HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-05 - Orange Coast Pilot..
Rainfall
to fade
tonight
A hit-and-run storm that struck
some areas with deluges and
thunder and left others cold but
dry was predicted lo diminish to·
day.
Once the current rainstorm
passes through pursued by a low
pressure system behind it, says
U.S. Weather Service forecaster
Andy Chagi, clear weather will be
on the horizon at least until next
week.
Chagi reported the average
rainfaU throughout the Southland
is about a balf·inch while snow
levels were lowered to4,000feet.
"Some places might not gel
anything," he said. ·
..
THU RSDAY MARCH•, 1°-rn:
..... ,,..._
.L _. ~)
Y• 11111• llllY NPIR
ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Youth Saved
Irvine boy has brain surgery
• SAN DIEGO (AP> -After 7;
hours of brain surgery, UnJversi·
ty of California doctors say
they've saved the life of a 15-year-
old Irvine boy with fbrain lesion
twice the sizeol an orange.
Steven Greth underwent five
stages of suraery to uptangle
arteries and veins ensnarled
throughout one·eightb of bis
brain.
In 1977, doctors in Los Angeles
diagnosed his headaches as an
arleriovenous malformation, or
AV M. But Carol Greth said •'they
could do nothing'' for her son.
The firstoffive risky operations
to correct the potentially lethal,
congenital condition took place at
the University of California at San
Diego Medical Center last Oc-
hours, the longest 20.
The A VM causes blood fiowin&
from the arteries to feed directly
into the veins that return to the
heart. Ar. a. result, oxygen and
n·utrients in the blood were
blocked from reaching cells in
Steven's brain, starving or mak·
ing them non-functional.
"It was absolutely out of the
question that it could be done safe-
ly in one o~ration, ''said surgeon
Hoi S. U, pronouncing Steven's
cure complete Wednesday.
The boy, who plans to return to
Irvine High Sch ool as a
sophomore in September, said he
was frightened through It aJI and
wondered if he would be
permanently disabled or coma·
lose.
"It was very difficult," Steven
said, adding "I don't want to talk
about it because I felt ashamed
because I was different."
Mrs . Greth said although doc·
tors said he would surely die
"Steven made the decision to go
and we backed him all the way.''
Dr. U's coUeagues described it
as the most difficult of brain sur·
geries, one which would have
been simpler in 1977 when
Steven'sA VM was much smaller. He said there may be showers
throughout the Orange Coast area
through tonight.
Orange County Flood Control
<See STORM, Page A2>
STEVEN GAETH, 15, OF IRVINE WITH MOTHER
Spunky youngater aurvtvea 75 hour• of brain aurgery
tober.
There were others in December
and Jan. 21. The shortest was 13
•'If you should go attead and re-
move the lesion In one shot, what
happens is that you completely
eliminate the shunt of blood from
arteries directly into veins and au
of the blood is introduced to the
rest of brain. suddenly, and the
arteries may not be able to take it
and the whole brain can explode
in your face "
"It has to do with a surgeon's
skill ," said Dr. U. "Some people
do this operation, and some peo-
ple don't ··
Chauffeur stabbed, kicked
Inflation key
More defense
funds eyed
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Reagan administration, finding
support in Congress for its
proposed $32.6 billion increase in
military spending through 1982,
is promising to seek even more
money for defense if it fails to
lame inflation.
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger. outlining a budget
he said would make "a major
Storm hits
Midwest
By The Associated Press
A winter storm packing winds
of up to SO mph dumped as much
as22inchesofsoggy,heavysnow
on Colorado. causing at least one
death and leaving hundreds of un·
prepared motorists snarled in
traffic.
In the parched Great Plains,
farmers welcomed the advancing
storm and New Jersey braced to-
day for up to lOinches ofsnow.
Because 2 feet of unstable snow
had piled up on top of the existing
base in some areas, an avalanche
warning remained in effect
through today for the southern
San Juan Mountains and for the
mountains near Aspen, the U.S.
Forest Service said.
Minor quake
hits.Hawaii
GOLDEN, Colo. <AP) -A
minor earthquake occurred early
this morning near the island of
Lanai in the Hawaiian Islands,
about 65 mUes southeast of
Honolulu, lb~ National Earth·
quake Information Service here
reported.
The U.S. Geoloalcal Survey
agency said the quake registered
4.9 on the Richter scale and oc-
curred at 4:10 a .m. Hawallan
Standard Time (7:10 a.m. MST).
The tremor reportedly wu felt
on the lllanda of Maui, Oabu and
Lanai, butno4amagewas expect·
ed, the USGS a1ency aaid.
'Cash' explodes
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -In·
Yfflilaton today were trytq to
d.termlne the sou.tte of a= bundM of money that ex
wltb ...,. 1u on Verba Buena
l1land Wedne1day nltbt. In·
ve1tlaaton believe the packet
WU t1ll'own from the Bay Brtdl•
d.lrecUyovfl°bHd. •
'
start on meeting needs too long
unmet," said he would submit a
supplemental request if prices or
military hardware increase
beyond the administration's
estimates.
"We have to keep this
program intact, absolutely,"
Weinberger told the Senate
Armed Services Committee. '
Under questioning Wednesday
by Sen. John Warner, R·Va ..
Weinberger conceded tbe
revised defense budget envisions
lower inflation than the Carter
administration's forecast. which
h e previ ousl y said was
underestimate<!..
But he said it is "fair to
assume a lower inrtation rate" if
President Reagan's proposed
tax cut and domestic spending
reductions are enacted.
The Reagan administration
predicts inflation will drop
steadily to 7 .2 percent in 1982
and 4 percent in 1986 as the
(See DEFENSE, Page AZ)
J et kills worker
CHINA LAKE (APl -Officials
are investigating the death of an
aircraft electrician who was
sucked into the intake valve of a
hlgb·powered jet during routine
maintenance work on the plane al
the Naval Weapons Center. The
victim was identified Wednesday
as William 0 . Brooks, 46. or
nearby Ridgecrest.
Bogus team
pwt toM
WASffiNGTON (AP> -
The U.S. Border Patrol
thought •omething was
wrong when the forel1n
basketball team wore clean
tennis shoes on an outdoor •
court and couldn't handle
the ball very well. They
were right.
Tbe ,bofu• bHketbaJI
team wu formed to 1mu1·
1le five Thal dtilenl into
the Uni~ States, the Im·
ml1rat1on and Naturallaa·
UonServtcecbarced.
Tbe plan ·called for the
five Thal• to play
ba1ketball near Campo,
Calif., on tht Kexlun
border, until, at a pre·
arran1td tiaM, tbey would
be drt..a to Loa An1elet,
aald David Croll8Ad1.. act-
tn1 commiNtoaer or the
lmmf1ratton an d
N aturaJkaUon Service.
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attac
Downtown goose steppers ..... , . ..-.
This gaggle of geese seems unconcerned
about holding up traffic. The birds flock
across Hij!hway 291 in Ninemile Falls.
north of Si>okane, Wash .. every morning
and afternoon. "Goose crossing" signs
have been posted to alert motorists.
Glass ban enforceable?
Glass containers soon will be
outlawed on Laguna Beach sands,
but City Council members who
approved the new ordinance say
they don't know how they'll en·
force it.
The council voted 3·2 with
Mayor Wayne Baglin and Kelly
Boyd opposed, to enact a law that
prohibits glass articles on city
beaches.
Orange County supervisors·re·
cenlly passed a similar ordinance
for county beaches, and Los
Angeles and San Diego counties
also have laws that prohibit vis·
itors from laking glass containers
to the beach.
But even as they approved the
new law Tuesday, members had
their doubts such an ordinance
can be enforced.
Sally Bellerue, who voted with
the council majority, said decals
outlinin8 the new law and applied
to exlsUng si1n1 at the entrances
to beaches will help.
She said it would be more of•• an
educational experience" for via·
ltora, 1uiaestin1 a wamlna si&n mltht beelfecUve.
But Mayo_r Baatln said he
doesn't thlnk the new law wU1
work.
"Our doc orclinance (leub law)
l1 a joke," be 1a1d. "We don't en·
Slide &hate road
YOSJUllTE NATIONAL
PARK <AP) -A rock1Ude on I
11-foot 1tmeb of park roM fON*I
temparary clol..,.. bere. Rut•
Dl~k llartiD NW be expected UM
blocked MeUoa about ftvt mil• lmld• the pirk to re-opeo late to-
day.
force it, and we don't enforce our
litter ordinance.
''We sit up here in our ivory cas-
tle and make these laws and then
don't make our lifeguards enforce
them.
"We·re not helping our Image
or our lileguards.'' he said.
Baglin said the city would have
a lot less broken glass on the
beach if It installed larger trash
containers. .
The new ordinance faces a
second hearing in two weeks, and
if it isn't contested, will become
law a month later.
Mistrial declared
in Mardian case
An Orange County Superior
Court judge has declared a mis·
tria1 durin& jury selection in a $1
million personal injury case in·
volving Dana Point restaurateur
Robert Charles Mardian, convict·
ed of reckless drivlna in a um ac·
cldent ttiat left a teen·aae boy
with pertnanentlnjuriea.
Judae William S. Lee ordered
the mfstrlal Wednesday wben at·
torney1 rePftHllllnl ll•rdlan •
jected to a queatioa posed by 1
lawyer for the family of Michael
C.Dawea.
Tbatqueltion, the attorneys u·
aerttd, violated a court order pro-
blbltlal Jurar qUfftlonin1 on mat·
ten related to Mud.lan'• net
worUt.
Tile defendant, owaer of
Hveral Nltaurantt, l1 &be 10a of
former Wblte HOUH aide 1'obert lhrdJan, who Hrved u ... r
Rleta.,.aNW..
Tbe=,POMdbr•taolWJ J a7 c. dMlt wilt. ....... .., ~~-::'ever bad CCllltMt •• ._. '• N1tavanta la
HawaU.
Hort.on and co-eounHl WlWam
B. Hanley insisted the query was
proper as a means of determininl
prejudice or bias on the part of
prospective jurors.
However, Lee granted the de·
fense requests for a mistrial,
leadlng to dismlsspl of 28 poten·
tfal jurors who volunteered to
bear what ii expected to be a
lenathYcue. Attorney• were expected to
meet witb Lee •lain today to de·
termlnewbatlltobedonenen.
If the miltrtal ruliD1 stands, tbe
(lee llUDIAN, Pa1e Al)
Gir~ 12, leaves
a trail of dentl
SAN DIBGO (AP) -la a one-
ton truek abe ••borrowed,'' a U·J•~ Sirl baa Wt a traU ot -.a•aeaNd .........
Tile truek whla a H ·foot
eacloMd van Mt two momaa
can llld 1 paned car, ••"°"'1 . •laalJIC ,...tit ... before ~'
tq to a atop on UM aldrialk
'WtdHlday. • 1
Wounded
in NB
incident
A chaurreur has told an
Orange County Superior Court
jury how he was attacked,
kicked and stabbed in the chest
by four youthful assailants who
laughingly poured beer over his
head as he lay wounded on a
Newport Beach street.
But despite the testimony of
Daniel Harms and other pros·
eculion witnesses Wednesday,
defendant David Paul Owen, 19,
was never identified in the
courtroom as one or the at-
tackers.
Defense attorney Roger Aga-
janian, who only briefly cross-
examined Harms, said he was
pleased with the testimony
because the witness had not
picked his client as one of the at·
tackers.
Owen, 18 when the incident OC·
c urred , is standing trial on
charges of attempted murder
and assault with a d eadly
weapon.
Harms, 25. who was critically
wounded in the attack, testified
that he was assaulted on high
school graduation night in June
after a bottle was thrown at his '
limousine as he drove six teen· ;
agers along the 300 block of : '
Walnut Street in the Newport
Shores area.
Alert called
WARSAW, Poland <AP)
After a two-week lull in Poland's I
labor turmoil, a local Solidarity •
chapter called a strike alert as
Soviet and Polish Communist
Party leaders again raised the
threat of intervention by other
members of the Soviet Bloc if
"anarchy and disarray" does
not end in Poland. The alert wu
calJed Wednesday.
011111 CDAl1 llATlfR
Chance of rain 50 per·
cent tonight, 20 percent
Friday. Gusty winds at
times. Lows toni1ht 48
alona the coast, 52 inland.
Hlgbs Friday SS to 80.
llllDf TDUY
The Oroftg• Countr
Philhormoldc Soci«tr'• mUlk:
mobU1 ot1it1 Colfforftta
School m Corto MeJG.. SH •Corv, photo•.~ 85.
• I 11111
t
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday. March S, 1981 -
Eyes on Re.II .forces
\
El Salvador. aU;l liinges on foes
WA~Hl'NGTON CAf ) -
Secretary of Stale Alexander M.
Haig Jr., dismissing a call to draw
the line now on aid to El Salvador.
says any rurther escalation of
U'.S. involvement depends on
what the Soviet Union and Cuba
dO~·
The possibility or additional
aid, Haig said. "will depend ·
Two of a kind
lar•ely on the wlllln1ne11 of
Cuba, the Soviet Union and those
associated with them to continue
to intervene Ulegally in the attain
of the member statea of lbis
bemllpbere."
Specifically. Haig ref~ed to
aay whether U.S. aid would stop
with 20 additional military ad·
visers and $2S million in new
.,. ..........
Twin hippopotami , born at the zoo in Prague,
Czechoslovakia, last month, make their public debut with
their mother, Zaira. It was the second recorded case of
hippo twins born in captivity .
1: /Fro•P~Al
DEFENSE • •
president's economic recovery
program takes hold. It was 12.4
percent last year , and the Carter
a'dministralion's las t forecast
was for 9.6 percent in 1982 and 6
percent m 1986.
"If what we hope does not
eome to pass and we are not
a ble lo reduce inflation and
don't get the cuts we are seeking
then I Wlll have to present you
with a s upplem e ntal ."
Weinberger said.
Members of the committee
unerally welcomed the budget
it)crease, which would pay for
a n ~xpanded Navy, a new
born ber. a new kind of nerve gas
and substantial pay raises for
military personnel.
Sen. John Tower . R-Texas. the
committee chairman, indicated
he wants the Pentagon's major
budgets approved by Congress
before there is any backlash
about cu t s in dom es tic
programs.
··our proposed inc r eases
would significantly and quickly
strengthen our a bility to respond
to the Soviet threat at all levels
of conflict and in all areas of the
w orld vi tal to our national
interest." Weinberger said
•
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~o frisking,
court rules
SALEM, Ore. (AP) -Even
convicted prisoners "retain
claims to personal dignjty," the
state Supreme Court bas ruled
in a suit by 15 female prison
guards who charged they were
d e-p r i v e d o r e q u a 1 job
opportunities beca use they
weren't allowed to frisk male
inmates.
In a 4'-2 decision Wednesday,
the court said allowing guards to
routinely touch intimate body
areas of inmates of the opposite
sex, even 1f the prisoners are
clothed, violates a provision of
the state constitution that says
no person cqnfined in jail "shall
be treated with unnecessary
rigor."
Male guards already were
forbidden to search female
inmates.
Fund unit vetoed
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov .
Edmund Brown Jr.'s plan to
create a special unit to advise
California pension funds on the
best investments for their com-
bined $60 billion in assets was re-
jected on \Yednesday by a key
Senate panel.
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BATTLESHIP NEW JERSEY MAY IE RENOVATED
132 bHNon defenM budget lncreeM eb""9t
ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat
Thoma• P. Haley ........
Robert N. WNd ~
M. Thomas KHVil .....
Thof'ne9 A. Murphlne ............
Ctwe.H.Looa .................. 1-
lllmard SChulmall a....
~=-n
Kennl9t N. Goddard Jr. ai.M1911 ......
Claaafftecl ~ .... 714/Ma..171
All other depertment• 9'2-481
MAIN Ol'FICE
DO WHt .. y St., cat. Meu, CA.
IMll ...,._ .. a IMO, C•la Mne, CA.,._
milltary assistance. ''It would be
fooUab to attempt to do so," be
said .
T.be administration bas ac·
cused Cuba and other communist
nationa ol CQmpllclly in smug-
glln1 at least 200 ~ns of military
suppUes to left.lat tnsurg.ents in
El Salvador. The Soviet UnJQn
and Cuba have denied the
charge.
Meanwhile, from camp\t.ses to
churches, a Oedglin1 anti-war
movement is emerging in
America. The movement opposes
increased U.S. military involve-
ment ln El Salvador, and it is
drawing support from veterans of
Vietnam protests a decade ago.
Already, there have been cam·
pus teach-ins and protest railles.
A hunger strilte is scheduled. And
soon, the hallmark of the anU·
Vietnam era will return: a march
on the Pentagon.
"There is a tremendous aware·
ness that this (U.S. involvement)
looks like what happened around
Vietnam," said Heidi Tarver,
coordinator for the Committee in
Solidarity with the People of El
Salvador. "People are saying,
'We're not going lo be taken in
again.' "
The protest groups frequently
couple their opposition to in-
c reased military aid to El
Salvador's civilian-military jun-
ta with attacks on President
Reagan's proposed cuts in social
programs.
"U.S. -Hands off El Salvador!
Money for Jobs, Human Needs.
Not for the Pentagon," reads a
flyer for a May 3 march on the
Pentagon scheduled by a group
called the Peoples' Anti-War
Mobilization. .
And in El Salvador, civman
president of the ruling civilian-
military junta says he has or-
dered the arrest of an ultra-
righlist major for advocating a
military coup, and U.S. diplomats
blamed the officer for a hit-and·
run attack on the American Em-
bassy.
Pres ident J ose Napoleon
Duarte told a news conf~rence
Wednesday that he ordered the
police to search for and arrest re-
tired Maj. Robertod'Aubuisson.
D'Aubuisson held a news COD·
ference Tuesday, accused Duarte
and the other members of bis
Cbriatian Democratic pany in the
government of being communlata
and said the military should expel
them from the government. But
by early today there was no in·
di cation be had been arrested.
Meanwhile, men in a speeding
pickup truck fired 10 to 15 shots at
the U.S. Embassy Wedne.sday,
breaking a window. No one was
hurt. and the embassy's Marine
guards did not r eturn the fire. a
spokesman s aid.
FroaaP .. ~AI
MAR DIAN • •
case must be sent back to the
superior court department which
handles scheduling of cases.
There also is a chance. Hanley
said, that Lee could reverse his
ruling and allow jury selection to
continue.
The D~wes family which
formerly lived in Capistrano
Beach is suing Mardian for in·
juries their 13-year-old son suf·
fered when he was struck by a car
as he was carrying a fishing pole
and pushing bis bicycle along a
South County roadway.
Mardian served a six-month
term in Orange County Jail on his
reckless driving conviction. A
drunken driving charge was dis-
missed because of insufficient
evidence.
The personal injury trial was
made possible by a ruling of the .
Fourth District Court of Appeal in
San Diego, whic h held that
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Oretta Sears erred when
s he said the family of Dawes
could not s ue for punitive
damages.
It ls alleged in the suit that Mar-
dian was driving while intoxicat·
ed. ran a stop sign and zigzagged
in andoutoftraffic.
Orp~an tells
grisly tale
WASHINGTON (AP> -Sitting
.stiffly erect, the 15-year-old
Cambodian orphan told of being
forced to dJ1 into 1ravea and re-
move tbe clothes from corpses.
Arn Cborn appeared at a news
conference Wednesday lo
dramatise an attempt being
made to rescue Cambodian
chlldrenlnretu1eecamp1wbo,he
said, face the dan1er of belnt kid·
napptd to be UMd u aoldlen In
Cambodia'• intemaJ atnautea.
Th• camp1 8" in TbaUand, just
aero11 the border from Cam·
bodla.
Arn lt OM of only four children
who have made It out of the
cam,., n• u.ou,a. America ta wlU.a,to recel.-e them ud YOIUft. l•er·a1eatle1 have found
apouanfortbem. • '
•
·~··,._.... Auto submarine
Peter Keegan drives a Ford Escort out of London's
Thames River during a demonstration to test the
durability of a new maintenance spray which inhibits
rust formation and waterproofs engine parts.
Irvine C.Oast views
to he preserved
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has acted to ensure
that construction of new homes
along the Irvine Coast between
Corona del Mar and Laguna
Beach doesn't obstruct views of
exisiting residents.
That action came Wednesday
d,.UOg a rezoning of the 9,527·
acre coasUine between the two
communities fr o m an
agriculturaJ area to a planned
community.
Firemen's
party probed
ROSSFORD, Ohio <AP>
City offlciala were trying to
determine which volunteer
firemen took prostitutes to the
city fire station after the
department's annual Christmas
party. ·
Three or four me n were
involved in the incident, which
occurred after the Dec. 20 party
broke up, and some firemen also
took a joy ride in a city
ambulance the same night, city
administrator Milan Vavrik said
Wednesday.
When their identities are
determined, they will be asked
to resign from the department
or be dism!ssed, Vavrik said.
More aid sought
SACRAMENTO <AP> A 10
percent increase in state money is
being requested by the schools for
kindergarten through high school
-twice the raise sought by Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. Jt would bring
total state aid to schools to about
$9.3 billion.
Supervisor Thomas Riley in-
cluded in the final vote stipula·
lions that plans for new homes
adjacent to existing
neighborhoods must include ii·
lustrations showing ocean views
from adjacent homes in Cameo
Shores in South Corona del Mar
before and after construction.
Residents of the neighborhood
had objected that new homes
could cul off their ocean views.
The rezoning gives the Irvine
Company preliminary approval
to build up to 225 houses in the
planning area. But P eter
Herman, Riley's aide in land use
matters. said Wednesday that
current company plans call for
construction of only 74 houses in
the area.
However. before any roads
are built or utility lines ex-
tended, the company must ob·
lain approval of its plans from
the state Coastal Commission.
Plans are scheduled to be sub·
mi tted to the South Coas t
Regional Coastal Commission
by the middle of this month, said
J e r ry Collins , a company
s po kesman. The s tate com·
mission could consider the mat-
ter in mid May, he added.
In exchange for approval lo
build up to about 2,000 housing
units on the property. the com·
paay is offering to dedicate 2,600
acres of undeveloped land to the
county. That land would remain
as open space even if other
acreage set aside for a proposed
national park in the a rea is not
bought by the federal govern-
ment, Collins said.
A development agreement
that would detail construction
phases and land dedications will
be sought by the company from
the county within six months. he
added.
For the one of a kind woman,
a one of a kind diamond.
Sycamore
pact
reje,cte~.
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of-~y~ll9ff
A $5.4 million land deal
between Laguna Beach and the
Baywood Development Co. ia
off, but council members have
agreed to extend ne1otiationa
with the developer until May 2.
The rejection of Baywood's
proposaJ to purcbaae about 80
acres of Sycamore Hills from
the city leaves the door open for
other developers to make offers
after the May deadline.
And Mayor Wayne Baglin in-
dicated the city should have no
problem in finding another
buyer for the parcel, located
near Leisure World within the
522-acre Sycamore Hills area.
Council members rejected
Baywood's offer Tuesday after
the land firm indicated the city
would have to accept the risk of
a subordinated note in order for
the developer to obtain a con-
struction loan from the bank.
City officials claim they had
an oral agreement with Rancho
Palos Verdes Corp., the com-
pany that sold Sycamore Hills to
the city. stating Rancho would ~
accept the risk should the
Baywood enterprise go sour.
But Rancho attorneys indicat-
e d recently that under no
circumstances will the company
accept a subordinated note, and
council members said they had
no choice but to quash the deal.
The $5.4 million would have
gone toward paying off a nearly
$7 million debt owed Rancho by
the city for the entire Sycamore
Hills parcel.
And city officials said the re-
jection of the Baywood offer,
after nearly three months of in-
tense negotiations, is dishearten-
ing.
By extending the negotiating
period to Baywood, the city is
hoping the Newwport Beach-
based developme nt firm can
submit an offer that does not in -
clude a subordinated note.
If not, the city will probably
make known its desire to sell the
parcel to another developer and
begin negotiations over again.
Meanwhile. interest on the
mortgage to Rancho is mounting
at about $1,500 per day.
IFr .. r .. eAl
STORM ...
Distri c t s pokes man Rob
Moreland said the current storm
accompanied by thunderclaps is
a little bit bizarre.
Sadd.Jeback Peak, for example.
has received only 2.7 inches of
rain from the current storm along
with a comparable 13.6 inches of
rain to date.
Last year at this time the
highest point of land in Oran.Re
County had received 58.2 inches.
Moreland said this is because of
what he terms rain cells, which
drop tremendous amounts .or
water in certain areas due to the
patterns of high and low pressure
systems involved
"The peak is always so much
bigherin rainfall," he said.
No serious damage was report-
ed in the county due to the latest
storm.
Hardly a woman alive d~sn't dream of
owning a dazzling diamond solitaire. Some
get one on their ~ddlng day-some on an
anniversary. One thlng·s for sure. the day
they unwrap a diamond solitaire is a day
they'll never forget. For the widest selection
and absolutely the finest quality available.
come see our solitaire collection. ,
SLA.VICK'S
Flnt ,.WtMnl Sine. 1917
Fathlon ltland, N•wport C•nttr, Ntwport Bffch, 714f644·13IO
Wntrnln.Wr / ut11N ~· / MIMiofl Vi.jo ( Notth Oranp IT"-Clfy ~ C~tot • 1"'11 M.111
Al9o Cl'Mlitf Lo. Anpln I S.n oi.to I I.a• Vtp1
U.-9' Sll'fldl'I_......,.~ '6tM .. "-btl ........ VISA..,._. C'hllp.
~ Flrtt ,,_,,,,, C111"
Singer sets
• • pnsong1g
Blues guitarist B.B. Kla«
will perform Friday at the
world 's largest walled
prison.
King offered to do two
"blues at the big house"
shows free for inmates of the
State Prison of Southern
Michigan at Jackson.
The musician is perform·
ing at a suburban Detroit
nightclub.
About 3,000 of the over·
crowded prison's 5,700 in·
mates wlll get an opportunity
to hear King in the prison
auditorium.
A spokesman said "it's
been a long time" s ince
anyone volunteered to do a
show for the inmates.
A last·minule agreement
worked out between Billy
Ca rt er and the Internal
R evenu e Service kept
Ca rter's 7,700-square-foot
home off the auction block.
The I RS haa planned to
place Carter 's Marion Coun·
ly house and 58 acres of his
property on sale lo pay off a
$105, 123 federal income tax
debt Carter owed from 1978.
The latest in a report-
~d string of mysterious
events on the $10 million
"Mommie Dearest" set
brought Frank Sinatra
to the rescue of Faye
Dunqway when the ac-
tress suddenly lost her
voice during a scream-
ing scene.
Sinatra spent 15
minutes giving the ac-
tress tips on preserving
the vocal chords.
P r esident and Mrs .
Bea&aA celebrated their 29th
wedding anniversary at one
of Washington's most ex·
pensive French restaurants
and said their years of mar·
riag e seem "like 29
minutes."
The president echoed her:
''She said it. lt seems like 29
minutes.''
. ..... .....
\
City-bred Assembly
Speaker Willie Brown.
D-San Francisco. who
has added a farm
specialist to his staff.
told farmers in a
Monterey speech . if his
new aide can't solve
their problems. · ·come
to Farmer Brown."
Edith C. Jarvis, a great-
g r e at-gr a ndda ugh te r of
Francis Scott Rey who wrote
"The Star-Spangled Ban-
ner,'' says she'd feel sad if
the anthem ever "had to take
a back seat" to other
patriotic songs
Mrs . Jarvis attended a
ceremony at Baltimore's
Fort McHenry marking the
50th anniversary o f the
song's designation by Presi-
dent Herbert Hoover as the
national anthem.
For 50 years, Mrs. Jarvis
said, "The Star-Spangled
Banner" h as withstood a
bombardment of competing
national songs, just as the
flag it was writte n about
weathered British shelling in
the War of 1812
Astronomer and television
personality Carl Sagan, con
tending that the gene ral
public has a "vast hunger for
scientific information. is urg·
ing Congress not to reduce
National Science Foundation
support for education pro-
gra m s in sc ience a nd
engineering.
For decades. the United
States has led the world in
science. he said. "Were the
United States to surrender
that role. it would be a great
danger not only to our coun·
try. but a dange r to the
planet as a whole."
Four/ace
recall on
Danaullit
Myers named chief
at Valley hospital
Reca ll petitions directed
against four members of the
Dana Point Sanitation District
board were filed with the
Orange County Registrar of
Voters by a local citizens group.
Named on the petitions are
s anitation district directors Earl
Hardisty, John McComb. Jack
Schmidt and Angus Smith.
THE RECALL effort against
the four by the Dana Point
Citjzens for Action was sparked
by a S500·a-month pension they
a pproved for retiring board
mem bers last April. The direc-
tors have repeatedly refused to
rescind the plan.
The registrar now has 30 days
to verify the signatures on the
petitions. Filing came one day
before the March 5 deadline to
qualify the recall for the ballot.
THE CITIZENS group needs
l .408 valid signatures on each of
the four petitions to qualify the
measure. which represents 25
1>ercent of the registered voters
in Dana Point.
Carolyn Walti, a spokesman
for the Citizens for Action, said
nearly 1,900 signatures were
gathe r ed for each board
member. She said her group
would try to have the recall
measure included on the Nov·
ember ballot.
Volunteer s for
Olympics a sked
The Onnge County Special
Olympics of 1981 is looking for
scbool volunteers to assist with
tbe April 4 event at the Cypress
College track field.
For more information, calJ
Red Cross Youth Services at
835-5381, extenllon 214.
Craig G. Myers. a former
Peace Corps volunteer who has
worked in Africa and Southeast
A.sia, has been selected as the
new administrator of Fountain
Valley Community Hospital.
Myers, 38, comes to Fountain
Valley from Chapman General
Hospital in Orange, where he
served in a similar capacity. He
h as been vice pres ident of
Human Ex Corpor ation, which
operates Chapman General and
Panel s tudies
traffic woes
in Costa Me sa
A Caltrans committee is ex-
pected to reduce the number of
proposals being considered for
improving Newport boulevard's
traffic problem when it meets
tonight in Costa Mesa.
The Policy Advisory Commit-
tee for the Route 55 Transporta-
tion Study meets at 7:30 p.m. in
the Ci ty Council Chambers. 77
Fair Drive.
Last month. the Route 55
Technical Advisory Committee
studying the same projects rec·
ommended that four of 10 im-
provement projects be scrapped,
including a Cull freeway project
between the present end of Costa
Mesa Freeway to Pacific Coast
Highway.
The PAC also will study a plan
proposed by the City of Costa
Mesa for routing a sub-surface
or overhead freeway -like
highway through the downtown
area . between Bay and 17th
Streets.
The committee studies are
aimed at producing a draft en-
vironment-1 impact stateJDent
addressing1 problems and poten-
Ual solutions of motor vehicle
traffic a long the boulevard
between Brla\ol Street and
Pacitlc Coast !fighway.
We're Listening •••
The Dally Pilot wants to hear from Its readers, whatl you Uke
· about the paper and what )'OU don't like. We also would like to
publish your views on any aubjec:t in our letters to the editor col·
11mn. Call the number below Ind YoUr mesaace wlll be ~rded.
MetMC• ~II be transeribed HVeral Umes dallY and deUvered to
the desk of the appropriat. editor. Mailbox ~ribut&ona will
. • be dellvere4 to the editorial pa1i edkor. Mailbox
contrlbuton mUll include ta*r name ud tea.phone
number for TfriftcaUon. Ml arcullldon catl., "9ue. Tell U1 what's on your .a&nd. TM .. mber lt ln
strvice 2A hOurs 1 day. lft'tft da)'I a *"Ir.
se veral other So uthe rn
California hospitals.
AS A PEACE Corps volunteer
f rom 1964 to 1966 , Myers
perfo rm e d publi c h ealth
services in central Africa. He
later served as administrator of
the Thomas A. Dooley Founda-
tion's Laos Program.
A resident of Santa Ana,
Myers will assume his Fountain
Valley post March 11.
He will step intas a vacancy
c reated Jan 13 wh e n a d -
ministrator Tom Ri chards and
ass istant adminis trato r Carl
Thielmann resigned under pres-
sure from the hospital's direc·
tors.
RICHARDS' de pa rture was
tied in part to continuing labor
unrest al the 215-bed facility
The National Labor Relations
Board has approved an April 10
election. in which the hospital's
700 e mp loyees w.ill vote on
wh e ther they wi s h to be
represented by the United
Nurses Association of California
and the United Auto Workers.
In February, new chairman of
the hospital's board of directors
was selected. He is Dr. Rudolph
C . Bald o n i, '4 9. an
anesthesiologist.
Pair remain
after • serious
Irvine crash
A 21-year'Old Mar ine and a
Newport Beach m an remain
hospitalized in serious condition
today as the result of injuries
they suffered in a bead-on traffic
collision in Irvine.
Paul S. Masaes, 21, stationed
at the El Toro Marine Corps
helicopter facUity in Tustin, and
Kurt A. Moll, 3Q, of 1219 Seacrest
Drive, are in the intemlve care
unit of Fountain Valley Com·
munlty Hospital.
Daniel Hake, 24, also ataUoned
at the belt~opter facility , UM
driver of l he car in wblcb
Maaaes wu rtdina , ls betn• held
In Oranie County Jail on suapt.
cion ol fetoay drunken drtvtq.
Ha •u Jai.Jed Tuelday after be-lAI treMM at UC l rYlne Medical
CeDt« f«: a cut . l nlDe .,.uce Set. Robert
ltredt,I Mid today U.at Hake wu clrt.._ ldl plchp truck DOl'th·
bouadlll tbe IOU&JabouDd .... of
MacArthur Boulevard south of
UnJ•enlt)t Drive when bla veld·
el• colUdecl wttb a toutbboaad Datawi driven by Moll.
~
New sewage pla1tt
A $70 million construction project is under
way at Orange County Sanitation Treat-
ment Plant Number 2 at Brookhurst Street
and Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington
Beach. New secondary treatment facility,
before it ts discharged into the ocean.
Sanitation plant currently is treating 170
million gallons of sewage a day. Domed
s tructures are digesters, in which organic
solids decompose. producing methane gas,
which helps operate the plant. _to open in 1982. wiJl further purify sewage
Air noise probe tabled
T est i mony set to r esume in A pri l
By STEVE MARBLE
Of I ... D•oly l'tlol Stall
A state hearing to determine if
John Wayne Airport should be
allowed to exceed state noise
standards has been continued
until seven lawyers and one ad·
ministrative law judge can find
room in their calendars.
The nine-day old hearing was
halted Wednesday after one
speaker suffered a heart attack
Douglas Parmentier Jr was as·
sisted by audience members un·
til Costa Mesa paramedics ar·
rived at the hearing room .
ATTORNEYS, T HOUGH,
already had agreed to continue
the hearing lo some future date,
likely in April.
The hearings originally were
scheduled to run only five days.
Although only two witnesses
have yet to test ify . at least
another 20 people have peli·
t io ned Adminis trative Law
Judge Robert Neher, who is pre·
siding, ~or ·permission lo take
the witness stand.
Most of the attorneys, who are
representing a variety of parties
in the noise hearings, say they
have other legal commitments
in the upcommg weeks .
TWO OF THE lawyers, Jerrod
Fadem and Michael Gatzke. are
set to square off Monday in
Orange County Superior Court.
Fadem. a Santa Monica at·
torney who has been represent·
ing noise-weary homeowners
during the variance hearings, is
representing some of the s ame
homeowners in a suit against the
county
The suit alleges people have
s uffered property damage,
personal injury and e motional
disturbances because of the
co unty air port. Gatzke is
representing the county as he
ha s in the noise hearings.
DUR I NG WEDNESDAY
morning's hearings, the witness
s tand was taken over by
homeowners who said they are
fed up with jet noise.
O•llr Pilet St.ti P"°1o
POSTPONES HEARING
l aw Judge Neher
Santa Ana Heights resident
Erma Balham testified she'd
b ee n forced t o unde r go
psychiatric treatment because of
jet noise from the airport.
"Wh at are we going to do?"
s he asked. "just throw people 1n
a coffin. It's sad. We 're so im
pacted <by noise>."
Rol lie Brousard. a n orth
Newport resident ¥d savings
and loan branch manager, said
jet noise is so bad he has trouble
talking o n the telephone.
watching television or sleeping
late on wt.•ek(•nds
"I'm embarrassed to invite
friends lo m y hou se," said
Brousard, ··and I can't use my
patio
.. Between Jets I can sit on my
front pon·h and see the golf
<·ourse and realt.te I'm not sucti
a bad golfer. It's a beautift.(I
house I never want to leave it '•
Brousard r eported that hr
feels .. caught ..
· · l c a n t -a-rt o r d t o la v t'
unywherc e lse in New port
Re ach." he s aid "The onh
avenue' left 1s to leave leave
my community · · •
Witness Parmentier. before he
was stricken. said he was skeJ>
tical of the "good intentions ol
our county super visors.·• 11
HE SUGGESTED t ha t con<tt-
ti o n s be attach e d to t h'i-
\'a ri ance. 1ocludmg a system f<fr
fining loud pilots and a program
for denying commercial airlin~~
a right to use the airport if the~
are unable to comply with noi~e
s t andards during any thret
month period '1
P armentier also suggest~
that officials look into building ..
hi gh-s peed monorail betwe~ Orange County and Ontario
Airport. He said supe r visors
s hould be urged to rescind the
airport master plan.
Roy Skultin. a realtor and Sasi
la Ana He i g hts r eside nt.
s tressed that h e and hi!>
neighbors are not anti-airport.
"Our purpose," he said, "is
simply to have peaceful co·
existence W1lh the airport "
Desert trip sch eduled
A four-day trip beginning
March 29. to Desert Hot Springs
Spa is being sponsored by the
Orange Coast College Communi·
ty Service office.
The $155 f ee i n c lud es
chartered bus. lodging, use of --------
~
mineral ho t pools. sauna,
breakfasts. dinn e r s, and a n
ae r ial tr a m ride 1n Palm
Springs.
Reservation information is
available by phoning 556-5527.
RO L E X
I SPEED COUNTS.
ENDURANCE COUNTS MORE.
Against time and the mountain. power with
precision means victory_ Just one tjfneplece •
quallfle&: Rolex Explorer II. Tou~. trusty,
Explorer 11 ls a self..'.wlndlng, offlclally
certified superlative chronometer In
stainless steel with matching bracelet,
pressure-proof down to 330 feet In Its
Qyater case. A lumlnoua red hour hand
paints eicact time on a 2•-hour t>eiel.
· RAEFjewElrX::
/ . . 32 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
6'4'4-2040
J
NATION /WEATHER
ILOT A INTO 1LOT a Daft. -You remember thole .
vealq lDlelllc.ee testa tbeJ Uled to Ii•• where they abow
you • ~ ot cc.tarted 1q...,..., rectaqles, and Jumbled tri...._ and order you to tell which ones are alike? Sure
you do.
Postal service def en~ land buy
Santa Ana municipal VCM·counter people 1ot a teat
like tbatcmly Ulla week.
TbeY, Dunked.
Either tbe ballot-cou.DUna bOlol blew it, or it wu their
computer1 or_ both. We may never know. ID •JlY event, the
computensea pratfall meant that Santa Ana people waited
breatbleuly (they were norin1 at home> all throuab UM
nt1ht Tueaday and
before dawn Wednelday ~ without learntn1 who • _
bad won four open seats -
on their aeven-member ~
CltyCouncU. JDI IURPHllf ,~I/
THE P&OBLEM
was that Santa Ana's municipal tavanu were usln1 a com·
puter to count up the election returns. To t.rta1er the com·
puter for your favorite candidate, you bad to punch a
parUcular bole in your ballot.
In the ballot·countin1. the bole representin1 your vote
was matched up with a similar bole in the computer and
your vote wu recorded.
What actually happened was that the ballot puncher in
the votin1 booth made rectancuJar·sbaped holes.
The boles in the countina machine were square.
Alu, thla was almost the same u the old saw about
tryin1 to put a round pea lnto a square bole. Or was it the
Moein fnte~ qada: which~ ii uJUO/e'!
other way around? Doesn't matter. The holes didn't
match. The computer rejected about 7 ,000 of said ballots.
TRIS MEANT THAT before the counting could eel
completed, election workers bad to go back and re-punch
each ballot so that the boles were square enoueh to satisfy
Santa Ana's square-holed computer.
The whole situation sounds pretty square. come to
t.binlt of it.
Santa Ana probably deserves ll. The election apparent·
ly drew little more than expansive yawns from the
citizenry anyway. The turnout at the polls was reported at
about 10 percent, squares, rectangles or otherwise.
Judging from the placards plastered all over the Coun·
ty Seat, crime and lower taxes appeared to be the big is·
sues. Judging from the turnout, nothing was.
"VOTE FOR BLAT -lower crime and taxes ... "
seemed to be the motto of every candidate. Maybt"'"ttle
voter turnout response would have been better in Santa
Ana if at least one candidate had come out in favor of
more crime and higher taxes.
At least the people would have had something to fight
about. Maybe they just all stayed home from the polls to
guard against Santa Ana burglars.
Anyway. it should be reported someplace that four
councilmen ftnally did get elect.eel in Santa Ana, once they
could match the square boles again.st the square boles. At
dawn. the election had gone to incumbents Gordon Bncken
and Daniel Grisel and new councilpersons Patricia
McGuigan and John Acosta.
TIDS WAS INTERPRETED by Santa Ana political
pundits as being a victory for the city's established
powers.
What does that mean? Who knows? Probably that City
Hall will continue its battle to shut down the dirty movie
house out by the Civic Center.
Few things change much.
Rains keep on
WASHINGTON (AP) -Wblle
cltinl red lnk u tbe Juatlftcatloe
for rate lacreaaea, the POltal
Service la faabtontn1 a *28
million ·•campUl·Uke environ·
ment'' for mana1ement
aemlnan ln a faahlonable
capital eubu.fb.
Over heated objectiona from
resident.a, the Postal Service de·
rends tu purcbue of 83 acres in
Potomac, Md., for trainin1
aupervtaon.
''It la lar1ely throu1h our
mana1ers that we make the pro-
ductivity 1alna that reduce the
need for Mure rate increases,"
spokesman Joe McDonald said.
Besides, McDonald said, tbe
training facllity was funded
before the Poetal Service asked
last year for hither rates. The
resultlnl lncreues, including a
3-cent booet in fint·class rates,
are eXpetted to take effect this
month.
POTOMAC RESIDENTS have
filed suit and written letters to
newspapers across the country
ln an unsuccessful attempt to
prevent use of the land to train
postal managers.
Potomac, where the average
home sold last year for $176,961,
la a wooded suburb of rolling
hills, bi& Iota and large houses.
Attempts to build new sub·
divisions have run into furious
and well-fmanced opposition.
U.S. District Judge Harold H.
Greene in December ruled
a1ainst a Potomac citizens'
group that wants to halt PostaJ
Service use of the land. In a de·
cislon now being appealed,
Greene said the law does not
protect •'enclaves of exclusivi·
ty" for the ..{eaJthy.
M EANWRILE, the Postal
Service has moved in and made
pla ns for up to 400 postal
managers at a time to take
courses by 1983.
"We want a campus-like en·
vironment and this was the best
place available," said John R.
Buttz, director of the Postal
Service Training and Develop·
ment Institute.
The Postal Service bought the
site in October from the Sisters
of Mercy, a Roman Catholic or·
der . The. sale included the five-
floor building that had been the
headquarters of the order and a
one -floor school. The purchase.
additions to both buildings and
construction of the dormitory
will bring the cost to an estimat·
ed $28.1 million.
MANAGERS FROM around
the nation are being brought in
for three-week courses in such
subjects as work scheduling,
meeting budgets a nd getting
maximum productivity from
employees. A lounge will offer
drinks in the evenings.
"We didn't think we were go-
• commg
Another stonn brewing in Paci/ ic
Smell ueft .WI..-, Ill effeC I I,...,.
Poliftt C~ t.o Me•k M ~.
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I I .. t I IW
I > IW t • w
l na to bave a bar in the
nel1hborbood," aald Nancy
Kosan, president of the cltiJen'a
association which brou1bt ault. UnW now, the Postal Service
Road hog
baa rsted apace in two otnce
buildlllp in Bethesda, lfd., for
clauea and paid for· motel
rooms and meals for atudenta.
Offi~lat. insist the new arruuce·
meat wt.II provide a better en·
vlronment for leamlnc and the
annual aaviftsa wU1 repay Uae
coat of the Potomac facility
within 10 years.
,.,.., ......
A 250-pound pig went hog wild on the Mar·
quam Bridge in Portland, Ore., after
escaping from a truck, stopping traffic for
an hour before officers used rope and bat·
tery jumper cables to subdue the rampag-
ing porker.
Deaths .scar Mardi Gras
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-Police
say they will recommend safety
changes for next year's Mardi
Gras alter two children were
crushed to death beneath the
wheels of parade floats as up to 1
million people packed the streets
for the close of the gaudy
carnival.
An 8-year-old boy was thrown
into the path of a float when the
ladder be was sitting on was top-
pled by the surging crowd. A
2~ -year-old girl attending a
parade with her father was run
over by a float when she ran to
pick up something beneath it,
police said.
POLICE WILL recommend
that 1982 flQats be designed with
lower sides to prevent anyone
from falling beneath them. ac·
cording to Officer Wayne Tam·
borella, who investigated the
girl's death.
As Ash Wednesday dawned
marking the start or Lent and
the end of the Mardi Gras re·
velry that began shortly after·
Christmas, the city was faced
with a mountain of trash and an
epidemic of hangovers.
Parades are the day's family
side, and children or all ages line
the parade routes -in parents'
a rms , sitting on the shoulders,
holding onto a hand, pushing
through the crowd, or perching on
wooden seats atop stepladders.
Christian Lambert of Jefferson
Parish was sitting on a ladder
when a surging crowd knocked it
down, throwing the child between
the cab and trailer of a float in a
procession of home-decorated
fl atbed trucks . police said. A
paramedic said he had tire marks
on his back.
HIS DEATH came soon after
Margaret McKenzie of New
Orleans was brought in dead, her
skull crushed in an accident
halfway across town.
There were varying accounts of
that accident. Some said she was
holding her father's hand at the
end of the Zulu parade's route
when the crush of the crowd
pulled her from his gr asp. Others
said she was in his arms, and a
sudden bump knocked her to the
ground.
FALL
"CLEARANCE"
ALL
•SUITS•
ALL
•SPORT COATS •
OFF
CHOOSE ... 100% \\OOL-BLENDS -POLYESTER.
NAMES LIKE SASSON • FIORAVANTI 0 BELLINI •
WHITEHEAD ... SIZES 36 SHORT TO 46 LONG.
SUITS
~9
DOOR
BUSTER LONG $LEEVES
V-NECK
VELOURS
'9"
. ... _______ .. __ ···--
~TiillUa
Four charged
in cop's death
UNION CITY IAP> -Four men have been
chuged with the murder of Police Chief William
Cann here slx years ago during a summer of strife
between police and Mexican-Americ"ans.
"l'he four were members of the Latino civil
rlabts group called the Brown Betels, acting police
chief J ere Bas hinski said. Bastunski declined to
discuss details of the case against the four whom
he identified a s Angel J . Ramirez, 37 : Ruben I.
Viicarra, 57: Paul J . Mendoza. 24, and Leonard
Baca. 36.
Off Wa•r ftaf I #OUfl"'
SACRAMENTO (AP > A resolution to ask the
Reagan Administration not to sell 011 drilling leases
in five basins off Californ1a·s northern and central
coast has advanced in the
Legislature
NEWS BRIEFS semb~y~~n\9<Jmb lar~ ~-
Carmel. went to the As·
sembly Flules Committee
on a 7.4 vote of the Energy and Natural Resources
Committee.
Four lrrn• flUlllfl In raiw
SAN FRANCISCO (J\P> Four youths have
been found guilty of 50 charges connec ted with the
brutal rape. kidnap und s hooting of a student last Oc-
tober
A Supe rior Court jur~ returned the last of the
verdicb Tuesda~ 1n the cai.c against Michael Brown.
17. Clyde J aC'kson. Ii. Larry Shephard. 17. and Da
monl MlllC'r. Hi
Tht• v1cl1m. a l4 ''ear -old woman. was a lla(•kt-d
as s he unlockt·d h1:r c;a r door after attending classt•s
al Goldt•n c;att• l'nivers1tyonOtt 6.198U
S,wf•iaf rdeu•aflote told
I.OS A'.'lGELES t AP1 T he sC'hool board 1·x
plained at a hearing before Supe ri or Court Judge
Paul Egly that certa in mtnonty schools in tht' 1nnt·r
cit y, although not involved in m andatory busing.
have special educalwn programs to offset any dt'
fee· ts causC'd b\ racial isolation
The Am<'ri C'a n Civil Libt•rtics L"n1on and other
groups have compl<Jine d in the pa~l that the school
district's mll'grat1on pla n excludes many inner l'it )
schools that ar<' more likely to benefit from man
datory· busing
Ud fo El .fitalrador prolr•lrd
SACRA M F:NTO I/\ P 1 About 250 persons
turned out for a demonstration a gainst t.: S a rms
sh1pmt'nts to El Sal vador
Speakers <•l Tuesd&iy"s rally. in front of the
Fede ral Building an downtown Sacramento, said the
rultng Junta of F:I Salvador 1s killing people in·
discriminatelv
Organill:d by Homan Catholic and other
churches. peace groups and labor unions. the dem-
on!ltrators marched in ;1 circle carrying placards
and singing ··c ive PeaC'C' A C'hanN.··· and ·· Pea cl' Is
Flowing l.ikt• a Rivl'r ..
Cos• • o f ri pit~?
More power
hikes seen
LOS ANGELES 1A P 1 The price of clectric 1
ty has risC'n 50 p C'rcenl in California s ince
mid 1979. and 1t will neC:Jrly triple again in the ('Om
mg decade. sa)s a report
The report hy the California Council for En
vironmental A21lanC'c. an organization of business.
labor and othC'r C'omm unil) leaders. urges rapid
devt•lopmenl of more nuclear power in California
lo slow the price inC'reast•s
If then• is C:J romplc•t<• shutdown of nul'lear
power in C'c.iliforn1a . the average homt>'s monthl)
electrical hill will rise to as much as fi ve times
today's hills. the s tu<ly says
I T PREDICTS THAT even 1f the pl'nding
nuclear plants arC' all put into operatwn on
schedule. the average residential electrical bill
will rise• from $33.80 a m o nth in 1980 lo between $94
and $135 in 1990
If all nuclear power plants in California are
s hut down. the average home eleC'trical bill will be
as high as S166 per month hy 1990. t he report said .
basing estimates on a 20 pe rcent averagC' increase
in gas and oil prices during the 1980s
·'The principal reason electncity prices have
escalated sharply is tha t California utilities
s ignificantly depend on high priced oi l and gas as
fuel to generate electricity.·· the study said.
"I N CONTRAST, "two representative out-of
s tate utilities had a n (tveragc clC'clriclty price in
1980 which \\as 40 p ercent lower than .
California utilities These two out-of-s tate utilities
produced very little e lectricity from oil and gas
They rely mainly on coal and nuclear." the report
sald . ·
It added that electricity rates today in Los
Ange les. which rehes on gas and oil. av.liige 212
times more than in Sacramento. which felS most
of its power from the Rancho Seco nuclear plant
and hydroelectric sources.
County plans jail
SAN JOSE (AP> -A ralse $17.7 m llllon
Sa•ta Clara County toward construction of a
gr¥d jury committee jail as authorities cope
ha• recommended the with crowded condlttufts
s ale of cou.nb land to at the existing facility'.
AP Worephoto
flhjf•(•f s f o f e11t•l1i119
Kasey Segraves . 13. son of "ereationist''
leader Kelly Segraves. testifies on the wit -
ness stand in Sacra'mento's Supe rior Court
evolution vs c reation trial. Kascv said that
his sixth-grade class teacher told him. con·
trary lo his religious he li efs . ··that we
evolvl:·d from the aDl' "
Panel expands
nurses' duties
SAN FRANCISCO t AP J In the hope of e asing
th<' ~horl age of bt•ds1dt· nursl·s. the slat(' Board of
RC'gistered NursinJ? has rulC'cl that California nurses
can prescribl• medit'ine .
State orfi c1als and some nurs ing leaders believe
lhdt expanding nurses n·sponsibilities will makt'
nursing a more des irable line ot work. and help al
leviatet,he shortage
Califorma·s 200.000 registe red nurses would be
e nough lo rill the need if they could be attracted to
beds1dC' nurs ing. official!. say
MANY Of' THE Nl'RSES. tired of long hours
and relat1vel} Im.\ pay. turn to higher paying Jnbs 1«1
public health. nursing t•duC'at1on or nurs ing ad
ministration. acl'ording to hospital officials
Top pa) for a nurH• at S<i n Francisco Gene ral
llospital 1s $22.204, officia Is said
California la" allows ho:-.pitals.. doctors a nd
nurst•s to dete rmint' "'standard procedures" lo gov·
ern nursing duties Thl' state• Board of Registered
:'l-l urs ing has dec1dl•d that nurst'S can prescribe such
items as bi rth control pills a nd antibiotics for tht•
t rea tnwnt of inf ecl mn
ThC' nurses would choose from a list of hosp1t<1l
<i pproved drugs. underlhC' board's plan
'That's what elm· tors do. and lhl•r<"s no reason a
nurse can·t do it."' said Barbara Brussla r. a nurse
and tht-l'xecul 1 ve sC'CrC'ta r:. of thC' registered nursing
boa rd
"THF. TR/\l!'il!'JG ~l'RSES haH• loday is what
doC'tors had only 50 yt'ars ago.·· "he s aid
Doctors h<1ve strong I~ opposed the C'hange. argu
ing that pat1l'nls dt•M•rve the best possible medical
ca rt>. and that onl.' phys1t•1a ns can provide it
··You can have a s ituation where a high school
gradual<' with two ~·c•ars of j unior C'ollege education
1s prescribing. and that ·s a vc·ry dehC'ate. sens1t1ve
an•a ... said a spokc•sman for thC' C<Jliforni a Medical
.\ssociat1on
"How far can ~ou t<Jke this to complicated
ht>a rl su rger~ ., Whc•re clo you draw lht• line"··
Officials say onC' of ever~ five hC'ds1de nursing
J<>bs in the slate 1s vacant. and. because of the
shortage. some patwnts huvc hc•l'n refused ad-
mission fort n•al mC'nt l'' en to 1ntens1 ve cart'
PUC ends probe
of utility ads
SAN FR ANC I SCO
(AP) The' California
Public l'til1t1es Com
mission has once again
halted a probe of ad-
vertising by powC'r com
panies.
"It has not been dem
on s tratcd that direc t
ing the labeling of utility
advertisements with
respect to whethe r the
s hareh o ld e r s o r
ratepayers pay for them
is in lhe public interest or
reasonable," the P 'C
~aid. .
Originally begun in
1976. the investigation
waa resume d in No·
vember 1918. The PUC
wanted to know whether
gas and electric utilities
in the state should be re
quired to identify who
p aid ro~ their ads
customers or
s lol'kholders
The co mmi ssio n
din•cted its staff to ex
plo re the reasibillty and
cost of preparing an in
rormation pamphlet ex
plaining the agency's
ratemaking procedures.
current policy on ad
vertising expenditures
by utiUlies and the way in
which expenses are al·
located b e tween
ratepay e rs and
sh areholders .
Ba. hai' fire· side"ba -'hifl(e)r-.sid\ n·
Hunhnoton C..nter
Mall today thru
Mar 8
C.11142-5171.
Put • few word• lo work for ou.
.
' ,,
.
Informal djsc:usslon about the Baha'i Faith (founded 1863, bv,
Baha'u'llah) and Its prlnclpfes of world unity, th• oneness of
mankind, and the essential agreement of all religions. Sometimes ac-
companfed by a short, Informative talk. Usually attended by a
diverse group of friendly, Interested people. Open to all. SYNONYMS
see •bsorblno, thought-provoking, f un, t nllghtenlng. See also PMCe,
Unity, Love, Equality, World Government, Justke. · .
BAHA'I F!RESIDEI FRIDAYS. I P.M.
NEWPORT BEACH 840-9010
•
Orange Coast DAILY Pll.OTffhursday. March 5. 1981 s
Smog inspections near.
State Senate committee OKs legislation
SACRAMEN1'0 <API Legislation to require
annual inspections of auto smog equipment has
passed the Transportation Commltte(' of the s tate
Senate.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is
holding up about $850 million in highway and
sewage funds until California adopts s uch inspec
lions for the San Diego. Los Angeles, Fresno. San
Francisco and Sacramento areas But the
Legislature has consistently declined to do so.
Tuesday's 7 1 vote sent SB33 by Sen Robert
Pres ley. D-R1vers1de. lo the Finanl'e Committee.
whic h could be less receptive.
P RESLEY SAID A series of amendments ap.
proved by the committee may have weakened
.. quality control" provii:.1ons
"We're .ioing to have to evC:Jluale each one' of
those a me ndme nts.·· he said. addinl{ that hl.' ma~
seek to n·vcrs(' some changes
The bill calls f• the usl' of local ser vice sta
tions and garages to test 1960 and later car~ and
light trucks to ensure that they meet e mission
st andards
Originally, it would havt> authorized a lhret'
pronged system that tncludcd cC'nlralizt·d tes ting
stations But Presle) re "role the bill in efforts lo
simplify 1t and soflc'n criticism from T ransporta
tion Committee m embt·rs
Most of the amendme nts approved by the cori;-
mittee were sought by garage and ser vice stutlao
owners. • I
One proposed by Sen. Ray Johnson. R·Ch1 eq.
would allow n{'w cars sold outside the fi ve urbitr.
areas to meet federal emission standards im.tear
of the generully tougher California lim1L.,
Another by Sen John Briggs. R-Fullertol
would allow Sl'rvicet 1nstcad of buying new equ1
m enl that s upporters say 1s mor(' tampe
resistant I
Represent:.ill"es of t ht• California Serv1cl' St~
twn Council con t ended that nt'" equ1pmt·~
"ouldn'I p rt'\ <·nl a me<'hanit from ragging ll'st r1
suits I
TWO AMENDME"'TS by Seu Ollie Spera'4
R-1.ong Beat·h. dropp<•d a requirement that tt·~tef
h ave magnetic lap<' recording device~ to presen · ·
data. and t'hm1nall'd ant'" offi«e 1nknd1:d lo ove
SN' the program
Tht• St·rnt'l' St&ilion Council ~aid lh<· pn•st·1
Rurl•au of Automotive Ht·pa1rs <·ould handh• lh ·
p1 ogram. hut lull s ponsor-. swd th1>1 l' "a~ conn·r
that tht· hurt· Ju "J-. too fril'ncfl~ "ilh garag
ownprs
Tht.• tomm1llt•t• ab11 Jppro\t•d a Brigg~ amt·n
nH·nl expanding lht• program to 1960 <1 nd later <:al
an<J light trut·k.., ll had .,1arll'il \\Ith lh<• 1969 mod I
.\ l'LI r
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiliililiiiii; : ~ at11e thaek i~;c1°c~;, ·I
HI -Fl -~ :1
suPER
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Stereo Receiver Slashed 44 °10 !
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Reg.
359.95
Buy now and get a receiver with the powe1 IP
easily drive two speal<ers plus lwo maqne11t
phono inputs that let you use two turntahtcs
Also gel conlrots lor recordinq with two t,1pe
decks n 31-2087
VISA
CHAH(;l II
IM O .... I ., , 0111 .\
• 40-watts per channel. min. rms into
8 ohms. 20-20.000 Hz. 0.06% THO
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t peak.ers al optimum Tower design puss d' Two 8 ac11ve woofers he1dgh1319rw~~~~Ji~~~rs1on tweeter deliver a an a ss the audio spec· balanced response aero t real sound even
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tram amplifiers with only 10 ~a h P #40·2025
nel. Genuine walnut veneer inis
Reg. Separate Items 809.80
• STA-820 AM FM Receiver
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• LAB-120 Belt-Drive Turntable with
Hinged Oust Cover and $12.95·
Value Realistic ADC OLMJO MK Ill
Cartridge
31·2087 40·2025 42·2973
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E~ito~~,~~~-------------T·h·o·m···s·P·.H··.'.~.'.P.Ub·l·IS·M·r-T·~-.~.K."-v.11 /·E·d~U-or .., ··--.-~ Thursday. March 6, 1981 earo.ra Krelblch/Edltorl11 P-ot Editor
B/F
Orange Coast Dally P1101
School librar i es
deserve priority
• Huntington Beach officials are proposing a merger of
the library systems of the city and the Huntington Beach
Union High School District.
, The idea is to save money by eliminating duplication
in book purchases. School district officials have agreed to
discuss the proposal.
But it appears from the city's initial suggestions that
most new library purchases would end up under city
direction. away from high school campuses, at the Cen-
;tral Library or three city branches.
More details of this proposal need to be worked out.
Although the idea of saving tax dollars is laudable, it
has not been explained clearly how this merger could be
done without seriously weakening the library system of
!oc al high schools.
It seems that the availability of a sound library
·system in public schools is essential to qu~lity education.
This merger concept does not appear to insure that, at
least not at this stage.
Re freshing st yle
Eugene Van Dask has been on the Fountain Valley
City Council for only a month, but already he has proved
to be an original thinker. .
With a $1.5 million city budget sbortf all looming for
the 1981·82 fiscal year, Van Dask was quick to .call ~or
creation of a citizens' committee that could seek financial
help outside city hall.
The plan won immediate suppart from Van Dask's
fellow council members. This committee may bring some
fresh ideas to a local government that sometimes loses
touch with the people it serves.
More recently. Van Dask made an unusual personal
decision.
The new councilman has arranged to donate bis coun-
cil pay to two local youth organi.zations, the. Fountain
Valley Girls Club and the Fountain Valley Hig~ School
Band. The band is still paying for hefty expenses involved
in its recent participation in President Reagan's in-
auguration.
Van Dask said the two groups will continue to split
his city pay, $252.50 per month, so long as be remains on
the council. He currently is serving an appointed term
that expires in April 1982.
In his first month on the council. Van Dask has dis -
played self-confidence. dedication to his city and a
refreshing personal style.
Spills 111ay be warn ing
Huntington Beach has experienced a couple of oil
$pills with serious potential damage in recent weeks -
not to mention an equally serious 2,000-gallon under-
'
round gasoline leak.
In one of the oil spills an underground line ruptured
n the Seacliff residential area, causing about 12,000
allons of crude oil mixed with gas and water to flood
;utters.
Another spill occur red in the downtown part of the ~ity less than two weeks earlier and caused the te rn ·
ii>orary closure of Main Street. p Though the spills didn't amount to anything serious.
ij.hey seemed to reinforce the city's position in a con· ~roversy with Gulf Oil Co. ~ City officials have gone to court in attempts to
ierminate the use of the tine that runs from vessels
ocked at sea and extends underneath city property near
he Huntington Beach Inn.
f The dispute developed after a 25-year lease between
t!the city and Gulf expired last December. The city had ~een collecting $2,400 per year from Gulf but has been
[
• eeking to increase the fee substantially.
Officials contend that the money the city received
imply was not worth the risk of a possible environmental
'disaster a long the beach.
· That might just be legalese rhetoric, but the city's
sition might be taken more seriously in view of the re·
cent spills.
• pinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
ther views expressed on this page are those of therr authors and
rt1sts. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilo t. P 0 x 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boy d/Smithsonian
By L. M. BOYD
Q . Wh y did James
Smithson, the rich European,
choose the United States as
.the place to found the
~Smithsonian Institution when
l'he'd never set foot in thls
country?
A. Maybe because nobody
here used the titles of nobility.
He is said to have been
highly conscious of the fact 1 that he was the illegitimate
son of the Duke of Northum-
berland and Elizabeth Keate
Macie, a descendant of King
Henry VII. But bis lJ.
legitimacy deprived him of
the noble titles. He died
childless. and when his
nephew s ubsequently
• likewise died childless, the
Onc e automobile
manufacturer• atrove
{o be tops ln sales and
styltn1 Today they
aeem to be compeUne
to re])Ort the lar1nt
deficit. D.M.
$508,318.46 in gold from hi$
estate was sent to the United
States as he'd willed it.
Those young men who've
long dreamed of growing up
to join the Merchant Marine
to go to sea can be expected
to have a tough lime of it.
The total count of s uch
seamen worldwide is drop·
ping drastically these years.
Report is only about 50 new
jobs open up annually now.
The fast-growing pine trees
used to make paper mosUy
come from com merclal
forests, planted specifically
for harvesting as any other
cash crop. U recycled paper
cuts 4back the demand for
such trees, the growers most
probably will go into other
lines of business. Recreation
real estate maybe. This la
explained by one Donald H.
Bump, Ph.D., who muea the
point that there are good
reasons to re~ycle paper, but
saving tree'a isn't one of them.
Q. Among women bowlers,
what's the average score?
A. 131. That's amateurs .
The average lady amateur Is
37 years old with two
children, lncldentally.
Every Amish bouH la
backtd by an Amish outhOUH
-the religioa prohlblt.a indoor
plumbing -and every Amish
outhouMll peinted white.
Earl Waters
Clamp some lids on public pay
...
A legtslatlve proposal has
been made to boost the saJary
or the governor to ·sw.ooo. He
now is paid $49,100. Included in
the measure would be equally
s ubstantial
raises for the
lieutenant
governor,
secretary of
s tate, con-
troller and
treasurer, all
of whom
would be
upped from
$42 ,500 to
$70,000 as would the attorney
general who now receives $47,500.
This propoeal follows closely
on the heels of recommendations
made by a so-ealled President's
commission to ra:lae the salaries
of congressmen rrom the pres·
ent $62,000 to •.ooo and make
similar increases in other top
--
rederaJ poslUona lncludln1 the
cablnet members.
Such lar1eu makes one
wonder what trees these 1uy11
are swinginf f'roqs. Have those
in government become like
Marie Antoinette, so insensitive
to the people that they believe
people are wllllnllY permltUnl
themaelves to be taxed into pov·
erty so that they can live in lux-
ury 7 Don't they read the
statlltics complied by the U.S.
Labor Department and the In·
ternal Revenue Service?
ACCO&DING lo U.S. Labor
atatlstlcs tbe averace waee
earned by ru11.ume workers in
maoufacturlnl Industries last
year was $283 a week while
those in other non·agricultural
private employment averaged
only $233 a week.
The same source reports the
median annual income of all
,
THE lJGHf M ™IS END Of Tut llJNNfL
Mailbox
males wu SlS,000 whJle the me·
dlan for women was only $1,800
and only 22 percent of the people
bad family lncornes in excess of szs.ooo.
lntemaJ Revenue figure• show
that out of the more than 200
mUljon population in the U.S.
fewer than 70 million riled ln·
come tax returns and only 12
percent of those bad incomes
over $30,000 apd leas than 3 per·
cent bad incomes over $50,000
with .005 percent reporting in·
comes in excess of $100,000.
HOW THEN can it be that
those in government are so prec·
ious, prqvide services so valua-
ble, that they must be granted
incomes equalling those of less
than 2.5 percent of the nation's wealthiest?
Jt was not taxation without
representation alone which
caused the American Revolu·
lion. The desire to be rid al tbe
trapplnp of royalty and •hed
the tltlea of nobiUty loomed just
as large in the minds of the col·
onlsts and they wrote into the
Constitution an absolute ban on noblUty.
ls the freedom from the op-
pression of a caste systero so
valiantly won by the colonists
two hundred years ago to be
permitted to be taken away by
those in government awarding themae~ves royal incomes? Are
we to address the congressmen
and legislators as ''Milord" and
other lesser bureaucrats as "Sir
Knight?" Ben Franklin must be
spinning in his grave.
THE SALARY of the governor
stands at 100 percent more than
it was 3Q years ago. Perbapcs,
althol.lgh that is a salary enjoyed
by no more than 3 percent of the
people, inflation is such that it
might be raised slightly even
though it is safe to predict that
no . matter wh at the pay the
caliber of those seeking the of·
fice won't change.
But whatever the salary for
the governor may be. it should
serve as the ceiling for all other
public offices, state and local, in
the state. In fact, no other public
office should pay more than 90
percent of the governor's salary.
UNFORTUNATELY, public
pay has gotten completely out of
hand with minor office holders
such as police and fire chiefs
city and county managers, and
school administrators now re·
ceiving far more than the gov.
e rnor. And. absent an economic
crash similar to the 30s. there
seems no easy way back
That is no excuse for not
clamping a lid on public pay the
next tin:ie the salary of the gov·
er no r 1s changed . Anything
short of that will be criminal
for it will pave the way to
economic collapse or worse
Bilingual education deprives children
To the Editor:
RecenUy, you printed an a rti-
cle from Bernice Walsh regard-
mg her views in favor of bi·
lingual remedial education in our
public schools Ms Walsh refers
lo the .. great melting pot" which
1s or s ho uld be -the
Amen can Way. However. H
e ducators do not e ffectively
teach the English language to
non ·English speaking citizens.
we have not a "melting pot" but
a "Mulligan 's Stew" not
cohesiveness and togetherness
but separateness and apartness.
As Ca lifor ni a Sen . S .1.
Hayakawa recently stated. a
com mon language English -
is the great unifying factor in
this nation of people from such
var ious ethnic backgrounds.
culture and languages.
Sen. Hayakawa, born of immi-
grant parents, admits he prob-
al"ily would not have obtained
so high a political office -and
before that so high an educa-
' tional offi ce or have become
such a fine semanticist if the bi-
lingual policies being touted to-
day were in effect in his school
days. Rather than being of help
to him, it would have been a dis-
service.
I BELIEVE the ethnic groups
s hould retain their culture
and their language -but its
people should be taught English
and taught in it. I think It weuld
be a much wi ser choice to
carefully, gently and intelllgenl·
ly teach non· English speaking
children to read. write and
speak English correctly than It
would be to not do it. We do
t hese children a great dis ·
service. in my opinion, if we do
less. And I believe that bilingual
education ls self·dereatlng.
Children are more adaptable,
teachable and capable than we
often give them credit for beint;
and while I truly sympathlle
with the problems a non·Engllsh
speaking child would have, I
believe that, wltb the proper
teaching In En1U.h, the great
majority would "make the
grade'' -that la learn to com-
municate In Enillah -be proud
(and rl1ht1y 10) of thia ac·
com pltahment and io on -
mal\y -i. JN•t helshtl. I am
aure of it. GeneraUons or paat
tmml1rant people attest to t.hll.
They are ltYlnf proof.
The man or woman wbo wrlta
and spea.Q the &nllltll lancua1e
correctly wtU obvlOUll)' bave lbe
bi11e1t ol llfeUm• advantq ..
over a man or woman who dote
not. Tb.ls lt lotlcal, la tt not?
Therefore, It would ... m to me,
the objtet al publie edueaUcn la
Lbe United Statea la todaJ wbat
It bu alw111 belll -to M&p ~· America,. acllool to won ud live tD tbe A......_~:aodW.cte. maade tM u.1ect -. ii ta..
En•Uilt ........... trllkll ta._
ly be accomplished by the
English language being taught
in the public schools
HAZEL H SCHWAB
Not llw a11tlaor
To the Editor:
On Sunday. Feb. 22. a scathing
letter about the Newport Beach
Police Department appeared in
this section, allegedly signed by
m e.
The purpose of today's letter
is to let the record state that I.
William F . Fawcett Jr .. did not
write that letter and the
signature was forged .
In no respect do I hold the Dai·
ly Pilot responsible for they did
check the name on the letter
against a proper corresponding
address.
But I do wish to state that my
own views of the Newport Beach
P o l ice D e partm e nt are
diametrically opposed to those
espoused in the forged letter. As
president of the Orange County
Red Cross Youth Council I have
had the opportunity to see the
workings of many law enforce·
ment agencies and Newport
Beach is one of the finest.
WILLJAM F. FAWCETT JR
StMlln~d
To the Editor:
Gov. Brown knew what he was
talking about when he labeled
the California Coastal Com ·
mi ssion "a bunch of
bureaucratic thugs ."
I was absolutely stunned when
Eric Metz, who Identified
himself as a spokesman for the
Coastal Commission, stood up in
the recent public hearing on
Bolsa Chica before the Orange
County Planning Commission
and denounced the county for its
efforts to develop a rational plan
whl ch would consider the
economy and needs of this coun·
ty for recreational access to thf!
coast, u well as for addlUonal
wildlife reserve.
It waa my impression that this
is what the Coastal Act is all
about. People voted ror Pn>PoSi·
tlon 20 back ln 1972, ettabli1hln1
the Coutal Comm1ulon. to taln
public acceaii to the coast, and to
preaene -where feasible -
wtldWe JWOUTCU.
Now comes the likes t>f Mets,
who aaid be w .. apeaklne for the
state Coutal Commlaslon. and
denounce1 the exten1tve erforu
of the rnponaJble local aovem-
mtnt to provide a balance
between the needa of the people
ind concern for the envlro9·
ment.
llNCS Tll£ Comml11ion ttMI/ wu al1pptd back by lta own
••••• COUDl•I ror IU Ill·
traord.lnary attempt to bloet
Oraa1• Couaty'a plaanlai ef • lorw lMt March, tt .,,..,.. &o
mt tUt MIU tpollt ~ tor
lllmHlf. Wlaat aetJoe'.:Of· tlM
Coastal Commission. I as k,
authorized him to give his
rambling denunciation of local
governmental efforts?
Frankly. my s hock at Metz'
testimony was only exceeded by
my reaction to your report of
this hearing. Your article noted
that 300 persons attended. but
neglected to report that the a u·
dience burs t into spontaneous
applause at the conclusion of
Signa l Landmark's presentation
of its plans for a combination of
marina, 300 acres of restored
wildlife area. plus parks, open
space waterways and private
development -all designed to
be self supporting.
You also failed to report that
the Orange County Central
Labor Council, representing
85,000 members. endorsed the
Signal plan. And maybe it would
t ake too much ink to note
marina support by four inland
cit y chambers of commerce.
plus spokesmen for the boat
building indus try and the
respected Orange County Coast
Association.
STEW A RT CASE
Word Hl-rllo•r•
To the Editor:
Your headline. "Two HB djs.
trict principals get ax," was, in
m y opinion, ill·chosen and in-
sensitive. Perhaps it was written
in haste, but I want to em-
phasize that negative and poorly
worded headlines unfairly rlavor
the reader's reception of the
article that follows.
It has been our experience
that Bob Barker writes with
clarity, sensitivity, accuracy,
and fair·mindedness most of the
time. I have assured people In
our school district that he was
not responsible for this headline.
The news editor might have
picked "Four HB school ad-
ministrators get c ut !" This
phrase would have more ac·
curately reflected the content of
.the article. With public educa·
tion suffering unduly from
budget cuts, we need all the
good, positive publicity we can
get . . . at least we don't have to
be blasted with unnecessarily
negaUve headlines.
I do not believe that the news
editor's words were deUberalely
intended to hurt. J am su11est-
ln& only that Cs)he 1lve a UtUe
more mature thought to thetr
Impact upon the reading public.
PATRICIA F . COHEN
&leee••l•• .. rtft'lftl
To the Editor:
Tbe concern for the educaUoo
of HwiUnitoo Beac.h younpteH
w11 lest than deep dunn1 tbt te-
cent t .. cbera' union contract.
Tb• t•achen decided that one ol
lbelr beneQu ln tbe contract
abo.ald be fewer hours •PHt
teaeblnf our cblldten, aad man time lpeM OD "pl .... wbl to
teaebour~··
Twenty mtnutes has been cut
from every school day fo r fourth
and fifth graders so that the
lt>achers will have more .. plan·
ning time." This is in addition Lo
t he planning time scheduled
twice a month already It is also
a fact that if a planning day falls
·on a S('hool holiday our children
lose even more classroom time.
The planning day is shifted to
another day of the same week on
which the holiday falls .
THIS FACT brings to mind the
question that has been plaguing
parents for some years : Why
are our schools turning out slu· de~ts who can't read, cipher, or
write a cogent paragraph? With
the ins tructional time our
youngsters used to have, they
weren't exactly knocking the top off standard tests. How do you
think they will do now?
With as much paid ·'planning
time" as the teachers have, we
as parents have the right to de·
mand only excellence from
them. Are we payi ng our
teachers to teach. or are they
getting paid to plan what to
teach!
There's nothing that can be
done now about the current con·
tract with the teachers' wtion.
What we as parents intend to
carry out is this: Never acain
will the quality of our children's
education be bartered away to
pacify an already well endowed
labor union. Learning takes time, and slowly but surely this in-
valuable commodity is being
taken away from o u r
youngsters. We as parents, will
not tolerate one more minute cut
from our children's instructional
time
CAROL BERES
JOANN JARVIS
Ca•p•lp , .... ,, ....
To the Editor:
Now more than ever the ~
pie need presidential candidates
who are financed by the
American people and not large
private interest.a.
How can an elected official ii·
nore large contributors wtio
boutht and paid ror the election
process? The candidate hu aold
the vote to the special onet with
the most influencing power • • .
money.
Pleue do yourself and 10W'· •
election process a favor and
check olf "yes" on your Federal
1040 tu form. The one dollar of
the toes you already owe will
help hnance a campal1n that the
taxpayen wlU benefit from and
not corporate monopolies.
LINDA J. PARNELL
-
•
MORE OPINION • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, March 5, 1981
Nicholas von Hoffman
Who speaks for the middle class miJJions?
°'he pluperfect picture of the
caatrated American la the one
that appean on your televialoa
screen at an announcer says thla
11 Barflee Drlpna1le 1peaklnJ ln
repJy to a Channel 10 edltorial oo
behalf ot himself.
The man then trips through a
minute of prose with the poise of
a hostage in
front of an
Iranian firing
squad. At the
end comes
the an ·
nouncer
again saying,
"That was
Barflee Drip·
naele speak-
ing for
himself."
Even if it isn't said snidely
with a lip curl, those words.
Art Hoppe
"apoutnc for hhnsell" tell you
this la a guy who bas been
pollticaUy snipped twixt the
le8s. That'• why they put blm oo
agaioat a nat blue backlfOU,Dd
and not on a set which mi1bt ln·
dicate be belonged somewhere,
that he was part or 1omethln1,
and not a contexUess human be·
ing who looks particularly dis·
mal because they never bother
to give those who speak for
themselves a dab of makeup.
TO BE LISTENED to, lo be
taken seriously you must have
scene and symbol. Before the
president comes on they show
his official seal and then cut to
him in the Oval Office with the
insignia or power all about him.
Lesser persons have less in -
timidating signs but you can tell
they should be listened t<?
because the '8ilhty names ol
our society , Chevrolet ,
Porcelana fade cream or Pepei-
Cola, sponsor them.
Barflee Drlpnagle is uo-
sponsored. Unsponsored and
also unannounced. They tell you
in advance when t.be Important
people are going to talk; their
coming onto your TV sets is
heralded beforehand.
Until re<:ently Poland was a
land populated by Barnee Drip-
nagles only they didn't even get
to pop on the air at odd hours lo
speak one minute of nervous
prose "on behalf of
thems elves." Enter Lech
Walesa. One of Solidarity's im·
portant demands was to be let
on the television so that the
union, apparently comprising
the great majority or Polish
workers, could speak. Tbere
would be no "This is Lech
Walesa speakina for himself."
In the ma11 society he who
speaks for himself speaks for no
one, so where is the American
versioo of Solidarity?
MOST OF THE people in our
country are without an or-
ganized, powerful voice. That
has been commented on often
enough as far as Hispanics and
blacks al the bottom of the up-
side-down i.ncome pyramid are
concerned, but it is as true or
more so of the white collar
millions.
the political coalract, the basic
economic aareement or the put
20 or 30 yeart, lJ in the process of
bein1 radically amended or even
ripped up.
Poaaibly a good thln1. The ar·
rangements brought into being
in the Truman-Ehenhower
period can't be expected to
serve forever. What is so dis-
turbing, though, is that the mid·
die class millions have no agent
to bargain ror them. They are in
a position not so djfrerent from
the one the Polish workers were
in against their government pre.
Solidarity, pre-Lech Walesa.
of the president cooferrint with
billionaires, the beads of slant
corporations and trade aaaocla·
lions. but not with repreaen·
ta ti vea or the middle clan
millions. There are no sucb
representatives because there
are no such organizatlona to
choose them.
This Is not a plea to save the
poverty pimps, the Beltway ban-
dits as the government contrac·
tors are called in Washington,
and certainly it is not a masked
pitch for the indolent, ineffectual
and dishonest bums who take
up too large a fraction of our
civil service.
But there is more al stake
than letting the Reaganile
Ayatollah s loos e on the
bureaucrats. Arrangements are
being made that will touch the
lives of the hard workers and the
ha rd pressed everywhere.
Fathers rarely understand
They have no representation
in bargaining with their
employers and none in the
palaces of government where
the great and the grand are pre-
ceded by liveried trumpeters
playing fanfares . The startling
paucity of organjzation of the
while collar. midd le c lass
millions has been an ongoing
condition for many years but
this year is different. This year,
EVERY DAY more omdal
announcements are made cut-
ting t.be standard of living for
white collar people. They are lo
,ay more for fuel, their children
are not lo get college loans. their
mortgage subsidies are to be
withdrawn. Some of these may
be good, some bad. but what is
unarguably bad is that the
millions have no part in making
these decisions. We see pictures
If they are to sacrifice, they
should have as much voice in
how and when and how much as
the Polish people and for that we
need an American Walesa.
"Look. Daddy, I'm engaged"
c ried my daughter, Malphasia,
flashing an obviously phony
diamqnd-and·sapphire ring the
siz~ of an ostrich egg.
"Not to that zither player with
the new wave band,'' I said,
frowning .
"You know
how your
mother and I
f ee l about
that weirdo."
''You mean
Fingers
Shadrow? Oh.
I haven't seen
Fingers in
months. No,
my new fiance's name is
Charles and you'll love him Dad-
dy. He's a real prince."
"THAT'S NICE," I said,
som ewhat mollified to hear
Fingers was out of the picture.
"And what's this Charlie fellow
do?''
"Do? Oh , he"s into shooting
and horses and things."
"He's retired? And this dirty
old man wants to marry a sweet
young 19-year-old thing like
you?''
''Daddy! He's only 32."
.. Well. that's al most old
enough lo be your father. To
think a daughter of mine would
marry an unemployed c rap-
shooting horse player.
"He do es n 't play the
horses. Daddy. He rides them.
As a matter of fact, he 's very
good at polo."
"That pays well ?"
"No, but he lives with his
family."
''Al 32, he still li ves with his
family? Are you sure he isn't
. . . Never mind. Just tell me
how this unemployed bum ex·
peels you to support him and his
polo ponies on your salary as a
kindergarten teacher ...
"ACTUALLY, he wants me to
quit my job. He says being mar-
ried to him and raising bis
children will be a full-time
career."
"Make that: this unemployed
male chauvini&t bum.''
"And. anyway, we'll be living
with bis family ... " "Wait a mmute. what's this
family of his do?"
··Do? WeU, they get a monthly
allotment from the government
and ... ".
·'The whole family 's on
welfare? And he wants you to
quit work and go on weUare with
Confused
by all the conflktins
food bargain claims?
\\"hen yo11 wm1t food bargains -prices
you can coun t on . the proof 1s m print
in the grocery ads in the Daily Pilot Shop the
Dally Pilot. get tl1e facts. compare . .
then yo11 knou: you·re really getting the most
for your money.
642-4321 Daily ~illt
him? My daughter, the welfare
mother!"
··But, Daddy, he says that
someday we'll have a palace of
our own and he'll treat me like a
queen."
"That 's what a ll idl e
dreamers say. And meanwhile,
he' II be out playing polo with the
boys . I've heard of welfare
cheats before. but playing polo
on welfare takes the cake."
"J don't care. Daddy. He has
great prospects. Some day he'll
take over the entire tamily
operation."
"Great! Then you'll be mar-
ried to the king of the welfare
cheats. Ob, the shame of it all. Malphasia •... "
But you kn ow the s e
headstrong girls. Now she's run
off t o some pla ce called
Clarence House where Charlie's
Fagin·like grandmother will in·
struct her in the family 's
fraudulent ways.
Oh, why couldn't she have
c hosen Fingers Shadrow in-
stead? A new wave zither player
may not be the cat's pajamas,
but I know I speak for every de·
cent parent everywhere when I pray tbat my daugber will
marry a man wbo bas at least
found honest work.
-------AIOUT -------AIOUT
1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNER
$5 ftft SUPERI
e77DINNERI (')
0 c ~
0 z
I
z
Good for lliree pieces of Juicy. goloen brown Kenlucky
Fried Chicken. plus slngle servings of cole slaw,
mashed polaloet and gravy. and a 1011 Lt mot two otters
per purchase Coupan gooc:I only tor comb1n11ton whole/
dllk orders. Customer pays all 1pp1tcable sales tu
Good tor none pieces of 1u1cy, golden brown Kentucky 2
Fried Chicken. with lour rolls. • l•rge cote slaw, • large :::i
m•ahed Pol•toes and a medium gravy L1m11 two offers O
per purchase Coupan good only tor combination whtlel U
•
dark orders Customer pays all applicable sales tax
Oller ekpores I March 15 1981 818
Procea m•y 111ry al Prtces may vary at par·
participating loci · 1 llclp1ting 1ocat1ona. Good __ lions. Good only in only In SOuthern
2= SOuthern Callloml1 1 Cal1forn11 where you see
where you see Arnerlca·s Flavorlte
Amerlca·s FleVOJlle Window Banner
Window Benner. • ..... _;...-.::::::;-;;;;;"'___ -
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natural
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at Great Earth Vitamin Stores.
~
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200
For the n ext six days only, a month's
supply of o ur f1nest naturalVitamin E
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custom er who brin~ in any empty
Vitamin bottle. It's that simple.
• Th e finest natural E
• plus eleven antioxidants to m ake the E work better
• our e xclusive environmen tal p rotection fo rmula
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Come into Great Earth Vitamin Stores and compare the
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If it's got
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you'll move
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Daily Pilot
classified
ad .Call
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f rlendly a d-
viser w ill
help you
turn your
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cash.
COSTA MESA STORE
370 E. 17th ~trPet
(next to Ralph•s ~arket)
(714)~534 , .
HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE
lOOM A'••• Ave.
I Ill tlae Albm18o .. c.ter 96N6"
' _____ t .
I
).
Orange Coa11 OAILY PILOT/Thursday. March 5, 1981
Rhone deposit hiked
ming•
t. Gov. Mike Curb,
ho owns a music
mpany, earned at
as t $184 ,000 from
usic in 1980, four
mes Curb's state
laty of $42,500 an-
, ally, according to
is financia l dis ·
losure statement
led this week.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -
Californians who fail to make
the credit muster wut have to
shell out a hefty deposit tor new-
ph one service from Pacific
Telephone Co., which was sad-
dled with $50 million in unpaid
bills last year.
The state Public Utilities Com·
mission agreed to allow the com·
pany lo eliminate a deposit by
credit-worthy customers while
r equiring a substantially In·
crea sed deposit for new-service
a pplicants who cannot meet
credit standards.
Pacific Telephone s aid it could
not collect S50 million from res·
identlal customers in 1980
five times the amount lost in
1970.
A bout 75 percent of uncollecta-
ble bills came from customers
who had service less than 13
months, the utility said. The new
billing rules granted by the PUC
Anthon'!~
SHOE SERVICE
for Handbags
Luggage & Zipper Repair
Regional Repair Center for
SPERRY -TOPSIDER
Don't throw away your
comfortable old tennis shoes
We repair and resole
all major brands.
will allow t.be utldty to Increase
service deposlll from the cur·
rent S25 to a ran1e of $55 to SSS
for customers who do not meet
the credit tests.
Under the rules, deposit.a will
not be required of applicants If
they can meet three of seven
credit tests:
O wning a h o m e i n
California
-Owning a car or truck reg-
istered in thestate.
-Continuing employment for
two or more years with a cur-
rent employer.
-Possessing a plajor national
cr edit card or a maj or national
oil company credit card.
-Ha ving another charge ac·
count acceptable to the com-
pany.
-Having a bank checking ac·
count or a s avings account with
a bank. savings and loan or
credit union.
-Being ~ years of aae or
older.
Applicants who cannot paSJ
the credit screening will be of-
fered the chance to f rovide a
guarantor in lieu o deposit.
Those with prior or concurrent
residential service and with a
good payment record would not
need lo make the depostt.
Other provis ions granted the
utility in Its biUin& proceaa
would e xtend the p'yment
period for bills up lo 10 days for
customers with good payment
records and eliminate the ad-
vance payment of installation
charges lo residential customers
with an established service rec·
ord.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
2FOR 1
CHEESE SALE
.:.~.~~~~-~! ... 2/2.29
~.~~.·~~.~~· .... 2 /3.19
~~ ............... 2/2.19
~~~ ............. 2/2.29
Good Mint M9dl I. I ti I
ff i~k~r1 farms.
OF OHIO
FASlllON
ISLAND
WESTCLIFF
nrt:N PLAZA Nf'.,POrt fi•1rh
640·6030
DAll.Y ltlh and lrvoM. N~wpon e ... .to
11o1tLSON
·1.ouTl" nuow
TENNIS
BALLS
WOF 32.39
642·0972
Contact Len•••
Eyewear Styling
Refracting I
Prescribing
Dr. Lou Elder
OPTOMETRIST
642-0720
1124 Irvine Ave.
Newport Beach
NISH SliFOOO
AMD
SHYICI DIU
Srtc:IALS
Freah Hot
Fried Chicken
1a.piece
f•mtty pek 5.99
WllTCU.. PLUA ................. ~ ......
Quality ln f a1bJon and 1ernces with that personal touch
?"
2 Mesans
win art
• pn~es
Coala' Meaa High
School aentors Mar~ Fisher and Mike Paf
have won scholarship& ·
to the Laauna Beach
School of Art for entries
in tbe Color It Orange
exhibition, a countywlde
student art show at the
Laguna Beach Museum
of Art.
•
CALIFORNIA •
A MIME -Pamela Huntley has fun
with her skills as well as earning a living
-by performing pantomime.
lntormotlon for trw "Pfal• ot lno Doy" It wPC>llotd l>Y Mike ForMty, oulhor of tno !tit ocllllOl'I ol Ille "W"°'t WhO of Per\ONllH CI Ctlllornl• L.I< ..... PIOIH ..
They and 26 other
Newport-Mesa Unified
School District students
whose work waa accept· ed for the show will be .._ _________________ _
honored with the i r
parents at a reception
Saturday at the Laguna
museum.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Works by Reggs P1CT1T1ou1au11N1u NAMl ITATIMINT A d a m s 0 I N e w p 0 rt Th• loll-4"9 per\an It Clolnv .,,,.,
PICTITIOUS 8UllNESS
NAME STATEMENT
Harbor High, Colleen .,.,~,:: MANAGEMEHT seRv•c.Es
Brahms of Costa Mesa i.1s1 p,..1116 LAne, Hun11nv1ot1 au<"·
High and Isa Bischoff. 011~~::.!:'4"-1,.., Cottrell. 1m1
Joe Campobasso. Loon Phelpt Lane , Hunt1n9ton &u<h, Phi and Gina Tucci of ca111ornl• '1Mt
The loll-1"9 pe.-, ll CIOino bull·
ntUH
V/lNL.EV"S GIFTS, IM7 U11lwru
Ave , Wttlmlntter. CA. t21o1J
Cornelus L . ve11 Cle• l.ff. t M? Uni ver\e Ave . Wu 1mlnlter, CA .,,..,
T W._._1 U 'ddl Sch l Tl\lt buslneu It c...-lotd llV •" on e huue llll e 00 dlvldual
Thi\ llv\lllHl Is <OftOuetoCI by .,, on-
dlvldu•I
Cotnel~ L. v.,, Cler Lu earned honorable men· o.c-... Mather cot1re11 T"h \I.It-I ., .. flied wltr> lht
County Clerti: of Or.,,91 Cov11ty on ... ., u. ""
. tb h h' h Tllll ~emenl WH filed Wllll Ille tion at e S OW, W lC Cou111, Cterll ot 0.011119 c...,ntv on openaSunday. Fo11 2, u11 l't-""*' Publl•Nd Orange Coo•t Ooily Piiot. Olhort c-fot U f\llllllon were &red 8•-. Joule Flot.,., Mar99re1 HonMn and Clnov lcf\lkawo of Costa
MHaHlgh. ,
-To4d Herm.n ond Davia L•M of
NewPorl Horllor H ltfl.
-Trev 8oNwr Of Horllor Vl<l w
ElementMv.
-D•IM'• &Mnet, Aov lllolle. s.. .. ,. Bulle•. Don 8..tb, Lori Ctorll, Charlie Colllnt, Jot>n Cotrl-. Steve MelYln,
Mike Novtor. 8111'1' Reml"9tot1, Mike Aou e lllnl and Yollo Tovamo 01
TeWlnllle 5c-.
A class project direct -
ed by Tina Reinemann,
Killybrooke kin -
dergarte n teacher, also is
part of the exhibit which
closes March22.
10 named
finalists
T e n Newpo rt· Mesa
School District seniors
h ave b ee n n a m e d
finalists in the National
Merit Scholarship com-
petition.
They are Julea Har·
rell and Robert Holmen.
both of Corona del Mar
High; Lisa Dahill, Jim
Rasfeld and Sera fina
Sands, all of Costa Mesa
High, and Laura Forbes,
Ralph GaJantine, Josep
Mader. David Oelh and
Lisa Payne, a ll of
Newport Harbor High.
PUBUC NOTICE
Pullll"*' Or-Coe ti Oolly Piiot F eo 2•, Morch S, 12, 1', 1911 Foll. 2•. -rch S, 12, 1', t"t --··
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTfTIOUI a USINIH
NAMI STATIMINT
Tne followlnt per1ons er• aolno
11\islnen et:
TROPICANA APARTMENTS,
101> Sovth ~rd Strfft, Santo Ano,
Cotllornlo.
Jtnton c. -Judy L. Chen. 11n Cllfh ld• Orlve, Hunllnoton 8tocll,
Colllornl• .,,._
8ow Toy -Wol Pint Toy. 12111
Grend Crou Lone, HoullOl'I TuH 11on.
Thll l>uMnes• It <ondu<led llY 011 111
dl•lduol
JOManC CMn
Thi' i.l•tl'tntnl w~ t1lld """" 1"-
County Cl••ll ol Oran91 Cov11ty 011
Fol> 10, 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
N11JU
PICTITIOUI 8UllNllS
NAMI 5TATIMINT
Tllo followlnt perM>11s are doing
bu\ine\s .,.
PROFESSIONAL 8001(1(EEPfNG
SERVICE COMP/lNY, 1001 Wnt Lo
H•llr• &oultVa<d, LO H•llt•, C/l •ou1 :
KWA. inc.,• ea1uorn1e corpor•tton, 1001 W•ll LA Hollo'• Bouleva rd. l..I
Hallro,C/l ~l
Tf\11ll<Nnes•11 conouc1..i llY • '°' PO•allon
l(WR. Inc
Robet1 w l(rau
Pre\ldenl
Thi\ 'l•t..,.,..,.t w•\ HI.CS Wtth ttw
County Cfert ol Or-County 011 Jon 1•. t .. t
Fl Ml .. PtUMI$ Pullhlh9CI Or-Coo1I Oooly Polot.
Pulllllht<I Or-Coe•I 011ly PllOI Ftll 12.1•.n .Morcf\S. "" Fell U, "· U , Morch s. '"1 ht It 111-t l
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS auStNESS
NAME STATIMENT l'ICTITIOUS SUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th• tollow1no oer1on\ •'• do•no f P\t tottow•"9 pers.on\ •r• dlo•nQ
bu\1ntu ., bu\1ntu ~
PARTY TIMERS. 1!>17 MOU Fora J &B CONSTRUCl lON llHWl'lol
Or . Huf"Ul'Qlon B••<h C•llfor"••l 11tr Avenut-F 7 (O\t• M ir\•
'l'lU • Cololorn11 'llUI
Jeffrey T•ylor Huttuw. 1)11 MOii J E•\ten Enltrpriie\ Inc , •
Ford Oriv•. HunltnQton 8t•<h, Calftorn1• <0t1>0t•t1on, ltlS W h1tl1tr
C•l1rorni• 9'2M' Avtnut, F 7, (Mt• ~w. C•l1torma
Wllloom Owi9"1 Croowoll, Jr , 1.01 '1611
M•cArthur Ave, Apt 30E S•n•• An•. fh1\ W\1nP.u I\ conctu< tf'O Dy a cor
Calllornl• poraloon
Tnll bu1ln1u I\ conducted by • J ELSTEN ENTERPRISE S.
gentrol JtOl'lM rll\op. INC
7-ltroy T Hulllne I Steven L Jol\11111u,
Thi\ •tot-• WO) llllCI wllll '"" PrHlo.<11
County Cl•rk ol Oran"' Counly on T "" "•lomenl *•' Ille<! wolll '"* Feb. 10, t•1 Counly Cltrk of Oran"' Coun1y 011
l'UH1t Fel> 10, Ult
Pulllflh9CI Or-COO•I D•lly Pllol, l'USS ..
Fell. U. It, 1', Merci\ S, 1'91 7'•·11 Pul>lllht<I Or-Cool! O•oly Polo! I F Ob 11, It, l•. Morell s I'll! no .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE I PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •USINl[H NAME STATEMENT l'ICTITIOUS a USINESS
Tiit fotlowl"ll 1»r10n o\ 00tnci °"'' NAME STATEMENT
PICTITIOUS auSINESS MU u OE R 1 NG CO 1 H• NAMI STATEMENT 8 C D
T n1 fot1-1r19 PH ton " doing bull nen .,
The fotl-1"9 ~ 11 aolne .,.,,,. Mo11tovlo /lvt . No U . NowPo•I
neu H BH <h. C1' ~
FllSHIDN Gill 1S.1 Edl,,gn 8 1ouforcl C Ootron9 I SJ•
/lve , Hunl•nt'Oft Bo~f\. C1' .,_ Monrov11 /lvo . No 11 NtwOOrl
5-yo Bae, 2071 Hope Pleet , ()n. BH Cll, C1' ~
tor lo, C/l ""' I T1111 _,,.,111 conauctPCI l>y .,, '"
Tiii\ _,,_,,It conouctoea by .,. In· dovlduol
dl¥1dl.oaf lkouford C Ooef one
CllllFORNIA REAL ESTATE
llNO INVESTMENT PROPE~TIES.
17411 ll•alon urw HU11lo1'19to11 &tocll
C•lolorn1191M7
Ct•udir J Demer\. 11'11 Av•ton
L1n1 Huntu.;ton Be•cP'I C•tatorn••
92''7
TrH\ D4.ls.nH\ '' <onducll'd by an 1n
Sootloyo a.. Thi\ •t•l-1 .... llled with trw dlvoau11
Thi\ 51o·t-t WH llled with trw Cou,.ty Clerk ol Oron91 County Ol'I Cf-J O.mtr•
_._.., F 2 1•1 T"'' sutement w•\ tt1td "'''" tnit County Cieri& of Or.,~ Counly on 111 '· PU•s.6 County Cltrlo of Ora11119 County on
F111ru1ry 2l, "" 1'1s.4M Pulllllh9CI Or1n91 Coolt Dolly Piiot, Fob 17, 1911
Pullfll""' Or-. Coo•I Oolly Piiot, Feb 2', -rU. S, l1, It, !ti t '"II Pullllll'tPCI Or1n11t Coo1t 0111:1:~:~
Fell 16, end Morch S, 12. "· 1911 In.fl F•ll "· 1•. Morch s. 12. 1911 .,, 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE
fl'ICTITIOUI austNESS
NAME STATEMINT l'ICTITIOUS auSINES5 fl'ICTl'J'IOUS IUSINESS Tne foll-lr19 "°''°" ,, dolnv blal NAME STATEMENT
NAM• STATEMENT neu u : The lollowtnv perton• •re cloong
Tiie foll-1"9 perton h dolnt l>v\I· JO/lN GREEN & llSSOCIATES, t>vslneu oi: "•"c~~tFOA:NIA Mt A ROA DESIGN, ,,,., Keitrel LAne. L•oune ~lguel, Av oc A 00 c 0 N D 0 LT 0
CA. '1671 PARTNERSHIP NO I & 2. JAii VI• ~1 Reilly Or., Hunt11111to11 Boocf\, CA. Joi n M. GrH n, l9US l(utrel lido. Suite 211. Newport Buen,
.,,.. L.•n•, L-Niguel, CA n•n Calllornl• n MJ. Dionne R. Llndtay·P lt ru, 1341 Tf\h llu1lneu 11 cDl'ducttd by •n In Tht 8 •1•111 Corpora tion, • ~:~v Or .• Hunllnvton Btocf\, CA ~Iv I duel. Colllornle <CN'llO'•tiot1, J411 voo Udo,
Tiii• llolllneu I• cona..ctoea 11.,..,, In· Joon M Gr"" Suitt 211, Newport 611<11, C•Hfon>i•
dlvldvo l. Thll 1tot-t wet 111911 with lht '2"3.
Ol.-R. UndM'l'·Plerco County Clet ll of 0•011119 Covnty Ol'I Thh llu1lntn h colldu<led by •
Tllh ttol-1 wH llled will! tM Ftlln.oory n , t91t Pts.4M llmlttd penn:~'!11 C0<po<tll0ft.
Covnty Cieri! of Or-County Oft PulltllNd Or-Coett 0111y Piiot, Pav! L a a11111
l'el>rvory u. ltll 1'116162 F.O 26, -Morch). 11, It, , .. 1 ..,_., Tf\h ,';.;= "" 11100 wlln trw
Publltlwd Or-Coott Oolly PllOI, County Clerll el o. .. ~ County on
Feo. 26' --rch '· 11• "· t"t m -t1 PUBUC NOTICE F•11 11• 1• 1
P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS SUllNEH
NAME STATllMINT
PICTIT10UI •UllNlllS Th• lollowlno l)ertOl'I\ or• ao1n9
NAMI ITATIMINT llu\lneu n ;
Tf\e lollowlnt -MHIS ••• 0011111 THE MAIL STOP, J.i•• Co•Jt
.. ,_
PuotlWCI 0r'"91 COH I 0 1111' Pilot,
Foll. lt,2',Mof'cf\S, 12, '"' ..._,I
PUBLIC NOTICE
llutlnoun. Hwy , o -Point, CA. '262' fl'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS SUNS.:T FRAMERS CONSTRUC· Corey D.T Word, 1711 Po119 Cir., NAME STATIMENT
TION, 22W La Linde c:-1, Hewpon Hunt1119tan llH<ll, CA. '1-The lotlowlnv ponons uo dolnt .. och, CA!lfoml• t-.0. Scotti Word, Ut2 Po119 Cir • Hunt. 11usln1u Ol
Rober t w. McC.,ttr, IUl 1"910l'l BeOCl\,CA.t2.. I( & OSERVICES. ll t03 Slly Pon
,._lno, Hun4111910l'I Bo«h, C•llfornle Tiiis tiuslneu 11 condu<ltd by"" on Soulf\, •201,lrvlnt.C•lllornia '1714.
ttMe. dlvlduol. l(ellh Alon Louck•, IOSI Noto!
JOfln l..UNI, 22'9 LA Lindo Covrt, c.tty D.T. Wero Drive, •I 14, w"1m1nster, Calllornlo
Newport llMch, C.lltoml• t2660. Scotti Werd .,W.
This llutlllflS ll COnclll<t•CI by • This •IM-t .... llled with lno This lluslneu I• COl'ldUCtecl .,.,. •
oenorol ~. County Cle•~ of Or.,ee County °" ~nerol pertnershlp.
ft'*'9n w. M<c.n.r Felln.oory 23, 1 .. 1. l(ellf\ LOli<lll
This A.l""'*'t wos fllecl wltll Ute P1SMM Thll s .. l_I WH lllHI wllll tile c .... n1y Clerll ol 0r91199 County °" Pullllst.cl Or-Cootl Dally Piiot, c .... nty Cieri< ol or.,91 Cou11ty °" fl'.O. 10, t•1 ,..,, 26, -Morell s. 11, It, , .. , Fell. 11, t•1.
l'INlll ••.ft Pvblllhtd Or ..... CMst Delly Piiot,
ff ell. 12, It, 2', Mon:ll S, 1'11 712 ... 1 I PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI aUllNISS
NAMa STATaMINT f'tCTITIOUS 9UMM•U The fouowtno perlOr'I h OOlnv l>vll MAMa ITATIMIMT MU ...
Tiie ...._.,. penon Is dol119 bull· DIESEL ENGI NE SERVICE &
NUUE:ftO T•CH PR"'C ISIO N AE PAl"CO .• l70t S.Orat!90,UnllL, A • '"' '"' Sollta A,.., CA. '1101 MACHINE, 2714 Hiiitop Orlve, Jemn A. Hurley, 21611 Hll.,,•
"""" ...... CA '2MO Cir HW1tl"91on 8eec:h, CA. .,_ Nerin•" C"•rlos Shefte, 271• This Minns It condlKllHI by ., 111·
Hiii• Dr .• ~t 9tecll. C1' t2W Cllvl~I. T ............... Is cendUCi.o by ... .... J-A. Hllrl•Y
... l .. ol. Tlll1 st.t-1 wot filed wilt! 1111
-51-. C...,f'll 'I' Cieri&: Of Oren .. C-ty on T"ls A11temeM -llleel wltll tilt Ftl>Nery u, Het C-tr Cl.,.. of Or ..... CW!tty °"
...... 14, ttt1. ,.,..,
t"vllfl ..... Or ..... c-tt Delly Pl ....
..... h , llMrch s. 12, lt, "" SJt41
P UBLIC NO'l'ICE
• P116161
P\11141 .... Or .... Cooll Oolly .......
ffe•. 26, ... Morcf'o S, II, It, ttet . ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
I • l ' • .'.(',
.---..
M -----
1'1 ... 11
Pvllll-Or-Coast Oally Piiot
Fell. It, :z., Morch s, 12, 1"1 ~•t
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS
NAMI ITATIMINT
The 1oi1ow1,. --. 11 Clolno 111111
nen ot
PACIFIC INVESTMENT G"°"P, 2212 Oliporl Ori,.., Suite Q, lrvlne,-CA.
'2711
Oo11etH A. Lo•CI, Utt OllPOllt
0r1 .... Suite Q, 1nr1ne, CA. n 1u
Tllll llullnets Is <CNM,u<tecl llt' •
llmllH '*1fttnlliP.
OWll• "'· Lon Geft9r1I Per111ff Tf\ls .....-WM filed wllll ,,.
Covnly Cl«ll of Or-C:-t• Of'I '•brllerv 11, 1tt1. f'1a111
Pvllll"*' 0r.,... eoo11 O•ltv llllot.
"ell. 16, .... Morell'· U, It, 1 .. 1 ,..t -----_..._..
DlilyPlllt
I
DEARPATDUNN: Whataretbenewl•l eaminp Umita for peJ'IOftl reeeivinf Social
Seeurity retirement benefits!
T .G., Coeta Meta Uy•arelloroWer,.....,.,.~
for euJaSZ yMean above~ 111111 a.,....
ftnt redremeat year, 1•'U 1et 7eu fall
mMUaly ct.eek for eacla ..... la wlaJelt JM
Delta.er work u u em ... yec r... -.re tlau
'4Sl.SS. Mr perform .... ......uaa Mnkee a.
aelf-emp&oymnt," re1ar4.leu el you a.tal
earalap for t.lae year. If yoa're ....,r 15, Ute .... aa eanlla11 cellla1 I• M,•; tlte ••tla.tJ
ceU1a1b SMt.
After yoa reach a1e 72 (711tart1a1 la ltlZ),
Y• cu make any amoaat aad ltW draw fall
Soc{JI Security. ,.Ile ean.1811 U111lt after a1e U wW be
ral1ed to ti,• la ltU. After tltat tile Umlt wW
be tied to aven1e wa1e1 of employees covered
by Sodal Secllrl&y. Tlae eandllp llml& for
peopl' youa1er &haa IS allO wUI lacrease to
keep pace wltlt lacreasea la uaaal covere4
wa1es.
When you work ln retire ment, your
earala1s may affect your o.. and yoar
depeadeata' benen&1. If a depudeat works, Illa
or ber eamlngs wUl affect oaly lt1J or lter
benefits. If yoar earnla1s ID retlrememt woaJd
result in blgber benefits, yOlll' beneftts wW be
automatlcaJly recompiled eacb year and yoa
wlll receive the increase without rurtber
application.
DIHfue• dell•ed
f
M ...... luua ..... 1t...,..AtU.~
It .. daaneterlle4 11117 • ..., , Mn&e'1 ce.1•.
r ualaC ..... lafla•e4 e7ea Hd aa Ir·
,........, .................. Tile '-•·
peratwe ••1 peM at lM depw after tllree
daya, I& wMelt pelilt • r ... wW a..,.ar e.er
••t el tM Wy. ft be&IM te fade la 1e.eral mored.aJa.
Complleatlq PIMtl•~ er ear lafee·
UeH ••7 ,....,. aatllilletlea. Tlae •••
aerl••• ee•plleatloa of ••Hies 11 ••· ceplaalJUa, wllle• cu came 1e.ere Naill
dama1e or •ea&la. Vaeelaatloa a1alHt
meaaln aJIO I• reeommn... at a1e 15 ... u..
ere.tic • .,.,.., ...
DEAR PAT DUNN: I ordered a $t4.90
suit last Aus. 18 from Hanband Co. Inc. of Pat-
terson, N.Y. and charged it to my bank credit
card. I found tbe suit to be unaatiafactory and
returned it. Haband said my charge card ac-
count was· credited for the $t4.90, but it
hasn't. Each time I write to them about this,
they just repeat that the credit baa been is-
sued. What now?
H.Z., Newport Beach
Habud'a ca1&omer servlee repreaea·
ta&iYe told A YS ~at tlaelr reeonls a.dkate
yoar credit was lulled Sep&. ~. t•. Tille
credit llOWka&loa •W be JHll tlanMlp acala.
If lt Ila'&, let A YS bow.
Nttrlftlr pla•• • lu•ftf
Orang• Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thul'9d1y, March 6, 1981
. .~ J • 0 Model 7230 combines ._yjY. the fun and flavor of
#~ W outdoor cooking ·W~ with the convenience
' of your kitchen
NOTIING COOKS
LIKE A 04ARMGLOW
range. Features
split burner versatility.
Automatic ignition.
IPICIAL CLOSIOUT
PllCI 14999
WtlLESUPPLY LASTS
G!1D
H~adquarters
for Ducane,
w~beranct
Charmglow
Bar-I-Q's
...
•
DEAR PAT: Will you please explain the
difference between measles and rubella.
What are the symptoms of each, and which
one is German measles? •
K. L., Huntington Beach
German measles la a mbleadla1 term
for rubella, wblcb probably orl1laated
becaue rubella was flnt ldeatlfled by t.lae
medical profeuloa ID Germany.
DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you tell me
where to write to get a list of the locations or
all the nuclear power plants and nuclear
waste dump sites in the United States?
P.R., Costa Mesa
Direct your Inquiry to &be Nuclear
Kegalatory Commbslon, 1• N. Callfonala
Blvd., Salte 20%, Walnut Creek, Calif. NSll.
CROWN HARDWARE
NOW 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU BETIER
• ··cot a problem"' Then write to Pat WntclHrt..
(formerly Rion) H.ttorv1ewc ...... Rubella usually lasts aboat tbree days. A
rash often accompules rubella bat may be
so falDt that it goes uaotlcecl. AD lde•tllyla&
cbaracterts&lc of tlile disease b a palatal
sweUlag in tile gland.a at tlae back of tile aeek
and bebJDd &Ille ears. A sllgltt fever alao may
be presea&. Tills ls a mUd disease l8 both
clllldrea aad adalta, bat severely daagerou
to a pregnant woman's ubora cMld ti she
bas the disease in u.e early m•Uas of prec·
aaacy. Vacclaatloa a1ablat rabella la rec·
om meaded at tllle age of 15 m•tb.
\.. l Dunn. Pat wall cut red tape. getting
• the an.twers and action you need to
solve 1nequ1ties an government and
I 024 I" ... An .. Hewport leaclt
Coro••.,M•
3107 E. Coast Hwy.
1 Kilometer South of Mac1'rthur
(formerly Imperial)
1614 S• MHJ-1 Dr., HeWport haclt
644-1170
Antique
Show/Sale
Today thru Sunday
Mar. 8 at the
Huntington Center
Mall. Outstanding
collections from 50 dealers. Also free
evaluation clinic.
405 Fwy and Beach
Blvd .. H.B.
P•ppermint
Patty I
Sally
n bu.sines&. Mail your que.ttioM to Pat
Dunn, Al Your Sennce. Orange C<XUt
Daily Pilot. P.O Boz 1560. Costa Mew. CA 92626. A.t
many Letters cu possible will be answered. but phoned
inquiries or letter& not including the rell/Ur's full
name. address and bu.sineu hours' phone number
cannot be conndered. Thu column appears daily ez·
cept Sundays ··
642·1 IJJ 673·2100
--------
lf i t 's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad .Ca ll
642-5678 and a
friendly ad-
vi se r will
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
INVENTORY SALE CLEARANCE
T .. IESTVM.UEATS 199
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Orange CoMt OAJtY PILOT/Thursday, March 5, 198f NATION
Hate groups get holder Monthly
appeals
award
U.S. terrorist cults coming into the open • are c~med." Capt John Bartlett, commander By P ETER AllNETI'
TEXAS CANvo'N..,. T~y ha~e tone lnbabited
the American frin1e. But today, armed clan·
destine organisation.a are comtna lnto the open to
attract members.
And along with the Ku Klux Klan, the
American Nazy Party and the Jewish Defense
League\are terrorist groups seeking to advance
their causes.
"Violence and conflict surround them ," said
Brian Jenkins, an expert on terrorism and
puamilitary organizations for the Rand Corp.
think tank a t Santa Monica. "And with today's
worldwide jet travel and international com·
munications, the potential for their influence is
high."
POLICE COMPLAIN THAT THEI& bands are
tied more tightly than ever in invesUgatlng these
organizations because of legislative prohibitions
agains t group surveillance.
"We can no longer keep much real intelligence
on them," said Capt. Dan Cook of the Los Angeles
Police Department.
In addition to racial hate groups are those pro·
moting special causes s uch as religious cultism
and political freedom for countries ruled by dic-
tators of the left or right.
"Paranoia breeds some disturbing activities,"
said Terry McGuiness, supervisor of the Threat
Analysis Center of the CaHfornia Department or
Justice.
"10HAV ETllEM INOURMIDSTandnotknow
if they will take up arms against the general popula-
tion even though they say they won't is genuine
danger.'' she added.
The most visible or these once clandestine
groups are the KKK and the JDL, mutually oppos-
ing organizations that are drilling their followers
in camps around the country.
About 30 JDL sympathizers and members
gathered recently for their first publicly an-
nounced training session at CaJifornia 's Texas
Canyon.
Driving up the narrow canyon north or
Burbank was like visiting a war zone. Shooting is
permitted in this part or the Angeles National
Forest, and gunfire cracked and echoed between
rock walls as hundreds of Californians fired
pistols. rifles and s hotguns from s tanding,
crouching and sitting-in-parked-car positions. The
s mell and smoke of cordite drifted into the air as
bottles, cans and other targets fell in a rain or
bullets.
THE JOL GROUP WA S DISTINGUISHED by
the nature of their targets cardboard cutouts of
human figures with big black swastikas painted on
their midriffs. Young girls, old men and married
couples tried firing military-type weapons like the
semi-automatic M-15 and HK -91. Or they played
with the s maller Ingram Model 10, favored by
African mercenaries.
"Jews in World War Ir would have given their
very lives to have the weapons you are now hold·
ing in your hands," said Irv Rubin, the bearded,
loquacious national leader of the J DL, open shirted
in the early winter sun.
The JDL was founded in 1968 by extremists
who perceived increases in anti-Semitism and an-
ti-Is raeli sentiment as threats to Jews, especially
at the hands of such groups as the KKK and the
American Nazis.
OPERATING IN ITS EARLY YEARS as a
vigilante group, the JDL moved into international
Jewish causes Fifty bombings and other terronst
actions in the United States have been done in its
name. or those of closely related groups
One of those at the Texas Canyon session, 13·
year-old Dina Mizrahi, dressed in red short-shorts
and T-shirt. confidently fired a .38-caliber re-
volver.
"l joined the JDL because I felt hurt at the
poor treatment of the J ewish people," she said.
BARRY KRUGEL, SELF-DESCRIBED chief
of operations for the Los Angeles JDL, was check·
mg out the shooters.
"When we get people who show acumen we
take them into the mountains for advanced train·
ing techniques . We teach them combat training,
s hooting from behind barricades and stuff like
that," Krugel said. "Our people more than meet
Marine Corps standards."
Krugel later crawled over rocks on the canyon
floor to show a photographer his technique.
Klan leaders are similarly outspoken. Louis
Beam, grand dragon of the Texas-based Knights of
the Ku Klux Klan, said in December that children
as young as 8 were being trained to shoot.
"INSTEAD OF PLAYING BASEBALL or
kicking a football around, they are learning how to
survive," he said.
In the face of these activities, America's
police forces are. honing their skills. Police Sgt.
Jack Shelton can burst through a locked door to
gun down a killer or shoot out an eye from a win-
dow 300 yards away.
For years, along with others on the Kansas
City police special weapons assault team, the na-
tion's first SWAT group, Shelton confidently
trained to handle major crime emergencies.
The five-man SWAT teams were developed in
the 1960s because or an increase in lertwing ter-
rorist groups. But as civil protest diminished in
the 1970s, the special ~ams found they were being
called mainly to quelf family disputes and to han-
dle violent outbursts of the emotionally disturbed.
Now, the militancy of paramilitary groups and
the intention or a growing body or s urvivalists to
arm themselves have once again thrown focus on
the SWAT teams.
Members of the armed Posse Comitatus or·
ganization faced down a SWAT unit trying lo evict
mobile home tenants in Wiaconsin last year. The
police departed lo avoid bloodshed.
"From what I bear we are three to rive years
behind the paramllltary 1roups as far as weapons
Bees kill man
in Venezuela.
BARQUISIMETO, Venezuela CAP) -A
swarm ol African killer bees attacked a suburb of
thiJ central Venezuelan city, killlnc an elderly
man and cauain1 severe stina reactions in 13
others, a spokesman for the fire department said.
The injured weft treated at a holpitaJ.
Univenlty •e;cperta aatd th(! bee• were African
killer beet, accordlnt to the spokesman, who
a dded lt •••the tint tlme hutAana were known to
ban bees> attacked by lbe bees ID Venftllela.
Atrlcan killer beet were acddentally releued
lo Br11ll ln t95e and have moved atudlly
northward 8'Dce. ,,
of the Kansas City East Patrol SUpport Division,
said. "We don't even have automatic weapons, yet
we know there are plenty out there ln civilian
hands."
Another Kansas Clty officer, Sgt. Robert
Ma this, said there was also concern about the ease
with which semi-automatic weapons commonly
available in gun shops can be converted to fully
automatic.
"It takes metal parts costing one dollar and 35
cents , and you can order them through any
number of gun magazines," Mathis said.
BUT THE SWAT TEAMS ARE THE primary
police assault force, and they regularly go through
their paces in Kansas City.
"Our offi cers are trained not to kill but to im·
mobilize," Bartlett said. "We have shot only two
persons in 14 years, yet we have been called in on
more than 250 operations .••
The Kansas City SWAT squads showed their
skills in a demonstration at an abandoned rural
mansion near the city limits where hostages were
theoretically being held. The blue-uniformed of-
fi cers, carrying semi-automatic AR-lSs and sniper
rifles. sma rtly double-timed through the woods,
running from tree to tree as they approached the
building.
A shot rang out. Was a hostage dead?
""Wirt..,.._
CHEYENNE, Wyo.
<AP> -A lawyer for
Penthouse macazloe bas
asked a federal judge to
overturn a $26.5 million
libel judgment awarded
to Miss Wyoming of 1978
or to grant a new trial on
grounds that the verdict
stemmed from "passion
and prejudice."
Denver attorney Paul
Cooper fi1ed a brief ask·
ing U.S. District Judge
Clarence Brimmer to
vacate a jury's Feb. 20
multimillion-dollar judg·
ment in favor of Kimerli
Jayne Pring, a fo rmer
Miss Wyoming.
The 26 -year-old
University of Wyoming
student brought s uit over
an August 1979 Penthouse
story that she claimed
libeled her and invaded
her privacy. The fi ctional
piece depicted lhe sexual
exploits of a Miss Wyo-
mmg. Led by Shelton, a Vietnam veteran with nine
years on the force. the police team rushed the
front door and kicked it open, They maneuvered
expertly up the stairs and burst into the target
room.
JDL FIGHTS NAZI REBIRTH
lnatructor prepare• target practice
The jury awarded Miss
Pring $25 million in
punitive damages and
$1.5 million in actual damages .
~ I I . I
ANNOUNCING ~ I_
-~
• • •
THE NURSERY WITHIN THE GARDEN!
To be sure. a visit to Roger's Gardens 1s a beautiful
and pleasant experience. It's also the best plac e to
find all the 1ngred1ents for successful gard.ening. We
do our best to provide unique displays creations and
services. but we think our best con be better So.
we re making new and exc1t1ng changes all designed
to provide you even more variety. quality and value.
Our nursery section has been expanded dramatically
I
to include a greater variety of tree and shrub cont-
ainer stock we· re buying 1n greater volume to provide
you with bigger selection and better values. We've
also installed a new parking lot with easy a ccess to
the nursery section Service hos been improved
with a new checkout stand to save you time Come
JOln us 1n celebrating these new add1t1ons We're
providing f rash-squeezed orange juice balloons for
the kids and special values throughout the store
GOOD TASTE.
You can't eat o juniper. but o citrus plant 1s a treat for the eye and the palate Come get
acquainted w ith the whole family We hove quite a variety or Oranges. lemons. Tangelos.
Grapefruit. Limes and Kumquats There will be a 1u1ce machine handy for sampling fresh ~
squeezed o range juice. ,:::llnL•..._.,,,
We also hove a terrific collectors book on Citrus. Well written and full of color
photos. !rs on A-to-Z book. fu ll of history. ideas and practical information
5 gal. citrus trees . . . ....... reg. $13.50 Sale $9.99
Citrus book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . reg. S 7.95 Sale $6. 95
GOOD 'STAR'"r
G~ve your plants a break
1n life. Supercharge your
soil with these two oc·
tivotors for strong and
vibrant plant growth
# 30 Roger's Soil
Activator
Reg. $16.98 Sale $12.98
Redwood Soll Prep ~
Conditioner. 4 cu. ft. ' .> • Reg. S 7 25 Sale $5. 99 3
~
GOOD BUY
Eucalyptus trees ore a noturolly beauti-
ful solution for all kinds of landscaping
needs. The price Is beautiful too ..
5 gal. Sale $1. 99
GOOD H EAVENS
such colors! Plant these gorgeous flowers
now for a wonderful season of garden
fireworks.
REG. SALE
Azaleas 1 gal. $3.25 $1.99
Indian Hawthorne 2 gal. $9.75 $6.ff
Marguerite Daisy 1 gal. $3.50 $1.99
Star Jasmine 1 gal. $2.98 $1.99
Whlle you're ot Roger's, don't miss this excep-
tlonol value on 6" houseplants . . . . • ....
Reg. $10.95 Sale $6.95
SURPRISE
We have o treat tor you when you
• visit our new parking lot. Don't miss ltl
AMBRICA ·s MOST OEA T IF L GARDEN CENTER
640-5800
Open 9 to 5 dally • Son Jooqutn HAI$~ at MacArthur etvd. • Across from FdshlOn Island In Newport 8eoch
NURSERY • INDOOR PLANTS • FLORtST • LANDSCAPING • PATIO FURNITURE • ANTIQUES
t .= t
~ ~'
\: '. ·1
I
~'
lf
lf
lf .. ... • ... ,
lf • I .. ' • • ,. ,. ., :1 :1
•• !L • ~( ..
it ( I ..
: f .. .. ,.. .. • 1.
I ·-·
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(fhurtday. March 5, 1981
•
e
Help celebrate Columbia Savin~'
Grand Opening in Newport Beach
Friday, March 6 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
~ver wonder whether friendly, personalized
banking has disappeared for good, like the
nickel hotdog? At Columbia Savings
we believe in
offering old-
fashioned,
neighborly
assistance in
helping you make
your money work harder.
We're new to Newport Beach. And
(~.-.... to introduce our-
r c, ...., _ selves, we'd like to
~r invite you to an I old-fashioned \.~' !,. ! rr lunch on March
11 6 at our new
~-' ~ office in Fashion
Island.
HOT DOGS, CHILI,
ROOT BEER & DIXIELAND
We'll be offering free Coney Island ...
type hot dogs, root beer, chili, hot pretzels,
fresh popcorn and ice cream!
Come enjoy a Dixieland band
entertain with songs of a
bygone era!
Pacific Coast Hwy .
Members of our staff will be on hand to answer questions
\~ about our many services, including:
FREf: CHECKING ACCOUNTS! That's right,
'\1 • free c hecking accounts that earn 51A% interest.
\1 I From now until April 1, free checking accounts
I will be available at Columbia Savings with a
n\inimum $200 deposit and NO MONTHLY.
~INIMUM BALANCE!
FREE CHECKING ACCOUNTS!
From now until April 1,
with a minimum $200 deposit
NO MONTHLY MINIMUM BALANCE!
FREE
Free various size safe deposit boxes (up to
10....,xlO....,) with a minimum deposit.
Savings
programs
designed to provide
the highest possible return on your
investment .
COLUMBIA
SAVINGS
80 Fashion Island, Newport Beach
(on the corner of Santa Rosa and Newport Center Dr.)
