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1981-03-10 - Orange Coast Pilot
By DA V"ID KUTZMANN Olt•OallY ,...., .. ff A child murder case bullt almost entirely on scientific evidence complied by patbolOliaU and a blo-medlcal en1lneer has been detaUed ror an Oran1e County· Superior Court jury that must decide if the 2- year-oJd victim's stepfather is gullty of slayine the youngster . Convicted Prosecutor Paul Meyer W'led the six-man, six-woman panel Monday to convict Leland Roy Dellln1er on tbe ba4l1 or testimony he claim.a will show Jaclyn Zilles could not have died in an accldeutaJ fall as claimed by the defendant. Part or that evidence ls a life· like dummy which was used ln simulated falls. <See Sports, Page 81) ''The evidence tn this cue 1bow1murder," Meyer said. . Defense attorney Don Ronaldaon, however, said ln Im openiq 1tatement that DeUiQler, 30, of Oraqe, wu prepartn1 diD· ner when he "beard a thud" and found bis stepdauabter lyln1 mo- Uon 1 ess at the bottom of a stairway. Ronaldaon told jurors lb at Dell· • in CdM slaying I ) " A N ( I! ( () l 1 N • ' /\ l 11 ' ) H ,~ I I\ 2 ~ (; l N 1 s 1D1•r, wbo wanted to teaalJy ado~t the eblld, "cooperated with the pol1ce departm•t lD every way poalble" wbeo the death wu inveaU1atec1. Tbe cblld's death from head in· juries m May, 1179, wu ori1lnally labeled accidental by the cor- oner'a off\ce. But Meyer said Dr. Richard Fukumoto, patbolo1iat who ex· amlned Jaclyn, was bothered by the clttwmtanees ot the Inci- dent, includlna a lack of bruilea common to fafl victtm1. Thou&h be judged her death to be accidental, the prosecutor and Fukumoto continued to have doubta, and these feelings were reinforced by later toxicolotical reports which showed the presence or cocaine in tbe youn11ter's aU>macb. Jaclyn's body wa1 eventually exhumed and M eyer uld patholoeista discovered con- tualona on the child's spinal col'd -evidence sufficient to reopen lbecaae. The deputy district attorney said other apeciallats were called. including Los Angeles County <See CHILD, Pace A2) spro•ts· in Mesa (See Page FEATURES, Page CU • oast con tnes escape Reagan seeks cuts $48.5 billion budget trims asked WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi· dent Reagan, declaring, "the next steps are up to Congress," proposed $84.6 billion in spend- ing cuts for 1982 across the breadth or government today, sparing defense and little else from the chopping block. The $695.3 billion budaet for 1982 would leave a deficit of $45 billion. It contains newly an- nounced spending reductions of $13.8 million in more than 200 Danger remains areas, including veteran and JOb programs, water projects and housing. The budget includes Reagan's call for a three-year tax cut, but the overall theme of the spending document is s imple and dramatic : More guns a nd rel· atively less butter. As a result of the military in· creases and sharp cuts in social programs, the defense share or the feder al budget would rise Harbor pollution wastes warm sun BySTEVE MARBLE • OlllW O .. ly l'l ... Slalf Warm beach-visiting weather is settling In along the Orange Coast but beaches along the Newport Beach coastline will re· main orrnmlts for at Least another week following a massive sewage 1plll. Orange County health officials lllllil COAST WIATHIR Sunny and warm. Lowa t.oni1bt 48 at beaches, 56 inland. Highs Wednesday upper 80s along coaat, mid 70s to low 80ll inland. llllDf TDDIY A S~lh·Dal/ Aduntut college ii tM hub of Kccmc, Tuot, o 1mall town n•or DoUat. ~c ~. P~c Al. 11111 . .. 8 stress the contaminated water situation is even worse in the Newport Harbor. They predict the harbor waters will be cloeed lo bathers for two weeks. Six million gallona of liquid and solid sewage poured into the harbor Saturday and Sunday when a sewe~e beneath Pacific Coast High ay ln front of the BalboaBay lubruptured. Although the line was repaired Sunday afternoon, sanitation of- ficials say the condition or the sewer line between the Coast Highway bridge and the club re- mahu in queation. ''Some or that pipe,'' Sanitation District spokesman Ray Lewis told Newport councilmen Mon- day, "ls as thin u 1 sheet ol paper. We're doine a lot of pray- ing thesedaya." County health officials be1an' testing the polJdted water Kon· .day, bl said re.Dita woe't be knownunWlatetodaJ. Miki Weimer, a.