HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-09 - Orange Coast Pilot, MONDAY MAHLH •I 1'l;i1
Two held • ID
Anaheim police investigators '
say they will seek formal
murder complaints Tuesday
•lain.at two San Diego residents
being held as suspects in Dis-
neyland's fint alaytne.
Police Sgt. Del Wade said to-
day that wblle bis lnveatigatioo
i1 still continuing, be wlll ask the
Orange County District At·
torney's office to press charges
against James 0 . Driscoll, 211,
and Julie Hoidener, 25,
Each ls being held in lieu ol
US0,000 bail, Driscoll at
Anaheim City J au and Mias
Holdener at Orange County Jail.
The two were arrested satur·
day night after Mel C. Yorba,
18,, of Riverside, was fatally
stabbed in the Tomorrowland
area ol the sprawling amuse-
Joking with guards
<J1l AN<,f ( O\JNI Y CAL If OHNIA 25 CENTS
Disneyland knife slaying
ment park.
Wade said investigators now
"have an idea" of what the
motive may have been, but be
declined to elaborate.
Officers uid Yorba was
knifed after apparentiy becom·
ing involved in an argument
with Driscoll and Miss Holdener
near the submarine ride ticket
booth in Tomorrowland.
Wade aaid witneaaea saw the
knifin1. Mill Holdener was
taken into custody by park
security peraonnel.
Driscoll was later taken into
custody by officers who
searched the park and found
him biding in bushes in the Ad·
ventureland area.
Wade said it dido 't appear
Yorba knew bis alleged as-
aallanta. The Riverside man bad
gone to the park with friends.
The park was being used
Saturday night by a boat to a
private party by Rohr Corp. of
San Diego and Riverside.
However, officers said they
did not know if Yorba or Driscoll
and Mias Holde ner were
employees of the rirm which
specializes in construction or
transportation equipment.
Yorba was taken by Dia·
neyland ambulance to Palm
Harbor Hospital in Garden
Grove, where he was pro-
nounced dead.
A Disneyland spokesman said
Yorba's slaying was the first in
the park's 26-year history. About
six persons have died acciden-
tally in the amusement racility.
ur erer goes to c • air
Water unsafe
·Repairs halt
sewage flow
By STEVE MARBLE
OfllleOall' ~l ... Sl.IH
Orange County health officials
were to begin tests today to de-
termine how seriously the waters
in Newport Harbor and the
Newport coastline were polluted
by this weekend's million gaUon
sewage spill.
Newport's shoreline, closed to
bathers on Sunday. 1s expectecJ to
remain orr.umits ror at least a
week.
But the quarantine did little to
discourage beach sunbathers.
I Llreguards Said at least 50,000
persons turned out Sunday, re·
mainingonthesand.
"We beefed up our patrols,"
said lifeguard Lt. Logan
Lockabey, ··and helped post
signs. Everyone was very
cooperative. They stayed out of
the water -1n ract , they
didn't even get close to tbe
water."
The trouble began Saturday
morning when a sewer line rup-
tured in front or the Balboa Bay
Club on Pacific Coast Highway.
Pavement in the southbound
lanes was raised and broken by
the force of the rushing sewage.
IRAIGI COAST llATHIR
Fair through Tuesday.
Lowa tonight 46 along the
coast, 54 inland. Highs
Tuesday 67 to mid 70s.
118101 TOIAY
The balkdboU •e<UOR for
UC lrotne opporcml~ u oveT
cu a bk:f to tlw NIT hlu not
~en fot1hcornfng. Page 81.
llDEI
Ray Lewis, or the Orange Coun·
ty Sanitation District, said the
rupture was caused by corrosion
or the 31>-inch line by sulpher
sewage gas.
Lewis said the stretch on Coast
Highway where the trouble start-
ed is the only area in Newport not
s.erved by double sewage lines. He
said because or shortage or runds,
a second "backup" line has not
been installed.
Repair or the sewage line cost
the sanitation district roughly
<See SEWAGE, Page AZ>
Injured owner
dragged to
safety by dog
COCHISE, Ariz. (AP) -
Bomber is 70 years old in dog
years, but the 45-pound
Australian shepherd mix proved
age poses no barrier to heroism
when he dragged bis 130-pound
mistress to safety after she fell
and broke her hip.
Rhaeta Eslick, 81, who lives
alone, slipped on concrete
outside her southern Arizona
farmhouse and lost
consciousness in the rain.
Bomber was licking her face
when bis mistress came to. She
grabbed the long fur around bis
neck and said "Pull, Bomber.
Pull."
Pull be did.
It took about twb hours, she
figured lat.er, but Bomber pulled
her into the house, tbroqb tbe
kitchen and to tbe teleplMJae,
where she cailed for M9.
I I I would let IO ti ldm and
rest, but be JUlt ltQed rtpt
there," Ma. l'.alldl iaW from ber
bed at St. Joe.,. '1 boapltal
where 1be wu recaperatln1
after the lnc:ldnt. "Re ju1t
seemed to know what to do. He
took over and took care of me.
"He'• alway1 been a Sood
do1," abe added. "Hia fftber
WH one ol the best cattle• in the country." ,,
Bomber la watcb.iq ovet the
farm with a bumu friend ol
bera while abe recovera, but
lla't yappl.aa at errant ateen.
Tb• OGly other anlmall Oil the
• farm IOUtbwat ol Willen are
cblckeba, 1eeae and three
Cblb\lahuu.
Judy, 24,
resisted
appeals
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (AP>
Joking with guards and
blaming himselr for his fate,
24-year-old Steven T. Judy went
willingly lo his death in
Indiana's black oak electric
chair today for murdering a
mother and he r three small
children nearly two years ago.
"I don't hold no grudges. This
is my doing, sorry it happened,"
were the last words of the blond.
blue-eyed murderer before two
powerrul surges or electricity
wracked his body and he was
pronounced dead.
YOUNG INDIANA VICTIMS OF STEVEN JUDY
Chaeteen children Ml1ty, 5i Mark, 2; Steven, 4
"'He was very relaxed, I don't
think it hurt," said his foster
father, R<tert R. Carr. "When it
hit him, he flinched . Then you
could see movement in his
fingers."
• ~ •'""""9 MURDERED MOTHER
TenyLHCh•etffn
Inf ant deaths
rare disease
DETROIT (AP) -The deaths
of 9·week-old twins apparently
were the result of a rare
almultaneoua occurrence of Sud·
den Infant Death Syndrome, the
Wayne County Medical Ex·
amlner'• omce aay1.
Tbe vtctlma, Vincent Ware lJ
and hla brother, Vincent 111,
were found WM:OUcioua ln tbelr
crib Sunday b)' tbelr parmta.
Both wen rmbed to Saratoca
General Hoepital, wbere tbey
were pronounced dead Oil ar-
rival. ·•
Translators stay
on Colombia jobs
Judy, who resisted appeals,
saying he prererred death to life
in prison, became the fourth
person executed in lhjs country
since the U.S. Supreme Court
revived the death penalty in
1976. His was the first execution
in 20 years in Indiana's electric
chair, made from wood that
once served as a gallows.
None of the Wycliffe Bible
translators has asked to leave
Colombia although their lives
• have been threatened by the ter·
rorists who shot and killed
Chester Bitterman Saturday, a
Wycliffe official said today.
A memorial service for Bit-
terman, 28, was to be held today at
Wycliffe Bible Translator Inc.
headquarters in Huntington
Beach.
''This tragedy baa pulled the
people in the or1anization
together in greater determination
to corrtlnue our work," said
Wycliffe spokesman Terry
Casey.
The terroriats kidnapped Bil·
terman and held blm 47 days, de-
mandinl that WycWfe and lt.1 sia·
ter organlaaUon, the Summer
lnsUtute of Lin1uiaUcs, pull out of
tbe country.
•'There wu really nothlna we
could do," Casey said today. "U
we pulled out, the action taken ~
a1aimtCbet would have been 1uc·
ceaaful and opened the nooc11ates
to terrortat action a1ainat other
Wyclilfetranalaton."
Cuey 1ald the non-profit COl'-
poraUon baa 4,000 worken in S3
couatriel. Tbe lfOUP develops 1...,..... iD prtmttlve .oeietf ..
and thee tranalatea ~· New Tnta ....
Brenda, and two smaU daughters,
aged2andl.
The terrorists charged that
Wycliffe and SIL are fronts for the
CIA and the Colombian govern-
ment.
Wycliffe officials have denied
the charges.
Casey said a Chester Bitterman
Me mpri al fund has been
established. He said more than
15,000 letters have come to the
Wycliffe headquarters in the past
three wetk.s, offering sympathy
and support for the moat part.
President Reagan sent con-
<See lllaLE, Pa1e AZ>
Department of Corrections
spokesman Tom Hanlon said
Judy was "very calm" and
walked the six paces from his
holding cell to the chair "very
quietly" and unassisted just
after midnight.
Carr said that before Judy
was taken to the chair, he
received a final phone call from
a girl In Texas named
••Jeanne.·' He then asked for
"photos of bis new haircut"
where he had been shaved to
make room for an electrode,
which was soaked in salt brine
to make it more conductive. <See JUDY, Pate A2)
Dog shoots man
Pet drop• loaded pi1tol
llONROE,.Micb. (AP)-A man waa abot in the arm after bia
German abepberd dol picked up a run in ita teeth and then dropped
it, police repon.d today.
John Calbert, 41, bad been tralpln1 bildol J arvl1 to attack and
• dlaarm.lDtruden,Pollcnald.
Calbert placed a loaded .II-caliber platol on a chair and J an1a
picked up tbe weapon in bll teetll, police offtcer Dan lllcbardl re-
ported.
&neral wttnes1e1, indudlq Calben'a father, wile ...S
eb11dl9. watc:JMd u .tbe dot•= tbe IUD. caallq tt to ftN a bullettUtbltC~bertlntbearm, ebard1ald.
Calbert WU inf air cODdWon 1D Mercy Holpttal. Rlebarda •ald. Bltierman bad been ln Colom· •
bta for two yean wttb b1a wife, ........-.... ·-·-··~ ' \"·'· -· -.. .._ ... . ........ ~ .. ••
'. '
8 Or1nge Coat DAILY PfLOTMo~. MllCh 9, 1911
Limits
retained
byFV
Despite a wamln& that some
local a~a Ucketa may aoon
be thrown out of court, Fountain
Valley City CouacU hu dedded
not to raiae speed Umtta on five
maln street.a.
The issue came t~ light ln
February, when city traffic ·
engineer Jim McClendon
presented a local driving speed
survey required every five years
by the state.
The study that concluded 45
mph ls the "reasonable and
safe " s peed on Fountain
Valley's arterial streets.
The pos ted speed on five
arterials is l ower , and
McClendon recommended they
be raised lo 45.
He said the limit must be
changed, under slate law, if ~e
city wishes to continue enforcmg
speed laws by radar.
The affected streets and their
li mits are Bus hard Street, 30
mph: TaJbert Avenue, 35; Slater ·
and Ellis avenues, 40; and
Newhope Street, 40.
M cClendon said his survey
round that the average motorist
cruises Bushard at 45.
The council initiatly tabled the
s pe e d l imit h i k e a t the
s ugges tion o f Mayor Al
Hollinden.
Holtinden urged that all local
arteriaJ Limits be lowered to 35.
He argued that this speed is
safer and produces a s moother
traffic flow.
APWl ......... e
City staff members returned
one month later with a proposed
ordinance that would have
raised the rive arterial speed
limits, as originally s uggested by Mcclendon.
PICKET PROTESTS EXECUTION
Larger group kept vlgtl unttl electrocution
The traffic engineer told the
council he believe 96 percent or
the local motorists are driving
safely, even at 45.
'"To set the speed limit lower
is lo encourage breakin~ the
law," he said. '"I'd guess lh~t
there's no one who came to th1s
meeting driving under 35."
J UDY ELECTROCUTED • • •
Ci ty attorney Thomas
Woodruff said s peeding tickets
issued by radar on the streets
posted lower than 45 could be
challenged successfully in court
because the city has not adhered
to the results of the r equired
traffic study.
Councilman Ben Nielsen said
he felt uncomfortable raising the
five speed limits. especially on
Bushard, whic h runs near
several schools.
Councilman Eugene Van Dask
said most residents he's talked
to would prefer lower speed
limits.
By a 4·1 vote, the co~n~il
decided to leave all speed hm1ts
as posted, including t he five
lower than 45. The city staff was
asked to keep track of s peeding
t ickets that are thrown out
b eca u se o f the coun cil's
disregard for the traffic s urvey.
Mayor Ho llind en cast the
opposing vote, saying he still
would prefer to lower all arterial
speed limits in the city.
f'ro• Pagr A l
BIBLE ...
dolences to Bitterman's parents
in Pennsylvania.
"Al this lime of terrible sad-
ness, I hope you .will be
s trengthened in the klbowledge
that the firmness and courage of
your son and daughter-in-law,
have contributed lo our stead-
fast determination to resist ter·
:-or ist blackmail,·· Reagan
wrote.
"My thoughts and prayers are
with you, .. the Preside.nl added.
Casey said that dunng the or·
deal workers at Wycliffe were
opth'.aistic that Bitterman would
be released unharmed.
But that turned to shock .
"The reaction is shock, but
there is a general feeling that
God doesn't make mistakes and
that there is a reason for what
happened to Chet. We may not
know it in our lifetim e. but
there's a reason." Casey said.
Stopover O K'd
CANBERRA. Australia (AP>
-Australia has given approval
for U.S. 8 -52 bombers to use
Darwin as a refueling base for
1urvelllance flights over the
Indian Ocean, officials said
today.
·'They sent for a photographer
a nd took the pictures he
wanted," Carr added.
Attorney Steven L. Harris,
who witnessed the execution
from behind a glass partition
along with Carr a nd stat e
offici als s aid that a s Judy
walked to the chair, he pointed
to where his trouser had been
cut so another electrode could be
attached to his leg, and quipped·
"I'm going to send the state of
Indiana a bill for $15 ...
Just before he was strapped
into the chair and blindfolded,
Hanlon-said, Judy took off his
wristwatch and asked that it be
given to a fellow death row
inmate who was his closest
friend.
Then Judy was strapped in.
the guards backed away. "there
was a pause for about 10
seco n ds, a nd he wa s
electrocuted,·· Harris said.
Hanlon said two surges of
e lectricity were sent through
Judy's body -first a charge of
2,300 volts for 10 seconds, then a
charge of 500 volts for 20
seconds.
State law calls for Warden
J ack Duckworth to pull the
switch that triggers the lethal
current. but Hanlon refused to
con firm wh o had done it.
Reporters, in accordance with
Indiana law, were kept far from
the death scene in another part
of the prison.
Hanlon said Judy's body was
released to the county coroner.
Judy's foster mothe r , Mary
Carr, said Judy would be buried
Thursday.
Judy was a bandoned by hls
parents and, at the age or 13,
was confined to Central State
Hos pital following sexual
attacks on women. Within two
yea r s, he was released on
"convalescent leave" to the
Carrs, who became his foster
parents.
By 1979, Judy was well-known
to Indiana authorities as a
troublemaker and was arrested
one day after the bodies or the
mother and her three children
were found. Judy broke down
and wept whe n the charges
against him were read and later
admitted his guilt on the witness
stand.
Gov . Robert D. Orr , wh o
waited at his Indianapoli s
mansion by a special telephone
Line to the prison in case Judy
asked for a stay, said in a
s tatement after the execution,
"I am at peace with myseU
because I know I have met my
responsibilities under the law
ORANGE COAST Dally Pilat ClaH"*I advertl1ln9 7141842·5171
All ottt.r department• 842-4321
Thoma.a P. Haley
~
Robert N. Weed ...........
M. Thomu Ke.vii ...
Thomet A. Murphlne ..............
Ctw ... H.LOOI .-........ ........... ,_
8em8fd SQttulman °"'* f:.!~1.'=9n
KennMl'I N. OOddard. Jr. o......ow-
MAIN MflCE
UO WHI l •y SI., Coal• MeM, CA. Mall addrHa: lo• ,,..,, Coat. MeH, CA f'62'
Cellyrltfll ttll 0.-enQlt CMrt Publltlll"t C-y No newt slotles, llluttrallons, edllorlal melter or •d• verllsernents herein may IM reproduced w11110111 JP«l•I MrmlHIOn ol COPY•IOlll owner
and because l believe justice has
prevailed.''
The governor a nd s tale
Cle mency Commission ref~ed
last week to delay the execution,
because the request was made
by the American Civil Liberties
Unio n without Judy 's
endorsement. The U.S. Supreme
Court on Friday rejected the
e ffort of another death row
inmate to halt the execution.
As Judy went to his death ,
aboot 200 people opposed to
capital punishme nt held a
prayer vigil outside the gate~ of
the century-old fortress-like
prison, its walls capped at
strategic locations with guard
towers. They carried candles,
sang hymns and jeered Hanlon
when he appeared to announce
Judy's death.
Also waiting ouside the gates
were m e mber s of a
pro-death-penalty group called
.. Protect the Innocent," whose
m e mb e r s includ e Mark
Chasteen. ex-husband of Terry
Lee Chasteen, the woman Judy
raped and strangled in April
1979, and father Of the thrEe
s m all children Judy d rowned.
Chasteen said that he felt
"hate and bitterness" toward
Judy and wished he could have
witnessed the execution.
Judy spent the early part of the
day in an emotional visit with
his foster parents and their four
children.
"He broke down three or four
times, especially when we left,
but I tried everything I know to
talk him out of it," Carr said.
"He really had a hard time
saying goodbye to my kids,'' Mrs.
Carr said. "He said 'I thought I
wa s ready fo r this, but I
wasn't.'"
For dinner. Judy asked for
and received prime ribs of beef,
two lobster tails, two baked
potatoes with sour cream and a
dinner roll . But prison orficiaJs
refused his request to wash l.he
meal down with four cold beers.
Three other convicted
murderers have been executed
in the United States in the last
four years -Gary Gilmore in
Utah on Jan. 17, 1977, John
Spenkellnk of Buena Park in
Florida on May 25, 1979, and
J esse Bishop of Garden Grove in
Nevada on Oct. 22, 1979.
SEWAGE ...
$100,000 and was completed Sun·
day.
Mike Wehner, a county water
q uallty supervisor. said the beach
rrom the Balboa Pier south to
Scotchman's Cove likely will be
closed to the publicfor a week.
•'It's bard to tell how bad it real·
ly ls," he explained. "T he
beaches will be cleaned up pretty
quickly simply by the current.
But the harbor ts slower to be
flu1hed and as the stuff leaves the
h a r bor , tt will affect the
beaches.''
Store charred
VERNON <AP) -A tire
caused an esUmated Sl million
dam11e to an import 1tore and
Ill contetita before ftrefi1hten
frol'O seven cltiu contained the
blaae.
•
Grier's
successor
delayed
Tbe Oranie County Grand Ju.ry
11 HklDI to delay theaeleet.ion of•
1ucceator to Human Services
A1ency Director llar11nt Grier
unUl the Jury releHet a report on tbe aaency'a perform Hee.
Tbe Jury, fn a letter to county
Board ol Supervlsora Chairman
Ralph Clark, said the HSA report
will be available by Mayl.
"The Jury believes that this
work b germane to your aelection
process and can add pertinent
data to your decision making,"
the letteraaid. Al'W~ IOYIET UNION SUPPLIES LEFTIST OUERRILI..AI
Mtip ahowa routea uMd for arma ahlpmenta Miss Grier has announced her
retirement, effective March 31 .
Under a tlmeUne approved by
s upervisors We dnesday, an
interim director will be named by
Marc h 17. On that date,
• recruitment for a permanent
director will begin.
The jury said in its letter that
the HSA's "ability to deliver
mandated services within its
present structure" has been
under study since September and
that the i¢ormation gathering
phase of the project is complete.
Will guerrillas
seize control?
The HSR is an umbrella
structure that administers more
than $200 million In health,
welfare and social services
programs. It employs about 2,*>0
persons and is the county 's
largestsuperagency.
N ixon fo e s
in court
SAN FRANCISCO CAP>
Three Bay-area residents who
say former pres ident Nixon
should not be all owed to profit
fro m the Watergate scandal
through the sale of his memoi~s
and interviews may take their
battle to the U.S. Supre me
Court.
Th e three , wh o ca ll
themselves PORN ror Profits
Or Richard Nixon have asked
the high court to review their
suit. In December, the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals upheld
a lower court ruling that citizens
cannot sue for breach of public
trust unless they are personaJly
affected.
No change,
says Rather
NEW YORK (AP >
Tonight's backdrop is
blue-gray instead of beige.
and Walter Cronkite's old
chair has been adjusted
for Dan R athe r 's long
legs.
"There won 't be a ny
conscious effort on my
part to change my style or
anything else," Rather
said in an interview before
his debut tonight as CBS'
fir s t n e w full -time
anchorman since Cronkite
replaced D oug la s
Edwards on April 16, 1962.
<Channel 2, 7 p.m.)
"After all ... Rather s aid,
"I 've been doing the show
ror 10 years now, .. includ·
ing JO times in the last
year while Cronkite was
on assignment or vaca·
lion.
The Casual Side of Rugby
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP> -More men, arms and
money are on their way to El
Salvador fr o m a U .S .
administration that voices fears
t he tiny Central American nation
could be the first to topple in a new
superpower game of dominoes.
But there is little sign that
leftist guerrillas will seize con·
trot, despite continued fi ghting
between the insurgents and gov
ernment forces.
They have failed to capture any
major chunk of territory, and
former U.S. Ambassador Robert
White says they are a "broken
and declining lot."
A m ajor o ff e n sive in
mid-January res ulted in the brief
seizure of a provincial capital,
San Francisco Gotera, 6S miles
east of the capital. But a week
later , President Jose Napoleon
Duarte declared the offensive
over and said, "There is nothing
mor e they can do with their
arms."
The guerrillas have conceded
they are regrouping.
Their calls for mass uprisings
and strikes have been largely
ineffective. Their attacks now are
isolated actions tinged with the
same kind of terrorism that has
been attributed to El Salvador's
far right.
A greater threat to the regime ,
according to some, may come
from rightists in the Salvadoran
military, which is well-arm~
and indisposed to tolerate a mid·
dle-of-tbe-road government.
The Reagan administration is
adding $25 million to the $10
million worth of arms already
s hipped to El Salvador's military.
and 20 U.S. military advisers are
being assigned to the force of 34
already here.
El Salvador "is a textbook case
or indirect a rmed aggression by
Communist power s through
Cuba ." says an official S~ate
Department report, which claims
the Soviet Union and its a llies are
funneling arms to the leftis t
guerrillas.
President Reagan apparently
has decided to take some form of
s tand in this most dense ly
populated, with 5 million ~pie,
nation of Central America. a
cou ntr y the s ize o f
Massachusetts, with expansive
black and white said Pacific
beaches, lush mountainsides and
torrid jungles. .
His decision, however , 1s
questioned by those who .be~e~e
that the United States, as at did m
Vietnam, may be choosing the
wrong friend, the wrong foe and
the wrong battleground.
"El Salvador would be a perfect
100% cotton rugby shorts.and pants
available 1n colors ol red. white.
khaki sky blue navy and gold
Also, the classic bar stnpe rugby shirt,
in e DOly/conon blMd •
base for the Soviet Union to
launch its drive to make all of
Central America its own," says a
Western diplomat here.
''Cost a Rica , Honduras,
G uatemala and Mexico a r e
watching what is happening here.
They know they mi~ht be next.··
NEWS ANALYSIS
the diplomat said, asking to
remain anonymous
White. a mbassador here in the
last year o f the Carter
admi ni s tratio n , told a
con gressional co mmittee.
however, "The Salvad or an
government 1s perfectly able to
handle the situation itself.
"The re is no possibility of
le ftists taking over 10 El Salvador
in a six-month period 1f we don't
send one piece of equipment." he
s aid.
There are indications the left
m ay be ready to talk peace.
Guille rmo Ma nue l Ungo,
l ead e r of the Democ rati c
R evoluti ona r y Front. an
umbrella political group for the
leftists. said recently he was
willing to accept m ediation.
Duarte, too. said he would talk.
But even with the protagonists
edging towa rd negotiations, their
minions continue to do the brutal
day-to-day work ofrevolution and
counter-revolution.
Thief beaten
sensele ss
BOSTON (AP> A 13·
year-old man carrying on-
ly $20 beat a Ufier rU'!J·
maging through hi s
pockets with a metal cane
"and knocked him sense·
less," police say.
Jose Ramos was walk·
ing in the city's South End
when a man got out of a
ca r and pus h ed him
against a wall, police said
Sunday. Later, officers
found Thomas Guzman,
38, or Boston, lying on the
ground bleeding from a
scalp wound, said Sgt.
Stanley Philbin.
He was treated at the
scene and charged with at·
templed unarmed rob·
bery, police said. Ramos
was uninjured.
ALSGAAAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714 ) 644-7030
16-incla pu~la APWI~
The massive 16-inch guns of the battleship
"Iowa" are sealed over now, but may see
action again. There is mounting specula-
tion the Reagan administration wanta to
re-activate the huge dreadnought as part
of a plan to strengthen the U.S. Navy. Next
to the gun is Master Chief Electrician's
Mate Peter H. Wessner.
~opes and risks high
Reagan ecorwmic plan a big gamble
WASHINGTOl'f <AP) -A s
Ronald Reagan prods the nation
onto an untrodden economic
path, critics are raising unsettl-
ing questions about the coose-
q u e nces if the trail leads
nowhere.
Worse inflation, more un-
employment, higher interest
rates, s hattered public con-
fidence in the government:
Critics cite these as lhe chief
risks if Reagan's economic re-
covery plan fails.
"This is a program of high
hope and high risk ,'' warns
Walter Hellier, chief economic
adviser to the Kennedy and
Johnson administrations. "I
don 'l say Reaganomics will do
us In and I don't think the coun-
try would come apart at the
seams, but we run the risk of
wo rsening inflation and very
high interest rates."
Not so, repUes the administra-
tion, which views its program of
budget cuts, tax-rate reductions
and slow money growth a s
virtually risk-free.
"I can't conjure up a situation
where there would be no signifi-
cant i mprovement" ln the
economy, said Murray Weiden·
baum, Reagan's chief economic
_.adviser. "The risks are much
greater in doing nothing."
The president defends his pro·
gram on simple grounds: Past
economic policies have been a
failure, the nation is headed for
a calamity if it doesn't
straighten out its problems soon,
and no one has a better
alternative.
Reagan's plan marks a break
from government policies or the
past 50 years, and it sets some
ambitious goals.
Working in tandem with the
Federal Reserve Board's plan of
slow growth in Uie money sup-
ply, the program is supposed to
accelerate economic growth, re·
vitalize productivity, cut infla·
lion in half by 1983, lower in·
terest rates and slowly bring
down unemployment.
The administration places all
its hope ror success on the con·
viction the program wiJJ bring
about a dramatic c hange in
Americans' economic behavior,
a belief other economists dis·
pule .
As the adminis tration en·
visions the process, public ex·
pectations that inflation wiU re·
main high for the i11lf<o(init e
future would be reversl·d once
the go\'ernmenl move-. to
balance the budget, thus proving
it is serious about fi~hlmg inna-
tion. This change in :ittiludc 1s
expected to lead s wiftly to a
drop in interest rates a nd
moderation of price and wage
increases
At the sam e tim<'. Reagan's
proposal to cul personal 111tome
tax rates by 10 per<'<>nt a year
over the next three yeurs ts sup·
posed to turn Americans into
better savers. thu~ p111v1d10g
new capital for investment 111 a
rapidly e'<p and1ng US
economy
T he theory behind the ad-
ministration program hac; been
dubbed "s upply s ide "
economics because its emphasis
is on increasing the supply of
goods and services to equal de-
mand, thus reducing upward
pressures on prices
This is a sharp dep;irture rrom
government policy. formulated
during the Great Depression of
the 1930s, that aimed to change
the demand for goods and
services lo match the supply
Can devil be proved?
Attorney will try in bizarre case
BROOKFIELD. Conn. <AP) -
tn a case one lawyer calls
"more frightening than 'The Ex·
orcist,"' the devil a ppears
beaded for his day in court in
this tranquil Connecticut town.
The charge is murder.
The bizarre story encom ·
p asses attempts by Catholic
priests to rid an 11-year-old boy
of "demons;" a 19-year·old
friend who challenged those "de·
mons" to "take me on " and now
· is being held in the stabbing
death of a Brookfield man, and a
criminal lawyer who says he'll
use demonic possession as a de·
fense.
Meanwhile, parents of the
ll·year-old boy say the spirits
remain.
It all started last summer
when psychic researchers and
priests worked diligently in a
secluded Cape Cod-style home to
rid the boy of "demons" they
said had taken over his body.
And there it might have
ended, buried in secrecy.
But the friend, Ame Cheyenne
.Johnson, 19, who li ved at the
house a nd witnesses t h e
sessions, challenged the demons
to ''take me on. Control me.
Leave this boy alone," accord-
ing to tape recordings of the
sessions and interviews with
those present.
Now Johnson is being held on
$125,000 bond in Bridgeport in
the stabbing death or Alan Bono.
A grand jury will hear the case
March 19. If Johnson is indkted,
his attorney says he's prepared
lo argue that "the devil made
Mr. Johnson do it."
"The courts have dealt with
the existence of God . Now
they're going to have to deaJ
with the existence of the devil,"
says Marlin Minnell a, the
criminal lawyer handling the
case.
Kids 'detectives'
BLUE SPRINGS, Mo. CAP> -
A game or hide-and-seek and a
bag of "junk" turned a group or
children into crimebusters and
h e lped solve a series' of
burglaries, police say.
"I was looking for someone
who was hiding," said 12-year-
o J d Kyle Plummer, wbo
stumbled across a pillow cue
while pJayin1 bide·and-aeek.
lnstde was stolen property -
watc hes, silver plates, a
camera, handcuffs, a knife, two
key rinp and jewelry.
Police were contacted, and the
discovery helped solve a lel'tes
'
of buriJaries in thJs Kansas City
suburb. Police Detective Ray
Vasquez said the discovery
helped them break up four
burglary rings and recover
about $25,000 in stolen goods.
Th l r le e.n c b ii d re n got
certificates of appreciation and
letters from Police Chi ef
Howard Brown in a ceremony.
How did tbe children feel?
'·Some of us were kind of
scared that they (thieves) might
come blck and try to find It,''
said 11-year-old Kevtn Masters.
"Happy,'' Plummer said. "You~ of bave tome prlde."
~'re tistening •••
The Daily Pilot wanll lo hear from ill rtader1, whit you Ulte
about the paper and what you doa't Uke. We also would Ulte to
pubUsh your views on any subject ill our lttters to the editor col-
umn. Call the number below IDd )'OUr m ... a1e wUI be rtt0rded.
MetHlet wUI be tranacribed' .. veraJ UllMI daily and delivered lo
the desk of the appropriate edit.or. MallboJl coatribuUonl will
be delivered to the editorial pe1e editor, MaUbox
contrlbuton mutt include their name and telephone
number for ver1f\callon. Ml ~ulaU. calls, please.
Tell UI What '• °" your adDd. Tbe number is in
servitt 24 houn a d1y, HV. Ml'S a .-.
"This l'3S(' will lit• UlllC!UP Ill
the higher JUns pruclN11·1• c;~ s t Pm
in the United States
Johnson, a s l~·ndl•r. 111us('ul111
youth with curl)' blond hau ancl
a spotlC'ss c·11 minal "'l11r<I.
wor ked trimming 11 ,., • .., Il l· ;ind
Bono wen~ "thl' llf'sl of f r 11·nd,.
accordinJ( lo thm"' who kilt'\\
both.
Police sa\ Bo no r t·1·t·1verl
multiple stah· \\OUnd~ rluri ng an
argument \\llh .Johns1111 Ill r111nl
o f t h e d o g k P n n t' I H o 11 11
managed J ohn ... un · .. r11l1hng
knife, with a flVI' trH.:11 bl adl'.
was recovered al th<' S('C'ne H<'
was arrested a few miles uway
Deborah Glatzel, Johnson's
25-year-old girlfriend and a wit
ness lo the incident, said the
quarrel occurred during a get
together al Bono's apartment,
which is over the kennel. One
minute Bono was pounding his
fist in his hand and yelling; the
next he was on the ground.
mor\ally wounded. Miss Glalicel
said. She said she wa s standing
between the tv.tl men and never
saw a knife.
If Johnson is indicted, Min
nella says he is prepared to pro
duce tapes, photographs and ex-
pert testimony from priests
and psychic researchers to
show that J ohnson was over
taken by the devil and not
responsible for his acts
"We have s ubstantial , credi·
ble evidence that Mr .• Johnson
had no intent to harm anyone
and what happened was a result
of demonic possession ." Min·
n e lla said in an interview
in hi s Waterbury , Conn ,
office. "People may not really
want to deaJ with the devil, but
he exista."
Dr. Abraham Goldstein, a
criminal law expert al Yale,
says the defense Minella is plan·
nin« is "very unusual" and the
success of such an attempt wUI
be determined by the latitude al·
lowed by the J11dge. "We're not talklog about
voodoo here. We're talking
about a pracUce tbat'1 accept.ed
by lM Catholic Church," Min·
nella laid. '"The Exorcist' was
more fact than fiction .
"In th.ls case, we're talking
about recorded fact, not ~ec·
ture. Thlt b not an insane de·
lualon. We're tteadJn1 on new
1round. We're dealln1 wtth the
u:nup11Jnable, and we're toing
to try to expl.aln It."
'" '
Orw9' CoMt ~v PLOTIMond-v. March e, 1181
Four call it a draw
L&gaJnans
global
• Winners
{
~ "-
.Four c~ooniata who -' ~
gather frequently at a ~\ \ 1 , 1 ~ @' La1una Beach tavern ~
have received word they ~""' ~ r.iJ are winners in an in-J ~ 1 ~
ternational cartoon COD• ~ e :· 1 ;.:__ _;; Gf
test conducted by a e t0 : It. : l
Japanese newspaper. ~ <...~ ~
Virgil Partch and "1--'~. ic:::::'11~•
Dick Oldden of La0 una <' o ~ · ·
Beach received leltera , 1.....L. J V ~....J~
stating they were among "-~ ~ @ L';l -~ five "special prize" win--~ i<'.'.")i ll/ t!J" ~
ners in the contest, -9 ~ l...l..-J ~ r;;\""-....
which drew 9,000 en-~ ~ @ ',,.~ __,, -;-
tr ants. ~,,.. l.V
Their prizes will in· ,....... 1 (' C).. ,
elude checks for Sl,000, · .I.Vt. c:..i 'I
Oldden said.
... ... ~·
Frank lnlerlandi of
Laguna Beach and John
Dempsey or Del Mar
were among about two
dozen who were notified
they won contributors'
prizes in the contest. he
~aid.
DICK OLDOEN'I F11HINQ ESKIMO TOP WINNER
Virgil P•rtch'• ftrtng aquad alao took prtze
Thal p rize carries
with it a check for about
S250. Oldden said.
Oldden, who attended
school ror a year in
Japan in 1962, said the
Yomiu ri Shi mbun ,
whieh conducted the
<"ontesl. is a major daily
newspaper in that coun-
try
The newspaper. in let·
tus informing the car -
toonists of their prizes,
asked for address a nd
bank a<'count informa-
tion, and indicated the
money was to be sent in
soon
.. We all thought the
thing was phenomenal
because the four of us
all drink at the same
bar, the Ivy Ho use,"
said Oldden. noting en·
trants participated from
all over the world.
"To knock off this
much in winnings from
ou r little corn er is
great," he said.
Deukmejian
buil~s big
'82 war chest
Southern ladies 110 t
gone with the wi11tl
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Aides ATLANTA <AP> -The Equal
'to s tate Attorney General Rights Amendment "doesn 't
George Deukmejian say he has have a prayer" against legions
raised about $500,000 for a possi-of modem Southern belles who
ble campaign for the Republican are holding fast to traditional
gubernatorial nomination. roles, a ~rgia sociologist says.
The aides said most of the The "Southern lady" did not
money was rais ed at a Los vanish with the Civil War and
Angl'les dinne r . Deukmejian her genteel tradition is a major
">aid contributions went to a reason the ERA has failed in
l·ampaign fund that can be spent most Southern states. says
in either direction -for gov· Caroline Dillman, a sociologist
<'rllllr or for attorney general. at Agnes Scott College in sub·
"Al thP right time, I will make urban Decatur.
a public announcement regard· "There are tremendous num·
rnf! my future political plans," bers of Southern women who are
I>cukmejian said during the $500 not about lo change ," Ms .
per person dinner at the Century Dillman said ... People are say-
Pla1.a Hotel. ing there is no such thin~ as a
.. As a result of the overwhelm-Southern lady anymore. There
Civil War ep1t "(;0111 • \\ 1111 111 ..
Wind."
"The South(•rrr h1•ll1· \\ ;i ... 11111\
a s mall p:~rt of Hu· g11111p I 1 .iii
Southern la di es. ">h<' "'11d
While the l>tl'rt'ol~ pt ti 111•11•• of
fi ction was fhghl~ 11ul <.<'If
centered. M s J>1ll111a11 ·..,
"Southern lady" is uc;uall~ \\I'll
educated and de\ olcll tu h1•1
family and communil\
She can lrac(' h t'r """' "''rn heritage for gen1·r<1 t i1111~ ,,,..
married and had ht•r l'l11ll111•11
young, she has s lr11nJ! fa1111h
and religious tics ar11l -;lt1· 1·011
siders her family lw1 r:11 1•t•1
Ms. Dillman sairl
ltl~ success or this fund-raiser, I are a lot of them... Outsiders often find 1t hard lo
want to tell you that I know of no Ms. Dillman discussed her re· be I ieve s uch worn 1· n l' x rs t
reason now why l'ahould not be• search at a regional conference because they look ou l v al
a c<J ndidate for governor in on women at Georgia State metropolitan areas likt' Atlanta .
1982 ... said Deukm ejian , a U niversity. She said women which are populated l:irJ!<•I\ h}
former state senator from Long have changed since the days of people who have livE'tl 111 lhe
Reach who was elected attorney Southern belles like the fictional South two g<'nrratim"' or lf'ss.
gene rat in 1978...;.. ________ ...;;S::..;c...oa::..;r_le'-t_t _O_'_H_a::..;r_a..:... _b_e_r_o_in_e_o..:...f-'th"-'-e_M s. Dill man said
I
J
/ I
our l(X)% came,l hair coat
the, }J'lrf'czct t:esic
to comp1<Z.mcznt
your busin<v~s or
w<UZ-kcz.nd wardrom.
fu11y 1inad, and
rei sczd cz.dge.s on
a1 l S<Z.ams .
hand crafted by
the, f\nczst ·
nciw czngland tailors.
@)~o@@J~@
44 Ptuhlon l•land• Newport Beadt•714/644-50 70
1001 Mbtwood Blvd.• ~twood VU.1Qge•2l.'J/4 79·7127
,,
LUU OP TBB PACDIC D&Pr. -You are left to
wonder toda~hat it would take to _ _, tbt th.ron,. awQ
from our • line after tbt .... _.., Great s.w.,.
Guaber fouled a lar1• aeament ot our waterfroot.
Tbe bappeolna ba9pened Saturday wben 1 major
sewer line rupture at (of all the nerve, for 1ooclnet1 take)
tbe Balboa Bay Club on Newport Harbor'• lovely waten.
Abruptly, the waters weren't IO lovely.
Mllliooa of 1aU001 ~ of the eJuck 1ot lnto the
bay waten before work • •
crews got the 1uaber ~ under control. You won· ~ ~ ..... ~bo stl~: :r:~u:b•TOI IURPlllf .~ 1
lnto that leak?
Anyway, the ·health department prompUy clamped a
closure on our shoreline all the way from Newport Beach
to Scotchman'• Cove, just outside of Laauna. . (
THEREFORE WE HAD a very deserted Suaclay alonl
our coast because all the lnJand visitors shunned tbe a.tul·
ness of our waters, right?
Wrong again.
Inland weather was clear, hot and sunny on Sunday.
So here they came. Thousands of them. Who cares about a
little smelly stuff noaling out there in the ocean?
Scotchman's Cove. one of the quarantine points, wu
"Ahoy there! TheTe's fungia growing on your yacht!"
as loaded with visiting folks as any Sunday you could im·
agine along toward the shag end of the cold season.
So you puzzle over what is required to cause beach vis,
itors to stay home? A shark attack? An oil spill? The lure
of the ocean front on a sunny afternoon is apparently quite
strong.
TIDAL WAVE THEATS are fairly scary, even though
we've never really bad one of any real consequence
around here. One time a few years back, we had a real
tidal wave scare. Authorities figured that one might have
been the Biggie, so evacuation procedures were set m mo·
lion in the preliminary stage. Radio stations began to
broadcast wam.ings that the next high surf you see might
be a real whopper.
Concern centered particularly on the Newport·Balboa
Peninsula because of the zero elevation in that area.
AND WHAT HAPPENED? Hundreds of visitors
flocked out to t he Peninsula and stood around, even in the
dark, on the chance that they might get a glimpse of the
great tidal wave when it humped up there on the outside ;ind roared toward shore .
As it developed, the t1daJ wave pooped out somewhere
on the other side or Hawaii. It never got here beyond being a weak slap at the sand.
Good thing, too. By the time all those onlookers.
spotted it, they might have round themselves riding it to
Brea.
All or this may make the point that when it comes to
seashore visiting. people aren't much afraid of what they
can't see. They apparenuy can't see a sewage •till so it
doesn't bother them much. They can~ see a rip current or
a tidal wave until It's too late, so thats all right. too.
They can, however, spot a shark rm or an oil spill so
those events might deter a lot of splas hang around. They
can also see the glucky·looking Red Tide when it rolls in on
the surf.
8J WAI.TD a. •SAU .. u ...... un ,
WAIJDNGTON -la ~. lt tall: .. a ruJ• to UDdo a .
rule, ud tbenbJ ~ • pandox. PNIAdeet .. ., .. • drtw to eut dowD oe federal refulaUona be
deema UDMCllHIJ may nm aloW of ,..Watlou enctwred by
l*>P .. wbolban .. aoal.
'AD ual.,a1I publltbed bJ tbt American Eoterprlae lnaUtute
boldl that...,..,... lDtadecf to limit tbt J'Ule·maklat autborlty of
the tsecutiH branch ol IO"l'D••t do not neceuuUy deter re·
,W1Uoa.
.. c·~:!-~t! ~~ tlWS ANALYSIS
Sealla, an editor of Re&ul•· ---------tlon maaulne.
Scalia aays that when 1ucb restricllom are lmpoHd oo an ad·
mln11tration prme to adopt new re&u1atiom, they can 1low'the pro-
ce11. "But lmpo1ed on an executive that lJ aeeldna to dinolve the
encrusted re&ulatlon of put decades, they will impede the diuolu·
tlon," be warns.
Scalia, a vt1ltln1 profesaor at the Stanford Law School, advises
regulatory reformers to remember that the game baa changed now
that Rea1an and others committed to erutne some of the old rules
are in power.
"REPUBLICANS, AND deregu.lators in eeneral, seem to be
deli&btint in the prospect ol le&talatioo which will make cbanae
more dlflicult, •' be saya. ·'Those in the Congress seem perversely
unaware that the accursed 'unelected officials' downtown are now
their unelected officials, presumably seeklna to move things in
their desired direction, and that every curtailment of desirable
agency discretion obstructs departure from a Democral,produced,
pro· regulatory status quo."
He cites, for example, proposed legislation lo eliminate a
Stepfather killer,
64, gets probation
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -A 64·
year-old man accused of killing
bis 77-year-old stepfather has
been sentenced to probation by a
judge wbo s aid the younger man
had "an excellent record" and
the old man may have been
"better off dead."
Wilburn; A. Byrd, 64, pleaded
no contest to charges that he
shot and killed his stepfather
because the man brutalized his
mother.
Hillsborough Circuit Judge
Fred Woods Jr .. who sentenced
Byrd to U years probation, s&Jd
·'it appeared that tbia Just got to
him -seeing bis mother get
beaten up on numerous oc·
casions.
''There was input lo this cue
that the victim was better Off
dead," said the judge.
Byrd originally wu charged
with second-de1ree murder in
the August slaying· of Walter
Robert Kyle, who bad been mar-
ried to Byrd'• 84-year-old
mother. Sarah, for 18 months.
showed him to be a good citizen
with an excellent record. Seldom
do you get a 64-year-old defen·
dant, and it's rare when you get
one who's so squeaky clean.
Usually they have a long re·
cord."
BYRD'S DEFENSE attorney,
Richard Lazzara, said the mar-
riage had "a lot of violence as
far as I could find out. He wu
beating her up frequently. He
was a mean individual, and
there were some indications that
he'd threatened my client."
Lauara said Byrd's mother
had moved out and was living
with her son the day Kyle was
killed. Without giving any des
tails, Lazzara said Byrd shot his
stepfather "in order to protect
himself."
"I didn't know bow it would
come out," Byrd said Thursday.
"All my neighbors backed me,
stayed behind me. prayed for
me. I'm thankful the way it
worked."
He refused to discuss details
of the case.
Nose to grindstone
This Phoenix, Ariz .. repair m an really gets into his work.
Some disgruntled mot orists complain that it's difficult to
find a good mechanic any more. But this young man ap-
plies hi mself -even if it takes a virtual headstand.
THEY SHUN THE RED tide like crazy, telUng you
that no way would t hey get out in that dlseusting,looking water.
Of course the red tide is harmless. But never mind
that. You can see it. And that's enough.
THE CllAJlGE was reduced to
manslaughter , Assistant
Hillsborough State Attorney Ty
Trayner said, "because he's 64
years old and he's never been
arrested before."
Byrd pleaded no contest.
"It was an unusual case,"
Woods said after the sentencing.
"The pre·sentence investigation
. We're going y_our wa~
Midwest snow lingers
Storm moves toward New England
Coa.tal 1eeatller
POINT CONCEPTION TO THE
MEXICAN 80ROER ANO OUT .0
MILES -Local small craft adw1•ory
1n •fl•<C for tnCr~e •'ff ot Ventura
P'l•rDor for natardou\. sw ells and
Dru.... Morn1nv wlndS llQllt and
warlaDle. Ol,.rwl .. , wlMI• •Htarly
t1Qht to U -noll with wlMt wavH one 10 t•o f•I through tonight. Westerly
swells -to thrM IHI IMtr waters and nort......,.,terly swetl' ltvff to f1••
IUl outer waters Fa ir through
t0<11Qlll
FORECAST Am1ttf'dam
AIMIU ..... -lelrul
1e1or-1 ... 11n .... ,.
lruuall l 'Arlff
Cairo
Cera<as
Copen~
~In
FraMfurt
Geneva
Hel1ln-1
IJ' Q H-l<ong ~ ·--·... JtruNltm Jo'toure
S<atter..i hQlll snow lln11tred over Kiev
paru of 1-r Mlchl-and tllt up. Lima
par Ohio Vall•Y. with ,,,_e snow... ll1bon PtCled to move Into lM Hor1iw .. t _____________ ........ ..._ ...... ..._-...~..-._,, l-
Clouds cow ... ed nwch of Illa Great Me<lrld
LOH region, tr. Ohio Valley •Ml Illa Manila llad•oodClty 70 .. north Allenllc Coall llatas on Sun· Montrul Sacramtftto .. ., dey. It 11so was CIOWY acrou I,. MoKo• SallnH .. ., '4Kltllern Plains Into Illa lower Ml• Hew Otllll San 8er.-dlno 11 •t SIU IPlll V•ll•Y -nor1,.rn Florida Nicosia San Gall<lel ,. .,, Orlula •as reported at a , • .., Oslo Santa Berber• •5 4l placH In north-<Mtral Tuas 1MI Peril
central Olll~•. and the Lou111on1 Rio Sant• Marla 70 ,.
IMlta lled .-". Roma Santa Monica •2 50
Stooton " 40 n 1 .. -IN rest of t1M aast.rn Sen Juan Ti-Valley 47 21 llalf of Illa n.tlon -• ci.ar to 1M1rt1y SN Paulo .IJ Thermal " u cloudy. In the W.•t. • law Cl-Seoul Torrance 70 47 were scattered owar t,. Pacific Coe1t Slnea-•
"•ta• Into western Monlll\a, whllt StoOholm l'ANAME•tCAN mostly ...,,,.., lilies e><t•all..S ''"" Sydney Acapulco '° 71 IN sou_.,, PtatffU to the plalfls ef , Taipei l •r-.. 7J ea .. ern Mont-. Tai A¥1•
Sult•"" llQlll .,_ II ·-•ao to-.Ot Tokyo larm11"8 ., u
N 'f from I.lie upoer Ohio Valley to ·2' Toronto 8090ta .. ..
Curecao .. 11 H•• Eno1anc1. The north Pacific Vancou-
Coast •Ill haw llQM rain, and much Vlt11na Oueclal1Jer• 72 ..
ol t.11• rfft of 111e ,..uon •Ill 111w ,..,,.
n'(t klfl.
01 011ac1e1-
Havana
l<ln9llon
Montaoo aay
.. •• 77 •5 t7 17 •• 7J
n l1
M 0 '° 75 .. .0 u 3' n ,.
.. 0 u ,.
IO ..
75 .M ....
.. 0
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TempareturH aro..nd the nation
Sunday r.....,, from • 1-of U In
Akron, GolO., to • hletl of t t In Fort
M'(t n , Fie.
Muetlan
Merida
Maclco City
Monterrey
Nen e u
77
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IJ
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'~eward told
OAKLAND (AP> -
Albtlque
AmArlllo
AncllOr ...
AIN•ll ..
etvnarcll
8\lffele
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NI La ,.,,.,
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CALl"O•HIA
l•ktrlfleld
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... ument
8 198•¥
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llyllle
CetallM
c111v ... c1tt
El Centro
lu,....
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M\,WlltM .......
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21
. 10 Chevron USA la offerlnt
a $25.000 nward for lD·
form.UC. tbat will COD·
vtct a bandit wbo killed
a aervice ataUon attea·
daat Feb. 11. Tbe com·
pan1 posted tbe reward
in the murder, of Victor
Ma, 22, wbo worked at
th• a.n-8'aUoD OD
Lake Sbon Ana~. ..........c.M, ..... ..,, ........
HeltfltltlleM ......... ...... ..,. ... = ............
ilM<ll .... -........ ..,
z-I I 1t 1 • w ~ .... ~ I I 1J 1 I w
a!.T.:.c...., I I II 1 I w • • 11 I • • NW
owe ... fiW Ti1119y1 UM Clll"'lt·
•
,,,, seems //11.e • t.wter 11 •lw•rs
tr•pped with l»PfH "'°'*· So I ,,..,,,.
the'"°'' ol my limfl by grlid/rtfl
Pl'Pfl" wfllle !fie OCTD bus drives
me to .chOol. And the bus sched-
ules •re JO frequenf Mod lle•fble il'S
sJmpJe lo •ll&nd ,,_rings .,,.,
scl'>OOI •nd stlll get flOme wllflOUI
•ny tuu or bother. Now Im encour·
aging .n my l/udents lo ride lflebus,,
Donn• s.r.sch
Tuchef Cypreu High School
MOl'8 1*/11"9 -riding the bus
to wor*. schoOI Mid~
~use we'\le nWlde It to NIY
l/lflflt new buMt. MW~
and /mtJlrwed ~
Donl _,.your_,.,,,,,,.
,,.. """"" S.ve -¥ Mtd ride
,,,. bus. 5°' ,, .. " c-. -,,.., on ,.-roufM.
OcN frlMdl1 pltotte ~
"""1lt$ YoU plMI 101" "*'Oft the OCTO bu&. It 1"" need «:hed-
ule ~ ..... -""It,.
YoU-FttEEI
Call
636-RIDE
(
I I
PJ:ejndiee t~et
Prep •chool chiB/ attaCk• problsm
MOR111 HOLLYWOOD (AP) -lD·
c1cleata ol ADtMlemlllam taeve lD·
creaNd at a prestitioua prep ICbool
bere, but tbe btadmuter baa opt.t
to addreu tbe problem d1Nctly by
Hndlnc a letter bome wttb bll •tu·
dMta bop6Jll to apart famUy debat.
OD the matter.
Harvard School bas educated
1eaeradom ol youn1 men between 12
and U as they make their
way t.O some ol the belt wllveni.Uet
ill the country.
Althoqb the school ii alftllated
wltb the Epi.seopallan Church, about
40 percent of Its atudent body la
Jewllb.
IN ONE &ECENT incident, a
"Soni of Hitler" sheet wu circulat-
in1 •IDOOI students and taped on
some lockers, reading "Death to
Jews."
Swutlku and other anti-Semitic
graffiti alJo appeared in some cam-
pua bathrooms. .
The achool ia not alone in the prob-
le m. Incidenta of anti-Semitism
have increased an estimated 250 per-
Care urged
in nuclear
·licensing
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Eight
Democratic state s enators have
urged Preside nt Reagan to act
"carefully and cautiously" in decid·
ing whether to license the Diablo Ca·
nyon nuclear power plant and more
units at San Onofre.
"We believe that any tampering
with the normal regulatory proceu
in these cases would be an abdication
of governmental responsibility to in-
sure public health and safety." the
senators said in a letter to Reagan.
released to the press here.
It was signed by Sens. Alan Siero-
ty, Diane Watson and Bill Greene of
Los Angeles ; Nicholas Petris of
Oakland, John Garamendi of Walnut
Grove, Henry Mello of Watsonville,
James Mills of San Diego and Walter
Stiern of Bakersfield.
The letter said safety consideration
should be the deciding factor, and
that there was no critical need for
new nuclear plants.
The Diablo Canyon plant is near
San Luis Obispo. The San Onofre
eeat from lHt year tbrou1Jloat
Soutbero Calllornla, aeeonllu to a
report by t.M Lot Anaelel COUDi,
Human RelaUona ComtPlaakla.
Harvard School HeadmHter
Cbrl1topber Berrilford Hid 10m•
ae hooh l•nore the problem,
but be believes direct eoalt'oatattoo
ls beat.
... AM SENDING you a copy of a
taJll tbat I 1ave to the studenta today.
1 think lt explalna ltaell. I wanted you
to know wbat wu said. I hope it can
form the bula ot a f1ml1y dlscusalon
on a critical laue ln our society," bis
Feb. 13 letter aa!d.
The 2~·pa1e 1peecb be.UU: "I
have called you all here toeether to
talk about IOIDethlnJ that disturbs
me deeply and to PC>lnt out to you the
pernlclouaneu of prejudice, suspi-
cion and bat.red."
Despite the Jncldenta, however,
Berrisford and Jewish communlty
leaden believe the problem ls more
one of Immaturity than dee~seated
prejudice.
ONE STUDENT WAS suspended
for two days after laughing at Ber·
risford's talk, but the headmaster
said the youth's reaction wu more
"adolescent" than anti-Semitic.
"None of the kids ever met as an
organized group,'' he said .
"Everybody makes mistakes."
As a result, the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith has argued for
more education on the Holocaust and
other results of anti-Semitism at the
school.
The league's community consul-
tant, Susan Davidoss, says the or-
ganization is happy with Berrisford's
"marvelous speech" but "more
needs to be done."
The league has offered lo send
speakers and films to help bring the
point across to students.
Court curbs ads
by roofing firm
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A con-
s umer protection s uit filed last
December bas resulted in Bilt-WeU
Roof and Material Co. agreein1 to
limit its advertising.
Studtfi11g ape••
Dr. Cappy Rothman, a Century City adroloailt, looks at livtq
sperm ol an infertile male paUent. Bothman, who operates the ftnt
sperm bank in the San Fernando Valley, sa that thawed sperm
from his office baa impregnated about 200 wo n since 1977.
Mistrial asked on coyote
CHOWCHILLA <AP)
-The woman who
claims to own Wile E.
Coyote haa uked for a
mistrial of a conviction
of vlolatina state laws in
caring for the coyote, if
that's what be ia, or lf
be' s really even Wile E.
Janet Riley was con-
victed by Chowchilla
his caae when a warden
came to check oo him.
The warden finally
cauebt Wile E. and took
him into custody, but
Ma. Riley claimed the
animal in court last
week wu not her pet.
And her attorney.
Lester Gendron, said the
prosecution should have
to prove that her animal
indeed was a coyote
rather than a dog.
Gendron moved for a
mistrial on grounds that
the charge of violating
caelng requirements
was added after ar-
raignment. Green will
announce his ruling
March 16.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A little unexpected lux·
ury U• &bead for the 212 men of t.be USS Van·
couver wblle t.Mlr ampblbioul l&Ddinl sblp UD·
der1oe1 ab overbauJ.
It's a lucky coincidence tb1t boustni at tbe Nav~ Station ii jammed at a time wbeo 295 rooms
are open at the plush U.S. Grant Hotel.
Tbe fourtb, flttb, aJxth and seventh noon com-
plete with maid service are reserved for the Van-
couver'• tailors five months, starting March 25. In
each room are color televtalon aeta and private
batba.
The sailors also are aaaisned dozen.a of suites
complete with aittlng rooma and wet bars.
Attlnaoo Mari.ne Corp., holding an $11,148,000 con-
tract to modernize tbe Vancouver, is. picking up
the tab.
The downtown hoteJ was built in 1910 by U.S.
Grant Jr., son of the U.S. president and Civil War
hero, but closed recently in preparation for major
renovations.
Aft.er seeing where bis men will live, the Van-
couver's skipper said, "Oh, my God! I'll never get
'em back oo ship."
Libyan pilot def ect1
TRIPOLI. Libya (AP> -Libya says it was love,
not politics, that prompted a Libyan air force pilot to
defect after flying his Mirage jet to a military airport
on the Greek island of Crete.
Libya's official JANA news agency said the pilot
wanted to marry a Greek girl he met while studying
in Greece but that hjs request had been denied under
military regulations barring marriage with
foreigners. Justice Court Judge ,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Howard C. Green last
week of obstructing a
fish and game warden,
iJJegally freeing the
coyote and violating
caging requirements for
a wild animal.
Ms. Riley was accused
of freeing Wile E. from
Plea guilty
GUESS WHAT YOU CAN
EATON
WEIGHT WATCHERS
WINE POPCORN HONEY
YES YES YES
0 D D
NO NO NO
D '" nuclear plant is near San Clemente.
The aereement, approved by Los
Angeles Superior Judge Richard F.C.
Hayden, prevents company aaleamen
from promising that any roofinl
material "stops dry rot" or tbat it la
heat resistant to 1,300 degrees
without fully describing the testing.
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -A San Jose trucking firm owner was
sentenced to 12 years in
federal prison for grand
theft and posaeaaion of
atolen 1oocb amount1n1
to more than $1 million.
Vincent Marlo Hod1e,
27. pleaded pllty to the
theft al 1,llO cues of
wine valued at $M,OOO
wholesale and to
poaaeaalon of 8 ,500
men's stolen aulta and a
trailer valued at tl.2
million.
0 D
1,
'I I
The issue of licensing is up to the
federal Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission.
A preliminary injunction aJ.ao pro-
hibits the company from advertising
a product called "Pioneer Flintkote
No. 1 Re-Cover Heavyweight," a
product the district attorney's office·
claims never existed.
"In order to meet the needs of our
c;ttbens, we strongly urge you to deal
with the issue carefully and cautious-
ly," the letter said.
Call 642-5111.
Put a fe)lt word•
to work tor u.
Sttr'l'lrq T+me St.,. It "f04it 0oot
tC1U Store,...,", YOUt A••••
CotlA MUA641·1289
IUI..._. ......
lttSMIN ~95-04()1
>.uc:.-c..-....
(loft 0...,0 "'"'·et A_,.~.)
COLLECTORS
CORNEA
Aer• Coln• • Stampe
GOLD • SIL VEA
Prices tor s+11 .... a-.-.• lifwrQ.&:."'
icn.rr_. ::Z.. ..,.... _..I.Hf M7MI .... MDC.-...... M61M •"--un.• ...... ~ SllWf .._ '7111. 1t1111.
'·-~-·ft c.11or.-.....
(714)5~
South CoHt Pfau Vlll•ll• _ ....... ·---C:--1
Auto & Homebwners if:.• Ouotes By Phone
FMmS lllmAIG ...
14 .. Hl4 er IJl-J4l7
t•••~-c .... ,...
I DOING ~. BUSINESS ···:·:; UNDER A
!:fl F1CTmous a "AME?
II you heft I'* !Med rour new ' cUUeue luel11eH Ne111• end
......... ,.. ... rtl ... d
1tMt11stn nu.,..... 4'e11'C fer .. C cl!1et t11e
1111111•110!' •• .. •• ,.
""'.._ ........ TM DA ILY "LOf°" wlll ~ .,_, .. ..._...
C•r Ill.It. Our ......................
e11t1r• Of•n .. C••tt
8'9 • .-..... .......
.,,..,"' .......... fl .,.,., t• ........ r.ur ........... , ,., ......... ••11• .......... ..., .....
tJ'Hll,. THI DAIU MOT, ,,O .... ,.,
c..te ..... ,CA-· ........ ,.... ,., ........ , .......... :=.JI.!:' ..
Brooks Brothers introduces its
remarkable new "Brookstretch"
The first wearers of these extraordinary new cool,
tropical suits have been unanimously enthusi-
astic. "Brookstretch" is a fabric with "give'' at all
stress points such as knees, armholes, elbows,
and with a grear resistance to wrinkling, thanks to·
the polyester-wool blend. Ideal for travellers and
commuters. It is tailored to Brooks Brothers'
usual high standards in our famous "346'' suits.
Solid or pinstripes. Coat and trousers, $240
ISTAIUSHIO 1111
~~· ~i!fi~· l
Jurntshlngo fOr.Mtn . Womtn ~.· 8oys
.5JO WRST 7TH STREET, LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90014
FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH 92660'
;
PEANUT HOME BAKED CHOCOLATE
BUTTER YES BREAD ~ CAKE YES
D D
NO NO NO
0 D D
RAISINS SWEET FIGS
YES POTATO YES YES
D D D
NO NO NO
D D D
THE NEW 1981 FOOD PLANS
Wine? Yes. Popcorn and peanut but-
ter? Yes . Homebaked bread? Yes
Sweet potatoes and honey? Yes. yes
PS. You guessed it. the chocolate
layer cake is still a "no-no:·
$12 first WMk, $5 weekly thereafter, no contracts!
You can learn to eat all these foods-
within limits of course-and still lose
weight. With 'Neight Watchers exciting n.e.w personalized food plans and com-
pl ete, time-tested program you can
take off the pounds, deliciously!
~ -WEIGHT-WATCHERS -~
: $4.00 :
I INSTANT I
: REBATE
I
I
ON H GISTVITIOH ANO FlllSl IWlllNG FU
OFFER ENDS MARCH 31, 1981
Otter valld onl)' as a discount and
may not be combined with any other
discount or special rate. Oller valid
In Area 43.
OfFH COOO ONlY WITH THIS TICKET
Just join a Weight Watchers class
near you and our instructors will teach
you the sensible way to good eating
habits. With wine, popcorn, peanut but-
ter and more, how can you lose? "'-------------'
WEIGHT
WATCHERS~
LAST CHANCE
( 835-5505)
The most successful weight loss progrcm in the \Wl'ld.
Or-C·ounty ~,. .. ..e:ao .... -··.-~ • ' .... 6fJOp"' -ANAHI--,._.., . . . .. 7'00 p"' .....,. • .,_ o.-,,,.., . .. . . too•"'
28'01# l-UNI I ........,~30or11 ,_ ._,, -Dole> . c,.... ..,._a.
Moftd9\' • .. • .. ·" • • • .. 4:ao P"' 10111 lotoody A-Morlcll1 .... .. .. .. 7-00 p"' ,_ .... ....,,
r-., ..... t'Joom ~ ....... tlOpm r....,.., . . .... 100,.,,. -DMA~-w~ .. . ... •.ao '"' c......,c.. w~ . . .. 1-00,."' ~..., .11w1 ~ • • • · • • • • r;00 '·"' loft Vlolol L.aMtml ThulMly ............ t:JO .. .., T I -P A~.a-~T~"' ~........ ~ .... (~ .............. ldlooll 1IOI &. l-•&. '-"" ,....,_,. 1.-0......, ... , T .............. ., .... t 30 11.M ........ "°°"'
~~ "T-, ........... HOI"' c....,....,_ . ........, ........ uoa.m
2W1t~A-T~ ""'"" .. t.JOPM w........., ......... •oo •"' ·fllllN-.-..... ..aMA-........... ...........
........... LI MINM ....... C......
101• N. --...,....,,. .,,..,_., ......... ~ a.M-T...., ... • ... t'QO I"' ~ .......... ::,... ~ ........... t-oo .... ~ •• ····-'"' -""'91Y ......... ~.A*o-,..._,...
........ c__....,,._ ,,_._.._. 1701 H '-..... cr--c..-rc-. ~c.-
,,._, 100 p"' r_.., . eooom
T-y •300"' T-y 700pm w-, . 1WI>"' "''"°"' 9 30 o m '-Y .. ..TOO pm
Setunloy • ' . • • 30 • Ill
v.-.,vto..-~ ,,,_.,,. c-
111•1 Yatllf Y-W-r . .,.,pm
-tMfT1NOTOlt MACH-............ °"*" ma1.....,
1w-'-~C..-> -. .......... 9"101111
......., • f'OOplll r....-, . . ... ..'-'01m ,._, .. . •'00•"' t~ .......... 7.fJOplfl w_, .......... t301 m
w~ ....... 1-00,.., ~ ........ taoa.111
T~ ...... lf'Qlp"'
~ .. ,., ... ,,.. .......... ··~·"' ,,,.., . ... .. ........ '"' ~ ........... l.JOa.111 ................... •tYO'\'_A_
~~ .. : ........ ... ~ ........ , .. 141JIA ,....,~ ~ ............... ... .,..,..., .......... 1.,... .., ID9tMOft-....... . T..-, ..•••••.•••• l.JOUll. ......._O.... .... .... r...., ............. 1:0t~111. ""~ ~.--~ •••.•...• 11:301 111 .-............... -~, -~ ................... *41 ................................ ~ ................ ...
t ..,._.Witte ......... ""·, .. , --'."'-~Wlttchet• ......... ;Ii
,! .
,
exceeds funding
n.11tuat1an ouWned tut week to~ or= COUat1 Board ol Supervtlon wu quite clear: Tbe coua Ruma
Servtc. Atency ii hi .ftnaneial trouble. Troub • to the
tune ol p.e mlllioa.
What many probab~ have feared bu ftna.U.y oc-
curred. 'lbe county tlmpb' can.not keep abreut of 'the de-
mands for service beln1 placed on the bealth and· welfare
delivery 1y1~m .
Economic times are bad: More and more penona are
aeeki.na uslltaoce. The 1tate and federal 1ovemmeota
have riaid reeulation.a about what the county mutt do to
provide the aouabt-after help.
On too of all that, Oranie County bu become the
favored settlinf place for tboulanda of IndocbineH ref-
uien and Mexican lmmigranta. They add to the service
demand.
After hearing tbe news, s upervison took the Ollly ac-
tion they could by dipping into contingency accounts to
provide enough money to keep the welfare programs
afloat until Long-term solutions can be found.
Those solutions now are under study by the HSA and
the County Administrative Office. A report is due within
30 days.
It is likely that other budget transfers -such as
further use of contingency funds -will be recommended.
Beyond that, the board has little choice but to cut
back on such things as the size of welfare payments and
tighten eligibility requirements.
In short, the board will have to spread the available
money as fairly as it can. It won't be an easy task.
Juvenile justice
The juvenile court system was established for the
protection of youngsters who for one reason or another
tangled with the law. but might still be set straight with
careful guidance.
With this hope, it was the policy to bar the public and
press from juvenile court hearings and to seal juvenile
court records . Thus, it was theorized, the rehabilitated
youngster could start anew with a clean record.
Unfortuna tely, in recent times, juveniles h a ve
become responsible for an increasing number of serious
c rimes.
In California, effective tfus year, the public is ad-
mitted to juvenile court hearings resulting from charges
of murder, arson, armed robbery, forcible rape, kidnap.
ping and other felonious crimes .
New measures before the state Legislature would ex-
pand that law, adding to the list of offenses to be tried in
public and openin g court records involving these charges
and their disposition, including reports of probation of-
ficers.
One biU also would require tbe Youthful Offender
Parole Board to transmit a state ment detailing reasons for
granting parole to law enfor cement officers in the area
where the off ender will be paroled.
These measures make sense. We 're no longer talking
about kids who steal apples or pick pockets for small
change. Such minor off enders probably still deserve the
protection of closed hearings.
But when it comes to erimes that gravely hurt other
individuals, neither the young offenders nor their fa milies
merit anonymity.
Global ignorance?
.. We are a parochial and insular people attempting to
devise and conduct what must necessarily be a cos-
mopolitan and global foreign policy.''
These harsh words come from Charles Bray, former
deputy director of the International Communication
Agency. And he has some discomforting facts to back up
his concern.
For example : Fewer than one in 20 college students
takes even one course dealing with foreign peoples or
cultures; a scant 5 percent of all the teachers in this
country have had a ny exposure to international studies or
training.
The U.S. education system, says Bray, "provides us
only with anecdotes about our own past and virtually no
knowledge of the history of others."
In a period when 2 million additional jobs became de-
pendent upon export s , enrollment in colfeie-level
language courses declined by 21 percent.
And, he notes, the percentage of colleges and
universities requiring even minimal foreign language
competen ce has declined from 85 percent in 1951 to 34
percent in 1966 and 8 percent in 1980.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this educa-
tional decline is the fact that it has taken place during a
period when our international interests and obligatioM
have grown as never before.
This is worth pondering when we complain about our
problems in competing in world markets.
• Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot
Other views ex pressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O
Box 15~, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71 4) S..2-4321 .
Boyd/Housing solution
BJL •-BOYD
ln West GerQlany's city or
Cologne. a housing assoda·
lion has put together a
special block or apartments
for single-parent ramlJies.
Day care i1 part or the
packaee. Good notion. what?
lllllY•
Wouldn't you know
Jerry Brown would
lblnk up a mock 'd.ll·
11teT' to ~•r up the
real dl1a1ter be' s
eauM4 \D Callfomla?
G.J .
The Antarctic 11 a desert.
So is much or the Arctic. A
desert need.!! no sand to be a
desert. Jllll a barrenne11.
There are deserta in some
places out in the oceana, too,
deserts becauae no marine
life exists there tor some
mysterious reason.
When you check into a hotel
ln Brazil, you not only have to
sign the register but also fill lo
the names of your mother and
father.
Q. What has been the top-
rated abow ol an during the
last 20 years? I mean flrtt·run
and rerun, too.
A. "GUl'ltll'M>lle."
Q. Which watch the more
, television amon• colJe1e atu-
dentt, t.M women ort.be men?
A. The coeds. Slilbt11 more.
Spedftcally: Men, :u.t bou.n
dally. Women, 2.22 boun dally.
Tit• ,. tUrffd •P at tae llll'oMllDa metDorta1 to prq tor
peace tbl o&ber' day. It'• Jwst u
well Uaat wbody'a dolD1 it. In a...ua, reUOm 11 forbidden and
b•r• CMP' cler11men pray fOI' eon1crtptlon H lbey sprinkle
holy water on UM cannons.
The pope and the Japenese
whom we Amerlcau retard u
eeeentrlc
becuaae of
1 their ex -
ce11tve fear
or atomic
warfare, can·
not do the job a I o o e .
Neither the
veneratioo of
the radioac·
live uhes of
one's &randparents nor the moat
heartfelt prayers offered UP._
from the BuUica of St. Peter 1
are likely to push the world otr
the approacbln1 coltlslon or
s uper powers. Some purely
huma n eftort a will alto be
needed.
N 1tur1tlly , Ir the Rusalans
Earl Waters
a 't can for pe•cei:tbere will
.,. war and we will au be killed.
Tbat, obviouly, II tbelr dec:laion
to ..... altbouab the record to
date doele1t lndlcat• the men ln
the Knmlin are partJcuJarly anx·
lout toaeethe bl• bombe ny.
ANYHOW, we can't make the Ru1lana do an,Ytbin1 UMy don't
wut to do but we can 1et our
OWD movlt to11tb•r. We can
ne1otlate. We've bten lnvtted to
do IO by the communlats and un·
le11 we are a nation of
maaodilsta who will enjoy a slip.
pln1 standard of Uvtn1 brouaht
on by the hJ1h cost of war pre·
paredness we had best accept
the offer to talk. Cit ls estimated
that tbe MX missile system
alone will use up so much ce-
ment it will drive up the cost of
borne coo.struction in the west.)
The admlnlstraUon, however,
1tves the impression It considers
ne10UaUon.s to be a boon they
may 1rant to the Russians ..
Ne10Uattng Is made contingent
on Russian "good behavior." As
though the burd~n of these
Thom•' P. H•ley/Publlsher •Thomll KHYHl~ctnllf
milltarJ f.reparatlou' weren't
1oln1 to all on American tax-
payen, u tboulb Cleveland or
Oakland were not ln aa much
dan1er aa Smolensk or
Vladivostok.