Houn:
9:30-5:30 Monday-Thursday; 9:30-6 Friday;
9-1 Saturday·
Columbia Savings has twelve locations in
Southern California
"'11
•
Oalldren alleeted
,Smoking hif in study
WASHINGTON (AP> -Cicanue.
amoklQI by adulte bas u adv .... af.
feet OD the health of children In tbelr
familie1, a public health journal re-porta. ..
Gordon Scott Bonham and Ronald
W. Wilaon, in an analyslia ol data col-
,lected ln the Natlon 11I Interview
Survey, found that children wbOlle
parents were DOD·Smok.en averaced
9.1 days a year of restrtcted activity
because ot Illness, whl.le tboee with
two or more smoke rs in their
household avera1ed 10.2 days.
"Thia study, ualn1 C]('Ols-aeetlonal
data, often no dlreet proof tbat adult
amottna adversely atfeeta cblldre'•
health," the pair wrote in the Mareb
iHue ol the American Journal ol Public Health.
But, they added, "tbe data support
the fi!Mtinp of otben that dearette·
amolciq by adulta ldvenel7 affects
the health of children ln their
famWe1." ' .
The National Interview Survey
sampled ~ ,000 bouseboldl la lt70. In·
formation collected in the survey wu
not analyzed unW recently.
N .... 11ee
John A. Svabn has been nominated by
Pres i dent
Reagan to bead
the Social
Security Ad .
ministration. At
37 , he would
become the youngest person
to hold that job
if confirmed by
the 'Senate.
\
NATION
Mesa man
commissioned
Geor1e F. Burckle,•
son of llr. and Iba.
Alton G. Burckle ot 308'7
Ball Circle, Costa Mesa,
bu been com.millioned
a second lieutenant in
the Air Force upon
graduation from Officer
Trainin1 School at
Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
Burckle will 10 to
Reese Air Force Bue,
Texas, for pllot trainin1.
Cell 842-5678.
Put • few words
to work for ou.
e're going. y_our -wa~
SOLID FOOD AT LAST
Oeofge Kever .. n eata llfter diet
Legislator
sheds 255 lbs.
BOSI'ON (AP> -George Keverian is still a
heavyweight in the Massachusetts House, but after
rosing 255 pounds in a year doesn't have as much
weight to throw around these days.
The Democratic floor leader consumed almost
nothing but liquids for 55 weeks to shrink from 419
pounds to 164.
. On the eve of the Lenten season, the
49-year-old. 5 .. foot-lOt,; Everett man began "phase
two" of his weight-control program, returning to
solid food on a regular basis.
"THE REST OF BOSTON STOPS eating, and
I start," said Keverian, who used to devour entire
loaves of bread al one sitting.
He will try lo stabilize his weight by limiting
himself to one 1,800-calorie meal per day,
combined with exercise.
"It's wonderful to lose weight, but the main
thing is to keep it off," Keverian said in an
interview at his Statehouse office.
He said it is inevitable that he will regain
some weight as bis body begins storing fluids
again, but he hopes it wiU be no more than 20
pounds. That would leave him at tbe dimensions
be had when he graduated from bigb school.
FOR HIS FIRST MEAL, KEVERIAN_shose a
late dinner at home, consisting of one pound of
broiled haddock, one pound of chicken, and salad.
The lawmaker also allowed himself five cups of
coffee with cream through the day, plus some
eeremonial nibbling of a salad at a Rotary Club
dinner in Cambridge, to bring his tplal to 1,600
calories.
He began his regimen Feb. 12, 1980, under the
@_upervision of the Obesity and Risk Factor
frogram, a private weight clinic in Brookline.
His intake usually was limited to five
packages of amino acid powder mixed with water
or diet soft drink, for 300 calories a day. He
iwallowed bis coffee black and took vitamin and
P<>tassium pills.
It was not a total fast, however.
"NOBODY'S SURE OF WHAT THE effects of
a year-long fast could be, so there were times
when my doctors made me eat," Keverian said.
He estimated bis intervals on solid food
covered about six weeks of his SS-week diet.
A combination of factors led him to undertake \
the fast, Keverian said.
• "There was no particular health problem, but
of course, the threat of oqe was always there and
you feel lousy. My friends were concerned, and I
kept thinking about my responsibilities to my
mother, and what would happen to her if I wun't
Utere." be said.
l KEVERIAN, A BACHELOR, LIVES with bis
ts-year-old semi-invalid mother and performs all
lhe household chores for ber. J "One day, you don't know wby, you just say,
•Hey, I've had it, I'm going to lose weight.'"
The lawmaker said be would continue
eporting to bis doctor for at least a year because
'I know the real problems lie ahead.''
J.A school head
lakes new job
LOS ANGELES (AP) -William Johnston,
perintendent of Los An1eles public schools, will
ome mana1er of Southern California Gas Co. 's
partlaan political procrama after be leaves the '
ool district June 30.
Jobnlton bu been superintendent of the na-
n 'a·secood lar1est school dlatrict since lt71.
Gu coq_ipany officials would not disclose
obnaton'a salary, but said duties would include
upervilkln of the uWity's, poUUcal action pro-
rama. They donate to federal and state
dates from funds contributed voluntarily by
' tillt7 employees.
Dead man. elected
MONTPELIERhnVt. (AP) -Vermont wmaken paid tbelr a1 tribute to tbetr lat. eol·
aaue Seraio Puetto -tbeJ UDbeld bll el«Uoa. ':-=:. voi.d without clebat. to ........ ~ at'1 electlon to tbe v....-Rouae,
~ Puetto died Dlne claJS before Illa Tidor'J •r a .. ,.......w political newcomer, Lauren
•wilL 'J'llie 1DOW9 aJao hpt P...UO'I appointed IUC·
___. Gino Salli, ID tbe JlouM,
I I
(
Improved Local Routes/
Route 22 La Habra-Orange via
Lambert/Tustin
Route 29 Huntington Beach-s,.ea via Beach
Route 37 La HalJl>Huntlngton
Beach via Euclid
Route 38 Orange-Cerritos via
La Palma
Route 42 5eal Beach-Orange
via Lincoln
43!43A/43B . Newport ~h to
La Halxaf Brea via
Harbor Boulevard
Route 47 Ful/enon-Santa Ana '
via· Anaheim
Route 50 Orange-~/ Beach
via Kate/la
Route 54 El M«Mna-Huntlngton
BfMch via Chapman
0
{
'.
--
Route 57 Laguna Hills-Santa Ana
via Laguna Beach
Route 78 Laguna Hiiis-Costa Mesa
· via Irvine Center Drive
Route 80 Huntington Beach-
Santa Ana via Victoria
In Costa Mesa
Route 85 San Clemente-Santa Ana
via Monarch Bay
Route 133 Fullerton-Orange via East
New/ Route 82
New service between Westminster Mall and
downtown Santa Ana vi• Hazard and Fifth.
Newt Route 88
New service between Larwln Square and
• Westminster Mall via Bolsa and First during
rush hours.
New axpreaa Routes/
Route ~5. commuter •• ,,,... service
Ntween Laguna Hiiis M•ll •ml downtown
' .
• I
-
''"seems lik.e a teacher is always trapped with paper work.. So I mak.e
the most of my time by grading
papers while the OCTD bus drives
me to school. And the bus sched-
ules are so frequent and flexible it's
simple to attend meetings aher
school and still get home without
any fuss or bother. Now I'm encour·
aging all my students to ride
the bus,,
Donna Barasch
. Teacher
Cypress H igh School
More people are riding the bus
to work., school and shopping
because we've made it so easy
with new buses. new routes
and improved service.
Don't waste your money at the
gas pump. Save money and ride
the bus. sex is all It costs one
way on regolar routes.
Our friendly phone operators
will help you plan your trip on
the OCTD bus. If you need sched-
ule Information, we'll send it to
you-FREEi
Call
636-RIDE
Se habla Espanol.
Orwwge eo...ty Transit Dislrict • We're going your way. .---..
Long Beach via the San Diego Freeway. ·
Stops in Irvine, Santa Ana, Long Beach.
Route 206, commuter express service
between San Clemente and Newport Ce_nter
via the San Diego Freeway. Stops in San
Juan Capistrano, Mission Viejo, Laguna
Hills, Irvine. •
Improved E•press Routes/
Speedier travel times, more service on Route
203, commuter express service between
San Clemente and Long Beach via the San
Diego Freeway. Stops In San Juan Cap-
istrano, Mission Vle/o, Laguna Hills, Irvine,
Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Seal Beach.
More service on Route 291, commuter
express service between San Clemente and
downtown Santa Ana via the San Diego
and Santa Ana Freeways. Stops In San Juan
Capistrano, Mission Vle/o. I
/
,
\
I
8)0.\VID&trrz•ANN ......... "" .....
Newport Beach offtclal1 will
10 to Oraqe County Superior
Court to seek a delay in county
plans callinc tor redevelopment
of Newport D\lael, a recreation
area near Upper Newport Bay.
Robert B~am. a1al1t1Dt~ attorney, Hid tbe cJly wUl
a writ of mandate to delay hn·
plementaUon of revi1ed plans the
city la challenitn1 on environ·
courtdatellu been Ht on the mat·
ter .
mental IJ'OU.l)dl. •
IN A LAWSUIT IUed last
month lo SUperior Court, tbe cl·
ty alleced that cban'" made 1n
redevelopment plana for the
70-acre alte would result in
"more severe adverse envlraG·
mental impacta, especially in
areas of trafflc, bioloay. nolae,
air quality, ener11 (and) public
services ... "
However Burnham sald no
Burnham said lo the suit that
revisions also required major
changes in environmental studies
prepared for the smaller-scale,
original project.
Tbe legal action seeks perma·
nent court orders ceasina all
county activities related to re·
development of Newport Dunes
until California environmental
regulations have been fully met.
The suit also seeb to have the
plans submitted to the city Plan-
ning Commission for study.
THE DUNES AREA, located
within Newport Beach city
limits, consists mostly of
tidelands owned by the state and
held in trust by the county. The·
county leases the area to
Newport Dunes Corp.
D.ilf l'IMt.,....
REVISED DUNES REDEVELOPMENT PLANS CHALLENGED
'Expended facHttlea to caUM more trefflc, nolM problem•'
Redevelopment plans original-
ly called for construction of two
motels, containing about 290
rooms; two restaurants; con·
struction of 241 recreational vehi·
cle spaces and a corresponding
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loo.n oaaociation
~HECKING ACCOUNTS
THAT EARN INTEREST. ASK US!
Executive Offices: 7842 Edinger Ave., fSIE
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
Southern Ca/f/ornla Raglona/ 011/ce:s
_.....,, __ _ ----·--
5677 E. La PalrN Ave., Anaheim, CA 92807
8955 Valley View St.. Buena Park, CA ll0620
1666 Arnell! Rd., Camanllo, CA 93010
20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Caraon CA 90746
23021 Lake Center Or .. (Laile Forest), El Toro, CA 92630
1001 E Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 G:t
4140 Long Beach Blvd., Long Beacll, CA 90807 •
22939 Hawlhorne Blvd , T0<rance, CA 90505 1095 Irvine Blvd., Tustin. CA 92680
235 N Citrus Ave., West Covina. CA 91793
"Mercury Room" available on a resarvttd buls
CALL TOM MARSTON
FOR A
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN -
INTEREST ONLY!
7'.'ewporf EC,uity 'Funds ·Inc ,a
Licensed Broker Since 1971 ..
(714) 760~060
~************************~
: INVENTORY SALE ! .. WALLPAPER -3311.1% OFF Jt ..
• • Lamps and Accessories
it• Mini BhndsJWOOI Blinds
it• C&rpeting-Lmoleum-Wood Floors ...
• Custom Draperies it
• Wallcovering • • Mattresses it
.. .. l.t .. lor Dell'p S..lce A•••ll
.. .. ..
... lit .. r-----•COUPOH•----., .. .. .. •I AddfffCMld I 0°/oOFFowaow pri~es t •
:1 o. SELECTED flOOR SAMPLES 1: »1 • L-.• • Tallltt • Sofol • CWn 1•
Jt lit •L Good thru 3/31/81 ..J•
... ------------. . ... ~~FURNITURE~ . ~ . • • .,.
• ,.. • •
Camino Plaza 5408 Walnut Ave. Suite A
Irvine. C81ifornia 92714
551·9011 ,
w.tlUI .. i,..;.;;=----t .. .. •
• • • • Hours: Mon. 'til 9 Tues.-Sat. 10-5:30 • i***********************~:
FURIACE
FILTERS
1" x asst'd. sizes
Reg. 85c
64c
1" ll 25" It 25"
~ 1.39
98c
·uchMlll cat• Clta.
WATER HEATEll
IUllKET
1-112" l( 41~ lt 80".
Covers 10 to 50 gallon cank.
Reg, 13.99
\
Orange Co11t OAILY PtLOT/Thurtday, Maroh 5, 1981
elimlnaUon of 300overflow partr. Tb• alle1ed cba.naet include
inc spaces; the addJtlon ot aeo even iaraer motel facUltlea
boat 1Upe and the eUmioaUon of (from 290 to 350 roomt>; con·
aoo dry boat atoraae 1pace1. and 1trucUoit of meet1n1 roomJ to
the ellmlnatlon of abo~t 700 day· accommodate 400 people; con·
usepartdneapaeaandabouttour atructlon of four adcUtlonal cof.
acreaofbeacharea. fee ebope/anack ban; creation
The Dunea area has 14 acres of of a "Marina VUJa1e" con111t.1n1
beach; 1,500 park.ins spaces for \ of about 50,000 square feet of
day use; 144 recreationaJ vehicle commercial and retail apace
parkinl apaces, a reataurant and and proposed construction of
a coffee shop. 12,000 equare feet ot commercial
space for unapedfied uses.
AFTEa compJetlon of en·
vironmental atudlea on re·
development plans, however,
the lawsuit alleges county of.
Cicials made cbangee in the pro-
posaJ.
Crisis center
seeking aid
Costa Mesa's Family Crjsis
Cent~r i.s requesting donations
from the Orange County busi·
ness community to help furnish
its youth home and offices.
Linens, carpeting, chairs,
lamps, drapes and tables, sofas
and recreational equipment are
needed as are services including
plumbing. landscaping and
photogupby.
For more information, contact
the center al 642·8380 between 9
a.m. andSp.m.
w._us ......
llSULATIOll
, .. )( 24".
Reg 49c lln. fl.
28c tin. ft.
The city claims that it wa1 not
made aware of these modifica-
tions until Oct. 28, 1980, the day the
county Planning Commission
first considered and recom-
mended approval of the revised
proposal.
The lawsuit alleges no public
hearlne notice was issued on the
chances.
DURl.NG THE October hear-
ing, city officials asked for
postponement of consider ation of
the matter.
The commission denied that re·
quest and approved the site plan
for the modified redevelopment
proposal.
In December, the Board of
Supervisors gave tentative ap·
proval to the plan with several
minor changes .
THE BOARD also found the
environmental study was com·
RECREATION AREA
Mep pinpoint• Oun••
plete and adequately dealt with
effects the proposed project could
have on the area.
The city, howe ver, claims U,e
r evised project would lead ~
serious traffic congestion qn
Bayside Drive, Pacific Cout
Highway, Bristol Street and J~
boree Road: would lead to de·
graded air quality in the dunr.
area: would degrade water qua •
ly in Upper Newport Bay, a!Jd
generate excessive noise.
UN FACED
R-19 m1c
INSULATION
6" ll 15" x 39'2"
4896 sq 11
Reg 1549
12.88
6" x 23" ,I( 39'2".
75.07 sq "
Reg. 23 49
18.88
KRAFT FACED
R-11 Ame
INSULATION
3· 112" )( 15" IC 70'6".
88 \2 SQ It.
Re9 17.99
13.88
11-19
KRAFT FACED
6" x 23" x 39'2".
48.96 SQ. It .
Reg. 24 99
19.88
JIU-KOil
DOOi i .....
3&". 17'. Alumtnum and ten.
WEATIBITllP
1T. AllMnlnlln Ind 'My! .
.Reg. 3.19
5.4'a 4.98 Reg. 3.79
2.48
SALE DATES: Mar. 8 thru Mar.-12
301 So ..... College --.. ~ ... Sit. I to 8 SWI. t to I
I 1·
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur9day, March&. 1981
r Why: we drin~ coffee J
Scientists find why caffeine keep1 u1 alert
NEW YORK (AP> -Sclentlttl bave ftnaUy
dlacoverecl wby coff ff, tea or cola can keep you
alert: that 'lbot of cafftlne lnhtbltl a natural
mechanism that'• tryln1 toalowyoudown ..
"Now we know why we drt.nJt coffee," 1ald Dr.
Solomon H. Snyder at a seminar beld here by the
Soelety for Neuroscience.
A reaearch team Jed by Snyder, director of
neuroscience at Johns Hopkins University School
QUEENIE
C) IMI ICW'Q 'MIUI• 5WftOIC4M. lf'C WO'W '""* ,._......
DEA TH NOTICES
DINEHART Chapel, 179ll Beach Blvd..I
META FAYE OINEHAR't:, Huntington Beach, Ca. or.
resident or Costa Mesa, Ca. Ciciating will be Or. Arthur
for 33 years. Passed away on Reese of The F'irst Chri.stian
February ZT. 1981. She was Church or Fountain Valley.
bom in Vassar. Michigan on Ca. In lieu of flowers the Cami·
May 13, 1895 Survived by her ly requests all donations be
son J ames Austin Garner or made to the Hoag Memorial
Newpo rt Bea c h . Ca . Hospital Hearl Fund in
grandson J ames Raymond memory or Lee Harter. Oil·
GamerorCresthne. Ca and a day Brothers of Huntington
great-granddaughter Sydney Beach 842-rnl.
Marie Gamer of Crestllrre.
Ca. Meta was Past Worthy
Matron o( the Eastern Star
Chapter in Grandville.
Mi chigan Sh e came to
California an 1940 where she
transferred to the Harbor
Star Chapter t568order of the
Eastern Star. she became a
life member of the Eastern
Star. She was very active 1n
the Coastline Post 113536ofthe
VFW Auxiliary and was past
president of that organ1za
lion Also active in the
Repubhc1an Women's As
sociation. Memonal services
will be held on March 14. 1981
al 2:00PM at the Masomc
Temple. Newport Beach. Ca
Interment or her ashe~ Wiii
take place in the fa mily plot an
Vassar. M1ch1gan In lieu of
nowers the Cam1I) reque~ts
donations be made to the
American Cancer Soc:1el \ HALBERT .
N E L \' A :-< I C 0 I. A S
HALBERT. passed aY.a~ on
March 2. 1981 an lie met. Ca
Survi\'ed b) brothl'r Wilham
Nicolas of Hemet. Ca . sister!>
Ardell E Blumberg of Long
Beach. Ca and Anita L
Christensen of Lo:. Alam1toi..
Ca. and Lorame =-.: llan!>en of
Hemet. Ca . J meces and I
nephew Funeral ~erv1ccs
will be held on Frida~. March
~. 1981 at 2 OOP:\1 al lhl' 011 d ay Hrothers l napel. 17911
Beach Bl vd . llunt1ngton
Beach. Ca In lieu of flowers
the f am1ly r('Questli donation:-.
be made to Amencan Cancl'r
Research Dilda~ Brothers
Mortuar~ directing 842 7771
HARTER
LEE J HARTER. resident
of Costa Mesa. Ca for many
years. passed awa> on March
3. 1981 lie 1s survived bv his
wife Ruth G Harter: son
Rictaard Harter, grandson
Matthey, F Harte r and
brothers Charles A and
Richard F Harter Memorial
services will be held on Fn
day , March6, 1981at11 OOA M
al the Dilday Brothers
HoYIOI L..AW..._MT. OLIVE
Mortuarv • Ceme1erv
Crematorv
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
~5554
,_ClllOTHUS
. IB.1 •OADWAY
MOaTUAllY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IALTl&-•aON
SMrTJt • TVnaL
WIS1Cllff CHAPR.
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
fM&.-9371
DEATHS.
ELSEWHERE
T HOUSAND OAKS <AP >
British actor Torin
Thatcher. 76, a veteran of
Broadway and the movies
who often played pirates,
died at his home her e
Wednesday after a two-year
bout with cancer.
LA JOLLA IAPI A dec-
orated Navy flier who spent
seven years as a pnsoner ol
war 1 n North Vietnam died of
canceratage38 A memorial
ser vice is planned Saturday
for retirC'd Cmdr Rieb a rd R.
Ratzlarr ..... hod1ed Saturday
ST E\' ENS BURG . Va
c AP J Reta red Air Force
Brig Gen Benjamin Scovill
Kt-lst-y, 74. a test pilot and
aeronautical engineer. died
Tuesday
TOLEDO. Ohio <AP>
Former Mayor Aloysius C.
"Olllt>" Cnlu11ta, 84. who
promoted subs idizing the
municipal airports and proj··
ects resulting in the Toledo>
Civic Center and Union Sta·
lion. died Tuesday
Design
contest
'biggest'
WASHINGTON <AP >
T he competition to
des ign a Washington
m e morial to the 2 . 7
million Americans who
served in Vietnam and
Southeast Asia has
become the biggest con·
test or its kind ever. its
sponsors said.
The Vietnam Veterans
Memorial Fund , a
private, non-profit cor-
poration authorized by
Congress to erect the
memorial, said registra-
tions to enter tbe com-
petition had been re-
ceived from 2,564 in·
dividuats or teems.
Regiatration required
payment of a $20 fee.
of Medlclne, plnDOtnied the met.bod by w&Jcb cal· f elne atta u a 1tlmulant.
HE IA.ID THE DllCOV&aY llA y point Ule
way to improved dru11 -lncludln1 an improved
form ot theopbyillne, a cbemJcaJ rtlaUve of caf·
feine that is commooly uaed to treat 11lbma but
which can be toxic In lar1e dOHt.
Caffeine ia ''the most wtdely used psycboac-
U ve substance on eartb," Snyder said at tbe
seminar, which dealt with trontien of research in
the neurosclences.
It's found in coffee, tea, chocolate and many
soft drln.lt.s and foods. It's also a common ingre-
dient in over-the-counter medicines ran1ing from
stay-awake pills to cold remedies to pain killers.
The research, by Snyder, Jefferson Katims,
Robert Bruns, Zoltan Annau and John Daly. will
be published in May in the Proceedin1s of the Na-
tional Academy of Sciences, Snyder said.
FO& TWO DECADES, SCIENTISTS have
theorized that caffeine worked by inbibiUng an
enzyme known as phosphodiesterase, which is
needed for energy production in ce~. But Snyder
s aid be began to doubt that explanation since there
are other drugs which better inhibit the enzyme
but which are not stimulants.
The researchers batched a theory that caffeine
might work by blocking the action of a compound
called adenosine which they were already in·
vestigating.
Adenosine is one of the building blocks of
DNA, and it's also involved in cellular energy. But
its crucial function, as far as the Johns Hopkins re-
searchers were concerned, was Its role as a
"neuromodulator" that tends to depress activity.
'l:VEN IN MICROGRAM AMOUNTS,
adenosine derivatives injected into the brain could
bring mice to a virtual bait, Snyder said, "which
makes this, in mice, more potent lban LSD."
Tbe researchers s tudied caffeine and a
number of Its relatives, including lbeopbylline,
aod showed that the stimulant effect of each was
proportional to Its a bility to block this natural anti·
activity chemical, he said.
The caffeine relatives worked by occupying a
brain "receptor" intended for adenosine, hence
preventing adenosine Crom doing its job.
Theophylline is taken by asthmatics to open
the air passages of the lungs but it cao be
hazardous because or its caffeine·llke stimulation
of the brain and heart. But Snyder said that if
adenoeine receptors in the lung differ Crom those
in the brain or heart, as is likely, then a modified
drug might be devised that would confine its ac-
tion lo the lungs
T HE RESEARCHERS HAVE ALREADY
identified two kinds of adenosine receptors, and
Snyder says there may be as many as four.
The Johns Hopkins scientists also are in-
vestigating why the body has developed the
natural mechanism of adenosine to depress activi-
ty. Rats which receive the chemical cease alJ ac-
tivity, yet they remain awake, relatively alert and
sensitive to pain, he said.
The chemical is not especially toxic, even in
large doses. Snyder said its action resembles that
or a potent natural tranqullbe.r.
Food expert
raps Reagan
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -President Arturo
R. Tanco Jr. of the United Nations World Food
Council criticized President Reagan for using food
as a political weapon and urged the administration
ins tead to lead a humanitarian global food
strategy.
I'm taking the position or supporting those wbo
would not use food for any political use whatsoever
because lo m e this is a very dangerous pro-
cedure," Tanco said.
He said the United States should focus efforts
on ending hunger in Third World nations to pre-
vent political, economic and military conflict in the 1980s.
"I THINK FOOD aid particularly should go
where hunger is, whatever the political color of the
government is," Tanco said in an int~rview follow-
ing an address to an international conference on
junger.
Tanco, citing an example of the political use of
food , criticized the recent suspension of $7.6
million or U.S. grain s ales to Nicaragua "because
of the accusation or the Reagan government . . .
that the Nicaraguan government was smuggling
arms to El Salvador.
.. Frankly, l don 'l think that grain, which is
badly needed by Nicaragua. should have been used
in this particular case for the reasons that were
cited," Tanco said.
"I think the grain should continue to be pro-
vided to Nicaragua and let the foreign policy dis-
agreements continue," he said.
TANCO PRAISED the United States as a
wealthy •. and generous nation, but said it is not
doing enough.
"Despite the United States' generous food con-
tributions, the United States ranked leth of 17 na-
tions in the amount of developmental a11iltance it
provides, according lo the Organisation of
Econor11;ic Cooperation and Development."
Peanut butter
situation sticky ,..c1.,nea1
IMllHS' MO&'TVAaY
627 Mam St
~nh~on Beach 531-65319
,ACMC;·Y9'1W .• , .... , , ...
NEW YORK (AP> -Peanut butuir has diaap""'
peared from some 1upermarket shelves in Ule city,
and lboppe1? who find lt are paytn1 a price lbat
PUBUC NOTICE rinla that . pt steak, the city Consumer Allain --::=~~~.,.-----i Department aays. "==~::' ._ A .... M i>Ound Jumbo Jar ol was bein1 sold for
The fund ••id the
number of entrants far
surpa11es the approi·
imateJy 1,000 who com-
peted to design France's
Georcea-Pompidou Na-
tional Cent.er of Art and
Culture, which opened in
Paris in lt'15.
c.n.e.v Monuarv .,,._..
3!iOO Pecillc View Onq
NewC>0tt Beach I t
&"4·2700
'"• ,..,_,"-""-•r• ... , ... uvm ~·•to f1 ,25, accordlnc to lbe department. -·':O't":~vHTMINT co ,. .. , The average price for the 1ta.,1e of brown-.._... ............. •· Hui.tlfttl1111 b•Hlnc school children wu up by 122 percent ~:·~ •.... •Ince April , 1978. DwindJJns 1uppUe1 and hilb .. ,,, .. ~.~~·..:~!.':, prices •tell\' malnl~m lut 1ummer'1 droqht, '&"::..~ . wbleb wiped out a ._ P'ftftt ol tlM nation'• ... ,.. '-•-· ·~=.!'T.::: peaJIUt C'l'Op. .. ~--. · CoalaJiMr Mfaln Cotnm1latoMr Bruce Batner .,,:=..~ 19 _..., ltf 1111 "'· 11td Wed""4ay aome whoMlalen wer. alJocatlq .....,..o. u11N1e.n. peanut butter to 1upennan.t. baMcl OD bow mac& c!~~., ~ ;:..:~ ': lbey ~t lut year, mudl U•• 1alOllne wu al·
""· "· ""· ' locattd durlns die lalt oil 141ueae. An A•P "'*'.,.. Orwlll c.... 0et:':= 1pote1man utd that cbaln •• 1.ulac about baJf
,. ... 11. "· •. Mlrttl '· '"' m•1 ltt lllOtuPJ>ly.
OBITUARIES
JOIN US IN CELEBRATING OUR 35TH YEAR BY
TAKING ADV ANT AGE OF OUR SPECIAL SAVINGS.
30% OFF
ALL
DRIED FLOWERS
SILK FLOWERS
POLY FLOWERS
25% OFF
ALL
• MACRAME CORDS /' ~~
AND ACCESSORIES
• PLASTERCRAFT 11 '
• STYRO SHAPES
(DOES NOT INCLUDE FINISHED CUTOUTS)
20% OFF
ALL
• PARTY ENSEMBLES
•RIBBON
• TISSUE BELLS
AND CAR STREAMERS
• PLASTIC GLASSES
sy Plastics Inc.
NEW PATTERNS FOR '81 FELBRO
GIFTWRAP PUNCH BASE
40 SQ II Make!> 6 Qallons
-
reg 1 19 reg 7 99 5.88 ga.
6" MILK GLASS 1 OZ. ACRYLIC
CRAFT PAINT
A~sorled 1.olors
reg 79 reg 69 444 ea.
CRYSTAL
GLASS EGGS
by LIBBEY
12-0Z. DESIGN MASTER
SPRAY PAINT
AND FINISHES
Pe1lect for 110..,ers loam wOO<l nooon
ana much more
s·.· reg 1 79 1.22
1.88
2.33
?J. ·reg 2 79
reg 2 79
9 reg 3 49
reg
75 OASIS
!Base IOI dried l10wers1 1Bast> I01 lrest1 flowers)
504 ea.
IE SURE TO
SEEOUA
~ANA GERS
. SPECIAL
f A"lANA TO""ANCE
(It St HMISt (2t~llHIH (213) 124.0133 (213) IU .. 141
WUT COVtNA GA~N OfllOVf \.A MIRADA
(IUtMHt?1 (JH)IH-3'20 (113)1 ..... lt '
IAN DtlQO \.A MllA UCOH0.00 tMifTtNOfON HACH
c11•>HMIH 171')40-tM? (714174HZH cn•••4M441
504 ...
Sale ends
Sun , Mar 8
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 5, 1981
BALTZ-BERGERON
SMITH & TUTHILL
WEST~LIFF MORTUARY
"Affordab"le Funera/,s"
Cremation Plans Available
427 .E. 17th St., . Costa" Mesa ·
' .
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• I c • a
ARCHAEOLOGIST DllPLAYS MOOeL
Murray Hatt ehowa Wendy Aoclcwal Kint Tut
:Pupils slwwn
Egyptian art
When a traveling archaeologist brought bis
display of Egyptian history to Part View School in
Huntington Beach, students bad one overriding
question about the m ysteries of tbe ancient
civilization.
How did they take out the brains of the
pharoahs that were to be. entombed In pyramids
before coming back to life in 5,000 years?
Faye Holt. researcher and artist for ber
husband, Murray, said she believes that the brains
were blown out through a facial membrane in
some manner.
"TIDS IS ONLY A THEORY," SHE cautioned
the children, "but this is what we believed may
have happened."
Holt told students that embalmers took out the ·
brains, lungs, livers and intestines or the pharaohs
and preserved them for future use by preserving
them in golden shrines.
Holt said that only the pharaohs and the rich
could afford being turned into mummies.
·'The poor people couldn't afford it and their
bodies were thrown into the Nile River for the
alligators to eat," he said.
HOLT, 70, OF SANTA ANA, DISPLAYED
about 30 tables of cardboard models and replicas
he and his wife made depicting mummies. tombs
of pharaohs and other historicaJscenes.
He said he became an archaeologist without a college education and by accident.
He said he dropped out or school during the
Depression and after serving in the Army, joined
the crew of an Italian freighter.
It collided with another vessel during a storm
in the Mediterranean, he said, and had to be towed
~o Egypt for repairs.
BECAUSE THE WORK TOOK several
months, he looked for work and found it with an
•· archaeologist in Alexandria.
le • He said he worked in Egypt 20 years and took
n .:Part in several excavations .
s · ·;~ The Holts take their traveling exhibition to
" f~chools in about 15 Western slates where they
t)lormally charge $~ per day.
o He indicated, however. that the Ocean View
a !:School District got a "special rate."
d ''Some of the children really get something out
Ci of this experience. It provides knowledge of a
Pl ereat civilization," he said.
bo
le cc
p t
~
~:10 teachers cut
~-~in 0 V district \,
Ten special education teachers will lose jobs in
! the Ocean View School District in Huntington
~~each next year because of decllnlnt enrollment
and reduced slate funding for the pro1ram.
The board of trustees moved tbi.a week to send
layoff notices to the affected teachers before the
Jlate-mandated notification deadline of March 15.
Im . THE S PE C IAL EDUCATION
Pl : classification is applied to a ranae of students,
: from those hard of beartn1 to the multiple ban·
~Clicap~t according to school olficials.
Jobn Thomas, administrator of apeeial educe·
·lion for the district, says there are about 85
. teachen and 450 puplla in the procram.
, District officials say the action wu taken ~because of a projected enrollment decline of about Faso 1pedal education students and reduced state
E tUJMllAI for the prosram. ..
~ TllE IA YOPFS aEPaESENT A aBDUC·
lion of about $180,000, accord1n1 to d11trtct
apokeswoman Gayle Wayne.
The elementary diltrtc:t bu about 11,000 atu·
dents in the cities of Fountain Valley,
Westminster, Midway City and Huntinttoo Beach.
Legal issues
topic in HB
Letal lasuea will be explained in layman's
terms durlnl a free, four-week aeriea belinnlnl
tonitbt at Golden Weit Colle1e ln Huntincton
Beach.
Tbe aeulOlll will be held trom 7 to t in tJie col·
lete community center. lnstruetor wW be attorne)'
Lawrence A. Tre1Ua.
Tonllht'1 lecture wlll deal wttb falllllJ •tate
plaanilll. Conaumer law la alated for llareb 12,
followed bJ Calilomla pf'Ol*'b law u tt rwlatae to
marrl•. diYWff a.net cohallltation on llarelt 11.
Tb• final pro1ram, Marth H , deal• witb partaerablp1, eorporatloH aad sole fro·
P~·
WEEKDAYS 9.9 AD GOOD
SAT. I SUN. 9-6 TBRU MAR. 11
McCULLOCH 10" CW CHAii SAW
·52~!
110
Wraparound Chain Brake/Hand Guud.
Muffler Shield, Safety Trigger, Guard
Linl& Safety Cha.in, and automatic and
manual oiling. Cut your own firewood
and .. ,,. a bunch. 2 .0 cu. in. engine.
WEISER I" THROW
DEADIOL T LOCKS r-.
~=ER 6.97 ~
19470·L ~
DOUBLE 9 97 CYLINDER •
•9370·L
To give you a real MCure fffling you
might want to install one of these.
PoU.hed brass or antique bra.as finishes.
SUNBEAM
' ELECTRIC MOWERS
18" TWIN
BLADE
wrrH fUP ·OVER HANDLE
The 20" hu a safety power cut· off that stops
blade in i-than 2~ MConcu. Re..ne
direction on the 18" 199•• by just flipping the
handle. •3129A
JOIE'S
TOMATO
SPIKES
77l~PAK
P ush in two spikes per plant and your
tomatoes will fMl good all Mason long.
10111 atHa .
ICIPJ.AIToof.r PlllWAI DAiii, In ~--bothhera. '.
-talM-......... °" pM:k s• ..... Moh.You'Ut. .....,,., • wW we. FLAT
RED DEVIL rc.&;=>G
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39:GRAMS .
If you're coming in anyway,
pick up one or two. If
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RA.ACO
STORAGE
CAlllETS
40
DRAWER 7•7
SS
DRAWER
60
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9•7
If the garage hu that clutter.d f .. Ung,
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II 1600 WITH REMOTE
CAPABIJ.ITY
99
Pick• up on the first
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and comH with c: .... tte
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3000 DUAL CASSETTE WITH
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tieing up the phone.
BEHR PLUS 10
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877 GAL.
Fade resistant, eliminate• cracking and
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or Mmi ·transparent colors.
6 FOOT HAND
SPLIT CEDAR
GRAPE STAIE
69c
Could it i.. theM were intended for grape
arbors? But if you have another use, the
more the merrier. (What?)
MEGUIAR'S CAR CARE
PRODUCTS
Buy aom• and ahin• up the car .
The neighbors will come and
marvel at the good job you did.
CAR
CLEANER I 2ss
WAX 1soz.
LIFETIME
POLY SEALANT 6" SYSTEM
14 OZ. PASTE OR 16 OZ. LIQUID
PRESTO NE
SUPER FLUSH
l~?z.
Helpe to remOft accumulated
rust depoeiu from the radiator.
Prwtone b good ( for eomethlng).
TR-3
AUTOMOBILE 227 CLEANER &
POLISH 16 OZ. = 2!!z.
Saye it'• guaranteed better
than wa. for auto finish ...
(Mr. T.R. better know what
he'• about.)
llCO GRAPHITE
IOW/40 WT MOTOR OIL
97c OT.
Recappable, plutic bottle llO
you c:an UM what you need and
.tore the rwt.
REMOTE CAPABILITY
Caller has up to on•
minute to leave m .... ge. 9999 The m .... g• can be
received from any phone.
DOUGLAS · FIR
2x4
21 ~NIT
2x6
Standard construction grade for framing
and such. Wood is becoming more and
more ec:arce, treat it nice.
DOUGLAS FIR
ROUGH HEAVY
TIMBERS
4x6 5 7 c LIN. FT.
6x8 157 LIN. M'.
CLOSE-OUT! 6xl0 177
LIN. FT.
It's land.acaping time. Or if you live at the
beach , you might try them for seascaping.
SUNBEAM GAS GRILLS
SINGLE
BURNER 899!,
Chrome plated cooking grid
with 250 sq. in. of cooking
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· With Mother'• Day comin9 JOU ml9ht
want to .tuh o~ away (but not ln tM
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fEIJURIB
This is a real example of music being appreciated.
Young musicians blowing horns . sawing on violins
and rapping on drums. It's all part of the Orange
County Philharmonic Societu' s mu.'\i<: mobile visit.
Two docents f below), JoAnn Fuerbringer f lejtJ and
Louise Upham. explain the instruments to the stu-
dents and Geoffrey Winnie r right J learns quickly the
French horn is no easy instrument to conquer .
O.llr ,., ... ...,...,. llY Oerr Amtlt'9M
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Thurlday, Maroh 5, 1981 ••
Youngsters know the sound of music
ByMARYJANESCARCELLO
OfU..Dallr~S-Trumpets bla.red, clarinets tooted and drums
rapped out a snappy beat.
It could have been a rehearsal of the Los
Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra at the Music
Center in Los Angeles.
But it wasn't. It was Pat Albert's second and
third grade combination class at California
School in Costa Mesa.
The Orange County Philharmonic Society's
Music Mobile bad come to visit. and the children
were trying their hands at the instruments after
some instruction about orchestras.
JoAnn Fuerbringer and Louise Upham, do·
cents in the program, brought a violin, cello.
clarinet, trumpet, French horn, trombone, snare
drum, small cymbals , song flutes and a conduc-
tor's baton in the self-contained van.
They used these along with a tape recorder
an'd colorful pictures to tell the class about a sym-
phony orchestra.
The bright blue van, with its "OC PS"
personalized license plates, is now in its sixth year
of operation.
By June, third graders in more than 1SO
schools and 10 Orange County districts will have
heard the docents from the Music Mobile.
Other educational projects for schools from
the Philharmonic Society inc.IUde youth concerts
al Melodyland in Anaheim for fifth graders,
music history programs for firth and s ixth
graders and jazz concerts given in junior high and
high schools within the county.
When Mrs. Fuerbringer welcomed the
California School third graders to her presenta·
lion, she reminded them of the important part
music playsineveryone'slile.
"Do you notice the music in movies?" she
asked. "It tells you what's going to happen
sometimes, doesn't it?"
Their teacher listened to the presentation and
watched her students seated on small wooden
stools in a semicircle in the grass.
"It's a wonderful introduction to a music
Emy Faulkner takes a tum on the French horn ...
unit," Miss Albert commented. "The school's in-
strumental music teacher plans lo start the
cbUdren on IODI nu1es next week, so the timing
couldn't be better.
"I'm always amazed at what they know after
the Music Mobile baa visited."
The docents told about the four families of
Instruments found in an orchestra -string,
woodwind, brass a nd percuss ion -and
demonstrated by making a little noise on each
inatrumen~in their collection.
While demonstrating the French horn, Mrs.
Fuerbringer pointed out the tubing, with all its
twists and turns, actually measures 16feet.
She and Mrs. Upham stood at either end of a
piece or blue yarn that length to show astonished
students how long a French born could stretch if
straightened. ... '
And then, alter a short stop usftrg the tape
recorder. the students were ready for the best part
-making their own music.
The snare drum drew a group of fascinated
boys who took turns rapping out tricky beats.
military marches and jungle rhythms.
Trombone players produced blasts as if herds
of elephants were rampaging across the school's
fronllawn.
Trumpeters, after a few false starts ,
managed some breathy notes mixed with a few
startling bleats.
Violinists s awed energeticall y. and cello
players created resonant rumbles.
Students examined the horsehair bows with
scientific interest, a lmost dismantling them in the
process.
Hardestinstrument to play, everyone agreed.
was the French horn.
Would-be musicians squinted their eyes and
turned red in the face with the effort to produce ii
sound, butfewsucceeded.
"Gosh, it's HARD!" one breathless third
grader exclaimed. "l don't know how those guys
doit."
It was a real example of music appreciation.
. . . while Matt Rouse makes beautiful music on the violin
Peace Corps · ••• It's hard work when you can get it
' IDITOa·s NOTE -Tbe
Peace Corps, inatituted by
l'tHident John F. Kennedy,
*ll6l'ked its 20th anniversary
Sotlay. The followln1 report teU. bow it operates today in one Iha ol the world -a re~ eoner of IOUtbem Chile.
•r~~~~
CIULLAN, Cblle CAP) -San· Ir Ho«mann, a J1.1ear-old from
Clhuon, Iowa, may bave tbe todlbelt Job ln the Peace Corpe. • :_1!'• la vl1lt1a1 t•• rural •w•1• ol aoutben CllOe lrrJq tO talk ........ hdO kWiaC their
dop. ..
Miu Hoffmann is a member
of a health team tryin1 to check
an outbreak of rabies near the
vUJa1e of San Ipaelo.
Two rabid do11 were found
there recenUy and 40 people had
to cet rabies ahola u a pre-
caution. Since fn ·dost lD the
area are vaccinated a1ain1t
rabies. autboritiea decided to
d•tro1 aU doll wlthln a 15-mUe
radius.
"Tbel'e'I DO tellinl bow lllany
do11 are lnf~. KUUnc them
11 tbe onJy way," the Mid. "lt'a
rou1h on the peaauu. Ttley
need tbetr doCJ fOf' li•atoet ~
tectloa, and for aome tbeJ an
companiOD1."
Most peasants eventually
acree to her entreaties, she said,
but the health team destroys the
doaa even if the ownen refuse.
Mlu Hoffmann la one ol 101
Peace Corpl vohmteen in ChUt
and ooe ~ 5,IOO volunteen in 62
cOW1triel. The acency marked
ita 20tb annlvenary Sunday.
MOit volunteers in Chile work
in rural art••· MallJ art teacben and commRDity dt·
• veJopen. TbeJ allo keep bt•1 t .. d pnteae f1'0W rabbtta ana
abeep, work with retarded
cbUdNll ..•. and COUDMl juTtalle
d~=~&atoteeeb tbelrMWI totlll~ ... IMlPtlMmMIP
themselves. Many live wit.b the
very poor and endure the same
hardships.
·'There's nolbln• romantic
about what I do. lt'a "° f\m f reeaint your butt off In the
winter wit.bout beat and 1oinl
for two QI' three ween between a bowen," kl11 Hoff mu told a
reporter In a recent lntentew.
All the volunteers in Cbtle
receive • a monua u a JlTinc
allowance. When tbey leHe the
Peace eon., tbeJ aet SllS for
every ~ lentd. Tht normal tour ol dul)' ti two Jean.
Tbe Petce ~ bud.let in
CbUe la •·* a ,..r. ~ ud Earle Brooke, tbe b .......
and wife teaD) who run the
operation in Chile, contend that
dollar for dollar it la one of the
best Investments the U.S.
covenunent ever made.
''Tht amount of influence
volunteers bave In rural areu 11
phenomenal," aald Brooks, a Iona• PWabury vice prukleat.
Tbe Broc*a were amoq the
flraf 500 Peace Corpa vohmteen
bac) la 1111 and also served in
Ecuador. Tbey HJ the .,.acy
baa .......... into a much more
efffftiw Gpll'atiOD,
• 'T*1'• vohmteen ate older
and more profe11ional. Tbe
trala&nl ud acreuln• la 100
perctet Mtter," aald Brooks, a
native of Boston.
Volunteers for service in Chile
cet three months of intensive
tralnlnt before tbey ue
accepted. Thia includes six
hours a day of Spanish plus
Other courses teared u mucb a
po11lble to ~he work tbe
volunteer will be dolq, Broob
aald.
Broob hid eo peopJe were in
the croup be started out with in
the corps in 1111, and 40 percent
dropped out dvinl tralnlnc in
Puerto Rico. lie aald all 11
volunteen wbo c•lll• to Cblle lD
S.ptembei to beala tralnlat
were awora ~ Dec. S and .,..
(leePSACScoaN,P ..... )
I l
I I
J
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 5, 1981 FEATURES ·
By SANDIE .JOY 6f ... o.lty "'91 ..... Tbe anniversary was por·
celaln but it was a tolden day
when the "An1els of Gold," bet·
ter known as lhe Angelitos de
Oro, met tut Tbunday for lunch
at the Bil Canyon home of Ken
and Toni Oliphant.
The s0n was shinine brigbUy,
streaming into the Olipbants'
living room, and many of the
more than 140 guests exclaimed
, over the magnificent view from
the patio. The home overlooks
the ninth tee for Big Canyon'• .
gol~ourse. G den flowers decorated the
bu et and coffee tables inside
while out.side the sun danced on
more golden blooms linine the
walkway between the hi>me and
a big white tent where guests
were to dine.
IT WAS ONE OF those days
when the sky was so blue you
could see aJmost forever -at
least to lhe snow-capped moun·
tains and all the way across the
golf course.
The occasion was the
Angelitos de Oro Patroness
luncheon, held to honor the
women who help provide
generous financial donations to
assist the AngeUtos in their work
with the Big Brothers organiza-
tion in Orange County.
While the Angelitos organize·
lion is an exclusive group of 55
extreme ly active and two
honorary members, the Patro-
ness group includes more than
100 women.
Angelitos de Oro was founded
20 years ago as a support group
for Big Brothers .
That makes this year the or-
ganization's porcelain a n-
niversary. So. appropriately, as
each luncheon guest arrived, she
was presented with a little por-
celain angel hung on a brown
ribbon which was securely tied
around her neck by a gracious
Jane Berls, who was Angelitos
presi~nt during 1973 and '74.
ALSO GREETING guests was
Mrs. Oliphant. who hosted the
··girls only" luncheon for 142
persons; Mrs. Alex Robertson Jr.
of Laguna Beach, who is this
year's Angelitos president; Mrs.
John Bailey. Angelitos vice presi-
dent; and Mrs . Don Woodward,
luncheon chairman.
Also enjoying the affair were
the Angelitos' two honorary
members. Mrs. ~pencer Homg,
who founded the organization,
and Mrs . Charles Thomas, its
first president. The group's
second president. Mrs. Clifford
Hakes, also was very much into
tbe day as was Dori deKruf, who
was busy assisting the press.
Other guests included Margo
Yule. immediate past president
of the Angelitos and this year's
Patroness chairmen; Patricia
Groth and Millie Niedecker.
The Angelitos have 104 new
patronesses this year. 75 of
whom attended the luncheon
a long with Angelitos members .
AMONG THE new patronesses
are Mrs . Daniel G. Aldrich Jr ..
Mrs. Robert G. Andrews, Miss
. A:gnes Blomquist, Mrs. Virginia
~ott Bender, Mrs. Alexander
B,Owie, Mrs . John L. Curci, Mrs.
CJement Hirsch, Mrs. Clifford
Hughes and Mrs. Boyd Jeffries.
Also , Mr s . William
Chichester, Mrs . J . Robert
Me serv e , Mr s . Andre w
Morthland , Mr s . Renfro
Newcomb, Mrs. Paul Queyrel.
Mrs. Jay Reed, Mrs. James
Roosevelt, Mrs . Don Metzger,
Mrs. Chandler Mccurdy, Mrs.
Edward Schumacher, Mrs. E.H.
Skinner . Mrs. Ira Smith and
Antique Show
Dally Pit• Si.ff P-.1
Lawyers Wives at breakfast are Liz Williams r left ). Beverly Barnes and Betty Lou Soden . Wendy Bowie pours punch at New Directions thrift shop.
HAPPENINGS
Mrs. Glen Stillwell.
Five new members of
AngeHtos are hard at work on
the 20th edition of the Gold Book,
a limited edition engagement
calendar presented at the an-
n u a I Angelitos de Oro Ball.
which this year will be held May
15 at the Newporter Inn. The
book is filled with photos of little
boys, Big Brothe r s. local
landmarks and advertising sold
to raise $25,000 a year to further
the work of Big Brothers of
Orange County.
While all 55 Angelitos mem·
bers participate in the project,
th e five members putting
special effort into it include the
Mmes. Robert Guggenheim ,
Robert Lucas, John Bailey,
Devillo Brown and Clark King.
~
At least one guest at the
Patroness luncheon didn't have
far to go.
That was Betty Lou Soden of
Corona del Mar, who earlier in
the day had attended a
breakfast and fashion show for
the Lawyers Wives of Orange
County at Neiman-Marcus'
Fashion Island store.
Mary Jane Thompson, Mildred
Snidow and Harriet Watson.
The Lawyers Wives are pre-
paring for a big benefit March 13
at the Balboa Bay Club.
Newport Beach, to help support
its special projects. The benefit,
billed as Friday Night with Feli-
ciano. will include cocktails and
a special performance by
singer I guitarist/songwriter Jose
Feliciano. Tickets. at $15 each,
are available by contacting the
Lawyers Wives at 731-0644.
Proceeds of the cocktail party
and concert will go to the
George A. Parker Foundation
w h ich administers the
Shortstop, which is a rehabilita-
tion program for first-time
juvenile offenders, and a legal
education program.
Lest anyone think the Lawyers
Wives are a frivolous group
making a merry round of
breakfasts, fashion shows and
cocktail parties, it should be not·
ed that this is a hard-working
group that has as one of its ma-
jor project s the running of
courthouse tours for junior and
senior high school students. The
tours, each of which lasts three
hours. are conducted daily and
wind up with mock trials so stu-
dents can see the administration
of justice in progress.
. Among other recent happen-
mgs was the grand opening Feb.
25 of New Directions' new thrift
shop at 600 W. 19th St., Costa
Mesa. The shop, which is twice
the size of its predecessor . was a
project of lhe provisional class
of the Junior League of Newport
Harbor.
The s hop, featuring ever y.
thing from 25-cent blouses to S8
designer dresses plus som e
household goodies. will be open
10 a .m. to 4 p.m . Wednesdays
through Saturdays. P ror.eeds
from the shop go toward support
of New Directions, which is a
halfway house for recovering
alcoholic women.
Among those attending the
grand opening were Sue Schaar.
president of the board at New
Directions ; and Sheri Best and
Linda Fins ter of the Junior
League provisional class.
Among Junior Leaguers who
worked on the thrift shop project
were Nancy Swan . He l e n
Cooper. Cody Smith. Phyllis Di-
gruccio and Wendy Bowie.
. . .Peace Cnrps
<From Page 85>
still in the fi eld.
a dozen volunteers.
The Lawyers Wives, many of
whom actually are Judges' wives,
were treated to a special show·
ing of Anne Klein's s pring col-
lection, narrated by the de-
signer 's re presentative Gail
Miller and followed by a sampl-
ing of Neiman-Marcus' other de-
signer fashions in a showing nar·
rated by N-M's own Kilty Leslie.
Jane Berls f leftJ presents angel to Patricia Groth Rene Lara. a Chilean and the
corps' liaison officer with the
Chilean government, s aid the
government likes the volunteers
and has asked for many more
than the corps can supply.
Brooks s aid th e agency
survived by staying away from
politics and warning volunteers
to keep their political opinions to
themselves.
And, while breakfast guests
seemed pleased with the Anne
Klein showing, their interest
really perked up when Mrs.
Leslie opened her portion of the
show with a raincoat to beat all
raincoats. Would you believe a
raincoat done in raccoon with
the hidden luxury of a squirrel
fur lining?
Next, noting that N.M. is "so
famous" for its designer furs,
she brought on a lynx-dyed fox
shown over a Missoni gold knit
dress followed by a coat she
d escribed as perfect for
Southern California," a ribbed
mink jacket. Her piece de
resistance was a full len_gth
Canadian lynx coat which Ms.
Leslie said, "If you only have
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 and a
friendly ad-
viser wil I
help you
turn your
wheels into
'Cash.
~~U<Jm fh, ,J/l~ady
S EASONAL .SALE
SAVINGS
"Wise fashion investments
well worth waiting for! ''
Jr., Missy, Women'ssizes4·20
"WE G O TO ALL LENGTHS
TO P LEASE"
one fur to live and die in, this is
it ... smashing of glamour ...
wear it over everything you own.
Wear it to Von's market or to Am-
brosia."
In addition to Mrs. Soden, en-
joy i og the Lawyers Wives
breakfast and fashion show were
Li:i Williams of Santa Ana, who
confided s he begins each day
with a fiv~-mile bike ride;
Beverly Barnes of Corona del
Mar; Lela Miller of Santa Ana,
Chile was one of the first
countries to receive volunteers,
with the first arriving in 1961.
The political upheaval that
began here in 1970 with the
e l ection of a Marxi st
government and the right-wing
military coup that followed in
1973 was a difficult time for the
agency. which cut back to about
Wha t does the United States
get out of the program ? Peace
Corps people agree there are
many benefits but say they are
hard to measure.
··People he r e take their
impressions of the United States
from 'Kojak' and 'Charlie's
Angels'," Lara said.
''It takes some simple guy
fro m Wyoming who's not a
superhero to make them realize
we·('e both human beings."
madine's
..
A Private Hedth Cub
For Women
• Sauna • Whirlpool
• Sunroom • Masseuse
• Nutritionist • Aerobics
No Contracts
t
2 FOR 1 SPECIAL
Two can Joi" Mldlne'1
for the price of one!
Off er Expires March 31st
3 Orange County locations to serve you
Newport Beach
2036 Quail
751 -3200
Huntington Beach
16857 Algonquin
846-3377
-.-...... #"!
Mission Viejo
24194 Alicia Pkwy.
770-3200
FEATURES· Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Maron 5, 1981 117
Tlw 'turtle' in her li/e When to use 'Thank you'
DIWl ANN LAJ(J)SU: lam WrtUDI WI
letter to Map all ~ ~ wtlo an tldak•n1
ot ,_., ·~· .l~ U., wW atve 10m• coulderatlon to tb• 1Puactuaa.J.~att lyn· drolDe."
I bavt been man19d elPt 1•art to a dar·
lln1 mu who 11 drtvtnl mt up tb• wall. I am a
VWJ NUabl• pereoa who ilk• to plua abtld 10 l
can bt wbere J am 1us>p09ed to be -oo timt. Ray
la exactly the oppoalte.
I have trttcl movtnc UM clocb ahead, fib·
btn1 about dat11, telllnl him we a.re Invited for e:ao p.m. wben actually 1t•1 7:30. Notblnl
worlta. He atill pokes alon1, and I alt and wait -
tettln1 madder and madder by the minute.
Lut summer I landed in the hospital with
hi1h blood pressure. The doctor said 1trea1 and
anxiety were contributin1 factors to my condi·
Uon. So, all you young lovers who are coll.llder·
in1 matrimony, please examine your partner' a
time bablts. They couJd be buardOUI to your
health.
If you have su11eaUoas that ml&bt help
ME, Ann, I'd love to Mar them. -WAI'J' WAIT
WAIT IN CHJCAGO ..
DBAa WAIT: l'lnt, cnllder tlala fut: No
Meeaa11Ye JM ldp WM ..--n wit.M9tyeu per•...._. Yoaat1ewe4aa1tedolt.
SeeGed: Yet, I do •ave a aa11esdoa fer Y•
HOROSCOPE
Taurus: Look
for miracle
FRIDAY, M~CH •
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Needed inlorma·
lion becomes available -you are in position
to take advantage of special circumstances.
Cancer. Scorpio, Pisces persons figure pro-
minently. Superior asks for meeting and result
proves beneficial.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Flurry of social
activity results in valuable contacts. Popularity
surges; what appeared far away is actually
close at band. Expect a miracle! A wish will be
fulfilled. Gemini, Sagittarius natives play im·
portant roles.
GEMINI (May 21 .June 20 ): Adhere to
routine; persons in position to aid your cause
are close observers. Keep goal in sight. You're
ready for . promotion! Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo
persons figure prominently. Scenario highlights
challenge, responsibility and reward.
CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22): Express feelings,
needs in writing. Emphasis on communication,
long-range projects, travel plans and special
publishing opportunities. Gemini, Virgo, Sagit·
tarius pesrsons play significant roles. Tie loose
ends!
LEO (July 23--Aug . 22): Circumstances dictate
a moderate pace and diplomatic approach to
p.rdbJems. What you seek is available and wiJJ be handed you in surprise fubion. Accent on domestic situation, personal surroundings and
possible purchase of luxury item.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) :. Obtain hint from
Leo m essage. Time moves. Bewaryinconnection
with fine print, subtle legal nuances. Perfect
techniques, streamline procedures. See places,
people as they exist, not merely through haze of
wishful thinking.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent production,
special material, willingness to make minor
sacrifice in return for major gain. Cancer.
Capricorn persons figure in scenario. One who
shares basic interests will speak up and become
an import.ant ally .
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): EmphasiS on
self-expression, completion of project and joy of
love. In matters of speculation, stick with
number 9. Aries, Libra persons figure in
scenario. Door of creative opportunity opens
wide. Enter!
SAGl1TAIUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Fresh point
of view aids in understanding property value
and future course of action. Greater indepen·
dence Is highlighted. Focus on origina.utr.
creativity and pioneering procedure. Leo lS m
picture.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J an. 19): Needed data
becomes available. Consolidate forces; lines or
communication, temporarily stalled will be
back in working order. Short trip ls on agenda.
Taurus, Virgo and another Capricorn figure
prominenUy.
AQVAIUVS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Fight tendency
to pay inflated prices. Count your change, be a
comparison shopper and alert to financial OP·
portunilies. Gemini, Libra and another
Aquarian figure prominentl,y. You are on brink
of bitting jackpot!
PISCF.8 (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): You'll be revising
routine -circumstances turn in your favor.
Lunar cycle is s uch that you make successful
starts in new directions. Trust your own judg·
ment. A chance meeting results in creative,
productive endeavor.
• __ ,.. _____ _
Ill 1111111 ..... ......___
ud all tM..., • tMn •Mare
trap,.. .. tM "Pwtaal·La*e ~•·"Tell
&M ~ .. ,..r Ille w~at thM,.. are lihta1. u ... (• •> ... , ,. •• , -....... ,, ... wW
•MtJlllllMN.0 1'1tealO.Ul&•eU110•HM
wW bft te take dae bu • a tall -IO w•atT 1&'1 a a. • .,., u.aa MP..._.,,........
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Tb.lJ l1 an embar·
raaam, problem. It make• me sound lite a
meanie, but I have bad it with my next-door
neltbbor wbo aenda her eilht-year-old boy over
here nearly every day after school to play wlth
my 100.
The kids set alona flne. The problem la the
child hMaa arwnd until auppertlme and says,
"Gee, that amella 1ood. Can I stay!" I don't
mind bavinl bim once a week, but five nithta is
too many. Any Jactful 1ua1eatlons? -
WAUKESHA, WIS.
DEAS WAU~ Wlaea JW ,nhr M& to ._Ye
dle boJ ,_...,er, ceu aw.. "Net 1ea111111, de·
ar," ... lllllller Mm to a.. ....... Ne espluadoa
line ·
ll'S
l have a recWTtll1 ot1btman ln which m).' ion
l1 1etttq tbe Nobel Prta• fOI' Sclenn. Alter ht 11 pre1tntecl the award, be t\ll'DI to'" the en Utt au·
dlenc1 on tta feet olapP1n1 wildl)'. J'inally, the •P·
plautedt• down and there ll a 1Uence tbat lull at lea1tayear.
I can't atand It. l crawl to the 1ta1e on my
banda and knee•t tu1 on bla pant. 111 and whilper,
"Sar_tbankyoul 'Hela55yeartold.
'J'o a motber, "Thank you" 11 the ultimate in
mannen and breed.ln1. It'• toney ... it's style
. . . tt tramcendl ra11y underwear, knotted
aboeatrinp and doa hairs on your sweater. It
melta tbebardeat hearu. Looti':,f back, J tbinlr my kids were under tbe
influence hypnosis. They'd stand there like a
fire hydrant until I said the key words, "What do
you aay?" and then they'd respond with au the
feellnp of a doll with a strinl in Its neck, ''Thank
you."
I could never get them to uae lhtt word in the
right place. ...
They'd say ''Thank you" for a licit off a
second· band ice cream cone from a friend.
They'd remain mute when their grandmother
gave them a cbeca«ortbeir birthday.
They'd say "Thank you" for a piece of auto
glass and a weasel t~th.
1111 ••• ~ :..,__ __
" They'd be comatose when someone 1ave
them a rldetotbe library in a blizzard.
The "Thank )'OU" experience may be an ex·
erci1e ln tutW&y, but it la one lesson that mottle rs ,
never Hem to live up on. They pursue it forever.
The other day I aald to my son, "Did you ever ,,
tban.k ...,.. Butler for that little bathtub toy for
your btrtbday?"'
"Mom! Tbatwaa23yearsago."
"She's probably wonderinglf you liked it."
"I ate it, didn't l?"
"Andl don't suppose you ever thanked Aunt
Mary for the atlas for your graduation."
"Why ar~you bringing aUofthls up now?"
"~ause lam tired and I want to put child-
raisinabehind me.''
He lifted up the phone, dialed and finally said.
''Hey, thanks a Jot!''
I beamed. "You see, that wasn't so difficult,
was it? Bytheway, whowereyoutalkingto?"
. He shrugged. "It was a recording. I forgot
myself."
I
MarCh Madness \·'.
s--r-s._ .. v-o-
ICMI S.O.e -v-"'-I . C~& ..u641·1289 , . .._._.
•tUOt~1 -~~.... Deep ......... ·~ .. ....,)
Baldwin
Pianos
and Organs
LE~50N~ INSTRUMENTS
T APE.S RE.CORDS
Yllll ~~:~~R
*• ,. Ni "' 1• ,. 111 ,,
Fashion laland '40·9020
OAll • 10-6 SUM tt \ ""°" THUlllS -F•1 10 t
o~ I
.. ,~*\ ~ c,v c,tl'~~ ~t~·'~
C ....... lty-• c.,...
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.,,.....~
.~ ..........
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Uri Euro ... :..icen llltc,_ ..,.., htl> ...,."°"' ___ ._,
Sale price good thru 3/8181 IAJl1/e supplies
last. Sly/es sho.<."1 are representtJt1ve of the
selection.
KENNINGTON
KENNINGTON
KNIT SHIRTS
Regutarly Sl7·S22.You ~on every short
sleew t<mnington kn11 shirt In siock. a wide
as50rt!Tlenl ol slyles and color's T err,.dolh or
inteflock knits. men S.M·L .)(L
GUYS' A. SMILE
BEAOiPANTS
Regu&arly S21·S25. Spring Is time 10 ge1 back
Into the A. ~ style Right now yoo save on
assorted styles and colors 1n cool conon sheeting
clom Elasiic·back Of boiter wal51s. 28·38
JRS.' BOLT
KNIT TOPS
Regularly S20. (Above) T \,\()of a kmd cldorable ,,asiel
lops end.pants from llgh1nl09 Bolt. These kn111op..,
feature assorted screen print"> S·M·L
JRS.' BOLT
BEACH PANTS
Regulafly S23. Our cute beach pants from Lightnl09
Boll come in the preftiesl paStel.., under the ">Un Rela111ed
drawstring Of elastic IM!liSls 5·13
DOUG WILSON
SWEATSHIRTS
BOYS' MEN'S
1299 1699
Super C.SIMll Pump ~be¥' $20, men's S25. (Ult) Get greal sa-A~s
oh thew fun w..eetshlrts ~Doug Wilson lof left &nk.
\Mth 1 popular logo screen prlnled on the sleeve. Men's orl
boys' slzn S.M·L XL
It's the new lower fHhlon
heel that's just right for
sprlng's knee skimming skirts. Biscuit Catt with St.eked Heel.
~ MiJ.i~ SHOES
,
.99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach . 759 .. 9551
t
' STORE HOURS
Mon-f ri 10.9:30. s.. 10. 7. Su" 10-6
MINlllll 2636 W La Palma 1vs1 w1s1 ol Magnotta 11'1521·3503
MIA llUg E /mPf(11f Hwy across trom Br11 Mill 71'1529-997'
CllfNTOl!AlfTEllA 18600 Gr1111ey opposite Los Cemcos Mall 2131924-MIJ ll CAIOll 116 J«k,,,,n F/ftclltr Pkwy II M1rshalt 11'1'•2·1616
llCOllOIOO 119 N E&COllfKIO Biro at MtSSIOn ..... 71•t1•S·l300
'0fJl(fM# W'ALLIY 83!0 Wlrntr Avt W1tn1r II tfll '05 Fwy 11'1"4""°1
l#U#TJlltTDll llAC# 10111 AC11ms A~e Brooktrurst & Adams 1~"4·~2.J
I.A •EU 71at El ~ Bflld 11 8'#1more Or 11'16H.f601 .... r•.JO 2$252 Mclntyrt '05 Fwy U Pu 1x1t 1141$14·8100 #Olt1PIMMJI 19320 Nordltolt St oppos111Norlllhdge1>1u1 2'319"·10f7
O#Wllf 119 S. Tuslffl Aw. TuatM II /tit Gtrdffl llrovt Fwy 11'16Jfft7'1
OJllMIO 200 Espllfl1<Je D11ve. oppoSlte Thi Espl~n1<J1 ce11111 805148S-CJ606 MIAlll#A 3660 E Foo/trill Blvd Ros1me1<J & Foo11t1/I 2131ST8·1692 ~#ILL$ 11851 E Co/lm1 HSI of Puent1H1/ls M11( 2131964-6121 IWfn#lf 3502 Ty/fr ntxt <JOOI to Thf 1T11sury 11•16'7·1322
lllflWM OMS .CS20 Van Nuys Bm1 lltKl 10 Huolles M11•t1 2131143·151 I
IMITA AllA 3'30 s Bnsrol Ave. "'·milt nortll Of SOlllll COISI Plllf 114>951·1100
UllrA IAltlAltA B20 Sllte St "' dow111ow11 Sin/I Bltblfl. 80SIH3·»fS
Sta Blfbafl Ojlfn M·TH·F 10·9 30 T11-W•Sll lo.l. S111110·6
TOIMMICI 22724 H1wtflome Bird 1/4·milt soutll of Ott Amo 2tJ/31.J·139' .,,,.,,,.Tf,, IS·fll GoldtllwtSI SI ntll lo GollNll Wtsl C°"'ft 714/nt·5541
,,
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High country taste.
~ght and mild.
Above all in
refreshment .
·-·-· -·~···-····
"
,/;,;·
Werning: The Surgeon Gtntrll Hes Determined
Thlt Ciglftttt Smoking' la~ to YOUf Hntth.
----------~-~..:;..·_;. : -,---------·-------
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1911
6USINESS cs
STOCKS C7
COMICS C9
MOVIES C10
TELEVIS,ON C11
A 9-1 pre-season record
is reason for concern
for OCC's baseball team.
See C4.
Be niakeS t h.e s acrifice
UCl's Wulf wins l,est sufaporting role
By .JOHN SEVANO in community college and high school. But, according to °'*~' ,., .. ,.... bl th i .fi t Wherever there ls a successful sports program -m, ese are more s Int ican ·
wbetber it be football, basketball, baseball or any other "THE TEAM'S SUCCESS is the main thing, anything
team coocept -there are bound to be people malting else is e"tra," says the 6-6, 195<-pounder. "I really like my
1Jacrifices; players who are willing to make concessions, of role. I'd hate to be in Kevin's position where everybody is
their own talents, for the good of the team. trying to pull a trick defense on you. That would be hard.
UC Irvine's Rainer Wulf ls one of these individuals. "B\lt then again, 1 would love to have Magee's talent."
As a starting forward on the Anteater basketball squad, Ironically, Wulf almost didn't come to UCL He was
which will play utah State toni&ht (9) in the first round of almost an afterthought until a tip from a friend convinced
the PCAA Tournament at the Anaheim Convention Center, Mullican he would be making a good choice.
Wulf has had to change his game, and bis ..-------------~ "He's far exceeded what we thought
priorities, In order to flt in with Coach Bill he'd do," admitted Mulligan. "We recruit·
Mulligan's offensive concept. ed him to come off the bench and he's done
AND, THE TRANSITION hasn't been as a great job for us."
easy as one might think when you consider WULF SA vs HE HAD no false hopes
Wulf came out of Citrus CoUege as an all-when he came to Irvine.
M lssion Conference selection, having ·•1 wanted to come here if 1 got the averaged 19.5 points and 6.2 rebounds as a
sophomore. Plus, ln high school, he was an
all-CIF 4-A performer at Bishop Amat
High where he averaged 24.2 points per
outing.
Under UCl's format, Wulf has had his
leading role reduced to a supportive one;
one that stresses defense, not offense, and
one designed to let the others around him
carry the burden.
Wulf is a prime example of what is
meant by sacrifice . . . and the best thing
about it is he doesn't mind a bit.
On radio t onlflll'
K 1n'E ( 108 FM) at 9
chance, I knew what I could do," he says
"From day one I wept out to break my
butt and play 100 percent and hope I'd get
in the top eight."
Wulf not only broke the top eight. he
made it to the top five, and now he'd like
to make it to No. 1 this week as the Ant
eaters make their drive toward an NCAA
or NIT playoff bid.
·'I've never played with the caliber of
players we have on this team," said Wulf,
whose good looks are more suited for a
movie camera than a basketball court. "I
didn't come here expecting to be a star. I
just wanted to fit in." RAINER WULF
"We (players > realize that one loss and
we're out," says Wulf, "and we won·t go to
any tournament -NCAA or NIT.
WULF HAS DONE more than just ''fit in." Recruited as
a sixth-man to come off the bench and provide spark,
Wulf's talents eventually promoted him to a starting role
by the fourth game of the season.
Since, he has logged 800 minutes in playing time (fourth
highest on the team), averaged 8.2 points per game and 4.5
rebounds, and ranks fourth on the team in assists with 74
in 26 games.
"I know it's a cliche, but we're going to
have to play our hearts out. All my life I've wanted to play
in a Division I playoff. What we have to do is dig deep
down inside and push harder.
"IF WE CAN just play our game for three nights, .. he
added. "First, we have to get by Utah State, and we've
played them two pretty ·close games already ( 117-110
DENVER'S DAVE ROBISCH GRABS REBOUND IN CROWD. Those numbers are a far cry from what Wulf averaged <See WULF, Page C2>
Fans give Nuggets · boost
DENVER (AP) -There was
something different al the Los
Angeles Lakers-Denver t-Juggets
game aside from the ract that
the Nuggets won the National
Basketball Association contest
123-114.
It was the fans -14,890 of
them, to be exact. That's about
twice as many as the lackluster
Nuggets had been able to attract
at home until they started win-
ning recently . a nd extended
• their victorious streak to four
games Wednesday night.
Denver Coach Doug Moe was
exultant over the turnout.
·'The fan s were great
tonight," Moe said. "It's terrific
to have them back. That's the
way it used to be there and it
really helps tq have those people
pulling for you."
"I GUESS the fans had some
kind of effect on Denver's play,"
s aid Los Angeles' Paul
Westhead.
But both coaches gave much
of the credit for the win lo Den-
ver 's performance o n the
boards; the Nuggets outre-
bounded the Lakers 81-53.
Moe praised Cedrick Hordges,
who hauled down nine rebounds
in the fourth quarter and tied
with Dan Issel with 14 rebounds
for the game.
''Cedrick really took over on
the boards i n the fourth
quarter," Moe said. "He wanted
the ball badly. He was even
pushing his own men to get the
ball. He and Kenny Higgs were
just unbelievable."
Higgs orchestrated Denver's
fast break with some crucial as-
sists during the last five minutes
as the Nuggets rallied to defeat
the Lakers.
THE NUGGETS trailed by
six. 104·98, with 9 :09 remaining
when Dan lssel hit a follow shot
and David 1bompson added two
consecutive field goals to tie the
game at 104.'
It was then that Higgs toot
over, building his game totaJ to
nine assists in the waning
minutes, including a pass to Is·
set for a layup that gave the
Nuggets a two-point edge.
English led wtlh 31 points.
Thompson finish ed with 28
points and lssel had 27.
Westhead offered no excuses
for his world champion team's
loss.
CIF quarterfinals
.. IT WASN'T a matter of not
being up for the game." he said.
''Over the last few years we've
had some great games with
Denver and this was another
Tall, speedy foes expected one.''
Westhead also noted that it
will take "about ten games" for
Earvin "Magic" Johnson, who
scored 21 points in the game, to
get back in lop shape . It was
Johnson's fourth game back in
uniform after knee surgery from
an injury suffered Nov. 8, 1_,,
against Kansas City.
By ROGER CARLSON
Of Ille Dally Pllet Stall
Corona del Mar High's Sea
Kings roll into the CIF 3-A
basketball quarterfinals Friday
night as anticipated of the Sea
View League champions.
But two others -Edison
High's Chargers and the Estan-
cia High Eagles -have entered
the arena· of eight in their
respective divisions after upset-
ting the dope sheet.
Here ls a look at each of
Friday's 7:30 Issues:
CdM--S.n Gorgonlo
Coach Jack Errion's Corona
del Mar Sea Kings meet tall and
talented San Gorgonio, coached
by former Westminster Hieh
Coach Doug Stockham.
The San Bern·ardino·based
Spartans, champions of the
Citrus Belt League with an over·
all mart of 25·3{ feature an
all·6·5 front line, ed by junior
Gerry Wright and senior Mike
Jackson.
Wright avera1es 16.3 points
and 7.8 rebounds a game, while
Jackaon bu scored at a 17.5 clip
and averased 8. 7 rebounds.
"We dOa't have the apeed San
Gor1oaio baa," says Errion.
"Their 1119ed in the transition
••me wUl be a problem for ua
and we bave to cut down their
lonf outMt paaset. • We've aot to make them
worry ~ 1eWn1 that first
PUI olf, to put IOme preuure oa
lbe l\lY tbeJ're tbrowt.q to,"
addl tbe nteran Brri~.
Tbe S. KJnp of Corolla del
Mar, 11-I and wortini oe a lb·
1ame wllmiDc atnak, revolve· around die Sea Vlew IAape't
Player ~ Ute v,ar, lelt Pr*,
center Mark Sptm and f.I 8ee¥e
'Moore.
"Colleettnly we're plaJina
well totetber now.'' aaya Enion.
"But one bad game al lhis poinl game in the past five seasons
and you're history. ~er Errion.
· ·san Gorgonio is an up tempo Eagle• In action
team and if 1 had to choose, I' The ract Estancia is still com·
rather play someone who likes peting is a story in itself as
lo move with the ball. StiU, we Coach Larry Sunderman's
c an't .~atch San Gorgonio's heightless Eagles continue to
speed: soar despite the odds.
Ernon says he expects to see The Eagles are 18-8 and in the
man-to-man and .zone defenses past five decisions, three have
from San Gorgomo and the Sea taken overtimes to decide the is·
sues.
BASKETBALL
Kings' offensive improvement
against the zone has him en-
couraged.
Aside from the Pries·Spinn·
Moore combination, the Sea
Kings are expected to employ
6-0 junior Chris Lynch, who bu
been ln double figures the past
six games, and 6-3 Adam Acone
in the starting lineup.
This is CdM's l8th CIF playoff
Invading .Edison High for the
3-A duel is Moreno Valley, the
CIF 2-A champions of 1980, who
feature three returning starters,
the No. 6 player and a 1980 let-
terman in the starting lineup.
Among Moreno Valley Coach
John Dahl's lineup are 6·7
Bernard Wolf, M point guard
Craig Jackson and 6-1 senior
Gaylen DeWald, in addition to
6-2 Al Farias and 6~2 Danny
Lyons.
The Vildnas from Sunnyme•d
(See P&EP, Paae C%)
Los Angeles got 26 points from
All-Star center Kareem Abdul-
J abbar and 21 from Norm Nix-
on.
Estancia, Irvine
win in CIF soccer
Irvine and Estancia high
schools both came away with
victories in CIF playoff soccer
action Wednesday as the Va·
queros blanked Valencia, 2-0 and
the Eagles defeated Marshall,
4·2.
With the wins, both advance to
Friday's quarterfinal round with
Estancia to meet Caotatrano
Valley whiJe Irvine plays Keppel
lligb of Alhambra at Keppel.
Thon has the tools, no:w he need8 a starting job
8 -~~SL But with the acquiaitloaa durinc the "I'm jult wmtehin& a lot of the playen "I'd like to play abortatop the most," :r ....... ...., winter ot free aaenta Butch llobloa at here like Carew and Caai~ and be 1ay1. "But I'll play U)'Wbere they
Dickie Tboa la bard at work tn hi.a third base and Rick BurlHoD at teyln& to learn aa mucb u I ean. want me to u Joo1 u •can pla,."
fourth sprtn1 traialq seuon with tbe sbott.at.op, plua tbe alread)' eltabliahed. 1
An1ela and the ..,.,_, Puerto Rican in· preHDM of Bobby Grich at HeCllMI bue Moat of tbe Au•l•' manaaement M
fielder who, accordiD1 to club ott'lclals and Rod Carew at fl.rat, wtU TIM>a ever believe that Tbon ao.n't baft much U .s. h08t l e D CO
haa aU the credentiala, aays that "my 1et bis ctaance? · more to learn. B•ttlal lutnletor lim·
chance bas to come soon." Well, M Dl'OMbl.Y wlll IOOll, but eer-my a ... la one of lbem. "Didde ....Uy
At 22, Thon indeed aeema to have the talnly nat wltll tbe An1et1. ~~toT:r~··~~ ':
abWty to be an eveeyda~ player in the Un._ one of tbe atan.r15urt lbe Anpla' Palm Sprtap eamp
maJora. He woft the Puerto Rieu Tbon wW be uMd., a utlllt.J • un~ rtfffttly. ··11e·1 le..,...~B•H•lll qakk·
Wtater Leacue .,.Wn1 title t114 rear d btdJ ._...... t eter ' 11. bu a srnt attitude aDd lllu .UUIMd wllb a .Sil anr:c• and 1-tbe leape'a ou --.11~....,.Cou " am-.. .... • to bl1 &•• ...... ...ate .. '••. He 8"°'ald have a Utelv MOI• Value le Plav-. ~~. -8ert ampaaeril •-... at --... ...... ' _... ,_ "'919 tona tmun lD tM .. .,....,.
TboD wu the Paclftc CoMt IAape'a y .. tM ldd w'6 bu • tbe teoll ta
top batter wttb a ,JM ....... wbeD coaftdiint tbal Id• cbuce wlll •GOD
called up by tbe Anlela lut Mar ..cl eome.
reaponded with a five-for -five "I'm paUent to '" wbn M"•·"
perfomiance in bis major leaiue debut. TboO aays ln hll ever·I041llbt accent.
(' I "' t
T• ~ M wmta to pla, eftl'JdaJ.
but redlbll tbat that may not be ,...
&Ul<. bl"• makiq adJuatmelltl to "1•
uUU\J role.
l
CARL81AD tAP> -JobD McEnroe•
and Rolcoe Taaaer, ruDHtaup at
w1m-.1edon. tll• latt two years,
1'PrtMnl UM U.S. ID 1ln1les pla, Frl·
day •g.IMt llealeo la a ftl'lt·roud Da~ aiMcb at La C-. 8IMI u4
Spa.
TIM U.S., the ........ U111n -
Wttb JI dtlel -mff Da.ta C1ap eom·
jitlU. ...-in ..-. lau a aw NeOl'CI •fainlt Muteo, but bad to replae. tu
top doublet team a week ato.
I
As atranie as il mi1bt sound, lbe <;al Poly
(San Luis Obispo> basketbaJJ team will com·
pete ln the NCAA Division 11 East Regional
tournament beginning F,riday night In New
Jersey.
And. if you think that's fwiny, eonslder the coDsequences
Uthe Mustangs beat Bloomsburg State (Pa.) Friday and then
beat the winner of the Clarion State <Pa.)·Monmouth College
duel Saturday.
The Mustangs would host lhe Eastern quarterfinal,
although San Luis Obispo is 15 miles away from the Pacific
Ocean. By finishing second in the California Colleitate As·
sociation, the Mustangs were chosen as an at·larce team at
the East Regional whJch is hosted by Monmouth in Wes\ Long
Branch. N.J . The winner of the Easter!" Regi~nal is the hqst team
against the New England Regional wmner March 13 or 14,
and that host couJd be the Mustangs, who boast the talents of
former Estancia High and Orange Coast College star Pete
Neumann.
It makes you wonder if someone from the NFL is in·
volved in the regional scheduling.
-----Qttotf! of tlw d••
Wesley <Undertaker> Boyd, basketball coach at
Paul Quinn College in Waco, Tex .. replying lo criticism
that he lets scoring star Lorenzo (Frog> Scott shoot too
much : "Some of the s ame folks read the Bible and
criticized the Lord 's Supper because they didn't have
chillins."
' Na.,ratfle"a adwawn •• ..,._.•'• , •• ,..._
INGLEWOOD Martina Navratilova ~ overpowered Roberta McCallum 6·1, 6-1. and
Bettina Bunge rallied back from a first-set loss ' .
to defeat Leslie Allen 4·6, 7~. 6-3 Wednesday
night in the second round of the $150,000 Avon Championships
of Los Angeles women's tennis tournament.
Navratilova. who inherited the event's · No. 1 ranking
when Tracy AusUn withdrew prior to the start of the tourna·
ment, took just 55 minutes to down McCallum and move into
the quarterfinals.
Bunge. a promising 17-year-old native of Switzerland who
now lives in Coral Gables, Fla .. used well-placed passing
shots to keep the m or e aggressive Allen on the run
throughout the match.
Prep baseball
Mater Dei, OV,
Edison, Uni win
Mater De i . Ocean View.
Edison, University and El Toro
all took victories to highlight prep
baseball action Wednesday
Here's how the action went·
Ocean View 7, Buena Perk 1
Left-hander Kevin Stanley
worked six innings and had 11
strikeouts for Ocean View. givi11g
him 20 in 11 innings this season to
dale. He hasn't given up a run and
was relieved by Joey Jennings in
the seventh.
Jennings struck out four batters
in the final frame but had the mis-
fortune of having one get away
from his catcher and Buena Park
scored its only run on a hit after
what should have been the third
out.
Greg ViJlarroel belted a solo
home run in the fifth inning for the
Seahawks and Richard Eagan
was 2·for-3forthe victors.
Edlaon 6, CelHornl• 5
Rich Sorensen struck out 10 of
the 12 batters he faced in four in·
nings on the mound for Edison
and with Rob Munson and Gri?g
Cloney, the Chargers had 16 for
tbeday.
Tom Hill was 2-for-2 at the plate
with an RBI and Mike Carozza
had a base hit. RBI and a steal of
home plate.
The action was the first of the
year for Edison and was an open·
ing round game in the Troy
tournament.
E1Toro11,Lagune Beach9
Laguna Beach and El Toro
hooked up in a slugfest that saw
the two teams belting a total of 25
hits.
El Toro jumped on starter
Brandt Vroman for four runs in
the first inning but the Artists
came back with five of their own
lo the top of the third to take a
momentary lead.
However, seven big runs in the
bottom of the third clinched the
victory for El Toro witb Laguna
Beach adding two markers in the
sixth and seventh frames to make
itclose ..
Dru Murphy was 3-for-5 with
three runs scored for the Artists
and Vroman drove in two runs
with a double in the third inning
The game was the first of the
season for Laguna Beach after
having an earlier game rained·
out with Mayfair.
Unlvet'9ity4, Laguna HlllaO
University upped its pre-season
record to 2-0 with good defense
combined with a solid pitching
performance from Paul Yovon.
The Trojans, who have aUowed
just one run in the last 14 innings
of play, got just enough hitting,
scoring two runs in both the
second and sixth innings.
Catcher Mike Miller drove in
two runs in the second with a dou-
ble, then Kevin Booth drove in
another in the sixth with a single.
The other run scored on a fielding
error following Booth's base bit.
Laguna Hills dropped to 0-1-1.
Meter0.11, ExcelalorO
Steve Mendoza pitched shutout
ball and Tom Baine belted a solo
home run to give Mater Deialltbe
firepower it needed in Downing
Excelsior.
Mendoza had 11 strikeouts and
allowed onJy three hits over the
seven innings. The left-handed
senior bad a 7-3 record for Mater
Dei's CIF championship team a
year ago.
Baine's winning homer came in
the fourth inning after be had sent
an EJtcelsior outfielder to the
fence in• the first inning with
another long blast. He bad a
slncle to go with the homer givinC
him two of the three Mater Dei
bits.
COLLEGE BISllETllLL
P.C.1.8. TOUllftll'J~ UllU!llSITV UTIB
OF CILlf. US. STITE
lllVUIE UllUEISITY a=so p.m. TCHllGllT
Sponsored by: Republlc lnsurance Brokera,
Denny's Restauranta. MoPeet< Chrysler Plymo1.1th
and Wendy's Old FUhloned Hamburger• 1
...,_ .. ., ... , ....... , .......
Ill LUTJ INnl scored 2' DOlnta and bfllerl
ParlM added 23 to lead Solton to· lw alxtb
atralpt Yidory, a 108·101 declllon over Houatota
to bJJhlltbt NBA acUoo Wednelclay. Th victory
was the 1.3tb atrai&bt for the CelUca over tbe Rockets ln a atr· that atretcbe• over tbe put three aeuon1. Boatoo allo Im·
proved lti record to S.·15 ud moved into 1 fint-place tie with
PhUa~.lphia 1n the AtlantJc Dlvllloo of the Eastern Coo·
ference . . . lttsewhere, Forward Lea 0 Tne11" Bo...,..
scored 20 pointl -10 in a crucial thlrd.quarter at.retch to
pace Phoenilc to a ~-106 thumplnt of Cleveland ... OU. aw..., went on a 39-polnt scorln1 spree to •1nlte playoff·
bun1ry Kansas City to its first triumph ever in San Antonio.
111·97 ... aecsJe T•eu scored 28 polnta as CbJcaco toppled
Philadelphia, 111·100 for 1ta fourth 1tral1bt wln ... Gre1
BaUaN bad 24 POlntl and Ehill Hayn added 19 to pace
Washington to a 11$-103 thrashlnc of San Dieco ... Guard
Vlnale .JoluuoD scored 22 polnts and SeatUe rolled up leada of
17 points en route t~ a 105-93 victory over Indiana . . .
Forward Benard Klac made a ts.toot jump shot with seven
a-:condl remaining to give Golden State a narrow 107·105 de·
clsion over Utah.
Sta...._e --'cf!• lint tl)tPf!•r••~f!
Doa Staalloase, the Los A.nleles Dodgers' free-•
agent relief pitcher who saved only seven games
in his fll'St season with the club lD 1980, pitched
batting practice for the first time this spring on '
Wednesday ... All-star third bueman Geor1e Brett, who
underwent hemorrhoid surgery over the weekend. left St.
Luke's Hospital in Kansas City but will not retu,rn to camp for
at least 10 days . . . Slugger Dave KJacmu, re-acquired by
the New York Mets last weekend, arrived
in his new team's training camp and lm·
mediately promised "to make things exclt·
iog for you guys in New York this aeuon."
. . . Veteran slugger Joe Badl, acquired
from the Angels in a muJti·player deal
which sent Fred Lyu to the Angels six
weeks ago, hit the ball hard 41 bis first ap-
pearance against live pitching with the
Boston Red Sox . . . First baseman Daa
Drleuea was the only Cincinnati player lo
sTANHOUll report late for the club's first fuJl-squad
workout ... Right-fielder Eltta Valeatlae, who has told ever·
yone within earshot that be wants to be traded, left batting
practice at the Montreal camp suffering from an infected
finger.
~Icy, rlta•p ~• I• rlla•plo11slltp•
HARTFORD, Conn. -Rocky and the •
champ, alias David Santee and Scott Hamilton,
were poised for another of their classic confron·
tations after they moved into gold medal con·
tention Wednesday night at the World Figure Skating Cham·
pionships.
Santee, whos~ inspiration comes from Sylvester
Stallone's movie character, Rocky, was first in the men's
event after Wednesday night's short program. Hamilton, the
cbamp based on their last matcb-up when Scott won the na·
tional tile, was a close third.
Confident
Penguins
nip Kings
PITTSBURGH (AP> -Uplift.
ed by the longest winninl streak
in their 14-year history. the
Pittsburgh Penguins hope to
climb still higher in the National
Hockey League standings.
• "Our confidence is sky high.
We know we can beat any
team," defenseman Mario
Faubert bubbled Wednesday
night after the Penguins won
their sixth straight, downing the
Los Angeles Kings 6·5.
"Pl1TSBUBGH IS probably
the hottest team in the league
right now." said Kings' winger
Mike Murphy. "They're shoot·
ing, skating and scoring as well
as anybody."
Errol Thompson 's tie ·
breaking goal with 8:38 left in
the last period won it for the
Penguins. who bad never won
more than four straight.
Goals by Mark Johnson and
Peter Lee gave Pittsburgh a 2·1
lead after one period. Billy
Harris scored for Los Angeles.
In the second period, the
Kings scored twice in the rlJ'St
minute and 12 seconds. Murphy
and Dean Hopkins had the goals
that gave the Kings a 3-2 lead.
LATER IN the second period,
the Kings had a five-minute
power play, the result of an
elbowing penalty against
Pittsburgh's Paul Baxter. But
the y managed only one shot
against Penguin goalie Greg
Millen during the power play. · · u we had capitalized on that,
it would have helped. But we
couldn't," said Kings' center
Marcel Dionne.
Later in the second period,
Pittsburgh regained the lead
with two goals in leas than a
minute. Lee scored his second of
the game at 12: 58 and Faubert
scored on a power play at 13:52.
JACKEAAION
WULF ...
double overtime decision at UCI,
and a 101·99 victory in Utah),
and then it's just a matter of be·
Ing consistent and doing the
things we're supposed lo ... and
putting out 100 percent all the
time."
Wulf doesn't think that's im·
possible, though, if everybody is
willing to sacrlfic~ a little.
"We've come a long way,"
says Wulf of the Anteaters. "We
didn't win our league, but now
we have a chance to win the
tournament.
"We can do it. I know we can
do it."
Boxer retires
LONDON <AP ) -John
Cooteh , a former light·
heavyweight champion from
Great Britain who fought in
seven world tiUe bouts in his
career. bas decided to retire
from boxing.
The boxing business manager
for the 29-year-old fighter said
Wedne.day night tbat Conteh
would accept a business offer
rather than wait for the chance
at another world title fight.
-.......
WlOI M.IM --, ........ HlllllW , • ti ..... ~'t'-llll>Oll•ll .. ....,_ ... , ... AOUU1 PIO JUlllQllS(t..1~1'11 )-1 •
OllUWN -"'" NI*~ --------~~~--~
Gel I o'n '• two,oall W aa Wlilt..=: hJm 1.-c .... r patMI 8*l1tUD..., ff Hockey Le~ pla,.r lD ....._, u MOlllnal
boosted hi •beat.en atreu to 1• ..... by rout,
lq Wlml6De1. 9-3, WednetdaJ aiabt • . . Rookie .,... Ck·
urelfl'• tillici.perlod 1oal lin.t 1IJ.nDeaoU to a l-1 Ue db Boatoe lft. remaU:h or tut ......... la •blcb Its .. ....
records for penalties were Mt . . . Deteueman S.-.
Browa drilled a 35-toot slap •hot with fl~e minutes to play to
Ult Cblca10 to a 3·3 tie wtU. Detroit . . • Tlle•u Gn6t
scored three goals and defenseman 8ol» Ila ... bad three H · suu to lead Vancouver to a 5-Z victory over Tol'Oftto ••.
Beal el•tler scored two tb1rd-period 1oal1 and A.._
8'at&ay alto added a pair to lead Quebec to a 74 victory °"'r Washinltoo ... Duar Gen,~ •s•Mr, Gillet._ ..
reaaJ& and Derek Sml~ scored the 1oall, and Bob Sane bad
bl• second 1oal-tendin1 1h\d0ut ol the season aa Buffalo de-
feated CaJ1ary. 4--0 . . . Sten Vle11en scored once and set
up two more goals in a 3:27 span of the third period but Ed·
monton•a Gleu A.adenoa tied the contest with Just 1 :32 re· maln.lng u the Oilers and New York Rangers deadlocked $-5. .
E~-s-Demi f"C!l'enes et1rHer .._..,
player wbo now says be saw ex-Sun DevUa'
A former Arizona State University football •
Coach l'Tuk Kaela throw a punch at punter
Ke.la a.deQe, testified Wednesday that fear
led him to an earlier denl.al . . . Unbeaten and No. 1-ranked
Ore1on State can clinch its second consecutive Pacl.fi.c-10
Conference basketball championship tonight with a victory
over Arizona . . . Former baseball &tars Lefty O'Doel and
Lefty Gomes are among the five athletic greats to be induct-
ed into the Bay Area sports baU of fame tollicht. The othen
are Helen Wllls Roark, Frank.Je ~lbert and Bob llatllllaa.
Telerin..., ftNlie
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings
are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 1 I worth watching; I ./ fair; 1 forget
It.
• 7:30 p.m., Channel 5 ./ ./ ./ .
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: UCLA at Washington State.
Announcers: Joe Buttlta and Biii Walton.
The Bruins should have little trouble in disposing of the Cougars in Pullman to perpetuate their bid for an NCAA playoff
berth. UCLA Is third In the conference standings wUh an 11-5 rec· ord (18-6 overall) while Washington State is at the bottom of
the Pac-10 with a 2-14 and 10-16 record.
[.) 7:30 p.m., Chennel 9 ./ ./
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: use at Washington.
Announcer: Mike Walden.
The Trojans are hopeful of closing out the season with a pair
of victories In Washington. But the Huskies are ahead of them in the Pacific-10 standings with an 8-7 record compared to 7·9 for the Trojans.
RADIO
Basketball -USC at Washington, 7:30 p.m., KNX (1070);
UCLA at Washington state, 'f:35 p.m., KMPC (710); UC Irvine vs. Utah State, 9 p.m., KWVE ( 108 FM).
PREP BASKETBALL. • • ~have been in the CIF playoffs
the past 11 straight years under
Dahl and are 22·3 for the season.
Dahl, however, is unhappy
with his team, citing its inability
to get the early jump in the
playoffs. Moreno Valley trailed
12·2 and 31-18 in its first two CJF
contests before pulling away for
33·23 and 77·66 triumphs over
Sonora and Hemet.
"We 've had a height advan·
tage in some of our games but l
don't put much stook in it," says
Dahl.
Dahl's quintet will enjoy a big
advantage in that department
Friday as Estancia answers
with its 6-2, 6·1. 6·1, 5-10 and 5·9
starting lineup.
Typical of Estancia's game
was the output in a first round
victory over Edgewood when aU
five starters scored in double
figures.
Moreno Valley's game shows
solid balance, too, with Woll
< 15.1 >, De Wald ( 13.6) and
Jackson (11.1) bolstered by
Farias and Lyons, each at 9.2
points a game.
Wolf is the leading rebounder
with 11.S per game.
While Moreno Valley has the
advantage in height, apparent
speed , the r ecord, the con·
fidence of a league champion
<Sunbelt League) and playoff
experience, Estancia answers
with a deliberate style geared to
equalize advantages.
As Sunderman explained his
Eagles' victory over favored
Lynwood Tuesday : "We just
played intelligenUy. We were
patient with the ball and we
tried r\ot to run up and down the
floor with them."
More of the same is expected
Friday.
Edleon duel• No. 1
Orange County's lone survivor
in the 4-A eliminations, lbe Sur·
prising Chargers of Edison
Coach Barry Leigh, are up
against 24-0 San Marcos of Santa
Barbara, a team which defies
basketball's code for winners -
a team with no height and no
depth.
But what San Marcos lacks in
height and depth. the Royals
more than make up for with an
unyielding press and fast break
offense.
Case in point: During the San
Dimas tournament in December
Verbum Dei wilted under the
San Marcos press as the Royals
rallied from an eight-point def-
icit.
Edison, however. seems to
thrive in games when the
Chargers are considered less
than equal.
··We 've heard the horror
stories about C Jon> Korfus,"
says Leigh. ~·1 understand
Inglewood put two players on
Korf us and he still hooped it.
· · 1 know they press an.d press
well. but Compton and Notre
Dame pressed us, too. We're do·
ing a better job o( handling pres·
sure.
"This is the type of game
where we may go with a three·
guard offense, but we'll start our
five juniors (Richard Chang.
Rick DiBernardo, Mark Goudge.
Darren M oore a nd Jeff
Stephens>.
"San Marcos ls our size (6-0 to
6·3 range) and it's our home
game, so we're excited. This is
gravy time and you know ,
anything can happen.
"Goudge a nd c h._ng are
familiar with some of the San
M areas players and they respect
them. They can't be too bad ii
they won the San Dimas
tourney."
Edison's home game wiU be
played at Huntington Beach
High and the Chargers are hop-
ing to get the type of offensive
fire.power out of Cha.n1 ,
DiBernardo and Stephens that
has carried them to a 16-9 over·
all record, including one-point
decisions over favored Compton
and Notre Dame.
There la depth, too, with
senior BUJ Vogelsang available
in the three-guard style.
I
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Thuraday, March 5, 1981
Chril Wycinowakl leored it ol lillr • Polau ta lbe ftnal quarter to 1pan a f\lriRI tOUDtaln
·Valley eomebaek u tbe BU'ODI Di,,.. Cul••r Cl·
ty. ... to blahll ... t MeODd l"OUDd •et.Ion in t.be ~rla CJP 4-A basketball plQafta W.-...Say alabt.
Valley battlea No. S seeded San Bernardino and
Sltueie, tbe No. 2 seeded team in 3-A, plays
Lynwood.
t hot from the side of the key with seven seconds rem~.
In addition to her 1ame-hl1b 28 points,
Wycinonki pulled down nine reboundJ.
Meyer hauled down 15 reboundl, d!tbed out
elsht us.lit.a and bad four steala.
For Marina, it was a case of too mucb too aooti
from No. 1 seeded Riverside Poly's 1-2 center
Cheryl Miller.
At P'ouotaln Valley, the Barons overcame a 14
ln otlaer 4-A •am•, EdillOD won euily over
islmt Valley, 12-41, wbUe Marina ftll victim to ~unior center sensation Cheryl Mlller and
:'klvenlde Poly, U..38.
In tbe S-A ,Playoffs, E1tancia, • tlnall1t a year
a10, advanced to Friday's quarterflnall with a
'72-49 win over Garden Grove.
GIRLS' BASKETBALL m For the Baront, Maryanne Belgen added 13
points and 11 asslsta and Deanna Davis chipped in
with 10 points. I
With the win Fountain Valley is now 21-S on
the season while.Culver City finishes at 25-2.
Miller poured in 3S points leadina Marina ,
Coach Mike Thornton to call her performance :
"awesome." ;
Etataneia (22-3) got 19 points from 1uard •
Vickie Simpson and 18 from forward Cara Francy i
ln an euy win over Garden Grove. '
Simpson added nine steals and Francy had •
At EdJson, Shannon Meyer and Sue Randall
both scored 17 polnta to lift the Cbar1era to their
20tb win aaainst three defe ata. So in Friday's quarterfinal 1ame1, Edison ~ake1 oo No. 4 seeded Lont Beach Poly, Fountain
point deficit in the fourth quarter led by
Wycinowlki, a 5-7 guard.
Wyclnowski bit the game-winner on a 12-foot The Chargers came out fast, marchlns to an
18-2 first quarter lead. four. Francy also added nine rebounds. •
. UCJ
.blanks
Aztecs
Dave Woodhead
pitched a complete
game shutout as UC
Irvine blasted San Diego
State, 1 4 -0 , while
Southern California
College posted a 9-4 vic-
tory over La Verne in
college baseball action
Wednesday.
San Diego State, seek-
ing to set a record for
most games without be-
ing shutout in NCAA
comretitlon, fell five shor of its goal with
Woodbead's gem.
The Aztecs didn't go
down without a fight,
having a runner thrown
out at the plate in the
eighth inning by left
fielder Carlos Rivera.
Rivera also had a big
day at the plate, getting
four singles in five ap-
pearances to lead the
UCI attack.
Woodhead's s hutout
was the first of the year
by a UCI pitcher and his
nine-inning stint was the
first complete game for
the 11-3 Anteaters.
UCI plays at USIU in
San Diego Friday and
hosts Puget Sound in a
noon double-header Sun-
day.
Dale Boucher had a
no-hftter for eight in-
nings in pitching t he
SoCal Vanguards to vic-
tory and Dusty Beals
ha d a two-run homer as
the Vanguards scored
seven times in the fifth.
Marina,
Mesa win
handily
Marin a defeated
Mater Dei in three
straight games whil~
Irvine was losing to
Capistrano Valley in a
b es t -of-five set to
highlight Orange Coast
area volleyball action
Wednesday afternoon.
Marina's victory over
the Monarchs came on
15 -4 , 15-12 and 15-13
scores.
The Irvine Vaqueros,
early favorites to cap-
ture the Sea View
League title, scored in
double figures in all five
games but managed on·
ly a pair of victories in
the second and fourth
games, 16-14 and 15·13.
Jeff Droke played well
as a hitter-blocker for
the losing Vaqueros who
are now 1-1 for the year.
In another match,
Costa Mesa defeated
Edison, 15-11, 15-8, 15-10.
GWCwomen
beat SD Mesa
SAN DIEGO -The
Golden West College
women's basketball
team upped Its pre-
1eason mark to 7-3 with
a 55-52 victory over San
Die10 Mesa, here Wed-
nesday nlpt.
The Rustlers got a
balanced scorina attack
led b7 sophom ore
forward 1\mi Piber's 20
polnta.
It was a same decided
by the defense u Golden
Weat 1bot juat 31.I per-
cent from the field com-
pared to 38.1 for San
Diego Mesa.
San DM•o lleaa outre-
bounded tbe Rustler•,
•S-M.
Wltb tbe 1011, San
Dle10 ..... drepl to 74 onu.e..uan. ·
"THE BEER THAT
THE TASTERS SMILE:'
' ~ jl ......., ~
Ct"ntlv. a gtb efts ar'I
enthusiast!'-gathcn·d in Seattle
to Judge c he mn..,l re!--peCtl·d hecr!'I in
America. Incl udcd were c he ..,e,·en hr;inds
dassitled by the hrcwmg indu:-.lly as ":-.upcr
premium:· and ju:-.t en make clic tc!'lt
more difficult. one beer fro111 Gnm:rnv.
Like wine Ll"ter::-. the p.1 11el sa m-
pled the bet'rs without kno\\ ing their
rdl·ntrttl''· .lnd wrch onlv dwrr p.1Lnc.., tn
guide them. Whl·n the lc..,t \\',h O\'l'r. the
winner w.1!--l~lll nd to be .1 lwcr \\'hrch \\',h
:tlmo!'-t unkno\\'n 111 Sc.nt ll· or l~)r I h.H
rn;Htcr, Ill chc rot nr the l0 0llllllY.
11.Y Sc11ttlc ·1 1111t' rl'pnrccd tlic l'n.'rH
under the hl·ad Ii rw "Tlw bca rh.n 111.h~l·
chc tastl'I'.., ::-1111k:· .ind .dtl'I' 11nt111~ 1h.H
the winnin>! hen \\':l::-"~c ii I r:Hhl'r lur.~
BEER-TASTING RESULTS
BRAND
Henry Weinharcfl>
Private Reserve
Augshurger
IJos. llut>er Brewinl( Co .. Wi~1'n~m1
Yuengling Pilsner
I Poustown. Penn. I
Andekcr .
IPnhsl. Milwaukee. Wis.I
St. Pauli Girl
I Germany I
Medallion
(Olympia Brewing Co. I
Erlanger
ISchlilzl
Miehe lob
(Budweiser. Calif.I
s
rn 1°11ll{0
\\'l'lll nn tn::-.l\' rhat"tl1l·
-~~ler ... l~)llnd re l'\1..·rllcm .rnd qu1tl'
~ d1 .... t1111..°ll\l' from clll' \Hhrr.....:·
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It "·'-':.11..1111t'rr111.1111111 th.ll \\L'
h.11..I l'l',h:lll'1.I 1lw 1..1 P.il \\ l' "l'l "I 1l·r1
"l' I rr·,r hre\\ l-..l f~l'lll \ '": tn 111.lkl·
I hl' t'ml·..,t blTI 1~n ........ d~lr. n·~.lrl1-
lr,, ,i( thl· 1i11w ur (1hl irl\nkc1..I.
S PERIOI< l~GREOI E~ I S
rl~t\DITl 00.',\L g1<E\Vl~C
nw llll·tl 101.~ .... ll .... l'd Lil brc\\' Hem'\'
\\'c111h.1r1..f" Prl\.ltl' Rl'"t.Tn-.ire 111 ::-h:trp
, nrHr.1..,t "rt h tl1l 111.b'\-~'rl)ducunn lcch-
11 rq ul'' ..,,> 1..°1l11111 11m i11 b1t.'\\rr1g to1..l.l\'.
--------
ONE COMMENTS
'N \tning aroma Dl\t1m:t1\l' n.l\11r.
'lkc hop l'haral·ter.
44 C1111J colur Ht•a\ia't~ll' lhJn 111hcr'
BtL! na,t•r.
41 '\ \ltL!hl~) hiller rml\h. Ol .. a~ Cl11t1d).
!N.2 bpct:iully lil-.t•J. Grain out ol halant't'
\\ ith hops. (\·rt•al-like Oil\ or.
~.--'" afterta.)le. !'11t11h1I~ h111er. Luck uf h.ilanl·e.
X7.'> Ordinary. Au e'cr~Ja) lieer.
Xo.2 \harp di\ is1un in panel runging from
·11\\C i( 10 .. had 1a.s1e:·
H2.7 Bland. Nti Jistml·tive charijcler. ___ _..Average.
rhl'\" l~>llo\\ .. h 1.. lml''\' .h l'°""ibk. till'
llll'illP\~' lht 1.~ b\ Cllll f~Hllh~l'I Ill clw I.ht
1..r1H111\, .11h1111\11hl· .1 ''>.!111t'ic.1111h
1.•1\'.lll'I" .111111111111111 r11ll' a111.~ c.11\·. Hn11y', ....
t.lkl·, lon~l'I 111 I'll'\\ 1 h.111 orhLT hl'l''"·
11 1.1kn l1111~lT l1l l~·rnwnt. 1\11d rlHhl
111111nn.1111. 11 ,.., .1llo\\'l'1.~ tn .l~l' .11d llll'l -
111\\ lnr .l J'lTrth~ rlut 1.., flH)fl' dun l\\'ll:l '
.i-. !1 m~ .h 1111,..,t hr .rnd-. nt' hn·1:
\\'lirlc d1l'"l' rnctl1u,~-. ,.,llHl'li'till·
IP dw Ll,tl' tl1.ll J'll'.hl'J thl· Jlllh~t'' 111
Sl.lttll', thl'\ .d .... P (lllllllhllll' [II till·
.... l.lrCll\' noted h\ thl /w11·, rq'<llll'r:
\\'L' .ire .1blc to bn'\\ nu mun· tll.l11 l11ur
hundred h.ll'n.:I ... nl Hl·nn:, .11 .1 1111w.
Th i~ rnr.11i::-th.11 Hl·nn \ \'l·mlur ,f,
Pri \'Jte Reserve m.w 1..°011 1111 ul· t1l be
"rather hard to (ind." But Wl' urgt: \'ou Ln
look for H ~rn)'':-.. ,111d ..... 1mpk l~)r \'rn11·..,clr
what one ~roup of t:xpnh 1ud>!t:d tn he
die finest premrum bl'l'r 111 J\rnt.·ric.1 tPd.1\·.
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Orange Coat DAILY PfLOTtrhur9day, March 6, 1981
Eve~ at 9-1, Pirates hav.~ a long wa~ to go
Ma chalnpiona await biggeat challe111Je a cl01e game
81 ctJaT U&D&N
Ol .. Oeltr ........ Even with a .. 1 record, tbe Or...,• Cout
EP bueball team ba1 not beep lalMd blto a
MDM ol secwity. Jn fact, OCC Coach Mike f ne uya hla team baa a lone way to ao.
"I th1nll we're playlnt clou to u Sood aa we
plQ at tbia point in the seuon," aaya Mayne,
.tho IUlded the Pirate• to the state cbamplonablp
,1a1t1eMOG.
• "lbe biUNl question mark la tbe mental part
llf the fame -can my freshmen cope wllb the ad-versity ol leacve play," continues llayne. "Rilbt
DOW, there are iDdlcationa that they're tolnl to
have that mental tou1bne11."
-Wh•t worries Mayne ia the fact that hi• team
baa not bad one close ;ame after 10 pre-seuon
conteata. The Bucs' lone defeat -to Southwestern
-wasn't close, and neither were any of OCC's vic-
tories.
Mayne says the Pirates' success baa been
fueled by near-flawless pitchine and the fact that
be bu a bunch of winners on bia teams -guys
who just aren't accustomed to losing.
"That's not to mention they have great abili-
ty," Mayne adds. "Physically, we 're doing everytbint right.
I'm interested in seeing what happem when we
start meeting the tough teams in the lea1ue. The
guys understand that Cerritos, Santa Ana,
Fullerton and Mt. San Antonio are tou1ber baU
clubs than we've played so far," Mayne explains.
Pitching and defense have always taken prec·
edence over offense in Mayne's book, and the
lera are ftttina ritbt lb to tbat lint ot
\ftll~ll
''Our pitchln1 ataff has been •uPtf'b tbb year. They've played much better than they've bad to, •
because we're 1cortnc a lot of runs. I'm aure we'U
hit a streak where runs will be bard to come by,
and that's when o~ pitchlne staff will really dem·
onstrateitsvalue," Mayneaaya.
But after 10 eames, the OCC pitcbera' num-
bers are borderln• on perfecUon. Sophomore Mike
COMMUNITY COLLEGES
Hogan is 3.() with a 1.88 ERA. DOD Smlth, w~e
career record with the Pirates la 14-1, la also 3-0
with a 0.38 ERA, and freshman Jack Reinholtz
boasts a 1--0 record and a 0.51 ERA.
Aa a team, the Bucs have not allowed an
eamed run lb 38 consecutive innings and are juat
four aby of the school record of 42 in.Dini• without
alJowiq an earned run.
And the OCC pitching success has continued
despite the transition from one pltchinl coach to
another.
Guys like Hogan, Smith and Wayne JustJ
worked under Tim Kelly (now at Arizona State)
last sea.son, but th.is year, Matt Mccann directs the
stat
au bas done a great job in a touah situa-
tion. He had to come in to a situation where loyalties are with another guy and be has to get
them on his side. Matt's done a good job at that,"
says Mayne.
s BAG·O
To men interested In making sound Investments,
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sizes, priced at 15500. ,,_0,,,.n Acce1>1e<1
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#54 FASHIOH ISLAMD, HIWPOIT IEACH 1714) 644-4223
#27 MAIH S'ftllT, ALHAMlaA 12131 212·5'7'
USED TIRES
SJ!~u• 2. ALIGNMENTS
TWIH 1-llAMS s1100
SUCiHTLY MOii CiUAaAMTEID s21 •s
·9UALITY 3 LUBE & OILSJ95 RETREADS
· • •I qh. 30 wt.
5 WHEiL PACKS . saso
·DllUMTYPI '
DllCTYPI ~~ .... cw. .......
.... -t••ltU.S.C..
-----------------------------------COUPON COUPON COUPOM
BRAKE s191s SPECIA~ ~
... ,,..c U.CAll . . ~L .. l'!.1111J~;.~ ..................... .:.~ ............... Y ..... I ..... ...... ll_ .......................... ,. ,. ...... ,, ..... _
FREE!
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'
MOIT U.S. CAii
4 POINT
SAlllTY Cl •CK
MAYN• IMITN
"The other thing I like ii the team atUtude I'm
startlna to-.ee," Mayne add.a. "Everybody haa eot
to sacrifice a little. You've got to have I club that
has a quallty that's stronger than the individual
player's ability.
"I don't think we're goi.u to 10 tbrou1b the rest of the season undefeateG. But then, the way we 're playing ... 't Mayne trails off.
* * • It will be the Southern Cal Conference basket-baJl all-stars against Santa Monica CC, the
league's champion, Saturday night at Santa
Monica.
Each year, lhe Southern Cal Conference pits
members of the league's fin~ second and honora-
ble mention squads against the league champion.
Golden West will be represented by first-team
pick Jim Eldridge and honorable mention selec-
tion Randy Heidenreich. Game time is 7:30.
I
.. USHIO "
GWC IOl)bomore t uard Rico Tbompaon, wbo
apearbeaded I.be Rustler attack, com .. from a
talented tamUy. lllco 11 the oldest of four bo11 in
lbe family.
Three brothers atm attend Huntlqton Beach
Hi•b. Bob, a tenior, and B~k a aopbomore1 both were atartera on the Oller etball team. Bob la
a tint-team all-Sunset Leaaue linebacker in foot-
ball and alto plays baseball.
Billy also playa buebatl, while freshman Dan-
ny is a three-sport athlete. He'• on tbe frosh
basketball, football and track squad.a.
Rico, meanwhile, ftnisbed the season with a
9.4 •corin& average. Even more impressive were his assists, 136 to be exact. He fell three shy of set-
ting a GWC season record.
• • • OCC Coach Dick Tucker's football team races
its toughest schedule ever in 1981.
The Pirates pre-season slate will feature
games with powerhouses Pasadena, El Camino
and Saddleback. Pasadena finished third on the fin~l state poll, Saddleback was fourth and El
Camino sixth.
"I can't say I'm honestly looking forward to
it," Tucker says. ··u I had my choice, I would not
have taken Pasadena."
• • *
OCC will host its annual outdoor doubles rac-quetball tourney, March 20-22.
The tourney is sponsored by OCC's Racquet-
ball Club. Registration deadline is Thursday
March 17 at 5 p.m. '
QUARTZ HALOGEN
AUXILIARY LIGHTING KITS
Includes all wlrlflG. toggle swllch.
& fu11 holder for easy in1t1ll11ion.
#TW021A ·Amber
#TW023C ·Clear
"WISS"
METAL MASTER SNIP
G11d thru M1rch 31, 1981
LAGUNA BEACH
AUTO PARTS
11.99·
~-~ AADELAMTO
AUTO SUPPLY
NIA
WllTl•NCONPl•INCI
h c:Hk DM.-w l l'cl. oa
• Plloenla SI lO 11• l.ellfft 0 2' U2 Porllencl ,. " S22 ,.
Gotdef\Slelt " :M ·* ., ....
Sen 01990 30 • "' 19'1'1
SH Ille :IO ,. OS lO
M-llOlwt.i...
S.nAnl-0 u ~
ICenulCllY " ,. "' II
Hovston ll ,. .,.
"' J Denver ,. • 0 3 ,,.1,,
Vlell 2S " U1 10'1> 0.11 .. 10 St us :M')
IASTUtN CONl'l•INCI AllHtic Olwt.IN
•·8onon S4 IS 113 a PhlleelelPN• S• u IU
New York ., 11 .OJ .,.,.
W••ll1nglon J3 JI '71 21~.
Ntw JerMy 20 so , .. :M•1
Ctftlral Dlvl1ie11
•·Mlhuvk" 4t 1e 131
lncll•n• JI n
Chlceoo 3• n
All•nt• 1' 0
Clevtl•nd 2S 0
Otlro11 11 S·3
S3' IJ
SOI 15
lM u ,.. 2•1.,
?Ill) Jl•,,
i -cllncrwo pl•yolf bertll,
W-...Uy'tSceret
Denver 123, LAkert IU
Cll•<•oo 111, Pnlt•dttp111• 100
K•n•n City 111, S.n Antonio ti
Bolton 109, Hov•ton 101
Plloenla 1u, Ctevet•no 10.
WHlllngton 1 IS, S.n 01•00 103
Golden St•te 107, Ul•ll IOS S.•lllt IOS, lncllene 93 T""-'' GattMs Portl•nd •I Kenw• City
New Vora •1 O.tro11
Allanl• Al MllW ... kff
PllCMnoa al Utell
Nugget. 123, Laker• 114
LOS ANGELES Cllonet 10 WllkH 19,
l•OO.r U , Noaon IS, JOllnson 11 Cooper 10
Brewer 0, Joro.tl l, l .,•<hO.roer 10 T acal\ ., lCMO 114
DENVEll Engh\1'1 JI, Horclgt\ '· hw•
21, HtQQ\ '· ,,,.,.,,_ 21. M<Ktnney II
Dunn 0, v-w~ o. AOl>ls<l'I 1 Gon
d'lllCk 2 TGC.•I\ •9 2S 31 12J
S<ort l>y O...r11rs
lo• Anoetn l2 33 JI 11 114 OtnYlr JI lO 2S 31 IU Fout~ ovl None Tot•I touts LO\ Anvete• 21, Denver 2t h cnnocal\ Denver
Coacl'I ~. LO\ AngelH Coecl'I Westhud A 14, .. 0
College
ALL ·WE S TlllN ATHLETIC COHPEltENCE
l'lrslTum
Danny A1n9e (8VUt, D•nny Vranes
(Vient, Ctwrtu 8r.cittv (Wyomtn91, Tom
Cllamber\ tUtelll, Fr..i Roberto (8VUl.
Sec-Tt•m Kenny Pa~ I New ~•1Col, RO\llern Amie
!TtaH·EI Pt\01, Tim H•rrlS IAlr Forc11.
Tony Gwynn IS.n Olooo St•tel, 8111 Garnett 1w vomlngt
ALL-ATLANTIC COAST COHl'EltENCI
PlrslTt-Relpl'I S.ml>""' CVlrglnleJ. Jell Lamp
(Virginia), FrMO• JOIWlton IW•k• Forb l), Al WoOd !Nortl> C•rolln•I. Gtnt 8enk\
(Ou••l
S.C-T .. .,.
Buck Wlllt•m• (Maryltndl, Albert Kong
I M•rYl•ndl, J •mu Wortlly I Nortl'I
CMttln•I. Lerry Ntnee (CltmMlnl, Sidney
Lowt IN.,,,,, CM041ne Slate)
HIGH SCHOOL
All·Angelu• League
Player, K-H•i9M Cl Ave.
S<oll Suw.k, S.rv1tt • 1 Sr 1J l
Mlh Wntll. Monl~y • 2 Jr 12 2
JOl'ln Gonl.alH. Suvol• • l Sr 12 0
T0"1my O.•••. 81•'-Amat S 10 Sr 14 0 &ob Moh\, Maltr Del • I Sr ll 1
Sttvt W•U. Strvll'll • • Sr 11 0 Merlo M•r~1. Montgomery • 2 Sr 21 S Ed Moloney, SI P..,I • I Sr ll 2
Jolln Cougl'llln, Mon190merv • • Sr 11 9
Brad N•w-yor, 81\lloj> Amat•• Sr •~I
L•rry Wollt•m>. Moler Oto • • Sr 10 •
Pt•ytrOlll'le'her S1Mk IS.rv1ttl
Co-co•chl!s ol tllt vur l arrv Wai•or
I Serv lU I, S I••• Korie t 8 1•n oo
Montgo-ry)
CIF playoff •ltH
FltlOAV'SOUAllTEltl'INALS ll::IOI •·A S•n Marcos ¥\ Edison al Huntln91on
Suen
l tkewooo •• NtwOUry P•rk •I W.sll•k•
Ht9h
Sorra " Palos Verdes at A9d<>ncl0 .; 1gn
Murplly v• L..onq !Heel> Poly •I Ctrrltos
ColltQt
l·A
St B•rnerd •• Tustin 11Footl'llll11>
Mor•no Valley vs E•t.nc•• ti Ed11on
Si n Gor9on10 vs Coron• dt:I M•r ••
Or1nge Ca.'1 Coll~
L• Quinta•• Oom1ng.,.1 10.
2·A
8urr""IJM IA1<1Qt<rnll v• Sunny H111s II
Cyprn• COii~ Pomone vs Gltncl•lt 10.
L• S.rn.a 'fl\ 8l•1r at M uir e.,.,_ vs N09"ltt ., W•lnul Htgh
l·A
Av1•t1on v\ Sanla C.tar• •I Vt ntur•
ColltQt
Carp1nteri• •I!.•,, M•rtl'\O
Aoo Mew et C•l•O.ws
Wll1Ht.r Ch<t\llMI ., 8•nn1n9 s ..... 11><-•
Ntlln vs 8roncwooo et Harvard School
M•rlcope "' M••odyltnO •1 An•l'ltom
HIOI>
Neeotet •' C•P••l•MIO V•tt•v '"""'•" NtwPOr't Chro>t11n ti Montcl•lr Prep
COMMUNITY COLLE OE WOMEN
Golden WHt SS, SD MeH 52
GOLDIN WIST -Hell 4, Pitzer '°· Scllteuter 4, 1'9ndtey •. Hooper 4, Kring 2,
l(rtkorlan 7, 0112, OMlll•.
SAN 01100 ¥11A lono 21, Wuren 10,
Partu 7, N•t-2, Allen 10. l<lettv 2. Helftlme: Golden We\t, 2 .. n .
Totet '°"'" Golden WHI 11, Sen Otego Meuu.
'
,ThleWHll'• ttout plen ..
'-01 MtOaUI -CAll•it L•ll• MCI OOwftttrH l'I Poot, L••• L•h•, Pull· tllftttt_ llt_wolr.
lltlYl•l•D• -Ev•n• L•-·· Perr i• ...... , .... ,. /
IAN 01100-~ ,._, '-" Luis ... ., "~ t':.9.~-~wr. At•K -tO l.<lkw,
l. .. un•L•t.
INYO -Dl&J WI-•· lndtpendtnc• Crffll, lont PIM Cnttl, 0-t Rlwr ILOM Pine
Pond, S lrlt19n dowMtrH m to Stew•r1 L•ncll , Ptt••ent Vell•Y Reurvolr,
Sh•Plltrcb Cnoel<, Sym,,,.s CrtU, T ulllt ,, ....
NHL
WAL.aSCOMPl•l•CI
........ Ofv ...
W L TOP OA ....
Montr•a l
ICl"ll
PiltlburQll
Oetrou
Hertforo
J7 1• 10 215 ,.. ..
JS n ' 111 2'1 19 1' JO t 2SI 2.. .i
,. 32 .. 202 2S9 so
11 n " Ut JOA so A"-Olvl-
8ulf1lo J1 14 " 2S. "' et Mlnn .. ole ,, 22 Is 23S 211 73
80\lon 29 H II 2S. 234 •9
Out bee 1l 29 IJ 2S 1 U9 S•
Toronto 23 J2 10 2U 297 St
CAMl'aEU.CONl'ElllNCE
l'elric:ll Dlvl1lo11
NV l1ienden 31 17 II 2'6 726 87
Phlledllphll 3• 19 10 2S6 200 82
C••v•rv 32 22 12 U2 ns 1•
NV A•._,. 2• ll 11 2U 212 S9
wu11111oton 19 JO •• 232 2M> ~ SmyllM Dlvlll.., St Lov•>
Cl'llcevo
V•ncou'Wff
Eomonton
Cotoraoo
W•nnli>eQ
3' IJ 14 290 22' 92
2• 21 IJ 2SS 2U •S
2• 1S 11 241 241 •s
21 J1 11 ,.. 113 ~
19 JS 10 114 111 ..
I .. 11 103 31S 2'
W-..Uy's S<own
PothburQl'l 6, Ki119.1 S
Edmonton s. NV Ae<>91rl s Oueoec I, W•shlngton 4
8ull110 •. C•~ry O Monlrttl 9, Wlnnipe9 l
v •ncovv.,. s. r or onto 2
Decroo I 3. Cl>lc-J
Boston 3, M1nt1esott J
T_,ellt'•O•m"
W1nn1peg •t P1'141-lplltt
Penguins 8, Kings 5
S<-byP..-.1
LO> Af>9et.\
Pt1hour911
Finl Plf'IM
I ) I
2 l I
Pltt•burQl'I. JOllnlOll 10 CMalon•i. S ~1 1
Lo• An~tes, >l•r"' II ISi l•urent, L
Murpl'ly), 9.0 l P1tu0vr9h, Ltt 2J IC•rlylt.
M••ontJ, 1S 01 Ptn•lllf\ Korab, LA
I SS. Hop~uns, LA, 11 18, Joh1uon, Pol, II II.
Sec-Period
• LOS AnQel•~. M Murphy 12 I Dionne.
T •ytor J SO. s Lo• A9ngo1es. Hopkin • S
(H•rdy, Leu.rd). 1.11 6 P11lsOur91'1, l ee 1•
(StackhouMI. 11 S.. I Plllsbur911, Faubert I,
ll. S1. I Lo• Ange1 ... Fox 12 CT err Ion,
JenHnl. t• S6. 9 Pllh01Jr9h, Kehoe 48
IGUdMr, Lon\berry), II 06. Ptn•llles
Weill, LA. 1 JS; 8 H ler, Pil, ma jor, S SS,
T •YIOr. LA, 13:16, Thompson. PH. 11.'1 TltlN ,..,,._
10 Los AnQotlH, Fox U I .l'ensen, T errlon).
9 so. II P1ttsbur91'1, Thompson If I Slltp-
PArd), 11 21. Ptn•Hltt·Wtll>. LA, 2 21,
Gerdner, Pit, 3:116; Miione, Pit, • 07
01onn•, LA. s l.S, Chartr•w. LA. 12 21,
Suter, Pil, 12;V.