-, water quality aupervllor, Nld baman contact with tbe eGlllta••uted water could be estremely danaerous. Healkl beeterta ln the (See 8EWAGS, .... AJ) . 12 men mieling N!W YORK (AP) -Cout Guard rescue crews were aearcbiftl lbark·inf•ted waters In t.be Benn\lda Triu1l• toda1 for 12 mte ltill mllllnl,~ an llraeU frelabter w..t DMI' Bermuda. The bod.111 ot ldDe llraell ullor'I were cliRovtred Monday, lncludl.nC two dtamem· bered bocllet Lbat were taken from the Jaws ol sbaru. from 24 percent in 1981 to Z1 per- cent next year and 38 percent by 1986. Payments to individuals, the chief means of federal help to Lbe poor and near-poor, would re- main roughly steady at about 48 percent. The social cuts are certain to provoke a battle in Congress. Reagan is seeking lo double his proposed reduction in welfare spending to more than $1 billion with a "workfare" requirement that he favored as governor of California. He wants to build 50,000 fewer units of public housing than be recommended just a month ago, and 85,000 fewer units than the 260,000 proposed by J immy Carter in January. On education, Reagan recom· mended a 2S percent cutback compared with 20 percent out- lined in bis February 18 budget message. His food stamp plan calls for ad- ditional cuts of $500 million to a total reduction of$2.3 billion. "The plan I outlined will st.op runaway inflation and revit.alize our economy if given a chance," Reagan declared in. a statement <See BUDGET, Pase AZ> NB 'burglar' turns out to be lamp A Newport Beach police SWAT team, alerted to a poaalble bur1lary in pro,....., cbaraed in the front door to • Cliff Drive home late Sunday only to d1Kover the culprit wu a lhtna room lamp wired to a timina 4evtc~. Police were summoned juat before mldnllht wbn a netatabor ... a li&bt 10 Oil in tbe 1712 Clift Drive residence. Sb• told o«ftcen tbe homeowner wu away on vacation. Wben police arrived, uplabaed Lt. Jim &pean, UM Uabt went olf, ral1tn1 .-plcloaa tbat someone waalnslde. Speansald tbeSWAT.tHIDWU called and after futile attempta to coaxoutthe"burllar" by Ullala bullborn, the order WU liven to eetertbehoule. Tbat'1 wben tb• lamp wu .,..... Polle. Mid UM .aeadon· lAI bomeownert ....,..tlJ .... Ml up tbe lamp t.o diMourall burl) an. "lo," Spears ..W ••we elolld up UM froDt door ud qulet.IJ left the a ..... bonood." ,., ........ LADY DIANA WOWI 'Ill AT LONDON CHARITY aALL llr•ple .. gown, ..... 91ellf0w1, 1Ntn1• wh,...• Lady Diana's dress stuns onlookers LONDON (AP) -LadJ. Diana Spencer •tunned onlookers 1'lth a alamorom ouUlt who abe tuned oul for her rtnt public enaa•ement wltb Prlaee Cbarl•, whom lbe la to •al'l'Y In Jul1. Her 1traptet1 blaoll taff«a evealq •own brou1lat 1upe from u ellte audl•M at a claarttf... - A erowd of about * c..._.. ........ and .... .,,.... ........ :%., *"• up iD U.. rm to • ... Hall ID tM Q'1 of r.... ftundaJ dlltrlet. -.,....,..... were wbtaUM u I.be ~•-r•ar·old earl'• ••••"er· Breakout by trio thwarted A San Clemente man facing a death penalty determinatioo in the murder of a Corona del Mar real estate agent was among three men alleged to have at· te mpted an escape today rrom Orange County Jail. Orange County Sheriff's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said the trio broke through a vent grate in an eight·man cell about 3:30 a .m . and were heading through a plumbing conduit to the roofofthe four-story jail building when deputies heard noises. Hart said It was not yet known how the three men would have left the roof had they made it that far. Investigation is continuing. Hart identified one of the three as John Alan Keith, 23, of San Clemente, convicted recently in the murder of Ruben Martinez, 40, ofCorona del Mar. Keith was scheduled today to appear in Orange County Superior Court for a hearing to de- termine if be should receive the death penalty for his role in the 1978slaytng. The others involved in the al· tempted escape were idenWled u Mark Albert Foster, facln1 murder and robbery charsea, and Robert Errol Stoner, faclnt rob- bery and burelary char1ea. The three men were alDOlll elght bouaed ln the cell on the fourth noorofthe jail. Banks cut • pnme rate NEW YORK CAP) - K-1or banks in New Y orlt and Cbicaao toda1 cut their prime Modlna rate. by oae-balf percentaa• point to 11 perceat, •· dercuttlnl the bulk ot th• banltlna lndUlt.rf. ClUbank, Ute naUOD'I 1econd·lar1••t co•· merclal bank. ltd Uae move bJ trlmmlaa lta pt1m1 rate from UM 18.1 pereent l•••I tbat laad prenllecl .._Uoewtdt. l"tnt Naticul .... of Clllcaao, nabd Ida ta.._ D a Uoaal11. 