WE ASE UNABLE to
ne1otlate because the ad·
mini1tratJon is unable to tell
ltaell what it wants. what its
1oal1 and objectives are. An end
to "communist inspired ter-
roriam" is as vJgue and un-
neaot.lable as "good behavior"
or an md to "capitalist inspired
terroriam." You can only
neaotiate specifics.
On the days when the ad-
mlni1tration isn't refusing to
negotiate because the com·
munists' comportment is below
passing grade, it is suggesting
that the U.S. can 'l negotiate
because it's not strong enough.
A more sensible way is to tum to
war and military preparedness
when negotiations fail.
Secretary or State Haig and
his boss might profit from read·
ing Walter Lippmann, the best
~.----
writer on lntemaUonaJ aJf ain
20th century American
Journalism produced: "The bll·
tory or dipiomacy 11 the history
of relaUona among rival powers,
which dJd not enjoy political In·
Umacy, and did not respond to
appeals to common purpo1e1.
Nevertheless, there have been
aettiement.I. Some of them did
not last very long. Some of them
did. For a diplomat to think that
rival and un!riendJy powers can·
not be brought lo a settlement is
to forget what diplomacy is all
about. There would be little for
diplomats lo do if the world coo -
s 1st ed o f partners enjoying
political intimacy. and respond·
Ing to appeals.''
LIPPMANN WROTE those
words in 1947. They were ad-
dressed to another generation of
American states men who con-
fused diplomacy with appease·
ment. The same psychology is
with us now. Then as now we
heard phrases like "a test of
wills " applied to international
relations as though nations had
character and personality in the
sense that individuals do The
bus iness of diplomacy is the
work of finding agreement, not
any agreement but one that is in
our national interest
You also he ar, "We can't
strike a deal because we can't
trust the Russians " So don't
make a deal based on trust .
make one based on mutual self
interest, make one that is self·
enforcing where n1> trust 1s in·
volved
Part of our problem may be
our secretary of stale. who was
involved with Henry Kissinger
in that inept piece of diplomacy
we call detente It was a poor
piece of work from the outset
because 1t was not specific. it
laid out no carefully defined set
of actions that the United States
and Russia agreed to do or to refrain from doing
Alexander Haig has apparent·
ly learned from his and Kiss-
inger's mis tak es , bu t he's
learned the wrong lesson. He's
learned not to negotiate but to
u!le the State Department as a
whip and a P.rod lo push our al-
lies into beefing up their arms.
Whal he needs to learn is how to
better practice his craft . how to
do diploma<'y right
Governor's 'disaster' order superfluous
By executive order Gov. Jerry
Brown bas created an Emergen·
cy Task Force on Earthquakes
lo prepare plans for the state to
cope with a "catastrophic earth·
quake." The order details 23
areas to be covered in the pre-
paredness plannin& and bas
given them until July l lo com-
plete their m ission.
The functions covered include
police and fll'e services, as well
as mass care
and financial
aid. Medical
and mortuary
services are
also Usted as
a r e search
and rescue.
tr a n s porta ·
lion , com ·
mand a nd
control and
even legal services.
Brown has directed the bead
of the State Office or Emer1ency
Services COES> to provide staff
and other resources for the task
force whJch means the work will
be largely done by OES, SUI·
testing he could have just as
eaally 1lven those orders
without the fanfare and flourish
of 1n executive order. Of course
Art Hoppe
that might not have produced
the benefits of the publicity
Brown calculated to get by rea·
son or the recent prophecies of
a major earthquake pending in
the near future.
The OES is the successor lo
the State Disaster Office which
had been renamed from its
original designation as the Of·
flee of Civil Defense.
THE AGENCY was created in
1950 by Gov. Earl Warren
because of apprehensions of an
enemy threat due to the entry in·
to the Korean conflict. Warren
appointed retired Major General
W. M. Robertson to head the of·
fice. He promptly set to work de-
veloping formal plans to prepare
the state for the absolute worst
that could result from the dis·
aster of an enemy attack.
Surprisingly, his group on the
overall put together excellent
plans covering au or the areas
which have now been ouWned by
Brown in his executive order.
The basic plans were in fact so
good that they were adopted by
the federal civil defense agency.
Within six months of the
formation or the Civil Defense
agency, Robertson testified to.
the Senate Special Committee on
Civil Defense that he had com·
pleted all planning possible in
the absence of any specific in·
formation from the federal gov -
ernment as to the nature of
weaponry an enemy might use.
THE COMMITfEE thereupon
adopted the sensible policy that
if the s tate did all things
necessary to be prepared for
a n y e merg en cy ca used by
natural disasters . including
rtoods. fires and earthquakes, it
would serve equally well in the
event of a man·made disaster.
war included. It is important to
note that excepting for "revis·
ing. re-evaluating and coordinat-
ing," Robertson's testimony was
that all planning to meet such
emergencies was completed.
Although they bave suspected
a certain amount of boondoggl·
ing to be connected with the
Emergency Services agency,
the legislators have continued to
maintain it over the years
because of their awareness that
natural disasters can and do oc·
cur in California with some fre·
quency and without warning. In
those years the agency has cost
an average of $2 million annual-
ly for operations, a long with
millions more for equipment and
supplies furnished lo local gov·
ernments Last year the agency
budget was $5 million for opera·
tions plus another $50 million for
equipment and supplies.
SO THE QUESTION is what is
the need for the governor's ex·
ecutive order? If the Office of
Emergency Services does n't
now have plans to meet an
earthquake disaster what in the
world has it been doing for the
past 30 years? And if it were a
fact that OES does not have such
plans, how can it now be trusted
lo do in six months that which
was supposed lo have been com-
pleted and kept upda ted all
these long years ?
The truth must be, of course,
that all of the planning to meet
earthquakes. floods, fires and
any other kinds of disasters,
whether man made or natural,
that can reasonably be done has
been done. That being the case
the governor's order is just so
much hocus·pocus. Whal else is
new?
So01e folks aren't quite ready for a tax cut
'·Sure rt1ht nice or the president
to 1lve ua a 30 percent tax cut," uld Maude Joad, dropping a
1mall chunk or salt pork into the
chick peu bolllnl on the old wood
atove. "Too bad we don't pay no
taxea."
Her husband, Jud, looked up
from a tattered copy or The Ap-
p a Jach I a
Corner•
Newa-Oasette
he'd picked up
dow11 at the
depot. "Now,
Maud•, tt'a a
1l1bt better
lf'n tht preal-
dent atve that
mOD•f to lM
rteb. Uk• UM
Seerl'W'J' olthe Treuun Donald
Recu •811 here, them tax cub la
'aimed,' be ,.,,, •at thole moat
Ukelyto11v1aodlnvest'."
"I reckon L.bat'• not us, la it,
JudT"
"Reckon not, Maude. For fitly
yeara,everyUmeyou and me laid
our handl on 1 nickel, we fUlbed • •
right out to spend it Hke there
weren't no tomorrow . Whal do we
know about saving and invest·
in&?"
"WELL. NOW, Jud, I put away
$3.95 from my cheese money last
year afore the goat died.
..Remember? I was going to buy
them gtnebam curtains I been a
hankering after for so 1001 a
time."
"Just so, Maude. And where's
)'OU put it away? In the lard ~rock.
Tbat weren't doing the economy
no 1ooct. You wu suppose to put It
away in T-blll accounts or money
market fWlds or the Uke."
"Whatarethem,Jud?''
"Don't rithlly know, Maude.
and that's lbe point . .When tt
comes toaavta1 and lnveaUn1. we
can't "°'d a candle to lht rich.
They beendolqltall lhelr lhee."
"I wouldn'tmlnd •lvln1 Ila try,
Jud,"1aidMaude,pushin1thepot .
ot chick peas to the back ot tbe
stove with a chunk ot ftrewood,
"ll'n the pretideal aaw fit to pve
ua aomethl.na to pracUce ~Ith."
"WouJctn•t work, Maude.'' said
' •I
Jud. "Soon as be let you have
$6.95. you'd be off lo buy them
curtains out of the Monkey-Ward
catalogue quick as a hound dog
with his tail afire. The price of
curtains would shoot up and,
afore you knew it, inflation
would be gobbling up the
savings of everybody in the
land."
"But we hain't got no savings,
Jud."
"THAT'S ANOTHER blessing
to be thankful tor. We got no
taxes to cut, no savings to get
gobbled up and no CETA job to
lose, like poor WHI ShinJopcr,
wbo sweeps up over at the
courthouse."
"Don't see wby the president
bas to fire poor WW . Why don'the
Quotes
"Newapaptra and tbelr
readen are partnen ln freedom,
and IC w-e fall to derend t.be
freedom al the PAS•, we nealect
OUJ'OWIL ..
~8.Jolrlwofl
fire that rich Treasury Secretary.
Mr. Regan, instead?"
"Balls o' fire, Maude. that rich
Mr. Regan knows a hundred
limes more about saving and in-
veslingthan poor Will. That's why
the president has to fire a hundred
WiUs to gjve every rich feller
enough extra money in tax cuts
to save and invest. And, believe .
you me, he's chopping every
government program there is to
do It."
"WELL, ALL exceptlna for na.
tlonal defense. It say1 here the
Pentagon's going to get an extra
$100 b'lUon or so.··
"Seems llke with all that, they
ml,,htof kept poor Will on."
• Firlit thlnga first, Malldt,''
said Jud. ''And like th• ,....adeet
11y1, ~!int lhlna we 1ot todo la
preserve our way of life."
"l recll:on you're riabt, Jud,"
saJd Maude wtth a slab u she
ladled Ui. chick peas into two
cracked bowls . "But 1omeUDM1 I
can't help wtshlna it lnchJded a
pairoltbem ttn1ham curtaina."
r ..
'
• I
·---~...-.... ------------------------_.... -..---.----.....-----------------.._.-......._ ___ ~_ ..
I I
t
I '• t
I' ,
OONSUMEA
Gold
fever a
memory
COLOMA CAP> -James
Maraball'a abouts one bitter
J anuuy day in 1868 touched off an event one blstorlan called
·'the area teat ml1ration of
human beings In history for one
purpose.''
Scooping up glittering flecks ·
from lhe tailings of John Sul·
ter's sawmilJ near the banks of
the American River, the
hardened mill boss who went
West in search of adventure
screamed to his friends that he'd
·•round a gold mine."
It was the cry that kicked off
the California Gold Rush.
A~WI ........
NOW, 133 YEARS later, the
site of Marshall's find in the
wooded rolling Sierra foothills of
El Dorado County betrays Uttle
of the excitement of the era that
galvanized a nation and made
the name California a household
word.
SUTTER'& MILL NOW STATE PARK
Vlllton ln..,ect •It• where gold waa dlecovered
Seven miles n o rth of
Placerville along Highway 49,
the 245-acre Marshall Gold Dis-
covery Sl a te His to r ic Park
marks the area where Sutter. a
wea lthy bus inessman who
founded Fort Sutter at what is
now Sacramento, chose to build
a sawmill to supply his expand·
ing agricultural empire with
lumber.
·'Sutter himself went to look
for gold al what is now Sutter
Creek. But after a rew weeks, he
gave it up -it was back·
breaking work.•·
According to park documents.
about 2,000 "r eg i ster e d
American citizens" were in
Ca lifornia in 1847, before
Ma rsha11 's discovery. Less than
five years later. arter the gold
fever had spread, there were
more than 200,000.
··But the figures are mislead·
ing," said Be ilbarz. "There
we re no accurate records then,
no census. There are no records
of the Chinese, the Europeans,
t h e South Americans. the
American Indians and the others
who came into the state. It's
been estimated that every major
nationality except the Japanese
were involved in the gold rush."
The focal point of the preserve is
the Gold Discovery Museum, a
one -story building filled with ex-
hibits, photographs, panners'
equipment, even a stagecoach.
Sutler's original mill is long
gone -destroyed by forgotten
vandals and the elements -but
an electrically operated replica
has been constructed near the
river and on weekends park or-
ficials start it up for visitors.
HIGHWAY 49, WHICH links
towns that have become part of
Western folklore such as Angels
Camp, Jackson, Amador City
and El Do r ado , m eande r s
among the foothills and bisects
the Marshall park.
As for Marshall, the man from
New Jersey who started it all, he
wound up bitter that so much
recognition brought him so little
money.
To oversee construction of the
mill. Sutter chose Marshall -
one of h.is workmen who took
a crew of laborers into the
Coloma Valley on the south fork
of the American River during
the fall and winter of 1847-48. By
Jan. 24. 1848, the log-sheathed
mill was nearly completed. and
it was during that morning's in-
s pection of the project that
Marshall spotted the precious
metal.
"IRONICALLY, THE gold
rush ruined Sutter ," said park
ranger-historian Alan Beilharz.
"He was devastated. Fort Sutter
became deserted as workers left
to look for gold. Hides were left
rotting in the tanning vats and
the crops were left...t.o rot.
THERE WERE NO J apanese,
he added. .. because in 1848
Japan was still a closed nation."
Unable to find mo re than
s mall amounts of gold, the wan-
dering Marshall turned lo
carpentry. smithing, lecturing,
logging, even apple and grape
farming, before he died in 1885
at the age of 75.
Now, tranquil Coloma is an
appealing hodge-podge of rustic
cabins. a museum and historical
markers. On a hilltop west of the
park s tands a statu e o f
Marshall. his arm pointing to
the spot of the gold discovery .
··He was ,·· said Beilharz,
"considered somewhat eccentric
all his lire."
Sa1ne naines confusing
DEAR READERS: What's in a name?
Confusion when too many are the same.
That's the situation at the Veterans Ad·
ministration's mammoth computer records
rue because so many vets share the same last
names.
In some Instances the VA needs more
than a name lo identify a given veteran's
record, warns a VA spokesman. Here's why:
VA bas about 3G5,000 Smiths, 293,080 Johnsons,
150,000 Wllllamses, 145,000 Joneses and close to
137 ,000 MIUers.
There are even multitudes of what one
might tblnk are not so common aames: more
than 53,000 Robinsons, nearly ?7 ,Mt Fishers
and Rlchardsons, and betwttn 23,0IO and
?4,000 each of Schmldts, Ryans, Snyders,
Butlers and Wallaces.
VA computers contain the names of
about 35 million veterans and their survivors,
which together with the approximate military
serial number, Social Security number, or VA
claim permit veterans' benefits counselors to
locate an Individual's benefits rue.
Veterans and others eligible for VA
benefits will receive faster and more ac-
curate information and service when they
are able to provide one of those numbers in
addition to a name.
Tbe advice from veterans' benefits
counselors ls to have your military, Social
Security or VA claim number bandy when you
call -even If your name, ls Kragmler Z.
Mugwomp.
Teela11fcf~• pad Oii lee
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've never driven on
icy roads. I'm planning a trip to the moun-
tains and want to know how to brake my car
NO FRIU.S TEETH WANING
OMLY s22 . -
on ice and how to get out of a skid safely.
C.T., Newport Beach
When you drive in the moaDtalns, always
keep plenty of distance between you and the
car ahead of you. On sUcll roads. use the
braking power of the englDe by shifting to a
lower gear. If you must brake, tap and re-
lease tbem In a pumping motion. And, don't
brake in the middle of a curve.
~ If you.r car goes into a skid, take your
foot off the brake. Ease up on the accelerator
and steer In the direction the rear of the vehi-
cle ls skidcllng. When you re«ain stttring
control, resume braking by pumping tbe
brakes llgbUy.
To retain traction and avoid skids, start
out slowly on a slippery surface. If your
wheels start to spin, let up on tbe gas untU
traction retW11s.
If you use chains, kttp a pair In the tnmk
along with extra chain Ualls for repairs. Also
carry a nubllght, lee scraper, extra fUBes,
cleanhag rags, booster cables, a smaJJ shovel,
and bag of sand or road salt. For more in·
formation, request a frtt copy of "Winter
Driving Tips" by wrttlag to Consumer In-
formation Center, Dept. se8J, Pueblo, Colo.
81009.
• ·cot a problem? Then wnte to Pal "-1 Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting
• the answers and actaon you need to
•
solve inequities m government and r-. bu31ness Mail your questions to Pat
I I Dunn. Al Your Service. Orange Coast
Daily Pi/.ot. P 0. Box 156-0 . Costa Mesa , CA 92626. As
many Letter.~ as possible will be answered, but phoned
inquines or Letters not including the reader's full
name. address and bu.flneu hours' phone number
cannot be considered This column appears dally ex-
cept Sundays "
Stre11 Management Center
Comes to
Newport Beach
Pl•n Newport
Brlatol Ave. •t J•mbor••
752-1808
Orange Cout DAJL Y PiLOT/MOndmy, March 9, 1981
to repair
300,000
DETROIT (AP> -
American Honda Motor
Co., Inc. ls recalllnt
300,000 ltB> model Ac·
cords, Preludes and
Civics to replace
charcoal canisters in tbe
emission control
systems, the company
announced.
A company
spokesman s a id the
original canister could
become unplugged ,
malling it difficult to
restart the car once it Is
warm. However, the car
will function without the
new canister, be s aid.
According to a com-
pa.ny notice sent to Hon-
da owners. the canister
s hould be repla ced
·'whether or not you are
having any diffic ulty
starting your car."
Honda caJled its ac-
tion a "product update,"
and not a recall. The ac-
tion is p a rt of the
Gardena-based Honda's
customer satis faction
program a nd th e r e
would be no charge for
installation of the part.
BALTZ -BERGERON
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTCLIFll MORTUARY
"Affordable funerals"
Cremation Plans Available
427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
PHONE 646-9371
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FREE ONE HOUR INFORMATIVE PRESENTATIONS
BEFORE
llE,.ORE tht' Scn1ck wj!'1gn1 Program
Kainy Gordon ar 7 13 lb~
Everything
You Wanted to Know About
the SCHICK Weight Loss Method •••
but never got around to asking.
Some of the questions that will be answered:
I . How 1s Schick different from o ther methods?
2 Is dieting involved?
3. How does Schick help you lose the urges?
4 How can Schick say 1t 1s the only method that keeps the weight oft permanenrly7
5. What 1s counter-condmoning7
6 Does the Schtek Method deal with nutrition?
7 Will I JUSt be part of a group. as in Weight Watchers?
8. How much does the Schick Program cost?
9 Does the Schtek Method have medical credentials 7
I 0 Why do so many doctors recommend the Schick Method7
Spring and summer are not far off .. but there's time to get nd of those excess
pounds so you'll be 1n good shape for the warm weather Come and find out how
you can make this a great summer. There's absolutely no obltgation. Check the listing
below for the presentation that's most conv~nient for you .
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11
Laguna
Buffum ·s Dept. Store
~guna Hills M all
7:00 PM
!Granada Room)
Lakewood
Clifton's Cafeteria
77 ~kewood Center
7·30 PM
lbrrance
Old Towne Mall
19800 Hawtho~ Blvd
10:30 ~ & 7 00 PM
(Community Room)
WHtmlnster
Buttum·s Restaurant
Westminstttr Mall
7:00 PM
S.n .. rnardlno
Inland Mall (Town Hall)
500 Inland Centttr
lower Level-South Side
10:30 AM & 7:30 PM
THURSDAY, MARCH 12
Costa Mesa
Bullock's Restaurant
South Coast Plaza
7:00 PM
C.non
Carson Mall
Community Room
250 Carson Mall
10:30 ~ & 7:00 PM
Downey
Woman's Club of Downey
9B 13 S. Paramount
7:30 PM
Rtvenlde
May Co. Alpiner Restaurant
3500 Tyler Mall
1 0:30~ & 7:30 PM
SATURDAY, MARCH 14
Orange
Schick Center
85 Town & Country Rd.
10:30 AM •
Montclair
May Co. Terrace Restaurant
5000 Montclair Plaza
1030 AM
lbrrance
O ld Towne Mall
19800 Hawthomtt Blvd.
J·OOPM
!Community Room)
Cerritos
Schick Cttnter
123 Los Cttrrltos Center
10:30 AM
SUNDAY, MARCH IS
Or•nee
Schick Center
85 Town & Country Rd.
2:00 PM
SCHICK CENTER"!
For mo~ infonmdon:
In Orange call_..,...
I t I
l
!
I
I
l.
Orange Cout DAILY PtlOT/Mond11Y, Merci. 9, 1111
250-298 East 17th Street
Costa ~esa
anbana's
~-:::::;t:~j'." ,:, l3hido.Q
_A.,J :J.orma/ Cenler
Formals -Prom
Debutante GoNns
Mother of the Bride
***********
MARCH SALE
BRIDALS & FORMALS
~~so% Reductions
***********
''Everything for the Bride''
TIO E. 17th Street, C.Osta Mesa
548-8264
~ir l\ogers JLtb. J!leli
An American-British
Delicatessen and
Specialty Shop
American
Over 30 sandwiches Including
• Roast Beef • Bacon, Lettuce
• Ham Tomato &
• Turkey Avocado
COST A MESA'S BEST!
British
•Meat Pies ....... , .... .. o.a..s....a ......... ..
Moe&la..y
• Sausage Rolls
• Tea
• Pickles
• Preserves
• Marmalades
• Cemish Pasties • Cheeses
645-2252
Hn: Moa.-fri. I CM. s.t. 10.5. CloMd S..
Serving the •ea since 1972
Sidewalk Sale
March 21 & 22
645-5505
OFfllllMG:
• THE FI NEST QUALITY
FROZEN DESSERT & SNACK
ITEMS
• FRESH & NATURAL CARROT
CAKE. COOKIES & YOGURT PIE
• DELICIOUSLY UNIQUE
LU NCHEON ITEMS-ALL FRESH
& NATURAL
PLANNING A BRUNCH.
LUNCHEON OR PARTY? ASK ABOUT
OUR BULK ORDER DISCOUNTS
ON ICE CREAM. QUICHE, SOUP
& OTHE SPECIAL TIES
GROUP DISCOUNTS
"I 0-20 CLUB"
CALL US FOR DETAILS
645-5505
Mention This Ad & Receive
A Free Mini Cone (Yogurt or
Ice Cream}
"for all your fa bric needs"
We have a large selection
of small prints and fabrics
for your quilting and craft
projects.
New patterns for border
prints ahd craft projects
for Spring.
NEW· DOLLMAKING
CLASS
See u s for details
H ours:
Mon .-Sat.
10 a.m .-5: 30p.m .
646-1235
250-298 East 17th Street
COSTA MESA
~ t .. 17"1 ~ c
!i -I :
~ 0
250-298 East 17th Street
Costa Mesa
,
.
'.r ·
And More'
0
Something Special
feminine fashions
250 E 17th. Costa Mesa 645-51 11
Wl' 'llt't'IJh/t' tn f.l'h1un 1111 lht·
nll'" flJ.!llrt' '"I'' I th1 ll Ill
Antique ]Kall
. . . where a collection of
dealers wi II help you
discover the merits of
quality In theantique and
collectible world -as -an
Investment rather than
merely a purchase.
541-JI 11
Moa.-Sat. 10 ..,, ,. ...
French , Eng l ish, and
American Furniture. Silver.
Fine China, Glass. Brass.
Copper. Lamps. Prints.
Clocks. A frican Art and
Primitives.
Sidewalk Sale
March· 21 & 22
I I
MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1981
COMICS 84
STOCKS 85
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CIF semifinalists
Eagles ·flying
higher 'n kite
By ROGER CARLSON
Of Ille O.lly .. llet SUll
If you're wondering what all
the commotion is about at
Estancia High's bas ketball gym,
the reason is simple. The Eagles
are still busy.
Coach Larry Sunde rman's
Eagles. counted out a long time
ago by all but the most faithful
of Estancia fans, are preparing
for Thursday night's ClF 3·A
semifinals at the Los Angeles
Sports Are na . with tipoff
scheduled for 8:45.
And Sunderman puts the ac-
c om p 1 is h m e n t s o f his un·
heralded and underrated team
in perspective when he states
"'This is the most gratifying ex-
perience in my 25 years or being
associated in sports ·
THAT'S A MOUTHFUL. Sun
derman. a standout athlete al
Morningside llagh, earning all-
league in baseball and basket
ball. in addillon to sharing in a
CIF baseball champ1onsh1p, has
had many honors and vactones
as a coach. None. however. has
quite matched this year's dream
team
Hi s Eagles seem to get the JOb
done with mirrors trick onei.
that make you appear larger
than life really is
his teammates and coaches.
He 's a great floor player.
.. Markel can play any five
positions on the court and a lot
or times has had lo play the mid·
die in a zone with the giants.
.. Kraiss -a lot of people
thought he might be intimidated
a fter his football injury. But he's
a real champ. His best four
games were the second Corona
del Mar game and the three
playoff games .
"DEUTSCH IS THE quickest
player on our team and he's not
afr aid t o chall enge any one.
McCahiLI? He's just a winner.
He is only a junior and he already
has four football. three baseball
Thi• b th~ •a•t
9ratll11ln9
experfen~~ In ..,, .ZS
11ear• ol bring
fU•~ated In sporta.
Coach Larry Sunderman
a nd three basketball playoff
games behind him ."
So it goes Sunde rman. the
coach, the believer, the upsetter.
"We just want to keep upset-
ting some people and play some
more games," is how he puts his
emphasis on this week's tuneup
for Tustin.
John McEnroe , tantrums
and. all, leads U.S. to
Davis Cup win . · .. B2
He's found it,
racing's peak
By HOWARD L. HANDY
()I Ille O.lly Plt.c SUll
There will be no encore for Dr.
Kent Combs of Laguna Beach
following Saturday's Formula
Atlantic race over the Long
Beach Grand Prix street course.
Combs says this will be the ul·
timate peak he can reach in
a utomobile racing and that he
will retire from the track follow-ing the race.
'·I grew up in Indiana and al-
t e n d ed the Indianapolis 500
every year while I was in high
school, college and medical
school," Combs says ... But my
thoughts and dreams have
always been with the Formula
cars on the international scene.
"I FEEL IT JS a purer form
and more difficult than oval rac-
ing, .. the Laguna Beach head
and neck specialist says.
"I have been racing for the
last 12 years but I dido 't get into
professional racing until last
year. It is something I have been
doing a long time and the Long
Beach race will let me ac·
complish the goal I set for
myself or driving in a race with
the best dnvers in the world in a
major event."
The car he will be driving is
one he purchased from Kevin
Cogan and he owns it himself.
Cogan finished second in the
Long Beach Atlantic race last
year in the same car.
"I have never driven on a
s treet course before and I'm
s ure it will be a different ex·
perience." he adds. "There is no
margin for error. In Canada. in
DR. KENT COMBS
of it without damaging the car
or getting hurt myself
"IN WNG Bt:ALH you would
tear up part or the machine by
hittmg the wall. I am sure
"My main ob1ective will be to
finish the race in the top 15 or 20
places and I will be ver y
pleased
The starting lineup Point
guard Jeff Gardner 15·9). Ken
Ha ll (5·10) in the corner. Jim
Sampson (G·l ), a forward who
shares guard responsibilities,
Mike Marke l. the tallest al 6·2"2,
and 6·1 Steve Kra1ss. a football
star who gives the Eagles the
big lift defensively
IT HASN'T BEEN a rosy path
for the Eagles. At one point
Estancia had dropped three
straight in non league play and
a fter getting a toe-bold on the
Sea Vie w League title, the
Eagles blew it with losses to
Irvine and University.
D•llY .. 11 .. ""°' •• .,~,, .. ......,... my fi rst race in the car, I spun
LARRY HALL (24) MIKE MARKEL APPLY THE PRESSURE. twice but was able to come out
"I will have only 30 minutes in
a practice session before quali·
fying to learn the track and that
isn't much time Then I will
have to be within a certain
number or seconds or the top
three cars lo make the qualifica-
tions .··
RANDY Tlfl, at 6-2, is the
E agles' No 6 player and has
s t a rted on several occasion~.
Others who have seen con-
siderable acllon are 5· 10 Mike
Deutsch and 6-1 Jim McCatull.
In fact, it took a last-hall ourst
to get past El Toro in overtime
just to claim the No. 2 spot in
league.
Good teams left out
While he isn't exactly a novice
in a utomobile racing. hi s ex·
perience on the Formula Atlan-
tic circuit is limited but res ults
have been very good And the
money involved isn't his main
concern. either He races for re
laxation and foots his own bills
"We sWl don't rebound as well
as I thlnk we can." says Sun·
derman. "But it has been much
better the last four games.
NCAA field filled for playoffs "I won a Formula Atlantic
race in Holtville and missed the
track record by only 7/lOths of a second an m y last race... the
doctor says. "I've also finished
second once. third three times
and taken a fourth a nd fifth
place in the past six months in
this car ...
Gardner is a first team All Sea
View League selection, \1arkel
was named on tht> -.econd team
But 1r you talk to Sunderman.
you 're left with the 1mpres~1on
his job has bt>cn l'as~. he has
done it with all stari.
"l thought Jcrr Gardner
sho uld have been the most
valuable plaver m the league He's our quarterback and the
current heir to a long line or
good point guards at Estancia,"
says Sunderman
"WITH OUR LACK or height
we have to make up for it with
an aggressive defense. Tustin?
We have to limit them to one
shot. If we give them two or
three shots, we're asking for big
problems.
MISSION, Kan. <AP> -If you
feel the 48·team NCAA bas ket·
ball tournament is leaving out a
lot of good tea ms th is year,
you'll get no argument from the
NCA A.
"We don't have the best 48
teams in the country ." Wayne
Duke, chairman of the nine-man
Division I Basketball Commit·
lee, admitted Sunday when the
bracket was announced.
.. All of the upsets did cause
con s te rnation.'• Duke said.
"This can mean certain teams
will qualify sometimes at the ex·
pense of the conference cham·
pions ...
Twenty-two "at large" inv1ta·
t10ns were extended to go with 26
automatic qualifiers, mostly
winners or postseason touma·
ments Highly ranked teams
that s tumbled in postseason
tou r naments and forced the
committee to use at-lar ge invita-
tions on them included Virginia,
ranked No. 4 in the Associated
Press Top Twenty, seventh·
ranked Kentucky, a nd third
ranked Louisiana State.
"HALL IS SHOOTING over 50
percent in the playoffs and
saved us against Lynwood
"Sampson does a lot or things
that go unappreciated except by
"But more than anything. we
just have to take care of our own
business. We have to concen-
trate on what we need to do."
So. Sunderman and his amaz·
ing E agles continue preparation
and it appears they'll go in with
all bases covered . The team has
already presented their coach
with a blood pressure kit.
THE PROBLEM, Duke said.
was the rash of upsets in con·
ferencc post-season tourna ments
that saw regular-season league
ch a mpions fall a way while
teams of lesser achievement
captured their conference's
automatic invitation
Some notables on the outi.1de
looking an are Minnesota and
John Sevano
Anteaters left out • ID cold
The word came shortly before 8 o'clock
Sunday night.
Afte r hours or waiting, UC Irvine
athletic director Li nd a Dempsey phoned
her coach, Bill Mulli~an. and gave him the
agonizing news.
''She told me it didn't look like we were
going anywhe re." said Mulligan. "She
said she had just hung up with Lew Cryer
(com missioner of the PCAA confer ence >
and that things didn't look good."
It was the last thing Mulligan wanted to
hear. But th.en. the news he received
wasn't totally unexpected, either.
"You know. I really didn't feel bad until
today ," Mu!Ugan reflected. "We were op·
timistic . . . and then it happened."
WHAT HAPPENED WAS the announce·.
ment by the NCAA, shortly before 2 p.m., of
the 48 teams that had been invited to play in
the prestigious posl·season tournament.
Mulligan, as did the UCI players. anx·
I
iously watched the screen as the sites and
1 teams participating were announced. It
was only alt.er the Far West Region bad
been completed that the UCI coaches'
I heart sank.
"When San Jose State didn't make it, I
. thought we'd 13e hurting," admitted
Mullit(an.
M ulllgan wasn't looking for an NCAA
bid. He was, however, looking for an NIT
nod. And when the Spartans weren't on the
NCAA'• first list of 48, tie knew they'd be
on the NIT's next one of 32, whJcb the
dlmlnutive lrisbman knew would cripple I hla team's chances contlderably •• far u
the NIT ta.kine two team• from Ure same
I conference were concerned.
As al lat.e Sunday night -altboulh two 1 ' berthl still remaJn -Mulll1an had re·
signed himself to the fact .the call he want-
ed would never come.
"Having a national reputation is really
important." he explained. "But not having
won enough games is the bottom line. It's
too bad."
As far as Mulligan was concerned, the
magic number was 20. He felt if his Ant·
eaters could secure 20 victori~s. an NCAA
nomination would be in the bag.
But his hopes for a 20-win season were
derailed badly in Santa Barbara, where a
12·poinl lead in the late stages agains t
the Gauchos turned into a nightmarish
one-point loss at the buzzer.
UCI DID PICK UP win No. 17 two nights
later against Cal State (Fullerton). but
M uJligan wasn't pleased because he knew of
the task ahead of him -meaning, In order to
win three more, he'd have lo sweep through·
the PCAA tournament, an almost impossi·
ble talk became Fresno State was looming
bead·ud•lboulden above the rest of the
field.
Of eomM, llulll1an never did get to the
BalW.. la fad, h1I team never 1ot by
the ftilt •am• as the Anteaters were m.M '7 Utab State.
lo, wtli • 17-10 mark, UCJ wall forced
into• wlllUq 1ame. A 1ame in which the
Anteaters had litUe chani:e of winnlnl and
a lot of loelnt.
"The best way to make any of those
(NCAA or NIT playoffs) .la to win THE
tournament ( PCAA >." said Mulllaan.
"Whether the 20 vlctortn would trave
made a difference or not, I don't know."
At leut41ofthe48 team1 wbo aeeured a
berth or were invited to tbe NCAA tourna-
ment heel 20 vtctortea or mon. Tbe wont
record Wat held by Minlaalppl at 18·13',
which earned tu placement by wtnninl the
Southeastern Conlerence tournament.
.. ...__ __ ....
As for the NIT. San Jose State held one
of the best records at 21·8. while Duke en-
tered with the worst a t 15-12. Five others
-Mi chigan, Purdue. Minnesota, St.
J ohn's and Dayton had numbers of 17-2
<same as UCI).
··I was looking at the NCAA statistics
list," said Mulligan. "and did you know
that in 14 different categories the team or
a UCI player was among 'the top five in
each. Plus, we still ended up as the scor·
ing champs."
Indeed. UCI had a lot of numbers, but
apparently they weren't the ones that
counted.
"l think we had a good season and I'm
happy with our season, .. Mulligan said. "I
just hope we can keep improving.
"I think we learned a lot. Hopefully. that
will carry over." • • • THE ULTIMATE SLAP in the face to the
PCAA conference came at halftime Sunday
oftheNotreDame-DePaulgameonChannel
4.
While Dick Enberg and Bllly Packer
were reviewing all the conference cbam·
pions across the nation, not one word wu
mentioned about the PCAA.
And, as if to add insulttotnjury, faterinthe
second half they apologized' tor mlttslna ·
a champion. And, yes, you guessed tt. H
wasn't the PCAA thla time, tither.
Instead, it was the titanic battle between
Tennessee·Chattanooga and Appalachian
State.
Take that Lew Cryer ! ••• Just for the record, Fresno Slate wu
placed ln the Far Weal refioult with. tbe
seeded team1 beinl Ore1on st:aae, Utah,
North Carollna and llllnota. lf the Bulldop
win their flrat 11me, Utah would be next.
Mic higan, both 17·10, Tulsa, 21·7,
San J ose State. 21·8, a nd
Syracuse. 18·11 . There are
others.
"WHENEVER YOU have
postseason tournament upsets it
eliminates the possibilities open
to t he committee." Duke said.
"We spent more time deliberat·
ing the final s ix or eight teams
than anything else other than
seeding."
As the bracket was worked
out, the top four teams in the AP
pol I were made the top seeds in
each or the four regionals. No. t
Oregon State is seeded No. l in
the West Re~ional. No. 2 DePaul
(See NCAA, Page 82>
COMBS F I N I S H ED his
medical internship an Southern
California. then went to Viet·
nam where he was a general
s urgeon for two years. It was at
thi s time h e d ecided to
specialize and picked head and
neck injuries for his concentra·
lion. He has an orrice adjacent to
t he South Coast Hospital in
South Laguna Beach
He will be driving an English·
made Rall and among his eom-
<See PEAK, Page 82) --------
San Dle101a Brian Taylor (left) battl• for the ball with T
Seattle's Vinnie Jobn.loc\ durlnl tbe ftnt -..11 of their
NBA game Sunday in Seattle.
I
~' \
!
'.
-Orange Co• DAILY '9LOT~. March e. 1•1 _ ......................... ""'!'!"~-..----~..., . _. ____ . ______________ ...., __ ...__ .
Davis Cup \
McEnroe leads
\ U.S. • to victory
Notre Dame thinks upset
when it's basketball time
FNm AP dltp•teltet
If you're • colle1e basketball team wttb m
Notre D•m• .on your schedule, doa't expect to •
come out of the leaaoo wltb • bealtby winnln1
streak.
The latest vieUm of tbe lriah ta Vlr1inl• which aaw it.a
28-a•me undefeated streak end thanks to upeet·mioded Notre
Dame. But the Cavaliers are not alone.
Jt wu the 25th major upset by tbe lri.ah in tbe Jut 35
years and t.be alxtb Involving a team witb a perfeet record.
Most notable amona tbe upset.s was UCLA's •1ame win·
nln& streak in 1971 as Coach Johnny Dee's Fllbtln1 Irllh
topped tbe Bruins, 89-82 at Soutb Bend. After tbat, the Johnny
Wooden-coached Bruins did not loee unW 1974, and who beat
them?
The Irish, with Diteer Phelps in bla third ye&1 • head
coach, nipped UCLA, 71 -70, also at Soutb Bend.
Notre Dame also spoiled DePaul's 25-game streak last
year, ruined USF's 29-game undefeated streak In 1977 and
beat New York U. back in 19'8 to cancel out a 19-game
streak.
...------QMete •I tlle d•• -----
Norm Sonju, general manager of the Dallas
Mavericks, after receiving a Telex message that the
NBA office would be closed on Washington's birthday:
"Is that Kermit's or Richard's birthday?"
nae.,. .... leau PonlGINI OT ••
Mycbal Tbompson scored 33 points Sunday
night, including four in overtime, to lead
Portland to a 120-112 National Basketball As -
sociation victory over Golden State. Golden m
State got the last six points in regulation time, including two
straight 20-foot jumpers by Bernard Kini, to send the game
into overtime ... San Diego center Swea .Nater scored 22
points and grabbed 20 rebounds to pace the Clippers to a
103-92 victory over Seattle ... Center James Edwarda and
guard Joluuay Davia had 28 points apiece and Davis also had
13 assists as Indiana survived going scoreless for nearly
three minutes in the final period to defeat Denver. 129-119
... Boston ripped open a tight game with a 13-point burst
late in the third quarter and. led by 23 points each Crom Larry
Bird and Kevin McHale, crushed New York, 115-94 ...
Rookie guard Andrew Toney, a starter for 57 games before
being benched last week, scored 28 points in a reserve role to
lead Philadelphia to a 123-100 win over Milwaukee ... Kevin
Porter scored three baskets on dazzling drives up the middle
in the last 90 seconds to help Washington overcome Chicago,
103-99 in a battle for the final playoff berth in the Eastern
Conference ... Guard Otis Blrdsoa1 poured in a game-high
30 points to power Kansas City to a 105-68 rout of Phoenix ...
James SUas led eight San Antonio players in double figures
as the Spurs rolled lo a 133-108 win over Dallas.
Std tn-'• qulrlc goa111.,,.r1c Cldrago
Rookie Darryl Sutter scored his 33rd and ~ 34th goals of the season within a 15-second span '
in the second period to spark Chicago to a 3·2
National Hockey League victory over Quebec ·
Sunday night . . . De1taJ1 Mank scored three goals to lead
WashingU>n to a 7-3 win over Toronto snap_p_ing_ a 13-game
winless streak ... Buffalo's Dall.Dy Gare scored three goals,
including the 250tb of his career, and teammates .AJu Hay-
portb and Andre Savard added two each as the Sabres
downed Philadelphia, 8-4 ... Detroit used third-period goals
by Glean Hicks and Dale McCoart to forge a 4-4 tie with the
sloppy New York Rangers ... Eric Vall poked a rebound of
his own shot past Hartford goalie Joba Garrett to give
Calgary a 5-4 win ... Paw Gardner scored two goals and
Rick Keboe scored his 49th of the season to lead Pittsburgh to
a 6-4 victory over Edmonton ... Boston spotted Vancouver
an early goal and then battled back for a 4-1 victory over the
Canucks in a game that may have cost them the services of
their No. l goalie, Rogle Vachon, who hurt his arm coming
out of the net on Thomas GracllD's goal ... Bernie Federk.o
scored two goals and an assist, leading SL Louis to a 7-0 frolic
past Colorado .
DePatd deleat• Nei~ Da-., 14·84
Mark Aguirre scored 24 points and Clyde •
Bradshaw dealt out 13 assists and added 14
points Sunday to lead second-ranked DePaul to
a 74-64 victory over sixth-ranked Notre Dame in
a battle of NCAA tournament-bound powers . . . Dodgers.
President Peter O'Malley underwent an appendectomy at a
hospital in Vero Beach Sunday ... Contract negotiations
between the New York Mets and Doa1 Flyne, their Gold
Glove-winning second baseman, have broken down, both
sides have said . . . Cleveland Indians first baseman AHre
Tborntoa suffered a broken bone in his right band during ·an
exhibition game and will miss four to six weeks of action . . . B~ltimore Orioles first baseman Eddie Muray worked out
briefly Sunday. despite complaining of continuing pains in bis
abdomen and back ... Pe4ro '1orea of Mexico won the
World Boxing Association junior fiyweight cbamplonsblp by
stopping champion Yoko Guldltea of Japan In tbe 12th.round
... Challenger Conell•• Bou·Edwanh of London knocked
<town Rafael "Baaooka" LI ... in the fifth round, withstood a
game comeback effort by the Mexican fighter and won a un·'
animous 15-round decision to becOme the new WBC super·
featherweight champion ... American Tamara MclUaaey,
the season's leading giant slalom skier, clocked a bllsterlna
time on her second run to win the women's giant slalom lo
World Cup competition in Aspen.
'ft', ••di•
TV: No events scheduled.
llADIO: No event.s scheduled.
TUESDAY aADIO
Baseball -Tokyo Gianta va. Dod&ers at Vero Beach,
10:30 a.m., KABC (790).
CARLSBAD (AP) -Mexieo'1
RauJ R&mirea 1ay1 1111 time tbe
lordt • ot teauall atop toleratlq
Jobo McEnroe's rantln1 and
ravtn1.
''Somethlq should be done,"
Ramires complainod after
McEnroe'• 8-4, 8·3, 6-0 victory
1ave the U.S. a 3·2 victory SUD·
day over Mnleo ln firtt round
non-zonal Davia Cup compett.
lion.
"I THINK HE complains too
much and I th.ink be does it on
purpose," said Ramire&, who
took a llabtly retarded but
tenacious Mexican team to tbe
veree ot a giant upset.
McEnroe halted the suapenae
with a clearcut victory that put
the U.S. in the second rou.nd
against defendin& Davis CUp
champion Ciecboslavakia. Tbe
two tennis powers will meet in
July al Fluahing Meadow, N.Y.
Roscoe Tanner set up the de·
clsive match -between
McEnroe and Ramires -by
overpowering 17-year-old Jorge
Lozano 6-2, 6-3, 6-3. That evened
the best three-of.five event at
2·2.
A surprise doubles victory
Saturday by Ramirez and
Lozano over Marty Riessen and
Sherwood Stewart meant the
U.S . had to sweep Sunday's
singles.
The Mexi can s had their
c hance to see McEnroe eat
crow, but the brash lefthander
was up to the challenge.
I AFTER HJS lackluster victory
over Lozano Friday, McEnroe
enflamed the Mexicans by call-
ing them "a one-man team, not
r ea lly even that, because
Ramirez hasn't been playing
that well." lie added, "There's
no excuse for us losing to Mex-
ico."
Unbothered by the pressure.
From,...,,, 81
PEAK •••
petitors will be Whitney Ganz of
Laguna Hills and Frank
Bramante of Costa Mesa among
others.
Dr. Combs' car is white witb
blue lightning bolts and is No. 80
for those who might be on hand
for the race at 4 : 15 Saturday
that runs for 114 hours.
The doctor doesn't figure to
get out of competition entirely,
however. He s till rides in
moto"'ross races and finished
fifth last year at Carlsbad in the
old-timers (35-and-over) race.
HE ALSO HAS A JET SIU to
use on the nearby ocean waters,
plays tennis and rides his bicy-
cle some 10 miles round trip to
downtown Laguna Beach each
morning for coffee and a Danish
roll.
He is single and walks up the
hill to his office each day from
his shoreside home.
He doesn't figure he is retiring
because of the possible danger involved. but says:
"I wi ll retire-on top as far as I
am concerned. When you reach
a goal, it is time to look to
something else to achie~e.
"I THJNK THAT danger is
part of racing but not someUUng
I look at and dwell on. The more
experienced you are in whatever
you are doing in life, the less
danger there is involved. And
you are more comfortable in do-
ing it."
During his amateur career
that started in 1969 in a Formula
Vee, he did well enough to gain
hls FIA license to be eligible to
drive in Long Beach.
·'I didn't win any big races as
an amateur," he says. "But I
was able to complete enough
races without causing any prob-
lems toget the FIA license."
For the Indiana boy who was
raised on a farm with a general
practitioner doctor for a fat.her
and one who turned sour oo
aeneral surgery in Vietnam
Dr. Kent Combs has come a long
way. Both In his chosen pro-
fession and in his driving career
that will end Saturday in the
.street.s of Long Beach.
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DD TllAT •BAT. U1 rDJ.DNI, ""11 U11111191 UI Maft. I
McEnroe put oa b1a mual abow.
In between playlq brilllanUy,
ht fumed over flat ca Ha, tbumbed b1a noee at tbe um"'"
and cuned wben be made poor
•bot..
"I'm haPll.f to bave aavecl my
country from embarraument .or
whatever," be aald. "If we'd
Iott, I'd have to put my 1neaken
in my mouth."
Ramirei found notbin1 amua·
In& about McEnroe's tantrums.
"It Intimidates officials and it
bothers the other player.
Everyone baa hia own way ol be-
ing a person; but I wouldn't rec·
ommend it. J don't think it's
nice," .............
NCAA.-•.
is the top seed In lbe Mideast,
No. 3 ~U ta top seed in the
Midwest and fourth-ranked .
Virginia ls the No. l seed In the East.
The top four seeds In each re-
gion al receive byes Into the
second round.
Duke, commissioner or the Big
10 , said the committee spent
"an arduous 2Y.i days choosing
and seeding the field."
"This is a wide-open field," he
said. ''That's the tag you should
place on this tournament. I think
it's a tremendou field in terms of
matchups down the line."
TEAMS RECEIVING at-large
berths in the Midwest Regional
we re LSU, 28·3: Iowa, 21 -6;
Arizona Stale, 24-3; Wichita
State, 22-6; Arkansas, 22-7. and
Missouri, 22-9.
At-large teams placed in the
Mideast are Boston College,
21-6 ; Maryland, 20-9; Alabama-
Birmingbam, 21 -8; Kentucky,
22-5; Wake Fores t, 22-6, and
DePaul, 27-1.
The West at-large entrants are
Kansai State, 21-8; Wyoming,
23-5, and Illin9is, 20-7.
In the Eaa(, the at-large teams
are Villanova, 19-10; Brigham
Young, 22-6; Georgetown, 20-11 ;
Tennessee, 20-7; UCLA, 20-6 ;
Notre Dame, 22--4, and Virginia,
25.-3.
Sub-regional action will be
Thursday and Saturday at
Providence in the East Region,
Los Angeles in the West, Austin,
Tex ., in the Midwest and
Dayton, Ohio, in the Mideast.
IN LOS ANGELES, Kansas
State will play the West Coast
Athletic Conference champion.
either San Francisco or Pep-
perdine, who will meet in a one-
ga me playoff tonight. The win-
ner will go against Oregon State.
In the otber first-round game
there. Wyoming, 23-5. will meet
Howard, 16-11, and Illinois will
meet the winner.
Dionne's goals
lead Kings
WINNIPEG, Manitoba CAP>
-Marcel Dionne scored his SOtb
and 5lst goals of the season Sun-
day night as the Los Angeles
Kings skated to a 4-1 National
Hockey League victory over the
Winnipeg J ets.
Dionne's first goal of the night
was the game-winner and came
at 7:47 of the second period on a
Kings power play. He added his
5lst goal into an empty net with
16 s econds remaining in the
game.
Andre St. Laurent scored in
the first period for the Kings and
Jim Fox also connected in the
final session.
Normand Dupont broke Mario
Lessard's bid for his third
shutout of the seaaon with 1:03
remaining in the game. Lessard
faced 22 drives, making a
number of key saves. Markus
Matt.sson, in goal for WinnJpeg,
was teated 39 times in the hard-
bi tting contest before 13,992
fans.
The Jets were comln1 off a 4-2
upset victory over Montreal on
Saturday but were decidedly
outplayed by the Kings.
-
GOl:F-1BASEBALL/SPORT88AEAK
.. .............. RI~ BURLESON STRETCHES OUT AT ANGELS' CAMP.
Angels report
For experience,
they go to Reese
By EDZINTEL
Of IM 0•111 Pli.t Swll Jn the 63-plus years he 's been
connected with major league
baseball, J immie Reese has
seen more than his share or
players come and go.
Reese is the ageless (75 > con·
ditioning coach and master or
the fungo bat for the Angels .
He's done it all. from manager
to coach to scout, in additon to 16
years as a player 13 in the
minors and three in the majors.
Reese broke into the majors in
1917 as a batboy and was a
slick fielding second baseman
with the Yankees I 1930-31 J and
the Cardinals (1932>.
He's got stories to tell, enough
to fill a lifetime. One of his
favorite though is the 1930
season when he hit .346 in a re·
serve role. But that's not what
Reese will tell you about. More
likely, he ·11 talk about that
season as the one in which he
roomed with Babe Ruth.
But Reese is not one to dwell
on the past. Like a kid at his
firs t spring training tryout.
Reese is up-to-date and now.
working closely with all of the players.
.. I think the free agency bit
and the threat of a strike is good
for the players." Reese says.
·'This is a new era and you have
to change with the times. What
was right for me as a player is
all wrong for today's player.
They have «ertain needs to be
met just as we did. But this is a
whole diffferent age ."
That's Reese -ageless.
Reese keeps Angels pitchers
on the run, chasing line drives
with his artful fungo batting. He
has perfected the task into an
art. He was so accurate at it in
fact that at one time. he pitched
batting practice with a fungo
bat.
''Tom Mor ga n (pitching
coachJ ts very enthused about
this year's staff and I can see
why,·· Reese says .. There's
plenty of talent here and a lot
more to be develooed."
0 ne of the things Reese
stresses in his coaching is at-
titude "It's important to have a
good attitude, to be mentally in
good shape thinking you can
is most of the battle.··
No one alive today has been
involved actively in baseball as
long as Reese. And how much
longer can he sta v in it?
"I'm not going to retire until
they take my uniform away
from me "
UCI picks up
two victories
UC Irvine 's baseball team
continues its hot playing ,in pre-
season as the Anteate rs swept a
double-header from Puget Sound
Sunday, 3-2 and 5-2. at UCL
• With the wins, UCI ups its
season record to 13-3.
In the first game. UCI second
baseman Carson Carroll doubled
in Mike Nagle in the bottom of
the eighth inning to break a 2-2
ti e.
UC Irvi ne ace reliever Larry
Hicks came in to relieve for
starter Cas Som a in the top of
the eighth inning with Puget
Sound runne rs o n first and
second and two outs . Hicks got
UCI out of the inning by strikfog
out pinch hitter Don Moore.
In the second game, a solo
home run by center fielder Mark
Stowell in the third inning tied
the Anteaters a t 1-1. then
another homer by Stowell , this
one a two-run blast in the sixth
inning gave the Anteaters more
than enough to win.
Kite flies high in Florida
LAUDERHILL, Fla. (APJ ~
The surprises, generally, have
been consider ably less than
pleasant for Tom Kite in hi s
10-year PGA Tour career.
One of the game's more ac-
complished performeas, a very
steady player, he kept finding
ways not to win. He'd come close so often, so tantaliziftgly
often, and, somehow, the victory
would elude him.
ONCE, THBEE years ago, he
cost himseU a victory. In a
superlative display of integrity,
be called a penalty on himself
for An infraclion no one else in
the world knew about and, as a
result, lost a tournament by one
shot.
This time. however. it was dif-
ferent.
With three holes to go, "I was
thinking third place.
··What a surprise.
"IT WAS STARTING to get to
m e," he s aid after Jack
Nicklaus had opened the gates
for Kite's victory Sunday in tbe
American Motors lnverrary
Classic. "Letting the wins slip
through your hands. ·
·-· -·------·· ...... ,. ............ ____ ,,....
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I
I
•
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N•A
WUT•llN CON,.llaNcE
P41elflc OIYl1IM w L P<t.
•·Plloenla u 21 ,,.
L•~•rt d ,, •st PorltMIO )7 lS SU
Go1oen si.te ,. lS S07
S•nDI-3J ~ 0 1
SUlllt 31 '" 0 1
Ml._.1 Dlvl1I•
Stn Antonio ... ,. •3'
K•llH iCily >• ,. .soo
HOU lion lJ J8 ... ~
Denver lO •O •H
Ul•ll 2• ., l~
0 •110 10 ., "' EA5TEllN CON,. llENCE
AtlMllk OhttlM
a Pt11l•C1elPN• ~ IS '" ' BOSIOI\ H •• 17S
New York ., n S91
W•U>1ngton JS 31 ...
New Jerwv 10 SI 111
C•nlr•I Dlv1ti011
v M1lw•~H SI ,, /"Ii
1nc11•n• ,, Jl .u• C.IH<t90 J4 l4 soo
Atl•nt• ,. 42 400
Clev1l•nd lS .. ~
Dll<P•I 11 u 234
., c11nchitd O•~lston till•
•·,lln<hed 1>l•vot1 berlll
SltllCl•Y'l Se-11
Bo.ion II s. N•w Vora '' Prut•ctelph•• 111, M1lwdu1t..t• 100
w un1nvton tOJ. Cl'l•e~'"
t<•nS••C•IY IOS, P~•• ..
San Antonio 133 Dallas 1oe
tno1an• In O.nvt, 11Q
Po•t1•n<1110. Go•oenStatt Ill 1011 s.n 01 .. ,0 103, Se•llle 97
Tonl9t11'1 cam•
Clwv•l•f'd •' MllW4uket
COLLEGE
NCAA pelr1ng1
EAST llEGtONAL
l•I Provlcl91><1, II I l Tlllo"4Wv'1Finl11 ... 11.
GI
S't> u
IS'.\ "'" ,,
10 ,,.,,
IS
10111
JS''
I ..
211n ,.
111<'> ,.
u
""' lS
BrtGh•m Voung 111·&1 vs Penn t'l0-61 or
PriMeton I ti 9), GtorQ•town <10 llJ v•
J amu Mid1SOfl t:I0-81
S.lwd.ay'J Secolld Round
B vu ,.,,,,..., •• UCLA uo II C>torvetown
J•me1.~1"W>nw1tvwrv\ No•re04H'\tf11 S,
C•lc:Mrlette, N.C I
Fnuy·s l'lrst ........
Hou\lon 121 &I V\ Vlll•nov• I t9 101
Virg1n1a Common,.eellh tn •• .-LonQ
ISl•nd U ( ll-IOI
S-r·s Se<olld ll ... 11•
,..Ou\ton V1U•nov• •inner "'' \liroln1•
11s )J V• Common .... lth LonQ l•l•n<I win
ner "\ T enne'5o~ U0-1J
MIDEAST REGIONAL
C •I 0111 .... Otll•I
T--..Uy'1P'1nlll-
C•••Ollton t 11 81 V\ SI JOSfPll •• P• en 11.
M•rvl•nd UO ~J v. Tenn Ch1ll•noo9a
(11 81 s .. wur'1Second lleulld
Cre19hlon St Joseph\ winner •• O.Paut
121 I J, M.Jrrland-Tenn Cr..ltl noc>Q• winner
vs lnd1•,,.Cl1 'I
1a1Tonc•l~,AI• I
Fn!Wv's "'"' "-Al• 81tm1ngl\Mn 11t-11 "' Wettern I(.,,..
tuoy lll I), Boston Coll~ UI •1 V\ S.11
Stdio 110 I )
S-y·1 SK..W "°""d
Al• 8lfm1ncatwm ·Wtnern Kentutky •vtn
ntr vs K~tuckv 121 SI Boston Ball State
w1nn~r W"\ Wake fore-\t 411 •I
MIOWIESTllEGIOHAL
I •I Au11JI\, Ttull
TIWr'WWY'l Ftnl ll ... 11d
Ml\\OUft \22 ,, vs. Lamu 11'·41 . Ar~ansa•
111 II•\ Mercer 111-111
S.IUt'UY'I Secolld ll°"n4
M1\.~r1 LA~r w 1nnf'f vs Lou•,••n•St•te-
j Jl·l ), Arkan~as M ercer winn er "'
LOU1\v111itt71 I t
(1tWltlloU,IC1n .. tl
Frour·· "'"'' ..... .w Soulh4rn U t 11-10/ •S W1cn1te Stele flttl
K•n\d\ tlJ 11 "' M1!t\lS\1pp1 t It. 1l,
s-..y·1sec-11 ... lld
Soulhern U Wtth•ld State ••nn.er v\ low•
llt •• t(.•nsas·M•\\l'\,1pp1 w tnnt' vs
Ar11on•Statt>'2' JI
WEST llEGIOHAL.
(llLOIA-IHI
T_...,_..,.,F1nt1t ... lld
K•n .. •S•llH ll-tl vs SanF,.~1scol2HI
0• Pep-dint 116 IH Wyom1n9 Ill SJ ••
Howord flS-111
satwcley'•Sec:ond Round
l<•ns~u St••• w 1nntf vi\ Or~n State • >• '1 Wyom1no Ho~ard winner v~ t Wnol'
t10 II Fridiy'1 F1n 1 lt..,nd
FrnnoSl•lo 2S.3t vs Ne><IM .. le•n t1l SJ
Ida not 1S l l vs P1tts1>ur9n c ti 111
S-y'1 S.c•lld ltound
F r~\no St•t•·Nortrw-•\tt~rn winner.,., Ut•h
C14 •• 1oa,..,..P1thbur9h w1nn•, "'' North
Carolin• 1n I)
NIT pelrlng1
T-•r
Fo•dll•m•I Ooton ._.. ..
01e1 Dominion at Georo••
San JOW Stttt .. r ... , EI P•..o
S At•bam•·T•aas Ar11no1on .st 8.tO••
M iu
Amtrle"" at Tol•do
Or•k• ., M lrw'f'\Ota
Ttu .. nUy
Connet liCUt•t Soutn FtOf•CM
Rhode'"""'" at Purour
Ouqu~\IW at M1cru~n
Nortll Caroltrw A& r .. Du•t
T •mPI• •I Cl•mSOtl
Al•b•m• 41 St Jonn ' t-toly CroH at Sootnern M 1u1;,,1pp1
Frld•y
MerQuelt• •t Svr..:uw
T e•m to be artnoun<.•d •I r ul\a
T••m 10 be _,nounc:ed •t Wt1ot \f•tQ1n111
How the top 20 f8fed
Here'\ llo>W IM Top Twenty team\ in Tiie
Auoe••ted Press co11t9e buktl.,.11 p0l1
l•red 11\1• weo
I Ore90<1 Sl•I• (16-11 bUI Arizon•. 80 •7
lost to Arlt~ Stet•, 17 61 ] OePeul 111 IJ bH I Dnton, I • M . oe.i
Nolro D.t,,,., I•"" ] Lo.Moana St;it• Clll )I C>e•I F10<10.0
IS.I), IO'JI to Georgie .... 40
• v1ro1nla C2S-31 but G•oro•• Tun.
1•·•1, IO'JI to ~ryllnd, IS-61. s. Ar1tona Slate <H JJ ,lle•I Oreoon, 78·11
(otl. bHI Or•QOl'I Stttt , 81 &I
6 Nolrt Da m. 111 SI IO\I 10 OePaul , ....
I Kentueky U1 SI IO~I lo V•nd••b•ll,
.O·SS
I •-• Ut •1 lost lo Mlcnl9•n St•I•, II 10
IOI/ IO'JI IOOIHo Sl•lt, II 10
' UI"" U•·•l 10,I 10 8rlQM m Younv.
9S-1'
10 ltMOSH (20-IJ lo" 10 Mlutu1ppl
•• 11
I I Wike Fore•I C1l·41 l>UI Cltmson.
IO·l 1, ltKI lo N....U. CMolln• st.SI
11 Horth C.rohna (H II O.at Nortn
C•rollna St-. 69-54, l>H I WeU Forni,
SI SI. IMl•IMtry~.•1 .0 1l UCLA c ... !Ifft W.s11tnv1on St.ti• s••so; _, W•lfllnvton, '1·11
"· lndl.na 121-•1 bHI llllnol\, 6• .. ; bHI
MIC111"1' Slel•, .....
t5 Arkan'" <21·11 Iott to Tu••, l t·lt.
1' llllnob (10-IJ Iott to lndlena, •• ...
DUI Nort-il•m, ... ,.
11 L .... SYlll• 121 .. -· Vtro1n11 Te<ll, 11 .... .,.., Clncm nau, 4J·l l
II, lrl...,., Your19 121 .. J Met Ulell, t~7'.
It W.,omiflo O~S) !Mlet Air F6'Ce, .....
Mat NtYeci9-YJ Ve911, tl·IO. ,o, Meryl-UO·tl llHI OuJtt. '6'SJ; -·
Vtrelnle ., .. ,, 1°"1 to Non" Gerollna, •t..O.
~
I '
... .
'
HCOfilO GA.Ma
U('lrvttw t • .._,IMM 1
P .... t~ (110 000 I l ) I
UC Irv,... 001 112 1' S 1 t w1 .... _,.._ <•> 1>114 k"-'• wi.utoo.
eft4 v w re . w -w i.ta100 CH I. 1.-w,. ... H -Moor• (f'llOtl $011nd), GlltMlt (UC
trvlna). SB-Glick (IJC 1,.,,rntl . t-IR-$10-11
1 IUC trY!N).
~KOt•• Ar Ilona Si.te IS, UCLA S
Ct lllor111• I, IJSC t
DevlaCup
NO .. ·lOHAl
l•IC.rl ..... I
u111t .. si.1 .. J, M9aic• 2
l11191fl l't1W1tl
Roscoe T.tNWr (US.I det JO<IJOI L.otano
lMUl,ol. 4-3, .. ,. •·l , Jolln M<Enrot IU s I
CHI Aeul Rem1re1, • 4, •·l, •~
<•t luri<ll, Swlltffl•ndl
CndltllnKll J, Swlturt•Old 1
Tom•s Smid l<:Ltchoslov•ltlel oet He1n1
Guenltwirdl, 7·S, 4·2, a.4. <•I ,.,...,.,,.,.,, w .. 1 O•rm•nr I
Ar,...llM ), .... o..-m ... y 1
Guillermo Viii\ CAr99nlln•l <let UH Pin
ner, 3-6. 1•. • ), 1 • Roll O..nr1n9 cwesi
C.erm•n11 def Jote Lu•• ClfrC, o·I, •••• ),
t I
•• , Lyon, Fr•..c•I
AU\IUll• l , Fr•ftO 1
Pet•• MtN•m••• 1 Austr•ll•) clef Pasc•I
Portos, o 3, •~. & 2. Vann1ci< Noah (F,.1101
dt• K•m Warw1ca, & 1, I S, 10-1
C•t lrit11to11, E 119t111d J
8rtUl11 l, IUly 1
Buoer MottrMI IBnl••nJ Gel Corr-
9.,.,zutto ... 3. 1>·1 6 1 Adrtdno P•IWll•
111a1y) ,,., Ai<Nird Ltw1s, • •. • 1, 6 1
Ronwnl• l. Br,.11 1
(al IYC.,.•Oll, Rom•nl•I
Florin Seoarce•nu tf~oman•af dtf
I homes t<ocn. ••. o l. I S, •·C., o o c .-1os
.C.1tm•yr t8,•1•U CS.f Andrt1 Otuu o J b 0
Swect.ft }1 J•P-•" O
C•I 'l'•Of>•m•, J•,..,.I
Per HJertqu1sl tSweotn, dt t T\uyO\n1 • •.
• 1 •• o. l<Jtll JOh•n\\Ofl ISwr ot-nl o~t
~h•<Jevu•• N11noo, • 1, 3 "· • 1. • 1 ..... Z.Hllnd 5, Sovlll Kon• 0
'C•I ~I, Soul!\ Kor••l
Cnr1\ Lt:wt\ CNew lfdictnd~ dPt Jf'Of\
Cl>•n11 DH • 1. o •. I s. Aui>ell )1moson
IN•• lUtdndl O.t Jeon Yeon9 Oet o 2
•••• 0
Cllottl. Col-bt11
C•I 8-1<1, Colom1>111
A1c•roo A<utW C.otomb••I dt"t Jo\f Al~
t•ndro Corlt\. 8 o ts l. • • Ala.rt J1nu·ntl
C(OJOmb1a1 df:'t 8etou\ PraJOUA 1 I I Pr•
1ou• rf'ltreddue to "nee tn1urv1
WCT tournement
(II S1l11bury, Md.I
Stnf11H Forwl\
8itl Sc.~'°'1 dfof V11•Y Arnr•lr•1 l 0 t 1.
• •, l •• ·~ Men'• tournement <•t De11ver1 ~l ... losFllWll
Gen• M.l~r def John S..dn . I>·' • •
Women'• tournament
C•llnGle ...... )
~., .. Fltwh
M•rt1~ N•vr•lllOv• «Mf Andre• JtM'l'ft
••• 0
lnvener, Cla11k:
lat U..rNH, ftle.J
Tom 1(11•. ~.000 6 ......... ,
J.c.a NiO'-, P!,400 U -1Wt-4ol
Cur11• S1ranve. U0.400 .... , ... ,s
Andr 8"n, $1l.100 ••-11 ....
L•rry l~IH $ ll.100 •S .. 11 n
CMrltt Coody $10,0S ., 11·10-6'
Johnny Molle•. $10,•,S 1010 && n
H•lf Irwin, ,,,JOO 10 .~ •' 61 Jertw Pa1e. \I, 100 lo bS·l1·"8
Merk O't.Var•. S8.100 11 ,. 60 69
L•nce HUI""" \8, too " ..... ,
M•U Oonald J) 100 171111 01
L ton.,d T-..p...,., U .100 /I II 10 o•
Motr1\ H•t•ls.ky '~ 100 ., 1110 10
Tom PurtHr ,)./00 11 "6 /I IJ
Sob Murplly, U,100 II ... , I) R•v Floyd, ,S,100 1164 "8·/J
Gil Morgan, '4.SOO 11 ol 11 II
Fr4nk Conner. U,SIO 13-13·1>8 .q
Gibby Gllti.rt. '3.SIO •4 7).11 10
Douq h -11. '3 SIO 10 ,, 12-10
::i~~,f~~ U SIO
13 /)., 10
o9 II /I /1
Don Poot~. U.l'J 11 17.13 ..
Fr.O Couple.. U ,l'IJ ,. .a n 10
Ron Stre<.k. U .J'l 11 IS .. 10 1(~11n Fer;us, U,l'J 11 10 61 IS ~~~~: ~~~~i>!:1~ ,860 1•101101 IJ.10 13 &4 Terry Ottlll, $1.ll>O 77121011
Tommy Aaron, \1,k$ ll 14 1111
M•r• Hayl'\. '1.866 /I 11 11 I]
Jonn FOU9hl. '1,t6lo /Jollll•
Jim Simon\ '' 164 ll l}.b\ I• Scott Hoen.,,_.., TS-61 I• 10 ~~~~<f;1~;~ .... I•"' IJ 10 I• &4 II 12
J ee It Newlon, '1 ••• /] 10 ., ,.
Grt9 Po-r>. SI, 110 1'·11 IS 61 Jim Nellord. '1, 110 I ]·II ,, 70
Gtoroe Burn>, ''·''0 10 IS 1110 Ed Sn••d, '1. 110 11·/l ID ll G•rr Ko<h, St 110 7111 &811
LPGA
Cil Tuoonl
Nan<Y L-1 -11on s1s llO 10 ,, ....
Pal B••dtey Sl1.2SO 11 11 11 t i
Mrr• Vdn H~• ~ ISO ,. 10 10 n
JoAnne <:arntr Mo,lSO 1• ll 1l&7
Aile• Miller $1,000 l•ll/2 04
P•llV Hayl'\ '4,l/S Tl 11 13 12
Allee R1luNn '4.000 131)lt/t
P•m H199ms, Sl.SOO 18 10 1310
... mr AleOll $3 S00 13111)12
t<ethy WM -Ill n.•.a I• IHJ-10
Donn• Cac>onl U,f>AO 13 l•·ll II
J•ntt Co•tt U,f>AO 1• n 1112
J•nfl Alo Sl.MO IS-10-111]
J•n SltoNtnSOtl $2,o•O "10 12 n S•ndr• Ha'(l\tf\2,0U 1)-1• 1' /J
Ar•ko Ou moto Sl.IOO 1'·11-1111
Judy Clerk '2.IOO "·'>-" n l•rwr• Moaneu 11,IOO IHI·•• 13
Sente AnHa
SUNOAY'S ltl!SULTS
21'
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111
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111
111
21'
2llO
290
1tO
111 ,.,
211
111
Il l ,,,
192
ltJ
113
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11S ''" Z86 ,.. ,..
Z86
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1•1 281 181
111
Jtl
196
111
1118
18'1 m
1'1
2'1 m
1'13 m m
143
1'•
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2'1
US"' et 17 INJ ....,.......,._ ,,. .. 111111
First rKt Wl-'l Turbulence CMcC.r
r onl 7.60, • 10, 1.'10. Fros ty Altair
C O.itllOllUlyo), II .a. 6 .0, Wln11m £•riv
CM<H••-1, l .0 s.,_ rK• lnctOUon CPl'1Uy Jr I,
1.20, 2.10, 2 . .0, Pr-II•• CVeklMffOI. u oo. uo. 511«1 s.11 tH-tey>. 7 ... u .i.1 IV doulll• ,,. 11 INlkl t 14.M.
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10.111\ousw r•I. UO, UO, UI; •· luMy
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(MtC•rronl. l 60.
F'Olll'UI r--t..ttfNll .... (l"lfl(ty Jr,), • "°· uo. uo ...... --"·"""'>· s .a, 160, Al Y-.. ._.(~),4M. ""'"rec._,,..,.. ("-'le), tt.•. 1 .,,
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HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULES
Irvine
Sat , Mercn 14 lrvtne lnv•t•llon•I
Set . Mereh 11 El Oor...io lnvtl•llon•I
Thurs , Mereh 16 El Toro· (110mtl
Thur\ , AP< 11 1 •I E)tanc"'
Set ' April • N0<eo Re .. vs
Tllurs . April 'I CorONI oel M•r" 1110-1
Set , A1><1I II Or..,,Ql' Counly 1nv11a11on.1
llM1Hi0nVleJO
S•t., April 18 Arccld•a tnvlt•Uon•t
Thurs . Ap;ll 13 at Co••• Mesa·
Thurs . Aprll 30 University' Tues , ,.,,.Y ~ L••o~ pretlm!. •t tr.,1ne
Hl911
f-rt • ,,,,_,.y I Le~ ttn•H •t lr..,•n• H1Qtl
0-lt\ S.• Voew Leavue du•I mn t
All dU•I ,,_ts •t 3 IS
Laguna Beach
Tllur\., Mtrth 11 '"I E•l•nc II
Tues . Merell II S.n Olml\ (110mt )
Thurs , Merell 1& La9una Hiiis' ( 110mol
Mer<ll 17·11 UQllNI ~.ell Tropl>y -
Tllu" , Aprll 1 •I D•IW Hllll"
Tnur\, Aprll' Sin Cl.,mente• CllOmo)
Thurs., April 13--C•PlllrlftO V•ll•r ·
lllomel w.., . 4'prll H -.tt Mlulofl v1e1o·
Tues., M.ly ~u-P"9llm1 •I ~
Beacl'I
Fri. Mo I L•~ue fin.tis •I 1..1-
BN t ll
• ---c oes1 u eow d ... , _
All d .... _el1:JO
Mann•
• .., .. ~ 11-U...• (-)
Thur._, Mtrcll lt-CYPf'H' (l'lonwl
Tllurt., M.treh 14-Founttln Vall•y' ,_,
Thurs., April 1 M Huntinvton lie.ell•
fllUf'S., Alltll •-N--1 H•rbor• CllOlnel
Tllurs , April tl et Wtttmln11er•
Wed • Aprll H at Edi'°"•
Tue\, May s Lt-Vue prel1m1 •I Hunl·
•nQton Bo.en Fri , M/Jv & l..H Qut ltn•IS •t HuntlnQlon
Beech
denoltt,Sun..,t Leavue Ou•I meet
A.II ov•l nw.I\ a t l IS
NHL
WALE!> CONFERENCE
HOf'tlS D1v"i9"
Mon1rtt1
l(J119•
Pltt•bu19n Hanford
Detroit
W L T GF GA Pis.