Shou on -I-Los Anoete• t-12 ~It. Pll·
l\bvrgfl 1•1~11-«1.
Goell .. -LO\ A1191iu, LHsard Pit tsburgll, Mitten. A·I 1,1 ..
~ . . . "
CoHege
UC INhM U , S... otee-St. f
~n 01-St. 000 000 000 O S l UC INIM 100 »4 OOa-U IS I
M•rtln. Le,,_rt 141. Crab UJ, Aou (t i, London (71 and Aomtro, T•tum Ill
WoOdl'leed encl ElliolL W W-l'lted U·•i
L-Mertln 11·11. 28-Cerroll IVC lrvlnt l
~I Coll ... t, La Ver,,. I
L• verne ooo ooo 004 • 1
SoC•I Coll-000 on 00• 9 10
I( Inv •nd 8onbor•, Bouche• 1nd Austin
W Boucher 11·21. L Ktng 28 Goodwin
ILVI, Pear.on, AU\ttn (SCCl. HA 8onOOr•
ILVI, 8NI• ISCCI.
High school
EIT-11,~aeecllt
t..•gun• 8eecl> OOS 002 2 9 11 J
Et Toro •OI 000 • 11 13 3
Vrom•n. Ctuk 141, Melnyk t6J ano 8er
ryhlll, Gl4lionau1, M•ntr Ill, Helllnoentl'ltl
!ti a nd Tokers11.1 W G1uon•u1 L
Vroman 28-Vromen. Me~rs IL•vune
8eachl J8 Murplly ll 19un• 8uclll
M•her IEITorol
MelerDtl t, E•c•hiert
Eacet\lor 000 000 O O 3 2
M•ler Ot1 000 100 • 1 3 0
Atvtr••n<I Cruz, Muldo1• •ncl David 28
Mtdln•IE•cell•or) HA 811ne(M•l•rOt1)
Ocee11V1ew1,•-Park 1
8uen• Park 000 000 I I 4 I
Ocu n View uo 011 • I 9 1
Ch•vt1, Smith U> ano AH<I, St•ntey, Jen
nong• Ill and M•loney w Stanto L
Cl'l111tz HA-vm.,roet I Ocean View)
E•-•.CalHerftleS Catllornl• 000 OU O S 3 3
Edison 041 100 • & s 2 Stel1, Moo<e IS> •nd 8rakeblll, SortnMn,
Mu!\>0nU>.Ctoney <•> •n<IS.Morello, Powell
(S) W-SortnHn. L.. St•l1. 28 Hill
I Edison). H A-<:H llllo !Celllornlt >,
UNvertlty4,Let .... H11110
l .. un• >lilts ooo ooo 000-0 • •
University 010 002 • • S 0
McVltker, RemHY C•I 1nd Cll•PIMll, Vovon, &econ 141. Frei 16) end Mllltr W
&econ (1·0>. L-MtVlc~er 28 Mllltr
<Unlversllyl.
WCT lnvltetlonaf
(et St!.._,, IM.) sec....•......,s.,....
Vljey Amrlltef dtl Brian T .. c:lltr, :1-t,
14, .. ,; 8111 ScenlOll def: Harold Solomon,
.. ,, •·•; Eddi• Olbbl .,., M .. ..itl Ort nm,
.. 1 ....
Men'• tournament'
(et~)
s.c.----lffllttt Frllr ................ Eddie l!-Md•, ....
•·J; Ttrry ""1ot 0.1. Nick S.vl•no, , .. , .. J,
1 ... Tony oi.-ve clef. 1111c11 we111, , .. , ._.; 0-llM'l'9f def. Weller Redondo, .. ,,
•·2; Mel l'w(;tll IMf. GOll11 Olb .. y, .. 2, .... StuMlt..-~
Tim G\llllUon•lhrnl• Millon oef. JOlln
H•YH•ltlCllUll Meyer, •·l 1 •·~; Stt1tt
ltrulevllf•MOOr dtf. Cllrli Dullk•Cllrlt
Mayo"•·"'· 1-S ... ,; Purc•ll·DIO $tock-.
dtf. JOM SNrl~lt Mc:DoNtld, , .. , M ;
K1v111 C11fftl'l·Steve11 DtnlOll •f. JOlln
Av1tln•Tflft04'lllk-, 1•, 74,
f
•·'· ••I o ..... ,. •·O. IMI, Wl911ey, .. o. SMu_tM IPVI ..... W, W, .. ,, H . S-
IP'YI -.. ,, W, Ml, H Mll .. r CllVI -.. , ....... , ..... .,.,,....
•11c11e ..... CHUIOllO "VI .. , 0.Wltt
Or•nl, H . H , .i Locier Ht_,, •·1, M ;
l'lllullll·R-lll'VI ~t>O, Ml, .... M
c.._ .. ....,""""..,..."• .......
.......... ((;,dM) .... Denny, • t, relftM
Out wltll .NM, •I. l!llftl, M , Nf. J e<lltor1..
..0, JI,_,., (c;dM> won M , .. ,, • t, Ml;
Otrll•n ICllMI _. .. ,, •,t, M, t-0, Oeru (c;llMI -U,t.•,r.i....4'\lt. .. t
De.191 ..
l!l'neroon·WtslMr (GdMI dtl lorrvu.
Mllltr, .. 1, .. 1; tiff, P•WWl·Tesker, t.t,
reln•d out, Suttlv•11·1!wln9 l(dM) IMt.
llf•wHt, 74, t~.
Loa Alemttoa
WIDNISOAY'S ••suus
........... --. ... wt! .. )
Ftr11 rec. -AdicK Aretec IB•rttu>, •.20.
MO, t . .O; Geeoie'• loy 1Cr•111>. e.oo. uo,
Wotcome Imp f81cklorcll, S.'11 U necte
f .. J) Ptld $2' 20
S.C-rec• -s.nctv tAteu nderl, ...o.
2 tlO, 2 • .0. H-8ovnd <B•vltul, 2 . .0, 2.20. Ar-8.u> tOsborn>, 2 . .0
Tlllrd rec• Beverly 8r0"1ac (KutOl•rl.
4.20, J 20. 2 tlO, Tw•I• s L•Oy !Grundy), S.20,
, IO, R M's Cindy 8HU ICr•nel, I tlO $2 e•·
act• 11-S> peid uo 00
Four I" r .oct S H Song ( V •ll•ndllllll\Mnl
• IO, ) 20. 2 'II, TlltiUS Io. ..... ,,, •.10, l .20;
P090 Stick ISNrren), 2 IO
Fiith rece l(•w•r•u Gold IC•mpbelll,
10 •0, 100, JOO Ttm• Str,.m (\l•lland·
inOl>tml, 11 00, • 40, Fire For Ellul
(B•rtonel,3 'II ue .. c te0 9l p•ld J7• 20.
S•all'I rece St•o•e H•n<I IGrundyJ, 12.20,
• 40, •.to. Clleml)e9M Prince (Of\omtrl,
4.20,J 00, WlnterPrlnceA (Grenier I,• 20 .
Seventh r•c• Armbro Wood ( 81y.
leu I, U.•O. S 10, 3 •O. Snow O•nce A
1Crogh•n1, 3 00, 1.ltO, Jim Crow IHotll,
10.eo u exact• 14·31 palo J.4•.IO
S2 P ica S•• p .1 ... 1 6·•> palo S1',16A ••w•lh
one w onning ll<kel (sl• tlorws> U Pock Si•
Con>ot•tion p,ald U S6.•0 with 11 wonning
ttcktl• (live hor\o l.
Eigl'llll rec• MV EllHbetll (Bart.ssl,
J.20, 1 •O, 2 10. l vnn't E•PrtU IWllllamsl.
2.60, 1 20, Sopnost•<•led L•dv !Grundy).
1 •O
Nlnlll tOl<t Howdy MIHl ISucceroue>.
11 20, S 00, 3 60, I( 8 King IV1llandlnQll•m1.
4 •O, 1 .0, A l WMllS tLOnQOI, • 10 \1 u..:
la IS •> C>eld ~I tlO
renth rece Covtltr'• tm•oe IT•»•••>.
12 .0. S 10, HO Aeo Soil <TOOd 11 >, J 40,
, 10 Star A .. 1tc11on ICr••Q) •• 00 n t .H CI•
110 P•ldUltlO
Attendance J,114
Santa Anita
WEDNESDAY'S llESUL TS
U h l ot 17..Wy ~.., mt1t11111
Forst raco F•trvly Maid IMcC•rron1.
I 00, • 60. S 00 Gam Bay tOllvare.J. 10 60,
• 20. Aoyet lns,,.r•11on1w1nal•ndl, IO 20.
S•cond r •<t tmpre\s1ve 8e•t
IV•leni ... l•I. 12 l>O, 6 t10 l 1>0 Sprmg Steel
IC.1st1ned•I 16 20 S 00, Labtrat
t Lt pn•ml l 00 U daily OOuble (I 2l Pll<l
Kl •O
T turd r.c• .,.~101s Prence c P1nc•v'. • 004
2 10, 2 .0, Malltl \ T1vern ILIPll•ml. 3 tlO,
J •O, C•nedlan8io IVale<Uueta l,3 •O
Fourtl'I rece Sky Var0tr (M<Carronl,
1 10, 3 40, 1 tlO. l OIHleur I Plnc•YI. J 00,
2 l>O. 8•"9<fltro (Otttr.ou• .. v•I. J.IO
Flltl'I r..:t Coe• Me Hom• IPlnca y),
~ .O. 3.40. UO, E•ll'lttt (Wlnl•nCll. • .o, l.tlO.
BltllOll AQeln IAemir.,), ) •O SS uecta
(I 2 J P•ld '67 00
Sl•lh r•ce Hl9hten<I Slyte (Plnc•yl,
•.•O. •.00, 2.tlO, tone IM<H••Vutl, s.'°. J.«);
Muter Jono IMcC.rron), 3.00.
Sevenll'I race E•e<ullve Coun>el I Pin·
cev1. s.10, J •o. 1 eo. Doubt• Olscount IM<H•rvue1. 4.10, J .eo. Good Lord
I llpl\•ml. •.tlO U u ectt CM ) paid U..00.
l2 PIO. Six (2-1 ... 1·1 .. ) peto Sl,170.IO wltfl
S.S winning lk UI• (ii• '-••L l2 Pick SI•
Con1ol•Uon e>eld ~1.40 willl '2t wtnnlne
llckt11 lllve llor-1 U Pick Sia <.Pft-llon
>Crete" ConlOl•llon ,,.Jd S110M wllll 11 wln-
nln9 lkkots 11-hOrsn. -KratCcll). Eltl'ltl'I rece -Low ly lt-ry IPlnuyl,
• 00, J 60, UO. Set A Scout IM<C.,r°"I.
•.00, J.tlO, I<• Princess IM<H•r-1, l .60.
Nlnt" rece R-., ltoment (Pln<•YI,
11 .0, 11 00. S 20, Or love tM<C..ronl, S-Oii,
3.20. O·So C.11..S tCHl-1, J.40. U euc;.
ta It-JI peld $277 00. 0 -l"lftlll'led 111 e
-dhHl tor MC-, di~lllle<I •nd pt.c.d third
Allendence 20,lU
High achool aoccer
Cll' l'LAVOl'"S
INIMl, Ve-i.o
I rv1ne ><orlnQ Alltn 2.
Esl.tl'IC .. 4, Marse..n 2
E>len<•• Moring Do 2, Hern•nOOl, ()o.
m•noue1
~ • • . "
Women's softball
COMMUNITVCOLLEGE
Gol ..... Wnl S. •lo H-0 Rio Honoo 000 000 o o I J
Gotd•n We'1 001 111 " s 8 I G•rt•• •t'd Dial Nutter ano R1<.N rC1\
N Nulltr L Gertie
Misc.
Wedne9day'a tranaactlona
aAHaALL
AnMrlcen Le ....
8AL flMOAE ORIOLES Announced
thel Devt Ford, pltc ller, and W•yne
I< re nt l'llCkt, lnfl•IOer, hed egreod to
one vur contracts.
Nallonel Lue ...
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Sold Ille
contract ot Terry W"l111eld, outllatder, to
lht S•IOU Uonl ol Jepenese L•eQut.
HOCICIV
N•l'-1 HeOey ~
MONTREAL CANAOIENS Aeust(IMd
Aten Luclw, aetenMtman, from Nov• Scott• ot ll'lt Amerocen Hoc:Uy LHQue 10 l'Hnc of
Ille tnternetlon•I Leegw. Grenle<I Mer•
PavOllcll, lorw•rd, • 1°'9amt tr.,oul wllll Ille
voyeveun. PHILADELPHIA FLYERS -Aec:•lltd
Atld 8ellty, Otlen-n, from Melne of Ille
Am•rlcen Hoelter Leegue. Anigned 8 .. kt
westeytoMelne
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS -SIQMO Ptlt
Sc emu rte, Oelenwman.
COi.UGi
COLUMBIA -Nemed Pete Sevil'IO end
Mlkt $1,,,_ tlSlSlenl IOOlbell COKllH.
KANSAS STATE -H•l'Md Dick Sumpn
..ltntlYt llnt CNCll.
MANHATTANVILLI! -Ntm ed Len
Alllf•m-1u llNd bett4>111 coech.
NO•THEAST LOUISIANA -NemedJecll
Tlll9'frl •U11tant beuetMll coec11.
._EOltOI WASHINGTON Fl,..ed I04I
Tetttnt, llHd bellt1llNll
W YOMING -Ntmed Jim King otltnslve
llneCNCll.'
Htah achoof IJIMHttC. ,.-. """' 111, u,,..... .. , 1'1-t•rc;I• -I, hlltf (PVI, •. 7J)
POf'l'llMI -1, Orlffln ll"VI, f,i; •tl'lft -r. Gflffln (PVl, 7.1; v ... 11 -•. o.lclolllfd ll"V),
U : l'•r•t .. 1 -.n -I. Orlltln CPVl, 1.a1
Hlfll "" -I. 0Hle1141 "VI, l .tf All•
• ...,,.. -'· O.lenct ""'· .o.tt . ._ .......... .
COMlllW•rfV COU.•M ~C...ltf ... ~ ... llCCt ..... llC.-..fl.!9
Vt1o1ll -.I. 0...... !L9CCI ,t ,jf, U,._
Mn -I ...._. COCC:), Ut; ...._,.
•-1 • ....,.... coca. , ... ,..., ...
tnl• I T"'"9 CLKCI, 1 .... 11111 .....
-1.H4ft-COCCI, a11.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 5, 1981
t
Co R1rressional
Cup nears
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
o.11• ...... ._... Wrt..,
Tbe ataie 11 set and tbe Une-up complete for
one o! the claasiest Congressional Cup match rac·
ing series ln recent years, judging from the 10·
man cast being fielded by the sponsoring Long
Beach Yacht Club.
Preliminary activity for lhls year's "Cong
C14p" gets under way Monday -assltning of boats
and practice racing -and the hard~core cornpeti·
lion begins Thursday and continues through Satur·
day. Sunday has been set aside ror a make-up day
in the event the weather prevents all of the
matches being saUed in three days .
As usual, the format calls for 15 matches a day
for a total or 45 with the coveted prize goin1 to tbe
skipper and crew with the most wins. A score of
nine is perfect. •
In some respects, this year's Congreaaional
Cup will resemble a post mortem or last summer's
America's Cup trials and defense.
For instance , the two main contenders in the
BOATING
Ame rica's Cup -the winner, Dennis Conner of
San Diego, and the loser, Jim Hardy of Australia
will again be pitted against each other, this time in
Catalina·38 sloops ins tead of 12-meters.
Appearing for the firs t lim e i n the
Congressional Cup will be Russell Long, the New
York Yacht Club youngster who was runner-up to
Conner in the America's Cup trials.
Dennis Durgan of Newport Harbor Yacht
Club, Conner's tactician in the America's Cup
campaign, will be pitted against his old boss in
their bid for a third Congressional Cu p victory.
Challenging both Conner and Durgan for a
third Congressional Cup crown will be Dick
Deaver of Balboa Yacht Club. Deaver won the
New Zealand Royal Yacht Squadron Challenge
Cup championship in 1980 and was runner -up in
the Royal Lymington Cup match racing series in
Ireland.
Another America's Cup veteran 1s Gary
Jobson of Fort Worth. who was tactician for Ted
Turner on Courageous in their successful defense
in 1977 and in their unsuccessful trials in 1980.
Scott Perry of Annapolis, Md. was the tacti-
cian on Independence in the 1977 America's Cup
trials and has been tactician in two Congressional
Cup series.
Harold Cudmore of the Royal Cork Yacht
Club, Ireland, will be making his third bid for the
Congressional Cup. He was the Lymington Cup
champion in 1980.
Others in the line-up are:
Rod Davis, Long Beach Yacht Club, the LBYC
sailoff champion and a runner-up in the 1980 Lym -ington CUp.
Robin Morgan, Little Ships Fleet, Long Beach,
winner of the 1980 Pacilic Match Racing Cham-pionship out of Long Beach.
Richard Hackett, Coyote Point Yacht Club was
named aa the alternate skipper. He sailed in the
Congressional Cup last year and since then has
won the San Francisco Bay Congressional Cup
sailoff.
Tri-Island
race begins
If weather forecasts hang tough, this coming
weekend should provide some wild and wet sailing
for yachtsmen along the South Coast .
For the hardy souls sailing out of Los An geles
Yacht Club Friday at 4 :30 p.m. it could be wild
and wet. That's the time scheduled for the start or
the often rugged Tri-Island r~ce around Santa
Barbar a , Santa Catalina and San Clemente
islands.
Even in normal weather, the Tri-Island has
been known to provide some real gear-busting
conditions as the fleet beats toward Santa Barbara
and Sutil islands birthplace of the westerlies.
The 156-mile race has such a reputation that
LA YC only sends yachts rated unde r the
International Offshore Rule out, using it as the
second race or the Whitney Series.
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet <PHRFJ,
Midget Ocean Racing Class CMORC) and Small
Boat Ocean Racing Association (SBORA > will
forego the Tri-Island and race a roundtripper from
Los Angeles Harbor to Ship Rock off the Catalina
Isthmus -a distance of 40 miles. The PHRF
yachts are competing for the Los Angeles Times
Trophy, MORC for the Little Whitney, and SBORA
for the Todd Pacific Trophy.
* * * In othtr $oulllern Celllornle v eclltlno Astocletlon 6rM1' s--.c ... .,
Pe clllt Merlnen Vec:lll Club -
Mellbu encl R•tur" ••<• lkMI boel•I
S.turdey
Oat Rey Vet lll Club -Sundey
Skippers rece IT_,.nbutO Strletl
Sundey.
Cor onedo Ceys V•cllt Club -
Winter Cletlk, Selurde\t.
* * * Santa Ciera 11ec1ng AHocleclon -
Mldwlntow Reoelta, Seturclay. O<••Mlde Yecht CtuO -VH rly
SetlH IPHRF) Sun<lay.
Southwestern Y•<l'll Club -
Gebrltto Senes IPHRl"l Sun<lay. ..............
Po111t °""" V ecllt Club -Sabot
llece1, s.turoev. Sunday.
Ventur• VKlll Club -Enstntde
T-Up, Sehlrdey.
Basketball scores
College ........
O.Peu1e.. O.ytonM
Mer-"t ti, StelJell st
llllftOIS St. 64, N. towe 44
TOUllt .. ~NTS
I 1 • n •ra CellMf'IMe .,..,.. ...... ,
V ....... 11 11, MlHlHIHI St M
FtorlN .!IO, AtAlurn 41 lot)
••c....~. . 1tet.-• ..-1 Lelty.U.1~ ._...._. M
lit ldtr ... lllClll'ltlt SO
Am•··~ u. U, DrH•l 60
St. J ...... 'U O, Ttmflt U
2·seater Ford
F ord Motor Co. unveiled its 1982 M er curx,!
LN7, a two-seater sportscoupe and its twin.
the Ford EXP, at Scottsdale. Ariz. TheJ'
front-wheel drive, four-cylinder models g61t
on sale in April. ,..,
'"
Genentech •I ...
•.'.> , ... views future l-
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The president ~
Genentech, the gene-s plicing firm that ranks a
one of Wall Street's hottest issues, says his fir
will operate "close to break-even" over the nex~
year or two, and may even see some losses. I
Robert Swanson told a meeting of securit~ analysts here that the company has surpassed it.
goal of breaking even in its first fi ve years. bu
that "it may not be possible for us to achieve sue
positive results in every quarter in the nea term."
The company's 1980 earnings were $236,000. ori
four cents a share, versus $116,000, or two cents ~ sha re, in 1979. :
The cost or research and clinical trials m thf1
near future, he said , make it "possible we will
report quarterly losses m the future."
Broadway stores
appoint Anwne
I r I
I l I I I
I I ' LOS ANGELES (AP) F rancis H. Arnone'
pr eside nt a nd c hi e f e xecutive or Th~
Broadway-Southern Cali fornia, has been appointe~
chairman of the 40-depa rtment store unit of Carte Hawley Hale Stores Inc.
Calvin E . Rowl ey will succeed Arnone a~
president, according to an announcement by Philiq
M. Hawley, president of Los Angeles-based Carte~
Hawley Hale. I
AllNONE, 40, WAS APPOINTED president o~ the Broadway division in 1978. Before joinin
Broadway. he was president of Carter Hawle
Ha le 's Sacramento-based Weinstock's division. 1
Ro wley. 53, h as bee n executive v icq
president-finance a nd planning with J . L Hudsort
Co . in Detroit. Hudson i s a unit o~
Minneapolis-based Dayton-Hudson Co.
BALE ALSO IS the parent company for Th
Broadway-Southwest a nd Sao Francisco-base
Emporium Capwe ll. It a lso operates th
Waldenbooks ch a in of book stores and th
Contempo Casuals chain of junior apparel stores.
Jn fiscal 1980, Carter Hawley Hale reporte
sales or $2.6 billion. up 9.2 percent Crom $2.4 billio ,
in fiscal 1979. ;
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fir.iSKIER PRUE
645-1342• 731-7777•831-2493
·r
Housing
saie ffip
ported
WASRJNGTON <AP >
-The market for new
houses continued to de·
terlorate in January,
wltb sales droppinc 6.5
percent from December
on a seasonally aciju.ated
basis, the government
reports.
An indust r y
spokesman said high
mortgage interest rates
were a main cause.
The departments of
Commerce and Housing
a nd Urban Development
reported that about
34,000 new single·lamily
houses were sold last
month, about the s ame
total number as in the
previous month.
Orange Cout DAILY PICOT/Thursday, March 5. 1981
Al"WI,..,.....
N o w yo11 see it .••
I However, since pas t
results indicate January i sales normally rise, the
lseasonal adjus tment
? shows a decline.
This Plymouth Reliant 'K·Car,' customized into a convertible, .is
being shown around the country by Chrysler Corp. They admit,
however, that the model, if actually produced as scheduled by 1982,
may not look like this.
WANTED
DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewels by Joseph purchases diamonds,
gemstones, gold and Sliver from povate lndM-
cluals and estates. Careful examination and
evaluatlOrt by our experts Highest pnces paid.
10·9 dally, Sat 10-0. Closed Sunday Phone
today. Ask lot Betty Grace or Enc Zalaskus.
A IMOITIOH Of l~I f~ OVEk 60 T~
J~W~LS by JOS~PH
Sold'! Co.at Plaza, Ca.ta Mee.i • 540.9066
f $50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS CALL LIN DA BLU E
FOR A
• Interest onJy pe119«nl
• lnco•e
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• Weekly co••il••nl•
• flllon U1ly ft1ndin•s
• 6 monll•• lo 3 years
• Soutllern C.llforn1'
( ·• tt. t1 I ~If
loan lnlo.--.llon service
f f 1IU ltrt<tll1 inq fh ,.J,
(714) 759·1515
AMERICAN HOME MORTGAO.:
710 Newport Center Drive
Oes1on Plaza
N .. wpor! Beacr.
Cat.torn1a
92660
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN -
INTEREST ONLY! Newpor~.~!J~¥o!~~~;.;!nc G
(714) 760-6060
COLLECTORS
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Rere Coln• & S.•mpa
GOLD & SIL VER
Prlc.s for J..4.11 o.wci...-.,. M....,.c1.11us
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•wy .... $471 •• ...,,. ...... ...,...
....... MSJ.Je un.• ~ _.,...,._ ,, ........... ,_.. ............ c-,.._.,...
(714) 556-ll50
South Coaat Plan VIiiage ___ ..
(---~-}
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FOR GOOD ADVICE
ALWAYS CONSULT
AN EXPERT
Bl.!..: ~.-: R.Ph. ··.--~
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d1rr<-rent ailments havl'
th e :.a ml' di stress
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f ree D .. •ery
Jll tt. ..... l eed .............
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BUStNE88
Change
• mname
by UCB
LOS ANGELES (AP> -No.
United California Bank is not
fuml1aUn1 lt.a ai1na. It's chan1· ln1 lll name.
• I When you've cot bags on
hundreds of your branches, It's
bard to keep lt a secret,•• says
Don Crtvellone, execuUve vlce
prealdent of United California
Bank. "What can I say? We're
changing our name sometime In June." ,
UCB, EXPLAINS Crivellone
will become First lnterstat~
Bank of California as part or a
massive name change being
made by its parent company,
Western Bancorporation, wh1ch
is becoming First Inters tate
Bank Corp.
Some 20 other banks owned by
the parent will also become
First Inters tate Bank of
wherever they are located, in
one Colorado case First In-
terstate Bank or Fort Collins, a
title thus far unclaimed.
"IT'S A GIGANTIC job with
900 branches in 11 Western
states," Crivellone said . "This is
a very time-consuming job being
coordinated by the holding com-
pany. but we think it's worth the
effort. It's a long-range project,
but if interstate banking comes,
we'll be well-positioned."
Making the names of the 21
banks similar. said Crivellone.
will help customers by removing
confusion over which banks are
affiliated with which.
There will be First Interstates
in California, Nevada, Oregon.
Washington. Arizona . New Mex·
ico. Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Mon-
tan a a nd Wyoming .
OVER THE COUNTER
Promotions told
Promotions of two top executives have been announced
by Pamela Ayers & Company of Costa Mesa, which de·
signs and markets interiors of model homes for builders
and developers. Pamela Ayers (left) has been named
chief executive officer and creative designer. Peter En~le (rig~t), replaces her as president, while retaining
duties as director of sales and marketing.
Banks tell plans
for office shift
Terry T. Tomich, president of Republic Bank and Joseph P.
Munger, president of Capistrano National Bank, have announced
the banks entered into a preliminary agreement for Capistrano
National to acquire one of the two offices operated by Republic in
Fulle rton
The office being acquired has approximately $5 million in de-
posits and is located on Orangethorpe Avenue near Brookhurst
Street.
Republic Bank would continue to operate a regional office in
downtown Fullerton, as well as regional offices in Gardena and
Torrance, and has received approval to establish a regional otflce
in Newport Beach from the state Banking Department.
Capistrano National reached approximately $44 million in as-
sets at year end and operates offices in San Juan and Santa An a.
and has received approval for an office in Irvinf'.
The transaction is subject to the execution or a definitive
agreement and receipt of shareholder and regulatory approv als.
NASO LISTINGS
NEW YORK IAPI ClarkJL i:~ '!~ rJ~':~7'. 11 ,. I OllFerro 91'. lO'I• SwEl!>v u :a... t S11~ NASDAQ SUMMARY 1'1ASOAQ Quotations ClowCp "''• 19'1> OllerT P "''· 11''1 SwnEnr l7:V. •• ,_ U\OWl"9 lllQllHI bids ColrT le lll9 ""' lnfra lnd S\. 611• PCA Int ll u v. S1andyn 21'1> 1'I and lowttl offer\ Dy ColG,hot Ii. '~ tnlel s ~ lS PatnlB 15''> 15"' StdM•cro 101At 10'• -nerket ~.,., H Of ComCltl ll .... ~ tntrcEnr 10···~ 11'• 11 .... 131.,, ,.1, c cGaR ~::~·i' Wed Prk H Clo not Cmt$tlr .. 11 lnlmtG' 10''> 10"-aulelP 11 , .. ,, 1''> JI N EW YORK IAPI The 1oll-1"9 list .nc; luch rtttall markup Cmwhl ,,,,, " ln8 kW'11 11~ I) Payl' • ·~ ""' Slert11 ,. . ""' >hows the OWr tne c;_,,., ""•rkdoM\ cw comm COllPap • 33-"t ~·· lwaSoUI '°"' 11 PH rMI IJ\.J IS StrawCI 7l 11''> '10<1<1 -warr...,u tnat Ila•• oo,,. up 1ssJon tor -· Cordi• 10'n JI Jam•DY 10 10~. Pena Ent IJ"' l)'\<t Sut>tiru 11loi 11'" Ille m01it --IM """'' O.\ed on Sloek Bid Ask CrM Tre ' 34~1 lS111 Jerico • ,,.,.. 11'.i'• Penl•tr 201/e 2011, SuCMrEI 10\\ II i:rcent of Cl\an99 reoardteH ot volume 4EL Ind u v, U V. CullrFd • llolo l 'h JlllyFd 1,. '\oi Petroltt 11v, 711/• TIME OC '"" w. or wees. AFAProt • 10 CY< Itron 1~11 JO>lynM l)'.I<. ~· .. Pelllt>on 11 1711, ~:~~ \
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F1 ... ti n1 " 11 .. 341 _. ,.,,, SCalWtr '~" JS JS•11 DOWNS Baul Fr 11'1. ,, ... 19 ,, •• l\o\lds11W 1s1,, •••r• Name La.i c';t,., Pct BaytsMk II'·> ""' FlaNFla 11• .. " MdldCap 1l' • 131--, UPS AND DOWNS I Phy""' \ ""' Oft " s B .. 11,.. I'. I ... Flure><D \ 14 _. .... MIOIRu ,,, '"' ) Nuc tMO • •'• ". OH I). BenntPll ForHIO JJ·--~ t tdlBU ~ )1'. l W'1Chm ,., iv. Ott I).
I 15-1'J l-.. ~~~~l~ ).\. . M:~~e~G 21'1'1 Zlt<to • MouCmph 2 J..t• s ,. Oft 11) BenttyL 1'1". JOI/, 101M 1111• ...... 11V. ) MelaS.,. 2"" l1i 0 11 12 0 BetrL•b ... ,. ... ,. F r•nkEI t• t•' > Molu 1 5.1''• )J"' • Storm Ko ,,,... ... Off II S BevMgl " 14111 FreeSG ,.,,. J'l1". MonfCol 4 4.i. NEW YORK (AP) Mo•t ac:llw over· I OynMom 2 '• Off II I 81bbCo 10'1'> II F remnl s :~~ :~~ :::=';:ifd ~·:~ ~~ '~!~:,., •locks •1f.:1.0 Dy NASO. • F.Olnv • " 1 Oft 10) BlrdSon u •1. 1~ FullrMB v;,~:;, ~ A1~,~ ~'i .. ' R•y<Otn l ife '• Off 100 81r1cllr 4~ SYI Gatnvo u •i. 14.,, MorQRH •"' SY, Sun.rgy 10 0.n{oM 1.,, "· Off . ' Blyvoor IJ\O ll ... nAulm "-ar, Mor"'tn 11'-II~ Mnrlh 21lt.= 11"' 11 .... " 8 mv
l .. ... 0 11 '' Bonen,. ,... ll!t no.vu 4'n .... l\o\olCluD 2"' 1'11 BrdyEn '"" lh .... 12 s .. Oft 9 I BrwTotn \ 45 o v. tRIEll 11 11''> °"ueller 11Yt H I'> 08eer Wt~ I 1~~67 IS.II:. . ,.,. IJ Adv Comp 4 l1i 0 11 ... Buckbee • ,.,.. vE~n I ,.,, NarrgCp s ,,.,, ll LCKllE •P ... 14 lndLDL.f 2~ v. ()if IJ Bulle I\ )44 lS~ GretnM 121'> 11"9 NOia 1 16 t•V. °"CIC .. 214,400 IH'I 11 • 'h 15 Micros 2'11. ''• Oft t.J Burn~ IJ\lt ·~ Grev.Adv ~v. ;:,,, =tc~&~:' !.~ ~~ ~ .. n~~ 104,IOO ,..,. 21 . "" ,. OmnlRK ,,.. ''• Ofl l l CNL In 214 J Glltnlll ' 102,900 I ' l·J2 . II 0.l!Alk s .. .,, 0 11 1.0 g.~~l. •v. ..-.. ~:~'11:'. Jv. 2~ =:~r~~·A : ~ ~".!~'u~ic ,':,=, .~~ ]) .,, ,, vanOyk $"'-,,, Off 1.0 :Ml'> lS\lt ·~· + 1-16 " PelOv 1"4 .... 0 11 I' C•nradM l JIA Mardwke ' 91'> NI•"" 8 lS lS\4 20 Pata-""' ' OH I I ~P~..Zly J J\1t HrpR-IOY. tl>'ti NoCa rGs Ill'> IP4 4dvanuo 513 ll CaeNJ WI l '" Off '' 14'.4 1S Ma~p ' » ..... NoEOI "" 61'h 10 0.cll...O ··············· .. 12 tnlegE"' J v. Off 1.1 CpfnAlr '" ... M• INI 22'-22"" NwlNG• IOl/e 11 Uncllanoe<I .............. •.•nu BetmM g 1214 I Off l.S ~=~~~~c 1514 ,...,. HetmRK 4-!"o S NwstPS U~ U 'lt Tola I tu ....... , ...... , . . • . . 1,'41 l4 EqutSL 101/a "' Ofl 1.• MenrtJF 1 ~ 261'1 NOUll ,, ""' New hlQhS . . . . .. ...... 41 u HaWltC~ 1v. 14 Off 1 I I~·· I" MOIOl>m JI.lo '"" Nucorp ~ 14 N•w tow' ........ ,. 16 Moony8 .... "" Off I I CnVtPS '~ 13llt Hoover 11\l'J 11'• ~llZM 26\/t 21 Total Mlft ... ······· .... 26,0U,400 11 Ra-un .. , v, 011 T I CIVmSh 12'-llllt MorlrR• W• .s~ o to as ->6.,, -----
MUTUAL FUND
NkW YOftK (API telvtn htiodi Conlfd 1103 NL Mull 'S. 10.40 MSB Fd "~~ NL h Fre 1 tS E•cll -TIWI IOU.,...... •uttek ISM 17.JI D•tny 10 G . Prov 4.14 s 15 Mul .... 10 ... II u Pro Su vlcu NL Fedl ... q NL latlons ...... '"DY C•ndn • .., 'u IEQ Inc 20.01 NL Tu Ea l ZA ) • Ml F FUl'CIS: M.OT IS., NL 42.l!I NL Ille Na\koNI Auocl-Olvld U I J.11 Exel\ M 07 NL Sle><k 11.09 22.'2 Funo 1.0 9.14 Fund a:s1 NL St~:.~~=~'.
•lion of Securltlft Hllnc ll,00 11.16 M•oel 11.Sl NL Select 6.14 '·" Grwtll S.ff •.<M lncom 7.. NL Am Ind UD NL
Dealers, lrte., ... I Montll •.n 10.•2 MFlud"••Bd .6 •.. ~ ~~ lnvv.R'.~! ?·?! ·~·.401 MN,•IBdol ~~·-'·'7 l>ru SIP u 'u 'f4., AHO< .n NL
:::.:••<ff :C~.!'. ~!::.! rn '~·~ Gvl SK ,,;; NL ,,,,, -· n:76 't:.L ~~!~ ;:;; .. ~L Putnam Funds: . Invest l.j6 NL
COUid flaw -,Cnt SM 10.11 ll.70 Mllnco I IS NL Ivy Fd 9 71 NL Grwtll S OS S 49 C0<1v IJ 47 l•.12 O<Hn I.IS NL Mtld INel -~llart I'd ..... 20... Ml Yid 10.J• HL JP Grill IWo 13 ff lnc0tn Lit L'D Int Eq 16.)4 11 16 Stein Roe Fd5• vatutl or ""'l4IM .... Dir --N' LI Mun 1 n NL JI" tnco I 42 1"01 T• Fre 10 OJ 10 t0 Georo l2.TJ ll.'1 faJ< Med IJ.at H.1' C t p1 • .,. .,..... ~ J · · · ' Grwtll 11.11 12.'1 Tmc»il GI 7.At I.II
ch:r':i :.0.~ c::';.~ .. :.: HL ~:.~::: 'l::i =t J=:sMatlCO::! NL ::~.~~r :rn =t Ml Yid 10. UAJ Tmpl W 11..U 1'.17 Seti a.y Fund 11.U 12.IS Tflrllt 9.11 NL 8 ond 119S "°' Nal Avie .. 6J NL lncom SM 6.10 Trns Catt 9.74 10.ff ADte 21.4' N Grwlll I.OS 1.IO Trend n .12 NL. Grwlll 11:19 12:16 Nal Ind u :JJ NL tnvut •.31 10.11 Tn tl Inv I.Gt 1.70 Acorn F 26.4' N HI Yield •.-1.•• Flnanc1e1 ~: Satan I St t M Nat Securities· Optn 11.n 14.ft Trn l!q 17 ... 1'.0. ADV .., • T IE . • I . T .. IE• "·" ..... T.udr Fd '°'" NL. Aluture 1.i.n N lncom 6.2' •• ., Dyna I. NL •• • 9,20 10.00 ..... 10.U II.OS Vista t•.<n 11.Sl Twnc GI 11.1 NL Optn 10.61 11.•1 tndu'I 4.0 NL. t<eutmn 1.20 NL. •-1.1' >.u Voyeg 14 61 u ,, TwnC s.1 14 NL AIM F-: Tu Mo IS.It ••.s• tncom l.4S NL KemCMr ,._, Olvld S.G s ... Ratnbw i.n NL USAA GI 1i NL
CvYld l•.Jl IS, Colu Giii 20.l4 NL. Fsl lnveuori: lnc:om I.SI '·" Grwlll 1.1:1 l .'3 Revere l.J• NL. USAA Inc t.«S NL Edson IS.a "· Cwllfl A• l-21 I.JI Bnd At> IJ.. ..... Grow 11.62 12.10 Prefd •.. OJ •.50 Sefeco SeNr· Uni Accu s.D NL. HIYld •.u t.7 Cwllfl co '·" UJ DISCO U M •.• Ml Yid •• ., 9.14 lncom •.10 •. ,. Eqult 11.61 NL. Unlf Mvt 10.61 NL. Alfi11'• F IS ... NL Comp 9cl l.'1 t.•S Grwtll 9.20 10.0S Mun 8 U O 1.17 Stock IO.n 11.1' Grwttl 163.J NL. Untied Funds' " BlrtllT n ... 13.tl Comp "'" •.• 10.0f lncom •• 62 7.23 Optn 14.2' IU2 Tax Ea 1 ... 1.47 IMO 1o'ts NL. Accm 1J1 .. ,
American Funos: Concord 1'.'5 NL Opt11 •.67 1.1' Summ 11,SJ 20.30 NllLll• Furlel: Stl"e11t tn .... t· ·-• n J0~ A 8al .... t. ConM<llcvt Gent: Sfock I.JO 1... Tecll 12.ft 14.20 Equll lt.4' 21.IJ Cet1lt 16.iO 17 tJ ~Oft Gr 1£ ,,·" Amcp 1121 t4.S1 Fund 112' 14.)4 Tu Ea 1.01 u o Tot ~I 12.41 1ui Grwtll t•.u 11.SA Grwtll 13.'9 14'.Js on t nc 10'.1t 11:10 A Mull 12.16 1 ln<om 6.12 •.U u Wlf;q .. ., •.ts us 92 16.JO 11.0J ln<Otn .... 10.st Sele<• n.. NL. lduc; 21A. a An Gtfl UO 10. Mun lld 7.01 1,51 ._.Wall JI.II NL Cws a4 "" 7.M Rel EQ 11.'1 20.62 Scudder Fwndt· Ml tnc 1lM lift
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Grwtll 12.11 11. Con1tllu _,,all Grwtll 1;11evall Cu1 51 II.JS 20.lt Enrty ?l.1J NL tn<om 10:11 NL. UtScl •.\Ill 10:3' tncom 7.'2 I , ~I Mui 7,0f NL. tn<om unavell Cua S3 t.7' 10.10 Guerd n .21 NL Intl fd 11.1' NL Vane 11ll120 ICAl"e I.tu t .7 try Catt 1 •. 09 17." Mutel una•all Cut S4 9 .... 10.72 Llbty 3.72 NL. MM8 7.2' NL. Uld Svea s'.6.t NL N n l.1t I. tew•re ~: Sc>e<t unevell lnt•rnt •.:It 4.IO ,,..,..Ill 4.M NL. to.ct 41 J7 NL vetwe LI,. Ff· Will Mt 1... •• Oecet tUS u ... Franlllln ~= Miu 12.1t 1U 7 Perin ,.,., NL. TaFr• ... NL FUftCI ..... 11 21 •mer 0-al: Del•• IS.,, 1'.11 AGE J..., 3 70 L.ulngton °'11: k llua U.iJ HL. Securlly Flll'lih· lncom "i .: .. ~ lld 6.21 •• ,, OelCll .... 1-'4 •r•wn U 7 6.01 Cp L.dr 14.21 !SAO Newt GI 20.14 NL ·-7.l .. I n L.tV Ot 11 "SJ Entrp •4.20 IS.SJ T• Fr• ..., •. 7J ONTC IJ .. t4.4' GHMA 7.51 NL. Nt•l Inc 7.Sl NL. EqwtY 1.22 1:.. Spl Sii If. 11: ..
HI Yid •.21 ' Della ... '·" Grwtll 7.11 I.JI Gr-10.CJ NL. Hlcllot• 11.U NL. tnve1l ,, .. to.• Vance s.n..rs· Mv Ufl • it.• 1tM Olr c-. 1. u NL Ullll >.t7 4.tt R•all ts.ts NL NoreHI 10.JO NL Ultr• t.1. 10,01 1ncom .... 10.tl tntr 20.U 22.$4 OofCa 81 U.42 NL tnc;om 1,17 1.<n TcFOI 1.02 NL. NY Vent l.M t ... Selected Funds tnveil 1A 1.1'
5m1111 1UO u .• JJ OOdC• St 20."3 NL. US Gov 6.4' 6.t6 I.lie In• 10.'3 IUJ Nuvffn 7.0S 1.• Am SM 11t NL. C.I f ff J1 NL .. ull :lt.M NL. Dru aw 1U,. NL. Cst1ll I.JO 1 • ., L.tnctnr tl.11 NL. 119 IS... NL. Spt Sfll 11:0. NL. COl'f\m a.is t t7 Fd Am IUO n.u OreyfWI GrP: Equll s 7t •• ,. LGOmll S.yles: Wm 11.M HL. S.HtmM! ~: oeast f . Grow lJ.IO NL A •no fl.. NL. FUftd1 Inc· Ceplt 17.77 NL. ,_, Fd: ..... 11. ... IUI sz.n NL. ~ar'ltr !.!·?! 11.M Orey! lol.!O U.IS Cmrce 9 4' NL. Mui 14.iJ NL .... n t,tl 10.JT Net. '"" UI t 11 Overa f .-K• -n.lO 1...... n.os 2A.IO Incl Tr 1211 IJ °" LOf'd Allllttt. Ml Yid 11 ... lt.2' u c.. • ... to:4! .. ,. NL. • "'"G vFld ...... ,, N Nlfll 12... NL Piiot ... NL. Affllhl 1.77 .... Inc ao. 7.71 I.JO Un Inc If 07 11.. • ••• , H al. .. Ill d 1.G ... , Set Inc 7.as NL. GT Pee IJ.74 NL. Ind. '·" 10.17 (>pt" n.• U.M Se!lllMI Oroti..· . ..,,.I ' t A Hertle JM HL. T'1a E• 10.44 NL Oete Op u .. t NL. On Gt 1•.U 11,11 5"<1 11.11 1'.... Apea J.n° 4.21 fldf t a. A ln•&llld UI S.11 Tllr• c .... NL. GE S&S 2t.... NL. '"'om • 2.10 UI T'M ,.,. ..,, HL. •••e11 i n 111 kll'ld' -.JI L.
" Invest ,,,., NL. ... I Giii .... •.A I SS L.9 •.CM NL. L.ulllerlft 8ro: AIM 20.7' 21.n Com $ 1a: .. 14'.74 S..CI tU• ~-A 111¥fnc 11,U NL elOfl&~: Sec 11.. NL. Fund 11.M 1ua Tl,.,,. t.6' 10.M Grwtll 11.SJ ».• V~rf w· ~ NIOlll 4,CM •.AZ ... .,. ._. tOt rtll 111111 11.00 NL lncO!'I 1.12 ._ .. OTC Sec 1UO -.74 5"Wi• 14.11 lfL l•W 1 ·ftl Nllnc 15. .. 16.11 F-l l0.l1 lfL. Helftlltofl~ Munl 6..W 7.IS Pertm M t.St 10.• Selllry t1 a n.n tflf Tr 1 NL. .,,, •• , --41 orwtll tt.54 21.01 .. HOA uo SM us Oev 1,M U7 P••Wlf •.• , NL. SllterMft ,... ONMA .. NL
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lllCtm 1· 4,,, ".ec Kiit 11.• 12.tS k•rt Otfl 11.u L MIO 11..6.t 11.u. l"f\11• 10 ... H.oll NwOlr 1S:u •• :., MutfY .: "t steclt •• 10.u IMnls« ~l Hirt L.•v lt..Tt L MIO ,.,,. 16.U PllM!I•• O\etlt: Trlrt t .... 1l.11 MuSllt ,.. " It~ gt I t~u chem "" Herold 1us• lfL. M~D 11.• 111.• •••tn t," •·• Sterr• 1 ,.,,. NL Mw1111 10. M •~ r,ncfl ~ I ~ '"'"' ,i, :::: ~~re -:::t 'UI : .. ~ ll:ft :tr. 2::r w~·'·" :-~ .. ...:.~ NL ~t.'1 ,f· f:!lt ... • • Ely 1~ 17.te ist O,_.: MMI t.7S t.U ~I -v•H ~I U 16 11 » QOh• 11 1 ij
.. ,~ CNllC r! I' Tr tt.14. .... Grwtll t. l'" MFH .. ,. tM P1'9•1m °'91 Ince i·n ,.~ ffJtce ... ML ~',.1.!. .~~ "',. !! I T• "D"" l f11MI .st ... Mellttf• IUJ NL l'llt Fd f4,14 15.J.J IJIWll 1 . 4 't'! Wet~ l'· NL " _, .... -¥~ JJ., N rtt i\ 71 I .. 1 --.rri~ll L.-,ncfl, M .. C 4.~ 4,19 Trv•l Wel"fl ,. =I. NwO.C 1 tittff f, 10.14 rPa ti> -•ell ••• IUD 1i.1• Mat In 1.IS 1.71 V91't 1..:n u: 101,_ .J "'.
T 14.0. 1 '""" 10 14.oQ u.n l'"'"•"Y ,.. NL. ce,, t , .... , ... Plf._'!9.J l'llMt t llllY 'tff 1.... '4IY14 .. I. Htll 1·J ,.._,_, ,_,.. !i"y 11., II.» a.v If filt .J1 _.... 3·" .... l•O'r t WNv NL ltK~Otlll 1tl A"' ~ ti bt ect '"' II, IUt 14~1 1·l,! •• , l'llM 01 '1·" 11 111 IS.ii 1&: WellM 0 , 1.-S ._ l tKll i. NL Ta t. f,41 "41 't".; '!· II If'< I ... I .. lflft ti. 11 w.111 Ill NL
lw ' H ~I 1(191 11 'I· IM• ,e. JM~ f~t '"' hn t §e"v i..9' '!,.\ hllM '-4 WIK lrfi NL 1 H ~fl ~·Nf· ~t '" 1,. 1· .. r · Mi1111;:., \11..,1 lt:I l~~ r tn IC .... u.41 ..., ; ..... . T.tl,.. "' I~ 1:"' •. ., ~Ill .. ,, , • ~IW ...... .. ~ 9!1· •.=i f!L. ~t!,~~·p.~ 1 L UI CM .1t Pl •="n C:,.:.~UI l'f tUI llM !»rwtll IL~ !:!L ,." ffi , =.,_ i:lt l:fr:.T.I 'TS ~"':Ii I 'l! ' Ylf 11;.. .... re. e;., ~~ ,... LI lfL -........ .. !.!.. u~'.. Ml " I ~11a'.lt .t4}~ "1 ,. I fM! .. t E. ,ut = .,._ .. ~ fily'I -" · Ml" dAt I NO t.a 1'ijJtMt ,,_ tiil NL ,,..,1 ,....._
A
..... ...,
!::\,!! ~ .... Chi
"" •• , 11 ,.._ "' ~,_ UO 10 It ~ .....
P I.... I ION tt"• Wo Intl .. IW• 11"'• 1'-A I. .. ' 71'\ ..... A•A V'-'.~'11 ~~ ---~-. "' ., Se .. 7Gll ... --i ...... '"'-""" .Jl17 S$ ~ 14 Lii U111 256 ~ ..... :n ..• 7 .. ~·"" .cw 1 1• •'II ..... i I ..... Jt IN+ 14
Ml ... S J s._+ ::
A 1.f UJ a; ~ Ir'-, .
A~llt 1.20 t J9 Into,., . i .... . 7J ,._"' rll'r• .IO u " 4314-~ ,_,,, UD 10 ll I~+ '-~r.-n.r ::~~ "' ·m~ ·i.i ·~ .. pf II . all) 71 .... A PP! 1.16 .. WO W , ,., A .. pf ... ; • dO u .... UU:":r='.CC"'-:0. 't A~eeK• UO 6 t IS~. •• ' A ... I,. f .60 6 UI JOIA-14
A "" 1.JO I 16 ~-Iii il AIMrl• . .ii S IU 12tlt-'-Alllbn f .. t IS U14 + 14 Ak.,. 1 1-S IS1S a.v .. V. 2~oSld 2 6 IS >ti.-14 •dr . . 7• UV.+ •,i. 118'P l,Qe 6 10 2tlll-..
AltCP Pf2 ... , . • ltt\ + l4I A~Lwd 1.40 10 107 .q +I A Uftf 3 •• UM +I A Ld Of2.lt .. I 17 + 14 "I .... uo s U7 IJf'o ..... ~ :rc~P uc\ % 21~ m'~ ! ::
AlldM111 .'2 t 12•ulll •IW.
A 1•str t.7'0 • '" :12\l'H l4! A l.C11 1 ' Q t 31~ -.
AllrAu ·-•• Ill "'""' • v. .. ,,..,., . . • 12 -14
Akoe t 1.IO S IOU u>4¥t +I~ A'"ISUV .. S t 41\ll--. .. ,.,,.. 2.40 s 571 ... + I ..
Amrce t.l2 6 u ltf'o ..... AHeu • 1.10 6 W 3',,_ .. AMA Ir .• 2017 ul2~ + ,.. ... ,, •• . • 22l ..... + .... AAlr pl 2 11 .. 2 IS + 11t
•••• , ·"' .. If 16\lo + 'Ill 48rlldl ~10 s 111 7ll')• i.o, A8rd pf 2 7S 4 22"-Allrd pt UI . S »~ A8dcst 1.60 6l116 »II•• \lo AlldM ... I IZI It~-V. A8u1Pd .• 7 12 IS\'J AmCen UO 1 123 21~ + .,._ ·~·" pl 2.111 .. • 22 'I• A e11lr1 .10t 1 3' •lit ..... : \•" :.~ : m ~~·; ;,; 2e•P• 2.» 1 "1 """ + 14 .. ~.E~r. ,J, ~ ~ 41:: • ~
AGnCp 2 • 160 l' .1v. !8:8\f I ,:so!! . ,:J ~: ~
AGllCv 1.56 II 271'1 + °" AktrllL 60 ' a 11~+ 'It •ao••1 , 12 • 112 .. v.. . A ome l.IO II 121' JI v.
A HP .92 IS 596 .. +I AMI I .M 11 17S • + .... AmMotr 174 411t ANllR J.44 I 138 42\lo l'h A$LFll .IO I U II A$11p I .IO I 217 llll't
AMSld 1 2.:ZO 6 541 Ul'o ASterll .>4 t 2'7 • • AmSlr .IO I 1' U~.
AStr pl S .SI . . • •1<o + ATT ·S40•1 .. SI,
ATT pf • • 11 WV. AT'T pt 3.M.. 14 :Dllt ..
AWetr 1.0. • 7 12iw.-\lo AW•I pl l.'3 .. 1150 16 + Vt
A We Spl l.2S . 160 tv. + v, Ameron 1.40 s • 27 Am .. o . .o a S4 u11o Amei. I 14 .. AMle< 1.44 S U MPl11 1.20 ll
01 AO. 1 ~ .. ~~11
... ts
HI I 1 ~'Jll.·•1
t
~·
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT(Thuredt.y, March S, 1881 S 1:1
~-~-.Y-,J-.!-.,.-~-AO~-.• M-.,..-f-Q-.§-.!T-• .,.-~.-,,c.T-, •• ~-IOt-~-~-.§.-~-~~-T.!-P-.~-S..... ·~
....... _, ..... -................. ,"""· ·~\~Have cake
Earnings lower
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Caesan
World Inc. President Robert
McEIDM announnd lower earnll\p
lo 1barebolders at UM annual meet-
lnt beR but predicted improved re-
1uJt. from bef t·ti«Jltenlq ln AtJanUc Ctt.y.
Net tneome for the Hcood fl.acal
quart« ended Jan. l1 wu MU,000 or
two ctllb a •bare on reveDUe1 ol ~
mUllOG, McElnea aald Tueeday com·
pared to net income ot tl0.8 mllUon
or 'l Cellll a 1bare on revtDIMI ol
SW milllaa in the 11me period a year..,.
Flrm1mer1e
N&W YO g <AP) -Tae
Ne"taHH OraaalaaUoa, wble•
pub1J1b .. arnpapen1 mqaalMI
and boob and owae lli'oado..t out·
IN. lodu ~ a ••llil wtt.11i
Vl.lloa Caw. Oomm~ -ot New Yen.
and eat it, too
Let'• auwne you lived in a bouae that wu
burned lo the '1'0UDCI. caua~urlet to people -
and you were unfortu.Dat.e not lo bave ade·
quate lnlW'ance to cover aU the ac•.
Wbat would happen lf you then called your in·
aurance a•ent, after the fire, and uked hlm lo write
a policy that wu retroaeUve in lt. cover1ce: in el·
feet, in other words, a.ta date prior to the ftre?
YOU CAN IMAGINE THE heehaws you would
1et.
"Whal do you trunk I am, an Idiot!" Or: "Sure,
everyt.bln,a'• euy to fieure out. with bincblcbt." Or:
"Dummy, why didn't you take out enou1b lnaurance
ln tbe ftrsl place?"
Well, ridiculous as it may seem , this 11 precisely
the kind of deal arranged by Kirk Kerkorian's MGM
Grand Hotels, operat-0r of hotels (with ca1loo1) lo
Laa Vegas and
Reno. It was
tbe MGM
Grand in Las
Veeu that was
hit Nov. 21 by a lllJll fire in which M
lost their lives.
More than 600
were also injured.
The MGM Grand apparently had enoueh in· '
surance lo cover property damages and buainesa
losses arialng from the fire. But beyond that, it bad
only $30 million ln liability coverage lo take care of
claims resulting from the deaths and injuries. Aa of
Jan. 15, 57 complaints bad been filed against the com·
pany -and they were asking a total of $275 million in
compensatory damages and $780 million in punitive ·
damages. That adds to a iotaJ of $1.2 billion.
IT'S TllUE THAT GAMBLING IS normally a
profitable business for the casino operator. And it's
also true that claimants nearly always ask for more
money than they even expect to get. But still, that
imbalance between $1.2 billion and $30 million is a Ill·
tie nerve-wracking.
Kirk Kerkorian, MGM's major stockholder (he
owns 47 percent), doesn't need this uncertainty hang·
ing over his head.
So Kerkorlan went out and did what you and I
couldn't do in a million years: he bought himself a
back-dated insurance policy. Frank B. Hall & Co .. a
big insurance broker, put together
the package for the MGM Grand,
bringing in such heavies as
Lloyd's of London and General
Reinsurance. As a result, MGM
Grand has been able to boost its
liability coverage from $30 million
lo $200 million -and it's retroac·
live.
Naturally, this additional $170
million of back·dated insurance
doesn't come cheap. Business u-.to111AN
Insurance, the trade paper that broke this story,
estimates the MGM will have to come up with an im·
mediate premium payment of $35 lo $40 million. But
MGM should be able i.o handle it. The two bot.ell lake
in about $300 million a year and earn $75 million
before taus. With the fire-rava1ed Vegas hotel down this year until at least July, those figures are 1oin1 to
be halved. But MGM will pick up business lnterrup.
Uon insurance -and it should be able lo meet this
premium payment. Besides. it's worth it lo gel the
monkey off your back and onto the backs of in·
surance companies.
THE INSURANCE COMPANIES WatTING lhU
coverage expect tb come out ahead, too. First of aJl .
they get lo dJvide up immediately the hefty premium.
That money wUl be inve.sted quickly. Then they'll try
to setUe claJrm for as UtUe as possible. And Instead
of paying lump sums, tbey'U try to structure settle·
ments as annuities -a set amount paid out each
year for many years. And of course lawsuits can
often be stretched out interminably. Meanwhile, the
$35 lo $40 million of premium monies, paid up front,
are earning a good return.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORK l~P) -s.1 ... W.O._ ll"k •
•ftd net ,.._,. of tM INteeft tn<KI •Cllw
New Yorll Stock E•<Mn9R IUWH, ~~·~':rioftelly •I··~ OWl"J.!; • ~ US Slttl 1g ,JOQ JIV. + 114 8elll SIHI Nt,700 19V. + 11!.
Su111>eam •a.aoo 19~ + 1~
Softy Corp 614,SOO "" + .... TW Coro Sll,JOO 20•4 +lilt SHrsR-561,600 16 • "-
Nwll Alrl 522,JOO 2'~ + ~ RoyCrown •.200 14,,_ .. ,,..
Nw1llftd &Jl,700 44 + 1
USLIFE Co 0>,200 ll~ • l'4
Mottll 02,100 --"' SldOlllftd • O ,IOO ""° • 1\ll Citicorp a1,100 2~ + .,._ UAL Inc )16,G 2S"-• 1~
AMERICAN LEAQERS
NEW YORK(AP) Final Oow·J-•vvs for Wed., M1;r •. STOCKS
()pe<I HIGh I.Ow C IOM OIQ JO ,,.. .. oo .o.ro "'., '11.u. s a 10 Trn M-7'0 406." "5.07 -. >4 • l.J1 IS VII IOI.IS I°'·°' 101.0 IOI.JI + 0.2t 61 St• 110. 16 JJ•." Mol.11 37J 'O • U • lndu1 •.M0,600 Trell 2,S01,0llC Utllt SOS,JOC
6S Siii ... ... ... . 1-*.'IX'
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK (AP) MM • Prev
Advenc..S TOdey
Ill ,,.Js
Dec tined Ml .. 7 u ntl\efl09CI ,,. ~ Total ISWH • 117' ,.,.
New hight . , • NtW IOWt II 10
WHAT AMEi( 010
NEW YORK IAP) ""'' I Prw.
Actvence<t
TOdey ,., e1u,
Oe<llMCI -u.
U11<1\entMI 112 11S Tolel IUUft ," IOS
New lllQM lO 26 NtW lowt .. 11
METALS Wednndey c...-~ uno • pol#ld, U.S. datlna· lion•.
"" 2:244 <...U. pound. :llM 4114untse ~. dellvtMHI
Tie M.ttts Metals W9" <-It• lb.
A......_ 7'C9f!IU ....-. N. Y
IMftwy ..... ,., lletll .
..._.._S*.•troyN., N.Y
SILVER
NEW YOIU( (API -H-.cty • Herm.,. tllver W.., $11.AO, Oft IO.U. l111t111erd ,,,.,., 11 l.•ro. 011 so.u , lellrlcetM tll-!1U111 tN P.Jt.S.
t
NOT1cffl':.ATH Of' llNalT JOllPN
RAN elra •RN•ST J.
ORAN elce IRN•ST
ORAN alee llllNll
ORAM AND OP'
ITITION TO AD ·
f INISTeR ESTATI NO. • 107"5 I
To all heirs , jeneficlarlu, cr•dltors
nd contingent creditors of
rnest Joseph Moran •nd
ersohs who mav b •
4therwlS. Interested In th•
•Ill ancr/or estate: l A .,.tltlon has been flied ~Y 'Elizabeth Ann Ballmer
lri the Superior Court of
Qrange County requesting
tih a t E I I za b e t h A n n
••llmer be appointed as
sarsonal re presentative to
administer the estate of
Srnest Joseph Moran,
F.ountaln Valley ,
<:allfornla <under the In·
dependent Admin istration ot Estates Act>. The petl·
tton Is set for hearing In
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
(!enter Drive West, Santa
A:na, Califo)'nla 92701 on
A6arch 2S, 1991 at 9 :~ a .m .
• IF YOU OBJECT ·to the
granUng of the petition,
ypu should either appear at the hearing and s tate
your objection s or file
v.lritten objections with the
q1urt before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
in person or by your at·
torney.
IF YOU ARE A
C·REDITOR or a con ·
tingent cred itor of the d e ·
c•ased , you must file your
claim with the court or
present It to the personal
representative appointed
by the c ourt within four
months from the date of
first Issuance of letters as
provided In Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing c laims will not ex-
pire prior to four months
from the date of the hear·
ing noticed abOve.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interested In the
estate, you may file a re-
quest with the court to re·
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, a c -
c ounts and reports
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
William W . Soukup, At·
torney at Law, 1600 N .
Broadway, Suite 601, San-
ta Ana, California 92706.
(714) 973-1644.
Pub lished Orange Coast
Dai I y Pilot, M arch 4\ S-4 11.
1981 016·81
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8UllNISS
NAMI STATIMINT Tl1t lollowln9 p•r.ons ••• do1n9
bU•lneH M
TWO BROTHERS PIZZA. '""' Brook1>11nl SlroeC. Fount.on V•ll•Y. C•l1lorn.e t210I
Sokyon IC•n9. U•I Som1>rtro Aven11e. Cypreu. CAlll0<nle -JO.
Min Ja Keno. U., Sombrero
Avenue, Crcoreu. CAlll0<nle '°'JO
Thi• llv•lnen h conouct..i l>Y • 9tnere1 per!Mrslllp
~yonl(-
Mln Je K•no Tl>IS •l•t-1 Wll\ llled will> lhe
C.011nty Clerk of Or""ge Co11nty on Feb 11. n"
f'IMM.I
P11!>1lslled Or-C.o<nt O•lly Piiot, Fel> 1•. 2', MArcl> S, 11, 1 .. 1 ..a-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
·~ f'ICTITIOU5 8U$1NIH
N-1 STATIMINT Tnt follo•ln9 ~r\ons ue dolne bilslneu es.
SOUTHLAND Tll.E CO . 27M So CoHI H#y .• l -Buch. CA tns1
Cl>erles G. Reilly, JI .. So. Co .. 1 Hwy .. ~ S.«h. C.A t2H1
S11un K Po._... 27 .. So. Coes1
Hwy • L-Bee<I>, CA t?HI Thi• builMS• Is Condv<l•d by ... In dlvlOUel C.herles G Reilly
Thi• \IA-wti filed with IM
Counly Clerll of Or11n9e C°"nly on Fl!I> 10, 1"1
'1Hl7t Pu1>11.-0r.,.. C.oest Delly Pilot,
Ftlf:>. n , n , 2•. Mercn s. 1"1 11111
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8UllMIH MAMI STATIMINT
The followl"9 pe<tont ••• doing bUtlneu es·
""SUNFLOWER TRAVEL.'" IUS
Mew Ver• Drive E•tt. c ... 10 Mew, cat lfornle .,..
D•At! lllrd. 1m Port carney, Newport llH<ll, Collf0<nie ,,...,
JHrwwtl• llro, ltlt Port Cerney.
Ntwpotl llH<ll, C.llfornia t:IMM> Tiiis bln!Mtt It conclu<l.0 l>Y •II Ill
dlwldual
Der• Bird
Tl'lls •l•temenl wM llled will\ the county Cltrk Of OrllnQe County on
Ftb. 11. 1 .. 1. .. ,, .. ,,
Pu1>ll1Mc1 Or-eo.11 Delly Piiot,
Ftl>. ''·it. MMcll S, 11, l"I .. 1 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
Orange Coast OAlLY Pl~OT/Ttlursday . March 6. 1981
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE P.UBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICt: Pl1BUC NOTICS PUllUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
, ORA ... C*M,....tVHalM UHAMOACCtOIWfMO..._.L~M COUllT 1'1~110~ THI A•MUALITATIMINT -NOTICE OF DEATH OP LLOYD HENRY
CAATl!R lka LLOYD H .
CARTER ANO OF
PETITION TO AD·
UP& _.D 4"1 DINT AlllO "IAI. TM
IYNOnlt Op ~M& A•MUAl. ITAHMINT -YaAa •MHO HCIMall• ti, ttlt
NOTICI! OF OEA TH
OF ALBERT P .
STRANAHAN aka
AL.BEAT PLANT
STRANAHAN AHO OF
PETITION TO A~·
,_ C...C cie-. lliftw... YIA• INOIO OICIMll• JI, t• ........ ~'"' "' 111\.A.I NTt pr~ PACll'IC MU t'UAL U Pl INIUllANC.I (OM .. AN't
MAllllA o• I.OS ANOILe• , .... w,wtc.MwDnwe,11.0 ........
..
,..,_ U .. 1--o c:.i.-Y n,...,...,,.,.Drln,
A,_._ .... y.-, MY 1 .... O'IHll..AS ... ....-4 IHcll. c.4Hwllll ....
Oll'IHDl\HT Totel eelmllttOIH"• MINISTER ESTATE NO. MINISTER ESTATE NO. Al07W. 1.AUllO p llUtl IL.VIA I LAH Tolll ltflillllllift C: 0 l P I 0 I Ill A I. HAT I 0 N A 1. 5'*1•1 ..,,.....,. ,..,,...
MO It TOAOI A$S0CIA T 1 ON, 1 UllHlltMCI IUflCM '""-"'" Corporotlen, CHICAGO TITLe Gtlrl(LMIHrotn•rtllWI• IHIURAHCI COMA .. AHY, e Ml-rl lnc•HN IOK,_l In Cfflwl ....
C:erpor•tlGn..,. ooes 1 tl'ltovtll 10. $wp11>e ..,.,.. 1teo
lnd utlve. ''""'lflce In ,.,C• Hll~wt• CMI...,.._:~ .t,c.c;ldenlendllNIUl..,.tl'lll\Kllt M l
SUMMC*I• lntwronce In ~orct Colltornle
NOYIC&l You ... we lleell -41 Thi h alntn P ...
A 107459. r.111 eM1111t11 -u T o a I I h 1 I r 1 , To1e111111111v..
beneflclerles, creditors ~~~~~11~U11vt11111.0•11r1>h11 and contl1"9nt Creditors Of un•tt!tftM lllllft 1-.i111J1 L to yd Henry carter aka 00111 11.-1 "9fn •••llon• Llo~d H. Carter of lrvlne ~~=!'ci!..°:e~:> •11 c.o11.e• •M
Callfornla and ptraoni •11•11rOflC•l11~c.e1 111o11onwt•
........... who may be otherwlM In· Accl41tnt Ml .... "' premium)
('1t,4Ul
ltf,S14,IOO 2,tl0,ts4
To all he irs ,
b1neflcl1rles, creditors
end contingent creditors of
Albert P. Stranahan aka,
Albert Plant Stranahan of
Lagun. Beach, Callfprnla
and persons who may be teres~ In the Wiii 1 .. d /or 1111111renco 111 l'orc.e; eo111ornl• " luahwu ,.... ,
estete. Acct11e11t Wl'IHI"' 11remluma Dlrt<t
court ..,.., dteld9 1901,..1 .,_ •11""'1 Act1c1tnt one! 11 .. 1111 premh.1m1 Direct
your llelftt l'lewCI UllleJA t01f r"410ftd Cellt0tnl• '"""''* Pete 117..., .»i 1111111111 JO cMYL RHCI "" tnlormttlOll W• lltftl>Y cartll>t ,,,., ,,,. •OO•e ltecm •te In e<<onNllCt Wiii! Ille Allllllll
1.uuo1 otherwise Interested In the
wlll and/or estate: llelow Stetement for U'lt YMf tnde4 Oct<eml>er ti, ltlO -to tllt •--•Ctn!·
11 you •!tit • -• the ldlllce Of .,.. mhsl-r ot the $1elt qt C.lllornle, -lllllftt IO 1-.
A petition nas been filed ce111ornl• lld!Mtt P•.. 4tO
by J~lne H . Nelson In Wt ..... -. <«llty ttwt OM ollove Hem• ere In «tord•no with,.,. Anl\V.el A peth1on has been
f ile d by Reva L .
Stranahan In the Superior
Court of Orange County
th. Superior Court Of St11tm1N1t tot the Y•• tnded Q.ceml>ef SI, tteel m-101110 tnwr-• Com mtnton.r Of Ille Su.t• Of C•llf0t11lo, pu" ... 111 lo I••
Orenve County requesting J. Freni. TOCld,
ollorney In lhlt molter. you t/'IOUld clO H. T. Jotnni119,
10 proMplly 10 thOt yo11r wrl\ltn S<. Viet Prettde111
'"flllllN, 11 •ny, m.y Do filed on tlMt. DlO Vlf\ Trtlltn
that Josephine H. Nelson ~r::"~. ven,••. be appointed as .,.rsonal S«r•t.ery
AVISOl )'alee! .. Wdl clctnel>Oedl. II Aul. .. ,,. •• ,.
trlb1.1nol -ere Olt(~lr contre Uel. tin Publttlltd Or.,. Cout Oelly Piiot, ,.. a. MM<ll s. •, 1, I, 19'1 101141 requesting that Rev~ L.
Stranahan be appointed a s 10•H1 personal representative
to administer the estate of
Albert P . Stranahan (un-
oudl•Mi. e ,,,,,_ q .. UCI. ~ -
dtlllrO de 30 dlU . l..te l.t 11\fotf'lllc:loll PUBUC NOTICE Que "VIit,
SI Ull-4 -•Ollcll.,. •I con .. jo Cle un • .,.._ •n Hie ...,..,., .,..,.,,.
1>aculo lmmedl•lemenle, cr. u lo men.re, Mi r.,.....tw dcrll•. ti 11•1'
t lfl.lftl. ltU94lt Mr .... lltr.0. A llemM.
I TO THE OEFl:NOANT: A CIYll
COMlll•llll NII -ltloCI by lM ptoln-
1111 etelntl 'l'Oll. II l'Oll wl~ .. dof•1141 1 l>h lewtull, Yoll l'TW$I, wlltlln JO claya
•ll•r tllls summons ts 50rYH on Y°"· Ille wllll llliteour1 • wrlllefl '"-lo
Ille <Otll~I. Unleu YoU 00 to, .-ow deleull will lie ..... red on •Pflllcollon
Of IM pialnl1tf, end lfllS COUl1 mey enter o juelfmeflt ...in11 yo.. lor ihe
rtllef Clt"""'°911 1n If\• compleuu. wl'llcll c-rewll In .. rniltwnenl of
weget. l•lllnQ Of morwy or l>f0Cle'1'r 0,
other relief •-tect 111 lllt Cotllj)t•ln
OATED:A~lt,1 ..
Loe A. 8rMC-,·CiN11 ., aeuy 01"1, .,...,..,
•-• K. Strkale...i llllH~a ...... ay
SMt.e AM, ca. t2191
Publl&lwtd Or-COHI Delly Piiot.
March s, 11, "· 1"1 1101 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI aUSINHS MAM• 5TATIMIMT
Tl'I• fotlowlng .,....,,,. la CIOlllQ bvll
MUH:
C.C. SYSTEMS. 1351 Riverside
Orlvt , Seftlt MO, Cellloml• '27°'. t<tvln Paul Rl-t1berger,.ns2 ltiverllGt °'1"9. Sonle Me. CellfO<nl• 9210..
Tiiis buliM11 Is conduclltCI by en 1n dlvlclvel
Kevin P. Riegel ........ ,
Tnl• 11e1-1 "'" filed wllll tllt County Clerll of Oron .. County o~
"" 11.1 .. 1.
PtatTIOUI auttM•U MAMa ITATUdNT
Tl'lt totlowl119 111non1 ••• dolnt ll\lllllft)H"
111 AUDIO, LTD .• 121 LIDO CAft LEAS~NO, (II AUTO AUOIO. t•t ltl•trtlGt A-. ~lie "I!'". Newport
... ,11, Collfornlt ·~ T.l. C lnduurtu, Inc .• •
Cetllornl• ,.,._•lion. 14' Alw"lde Av.th,., Wtl "E" ..... ..,., .. .c.,..,
Ctlltornle~ T1111 llUllness I• <OflClwCIM by • cor pof'AllOfl
T l. c. 11\dvsui.s, IM
M. 8r004lt G unnin{I.
SecreCAty/TrffSurtr Tl>IS , ... ._,., wM llted wltll ll'le
Co11nly Cl••• of Or•no-Co..nly on
Marci\ >, 1 .. 1. ..,.,.,,
Pulltls-Or.,,.. Coost D•lly Piiot,
M•r<ll 5. 12. It, 26. 1•1 IOIM .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 8USINll$ NAMI STATIM•NT
Tiit followlng persons ere 001119
businelt as; L a. M PRODUCTIONS, 111
Rlv•"lde A-. Suite F, Newport
Buen, Celltornl• tMJ.
Mery LOU Pr•-ee••. ltSO ,.ltl
Street, M)OI . N•wport B••<I>,
C.etllornl• tM3.
L•onerd a . H .. <•11, IUO l•th
Street, MJ07, Newport Beech.
Catllornl• 9U63. Tll" l><dlMSS I• Conducl.0 by 11n Ill•
dlv•dual U..ry I..°" Prencler .. st Th1l stet...,,.,., wH liled "'It" tne
Co11n1Y Clerk ol Orenge C.ounly on
Merell>. 1"1 f'ISJtm fl'7 .. J Pul>lllNd 0r""99 ( .. o .. t Dolly Piiot. P11lll1\lwG Or-. Coe>t Delly P1to1.
F•ll "·,.,MMe" 5, 12, 1 .. 1 w-tl Mercn s, 11. "· , •• 1 .. 1 IOSO~I
PUBLIC NOTICE
N11m--·-
l'ICTITIOUS austNEU MAMa ITATIM•NT
Tl>t tOll-llQ ~ Is doi"9 bull· .......
CE NTURY 11 HORIZON REALTY.
ISSI WHlmln.ler, G•rdtl\ Grove, Celllorn•• t2M4.
Robert s Z..nwl. 1330 St-CrHk Roed, A~m. Cotllomle ta01
This bUMNU I• <-led by an In· dtvidue l.
Robtr1 S Z..mel Tiiis ,,.._,,, wos fllect with the
County Clerll ol 0r""9e County oft Ftb.
9, lff1
f'ISMtJ GltOVEa HCaOW CORl"OltAflON ,...,,,..., ..........
Tustin, Cellfornla tlMO
Pul>lli.111<1 OranQe Coesl D•lly Pitol, F11> 12, n . u . Merci> s. 1991 171-11,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS iustMISS NAME STATEMEHT T ht lollowlnQ Pff1on 11 doir>Q bull ""''' ., DE TAil.iNG UNLIMI TEO. 21t
Amell>Yll. a.111oo 1•1-. C.lllornle
.., .. 1
W•ller 8 Hauekorll 111. 21'
Amotl>y•I. a.1-lllM'ld, C•lllornl•
'1'41
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS au51N•H NAMI STATIMENT
The lol1-lllQ ~''°" '' OOlng bull ntHH BAV CITY ARTS, U Sterllal'I
Co..ro. Newport 8t.ch. CA. '2 .. l B•rtwlr• N Murptly. l6 Sl•rll11'1
Co..rt, N_,i 8each. CA. t2 .. 3 Tl'lli l><NnH• Is <onducl.cl by .,. In
dlvlduel Ber«ier• N Murptly
Tiii\ 11•1-t wH flied with IM County Clerk 01 Orenge County on
Fel>ruery 14. 1"1 f'1SU44
Publl"*1 0r..,.. Coasl Otlly Piiot.
Feb 2'. encl U..rcn s. n , tt. 1'111
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS 9UllNllS
NAM• STATIMIMT
.... I
Tiit IOll-llQ 119'""' la doi119 bull·
M 'S.\ •I.
Al.l.ISON DESIGN SERVICE.
1110 N Grand, • J4. Sent• An•, C•lllotnle n101 Ctwtrl .. AlllM>n Wit-., 2170 N
Gr•nd. • )4, S.nt• A"•· C•lllOrnla t1101
Tiii• butlrwu I\ C-..C9d by ... In d1vl0Uel
0-.r~AWlltl'leon
PUBUC NOTICE representative to Id· 11u1111-0t'.,...coo.i O•llY P1104, ""' u. ~rc111.•.1.1, , .. ,
----------minister the estate of
,.,a1T1ou1au11Mass Lloyd H•nry Carter (Un· N~ ITATIM ... T der the Independent Ad·
Tll• tonow•"9 '"''°"' .,. ••11111 ministration of Estates 1>11~1~f~ cuPET CARI cOM· Act) The petition Is set for
PAHY, 101t Qrove Ptao, c.-1.1 N'eN. hearing In Dept. No. 3 at
c1111or11tem27. 700 Civic .Center Drive,
Lester o. •1•nton, IOlt Grove West, In the City of Santa Pleet , C.lt Mne, Colllornlo t»27. AllMtrlla C•mp.,.11, IOlt Groft Ana, California on Marc h
Ptoc•,C•t.eMHo,c.t1tom•tan1, 18, 198\at9:30a.m.
Tiii• 11u1111eu ts coftducted by • IF YOU OBJECT to the -••l~lp. LMte< o. a1 ... 1on granting of the petition,
n1t1 11.ei-1 wn 111ec1 w1t11 ""' you should either appear
County Clerk ol OrenQe COWllY on at the hearing and State
Morel'!>. 1"1· ,.111..., your objections or flle
Pub11.-0r-. coest 0o11y PHot, written objections w ith the
M•rc"' s. n, "· u . 1•• tsM1 court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be PUBLIC NOTICE In person or by your at-
torney. FICTITIOUS aus1NHS 1 F y o u A R e A NAMI STAT•MINT Tht followtn9 P•••ons .,. doln9 c R E 0 I T 0 R 0 r a c 0 n .
buainenM: tingent cred itor of the de· COINS av RICK, 3110 M<Klntev d t fll s""'· Cott• Mew. c:e111ornl• ti.t•. cease • you mus e your
Donald Rou Schenck. 3110 Cla im With the COUrt Or
McK1n10 strut, Co•t• Mu•, present it to the personal
C•11~~~7~~"i:~;,0. rno Mc1<in••v sr . r e presentative appointed
c ost• Mew. ca111ornl• 92416. by the court w ithin four
Thia l>uSlnHs I• <onducl&d by an in months from the date Of
dlvlou••o.,,..,dRouSctwnck first issuance of letters as
Tl'll• ····-· ... , filed wlll'I ow provided In Section 8700 of cou"IY C•••k of Oren99 County on the Probate Code of
M1rc11>.1"1 ,.m ... Cal ifornla. The time for
Pu1>11Yled 0r ... C.O.•• 0011y P11o1, filing c laims w ill not ex-
Merc11s.12. "· ,., '"1 10.t.11 pi re prior to four months
-----from the date of the hear-
PUBLIC NOTICE ing noticed above.
,ICTITIOUS 8UllNESS
NAMI STAT•MEHT Tiit folt-1no _...., I• doln9 bU..,·
ntu •• MISS TRACEY SECRETARIAL
SERVICE. l" Boal C..nyon Drive, l e9une S.ech. Cehlornl• t~SI
Grete L Mo1<11r1to10. 161 C•Jon Street. 1.."9U"A 8te<I>, Celltorni•
Thll Duslneu 11 cond\Kle<I by •n tn dlvidu•I
G. L. Mo,c;er11010
l<IN>MluTrec•y I nl\ ll•l-1 W» Hied Wllh llW
Co11nty Clerk of O••nve County on
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If yo u are Interested in the
estate, you may file a re-
quest w ith tfie c ourt to re-
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac-
co unt s and reports
described In Section 1200
of the californla Probate
Code. ARTHUR s .
LEVINE, ESQ. Mercn >.1 .. 1
Fmea.s S T E L L, L E V I H E &
Publlllwt<I 0ref191 Coe•t D•lly Pilot, BOOKMAN
March s. 12· 19• 16• '"' 110""1 727 West Seventh Street
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUllNIU
NAM91TATUMNT
The IOll_,. P9"0ll It dolftt IMltl·
ne11 ••·
Los Anget.s, Ca. 90017
Published Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, March"· s, 11,
1981 1077·81
PUBLIC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTIC~
NOTtc•o" PUa1.1cH•••tNo NOTICE OF DEAT OF der the Independent. Ad·
Nollc•lsl'ltr"'1ttvent11e1111tP1an-H ministration of Estates 1 c 1 1 NORMA VIRGINIA ~.'::..,:=~~~~~~~'::io.~;•:_.~~ STRACHOTA ANO OF A ct). The petition is set for
Int on ,._ e119t1~tllOI\ 01 Merriott p E T I T I 0 N T 0 AO . hearing .in Dept. No. 3 al
Hot•I C.,.por.itontortl'leo119<ov•fote MINISTER ESTATE NO 700 Clvte Center Drive,
Trelllc SIYd'f ... -rty IOcetect ., A107878 • W est, In the City of Santa
tOO Newport Cent« Drive lo ~rmlt · A C llf I M 111e tu"""'' o4 lkltktl111 _, G•Odillt T 0 a I 1 h e 1 r 5 na, a orn a on arch
s-rm1t1"" an •--'on o4 ttw ••l•t· beneficiaries cred i tors 11, 1981at9:30 a .m . 111e M•rriott Hotel "" t65 ~ wll1> • IF YOU OBJECT to the ••••••o 1e<t11t1es 111,.,.,.d tn •c· and contingent creditors of granting ·of the petition co•d•l\Ct •111'1 ClloJM« u . .eo Of ,,.. Norma V irginia S trachota • Newport aucll Mu111c1u1 cod• and persons who may be you shourd ~ither appear
("'Tr•llk Ptloslft9 Orcli ... nce··· end th I I at the hearing and state Clly P~11ey s.1 , .. Admtn1s1ra11ve o erw se nterested In the your ob1"ections or f ile
Gu111e11nes tor lll'll>lement1119.,,. Tr•'· will and/or estate: . , 11c "'"••lnQOrdi•-o"'>. A petition has been filed written objections with the
Nollu is ,,.,..,Y f11rt1•tr Qiven '""' by Russell W ledenma 1 court before the hearing • ~:=:~::::~.::'.'.~1::::,;':, the Superior Court" 0~ Your appearance may be
1:JO p.m. 111 111e c.o..nc11 C.Mmtiers 0, Orange County requesting in person or by your at-
,,.. Ne.._t llMcl'I City Hell, at wl>lch th t R II Wied torney. time and place .... ,,.,,., •II~''°"' In a usse enman I F y 0 u A R E A
,., .. 1.., mey •111M•r •nd.,. Merd be app0lnted .as personal -REDITOR or a con -
lhereon. representative to ad--:
Geot .. Colles,Se<•••••• minister the estate f ttngent creditor of the de· ~::=:':!'.~~!:'n Norma Virginia Stracho~a ceased, you must file your
NOTE:Theupen .. 011n1.,,011c.1,(under the indepen~nt claim w_lth the court or
P•ld from. 1111"9 ••• collected from Adminis tration of Est~es present It t9 the personal
111 .. pp11con1. . . representative appointed
Publlahed Oranoe c.oe•• oa11y P1to1. A ct) The . petition is set for by the coort within four
Morch'· •'111 10'95-11 hearln_g .in Dept. No , ~ at m onths from the date of
700 C1_v te Center Drive, firs t issuance of letters as
PUBLIC NOTICE Wes t , 1n. the ~ity of Santa provided in Section 700 of
N11n1 Ana, Callforn1a o n April 1, the Probate Code of
l'tCTITlOUseustNHs 1981 at9:30 a .m . California . The time for
NAMUTATEMINT IF YOU OBJECT t~.the fil ing claims will not ex· .,.,:~n·.s~O:o•l"V e>erwns "'' dolno granting of • ~he pet1t1on, p i re prior t o four months
OLANOER"S w EL01NG SHOP. you should ~1ther appear from the date of the hear-
1Nc • c11111orn1e core>0r•11on. 2171 at the h earing and state Ing notic ed above
Ent L• Crest. A••nue. M ahelm, your objectio n s or file YOU MAY EX. AMINE Celllornie t7Q ltt b " . . a.n"•' s11u 1 M•t•I inc.. • wr en o 1ections with_the the file kept by the court.
ee111orn1a corporMlon, 1171 Eest u c ourt before the hearin9. I 1 f you are interested in the ~:;.t• A.,..,.., ...,,_Im. c a11tor111a Your apearance may be tn estate, you may file a re·
T1>1•11on1~1t><onckrctectbY•<0< perso n or by your at · ques t w ith the court to re·
1tot•llon torne y. ceive special notice of the
....,_ si-t Meu.1, inc I F Y 0 U A R E A inventory of estate asset s =."!:~,e.-~RE DITO_R o r a con-and of the petitions, ac-
T111, ,11..,,..,.. ••• 111.a with ,,,. t1gent c reditor of _the de· c 0 u n t s and rep 0 rt s
coun1v c1er11o10r-c .... n1vonJ.,. ceased you mus t file your described in Section 1200
u .1 .. 1 1111™-claim w ith the court or of the Califo rnia Probate
PublllNd Orange coest oauv Pilot. present It t9 the personal Code.
Feb.n .tt.tt.MarchS,1ttt 110 .. 1 repr esentat111e ~ppointed JOHN w. DOWNER,
-----------by the court within four 401 Glenneyre Street, Suite
PUBLIC NOTICE months from the date of H Lag u n a Be a c h
SUPlltlOlt COUltT 01' CALlll'OltNIA
COUNTY O~ OltAMO•
....A1Wnt
OltDlaTOSHOWCAUH
'" lhe Meti.r ol .,. Apt>llcetlon Of IRMA JEAH Ht88ARO 10< C.P\enve of Ne me.
WHEREAS IRMA JEAN HIBBARD. s-tttl-. NII llled • S-llllon with tlw
firs t iss uance of letters as California 92651 (714)
provided in Sectio n 700 of 497-2443. '
the Pr~bate C .ode of Publis h e d OranQe Callforn1~. The. time for Coas t Daily Pilot, Feb 26.
filing claims will no t ex-27 , March s, 1981 793-81
p ire to foor months from
the date of the h earing,
notice above. PUBLIC NOTICE MESA S A l l!S . BAJ A MARl<ETIHG ANO N£WSl.ETTER.
71J Center Slnet, Coste Meso, C•llfornlo mZ7. l'ICTITIOUI IUllMlll Clerll Ill IN1 c-1 for.,.. order Clwt"9· the f ile kept by the court. NOTICE TO Cltl!OtTO•S
L-Oevld Moll-, llJ c.tl .. r s1 ... 1, ca.. Mnt, Co1ttom1t '21U7.
Tl'llS .....,_.It c--•r -lft. dlvldllel
~Mollfter
'"'" --· ... llled wllfl -Cwnly Ctorll of Or-County on
Feb. I0, 1t91 ,, .....
PvtllllNd 0r.,... eo..c Dolly PllOC.
MAMa ITATIM8NT ln9 eppllcon1·1 n•me from I AMA
Tll• IOll-lflil .... Ofll .,. doing JI! AN H 1••AR0 lo JEANN E IMISl,.u•: O'SHEA.
ilMilRAl.D l.At<E. P.O. 8o• UOt. IT 15 OltDEREO 11\ot oll perlO'lt II\·
""' 8oedl .......,.,d, s..lt• UI, Hun l«Hled In ll'le --Ulled m•ll•• tlftQton ...... Cellloolla nM1. """9•r -.1111, c--t et 11 :JO o.m .
Celvift M. ~ a. K•UI'"" It Oii ACN'll I. 1•1. i-courtroom 01 Lovftl. tlS2 lted C:OOCll Drive. Hunt· D•1>erlmenl J •I 100 Civic Cenl•r
lnQlOft a..a.,Cellldlrl\UnMI Orin , Softt• Ma. 0reift9e County.
If you are interes ted in the 0 ,. iul.X TRANSFER
estate, you may file a re · 1 tS.CL """'"' u.c.c .1 quest With the COUrt to re-Nol1ct ll .. rwl>Y given locredllorsol
Celve S,_Cial notice Of the lht wl!Nn ne.-d ,,_,,.,.., lh•I • ,.... bUI~ tron•ler 1, ......,. to De "'-on Inventory of estate a ssets per•o"•' property n.,e1na 1ter
and the petitions, accounts 1te1<ri1MC1
and r!!ports described tn ,..;~:,;::;::,~,,'::::."!:! • .-"' 01
Se C t I 0 n 1 2 0 0 0 f th e K N WEBER. 101 Mein Strfft T '"' bt..rMneu t\ conduc-ted b' Mt In diYIOUel T111s 1i.........,1 was llled •llll IN FM! 12. it, 2'.. -ells. 1"1 7JS..11
Cl-K.M. Levft9 -Ctover Colll0<nle, --ceuse, II env, M. Y. LWllQ. .-52 RM C.0.Cl'I Drive, why Ille petition for chonQe ol neme
H11nli119ton 8Hcll, Celltof'nle tJMJ. .-kl llOC lie granted. California Probate C ode . B11111oe. comorno• A O B E R T L . The locellon 1n Cetoforn•• of 1111 Wati.r B H-"°''' Tll1i , ... l....,..l was llled "'"h ttw Co11nly Cterlt. ol Ora1>99 County on Feb 10, 1'111
C.ounly Clerk of °'""Ge CO<.lnly on - -----
Fel>ruery 14, 1"1 PUBLIC NOTICE
f'll4S71
Publl\hecl Orono-Coell D•lly Piiot. f'UJM4 Fel> 2•, Mer s. 12. 1•. 1"1 -..1 l'ICTITIOU5 austMEH
NAM• STAT•MENT Publiilwtd Or-Cooll Delly Piiot. Feb ll. tt. i.. Merci> S. 1"1 1:.u
PUBLIC NOTICF.
"talTIOUS 8USINESS
NAMI STAT•M•NT The 1•11-ino PHSOFI Is CIOlno bull n''-' at' TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC
PROOUCllOHS. ltS. Fleml1190 Drlvo,
COii• Mese. Cllllfornl• t2'2'.
Ronald K. McConn•l>u, "U Fl amlngo Orlvt, Cost• Moe.
Cetllornlattt2' Thia llUM,..., Is conOU<lfll by an In
dlvlduel.
RK.McC-• Tl'lh alel-1 .., .. filed wlll'I lhe Counly Clerk ol Oranoe County on Feb. II, 1"1
f'IU10
Publltllect Drenve CMll Delly Piiot.
Fu "· 2'. -cll s. 12. '"' 112·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI 8USINHS
NAMISTATWMaNT
T "• 1o11owl119 P«'Hlll ere doln9 11v11neuas. JERRY & VAN PUBLICATIONS, IOIMt EMI COMt ...........,, .._...,,
•••<l'I. C.llloml• '1We.
J omu E. Pott•r lor Gereld Oerloallon, n.J2 Cl-Ore ... U.h
f'Or9'1. Celllomla t»l2. Ger•ld O.rlOlhon. 22'l2 CleUde
Clr<le. ~· F0< .. 1. Calllornle tltJ:l. Von A. Fr-•, 16tl Me .. Drive,
Coste Mew, Callfomletlttt.
TlllJ bvslnen It COllOUCle<I by • veneral portnertlllp,
O.rekl OtrlosllOn
Tl'lls swt-1 wet filed wlll'I Ult County Clerk of Ot'•nee Ceunty on Feb. IO, 1 .. 1.
~ISPublla!Wd Orenga Cootl Dally Piiot,
Feb 11. 19, 1'. Marti\ S, 1 .. 1 111 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINl5S NAMIE STATIM•NT
Th• followino porwn' •r• doln9
t>uslneu ••· A MAN FOA Al.l. SEASONS. l6CI
Cleo SI .. l.OfUlle Stech. CA. '2651 Mlt"-1 C. Jo..venot. l60 Cleo SI ..
l.egune S.0<1>, CA '2651 O•vld C Jouveno1, 111' Ruby Pl .
Legune a.ac11, CA. '2651
Thi• bu''""' Ii conducttd l>y • .. ner•I pertneolllp. Mlc,...IC Jo..v•n•t
Tl'llS alel-1 w.i llted with lhe County Clerk ol Oronoe C.O.Onty on
Febrvery 14, '"' Pl~ Publlllled Or ..... Coesl Dally Piiot.
Fell.''· -Merch S, 11, It, lttl
PUBUC NOTICE
N1U ..
l'lalTIOUI IUllMIU NAMllTATaMIMT
t21··1
The toOowlng P••ton' IT• dolnt
l>WslNHOI.
l.EEltUE'S f'l.OltlST. UOU Eve lld Avt1111t. Garden Grove Collfomlo me. ·
S...nin tmn. m lo Oott, Ot'011ge, C.ll~nl•~. 51'1•••11 M1tc11e11, nt So. o eti. Oronge, Cltllfornl• UNO.
$/\«Oft Ir""" Sl>eron Mllchett
Tl'll~ slot-' wM Ill., wlll'I lhe
County Clff11 ol Oronge County on FMl. IJ, 1•1
TM loll-Inv ~'°" Is dot"9 ...,,,_
MUH R 0 CONS T RU CTIO N
MANAGEMENT CO . 119'1 Cowen, lrvlnt, Celltornl•t271'
Rlctwtrd M. Dellon, Jr., 5005 RI.,.,
Av•nue. Newport BHcn. C.alilornl• ., .. ,
T .... bus1neH " conduct.., by tn II\ dlvlduel
R1c11erd M. Dallon, Jr. Tllll ttelemenl w•• filed wllll lhe
County C.terk ol Oran99 County on Mere fl l. l'ltl
f'IS7M7 Publlslled Or ... C.oesl Deily Piiot.
M•rcll S, 11, It, 2', 1911 IOS4·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOU5 aUSINESS
HAME STATIMEMT The lollowino per'°" h do1"9 bval nn,•• l.A 81BLIOTECA. CUl.IHAaY
INf'OltMATIOH SEltVICfi. P.O. Box
11 .. 7, UIS El.,. Av-. Coste Mew.
C•lllornle t2'Z1. H.,O.rt K Al'ln, tHJ Elden
Aveftue. C•t. Mew. C.lilornla tlUJ. Tiiis llldlnes~ I• <-..Ci.<! by en In· dl•lclvel. .._,_rlK AM
Tiiis llel-1 WM flied •llh IM Co..nty Clerk of Ore1>99 Co..nty on
Merell>. 1 .. 1. 1'07 ... Publlalled 0r.,... eo.st Oolly Piiot.
Merell S, 12, It. 2'. 1"1 10~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
Gold•n Oall lnoslm•nl, A IT IS f'UltTHER ORDERED -1 •
Collfo<'nle l.lmiled Pettllertlll1> ... I .. COPY of 11'111 O<dlt< to sl'loW , ..... bo
B••<l'I 8oulevard. S..lt• 2st. H11111 publlsl'l•d In lh• O•lly Piiot. 1 l"ljton 80Kll.C..lllornlat»<i7 newlpeper of v•n•r•I circulellon
HU cn1ef eaeculove oll1C• or pr1ncopel bu••· MPH REYS, 811 Dover nH• 0111u ot "" 1n1onc1ed ,,..,,,,,or
Drive, Suite 33, Newport " ,.,,. ... •Dow
prlnl•d In Orange Counly, C..lllornle,
OflU. --for'-WCtltUlve ..... , prior 10 ,,. date .. , lo<' .,..,.1"9 on t.,.
1191111on
Beach, Ca. 92663. (714) All 01,,., bU••neu nemH .,,., ...,
645·2710 ~:.~:f~~!, ~~fn :.~~:s",':S~:Z:r CeiYln M. Uu11Q
Tllh , ... ...._, ··~ filed Wllll ,,,. County Cterlr. of Or.,.oe Co..nty on Merci> l, l"I Oeled l"eeln.>ery 11, 1"1
R-ld H. Pr•,.,,...
Published Orange Coast 1 •o fer ., •no .. n 10 '"' 1n1end•d
Daily Pilot, Marc h 4, S, 11, 1••nst•r ... .,, none
1981 1078 81 fl>• ,..,,,., ""d bu•lneu acldrH' ot 111117"4
P11bll•hed Or ... CMll D•lly Piiot, • ,.,. lnte......, lron•ltrMI .,,
M.,cl> S, 11. If, 16. 1 .. 1 110111
PUBLIC NOTICE
J~Ofltw
Superior Court
Publl"-d ()re119t CM•I D•llY Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE
Feb U. #Mr. S, 12. 1'. '"I ffS·ll OltDllt TO $HOW CAUll f'Oll
------CHANOI 0111 NAME ~1cT1T1ous au11N•H PUBLIC NOTICE c.sa NUMa11t A·1111u NAMI STATIMINT In tllt Melle< ol the AllC)llcellol\ Of
Tn• IOllO•lng perwn• ••• doing NE NAO KOSTIC. •k• NISHA bUilMU ... l'ICTITIOUI IUllN•H MICHAEL PATTERSON, lor CNnve
NINA'S RE CORD SHOP. IJI No NAMI ITAT•M•MT o1 N•l'll•. Anaheim Bo11levard0 An•l'lelm. The loll-"9 ~-11 doing bull· HENAO KOSTIC. ak• NISHA
C•hfornl• ntos. nos.,. MICHA El. PATTERSON h•• flled • Celle c.m.chc>. .. II Oaytono Cir I II ROCKWE LL AERO·SAFE petlll., In 11'41 c-1 f°' an °'Cle' el·
Cle, Huntington Buch. COIHornl• T ECHHOLOGY, 111 ROCK WE l.l I-Ing 1191111-r to ctwnQe hla/ller .,__ AEltO·SAFE DESIGNS. Sl42 Mc Fad· nom• from HENAO KOSTIC lo NISHA Nina C-llo. Wll o..,.-Cir· den, Unit "0'. Huntington 8eecll, MICHAEL PATTERSON.
ct•. H11nll11Qlon 8Htl>. Celiforn1• Cell lornl• nMt. I 11 ls...,..,,, oreler9d 11111 ell ~''°"' .,_ K•nl N. Rou-11, P.O. Box 204, ,lnl•rest• In the metier •f.,,HOld •P
T 111, bullneu It condueted llY • Coate llMH, Celllornla t2'J1. S14J peer Mlore 11>11 court In Oepertm.,.t (feller•I l)ettlWnftlj) Mc f'addlfl. Unit •CY, HunllnQlon 8UCll, j Ho. J •I 100 Civic Coftl« Drive WUL
C..lle CMnocl'IO CA. '2"9 Senta AN. Celllornla. on Aprll I. 1 .. 1,
c::~:Y ~~-::-:! ;..-:,:eoc.O:~iy t~ dlJ,'::,:.~ la condllcled lly.,. In· ,:~,:.:~·!.::'~C:.~ T, ·.:;4,;.t.;",.,:v":.
Merell J, , .. , KHll H. Roo-11 wl'ly Mid potllfCWI '°' Cl\onQe of neme
PU7... Tl'll~ stet-I •• Oled with ll'le "*'Id not lie grentN.
P11blltlled 0r.,.. Cooil Dolly Pltol, County Clerll ol Or-Cw11ty on II 11 furt..., °'Cle<ed 11\el • <OOY of Merell s. 12, It. 1'. 1"1 to.t-t1 f'ell. IO, ltsl. 11'111 or•r to tflow YUW lie 111111tlllwtd
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUl'aUltNISI
NAMllTATIMIMT
Tl'lt lotlowl119 --lt dolnt bUtl· ... .... ,
'., P.lt.O.a.e .• (JI PROlllflSION
RESIAltCH OltOAHIZATION f'OR
BUSINESS l!HTltEPltlHEUltS, !JI, UNITl!O.AMl!ltlCA COltllORATION,
Sit Antelll.O Drive, Cor-*' Mor. Collfornto nus.
"'""' In Ore ne• Cou t Oelly Pllo1. • Publlllled Or.,. Coeat Doll' Pllet, n•••P•S-• of 99n•ret clrcvl•llan. II ... 12,Jt,MettM, 1 .. I .. WI IMIOlllMd In INS c-ty Ol 1-t one• e
PUBLIC NOTICE
-• ror low c-wllve -•• prior to tM dlty ol Nfd MerlllQ Del-4 l"eOrwry 11, 1"1
It-Id H. Pnm« PtatTIOUI IUSIMISS J ...... Of ll'le NAMI ITATIMSNT 5-er1ar Court
Tl'I• fOll•w•no perlOflt ••• dolno ALLAN M.OOM
bvtln•nes: ... C.......PMIMl.Wtettt
8EST MARKET ING AS · L.MAaael-,CA...i
SOCIA TES. 111» l.oeen Awnue, Cost• Tll: uuun ... u
MtW. Celllornlo ··-· P,,.llllllM 0r8"99 CMSI Delly Piiot Artl'lur C. Ptecock, Sr .• 1901 f'MI. 1', 2', MM. s. 12, l"t NNil W•••ll•m Piec e, Sent• ·An•,
Celtlornle '2704.
Wllll•m W Barrick, lO Greftd Avenue, Afll. • s. long 8eec1>. PUBLIC NOTICE
C•llfornl• toem. 711U
Jemu H. CN lk. t1U Juenll•, l'ICTITIOUI 9USIMlll Cyp,.u, Colll0<nl• ~. MAMI ITAT•MINT
Thi• bll•lneu la condQCled Oy a flle fOll-1111 p•r'°ns art doing ttneral ciertrwnllip. llUllNU M: A.C. PHcock. Sr. ClteST TltOPHY .. AWARDS,
Tiii• tl•l-1 ••• llled wllll the lltJ lllM. Ml••v CJty, CallfO<nl• Co11ftty Clerll ot Orel\Qe co..nly on .,..,,.
M.,cl'I J. 1 .. 1. A11twt• UtvlM Ct-ltl'. IU E.
M••-H Hallee rt, Sorel> H Vtr bit . Elise R Mufi, UJ> Sen Mlguel.
NewPOrl S.ec.11. Celllornle 92'60 Tnat the pr-r1y ~rllMnl her•lo ,.
dHtrilMd In generel as hwnlturt. II•
turn. CH1Ulpm.,l tnd merehaf\Sfise •nd Is loceled •I 101 M•ln Street.
811lboe, CAlllornle T l'lt 11.,.1,. .. neme .,..., by lht wld
tr•naleror at sald 1oc11hon 11 I( N
Wtber Je-•"· Thet aoid bulk ,,.,51., ls lnl-d 10
ti. co11111mm•l•d al 11>1 olllc• of
David "· O.l..9nc: y, Etc1. 6111 Newpo,.. ;.,.,., Ot'lve, ~1•211, Newport S..ch,
Celllo•nla t76'00flo•elter Ftbr.,.ry u .
ltll Thi\ billk transfer I• 111bje<I 10
C•lllornie Unlfarm Commercl., C-
S.ct Ion "°'· The ,...,,. Mld ·--of, ... porson .. 111> "'"°"' ctetms mey De flied I• D••ld P Del.ency. UO Newport C.ent•r Drive, Suite 211. Newport
a .. tl'I. Colllornle •JMO. -ll'lt IMI :tey ICM' llllnt ctel"" bf .,., <re<lllor
lfl•ll .,. ~, 11. 1 .. 1. wl'llcll ,, the Dtllll\eU Cley Defore the conwmmolton
clele wie<llle<I •-• 0 •1-4' ,,._,. 11. ltll
MMl""H HAll.Cf'I
Sarah H Ver111t
Ell .. R. Huff
Oil.ANCY , HUNT•
lllNIT•lilMAKllt
U1 N•..-t Celtter Drive, llllte 111
N•w"" 8Mcll, CA nMI Pul>ll....., Or-CO.SI Oellv Piiot.
l"tb. It. 1 .. 1 1J7·11
PUBLIC NOTIC£
ST ATilMINT 01' AaAMOOMMPT
OllUH'OI'
PICTITIOUI auSINllS MAM•
TM loll-lllQ per-""" oMll• d6ned It.. u• ot l!W f'l<lltlous ewll· neu Heme; El.GIN PAltTNEltSHIP. U'1 Nol,..
De me R-, C-1• Mltto. CA~
TM Fictitious 9uliNU Ntlllt ,.
, ... ,.., , .......... fllOd '" o.-..
County on Hovet'llber '· 1'77 f'll.E
NO. "1495·
N7U•J llllCTIT10US 8UllNIH NAMl ITATIMIMT
lr11e followlnt 1t«to111 ••• doing ~tJJ•• 8e¥1f'll' lllloct, Senl• Mo. C.lllornle P11blllNll 0r.,... cout Delly Piiot. n101. IUcf\onl v_.,i., :U'1 Notre Oame ltHd, C-le MltM, CA '26». -'""'•: ' P1100VCT MANAGEMENT CO.,
:.:•Miion ....... T11ttln, Callfwnl•
ltMlaf't W. 'Mlely. 17402 VeldHM, 11111»1.., Viejo. Cltll~a ... ,
ttonelO I . Cton.. UJI Porl i••• IC11 Ill•<•, Newport •••ell, cillltrftl• ......
fTl'llt NII-• It COl'MN<ltd •Y e
tfMOI ........ lt--1 w. Wlwty
h 111, ...--111911 wllfl -(Jilnly Cltt11 el Or.,.._ Cwnty Oft
....... 1'11.
;:
ti AHO ltll.LIAH MM#-81W,.1
port IMdl, CM llOffle tllMO . "*" •Pvbll.,... Orlll9t CMtt Dally 1111411,
. It,,., Mw<ll s. 12, '"' an.ti
PUBUC NOTICE
Merch S, It, lt . 2', 1•1 1047 .. t Oor94t., l.OVlto ~. 11' E.
PUBUC NOTICE
Beverly l'llU, Sent.e Alie, Collltmle
'2101. Tl'lh !Mist""' 11 coll4l11c1..i Illy •
.. nerel -1rwn!Wp. /114111• LAulM er_...,
OW.t.y l.wfN ,,.._...
Tllfl NI-I •• Ill• wltll Ille C-\y Clerto ti 0.91199 C.VMy Oft
""" ''· '"'· ,, .. ,
,._,.,.. Or1119t CMtl Dolly Pl'-'.
, .. , It, .. ~ S, U, 1•1 '71.fl
Merlffl\ l.ltLel, l1DS2 StretllmOOf Lene .............. a.Kll.CA.,.._
Thia ...-. wet cOllClluct.ci Dy •
llmllff~.
~Lltzll Tlllf ........... WM lllecl wf1ll lltit
Cevnly Ct.,.k ot Or.,.._ CetltotY on ....... "''· li>vll>llSNd Or-. Coo•I O.lly l"lle4,
, ... 12, "·"'Merell •. '"' , .... ,
PUBUC N011CE
..
•& &•aa by Virgil Partch (VIP)
! ,
(
~~9
1-r
"Shh -Helen'• Dally Talk Show la on tt-.alr."
MARMADUKE
--
0 C> . -"I didn't push Margaret! She's down there tellin'
the buttercups that SPRING is com in'!"
"I suppose YOU want a goodbye kiss, tool"
THA~ ~'*4T. A&eEY ! l'M ~Rf A ~IVElt ~OULO
by Harold Le Ooux
MEANWHIU: 1 WANT A ON~WAY
TICKET TO LO~ AN6£LE!>.' THEY FOUND THE 6TOLEN CAA ON A 510f ltfMf.M8£11. JEANNIE! ~uer DOWNTOWN ... W1 NO JEANNIE!
TI-if POUCE ME CHfCKIN" THE CAO
COMF'l'NY TO 6£f WHETHER ANYONE.
FITTINC:> HER OE~RIPTIOM PICKEO UP
A CA~!
Ml88PEAC8
-
ARTHU(2.
e~Pt..A tMS
SA£fo£1AL I Sf>L~OCR.. \
c (?ti; j
MOON MULLINS
®
3
f
AC..OSS 59 Jewel ea Centrll
' Cllllclze 64 Recorded 5 -ray 85 Atllgf1
9 Wlllllt &7 Prtv1te c:h1t
14 FlnieMd 70 Idler
t5 KJng or Ladd 71 DllcNrge
, ... Domlclle 72 The Old Sod
tf Aelnltltlng 7S F9bttc
11 Join 74 f1llure
20Wll' 75 ~
lllMnCe
21 ,. .. IOI DOWN
23 °""" 24 ..... ,, ...... r,=-. •a...
UNITED Feeture Syndlclte
Wedneedey'1 Puzde Solwd
by Mell Lazarius
I Ct'.'N'i KNOW ~IS
NAME, 9<.Ai Me~ Tlo4e
ONe WMO WEAlll':~
THE ~OC.'t<~.·. ·
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
NANC\'
GORDO
-........... ----------------------......... -------. ~
,. Orange Cou t DAILY PILDT/Thurlday, March 5. 1981 d
o-----
THERE'S SOME
CHEESE IN THE
R E FRIGERATOR---
MAKE A
SANDWICH
by Chari• M. Schultz ---------.
PEEWEE,
WHAT
ARE YOU
DOING
THAT FOR?
~ .. I OWN'T l<NQl.I
lJi\' E\U 'POOFEO" ~
-~-
.. ""1 l'r? fJESi NOT CRAM
100 MUCH EXCm:MENT IN10
ONE: fJRIEF MOMENT:
by Ernie Bushmiller
T HIS CHEESE IS 50
OLD IT HAS HOLES
INIT
by Gus Arriola
II HaJ..Plff
FUNK\' •tNKER8UN by Tom Batiuk
BACK OFF A u111..E srr , SHE's A ~e-r1c; ~E!61ve. ~I AtJD WATUI ~ um.£ PL.AQER.,15N'1 6HE ~
FOOl5 ! .
I'LL 511-; { LA5T Nl&frr SHE
fOULED CXJT DORIN& THE
PRE -GAN\£ WARM-tJP !
!
I
! t
9
DRA88LE by Kevin Fagan
I ~~~f' fcR~'f'f•N~ ...
1'14\~ I~ DNL 'i OUR
73rd ~rt!
PON'1" l!!Vl!!Ft E!!XPl!!C1" 1"0 591!! "T"MA1" ONI!! Wll=tl'T'Tl!!N UP
IN "f'HI!! M8PIC.A.~ 5eC1"10N
Of& 1"1MI!! Ofllt NllWSWl!!l!K /
OO)bu~e.
WE'flf. Lf.ADI~ R
DULL L\FE. '?
Orange Oo11t DAILY PILOT/fhursday, March 5, 1981
'Catch Me' enjoyable
By TOM TITUS of_o.1,, ..........
Even alter several close encounters with the
lay, "Catch Me If You Can" remain$ an enjoya·
le and intriguine experience, not in the least
ssened by its latest incarnation al the Sad·
leback Valley Community Theater.
Ideally, one s hould be viewing thls play for
e first time ror maximum impact, but tbat
rsonal happenstance occurred about four local
roductions ago. So now that we know the final
ERMISSION
score, we s tudy the
players rnore closely.
AT SADDLEBACK
director Vince Cor·
d io h as mounted an
entertaininl( vers ion of
tle Jack Weinstock· Willie Gilbert mystery, but the
'how could gain furthe r effect witb the tightening
Otat comes Crom increased familiarizatio n. Also,
f ere is an element of comedy to the script (which
pa rates it from the run of the mill '· myste ry play·'>
at does not come into full bloom.
The premise is nicely established an ad·
f
. ertising man honeymooning in the Catskills
nlists the local police inspector to locate his
unaway bride . But the lady who "returns" isn't
\tle one who left. thus creating a situation which
casts suspicion on virtually everyone.
: Harvey Dahling enacts the _ _...,.
rattled groom with a s plendid
$ense of panic bordering on
paranoia once his early stage
~tiffness is resolved. As the
t om an who insists she's his wife,
~ris tine Nic hols is overly
enigmatic, playing too much on a
4ingle, subdued level, but her
+ura of menace creeps through to
render her properly unsettling. l HYOE i THE PLUM ROLE IN the show, that of the tewish cop who's handling the case, is done·well by
aul Goedhart. though he could inject more ethnic
umor into the part. Bill Law is physically effective
b the local priest who 's also a sort or enforcer, but
bis timing could be stepped up a bit.
Most memorable in theSaddJeback cast is David
Hyde as the proprietor of the town delicatessen who
stumbles into the thickening plot-his comic inflec-
NOW SHOWING ----
•com •u •• nu1 • lllMCI: wtST111m1 Edwards C1ntn•• C1ntma V1t10 C:1nfdomt H1 War 19 011vt-ln
979414 1 17141830 6990 6J4 2553 71418913693
UU81ea P1du
I "' 529 SJ39
"CATCH "4• "YOU CAN"
A lflylltry <omedy l>Y JMk Welf\ilOd •NI Wittie GJIO.rt, dlrKlllCI C>y
111110 CorolO, "• m-ger Sleptl•nle Gordoo. l•<llnl<.111 e11re<1ott
•rl•n •NI Jffll l.luoNln, or•wnl9d "''O•yl MIO $ee..,O•Y• ., • p,m
throuen Merci JI lwltll •PK••• oerl'Of'man<H March• el 2,)0 Mid
Marth 12 at II •I the s.oo1eo.o ll•ll•Y community TnHter, n1•1 C OOrtro. Mlulon llltlO. ftHtrvallon• 110.oltl
De11ltl Corbin
EllHIMlll lntH<lor l,.eVll\I
Fe111er IC••-•
Sidney . Evtrelt P•rker .. .
Mn . P•rktt . • .. . ....
THl CAST
Harvey 0.1111119
Cri•llnt Hl<hOIS
Paul~r\ .amuw
0.viCI HyOt
.. E111S EslH
S.hy Sou111wortn
tlons are rtgl\t on target. Ellis Estes as Oabllng's
philandering e mployer and Betsy Southworth as
Estes' ladyfriend complete the cast erteetively in bit
roles. . "Catch Me if You Can" offers a r eal
challenge for the first-time viewer who enjoys try.
ins to guess the murderer in advance and he'll
probably be wrong. The s how continues weekends
through March 21 at the Saddleback theater. 25741-C
Obrero, Mission Viejo.
CALLBOARD -Auditions for an Orange
County talent showcase to be videotaped for cable
TV will be held Monday at 2 p.m . and Tuesday at 6
p.m. at 515 Superior Ave .. Newport Beach ....
further information may be obtained by calling
coordinator Jobie Gilliam at645·6121. ...
The Fountain v·a1tey Community Theater will
hold tryouts for "The G real Cross Country Race,"
a story of the tortoise and the hare, Saturday and
Sunday from 2 to 4 p m at the Fountain Valley
Community Center on Slater Avenue .. the
children's play will be presented for two weekends
in May ....
The Harlequin Dinne r Playhouse will hold non-
Equity interviews for principals and dancers for
the black musical '"The Wiz" Monday at the
play house. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd . Santa Ana, Satur-
day from 10:30 to 4 p.m The show opens
May 6 for an indefinite run ... • BACKSTAG E The Laguna Moulton
Playhouse will be the scene Saturday for the
western regional fin als of the American Comm um·
ty Theater Festi v a I. to be staged at l 30 and 7 · 30
p.m ..... one of the entries will be Laguna's
"Match Point" by Mary Jane Roberts ... res ·
ervations arc being taken at494·0743.
l
NINE
TO FIVE (PG>
YOU'RE NEVER MORE
VULNERABLE THAN WHEN
YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH.
. •,
I "THE JAZZ.
SINGER" IPG)
~ f .. I "FORT APACHE
THE BRONX" 1111
~ THE it COMPETITION" lr·:~NTABI~:
• I i
(
"INCREDIBLE
~ . SHRINKING WOMAN" I c:::~UDE BOM:B'' I
I "THE DEVIL
& MAX DEVLIN" J "HERO AT LARGE" IN t
' -I "RAGING BULL" (Ill
"FORT APACHE"
I • • •• ~ I "TRIBUTE"
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"
1111
I "COAL MINER'S._.
DAUGHTER"
"SMOKEY II"
..-.. A~9wFiiER
WAY YOU CAN''
''HONEYSUCKLE ..
MOYIE RATINGS
l'lle~-ol ... re""fl•lo ......
/IM#ft eOOUf,,,. ~bollli; OI
19D ... ....-,,,,~0r-·""""'"
Al.l Aon A<*lmo
Oeftotel A..a-
I\\" 111 111 \"II I<\ I 1 •\l'HI '<I \I<, \1'1 11 RI \I I., I II \I
WILLIAM HURT·SIGOURNI:'\' Wl:AVl:R·tlmlsroPHLR PLUMMl:K
I' I\\ I I "'I" .... ,,,., JAMES WOOD ·1·,.,11 ... 1.u .. 1lltr .. 1 .. 11 .. 1•1 111< 1 \II ..
1\11111111'\ .. II \ I 11 .. k I I ·'~"• h .. I \\.I I\""' t l<\t \\. \11\\ \\, \\1•\. P\l'll<li\c l-.1
INTERMISSION
Mleke:r peaking
Actor's career at new high
By 808 THOMAS
...__ ~.· ,.,. ..........
Signing fn
Actor -director
Robert Redford signs
an autograph for a
fan in Ne w York
a fte r leav ing the
Broadw ay pl ay
"Lolita."
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The unstop-
pable Mickey Rooney Is back In
towo, ettjoyln1 to lhti hilt his loth
career -or ls it 11th?
He claims to have·performed 59 ol
his 60 years, and he has known high
times and low times. Rlght now it's
hi1h . That's because of "Sugar
Babies," the hokey, happy Broadway
hit, and "The Black Stallion," which
won him an Oscar nomination and
renewed recognition of his powers as
a dramatic actor.
No longer need Mickey rely on din-
ner theaters to keep him alive.
WHILE APPEARING in ·'Sugar
Babies," he made four feature films
in New York as welJ as a pllot for an
NBC series, "O'Malley.
Rooney ls here on leave from
"Sugar Babies" for a CBS movie.
.. Leave 'em Lau1hing," a true story
of a Chicaeo circus clown and his
wire (Anne Jackson) who cared for
dozens of homeless children.
In his land Cruiser-dressing room
at CBS Studio Center (once Republic.
where he produced and starred in
two films in the 1950s), Rooney laid
down his favorite reading, the racing
form, and talked. And talked. He was brimming ovn with en-
Marcello Mastroianni
Laura Antonelli
Wjfeniistress
IRJ
Gene Hackman
Barbra streisand
.....
She's got a way with ~n. f
And she's getting away ', ~ ~
with It... ~ •
J!ln(J ~.
I I'.;.• I ifjf '4' •.a~' .\ •, ""'• •
I '~\t \
>i.'.PflW, • '~' \!.', t
R .......... ._ ...... . ... --.. -· .. . .....
~J
thuslas m for bis am blUou1 en-
terprises: Fun-Filled Family, 1 pro·
&ram for senior citizens <"Don't re ••
lire -inspire"): his chain of ·
Star·B·Q eateries ("The best food in
the world"); hla s~!-taught acting
course ("Anybody can learn to act").
.. My height never bothered me,
there's nothing dastardly about being
short. People ask me, ·Doesn't it
bother you always to be classified as
short and pugnacious'!' That's like
asking Willie Shoemaker, ·Are you
sorry you're a successful jockey?'
"YOU MUST ACCEPT your own
individuality, not allow others to
classify you.
"f'.or years I was supposed to be .
waving the • banner of The Alimony j
Kid. Well , l never paid a fot of
m?ney. I~ the first place. aJI of my
<eight ) w.ives were ladies, and we
parted friends. Secondly. many of
them remarried two or three times
after me, and, I'm sorry to say.
ended up unhappy women.
'.Tm happy to say that all of my
<nine > progeny are close to me.
we're like bees in a honeycomb.
''If l had it to do over again, would
I? Probably so. Only this time I'd wear a tie.··
llON ... rMUlll. r:OO, 1:00
"FLESH 00,.DON"
.,...,._, ,_11rl0 '"'
"SUMMI! .. CAMP"
llllOlt-TMUllt '"' -... , .............. -
STARTS TOMORROW
J-A,_ I""~
CINEDOM E EDWARDS' HARBOR Hl·WAY 31 DRIVE·IN
Qrdnge 6JJ . ,• J Co~1.i Mesa bJI J~Q1 Wes1m1n~1er 891 J69J
"IA CAGE AUX FOLLES II"
ITS II, II FUNNY
... the relationship continues
MN« 'l:U.0 !>ANON ~11~
l JGO TOGNAZZI MICHEL Sl!RIMU .. T
"LA CAGE N.JX F<>u.e. 1r·
t •·Jtii.i• " ...... "' A 1*n h,t EDOUAAD MOUNAAO
"1'1' \IMl 11 1~17A•H !Wll.A BORBOl'I GICM\N!ll1 VI H ClfW.lO
tJ All( o ONCJAAlCJ H<IAl-Rm BN\C'CO BCNNn.t.ll<t
.... t OMdt , ..... fWllClf"'l:UI nl MICHEL GALA8RU
~ • ._ 1.., 1 HANC I'-\/lo'.Bl.R JI.AN f'OIRITT MARCHJ.O ll/\NON
"l~•~il.1" hi! FRANCIS VEBl:.R M1111C by I NNIO MOHHK ONI
'""'"" 11' Pllo1i:,.n1ll1Y ARMANOO l'IAlffJZll
1 ,., u11w "" •"-... MARCELLO MNOfll 9\ r nonctt lt.\lwl c<> pn~ IJ..,PRC~Afm>1T"~~,S.P41r
Ill\ "4A l'HOl >U11CN " I fb1ll
l 1• f• • lll\MA l'IWllU'llfol. "' 11'"'1\ rt11I ~,., .. ,,_,,
Y.""1llck Null~ On ~~"'~ ....... • T ......... Arttata ~-·~
"RAOINO BULL" 1111
1111 ~ .... !),,
~EVBINO-
.. , •• NeWS
ITAMKYAM>
HUTeH
A notOl'IOul gang leecler i.
USUlinated while being
guarded by Stet'Sky elld
Hutc:ti. and the c:onteealon
of • yoong men 19eds the
d4tt~llYW on • 11111 ol
dMO ena1. CPart 11 ltlatter of heart
I TIC TAJ; DOUGH u·A·s·H
When Hot L,ip1 thlnka Iha
mlgiht be pregnant. Iha
only rabbit evalteble IOI'
tM t .. t Is Redar"t pet F111I•
• OOOOTIMU
Jon Walmsley as Jason Walton is tom
between his family and his girlfriend
(Lisa Harrison, Walmsley's wile in real
life) over her religion on "The Waltons"
tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2.
FlOflda • 1 conccwn f Of 0"4I
of her young paa~re
puts hat on • co1mon
courM with the el\ol<fa
mother. (Patt 1)
Ill G ELECTRIC
COtiWAK'f (fU
CJ) C88HEW8
Q]J A8CNEW8
l:30 G aou..&EYE
• WB.COME BACK.
KornA
When Wash1ng1on get•
llOOl<ed on Plfl•. Gabe and
the Sweathogs try 10 help
him.
Q) BENNY Hill
Benny plays the bandmas·
ter or a park t>and
ffi) PAOFILES ~
POWER
Guesl Congressman
Anthony Boetenson m 8TUOIOSEE
.. River Boats .. (R)
(J) M•A•S•H
Frank os antagonostoc
toward a w011nded North
Korean ollocer who
dftcflbes hos own 1n1ury
end COl'reclly diagnoses
the wounds ol other
patlentl
CHANNEL LISTINGS
®J 8AAHEY MILLEA
Barney finds homHll In hot
water when two young
... omen cops exc:e9d their
1uth0f1ty and make a drug
bust.
1:55 IJ EOfTOA&AL
7:00 8 Cll8 NEWS D NeCHEWS 8 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Howard's lather. a dynetn.
IC QO-glll•. atrivet at tn.
C11nninghama determined
lo lind new life.
8 A8CNEWS 0 J0t<£A'S WM.O ID M·A·s·H
Hawkeye and B J are
appointed morale olliCers
of tne un11
Q) STREETS OF SAN
FRAHaSCO
Stone savM a young gut
lrOl'n death at the hands or
a middle-aged man seek·
~ 10 Pill time on .. hold ·•
W OVE.REASY
Guest s Meloss. Manches-
ter. Oav•d Marochester. Or
Timothy SllM CRJ
'1l) MACHEIL / LEHREA
R£POM
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
8 KNXl 1CBS1 Lo'> Anqo·le..,
0 KNBC t NBCI LO'> Anqele'>
Q l(TLA olnd I LO'> AnQl' t!'>
8 KABC TV 1ABC1 LO<, Angel».,
(I.' '\FMB 1CBS1 S,1n Ooeqo 0 KHJ 'fV t Ina I Los An·wlp<,
@' KCST 1ABC1 San 011•q
at KTIV 1tna t los Anql:'ll'<, aJ KCOP TV t Ind I Los AngelPS
ID KCE T TV 1 PBSJ Lo~ Angeles
'1i) KOCE· TV t PBSI HuntonQton Beacn
(Ill MERV GAIFFlH
G11es11: Betty B11cktey,
Alexander Goctunov. Mar-
one Van Hamel. Jay Leno.
Arthur and Kathryn Mur·
fly.
7:30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosta· Steve Edwards.