4ulekl' matdted CIUbaM. Ull No. • ClMlldeal .... ,....... ault. ao .. •••lier, ,... lloeal bMlra al8o dfopp•• UMtr rMM llO II ps11M APWI ....... Otln-• laelp Wearing the beret and T· s hirt of the Guardian Angels, Lisa Evers ad- dresses a group of the pro- tective organization in New York at a memorial service for black children s lain in Atlanta. She heads a 10· member delegation pledged to go to the Georgia capital and off er help. plDchlna tDcksent tdciertns the violent cbein ol ev.U llu not beM verified. .. ..,, can't show tbaoecurred, '' Wadeaid. Some witnetaes inckatecl &hat a yo_, DWl bad pinched oneolt.be 1uapffta, Julie HoldeDer1 IS, ot SU Die10, on tbe buttocu. and this may have led to tbe alleged attack by the other suspect, JameaO'Driacoll. Both O'Drlscoll and Mill Holdener were expected to be formally charged with mW'det~ day by the Orange County Dlltrict Attorney's offtce. Each is being held in Ueu ol $250,000 bail, O'Driscoll at Anaheim City Jail and Miss Holdener al Orange County Jail. Wade said both suspects have refused to talk with police in· vestlgators. The slaying occurred near the submarine ride ticket booth in the Tomorrowland area. Yor ba, who apparently did not know bis U · sailants, was taken to Palm Har bor Hospital in Garden Grove, where he was pronounced dead. The stabbing occurred at about 10 p.m. while the park was filled with guests of the Rohr Corpora- tion or San Diego. An estimated 10,000 people were in the park that night. Both O' Driscolf and Miss Holdener are lis ted as un· employed. Wade said it is un· known what connection they had to Rohr. O'Driscoll was arrested by police who found him hiding in bushes in the areas or Adven· tureland. Miss Holdener was taken into custody by park securi. ty personnel at the scene of the stabbing. Wade said a folding knife which police think could be the murder weapon was found in a park moat. The weapon is now being ex· amined by the Orange County Sheriff's crime lab. Teen killer says devil forced her FITCHBURG, Mass. (AP) - A man who a llegedly called himself the "son of Satan" or- dered a teen-ager to slit the throat of her lesbian lover, her roommate in a prostitution ring, the young woman bas testified. ··I believe I w~ possessed by Satan when I killed Karen," said Robin Murphy, 18, of Fall River in testimony Monday at the t.riai of Carl H. Drew, charged in the death of Karen Marsden. 19, of Fall River. Miss Murphy pleaded guilty to second-degr ee murder and Spousal rape ruling upheld BOSTON (AP> The state Sl;lpreme Court. ruling on the fir st case in which Massachusetts' rape statute was applied to a married couple, has upheld the conviction of James K. Chretien for raping his estranged wife. The unanimous decision Mon· day held that ··a person who forces bis or her s pouse to engage in non-consentual in· tercourae is no longer free from criminal responsibility." Chretien had been sentenced to three to five years in state prison and three years' proba· lion for breaking into his wife's apartment Feb. 9, 1979, two months before their divorce was lo become final. Garwood ple ads JACKSONVILLE, N.C. <AP> -Convicted turncoat Robert Garwood has pleaded innocent tbrou1h his attorneys to two charges of sexually molesting a 7-year-old girl. The plea was made Monday. ORANGE COAST agreed to testify against Drew as part of a plea-bargain. "I did not want to ltiU her. I was ordered to s lit her throat after Drew broke her neck," said Miss Murphy, adding the motive for the s laying was to "offer up her soul to Satan." Miss Murphy testified Drew performed a "satanic ritual" on Miss Marsden by cutting an "X" into her chest while chanting in another language. Authorities contend Drew. whose murder trial is in its second week, ran a prostitution ring and styled himself as a "son ol Satan" to terrorize and control his women. Miss Murphy testified she at· tended Satanic meetings where believers huddled around skulls in candelit rooms. Drew, 216, of Fall River. also awaits trial on murder charges in the s laing or Doreen Levesque, a 17-year-old pro- stitulewbodied Oct.13, 1979. Prosecutor David Waxler al· leges Drew killed Miss Marsden on Feb. 8, 1980, because she had witnessed the slaying of Miss Levesque. "We drove into a wooded area of Westport," Miss Murphy testified. "and Drew said to Karen, 'Your time has come.' "We took Karen's clothes and he beat btt and broke her neck. Just before she died, Drew said, 'God can't help you now.