JI 1' 10 211 1'3 14
ll 11 ~ 118 HJ 83 11 JI ~ JU 298 ~l
ts lJ lo 1•8 Jll s'
1• )1 II 104 2"3 11
Ad•m' OIVlllOft
Bulf•lo J' IS 19 1•1 10J ll
M•M>t\Ola JO n IS 2'3 216 IS
Bo.ion JI 1S 11 l•I 1lli 1J
Ou•.,.< 13 JO I) lSJ 112 19
Toronto 73 l• 10 16' JIO S6
CAMPBELL CONFEAENCE
P•trf(.~ OiYll lOft
NV l\l~nd•rs J9 11 II ]99 111 89
Ph1l•dtlpn1a JI /I 10 Ill 21' 114
CalQar r JO 11 " 1/J 10 80
NV R•"9<'" I• 11 17 1"' lll 00
W••h•n91on 20 .lO ·~ 2J4 710 S.. Sm•th• D 1•il l°'" • St LOUI\
Cn1c4IQO
v•ncovvPt
Edmonton
Colorado
W1nn1oeo
•• 1l .. JO• 716 9-
11 71 " JS9 2n 61 1• 71 II l4J 1'8 &S
11 )J 11 110 181 S6
19 JI 10 ]IS 191 ..
8 .. 11 20'I Jll 18
1t-C:l1ncne-d d1v1,1on lltlt s .. nday•s S<WOI
I( IRI \ • W•l'W'l•PfO 1
St LOVIS I Colorado 0
80\ton _., VMtCOU"tr t
8ull•lo8. Ph•l&delphl• •
CalQl'V s. HMllOrd.
Wa\hir~otof" 1. loronro l
P1l11bUr911 •. Edmonlon •
Oetroit • New 'Ya<k R•n~f\ •
C1>1u90 l. ~btC 2
Tenl"1l'1G•mt
Montrt•I •I M inne.sot•
King• 4, Jet• 1
score by "-rlod•
First Peri ..
I I 1 '
0 0 ' '
Los Anvtle>, St L•urent • IH•rtlll. I H
Pen •1t1f1 (reOlfrton Win, l 10. l•rr•on,
LOii. S 11 L.ew11. L.A. 19 1'
So<Olld P•rtod
1. lo• Anvel•~. 01onno so c H•'"'· Ko,.c»
I ., P•NlllH L.ewlt. LA, 1 ". 1..ono. Win, 6 06, L. Murphy, LA, 1.19 PienttrY.
Win, 11.14
T~lrd p.,1 ..
) L.o• Angfltl FO• .. (ICOrlb, J eMOnl.
'' 1J • WlnnlDeG. Dupont JS C8abyell), 11 SI S Lot Angtlfl, Olon11e )I IM
MurPl\11. 1' "· P.IWlllH N-. Sllolt on goel LO'J An90IH IS 11 ti.3'
WlnnlpctO • II 1·12 Go•llH Los Angelo, Lenerd. W111
111..,.9, Mllttuon. A -n,ffl
Misc.
Kerr wiris Tri-island
By ALMON LOCKABIY
0.11, ...... ....-....~
LOS ANGELES Temerity, lk!ppered by T. W.
Kerr. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, Newport Buch.
scored a clean 1weep in Loi An&tles Yacht Club's
158-mUeTrt.lsland rue Sunday, fWabln:a tbe courH
ln 31 hours for Une honors and neet and Class A wins
on corrected time.
The normally rugged race, leavln& S1ota
Barbara, Catall.Qa and San Clemente islands to port.
turned into a •·weekend cruise·' this year wllh winch
so Ugbt at limes that several yachts dropped out and
motored home.
Tbe Trl·lsland race is for yachts rated under the
International Offshore Rule CIOR> handicap
system. It started Friday afternoon and the first
yachts finished early Sunday.
Cats Pajamas
takes Bogart
LA VC alto sent a fleet of Performance Handicap
Racing Fleet ( PHR F ). Midget Ocean Racl..na Ctua
C MORC> and Small Boat Ocean Ract.na AJ.lodatioa
<SBORA> o!f Saturday In the 40-mlle raee to Shlp
Rock. Cat.allna l a land and return.
Overall PHRF winner, aaillnf ln tbe Lot Anaeles
rrlmea Trophy Series was Temper, co .. lrlppered by
Joe Smith and Ray Booth, Balboa VachtClub.
MORC wlnner ln the I.JtUe Whitney S.rtes was JS ad News, Stan Sorensen, Alamitos Bay Y aebt Club. m BOA TING
and 'the SBORA winner in the Todd Pacific Series
was Ginger Ale, sailed by Andy Ayale, ABYC.
Class winners:
IOR·A -Temerity, T.W. Kerr, BCYC; 2. Sistet
Divine. Delfino-Gayner, LAYC; 3. Illusion, Ed
M<.'DoweU , KHYC.
IOR·B 1. Hurrah, BUI Blakesley, LA YC; 2
Audacious, Mike Kennedy, LA YC ; 3. Trix, DAMP
Sy ndicate, CBYC.
fOR-C -Wiley Coyote, John Messenger,
KHYC: 2. Tonka, A. Hibbs, Ana YC ; 3. Stinger. Mike
Wathen,CapoBYC.
PHRF·A 1. Timber Wolf. Larry Harvey,
Cats Pajamas, skippered by Carl Last was t he Q!.YC: 2. Cannibal, C.A. Oerivas, LSF; 3. Colloquy,
Class A winner in Voyagers Ya<.'ht Club's double· p ank Dair, CBYC.
barreled Humphrey Bogart Series Saturday and PHRF·B l Temper, Smith·Booth, BYC: 2.
Sunday. ; Doshwacker, Al Nelson. LSF; Hot Rum, Castillon-
Last won the race from Newport to Catali"" ·:Sellars. KHYC
Island on Saturday a nd the race from Catalina).~' PHR F -C 1. Tomara, Doug a nd Tom
Newport on Sunday. · .~ v-Jorgensen, LA YC: 2. Orange Blossom , M L. Kinney .
The Bogart Series features two classes . ·.' LBYC: 3. Windy, Don and Dave Michaelis, ABYC.
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts, tw9 -r MORC 1. Bad News . Stan Sorensen, ABYC; 2.
classes rated under the Southern Ocean Racing Kahuna, Mark Brewer , CYC , 3. Too Hip, Fuller·
Division ($ORD) handicap syste m. and Ocean Rae-Frost-Fuller . ABYC
ingCatamarans. . SBORA l. Ginger Ale, Andy Ayale, ABYC; 2.
Results of the <.'al amaran division wer e not Quic ksilver , Bob Newsome. LAYC ; 3. Hardtack.
available because they sailed so fast on the return Jim Neary, WCYC
race that they bea t the committee boat to the finish
line.
Newport to CataUna Saturday
PHRF·A l. Cats Pajamas , Carl Last, VYC; 2. Sniall turnout Jedi Master, Bruce Hansen, VYC ; 3. Le Boat. Don Le
Beau,BCYC
PHRF B l Quest, Roger Gooding, VYC ; 2
Avanti II, Fred Masino. VYC. 3. Aloha II . Glenn
Reed ,S.SYC
SORO A 1. Shockwave. Kneist -Winkelmann.
for One-desi~ ·
SSYC-VYC; 2 Redbne, Vern Mathisson, VYC. 3. An
di a mo, Bob Sodaro, BYC.
SORO-B 1. Ojarv. Dan Nordstrom. SSYC: 2.
lnnole, Hank Humann, BYC, 3. Celebration, J an
Fleugge,S.SYC.
Catalina lo Newport Sunday
PHRF-J\ 1. Cats Pajamas, Carl Last , VYC; 2.
Jedi Master, Bruce Hansen, VYC : 3. Macko, Larsen·
Peterson, BYC
PHRF·B
Crest , Roger
Masino, VYC
1. Firecrest. Pat Glazier VYC , 2
Gooding, VYC. 3 Avant1 II , Fred
SORO-A 1. Runaway II .J ohn Wieble, VYC : 2.
Andiamo, Bob Sodaro, BYC. 3 Momentum. Peter
Tong,S.SYC .
SORD·B -1. Yo-Ho-Ho, Ken Roge rs, VYC: 2.
Wild Child, Lee Armstrong. VYC. 3. Celebration,
Jan Fleugge,S.SYC.
Navratilova beats
Jaeger handily
Seventy boats in 10 classes showed up on-in·
side and outside startin~ lines Saturday and Sun·
day for Balboa Yacht Club's One-design Regatta.
Several sm all boat classes did not sail on Sun-
day because or the quarantine or the harbor due to
the sewage spillage from a broken line und~r
Pacific Coas t Highway which poured more than a
million gallons or raw sewage into the bay and sur-\
rounding beaches .
La rgest class s ailing cours es outside the
ha rbor was the Etchells 22 with 17 entries. The
winner was Close Encounters, co-skippered by
Tim Hogan and Jim Warmington, Newport Harbor
Yacht Club. Second was Spirit, sailed bv Scott
Ramser, NHYC, and third was Shy, Don Bever
Southwestern Yacht Club, San Diego.
Trophy winners in other classes:
THISTLE l Jubilant, 8-0b Ball. BYC
STAR I Trigger Happy II , Trygve Lil
j esstrand. CYC, 2. Yemaya, Hellsten·Svenson. eve.
SANTANA-20 -Looney Tunes, Harry Pat·
tason, NHYC: 2 BulJit, Dick Brown, BCYC.
Ll00·14A L Gary Thome. BCYC; 2 Mark
Gaudio, BCYC.
Ll00-148 1. Will Longyears, LIYC.
ADULT SABOT 1 Jackie Smiley. BYC.
SABOT A 1. JeH Gould, BYC; 2. Dean
F ulton, S.SYC; 3. Cassandra Smeltzer, N HYC. I
• I
INGLEWOOD <AP>
Top-seeded Marti na
Navratilova needed only
one hour to defeat 15
year -old Andre a Jaeger
6·4, 6-0 Sunday and win
the singles title of the
Avon Cha mpio nships or
Los Angeles.
Dee rfield, Fla.; th e
Colgat e semifinals in
Washington. D.C .. and
the Avon Kansa s City
Cin a ls in January
SABOT B & C 1 Enc Proul, BYC. 2. Kevin
Whitehouse, BYC. ~· ~ \
Navratilova, who lost
to Jaeger the last three
tim es she raced her,
earned $.10,000 for the vic-
tor y . J ae ge r . th e
tourney's No. 3 seed. took
hom eS15,000
Sue Barker of Great
Britain later tea m ed with
Ann Kiyomura to defeat
Marita Redondo and
Mar een Louie. 6·1. 4-6, 6· l
and capture the doubles
championship The win
ners shared $11 ,000.
Jae g er d e r ea t e d
Navratilo va i n the
semifinals last year in
Lo p ez
• post s win
in Tucso n
Navratilova opened
Sunday's first game with
a service ace and won at
with an ace.
There we re fi ve service
breaks in the first set.
with Navratilova break-
ing J aeger's service in
the final game when
Jaeger hit a backhand
lob lonJ?.
The second set was
over in 25 minutes a!'
Navratilova took <.'om
m and with her serve· and
volley game.
·'I knew what I had to
do." Navratilova said af-
terwa rd. "I had a plan.
which was to hit short.
low balls . I didn't let her
get into her rhythm.
·'Today I changed the
tactic. J knew I'd beat her
sooner or later ."
Jaege r sa id that
Na vratilova "played bet ·
ter this match than the
othe r ma tches and it
brought up he r c on
fidence and brought mine
down. She didn't even
h ave to serve well to·
Dana Point series I
w on by Tlwmpson 1
Mackinat'. Class B entry sailed by Wes
Thompson, Capistrano Bay Yacht Clu b, was the
over all wmner in the first race or Dana Point
Yacht Club's Dana Point Series Sunday. The
series is for yachts rated under the Pe rformance
Handicap Racing Fleet handicap system .
Sunda y's race was sailed in brisk winds and
ri al seas off Dana Point Ha rbor. Trophy winners :
OVERALL l. Mackinac; 2. Valkyrie. Bill
Murray. Capo BYC; 3. Bold Forbes, Ed Cummins.
OPYC.
CLAS.S A I. O.W. Harold. Tom Hill, DPYC :
2 Baltic, Roger Ritzdorf-J . Soltwedel. BYC ; 3.
Dark Star, Randy DeVore. Capo BYC: 4. Magic
Light, Hobie Alter, OPYC.
CLASS B 1. Mackinac. Wes Thompson,
Capo BYC; 2. Valkyrie, Bill Murray, Capo BYC; 3.
Rock N Roll , J eff Rogers. DPYC; 4. Martinique,
Dave Cooper, Capo BYC.
CLAS.S C 1. Horizon Job, Joe Fletcher,
OPYC: 2. The Vulgar Boatman, Hugh Curran,
DPYC: 3. Firedrill, Mike Reardon. Capo BYC; 4.
Claire de Lune, Paul Frazier, DPYC.
CLAS.S D 1. Bold•Forbes. Ed Cummins ,
DPYC: 2. Sunshine, Ron Malan osky, DPYC; 3.
Breakaway, Gary Allen, DPYC;.~4. Daybreak, Bob 1TUCSON <AP> -Nan· Gates, Capo BYC.
c y Lopez· Me Ito n a t-1~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._ __ ;;;;;;;;;;;;--;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
day."
tributed her victory Sun-
day in the first annual
Arizona Copper Classic
Ladies Professional Golr
Association tournament
to some aggressiveness
on the greens.
"I felt l played well
today and w as ag-
gressive with my pulls,"
she said. "I didn't play
conservatively. I wanted
to win with birdies.''
Lopei-Melton had 19
birdies in the 72·bole
tourney. She s bot a 68
Sunday to lake the title
by four s~es over run-
ner ·UP Pat Bradley.
Bradley and JoAnne
Carner both shot round.s
of 67 Sunday to set a new
course record at the
par·73, 303·yard Ran·
dolpb North Municipal
links. ~&·Melt.on bad
orl1lna.Uy broken the
record with a 88 on
Saturcta.y. it wu Lopea·Melton's
nr1t victory 00 tbe 1881
tour in alx ouUnp and
earned her '1 ... 750.
Lo pet· Melton led
tb.roqbout tbe tou.mey,
wbicb wu plaaued by
wtnd, rain and co
weather.
SEE D EFENDING CHAMPION NANCY LOPEZ,
A ND ALL OF THE LPGA GRE ~TS AT T H E
... ~· $175,000 . .. , , .. ...
WOMEN'S KEMPER OPEN
MARCH 25-29
MESA VERDE COUNTRY CLUB ,
COSTA MESA, CA.
S t a s o n· T I c k e t s
Dally Adm issi on
(:lub. House Badges
$12 .00
$ 8 .00
·$50 .00
I
TICKET INFORMAT ION: 540-1708
Io
!·
t i i
t
,..
FOILt'
c1ac111
"I'm trying to practice my reading but Doly
won't listen."
MABMADIJKE by Brad Anderson
0
0
00 ~p,,l
"My red shooter Is missing!"
IUDGE PARK EB
NOW, REMEM~ER ... A!J MY LAWYER,
YOU'VE &EN TOl..D THI=> IN 6TRICT
WHEN THE ~ERGEANT CONFIDE.NCE! THAT'!) MY MONEY
15 CAL.LEO FROM lHf ~E RAN OH WITH!
INTERROGATION ROOM,
TIM lEL.~ 6AM DRIVER
THAT JEANNlftl CAltRY·
INCi A60\IT t ~. 000
IN HER WIT~E.'
tf.AlllOtP
1i1 Pj.Q"<
MISS PEACH
trtA, YOLA~ ~~Aoes TH1~ YEA~
HAVE eeeN VE~Y POO~. L'O L.IKE
TO !1EE ~t::>IA~ P.A~Ni~.
c:-
MOON MIJLLIN8
.JOGGING ®
AGAI~?
~I
ACAOSS
1F...,., 5,.,.,,,,
9Pfotlee
14 Snlll
15 LIMen~
18 Author 8t'tl
17 lnjur1oUI
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82 lnlttuct
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14 M.int rllOl'1:
2wordt
M Mr. Pllmlr
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890eftme
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24Nollll ....... vv.w 44•• ••
bV Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
...,;; 880E
.. , hit• Mondlp."
I DENNIS TRE MEN A«;E Hank Ketchum
/ /
/ I
"It's COLD out here, Mr. Wllson l Can;t we talk
about It beln' me again from In THERE?"
by Harold Le Doux
by Mell Lazarius
Ce~AI NL.~ ~IJC . l 'L.L-
"rAl(c ~OMe ~NAP5HO'i~
i'Hl-!1 VEEY EVENlflJ(i.
D
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
-......... -""' ··-----·-
NAN«;Y
I WONDER IF
NANCY IS STILL
MAD AT
ME
GORDO
I'LL TAKE A
CHANCE AND
C)ROP OVER
FUNKY ttlNKEBBEAN
~.q
by Ernie Bushmiller
BEWARE
UNFRIENDLY ~1<10 ·----I
c•-·-.-...
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
Grooming Tips What t;o do if a rabbit
sits on your nose ...
or, how to get rid of
unwanted facial hares!
DBABBLE
l.M ... 1'o 1'lol~ &E.sf Of
M-4 ltf.lOU.f.C:flON, I
CAN '"f ftf.MO'\SE.~.
I ~AV£ NO r1.J~'flt£R
1"HIS 19 l!!XCl1"1 NG/ Yl!!S1"1!!F'PAY .:t WAS ON~Y A CASHll!!~
IN A CHINl!!ISI!
"9S'TAU"AN"T" .'
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EGG! Yoo'RE.
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9
by Kevin Fagan
14£'1, &t'f 1'14~1' CAMf:RA IA>e'flE P1.A'41Mu 1'14£ our o~ M FA'£ H "401'1\£ vttt~10~ or
TH\S \SR
PERFECTLY
GOOD~,
MICHAEL. I
WANT NO
OOMMIHTS.
""O ~IN\J'ftS~
by Lynn Johnston
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t
By &OBE&T OSJIOl.NS ""'....,..... . ..,.,. Tbere'1 nothinl blatanUy wron& wit.It
tJaivertal'a "All Nlaht Loot" that aaot.ber
1et1lon ..,...... the c11Un1 table couldn't
bave remedied.
But that cuUnc faux pas -enll1tln1
Barbra Streiland u a cooln1 blonde sex·
POt who la tbe ehlek1t •Y«Ye>ae on ber
block ls cbutn1 -makes tbil Leon¥d
Goldberg-Jerry Weintraub production,
atarrlna Gene Hackman, much more of a
curlosJty ite1n than tbe low-key little
Capraesque comedy tt obviously set out to
be.
NOT THAT STR EISAND isn't good,
within the seams of her lll-fittint role. She
tries. She also plays it straight, as a lead·
in& lady rather than as a star (for the rec-
ord. Ws is the first lime she has taken
second billing in her 14-year, 12.film
screen career, havlng replaced Lis~
t Eichhorn early in production).
spends lb years ta ll)aDl,.IMllt .tth a
large drue store concern, only to be de·
moted to nltht manaaer ot one of the
company's all-nlabt stores (thus lbe Utle).
He gell' UtUe sympathy at home from wife
Diane Ladd and JOO DennlJ Quaid, the lat·
ter a teen·aaer with muscles everywhere,
especially between bis ean.
lo pnf9f aan1er comedy la their rum.a.
Jeaa·Claude Tramoat, makln1 Illa
Ameriean direetori.a1 debut. bu added a
dfflded Freneb navor, a.w.s by Pbllip
Latbrop'a darkttb elaematotraJ)by and a
t11bt mualc acore composed by Ira
Newborn and Richard Haurd. ,
W. D. lllcbter's screenplay has mu)'
merry momenta, tspetlally when ln· vest1111lnc Hack.man's nl(htl on duty at
the bis st.ore, but lt Itta unneceaaarlly
va1ue In the later development of rela-
tioaahlpe and characters. Streisand, In·
ltially palnted 111; a bona-fide tootsie
becomes quite straight aa the reels roli
ahead (with little explanation) just a~
Quaid'a knucltleheaded characte r ts
abruptly dropped.
Watching the 'Birdie' A• WI•••-..
She has also adopted a new look, drop·
ping lhe familiar Harpo Marx hairstyle
with a close-cut rtaxen wig, and speaking
in a softer, lower, slower voice than usual.
It doesn't work. however, not for a frame,
since this is clearly a role geared for a
Valerie Perrine, Loni Anderson or Raquel
Welch. and decidedly outside the kind of
pasture in which Streisand functions best.
In theory. the story revolves around
Hackman as a good-natured schmoe who
HACKMAN'S T&OUBLES have only
started. Ladd nass because of bia new
lower-Jeve1 job. The store ls filled with a
flaky staff and welJ'do customers. On top
of lb.at, be discovers his soo ia havln1 an
affair with Streisand, the wife of a distant
relative, Kevin Dobson, who's a fireman
too often out on caJJ. In the process of at·
tempting to squelch the affair, Hackman
becomes entangled with Streisand himself,
and all hell breaks loose, including a
divorce, a final confrontation with "lhe
establishment" and a (happy? l ending.
It all plays comfortably, althoush
perHaps a bit pedestrian for the majority
of today's hard-core moviegoers who seem
THE ACflNG CAN'T be faulted in most
departments. Hackman is right on target
in the focal role, Ladd is properly subdued
and dellgbUul as the suffering wife, and
Quaid ls $ensational in his early scenes as
Junior (so dense he refers to an uncle's
death as tbe result of ''braJn hemor·
rhoids"). Dobson, considering the way his
role ls defined, is fine, as are William
Daniels, Vemee Watson, Steve Peterman,
Chris Mulkey and aJI the others.
The film may make bucks because of
Streisand's name on the marquee, but it
wilr probably gain its greatest fame as a
prime example of how not lo cast a motion
picture.
Li.za Minnelli (right) embraces Donald O'Connor while Chita
Rivera gets a hug from her daughter, Lisa Mordante backstage
3:rter O'Connor and Miss Rivera opened in the Broad~ay produc-
tion or "Bring Back Birdie," a sequel to "Bye Bye Birdie " in
which Miss Rivera also starred. ' '
Dolly's '9 to 5' rebounds to no. I
By Tbe Associated Press
The following are Billboard's hot record hits
for this week as they appear in Billboard
magazine·
HOT SINGLES
1. "9 lo 5" Dolly Parton <RCA>
2. "Keep oo Loving You " REO Speedwagon
(Epic>
3 .. "Woman" John Lennon <Geffen)
4. "The Best of Times" Styx <A&M)
5. "I Love a Rainy Night" Eddie Rabbit
<Elektra>
6. "Crying" Don McLean (Millennium)
7. "Rapture" BIQndie <Chrysalis)
8 . ·'The Winner
Takes it All" Abba TOPS IN POPS (Atlantic>
9. "Hello Again"
Neil Diamond (Capitol)
10. "Celebration"
Kool & the Gang (De-Lite>
TOP LPS
,1. "Hi Infidelity" REOSpeedwagon <E pic>
-.. -11t11G •• , "SJUU_ ... ~. _ .... -....... "--'"' oll'f'" "A~~ ........ ; ...
EL TORO
IOWAllO.aAllCk.La•eot 8• '~~0
WESTMINSTER
UAWll-1VllllALL ..,.._
COSTA MESA
UJo. M>VTMCOUT
ORANGE
STAOIUMDNVllN
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
NINE
TO FIVE <PG> ..... ... __ _
I "THE JAz:Z
_ SINGER" !PG) .
'~ · ... ;..,. I "FOAT.APACHE
THE BRONX" 1111
I "ALL NIGHT ... ~~.~-o;· !:~ • I "FANTASIA"
I !CC:t:E
"ALTERED
STATES"<RI
6
"INCREDIBLE
. SHRINKING WOMAN"
··THE NUDE BOMB"
c : : ) I "THE DEVIL
& MAX DEVLIN"
"HERO AT LARGE" tl'GI ' .. ~ ~ I "RAGING BULi7' 1111
"FOAT APACHE"
f ""'••~ I "TRIBUTE"
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"
(Ill
c..:;... ~ -....... I "COAL MINER'S
DAUGHTER"
"SMOKEY 11··
"··· .. ~NY wJi1err
WAY YOU CAN"
"HONEYSUCKLE
2. "Paradise Theater" Styx (A&M J
3. "The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond (Capitol)
4. "Double Fantasy" John Lennon & Yoko Ono
<Geffen)
5. "Zenyatta Mondatta" The Police <A&M )
6 . "Cri mes or Passion" Pat Benatar
IC h rysa1is )
7. "Autoamerican" Blondie <Chrysalis>
8. "Greatest Hits" Kenny Rogers (Liberty>
9. "Captured" Journey (Columbia>
10. "Celebrate" Kool & the Gang (De.Lite>
Redford film slated
TORONTO CAP> Robert Redford has signed
for the lead in a movie to be based loosely on the ex·
periences of the man who will produce it -Canadian
Robert Cooper.
Tentatively titled "Off the Record," it will deal
with television's power and the Ufeof a broadcaster,
said Cooper, who for five years starred in the Cana·
dian Broadcasting Corp. television series "Om-
budsman.''
YOU'RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE
THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH.
EYEWIJ'llESS
~ ~·-•~«.-. r-J .
~~NOWPLAYING ~~
CllTAD ._.mft -Bristol Wntbroo~ Stadium Dnve·ln
(114) ~ 7444 <714) 530·4401 (114) 639·8770 ... Woodbftct,. (714) 551·0655
•a=-~-~~~~l' ... SlAn Cit M AllT•---AMEAICAN POP 1•1
u •. , •.• •·•:m·••· ~·· ..._.,.,..a ..,.,......, ... ,.,.._,.,.••
'"--WALT OISNEY'S ••-
FANTASIA 101 ~ Fa<.ulty
11CMl4'•-l1J1Ul·OIO tJ••t••t•·L••ttM
a.AllQAIM Hltell ..,_ ~"I.At "f& 141 ,... ti•
-~9""-----::F:-1<-u"'.".ll-y--,. M.,. l<ACC-..,. •-..._,,..
,, ~ • ...,.., ALL NIGHT LONG 1111
?lltSJt·•WO t •·•••·-·••· •••
MOtllUTWO flu.._.~ AWAA:OI
"TESS"I~) .......... , ......... ·-
F«ull' ·--· at C--FOl'IT Alt ACHE, THE al'IONX .. ,
11l/Ut.fll0 u .. · *''" •• • •11 · •••
"THf Ol'lfAT SANTINI" I~)
.,....,.. ..... , .... 11 ....
"l'IAGINO aUU" (l'I) .,..,.. , ... , ......... .
.0..,.. , ..... .. .............. ,,,.
IUltOAf •r-•·••• ... •l tt
, • .,.,...., ...... , •• °""', ......
MANIAC ,.. o.. -11 -WK~m~L-1~~&.-' MEAT CLEAVE;-... SSACRE II'!
1,•0••, '""'*•• .. , •..
........... ., ...... ,.o.Olllf ......
MANIAC
l'A.-19" _,.,..AU ftUI
MOJAOO ltOW£1'1
CON
NORA LA l'lf8ELD£
OOH HACllMM ... •AMR.A 1-nwt&AMO
All NIGHT LONG 1a1 -RfSnEts 1a1
11 Ho AM CM RIOio w1111 19n111cn Atu•uory 8'1no Your Own AM Po.Ubl
I
... M"'lll.-0 CU!AYONUTTU•Ol:•ft.DClll
• \0 •• '--... ·-••LAZING SA DOLES Ill) c;,, ... ,., .... ..., ....
( C , . "' • ., UP THE ACAOEMY 1111
I No AMC:.. llacllo Willl t9nt11cn Atoucr' 8rlno Y-Own AM Pon.
"•Ul'HANT MAN"
"Altlllll
""AOINOIUU"
I ·I
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....
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,
.. , ......
8TAMl<Y IMIO
..not aw.y lnCI Hutdl help en .. ~~ .. ~
i • fol'mer f'MrTllGe,
TIC TAC°°""" I
... A'l'M ,,. ......... plM aw....
taee to gt¥e tllnl -...w Nil ltrangt ~
llla119 laees
• aooot.-J,J. Ille -tMt ~
,8'one to rnek• wtien he
ml1takanly ent•rt an
ltnportlnt an COfM8t wllh
tolMOIW ..... , l)llntlng.
David Wayne plays his re1ular
character ol Dr. Weatherby (top left) as
well as those of his sister (bottom left)
and two cousi~s (ri1ht) on "House
Calls" tonight at 9: 30 on CBS. Channel 2.
• l1.ICTNC CO#AHY
"' Cl) CMNNI
@A8CNN8 a:'°. PllDOe 9MAK ~Illy schaduled pro-
grllll'lmlng may M delay«!
~to~~ ...
1c11 • E.ICTNC CX)t#A#Y
"' uo I MJU..IEYE WB..COME 9ACK.
KOTTUI
Thi s-1hog• •tend up
tor Wldlhlngton when Mr.
Woodman accu1M hln'I °'
chNl"'ll on en eum.
• ......VHIU.
8«wly 111111• the l9land of
Luana with ltt lo¥ely wom·
en. ID ITVDIOSH
"Cowboy" T rloll rOf)lng
with a young T-cow-
boy; Seatlle"1 Gr_, Lake
Cfaw P<IPI'• tor a ·-· (R)
(I) M•A•a•H
Radar It ace.pt~ 10 the
"Famout Lii Vegat Writ·
CHANNEL LISTINGS
-Schoor' and begins -ding hit lrnprlllloM
ot the 40T7th,
9 IAMlY Ji&.L.I"
Flth -'• hl8 matctl In a
young gltl ha pid<I up lor I
IUllPIC'ed theft whlll Wojo
-·~tOM
._,about~
dlaMt• for the ctty. t:10. WHAT'S GOMG ON
UPTHEM't tnl~ with Canedlan
wrlt.e. ac:onomltl1 and
pMoe.opher1 on ma)Or
queetlonl laclng Canada
tOd•y lncludlng bllingual-
ltm. con*'-allon, nation-
al unity, Canida'• eco-
r>Omicl relatlonahlp with the
Unit~ Stat• "'d h«
Image abroad.
Uf I DTONAl 1:00 cee NIW8
N8CNIWI
• HMfl'V DAYS AGAIN
Fonzie O-tl 1 dog to pro-
tect hi,,,..., from glrll wno
c~ to hi• ttouse unlnvtt-
'"'1
II KNXT 1CBSI Loe; Angeles D KNBC tNBCI Los Anqeles
8 KTLA \Ind 1 Los Angeles D MBC· TV (ABCJ Los Angeles
~FMS (CBS! San Diego
KHJ-TV (Ind I Los Angeles
\Ill KCST tABC1 San Ooego a» KTTV t Ind ) Los Angeles
• KCOP TV (Ind I Los AngelPS fl> KCE T ·TV I PBS) Los Angeles m KOCE·TV 1PBS1 Hun11ngton Beach
8 ABCNeWS
I JOQW8 wtl.D u•A•••"
HllWk• ,.._ to the front
with 1(1 arctHnemy to
aYOtd a "MM'Pf'lle" blfth·
dlypwty. e lfWta()fft.AH .
MtNCllCO I(..., po.-... paranol-
ee ll>d II pMlcad In • men-
tal hOapital 10 lnveetlgat• •
number ot queetlonable
dMthethare.
• MACHEL/ LIHMR
NPORT i ~~
Gufft1: Lorette Lynn.
DaanConn. 7:208D~S
7:30 II I ON THIE TOWN
Hoate: Stev• Edward•,
M.iody Rog.a Spe<>d •
"mad day"' wllh comedian
Ali:-1 8roolc1; Andy Bllnn.
1 16-year·old artist, blend•
hlt lov. I<>< p'-t and hit
attlallo ability to CIHI• a
mural at Iha Douglas Ilk·
craft M~
D FIGHT 8AQ( Wmt
DAVID HOAOWrrZ 8 SHANANA
Guests: Jan and Olan ..
D HOU.YWOOO
IQUAAU
II FN:E THE MUiac
• ALL .. THE fNtl&.Y
Archie, Edith and Mike
NCh ,...., •• dlnlr«lt ltO-
ry to Gloria conc:ernlng a
vltlt by a ~retrlgarator ,
~11..EHfa
AEPORT
·~---~ .• , ... ,,,.. ... ....... ......
-----~ Cl) ........
A IMll • ,.,. .....
r900ld Md tMmOtllll•• ooMullw: a 1 .. ~.....,. **': CNf Tai
.... ~F $ph'
Dr. -Oii ---..... .... _, ..,_.--.:
~....,. .... .......__
• 7 lwl.
19 •........... " Nenetad by Mwy ,,..,,
Moote. Ihle ~ IDok.t
..--~---to ........ ,.....,. .•
--~ ...... ~ Alda. ~ Farr.
L.Of9lt9 hit, Harry Mew·
.. llld Wllll11m Qwtlto. .,._ .., INigtlta Oii .....,
lflOW'aeuoceaa..(111)
.... Cl) '"'Wt4f1W
IM'tal*' r...., ......,., •'WM °' ...... OClllMal ,........ ...... c.wr .~
with~,.._,..._
8 um.a HOWe ON
ntl"'-'RI A ...._ of w11a erupta .,.._Laur• and~
IO wflarl ha lnelata thel
tMr oat married r1ght
1W1!Y and IN .,,.. on
w.Hlng.(A)
• MO'Jla * * "Qlnoar In Thi Morn-
ing" (1973) Moftt• Mani·
him. SIMy 8'**'. A If-.
aplrlt•d young girt
hltdlttlklng acrou the
country la pld<~ up by a
confuMd young men .who
11 In the mldtt of.~. •Ill THAn INCNE91 FM.luted: a ,,..,.,_ c:er
end motorcycl• 1Jun1
tewn; • ,_ method to
keep food frMh; • medlclll
~through:'"' .. pt'eci-
lk>rl lt\lnt pllotL
·• r.eow * * 'h "Thi Night TNy
RelMd Mlnllty'1" I 1Me)
JH on Robard1, 8rfl1
Ekland. A rellgloualy Inhib-
ited young girl r•ti.1•
90aln1t ,,., Pllll'lt• llnc:I
lnll«lltl IM 1tr11>t-.
• P.M. MAGAZINE
A looll at !JI<• S..tle
rec0<d end tl\Wmorablli• coltec11ona; 19-)'Ml'-Old
esce~ artl · elnger I
songwrlt• "l"'Y Chapin
perlormt Iha winning eong
lrom IM "P.M, l yr1c Con-
l•t."
ti) MOYIE * * * "lnalcM Delay Clo-,_ .. (19M) Natalie Wood,
Chrlstophat Ptumm«.
• GREAT
PEJllFONAANCD
"Oenoe In ~ Trib-
ut• To Nljlnaky"' Rudolf
~ IDlne Robert Jof-
tr.y and IN Jottr.y Ballet
for p•rformanc•• of
"Pelrouc:Nca." ''I.• 89ec· u. oa ta AoM'' and
"L'Apret·Mldl O'Un
• F-" In a tribute to the
Blues for 'Hill Street'
Cop ahow •puttering de1pite critical rave•
By PETER J. BOYER ments, for e:umple -and a
couple of characters un-
complicated enough to saUsfy
the broadest predelictions.
LOS ANGELES <AP) -
Network television doesp't have
to be low, just commercial.
Same thing, you say?
' Perhaps. Grant Tinker, who AND •oat:. "Hill Street
Blues," being a cop show, had
its share of squealing tires and
blazln1 suns. It also bad the sup-
port of NBC, which promised to
give the series a fair chance. In·
deed, the network hu promoted
the show with zeal and has
tolerated five weeks of abysmal
ratings without bringing forth
night la an unlikely n11bt for a
cop show," says Ti.Dkel'. "We
tried it with 'Paris' (Oil CBS 1aat
year). a clauy show that bad
James Earl Jones, and it failed.
It's yet to be shown that a cop
show can .succeed on Saturday
night and we're yet to get our
beads above water with this
one."
makes television that is seldom
low and often commercial,
thinks not.
.. l'VE ALWAYS said that the
audience's lowest common de·
nominator is not so low, its at·
tention span not so short," says
Tinker, head of Mary Tyler
Moore Productions. "Maybe I'm
just an optimist . . . "
That optim.Wn was forged by
such intelligent, broadly appeal-
ing successes a s ·'The Mary
Tyler Moore Show," "WKRP in
Cincinnati" and "Lou Grant," It
is being tested by the sur-
prisingly cool audience recep-
tion being encountered by M-T-
M's new cop show on NBC, "Hill
Street Blues."
HERE'SA s how that was
launched by critical raves a full
seven months before il was even
broadcut, winning plaudits as
the best of the new TV series
shown to the TV press at last
summer's network press con·
ventions. "HUI Street Blues"
possessed the qualities certain
lo win critics favor -realistic
chai;acten of some depth and
passion, and stories that bad
something to say.
But "Hill Street Blues" bad
more, element. that suuest.ed it
would have no trouble finding a
broad audience. It contained
certain soap-opera qualities -
cont1nuin1 romantic ~ntan&le·
the ax. ·
So, what's wrong here? Why
does n 't this s how , with a
pedigree fro m Hollywood's
most reliable producer of quali-
ty TV, 'et moving?
"We all know that Saturday
Downs pens
'Best Years'
HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Hugh
Downs . t he host of ABC's
"20·20," is the author of "The
Best Years Book'' about retire-
ment.
Downs s aid on "The Mike
Douglas Show" tha t it 's not
about retiring on the porch with
a nshing pole.
''If you have not taken the
trouble to concern yourself with
a hobby or possible other oc-
cupations, you may find yourself
in a box when some company
tells you at age 65 or 70, 'That's
it. You're no longer useful.' It's
ver y destructive."
Tinker refers to the Saturday
night audience 's c urious
partiality to light entertainment,
a predilection that once made
CBS' Saturday night comedy
lineup a powerhouse and now
favors ABC's two-hour Saturday
night fluffathon, "Love Boat"
and "Fantasy Island."
"BUT IF WE'RE right, that
is, if this is really a good show,
then the audiences wlll find ll
and they'll be back," s ays
Tinker. "We bad the s ame
problem with 'Lou Grant' al first.
"But we're giving the au-
dience a little bit or a hard job.
It isn't done episode by episode,
with everything wrapped up by
the end or the hour. That's
something we're looking at.
"And, maybe inner city prob·
lems represent a threat to the
audiences. I don't know. Those
elements may be making our
climb more of an uphlll one, but
those are the element.a that I
happen to like about the sbow."
Indeed, too much tinkering
(sorry) with the show coald ruin
its tentative balance, u hap·
pened with another M·T·M
series. "White Shadow," which
didn't endure alterations meant
to broaden its appeal.
* BARGAIN SPECIAL *
All Seet1 $2.00 ALL ,DAY
everr Mondey a Tue8deyl
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/MOnday, March 8. 1981
TUBE TOPPERS
KOCZ • 7 :35 -llaktn1 'M•A•s•ir.:;:::J Tyler lloon narratet th1.I l•Ulh·I documentary on the
ftlmPal °'"the popalu ulevtmon aeries.
KTLA • 1:00 -.. Ginaer ln tbe llornlU." SIU)' Spacek plays a youn1 hltcb.blier befriended by a man C Monte
Markham> ln tbe midst of a divorce in
Ulla TV movie drama .
KCOP • 8:00 -"Inside Daisy
Clover ... Natalie Wood stars u a youn1
actress who ft&hta the "Hollywood treat-
ment' iJ\ thll movie with Christopher
Plummer and Ruth Gordon.
legandlty dance a-niu.
Vllllav Nljlntlty.
a:ao • CMOl. IUtl'NITT
ANDflMNDI o.-t: 8lmmy OrM Jf t:00. Cl) .. •A•t•H
Cot. Potter'• already ....
v•t•d blood pret1ur•
thrtllltana to blow •v hlOh
w"-' the ltlllf ... ._to Mlp
hi/ti to.. It, •111~ MIC:Nlef II beaten by a pail
ot "'*-llllllanta and 811k1 finds out lbout Ste-
van'a lnvotv.rnent with
MatlMw'I wife.
•....v~ Gu .. 11: Loretta Lynn,
Olen Conn. Uone Boyd,
l ..... Kelly and Jorln F<><d
~Jerry SelnMld. .._. 8 Cl> HOUM CAU.1
Dr. W•th«by convlncee
hlmMlf that ha'•~-ID PAUl-..oN
~. po.I and enf ....
lei~ Paul Simon ott ... a t
,,..,iy non-11 op collec11on
of l'tls grNIMI hill end
currlltll f1vor1t• from the
T o-r ThN'r• In Upper
o.tby, Pa.
9-AO. LOS J.Mftft f&
CAMAfT
Keren M0<row and Nancy
Ouuault belt OUI Ille!<
eonga In an -inu ot
I anappy pal\er and rou1lng
performance. 10:00. Cl> '1.0U ~
Anlmal II drewn Into 1
llranga queet IO find OUI
mOt9 about • pt'etty girl'•
,,. dMttl.
DA~AOAO
A IMmlngly Innocent
young woman MducH
Skipp« and hill tlel• Con-
llanct le «Mtarmlnad to
llnd out 1lltly. eGeNIWI 11 9 IC»#
Mwy rltYMt who Denny·•
real lather 11, Jodi•"•
-di tor Wendy Ilk"
him lo I kung lu 10<1r-
and Burt crUhM a gather·
i ofmobll.,.
10:a0 HEWS
1NDB'IHDIHT
HETWON< Nl!WI Ill 80UN08T ACM!
"The Utlla RIV« Band"
TM Aullralltn group per-
forms "Lonesome L014W:'
'Men On Thi Run,"
"lady" and olha<1 from
,,.,. Chicago Perk w .. 1
Tl'tellre
10'..41 fD LEHMAN SHOAT
11:00 e D D (I) ®J N£WI 8 STAATREK
A CtHllK• from pl-I M-
113, capable ol cl'tanglng
Ill f0<m I nd petllOnality
..................... ..........
' .... ,.. ..... ... " .....
11111111••·-.... -·~ .,..,., ... , ... of • WOUNled ...
Ott who dllnlt ..... --Ctwlle.
• MMTTA
In Ofdar to tot\111 • ...,,.,,
Tony .._ wWI WI '91
agent wtio le ,..., only en
FBI COMPUlet U"1 fullll.
Inga~,
• DICK CAVITT
0-t: Jeen.Pltrrt ,_.,_
pal. (Pan t °' 21
11:.tl. Cl) QUICV. M.L
Quincy flohta 10 klolO •
cNld ha beleevea Ip M
auOttlc •om being aant to
an lnet11ut1on lor th•
retarcs.ct.
D TH1.er0f'
CAMON
a-ta: JoMny Mathie.
K.ally Monlel,h, Marlkl
Tolo.(R) eO ABCNIWI
NICIHTUNa
• QUNIHOQ
I N)( ..... ..,
CAPTIONID MC
HNI
-Ml>flOHT-
• 12:00• litACa: 19"
AICiha'a power 1upply
dr~ to an alarming lewl
and ....acu.tlon 10. ,_by
.,._, -· lhe only
~. • 9 fAKfA#'l 181.ANO
A eecratary me.II an
•xclUng man. • prlnc. oet•
rid ol his reepontlbilllln
end a ci.lectlYe QOM beck
10 lhe Old WMI (R)
• Mll8ION:
NPOl8a.E
11J ONE STEP BEYOND
"Goodbye Grandpa" A
tired Old man p<oml-1ht1
MMHl·yeat old grlltldaoo
that he will bid lhe boy
farew•ll belora going
"home" 10< good
t2:IO D TOMOMOW
I
Guests lmprovlsellonal
duo Montellh Ind Rand;
M1rvard law prola11or
Alan Oetsnowtn 11J OOHLAHE
Gues1s Bo O.w. Harry
Saacom, Merit Muldour.
T~•d•tl'•
Daytl•~ Me.,ff-•
1t:GO. *'-"' "Luc:ky Tnen"
( 1934) John Wayne. OabOy
H..,.._ A cowboy trlea 10
c111r hie 1ld•lclck of
ctiaru-of 8nNd robbery .
1t:OO. * * * "TM PrC>WW"
(195 1) Van Heflin, Ev.iyn-
K~. A polio.matl p1ot1
to muro.r a man fOf tu
WMlth and hi• ....
••• "Conie All Thi
Cup" (1951) J-Cag-
ney, Gig Young.
S:OO 9 * * "Strange And
O•adly Occurr•nce"
( 197'1 Robert Stack. V•a
Mllel.
a:ao 11 • • 'h ··Ha1111g11t••"
( 1"9) John Wl)'M, Katha-
riM Rou
JOHN DARLING by Armatrong & Batluk
LOOK, C~LtE, T HE.
On-ER STAilON HAS A FEMALc CO·ANCHOR.
"'1-o VJ£ IHOUGHI IT WOULO 0E. GOOO ~ OUR t-.GWS, TOO!
OH, SO NON
WE~ STEALING
ID€P"6 F'R()M
,.t.NOTHER C~
HUH?
Striking oil on 'Dgnastg'
Dale Robert.son (second from left) and his crew celebrate amid
splattering oif from the gusher they've just brought in -saving the
company from creditors -on \\J)ynasty" tonight at 9 on ABC,
Channel 7.
Actor 'nearly killed himself'
LONDON (AP) -British actor
Michael Crawford has returned from
New York complaining he "nearly
killed" himself preparing for his
role in the play ·:Barnum'' which
opens at the London Palladium.
"The show is about Phineas T.
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
Barnum, t he circ us king, so I
thought I should learn how to do
everything properly," Crawford, 39
s aid. He was hobbling from injuries
in a unicycle accident -"They're
more difficult t o ride than you
think" -and a high-wire fall. ·
Haiti
show
• to air
NEW YORK (AP)
Despite the concern ex·
pressed by Mike
Wallace, who has rel·
atives living in Haith
CBS' "00 Minutes" will
do a story on the Carib.
bean nation for an up.
coming sho w , the
newsmagazine's pro·
ducer, Don Hewitt said.
Walla c e, a "6q
Minutes'' correspondent
since the program's pre·
mi e re in 1968,
acknowledged he bad
approached colleague
Morley Safer with his
concern for his wife's
couskl and her busban4
and, Wallace recounted.
"He said, 'Fine,' and
that was it."
''I can only say we
will do a story on Haiti,
in the not-too-distant
future," Hewitt said. He
declined to say whether·
Safer would be involved
in the production, ad-
ding: "I don't want to
talk about our assign·
ment.a, or the stories we
are doing or going to
do."
'
I I
j
·1
I
ft
It can be a
BJ JEFF PARKER
Of-Deily f'lle41'8"
Some 200 physicians from
1croas the nation will flock to the
iheraton Newport soon to declare
.hat stress can kill people.
The March 19-22 symposium Is
:ailed "Stress and Catastrophic
·uness," and it is being organized
>Y three of Oran1e County's
·oremost psychiatrl1ta -Dr.
.. ouis Gottschalk, Dr. Dona.Id W.
icbafer and Dr. E. Mortimer
}berman.
The idea goes back a few hun-
lred years, and was 1rapbically
l e monstrated in the film
'Where's Poppa?," when George
People often think
that stress is 'out
there somewhere . . . •
-E. Mortimer
Gherman
Ex-prisoners of war
and ex-hostages are
often prone to mental
disorders.
-Louis Gottschalk
' . . . the medical
community isn't tak-
ing stress into con-
sideration enough in
the treatment of sick-
ness.'
-Donald W. Shafer
HOROSCOPE ANN LAN DERS
CLASSI F.I ED
kilkr
Sega.I dressed up like a gorilla,
anuck into his motber'ts room one
nieht, turned on the light and
jumped on her bed ln hopes of 1iv-
ln1 her a heart attack.
On a more scientific note, Dr.
Gottschalk writeS, 1n his introduc-
tory program notes, that " ... the
relation ol people to their society
and to the people around them can
influence the Incidence, the pre-
valence, the course, and the
mortality of diseases. . . " The
purpose ol the symposium i.s both
to examine the relation between
stress and illness, and to live
leaders in the medical establiab·
ment a chance to reveal possible
tools for helping people deal with
stress.
"We have some misconceptions
on ju.st what stress is," said
Gherman. "People often think
that stress ls 'out there
somewhere.' But really,
the atresson are out there -tbe
beat, cold, traffic, etc. Tberea.lity
of stress IA bow you perceive and
respondtotbest.reuon. Youmay
be diatreued-I may not be.''
Worklna from a model de-
veloped by bis mentor, Dr. Ram
Selye, Gherman traces the
normal, constant reaction ol a
human body to ·a atreuor.
Biochemically, tb1a IA what hap-
pens:
"fhe1tnuor (traftlc,aay) lare-
celvedbythebypoChalamuaofthe
brain, which atlmulatea the dla-
c bar 1 e of ACTH
( adrenocortlcotropblc)
bormonea. Tbe ACTH ln turn ln·
ducea tbe adrenal 1lad to eeeret.e
corticoida, wbicb abrlnk the
tbymm, atrophy the lymph nodes
and inhibit the production ol
energy-giving au.can.
Gherman points out this basic
reaction takes place in every
human being when encountering
a stresaor. whether the stressor IA
nuative or positive.
"I take exception to stress be·
ing called a strictly negative
thing," be said. "A gold medalist,
a first violinist. They' re under a
great happy stress. It can be both
bad and good. But the biological
reaction Is the same every time."
Interestingly, the mainstream
medical community has been
somewhat reluctant to admit that
stress plays a major role in ill·
ness.
''It's my contention that the
medical community isn't taking
stress into consideration enough
in the treatment of sickness,"
said Schafer, a clinical professor
in the Department of Psychiatry
and Human Behavior of the
!)niversityofCallfornia, Irvine.
"There's a re&t rhubarb goin1
-'ln in medicine ri1bt now," be
said. "The averase doctor will
abate bia bead and say 'snap out
of it' to a patient who won't
respond to conventional medlcal
treatment, when 1tre11 reduction
is whalla needed. Then there a.re a
lot of lay people who are aware of
the dangers ol stre11 but don't
C2
C2
C3
know anytbJng about medicine.
The purpose ol the aym~ium is
to give doctors more information
on1tresa."
~balk. a professor in the
Department of Paycbiatry and
Human Behavior at UC Irvine, re·
cently compiled a summary of
"Streu Factors Increaaing
Vulnerability to Disease." The
el1bt stresses found to increase a
person'a chances ol contracting
certain diseases-and what those
diseases are -were reported by
Gott.achallt as foUows :
Loss of a parent early in life pre-
diaposes a person to depressions
and mania.
Loss, through death, serious ill·
neas, divorce, of a significant re-
1 ationship, is linked with a
generaJ brealtdown in the body's
immune system, leading to ul·
ceralive colitis, rheumatoid
arthritis and leukemia.
A narrow or fragmented con·
nection with family and social ac·
quaintances increases proneness
to depression , poor recovery
from surgery, and drug abuse and
alcoboll4m.
Persons with trouble admitting
their own feelings to themselves
are prone to a variety
of psychomatic di sorders.
Researchers have found expec·
tant mothers who deny pre-
deli very anxiety have longer
labors; pilots who won't admit
their fear of death are more UJcely
to develop mental disorders; and
patients who are unable to admit
their fear of surgery are liJteJy to
recover less quickly from it.
Individuals suffering from high
social alienation are likely to
show various physical disorders
and respond poorly to
psychotherapy. Highly alienated
persona are also more prone lode·
lay oeceuary medical treatment
YMCA,, ENCORE
series continues
... C2
a nd to exhibit a poor abifity to
adapt to everyday frustrations.
Ex-prisoners of war and ex-
bostagea are often prone to men-
tal disorders.
People who delay grief reac-
tions over the death or loss ol an
important relationship are prone
to hypochondria and
psychoeomaticdisorders.
Persons experiencing an in-
crease in life changes (whether
positive or negative) have been
found to have an increased su.s-
c e p ti bility to infections and
cancer.
Backed with research support-
ing the long-held suspicion that
stress leads to sickness, Gherman
and Schafer will discuss their
methods of helping their patients
deal with it.
· Gherman is a specialist in the
treatment of stress in bminess
and industry. His "Stress and the
Bollom Line: A Guide to Personal
We ll-being and Corporate
Health." ls due off the presses this
month.
The 71-year-old vice president
of the American Institute of
Stress believes that stress can
kill, and offers a five-point plan to
help people avoid such a fate.
"People can be so stressed that
they can literally collapse at any
given moment. Someone once re-
marked that 'my life Is in the
hands of any individual who
chooses to take It.· A verbal as-
sault can lcilJ some people -It
happenedtoafriendofmine.
"We can't do anytbina about
stressors, but we can learn to
manage our response to them,"
said Gherman.
Gberman's defense against
adverse stress reaction lnchadea
l) nutrition 2f breathin1 tech-
niques, 3) physical conditioning,
<--... -
--. .•
Delly ,., ... Si.ff At1 lly TIM ....... _
4 ) vitamins and S) self ·induced re·
taxation.
Although our readers may be
unduly stressed by stiJI another
opinion on nutrition and pbysicaJ
conditioning, Gherman's
methods of self-relaxation and
breathing may be of interest.
''Once an hour, I suggest that
each person r e lax their
diaphragm and breath deeply. l
don't mean expanding the lungs in
the rib cage, which is a fixed
enclosure, but breathing deeply
like a baby -your stomach will
rise and faJI if you do It right.
··Five or six deep breaths will
take 17 seconds, and wash the
brain in oxygen-rich blood that
cleanses and revitalizes th(
mind," he said.
"People should also be aware
that they can almost totally relaa
their bodies while they're work·
ing during the day. I work with my
patients, suggesting that they re-
lax their muscles, and after some
training. it's possible to functioo
in an almost constant state of re-
laxation.
•·Your mind is alert. your atten..
ti on span ls greatly increased, YO\I
have a state of high composure..
When the muscles are relaxed.
they malte little demand on the
beartforblood. moreofwbichcao
be used to supply the brain. It's
possible to function in an almost
consistent state of serenity.
"That's my quarrel with the
ways Uungs are '<ione now -ot
not done -all these tecb.nlquei
can be learned. They're all
teachable," said Gherman.
Armed with such modern,
scientific weapons, we are sure to
slay more dragons. The next time
you run across one, just relu,
take a deep breath and serenel)'
clench the handle of yours word.
j
Jelly beans • • • What would the tooth fairy say?;
BJ STAN D ELAPLANE .......... Del.., ......
We betan with ten cent.a under
the pillow. By the time the
youn1e1t child lost bis last baby
fana, t.be Tooth Fairy waa ex-
pected to leave one dollar.
Tbal'1 tbe true measure of lnfla-
tloa. Forset u.o.e 1ovemment
index fllures. Now all teeth are ln. Braced
a1aimt tbe doubtful fUture.
I Hid: "Don't try to eat ALL
th• ValenUne candy at once, for
heaven'• 1ake." Not tbat anybody pays att.en-
tloa. CIDdJ la for eaUna. tu loat
u lt'1 la tbe house -aobble,
1obble.
Prllklent Rea&an iu't clo6Ga
UI -.Y toOd ~· off U.C.. Jelly beau. Al a-., dendlt.
lome NPOl1erl uked a dmdlt
at tbe Oeor1etown Unt.enlt.1
lledlcal C.ter ad l)e Hid: "J•llJ beam rOl your tMth
pure and simple. BecaU1e they
are sticky and full ol au,...."
The dlentlst wu not ldentttled.
Georaeton I.a tbe blO net di.a·
trlct of W..aw..tm. C apect tbe
dentist Mid: "f'U WI,..., JOU
don't UN my ........
Wby doee tM •JN11,.lllUllllMmtt eat
jell7 bual? "lie "* .._ up
when ......... FE'""·" Aid a White Home .... (Olil ol tbe
frytn1 pbill ............ etc.)
• * * The media bane•t put out tbe President'• X·rllYI ao we don't
Ir.Dow wW.ber Jelly beaM an dolnu: tn. TheJ loc>t ftDe OD
teleY . 'haat'• tbe wt. ••erJbodJ tn the aetlq ball·
ne11 1et1 their teetla
atraJ,..._... ad capped:
Tbe otblr' Dllbt we watcllild a
bad PJ mcm. Oil TV. TM bilid
1u1 looked reallJ bad. A
,. ... dade. You'd 1ay, "Now
there'• a ba4dl• wbo neHr 1aw
..
'Jelly beans rot your teeth pure and simple.
Because they are sticky and full of sugar.'
a deatiat in bi.I We. Let alOM
twice a year."
But wbeD be amiled bis evil
leer. lo and bebold, be bad chop-
pers U.U Snow White. He could
act, but bis pearly teeth cave
him away. • • • We put the youn1eat boy's
i
1 --··
-unidentified dentist
teeth in braces a year a10. 1be
teen·-se Iron Maiden atartl next
w"k ..
I took them ln early and tbe
denlilt aald: "There are hro
1cboola of tbou1bt. Some or-
tbodonU1t1 be1ln them at I .
Otbera start them after U
yean." --.
He aald: "The dentiata that
start early are usually youn1
fellows, jmt out of 1cbool and
atlll P.aJIDf for tbetr equip·
ment.'
He Mid: "lllae'1 all pald IOI'.
Brlq tMm Mek when they're
12or11."
I llbd tlaat man.
* * • T.-...... II not on 10W'
Blue a.. aa I dlacovered 1adly enoup.· -
I said to the yowa1nt boy:
"Do you lblnk lbe Lafayette
E1cadrUle didn't flJ tboae
flamln& cotfln1 lust becHH
they bad overbite? ' ·
But he'• a vain kid. He 1ald:
'•All the other kid• baYt
bracn." Brae• are a ltatUI
11mbol arowad ben. Tbe chleb
WOD 't duce with a boy wMb
bare t.ltb.
He'1 ,a horrid 1t1bt. A
mouthful of iron. When be
smiles, it look.a like a view of
cyclone fencing. • * • The preaident advtaed the
White Houae people: "Reach for
jelly beam when you need ~
enerty.'' He keeps an open iar
All the Cabinet memben cu di
ln and take a handful.
There are ten mllllooal.rel
the Cabinet -the other
members aren't on weltar
either. Tbe Preatdent ii I
at some expeulve molan.
Tb• Healtb lnluruce I~
wl1b• ae.,an would cut it oat.
Tbe7 checked a nut ritlai
penon and tome deaUltl and,..
ported: "Jel11 beaaa laavt
ablolut.17 DO autrltioeal Tal•
ADd they're UDCllll UM ~
kladl ol caadJ fw JOV t.-.~
i ValelitlDe ci.oeolatee rt...
ut JellY beut bani tn
and1Uck. •
--\------·
)
· EJVC(JRE highlights immune system
...
P\1BUC P«rl'ICS PVSUC NO'l'IC&
11TOV AND YOtJa lmmUM S11tem'1 will
bl UM •• ol 1 lecture 1PODIOl"td by th• SouUl ()nap County YWCA a{ • p.m. today It
the a.babWtatloe lutltute ol Orut• County, t• Sat I.a Veta, Oran,e. Tbe lecture la ~
Milted u part ol tbe YWCA'• ENCORE pro-
sram, u education, eurclle and aupport PoUP
for women recoveriq from breut cancer 1ur·
fery. Featured apeaker wm be bematoloclat·
oncololilt Jacquea Souadjlan. For information,
ea1l 5C2-5125.
PAJOLY TBE&APl8T Eris M. Hirdler will
lead a dllcuaaion on ''SeU-Esteem -The Key to
A11ertlon" at 10 a.m. Tuesday,. March 10, in
Santa Ana. The lecture lJ part of the South
Oran1e County YWCA's Employment Proaram
for Mature Women lecture series. For inlorma·
tlon, call Marion at 542·3921.
CAaDIOPVJ,.MONA&Y RESUSCITATION
CLAS8F.S are offered by South Coast Medical
Center throu•hout March. The program allowa
people to obtain CPR certlfication by the
American Heart Associallon. Beginnin1 class~
will be offered March 11and18andrecertificaUoo
training on March 25. For reservation in!orma·
lion, call 499-1311 ext.618.
CLINICAL P SYCHOLOGIST Muriel
Oberleder will discuss new lifestyles and
personalities for the al(ed at 1 p.m . Wednesday,
HEALTH
Karch 11, at tM OASIS Seoi01' Qtben Center ln
Newport Beacb. For lDformation, call 79-9'71.
''8'1'8£88 AND ADOLESCENCE" ls the
theme ol a three.part seminar series spomored
by the Stresa~nter of South Coaat Medical
Center and the City of Irvine Community
Services Department. P.rt one, "The Parents
Point of View of Raising Children," will be beld
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 11. Part two,
"The Kids Side of Growln1 Up," win be held at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 18. The final
seminar will cover "Stress and C0Ue1e Stu·
denta" at 7:30 p.m . Thursday, March 26. The
seminars, led b y therapists from the
StressCenter and the Family Treatment Center
of Laguna Beach, will be held at Deerfield Com·
munlty Park in Irvine. For information, call
491H311 ext, S60.
"PA.llENTING in Drug-Troubled Times"
wilJ be the topic of a lecture at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, March U, at Ensign Intermediate
School in Newport Beach. The speaker will be Dr.
Mite bell Rosenthal of New York's Phoenix Ho11se.
For information, call 760-3200
NEW RULTa CAIS approatbel wlll be
PHHDted at a mHllDI of tbe Amwtcan A•·
•oelation ol Ulllvenlty WoDMD at l :U p.~.
Wedn91Cky, Marcb 11, ln lrvtne. Pediatrician
Edward Taub and bls wlfe Barbara, a bealtb
f acllltator, will dlscuu a treatment prosram
wblch integrates the hoUsUe health movement
with modern science. For Information, call
857·234.S.
THl&D ANNU~L Youth and Alcohol
aeminar will be presented by the Orange County
Chapter of the National CouncU on AleohoUsm
at 8:8() a.m. Friday, March 13, in Santa Ana.
Retlstrallon for the daylon1 event ii $12. For
program and speaker information, caJJ 835-3830.
HOW TO BEAT the bad back syndrome will
be the topic ot a four-week lecture series be1in·
nlng Saturday, Mar ch 14, al Golden West
College. The program will be led by chiroprac·
tor Cary H. Rothenberg. For information, caJJ
892-7711 ext. 591.
PSYCHOWGIST SUSAN CBIUSTOPBEB,
author of the book, "The Hidden Power of Self
Direction," will lead a lecture series on "T he Art
of Loving Yourself" beginning Saturday, Maret
14, at Golden West College. For information on lht
three-part series, call 892· 7711 , ext. 591.
Music goes on
The Orange County
Philharmonic Society
hopes to keep the mu~i,r
playing with its 191f'l
Continuance Fund
Drive.
''This is our major
fund-raising effort to
provide fine music to
250,000 school children
a nd the Los Angeles
Phi !harmonic to our
community," said Mrs.
Peter Gipkins .
chairman of this year's
drive.
She will be assisted by
1,500 volunteers led by
Mrs. Robert Weber.
Contributions to the
Continuance Fund ena·
ble the society to bring
music to schools begin·
ning with third grade
a nd continuing through
high school.
Some of the educa·
tional programs are :
-The Music Mobile,
a van ta.king orchestra
HOROSCOPE
instruments, audio vis-
ual aids and stereo
e quipme nt to third
graders.
-The Music Enrich-
ment program, bringing
professional musicians
and music students into
fourth grade
classrooms.
Youth Concerts for
fifth graders at
Melodyland attended by
34,000 students last year.
Chamber Concerts
in .Public and private
schools for fifth and
sixth grade students.
Music H.Jstory Pro·
grams with nine shows
for fifth and sixth grade
students packaged in a
SO-minute show with a
script, tapes of music.
costumes of the historical
period. pictures, posters,
maps . cartoons and art
prints.
-Jazz Nexus Con -
certs by the Californja
Scorpio: Lie
low, go slow
T UESDAY, MARCH IO
By SYDNEY OMARR
AlllES <Mar. 21-Apr. 19) · You locate what
had been lost, missing or stolen. Accent on
money, income potential and solidifying of re·
cent gains. You'll be dealing with Taurus. Virgo
and Scorpio individuals. Surprise gift could be
on agenda.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Lunar cycle
high ; apparent setback boomerangs in your
favor. Focus on timing, special appearances.
personality and appreciation of your unique
style. Take initiative. Make new starts in new
directions. Confer with Pisces.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20 ): One in authori·
ty s upports you in subtle manner. Look behind
scenes for answers. Temporary period of con·
fineoienl can be constructively utilized.
Participate in study group. Capricorn, Taurus,
Virgo persons figure prominently.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): You are capa·
ble now of winning friends and influencing peo-
ple. Accent on fulfillment of desires, making
wishes come true. Profit results from recent
stock or business investment. Important project
is due for completion.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): New contact results
In career boost. Goal is within sight. You now
are able to get to heart of matters. Another Leo
figures prominently. Promotion brings added
responsibility, greater chance for rewards.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You are pulled
in two directions simultaneously. Choose course
leading to greater financial and family security.
Long-range plans will come into sharp, clear
foc u s . Accent on communication, travel,
publishing.
LIB&A <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Flurry of social
activity dominates your personal scenario. Be
flexible, display versatility and sense of humor.
One close to you confides "financial embarrass-
ment." Be understanding, but don't co-sign.
Symphony Orchestra in
junior and senior high
schools.
Besides the ed uce· tional. efforts, th e
Philharmonic Society
contributes to the cost of
bringing the Los
Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra t o Or ange
County eight times a
year with such soloists
as l tzhak Perlman,
Vladimir Ashkenazy and
James Galway.
Contributions to the
Continuance Fund are
tax-deductible and add
the donor's name to the
membership roster, con-
ce rt progra m s and
priority sealing for con·
certs.
P UBLIC NOTICE
''" NOTICE TO CltEOITOltS
Of BULK TltAN"IElt
IS.Ou. 6101-6101 U C.C.I
Nol1(e '' Mrtby QIY1tn lo cred11ors or thf' w1thtn Mrned tt•nsterorC') tf\at •
bVlliL Ir~''"' J\ •boUI to c. m.oe on
o~r\on•• orooerly h•retn••t•r
deM.t•beO
P UBLIC NOTICE
Checks may be mailed
to any women·s commit·
tee of the Philharmonic
Society or directly to the
office at 234 E. 17th St..
Suite 12, Costa Mesa
92627.
Kitty Knox (left ), Lorne Huycke, Joane Evans and
Muriel Gipkens.
T hf nameU) •nd t>u~1ne-n •dre'' ot
the 1nttnOf'd lr•nslfrort't •re
l.EONllRD KESSLER M>d MURRAY
AISl.EY. 27SO Harbor Blvd , Co\t•
Mela, C•IUOr'nl•
NOTICIE OF TRUSTEE'S 'ALIE
AMl·VI
SPFNo.OIUl
Rt U·ll2/110rvt•
SOU IHERN PACIFIC TITLE COM
PAN v. d CA11•orn1a cotpor•tlon •\du
ly •ppoonted Tru~lt• under lrte lollow
1n9 oe,cr1~0 dtf'O of tru't ~ILL
SELi. AT PUBLIC AUCTION TD THE
H IGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My h~sband has
not filed an income lax return, federal or state,
for 15 years. Ed is able to get away with thls
because be owns a smaU business and has no
employees. The IRS seems to have oo record of
him.
Ed does not keep any books and, therefore,
does not know what hls income is, what his ex·
penses are, or how much profit he makes. Also.
he doesn't pay any Social Security. This means
we wiU not be eligible to collect when the time
comes. Since Ed does not have a private
pension plan, the future seems very uncertain. I
am becoming increasingly bitter about this.
Our children are unable to apply for college
scholarships because we can't sign a parent·~
consent form to release inrormalion that doesn't
exist.
I returned to work last year and intend to
file a tax return for myself. Hopefully this will
not cause more problems I worry that if
UIWDIRS
something happens to my husband everything
would be dumped in my lap. He bas no life in·
surance either, so there would be no help rrom
that source. I also worry that if we both were to
d ie at the same time our children would be
responsible for the whole mess.
Obviously I can't sign my name to this let-
te r. Will you please help me?
WAITING FOR THE AXE TO FALL
Dear Waiting: The wbole thing smells llke a
barrel ol 108t herring. I really feel for you, dear.
My advice Is to get a lawyer at once -and a
good one. The longer you put lt orr, t•e worse lt
will be.
Yht •oc•Uon 1n California 01 tf\f'
cruet ••P<VhYe ofh<P or pr1n<1pel bu"+
ntH otttee of tM 1nttf"ldfod 1r•nsferor '' \•mt'., •tJiove t P•r•blt •t l•me of \a lt' '" •••tul
Alt ottwr bus•~\\ n•"''' •no •d monf''t Of tne Un1tf'd St•IH) ell r1on1.
Ort'''' u\fO by the 1ntt noeo hllt •nd intl'f'rSI con¥fff'd to M\O "°""'
tt•n\ltror ••lh1n lhrtt .,,.,, l•\t pa\t nelo by 1t unic:s.r s.Md Deed Of Trust in
io fa r •\ tcno•n to tt'tr 1ntendfd tht prooertv "•rt1n.afttr dt scr1bed
tr•ntff'tff•f"f None fr,.utor WILLIAM R ORVIS i1no
The n•mel\I •nd Du"M\\ .. ddren FRANCES I( ORVIS, i'IU•IMlnd •na
ol lhe lntena~ ltr•n•lorul>I •rt Ntle B-l o<•¥Y ORANGE COUN·
JAMES DAVERN .S .. Bl•nca Dnvt , TY TEACH ER CREDI r UNION, a
Cyprtn, C•hf0<n•• C•htorn1• corpor•t•on. A•loroeo
H'•t Int Pf'"QOlttly pertinent Mtf'IO I\ 0.temoer 2l. 1911.,s tn\lrument No
C1•w:r•l)to(l 1n C)e'Mt•I a\ turntturt. ha· l0\11 1n ~ llSOJ ~..,. 94~ of t he Ot
turu •• tQv1~nt tr•dP neme, 9ood t1t1al RKoros tn th• olf1ce ot thP
~ill, •••'*, le•\~f\ofo 1mprovtm~nts, Rtitorder of Or•f)Qt Cout\ty , \••d ~td
covtnant not to (ompelf fnd t~ loc•ltd ol tru\I oes<ribl!s lt'le lollowtnlJ pro
81 11~ H•rt>or Blvd Co\I• Mew. perly
(al1torn1• LOI I of Tr.ct No UOI •• , ~ M•o r n• D\1\1~\~ n•mt U'M!O by lhe \.lld rtcorOtd 1n bOOk ~·. Nve tS 01 M t\
lra n,rfrOr h f •I \••O •oc.•t1on 1\ c.tll•ntov.s ~. 1n uw office ot '"*
CROWN CLEANERS County Re<oro.< of 0r ... 9t' County Tn•t W•O OUlk lr•nst~, •\ 1ntt>ndf'd to C•tifOU'H•
bt co"'ummateO •I lht Ollttt ol MAY BE Al.SO KNOWN AS 10tS1
/lllA RLENE STE IN ER ESC RO W ' B•y \loew Avenw, S.nl• An• HflOM>. ~ER VICE llOl w'"""' Blvd . Los Ca lltornla.
AnlJtlts. CalifOMla !/0010 on or altPr Tilt t>enellclary under •••d DffCI of
M.,ch 11. 1911 lru•I. by reason 01 a Drtach or del.ull
Tru \ bulk lr•nsft!f '' subft<t to in the 0011Nt1ons sKurtd tMrtby.
C•l•forn•• Uniform Comm~rc••• C.odt nerttotcwe eae<uled •nd 0tltt1erte1 to
Se< hon •10b tM unO.t"'9Afd • wnttl!'n Oecl•r•tton
Th• n"""' and •OGrtts 01 IM t>tr.on ol Oetaull ana O.mand lor S.lt. •na
•i1tt w"«>m ct•1m\ m •1 bf-fiteo is wr1Hen notiot of brNch •l"d of e1t<11an
MAR LEN E STEI NER ESCROW to uu .. ,,,. unoers•oneo 10 .... Uod
SE R\llCE. U01 Wllshore Blvd I.OS pr()C)4!rty to H liSfy Wiid ol>lto•••on•.
AnQtlH. Calltorm• 90010 and "" la.i and 111er .. ll1tr "'" unct.r\lonltd (auwd
d•V for fll1nQ c.l•1m\ by •nv creditor \a•d nollce ot t>ir••<h .nd of tlK Oon to
\h•ll ~ March 2•. 1911 wrruch 1s th• be recorded NoYemt.r ••. •9'0 ., 1n
bus1ntu Uy bf'fon• t~ c.onsumm•llon slrume"'t No 1110'1 1n booa t-.JJ JN9P
d.tt •1>«lflt<1 •Dove 1611 of wld OlllCoal Record•
D•t•d FtO<".,.rv 1• "" S.1d wle w•ll m m-. 11<11 ••1'-1
JMTW'\ 0•"''" coven•nt 01 •MrMlY. ea,Of"ess Of" 1m
lntenoeo TrM>slerH pltod. r19Ardl"11 tint, po~uton or
MAltl.fNIE STEINER ESCltDW on<umbrancH, ta PO lht remaonlnQ
SE lt\/ICIE prln(IO•I 1um of lht note(S) \e<ur~ Still more on cholesterol
By DR. PETER STEINCROHN
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN : I call it the
cholesterol mixup. And that's what it is . I blame
doctors for having us in a dither about low
saturated fat diets.