Mek>dy Rogers Visit woth •
!amity to !Ind out how they
adjusted lo their 1ranssex-
11al mother who 11aed to be
a man. v1a1t .. Tllfre:· East
Loa AngelH"s rock sensa-
tion. to hear aome ot their
hh111.-
D FAMILY FEUO 8 COLLEGE
8ASKET8ALL
UCLA vs Wasnlnglon
State
8 EYEWITNESS LOS
AHGEl.£8
HOSll P~I Moye< and Inez
Pedrou take a look al why
Gospel muelc IS et1ract1og
tome or the stars ol the
recording Industry. SOI••
mysteries woth a reat-11ta
.. Hart To Ha11 · h11sband
and wore detective team
and meet some OI Los
Angeles"• wacky Inventors
0 COLLEGE
BASKEnAl...l
USC vs Washington
ID ALL IN THE FAMILY
A lost m90azine and a
loon<S poem lnotiate a lam•·
ly feud on the rlgllt ol pro-
vecy whteh provokes Mike,
Gloria and Edith lo move
out or the hOuse
Eli) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT m NEWS CJ) P .M. MAGAZINE
POIJcem41n who Nn I yOll th
progretn and Hll·help oen·
ta• In the aouth 8'onx, the
revival ol a Southern dell·
cacy: arrioetOf tall
1
t:t0e(I) THIWALTONI
Juoro'• ,... gitlfflted'•
.i.wilh Nllgk>n ~ c;on.
ltCNt!rty II\ hit ltfict 8aip.
-~ • IUCI< *>GIN
lucll '• M41fctl fOt cryet•
t to~llll~lt
I ..,d!Md by • mumml·
flecl cr.hK•
e o MOM/llfO MN)V
Mont'a IMdnet~ wftl'I t"9
fM1tl CU9tom ot pracnlclll
lok• ~to a dluttr-
r-st (,_)
-~ANOTHE -~ Timothy W .. t Md JOMl)l'I
Co;t*' at w In tl!ll reveal·
lng ponrelt of England'•
I-World W11 It prlf'fle
mln111\er.
• TOI' 0# TIW HILL
lnWI Shaw'• drama, Ml at
• t~ 1980 Olymplc:e. ol a
I man wtlo has made It big
but lind• hlmaell llruogllng
with• mld-l1le crlall It con-
cluded. (Pert 2) flD THI PAPER CHA8E
"'Once MOl'e With "-ling'"
I\ la'* profHSOf (Robert
Reed) gt"" a top a111dant
• low e11am score attar she
ref-hll adYanc:e& e PllDGE 8NAK
Regularly tcheduled prc>-
gremmlng may be delayed
d1141 to c>le<SO-b• .. k•
1:06 '1!) THE PAPER CHASE ··once Mora With Feeling"
A law proteuor (Rot>e<t
Reed) g111es a lop lludanl
a tow eum 10ore alter she
relu-hi• advanoes.
8:30 8 Q]J 90SOM 8UOOIES
Kip and Henry. ditgu1Nd
as Bully and Hildegarde,
Me something 11peet11ng
while working at a hoapltal
as candy 1111pers
t:OO 8 CJ) PEoPLE'S
~AWAROS
Fevorite parlormere In
tel1V1si0n. motoon p1C111res
end m11s1c w1\I be named
on the seYenth annuat ed1o
tioo of thele awards. to be
1etecas1 hve l•om Holl)·
wood
CiJ MOVIE
00.1th Ray 2000 \ 1979)
Robert Logan. Maggoe
Cooper A government
agent II Ullgned IO stop a
• vollaon wnose latest plans
thruten tne world
fJ @l BARNEY MILLER
An Aor Force veteran
blames hos criminal car-
on hos e•PQSute to Agent
Orange (R)
Eli) SNEAK PREVIEWS
Roger Ebert and Gene
S1Sllel reveat their ·•guilty
pleasures· •. mov1e1 that
they"ra embarrasMld to
admit tney love m MOVIE * • *'"' .. l\.tonty PylhOn
And The Ho4y Graor· ( 197•)
Grenetn Chapman. John
Cl-King Arthur and
h la bend ot knighll
encounter giants. rlddlws
end • t.,oclo4 rabbit in
their March tOf the legend·
atycup. t:S09 IHANANA
0 .... 1. Bobby Rydell
-
Orangu Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 5, 1981 *
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ e 7:30 -Col leae BuketbatJ.
USC takes on the Washington Huskies.
KTrV e 8:00 -"Churchill and the
Generals." Eric Sevareld hosts thls hla·
torlcal special focwsing on crucial de·
velopmenta in Britain df.uinl World War
11 (see story below>.
CBS 8 9:00 -People's Choice
Awards. Winners of a n 21tionwide poll for
favorites in movies', TV and mwslc are
honored in this two-hour special.
8 9 TAXI
Jim bl(:ornea a wllir1wlnd
moneymak• atld the der·
ling of Louie when he turns
hit cab driving Into an
o~ G FACE THE MUllC fD THIS OU> HOUSE
The south root o-t• an lee
INeld, the '"""'11 room gets
a layer of ..,...gy· .. ving
pOlystyrana boerd and Ille
~ounds~t ••-lilt
10-:00 • G m NEW8 l o 20120
MA&TfAPIECE
THEATRE
'Danger UXB"" 8roan and
the sq11ed have to d9&1
with a mine that no4d• a
London nelghbOrhOoc:I In
Ill gnp 1P111 II)
10:'° Cl) INDEPENDENT
HITWOAK NEWS
11:00&DfJat(J)O
HIW8 8 STARTREK
leaders of the planet Gld·
eon <eluM 10 altow anyone
but t<irk to beam down to
the" planet '1J NEWLYWED GAME
II) BARETT A
"Open Season··
Eli) DICK CAVETT
· Orngs Add1c11on And
Recovery.. GuHll Or
Mark S Gold, John Pnof.
lips. Mac1<en11e Phillips
(Part 2 ot 2)
11:30 8 Cl) THE JEFF£RSOHS
Jenny has pre·ma111a1
11tters and question• ner
leellngs tor Loorwit (AJ
CiJ TONIGHT
Host Johnny Carson
GlllSts Natassia Konsk•.
Cttartes Nelson Reilly
8 9 A8CNEW8
N9GHT'UNI
• GUNIMOK.E
When a yOYng outlaw
~ the victim of hi•
own gang. he dedd4ll to
help Mell bflng th9m In
at M•A08°H
The 4077111 becomee an
Impromptu orphan~•
wt.... hee.-y lhelllng t«cea
Korean children to Mele
INllllt el the camp. &> CAPT10HID A8C
Nf:W8 ·-MIJlllGHT-
12 :00 IJ CJ) MCMILLAH & WR
Sally 11 kldnapp.d and
held In exctoange lor a
prlcere .. Rembrandt. 8 MOVIE
• • ""MadlllOn Avenue"
( 1962) Dana Andrews.
Eleanor Parke< An uni•·
pectad turn of events
reveals that a hlghty
1Mpeeted pybhc tlg11re
poaes 1 deadly threat to
the nation.
8 ®J CHARLIE'S
ANGELS
The Angels learn that a
wedding on wtuch Kelly ls
to be the maid of honor os
actually a camoullage •or a
murder (R)
at MISSION:
IMP08&8LE
Jom Phelps poses as a gov·
11rnmen1 ln11est1gato1 to
prove thll a Cflme syndo-
cate l>o55 killed nos gott-
rroend
ti) ONE STEP BEYOND
The Conress1on An
JOHN DARLING
""~~"'* thll • man doomed 10 dlt
II w.oc.nt Of IN otlme lie
ltlOdletof.
12:IO 8 TOMOMOW
Qwet1· lututltl AN1n fOf.
liet. eulhOf HMold Rao.
bin• D OOHW. Ouetta. ~ Olllet. I(.,
In At'*'· Ak.tly Mey. ~
Ille !klrnt
• OHi 8TP llYOND
"'Slot* Aec*Yed" Tivee
youno Miiot• ~ • ~
rnonttlon that """' 1111p wi. be IUflll.
1:CIO e YOU-''*°""~
811ddy Hac:tc•n IMllll a
~twbed queen, • 11Ubur·
t>M cowboy end• ~pa
Ol•V-·
• M>INNOIHT
.-:TWONC NlWI
1:108 MOW! • * • "8rollen Lance·
C 18541 Spene., Tracy,
Rlehard Widmark Con·
lllCtl «UPI In the lamily ol
• Te•a• cattle baron.
WMk90ing 1111 ~ 0 CAAOl IUANITT
AHOFRIEHOI
Gue1t1 Joan Rivers. Von·
cant Price
1:ac> Cl THE LOHE AANGEA
··Sta Gun Art11r· m wow * • • ··Five Carne Beck ..
(1939) Chatter MOrflS,
Jonn Cattadlne Cou•aoe
and cowardl<:e are dlS-
played by n paaaenoer•
who survive an airplane
crell\ on the Amazon iun·
gte
41) MOVIE
1l *'h .. D 0 A " j1949)
Edmond O"Brlan. Pamela
Britton. When a man real·
1zes that he has oaen given
e dose ol 11me-reteased
pottOO. he sets OYI to
locate hlS killer oerore his
Ille ends.
1:45 11 NEWS
1:658 NEWS
2:00 Q NEWS 8 MOVIE * * '" ·01 Love And
Desire.. ( 19631 Mute
Oberon. Stave Cochran A
wealthy wOl'nan 11tempts
to i.ave he• soraod past
t>enind by marrying the
man she loves
2:15 fJ EDITORIAL
2:20 I) MOVIE • * * .. The log Ot The
Bleck Pearl .. ( 1975) Ralph
Bellamy. Koet Marton A
1\GC*tltOUr .... out to
,__ a IUMan trMIUH
,,,.., .. ~ Ofandtather j
toe11 IW'rl...,. to flM It. l::IOI .... 1:00 "°"" * ,_. ··Qitt In The WOOda"
11161) 'omit Tudl•, hr· ton MMIUM Wood""8fl
IMd ~-.._-'*" effect IN won-WllO I0"8
''*"· .M0\111
• • ...... , Of The DMcr'
( 1t10) John Atl'lley.
~ Ylml!H, A Mad
doctor •bdUclt• • young
•eporter In Otder to expen. "*" on ,_ body Mt, .....
4:00 ~ * •~ '"L*ly In Diltr-··
I 1~2) Paul Luka&. Salty
Gray A meglclan pulta the
right string. and a IUQP06-
edly 1111• muro.. ~
real
4:30• N1W1
1
1
Frida11'•
Dayt l•e ,,.o.,le•
~MORllNG~
' 11:00 aJ • "Oeeert Trail" ( 11135)
JOl\n Wayne. Maty Korn-
man A rodlo eter Nit out
to trip • gang or bank
robbers.
-AFTEiNOON-
12:00 ID * * •,, .. In Name Only"
( 1939) Carote Lombard.
Cary Grat1t A Millth Wlfe
whoM only concern tor hat
husband Is Iha atatut and
wealth hi• name 1>r1ng1
steunctlly rel11MS hom •
divorce that would enable
him to m111y the girt he
reaNyloYM
(I) * • * ··t II See You In
My Dreams .. (1952) Doris
Day. Danny Thomas
Songwnter Gus Kahn
overcomes ye.ars ol !allure
belore finally acnie111ng
WCc;MS
3:00 ®) * •,. Runaway·· ( 19731
Ben M11rphey, Ben JOl\n-
son PaSMnQefl returning
trOl'n a sluing Weekend di ..
cover that the train carry.
ono them down a snowy
mountain 1s • braketess
runaway
3;30 0 1" *'~ .. Tiie Deep Sox
( 19581 Alan Ladd. W1lll•m
Bendix
by Armstrong & Batiuk
Churchill's 'finest hour' recalled for TV
Right stuff
Erin Gray shares her discovey of the crystal
fuel needed to power the starship with Buck
Rogers (Gil Gerard, right) and Hawk <Thom
Christopher) on "Buck Rogers" tonight at 8
on NBC, Channel 4.
'Shadow' jading
from CBS lineup
By PETER J . BOYER
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Alas, even CBS' near-
heroic efforts have failed to save "The White
Shadow.'' The senaitive, thoughtful series about a
white basketball coach coping at an inner city school
haan 't responded to an emereency schedule change,
and wiU very probably leave the alrthisspring.
The show, which stars Ken Howard, was one
of those that survived on a telatively small but
dedicated audience, much in the mann,r of "Paper
Chase." To CBS' credit, tbe network gave both abowa
more than a fair chance to catch on, but neither quite
made it.
"WBITE SllADOW" bun't yet been officially
canceled -CBS won't anoounce ill 1•1-t12 fall
acbedule tmtll later this 1prtn1. But .the aeries baa
been ftnbhinl near the bottom of the rattnaa all
teaaoa. and it didn't improve even alter CBS moved it to Konday night, Yt'hlcb is one of CBS'
•t.ron•est evenin11.
• "I tblnk we've 1ooe down for the tblrd Ume,"
.. id Grant 11nker, PN1ideat ol Mary TyJer Moore
J>roductlODI, wblcb makes "Wbite Sbadow."
"We',. Just dolftl our 5'tb epilOde. I think it
ma1 be our lut."
By JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Timothy West is
artistic director of London's Old Vic Theater, but
he takes time out occasionally for a memorable
portrayal of his own. '
Among his many roles was the magistrate in
public TV's "Crime and Punishment" and Edward
Vil in the Mobil Showcase Network presentation of
"Edward the King.'' Tonight he port.rays Britain's
wartime prime minister in "Churchill and the
Generals," on the Mobil network.
"l suppose l have played quite a few members
of the ruling class," said West, the son of an actor.
He attended 13 different schools as his father ,
Lockwood West, performed from one end of the
British Isles to tbe other.
"BUT I DIDN'T select the roles detiberateb.
It's just the way it happened. You play one his·
toricaUy real person and they thinlt you can play a
lot of them."
He grinned and added , "As long as they smQke
cigars I can play them. The last three major roles
I've had were heavy cigar-smokers -Churchill.
Edward and Sir Thomas Beecham. lf I wasn't
already a cigar smoker, I'd be one by now."
Churchill has plenty to puff about in the
three·hour drama, to be broadcast tonight at 8 on
KTTV, Channel 11. His relationship with the
British military is stormy at best. He once
thre atened, "1 shall have firing parties lo shoot the
generals."
CRURCIULL ALTERNATELY bullied and ca·
joled the American and British military leaders of
World War II. When he set up his own planning
staff, one general complained, "His strategic
sense seems to have got stuck about 1899."
Eric Sevareid, who covered the war as a CBS
News correspondent. narrates the drama, which u
basedonChurchill's memoirs.
It also stars Arthur Hill as President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, Joseph Cotton as Gen. George C.
Marshall, Richard Dysart as Gen. Dwight
FANTASIA
1:154:30-1:41
1:00-10:11
TIU sa ILGWll
WEEKDAYS
tOAM
WE~KENOS
9 AM & I PM
u1vifta Frc>m Ch~ .......
Adults S8. ChHchetl SS.
,,, ... 67J·Jl4$
Eisenhower, Eric Porter as Gen. Alan Brooks, Ian
Richardson as Geo. Bernar'd Montgomery, Alex·
ander Knox as Secretary ol War Henry Stimson
and Patrick Magee as Gen. Sir Archibald WaveJJ.
On a recent visit to thin country, West said,
"Churchill's been played so many times there's no
point in looking to see what anyone else did.
You're not playing the man but the particular
author's interpretation of him. It's better to look at
the film of Churchill himself and study the voice.
"(played him as a mixture or manx things. Jn
this we see Churchill onl y as the statesman and
war strategist. We don't see him with his family.
We don't see the domestic Churchill.
"You see him being very tough sometimes,
very childish sometimes, very pe rsuasive
sometimes. And you see him being very despair·
ing. It was my job to try to find what it was that
motivated his decisions -some of which were
m arvelous and some disastrous."
West runs the Old Vic, which bas had an ac-
tors' company off and on for 150 years. The N.,
tional Theater was housed there until four yeal'\
ago. He selects the plays. directs some and acts ir(
some .
His grandfather also was an actor, and bis
14-year-old son makes the fourth generation to don
greasepaint. His son, Samuel, played a young
prince in "Edward the King." His wife is actress
Prunella Scales, and her parents are actors.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~e u~~ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Crack into a plate of hot, steaming crab legs. Or pop a generous
serving of delicious Popcom1' shrimp. And then do it again ~
lc's alLyou can eat. Every day of the week.
Each special is served with your choice of a crisp tossed salad or cole
slaw, baked potato or rice pilt1f, and another favorite. sourdough bread.
, All~ can eat. All week long.
Alaskan Snow Crab Legs
All you can eat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.95
Popcorn• Shrimp
All you can eat .. . .. $6.95
. \
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/TllUraday, March Ei, 1981 MOVIE REVIE W
'American Pop' animoted musical panorama ··= ...... ,.. n. ...... 0 ..
E
Ralpb Bakahl, who hu become the
adin1 Innovator in American otlon picture animation, baa
temp&ec1 an especially ambWoul roject in "American Pop."
The future-lenltb a"lrnated work ~aces tbe development of pop music
nd pop culture ln this country
rin1 the aoth ceatw-y. While the
dramaUc line ll focus.a oa tbe fact
that eacb of the four major
ce-araeten bM a buie love ol mule
and 11 involved la tbe popular
entertalmnent fonn1 of bla era -
hoaa tbe bawdy eatertailunent ol the
burlesque bou1e1 on throu1b the
drlvlq rock of such artJ1ta aa Bob Seier.
1tor7 line alto parallel the cbaniJnc
entertainment 1t7lea. AddJUoeall7,
tbe rum chronlcl• tbe turbUleat ud
violent social CODCUUooa O\lt ol wblcb
the music arew, from World War Jon
tbroutJt the druC culture ol modmi Ume1.
8.,..,,.,..
David Manball
Grant stars in
the tiUe role of
"The Survivor,"
a new Broadway
drama about Nazi terror in
the Warsaw
ghetto. 1lm ls not alw,aya entirely
uccesaful, lt Is one of the most
dventuresome and exciting works to traces four generations of a RUKl1.n
me out of Hollywood in a long Jewish lmmi1rant family, a1alnt:1t
"me: • which the panorama of the chanlin I
Alto1etber, Babbl incorporates
more than 50 pop cla11lc1, wbicb
have been expertly arran1ed and
adapted by Lee Holdrid1e, who abo
provided ori1lnal music. The
characters are a clever compilation
of actual entertainers from the
various periods, and the diaJoiue and
Overall, the film repreaenta aa
lmpreaalve, 1lthoucb occuioaally
flawed, artistic achievement. It works on many different leve!J, in ill
view ol the development ol popular
American music and entertahiment,
with the various Interpretative
depths layered in such a way that It should appeal to a broad audl•nce for Scripted by RoMi Kern, the story ~merican culture ls p1inted. The Al' •1,.....,
..... ~~~~~-..--..--..--..--..--..--..--..--..--..--..-~ -..-~~~~~~-..--..--..--..--..--..--..-~~-..--..--..-~-..--..--..-~~-..-~-..--..--..--..-~-..--..--..-.,....-~~==:.=_-..--..-~~~~~~~
dlfterent reasons.
8 PC.ADEMY
AlNARD
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"AL TEAED STATES" (A) .......... ~,...
"THE OAIEAT SANTINI" (PO) .,....... ., .... ,, .. 4::11. ..
"RAGING BULL" (A)
..,~ .. , ..... .,. .,.., ...
()
All Sele hem• are Sull>Jec1 to
Stoclt on HIM All
Photogr•Phle. Typogr aphlcal,
Cl•ical and Prlnll~ 6 rrors M••
Subject to Conwc:tion D
SAU PRICES
GOOD THRU
MARCH 11 , ltUl D I \
LIMITED
TO
STOCK
ON
HAND!
spred
the satin
Famous late1e flat wall
paint from Glidden, Dries
to beaullful flat finish that
scrubs clean, s tays
colorfast. Water clean-up.
899
t•llon
perfect
timing
Get the accuracy of a
quartz timepiec e.
Weather resistant clock
aultabl• for Indoor or
outdoor uae, Uses slngle
AA battery. Reg, 19.98.
1111
the garbage
gobbler
Badger I dl1po1al by ln-
alnk-erator really h•ndlea
tough Jobi, Olvea quiet,
dependable. powerful
action. Reg. 39,95.
2995
BAR~BE-QUE CLEARANCE SALE!
it's a natural
Natural gas, that is, Sturdy cast
aluminum construction barbecue
with e1etra high hood Features
nickel plated grill, gas flow control
#1000 Reg 159 95
glowing with charm
ggaa
Prooane oas barbecue heavv duty 14 9 9 5 construction. E1etra-strong wheel
assembly and handle Propane tank
included #1030 Reg 189 95
BBQ brilliance
Dual burner propane barbecue with 15 9 8 8 stainless steel cooking grates over 2
feet wl.je and 1 loot deep With tank
#3250X. Reg 239 95,
propelled with propane
Propane burning barbecue features
high-domed lid, Super strong wheel
assembly and handle #2730X
Reg 249.95 15995
... .......
be glad
you got
gli~den
Kid-tested Glldden Spred
Late!C semi-gloss enamel
gives a super-tough, non-
yellowtng finish
11;a.t
flick
a blc
Be sure you're never
without a llghtl Disposable
Blc butane lighters give
quick, sure lights.
Reg, 69'.
111 n1111r pita ..... dustbuster
to stay In
hot water
30-gallon water heater
wllh energ y-saving
design, High temperature
shut-off. glass lined tank.
Reg. 119.95
·10995
4G-flll., ........... 119.95
so ... 1.. .. ........ 159.95
breeze away
the hot spells
Put a 3-speed 20" bo1e fan
In your window to cool
your home when the
temperature climbs. With
safety features,
2211 .
High.quality hlgl'l-durabtllty paint
edger IO make all painting Chor• go
amootl'lly. lt'a th• profeulonata'
Mer9tl Aag. Ut
Recl'largeeble cordt.N v11euum
h1ndte1 big and am•ll Jobs In •
snap. Let the b•tterl" do tti. work. Reg. 32.95.
.,
, I
Or•• Coa1t DAJL y PILOT/'l'hurwday, March 5, 1981
• I •
The marketplace
on the orange coast . 642-5678
......... Per,. "'''",... s. ....... ,.,. s. Ho.set,.,. s. ,.,. 599 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
IOOZ .. ~.. 1002 •••r• 1082 ..,...... 1002 G........ tOOJ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
lMl600DUN
WILSON PAii CllBJMHIUMS UMY.Pill
Townbome llvlna at It•
me»t prestJ1loua. You'll
tQjoy cosy flre1 In the ,
EQUAL HOUSING !'J~~pl:::~c::: CllCK 'COMPARE TllSE FEATURES
OPPORT UNITY , or minor redecoraUn1 ~~~:er.-!f~e a;r1c:e: 90% RNAtCltl 1234% INTER. P•I e.r1
1 Motlc.: $140.000 ll lhe belt In the ~-;-;-:==-:--:-:::-:.-::--:-=-:-==-....-----~ A II real. eat ate ad· area. For information on I HARBOR AREA LOCATION
v er t I ae d l n t h I s t h l s S E L E C T I SIZE-1~ SQ. FT. ./ MICRO OVEN
newspt1per ia 1ubject to p RO p E RT y c a 11 t ALL SHOPPl~G ~ BLOCK ./COMPACTOR •
the P'ederal Fair Hous-751·3191 ./AIR CONDITJ()NING ./DISHWASHER
In& Act ol 1188 which ./CEMENT DRIVES ./DBL GARAGE
makes it Illegal to ad· • SELECT. t WALK IN CLOSETS W /OPENER
vertise "any preference,
limitation , or dis· PROPERT IES WARD INVESTMBIT INC.
crlmination based on -------...----1
race. color, religion.i-•_1111111 ....... ,_ll!!llll•+--!!!ll!!l~....,.•5•
sex, or national origin, -• • ,_,...
or an intentiOn to make MO LOAM PllSt SALIS OMCI 171416Jl .... I
JIO W. WIMa St. ~HOO
C....Mete.c.lf. any sucb preference, Owneraaya he will carry
limitation , or d is· rinanclng on this
crimination." beautiful 3 BR/2~ BA~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ executive townbome in -This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate which Is in viola·
lion otthf law.
BACK BAY AREA with
J1oo i----------i
ONLY 10% pOWN .
Sunken living room
creates cozy at ·
mospbere for family or
entertaining. Must see to
ap~iatethis beauty. ~
J.300 )400
l42:o 3i<lO 3.12)
l.IM 3800 J'IOO .. ,
il!IOO ~ ~ llUO II~ •:m WU
4'lru
' HIC>aS: Act.ertfHn
shol!WcMckthelrach
daly .... Nport .,...
ron lsouwclatet,. TIM
DAILY PILOT .. ._.,
Habllty for tt.. fln t
h1correct h•sertloa
Ollly.
$1M,OOOFULL PRICE
(1)
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631 ·6990
CAREER OPPORTUNITY -J oh• a
1.1.lll r.'!'--~~~----..-~~lllllllll-.... -... ~ ~ HHNS ffw Sale OfllN s.t/S-1-4
r.OCJl"HM•e ..ct .... c real " .... fir-.
xcelletlt cOllllftlHlott schecWe. Attroctin
offlcet .ct loh of ptoh11I__, _.t.u
crYaMcllaM. Cati Joa. or Vodf at '75-5511. '
~ • • • • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2044 0c .. l lYd
441.l(j GeMnll I 00 2 Bdrm. 1 bath cottage
•••••••••••••••••••••• Beam celling, frplc. 3
car parking. Priced at
COLI OF NIWPOIT llALTOIS 251 5 E. Cont Hwy., eoro.. .. Mar
675-5511
:t::::;~~ :~:::::::~: ~1='.!i \
Whelan Real Estate is
now olfering 90'* com·
mission lo licensed
agents
$295,000. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Monty lo Lo• n
Mon.t)' \l •ntf'd• llO<tu l!ft Tn , •No desk fees
*No phone fees
•No advertising fees
associated
BRO >< ERS IH Al TOPS
l Q]C 't/ltJ 8 0...•~~d "°'' 1•t.[ ANNOUNCEMENTS,
PERSONALS &
LOST & FOUND
Announ(tnwnb
Car Poo4 IA>ul Notit"'
Looi " ~·o.ind PtrM>n•la• Sor1aJ Clut>.• Tn~tl•
We belong to five multi· Whe~ you need expert
:.1011 pie boards. Call for an service or repairs, tum
mo appointment. Ask for to the Service Directory ~ John. 540-3666 in Classified to solve ~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I your problem. S4!1(1 1 •
SERVICES
Sen tt.'t Uirtt I or)
EMPLOYMENT &
PREPARATION ~hoot~ Jn~truction Job w • .-.. ,,.
H•l1> ~ H>lf<I \I .. t•
MERCHANDISE
AnllqUH
Appl•Mtt< AuirtKWt
t!ld.'r:; ~ht.n .. 1 .. c .rn.r&J. ~ ._ .. u1prtwol
tah
lloc• t'tff IO y°" t-unvlur• L•r•l:f'~I .. Hon.-. ~·JOOd' J•••ll')
Li•tMOC'k
M•c-fiuMf')
\11"-<'f'll•-"""N'
)h.w:-ell•twuu' '4 .n1r<1
"""t•I '"'''"""""'"' OHK't' F\lrn" t:quop p~,
Pl•no. • Of 1.IU\_ ..
Sr•tNI Marh1M"' ._-i,llC Good• Stort R~l•tJr•n1 Der ~~T.c1t0 "'" '-~t'ft'(J BOATS & MARINE
EQUIPMENT
li'nt"f•I &ab M~un\ ~nlt't> &au. Mat1nt l.•4u1p
8oJillo Po-tr ltotib Rf'nt l hiHtf'r llwu !l.11
Boat• Slop. IJo<"k• ==~~ ;t;e:s.: ~·
TIANSPORTA TION
AH<'ran ~~=~'c':': Kt'n•
Wobol• llom.-MCllOf Cydn. S.--en•
Mot.of' Hm' ~It> Hrnl Tratlf'O Tra~•I Tr··~· l Uhl) Auto.Yt\t('f' Parb
AUTOMOBILE
1.n. lul.,
1H•i
t;~nu•I !J.)IV
Ao~vh l 'l•uu' ~ Httr••~ \ .. nu_ It>• ~ ~xh R•tir R1.111h ~
.I Whttl lJn, ID ~ r ..... ~ '°"" v..,.. 11)1U
Autu l,.c-.,1na.. ~
Aui. Wenl.-d ~
AUTOS, IMPORTED
li-f'Mr•I Alf• Mu.wo
Audi
A~lln lft'•lt')
ll>IW
l..ii>f• ~ o.uun frrr•rt t'••l
ltllfld• Jai.tui.f J•n.f'n K•rmann •~h ... ~·"' ,...,d-.
>4t'ru•ft1t"" U.n1 .111;
MGll
!)pol Pttn-.1.-t'•ua:t'Ut Pone~
llft<lult
Rolls Kotu RI)\ er &.ooO ... Su!>otu = .... VOluwtaoo Voho
AITOS, NEW
~·· AUTOS, US£0
u-.1 "°' AMC _.
lkllck •it CMllll•• WIS
C.IUIO •ll
0-.Nlft -=..,· = c...i-..ut -c.r. ril• 1121 g::.u -,..:r ·.. : ... : ...... = llll~MM llM:I ._.,,. .. . . . ..... .... -.venttt • .•• ••. .. .n .......... ,... ..... .. =ei ... ·.:····:·:··:· ·= PlllU • .. .••.. M1 ~ ............. ·=
,,...., .. , •. '.~ ... :.::. .tf10 v... Otl I• o•••I••• • -· ............
.iAlUe MlM Muff et Ht on a
Tuffet, a Ions came , a
1):16der and rtad lo the
Dally Piiot Clanlfled
Md.Ion 1bout Mla1 Muf.
fet'1 Nftt and bouiht lt
for ••· You un 1tll
)'OUI' tufftt and )ota of
other tllln11 throu1h
Dally Pilot Cla111fled
Adi. c.u 141-Sl'78
LOVELY LINDA ISLE-LARGE
ProlK194.by ,... ... ,.,. Oii Mll9r .....
roo. for 3 booh. A ··111owc .. ·• a.
n ery w.,. Large ......., ..._ + 4, ........ ... """ .... ._,, ,.. .....
~sioftal shp-doww INr, clp P"' &
spa, SI .396,000. 631-1400.
TRADITIONAL & BEAUTIFUL
Emlen ~ •... qaalty • •gho.t.
Spoc'°'5 2-story 3 Mel ....... ....,,
fatnily & dWncJ rOOM. A VU
A VU from su,,.r floor. Mo• .. ilt ftOW.
$380,000.
AXER-GREAT LOCATION-VU
Alntost lmtd .... P111i11:1• PoW .....
across frOfll bay -blod& frOftl oce..
light acrou froffl M•wport Hart>or
Yacht Club. $335,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAl ESTATE
'-Ml+-' H .. ru..tl .. Pttl'p9'fl~ ~.tn.t....,,,,.,"'
2"436 W Coast Hwy
Newpor1 Beach
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES
CYPRUS SHORES OCEAMFROMT
Make an appointment to see this
magnifi ce nt estate in San
Clemente . Private gated
community. Two stories looking
thru cypress & palms to some of tJle
worlds best surf. 6 BR's. 7 BA 's.
Family rm. Library. Exercise
room. $2,275,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
'=~=' SCC 1lc4l~-4t.~s·
-----...... ~ CU'r I.~
·~": .. bl:7'-~. ~
low to for,.. ._ ....,_ -·
I D E N R U E
I· YA & ER
I I I I
I· II 0 G G I
I I' I I
I
is now in Costa Mesa of·
fering re1idential pro· pertywilh:
No Negative Cash Flow
No Tenant Problems
Capital Gains Only
high Returns <not 2nd Trust Deeds >
:-: . . .
'... . ··.
"°' urATE rxci~ I/NCI,,.,
IAYCIEST
0,.. Wed & Fri I ·5
203' SWpway L ...
Juat listed fascinating
t hree bedroom, t hree
bath home. Soaring
CaJJ for Information beamed ceillnl in living •RED,..A~·. room. Oak plank noor· ~~• Ing. Atrium type 754-1202 · brutfast room. Im·
'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I. mense covered palto.
21DRM
Large secluded back
yanl.$DO,OOO. 631-7300 M.I .
rucncALL Y NH I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
$S8,900. If you have little
cash and are looting for
a golden opportunity to
own your own home,
don't wait, th ls is It! This
lovely condominium is a
2 Bdrm. very clean and
neat, and located in a
quiet area. Approx·
imately $2,950 down and
owner will carry 2nd
with small payments.
Call now for all the de·
tails. 752-1700
THE REAL ESTATE RS
SIR ESTATE
$145,000
lmposlible to match.
U n believable ... S
Bdrm ... super sharp
... pluab carpets ... cozy
st.one fireplace ... RV ac·
cess ... and take over ex-
isting ~% loan. Priced
to sell fast.. .owner will
help fin a nce! Ca II
96U767
THE REAL ESTATERS
-ll G CAHYOM OMLY
$4J5,000. Dr a1aatlc Htryway
.... ~ ..... lo¥ety ... 3 .... 21/J
bat~a-.tt.p u .... &fonlall
61 na. Walt of cjlcw lead to bridl patios. Priced ..... .._ -9t
w /exc.._. *"'-«:lstg..
-lllHG YOUI PAIMT-SAVI
YOUI SSS. Tltlt spaclom -..V ................... w.,W.
Loc•d Ill choke Corw .. Mw ==· 4~ 3 ":: =~ !I: ... ....... ,..s ........ =:::J & look •t tt.. oc••· atS39S,OOO. .
Now·s THE TIME
TO BUY!
Interest rates are high on new Joans
but why get a new loan when many
sellers today will finance the sale
themselves at a reasonable rate of
interest. We have a dozen listings of
quality properties in the Harbor area
that feature owner financing. So save
on loan fees and high interest rates.
Buy now. Call us for more information
on how to save money on buying a
home.
TRADITIONAL
REALTY
HOMES & INVESTMENTS
631 -7370
TREASURE OM SPYGUSS HILL
Tastefully done with ocean and bay
views . Portsmouth model looks.
smashin g! And has assumable
financing! A r eal value at just
$535,000.
U~l()U~ ti()M~'
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Eut CoHt Hl9h1Hy, Corona del Mar
WE HA VE t3 OF THE BEST LlSTINGS IN TOWN
u. ...... ,.,...
Owner arudoua, he sez
aeU and be will carry an
A.l.T.D. with only 15~
down. 3 luxurloua units
In exceHent location.
With t hese terms it
won't last! Call now for $Setalll. SM-2JlMIO.
C SEL ECT
T'PROPERTIES
CdM ·con AGE
$175,000
2 Bdrm' charmer! Wood
burning fireplace. step-
saver kitchen. High as·
sumable Isl TD. Owner
will help fianance.
87~
THE REAL
ESTATERS
\\ i ', J I ·, '\
TAYLOR CO
I\ I 1\ 1 ' 1 ( 11: ~ . ' ! 'I I I~ I i I
llG CAHYOH
A FAIULOUS "VHSAH 'ff" $121,000
Deane Homes largest & most
spectacular model & situated on the
larj!est lot of Deane Homes. A j!JOriQUS view looking thru a lovely Y.ard (wtth
tall trees) to the Big Canyon golf course. Huge patio surrounds the -lge
pool & spa + the sweetest gazebo ever {even has a lovely chandelier). Gated
entry to the front courtyd with
fountain. Marble floor in foyer with
glittering crystal chandelier. 4 BR,
den & form DR .
WISLEY M. TAYLOR co .. UAL TOI S I
2 I I I S• Joocpm .... load
NEWPORT CENTER. H.I. 644-49 I 0
SPYGLASS
Popular Ports mouth model plus -1
more.bdrm with full bath. Incredible
180 deg. view of ocean. harbor, city
lights. Upgraded. $650,000.
Agent, Bonnie Barrington
675-6000 644-0452
COSTA MESA MAMA'S
GONE TO
CHICAGO
. ..
;·
. ·-
.·
•, Channing 4 Bdrm. 3 ba
home with family room.
Corne r lot VERY
priyate yards Im·
macwate and ready to
move in. S17t,SOO
This 3 Bdrm charmer
was once a mOdel home
Located on a huge cul·
de·sac lot and filled with
extras. FINI S HED
garage. CI06e to schools.
Offered at Sl44.SOO.
IRVINE
Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba single family home with
very PRIVATE yard.
Xlnt k>caUon . close to
schools. shopping and
freeway. Sl6'1.500 a nd
owner will carry 2nd
Giant 4 Bdrm beauty,
located near Orange
CoWlty's most popular
s hopping center. This ·
lovely home is located
on a quiet cul de sac. The f
home is a former model '{
and shows like one.~
Huge rooms thruout. big ;
living room, ankle dee•;
plush pile carpets. Spa~ ,
age kitchen, big bdrms. ; park-like grounds witb
entertainers delight 1 back yard. Decorative
rocks. rolling hills and a "":
solar healed pool. This'~
unique home is pric
way b~low market.
Seller must sell. Take
advantage, call now! 1
752-1700
*'Cote Realty
& Investment
640·5777
THE REAL ESTATERS
Looking for a home of
your own? You'll find ··--------•! many homes adve~ised Trade your otd stuff for CdMDUPl.D j
for 1ale In Class1rled new goodies with a
every day. Classified ad. 6'2·5678
CIE
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
HEW LISTING
Tntm.lly Decorot.d "9 " "-With
Coay Co•••rsatlOR Pit & Spocio••
U¥iac)'DIMMJ IOOM An& I .. Locllflolt
Witll l.-ge i.doMcl Patio 0. •HlllHN .,.._, ,ool & T.-s C.._ Perfect HOMe
For ......... I)! $239,900.
@ ·---·········
NEWPORT ANE LOCATION
W• to Watclff '9cna froM tltls act.It
2 ..... 2 IMlttl cCMMto. ,oal & prf¥acy.
OwMt-......... tt..c ... $4 24,500.
WATERFRONT HOMES. INC
REAL ESTATE
~._,, R .. n14t1, f"rt}fWrt\ M.tfk9 mt-n1
315 Manne Ave
Balboa Island
IACK IA Y VIEW
IB.OWMAIKIT
This beautiful view pro-
pert y in Newport Is
prl~ed below market
value and belo w ap·
praisal. Space age
kitchen with breakfast area. Huge living room.
lanai with view .
rtreplace and open
beamed cathedral cell·
ings. Hide.a-way master
suite, separate childrens
wing. Dash to the pool.
Call today for details.
Owner highly motivated
and will work with very
creative financing. Call
752-1700
THE REAL ESTATE RS
OPPOITUMITY
knocks ofien when you use result-getting Dally
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Oranae Coast
marltet.
Phone 6'2-5678
IBMICED SI0,000
South ol PCH duplex ill 4
Corona del Mar. 2 yean""C
new. 4 Bdrms with ...
master hide-away Cin· .
eluding nreplace, spa1
owners unit. PLUS,, f
Bdrm. 2 bath unit.
Oversized garage for
autos and toys + + + very high a ssumable
loan and creative owner
ready to bargain. Call
NOW for appointment
SEA COVE PROP ERTIES
71 4-631-6990
MOW IS THE TIME l
for job seekers to check
the Daily Pilot Help
Wanted classification. If
the job you want is not
there you might consider
ofrerine your services
with an ad in the J v1i '
Wanted category. P hone
6'2-5678 .
-~~~~---~1
Cla.s.sified Ads, your one-0
1topshopping center. I
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
l
' O~ Cout DAILY PILOT{fburaday, March 5, 1981
It a"lloW'Sllf . ,_.,. H1un,_.S-. H1•M ..... S. H11t•tNS. H111tt'*'S. H111nlwS. .._...,_.. . -......:.._ ....... .............................................. ....................... ..............•......•. ....................... .............•........ ..•....•............... ....................... ..........
••-• t002 t•2 c.,.. .. ..._ llJJ D-r.llt 102 '"'-1044hpz ...... .IOI Wa' ' Pw lttlWall r "" 1091 ... -............... . ············-········ .. ·-·· .. ··-········ ............ •••••••• ....................... ...................... • ••••••••••••••••• ,... • ...................... w ..... Detttf, ~~-----mllil!lllliim-----·~~ll!l!llmlll .... llil-1'4NO DOWHI r1111 or PANP&RED PATIO & W I ' ., ' -' ...... 2400 OflM DAIL' I .. I .._ ' a ..... I HOiia: ~w In hllla -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ POINT llACt .. ONY
Panoramic view at wedge, from
prime lar1e lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom '
home. 3700 sq . rt. featuring marine
1 room, entry, living room. dlnine
room. buil~·ins, etc. Sl,385.000.
. UDO ISU
Newly remodeled tradltiooal style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large
recreation room & 2 patios. Living
room has attractive beam eeiUng1,
fireplace & french doors leading Ohto
bric k patio. New kitchen bit-in
a ooliances, Close to tennis cQ11rt.~.
sandy beaches & c lubhouse. '$420,000
IAYFttOMT
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip, starting at $1,500,000
RAHCHO MIRAGE
Springs Condo. 9th fairway. 3000 sq .ft.
3 Bdrm . 3 bath. furn . Golf c lb.
mbrshp. Will trade for inwest. prop.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Joli Roy,,cf,. Q,,,,, N R 67'> biol
l1llUMl:1111'8. ba.• ........... o/Mcuei. l!llijoycowitry CH Taboe C1t7. C.traetor'1
HAUOR"VJP lllLLI Pi•m y 1114 Nlceb .,....._. p)u n 1 .. 11q /.111&. ~ lh• _Alt. lualily bom• • Br. 2~ sb~•<>pees8drl~ ....................... Nortllwood Park d•· =:-:·~In •. a OWNM llLIXal T:Y ~~ "";0: ~ 'C:1
OID• oo corn.er w ta narul'U CHAJW t.tdiad a.o.ne wttl air &.e.;..v;;. propert,. uu.ooo. t*"t1°' fOOll' fOf' ':-nll.Rllll ::!!9· ~,~~:.:a 491.17 I l.L Owner will carry 2nd w/20% down tl•·Hl·0214. Tahoe am >'· LI• pat t:1 eUBTCOTTA .. I U..~ S:..00: , assumable 93 FHA loan. 3 Bdrm cozy Nortt.horeReaJton. ::::--&:;:.>' s~:':n1t 41 ' •·liilill la uHbl• tfnaocto1, BUY A HOME, ASSUME home in ex~ellent area near schools
often, owner will .. 11tt OMLYll",ltO PrieedtoMllaUW,000. ALOAN and s hopping. Only $85,500. 752·1920
w I ......... a .try f'rtaell Clulteau Enjoy this 4 Bdrm 3 Ba
towellom• lo a lu1b '44-7211 Kite Hill home with
.,... lllWDI by lbe Ma. cu1tom 1pa, mountain
Dbl door eatry to vlew, and mucb more!
cat.bedral celliDCed UY· A11umable lit TD at , lnl rm. DramaUc open 1 o. s ~ . offered a t 1talrcue to ptt metr ..... ooo -1120
9UAll. PLACi ,.°'.Tiii
712-1920
~OTM Pt tD bt 2br, Zba + loft cmdo nr Chair 15, ...... ~
o.tofC-lt ,,,.,., 2550 suite. Sep cblldren'• -. ._. wiftl and a bat.ba ! All~~!!!~~~~~!
~~~.:.1!~ :~~~re~ . **E5M' Lingo s.c11.111t~ 107' a.K ........ ,.rty -zoo
!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!\' I •••••••••••••••••••••••
RS acre, fast·1rowlng
COM DUPUX Wllh a _pool I Super
Street. Hi Income. $295,000. Ask for Gina
Paradl&e.
OompJ I et b Tb t'l • • _ ... _ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. . w w ar, a 1 r I l·• b111e 4 ...... ,,
4lh ba + more! Motlvat· Bdrm. free -tndlng L1e 4 BR 2~ Ba in prime APPll V AUEY
ed seller. hen It poten· Irvine~ that can be Mewportleeclt 1069 San Clemente area with Near new 4·Plex, 2
tlal. TC~rRanyta211e. purcbued with aa Uttle ••••••••••••••••••••••• f ~6~dooi c •:r~c:J efw · bdrmlth ;.~ b1ath each1 unit r..nav a~ $25,000 down~)'· . · · o w 11n:1pace, encoaed
WALK-IN REALTY , meat. CaU for details on THl.000 LPN qwdl sale. or assume patio, double garage. '64-J)l I thla super buy. Total Newport Crest, Ow~er lea~e opt. Agl. Ron $165,000. Bill Grundy,
price only Sl5S ooo. wiU Carr'Y. for 5/yn w1lh PoultA:m 498-2510 Rltr, 6'7~161.
0 · 203 do1'n. Purchase .
Hesperia, CA. '21,500. 'Al
down, bal. 10%, or trade
for mobile home, beach
area. Principal• only.
Alt 6pm, 644-ot!SI.
Ow of Stat.
Proparty 2600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
40 A scenic Orecon Coast .
Etectrlcity, fenced, out-
standing view. accesai·
ble, owner 492.2499
$110 0 0 (i1 . · $187,500. 3 Bdrm, 2\AJ Ba .. Live on the waterfront in FOURPLIX
Cleah 4 Bdb • owner ~1 l\bod. bridge tennit,pool,sauna. San Cleme.nte. S·Slar Westside Costa Mesa. · Re mobile home park on the wlll e&rr)' balance with ilrg beach Forced t 1 Needs some work . S20,000 dowu. Hurry · . o eave S22,000 yr income. Full lffll Estah
won't lut Call Rafferty . SSJ-3000 area. 2 Br 2 Ba, partly price $225,000. Owner Ex...__ 2100
SJ._ •t l"'V2'9 &Lloydekn.98).55811 •tttBurann P11 ... y.lrv1n, furn . $54,900. Ownr. will carry l O'll'r interest •••••-::;:::.••••••••••••
-~ 6 492-8439 w/t&O,OOOdn. PIMAMC.... LOVELY MEADOW WOOOlllDGE S• ...._ Mobile Homes-Lakeside -f R€' Big Bear Lake or Sa•itMltgDfft.r .. t COMCOTTA•I Lg 3Br, lam rm, 2~ba. 2 Bdrm Warmington C ... tr.o 9071 >TIG€ Ocnfroot Laguna Bch,
A large4 Bdrm home on Pl.US IMCOMI La\Sld rm, lge mstl' br. "B" end unit. Great ....................... HOM€~ tennsortrade. 499·3816 120/oDOWN
Buyslhis2 +denhome. the Peninsula Pt near Or 3br, 2ba h ome, Comerlot,boatgat.e.Le location. Open house 3MletFrM.,.... -
6 months new. double the Harbor entrance. w/lsolated matter exbiatingln.$152,500. Sat/Sun 12·4 at 10 rrwt'ii'fHMHllty R.E.Investments leallst.h
I C!WTUS ...... R E Wind··--... Aat. cc:2-0660 -r-· WITH OCIAM VIEW 3333W. Co'"•t H'"'y. NB w~ ron gated entry , Plusa3 cargarageand bdrm/Pantttn!lreat or "'v"" .,.. ·. """" &• oN 642-3150 .... .. --ZtOO
cathedral ceilings, brick still room and access for ln·La• quarters + 2br 542-SIOB ....-03 •...1-.-..1 •-•-w ~&~ J._ 645-6646
fireplace , gourmet boat/trailer even a cotta1e. Anyway you H &...I •---It 1040 ..-~wv.,..., .... .._.
kllcben,Frenchdoors to motor home. Asking describe it, It's charm· Wiie;:•.-M~ef ~V•H• Over 3,000 sq.ft. of IHCOMEPIOPEITIES
•••••••••••••••••••••••
WAMTID:LOT
Will pay cash. Call Mr.
Jaff: C714)640-0246. at. 0 ·11 ·ang, up lo dale,•·••••••••••••••••••••••• _... '--'-'-1forlncomeun P •0 · w n e r w 1 $-475,000. "' College Park Purdue Ocean vu, 3 Bdrm 2i,; elegance. Exclusive new .....,.,..... -
finance . $179,000 JACOBS REALTY beautifully decorated. 3Bdrml~Ba,famrm .,2 plan features 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, 3 ca r ga r age. homes, from 1515,000 its?! We have 5 pro· Priced at $280,000 with frplc , bloc k wall S32SOOO 14 i,;"k fin · -1 perties in C.M. Priced B very special financing. $129,900. 846-1756 Ba. Askin& only Sl38 500 ' · ancing av a a · rig h l at I es s than
Income Property Want·
ed : With owners unit
and able to creatively
rina nce. low down .
princ. only. 547·3182
II :!It-~·~ '75-6670 CALLPOIDETAILS ' . ~Ste,!e_Dunn~ '4~~rRlty&I:S~~~i 1 llXGross . No bank
I: 'ifijrff Otlht~ ChanHr 644-72 It rooL & IEACH -~v ~ Tnffll I OtO f~~:t!;f ,!he;!,u~~~~/n
-Thia warm & cozy home et!lm Mqdel perfect Seawinds 759_9 .... 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --..... 111111111____ offers room and comfort 4 Bdrtn. 2i,; bath pool .. ..
MIWJ'OIT H«iHTS i n an e x c e I I e n l s , . home. $172.000 THE TERRACE of Univ. ~~~~~~~~~1-cCUST;!mow>CtH;O;:MQEE,
Deluxe townhouse neighborhood. Situated ~ I
duplex.3bdrm + fami-onalargellotwfith.a3 car ~ DUTCHHAYEM I ic,~m!.bs:pr:::.~te~~n~ $3,900DownN.B.lbr, lnexca':::::s/f with
ly, 2Vt bath, each unit. garinage .~~ Aru1tn pro-CoJ.MHo 102 Sharp 3 Bdrm home ing room, wetbar & un. ~or631-76S3 4 bdrms, central air, Frplcs. all built-ins . due g "'--=· · ower •••••••••••••••••••••• near Beach & Warner ,.. JohnLembeck (Agent> decks & patios. Park· filled garden & covered..._ ________ Aves. $114,900 g r ades. Offered by VICTOIP•""' gr eenhouse windows.
like landsca ping . I patio. The interior hasr-owner at $152,000 with "'" vaulted ceilings , 3
SEU.ER WILL HELP been substantially UP· MIS.A VaOE $80 O O flex. owner financing. BEACH HOME fireplaces and many FINANCE! $295,000! graded lo include a large CHilMEa • 0 at I 0% 552-5282. New 3 BR 31h Ba. QuaU· amenities. Doe Run, off
lcAoal-Prop. kitchen. two spacious Beautifully decorated 4 4 Bdrm. 2'4 baths. pool ---------• ty handc rafted oa k Newport Blvd and north
-, bedrooms. and 2 baths. Bdrm home with atrium and spa. Only $125,000 WOOOIRIDGE GLEH thruout. Stained glass. of 17th. DM.950.
lffllton A super sharp home only and separate mas ter t 'l4% ...... spa Cal 644-7211
•675-7060• minutes from the beach suite. Private comer lot, IE Profes1kNlah 2br, !ba, study, frplc.
WESTCLIFF
SI 29,500
Newport Beach highly
upgraded 2 Bdrm condo
with private patio,
custom draperies. large
pool! Walk lo WestclHf
shopping. Shows like a
model. Hurry this
won'tlast! CallS.6-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
ocWAOUT
2 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfurn.
New. S850 yrly.
IAYFIOMT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba. unfum.
Minlcond. SISO. Yrly.
CHAMMB. ROHT
J Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum.
S750yrly.
associated
BROF £RS llE Al •0115
l t1J' 'f\i B~1·t ,, ;, ' 'ot. 1
Asking $145,000 lovely carpets and wall 96J..1377 comm'ty pool/jac/lake.
lcAoal11cMdllty coverings Lhruout. For~~~~~~~= $128,000. By Owner PlanlllRealty /.JD.NIGEL
[)AILEY &
ASSUCll\1 ES 673-8700 an appointment to see, I• 559-4922. 7c:,._~.99 -callS40-1UJ • I M VIS T 0 I S ""'"
.... ~ • HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
2 Br Ass umable
Beautiful 2 Bdrm adult
condo. large assumable
Isl. Call for details . ~~3666 ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!I
•Whelan
Real Estate 9.5
INTEREST
Assume S3BK down. Lov·
ely 3 Bdtm, 2 bath, faml·
ly room. ftreplace, opeo
beamed ceilings. new
copper plumbing, large
yard. double garage,
skylight. Only $112,500.
Call~9161
: OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/.
SIOIM
POOL HOME
SPICPAL! 'AS MINE CREEK · New NNEE:iwViPp;o0-RRTTHHEE:l1cc~Hi1Tr;s;~~~~~~~~~
Executive Duplex for model bome · 3 bedrms: CHARM ER!
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
discriminating taste. 2~ baths; built In ap-3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Fam. Rm.
3br, 3ba, each, central pliances; superb carpet· Form a I Din . Rm .
air, woodbumlng frplcs, ing "drapes; complete-Gourmet It itch en .
custom drapes/ carpets, ly landscaped. O~ner Fenced. 12~ inte rest!
heavy shake roof. 11~~ will carr y financan1. Best terms! John Va·
I · bl Shown by appointment .._ _______ _
q0u8.:k~;5:::.~a:Y. no only. LEIMERT CO. nianCo. 63l-0900. ,.
<213> -.a:se1 VlaY rtlV A Tl SIOK Doww OrLH1 Secluded Westcllff I MOVES YOU PM DISCouaAfHD? Dover 4 bdrm, tam rm.
N o q u a I t f y I n g DB'alSSID7 courtyard, 2 fpJca. Open
necessary. Your mon-DtSAPPOIMTID? Sat/Sun 1-5 at 1514
lhly payment can be ad-Tblnk you wlll never H 11 h I and Dr. Ag t .
justed lo meet your mon-find that 3 bdrm. home 552-0llllO
thly budget. We have you really want at a ---------
many 31t4bdrm home in price you can afford ? llG CANYON
best Orange County Don't dispare, we have Prime view building site
locations w/these terms just what you have been on golf course. Plans in·
Call our specialist for looking for al SL59,000. c I u de d . Re d u c e d
more information. It's in a coovenient loca-Sl00,000 · with terms
GOLDElftllCST lion. Highly upgraded. available. Sl.100,000. IHIL O wner is offerin g CallDanBlbb
REAL TORS generous terms to help 67!>-2311or64(). 7665 ev
';,..._..;.· ~ASSOCIATES you purchase. Eastbluffs lowest priced
14MSll home. Xlnt financing
•EXCITING• ...... s-.
Beautifully customized
24 'x60' Vikift.A Home
2Br. 2Ba & en closed
porch. In Laguna Hills
nicest S star park. 21 yr
olds&older !JE8359>
... t...,IRToww
A Doll Hou.se. 20x42. 2Br.
!Ba, walk·in closet s
Many xtras. S22.SOO.
CLASSIC
MOllLEHOME
SALES
2706 Harbor, Ste 2C8A
540.5937
Call Arnie Quevedo. The~~~~~~~~~ Property Mart. 640.9019 r:
Terriric fina nci n gl-~~~--~~~~ ---------i •-~~!!!!~~:.__.:i available. Large 2 story lltlMCi AMY OFFB family home wilh lovely Lovely 3br. cslm home
pool. encto.ed courtyard near beach & park.
and separate master formal dining, heavy
suite down.stairs. All thls shake roof. Call now for
for ooly Sl45.000. Call Information regarding
540..1151 for more In-the ~3 assum. loan.
formation. Seller w/carry part of
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment! Two
2·Bdrm units, one with
fireplace! Current in-
come-$740 mo. Financ-
ing! 1 yr home protec-
tion plan Included.
Hurry. this won't last.
646-7171
LOWDOWN
Venaille 1 Bdrm /studio
penthouse condo with
l1e a11umable loans.
Onty $105..SOO. Call today
m.5110
ALLSTATE
;_ REALTORS ·
llSTIUY IH
•CAMYOM
f;•eelJeftt ~unlty to
pu.rdMM BlC Canyon's moat spacious a.twnhome. Pour Bdrms
aad a 1ameroom. each
wltll a bad9. Fonna I h · •s Md dllDiq room1, lblclJ fl ~ room.
• on..dfaroelJ ••o.•. D.M.Uast•• ••'"'
SIDRMS.
Spacious family home
on large lot. Great loca·
lion! Family rm with
wet bar and brick
fireplace. 3 car garage.
$329,750. Owner will help
finance.
t. HERITAGE
RE Ai TORS
-£ -.. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
the buyers down pay.
ment & says bring any
offer.
7141641-0763
2787 Bristol St.
Costa Mesa, CA
Investor will take over
payments on your va-
cant home. Call It let's
talk about it. 547-3182 ......
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• COST A MESA lcAoa P.-Mla l I 07
7 Units. Bread & Buller ••••••••••••••• ••••••••
That's what these units Charming 5 bdrm, 3 bath
a re referred too. Ap-bayfroot with 38 ' boat
prox. 1h acre. conve-float. $1600 m o Bill
nienl lo all stores 3 2Br. Grundy, 675-6161
& 4 lBr. $250,000 Good --
terms. Possible trade HwelltwjlOR IMCh 3140
M cNash R ealty ,•••••••••••••••••••••••
&U-1334.&U~8eves. B r'i n g s uitca se -
---evt:rything furnis hed. OFFICE ILDG Secluded 2 br on beach
30 Units. too/. financing. $650. Agt , 536 1484.
0 W C S 7 0 , 0 0 0 w I n o 536-6638
3144 pymts $425 ,000 A~t '"iM --646-1544. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Pa!DE
OFOWMHSHIP
TIU PL EX
6/mo lse, fully rum Ex-
ec . twnh se in
Northwood. 3br. 2'hba. fam rm. air. microwave. Assume 7~~ loan and 2 frplcs. p ool /s pa
ownerwillpartic1patein St 200/m o complete secondary financing. 544-4846.
Only $180.000 Call now ' ---
9'79-S370 HCMIMS Unfurnished
ALLSTATE ~~~~~::::::::::?~~~
REAL TORS By OWNER. formal din.
-----·3 br: pool Now avail.
20 Uni ls 10'1 down Arro whead Countr y
$360,000 Ri ver s ide. CI u b ar e a , S an
7xgross. Owner /Agent. Bernardino. I 864-1732.
673-6720. 544·0333. 1·884-72S8
Duplex, 2 BR I Ba. 2 car lalMHI , .. ,.... 3207
ga r .. sepa rate fnc d •••••••••••••••••••••••
yard, great cond. Nr Oceanfront condo, Jbr.
C.M. Bluffs $129.500. 2ba, tmderground prkg.
~ $800. 637-7580; 637.6099
HEWl'ORT IEACH COf"Olla ct.I Mar 3222 AAA PttOPEITIES ••••••••••••••••• • •••••
lmmac. 2 s try s Br.
. s tained glass , I. 3 Triplexes _In a row, amenities. Nr bcb. Xlnt
south of PCH m Corona area. See to appreciate.
del Ma.r. $1200/mo. 536-1453 II. 2duplexes + l trtplex ---------In a row on Bal. Penin. 1 Sub-lease 3 Br 2 Ba 'til
lot from sand/surf. 11/15/81. $950/mo. Agt. III. 1 duplex on water 67~1'15S
with dock for 30' boat. ---------
don o sen
' '
s Bdrm, 2 be, family nn,
frpk, z cat 1ar. Nlce
back 1ard, '150/~o .
IT'lllATPIUJSPSCT Waterrron,t Rome1
1\JS'l'l1', 111·1111 ....... 1-. ~
.......... I llt. a 8a. I 9ty. SUOO
l+ AcnLoU mo.•· LODI h•d• b11fro.ot
bome witai U·•hP•d .. '"'9a&Mt.Ar,diee,a..
lbdrm, Illa. I Cir •ar,
air, tiled veraada, ·~ of 111111, bt1vt crpt,
CUltGID ...... Cl...,..
·~ pool. Jae, t•.nlt, Hklll1 aua.ooo. A•·
owe-.. DWN 49.._..,,
t'71·TIOO, H• •I 111 •---------"Clnlll ., M • .. , lot.
........ -.P.P.
D11: flll)tlt·Oltl , ........ ,.UHi: (Ill)·-·
H••b" ll"-. Joan . ............ 0.W/-SM11tl1..-.s •.1 ... ·---------....,.~-----.....__.._ .. ,.. "--....
E....W. a br, 2 ba. l~e
s unporch , yard ,
UOO/mo ; lmmed .
M5.oM8
New 2 aty, 2 br hse, tr pie.
DW, wash/dry , yd ,
ba lcony, car, $525 .
Aduha, no peta. M2· 1725
4 BR 2 Ba, fam rm .
dinette, 1700 sq.ft. S'7SO
mo. Grdnr incl. 642·4623
Huge3br. 2 ba. aubmit on
kids & pets, avail. now ,
$625. 631-6994
3 Br. 2th Ba. n ew
Townhome. Frpl c,
micro-wave, auto gar
door, pvt yard. dlx thru·
out. Approx 1600 s /f
Best E 'S id e toe .
S7SO/mo. Isl /last + $300
dep. No dogs Avail
3·&-81. 2430 Santa Ana
Ave. Unit F·l. 645·7800
HOME FOR RENT
2 Bdrm. $475. Fenred
yard & garage. Kids &
pets welcome. 964-2566
or97J.2971 Agt.. no ree ----
Dmta PoW 3226 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Beaut., spac. 4 br. 2 ba.
patio. fenced yd, gar
$695. 962-2194
Super 4 br. 3 ba, den.
frplc, prestigious Ra('·
quet Club. SHS/mo
556-6576
3bdrm. newly decor con·
do in Irvine Groves.
S6SO /mo No pet s
857·2141,549·3918
.
Redhill ~R' -.1lty
I;-;-:: -;-: {Ill I
RENTALS
2+den 2'h ba
3br I"• ba
3br2 ...... ba
4br 2'" ba
~~Harbor Ridge Lautre ·
$350 mont Model. Full ocean
S900 view $2500 mo 760-1977
3br2ba
Anaheim Hills S900 3 Br 2 Ba. large yard, 2
car garage. S745 mo.
675·0562.
Orangetree Condo 2Br
l Ba PatiCH>n Lake $495
mo . .Jim 957·1100 Ext.
301days551·3751 eve's.
Lux condo. 3bdrm. l 'hba.
pvt patio. 2 car car /ele('
opener. close to S.C
Plaza. $595/mo, lse.
549-0259 .
-FR EE RENT tall 3/31 /81
2500sq ft condo, 3br, ram. Hngt Landmark 3 BR
rm. 2"'2ba. 2 rar gar. condo. brand new
3 br, 2 ba, yd, frplc. $745 $1400.557-7883 Adults only over 40 yrs.
+ utlls or lease option. Nwpt. Heights. 3Br/2Ba S6SOmo. 7S9·9386
497-~ ~k~--avail. Mar I Refrig Beautiful Park Bristol
Hwwllwcjhwi IHch 3240 Grdnr S700mo 645-7400 Adult Condos Pool.
••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 523 CAMPUSDl·IRVl,.E 2 Bdrm. Condo 1184 security. spa. lBr. S450;
Oakwood
Garden Apartments . ,
Newport Beach/So.
1700 16th St o ...... , oi •f,r,,.
714 1 642·51 13
Newport Beach/No.
880 •••"e
Orange Coast DAIL 'l PtLOT/Tl'IUrsday, March s. 1981 88-
Sharp <'lean 2 Br I Ba .
built ins. Westside 4·
plex Kids OK , no pets.
$395. 645·2478 eves &
wknds
SEA ENVIRONMENT
1 96J2 HAMIL TON H B
962 4SOO
WOOOUKE Ans.
146-6591
Vers ailles Studio. all
Amenities. S450
549-0833
Luxurious I Ar Condo
SSOO mo. Xlnl fa!' Full
SN' 541).4646 or 631 7653
John Lembeck tAJ!enl 1
Retired Female· Room
with kitchen prlv Costa
Mesa $200. 548·5082
Edith.
Newport. lbr. den, priv
bath/entrance, sunded,
gar, lndry, 1cros1 from
bch, $350962-4914
Rag Bear. close to slopes.
sips 8, rrplc. $45 /day.
$175/wkly 546·0116 an
Spm
1.arge Big Bear Cabin
Pool table, color TV. f.
frplcs. s ips 14 545-6916 • -~
I.as Vegas. 3 bdrm. 2 ba,
rully rum $450 wkly or
monthly rate 673-4586
S blks to ocean. Elegant 2 Rutland Rd. #6. 1650 mo 2Br, SSOO. 646·0686.
bdrm, ram rm & den. Avail3/1.Agt.675-4000 Walk to s C Pla2a 111 ($750 mo>. Plush crpts . 2br. 2ba, gar. nice. d r 11 2'n ba. cedar & glass. 559-6474 Yearly rental 3 Bd. 2 Ba. 3b rm. 2ba. u rec ----------
' 'r ~'
''141 64S-1104
Mesa Verde 2 Br I Ba
Dining Rm Newly de
C'orated garage. Adults.
no pets $400 Isl last &
security 642-0735 --
Adult luxury 1 & 2 & 3
Bdrm Beautiful lakes &
s t reams Compl e te
a menit1es No pets
FromS385.
Westchfr adull l'ltndo 2
bedrooms. 2 b;iths Oan
ing room F1re pl;,i ce
Freshly decorated Un ·
rum S600 mo 631 7300.
Rkr
Will trade 2 wk~ in lovely
home. Sno Summit. Big
Bear Lake for 2 wks m
beach hse during ~um
mer 1213)988·4300 Dbl. car pvt gar. rully 644•5106 incl stove s750/mo rac1lities. $600 No pets
ma1nt. yd. Adults. no Possible lease option 557·2232. 673-4678 Lado Isle, Ir 3bdrm . 2
patio. steps to pvt bearh.
mirro-wave, 675-7155
NEWLY dee. 2Br 2 ba
townhouse. rrplr. pa tao.
encl gar. $525, no dol'(s
998-8128. $150 dep.
Nr new xtra dlx twnhs
a pt I\ unit lg 3br 21 •1 ba
form din rm+ bkrst rm
rrpk bltns WO hkup
s kyhghL'! vaulted ce1I
ings dbl attch gar etr
$625 545-3604
WES TC LIFF
pets. Inquire at 527 18th. I Nice 4bdrm. 21..-.iba house. Agt 673-3355 Woodbridge Condo Yrly St. 714 /960-6331 o r 2 frplc, nr shopping ·
960-5ll2 center. pool, jac. tennis. No Newport. 2Bd I Ba. t.se SS6S. 2br . Iba. lower
2 br. 2 ba. frpl. PoOI nr
shop s, adlts SSSO + tlep
631 5596
Mammoth luxury rondo
sips 4-8, 9-day Easter
Spe('ial 830 9352
837 7553 ------r unit. lge backyrd races 1 Bedroom Condo near $725. 551-6931 a ter 6pm Gardener. Quiet. Adults p a r k . 1 n c 1
OCEANFRONT Winter
rental to June 15th I Br.
$350/mo. Ul1I. includt>d.
No pets 548·1930 or
673-7844
2 bdrm . 11-,ba . di s
hwasher, crpls. drps,
gar. 995 3311 $470
995-3311 .
3Br condo w boat shp
Call for details Brook h u r sll Ad ams. only, no pets 1450· appl pool /lake t boal ra ci I LCICJWMI hoch 32 48 642-2267 or 645·5778 fi75 86.50 a ft er 6 PM R.ntals to Share 4 300
Pool/Tennis. Etc $450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ 957·1081 days. 552-7819 Spacious 2 Rdrm w /nu
cpl, paint, drps Kids
OK No pets 7921 Holt
$425 847 -4803 btwn
J.7pm.
....•..........•.•.•...
mo.646-4477 Ocean rront lbr. trlr House w/pool. S995 mo eves EASTSIDE Cannery Village, lbdrm
avail 1mmed $400 mo
673-6.522
Moving., Avoid deposits
& c ut living expenses'
Professionally s 1nrt'
1971
New condo in Seaside +caban a $650 mo ·3Br.2Ba + 2ulil bdr ms. To~
Village. Beach & Allan-adultsonly499-3816 ram rm. patio 64~1327, u..fwftished 3525 Near Lido Village I Br.
fomished apt $400 mo.
Ulll. incl. Yrly lsc
673-1769.
Country W ooch
la Blvd.2br.den.2Vz ba, Ocean rront hou se 55Ml88,orofc7S9·6S97 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 Br & Study, lri·level,
fire place, s kyli g ht.
deck. No children or
pets. SS35 180 E .2lst St.
Days 646·4262, ,:ves
645-91543.
Newport Heigh(s Duplex
2 Br. I Ba. Adults. no
pets S49S Mo lst. last
deposit 517 Bolsa Days
631 3520. Eves Wknds
548·5041.
HOUSEMATES
832-4134 1650sqrt.sec.gale.ten French Normandy W.ATERFIOHT Woodbridge 2br. n~ba ,
nis els. pool & jac Ch ateau in Victoria w/boatslip included pool/jac/tennis SS70/mo
Xlnt loc Pierpoint con
dos, 1·2br, $450-$600
pool . jac . t ennis
846-1826
$975/mo 1213)833 1369. Beach. 4 Br. 4 Ba. decks. 3 Bdr 2 Ba. dbl gar. rm Steve White 973-0945,
e v es & w k n d s · rantastic view. steps to ror power boat up to 55t-50t5 A'-'*' lwocb • Shared LMIHJ.
CoW\Selors to personally
select your compatible
rmmte to s uit your lifestyle. Shared· Living
833 Dover Dr Suite 31 N 8
1213)831·5734 the beach. $2500 mo. about 35'. S1150/mo. Hunt. Beach. Townhouse. Large 3 Br Crple. Enclsd
u..twwi*d
••••••••••••••••••••••• LG. 2br, 2ba, enc 11ar.
Brandnewhousefordis· Edgewater R E . J.ACOISll.ALTY Large 2 Br. l'h Ba.
criminallng family 3 494-35.16. 67~6670 Adults only $475 mo. gar. $495 Lado Isle, on water, bay G....,.., 1102 quiet Mesa Verde st .. no
••••••••••••••••••••••• pets.$42:5.536-0573
blks to ocean. 3 Br 3 For Rent: So Laguna 175-l&M. Ba .. ram. rm Totally Superb lbdrm hm e Newport Hgts 3br. 2ba,N --ic_e_Twnhs ___ e_,_$4_9_5_m_o_ A"1MTS Foa llENT
H.B .. N.B., Costa Mesa
Something for Everyone
Bach. to 4 Br. Unfurn.
Apts. Certain locations
o ffer Pool . spa ,
fireplace. laun. room.
beamed ceilings .
garages. all buill·ins
Garden & Townhouse
lmmac. Large 2 Br. 2 Ba.
2 c ar garage . '600.
642-.8235. Berit/ Agent
213/596-6549. _ view, lbdnn, Ir li v rm &
Nice 2 Br. \'h Ba. Pool, din. Sl675 675-7155
laundry, garage. patio. New 2 Br l Ra, d1s-
n e w ('arpel. S4 7 5 . hwasher, encl garage
631 -1801 ..
M/F to sh; hse in C.M~
Sl9S + 1 ~ util Non·s mkr
675 TI94. 549 8677
upgraded & customized. w/view. deck & frplc. rrplc, w/d, avail immed. 2br, l 'hba, Avail im·
$1200 mo 833 ·0145 $600 incl util. Chuck petsok~7498 med.SavageWlld&Co.
AM IPM. AyN!S4~2512 SPACIOUS M.I . 675-Qj()S 2 br. 1.,, ba. W. side, $425
+ sec. dep. No pets.
645-0079
960-5043. 1-030-0350 $475 645 38M
McriMn Wais Aph.
Lrgl Br. Apt. Fireplace.
washer dryer hook up
Patio. dbl car garage.
Children OK. SS7S Nr H.
Harbour 840-5623.
M F lo shr new home. :i •
Br. 21, ba. tennis crt
Hunt. Bch La Cuesta
$300. Call Sam to 6pm
960-9831
3 Br condo Refrig. frplc. Charming. newly re TOWNHOUSE -,--,-...... _.t..L.-~ Apaown•~ patio, carport $50()/mo modeled 2 story. 3 Br 2 New 2 br. 2YJ ba, Back •••••••••••••••••••••••
2bdrm. Iba. rrph . no
pets. adulL'> only S.'>40
129 45th St. 675·6969 893-3645 Ba. House. Ocean view. Bay loc. Gar. pvt. patio. lalboeP.-S• 3707
fireplace. Near beach & S97S mo. Su.san: 957·6507. •••••••••••••••••••••••
3Br, 2Ba. 2286 Canyon Or.
$450 mo.-$475 mo.
642-6153 LANDMARK adult con·
do. brand new 2 BR 2 Ba.
atrium model. P rime
living. $650 mo. Call al'(t,
962-4454. No fee to te·
nants.
COATS & WAI.LACE
R.E.
4 Br. 2 Ba. Fam Rm
Xlnt loc. Gardener. Call
aft 6PM S695. 840-6203.
town. $750. 494 ·5873 & !>40-7238 __
4~1036. 3 Bdrm. frplc. walk to
LCICJIMCI Hills 3250 beach, pool & tennis
• • • • •••• • •• •••• • • •• • • • • $795. Agt. 7~9278
HOMF.S FOR RENT
3 & 4 Bdrm. S575-SS95. ILU~S
Fen ced y a rd s & 3 bdrm. 2'h baths. ram
garages Kids & pets rm. S8'SO. 2 bdrm. 2 bath.
welcome. 964·2566 or $875. 3 Bdrm. ram rm.
973-2971 Agt f St 100. Pools Rlt r , ---· · · no ee 644·0134.
1 Br, Carpels, drapes,
stove. refrige. Utils pd
Utens ils for 4. S375
675-0035
CorOIMldefMar 3722
desikn.
TSLMGMT. 642·1603
2 IB>ROOM, $355
On quiet cul·de-sac, lov
ely, spacious. clean. Lrg
landscaped en cl yrd . ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar . Anaheim l nr
2 A"S. Katella & Euclid I
On beach . Pvt. gate. $550 635·7868·
& SllOO/mo .(in cl. lalboalsland 3806
2 Br. I 'h Ba. 2 Br 2~ Ba
Frplc, dishwasher. laun
dry facilities. carports.
548-0967 8 ft 4.
3Br. 2Ba. near 0 C C
$450/mo Upper.
-----FREE RENT till 3/31/81.
Hntg Landmark 3 BR
condo . b r and new
DAdlts only over 40 yrs
S650 mo. 759·9386
Newport Hts. 2bdrm. Iba.
frplc. carpets. s to11e.
etc Older adults. no
pets. $400 yrly 548·5306
2bdrm townhouse. SSSO &
$625 Adults no pets 1409
Supenor 645-8684
3 Bdrm apt. 4 blks to Across from beach. 2 br. 641-8657 -bea c h . New cpl . adults only, pool. gar.
Eastside 2 Br. Di s · S42S+S250dep will move $450.640.5078
h wash er. ri r ep I ace. you in. C/21Surf536-7542
Nice 2Br. 3Ba dlx twnhse.
E. Bluffs , Nwpl Bch
Fum. S360 mo 759·0422
Res p F to shr lge 2 br
Nwpt Bch hst> w/s pa &1
BBQ. S275 673·1955 •·-
897-3575
Lux 2 Br. den. 21h Ba
Condo Pool. spa. 2 car
gar. No pets $590
646-5974
Leisure World, 2br. 2ba.
gate l , beaut Nr all
6 /mo lse option
$600/mo. (213)437 7674
utilities.> No pets. New •••••••••••••••••• •••••
m a s l e r s u i l e $625. 2 Br. modem. patio
Spaciou.'I 2br. Iba, dplx 1 I 4 · 6 7 5 · 7 7 6 4 ° r & gar age 227 Coral
patio, gar . lndry, 213-928-1844. 213/:BS-3511
lndry rm, garage. patio ----Santa Ana 3880
Adults. no pets. $475. 3 Br 21~ Ba. 2 Story, •••••••••••••••••••••••
642-11135 frplc. lndry rm in 4· 3 Br 2 Ba Condo. Across
Fem wanted to s hr home
w /s ame nr OCC
S22S /mo Re rs req
540-~.
F.xec hme 5br. 3ba, bonus
S700/yrly 962·4914 Costa M.sa 3724 la.,;; Pfttinsula 3807
3 Br 2 Ba orean(ront ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Br. Stove & refr1ge
Small yard Adult, no
pets. S315 54ff.1377
Plex. Bolsa C h ica / from S.C. Plau Securi-
Wamer area. SS80 per ty & swimminic pool
Fem non--smoker 18 2S to
s hr 3Br. 28a redecoral·
ed hse nr bch S200 mo
H B 536-1140 HOME FOR RENT room. ale. microwave.
4 Bdrm SS95. Fenred spa. view. nr 405/Alicia
yard & garage. Kids & $1095/mo lse Sec de·
pets welcome. 964·2566 posit. 581-1330 days.
home, nu p aint. & SUSCASITAS
drapes, xlnt cond . patio Fum 1 br . apt. S32S & up
& yrd. rum. or unfum Encl. gar. Adults. no
$1200/mo yrly. Owner pets. 2110 Newport Bl
may consider winter 548·~_b_tw_n!&5PM
r Br Apt. Close lo beach
& Balboa Ferry. Yearly
rental S365 C all
mo. 84().5504. S550 645-2462.
3 Br. 2 Ba. 1st. &
months SSOO mo.
775-0781
las t 2 Br. I ba, near So Cst
Plaza Security gale.
pool 1 child ok. No pets
$425 mo. 752-7474. or97J.2971. Agt..noree. AG T . 5 9 8 . 2 s 1 1
---eves/w·knds HMI~ --rental. No pets please
Lioyd at Jacobs Realty
675-61670 H.t.Our 32 42 M•wpcwt hoch 326' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Seagate Wate rrront
Townho me. 40' boat
dock in front. 3 Br, 3 ba.
New cpt. newly painted
thru-out. Pool. spa, ten·
nis, clubhouse. GR EAT
VIEW. Vacant. Asking
$1450. 84().3341 or840.6045
SEABRIOGE Waterview
Condo 3br. 3ba. frplr.
wet bar, patio, pool, ten·
nis, spa. kids/pets ok.
Avail. 4/1. Encl gar ,
lndry S9?S/mo. 631·0995
HOME FOR RENT
4 Bdrm. $800. Fenced
yard & garage. Kids &.
pets welcome. 964·2566
or 973-2971. Agt .. no fee.
,,.... J244
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Woodbridge condo. 3 Br.
1 v. Ba. teP<>/mo. (213)
498-fe»Oeves & wknds
Woodbridge lease . 2 Br.
1 ~ Ba. peUo. pvt loc ..
boatlp1, tennis. pool.
flSOO/mo. Agt. 640-9900
Woodbridge Sycamore
Plan. 4 Br, 3 ba. No pet.5.
l7SO mo. lncl. gardener
752·•1.
Lated Br. Condo 21,4j Ba .
Din area. ramlly rm.
trplc. crpt, 2 atory.
comm. pool. Av•"· s-11,
-mo. +d.epoelt. Call
7sz.tmlt.o·•.
a Bdrm townhouae In
Herttace Pan. Ht1hly
up1raded. Excellent toeattora. No pet.a. '800 mo. Act. ass.vm.
• iJ ,
ma en ab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
HARIOR VIEW HILLS LEASE !
Beautiful single-story family home.
3BRS, 2 baths, and located next to
park. Avai lable within 2 weeks.
SllOO/mo. Donna Godshall 644-6200.
(0·75)
COROHA DEL MAR LEASE !
Completely re furbished 3BR. 2 bath
s ingle·story home just 2 blocks
from beach. Ready for occupancy.
Only $875/mo.· Appl. only. Donna
G<>ds ha ll 644·6200. <0·76)
Hl ... 7H
CASA DE ORO
ALL trrlLITIES PAID
Compare before you
rent. Custom design
reatures : Pool. BBQ.
cov'rd garage. new
rurniture. surrounded
with plush lands('aplng
Adult livmg at its best.
No pets.
I Bdrm furnished $410
2 Bdrm rum lshed $480
36S W. Wilson. 642·1971
Newly decor . 1 Br
Duplex. Sep by garages.
Quiet. Empld Adult over
35 . No pets $330
548-1001. •
Bach. Apts. Utils . paid.
Weekly or 'M onthly .
McNash RealtyM2-1334.
642-6S78 eves.
675-6606.
Corona del Mar
Large I Bdrm Near
shops, pool. all util pd
3822 1884 Monrovia. 548·0336
••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr S.C. Plaza. lge lbdrm.
Dix ocean vu I Br. newly patio. gar. $400/mo. S200
decor ated wtgarage dep.631·0560 Adults $675/mo. Ask for
Fa ye 64().9900 2bdrm. new carpets , 2273
t br. t ba. rrplc. DW . encl.
gar Nr Hunt Harbor
Jan. 846-1186
Soutfl LGCJ'91a 3886
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Oceanfront s:..id10 apt
FREE RENT till 3/31 /81 with patio. overlooking
New spacious Jbr. lox pvt beach. $550/mo util
F tnon-smkr to shr 3 bdr
C M h o u s e
$175 mo+Cor1nn t>
631 9121 aft 6pm
Fem to shr 3br. 2i,.,ba hse
non-smkr E. Blurrs N B.
$350 eves 759-~ l
condoSS50962·4914 incl.4~2253or499·502l. Male to share 2Bdrm Nice view 3bdrm. 2ba. 2 -----~ ..__ 3898 Housein Coronadel Mar
sundecks. frplc. beams. 2 Bdrm. 2 ba apt, frplc. Wn'"""STIC"t' 64~6479
Maple.~
545-5004.
nopets.R1chard640-1850 Triplex. 3 br. 2 ba. encl garage. $455 Agt. •••••••••••••••••••••••
dys :64o.7072eves . S5SO/mo 1 br. 1 ba. 960-4614or848·2780 New two bedroom. one Share nice HB home.
Spacious I Br w/garage.
laundry facil. SS25. Ask
for Faye. 640-9900
$350/mo. Encl. gar. ---bath unit with gar age. quiet neighborhood. or
frplc, patio. lndry rac 2 & 3 Be~ r 0 0 m s · S450month. 548-0786. bch. w/jacuui $195 mo.
2276 Pamela Lane . C M S4~"'50. Kids OK. no -----848-5857 eves pets please. Waterl AfHiltftoentsFwnlsh.cl •
Open hrs 4 :JC>.S ·30pm Trash Paid. carport. orUnfwftbhecl 3900 Prof woman. 33, with 1112
Bachelor Studio. Pvt en ~73 ---964-2566or97J.297l. Agt., ••••••••••••••••••••••• yr old boy seekinf!
trance & bath. $225 2 Br. Oar. Child/Pel OK. no fee. S E A W I M D woman in sim ilar posi·
67J.6223aft5pm. $485. Ask for Mike . lion to shre expenses.
641.0763 Yorktown/Beach. 2 Br. I VILLAGE Apt/Me SJOO.s.150 + utU. lbdrm. lba. I~ blocks to ___ Ba. Os hwshr, patio, 641.7188 leave mess. for
ocean, S37S. Adults. no 2 HUGI'; Bedrooms In garage. Water/Trash New 1&2 bdrm luxury Jeanette
pets. 675-4174. super location. Fully paid. l child OK, no pets adult apts in 14 plans from $440, 2 bdrm from b Avail. April lst. 2 Br . 2 carpeted , built·ins, please. $425. 964-2.566 or ,505 + pools. tennis. Wil l s hr my plus
Ba. with sundeck. Close grolD'ld noor. Adults. no 973-2971.Agt.,no ree. waterfalls, ponds! Gas s pacious Hunt. Bch
to beach. No pets. $700 pet.a. S350 mo. Apply Apt L-1.1111. 3150 for cooking & heating home. micro, frplc , YJ
E 568 W W i Ison . ~~ Id F s 01 g ml to beach. S26S incl Stunning large l Br. mo.67S.0124Jackie. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pa . rom an e o all.536-8090
Garden Apt. Pool & Rec. 646-4477. Leisure World Lease 2br. Frwy drive North on
area. now.18th. St. CostaMna 3124 t Br upper. Enclosed 2b•, Villa Nueva on hill, Beach to Mc Fadden Female to share lux· ----------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c 11 gate 14, s pectacular then West on McFad~en urious apt. Ocean-view
Hwllsoglowleoc• 3740 21r.llaApt garage.~~: v1ew,nopets,noamolt· to Sea.wind Village. Newport Beach 671-5425 ••••••• .. ••••h•••••••• Newly decor. (:'as pd, ing S2 or older. SS7S/mo. <714>893-Sl98. Early AM/PM.'
H,l.'s AMIST e n c I ga r , p C) o 1 . S425. E/Slde 2 BR. 1ar. (714)551·0788 IOOMI 4000 _ __.:. _____ _
Spanish Estate Living! d I washer Adu Its . patio. no pet.a. 1st & last Ml.._ Vlefa 316 7 ............. ••• ....... Work.Ing Male 25·3S •II
~:~:A~:J.~r~:~:.~~d 642-5073 ~~· 54l·S3lll_ evs .••••••••••••••••••••••• L="JoBeP~~m~c!::t :it~/~;.~: r~~1:
pool. Sunken gas bbq. 31rTo.._. Finisterre Condo 2 Br. 2 Hwy Laguna Beach. ly aituaUon avail. now.
1 parklln1 fountains. Newly decor. 1111 pd .. 3bdrm, lt,4jba. $450/mo.I Ba.llSO.Nopets. DaitY Weekly Klt.chen casual folk Lind • s p 1 ciou1 room a . e n c I 1 a r . , po o 1 . 7t5 Shalam1r. Call Ron , 751-4330 aV1ll~ble, Lo~ wint•r ~$200/mo.
Separate dlnl•I area. d /wuhe r . Adults . !! ... ~~1.734 or Noa at 3 Br. ll,4j Ba. Condo. ~25 r•l•.411M·5294. Walll·ln c:IOMta. boma· &42-507! '"~••JR Roommate\ wanted, 3
like kitchen" cabinets. mo. ~peta. Coron• del Mer t unny 2bdrm. 2 itory W/d1rtc
Walk t o HunUnaton MIWLYDICC>a. Good I~. 2bdrm. 2b•, l6l-t330 room •ba. w /laundry room,non-smolter.-.
c.nter. I Br. fu pd, encl 1•r. crpta, dJ"PI, trplc. bit~ .._.,.,. .._. 3169 facll. 12"15. Mir/or Faye. M/F. 548-9419 ·
tBedfoonHmfum. d/Wlllber. pool. Adult.a. lna, pr, lndry lac:. Aprtl ••••••••••••••••••••••• M0-91JO . from '400 8'2-5073 etll. MSO. Adultlt no pet1. ---------1 W.nt Profeesk>nal mar.
1 ~-tum, I 1cioua a Sr Duplea MMmnorSST ... 147· PAii NEWPORT v;:: :'~·.';:~~ft'~· ~r:!~to~t~':: ~
zWroCJm.f\lra ,S490 ~10.Puol•lat.mdryfu. E.1lde 1 Br. lrt yard , C~Y.CLUI prlv. t42-4S4S wt: NewportBeach.9'7).1550
MWU.no,.u. Ml-allfrocn 12·'7PM. #71. UV.-54t-IM7hm.
UUHU-~! lfHr M• actnn, aba, ~m4or963-7to0 Slftll•, 162 bed room ---------1Cbrtstlan Female want.a
LA ~r.~• •OSA ,,_ laundey r.c. new Netfft'. c*8 to beach. Ira ;is:· ~houa::,.. LIOO P'•m:=; ::.. ~mh •~· -=~1~•re •P':
1au p i._ 1 b• ~ drPI • paJnt. Encl 2 Br w/frpl. lrt 1ara1e. '°"' am • c P •
W. ti Buch. a btb S. o1 1ar, U7S. Adult. .... no balcony, ,_, lat. la1t Oc:eanli'Ont for Winter :a.~ to bch N.I . OIOSlf· Low "9l. Ne•lr
........... pet.a. '7).hlS. "4·aT51 +SlOOdep.lll·TtOO lteotala, Fumlah~ tr ---· ------1 ~ 11e, latMoom •
Mf·M41 n• !aiulde 1 Bdrwn for ~twa. lrolttr. f71.4t1J.. !leplll aul&9, pool, F•ti ••titer. Qu••t Co•••
.,.,.., l·t Wnn. pool. ....... latae -1', ldrm. ~-.2Mrm.1~ lla••M'Dll:•'lfN••Al hi. No U•k. uu ........
Jae, .. _. nonda, ~!"-~,.!' '"· la .... Wa&er •ON Lo•UTart..llftedldldo t40·15N ..... Jo1ce llillt~ H.1.-.war...am .,. ,.,•·--· fMI;...-. ta.._ • ..., ..._.,..o.,...., """'Ill
l
Orenge CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thur9day, March 6, 1981 • , _ -~· • !~•·r.1'·", :-~~ .. t:~~~, l~,: .. ~,.d ,. • .. '~,--~1 '' ~'I ~,.~~~--~.11:• •:l ·t,J I .. ~~-, .... 11 '• c> .... ~, .... ,. r•I
i \ ___ j_,, ... ~ ~ ~ ~ .,.;I ... "l .. .-_.. • .• J ~j -"l ~ ~ ·rt •.L . l ·t· .I ~. L , .LI _ ... ~I 91! ~· ' • ~ •;'.•
A I -T" I ·-· .---D . ' ' -'~ I •• • ---SliJ;fwi -1'lf 1... ....... "······I ........ ~-,., ... ..,.,...... • ... . ,._~ .... ~· ~~~~~!···· ....................... ~...................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....../9111..... . ............ , ........... ·······'···············
"•" 0 EN. CONITIUJCTION We Can Carpet Cleanen S.S. DESIGNS J,.udleaPlna·Cleanupt Want a R £ALL y CLEAN • •• ••••••••••• .. •• • •••• Palatlq fr P1.,.rblt QUALITY ROOFING
'IJ a.. Addftionl, Aemodela Steam cle~ • uplloll. Cu.1tom Dra.,.ry Wln· Treetrlmmini·H•ullni HOUSE? Call Ginlh•m For 1n1. purpoHs, we C.bioet Refinlth1AI Alu,,_, h'ee "" ~ ft -ulf Uc/lm. MartlfJ'M'11 Work 1uar. Truck do~, 1000'1 of fabnc1, Maintenance. Free eat. 01.rl Fr~ust.M5-512J Yldeotape Pl'OP• le COO· Prol. won. Pree eat. Vlta,MC. SU"930 '•AU jou Pl1 N .-LI 1_ mount lllilt. lel'fll SUS-4.15 yd. 10 day del. Amie 541-8414 ~nl. Call '40-0100 Video Ranbl. Steve MT-4281 HA.at.Oil ROOFING fora ew or._. or m bttweeo ,........_ Pl'eeelt. •yn In area. ' E•pertiae boutelleefln1. VertnuUon •,~Yad bulldJ111. Licensed fr _._.,.Act•He 64• L614 h'otal iarden It lawn equip • supp lea PalnUn1 lnt./F.xt. reo· NOlllON
ro Ute lnauredl0-21T'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.. care. 1 time or continual funUabed trustwortb • MetellrJ tall our •saec:lalty. Ac· IOOfllte CO. C ...... Mrt... ACOUltJcCelllnp Drywll aervice493-4e03 d 641_.:,0 Y ....................... COUit.ie painted. Prompt. . ~ I
I
DAILY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ij~~and~•;t!.~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ep BRICKWORK: Small SeuMSe P11nUn1. Oreg Uc.=•R~l809 HOMER&PAIRS ·-· ,,_ . ......,., I>rywallSpeclaJitt **ATRIUMS•• Superbffousecleanlng Jobi. Newport, Costa UM808 PILOT Int/al Cult cabinets C ..... /Ca.cNte Qual.lrprod.Newltre· Do your indoor/outdoor Sped.acularRe1ult.1 Meu, Irvine. Refs. -------.. -h---1 BalboaRoollnlCO.
ru .. n n•-..ov· ATINO ••••••••••••••••••••••• mod. t31111M4. 532.5549 at-rlwn.s need plantln1 or l'TJ.-0508/642~39 875-Sl75 lot•r/Ext.er/Refln ln1. ':::rial COit.i down! SERVICE "'nnn Ar.I'! f bi hi 1 C II celllnp/wallpaper. Lie.
14$-37• Foundations, Retalnlng DRYWALJ. our ex-~ee~rpo:t ~'trlu~. PeraooalizedHouae EXPERT Brick & CainlaSons 118-5106 Fr eat. S73-e'743
DIRECTORY c_,aabc ~::,is· ::~i:::e ~~:~!:· pertise. Quality with the 644..c»27 cleanins by KUMI. MUOllry. Small jobs &c PAINT;NG Tia.
•••••••••••••••••••• ••• Block la Brick'. Llc'd. • rifhl price. 631·2004 • _. Call Eve 531-5172 re pain. Frplc facln1s. 15 Yean Experience ••••••••••••••••••••••• :,:~ Rf.!~~~:a,1~:~ '42-mTeves. 11Kfrica1 .. :.:r.::': ............. General cleaning-of· MR.::~::7'°"7: 548-4182 ·~~::~~·r!l!.kTois~
YourDallyPUot 2ndlflneraUon 17ynln Driveways, Patios . •••••••••••••••••••••••Carpentry, rooting, flces,vacantapta., ~m el· RALPH'SPAINTING 893-1887 ~Directory area. Uc'd. Top qual. Walb, Brick 6 Block . ELECTRICIAN-priced masonry, plumbln1. homes.891-3365 Ina. Quality with the Uc. Int/Ed. Low Rates ---------~tative Mr. Palombo,MZ.-Jl•. LJc'd.88l·ll72,962·0996 right, free estimate on s\ucco, drywall. et<!. MRS. CL""'"u MAKES IT beat price. 63l·2004 Free Eat. 964·5566 TrHs.r.ke c lar•eorsmalljobs ·~• -LnJ-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 64Z..H71,•d JI I ~ CllMC.. Llc~#398&2l 67·,_~9 ...,.._.., , GLEAM! Homes, apt.a, Mo""9 ''-tw/I..... ExpertTreeTrimmer
CUSTOM INTERIOR ROME IM PROV EM ENT office. Ca"'"'t. 64&-2240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ten yean experience CARPENTRY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ M I ., Tbe St i 28 BOOKKEEPING By Jay l42-ll08 LIC. CJULD CARE Top ~ality, Dependable Remodeling-Odd Jobs Housecleaning-reUable. Cov~nf ·Studenta =~:.ng Neat patches le textures MS-1~. 751 -21
6TAXSERVICE llyCorcmadelMar Servtce. Reas. Rates. 18 28ynexp. 979-2285 ood k d j b c mg Fr.e .. t. Hl-1439 Tree/shrub trim. remov. Reu. rates. 498-0813 Custom Cabl.neta Ir Ban home 8'73-2945 yrs experience. 531-SOSS I wor • stea Y o . o. H 1rown··sa"?e Ii Ftnlsblns. Garaie Carpentry, plumbing & Ref1.646-7228aft. 4. lood eervtce. Ins.. lied.,._. .. , clnupe, haul. Concrete.
..... Unit.t145-41521 Coalt•t.r Electrician -Sm. Jobs, electrical. Llc. contrac· House cleaning, ovens, #T12'-431.641-8427 ....................... dirt,etc.Jlm631·4530
••••••••••••••••!•••••• •••••••u•••••••••••••• maint. & repaln. Lie. tor. Gene, 642·8537. dent Holleman .Plumbin!f Wlltdow C~ Driveways, parkin1 lot c..,.. Service Construction· All types #23.Jl<B-ClO. 548·5203 H__....woocl n---dwlinrtdoy. WSMe'1anflrsy 'a~~~4y7~~lng s:~... :::~~0;5e2~014u9a3t. Sales-Serv1ce-Repa1rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• repairs, aealcoat1n1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20ynexp. Free est. _.., ~ .,.... -Freeestlmates 552·7183 .. . .. '•S.S Asphalt: 648-4171 Shampoo6steam clean. Lie #3M589 6'5·59'13 ELECTRICAL and re· ....................... H eslll~ 848-3'T17orl47·3309 LetTheSunsh~eln '· Lic'd c 1or bri h -h . ' model.in& QuaUty with HARDWOOD FLOORS o~ _, Properly M••g••etlt Call Sunshine Window
· 0 1 teners, w t RESIDENTIAL &c Co • thebeetpn'·ce.631-2004 Cleaned&Waxed ••••••••••••••••••••••• P.wMg,/PaperllHJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleaning,Ltd.548·8&53
... ,sPffha crpts 10 min. bleach. m EX EC UT IVE w 111 ....................... p f · •A -.., ff ll u .. ,_ I"' merclal remodelln1 4 __. Anytime 832-4881S A , ro . service""' save you ·Wh w d rf 1 w Id ....................... a • v ......... rm1 ~: Q lit Ith h be · ••I lllg ' · · housesit, xlnt refs. ex· DAVES PAINTING lime & money. Newport at a on e u or
bABYSfJTJNG avgnnS7.50;coucbllO; ~· Y w t .e st •••••••••••••••••••••••HClllllMJ per'd.!M7-540'7,644·1241 ServingArea9years PaclficR.E.M5·368J of Sho_pp1ng: right at
• My borne, 1 yr fr up, nr cbr 15. Guar. elim. pet P ce. "1·2004 •VERY LOW PRICES• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Moat Reasonable }our hngert1ps ever}
Victoria, C.M. 642·1412 odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrs Room addilionl remod Landscapemalnt·clnups Haul, cleanup, concrete .~=•••••••••••••• Insured, lic'd. 760-7301 ltooflR9 day : D a 1 I y P 1 Io t
Mature woman to baby
sit anytime.
e•p. Do work myself. plan. Geo. Pilm~r 6: Son'. Georae. 549·2015 removal. Dump truck. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Classlfied Ads. To place Refs. 531-0101 Lic'd 557.a32 Quick serv. 642-7638 Auto Ins. Cancelled Fine ext/int painting by New &recovers. Repair your ad, call 642-5678 and
548-2038
c..... • Have sometJUna to sell? All RiakSR·22Lo Rates Richard Sinor. Lie, Ins. specialist/stay-busy let a Classified Ad·Vj.sor
Classified Ads 142 . ...,,., Sell idle itemt 642·5e'71 Classified adt do It well. Want AIU Call 642·5678 Pirtle! Ins. 646-3995 Try me. 631-4410 (24 hrs) prices. Reliable. 548-0512 help you.
Offlu lt...tal 4400 Office lt..tal 4400 Office....... 440G ..... lu lal ll_... 4500 M~ Tn1St Lost & '-cl 5300 ,......... SJSO PerMMh 5350 Help W..e.d 7100
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• D.ecti 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Elegant pror ~ldr in 1:t!t ~ srio u'i!lrit°~!ddurl/gf· ....................... Lost: M Lab mix, under 1 ~~~s:~~~~E ___ Un ____ ... _
SS< per sq .. se. .~c~; on o r. Widow has money for y~. It. golden . vie. LOST: Blk/Wbt m . cat. Accoun I
Carpet ... 1351 17th ST. and BRISTOL p . HuntBch.842-2834 2ND T.D.'s any size Lindberg School. C.M. red collar w/name taf s:!~~~ESlO~~ Po:i(i~n·!£<~1MN-·p"'t• ... th.
l•17 Wes' Ali fr N. B. Want COSTA MESA Industrial above Sl0,000. No credit Feb. 27 . Reward CdM vie. Lge Reward " ... ./ 1 F · 642-8:598 '"~" Mtt<>or 7.,.. .u.... prop. mg mt. firm . financial inst. 70005.f. 5,000 sq ft. new till up, • no pn ty. or action ~.... ...r......, AMBER formerly with Outstanding career opp-
lst. '1oor. Agent541·S032. Primegroundfloorofficefrom65·75c 18~'clearce1Ung.450sq call AGT 673-7311 LOST:MaleGoldRabbll COVER GIRL is now ty .-G/L. A/P . AIR
pr sq. ft. From 200-3000 sq. ft. North ft offices. avail in anytime vie Tradewinds/San-Found: abandoned white w i t h T H E w/emphasis in financial
Rent: 3 mos to 3 yrs. 180 Santa Ana near college. All utilities 3 O I d a y s . l · 5 I y r l Madlerel Aoh M'-llago Pleasecall 646-9844 M cat, neut .. needs lov-GIRLFRIENDS' analysis. If you· r e
to ~ s/f. Flex. terms. paid. lease .. 33" net. Owner I SINCE 1981 • .,. Ing home. 673-7087 bright w/prior F /C exp ..
Fumor unrum. (714>642-3971. lsl&:2nd TDs. SSOK-SlM + FOUND : Bl k pu PPY we'll train you & provide ltlcJMRHllty Owner/Non Ow n er female. Poodle-g ray Found: Golden puppy, THE for career advance-
979-1533 PRIME C.M. loc. 1500 to SFRs&Condos male. Shepherd-tan female. nr Raster & • ment.Call:640-0123 540-3666 1800 sq . rt . ofc . Commercial&lndustrial male. Shepherd-blk & Orangewood. Anah~im. Girlfriends KOU CEMTEI warehouse. $450 plus tan male. Also cat· 971-5838. ESCORTS ACCTG CLEIK ..... ~OIT mo. Avl . immed . PETERDOBBS Siamese mix male. S350 * * ,...:;nr-~.............._-=:.:--. 54~ 64<Mi016 673-9043 Newport Beach Animal PH'SOftCllh Hw/Offlce/Hotel Exp'd , mature person ~legp~~~~ge~u\i;::t~~~ It~ W_...__.a 4600 W9120-22% Yt.ld? Shelter644·3656 •P•R•E•••LA••W•••s•lu•d•e•n••t•n•::;s• * 759· 1216 * for general office & Sub-lease o ffi ce & 1--1--It__._, 4 .. SO ..,,._ unTil'lll OnY ~ H N H'. payroll. Arcuracy a With complete support ~s ......-m "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ourT.D.'S.Notes Found· male German 125.000.Willdoanything 24 rs ow tnng mus t C M area
services. ~a~eh~~seRe~nhilT~~ •••p••••••••••••••••••• Garage needed. C.M SSCRaJSll. eDers·l~ves~rsSS Shepherd mix. 2/24, nr Legal. Confidential MC Visa 549-2238
714/851·0681 sp ena · For store & office space area. must have 24 hr a nnison nssoc p la van School, F . v DVM . P.O. Box 3242, .;;;_.-_.-___ _
"OU c~H ~nstol. 1·4/yr lse. 4 of· at reasonable rates. access. 673-7586 673-7314 540.1662. N .B. 921163. • •
" snt fi ces. recept. a.r~a . SOOto 2700 Sq Ft. -----------
HEWPOIT warehouse w/lrg sliding MESA VERDE DR a...-SS/lnnst/ Want investor for Npt Lost : Reward . Sm I COVER GIRL ~i~~~~~ Elegant executive suites door. full sec. system . PLAZA ,._. bayfront home. Give blk/bm M. Terrier mix.
in prestige location. all new crpts & pnt. 2500 1525Mesa Verde E. C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• well secured 1st or 2nd Vil"HB. 842-2156 * OUTCALL • IOam-lOpm. Fully Lk'd. With complete support sq n. Avail after 3/25/81. s .. r 4123 1._i....-...1 T.D. Agt. 67S.616l. 95S.<m8 MC/VISA 492·7296 or 492-9034 1815 . C II -'" 10 f 't "''I-.._. LOST R d M" d ---------S Camino Real. San serVJces . a ..,,er am or app OppiwtwNty SOOS 2 n d Tr u s t D e e d . ewar ixe Clem
ADMINISTRA TlYE
ACCOUNTING
MANAGER 714/851·0681 tosee.644~. Conw•icial ....................... purchases arranged. Terrier Blk/Wht vie FIRST LADY
4SO sq. ft $450 per mo. EXECOFFICESPACE ...... 447S COPY SHOP: S37 ,000 For details. call 960-1957 ~.~'.1:=~~ H.B. Escort. Models
4001 Birch St. Newport Newport, 1675 sq ft <or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Profit. Sl5,000 dwn. bkr
LOST· Reward SJOO Sml
blk cat, fem. Requires
mediralion 548-6539
Advertising Agv.
Person with personn'I &
office administration.
payroll & full charge
bookkeefing exper. Des irab e New port
Beach location. Liberal
benefits. Call
"' Beach.Agent54l·S032. more>. full service. Store Space for lease. WC/Bal. or Exchange ---------LOST; Male Shepherd PcriyDmcen.
ground nr. ample prtlg, ~500 sq.~· & 12eO sq. ft. Esta blsd 5 ~ Yr s AwcWClh/ Mix. vie. Npt Blvd. * 972-1345 *
Luxurious. ru11 servire of-
fice space. 1-6 rms. con-
ference room , sec'l
services Newport
Beach. Call for info:
752-61118
avail. 3/11. $1.30/ft . tn H~llngton Beach. 631-<m5;642-6157 Ptnaaals/ REWARD! 645-7395 MC&VlSAAccepted
Terma ne1ot1able. To F 1ex 1b 1 e terms · Broker wants partners. Lolf & Fo9d "Klmo"
see. call ~oeo:I wtdys. 213/586--7202. Arnie Quevedo. The
Cowtesytobroken. CORONA DEL MAR Property Mart. 640.9019
., Prime retail loc. Hwy 545 S4i).r • • rrontage. 645-5429. LagWla Time Sha re Con·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ._ce•Rts 5100 Lost. Small while Terrier
••••••••••••••••••••••• mix. Brown collar. Lie. 11102498. H .B . nr
Gr'NtC_,..y
Escorts
24Hrs. 641-0180
***** FANTASY
ESCORTS
Jan Wood
213-277-3200
17th St, Costa Mesa. 3 do Cash To Loan 450 sq. ft. Delightful roomsuite.S450mo. 3700 sq ft deluxe 640-7051
workin.g s pace with Realonomlcs 675-6700 showroom & warehouse.
WEIGHT
LOSE IT
& Earn Money
821-3241
Garfield /Beach
REWARD. 960-1087. Casll/Checks
A. &p/MC/Vlso
631-1730
12MOOM-4AM
9658 Garden Grove Bl. ADVBTISIM6 ocean view. Full bath. 3 ln•fthMM yr old bldg. $450 mo. CdM Deluxe Suites. AC. Seetoapprec. 631-4402· O~fty SO IS
Lost : 2 Cockateels. both I~~!!~~~~~~
white w/gray markings
Vic Harbor/Victoria
GG
* •• * * Turner Assocs . 494-1177. ampl pkg, uul pd. 28SS 4.000 sq ft for lse. storage ••••••••••••••••••••••• SCRAM-LETS 646-6052 eves. M D's facil. in HB. 2.000 E. Cst Hwy. 675•6900 w_ort area, potential .of· LOAN S500 or more. Dbl
sq ft Reduced to 11200• ... '--1lt--"-' 44SO ft ce set-up . Will your money Loan is ANSWERS Lost · black & white
FANTASY
0 CHADN~MGEST, !:fMCOS. T &nD6o,...11t & . . r." "' ,,.,. atiOlt
Acd. Coordlltator
Immediate opening for
agency ex per 'd
roordmator with gd
managerial /organiza.
tional skills. Industrial
or trade accounts back-
ground preferred. Call
Freddi at 714.730-0355
· .,.._.. ........ negotiate good lse secured by unprecedent· 8m9~
35
1s1e Red Carpet.••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor & Warner. SA ed 1st in film financing Eodure -Orave Boston Bull Terrier .
...-1 Newport Beach. Sl.25 546-3'700 history. 714·957·4<Wl6 Going -Cornea fem a I e . R e ward
sq. ft New dlx ofrice or ARGUING 963-7985.
LIBERAL STUDIO IS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~·sT~~os~/~~ Schools&
•DaUXEOFftCES• retail w /pvt bath, lttdllltrialll...tal 4SOOl1tnshM11t The secret to a happy --------
From 1 room up to 2300 security, a /r. 600.2400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wmlhd 5020 marriage is to rind so-1 year Calico r at Mesa
Sq ft ... ""per sq ft 3 m e on e you en,. o Y Verde area c45.9579
TI ON. 8125 Bo Is a . IMh.cffoR 7005
Midway City. Just 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~
blocks east of Beach
Blvd. behind liquor · · ••·"° · · sq. ft. 509 31st St. (next ••••••••••••••••••••••• " rooms and up. No lease to Bank of Newport. MESA lwtioclllc..._ Off..-ARGUING with. ___ Reward. Call aft Spm required. 2172 DuPont ._.. r Dr. Adj. Airporter Hotel. Lido Cannery area l . INDUSTRIAL 7.5 pts rommisi1ion on all Lost & Fo.nd 5300 Found. Poodle ; small
83J.32'l3. !H2 875-3238, (213)641-9700 p •RK 2 n d T D ' 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• remelt> Blue rollar. no I•--------•
--------1 "' SlO,OOO-S40.000. 1 & 2 yr 1-.-------~ t 556-4700 c 11 NB •FOIYLADY * HEWPo.TCEKTEll ,,_.Loe..._ J.O. Llm!ted offer. Ca11 1• s~!iter. -8 . . OUJ'CALLONLY
Full Service Suites 1270Sq rt on busy Beach 711 W .17tla. St. Liberty Home Loan. & i----------t VISA MC
SCUT COSTS$ Boulevard· Huntington Investments. &el-9343. FOUND ADS Found. Small Tan/white. * 972-11 JI* Beach. Ideal for real Cc.ah Mna. CCllH.
store. 543-9243.
AllUME CAltHllS
""1.AirAcadetlly
will be Interviewing pro-
spect.Ive students·in your area. If you are 18 yrs.
or older & a high school
grad .. you may qualify
ror airline/travel career
training.
Call toll free :
ADVERTISING
ADVERTISIN•
SALES
$2000+
PER MONTH
Must be experienced
Call Mr. Crossen.
759-0652 All you need for one estate omce. store or 642-4463 M0tig•111. r ... t ARE FREE· dof. Part Daschabund. ---------monthly fee! other suitable business. D"41i 5035 part ? Hunt. Bch. area. e.otlc Escorts
1M0-547o 2 Private baths, avail•· ·~ sq ft warehouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• C II 640-'12M. 558-llMI Alarms-Winning team.
Now available. Ideal ble Imm ediately. 10 avail for immed oc· s.etlerMt.,.Co. a : Found. Black &c white 24Hr.Service Experie~ce:: ~rsonoel
I I f A Yearleue. Attractively cupancy. *2780 aq ft All types of real estate 64J,.S671 F b 2 d Se.rvlngOr.Cty require Y range
1-100-426-16 55
Vancouver, Wash.
:~!~ o~sto:te ~~rn~~: priced. warehouse avail late investmenLs1ince UM9. l~~!!~~~!!!!!~~-~~~:~~~e!:Pr~~~M~a~r~_n_e_·r_•_~_rj: ATLANnS MASSAGE Readin1 taufht children ~:::ll(n ie~1u/};~ L:~ trepreneur in beautiful· 642-4321,ext216 Feb. -Z·l.8001q. 'li units S,.Clal .. llt I-N.8 .831-4121 SPA Christian teacher, re · volt'.age Ir electrical ex-
ly maintained full Weekdays avail early Marc · •33" WTDs · a• ..... able rat-certified E ----------1 sq ft •Leulng ortice Have something you LOST: Ute grey tabby Be pampered by 16 """' ... a , perience necessary. X·
servlc;, buJ:fd~ng& Sellthl.npfutwithDally ~.Mon. thrv Fri. M . 64Z..Jl71 545-061 I want to sell? Clusllted cat w/blk stripes Fem Beaut. Girls. Open _548-__ 9UO __ •_ft_er_6-'p_m ___ 1 periencedonlyneedapp·
<Comer eslc r. PUotWantAds. Sat.1~2. WantAdResulta &U-5678 adadoltwell.142-54111. vie. So Laguna Reward 10AM-4PM 7 days. JGIKW..t.cl. 7075 ly. 714-8311-63lO. Irvine. Newport Beach). IL.. ._ 499-4470 PhooeMs-3433 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.:. _______ _
500 sq. rt. Call Melissa""•"..... 11111•11l11at .. 1' .... I.. .......... 1----------i ----------AnswerinJ service needs
145--elOl. Opp-1 . ..., 5011 o,,.. . ...., 5015 Oua.tmlty IOll Ona lcaJtr SOll!Wbet.beryw'rebuitaior TOUCH A CLASS Bs:ti <fuli~u::'!~;.~ relier. graveyard ... •••••••••••••••••••••• !.•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• selUnf, Clo1lfied ad· ESCORTS 752·0817 I N B •· C M operator. Top wa1es & Newport Center Lawyer vertJ.sinc will let your ment. n · · "' · · many benefit.a.• 312 3rd
or other professional A reglstrOflOn 9'0fement re10t1ng to ltle$e secu:(ties tios been fllea wrtti lhe Securities and Exc:ha11ge meaaaeetotberitbt peo-The futat ·draw ln the _n_s._n_os _______ , St. IC, Laguna Beach.
1ln1leofc ln exec. suite. Commssioo.buthasnotvetbecomeelfecttve TtiesesecllitiesmoynotbesoldnormoyotfetSlobvvbe 1 CaDToda 1142.5171 Welll. · ·• Daily Pilot Scandinavian woman Law library, recep't , accepted prior to lhe time lhe reglstrott0n statement becomes ~active This odllert1sement shall not pe. y. · CluatnedAd.6U-:ie78. lookins ror houseclean· ASSEMBLERS. We will
.telerhone answering coostiMeanolfertosellorthesoflcltot1onofanolfer tobuvlhesesec11111es norshOlltnerebeonv soteof 1 1 . . t r ain. Apply TAM . avaL Lease avail. A y . these secllitles In anv slate 1n which such olfer sol1c11at1on or sole would be un1owtu1 prior to reg1strotl<XH)f n I P 0 9 t 1 0 n 1 n MacGregor Yachts, 1631
CO Financial Tower QVOllflcolion under the securities lows or onv such stole N · B ·IC· M · 8 re•· Placentia, Costa Me1a
955-2411 PROPOSED NEW ISSUE ~~ _,.. 'e " _6?_3-_
79
-
17
-· ----ASSISTMAMA6R ~ f'i Manicurist wants to WISTCUFF AllA \ a \ 1peciaUze in pedicures Auto rental. No exper.
Executive suites . 700,000 Shores ~ '1 "-.•. •· eveninp.546-7462 neceuary. Call 979-1826
I r o u n d rl o o r I o c . .1 • ~ or 'T72..e.s50.
Secretarial/bookkeep-> il tL............. Pr act I ca I nurse · •
(714)131·36.'51. V 1rivr_nvrv SS /hr . flexible . Call,,,...or772•8550·
lnl .erv. avail. Call for mt )~ r1 OOt'\'1'3 PUT't:/ companion, matllre AUTOltlMTALA T
m 0 r e de ta 11 s . • n I technology , ,. ~L. .JL.1.o'·OIAI J w/loc:al refs, 5 days/wk. No eaper. neuaury.
Office space available marketing l~f~( . 1 l 8' 1181). CalJD.9788 (9-5). AUTOMOTIVE
J
r!'tttepa.I' . ..__ ~e4 offices. 756 incorporated 1 Mf?' ~, " ~.II\ ~I J Hetp W..e.d 71 OG PIOlllSSIOHAL .,.. ~"""' ti""'~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SllYIC:I
lftlSIMTATlfl r N.B. 2700 eq ft. fully Im· (Uf\n!ll\/l -ACCOUMTIM• Roy Carver RoJU 1loyce
L p?'O'Yed ,,.ce, Sl.5/eq ft. INlne. Ca lifornia · "1 ll looldn1 for •• ex· pleauntly divided ibto 8 • -4/or perlenced profeas&#Jlal
otnces, Z sec'y areu, + COMMON STOCK ~.. Aj IOOll91NG aervlce reprwentallve.
coafereaceroom. Forln· Use ~~ "" service To .. tat ID developing If )'OU b ave the fonnadonMUMO (no par value) r h tbe P • L. Wort under qualifications, tall w en placing your ad ... a Avail now In prime o.c. O •1 p · i iolnlmum Hpervlslol'I. DU'11 Sickle for an •P-A r hi 11 1 p t t a1 y 1 ot ad number wiU Requlndtomelndepen· pobrtmentat al'l*t loc. 1 0Rlce1. copy o t s pre m nory rospec us or review only i I If led dent Juclaement. May 64M444 toafereace room .. re-may be obtained by colling or wrftln,g to the address below. appear n your c ass ad aNlp "" to lower·
cept. area. Ideal for M s . . c . . .. we take your messages leYel derb. Xlnt. eom· Babyaltter. P/T, t•p .
• • m 1 I I OntanO SCUrltlSS Orporat10n 24 hOUrS a day YOU Call paay benefits. Ctll with lnf1nU, ma ure ~ bua./duk /1torau. .._ • • • Mllll• after tAM : adult. Woodbrldse. : R001111'1IO;.ch.Ma1te MembenPoclttcsrockc-"cnonge&SIPC in at your convenience ...-. m-•1.
deal cm all or part Call 523 West Sixth St . Suite 244 19752 MacArthur Blvd Sul!e 120 during Office hOUrS and et
!Sten : tH·Ol··4 or Los Angeles. CA 90014 Irvine. CA 92715 g l•----··----1 Bab,.ttw needed ln my 110-0M1. (2131680·3620 (]141752•6165 I ~, the responses to your ad • . . A~ _ ·~ home • n1ie. ..... k. ~ zxlClmV••UJTa Nome: -• 11 this service Is only $7.50 A/Pea.Ill ~-:::W.11,:a!'c:~
MCllllblTrtntallncld.tre. Address· City : 1i week. For more lnforma· Eaeen. ca .... r.:C:~ 14uua
Hpt, p11oee coHr•1•. ;i tlon and to place your ad s.,.., ... • ~ -
m.U ..,.,, .. cone...... State: Zip Phone: ( ) c II Lr~2 5678 ~ ................ No...Sttln•sead ....
.. ! Jtall1. Xtroa 6 MC. ' ) 8 U.. • • • ..... ~ '-ft&a .... lo-Jaak far qe
un. -.anll. Oousiu ~~Ol'l~----~OlllllQW9ll INGDCM~U· .. ~-.... o.tl--. -·-. ,. Deli&. ewe...... ... ... ,...·n • ~ ,. ..... ,., .. 1oc. !:li!?'.,':'~;c!':'::.=:=:i:-='=':,~~~:rnt:= ..._...., ,..c.a:....aa: ';· •ti.re• . C;J:~~~lt~ ... ~-tl~:'~,·~·~1""*~1~1~~~·2.a..~1~·1=1~·11~i1._.ll.i•ifMlij~ii;:.iJi-.. i°""i::";!l•!~!.i::;i'ii_,illll9i,.,.i-':,i':'"i·..,_~11o1o~~~;oi~!:-!~!~!·~!~;!teo1111e!1Dt!:!!~!·0!,...,!!~~!·!•!•!~ii·!...._o;~!~·!~-! .... i!!~~!!!,...!i!i!~~1J!·,::~~~==~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;·~~·!~~~r.~~,a~111e~re~-~ 109~,~~!f:·~·~e , ..... ---< • ·} , W•Mll&lpT ~...,. ...... nu..,. ,_
• • -··-·-------..,. ,_ -\ .-·----' -·=---~ ... ,. _,, .. ...,_,. , .. ,__ .__ ...
~\ '
Orange Co .. t OAtLY PtLOT(Thul'9dey, Milich 5, 1981
!t.'!~.~ ..... ?!... ... w~;.~ ... ..?1~ •• .?~;.~ .. : .. ?!.~ ..... !!~ ..... ?!.~ ~~'r.~!'!';.~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~':';.~ ..... ?! ...... ..!eS:-!! ..... ?~~ ~?~;.~ ..... !!~
...... To Go po.itlon a..t raPtty COOTdLHtor. RAIDS JAMITOMAI. o•nc• RecQIUool1t. mu.t be nUaMe penoa avlU. Pll lltffl. Exger. PbermM)' It Hallmaril. a,p ...... ..-..t for r•·" .r tJ All J' I I abet to.,,...... a PBX --vS/moold, preferred. Skinn y lxp. MO-ma · -~ me. ull t me. Work n MAMA•• . •--~ clrape17 ~tot la arut. UaAlwml ""11'd. buuUful Dan• Point Cla 11 1 11 couole, typ ... 1 fef., 1'na..-.m .m1. Ra.,. a..taurant 9'01 Compeni• for elderly our dHllD 1h&dlo. Ar• 21 • ov.r. tttlred Harbor. U .50/hr + M~t ".,! ~:u!:t'a~t:~· neat In appearuee. 1d ~-------•I YortllowA••.ffBApply man for l·I weeks. 561-1'01. welelOIM.Nouper.nec. beneftts. PltHe apply craUve wtt.b lood or'. beneftt.t. call ~HIOO. NI,...,.. t1001..-. Uve I•, prlv Appl)' : \1nIv er1 a I Tuet. tbru Sat . Dana taalaaUOa lkllla Salary Mn. Wolf.
C "'SHI• rm~Cdll~ Oriver to pld up de· Protedlon Servteoe. 1%311 Point Marina. 24101 ne-'•Me Call· for ln· --------,.. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ceMed pets • eome yard W. 5lh St.. Santa Ana. Dana Dr. Oana Point. t_; ao..n T&* llC ..... OMIST P'~,!!~~l' lar•e C~ wort.11542 8eacb Blvd, ~~. hn: •1Jltl·4, Lefal .,,~__. .. ...,, exp In or'lburt.IAM·SPll. Aak Full Ume. Sun .. Thun. m--..,.. ... are •tore. -·TOI H.B. .............. ~·.,-·,, f --Ll•-t....i-· • 10.kt" ex· Xlot ._.,...as workln1 ~ uuaation, rchktlla, H.B. or ....... ee~~eeded. "Pvt. --------~~b~ !:nc:':1_cond1Uona ___ ._l4S-_1_1u. __ -1 ~--~.;=.· J~~ Em~ H;=.rb:::.~. Iota Non-amoter.841-1400. PACIA•RS COWltryClub.144.$t04. N~~~ leadUis
&xperieoc9pref'd. Call: CASHIER 1alaryiil00d beneflta. COUMSaott 41'-5e77. Legal Sec:retary for sole IUO/hr to 1tart. Merit ------.... -111 Jewelera aeektn1 full ltatbyAmburl•Y HOUSEWAllESALES lOCW. Jl'ree Earnh•I• unlimited ! practltioner, airport loc. ralset. 1517 Monrovia llC9'Tl°"9ST time Employee well ~ Apply ia penoo: Crown Acea• t,........ Turn·keY operation! HAii STYLIST Concenlal atmoephere. Ave., N.8. Exper'd. pe.rsoo needed venecl In aalet fr office
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL Se•he•aL._ •Town Center Dr.
Colt.a ll•a. Ca. tK2l8
Equal Opportunity
Employer
........
a...,./Swtlclllloerd
911Mn1 personable ap-
plicant with gd. phone
etiquette . Exper .
b elpful. Typing re·
quired. Call : Sylvia
Waters, 552-41100
IAt«OFllVIME
Equal Oppty Emplyr
Hardware, UIZ4 J"lne, PenonnelServtces Fully e9t.abli.abed. 50'I. NEED NEW IMAGE? nex hn. Prefer back· to handJie buay board ln procedures. J d•y week
<Weltclilf Plua) NB Temporar y 6 Perm•· commlaalon. Option to Colleen O'Hara haa a ground in civil Ut./b141l· Part Time dynamic Npt Bcb. com· lncludina Saturday, no
nent buy Into bu1lnus ! spacJouasalon tn perfect nesa plannlnJ, word pro· m'I. brokeraie office eveninp. CallS73-9334.
l100Quall,N.B. Employment agy. location. II could be ex· ceasln1exphelpful.Con· Ca••••IY°"" Profeulonal •P· SALES/Order Deak Clt'fflERS 9155-mo E.O.E. coumelor. Exper'd. on· actly what you are look· ta ct JI m at < 7 l 4 > c..n.n pearance " mannerism E Ii h . M I~~~!!~~~!!~ ly.Callfora~.754-1581 lngtor.646-134.5. """'"""'" Adult.a with outatandlnl a muat. Call : Laila, Muat be n,1 1 • 1: MOR AN .. ,.,....._.. ·-2800 Spanlah speak I · Marine '" ff di d k ---------• attractlve penooallUea _. U Ta Tl M Counter help wanted EM p Loy M ENT an cappe wor en. Live-in. young disabled to spend 1.5.bn per week II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ or a uto. exp. helpful.
F I T. Mt ch e 11 e • s AGENCY fut bands/1ood mind. female business student counaelint youth aiea ::; F /Ume poe. Excell. co.
Cleanen. I~~~~~~~~~ Wewantyou.641·3907. needs English speaking lO-U. Evenloaa & RECEPTIONIST I benefits. Call: Balboa
MARKETS ForZnd It 3rd Shifts
We promote to manage-
ment Ir supeovialon from
within.
WANT A CA REER?