• "Aner she was killed, Drew said the body will not be found," said Miss Murphy. Authorities sald thev have found only a skull fragment from Miss Marsden's body. Miss Marsden's death was one of three similar slayings in Bristol County between October 1979 and February 1980. Miss Murphy a lso testified against Andre 0 . Maltals, 44, of New Bedford, who was convicl· ed ln January id t.be slaying of Barbara Raposa, t he t hird Bristo! County victim. Dilly Pilat MAIN OF'fa ThomaS P. Heley ,_., Robert N. WMd ....... M. Thomll Keevll ..... ThomM A. Murph~ ............. etwe.H. Loot ...,.......,..1 .. e.rn-d Schulman a...llr Cerl CetatenMn ........... ~ Kennttt! M. GoOdard. Jr. ~ ...... Ja Welt 9er M., C-.. .... CA Mell ..... : .. ttil, C-.!!!'iCA.• r ... P-AJ BUDGET ••• t.bat outJIDed cut.I in more oearty IOO Pl'Oll"Ull from food 1tamP1 to 1paceesploratioe. Alao, tteacan would ellmJnate le«ial HrVtce aulatance to the poor. abarply reduce spadins for ea.u.m.ntaJ ud COU\UDer proteeUoa and pare tbe buctaet of the Equal Employment Op- portunltyCommlulon. ''These are unprecedented cuts to meet an unprec~ented attua- tlon," tbe president aa!d u he signed tbe package in the Rose Garden. "They mark the end of an old era and the beginning of a new one." Ump blimp repaired In a revamped version of his 1982 spendlns plans, the president said be ls prepared to recommend still deeper spending cuts if necessary to keep federal spend- ing from rislns faster. Jn relaying hi~ plan to Congress, Reagan pointedly reminded lawmakers and special Interest groups that he fell he was acting on a "man- date for change" delivered by the voters lastfall. Ever wonder what the Goodyear Blimp looks like with the air let out of it? Something like this (top) after a win dstorm deflated one of the company's four dirigibles last week. Below, the gon- dola rests upside down in a hangar at Tustin's MCAS <H> helicopter base where the problem is being resolved. ·'There is nothing more impor· tant than putting America's economic house in order. The next sl~ps are up to Congress," he said. Trio held in Irvine stabbing RIVERSIDE (AP> -Three men have been arrested for in· vestigation in the stabbing death of a 26 -year-old Irvine man whose body was found in an ex· plosion racked pickup in August. Riverside County sheriffs of- ficers said Glen S t e wart Godwin, 23, of Thousand Palms, Frank Soto Jr., 31, of Rancho Mirage, and Roy Dickey, 35, of Camp Verde. Ariz .. were expect· ed to to be arraigned Tuesday. They were being held on $350,000 bond each. Deputies said they were look· ing for one more suspect in the slaying. Sgt. Floyd Marlowe of the Blythe substation s aid Kim Robert LaValley apparently was murdered in his home. then his body was taken to the desert south of Desert Center, where his pickup was blown up with the body inside. Dickey reportedly was arrest· ed at his Camp Verde home Fri· day. Godwin was picked up Saturday at his parents' home in Thousand Oaks, and Soto was arrested in Phoenix early Sun- .day, officials said. Reagan submitted his revised 1982 budget in tandem with the de- tails on his propc»cl for a three- year cut in personal income lax rates of 10 percent a year. Top Republicans on Congress' tax· writing committees were to in· traduce the administration's tax plan today. Re~gan's budget makes deep cuts in the spending blueprint President Carter recommended before leaving office Fro• Pag• A l CHILD ... C~roner .Thomas Noguchi and b10-medical engineer Car ly Ward. Or. Ward built a special life-like dummy that was pushed down a stairway to determine where Jaclyn would have hit in an ac cidentaJ fall. She concluded the youngster. in the worst possible case. could not have suffered fatal head injuries in such a fall. RonaJdson disputed her find· ings. however, and said he will of. f~r evidence showing her calcula· lions are not accurate. The defense attorney said Dell· inger h ad picked up h i s stepdaughter from the baby sit· ter's the day of her death and had gone home. Fluor stock sinks Dickey and Soto waived ex- tradition. He said the defendant heard the fall a~ he fixed dinner. Dellinger, he said, gave the child mouth-to· mouth r esuscitatio n until paramedics arrived. • on earmngs report Boy, 7, kil/,ed by 'seesaw' The presence of significant amounts o f cocaine in the youngster 's system, Ronaldson said . was a mystery to his client. By F REDERICKSCHOEMEHL 0tt"9D•111 p11 .. s .. 