We don't seem to know from one day to the
next whether or not cholesterol Is really an im·
portant factor in coronary heart disease.
Up until a few months ago my doctor
warned that cholesterol is tied in with the fatty
deposits in arteries that narrows them and
blocks them off.
Although I had normal electrocardiogr ams
and no family history of heart attacks or stroke,
I was told not to eat more than one egg a week
(which killed off my favorite breakfast of ham
or bacon and eggs).
No ham. No bacon. No ice cream. He took
all the fun out of eating.
But at the time I didn't blame him. He was
trying his best t-0 keep me healthy and aUve.
But now all is changed. He tells me that
cholesterol restriction need not be so great. He
allows me to have eggs and bacon in modera·
lion.
Why the change, I ask him? There's been
new evidence, he says, that restricting
cholesterol may not be so necessary in prevent·
Ing heart attack~ and stroke. Am I rilhl in re·
llt7 WlllHre •1vt1. Dy said Dffd 01 trust, wtlh Interest as
I.ff A1tte'" CA 90010 1n w •d note Pf'OV•dt<J. o\dvancu, 11 •ny, DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE Publl1t.ed OrM>Qf Co .. I D•oly Pilot. uno.r Ille ter1n. of w1d Dffd OI TrUit,
M•r<ll •.Itel t~,lt IHS, <h•rv-s •nd u~nH• of lht
P UBLIC NOTICE
Tru.iH -of IN tru1U (rUlt<I by
Wtd DHCI of TrUIL S..d ••It •Ill M
held on Nl«'ttUy. Mer<h U. '"'· •t calling that for some years you've been saying
this? ---11 00 • rn. at llltP front enlranc:e lo I/WI
CAU. fOlt •tD$ ornc .. of Souther" P•<ill( Tollt Com·
-Mr. 0 . T 0 It ENT It IE SID INT I A&. Potny. SU NOrlh C.brlllo P.,k Drl•t.
"ltOP'EltTY Suite 100. $MUI Anll, C•lllornl• DEAR MR. D.: Yes. For some years I've NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN ,,,., Tile total •mount ol th• unP••d bee wrft& .... •L. t too -rll the Board of S-vlsor'I of Ille County IMll•nc:• of ttw o1>1i09llon s.<urod Dy D .....a& U18 many 1-1er a.Dllettlla Y ol Oranv-Intend• to IH>t to tile w id pr-r1y to m told, 1-ll>er with from what I call Cbolesteroloplilobla. "'II""" .,._,.., on • montll·lo-montl\ lnter .. t, l•t• <NlrOH. And tStlmAIO<I
It ls an llllJlatural fear of eatlng fat.. And, beslt, (ortaln rffldenll•I rH I pr-r-(0Sll, npeMft. -..:IVen<e\ ••• of IY. IMlonof"ll tau.. Cou<>ty of Or..,ge, tne date twrtlof, •• Stt.5il.02 al YOU Say, We doctors have Spread tills aa•lety, commonly clelerlbed as JtO Unl ... rsJty Dato Fot>ruary20. l'il1 I've con•·nded that restrlc:"~-may.._ ea· Orlv•,•nclU.Unl•ersltyDrlYe.Cost• BY:SOUTHERNPACTIFIC ""' -'"' Mu a, Calltorn•• Pr-sail to rent TITl.ECOMPAN'I', sential la paUentS Who have Ud bea.rt attacks, Hid pr-rtles must t>e wt>mllte<I In ACorpor•tlon,
d la •~· b b ....... ,...... •-rol I I wrlttn11. on lorms Pf"Ovlded b., lh• HTrustef aD ~ W 0 ave ..._ c-es..., eve 8 CountyofOr-.ln seai.cionvel-1, SU N r"""110 P•r" Dr Sii and ECG changes. Bat I saw DO ce11tradldloe to lo th• Cle rk of the Burd ol 100 regular diets la tlto8e wllo were •rmal. Wby Sup.rvl-•, At1m1n1s1rat1on BuHdlllQ. Sant•Ana.CAn101 Room ••S, tO Civic C..,tor Plate, Santa (11•l •11·1l00 take away tbe joy of eatlng from one wbo la "'""· ca111orn1a. u102. •net mu1111e ,... BY Fr11ncnsi..1drto
bealtby and noto ...... .,. (elved by '"" Clerk at said edclrffs M Pui;:t2"'909 Dr-eo.s1 Dally Piiot, °"''"' oerore 2.00 p.m •• Mondo, April t, -•re • & 16. 1911 96t·lt Tbe reaaoa for yoar ~tor'• change of 1te1. 1n ord« to 11e e111111>1e No •••• mind! Pertlape a report wldc:lil came oat la bid• or or•I -wlll De (OMldored.
Rent•• -· forms. •nd acldltlONI mld·l• by Tbe Food aJld Nlltrltloe Board of inlorfTlatlon asto Ille termund <ondi tlae National Research Conell wllldt 1tated (In 11ons on ..wch u. IH"-11u w111 11e -.. II .... vide •L. leased. may IM al>tal~ from. R-r part); &Dll:l'e rea Y Isn't eeoG.-e DC:e !Wat Cunn ln Qh•m, GSA/Au l Est•le
reduction of blood·fat levels by diet prevent. 01v1ston, county of Oranve, ~ Cl•k
coronary di.aeaae. ~:~1':r~1.°~i:,. ":!1~~"~~,:.;~; On the odaer baad, tu Amenc:aa Hearl As· uw a..uso, ,.,., 10: ProJect v,.,
aoclaUoa still beUeves tltat loo •Hit c:""-•ea&erol Ulllvorslly [Hlw. -Oat.d F.-Y 2f, Itel
P UBLIC NOTICE
"ICTITIOUI 9Ul1Mlll ..,.... ITATIMIMT
Tllo loll-Int perSOf!t a re dol1tt
ouslneu •:
ACTION OFFICE MACHINES.
ttl71 Matnoll• Str••t. Suite II,
Huntl""°" 8Mcll, C.llfOml• ,_.
J-Mk-lteecl, 12>41 Hedde
<Hive. Cerri•, Callfonll• '°701
SCO&PIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21) : Lie low, go
slow, play wailing game. Gain insight into legal
rigbta, permissions. Focus on partnership pro-
posals, public relations and dialogue with one
who shares major interests. Marital status
could be subject for discussion.
coatrtba&es to UM eoromary llleut problem. BY ORDER OF THE 80AAO OF ,-~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~--~~~~~~~-ISUPIAlllSO A S OF O ltANGE Vern ~ 11.-, ltat Jo;4y way. c.m-. Calll'enlM '°101
SAGrrl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You re·
ceive note of appreciation from one who de·
pends upon your support. Changes occur in
buic procedures. Favorable news comes in
connecUOll with employment and health. Sue·
cesa indicated if you put ldeaa, views lo writing.
CAP&ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Greater
freedom of expression and movement hiChlllhla
1cenario. Gemini, Vir10, Sagittarius persons
play key roles. Major domestic acljuatment la
featured. Surroundinas will be more pleasant.
TokeQ.ol affectJon la received.
AQtJA&IU8 (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Accent on
real estate. interest rates, aupport from older
famUy member. Places, Cancer, ScorDlo natives
flfw'e promlnenUy. Potential comes l nto focua.
Retue to be drawn into 1et·rlcb quick acbeme.
lloee1 La available. ·
Pllea <Feb. 19-llar. JO); RelaUvea uae
you u "MwMllns board." ~ to become
embroiled In family dlapute. Ac cept
reapom{blllty. but don't carry '"'1'den not ri1bt·
l.J your own. Receat lntt1tmeal pqa •W"PriH
dlricleadl. Capricorn ftpn1 prominently.
Going Into
Business?
A• requfred by lew,
new bualn••••• u1ln9 a Flctltloua
lu11n .. a Name mutt
regleter that name
with the County Clerk.
Cell the DAIL V PILOT
LEGAL DIPARTMINT
tor toNM end further
lnformMton.
142.a21
IJlt. w
CAREER WOMEN
Don't leave your image
to chance ...
Leave it to
POWERS
Orange County
547-8228
/cltnj(pCfft Jl.u'( LJ
COUNTY, CA&.IF-ORNIA.
<SEAL) JUNE ALEXANDER
CltrttoftheBNrd
of Supwvltorl
ofOrMOtCOUrlt.,, CA
Tllh l>UslMts Is <-<I"' a., •
-r•I P«tNnNp.
J-Ml<llMI AMII
Tiiis .iet-1 was lllM wlttl ti.
Covnly Clerlt of Dr.,,.. Count., Oft
F~,., It. ltet
Publltlled Or-CMSI l>•ll., Plloc. PtMm
March •• 10, "· 12, ll, , •• "· , .. "· ""4tll"'9tl Or .... CMSI !)ally ~19'. 20. "" 10,,_.I l'M. U , IMf. 2, t, It, ltll 1514'
P UBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
Ll .. 8 AMO ACCIOINT AMO M8Al..TM
IYNO"ll 0 .. TMI ANMUA.L. ITATIM8MT YIAlt INOID MCIM911t *1, 1t9 0 ..
.. ltOVIOINT MUTUAi.. 1.1 .. 1 INl4'11Aetel COM .. MY
0 .. f'IUl.AOILPte.a
..., ......... '"9\, ................ A "Qt
T ... l ldt'fllttH auets , .................. , ................... t 1,tt•.714,,0
TotelllNllltlft • •• • • • • • ................. , • , • • • • .. . • . . . . l.tDt.4111•1 ~ctal Sl/rfflll l'undS .••• , ..................... , ........... 1u , ... 71t
Gal1t (~I fnim ..-r-atlor1t •.•••..• , .............. , • .. .. • .. • • • . U.illi,.n
lnat•M 10.Cl't-) In Cef>ltel alld Surplus
JI
I •
•111111t "" ................ ••• •• .. .. • • • ... ... .•••••••••• 7.M,M I In-lft '°Wet: N411ionwl• ................. , • • • .. . . . . • ••• 11,Ml.Mtll
ACtl_. ... flNlll lllt-1-t. . . -......•.....•.•• , . •• . . •. •• . •.JU.tll ''"'"Mee'" it.tu: c:.lllortll• •itt--...... .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . ...197.ut
"",.. Mf 111Nllll lll"9mh1mt -I Ol~t. Clllfror111e au.ine.a Pa .............. , , .. • • • . • . • l.'71.-1
I ... ,...., unify thtt Illa ...,,. Ii.Ms -In -~· ........ "-' J
ai.1t111t111 ,., ... ~' .,..... ~ "· 1• ,.... •• .,.. ,__ J c"""'' .. *-"'•SMl•atc111..-1111.~• i.w. NWllll-A ...,_
liMlw lllU """' ...... '""-"·...., .,...,.,
~°'""' c:..t o.11r _., ... ~ '· e. •·. tt. n, '"' ,._..
' ~
IDTHRES
Ditiilil6A Ca. Puaed away Oft Ma1tb
JO ANN ANDERSON, J. 1111. Sun1ne$ by 2 aona
.... ..._ ol C..U M•a, Ca. Paul D. Novak of Costa
P11ud away at !\er Meaa1 Ca. and Mickey £..
r•'41mae oa Mardi 7. lMl. Novu ol Con:ina del liar,
Sh WM bom °" November Ca • dau1hter Gloria r t, llD In Buller, Ml•tourl. Goo d l n1 or Lu Veru. s b ' w 0 r k. d r 0 r t b . Ntvada. Gravealdt HJ'Ylcet
Newfon·Meaa Scbool wert held 011 Monday,
Dlatr ct for the put 10 M1rch t, Itel 1t Ule Pacinc yeatt u a Mftlor Account View Memorial Parle
Clerlt. Sbt i.11un1ved b1 her Pa cHlc View Mortuary,
lovln1 husbend Marvin L Newport Bea<!h dl~lol"S.
Aoderaon of Costa Mesa. Ca .. son Jtf/rey Lypn
Anderaoo of Hunttnaton
Beacb, Ca., daUJbltr Krlttl
Joy P'r1lo of Lake Tahot,
Ca ., 2 1randcblldren. a
brothers and l s la ter.
Friends may c all at the
Baltz Beraeron -Sihlth &
Tuthill Westcllff Chapel ol)
Monday, March 9, 1981 from
t :OOAM to 5:00PM. Services
will be held on Tueadav.
March 10, 1981 at IO:OOAM at
the First United Methodist
Church of Coeta Mesa, wUh
pastor Charles D. Clark
of CJciatin& Graveside
lservices will be at the Oak
'Hill Cemetery, Butler,
Misso uri on T hursd ay,
March 12, 1981. The family
requests in Lieu or flowers
those friends who wish may
make a contribulion to the
Amer ican Can cer Society.
Services under the direction
of Baltz Bergeron-Smith &
Tuthill WestcliH Chapel or
Costa Mesa. Ca. 646-9371.
BREWER
RIC HARD BREWER
resident of Newport Beach:
IDTHS
ELSEWHERE
AMSTERDAM,
Netherlands <AP> -Kh1U
Koadraallla, 87, former con.
ductor o r the M oscow
Philharmonic who defected
to Holland In 1978, died
Saturday
LOS ANGELES t AP>
Artist Alols Lffoqae, 89, a
contemporary or the World
War l·er a Paris 1roup of
post-impressionist painters
that included Pablo Picasso,
Ma rc Chagall and Amedeo
Modigliani, died Saturday.
SAN MARINO 1AP1
The acknowledged dean of
American frontier his-
torians. Ray Allen Bill·
lngton, 77. died Saturday.
LOS ANGELES <APl
Allee Ehlers, 93, who in 1936
introduced the harpsichord
here and sparked a revival
of baroque chamber music
on the West Coast. died
March I. In 1941. she began
what was tu become 26 years
on the faculty al USC.
PUBLIC NOTICE
M·1UN l"ICTITIOUI aUSIMllSS MAMll ITATllMllMT Tiie lollow1no penon1 ere Golno IMl'IMUM AMER IC AN TR AV EL PLANNERS. t20I N Tu,lln Ave ., Or•nee. C..llomla '2661 FANTASY TOURS, a Calllornle corporetlofl, l20I N Tustin Ant>ue, ')rent•, Calltornle tM7 Tiii' IMl1lnen h conducteG by • corpgreUon.
F-yTOUO'S Anlonlo F R00r1tue1,
Pretldonl Tiiis 'tal-1 WH filed wllh Ille Counly Clerk ol Or•noe County on Februery II, 1'e1
Ca. Passed away on March
5, 1981. Survived by his wife
Joan , so n and
daughter -in-law Bob and Sue
Brewer. granddaughter
Mic helle and his Cather Ted
Bre wer. Dick was rounder of
Brewer Industries, president
a nd rounder of General Auto
Leasing, owner of Colony
Products and H P Rental
Company. He served as 1980
President of Allied Trades of
Bakery Industry. Southern
Califo rnia , m e mber of
Production Club. 552 Club of
Hoag Hospital. Balboa Bay
Club in addition having
;er ved as president or a
local service rlub 1n the
years past Dick will be
g r eatly mi ss ed b\•
everybody whose life he
touched I le gave or himself
to a II of his many. many
frie nds and his family He h p:1,_; went l rough life m JOY and Published Or-coan Dally Pllo1
laughter. His family wants Feb. 2J, MM. 2, '· 1•. u11 t1Mt '1
everyone to continue to think
of him in the sam e way A
memorial ha 1> bee n
established m Dick's name
al Hoag Hospital if you so
desire. Services will be held
at Pacific View Memorial
Park, 3500 Pac 1f1c View
Drive, Newport Beach, Ca
on Monday, March 9, 1981 at
3 :00 PM Pac 1f1c View
Mortuary d1rectors
DAILY
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUS au11iii:ss--lllAME ITATEMllMT
Tiie toll~wlno p1non 11 dolno ...,,1.Wue.1. C A A STAINLESS. 1S21 Poplar LeM, Coata MHa, Calllomle t2'2' Celvln F. Hall, U21 ,....ar LAne, C0>le Mew, Calllornle '262' Tllll ~ Is <onduc:llld by en lno1vlGue1
C..vlnF.Hall Tiiis 11ai-1 wn •lled wllll llw Coun1y Clerk or Or•noe County on Fet>Nery It. ltlt.
Pt Mm CLARA MARTHA DAILY,
age 80 , resident or H untington Be<.1ch , Ca PublllNd Or-coo1 <:oa11 Dally
P assed aW<.1} on f rrd<.1y , Pllor.Feo.n.Mar 2·'.:..'~~ 154-ft
March 6, 1981 al Anaheim
Extended Care Convalescent
Hospital Mrs Dally was
born on October 15, 1900 in
Warrens. Wisconsin She
a nd her husband came to
Huntington Beach. Ca 1n
1954. She was a member or
the First Chnst1an Churth of
Huntington Beaeh and a
member o r the Sunday
School Class of the Chun·ti
Surviving are 3 sisters Irene
Goetzka of Pasadena. Ca .
Alm a Gardner of
Weyauwega. Wisconsin .
Louella Daly of Warrens,
Wisconsin. also a brother
Em il Goetik a al so or
W arrens. W1 scon s 1n
Funeral services will be held
on Monday. March 9. 1981 at
the Pierce Brothers Smiths'
M ortuar~ al 3 OOPM
Interment will be made in
the Westminster Cemetery
The famil y s uggest s
contributions be made to the
Building Fund of the First
C hristian C hurch of
Huntington Beach Pierce
Brothers Smiths' Mortuarv
directors 536-6539 ·
SIEGEL
ESTELLE L. SIEGEL .
resident of Corona del Mar,
,_Cl .. OTHHS
.._ .. OADWAT
MOITUAIT 110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IM.T% 1116110H
SMITH I TVTHIU
WUTCU" CHArt&.
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
P'IHCI MOTMIH
SMITHS' MOITUAAT
627 Main St
~nllngton e .. ch
53&-6539
PACl'te v•w .-.c>tu.A&. , ...
CemttetY Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pec1flo View Drive
Newport Beach
6*2700
MICOIMCIC MOITUAA•s
:Leaguna a.ach
'' Ila ,.
1en Juan C.pratrano
495-1178
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OP: IMTENTION TO
COLL II CT ANO TO REMOVE l'EIUONAL l'ltOl'llltTy P:llOM THE UATE OF CALIP:OltNIA
In Ille metier ol IM EU•I• ot Jonn Gre111m MCOon1ld NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo 111
ptr\OIU 1nlereit1d, w tletner •s
(r t dlton, ,..,,,, lt'QalffS, Of' 0.YIMH
ol Ill• ebove named d«H~ •llOs. IOI known IGGrtu w•• Box 2117, Herbor. Oreoon, 111e1 Lellers ol h'11mentery _,.. luuao 10 Kenne111
A. Hlnn1nson, ISll2 Pltllcen B•Y Drive. Brool<i119l. ~ '7'1~ by tlle Ctrcull Court or Ille Stitt ot Of'ogon of Curry
County, • court of comoettnt 1urlSd1c
lion of '"" St••• Of CK eoon Tll•• uc11 ol tne 1a11ow1no nem.o " 1n01bl.O lo or " llOlcllf111 perM>nal pro-.,.,.Y Ot Ille Wld Oe<ecknl ·
F ldllity F•OIUI S.V•"9• Ind Loan A1-l1hon, llU H-r Boulevard CO>le MIU, Calllornle O•V •
Tllet II• "'*'"111*1 dnlrH to rt· et•n 1118 WIG per,O'lll pr-rly or to cotlt< t 11• cleoms ...a lo remove lrorn IM Slit• of ea11rorn1e to tllt u 1G Slllt 11111 L•ll~ THtamentMy or of Ad-m1nls1re11on IWtve been luu1d
All Pf''tor" 111v11111 claims -•n•I tM WIG Ot<-nl or -...... .,, In· lerul tn Uld HU.II ..,G wllO "'"II lo
Obt•<t 10 wch rtmov•I. mu\t 9fve wrtllln noltu of """ ot>it<lion to,,..
.,.rion or -'°"' tnOebl.O 10. or llold· 11111 per'°""I on>perly OI Ille clt<-1.
II Ille -KS ti llii.cl bllow•wllllln lllrte (J) monlM •fltr llrSI PUl>llutlon ol 11111 NOlke
0•1~ -lorsl P\lbllslleel Mardi •. .... K1111n1111 A. Hlo111nsO'I, Per_..1 Rte><Henlaltve ot Ille E'laltol John Gr.,..m Mt OonllG
<10 O.vld R. Forlltr
AltorNy et Law
P.O. Bo• 1043 Br-I~. Ore. 974U PuDll&hfd Oreno. CoHI Delly Piiot,
Merell'· 16, 23, JO, "'' 1066·11
P UBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI INVITIMO llDS Notice Is fief.., 9lven t...i Ille Flrlt llrllllan C:-cll of Huntlnoton a .. c:ll, lllornl1, ,...,.,,..,.., reten'ed 1o as
lie "OWner" 11 lnwtllng -r•l• lolch, includlnt me<1-lu1 ano electrlc:al rk lor a -SMctuary Dulldlno, ,_ 1torlft Plu• meuanlne, •1111 •P· ro.lmei.ir l1 /lt10 tc1uere Ifft. Tiie ~ ... 81d tatatorlft ere M oll11W•. 1 Con<rete, 2. Relnlorclno IMI lluml"' only); 3. Site dl'al1\898, A1p11a1tlc concrete pevln9; s.
HOnry, 6 Mttlall; 7. SOace fr-;
. Carpentry -mlllwon; t. Mem· ant WM.,,.,...,l"I; 10. 8ullellng In uletloft, 11 Prtfornwct metal roofing,
12. lulll-rclof"'9; II. Flallllnt -SllMI mettl, 14. 5Nlaflls, IS. HolleW mllal •or• lfurnill• 0111y 1; 1'. Aluminum -•. lr-s. WI.....,, ttau-t1ulng; 17.Flnltll,......,.,. tlurnllflanly); te. l'lnter-~
W•ll-rG; 1•. ni., 20. WOOd ,_Int;
JI. ltealll..,1 llMtlllt, cer,.1; 22.
'"''" f-'9 ... r1111; u. ~·.,.d 11•-MfHlt; U. ~alllllfte. well ce,,.,.
lftt; U Tliltl INK"Uti-s; a. A«-0<• ~en ft!dl .. -1ltltn; 2.7. Tlii.t 8'• Ce•Ml'MI; & ...,.,...,,; "· ""'9Jeclllft ecr-. • °"..,., lreco: 11. ,,.... er11eo c.ttll!fl; st . .-fevat1r; U. f"tllfft9111tl ~. 1'1,. _,....,..,_, U Air
c...-IOtnfne; a.. llec'trlc•I. Tiie ..., Clf w rec .. ,. I• TW!Miley,
Merell 11, "''· .,. wUI .. ,.,,,,__In ... Otfk• ..
.. ~ MeMtiw. ,._MM>
Ce,, t•T llollllll ........ H_.. a-.c;..~ ....
ft ..... -"",, ....... . •. ...,.a...;_ ... ~ ....... ....
I I llM efflU 9f tlle C...ttnlCllM
.-.11-..r, ,._ -.-ee .• 1• Mllll lt,MI, H1111tl11911n IHCll, Cell..,.,... ..... ............ ,,. ... ,.,..."'"-, .. ~ ,_,,... IM tl9'1f te
........... 1 .............. Md .. ,.~.,,,,,et ... .....
....... Or .. c.e. Deity ,.. ...
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The marketplace
on the orange coast . . 642 -5678
EQUA&,. HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
, ... .._.1Mottce:
associated
uw( ..... 1 iif '-> wt (\ r 1 w ·,
' ; .,,,, £-!,, t; • • .,
A ll re a I es ta le a d · '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I verllaed In tb ls
newspaper is aubje~t to
the Federal Fair HOUS·
lng Act of 1968 which
makes it illegal to ad
vertile "any preference.
llmltatlo n , o r d ls-
crlmlnatlon based on
race. color, r eligion,
sex, or national origin.
or an intention to make
any such prefe rence,
limitation, o r dis ·
crlminallon.''
" &REENIEL T
CONDO
$79,900
2 84rm 2 bath, near
South Coa s t Pla za .
Owner will carry la-rge
2nd. Call 546-2313
f8tsl~
Pol• De1ert
COIMlo
Deep Canyon Tennis
Club
security Gale Entrance
l2 l'OW1a·pools·SPH
TIAMUP
Own a Peters "E" plan
L200s/f 28r 2ba, atrium
lrjgllt ..ct ...........
Decor & Co mpl
P'Umlal\ing1
$113,500 cau ror details.
Principals Only
Bkr /Onr 7141544·3158
2·UNITS
$94,900
Super lnveatment! Two
2·8dnn unJts, one with
fireplace! Current In·
come-1740 mo. Flnanc·
Ins! 1 yr home protec·
tlon plan lnclud4'd.
ffurTY. this won't laat.
Nl-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
C~ce comer duplex. 3
bdrm. 2 bath up. 2
Bdrm, 2 bath down
G~at rental· or home+
Income unit. SELLER
WILL HELP
FINANCE! 9895,000! . ..._.,dy,rop.
Thls newspaper will not
knowinflY accept any
advertising for real
estate which is in viola ·
tlonoftbe law.
RHltors
11r67S.7060* VA TERMS! l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I
Mesa North 4 Bdrm . 2 Charm, Price, Terms '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j
bath b eauty. Near AppeaUngtoth e poc kel·
schools and s hopping . bOOk as well as the eye.
Call 546-2313 The vast Improve ments
in this older home make
CHOICE IRVIHE
LOCATIOH
~~~;_port"":·; ff-fl& ~::2P,!:::~.~~;,1;
--r •-•-••-•-a l Sll0,000. Call fo r
$11,500
Super upgraded con ·
dominium, near ever-
ything. Sacrifice sale .
Seller transferered .
752·1700 ron ........ ately. T ... -terms & details. ~6·2660
DAILY rtLOT atlWRH COST A MESA
llabHlty for the first 5 IR -S 125,500
incorrect Insertion OWHER S.AYS SELL onty. Not an add-on or con·
version. A real 5 Bdrm
family home in one of
Costa Mesa 's nicest
HOUMS for Sale I areas. Handymans de-~~~~~~~~:::!~:~· n,,. C•@•"m
WIUFIH.AHCE SEA COVE Large 3 bdrm custom
h om e in prestigious PROPERTIES
a r ea. Immaculate. 714-631-6990
Owner will carry lst TD
of Sl00.000 at 12'7, an -
t e rest o n ly Prire
$185 ,000 Call n o w
979-5.170
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
COSTA MESA
FIXER
Reduced to $128.SOO. 3
Bdrm, 2 bath pool, spa
and more! A bargain !
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
RESULT"
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5678
ht.122
Call 546-2313 l•-------.. 1
THE REAL ESTATERS
LUXURY + TERMS
.ASSUME I 0'/•0/o
Nestled on hillside with
a panorami c view
forever, this home of·
rers so many features
we caMot list them all.
3600 s9.fl includes
romantically inspired
master wing, 4 Bdrms.
formal living and dining
rooms Dumb wait er.
supplies the downsairs
family room. Oak inlaid
bar. complete with brass
fixtures. F.verythinJ? is
custom ln this executive
delight. Owner says he
may help you finance,
and It's priced lo sell
NOW'
~
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
WANf ACTION?
C1asslfed Ads 642·5678
A Flct1t10111 •u•tnen
Hem• Stetement lll•d with the County Clerk It
welld for nve ,..,.,,. efler
which lime conllnulnt
IMl•ln•H•t mu9' reftle.
Publtcetlon It n-•M'Y only If then •r•
ch1n1••· Cell IM Lee•I Depertment 111 tlle
DAILY '1LOT for
l nformetlon end
nec•H"'Yf-.
642-4321
Ein. n2
$3
ccm cp-t you
$100
all it tc*H is a
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
:t 11111·' 1111 't Ila''
11111\ '>I $11 ,, cla\
\th t' rl Isl' II n l' ;, r
mon• lll'm' '.ilut·d
U I' I II S 1110 I'.: ,1 (' h
.1<.ld1t1onal l1nl' •~
11111\ lil'>t for lht• t "0
d ,1 ·, :.. S 111 I \ n 0
1· o rn m e r c 1 il ·1 il d s
a llo\H'd C:har~r
'our Penn\ l'tnt'her
1\ ii u r u':-1· ) our
Ba11kAmrne<.1rd Visa
01 :\I astc·r l'har~r
call today and Stt
your ad ht print
toMorrow!
Cell MOllCMy ..... Fridey
l :OOAM to S:JOrM • .,.
Milt dey't ~ Of C ..
by II-Oii s.ewdey fw
s..dey't,.w.
642-5678
Daily Pilat
w:a-:' ~\l4llA-ll~~s· .... ....
-------~ QA'f .. POU.AM------
•
.............. "'it. ·-~ ... ... low .. lonll ,_ ....... ....
I RO MMI E I I I I I I' _ I DtiMUI I
c=sELECT
I PROPERTIES
l.ACIC I.A Y VIEW
IB.OW MARKET
This beautiful view pro·
perly in Newport 1s
priced below market
value a nd below ap
pra1sal. Space age
kitchen with breakfast
area. Huge Living room.
lanai ,with view .
Cireplare and o pen
beamed cathedral ce1l·
ings. Hide-a .way master
suite. separate childrens
wing. Dash to the pool.
Call today ror details .
Owner highly motivated
and will work with very
creative finanring. Call
752·1700
THEREAL ESTATERS
INVESTORS
TICKET
is now in Costa Mesa of
fering residentia I pro-
perty with :
No Negative Cash Flow
No Tenant Problems
Capital Gains Only
High Returns
t not 2nd 'Prus t Deeds)
Call for information d• RED CARPET
·-754-1202
WESTCLIFF
SI 29,500
Newport Beach highly
upgraded 2 Bdrm condo
w i th private patio .
custom draperies. large
pool! Walk lo WestcliH
shopping. Sho ws like a
model H urry this
won't las t ! Call 646 7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
Eager buyers read th
Class1f1ed ads every day
If you have something
for sale, reach them tas l
and Ulexpens1vely, call
64.2-5678
THE REAL ESTATE RS
* * * ....._.W.ate,.
160 21st St. It H
Costa Mesa
You are the winner or
4 fl'ff tickets
($32 value ), to
Circus VarcJas
Mar. 17th. 8PM at
Montgomery Ward
405 Fwy at Bristol
Costa Mesa
Call 642·5678, ext . 272 lo
claim your tickets. • * •
MAMA'S
GONE TO
CHICAGO
Giant 4 Bdrm,, beauty.
located ne a-f" Orange
County's mf>st popular
shopping center. This
lovely home is located
on a quiet cul de sac. The
home is a former model
and s ho w s like o ne
Huge rooms thruout. big
living room. a nkle deep
plush pile carpets. Space
age kitchen , big bdrms.
partc-Uke grounds with
ente rtainers delight
back yard Decorative
rocks, rolling hills and a
solar heated pool. This
unique home is priced
way below market.
Seller must sell T a ke
ad vanta ge. call now !
752·1700
THE REAL
ESTATERS
IEACHHOUSE
Large roomy fa mily
home w/cozy bit-in en ·
tertainme n t center.
Owner's pride is ob·
vious. Highly upgraded
bit-in kilrhen an d
carpeting etr Huge
playroom upstair s for
kids or adults t Asking
$174,900. Owner will
carry for 5 years a t low
interest.
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
Find what you want tn
Daily Pilot Classifieds.
HARBOR RIDGE
3 bdrm. w /loft , 3 balconies, A/C
near tennis courts & pool. Owner
motivated. 10~% assumable loan.
$479,000
X r-°"''' Aot•llr Gv.d. t1. Y Accefdtrtf '• tl.e Sfou. V To dt•tlop mt1•011t tor Tutsdoy. r1'0Ci -..i.-rnpor..iing to~
o4 ~ lod'°' ~ l'O'\
QUIET USTSIDE LOC.ATION
Charming home for small family, 3
bedroom, 1 bath, hardwood floors.
copper plumbing, refurbished kitchen,
large lot. Offe r ed for onJy $121,500.
U,_.l()UI: ti()M~'
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Eut Cout Highway, Corona del Mar
WE HAVE 43 OF THE BEST USTINGS IN TOWt-J
2BDRM
PRACTIC.ALL Y FREE
S68,900. If you have little
cash and are looking ror
a golden opportunity lo
o wn your own home.
don't wait, this 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
o wner will carry 2nd
with s mall payments .
Call now for all the de·
tails. 752 1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
OCUHFtlOHT
2 Bdrm, 2 ba, unCurn
New. S850 yrly
IAYFROHT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba. unforn
Mmt cond. $850 Yrly.
CH.AMMEL FROMT
3 Bdrm. 2 ba. unfurn
S750YTIY
associated
BROKERS--AEA l TORS
lOH W Bolboob/11661
AW.ARD WIMMER
This home truly de
se r ves i t s nam e
Elegantly decorated 4
Bdrm home features
dramatic cathedra l ce1I
ings, accented by plus h
rarpe ting , decorated
wallcoverings. drapes &
mirrors. Lovely garden
features custom de
signed spa and covered
patio To top 1t all
c reative financing 1s
available This home 1s
truly a Select Pro perty
Call 751 ·3191
c=sELECT
I PROPERTIES
MESA VERDE
assume existing (inane·
ing on this lovely 4 Bdrm
3 Ba executive home in
Costa Mesa's m ost pre·
stigious area. The pro·
perty 1s in move-in con·
dition and the owner is
a nxious. Full price
$240,000. Ask for Mary
Ann.
TRADITIONAL
REALTY
HOMES & INVESTMENTS
631-7370
5 BR ESTATE
SI 45,000
Impossible to match
nbel1 evable 5
Bdrm super sharp
plus h carpels cozy
s tone fireplace RV ar
cess and take over ex·
isling 9'.'1< loan Priced
to sell rast owner will
help fi nance' Call
963-6767
THEREAL ESTATERS
~RS
• TOWMHOMES
2 ·"FIXER" CHALLENGES
OH LIDO
luilden & Decorators ln•lt.d! Lowest
price couple house for fint-time buyer
on Udo lsi.. Stained glass. south patio
.ct km of possibilities in this 2 ~ 2
bath houH w /dinift9 rm. It's quite li•able
-iust nHdt some "TLC" to make it
adot able. $299 .ooo.
LARGE HOME-GREAT LOC. ~ appeal exterior -but inside Mech
lots of help. Howe¥er . . . you hon a
lcs? hOIM to woril wfth. htelMdes H•iftcJ
room. dlnin9 area, 1Cln)9 family nn.
MpOI ate mashr suite + 3 bclnna. Street
to strfft locaHon. $349,000.
Come by 123 Via O"leto· Lido Oii
Sat/S-1-5 and aH these two excfthMJ
opportunities at the lowest prices
posslble.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAi FSTAH ,,, .... H''"'·''' ,,,,...,...,,, M.,h.UJ''"'*"'
2436 W Coast Hwy
Newport Beach
Hl SIOf Nfli\1 H( Al 't; !All .,, Hv1cr 5
P"IM! ociAN '"ONT DUl'l.U Classic 3 BR. Cape Cod beauty.
Picturesque. Bay windows and
vaulted beamed ceilings. Relaxina
Master BR suite with readln1
alcove It Clreplace. New and custom
designed for your comfort •
pleasure. l850,000.
Maro•, tttt UIHI ~~---~~~~..i-~~~~--~~~~~--~~~~___;;~---~~~~~-L~~~~__;_~---~~....:..:.:._...::..:...
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116 CAMYOM DCLUSIYI
A 'AMLOUS "'VlllAILLIS .. $121,000
Deane Homes largest & most
spectacular model & situated on the
largest lot of Deane Homes. A elorious
view looking thru a lovely yard with
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 . Call for ap~.
WISUY M. TA YLOI CO., REAL TORS
ZI 11 S• Jo ....... ltoed
MIWPORT CIMTEll, M.1. 644-49 I 0
WILSON PARK CONOOMltlUMS
CHECK & COMPARE THESE FEATURES
90% ANANCltli 12%% INTER.
'I HARBOR AREA LOCATIO
.f SlZE-1650 SQ. FT. .f MICRO OVEN
./COMPACTOR
.f DISHWASHER
./ DBL GARAGE
.f ALL SHOPPING ~ BLOCK
.f AIR COND ITIONING
./CEMENT DRIVES
./WALK IN CLOSETS W/OPENER
WAID INVESTMENT IMC.
SALIS OMCI C714t 63l·IOll
J80 W. W.... It. '4Z.ZOOO
CeelllW....C4f.
EASTILUFF -CAPI COD
IUIL T I Y WSK
3 Bdrm. Family room. Large
Assumable loan. 111/4%. FEE land
-not leasehold.
2127 Aralia -S279,500
Drive by Clftd cal •
.... '"' .. Ano! J acque or Chris 644-7315
IROKU U 1-7100
INCOME PROPERTY
Two houses on a divisible lot just 2
blocks from the beach. Great rental property. Call for more information.
644-9990 760-0835
HOME ON THE BEACH
OwMt-has boucJht another & Is ready to
move! hRmaculat• and b•Q•tlf•Hy
...autaiMd 3 bed. hoMe with ..,.. ...
"" .. 2 c or CJSOIP· ROOM to & CJO 2nd story. A .......... llC a
Hdi0tt of th• Ol:EAHFttOMT.
r wlll oulst with flnHclng.
Property Is f ree & clHr. Selb•lt.
$598,000.
CUSTOM PENINSULA PmNT
VCICGICt -MO•• right In! Totally new
... .ct out l bctnft, l bath. .....
t.Nly rOCMR + dhtiltcJ ""-Shpt to bay
... bNc:h. $ 465,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
RfAI ESTATf
~,.. ... .., H. 01,,1 .. p,nrwth \.1,,n.,~ttwnt
2436W CoastHwy 631_1400 Newport Beach
C!IE J
IBDlll BLlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
MESA VERDE -HST IUY
No Question But What This ls One
Of The Finest Buys In The Area!
Lovely Four Bedroom Home On A
Large Corner Lot. Completely
Remodeled. Large Assumable
Loan. Submit Offers. Only $145,000.
MIWPOIT Hlf•HTS 4-flLU
Located On Quiet Street Near
Shopping. Excellent Condition.
Good Rent Income. Minimum
Vaca n cy Factor . Four
Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable
Loans. Inspect With Offer. Priced
At $365,500.
® ·--............
..... ,A ~ IMCllllGlf
P•noramlc view •t wed1e. from
prime luae lot. 4 bdrrn, 3 bmth et11tom
••••• Lrt •=~~ ........ ID prra UDJ•-= Part=triocn ud k . ANWD•·
ble 1-Cell for cWei.11. . home. 8700 1q. ft. reaturina m.rine
, room, entry, livlng room, dtntn1
room, butlt-ins, etc. St.•,OOO.
• • OCEAN FR 0 NT. 0 n I y I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • L90 1KI
Newly remodeled tra ditional style 3
bdrm. 2 bath home featurin1 lar1e
recreaUon room & z patl01. Llvin1
room hat attractive beam ceilln11,
rireplace & french doors leadtna onto
brick patio. New kitchen bit-in
appliances, Close tQ tennls _ cout'U.
sandy beaches & .clubhOUH. "2(),000 \
· HERITAGl mTPllC;I
HI J\I fl )J(o.., .. JOWM '-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 4br, remodeled ldtchtn. r: pluala cerpeta, c1.11tom dt..-. "-la!)' paint.ct.
Hller boultit another Is
baa priced thouHnd1
below market velue tor
qulcll: ute. Creetlve
0.,. SUNl!ly, Hpm, 1"1
Ordlard Dr. lbdnn, .. ,
fre.bly pelnt.cl cioloni• ~Huty. Pemlly room.
taooo dn. 2Br ft'.'Oblle
home. PooJ, pvt ~-. -------.-...;;;o.-1 •dlta. Lie av•U _..,
, .........
Nlctiy uptreded ilan II
Northwood Park d e-
t•tmed home with air cond, 1klnny dip 1pa
area, treat lendscaplna
and decor9tlnt. S103.000
In uuble fln•nclng.
Priced to sell et $152,000.
JUSTPOIYOU
Super 2 Bdrm home ID
Villqe ~South La1ua.
VauJted cellln11. II•
m Hterl priv. peUo, frplc. Al the charm you
would went for only
lecl&O.Mert&et
Leue opt.loo or equity
1hare I.be beat buy on
Bel. Penin. Charmlnt
2·1t)' Soen. home oo the
perk I Cal.I Joyce W•ltse.
'31·19 ..
1eparete dlill.nt room• terma Cit-better hurry.
l:i~~I Z•.
REALTORS
IAYPIOMT
We have several fine homes
wlui pier & slip, aurttng •t $1,500,000
UMCHO MIRACH
Springs Condo. 9th fairway. 3000 sq.n .
3 Bdrm. 3 bath. furn . Golr clb.
m brshp. Will trade for invest. prop.
frplc, IMW roof. Priced ~ •t sieo.ooo. for qu1c11: ~ so• naMCST u le. Xlnt flnanctn1. . I~ LULllWL
THE WIEDEMANS. REALTORS
4N-OOl8or fSl-4213. I.ASSOCIATES
FIXER S Br 2 ba, pool Is 141-1111
ape. ONLY tue.900. Va· f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I cant. Tbe Reel ta&atera,
644-7111
/.Jn "llf.l l
liAllt 't f.
1\<:>'JUl If, If C., aall: IOI' ELSA. 751-197 II im.-..-111111! ... ~ .... lll!!l!!ll s.e.ms l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I SPICIALI
Sl71,750.
L_,..V .... lt.I
4'7·1161
MOVE FAST ON THIS!
2 Bdrm. 1 Ba home
withUI 'walking distance
to the beach. Quality
built. easy maintenance
yard. Perfed for starter
home. Priced to sell.
$179,500.497·3331
$3.900 Down N.B. tbr.
~orUl-7653
John Lem beck CA1ent)
VICTOR I AM
BEACH HOME
New 3 BR 3t,; 81. Quall·
ty handcrafte d oak
thruOUt Stained glas$,
apa.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR MIWPoaT llACH Executive Duplex for
SM.GOO down, owner wlll dl1crlminetin1 taste. nnuce et ll'Ml'k with lbr. aba. each, central
11500/mo paymenta. elr. woodbumlnl frplca,
Total pr ice 1219,000. custom drapes/ carpetl,
Edt Bluff, 5bdrm, 3b•. heavy 1hake roof. 11 V.-7'
call M4-10l3. lo•n ii assum•ble, no
**S128,900 Can you believe that
price for a 3 Bdrm l t,;
Ba auached home In
Woodbridge? Seller will
h elp with c reative
financlng. Walk to park
and pool. Call for details
on thluuper buy.
·. PtanlllRealty .! Lingo -752-6499 • J ·I I ~" y •, , d, I ), , • , ' , k t> ! ·, ti I () I
REALTORS
675-5511
DESPIAAn
Mo9'J HfwtMJ
S20K dwn, 3br, 2ba,-Prin.
Only631-573'7 AGT.
3BR, 2t,;ba condo. Nr. So.
Cst. Plaza. Sky lites,
paUo, deck. 2 car gar,
may upgrades. $130,000.
By owner. OWC 2.
~
quallt)'ing nece11ary.
SI OK DoWll O r Le11
.... b • .,,
80/o DOWM
Only 8'* down to buy this
fantastic 3 Bdrm dream
home with magnificent
view of the Pacific.
OCEANFRONT
Peninsula Point home. 4
Bdrm, 31h ba. S9SO.OOO
Call for rinancing de-
t.a i I s . 0 w n e r I A g t.
67s.8676 MOVISYOUIM
No quali f ying
necessary. Your moD ·
thly payment can be ad-
justed to meet your mon-
thly budget. We have
many 3 6 4bdrm home In
\\bod bridge
Realty Su per usu ma ble loan !!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! available. $225,000.
' 551·3000
nu Pk.-y. lrvh1~
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
CHARMER! don osen r,.altor ..
beat Orange County -!lll!ITI&W""1•11•11111!!1-'11!!1111•1 loutioo.s w/these terms. w,_,_, SQUARE 1213N. COAST HWY
Call our specialist for * lfST IUY * LAGUNA BEACH
==~·~.'=.~~ .. ,. ........................ . E .slde 4 Bdrm w/at-
tacbed l Br unit .
US5.000 . By Owner.
646-0758
more information. Nice 2 story "C" plan 2 497·4848 __ _
3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Fam Rm .
Formal Din Rm
Gourmet kit c hen
Fenced. 12"'r interest !
Best terms' John Va·
nian Co. 631 -0900. ~ 6 llUICST bd~m condo. Freshly LCIC)llftOHllla 105
•
1
• A
rp ; Q~OJ11TORWLS painted, central air •••••••••••••••••••••• PEtif'THOUSE
Of ' ' -flf C s::! ..., I 0 I I ... --· .. ~ •.. Ott.r.I • 1749.IM. C4 ... ~ .......
BUILDER
Priced below compare-c-..1-l.t.L D k rt l ble sales for immediate l-11111!1~1!!1-...!!!!l~~lll unuu Wnn oc ,.,,.._,ff/'· '"'SSOCIATES u'on S98 C.v\ LEASE IOM 2 Bdrm, 2ba. 280 deg " ac ·"""· 6 beautiful new homes ocean, bay. mtn. city
C OU OF NEWPORT HALTOIS
ZI 111. C...t Hwy .. c..-.. W.
675-5511
141-1511 CAU MOW available for lease with view. Pool, sec Lge as·
option to buy Excellent sumable loan Balboa Ha.PS YOU IUY!
MEW COHDOS ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I xwT .... s! 644-7211 terms. Best location. Penln. Fee land C 121
2&3BR °'84SUM 10-12 ...
Pvt decks &c patios. 2br, 2ba. S12S.OOO \::
Month of March 211 90\ St 213-399·1~ t . ,
Newport Cntr
640-5357 760-6767
LOWDOWN For 30days escrow, F R EE d r a p es & 3 Bdrm 1~. Ba. fam rm .. 2 Versailles l Br /studio, microwave fr p I c , b Io ck w a 11 . • pe nthse condo, w llR as· •!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!llc---....... Mar 1022 OPEN1·2·4PM $129,900.846-1756 •Now Must Sell s umable loans . only .... _ _.. $105,500. Owner/agt
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2000 MEYEll PL Thu elegantly decorated llillilll.W!7""14~~~ll)Wlilllllllli.•I 645.3447, 979.5370 ask for
41EDROOM&
OHLY $141,000
JUSTLISTED 641-lttl,OC)t. GLEHMAI 3 Bdrm 2 "" Ba Jim townhome, has 2 great 3bdrm, 2ba. 2 car gar .
Charming Duplex with o .. Poilit I 026 4 Large 3 4 Bdrm 2 ba, assumable loans and air, tiled veranda, view
French doors on front ••••••••••••••••••••••• upgraded with shake overloo«s park and pool. of hills. beaut crpt,
unit, shake roof. Walk to MO DOWH root. Hot tub. Enclosed ~wners are very anx· custom drps, clubhouse
all shopping. $198,000. D Pt D I 6 patio. Lovely area. ious.ThiaisoneofWood· with pool jac tennis.
Call for appt. to see. •na . upex, Iny o-$l29,500. Open Sun 1-S, brid~e.'s b est o p · ask·1ng s'125,o'oo. As Be rn it a E i le rtse n . I/yr lease. option .with Providence Lane. " Broker, 675·2373 or owner f1o•n c 1ng . SUHSETl.E. portw\ities. sumable 121.'7. loan
llGCAHYOH
Prime view building site
on ~olf course. Plans in·
e luded R e duced
SI00.000 with te rms
available. Sl.100.000
Call Dan Bibb
675-2311or640. 7665 ev
ASSUMAILI LOAM
Charming home on quiet
cul-de-sac in choice loca-tion. Many u pgrades
plus excellent financing .
Take over subject to ex; isling iru,t deed at 8'¥. ~
annual interest rate.
Newb' offered .ti will not
lut.
TIG-8598 Spacious 3bdrm, 2ba &c (g]-95S-02S4 or85S·1968 · 2bdrm, 2ba. Lr1 view _5_4_Z._5l_Ol __ l _4M __ IO_l_, \\bodbrldgt Lale• foorett
1055 Coa:hy r.ghll deck · S 2 1 O · o O O · Divorce /foreclos ure Re"'llU 1-~~~--~!!1!!!1!!~• DUPLD Owner/agt.1161·9343. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••·
9 m"". new. 4 bdrm + 2 NO DOWN '· Terms or forced sale on beaut. 551 -3000 Beautiful spacious 3br JASMIME CltEH
bd "" . fi I Huntington Harbor 412tBerrHu Pkwy,lrvln~ house. Lk view, & green Take advantage of my nn im1t, 3 1rep aces, 4 lease optiOfl or ? 3 br, 2 home. Worth $295,000. · be 1 t . C 0 n v er t e d assumable 8~•~ loan.
car gar., built-ins. ba.497-3034bkr Trys;?JSS,000. Lowdown, ,, , d t. · Beaut Jas mine Creek beams & used brick, WOODaalOGE GLiH .. ar.covere pa io.in F h 1 d F ... .,..._. 101 4 take over exist1n1 door laundry. frplc. Lg condo. plan 1, 2bdrms. renc w n ows , vamA -,. financing at 13~ int. f 1{4o/0 A1-. assmm. first, at l1'4o/r. den . guarded gate C
sprinkler system. BBQ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Featuribng 4drms , 3 full 2br. 2ba, study. frplc. $219 500 By owner comm. Pool. tennis , '1 709 -7 09~ Orchid . FRENCH CHAT£AU baths, 3 frplcs. ocean comm'ty pool /jac/lake. 110-48ss ownertagt $315,000.
S38S.OOO.Callforapptto vlew,3cargar+xtras. $128,000 By Owner ----640-6188.
75'·1616
see, 851·91~ (will coop GUEST COTT AGE ! Call 631-6313 for more SSs-.4922. Mewpori hoch I 0691'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ WI LI w/rltrs) Owner/bkr. . f •••••••••••••••••••••••
G l •--u 4W:.w·lffcll tn o. rea !""8 on -ver~ Costa Mesa I 024 * •2 MASTERS I UNDA ISLE
convenient. 2 bdrm: • ••••••••••••••• ••••• •• OHL Y SI 09 ,500 • bath adult condo with 2 stry French Chateau GLENMAR No. not 2 bosses but 2 wood burning fireplacel ________ llill t ownhome in a lush Lge 4 Bdrm, 2 ba up. separate master Bdrms
overlooking attractive HEID A green setting by the sea. graded home. shake that highlight this super
s wimming pool . FAMILYROOM7 Dbl door entry t o roo(. hot tub. enclosed gorgeousattachedhome
$129,SOO. Has low in Then make an appoint· cathedral ceilinged liv· patio. Lovely area . built by Wa rmington
tereat T.D ment to see this out· ing nn. Dramatic open $129.SOO. 1646 sq ft and ask in@
standing 3 Bdrm home staircase to pvt ms tr SUNSET R. E only
17141 671-4400' "
IJIJI U .. 2121
HARBOR
featuring huge custom suite. Sep children's 542.Sfkl8 846·8803 $149,900
room with fireplace, wing and 3 baths! All INWOODBRIDG E !
WESTCLIFF
4 Br with d e n .
housew1 rely clea n .
Warm earthtone colors.
highlighted with wood
decor. Privacy you'll
like. Yours ror only
$250,000 Call Harry
631-1266
REALTORS
Lease option. 1·2 yrs 3
boat slip, 5br. maid's
qtrs. Owner/Bkr. Con·
tact Joanne Korne y.
1 714 )828 1280 ,
{213)598-1363
new ceramic tile in this+ pr iv detatched HwslW• (g]
baths and kitchen and mom·ln-law apt. or rec. H.t.iw I 042 ~I \\bodbrldge
loads of storage inside rm. Compl. w /wet bar, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Re I and out. VA & FHA 4thba +more! Motlvat· •IV
TERMS AVAILABLE. ed seller, here is paten· G~Westhtahs 551·3000 1--;c:::cc,,,c:::--i
Asking only $107,500. tial. Take advantage. Beautiful S&.S Exec. 4 ntoBarnau Pkwy Irvin~ I tote A Di vision of
DESPERATE
S34.000 down. owner will
finance al 13~'7. with
$1500/mo pa yments
Total price S279.000
East Bluff. 5bdrm. Jba.
ca 11644-7063
Mpt Cmt $65,000
Beautiful Newport Crest • Harbor Investment C.o J
For more details, call CENTURY 21 bdrm home. Elegant wet · s~lal
s.40-11.Sl WALK·IN REALTY bar, blt·ln bt>q inside & l,..;;.t Rate
964-331 I many ohther amenities .& RE •L 4 bdrm. 2•L bath w1'th PURE CiOLD incl. a uge yard that A A ~
3 Bdrm lower. 3 Bdrm Sl 10 000 ~=~:.s }:st a 2 b::sut~rdl VALUE r.l~~~s.ca;:;;,tli~ ;:,~o~ --~ ·• HERITAGE
2 Bdrm + den condo. ' view from every room.
Walk to beach 1245.000
s.f()..3666
upper duplex. Outstand· • Broker. 963-8lS2 AT a time when good with fireplace. Great
ing Balboa lsland in· '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Clean 4 Bdrm. · owner ---------1 buys are few and far financing with a 13~ • Whelan . . REALTORS
vestment and summer wUl carry balance with Divor ce/foreclosure between. we are proud fixed rate & 20'* down. n...-I r--
home. $449,000. S20.~ down. Hurry · forced sale on beaut. to present this im · $245,000. Hurry , with •w:a ~uw.,..
hlMMll.-clllty g 5 wont tut. Call Rafferty Huntington Harbor maculate, up-graded 4 terms like this it won't --------t
67).1700 • & Lloyd Bkrs. 963-5568 home. Worth S29S.OOO, bdrm. 21,; ba. Plan 4 in last! 1
LohofC ....
in this lovely tree·
shaded bungalow on ex·
tra large lot. 3 Bdrm,
beam ceili n gs ,
wortshop. 1189.500.
..
Lovet)' I Bdrm, 2 ba
11Dfle family home with
very PRIVATE yard.
Xlnt location, clole to
acboola, 1hooP1n1 and
frMW•Y. llU,500 end
owner will ceny 2Dd. -
'*Cote Be.atty
A lnvestm~l
640-5771
-.. Lo d Northwood Place. Fan· INTERE.ST TRUE VALUE try ......,,ooo. w own, tastic assumable loan.
I take over existing Assume S38K down. Lov· in the ever popu a r financing at 13~ Int. Call today for further de·
ely 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, faml· Westmont homes. 3 lrg Featuring 4bdrm, 3 full tails. Bd + Bonus rm. Below ly room1 firepl~ce, open market price. SIZ7,000. baths, 3 frplcs, ocean
beamea ceilings. new Cell Anne McCasland view, 3 car gar + xtras.,.
copper plumbing, large 631.121!18 Call 631·6313 for more yard, double 1ara1e. info .
skylight. Only Sl12.500.
Call~9181
OPE N HOUSE
Rf ALT Y
/
RFIMJ.X
tn I I I Ill!'-
HwlkUIJl• IHcll I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ml.80A ISLAND OWtlR RUN . w... .............. , .... , ... ... ,. ..._. 'f'tt-fi I ....... 0.....
wll c....., I at TD. TtntflC D .... L
MI0.000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
RlAl lSTATE
S.01"' IVnt•I" Pr~ftV M41Ntr,...nl
I
873-teQO
104 ••••••••••••••••••••••
**LEASES Ranch Re a It y has 11.523 ,.,.,. .... n..0 jeuw£ teaaes. 15 to chooae "f """'"'~I'll. ""''" .
from. 9550-*° mo. Cell .......... h 1041 ..
C-!·'.\ l\:('t t
~.;f.\l IY
'•'' 1 ,'()(}0
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
ONE OF THE HST Redhil l 0-~ Realty
1;-;:; -;:wo
3 bdrm·2 ba-den·pool
Mint. Sl83.000. Own /agt.
548-8665. 548-5758
In one or the best loca·
tions in Newport •.
Heights. Daisy fresh and \
ready to move in. Brick
fireplace flanked by
buillln bookcases in llv·
Ing room. 3 Bdrms and
nice yard Offered at
$189.500 .
OCEAN VIEW CONDO
Owner mwtt sell this unit
NOW ! 2 Bdrm 2ba
Versailles condo with
excel assumable !inane·
Ing. Only JW,950
REAL ESTATE STORE
642-5200
~ PETE J BARRETT ... REALTY
67~1771 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
ma en ab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
Sl*LI STORY IH T .. IU"1f5' 38R
Bonita Plan in super location. 3
separate patios, Spanish tile entry.
$215,000. Nancy Imbernino 642-8235.
PllCI llDUCTIOM IH IRVIMI
lBllAClt Now $399,000 incl. land for
thJs completely refurbish~d and :
expanded SBR & baths home. New
kitchen, all new master suite w /fplc
and luxurious bath plus large tree
form pool. Larry Dyer 642:8235.
• '
l
•
R
I
I
I
"i
••
A
• :;.
712·1920
a Br. J Ba. larce yard, 2 ... .,.,. INdl J76
car aaragc. ST4S mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••
175-ClrG. Pabuloul, Wkly; Easter.
Summer. Now. J.4 Br.
Yearly rental a Rd, 2 Ba. Prime toe. flS-7171
IASTSIOI
Ca 11,w ...
2 Br. ' Study. trl.Jevel. fl replace, 1 k )'II I h t ,
deck. No children or Incl. atove. ST~O/m o.
Poaalble leue option. Luxury Oceanfront oeta. tsa5. 180 E Zllt. St.
Wockly.zoraBr.Comp. l>ay1 848·4212. l'!vu Al\.17$.&15.S furn . tncld llnen1. _~ __ 954.1 __ . _____ _
--
\~u /llH 11 T _.:£ fi. l I \i!r~ (1 House w /pool, 189$ mo.
!Br. 2& + 2 utH bdrms.
fam rm, patio. 840-132'7.
SSM•. or ofc 759-8597
MG-4714. 2 br, I ~ ba, W. 11lde, M25
Beaut. 2 Br. 2 Ba. fully + sec. dep. No peta.
furn. Condo. Overlook· _64.5-0979 _________ • • I ' 1 M Piiio Aptt
• 011l'lw1111trs & 880 s
T1111ttn
Waterfront Homes, Inc.
Realtors 631-1400
lnl aoll course in BJti CM· 2 Br, 11,\ Ba. 2 Br 2~ Ba.
nyon. Poot, spa. tennis. Frplc, dishwasher. taun·
Call Bill we.dmore dry faclUties, carports.
8'4·7020. 5484M7 aft 4.
1 Br. Stove & refrlge.
Small yard Adult, no
pet.3 S315 S48,1m.
Large l· Bdrm. Near
shops, pool, all util pd.
1884 Monrovia. S48·0336
••••••••••••••••••••••• • 2 Br 2 Ba. Condo nr SC
l Br. Apt Close to beach Plaza. SA Pool $500
&c Balboa Ferry. Yearly Child OK 549 3232 or ~~~I. $365 . Cati 641.1460~ --
~--~-~~~-COf"OIMI def Mar 3822 2bdrm. f~plc , cpls, patio. ~~~~~~~~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• sep unit 2636 Elden
N. . 3bd 2b 2 $475 /mO 646 6789 .
Harbor V. Homes . 4Br.
fam. rm .• 2 story, excel
I 3 Triflexes in a row. cond. 644-5997 south o PCH ID Corona -
del Mar H •L..L-1 IMd II 2 duplexes + 1 lriplex OUMS ~ •
3Br. 2Ba, dining rm. en·
try kitchen. good cond.
SSOO mo. 978-04.23
3bdrrn. pvt beach & ten·
nis court. $700/mo.
551·3006. . B I p . l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely 4 bdr home in 't523 CAMPU' "-·IRVIME l~t~::::nd ~s~rf~nm . GMINI 3202 College Park. Children ML 2 BR. den, 2 Ba. fplc.
tee view. rm, a , cAo 6019 sundecks, frplc, beams, .....,.
no pets. Richard 640.185-0 Secluded 2 Br 1 Ba. patio
dys: ~7072eves. home Wllh comm pool
Spacious 1 Br w/garage,
laundry racil. AS25. Ask
for Faye. 640-9900
Adults only. no pets
A va1I J.13-81. $500 per
mo 2453 Orange Ave
Manager Apt. 2 .
I 090 (JI 1 d 1 t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ok . no pets. 546·6147 or Woodbridge-CONDO 3br. garage. walk to beach Avail. April lsl. 2 Br 2 • •••••••••••••••••••••• . up ex on wa er di ,,A.,""°" •· t . . ..,50 'th d k Cl withdockforJO'boal. By OWNER. format n, '"°"''"" 111.ba, all amen. incl. Pool "' ennlS pr1v. •• Ba. W1 sun ec ose NEW BREED APTS
l Bdrm Ai Bach from CUSTOM HOME 3 br; pool. Now avail. D..a ,oW 3226 $590/mo640-7690 _l_se_._~_527_2 _____ 1 to beach. No pets. $700 S315
Frplc, rec room. pool,
• Pool & Rte Roo111
• G11e1t11 landsuo1110
• JoO to lit.ch ' Sl'IOos
S GI
S E A EN VIRONMENT
'•» '. HAl .. 11 f'lN •i H '*'· •hill)
Dplx, 3br 2ba. quiet nr
Civic Ctr. dbl encl gar,
frptc. near new. lge
patio, ~75 962·0819 ---Large 3 Br frpk. Enclsd
gar. $495.
213/596·6549
New plush 2br 2ba apts
2.2456Q ft Extras 5041
Dumbar St 846-9501
LOCJUl'ICI Hills 3850 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Leisure World Lease 2br.
2ba. Villa Nueva on hill.
gate 14, s µedacular
view. no pets. no s mok
mg 52 or older $.575 mo
(7141551 0788
MisMo.t Viejo 3867 .......•...............
F'in1sterre Condo 2 Br 2
Ba S650 No pets
751 4330
3 Br l • .., Bu Condo 5525
mo No pet!..
751 4330 .,. __ I• All these properties Arrowhead Country ••••••••••••••••••••••• L •--L 3241 BIG 2 BR. Across from mo.675-0l.24Jackie. ..,.... have large assumable C I u b a r e a . S a n .,.... __ .. ln excessof3000s/fwith loans at i2.5°h-. Call Bernardino. 1·864·1732, 3br.~ba,yd,frplc.S745 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bch. Blt·ins . patio, CharminglBr.soofhwy,
• bdrms, centra l air . s ·t h M Bk 1·884-7258 + utJls-<>r lease option. Oceanfront 1br, trlr lndry, gar. S700 yrly. beamed ceiling, refrlg.
j a c uni . en clos e d H•wport l•ach 3869
garages. Gas & water •••••••••••••••••. ••••.
greenhouse windows. ~k-or~~~i3 r . 4.97-m.tbkr +cabana $650 /mo. 962-49H. gar.MtOmo.955-3649
vaulted ceilings . 3 CCMWM1de1Mw 3222 adultaonly499-3816 ---------i fireplaces and many •24 UHrTS• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 br. 2 ba, yard, 1ar. wet SEAVIEW-4Br. 2YJ Ba . CotihlW... 3124
pd. Adults, no pets. 393 PARK NEWPORT Hamilwn. C.M. 645-4411.
ameru.ti .... Doe Run. off _,.. 000 d.n 8 Id Sub-lease 3 Br 2 Ba 'tit bar & more, 9800 mo. For Rent: So La&una beSt ocn view, security. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. crpt. drapes, bit-ins . _,, __..,, · yrs o · 15/81 -..., A..t Ca11 493-6384 661-9343 b b d h I $'·600 C213) 2 .. 11 ~ dul ....,., ...,..2M I Newport Blvd and north 11~ rtnancing. Prin 00. 11/ . _,.,mo. a•· • s u~er l rm me poo . ., mo. • •-"' A ts . ....,., "'' ape
of 17th. $264,950. ty. Ms Deaton or Mr. 67).3355 tbdrm, lba, fam rm , w/VJ~, deck .tc frplc. 4»31129 Newly decor. as pd, _.__1-_2927 ______ _
CGl 644-7211 Sc=~ a(U. 731-2525 3 Br. 2~ 81. Jacuui, 2 patio, 1 ml to harbor, no :':S~25~l l. Chuck BLUFFS BARGAIN. 3 Br ~ i~~s::/ 'A~~ I~~: Lge Jbr, 2ba, gar. Fam
COUMTRY CLUI
LIVING
Singles. 1&2 hedronm
apts. & townhouses
From $429 644 1900 . or cargarage.l850permo. pets. $760. 492-3051. twnhm. SlSS,500 Agt. 642•5073 pref.1034EI CaminoitD
Loh for s. 2200 Startin1 immed. Call 492-21198eves. Charming, newly re· 875-5830,~146 $435. 832-5057 C&-8pm I Oceanfront for Winter
td, . · ....................... J im?e0-174.3. Hw.tl'oaleec• 1240 modeled 211\0ry, 3 Br. 2 s-NAM 3210 J .. ToW11•a_. ----------1 Rentals Furnished &
W ... _.-o...,.. .....,. Ba 0 ---Ocean view Newll d ...... r. gas pd., 2 br, 1 ba. t sty, gar. lge. unfum. Broker 675 4912. -"''ER~ "' ShorecUffs 2 br •·den, lge ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ...........,. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... v I i d "' flrepla .... Near beach •· e n c oar . . Po o I . c ean. n ce ecor. no LOTS yard. Mini view. $1100. 5 bl.ks to a«an. Elegant 2 ...... "' 2bdrm. tba, drive by. d /w 81 her . Adu Its. pe_ t.s, $400. 2178B Placen· NO FEE' Apt & Condo
T' A few CABO DEL ESTE Agent, 673-5354. bdrm. fam rm .tc den, town. $750. 494·5873 & 2 006 S . Ga rnsey 642.5073 ha. 545-7983 rentals Villa Rt!ntals
LI Ofhet-IHll &tat. waterfront home sites ($750 mo). Plush crpts, 49&-1<m. 844-7083. ----------1 675 4912 Broker
d ••••••••••••••••••••••• remain on Lake M isson Avail Now. 2Br I ba with 2~ ba, cedar & glass. WOOOS COVE MIWL y DEC 01. COZV 1 Br Near shops &
II Moble Ho.Ms Viejo. This is the final (rplc. Ni~ No pets. no Dbl car pvt gar, fully SCMlfll LClgma 3216 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar, bus Adult. no pets. $325. For 5* 1100 opportunity to build children. 111t/last + S200 maint. yd Adults, no 370 ROIA ••••••••••••••••••••••• d/washer. pool. Adults 645·7836_. ____ _
Set' ••••••••••••••••••••••• yourdttam home. From sec. 9i00/mo. Call Linda Spets. l~u/i9r:Oat65Z733tl8th. OlbUaT. RskAyGligEhf?·U. Sa!nl21·qbure, 2f~r +,. l"'z Ba. View, 2 642-5073 B St ts & $285.000 Call Henry al67!>-23ll t. 11.. v • or .., lrep aces. garage , ---------I r ove. carpe x Trailer at bch $8500 Durantat7148551081 ~5112 doors / window s . backyard.Avail.Aprill. Near new 2bdrm. 2ba. drapes. No children or & Terms. OWC or trade . . CostaMno 322 ----· -----beamed ceiling. frptc, 499-3251 SJOO 646-4382
499-:1116 I+ Acre Loh •••••••••••••••••••••• • * * new kitchen / bath. 1675 frptc, laundry fac. new pets. m_o_. ___ .
New Modular type home,
El Moro Beach Park. sp
70. 2Br. space rent $175
mo. 20 yrs lse. 169.900.
499-3816
OWC200/o DWM 2 BR, encl gar, adlts, no l•a.lollMoll mo. 833·3544 days , c.-.fums cf1)lS.drps&paint. Encl LARGE BACH & 1 BR .
979.7 3oo 994 .2 171 ~.$450.773W.Wilson, 1700 16th St. 497·2278eves.Trish. ~d 3425 gar. $475 Adults , no APTS.w/patiosinquiet
l A_. B h ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. 673-2113 . 494-5758 adult complex w/pool. Owner/Agt __ . .....,., _______ 1 Newport eac b'I Youarethewinner of New 2Br, 2Ba Mo I e tbdrm lux club & spa eves _______ spa. bbq. No pets. From
4 frft tf II.ts Home. good ocn view, facil. ocn view. Newport S325 mo Mesa Pines. c pvt bch. S850 mo. Adi ts S 4 7 5 I m o . T o d d Stunning large l Bdrm. 2650 Harl a. 549·2447.
2 br JI•, ba + ~ar. Hoa~
Hosp area nu decor.
open hse Sat & Sun 11 J.
4238 Hil aria Wa ~ .•
$.WO/mo 830 5875 '
3 Br 2 Ba •') blo{'k to
beach Yearly
548·81Jl3
2 Br 2 Ra Penthouse•
Apt. w/oc: vu S700 mo '
Mo 10 Mo 714 624 1325
~~ 5 Star Park, C.M 2bdrm.
10 Acres Laguna Beach 2 Br 2 full balh condo. 2
ioned R·1, '395.000. 29c;; car gar. Poot. jacuzzi.
dwn. owner 640-4244 Gas pd. $700/mo. Days
213 /861 ·8207, hom e
213192J. 2l660
($32 value), lo only. 4gs.3816 ,2131240-9077 garden apt. Pool & rec
Circus Van)OI area. 7JOW 18th. St.
Mar. 17th, 8PM at LCICJlllMI H11h 3250 Beautiful Park Bristol IMSTAMT IM
Eastside 2 Br J Ba Apt
Pool. laundry rm Small
Eves. .;. ;. Iba, 126.500.
646-7048. TalVEltSIDE MontgomeryWard ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adult Condos . Pool. Newupgraded2200sq ft d.:l~r.: ~:N Dix E Side lwnhse. 3 br, ~Fwy. at Bristol Ex« hmeSbr. 3ba. bonus security. s pa tBr. $450; Ex«. Townhouse. Back
UYI %J THE I "Y 97 9 7 300 , 99 4 . 2 171 2. "'1 ba, patio. frplc. bit· Costa Mesa room. a /c, microwave. 2Br, $500. 646-0686 Bay Newport Bea ch "'" • t Call 642·5678. ext. 272 lo spa, view. nr 405/Aticia with view. 21 unit com·
child OK
TSLMgml 642-1603 ----
Near new I br. ccntrallv .
located. encl l!arage
$.WO 673 2113 '•
Newport for 189,500. Near new dbl Owner /a gt. ms. au 0 gar. opener. claim your tickets. $1095/mo lse. Sec. de Woodbridge Condo Yrly plex with tennis court. a• wide with wonderful wash/dry hook-up. 1690. d• bo Ca pl.Strano Beach R-2 lot. 759-0558 eves. • * • posit. 581 -1330 days. Lse. $565. 2br. 1 ba, lower pool, spa. SlOOO per mo.
2b r $380 stove /
refrigerator . poo l .
adults. no pets 423 W.
2br. Iba . frplc
Hgts SS3S1mo
675·0349 cl view. Watch the ats, ocean view. p lans & ___ AG T . 5 9 8 . 2 5 I I unit, tge backyrd races Cal1Sheila641·9022.
C• seagulls, pelicans. Pass nonnit. S90.000. 661.2871 . 5 Br. 3 Ba. 2 Sty. SllOO l Bed.room Condo near eves/wknds p a r k , i n c l B 548-9516 YEARLY 3 Br. 2 Ba • by "D" Anchorage Way .. ~ I B kh t /Ad m s I I k h r ·1 ~~ and call us. Two R·2 lots, Capistrano mo. se.494-0066 P~l<;re:n~:. Etc
8
$450 LCICJlllMI Mlgu.I 3252 ~;7~ l~~ ~~Y~a ~52~7c8\s
h WATERFRONT Beach. view, by owner, mo. 646-4477 ••••••••••••••.••••••••• eves ·
Quiet 1 Br. l Ba. New
c rpts & drps . Good
Eastside toe. Mature
Adults only. $325. 147 E.
18th. St 114. C.M
ay -----1 Steps to ocean S695 per:
tbr. $340 uti l paid . mo.Bkr6453683 ;
carport, adults. no pets •
ff terms. 496·1542 3Br, 2YJBa condo Micro. -. -3 Bdrm Lag Niguel $650 -tr HOMES --wet bar many extras. Brand new house for dis-mo Gardener Included. To~ 383 W. Bay S48-9516 Quiel 2 Br I Ba with ;
garage. patio. pool :
01 Rij~~-~~~E R-1 lots. Fountain Valley Great location. S695 . criminating family. 3 Call 951-~l ~r 831-1939 u..twwlshed 352
Nr Mile Sq Pk Doris 644--0685, 857-2302. bllts to ocean. 3 Br. 3 Ask for J 1mm1. •••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br 1'12Ba. w/gar Adlts .
cpts. drps. bltns, fn cd
yd, water pd 636-4120.