Cost.a Mesa
lllDelMar
631·9421
Laguna Beach
494.9233
Hunttngton Beach
982-9116
498-51U HARDWARE SALES attendant. Ask for Ann, Weekends Available. S75 secretary for am. H. B. MMa/Frlne/H, 549-98'7l E.0 .E. ---------• ISCIOW POSmOM ....., .....,1 k c a 1 1 firm. Excell. on phone. ~....,..H p Fulltime/PartUme.An. .....,....,, Per w · ---------C'-"'"tliR IL Immediately avail. in r 2·»s·30pm Mon thru typing60wpm +.Outgo-
AmbiUoua, bri1ht and L.B. Escrow Co. Exp. pHlayrdi.nwapere,rslo02n =. clrrvo~nne Live· in housekeeper com· Fri. Mz·Cl ext. 343. lng penonallty. 960-2441 s :a~:e~ f~r E.:.~i~:.y·
enercetlc people wanted ~·i'~i~::-~tles CWeetcliff Plau) N.B. panion for elderly lady. Ask for Lori. shop. Exp. helpful but
for lull and p/Ume help 642-0l:M <>r,.... Coat I.E. Secntary not nee. Full Ir p /Ume.
for t.aay deU 6 aandwich ---------*•HEY IUDS** ...,. •CHl .... IST ~Plot Real estate firm needs Call : 646-5311B for appt. shop. Good 1tarttn1 posi-F/C'-•--&.&. -,.. W S experienced secretary lion wtth xtnt chance for 91-..,..-Here's your chance to Part Ume for short run D> · ay treet for its C.M. office. Must
advancement in trow-Fast growing C . M. make extra s pending production lathe work-Costa Mesa. Ca. have euellent typing SAUSPEISOM
Ing company. To set up mfg/importer i.s seeking money, working only a lite, clean job. 846.3215 E q u a I 0 p p o r t . skills, shorthand not re· Photography a tore.
appt. for interview call an exp'd full charge few days a week ? Employer quired but helpful. Will Good photo ltnowledte a
Stanat67J..9000. bookkeeper. Must enjoy Berome a subscription aaaist manager with must. Apply tn person:
responsibility & be well salesperson for the Dai· MACHINE PAITY HB.P operation of office. R. E. Photolraphy Unlimited.
organized. Computer & ly Pilot. Earn as much Experienced gentleman license desirable. Call _l_SB __ &ea_ch_B_I._. H_.B_. __ CPT 8000-Secretary .
BEAUTICIANS &
.AMCURISTS, follow-~~~~~~~~
Newport Beach Law Of·
flee, ask for Cindy Ray
(714) 644-'516
budget exp a +. Great as '50.00 PER WEEK! SHOP & lady to bartend & Suzan 831-12166. growth potential , Positions open in Hunt· serve occasionally at Salespeople-Cathy Jean,
pleasant atmosphere. lngton Beach, Fountain TRAINEES our residence. TOP Fash.Ion Island's finest 1111 pref. To work In
warm, friendly salon.
Hrs. Oex.ible. The Hair
Depot. 557·2234.
Beautician
HAllCUTTBS
MA.II-UP ARTIST
MASSA•E
E stablis hed pro·
feuionall only for a uni·
que new sa l on i n
Newport Beach opening
March 16. A few posi·
Uona available for lease.
87S.3128. i. The DAZZLERS 1:»alon
Beauty
CllCUS VAR6AS
Costa Mesa. Mar. 17·19.
Office 4r deliver y help-
F IT. Call 546-1266.
CLEANING
Need help In my
establlilhed residentia I
cleaning service. Good
pay. Call today. 751-5198.
CLEttlCAL
Gen. Ole. P/lime pos.
for mature person. In·
teresting work in
pleasant ofc. on P.C.H ..
Npt. Bch. Exp. a must
Accurate typing , no
shrt.bd. 20 hr. wk. Hrs:
Sun, Mon, Tues, Wed. 9
to lPM. Sat. 10: 30 to
2:3oPM. Call :646-7431
Salary Sl4K·S15K to Valley and Costa Mesa. WAG~.Call752·6505. clothtng/shoe store has
STOO .... start. Non·smoker pre· If you are outgoing, en lmmed openings for ---------immed. openings for CU IA... mach. operators. Will REALTORS i F I T . 3 p m . 1 1 p m . ferred. Contact Lightn· thusiastic and at least 12 train for C.M. plant. Ex· Pff A TI'EHDAMT eage r , attract v e
male/female. Harbor ingBoltAcces.957-9323. years ol d , CALL cell. co. benefits Busy beach kennel. Restaurant salespeople to work in
area church. Cal Chuck I~~~~~~~~~ TODAY!!!! !642·4321 Deltron.ic·S45-04l3 Start SJ. 75 . Helen . FRY COOK. COUNTER our Fashion Island
8 . "'pm . M 0 n . F r i Ext. 211 before 6pm Ask 494-0142. & ASSIST MGR. posi· store. We will train U,e
o1 File Cle rks ·want a f Vl Ow 631-2880. or c ens. lions open in fast food right personnel. Contact change? Use your skills ~ C t Pet sitter fo r small M
forbon ... ..., .... 1.3907. _.._..,.. oas ---------.. d W Ii restaurant. Nr Airport Ricardo or Joe at c .... ., Relaffofts ......... .... Dally Pllot u •cHl ... E Ben.JI-type og. e ve 639-139'2 759-9700.
Growing nnancial co. in E I 0 t l"l"IA " aboard, don"t want to FILECLERK·P /T qua PP 0 r give him up but can't F.V. needs person with lns.ofc. Train rating & Employer SHOP keep him cooped up. gd.phonemanner,office claims.83S-J43'1M /F. I d · ex per., typing. 10-key HOSTESS/HOST mm e · o Pen 1 n g · DP/SJC area. 493.3035 Will train on computer 1_________ ell m a ch In e oper ator
$900+. Call: Bobbe. BUCLHK Mature,frien lyperson trainee. All girl dept 839-8045 n Experience helpful. but 6AM-2 :30PM. Costa Picture Frame Fitter. limliiiiiimiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiillil Large insurance agency I not necessary. Apply in Mesa plant. Excell Custom quality shop,
• has immediate opening I person: Denny's, 105 E company benefits. App· exp. ref's. Costa Mesa
C•h• '" s.rtlce for fast. energetic file 17th St C.M No phone ly: Deltronic, 54S-0413 (714)642-41S4. T1wfft & Lo. clerk. Paid company calls please.
l~S&L benefits. Call: Linda at --------NESSIOOM
eves.
l"t.rantHelp
Del Taco in Newport
Beach i5 now hiring full
& part time help. Both
d ay & night s hifts
available. Please apply
in person. 2112 South
East Bristol. Newpor t
Beach.
Restaurant
SALISPHSOM
Fulltime. am bilious
salesperson wanted to
work i n marine
hardware st.ore. Boating
exper prefer red. Xlnt
benefits & working con·
ditions 645-1711.
Sales Pro1resslve salon in
Newport looking for •---------
Newport-based com-549-8161 l:IOUSECLEANERS ___ MA_C_H•IMt-S•T--SUPBVISOR
puter service bureau.I~~~~~~~~~ T'oSS/hr. car. 64S-5123 for tooling le prototype Pos. requires min. 10
Day food po si
lions/Cocltt.ail positions .
Apply tn person:
RENTAL
COMSULT AMTS
Breuner 's Rent s
Furniture sttks career
oriented person for en·
try level pos. in home
furnishings. Breuner's is
California's largest
furn. rental co. & needs
qualified sales & mgmt.
staff for expanding mkl.
Retail exp. pref'd. Will tratn. $4. hr .. depending
of exp. Full or p/time.
E.0 .E. M/F. Mon-Sat ..
9-5 :30 &r Sun. 12Noon·
5P M. Contact: Jeff
Thomas at 645-4TI2
creative, motivated.
well-trained, exp Hair
Deslgner. Call 833-0304.
Beauty
llxperienced Shampoo
assistant with Ii cense
needed. Apply in person,
at : Allen Edwards
Salon, 1040 W. Pacific
Coast Hwy, Newport
Beach.
BOOKKEEPER/
RECEPT. Medical of-
fice, Laguna area.
SmaU. eon1enJal office.
fuli time. Ins urance
f'orms/typing. Call Bet·
ty: 489-1702.
IOOKKEEPER/SEC 'Y
Fulltime. Experience
pref. Newpe>rt. 631·2825
IOOIK .. IMG _,_
ACCOUMTIMG
To assist ln developing
the P It L. Work under
Clerical
Typists 50WPM
Dicta Sec'ys
Exec. Sec'ys
C'-IJllwJ Car'Hf'?
Look fora
ca.• .. """1
Opp cwt.ity7
serving f in a n c .i a I FOOD SVC. WORIER ~~~!!!!!!!!~~~~~ work. Some production yrs. printing exp. Strong
custor_ners state-wide, Orange Coast College, work on vertical mill & mechanical. technical
req!-'1res cus lof!ler 3hrs /day . Mon -Fri HOUSECLEAN ERS lat.be. Read blueprints. bkgmd. in Web offset. se.rvice rep~entat1ves 1 1 .. 3 0 . 2 .. 3 0 p M PIT or FIT. Start im tools E 0 E Org. Cty. co. Send re·
with extensive bank or S4.75.ss.79/hr. Contact mediately. Top dollar. 0 W:DINSTRU.MENTS sume: Box #673, Daily
s.avtngs & loan opera· Coast Community 673-1266or646-4871 l.S542Chemica1Ln. Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. t10~ or thrift & loan ex-Colleges. 1370 Adams Housekeeper for elderly Huntington Beach Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626
penence. Excellent fr. Ave. Costa Mesa, CA l~~~~~~~~~l inge benefits. great op-92626. 556-S94? by 5PM. lady. Live-in. Mature 1~ P /T from home. am·
portunlty for growth. March 13th . E .O. E woman to drive, cook & MAIMT./JAMffOllAL bilious person lo set own
Call Norm dePlanque. M/F keep house. Attractive sw-aVISOlt hrs & income level. For
ON-·UNE COMPUTER --·-------area. R efs . req 'd . 2:56un.ltcondoproperty app'tcall5S7-5675.
SYSTEMS. 644-1801. 644-2120, 673-2991 tn Sant.a Ana P/T·F/T help needed in G98AL OFFICE Housekeeper loving non· (213)320-M32 mail room. Piece work Use tempo~ary jobs as D a t 8 E n t r y Huntintton Beach area. okl d th t1 your shopp.U>g tool. We CI er .. I Term In a I Sm. office. Invoicing, sm nt gran mo er MAMA611l TRAIMH +incen ve.641·3907.
h loo ._ hort t • h to live-ln. Mother ex· . ave I• s erm Operator, must be self· typing, heavy P one __.,A W ti id R f 5hst $700 PIT Receplioni.st /Typlst. Jobs available In the starter. accurate . gd contact with customers. ...,-.-·I· e pa · es. Mature, esp, "person weekends. Residential
O.C. AiZcrt area. Week· with niures. ability to 847-3513 848-01.13. friday" type wanted lo R. E. office. Sat/Sun
ly pay ks. quarterly work Independently. I~~~~~~~~~ Housekeepers wanted. train for position of 8 : 30·5. Llrense pre·
bonus trips. Never a fee. familiarity with 1eneral GBBAL OFACE Seacliff Mot.el. Ul61 So. manager or small, uni· ferred. Call631·1266 Call forappt. today: com puter concepts c t H L quebusi.ness. Type60-65.
557 0045 lmm--''ateorint"ngfora oas wy , aguna Real""~tate L1·c.nec • helpful. Salary open & """ · Beach 494-489'2 phone. bookkeeping . c.-. commensurate with exp d e Pe n d a 1 e • e x · ' · pay ro 11. customer L0CM Officer perienced person with r-r'\. Lfr'\~ Gd opportunity to ad· xlnl. typing skills & a Housekeeper/Companion service, etc. Apply in Exp. in 2nd & 3rd TD U \• I\':. .vancewith a fastgrow· pleasing phon e lOamFri.tolpmSun. person. Mall Center. l oan pla cemen t .
llWOIWNPUISONNUSfll\llCtS ingCo.tnC.M.549-2221. personality. Duties will NewportBeach.646·2810 167838eachBlvd,H.B. ( 7 14 ) 8 3 2 . 6 3 I I .
DB.I. F/T & P/T. also includf~ filing k& Housekeeper/Companion, MAMICUllST (2ll)4l~.
Eslary'11. 3444 E. Coast general of ice wor · · refined, over "'O. for T s NI Real F.state Lie. nee. Xlnt. benefits & working " uea.· at. ce at· C _ _._
l72l llrch StrHt ... ~~·
THE RUSTY PELICAN
273SW. PCH . Npt. Bch
Restaurant
•IUSIOYS•
Male/Female. Full or
PIT. day shifts. Apply in
perscn, Plaza· de Cafe.
4881 Birch St . N B
955-2484.
RESTAURANT
WENDY'S
OLD
FASHIONED
HAMBURGERS
Sales
Security syst~ms
We need career minded
pe()ple with manage·
ment potential to ex·
MOW HlllMG pand rapidly growing
SMIUMG FACES! commer cial & residen·
Part-time day positions ti.al burglar & fire alarm
are available. Students business.·
and Homemakers invit· S20K-S60K ed to apply. Applications i.t year comm.
minimum supervision .~~~~~~~!!!~ Required lo use Indepen-
dent judgement. May •c •ie•ri•ca•1------
Hwy.CdM,675-1354 conditions with a grow· older gentlemen, lite mosphere. ......_ ... om--r ......_.._. •-.n~ ing company. Apply in work in small hme on n,eHairHandlers Exp. in 2nd & 3rd TD
-~ ..._.. person al: Bay. Own room & bath. 642-8484 Io an p I a ce men t
Chair aide. RDA & X-ray THE J OLLY ROG ER Live-in, must drive. non· C 7 1 4 ) 8 3 2 · 6 3 I 1 .
are being accepted Qualifi cations : a m ·
betWftll the hours of 2 bilious, willillg to work
and 5 PM , Monday hard &r follow proven
through Friday. Please success pattern. For In·
apply in person to the t e r v i e w c a I I
Store Manager at the (714>&31-5711 Mr. Neill.
following location: ilaalsn work to lower·
level clerks. Xtnt. com-
pany benefits . Call
lllllle aft er 9AM :
l4S-900.
Ile. req., 41h day wk . · INC. smkr. $600/mo +. Send Market Demonstrator. (213)413-4050.
benefits, salary open 17042 Gillette Ave. resume to PO BOX 403 PIT opportU11ity, start·
GENERAL N . B. area 642-6880. Irvine CdM9262:5 ing April 3 Ir 4th.
673-3403 wknds & eves. 714·546·0331 $4.SO/hr. close to your
Housekeeper Live·l n home. (213 )277-5784;
Real E.9tate SALESTRAJNEES
SUCCESS 01 14316 Culnr Dr. Full or pt/time. excell.
FAILURE IM 'II 7 (near Walnut> oppty. for college stu-
1. Have you considered llVIME dents & moonlighters OFFICE D&ITAL ASST G&IBlAL OFACE Companion for elderly (213)881-6465 after6pm. RDA expanded duties
• -.-l(-IM4. for pediatrics dentist. Needgoodtyping, 10-key mobile couple mus t MBHCAL
'""-"' ......-w RCA currently h as a D r . Don a Id K ing . skills & phone manner. speak English & have a
Coeta Mesa engine dis· full·time position availa· 962-93>2. Order Desk & lite bkkpg. valid drivers license COURIER
the pitfalls of com· Easily earn Sl0.115/hr .
merctal le residential re· Equal Oppty Call : Jack at 951-2642.
trlbUtor needs accounts ble for an individual Part time now, possible Ref's req 548-<Y794 M us t h ave own
payable clerk. Com· with good office skills.1--------~ full time. 1537 Monrovia ---'--------t ransportation & be
puter tnput. reconcilia· accurate typing ability. DESIGM Ave. N.B. 548-5125. Housekeeper. live-out for familia r with Calif.
ti ....... 10.key ""' ....... --.1 .... 81 N.B. home. 5 half days frwy. system. No sales. ..,..,, ·'"""-...... a nd pleasant. pro· ..,.... " GENERAL OFFICE fessional telephone man· Mf In M" 1 y · · k per wk. English speak· Pleasant position for in·
leolllleeper/F•lt ner. Please apply in ar:a~eedsia;'x~r.1ef~ Newport Beach Sloe ing.mustdrive.lmmac div.whoenjoysdriving.
C'-"tt persoo to· electrical connectors. Market Advisory Firm. housecleaning, laundry. Mo n .Fri., 9 · 5 PM .
Rapidly growing C.M h er m e l i c 5 e a I s . If you can .... type, han· errands. occasional lite 768-8500 mf1 firm is seeking an transducer design. com· die telephones, do lite cooking. Send resume & , __ M_llHC __ A_L_OFftC ___ E_
eap'd. full charge book· RCA ponenls materials & bookkeeping & you want desired s a I a r y to :
keeper Interesting & methods. to learn .... about the Classified Ad #685. Daily ~eer~::c:de ',:1~~ di~:
pleasant work environ· • Duties Include design, stock market & data en-P ilot, P.O. Box 1560, --.... . b"ll ment , comp~ter & Service drafting. materials teat· _t_;ry;_,_c_a_ll_54G-_9237 ____ Costa Mesa.921626. ta.,. ......... insurance I .
b·.A•et G wth i n g & h a n d I I n g .._ exp a+. ro ing le R&D projects. ~-.... 0 _.CE tele-. One person potential-con troller Mechanical Engineer-*•'""~ m * Housekeeper. Mon & ... ~
Ith. 2 s I Com any A phon .• . g Th 9 4 30 office. Fullt1me position. 'II 1n yrs. a a ry ru! ing deg ree pref'd . nswer es, ... ypin . urs , . : pm . $13K-Sl5Ktostart.Send Qualified candidates filing & help organize General cleaning . San ta Ana a rea .
reawne to: CD&G 5020 1San601tEa.Ana, 1gAer
927
v
0
e1. sent resume to: Mrs. our airport ofcs. Tem-washing & ironing, plant _83_1-0480 __ . ______ 1 Campus Dr. N.B. 92660 C J ans . 2 3 8 9 1 v i a porary position/possible care a. meal prep. for Medical
al estate? For example : Employer M/F 1·4PM 17~ INT. rates. long --------
escrows. farming for ~~~~~~~~~I SECllTAIY
listings. competition. Restaurant Fash. Island. lntemat'I.
etc.! Walhn/Waffnsws mlttg. ofc. w/mjr. corp
ProfeuloHI L..ct Exper'd .• p/Ume needed in the engineering mfgr
Corpol .tlo. for dinner shift. $.5.75 per & consl. business. Req's.
Has the answer for your hour. No tips. Pvt. coun-xlnt. typing & shorthand
success ln 1981. try club. Call aft. 3PM. skills. ?60-18
2. Learn to market low 644-5404 SECRET AIY cost Iota and acreage In So. Calif. We have 10% RETAIL Clerk. full or Xlnl opportunity for
INT. rat.es. Earn S50K to p/t.ime. Costa Mesa Sta-sharp person for position
Sl50K, flnl year, un· tioners. 270 E. 17th. with large packaging
limited leads at more ! Costa Mesa. Apply in Co. al executive offices in N.B. Good secretarial LicaM .... INd. perscnlOAMt.ol2only. skills needed, typing
For success in 1981, ask Retail Agent with 2 or above &Owpm, dictating
for Mr. Telles more year s e xp is machine exp a must .
9155-3t02 le 831-8SS7 needed to help increase shorthand preferred but
Attn: D.A.F. Fabricante, Suite 603. permanent. Reliable. father le 2 sons. Newport BACK OFFICE part·
Equal Oppe>rtunity Mission Viejo, Ca. 92691 confident individual Shores. 16/hr. Must be time, N.B. EKG le chest llC.nOMIST IOOUSICR-IT~IFY/C EmployerM/F/H !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~must haveC n11eaLt ap1• dependable, ref's req. X-ray. Reply Classified With excellent typing
retail sales in lrg com· not req. Superb benefits.
merclal office. Xlnt $1250/mo +.Call Lois at
salary & benefits. Send <714>7S!·Z7ll.
"' ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ pearance. a aur e Please call between PO .. it'· 1 '"A · f Co1ta Mesa location. r: for details 833-0440. 5:J0..8:30pm. 646-8309. Ad #834, Daily Pilot. Sa ... or enau1eenng 0 •
resume to Associated
Cardi l lo , 2211
Martin/Plaza Centre.
Irvine, 927U. Attn: Tom·
s.cr.t.ry Cbec)
For President of small
fast p-owing mf1 co. Job
Is challengln1 aa it h1
ever changing-looking
for a penon wbo works
well IDier pressure. can
think for themael<re1.
good al follow thru Ir de-
tails. Much of the work
bu to do w /aalea·tood
phone penonality Im·
portanl. Oppty for some
travel, aettlnt up abows
It cocktail parties for
product clemOMtraUoft.
S/H DCJt required, but
typln1 fr other ofttee
skllll 1bould be well
allow avera1e. Phofte
n1•)l4J.1140, ••k for 0..... Kellett. Salaey
determlaed b1 •• ·
Oood w/pbonea. Full CLlllC DISlfl.Mll Box 1560. Costa Mesa. ·f~ice~.!C!.M~.~957!!·1~1!4.l~!!~I time. Typln1. general Insurance co. nr. O.C. DIAFTll Housekeeper/Companion 1_C_a_. 93626 ________ 1 =
office procedures . airport needs rating & Laguna Beach elec· General for elderly person. Llve-ee,za,w coding clerk with ap-n......_leyCWt Medical Assistant In·
tltude for math le detail tronica manufacturer It•;« lllrifMJ: In or out. 833-2009. temlst back office, af·
l1nv.u,11tgClertl work. T'yping40-45wpm. ?~~perienced person HOUSBEatHS temoons ooly, exp nee.
NI Ume, exper. helpful Exp. helpful but not nee. to be responsible for FrOllt Desll Clertl We have an Immediate Laswia Niguel. 49S-301l.
but not nee. Many com· 1825 •mo. Gd. benefits. drafting & mechanical 7AM-5PM o pen I n I f o r 2 Nursing
pany beneftta. Apply at: Call: Laura, 833-845o. design funcUooa. Must ~eepers. Full time LVN. 3-11. Med.a le treat· 11~ Placentia Ave., 1_140_l_Do_ve_St_ .. _N_._B_. __ have thorough PIXO .. r.tw posttions. lOPM·IAM menu. Good workinl
COlta 11.. knowled&e of draftin1 Exp'd. 2PM-10PM s hifts. Excell. fringe con d 1 t Ions . New CAI LERK, retaJl beauty procedures, PC board beneftta pactaie. Apply traduate acceptable * ,__!) ... RIVCRbS• supply, exp'd., mature . layout, dilital, analog, Please call for appt. Hlnepenonalth c•~n: tedrv. anlc3ed00 Mesa Verde Convalee: "'":!!....• Apply penon Newpe>rt microwave clrcu.lt de· 145.1351, Mon-Fri., B...._._, St.~N--.... Ste. centlb""'t.al ,&llCenter ••-Bcbarea.M241110 alp, •aomeknowled1e l :JO.SPM nawo vn.11 ...
·Plad what .you want In Have tomet.hlnl to sell? of electro-mecbanlcal~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I! UOO, Newport Beach. St., Co1ta M esa . Dali.J Piiot Claulfied.s. Clualned ada do It well. packaClnt. 1: E.O.E. M /F ,_541-5515. ______ _
m~IO •••ALOMCI 1Mt11DIATI •••••• Daily Pilat . • · tneraman · • Experiencei"at least 5 years. •
Must be able to use newspaper e
camera and platemakfna e
&)'Items. Excellent wages pd e
benefits. A..Pl>lY in per1on1 • ~·to Oran1e Coat Dtdly. e
• • • : -.
•to do meebanlcal det.all Multi bnnclled caaualty JOI
drawtnp for machined ln.aunnce a1Y. bu open· ...,.pprnTUMITY parta auecnbl)' ft I na for Branch vr VR
layout. Knowled1e of Coordioator to handle In· Tiit .,._ Plet
mecbanlcal parts aa-ter·branch work now, It kxlktDi -IOI a Motor w~ ·-•er•A et au--It communlca· a ~n p Mm....,-, "'" ... cea, c. ..~ .. ~ nn ~ very tnon abtolutely nece 11ary. uunt""' L.A... · ..,-::• for the ewport S.acb
Minimum l 'f't. dtrect1y oles. Pd. co. bent ti • ~ re a . R e I i a b J e Ullcable wort aper. car· Call : Linda at Tnnaportatlon It a
or l 1ft• tedmieat ICbool r.;UNY1~~~~~~~5J mUlt. P'w cs.tailt Hll t llper • .....-l.red. Potttr Oaellet at
o,,ortmit)' for adHD· •U·Ull II·,. from
eemtDt a career lO:CIOlm ·l :OOpm. ~ Wt ofter xtnt. OPPOITUMrTY lEC...t .,.,.~......... boeb .. --)'09 ... 4DAYWOllW• .. ,.....__... OaitJ
P.alb' II tn beautllul Pilat OwHhd -Adi ta •W. llNet
C __ ..... -n.--~---• ODlla K..a, Ca. 1..,_I ••JOO near ·-... a -.......... ...._. E q u a I O p p o r t . ladl • ~ areu. marts& Ima..,.. Calb'1ppt:....._..l ..._....,. °""',....,. ...... ,:
'714 ·4N·NfU • La I u• •!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I -...i.o.i:.
OMCI
. MAMA•B
Over 25 to woril wJt" >'°"°'· Muat be abarp,
out101n1. aUraetlve
persona lity , 1ood
tele,._oot voice, and
ab!fiy to ::.pit. S.•entll ... ,. ......... ...,.rn.ol')' .. ,........ aa,WlJ ad-
•• •&-1 •t Co . •ltb .,_....., .. rt at SllO ,... ""'*· ••tram . .JOI LONO 6 AllOCIATl:I
Youdt C:0..9'on. Call
lpm•6: IOpm. 141·•1J1
.-t.MI
mle. R.upll•llsl
Part/Full Time Recep-
tionist. Typing. light RN 11·7 Char1e nurae-80
bookkeeping le other bed ECF. Full It part
clerical work. Hasson le time, 1d. salary. Meaa
Assoc. 85J.ttsl. Verde Conv. Roept., lel
llC9'TIOMIST Cent. St .• CM 548-5585
Phone order taker. SALa Clerk for retail
Frosen Food Plant L.B. marine bardwar'9 stor'9.
Require• lite typln1, P ltlme. exper. nee.
1ood w/ft1Uf'e8 Cln·l'741 Call : Balboa M arlne.
549-llS71, E.O.E . M/F /H ac.nOMIST
Parttlme, Tues . •Sal•
Tbun. onlY. Typtn1 re· MIA T HOUIS
quired. Nwpl B c b.
~
Receptianiat/Secretary
Small uliboat ac-
cePOry manufacturer
nr Jotm Wa)'M ACrport
req • .,_al* recep-
tlolliat/aetretar1. Lite Motl!=• In a one pe.-.1$1-8'7'74.
Joln the Lot An1tle1 perl41K'8Aatllll .
'nlMI arculaUorl Team as adapt your work Seeretar7·T1plat,
schedule to your Newport Bea~ La• Of·
life1t1a.. won 5hnlda1 nee. Mir tor Cl6d1 ••1
la a 11mta Clreua.tloa <n•> ..... 11
.... oftlc:. near your
home A U\te more Um• for,..,...,.~.:~·
Cll' ... ~ •••
P•1 tsou 1 wa1H 6 ~.
\
.. Ora'* Cout DAILY PILOT/Thureday. M arch 5, 1981
'!!\t?e~! ..... ?!.~ ..... !!~ ..... !!!! tt~.!!~ ..... ?!.~! ~.~~~~.~~ ....... !!.'.! .................. ~~.~~
Sec'v-Tw.ht TYPIST Kenmore d r Yer . Brand iww Sofa Ir Lov· a Metal Cat Carriers. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••llCllfMllS•• PIT bra. flu ''\Vestcliff· p rt u 2 3 d Whirlpool 18 cal cap HHl Htrculon earth SZO/n. ot.ber mlJc cat le• madtlne. f111ler. IUN1·8tJ(E
SlOl/trawelf'1tlS.IOO NB. AdYt. Co &42•4097 wt va:'a~ rel':!f r; wuher. Xlnt cond tOf* "'50. trundle bed ace-.. MZ·mzt neeck repair , s:eoo. Oya Ron'da MR·50. 1ood
TtO/Gr'MtOroupdU.JOO 9am·l2 ply. at· lllO Placeolla PSO/t01ether. 842·0892. ~831.sflhves ~CYLOP""'IA '45-0l4S:eves,.,..e12 cond,ta00,541-Z511evet S90/Tnlol.anier$1SK ~ ' ' 84.2·2112 ..,., '°'u lletptl'l'U/Puntlo.100 SERVICE STATION ta Mesa SoUd wood dlninl room AMERICANA TY,..... '11 IT ITS. IOOd condition.
LilRelndenAsency Attendant. P /tlmt. TYPIST/ KtftmoreWuher& table.Scapt1in'1ch1lrs. Complete set. excellent HM,Shreo 1000 mi. ISOO. f7t.51TS.
4ClllOBittb Eat 'M EOE l':vea/wknds. Neat ap· ALICLH• o:::;5~ Tr~ style. OVll condltlon.175 631·e&18 •••••••••••••••••••••• ~
New\)Orttm.ll90/frH r:i1rance • bandwrlt· sb1-1 tur. 557.7757, N..,.,. n-b Tennis Club Color r emote TV, 19"
l ,..90 N rt for dynamic Investment ---. .. .,. ~ Sb lnt _... 1• '80 BMW 250CC R 28. I · Appy -ewpo co. Collins Aas,.,. .. ',._ Westtnghouse Washer & t ... hi II '1c· t c, .... , v mo, Bl d .... -· Movln•'. ftln1-., rm s-', am. rnemu.::rs Pav• • -080 '"""&592 M.C. Just overhauled. v · San Nicolas Dr1'v•, Drytt . .,25forboth. " ..,, "'• "' _,., . ..-.· " •• $350, Oak bdrm set, $175, $800. Call AnawerAd cle1n Call eves ~7782. SECRETARIES
••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 TO)'. w/1bell. many
xtru, loob 11\arp, ask·
ln1NJOO. noo
'71 ourler w /1 hell, nain. custom Natt, etc.
$1800. A1k for Dave
90-1531.
'78 CMC l tnn. dual cm pr
sped1I. 4 whl dr, fully
loaded. 17000 MS-3984 Service St1tlon Atten-Newport Buch 6'2·31.56 Niucabyde couch. much #451, 642-4300. 24 bra. BeautifuJ Color TV, 2 yr $2.000.
dant.f'uJIUme.Applyin 20 n d Ph"I I culite wrnty. Pree delivery -------'79 Chevy Luv, 4x4. MOO P era on , L •au n a VET •EMMB. ASST cu . avoca o, •co more. mma . Kar utan Ru1 lO'X 18' 1148.848-1186. LOOK!! '80 KAWJ 250 mi. air. shell, xlnt cond. iv1c11 HESTON I
&Assoc...._
A Temp Help Service
54 .. 0400
180CMSkypark Blvd.
Sulle235 Irvine
Secret.I rial
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS.
•LflJGIS.c'y.
•Dk:t .. hw S.c'y.
•loaldlHper SK'y.
•Mcft..W.C. Sec'y.
100o/r Free
Accowtt AbfltMs
Personnel Services
Temporary & Perma
nent •
UOOQuail. N.B.
955-znO E.O.E
·Secretary
Jr. SECRET ARY
wanted for Newport
. securities rirm. Hrs . 7 to
3.JOP M. Contact · Ms .
Pr alt. 644·911 l
Chevron. 804 so. Coast FIT. Jfardworkin&, re· rerrla. with lce·maker. 552-8905 Blue/Wine main colors -LTD lo mJ. ad cond. Sac Mt50. 963-B9l7 Hwy, Laiuna Buch. liable person needed. like new. S300. 548·0130. Drexel party table. dk S500/0B0968-1883 Color ZS" console TV. $12000.B.O. &4.2·8108 ------
---Call861·1658Dan~ G.E. Refrlg·freezer. 21 Span .. 4 chairs. 1250.SuperSavinasonAmway Sears. 5 yrs old, xlnt M ......... s•1 '76·EI CaminoClassic,all
SOUT H C 0 AST WAlTRESS cu. ft. Ice-maker. while, Sofa. 8'. gold/olive lea~: Products 60~ otl & X cond,$300/0 8 0 .642·8592 :..t/Skw..;. ftt.O ;t~a~.0 s0u~er Ds~a~e . R EPERTOR~ Orange Exp. preferred, for 8/mo old, llke•new. Full $75. Reel. chair, 125. 14.. Distributors inventory Complete FISHER Stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• c1 14 )738.7454 : eves :
County's res! ent pro· cocktai l s & rood . warranty. $450. 552-1717 elec. mower. 135. 42 c learance 851 ·7058. 536-1104 RENT: 22· lux. mtr &40.•776.
fessional lheat.er is seek· 644.9550. Call Karen after6pm glass-top cortee table, 631 1726 home. Sips 6. self·cont
lng2temP<>raryF/Tas· -------woodbase,$40.640·9888 loah&M«iff $275/wk . + 8•/m l. '76 Datsun with shell, I slslan~ for subscription WANTED: Girls 20 or llcydes 8020 rAtM ~,.......
campaign. 2·3 /mo. over for prom otion ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2lwinbeds <orkingbedL LOSE IT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-8S85. - ---• ~:k~~=~!4f;~~~as.
starling March 30th. work . CosmetologyBicycle"Crulser",brand extra longlength,Wea &EamMoney GeMl"Cll 901 WECANSILL
Clerical & phones skills background prderred. new, 1150. 540-7987 821 3241 • ••••• •• •• '60 Ford 6-cyl nu tires desirable Ability t o Call after6·00 PM C714 ) 831·5019. ---. ••••••• • • • •• YOUR R.V. bod · rf 'h I · 2 studio beds. bolsters & Teac 33405 tape deck. 15' rishing boat. like new. S59-l304 Y m pe . s ape. on Y work under pressure a 64().73216 Schwinn ladies lO·s pd table. S22S 640 5040, Low hrs, great cond. ready to go . $89S -needs paint job. Best of· must. St75/wk . contact ------lk f d " 645 21198 r 631 3860 Steve Winget at 957·2602. WRITERS articles and b e. per con ilion. 673-3350 S800firm. 645-7067 PP. . '77 EJe~nza GMC 26' er -
Mon·Fri,n5pm photographs a bout SlOO. 9'79·6717 ---lo~ ~ Beaut cond. many xtras. VOM 9570 ..-6' designer glass clock & 17 .. rron!-throw self· --. 9 30 S29.SOO 963-1242 Orange County beaches luilclftcJ Materloh 8025 matching coffee tabJe by ~....... 0 -· --•••••••••••••••••••••••
needed for new publica-••••••••••••••••••••••• Glass Arts. rlawless. propelled powe r + ••••••••••••••••••••••• TroAerl, Tra•el 9170 '73 VW. auto trans. air. SUIOfV~OlrM t1on.Submitto: Newport Redwood. 2 x 6's. xlnt SS00.559-~ :og::s'tJt~rsp2~:a~~; BARIENT WI NCHES. ••••••••••••••••••••••• gd nirming <.'ond. clean. EHC'ilM~ Beach Advertising. Box decking, 18,00C)' on hand used. Sizes 28. 32 & lS. 8x24 Aristrocat hke new 496-Cri89.
DESIGNER 2000. CdM. Ca 9262S 55</ft 645-9137 ext 127 Din. table, mahog, 78 ". 2 Nearly new., Beet offer. Stainless. 642-2932. $5.000. <KP68581 1'78 Ford custom Van. xlnt
Career oppo rtunity --Ives. & bufret. $300 673-5677 499-3816
M L.-..11 & Rowing DORY. 16' glass. c o nd. am trm stereo avajl for talented & ex· et"C--se _,.. 646-100 DIGG I NG E Q U 1 P . per'd . individual with ••••••••••••••••••••••• E.,i,....... 8030 - - - -"Makida" Elec Ham· Teak cap rails, grates. Auto Sertice, rorts cass, 6 cyl. 4 spd. 2Smpg,
well established & grow· A....... 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 pair trundle beds mer w/barrow. shovels. Complete with Ii ght· Ir Acces~ 9400 n e w t ires. S 4 5 O o
ing Civil Engineering ••••••••••••••••••••••• MINOLTA XD-5 SSOeach maddox xlnt cond 1400 weightoars.642-2932. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76()..8337,646-4658 .
firm nr. o.c. Airport. + equip. 645·1769 eves ___ 536-3&45 673-2514 aft 3PM 7112 hp HOMDA S SAVE SAVES
Apply in person with re· AMTIQUE SHOW ---S 040 Lovely Dinette set 42" Long s halt. xlnt Cor WITH USED PARTS
s ume to Mr. Fuentes at Today Thru Sun Round tbl. 2 leaves. 6 IVOllY CARVING s '!boats 1325 675 S994 Imported car parts
MUST SELL
Robert Bein, William FreeAdmission ••••••••••••••••••••••• h 846-9093 640-8688 81 · · · · IMPORT
SECRETARYTYPIST Frost &Associates. 1401 HuntingtonCenterMall KF.F.SHOND Pups. AKC. c rs.reas. loah,Pow..-9040 AUTOSUPPLY
Reliable,energetic.selr Quail S t .. Newpor t 405 Fwy & Beach Blvd. Champsire M/F Pet& G~S• 8055 SuperSavingson perfect ••••••••••••••••••••••• tOlN.Manchester
'77 Dodge Trades 200
mint cond .. P/S, P /8 .
A IC. Cruise. cstm. in-
l /ext. All x tra s
$6500/080. 962·590d.
54S·8261. Brad starter. Able to handle Beach HD s how · p v t Pt Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• copies or S Romantic Anaheim 776-9900
all phases or ore. duties.1·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-l 2l3/697·l345aft6 pm. Sat Only! 8-5PM fishing Perfumes. Joy, Norell.
United Cerebral Palsy h k' d •pp1 --8010 AAAHOMIC".OOG equip, clothin g, toys. C hanel #S, Wh ite
S Teacher-pre-sc ool· In "' ..Cft r. Id Sh 1· Assoc.. anta Ana . b TRAINING hsehldgood, much more Shou ers. a 1mar. Part. full time. Irv su · ••••••••••••••••• ••• •• • G SACRIFICE For Sale
CHEAP!! 546·5760 Pat Meidell s titutesexp. 551_4533 HARBOR AREA Complete IN HOM F: 10 131 Birchwood Dr Money Back uarantee
----APPLIANCESERVICE Training Obedien H.B. Cnr Brookhurst 1 M.O.orCashier'sCheck 731AYLIMER
27 ft. twin I 30
Vol•o's. F..tl
Cabin. Great loat
Clftd Tral~. Fty
lridge!Mmty
Extras. s I 5,000
Cal 67S.26'5 Ens.
Slightly used turbo k 1t
'70. '74 DaL<1un Z cars
768·5837 Secretary
EXEC. S.cretary Shrthd. nee Gd work
mg conditions & variety
job. Fas h Is land to
$14,400
E.O.E. & Free
Irvine Personnel Agy
488 E. 17th. Costa Mesa I
Su1te224 642 1470
SECRETARY/
RECEl'TIONIST
F.xper. phones. type
45 +wpm, lite bkkpg ,•
misl' clerical Irvine
mfr. Call K.H 540-8894.
SECRETARY·TYPIST
90WPM
Temporary "Cras h"
Project require~ power
Typist. F.ither days or
eves. S.6 h~. a day 2R02
Michelson. 11212. Irvine
752-0234
Security orrit"er. P /T.
wkends for lrg apt con
plex in N B S3 S01hr
F"or info contact Jim
l.upis at 644 1900
TEACHER We buy used appliances ce /Problem solv1n~. _A~ams l only. $19.95/oz. + tax. L
Pre· chool. With classes ··wesell recond. guar. protection. 539·761S Household Gooch 8065 & M Productions 177 F
C•O-750 li c,09 3077 River.11de Ave Suite •33 or expene~ce ..... 4 · app ances. .... · BARKLESS BAS EN JI '••••••••••··~··•••••••• NB. 921663631 1726
TE•CHER f IUY APPllANCES Red white F pups. AKC. I Contest Prue -20 P<'
.._ · Les 957-8133 S200 964·2119.962-4657 waterless cookware Dinghy 2 1nrlatables Preschool. Full time . _ _
1
Sac at $250 557-9856 aft w 1wood en floors &
Needs ECE. Costa Mesa Washers. Dryers Refr1g, Cocker Spaniel Blk AK C I 4pm hberglasi; 851·2109
area.642-0411. Whirlpool. Kenmore. vrold.needslovm~hme J .a-.. 8070
M R d r h h ew .... , Lg doghouse TEACHER AIDE . a_ytag. econ . re, ree to rig t ome ••••••••••••••••••••••• x38x38 Well S I Z e
bu1 It
Porsche 914 western st yle
mag wh eels $20 ca
548·9'744, 548 6446
Fors•
EC E units required finished. guaranteed S52 7903 Gold & Silver top dotlar SO h k . r · S155d 1· d7503 03 · · w l 'I a e r oo. Costa Mesa. Garden e ivere I p 0 0 d 1 e., T 0 y & Classnngs? 55 1.4137 Groveareas.642-0411 Sear 's Almond Refr1R 6 miniature Al ack & 957 ·8053
S7 5 36' CHRlS Tri·cabin. T /S
Gd . cond . $1 9 ,000
673-9060
Datsun Z
motor + othet' ports
768-5817
TEACHERSASSISTANT mos ru11 warr. 18 cu rt brown Males Fl•male~ 2 loose Dia l 50 c·ts
Special classes for han· Orig price $749, will sell 586 3422. 586·8526 I 7 5 rt s H a v e a p
dicapped adults .. 2 yrs for$469. 7141646·4588 AKC Reg Cocker Spaniel praisals $38.00-0 Will
~ollege~xper: req d ~X· AMANA Refrigerator I pups. 10/wks old . S12S Sa c Call ror in ro
cell va c at1~n & an -Freezer. Side by Side 63 1-0754. S58-7276
surance benefits. W~dys 15.1 cu. ft. Harvest Gold Diamond pierced e ar
s ·3o to 4 PM. United Xlnt condition $200 ree toYou 8045 rings .. 50 els Appr
Furniture & sm a II a p
phances sale Call art
1 PM . 494.7145
K ings ize wat er bed .
heater. thermo qui lt.
padded, rails. wooden
post Tony67S·7736
LIVE Aboard boat in
Live aboard slip. 40'
Owens ready to move
onto. NB. 642·4644
14' Motorboat without
motor w/l yr bt"h tie-up
at Backbay $200642-8674
Two l..6().15 & two G60 15
tires on wood i.poke
d odge rim s 1200 ,
892-6856
Cerebral Palsy Assoc , 631~6618 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s1200. WilJ sell s375 Santa Ana. 546-S760 Free cat to good home. 558_7275
Balboa Yacht Club Mem· - ------
berstUpforsale. 32' Pace. FB sed. V8's.
Stockland Shel I for GM or
Chevy Shortbcd Pick Up
xlnt cond. S4SOiOBO
645-4396
ToPLESS MODELS Refrig. GF.. gold, 7 yr-. gray & white. Simo old,
o I d . 3 0 'h x 6 7 14, , fem 962·8584· $75 DAY. PAID DAILY $300/0BO. 546 9828 No exp nee. 826-2583 Free to gd home. very
TIA VB. AGENT
Exclus ive NEWPORT
BEACH AGENCY. has
immed opening ror
qualified outside sales
agent Call Rose 645-7777
Ref's clean work good S60 r r i e n d 1 Y m a 1 e
& SIOO Refrig FF. clean Doberman. black & tan.
xlnt S200. Fru. upright. Call 846 2039 ~fter 6pm.
clean, works good $100 ,..._. 1050
Wshr. clean. works good •••••••••••••••••••••••
Must sacrifice men's P.. 851· 1600 Sacrifice! 2705 W. Cst
Hwy, NB. Bkr. 642·8200 Autos for Sate
c_aral gold diamond 2 mag JS" wheel rims.
rmg. New $3000; $2000 $35/tubeless D78-14 tire .
firm. Kimball organ, S20/gas lawnmower ·
St 100/0BO. Mus kin style Sl50. refrig 33H x t8W.
pool, $700 with equip. sso. 64S-8103
Be s t ofre r Dy s
661-6455. Ron
-------•••••••••••••••••••••••
21 ' 19'77 Reinell Cr uiser. IMPORTANT
190 H.P. omc. Vanson NOTICETO
trlr. fully equip. sips 4. RF.ADERS AND
$8500/0r trade for V W ADVERTISF.RS
Van64S-2340 The price o r 11emi.
-----advertised by vehicle
SEC'Y /REC&f'T. Typist General ofrice
SSS Dryr. gas c lean . * * I BUY * * works good S75 548-8513, 548-4485 ood use<! Furniture &
- -Appllances OR I will sell
t8K Audemars Piguet
man's white gold wrist
watch 645-9137 ext 127
8' couch : SSO. antique
dresser $30' VW bum-
pers S20. bit 1n d 1s -
l)washer S25 645·8103
'79 26' Penn Yan 200 hp dealers in the \Cht<"lr
Turbo Diesel. ru lly c lassified advertts 1nJ.?
equipped. immac cond columns does not an
Bargain priced P P elude any appht"able
Eager buyers read the r SELL for You 775-7125. 673-3729 taxes. IJcense. transfer
9590
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
ror top used car s
foreign, domes tics or
classics tr your car 1s
extra clean. see us
F IRST'
11 1 ltt Or~ C-"f
2925 Harbo-r Bl vd
COSTA MESA
979-2500
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AMDTRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
~II arbor HI\ ti n tiT <\ ~I-:.'\\
546-1200
HtGHIUYER
Top dollars for Sports
C'ar:<>. Rugs. Campers .
9t4's.Audi 's
Ask for U C MGR
JIM MARINO
VOLKSW AGEH
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
842-2000 Sales omce for national HS graduate No ex-
company Variety or penence required Good
duties F.xcellent com benehts Located 1n
pany benerits. New or Costa Mesa Will be
fice m Fountain Valley moving to Ir v ine
The Standard Register Far me r s Ins urance
Classified ads every day MASTStS AUCTION 12 c t BLUE T 0 PA Z
Ir you have something 646-8686, 833-9625 ! stone Only $200 '
for sale. reach them fast I 640-8688
Firewood for sale. $130 a
cord Delivered
631 0754
- - -lees. rinanr e r harges
loah. R...t / rees for air pollution con I
Charter 9050 lrol device certir1cationi.
••••••••••••••••••••••• or dealer documentary
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAM
USED CARS!
Co. 962-9361. G c.A(). 00 "" o IC" F:qualOppty Employer I roup,,.. 41 r4 .r •.
and inexpensively, call I IUY FURNITURE Ladie's dia. cocktail ring, ~-567!. _ Les 9S7 8133 aprais. S1650 . take SllOO
Free Es timates on
Upholstery Ihde a bed
w inew mattre~s S22S
641 8205
•IMMAC28'·34 ' BOATS preparation cha rgei. un
Glass top 311 an table set
"' '2 ant french <"hrs Sl9S
67S 1849
Rnll Top Sec·y. m any
draw/suppl y s paces .
very good $450 !!&I 7260
Antique dining room set.
6 chairs Needlepoint
!.eats Good condition
$250. Call 642 3576 art 4
8' flameweave sora w
match 6' loveseat. 4 yrs
old. new cond. S28S
640-4776 eves /wkndi>
''2 rl. dia. sol . appraa!'>
$2150. S900 642·2287
M ~ 8078 Hummell Bell & Plait '78
ac.-~ r Bs t Orrr. Mus t se ll
• • • •••••• •••• •• • •• • ~ • • • Mel any 644 4754
Atr Compressor Service
t hp port. comp. S28S Mlscelaneous
Sale price. 540.4286 Wmthd 8081
Misce41aneous 8080
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FLY INTERNATIONAL
on Pam Am with airline
•••••••••••••••••••••••
WANT MEN'S BIKF..
prerer Beach Cruiser
641 8309 a ft. 3· 30
6/l2mo plans prepaid less otherwise spe('1r1ed
from S180imo. including by the advertiser
slip. lessons 7141~·5994 An~s/ ~~."!:;.~~! ........ !?.~~I .. ~~s!~: ........ !~.~~
Erickson 32'. '75. loaded. '46 Ford Woodie, restored
custom int-ext. Bristol St3.000 ALSO ·29 Model
cond. Offer or R.K P.P A Town Sedan. 4 dr.
968-7903. 968·0872. restore<!. Ideal for stu
-----dent. $10.000. 675 6161
Hobie 16. Red. wht. blue
sails. no trlr $1350
760-9072. Hot deal.
two-for-one ticket slip Lawnmower edger want·
Sing a pore . Cent r a I ed. running or not. Call 30' 5 meter SLOOP. S6000
Amer ica , German" 547-3182 or bestofrer.
'60 MGA Xlnl Co nd .
res tored. person a I
plates read '60 MGA
SS000/080 645· 7S31
any or 11 ~untri~s . 832-2639 '62CorvairConvert
miracle
mazda
2 t SO H.-bor It•&
Costa M.M 645-5700
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos Cal l u s
TODAY!!!
Earle Ike
MARCH 17, 1981 Crib, complet e. 190.
Hurry! Good until Feb Small Portable Elec --------Lt blue. compl reblt. 28_7~1999 Refrigeratbr Breezy 12 ' now at spoke whl covers. all TOYOTA·•OLYO 831 ·6311 A n a h e i m 8 oat show new. $3500. 855-8809 .__.;.. ....... -.-.._--...-_-t
Cell 952·3191 for Clrcue
Information
IT'S EASY! Look for your name and address
In today's classified section. If you find it, call
642-5678 Ext . 272 and we will arrange for you to
pick up your tickets at D ·1 p·1 ""
the nearest office of the II J I DI
Highchair. S30 559·9398
aft. &pm.
Almost new glass-top
patio table & 5 chairs.
Verde Green finish on
metal. S400 10BO
64~·2041
Obi Bed W /Frame
S55 Good Cond.
548-2137 eves
S200. Modern Sofa, loose
pillows. Beige. White
Gd Cond 495.32911 eve.
Uph olstered s wivel
r ocker. antique gold
velvet $125. purchased 6
mo ago, like new. 2137
Miramar. Balboa Pen.
673-6456
TWIN Beds like new
Cost $900 Sac S475
675-5118aft 5PM
Lo 1 ----3/•·3/8. See New colors "" H~ II•"-•• -s __ , _ _. .. c .... ,...~. H r B t d M1n1,.... for '81 Musuang '65 Conv PIS. ,,._ 60.u o>e.s•o.9467 e •um ouque s C· ht1trwMftts 801) ---------• disc brks. pwr top. auto.
livered. ~erfect ror •••••••••••••••••••••••loots Sips/ pony intr. 289 4·V eng . everyoccasaon. 673-4419 D-~-9070 ONN Director trombone _. s traight body, x Int
6' portable spa, pwr pack. with case. Excellent ••••••••••••••••••••••• mech. Wire whl covers.
deliver. set up 12200 condiUon. SIOO. 675·8052 NEWPOllT MARINA tonneau. boot Orig
631-6519,645-7285 after6PM __ Slips Avail. 646-0551 0 w n r . Pvt pt y
SPLIT&SEASONED Ibanez electric guitar. PvtboatdockonNewport
\. • FIREWOOD * Pror. model with Tree of Island, 30• max. $160 mo.
•• • 848-9111 * • • Life going up to the neck 752·2584 dys or 675-7267 Woodgrain body with eves.
John Wayne Tennis Club
f am . membership.
SllOO. incl. trans rer.
644-1549
hard s hell case. SSOO. ---------
548-6446 U·shaped carpeted slip ----·-1 for max. 45' power boat lanos & Of"CJCll'• 8090 ---...................... . only. All util paid. Al
(714 )968-2042
'63 T-Bird. completely
restored, like new. over
Sl2M s pent . tak e
$8500/0BO. Leaving
country. 642-2287.
R•creatlonal Vehlcln 9530 64().1203.
Irvine Coa s t Country O WRY ORGAN . 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow~ the opportunity
to consider the purchase
or trade-in or your clean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today!
13631 Ha1b1>1 Bl•cl
Ga1<)ef> G•o.., "' Ul·J>U Cl ub Membership keyboards. pedal. Ex· •TRADE• '78 Dodge RV Va n. Selr·
available. 955·2699 . 1 cellent condition. $600, Use of boat for slip. We contained. Xtras. low I ... --:=~'.""-=~~===
d ood , 1 -I or make offer. 96().S996 have 26' sailboat. need miles. 842-5241 Re w • 2 x 6 s. x nl --N rt r w·n t h 1------
decking. 18,000' on hand WURLITZER Piano with sa~~ ai!o'.PRos~ ore~i~-4 Wt.Hf DrinJ 9550 ssr /ft. 645-9137 ext 127 bench. Ebony Spinet. da. l·SSS-1161. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••
Private Party. 76 SUIARU
Top Dollar ·
Paid
For Your Car ! Mobil. TelephoM S900 631 t8 loah, Storoc)e 9090 4 WH• DRIVE
DOUBLE BED 963-5535 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOHHSOM Ir SON
I
l
CLIP THIS COUPON FOR GOODCONDITJON IAIYGIAHD •Lido Peninsula Boat. . WA&OH
S60 548.5687 Semi Invalid Walker "1AMO Stor age . SlM-ege, 4 cylinder, 4 speed. AM ·
U.C• M..-c_, 1,
2626 Harbor Blvd. r
GREAT SAVINGS AND FUN
~··················· * • ''2 Circus tickets
for the price of l '' * * * * ~
*
l'11·t· 111·d ~1·.11--. 11111\'
M•rch 17, 1981 8:00 P.M.
et Montgomery Ward, Costa Mesa
(405 FWY. at Bristol)
l ..
-----w /brakes Portable Mahocany finish . liunc hing &r crane FM<m2PPM>Exce11ent
King Sz Waterbed S135/0B096:f.8674 alm oal new. p re mier se r vice ror the dis· buyatonly
w/headboard Musl Sell. Reasonable! John Wayne piano. S3500obo. c riminatlnt boat ~. SJ695
642·2A37 Tennis Club Family •-k833-f 11~ l<s':~_'.:)173-lllO, 175-5901 fp· 1~ .. L Uowcw.f
Wrought Iron & glass Memberibip. 644-1613 or "" or aerry ""''~ .. r~ NC 7S9·~1 (Judy) ~ ~ VOUCSWAGlN I dinette set . 4 chairs. Lovely GULBRANSEN Trw•• IJIH ' 534-4100
very gd cond $200. Rav.! aomethinJ to sell? Spinet. perfect cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l3731 Harbor
5S2·7104. Classified ads do it well. MSO. 642·9178aft SPM. Alrcrwft ti Io Garden Grove
You can~ a
WINNER
Just by sending us your name and
address and by watching for your
name ln the classlfled ads of the
Dally Pilot. .
:i~.~~~llort;~~~ .. ~·~~~~~~~ coupon and min It iOAy to Ute:
Claullled ~·ftiil-Dalb' ..... 330 w. Bay 8tnet. Com ...... CA nm
'
·······················---------MUSTS&L
'7'Toyote
I.Jle new. low m Ilea
1Ht Betell tlutketeer.
mlclt.LIDI • Lycoming
e na, 2 Com ·na v's
tranapoaclar. H0-4109 all option• tao0/080 _e_v_ea_·----~~-~ 968-sitO
... ot. llN .... t I 4o -, -D--8--t--r-t
• •••••••••••••••••• •• • • 70 une ust>'. op cu · talns. roll bar, street 1-.,.•IW-PUC-•H•MOP9--•511f le1al t1800. ta·•U
Any Model · WbOletale ntdll tl60
Saft up to tll'7. • • • • •• • • ••••• •• .. • • • •••
111·8' ftS-1455 'IOD1taun
f
Pkk·Up
5 1 pee ~.:.. A m • F m cuatte. C1M'IU4l Mtll
Banftd l•pciit.i IJe~I I
Costa Mesa 54().5630 v
W~PllJ
OVER
.. loot
..
ForYO\lrGood vw. Poncheor Audi . ...
-• ·~. H .. • I • •
VW·PORSCHE·AUl>I
445 E. Coast HI way
at Bays ide Drive ,
Newport. Beach 673-0900
Premium pf\cet• paid for any uatd ~r <fortlsn ~ domudc)
ln rood condition.
S..UaF:lnt!
'-I< >I T t t < • l ' 'T
Dodge
'78 All• Spyder Convt.
Xlnl coed, silver
w /m e roon int .
Bl•upunllt Am /Fm
stereo. u .ooo mi ,
17250/0 BO. P.P. 548-2184 7tM-llH% .
evee. '77 B2ltWchb9clr,57,000 Showroom. new ZAOD
A.. 9707 ml, nu U..., lood ~d. wtt.h only Z2.000 miles. 4
••••••••••••••••••••••• $2llOO. 873-0781 1peed. air, steerlnl.
"77 AUDI FOX 'IO ~·GL T·top. cass . cnaile control. Still ln
Dvn•mit.e 2 door, sun-brow'ft, 9100 mt. x\nt hctory warranty . J ·~ (12209) ~c:t~r=PMr stereo. cond. ss1-ocm ~''·'''
$3495 '72 DATSUN 240Z JIM MAll1t0
JtM MARINO Lo mi. 1 owner. good VOLllWA•IM
VOUSWA .. IM cond. CalJ M5-2JOU. lml IMcb Blvd,
18'111 Beach Blvd. D•tal.D\ 8%10 Coupe, L/B, i---_.M_Z._2_000 __ _
142-2000 '76. am/Im stereo, ver y Mettedes 300SD· •79
IMW '712 gd cood. 12.995 or ofter. Maple yellow, str iped,
••••••••••••••••••••••• _84_2-«JB __ . _______ , sunroof, stereo/cass.
For the bes t deal in
Orange County Come
See Us Today!!
·&
SADDLHACK
at 9725 ... , ...............•.•.
MUST SIU!!!
polishe d wh eels .
Beautiful & mint cond,
$28,SOO. 557-9044 ; eves
760-0lll9
1976 FIAT 121 . SPORT COUPE 450SL/m a int. . in xlnt __.. 1 di cond. F. equip. Poss .
4. '~ trans., a r con . n e g . P rl c e D a n : t1orung, AM /FM stereo
THEODORE
RO BI NS
FORD
1060 HARl\(11< BLVD
CO!>TA Ml '>A 1>·\"2 0010
'76 911S, 5spd, mags.
stereo cass, snrf. silver ,
immac. $12 ,950. PP
640-19'8 eves/wkends.
'77 silver 911 Por. Targa,
fully equipped, good
cond. $16.000. 499 2937
Rolhloyce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •1 DEALER IN U.S.A.
V AU.Ff IMrORTS
28402 Marguerite Pkwy
Mission Viejo
831-2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays
radio with cusette tape, 64&-2128·
Michelin tires & more! '79 MB 450SLC. Silver. ~ ~~~VER
$1700/best offer. Call snrf, mint cond Low ROLLS-ROYCE 9S1·95506 PM to9 PM. If mlleage. 714·328-1730 no answer. PLEASE -IS*J•mbc>ree
keeptrying! MB '75 450SEL. minl111---.....1 ~r1 9••<11
CREVIER
$1 ST 6 H OAOWAY
SAMTA AHA
835·3171
THE UlTIMATE OAtVJNO IOC><INE
•USEDIMWs•
'77 6.~csihpeed (0247 1
'75 20028 (0035)
'79 320i (756())
'776.~csi auto C0040l
'80 528iA sunrf. (1625 >"
CloMd s-doys
•141MW2002
4 speed with s tereo.
Ver}' clean & original (91".iLlfQ)
$4195
JIMMAllNO
VOUSWAGEH
18711 Beach Blvd.
I 142•2000
~ ~~~~~~~~-
"' OIAMGICOUMTY'S
1 OLDEST
'78 Fial 124 Spider
Convertible
Only 29,882 miles !!
Make monthly pay.
m e nts a nd down .
<072UJS)
Barwick Imports
8 31-3311
"79 2000 Spider Roadster.
cond. silver green, fully
equipped, "a beauty".
$13.000/080. Ca ll
1714)673-0110 a ft 7pm
wkda y s & all day
wk ends.
'72 450SL, very clean,
both to ps, 78,000 mi,
$1',500. 49'·7451
I Only 7500 miles. Auto. '57 Mercedes 190S L,
trans.Mint cood. All ex-beaut. cond. Both tops,
tras. $7,000 or best offer. must sell tbts week
673-4617 or 675-6615. Sl0,500/0BO. 5.57·0118. ----------11--------
'79 Fiat 2000 124 Spyder. '78 Mercedes Beni 450SL.
Blue. Power windows. immac cond, $26,000.
stereo, hardtop incl. SS9-4!H2.
Xlnt. cond. $7 ,000 ------
nnAC MBZ 280 · 1973
S.S.""""". -XLNT COND · $6500
HOftda 9727 Call 760-9278
•••••••••••••••••••••••
VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
HONDA
HEADqUAITHS
----'71CLASSIC2:80SL
Orig owner. 72,000 mi.
a /c, nu tires. 2 tops.
Showroom sharp. Must
sec to apprec. Have all
service records. $22.500.
P.P. S40-3136
CLOSED SUNDAYS.
Saab 9760 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
1981 SAAi
TURI Os
IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
152-0900 ----O~ECOUNTY
SAAi
BUY or LEASE
DIRECT
OVERSEAS
DELIVERIES
10 120 Garden Grove 81
Garoen Grove 530·9190
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 5. 1981
'10 DATSUN IMCAIP/UP ~ GL 'Mht• air, ~hrolllt ................ -.... ......
#HM. IOW -._ 0.-on I""° beeulYI llT'41t\I
57199
'75 DODGE YAM
53688
'67 MERCEDES
2505
J'ut~ aut:onwhc ..S•n 1ee1ur1~
,~..,., ... Pf$ """00' ... ,,,.,
Pr ... tnt cond•ttanl
'80TOYOTA
COROLLA
0--Fu•ty eu1oma1ic
with taQtoq· '''' p ,,c• ~ -ucecl lo< QUICtl -(7~1
'71 Super with snrf. s uper
c lean. $2700 Se rio u~
buyers only rall 675 4162
arter4pm
1975 VW IUS
Automatic. S3SOO.
840.64Z7
'67 BUG. white , good SEE US FIRST!
cond. $2000 Ev es Wehave a Rood selertion
642·8019: days 631 4836 0 r N E W & t i S I-: U
HcrclTo Find-Wgn
'77 VW Dasher. 4s pd,
am /f m . lthr e tt e .
radial'>. lugg rack. very n ice• Ai;kfog $3195
640 9049
'74SUPER BUG
Xlnt rond. roust sell
ChevroleL'i '
COMMRL
CHEVROLET
.:X2H 11.ir bor Bl-. •1
c·1~T.\ Mt-:.o.., \
546-1200
For sale '73 Chev Impala,
4 dr, xlnt cond. bst ofr s 9 700.0345 466 76 &irocco. web. konis. .68 Coupe Rood rond 327 .,_ ________ _.. towered. S397S. VS. mus t ~e ll $700
963·2591
'76 FIAT X·lt
.. tto11• (dltion ••"' attoy ~ •. ~. eler.o• T"'' LMN ca.-. e...AY .. -"'9 .... ,~ .
53498
___ 548-6985 964-2768
Vot.o 977 2 '79 Monza good cond air ••••••••••••••••••••••• , C II ( ,
OLVO + xtras. a al 6 or V wknd. 556-0724
SALIS. SEAVICE
AHDUASIMO.
OVERSEAS DELIV\!;RY
EXPERTS
i78 Malibu Class1l' a r.
p/s . vs. good mileage.
very clean. well mamt
556-9967 or !>49-5338
79LIHCOU.l
VERSAILLES
Built for today and
more' Full power option
group, leather interior
whffl covers (602555 1
$8997
JOHNSOM & SOM
Lincoln Me-rcur y
2626 Harbor Rlvd
Cost a Mesa
540-5630
M~rcury 9950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ORANGE COUNTY'S
FfNEST
LINCOLN-MERCURY
OEALERSHIP
~·7i.U&u
LINCOLN MERC"l'R
0
Y
16 18 Auto Center Dr
S O f''wy Lake Fore'>l
exit
IRVINE
830-7000
'79 MERCURY
MARQUIS 4DR
*
Pinto 9957.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
*SALE*,
1979-1980
PINTOS
• 30.
to choose
from $2895
C817XKS)
ALL Low Mileage
Al .I. Automatic Trans
ALL Power SteerinJ(
ALL Runabouts. 3 dr
SOM f: Air Condition mg
SOME·Statmn Wa1w ns
A LL·Guarantt-ed
ORANGE COAST •
TR.AH SPORT A TION
CLOSE TO FR E f.W ,\VS
2167 Ha}'bor Bl vd
Costu Mes11
(":.ill <714 J fi31 6441
·72 4~p Pinto. blal·k Nu
lirl'S G d run l'ond
$900 080 847 0372
Plymouth 9960 .••..•.•.......••.••••.
76PLYMOUTH
ARROW
I TODAY!!! UHIVllSITY
SAL~•SERVICE
OLDSMOllLE
HC>t4DA
GMCTaUCIS
211150Harbor Blvd.
1981 21M6E Coupe, auto. -~--~----.,_ ______________ _..
white, brown leather in· To,... 9765 76MOHU
2+2 , 4 cyl . good mileage, a /c , radio .
transferrable warranty.
557-3527 or 759·0060.
Previous owner d e
manded luxury! Tu
Tone, am /fm s t ereo.
factory air conditioned.
Uc 62TYBO SS997
4 speed. AM FM. great
2nd rar with low miles
<841REDI
$2395
-c Sales-Service-Leasing
·t Rey C.ner ,Inc.
l Rolls Royce BMW
1540Jamboree « Newport Beach 640.6444
1 751MW
Dynamit e 2002
automatic with only
4 51,000origina\ miles. Air
..... conditioning, stereo.
Mint. (tl9NKQ)
$5695
JIM MARINO voucsw••IH
IB711 Beacli Blvd.
142-2000
IOI McLAllM's
COSTAM~A
540.9,40
tenor, like new. a lways •••••••••••••••••••••••
g a r a I e d , r a d i a Is 78 Toyota Celle• Lftbck
$11,SOO ; 1968 280SE low m.ilff, xlnt cond.
Sedan. brown/ black in· a /c , 8trk, auto. $4900
terior. auto. radials 549-8068 days. 673-4199
$3500. S.-7827 Anytime _w_ll:_nds __ le_v_es ____ _
Pvt. Party
78 HONDA CIVIC '78 ZllOCE, 18,500 ~i. s ilvr
5 speed, radio, heater. blu, snrf, alloys, am mac.
This is the one ever-$18,250. 494-6459.
1980 To)'OlJI SR 5, pkup.
xlnt rond. S s pd. AM /FM
stereo. Uke new. 831-7494
aft5
Y~r. wan~. in superb .76 ~E. river blue, ta~ '77 CeUca GT liflback.
condiUon · w1th less than inl serf cass Slo4 000 xlnt cond, a/c, auto. lo
36,000 miles. A silver ' ' · · · · ••"""/OBO 631-6399 beauty with black in-499·1998• 972·91 43 Dr mi . .,_..., ·
teriot. <3206> On sale for Pugh. '73COROLLA
ooly MG 9742 $1600
Sll99 • ••• •••••••••••••....... 645-9502, 642-2434 Don
IOI WITHAM '79 MG Midget: Dark '78 Toyota Celie a Coupe.
VOLKSWAGEM brown. Xlnt cond. ~O. 5spd, air. am/fm stereo.
7600Westmin;ster Ave Days 645·5570· E es mags. Great cond. $500
in Westminster 645·<548. ____ below blue book. Catt
$ 893-7551 638-7880 MGI 9744 Tim 752·6 426 dys.
'78 HONDA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 955-007 e!es/wkends.
c Dynamite 5 speed red '79 MGI Vollswogen 9770
d hatch back. Only 25,000 COHVHTllLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• r . 850 N. Beach Blvd. miles. <ICINDYM) 4 cylinder , 4 speed. This •75 Bug
ve LA HABRA $3795 is a Brit.lsh racing green Sunroof, EXCELLENT
Bo <5 MJ. No. of SA Fwy> JIM MARINO w it b Io w m II es . CONDmON ! ! (031179)
me 17141522-5333 VOLKSWAGEN l 882WEA > It is all Sltll
mi &mday by Appl. l8'1ll Beach Blvd. orieln•I and on sale this Barwick Imports
Tu 142•2000 week for the unbetieva-831.u I I
I •--------~ ble price of pla . Di~orced. must sac. '79 CCOR LX $5299
320i .... , .. 1,6 _ Lu:xus p'-g '78 A D Sspd, WITH vir .,... ...... " · snrf, $4895 IOI AM cy, Steve: 731-2221. Iv. msg. 857_2264 VOLKSWAGEN
re! Dots. 972<
mi1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
l,2C 760ATSUM 210I
wit 6 cylinder. 4 speed. fac-
cov tory air conditioning.
A stereo, wire. wheel cov.
s ho ers. Performance plus in
clUt this beautiful orange
saii met.Ilic with black In·
T t er lo r sport S· c a r .
C1457SU> Enjoy youreelf
a lt( and eojoy owning this
by dlamondforonl,y
owr $S9ff
th; IOI WmtAM
late VOUSWAGIM
roul 7100We.tmlnlter Ave.
inla in Westmlruter 893-7561 638-7880
76DATSUMD210
4 speed, elr condltk>n·
ing, AM·P'll. (t05112)
$25'1
HtMllUowcWf ~ VOlUWAQIN. 14<: W!JJ Ut-4100
" 13731 H.,_
~Grove
7600 Westminster Ave. '77 Accord, Sspd, am/fm in Westminster
s tereo, air, $3995. 893-7551 638-7880
642·3850.
'80 4-dr Accord, A/C ,
AM /FM cass .. snrf,
mags. xtras. Assume
lease $208.31 mo. or buy
out. $400 to take over.
DYS 556·0571, Vince.
Eves 642·1150 Pete.
'7' Honda. bas new eng,
Slpd, dual carb 4' dual
exll. Oneol a kind. saoo.
H2-H 46 after 6pm.
841-72'71.
7 9 MGI
4 speed, 24,00 miles , new
tires, stereo tape. (936G)
CREVIBIMW
i.t It Broadway
Santa Ana 835-3171
75VWRAlllT
4 cylinder. auto. trans ..
air conditioning, stereo.
A really great running
Rabbit with Blaupunkt
s tereo. A n icely
equipped car and of
course VW reliability.
<080MVF) She is on sale
for only
$2699
IOIWfTHAM
VOLKSWAGEN
7600Westmlnster Ave.
ln Westminster
893-7551 638-7880
'10 DATSUN 210
a-, lllue ....... -...... 11c1 w AT Oftly 12 203 mt ...
Comp.t9iw-~I H..,,,. IBZ20I
EAllLIHll
VOLVO
1966Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MF.SA
.646-9303 540.9467
OIAMGECOUMTY
VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
in Orange County !
BUYorLEASE
DIRECT
10120 Garden Grove 81
Garden Grove 530-9190
1-------------""1 ---~
'80 CMi4ARO
t cyl "'Ill onfy 1.llOI "'''" Aten
lk.rowndY wtlh .... ''" I'll. ,.11y ....... /.. -bebyt (tlOZE81
'79 v.w. COMYRTIILI
.,_ ...,, .. ·--Olll -tec'\OfJ ••• dynamue etereo ~ °"'' 21 121 .......
'71 v.w. . .,.
Only O ,Jl5 dOCulft•nl•d oriOinoll ... ,.1 ...... ..,,., ti-
... .. -Mw edd 10 1he -•y ol Ihle ptlattn• b~I
(7111/0W).
'78 AUDI HOO
f04leoco lfOMI --Wllll lir.CllM.~MHM MllcM.,.. __ _,.._ y..,_....,.,,..._. ... ..,_......,.
'68 Volvo auto. a /c, runs.
$1600/080
962-5128
'74 Volvo J64E, xlnt cond,
n ew tires . brks ,
alternator. etc. Must see
to apprec. Mu.st sell, sac
$3000. 968-CT1
9901 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•CARS WANTED•
RUNNING OR NOT
SZS.$300
CASH
FREE TOWING
OPEN WEEKENDS
Call F.d C7t4)891·0517
'71 mail Jeep, 38,000 mi,
runs 1d, $1100.
54G-21894 Mike
MC 9905 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 Gremlin, brand new
en1. dnt rood. fantastic
mllee1e. $1795. 760-9205,
75!Hl21
9910 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 Electra 2 dr, loaded.
xlnt cmd, clean. S2150.
5".-ss
9930
•••••••••••••••••••••••
77UHCOLN
MARKV
Oh my! What a buuty1
Too much luxury to
list !! Full power group.
crwse control <672ZX E l
$6397
JOHHSOM & SON
l.McolR Mercwy
2626 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa
540-5630
9932
•••••••••••••••••••••••
ValueRat•d
UMdCars!!
79Conett.U2
4 speed. I 0.000 mi!.s,
glass T top, door
locks. • .. ro. power
w l •dow1 . s po r t ........
(UOYMV)
$13,900
7 9COIVETTE
Low mll~. Dead sh arp.
lo aded & original•
Dynamite' (693XVH >
$10,995
JIMMARIMO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd .
142-2000
JOHNSON & SOM
UncolftM..-cury
2626Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
540.5630
H1Mlt Uowaut
vOllC SWAGlN INC
534-4100
13731 HarbOr
Garden Grove
'78 ~rquis wagon . 9 '78 Horiw n. 4 dr. •J s pd. pan. loaded . New M ichelins Xlnt cond PS. lo m1 Mint cood ~.Owner. 675·6161 S3450. eves 673·3326
80MHCURY
UPHYR 201t.
Hurry on this one' Low
miles. AM ·FM cassette
steroo. air conditioning.
power s teering
<601ZEE> SS297
JOHHSOtil & SON
Lincoln M..-cury
2626 Harbor Bl vd
Costa Mesa
540-5630
'78 Zepher. lo mi. <'lean. 6
cyl, 6 pass. $3900 or re as
ofr. 546-6196
75MHCURY
COUGARXR-7
Under 55.000 miles! Lots
of extras! .Full power.
wheels. beautiful styling
and extra luxury are
yours! ! <202MSZ ) S2997
JOHNSON Ir SON
Ultcoln M..-cwy
2626 Harbor ntvd.
Costa Mesa
540-5630
'77 Volare r..ow miles
New tires S2.000
645 4616
'74 Ply m o uth Gol d
Duster. 55.000 m1 . auto,
am/Cm. air. xlnt rond
$2000 firm S59·09SS arter
3pm
Pontiac 9965 ....................•••
78POHTIAC
FfREllRD
Air cond1tionm~. power
s teering . s tere o
c assette. wire wheel
r overs, lilt whee l. A
beautiful silver blue
metallic car with low
miles and in superior
condition. f682UCR l An
exc ellent handlin g
machine that you will
enjoy owning for only
$4999
IOIWITHAM
VOLKSWAGEN
7600 Westminster Ave
m Westminste r
~3-7551 638-7880
II . ALL ALL
1981 PHOENIX
ALL
1981 GUID PRIX'S 1981 FIREBIRDS
INCLUDING DIESELS GM1s X BODY INCLUDING TURBO
---•-;;r-<:++ J:J\ ....
. CASH SAYINGS DIRECT PROM GM
INC LUDES:
•AM radio
•Heater
• 4 speed trans
• Tinted glass
• Whitewall tires
• Power steering
• Power disc brakes
• 18.5 gal. fuel capacity
•Tilt wheel
1978 CORVEnE
350 V·8 engme. factory air, arntfm stereo tape,
automattc. Power steering & brakes. heater. &
much more. (401189).
·11151 SEE
1978 FIREBIRD FORMULA
Automatic, am/Im atereo tepe, power windows. air
cond., rally wheela & more. (532\JOT).
HURRY \¥HILE SELECTION IS GOOD
•ottw ...... M-11 lttt.
NEW 1980 PONTIAC SUNllRD
OR
5995
DOWN. AND
Cash or Trade Plus Tax, LiCMH & ooc ....... tary Fee
Siie "'= l41116~ tu. lie I OOC-IUry IH 1906 doWn plus S:IOO 90 ..... tu. p lua SI O I llc•n" left 120 aocumenlary IH 101 1 10111 ol ~= _.. Ot 1..-llltl6 -Pno<llh IO< 80 lftOlllht F1nonce cNf11H '1197 00. APR 17 28'!1. delerre<I paymenl PfOC. H • 13 t10 on
1979 PONTIAC
TRAMS AM Automatic am/fm stereo tape. air oonditloning,
pwr. wlnd0w. custom wheels. custom Interior &
more (832XZR).
57395
1978 CHEVY
CA.NICI CLASSIC
Automatic. factory air, power steering & brakes.
power windows. am/Im stereo tape. custom
wheels & much more. (211136).
54115
1979 DODGE
COLT
4 cylinder engine. good gas car (419XHA)
53695
1979 OLDS CUTLASS
MOON ROOF
Automatic, am/Im stereo. pwr. Windows. air con·
ditionlng. custom wheels. custom Interior & more. (436462)
4 Cyl.
4 Speed
UM ll'l•M """'°"" f()f COMC)eflM)t'I Your ,..., ... mey vary Oieptnd•ng
Oft dttVJ"9 liP9ICI ft•f) *'Gin end
wMther concttow Ach,..., hllQt'M'•\' m••aove """~be ......
II --
1978 DATSUN
210%
4 speed, am/Im stereo tape. air cond . only 34.000
miles. (455766)
57395
1978 CHRYSLER
COIDOIA
Automatic transmission, AJC. AM/FM stereo
tape. power steeri ng. vinyl t op. cruise
(IAOV127)
Rainfall
to fade
tonight
A bit-and-run storm that struck
some areas with deluges and
thunder and left others cold but
dry was predicted to diminish to-day.
Once the current rains torm
passes through pursued by a low
pressure system behind it, says
U.S. Weather Service forecaster
Andy Cbagi, clear weather will be
on the horizon at least unW next
week.
Chagi reperted the a verage
rainfall throughout the Soutbland
is about a ball-inch while snow
levels were loweredto4,000feet .
"Some places might not get
anything,'' he said.
He said there may be showers
throughout the Orange Coast area through tonight.
Orange County Flood Control
<See STORM, Page AZ>
·~·,...,..... STEVEN GAETH, 15, OF IRYINE WITH MOTHER
Spunky youngeter eurvtvee 75 hour• of br•ln eurgery
OH AN GE COUNT Y C ALIFOHNIA 25 CENl S
Youth saved
-Irvine boy has brain surgery
~SAN DIEGO (Af) -After 7S
hours ol brain auriery, Uruversl·
t y of California doctors say
they've saved the life of a 15-year·
old Irvine boy with 8'1brain lesion
twicet.healnofanorange.
Steven Greth underwent five
stages of surgery to untangle
arteries and veins ensnarled
throu1hout one-eighth of his
brain.
In 1977, doctors in Los Angeles
diagnosed his headaches as an
arteriovenous malformation, or
A VM . But Carol Greth said "they
could do nothing'' for her son.
Thefirstoffive riskyoperations
to correct the potentially lethal,
congenital condition took place at
the University of California at San
Diego Medical Center last Oc·
tober .
There were others in December
a nd Jan. 21. The shortest was 13
hours, the longest 20.
The A VM causes blood flowing
from the arteries to (eed directly
into the veins that return to the
heart. As a result, oxygen and
nutrients in the blood wer e
blocked from reaching cells in
Steven's brain, starving or mak·
ing them non-functional.
"It was absolutely out of the
q ueation that it could be done safe.
ly in one o~ration, ·' said surgeon
Hoi S. U, pronouncing Steven's
cure complete Wednesday.
·'If you should go ahead and re·
move the lesion in one s hot, what
happens is that you completely
eliminate the shunt of blood from
arteries directly into veins and au
of the blood is introduced to the
rest of brain, suddenly, and the
arteries may not be able to talte it
and the whole brain can explode
in yourface."
The boy, who plans to r eturn to
Irv i n e High Sch oo l as a
sophomore in September, said he
was frightened through it all and
wo nde r e d i f h e wo uld be permanently disabled or coma·
tose.
"It was very difficult," Steven.
said , adding "I don't want to talk
about it because I felt ashamed
because l was different."
Mrs. Greth said although doc·
tors said he would s urely die
"Steven made the decision to go
and we backed him aU the w ay. · ·
Dr. U's colleagues described it
as the most difficult or brain sur·
geries, one which would have
been simple r in 1977 whe n
Steven'sAVM was much s maller.
"It has to do wi th a surgeon's
s kill," said Dr. U. "Some people
do this operation. and some peo·
pledon't."
Bitter teachers' dispute ends
9 held captive
Gunman • seizes
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
man with a .45-caliber pistol and cla iming to have a briefcase full
of explosives held nine people
a board a Phoenix-bound Con· tinentaJ Airlines jetliner today
at Los Angeles International
Airport, authortUes said.
Continental spokesman Jobn
Clayton said the hostages in·
eluded seven passengers and
two flight attendants aboard the
Boeing 71:7.
··o ur understanding is the
cockpit crew (including pilot
and co-pilot) got out by usinit
ropes they have for emergen-:
cies," Clayton said. "The man
claims to have a briefcase lull ol
explosives." -..
Most of the '9fW .....
out," said ai~ spoteswoman
Sharon Hahn~'·we think he's
a rmed with a .45 c a liber
automatic."
Police officer Pat Connelly
said there were "possible guns
or expl08ives involved.
"SWAT's en route," he added.
"We do not have the inform&·
tion on what the individual
400-acre preserl'e
Ei~hth Bolsa plan
readied f ~r county
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of Ille o.lly ~It.I S .. ff
Orange County planners have
dra fted an eighth alternative de-
velopment propos a l for the
Bolsa Chica marsh to recom·
mend to the Planning Com·
mission at its meeting next
Tuesday.
Ken Winter, chief of urban
pla nning for the county's En·
vironmenta l Management Agen-
cy, said the proposal calls for
r estoring and preserving a
minimum of 400 acres of the
1,200-acre marsh in conjunction
with a boat marina of 1,800 slips,
covering about 100 acres.
About 5,700 homes and various
shops and motels would be in·
eluded in this proposal, Winter
said.
The plan is an offshoot of
alternative plan three developed
by Signal Landmark Co .• which
owns most of the marsh.
The major difference between
the two proposals is that the
latest plan doesn't call for re·
routing Pacific Coast Highway
inland around the development.
Instead, a bridge on Pacifi c
•Coast Highway would be put
over the proposed 600-foot-wide
channel from the sea into the
mar ina. A "collector road"
would be looped inland to serve
t he development, Winter said.
While planners were drafting
t h e proposal We d nesd ay ,
representatives of the environ·
mental group Amigos de Bolsa
Chica were holding a press con·
ference in Santa Ana criticizing
the marina concept.
The environme ntalists said
(See llOLSA, Page AZ)
Yoga class slated
for handicapped
A yoga class for people with
multiple sclerosis is scheduled
to begin Saturday at Golden
West College in Huntington
Beach.
More information a bout the
free series can be obtained by
calling 893-6250. 1
Fire all wet
Sprinkler triJl' OC alarm
It wu at 8:45 a .m . today when the flre ala.nu,,.. off
1n the •. 9 million Oran1e County Hall of Ad••DIWMloe ill
Santa Ana.
"Commence evacuation procedures, .. a voice ordend
via the bulldin1'1 fire warnina syatem.
THE EMPLOYEES poured fort.b. Pualnl tbroqb tbe
buildlnl's lobby, boW•ver, they dlsco'Hred tlMr-e wu no
flrt. Not even smoke. \
WMer WU ralnlq doWilt from t.be bulldiQl's MCODd noor where a ftre sprin,k .. r s~tem UM reptuncf uader UM
welpt ol ~:-·--Reel cablet beinl lmta.lled to make the stnaeturally eoand.
TD WOU WAI ordtnd aftei. ltudJ• concluded the
ft•e·ltlol'Y buiJcffn1, op.....s two 1Ul'I •IO. ml1ht celilapee
ID u.. .-ol a M11ou1 ~·· Santa Ana"" 0..-rtm.& Nlpoeded to vacuum UM
• water tUt PoUnd late tM bUl'cllnl's tiled lobby.
LA jet
waots," said another police de·
partment spokesman.
And it was not known bow the
hijacker 1ot tbrou1b airport
sec~ ~ boird UM alrcraft, but Claytm said be contranted a
fli1bt attendant wblle tbe
paneqen were boud.lng just
before takeoff, which allowed
the c re w to escape to the
ground.
··Flight 72 baa been scheduled
to depart at 9 :S5 a .m. for
Phoenix and San Antonio,"
Clayton said.
Chili/est
• geu repneve
in Valley
By PIDL SNEIDERMAN
OI U. Delly ~It.I Si.ff Founta in Valley 's s trict
carnival law nearly put a lid on
a three-day "Chili Cook-Off"
planned by the Elks Lodge.
The fund-rais ing festival,
scheduled Mar ch 13·15, won a
last-minute reprieve when the
City Council made sever al
e m e rge ncy c ha n ges in the
carnival ordinance this week.
But the council members
e xpr esse d un a n i m o u s
displeasure in making legal
changes unde r pressure and
vowed to overhaul the ordinance
and consult with local serv\ce
c lub s to a void si m i l a r
dilemmas.
Fountain Valley's carnival
la w, adopted in April, 1979,
requires hefty fee deposits and
exte nsive police checks before
s uch festivals can be conducted.
The law was d esig ned to
protect local r esidents from
unscrupul o u s ca rniv al
operations.
But Councilman Ben Nielsen
observed this week that the law
instead "bas protected us from
our local service clubs and their
fund-raisers."
In several instances, travelin1
c arnival operations have
claimed Fountain Valley's legal
provlllooa are difficult to m~
and will cut into profit marstns.
The local Uou Club baa cited
t he law ·as a factor in the
cancellatlon of the c ity's
traditional Hallc}ween parade
and carnival the put two years.
After a confrontation with the
Lions lut fall, several council
member• su11e1ted that the
carnival law be revised.
But durinl a dlacu11lon thla
week of the Cblll Cook-Off
dllemma.t -~ouncll members
admltt.d DOUl tbey and the city
staff bad failed to follow
t.brou ....
Tbe cbanftt made bJ tb•
co•ndl allowed tbe city
mana1er to waive a Sl,000
deposit required by tbe
ordlaMN.
Tblt MUD ll to cover..w ell)'
HpellMI auoclated wlli UM •••t, illdudial police ..mce and d••UJ ..,. ........ l•vol'1al
tlt1enwt.
(lie aau .•• ,. AJ>
Pl av an K hoo!
~
AV.
SLATER AV.
TALBERT AV. t;j
i I
ELLIS AV 6 Gtai.tscMol
Ml>toll Khool ~
GARFIELD AV
Delly " ......
TWO MORE SCHOOLS TARGETED FOR CLOSING
Fount.In Y•ll•y truetee1 echedulect to vote tonight
Zero hour at FV
on school actions
Concluding several months of
study sessions and public hear·
ings, Fountain · Valley School
District trustees are slated to
vote tonight on school closures
for the comini year.
Bogiu (eam
plot told
WASHINGTON (AP)
The U.S. Border Patrol
thouaht s omethlna waa
wroni when the forelan
basketball team wore clean
tennil lboe9 ·OD all outdoor
court and coWdn't hanclle
the ball very weU. They
werertabt.
The bo1us baaketball
team wu formed to smua·
1le fl.e Tbal dtllem into
t.be U..._. aattt, ~ Im·
ml11'1titln ad Naturall11·
Uoa~claar1ed.
Tbe Dian calle4.for the
fh• TbaJ1 t~Ja1
bukttball D .. r Campo,
Calif., on tbe llexlcan
border. waUI, at a pn· arra...S time, tbe1 would
be drf.m to Loi Alli .....
aald O.WI Cnelud, •ct· lnf eomml,...... ol tlae ,
lmml1ratloa and )
NatunllutJo8Sentee. '
The trustees meet at 7:30 p.m.
at district headquarters, 1
Lighthouse Lane.
V ariows closure options were
discussed by the board al a
special study session Monday.
The options:
-Close Wardlow School and
Bushard Middle School at the
end of the current term, u rec·
ommended by the district's ad·
viaory committee on • school
closures.
-Close Wardlow, but reserve
judament on Buahar~ for at
least a year, u recommended
by Acttnc SUJ)erintendent Jack
Mabnten.
-Clott Bushard but allow
Wfrdlowto remain open. .
The dlltrtet upeeta to save
about SlQ,000 annually with
eacb ICbool elolure.
Tbe board allo facft variolUI
ODtlom for diapentnc Wardlow
atudeata 11 tbat lcbool 11 cloMd.
TIM ~ comml'* bu
recom ..... w tbat all W~
studeMI 'be JDOTed to TalMr\
Sebool.
laeb a man WCNlcl dlatlaee 1pedal edueaUOD studeaia at
Talbert. 'l'rUltlM Carol llobu .. ad ..... ., .... will 0,...
moYbtl._...._,ta,
A SHHd ,,.,.... wowd
dh1da u. • .,..,, ..,,......
bet.,._ Talbert Ud ..... _.
1cbooll. Some ,. .... ., ...,._.
tbla optkJa ..... lt would,..
quire huanloua street ttaU· Inca.
2-year
pact
signed
Huntington Beach Union High
School District teachers have
agreed to a two-year contract
retroactive to last July, ending a
bitter dispute that included
tea cher sickout protests and work
slowdowns.
The salary terms of the two-
year pact call for a total 16 per·
cent r aise . Th e d istrict
negotiators offered those terms :
as "flnaJ " several months ago '
and never wavered. ·
William Bianchi, executive
dir ector of West Orange County
United Teachers Associa tion,
said "95 percent " of the 6SO·
member teacher association ac·
cepted the contract in large part
bee a use of district concessions in·
volving class size maximums and
improved medical benefits.
"I'm sure the whole board is
ver y delighted," said trustee
Doris Allen, who served as school
board president during most of
the contract battle.
She said the trustees most li kely ·
will sign the contract Tuesday.
The agreement gives teachers a
6 percent raise for last semester.
a 4 percent raise for the current
se m ester and a 6 percent raise
next year, Bianchi said.
He said class enrollment in in·
dividual academic classes would
be limited to39students.
Teachers in the West Orange
County district currently average
$21 ,000 a yea r, according to dis·
trlct officials.
Girl, 12, leaves
a trail of dents
SAN DIEGO <AP) -In a one· 1
ton truck she ••borrowed ,•' a
12-year-old girl has left a trail of 1
dents and scared pedestrians.
The truc k with a 14-foot
enclosed van hit two moving
cars and a parked car, narrowly
missing pedestrians before com·
ing to a stop on the sidewalk
Wednesday.
111111 CIAIT 1111111
Chance of rain 50 per·
cent tooi1ht, 20 percent
Friday. Gusty winds at
times. Lows tooi1ht 48
alonJ the cout, 52 Inland.
H11ba Friday 55 to 80.
llllDI' 11111
Th• Ora•e• Co untr
p~ Soc:Wtw'• ""'* mof>U• vt1U1 CoU/ort&ta
School .. COICo MHO. St•
tCoJV, ..,CO.. Page 85. • 11111
------
H/f Orange COut DAIL V PILOT trh Llr9day1 March 5, 1981
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of .... o...,~ .........
The United States alroady bas
enough nuclear mlssOea to bk
-every population and lnduatrial
cent~r in the Soviet Union several times over.
Dev~oping additional wea(>OllS
systems will only enable us tote· ·
arrange the rubble .
That's the assess ment of Dr.
"Arvin Ooldberarer. oresJdent ol
the C alifornia Institute of
Technology in Pasade.na, and an
outs poken critic of the nuclear
arms ra ce .
I
WASHINGTON (Af > -
Sec retary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr.,dismissinaiacalltodraw
the line now on aJd to El Salvador.
saya any further escalation of
U.S . involveme nt depends on
what the Soviet Union and Cuba
do.
The possibility of a dditional
aid, Haig s aid, "will depend
la rgely on the willingness of
Cuba, the Soviet Union and those
assoclated with them to continue
to intervene Illegally in the affairs
of the member states of this
hemisphere."
coordinator for the Committee in
Solidarity with the People of El
Salvador. ··People are 1ayiq,
'We're not golnc to be la.ken in
again.'"
The protest groups frequenUy
couple their opposition to in-
crease d military a ld to El
Salvador's civilian-military jun·
ta with attacks on President
Reagan's proposed cuts in social
programs.
"U.S. -HandsoffElSalvador!
Spea.Jdnai at UC Irvine Wednes-
day night, Go ldbe rger s aid
several "Oash points" around the
world have the potential to draw
the United States and the Soviet
Union into a nuclear exchange.
"The war between Iran and
Iraq could flare a global en-
counter which could lead to a pre-
emptive strike by the United
Sta les o r th e So vi e t s,"
Goldberger told the nearly 80 peo-
ple at the talk sponsored.by the Al·
liance for Survival, a group op-
posed to nuclear weapons and
nuclear power
BOLSA CHICA PLAN -Orange County
planners have drafted another plan for the
future of Bolsa Chica marsh similar to this
one drawn by Signal Landmark, owner of
the property. New county plan calls for
Coast Highway bridge over proposed chan-
nel to ocean instead of rerouting highway
inland as Signal has suggested on map.
Specifically, Haig refused to
s~y wh~er U.S. aid would stop
with 20 additional military ad-
visers and $25 million in new
military assistance. "It would be
foolish to attempt to do so." he
s aid.
Money for Jobs, Human Needs,
Not for the Pentagon," reads a
flyer for a May 3 march on th~
Pentagon scheduled by a group
called the Peoples' Anti-War
Mobilization.
And in El Salvador, civiliarr
pr~sident of the ruling civilian·
military junta says he has OT·
dered the a rrest of an ultra·
rightist major for advocating a
military coup, and U.S. diplomats
bla med the officer for a hit-and·
run attack on the American Em·
bassy.
,.,,..p_ ....
BOLSA cmcA PLAN. • •
He said the insecurities and
confusion created by the threat or
an Interruption in the flow of oil
from the Middle East could lead
Soviet and U.S. leaders to weigh
the advantages of launching a
ft rst strike
"In the United States at the pre-
sent time I have heard some crazy
things about our lack of military
prowess ... Goldberger said.
"Some have suggested that we
could fight and win a nuclear war.
(n my opinion anyone who could
s ay that is certifiably insane.''
Goldberger. who is a me mber of
t he Nation al Nuclear Safety
Oversight Committee. said the
United States and its allies have
10.000st rategic nuclear weapons.
He said the Soviets are believed
lo h ave 6,000 and the South
Afri cans and Israelis probably
have nuclear strike capabilities
or soon wi ll have
·'Ten of t h e se s t r a t egic
weapons wou ld be sufficient to
wipe out all population and in·
duslrial centers in the Soviet
Union." Goldberger said "How
can wefeelthreatened?"
they would offer another pro·
posal _to . the c~unty Planning
Comm1ss1on Tuesday calling for
g r a dual restor a t ion of the
l,200·acre m arsh by installing
culverts under the highway to
the ocean to allow tidal flushing
in the marsh.
Lorraine Faber, spokeswoman
for the group, said use or federal
and state dollars to partially
fund the m a rina would only
be nefit boate rs, ·prospect ive
waterfront homeowners and the
housing developer.
She said the Am igos plan to
purchase and graduall y restore
a bout 800 acres o r wetlands
would cost between $22 million
and S4S million, depending on
the value placed on land owned
by Signal.
The Amigos estima ted the
value at about $22,500 an acre
while Signal representatives
claim it is closer to $100,000 an
acre. The state would have to
purchase the prope rty for marsh
restoration.
. Mrs. Faber said the proposal,
rncluding the development or
county's proposed linear park on
the southern bluffs of Bolsa
Chi ca , could be funded by
va rious agencies a long these
lines: 37 percent from the state,
33 percent from the fede ral gov-
ernment, 20 percent from the
county, 4 percent from state oil
re venues and 4 per cent from
other sources. •
The county has been consider-
ing development proposals rang-
ing in extremes from marsh
restoration of 1,105 acres to a
housing develop ment of more
than 6.fn> homes.
The county also is considering
leaving the 1,600-acr e Bolsa
Chica as it is. Currently, the
state owns 300 acres of marsh
and is restoring 150 acres along
Pacific Coast Highway.
More than 200 oil wells are on
the property, which is south of
Warner Avenue a lo ng the
eas tern side of Pacific Coast
Highway in county territory.
Goldberger added that there
are 5,000 towns in the United
States with populations over
5,000. Conceiva bly the Soviets
could hit every Qne of those towns
?nd still have 1.000 m issiles left.
The Cal Tech president said a
study conducted by the Federa·
lion of American Scientists round
tr 20 one-megaton bombs were
dropped on Los Angeles, equaling
the power of 20 million tons of
TNT. an area of 1,200 square
m iles would be wiped out
Assembly speaker
mends GOP fences
That area could include the
cities of Los Angeles. Burbank.
Glendale, Pasadena. Santa Ana,
Seal Beach, Long Beach and
poi nts in between
Court hears
of attack
by punkers
A chauffe ur has to ld an
Orange County Superfor Court
j ury how he was a ttacked.
kicked and stabbed in the chest
by four youthful assaila nts who
lp ughingly poured beer over his
rbead as he lay wounded on a
.Newport Beach street.
But despite the testimony of
Daniel Harms and other pros·
ecution witnesses Wednesday,
d efendant David Paul Owen, 19,
was never identifi ed in the
courtroom as one of the al ·
tackers.
Defense attorney Roger Aga·
j anian, who only brierly cross·
examined Harms . said he was
pleased with t he testimo ny
because the witness had not
picked his client as one of the at·
tackers.
Owen. 18 when the incident OC·
curred, is standi ng trial on
charges or atte mpted murder
a nd assault with a d eadly
weapon.
Harms, 25, who was critically
wounded in the attack, testified
t'1at be was a$saulted on high
school graduation night in June
after a bottle was thrown at his
limousine as he drove six teen·
age rs along the 300 block of
Walnut Street in the Newport
Shores area.
By GLENN SCOTI' Ol U. 0.11, ~ .... IVff
State Assembly Speaker Wi llie
Brown was the guest of honor at
a closed-door luncheon at the
Fluor Corporation in Irvine.
Brown, who put together a
coalition of De mocrats and
Republicans to capture the As·
sembly speakership, met with
about 40 local business leaders
and the ri ve me mbers of the
O r a nge County Bo a r d of
Supervisors Wednesday.
It was an unusual move for the
San Francisco Democrat to be
entering the lion's den of con·
servatism . But Brown reported-
ly made the trip to assure com-
munity leaders that he doesn't
intend to use his new power to
back onJ y liberal causes.
Fluor Vice President Thomas
Ellic k , who Is active in
Republican politics, s aid the
m eeting was arranged through
form e r s tate Sen. Dennis
Carpenter, who is Orange Coun·
ty's new Sacramento lobbyist.
Assemblyman R ic hard
Robinson, 0 -Garden Grove, also
attended the private meeting at
Brown's request, Ellick said, to
show that Brown is interested ln
mending rifts that occurred dur·
ing the political fight for the
speakership.
Robinson had been a strong
backer of Assemblyman Howard
Berman of Los Angeles.
Ellick said Brown was well re-
ceived by the elite crowd, which
he said included presiden~ of
major companies who are con-
s Ide red "he avy hitte rs " In
political circles.
H Brown wanted t o visit
Orange County to convey his
new attitude, Ellick said, "he
surely s ucceeded."
Even though all county
supervisors accepted invitations
to attend Brown 's lunc heon
speech and the en5uing question
and answer period, the press
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHltned lldvertltlnt 7141142-1171
All other de9a"menta M2-4a21
Thomas P. Haley
NilllWW
f\Obeft N. WMd• ............
M. Thomas KHvll , ....
Thoma A. Murphlne ........,.,_
QwleaH.LOOI ,....,.~,.,,
~Schulman
i:!~"
K~ N Goddard Jr ~~
MAIN OfrtCI ~West-.YM .CMta-.a.c• Mell Mdf'9M' loa IMO. c;ci.t. ~.CA. '2'1•
was not allowed to attend.
That decision raised questiQOS
of whether the intent of state
open meeting laws was violated
by the supervisors in attending
the private affair .
Chairman Ra lph Cla rk an·
n o un ced a t t he c l ose of
W ed n e s d a y 's boa rd o f
super visors' meeting that the
ensuing luncheon didn't appear
to violate the Ralph M. Brown
Act because the s upe rvisors
were not goi ng to deliberate in
p rivate.
County Coun se l Adrian
Kuyper said the law prohibits a
majority of legislative bodies,
such as the board, from de-
liber ating in secret, except on
personnel and litigation matt.en.
· Ellick said the press was not
allowed at the meeUng because
business leaders invited to the
luncheon were told in advance
that they would be free lo ask
Brown questions without worry-
ing about public exposure.
"I can't violate that initial un·
derstanding,'' be said .
The Brown Act was passed as
a means to prevent publicly
elected boards from m eeting
secretly.
Although Elllc k s aid the
supervisors mostly listened dur·
ing the question and ans wer
period, he said that Supervisor
Bruce Nestande did ask Brown
his opinion on building toll roads
to solve freeway congestion.
Brown answered that be
wouldn't stand in the way of
legislation to make construction
of toU roads a local option for
counties, Ellick said.
fi',....P ... AJ
cmL1 •••
Tbe l ,OOO·member Fountain •
Valley Elks Lod1e has agreed to
provide private security. The
event will be held on the !:lits'
property at 10480 Talbert Ave.,
and the cleanup wm be lbe
club's responalblllty. ·
T he councU also reduced a
30-day permit application
deadline to 10 days becauu the
Elks bad not applied earlier.
Elka 1«retary Al RocbUo said
tM or11An1Md a 1lmllar event ftve
yeara ap and waa u.nawue ot
th• 1trict provttlona lml*!ed
1lnctU...
TM comdl m&M tta cbul•
TtletUJ eWI 'hf, ud ~ flied the &ropet ,.,,._
WedJMlda>', ty Jina....-llOO
Vollmer 1aJd.
Fr .. P•geAl
STORM ...
D istrict s p o kes man Rob
Moreland said the current storm
accompanied by thunderclaps is
a little bit bizarre.
Saddleback Peak, ror example,
has received only 2. 7 inches· of
r a in from the current storm along
with a comparable 13.6 inches of
rain todate.
Last year at this time the
highest point of land in Oranjte
County had received 58.2 inches.
Moreland said this is because of
what he terms rain cells, which
drop trem endous amounts of
water in certain a reas due to the
pa tterns or high and low pressure
systemsinv~ved
The administration has ac·
cused CUba and other communist
nations of complicity in smug-
gling at leas t 200 tons of military
s upplies to leftist insurgents in
El Salvador. The Soviet Union
a nd Cuba h a ve d e nied the
char ge.
Meanwhile, from campuses to
churches, a fledgling anti-war
m ovem en t is e m e rging in
Am erica. The movement opposes
increased U.S. military involve-
ment in El Salvador, and it is
drawing support from veterans of
Vietnam protests a decade ago.
Already, there have been cam·
pus teach-ins and protest rallies.
A hunger strike is scheduled. And
soon, the hallmark of the anti·
Vietnam era will return: a march
on the Pentagon.
·'There is a tremendous aware·
ness that this (U.S. involvement )
looks like what happened around
Vietnam," said Heidi Tarver.
Presid e nt J ose Na p oleon
Duarte told a news conference
Wednesday that he ordered the
police to search for and arrest re·
tired Maj. Roberto d'Aubuisson.
D'Aubuisson held a news con-
ferenceTuesday, accused Duarte
and the other members of his
Christian Democratic party in the
government of being communists
and said the military should expel
t he m from the government. But
by e arly today there was no an·
di cation he had been a rrested.
Meanwhile. men in a speeding
pickup t~ck fired 10 to 15 shots at
the U.S. Embassy Wednesday,
breaking a window. No one was
hurt, and t he embassy's Marine
guards did not return the fire. a
spokesman said.
·'The peak is a lways so much
higher in rainfall," he said.
No serious damage was report·
ed in the county due to the latest
storm.
Moreland said Costa Mesa re·
cei ved 1.13 inches in the 24 hours
endingat8a.m.
Santa Ana received .63 inches
ror the same period.
Defense cost tied
to inflation rate
So far this year, the county seat
baa received 7.32 incbes. Last
year's tolaJ was 19.26 inches.
The 2'-hour storm total in Hunt·
ington Beach was 1.35 inches.
The season's total is 9.62inches.
wbUe last year Huntington Beach
had loued 19.28 inches .
San Juan.Capisp-ano's official
weather watcher, Adele Kankey.
monitored 1.12 inches of rain for
the 2•-hour period ending at 8 a.m.
today.
Two power failures in Newport
Beach occurred early today but
authorities said they are not s ure
they were caused by the storm.
Both occurred in underground
vaults.
One struck at 1:53 a .m . knock·
ing out power to 1.925 customers
in the Eastblulr area. according
to Southern California Edison
Company spokesman Jim Ken·
nedy.
A second power failure was re·
ported in the Fashion Island area
at about 4:30 a.m . and involved
a bo ut 400 Edison Company
customers, Kennedy said.
He said about 100 customers
stiU had no power by approx-
imately 10: 30 a . m .
WASHJNGTON <AP ) -The
Reagan administration. finding
s upport in Congress for its
proposed 5.12.6 billion increase in
military spending through 1982.
is promising to seek even more
money for defense if it fails to
tame inflation.
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger, outlining a bUdget
he said would make .. a major
sta rt on meeting needs too long
unmet," said he would submit a
supplemental request ir prices of
m ilitary ha rdware increase
beyond the ad m inistration's
estimates.
··w e h ave t o ke e p this
program i ntact . a bsolutely, ..
We inberger told the Senate
Ar m ed Services Committee.
Under questioning Wednesday
by Sen. John Wa rner. R-Va.,
We inberge r con ced e d the
revised defense budget envisions
lower inflation than the Carter
administration's forecast, which
h e previo u s l y sa id w as
underestimated.
But he said it is "fair to
assume a lower inflation rate" If
President Reagan's proposed
tax cut and domestic spending
For the one of a kind woman,
a one of a kind diamond.
r eductions are enacted.
The Reaga n administration
p r e dicts inflation will drop
steadily to 7.2 percent in 1982
a nd 4 percent in 1986 as the
president's economic recovery
program takes hold. It was 12.4
percent last year, and the Carter
adm inistration 's last forecast
was for 9.6 percent in 1982 and 6
percent in 1986.
.. If what we hope does not
come to pass and we are not
a ble lo reduce inflation and
don't get the cuts we a re seeking
then l will have to present you
w i th a s uppl e m e nt a l ,"
Weinberger said.
Members of the committee
generally welcomed the budget
increase. which would pay for
a n expande d Navy , a ne w
bomber. a new kind of nerve gas
and substantial pay raises for
military personnel.
Se n. John Tower. R-Texas, the
committee chairman, indicated
he wanu the Pentagon's major
budgets approved by Congress
before there is any backlash
about cuts in domes ti c
programs.
Hardly a woman alive doesn't dream of
owning a dazzling diamond solitaire. Some
get one on their wedding day -some on an
anniversary. One thing's for sure, the day
they unwrap a diamond solitaire is a day
they'll never forget. For the widest selection
and absolutely the finest quality available,
.come see our solitaire collection.
•
~-~---..-............ ---. ·--. --··· ··-·--··· ...... -........ ··-·-··--···---.-...
Singer sets
prison gig
Blues guitarist B.B. K1D1
will perform Friday at the
world's largest walled
prison.
King offered lo do two
"blues at the big house"
shows free for inmates of the
Slate Prison of Southern
Michigan at Jackson.
The musician is perform·
ing al a suburban Detroit
nightclub.
About 3,000 of the over·
crowded prison's S,700 in·
males will get an opportunity
to hear King in the prison
auditorium.
A spokesman said "it's
been a long time" s ince
anyone volunteered to do a
show for the inmates.
A last-minute agreement
worked out between BUly
Carter and the Internal
R e v e nue Servi ce kept
Carter 's 7,700-square-foot
home off the auction block.
The IRS had planned to
place Carter's Marion Coun-
ty house and 58 acres of his
property on sale to pay off a
$10S, 123 federal income tax
debt Carter owed from 1978.
The latest in a report-
ed string of mysterious
eventi on the $10 million
"Mommie Dearest" set
brought Frank Sinatra
to the rescue of Faye
Dunaway when the ac-
tress 81Addenly lost her
voice during a scream-
ing scene.
Sinatra spent 15
minutes giving the ac-
tress tips on preserving
the vocal chords.
President and Mrs.
au1aa celebrated their 29th
wedding anniversary at one
of Washington's mos t ex-
pensive French restaurants
and said their years of mar-
riage seem "l ike 29
minutes."
Tbe president echoed her:
"She said it. It seems like 29
minutes."
\
City-bred Assembly
Speaker Willie Brown.
D-San Francisco. who
has added a farm
specialist to his staff,
told farmers in a
Monterey speech, if his
new aide can't solve
their problems, "come
to Farmer Broum.''
Edith C. Jarvls, a great-
g real-grandda ughter of
Francis ~& Key who wrote
·'The Star-Spangled Ban-
ner," says s he'd feel sad if
the anthem ever "had to take
a bac k seat'' to other
patriotic songs.
Mrs . Jarvis attended a
cere m ony at Baltimore 's
Fort McHenry marking the
SO th annive rsar y o f the
song's designation by Presi -
dent Herbert Hoover as the
national anthem.
For 50 years. Mrs. Jarvis
said , "The Star -Spangled
Banner " has withstood a
bombardment of competing
national songs, just as the
flag it was written about
weathered British shelling in
the War of 18l2.
Astronomer and television
personahty Carl Sagan, con-
tending t hat t he general
public has a "vast hunger for
scientific information, is urg-
ing Congress not to reduce
National Science Foundation
s upport fo" education pro-
g r a m s i n scien ce a nd t
engineering.
For decades. the United
States has led the world in
science, he said. "Were the
United States to surrender
that role. it would be a great
danger not only to our coun·
try, but a danger to the
planet as a whole."
Four/ace
recall on
Dana unit
Myers named chief
at Valley hospital
ltecall petitions directed
against four members of the
Dana Point Sanitation District
board were filed with the
Orange County Registrar of
Voters by a local citizens group.
Craig G . Myers. a former
Peace Corps volunteer who has
worked in Africa and Southeast
~sia, bas been selected as the
new administrator of Fountain
ValJey Community Hospital.
Named on the petitions are
sanitation district directors Earl
1 Hardisty, J ohn McComb, Jack
1 Schmidt and Angus Smith.
Myers, 38, comes to Fountain
Valley from Chapman General
Hospital in Orange, where he
served in a similar capacity. He
bas been vice preside nt of
Human Ex Corporation, which
ope rates Chapman General and
THE RECALL effort against
the four by the Dana Point
Citizens for Action was sparked
by a $500-a-month pension they
a pproved for retiring board
members last April. The direc-
tors have repeatedly refused to
rescind the plan.
The registrar now has 30 days
to verify the signatures on the
petitions. Filing came one day
before the March S deadline to
qualify the recall for the ballot.
THE CITIZENS group oeeds
1,408 valid signatures on each of
the four petitions to qualify the
Panel studies
traffic woes
in Costa Mesa
A Caltrans committee is ex-
pected to reduce the number or
proposals being considered for
improving Newport Boulevard's
traffic problem when it meets
tonight in Costa Mesa.
I measure, which represents 2S
percent of the registered voters
in Dana Point.
The Policy Advisory Commit·
tee for the Route 55 Transporta-
tion Study meets at 7:30 p.m. in
the City Council Chambers, 77
Fair Drive.
Last month, the Route SS
Technical Advisory Committee
studying the same projects rec-
ommended that four of 10 im·
provem~t projects be scrapped,
including a full freeway project
between the present end of Costa
Mesa Freeway to Pacific Coast
Highway.
Carolyn Walti, a spokesman
for the Citizens for Action, said
nearly 1,900 signatures were
gathered for each board
member. She said her group
wo-uld try to have the recall
measure Included on the Nov·
ember ballot.
Volunteers for
Olympics asked
The PAC also will study a plan
proposed by the City or Costa
Mesa for routing a sub-surface
or overhead freeway -like
highway through the downtown
area between Bay and 17th
Streets. The Orapge County Special
Olympics of 1981 is lookinl for
school voluhteen to assist with
the April 4 event at tbe Cypress
CQllec.e track Cield.
< For more lnlormalion, call
Red Cross Youth Services at
The committee studies are
aimed at producing a drafl en·
vironmental impact statement
addressing problems and poten-
Ual solutions of mot.or vehicle
traffic along the boulevard
betwe,en Bristol Street and
Pacific Coast Hl•hway. < 835-5381, extension 214. l a
We're Listening •••
the Daily Pilot wantl to he•r from ltl readers, wh,at /ou like
about the paper and what )'OU doft't. Uk~. We also woul Uke to
publl1b your views on =t. Alllfeet ln our letters to the ed6tor col·
umn. Call tbt number ...S JOUI' ..... ,e will be recorded. Meuqes wUl be CrUICli ...... UIMI 8111 aad cleUvered to
lbe deA ol the ·~ dlor. lllallbox contrtbutk>ns will
• be dell._. to Pie ......... editor. Mailbo1
coalrtblaan mUlf lllchldl a.r .... aftd tel...,_
nu•btr for "r;nau.. ~ ~ c.US. pa.... Ten \II wt.at'• on 1our mllld. 11'e nusnber tt ln
service 2A houl'I a da)'. eev• da>'• a week.
seve ral ot h er Southern
California hospitals .
AS A PEACE Corps volunteer
from 1964 to 1966, M yers
p e rformed publ ic h eal th
ser vices in central Africa. He
later served as administrator of
the Thomas A. Dooley Founda·
lion's Laos Program.
A r esid e nt of Santa An a.
Myers will assume his Fountain
Valley post March 11.
He will step into a vacancy
create d Jan . 13 when ad-
ministrator Tom Richards and
assistant administrator Carl
Thielmann resigned under pres-
sure from the hospital's dfrec·
tors
RICHARDS' departure was
tied in part to continuing labor
unrest at the 215-bed facility.
The National Labor Relations
Board has approved an April IO
election. in which the hospital's
700 employees will vote on
wh e ther they wish t o be
represented by the United
Nurses Association of California
and the United Auto Workers.
In February, new chairman of
the hospital's board of directors
was selected. He is Dr. Rudolph
C . Baldoni , 49. an
anesthesiologist.
Pair remain
serious after
Irvine crash
A 21.year-old Marine and a
Newport Beach man remain
hospitalized in serious condition
today u q.e result of injuries
they suffered in a head-on traffic
collision in Irvine.
Paul S. Ma.aaes, 21, stationed
at the El Toro Marine Corps
bellcopter facility in Tustin, and
Kurt A. Moll, 30, of 1219 Seacrest
Drive, are in the Intensive care
unit ol Fountain Valley Com·
munlty Hoepital.
Daniel Hake, 24, also stationed
at tbe helicopter facility, tbe
driver of the car lo which
Muaea wu riding, ls belng held
ln Oranae County .JaU on••·
clon ol feloDi drunken dl'tYbil. He w• Jail TU.day after be·
l111 u..&Aid UC Irvine lledlcal CenwtoraM. Jntae poUee S1t. floberi
Xredel Hid today tbat Hake WM
clrt•lal :bll pl•p t.ruct nortb-
boundln tbe southbound lanes ol
llaeA.rUaur Boulevard IOUUl ~
UDJ•enttJ Orin wllen Ida Hid· eJe eoWd"ed wttb 1 aoutbbound
Dataun driven by Moll.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{T'hurSday, March 6, 1981 •
New sewage pla11t
A $70 million construction project is under before it 1s discharged into the ocean.
way at Oran ge County Sanitation Treat· Sanitation plant currently is treating 170
ment Plant Number 2 at Brookhurst Street million gallons of sewage a day. Domed
and Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington structures are digeste rs, in which organic
Beach. Ne w secondary treatment facility. solids decompose, producing methane gas,
to open in 1982, will further purify sewage which helps operate the plant.
~~~~~~~~~
Air noise probe tabled
Testimony set to resume in April
By STEVE MARBLE Of,,. Dally Pilot Stall
A state hearing to determine if
J ohn Wayne Airport should be
allowed to exceed state noise
standards has been continued
until seven lawyers and one ad·
ministrative law judge can find
room in their calendars.
The nine-day old hearing was
balled Wednesday a rter one
s peaker suffered a heart attack.
Douglas Parmentier Jr. was as·
sisted by audience members un·
til Costa Mesa paramedics ar·
rived at the hearing room .
ATTORNEYS, THOUGH ,
already had agreed t.o continue
the hearing to some future date,
likely in April.
The hearings ~riginally were
scheduled to run only five days.
Although only two witnesses
have yet to testify, at least
a nother 20 people have peti·
tioned Adminis trative Law
Judge Robert Neher , who is pre-
siding, for· permission to take
the witness stand.
Most of the attorneys, who are
representing a variety of parties
in the noise hearings, say they
have other legal commitments
in the upcoming weeks.
TWO OF THE lawyers , Jerrod
Fadem and Michael Gatzke. are
set to square off Monday in
Orange County Superior Court.
Fadem. a Santa Monica at·
torney who has been represent·
ing noise-weary homeown ers
during the var iance hearings, is
representing some of the same
homeowners in a suit against the
cou nty.
The suit alleges people have
s uffered pro pe rty damage,
personal injury and emotional
disturbances because of the
county ai rport. Gatzke is
representing the county as he
has in the noise hearings.
DURING WEDN ES DAV
morning's hearings, the witness
stand was tak e n over by
homeowners who said they are
fed up with jet noise.
O•ilJ ~ol•t SUH P"°'I
POSTPONES HEARING
Law Judge Neher
Santa Ana Heights resident
Erma Batham tes tified she'd
been for ced t o u nd ergo
psychiatric treatment because of
jet noise from the airport.
"What are we going to do?"
she asked. "just throw people in
a coffin. It's sad . We 're so im·
pacted I by noise)."
R ollie Brousard , a north
Newport resident a nd savings
:rnd loan branch manager, said
jet noise is so bad he has trouble
talking o n t h e tel e phone ,
watching television or sleeping
l ah ' on weekends
"I'm embarrassed to invite
f riends to my -house." said
Brousard. "and I can't use my
patio
"Between Jets I can sit on m)
front pon:h and see the golf
course and rcaltze I'm not such
a bad golfer It's a beautiful
house I never want to leci ve it.",
Brous ard re ported that he
feels "l•au~hl ..
'"I c an 't afford to live
an ywhi:-°re el ~e in Newport
Beach.'' he sciid . "The onl~·
avenue left 1s lo leave leave
my community."
Witness Parmentier. before he
was stricken, said he was skep-
tical of thli "good intentions of
our county supervisors ...
HE SUGGESTED that con<fi·
t 1on s be attached to the
variance. including a system for
fining loud pilots and a program
for denying l·ommercial airlineS
a right to uae the airport if ther
are unable to comply with noisf
s tandards during a ny three
month period '
Parmentier also suggeste6
that officials look into building a
high-s peed monorail betwe~n Orange County a nd Ontarib
Airport lie said s upervisors
should be urged to rescind the
airport master plan.
Roy Skultin. a realtor and Sein·
la Ana H eight s resident .
s lre ssed that he and h is
neighbors are not anti-a irport..
"Our purpose," he said, "is
s imply lo have peaceful ~
ex1 st('nce with the airport."
De~ert trip scheduled
A four-day trip beginning
March 29, to Desert Hot Springs
Spa is being sponsored by the
Orange Coast College Commun!·
ty Service office.
The $1SS fee includes
chartered bus, lodging, use or
~
mineral hot pools , sauna.
breakfas ts. dinners . and an
aerial tram ride in Palm
Springs.
Reservation information is
available by phoning 556-5S27.
RO LEX
SPEED COUNTS.
ENDURANCE COUNTS MORE.
Against time and the mountain. power with
precision means victory. Just oneruepiece
qualifies: Rolex Explorer II. Tou , trusty, ~xplorer II ls a self-winding, o flclally
certified superlative chronometer In
stainless steel with matching bracelet,
.preseure-proof down to 330 feet In Its
Oyalar ease. A lumlnoua red hour hand
points exact time on a 24-tiour bezel.
32 Fashion Island
Newpen Beech
644-2040
I I
~ Cout DAILY PtlOT/l'huraday, March 5, 1911
Down .
for the count
SLOT A INTO ILOT a DSPT. -Yoa remember tboM
vexiq 1DteW1enee t.eta tbey UMd to tin wlaeN Uaey lbow
you a bunch of~ 1qune, reet.ua)el, aad Jumbled
trlanal• and order you to tell wbtcb ooe1 aN alike? Sure you do.
Santa Ana mUftlclpal ~ter people tot a teat like lbat only t.b1a week.
They ftunked.
Either the ballot-countlnl bolol blew it, or It waa their
computer, or both. We may never know. In any event, the
computeriaed pratfall meant that Santa Ana people waited
breatbleuly (they were •norlnt at home> aJl tbrou1b the
'(;, nt1bt Tuesday and • before dawn Wednesday
• ,_ without learnin1 who ~\ bad won four open •eata ~~ on their aeven-member JDI IURPHHJI -~I/ City Council.
THE PSOBLEM
was that Santa Ana's municipal savants were u.alnl a com-
puter to count up the election returns. To triH•r the com-
puter for your favorite candidate, you bad to punch a
particular bole in your ballot.
In the ballot-<:ounting, the bole representing your vote
was matched up with a similar hole in the cbmputer and
your vote was recorded.
What actualJy happened was that the ballot puncher in
the voting booth made re<:tanguJar-sbaped boles.
The holes in the countine machine were square.
Alas, this was almost the same as the old saw about
trying to put a round peg into a square bole. Or was it the
Mouae intelligence quiz: which hole u uruafe?
other way around? Doesn't matter. The boles didn't
match. The computer rejected about 7,000 of said ballots.
\\ORLD I NATION -· 118 still on Je t
28 ~e'leased
.
by hijackers
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan <AP)
-A Pat.latani pJane flew back
from Kabul today with 28 people
freed from a hijacked JeWner.
But 118 otheo. tncludin1 several
Americans and a World Bank of-
ficial, remained captive and the
hijacker again threatened to set
off grenades aboard the aircraft
attheAllhanairporUnKabuJ.
The hijacker demanded that 79
Paldatania, including pollticaJ
prisonen, be fiown to Kabul, the
Altban capital. A Pakistani of-
ficial laid some of them were in
jail, but that others were "not
evenincustody."
THE Bl.IACKE& has identified himself as Mohammad AJamgir,
said be bas two accomplices and
band grenades aboard and that
his finaJdestination is Iran.
, According to Pakistani of-
ficials, those aboard the evacua-
tion plane included 10 children
and 16 women released Wednes-
day from the Pakistan Interna-
tional Airlines Boeing 720, which the hijacker commandeerea
Monday during a flight between
Karachi and Peshawar in
northern Pakistan.
Apparently also aboard the
evacuation plane, which landed In
Peshawar, were two men who
Afghanistan radio said were re·
leased by the hijacker because
they wereinillhealth.
Pakiitani 1ovemment broadcut
the hijacker'• dental of Pakiltanl
cbaraes that he was a member of
executed Prime MinbterZuJftkar
All Bhutto's PakJstan People's Party.
Bhutto was ousted in a military
coup in urn and was executed two .
years later after belnt convieted ot conspiracy in the murder of a
POiitical rival.
Flu v a ccine
• • victim gets
$2 million
HONOLULU CAP) -A 4S-year-
old meteorologist who was tem-
porariJy paralyzed after receiv-
ing a swine nu shot has settled a
suit against the government for $2
million, the highest damage
award to come from the con-
troversial 1976 Inoculation pro-
gram, lawyers say.
Kenneth Hazemoto and bis
wife, Mildred, will receive an im-
mediate $315,000 in cash as well as
$30,000 a year tax-free for as long
as he lives, with 3 percent in-
creases compounded annuaJJy,
according to terms of the out-of-
courtsettlement.
TIUS MEANT THAT before the counting could get
completed, election workers bad to go back and re-punch
each baJlot so that the holes were square enough to satisfy
Santa Ana's square-holed computer.
Far from home ..... ....,.._ U.S. EMBASSY officlaJs said
they believed Deborah Leighton
Weisner, of Auburn, Maine, and
Charlotte HubbelJ were amoog
those released. Mrs . HubbelJ's
hometown was not immediately
available.
THE APPROVAL of Attorney
GeneraJ William French Smith is
needed before payments can
begin.
•
The whole situation sounds pretty square, come to
think of it.
Santa Ana proba bly deserves it. The election apparent·
ly drew little more than expansive yawns from the
citizenry anyway. The turnout at the polls was reported at
about 10 percent, squares, rectangles or otherwise.
A snowy owl with 50-inch wingspan lands on lumber shed
roof in industrial park in Lancaster, Pa. The arctic bird
is rarely seen that far south.
Judging from the placards plastered all over the Coun·
ty Seat, crime and lower taxes appeared to be the big is·
sues. Judging from the turnout. nothing was.
PCB doesn't scare
"VOTE FOR BLAT -lower crime and taxes ... "
seemed to be the motto or every candidate. Maybe-the
voter turnout response would have been better in Santa
Ana if at least one candidate had come out in favor of
more crime and higher taxes.
New York's Carey
At least the people would have had something to fight
about. Maybe they just all stayed home from the polls to
guard against Santa Ana burglars.
Anyway. it should be reported someplace that four
councilmen finally did get elected in Santa Ana. once they
could match the square holes against the square boles. At
dawn, the election had gone to incumbents Gordon Bncken
and Daniel Grisel and new councilpersons Patricia
McGuigan and John Acosta.
TIOS WAS INTERPRETED by Santa Ana politicaJ
pundits as being a victory for the city's established
powers.
What does that mean? Who knows? Probably that City
Hall will continue its battle to shut down the dirty movie
house out by the Civic Center.
Few things change much.
ALBANY. N.Y. <AP) -Gov.
Hugh Carey says he wouldn't be
afraid to drink a glass of PCB, soa
radio station manager is standing
by with a cup.
The challenge came Wednes-
day. after the governor'• annual
health messa1e. when Carey told
a news conference that reports of
be al th dangers from the toxic su~
stance released in a Binghamton
state office building were "over-
blown."