11 Everything seemed rosy at the outset of the Fluor Corp.· s annual s hareholders meeting at a posh hotel not far from its Irvine world headquarters. After all. only six days before, the global engineering firm had announced that net earnings per s hare for the first quarter of fiscal 1981 were uo 24 percent compared to the same period in fi scal 1980. And stockholders were s miling because the company's work back log had jumped to $17 .l billion, a record amount, com- pared to $11.7 billion for the fi rst quarter last year. But the smiles some of them, anyway faded moments after the meeting was over Monday on the statement to reporters by J Robe rt Fluor. president and chairman of the board. that earn· ings in the second or third quarter of 1981 could decline. Perhaps by as much as 10 cents per share. Fluor said. Despite any "blip" in earnings -lo use Fluor's term net earn- ings for the current fi scal year are expected to be 15 to 20 percent higher than fiscal 1980, the com- pany's chief executive officer said. But the mere su~~estion quarterly earnings mfght drop forced 313.400 s hares of Fluor SEWAGE ••. sewage can produce eye, throat and intestinal infections. In severe cases, he said, it can cause hepatitis. Wehner said pinpointing when the water ln the harbor will be safe is difficult because "we've never h ad a s pill of t his magnitude ln a bay before." He added, though, that the sewage was diverted to a point in t.he bay where currents are strong, a fact, he said, that could help "nus~" outtheharbor. The sewer break, reportedly caused by natural corrosion oft.be 33·lncb pipe, caused pavement on Coast Hi1hway to buckle and crack. The problem WH compounded, explain• aanitatlon spokesman Lewl~~ ~. auae there is no backup line uona the half-mile stretch between the brldae and break pOlftt. stock to be sold in the two-hour period preceding the close oftrad· ing on the New York Stock Ex· change. The stock, which had hit a high of 523/• in the morning, sank to a low of 46~. and closed at47Yt!. Fluor closed off 37/a points on the day's trading. But at 10 today, it was up 1 1 11lo48~. A Fluor spokesman said the sell off was directly attributable to Fluor's "quantifying" the reduc- tion that may occur to earnings over the next two quarters. In his address to s hareholders -othered at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa, Fluor didn't PALMDALE CAP> -A 7. year-old boy was killed when the front end or a construction trailer landed on his head while he and seven friends were play- ing teeter-totter with it. sheriff's deputies said. Young Mark A. Kellison of Palmdale and his playmates were playing with the trailer in a vacant lot. said Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Clyde French. His playmates had jumped off the rear of the vehicle while Kellison was underneath the front end. It swung down, hitting him in the head, French said. The child died instantly. Sto r y r e futed LAS VEGAS <AP> -Tests conducted by fire officials in- dicate the deadly blaze at the Las Vegas Hilton couldn't have been sparked by a marijuana ciJ!arette. as a former busboy al· legedly told authorities. pros- ecutors say. Philip Bruce Cline,· who allegedly told authorities he accidentally started the hotel fir:e that killed eight people, was ordered Monday to stand trial on eight charges of murder and one count of arson. mention figures. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FIND OF THE WEEKl®--- Look over our four-leaf dover. All the luck vou can handle for St. Patrick''> Dav. Our rour·lear clover j.., a 24 ~a rat gold-plated replica of the Florl•ntanc origin.:il. You. can hang 1t over the door for luck or use it a5 a paperweight. It's inscribed on the back with "One leaf is for hope, and one i'i for faith, and one is for love, you know. And God put another an for luck." The luck starts with the price-$15.00. Ben11l1(11/ g1fls say. "/ lotic you." --------·---------~------- ,_ , Beauty (Debbie White ) grooms the becut ("The Gen-Genbacher") at Six Flags Over Georgia's $31h-million addition to amusement park. The 11-foot-tall Dgre is part of the Monster Planta- tion. Te levision newsman Ken .lone. has been in touch with his employers at KNXT and hopes to resolve al)egations by his bank that he cashed $200,000 worth of checks that bounced, a station official said. Jones was in the middle or a two.week vacation when Security Pacific Bank of- ri ci als accused him of defrauding the bank through a check·kiting scheme over a four·day period in February. Police have said they are investigating the matter. but no charges have b'een filed and no arrest warrant is· sued. Cleveland Orchestra Con· ductor Loria Mauel is now an officer In the F rench Legion of Honor. Maazel was awarded the honor on his 5lst birthday during ceremonies in Paris at the residence of U.S. Am· bassador to France Arthur Hartman. Actor Jack Klugman, TV's crusading medical examiner Quincy , con- verted last week's show theme into real life Monday when he testified before con- gressional committee to spur development of so- called "orphan drugs" for rare diseases. lllls alee ..... ••'"Iii WM 1tarnd 1D I Mriel ol ltallu·made ''HerculM~' after be-taa. named Ill . America and .lllr. Univ , ••Jt PUliai up tbe tole that mede C-.. &HS .... a ltar WU I mil· take. Alter a run of 118" Iii 1111 aortrayin1 muscle men, Reeves Hid be milbt have become known more u an actor lf he bacln 't tu.med down the atarrin1 role in 8erflo Leeae'a "Fistful of Doi ara." Reeves said be clldn 't think an Italian di~ tor could mate a auccesa(Ul American western from a Japanese samuraJ atory. Tbe role went to Eastwood, who went on to become a major star. Reeves retired In 1972 and bou1bt a 14·acre ranch on a highlands nortbeasl of San Diego where he lives with bis wife, AUae. Edward Cricks admits a newspaper ad designed to catch him a wife has opened a "can of worms." Now he's ready to go fishing. The 4S ·year -old s upermark e t produce mana1er placed an advertise· ment i n a Ba y Area newspaper, showing himself leaning casually against h.is sportacar. The copy said the want·ad suitor, who called himself "an honest man with a touch of class,'' wanted to give up the single life with a woman in her early 20s to mid-30s, fun . loving, curious and with a sense of humor. So rar. 135 women have responded. President Reagan and his wife, Nancy, attended a cello recital by Mstlalav Rostropovlcb, conductor of the National Sympho ny Orchestra, at the Bethesda, Md . h o m e of Leoaard SllverateiD, president of the orchestra. Other guests were Chief .laatlce and Mrs. Warren Barger; Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and h.is wife ; Sen. Paul Lnalt, R· Nev .. and his wife; Deputy Secretary of State Wllllam Clark and his wife; and Edwin Meese, Reagan's counselor, and his wife. Wrong victim reported in Irvine crash Portion of Newport gem loot recovered A Daily Pilot a rticle er · roneously reported on March 2 that a South Pasadena man was killed in a traffic accident that day on the San Diego Freeway near tbe Santa Ana Freeway interchange in Irvine. The actual victim, was Denrus Pavalonis, 37, of Lakewood, ac- cord i ng to the California Highway Patrol. He was killed whe n his car struck a car park ed o n the s ide or the freeway, the CHP said. The driver of the parked vehi· cle, Ernest Brooks, 47, of South Pasadena, wasn't injured. ac- cording to the CHP. He told of· fi cers that he parked his car because be was tired and want- ed to take a walk. In the initial article, Brooks was identified incorrectly as the man killed in the accident. The Daily Pilot regrets the error Panel to eye art colony's goals report Laguna Beach planning com· missioners wil~ review a citben· prepared report on 1oab for the Art Colony when they meet Wednesday In council chambers at 7 p.m. • The t»pa1e document, pre- pared by five citizen groups, out· Unes Issues and objectives In Laguna Beach that will be in· corporated In a planned revision of t.be dty'a General Plan. In addition, the commission Wednesday will review a sub- dJviaioo