687 Victoria St. S415
2619 •'J" Santa Ana Ave
$410
E Side triplex 3br . 2ba.
immed occup. no pets
$550/mo incl uti l
851-9647
Adults, no pelS 1801 H
15th St Newport ·
Heights S450 642 7340 • re 962-7:.12, 842·1418 Agt Ba .. fam. rm. Totally
b: Ac,.. for S. I ZOO New 2 sty, 2 br hse. frplc. upgraded & customized. Mh'*' Vlefo 3267 Nice Twnhse. $49~ r:no
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br, 1YJba. Avail 1m
•••
'41
$l ~
'63
rt s
SI
C(
•• r4
'2
4
S I
8'1
•• ' •••
'78
c~ m
•••
4 I
Fl
b\
••••••••••••••••••••••• M~D•sert, OW. wash/dry , yd. s1200 mo 833-0145
WORST COULD BE ltftOrt 2400 balcony. gar, S525 AM /P M.
BEST FOR YOU ••••••••••• ••• •• •• ••••• Adults, no pets. 642· 7725
ff you have $164 ooo and Tahoe City. Contractor's 4 Br. 2 Ba. Fam. Rm .
want 35~ yield 'annual· quality home 4 Br. 21h 4 BR 2 Ba, fam rm. Xlnt toe. Gardener. Call
ly, purchase $200,000two Ba, Fam rm, 2 car gar. dinette, 1700 sq.ft . $750 aft6PM. $69S. 840-6203.
year deed of trust bear-Try xchng for Or. Cty mo. Grd.nr incl. M2·4623 h property. $215,000. HOME FOR RENT a"c~ ~oc~!k,re=~~~ ~ 916·583·0284 . Tahoe H~ge3br,2ba,su~miton 4 Bdrm. $595 Fenced
Inactive developme nt Northshore Realtors. kids & peta, avail. now. yard & garage. Kida It
area near Vista. Com. M • uuOTH COM DO $625. 631~ peta welcome. 964·2566 bleed 8°h-tst. + this in-~ or 973-2971. All .. no fee. vestment represents $79.SOO. 2 br. frplc, close· 3 Br. 2 ~ Ba . n e w
HOMF.S FOR RENT med. Savage Wild & Co
3 Bdrm . SSS O. 5 7 5 _67_5-6606 _______ -i
F e n c e d y a r d s & Ape liM:cb Fwwl11ted
garages. Kids &c pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• welcome. 964-2566 or ,...,_ ,...... 3101
97).2971. Agt .. no fee. •••••••••••••••• ••••••
M•wport hoch 3269 OCEAN FRONT
••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa Bachelor. Lovely
Newport Shor es Canal view, quiet & secure .
front 4bdrm, 3ba. newly Adult, no pet. $395 incl
decorated. 2 blocks to uUls. 673-6372.
ocean.962~. COIWMl .. Mw 3722 tent.han~oftheap-tn with 20 ~ down Townhome. Frplc. Smallokter 2br, tba hse
prailed value of land. O.W.XC AT 12~. B. micro-wave, auto gar offstreepkgbutnogar. Harbor Ridge Lautre· •••••••••••••••••••••••
M Al appraisal on adj a· M ace, 497. 48 74 o r door, pvt yard, dlx thru-S37S. 635-0507 moot Model. Full ocean 2 AnS.
Westside Duplex Apt.
3 Br 2 B a,. 1 n c I
stove/refng. yrly rental '
$675/mo Agt 673-3355 UpStairs. 2 Br. l Ba.
Refrige.. stove. enl:tsd ....__liBJllf gar No pets or small Verasailles I Br /studio ~ ·children. $390. 770.5629 i>enthse condo. adlls.no. A,ARTMEMTS pets. $450 mo. + 1st-last ·
Beautifully landscaped S225. utit. pd.. 1 bdrm. + sec. dep. 645·3447.:
garden apts. Patios or patio. adults, quiet. 979-5370Jim
deckll. Poot & spa. Heat Avail April lst. 644·6958 •
P id covered parking Sunny upper w /patio. 2 • A~ults, no pets. 1 or 2 D_. ,oW 3126 Br 2 b a , $585 I mo
~OK. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oshw:1hr, no pets. 789 rBdnn '390-$400 Vacant. $490/mo. 1st & Amigos Way 644-0685 or
2250Vanguard Way last. S300 sec. Frplc, bit· 631-2029 ~9626 or 548-2408 ins. No dogs. S42·3597.
,...nt 2•L acre parcel at 661-8143 out. Approx 1600 s /f. view _,,..mo 760-1977 On be h p t o t ..,..,., $i5o.ooo each. Call Bes t E'Side lo c .Sbarp3br,gardenerincl. .....,.,., . . ac . v .• ae.-..v IASTSIDE 2Br.1Ba.wtthrefrige.,
7lt f7SHG8;•9J.11530r lncUne Village.No.Shore S750/mo.llt/laat+S300 cstm decorated, frptc. 3 Bdrm. frplc, walk to ~tm'J~~10k~:e~~nNce~ 38r.l~Ba.Townbouse. built·ina, carpe ts &
Versailles Studio. all
Amenities, $450.
549--0833.
condo. Lake Tahoe vu. dep. No does . Avail tge patio S650/mo. h 1 No pets. $525. 127 21st. drapes. S410. 951·0881 or 7st-30lll. SllO per night. 3 Br, 2ba. 3-6-81. 2430 Santa Ana ( 2 13 ) g 5 6 . 9 6 8 o e r beac · pool & tennis. m a 11 t e r s u t e · St. Days 646-42162. Eves 951.7630. Ask for Louie westcUff adult condo, 2
O ea I g n R e a It y . Ave. Onlt F·l. 645·7800. (714)982·0458 S795. Alt. 7~9278 7 14 ·87 5 · 7 7 6 4 0 r 64S-9543. 33801 Mariana. bedrooms. 2 baths. Din· 7021831-MSO _;___:._;_ _______ , 213-•1844· ------------------Ing room. Fireplace ---------12br. Jba ,,._ ... ~. lmmac. Hw.tld• ILUPFS WESTBAY APTS tarae 2 $395. Nice 2bdrm, nr F-hly dacorated. Un >-'-VtNU H~ 3242 3 bdrm, 2~ bat.hi, fam Cozy, small Cum. studio. • • ,....., "' RUNNlNG SPRINvS cond, commGG pool, at· --lll50 2 bd 2 b h No kitchen. E mployed Br, 2 Ba • .-..-. New Dana Harbor. B-25091 fum. tBOO mo. 831-7300, Df&ili on the way to Blf Bear. tachecl pr, Nfr/mlcro, ....................... ~s 3 Bctr "';• at . Female, Non smoker. 1ardm apg, ,.U0.,1pa. La C resta Owner Bkr.
Beautiful 3 view lot in II eta ver4e area . Seagate W•te~front · m, am rm, Adulta .,... 4M-a48. ---------~ & ,,..._L hom -a Townhome 40 boat SllOO. Pooh. Rllr, Ref's.12'7$.MCMtlt. •w·.-...._·...... Ne.-Hei0 hts Dupl'"'x perm. ea .... · $411/•o. 1•1·1018 • a..unn~ ... _ -II .....,. •---"" 314 -...,.. • "' Lal. RMisBZ~ oppoetle szs ooo ev•,...._. dock in front. 3 Br. a ba. .,....,,&.ft. Cotihl ....._ J1J4w.wcp• ~ 2 Br. l Ba. Adult.a, no
Cqth M .. a Ho1pltal, ~ • 840-1141 New qit, newly painted 3 Br 2 Ba oceanfront ••••••••••••••u••••••• • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• peta. SC95. Mo. 11t. la1t 1211.aoo. LP pr daJ .... lbr, l tJmHa&, Pool, 1pa. Len· home, nu paint. • SUSCASITAS ........ 3 er. 2~ Ba. 2 Story, dtpoalt. 517 Bolsa Day• lltf McC .... lltr. 20 acre percela ol recre•· ba, ;;;.tu. ao pet1. nll, cJubbouM. GREAT drapes, xlnt cond .. patio Furn 1 bf. apt. SIZ5 Is up. _....., trplc, lndry rm. In 4· u1.JS20. Evu Wknds
141-7729 Uonal land w/palm treet .. 199. ... lfll VIEW. Vacant. Aaldn1 • yrd, fum. or unrum .Encl. sar. Adulta, no a..•.. Ptex. Bola a Chica I ~1.
lm!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2 hourt h'om O.C. from S14S0.8*3Mlorl40-80'5 $1200/mo yrl)'. OwHr r::-.:io Newport 81. Y• .... wflllaerof Wame.r area. S580 per ----------= p ,000 B1rr1 WUUam IBf' •/,,..... Mewly de· .. ...._...... mo 94().-51J06 2bdrm townhouse, SS50 4 D Ame/• Centurian Investment C!O'l'9t*I. ltutal&t. Lri. st:i\BRJDGE Watervlew ma)' con1lder winter btwne•5PM ·---·---·-----1 -. Adults no pets. 1409 ... S. 1100 Corp. m.m2 yard.-. tTMIM. C~-*'·0o~' lfrplc, L~·atNoJa~ Rpleea .. lty ... Bach. A .. *. UUll. paid. ..!!!_~W.>. &o t br. t ba, trplc, DW. encl. ~rior.14WM4. •• .._ .. •••••••••••••••• wet_.., pa • PoO 'ten· NI''" ""-W '-l.,.. II thl _.,. yar. Nr Hun!.. katbor . .-.... --• ... .-~11 •. Ill 2bdrm, lba dup .. x, car. nla. 1pe, klda/pftl oil. '75«0 H• Y or o n Y • Mar. tNa. IP at t·-AcrcM from beach. z br, -'nm.__. 241 her d h II all It ~ I MeN .. lt Rult1 tu-1134, N-.omer'J Ward an,• ._ •
..... -~ Wd I l'JM' oo ·Up, Av • 4 · nc far, .. u..a 141...,...,.. . adulU only, PoOl. Ur, 'I ~ .....,..... ••••••................ new Roon. Cf'1llta, pa.Int. lndrJtrrS/mo. at.-....,rr• · •"'1· at lrilt.o1 I Bdrm, a ba apt, trplc. MSG ..0.5018
S:ms Ill '; ~ o::!~!i Lac-a urttlm• ftailoa M71 • dep.llrn.llchlkl .,.._ 1144 Ba~~abr,I~ ba. stu.nn.lba 1ar1• 1 Br. Ool&llM... eel. 1an11. faS. All. ' .um-... __ ... _ E:ll ~ ~ llU Me-r -· , 157m o-....._ ~ .......... &. ... _. Call ...... ••L m lO w. .-. .. _ ..... -·VF--w kl" Uftfl Ir J .._ YIU g .,.. • ua. • I • ' •••••H•••••eeeeeeeeeee -... ....,. -n.~" -J-1--·•u~~-. -·-_.,_ -.... ~-• .. clans• world wi de. Mt-.... · ..... .. -..U1111-~.,.... L&rl9 t Ir l Ba over bl. .__. 1111•· D • • d . o w • e r • La.rte lit{ Cclndo-2~ B•. U'YelASStMJ. ana. ·-• --· * * * J • I Bed roo • •. looiha1 Baek · Bay·
ldal ~"°.:'~ • Ill· (2ll)a-100I. Whm JOU oeed ntert Din an.a, family rm, Ot.m, blJ Is nllbt n . II a ....... 174 '400-1•1 IC.a. Olr, no Load• or clouu 1 ~-.._ -.:r"1' ~•,..,a.In. tan frplc, erpt, J etory, ....._ • k, lba.lonn.a.1 ....................... PCEWLY dee. J~ 2 k p•l• plHH. 1ht'tr/ ~ 1 Clf"IOIU, .1
,._. __., • W ... SAl&I to U. lentee ~ comm. paol. Avail. S.ll, DI. POOi. COftMI' loc. _,.,,. 1.a ...... ~I lo!twllio•a. .,_, patJo, Tralb Paid. Cu,.lt. ~. 141 Ootnlft.ie
• .., ... T ..... C.. ft'uDSllS In Cl ... lft .. to ........... +deposit. Call 'Anlr. ••med. L411e Jft ~ ... ~.: md ~·-·IM> dop ..... -orl'7Nlfl."lt·• l>r. C&ll before SPilL .... • 6~4-4ttl Cle,..,...~__,. ,.,......,... ~ Ta.mltto4. tlD/sno.tw-lllL H.il• .. •ICl-attn •11a dip. nor.. tHl.,,.,._ortu.i.,
,., """'""' ee4tMMti-.-1e1••···-· .............. ••••••••• ................. •••••• ....................... ...................... ..................... • .................. ·~···
--------.. ..,_.,ID m1.._e, WeC..~CJewre Room eArMe'Dff; remod, EL&CTIUCAL Hd n-Rau&.clwlup,~ ltXl:CUT.VI! wlll rte. at/IM ,_t.Unl by New• rteo'len, ll.,.U l -,r • • Nr Vletorta. -de9 • vpliloll. »laLO.O. Ptlmer•Soe. modelblC. QuUtJ wltb ~al. Diunplrvct. '-o•ri. Ult nla, a -lllcWd 8'DOr. Lie,-.. apeclall1t/1ta1·bUl1
ClllGI• •ork 1aar. Truck lJe'd.ur.-lM'**llrice.Ul·_. 'Mc*MrV.ta-'llal Wd.N7-540T,Mt-IM Tr)'me.at-4'10 (24bn) pi'l(9.l\eliable.5'MIU
I rt I CmeUlt .... ~ . .._,,II .. Dr If I lw •• t ' I -~~1......... ... au Pala&.ln1 lat./Eat. ren· QUALITY llOOFlNO ••••••=•••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..;:, ..... 1-.1 ···--••••••••••••• ta1a our •~lly. Att· AJllypea.rreeeat. OEN.'-'-"'"'' RUCTION ................. •••••• 8.8. Dl:8JGNI •VERY LOW PRICl:S• '-' •••• """"... a• COUl9de paloted. Prompt. Vlaa, MC. :W1·5tlo ~::.~::=~1 .-"~~=~1 ~ .• ,;.•'Jrya .. !~·. ~m.~!'~l.SID\lpe ....... b, ~ .. ·~.!!.!'~e ~ ~-~ Palntlna. Grea HARBOR ROOFING ~ r1 un... ..__ ---............. ••••••••• r_, 1111' .. _ ra.-. -Uc.-... Sii· SUM.• )'d. 10 day de1.1---...;:;..-'--~--1WutaREALLY CLEAN PiJWlle ..... _ Le a k Rep a I r•. It , ,.,... •1n in area L•.....,.•JMJ·Cleuupe lnter/E.xter/Refinlabin&. Comi*U RooflnJ Jobs. c; ...... ,ICeMrefe , ... .a ' Treetri11u1)Lnl·Ha1111J11 KOVKT Call OID•bam ... f '1;": cetliDp/waU~per. Lie. "Ram Or Sblne ltoof· . ............... ,....... ,. ... 614 ll~ao r OltL ...... eet.Mf.5121 Hw~la111 CalntcSoaa,-.5105 ln&"~ RAE.::;:~:b't!:! Fwo~~:~ReRtaltonln1 Dt'JWll . Anlle.:a...':"'· Eapeftiae boulell pbt ............ ••••••••••• 2ndteneraUoo t'Jytlln ..-,nu.wIGe ea ra-••••••••••••••••••••••• l • ..lt4I • P'or Im purpoaff we RALPH'SPAINTING BalboaRoofln1Co. area. LiQ'd. Top qual. Uon. Slabt, P~tlo1 , l)rywallSptelaU.t HAT'RIUMS•• equ P aupp u vl&llat. prop. 1r'con-Lk.lnt/Ext.LowRatea MaterialC09tldownl
Mr. PaJombo.ta"3l4• BlodclsBrict. Lied. Qual.. prod. New. re· Do YoUI' lod0or/out4oof rumAIMd,truttworthyA teat. Call MCMnOO Video FreeP.lt. -..s. Freeeai. 67a.1143
M2"387 evea. mod. t-.C. U:Mi5't aUi\llDIJ Deed plantlnl or depta-4170 Verlfteaticm CUSTOlllNTERIOR C-.....,.-,.-------I refurbl1bla1T Call __ .. __. ... ___ ... DAVE'SPAINTING TMt
C RPENTRY _ _.. DRYWALL our ex· N A i ' ... _ _.._.._ tt 11 If Servinlareatyeara •••••••••••••••••••••••
A •••••••••••••••••••••• e w port tr um • c___, bJ ltUlll. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• MOil reuonable Tile installed. all kinda. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~;:B::y:;J:a:y-;;;:;:;:;~~MZ;:-;-8809~ UC. CHILDCARE ~~~:~~:the 8".QIZ7 Call EveSh.-5112 BRICKWORK: Small Ina~. lk'd. 780-7301 guaranteed, ref1. John = Cuat.om CabineU Ii Bara llb'Coroudellbr M••• Tender Lovin• Cleaalll1 lobe. Newport, C"ta 893-1887 Jl()OKKEEPINO It Flal1hln1. Gara1e home 87S.2t45 •,u.....1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bv •--. We -'. ve -· !!~!!z.. lnlae, Reta. Palntin1: Comm'!, In· ,--.-_-le ____ _ ,...._ c ' ~ •• ,_ ··~ du1trlal, Realdentlal. ,... ~ • "TAXSERVICE UnltlM5-1521 My taome. Planned ac-••••••••••••••••••••••• arpe~try , rooftn•. t.be kiad ol aervlc. the F Et L w rates •••••••••••••••••••••••
Reu.ratea. 498-0913 15~ otf Skylight price tlvitlea, bot lun ch , E~ECl'RICIAN-prfced u:a;::r'cirf~~Wbl~I · world haa ror1otten. EltPSaT Brlek It 87'::m 1
·
0
ExpertTreeTrimmer'
A.... Cal1 for lnatallatlo~ anadlali'8amblltlllper. ncht. fnie eaUmate on :;..; • e e . 15/yn exp. Ref'1. CaU ._,.. lmalJ joN Ii Tenyeanexperience
••••••••••••••••••••••• date. Oranae County Call Kathy, H2-85t4. larporamallJoti.. 1__ • Bartiara at m.1m or ,..,..,.. ~ faeinp. ,...._.jlepaW 54.S-tJMS. 751-2121
Driveways, parkjna lot ca-try. ~7802 Eve15S-OZ14. Lie. #3'912l 87S-lra:)9 Cariieatry, plumbin1 Ir su.4149. llafl.st.-, 7 .. 7074 •••••••••••••••••••••••
epair. 1 ti • .,._. 1-..A~A .. J UA -t Neat -tcbes Ii •-xtur-WIRdow ca. .. W.g J1C
S
r liS • h•e1a c:oa n1. Cwl:wclllf Top Quality, Dependable toe~~· ... ..., .. rac-ROBIN'SCLEANJNG MASOinlY and remodel· ---.... ~ lf~I .. ~J"t ••••••••••••••••••••••• .
U 'dA1p at. 646-4871 C~Serflc• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service. Rua. Rate•. 18 r.uaJll',MZ-1537. Servtce-athoroucbly in1. Quality with the ~'"""· ill'°
09 "Let1beSunshine ln" •·
c · ....................... Construction-All types yraexperience.531-5055 carpentry/Handyman cleanbouse.540-0IS7 be.tpriee.131-2004 rtus ... , CatlSunshineWindow l•JllM~ Shampoo " steam clean. 20 yruxp. Free est. . Drywall palntint patio ....,._~ ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Cleaning, Ltd. 543-8853 ••••••••";:'?•••••••••••• Color brightenen, wht Lie. #334.589. 645-5973 Electrician -S~. )obi. ' ' Wlll dean your bouae, -·-, Holleman Plumbing Infants Ir toddlers. Go c:rpta 10 min. bleach. maint. " repairs. Lie. coven. Your apec:illca· apt, orotftce and leave It ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sai.·Setvic:e-Repairs
bac:k t.o work ctr worry Hall, liv.-dln. rms SIS; RESIDENTlAL & Com· t2331~Cl0. MS-5203 tlona. ~»<mt · DAISY FRESH. Ref1. Student will move you at Free estimates 552-7183
less. 1 adore children av1 nn f7.SO ; c:ouc:h ttO; merc:ial remodeling. . Hwctw11dl'toon 875-2831 rea1. rates. /52-1493, r and my bac:k1round in· c:hr ~. Guar. ellm. pet Quality with the best Elect.rk1an-Qual. work, ....................... Ml-17'17or847-3309 r,..011111p .. 1rtrti~r M•DIJHMllf
eludes training in child odor. Crpt repair. 15 yrs · price. '31·2004 reu. rates. No Job loo HARDWOOD FLOORS S!LL Idle ltem1 with a · •••••••••••••••••• ••••• raisi.nc. University Pari exp. Do work myself. s ma I I ! Free est . cieanecUt Waxed Dally Pilot Cla11lfled Make your ahoppin1 Prof. service t.o save you area 7am-6pm 559.0734 Refs. 531-0101 Want Ada Call M2·M111 646-lmo. Anytime, 832·-4881 S.A. Ad. eaaler by Ulinc the Daily lime & money. Newport PllotCluelfledAda. Pacific: R.E. 645·3683
Ultle It lkj!!
Clualfied Ada are really
1mall "people t.o people"
sales calls with big re·
adenlhip and bi1 resultl !
To place your c:laasirled
ad, call today 642-5678.
Apm l•••h............ R...W. to Sharw 000 Offlu Retttal 4400 ....... R...tol 4450 l .... h W R..tal 4500 Mort~g11, T,,.t Lott & r..-d SJOO P•rao1t• USO Ma&. W...t.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deicli SOJS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~...,. M•wporta.och ll6f Moving? Avoid deposits Luxurious,fullserviceor-For st.ore & office space PRIME c .M. loc. 1500 to••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND: Blk Terrier••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.,..................... & c:ul living expenses! lice space, 1·6 rms, c:on-at reasonable rates. ~ Atltt Mf9. m Ix , Hound . d 0 g . FIRST LADY ACCOUMTIMi
3 Br I Ba. Steps to the ri:;~.ressionally since ferenc:e room , sec'I 500to2700~. ~~~:hosu~~. ~so 0:,~~ SJNCE1981 Shepherd Malamute Escort. Models AMD/OR
beach. $675. Property HOUSEMATES services. Newport M~PVLAERZADE R mo. Avl. lmmed . tstld.ndTDs,SSOK·SlM+ mix, Blk Lab, Young ,_...D IOOICKHPl.._.G House 6423850 Beach. Call for info: S4<Hl5i2S Owner/Non Owner •olden Lab. Irvin e -·r .een. " · · · 832-4134 752~188 JS2:SMesaVerdeE.C.M. Sf'Rlt!Condo. Animal Care c:e.nter •972·1J45• To assist in developing
Need quic k sub-lse ! Male 40-45 shr Sbr 2ba . 545-4123 ...... W91hd 4600 Commerc:iaUclndustrial 754-3734 MC&VlSAAcc:epted t.he P & L. Work under
primeloc:allon.1 Bdrm. hie C M S N sC 450 sq. rt. Dehght~ul 11••••••••••••••••••••••• PETERDOBBS minlumsupervision.Re-
1 ba. Amenitie1. $600 no Pia~ & Frw~a$:ioo" Shr worklving spFuaclle wh1th PRIME Garage needed, C.M. MCM016 673-9043 Found: Black Cockapoo ? ATUMnS MASSAGE quiredl . ldo use indeMpen. dep. 6 mos. lse 673-8432 Uls ,.,.1 ,.913 · · ocean ew. bat . 3 While spot on c:hin. Can't ••• den JU gement. a y ---------• u . --. . yr old bid". ,.,.50 mo. area. must have 24 hr W-' 20.JrYo YleW1 .. _.."" assign work to lower-" ,,.. access. 673-7586 On y TD N aeep. 9S7-0ll9. B d b 1 I Nwpt Island waterfront. • • ..._ .... LI•"-* Turner Assocs .. 494-1177. WATERFRONT our . :s. OU. e pampere >Y 16 eve clerks. Xlnt com-dlx upper dplx. 3 br, 2 --_, S$Railen-lnveat.orsQ Found: set of keys at Beaut. Girls. Open pany benefits Call
ba, frptc:, sundeck. slip Counselorstopersonally .__.f"t•Ht/ CallOeonilonAssoc. Fashion Island theater lOAM ·4PM 7 d ays Millie after
0
9am . select your compatible 11!1.. 673-7314 _._ Phone64S-3433 ~5800 avail. Mature cpl pref. rmmte to s uit your RETAIL ,...•i:• para.inc lot. March 6. No pets . $850. yrly. Ufestyle.Shared·Llvlng. •••••••••••••••••••••••Want Investor for Npt ldentify.640-T7MNina. TOUCHACLASS I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
675-7672 833DoverDrSuite3JNB ~ lmlty 5005 bayfront home. Gi ve Lost: Cat. It grey, blue ESCORTS 752-0817 ~
IEST VALUE 631-1801 SPACE ....................... well secured lat or 2nd eyes pl siamese. Irv . .AMBER forme;ly with Accom1Htt9Ca.ril
Versailles corner pen· Fem wanted to shr home * * * T.D. Agt.875-6161. W a In u t sq u are COVER GIRL is now Small C.M. ore: A/P .
thouse2Br2Ba.comm w /sa m e n r OCC . "'-llH.. REWARD 834-5528. with THE A/R,lig.htpayroll.
pool. jac: .. wgt room. $225/mo. Refs req. lSt TIME •7lFair A•1•n•Hl1/ 552-5075 GIRLFRIENDS' Free& E.O.E.
S700tmo. 615·3787 54~· AVAILABLE Costa Meaa [::19t;'9. LOST: Cat Reward Sm an ii---------~.e1f:h':5~"t~ ~~~a
SantaAIHI 311 Femt.oshr3br,21hbahse You4~~rof ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blk Female N.e .. 1c .,M. THE Suite224 642·1470
•••••••••••••••••••r0 •• non·smkr E. Bluffs N.B. SQO 2600 S ft .....-~ A u•n• •I• ltO area. Needs medtcauon ~
2 Br. 1 ba. near So. Cs t SJSOeves 759-0Sfl · Q. . ~~a~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-e3I Girlfriends Plaza. Security gate. -T-.,-----------
pool. 1 child ok. No pets. Share nice HB home. llar.17tb.IPM at sca1u 1EJ$ FOUND: 3/3 Blk/Brwn •ESCORTS•
S42:5rT* 752-7474. quiet neighborhood. nr NEWPORT BEACH MonteomeryWard IUUR"L Male Doble /Shepherd HOtM/OfficefHohl
• __ ...... L 311 bc:h. w /jac:u.ui. S195 mo. a Fwy. at Brilt.ol •~•s pup Hunt. Harbor Shop· * 759· I 2 I 6 * ~ GCJlmCI 848-S8S7 eves. SPECIALTY Colt.a lfeaa lllW"UI s>hl&Cntr. 842-2156 ••••••n•••••••••••••••• M--'-H Id 24Hrs Call IG-5811, ext. m t.o ..._. -um -Penaa• S lSO Now Hiring
Visa Oceanfront stud io apt Prof woman. 33, with 1~ CENTER claimyourtlcketa. Fetch-Pardon-MC with patio. overlooking yr old boy s eeking '* * '* MORE FUN •••••••••••••••••••••••l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
pvt beach. SSSO/mo util woman in s imilar poei· If every llrt were built PRE LAW student needs
incl. 499-22S3or499·S021 lion t.o sbre expenses. Vent11re capital avail. like a model tbe world SZS.ODO. Will do anything •• Apt/hse $300-$350 + util. Busineu upanaion, mube wouldn't be 80 Le•al. Confidential SPIRITUAL
Apm lawats Fw •sJMd 641·71118 leave mess. for Real Eatate. Cootact dtnerea But crowded NDVBM~O. Box 3242 . READINGS
Of'1........_1_..._ .... lfOO Jeanette Thoma• Gedbart elevators would be --·-·---------108m·10pm Fully Lic'd ~-MOUJIUN 492-7296 or 492.9034 1815
....................... Working Male 25-35 all S,.CWL.e.... c714>790--· COVER GIRL S Camino RetJ. San S E A W I N D p r i v . a v a i I .1...:---------1 ....... "Mow NPT. BCH. Emplymt. Lett&,._.. IJH OUTCAU Clem
kitc:hen/lndry. etc. fami-MD'a fadl, in HB. 2,000 C71 .. ,,7• •66• A..,. eo ... -b'd. •• ...... 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * - -VILI .A.GE 09 -& .,. .,...... ~ ,... 953--07'79 · MCtVISA LOST· Reward SIOO Smt ~ ly sltuatlon avail. now. sq.fl. Reduced t.o Sl200 person operation . · blk cal. fem Requires c: as u a I lo I k Lind a mo. lse. Red Carpet. ,,_ Loctllloll Include furn. Ir equipml. -ml!!!m_lll _____ medication 548-6539 New 1&2 bdrm luxury
adult apts in 14 plans
from $440. 2 bdrm from
SSOS + pools, tennis.
waterfalls, ponds! Gas
for cooking & healing
paid. From San Diego
Frwy drive North on
Beach to Mc Fadden
then West on McFadden
to Sea wind Vi Ila ge.
(714)893-5198.
_s._s-_Z11&0 __ s::zoo_1m_o. ___ 1 893-1.:1>1 1270 Sq ft on busy Beach ~eves Ii wknda. fOIJND ADS ...... ..,_y
*D .. uvEOFFfCES• Boulevard-Huntington .__ ...._ .t ---~ • * *. * Roommate wanted. 3
2bdrm. 2 story w /dark
room. non·smoker. S200.
M /F. 548-9469.
Quiet. cln resp employed
rmmate w/refs needed.
2Br. 1 blk from ocn. NB.
$250 mo. + SSO dep.
675-702:5
-.va Beach. Ideal for real........ RE FREE ~~
From l room up to 2300 estate office, store or Opp a taJty 5011 A 24Hn. 641·018° FANTASY sq. ft. St.Oii per sq. It. 3 other suitable business. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call: C.../Ce.clt rooms and up. No lease 2 Private baths. avalla· LOAN l'iOOor more. Dbl. A.bpfMC/YfH
required. 2172 DuPont ble immediately. 10 your money. Lou la 64J 1671 ESCORTS Dr. Adj. Airporter Hotel Year leue. Attrac:Uvely secured by unprec:edent· •
833-3223. 9-12 priced. ed t.st in film financ:lng L !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1·--:.~Ml'!nlttd!IB"tr:.-1 ua.1 no
MEWPC>aT CEHTEI 642 .. 321 • ... 216 history. 714·9SH096 I! OUl'CALL ONL y I Z MOOM-4AM
Full Service Suites Weekdays Unique business oppty. LOST: Male Gold Rabbit VISA MC 96S8Grdn Grve Bl. GG
ROOMI 400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shirley and boy want to
Laguna Beach Motor Inn. share home by beach.
985 No. Pacific Coast Call8am·4pm. 557-8712
SCUTCOSTSS suaLEASE SSK·S20K needed Un · vie Tradewlnda /San· * f72·t Ill* •••• *
All you need for one secured, low risk. hilh tlago Pleue call 84&·9844 ·--------· 1---------
t.h Office & warehouse in If l'k Parties for mature. free-mon ly fee! The Esplenade, Redhill return. you t e lo LOST: Reward M lxed 1bef1c hcorh
64()..M'lO nr Bristol. 1.4 yr lse. 4 of· gamble w /the odds in Terrier Blk /W bt v I c: 551-lN& thinking adult couples.
Hwy, Laguna Beach Dally, Weekly, Kitchen
available. Low winter
rates. 494-5294.
Corona del Mar sunny
room & ba. w /laundry
facil. S275. Ask for Faye.
640-9800
Female, age 2:5.!!S. non-
smoker, with kilch prlv.
~ bloek to bc:h . N.B.
875-1708.
Fem 18-2:5 to shr 3br. 2ba Now available. Ideal (lees. recept. area . your favor call Mike Hell/Sprln1dale H.B. ?A Hi'. Service R.S.V.P.549-7605
hse non ·Sm k r new location for Attorney wa~ w/lge sliding (213)--Lie:. tOTllOM0-5911 Servin10r. Cly INTRO SPECIAL
cpl/drapes nr Bcb H.B. Real Estate or En: ~~~l:,,:l ~~t~ Certified Gematonea, Lollt: SlameM lcltten, F. 3 * * * MYSTIC MASSAGE szoo53IHl40 tre~ur in beautiful· sq rt. Avail. after family Uquldatln1 as· moaold,S/4111.Eldennr M~GESlOW /AD
Fem rmmte 2S-3S to shr 1 Y ma Int a in e d f u 11 3/25/81. Cail after lOam 'e ti. x Int Inv e • t. Del Mar, C.M. Reward. ~ ~~ay Sant.a Ana SM-4656
3 b r h 0 m e I 0 I r v . s e r v i c: e b u 1 l d I n g . ~ M al co I m S 4 8 · 0 7 8 I ... 2551 at.ol47 Colla Mesa
S300/mo. Call ~3·1456 <Comer Weatc:Uff Dr. & S22.(M1J ' Vouaretbewinnerof 8:»5pm Nancy Irvine. Newport Beach). Westalde 2Br 2b• comer t. ... .t Loll: lrlah Setter mix 4 .,...tlcll ... soo sq. ft . Call Melisaa home. la yrd w/attach •w• __..!_.. IOJO pup. S/mo old. very CSl2vahae), to
M/F ahr lge 2br house. 645-6101. store. zoned for bual· --frlendlJ . Vic C .M . ,..__ .. _....
WANTED : Balding men
& women. For infor Toll
Free: SOO. 772·354.S oper.
208
CdM, I Blk beach. nesa. Compl. renovated ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54141M. ~ T SPM a $250 /mo. lnc:I utils. WESTCUFFARli 1750, 50·1905 dyi , ..... •ctoryotfer ________ _. Mar.17Ul,8P at •••••••••••••••••••••••
5450
87~5020. Executive suites . 751-2340ev. 7..5ptacocnmlaalononall LOST : White fem · Mont.aomeryWard 1 way ticket, L.A. to ~1:fan~~ui~.:n~\~;~~ G.,..... ~!:r~~a~1:1~~:1c1c1e0e~: Co :mn11cW ~0~940.~.Dl ~: y; :~~~edN:•~aoi1e:~~ -~~!'!9tol Boston. Cheap. March
640·8594 eves. Joyce for•IM 4150 lng sev. avail. Call for ..... 4471 1.0. Umlted offer. Call R I! WARD . Ca 11 Call 142·5811. ext. 272 t.o 17· eam. &3l·242S.
544>-31122days. Garage? ....................... m ore de t a I I a . ....................... Ubert)' Home Loan, fr Richard. M6-0t01 days. clllmyourtlckets. ...,,,.at &
____ ;__ __ ::.___1Slngle Car Gar for <'114)(131-3851. Store Space for leaae. lnveatmenta,Ml·UU. Mt-18ev•. ----*-*-*----Pn-•loa
4bdnn house, residential stor•&e purpoees only. 1500 sq. ft. Ii 1280 1q. ft. r-area, Mission Viejo. C.M. $50/mo. 645-2679, N.B. 2700 sq ft. fully Im-in Huntington Be•c:h. Want lnVeltor for prime •••••••••••••••••••••••
1bdnn for rent, S217 /mo. Mf.550Sevea proved space. $1.5/sq ft. F 1 e" I b I e t e .rm 1 . NewPOrt oceanfroot pro-Sc="J...
M/F. T7~2183. Office l...tol 4400 pleuantly divided Into 8 21a1-.1202. perty. Give well aecured
offices. 2 sec'y areas, + 2ndTD. PP.87t-Tm Room with kitchen priv. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Near bus " shopping Elepnt prof bldg ln H.B. center. 912-7520 aft &PM l.'i' per sq.ft. lie. Red
orwknda. Carpet,IN-1351
........ Mohh 4 t 00 1117 Wellcliff. N.8. Want
••••••••••••••••••••••• financial lnat. 7000..f.
SEA LARK
MOTll
•Weekly rental1 now
uall. •SH and up.
•Coloc' TV. •Phone. In rooma. 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M.
MS-1445.
11t. noar. A1e11t :w1-5032.
IOU.C9fTR MIWPOIT
Elepnt executive 1uitea
In pre1t11e location. With complete aupport
aemce1.
7141151.-1
IOU.CIMTll
conference room. For In· 4.000 8'ft for lie, 1t.ora1e formaUon644·6S80 wort area, potential of-Muta 111. T,...
fl c e ae l • u p . W l 11 Otitli llH
EXECOFFtCESPACE nerotlate 1ood lie. ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••
Newport. 1875 sq ft (or Harbor • Wamer, S.A . .....,.~c ..
more>. full aervlce. 54&-JJOO at'O\md nr. ample prk1. ---------avall. 3/18. $1.30/ft. .. jut:hlll..W 4100
Term• ne1otlable. To •••••••••••••••••••••••
aee. call '75-0tOS wkdys. '500 up. 1940' lnd\ll'l/Of·
Courtesy t.o broilers. flee. 11101 Redondo Cr.
1415qlf.
17th St, Colta Mesa. 3
room 1u.ite. M50 mo.
Realonotnlct 11547
"P". Hunt Deb, 9'2·18S4
MESA
INDUSTRIAL PAIK.
All t11* fll real •tat.
ln•lltmenCI aloc:e 1.Nt. s,. .......
WTDt
641-1171 141-HI I
Widow haa money for
ZND (l'.0 .•• any •lie
abovt $10,000. No eNdtt
I, no pnlty. For acUoe
call AOT fU ·Tll 1
an,UJM
0°"·1~r ~
P1~£~8>V ~~ rwnnif14-,
7001 •••••••••••••••••••••••
llt'lAJrAc ... aay
will be lntervlewln1 pro-
apect.lvutudentl In your
area. U you are 11 yn.
or older Ii a bl1h 1chool
rrad .• you may qualify
for airline/travel career
ltainiftl. C-all toll ffff:
... 00-426-1611
Vmcouver. Waab.
7071 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Compmlon. Prot .. 1ooa1
Health Puctltlontr.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAA
ACCOUMTAMT
$26,000
Residential construc-
tion, all phases.
Liz Reinders Agency
4020 Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport 1833-8190 /Free
DO&llSiAi
Acct. CHI .. llfor
lmmeclbt.e opening for
agency exper 'd .
coordinator with gd.
managerial/organ i za ·
UooaJ skills. Industrial
or trade accounts back-
ground preferred. Call
Freddi at 714-7»0355
Ach.tl1'-CJS~
Make It happen! U it
feels like Ufe ls passing
you by while your am bi·
lion Ii energy ~o towards someone, else s success.
look into the Pen ·
nysaver. We offer an ex-
c:ell. commission pro-
gram plus profit s haring
& fWJ company benefits.
If )'OU have advertising
or related sales ex per ..
1lve u s a c:al l .
714-4142 ·0811 . Mt Edwanb. E.0 .E. M /F
Alarma-WIMing team.
Experienced personnel
required by Oran1e
County Security Con-
tra ctlng Firm. Low
voltage " electrical ex-
perience necessary. Ex-r:rienc:ed only need app·
y (714)83M310
AMSWBIMG SHY.
Plsnt. olc. NB. Exp. or
will train. S.llPM shift.
Wed. tbru Sun. Alao
p/timeopenin1. 831-5511
DlllLAI
TRAINEES Ir ell ·
perlenced needed for
TWO major Oranae
County manufacturing
firms centrally ~attd.
Call immedlatet1 to
make 1ure you don 't mlaa UUa ~cmity. .....
AM.et
Temporaf7
117·9760
'500Campua Dr .. NJI
711·1627
lGU Yorba St. T..-Ua
10CW. Free to Appticlit
v .......... 42H
········JEI··· ......... . 4bdrm. Zb condo ost
NOJ'tlt of Tahoe.
rully tum. 5/mla from
North star. ttoo/wkly.
., ......... Bert.
MIWPOIT
Elelant eaeeuti•e 1ulte. In pre1t11e location.
Wlt.b eompl«e 1upport
MrwiC91.
CdM Deluxe Sultn, AC,
amDI t*&. utll pd.•
E. c.t Hwy. nMIOO
SUite •~all. appros 1100
141.ft. Newport Archea
Marina 8Jdl. M2"*4
711 w. """ It. C.-MIN.C-'f.
2nd Trutt Deed
purcba1e1 arran1td.
Pot dat.1111, call • 1111 bkr.
Use ....,.#service
when piecing your ad ... a
Daily Piiot ad number wlll
appear In your ct•sslfled ad
Mature woman avan .... -............. -_. part-time. Call '31-td.J -"'-•• ~~._
Mpm Auto rtllll.al. No ......
IJlA/151--1 64M461
BEST RATE •llllO tQ ft warehoule Tr.at\ 4ttd for Hlt.
Orrlcet, JOO.SOO lq ft. avail for lmmed OC• '111000 T.D. 1Ubof'dliat-
LarpBlaBearCablo In Stnel \ewl, aky lltea, nr C\lfaney. dTIO '1 ft tel to a MW to111truct'°"
Pool tabk, eolor TV. 2 EWP !'.:.l:a City Hall. warehouat aHll ate loM IW I MW bltrtront
,....._, ,,_ "· M5-tll8 N ORT BEACH t•b. •S.-14. ft. wtlta eoadoll loeat--1 .. w ._. ..... avail M.rtJ Marcia. •• ••1 Au, ifewport ' WllJ tndl 2 .U ID lovel1 1J1J to '4200 Sq. H. 1 atw 'I ... ft. •lAutaJnofftce BM& flloet 61 for 1n
boint, 8no s..mmlt, Bil ... J__..__._, •-nl-.... ........_ "'--.... lln. lllcm. tin . M . ....... : pan*• -Bear IAk•, for J wkl In .. ~.:i~ • ~ . ......,_ • · Sat.10.1. mo. Al._ID u ....a;.
~-19t":'..,!U:::: ••m· ·~toAltport 200to• .. ft.,,... Ml l"'8t IO,M aq fl Dtleo ••to•• \o --\6M',__ .... .,...,tJto9r tu,ku badp, rrMway fl90ld,11td*tltub, JWdllC ... frMlil.
llalDIDGda IU11f7 coodo. •Acttll to a Major cloet. == 1laoptorrte1". ,_ ............ •T
ilpl..., t.411 &eater f'wya. ..... .. :'!' Deed, tacl. 11 .. lal.
s,eclal. llO·llU. B3" oal) "9-11..,. ftM ..._ .,_ Wllll& ta !.!.!.:.' ••tJ · Alt ....::•~· ... .::::::__ _____ ,_-'----.1"'00----1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f Dattr ... -W IF 1 •1 ··---m.-
. we take your messages
2.C hours • day . . • you call In at your convenience
during office hours and get the r"ponses to your ad ...
this service Is only $7 .so .
week. • For more Informa-
tion and to place your ad
ca I I 642·5671.
•~~~-~-~~~• neelllU'Y· CaU t7t4lll
STUDINT affCla J to • or TrMllO. bn ._ .... mbly, af.:---------
ttrooona. Call John AUTOllMTAL Aet .....,. Ho exper. nece11att.
MlfpW_... 7100 CaU,,....orm-llllJ.
•••••• .. •••••••••••••••At~ Pfr, to ... fp wttll tlll tDOl'IUal can or 1-M•t•w-h+•,----•I b udl ea pped m I II.
A/PCl•I ~,.~·~-~---~
Eac:en ... ,.., :?r~.· Malle 1CH&r 1dv•rtl1'91 tlQllr, .C, for ~ .ol-'1--, _ _..__, I &..t b._. •••• _. nnn. _. flO ~· .... • ..._.,...... .._,... ,_. ••• every d6J
"91lr(fJt=•ar ... • 1111 Cl...ultd •• -. of t .. 11 ••••P•••~. r-• . ...... •
I ..
.... ,
" I
MIMW-... 7111 .W.W.._. 11:--·Wais• 7111MllljlW•s• 11 .. HlilpW..s• 7tM11 Or!ng!eo.tONLYPILOTMondlJ,M.-chl, 1M1 -ff aeeLa•••••••·---•• ~··.,.....-··-•••••••••• •••IM• .... ••••••••-•• ...... -.... •••••••••• ••••--••••••••••••• -• ~. --........... '" .. , CAIHllE ·~1,1 Cla:AL ' -~ ... w.-. 71---~" ..... _-:.---11 .. ,...,.w ..... 71MMelltW ..... ,, .. ~
..... -. v.r.16 T HOUISWAa&IAl.18· Ota; Oft. P!Uae llOI· ~~I ~~eJ;.ff .............. ••••••••• .... ••~• .. •••••••••"""P•••••••••••••iieeT••••• .. ••••• ..... ..
yr ..... "._, lloe. • Alfltta...-: ewow.r.:·'.., ..._..~·I•· ••11 M•WwWe.,uak1 LtpJ ltcnUiry, np 111 otflCI , IM:Wi./llC'Y aai. _;,~
W .. /f'rl hm•Om ; .... ....,.. a.-t 1n1ae)lten•tl•I wor' la llta;eo.•......_Vleto :-wie, A11ilwopmb lit•..-.ldlkllll.H.B. .... .. ~.. • EMr7a...lfoeMJeawitla OPPOITUUITY ..
.._ ~ ··cwtllldftPlau>NB I' •hr,.. ale.• P.C.H., area...._ .... r . la • ••. or raa c NCllHIDObr ..... t•. .,....,.. ._.......... pell'OlewD COM"l'IMlm ~ • , , NllL I& IQ. a mlllt. •lectrlcal oouecton, Oodr-..,_tolt.udJem· Chllatlal JOllUoa. oun Mhl ft.rm. 1'1P6DI ; ·o • IAIYSn18 "',j Aeearet. ,,, ... IO b um•Ut I. a 11 . l•r· ...... work flo•. u .. iallouMheptrc:om· M.aat ... Hlf·1tarter. ,......... _, .... Call TOIMOCI •
......... 1 lalut. Sep. ... l'I~ t1ut1111.• 1W. wk. Hrs; ..,...,....,....,_, cotn· •""'-9 • coauDUDIH· =for elderl1 lady. el'lllltft. wttb ,_.or· Jila.ft7,trMl1J(lM). W1-,... ...._for ... ·' llY. ,,,. CMI Balboa ~., WYIWUltl st-. .... 'Nea. Wtcl .• ~ ••••rial• • UW ... L:A. •Ors.Co. • ......... atllll. Salary LOI A•l•IH TlmH llllM.'. ...._ ~ase. ~1 • to lPll, Sat. 10:• to 111....._ Gica. Pd. co. ~ • ....._ble. Call for In· llC9'TIOMtlT Cireuladlia De1t. u • iii!if:~~~~~,UTDTIM l :IOPll.can: ... 1411 =~=~ ~all : LI••• at :=.=· .. ~ Pboo. order taker, =~==~
H r~ ) ~ CLm l•I • itaD ,proJecta. MACHINE forPwoe. ~ Jl'ood Pia.At L .B. wb.lc:la IDYOI•• • ~ m.LEIS MUJr:T'S Wln8ee co.. ar 0 C Ji1 1auJ aJ &a la SHOP Req_ulr". Utt typta1. uJ> new 1Ubeertben JI
l.ID •• l.'e. f .. lltlm• hrJnd61rdSlllftl a1rpart neecll raU..1' • In-; d•lert• .~.PJ: .UAIM .,..IMEES 01.JICI 100G•tn1u,..."7·1741 tbe commuok)'. ll•AJ '" We promote to mana1• codbal ca.rl •ltlt ap. QualUled caadldatu Full • part Ume. All 1""' MAMA•• now ha th.la pro•r,~ =~·.:!.~" ~.~';,°~ rptatfr1upenrlaloe from titude for m.U. fr dttaU Mod ,_WH to: Mn. arw. Ualfonna fum'd. Im med. o.,.ntn11 for Over 2S to work wlUl , •. ~~llOD·.._.l,:fll"•t Hnl _,,.than ta00 eer ~•1 bankhtl n· wtc.IUD. work. Tnla&4CMSW'Pm. J au . Ultl VI a A ... 11 or over, mired macb. operatora. Will youth. 11...t be 1barp, uuum9 rn -wMk f« wortlnl J~ •
• bowiever wlll· WANT ACAREBR? Exp. belpfulWDOt nee. P'eb«ieutt Suite IM>s. welcome. Noexper. nee. traJnforC.11. plant. Ex· out1oln1. attractive be penonable • well ftw,bol.naday. •
tq t.raln lodlvldua.lt eo.talleta -a mo. Od. beMllU. 11...._vle'lo.ca.a.1 A~ Unlve r u l ctll. co. benefltl . penooallty 1ood fnroomed• ti~' meet· Wen lookJD& for abup
, ..._vy cathierinl a: m Del Mar Call: Laura. Q344$0, P Service, 1218 Deltronic·545-0U3 telepbone voice, and I the pu Uc. "Require• lodMduall who bau % =l eoa1act ban· 831·"21 ' lfiOIDoveSt.,N.B. WTOll r .. n~ • .....,. St. hrs~:~:~~: ::'~ !>Ut':.e:.tf:°:.~: ~o::,:r:'"~: ~pf:~: :~:,;-:=,•~Vt
II · La"""• Beach CL-EOE fr Eltcn. l:d. uaiu -· .-n _..... ,__ Phone experience pre· ~ We pay bovnJ Eue ent 1rowth pro· .. ...,. Ciftft •tarter.,.."" auperv...,ry ferl'ed. Full company . tentlal. 1atary & 4M-923S A:exp.req'd.MZ·OUl HAIWWARESALES MACHINE experience Rapidly ad· benefit•. Apply: Pen· w~., + iene~tOJP.·
belaellb. Pleueapply ln Ulll IOOM """·U·'--!PartUme.An. HOP vancln1' Co. with m II oo1 . rew cn11 HUnt.lnltOO Beach RUii DtSMWASNR ru woe r S benet\ta. Start at SllO ny1aver, 1880 Placentia aaleuxpertencehelp,ul,
pellOft Wed., Mareb 11. td·tlll p l t • I b ply ln penon: Crown d r__. Wet.ra•-JIM Ave.,C.11. butnotneceaary. bt..,._ loam 6 Jpm. c1ta11 rva e men1 cu . Hardware, 1024 l rvlne Imme . openln1 . Lo~·ASSOClATES Call Monday-Friday
ld N. Main St .• Santatm••••••!!!!!!!ll LUlft Ne~ Beach, 10.m· (WelkllffPlaza)N.B. machine operator Youdl Couuelon. Call llC.,,OHIST 9All·$PM. 9151·2181 ext
AU, Znd f'l9or. SYlte Caterina Co. hu openinl We uv.uexcellentop-~l,~11 -'J'. Call Al. ~rt~T.'t,~iJ~rlc!~~~ 2pm·l :-.m. _.z.4321 With or without typing #12.CM 200• for mDlmnt trainees. pol'tUalt1 fw • person ••MIYKIOS•• 111 1 nt Excell ext.Ml needed. Top pay. 1'em· ---------CALIPOIMIA Hn • waces neg. MuaJ wlU. w mall room Here'• your chance to en P • · · pornv" full time. Call SALES/Order Deak . ...__,,,..._ .._ , .... __.__.•·capable and 1•.,a1 room ea· Domestic L i ve -In make extra spendln1 company beneflta. App-Cl •RS ·-1 ""' b E It h •-~· ---..cu• perimee.Dutiellnclude houlek~r. Sdy1/wk ly:DeltronJc,545-0UJ PAL A TodServieaatm-8900. must e 0 1 s • Equal Opp. Emplyr of leal'lllna food service. 8 1 money. -.--•--•-rt. M•rit Spanlalupeak'1. Mari.De ... ,, Lori' Kit .. __ 97 ... 07~7 delivery of mall, dis· Ref. req. a ary neg. wontnt only a few days -_,_ .., -"' to h l r l • s cucu ,... • lributian of ordered 1up-Callf7s.ast, '45-5980 a week? Become a sub-raiaea. 1511 Monrovia or au · exp. e P u · an10am "-__ ... ln f Av• NB llC9'TIOHtST F/thne po11. Excell. co. ™G
lcnmediate openings for
t1'e following positions:
TELLER/
NEW
ACCOUNTS
Some S & L or bankinjf
experience preferred. but will train the right
applicant with cash
handling experience.
Bilingual (Spanish &
English>
TELLER
Part Time
Some S & L or banking
experience preferred
but will train the right person with cash handl·
inl experience. Hours
llam ·3 :30pm . NO
SATIJRDAYS.
AL
Pos. avail. for A/R
clerk. Esper. desirable but not ntt. 10.key. Hrs.
8 to 5. Mon. tbru Fri.
Call: Rose at 556-0540
(Irvine)
Clerical
WE NEED
YOUR SKILLS
New ~ tone "acctex
temporaries" logo
JJOOQuail Street
Newport Beach
71 ~'55-2770
p_,. --ma tenance 1crtptioa aaielperaon or MAC..aS:r ..... · · Exper'd. penon needed benefita. Call: Balboa of inventory. Muat be •DIAPTR the Daily Pilot. Earn u Pst Ti .. __ ... ,_ b bo -' l
.b•-to• .. •~ace ....... aU 5T1•---•• 00 PER for toolinl Ir prowtype 1118 to.........., uay •~u n Marine. SG-9871 E.0 .E. ""' ... ~. w•UI _,_. much u $50. wort. Some production dynamic Npt Bch. com· M/FIH
penonnel and vendora. 67MI 10 WEEK! Positiooa open work on vertical mill & Ca•111•1YCM11ti m 'I. brokerage office. •.u H-SAM
Contact: In Huntiniton Beach, lathe. Read blueprinta. C.,...,.. Profeaslonal ap · --""
Personnel Department Derxappe. :.!.5.,.oon~~~~toforr, ~~~taMin Valrlleyouy aanr~ ownt.oob. E.O.E. Adulta with outstanding peannce & mannerism Fulltlme. ambltdlou1 ..-·-· ..,_....., ~ eea. · "' J.DINSTRUMENTS attractive penonalities a must. Call : Laila. salesperson wante to Alicia ChavM drapery department in outgoing. enthualastic ~Chemical Ln. to s--' 15 hrs ,_r week a:B-2900 w or~ I n m a r i n e
714-546-1360 our dest1n stud lo. and at least 12 years old, HunUnctoo Beach .-.... ,... hardware store. Boatinc ~UI01 C Ir L L coO~ellnl youith ·aie: exper. preferred. Xlnt
TODAY!"!!!!642·4321 1 ·l · ven DIS Restaurant benefita&worklngcon·
Eam up to tB.OO. per hr.
Set )'OW' own hours. Car
& phone necessary .
Ext. 211before6pm. Ask MAKE MORE-Weekends Available. S75 FRY COOK COUNTER diUons. 645-1711. i VicOw p e r w k . C a II · or ~C· -t Suppl. family Income 2:30-5:30pm. Mon thru ~ ASSIST MGR. posl· _..._.,. -· togeUler. Need 4 am· Fri. 6(2.4321 ext. 343. taons open In fast food SAL~PERSON. mature
Daly 'llot bilious couples. 494·5188 Ask for Lori. restaurant. Nr. Airport. for specialty shop. Exp
4400Campua Dr. E q u a 1 o p p 0 r t . ror appt. ~Coast 639-lm helpful but not nee. Full
N...,..,,.rt Beach CA E ployer ---------& p/tlme. Call: 646·53118 ~~ Opportu~lty Electromechanical m Piiot Restaurant for appt. Employer M tF 0. ..... ..._ HOSTESS MAMA(iEI TaAIMH 330W. Bay Street D a y r o o d p o s I . -~..;__ ____ _
NATIONAL
EDUCATION
CORP. 848-2172, S.lOAM .
l!!!!!!!!!l!!l!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!I Must have ~5 yn exper. Lunches/Dinners. 18 St..+ $700 Costa Mesa. Ca. lions/Cocktail positions. Sales
with schemaUcs to read yn+. Apply in person. Mature. exp. "person E q u a I 0 P P o rt . Apply in person: Prof. S .. 11,.ople
off anato1 schematic & LeBiarritz 414 No . fridJly " type wanted to Employer THE RUSTY PELICAN o..IJ
Pharmacy & Hallmark. design finish product. Newport Blvd. N.B. train for position or Picture Frame Fitter. 2735W. PCH.Npt. Bch. Marketing Reps. to sell
Exp. pttfM0-7373 Also design sheet metal 92863 manager or small. uni· a product that is wanted l.;m~jiji,,jiififiiiiiiil finishes. Salary depend· I quebusiness. Type60-65. Custom quality s hop.i---------& ~ by everyone. r CLall11 ..... ~T ing on exper. Send re· HOSTES~HOST phone. bookkee ping. exp. ref's. Costa Mesa. Restaurant Earning potential · .,_ sum• to: Gary Rice. I 11 ft st m e r (714>642·41.54. McDAM •Lo•s •~n"""' ltCI\ ooo Computer Center near "' Mature, fri Jy penon. Pa Y ro · '"u o "'",.. ~ . ...,.,.....,, .
Dyer Rd" Newport Fwy Coastal Personnel A gen· Experience helpful. but ser vice. etc. Apply in Plumber. min. 3/yrs exp. Now hiring full & part •Co. Training
needs person to assume cy. 2790 lhrbor Blvd.. not necessary. Apply in person, Mail Center . b time. Days. eves. Great *High Income
front office position. Costa Mesa · 92626 · person: Denny's, 105 E. 18783 Beach Blvd, H.B. 4P hrs. ~;5~~--career opportunities. *Qualified Leads
Pleasant working en· 540-8055. Never a fee. 17th St. C.M. No phone On·the-job training. For Llquidyne Energy
Our company offers ad· E.O.E.
vancement opportunity '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t and company paid l~
vi r on men t & EOE calls please. MANICURIST PRESSPERSON ex· more info .. call : S13tems
medical/dental benefits. !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Tues.· Sat. Nice at· per'd. wanted for com· 754-9943, or Inquire at Al: 754--0535. 545·6793
Call John Vanderwol.k. ......... Housecleaner. Reliable mosphere. merclal offset job shop. 3141 Harbor Blvd. Costa
549-83113. pen.on needed to help in 'lbeHairHandlers M & K Printing. San Mesa. i---------ON-UNECOMPUTER STIUCTUUL res.cleaning:f7~28311 642-8484 Clem. 7l4'"'92-<42.4l '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Sales benefits. Contact : 1191!!~~~-----i Clerical
Ellen Cuesta
833-8383
FAR WEST
S..lftcp&Loe111
4001 MacArthur Blvd.
Newport Beach. CA
F.qual Opportunity
Employer M /F /H tV
Banking
TELLER
P.+.T11M
•AeCltttls
•leaplta.l1h
•ClerilTyphh
SYSTEMS, INC. '75-6110 r: l73JE.GarryAv.,#103 Market Demonstrator. NISYOOM Restaurant
SantaAna,CA File Clerk needed for HOUSECL~EA.NEBS P!I' opportunity. start· SW'BYISOI W ....... /Wllltreslff
'"!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!I N.B. Insurance ••ency. To15/hr,car.145-5123 Int April 3 " 4th. Ex .... r'd p/Umene_ ... _ _. r: " POI. requires mln. 10 ..-· ·· '""'""'
M . d Cl . 1 C b 1 t d 548-9001. SUO/hr, close to your VY'!l, ...._.1 .. g -p. Strong for dinner shift. $5. 75 per any var1e eraca ounter e p wan e ---------1 home. (21•)277·571~ ·. ,, •• .,. ....... ...,.. ho No ti"" Pvt ftoun positions are cu~ently F I T . M 1che11 e • s FILECLERK·P tr HOUSrx:LEANERS (2U~ ..,..:after•pm~ mechanical, technical u.r.l b C,...l'i (t · lPM ·
available to SUit you Cleaners. lna.ofc. Train ratin1 • Ptr or rrr. Start Im -~-.. bltlJDd. In Web offset. m.~. a a . .
skills &schedule. Call or 496-5124 clalma. 835-Ml7 M/F. medUl&ely. Top dollar MATlalAL Or1. Cly. co. Send re· ---------
come by the Kelly Office ---------1 1'13-lmorMMl71 ......_.,. 1ume: Box 1873, Daily UST AUIAMT
nearestyou! COUMTBMB.P --.. ~ ... ~~"" HoUNll .... n wuted Pansftlrtl,rubberhoee Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Catering Co. bas open· Ambitious, brt1bt and C..-~ mt eo.ta Ilsa, Ca. 92626 in gs for full time. part energetic people wanted L lu 1eecy 8eadlff llti&el. 1111 !!lo. Pi ' m pau co. t i m e , 5 A M t o
for full and p/tlme help b:.rwelm~..i--• Coaat 8•1 • La1uaa ~=-...O:~P':c': NODUCTIOM 9 : 3 o AM / 1 P M r o r
for bmy dell •sandwich for faat. c rue a....-.-. Um9 betwn 1 • 10.m 00• MAMACIH sandwich & salad as·
shop. Goodstartinl poll· clerti. Paid ct;:g:•1 Hom 0 11 !Com-·'-tw. Stratoflex, 17171 h . 1 sembly. Also need full lion with lllnt cbance for ~· C.U: et ., ... -..tolpm-==-. A' _ _._,1 Ave Irv E~~~ an~a as· time slice.r to train on
IELL~~
SER VICES
llMTAL
Cot4SUlTAMTS
Breune r 'a R e nt s Furniture seeks carMr
oriented person for en·
try level pos. in home furnishings. Breuner's ls
California's largest
furn. rental co. & needs
qualified sales & m1mt.
staff for expanding mitt.
Retail exp. pref'd. Will
traln. $4. hr .. depending
or exp. Full or p/Ume.
E.O.E. M/F. Mon·Sat ..
9·5:30 " Sun. 12Noon· 5PM. Contact: J e ff
Thomas at ~772 2102 Business Center advancement in 1ro•· --.-N., rt"' ........... ...--::10 EOEA .... Kendavb Incl: aemuv Poant ne ..... s a lop portion control. Lori's
Drive .. ••. Irvine or 10· 1 com ..... ,. To Mt"'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ecpa-.--1rade peraon to run K"t ... _ ........ 07•7 d La r-r: Co manufacturing opera· __ 1 c_ .. _., .. _, .,_, ... _·---It!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 27957 Cabot R . . guna a Pill for •-·~ call tf:ftf\-•• • --·-------Nlpet,831-0542 M F stautm.000~""'-WOMCI u~c.';;1ors::old. lleebenlcDMdedforauto Uom. Equipment ex· Retail Agent wiUl 2 or Sales
The beautiful Laguna E.O.E. I PULLTlllE N '-....__, eormY del ma.ialenenclr repaln at perience on punch ~re· more year s exp Is Securltysystems
Beacb officeofa leading j~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~CPT IOO~:_~e~~·~· lledkal !ec'J • Book· 11;_~1f16..!/1/Zt car rental agency. Call llH 6 screw .cultl~g needed to help Increase We need ca~r minded
savlng.s & loan has an Newport ~c w · beper. Esp. nec:euary. 554';1711. ~ui~mhent. P~!marily retail sales in lrg com· people with mana1e·
immediate opportunity Clerical lice, ask for Cindy RaJ Su Oemente Write Ad Houaekeeper Live-In 1:::1 /':~ :~~ ra:: mercial office. X Int ment pot!ntial to ~X ·
for a Teller. Experience (714)"'4-fSll •m C/O DaJly Pilot PO Compaaion ror elderly MEDICAL Responsibilities include salary & benefits. Send pand rapidly growing
in Sid.. is preferred. We DtihProceuillt BOX1!580CMCAtza8 mobile couple must COUllla productloo direct labor r esume to Associated commercial & residen· ~!{.e.!. ~ peaxr~~nl~~~J GENERAL Operator needed for nb · FULL TIME Graveyard. speak EntLl.sh Ir have a M us t h ave ow n costs, quaUty control & C a r_d i I I o . 2 2 l 1 tlal bur~ular & fire _,, " d rf __._._ f A N valid drivers license. trans portation " be Industrial engineering. Ma_rtan/Plaza Centre, alannbusaness. Paid career apparel. For o /auu.A systems or na. serv. o exp nee. I I h C llf I At T CE I t C ll --EOE Ref's ,_.,.~94 fami 1ar wt • . Apnrnx.imately 25 to 30 rVU>. e,92715. tn: om· S2 0K·S60K 1s t y ear m or e inform a ti on . Offl long term ass gnmen · • :--..... N I ,.._ f lnf Tod ---------• frwy. system. o ea es. worlters. Excellent on. m1e. comm. ~lease contact Gene Call or more o. ....... u t f 1 ii f 1 ., Servi 97'!M900 jlllJl_ll!lla ______ Ho-eeper, ve-0u or Peasant poll l on or n· portuoity for g-rowth Qualifications : am·
rizelleat<714>494·7506 RCA currently has a ___ ces_. ______ , Gardener N.B. home. 5 half days div.who enjoys driving. with a nationa l or· RN11-7Chargenurse-80 bilious, wlllinq to work
RDRITY full·Ume position availa· Dal. f/T & p /T IHTBIOI per wit. English speak· Mon · Fri .. 9 · 5 PM ganbation. Immediate ~ ECF. Full & part bard & follow proven.
FIDEIAL ble for an Individual Eslary's. 34"4 E. Coast LAMDSCA'EI Ing. mmt drive. lmmac 678-8500. 768-8500. opening. Call Brian at time, gd. salary. Mesa success pattern. For In·
Saving.sandLoan with good office skills, Hwy,CdM.67~1354. ..,11 housecleaning. laundry, . 545--04T7 (7:30-4:30M·F >. VerdeConv. Hospt.,661 t er v I e w ca t I
Association accurate typing ability, _....;... _______ I errands, occasional lite Meda.cal Asslst~nt In· ,"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Cent.er St .. CM S48-S585 (714)811-5711 Mr. Neill.
AnEqualOpportunlty and pleasant, pro· Deliver L.A. Times to Prestllioushotelhaaim· cooting.Send resume& tenust back office. af.1-:
Employer ressionaltetephoneman· homes in Newport med. lullUmeopenlng desired salary lo ; temoons?'lly,exp nec. P /T from home, am· Routedriverswantedfor SAL~TRAINEES
BOOKKEEPER·General
ledger knowledge. Fast
growing N.B. R.E. de·
velopment & brokerage.
1reat working condi·
tlons on the water . To be
bonded. 640·8250 or
wknds & eves 67~9374
ner. Please apply in Beach. 3:30am to Sam. for exper'd. landscape ClassifiedAd#68S.Daily LagunaN1guel,496-801t. blUouspersontosetown deliveries of new snack Full or pt/time. excell. ,• personlo: s550/mo. 548·8441 or helper.Knowledge on in· hrs Ir income level. For food products to local pt r II t t •rlor p lant main Pilot. P.O. Box 1560· • U U!"f supermarkets. Some op y. or co ege s u· 646-1413. "' · Costa Mesa. 92626. app tea 557·-·5· denta " moonlighters.
RCA ---------• ten.nee a must. Enjoy MEDICAL exp. gd driving record. EuUy earn SlO.SlS /hr. * * * excellmt co. benefits ln· Housdteeper. 3-.f 'h days 'i)UALITY Perm position 8'8· 1900 __.__ • .._. eluding a free meal per -~ 1 1 SECRET ARY COMTIOL · · Call : Jack at 951·2642.
• ---shift. Apply in person a ""'"""• genera c ean· Flnal Ins-Hon hose & SALES. ART & AC· _1_-4_P_M ______ _ Service 201Prvinergeola tp~-Noool • Mon·Fri. ln1. lndry. hrs & days ro~... • CESSORIES Fl f .... _..... flex. $5/hr. 780·1443. Wecunentlyhaveafull· flllinl, must pass co. . · are or Secretar y .Typist .
Youaretbewtnnerof u•--MOT& Mra. Part. time openlnt lnlloiur pbyslca\T~~luding buack dhecoratXmlg lnecc.o mFlemx . Newport Beach Law Of·
C 4 .a......... .. -........ -· • ---------• Garden Grove c n c. JM'&y. aaang app ca· rs · n · · flee. ask for Cindy Ray Of!3"l <~i};; toONewportCenterDr. Howekeeper/Companion T!da po11Uon requires Oona btwn a & lOam on· 49&-1461.. (?l4)6M-flSlS
E ,.._;__•::e · NewportBeach forelderlypenon. LJve-t-'-•atillaoflOwpm. ly. Stntoflu, 17871!.il ... -------1,.,.,..1 ........ A 1801 . ger ve. -•::1:': s-.. ul ,_ Emplyr M /F ,._.. d A I "' f I """"" lllml'"•"• Santa Ana. CA 92701 .. l7th •n t ..,.. ~ in orout. 133-2008. 1teno at IO wpm an Armstrong ve. rv .. Sales Secretary. 20 ex . AMD/O. ... ar. ,...-• ---------• knowted1e ol medical EOE A Kendavis lnd.. AMDCm..-creative hrs/wk. Will
ACCOUMTIMG Equal Opportunity ::'~~=~~~ ••BAL OMCI MOUSa_.S t.erminololY. Salary ii Co. SALES OWT t . train simple word pro-
'
. EmployerM/F/H M Jm-.-.a•-•·o~lalfora We have an immediate St113permonUlpluaex· .,. ... _ ceaaor. Nwprt Center. To assist in deve oping Costa esa UR:IU.la-0 p e n i n 1 f 0 r 2 celleat benefits Real .,....te we are e n t e rt n g a 844-43l1
the P & L. Work under ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Call 842-5678. ext. 272 to d e pend a le . e x · ~eepen. Full time SUCCISS 01 tremendous new field or ----· -----
minimum supervision. claimyourUcketa. perienced penoo with poiitlona. lOPM·IAll Fortbia poaltlon, pleue 'AILURllM .. 17 entertainment that ls l•-••!'l!l .. "'111"~~
Required lo use indepen· Clerical * * * xlnt. tn'nl akUla • • 1hlfU. Exe.II. frln1e apPl:J to tbe Employee 1.llave you cooaidered sweeping the naUou. We * •SICalT AlllS• *
dent Judgement. May CUii( TYPIST PI ea 1 In I P h 0 n e l>eaefta.I pacb1e. ApplJ Relat.lool Department the pitfalls of com· are lookinl for • sales SlOO/travel/Fl$JJ,900
assign work lo lower· Laiuna Beach elec· DIMTAL penonality. DutJea wUI in penoe at: Adunced between the boun of mercial •residential re· oriented person who hu TeO/GreatGroup$13,200 level clerks. Xlnt. com· f h · FRONT Ir BACK OF· al10 Include fllln1 • Health Center, 1300 t-UAM fr 1:30-3Pll on al estate! For example: a desire for above StO,...,ainLanier .. ~K
Pany benefits. Call tronlc mgr. as tm· FICE general office work. B_ .... St Nortla .,._ -...._ .... -·Th _... 1 y /&I .-mediate opening for Xlnt. beaeflta • worklnl ~ . • .-.:. 11..._y...... u~ay. 17~ INT. rates. long average ncome. ou Reciit/1'55/Jl'un$10~ :J.~ after 9 am . sharppersonforgeneral Xlnt oppty for am· tUll, Newport Beach. eacrows. farming for must be penooable" Lli"Reindel"IA1eney clerical duties Including biUous, self motivated condiUona wttbAa 11ro•tn· E.O.E. MJt 11 •ISER H1tlngs. competition. confident in your ability 402!08lrcb Est 'M F!OE
..i .... f p h individual in Laiuna ln1 company. PP Y ftA etc 1 to communicate with N-,.-...190/Ftee
IOOIOCllPlll ~C ~!I""~;-:u~or:r~, at'~ Beach practice. Must be TpeHraonE J•ot:LLY ROGER It• tlDIATI PmtMAMIMTI ~ofw11l1Rll Lmd others• have depend•· ., __ .,,,,_,,,
t .. ~ 111 1 Jo·.. flexible. Call Ann at JOI L ,._ ._ ble transportation. We SICUTAI s ocouvum pu n •u 494.ga INC. UmiCA .....,.... will train If neceuary. SECRETARIES klta. issuln1 material, ----------1 l"""''"Gi"'"''-A OPPOITUMfTY ff the ,. Costa Mesa location . d ,.,.. l"'1NllJ ve. C .. T. u answer .or your E•-'l. frin1• beneflll. -keepln~ records. G . A--"-ol • _......_., 1_ .. __ •-·-1 .... ,,. " • ., Good w/phones. Full -A•-..--~ .. ....., ......_.,....._. iuccmaw..-. ofAp&~e~!a'°chm.pte90r1 , IYICll RESTO time. Typing. ~eneral typinas lllamuat! Min. ChairskSe.RDA•X·r•Y ___ 1_1_4-_546-_«11 __ 1__ ,_.Ui_fcif rllU"f t•I.~ 2.Le&m to market low ........ ...,. • ...., _ • !J.f~e,. proce urea . :ri:f.Pt!r~rc::. ;:~ lbeic.efreql•-' 4'h1 day0 wpekn, •••••L-I• IR•-~.-·P~~ ' WAM.-Socc.t,..~•andwe•hca'!aeg1e,!' w. ~tb st .• Newport & • Ill >~ --· offer id-pay 6 beneflta n ... 1• ary • ~ .,..... uwu .... , ... -.. ~ 45JWll'. · ~· • v ,.. Beam ~•• ••
I nAY WORK N .B. are .. 142·HIO, Anawer pbonea, typtn1, for tbe Newport Beach ,.,,.. 90706 INT. rat.. Earn tl50K to ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I A Temp Help Service 11 dlnapll I Clefts P us • 4 ., '73-MOI wtna 6 eves. flllnl fr help or1anln a re a . R e II a b l e -11JC1C. ftnt year. year. r: I• MOO P\lllUme. exper. helpful WEEK. Call for In our a1'1*t ofc.. Tem· Transportation 11 a CJIJtt2M24J ilellmkedle.datsmore! SALES Clerk for retail -•
blll not nee. Many com· t.ervtew •=· Penonnel WTALASST porary ,..!Ucm/,..aible ma ,.... cletalla call Unus ,.,..,41. marine hardware 1tore. ..,...,..,.,. Bl•d. pany benefitl. Apply at: Dept., Te c Berkele1, RDA expanded dutle1 permanent. Reliable, P'o1ter Ouellet a t l'AluaJ()pportual\J ror auceaa ln lJll, ask p /time. ea per. nee. SW&em Irvine
llfO Placentia Ave .• 714•494·940l. Laguna forpediatricdeatbt. Dr. confideat l11dhtdual '42·4121 11 -f' from lim,..,,_11/P forllr. Telles. Call: Balboa Marine, Sftretary
COit.a Mesa .ee!!!!!a!!!ch.!!!!E.!!!O!!.!!E!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t DobaJd Kini. ..... m Ult ha vec a,.e •Lt • P· lO:Ollllam -l :OGpm. --• ISl-1557 549-9171,,E. o. E. 11 /P' /H lmtc. Sec'-. ';a' = pearaace. a aurie ~.c:...e .__.,.. ,_ ...!. •CAIDllYRS• .... j forcWalla111 .. to. .'w.'J.PW -llC9'T'IOMtST s.t 20-2SDR.J*••· ot:PM ~~ab ······~Dally n~ G• .. r· .. • 01,"c:,e p·t~· : .. .!.~ =:::::~:~ ;e:;_!:~.fn·"'.:e.r ~r:r~"!~:e.~~ ~ce~·~f.:¥. , • IPll. on-r • -e I q u a I o p p 0 r t . rr--~ _,., _,. "' · ad repreaeataUv• for Pleele U 11 ~ * * * • . penoaalit7, mu1t be Em...__ Hrs. I to 5, Jiloa·Fri. C.Jil . loc . Mu1l be iulde aale• poeltlooa. 1 ca, : °"· •11 C.. llelwwltlu • ~-"-I f::' wt&b n T _,... Salery plu1 mllea1e. c:heerf\11 • pneentable Gel beoeflta 'J' r . , a t 4 : IO r , -..__.~ • • ' • 1 ~sa' ia',P-1 ... ~c<=>'_.aU .'°' app&: SSMOllO. •!hour Tm.m.SSTs · A~oomln·~~ P•: .. ,.no. Tllompoa _..,. __ IUc' e .Experienc at east 5 yean.· I ea r~ct. 8 ·-j · ' · "'"" --~ P"loiltlldoeCO. SOI' , v='.!."l:'.-:~of e Must be able to uae oewtpaJ)er e open. Lori• IUtell••· ~OllAL llC.,..JSIC'T llYN"'" ~Placentia 4.,_Wt camera and platemaklDC e ITM'IChftJOAM run U•e. Wor~ ln ....._,.,...c.. Newpo"t Center . ~.~t!'i lload&f· -.... -
<$1.hahM>. to • .IYI~· Excellent ,..._ JDCI .. -beaudllal Dana Potnt Paltilae ftlm dll&ribu· P-.. accurate typ-1111ISD1ATE •
........ • benefit1. Acf.ply in peuon1 1 • · IEllOAl =:: :,:!~'~',,~ :-.~~r~~~!fi =~ntoq:'~ti::: SALIS ·fWaaNOS: • ........ e w/resume, to ran1e Oout DatlY. 11_.rr ...._,,_local J'::-t 'A':rt~': f.~~~ aaal, Production•, . Jack Ann•tronl lhtropolltu aHd• ~ IM'f.
llar.4tbrullar.a •. l'Uot. • ~ • ,, ,,. __ _.,..,...... llO....l-• N••t Belt, 111·1444 or Mor1n Juobaon , multi-line Hl•1 rep1. .. t4I 111 S..-,,.
eau::.:to • ~-c..e I '~-m. ==~:.. .. :). \ ':..r'""'' £~.'::~~~:" ·=.t~~;!· ilalm,.,.ucteu. e -.., • t ~ ":::: •.-.... L:i,a-n11~•.-··=ij--__ ..,...,.. ~~ -~ ~ . ' I Cc:-=!1• am.....,., • . a.. •• ,_... ...ell JocaUO. .,. I 0 ..... ---*-*-*----t • Cotta lleaa. CA ~· 1, na n PNf• Mel· c ••"ti•• 1 . N t • tor ewtPt la· It! I IF MIN Pu '""'-•
cA11111n • F.quaJ Opportwally Empia,. • ,, t am :-:r ........ d!'J~· ,, ....... _, -· ''--........ '° f\D ,..., °'· ··~~·-I' "•"·' .~: :__._., ...
ramlm• for • ., •• -~t ~1'---................. WNI! ~-,.., ............. 51 o.11 if.Iii ..... laanhrant\On. W. 1:·· Ir ............... 0.. -Wfe. lallfJ ru1e .... I ' ~ .....