Carey offered to "walk into any
part of that building and drink a glass of PCB."
"If I had a few willing bands
and some vacuum cleaners, I'd
Snow, showers hit U.S.
Avalanche in Colorado leaves 1 dead
FORECAST f"..o .. tal .,~•titer Weslll1191n so 40
CALIP'OltNIA Ottn lon•I ously "'Inda lonlQlll
.. 1111 • 50 peru~t c-• of r•ln,
decreHlnQ to 20 jMrcenl Frldey. L-1 laft191\1 .. et Ille _.,.., U In-
land. Frlcley ll19N U to Ml. W•ltr ...
E1 .. w11en, ttnall crelt Mlvltory
wllll wetl IO ~I winds of 20 to
JO knots QWltlnt to 40 knots. Seas ol •
to 10 '"'-SUll1arecl .,_.,, ""°"°" e•rly Fr!My, ~partly c-y
by Friday...,_
IJ.8.•--· ...
R•lft -.-l««etl today froM Ille C•rollnu to Maryland, e nd
ecrMI perts ot llM T~ VellO
-Kent;,dly, wltll ,,_ e•peclff
from tll• lower Greet L•kH to
souti....n N-E.._.nd. Snow also •H forecast over
northern end eetltrn Mlclll99n, wllll• llAM*Al .... ._ 111¥1(1.
scattered ....,_.,.. were ••p.cted ,._...--... ____________ .;:::;...:.:;.,::i:::..::,.::::=::1' ltO"-' Ill .. "'-
trom Ari--SGutllern Cellloml• to weuern Mol\tene, cllenQlnQ 10
snow over Ille mownl.elnl.
S.v•r• lllllndll.,tonn1 belwrecl Ille lower Mlulu"'91 Vel .. y early today
wllll• lleevy r.i.,111111119 '°"'"All•"· tk Coast 1tete1 end • winter storm
puking wl,.ds ol up to SO mpll
dumped neerty two IHf Of snow on
Coloredo, lr'-rlno evelllnCllO 11\et
CtUHd ti lffst -cleetll. Snow~ lellll'IQ tn New York Cl·
ty sllorlly after dewn, wlll lt
nelQllboflno New .Hrwv twac:ed f«
up to 10 Inc:,...
TemPff .. WH erounct Ille nation
renoed from nro 111 OUtulll, Mln11. to
74 In l(ey Wttl, P'le.
c:au1 ..... 1.
SwHy relll ,,_. '•Ille storm le II
owr ,.,.... ot ~ CeUlomle '-"
Cley. fOl'Cll\t tll9 ...,.._,, <'-• .. _, ..... -~., ....... ,_..
tllreet toelrwdy..aeclceftyelle,...s..
Sllow ........ -. l119ffect In IN
movnt•IM, _.11-crllfl edYIMf' .. I
wtn cel!M ...... Ille CMMllM Md ,. ..... ,. ............... lfkttlll•
rnemlftt.,. w llelow tfle ''°'" 91 nw Senta Menlc• 1N1v11tel11• Ofld 111
<DllY•-otV..W.e,LM ..... lff -~ ..... c:---. , .. llM!eod MllCllH ..-COllH for
Ill• loetlllll of S.111• ••rbore,
lllvwtldt, _. -Mnt!M -loll 0 .... c--. " • ..,..,. ,,_ , ..... lloMlflt ,,
lmmlfloM.,111,,..,_, .. ,...._,"
, .. eff9ctell -.... l111en.c'94I .. l•ltt lltCHMry ttrocevtlOflt Im ·
....ctlowty. COid, ....... air 1i11NM1 ttio tyMom WOI 011.-Ctld ID '9tllll Ill IC....._
111owers, eccompe"l•d by ously
wlndl, 111 .-10,.... '"'°"°" lontQM,
Ille NtllOlltl WNttwr Servkt Mid.
TM Sii~ -Id cle<l'MM by Fri·
d•Y morlllng wllll some pertl•I cle•r·
Ing.
Snow temporarily block•d I"·
terst•tt S '" Ille Tejon Pess trff tllCI
c1e11se loo ctbl'\lllt.cl ~nl119 tretflc on
Ille Antelope Velley Fr .. wey IStelt
HIQllwey 14) In LOI AngelH County,
Ille CelllOl'ftle HIQflwey Petrol re·
ported.
Lt T._ CM'tOf\ A-In Ille Tu·
Juft90•5'ftend •N• of LOI it.119tlff
Cov11tv wat .... II cio.d todlly dw to mlldlllcllel, wftllt _ 1_ Of Ille Solle.a
tM11k• ,,._, '" $Ollto Monie• Dito llOd to .. cloMd dole to lloodlno. tlle
CHflMld.
Up le UlllcMsllf newshowwae•·
llOCIM Ill tflO _... ... tty loftltftt,
....... -...,.. -about 4,000 '"'· AYOIOftellt-NfteisromolMdlnef·
foci .. -.... ............. -...... wes lllllod.,..enoa.r llrteflylro"9CI
ll-(e11ev.._,.._,._wool!Md.
TM tlDml fled *""'POd Jwt -.
-IMll ef rolll Ofl dOwn4IDWft LOI ........ .., ...... ~ ....... 'If•"
MDMfl ._...to 1.i1 lnc:tlos. n1et'•<Ofl·
•*'MIY 1-INll lM 21.7SlllC'llol Ille
city rocolwd lete -Md u.--· totelof IUSl!ldlollllythlstlme.
Sowret...,.,,.......,. ,,_. 1.......,
lrom ti. Pee Wk In rt<IH'lt _.,,, efw • 11.....,..._...,.... .......... ,tM
-vlc:e ...._ 'Mlilo-clOorlnt-
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0¥or1111M lowt..,...•ture1111 mo11
-· ...... ,.,... Ill 1111 ....... Mall• ,.,-.111tMMl4MOltom.._, i..OWl ...... llllfte-tollltWlll
rtMOlll lflJtlttow· .. mllf·IOt.
'I'• ........ ,...
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B<Kton 42 11
Browruvlle '° S4 Bulle lo • 31
C11ar11111$C 44 Ml CllerlslnWV 0 41 .JS ClloyenN 42 II
ClllceQO ,, JI .01 ClnCllll'ltll .0 ,, SS
Clevel•nd JS ,, ·°' Columbvl ,, ).C ·" Oel·FIWlll 71 " O.nver .0 11 .:II
0.1Molne1 42 :II Oelrolt • lO .04 OvlYlh JO ..
Hertford " 2t HelOne " u
H-lvlu IU .. HoustOft 71 " .31
lndnoplls .. N ·'° Je<lllftvl .. 11 •s uo IC-City 42 JO .04
LHV .... 61 12
Llll .. ltodl 67 .. . o.s
L01it.119tt. M S2 ·'° Loultvllle 4J 41 ·" Mempfll1 " " .71 Mlefftl u ,,
Mllw.-.e ., 2' Mpl .. M. .. ,. II
No9'1vll .. tJ ., .JS Now Orie-11 " .0.
NewYtni .. JS
Mort.Ill .. ~ .41 Oil le City .. • M OftloM 41 n .ti
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Btkerslleld •• 41 Blyllle 7S 5'
Eurek• o 42 Fresno Ml 44
Ltl!Ullff Sl 4l Morysvlllt SJ 4S
Moftt.rey S4
NeHIH 61
OeklofWI S4
PesoR0411H " Aedalvff SS
RedW-Clly SJ
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se11to•.,,_• so
S!AKkton SJ
Tllermel 12 S4
Ukltll SJ 17
Berstow .. 41
a 1,a .. ,. 41 n
BlllMll> SS 2t
Cotollne .0 SI
El Ce111ro " " LOflQ8HCll 61 SI
Moftrovle 61 SI
MIWll~ U JI
Newport BHcll •> 5' Oftlerlo .0 S2
PtUdeM SI SO
Sell Bernerdlno s• S2
SenJose S2 4'
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l'lrstlow 11451.111.
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clean it (the building) up
myself." the governor added.
Within hours, Henry A. Strong,
general manager of radio stations
WENE-AM and WMRV-FM in
Endtcott. sent a telegram to
Carey: "We have arranged to
meet you at the Broome County
Airport at your convenience. We
baveourown vacuum cleaner and
we ~ven bav.e a cup.·•
But PIA officials who met the
evacuation plane said later that
Miss Weisner refused to get off the
hijacked aircraft if her fiance,
Pakistani-born Mian Manzoor
Ahmed, a deputy sheriff from
Auburn, remained aboard.
U.S. Embassy officials said
they could not immediately con·
firm the report on Miss Weisner.
Diplomatic sources said the
jetliner remained parked on a
runway about 700 yards from the
KabuJ airport terminal and was
surrounded by Afghan and Soviet
troops. The Soviet Union has
85,000 soldiers in Afghanistan
fighting and a Moslem rebellion
aiainstthecommunistregime. The sources said the first batcn
of host.ages was freed and the
jetliner refuted after the
If Hazemoto lives to be 77. his
normal life expectancy. he will
receive $2.07 million. If he dies
before 2001. his heirs wilJ re·
ceive annual payments totaling
up to more than $1 million.
ABOUT 4' MILLION people
were immunized from October to
December 1976, but a feared flu
epidemic never materialized.
Some 1,480 claims against the
government are pending by vie·
tlms or their survivors who claim
the vaccine caused physkal or
mental disorders.
Quake hit s G r eece
ATHENS, Greece <AP) -
Another earthquake rocked
Greece today. adding to the fear
and miser y of thous ands of
peo ple camping out in the
streets and squares across the
nation .
FALL
"CLEARANCE"
ALL
•SUITS•
ALL
•SPORT COATS •
OFF
' CHOOSE ... 100% WJOL-BLENOS -POLYESTER.
NAMES LIKE SASSON • FIORAVANTI • BELLINI •
WHITEHEAD ... SIZES 36 SHOAT TO 46 LONG.
SUITS
•
l
'
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 5, 1981 H/F
Boxing pro~oter 'duped' by haiik?
/
'
~ LOS ANGELES <AP> -Attorneya for mlssin1
box int promoter Harold J . Smith called a new•
conference to aaain declare b.1a Innocence ln a
121.3 mllllon embeulement. from Wells Fargo
Bank.
But attorneys, Jennifer Kine and Robert
MkbaelJ, produced virtually no evidence Wednes·
day to support their contention that Smith waa
duped by bank officials who were ''laundering
money" thrOugb bis accounts.
They wisted that the bank ts keepin& doc:u·
ments from them.
They conceded that whether or not Smith was
involved in the embeazlemenl scheme, be owes.the
bank $10.1 million -the amount drawn on bis
various accounts.
MS. KING, EXPRESSING an~er about state·
men ts of Wells Fargo officers, declared : "Our
purpose is to use the press in the same fashion
they have."
She told report4:rS and cameramen crowded
into her office: "I 'll tell you right now. Harold J .
Smith and Muhammad Ali Professional Sports are
totally innocent victims. The accounts were used
by the bank for laundering money and playing
banking games.··
She displayed various documents including
canceled checks and bank statements which showed
only that mone y had been deposited and
withdrawn from Smith 's accounts at Wells Fargo.
The most crucial document, she insisted, is
Nixon, Reagan?
Erotic show
lured greats
SAN. FRANCISCO (AP> Famed former
madam Brandy Baldwin says some of the men of
the exclusive Bohemian Club ''just loved" erotic
shows put on by her "girls ."
In an interview published Wednesday by the
~!!!----~--=:!:;I!!!!:!!!!!~ San Francisco Examiner, Ms Baldwin, who has ................
WELLS FARGO DOCUMENT SHOWS DETAILS
Attorney Jennifer King Hy• Smith la Innocent
Debate stilled
on evolution
SACRAMENTO <A P > -A judge has virtually
eliminated the issues of evolution and biblical
creation from a trial that was expected to renew
the legal war between Darwin and Genesis.
Superior Court Judge Irving Perluss told
lawyers Wednesday that the central issue in the
case is ensuring "sensitivity, understanding and
tolerance" for children whose religious beliefs
may clash with what they learn in science classes.
The state dropped plans to call astronomer
Carl Sagan, Nobel laureate Arthur Kornberg and
other prominent scientists as witnesses to defend
evolutionary theory. developed by Cba rles
Darwin. who wrote "Origin of Species."
Pee prot~d•• _,.,.•rn
SACRAMENTO <AP> The bill to prohibit
killing cats and dogs for food has advanced to the
floor of the California Assembly.
The Ways and Means Committee voled 12-4
Wednesday for AB241 by
Assemblyman Lawrence
NEWS BRIEFS Kapiloff, D-San Diego.
It would make it a
misdem~anor, with a
maximum penalty or six
months in jail and $500 fine, to kilJ a dog or cat to
eat it.
The bill and an Identical one moving through
the' Senate were prompted by reports last year
that refugees from Southeast Asia. where dog is a
delicacy in some cultures, were killing animals in
a San Francisco park and elsewhere for food.
Ctllt tort•re related
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Skip Webster. who
produces ABC-TV's "Fantasy lsland," has a fan·
tastic story of his own to tell
about abuse and brainwashing
he says his son. daughter-in-law
and three grandchildren have
suffered since they joined a re-
ligious group that claims to be a
fundamentalist Christian sect.
Webster called a news con·
ference Wednesday to tell about
his 8-month-old grandson,
whom he's never seen, being
wnsTn beaten with a belt and stuffed
htad and feet downward an a can. Webster says
(dr1ner members of Truth Station told him bis
IS-year-old grandson took part in beating women at the Apple Valley camp of the group, that was
once known as River of Life Minis try.
Twller lteld I• .......
BERKELEY (AP I -A Universit y of
California physics teaching assistant has been ar-
rested in the strangulation of a coed in his class,
~ce said today.
MlchaeJ Joseph Brodhelm, 22, was discovered
at Highland Hospital, where California Highway
PatroJ officers had taken hJm just after midnight
Ma,day.
Berkeley police said officers found him with
b&a wrists slashed after an apparent jump off a
fretway overpass.
Police spokesm an Andy Goodman said
a.dhelm apparenUy once dated ltristin Malm·
qaltt, 24, whose beaten, atrangled body was dit·
cowired Tuesday on the noor of her Berkeley
apetment.
been convicted several times for running bawdy
houses. said for 10 years she took prostitutes to a
house near the club's Bohemian Grove retreat.
The 108·year-old club counts among its 900
members President Reagan, Vice President
George Bush. Attorney General William French
Smith and former President Richard Nixon, as
well as men from the highest echelons of
American business. Club officials could not be
reached for comment.
MS. BALDWIN MENTIONED no names in her
account. It indit...ited that neither she nor the pros-
titutes ever operated on the club grounds,
although s he said she once "tried to sneak into the
Grove with a Midwestern newspaper editor, and
he fell and broke his hip.
··All hell broke loose. but I managed to slip out
before they caught me ," she said.
The Grove is in redwood country on the
Russian River. north of San Francisco.
" . .l would rent a little house in the woods . a
beautiful little place. gorgeously decorated, and
we'd have champagne and the delicacies and the
Beta-Max and we'd make it all so homey." she
said .
"l'D TELL THE GIRLS to bring all their fan-
cy underclothing so they could do the lilUe-·erotic
shows, and the gentlemen just loved it. I did t.he
Bohemian for 10 years. and they were such
beautiful people. very generous and so much fun."
She recalled that each year after the club's
"Spring Jinks" show. in which members dress in
drag and perform at the remote encampment. she
would "have a little thing we call ed the 'Final
Jinx.· where the last customer from the Grove got
lo be the 'jinx."
"We'd just have five or six ladies all over this
guy . The gentleman who got to be the jinx could
never believe his good fortune. .Oh, the Bohe·
mi an was fun."
Brown running?
Keep in touch
SACRAMENTO <AP> ls Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. going to run for Republican S.I.
Hayakawa's seal in the U.S. Senate next year?
Brown's answer depends on exactly how. it is
phrased.
Here is the exact exchange between the
Democratic governor and reporters at a news con-
ference in the Capitol Wednesday:
Q. "Are you running for the U.S. Senate?"
A. "No.
Q. "No?''
A. "That was in the present tense, and the
answer is no."
Q. "Absolutely not?"
A. "Not at this moment.''
Then. a few moments later, this exchange oc-
curred:
0 . "Ate you considering running for the U.S.
Senate?
A. "Yes.''
Q. "What would possibly deter you from enter-
ing that race?"
A. "I don't think it's appropriate' lo make a de-
cision for -on -something that Is a year away.
And therefore, I'd rather not make that commit-
ment now."
Q. "Have you made a declalon to form an ex-
ploratory committee 7''
A . "Yes, because unless a committee is
formed and funds are raised, it's impossible to
mate an intelligent decision aomeUme down the
road.''
Ba·haf fire· side ba -'hifi(•)r-.srd\ n:
Inform•! discussion about the B•h•'I ·F•lth (foundld 18'3, by
B•h•'u1llah) and tts prlnclples of world unity, the oneness of
menk~, and the ess.ntial agreement of all ren91ons. Sometimes ac-com~led by • short, Informative t•lk. Us•llY •ttendtd by • dlverte.,.... Of friendly, lnttrffted people. Open to en. SYNONYMS
... ablort»fnQ, thoUGht..provoklng, fun, tnllehtenlno. SM •Ito P9ac•.
Unity, Low, Equ.llfy, World Gowmment, Justl<•.
BAHA'I F1RE81DEI FRIDAYS, I P.M.
NIWPORT8!ACHl40-I010
missine and the bank says it does not exist. In the oft.en confusin1 news conference. the •t·
torneye repeatt!dly attempted to t hift blame for
the embH.zJement to various bank officials but
prhnarUy to Gene Kawakami. a founder of
Muhammad Ali Amateur Sports Inc. and former
general manager of the Wells F'arso Mlr•cle Mile
Branch.
That document, she saJd, la a paper &lvtne a
"ltne ol credJl" for $12 million to Smith and his en·
lerpriles.
"My client.a were under the impression they
had a $12 million line of credit a nd the money did
come through. If the bank claims there ls no line of
credit, we have been duped by the bank, used by
the bank," sbe said. KAWA.KAMI HAS BEEN FIRED by Wells
Fargo but the bank says he had nothing to do with
THE NEWS CON .. ERENCE became the embezzlement. The bank said Kawakemi's
acrimonious at times as reporters challenged Ms. connection to Smith and MAAS was "coinciden·
King to refute the Wells Fargo version or the em· tal."
beulement. Wells Fargo has filed a $21.3 million civil
"You believe because it's a bank that they're fraud suit against Smith. L. Ben Lewis, former
right," Ms. King exploded, "and you're going to Wells Fargo branch m1tnager. Muhammad Ali
throw it on some innocent black group. I think Professional Sports and MAAS.
that's racist!" Although Ms. Kine said she was not represent·
Smith Is black: Ms. King is white ing Lewis who has been named by Well~ Fargo as
Michaels said he hoped Smith would surface the key figure in the embezzlement. she said she
soon and tell his story. does not believe he acted alone lo carry off the
"He wants to come out. He just doesn't want to theft as the bank said he did
get shot.'' he said. Both Michaels and Ms. King She displayed an airline ticket which she said
claimed that Smith has been shot at, followed, was issued to Lewis for a tnp to Detroit for six
threatened and his small son was kidnapped and days in 1980 The bank has said Lewis did not lake
returned. a vacation during the two years in which he was
"I s pent last weekend with him in a allegedly embezzling the money because h is
hideaway," said Ms . King. "I was followed. My absence from the bank would have blown the·
phone is bugged. This oCfice is bugged." scheme.
She insisted the only .reason Smith fled was A Smith associate. Hilton S. Nicholson, told
because "four Orientals came to his home and told the news conference he personally traveled to
him to leave the country. They were armed." Australia with Lewis in 1979 for 10 days. -------
~ I .. • • I ... : •;. -· ... " " .. . . .. .. .
ii 111
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..
·-.;t..,..it0~~1 ........ ~•••••••--•--•T•ho•m•1•s•P•.tt•1•1e•y•1P•u•b•t11•M•r-T•hotnl-•••K•"•v1•11•1•df•to•r ~--·r..a ~:q Thurld1y, M11ch 6, 1981 BMW. KrtlblcMlidltor111 Paee Editor
B/P
Orange Coast Dally Pilot
School liH~aries t
!. deserve priority
Huntington Beach officials are proposlng a merser of
' the library systems of the city a nd the Huntington Beach
' U nion High SchooJ District.
.. The idea ia to save money by eliminating duplication
in book purchases. School district offlc!als have agreed to
discuss the proposal.
But it appears from the city's initial suggestions that
most new library purchases would end up under city
' direction, away from high school campuses, at the Cen ·
• tral Library or three city branches.
'· More details of this proposal need to be worked out.
Although the idea of saving tax dollars is laudable, it
" has not been explained clearly how this merger could be
d one without serious ly weakening the library system of
local high schools .
"• It seems that the availability of a sound library
. system in public schools is essential to quality education.
This merger concept does not appear to insure that, at
... least not at this stage.
.
:,. Refreshing style
Eugene Van Das k has been on the Fountain Va lley
City Council for only a month, but alrea dy he has proved
to be an original thinker.
With a $1.5 million city budget shortfall looming for
the 1981·82 fiscal year . Van Dask was quick to caJI for
creation of a citizens· committee that could seek financiaJ
h elp outside city hall.
The plan won immediate support from Van Dask's
fellow council me mbers. This committee may bring some
fresh ideas to a local government that sometimes loses
touch with the people it serves.
More recently. Va n Dask made an unusual personal
decision.
The new councilman has arranged to donate his coun·
' cil pay to two local youth organizations, the Fountain
Valley Girls Club and the Fountain Valley High School
Band. The band is still paying for hefty expenses involved
in its r ecent participation in President Reagan's in·
auguration.
Van Dask said the two groups will continue to s plit
his city pay, $252.SO per month, so long as be remains on
the council. He currently is serving an appointed term
that expires in April 1982.
In his first month on the council, Van Dask has dis·
played self-confidence, dedication to his city and a
refreshing personal style.
t i Spills inay he warning ! Huntington Beach has experienced a couple of oil
! spills with serious potentiaJ damage in recent weeks -
not to mention an equally serious 2,000·gallon under-
ground gasoline leak.
In one of the oil s pills an underground line ruptured
in the Seacliff residential area, causing about 12.000
gallons of crude oil mixed with gas and wate r to flood
gutters.
Another spill occurred in the downtown part of the
city less than two weeks earlier a nd caused the tem-
porary closure of Main Street. •
Though the s pills didn't amount to anything ser ious.
they seemed to reinforce the city's position in a con-
• troversy with Gulf Oil Co.
City officials h ave gone to court in attempts to
terminate t he use of the line that runs from vessels
• docked at sea and extends underneath city property near
the Huntington Be ach Inn.
The dispute developed after a 25-year lease between
the city and Gui( expired last December. The city had
been collecting $2,400 per year from Gulf but h as been
• seeking to increase the fee substantially.
Officia ls contend that the money the city received
simply was not worth the risk of a possible en vironmentaJ
disaster a long the beach.
• Thal might just be legalese rhetoric. but t he city's
position might be t a ke n more serious ly in view of the re·
cent spills .
• 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 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Smithsonian
By L. M. BOYD
Q . Wh y did James
Smith.son, the rich European,
choose the United States as
t h e place to found t he
Smithsonian Institution when
he'd never set foot in this
country?
A. Maybe because nobody
here used the titles of nobility.
He is said to have been
highly conscious of the fact
that he was tbe illegitimate
son of the Dulce of Northum·
berland and Eliiabeth Keate
Macie, a descendant of King
He nry Vil. But his il·
legitimacy deprived him of
the noble titles . He died
childless, and when hls
nephew s ub sequ e ntly
likewise died child.less, the
Once .-ulomoblle
ma11uf1ctu.rers strove
&o be lOPI lo salet and
1tylln1. Today tbey
1eein to be competln1
to report t.be lar~eet
deflctt.
$508,318.46 ln gold from h.is
estate was sent to the United
Slates as he'd willed it.
Those young men who've
long dreamed of growing up
to join the Merchant Marine
to go to sea can be expected
to have a tough time of it.
The total count of s uch
seamen worldwide is drop-
ping drastically these yea.rs.
Report is only about 50 new
jobs open up annually now.
The fast.growing pine trees
used to make paper mostly
come fro m commercial
forests, planted specifically
for harvesting u any other
cash crop. U recycled paper
cuts back the demand for
such trees, the growers most
probably will go into other
lines of business. Recreation real estate maybe. ThJs ii
explained by one Donald a
Bump, Pb.D., •ho makes the
point that there are aood
reasom to recycle piper. but
saving trees Isn't one of
them.
Q. Among women bowlers,
what'• the avua1e acore?
A. 181. That'• amateun .
The averaae lady amateur ll
37 )'Uri old with \WO
children. incidentally.
Every Amhh houH la
backed bJ an Aml1b outhouM
tb• ... uiton proNblta lDdoor
pluq1blne -and every Amith
outboc»t ls palnt.ed white
Earl\Vaten
Oamp some lids on public pa1.
A legislative oropoaal h11
been made to boost the salary
of the eovernor to $125,000. He
now is paid $49,100. Included ln
the measure would be equally
s u b stanlial
raises for the
lieutenant
govern or.
secretary of
s t ate, con ·
trol ler and
treasurer. all
of whom
would be
upped from
$42,500 lo
$70,000 as would the attorney
gen~ral who now receives $47,500.
This proposal follows closely
on the heels of recommendations
made by a so-called President's
com mission to ratlse the salaries
of congressmen from the pres-
ent $62,000 to $8S,000 and make
similar increases in other top
federal positions lncludlng lh•
cabinet memben.
Such tar1es1 mak11 one
wonder what tree1 thete 1uy1
are swingin1 from. H1vt thott
ln government become Hiiie
Marie Antoinette, so lnnn.ltlve
lo the people that they bellev•
people are willingly permlttlnl
themselves to be taxed lnto pov·
erty so that they can llve in lux·
ury? Don't they read the
statistics compiled by the U.S.
Labor Department and the In·
ternal Revenue Service?
ACCORDING lo U.S. Labor
s tatistics the average waae
earned by fuU·time workers in
manufacturing industries last
year was $283 a week while
those ln other non-agricultural
private employment averaged
only $233 a week.
The same source reports the
median annual income of all
,
T~t: LIGHT" AT '™lS ~ND OF THE 1lJNN£L
Mailbox
m1IH wu tUl,000 wbJle the me·
dlln for women wu only $9,900
and only 22 percent of the people
had l1mJJy Incomes ln excnt ol
t25,000.
Internal Rttvenue fi1ure1 show
that out of the more thlll 200
mllUnn population in the U.S.
fewer than 70 mllllon filed in·
come tax returns and only 12
percent of those had incomes
over $30,000 and less than 3 per·
cent had incomes over $50,000
with .005 percent reporting in·
com es in excess of $100,000.
HOW THEN can it be that
those in government are so prec·
ious, provide services so vaJua-
ble, that they must be granted
incomes equalling those of less
than 2.5 percent of the nation's
wealthiest?
It was not taxation without
representation alone which
caused the American Revolu·
tJon. The desire to be rid OI tbt
trapping.a of royalty and abed
the titles of nobJUty loomed J1.11t
as lar1e ln the mindJ of the col·
onists and they wrote lnto the
Constitution an absolute ban on
nobility.
ls the freedom from the op-
pression of a caste syatem so
valiantly won by t.he colonlJta
two hundred yeara a10 to be
permitted to be taken away by
those in government awardina
themselves royal incomes? Are
we to address the congressmen
and legislators as "Milord'' and
other lesser bureaucrat.a aa ·'Sir
Knight?" Ben Franklin muat be
spinning in h.is grave.
THE SA.LARY of the governor
stands at 100 percent more than
it was 30 years ago. Perhaps,
although that is a salary enjoyed
by no more than 3 percent of the
people, inflation is such that It
might be raised slightly even
though it is safe to predict that
no matter what the pay the
caliber of those seeking the of·
fice won't change.
But whatever the salary for
the governor may be. it should
serve as the ceiling for all other
public offices. state and local, in
the state. In fact, no other public
office should pay more than 90
percent of the governor 's salary.
UNFORTUNATELY, public
pay has gotten completely out of
hand with minor office holders
such as police and fire chiefs,
city and county managen, and
school administrators now re-
ceiving rar more than the gov-
ernor. And, absent an economic
crash similar to the 30s, there
seems no easy way back.
T hat is no excuse for not
clamping a lid on public pay the
next time the salary of the gov-ernor is changed. Anything
short of that will be criminal
for it will pave the way to
~conomic collapse or worse .
Bilingual education deprives children
To the Editor:
Recently. you printed an arti·
cle from Bernice Walsh regard-
ing her views in fa vor or bi ·
lingual remedial education in our
public schools. Ms . Walsh refers
to the ·•great melting pot" which
is or s hould be -t he
American Way. However . if
educators do not effecti vely
teach the English language to
non·English speaking citizens,
we have not a "melting pot'' but
a "Mulligan's Stew" -not
cohesiveness and togetherness
but separateness and apartness.
As Ca liforni a S e n . S .I .
Hayakawa recently stated, a
common language -English -
is the great unifying factor in
this nation of peopl e from such
various ethnic backgrounds,
culture and languages.
Sen. Hayakawa, born of immi·
grant parents, admits he prob-
ahly would not have obtained
so higb a political office -and
before that so high an educa·
tional office -or have become
such a fine semanticist if the bi·
lingual policies being louted to·
day were in effect in his school
days. Rather than being or help
to him. it would have been a dis·
service.
I BEUEVE the ethnic groups
should retain their culture -
and their language -but its
people should be taught English
and taught in it. 1 think it weuld
be a much wiser choice to
carefully. genUy and intelligent·
ly teach non·English spewng
children to read, write and
speak English correctly than it
would be to not do it. We do
these children a great dis·
service, in my opinion, if we do
less. And I believe that bilingual
education is self·defeating.
Children are more adaptable.
teachable and capable than we
often give them credit for being;
and while I truJy sympathize
with the problems a non.English
s peaking child would have, I
believe that, with the proper
teacbJng In English, the great
majority would "make the
arade" -that is learn to com·
munlcate ln EnRli•b -be proud
(and rithtly ao) of tbls •c·
compli1hment and 10 on -
many -to freat bel1hta. I am
aure of it. Generallolll of put
lmmtirant (*>Pl• attfft to thll.
They are liViftl proof.
Tbe man or woman wbo writes
and 1peak1 tbe En1U11t lanp.,e
correcUy wtU obvl0utly have the
bl11eat of Utetime advanU,tl'
over 1 man or woman who doel
not. Tbls ls lotlcal, la it not?
Tberdon, lt would seem to me,
the obj4)et ol public educ.UGn In
the UDlt.ci Stat.I I.I today what
It bu alw111 bMa -to IMlp
p_repare Amerteaa sebool
dUclrm to work Ud UYt ID UM
A•e,.._ IOdec.1 ; ad Ulll de-
maada the eon.ct UM of u..
&D1UU ......-... wblc• cu•·
ly b e accomplis hed b y the
English language being taught
in the public schools.
HAZEL H SCHWAB
Not tM author
To the Editor:
On Sunday. Feb. 22, a scathing
letter about the Newport Be ach
Police Department appeared in
this section. allegedly signed t>y
me.
The purpose of today's letter
is to let the record state that I.
William F. Fawcett Jr .. did not
write that letter and t h e
signature was forged.
In no respect do I hold the Dai·
ly Pilot responsible for they did
check the name on the letter
against a proper corresponding
address.
But I do wish to state that my
own views of the Newport Beach
P o li ce Depart m e nt are
diametrically opposed lo those
espoused in the forged letter. As
president or the Orange County
Red Cross Youth Council I have
had t he opportunity to see the
workings of many law enforce-
m ent agencies and Newport
Beach is one of the finest.
WILLIAM F. FAWCETT JR.
St111tn4!'d
To the Editor:
Gov. Brown knew what he was
talking about when he labeled
the California Coastal Com·
m issio n "a bunch o f
bureaucratic thugs."
I was aMolutely stunned when
Eric Meh. who identified
himself as a spokesman for the
Coastal C.Ommission , stood up in
the recent public hearing on
Bolsa Ch.ica before the Orange
County Planning Commission
and denounced the county for its
efforts to develop a rational plan
whic h would conside r the
economy and needs or this coun·
ty for recreational access to the
coast, as well as for additional
wlldlif e reserve.
It was my impression that this
Is what the Coastal Act is au
about. People voted for Proposi-
tion 20 back In 1972, estabUsbJng
the CoutaJ Commission, to ta.In
public access to the coast, and to
preserve -where feasible -
wUdUle resources.
Now comes the llke1 of Mell,
wbo Hid be was 1peakln1 for the
state CoutaJ Commisalon, and
denounces tbe extenalve efforts
of the retponslble local 1ovem·
ment to provide a balance
between theJleeds of the people
and concern for the environ·
ment.
llNCS TRa Commll1lon lt.Mlf
Wd llapped IHtck by ltl own
le1a1 cou.,ael for tu ex·
\raol"CllnafJ attempt to block o, • .,. County•• , .......... .,.
forta Ullt .. ~ lt ........ '°
Ille tbet Mtll ••• oe)j 1w IU•Mll. Wlaat actaea'±' of Ute
Coast a l Commission , I ask.
authorized him to give his
rambling denunciation of local
governmental efforts?
Frankly, m y shock at Metz'
testimony was only exceeded by
my reaction to your report or
this hearing. Your article noted
that JOO persons attended. but
neglected to report that the au-
dience burst into s pontaneous
a pplause at the conclusion of
Signal Landmark's presentation
of its plans for a combination of
marina. JOO acres of restored
wildlife area. plus parks, open
space waterways a nd private
development all designed to
be self supporting.
You also failed lo report that
t he Orange County Central
Labor Counci I, representing
85.000 members. endorsed the
Signal plan. And maybe it wouJd
take too muc h ink to not e
marina support by four inland
city chambe rs of commerce.
plus spokesmen fo r the boat
building industr y and the
respected Orange County Coast
Association.
STEWART CASE
Word Hf.~llo•r"
To the Editor:
Your headline. "Two HB dis·
trict principals get ax." was, in
m y opinion, ill-chosen and in·
sensitive. Perhaps it was written
in haste, but I want lo em-
phasi%e that negative and poorly
worded headlines unfairly fl avor
the reader 's reception of the
article that follows.
It has been our experience
that Bob Barker writes with
clarity. sensitivity. accuracy,
and fair·mindedness most or the
time. I have assured people In
our school district that he was
not responsible for this headline.
The news editor might have
picked "Four HB school ad·
ministrators get cut!" This
phrase would have more ac-
curately reflected the content of
. the article. With public educa·
lion s uffe ring unduly Crom
budget cuts, we need all the
good, positive publicity we can
aet . . . at least we don't have to
be bluted with unnecessarily
negative headJlnes.
I do not believe that the news
editor's words were deliberately
Int-ended to hurt."'1 am su11est·
Ing only that (s)he give a UtUe
more mature thought to their
Impact.upon the readin1 public.
PATRICIA F. COHEN
u ......... r .......
To the Editor:
Tbe concern for the educatJon
ol Hunt:iJ\it.on Beach yo11npten
was leu Ulan~ durlnc the re-
cent teachers' union oontnct. Tbe teacben dfflded that GM ol
tllelr benefttl In the contract
abould be fewer hour• 1peat
tntbml our cbUdno. ""'cnor-. tlmt.,... • "pluaint wbat to waeb our cblldND. ·•
Twenty minutes has been cut
from every school day for fourth
and fifth graders so that the
teachers will have more "plan·
ning time." This is in addition to
the planning lime scheduled
twice a month already. It is also
a fact that if a planning day falls
on a school holiday our children
lose even more classroom time.
The planning day is shilled to
another day of the s ame week on
which the holiday falls
THIS FACT brings to mind the
question that has been plaguing
pare nts fo r some years: Wh y
are our schools turning out stu-
dents who can't read. cipher, or
write a cogent paragraph? With
the instruc tional ti me our
youngsters used to have, they
weren't exactly knocking the top
of( standard tests. How do you
think they will do now?
With as much paid "planning
time" as the teachers have, we
as parents have the right to de-
mand only excellence from
them . Are we paying our
teachers to teach. or are they
getting paid to plan what to
teach !
There's nothing that can be
done now about the current con-
tract with the teachers· unioo.
What we as parents intend to
carry out is th.is: Never eagain
wilJ the quality of our children's
education be bartered away to
pacify an already well endowed
labor union. Learning takes time,
and slowly but surely thls ln-
v a luable commodity is being
taken away from our
youngsters. We as parent.a, will
not tolerate one more minute cut
from our children's instructional
time.
CAROL BtRE.5
JOANN JARVJS
C'ampafpt.,.d••
To the Editor:
Now more than ever lbe peo.
pie need prealdentiaJ candJdates
who ue financed by tbe
American people and not lar1e
private interests.
How can an elected ofridal la·
nore large contrtbuton w6o
bought and paid for the election
process? The candidate bu IOld
the vote to the apeclaJ ones wttb
the most influencing power . . .
money. ,
PleaJe do }'ounell and YoW'
elettlon prohss • favot' and
check ott "yes'' on your Federal
10.0 tax rorm. The one doUU' ol
lhe tax• you already owe will
help ftnaoce a campatan that the
tupayeti will beneltt from and
not corporate monorllea.
LINDA . PAR.MELL
-....,.... _______ .. ""'""'---
----................. ___ ,, _____ _
and e at it, too
Let'• uawne you lived in 1 houte lhat wu
burned to the ll'OUM. cauatnc uuurtu to people -
and you were unlortunate el'.aOUlh not to have ade·
quate insurance to cover all the d1mait1.
What would happen if you then called your in·
eurance agent, after the fi~. and uked him to wtite
a policy tbat was retroactive in ita covera1e: in ef·
feet. in other words, at a date prior to the fire?
YOU CAN IMAGINE THE heeht1ws you would
get.
"What do you thlnk I am, an idiot?" Or: "Sure,
everythlng's easy to rtgure out, with hindsight" Or:
.. Dummy, why didn't you take out enough lnaurance
in the first place?"
Well, ridiculous as it may seem, this is precisely
the kind of deal arranged by Kirk Kerkorian's MGM
Grand Hotels, operator of hot.els (with casinos) in
Las Vegas and
R eno. Il was
the MGM
Grand in Las
Vegas that was
bit Nov. 21 by a
fire in wbJch 84
lost their lives.
More than 600
were also injured.
~ _____________ ,f , ~I
lllTll lllllllU 4_'2
The MGM Grand apparently had enough in·
surance to cover property damages and business
losses arising from the fire. But beyond that it bad
only $30 milli_on in liability coverage to take 'care of
claims resuJtmg from the deaths and injuries. As of
Jan. 15, 57 complaints had been filed against the com·
pany -and they were asking a totaJ of $275 million in
comperuiatory damages and $780 million in punitive
damages. That adds lo a total or $1.2 billion.
~T'S TRU.E THAT ~AMBLING IS normally a
profitable busmess for the casino operator. And it's
also true that claimants nearly always ask for more
~oney than they even expect to get. But still. that
imbalance between $1.2 billion and $30 million is a lit-
tle nerve-wracking.
Kirk Kerkorian, MGM 's major stockholder <he
owns 47 percent), doesn't need this uncertainly hang-
ing over his bead.
So Kerkorian went out and did what you and I
couldn't do in a million years: he bought himself a
back-dated insurance policy Frank B. HalJ & Co .. a
big insurance broker, put together
the package for the MGM Grand,
bringing in such heavies as
Lloyd's of London and General
Reinsurance. As a result, MGM
Grand has been able to boost its
liability coverage from $30 million
to $200 million -and it's retroac·
live.
Naturally, this additional $170
million of back-dated insurance
doesn't come cheap. Business u..co•1•N
lns~rance, the trade paper that broke this story.
estimates the MG M will have to come up with an im·
mediate premium payment of $3S to $40 million. But
MGM should be able to handle it. The two hotels take
in about $300 million a year and earn $7S million
be.fore taxes .. With the fire-ravaged Vegas hotel down
this year until at least July, those figures are going to
~ h~lved. But MGM will pick up business interrup-
llon ins urance and il shouJd be able t-0 meet this
' premium payment. Besides, it's worth it to get the
monkey off your back and onto the backs of in·
surance companies.
THE INSURANCE COMPANIES WIUTING this
coverage expect to come out abead, too. First of aU,
they get to divide up immediately the hefty premium.
That money will be invested quickly. Then they'll try
to setUe claims for as little as possible. And instead
of paying lump sums, they'll try lo structure settle·
ments as annuities -a set amount paid out each
year for many years. And of course lawsuits can
often be stretched out Interminably. Meanwhile, the
$35 to $40 miJJ ion of premium monies, paid up front.
are earning a good return.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORK (API S.le>, Wee!. prlo
•nCI Ml <henOI ol ,,,. lilll•n mosl acllw Hew York Stock E•<r..noe 1u.-1,
t:e''C!'o::110fWlllY at .1ir,~ IN"-i1·~ • .\loo
US Slffl ISJ,JOO Jl.... + 1•1,o Bath SIHI U.,700 1•.... + 21/. Sunburn •21,IOO 1'.,. + l.\loo Sony Corp •,•,500 1•1'1 • v. TW Corp 511,JOO 10'4 , 11\ S.arsR-~1,600 It • ...
Hw" Alrl SD.JOO 1'.\loo , ·~ RoyCro-•.:roo , • .,.. , '"' Hw•llnCI G ,100 H • l VSl.IFE Co 430,:IOO 1S'~ + '"
Mobll "'·* ...... -.,, StclOlllnCI s _,.,IOO '''-, 1.,., Cllicorp •t,700 lP\ , • ...
VAi. Inc l1•.• "" . I ...
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YORK IAPI S.lel, Wt<I. prl<t
•llCI rwl <,.,.,_ ol n.. ten moll •< tlw Am .. IUft !.tock EuNn" hWM. lrHlng nallOfWlllY al more 11\<tn $1 Commdrt lm s U2.500 10\'t ,.... lnU 8nllnol 124.JOO t~• + I/. A1Hlla Alrl 112,'llO •"'-+ V. WarnrC4m wt U, 100 '~ ..,. H1111!yOG s '3.'llO ,,.... \'t GllCan 11 s '3,toO ~ + ... HovOll~ n ,JOO SO'H + \< Walnoco ,., 100 u-. + '4
Sy11ttx COrp 17.'Jf'J """" + lh ... "''"' • n.eoo ,,,,. • ,
HEW YORK(AP) FIMI Oow·JonH ••(JS ~"ioc-:r·· l'Mr •
lO lno to Trn
IS Ull u ~lk
°""" HIQll I.OW Close ChO ..... to W 70 U•.41 •11 «, s d ,.. , • .,. .. ""°, 4CM )4 + • 11 IOI Ii 10t Oi 107 .'1 IOl.J7 • 0.1' JTO 1• JI• •1 M .11 JIJ t0 + J 1' '"""' Tr•n
VII" .S Stk
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YORK CAl'I -· •
Advanc..i TOO.y 113 0•<11Md ..,
un<,.,•"9'0 ,,.
Tolal I•-· "" Htw ll1QM .,
Htw 1-S 11
-ATAMOOO
HEW YORK lAPI _, •
TOO.y
AOvanceci m 0.<ll!>ff ,.
Vncl\a"9fd 111 Tolal IHl.lft ,.,
HtW highs 20 Htw IOW\ It
METALS
4.S•0 . .00 l,S01,00t sos.JOO u ....
fl'r•"'-
d:.Is .. , ,...
1 ... • 10
Pr..,_ o.J.
lM l1S eos
26 1J
C-t)~ Ct<IO. PoUl'd. v.s. desu ....
lion•.
Lt .. )4 <tnls a pour>d.
ZlllC "~ (ef'llt. '*'"°· chi httr ... Tl• $4."1' Mtl•l1 w .. k comoosltt lb,
ANM-7' (lf'lll e ~. H. Y.
Mff«WY ~per llUll. ,.._,._,.. M9!bo troy or .. N. Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
....... ---_....,.._
N·7'• HOTIC• OP DeATH 0, RNelT JOllPH
RAM• •RN~l'T J .
O .. AN 1h ERNEST
ORAN •lua EllNl• ORAN AND OF
•TITION TO AD ·
NISTER ESTATE NO.
• 107165
To all heirs ,
bineflcl•rlts, creditors
• d contlnoent creditor$ of E nest Joseph Moran and
p rsons who P\a y be
qf\erwlse lntere$ted In the ~II and/or estate: 'A petition has betn flied
by Elizabeth Ann Ballmer
in the Superior Court of
Orange County requesting
tttat Elizabeth Ann
B611mer be appointed as
p'rsonal representative to a minister the estate of
E nest Joseph Moran,
Fpuntaln Valley ,
C4lifornla (under the In·
d~endent Administration
of, Estates Act). The petl·
tion is set for hearing In
0.pt. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive West, Santa
Af'la, California 92701 on
Mtlrch 2S, 1981 at 9: 30 a .m. f F YOU OBJECT to the
orentlng of the petition,
yol,i should either appear
a t ; the hearing and state
your objections or file
wr:ltten objections with the
co(lrt before the hearing.
Yqur appearance may be
1n .person or by your at· to~ney.
'I F Y 0 U ARE A
CREDITOR or a con·
tingent c reditor of the de·
c.O sed, you must file your
claim with the court or
present It to the personal
representative appointed
by' the court within four
months from the date of
fir&t issuance of letters a s
provided In Section 700 of
th, Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing claims w ilt not eit·
pire prior to four months
from the date of the hear·
ing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court.
If you are interested in the
estate, you may file a re·
qu~st w ith the court to re·
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac.
to unts and report s
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
..... ____ ,... _______ ......, ..... , ... _~-----
Orange C<>nt DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, March 5, 1981
P\JBUC NOTICE PUBLJC NOTICB P\J9UC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
••AMOeWIMYOU ... lllM LU•I AlllO ACCIDIMT-... ---.-... -... -,-.. ------1 ·--N-O_T_l_C_E_O_F_O_E_A_T_H_O_F_I" _ __;~--------• NOTICE OF DEATH
cou•' avNOniao,., ......... .,""•.,...•'-1. L.. 0 ., 0 H EN R v ...... .-0ACC1H...,.,...o .. u.L.n. o F AL a e R T P . ••°"'~......... v1a• .. 10•001ta•••11.1• ,. 1vNOPM•OPTMl•••u""-"ATIM••T-ST R ... NA H ... N e k 1 .......... ~.... .. CARTER •ka LLOYD H. YIUl•DIODICIM .. U1,t• ... " ~LAOITll'P:1 PAClf!tCMUTUALLl~ttltlUUlftlCOMPA•Y c A RTE R AN 0 0 F .. AL 8 * T pl. A fl! T MAR •~ oe Los ANGIL.H , • .....,,c:.,.Ot1w,a.b. ... ..., PETITION TO ... 0 . PMu•u--c..-, STAAN HAN AND OF OIU'il!LAS ............. ~.......... ... ,.,...._ ....... Or.... PETI I ON TO AO · Of'INOANT Tote1e0r.,111.in..u u .M.Ul.Aita MINISTER ESTATE NO. ,.,_.,.._.,..-, .. .,,.... MINISTER ESTATE NO. LAullO P. •u•z. ELVIA •LAH· Tet•lll•illtie. u~.ua A107~S9. TNIM1Nn.1._11 11i • ..._ui AIO?• .... c o " E o 1 •AL H,. "o NA L 1t1ee1a1 SW'floa If.,,.., f u,•.•u T 1 1 h 1 Ttt.i 11•11u. 1.100,7'1 -1111o •TGAOI AUOCtATtON , • Unutl!IMllf_1....,...1 1',5*1.laJ O I • r S • c...1 .. 1..icswe ,,000,000 To 1 f I he Ir s . co, PO••tlon, cH 1 cAcao T 1 T Lll 0.111 l&.o•l 'IWI\ ..., .. '-'~ • .u.-.2" beneflc larles, cred I tors Ofoao•ld in....,,.,..,,..,. .. •u•o11" •.J•0,4ff beneficiaries, c redlt\)rS tNsu11~cEcOM.AP4"Y,• M1-1 i11cr .... i o.c-1 inc..iyi '"" end contJngent crwdftors of u11e .. ltMd MOI <_..,.,., n.w.ow and contingent creditors of f::::~11e1.""·...., ooes' ltlr0\1111 '0• ==~~'1~'::. Ne11G11,.1e1t 11.se~:.t~ Lloyd Henry C.t"ter •kl ~~;.~'i.,"T=.::'f:'J:~,., ,..., ,,., .. ,, Albert P. Straneh1n aka. e-....._:_,,. Acclotnt...011M1111cwtm1.11mt -Mt ••.1~.01• Lloyd H. Certer Of lrvlM, Swrp111•clwllllt9 t•2•.m 1 Albert Plant Stranah•n of 1uMMOM1 tlliurence 1" "«u. c:.11~n1• Cellfornle •nd persons l11111t'e11U 111 ~ce Het'9n•I• 1tt,su,ooo La~una Be.ch, Cellfornla NOTICE• vow htvt""" -4 TM &wtlM•• '"• e.m ,tte.ott who mey be otherwise In· A<tlM11tM1111N1t11.,_1um1 i,t1u i. '°"" ,,...,, o.c:Mlt ,..i"'" you .11,,..,1 Atc1oe111 Md"'''"' premium, -Olr•<t teres,._ In t-Will Ind/or ,1~~1~ •• ' ... "it.re.: c..111.,.nl• an persons whO m1y be Y ... f .. , .... '*"Cl IMl'-9 fe.& r-..M C•Hlorl'lle aw ... p-.,,....,.., WU ... --· ~ 1.m .201 otherwise Interested In the
•11.1111'1 ao 0.Yt Rffd tne l1tlf''"•tl011 Wt~ tWlllr '""' .,,. ebovt "'"" •r• In "COl'Mnc• with ... ""-' estate. I ~''""' --"'' jlfftnl11m1 Olre(t wll 1 and/or estate: ~ below Stet•rnent '" "" .,. .. , tllCltd O.Ctmi:..t ,1, '* m.oe 10 tr.. IMUrMu CAM· A ,...tit Ion h•S ~ filed C•lllw111e l<dlneu P-.. •fO A t. h II yow wtMI 10 ... k llw MlllCt Of ell mlUl611er of \llt Still• ol Calllorl'llt, pul'-nl 10 law. J,..... _1 W• lier..., cwtlly t"'I Ille •OOVt lltmt el• In ecco<O.nu wllh Ille An-I pe ll f On a S ten
•llorno tn thl• """''· YOV lllO<ltcl dO • H, T. JoeMI~. by ose.,.. nt H. N•lson In Slelemtnt '°' 1119 , .. , •lldotCI 0.nrnw >I. '"° meo. to'"•''""'...-<• Com· f I I e d b y R e v a ..... '° j)romplly '° '"'' ~·"' •Hlll•ll 5' lllct Pr"ldtnt the ~uperlor Court of mlul-otV!t,..ltOICellforllle,pwMHnt~l•w Stranahan In the Super,or
··---· ""'Y· ""' 11e 111 .. °" """· otck 11e11 T•••I.., Or•nge County request Inn J. "'"* TOCIO. Court of Oranne County AVISOI Yttecl ee WCll cMNOdedl. f l {Afll S.u 9'ery th J I • PfMldtnt • '''"""'' ~ oecio1r con••• Ud. 11... P11b1..,..,,0renee coett 0.11., Ptiet. ""--.~11s.•.1. a, 1•1 1on .. 1 at oseph ne H. Nelson 111nc.,,1H.11 ... , ... , requesting that Reva L.
•llcll•ncle • """°' 11ut uo. ·~ be appointed as persornil *,..,.,, Stranahan be app0lnted as oeniro oe lO dle.t L•• .. i1110tm«lon PVBUC NOTICE rep resentatlve to ad. P~i.....0r ..... Cou&O•llY Plloc, ,. .. a . Men11 s ••. 1.1, , .. , 101w1 personal representative
qu;, ~~~dtwuot1c11.,.1, ... w100. minister the est1te Of -PUBUC p to administer the estate of u11 •booiedO en .. , • ..iun10, deberl• ~mousauttNHS l'1cT1T1ou1aut1MH& Lloyd Henry Carter (Un· NOTICE UBUC NOTICE Albert P. Stranahan (un·
11i.c.,10 1mmtdl•t•m•nt1, d• ut• NAMll ITATIM41NT NAMl ITATIMINT der the Independent Ad· ----der the Ind e d nt Ad m•nere,•w r•SOUt.U ttcrlt•, 11 "'" r.,e 1011ow1111 Ptrton• ••• do1no Tll• 1011ow1n1 perton1 ore do1n11 mlnlstr*tlOn Of Estates lfOTIQIO'PUet.tC NIHINO NOTICE OF DEATH OF ep n e • •10une,,,.,.._,e91weo..11emPO 1i.111i.uea: 111.111"'•••: .. Not1ce1111e'"1tfYlfltMt1"' Pi .... N 0 R MA \/ 1 RG 1N 1 A ministration of Estates 1 TO THE oEl'ENOANT · A c1 .. 11 Pl Auo10, LTO., 121 LIDO CA• COSTA CARPET CAfltf co"-· Act) The petition Is set for 111110 C•m"'1111011 01 ,,,. c11., •• 5 TR AC HOT A AND 0 F Ac t ). The petition ls set tor
comp1e1n1 .,., "'°" moct 11y 1,,. o•elll· LE AS• NO, u1 AUTO •uo10, ,.. it ANY, '°''°'ow Piece, C•te MtM, hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 1N11•1•~18McJI,. ~111c'e-tt~ 'e,_,• .. k.,,,.,'°.,''. p E T 1 T 1 0 N T 0 A 0 • hear I""" ,In n..,,.t. No. 3. at 1111 •~IMI yo.. 11 you "'''"to Clefel'ICI Rl••nl• •-. S41tte "E", Newport Ce111or11te "'21 100 Cl I C t 0 I -· ........ ~ ... '·• ...,.,., 1111, ··-"· 'l'OV mutt, wltlll11 l0 NYJ .. (11,C..lloml••MJ. Lttl•r o ........ on. IOlt Gro..t "'c en er r ve, Hotel C0t_.aloll1trtllt ..... O¥elole MINISTER ESTATE NO 700 Civic Center Orcve. •II•• 1h1,~ '',.,.,.,on.,.,., T.L.c. 1no11ttr1u, Int., e Plect.Cott•MeM.Celli..n1••a.n. West, In the City of Santi T,.Hlc St\ld't on""°"'"' locetect e1 A 107878 · Wes t, In the City of Santa 111ew1t111111sc-•••rttt•nr~110 c:a111otnle cortlOl'etlon, 149 1uw~J• A1t141rtla C•mp11e11, 1019 Grove Ana, Callfornla Of'I March too H•W1MW1 c.nw 0r1~ to permit · Ana Callfornla M h I"• compl•lnl. Vnltu you do •o. yo Aven .... WI .. "a'·, N-• .. Kit, Piece. Cat.MeM, Celll0<111etM21. 18, 1981at9;30 a.m . IM 1 .. -ot Wldt"9 \Ill! Gr.Oln• T 0 a I I h e i r s I 11 i'981 t 9 30 on arc
d•l•ult w111 11e en1erote1 on •~iceHo11 celllornle~ .... !.",',',~,.."'~'.L'. condu<ted by • 1 F YOU OBJECT to the "9''"111 tw .i e......n.1on of,,,. u ttt· beneficiaries creditors • a : a.m . of 1111 o .. lntttt. '"° this court mo Tiii\ butl""• h <ono..tt•o by• <or• ..... -· • .,..,. 1119 M•rrlott Hoeel 11\1 tU ,_.,.with . ' IF YOU OBJECT to the
enter • ,...,....,., ... 1nsi """ ~ 1-.._ "°"uon. l..ffte< o. e1en1on granting of the petition, rtloteo 1e<111t1 .. 11••11•r•o 111 ec· and contl~nt. creditors of gr anting ·of the petition re11e1 oemenc1ec1 1n '"' comp1~1n1, T.L.C. 1nC11n11"'· •nc Tiii• , .. ,_, .,., 111eo "'"" ,,.. you s ....... ·ld '"'lther arv.air u rcieno w1111 Cl\eptor U.40 of ,,,. Norma Virnin1a Strachota houfd 1 h ' r ~ Br-.G•-nll'8 C '""' " ,...., Newport 9••<11 uwnl<IP•I CoAe and """rson"s WhO may be YOU S et er appear wlllcr. could rewlt 111 g.trlltt/lrnejll ot --· -Oulllr CleO OI Orentt Cownty 01'1 at the hearlnn and State "' v ,... t · w•o ... t•klr.9 ot "*"Y or l>f'OClert~ or *•etery/T,...,.,,., M"'" :1, ttet ... .., t"Trtttk ""-Int OrClll'IAftC•"I """ th . · t ted 1 th a the hearing and state olh1rre11•••-••t0111111e c0!1'01"n Tiits ... ,_, wM rneo w1111 ,,,. ,.,., ... you r objections or f ile City ttolfcr s-1 C"Aom1n111ret1v1 ° erwise •n eres n e your objections or file DATED: A"""' 11, '"' cou11ty c11rll or Or•110t County 011 p111111 ... Orenoe c0 .. , O•lly Piiot, written objections with the G11111e11nea tot ,,,..._lino,,,. Tret· w ill and/or estate: written objections with the L• "· •r-11, C*Y March>."'' AA1rc11 ~. n, 1t, ,., "'' HMI court b9fore the hearing. lie ttllHlf'tOrdl"""•"I. A petition has been filed ., a.tsyOlltle. ~r 1<mt)t Your appearance may be Nou,. •• ,,.,_.., tur ... r otve11 '"'' by Russell Wledemnan in court before the hearing. •...-•K. stnc11...,. Publlu..d <>reno-Co.•• oa11, Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE MldputMk -lnet•lll 11e11e1c1on ,,,. Your appearance may be m1Ntr111•,......•' Marc11s,1t,1',u,1•1 100. .. 1 In person or by your at· '""'•Y01Mlr<11.1t11,•tU..hovrso1 the S uperior Court of in person or by your at· P1101"r!:::=~~!,,, Piiot, P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUUUSINHS torney. :,;.JO:.·~ ::c~·H~'::':tr:.:~ ?;at"~ eountyJi:uesting torney.
""•"" s. 12. 1•. 1•1 120..-1 MAM• 1TAUM•1tT I F Y 0 U A R E A time Md P'«•....,. -•II pertofls in. a usse enman I F Y O u A R E A '"• follo••"11 01,.on1 .,. 001ng CREDITOR or a con. •erttt.O rney ·-•· eno be r..•rd be app0lnte<S as personal :REOITOR or a con·
P UBLIC NbTICE--"~C::.~~!:~!'::r 1>1111Mun: · tlngent creditor of the de· '"'''°n. representative to ad· llngent creditor of the de·
Tr.• to11ow1n11 P•noni .,. do ing s1r~~~c!..8~.c~.11:~1~:~.1•Y ceased, you must file your =~::.'!!.'"' minister. t~~ estate of ceased, you must Ille your
fflCTITIOUS aUSINHS
HAMISTAT•M•NT Tiie 1011-"I peoon 11 Ooll'tQ l>u~ MU ••.
C C SV$TEM$, UU lltveriloe Orlvt. Sellla M•, CAlllWnl• tVOi. Kevin ia ... 1 lll1t9<11\l>erger, USJ Rl••r~lcat Ol1w, S.nla Ana, C.lllornla
07ot. Tllh _._, h <ondllet.d by •n In Ol•lcNel Ke..U.P Al .... -ger Tiii• stet-I -~ llltO wllll lllt Cownty Cle<ll. of O<M\91 Coo.nly or Fell 11, 1•1. FUS,_, Pul>llttwd Orenot c..o.,1 Dolly Pllol Feb. lt, ~.Marci> t, 11. 1,.1 U3 1i
PUBLIC NOTICE
N11Jl1 l'ICTITIOUS IU51HEU NAME STATl!.MEHT Tiie 1ot1ow1no ...,_, '' doing ~
ntu •• CENTURY 11 HORIZON REAL T'V, IHI WeslmlnUer, Garden Growt. C•lllorn,.,,... Rooert s z..,,..1, lllll Stonecrltft Ro.d, A ...... m. C~lllornl• '2IOI Th11 ti.dlnMi " C-.Cl.O by •n lrt· dlvldw•I RotiertS z.e-1
""''n•nt• ooneld Ron sc111nc1r., )120 claim with' the court or Cltyot New-•••ec" Norma Virginia Strachota claim with the court or L £"" P•ooucT•ONS, 111 Mc1C1n1o strut, cut• M•u, present It to the personal NOTE: nwea......,o111111no11c•I• (under the Inde pendent present it to the personal =~~~~~1~=;~•· F, Newpo,, c.11~:~~~~•.l•20Mc1t1n1n s1 .• representative appointed ~~:'~11111111 ... co11ec1ec1 ''""'Adm inistration of Estates representative appointed
M••Y Lou Pre~st. ••so 1"11 cosi. 1111ew. c.111orn1ui.tt by the court within four Publltlltd 0r.,. eo." D•llY Pilot, Act) The. petition is set for by the court within four ~!~1::,~,.~· "'•'"'Po•t e .. c11, T111s1M1n.ssiaconouc:1e<1by ... 111· months from the date of Merc11S,t"1 1otW1 hearing in Dept. No.~ at month5 from the date of
Leonerd a. Hesc•ll, 1tso ••th d•v•ou••OON,dRoss~ne ... c111 first Issuance of letters as 700 Civic Center Drive, first issuance of letters as
s1ru1, M101. Htwoo•1 euc.11, in1, , .. 1_1 ,..., 111ec1 wlltt "" provided In Sectloo 8700 of PUBLIC NOTICE West, in. the ~lty of S~nta provided In Section 700 of
C•lllornl•nM3 County c1erk 01 o .. nee coun1y on the Probate C ode of M 7, .. 1 Ana, Cal1forn1a on April 1, the Probate Code o f
Tiii\ buSIM» IS ConclU<ltd Oy •n In· Mer h J 1'81 f '" -1981 at 9 JO o1v1oue1 < · .,,51 .. Call ornia. The tim e for fflCTtnous.u11NEU : a.m . California. The time for
MertLovP••-eesi .Pu1>llS11e<1<>renoeeo.•r<>•lly Piiot. filing claims w ill not ex· NAllMITATaMa1n IF YOU OBJECT to the tiling claims will not ex· l"'' .. ,,_, wn 1111c1 w•111 ,,,. M•rc" s. 12. tt. u. 1t11 •-•1 p lre prior to four months 1111~':.~°!~'"' peoo"' .,. d01"' granting of the petition, pl r e prior to four months ~~ ... ~~3.~';;1k 01 °''"09 county on ----from the date of the hear· OLANOER'S wEL.OtNG SHOP, you should ~lther appear from the dale of the hear·
Ftmu P UBLIC NOTICE ing noticed above. 1Nc. • c..11or111e cw_.ee1 ... 1111 at the hearing and state Ing noticed above
Pu1>H"*IOr<1110t1Coeuo•11yPll01, ----YOU MAY EXAMINE ~:.~~,';.T.~te Avtn .... ""'"'''"·your objec tions or file YOU MAY EXAMIN E
M••<" s. 12· "· 2'· 19111 ___ 10_so_ .. _1 "~~~~!:~!':::s the file kept by the court. e.nner s11ee1 1111 ... , 1 n< .• • written objections w ith.the the file kept by the court.
'"• 1011ow1no "'''°" ,, dOing 1>ut1 If you are interested in the C••llor..te <Oll*.C.IOll, 2'11 EHi u court before the hearin,:i. If you are interested in 1he
nesu• estate, you may file a re· Crute A-. AMtw•m. c:.111"""'' Your apearance may be in estate. you may file a re· lll'tCT1T1ou1 1us1~ss --Miss TA•cev SECRETAA•AL quest with the court to re· ~l,buMM't.1 11 ,0fWM:-.dbY •<«· person or by your at· quest with the court to r e-
NAMUTATl!M .... T ~~:.,~~~~~"'~~~:;;.~. Or•v•. ceive special notice of the poretlOn torney. ceive special notice of the
Th• touow•no "''"°" •• c1o<no t>usi. G•~• L. Mosuri101o. u1 c.1on inventory of estate assets ~ Slwet Mei.I, 1"'· I F Y 0 U A R E A inventory of estate assets n .. .,, s1rM1,Leounee ... c11,c.111o<n1•. and of the petitions, ac· :=..._, ~REDITO.R o r a c on · and of the petitions, ac· cou•~.ANv~:e.~~~~A 3!,.!~•••hn 01:1~1~.~·1~•" <_IK,,., by •n In· c o u n ts and reports 1111, t1.e..n-t wtt 111.0 w1t11 1.11e t1gent creditor of .the de· c o u n t s and rep or ts
Barben N. Mu•Phy, lO Sl•rll•h c; l. Mosurllolo described In Section 1200 Cownty Clef1l of 0r4'1Qt (.ounly on J .... cea.sed Yc;>U must tile your described in Section 1200
c°"''·"""'°"e.tth,CA 91"3 101>e1M1u TrK•1 of the California Probate u ,it1t. .,, c laim w_ith the court or of the California Probate
01:1';;!.':'4',_'" u•nctuc•"' by'"'" c::~:Y ~~e;:-::: ~:!~"'c.:~~Y 1: Co de . A RT H U R S . Pwbllu..d 0r.,. co.11 O•llY Piiot, present it t<;> the per~onadl
1
Code.
llert>ioreN 1111urP11v ""-rchl."'1 LEVINE, ESQ. l'•t>.tJ,1',2'.MMt11s.1"1 11o,.e1 representative ~ppointe JOHN W. DOWNER,
PUBLIC NOTICE
William w. Soukup, At·
torney at Law. 1600 N.
Broadway, Suite 601, San·
ta Ana, California 92706.
(714) 973-1644.
Tiii• stel-nl •aJ OltO wllll the CownlY C"rl< ol Or-County 011 Feb
'· l'ltl
Th•• , .. ,_, ••• ruoc1 w1th ,,,. l'U7MJ STE LL, l. EVIN E & by the court w1th1n lour 401 Glenneyre Street, Suite Counl y CIU-Of or ... ~ Counly on PubllSl'lt<I 0r'"9t C.0.SI D•llY Piiot, BOOKMAN PU~LIC NOTICE ~ont~s from the date of H • Lag u n a 8 ea c h .
Fet>ruery24,l'itl l't.U.. Merchs,12.!9.2•.1'81 ---~ 727 WestSevHU.Street first issuance of letters as California 92.6St (714)
Publl\Nd Or"'Ot Coe•• D•lly Piiot, P UBLIC NOTICE L..os Angeles, ca: 90017 IUPUta.t COU•T OP CALIPO•lflA provided in Section 700 of 497 ·2443. , FUMt) GROVER ESCltOW COlll'OllATION ,..,,,,,... ...... F•t> 2•·--''"s.u.1'.1"1 Published Orenge Coast cou"::~~alfOa the. Pr~bate C~de of Publis h ed OranQe
-..i l'ICTIT10US9'IS1iiii1S --Dally Piiot, March 4, S, 11, o•DHTOINOWCAUH ~al 1forn1~. The. time for Coast Dail~ Pilot. Feb 26.
Published Orange coast
Daily Pilot, Marc h 4, 5~ 11. 1981 1016-81
Tustin. C.lllontl• t1'IO
PubllSIWd Or-C°'\I Delly Piiot, Feb 12, "· 1•. MllrchS. 1'81 1n-e1,
PUBLIC NOTICE MNMITATafMMT 1981 1077_,1 '" u. Met• of"' ~1ce11on., ft.ling claims will not ex· 27. March 5. t981 793.81 ,..!."!,'°''D'M"" .....-'' dol"9 """· ••MA JEAN H•••ARO tor a...,.."' pire to four m onths from
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •U51NESS NAME STATEMENT
T "' lollowlno peoons ert do•no 11•,.IMH ~
'T wo 8ROH4ERS PIZZA, ""' B•oekhursl SlrHI, Founl•in V•lley, C•lllorlli• 921111.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •USINEU
.. AMII STATU•l!NT
T lie followlftQ penon I\ dOlftv l>u\I
neu i11 OE T ... ILING UNllMI TEO, 11• Amt1hYsl. 8'11-1\1-, C.lllornl• .,, .. ,
W•ll« 8 HluOorSI Ill. 219 Amefllysl, a.1-1si.,,d, Calllorn" .,..,
FICTITIOUS •us1M•U
MAME STATl!Ml!lfT The fotl-1"11 per-. I• 00i"9 bull· .,." .. ALLISON DESIGN SERVICE, 1720 N Grand, • H , S•11ta An•. C•lllo•l'll• "7111 C"'rtes Allloon Wll~. 1110 N. G,.nd. •~. 5'111• Ane, C•lllornl• 91101
Tiiis l>u\lneu l.l Ulnducad by "' In dhrtdu,.,
Olertes A wt n'*'1
MESA SALES , &AJA PVBUCNOTICE N~':eu45 1,_MAJEAHH•HA•o. the. date of the hearing
MA•KETIMO A.NO NEWSLETTER, llellti-, ... "*'. pellUOll wltll I.lit notice above.
1 u C•lller s1r .. 1. Co••• M•... fftCTITlOUt M1111tau '"'" Oii IN• COllr111r en o..-w cMnO-the file kept by the court. C•11~~ .. .._, 711 ~ MAMSITATafM•T 1111 ,,,1tcM1t'• Mme from ••MA If you are interested in the
str"1.CeMA-....c..tlfernleft627. 1111"!.':.!9!s~..,. ,..._ ., ... ,.,. t,.~~14199A"o •• JEANNE estate, you may file a re·
Tiiis ........ ,, ~Wei t>y ... "" EME~ LAKE, P.O .... "°'· IT IS 0..0E .. EO ..... 11,..,...,, In· quest with the court to re·
ot.1oue1. ••161 .._,. .......,_, wie "'· H.,,.. •-eo in .,,,. --•ueo ,..."., ceive special notice of the ~ MDllnH Unoten a..dl, C.lltom!e t1M7. ,...., ..,_.. tNs c.e.w1 et11:» •.m., . f Tiii• ~ •• 111ec1 w1111 "" cetvln M. ...._. ,. K•ltli.tn "· .,... Aprll a, ,..,, 111t11t cow•~_.,. o1 inventory o estate assets County Clert< ol 0••"91 Covl'll'I' on L"'"'· 6152 RICI Cokll Drive, Hunt· Oep.,ttNnt l •I 700 Civic Cenler and the petitions, aCCOUntS Feb. 10, 1"1. lllQIOll 8Ncl\, C.llloml• ttM1. Ori.,., SMiie An•, Oref111'1 Cownly, and repOrtS deSCri bed in
Sokyon Kano, UU Sombrero Avonue, Cypnu, (Alllo<nlt ~JO
Tiiis buslneu "conc1uc1..i l>Y •n In dlVldU•I
P11••1·~ Or-,.-·•t "·llyl'IPHIGllot, Cl~ l(,M. IAung end CIOwer C"ltorlll•, end lftow cevw, II •ny. S e C t i 0 n 1 2 0 0 0 f t h e "' • .., --.. ....... ..,.. M. 'f. L--a, ttil ,_.., CM<ll OrlW, Wiiy 1"9 -1llon l0t <Mnoe of "'"" • fllls si. ........... w" lltld wltll ,,,. Fet>. n . 1', 1', MAKll s, "" 7JS.et Hu11llngton llMcl\. c.etltoml• tMl. IMlllO notlloerWll.0. California Probate Code. County Clerk ot ~"'O-Cou1111 on ----Golden Oek ........ 1me111, .. IT IS FUllTHE• o•OEREO INl. R 0 B E R T L . W•ll~r 8 HtuOor•I Min J• K•nQ, Ut1 Sombrero Av•l'l<>e, CY9"tll. C•lllo<nlt ~JO
Tllh business IS CDftducted by • Q'ntrel CNrllWnhlP
TlllS not-• .... llled willl lne Cou11ty Ci.rt< ol Ou~ County on Ftb 10. 1"1
Feb•u••Y2•.1"'· Ftsun PUBLIC NOTICE ~:~~"':o!::'.':: P=~·~~~~ ~~.:'11~,,:·1~.100~ ~~:.. ": HUMPHR~YS, 811 Dover
PubffShed Ort1n91> ea.it D•fly PUot. ----'""ton BMdl. c.ut~• ...,.,. · n•••p•per of 9•n•r•I cl rcu••t•o" Drive, Sutte 33# N@wport Sol<yon Keng Min Je Kel'Q P:UUM Feb 26, M<tr s.1i, 1t, 1•1 ..... l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS prl11ted In Or .. County, C.lllo<ni•, Beach, ca. 92.663. (714)
PubllSl'ltd Or-CotSI D•llr Pllol, ----.. _E STATEMENT C.lvln M.......... on<•. -,,,, ·-\IKCMstft -·· 645-2710 This •l•lomenl w•s lllld wllh Ille Coul'IY Cieri< of Oungit County on Ftb 11, 1'11
Fet>. n. ••. u . Mer<ll s. 1'81 IJo-11 PUBLIC NOTICE r11e 1ot1ow1no '*'°" h clOlno 1>11•1· Tlllt •tei-1 wH 111e0 with '"' prior to tllt <let• Mt tor ,,..,.,no on tne p bl. hed O C MU •S. Cownty Clerk of Or'"Vt Cownty on petltlOfl. U IS range OaSt ,.,_,
Pul>llShe<I Orenoio Coest O•Hy Piiot.
F et>. 19, U , Merell ~. fl, '"' 161-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME STATUUHT FICTITIOUS9U51NES5 Tiie tollowlno pe"on> ,.. do1nQ NAME STATIMIENT bU>•nu s es . flle fotlowll'Q Pl"IOll Is OOlno bllst A MAN l'OR All SEASONS, l60
neu U . Cleo SI .. L~ Be.ell, CA. t26SI ••~• TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC Mlcr..1 C. Jovwn•t. 360 Cleo SI., ·-PRODUCTIONS, 1tt6 Flemlnoo Drive, L•gune Beech, CA t2Ul FICTITIOUI •USIHEH Coste Mew. C.lllo<..te t21U•. O•v•d C. Jouvenot, 2176 Ruby Pt , N&Ml!STATIMEllT Ron•ld IC. McConnell••. ltSt L'9Un• Beech, CA. t26Sl
Th lollowl110 Pinon• •rt do111g Fl•mln90 Orh•, Cost• Mesa , Tiiis buslneu I• condwclt<I l>Y 0 b'""'"' ~ c.11to<ni• m:i. -··• --s1>1p SOUTl-ILANO TllE CO , 2716 So Tiiis bllslrwss Is condu<ted by •n In· Ml~I C. Jow,,.,,.t Co••• Hwy.,..._.. llHCll. CA t26Sl dlvlduel. Tllb •le'-1 was lllld Wit,. ,,,. Cl)•rles G. lltllly, 2116 So. Coesl R K.McConnellee countr Clerk of Or~ county on Hwy., L.eoune Beach. CA '2.UI. tht• 'tetement was llllO wltn Ille Ftbruery 14, ltll S'('•n I( Pa~. 2116 So. Coe•I Cou11ty Cler-ol Orenoe Counly on F15'564 H•f .. ~-Beech, CA '101 l'el> 11, 1'81 Put>llsl>ecl OrM19t Coe\! Deily Piiot, T11ls bullneu II <onOU<ltO by •n In· F1U70 Fob 2•, •ftCI Maren 5, 12, 19, '"1 dtvl,..•1 PuOllllled Or"'9f (OHi O•lly Pllol. 921-11 CNrlft G Rellly Ftt> It, 26, NIMU. S, 12, '"' ll2·11 Tiii• \la\enltftl w~ llled wl\11 Vie Couflty Cltrk or Ora1191 County o" Foo, 10, 1901. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
R. o. co .. sTRucrtON ~rc111.1 .. 1. oe1.o·~rvt1.1t11 DailyPilot,March4,5,11, MANAGEMENT CO. 119'1 Cow•n. ff1S7-R-ldH. ,,,.,..,_ 1981 1078-81 lrvlne, C.lllornl• 927U Put>llU!td Orange Coest Delly Pilot, Rlcllerd M. Delton, Jr., SOOS Riv•• M•r<h S, 11, 19, 16, 1 .. 1 1202 .. 1 A.,.nuo, N ... POrt &e..:11, C•lllornla
9?KJ This l>us1neu ''conducted by •n In dlvldu•I Rlcllard M O•llon. Jr rr.is ,, .. _, wH lllecl with Ille County Cterll ol Or•noe Cownly on March l, 1'81
l'U7tS7 Publi\lltO 0ratlQ* Coe•I O•lly Piiot, M•rtll S, 12. 19, lt. 1'81 lOS.·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO c•EDITO•s OF •ULK T•ANSI'•• 11eca. .,., .. ,., u.c.c.1 Nollet I• Nret>y 01,,,.n to crtottw• ol
Ille •lll>ln "'""" ,,..,,,,..or '"" • bulk lr.,,sl9r I• ....... ID M m ..... or>
pr r ,on •I property h•r•lnefter Ots<rlbe<I. T"• name end 11"''"'" •Odrtts ot Ille 1nt1t<1cled lransteror are
I( N. WEBER. 101 ""-1" Strttl. Btlboe, CAlltornl• The locaUon 1n C•lllornl• ol Ille
tr.111 •••Ulliw omce or pr•nc•CNI """ .,. .. olllce ot the 1ntenoeo ,,.,~., ... .. ""'' •••bcwe All olrwr bulll'ltH n.mes ond •d are su s used by 11\J lnlend~d lr•l'l•leror wltlll" thrff .,.,,, lot P"'' so ltr " known 10 the lnlenc110
1ren11e,..•s "''· none Tiie ,,.,.,., ...0 bull,,.u •dd,..u ol
tne Intended tr"'''''"' •rt M•rion H. 1-f•llecre, S.r ... H Ver ble, Ell .. R Hull, 2'l0 S... M19U•I, Newporl Beecll, CAlllornl• U•.O Tll" Ille ~rty per!lnenl llerelD '' Otscrlbecl in Qent,.I H . lurnlb.ore, ll• lures. equlpmMI eno rnerchenplw •nd
IS IOC •led •I. 101 M•ln Slrorl. Bel...,., c:.tllornle.
Tiie buslneu "'"" UHcl by Ille U •O lre nsreror •I uld loc•llan ,. IC N
Weber J•-•n. Th•I wld bu4k lrW1sle< Is lnltn<lld IO be con1umm•t•d •I the olllce ol O•vlo P. 0.lAncy, E,q. UO Newpof1 :en1er 0r1 .... Sullelll, N-POrttleem. Celllorl'll•t26'00ftOr•ller Fet>ru.r., 21,
'"' Tiiis t>ulk lrMster h subl•<I 10 CAlllornl• Uniform Cotn""n:l et Cede S.ctlOll 61111.
Tiie ...,.,. ---of Ille peraol'I "'"" w"°"' cl•lms m•y be 111.0 Is D•vld P. OtLency, UO Ntwporl Cenlfr Drift, Suite lll, Newport Boch, c..tltorlll• •~. •ncl Ille Int ,., tor 1111"0 clelm• try WIY creditor "'•"be --...Y u.1 .. 1. -Id\ bllw butlneu dey l>eloA tile ,.,,....,...,,19n Oelttoe<llled-Oet..S. F•-Y 11, l"I
MMlon H. Hellet'1t Ser"° H. lle'111e Ell .. R. Hult DEL AN CY', lfUl'T • l'ENSTIERMAKI• w Ne.,... C...fllr Ori .. ,
s..11• tit Hew,.n ..._.,CA n..-PllllllllWCI 0r"'OI Coesl O•llY Piie\,
""' ''· , .. , H1 .. 1
PtJBLIC NOTICE I
STATEMENT D, AMNOONMOO Off UH OP l'ICTITIOUS •USllfl!ll HAM•
Tiie follOwlnt --NW tbefo· dOMd the.,. of IN PlttltkMn 9wtl
MU Heme: ElGIN PAllTNE .. SHIP, 2J61 NoV• D•mt •O.O, Cost. Me,., CA t2'26.
TM l'l<tltlo\JI lluMl'IHS N•,,_ ~·
'"''" to ......, we• lllltd In Ot'Wl9t Cow11ty Ofl Howmber 4, lt11. FILE NO.Ft.s. ••c,,.rf v~ Z»I Not,.. Ount •oH,C•te.liilllHe.CA'26». M•r1-Lllnl, 210S2 Sl,.lt\moor LeM, Hlll!l'"9t0fl IMcll, Clo f?M. Tiii$ llullftftl wet condlKl:H 1»¥ t
llmtted~tp.
Mef1"n l,,1Utt4 Tlllt .._....,._ -11194 wltll. llw Cown\y Clffll tf Or,.... c....-v Oii ....... ,., .
.......... Oret9 0..11 o.lly Piiot, ,. ... u. "·-. ~" s. "" 1 .... 1
PVBUC NOTICE
--
Let's auume you lived in a houu that wa1
burned to Ute around, cawsine injuriea to peopJe -
and you were unfortunate eDO\llh not to have ade·
quate insurance to cover all the d1m11e1. '
What would happen ll you then called your in-
surance agent, after the fire, and u ked him to write
a policy that was retroactive in it.a coverace: lo ef-
fect, in other words, at a dale prlor to the tJre?
YOlJ CAN IMAGINE THE heehaws you would
get.
"What do you think I am, an idiot'!" Or: "Sure,
everythlng's easy to figure out, with hindsight." Or:
"Dummy, why didn't you take out enough Insurance
in the first place'!"
~ell, ridiculous as it may seem, this is precisely
the kind of deal arranged by Kirk Kerkorian's MGM
Grand Hot~ls, operator of hotels <with casinos> in
Laa Vegas and
Re n o. fl was
the M G M
Grand in Las
Vegas that was
hit Nov . 21 by a
fire in which 84
lost their lives.
Mor e than 600
~ -------------'1 .... ,
111111 Mllllllll ••
were aJso injured.
The MG M Grand apparently had enough in·
surance to cover property damages and business
losses arising from the fire. But beyond that, it had
onlr $30 milli.on in liability coverage to take care of
claims resulting from tfie deaths and injuries. As of
Jan. 15, 57 complaints had been tiled agains t the com-
pany -and they were asking a total of $215 million in
compensatory damages and $780 million in punitive
damages. That adds to a total of $1.2 billion.
~T'S TRU~ THAT GAMBLING IS normally a profitable busmess for the casino operator. And it's
also true that claimants nearly aJways ask for more
~oney than they even expect to get. But still, that
1m balance between $1.2 billion and $30 million is a lit·
tie nerve-wracking.
Kirk Kerkorian, MG M's major stockholder Che
owns 47 percent). doesn't need this uncertainty hang-
ing over his bead.
So Kerkorian went out and did what you and I
couldn't do in a million years : he bought himself a
back-dated insurance policy. Frank B. Hall & Co .. a
big insurance broker, put together
the package for the MGM Grand,
bringing in such heavies as
Lloyd's of London and General
Reinsurance. As a result. MGM
Grand has been able to boost its
liability coverage from $30 million
to $200 million -and it's retroac-
tive.
Naturally, this additional $170
million of back-dated insurance
doesn't come cheap. Business u1u<o1t1AH
lns~rance, the trade paper that broke this story,
estimates the MGM will have to come up with an im-
mediate premium payme nt of $35 to $40 million. But
MGM should be able to handle it. The two hotels take
in about S300 million a year and earn $75 million
before taxes. With the fire-ravaged Vegas hotel down
this year until at least July. those figures are going to ~e h~lved. But MGM will pick up business interrup-
tion insurance and it should be able to meet this
' premium payment Besides. it's worth it to get the
monkey off your back and onto the backs of in·
surance companies.
THE INSURANCE COMPANIES WRITING this
coverage expect to come out ahead, too. First of aJI ,
they get lo divide up immediately the hefty premium.
That money wiU be invested quickly. Then they'll try
t.o settle claims for as little as possible. And ins tead
of paying lump sums. they'll try to structure settle-
ments as annuities -a set amount paid out each
year for many years. And of course lawsuits can
often be stretched out interminably. Meanwhile. the
S3S to ~ million of premium monies, paid up front.
are earrung a good return.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW VORIC (AP) S.IH, Wtd IWKt
•no n•1 <IWI~ OI Ille lllteen mo>I ecllvr New Yoo Stock EotlWlnge 1uuu tredlng ,,.11.,,,.lly •1 "'-• 1l1•n 11 • I. TV C0<p •M.JOO U"-• ._
US Steel IJJ.JDO >1•.. , I"• 8elll SIMI •.J',700 tt•"t , flt•
Sunt>um •2'.IOO "" • , .. Sony Coro U•,SOO "~' , ..., TW Corp Sll,JOO 701/• • t'"t s. ..... _ ~1 • .00 ,, ' ...
Nw>I Alrl SU.JOO ""' • •o RoyCrown •,100 ,... , 1-. Nw111no '31,700 « • 2 VSL.ll'E Co 4JO,J(IO H'• • y, Mobil 412,J(IO .. 19 v,
S1<10111M > -.IOO ...... • l'h Clllcorp •t,700 '3"-• \<o VAL In< JT•,«IO 1$.. • 1\ot
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YORI( CAP) S.les, Wtd P<Ke
4ln<I ntl <~ Of Ille len mo•• ecllw AmerltMt Stock E•<llM\9' iuues. tr•cllno nell-lly 11 more ~" 11
CClnlmdrtllW ' 2S2,5GO H"ll Ja. Intl 8nknot 124,JDO 2'~ + v. AIHke Ahl 112,.00 4,.-, + V.
Wernrcom wt ts.100 '"" "" Hu•ll~OG > •J,'00 13''> w GllCen I ' '1,IOO 10"" -. tiouOllM '2.lOO SO~• '-Walnoco tt, ICXI 21"' , "' Synt .. COrp 11 .'JOO MW> 1 1''1 Rnrttnt A 74,IOO 21•11 + 1
10~E~:.S~~!:P! 1'1,,.1 Dow JonH ••OS
STOCKS Ooef> HIQll Low Close ChQ
lO Ind tM.IO 9ICI 10 n• •I '71 ". s d 10 Trn ,_70 '°'",.SOT -O-l4• 1 31
1S VII U• tS ICI' a. 107 41 10l l7 • O 1' u ~1~ >10 " J7'" M .11 an '° + > 1• ~~~~· •.S60,600
VIII> 2'~'.~ U Slk 7 _566, 90C'
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( (AP) ~' 4 Prev
Adven<ed Too.y
113 d:Is
0.Cllr>ed ... ..,
V n<l1• nQOt<I "' ~ Totel ln ut• 117' .... Nrw 111~ 67 • Ntw IOWJ 11 10
W>iAI ll"'U DIO
,..EW YORK IAPI Mer 4
Prev
Adw•n<td
TO<l<ly o;x. 2" O.cllne<I 211 ll4 Vn<llanoeG 211 tu To1el IHUH ,., IOS New MQll> 20 2t New lowt 1• 1J
METALS
C9-r 13-..S <Mlb • OC>Ufld, V s. dffll-llon>
L.tefS.cenOallO\lllCI
llA< OY. <.enh • PoUNI. dell-.
Tl• $6 111' Metels WMll <~It lb
Ahllft'-16centse~,N y Man:1WY~.0011er lieu.
,.1eti-M42.00lroro2 .• N.V
SILVER Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appearlntheOally Piiot.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
... .......-,. ................. ""'. ·-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(Thuraday, March 6, 1981
------------------PtJ8UC NOTIC PtJBUC NOTICE PVKICNOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PtJaUC Nones rvauc NOTIC1 PUBUC NOTICE
~ .. 1 .. 0A«i01•u•o"u""" NOTtCEOF 01.ATHOP NOTICE OF DEAT~
1VNCN11110,.TN••lf•Wlt.1YAT1••r-L L 0 y 0 ~••AJ1•&ec101•TAMO"t•t.TM 0 F A L B E R T P i f-e·1t•ts OaA ... ICOUWTYIUttlltlH ' NOTICI OP OIATH OF touaT aN•IT JOl•~H ::!"!..~:=' O•AN .. RRN•ST J. PL.AIHTIPP: •
YUIU•D1oo•c1MU•tt..tw He N "y ........ °", ........ llAUTATIMtlt'f -s TR AH AH AN •IC.
t1 CAf'Tl!R Ma LLOYD H. 'f8Ht.oaooac ... 1u1,1• AL 8 ER T p LANT
O•AN lkl lltNEST· M.AltlA 01! LOS ANOU,U
PACIPIC:.MU'fVAt. "'" ll•tuMIKUID#IUIY c ART IE " A"' D 0,, ., ,......._.,c..w..,. ... ~.o.e.~ p 6TIT1 O~ TO .a D · ,...u.., __ .~, STRANAHAN ANO OP
ORAN alra ERNIE g:~=~•n . 11ewpe" IMcll, ~.... "" m ....._ ,..,. cwiv., P E T I TI 0 H T 0 A 0 •
Toc,1.om1tt.i.awu 11.-.1....., MINISTER £STATE NO. ..,_.., ... .,..---.Nori.... MINISTER ESTATE .HC>. 0 ll A N A N 0 0 " LAUllO p: ltUll; l!LVIA II.AN ITITION TO AD · c;o· ,.101E1tAL. NA TIONAL.
Yott111fl)lt111t\ t.~111 A 107459. T..., ....,...,..,..... 1 11 ..... m Al01~. ~:,=~utl ~:= b T•folcl• 1, I h • di ,r, ' , =.:=-:: t::: T 0 • I I h • I ' s . G•'" 11.•11rw11'"••lltt1• ·••·••'• •n •r ti, crt ora o, ... ,...,".,.,'*'ll'IMWwr.i"' •,tro.ut beneficiaries. creditors '"H HM 10.Cr-) t11cui1.11.,,., and contingent Crtidltor• Of Un ......... l\IMt C_,."'' l1,W ,ill41 d I . tdl"
MINISTIR ESTATE NO MOit TGAOE ASSOC l.Al I O H •• a 107 ... • ' Corporetlo111 CHICl>GO flfl.I .,. _,. INSVRAHCE GOMAftANY,. Mluewrl T 0 a I I h e I r s , CM-•''°"• ~ OOH 1 tivCKltfl 10,
flentfl,l1rles, cred itors 1"<1"'''.,.
S..rc>111,.-111e •• .t,Ml.-o£l Ltoyd ~ry Cart.r aka O•ln ,..._, ffMI•'•''"' rMMll an cont ngent er .. ors of '"'"''fll" HI,..,"' H•t1e11w1• ,.,.,,,..,.. Lloyd H. ,. ....... r of 1_,1_, !~~ u•-,.• h\C#li.1-Albert P. Stranahan •k-
a)1d contingent c rtdltort o f ~,i:,=:,:--A<cldtM •llff1 .. 0A'"'•--"'1 ...,,.,.,. -· ~ •"' '"" _.,._..,.,..,, 10•.usl Albert Ptant Stranahan of
'"•urtnett"F0rc•:Ca11mm• Calltornla and persons 111tw-.11t'-tce1'6a11eM111• 1 ... su.000 La~una Beach, Calltornla
•rntst Joseph Moran a nd HOT1ce 1 vou 11t .. """ -d. Tri. p e ( SOnS WhO m I y bt court .... y dle<lde ... IMI YoU .rltMl.lt
Bu\lntnP• 1.2'2.•JUlt who m.y be othenwlM In· A<cl•t•Me"'"'_,_. 2,tto,1~ ho
Acc11Jtn1 Md .... 1111 Pf'.ntlum• -0 1ret1: terested In the Wlll and/or ~":,",::-L 111tru1 c:.111.,111• an persons w may be
otherwise In terested In the :,:111'-.o'"'a.':':'==-:. ...::=
w ill and/or estate: 11t1ow.
ca1110.111• Billlnt» P• 1 1u ...,,., estat•. ...,.~. ~-~-··-• _ ot••C'1 1.m .101 otherwl~ Interested In the Wt~c"1llytM1u.ea1110vt llllmt•••l11•cc~••llltNA111 ... a1 -....,. _ _.._..,......,_., Ill nd/ t t s1,1emtn1 tot ,,. , .. , •noed o.c,,,..., ,1, 1•,.... 10 tM ,,..,,."" C-• A petition has *" filed c.111.,11,. ~ ,.._ ·~ w a or es a e :
A petition has been flled II vou •Ith '° _ ..... lllNICt ol .,,
b.y Elizabeth Ann Ballmer •Uornt' '" '"'' "'"''••·.,.,..•'-Id do
in1u1_, oi uia 5t•te 01 c.111or11I•, PIH'-111 • •••· by Jo•....., Int H Nelson In w.,....... ""'"" IMt u. ... ,,,. ,,.,,,. ••• '" a<<ot"Mnc• •• 1111r. 11n-1 A pell uon has been 1-1. T JOllM!no, -· • ll1t1tn1t111 ,., IM yeef ,,..._ O.et111w J1, '"° ~ 10 ,,,. ,,,...,.one• Com· f I I e d b y R e v a L •
I )0 prompllJ Ml tllal your wrlcten
n the superior Court of r•MIOft ... 11 OftJ, _, ltt lllecl Oft time
Qrange County requesting Av1so1 V\ltd oa wci1 ci.-1. 11
t J\ a t e t I z a be t h A n n 1r11:1u11t1 _... c1tc;ldlr tontr• Ud. tin a •ucllencl• •....-Que Ud. ,_fide
11;1allmer be appointed as d9ftlro • » 01a.1. "'" .. 1n1orn1aclol'I
5'.vlcePreildMC tht Superior Court of 1111aar-o1111t1e.ie .. 1w11w111a,PW•-ntto•••· Stranahan In the Superior =· ~~!!'~~.,. Orange County requesting J, ,,.,. Teclf. Court of Orange county
Pwblt""°°'...., eout 0.11, P11t1, '"' t1, l!Mr(11s.•.1. 1.1•1 101141 that Josephine H. Nelson ~=~ v.,..-. requesting that Reva L.
be appotnttd H personel *"•*Y · Stranahan be appointed as
PUBLIC NOTICE r.rsonal representative to Q ... sioue
m i n ister the estate o f SI Usttd-iOllCllat •I (tl'IMIO... l'ICTITIOUI ........ .. un ·~ en Ult tdunlo, IMbtrla ...... " rnest Joseph M o r an, haurto lmm•ell•t•m•nte d• .. ta NAMESTATllMINT F 0 u n t a i n v a I I e y ' M•ntr•, SU ,_ ... "''i, •. sl 110 Tllo toClo•C119 -'°"' .,. dolnO
Californ ia (under the In· •1ouna.ouec1u.,,.tJt1t.ciaa1i.m.o. °"''1
1"'11".'"uoc' o. 1.To .• ••1 1.100 CAR
d I I: TO THE OEFEHOANT· A ''"'" ., u epertdent Adm nlstratlon complalnl MS -llltd .. ., ,,,. plalfl. I.EASING, m AUTO AVOIO, I••
Of Esfates Act). The peti-1111 •11tl"'1 yow. II 'fOU wl•lt lo dn•"" RlvtrtlclloA-. Sull•"ll", N••-1
ti On iS set for hearina in lllll l•wWll. VOY mull, •111\111 30 N'fl llaacll, C.illornll t:IMS.i I
0 ."! • •fl•• tllll •um-It sarved on'°" T L.C. lnelustr ''· n,,, • ept. N o. 3 at 700 C1v1c 111.w.11111111 c"""••rmen.._ ... 0 c.111or111a ~.iloft. 14' '""'™"'
Center Drive West, Santa tho com111a1"t unttu .,o .. dO •o, "°"' Av•""'· Sul• "I!", N-•' Bn<11•
Ana, California 92701 on d•l•ull w111 11e .,,.,,.don •Pt>lk •llon c1111or111•'2ttl. ....... ~,-· b .
M h "S 1981 t '" 30 ol th• pi.h•llll, end 11111 cour1 m•Y Tlllt !MnlnetJ 11 c .......... '"" Y • t OI' arc , , a ., . a .m • .,. .. , • IUOomt,.1 09A1,,.1 yow 10, ,,.. c>0••ll011.
IF YOU OBJECT to the ••liel .,.,,..,'°.., 111 111e compl••l'll, T.LC. lnd\lslrles, 111<
granting of the petition w111c11 coutd r.suu 1n e-•"'s1tmtn1 of M.Br-.eGT''"'"ng,
h Id Ith ' ••oe• ltklno of mottaY or prOperty or secretary/ ....wrer YOU S OU e er appear Oilier :ellel •-\led In IM ,omplaln Tiii\ 11tl-I wH llled wltll llM
at the h earing and state OATIO: • ..,., u. ,. '°"'"'" c1er11 01 o,.fltt county on
your objections or file .... ._ .,_,c .. .-M•rc11 >.1"'1· ,.157171
written ofb}ectitohns with_the •:=~~~tric:= Pw1>u.-0r....,. coest o.11y P1to1.
c ourt be or e e hearing. 1111 Hor1t1 • ..-. • ., Me"11s.12. "· 2•. 1 .. 1 100H1
Your appearance may be s.nt.AM,Ca.tm1
In person or by your at-Pu1:111,,,.., 0r ..... coe11 o.11v P1101. PUBLIC NOTICE
PV8UC NOTICE representative to ad· tt1;111t111e0rtnet~O•llyPllot,l'e11.21,M11rc11t.•.1,1.1911 1ou11 personal representative rn In lster the estate of -to administer the estate of
l'ICTITIOUUllll••U Lloyd Henry Carter (Un· Puauc NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Albe rt P . Stranahan (un-
NAMllTATCMallfT der tht Independent Ad· -d h • Tiit lollewl"' pttlOl'IJ .,. dolno ministration Of estates MOTIUOl'l'U•'-•CN•HINO NOTICE OF DEATH OF er t e independent Ad· w.,....... Hot1t•l•........,t1""'"-'"• P1-N 0 R minis tratio n of Estates CO$TA CAllPllT CAltE COM· A ct) The petition IS Mt for 111111 C•111mlHl011 ,, t11t City 01 MA V I R G I N I A A ct). The petition Is set for
l'ANY, 101t~O .. Plec., C.0.1• .... hearlnQ In Dept. No. 3 •t H••ll*'l9Ndtwllllleld• ..... K-· S T RAC H OT A AN 0 OF hearing In Dept. No. 3 at G•lli::~::,~~-B••n•ot1. 101• O•m 700 Civic Center Drive, ~:,,~.::,:':t:::..:::t!:'! p ET IT ION TO AD . 700 Civic Center Drive, ,.,~ •• c.-.--..c.111«"4••»21. West, In the City Of Santa Tram,,......"' """"''Y tour..,•• MINISTER ESTATE NO. W est In the City of Santa
"'""'' C•m~11. 101t o,...,. Ana, Calltornla on March "° He.,.n CM~ 0r1,,. " ,.,mu A 107878. A • •t•u . eo.1u1Ms.,c.1t!O't11anw ll, 1981at9:30 a .m . tM ,,._." ....,.,...,. -c;r.ow.e T o a I I h e I r s na, California on March
Tiii• IHISIMU is '"'tduct.o llY • IF YOU OBJECT t .. '"''"1111w ... ••NMl1r19'111eu1st· beneflclarl s dlt • tl, 1981at9;30a .m . oetMtfflpartnent\lp. O t .. e '"' M•rrlon "°'".,,. ,., ,._,,, wtt11 e ' ere ors I F YOU OBJECT to the L .. 1 .. o. B1an1on or anting of the petition, re11ted 1tc11111 .. p•eH••d '" at· and contl".IOent creditors of granting ·of the petition
Tiiis 11a1-1 w•• 111.0 w1111 lllt you ShOuld either appear cot .. 11<• •ltll ~" U.40 ol tllt Norma Virginia S trachota ~ . '
cou,,1y c1et• 01 Or•l'IOO C1M111tt "" at the hearl"" and state Newport ... c11 Mw11l<ltt•I cod• and persons who may be YOU shou d etlh er appear ~rc11J,1•1 ··11 1 .. Tromc PtMllftO OtcllM1M:e"1 tnd th . 1 at the hearing and state ,.m ... your objections or tlle c11, Polley s.1 C".Adrn1111sera11v• o . e rw se interested in the your objections or file
Puolltfttd OrM9t c .. sc 0.11., Pllo1, writte n objections with the ou1oe11"" tw 1mp1emtnt11\9 ,.,. Tr••· will and/or estate : written objections Ith the
M•rcll s. 11• "· u. 1,.1 UMI court before the hearing. 11< Pll.slfttOr•"""•"1· A petition has been filed w
Yo ur appearanc.e may be Notlc• '' ... ..., tvr .. r 91,,.,, i11a1 by Russell Wiedenman in court before the hearing. wldPvlliK111t ... ....,.w111 1Mtw1c1°"111e • Your appearance may be In person or by your at-1tt11ci..,otM11rc11.1,.1,a11n.11ouru1 the Superio r Court of In person or by your at·
fllCT1-r1ous au st NHS torney. :~ :~ :.C~~'H':.i:'::-:~,:~ ?;atngRe Cou,n,tyWrleqeduestlng torney.
NAMt: STATIMINT I F y 0 U A R E A "'"' Md Ill«•.,.., -•11 i-rsonJ In-a u sse en man I F Y 0 U A R E A
PVBUC NOTICE
torney. M.,e11 s,11 .... 1t11 1201 11
I F YOU ARE A
C REDI T OR or a c on -
tingent c reditor of the de-
ceased, you must flle your
claim w ith the court or
pres ent it to the personal
representative appointed
by the court w ithin fou r
months from the date of
first issuance of letters as
provided In Section 700 of
the Probate Code o f
C alifornia. The time for
filing claims will not ex·
pire prior to four months
from the date of the hear·
Ing noticed above.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiie 1011ow1n9 pereon• ••• ootn9 CREDI TOR or a con-C•ro1ee1 ma., appear -bt llH•d be appointed .as personal ~RE DITOR or a con-
f11CT1T1ousausiNHS bu1ineo.. tinge nt creditor of the de "'""'" representa tive to a d · -: · HAMt:STATEMIHT cOtNS B., RICI<, mo McK1n1ey • GeotoeCo« ... ~,.1.,.., minis ter the estat f tingent creditor of the de-
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the c ou rt.
If you are interested in the
estate, you may file a re·
quest with the c9urt to r e -
c e ive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
a nd of the petitions, ac-
c o u nts and repo r t s
described in Sec t ion 1200
o f the California Probate
C ode.
W illiam W. Soukup, At·
torney at Law, 1600 N .
Broadway, Suite 601, San·
ta Ana, California 92706.
(714) 973-1b44.
Published Orange Coas t
Daily Pilot, March 4. 51 lt.
191!1 \0 6-81
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aus1HEH NAME STATEMENT
Tll• 1011owlno P••,.OM u• doing
buitl!OU M l WO BAOlHEAS PtZU. 1n.•
Brookllwnl Slrtlt, Founl•'" Vall ty,
Colllornta 92708 SokJon Kang, U•1 !oombrtro
•••nuo, C'l'i>r•u. c.11l0<nl• •ouo Min Jo Kong, 0 '1 Sombrero
a •tnue, C'fP<CU, Calilornl e •JO.
T "'' t>wsln•u '' c0<1eluc1td b'f • vener•I partn.t•"'IP !.ollyon ltenq
Min J• Kong
Thi\ •l•t-t WM "'"° With ,,... ~ounlv Clrrk 01 OrM191 Counly °" Fell 19, ,,.,
Fl-7
PuDll\/Wel Or-c:.0 .. 1 Dally Pilot, Fob It, 2'. Marcll 5, 12, 1911 ... t i
PUBLIC NOTICE
T11e lollowlng penono 1re eloln9 !otrHI, C:O.lt ,,,,..., C.lltornla •lili. Ceased, YOU must ffle Y0Ur pt.,,,.1"9 GommlHlon . e 0 Ceased, you must file your
bu)lne1u1. oon11e1 Ron sc11eno, J 120 c laim with the court or c11.,01 H-por1e.ec:11 Norma Virginia Strachota claim with the co urt or ,.ICTtnousau11N1HS I. ~ M PRODUCTIONS, 117 Mc 1t1nl•'f Sl t tel, Cotto MU•, present it to the personal NOTE: lNtllpeftMof 01h nollc• h (under the Ind ependen t t 't he
NAMESTATEMt:NT 111ven1c11o A,,.,,..., s..11e F, Hewpor1 c.1110,,,1•92,,.. representative appointed .,.,., rrom • """''" collecteo 1,.,,, Administration of Estates presen t t<:> t personal Tllo ro11ow1ng .,_,_, '' e101n11 buJI BH<ll, c1111orn•• •Ml. v1v1a11 SctMnck, J120 M<Klrtley s1 . 111e •P9'1cent. . representat 1 ve appoin ted
MU.. Mery LOY Prel!IMrGatt. IOO 16111 Cosl• Mo ... Calllornl• ,,.,._ by the coort within four PUl>llllwel Orat199 Cotti O•llY Piiot, A ct) The petition 15 set tor by the court w ithin four O•lv;:~~:~.~,,!!~.:;:.1101 ~!~i:!!.i.~· Newport Buell. T1111 DUslnes• h <ondU<t-4 b., •n In· months from the date of Ma•tll s, "" 1oow1 hearing .in Dept. No. ~ at month!> from the d ate of
Kevin Ptut Rlttetsbt•oe•. 1111 Leon"" a Huca11, 1u o u 111 °1•1""1'oona1d Ron Sc1Wnc1< first issuance of letters as -7oo Civic Ce~ter On ve, first Issuance of letters as
Rlvor1lc11o o.1 .... s.nt•M•,C:.lilorn11 Slr UI, Ml07, Nowporr Buell, fllif •lo'-1 was ltlod •1111 ,,,. provided in Sectio1\ 8700 of PUBLIC NOTICE W est, in .the ~1ty of S~nta provided in Sec tion 700 of tuo.. ea111orn1a 92~. county c•••" 01 oranoo coun1y on the pr 0 bate c 0 de 0 f N1'll1 Ana, Caltfornia on Aprr I 1, the pr 0 bate C 0 d e 0 t
dl:.t;;.:.':")lnou 1' conelY(.teel by on In dl:,~·~.~MSl ,, conducl•el l:IY ... In Mercll l , l ... I ""' ... California. The time for PICTITt~auMMEU 1981 at 9 :30 a .m . California . The t im e for
tt••'" P P1eoe1s1Mroer ,,,.,, Low Pro.-'94'" Put>H•IWd 0r.-. Coa\I 0•11., Piiot. filing c laims w ill not ex· NAMll ITAT•M•N-r IF YOU OBJECT to the filing claims will not ex-
T111• ... ,_, ... 111..i '""" 1111 T11 .. 1r.atomen1 "'"' ,,,.., .. 1111 ,,,. M•rc11 s.11.1',26, 1911 10.t.t1 pi re prior to four months bu~~~':~'"' 00'''"" •r• d01"' granting of the petition, pi re prior to four months ~=~n:~. ~tit ol O.anoe Counly 0" ~~~~~\~~~ ol Oronoo Counly on ----from the date Of the hear-OL ANOER'S WELDING SHOP, YOU Should ~lther appear from the date Of the hear-
"uttll ,.15, .. , PUBLIC NOTICE ing noticed above. 1Hc. • c1111orn1a corPO••llon, m1 at the hearing and state ing noticed above
Publo_ Or_ t.oa11 0.11., Pllol Pwbhltleel Or•"OO CINISI O•l•t Ptlol, YOU MAY EXAMINE ~.~~;~.~ .. Ave,, .... Anaheim, yo~r obj~ctl_on s o.r file YOU MAY EXAMIN E
Foo."· i., ~rc11 s. u, '"1 ISH1 M.,c11 s. •2. "· u. "" ioso .. 1 F1CT1T1ous austNESS the file kept by the court. B• nner s11ut M•t•I '"' • • written ob1ect1ons with .the the file kept by the coo rt
Tiie 10~::! s;::.~!!~~':!1,.9 t>UJI· If you are interested in the ca111ornl• <ortt0ratlon, 2111 E•ll u court before the hearing. If you are interested in the PUBLIC NOTICE
HJIUJ l'ICTITIOUS aUSIHESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tllo IOll-lnQ P'"'°" .. doing ti..SI ,,.,, .,
CENTURY 21 ~ORIZON RE.AL TV
I UI WutmlMI••. G11el1n Grove, Cohlornlo 97..U
Rot>eM s. l.emel, 7ll0 SIOMcrt.i. Ro1e1, ,.,_Im, c;elitornla 92'01
Tll1• ~~•Is con<IU<ted by en 1n
dtYldU•f
A-IS.Zemel
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
Tllo IOll-1"9 oerson I\ e1o1119 busl
nru .,
BAY CITV AR TS, U Stlfll>h
Cowrt. Hl1WllOl'I Bee<ll, CA 97 .. J Barbar• N, Mwrptly. ~ Sl.,11111
COYrl, Newport lk«ll, C ... 9'2'43 Tiiis IKtjj~s I• CondUCle<I b., •n In·
ellvlelull
Bar!Mr 1 N Mu<pflY
Tiii\ Stal-I WM llleel Wllll llM
Counl'f ''"" ol Oran~ County °" Fe b•wary 2•, 1'111
ntu .. estate, you may file a re-Crttl• A-. AMMlm, calllor'11• Your apearance may be in es tate, you may file a re-
Mtss TRACEY s EcAeTARtAL quest with the court to re-~i. ~ lsconcM1ec1 by• cor· p e r son or by your at-quest with the court to re·
SE AvtcE, 1" Bo•• C•""°" 0••••· ceive s,._,.lal notice of the POt•tton. torney. c e1've srv>r1'al notice of the Legwn• Beacn, C•hlor"'• t»SI ,....... I F y 0 U A R E A .... ~ Gr•u L M<>K•roto10, m c11011 inventory of estate assets ._., si-t Metal, •nc. inventory of estate assets
s1ru1,LAOUN&.ec11,c•111ornl•. and of the petitions, ac-:;:n.;e-wt C,RED IT O.R or a c on· and of the petitions, a c -
Tllh l)u\l~• 1' ~onducied bv .,, •n-cou nts and r e ports T111l -.-•• "'" wn11 111e tigent creditor of . the de-co u n t s and report s
d i.,ldu•'c.L MCK<~'•'o•o descr ibed Jn Section 1200 c°""''~°'°".,...countyonJan ceased you must file your described in Section 1200
<dt»IM•uT•Key o f the California Probate u .1911· "'......,claim w.ith the c ourt or of the California Probate 1 n•' "•1ement .... 111"' wllh tht Code . AR T H U R S . Pub111htd 0r..., eoaa1 o a11y P1101, present it t<:> the per~onal Code. ~~u,~:,\~~t 01 Orange Co..niy on LEVINE, ESQ. ,.ao.12, 1t.u ,Marchs, 1,.1 110 .. 1 representative ~p!>ointed JOHN W. DOWNER,
FU7tU
Pwblllheel Or~ Coasl 0•11'( PtlOI,
ST E I.. L 1..-LEV I N E & by the court within four 401 Glenneyre Street, Suite
BiouKMAN PUBLIC NOTICE months from the date of H Laguna B ea c h TlltS 11•1..,..nl wH llltd wllll Ille Co..nly Clerll ot Or~ Counl'( on Fob •. "" Morell s, 11, 19, u. 1,.1 1203-11
Ftsu.M ~----727 west._Sevtftth Street -· first issuance of letters as l California 92651 (714)
Los Angeles, c.. 90017 M.1Paa10.c:ouaTo.C.Aul'outA provided in Section 700 ot 497-2443. ' FUJ4tj GltOVEa ESCaOWCOllllllOlll .. TIOH IMtllr. ... a1 ....
T ullln. Celltwrtla t2'IO
Put>ll~ Orangie CCN11I Deity Piiot, Feb U , 1', U, M"'cll S, 1'191 172 .. 1,
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS austNESS NAME STATEMENT
Tiie lollowlftQ pe"°" I> ~ l>Ysl
~'' ., OElAILI NG UNLIMITED, 21, "motno t, Bllboe 1\1-. C1lllorn1a
•1'61
W•ll« B Hau•aorsl Il l, 11'
Amllrtnl, e..1-lstenel, Caltlornio
'1"1
Pubh\heel Oranoit co .. 1 O•ll'f Piiot,
Fetl U. -MArt ll S, n. It. 1911 ,...,
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUI aUSlltl:S.S NAME STATEMENT
Tht loll-Ing person Is clolnt busl· nt:\I .,
AL LISON OESIGN SEllVIC~
1110 N. Grand. • l•. Santa Ana Calllotnla '2101 '
Clltrtes Allltol'I Wlltrteus, 2720 N. Gr•nel, •:M, S.nl• Ana, C.lllornle 9'2701
Tl'lll bu\ineu 11 <-.Cled b'f ., In· ellvlclutl.
CNrle\ A Wfttl*.S
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS aUllNESS N.UU STATeMENT
Tiit lollowlng Plf'SOft It do+ftt busJ·
-•H: ME SA $A LES . BA J A
MAR KETING ANO NEWSl.ETTlllt,
711 Center StretC, Costa Meu. Col11otn4an.27.
L-OevW Mot-. 71J Ctftter
St'"'· C.le Mna, CAllllomle tKV. Tiiis .....,_. ,, c-ted l>Y.,, lft·
CllVICIWI.
LotWI MDII,,.,.
Tiii• --1 was llled wltll U.. c ... 111., Cltl"ll of Oranoe Cou11ly on Fell.10,1 ...
""* Pu1>1IS11te1 <>renoe Coast oa11, Piiot,
Published Orange Coast c:ou-:::r~~,'""°• the. Pr_obate C,<>de ot Publis hed O ranqe
Dally Piiot, March 4, S, 11, oaosanu .. owuusa C,~l1forn1~· The. time for Coast Datl} P ilot, Fe b 26
1981 1077-6l ,,, 111e Mlllter of .. 4P111ic.11on °' filing claims w ill not ex-27, Mar('h s. t981 793.91
11tMA JUN HIBBARD'°' c"',,.. of pi r e to four months from
PUBLIC NOTICE H~~e1tusi1tMAJEANHIHARo. the _ date of the hearing .,.uu-. _ , .. ., • peUllon w11t1 1:11e notice above.
•1CT1nous .u........ c 1er11., IN• c:--t tor.,. o~ '"'""" the file kept by the court.
llAMI ITATaNMT 1111 •PPll<.,,t'• name ,,.m •ltMA If you are interes ted in the
Tiie .... -... --· .,. ""'"'JEAN Ht BaARO 10 JEANNIE estate a f 'I ~-•: O'~EA. • you m y 1 ea re-
t:MIERM.D l.Al(IE, P.O .... ""· IT IS OltOERIEO -.11...,_ 11'1· Quest with the c ourt to re · ,.,., a.ectt eo..1ev ... e1, Swlw ue. H...,. t«t1tee1 111 t11e ...,. .... 11uee1 rMtter cei ve special notice of the t1119Con 9Mcll, C.lllomUI '1M7,• ~r Wote lfllt c--t .i 11:30 •.m .. I f c.1v1,, M. LMOflO • K•ttt1twt R. °" A.IM'U 1. "'1· ,_ cour~ .... o1 nventory ~ estate assets
LWfttl • ..., "" COK11 0t1,,., Hunt· 0.,.,1,...nt J " 100 c1v1c c.nt•• and the petitions, a c counts '""'°"9Mdl.Cell~'1M1. Ori••. s.<it• Ana, o...,.. covntv. and reports described in
Cl""'9ftt K.M. L.e4#lo eflCI Ctowr Celllwnl•, and .,_ <-. 11 "''· 5 e C t I 0 n 1 2 0 0 0 f t he
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTICI: TO C•EOIT'ORS OF IULK TRANSfllla lika. .,.,,..,1 u.c.c.1 Nolke i\ llerot>y ,,...., 10 <•editors ol
Ille •ltllln named ,,..,.,,.,.or 111•1 •
bull< lr .. $ler IS about IO be m-Of\ Ptr•onal proporly 11 .,oln•ll•t
do"crlbtol Tnt n-.,.., ti..sineu aeldrH> 01 ,,... lnllftOl<I trM1\ler0< 11e
Tll•S burnwu 11 condu< IPCI bY •" In dlYtClull Thi\ •lat..._ wiu 111oc1 wllll IM Fell. n. It, 26, lti'Mcll s. "'1 72'-tl 1111. Y. LtwtQ. ""52 Red C:O.Cll Orin, ""1\y UW petition IW <lllMIQe of l\aMI ,
Hu"t1noCo11 8"c.ll, c.111ort11a t:i.47. lftoutd 1111t •or anted. Ca II fornia Probate Code.
I(, N. WEBER, 107 Main Slretl, B•tDot, Calll0<nl•
Goldt n Oak 1.,.,.,,.,,,,,,, 4 IT IS FURTHER OltOEltEO lttal • R 0 B E R T L , w•ti.r B H-•orsl Coun1y Ctttll of Of'~ County on ----
Fet>ruery 1~. lttl PUBLIC NOTICE T11is tlllemenl .... 111.0 wllll ,,.,.
Couniv Clerk ol 0••"99 Cownty on Feb 10, 1,.1
,.,,.,.,,
Pwl>ll..,,.., Oranoe CINI\! 0111, Piiot,
,UUl4 ftD 1t, Mat. S, 11, 19, 1911 -.e1
Publtllleel ()rangie CM•I 0•1ly Pilot,
Fol> 12, 19, 1•. Mar<ll s. ltll l>t-tt PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS
NAME STATEMENT l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS Tnt following persons er• doing NAME STATEMENT 0..$1r>eU es
Tiie ra11-•no P«'IOI\ h doing bu>I • A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS, J6G
~!~~011"":...~:'.~. Pt.,~P. ~~~ ~':.;'11~11:•1~e "'o~ ~°:'::..ii: HU.MPHR~YS, 881 Dover
----111910n hecl\,CAIUt«nl•tM7. • 11•••P•P1• or ,,,,.,., clrcwt•lfon Drtve, Suite 33, Newport
F1CT1T1ousaus•NESS ,...i11tee1 In0r.,... County, c.111ornl•. Beach, Ca. 92b63. (714)
MAME STATUAENT CalVln M. Leung once • -lot, __ , ............... 645-2710
TIM IOltowlno "''-.. Clolnt """ Tiiis '"'-' ••• llled wn11•111e prior lo u. dtlt ... for N•lno Oft Ille p bl. hed 0 c t nou •~ cown1y c'"' o1 Oranoe c°""'' on Ptllllon. u IS range oas R . o c o N s T R u c T 1 o N Marc11J,1 .. 1. 011.0: Fellr'uar., 11, 1•1 Daily Pilot, March •. 5, 11,
M .. NAGEMENT CO., 11.,1 Cowan, PU7tM R-ICIH. PY•-1981 1078 81
lrvlno, C.lllornl• 9Z7U Pwbll"'9el Or..-ioe Coast Oall., Pilot, • Rlel'lfrd M Dellon. Jr . SOD) River Marcll s. 11, 19, 1•. "" 1202 .. 1 J"°'119 o1 Irle Avenw•. N-p0rt S.e<ll, Ctlllor,.I• S...S.rlar eo...1
91"3. Pul>lllhtd 0reft91t Coa~I Oall'f Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE
The loc•llon 1n Ct11torn1• or ltw
clllel u1ct111•0 o111eo"' princlpal ti..t•
M U Olli« OI Ille lnt..-el lr .. sl.-OI'
h wmeasaoo ...
All otl\., l:IUl!IWU namu ena •Cl drtue1 ustd t>y Ille lnltneltel lf•MIHot ""4ttlln lllrM ve•n llSI PISI
ID tor es known to '1111 lnle"eltd lronsl• .. •s en -..
Tll• namH AllCI """,." •Clel•HS ot ,,... lnlttnde<l lrWulerOI' er•·
Marion H Hall«rt. Sar.., H Vtr
ble, Elise R. Hwll, lllO S... M•llu•I Newport Buell, C•ltfornla tl!MO nt\• es· Cleo SI .. U9UM 8"<.1<. CA. 9201 u~· TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC Ml<llMI c Jow-.nol. l60 Cleo SI.,
-PAOOUCTIONS, I~ Flemlngo Otl"t L•gwna BelCll, CA, 9'2651
Tiiis busllw~• Is cOftd<lctoel by ~n '"' PUBLIC NOTICE Feb. 26. MM t. ll. 1t, 1,.1 91j..•I OaDeR TO SHOW CAVIE flOlt
OUUIOE 01' NAME dlYtelUIL
Alert.rd M. Oallon, Jr. l'ICT1nous aus11tau PUBLIC NOTICE CAY NUMa•• A-te1ru
Tllal lllt properly ~11....,1 llereto is
du crlbeel In ge,.rel u . lurnllllre, rt•
lu•u. equlpmM1 tnel mortnanpise •ftCI Is loc•l•d •I 101 Mein Strot l
81lbot, c.alilotnl•
FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS , .. ,. Meso, Calll0<nl1 Uta. Oevlel c. Jo..-. 2116 Rwby Pl.,
NAME STATEMENT Ronald K Mt Connellu, !H • La9une 8H<ll, CA. 92•51 Tiit lollowl"g persoM oro do1n9 F lamingo Drive, Co st• Mue, Tiiis ti..slrwu Is coneluclod bY 1
.... ;oln~~·.rLANO TILE co ,, .. ·-Calllornla .,.. V•Mrtl parlrwts1'11p .., Tiiis bu\lntSJ h <onducl-4 by an In Mlc'-1 c Jou-.nal Cotti H...,,. L.....-. Bea<ll, CA tUSl ellvleluel Tiiis lltlenwnl w .. Iii.cl with 1,_
Cn•rlu G Rclll'f. 11 .. So, CCNISI R K M<:ConnoMI Counly Clerk ol Or.,11t County on ..... , 'LIQUl\I Beech, CA 92651. Tiiis , .. ,.....,,, ... , '""' •1111 ,,.. F 0 2 l'ltl
Suun It Persons, 17 .. So Coast Coun11 Cl trk ol Or•"llA '°""'" on ' ruary 4' • l"IS4SIM
Hwy . L•QOMW lleecll. , .. 976SI Feb 11, '"' Put>llllled Oranoe Cot•I O•ltv Piiot, Tiils bu\lnt\s 1$ uwtelucreel bY •n tn FUJ10 F•D 2• . ...., ~rth S, 12, It, 1911
Cll•ICIUAI Pul>l lllW<I Orango Coll! 0111'( Piiot, •n·••
CN•IH G. Rt Illy Foo ''· 1•. Mat<ll S, u. "" 131 ., Tiiis stalemenl was Ill.a wllh lho
<;ounly Ciera. 01 Oo n91 Co..nly on ftll 10, l .. I
FtSSS7' PublllolleCI Or-Co.st Deity Piiot,
Feb U, tt.1•, Merell S. Itel 111-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUllNHS NAME STATl[MINT
T II• lollowln9 Ptt\Oftt .,, dOlnQ butltltu ..
'SUNFLOWER Tl~AVEL," 1515
Mew VOl'de 0.1 .. E11I, Cot•• -...
Catllornl• '161'. Dotlll Bini, 1939 Pott CtrlWY, Newporl 8ee<.ll, Calll0<nle '1WO.
J .. nnettt elrel, Int Port Carne,,
Newport Baa<tt, Calllorlll• tllt60.
Tiiis ~nou I• conclueteel by en 111 dlvldual.
Detell Bird Tllll Jltl-1 Wit llleel Wtlll 1r.
Cow"l'f Cler• ol Or•nve Cownty 011 Feb 11, Ull. ... ,. .. ,
Publltfttd Or-C.0.SI OellJ Piiot,
Fttl It, 2'. ~r(ll S, 11, 1 .. 1 ttl t i
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS ausu•ESS NAMIE STATUOIEHT
The lollowtn9 peraona ore C1oln9
bU,\M\\ ·~ JERRY & VAN PU81.ICATIOffS,
J00-4, E•\I C-\1 Hlghwey, Ntwpot1 801cll, Celllwrtl• 9lWO.
J 1mn E Poll.r tor Gtr•ld
Oe11osi-, nW Cr..-Circle. L..eO Forni, C.llloml• t~
Gcr11e1 0er1 .. 11on. 21•» Claude Circle, Leite Fw"'· Celllomia t2'J2.
Ven A. Franco, 1 .. 1 Mew Drive. Cot I• M• ... C.lllornla 92'2'
Tiiis OWlltwU Is COt'ldYCltd Dy a g•MUl -lnenl\lp
<Ur•ld Oe•IO\llon Tiiis ~l•l-1 WAI llled Wltll lllt
county Clerk ot Oren91 Cowftlv Oft Feb 10, 1•1
l'UH•
Put>llslleel Oranoe Coest O•llJ Pllof, Feb u , "· u . Merell s. 1111 7ll .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
H7UM
l'ICTI Tl OUI IUllN HS MAMI: STATEMaNT
Tiie lollowlnt persona ••• elol11g t>Usl,,.u as:
LEERVE'S FLORIST, 110U
Ewclld Ave"ue, Garden Grove Celllornla fUCI, '
Slltron In.In, nt So. O.•, Orange, C.lllotnl• 92'60
Sllt•ol'I Mll<Mll, 21t So Ota, Ortnoe. c.tllornle f:IWO.
S...ort ''""' Slwlt on Ml tcl\tll
Tiiis ttotement •M lllod wllll 1119 c ou111, Cl.,k 01 Orange COYnl'f on
F.-IJ.1 .. 1'1Ul11
Put>llOIWd 0r...., C.0.11 O•lly. trell.
It, 1', Ma~, 12, 1'11__ ~
PUBLIC N.OTICE
Tlll1 Stal-I WAS flltcl witll Ille Cownty Clerk ol Or•n9e Co..,.ty on
Marcll J, 1'111
FIS7M7
Publllheel Or-Cotti O•ll'f Piiot, Merell s. I,, 19, , •. 1'191 IOS+el
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINESS HAMii STATEMENT
Tiit 1011-1119 person is doln9 bll•I
n•u •s.. LA BIBLIOTEC". CULINARY
INFORMATION SERVICE, P 0 Boa llMI, U IS Elelen A-. (Olla Mew,
Calllorn11 mn. Herber! K. Alln, H1S Elden
A••nut. COit• ,,... .. , C•lllornta '1•27. Tiii\ buSINSt h conclucleO b'f an In
dlvldwel.