planned on a 97-acre parcel ln the Top of the World community that would take ac· ce11 otf Neatall Road. The developer proposes creat· inl 33 aiDCJe-family loll, alon1 with a 51 acre open apace area. FBI agents have recovered a small portion of $600,000 in jewelry snatched a year ago from a Newport Beach shop by two armed men. Although the two, one an ex- Santa Ana police captain, are ser ving prison terms for the rob- bery al Brett Walker Jewelers in Newport Ce nt er, th e whereabouts or most of the miss· ing loot rem ain a mystery. FBI agents notified Newport detectives last week they had re· covered eight pieces of jewelry, including a $16,000 watch, from an undisclosed source in Long Beach. Police say the items, worth $60,000, have been identified as jewelry stolen March 18. Frederick Hopper, 51, former pol ice captain, and Hugh Coughran, 45. entered guilty pleas on the robbery charges. Hopper was sentenced lo seven years. Coughran received a five- year term. The bandits had entered the s hop wearing wigs and sun· glasses. They told clerks they had a radio-controlled bomb. One ring worth an estimated $5, 700 was recovered several months later in Reno where Hopper's former wife was liv· ing, police said. I Final NB bay tour Saturday Final season tours of the upper Newport Bay Ecological' Reserve are scheduled Saturday. Groups will leave t.be comer of East Bluff and Back Bay drives, Newport Beach for the two-hour tour approlllmately every 15 minutes, beginnlna at 9 a.m. More information can be ob- tained by cootactlnc UM Depart· ment ol Fish and o... (211) 590·5126, or tbe J'rle• .. of Newport Bay <n•> ..,..... We're Listening ••• The Dally Pilot wants lo hear from ltl readers, what 1ou Uke · about the paper and what you don't like. We alao would lllce to publish your views on any subject in our lettera to the editor col· umn. Call the number below and your mes111e wUI bt recorded. Me11a1es will be tranacl'lbed Mveral Um .. dally and delivered to the desk of the a. pproprlate. ..sttor. Mailbox coatr1buUons will be delivered to the editorial pa1e editor. Mailbox contrtbutorl mutt include their name and telephone number for vertncatJon. M, clrculaUoa cat\., pleue. Tell ~ wttat't on your mind. TM number la In service J4 boUn a day, HVtn da11 a weelt. At the time of his arrest, Hop- per w as o n p a r ole from Terminal Island federal prison after serving time for a 1976 con· vlction of aiding a jail break and possession of s to le n bank money. While a member of the Santa Ana pol i ce f orce in the mid·l960s, Hopper was fired as the alleged ringleader of a group of John Birch Society members within the department. Hopper won back his job sever al months later but quit to attend law school. Early closing of Belmont Pier approved The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has ap- proved closing the Belmont Pier in Long Beach at 10 p.m. in an effort to curtail late night crime. Long Beach City Councilman Wallace Edgerton told com· missioner s Monday in Hunt- ington Beach that operating the pier from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. -in· stead of the present hours of 4 a .m . to midnight -might curtail violence on the structure. The Regional Coastal Com- mission ruled that the earlier cloain1 time wouldn't un · reasonably restrict public ac· cesstotheocean. · In the put year, there have been two reported aa11ulta with deadly wea])ODS between 10 p.m. and midnight on the pier, accord· lnl to Loni Beacbofliclala. The 950-foot·long pier bu a gate slammed shut at cloalnc time to prevent vandalism and to clean the structure. •'Our clty bu found that the police department cannot. any lonaer provide safety on t.be streets,'' Ed1erton a aid . "Thln11 are out of control." Toll tel~phone C9ll ban nixed PROVIDENCS, •R.J. <AP) - An •JlJlll"lment to •llmtaat. toll tel..._. calla ID R~ Island ~ • .=ic..::.