Di& ...... t. wortiltl ········••'.illll.••• ':-~ :-,-.! ... ao.ta. (, _ •41_4i!( ,,. ·~·r<UO .!}Jll._~~tl 1: ilt.e ...... 11~0. l~l·SHl •-=-c " • ·• c_ lt.O.S.
11 ...... nu. ~'·, ·~ • c -r I~ 1'; ~ 4 I 1l 'I I. "'·-········ I •• ~ •
. , .. __ .... ,, ... • ....... _..A ... ~ _.., • 1• "• ... r.~•
O!!f? CoMI DAl&.:'t PaOTfMot*t. March I, 1•1 ,_ n u .... ... ~
. -' ! ·.ztrb .. ·--··-······-·· ....................... .. _._,.,W.... 11 ..-.w-... 71 IOIO A.u.. ...... llaaiM Nwpt ldi 'huAI Club ... ._ __ ........... ~!lll!ll!illl!m~~~ ... 111111!1111~!!!!'11•~~!!1!-!~llJim~I! ••• •••••n•••••••••••• ••~ ....................................... 1olld mabo1u.1 f11S. lam • ...,.. 9 If avail, CONN~troeboDe
SI• fltle... WRJTJ:RI arUdn end 1 IU'Y flUIMfTUll MMalS,. m..oo 1100. Call ANwtrAd wttb eaH. Exeelleal
llC•Wlle pboto1rapbe •bout lAa •1.a111 ...... 1011 IUl,IG-GIO•JOn. ~ •oo. tTUOU
Ma lt. t•p•r laelpful, Orantt County beatbll · •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Balboa Y~ Chab ll•m· ,_a ____ ·-----1
iaome llftin1 (50e Hae.) needed for n.ew pubUea-Crib, coWflte, StO. Chlldnn'~ clot.hhsf. s., benldpfonale. lbaJMS •tfftric 1ultar.
xlnt rompany MMflb. Uon.. Submit to: NeWf10rt ~~'· .. ...... IHI ...... ,.,.. By 11rl. •l·lfOO Prol . .-.1 wttb .,,.. of
Informal offlu. C.M. Buch Ad~rtlalna. Bo• .. ~...... All wk, Cuh only. JOO Llfe-.uptotbenecl •-1!!1-.-.-.-.~-;_-;.~-;.-;.-;.;;;; Call Millie after tam. 2000,CdM.Cataas ew...,....ublneU roU kilt11P1.NB Teac IMCIS ta.Pt deck. Wqodcratn body with ~ • Low hn, 1rHt eond. b rd bell _,... ~ top bar cabinet. for H1111•1 ...... e061 .-nnn. TOff PP. ~· 1 ·ca••· _.,.,, DIC. SICllf ilY SU.U1tlcal typlltt ad· M.. ...... vau, boobi.elYt1, ne w ....................... ~
s star co. needl Exec. vt rtillng, mst type ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• SO" bltn 1a1 atqvecontHt P rhe·IO pc AppleDPluacomp.,'8X. Vlvltu Serlee I '70..2lO
Seel'Wlry NOW, 1•4 yrs. wpm. 8:»5pm, 5 dya ........... 1001 <Almond), va(iout h1hld waterleH cookware. new, aW.I UDdu wanan· MM Jena Mac~ $l7S
uper. Cd. typln1 It aalary Sl.000. Call Lois ••••••••••••••••••••••• furniture. 5M·M78 aft Sac. at 9254> 557-9851 aft ty, suoo. tTS.Ot• · l5'7..(9 • ·
ahcitthand req'cl. Steady SmitM"l~..ac> * * * 8PM. 4pm DIG CI NG E QUI p . 8 S d
wor1ctn1 backcround. ----I......__ Din•tt• Set Wht 42" J~ 1070 "M•klda" Elec Ham ea1tt tu ent Bue Gd. benefits. Contact: "8..x.-... ,,.._n.-. ....... 18 ......... bu-b ..... _, · needarestrlnttnaSUO Judy, 540-t055, Coutal STUDENTS .~~t•-iit:Be•': round w/2 leavee + 4 blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• mer w/ba.rrow. 1hovel1. 41~ · PetiOnnel Agency. 2791> y~,:'the 'A'inn;rof uphol awtvel chn $100 Gold• Sliver, top dollar. maddox xlnt cond. s.oo 1
Harbor Blvd .• Coate 7 OTHHS ............... -L... t'1M7111 Cluartn:;~a f11-ts1'all3PM YAMAHA TIUMPIT
Mesa, Never a Fee. ""nww'""" · · SUO 54.8·3188 EOE , ... ....__ J-L-C(~~alVu:;r:e>. to Brand new Sofa It Lov· ., l Di 1 •o t New Rah tank. fully a1-',.... ...,.. _ eHat Herculon earth • oose a· ·" c. 1 · • sembled, $'50 or bett of. Fender Rhodes 73 Key
MUSTBl!:l80ROVER Mar.t7tb.8P at tont1 D50 lrwidle bed t.75cta. H ave ap -fer.CallM2·3187. suitcase w/ampUfler &
CALL lOAM T03 PM M-taomeryWard ~.$Sl·S7)Seves praisai.. PS.OOO. Will 1pkra. '800842-912t Secretaries ""' Sac. Call for l n to. IVOltY CARVING
...,_,Sec....tenei 714-847-2422 ~~{a~:.~•tol Couc.h & loveaeat. $100 _558-_727_6 _____ 1 __ __;:64().:..:.:....:88=•=---IOfflceFw...._..A
Sevfral needed. Up to.l'!!!~~!l!!!!~!!!!!l!!!!~!!!!I Call 842-5878. ext. m to both. 4 atora1e cabinets, Diamond pierced ear-......... 1015
S2S.to0. EO clalmyourtlcketa. SZOea.84.2·"°4 ring1, .50 eta. Appr. s '~:,'~~~!~~~ng, •C••••••••••••••••••••••
"Free& · .E. SUIDIVISI N * * * TWINBedallke new $1200. Wiii sell S375. 14 ,000' In from mill. 0 p I I R
Irvine Personnel Agy. IHGINHI & Colt teOOSac $475 558-72'75 55</fl. 645-91:rt ext. #127 SI 00/010 488 E. 17th, Costa Mesa * • • 615-5118 aft 5PM = 642· 1470 DESICiHll "'-cJt D. ICNIMf' 12 ct. BLUE To PAZ anytime 55e-W18
• ~ Car,,eeforr otaplepnotredtu.~letxy 890W.l.StbSt.Sp.16 Wrought Iron tlr glass stone.Only$200! * * * 2 filing cablneta, S60 ea.
SECRETARY TYPIST ava · · .. · Newport Beach dlnJ!tle set, 4 chair s, 64().8688 Loh I'. Taylor 30 new 8' fluorescent per'd. individual with Youarethewinnerof 't(.ery id cond. $200. ----------i 18l~Otwberry Way Reliable, energetic, self-well established & grow-4 fNeffcJlets SS2_7104_ Must sacrifice men's l~ Irvine bulbs, S3ea. 842·5304
st.,ier. Able to handle ing Civil Engineering c•rat gold diamond Youarethewinnerof ftlm.oe&"'---1090
all ~ases of ofc. duties . firm nr. 0 C. Airport. <S14 value>. to Dbl Bed w /Frame rlng. New $3000; $2000 ......... ::.;.:: •••••••
United Cerebral Palsy Apply in person with re-.,...... $55 Good Cond firm. Kimball organ, 4.frH tickets IAIY CilAMD Assoc., Santa An a. sumeto Mr. Fuentes at loatShow ua 21..., . Sl"OO/OBO.Muskinstyle <.l4valuel.to Robert Bein. Willia m ......-~·eves " ... _ ........ _._ -· ... o 546-!j760 Pat Meidell Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8 I MOO 'th · _..., "''~" Frost & Associates. 1401 Be R dbl poo • •• WI equip. •-...a aL-w M h f · · h
Q 11 S N l Anaheim Convention New auty eat e Best offer. Dys : _._ a ogany 1n1s . SECRETARY / ua t .. ewpor Center Spring &Mattress$350. 661~.Ron Mar.4thruMar.8 almost new. Premier
RECEl'TIOHISt Beach Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to Kenmore bvy duty gas Anaheim Convention piano, S3500obo.
Exper. phones. ty~ 45+ I~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ claim your tickets. dryer $75. 548-2654 Ladie's dia. cocktail ring, Center 833-9300
wpm. lite bkkpng, misc. s u p E R v 1 s o R -* * * T & C b . 1 aprais. $1650; take $800. Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to Ask for Terry
clerical. Irvine mfgr. Fiberglass, 3-11 shift. ----------i V om 1 n at o n 1t7 ct. dia, sol .. apprais. claim your tickets. Console Wurlitzer piano.
CaU,K.H. 540-8894. MacGregor Yachts. 1631 Amer. Oak Rolltop Desk Reco~d Player •250· $21.50· S900. 642·2287. * * * excellent condition $950. Placentia.Costa Mesa Scurve.excond.S2500 Refrigerator $125. ---'-------1----------1 63 SECRETARY-TYPIST PP546-8209,962-0049 Freezer SS-0. Cash only, :v. ct. diamond ring, 8' couch: S50. antique __ 1_·34_7_4 _____ _
90WPM. Teacher-pre-school-kind all week. 200 Kings $1000. 14 ct. ~art ring. dresser : $30, VW bum-Sporting Goods 8094
Tempo rary "Cras h " Part,full time.lrv.sub-Apploncft 8010 Place.,N.B. $350. cultured pearls. pers : S20. bit in dis-•••••••••••••••••••••••
Project requires power stilutesexp. 551·4533 ••••••••••••••••••••••• if . R $125. P.P. (213)431-5175 hwasher : $25. 645-8103. Brand new Chrys le r
Typist. Either days or -HARBOR AREA Beaut ul Liv. m set SOHP out board motor,
eves,5-Shrs.aday.2082 TEACHER APPLJANCESERVICE s4oo. Din . Rm $SOO. 18K Audemars Piguet Newcomb Loom · still in box. 1 yr wrnty,
Michelson. 11212. Irvine Pre-school. With classes We buy used appliances Mahogany bdrm set man's white gold wrist Weav_ers Delight . all Orig S950 asking $750.
752·0234. or experience. 540_4750. ·-we sell recond , guar. $700. Cash only 200 watch. 645-91:rt ext 127 parts mcL $200. 631-0295, 751_8967 appliances. 549.3077 KmgsPl,N.B. MochMtry 8078 556-3778. ---------
---------•!Teacher. Pre-school. im-I IUY APl'LIAHCES Couch $12.5, brass lamps I••••••••••••••••••••••• Super Savings on ~rfect TV, Radio,
SECRETARY med. FIT employment. $35 ea, chairs pr, 2 end I SAVE $-RENT copies of 5 Romantic •• !!~~;~ .... ~~.9.!
Benefits Harbor area. Les 957-8133 tables. coffee table. $175 Bridge Port Mi 11. Perfumes. Joy, Norell. Color remote TV. 19"
For info call 540. l9l9 --New 15 cu ft. Frostfree . Singer sewing machine N ~w-$255. Bridgeport Ch a n e I # 5 · \\'.h i t e Sharp, xlnt cond, 16 mo, TEACHER ref rig. $450. Microwave $115. 549-3984 Mill, Used $185. Cadillac Shoulders , Shah mar S300/0BO. 642.8592 A challengi ng position 1s I Amana Radar Range 17" Lathe S325. Clausing Money Back Guar antee.
available with a leading Preschool. Full time $150640-7845 Drexel party table. dk 12'' Lathe $155 M.O. or Cashier 's Check Beautiful Color TV , 2 yr
savings and loan. As Needs ECE. Costa Mesa Span .. 4 chairs. $250. IND CITY MACHY only. $19.95/oz. +tax. L wrnty. Free delivery
Sec r el a r y t o ou r _a rea. 642·~· _ _ _ Wa shers. Dryers : Refrig, Sofa. 8', gold/olive leaf. 541-0535 & M Productions 177-F $148. 646-1786.
Regional Manager. you TEACHER AIDE Whirlpool. Kenmore, "'$75. Reel, chair, S25. 14" Riverside Ave. Suite #33 ---------will be involved in a Maytag. Recond. r e-elec. mower. $35. 42" AirCompressorService N.B.92663631-1726 Color 25" console TV.
variety of secretaria l E.C.E. un its requires. finished. guaranteed ! glass-top coffee table. I hp port. comp. $315 Sears, 5 yrs old. xlnt Cos ta Mesa . Ga rden Th' k c:•n4 .... ., and adm in is t r a t ive Groveareas.642.041 1. Sl55 delivered750-3103 woodbase.$40.640-9888 iswee · '""'"""'Free Estimates o n cond,P>O/OB0.642-8592
duties . Strong typing Mis~ 1010 Upholstery. Hide-a-bed
and dicta phone skills. T EAcHERS ASSISTANT 21 cu ft Freezer. United 2 twin beds (or king bed). ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /new mattress $225 Complete FISHER Stereo
pl e a s ant ph one s~cial classes for han-upright. xlnl cond. extralonglength,$35ea. FLY INTERNATIONAL 641-8205 536-1104
personality and good d icapped adults . 2 yrs $350/offer. 754-6757 _54._0._7987_______ ---------figure aptitude are re--on Pam Am with air line S~ring Cleaning at our loah & McriH
q uired Some br anch collegeexper. req'd. ~x-Apt sz Lady Kenmore 2 studio beds, bolsters & two-for-one ticket slip. ouse 9x12 Br/b1'ege cell va cation & 1n s· C 1 : ..._.___. operations experience · . · washer & dryer , llOV. table, $225. 1ngapore. en tr a t 175 H I ...,..,..._ ... Surance benefits Wkdys A · G woo rug · exce ••••••••••••••••••••••• wou,ld be helpful. · . w /stand. m>. 496-8364 640-5040, 673-3350 me rica · erm any-Bl Ii 85 kl' 175 8 :30 to 4PM United any of 11 countries. ue te 1 5 s · CieMr'Cllll 9010
Cerebral Palsy Assoc.. K W h & 6. d · J I k & Hu""''· Good until Feb. Scot l boots 9 '>'l D ••••••••••••••••••••••• Located in our beautiful enmore as er es1gner g ass c oc . "J Santa Ana. 546-5760 D $250 t hin ff t bl b 28. 780-1999 S8S. (package both for * * * Newport Beach office. ryer. . mac gco ee a e Y Sl4S')
this position offers an 498-7514 Glass Arts. fla wless. · · 67"' """l F. JOMS i---------•I 6' portable spa, pwr pack, .,.."'"' excellent salarv and out-~ C .... $500 559-0055 16700Saybrook Lane standing benefits mclud-n::"'HMI IA" Westinghouse Was her & . deliver, set up S2200· Underwood typewr iter HWltington Beach
mg profit sharing and Field Service Tech. to Dryer. $125 for both. Din. table. mahog, 78". 2 63HIS19. 645-7285 $20. Electric hot curler You are the wi.nner of
paid med ic a I de nt a I service mini-compute r 642-3156 Ives , & buffet . $300. * * * set in case. like new $10. 4 frH tickets coverage. Please apply s ystems Must have 646·11JJ7 on l'HURSDAY. March min. 2 yrs. ex~r. in field 20 cu ft. avocado. Philco ---------M«y AM MOllN Hibachi $2.50. Large ($32value ). lo
12. from 9 30 am to 2 30 service or system test ref rig, with ice-maker. 12· cstm made couch , 11· 425 Merrimac Way plants $2.50ea. 631-3474 Clrc. VWCJGS
pm at tech. For more info . like new.$300.548-0130. sofa table inlaid Tapa Costa Mesa WANTED: Stoller & Mar.17lh,8PMat contact. Noel at 557 ·8640 -shell 11 ' cstm made cof-You are the winner of Montgomery Ward
FIDELITY
FEDERAL
~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ Ref's clean w.ork good $8-0 reeta°ble. must see to ap-4 frH H~keh highchair also mis c 4-05 Fwy. at Bristol
& $100. Refng FF. c_lean preciate. 760-8239 ($32 value >. to baby items. 751-8967 Costa Mesa Telephone Sales
BE A WINN ER''
SS.SO hourty salary
Daily pay available
$500 to $1000 commission
xlnt $200. Frz.r. upright, Cl V WANTED DAILY PILOT Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to clean, works good $100 U p ho Isler e d s wi ve I rcus Cll"CJCft claim your tickets
Sa•incJs and
Loan Assn.
1515 Westcliff
Washer , c lea n works rocker . antique gold Mar.17th,8PM at delivered to my home! * * * Montgomery Ward 31855 Laurel Lane South ---------
weekly. Call Dewey.
or Chuck. 714-49R-2953
good $85. Dr yr , gas, velvet $125, purchased 6 405 Fwy. at Bristol Laguna. clean. works good $75. mo ago, like new. 2137 Costa Mesa
548-8513. 548-4485. Miramar. Balboa Pen. Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to
-------673-6456 claim your tickets. 8011 <at Dover )
Newport Beach
Equal Oppty
Employer •TRAINEE• luiklncJ M•riols 802S Red upholstered chair in *** •••••••••••••••••••••••
Prinlmg & packaging. ••••••••••••••••••••••• good condition $45. Hid·
Starts at $3.50. Gd op· 6' folding door, $40. 8' lad· a . bed $85 . Ear I y
portunit y for good der, S20. 30' ladder, S50. American console radio SECRET ARY worker 979-7660 842-S»t $45. 2 lamps tables &
2 mag 15" wheel rims,
$35/tubeless 078-14 tire·
$20/gas lawnmower·
$150. refrig. 33Hx 18W.
$50. 645-8103
Lawnmower edger want-
ed. running or not. Call
547-3182
Small Portable Elec.
Sea & Pacific Skipper. a TitUCK DRIVER REDWOOD lx6's matching coffee tables
1 d. thl bo t. c c all for $75. 631-3474
Refrigerator
832-6311 ea mg mon Y a in g ross ountry. Class 'A· S for S. Xlnt. decking, -------
maga zine located in License 3401 Fordham !4,000' in from mill
Newport Beach . has an SA 979-936 1 Vagabond 55</ft. 645-9137 ext. 1!127 i~mediate o~ning for a Sailboats. anytime
secretary. ---
T he position requires a Typist General office Cots 8035
minimum of 2 yrs ex· H.S. graduate. No ex-•••••••••••••••••••••••
ptrience +a m inimum perience required Good WANTED : 2 female un-
typing skill ~r 45wpm. benefits Loca ted in registered Siamese sis-
Stiorthand desirable, but Costa Mesa . Wi 11 be ters 6-8 wks. 642-4294
notmandator_y.. m ovi n g to Irvi n e ~cell. benefits include : Farmers Ins uran ce D04JS 804
group he alth /d en-G E OE ••••••••••••••••••••••• tal 1life /profit sharing. roup. 540.4lOO. ·-KEESHOND Pups. AKC.
Please c a ll fo r in-TYPISTS Champ sire. M/F. Pet &
terview /appointment •Immediate O~nings s how P v t p l y .
714-645-1611/ •P!time.F /time. Tem p. 213/697·1345aft6 pm.
Sea & Pacific Skipper •Top Pay E:qual Opportunity For more info. ca 11· Tod AAA HOME DOG Employer M /F Services at 979_8900_ TRAINING
Seeurity officer. P /T .
~ends for lrg apt. con-
plex in N.B. S3.50/hr
F.or info contact J im
Uipis at 644-1900.
-----Complete IN HOME
TYl'IST Training, Obedien·
Part time. 2-3 days ~r Ce /Problem Solving,
wk Vacation relief Ap-protection. 539·7615.
ply at: 1660 Placentia. p 0 0 d 1 e s . T 0 Y & Costa Mesa ---miniature . Blac k &
VETKEHMEL ASST brown. Males/Females.
Slcurity F rr. Hardworking, re-586-3422. 586-8526.
SECURITY liable person needed. -BARKLESS BASENJI
1 OFFICER Call6Sl-l6S8Da~~-Red/whiteFpups,AK .
pt~gious hotel has im-Waitresses/Waiter. P /T S200. 964-2119. 962-4657.
nject. need for ex~r'd. dahiy. over 18. will train. Frff to You 1045
Sie cu r i t y 0 r f i c e r . S raz. 548-7948. • •• •• •. •• •• • •••• • • • •• • • ~ualified candidate will WAITRESS/WAITER Fluffy 8moe old female possess a min. of 6 months exper. to in · W /car for wicker basket cat black to good home
elude: dispatching. the I u n ch s e r vi c e . 848-6423aft.5pm wkdaya
$iUty to interact quick-9:30-1 :30PM, Mon-Fri. hrNhre 1010
I)'. requ i r e m i n . Earn S125·Sl50 wkly .••••••••••••••••••••••• sppervision & have min. Must be neat. persona-
~plng requirements . ble & energetic. 979-<YT47
n joy exce l!. c o . aft lOAMforappt. Antique English oak nefits including a free ---------sideboard ln perfect con·
meal persJlift. Apply in WANTED: Girls 20 or ditlon with nke detail,
person &AM-Noon. Mon-over for promotion $350. Dreaaer, maple fl
FOR SALE!
lfri .. Pel"IOMel work. Cosmetology French pt:0vlnclal. $100. MAHIOTI HOTEL background preferred. Two matchina dr•Hert,
r>°NewportCenterDr. Callafter6:00P.M <714) maple Ir country atyle,
• 'NewportBeacb 64().73216 uoo for the pair.
• F.quatOppEmplyr -W-... --.au-5-.-W-0-1-11-_-Kln11lle waterbed In
_ _.. ., "-perfect condition wlth
S rvlce Station Atten· . ~~l;.. Full time. Apply In * Laguna Cbevron.
1(()4 S. Coast Hwy .
qaguna Beach.
Looking for mature. oak frame.i non·•~
alert lndlv .. willing to mattraa Is oea~r, .
learo and accept resp. In Call-548-78Z'7·MUST tell! estab. Newport Beach1----"-------t1•
rlrm Involved in supply-* * I IUY * * * Ing textiles used in Good \lied Fumtture •
yachting, back packing ASf!"' .. --.~a 1 wlll * and ski wear. Secure ~.....-v
C•R H2·3191 for.arcu•
lnformdon
1 T'S EASY I Look for your name and address
in today's classified section. If you find it, call
6-42-5678 Ext. 272 and we will arrange for you to
pick up your tickets at 1 ·1 p•1at
the nearest off ice of the II J I
''2 Circus tickets
for the price of 1 ''
I ' I ' 1 ' I I r ~ 1 • • . t 1 '" ' I 1 \ '. slrvlc& Station Atton
d.nt. rrr. wtth exp 4r
iief'a. mt/•k to 1iart.
.... 11$1.
tutwe for ri&hi person. ae orSELLforYou * • p M Fllllna of orders and MA.STiii AUCTION ·M•rch 17, 1111 8:00 • •
s•neral warehouse 64M616,IJS.t621 t •t Montgomery W•rd• Coeta Mea• ~!l~ ,!~t~~ !~Y~ a· namew.ave iota ~. ,,. 401 FWY. at Btlatol) S~vlct ~•tlon . Atten·
ant, P /T, •·lOpm , e
• week. $4/ln to
........... 7151.
beftenta. Pa,y increases match. S' Jov•nt, • Yrt
ba•ed on abUUy. CaJI old, n•• COft~. $215.
S.U.Ulll 14CM'1'1tev•/•lmda .
------~-----------l -l
' • f ..
••• Doris Eichom
1222 Delaware St.
Huntington Beach
You are the winner or
4frHffckets
($14 value). to ........
loot Show
Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8
Anaheim Convention
Center Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to
claim your tickets.
***
K· I RacllHJ Koyall
Xlnt $400. 548-3168
loah.McriH
E.11..-111 9030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Brand new Chrysler 50 HP outboard motor. s till
in box. 1 yr wrnty. Orig
$9SOasking $750. 751-8967
loah. ftow4tf' 9040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
21 ' 1977 Reinell Cruiser.
190 H.P. omc, Vanson trlr. fully equip, sips 4,
$8500/0r trade for V.W.
Van 645-2340
loah,l...t/ Clwtw 9050 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Partner wanted: 24' Sea
Ray Sundancer in N.B.
boat s lip. $130/mo.
Lease or purchase. Call
557-9327.
loah. Sall 9060 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ericboo 32', '75 loaded.
custom lnt·ext . Bristol
cood. Offer or R.E.P.P .
988-2703,988-0872
9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach mooring
• , •• sloop, l?.5,000.
875-1511
Slips available, Newport
Arches Marina. 25' to
51'. Avail. nciw. 842-.4M4
Sldetie. up\025',
Sl50frno. 2.1119th St.
Apt C. t'fl.OUS.
•TRADE•
Uee ol boat for alip. We
have 31' tallboat, need
Newport slip. Will teach
•allln1 alao. Roaa or Un·
da, 1·535-1111.
WANTED Boat with 1lip
hs Newpoct Beach.
151-*7
ll•k• 1our abop ~d!!:z::..
···~--...... -.... . ·-··-.... -.......... -.............. .-..-,..-, ..... ·~--.--....... -.. ..... ~.,........ ......... ,_ .......... ~·
.·
Daily Pilat
041--6676 . ..
~ .. t, I
'
~!~~!!! .......... ~~ ... !~.~ ...... ?~.·.~ .... !!.~~ ~.~r!!~ ...... ~.~~.~....... 0r..,. eout cwL:v PiLOTJMond81. Maroh 1. 1911 _ 'f
•IJ4lo PftlaHI• Boal 'Oodce.'•.aoooaatoo NeHIUY• D.._ tnoM• t742 ....._,.,,,.w i,....u..4 ~~U-4 ....._Ute4
ltot•I•· Storac•. eew _,, 440, •ater ln· Top Gollan for Sporta ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••1::~··••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••-•••
tauelalnc fr crane jed. part cociverter, 1•• Can. •Jli· Campen. 76MTIUMDJIO ''79 MG Midaet: Darlt Yc1Ran1,1 t770 CIN:uu•t ttJO ..... ttll ,..._ ffl7 ·~f!''' tor u .. di•· ....._, ...,_ n llllft llJt t14't.A ,_ • .,_.. .., COOlbUoo· browa. X1nt c:ood. ~. •••••••• .................................................................................. .
c:.:l=ltoeter. 6 &n.M, uw radla... Nil U/CMO• taf,All:'11.c•m> D11a tU·HfO, Evt1 'llWlllOO.'frfor.-00. ·~ ..... '7t ''fa XR-7, tthr Int, all •• .._LI*
:-.., • lfl.ll01 amtfm ca11. camper JIMMAllMO Ultl HI-. 0r-..otrerp.p.MUIT l+I Rltebbaclt I power, Id cond, lo ~ •-------1 = WI mON xtru. YOLUWA... H~~·~~.:J Wei 9744 laL ... lGll Ecoao111leal 5 a~Hd mu.nt. MJOO. -.aaos. 1f7f•If10 f()I0.9MIOll. 11ru-....11..a. ~~ .. ~· ......................... VW V 1n d maol&Al traae. Cluo --.!.'?}.~~~, ....... "n Dodi•. teOOO or belt ~~A:l:AOH ~ YOl..M ':too"' INC .,, .... , ao. a , " t coo • earl =~ltl 't'r!-1'., c:&•=:3i PINTOS
..._. "IO offer. an.oats or hpeect.M,oomJJ .. ,new MIAlllll HOWAIDC ... ,.._. lDt. Bucket Hau. all • 30 • ••••••••••••••••••• •• •• -.ma. Top Dollar 1 '731 H•rbor UNI, .... t. ... (N8G) '74 SUPER BUG Do • Quall ;ta xtru, !MO-O'l!T. to cbooH
1 ... Btffb Mu1kttttr, r....-tl60 Glrd4tnGrove CllY9 MW . Xllltcand,muataell. N~RTBEACH OCMlp ttH f B895 m~ ~ LycomlJ?• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pa1·d "l8 2IOZ 2+2 Int d sa.n:l:.Broadw=.ll171 790-o:MS IJ).0111 ....................... rom(l1 ) •"I• 0 m -0 • v 1 '80 DatallD -' x con ' '75 Dodie Monaco, xlnt trlfttpoeder. 8•0·4109 Pi It U ForYoW'CU! Am/nn casa. a /c, tnrf. '79 MOB Int d ,.,.,. 76 Sclroceo web konis, SH US FIRST! d _,,,. ev,. c • P a SOM $74SO PP 6'0· 1948 " con • "'~ ' ' con · -arm. ALlrLow Milea&t · s 1 peed , A m Fm JOHHSo.4 evea/wkench ml, am/fm tape deck, lowet'ed. ans. We have a good aelecUon ~7350. AUrA u T Ma..,llM .... tt 40 cassette. <1847234) U.Co .. Mercwy mags, luH rack '8300 · 548>1885 or NEW " USE n AUr.,::~:.J;,•;'·
••••••••••••••••••••••• $4911 2836Rarbor81vd. t725 645-~evea /wknda '78Cballenger,Sapd,xlnt ALL-R bout.I Sd.r
MIWPUCHMOPIDS BarwlcklmPorts 'costaMesa s.co-5e3o Aat AMto.._tlltCt cond, am/fm, other ex· SOM&':.\:c;;dlt1onin,
A M...a-JWhol 1 131·3311 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64MGB,reblteng&gear Problems? I wr1te any tras.548-3289.N.8 . SOME"'"~"-Wa& .....
D) ......, • esa e ...... •parhd MUST Sii.LiU box, new top & int. new rl~k. lo monthly rates. AUrG:;:"'teec1 .,.... 631.~veuptoSWii.i.ss '79GMC StepsldePickup, ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• 1t7'"AT IZI am/fm . new mlchelin P1rketlna.846-399S ~ ••••••••••••• !!.~~ ~I COAST
---------• makeorrer. ~'!!'.~~•••••••!~.~~ SPOITCOUPI radlata, $2300. 64°'8090 Yolvo 9772 '72Torlno,Xlntcond.ori& TIAMSPORTATIOM M~:J:':'f 9150 548-9697 4speedtrana .. aircondi· afterSpm. ....................... * * * owner, Sl495. <l80FNffl CLOSETOFREEWAYS
....................... '80 Ford truck, ne w LEASE tlonini. AM /FM stereo Regret selling '64 MGB. VOLVO H. s.eoro 642-1710 2187Harbor Blvd.
"19 KAW KD175, xlnl cond wheels. & tires, body in DIRECT I radio with casaelte tape, stereo, mags, gd cond. Coeta MeH
ridden 4X's $600/0ffer perfect s hape. Runs • ~~c~J~,~~rt:r.m~~~i ~:~~0~~~~75. 673-7081 S~SL.~~SIY~CGE N!!;i!;n~:ch ·~8e11~~~::[i~n~n~~1::d cau <714lm-M4I
1111.mzs great6Sl·3860 1911 ALFA 9Sl-95506PMto9PM.H ,..._ ~ " Youarethewinnerof toselJ.49&-3987 rt~ 9960
LOOK!! ·so KAWI 2SO v.. 9570 no answer, PLEASE PfllCJIOf 9741 OVERSEASDELIVERY 4frff tickets •••••••••••••••••••••••
LTDk>mi,gdcond.Sac ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPIDERS keeptrying! ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERTS ($32valuel,to ~~~••••••••••!!.~~ 76PLYMOUTH
S12IOOO.B.O. &12-1106 'MUST SELL '78 Fiat 124 Spjder -LEASE 1 Circus YGrCJOI ORANGE COUNTY'S Aaaow '71 Dodge Trades 200 IEACH IMPORTS Convert.Ible EA LEllE M•r. 17th. 8PM at FtMEST 4 speed, AM· FM, great
'1A Yamaha YZlOO, xlnl mint cond .. P /S. P /B, MS Dove Street Only 29•882 miles!! DIRECT! VOlYO ~!"FwtgometryB~atrd1 LINCOLN·MERCURY 2nd car with low miles.
cood. l650. AIC. Cruise. cstm. in-NEWPORT BEACH l966COSTHarAboMrEBSIAvd """'cosytaaMesralS o DEALERSHIP (841RED> 979-1942. t I ext A 11 x tr as . 752-0900 Make monthly pay-$2395 men ts and down 1911 PIUCiEOT 646-9]03 540-9467 Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to
M1otor_.=.s•1160 ~l~:~d 962 '5900· '78 Alfa Spyder Convt 1072UJS> TUUOs claimyourtickets ~ ?t.~· '<fj)'.u~ .. L 11~ , _ ~ 9 XI n t con d . s i Iver Barwick Im Ports OltAMGE COUMTY • • * · • fft""'\ R ••••••••••••••••••••••• AlllfosWcmhd 9 590 . 131 3311 ------LINCOLN·MERCU RY ~/~ voucswAGIN INC
WE ••••••••••••••••••••••• w I m a r 0 0 n 1 n l · • IEACH IMPORTS VOLVO 16-18AutoCenter Dr :-.•' 00 CAM SILL Blaupunkt Am /Fm * • • · 534-41
R WEPAYTOPDOLLAR s tereo. 35 .000 mi . '79 Flat 2000 124 Spyder. 848DoveStreet Largest Volvo Dealer Tan~al-ski SD Fwy·Lexa1.kte Forest 13731 Harbor YOU a.v. ror lop us ed cars-Blue. Power windows. NEWPORTBEACH inOrangeCounty' 'T·-· """"l""" $7250/0BO pp 548-2184 I BUYorLEASE 9074 ockatooAve. IRVINE Garden Grove .. ,,.,.,.. ...,.. foreign. domestics or · · · stereo. hardtop in c . 752-0900
'77 Eleganza GM C 26'
Beaut cond. many xtras.
$29.SOO. 963-1242
RENT : 22 ' tux. mtr
home. Sips 6, self-cont
$275/wk . + 8< mi
64().8585.
'76 Tioga Motorhome.
complete roof air, S8500
or best offer 631 0295,
556-3778.
Tralen, Trani 9170 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Sx.24 Aristrocat, hke new
~.000. CKP68S8l
499-3816
ralers. utilty 9110 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Motorcycle Trailer
3 rails good cond S3SO
Best off 540.9732
Auto Senlu. Ports
&AccessoriH 9400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SSAVESAVE S
Wmt USED PAITS
Imported car parts
IMPORT
AUTO SUPPLY
101 N. Manchester
Anaheim 776·9900
Forsale
classics. If your car is eves. Xlnl. cond. $7 ,000. DIRECT Yo~~l~~~f~~e:..or 830-7000
extra clean, sec u s IMW 9712 645-9985. Porsche 9750 4 free ffck•h '78 Horizon, 4 dr. 4 spd,
FIRST! •••••••••••••••••••••••Honda 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~i ·~~[~*'!l!~I~ 1$14 value), to ·~x~:rt:;~e~0~:~i~~ ~'.~v~;G-r~:e cond.
k
"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 !~~:.~Jl~. ~: t • ! • Allalwim control. 50,000 mi, like POfttiac 9965 ..,. VISIT YOUR VS, S speed, air cond.. - ----- - - - -loat Show new. $2,750. 751·0829. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ O ST · d · Mar.4thruMar 8
#1 1 .. 0,.-.c_..,
292."i Harbo-r Blvd.
COSTA MESA
979-2500
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
COMMRL
CHEVROLET
~llJrbor Hl\11
l'l~TA M ~:s \
546-1200
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAM
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda
'IO's-'81 's 0RA"9E C A pwr. win ows. cruise. 10120 Garden Grove 81 Anaheim Convention '78 Marquis wagon. 9 •PONTIAC 76
Hoa..aD .& AM/FM. cass. & under GardenGrove530-9190 Center pass. loaded New SUMllRDCOUPE! Le.. Or luy " A 16,000m1les ! (9200368) Call 642·5678. ext 272 to Michelins Xlnl cond Auto. trans .. power
ly Phon•!! HEADQUARTERS S27•918 .74 Volvo 164E. xlnt cond. claim your tickets $5000. Owner, 675-6161 steering, light color. etc.
AskForThe TOD•Ylll n e w tires , brk s. ----*** ___ Mustanq 9952 Neat little ca r ! """'eet Clearan~e" A • •• 1651PVJ) ,., , alternator. etc Must see C 99]2 •••••••••••••••. •••••••• Department UNIVERSITY orvette . M OML Y S2995!
MCL-IMW SALES •. SERVICE to apprec Must sell ••••••••••••••••••••••• 68 uslang, orig owner. It C"'-~ -.,.., "' Sac. SJOOO. 968·2707 v..a.-Rat d x Int co n d BI u e HOWA D _.wro .... 522·5 3 3 3 OLDSMOllLE ---~ e $2495/best ofr 846-9662 Dove & Quail St.s
---HONDA • Autos. Used Used Can!! '66 Mustang ve. 289. good N~~~65~~ACH
ForThe Best GMCTRUCKS '76 911S. 5spd, mags,••••••••••••••••••••••• '79CorY.tf~Lt2 cond. $2800/0BO Reply
Buy Or Lease Deal 2850 Harbor Blvd. stereo cass. snrf. silver, GeMral 990 I 4 speed. I 0,000 ml8-s, Answer Ad 11434 642 4300
In Orange County COSTA MESA immac $12,950 pp ••••••••••••••••••••••• qlass T top, door 24 hrs.
ComeSeeUsToday! 540-9640 640-1948eves/wkends. •CARSWAMTEO• locks, ituo, pow•r -----
RUNNING OR NOT '67 MustCllH) ~ '80 4dr Accord. A/C. '679125spd.amtfm8trk. S25·S300 windows, sport Red exterior. black in· \;;JI AMtFM cass. s nrf clean, new shocks t muf. CASH wt.e.h, ter1or. Brand new steel
SADDLEIACI<
IMW
28402 Marguerite Pkwy
Mission Viejo Aver y Pkwy exit ( 5
Fwy.I
8] 1-2040 495.4949
Closed Sundays
CREVIER
mags. xtras Assume fler. rblt seats $5200 FREE TOWING (llOYMY ) belled radials. Good run-
lease $208 31 mo or buy 752-8786 days. SSl-5076 OPEN WEEKENDS ning cond. $1700 or offer
out $400 to lake over eves/wknds Call Ed (7 14 )891·0517 $13 9 o o 642100-.7049 or 642-4321 ext Dys 556·0571 , Vince Eves 642 tt50 Pete . '70 9UT cpe. S spd, 2.2, J E E P S . C A R S .
'79 HONDA 4dr,
stereo/tape. a /c.
9.5 644-0550
stereo, mags, best offer PICKUPS. from $35 MUSTANG GRAMDE
auto, 640-0018,642-8338 Available at local Gov't Whihwithvlnyttop
S6520 Roh R 9756 Auctions. For Directory Air cOltd. oyc:e cal l Surplus Data .. #ioiiii9Riiio~s.i~· center. ms) 861-2648. -G!:~~!!,.!!
ROY luldc 9910 RecJlllarGcn!!
75POHTIAC
FtRYIRD
Auwmatic. air. AM ·FM
cassette with power
booster. extra clean. low
miles. 1506309 1
$3695
· '" tttcWt. Uowcwl ~VOLKSWAGEN. INC ~ ~100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
Datsun Z
motor
+ ofMf" parts
768-5137
2150 H..t.or llvcl
Code ..... 645-5700 0 1 SI & llOADWAV
SAHIA A .. A
'73 Honda Civic. 4spd .
xlnt running cond $1950.
842·9946 after 6pm
848·7276. CARVER ;;;;·~·:i:~··;:~:~~·=~~: ~ ~-.83i00l. Good MllNge!!
ROLLS·ROYCE cond Loaded. T ·top. $1200
'74 Honda. has new eng. IMIJ•.....,.... lugg rack. wire rims. SHOWROOM COMD. Sspd, dual carb & dual u,__ __ _. ~ ... c11 831 7494 art 5 Ens. 640-5527
'77 Trans Am Almost
new engine. Powe r
steering. brakes. win
dows AM 1FM 8 track
586-8415
Porsche 914 western style
mag wheels S20 ea
548-9744. 548-6446
Two L6Q.1S & two G60 IS
tires on wood spok e
dodge rim s $200.
892-6856
Stockland Shell for G M or
Chevy Shortbed Pick·Up
xlnl cond . $4501080
645-4396
CHEAP!!
Slightly used turbo kit
'70-'74 Datsun Z cars
768-5837
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
The price of items
advertised by vehicle
dealers in the vehicle
classified advertasanli(
columns does not an
elude any applicable
taxes, license. transfer
rees. finance charges.
rees for air Pollution COO·
trot device certifications
or dealer documentary
preparation charges un·
less otherwise specified
by the advertiser.
9520 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'41 Chev. runs great.
$2800 or trade. Days
581·2003; eves 855-8984
'63 T·Blrd, completely
reatored. like new. over
U2M spent, take
S8SOO /OBO. Lea v ing
country. 64.2-2287.
'48 Ford Wo o die ,
restored, $13,000. ALSO
'29 Model A Town Sedan,
4 dr, restored. Ideal for '
student. St0 ,000
67W181.
9530 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'71 Dodie RV Van. Self·
coetained. Xtras. low
mUeJ-942-5241
4 W'"' Drt.n 9550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76SU9AIU
4WI ET DllYI w••°" 4 o.11inder • apeed. AM· FM (052PPM > Excellent
b~aton.ly
SJ6'1
t3'i~tt~ ~ ISM100
13731 Herb«
G«detl Grove
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
V oJ v o s . Ca 11 u s
TODAY'''
835·3171
THE UlT!MA TE DAIYIHG MACHINE
exh. One ol a kind. $2800. _ _.......... '75 T·TOP
842-9946 arter 6pm. CLOSlDSVNDAYS. • '74 C entury 4 dr . Power brakes. power Oldsmobi8-9955 windows. Power steering
•USEDIMWs•
'77 6.:.> csi 4 speed 10247)
'75~ (OOJS)
848-7276. s.-9760 cassette. loaded Good with tilt/telescoping ---97 ]0 cond 67J. 7677 or 673 7873 . JGCJ119r ••••••••••••••••••••••• steering wheel. air.
Earle Ike ·19m <7560> •••••••••••••••••••••••
'67 Jaguar 3.8 MK 115 all
orig. very well main·
tained Must Sacrifice
846-8570
LEASE
DIRECT!
'69 Bwck. xlnt cond. run AM /FM stereo. r ea r
eqwp. $800. Call 645·9590 w i n d o w de r o g g er . automatic trans Snow
TOYOTA· VOL YO '77 6.:.> csi auto (00401
'80 528iA sunrf I 1625 I aft. 6pm white with Burgundy in-
I O• H..--11•4 c ........ ..
..... •0-,)0) -S40.,4'7
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us the opportunity
to consider the purchase
or trade·in or your dean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today!
136J 1 t-ittt>ut 01.,ft
C••den G•Ovt' ... 6l6-23ll
CloMcl 5-days
ORANGE COUMTY'S
OLDEST
Mcnda 9738
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1981 SAAi
TURIOs
Great Ec:onoMy W gn' ·1tt 'Maida 808. 1600cc. BEACH IMPORTS
4cyl (not rotary) 4spd.
radials, am 1rm . Extra
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
'66 LeSabre 4 dr. new ring
& valve job. eng runs
smooth New paint. Int
very clean. AC works. S
tires i;?ood tread .
$795/bsl orr. 645-4631 brr
noon/aft SPM .
Caclloc Sales-Service-Leasing nice! Ask ing $1995. 64~9049 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Roy Caner.Inc. ORAHGE COUMTY Rolls koyce BMW Mucedn len1 9740
1540Jamhorec ••••••••••••••••••••••• SA.Al
Newport Beach 640.6444 450SL/maant in xlnt BUYorLEASE
cond F equip Poss DIRECT
YOUR #1
CADILLAC
DEALERSHIP IM
ORANGE COUNTY! Divorced. must sac '79 n eg . pr 1 c e Dan OVERSEAS
320i blk/tan. Lux us pkg 646-2128. DELIVERIES SALES. SERVICE
Steve 731·2221 , Iv msg .78 4SOSL. blk on blk, I ... ,~.,~.~·~~. NAANDBELEASING 1980 BMW 5281. 4 cir. polis hed rims. mint
loaded · like new 26.000 cond 14.000 m1 , $30,000. ~
m1. Assume lease or buy 63l·SISS We Pay out 7141646.6950 10 120GarCJi>nGrove 8 1 CADILLAi
OVER '72 4SOSL. very clean. r • .-1rC1pn(..1 ""''>30-9190
I L.-800L ·75 BMW5301. low miles. both tops. 78 .000 mi. ----9765 c~':?' ~~~00 _. • am rm 8, auto and air Sl4.SOO 494 7451 Toyota
For Your Good rtawless. must see $7 ,SOO •••••••••••••••••••••••
VW. Porsche or Audi Pvt Pty640-1S47 '72 MBZ 280SE. 1 owner. 1980 Toyota SR 5. pkup, .79 Eldo. salver & blk. blk ~HICK super clean. service re· xlnl con~. Sspd. AM /FM lthr int. moon rf, less ·~RSOll Datwn 972 cords. MicheUns $6900 !~~';°·like new. 831·7494 than 19,000 mi . mint
••••••••••••••••••••••• 497·2382 eves/wknds __ cond. $13.900 631 5155. VW PORSCHE-AUD I
445 E Coast Hi way Forsae.
terior. Z7.000 miles. Im·
mac ulate thruful '
$8. 100. 754-6790 o r
Answer Ad #209. 642-4300
. 24 hrs.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'78 Olds. Cutlass
Supreme Brougbam
T-top, foll power.air. ex
tremely sharp! Make
monthly payments and
down 1543VOY)
Barwick lmPorU
831-]]l I
Have something to sell"
Classified ads do it well
at Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 673 0900
Premium prit•es
paid ror any used <'ar
(foreign or domeslir l
in good condition
See Us First !
Datsun Z
motor
+ ott.r parts
768-5837
'79 4SOSL. executive's
car. $32.250 Assume
lease or purchase Ma-
p I e yellow /bamboo
'76 Toyota Corolla. a /c. Se Ville Elega~81 .
a.mtrm ste~eo cass. sta-diesel, every option( 38K
taon wgn an top cond. . 891.1588 ft SPM $2400/0BO. 642·0693. mi, a ----
Loaded . 16,000 m1. .73COROLLA '78 Seville . leather.
760.1831.548·9094. Sl600 amtrm stereo w/lape.
cruise. etc. xlnt cond.
\\ere' s a sure th\ng tor Ornnge
'72 DATSUN 240Z '71 CLASSIC 28-0SL 645-9502. 642-2434 Don $8500. 495.6988 Orig owner, 72.000 mi. Vo .. WCICJlll 9770•----Lo mi, I owner. good
cond. Call 645-204 I. a /c. nu tires. 2 tops. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CCllftClr'O 9917 Showroo~ sharp. Have ,75 Bug •••••••••••••••••••••••
all service records . Sunroof, EXCELLENT '78Camaro
S29.7SO. CONDITION !! (031l7Sl Air, automatic. Power P.P. 540-3136 $]918 steering, 27,961 miles,
----(882VEI > Barwick Imports $4911 '76 45«iE, river blue. tan
int. snrl. cass, $14,000.
499·1998, 972·9143 Dr.
Pugh.
For Classified Ad
ACTION
CaUa
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
For Sale
CHEAP!!
SllebU7 ... turbo kit
'7o. "7• Dlil9m I Hrl .,...,_
You can be a
W·INNER
Just by sending us your name and
address and by watching for your
name In the classified ads of the
Dally Pilot. .
Wln tl~keu to the circus, area •musemenl at racuons or aPOrtint event.a. Juat nu out thlt coupon and man it. today to the:
Ctualned Departmen&, DaUy Pilot
330 W. Bay S&l'fft, Cotta Mesa, CA m2t
. -.
..
" "'° 41! . ~ .
: : : I ..
! 1 ~-z iy~
Ul-]]11 Barwick lmPorts
76YWVAH 131-lll I
'70CAMAR0
$1800/080
758-U30aft8PM
71C_..R.,
Tinted wlndowa ,
louvers, super ll&hta
with TA's, bra . $1200
stereo system.
$6700 /080 . (7 H)S3&-98118 eves.
......... ttH
'70 BUG •lnt cond, auto •••••••••,••••••••••••
1Uck, swreo/ca11. S2SOO '•Coupe IOOd eond. a27
PP•21111lS va , muat aell UOO ..... , ...... w.. ,_ ..... _,,.. ______ ,
"11 VW Da1her. lapel. '11 Maua •ood coad air am/fm, lthrttte , ' 1 ft • tadialt, htll rack, nry + JCU111, Cal • · f or
nlcel Aallln1 tilts. wbd.-.onc.
,... '76NOMIA
l+I. 4 ~yl, ,ood
mllea••· a /c, radio, tr...r.nbll WUTUlJ,
87.Bf Of '1IM080.
'65 LeMans Convt
Good Cond. $1700
759-1580
'79 Trans Am. rare 10th
annivers ary , 4spd .
loaded incl lthr. immac.
7K m1. S9700 494·6459.
548·1141
SELL idle items with a
Daily Pilot Classiried
Ad ---
..
. .
~
I
•
1
•
'
I
Now the MERITidea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar-
New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERIT for those who prefer
an ullra low tar cig{lrette.
· New MERIT Ultra Lights. It's goiizg to set a whole new taste
standard for ultra low tar smoking
Only 4mgtar
Regular&
l\1enthol
4 mg "ter:' 0.4 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by RC Method
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. -
&.-__.-,..._---~0 ... Mentll.c.INI
·:
------·--· -------. ----------·
t ' -
----~
I
• .JJ
-11111111 llllY PIP.II
M1lNl)1\r MAH ' It •1 1•u11 OHAN< ,f 1 UUN I Y I Al H 1 >H N IA 25 CEN TS
• • ·:Bible tran~t}tors rem.aID ID Coloniliia
FAMILY SHARES SADNESS -Chester and
Mary Bitterman, about to leave for secret
r eunion with slain son's widow, read
Colombian newspaper account of slaying
Af'W~
and a letter from President Reagan. With
them at Lancaster, Pa., home are (from
left> sons Grant, Curt and Chris.
Burro shootout
381 killed at Navy center
CH l NA LAKE CAP >
Airborne sharpshooters with
high-powered rifles killed hun-
dreds of wild burros during the
weekend because the animals
e nd angered a irc raft a n d
vehicles at the Naval Weapons
Center here. the Navy con·
firm ed today. Two ci vi lian professional
mark s m en under t h e
s uper vision of an Arizona
animal population specialist
flew in helicopters Saturday and
Sunday to kill 381 or the beasts,
which wander wide areas of the
vast Mojave Desert, including
this Navy base 115 miles north of
Los Angeles. the Navy said.
The burros have created a
"major hazard lo both aircraft
and vehicular traffic as they
r oam across the Ce nte r 's
runways and roads," the Navy
said in a written statement pre·
pared after the kills were com·
pleted.
"I have been concerned for
som e time that a Navy jet
aircraft will hit a burro on a
runway and crash," said Capt.
William B Haff, center com-
mander. "At night there's no
way that burros can be seen
either from the air traffic con·
trot tower or by a pilot To pro-
tect the lives of our aviators and
million-dollar aircraft . I fell the
emergency reduction program
was essential "
The Navy said the burro
population on the 1,712-square·
mile research and development
center the Navy's largest
increased from l , 110 to 2,225
from 1978 to 1980
A Navy enlis ted man was
seriously injured in September
when his motorcycle struck a
burro on a road at night near the
Center's airfield, the Navy stale·
ment said, adding that a number
of colli sions be tween burros and
autos have a lso occurred on
state and county roads on the
Center 's perimeter.
The burros, descendants of
animals t u r ned loose by
charcoal miners, damage the
desert through their foraging,
the Navy said. No native burros
exist in North America.
Wild burros have posed an ln·
ORANGE COAST WEATHER
Fair through Tuesday.
cr easing problem lo western
U.S. desert areas in recent
years. Hundreds of burros were
helicoptered out of Grand Can·
von late last year in a well·
publicized relocation campaign.
The Navy also had about~
wild goats taken off San
Clemen te Island las t year
because they endangered other
species on the island just off the
Southern California coast.
2 assaulted
The Navy. which owns the
island, originally bad intended
to shoot those animals as well,
but the Fund for Animals suc-
ceeded in getting a federal judge
to stop the shootings. Ultimately
190 of the 212 goata died on a
mainland ranch near San Diego
from diseue, malnutrition and
stress. veterinarians said.
The Fund group pro~sted the
China Late abootinp today.
Huntington man
held in shooting
One man has been shot and
two others assaulted outside a
Huntington Beach wedding re·
ception, police reported today.
Samuel Perez Cortes, 28, of
Huntington Beach, was arrested
!Sunday on suspicion or attempted
murder in connection with the
shooting incident, police said.
Francisco Velasquez, 17, of
Santa Ana, was treated at Hunt·
ington lntercommunity Hospital
for a bullet wound in the left
thigh and was released.
Aged dog
saves hurt
• mistress
COCHISE, Ariz . (AP> -
Bomber is 70 years old in dog
yea r s, but t he 45 -pound
Australian shepherd mix proved
age poses no barrier to heroism
when he dragged his 130-pound
mistress lo safety after she fell
and broke her hip.
Rhaela Eslick, 81, who lives
a lone, slipped on concr ete
outside her southern Arizona
farmhouse and lo st
consciousness in the rain.
Bomber was licking her face
when his mistress came to. She
grabbed the long fur around bis
neck and said "Pull, Bomber.
Pull."
Pull bed.id.
Police said Velasquez was at·
tending a Saturday night recep·
lion at the Moose Lodge, 7451
Lorge Circle, when several fights
broke out In the parking lot.
the parking lot.
Velasquez was walking to his
car at 11:30 p.m. when he was
struck by a s ingle gunshot,
police said.
Receiving cuts and bruises in
the disturbance wer e Carlos
Gonzales, 18, and Octavio
Tinoco. 20, both of Huntington
Beach. Both were treated at
Huntington Inter community
Hospital and released.
Cortes was arrested Sunday
near his central Huntington
Beach home after a police of-
fi cer reportedly was told that
Cortes was about to be attacked
for his role in the wedding dis·
turbance. The suspect was later
identified by the shooting victim
as his assailant, police said.
The cause of the wedding dis·
turbance was not known. police
said.
Iraq attacks
with missiles
BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -
Iraq today fU"ed four missiles
Into Abvaz. capital of Iran's
oil-producing Kbuzistan
province, destroying several
buildings, Iran's official Pars
news agency reported as
fl1htin1 Intensified in the
5~·month Persian Gulf war. Lows tonight 46 along the
coast, 54 inland. Highs
J .• ;s;i~·i;~t TOs ~ TM balkdboU H<UOn for
It took about two hours, she
figured later, but Bomber pulled
her into the house, ~ tbe
kitchen and to the t•<hCDe,
where she called for a... ·
•• , would let'° ..... and
rest, but be Jlllt _..,.. rtOt
there," M11 FAiick .... fl-a ier
bed at St, loe•'• Mepltal
where abe wu l'ff•peratia1
after the tnctdeat ... He Juat
seemed to know wbat to do. He
took over and took care of me.
There were no reports of
caauaJUea in the missile attack,
Para said.
It wu the third straJeht day
that Iran accused Iraq of uaina
1urface-to-1urface misalles.
• I
=
UC lrvfM appor~tl~ u owr
o..t a bkf to IM NIT Ml nol
bHn fonhcoming. Page Bl.
INDll
AM~ C1 ... ............... •• ...... ...,
.......... ,._ A4
~WlkfNIUcef CM a...tt .... .... .....,,.... u ,...,,... .,
TMetren ... ,
WHlllllW I M -~-M HJf
"He's always been a 1ood
do•," she added. "Hll fatber
wa1 one ol the belt caUle clop tn
the country."
Bomber la watchin1 over tbe
farm with a human friend ol
hen while 1be recoven, but
11n't yapplne at errant 1teen.
Tbe only other animal.I oe the
farm IOUtbw•t of Wlllco~ are
cblckena, 1ee1e and three
Chibuabuu.
High court nixes
releue of tapea
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
U.S . Supreme Court today
blocked th• releue of Mer« lnformattoa tbe •overnmeat
HYI eould . •bow tall cheat.en
bow to avoid teWal caqlat.
Tbe Juatlcu -poatpoaed
l8deftnlW, tbe effect ol court
ordera forctac tbe Bureau of
SCODOllUc A.alysta to n1e .. • com,._ tapea to Sulaa and
P.bllf p LGal of BeUnue, Wub.
'
Slain Bitterman mourned
By PATRICK KENNEDY °' -.,..,, ...... lt.ltf
None of the Wycliffe Bible
tranalat.ora bu asked to Jean
Colombia although their lives
have been threatened by the ter-
rorists who shot and killed
Chester Bitterman Saturday, a
Wycliffeorftcial said today.
A memorial service for Bit-
terman, 28, wu to be held today at
Wycll!fe Bible Translator Inc.
headquarters In Huntington
Beach.
"This tragedy has pulled the
people in the organization
together in greater determination
to continue our work," said
Wycliffe spokes man Terry
Casey.
The terrorists kidnapped Bil·
terman and held him 47 days, de·
manding that Wycliffe and its sis-
ter organization, the Summer
Institute of Linguistics, puU out of
the country.
·'There was really nothing we
could do," Casey said today. "If
we pulled out, the action taken
agaJnatCbet would have been suc-
cessful and opened the floodgates
to terrorist action agalnst other
Wycliffe translators.·•
Casey said the non-profit cor-
poration bas 4,000 workers in 33
countries. The group develops
languages in primitive societies
and tM.ll translates the New
Testafiieill.
Bitterman had been in Colom·
bia for two years with his wife,
Brenda, and two small daughters,
aged2andl.
The terrorists charged that
Wycliffe and SIL are fronts for the
CIA and the Colombian govern-
ment.
WycUffe officials have denied
the charges.
Casey said a Chester Bitterman
Memorial fund ha s been
established. He said more than
15,000 letters have come to the
Wycliffe headquarters in the past
three weeks , offering sympathy
and support for the most part.
President Reagan sent con·
dolences to Bilterman's parenta
in Pennsylvania.
"Al lhla time of terrible Sad·
n ess, I ho pe you will be
strengthened in the knowledee
that the firmness and courage ol
your son and daughter-In-law
have contributed to our stead·
fast determination to resist ter·
:-o rist blackmail,·· Reagan
wrote.
"My thoughts and prayers are
with you," the President added.
Casey said that during the or-
deal, workers at Wycliffe were
optimistic that Bitterman would
be released unharmed.
But that turned to shock.
"The reaction is shock, but
there is a general feeling that
God doesn't make mistakes and
that there is a reason for what
happened to Chet. We may not
know it in our liretime but
there's a reason," Casey said.
YOUNG INDtANA VICTIMS Of ELECTROCUTED STEVEN JUDY
Chaawen chffdren Misty, 5; Marti, 2; Steven, 4, alaln wtth their mother
Af'W .........
MURDERED MOTHER
Terry LH Chaateen
Heart, lung
operation
completed
ST AN FORD (AP> -Doctors
at Stanford University Medical
Center completed the world's
fourth heart-lung transplant on a
45-year-old woman today, hop-
ing to beat the survival odds
with the use of a new dru1.
Mary Gohlke, 45, of MeH,
Ariz., wu liven the heart and
Junes ol an anonymoua donor ln
a four-hour operaUon and wu
listed ln stable but critical condl·
lion, bo1pital 1poke1woman
Lora Hol1tadter 1aJd.
••A very critical period wlU
come ln 24 houri when they
<docton) attempt to wean her
from the retplrator early tomor-
ro'ft' momtn1," Ma. Hof1tadter
•aid.
"So far she 1eem1 to be doUal
H weU u Hpected and her
heart ii functlonlnl normally,"
Ill. Holltadter 1aJd about four
boun after tbe operatloa.
Tb,_ people wbo UIMhrwent
heart and hana tran1plant1
bet .... u. ... tm, ......
. two la tbe Uded Statel, ct.a after 1untvtq pertod1 of H
bout, •t da11 &Dd 11 dQI. TIM IMl beart·I-traMplmt
wa1 lD11'1.
(lee DdT, Pa1e Al) .
1\
... ' ~,__=------
Blames himself
Joking Judy dies
in electric chair
~
MICJUGAN CJTY, Ind. CAP >
J oking with gua rds a nd
blaming himself for his fate,
24-year-old Steven T. Judy went
willingly to his d eath in
Indiana's black oak electr ic
chair today for murdering a
mother and her three small
children nearly two years ago.
"I don't hold no grudges. This
is my doing, sorry it ha ppened,"
were the last words of the blond,
blue -eyed murderer before two
powerful surges of electricity
wracked his body and he was
pronounced dead.
"He was very relaxed, I don't
think it hurt," said his foster
father, Robert R. Carr. "When it
hit him, he flinched . Then you
could see movement In his
fingers."
Judy, who resisted appeals,
s aying he preferred death to life
in prison, became the fourth
person executed in this country
since the U.S. Supreme Court
revived the death penalty in
1976. His was the first execution
in 20 years in Indiana's electric
chair, made from wood that
once served as a gallows.
Department of Corrections
spokesman Tom Hanlon said
Judy was "very calm" and
walked the six paces from his
holdina cell to the chair "very
,, .,
quie tly" and unassisted just
after midnight.
Carr said that before Judy
was taken to t he c hair, he
received a final phone call from
a girl in Texas n a med
"J eanne." He then asked for
"photos of his new haircut"
where he had been shaved to
make room for an electrode,
which was soaked in sail brine
to make it more conductive.
''They sent fo r a photographer
and took the pi c tures he
wanted," Carr added.
Attorney Steven L. Harris,
who witnessed the execution
from behind a glass partition
along with Carr and state
officials said that as Judy
walked to the chair, he pointed
to where his trouser had been
cut so another electrode could be
attached to his leg, and quipped:
"I'm going to send the state of
Indiana a bill for $15."
Just before be was strapped
into the chair and blindfolded,
Hanlon said, Judy took ofJ bis
wristwatch and asked that It be
given to a fellow death row
inmate who was bis closest
friend.
Then Judy was strapped in,
the guards backed away. "there
waa a pause for about 10
(See JUDY, Pa1e AZ)
-· ··--~-·
-'
byFV
Despite a wamln1 tbat some
local apeedlna Uckeu may SOOD
be thrown out of court, Founl&Ln
Valley City Council baa decided
not to ralle 1peed Umita on five
main at.reeta.
The lasue came to liCbt in
February, when city tramc ·
engineer Jlm McCJendon
presented a local drivln1 speed
survey required every five years
by the state.
The study lhat concluded 45
mph is the "reasonable and
safe'' speed o n Founta in
Valley's arterial slrffts.
The posted speed on five
arterials Is lower , and
McClendoo recommended they
be raised to 45.
He said the Jimlt must be
changed, under state law, if the
city wishes to continue enforcing
s peed laws by radar.
The affected streets and their
limits are Bushard Street, 30
mph; Talbert Avenue, 35; Slater
and Ellis avenues, 40 ; and
Newbope Street, 40.
M cClendon said his s urvey
found that the average motorist
cruises Bushard at 45.
The council initially tabled the
speed limit hike at the
sugges ti on of Mayor Al
Hollinden.
Hollinden urged that all local
arterial limits be lowered to JS.
He argued that this speed is
safer and produces a smoother
traffic now.
City staff members returned
one month later with a proposed
ordin ance that would have
raised the five arterial speed
limits. as originally suggested
by McClendon.
The traffic engineer told the
council he believe 96 percent of
the local motorists a re driving
safely. even at 45.
"To set the speed limit tower
is to encourage breaking the
law ... he said. "I'd guess that
there's no one who came to th.is
meeting driving under 35."
o.lly ...... "-" .......
SIGN TELLS STORY OF HUGE SEWAGE SPILL IN NEWPORT
50,000 betttera couldn't go n••r w•t•r Sund•Y
Tests of polluted
Newport waters set
By STEVE MARBLE
OtU. D.ity 1'1114 5t.H
Orange County health officials
were lo begin tests today lo de·
termine how seriously the waters
in Newport Harbor and the
Newport coastline were polluted
by this weekend's 6 million
gallon sewage spill.
Newport's shoreline, closed to
bathers on Sunday, is expecte<J to
remain off-limits for at least a
week.
Mike Wehner, a county water
quality supervisor, said the beach
from the BaJboa Pier south to
Scotchman's Cove likely will be
closed to the public for a week.
·'It's hard lo tell how bad it reaJ-
1 y is," he explained. "The
beaches will be cleaned up pretty
quickly simply by the current.
But the harbor is slower to be
flushed and as the stuff leaves the
harbor, it will affect the
beaches."
cuts rapped ·1
Reductio118 'shortsighted:' Conrad J
IJ IUCllA&I. DOUGAN ....... "" ... Tbe third man to leave b4t
footprtnu oo the mooa bu pre-
dicted that, becauH of cuu ln
t.b• •pate proaram, it .,tu not be
until tbe nett century before
1omebody makes that trlp
a1ain.
Charles "Pete" Conrad, com-
m an de r of the Apollo 12
apacecraft, described as 1bort-
si1hted President Reacan'1 ex-
pected cut of 25 percent iD the
National Aeronautics and Space
AdmlnlatraUon research budlet
durln1 a visit Sunday to Hunt-
ington Beach where be appeared
on KOCE -TV 's pled1e
maratboo.
Conrad was Joined by Russell
Schweickart, another former
astronaut now 1ervin1 as
chairman of Gov. Jerry Brown's
energy commission.
"I think It wiU be .a long time
before anybody goes back to the
moon," said Conrad. He sald
former President John F . Ken·
nedy's push to land a man on the
moon was motivated by "the
politics of putting the nation
back together. In my oplnion,
because It was politically
founded it's easily politically
killed.
"I think there Is a lot of fat in
the federal program," he added,
"but not in the space program."
Conrad, now senior vice.
president for marketing for
McDonnell Douglas, noted that
the 1979 NASA budget was $4
billion white defense received
$115 billion and the department
of Health, Education and
Welfare was budgeted at $180
billion.
·'Somewhere we got our
priorities screwed up," he said.
''You can't tell me that, if you'd
taken just (another) $4 billion or
that and given it to NASA , the
HEW would have even missed it. ..
Conrad blamed the three-year
delay in launching America's
space shuttle on lack of funds.
"They have done their absolute
best with what they have," he
said. "They aren't about to let
that th.ing go before it is ready."
H• attributed part of the prob-lem oa .lbe fact Americana
abandoned their love aff alr with
the apace prorram once t.he ex·
cU.ernent of landing on the moon
eub1lded.
"That 1ort of (excitement)
abouldD't be there," said
Conrad. ,j Americana seem to
have a short attention span.
They tend to move on to other
thln1s."
l I
T . . ·1 d 1 wo remain J a1 e l
I
fatal stabbing : • Ill
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of Ille Delly l'Uet St.H
Anaheim police investigators
say they will seek formal
murder complaints Tuesday
against two San Diego residents
being held as suspects in Dis-
ney land's first slaying.
Police Sgt. Del Wade said lo·
day that while his investigation
is still continuing, he will ask the
Orange County District Al·
torney's office to press charges
against James 0 . Driscoll, 28.
and Julie Holdener, 25,
Each is being held in lieu or
$250,000 bail , Driscoll at
Anaheim City Jail and Miss
Holdener at Orange County Jail
The two were arrested ~atur
day night after Mel C. Yorba,
18, or Riverside. was fatally
stabbed in the Tomorrowland
area of the sprawling amuse·
ment park.
Wade said investigators now
"have an idea" of what the
motive may have been. but he
declined to elaborate.
Officers s aid Yorba was
knifed after apparently becom·
ing involved in an argument
with Driscoll and Miss Holdener
near the submarine ride ticket
booth in Tomorrowland.
ventureland area. .
Wade said it didn't appear ;
Yorba knew his alleged as· ~
sailants. The Riverside man had
gone to the park with friends.
The park was being used ·
Saturday night by a host to a .
private party by Rohr Corp. of :
San Diego and Riverside.
However. officers said they
did not know if Yorba or Driscoll
and Mi ss Holde n e r were
employees or the firm which
specializes in construction or
transportation equipment.