-rtlt.Alln Tllh 1tt1-nt was llleel wllll lht
Cownty Cl••• ot Oranoo CounlJ on
""•"" J, 1'11 1'1S1Nt
Pwbll•"ed Orenge Co.ti! Ot llJ Piiot,
Merell s. 12, "· 26, 1•1 IOSJ.11
PVBUC NOTICE
NAMe ST.ATEMINT In lltt ¥Mier of ... AllPl l<etlon d
The lollowlng persons ere doing ----------NEHAO KOSTIC, aka NISHA
bY1lntu1s: ~ICTITIOUSaUllN•U MICHAEL PATTERSON, lot Cl\a .... NIN"'S RECORD SHOP, 121 No. NAMa ITAT•MINT of Heme.
Anllltlm Boul•verd, Anellelm, Tiit following -ton It Clol119 l><lsl· HENAO KOSTIC, eke NISHA Calllo1nl1 '2IOS. ,.. .. H : MICHAEL PATTERSON llAI 111.-1 1
Cell• Ctmec:llo. '411 Oe'f(OM Cir· Ill ROCKWELi. AEltO-SAFE peCICI .. In 11\11 c-1 lar.,, °'"'' ., . <II , Hunllntlon Bu ell, C•lllornl• TECHNOLOGY, ,,, ROCKWELL lowlno pellll-r 10 cllanve lllwller
92U.. /'l:RO·S.AP'IE OESION$, SMt Mc Fad· neme lrom NEHAO KOSTIC to NISHA Hin• Ctma<llO, '411 0.rtona Cir· dtn, Unit ·o·. HUl'ltlnocon B .. cll, MICHAEL. PATTllRSOH.
Cit, Hunlfl'lgton Buell, C•lllornl• Callloflllt ,,..., It It,......, ordlrecl lhet •II --~ K•lll N. Roc--1, P.O .... 204. , ... , ... " ... II\ 11\e matter tloteald '4>·
Tii i• bwltMSI h COt'ldY<l•CI b., • Cosl• 'MAN. C.lllornl• t>t27; ,..1 .... , ~· ,,., C0..'1 In o..,.,.,.....,, 11•nt••l 1Mr1Mnlllp. , Mc F'4N911, Unlc 'O'. H""tl"9toft BHcll. No. i •I rao crv1c een1 ... ore ... wnt.
c..1 .. c.mac11o CA.HM' ,Sllnte AN, Cllllotl'llo, on Ac>fll I, 1911,
Tiiis JC•f-t ... 111..i wllll ,,.. Tiiis lllMIMll 11 c..-.Cteel llY.,, Ill· j•I 11:ao o'<loc:ll •.m .. -1r." •no
Covnly Clerll of 0••1199 COUt'lly 011 dlvldu•I. ,.,..,.e -<-. II "'Y llwy ...... Ma"ll J, 1 .. 1. l(ent H. ltoclr-11 wlly Mid Ptlll.., tar CNn9t 01 name flll7W Thlt lht-w• llltd •1111 Ille "*'tld tlOf 119 Ql'., .. el.
Publlllwel Oranoe c .. tt 0111., Pllof, Count., Cltrll of Oranoe Co..nly 011 J 11 I& '""""' arcM<'eel lhel • copy ot Merell s. 12. "· u , 1"1 1o..t1 Falt. 10, I... tlllt °"*r to ,,_ c..,.. tte pullllthed ~1""1 111 Off11oe Coall O•ll'f Piiot. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTITIOUI IUllNell
NAMI ITAT•Ma•T
P~r.-Or-. Coatt 0.llJ Piiot, 11e••I''"' of Ofl'l1t•I ctrewl•llOt1, , ... 12,2',MMCllS, ltll • .,.., ...... lfleel HI 11111 COWllY ....... once.
• _ .. for '°"' tonHC:ull.,. -kt llf'lor PUBLIC NOTICE Co CM ny of ttld Marino.
Tiie IOllowlng per-Is dolnt bull· •
rwuu:
Oaled F...,.,.., It, ltll
lt-ldH.~mer f'ICTIT\OUS aUICNISI Jlldle ol IM NAMl ITAT•M•NT s..tnar court Ill P.R.0 .11.E., m PROFIES$10H
RESEARCH ORGANIZATION FOlt BVSINIE$S IEH1'"EPREHIEUaS, (J I,
UH I TIEC>-AMERICA COftPOltATIOH, Sil A,,..Mlt 0..lw, C..-dtl IMf,
C•lllornl• nus.
He1-. G . ..Umey, sn "" .. ""' Orhtt , Cor-del Mer, C.lllornle
"'"· Tiiis IMA!rwst ,, UNl\ICIM lly ... "'"
l"<oroor.ild -••tloft octwr 11\al'I • pt'tnar-tNp, ,.....,, (), M¥Ny
Tiiis tl...,.... -llltd Wltll 1M Coul'llY Cl«t< of 0r.,,.. COlllll'f on Merell J, ltll. . .. . ., .. ,
Pullll.,.., Or .... c;oe,1 a.It., Piiot.
Mat<ll S, U, It, tt. 1"1 tOSUI
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tllo foll-Ing PtrlOftt et• doing At.LA• M.oQM
o.it111eu es: ... c...,,, f'wtl Ent. Wt• m aesT MAR KETING A!> U. ........ CAMU SOCIATE$, 1• L099" A-.... Cotta Teti Utlll71..n6
Mtw, C•lllot'nlat»». PW!llllleel 0r.,.. Coast 0.11, Piiot Artllwr C. Pucocll, Sr., ltOI ""· 1t, tt, AMf. s. 12. 1911 .. »i1 Welltll•m Piece, Senti ,.,,,,
C.llrttllla '270t Wllll•m w. B.,rlo . l'O Grand AYtllWt, Apt. • S, 1.0110 Beecll,
C•ll,...1'14• tolOI.
Jemtt N. CIMllt, '1$1 Jua"'Ca,
,.,.,,. ... c.lllornl• ...
This CWlfllfll 11 CO/lducted h a .. ,..,.,~
A.C. fliaKO<ll.. $r, TlllS Ital-I WAI llleel Wllll Ille
CO\Hl\Y Clerll et 0••"9' Cownty on
~r<llJ.1 .. 1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
""* f'ICTITIOUI •UllN•U
UM•ITATeMEltT Tiit lell .. lfll Jll«Hlll .,. CIOlflO l>YtllWHM:
CRIST TltOPHY & AW41t0$.
llQ ae1 ... ,,,,..,,.,. City, Celltorlll•
ttUS. AllfUll• l.OUI" c;, .. 1.,, IU E. PIUtM .. '"4'ty Plett, $91111 Ma, C•lllernle P .... lllltd 0r"'419 CMtt Oelly Pll.t, ftlll.
Merth S, 12. It,». 1 .. 1 11M141 ~ LOUC .. .IOM$Oll, tlS IE.
PtJ8UC NOTICE
••...,IY Pl••· s.nce Ma, Calltotlll• '2101. •
Tiiie ......... It cottekltl•d llY • ........ _,i.nNp,
Ailltalli LwlM Cr-'9'f o.r.t"' WlllM ~ 1'1119 .....,_,. •• llltd •1111 '"" C-tr Cltrti of 0r...-Qwn1., .,. ...... ,, ,.,, .. ,_,
,,.., ..... O' .. Qliett Delly Piiiot,
..... 1t, 16. ~ J, It, 1"1 171.fl
"18UC NOTICE
Tiie l>ui"-u name USO<! by Ille WICI
lr•nsl•ror 11 said loc•llon 11. It N Wobtr Je-ol"J
Tllal Mid t>Ylk tr.,sl• IS tlllfneled to
l>t con\umm•lod al Ille olllte of Oavtel P. O.u.nc,, Esq t211 Newport
":enter 0r1 .... 5'>11elll,Hewport s.ac11, Celltornto 9'26611on or all•r Fobn.ary 11,
1 .. 1. Tiits bYI~ lran1lor Is s11bJecl lo
Cell rornle Vnllorm ComMOrclet c-S.cllon 6106. Tiie name and address of Ille_...,,
•1111 wllom ctalms may bt filed Is
Oavld P. O•L•t1<'f, 0 0 Newport Center Ori.,., Swllt 111, Hewoort
Btatll, Calllonll• eH60. -tllt .... ~ • ., lor llllnt Clelm\ l)y .,.., '""'"°' loll•ll 1>t F.-., 11, lttl, wlll'I\ IJ IN
t>Y•lntH div belw• 11'e '°"""""''"on Clele JPKlll.-1 .-. 011-4: l'e«INer., 11, 1911
Mat\Of\ H. HallttrP
Strei\ H. ller1>1e
EllM A.Hull 01:\.ANCY . NUNf 6
l"IHSTaltMAl<llt utN._tC.•Orlve,
1410• 211
New"" 99Kll, CA t2Wo9 Pwlllltntd C>anoe CMll Oelly Pllol,
Feb It, ltll IS7 II --------Pt)BLIC NOTICE
ST A TildNT O'iAiAMDOii"'11t'iieT
Ol'USIOf' l'ICTITIOUS au101•u NAME
Tiie loll-Ing ..._,. l\a'" Mfll· CIOlltel Illa 11W of tlW Flclltl-9"sJ·
MU Name. fl.GIN PAltTHEllSHIP, 1161 H•ll .. Dame ltNd, Coelf Me ... CA .,.,_,
TIM P'lctllioYI euss-H•-,... lerreel to attove was lllecl In 0r .. ve
Cownly on .._,btr '· 1'71. "LI
HO. F.-S.
fl ldltnt V-Y'. Utt Notrt 0.me
ROH, Gatta Mna, CA nt»
Mart"" LltHI, 21052 Stra"""-L.ent. HUf'lllftt'on 9Ncl\, C.A ttt46. flllt ~ wt~ <ONllK ... by II
llnllltd _,,,...,... Me,_UCze4
Tiiis ~I ... llltll .S91 IHt
Cowntr C .. rll ol ou.,.. C..,.y Ofl F......... ..... ~ Puetl.,_ 0r8flflt CM'4 Dtill' P'li.\,
FM. It, 1f, Jlt., MIH'dl S, net 1"'4'1
P\IBLIC NOTICB
..
Rainfall
·10 fade ...
tonight
A hit·and·run storm that struck
some areas with deluges and
thunder and left others cold but
dry was predicted to diminish to-
day ..
Once the current rainstorm
passes through pursued by a low
pressure system behind it, says
U.S. Weather Service forecaster
Andy Chagi, clear weather wiJI be
on the horizon at least until next
week.
Chagi reported the average
rainfall throughout the Southland
is about a half-incl\ while snow
levels were lowered to4,000feet.
"Some places might not get
anything," he said.
...............
t
OHANGL L.UUN I Y LAL If Ofl NIA 25 CE.NTS
Youth saved
Irvine boy has brain surgery
•sAN DIEGO (AP) -After 75
hours of brain sur1ery. Universl·
ty of California doctors say
t hey've saved the llf~ ofa 15· year·
old Irvine boy with a brain lesion
twicetbesizeof an orange.
Steven Greth underwent five
stages of s\irgery to untangle
arteries and veins ensnarled
throughout one-eighth of his
brain.
In urn, doctors in Los Angeles
diagnosed his headaches as an
arteriovenous malformation, or
AVM . But Carol Greth said "they
coulddonotbing''forherson.
hours, lhelongest20.
The A VM causes blood flowing
from the arteries to feed directly
into the veins that return to the
heart. As a result, oxygen and
nutrtents in the blood were
blocked from reaching cells in
Steven's brain, starving or malt·
ing them non-functional.
"It was absolutely out of the
q uestlon that it could be done safe· ly in one o~rallon," said surgeon
Hoi S. U, pronouncing Steven's
cure complete Wednesday.
The boy, who plans to return to
Irvine High School as a !
sophomore in September. said be:
was frightened through it all and '
wondered if he would be 1
permanently disabled or coma·'
lose.
"It was very diJficult," Steve.D •
said, adding "I don't want to talk
about it because I fell ashamed
because I was different." 1
Mrs. Greth said although doc·•
tors said he would s urely die ·
"Steven made the decision to go
and we backed him all the way.··
Dr. U's colleagues described it
as the most difficult of brain sur·:
ger ies, one which would have ·
been simpler in 1977 when
Steven'sAVM was muctrsmaUer. He said there may be showers
throughout the Orange Coast area
through tonight.
Orange County Flood Control
<See STORM, Page AZ>
STEVEN GRETH, 15, OF IRVINE WITH MOTHER
Spunky youngater aurvtvea 75 houra of br•ln aurgery
The first of five risky operations
to correct the potentially lethal,
congenital condition took place at
the University of California at San
Diego Medical Center last Oc·
tober.
There were others in December
and Jan. 21. The shortest was 13
"If you should go ahead and re-
move the lesion in one shot, what
happens ls that you completely
eliminate the shunt of blood from
arteries directly into veins and aU
of the blood is introduced to the
rest of brain, suddenly. and the
arteries may not be able to take it
arid the· whole brain can explode
inyourface.''
"It has to do with a surgeon's
skill," said Dr. U. "Some people
do this operation, and some peo·
pledon't. ..
LB water breaks wreak havoc
Sycamore Hills
$5.4 million
land deal off
A $5.4 million land deal
between Laguna Beach and the
Haywood Development Co. is
off. but council members have
agreed to extend negotiations
Lawyer gets .
• year te~ in
embezzlement
A Laguna Niguel attorney will
begin serving a one-year Orange
County Jail sentence March 27
afte r pleading guilty to one
count of grand theft in co$lec·
tlon with the embenlement of
$132,000 from a deceased client's
estate.
Richard T. Mudge, so. whose
offices are located in Laguna
Hills , also was ordered by
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Richard Beacom lo serve
three years' probation and dis-
continue the practice of law.
The sentence was imposed
Wednesday under terms of a
previous ly negotiated plea
bargain settlement between
Mudge's attorneys, Garvin
Sballenbarger and MarshaJI
Schulman, and Deputy District
Attorney Ri chard Huelsenbeck.
Mudge, of 33622 Halyard
Drive, was accused in a
criminal complaint filed in
December of embezzling the
money from the estate of HaMa
M. Childs, of Dana Point. Sbe
died Sept. 9, 1974. The embeazle·
ment wu alleged to have OC·
curred between October 1974
and April 1978.
Mudge declined to comment
on the case today on the advice
of his lawyers. They previously
said he was under financial and
emotional pressure al the time
<See IAWYEa, P-'le ~)
with the developer until Mly 2.
The rejection of Baywood's
proposal to purchase about 60
acres of Sycamore Hills from
the city leaves the door open for
other developers to make offers
after the May deadline.
And Mayor Wayne Baglln in·
dicated the city should have no
problem in finding another
buyer for the parcel, located
near Leisure World within the
522-acre Sycamore Hills area.
Council me mbers rejected
Haywood's offer Tuesday after
the land firm indicated the city
would have to accept the risk of
a subordinated note in order for
the developey-to obtain a con·
struct.ioo loan from the bank. ·
City officials claim they had
an oral agreement with Rancho
Palos Verdes Corp., the com-
pany that sold Sycamore Hills to
the city, s tating Rancho would
accept the risk s hould the
Haywood enterprise go sour.
But Rancho attorneys indicat-
e d recently that under no
circumstances will the company
accept a subordinated note. and
council members said they bad
no choice but lo quash the deal.
The ~.4 million would have
gone toward paying off a nearly
$7 million debt owed Rancho by
the city for the entire Sycamore
Hills parcel.
And city officials said the re-
je~tion of the Haywood offer,
after nearly three months or in·
tense negotiations, is dishearten-
ing.
By extending the negotiating
period to Baywood, the city is
hoping the Newport Beach~
based development firm can
submit an offer that does not in·
elude a subordinated note.
If not, the city wiJJ probably
make known its desire to sell the
parcel to another developer and
begin negotiations over again.
MeanwhHe, interest on the
mort1age to Rancho is m ounting
at abou\ $1,500 per day.
Fire all wet
Sprinkler tri~ OC tilann
Jt wu at 8:45 a.m . today wben tbe fire al..,.. ... fllf
ln the •·• million Ora.nee County Hall of Ad••a' &rlllMa Ill
Santa Ana. . "Commence evacuation procedun1," a .-e _...
vla the bulldina'• ftre warn.lDf 111tem.
TtlZ B•PLOYEU poured fortb. P ..... ._,..the
bulldiq'I lobby, bowever, they ~end tMre wu DO
ft.re . Not ev• 1moke.
WM« WU r~ clown from tbe buUdlDi'• HCODd
floor wben 1 ftn tptlnkler l1ltetD line f.911!l.,.r UDder the ... ••labt ol larse-di8..t. .._. cable* betJll lDltalJed to
make tbt WMtna 1tn1ct11r.OJ toad.
TD WOU WAI en.red after ltwdlel eoacluded the
ft ... _, WJdtalt.tfWd M ,.an.,.,, milbt collapee
lat11e...ao1 ................. .
._. Au "" DIMl1mlat rwpoaded to vacuum tbt
wat.ru.at...,.. llltotlie ........ nc'• Wed lobbJ.
Deily 1'1 ... ltaff -
LAGUNA WORK CREWS REPAIR RUPTURED WATER LINE ON CRESS STREET
Surge of preHure bf••k• aht Hnea; one may h•ve contr1buted to four-car colHalon
Glass ban enf orceahle?
Glass containers soon will be
outlawed on Laguna Beach sands,
but City Council members who
approved the new ordinance say
they don't know how they'll en·
force it.
The council voted 3·2 with
Mayor Wayne Baglin and Kelly
Boyd opposed, to enact a law that
prohibits glass articles on city
beaches.
Orange County supervisors re·
cenlly passed a similar ordinance
for county beaches, and Los
Angeles and San Diego counties
also have laws that prohibit vis·
ltors from taking glass containers
to the beach. ·
But even aa they approved the
new law Tuesday, members bad
their doubt.a such an ordinance
can beenforc~.
Sally Bellerue. who voted with
the c~il majority, said decals
ouUlnina the new law and applied
to·exisUng sl1ns at the entrances
to beaches will help.
She saidlt would be more of "an
educational experience" for via·
i&ors, •uaestina a wamin1 sign
mtsbt beeffecUve.
But Mayor Ba1Un said he
doesn't thlnk tbe new law will
work.
"Ourdolordlnance (leublaw)
ls a joke," he said. "We don't en-
Girl, 12, leave&
a trail of denta
SAN Dime> CAP) -In acme-
toe traclr abe "borrowed," •
12-year-old llrl bu left a tr.u ol
dntl ad ~and MdeltrtUI. Tb• truet wltb '.1 1'-foot
eneloeed vu hit two mo...,
can md·•.,.ned car, DUTOWIJ
mlulq ~..., belor'9 coaa-
lnl &o a lt.bp • UM lidewalk Wedneeday.
force it, e.nd we don't enforce our
tilter ordinance.
"We sit up here in our ivory cas·
lle and make these laws and then
don't make our lileguards enforce
them.
"We're not helping our image
or our 11.feguards, ·•he said.
LAX ineident
Baglin said the city would have
a lot less broken glass on the
beach lf it installed larger trash
containers.
The new ordinance faces a
second hearing in two weeks, and
if it isn't contested, will become
law a month later.
Gunman holds .9
aboard jetliner
LOS ANGEL~ CAP> -A ski·
maake~ 1unman with an
"automatic ,.-eapon and an ex-
plosive device" held nine people
aboard a Pboeni:a-bound COn·
Unental AlrliDel letllner today
at I.-':f::• naternaUOft.al Airport, a rltles said.
C'oadnental IDOkelmaD John
Clayton 1aid •tie boet.111 1n·
eluded lffeD pa11en1era and
two na..-au...daata aboard tbe
Boel., m. wblcb wa1 to be
towed from the t.nnlnal area at
tbe ~··•demand. ~ ·~ellnow ..... aot •• .............. -... ploelH de•lce at\acbed to • ~... 1ald poltn oftlcer
ltatCG•1lly.
PoUot Lt. Du eoo.. •aid tbe ....... CAc ........... • ... ...-..as..-. .......... u. ...........
He'1 ..... a lltUe Mn'OUI," CoN• .......... ,.... tMn ..
too ma•J bl•U·••d·w1alte1 <pollee can> arouad. We'H
..... .,. ceetaet wttb bi•. -
be' a just 1ettln1 a little
nervous."
The terminal wu evacuated
and a police SWAT team moved
ln shortly after tbe hijacker ap.
pareatly lliDDed tbroqh airport
security ana-eontronted a ftlpt attend8at wldle ,..._,.,. were
boardlal U'OUDd t :IO a .m . 1be bijacar UI ..._ apeulq wttb
auu.ortdls o... tbe airliner'• tn-
tereoa • •0v U4leratandln1 la tbe
eoellplt ..,. Oaehadlal pilot
......... ) --bf' ...
r..-......... -···· a..'' ae,c. Mid: ....... .... .... .. to ...... brtele ... lalll ol ..,....._,, .
A tollee llelleopter biftnd o•erfMtad. C.rlou oaloMen ........................
iM cwt111d4" .......... .. .. ., ...... ~ ...
oat.•• Mid llrpOl'l•..-...._ ..........................
armed wltla a .tl-callbH •utola8tle .•• ,.
Woman
seriously
injured
By STEVE MITCHELL °'..,. o.11, l'I._ s...i .
A surge on the line which blew
out water pipes in six areas of.
Laguna Beach may have con-
tributed to a four-car accident
near Emerald Bay where tons of ·.
water gushed across Coast ·
Highway.
A Newport Beach woman re-
mains in serious condition at·
Mission Community Hospital as 1
a result of Wednesday's acci· f
dent. '
Meanwhile, Joe Sweeney, I
Laguna Beach County Water I
District manager, said repairs
had been made to all pipelines •
by late Wednesday afternoon. :
and water service was restored I
to upper Emerald Bay , the I
downtown area and homes along
the coastal strip.
The most critical break was in
an 18-incb feeder line of the in·
land side of Emerald Bay which
burst at about 9: 15 a.m., sending
a river of water across the busy .
highway. !
Carol Boyle, 48, of 2915 Broad ·
St., Newport Beach was listed in
stable but serious condition by •
hospital spokesmen. '
Police gave the following ac-!
count of the four-car collision:
Christine Sharp, 35 , of San 1 Clemente, was driving her
s ports car on Coast Highway
when she encountered the water.
Her vehicle b ega n to
hydroplane and she lost control
of her car which ente red Ute
southbound lal'les, striking a
Volvo driven by Janice Weeks,
24, of Leucadia.
Immediately after that col·
lision, Carol Boyle , 48, of
Newport Beach, was driving her
Ford Mustang north on Coast
Highway. She applied her
brakes as she entered the wet
area and promptly lost control
of her car.
Her .vehicle skidded lnlo a
northbound food van driven by
(See WATER, Pa1e A%)
lllllll l:MIT WIATlll l
Chance of rain 50 per·
cent tonJght, 20 percent
Friday. Gusty winds at
times. Lows tonl1ht 48
alon1 t.be coast, 52 inland.
H11hs Friday 55 to 80.
111111•1
Th• Oro•1• C•M•tw
Ph ....... :llowr'• ......
fftobtl• o•••h C•lllorttica
School lft Co.Ca ·"'''°· &.c dOf'll , ~.,,. 85.
11111
aponry
__ uliiliml,l .
81.IOllN NI DRAM ...................
The Vnl'4d StlltM already bu
eoou1h n~•tv mllall• to bit
Yery PGIMl.laUoD ud lftdlastrial
center In tM SovlM thlloa Mveral "mes over.
' Den loplnf adcllUonal WHpona •
1ystems will oaty nable us to ro·
rran1etbe nabble.
That's the UHSSment ol Dr.
U 11trvin Goldbeuer. oruident ol
the California Institute ot
Technology in Paudena, and an
outspoken critic or the nuclear
arms race. •
Speaking at UC Irvine Wed.Des·
day· night. Goldberger said
several "flash points" around the
world have the poteotiaJ to draw
the United States and the Soviet
Union into a nuclear exchange.
·'The war between Iran and
Iraq could flare a global en·
counter whjch could lead to a pre·
emptive strike by the United
States or the Soviets,"
Goldberger told the nearly 80 peo·
pie at the talk sponsored by theAJ.
liance for Survival, a group op·
posed to nuclear weapons and
nuclear power
He sajd the insecurities and
confusion created by the threat of
an interruption in the flow of oil
from the Middle East could lead
Soviet and U.S. leaders to weigh
the advantages of launching a
rirst strike.
·'In the United States at the pre·
sent timer have heard some crazy
things about our lack of military
prowess.·· Goldberger said.
·'Some have suggested that we
<;ould fight and win a nuclear war.
Tn my opinion anyone who could
say that is certifiably insane "
Goldberger. who 1s a mem berof
the National Nuclear Safety
Ov ersight Committee, said the
Untted States and its allies have
io.OOOstrategic nuclear weapons.
He sajd the Soviets are believed
to have 6,000 and the South
Africans and Israelis probably
have nuclear strike capabiliUes
or soon will have.
·'Ten o f these s trate gic
weapons would be sufficient to
wipe out all population and in·
dustrial centers in the Soviet
Union," Goldberger said. "How
can wefeelthreatened?"
· Goldberger added that there
are 5,000 towns in the United
States with populations over
5,000 Con<'eivably the Soviets
~ould tut every one of those towns
and still have l.000 missiles left.
The Cal Tech president said a
!f tudy conducted by the Federa
Uon of American Scientists found
·Ir 20 one-megaton bombs were
dropped on Los Angeles, t'Quallng
lhe power of 20 million tons or
TNT. an area of 1,200 squur<'
miles would be w1J)t!d out
That area could include· tht•
cities of Los Angeles, Hurbunk,
,Glendale, Pasadena. Silntu Ana,
Seal Beach, Long fft•ach und
,Points 1n bet wt'en
Fro• ra11• Al
WATER.
Eugt•nt• Br own ,
WestmtnstC'r
• •
4 1 , 11 f
Ms Boyle wu s hHlt•d 10 1>t1tbli"
but serioui; condition at M 1111111111
C'om munity llospltal toduy
Brown was not !4er1<1u11ly nurt
tn the accident, pollN• Huld , untl
the other two wom<•n wnc t11kNl
to South Coa11t Mt•d1ca~t..r
...,here they wer<' trc:atl!d~ unfn-1·
leased
Water district otr1<-1ah1 11i11cJ ~
r apid change in water prc>11111Jr1•
caused the surl(c. which hur11t
the pipelines
Crews from Lul(unu Bt·uc·h,
the South Coast County Wu~r
District. Newport Deurh 1m1I
Costa Mesa repaired thtl llnN1
before nightfall.
Breaks were ruport11d m1
Cress Sleet above Cit tallna , <.:hi
qulta Street on the occ.rnn 1lde of
the highway ; Oorr. RtrtJtJt
between Legion and El Camino
del Mar : and 11ervlC'e brt1ak11 on
Cypre111 Drive and t.o 8r«i1
Street.
Water presauru w11 reduced
to a dribble at homet near the
plpellne break•. but wort back
to full 1tren1th by even Inf.
Sweeney said crew1 at II have
to repair t hree leaky valvea
along the system, a nd road
crews will be resurt1ctn1 1lreet.1
soon.
Of'ANGI COAST
•
BLASTS A"MI MCI ~retUCt
Assembly
leader
visits OC
By GLENN SCOTT °' 111e o.11, ~, ... s .. tt
State Assembly Speaker WilJle
Brown was the guest or honor at
a closed-door luncheon at the
Fluor Corpor ation in Irvine.
Brown, who put together a
coalition of Democrats and
Republicans to capture the As·
sembly speakership, met with
about 40 local business leaders
and the five members of the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors Wednesday.
fl was an unus ual move for the
San Francisco Democrat to be
entering the lion's den of con·
servatism. But Brown reported·
ly made the trip to assure com-
munity leaders that he doesn't
intend to use his new power to back onJy liberal causes.
Fluor Vice President Thomas
E lli ck , who is active irf
Republican politics, s aid the
meeting was ar ranged through
fo rmer s t ate Sen . Dennis
Carpenter, who is Orange Coun·
ty's new Sacramento lobbyist.
Asse m blyman Richard
Robinson, D·Garden Grove, also
attended the private meetinJ at
Brown's request, Ellick said, to
show that Brown is interested ln
mending rlft.s that occurred dur·
ing the political right for the
s peakership.
Robinson had been a atrong
backer ol AssemJ>lyman Howard
Berman of Los Angeles.
Elllck 1ald Brown was well re
celved by the elite crowd, which
he said lncludud prealdenlJi or
major compunle11 who ure C'On
slder cd "ht•uvy h lllt-rli " In
polltlN&I c-lrt'h!11
If Brown wuntt·1I lo v1111t
Oran"e C:ounly lo t•onvc•y hl11
nl'w uttltud1>, fo;ll lt·k uld, "ht<
ICUrt•ly llUCCt!edN1 ..
fo: v t• n thou " h u 11 l'll u n t y
11u1a·rvl11or11 ut•c·eptt'CI lnv1t11U11n11
to Utlt!nd Hrnwn '11 lunc•hm1n
11pt•t•(•h und lh•• en1min1e qu•••tltm
and un11w1ir JH!riod , tho llft•llll
wu not ullowNt to atlt•nd
l'hut dN·h1ion rnhwtl '1uo11t111n11
of whoth•ir tht• lntc•nt of 11tnlt•
011~·n m••t•UniC h1w1 wu11 vlolut.c+1I
by ttw •ui14•rvl1111r11 In uttM<tlnlC
th1• 1>rlv1tlA• affair
<"hulrm1rn llblph ('lurk 11n
n ,, u n (' ,. ti II t t h •• I' I 11" ,. II (
W t' d 0 I• II (J ll y ' II Ii 11 II r ti 11 f
"up1•rv111or11 ' met<ttnr, th•l thC'
1•n11u1nac luncheon 111< n'l BJIPN•r
t11 vl11l11tr th1• rt11IJ1h M Urown
A1·1 i>1•1•uu.1tr the• 11 u1H·rvl11or11
wnr not 1e11ln11 to 1h•llht•ratc• In
t>rl VU Ir
(' 11 u n I )' (; o u n '"' I A d r I a n
t<u yswr 11111'1 thr l1tw prohlhlt• M
""' J11rlly rrl lr1l11l11tl vc: bodle11 ,
11 u1•h u• lht• bo.rd, from dl'
llt1f!r11tlnN lt1 11vrrnl, rll<'4'Pt on
vrr111mnrl ant1 llll1C1ttlon m•ttc•n.
li:lllt•k •Hitt thr Vf""" w1111 not
.1tllt1Wf'(I i.t th,. rnt•rtlnl( htir1au11ci
tiu.1tl nr1111 lratlftrll Inv It ml lo thc-
l urwhNtt1 w,.r,. told In 11dvance
Hutt lhf'y would ht• frew lo 1111k
hrnwn t1u•11U11n11 without worry
hHC 1t ljf111t vuMh' •••pcn.urc.
"f 1·11n't vl11l11tft th1t lnlU1d un·
"'r1tt1ridlt11C," hr ""Id
'rh .. flrowu Ac•t wn11 p1111cd ,..
n mum• to vrt<vent publicly
olotl•d hoi.rtlll from mootln1
•ocretl)'
AlthOU#h l'!lllt1k uld lhe
1upervlll4tf'11 mctJtly ll11tantd ctur.
ln1 th• uu•11tlon ind 1n1war
(>ttrlod, hf Hid lh1l Hupervltor
8ruct NQt1ndt did Hie nrown
hl1 optnton on bulldln• tott ro1d1
lo IOIYt frHWI)' con•••Uon.
Dilly Piiat MAIN °'1'1CI
Thoma P. Hatty ........
Robert N. Weed ........
~hofn .. KHVll
ThomM A. Murphlne ...... 1 .....
~~:.:..
~d &chutm1n
~e.s=.,e.n
~erdJf,
UO Wt•I ley S. .. ( .. la WM, f4, Mall...,. ....... ,,.. ( .. It
The Oran1e Co~ty Board of
Superviaon hq act.tel to euure
tbat conatructlon of new homes
alon1 tho lr~int Coast between
Corona dtl Mar and Lacuna
Beach doeln't obltruct Ylewt of /
1xl1lllne rt1ldenta.
. That act.ton came Wednesday
durtn1 1 re1onin1 of the 9,52'7·
acre ooa1Ulne between the two
oommunltle1 tr om an
a1rtoultural area to a planned
community.
Supervisor Thomas Riley ln·
cludtd ln the rlnal vote aUpula·
lions that plans for new homes
adjacent to exl1t1n1
nei1hborhoods must Include ll·
luatraUona showtni ocean views
from adjacent homes In Cameo
Shores ln South Corona del Mar
before and after construction.
Residents or the nei1hborbood
had objected that new homes
could cut ofr their ocean views.
The rezdnin1 1ives the Irvine
Company preliminary approval.
to build up lo 225 houses In the
planning area . But Peter
Herman, Riley's aide In land use
matters. said Wednt111day that
current company plans call for
cons truction or only 74 houses In
the area.
However. befor<' uny road!!
are built or utility lines ex
tended, the C'ompany mu11t ob
lain approval of Its plnnR from
the s tute Coastul Comml1udon.
Plans ure scheduled to be 11ub
mi tted t o the South Coust
Regional Coastal C'ommls11ion
by the middle of this month, said
Jerry Collins , u co mpany
s pokesman The s tule com
mission could consider the mat
ter in mad Muy, he udded.
In exchange for approval to
build up to about 2,000 housmg
units on the property, the com·
pany is offering to dedicate 2,600
acres of undeveloped la nd to the
county. That land would remain
as open space even if other
acreage set aside for a proposed
national park in the area is not
bought by the federal govern·
ment, Collin s said. ·
A development agreement
that would detail construction
phases and land dedications wiU
be sought by the company from
the county within six months, he
added.
F,....P-.eAI
STORM •.•
District 1pokt-1m1n Rob
Morol1nd 1udd th~ current 1torm
fl<'Comp&mled by thuncltir<'l•Pll 111
u llttlt-bit hlurrt1
Sitddlt-lmrk 1•1•11k, for .. 1u11nplti ,
h1111 rf!C•t1lv1·<1 only 2 7 lnrht1• of
ruin from llw <'Ul't1111l 11lorm i.lon1&
with u c·om1111ruhl11 1:1 fl lnc•hm1 of
1 ul11 to<l11lt•
l.Ulil )'l!ll f UI lhlll llllltl lh.,
hhchr•I 11e1l11t of luncl In Orf*llMti
<'11unty hu1I rc<•11tv4•cl l)H 3 lnt'h41•
M11rt1l11ncl •ulll thh1 Iii htll'&1U11uof
whut tw turm11 1·11111 rt1ll11, whlc•h
1Jr1111 tr1Hn11r1tl11u1i un11111r11 11 ot
wulc•r 111 c•1•rtuh1 11rcu111 tluu l11 lht1
11utt11rn11 of hliih und low 11rC11mr••
11y1111~ m11I11vol v11d
"1'hn pt•ia k Iii ulwuy11 •11 llllll'h
hltehc•r In rulnf 1111," hu 1u Id
No 11rrlo11111t11111Ml£l' w101 ruJM1rt
NI In 1tw 1·111rn1y chu• lo lht• lut1111t
'll11rrn
Mort1l11nd uld ('0til11 M••u rt•
colvc•d l 13 lnt•h1!11 In th1• 2A hour•
.-.ndln•1tth m
lianh• Anu r t•t•lvc•d 6.'I lnchll•
for the.• •~mr pt"rlod
Ho far thl• yuar, th<' county 11aat
hH rc-col\ll'd 7 32 lnchci1'. 1. .. t
yt1.1r'" totul WH 19 26 lnchc11.
Tht' 24·hour 11lorm total In Hunt·
lnf(lon Baich w11 I "lnche11.
'rhc 11e1Aon '11 total1119.82 lnchoa,
whllf' lftltt year Huntington Beach
hud lo1«1C!d 19.281nche11.
Son Ju11n Cupl11trano'1 official
weather wutcher, Adele Hankey,
monitored t. L2 Inches or rain for
lhe 24·hour period ending at8 a.m.
today.
Two power fallure11 In Newport
Beach occurred early today but
authortlle• uld they are not aure
they were caused by the 1torm.
Both occurred In under1round
vaulla.
One 1lruck at 1:53 a.m . knock·
lnJC out power to 1 ,~5 customers
In the E11tblulf area, accordina
lo Southern Calltornla Ediaon
Company 1pokeam1n Jim Ken·
ntdy.
,,...p,.-AJ
LAWYER •••
th• tmbt11ltment occurrtd.
Court document• •how that
tho monty w11 repald, witb ln·
ttr11t, lon1 btfON tho crtmtn1J
complaint wat fUtd .
Wllh credit for 1ood bthavt~1 lludt• eouJd bt lrttd trom Jau
alter Mr¥tna 1Ulhtly more than
tt1ht IDOlldll of the HDtnce .
lludp MW IU1 law practice ta
bttn1 ......S b1 attorntr .lobn Knowa. ti Lanita leaeb. ,. ............... ....... &Mc...,.... ...... .,. ............ ........,,. LanM ._...,, r.ti•lll ol AN
•ii .........
ear
eds viewed . WAIHINOTON <AP) fte U.S. Border Patrol
Uao•sbt 1om1tbln1 waa b':=;.wka tM fo,..11n
b U '9am wore d•u
tennis lboel on an outd001'
court and couldn't handle
tho ball Ytlf)' well. They
wer1rt1ht.
in El Salvador
The bo1u1 buketbaJI
team wu formed to 1mu1·
tie tlve Thal cltl11n1 Into
the United Statea, the lm·
mi1rat.ton and Naturallaa·
tlon Service charaed.
The plaJl called for th.J
five Thall to play
b11ketball near Campo,
Calli., on \he Mexican
border, until, •l a pre·
arran1ed time, they would
be driven to Lot An1ele1,
said David Crosland, act·
ln1 commlaaloner or the
lmml1rat lo n and
N aturallzatlon Service.
Mistrial
declared in
crash case
An Orange County Superior
<.:ourt judge has declared a mis·
trial during jury selection In a Sl
million personal injury case In·
volvlng Dana Point restaurate ur
RobertChulea Mardi an, convict·
ed of reckleu driving in a 1977 ac·
cldenl that left a teen·age boy
with permanent Injuries.
Judge William S. Lee ordered
the mistrial Wednesday when al·
torneys representing M ardian ob·
jected to a ques tion posed by a
lawyer for the family or Michael
C Dawes.
WA~HlNOTON <AP> -
Secretary ol Stale Aleunder M.
H1l1 Jr., d11ml11ln1 a call to draw
the lloe now on aid to El Salvador,
aays any further escalation or
U.S . Involvement depends on
what the Soviet Union and Cuba
do.
The poeslblllty of addltionaJ
aid, 1ial1 said, "wlll depend
lar1ely on the willingness of
Cuba, the Soviet Union and those
associated with them to conUnue
to Intervene illegally In the arfairs
of the member states of thJs
hemisphere."
Specifically. Haig refused to
aay whether U.S. aid would stop
with 20 additional military ad·
visera and $25 million In new
military assistance. "It would be
foolish to attempt to do so," he
said.
The administration has ac·
cused Cuba and other communist
nations of complicity in smug-
gling at least 200 tons or military
supplies to leftist insurgents in
El SaJvador. The Soviet Union
and Cuba hav e de nied the
charge.
Meanwhile. from campuses to
churches, a fledgling anti·war
movement is e merging in
America. The movement opposes
increased U.S. military involve·
ment in El Salvador, and it is
drawing support from veterans of
Vietnam protests a decade ago.
Already, there have been cam·
pus teach·ins and protest rallies
A hunger strike is scheduled And
soon, the hallmark of the anti·
Vietnam era will return . a march
on the Pentagon.
"There is a tremendous aware·
ness that this IU.S. involvement)
looks like what happened around
Vietnam." said Heidi Tarver,
coordinator for the Committee ln
Solidarity wtlb the People of El
Salvador. ''People are aaylns,
'We' re not 1oln1 to be taken in
a1aln.' "
The protest 1roupa frequently
couple their opposition to ln·
creased military aid to El
Salvador's clvillan·mlUtary jun.
ta with attacks on President
Reagan's proposed cuts in social
programs.
"U.S. -Hands off El Salvador!
Money for Jobs, Hum1n Needs,
Not for the Pentagon,'' reads a
flyer ror a May 3 march on the
Pentagon scheduled by a group
called the Peoples' Anli·War
Moblllzatlon. ·
And In El Salvador, civilian
president of the ruling civilian·
military junta says he has or·
dered the arrest of an ultra·
rightist major for advocating a
military coup, and U.S. diplomats
blamed the officer for a bit·and·
run attack on the American Em·
bassy.
President Jose NapoleQn
Duarte told a news conference
Wednesday that he ordered the
police to search for and arrest re·
tired Maj. Robertod·Aubuisson
D' Aubwsson held a news coo
ference Tuesday. accused Duaru
and the other members or his
Christian Democratic party in tbe
government or being communists
and said the military should expel
them from the government But
by early today there was oo m·
dication he had been arrested
Meanwhile, men in a speeding
pickup truck fired 10 to 15 shots at
the U S. Embassy Wednesday.
breaking a window. ~o one v.·as
hurt, and the embassy's M anne
guards did not return the fire. a
spokesman s aid. t hatquesUon, the attorneys as-
serted, violated a court order pro-
hibiting juror questioning on mat·
ters related to Ma rd Ian's net
worth.
The defendant, owne r of
several restaurants, Is the son of
former WhJte House aide Robert
Mardian, who served under
Richard Nixon.
T he question. posed by attorney
Jay C. Horton, dealt with whether
any of the jurors ever had contact
with Mardian's restaurants in
Hawaii.
Defense cost tied
to inflation rate
Horton and co·counsel William
8 . Hanley insisted the query was
proper 111 &.1 means of determining
prejudlct or bias on the part or
proapotUvt Jurortt
llowt1v4'r, I A'~ trruntc-d the de·
tenn rflcl"4'1b for u ml11\rhtl ,
lt1ttdlne1 to dltmlJ'ul of 2fl polt'n
11&•1 Juror• who \loluntN•rt•d to
ht1Mr whe.t I• u•au•rlt•d lo llt' u
1.,1111thy ri.110
A t111r111<y11 wt1r11 ,, x 1wc•tc•d to
lllt!til with I.tie"""'" lod1o1y le> dt>
,., rm Inti whi.t 11110111• 1l111w nt1xt
Ir tht' mhilrl11I rullnw 11t11od11, tht·
••Oat 11111111 bc1 1tf1nl h11<•k lo thl'
11111u,rl111' 1•1111rt llt1111trt uwnt which
h1rndlt111 •1•h1,.lull111t of l' llllc•K .
1'ht1rt1 i.1110 lfi 11 <'hunc-t•, ltnnley
uld, th11I lAit• 1•0t1ld r<•vc>rAe his
rnllnM 14n1t t11l11w Jury 11t•ll'etion to
C'Cltlf 11111'1
'l'hr l>1two11 fumlly which
form c•rly 11 vetd In <' 11pl~truno
llc•i.c·h I• •111116' Murdlun for in·
J111•lti11 th••lr 1:1 yuur old 11on suf.
t11rt1d wht1n he• w1&1111truck by a car
u ht1 w1111 r11rrylni a fh1hlng pole
•nd J•U1Chl1111 hl11 hlcyC'le along a
South< '11u11ly roudw11y
WASIUNGTON CAP> -The
Reagan administration, finding
support in Congress for its
proposed $32.6 billion increase io
military spending through 1982,
is promising to seek even more
money for defense if it fails to
tame inflation.
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger, outlining a budget
he said would make '"a major
~lurl on meeting needs too long
unmet." srud he would submit a
supplemental request 1f prices of
military hardware increase
beyond the admin1strat1on's
t!Shmates
· · W e h a ,. e t o k e e p t b 1 s
program intact. absolutely,"
Weinberger told the Seoate
Armed Senices C-0mm1tt.ee
u nder quesuomng Wednesday
by Sen. John Warner, R·Va .
Wein berger coo ceded the
revised defense budget envisions
lower inflation than the Carter
administratioo"s rorecast. which
he pre viously said was
underestimated
But be said it is "fa ir to
assume a lower inflation rate" if
President Reagan's proposed
tax cut and domestic spending
For the one of a kind woman,
a one of a kind diamond.
reductions are enacted
The Reagan administrauoo
predicts inflation will drop
steadily to 7.2 percent in 1982
and 4 percent in 1986 a.a the
president's economic recovery
program lakes hold. It was 12.4
percent last year. and the Carter
administration·s laat forecut
was for 9.6 percent in 1982 and 6
percent tn 1986
· · 1 C what we hope does not
come to pa.As and we are not
able to reduce inflation and
don't get the cuts we are seeking
then I will have to present you
with a suppleme nt al,"
Weinberger said.
Members of the committee
generally welcomed the budget
increase, which would pay for
an expanded Navy , a new
bomber, a new kind of nerve gas
and substantial pay raises for
military personnel.
Sen. Joh.n Tower, R·Texas, the
committee chairman, Indicated
he wants the Pentagon's major
budgets approved by Congress
before there 11 any backlash
about c uts In d o mestic
programs.
Hardly a woman alive doesn't dream of
owning a dazzling diamond solitaire. Some
get one on their wedding day-some on an
anniversary. One thing's for sure, the day
they unwrap a diamond solitaire Is a day
they'll never forget. For the widest selection
and absolutely the finest qualfty available,
come see our solltalr1! collectlori.
'SLAVICK'§
I .... , • .-nSlnc. Jtl7
PMNon Wind. N.wpon C~a.r. Ntwpon h~h. '1"166'·1•
WftblllMttf I t..pna Hiit / MIMklft Ylfto f North~ I Tlw Clly
Lot c..,...,. • "" Mall Alie c...-Lot A .... / S.11 °"fo / lM Y ... t uw_.,, ...... ,_........._.,._.,~..,_.VIM.....,o.p
~ ,., ,,_.,.,. Ct1111f
I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 6, 1981 H/F ~A
.Boxing promoter '~oped' by hank?]
/
'
APWlr9'fle-.
WELLS FARGO DOCUMENT SHOWS DETAILS
Attorney Jennifer King HY• Smith I• Innocent
Debate stilled
on evolution
SACRAMENTO (AP ) A judge has virtually
eliminated the issues or evolution and biblical
creation from a trial that was expected lo renew
the legal war between Darwin and Genesis.
Superior Court Judge Irving Perluss told
lawyers Wednesday that the central issue in the
case is ensuring ··sensitivity, understanding and
tolerance" for children whose religious beliefs
may clash with what they learn in science classes.
The stale dropped plans to call astronomer
Carl Sagan, Nobel laureate Arthur Kornberg and
other prominent scientists as witnesses lo defend
evolutionary theory. developed by Charles
Darwin, who wrote "Origin of Species." •
Pef prote~tl•• ad~
SACRAMENTO <AP > -The bill to prohibit
killing cats and dogs for food has advanced to the
floor of the California Assembly.
The Ways and Means Committee voted 12-4
Wednesday for AB241 by
Assemblyman Lawrence
NEWS BRIEFS Kapiloff, 0 -San Diego.
It would make it a
misdemeanor, with a
maximum penalty of six
months in jail and $500 fine. lo kill a dog or cat to
eat it. The bill and an identical one moving through
the Senate were prompted by reports last year
that refugees from Southeast Asia, where dog is a
delicacy in some cultures, were killing animals in
a San Francisco park and elsewhere for food.
a.It tort11re relaied
LOS ANGELES (AP> Skip Webster. who
produces ABC -TV's ''Fantasy Island,'' has a fan-
tastic story or his own to tell
about abuse and brainwashing
be says his son, daughter -in-law
and three grandchildren have
suffered since they joined a re-
ligious group that claims lo be a
fundamentalist Christian sect.
Webster called a news con-
ference Wednesday to tell about
his 8-month -old grandson,
whom he's never seen, being
wunu beaten with a belt and stuffed
head and feet downward m a can. Webster says
former members of Truth Station told him his
15-year-old grandson took part in beating women
at the Apple Valley camp or the group, tbat was
oace known as River or Life Ministry.
r~uw1 .. ....,.,..
BERKELEY (AP> -A University of
California physics teaching assistant has been ar-
rested in the strangulation of a coed in his class,
police said today.
Michael Joseph Brodheim, 22, was discovered
at Highland Hospital, Where California Highway
Patrol ortlcers had taken him just alter midnight
Monday.
Berkeley police sald officers found him with
bia wrists slashed after an apparent jump off a
freeway overpass.
Police spokesman Andy Goodman said
Brodbetm apparently once dated Kristin Malm-
qu\at, 24. whose beaten, rtrangled body waa dis-
covered Tuesday on t.be noor of her Berkeley
apartment.
~ LOS ANGELES (AP> -Attomeya for mlaainC
boiln1 promoter Harold J. Smith called a n•-'
conference to a1aln declare hll tnooeence ln a
$21.3 mllllon embe11lement from Wells Far10
Bank.
But attorneys, Jennifer Kini and Robert
Michaeli, produced virtually no evidence Wednes·
day to support their contenUoo that Smith was
duped by bank officials who were "laundering
money" lhrouah his accounts.
They insisted t.bat the bank Is keeplnc docu-
ments from them.
They conceded that whether or not Smith was
involved ln the embftzlement sclfeme, be owea the
bank $10. l million -the amount drawn on his
various accounts.
MS. KING,' EXPRE~ING anger about state·
menls of Wells Fargo officers, declared: "Our
purpose is to use the press in the same fashion
they have.''
She told reporters and cameramen crowded
into her office: "l 'll tell you right now, Harold J .
Smith and Muhammad AH Professional Sports are
totally innocent victims. The accounts were used
by the bank for laundering money and playing
banking games."
She displayed various documents including
canceled checks and bank statements which showed
only that money had been deposited and
withdrawn from Smith's accounts at Wells Fargo.
The most crucial document, she insisted, is
Nixon, Reagan?
Erotic show
lured greats
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Famed former
madam Brandy Baldwin says some of the men of
the exclusive Bohemian Club "just loved" erotic
shows put on by her "girls."
Jn an interview published Wednesday by the
San Francisco Examiner, Ms. Baldwin. who has
been convicted several limes for running bawdy
houses, said for 10 years she took prostitutes to a
house near the club's Bohemian Grove retreat.
The 108-year-old club counts among its 900
members President Re agan, Vice President
George Bush, Attorney General William French
Smith and former President Richard Nixon, as
well as men from the highest echelons of
American business. Club officials could not be
reached for comment.
MS. BALDWIN MENTIONED no names in her
account. It indicated that neither she nor the pros-
li tu tes e ver operated on the club grounds,
although she said she once "tried to s neak into the
Grove with a Midwestern newspaper editor, and
he Cell ~nd broke his hip.
· · AJJ heU broke loose. but I managed lo slip out before they caught me." she said.
The Grove is in r edwood country on the
Russian River, north of San Francisco.
" ... I would rent a little house in the woods, a
beautiful little place, gorgeously decorated, and
we'd have champagne and the delicacies and the
Beta-Max and we'd make it all so homey," s he
said .
"l'D TELL THE GIRLS to bring all their fan·
cy underclothing so they could do the little erotic
s hows, and the gentlemen just loved it. I did the
Bohemian for 10 years, and they were such
beautiful people. very generous and so much fun."
She recalled that each year after the club's
"Spring Jinks" show. in which members dress in
drag and perform at the remote encampment. she
would "have a little thing we called the 'Final
Jinx," where the last customer from the Grove got
to be the 'jinx.·
"We'd just have rive or six ladies all over this
guy. The gentleman who got to be the jinx could
never believe his good fortune .Oh. the Bohe-
mian was run ...
Brown running?
Keep in touch
SACRAMENTO <AP> -ls Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. going to run for Republican S.l.
Hayakawa·s seat in the U.S. Senate next year?
Brown's answer depends on exactly how it is
phrased.
Here is the exact exchange between the
Democratic governor and reporters at a news con-
ference in the Capitol Wednesday:
Q ... Are you running for the U.S. Senate?"
-A. "No.
Q. "No?"
A. "That was in the present tense, and the
answer is no ...
Q. ··Absolutely not?"
A. "Not at this moment."
Then, a few moments later, this exchange OC·
curred :
0 . "Are you considering running for the U.S.
Senate?
A. "Yes."
Q. "What would possibly deter you from enter-
ing that race?"
A. "I don't think It's appropriate to make a de·
cision for -on -something that ii a year away.
And therefore, I'd rather not make that commit·
ment now."
Q. "Have you made a decision to form an ex.
ploratory committee?"
A. "Yes, because unless a committee is
formed and fund! are raised, it's lmpoHible to
make an intelligent decision sometime down the
road."
Ba·hai' fire· slde"'-ba-'hiti(e)r-.sTd\ n:
Huntlnaton Cenlef Mall todly ttwu
Mir .•.
'c.fl 141-1111. 'u' a few word1 loworll for
lnforfial discussion about th• Baha'i Falth (fOunded 1863, by
Bahat:l'llah) and Its prlnclplea of world unity, th• onenen of
mankind, and thlt essential agrHment of 111 rellglon1. rr=lm.1 •C· comSNtnled by a Short, lnformetlve talk. Usually a by •
dlvtrM group of friendly, Interested peopl•. Open to au. YMONYMI '"MIOrbl~ thouaht-9f'OVoklng, fun, enllahtenlng. SM also PHce,
Unity, Love, Eq&Hillfy, World Gowmment, Justice.
BAHA'I FIRE81DEI FRIDAYS, I P.M.
NIWPORT llAC ~IO
ml11lna and the bank aays it does not exlat.
That document, abe Hid, ii ' paper clvinC a
"llne ol credit'' tor SU mtWon to Smith and his en·
terprlles.
"'My cUenta were under the lmpreulon they
had a SU mUUon line of credit and the mOGtY did
come throu1h. If the baDlt claims there ls no line of
credit, we have be.en duped by the bank, used by
the bank, 'i she sald .
THE NEWS CONFEKENCE became
acrimonious at times as reporters challenged Ms.
Kina to refute the Wells Fargo version of the em-
beulement.
''You believe because it's a bank that they're
ri1ht," Ma. King exploded, "and you're going to
throw lt on some innocent black 1roup. I think
that'• raclatl "
Smith la black; Ms. King is white.
Michaels said be hoped Smith would surface
soon and tell his story.
"He wants to come out. He just doesn't want to
get shot," he said. Both Michaels and Ms. King
claimed that Smith has been shot at, rollowed,
threatened and his small son was kidnapped and
returned.
"I spent last weekend with him in a
hideaway," said Ms. King. "I was folJowed. My
phone is bugged. This office is bugged."
She insisted the only reason Smith fled was
because "four Orientals came to his home and told
him to leave the country. They were armed.'·
In the often confusing news conference, the at-
torneys repeatedly attempted to ahllt blame for
the embezzlement to various bank official• but
primarily to Gene J(awakaml, a founder of
Muhammad AU Amateur Sports Inc. and former
ceneraJ manaeer of the Wells Far10 Miracle Mile
Brauch.
KAWAJ(AMI HAS BEEN FIRED by Wells
Fargo but the bank says he had nothing lo do with
the embezzlement. The bank said Kawakami 's
connection lo Smith and MAAS was "colnclden·
tal."
Wells Fargo has filed a $21.3 million civil
fraud suit against Smith·, L. Ben Lewis, former
Wells Fargo branch manager, Muhammad Ali
Professional Sp0rt.s and MAAS.
Although Ms. King said she was not represent-
ing Lewis who has been named by Wells Fargo as
the key figure in the embezzlement, she said she
does not believe be acted alone to carry off the
theft as the bank said he did.
She displayed an airline ticket which she said
was issued to Lewis for a trip to Detroit for six
days in 1980. The bank has said Lewis did not lake
a vacation during the two years in which he was
allegedly embezzling the money because his
absence from the bank would have blown the
scheme.
A Smith associate, Hilton S. Nicholson, told
the news conference he personally traveled to
Australia with Lewis in 1979 for 10 days
+ -• • .. •• • •. • I .. ... ,_ -., :· .. _.
i 1111 """'"
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Orange Coast Daily Piiot
•
Feds inconsistent
on slide repairs
Federal dJsaster officiala have once .again rejected
Laguna Beach's appeal for funds to restore the slide·
ravaged hillside below Arch Beach Heights.
Restoring the landslide area, located below Del Mar
A venue, was completed last week. City officials say the
final bill probably will surpass $900,000.
But officials from the Federal Emergency Manage·
ment Agency say they'll pick up only the $50,000 to $15,000
cost of replacing public faclllties to the site, such as
sewer lines. ·
The federal agency contends restoration of the
hillside, which was damaged during the February 1980
rains, is not considered emergency work.
That despite the fact the work had to be done to pre·
vent further damage to homes on the crowded hillside.
And though former President Carter authorized
federal funds for restoration of the Laguna Beach site,
FEMA officials say they'll pay only for restoration of
public facilities ignoring the larger necessary work.
Laguna Beach will ask once again for federal as-
sistance, and perhaps new Washington administrators
will look favorably on the city's request for emergency
funds.
The same agency paid for reconstruction of Bluebird
Canyon following the 1978 landslide in that five-acre
neighborhood.
Unfortuna tely, the political climate of the new ad-
ministration doesn't make Laguna's chances look too
good, despite the worthiness of the appeal.
CynicalJy, Laguna Beach Republicans ought to re·
mind Washington how popular Reagan was in this city in
last November's electi6n.
Pilot water project
The South Coast County Water District is embarking
on a water reclamation project that could save south
county customers money and conserve water to boot.
The agency, which serves South Laguna and portions
of Dana Point and coastal Laguna Niguel, has received
concept approval for a $2 million state grant.
That money. when matched with funds from large de-
velopers in the djstrict, wilJ be used to construct a $4
million water reclamation system.
The project includes construction of a pipeline along
Coast Highway to the south end of the district, and in·
stallation of pumping and storage facilities.
The initial contribution from large companies such as
Avco CommunUy Developers would be in the form of ad-
vance user fees for the reclaimed water.
That water would be used to irrigate the firm 's pro-
posed golf course and la ndscaped areas. The county
would also pay for use of treated water for its parks and
medians within the s mall district.
And other potential users of irrigation water have ex-
pressed an interest in the program.
The benefit to users is two fold . For one thing, treat-
ed water is about 20 percent cheaper than potabie water.
And users would be assured of a supply of irrigation
water during times of drought. when irrigation is usually
the first to be curtailed or eliminated.
If the district gets state approval for the grant it will
be the first eligible agency in the state to receive the
y.rastewater system assistance.
It looks like a good program.
J)ouble tax burden
A Superior Court judge has dismissed a suit against
Laguna Beach that sought the inclusion of low-cost hous·
Ing in a project proposed for Sycamore Hills.
: The suit, filed by the Legal Aid Society of Orange
County, attempted to force the city to include so-called
affordable housing in a developer's proposed 300-unil
townhouse project on 60 acres near Leisure World.
. In dismissing the suit , the judge ruled federal
guidelines on low-cost housing are advisory in nature, not
mandatory as suggested in the lawsuit.
· The city's attorney successfully argued that the city's
current housing element is adequate and that previous
approval of the subdivision was appropriate.
The dismissal gives the city the go-ahead to negotiate
for sale of the property, which, if s uccessful. would re·
lieve the city of a nearly $7 million debt owed on the en-
tire 522-acre parcel.
The action raises the issue of whether a tax-
supported agency such as the Legal Aid Society should be
extending its efforts to fight tax-supported municipalities
and other government agencies.
The City of Irvine, for instance. has spent more than
$500 ,000 defending its housing policies against Legal Aid
Society suits.
A more appropriate solution for affordable housing
advocate groups would be to use their energies and r~
sources to sugges t changes to municipal zoning laws
rather than resorting to lawsuits. • Opinions ei<pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
~rtists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 .
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Smithsonian
By L. M. BOYD
Q . Why did J ames
Smithson, the rich European,
choose the United States as
the place to found the
Smithsonian IMUtulion when
jle'd never set foot in \his
-country?
. •
lllllY·Cll
Ooce automoblle
manufacturers •trove
to be tops ;la sales and
stylin1 . Today they
uem to be eompetJnt
to rep0rt tbe lareeat ·
deflcJl. D.M.
A. Maybe because nobody
here used the titles or nobility.
He is said to have been
highly conscious of lhe fact
that be wu the illegitimate
son or the Duke of Northum·
berland and Elinbeth Keate
Macie. a descendant of Klne
Henry VII. But bis il-
legitimacy deprived him of
the l)oble titles. He died
childless, and when his
nephew subaequ\'ntly
likewise died cbildleaa, the
$508,318.46 ln gold from bis
estate wu sent to the United
States as he'd wUJed it.
Q. Among women bowlers,
what's the average score?
A. llU. That's amateurs .
The averaee lady amateur la
37 years old with two
children, incidentally.
Every Amlsb houn la
backed by an Amllh outhouse
-the rellllon prohibit.a Indoor
plumbtnt -and every Ami.ah
outbOUM ii paJnted white.
e Thurld1y, March 5, 1981
Thom.s P. tialey/P"blllhitr Thofnll K"vll/l!dltor
.. ,.,.,. kretbkhllidlt«l•I P199 Editor
Earl \Valen
Clamp some lids on public pay
A le1l1latlve propoul b11
been made to bootl the aaJary
of the governor to $125,000. He
now la paid $49,100. Included In
tbe meuure would be equally
su bstantlal
raises for the
lleutenan\
governor,
secretary of
state, con-
troller and
treasurer, all or whom
would be
upped from
$42,500 to
$70,000 as would the attorney
general who now receives $47,SOO.
This proposal follows closely
on the heels of recommendations
made by a so-called President's
commission to raise the salaries
of congressmen from the pres-
ent $62,000 to $85,000 and make
similar increa~s in other top
rederal poeltiona lncludin1 the
cabinet members.
Such lar11u makes one
wondet wbat trees theae auys
are swtnctna from. Have those
In 1overnment become like
Marie Antoinette, 10 Insensitive
to the people that they believe
people are wllllnllY permlttin1
themselves to be taxed Into pov·
erty so that they can llve ln lux·
ury ? Don't they read the
statistics compiled by the U.S.
Labor Department and the In-
ternal Revenue Service?
ACCORDING to U.S. Labor
statistics the average wage
earned by full-time workers ln
manufacturlne industries last
year was $283 a week while
those in other non·agricultural
private employment averaged
only $233 a week.
The same source reports the
median annual income of all
, --THt LIGHT AT -mis END Of THE fuNNE'L
Mailbox
males wu $18,000 while the me·
dian for women waa ooJy se.eoo
and only 22 percent of lbt people
had family incomes ln exC'ell of
$25,000.
Internal Revenue flaurea abow
that out of the more than 200
million population ln the U.S.
fewer than 70 million fUed In-
come tax returns and only 12
percent of those had incomes
over $30,000 and leas than 3 per-
cent had incomes over $50,000
with .005 percent reportine In-
comes in excess of $100,000.
BOW THEN can it be lhat
those in government are so prec·
ious, provide services so valua-
ble. lhat they must be granted
incomes equalling those of less
than 2.5 percent of the nation's
wealthiest?
It was not taxation without
representation alone which
caused the American Revolu·
Uon. 1be desil'e to be rid ol tbe
lrappinga of royalty and •bed
the tJUes of nobility loomed Just
•• laree in the mlndl of the eol·
oniata and they wrote into the
Constitution an absolute ban oo
nobility.
ls the freedom from the op-
preaaion of a caste system ao
valiantly won by the colon.lats
two hundred years ago to be
permitted to be taken away by
those in government awardlne
themselves royal incomes? Are
we lo address the congressmen
and legislators as "Milord" and
other lesser bureaucrats as "Sir
Knight?" Ben Franklin must be
spinning in his grave.
THE SALARY of the governor
stands at 100 percent more than
it was 30 years ago. Perhaps,
although that is a salary enjoyed
by no more than 3 percent of the
people, inflation is such that it
might be rabed slightly even
though it is safe to predict that
no matter what tbe pay the
caliber or those seeking the of-
fice won't change.
But whatever the salary for
the governor may be, it should
serve as the ceiling for all other
public offices, state and local, in
the state. In fact. no other public
office should pay more than 90
percent of the governor's salary.
UNFORTUNATELY, public
pay has gotten completely out of
hand with minor office holders
such as police and rire chiefs.
city and county managers, and
school adm inistrators now re-
ceiving far more than the gov-
ernor. And. absent an economic
crash similar to the 30s. there
seems no easy way back.
That is no e xcuse for not
clamping a lid on public pay the
next time the salary of the gov-
ernor is changed. Anything
short of that will be criminal
for it will pave the way lo
economic collapse or worse.
Bilingual education deprives children
To the Editor:
Recently. you printed an arti-
cle from Bernice Walsh regard-
ing her views in favor of bi-
linguaJ remedial education in our
public schools. Ms. Walsh refers
to the "great melting pot" which
is or should be -the
American Way. However, if
educ ators do not effectively
teach the English language to
non-Englis h speaking citizens,
we have not a "metling pot" but
a "Mulligan's S'tew·· -not
cohesiveness and togetherness
but separateness and apartness.
A s Califo rn ia Sen . S .l .
Hayakawa recently stated, a
common language -English -
is the great unifying factor in
this nation of people from such
various ethnic backgrounds ,
culture and languages.
Sen Hayakawa, born of immi·
grant parents, admits he prob-
ahly would not have obtained
so high a political office -and
before that so high an educa-
tional office -or have become
such a fine semanticist if the bi-
lingual policies being touted to-
day were In effect in his school
days. Rather than being of help
lo him. it would have been a dis-
service.
I BELIEVE the ethnic groups
should retain their culture -
and their language -but its
people should be taught English
and taught in it. I think it would
be a much wiser choice to
carefully, gently and intelligent-
ly teach non.English speaking
children to read, write and
speak English correctly than it
would be to not do it. We do
these children a great dis-
service, in my opinion, if we do
less. And I believe that bilingual
education is self-defeating.
Children are more adaptable,
teachable and capable than we
often give them credit for being;
and while 1 truly sympathize
wilh the problems a non-Enalish
speaking child would have. I
believe that, witlf the proper
teaching lo En1llab, the great
majority would "make the
arade" -that ls learn to com·
municate in Enallsh -be proud
(and ri1htly so) of thia ac-
complishment and go on -
many ~ to great helghta. I am
sure of it. Gene.rations of past
immigrant people attest to lhil.
They are living proof.
The man or woman who writes
and speaks the Englilh laneua1e
correctly will obl'loualy have tbe
b111eat of UfetJme advani.1ea
over a JDan or woman who doet
not. Thia la toakal, la it not?
Therefore, lt would seem to me,
the object of pubUc educaUoo ln
tbe UnJted St.alee la today what
lt bu al•lYI been -to belp
prepare American ubool
dilldnn to won and U •e ID tbe
Am mean toeklJ: and tJUa de·
mandl the oon-ect UH ol the
1Cn1llth tuaua1e, wbleb e• on·
ly be accomplis hed by the
English language being taught
in the public schools.
HAZEL H. SCHWAB
Not ilw author
To the Editor:
On Sunday. Feb. 22. a scathing
letter about the Newport Beach
Police Department appeared in
this sect.ion, allegedly signed by
me.
The purpose of today's letter
is to let the record state that I,
William F. Fawcett Jr., did not
write thal leller and lhe
signature was forged.
In no respect do I hold the Dai·
ly Pilot responsible for they did
check the name on the letter
against a proper corresponding
address.
But I do wish to state that my
own views of the Newport Beach
Police Department are
diametrically opposed to those
espoused in the forged letter. As
president of the Orange County
Red Cross Youth Council l have
had the opportunity to see the
workings of many law enforce-
ment agencies and Newport
Beach is one of the finest.
WILLIAM F. FAWCETT JR
Sdtool f aUurf'•
To the Editor:
As a taxpayer, ongoing-college
student, and parent my biggest
concern for several years has
been the lack of inspired
teaching to our children. This Is
especially true in the in·
termediate and high school
levels. Admittedly, our kids are
not gifted or class leaders, but
average kids. They needed to be
encouraged, praised and in-
spired to reach beyond what
they seemed to be able to do.
Instead lhey have been ignored
and unchallenged and s huffled
through the system, graduating
totally unprepared for college
and unabl e to su pport
themselves.
The burden of educating them
was given lo Oran1e Coast
College. lan't t.hls rather late lo
their leamln1 llves? For the
fint Ume they had meaningful
counaelln1 and at last they
learned bow to read and add
more than one flgure I Of course
th.ls required tutorinc and for
the nrst tJme thJa waa available.
We tried, totally unaucceutuUy,
to aet this kind of help In blgh
1cbool or even to arouH concern
or lnte.reet for our Irids or their
future. We flnaJly tried tut.onn.a
them ourselvea and we were
able to help 1D aome area•. .
80&&Y, l have no ayrnpatb.y
wlt.b UMM teaehen uklnl for
ulaey lncrea111 and tbe ad·
mlnlltraton 11lrln1 for more
mooey to run the 1cboot1. Tbt
problem ll not 10 much mooey
as aceow1~bUlty to teaeblq.
THI.....,, couueJon, aod ad ..
.... _.._.-.-.. --...-....·· ....... .-..
ministrators should s top d e·
manding and start thinking of
acting with so me pro
fessionaJism. In so many cases
their work (teaching I and their
social behavior is s hoddy and
unprofessional. After all. they
are examples to the kids and. as
a whole. are poor ones The s tu-
dents are exposed lo the uncon·
ventional life styles and poor al·
titudes.
I would hke to see our educa·
tional system be a pay-as-you.go
one and be operated like a busi·
ness . More parents would take
notice what their kids are not
learning and require better
services for the ir dollars .
Parents could be more demand·
ing and get results if they held
the purse strings. In the real
world when a good job is not be·
ing done then you are fired and
someone is hired who can . There
doesn't seem to be a shortage of
qualified people to teach, only
positions . This system would
also allow people who are not us-
ing or no longer have need for
education not to pay for
something they aren 't using
Seems fair to me to pay only for
what I use.
BARBARA JOBBINS
No•en•1-
To the Editor:
The Newport Beach City
Council recently approved the
building of a large hotel
adjacent to John Wayne Airport.
M ayor Heather has j u st
announced that the council will
fight any expansion of said
airport. I can make no sense of
such behavior.
JOHN F. CASSIDY
Stop dte •011••n-
To the &litor:
I couldn't agree more with R.
Williams and Donald Beatty
(Mailbox, Feb. 26). The ar-
rogance or our s upervisors and,
moat particularly of Ralph Clark
(a "people's representative"?),
and their indifference to the
thoughts and wishes of the
voters and taxpaying citizens
can only be described as appall·
lng.
As yet another lonttlme
Newport Beach resident under
the ever-increasina ltlgh.t pattern
oft.he Jets , I'm wonderinf what I•
1otng on here? Are we al victJms
of Johnny.come.lately lnduatry
<•uch aa F'luor, who would "love
to fly'tqSeattle, Chka10, and New
York dlrect from Oran1e
County'')?
CAN WE do not.hint but 1lt
here and watch our way ol Ute
IO down the tuba, our property
craduallJ. become worthltH
<Remember Playa del Reyt It
couldn't happen there, could
It 1 >. cbc*e in conaeaUon and pol·
luUon, and 1eberally aee another
beautiful s tretch of country
destroyed by bigger and bigger,
louder and louder, dirtier and
dirtier aircraft all in the
name of convenience for a rel-
ative few who are loo lazy to
ta ke a s hort drive or flight to On-
tario or LAX?
Whal IS going on? Nobody but
a r,w really wants the airport.
yet it keeps growing and grow-
in g . Can 't this monster be
stopped before it's too late?
Can't we get some teeth into our
citizens' groups?
W.A. SCHRAEGLE
No "pal on barlc'
To the Editor:
Regarding you r Feb. 18
editoriaJ on the talk given by Dr.
Judy B. Rosener to the UCI
Faculty Club, I suggest that any
"questionable logic'' used was
the Daily Pilot's . It is ironic
that. for any of us who were ac·
tually present to hear the
speech. your obvious attempts to
cast aspersions on Dr. Rosener's
integrity had the opposite effect
of, in fact, proving precisely the
points she made regarding the
credibility of press coverage of
Coastal Commission activities.
Unfortunately, however . there
are many people whose only
knowledge of what Dr. Rosener
supposedly s aid comes from
your biased and inaccurate arti·
cle.
TO SET THE record straight,
Dr. Rosener neither condoned
n o r excused th e alleged
behavior of any of the Coastal
Commission's elected officials
who might have used their posi·
lions for per~onal gain. Rat.her,
she merely reminded us that
there are at least 76 other honest
and dedicated public servants
workin1 hard on a number ol
complex an(l important issues,
whose efforts should not be it·
nored simply because the press
finds It easier and more
newsworthy to cover the
"flashier" personal issues that
miebt smell of scandal.
No "pat on the back" was
reached for or solicited ln any
way by Dr. Rosener. The
1reater likelihood la that the
Pilot will be "reachina" the day
lt chooees to report as favorably
as it claims lt would like to dot
MARYANN WELLS BOGN'ER
• 1.AU•rt from read4lr1 art w.lconW.
The right to ~' lftten IO fU
apace or 1Uminot1 Ubfl u rt1nwd.
Lttl•r• of JOO \OOrdl Or ltN '°"1 bf
gl~n prt/tmtff. AU i.tter1 m...t
tnchidt """°'""' -mcriURd m· drc11 bMt "°""' ma, bf wUMaf on rtqwft If ~tficknt ''°'P" ti QP-
po rut. Po1tr11 wlll not b•
publl1h1d. L.rter• mow be
t1lqhoftld lo to.-. Na'"• mtd
phofet ~ o/ tlw COJttribldor
mu1t bf gh>•n /or nnfi~
'*"°"''
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Thurtday, March 5, 1981
....
BALTZ· BERGERON.
SMITH & TUTHILL .
• WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
•
''Aff ordabk Funera/,s"
.
Cremation Plans Available
I
427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
. PRONE 648·937 J ..
I i '• I
SERVING ALL FAITHS ••••• IN AEL CEMETERIES
I .
I I
j .
. .
I
I I .
• • . ; . ' .
I
r
' ' '• ..
"
.,
l * Orange Coat OAJL'.V PILOT/fhurlday. M1roh 5, 1981
Summer.
school
Califontia's rain acid
But experta 1ay pollution can be chttlted
fees set
A comprehensive summer
achool program will be offered
this year in Irvine. but parenta ,
wUl have to pay tultlon in some
cases.
The Irvine Unlfied School Dla-
lricl trustees decided the Dis-
trict Advisory Forum, a non-.
profit parents group, should run
tbe program. Under stale law,
school districts can't mana1e
educational programs in which
tuition is charged.
AS ENVISIONED, THE rorum
will hire school district teacben
to tea~h tuition-paying student.a
in bask and extended skllls for
grades 1·6, fine arts tor grades
1-8, unified arts ror arades 9-12
and enrichment classes for
~rades 9-12.
Additionally, students can
~nroll free or charge in a
tumber or classes to be funded
.hrough state and federal
1ources.
Courses falling in this
:ategory are remedial education
ior grades 7-12, learning and
anguage disability instruction
for grades K-6. migrant educa-
:ion for grades K-12. "catch-up"
.nslruction for graduating
;eniors, occupational training
'or grades 11·12 and 10th grade
Jrivers training <depending on
;tale funding decision).
ALSO, THE IRVINE boosters
:tub will sponsor free athletics
rnd marching band classes for
;tudents in grades 9-12.
Irvine school district ad-
'Tlinistrator Jerry Rayl said tui·
.ion will probably be about $50
>er student.
He added there is a possibility
.he forum will offer a tuition
subsidy to parents who can't af-
·ord it.
Viejo leaper
identified
as Argentinian
A man who apparently leaped
.o hi s death from the Alicia
Parkway overpass of the San
Diego Freeway in Mission Viejo
Feb. 7 has been identified as an
Argentine citizen who had resided
in Long Beach
Orange County Sheriff's
Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said
fingerprint comparisons were
used to determine the body
found on the freeway was that of
Jose Brizuela. 28, of 1092 E. 7th
St., Long Beach.
Brizuela's body was struck by
;everal vehicles after he ap-
parently leaped from the over-
pass in the predawn hours.
The death is being treated as a
:>uicide, Lt. Hart said. Results of
toxicological examinations are
pending.
Pair unhurt
but arrested
in smashup
Two men escaped serious in·
jury when their car smashed
through a guard rail, pierced a
chain-link fence and tumbled into
an eight-fool ditch dividing
Newport Boulevard's traffic
lanes.
Arrested by Costa Mesa police
for suspicion of driving under
the influence 'of a lcohol was
Steve R. Watson, 29, of 2303
FairhiU Drive, Newport Beach.
Arrested for suspicion of being
drunk in an auto was Houston W.
Vardaman,· 45. of 2538 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Police said firemen worked
for nearly 30 minutes to free the
two from their auto after it left
the boulevard's northbound
lanes near 20th Street at about
12:15a.m . Wednesday.
Shy artist
Jennifer Myers, 6, displays her sailboat art work at the
Newport Elementary School art fair in Newport lieach.
Injured worker's
wife due award
A Southern Pacific railroad
engineer who lost a leg and a
foot in 1977 when he fell beneath
his own locomotive would re-
ceive $1.34 miUion over a 20-year
period in an out-of-court settle-
ment recommended by lawyers
for both sides in Santa Ana.
signs the settlement.
He said the Sl.34 million is the
total of a series of payments to
be m .. de over 20 years to
McDowell. including $350,000
"up front." $2,780 a month for 20
years. an additional $25,000
'lump sum after the first five
year s, $50,000 five years after
that, $100,000 in the 15th year
and a final lump-sum payment
of $150,000 in the 20th year.
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
rain fallln1 from Callfomla'a
polluted tkJet it &I Diily U the
Northeul'1 lntamous acid rain,
but strict environmental con·
troll can probably prevent ma-
jor problems, state offlclal1 say.
"We can stop It by stopping
the emissions of sulphur oxides
and nitrogen oxides from cars
and power plants that are the
source of the acid rain problem"
in California, Thomas Austin,
executive officer o f the
California Air Resources Board,
said Wednesday.
The board, meeting In Los
Angeles to discuss the recently
recognized problems of acid
rain, acid dew and acid fog. was
told rainfall In the state is often
as acidic as that which has
killed hundreds of lakes in Ver-
mont, New Hampshire and other
northeastern states.
"I think acid fol Is probably
going to be the most seriOU5 pro-
Irvine police
profile pair
• 1n rape case
Irvine police investigators
have rel eased an updated
description or two men being
sought in las t Thurs day 's
abduction and rape of a
15-year-old girl.
The rirst suspect is described
as a Caucasian, 5·8 to 5-10,
slender build. dark brown
shoulder-length hair. very blue
eyes and a very tan complexion. . The second sus pect is
described as a Caucasian, 5·8 to
5· 10, with long, stringy blond
hair and a deep tan.
Police said the men rorced the
girl into a van and one of them
raped her while the other
watche d The vehic l e is
described as a green Chevrolet
van with tinted windows on both
sides and in the rc>ar.
The proposed settlement in
favor of Gordon McDowell and
his wife Patsy, both 54, capped
more than . a month or pretrial
negotiations and was termed un-
precedented by their attorney,
John Van Dyke, who said it
marked the first time a railroad
worker's wife had s ued suc-
cessfully for the loss of her
husband's "consortium." He de·
fined consortium as solace, com ·
fort. love and marital rights.
Brown, Hayakawa
"WHEN A WOMAN loses
those things. and then becomes
her husband 's nurse. s he's
entitled to damages," Van Dyke
s aid.
Southern Pacific lawyer
William Still denied that con-
sortium was a valid issue
because the case was settled
before the consortium question
could be tested in court.
Consortium has long been a
provision of maritime law but
not railroad law. Van Dyke said,
noting: "If a seaman can be sub·
ject to it, why can't a railroad
worker?"
He said the U.S. Supreme
Court rejected So uthe rn
Pacific's effort to have the con·
sorlium issue deleted from the
suit after it was first allowed
by a Los Angeles Superior Court
judge.
McDOWELi. WAS injured
four years ago when an
unnamed conductor at Southern
Pacific's La Mirada yard
started McDowell's locomotive
without the engi n eer 's
knowledge, Van Dyke said .
"When McDowell tried to find
out what was going on. l\,e
slipp ed and fell under the
wheels. We thinJc the railroad
company was negligent because
the other employee violated
work rules. He unlawfully
operated the train when he
shouldn't have," Van Dyke said.
Still said company lawyers
had recommended the settle-
ment and management was ex-
pected to act on it within the
next couple or days.
VAN DYKE SAID no approval
is required from the court after
Southern Pacific 's president
• • unages negative
SAC RAMENTO <AP > -
Ca lifornia voters hav e a
negative impression or both U.S.
Sen. S.I. Hayakawa and Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr., but Brown
has a better chance of overcom-
ing his negative image. pollster
Mervin Field said.
Field told a Sacramento Press
Club luncheon that the negative
voter ratings for Hayakawa are
based on "an ill\age o( incom-
petency" that wHI be hard to
change.
But the negative image or
Brown , who is a l ikel y
c h a llenger n ext year for
Hayakawa's seat. stems from
factors he can more easily over-
come in a U.S. Senate cam-
paign. s uch as the public feeling
he has not been a good ad·
ministrator as governor.
HAYAKAWA HAS "a fairly
large accumulated negative im-
age." Field said. "When I say
·accumulated," I mean it's a lit-
tle difrerent from something
that's momentary."
Field cited a poll he published
last month in which Hayakawa
was second c h oice among
Republicans to Rep. Barry
Goldwater Jr. to: the Senate
nom ination by 32 percent to 19
percent.
A companion poll of
Democratic voters found Brown
and former U.S. Sen. John Tun-
ney . who was d e feated by
Hayakawa five years ago, tied
for the lead with 24 percent
each.
Field said as incumbent
governor. Brown ought to be the
hhvy favorite for the Senate
Two trashmen
nomination if he wants it. The
fact Brown ls only lied with Tun-
ney. who was soundly defeated
five years ago and s hows no
signs of seeking the offi ce again
"is a measure of <Brown's>
vulnerability.
"Jerry Brown has over the
years squandered an incredible
amount of political capital"
since the early months or his ad-
ministration in 1975. when he
had the highest approval rating
of any California governor in~
years of polling in California.
Field said .
Since then. Brown had disap-
pointed voters, partic ularly as
an administrator. but most
voters who have a negative im-
pression of Brown still find some
of his ideas interesting, and
many feel Brown "is the type of
person who ought to be in the
Senate" rather than ser ving as
chief executive.
''I WOULD say if Brown
would run for Senate, he would
be favored, but he would have a
battle." Field added.
Commenting on the race to
succeed Brown as governor,
Field discounted the big lead
that Lt. Gov. Mike Curb had for
the Republican nomination in a
poll he published last month,
when Curb was favored by 32
percent of the GOP voters to 20
percent for San Diego Mayor
Pele Wilson and 18 percent for
Attorney Gene ral George
Deukmejian.
Hearing March 31 • recovering
Views solicited
on Sand Canyon
March 31 bas been set for a
meetinl in which the pubUc can
comment on city plan1 to iurn
hl1toric, oak-tree lined Sand
Canyon lnto a •ix-lane divided
hl1hway.
The Irvine city staff Is 1Wdy-
tn1 potential aJlrnmenta foa-tbt
throu1bway ,.to mlnlmln
dama1e to treet and the '2·Y•U'·
old lrvlne Country Store, 14801
Sand C8QYOll Ave.
City Njll'MmtatiV'9 HY tbe
road ... to be wklened to hM· die a projected l.Dereue ln tnf.
ftc ta ... lrYIM. A co~
yard and animal pound are pro-
posed near the lrvlne Country
Store, and Sand Canyon Avenue
has been identified aa a probable
route for dump truclta en route
to tbe proposed Bee Canyon
Dump ln tbe foot.bills nortb of
the ally.
Loeal hl1tortcal buffs have
vowed to ftlbt to preaerve the
Irvine Country Store and oak
trees.
The meldnc will .,. held Ill 1
p.m. ID ta.. lrriDe City eo.dJ
Chambers, 17200 Jamboree
Blvd:,lm.ne.
..
•
from plunge
Two Newport Beach
municipal trash truck crewmen
who survived a somersaulting
plu.nte to tbe bottom of a Boatta
Canyon ravine after collldinl
with anocher rta Feb. 20 -.., re·
coverlna from their ln,Jurie;a.
Spoke•men at Santa Ana·
Tu1tln Community Hospital aald
today that both vSclimt .,.. 1n
1ood condlUon, but wlU be con·
vale•ctnc for som• lime.
Driver RalDb Hlll, 29, ot e33C>
Clatk St., Cotta Mesa, baa
Jolaed bl8 putMr on a •Ul'llcal recovery floor aft•r J•veraJ
d•JI lD the IDtenllH Care Ualt,
DUl'Mltakt. Blll aDd Robert Mlller, IC, of ~ In 9'., Newport Beach,
1Uffered muJtlp&e l.nJurtu ln tbe
•t~ident.
blem from a human health
1tandpoint," said Austin.
He said it probably bu some
effect on humans, but any ef.
feels have not been 1cientlflcally
determined.
And, he said, "it appears to us
the human effects are not nearly
as significant as the effect.a on
fish and lakes ."
Acid rain, which can be as
acidic as lemon juice or vlne1ar.
is formed when oxides of sul-
phur or nitrogen are emitted
through th e burning of
petroleum or coal. In the at·
mosphere, the pollutants react
chemically and invade rain·
drops, which fall back to earth
as acids that can etch buildings
and gravestones, damage plants
and, by running into rivers and
lakes, kill fish by the thousands.
THE PROBLEM WAS iden·
tified in the severely ravaged
Scandinavian countries. Acid
rain bas been blamed for
virtually killing lakes in the
eastern United States and
Canada.
In most publicized cases.
Austin said, the poijution that re-
turns as acid rain is emitted
hundreds of miles away in othe{
states that are spared the effects
of their industry .
•·But here in California, of
course, we generate our own
pollution ," :;aid board
chairwoman Mary Nichols.
Austin said. "Right now. most
Ne11.~-porf caper
or the lakes in CaJllorn1a are not
to acidic that flab are Mini
killed. We have evidence that
there wu one bl& flab tlU lut
year at a lake ln Sequoia Na-
tional Park."
HE SAID THE federal Clean
Air Acl contains adequate
authority to resolve the problem
nationwide by reducing auto and
Industry emissions.
"But they have decided not to
act on that authority." apparent·
ly planning instead to study the
problem further.
He said such studies will only
confirm "that we had belter
take a close look at this problem
in California to make sure we
don't get caught in the trap of
studying the prob~em until it is
too late to save hundreds of
lakes."
Austin said board proposals to
lighten environmental regula-
tions are meeting opposition
from utility companies. but if
implemented. they should
drastically improve the situa-
tion.
HE SAID THE immediate
task is determining .. whether
the lak es are becoming
a problem. We're going to start
monitoring these lak es in
California."
In addition to the acid rain.
Austin and others have noted the
acid in California can float back
to earth a$ dust particles or as
gas and appears in dew and fog .
Persistent, neat
burglar hunted
A persistent burglar who tried
several d oors and windows
before he climbed through a
hedge and found a window he
could break, finally got into a
Newport Beach home. police
said.
Then he found a piano block·
ing his way with only a 12-inch
space to squeeze through.
And after all that effort, Of-
ficer Mike Welch s aid .. the
perpetrator of the $900 burglary
cleaned up the broken glass and
laid it out neatly on the front
lawn.
The victim of the Port Bristol
Circle residential burglary
discovered the bad news when
s h e arrived home from a
vacation.
Officer Welch said in his re-
port she was loo tired from the
trip to give a detailed account or
the loss. but knew whoever
ransacked the residence made
off with at leas t $900 worth of
jewelry.
Due t o t h e w ee kend 's
r ai nstorm. Officer Welch said he
was able to determine the
burglar wore size 101 '2 tennis
shoes from the prints in the
mud
Toxic chemicals
found near sclwol
By PATRICK KENNEDV
Of llM O•llY Piiot Sufi
State health officia ls have
identified traces or a toxic
chemical on the surface of a
38-acre mud dump across the
street from Edison High School
in Huntington Beach.
Miller Chambers. of the state
Department of Health Ser vices,
said tests of surface tar at the
Steverson Brothers· private
dump at Magnolia and Hamilton
s treets showed traces o r
perchloreothylene. an industrial
cleaning solvent.
HE SAID DEEPER samples
of the tar-like substance will be
taken in the next two weeks to
determine if a potential hazard
exists.
·'In high concentrations.
perchloreothylene could be tox-
ic " Chambers said . "But
nothing we have found in the
surface tests indicate hazardous
conditions.
"We found no high concentra-
tions. ju~t enough lo indica~e
there might be som e toxic
chemicals below the surface."
Chambers said that for years
the dump had an Orange County
industrial waste permit allowing
disposal of oil drilling muds. He
said in the . early 1970s it was
changed to a Class III dump.
restricting disposal lo inert ob·
jects. such as concrete.
CITV OFFICIALS say the
private dump was used for o!I '
drilling muds from 1950 until
1970.
Chambers s aid oil drilling
muds shouldn't contain toxic
c hemicals unless s ubstances
were added to lubricate or pro·
tect drilling equipment during
operation.
C hambers said s urface
samples of the dump were taken
last October after a nearby resi·
dent expressed concern about
the site's proximity to the high
school.
City Planner Jim Barnes said
he received several calls rrom
concerned citizens after it wa~
reported that another former
dump in Huntington Beach, the
so-called Boucher Landfill, con·
tained various toxic chemicals.
Rainfall
to fade
tonight
A bit-and-run storm that struck
aom·e areas with delu1es and
thunder and left others cold but
dry was predicted to diminish to-
day.
Once the current rainstorm
passes through pursued by a low
't>ressure system behind it, says
U.S. Weather Service forecaster
Andy Chagi, clear weather will be
on the horizon at least until next
week.
Chagi reported tbe average
rainfall throughout the Southland
is about a half-inch while snow
levels were lowered to 4 ,000 feet.
"Some places might not get
anything," he said .
............
·---11111 1'11111
OHAN \a f ( O llN I Y '~A l If C1HNIA .'~ Cf N T S
YoUth saved
Irvine boy ~ 'brain surgery
~SAN DIEGO CAP> -After 75
hours ol brain surgery, Universi·
ty of California doctors say
they've saved the ur~of a .15-ye~·
old Irvine boy with a brain lesion
twlcethesluofanorange.
Steven Greth underwent five
stages of surgery to untangle
arteries and veins ensnarled
throughout one-eighth of his
brain.
In 11717, doctors in Los Angeles
diaenoeed his headaches u an
arteriovenou.s ~alformation, or
A VM . But Carol Greth said "they
could do nothing'' for her son.
hours, t.belonaest20.
The A VM causes blood flowt.ne
from the arteries to feed dlrecttx
into the veins that return to the
heart. As a result, oxyeen and
nutrients in the blood were
blocked from reaching cells in
Steven's brain, starving or mak-
ing them non-functional.
"It was absolutely out or the
q ueation that it could be done safe-
ly in one~ration, ''said surgeon
Hoi S. U, pronouncing Steven's
cure complete Wednesday.
The boy, who plans to return to
Irvine Hi1h School ~s a
sophomore in September, sad be
was frightened through it al and
wondered if be would be
permanently disabled or coma-
tose.
"It was very difficult," Steven·
said, adding "I don't want to talk
about it because I felt ashamed
because 1 was different.''
Mrs. Greth said although doc·
tors said be would surely die
"Steven made the decision to go
and we backed him all thew ay."
Dr. U's colleagues describPd it
as the most difficult of brain sur-
geries, one which would have
been simpler in 1977 when
Steven'sAVMwas muchsmaUer. He said there may be showers
throughout the Orange Coast area
through tonight.
Oran1e County Flood Control
<See STORM, Page AZ>
STEVEN GRETH, 15, OF IRYINE WITH MOTHER
Spunky younglter eumvee 75 houre of br•ln aurgery
Tbefll'Storfiveriskyoperations
to correct the potentially lethal,
congenital condition took place at
the UniversityofCaliforniaatSan
Diego Medical Center last Oc-
tober.
There were others in December
and J an. 21. The shortest was 13
•'If you should go ahead and re-
move the lesion in one shot, what
happens is that you completely
eliminate the shunt of blood from
arteries directly into veins and all
of the blood is introduced to the
rest of brain, suddenly, and the
arteries may not be able to lake it
and the whole brain can explode
in :rourface."
"It has to do with a surgd<>n's
skill," said Dr. U. "Some people
do this operation, and some peo-
ple don't."
Six-month school urged for N-M
1
Coast visitor
Willie Brown
mends rifts
By GLENN SCOTT oi 111e o.Mr ,.. ... ,....,
State Aasembly Speaker Willie
Brown was the guest or honor at
a closed-door luncheon at the
Fluor Corporation in Irvine.
Brown, who put together a
coalition of Democrats and
Re publicans to capture the As·
sembly speakership, met with
about 40 local business leaders
and the five members of the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors Wednesday,
It was an unus ual move for the
San Francisco Democrat to be
Frontier OKs
purehase of
'quiet' jets
Frontier Airlines a nnounced
today it will join two of the three
other commercial jet air car-
riers ser ving J ohn Wayne
Airport in purchasing the new
a nd quieter DC-9 Super 80
jetliner.
In a press release issued
through .the office of Ralph
Clark, chairman of the Orange
NOISE HEARINGS
CONTINUED -A3
County Board of Supervisors,
the airline said it will purchase
three of the high-technology jets
as part of its commitment to re·
ducing noise levels on residen-
ti a 1 areas s urrounding the
airport.
Frontier. · based in Denver,
operates two ruehts daily from
John Wayne Airport. It was one
of two carriers which received
ritbts last year to join Air
California and Republic Airlines
(formerly Hughes Airwesl) in
<See QUIET, Pa1e A?>
entering the lion's den of COO·
serv atism. But Brown reported-
ly made the trip to assure com·
munity leaders that be doesn't
intend to use his new power to
back only liberal causes.
Fluor Vice President Thomas
Ellick , wh o i s active in
Republican politics, said the
meeting was arranged through
former state Se n . Dennis
Carpenter, who is Orange Coun-
ty's new Sacramento lobbyist.
Assembl yma n Ri chard
Robinson, D·Garden Grove, also
att~nded the private meeting at
Brown's request , Ellick said, to
show that Brown is interested in
mending rifts that occurred dur-
ing the political fight for the
speakership.
Robinson had been a strong
backer of Assemblyman Howard
Berman of Los Angeles.
Ellick said Brown was well re-
ceived by the elite crowd, which
be said included presidents of
major companies who are con·
s idered "heavy hitte rs" in
political circles.
If Brown want ed to visit
Or ange County to convey his
new attitude, Ellick said, "he
surely succeeded." .
Even though all county
supervisors accepted invitations
t o a ttend Brown's luncheon
speech and the ensuing question
a nd answer period, the press
was not allowed to attend.
That decision raised questions
of whether the intent of state
open meeting laws was violated
by the supervisors in attending
the private affair.
Chairman Ralph Clark an-
n ou n ced a t the c lose o f
W ed n es d ay 's board of
supervisors' meelin1 that the
ensuing luncheon didn't appear
lo violate the Ralph M. Brown
Act because the supervisors
were not going to deliberate in private.
Co unty Counsel Adrian
<See VISITOR, Pa1e A?>
Fire all wet ·
Sprinkler trips OC alarm
It was at 8 :45 a.m. today wbeD lbe fire aianDI Wtllll aft
in the •·• million Oran1e County Hall of Ad111,,,....._ Ill
Santa Ana.
"Commence evacuation procedUNS," a "6Cle .._ed
via the bulJdioc'• fire warnlQc 1,.iem.
THE E•PLOYBU poured forth. Pualq tbroap UM
bdlldlDI'• 1obbJ, however, they dlHovend there wu no
ftre. Not nm smoke. Water WU raioioa down from tbe bull•llq'a HeODd
fioor ...... nn •pridlet 1,.tem Uae reptuNd under tM ·~:t d _ •~·diameter •tee! cables belq IMUlled to •
ID tbe bUUCliDI l~tllta.111 aouad. ,
TD WOU WM orMnd atter n.U• oonehaded the n ••. ..., ............ opmed two ,..,. •• mllht eoUapee
la U.. ftml al a Mrioul ..,..._.,
8Mla Aaa Pin DepertllMM Nlll•ded to ncwm tbe
• ...,. tbat DOUNd into UM llulM'n1'1 Wed &obby.
AU wrapped up
Air California's 737 jet , which crash landed
last month at John Wayne Airport, rests
near a county fire station at the airport.
The jet is wrapped in canvas and reJ>Orted·
ly will soon be sold to a s alvage firm by the
airline's insurance company. Air Cal of-
ficials say they don't know when that will
·be.
Hillside
stabilized
in Mesa
Mesa Consolidated Water Dis·
trict employees worked into the
night stabilizing a hillside that
washed down on Costa Mesa's
Sea Bluff condominium com -
munity a fter a water main
broke.
Karl Kemp, assistant water
district general manager, said
cr ews placed plywood and
sandbqs along the bill that
gMve way, causing vegetation
and mud to rip out an ornate
fence and come to rest against
the Sea Bluff clubhouse . ·
"We're watcbint it," Kemp
said. "We're waiting now for the
storm to clear before opening it
(the water main trench under
Sea Cove Lane> and seeing what
it looks like."
District genera! manaeer Ed
Schnabel said late Wednesday
he believes the main broke at
about 3 a .m . Wednesday
because the entire blllaide above
the 82-unit condominium tract
slipped.
But Jim Greaory, owner of
Gretory Co. ol Irvine wblcb de·
veloped the condomlnlum com-
munity iD 1978, protested that
idea Wednesday.
"Nooe ol the bl.llalde la lost,"
he ••ld. :J:l 12 lncbes on the aurfaee re tbe water from
tbe~pe ran over tbe top ol lt." IM lncbel ol ra.la that
ha f .U. on t.be hlUllde prior to
WedMlda1'1 break Ud •b1n1 to do wttll allppete aM UM maia
break, 0ntOC"Y con._....
"In no w91 eould I, at um
Poiat, c.'Wt.IW Uf relat.topslip
betwem tlal waw lllM bnMaae
aad an1 problem •ltb tie
•,-...;..,. ............... a.ad
bHH .. the "1HtelJ oW'Md
street to ..._ cllltrlct •Dedftea·
tlODI aad ...... I cllltrlct·Mnd
eqiDell'.
Ailing ·man saved;
city rules rapped
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Delly "*41'-"
Two Newport Beach residents
-one a registered nurse and the
other a Newport city planner -
are being credited today with
helping save the life of a 63-year·
old man who suffered a heart at-
tack after testilyint durins an
airport noise bearing.
Nurse Lynne Bloomberg and
planner Craig Bluell started
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
and cardiac massage immediate-
ly after DoutJas Parmentier Jr.
collapsed iD bi.a chair. Several
others assisted.
But concern also followed the
incident at Costa Mesa's Harper
Community Center which left
Parmentier in serious condition.
' Several people at the noise
hearing expressed surprise that a
jurisdictional rule kept Newport
paramedics from responding to
the na.m. incident Wednesday-
even though a Newport fire sta-
tion wuonlythree blocks away.
According to fire officials ln
Costa Mesa, the cit~ that
responded to <he incident, lt took
five minutes for a fire engine to
arrive on the scene and exactly
eight minutes fo r ·Costa Mesa
paramedics to arrive.
(See RULES, Pate A%)
Suspense at LAX
FBI agenls b_oard
hijacked jetliner
LOS ANO&i.BS (AP) -FBI
acentl ... aboard 'blJaeked
Contlnental AlrliDes Jet todaJ
after a lki·maaked ruaman wlth
an "automaUo weapon and an
explollft dnke" took HVeral
people boltale, polln Mid.
A.ad at the bljacktr'• in·
alatenee, U. plue wu JDO¥'ed
from lta .. 8t S... Aaael• Jlt-lM'Dadmail A1ll*t to • ,....
ana cm t.be otlier 1Mle al tM
MmW8', polke IA. DM Ooob
aald.
Cooke aald Ile wa1 utan
whtMr U.. RI aauta Ud
................... tau.of .... ~ ..... ..,~ . ••117 ...... piiople ...... ................... ~
jediw.
\
Tbe ma apparently boarded
the BoelDI m with eom• 102 ,.......,. beton puWq a sun.
aatd .Jaet Orepry of Coatlnen·
tel.
TIMn ... confllctiq reports
al UM --al people OD board and bow IDU1 wen,............
Ore1017 Mid I total al tilbt P.IO-r:: ... OD tM plane, lacl ....
• •m:.ow be'• 1ot an
ntomillk ... ,.Mill••·
ploelft ••tee attHMd to • ........... .. .... ... Cillftl'
PatCa ••111· Tiiie ._.taal ••• latua&IJ ..,.._. ... ,.... .. AT ........... ...._ ......
MJHller .;=•tlr 1lt'"4 .... .. .. All-~--
\
Alternate ~
to loss
of jobs?
By JERRY CLAUSEN
OI ... Delly f'llel Sqtt
. .
A Newport-Mesa teachers un-
ion negotiator bas agreed that
school should be dismissed Uit-ee
months early next year rather
than cut back on teachers to
make a declining budget stretch •
over the full nine months of
school.
Obviously angry, former union
president Maya Decker told the.
Newport-Mesa School District:
board Wednesday that the opi-.
nion was her own and was not ;
authorized by the Newport-Mesa •
Federation of Teachers. !
Ms. Decker, a sociology ;
teacher at Corona del Mar High :
School, told board pre~ident Ken :
Way man that by cutting school :
to six months the public could :
see the financial problem and :
seek changes at the legislative :
level. \
Her remarks followed pro-:
posals by Superintendent John ~
Nicoll and Deputy Superinten-'.
dent Norman Loats for massive
layoffs that would, if approved, '
cul nearly 86 teaching serTices '
and administr ative positions ·
next year. ,
The cuts would include about :
• 20 posts eliminated by closing •
Rea Middle School in Costa !
Mesa and Corona d el Mar •
Elementary School in Ne~rt :
Beach, closures ordered for lnext :
June because of declining stu-'
dent enrollments. :
The layoff proposal would :
eliminate instrumental music in :
elementary schools and do away l
with Latin, German, advanced !
photography, commercial art I
and pos te r a rt al the high
schools. l
It also would eliminate the dis-'
tricl's evening high school pro-l
gram for more than l.SO workiq I
youngsters. I
Also to be cut if the proposais I
are approved are middle •~ 1 metal shop, typing, draft.in• and l
foreign laniuage programs. I
<See 8CllOOLS, Pate AJ) • I -----------·j 811111 CIAIT lllTlll
Chance of rain 50 pei;·
cent tonitbt, 20 percef. Friday. Guaty winds
times. Lowa tonltht
alont the coaat, 52 lnlan .
Hitbs Friday 55 to eo.
Ora0g9 C081t DAIL V Pll OT/ThulWday, Mar~h 5, 1981
uclear
. iooaponry
I
undant?. ... By JOHN NEEDHAM • Of ... _., ...........
The United states already has
enough nuclear mlasllea to hit
every population and lnduttria.I
nter in the Soviet Union several
flmesover .
Developln1 additional wea()Ons
.f)'stema will only enable us to re-·
F.rangetherubble. ,
That's the assessment of Dr.
arvin Goldbertel'. president of
the California Institute of
TechnolotY in ~adena, and an
outspoken critic of the nuclear
armsuce.
Speaking at UC Irvine Wednes·
day night, Goldbereer said
•everal ''flash points" around the
)torld have the potential to draw
the United Stat.es and the Soviet V nion into a nuclear exchange.
"The war between Iran and
'l1'aq could flare a global en-
counter which could lead to a pre·
emptive strike by the United
Sta l es o r the Soviets,"
Goldberger told the nearly 80 peo-
pleat the ta lk sponsored by the Al-
liance for Survival, a group op-
posed to nuclear weapons and
nuclear power.
He said the insecurities and
confusion created by the threat of
an interruption in the flow of oil
from the Middle East could lead
Soviet and U.S. leaders to weigh
the advantages of launching a
first strike.
"Jn the United States at the pre-
sent time I have heard some crazy
things about our lack of military
prowess ... Goldberger said.
··Some have suggested that we
could fight and win a nuclear war.
Jn my opinion anyone who could
~ay that is certifiably insane ··
.. Goldberger, who is a member of
the National Nuclear Safety
Oversight Committee, said the
,Vnited States and its allies have
1.o.ooostrategic nuclear weapons
He said the Soviets are believed
td have 6,000 and t he South
Africans and Israelis probably
have nuclear strike capabilities
or soon will have.
.. Ten of these s trategic
weapons would be s ufficient to
wipe out all population and in-
dustrial centers in the Soviet
Union." Goldberger said. "How
can we feel threatened?"
Goldberger added that there
ere 5,000 towns in the United
States with populations over
5,000. Conceivably the Soviets
could hit every one of those towns
~d still have 1,000 missiles left.
The Cal Tech president said a ~ludy conducted by the Pedera-
f.ion of American Scientists found
if 20 one-megaton bombs were
~J;opped on Los Angeles. equaling
be power of 20 million tons of
NT. an area of 1,200 square
miles would be wiped out.
' That area could include the
·~·lies of Los Angeles. Burbank.
, lendale, Pasadena. Santa Ana.
eal Beach, Long Beach and
points in between.
It was estimated that 5.5 million
~eople would be killed by the
last, with more than a millfon
ore dying from burns in the ac-
companying firestorm . Many
thousands more would die over
~be nextfew weeks from radiation
sickness.
F....,P8fleAJ
SCHOOLS. •
Two psychological services
posts would be cut as well as
nearly five school nurse slots
and several library positions.
Physical education would be
reduced to a two-year program
and driver training would disap-
pear from the district.
Union representatives, includ-
ing president Adele Kopecky
a nd chief negotiator Bill Cue.
took issue with board sugges-
tions that many of the programs
scheduled for cuts could be of-
fered by volunteers or under a
corporation sponsorship pro -
gram.
··I wonder if the board knows
what it is talking about," Cue
conjectured.
He questioned board proposals
for volunteers to replace pro-
fessionals and charging fees for
s uch enrichment classes as typ-
mg in the middle schools "when
some students can't even pay for
buses."
Ms . Decker told the board.
"You are taking us back lo 1850.
We (teachers ) have fought long
and we h ave fought hard to
change that."
Questioned by Wayman, who
asked if the district should "go
into the red" or dismiss school
three months early to balance a
sagging budget. Ms. Decker said
schools should be staffed with
professionals even though the
answer might be a shorter year.
Union president Mrs. Kopecky
said ber group wants "a free
quality education for children
who reside in thla district. 1be
cuts you discussed today are far
in excess of cuts crrom ) dedin·
ing <student) enrollment."
She said she doubts the dis-
trict would be able to provide
.. even an adequate education"
under the circumstances.
Superintendent Nicoll said
earlier this year that next year's
district income is expected to be
between S2 and $5 million less
than received this school year.
Much of the problem, ad-
ministrators say, is caused by
sa laries and fringe benefits
which require more than 92 per·
cent of district income.
Nicoll estimates the district
could save about $29,000 a year
for every leach in g and a d·
ministrative post cut from the
district's operation plan.
E'r•• Page A l
QUIET JETS OK'D. • •
ser ving the Orange County
market. The other was Western
Airlines.
· Western has not a nnounced
·l>lans to purchase the OC-9
Super 80s.
Both Air California a nd
Republic Airlines previously an-
nounced plans to purchase the
Super 80s. manufactured by the
McDoMeU Douglas Corp.
Frontier's announcement was
viewed by knowledgeable
airport officials as an attempt
by the firm to gain leverage to
J ewe lry, silver
stole n in I rvine
More than $2,000 worth of
jewelry and silver household
items were at.oleo from an lnine
home near the Marine Corps
Helicopter Air Station Wednes-
day. police said.
Police said the re were no
signs of forced entry to the home
of the victim. Mary Ann Miller.
ORANGE COAST
preserve its privileges to fly at
John Wayne Airport.
Under the airport m aster plan
adopted by supervisors Feb. 18
and under a proposed air carrier
access plan scheduled for a hearing in April, only airlines fly·
ing the Super 80s would win rights
to fly at John Wayne.
"Frontier uses the Boeing 737.
as does Air California and
Western. Republic utilizes the
DC-9.
Under the proposed access
plan. noise levels at the airport
would be reduced as the airlines
change their ·neets to newer and
quieter planes. And it would be
onfy those airlines that dem·
onstrate noise reductions that
would retain privileges to serve
the airport.
Frontier began service at the
airport Dec. 15. During January
and February, the air carrier
posted the lowest average
takeoff noise levels df the four
commercial airlines. another
fact Frontier hopes to use ln
persuading county officials to
grant it continued airport
privileges.
D1ily ·p11at
MAI N OfflCI
,
Thome• P Haley .._...
AobertN WMd ,.,...,.
M. Thomu K-.vll .....
ThomM A. Murphlne ~,--
~~~--
==°Schulman
f:J..S::=:e"
Ktnntth N. Goddatd Jr. a.....~
UO W•tl hY St., COll.t Nine, CS\.
Melt H9rffl1 ... IMO, C•I• Mffe,.CA. ,_,.
I
The Oran1e Cou.nty Board ol
Supervbore bu acted to ensure
that cooatrucUon Of new homes
alon1 the Irvine Coast between
Corona deJ Mar and Laguna
Beach doeu't obetruct views of
eid•lllna resldenta.
That acUon came Wednesday
during a rezoning of the 9,527·
acre couUlne between the two
c o m· m u n i t i e s f r o m a n
a1riculturaJ area to a planned
commWlity.
Supervisor Thomas Riley in·
duded ln the final vote stipula·
tiona that plans for new homes
adjacent to existing
nei1hborboods must include iJ.
lu1traUons showing ocean vie~
from adjacent homes in Cameo
Shores in South Corona del Mar
before and after construction.
Residents of the neighborhood
had objected that new homes
could cut off their ocean views.
The rezoning gives the Irvine
Company preliminary approval
to build up to 225 houses in the
planning area. But Pete r
Herman, Riley's aide in land use
matters, said Wednesday that
current company plans call for
construction of only 74 houses in
the area.
However , before any roads
are built or utility lines ex-
tended , the company must ob-
tain approval of its plans from
the state Coastal Commission.
Plans are scheduled to be sub-
mitted lo the South Coast
Regional Coastal Commission
by the middle of this month. said
J e rry Collins. a compan y
spokesman. The state com·
mission could consider the mat-
ter in mid May. he added.
In exchange fo r approval to
build up to about 2.000 housing
units on the property. the com-
pany is offering to dedicate 2,600
acres of undeveloped land to the
county. That land would rem ain
as open space even if other
acreage set.aside for a proposed
n ational park in the area is not
bought by the federal govern-
ment, Collins said.
A development agreement
that would det ail construction
phases and land dedications will
be sought by the company from
the county within six months. he
added.
,.,.... P11.,e .4J
RULES •••
But the call for help went to
Newport Beach first.
The person who made that call,
Newport resident Tom Williams,
said fire officials in Newport told
him he would have lo call Costa
Mesa for help.
Tom Anderson, a Newport fire
official, said the city's agreement
with Costa Mesa requires that
"we can't respond lo an incident
in that city unless they request us
to."
He stressed that Newport is
hopeful o f in stitu ting an
a utomatic response system
between the two towns similar to
the joint.powers agreement that
exists in Huntington Beach, Foun·
lain Valley and Westminster .
Anderson said putting together
such an agreement is a "political
question" and would require de·
cision-maxing by council mem-
bers from both cities.
Russ Henderson, a Costa Mesa
fire marshal. said his department
received notification of the inci·
dent from Newport just seconds
after Williams called from the
Costa Mesa center.
He nderson said according to his
records 20 persons caUed the
Newport fire station to report the
incident.
Parmentier, whose son is a
Newport police offi cer. collapsed
in his chair after spending at least
15 minutes on the witness stand.
Friends said he's attended all
nine days of the hearing before
testifying.
Authorities at Hoag Memorial
Hospital, where Parmentier was
taken, report the Newport man is
In ser ious but stabilized condition
in the hospital's intensive care
unit.
F,....Pa,,e.41
STORM •••
District spokesma n Rob
Moreland 1ald the current storm
accompanied by Uumderclaps ia
a little bit biJarre.
Saddleback Peak, for example,
has received only 2.7 inches of
rain froai the. current storm aJoq
wlt.b a c:odlparable ' u .s lncbet of
ralD to date.
Laat ·year at lhl• Um• the
bl1h"t polnt of land in Oranie
Cou.ntf bad received 51.2 lncbes.
M oreland1ald tbls ls bff ameof
what he t.enm raln celll, dleb
drop tremendous ·a mount. of
water ln certain a.nu due to the
patte1111 al blab aad low pre11un
111temslato1Wd
''The PHk ti alwara to mueb
1tJ1hertar.mfall," a..aatd.
No....-. damqe wu rwpart.
Id lD tbe ~ ... to lM latest .....
·~ ... Colt.i .... ,.. ollfttl.11 ....... tMll ... ··-··~··
W AIHJllfOTOJ( (Alf) -
Tlte U.S. Border Patrol
tllou1bt ao111ethln• wu
Wl'G91 when the foreitn
baeMilball team wore clean
teoDll lboM an ~ <>uldoOr
court and couldn t handle
the ball very well. They
werertaht.
The bo1ua basketball
team wu formed to smu1-
1le five Thal citizens into
the United States, the Im-
migration and Naturaliza-
tion Service charged.
Tbe plan called for the
fi ve Thais t o play
basketball near Campo,
Call! .• on the Mexican
border . until, at a pre·
arranged time, they would
be driven to Los Anceles.
said David Crosland, act-
ing commwioner of the
Immigration and
N aturallzationService.
F,....P,,.e AJ
VISITOR •••
Kuyper said the law prohibits a
majority of legislative bodies,
s uch as the boa rd, from de-
liberating in secret, except on
personnel and litigation matters.
Ellick said the press was not
allowed at the meeting because
business leaders invited to the
luncheon were told in advance
that they would be free to ask
Brown questions without worry-
ing about public exposure.
.. I can't violate that initial un -
derstanding," he said.
The Brown Act was passed as
a means to prevent publicly
elected boards from meeting
secretly.
Although Elli ck said t he
supervisors mostly listened dur-
ing the question a nd a ns wer
period, he said that Supervisor
Bruce Nestande did ask Brown
his opinion on building toll roads
to solve freeway congestion.
Oops: Pilot
'correction'
not coJTect
Sometimes, th e band is
quicker than the eye.
In t.be cue of Wednesday's
Daily Pilot, the hand belonged to
a print.er. l{e pasted what was
supposed to be the corrected
first paragraph of one story on
another story the wrong one
-on Page 1.
By the time the mistake was
~tted, the presses had rolled
and it was too late to d o
anything about it.
The error caused readers to be
confused and editors to be an·
gry. Besides, the "correction"
contained two typographical er-
rors.
Ben Franklin told us there
would be days like that.
Marital ta lk set
A lecture on marital discord is
scheduled March 13 at 7 p.m. at
Orange Coast College. More in·
formation can be obtained by
calling 556-5880. ' ·
aeadJine set
8) UCH.ARD GREEN
OI • Delly ...... '4Mf
Koll Co. Vice President
Timothy Strader bas less than 2'
hours to reach an aereement
with Marine Corps officials over
an amphitheate r proposed for
Lion Country Safari io Irvine,
one mile weal of El Toro Air Sta-
tion 'a main nmway.
Irvine City Councilman Larry
A1ran say& that if the agree-
ment ian't reached by then. be
will appeal a c:ity Planning Com-
mi11ioc approval of tbe project
tot.be City Council.
The Planninl Commission ap-
proval becomes final at 5 p.m.
Friday if no appeals are filed.
Lt. Col. Bob Wemhe ur.
spokesman for the air station,
said today there is no agreement
and the Marine Corps opposes
the project on grounds that it
would encroach on the military
facility.
Strader. a partner in the
10,000-spectator Irvine Meadows
a mphitheater project, points out
that jets typically don't fly over
the site on weekend nights when
concerts would be held.
But Marine s po k esman
Wemheur points out that flight
schedules can change daily. He
said it would be hard to ins ure
that a Marine aircraft wouldn't
zoo m ove r a packed a m -
phitheater.
Wemheur indicated that the
Marines would consider legal
action to block th e am ·
pbitbeater.
Although the differences
MARINE CORPS
AIR STATION
EL TORO
LION COUNTRY
o.11, ........... _
APPEAL THREATENED
PropaMd emphllheeter
between the position or the
Marines and the theater propo-
nen ts seem large, Strader.
however . is continuing to
negotiate.
For their part. the Marines
say that they can't enter into an
agreement that would limit
them in any way.
We mheur said the Marines
must hold their ground on the
amphitheater because the pro-
posed facility lies di rectly under
one of of the last remaining
training patterns at the air sla·
tion .
He said military fighters
sometime zoom over the site at
SOO·foot altitudes.
Mesa inan acquitted
in bank ~fraud rap
A Costa Mesa lawyer and a
Washington state businessman
acc u sed of defrauding a
Nigerian government bank of
$21 million have been acquitted
by a Los Angeles federal jury.
The jury r eturned in nocent
ve rdicts Wednesday on fi ve
counts of a federal indictment
against attorney J . Willie Hen-
derson, 38, and George 0 . Ja·
Quith, 38, of Bellingham. Wash.
But Henderson was convicted
of a sixth count charging that he
perjured himself before a
F,....P.,,eAI
IDJACK ...
through airport security and
confronted a flight attendant
while passengers were boarding
around 9:30 a .m . After the plane
was moved, the terminal was re-
opf'ned to the public.
The hijacker was speaking
with authorities over the
airliner's intercom.
"Our understanding is the
cockpit crew (including pilot
and co-pilot) got out by using
ropes they have for emergen-
cies." sai d Conti n ental
spokesman John Clayton. "The
man claims to have a briefcase
full of explosives."
federal grand jury last June.
T he government charged the
two plotted lo have the money
fraudulently transmitted by wire
a year ago from the Central
Bank of Nigeria to Henderson's
account in'Costa Mesa.
While the money did end up in
the Costa Mesa account, the
prosecution could not convince
the jury that the defendants were
involved in a fraudulent scheme.
The prosecution accused the
pair of conspiracy and of "caus-
ing unindicted coconspirators"
in the Nigerian bank to make a
phony wire transfer of govern-
ment funds.
The transfer order directed a
New York City bank holding
Nigerian (unds to send $21 .5
million to Henderson's account
at Barclays Bank.
Barclays froze the account
when bank officials decided to
investigate the transfer.
Henderson and Jaquith insist-
ed they did not know anyone
working in the Nigerian bank
and had no knowledge that the
wire transfer was unauthorized
until days after it was received.
Jury members said evidence
presented by the prosecution in
supporting its fraud case was
almost entirely circumstantial
and that they could not return a
guilty verdict. Henderson's sentencing on the
perjury count is set for March
30.
For the one of a kind woman,
• one of a k ind dl•mond.
Hardly a woman alive doesn't dream of
owning a dazzling diamond solitaire. Some
get one on their wedding day-some on an
anniversary. One thing's tor sure, the day
they unwrap a diamond solitaire Is a day
they'll never forget. For the widest sef~lon
and absolutely the finest qualify available,
come see our solitaire collection. ,
..... , .......
WELLS FARGO DOCUMENT SHOWS DETAILS
Attorney·Jennffer King ••Y• Smith I• Innocent
Debate stilled
on evolution
SACRAMENTO (AP> A judge has virtually
eliminated the issues of evolution and biblical
creation from a trial that was expected to renew
the legal war between Darwin and Genesis.
Superior Court Judge Irving Perluss told
lawyers Wednesday that the central issue in the
case is ensuring "sensitivity. understanding and
tolerance" for children whose religious beliefs
may clash with what they learn in science classes.
The state dropped plans to call astronomer
Carl Sagan, Nobel laureate Arthur Kornberg and
other prominent scientists as witnesses to defend
evolutiona ry theor y, developed by Charles
Darwin, who wrote "Origin of Species ...
Pet proteetl•• -~
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The bill to prohibit
killing cats and dogs for food has advanced to the
floor of the California Assembly.
The Ways and Means Committee voted 12-4
Wednesday for A B241 by
Assemblyman Lawrence
NEWS BRIEFS Kapiloff, D-San Diego.
It would make it a
m isde meanor , with a
maximum penalty of six
months in jail and $500 fine, to kill a dog or cat to
eat it.
The bill and an identical one moving through
the Senate were prompted by reports last year
that refugees from Southeast Asia, where dog is a
delicacy in some cultures, were killing animals in
a San Francisco park and elsewhere for food.
Nt tert•re rei.ted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Skip Webster, who
produces ABC-TV's "Fantasy Island," has a fan-
tastic story of his own to teU
about abuse and brainwas hing
he says bis son, daughter-in-law
and three grandchildren have
suffered since they joined a re-
ligious group that claims to be a
fundamentalist Christian sect.
Webster called a news con·
ference Wednesday to teU about
his 8-month-old grandson ,
whom he's never seen, being
wHSTH beaten with a belt and stuffed bead and feet downward 10 a can. Webster says
former members of Truth Station told him bis
15-year-old grandson took part in beating women
at the Apple Valley camp ol the group, that was
once known 111 River of Life Ministry.
Twt.erltekll• .. • .. ••
BERKELEY (AP > -A Unlverslty of
Caltfomia physics teaching assistant has been ar-
ftated in the strangulation of a coed in bis class,
Police said today. Michael Joseph Brodheim, 22, was discovered
1t Hifhland Hospital, where California Hittiway
Patro officers bad taken him Juat after midnltbt
Mond•Y·
Berkeley police said officers found him with lats wrilta slashed after an apparent Jump off a
freeway overpua.
Polle• 1poke1man Andy Goodman aaid
lrodbelm apparently once dated Kristin Malm-
tu.i•t, 31, whote beaten, 1tran1led body was dll· ~ered Tuetday on the noor of her Berkeley
••rtmeat.
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thuraday, March 5, 1981 H/F ~I
Boxing promoter 'duped' by hank.?]
~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -At1omeys for mt11ln1
b01dn1 promoter Harold J . Smlt.b called a new1
conference to aaain declare hb laaoctnee tn a
$21.3 million embezzlement from Well• P'arao
Bank.
But attorneys. Jennifer Kins and Robert
Michaela, produced virtually no evidence Wednet·
day to 1upport their contention that Smith waa
duped by bank officials who were "laundertna
money" through bis accounts.
They insisted that the bank is keeplnt docu·
ment.a ftom them.
They conceded that. whether or not Smith was
involved in the embezzlement scheme, he owes the
bank $10.l milllon -the amount drawn on his
various accounts.
MS. KING, EXP RESSING anger about state·
m en ts of Wells Fargo officers, declared: "Our
purpose is to use lh.e press in the same fashion
they have."
She told reporters and cameramen crowded
'Into her office : "I'll tell you right now, Harold J .
Smith and Muhammad Ali Professional Sports are
totally iMocent victims. The accounts were used
by the bank for laundering money and playing
banking games."
She displayed various documents includinl
canceled checks and bank statements wblch showed
only that m oney h ad been deposited and
withdrawn from Smith's accounts at Wells Far10.
The most crucial document, she insisted, is
Nix on, Reajan?
Erotic show
lured greats
SAN FRANC ISCO <AP) -Famed former
m adam Brandy Baldwin says some of the men of
the exclusive Bohemian Club "just loved" erotic
shows put on by her "girls."
In an interview published Wednesday by the
San FT~ncisco Examiner. Ms. Baldwin, who has
been convicted several times for running bawdy
houses, said for 10 years she took prostitutes to a
house near the club's Bohemian Grove retreat.
The 108-year-old club counts among its 900
m embers President Reagan , Vice President
George Bush, Attorney General WiJUam French
Smith and former President Ric hard Nixon, as
well as men from the highest echelons or
American business. Club officials could not be
reached for comment.
MS. BALDWIN MENTIONED no names in her
account. It indicated that neither she nor the pros-
li tutes ever operated on the club 1rounds,
although she said she once "tried to sneak into the
Grove with a Midwestern news paper editor, and
he fell and broke his hip.
··AU hell broke loose. but I managed to slip out
before they caught me," she said.
The Grove is in r edwood country on the
Russian River, north of San Francl•co.
" ... I would rent a little house in tbe woocb, a
beautiful Uttle place, gorgeously decorated, and
we'd have champagne and the delicacies and the
Beta.Max and we'd make It all so homey," she
said.
"I'D TELL THE GIRLS to bring all their fan-
cy underclothing so they could do the little erotic
shows, and the gentlemen just loved it. I did the
Bohemian for 10 years. and they were such
beautiful people. very generous and so much fun."
She recalled that each year after tile club's
"Spr ing Jinks" show, in which members dress in
drag and perform at the remote encampment. she
would "have a little thing we called the ·Final
Jinx,' where the last customer from the Grove got
to be the 'jinx.·
"We'd just have fiv e or six ladies all over this
guy. The gentleman who got to be the jinx could
never believe his good fortune ... Oh, the Bohe-
mian was fun."
Brown rmming?
Keep in touch
SACRAMENTO <AP > -ls Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. going to run for Republican S.I.
Hayakawa's seat in the U.S. Senate next year?
Brown's answer depends on exactly how it is
phrased.
Here is the e xact exchange between the
Democratic governor and reporters at a news con-
ference in the Capitol Wednesday:
Q. "Are you running for the U.S. Senate?"
A. "No.
Q. "No?"
A. "That was in the present tense, and the
answer Is no."
Q. "Absolutely not?''
A. "Not at this moment."
Then, a few moments later, this e~change OC·
curred :
0 . "Are you considering running for the U.S.
Senate?
A. "Yes."
Q. "What would possibly deter you from enter·
Ing that race?" A. "I don't think It's appropriate to make a de-
cision for -on -1omethtn1that11 a year away.
And therefore, I'd rather not make that commlt-
ment now."
Q. ••ffave you made a decision to form an ex·
plora&ory committee?"
A. "Y•t be.cau1e unle11 a c:ommttt.. Is
formed and runds are relied, lt'I lmposlt~ to
make a lntelll1ent deelaloll aomeUme down t.be ,.., ...
mle•lna and the bank says it doel not txlet.
That document, she said, la a paper 1lvln1 a "l1De ol credit" for Sl.2 mUllon to Smith and bla en·
terprtaes.
"My cllfnta were under the impreaslon they
had a SU million liQe of credit and the money did
come throu1b. If the bank claims there la no Une of
credit, we have been duped by the bank, used by
the bank," she said.
THE NEWS CONFEa ENCE became
acrimonious at times as reporters challen1ed Ms.
Kini to refute the Wells Far10 version of the em-
bezzlement.
"You believe because It's a bank that they're
right," Ms. Kine exploded, "and you're going to
throw it on some innocent black group. t think
that's racis t ! ''
Smith ls black ; Ms. King is white.
Michaels said he hoped Smith would surface
soon and tell his story.
"He wants to come out. He just doesn't want to
get shot," he said. Both Michaels and Ms. King
claimed that Smith has been shot at, followed .
threatened and bis small son was kidnapped and
returned.
"I spent last weekend with him in a
hideaway," said Ms. King. "I was followed. My
phone is bugged. This office Is bugeed."
She insisted the only reason Smith fled was
because "four Orientals came to bis home and told
him to leave the country. They were armed."
In the often confusln1 news conlerence, the al·
torneys repeatedly attempted to 1blft blame for
the embeadement to varloul ~ olftclal1 bu
primarily to Gene Kawakami, a founder o
Muhammad AU Amateur Sports Jae. and rorme
general manager or the Wella Far10 Mlracle MU
Branch.
KAWAKAMI HAS BEEN FIRED by Well
Fargo but the baok says be had nolbint to do wl
the embezzlement. The bank aaid Kawakami'
connection to Smltb and MAAS was "coincldel)
tat." l
Wella Fargo has filed a S21.3 million civ
fraud suit against Smith, L. Ben Lewis, forme
Wells Farso branch manager, Muhammad All
Professional Sports and MAAS.
Although Ms . King said she was not represent
ing Lewis who has been named by Wells Fargo a
the key figure in the embezzlement, she said sb
does not believe he acted alone to carry ofr th
theft as the bank said he did.
She displayed an airline ticket which she sai
was issued to Lewis for a trip to Detroit for si~
days in .1980. T~e .bank has said Lewis d.id not tak ,
a vacation during the two years In which he wa
a ll egedly embeuling the money because bi
absence from the bank would have blown th
scheme.
A Smltti associate, Hilton S Nicholson. told
the news conlerence he personally traveled
Austral~ with Lewis in 1979 for 10 days.
....
ad1e·thaek
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Complet~ System with Metal-Tape Ready
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City investments
need explanation
The Irvine City founcil has decided to punue the
formaUon of tolnt powers authoritJes u a way of f undln1
nearly S30 ml lion In t acllities planned for tbe city.
While thls seems to be a reasonable course of action
the Irvine city staff should provide extensive justification
for each project before the City Council actually decides
to enter into a joint power authority with another gov·
ernmental agency. · For example, one of the facllltles said to be needed
for Irvine is a '4.3 million animal l>Ound. On the face of lt,
this seems an excessively expensive facility. It may be,
however, that the fast-growin• city of Irvine would be
spending money on a good investment considering the ul·
ti mate demands on such a facility.
' If that is the case, the Irvine city staff should be able
to provide a persuasive argument to tbat eff eel.
In urging that other governmental bodies participate
financially and in the utilization of the facilities, the city
staff noted that the city of Irvine is better off building its
needed capital improvements than continuing to lease
them indefinitely.
This argument seems to be valid, but it needs lo be
documented al on tr with cost comparisons of the facilities
envisioned for Irvine and similar! acilities elsewhere .
The City Council has decided to ask the voters' ad-
vice on the b!Jgest ticket item of all the proposed de-
velopments, an $11 million civic center.
This was a good decision. but the voters needn't be
asked how they feel about all of the capital improvements
planned for the city. That. after all, was what they elect-
ed the City Council memberstodo.·
But the voters have a right to know the exact
justification for every major municipal project the coun-
cil decides to build.
'
. . .so does that s01ell
Irvine Ranch Water District General Manager
Arthur Bruington says his Michelson Sewage Treatment
Plant isn't creating a stink in town.
That plant, located near the Fluor Corp. head-
quarters in Irvine . is subject to biological upsets and
equipment failures that have led to smelly situations in
the past.
So naturally during a recent hot spell when an offend-
ing odor was detected in the area of the plant, residents
blamed the sewage treatment facility.
Bruington says, however, that the whole stink was
due to the freakish hot spell. The hot air forced a variety
of the entire city's odors to settle close to the ground.
Water district officials decided since the plant ap-
parently wasn't at fault there was no need to quickly get
the word out to nearby residents that the smell was a
temporary condition posing no health threat.
Leaving Bruington's unusual explanation for the
smell unchallenged, officials at the Michelson Sewage
Treatment Plant still have a responsibility for letting the
public know the source of the problem.
At the very least, they should advise city officials of
the situation no matter who is causing it.
Swim nieet costly
T he Irvine Aquatics Club is balking at a $4,487.69
debt to the city and wants to go over the bill on a line-by-
line basis.
The bill is a result of a swim meet at which the club
was host last summe r in the city's Heritage Park
Aquatics Complex. Although the meet drew national at-
tention and television coverage by a major network, the
meet organizers inexplicably lost money on the event.
And the City of Irvine was left holding the financial
bag after the meet to the tune of about $30,000. The Irvine
Aquatics Club has since reimbursed a portion of that debt
to the city, but is objecting to the final $4,487 .69.
A spokesman (or the club appeared at the last Irvine
City Council meeting and pleaded that the city waive the
bill. If it couldn't be for given, he said , he would like lo go
over it with the city staff for any billing mistakes.
The City Council refused his first request but ordered
the staff to re-examine the bill.
If anything is to be learned from the incident, both
the city and the aquatics club should keep in mind that
the next big glittering opportunity, lo "put on a show"
m ay well come with the same kind of fin ancial ties. • 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 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 .
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Smithsonian
By L. M. BOYD
Q . Wh y did James
Smithson, the rich European,
choose the United States as
t he place t o found the
Smithsonian Institution wher.
he'd never set foot in this
country?
A. Maybe because nobody
here used the lilies of nobility.
He is said to have been
highly conscious of the fact
that he was the illegitimate
son of the Duke of Northum-
berland and Elizabeth Keate
Macie, a descendant of Klnc
Hen ry VII. But h h il·
legitimacy deprived him ot
tbe noble titles. He died
c hildle11, and wben bia
Aephew subseque ntl y
likewise died childless, the
$508,318.46 in gold from his
estate was sent to the United
States as he'd willed it .
Those young men who've
long dreamed of growing up
to join the Merchant Martne
to go to sea can be expected'
to have a tough lifl\e of It.
The total count of such
seamen worldwide is drop-
ping drastically these years.
Report is only about SO new
jobs open up annually now.
The fast-growing pine trees
used to make paper moaUy
co me from commerclal
foresta, planted apeciflcally
for harvesting as any othtt
cash crop. If recycled paper
cuts back the demand tor
auch trees, the crowen mott
probably will co lnto other
lint• ol bualneu. Recreallua.
real eltat.e maybe. Thi• ..
explained bY cine Donald H.
Bump, Pb.D .. who IDUtl UM
point that there are tood
r'ea•ona to recycle r.aper, but
11vla1 lreea llD t one of
them. .
Q. What unlveralty put.I UM
bll•Ht empbaalt ln lU
l portl procraml OD IOlf?
A. No. then JOU bavt me.
Caa onlJ report tbat "' Ualnrttt1 if Houston b ..
"'• mOll al...U aow plaJUll oa u.e Proluonal Goll Aa-
toe:lt&toeJour -wttb 11.
'
I
Cla~p some lids on public pay
A le1l1latlve propoul bat
been made to booet the 1alary
of the 1ovemor to $125,000. He
now la paid $49,100. lnclucled tn
the measure would be e(lually
s ubstantial ·
ra\ses for the
lieute nant
governor ,
secretary of
state, con-
troller and
treasurer. all
o f wh om
w o uld be
upped fro m
$4 2,500 to
$70,000 as would the attorney
general who now receives $47,500.
This proposal follows closely
on the heels of recommendations
made-.by a so-called President's
commission to raise the salaries of congressmen from the pres·
ent $62,000 to $85,000 and make
similar increases ln other top
federal poeltJona lncludlna the
cablnet memben .
Such larieaa makes one
wonder what tree• these IUY•
are •wtnit.nc from. Have thole
ln 1overnment become like
'Marle Antolnttte, so lnaenaiUve
to the people that they believe
people are wt1Un1ly permlttina
themselves to be taxed Into pov·
erty so that they can llve lo lwc·
ury 1 Do n 't they r ead the
1taU1Uc1 complled by the U.S.
Labor Department and the In·
temal Revenue Service?
ACCOaDING to U.S. Labor
statlaUca the average wage
earned by Ml-time workers in
manufacturing Industries last
ye ar was $283 a week while
those in other non-agricultural
private employment averaged
only S233 a week.
The same source reports the
median annual income of all
~
THE UGfrr ~ °™IS END Of THE llJNNt'L
Mailbox
maJea wu $18,000 while the m•
dlan for women was only 19,IOO
and only 22 percent of the people
had f amlly incomes ln exceea of
$25,000.
Internal Revenue fl1ure• 1bow
that out of the more than 200
million population tn tht U.S.
fewer than 70 mUUon filed in-
come tax returna and only 12
percent of those had incomes
over $30,000 and less than I per-
cent had incomes over $50,000
with .OOS percent reporting in·
comes in excess of $100,000.
HOW THEN can it be lf\al
those in government are so prec-
ious, provide services so valua·
ble, that they must be granted
incomes equalling those of less
than 2.5 percent of the nation's
wealthiest?
It was not taxation without
repr esentat ion a lone which
c aused the American Revolu-
tlon. The d•ire to bt rid of tbe
trapplnp of royalty and abed
the tlUes cl nob1Uty loomed J•
H lar1e ln the mlnd1 of the col-
onlata and they wrote lnto the
Constitution an abeolute bu on
nobility.
I a the freedom from the op.
preaalon of a caate ayatem ao
valiantly won by the colonllta
two hundred years ago to be
permitted to be taken away by
those ln government awardln1
themselves royal lncomea? Are
we to address lbe congressmen
and legialaton as "Milord " and
other leaser bureaucrat& as "Sir
Knight?" Ben Franklin.muat be
spinning in his grave.
THE 8ALA&Y of the governor
stands at 100 percent more than
it was 30 years ago. Perhaps,
although that is a salary enjoyed
by no more than 3 percent of the
people, inflation is such that it
might be raised slightly even
though it is safe to predict that
no matter what t he pay the
caliber of those seeking the of·
nee won't change.
But whatever the salary for
the governor may be, it should
serve as the ceiling for all other
public offices. state and local, in
the state. In fact, no other public
office should pay more than 90
percent of the governor's salary.
UNFORTUNATELY, public
pay has gotten completely out or
hand with minor office holders
such as police and fire chiefs.
city and county managers, and
school administrators now re·
ceiving far more than the gov-
ernor And, absent an economic
crash similar to the 30s, there
seems no easy way back.
That is no excuse for not
clamping a lid on public pay the
next time the salary of the gov-
ernor 1s changed. Anything
short of that will be criminal
for it will pave the way to
economic collapse or worse.
Bilingual education d eprives c hildren
To the Edit.or:
RecenUy. you printed an artJ-
cle from Bernice WaJsh regard· ln1 her views in favor of bi·
lingual remedial educatiall in our
public schools. Ms. Walsh refers
to the "great melting pot" which
is or should be -the
American Way . However, if
educators do not e ffectively
teach the English language to
non-English speaking citizens.
we have not a "melting pol" but
a "Mulligan's Stew" -not
cohesiveness and togetherness
but separateness and apartness.
As California Sen . S .l.
Hayakawa recently stated. a
common language -English -
is lhe great unifying factor in
this naUon of people from such
various ethnic backgrounds,
culture and languages.
Sen. Hayakawa. born of immi·
grant parents, admits he prob-
aMy would not have obtained
so high a political offic e -and
before that so high an educa·
tlonal offi ce -or have become
such a fine semanticist if the bi-
llneual policies being touted to-
day were ln effect in his school
days. Rather than being of help
to him, it would have been a dis-
service.
I BEUEVE the ethnic groups
should retain their culture -
and their language -but its
people should be taught English
and taught in it. l think it would
be a muc h wiser choice to
carefully, gently and intelligent-
ly teach non-English speaking
childre n to read, write a nd
s peak English correctly than it
would t)e to not do it. We do
these c hildren a great dis-
ser vice, In my opinion, If we do
le111 . And I believe that bilingual
education Is self-defeating.
Children are more adaptable,
teachable and capable than we
often give them credit for beinl;
and • while f truly aympathhe
with the problems a oon-Enallsh
1peakin1 child would bave, I
believe th.at, with the proper
teaching ln En&lilb, tbe sreat
majority' woufd "mah the
vade" -llaat la learn to com·
munlcat.e IA bd&b -M proud
·<and rl1btl7 to) of tbl1 1c-
compll1bm•nt and 80 on -m•JU' -to put IM!tlbtl. I am
IW'e ol lt. a..NtiOM ol PM(
lmmlCfut PIOPI• Mtalt tD &NI.
1'tlty ... UYlallll"Mf. The man• ..... wtto wrtc.
and apeab .... ....,. .........
9orredly will otMOullJ uie tie
!1111• ot utetimt .Sv•.,. o• • man Cll' womu wbO ._ eot. 11111 .. locteal, .. It _.,
ftertlon, It WGUld .... to •·
"'' Olltect ol publ6c edlleMlaa .. tlle Ualted ..._ " ~ wt111t It }tu ahrQI ..... -lo .....
:::::• Amtrtea" 1d1Ml ..,_._ .. u ......
A..-.. IOdlt1; Md tNI 411-maada u. corrtft .. ii ta.
--......... ~fta--
. ----------.....__._____..
ly be a ccomplished by the
English language beine taught
in the public schools
HAZEL H. SCHWAB
Nol llw •111 ltor
To the Editor:
On Sunday, Feb. 22. a scathing
letter about the Newport Beach
Police Department appeared in
this section. allegedly signed t>y
me.
The purpose of today's letter
is to let the record state that I.
William F. Fawcett Jr., did not
write that letter and the
signature was forged.
In no respect do I hold the Dai-
ly Pilot responsible for they did
check the na me on the letter
against a proper corresponding
address.
But I do wish lo state that my
own views of the Newport Beach
Poli ce Department are
diametrically opposed to those
espoused in the forged letter. As
president of the Orange County
Red Cross Youth Council I have
had the opportunity to see the
workings of many law enforce-
ment agencies a nd Newport
Beach is one of the finest.
WILLIAM F. FAWCETT JR
-Sdtool taUur••
To the Editor:
As a taxpayer, ongoing-college
student, and parent my biggest
concern for several years has
been the l ack or ins pired
teaching to our children. This Is
especially true in the in-
termediate and hig h school
levels. Admittedly, our kids are
not 111ted or class leade rs, but
average kids. They needed to be
encoura1ed, praised and In-
spired to reach beyond w~al
they 9"med to be able to do.
Inatead they have been Ignored
and uncbaUeqed and s huffled
tbrou1h the system , graduating
totally unprepared for college
and unable to s upp o rt
themselves.
The burden ol educallna them
was 1iven to Oran1e Coast
CoUe1e. lln't thla rather late ln
their learnln1 lives? For the
ftrtl UIM they had meaninlful
counaella1 and at last they
learned a... to read and add
more t.Mn on. n1urel Of eoune
U.l1 NQuiNd tutor1q aad for
the ftnt Ume tb1I wat ·available.
We tried, totJ:!f umucreufully, to a« Uda of belp ln blcb
"boot• even to arou1e cone.m
or ~ for out lllda or their ftlture. We ftnally tried tutortn1
lbtm ou.net• .. and wt were
able to Mlp lD tom• are••·
..aY, I •ave no ·•tj:thy wtUi .,... teett.en at for
1ala17 llitre8MI and the ad·
•lldltratora Ukllll for more _..,. to nm the 1cbooll. The
probl• II DOt 10 muc:la money
M MCMDlablllty to teadllq. Teullln, cwelon. and ad·
ministrators sho uld s top de
m anding and start thinking of
ac tin g '>'ith s ome pro
fessionahsm In so many cases
their work <teaching l and their
social behavior is shoddy and
unprofessional. After all, they
are examples to the kids and. as
a whole. are poor ones. The stu-
dents are exposed to the uncon-
ventional life styles and poor at·
titudes.
I would like to see our educa-
tiona I system be a pay-as-you-go
one and be operated like a busi-
ness. More parents would take
notice what their kids are not
lea rning and require better
serv i ces for t heir" dollars .
Parents could be more demand-
ing and get results if they held
the purse strings. In the real
world when a good job is not be·
ing done then you are fired and
someone is hired who can. There
doesn't seem to be a shortage of
qualified people to teach. only
positions. This system would
also allow people who are not US·
Ing or no longer have need for
education n ot to pay for
something they aren't using.
Seems fair to me to pay only for
what I use.
B-ARBARA JOBBINS
No•en••
To the Editor:
The Newport Beach Cit y
Council recently approved the
b uildi ng of a large hotel
adjacent to John Wayne Airport.
Mayor Heather h as j u s t
announced that the council will
fight any expansion of said
airport. I can make no sense or
such behavior.
JOHN F . CASSIDY
Siop i lle •••••n-
To the Editor:
I couldn't agree more with R.
Williams and Donald Beatty
<Mailbox, Feb. 26). The ar·
rogance of our supervisors and,
most particularly of Ralph Clark
(a "people's representative"?),
and their indifference to the
thou1hls and wishes of the
voters and taxpaying clliaens
can onJy be described as appall-
ing.
As yet another longttme
Newport Beach resident under
the ever-increasing tu1ht pattern
of the Jeta, I'm woodertn1 wbati1 aoln• on here? Are we all vlc:timt
or Job.nny-wme-lalely lnduatry
(aucb as Fluor, wbo would "love
tonytoSeatUe, Chlca10, and New
York direct from Oran1•
County'')?
CAN WE do nothlq but all
ber• and watch our way ol U.fe co dowta tbe tubes, our property
1raduallr. become worthleal
<Remember PltJa del Rey? It
coulda't bappea tbe,., couJd
It 7 > • cbob la eonc..uoa aad IOI·
lutlon, and ,....allJ '" ucAtr
be au t1fu I stretch of country
destroyed by bigger and bigger.
loud('r and louder, dirtier and
d1rl1('r aircraft all in the
name or convenience for a rel·
at1ve few who are too lazy to
take a short drive or flight to On·
tario or LAX?
What IS going on'.' Nobody but
a few really wants the airport.
yet It keeps growing and grow-
ing . Can 't this monster be
stopped before it's too late?
Can't we get some teeth into our
citizens' groups ?
W.A. SCHRAEGLE
No •p a l o " fJa~lc'
To the Editor:
Regarding your Feb. 18
editorial on the talk given by Dr.
Judy B. Rosener to the UC I
Faculty Club, I suggest that any
"questionable logic" used was
th e Daily Pilot's. It is ironic
that. for any of us who were ac-
t u a 11 y present to hear the
speech. your obvious attempts to
cast aspersions on Dr. Rosener's
integrity had the opposite effect
of, in fact. proving precisely the
points she made regarding the
credibility of press coverage of
Coastal Comm ission activities.
Unfortunately, however, there
are many people whose only
knowledge of what Dr. Rosener
supposedly said comes from
your biased and inaccurate arti-
cle.
TO SET THE record straight,
Dr. Rosener neither condoned
nor excu sed the al leged
behavior of any of the Coastal
Commission's elected officials
who might have used their posi-
tions for personal gain. Rather,
she merely reminded us that
there are at least 76 other honest
and dedicated public servanta
working hard on a number or
complex and important issues,
whose efforts should not be ig-
nored slmply because the press
finds it easier and more
n ewsworthy to cover the
"nashier" personal Issues that
mi1ht smell of scandal:
No ''pat on tbe back" wu
reached for or solicited in aay
way by Dr. Rosener. The
greater likelihood ls that tbe
Pilot will be "reachin1" the day
it cbOOlel to report as favorabl.Y
as lt claims lt would llk.e to dot
MARYANN WELLS BOGNER
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Thurlday, March s. 1981 H/F ~·
promoter 'duped' 'by hank~
/
'
.... 1,.,.....
WELLS FARGO DOCUMENT SHOWS DETAILS
Attorney JennHer King NY• Smfth la Innocent
Debate stilled
on evolution
SACRAMENTO <AP> A judge has virtually
eliminated the issues of evolution and biblical
creation from a trial that was expected to renew
the legal war between Darwin and Genesis.
Superior Court Judge Irving Periuss told
lawyers Wednesday that the central issue in the
case is ensuring "sensitivity, understanding and
tolerance" for children whose religious beliefs
may clash with what they learn in science classes.
The state dropped plans to call astronomer
Carl Sagan, Nobel laureate Arthur Kornberg and
other prominent scientists as witnesses to defend
evolutionary theory. developed by Charles
Darwin. who wrote "Origin of Species."
Pn pro•~•lo• _,.,..rn
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The bill to prohibit
killing cats and dogs for food has advanced to the
floor of the California Assembly.
The Ways and Means Committee voted 12-4
Wednesday for AB241 by
Assemblyman Lawrence
NEWS BRIEFS Kapiloff, D·San Diego.
lt would make it a
misdemeanor, with a
maximum penalty of six
months in jail and S500 fine. to kill a dog or cat to
eat it.
The bill and an identicar one moving through
the Senate were prompted by reports last year
that refugees from Southeast Asia, where dog is a
delicacy in some cultures, were killing animals in
a San Francisco park and elsewhere for food.
~ LOS ANGELES <AP> ~ Attomey1 for mi11iat
bo1dn1 promot.er Harolcl J . So\lth called a newt
conference to a1aln declare h1a tnnocence tn a
'21.3 million embenJement from WeUa Far10
Bank.
But attorneys, Jennifer Kini and Robert
Michaels. produced vlrtually no evidence Wffoes-
day to support their contention that Smith was
duped by bank officials who were "laundertn1
money" through his accounta.
They insisted tbat the bank is Jceepln1 docu-
menta from them.
They conceded that whet.her or not Smith was
involved in the embezzlement scheme, be owes the
bank $10.1 million -the amount drawn on his
various accounts.
MS. KING, EXPRESSING anger about state-
mentJs of Wells Fargo officers, declared: "Our
purpose is to use the press in the same fashion
they have."
She told reporters and cameramen crowded
into her.office: "I'll tell you rtght now. Harold J .
Smith and Muhammad Ali Professional Sports are
tqtally innocent victims. The accounts were used
by the bank for laundering mon~ aod playing
banking games.''
She displayed various documents including
canceled.checks and bank statements which showed only that money had been deposited and
withdrawn from Smith's accounts at Wells Fargo.
The most crucial document, she Insisted, is
Nixon, Reagan?
Erotic slww
lured greais
SAN FRANCISCO IAPl -Famed former
madam Brandy Baldwin says some of the men of
the exclusive Bohemian Club "just loved" erotic
shows put on by her "girls."
In an interview published Wednesday by the
San Francisco Examiner, Ms . Baldwin, who has
been convicted several times for running bawdy
houses. said for 10 years she took prostitutes to a
house near the club's Bohemian Grove retreat.
The 108-year-old club counts amoilD its 900
members Pres ident Reagan, Vice i'resident
George Bush, Attorney General William French
Smith and former President Richard Nixon, as
well as men from t he highest echelons of
American business. Club officials could not be
reached for comment.
MS. BALDWIN MENTIONED no names in her
account. ll indicated that neither she nor the pros·
titutes ever operated on the club grounds,
although she said she once "tried to sneak into the
Grove with a Midwestern newspaper editor, and
he fell ~nd broke his hip.
.. All heU broke loose. but I managed to slip out
before they caught me.·· she said.
The Grove is in redwood country on the
Russian River, north of San Francisco.
" .. .I would rent a little house in the woods, a
beautiful litUe place. gorgeously decorated, and
we'd have champagne and the delicacies and the
Beta-Max and we'd make it aJJ so homey," she
said.
"l'D TELL THE GIRLS to bring all their fan·
cy underclothing so they could do the little erotic
s hows, and the gentlemen just loved it. I did the
Bohemian for 10 year s, and they were such
beautiful people, very generous and so much fun."
She recalled that each year after the club's
"Spring Jinks" show, in which members dress in
drag and perform al the remote encampment. she
would "have a little thing we called the 'Final
Jinx.' where the last customer from tt)e Grove got
to be the 'jinx.·
··We'd just have five or six ladies all over this
guy. The gentleman who got to be the jinx could
never believe his good fortune ... Oh, the Bohe·
mian was run."
a.ii cerc11re r~ B • ?
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Skip Webster, who rOWll r111111111g.
produces ABC-TV's "Fantasy Island," has a fan·
tastic story of his own to tell ueep Ill. touch about abuse and brainwashing _n!
he says his son, daughter-in-law
and three grandchildren have •
suffered since they joined a re-SACRAMENTO <AP) -Is Gov. Edmund
ligious group that claims to be a Brown Jr. going to run for Republican S.I .
fundamentalist Christian sect. Hayakawa 's seat in the U.S. Senate next year?
Webster called a news con-Brown's answer depends on exactly how lt is
ference Wednesday to tell about phrased.
bis 8-month-old grandson, Here is the exact exchange between the
whom he's never seen, being Democratic governor and reporters at a news con-
wnsTu beaten with a belt and stuffed ference in the Capitol Wednesday:
bead and feet downward m a can. Webster says ' Q. "Are you running for the U.S. Senate?"
former members of Truth Station told him bis A. "No.
IS·)lear-old grandson took part in beating women Q. "No?"
at the Apple Valley camp or the group, that was A. "That was jn the present tense. and the
once known as River of Life Ministry. answer is no."
1 Q. "Absolutely not?" l'ftldler...,,, I• ....... A. "Not at this moment."
Then, a few moments later, this exchange OC· BERKELEY CAP> -A University of curred:
California physics teaching assistant has been ar-o. "Are you considering running for tbe U.S.
Mated in the strangulation of a coed fn bis class, Senate?
police said today. A. "Yes."
Michael Joseph Brodbelm, 22, was diacovered Q. "What would possibly deter you from enler-
at Hi&hJand Hospital, where California Hitbway ing that race?"
Patrol olficen had taken hlm Just after midni1ht A. "I don't think it's appropriate to make a de·
llonday. 1 cision for -on -somethina that is a year away.
Berkeley poUce said offlcen found him with And therefore, I'd rather not make that commit·
b11 wrists 1luhed after an apparent Jump off a ment now."
flreew_, overpass. Q. "Have you made a decision to form an tx·
Police spokesman Andy Goodman said ploratory committee!"
Brodbeim awarenUy once dated Kristin Malm· A. "Yea, because unle11 a commitlee 11
.... t. Jt, w&oee beaten, stran1led body was di•· fonned and funds are railed, it's impotslble to
eovered Tuesday on the noor of her Berkeley make an tnt.elUaent decision aomeUme do•n the apertmeat, toad, II 'lo
ml11ina and the bank aaya It does not exist.
That document, ahe said, ii a paper 1Mn1 a
"line ol credit" for $12 million to Smith and his en-,
terpriles.
"My clients were under the impression they
bad a $12 million line ol credit and the money did
come tbrouah. If the bank claims there is no line of
credit, we have been duped by the bank, used by
In the often confusing oewa conference. the at·
torneys repeatedly attempted to 1hlft blame for
the embeazlement to various bank officials
primarily to Gene Kawakami, a founder o
Muhammad Ali Amateur Sports Inc. and forme
general manager of the Wells Farao Miracle Mil
Branch.
the bank," she said. .· KAWAKAMI HAS BEEN FIRED by Well
) Fargo but the bank says he had nothing to do wit
THE NEWS CONFERENCE became the embezzlement. The bank said Kawakami'
acrimonious at times as reporters challenaed Ms. connection lo Smith and MAAS was "coinciden
KinJ to refute the Wells Fargo version of the em-tal."
beulement. Wells Fargo has filed a $21.3 million civi
"You believe because it's a bank that they're fraud suit against Smith, L. Ben Lewis, forme
right," Ms . l(jng exploded, "and you're going to Wells Fargo branch manager, Muhammad Al
throw It on some innocent black group. I think Professional Sports and MAAS.
that'• racist !" Although Ms. King said she was not represent
Smith is black; Ms. King is white. ing Lewis who has been named by Wells Fargo a
' Michaels said he hoped Smith would surface the key figure in the e mbezzlement, she said sh
soon and tell bis story. does not believe he acted alone to carry off th
"He wants to come out. He just doesn't want to theft as the bank said he did.
get shot," be said. Both Michaels and Ms . King She displayed an airline ticket which she sai
claimed that Smith has been shot at, followed, was issued t.o Lewis for a trip to Detroit for si
threatened and his small son was kidn~pped and days in 1980. The bank has said Lewis did not tak
returned. a vacation during the two years in which he wa
"l spent last weekend with him in a alleg~dly embeuling the money because hi
hideaway," said Ms. King. "I was followed. My absence from the bank would have blown th
phone is bugged. This office is bugged." scheme.
She insisted the only reason Smith fled was . A Smith associate. Hilton S. Nicholson, tot
because "four Orientals came to his home and told the news conference he personally traveled t
him to [eave the country. They were armed." Australia with Lewis in 1979 for 10 days.
i , ..
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Saving the basics
goal of trustees
At what point does a 1ooct bulc edllcation end and
ed ucaUonal enrichment beitn?
The elualve answer to that quesUoo may well be sup-
plied over the next few years in the Newport·M~sa Unified
School Dlstrtct. Last year the school board-faced with declines ln both
income and atudent enrollment -cut deeply into elesneo·
tary school vocal music, physical educatJoo and remedial
readm, programs. .
Board members also trimmed away at the school nurs-
ing and psychological counseling prosrama.
Now administrators are talldnl about even more health
care cuts, an end to instrumental music in elementary
schools, cutting two years off high school physical educa-
tion and dropping foreign languages from middle school
programs.
Final action on next year's programs probably won't
com e much before the opening of school in September.
though, when next school year's budget is approved.
District administrators are predicting they'll have to
chop between S2 and $5 million from this year's budget
amount, depending on what laws are passed in Sacramento
regarding school finance.
Trustees, faced with making final decisions on what
programs go and which schools close, noted last week that
like it or not, the once-wealthy district is approaching the
point where few enrichment programs are offered in order
to maintain good basic education.
. liberty isn't license
Urged on by an answering tape attached to the Cuckoo's
Nest nightclu b's telephone, hundreds of rock advocat es
turned out recently to protest what was billed as the possible
demise of punk rock in Orange County.
Club operators a nd rock advocates alike claimed Costa
Mesa's City Council would crush an art form and emerging
culture by recalling a live·entertainment permit issued the
club aboutt wo years ago.
But Cuckoo's Nest neighbors along P lacentia Avenue
complained bitterly that vandalism, litter and rowdiness
were the result of rock -fan activity on entertainment nights.
Police claimed club activity spawned alcohol, drug
abuseandminorcrime.
As a result, the council pulled the permit, issued
originally on the basis it would cause no neighborhood
problems.
Councilman Donn Hall said the issue was not musical or
cultural prefer ence but a matter of crowd control a nd public
safety.
Councilwoman Norma Hertzog addressed the cultural
and artistic freedOQ1 challenges even more succinctly.
She said freedoms s hould be cherished and nurtured,
but when one group's freedom infringes on another it is
called "license.•·
Costa Mesa, s he admonished, won't condone license in
the name of freedom .
Whether or not Costa Mesa's cultural level suffers from
the possible demise of the Cuckoo's Nest, the mayor put the
matter in perspective.
New library goals
Costa Mesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal has conceded
that there is a continuing need for the Orange County library
branch at or near its present location near the downtown
area.
He and his staff are s tudying possible renovation of the
old city.owned library building or construction of a new one
in the areajustnorth of Lions Park as a part of the city's new
Super Block.
At one time, SorsabaJ noted that downtown branch
Lib r ary patronage was slipping. Perhaps. he conjectured, it
might do better elsewhere.
After discussion with county library officials, Sorsabal
says the library should continue service, perhaps in a man·
ner reflecting the city's westside population changes.
More emphasis, librarians agree, s hould be placed on
materials serving the city's newly emerging Hispanic
culture and the older Mesans drawn to the area for retire·
ment.
Reassessment of community needs should be a continu·
ing part of any government.
Only time will tell whether expenditures made in con·
junction with those things perceived as need are wisely
made. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those ol their authors a11d
artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot. P 0
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Ph one (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Smithsonian
By L. M. BOYD
Q . Why did Ja m es
Smithson. the rich European,
choose the United States as
t he place to found t he
Smithsonian Institution when
he'd never set root in this
country?
A. Maybe because nobody
here used the tit) es of nobility.
He is said to have been
highly con.actou.s of the fact
tbat be wu the lJlegitimate
son of the Duke of Northum·
berland and Elizabeth Keate
Macie, a descendant of Kini
Henry VII. But bis ll·
le1itimacy deprived him of
tbe noble titles. He dled
ShouJdb't the taxpayen
· be obll•ated only for
tll• coa t of one-way tlcteu to Wublnatoo,
D.C. fOf' tbe CltJ Cou· ell, Cit}' Manacer end
Ctty AUarmy't
R.C.S.
childleu, and when hi1
n ep hew subsequently
likewise died childleaa, the
$508,318.46 in gold from hla
estate was sent to the Unlted
States u he'd wiUed it.
Those young men who've
long dreamed of growing up
to join the Merchant Marine
to go to sea can be expected
to have a tough lilJ\e of it.
The total count of such
seamen wQrldwide Is drop-
ping drastically these years.
Report is only about 50 new
jobs open up annually now.
The faat·rrowing pine trees
used to make paper mostly
come from commercial
forest., planted 1-peciflcally
for harvesting u any other
cash crop. U recycled paper
cuts back the demand for
1uch treet, the arowen mOll
probably will 10 into. other
llnet ct bualneu. Rtcrea.Uu..
real •tate maybe. Thi• la
explalned by 01M Donald ff.
Bump, Pb.I>., wbo mu• the
point that there are 1ood
reaton1 to recycle paper. but savln1 trees isn't one of
them.
Q. AmOCll women boWlen,
what.'• the averase aeon?
A. lJl. Th.It'• ama&.eun .
Tb• a••.,• lady amat.eur II
37 . years old wltb two
cbUdren, lnddtetally.
T~tnU P. H•ley/PUbll1Mr Thof'Ms K-.vll/l!dltor
S.rt)era Kntlbtch1Edl1of'tel P19t l!dltor
Cla•p some lids on public ·pay
A te1l1lalive propoul bH
been made to boolt tbe u.lary
or the 1ovemor to SlJS,000. He
now la paid "9,100. Included ln
th• meuure would be equally
1u batan tlal
ralses for the
lieutenant
govern or,
secretary of
state. con·
troller and
treasurer, all
of whom
would be
upped from
$42 ,500 to
$70,000 as would the attorney
general who now receives $47,500.
This proposal foUows closely
on the heels or recommendations
made by a so·called President's
commission to raise the salaries
of congressmen from the pres·
ent $62,000 to $85,000 and make
similar increases in other top
Mailbox
federal poaltiona includln1 the
cabinet members.,
Such lar1es1 ·makes one
wonder wbat trees these JUY•
are 1wlncin1 from. Have tbole
in aovernment become like
Marie Antoinette, so insensitive
to tbe people that they believe
people are willingly permitting
themselves to be taxed lnto pov·
erty so that they can live in lux·
ury? Don't they read the
statistics complied by the U.S.
Labor Department and the ln·
temal Revenue Service?
ACCOaDING to U.S. Labor
statistics the average wage
earned by full·time workers in
manufacturing industries last
year was $383 a week while
those in other non·agricultural
private employment averaged
only $233 a week.
The same source reports the
median annual income of all
,males wu $16,000 wblle U.. me·
dtan for women waa only •.eoo
and only 22 percent of tbe people
bad family incomes ln HCMI of
$25,000.
Internal Revenue n1ura ~w
that out ol the more than 200
million population ln the U.S.
fewer than 70 million rued in·
come tax retur111 ~d only 12
percent of those bad incomes
over $30,000 and leas thao 3 per·
cent bad incomes over $50.000
with .005 percent reportln1 in·
comes lo excess of $100,000.
HOW THEN can it be that
those in government are so prec·
lous, provide services so vaJua·
ble, that they must be granted
incomes equaUing those of less
than 2.5 percent of the nation's
wealthiest?
It was not taxation without
representation alone which
caused the American Revolu·
tlon. The desire to be rid ol U..
trapplnp of royalty and abed
the UtJes ol nobility loomed JUlt
as lar1e ln t.be minda or the ~
onisll and they wrote into the
Con1titution an absolute ban on noblllty.
Is the freedom from the op.
pre11lon of a cute system so
vallanUy won by the colonllta
two hundred years •to to be
permitted to be taken away by
those lo government awardlnc
themselves royal incomes? Are
we to address the congressmen
and legillators u "Milord" and
other lesser bureaucrats as "Sir
Knight?" Ben Franklin mu.st be
spinning in his grave.
THE SAIA&Y of the governor
stands at 100 percent more than
it was 30 years ago. Perhaps,
although that i& a salary enjoyed
by no more than 3 percent of the
people, lnflation is such that it
might be rai&ed slightly even
though it is safe to predict that
no matter what the pay the
caliber of those seeking the of-
fice won't change .
But whatever the salary for
the governor may be, it should
serve as the ceiling for all other
public offices, state and local, in
the state. ln fact, no other public
office should pay more than 90
percent of the governor's salary.
UNFORTUNATELY, public
pay bas gotten completely out of
hand with minor office holders
such as police and fire chiefs,
city and county managers, and
school administrators now re-
ceiving far more than the gov-
ernor. And, absent an economic
crash similar to the 30s, there
seems no easy way back.
That is no excuse for not
clamping a lid on public pay the
next time the salary of the gov·
ernor is changed. Anything
short of that will be criminal
for it will pave the way to ~conomic collapse or worse.
Bilingual education deprives children
To the Editor:
Recently, you printed an arti-
cle from Bernice Walsh regard-
ing her views in favor of bi-
lingual remed~l education in our
public schools. Ms. Walsh refers
to the "great melting pot" which
is or should be -the
American Way . However, if
educators do not effectively
teach the English language to
non-English speaking citizens,
we have not a "melting pot" but
a "Mulligan's Stew" -not
cohesiveness and togetherness
but separateness and apartness.
A s Ca lifornia Se n . S .J.
Hayakawa recently stated . a
common language -~nglish -
is the great unifying factor in
this nation of people from such
various ethnic backgrounds,
culture and languaf(es.
Sen. Hayakawa, born of lmmi·
grant parenta. admlt8 he prob-
ahly would not have obtained
so hl1h a polltlcal office -and
before that so hllh an educa·
llonal office or have become
~uch 1 tine semanUcl1l It the bi·
lln1ual policies beln1 touted to·
dfty were In effect. In hi• school
days. Rather than beln11 of help
to him. It would h11ve been a dis·
service.
I BEL.IEVE the ethnic 1roups
should retain their culture -
and their l•niuage -but its
peoplr 11hould be taught English
and tauaht In It. I think it would
be a much wiser choice to
carefully. 1ently and Intelligent·
ly teach non·English speaking
children to read, write and
speak English correctly than it
would be to not do lt. We do
these c hildren a great dis-
ser vlce, in my opinion, if we do
leas. And I believe that billni'Jal
education is self.defeating.
Children are more adaptable,
teachable and capable than we
often etve them credil for being;
and while I truly sympathize
with the problems • non·Eilgllsh
speaking child would have, I
believe that, witb the proper
teacblni In En1li1h, tbe ereat
major ity would "make the
grade" -that is learn to com·
munlcate in &Wlah -be proud
( hd ri1btly 10) of tbl• ac-
co m plis hm,nt and 10 on -
many -to •re*t hel,hll. I am
1ure of it. Generationl ol put
immigrant people attest to WI.
They are lMq proof.
The man or woman who writes
and spePI the En1llaH lancuaie
correctly wtU obvloualy bave tbe
blH•t ol lifetime edvan~
over a man <W woman wbo·doet
not, Tb1a la IOlleal, is lt not?
Therefore, lt would Hem to me,
tbe obJeet of public .cSQeatkln ID
tbe United Statel la todaJ what
lt baa alwlJI been -to IMlp
prepare America• 1el1ool cbtldnn to wort Uid UM la U..
Amertaa tod«7~ Md UM ...
mudl tbe coned .. ol tM
En1lllb 1..,....., nan ca.-
ly be accomplished by the
English language being taught
in the public schools.
HAZEL H. SCHWAB
Nol clw aMdtor
To the Editor.
On Sunday, Feb. 22. a scathing
letter about the Newport Beach
Police Department appeared in
this section. allegedly s1gne<l by
me.
The purpose of today's letter
is to let lhe record state that l.
William F. Fawcett Jr., did not
write that letter and the
signature was forged.
In no respect do I hold' the Dai·
ly Pilot responsible for they did
check the name on the letter
against a proper corresponding
address.
But I do wish to state that my
own views of the Newport Beach
Police Department ar~
diametrically opposed to• those
espoused in the forged letter. As
president of the Orange County
Red Cross Youth Council I have
had the opportunity to see the
workings of many law enforce·
ment agencies and Newport
Beach Is one of the finest.
WILLIAM F. FAWCETT JR.
~ltool f aflMr••
To the Editor:•
As a taxpayer. ongoing.college
student, and parent my biggest
concern for several years has
been the lack of inspir ed
teaching to our children. This is
esp ecially true in the in·
termediate a nd h igh school
levels. Admittedly, our kids are
not gifted or class leaders, but
average kids. They needed to be
encour aged, praised and In·
spired to reach beyond what
they seemed to be able to do.
Instead they have been ignored
and unchallenged and shuffied
through the system, graduating
totaUy unprepared for college
and unable t o s uppo rt
themselves.
Tbe burden of educatin1 them
was 1iveo to Orange Coast
Collete. lan't thiJ rather late in
th4'lr learniDI lives! For the
firtt time tb"y bad mea!Un1tul
counaellna and at last they
learned how to read and add
more Ula ooe ftiurel Of course .
this "*luired tutortn1 and foT
the nnt time t.hll WU available.
We tried, totally untucceu tully,
to let WI kind of belp ID hlCb
tcboo& or even to uouae concern
or lnterell for our kid• or their
future. We ftnally tried tutonna
them ourHlvea and we were
able to blip In tome area1.
minislrators should s top de·
manding and start thinking of
acting with so me pro·
fessionalism. In so many cases
their work (teaching) and their
social behavior is shoddy and
unprofessional. After all. they
are examples to the kids and. as
a whole. are poor ones. The stu-
dents are exposed to the uncon·
ventional life styles and poor al-
titudes.
I would like to see our educa-
tional system be a pay.as-you-go
one and be operated like a busi·
ness. More parents would take
notice what their kids are not
learning and require better
services for their dollars .
Parents could be more demand·
Ing and get results if they held
the purse strings. In the real
world when a good job is not be·
ing done then you are fired and
someone is hired who can. There
doesn't seem to be a shortage of
qualified people to teach, onJy
positions. This system would
also allow people who are not US·
ing or no longer have need for
e ducation not to pay for
something they aren't using.
Seems fair to me to pay only for
what I use.
BARBARA JOBBINS
No ana•e
To the Editor:
The Newport Beach City
Council recently approved the
building of a large hotel
adjacent to John Wayne Airport.
Mayor Heather has just
announced that the council will
fight a ny expa nsion of said
airport. I can make no sense of
such behavior.
JOHN F. CASSIDY
S•op dw ••"al..-
To the F.ditor:
I couldn't agree more with R.
Williams and Donald Beatty
(Mailbox, Feb. 26). The ar·
rogance of our supervisors and,
moat particularly of Ralph Clark
<a "people's representative"?>.
and their Indifference to the
thou1hts an~ wishes of the
voters and taxpaying citizens
can only be described as appall-
ing.
A 'i yel another longtime
Newport Beach resident under
the ever·lncreaa,lng flight pattern
of the jell, I'm wondertnf what 1'
1oln1 on bere't Are we al victim•
or Jobnn)"-come-Jately lnduatey
(such aa l"luor, wbo would "love
to fty to Seattle, Chlca10, and New
York d irect from Oran1t
Cou.nt.y")?
CAN n do nothl•• but all
bere and watch our way of Ufe
10 dotrn the tubel, our pf'Ol*U
1rad•allx become wortM .. I
(Remember Playa del R91? It
coulda't ... ,,_ t.Mre, eovld
llf),tMb~--~-.......
beautnul stretch of country
destroyed by bigger and bigger,
louder and louder. dirtier and
dirtier aircraft -all in the
name of convenience for a rel·
ative few who are too lazy to
take a short drive or flight to On-
tario or LAX?
What IS going on? Nobody but
a few really wants the airport.
yet it keeps growing and grow-
ing . Can 't this mons ter be
stopped before it's too late?
Can't we gel some teeth into our
citizens' groups?
W.A. SCHRAEGLE
No •pal o" fJarlc'
To the Editor:
Regarding. your Feb. 18
editorial on the talk given by Dr.
Judy 8 . Rosener to the UCI
Faculty Club, I suggest that any
"questionable logic'' used was
the Daily Pilot's. It is ironic
that, for any of us who were ac-
tually present to hear the
speech. your obvious attempts to
cast aspersions on Dr. Rosener's
integrity had the opposite effect
of, in fact, proving precisely the
points she made regarding the
credibility of press coverage of
Coastal Commission activities.
Unfortunately, however. there
are many people whose only
knowledge of what Dr. Rosener
supposedly said comes from
your biased and inaccurate art.I·
cle.
TO SET THE record str aight,
Dr . Rosener neither condoned
nor exc used the alleged
behavior of any of the Coastal
Commission's elected officials
who might have used their posi·
tton1 for personal gain. Rather,
she merely reminded us that
there are at least 76 other honest
and dedicated public servants
working hard on a number of
complex and Important issues,
whose efforts should not be lg·
nored simply because lbe press
finds it easier and more
newsworthy to cover the
·'flashier" personal issues that
might smell ol acandal.
No "pat on the bac'k" wu
reached ror or tollcited in any
way by Dr. Roten er. Tbe
1reater likelihood is that t.be
Piiot wlll be "reachlna" th• ct.1
lt ebOOHS to report aa favorably
as lt claims it would like to do! .
MARYANN WELLS BOGNER
APWI ..........
WELLS FARGO DOCUMENT SHOWS DETAILS
Attorney J e nnHer King aaya Srnfth la Innocent
Debate stilled
on evolution
SACRAMENTO CAPl A judge has virtually
eliminated the issues of evolution and biblical
creation from a trial that was expected to renew
the legal war between Darwin and Genesis.
Superior Court Judge Irving Perluss told
lawyers Wednesday that the central issue in the
case is ensuring "sensitivity, understanding and
tolerance" for children whose religious beliefs
may clash with what they learn in science classes.
The state dropped plans to call astronomer
Carl Saaan. Nobel laureate Arthur Kornberg and
other prominent scientists as witnesses to defend
evolutionary theory, developed by Charles
Darwin, who wrote "Origin of Species."
Pee protectle• _,tw•rn
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The bill to prohibit
killing cats and dogs for food has advanced to'the
floor of the California Assembly.
The Ways and Means Committee voted l2·4
Wednesday for AB241 by
Assemblyman Lawrence
NEWS BRIEFS Kapiloff, D-San Diego.
It would make it a
mi s demeanor. with a
maximum penalty of six
months in B.il and $500 fine, to kill a dog or cat to
eat it.
The bill and an identical one moving through
the Senate were prompted by reports last year
that refugees from Southeast Asia, where dog is a
delicacy in some cultures. were killing animals In
a San Francisco park and elsewhere for food .
€Mlt tert•re rer.tftl
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Skip Webster, who
roduces ABC-TV's "Fantasy Island." has a fan-
tastic story or his own to tell
about abuse and brainwashing
he says his son, daughter-in-law
and three grandchildren have
suffered since they joined a re-
ligious group that claims to be a
fundamentalist Christian sect.
Webster called a news con-fer~nce Wednesday to tell about
his 8· month-old grandson,
whom tie's never seen, being
wunu beaten With a belt and stuffed head and feet downward m a can. Webster says
former members of Truth Station told him his
l5·year-old grandson took part in beating women
at the Apple Valley camp of the group, that was
once known as River of Life Ministry.
l'ftldaer lwW I• .......
BERKELEY (AP > -A University of
Callfomla physics teaching assistant has been ar-
rested In the airangulatlon of a coed In his class,
police said today.
Michael Joseph Brodhelm, 22, was discovered
at H11bJand Hospital, where California Highway
Patrol otflcen had taken him ju.at after mldnl1ht
•onday.
Berkeley. police said omcers found him with
a11 wrllt.a aluhed after an apparent jump off a
freeway overpua.
Police spokesman Andy Goodman said
l rodhelm apparenUy once dated Kristin Malm-
4ul1t, 24, whose beaten, 1tran1led body was di•·
.,vered Tuesday on/ tbt noor ot her Berkeley
•artment.
\ '
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIThurlday. March 6, 1981
Boxing promoter .
~ LOS ANGELJ:S (AP) -Attorne)'I for mwlnc
boxln• promoter Harold J . Smith call..t a newt
conference to a•aln declare h1I lDnoHDee la a
$21.3 mllllon embenleplent from WellJ Far10
Bank.
But attorneys, Jennifer Kini and Robert
Mfchael1, produced virtually no evidence WeclJlea-
day to support their contenUon that Smith WH
duped by bank ortlclala who were "l.underln1
money" lhrouth his acc9unta.
They lnalated that the bank is keeplnc docu-
ments from them.
They conceded that whether or not Smith was
involved In the embeulement scheme, he owea the
bank $10.1 mllllon -the amount drawn on his
various accounts.
MS. KING, EXP RESSING anaer about state·
ments of Wells Fargo officers, declared: "Our
purpose la to use the press in the same fashion
they have."
She told reporters and cameramen crowded
into her office: "I'll tell you right now, Harold J .
Smith and Muhammad Ali Profession.al Sports are
totally innocent victims. The accounts were u.aed
by the bank for laundering money and playing
banking games."
She displayed various documents including
canceled checks and bank statements which showed
only that money had been deposited and
withdrawn from Smith's accounts at Wells Fargo.
The most crucial document, she insisted, is
Ni x on, R e agan?
Erotic slww
lured great s
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Famed former
madam Brandy Baldwin says some of the men of
the exclusive Bohemian Club "just loved" erotic
shows put on by her "gir ls."
In an interview published Wednesday by the
San Francisco Examiner, Ms. Baldwin, who has
been convicted several times ror running bawdy
houses, said for 10 years she took prostitutes to a
house near the club's Bohemian Grove retreat.
The 108-year·old club counts among its 900
members President Reagan, Vice President
George Bush. Attorney General William French
Smith and former President Richard Nixon, as
well as men from the highest eche lons or
American business. Clu b officials could not be
reached for comment.
MS. BALDWI N MENTIONED no names in her
account. It indicated that neither she nor the pros-
titutes ever operated on the club grounds,
although she said she once "tried to sneak into the
Grove with a Midwestern newspaper editor, and
he reu and broke his hip.'
· · AJl hell broke loose. but I managed to slip out
before they caught me.'· she said.
The Grove is in redwood country on tbe
Russian River, north of San Francisco.
· • ... I would rent a llltle ho"5e in the woods, a
beautifw little place. gorgeously decorated, and
we'd have champagne and the delicacies and the
Beta-Max and we'd make it au so homey," she
said .
"l'D TELL THE GIRLS to bring aU their fan-
cy underclothing so they could do the little erotic
shows, and the gentlemen just loved it. I did the
Bohemian for 10 years. and they were s uch
beautiful people, very generous and so much fun."
She recalled that each year after the club's
"Spring Jinks " show, in which members dress in
drag and perform at the remote encampment. she
would "have a little thing we called the 'Final
Jinx,· where the last customer from the Grove got
to be the 'jinx.·
"We'd just have five or six ladies all over this
guy. The gentleman who got to be the jinx could
ne ver believe his good fortune ... Oh, the Bohe-
mian was fun."
Brown running?
K e ep in touch
SACRAMENTO <AP > -Is Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. going to run ror Republican S.I.
Hayakawa's seat in the U.S. Senate next year?
Brown's ans wer depends on exactly bow it is
phrased.
Here is the exact exchange between the
Democratic governor and reporters at a news con·
ference In the Capitol Wednesday:
Q .l'Are you running for the U.S. Senate?"
A. "No.
Q. "No?"
A. "That was in the present tense, and the
answer is no."
Q. "Absolutely not?"
A. "Nol at this moment."
Then, a few mom~nts later, this exchange oc-
curred:
0 . "Are you considering runnine for the U.S.
Senate?
A. "Yes."
Q. "What would possibly deter you from enter-
ing that race?"
A. "I don't think it's appropriate to make a de·
d.sion for -on -somethtng that la a year away.
And therefore, I'd rather not make that commit·
ment now."
Q. "Have you made a Ctecl16oa to form aJl H ·
ploratary committee?''
A. "Ye1, because unlea1 a committee 11
'formed and fundl are ra.Laed, tt'I lmpontble to
m ake an tntelllaent decision aomeUme down the
road.0
mi11lnc and the bank 1ay1 lt does not exilt.
Tbat document, 1be Hid, la a paperJivtnc a
"Une ot credit" for S12 mUllon to Smtth a b1I en·
In the often conlu.aln' news conference, the at·
lomey1 repeatedly attempted to 1hift blame for
the embeulement to varioua bank otflclals b
primarily to Gene Kawakami, a founder o
Muhammad Ali Amateur Sport.a Inc. and forme
eenerai manager of the Wells Far10 Miracle MU
Branch.
terpriles.
. "My clients were under tbe imprea1ion they
bad a SU million Une or credit and the moo.y did
come throu1h. If the bank claims there is no line of
credit, we have been duped by lhe bank, used by
the bank ... l be laid. KAWAKAMI HAS BEEN nal!D by Well r Fargo but the bank says he had nothln& to do wit
THE NEWS CONFEaENCE became the embezzlement. The bank said Kawakami'
acrimonious at limes as reporters challenged Ms. connection to Smith and MAAS was "coinclden
Kina to refute the Wells Fargo version or the em-tal."
beuiement. Wells Fargo has filed a $21.3 mlllion ctvi
"You believe because it's a bank that they're fraud suit against Smith, L. Ben Lewis, forme
right," Ms . King exploded, "and you're going to Wells Fargo branch manager, Muhammad AU
throw It on some Innocent black group. I think Professional Sports and MAAS.
that'• racist!" Although Ms. King said she was not represent
Smith ls black: Ms. King is white. Ing Lewis who has been named by Wells Fargo a
Michaels said he hoped Smith would surface the key figure in the embezzlement, she said sh
soon and tell his story. does not believe he acted alone to carry off th
''He wants to come out. Ke just doesn't want to theft as the bank said he did.
get shot." he said. Both Michaels and Ms. King She displayed an airline ticket which she sai
claimed that Smith has been shot at, followed, was issued to Lewis for a trip to Detrojt for si
threatened and bis small son was kidnapped and days in 1980. The bank has said Lewis did not tak
returned. a vacation during the two years In which he wa
~ "I spent last weekend with him in a allegedly embeuling the money because his
hideaway," said Ms . King. "I was fol.lowed. My absence from the bank would have blown th
phone is bugged. This office is bugged." scheme.
She insisted the only reason Smith fled was A Smith associate, Hilton S. Nicholson , told
becawie "four Orientals came to his home and told the news conference he personally traveled t
him to leave the country. They were armed." Australia with Lewis in 1979 for 10 days.
. .;..,
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• • • • {joast plan merits
good . presentation ·
Ofncla.la in Newport Beach were right on taraet •bn
they proclaimed it a "historical day" when they approved
the city's Local Coastal Plan.
The state-mandated plan, outllnina land uses in tlM
city's coastal area, had been under study tor nearly two
years.
As required by law, the plan now must be approved b1
the Sout'h Coast Regional Coastal Commission as well •
state coastaJ commissioners before it becomes the city's ' legal coastal guide.
Councilmen, though, opted to deviate a little froqi the
norrpaJ process. They agreed to hold off forwardinf the
hefty document to the commission until a •·selling presenta-
tion'' is worked up.
By this, councilmen mean they will study ways to con-
vince coastal authorities that the land use document ..
worthy of approval.
The concern at city hall for months bas been that the
document might be denied. Coastal commission plannen
helped create some of the worry by detaillnt "inade-
quacies" they saw in rough drafts of Newport's LCP.
.A.Wiough the council's plan to put together a selling pre-
sentation -possibly including a consultant's help -may
cost a little money and likely some time, it seems well worth
the effort.
After months of hard work and dozens of public hear-
ings, it would be unwise to gamble with the <;oastal Com-
mission until the city lines up all the high cards it can.
Honeyntoon over?
Warning signals th-at the honeymoon members of the
Newport Beach City Council have been enjoying is ending
a re s tarting to surf ace.
The Newport council chambers, once the scene of
stormy squabbles among council colleagues, became calm
much of last year following the municipal elections. Ai most
serene.
But in recent weeks. the turbulence of past times has
begun to s how itself again.
During two consecutive meetings, Councilman Paul
Hummel has blasted colleagues . Councilman Don Strauss
took shots at Mayor Jackie Heather during another session.
And citizen groups, most notably SPON <Stop Polluting
Our Newport). have been vocal in their criticisms of council
members and council policies. The SPON group has even
started placing weekly newspaper ads, many denouncing
council action.
Perhaps the new siege ofunrest can be attributed to the
many controversial items that councilmen find themselves
dealing with, such as John Wayne Airport, the Local Coastal
Plan and the Irvine Company's proposed expansion of
Newport Center.
Or it could be that some are already looking forward to
the 1982 city elections. More than one cynic has suggested
that.
Disagreement can be healthy. But council memben
ought to be asking themselves if some of the gratuitous ,
bickering isn't leading back to the same non-productive at-
mosphere that haunted city government for so many years.
SaVing the basics
At what point does a good basic education end and
educational enrichment begin?
The elusive answer to that question may well be sup-
plied over the next few years in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District.
Last year the school board -faced with declin~ in both
income and student enrollment -cut deeply into elemen-
tary school vocal music, physical education and remedial
reading programs .
Board members also trimmed away at the school nurs-
ing and psychological counseling programs.
Now administrators are talking about even more health
care cuts, an end to instrumental music in elementary
schools, cutting two years off high school physical educa-
tion and dropping foreign languages from middle school
programs.
Final action on next year's programs probably won't
come much before the opening of school in September,
though, when next school year's budget is approved.
District administrators are predicting they'll have to.
chop between $2 and SS million from this year's bud1et
amount, depending on what laws are passed in Sacramento
regarding school finance.
Trustees. faced with making final decisions on what
programs go and which schools close, noted last week that
like it or not, t he once-wealthy district is approaching the
point where few enrichment programs are offered in order
to maintain good basic education.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other 111ews expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) &42-4321.
Boyd!Smitluonian
ByL. M. BOYD
Q . Why did James
Smithsoo, the rich European,
choose the United States as
the place to found the
Smithsonian Institution when
he'd never set foot in this
country?
A. )(aybe because nobody
here uaed the titles of nobility.
He la said to have been
bJlhl)' COUCiOUI of tbe flcl
tbat be wu the We11t1mate
son of the Duke of Northum-
berland and Elizabeth Keate
Macie, a descendant of Kin1
Henry VII. But bis il -
legitimacy deprived him of
the noble titles. He dled
childless, and when bis
nephew subaequentl,y
llkewlae died childless, the
$508,318.'6 in gold from hil
estate wu sent to the United
States as he'd .willed k .
Those young men who've
long dreamed of gro•lnt up
to Join the Merchant Marine 1 to 10 to sea can be expected
to hive a tough tlft\e of It.
The total count of such
seamen worldwide ls drop-
pln1 drutJcally th"e S-ean.
Report la only about $0 llew
~open up annually now.
Q. Amonc wor11en ~wltn,
•hat'• the aven•e IC.'W'e1
A. tJt. Ttfat'• ..-mun .
Tb• Jvera1• lad1 amateur II 3T years old with two
children, tncldentally.
Th""uraday, M.,ch S, 1981
Th0ma1 P. H1ley/Publllhtr Thoma K"vll/Edltor
Barber• KffiblCf\/Edliorl•I ~ ... lldltor
Clamp some lids on public pay
A le1l1latlve proposal b11
Men made 'tO boolt the aalary ot lbe 1overnor to •m.ooo. a.
now la paid $fl.too. Inchaded ln
th• meuW'e would be equally
nb1tantlal
ra\ses for the
ll e u te'n ant
1overnor,
tecretary of
state, con-
troller and
treasurer. all
of whom
would be
upped from s•2.soo to
$70,000 as would lbe attorney
1enera1 who now receives $47 ,500.
Tbls proposal follows closely
on the heels of recommendations
made by a so-caUed President's
commission to rais¥be salaries
of coniressmen from the pres-
ent $82,000 to '85,000 and make
similar increases in other top
Mailbox
federal potldonl tncludin.8 the
cabinet members.
Sucb lar1e11 mallu one
wonder wbat tne1 lh•H JU.11
are •wlnainl from. Have those
in 1overnment become like
Marl• Antoinette, ao lnaenalUve
to the people. that they believe
people ~ wllllnllY permlttlna
tbemaetves to be taxed into pov·
erty so that they can Jive ln lux-
ury? Don't they read the
stati.tlca tomplled by the U.S.
Labor Department and the In-
ternal Revenue Service!
ACCO&DING to U.S. Labor
statistics the avera1e wage
earned by full·Ume workers in
manutacturtn1 industries last
ye~r wu $283 a week while
those in other non-agricultural
private employment averaged
only $233 a week.
The Hme source reports the
median annual income of all
maleit wu $16,000 w,b.lJe the me-
dian for women was ooly •.eoo and only 22 percent ol tbe people
bid tamlly incomes in exceea ot
$2$,000.
Internal Revenue tlaures 1bow tb1t out ot the more than _,
mUUon population in the U.S.
fewer than 70 million tued in·
come tax return.a and only 1.2
percent of those bad incomes
over $30,000 and less tlt1n 3 per-
cent had incomes over ~.000
with .005 percent reportine in-
comes in excess of $100,000.
ROW THEN can it be that
those in government are so prec·
ious. provide services so valua-
ble, that they must be granted
incomes equaJling those or leas
than 2.S percent of the nation's
wealthiest?
It was not taxation without
representation alone which
caused the American Revolu-
lion. Tht deel.re to be rid ol the
tnpplnla ol royalty and abed
the tltJes ol nobility loomed Jllll
1s laree in the mind• of the col·
onlata and they wrote lnto the
Constitution an absolute ban on
noblllty.
ls the freedom from the op.
pre11ion of a caste system so
valiantly won by the colonilta
two hundred years aeo to be
permitted lo be taken away by
those in eovernmenl awardlng
themselves royal incomes? An
we to address the congressmen
and legislators as "Milord" and
other lesser bureaucrats as "Sir
Knight?" Ben Franklin must be
spinning in his grave.
THE SALA&Y of the governor
stands at 100 percent more than
it wu 30 years ago. Perhaps,
although that is a salary enjoyed
by no more than 3 percent of the
people, inflation is such that it
might be railed slightly even
though it is safe to predict that
no matter what the pay the
caliber of those seeking the of-
fice won 't change.
But whatever the salary for
the governor may be, it should
serve u the ceiling for all other
public ortices, state and loeaJ, in
the state. In fact. no other public
offi ce should pay more than 90
percent of the governor's salary.
UNFORTUNATELY, public
pay has gotten completely out of
hand with minor office holders
such as police and fire chiefs,
city and county managers, and
school administrators now re-
ceiving far more than the gov·
ernor. And , absent an economk
crash similar to the 30s. there
seems no easy way back.
That is no excuse for not
clamping a lid on public pay the
next time the salarJ of the gov-ernor 1s change . Anything
short or that will be criminal
for it will pave the way to
economic collapse or worse.
Bilingual education deprives children
To the Editor:
Recently, you printed an arti·
cle from Bern.ice Walsh regard·
lnl her views in favor of bi-
ijn1uaJ remedial education in our
public schools. Ms. Walsh refers
to the "ii-eat melting pol" which
is or s hould be -the
American Way. However . if
educators do not effectively
teach the English language to
non-English speaking citizens,
we have not a "melting pot" but
a "Mulligan's Stew" -not
cohesiveness and togetherness
bYl separateness and apartness.
As California Se n . S .l .
Hayakawa recently stated, a
common language -English -
is the great unifying factor in
this nation of people from such
various ethnic backgrounds.
culture and languages.
Sen. Hayakawa, born of immi-
grant parents, admits he prob·
ahly would not have obtained
so high a political office -and
before that so high an educa-
tional office -or have become
such a fine semanticist if the bi-
llnguaJ policies being touted to-
day were in effect In his school
days. Rather than being of help
lo him. it would have been a dis-
service.
I BELIEVE the ethnic groups
should retain their culture -
and their language -but its
people should be taught English
and taught in It. J think it would
be a much wiser choice to
carefully, gently and intelligent-
ly teach non-English speaking
children to read, write and
spuk English correctly than it
would be to not do it. We do
these children a great dis·
service, in my opinion, if we do
leas. And I believe that bilingual
education is self-defeating.
Children are more adaptable,
teachable and capable than we
often give them credit for beine;
and while I truly sympathin
with the problems a non·Enlliah
apeaking child would bave, I
believe tba,, with Ule proper
teachlng in Enillah, the 1reat
majority would f'make the
1r1de" -that is }earn to com-
municate in En•li•h -be proud
(IDd rt1htb SO) of tbl• ac-
compllshmellt and so on -
many -to treat heilltta. I am
1ur~ ol lt. O..ratlou ol put lmml~ people atteat tot.bl.I.
They are Uri:q proOI.
Tbe man or= who wntee
and apeab u.•• tanauap
eorrldly wllf obvl._11 a.a" the
blHnt ol lifetime edvaatqtt
over 1 man Cf woman wbo doel
not, 1'MI .. ~al, 11 lt •t n.r.-.. it '"*'d .... to lne,
lbe ol»jeet ol publle HUtaU. la
tile U.at.d ltatee ii teda1 nat
.. ... .. • .,. ..... -to lMilp ''U:' A•erle•a u~••l .. • ...... u ........
A•erlda ~: Ud t1111 ._ .,_..ft! «*teet ... ti.-n1zn I 11.••e•A-
ly be accomplis hed by the
Enelisb language beine taught
in the public schools.
HAZEL H. SCHWAB
Nettlw••t .. r
To the Editor: ·
On Sunday, Feb. 22. a scathing
letter about the Newport Beach
Police bepartment appeared in
\hia section. allegedly signed by
me.
The purpose of today's letter
is to let the r~cord state that I.
William F. Fawcett Jr., did not
write that lette r and the
signature was forged.
. In no respect do I hold the Dai-
ly Pilot responsible for they did
check the name on the letter
against a proper corresponding
address.
But I do wish to state that my
own views of the Newport Beach
Police Department are
diametrically opposed to those
espoused in the forged letter. As
president or the Orange County
Red Cross Youth Council I have
had the opportunity to see the'
workings or many law enforce-
ment agencies and Newport
Beach is one of the finest.
WILLIAM F. FAWCETT JR.
§<"heel f aUttrr•
To the Editor:
As a taxpayer, ongoing-college
student, and parent my biggest
concern for several years has
been the lack of inspired
teaching to our children. This is
especially true in the in-
termediate and high school
levels. Admittedly, our kids are
not gifted or class leaders, but
avetage kids. They needed to be
encouraged, praised and in-
spired to reach beyond what
they seemed to be able to do.
Instead they have been ignored
and unchallenged and shuffled
through the system, graduating
totally unprepared for college
and unable to support
themselves.
The burden of educaUne them
wu 1iven to Oranie Coast
Colle1e. Isn't this rather lite ln
their learning lives? For the
llrat time they bad mean.lnlful
counaelln1 and at last they turned bow to read and 1dd
more thu OM flCW"el Of coune
thl1 Nquind tutor1A1 1nd for
the ftna time t.bl1 wu anllable.
Wt tried, ~ unaueeeAl\al.ly. to •• tide ol http In ldp
1ebool or even to arouu coalem
or lllteNlt fOC' our "Id• or their tutur.. We ftnally tied tutor1n1 '
t.ai.m OVHlv" and we we.re
able to• in tom• art11. ,
IOUY, I have no 1rmpadliy
wttll ~-dten •*iq '°" 1ala'1 •• nd th ad-m.lai1tra ultl•1 for more
•Ollef to rtm the ffbooJI, TM
problem ii a« to mueb maMy
• aecountaMltt.J to teaelalq. ........ .............. .. .
ministrators should slop de·
manding and start thinking of
acting with some pro ·
fes sionalism. In so many cases
their work <tectching) and their
social behavior is shoddy and
unprofessional. After all. they
are examples to the kids and. as
a whole, are poor ones . The stu-
dents are exposed to the uncon-.
ventionaJ life styles and poor at-
titudes.
I wouJd like to see our educa-
tional system be a pay-as-you-go
one and be operated like a busi-
ness. More parents would take
notice what their kids are not
learning and require better
services for their dollars .
Parents could be more demand·
ing and get results if they held
the purse strings. In the real
world when a good job is not be-
ing done then you a re fired and
someone is hired who can. There
doesn't seem to be a shortage of
qualified people to teach. only
positions. This system would
also aJlow people who are not us-
ing or no longer have need for
education not to pay for
something they aren't using.
Seems fair to me to pay only for
what I use.
BARBARA JOBBINS
No•ftt•~
To the Editor:
The Newport Beach City
Council rec~ntly approved the
building of a large hotel
adjacent to John Wayne Airport.
Mayor Heather has just
announced that the council wlll
fight any expansion of said
airport. I can make no sense of
such behavior.
JOHN F. CASSIDY
SIOfl Ille •011•frr
To the Editor:
I couldn't agree more with R.
Williams and Donald Beatty
(Mailbox, Feb. 26). The ar-
rogance of our superVisors and,
moat particularly of Ralph Clark
(a "people's representative"?),
and their indifference to the
thouebts and wis hes of the
voters and taxpaying citizens
can only be described as appall-
lne.
As yet another lonattme
Newport Beach resident under
the ever-Increasing ruaht pattem
of the Jets, I'm wonderinl what l1
1oln1 on here? Art we all •ietlma
ol Johnny-come·lately lnduat.ry
(1ucb u Ftuor, wl\o would "lov.
tony to SeatUe, Chlca10, and New
York dlreet from Orae1e
County")?
CAN WE do notblnl but 1li htrt and watch our way ol Uf•
10 clown UM label, our P"°""'1
1radually become worthleal
<Remember Playa del RtJt ft
.eouldn•t happen Uaert, eould
it?), cbobia~~= haUoa, ad .-.au, ..
beautiful strPtch of country
destroyed by bigger and bigger.
louder and louder, dirtier and
dirtier aircraft all in the
name of convenience for a rel-
ative few who are too lazy to
take a short drive or rtight lo On ·
tario or LAX?
What IS going on., Nobody but
a rew really wants the airport.
yet 1t keeps growing and grow·
ing. Can't this monster be
stopped before it's too late?
Can't we get some teeth into our
citizens' groups?
W.A. SCHRAEGLE.
No .,,., 011 flarlc'
To the Editor:
Regarding your F eb. 18
ed itorial on the talk given by Dr.
Judy B. Rosener to the UCI
Faculty Club, I suggest that any
"questionable logic" used was
the Daily Pilot's. It is ironic
that, for any or us who were ac-
tually present to hear the
speech, your obvious attempts to
cast aspersions on Dr. Rosener's
integrity had the opposite effect
of, in fact, proving precisely the
points she made regarding the
credibility of press coverage or
CoastaJ Commission activities.
Unfortunately. however. there
are many people whose only
knowledge of what Dr. Rosener
supposedly said comes from
your biased and inaccurate arti-
cle.
TO SET THE record straight,
Dr. Rosener neither condoned
nor excused the al leged
behavior of any or the Coastal
Commission's elected officials
who might have used their ~i·
lions for personal gain. Rather,
she merely reminded us tbat
there are at least 76 other honest
and dedicated public servants
working hard on a number of
complex and important issues,
whose efforts should not be ig-
nored simply because the press
finds it euler and more
newsworthy to cover the
"flashier" penonal Issues that
mieht smell of scandal.
No "pal on the back" wu
retched for or aoUclted in qy
way by Dr. Rosener. Tbe
treater llkellhood l1 that the
Pilot wUI be ''reacb!q" the da1
lt chooael to report a• favorably
at lt claim.a 1t would ll.ke to dot
MARY ANN WE~ BOGNER
\
.Orange Cout OAILV PILOT(Thunday, March 6, 1981 ---"'auc NOTICB P\lauc NOTICE
N·71fK CHl ..... COUNTYWN•tCNI NOT1C8 Oft DWATK Oft coun a N •IT J 0 I• P N ~r...::i:.°':::= tlAN Illa ••N•IT J. Pl.AINfl'"· ORAN •lie• ..... ,T MAltlA 01! LO$ ANHl.f!S
OlltAN , ... I RNIE g;~:~T:
0 • A .. A .. 0 0 fl l.AUAO "'· ltU12: II.VIA •LAH· l!TITIOH TO AD -co ,l!OlilllAI. HATIONAl.
'
.. ISTI!• ••T•TE NO MO"TOAOt ASSOCIATION, a " .... ... • c •• ,.r.Uon. CHICAOO TITl.I • 107165 I NIUlllAHC• COMAl'ANY, •Ml-I T o a I I h t I r s , c:or.-at'-'. _, oou 1 lfW'Ol4ll 10,
entflclerles. cr•dltor s •nc111•'"'·
nd contl,.nt creditors of c.. :=:-"'
rnest JoMph M oran and NOT1ce1 v ... 11t"' ..., .-.. ,.,.
e rs o n6 who may b e toun ,,..., llKIOt ... 1,..1 "°" •11'*'1
th I I t ted I th rovr lltlne ,.....Cl "",." y911 ·~ trw H n eres n e w1111111 10 dtn. 111..0 "' lnfOl'fl'lttlon Ill and/or est.ate: 11910 ....
A~tltlon has been filed " YOll wi"' to'""'"" -.k• .. .,, llza-th A B llm'"' •Uor11•v "'11111 rnttt.,, r011 .._.,. oo y "-nn a vf to 11romcilly 10 lllat VOllr wrttlt ll n the SUpe,rlor Court Of rtl!*IM, , • .,, ... mn .. llltd Of\,,.,,..
r ange Countv requesting Av1so1 ~11ed oe tuc11 ~1. Et
Pt18UC NOTICE
h a t E I I z a be t h A n n lrlblln•I pWdt llt<ldlr (Oftlf• Ud. Sin •11dltn<lo • menos Qllt UCI, r~ • all mer be appalnted a s oefttn> oe >0 01", '-••" 1n1ot1Mclon
ersonal representative to o"' sioue.
dmlnlster the estate o f s1 Ustt0dtltuo11c1ter•t<ot1•fodt
PUBLIC NOTICE
un ellogado an ttlt tclllnlo, dtberlt fllCTtTIOUa MISINllS rnest Joseph M oran, nacerto tmmtdl•l•m•nlt, •• .... NAM•ITAY•MINT
o u n t a I n V a I I e y , tn•nttt, w r~te OM:tlte, 51 11., Tiie ttllowlng ,_,'°"' •rt dolne
allfomla (under the 1 n-•ltllM, puec1uer roo111~ade • 11ampo. 111111"'" '" I TO THE Df!FENOANT A eMI (I) AUOIO, I.TO., 1211.100 CA• ependent Admin istration <omol•llll ,,., -liltd..., ~ pi.1 ... I.EASING, t» AUTO AUOIO. u•
f Estates Act). The peti-cur aoelMI yOU. II YIMI wllll IO clltftnd Al'tttlldtA-. 51111•"£", Nowperl
Ion Is set for hear In~ In tllh tawwlt, Y°" must, wllllln :IO d<IYI a .. c11. Gelltornl• t.U
t N 3 t 700 C I allet llllt ~Is M'11td Oft yov. T.l..C. tnd111tr1u, Inc., • ep • 0. a V C llltwlllltlllnovno wrl11e11r~to Calllotftl• corpontlofl, lft "1Yfrsl9t
enter Drive West, Santa Ille eompl•lnt. Unt.u YOll do SO, -Aotenll9. Sollw ...... "-wPOfl .. kJI. ~na, California 92701 on de1 ... 11wu1 11t enter.a on tPD11ca11on eet11orn1t~
h 25 1981 t 9 30 ot lllt pltlnUH, end !Ills <ourt m•, Tl1lt llutintU It CtJldllCWd DY • <or· a re , a : a .m . tnltr • f\IClorfttfll •oalnst "°" lot n,. pora!IOfl
IF YOU OBJECT to the reltel dtMfnded In Ille cornpl•1111, T.l..C. lnduslllff. '"'
granting Of the petition, wn1<11 <Ollld rewll In 9t'fllsll"""t o1 M.8r-t0llf\ftlft9.
YO Should Ith .-..a wag", t.alr.lnQ ol _,or propert_. or S.Ctttary1Tra"11.,., U e er a p.,... r Oilier •tlltl r-stld In Ille eOMpl•lft Tllll 11.ai-1 ••s llltd wllll Ille
It the hearing and state OATIEO: 11..,..m 11, 1.. county c1er1r. 01 Or•noe c°""'' 011
your objections or f lie 1.etA. ••Mell. C1tl'1l M•rc11 >. ""·
writte n objections w ith the •::=~ ~~1c= · P11i.11stwc1 0r.,. co.11 D•t1~·:~:1'.
Court before the hearing. 11"...,..,_•Y M•rc11s,12,tt,26,1•1 1004-11
Your appearance may be s-..AM,<:e.w•1
In person or by your at-Pu111ished Orange coa11 D•llY Pi101, PUBUC NOTICE
torney. Mewls. u. 1~ ~1---_ 1201-11
I F y 0 u A R E A PUBLIC NOTIC"" fl'ICTIT10US IUSINISS CREDI To R El MAMa STATCMUIT 0 r a C 0 n . The lollowtng pttsons •rt doing tlngent c reditor of the de· -------11«s1nenH:
cea sed , you must file your l'ICTITIOUS8UllNllS I. .. M PRODUCTIONS, 11'
claim w ith the court or NAMIESTATIMENT R1ver110e Av-. s..11. "·Newport l he lollowll'IO Pttton la doing llllsl· Btaell, C•lllbrftla t*l. present it to the personal MU as: Mery LOii Prendtr"gast, 19SO "ltt
representative appointed c.c. SYSTEM$, nst Rlv•rs101 strttt, MlO'. N ... 1por1 a .. eh,
by the COUrt w ithin four Orlve, $ante An•, C:.tllornlat 270t. C•lll0<nl1 ~. Kevin P ... t Rlegel111tro-r. 23S2 l.eonard 8 H .. <elf. ltSO '"" months from the date Of RlvenldeOrlvt,!ianlfAn•,C:.lllornl• Slr .. I, M)O,, Ne,.port 8 .. e ll. f I rst Issuance of letters as '2706. ce111or111a m.63.
p rovided in Section 700 of T111s IM6ir1tu 11c..,clllcbtd1>y •n in· l111s bllsintn is eondueted by'" 1n dl11ldue1. dlv1<111•I. the Probate Code of 1Ce"1n P Rl-oet\Ctroe• Mory 1.ou Prenoerotil
Californ ia. The time for Tiiis stat.......;, WM llled wllh llW fhlS ii.al-I wes llltd wltll Illa
filing Claims Will not e)(· °"to\lftly Cler-I< ol Orange Counly o• Coullly Clerk ol Orange County on
Pi re p r ior to four months Fell "· 1"1 M•rc11l ,1"1 ,. .. ,.., ,,,, .. ,
from the d ate of the hear-P ... 1111111tO OrA119t t.0 .. 1 oa11, Pllor. Pu1111snec1 Orange coal! oanv Piiot,
ing noticed above. F•ll "· 1•. Mii<" s. 11. '"' nJ.11 t.Urcn s. 12, "· 2•. "" 1oso ... 1
YOU MAY EXAMINE ----
th e file kept by the court . PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
If you are interested in the
estate, you may file a re·
quest w ith the court to re·
ceive special notice of the
inventory of estate assets
and .of the petitions, ac-
coun t s and reports
described in Section 1200
of the California Probate
Code.
William W . Soukup. At·
torney at Law, 1600 N .
Broadway, Suite 601, San-ta Ana, California 92706.
(714) 973-1644.
Published Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, M arch <4, s11 t.
1981 10 &·81
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS llU51NIEU MAMIE STATEMENT
flle IOltowlno persons ••• dolno
11«slnus .. : TWO BROTHERS PIZZA, 11944
8rOOll11"'11 Slrttt, Founl•lf\ Vtll•v. C•lllorftl• '210L
Sokyon Kang, •1'1 Somllre.o Ave,,..., Cnweu. c:.111ornl• '°'JD
Min Je IC•ng, OU Sombrero Avtn ... , CYP"HS, C:.lll0<nl• 9°'J0
Tiiis buslneu IS conducleO by •
o•ner•l ---rMl•P
N'1m
FICTITIOUS IUSINEU
NAMIE STATEMIENY Tiie lollowiftO person h doing IK<sl ,,.,, .,
CENTURY 21 HORIZON REA i. TV ,
USI Wtslmlnstu, Gercltn Gro'We , C•lllornle t1M4
Rot>trl S z.. .... 1. 7)30 Stonecrfflt Road, A,,_lm, Calltomla '2101.
This bl.tslr1tu Is condUcled by an In· dlvlduel
RobertS.Zenwl
Tiiis \l•lerntnl wH llltd wllll 11'41 Co..nty Clertt of Or-. COllnly on Fell
9. 1~81.
1'1""5 O•OVElll uc"ow COltl"O"ATtON 1"'2 1rvlllt llV11. T111tln, Calllornl• t:iwo
P11btlllled Or-Coast O•ily Piiot.
F.ti. U. 1', 26. Morell S, 1tl1 112-11,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUl-eUStNISS -
NAME STATEMENT The ID4lowl119 C>er\Oft h CIOl119 buSI· nen•s OElAll.ING UNLIMITED, lit Ametlly\I, UbCMI ht-. C•llfornl• ., .. ,
W•ll•r II H•ueltorll 111, 21t
Amtthy•t. UbCMI lstlftd. C_.lllornla
•1 .. 1 This llUslnns I• conducted by an on· dlvldval
Walter 8. H-ltOfSI T hh slaC-1 was llled ••th Ille Counly Cl.,. ol O,.nQe CO<lnly on
FtD 10, 1"1
FICTITIOUS IU~INIEIS MAME '1ATEMENT
fht IOll-lftf penon It doint 11«11•
n•\\ .,.
8AY CITY ARTS. l6 Sl•rll1ll
CO\lrl, Newport S.t<ll, CA. '12 .. l Bt rtlM• N. ""'rplly, J6 s1arrl1h
COllrl, N~ 8tetll, CA. '1'6l Tiils bll!Slnt'\s ls tondueltd by an If\
01vlduat.
ll«bar• N. ""'rplly This II.al-I .... llled wltll Ille Counly Cltrk ol OrWloe Co11n1y on
Fellr11ary 24, 1911
"'""' Pullll-O.ange CCMISI D•llv Pllol,
Fell. 16, -Merell s, 11, 19, 1 .. 1 ..... , ------------
PUBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUS IUllNIH NAME STATIMI MT
The IDl-ntl PfrlOll II dolno 111111· ntUH
Al.llSON OESIGN SERVICE.
2110 N Grano, •H. Santa Ano.
C..lllornl• '2101 Cllarttt AllllOft Wll"'-. 2'10 N.
Gr•nd, • J.I, Senta Ana, C•lllornle
'12101
Tiiis l>ulineu 11 ,_...,Dy., In·
dl11ldllt1.
Cllar'IM A Wltt"-K
This Jlalemtnt WIS lllMI wllll the
CO\lflly Cl9" ol Ounge COvllt'I' on Ftbruery 24, 1"1
5oltyon 1Ca119 Min Ja K•no
P1*7> PullllsnecS Or-. Coest Delly Piiot,
FIS.UM Feil 16, Mor. S, 12, 1', 1"1 .... ,
Tllh ... ,_, WfS 111.0 Wllll '"' County Cler• ol OrWtoe Co..n1y on Feb It, 1911
Fls.e.7 Pul>lltlltd Or.,..~ Coesl Delly Piiot.
Feb. It, 26, March s. u. "" ... II
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pu1111""'4 Orenge Coast O•ily PilOI,
Ftll U, 19, U . Morch S, '"1 7llo-l1
PUBLIC NOTICE
fl'IGTIT10US IUSINf.SS NAMI STATIEMIENT
Tll• 1o11-1no -lCln Is ClcHng 1>1111
ne\~ .,
TWENTIETH CENTURY MUSIC
4J46J PRODUCTIONS, 19!4 Ft...,ln90 Drive, ,,CTITIOUS IUSINIESS Coste Mew, C:.tllornl• t2'2'.
NAME STATIEMIENT Ron•ld I( MtConnellu, US•
Tiie tollowlng P<tt1ons er• doing Fla mlngo Drlv•. cost• Meu.
11«1lneu •s: Calllorftll '26216. SOUTHL.ANO TILE CO., 21 .. So Tiiis llllslneu I• tondu<ted by an In· Co.it Hwy .. LOQllN 8e•eh, CA t1•SI dlvld11t1.
Cllarles G Reilly, 1714 So Co .. t A It M<Connentt
Hwy • l.•OtM>a 8aecll, CA '26SI Tllh ti.al-I wn filed wllJI Ille
PUBLIC ~OTICE
~~~--~~-....-~-
l'ICTITlOUS IUSINEH NAMIE STATIMllfllT
Tll• folfo•lft9 per\Onl ere oolno IK<slneuas:
A MAN FDR~~ASONS, ltO Cito SI., l.tQllN h, CA. 92651
MklMltl C Jou I, J60 Cito St., Laguna 9-ecll. CA. '2651
Oavld c. Jou,...noc, 111• R1111v Pl., Lagun• Beech, CA. '26St
· Tiiis 11111lne11 It <onduel•d bY • 0tftera1 paf'lntnlllp.
Mle'-1 C. Jouven•I This tlfl.....nl wa1 lllecl with Ille Co11nly ct .. k ol o ....... co ... nly on
Feor111ry 1•. 1 .. 1.
1"1Mtf4
Pullll-Orenot Coetl Oalty Piiot,
t<Uf10 Feb. 26, and Morch s. 1', "· 1 .. 1
s ... san K P•rwna, 21 .. So CCMISI Co11nty Cler• ol Ot•noe County on
Hwy., 1.•0\#\A 8ea<h, CA '2U1. Fell 11, ltl1 Tllll business Is ton<1uc1eo by •n 1n dl•lduat P11l>llSl'oed Otanoe Coast Dellv Piiot, t21·t l CllarlH G Reilly
Tnls st•lemtnl wes llled with lh• County Clerk ol Or•noe CO\lnly on
Ftll. 10. 1"1
ft1SH1'
Pul>llSlltcl Or--Coest D•llY PllOI,
Fell 11, "· 26, Merell s. "" 'IHI
PUBLIC NOTICE
t<ICTITIOUS I UllMIU
lllAMa STATUHMT Tiit loltowl119 peoons are oolf\Q
11«sl11tuas: "SUNFl.OWER TRAVEi.," IS2S
Mew V.,de 0rlV9 EHi, Colla MtNI,
C.tllornl• mi..
O.ftll 91 ..... t~ Pott Cetntv,
New-I lletch, Celllornla tMO. Jta.,,..11e •r0, 1m Port Corney,
Ne•port llMcll, C:.llfornla t2'60
Tiii• Dutlnats IS (OftduCl•d by •n In· dJvldvtl.
Otrlll 81rd
Tiiis Slltl-1 wits llltd wllll Ille Co11nly Clerk of Otanoe Co11nty on
Ftll. 11, 19'1.
Feil. 1', 26, Morell S, 12, l"I U2 .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE
t<ICTITIOUS IUSINHS NAME STATUAUfT Tiie 10110 .. rng p.,..,.., .,. dOlno
IK<slneu•s;
JERRY & VAN POBLICATl~S,
:JOO ... Eall C..11 Hlgl>way, Newport
8HCll, C•llfoml• '2MO.
J amu E. Polltr lor Gerald Otrlo.,_, 22'32 Cl-Clrc1e, uflt
Forest, C:.lllomla tiut.
G•••IO 0tr1os11on, nu2 Ct•llde
Clrclt, Ult Forest, C.altlornla '21U1. V•n A.. Fran<t, 1'tl Mtw Drive,
Costt Mn•. C..tllomla ta26. This lluslne11 Is cond11eltd by • general par1nert111p.
Gerald 0.rlosllOl'I
Tiiis K•l-1 WH lllao wllll Ille Co11nl y Citric of Orange COllnly on
Fell. 10. 19'1.
l'ISSMI Pullltllltd Ortl\9f Coesl O•lly PllOI,
Fell. 12. 19, 2'. Metell S. 1Mt 1J1·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
N71JM
l'ICTIT10UI IUSINlll
NI.Ma STATIMllllT Tiit lollo•lll9 p•rton1 art doing bullntMltl:
1.l!ERUE'S l'l.OltlST, 120U
E11ettd Avtn11t, Gtrdt n Gro¥t , Ctllfoml• f'lM).·
SM,... trvln, 22t So 0.., Ort110t, Citll tom! 1t '2*.
Slleron Mllc!Wll, Jtt 541 Oall, Orange, Ctltloflll• t1MO. Sllat'on I twin
Slleron Mltcfltll fllh .stat-I .... filed wllh Ille
Co11"1y Clttk ol 0,..noit Counly on
Feil. IS, ltll
P11blllNd °'"""' Coe•t O.lly, "•b. "· 2', Merell s. 12. lttl tn"''
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICB ruauc NOTIC&
NOTtCE Ofl OEATH 01' NOTICE OF DEA!)f
LL 0 V 0 H ~ H A y '-''&MD~•Hlff,.,..MU~TM 0 F Al. 8 E RT P . ... '".,..,.°"' ........... ITAT&M .. T-s T A AH AH AN I " I CARTER eke LLOYD H. Y•uHoHHC&MNIU1,H9 AL 8 Ea T pl. A .... • CARTER AND 0, flf ~ "' P""TITION TO .. 0 • "'"*'--•~t STRANAHAN ANO OF .. ,... m......,....,......._ PETITION TO "A O -MINISTUt ESTATE NO. ..,.....,._v--.•Y*M MINISl'ER l!STATI! HO. A1070t. T ......... _.. tll,..,UI AlOTIS.
l' 0 • I ' ,, • ' r • , =~:=-= ~== T 0 I I I ,, • I r •• t>eneflclulH, creditors 0r ... ,,...111•cenf•M1W1 .. w•1111ut 11~4:;~m beneflcl1rles, creditors
•Lndl cdon~tcc~ton~ =~==:!. 1,.,1111 and c ontl"9tf\tcredltonof
oy ry a,. .. r a,.• 111cr .... co.-> 111 c..i'-' _, Albert · P. Stran1hln •k-l.loyd H. Ce~ of trvlM, .. ""'41ttM1111 1• t.,.-'"' Albert PIMt Str•n•han of
C•llfornl1 and persons •ntw-li!Force: 1W11o11w1• '"·m,ooo &..egun1 e.ach, C•llfornf•
who may bt ~lse In-Aec1_..., .... ,"' "'-11111"' 2·"0·™ •nd persons who may be
ter-tted In the Wiii Ind/or :.,-::= ~ ~e: c.utotn1e 1.uuo1 otherwlM Interested In the
tState. Ac41 .. ,...,.,..,.,._fl'lh•tr1•-01••«: wlll1nd/ottst1te: .. natltJon .... ""-n fll-Cf lllorlll• lwlilltt• ..... "° A ti h b "" -.... ..... -Wt~ cef\lty 11\al"" ellOv• llt!M ••• In K'or•nc• wllll ""' All-I "" Pt uon IS ten by Josephine H. NellOf'I In , .. ,."'"" 1tr.,. ., .. , '"°" Otc•m~ ,,, '"° mtci. 10 111e 111su1.nc• Com· f I I e d b r. R e v a L .
the Superior Court of "''"'-OftMSYtettc.t110r111•,llVf'-'•tto1ew. Stranahan n the Superior
Oranoe QK.lnty requesting J, ''•'*Todd, Court of Orange County
1012 ... 1 that JQMphlnt H. Nelson ==~· V9n1At. requesting that Reva L. be aPPofnttd as personal s.cretMy Stranahan be appointed a s
PUBLIC NOTltE represent1tl\fe to Id· fl111111Mt 0r.,.eoe•0•0•P1to1,,;.ca.u ,Marc11 s.•.7.•.1 .. 1 101> ... , person~! representative
minister tht est1te of to admfhlster the estate Of
fltCTtTIOUt •1111•111 Lloyd ... nry C1rttr (Un· PU.UC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Albert P . Stranahan (un·
MAMtl ITAHMINT der the Independent Ad· der the Indepe ndent Ad· ~~0!~•111t "''°"' •r• 0oin1 mlnlstr1tlon of estates "':J!C::~:=::·~.... NOTICE OF DEATH OF m in istration of Estates
con A CUPET CA"~ COM· Act) The petition Is set for 111111 C•1111111111011 •' "" cu., or ~TOR ~'t~o{ ~ RA~ b Nb~ A ct). The petition Is set for
......... 101t Grow Pt.c., Colle MtM, hearing In Dept. No. 3 •t ~·."':",~,;\~':: e ::*~~.:~; p E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D . hearlno in Dept. No. 3 a t c.i11or111••17• 700 Civic Center Drive, 700 Civic Cent er Orl..,e l.ttler o . BlenlOfl, 101t Gr•"• West Int-Cltw Of "'•ntl Hott1C-.MI001hlrt11e~o11eloh MINISTER ESTATE NO , Pttu, eo.te ...,..., c..11torM1 ttu1. , ,,. , -''•"k sw, en PNPtrtY toc.etH •t A 07878 • West, In the City of Santa
AIMrlll Ctmpbtll, 101t GroYt Ana, Cellfornl• on M1rch '°° N•"'l*t CeftlM Orlwt l• IM•Mlt 1 . Ana Californ ia on M a r ch
l"tece,c..ieMtwi,Cttlfllt'ftl•taV. 18,1981 at,:30a.m . 111e 1..-eetWNN.fttM111Greoc119 To a 11 he I r s , 11 1981 at 9 :30a.m .
Tiii• '-1'-1 II (Oft<IU<ttd Dy. IF YOU OBJECT to th• ::~~·r::11 .. ~:S~s·~r~ beneficiaries, cred itors iF YOU OBJECT to the 09~'•1 =~:f. ... ton orantl"9 of tM petition , retat•d 1ec:111tt•.• pnptreo 1n ec-and contlnoent. c reditors of grantl"9 ·of the petition,
Tiii• ''-'-1 •H "'.., wltll UM you Should either appear etrd•ll<t """ G ..... ~ IS • ., ol Ule Norma Vlrolma Stracho\a you shoufd either appear ~:,r, ~':::-01 Ortnet County on at the hearl"9 a nd state ~~T~:.~~ =::_ ~~~::.'!:~~.1c!:: and persons who may be at the hearl"9 and state
• · P111 your objections or flle c11y Polley s -1 t"Adm1n1str•tt11• otherwise Interested In the your objection s or file
P11i.11"'9d 0r.,. c.eu o.11y P11ot, written obJectlons with the G111c1tu .... 1er 1~11ne"" Tref. w i ll •~/or estate: written objections with the
M4lrc.11 s, u, 1t,26, 1t11 uM1 court before the he.Wing. rkN~!":~.:".=;,~r flvtn "'-' A petition has been filed court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be wldpw11c....,.lnfl•lllbt,,.1c1on111e b y Russell W ledenman In Your appearance may be PUBUC NOTICE In person or by your at-1t111u.,o1 Mtrc11, 1•1.•1 uw110oino1 the Superior Court of In person or by your at-
torney 1:>0 p.111. If\ IN c.ouncu CNm«Mtn Of Orange County requesting torney l'ICTITIOUI IUllNllS
NAMa ITATIMINT The tollowlftt 11er1ons •rt doing 11«1lnessa.:
COINS av RICI(, ll:!O M<ltlnlty
$trMI, Co.la INH, C•llrornl• U62'. ooneld Ron Sellenclr., 1120
McKinley Slrttl, CO\la Mtu,
Calllorftle '12t». VlvlaftS<lltnO, J120 M<ltlnlo SI.,
Cotta Mew, C•lllomla t261•.
This llUllnes1 Is conduct~ by an In· CllYldllitl,
Oonald Ross S<twn<k
Tiiis •la'-1 •as Ill.., wltll ttw Co11nty Clerk ol Orange C011nty on
March J. 1911
· llltN•wwiort9"cll Cll'fH•11·•1•"1"' that R s II W ied • I F Y 0 U A R E A "'"' end l>I•• ..,, •no eu ",..,,,. In· us e enman I F Y O U A R E A
C REDITOR o r a con·1trntt0MfY•HH ••nobe11 .. r'llbe appointed a s personal :REOITOR or a con·
tlngent creditor of the de· c11trtoft. representative to ad· tlngent c reditor of the de·
ceased, you mus t file your =nt~'i:!:'., minis ter the estate o f c eased , you must file your
claim w ith the c ourt or c11yo1N-p0r1aeec:11 Norma Virginia Strachota claim with the court or
present It to the personal NOTI: Tiit ,.,_" o111111no11ce11 (under the Independe n t pr esent it to the personal
r epresentative appointe d =~i:;~_: .. 1111nt'" '"1«1'° irom Administration of Estates representative a ppointed
by the court within four Pu1111111tO Orant1t c ... 11 o.u., Piiot, A ct) The petition Is set for by the court w ithin four
months from the date of "'"'" s.1•1 Ill's.ti hearlno In Dept. No . 3 at months from the date of
fir s t Issuance Qf letters as · 700 Ci.vie Center Drive. f ir st Issuance of letters as
provided In Section 8700 of PUBUC NOTICE West, in. the City of Santa provided in Section 700 of
the Probate Code of -Ana, Callfornla on April 1• the Pro bate Cod e of
C alifornia . The time for l'ICTIT1=S:,,,..,... 1981at9:30a.m. California. The time for P111>t1~ 0ranve coHI 0•11~1~~:: filing c laims will not ex-•AMS ITATSMINT IF YOU OBJECT lo the filing c laims w ill not ex·
M•rc" s. u. "· 1•. "" 106t-t1 plre prior to four months Tll• "11-1n9 perton• ••• doing granting of the petition, p i re prior to four months
P UBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATl!MllNT fhe IOllowlnt Pffton 11 doing bull·
ntU •• MISS TRACEY SECRETARIAi.
SERVICE, 2" Soat Cenyon Drive,
l.•011na Btt<ll, C.lllornl• 9»1 I Grt<• I.. ~1\ot<e<lloto, 261 C.)on
Strttl, LtQUM S.acll, Ct lllornlt. Thi• ~tnn1 I• <ondllcted by •n In
dlvldu•I. G.I.. Mo1urlto10
(dbal MIU Trec:ey
1 nls Sl•tement was llttc1 wltn Ille County Clerk ol Ora119t COllnlY on
from the date of the hear-111u~r'A':.~h·~ w£1.01NG $HOP. you should either appear from the date of the hear-
ing noticed above tNc. • ce111°""'" '°'"°~•lion, 2111 a t the hearing and state Ing noticed above
YOU MAY EXAMINE EH i I.• c rnc.a A..,.11 .... Au11tlm. your objections or file YOU MAY EXAMINE Catllornl• '2D. "tt b ' ti "th th the file kept by the court. hnner s 11 .. 1 ,,.,,.1 tnc .. • wn en o Jee o n s wi e the file kept by the court.
If you are Interested In t he C•"'°'"'• c.,,_.von, an EH1 u court before the hearln~. If you are interested In the
estate, you may file a re-~· A-. ~Im, Ctllfoml• Your apearance may be in estat~. you may file a re-
ques t w ith the court to re-Tllls11o1t1Mta ls <onc1u<ltd11.,.,.,.. tper son or by your at· q u est with the court to re-
ceive special notice of the -•tlOll. orney. celve special notice of the
inventory of estate assets ~SMttMtc.ai. inc. I F Y 0 U A R E A inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac-~~ C:REDI TO.R or a con-and of the petitions, ac-e o u n t s and reports T111, •'--' •• ttt.., •1111 t11t t1gent c reditor of the de· co unt s and reports
described In Section 1200 c°""'Y ~ o10r..,.. '-'Yon JIM\. ceased you must file your described In Section 1200
of t he Clllfornla Probate 26• 1 .. ,. Pt c laim with the court or of the California Probate
code , AR TH u R s . p11i.11...., 0r-. Coe•• 0 ,11., Piiot, present It to the personal Code.
LEVINE, ESQ. , .... 12. l9,26,MMc11s, "" 11CM1 representative appointed JOHN W. DOWNER,
'""" STE LL LEV IN E & by the c ourt w ithin four 401 Glenn.yre Strfft, Suite
P111111"'9d Orentt eoe•• 0.11, P1101, BOoKMAN PUllUC NOTICE months from the date of H Laguna a• a c h
Mar~n l. I"'·
Mere11s.12. 1•. 2•. 1"1 120U1 727 West S.vefttfl St~ • f irst issuance of letters as ca 11 fornla 92U 1, ( 714)
LOS Angelel, C.. 90011 IUPUtOltCOUaT Qtl CALl,OUIA provided in Sect ion 700 Of 497·2.443. PUBLIC NOTICE Published Orange Coast COUNTYOPOUMO• t he Probate Cod e of Published Orange
l'ICTmouuu11uu Dally Pilot, March 4. 5, 11, o•os•~=CAUM ~alifornl~. T he time for Coast Dally Pilot. Feb. 26 .
1uwa1TAHIMNT 1981 1077_,1 tn '"' Miil"' lu,""' Ao1>11Ut1on .. filing claims w ill not ex· 27 . March s. 1981 793-81 ne!:!,',°''-. ""°" 11 dOln9 wsi. • '"MA JEAN HI "o tor CM,,.. of pi re to four mont hs from
MESA SAlt:s, BA J A PUBUCNOTJCE "~"::E111£AS11WA JEANH1au"o. the date of the hearing
MAIUCETIHG ANO NEW$1.ETTER, 11t11tl-, ,_ llttd a 11111111.., wttll tlle notice above.
,,, C•nter Sltttt. Cott• Mn•, fltCT1nou1 •UMNU.S Cter• "'!Illa c:-t,., en o,.... <'*'9-the file kept by the court.
P UBLIC NOTICE
C•lltornl•n.27. NAMa ITATIMaNY 1111 •Pllll<enl'I 11•me rrom '""'A If you are interested In the MOTICll TO ClllEDITO-. scr.;:'.'~~~:::;..:~ ... , i.!i':...to1 .. ~1,.. 1Mr10M .,. dotng ~~:A.H 1 uuo co JEANN E estate , you may file a re· ~S:C~u,';:,!~.~~~~.~~
Tlll1 ........... , cond!Ktllcl Dy an In· EMEltALO 1.AICll, P.O .... Utt, IT IS Ol'OE"ED ... I ell __ ,,.. quest With the COUrt to re· Notk t ltlltl'fff given loetedllOf't ot
o1v•-•. 1•1 .. e..o ...,...,.,.., suita ue, H-· t«Httd 1n ..,. ............. 1t1t11 metie. celve special notice of the ~. ~~=~~ .!..,.!'-:.°" ...::::,1:,.
Tiiis :.::'':. 111t11 ..ct11 u. 'ln9tc':=-:~:':.:"...., 111 ~.m:'.'=':'~3!.:;rn~i Inventor y of.estate assets puun•• property h••et ... 11 ..
C011nty c1er11 o1 o n.,.. C:-ty on Lt<Mt, *2 ... ce-11 °'""· Hllftt· 0 ... ,1-1 , 1t1 100 cMc eenctt and the petitions, accounts c1e1e11-
FM1. 10. t"1. 11191°" ltedl. C.llfdrllle ttw7. or1,,., s-u """· 0renee County, and reports d escribed In Tll• """' ..a 1111slftus •ddreu ot Pu-. c Coll*"'° 11 '"' lnlen-1r .. 1r .. .., are -~•t IMW'll l(,M. leufte -Ctowr ' - -<WM, any, Se Ct i 0 n 120 0 0 f t h e IC N ~EBER, 101 ~-1n •1r-1, ~v-.,,.., Or ... <Mil Deity Piiot, M. Y 1..-., 6152 "ltd CMcfl OrlW, wfly tll9 pittll ... hlr cNnglt of Nl'IW • • .. -" -Fu. 12, tt, 216. Merell s, , .. , 1~1 H11n11....,.. 8ltecll c.u1om1a nM1 .._,.,. .. .,...,..._ Ca llfornia Probate Code. ea111oa, ee111om1.
PUBUC NOTICE Goldtll o .ii 1n11u tmen1: A IT rs l"UlllTHElll OlllOIEltEO ... I. R 0 B E R T L • Tl•• •outlon In Calll~nl· ol Ille
c1111w,..a 1.1m1..,. P.,.,....,,lp, l6t .. <••et 1111, on1w to -,_ t1t HUMPHREYS Ill O e111.t e•C\ll•,...omc•orpr1nc1pe1t>1111. 8Hell &outevard, Stlllt JS., H11nt· ,lllllltl1tO Ill Ille Oally Piiot, t ' OV•r M\I olflu OI 9'e ln\-cl tr.,slKat t1191on IMcll c.111on1111tM7 11•••111tPtr or .. neral elrc11l•tto11 Drlv•, Suite 33, Newport is wtnt11.oo ...
l'ICTIT10U5 •UllNHS ' · """'"In 0r.,.. c-wv. Colltoffl•. B•ach, Ca. 92663. (714) A.II .U.r llllsl<Wu ,,.,,.,ff tnd ed· NAMI ITATEMIENT C•MnM. ~ OflCt • _.. ,_ 1-tuc<n tlw _.s 645 27lO <lruu1 llHd l>Y I lie Intended
T,.. 1o11-1no per ton Is dolno INtl· Tiiis sta..._,t ••• 111.., wllll Ille prl~ to IN cllttt Mt tcw ,,..,.lno on tllt • ,,."''•'"' wtltllft '"'" wtrs ltll ,..,, neu., county Cltttc 01 0r.,,.. c-nly on 1Mtltlon. Published Orange Coast so '" u tcnowf\ to th• t11lend•d
R . o . co N $TR u c T 1 o N M.,c11 l. 1t11. Oated: ~Y 11, 1•1 Dally Pilot, M arch <4, S, 11, tr•n11 .... un: '*"
MANAGEMENT co .• 11"1 Cowan, I'll,.. .__ldH. "'-1981 1078 81 fl•• N""S .. d INtlntss adclrKS ol Irvine, C..tllOf'nl• '1714. p111111.-0r..,.. Coast 0.lly Piiot • tlle lnlended 1r.,1l••M• ere: Rlellarcl M Oallc>rl, Jr., SOOS Rl11er Mar<h S l2 " U '"' l201 .. i J \ldlllt"' Ille Marton H. Httlecre; Strati H. Ver-Aven11e, NtwPO•t 8Hch, C•lllornla • ' ' ' ' 5up9r1ar c:-1 P UBLIC NOTICE llte, EllM R. H11lf, UJD Son Miguel,
U..i. P11lllllllitd Or .... Coltst O•llY Pllol, N••POJ'I ludl. Ctllfornla 92MO
T11ls tK<sifttU Is eOftclucted by an In· PUllUC NOTICE FMI. 2', ,,_, s. 12, 1t, 1"1 ft.S-11 o._01111 TC> '"OW GAUll l'Olt Tllet Ille proPfrty P9f'llnt11t 11erea. It dlvldu•I. at.ANOI OP NAMI de•crlbed In OtNrtl u : l11<nllu,.. II~·
Alcllard M, D•llOll. Jr. l'ICTITIOUS IUllNIH PUBLIC NOTICE CASI NUNllllt A·l'71U lures, -lpme1t and ,.,.rehanjllte •114 Tl!ll sttc.,...,,1 .. ., llled with ,.,. NAMI STATaMINT In Ult Mett.r of ... Appllcellon Of II IO<•l•d ... 201 Main Slttet,
Co11n ty Clerll ol Otitncie County on Tiie lollowlf\9 PtrMf\' art dolf\9 HENAO l<OSTIC, alla NI SHA 8•111oa,Ctll!ornla.
M•r<ll J, '"' ll111lneu '" lllCTITICIUI 94#11 ... IS MICHAEi. PAnERSON, lor Cl\eft99 Tiie ll\lllntu ....... used by lM w ld ,1J,tS7 NINA'S RECORO $HOP, '11 No, NAMllTATIMaN·T of Heme. translen>t al teld location It K. N.
P11blf.-Ortl\9t Coast Oally Pltol, Ana heim 8oulevtrd, Anellelm, TM IOllOWlnt __,It doing lllltl· N ENAO KOSTIC, alt• N tSHA Wtber Je-ers. M11cll s. 12, "· 16· 1911 IOS'-t1 Cetllotnlt 921QS. ... .. H : MICHAEi. PAnEltSON flat Ill.., • Tllal Mild 1111111 ,,.,,, .. 11 lnt...oed lo
Cella C-llo t41I Otyt-Cir· (II ._OCKWEl.1. AE"0-$AFE pitttllM In tNt ,_, tor aft order ti· llt contumtn•ltd et lllt ofllo ol:
PUBLIC NOTICE Cle, H11f\llngtof\ tucll, Calllornla TECHNOLOGY, 121 ._OCICWEl.I. I-Int peUtl-r co clMlnge Illa/lier Oevld I'. Otl.Anc\', EtQ. UO Ntwpo,. 91"'6. AElllO·SA'E OESIGHS, SIG Mc Fad· Mmt lrom HENAO KOSTIC 10 Nl$HA :enttr0rl,...,Sull01t,Newport .. ec:h,
Nine CMflt<llO, ,.11 O.yt-Cit• deft, U111! 'O', Hu111tn1ton 9Hcll, MIC HAEi. PATTERSON. Cetllornlet2'60W1oralltr Fel>Nety29,
PICTITIOUI IUSINESI <It, H11nllnoton 8eecll, Cetlfornla Calllomlafbft. 1111 ~ or•rtd lt\at •II PtOonf '"1
NAMI I TATIEMENT tt'46. l(tnt "· •t.Owtll, P.O. Bo• 20-l. ltnlel'ftl.., Ill .... meec.r afortMld .,,. This blllk l•ensler Is sllbject lo
Tiie 1011-no per-. II doing !Klli· Thil ""''"'" 11 eof\dllCltd Ill' • Coste MHe. C•llfornl• t2627; ™' pttr i.fort 11111 COIKI "' Oe"rlmtnl Calllornlt Unllortn CommtrelM COde
"'" ... ~··1 POMntl'Slllp . M<,......,,Unlt'O',Hllfttl"91on8 .. cll, No., t i JOO 0"1< C...\K OflV9 WHI. Se~~:n= end •ddr-ol tllt ...,..,,,
I.A 8181..tOTECA. CUI.I NA RV Cetla c:..ntcllO CA.ft"' Stnlt AN. c.lllOtnlt, on Aprtl •• 1 .. 1 ... 1111 .......... Clt lm.1 ,,, • ., be lllld Is INFORMATION SERVICE, P.O. &oil Tiiis llet-1 wff Ill.., wltll UM Tlll111u111Wss II c...-.Cc.d Dy en In· i•I 11:JO o•ctoctc •.m , end tl'len end Oavld p Ot l.t ncy, UO NewPOrt '""·UH Elden Avenw. Colle Mew. Co11nty Citric ol Ortnet C°""'' on dMdllal. ll!Wrt ,_ '-· II ..,., 11'ty lla¥e, c enter 0,1..,., Sllll• 211, Newport Citlllorni. mv. Marc II l. ltl1. ICtnt N. llle<k"ll wtly aold Pt(llon for cllanoe ol Nme ... ,,., CtllfOt'llle ~. end Ille 1111 Httllerl IC. Allft, 2S1S Etd•n flU1'M Tiiis llat-1 •• lllltd wllJI IN -ldnotllt.,..mtd. jay IOt ftllnt Clal-~ _,., cndllar Ave-. Coll.I Mew, Cttllor11t• ttt21. P\lllllllltd Oret19t Coast Delly Piiot, C011nt, Clel'1l Of Ortnee County on ti It twtNr ar4itrltd 111t1 • <CllPY ol lfl•ll l>t ~., J7, 1,.1, wtlltll ls lf'e
Thh llllMntH" <-ltil bV •I) In-"'411<11s,12, "· 1•. , .. 1 11)41..tl FMI. 10, ltl1. ""' Ofdff '° ._ ~ be Pllbllllltd 111111...u • ., ~ h ~mellon dlvlduat. '1""1 In Oran1• Coest Dally Piiot, • ~IC. Alln PUB C OT P\14>11"*1 Oraftllt Coltst Deity Piiot, nt••P•Ptr of ttner•I ctrc11t all on, d•t• "'9Cllltd •tloYe.
Thh 11.c-1 w.u 111.., wltll 111t U N ICE P:Ml. IJ,26,INrtllS, t"1 6ff.lt Pllbfllllltd In lflls '""''al tent once a Dattil.~~ ~~.:!!,
Co11nly Ctttk 01 Or•ft91l CO<lftly 011 • _... for tcM" <-1111w -•s P<lor Strati H. Vt~•
M4lr<11 J. 1 .. 1. "CTITIO'IS •UMHU PUllUC NOTICE I• IM .. ,°' Nld,..rlng. Ell• Ill. Hllff
f'117... MM!la ITATIMIMT Oeltd '"""'*" ie. 1•1 o I &. A N c y , H U N T • P11llllWWCI Orenge Coesl Dally Pttol, Tiit lollowlf\9 ,.., .... It dolnt 1111•1· "-'dH. """".. , ... ..,.aMAte•• Mar<ll S, t2, 19, 2', 1911 IOU<ll1 neu at: fllCTITIOUI IUllNIU JYllftof IN •tt Ill ..... CltMw'Dn CO P.R.0 .1 .1 .• tt1 PltOl<l'.SSION NAMI ITATIMINT S...,.,.,. c:.vr1 t "·
lllESl!A"GH OlllGANtZATION l'O._ Tiit lott°"'lllf ,..noftt ltrt dOlftg AL.UIN M.00M ~ llMdt, CA tlWI
BUSINESS ENTltal"._.NIUlllS, II>, 111111":S:~~ MA "KITING A$· :::~~ ... 1•"9 P11lllllNdOr.,...C:oHIOtlly l"llol.
\JNITIEo.AMIEltlCA CO"l'OltATION, .,.,.IATIS, , .. , _ A~w, Gotl• , .... 1111., ... .-, FtD. It, 1•1 IS1 .. I 1'~:::~~!::~1::.:s Sit A,,..clta Of'lft, Cor-def Mllr, ;;"°11, C•lllornle M 0 ·~· Niii..,;·~ COHI Dally Piiot
Tiie tollowlnt ~ 11 doing bllsl· Celllorlllat262S. Arlll11r G. flHcO<k1 Sr ., ltOI ..... It, 16, ,,_, s, 12. t"I M:l-tl
....... , Nt114ft G. ·-·· SU~ltle W•k•ll•m P t•c•. Stnl• Alie, COMMliACIAI. 1NVE$TMf!l'fT'S, Drive, Conine dtl Mer, ornla Calllorftl• '210t. , -____, "o Columbl• Drive, Coste M•... t26U. Wlllle(ll W. litrrtck, 20 Grend PUBLJC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ISHt1 P11lllllMd Orenoe Coefl Delly Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE
Cetllornlet2'2'. Tiiis blltl'*ts It Ullldllcltd .. , _,, 1111, A~11111t, Apt. SS, l.Ollt ltecll ,
PICTIT10UI •UllNaU JOlln M. Soflt<lll, U.1 Colilmlll• tncOf'porMtd -l•llon ottlfr "'9n 1t Cfllritl'fll• tOa). N7t
NAMl ITATaMaNT Orlve, Colle Mitte, C.lllornla •a1'. "'''*"""' Jel!IH H. CMlk, t1S2 J11anlta, ,ICTITIOUf IUltNIU Ftb. It, 2', Mer,11 S, 12, 1 .. 1 161 ... 1 -----------
PUBUC NOT1CE
N,,,.,
lllCTITIOUI IUllNIN
MAMa 1TATll1HNT Tiit loll-Int llffMnl are dOlftf
IWllnna•· P"OOIJCT N\ANA(;l!Ml!Nf CO., io2 l"•thlon t.alllt, T.nllll, Cafllllfllla ""°· It~ W. Wl#ly, VffQ Vtldtf ... AAl»IOll Vlelt. GolltorNa ... ,,
••"•'• I!. c111r11, nt1 ll'trl l•r•IU. Plou, N••,•fl IHCll,
t.otlfW!lll ...... ~Tlllt ._.,,.. .. It c...Wc;t'4 "' a
lltf' ...... "'""""' .....,"1.WIMlf
Tll" .._ -•1M wllll lM C-t' Clt111. tf Ort1191 Ct11111t' .,. Fa6, 1Wt.
AVll AMI Kll.UAN 1 M"""'9W .,VIL, 2
twW*1 ltl(ll~lfltflll• ,,...
'111411
~-...... Clrllllllt c-t OtllY "''"·
... It, ... Merc:ll ~ lt, "'' .,,...,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiit lolloWflltl ~ le dOlne 111111· T°llll 1111t111ttt It C11M11e1te1 by ..., 111. llfettorl o. ~ CYll'ttl, Ctllhlrlll• ..... NAMa ITATIMtUfT
N1U'1 "'" H : dlvld11a1. Tiii• tl.IMIMllt -thtd wlltl -Tlllt Dldlnfft It etnd11<1td Dy • Tiit ritlltwlllt _..,., •Jt tl•lflt
l'ICTIT1outlUllN•IS 800 KICEIEPIHG Pl.US, '°" JoMM.Softaekl C~lll'I' Cltf'tl .. Ol't1191 c-tt tll ..... r•ltNWll.......... Mlllffl•: llAMI STATIMINT ~!!.Y SlrHt, Cypren, Calllotnlt Tiii• •'-l-1 .... lllld wllll Ille Mtrclla, '"'· A.C. l'Mee<ll, "· GllllST '"0flHY • AWA"O• • .__ Co11nty Cl•ttr. of Or•nge CO<lnly on ,, ... , Tlllt....IUt-1 -tllltd wltll tllit tlOI ... ta, .....,.,. Cltv, CAllltnll• Tiie follOWlflO Ptrtont lrt dolnt wa.,,.. trlfft Mawo ttto MMf'I' M•rcll J, '"'· . Plll>ll.,_ Or ... (Mtt 0.ll" "'I"-(9'1111Y Cltfll Of Ore119t C-ly en ftlt.SS. 111n1nen ,.., s1, .. 1 c~ c.111wn1e MID • Merell a 1t11 ~ lAlltM c.r...io. tu 1 GU A._ ANT y I' I NANG I A I. ._.,. ~ M Yorlla Slrttl, P11lllltlltd OrMOt Coall Oell~'::: Marti\ S, It, lt, ~ l•I tOS~I ' ' .,.,_. .. nf'I)' ,._, S.0W Ma, Cell ...... ~
S£1tVIC£5, 1UO T-Clnlrt PlllCt, Or•nea c..tlforlllit... Merell s. 12 .... 2', 1•1 totNl .... 1 ..... OrMet Coett Doll' ....... ttt•t.
kllt104,"-!m,c:otltornt•'-'· T1111 '11vt1-· lt U~dvcttd .. ., • -----PVBUC NOTICE Mtr<llt,11,lt,216,ltlt 10041 ~ LMllM JlfwlMft. au •. Gtntfel Eltdrlc Crtdll c:or.,. ll"'lled..,._tfll~ a-1,,-l'lece, ..,.._ M.t, c:.11..,...,
ll&n, ..... Yori! <""1•11of\, 2fM w..,.. .. ..._.. PUBLIC NOTICE .......... w~a ""''· T••llt Ctntr• Pleet, Suitt IU, Tllll M9IMlitllll -rt11d wllfl Ille -v--.. i,.Yt"'-f lll• ....,_,I• CtlldvCIH ., • Anofltl111, Citllfllnllt ,_., C....,c, Cl~ er OrMtit Cotillly t11 .....,-.. "'9MnN~ Tlllt tMlftat b ~-DY 1t tor. l"ati.. II. 1... 'te'fl,,_ Mltt .. M ,..,._ UuM Crtwley _,u..,_ r1.... ...... ITATIIMSNT o..a., UNlte ~ o-.-:_~rk Gltdlt ~, ... 0r"'9t CMtl o.i1, Pitt', Tiie .......... MrMfll er• H l"f fll'-....,._. Wiit tlttt 91111 1111 ~Miil!, P•. It, 16. Mlr'dl S. tt. "'1 ..._., Ml_ II: C-.'t °" tf °""'lit (.owlty .,.
Ol*kl ~ I ..... 11. "'1. ___. _, •• ~ r,_,
Ti-I• .,....,_. ... ..... .... .. .-v--. NOTICE .......... Or-. c-1 Dltlty ,.. -----------
CtlHlly Gttfll " °'.,.. c.., "" r•. "· -.1111Wc:11 s.. tJ."" tll-t1 PVBLIC NOTICS Ft41 IJ, IWI Ptcn1'0UI IMIM•aU ..._ltAftM&MT
PUBUC NOTICE
Pt(Y1TIOUS ewtNa• MAM91TAT .... WT
"'"' loll•I ... lltf*Mlt ., ....... .,_.,..._., 'I
' .
ruauc NOTICE
N~SE COMPOSITE TRANSAanONS
eYOfAf'tOlll IMC\.\101 U~•DUON nta •IWY•L Ml .. l.tT, ,A(tPIC. ..... IOITOW, MUOIT ue CIMCINtlATI IT'OCll l&~I -.o ••N•TIO IY Titl ....... , •• ,. •• ,,
N
DOw Jor18S Final
OFF. 6.81
I
CLOSING 914.82
I .. -----~-----~----•11 ~ ·~Have cake
and eat it, too
Let's assume you lived in a house that was
burned to the ground, causing injuries to people -
and you were unfortunate enough not to have ade-
quate insurance to cover all the damages.
What would happen if you then called your ln·
surance agent, arter the fire, and asked him to write
a policy that was retroactive in its coverage: in ef·
feet, in other words, al a dale prior to the fi re?
YOU CA.N IMAGINE THE heehaws you would
get.
"What do you think I am, an idiot?" Or: "Sure.
everylhing's easy to figure out, with hindsight." Or:
"Dummy, why didn't you take out enough insurance
in the ftrst place?"
Well, ridiculous as it may seem. this is precisely
the kind of deal arranged by .IGrk Kerkorian's MGM
Grand Hotels, operator or hotels <with casinos) in
Las Vegas and
Reno. It was
t h e MGM
.Grand in Las
Vegas that was
hit Nov. 21 by a
fire in which 84
lost their lives.
More than 600
were also injured.
~ ----------------------~·! ~,1
lllTOI llllDWITZ ~-
The MGM Grand apparently bad enough in·
surance to cover property damages and business
losses arising from the fire. But beyond that, it had
only $30 million in liability coverage to take care or
claims resulting from the deaths and injuries. As of
Jan. 15, 57 complaints had been filed against the com-
pany -and they were asking a total of $275 million in
compensatory damages and $780 million in punitive
damages. That adds to a total of Sl.2 billion.
IT'S TRUE THAT GAMBLING IS normally a
profitable business for the casino operator . And it's
also true that claimants nearly always ask for more
money than they even expect to get. But still, that
imbalance between Sl .2 billion and $30 million is a lit-
tle nerve-wracking.
Kirk Kerkorian, MGM's major stockholder (he
owns 47 percent), doesn't need this uncertainty hang-
ing over his head.
So Kerkorian went out and did what you and I
couldn't do in a million years: he bought himself a
back·dated insurance policy. Frank 8 . Hall & Co .. a
big insurance broker. put together
the package for the MGM Grand,
bringing in such heavies as
Lloyd's of London and General
Reinsurance. As a result, MGM
Grand bas been able to boost its
liability coverage from $30 million
to $200 million and it's retroac-
tive.
Naturally, this additional· $170
million of back·dated insurance
doesn't come cheap. Business u..:oiu•N
Insurance. the trade paper that broke this st~ry,
estimates the MGM will have to come up with an 1m·
mediate premium payment of $35 to $40 million. But
MGM should be able lo handle it.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
... 300 m ,100 •H,900 .... 100 ~7',IOO sn.~ -·'°° m::: -Jll,000 J00,000
m .900 1n.100 166.~ lM,300
UPS AND DOWNS
GOLD COINS
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NEW TOflK IN'I -S•'"· ,,_ P""" ..0 -
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