Yorba was taken by Dis·
neyland ambulan ce to Palm
Ha rbor Hos pital in Garden
Grove, where he was pro-
nounced dead
A Disneyland spokesman said
Yorba's slaying was the first in
the park's 26-year history. About
six persons have died acciden-
tally in the amusement facility.
City attorney Thomas
Woodruff said speeding tickets
issued by radar on the streets
posted lower than 45 could be
challenged successfull y in court
because the city has not adhered
Lo the results of the required
But the quarantine did little to
discourage beach s unbathers.
Lifeguards said at least S0,000
persons turned out Sunday, re·
mainingonthesand.
l'ro•Pop A I
ELECTROCUTE "Ii
Wade said witnesses saw the
knifing. Mi ss Holdener was
taken into custody by park
security personnel.
Jury ask s
d e l ay i n
procedure
traffic study ·
Councilman Ben Nielsen said
he relt uncomfortable raising the
five speed limits. es pecially on
Bus h a rd , which runs near
several schools . , •
Coiindlman Eugene Van Dask
said most residents he's talked
to would pre fer lower speed
limits.
By a 4·1 vote. the council
decided to leave all s peed limits
as posted. including the five
lower than 45. The city staff was
asked lo keep track of speeding
tickets that are thrown out
because of the counci l 's
disregard for the traffic survey.
Mayor Hol linden cast the
opposing vote, saying he still
would prefer to lower all arterial
speed limits in the city
Front P a fl*' A I
HEART ...
But Stanford doctors said they
believe Mrs. Gohlke stands a
better chance of sur vival
because the drug cyclosporin·A
is being used in her case to
remedy two problems that have
beset other· patients. the slow
and imperfect healing of the
windpipe and IHe·lhreatening in-
fections.
Mrs. GohJke, who was con·
scious shortly after the opera·
lion, had been suffering rt-om
pulmonary hypertension, a tung
condition that can also damage
the heart, Ms. Hofstadter said.
Doctors Bruce Reitz and
Norman Shumanway , who
performed the operation, lay the
groundwork for the operation
working with monkeys.
In tests over several years,
they said they obtained en·
couraging results when they re-
investigated the possibility or
heart-lwig transplants with the
new drug.
Three of seven monkeys re-
ceiving new hearts and lungs
and being treated with
cycloaporin-A survived more 1than 140 days after surgery. Two
1 are still living, 14 and 15 mootha
after the operation.
"We beefed up our patrols,"
s aid lifeguard Lt. Logan
Lockabey. "and helped post
signs . Everyone was very
cooperative. They stiifed out of ttte water' L in .,,ct, they
didn't even get c lose to the
water."
The trouble began Saturday
morning when a sewer line rup·
lured in front of the Balboa Bay
Club on Pacific Coast Highway.
Pavement in the southbound
lanes was raised and broken by
the forceofthe rushing sewage.
Ray Lewis, of the Orange Coun-
ty Sanitation District, said the
rupture was caused by corrosion
of the 30-inch line by suJpher
sewage gas.
Lewis said the stretch on Coast
Highway where the trouble start-
ed is the onJy area in Newport not
served by double sewage lines. He
said because of shortage of funds,
a second "backup" line has not
been installed.
Repair of the sewage tine cost
the sanitation district roughly
$100,000 and was completed Sun·
day.
Ship sinks ;
21 missing
NEW YORK (AP) -A Navy
helicopter recovered a fourth
body ln the water today as the
aircraft carrier Forrestal and
three smaller vessels searched
for 21 missing crew members of
an Israeli merchant ship that
sank in rough seas off Bermuda,
the Coast Guard said.
Petty Officer Greg Creedon of
the Coast Guard news center
here said there was confusion
over whether nine or 11 crew
members had been rescued,
because a vessel that reported
picking up eight survivors later
sent the Coast Guard only six
names.
Three bodies from the
merchant ship, the Meiada, had
been pulled from the sea Sunday
before darkness curtailed the
search, about 90 miles soutbeut
of Bermuda.
OAANOE COAST Dally Piiat ClHetfted ..,.,.."I 7141142-Mn
All O"-dip 1rtmenta 142...Q21
Thomu P. Haley ""1MlllW
Robert N. Weed ,..........
M. Thom11 Keevll ....
Thomat A. Murphlne ........ ..,
CNt ... H.Loot ~--.... ....
~ 8ohulm1n
~:=.,•n
K'""'81 N. Ooddard. Jr. ~~
MAIN OFFICE
:Ill WHI a., k ., C..te Mela, CA.
Mell...,_, loa IMO, C.te Meu, CA. 9262'
J UDY
seco nd s, and he was
electrocuted." Harris said.
Hanlon said two s urges of
electricity were sent through
Judy's body -first a charge of
2,300 volts for 10 seconds. then a
charge of 500 volts for 20
seconds.
State law calls for Warden
. Jac k Duckworth to pull the
switch that triggers the lethal
current, but Hanlon refused to
confirm who had done it.
Reporters, 'fn accordance with
Indiana law,.)¥ere kept far from
the death scene in another part
of the prison.
Hanlon said Judy's body was
released to the county coroner.
Judy's foster mother, Mary
Carr, said Judy would be buried
Thursday.
Judy was abandoned by his
parents and, at the age of 1.3,
was confined to Central State
Hospital following sexual
attacks on women. Within two
years, he was released on
"convalescent leave•· to the
Carrs, who became his foster
parents.
By 1979, Judy was well-known
to Indiana authorities as a
troublemaker and was arrested
one day after the bodies of the
mother and her three children
were found. Judy broke down
and wept when the charges
against him were read and later
admitted his guilt on the witness
stand.
Gov. Robert D. Orr, who
waited al his Indianapolis
mansion by a special telephone
line to the prison in case Judy
asked for a stay, said In a
statement after the execution,
"I am at peace with myself
because I know I have met my
responsibilities under the law
and because I believe justice has
prevailed."
The governor and slate
Clemency Commission refused
laat week to delay the execution,
because the request was made
by the American CivU Liberties
Union without Judy 's
endorsement. The U.S. Supreme
Court on Friday rejected the
effort of another death row
inmate to halt the execution.
Aa Judy went to bis death,
about 200 people opposed to
capital punishmen t held a
prayer vilil outside the gates of
the ~ntury·old fortreaa-Hke
priao Ila walls capped at
alrate locatlona with guard
towers. bey carried candles, uni hymns and Jeered Hanlon
when he appeared to announce
Judy'• death.
All() waltinc ouaide tbe cata
were members of a
pro-death·penalty 1roup called
"Protect the IMOCent," whole
membera Include Ma r k
Cba1teen, ex·buabaDd of T•rry
LM Cbutaea, the woman JudJ
raped and at.ranaled ba AprtJ
mt, and fat.Mr of tbe tla.ree
• • •
small ch.ildren Jud¥ drowned.
Chasteen said that he felt
.. hate and bitterness.. toward
Judy and wished he could have
witnessed the execution.
Judy s pent the early part of the
day in an emotional visit with
his foster parents and their four
children.
··He bro«e down three or four
times, especially when we left.
but I tried everything I know to
talk him out or it." Carr said.
"He really had a hard time
saying goodbye to my kids,·· Mrs.
Carr said. "He said 'I thought I
was ready for this, but I
wasn't. ..
For dinner, Judy asked for
and received prime ribs of beef,
two lobster tails, two baked
potatoes with sour cream and a
dinner roll. But prison officials
refused h.is request lo wash the
meal down with four cold beers.
Three other convicted
murderers have been executed
in the United Slates in the last
four years -Gary Gilmore in
Utah on Jan. 17, 1977, John
Spenkelink of Buena Park in
Florida on May 25, 1979, and
Jesse Bishop of Garden Grove in
Nevada on Oct. 22, 1979.
The Casual Side of Rugby
Driscoll was later taken into
c ustod y by officers who
sear ched the park and found
him h.id.ing in busht>s in the Ad·
Coast unit
h e arings
cancelle d
South Coast Regional Coastal
Com mission hearings scheduled
this week on Orange County
Local Coastal Plans have been
cancelled.
H earings on t h e slat e ·
mandated LCPs for Sunset
Beach and Sunset Aquatic Park
had been set for Tuesday.
Plans for South Laguna .
Newport Dunes. and Santa Ana
Heights had been scheduled Fri·
day. .
County land-use planners
withdrew the plans last week
after CoastaJ Commission staff
members had recommended de·
nial at the proposals.
Mel Carpenter, executive
director of the South Coast
Regional Coastal Commission,
said each of the proposals failed
to meet standards of the state
Coastal Act in one phase or
another.
100% cotton rl,oby shorts.and oants
eva•lable m colors ol red white.
khaki. sky blue navy. and gold
Also. the classic: bar stnpe rugby shirt,
1n a POlylc:otton blend
The Orange County Grand Jury
is asking to delay the selection or a
successor to Human Services
Agency Director Margaret Grier
until the Jury releases a report on
the agency's performance.
The jury. in a letter to county
Board or Supervisors Chairman
Ralph Clark. said the HSA report
will be available by May 1.
·'The Jury believes that thjs
work i~ germane to your selection
process and can add pertinent
data to your decision making."
the letter said .
Mi ss Grier has announced her
retirement, effective March 31.
Under a timeline approved by
s upervisors Wednesday, an
interim director will be named by
Marc h 17 . On that date.
recruitment for a permanent
director will begin.
The jury said in its letter that
the HSA's "ability to deliver
mandated services within its
present structure" has been
under study since September and
that the information gathering
phase of the project is complete.
The HSR is an umbrella
structure that administers more
than S200 million in health,
we lfare and social services
programs. It employs about 2,800
persons and is the county's
largestsuperagency.
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644 7030
....... ~_•at;laan
left .,.~:~MUU Urie per1oaal f ortuat 11111 ...
eeutor1 aad ••••t• ••·
\
ml.DlMin tltlmat., aeeal'd·
... to repona al .. !Men.I a...-. leniee eudtt Ml· U.., tbe ee~c r.elue'a 1r011h at..., mlWoo.
Tbe Cbie-.O Trtbwle ....
ported &bat UM IRS alldit ID·
eluded hold'• ID 1~mblinl culDol, 15,a • ....,_ ot bll
Summa Corp,, and a box al
$5 tambUq chi111 found 1n
hia fut botel room. '
The IRS conducted the
audit after exeeuton of the
estate complalaed the aten·
cy wu demandlne too much
in taxes on Huahet' boldia1s.
Actor-director a. Bewm
and hll wife are the parenta
of their first cbUd -llD eiibt·
pound, one-OUDce prl.
Br1ee Dellu Boward and
her mother, Cller1I, went
home from Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center, a
spokesman for Howard an-
nounced.
Howard, wboee 27th birth··
day was March 1, one day
before bia dauchter's birth
left the cast of the "Ha~py
Days" television series this
aw seuon after seven years ln
the central role of Riehle
Cunnlqham.
Opera singer Luciano Pavarotti signs an original
lithograph for admirer at New York's third Art
Expo.
Madera County
goMen winner
Three re s id e nts or
\hwahnee in Madera County
;wept the top spots in the 21st
innual world championship ~old 'panning contest at
Knott's Berry Farm.
Lance Marray won first
l lace by washing a plate full
>f sand and finding eight
!uggets in 13.4 seconds.
That tied the record set
previously by Dick H•ber
who was second at 13.5
>econds.
Lt.da Hold.tclaw won the
women 's division in 19
seconds and was third in the
open competition at 18
seconds.
A two-week honeymoon
c ruise of the Caribbean
aboard the royal yacht
Britannia r~portedly is in the
works for Prtnce Qarles and
Lady Diana Spencer.
Buckingham Palace had
nothing to say about the
story published in the News
of the World.
The newspaper s aid that
St. Lucia and St. Vincent in
the Windward Islands will be
among the ports of call after
the couple marry July 29 in
St. Paul's Cathedral.
The report said the
newlyweds will stay in a col·
tage on Nevis in the Leeward
Islands. It said Charles en·
joyed Nevis on a visit in 1973
during his Royal Navy
service.
The newspaper said that
officers of the royal yacht
have been told to make plans
for the cruise.
Yasser Arafat, Leader
of the Palestine
Liberation Organization,
says George Washington
may have been the
father of the United
States, but to the
English he was a
terrorist. Arafat was
quoted in the Turin
daily La Stampa .
Can devil be proved?
Attorney will try in bizarre ca8e
BROOKFIELD, Conn. (AP> -
In a case one lawyer calls
"more frightening than 'The Ex·
orcisl, "' the d e vil appears
beaded for bis day in court in
this tranquil Connecticut town.
The charge is murder.
The bizarre story encom·
passes attempts by Catholic
priests to rid an 11-year·old boy
of "demons;" a 19-year-old
friend who challenged those "de·
mons" to •·take me on" and now
is beinl held in the stabbing
death ofla Brookfield man, and a
criminal lawyer who says he'll
use demonic possession as a de·
fense.
Meanwhile, parents of the
11 -year-old boy say the spirits
remain.
It all started last summer
when psychic researchers and
priests worked diligently in a
secluded Cape Cod-style home to
rid the boy of "demons" they
said bad taken over bis body.
And there it might have
ended. buried in secrecy.
But the friend, Ame Cheyenne
Johnson, 19, who lived at the
house and witnesses the
sessions. challenged the demons
to "take me on. Control me.
Leave this boy alone." accord-
ing to tape recordings of the
sessions and interviews with
those present.
Now Johnson is being held on
$125,000 bond in Bridgeport in
the stabbing death of Alan Bono.
A grand jury will bear the case
March 19. tr Johnson is indicted,
his attorney says ~e·s prepared
to argue that "the devil made
Mr. Johnson do it."
''The courts have dealt with
the existence of God. Now
they're going to have to deal
with the existence of the devil,"
says Marlin Minnella, the
criminal lawyer handling the
case.
Kids 'detectives'
BLUE SPRINGS, Mo. <AP) -
A game of bide·and-seek and a
bag of "junk" turned a group of
children into crlmebuslers and
helped solve a series of
burglaries, police say.
'· J waa looklng for someone
who was bidinf," said 12-year-
o l d Kyle P ummer , who
stumbled acroea a pillow cue
while playin1 hide-and-seek.
lnaide wu stolen property -
watches, silver plates, a
camera, bandcuffa, a lmile, two
key rtnp and jewelry.
Police were contacted, and lbe
dlacovery helped l'Olve a 1series
of burglaries in this Kansas City
suburb. Police Detective Ray
Vasquez said the discovery
helped them break up four
burglary rln1s and recover
about $25,000 in stolen 1ooda.
Thirteen children aot
certificates of appreciatlon and
lettera from Police Chief
Howard Brown in a ceremony.
How did the cbllctren feel?
"Some of ua were kind of
scared that '::I (thieves) mllhl
come bllck try to llDd lt,"
aaJd ll·Jear-old Knta .......
"Happy," Pl•••er -~•ld. ''You~olllaft .... pr1419.''
We're Llatening •••
The Daily Pilot wants to hear from ltl readen, wlMll )'OU Ulle
about the peper and what you don't Uke. We allo weuld Ilk• to
publish YQW' view• on any subject ln)Mlf letters to the editor col·
umn. Call the number below md JOGr .... .,. wUJ be ~
Me11a1es will be tranacribed MfttaJ tJmea daUy and deltvered tO
the desk ol the appropriate edttor. Mailboit eontrtkUon.a wUI
be dellvertd to the editorial ..... editor. Mailbox
contributors muat Include their narM and telephone
number fOf' verification. Ml drculatlm Hila, pleue.
Tell us what's on your mlnd. The number la ln
service 24 hours a day. seven da11 a w"lr.
·'This case wiU be unique in
the higher jurisprudenc;e system
in the United Stales."
Johnson, a slender, muscular
youth with curly blond hair and
a spotless criminal record,
worked trimming trees. He and
Bono were "the best of friends "
according lo those who kne'w
both.
Police say Bono received
multiple stab wounds during an
argument with Johnson in front
of the dog kennel Bono
managed. Johns on's folding
knife, with a five-inch blade.
was recovered at the scene. He
was arrested a few miles away.
Deborah Glauel, Johnson's
25-year-old girlfriend and a wit·
ness to the incident, said the
quarrel occurred durt.ng a get.
together al Bono's apartment,
which ls over the kennel. One
minute Bono wu poundin1 bis
fist in bis hand and yellln1; tbe
next he was on the 1round,
mortally wounded, Mlas Glatsel
said. She said she was standing
between the two men and never
saw a knife.
If Johnson is indicted, Min·
nella says be ls prepared to pro-
duce tapes, photofrapba and ex·
pert testimony -= from priests
and i-ych.lc researchers -to
show that Johnson was over·
taken by the devll and not
responsible for bla act.I.
"We have subltantial, credi·
ble evidence that Mr. Johmon
bad no lnteat to harm anyone
and what happened waa a retul\
of demonic poase11loa," Min·
nella uld' ln an interview
in hh Waterbury, Conn.,
office. "People may not really
want to deal with tbe devil, but
be exiata/'
Dr. Abraham GoldateiD, a
crimlllal law expert at Yale,
1ay1 the def ... Minella ll plan-
nln1·11 ••very uauual'! ucl. tbe
1ucceu al tueb u attempt will
be determiDed by tbe laUtade ~
lowed bJ the J~•· ••we're aot talkla1 "Hout
•oodllO bere. $£'.! ....... ~ .
bJ tbe eau.auc·· .. • aella Uld .•• .,,.. • ...
more taei tban ftcdclla .
''(D ... CaM ft'N taa:tltl
aboul reeorded '• .. ~tare .• ,,. 11 not -.........
l•lclo. We're trudiDI • MW pwad. We're de11te1 WM ._
.. xp&.mable, aad n'n,...
to try to explain lt ...
.L&gllriane
glob&I
• winners ~
Pour cartooGlltl who
tat.ber fnqueat.J.y at a
Lasuaa Beach tavern
haff received word they
are wtanen in an ln·
ternaUcmal cartoon eon·
tell conducted by a
Japa.DeN newapa~r.
VtrsU Partch and
Dick Oldden ol Latuna
Beach received letter•
1tatin1 they were amoo•
five "•pedal prise" win·
ner1 in tbe contest,
which drew 9,000 en-
tranta.
Their prises wtll in·
elude check.I for $1,000,
Oldden said.
Frank Interlandi of
Laguna Beach and John
Dempsey of Del Mar
were amon1 about two
dozen who were notified
they won contributors'
prizes in the conteat, be
said.
That prize carraes
with it a ctleck for-abcj>ut
$250, Oldden said.
Oldden, who attended
school for a year in
Japan in 1982, said the
Yomiuri Sbimbun,
which conducted the
contest, is a major dail,y
newspaper, in that coun-
try.
The newspaper, in let·
ters informing the car·
toonists of their prizes,
asked for address and
bank account informa-
tion, and indicated the
money was to be sent in
soon.
. "We all thought the
thing was phenomenal
because the four of us
all drink at the same
bar. tbe Ivy House,"
said Oldden, notinl en·
trants participated from
alJ over the world.
"To knock off this
much In wtnntn1s from
our little corner is
great," be said.
Deukmejian
builds big
'82 war chest
DICK OU>Oefl AIHtNG llKIMO TOP WINNe"
Ylrvll Partdl'a flrtng aqulld •leo toH prize
Southern ladies not
gone with the wind
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Aides ATLANTA (AP) -The Equai Civil War epic "Gone With the
lo slate Attorney General Ri&bts Amendment "doesn't Wind."
George Deukmejian say be bas have a prayer" against lesions raised about $500,000 for a possi· of modern Southern belles who ''The Southern belle wu only
ble campaign for the Republican are holding fut to traditional a small part of the group I call
gube111atorial nomination. roles, a Georgia sociologist says. Southern ladies,'' she said.
The aides said most of the The "Southern lady" did not While the stereotyped belle of
money was raised al a Los vanish with the Civil War and fiction was flighty and self·
Angeles dinner. Deukmejian her gent.eel tradition is a major centered, Ms . Dill man's
said contributions went to a reason the ERA has failed ln "Southern lady" is usually well·
campaign fund that can be apent moat Southern states, says educated and devoted to her
in either direction -for gov. Caroline Dillman, a sociologist family and community.
emor or for attorney general. at Agnes Scott College in sub-She can trace her Southern
"Al the right time, I will mate urban Decatur. heritage for genera lions, she
a public announcement re1ard· "There are tremendous nwn· married and bad ber children
ing my .~uture political plans," bers of Southern women who are young, she bas strong family
Deukme11an said during the $SOO not about lo change," Ms. and religious ties and she con·
per person dinner at the Century Dillman said . "People are say-alders her tamily her carttr,
Plaza Hotel. in1 there is no such thing u a Ms. Dillman said.
"As a result ol the overwhelm· Southern lady anymore. There
ing success of this fund-raiser, I are a lot of them." Outsiders often find it bard to
want to tell you that I know c:i no Ms. Dillman discussed her re-believe such wome n exist
reason now why I~hould not be• search al a regional conference because they look only at
a candidate for governor in on women at Georgia Stale metropolitan areas like Atlanta
1982," said Deukmejian, a University. She said women which are populated largely by
former stale senator from Lon& have cban1ed since the days ol people who have lived in the
Beach who was elected attorney Southern belles like the fictional South two generations or less.
-=ge_n_e_r_al_in_197_8.'--_______ .;;;Sc~ar;;...;l;.;:;ett..;.:_O~'Har=:...:a:..:.·....:be=ro-==in:..:e:.....::of::.....:th:.::e::..._....:M=s. Dillman said.
our 1CO% com<Z-1 hair coat ...
thq, pe,rfczct basic .
to compl<imq,nt
your bUsincz,es or
wuk<ind wardrolxz,.
fu1 ly linzd ,and
raiS<Zd ~gz.s on
all S<Zams .
hend craf'tcz.d by
th<Z, f\n<ist
mw q.ngl6Tld. tailors. ,
I I
l
I
'
0~ .........
stpps our visitors
" Lvas or TBS PACUIC Daft'. -You an lllllft '°
wonder today what It would take to nep tM tlu'o9D_aWQ
from our ..,_.line after tbe we.tied'• Oreat'llri;•
GulMr fou.IM a larce MlllMDl ol our waterfl"oet. •
Tbe bpp-tn1 bappeeed Saturday wt.en a maJcw
sewer line rupture at (of all tbe nerve, for podn-.11ate>
the Balboa Bay Club OD Newport Harbol''a lovely waters.
Abruptly, the ••ten weren'tao lovely.
llUU.. of lallou . ~ of tbe &luck Cot into the
bay waten before wotk • ._
crew• 1ot the fUlber . · ~
under eootrol. You won· ~
der who the brave aoulTDI lllPllll /
••• to .Uck his thumb •
into that leak?
Anyway, the health department promptly clamped a
clo1ure on our shoreline all tbe way from Newport Beach
to Scotchman's Cove, Just outside of Lacuna.
TllElll!PO&E WE HAD a very desertff Sunday aJoq
our coast because all the inland visitors shunned the awtuf·
ness of our waters, right?
Wrong a1ain.
Inland weather was clear, bot and sunny on Sunday.
So here they came. Thousands of them. Who cares about a
little smelly stuff floating out there in tbe ocean?
Scotchman's Cove, one ol tbe quaranllDe points, wu
"Ahoy there! Thne'.s l1U\f11U growing on JIOUr JIOClal!"
as loaded witb visiting follts as any Sunday you could im-agine along toward Ule shag end of the cold season.
So you puzzle over what is required to cause beach vis-
itors to stay home? A shark attack? An oil spill? The lure
of the ocean front on a sunny afternoon is apparently quite
strong.
TIDAL WAVE TREATS are fairly scary, even though
we've never really bad one of any real consequence
around here. One time a few years back, we bad a real
tidal wave scare. Authorities figured that one might have
. been the Biggie, so evacuabon procedures were set m mo-
tion in the preliminary stage. Radio stations began to
broadcast warnings.that the next high surf you see might be a real whopper. .
Concern centered particularly on the Newport-Balboa
Peninsula because of the zero elevation in that area.
AND WHAT HAPPENED! Hundreds of visitors
flocked out to the Peninsula and stood around, even in the
dark, on the chance that they might get a glimpse of tbe
great tidal wave when it bumped up there on the outside
and roared toward shore.
As it developed, the tidal wave pooped out somewhere
on the other side of Hawaii. It never got here beyond being
a weak slap at Ule sand.
. Good thing, too. By the time all those onlookers,
spotted it, they might bave found themselves riding it to Brea.
All of this may make the point tbat when it comes to
seashore visiting, people aren't much afraid of what they can't see. They apparenUy can't see a sewage spill so it
doesn't bolber1hem much. They can't see a rip current or
a tidal wave until it's too late, so that's all riJbt, too.
They can, however, spot a shark rm or an oil spill so
those events might deter a tot ot splastung around. They
can also see the glucky-looking Red Tide when it rolls in on
the surf.
THEY SHUN THE RED tide like crazy, telling you
that no way would they get out in that disgusting-looting
water.
Of course the red tide is harmless . But never mind
that. You can see it. And that's enough.
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP> -
The bljacke~ of a P~
alrliD•, aft# a eeven-di1 ltud·
off In Aflbulatan, tQok tit•
plane and more tban 100
bo1ta1• to Damucua duriDI
tbe DI# ud ._..eel Utelr de-
mandl for releue ol lm~
foes of Paklatanl Pre1ldent
llobaml!Mld Zia ul·H-..
In several bourl ol =· Uona bY radio with P
diplomata and Syrian ty
otftcen in tbe Da.alueua ~
tower, tbe bljacken demanded
freedom for other memtiien ol
their anti-Zia Jn>UP and ~ encl
to 1overnment propataoda
asainat thelr orcanllatton,
airport aources repol'ted.
Pakhtanl Ambaaaador
Sarfaru Khan said be would re-
lay tbe demands to hi• 1overn·
ment. 1be three bijacken, who
on Friday killed one of tbelr
boltatea. a Pakhtani dlp'°mat, set no deadllne, but •'threatened
to take an extremely harsh
measure," which they did not
specify. if their demanda were
·,
Bomb threat
routs guests
from casino
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . <AP>
-Caesars Boardwalk Regency
executives are "curious" about
an unprecedented State Police
order to clear their SCM-room
casino hotel following a
$6.5-million written extortion
threat.
Caesars World Inc . spokesman Herbert L. Wolfe
said executives "might have
something more to say later this
week" about the Sunday
morning evacuation.
"THE INJ'O&MATION we
gathered from a number of
sources indicated to us tbia was
a hou," Wolfe said.
The Loe Angeles-baaed firm
which aJao owns CaeHn Palace
and Caesars Tahoe ln Nevada,
bas been at odds with New
Jersey gaming authorities for
more than a year.
ABOtrr z.• employees and
guests were routed onto the
Boardwallt and streets for about
2 ~ hours Sunday morning as
FBI agents, state troopen and
policemen waited for the
extortionist's noon deadJine to
pass.
No bombs were found, no
ransom was paid and Caesars'
casino and hotel operations
returned to normal by 12:30
p.m .. officials said.
Much of nation soggy
Slwwers /all from Northeast to Florida
C.aa••I tee••ller ~------------..,. ............ .-.... on1 .. 10 Pu_,.. IS '" ,. ..
Fa ir WMttler contl,...lno tllrouQll
T~y. 1..-. tonlQl\I .. Mar Ille
bH<heS lo S4 lnl-. HIOlll Tuesday
'1 10 mlcl IOI Waler 59. Else•-•, westerly wlnm 10 to 11
kllOll T_., wftll 1 10 l fool wlllcl
waves. Wfttarly S>••-41 2 lo 4 leet
Parity cloucly oll Oreno• Cont
11M>res.
V.&•-••.,,
SnowlftOWers llnoerecl over tM Nortfleut .-.., n ra111 tell on P•'1•
of -Midwest. ancl ,._., rein was Pf'ecllcltel from WasN"91on to Tuu. Sno•"-" -r• .. pec:tecl to ••· t•llCI lrom the Great u•es acrou the -r Of* V•ney to ,... Enol•ncl
s.n a.r ..... cllno
Santa Marl•
Tahoe Valley
~AN AMEltlCAN
11 Ct
10 n
Cl 21
Acajkjlco tO 11
8art>ad0l 16 1J
8ermwde •2 n .01
10901• .. 41 2• .C11rec:eo '6 11 G11adalejara /1 ..
G11-1oupe 16 •• Hevana 17 '1
Klnesloft 17 n
Mont.911 .. Y M TJ
Maullaft 11 S2
Mericle 9S 11
Meal<o City U JS
Monterrey 71 s.i
NHMll It S1 Sall Jy.., 17 IS 10 -Into Meryl-. Rein wn to be scettarecl lrom -iern WHlll"9l011
to nort"-tem C.llf,,.nla -over -i11trn TeUI.
HO&& U I 0•1" el <-•"" St Kltu 16 -'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~-------....-..'T•O~ltelpe 90 U
lelo,.. o.-. 1111114 "'°'* was re·
pWttCI 111 t1w ...,._ Olllo Velley -
1'9fl't Hstem ...._.,,v.,.1e to Ver·
mont. SOutllern f<lorlcl• report•cl
rein, encl rein fell owr •Kter11 SouUI Oatote, WHI ce11trel Te .. 1 e11cl
....uitr11011.......,..
T•---..,1y today rtn9te1
lrwll It 111 ~. Ken., to 12 In
Mlernl.
C.Ufert1la
f<elr weatller tllo11lcl prevell
111ro111ho.it So11tMr11 Celllor11I•
t11ro111h TwHd•Y. Ill• Hellon•I
....... S..-Yke .......
S111111y e ncl werm cleys •••• H.-Cltel to c-lflue Ill rnMI erHt,
wltll 111111 temtier•twrH T.,.•cl•Y
-""" ....... ""'"10.. TIMI v .. i.rt _.. ....-Cted ta r.ave 111e11t r~ trw11 7J to rt Twnd41y. l'alr •••thor e11d coot '91!1peret-_.. tor-t for l'-
-11telM. O.ytlme t~ret11r .. ..._,._ .. Ill .. ,,,.._..Md JOI wlUI
1M 10W Mo11tM rlflllftt ..._ 1S to •• Hf9111 lfl ltll -_.,.,,_ Tue.O.y
w111 .. ._nanc1a-.111t,. 111911 ,._., ... _ Ille "'......_
9Mmfd.11L
Albany
AllMICIV•
Amarillo
A~vlll•
Atlallla
Atlanlk City
ea111m ....
llrm I noNrn
llsmaro ..,.,.
'°''°" lrowntvltle
811ffilo
Cllerlll11 SC
C1'erl1t11 WV
Clley•,_
Clllc-.c> ClllCl,,,,.11
Clavel...O ce111me..
0.l·f<IWUI Oe11ver
DetMolNt
Del roil
OuMh
Hanford
Hel-
-11111 HOllllOll
llHlll#ll•
Jachflvilt
K-Clty UltV..-
Llttle RKll ----------... · '""~ .......... 11 ..
Mtffttlfllt
'Mllflll .,, .... , ..........
·~ .... on..
'fffwYW'k ...,....
Ollie (lty
OIMM ==...... --... .. .. ....,,. ......... ................... ______ .,.. ...... o..
RellO SI U
Sell Laite U 21
HI La l'C•· l9 )1
S.1101990 •• S4
S•n Fran .. S2
SI JO Seelll• Jt C7
JI 26 St LCMlll 4J JO
SA 27 St p.fempe 14 "6
SIS!•""-"' J4 D '° :u 0 )9 S...-•ne 4t 1l
TlllH 41 :U w as111nei.1 so '3 .. ,. '° JO •t 2•
SI JI CAUl'OltNIA
le J4 lell•rsfltlf ,. ,, llylhe
M .n Elll'ella
SI Cl f<retno
• J1 Lell<H .... ff U Maryalfllle
., 22 Moft ..... y
:rt 24 NaMlel
• • OelllMll 41 JI .. _ ...... .. . .... ..... .. " ....... °" 4' 21 .. ,.,_
., ,.
St ., ... .. ... 11 . ,
11
10
10 ...
Trinidad 90 II
Verec:rut IO 11
CANADA
C•lllt•Y 46 n lclmcHllllll n u MofttrHl JI .n
Ottew• .. )4 ........ l6 1'
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V•M-" JI WllMllll't ,. 2t
WOtlLO u Am1terclllm S1 J1
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JO ...... .. 4S .,,, ..... u " l 'Arl" '° .. .. (.el,. IS ~ .. car-.. .. '° c...-.~ 41 4)
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DOt met, an airport .,-.. man
aald.
S arller, wbile Ulll la
Afabn'etan, the bljaek•n de-
manded the releau of 92
prlaonera, and the Pakl1tanl
tovenunent offered to free 15. But on SWMlay lt rounded up
more tbaa 1JO members of the
late Prime ltinllter Zulfikar All '-
Bhutto'• Pakiltan People's Par-
ty lncludln& Bhutto'• widow and
dau1bt.er. l
In lalamabad, a 1overnment
apokeaman said President Zia
asked a number of heada of state
to intervene ln the crisis, cltlq
"tbe pli1ht of the hostages who
have been sufferin1 from
pbyslcaJ exhaustion and meat.a.I
torture now for the eighth day.''
... , ......... The hostages, who include
three American men and two
other residents of the United
States, have not been allowed off
tbe Boeinl 720 jet slnce Mareb 1,
when they boarded a Paldstani
domestic flight that the hi·
jackers diverted lo Kabul, the
capit.al of Afghanistan.
To the resf!ue
Fireman Bill Mims of Austin, Texas, makes certain all
lives are saved in fire rescue. He's carrying Kermit the
dog down ladder from top floor of house that partially col-
lapsed after its foundation burned away.
Fed loan squeeze seen
Government co//~rs siphoned by credit
W ASfllNGTON (AP> -Fewer federal loans
would be available for homebuyers, farmers stu·
dents and smalJ businesses under a Reaga~ ad·
ministration proposal to curb the government's
role as a low-interest lender.
President Reagan is proposing an 11 percent
-or nearly $35 billion -reduction in new loans
and loan guarantees through 1982 from the levels
anticipated by former President Carter.
Budget director David Stockman
acknowledged that the president's proposal would
mean that some people would have to borrow
money at higher interest rates or that they would
not borrow at all.
But, be said, as loan demand falls and reduced
federal lending makes more money available to
private lenders, commercial interest rates will fall
from their current high levels.
AMONG THE P&OG&AMS that would be
affected are the Federal Housing Administration .
which insures home mortgages: student loan
programs ; the Rural Electrification
Administration; Farmers Home Administration;
farm commodity loans; Veterans Administration;
Sm all Business Administration and the
Export·lmport Bank.
Cuts aiso wouJd be made in lending for foreign
military sales, energy development, rural housing,
consumer cooperatives, housing rehabilitation,
economic development, veterans. the District of
Co lumbia , aircraft purchase, merchant
shipbuilding and credit unions.
Most o f the proposed c uts r equ ire
congressional approval.
Stockman said the a dministration was
furthering the proposal to return greater control
over allocation of credit to private markets.
He said the fed eral government accounts for
about one-third of all lending activity in the
country. its outstanding loans exceed $800 billion
-compared with S200 billion in 1970 -and new
credit is being extended at a rate of $150 billion a
year.
"IT'S IN THAT context of just explosive
growth that we feel it is critically important to
begin to reassess and wind down this enormous
increase in federal credit activity,'' he said.
Reagan's proposals, most of which require
congressional approval, would cut credit by $13.6
billion in 1981 and $21 billion in 1982.
Stockman predicted that planned reductions
for the FHA and the Government National
Insurance Association, which insures mortgage
purchases, would have "absolutely no impact" on
new housing starts.
We're going y_our wa~
''"'"ms Ii*•• tfHICher Is •lw•ys ,,.~ wilh paper "'°'*· So I ma••
ffle mo111 ol my lltM "1 gnd/ng
J»l*'S while the OCTO bus dr"'9s me 10 tchool. And IM bus tclled-
ule1 •re so frequent •nd fle11lble H~
1/mplo IO •ttend meeting• ah.,
llChooJ and 1tlll flOI home wllhOut
any Iva °'both«. Now I'm oncour·
.ng ,,,, my atvdents IO rldo lhebus.,,
OonMIJllrndt
TNCJ>er
CypreH High School
,,,_ peopi. are riding ,,,. bus
fO -*· .Choo/ Mtd lltOf1tllnfl ~_._,."'-*It .cl_,
ilt#fll -buMs. -'°""" and"""'°"""~-
Oon'f _,. '°"' -y., ,,,.
0-pump.~_,. Mtd rldfl
IM b&M. IOC II .. It Co.le -
99)' Oft,....., nMM.
Our tr#Mdty ,,,,_. ..,...,,. .. ,... yOCJ,.,. '°"',,.Oft
lfle OCTO bus. ti YOCJ,,..,, ~ -, .. ,..., _ .. -"' ...
yOCJ-~
Call
636-RIDE
·Man killed
hang-gliding
Si\NTA MARIA (AP> -A San P'ructMo man rtdlac a bane atider wu kWed whee tbe S)ldu
went out of eontrol • amuhed into tbe sand at
CJaadalape Beach lD northwest Santa Barbara
CoUiit)t, &Mrilrl deputlei Hid.
TM victim, ldeiltlfted u Robert lllllJtan, •. bad bem tlYlDi for abOut oee bour Sunday after-"°'° when be l01t con~ of the imter, aald dla·
patcher Diane Cheney at the aberilf'a Santa Ilaria ataU..
llillitan's craft plummeted straipt down and
1m11bed illto the sand at about 70 mpll, Ila.
Cheney said. ............ ,,.,..., ., .....
EL CENTRO (AP) -Imperial County
Sheriff's Deputy Robert Holmes wu doln1 bis
renlar overu,iiht duty when he said he felt b1a car
shaking and thouebt
somebody wu trying to Voight with vets
Prep •claool chief altaek• problem
NORTH HOLLYWOOD <AP) -Jn.
ddeata of Aa&t-S.mltlam have lD·
creued at a pHltlP>ua pnp aebool
ber., but tbe beadmuter bu opted
to addnu the ~lem directly by •eodlal a l.U. home with Ida 1tu·
denu bo&Mnc to 1part family debate
on tbe matter.
Harvard Sebool baa educated
teaeratlom ol youni men between 12
and 18 as they make Lbelr
way to some of the best unlveraities
lD t.be country.
AltboQ8'h the scbool la afftllated
wltb the Eplacopallan Church, about
40 percent of it• student body is
Jew lab.
IN ONE &£CENT Incident, a
"Sons ol HlUer" sheet was clrculat·
int amone students and taped on
some lockers. reading "Death to
Jews."
Swdtikas and other anti-Semitic
1rafflt1 also appeared in some cam-
pus bat.broom1.
I WU lt nplalnl itlelf. l wuted you
to know wbat WU said. I hope It CID
form the bull of a f amUy d&eUllloo
on a erttical tuue lJl our soetety," bis
Feb. tJ letter lald.
Tbe ~a1e apeecb bepna: "I
ba ve c you au ben totetber to
talk about 10methin1 that dlatut.be
me dees>l>' and to l>Olnt out to you the
pernlclousneu of prejudice, suapi·
cion and hatred."
beaplte the incidents, however,
Berrlaford and Jewlsb community
leaden believe t.be problem la more
one of lmmaturlty than deep-seated
prejudice.
ONE 8'11JDENT WAS suspended
for two days after laughing al Ber-
rllford'J talk, but the headmaster
said the youth's reaction wu more
"adolescent" than anti-Semitic.
"Nooe of the kids ever met as an
organized gro up ,'' be said .
"Everybody makes mistakes."
NEWS BRIEFS scare him -but that
somebody turned out to
be two small earth·
quakes.
The temblors rumbled throueb Southern
California's Imperial Valley Sunday
awakening residents but causlne no damaee. '
Actor Jon Voight, center, who portrayed a disabled Vietnam veteran
in the film "Coming Home," taJb with wheelchair-bound vet Ron
Kovic, left, as an unidentlfted vet, rilht, looka on durinl a demonstra-
tion in U>s Angeles on Sunday. CalleCl ''Green Ribbon Unlty Day,•• the
vets were protesting budget cuta proposed by Reagan.
The aclaool i.a not alone in the prob-
lem. Incidents of anti-Semitism
have increased an estimated 2SO per-
cent from last year throughout
Southern Callfomla, accordin1 to a
report by the Los Angeles County
Human Relations Commission.
Harvard School Headmaster
Christopher Berrlsford said some
schools ignore the problem
but be believes direct confrontatio~
As a result, the Anti-Defamation
'League of B'nai B'rith bas argued for
more education on the Holocaust and
other results of antl·Semitism at the
school.
The league's community consul-
tant, Susan Oavidoss, says the or-
ganization i.a happy with Berrisford's
"marvelous speech" but "more
needs to be done."
The first quake, measuring 3.0 oo the Richter
Scale, hit al 3:09 a .m., and was followed six
minutes later by a 3.S Ricbter·scale jolt.
' . •Off ldl..., •~•r ,,.... I rfH>lc
POMONA CAP) -Twelve-year·old Kevin
Thomaa Cleeves of Diamond Bar was killed as be
and three friends huddled in sleeping ba1s three to
five feel away from a railroad track watching
trains roar past.
Police Sgt. Dale La Fleur said Sunday the boy
apparently died of a blow to the bead, and perhaps
was hit by a protrusion fr?m the train or by a rock.
Ma• IJoolc'd l• allfo dwli
CANOGA PARK CAP> -A Los Angeles man
was booked for investigation of ,rand theft auto in
San Francisco after the California Highway Patrol
arrested him for driving across the Oakland Bay
Bridge without paying the toll -ln a fully-
equipped Los Angeles city ambulance.
Reml Anthony Pappe, 20, was arrested Sun-
day. said CHP dispatcher Jim Dukes.
Ca•~r lcHlftf ..... .n.,,
PINE VALLEY (AP> -A San Diego man died
on a camping outing in Cuyamaca State Park of
carbon monoxide poisoning after burnin1 a
manufactured log inside his camper in an attempt
to warm up the v~hicle, the San Diego County
Sberifrs office said.
Gaeleo Flatt, a 31-year-old Navy man, wu
pronounced dead at the scene Sunday after bis
wife, Barbara, 22, s\umbled to a camp1round en·
trance seeking help.
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COLLECTORS
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Viejo inan dies
deep-sea diving
AVALON CAP> -A Mission Viejo man, ap-
parently stricken with
nitrogen narcosis during
a deep-sea scuba dive
o ff Santa Catalina
Island, removed his
breathing equipment
and drowned.
The man, identified by
s heriff's deputies as
John L. Taylor, 53, was
last seen alive by a div·
ing partner about 4 'r'l
miles off Catalina
Harbor on the island's
south coast at 9 a .m.
Sunday, Coast Guard Lt.
j .g. Mark Jones said.
The partner, alarmed
when Taylor removed
all of his diving equip-
ment at a depth of Pie ·11 between 12» feet and 130 a gui y feel, tried to approach
SAN FRANCISCO him but Taylor began
CAP) -A San Jose strugglln&. Tbe partner
true.king firm owner wu surfaced near tbe 75-foot
sentenced to 12 years in Sea Raider, a divine
federal prUoo for &rand vessel from which tbeir
theft and pouesalon ol party wu bued, and
stolen goods amountlnl crew memben radioed
to man than $1 million. for belp.
Vincent Marlo Hod1e, JoneuakflraylOr prob-
27, pleaded guilty to tbe a b I)' was suffer in e 1 theft ol 1,180 ,cues of from nltrocen narcosis
wine valued at $54,000 or dluiness, euphoria
w b o l e s a l e a n d t o and lrratiooallty caused
possession of 6,500 by an excess of nitrogen
men's stolen suits and a in the blood, resultine
trailer valued at $1.2 from hi&'h atmospheric
million. .preHure.
f-.SllSWJG ..
14~1114 w IJ~J4J1
lt14twW·C .... ~
Brooks Brothers introduces its
remarkable new "Brookstretch"
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T he first wearers of these extraordinary new cool,
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530 W!ST ?TH STREET, LOS ANOILES. CALIP. 90014
FASHION ISLAND, NBWPOltT BEACH 9~
Call 142-5171.
Put a fe)IW word•
to work for ou. is best.
"I am sending you a copy of a
talk that I gave to the students today.
The league bas offered to send
speakers and films to help bring the
point across to students.
GUESS WHAT YOU CAN
EATON
WEIGHT WATCHERS
WINE POPCORN HONEY
YES YES YES
D 0 D
NO NO NO
0 0 D
PEANUT HOME BAKED CHOCOLATE
BUTTER YES BREAD YES CAKE YES
D D D
NO NO NO
0 D D
RAISINS SWEET FIGS
YES POTATO YES YES
D D D
NO NO NO
D D D
THE NEW 1981 FOOD PLANS
Wine? Yes. Popcorn and peanut but-
ter? Yes . Homebaked bread? Yes .
Sweet PQtatoes and honey? Yes. yes.
You can learn to eat all these foods -
within limits of course-and still lose
weight. With \\'eight Watchers exciting new personalized food plans and com-
pl et e. t ime-tested program you can
take off the pounds. deliciously!
Just join a Weight Watchers class
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you the sensible way to good eating
habits. With wine. popcorn. peanut but-
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PS. You guessed it. the chocolate
layer cake is still a "no-no:·
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r ------------, WEIGHT WATCHERS
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ON tfGISTaATION ANO FlllST MUTING f((
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Offer valid only as a discount and may not be combined with any other
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lnArea43.
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WEIGHT
WATCHERS*
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OrMgeCounty
AIMI~ ........... o..r
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c__.,o..e. W......, •••. : •.. UOpm a.L.al'll"-~ .. '"°""' l4MI ... Jiwt talWNMiYOlt ~ L_.. HMll. CA mu MoMey •• .. • 70011"' \r~~ ==kl; 0... ""°'*"· ......... UOpm ,......,, . •OO P"' ~ ............ t;JOp.... ,_,, ........ .t001m r....-,. .1.00p .... ~ c---~Ctnwl TWICley ............ r oopm _, ........ 1«111om c-..--.. _ ~ .......... t:001.m, Tll ..... Y ........... tO'OO a A tlOtl."-__ .......................... w_.,. .. 1«1p11t .....,.._ (IMftlftlll~Mltlll ................ 7•P• Tilur9illly ,..... UOIM • ••H ~CM._.. ............... ~ .............. aJ0:00•-"' ~ .......... 1-00,... ....... ............ , • .._ ..... . ...._ -.. -,_ .................. --~ ·-... _,.. __ • _,, ........... ---,... ............. 1Qlp.M --_;·,;:;.:;.;.;.. .. ·, ........ ---·-.. .... ___ .. , ................ l:JO ..... -tJIO --._._ U.-"'-~ .................... ...__, ••........ .. ........... '-.... t01-llC......llell 'Cllllf _....... ......., .......... 1;G)p.llt. ==--............ , ,...._ .... ........ __.... ,...., ................ .._.... ,...,.-·~-. ············ _, .... ... ................. c:..... ~ ...•...... ltoOJJ!!' .,._ -eANTA W-M ..,..,.._ ~ •.•.•.•••••• 7 • .,_ ·-···•·••••••IO'll0111t ............ ~ 1•11 .HllW ,.., ................ 11)11. , ...................... ,_ ...... .... ,......, ............... .._... ,.... •.•. . ......... _,.._ ...._,, •......•. I.JO..... ~ ........ ....... ~ i,, •• ,,, •• a.a• .__ --~ ......._ , ... ,., ----I A _ =:::..:.:.:.: .. " .. •" f:JO I Jll __,, • • '"• • • • •" • " -·---------. -~ r-, .............. ,,..
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• --~....._~_...__. ....... :..o..J.. ____ ~.,_--........ ..;..,-----~ ....... --......,;~.
Tbe 11tuatlo0 outliDed tut WMlr to u.e Orana• County Board ol Supervbon wu quite dear: Tbe couaty Human
S.rvlcee Aaeaey la in ftnaDcla1 trouble. Trouble to .the
tune ol '-'·' mllllon. Wbat many p~abl)' bave feared bu finally oc-
curred. Tbe county aimply cannot keep abreast of tbe de-
manda for service bein; placed oo tbe bealtb and welfare delivery system.
Economic Umet are bad; More and more persou are
aeekini uslatance. Tbe at.ate ud federal eovemments
have rllid replatlou about what tbe county must do to
provide the IOUC.bt·aft.er belp.
On too of all that. Ora.Die County bas become the
favored settling place for thousands of Indochinese ref-
u1en and Mexican immtirants. They add to the service
demand.
Aft.er bearing the news, supervisors took the only ac-
tion they could by dipping into contingency accounts to
provide enough money to keep the welfare programs
afloat until Jong-term solutions can be found.
Those solutions now are under study by the HSA and
the County Administrative Office. A report is due within
30 days.
It is likely that other budget transfers -such as
further use of contingency funds -will be-recommended.
Beyond that, the board has little choice but to cut
back on such things u the size of welfare payments and
tighten eligibility reqUirements.
In short, the board will have to spread the available
money as fairly as it can. It won't be an easy task.
Juvenile justice
The juvenile court system was established for the
protection of youngsters who for one reason or another
tangled with the law. but might still be set straight with
careful guidance.
With this hope, it was the policy to bar the public and
press from juvenile court hearings and to seal juvenile
court records. Thus, it was theorized, the rehabilitated
youngster could start anew with a clean record.
Unfortunately. in recent times, juveniles have
become responsible for an increasing number of serious
crimes.
In California, effectrve this year, the public is ad·
milted to juvenile court hearings resulting from charges
of murder, arson, armed robbery, forcible rape. kidnap-
ping and other felonious crimes.
New measures befor.e the state Legislature would ex-
pand that law, adding to the list of offenses to be tried in
public and opening court records involving these charges
and their disposition, including reports of probation of·
ficers.
One bill also would require the Youthful Off ender
Parole Board to transmit a statement detailing reasons for
granting parole to law enforcement officers in the area
where the off ender will be paroled.
These measures make sense. We're no longer talking
about kids who steal apples or pick pockets for small
change. Such minor offenders probably still deserve the
protection of closed hearings.
But when it comes to crimes that gravely hurt other
individuals, neither the young off enders nor their families
merit anonymity.
Global ignorance?
•'We are a parochial and insular people attempting to
devise and conduct what must necessarily be a cos·
mopolitan and global foreign policy."
These harsh words come from Charles Bray, former
deputy director of the International Co mmunication
Agency. And he has some discomforting facts to back up
his concern.
For example : Fewer than one in 20 college students
takes even one course dealing with foreign peoples or
cultures; a scant 5 percent of all the teachers in this
country nave bad any exposure to international studies or
training.
The U.S. education system, says Bray, "provides us
only with anecdotes about our own past and virtually no
knowledge of the history of others."
In a period when 2 million additional jobs became de·
pendent upon exports, enrollment in colfege-level
language courses declined by 21 percent.
And, he notes, the percentage of colleges and
11niversities requiring even minimal foreign language
competence has declined from 85 percent in 1951 to 34
percent in 1966 and 8 percent in 1980.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this educa-
tional decline is the fact that it has taken place during a
period when our international interests and obligations
have grown as never before.
This is worth pondering when we complain about our problems in competing in world markets.
• Opinions expressed in the sp_ace above are those of the Datly Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 15.§0, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd/Housing. solution
ByL•.BOYD
In West Ger01any's city of
Colope, a bousln1 associa·
lion has put toeether a
special block of apartments
ror slngle-parent families.
Day care is part of the
pac1ta1e. Good not.ion, what?
11111
Wouldn't you know
Jerry Brown would
t.blllk up a mock ·dia·
uter' to COYef up the
real dl1uhr be'• caused In Callfomla?
G.J.
The Antarctic is a desert.
So is much of the Arclic. A
desert needs no sand to be a
desert. Just a barrenness.
There are deserts ln some
places out in the oceans, too.
deserts because no marine
llfe exists there for some
mysterious reason.
When you check into a hotel
in Bruil, you not only have to
sign the register but also flll in
• the names or your mother and
father.
Q. What bas been the top-
rated 1bow ot all durln1 the
taat 20 yeanT I mean tlrat-run
and rel"Wl, too.
A. "G\llllmolte."
Q. Which watch lb• more
television amoo1 college stu·
dent.I. the women or the men?
A. Tbecoedl. Sll1ht1y more.
SpecUlcally: Men, 2.J8 houn
dally. Women. 2.22 houra
dally.
I
~~~----.--ThO~ P. Haley/Publisher
&arMra ICretblch/Edltorlal P919 ldllOf'
Have we forgott~n diplomacy?
The pope turned up at the
Wroahima memorial to pray (Of
peace the other day. It'• juat u
wtll lbat somebody's doinl it. In
RuasJa, religion is forbidden and
here our clergymen pray for
conscription as they sprinkle
holy water on the cannons.
The Pope and the Japanese
whom we A~cricans retard aa
eccenldc
because of ,----.... \ their ex ·
cesslve reur .a,. o f a t o m I c ~..., .
warfare, can· '"
not do the job
a 1 o n c .
Neither the
veneration of
the radlqac·
tive ashes ot
one's grandparents nor the most
heartfelt prayers offered up
from the Basilica of St. Peter's
are likely to push the world off
the approaching collis ion of
s uper powers Some purely
human t-fforts will also be
needed Naturally, 1f the Russians
Earl Wat~rs
don't care for peace, there will
be war and w• wW a1J be killed.
Tb at, obviously, 1a tbelr deeiaMla
to make aJt.bouO tbe NCOrd to
date doelo't lndlcai. lb• men In
the Kremlin are particularly au·
louttoaeethebl1bomblOy.
ANYHOW, we can't make the
Ru11lana do an)1hlnc they doa't
want lo do but wt can set our
own movie loaether. We can
nesoUate. We've 1>9en Invited lo
do 10 by the communlata and un-
l • 11 wt a r e a nation of
maaoehlatl who will enjoy a 1Up-
pln1 standard of Uvtn1 bl'Oqbt
on by the hllb COil of war pre--
paredneaa we had beat ac~
the offer to talk. Cit 11 11Umat.d
that the MX miaalle 1y1tem
alone will uae up 10 much ce-
ment it wUl drive up the COIJt of
home construction In the weet.)
The administration, however,
givea the impression it conaiders
negotiations to be a boon they
may grant to the Russians ..
Negotiating is made contingent
on Russian .. good behavior." As
though the burden of these
mlllt81'J pnparaUOGa Wer•'t
IOinl to fall OD Amertclb Wt· P•Y•rt, u tbouab Cleveland or
Oakland were not ln •• mueb
dan1er aa Smolenat or
Vladtvoatok.
WI: A&E UNABLE to
ne1otlate because the ad·
minlltrat.lon la unable to tell
ltlelf ..,.t It wants, what ill
1oalJ and obJectivn are. An eod
to "communist inspired ter-
rorlam" la aa vaaue and un·
neaotlab&e .. "lood behavior"
or aD tDd to "capitalist inspired
terrorl1m." You can only nesott• 1pedftcs.
On UM day1 when the ad-
mlnl1traUon isn't refusina to
nesoUate because the com-
munllll' comportment is below
pasainc grade, it ls suggesting
that the U.S. can't negotiate
because it's not strong enough.
A more sensible way is to turn to
war and military preparedness
when negotiations fail.
Secretary of State Haig and
bis boss might profit from read·
ln1 Walter Lippmann, the best
~~
l\. :-~. m
~-----·---
.-I ' •
~~i /~·.,
writer on lilteruaUoaal affairs
ZOtb century American Journa.lllm produced: ''Tbe ~
tOI')' al diplomacy 11 t.be b1ltory
of relaUoaa auaoaa rival powers,
which did not enjoy pollUcal ln·
tlmacy, and did not retpond to
appealJI to common purpoees.
Nevert.beleu, there have been
aetUemeatl. Some of them did
not last very loftC. Some of them
did. For a diplomat to thin.It that
rival and uiatrtendly powers can-
not be brou1bt to • settlement is
to foreet wbat diplomacy ii all
about. There would be UtUe for
diplomats to do if the world con-
s is led of partners enjoyinJ
pollllcal intimacy, and respond-
ing to appeals."
LIPPMANN WBOTE those
words ln UM7. They were ad-
dressed to another 1eneratioo of
American statesmen who con-
fused diplomacy with appease-
ment. The same psychology is
with us now. Then as now we
beard phrases like "a lest of
wills" applied to international
relations as though nations had
character and personality in the
sense that individuals do. The
business of diplomacy is the
work of ft.nding agreement, not
any agreement but one that is in
our national interest.
You a lso hear, "We can't
strike a deal because we can't
trust the Russians." So don't
make a deal based on trust,
make one based on mutual sell
interest, make one that is self.
enforcing where no trust is in-
volved.
Part of our problem may be
our secretary of state, who was
involved with Henry Ki ssinger
in that inept piece of diplomacy
we call detente. It was a poor
piece or work from the outset
because it was not specific, it
laid out no carefully defined set
of actions that the United States
and Russia agreed to do or to
refrain from doing.
Alexander Haig has apparent-
ly learned from his and Kiss-
inger's mis takes. but he's
learned the wrong lesson. He's
learned not to negotiate but to
use the State Department as a
whip and a prod to push our aJ.
lies into beefing up their arms.
What he needs to learn is how to
better practice bis craft, how to
do diplomacy right.
Governor's 'disaster' order superfluous ·
lly t'XN'Ulivt' order Gov. Jerry
Hrown has created an Emergen-
cy Task Fort'e on Earthquakes
to prepare plans for the state to
cope> Wllh a ··catastrophic earth·
quake " The order details 23
areas to I"><' covered in the pre-
pa redncss planning and has
given them until \July 1 to com-
plete their mission
The runctions covered include
poli ce and fire ~crv1ces. as well
as mass <·are
and finanr ial
aid Medical
and mortuary
services are
a lso listed as
are s earch
and r cst·ue.
tra n s porla
lion , com
m an d a n 11
control and
even legal s~rvices.
Brown has directed the head
of the Stale Offi ce or Emergency
Services IOES> to provide staff
and other resources for the task
fore<' which means the work will
be largely done by OES, sug·
gesting he could bave just as
eas ily given those orders
without the fanfare and nouri'9h
or an executi ve order . Of course
Art Hoppe
that might not have produced
tbe benefits of the publicity
Brown calculated to get by rea·
son of the recent prophecies of
a major earthquake pending in
the near future.
The OES is the successor to
the State Disaster Office which
had been renamed from its
original designation as the Of.
fice of Civil Defense.
THE AGENCY was created in
1950 by Gov. Earl Warren
because of apprehensions of an
enemy threat due to the entry in-
to the Korean conflict. WUTen
appointed retired Major General
W. M. Robertson to head tbe of.
fice. He promptly set to work de-'
veloping formal plans to prepare
the state for the absohate wont
lhat could result from the dis-
aster of an enemy attack.
Surprisingly, his group on the
overall put together excellent
plans covering all of the areas
which have now been ouWned by
Brown in his executive order.
The basic plans were in fact ao
good that they were adopt.eel by
the federal civil defense aeency.
Within six months of the
formaUon of the CivU Defense
agency. Robertson testified to.
the Senate Special Committee on
Civil Defense that he had com-
pleted all planning possible in
the absence of any specific in·
formation from the federal gov-
ernment as to the nature of
weaponry an enemy might use.
THE COMMITTEE thereupon
adopted the sensible policy that
if the state did all things
necessary to be prepared for
any emergency ca used by
natural disasters, including
floods, fires and earthquakes, it
would serve equally well in the
event of a man-made disaster,
war included. It is important to
note that excepting for "revis-
ing, re-evaluating and coord.inal·
lng," Robertaon 's testimony was
that all planning to meet such
emergencies was completed.
Although they have suspected
a certain amount of boondoggl-
inl to be connected with the
Em er1ency Services a1ency.
the leJi,alators have continued to
m ainlaln it over the years
because of their awareness that
natural disasters can and c:k> oc-
cur in California with some fre-
quency and ~thout warning. In
those years the agency has cost
an average of $2 million annual·
ly for operations, along with
millions more for equipment and
supplies furnished to local gov·
ernment.s Last year the agency
budget was $5 million for opera·
tions plus another $50 million for
equipment and supplies.
SO THE QUESTION is what is
the need for the governor's ex·
ecutive order? If the Office of
Emergency Services doesn't
now have plans to meet an
earthquake disaster what in the
world has it been doing for the
past 30 years? And if it were a
fact that OES does not have such plans, how can it now be trusted
lo do in sill months that which
was supposed to have been com-
pleted and kept updated ail
these long years?
The truth must be, of course,
that all of the planning to meet
earthquakes, floods, fires and
any other kinds of disasters,
whether man made or natural,
that can reasonably be done bas
been dobe. That being the case
the governor's order is just so
much hocus-pocus. Whal else is
new?
Sollle folks aren't quit~ ready for a tax cut
"Sure dght nice ofthe president
to give us a 30 percent tax cut:•
said Maude Joad, dropping a
small chunk or salt pork Into the
chick peas boiling on the old wood
stove. ''Too bad we don't pay no
taxes."
Her husband, Jud, looked up
from a tattered copy of The Ap·
pala c hia
Co rner !'
News.Gazette
he'd picked up
down at the
depot. "Now, Maude. It's a
ataht better
lf'n the presi-
dent 1lve that
mone1 lo the
rlcb. Uke the
Secretary of the Treasury Donald
Re1an says here, them tux cut.a ii
'aimed,' he seys, •at thole most
IJkely lOH\fe and invHt'."
"I rtckon that's not ua, Is lt,
Jud?"
"Redr.oa not, Maude. For nft1
YHfl, evel')' lime you and me laid
our bands on a nic~el, •e Nat*t
' •
right out to spend lt like there
weren'tnolomorrow. Whatdowe
know about saving and invest·
ing?"
"WEl...L, NOW, Jud. I put away
$3.95 from my cheese money last
year afore the eoat died.
Remem~? I was 1otn1 to buy
them giftgbam curtain~ I been a
hankering after for ao lon1 a
time.''
"Just so, Maude. And where's
)'OU put It away? In the lard crock.
That weren•t doina the economy· no tood. You wu suppose lo put it
away in T·bill accowata or maoey
m1rketfundsortbe Ulre."
"What are them, Jud?''
"Don't rigtiUy know. ll•uch,
and t.bal'a lbe point. When lt
come1 losavm1 and lnveat.lna1 we
can·t hold a candl• to t.be ncb.
They been dolQf it all their llvea • .,
'11 wou.ldl\'tm1nd siviDI ltltrJ,
Jud." aald Maude, pualUftl the pot
of chl(k peas to tM back ot LIM
1to.e wltb a cbunk ot ft...-nod,
''lf'• tM ........ NW flt to ~ft a aomtlbblCtopradlce.W-. '
"Wouldn't work, Maude," uJd
Jud. "Soon as be let you have
$6.95, you'd be off to buy them
curtains out of the Monkey-Ward
cataJoeue quick as a bound dog
with tws tail afire. The price of
curtains would shoot up and,
afore you knew it,' inflation
would be gobbllng up the
1avin11 of everybody In the
land."
"But we hain't 1ot no savinp,
Jud."
"THAT'S ANOTBEA blestlna
to be thankhll for. We cot DO
tue1 to cut, no savln11 to fet
1obbled up and tlO CET A Job to
lote, like poor ~UJ Sblnloper,
who 1wee\>1 up over at the
courtbouM. '
"Don't aee wby lb• president
bu to ft.re poor WW. Wby dce't he
QuQtee
• • New1paoera and their
S:•ad .... art partnen lD freedom ,
ud 11 we fall to defead t.be ,....._ ot tbe ....... we IMllect ... on.·•
~B.J.._.
fire that rich Treasury Secretary,
Mr. Regan. instead?"
"Balla o· fire, Maude, that rich
Mr. Re1an knows a hundred
times more about savin1 and ln-
veating tban poor WW. That'awhy
the president bas to fire a hundred
Willa lo etve every rich feller
enouab extra money ln tax cuta
to save and lnveat. And, believe
you me, he's cboppln1 e-.ery
covemment program the.re la to
do il."
"WELL. ALL uce-pUnt lot aa-
Uonal defeaM. lt aaya her. the
PentafOll'• IQlns to set an extra
$100 billion or to.•'
''SMma Wt• with all that, they
ml•btolt5-oor Will on." .rFlrst ftnt, Maude,"
said Jud. •• Uh tM pr.udmt aa11. the ftnt t.ldq we tot to do lJ
prenrwour wu of Ille.''
"I rec• 108'N ,.,..t, ltad.''
Hid llaGlll wttll I alP II aM
ladled tbe chlck peu lato two
cracked bowll. "But aom.u-1 cu•t tMlp wlablna It lDel..-S a
pair ottbem ....,.._m curtalia:''
• -,. ---
..
llUl.q IUDol II 011e Udae· ll.U:IDI mODeJ ll
10mMillna efH qal.D. A Civtu•tt·baMCI r:r::t Baldwt.Omt.d, bows bow to do ~ It
Ute .,., to make t»ea.utu.I mUllc II bJ m•ktna m_.J
otfmOMJ.
BaldwtD bu one ol tbe lDOlt ~ aam• lD
Ut.e mulical fteld. BaJdwlD piano. ra.U alou wtdl at.tnwaya (now pa.rt ot CBS> u blp.qaallt7 Iutru-
.menta, tbe kind
ua~ b)' cooeert
p l anlate ,
a ltbou•h the
company allo
com~ Jn t.be
lower end of the
market with
aplnell priced
under $2,000. Long baaed lD Cincinnat.l, BaJdwln abo
makn planoe and organs ln Greetlwood, Mlu .. and
Truman, Arlr.
Baldwin la one of tbe oldest companlea In
America, with root.a 1oln1 back to 1882. It'• a.tao an
old hand at another keyboard: flnanctn1. Baldwin
waa one of the flnt companies to cet into aelliq oo
the lnatallment plan. That was back ln the lllOI, well
before t.be auto companiet were ln buainesa and doin1
the same t.hlng to sell their products.
FOR MANY YEABS then Baldwin baa helped to
finance the inventories of its dealers and the
purchases of pianos by cuatomen wbo couldn't afford
to pay the full price at one shot.
In the beginning such financing was a tool to
make it easier for people to buy your product. But in
the inflation-prone times we're livinc in, financinl
has a way of taking on a life of its own. At least when
you start to make as much money off the financine as
you do on the sale of your product, you beein to
wonder what business you're really in.
The people runnin1 Baldwin did beef n to wonder
about that 15 years ago. And they decided that they
would be wise to expand the finance aide of their
business. So they bought a savings and loan asaocia·
lion in Colorado. Then they bought an insurance com·
pany. And then they got into commercial ban.kine in
Colorado. They bought other insurance companies.
They got into mortgaee banking, And they fin~y
combined with United Corp., an investment fund (10
effect a large pool of money), resulting in a name
change to Baldwin-United.
THE &ESULT WAS A radical transformation of
this company from a little old piano maker to a
diversified financial conglomerate whose forte is
"managing assets," a term that can be roughly
translated as knowing how to make money off
money.
Baldwin-United still makes pianos. It even owm
the German company that makes the famous Becb-
stein pianos. But musical lnstrumenta are down to
about 10 percent of sales. This company came into
the 1970s as a $50-million-a -year business. It's now
doing $1 billion a year. '
Two years ago Baldwin-United looked around its
native state, Ohio, and snared another company, Top
Value Enterprises of Dayton. This is a tradln1 stamp
company that bad been owned by the bi 1
supermarket chain, Kroeer, also based in Cincinnati.
Trading stamps fit well in the Baldwin-United
philosophy becaWte the seller or th.ese stamps has the
use of the money before the stamps are redeemed
(and some people never get around to redeeming
them). ..
THAT ACQUISITION APPAaENTLY worked
out so weU that Baldwin-United has now offered to
buy out the biggest trading stamp company of them
t all Sperry le Hutchinson, distributor of S&H Green St~mps. That would give Baldwin access to a $300
million "fioat," the amount of money Sperry &
Hutchinson bas in reserve for redemption of stamps
already issued. Baldwin-United will be able to make
use of that interest-free money before the stamps
.turn up for redemption.
Sperry & Hutchinson would also bring in a clutch
of other businesses that the trading stamp company
bas picked up over the years: Bigelow-Sanford
carpets; Daystrom, Gunlock and Pontiac furnitur~;
and an insurance brokerage operation, Bayly, Martin
& Fay. ,_
You see what can happen when you sit down to
play the piano .
Chrysler
faces survival
DETROIT <AP> -After re1alnin1 the dubious distinc-
tion of having posted the lareest annual Joas in U.S. cor·
porate history, Chrysler Corp. is again facine up to the
question that has dogged it for two years: Can lt survive!
Treuury Secretary Dona.Id Recan, who is chairman ol
the Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board, says the chances that
the nation's No. 3 auto manufacturer will make i~ are
"reuooably good" foUowln• Chry9ler's sale of $tOO millloo
in Dine-year. federally guarant.cl notes.
Gold metals quotations
Gold
BJ ne Auedatell PNM
Selected world gold prices today:
....._: momin1 fixin1 '473.25, up Sl.25.
i......: afternoon fixina '474.25, up f1 .25.
Part.: afternoon fixin1 $521.•. up '8.22.
Fr...,....: fixing '474.02, up $9.02.
Zutda: late afternoon fixinl '473.00, up $10.00. '47&.00 uked .
.. .., A Bar•aa: onl. y dally quote '474.25, up fl.25.
Sq...,..: only dally q&aate '474.25, up fJ.25 .
......... : ooly dally q&aate fabricated sm.n , up f1 .5' . .....
• NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrou1 metal prlcea to-day: •
C.W.IMMlceeta • powad, U.S. de9tiaeticm. Lelli .. c-. • pound.
SIM U\4 e-. a pouad, cWiffNd.
Tim atllT Met.ala WHk compoette lb. Al• ' ·'Jt~aPoUDd,N.Y .
•• ....., •• 00 per nut .
........ MCI.GO tro7 •., N.Y.
~""'· NSW YOU CAP> -Pl1eea lllte Prld11 tf liM ~ eompandWttla~·•m:wte.: •
87 &OBl!&T OSBO&N E ,.. ...............
There'• notblq blatantly wroat wltb
qnJvenal'• "All Ni1ht Lon1'1 tb1t another
..... aroqpd the cHt.iDI uble couldD't
have remecll'ed.
But &bat cutiq fau1t P• -enll1tln1
larbra Strelsaod u a cootnc bioede H&·
pot wbo ls the cbickie everyone on her
bloek ii cbuln1 -makes this Ltonard
c;oldber1·Jerry Weintraub producUon,
lllaning Gene Hackman, much more of a
curiosity item than the low·key little
Capramque comedy It obviously set out to
be.
NOT THAT STREIS,\ND isn't good,
wit.hin tbe seams or her iU·fittlnl role. Sbe
tries. She a.I.so plays it straight, as a lead·
lne lady rath.er than as a star <for the rec:·
drd, this ls the first time she has taken
second billing In her 14·year, 12·film
screen career, having replaced Lisa
Eichhorn early in production).
She has also adopted a new look, drop·
ping the familiar Harpo Marx hairstyle
with a ctose·cut flaxen wig, and speaking
in a softer. lower, slower voice than usual.
It doesn't work, however. not for a frame,
since th.is is. clearly a role geared for a
Valerie Perrine, Loni And~rson or Raquel
Welch, and decidedly outside the kind of
pasture in which Streisand functions best.
In theory. the story revolves around
Hackman as a good.natured schmoe who
Au:•teenu.e ......... ..~ ................ ~w,,, ...... ... O•tt<W , ••• , ••••••• , ................... ('t•'Tr.,._. S<~y .................................. w.o •tit....,. CN"l•...,._r ..... , ........... ,,, ....... l..lltlv't9 c.-e. .. : 0-H«kMM, ..,_,. -........ ~ I.Mill, 0.IWVi~ lt~lft 0.... WlllMl!n ~ HeMI._ c-.. AM1e Oil'.,.._ Ytn>r Kl .. ,, °*"" ~. v"""w..n~•e1.i ...... A!W!Oer111 r...,cr~ .,_ ''*-• Jir!t No1111, ,.,Ill Miiie.,, :;...., J<Mr. • l'IW\lfte ,.._ -• lftlll\llM ~ ........
spends 20 yeart ln manqem&nt with a
larce drut ston concern, only to be dt·
moted to night mana1er of one of the
company's all·n11bt stores Ctbua the title).
He eeta little sympathy at home from 'fVtlt
Diane Ladd and son Dennis Quaid, the lat·
ter a teen·a1er with muaclea everywhere,
especially between bis ears.
HACIUIAN'S T&OUBLES have only
started. Ladd naas because of bia new
lower·leveJ job. The store is filled with a
flaky staff and weirdo customers. On top
or that, be discovers his "Son ls havinc an
affair with Strei.sand, the wife of a distant
relative. Kevin Dobson, who's a fireman
too often out on call. In the process of at·
tempting to squelch the affair, Hackman
becomes entangled with Streisand himself.
and all hell breaks loose, Including a
divorce, a final confrontation with "the
establishment" and a (happy?) ending.
It all plays comfortably, although
perhaps a bit pedestrian for the majority
or today's hard-core moviegoers who seem
to pref.Canler comed1 in their fllml.
Jean.Claude Tramont, maldna bla
AmtrletlD cMnctorlal debut, hu added a
decided f'reneb navor, aided by Pbllip
Lathrop'• darkish clnematocrapby and a
ll&bt music acore composed by Ira
Newborn and Richard Huard.
W .D. IUchter'a screenplay bu many
inerry moments, especially wben In·
veetlcatins flackman's nl&hts on duty at
lb• bil store, but It geta unnecessarily,
va1ue in the later development or rela·
t1on1bip1 and characters. Strelaand, ln·
~l ly painted as a bona,.flde tootsie,
omes quite straight as the reels roll
a ead (with little explanation> just as
Quaid's knuckleheaded character la
abruptly dropped.
THE ACflNG CAN'T be faulted ln most
departments. Hackman is right on target
In the focal role, Ladd is properly subdued
and delightful as the sufrerina wife, and
Quaid is sensational in his early scenes as Junior (ao dense he refers to an uncle's
death as tbe result or "brain hemor·
rhoids"). Dobson, considering the way his
role ls defined, is fine. as are William
DanieU, Vemee Watson, Steve Peterman,
Chris Mullcey and all the others.
The fllm may make bucks because of
Streisand's name on the marquee, but it
will probably gain its greatest fame as a
prime example or how not to cast a motion
picture.
Dolly's '9 to 5' rebounds to no. I
By The Ass~lated Press
The following are Billboard's hot record hits
1 for this week as they appear in Billboard
magazine:
HOT SINGLES
1. "9 to S" Dolly Parton <RCA>
2. "Keep on Loving You " REO Speedwagon
(Epic)
3. "Woman" John Lennon <Gefren)
4. "The Best of Times" Styx I A&M >
S. "I Love a Rainy Night" Eddie Rabbit
<Elektra)
6. "Crying" Don Mc Lean <Millennium>
7. "Rapture" Blondie <Chrysalis>
2. "Paradise Theater" Styx <A&M)
3. "The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond <Capitol)
4. "Double Fantasy" John ~nnon & Yoko Ono <Geffen)
S. "Zenyatta Mondatta" The Police <A&M>
6. "Crimes of Pass ion " Pat Benatar
<Chrysalis>
7. "Autoamerican" Blondie <Chrysalis)
8. "Greatest Hits" Kenny Rogers (Liberty)
9. "Captured" Journey (Columbia)
10. "Celebrate" Kool & the Gang <De-Lite)
Redford film slated
Watching the 'Birdie' A~·~··
Liza Minnelli (right) embraces Donald O'Connor while Chila
Rivera gets a hug from her daughter, Lisa Mordante, backstage
after O'Connor and Miss Rivera opened in the Broadway produc·
tio~ of "Bring Back Birdie," a sequel to "Bye Bye, Birdie," in
which Miss Rivera also starred.
I 'TOPS IN POPS
8 . "'Th e Winner
Takes it All " Abba
(Atlantic>
9 .. Hello Again"
Neil Diamond (Capitol >
10 ·'Celebration"
TORONTO (APJ Robert Redford has signed
for the lead in a movie lo be based loosely on the ex·
periences of the man who will produce it-Canadian
Robert Cooper. I I
I Kool & the Gang < De Litel
TOP LPS
1. "Hi lnfideLity" REO Speedwagon (Epic I
EL TORO
1-AllMIAOOU:•ACll "' •<~
• !4 /)~
WESTMINSTER UAWH-1UllllALL ._.,..
COSTA MESA
U .A. IOl/TltCOAST
ORANGE n.--IN 'l9 ~nn
JNINE
TO FIVE CPO>
t.-. 1 "THE JAZZ.
SINGER" (PG) .
' ,, '4# ' I "FORT APACHE
THE BRONX" 1111 ,,
I ·•ALL NIGHT
LONG" (R) ,,_,,a re• I "FANTASIA"
r:::c:=:au
"ALTERED
STATES"<R>
6
"INCREDIBLE
SHRINKING WOMAN"
··THE NUDE BOMB"
f :c: ----:t:!3 I '"THE DEVIL
& MAX DEVLIN'"
"HERO AT LARGE" 1H 1 . . -I '"RAGING BULL'" 1111
"'FORT APACHE"
. ~ .......... ~ I '"TRIBUTE"
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"
!Ill
I ·~·coAL' MINER'S_
DAUGHTER"
'"SMOKEY II"
i .• ANY wHieir
WAY YOU CAN'"
··HONEYSUCKLE
Tentatively titled · ·orr the Record ... it will deal
with television's power and the life of a broadcaster,
said Cooper. who for five years starred in the Cana-
dian Broadcasting Corp. television series "Om-
budsman."
YOU'RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE
THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH.
~~NOWPLAYDIG ~~
um& South Coast
(714)494·15U
atm
CIST&IDI ..... -811stOI Westbrook Stadium Onve·ll!
(714).S40·74U (714) 530-4401 (714) 639·8770
Slddlllllell(714) S8l·Sl80
.. Woodbrid 4) 551 ·0655
I ftM°"'°"9C IOUte
WALT DISNEY'S ,,,_
FANTASIA 191 •-11•·••·••·.-:•·u• MCHil n.J I.AT "T& I..... UM
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fNTUMC........•~•At Fr-•y ,, "All
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-m1W1 llllY PIPll
... :
~,()N[)AY MARCH q 1'1H1 OHAN(~[ C OllN 1 ( ' AL II UHNIA 2~ CENTS
Colombia "'Bible translators reBlain • In
FAMILY SHARES SADNESS -Chester and
Mary Bitterman, about to leave for secret
reunion with slain son 's widow, read
Colombian newspaper account of slaying
.............
and a letter from President Reagan. With
them at Lancaster, J>a., home are (from
left> sons Grant, Curt a nd Chris.
B111To shootout
381 killed at Navy center
CH I NA LAKE <AP ) -
Airborne sharpshooters with
high-powered rifles killed hun·
dreds of wild burros during the
weekend because the animals
endangered a ircraft and
vehicles at the Naval Weapons
Center here. the Navy con-
firmed today.
Two ciyiliao professional
mark smen under the
sup ervision of an Arizona
animal population speciallsl
flew in helicopters Saturday and
Sunday to kill 381 of the beasts,
which wander wide areas ol the '1ast Mojave Desert, including
lbis Navy base 115 miles north of
Los Angeles, the Navy said.
The burros have c reated a
"major hazard to both aircraft
and vehicular traffic as they
roam across the Center's
runways and roads," the Navy
said in a written statement pre-
pared alter the kills were com·
pleted.
·. "I have been concerned for
some time that a Navy jet
aircraft will hit a burro on a
runway and crash," said Capt.
William B. Haff, center com·
mander. "At night there's no
way that burros can be seen
~ either from the air traffic con-
&ol tower or by a pilot. To pro·
feet the lives of our aviators and
million-dollar aircraft, I felt the
emergency reduction program
was essential."
The Navy said the burro
population on the 1,712-square·
mile research and development
center -the Navy's largest -
increased from 1,110 to 2,225
from 1978 to 1980.
A Navy enlisted man was
, seriously injured in September
when his motorcycle struck a
burro on a road at night near the
Center's airfield, the Navy state-
ment said, adding that a number
of colllsioos between burros and
autos have also occurred on
state and county roads on the
q Center's perimeter.
I The burros, descendants of
1 animals turned loose b y
b charcoal miners, damage the
J desert through their foraging,
t.be Navy said . No native burros
ci 4xist in North America. s Wild burros have posed an in-
IRAllil CUil llATHll .
Fair tbrou1h Tuesday.
, Lows tonight 48 alon1 the
coast, M Inland. Hl1hs
' :Tuesday 87 to mid 709. ! "1111 Tl~Y
~ • TM boalrieCboll M010n /cw fti UC ,,,,.,..~ u °"" ~ cu o b6d to U.. NIT 1w f90C
Ibo btm /or1hcomfnf. ~ 81.
~ 11111 0
i le 'r.:-=---~ P!t1 fl.,M..... M •. =. :: ..,.. C........ CM -•iff :: _ ......... Cl .. ...., ,,.::. . :ea:-cg ..
'
L
creasing problem to western
U.S. desert areas in recent
years . Hundreds of burros were
helicoptered out of Grand Can·
von late last year in a well·
publicized relocation campaign.
The Navy also had about 450
wild goats taken off San
Clemen te Island last year
because they en<Jan1ere<l other
species on the island Just off tbe
Southern California coast.
Beaches closed
The Navy, which owns the
island, originally bad intended
to shoot those animals as well,
but the Fund for Animals suc-
ceeded in getting a federal judge
to stop the shootings. Ultimately
190 of the 212 goats died on a
mainland ranch near San Dieeo
from disease, malnutrition and
sireaa, veterin~ 1aid.
The l'\and group protest8 .-.
· Ch1na Lake shoofings today.
Tests of polluted
Newport waters set
By STEVE MARBLE
Oftlle DllllJ l'lleC S~"
Orange County health officials
were to begin tests today to de·
termine bow seriously the waters
in Newport Harbor and the
Newport coastline were polluted
by this weekend 's 6 million
gallon sewage spill.
Newport's shoreline, closed lo
bathers on Sunday. is expected to
remain off-limits for at least a
week.
But the quarantine did litUe to
discourage beach sunbathers.
Lifeguards said at· least S0,000
persons turned out Sunday, re·
mainingonthesand.
"We beefed up our patrols,"
s aid lifeguard Lt . Logan
Lockabey, "and helped post
signs. Everyone was very
cooperative. They stayed out of
the water -an ract, they
didn't even get close to the
water."
The trouble began Saturday
morning when a sewer line rup-
tured in front of the Balboa Bay
Club on Pacific Coast Highway.
Pavement in the southbound
lanes was raised and broken by
theforceoftberusblngsewage.
Coast unit
hearings
cancelled
South Coast Regional Coaatal
Commisaloa bearin11 scheduled
this week on Oran1e County
Local Coutal Plana have been
cancelled.
Hearlnc• on the a tate -
mandated LCP1 for Sunset
Beach and Sumet Aquattc Park
bad been Ht for Tuaday.
Plans for South Lacuna,
Newport Dunes, and Saata Ana
ff•llht.a bad been ached~ Fri·
day.
County land-uae plannera
wltbdrew tbe plam lut week
after Couta1 CommlNkle staff
members bad recommended de-
nlal at the propo11all. )( 11 Carpenter, executln
director of tbe Soatb Coast
Re1Joaal Coutal CommlllloD,
tald --ol tbe propoaall failed to meet atandardl of lbe IUte
Co11tal Act in one pba11 or
anothw. ·
Ray Lewis, of the Orange Coun·
ly Sanitation District, said the
rupture was caused by corrosion
of the 3<>-inch line by sulpher
sewage gas.
Lewis said the stretch on Coast
Highway where the trouble start·
ed is the only area in Newport not
ser ved by double sew age Lines. He
said because of shortage of funds,
a second "backup" line bas not
been installed.
Repair of the sewage line cost
the sanitation district roughly
$100,000 and was completed Sun-
day.
Mike Wehner, a county water
quality supervisor . said the beach
from the Balboa Pier south to
Scotchman's Cove likely will be
closed to the public for a week.
··It's hard to tell bow bad it real-
1 y is,'' he explained. "The
beaches will be cleaned up pretty
quickly simply by the current.
But the harbor is slower to be
flushed and as the stuff leaves the
h arbor, it will affect the
beaches."
Health officials said bacteria
in raw sewage normally dis·
solves quickly when it comes in-
to contact with ocean water. But
human exposure to the con-
taminated water, they warned,
can result in several kinds of in·
fection.
The untreated sewage was in
liquid form.
The quarantine. t.bou1h, bad
llttle effect on boaters who
came out by the hundreds on
Sunday.
The broken line was dis·
covered Saturday morning by cl·
ty water department worken
who noticed surface 1eepa1e. It
waa several houra later that·
sanitation olftclals llolated the. reptW'ed at.retch o( pipeline.
AU wute water, on tbe 'ltreet
aurf ace and In the pipe, waa
diverted south on Cout
Htcbway to tbe bay at the
bi•hway bridle crou
(lee IRWAGB, Pa1e AJ)
Crime talk eet
PoUee Capt. Nell Puttell will
dl1C11U tM Lquna Beacb de-P&l'taMllt'• not a1ataat crime iturlDI a bnakfut meeUq ol
tbe Ct.amber of Commerce
Taftclay. Tbe I a.m. m..U.,
wtll be Wd ln tbt Hotel Lquaa.
TtcketaanM.
Slain Bitterman mourned
By PATalC& KENNEDY
Of .... Delly ...........
None of the Wycliffe Bible
tranalaton bu asked to lean
Colombia altbou1h their llvea
have been threatened by the ter-
rorists who shot and killed
Chester Bitterman Sa turd~, a
Wycllf(eofftclal a aid today.
A memorial service for Bit-
terman. 28, was to be held today at
Wyclllfe Bible Translator Inc.
headquarters in Huntin1ton
Beach.
•'This tragedy has pulled the
people ln the organization
together in greater determination
to continue our work," said
Wycliffe spokesman Terry
Casey.
The terrorists kidnapped Bit·
term an and held him 47 days, de·
manding that Wycliffe and its sis·
ter organization, the Summer
Institute of Linguistics, pull out of
the country.
"There was really nothing we
could do," Casey said today. "If
we pulled out, the action taken
acatnatCbetwouldbavebeensuc·
ceaaful and opened the floodgates
to terrorilt action against other
WycWfetramlaton."
Casey laid the non-profit cor·
poratioa bu •,000 workers in 33
countries. The group develops
lancuaies in primitive societies
and then translates the New
Testament.
Bitterman bad been in Colom·
bia for two years with his wife,
Brenda, and two small daughters,
aged2andl.
The terrorists charged that
Wycliffe and SIL are fronts for the
CIA and the Colombian govern-
ment.
Wycliffe officials have denied
the charges.
Casey said a Chester Bitterman
Memorial fund has been
established. He said more than
15,000 letters have come to the
Wycliffe headquarters in the past
three w~ks. offering s ympathy
and support for the most part.
President Reagan sent con-
dolences to Bitterman's pa.rents
in Pennsylvania.
"At this time of terrible sad-
n e 11, I hope you will be
strengthened in the knowled&e
that the firmness and courage ol
your son and daughter-in-law
have contributed to our stead·
fast determination to reaiat ter·
roriat blackmail," Reagan
wrote.
"My tbougbta and prayers are
with you," the President added.
Casey said that during the or-
deal, workers at Wycliffe were
optimistic that Bitterman would
be released unharmed.
But that turned lo shock.
·'The reaction is shock, but
there is a general feeling that
God doesn't make mistaltes and
that there is a reason for what
happened to Chet. We may not
know it in our lifetime but
there's a reason," Casey said.
.............
YOUNG INDtANA VICTIMS OF ELECTROCUTED STEVEN JUDY
Ch••teen chltdren Mlaty, 5; Mark. 2; Steven, 4, at•tn with their mother
. ... .,........
MURDERED MOTHER
Terry LM ChaatHn
Heart, lung
operation
completed
STANFORD <AP> -Doctors
at Stanford University Medical
Center completed the world's
fourth heart-tuna transplant on a
45-year-old woman today, bop.
ins to beat tbe survival odds
with the uae ol a new clnae-
)( ary Golllke, 45, of Mesa,
Aris., wu lino tbe beart and
tunes ol an anonymou donol' in
a four-hour operation and wu
listed ID stable but critical coodl-
ti on, hospital 1pokeawoman
Lora IWatadter aald.
"A very critical period will
come in 24 boura wben tbey
(doc:ton) attempt to wean her
from tbe n1ph'ator tiarlJ tomor'· row IDOl'Diq," )(1. Holltadter
1ald. ~ ''So far lbe seem to be dolDI
aa well u e:apee and ber
beart la f\mdlonlu normally,"
111. ~ MiCI about four
boun aft« tbe operatloll.
nu. ~ wbo UDdel ·-b tart aad ·= tUDIPIHU ...... Im 11'11, laehldbaa
two ta tM Ualted ...... dlea
afte.r 1unt¥lq pertodl al H
~<.. ...... -..rt*l:.a-t.::
wutaJftl.
( .. DAaT, Pa1• A.I)
Blames himself
Joking Judy dies
in electric chair
• MICIDGAN CITY, Ind. (APl
-J oking with guards and
blaming himself for his fate,
:U-year-old Steven T. Judy went
will ingl y to h is death in
Indiana's black oak electric
chair today for murdering a
mother and her three small
children ne.arly two years ago.
"I don't bold no grudges. This
Is my doing, sorry it happened,"
were the last words of the blond,
blue-eyed murderer before two
powerful surges of electricity
wracked his body and he was
prODO\DlCed dead.
"He was very relaxed, I don't
think it hurt,'' said bis foster
father, Robert R. Carr. "When it
hit him, he fiinched. Then you
could see movement in his
fingers."
Judy, who resisted appeals,
saying be preferred death to life
in prison, became the fourth
ptrson executed in this country
since the U.S. Supreme Court
revived the death penalty in
1978. His wu the first execution
in 20 years in Indiana's electric
chair, made from wood that
once served as a gallows.
Department of Corrections
spokesman Tom Hanlon said
Judy was "very calm" and
walked the six paces from b1a
bold.ins cell to the chair "very
quie tly" and unassisted just
after midnight.
Carr said that before Judy
was taken to the c hair, he
received a final phone call from
a girl in T e xa s named
"Jeanne." He then asked for
''photos of his new haircut"
where he had been shaved lo
make room for an electrode,
which was soaked in salt brine
to make it more conductive.
''They sent for a photographer
and took the pictures he
wanted," Carr added.
Attorney Steven L. Harris,
who witnessed the execution
from behind a glass partition
along with Carr a nd stat e
officials said that as Judy
walked lo the chair, he pointed
to where his trouser had been
cut so another electrode could be
attached to his leg, and quipped:
"I'm 1olng to send the state of
Indiana a bill for $15."
Just before be was strapped
into the chair and blindfolded,
Hanlon said, Judy took off b1a
wristwatch and asked that it be
1iven to a fellow death row
inmate who was bis closest
friend.
Then Judy was strapped in,
the 1uards backed away, "there
was a pause for about 10 <See JUDY, Pase AJ>
Dog ~hoots man
Pet drop• loaded pittol
MONROE,, lllch. (AP)-A man wu &bot in the arm after bia
German ahepberddoc picked -.p •IUD lo ltl teeth and t.beD dropped
lt, police reported toda1.
Jobn Calbert, .a. bad been tralalq hll dol J arvll to attack and
• dlaarm illtruden, POilceHW.
Calbert placed a loaded .aa.:calfber pil&ol on a coucb ud Jams picked~ tbl weapaa ID bll tMlla, paB0e oalcel' Du JU ... N-
poNd. ....... wti•••· a.e..._, Celbert'• fataier, .,... ...t ellUdr9. wMcW a1 ta. dol ..._.. tM .-, e .... tt to ftN a
bullet tbala..lCalMltlD UMt arm. AleMN ..w. CalbertWNlafalreondltNIDM.-QlllmlpMAl.~aaid. ,
'
M L
Salvador
aid hiked
by lJ.S.
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP> -More men, arms aod
money are on their way to ~
Salvador rrom a U .S .
admln1'tration that voices fean
the tiny Central American nation
could be the first to topple in a new
superpower game of dominoes.
But there is little sl$n that
leftist auerrUlaa wiU seize con·
trol, despite continued fighting
between the insurgents and gov-
ernment forces.
They have failed to capture any
major chunk or territory' and
former U.S. Ambassador Robert
White says they are a "broken
and declining tot.··
A m ajo r o ff ens iv e in
mid·January resulted in the brief
seizure of a provincial capital,
San Francisco Gotera, 65 miles
. east of the capital. But a week
NEWS ANALYSIS
Deity 1'11.e 5La" -
later. President Jose Napol~n
Duarte declared the offensive
over and said, "There is nothing
more they can do with their
arms." SIGN TELLS STORY OF HUGE SEWAGE SPILL IN NEWPORT
50,000 bather• couldn't oo neer weter Sundey
The guerrillas have conceded
they are regrouping.
Their calls for mass uprisings
and strikes have been largely
ineffective. Their attacks now are
isolated actions tinged with the
same kind or terroris m that has
been attributed to El Salvador's
far right.
,..,.... Pflfl# A I
SEW AGE HALTED. • •
A greater threat lo the regime,
according to some, may come
from rightists in the Salvadoran
military, which is well·armed
and indisposed to tolerate a mid·
die-of-the-road government.
The sewer line, which serves
50,000 residences in the Newport
area, carries close to 4 million
gallons of sewage a day from
Newport to a treatment plant on
Brookburst Street in Huntington
Beach.
Some sewage seeped onto the
Balboa Bay Club parking lot
before the flow was diverted to
the bay.
County health officials s aid
today's testing should provide
answers on whether the spill
could be or harm to fish or other
orgaftlsms in the . .b.irtlQr Qr im·
mediate coastline
Sanitation officials be~an
pouring chlorine into the sewage
late Saturday in an attempt to
reduce the danger or harmful
bacteria entering the Newport
Harbor.
The line break, which dumped
sew age into the bay for more
than 24 hours. had no effect on use or domestic or commercial
restrooms.
The Reagan administration is
adding $25 million lo the $10
million worth of arms already
shipped to El Salvador's military.
and 20 U.S. military advisers are
being assigned to the force of 34
already here.
El Salvador "is a textbook case
of indirect armed aggression by
Co mmunist powers through
Cuba , .. says an official State
Department report. which claims
the Soviet Union and its allies are
funneling arms to t he leftist
guerrillas.
E'ro•PagrAI
JUDY ELECTROCUTED • • •
President Reagan apparently
has decided to take some form of
s tand in this m ost densely
populated, with 5 million people,
nation of Central America, a
co untr y th e s iz e o r
Massachusetts, with expansive
black and white said Pacifi c
beaches. lush mountainsides and
torrid jungles.
His decision, however , is
questioned by those who believe
that the United Stales, as it djd in
Vietnam, may be choosing the
wrong friend, the wrong foe and
the wrong battleground.
•·E l Salvador would be a perfect
base for the Soviet Union to
launch its drive to make all or
Central America its own, .. says a
Western diplomat here.
"Costa Rica. Ho nduras,
Guatemala and Mexico are
watching what is happening here.
They know they mi~ht be next,"
the diplomat said, asking to
remain anonymous
Mo•t •UPOn• ••Po•t•dly
d•lP•"""" to 9110111lla
ll•on9t1otd• "' p10•1nco• of
I Chalatonango
2 San V•conto
l Mo•uan
•·La Union
seco nds , and be wa s
electrocuted," Harris said.
H anion s aid two surges of
elef tricity were sent through
Judy's body J first a charge of
2,300 volts for 10 seconds, then a
charge of 500 volts for 20
seconds.
State law calls for Warden
Jac k Duckworth to pull the
switch that triggers the lethal
current. but Hanlon refused to
confir m who had done it.
Reporters, in accordance with
lndiana law, were kept far from
the death scene in another part
of the prison. .
Hanlon said Judy's body was
released to the county coroner.
Judy·s foster mother, Mary
Carr, said Judy would be buried
T hursday.
Judy was abandoned by his
parents and, at the age of 13,
was confrned to Central State
Hos pital fol lowing sexual
attacks on women. Within two
years. be was released on
.. convalescent le ave" to the
Ar"'' reportoOly •"•PP•d
by l>oat from N1ca1a9ua
acrou Gull of Fonttc1
through HonOuraa ano
1Mo Et S1tY10or by truck
and by a1rc11fl t1om
Mtn~ut t nO Costa ll1ca
.............
SOVIET UNION SUPPLIES LEFTIST GUERRILLAS
Map ahow1 routn uMd for erma 1hlpment8
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomas P. H•ley
~
Robert N. Weed ,.......,..
M. ThomH KHVll .....
Thomu A Murphlne ....... ...,
Ctwlee ti. Loo• ~ .......... a-=:cs Schulm1n
~~n
~-:1~ddanl. Jr.
MAIN OFFICE "° Wtil •ev SC., Cata Mete, CA. ~" tctdrHI. ha U.O, c..t. M!!!, CA.-
c.., .... "" Orelltlt oi.91 ""*ll•t••~· ... ne•n 1torlo1, lllu$1retlOM, •"""-• lllllttf or ado •erthemonts hortln mey IN , .. ,04ilwc4"1 without
ll)O( ltt peNnlHIOll of copyrltftt -""'.
__ __._.,..... __ _
Carrs, who became his foster
parents.
By 1979, Judy was well-known
to Indiana authorities as a
troublemaker and was arrested
one day after the bodies of the
mother and her three children
were found. Judy broke down
and wept when the charges
against him were read and later
admitted his guilt on the witness
s tand.
Gov. Robert D. Orr, who
waited at his Indianapolis
mansion by a special telephone
line to the prison in case J udy
asked for a stay, -said in a
statement after the execution,
"I am at peace with myself
because I know I have met my
responsibilities under the law
and because I believe justice has
. prevailed."
The governor and state
Clemency Commission refused
last week to delay the execution,
because the request was made
by the American Civil Liberties
U nion without Judy 's
endorsement. The U.S. Supreme
Court on Friday rejected the
e ffort of another death row
inmate to hall the execution.
f"ro• Pagr Al
HEART ...
But Stanford doctors said they
believe Mrs. GohlJce stands a
better c hance of s urvival
because the dru~ cyclosporin·A
is being used an her case to
remedy two problems that have
beset other· patients, the slow
a nd imperfect healing of the
windpipe and Ufe·lhreatening in·
fections.
Mra. Gohlke, who was con·
scious shortly aft.er the opera-
tion, had been suffering from
pulmonary hypertension, a lung
condition that can also damage
the heart, Ms. Hofstadter said.
Doctors Bruce Reitz and
Norman S human way, who
performed the operation, lay the
groundwork for t he operation
working with monkeys.
In tests over several years,
they aald they obtained en·
couraging results when they re-
In vesU1ated the possibility of
heart·lung transplants with the
new drug.
Three or seven monkeys re-
celvtn1 new hearts and lungs
a n d b ei n g treated with
cycloaporin-A survived mor e
than 140da)'I after 1ur1ery. Two
are sUU Uvtn1, 14 and 15 months
after tbe operatton.
Gift to ~uy boob
Tbe J'rlendl or t.be Lquna Beach Library but doaated .. '° be UMd '° buy ftctka boot• for tbe Tbunton In·
a..nDdat. 8cbool library.
BJ lllCllASL DOl)GA.N ..............
Tbe Ud.rd man to leave h1I
footprint.I ~ t.be mooo bu pre-
dlcted that, because of cull In
the apace prosram, It wlU not be
until tbe next cent ury before
s omebody makes that trip
acain.
•ot to keep one eye on the
stars." be taid.
He expressed hope that tbe
"scores' of clUzen.s croups that
have •been formed to SUPPort the
apace program would make a
difference.
"They won't make an impact
in terms of direct funding," said
Sch weickart. "But t h ey will
make an impact politically if
they do their homework and
persiJ1t. ··
Disneyland first
COHiii.AD KHWlllCAlllf
Charles "Pete" Conrad, com-
m a nd er o f t h e Apollo 12
spacecraft, described as short·
sighted President Reacan'a ex·
peeled cut of 2S percent in the
National Aeronautics and Space
Admi.nlJtration research budget
durin1 a visit Sunday to Hunt·
in1ton Beach where he appeared
on KOCE -TV 's pledge
marathon.
Conrad w-. joined by Russell
Scbw~ickart, another former
astronaut now serving as
chairman or Gov. J erry Brown's
energy commission.
Two remain jailed
"I think it will be a long time
before anybody goes back to the
moon," said Conrad. He said
former President John F. Ken·
nedy's push to land a man on the
moon was motivated by "the
politics of putting the nation
back together. In my opinion,
because it was politically
founded it's easily politically
killed.
• ID fatal stabbing
"I think there is a lot of fat in
the federal program." he added,
"but not in the space program."
Conrad, now senior vice·
president for marketing for
McDonnell Douglas. noted that
the 1979 NASA budget was $4
billion while defense received
$115 billion and the department
of Health, Education and
Welfare was budgeted at $180
billion.
··Somewhere we got our
priorities screwed up," he said
"You can't tell me that. 1f you'd
taken just (another ) $4 billion or
that and iiven it to NASA, the
HEW would have even missed it. ..
Conrad blamed the three-year
delay in launching America's
space shuttle on lack of fwids.
"They have done their absolute
best with what they have," he
said. "They aren't about to let
that thing go before it is ready ...
He attributed part of the prob·
lem on the fact Americans
abandoned their love affair with
the space program once the ex·
citement of landing on the moon
subsided.
"'That sort of <e xcite ment>
shouldn't be there ,·' s aid
Conrad. .. Americans seem lo
have a short a ttention span.
They tend to move on to other
things."
Conrad said people should pay
attention to ·'the useful things
that it (the s pace progr am )
could do instead or the spec·
tacular."
Schweickart accused the
Reagan Administration of "a
lac k of vision.
"It's looking at your navel and
not understanding that you've
County films
lecture topic
Movies shot in Orange County
will be the subject of an illustrat·
ed lecture In Laguna Beach
March 12 s p onsore d by the
Laguna Beach Community His·
tori cal Society.
The lecture will be given by
Orange County his torian Jim
Sleeper. The program will be held
at the Neighborhood Congrega-
tional Church. 340St. Ann's Drive,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. The public
is invited.
The Casual Side of Rugby
By DAVID K UTZM ANN
Of I ... Delly l'ltot SLall
Anaheim police investigators
say they will seek formal
murder complaints Tuesday
against two San Diego residents
being held as suspects in Dis·
neyland's first slaying.
Police Sgt. Del Wade said to-
day that while his investigation
is still continuing, he will ask the
Orange County Dis trict At·
torney's office to press charges
against James 0 . Driscoll, 28,
and Julie Holdener . 25,
Each is being held in lieu or
$250.000 ball , Driscoll at
Anaheim City J ail a"nd Miss
Holdener at Orange County J ail.
The two were arrest~ Satur·
day night after Mel C. Yorba,
18, or Riverside, was fatally
s tabbed in the Tomarrowland
area of the sprawling amuse·
ment park.
Wade said investigators now
"'have an idea" of what the
motive may have been, but he
declined to elaborate.
Officers said Yorba was
knifed after apparently becom·
ing involved in an argument
with Driscoll and Miss Holdener
near the submarine ride ticket
booth in Tomorrowland.
Wade said witnesses saw the
knifing. Miss Holdener was
taken into custody by park
security personnel.
Driscoll was later taken into
custody by office r s who
searched the park and round
him hiding in bushes in the Ad·
Hilltop
subdivision
approved
Laguna Beach council mem-
be r s have approved a sub·
division that will allow 11 homes
to be built in the hilltop
Portafina area.
Council members attached 19
conditions to the subidivision re·
quest by owner Mary Ellen
Lewis.
The 2.8-acre vacant parcel ad·
jacent to Marline Drive and Gull
Circle will include catch basins,
drainage ditches and plant
growth to control erosion.
In addition, individual homes
in the new subdivision may not
block views . of existing resi-
dents.
Co un c il members Sally
Bellerue and Neil Fitzpatrick
opposed the subdivision request.
100% cotton rugby shorts and panls
8'41llble 1n colort of red. white.
ld'\lld. sky blue naw ·~ QOld Alie. the classlc bar strioe rugby th•rt
in a paty/cotton blend
ventureland area.
Wade said it didn't appear
Yorba knew his alleged as-
sailants. The Riverside man had
gone to the park with friends.
The park was being used
Saturday night by a host to a
private party by Rohr Corp. of
San Diego and Riverside.
However. officers said they
did not know if Yorba or Driscoll
and Mi ss Ho ld e ne r were
employees of the firm which
s pecializes in construction or
transportation equipment.
Yorba was take n by Di s·
neyland ambulance to Palm
Ha rbor Hospital in Garden
Grove, whe r e h e was pro·
nounced dead.
A Disneyland spokesman said
Yorba's slaying was the first in
the park's 26-year .history. About
six persons have died acciden·
tallv in the amusement facility.
Jury asks
delay in
procedure
The Orange County Grand Jury
is asking to delay the selection of a
s uccessor to Human Services
Agency Director Margaret Grier
until the jury releases a report on •
the agency's perfor mance .
The jury, in a letter to county
Board of Supervisors Chairman
Ralph Clark. said the HSA report
will be available by May l.
··The jury believes that this
work is germane lo your selection
process and can add pertinent
data to your decision making,··
the letter said.
· Miss Grier has announced her
retirement, effective March 31.
Under a timeHne approved by
s upe rvisor s Wednesday, an
interim director will be named by
Marc h 17 . On t h at d ate .
r ecruitment for a permanent
di rector will begin.
The jury said in its letter that
the HSA's "ability to deliver
mandated services within its
present structure" has been
under study since September and
that the information gathering
phase of the project is complete.
The HSR is an umbrella
structure that administers more
than $200 million in health,
welfare a nd social services
programs. It employs about 2,800
per sons and is the county's
largest s uperagency.
ALSGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
i
~ i! • -
I llrl
-11111111 ., NPll
M () N () /\ ' MA I 1' 11 j I I il 1 l•''JHH.t (llllN TY (Al ltlll11\,!IA l'J C E~lS
Slain Bitterinan DioUnied • ID HB • rites
81 PATalCIE KENNEDY
Of .. ~ ...........
·} None of the Wycliffe Bible
uanslaton baa asked to leavf'
Colombia aJthou1h their lives ~ve been threatened by the ter-~rl1t1 who shot and kUled
,1.-bester Bitterman Saturday, a
Wycliffe official said toda)'.
•. A memorial service for Bil·
\er man, 28...t. w~ be held toda1 at
)lycllffe uible' Translator Inc.
beadquartera in HunUntton
Beach.
"Thll traaedy has pulled the
people in the or1ani11tlon
toaet.ber in ereater determination
to continue our work," said
Wycliffe spokesman Terry
Casey.
The tem>ri.ata lddnapped Bit·
terman and held him 47 days, de-
mandiq that Wycliffe and its sis·
ter organization, the Summer
lutltuteol Unau11Uc1, pull out ot the country.
•'There waa really notbiq we
could do," Cuey said today. "If
we pulled out, .the act.ion taken
a1atmtCbetwouldbavebeenauc·
ce11fuJ and opened the fiood1ates
to terrorlat act.ion a1ainst other
WycWfetransJaton. • ·
Casey said the non-profit cor-
poratlon bu 4,000 workers in 33
countries. The group develops
ian.1ua1es in primiu.& IOtleties
and then tranalatel the New
Testament.
Bitterman bad been in Colom-
bia for two years with bis wile,
Brenda, and two small daughters,
ated2andl.
The terrorists char1ed that
WycliffeandSILarefrontaforthe
CIA and the Colombian 1ovem·
ment.
Wycliffe officials have denied
the cbaraes.
Casey said a Chester Bitterman
Memorial fund bas been
eatabllabed. He said more than
15,000 letters have come to the
Wycliffe headquarters in the put
three weeks, offerin1 sympathy
and aupportforthe most part.
President Rea1an sent con·
dolenices to Bittennan's parent.a
ln Pennaylvania.
"At th.is time of terrible sad·
nu•, I hope you will be
1trenftbenecl In the knowledce
that the ftrmnes1 and cour~e ol
your aon and dau1hter-in·law
have contributed to our stead-
fast determination to resist ter·
rorlst blackmail," Reagan
wrote.
Casey said that durin1 the or·
deal, workers at Wycliffe were
optimistic that Bitterman would
be released unbanned.
Area beaches
. • remam closed
Dl6ty P*' ,,_,, f'*kl!O'O-•
Polluted
waters
tested
By STEVE MARBLE
Ofl!MOaltyf'll .. Slaff
THIS IS BIRD'HVE VIEW OF .....,..HOOD COMllUtHTY <:eNTER RITU
About 400 n1tghbar9 tum out taf dHlcallon Ill Com ....
Orange County health officials
were to begin tests today to de-
termine how seriously the waters
in Newport Harbor and the
Newport coastline were polluted
by this weekend's 6 million
gallon sewage spill. SRO at new Mesa center Newport's shoreline, closed to
bathers on Sunday, Is expecteG to
remain off-limits for at least a
week.
Meetings slated; furniture en route ,_p\ ~ qwarantin4' dlcl litUe to dl1co~a1e beach sunbathers.
Lifeguards said at least 50,000
JM!rtodi tu.med out Sunda1, re-
malDl.neoo the sand. By JERRY CLAUSEN
OfUMOally f'tteU .. ff
' Workmen are putting finiabi.ng
touches here and there to the $2.4
million downtown Neighborhood
(;ommunity Center in Costa
fttesa, and although the facility
bas already bttn dedicated much
!of its furnishings are on back-
'order.
The first group scheduled into
the new center at 1845 Park Ave. is
the office of Statewide Health, ~lannlng and Development. The
~acramento-based group will pay
~ a day March 17-19 for one of
three seminar rooms at the
center, said Trudy Nuzum,
manager.
Chairs will be borrowed from
other city facilities, she said, to
accommodate the Sacramento
·aroup and others renting facility
apace before seats on order arrive
next month.
An estimated 400 observers and
,partici~ants attended the Satur-
Tday dedication of the new con· ~rete structure, sandwiched
"))etween Lions Park to the south
and Orange County Library's
downtown branch to the north.
The ceremonies included a
musical prelude at 10 a .m . by the
8rd Marine Aircraft Wing Band
and the Coast Master Chorus.
Monsignor Thomas Nevin,
pastor of St. Joachim's Church,
Jave the invocation. He was
1onowed by master of ceremonies
j'red SorsabaJ, city manager, and
Mayor Arlene Schafer.
A coment.one ceremony was
conducted by the Grand Lodee of
Freem8IODI. Dr. Hershel Brooks,
Temple Sharon rabbi, offered the
benediction.
As an estimated 600 persons
toured the new 21,000-square-foot
center, focal polnt of the city's
Super Block, other orcani&ations
dedicated a naerole and tree on
center1rounda. ·
Ambulances
ouncil topic
Jrvine'• emer1ency medical
tramportat.lon needl will be con·
.sdered by Iniae City Ooundl ~emben at 7:30 p.m . Tuelclay.
: lfbecounclll1todeeldewhetber
ttie city'• present ambulance w.tce 11 aaequte or whether it
lllloald be 1upplemented b)' a
pri•ate or bo1pltal-operated
Nnlce.
Cound1 memben allo will tab
a look at a CommualtJ 8enkel P.!tPartmeat prosram in wbicll d ·. W empio1eel GrlanlM ebil4ND'I JllrtbdaY putiet for a $IO 1 ... Tbe
,,..,.. WU ertUclaed bJ •
dUsen attbe luteoaneU mMtlnl
•• belnJ an inappropriate
· laidpel aervtce. -CoaDdJ meeUnp are beld ln ,,._. atJ Hall, 17JOO Jamboree
~.lrvtne. ..
The pole dedication wu con-
ducted by the Veterans of Foreip
Wars Poat3S36, VeteranaofWortd
War I Barracks 1249 and
American Legion Post 455.
In addition to 1, 100-aeat
auditorium that will accom-
modate 500 diners, the facility
Shot from air
feat.ures three sernlnar rooma, a
stainless steel kitchen and offices.
The center is open to the public
for meetings, receptions and
reereational gatherings, said Ms.
Nuzum. She can be telephoned at
645-8551 for rental information
and fee schedules.
"We beefed up our patrols,"
said lifeguard Lt. Loean
Lockabey, "and helped post
signs . Everyone was very
cooperative. They stayed out of
the water -rn ract, they
didn't even get c lose to the
water."
381 burros killed
The trouble began Saturday
morning when a sewer line rup-
tured in front of the Balboa Bay
Club on Pacific Coast Highway.
Pavement in the southbound
lanes was raised and broken by
the rorceofthe rushlnJC sewage.
at Naval center
Ray Lewis, of the Orange Coun-
ty Sanitation District, said the
rupture was caused by corrosion
of the 3C>-incb line by sulphur aewaeegaa.
CHINA LAKE (AP > -
Airborne sharpshooters with
high-powered rtnes killed bun·
dreds of wild burros during the
weekend because the animals
endangered aircraft and
vehicles at the Naval Weapons
Center here, the Navy con-
firmed today.
Two civilian professional
marksmen under the
supervision of an Arizona
animal population specialist
new in helicopters Saturday and
Sunday to kill 381 of the beasts,
which wander wide areas or the
vast Mojave Desert, including
this Navy bue U~ miles north of
Los An1eles, the Navy said.
The burros have created a
"major hazard to both aircraft
and vehicular traffic as they
roam across the Center's
runwaya and roada," the Navy
said in a written statement pre.
pared alter the kills were com-
pleted.
"I have been concerned ror
aome time that a Navy jet
aircraft will bJl a bWTo on a
runway and crash," said Capt.
William B. Haff, center com-
mander. "At n11bt there'• no
way that bWTOI can be seen
either from the air traffic con-
trol tower or by a pilot. To pro-
tect the lives of our avlaton and
mllllon-doUar aircraft, I felt tbe
emer1ency recludion prosram
WU eueatJal."
Tbe Nav)' aald tlat burro
populatioD ca ta. l, nJ.equre-
mlle rwarcb wt clnll"a.at
center -tbe Na91'1 larlelt -
increued from 1,110 to J,225
from 1171 to ....
A Navy eall1ted man waa
lertoualJ lnjund ID Seplember
wben bla ~ycle 1~ a
burro ca a roed at nlabt Mar tbe
c..t.'1 .ufteld, tM lf•YJ .....
mnt tald, addlq t.bat a number
of eollWonl betwen burrot IDd
aut01 bave alto occurred on
ltate and eouDty roadt on tbe
C...ter'• perimeter.
The burroe, de1cendanta of
animal• turned looH by
charcoal minen, ~·•••• tbe
de1ert tbroulb tMlr for8'lnc,
the NaVJ tald. No native burrOI
exist in North America.
Wild burros have posed an in-
creasing problem to western
U.S. desert areas in recent
years. Hundreds or burros were
helicoptered out of Grand Can·
von late last year in a well·
publicized relocation campaign.
The Navy also had about 450
wild goats· taken off San
Clemente Island last year
because they endangered other
species on the island just off the
Southern CallfQ1'1lia coast.
The Navy, which owns the
Island, originally bad intended
to shoot those animals as well,
but the Fund for Animals suc-
ceeded ln getting a federal judge
to st.op the shootings. Ultimately
190 of the 212 goats died on a
mainland ranch near San Diego
from diseue, malnutrition and
Atress, veterinarians said.
The Fund group protested the
China Lake shootings today.
Robher8 nabbed
VACAVILLE (AP) -Two
men were in police cUJtody alter
they held 15 people at gunpoint
during the robbery of a coffee
shop. The men gave up without a
strugsJe about 30 minutes later,
r.olice said, and the cash
nvolved was recovered.
Lewis said the stretch on Coast
Highway where the trouble start-
ed is the only area in Newport not
served by double sewage lines. He
said because of shortage of funds,
a second "backup" line has not
been instaJled.
Re pair of the sewage line cost
the sanJtation district roughly
$100,000 and was completed Sun-
day.
Mike Wehner, a county water
quality supervisor, said the beach
from the Balboa Pier south to
Scotch.man's Cove likely will be
closed tothe publidor a week.
"It's hard to tell how bad it
really is," he explained. "The
beaches will be cleaned up pretty
quickly simply by the current.
But the harbor is slower to be
flushed and as the stuff leaves the
harbor, It will alfect the
beaches."
Health officials said bacteria
In raw sewage normally dis·
solves quickly when it comes in-
to contact with ocean water. But
human exposure to the con-
taminated water, they wamed,
can result in several kinds ol ln-
fecUon.
The untreated sewage waa in
liquid form.
The quarantlne, tbougb, bad
little effect on boaters who
<See SEWAGE, Pase AJ)
Dog shOots •••
Pet drop• ~aded putol
MONROE,,IOcb. (AP)-A man wu 1bot lD1't arm after bla
GermantlMpberddoc picked upa 111D1Dlta tMtll ucl u...,..... ·~pollee......,todQ.
lobn Calbert, 40, bad been tralnlnl bil doc J a"'8 to attack and
dltarmbaudln,pollce1ald.
Callmtplaced• &oadtd .22-callberpiatoloa a couch udJant.t pteked •&lie napoe la bla Mella, pollee olfteer Du JUeUrdl ... ported.
leftial wttw .. , IDcJuclat Calbst11 fatber, ........ clllldr9, wateW u .UM doc....,.. tM .-, e.-., tt toftn a
bedl«tUtllltCalbertln I.Mana, tieUrd..W.
Calbert WM la fair eondltioalD MettJ ROQttaJ, llcbardl 1.W. '
oattr f'!Me *" .._ SIGN TELLS STORY OF HUGE SEWAGE SPILL IN NEWPORT
50,000 hthera couldn't go near weter Sundey
Blames himself
Joking Judy dies
in electric chair
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (AP)
-Joking with guards and
blaming himself for his fate,
24-year-old Steven T. Judy went
willingly to hi s death In
Indiana's black oak electric
chair today for murderin1 a
mother and her three small
children nearly two-years ago.
"J don't bold no grudges. This
is my doing, SOl'TY it happened,"
were the last words of the blond,
blue-eyed murderer before two
powerful surges of electricity
wracked bis body and be was
pronounced dead.
"ae WU very relaxed, I don't thin it hurt," said his foster
fatb r, Robert R. Carr. "When It
bit him, be flinched. Then you
could see movement in bis
fln1en."
Judy, wbo resisted appeals,
11yin1 be preferred death to life
in prilon, became the fourth
perlOll executed in this country
since the U.S. Supreme Court
revived \JM death pentlty in
1178. 811 WM tbe ftnt execution
in 20 Jeart la 1Ddlana'1 electric
cbair, made from wood that
oace Ml'ftd u a 1allow1.
Department ot Corrections
1poknmu Tom Hanlon Hid
Jud1 wu "Yery calm" and
walked U.. llx pacn ftom b1a
bold.lnl cell 'to UM chair "very
qulet11" and u.na11i1ted Jut alter~t. can:Ni that before lud)'
w11 t_.en to tbe cbalr1 be
reeel* a ftDal pbcJDe call ...,...
a 1lrl la Tea11 ••m•d .., ..... , •• He &MD uked fw
"pbotol of bl1 aew laalrcut" .,...,. ... bed bM8 ...... to
malle riM»m fw an •JedroM,
wblcb WM IOILked in Mlt brlDe
to mak• It more CODCludive.
·'They sent for a photographer
and took the pictures he
wanted," Carr added.
Attorney Steven L. Harris,
who witnessed the execution
from behind a glass partition
along with Carr and state
officials said that as Judy
walked to the chair, he pointed
to where bla trouser had been
cut so another electrode couJd be
attached to his leg, and quipped:
"I'm going to send the state of
Indiana a bUI for $15."
Just before be was strapped
Into the chair and blindfolded,
Hanlon said, Judy took off his
wristwatch and asked that it be
1iveo to a fellow death row
<See JUDY, Pate AJ>
DRAIGf CUil IUTHll
Fair through Tueaday.
Lows tonltbt 48 alon1 the
coast, 54 Inland. Hilb•
'Tuesday 87 to mid 70..
111111 llllY
TM~.._.for UC lrWw appor_,. .. ooer
u a fNd lo U,. N 11' Ml MC
,,.... /orUtcontMQ. ,,.. 8J.
11111 =:.::._... Cl t=...~ a ~ .. ~If
c........ :: e:::·~ ~l irl !It:= ~ M .... •• 8 ..... !'-..
.-
YOUNG INDIANA VICTIMS OF ELECT'ROCUTED ITEWN JUDY
Ch••tHn c"hlldren Mlety, 5; Martl. 2; Steven, 4, ... In with their mother
I
...............
a, ~&11 DOUGAN ...... NII .....
The Wrd man to leave b1I
footprinta on the moon b .. pre.
dlcted that, becauae of cuta ln the apace proaram, lt wlll not be
untU the next century before
somebody m ak es that trlp
ataln.
Charles "Pete" Conrad, com·
m a nder of the Apollo 12
spacecraft, described as short·
sighted President Reaaan'a ex·
pected cut of 25 percent in tbe
National Aeronautics and Space
AdminlatraUon research budaet
durint a visit Sunday lo Hunt·
inaton Beach where he appeared
on K OCE ·TV 's pleda e
marathon.
1ot to keep one eye on tbe
atart, •• be aald.
ff• exprested bope that the
"scores" ol citizens groupa that
have been formed to support tbe
apace procram would make a
difference.
"They won't make an impact
In terms of dlreet fundJng," said
Scbwelckart. "But they will
make an impact politically lf
they do their homework and
perslst."
Disnegla11d firsf
Conrad was joined by Russell
Schweickarl , another former
astronaut now s er ving a s
chairman of Gov. J erry Brown's
energy commJsslon.
Two remain jailed
in fatal stabbing
..
JUDY ELECTROCUTED • • •
inmate who was his c losest
friend.
Then Judy was strapped in,
the guards backed away, "there
was a pa us e for a bo ut 10
s e co nd s, a nd h e w as
electrocuted." Harris s aid .
Hanlon s aid two surges of
electr icity were sent through
Judy 's body first a chacge of
2.300 volts for 10 seconds. then a
c harge of 500 volts for 20
seconds. State law calls fo r Warden
Jack Duc kwo rth to pull the
switch t hat triggers the lethal
current . but· Hanlon refu sed to
confirm who h a d done it
Re porters. in accordance with
Indiana law. were kept far from
the death scene 1n another part
of the prison
Hanlon said Judy's body was
released to the county coroper.
Judy's foster mother, Mary
Carr, said Judy would be buried
Thursday.
Judy was abandoned by his
parents and, at the age of 13,
was confined to Central State
Hospital following sexu al
attacks on women. Within two
years . he was released on
"convalescent leave" to tt,P
Carrs, who be'came his foster
parents.
By 1979, Judy was well-known
to Indiana authorities as a
troublemaker and was arrested
one day after the bodies of the
mother and her three children
were found.
MURDERED MOTHER
Terry Lee ChHteen
Impasse in Salvador
Leftists regroup, attacks ineffective
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador
1AP1 More men. arms and
money are on their way to El
Sa l va d or fr o m a U .S .
administration that voices fears
the ti ny Central American nation
could be the rirst to topple in a new
supe rpQwer game of dominoes.
But there is little si'o that leftist guerrillas will seize con·
trol, despite continued fighting
between the insurgents and gov-
ernment forces.
Tbey have failed to capture any
major chunk of te rritory, and
former U.S. Ambassador Robert
White says they are a "broken
and declinin~ lot.·'
s tand i n this most densely
populated, with 5 million people,
nation of Central America. a
c ou ntr y the size o f
Massachusetts, with expansive
black and white said Pacific
beaches, lush mountainsides and
torrid jungles.
His decision. however . is
NEWS ANALYSIS
questioned by those who believe
that the United States, as it did in
Vietnam, may be choosing the
wrong friend, the wrong foe and
the wrong battleground.
"El Salvador would be a perfect
base for the Soviet Union to
launch its drive to make all ol
Central America its own," says a
W estem diplomat here ·'Costa Rica, Honduras,
Guatemala and Mexico are
watching what is happening here.
They know they mi~ht be next."
the diplomat said, asking to
remain anonymous .
White, ambassador here in tbe
last year of the Carter
admi n istration , told a
congressional committee,
however, "The Salvadoran
government is perfecUy able to
handle the situation itself.
"T here is no possibility of
leftists taklng over in El Salvador
in a six-month period if we don't
send one piece of equipment," he
said.
There are indications the ten
may be ready to talk peace.
Guillermo Manue l Ungo ,
le ade r of the Democratic
R e vo lutionary Fr o nt, an
umbrella political group for the
leftists, said recently he was
willing to accept mediation.
Duarte, too, said he would talk.
A m ajo r o ff e n s ive i n
mid-January resulted in the brief
seizure of a provincial capital,
San Francisco Gotera, 65 miles
east of the capital. But a week
later, President Jose Napoleon
Duarte declared the offensive
over and said , "There is nothing
more they can do with their
arms ."
The guerrallas have conceded
they are regrouping.
Ji',... Pllfl*' A I
Their calls for mass uprisings
and strikes have been largely
ineffective. Their attacks now are
isolated actions tinged with tbe
same kind of terrorism that has
been attributed to El Salvador's
f.ar right.
SEWAGE HAL TED. • •
A greater threat to the regime,
according to some. may come
from rightists in the Salvadoran,
military, which is well·armed
aod indisposed to tolerate a mid·
dle·of·tbe-road government.
The Reagan administration is
adding $25 million to the SlO
million worth of arms already
shipped to El Salvador 's military,
and 20 U.S. military advisers are
being assigned to the force of 34
already here.
El Salvador "is a textbook case
of indirect armed aggression by
Com moni st powe r s t hrough
Cuba," says an official State
Department report, which claims
the Soviet Union and its allies are
funneling arms to the leftist
guerrillas.
President Reagan apparently
has decided to take some form of
Jewelry stolen
Burglars stole an estimated
$1,500 worth of jewelry. Swlday
from an apartment in the 17800
block of J ordan Avenue in
Irvine.
ca me out by the hundreds on
Sunday.
The broken line was dis·
covered Saturday morning by cl·
ty water department workers
who noticed surface seepage. It
was several hours later that
sanitation officials isolated the
reptured stretch o(pipellne.
All waste water, on tbe street
surface and in the pipe, was
diverted s outh on Coas t
Highway to the bay at the
hiizhway bridge cross
The sewer line, which serves
50,000 residences in the Newport
area, carries close to 4 million
gallons of sewage a day from
Newport to a treatment plant on Brookhurst Street in Huntington
Beach.
Some sewage seeped onto the
Balboa Bay Club parking lot
before the now was diverted to
the bay.
County health officials said
today's testing should provide
answers on whether the spHI
could be of harm to fish or other
organunns in .th.e JJacbor. or im·
mediate coasUine.
Sanitation officia ls buan
pouring chlorine into the sewage
late Saturday in an attempt to
reduce the danger of harmful
bacteria entering the Newport
Harbor.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHl!hd lldYefdelng l'14/.......,.
All other depertment• M2-Gl1
Thomae P Hatev l'l*lllw
Robert N. Weed ~
M. Thom11 Keevll ~
Thom .. A. Murphlne ..........
?*':f:.;~
~lchulman
~a:=..een
~:...,Goddard, Jr.
MAIN OFFICE
»0 WHI .. , SC., C.i. INN, C.A.
!Mii eeld,....: 9o• 1MO, c.i. -.., CA. ....
The line break, which dumped
sewage into the bay for more
than 24 hours. had no effect on
use of domestic or commercial
restrooms.
* * * Sewage spill
less serious
3 years ago
The spill of 6 million gallons o.
r a w s ewage into Newport
Harbor marks the second time
in three years the sewer line
beneath Coast Highway has rup-
tured.
The spill In January 1978, was
not as serious, sanitation of·
ficials say, because there was a
"backup" line at the break
point. In the earlier Incident, the line
under the southbound lanes of
Coast Highway In front of the
Boy Scout Sea Base broke.
Sewage seeped onto Coast
Highway and flowed into the
nearby harbor.
Although Coast Highwaf was
closed for t hree hours and
Newport beaches closed to
bathers for days, sanitation of·
flclals say the big difference in
Saturday's spill was the lack of
a backup line.
The Sea Base ls less t.b8h a
mile north ot the Balboa Bay·
Club, the polnt where the recent
Une break occurred.
But, u aanltat.lon otflcla.la ex·
plain it, the area adjacent to the
Sea Bue ls equipped with two
Unea. When the 1978 break oc·
curred, the now or aew•ae wu
diverted to the second line.
The brHk ln front of the
Balboa Bay Club waa different.
Sanllat.lon olftclals 11y tMN lt
only oae line. And bffau.. ol Ua•t, u.e now o1 .... ,.pound
lnto Lbe barbor UDUl tMt <me
lln• eould be ....... ,....
•
"I think ll wtll be a long Ume
before anybody eoes back to the
moon," sald Conrad. He said
former President John F. Ken·
nedy's push to land a man on the
moon was motivated by "the
politics of putting the nation
back together. In my opinlon,
because It was politica lly
founded it's easily politically
killed.
''I think there is a lot of Cat in
the federal program," he added,
"but not in the space program."
Conrad, now senior vice·
pres ident for mar keting for
McDoMell Douglas, noted that
the 1979 NASA budget was $4
billion while defense received
$115 billion and the department
of Hea lth , Educ ati on a nd
Welfare was budgeted at S180
bi Ill on.
"So me whe re we got our
priorities screwed up." he said
"You can't tell m e that. 1f you'd
taken just <another > $4 billion of
that and ~iveo it to NASA, the
HEW would have even missed it. ..
Conrad blamed the three-year
delay in launching America's
space shuttle on lack of funds.
"They have done their absolute
best with what they have," he
said. "They aren't about to let
that thing go before it is ready."
He attributed part of the prob·
lem on the fact Americans
abandoned their love affair with
tbe space program once the ex·
citemeot of landing on the moon
subsided.
"That sort of (excitement)
sho uldn't b e t here ," s aid
Conrad. "Americans s eem to
have a short attention s pan.
They tend to move on to other
things."
Conrad said people should pay
attention to "the userul things
that it <t he spat•e program >
could do ins tead of the spec
tocular "
Schwe1ckart accus ed the
Reagan Administra tion of "a
lack of vision.
".It's looking at your navel and
not understanding that you've
Vaccination
clinic for dogs
An anti·rabies vaccination
clinic is scheduled Tuesday night
in Newport Beach.
Vaccinations will cost $2.50 per
dog and will be administered
from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Santa
Barbara Fire Station, 872 Santa
Barbara Drive, Newport Beach.
By DAVID K UTZMANN
Ol IM Oallr ...... Staff
Anaheim police inves tigators
say they will s eek formal
murder complaints Tuesday
against two San Diego residents
being held as s uspects in Dis·
neyland's first slaying.
Police Sgt. Del Wade s aid to-
day that while his investigation
is still continuing, he will ask the
Orange County District Al·
torney's office to press charges
against James 0 . Driscoll, 28,
and Julie Holdener. 25,
Each is being held in lieu of
$250.000 bail , Driscoll at
Anahe im City Jail and Miss
Holdener at Orange County J ail.
The two were arrested Satur·
day night a fter Mel C. Yorba.
18 , or K1vers 1de. was tatally
stabbed in the Tom orrowland
area of the sprawling amuse·
ment park.
Wade said investigators now
"have a n idea" of wbat the
motive may have been." but he
declined to elaborate.
O ffi cers said Yo rba was
knifed after apparently becom
ing involved in . an argument
with Driscoll and Miss Holdener
near the s ubmarine ride ticket
booth in Tomorrowland.
Wade said witnesses saw the
knifing. Miss Holde ne r was
taken into custody by park
security personnel.
Driscoll was later taken into
c ustody b y officers wh o
N-M clerk
Anderson's
rites slated
Fun e ral se r vices a r e
scheduled Tuesday at 10 a.m. for
.Jo Ann Anderson, 58, who died
Friday at her Costa Mesa home.
Mrs. Anderson worked the las t
10 years as a senior account
clerk for the Newport·Mesa
Unified School District.
Se rvices are scheduled at the
First United Methodis t Church
of Cos ta Mesa, with pas tor
Charles D. Clark officiating.
Graveside services will be
T hursday in Butler. Mo., where
Mrs. Anderson was born.
She is survived by husband
Marvin L. Anderson of Costa
Mesa: a son. Jeffrey. of Hunt·
ington Beach: a daughter. Kristi
Joy Frito of Lake Tahoe; two
gr:andchildren; three brothers
and one sister.
The family suggests contribu-
tions to the American Cancer
Society.
The Casual Side of Rugby
100% cotton rugby shortss nd pants
available an colOl's of red white.
khaki. sky blue navy. and gold
Also. lhe ClaSSIC bar stnpe, rugb't Shirt,
1n a poly/cotton blend
•
•
searched the park and found
him hiding in bushe" in the Ad·
ventureland area.
I
Wade s aid it didn't appear
Yorba knew hi s alleged as -·
sailants. The Riverside man bad
gone to the park with friends.
The p ark was being used
Saturday night by a hos t to a
private party by Rohr Corp. of
San Diego and Riverside.
. However, ?ffi cers said they
dad not know 1f Yorba or DriscoJI
and Miss Ho l de n e r we r e
employees of the firm which
s pecializes in cons truction or
tra nsportation equipment
Yorba wa s taken by Di s -
neyland ambulance to P alm
Ha rbor Hospital in Garden
CT r o ve, where h e wa s pro-
nounced dead
A Disneyland spokesman saJd
Yorba's slaying was the first in
the park's 26-year history About
six persons have died acc1den-
ta ll v an the amusement facility
Jury asks
• delay in
procedure
The Orange County Grand J ury
is asking to delay theselectionof a
successor to Human Ser vices
Agency Director Margaret Grier
until the jury releases a report on
the agency's performance.
The jury. in a letter to county
Board of Supervisors Chairman
Ra lph Clark, sa id the HSA report
will be available by May l.
"The jury believes that this
work is germane to your selection
process and can add pertinent
data to your decision making."
the letter said .
Miss Grier has announced her
retirement. effective March 31.
Under a time line approved by
s upervisors Wednes day . an
inte rim director will be named by
March 17. O n that date,
recruitment for a permanent
director will begin .
The jury said in its letter that
the HSA's "ability to deliver
mandated services within its
present structure" has been
under study since September and
that the information gathering
phase ofthe project is complete.
The HSR is a n umbrella
str ucture that administers more
than $200 million in health,
we lfare and soc ia l se rvices
programs. It employs about 2,800
p ersons and is the county 's
largestsuperagency.
AL'S GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
,.
.
CLOSING 971.41
Makin& planoe la one t.bl.ni. Ill= money • somethlnl elH aaain. A Cinctnnati· compaQ,
Baldwin·United, knows bow to do botb. lt found u..t
the way to make beautiful music lJ by makin1 mC>Qey
off money.
Baldwin bu one of the most preatilious names Ill
the musical field. Baldwin pianos rank atoo1 wUll
Stelnwaya (now part of CBS) as high.quality instn·
.menta, the kind
used by concert
pianists .
although the
company also
competes in the
lower end or the llllll
market with
'spinets priced
~ ·~ 1111•m;c~
under $2,000. Long based in Cincinnati, Baldwin also
mak'es pianos and organs in Greenwood, Miss .. a.t
Truman, Ark.
Baldwin is one of the oldest compan.ies in
America, with roots going back to Ul62. It's also u
old band at another keyboard: financing. Baldwin
was one of the first companies to get into sellin1 on
the instaUment plan. That was back in the 1880s, well
before the auto companies were in business and doine
the same thing to sell thetr products.
FOR MANY YEARS then Baldwin bas helped te
finance the inventories of its dealers and the
purchases of pianos by customers who couldn't afford
to pay the full price al one shot.
In the beginning such financing was a tool to
make it easier for people to ~uy your product. But ill
the inflation-prone times we're living in, finaacinc
has a way of taking on a life of its own. At least whll
you start to make as much money off the financin1 u
you do on the sale of your product, you begin to
wonder what business you're really in.
The people running Baldwin did begin to wonder
about that 15 years ago. And they decided that they
would be wise to expand the finance side of their
business. So they bought a savings and loan associa·
lion in Colorado. Then they bought an insurance com-
pany. And then they got into commercial banklnt bl
Colorado. They bought other insurance companies.
They got into mortgage ban.king. And they finally •
combined with United Corp .. an investment fund (in
effect a large pool of money), resulting in a name
change to Baldwin-United.
THE RESULT WAS A radical transformation of
this company from a little old piano maker to a
r diversified financial conglomerate whose forte u
"managing assets," a term that can be roughly
transh•ted as lrnowing how to make money off
money. Baldwin-United stiU makes pianos. It even owns
tbe German company that makes the famous Beeb·
stein pianos. But musical ins~ments are down to
about 10 percent of sales. This company calne l.Bto
the 19708 as a $SO-million-a-year business. It's new
doing $1 billion a year.
Two years ago Baldwin-United looked around its
nat.ive state, Ohio, and snared another company, To'
Value Enterprises of Dayton. This is a trading stamp
company that had been owned by the bit
supermarket chain, Kroger, also based in Cincinnati.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
'113.~ 801,000 .07,700 $3),600 •:M.SOO ll0.200 367,600
3'2,100
306.500 2'1,700 ~= 116,000
277,600 ?7',500
UPS AND DOWNS
. •;, " . ~ • 'h . '"' . ''-• I ., .. . ,.,., . '"' . " '""' + l't.
MnALS
c-es~s <•nt.1 • pouno, v.s -1-uons.
UH :M ceni. • pound
Zl11c •1'4 unts • ~. dellver•O.
Tl• $6.9917 Mata ls Wff• <Om~ll• Ill,
"'""''-1' untu "°"""· N. V Mnc11ry $3'11l.OO oer Ila,_,
l't•UllWft IMl.OO lroy oz .• N. Y.
SILVER
lynt.Aueclai.41'""•
$12.020 oer troy°""''· Hanoy t. H•nnM.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
l
I
Barbra miscast in .'All Night'
BJ &OBERT OSBO&N~ . ,... ..... ~---Tbere'• notbln& blatantly wron• with Uolvena1'1 •·A.LI Nltht Lon1" that anotber
Miiion U"OW>d the CHtinC table couldn't
ban remedlecl.
But that cuUnt faux pas -eollsttn1
Ba)'.bra se.r.taand u a cooing blonde sex-
Pot ~ la Lbe cblckle everyone on her
block la cbuing -makes this Leonard I Goldberg·Jerry Weintraub production,
1tarrlQ1 Gene Hackman, much more of a
curiosity item than the low-key llttle
Capraesque comedy It obviously set out to
be.
NOT THAT STREISAND isn't good,
within the seams of her ill·fittini role. She
tries. She also plays it straight, as a lead·
inl lady ralber than as a star (for the rec·
ord, th1s is the first time sbe bas taken
second billing in her 14-year,. 12-film
screen career, having replaced Lisa
Eichhorn early in production).
A'-LIU ... Tt.CNlle
Utlt-W .. ~.n •...•..... ~·~.W.,.,Wt!Mr .. Ol~ ..................... ,,,,,JMfl<_,.T,_. SCr~ ........................ W.O. -.CllWo
, ............ y .............................. l..dVW CtMr CAM. 0-"-it-. ...... Mrtl....,, ~ t..Mll, 09Mla ~IC ...... OllMon, Wllll.m OM!el-. HMll"-"
C:-11. Alftle Olf=THl'Y Kl•, 0Wttt ~. V-• WMtilll\. It 941M1-'M o.r.i1, TMWY ~ Ir.MT .... , Jim , ,ellltMlnt..,1.14'fYtUrr.
lt_.,.tlfM-•ml-• • MllAAll ..... 111 •
spends 2IO yean in mana1ement with a
large drug store coocem, only to be de·
moied to nJght mana1er of one of tht
company's all-nilht stores (thus the tlUe).
He gets little sympathy at home from wife
Diane Ladd and son Dennis Quaid, the lat·
ter a teen.ager with muacles everywhere,
especially between his ears.
to pref• aanler comed1 in their ftlma.
Jeao·Claude Tramont. maltln• bl• America dlredorial debut, bu added a
dfflded Preach navor, alded b)' Pbllip
Latbrap'a ~ cine191tocr1pby and a
ll1bt muale 1core compoaed by Jra
Newborn and IUebard Huard.
W .D. 1Uebter'1 1cree0,play bu many
merry momen\1, especiaJly when ln·
veaU11Unf Hacltman'a nJ1hts on duty at
the bil store, but it get.a unnecessarlfy
v11ue ln the lat~r development of rela·
tlonablpe and characters. Streisand, in-
itl ally painted as a bona.fide tootsie,
becomes quite straight as the reels roll
ahead (with little explanation> Just as
Quald's knuckleheaded character ls
abruptly dropped.
Watching the 'Birdfe' APWlr .. -
She bas also adopted a new look, drop·
pint the familiar Harpo Marx hairstyle
with a close-cut flaxen wig, and speaking
in a softer, lower, slower voice than usual.
It doesn't work, however , not for a frame,
since this is clearly a role geared for a
Valerie Perrine, Loni Anderson or Raquel
Welch, and decidedly outside the kind or
pasture in which Streisand functions best.
In theory. the story revolves around
Hackman as a good.natured schmoe who
HACIUIAN·s T&OVBLES have only
started. Ladd na111 because of hl1 new
lower-level job. The store is flUed with a
flaky staff and weirdo customers. On top
of that, be discovers his son ls having an
affair with Streisand, the wife of a distant
relative, Kevin Dobson, who's a fireman
too often out on call. In the process of at·
tempting to squelch the alfalr, Hackman
becomes entangled wltb Streisand himself,
and aJl hell breaks loose, Including a
divorce, a final confrontation with "the
establishment" and a <happy?) ending.
It all plays comfortably, although
perhaps a bit pedestrian for the majority
of today's hard-core moviegoers who seem
THE ACl'ING CAN'T be faulted in most
departments. Hackman is right on target
ln the focal role, Ladd is properly subdued
and delightful as the suffenns wife, and
Quaid is sensational in his early scenes as
Junior (so dense he refers to an uncle's
death as tbe.1 result of "brain bemor·
rboids"). Dobson. con&.idering the way bis
role is defined, is nih, as are William
Daniels, Vcrnee Watson, Steve Peterman,
Chris Mulkey and all the others.
The ftlm may make bucks because of
Streisand's name on the marquee, but it
will probably gain its greatest fame as a
prime example of bow not to cast a motion
picture.
Liza Minnelli (right) embraces Donald O'Connor while Cbita
Rivera gets a bug from her daughter, Lisa Mordante, backstage
after O'Connor and Miss Rivera opened in the Broadway produc·
tion of ''Bring Back Birdie," a sequel to "Bye Bye, Birdie," in
which Miss Rivera also starred.
Dolly's '9 to 5' rebounds to ~o. I
By The Associated Press
The following are Billboard's hot record hits
for this week as they appear in Billboard
magazine:
HOT SIN GLES
1. ''9 to 5" Doll y Parton (RCA)
2. "Keep on Loving You" REO Speedwagon
(Epic>
3. "Woman" J ohn Lennon <Gefren)
4. "The Best of Times" Styx ( A&M )
5. "I Love a Rainy Night" Eddie Rabbit
(Elektra)
6. "Crying" Don McLean (Millennium)
7. "Rapture" Blondie I Chrysalis>
TOPS IN POPS
8 . "The Winn e r
Takes it All " Abba
<Atlantic > 9 ... Hello Again"
Neil Diamond <Capitol)
10. "Celebration"
Kool & the Gang <De-Lite I
TOP LPS
1. "Hi Infidelity" R EO Speed wagon <Epic >
~UL NEWMAN in
foRT APACHE,
THE BRONX
~ ...... J~~.~~
EL TORO
RDWAll091ADOU8ACll '·8' ~880
ORANGE
CMI-
WESTMINSTER
UAWH119NITWllllALL -
COSTA MESA
U.A. 10\ITIICOAI T
ORANGE
ITAOIUMllNYRtlC
--
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
t
NINE
TO FIVE (PG)
' I ''THE JAZZ
_ SINGER" (PG) . . , ..... ..
I "FORT APACHE
THE BRONX" 1111
I "All NIGHT
LONG" (R)
t .,, ... '§)' I "FllNTASIA"
iio11 •
"ALTERED
STATES" <R>
6
"INCREDIBLE
SHRINKING WOMAN"
"THE NUDE BOMB"
-I .
I "THE DEVIL
& MAX DEVLIN"
"HERO AT LARGE" 1~1
"' -" ~ I "RAGING BULL" 1111
"FORT APACHE"
• • ..... ....,..r.;:, I "TRIBUTE"
··ORDINARY PEOPLE"
(II)
c......-.. ...... ' ( ...a. I "COAL MINER'S
DAUGHTER"
"SMOKEY II"
tt "AN9 WFutFi'
WAY YOU CAN"
"HONEYSUCKLE
2. "Paradise Theater" Styx (A&M )
3. ''The Jazz Singer" Neil Diamond (Capitol)
4. "Double Fantasy" John ~nnon & Yoko Ono
<Geffen) .s. "Zeoyatta Mondatla" The Police <A&M )
6. "Crim es of Passion" Pat Be natar <Chrysalis)
7. "Auloamerican" Blondie <Chrysalis>
8. "Greatest Hits" Kenny Rogers (Liberty>
9. ''Captured" Journey <Columbia)
10. "Celebrate" Kool & the Gang <De-Ute>
Redford film slated
TORONTO CAP) Robert Redford has signed
for the lead in a movie to be based loosely on the ex-
periences of the man who will produce it -Canadian
Robert Cooper.
Tentatively lilied "Off the Record," it will deal
with television's power and the Life or a broadcaster,
said Cooper, who for five years starred in the Cana·
dian Broadcasting Corp. television series "Om·
budsman."
YOU'RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE
THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH.
f JllllCillft ......... C.-.
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FANTASIA ,.. •1'1Ul90 ,, .•. ,....1:•·••·u•
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~---NOWPLAllNG~~
··-..... mil -8flstol Westbrook Stadium Dn¥t·ln
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FrMWrt•1 fMCIMef••,,_.,...f.._~.._OfAlll ]~~~l_~ol1~u~mon~~s1L._J AOAOG,.!.MES 1N1 879-9850 COAST TO COAST 1N 1
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