~ by New fte mtpaa1 plan calltd for a oar, Hpertmeat ID Nortb Kl , when U.. l,'NO NII· dea •oald be able to cll1l u;-.. ID U.. l'tat. wttllout beiq eMrpd fot a loq elk· tance pboiM call. Orange Cout DAILY PfLOT/Tueeday, M8rCh 10, 1111 Rehnquist turns down por~o slwp A U.S. Supreme Court justice has denied owners of the Tallt of the Town bookstore permission to reopen their white stucco sex shop along Newport Beach's Mariners Mile. Justice William Rehnquist handed down the denial order. sealing, for the time at least, the fate of the controversial book and video center. .JOSH KAPLAN, attorney for bookstore owners, asked Rehn· quist last month for permission to reopen. The request to reopen -legally known as a writ of supersedeas -would have re· suited in a stay of an Orange County Superior Court order that the shop stay closed. The case of the Talk of the Town has now traveled the en· tire lenctb of the leeaJ ladder. The Pacific Coast Hiebway bookstore, set on fire by an arsonist at one point last year, opened last year, but did only 10 days of business before being closed down. IT REOPENED for three days last mooth when the California Supreme Court granted Kaplan's request for a writ. Less than a week after grantine the writ, though, the stale court re· versed itaelf and ordered the shop to close up. Owners remain hopeful of re· opening the shop and are pursu· ing a separate legal angle to do so. Kapla n has appealed the Orange County Superior Court ruling to the State Court of Ap· peals. If the court of appeals agrees to take up the case, the Talk of the Town may get another day in court. HB service held Bitterman project 'worth dying for' By PHIL SNEIDERMAN CM -Delly ,..... IUlf Slain bible translator Chester Bitterman was punuine a 1oaJ "worth dying for," and his puslng will spur a new flood of recruits , into intem~tional religious work, George Cowan, president of Wycliffe Bible Translators, Inc., declared. . Cowan addressed about 200 people attending a memorial service for Bitterman al Wycliffe's Hunlioeton Beach bead· quarters Monday. · BITIERMAN HAD BEEN working for Wycliffe in Colombia for two years, when he was kidnapped Jan. 19 by the M·l9 guemlla group, which claimed WycWfe and a sister organization are a front for the ClA. The Bible·lranslating organization refused the terrorists' de· mand that it leave the country, and Bitterman was shot to death early Saturday. Wycliffe president Cowan dismissed the alleged CIA tie as "pure fabrication," and said bis organization's only goal is to make the Bible available to primitive cultures around the world. ''We believe we should press into areas where the gospel has not gone before," he said. "We believe this is a eoal worth living for. We believe no greater lift can be eiven. "AND AS SOMETHING worth living for, it's also worth dying for." Cowan said the violence done to Bitterman underlines the need to spread biblical teachings. "Every time we have a loss of this type, there's been a tremendous reaction," the Wycliffe official said. "This kind of thing seems to challenge t.be best in a certain kind of people." Cowan repeated the organization's vow not to remove its 200 representatives from Colombia until the Bible translating proj- ect in that nation is completed. COWAN SAID WYCLIFFE has lost international translators before. He said three adult workers and a translator's child were slain while on assignment in Vietnam. "We see this as one of the risks we all take in doing our job," he said. . During the memorial service, Sara Petty, Bitterm.an's teacher at Columbia Bible College, observed, "He knew what 1t would cost to stand by his convictions, and he paid a price." OTHER SPEAKERS RECALLED Bitterman's "zest for life." "I think his delight in livin1 was contagious," said Chuck Sheldon, a former classmate. "He was a joy to be with." Bitterman, a native of Lancaster, Pa., leaves his wife and two daughters. SURPRISID7· · We've been doq IMt to peoplie lately with our ladies department. Come In Ind• our new spring collection, including Lady Norman, Lady'Ihonwon and J.C. HOok. We think Y0\111 be plemntly ~. .. • i GAIOLINS ALLEY DSPT. -OM Of &lie_.. WwTe talea lo come aloal ov co ..... • la r..-U... au. bMe tbe "...CAUoeal" o•me:=..., •-~ tM Hlllll· iqtoD 8eacb P'lre De to Uft I • •• operators from tbemH VII. Tlaat'I n,ht. All ol Ulla IW'f aced Just tbe other day after toe• tuollM cl.IM cloee to 1urfactDc lD Huatinp. up ...., UM corner ot Edlnaer A venue and Sprinlda1e SVeet. Tbe fuel leaked toto an under1round electrical vault and Utgered a blackout in the re· · ~ llC>D. L,at.er, it waa de· 4 • termlned that between . ~ 30 and 40,00011aJJon1 of ~ rJ:kl~~~po'fat~~D~ JOI llRPllll ,~ 1 dercround storage · .• tanks ol a nearby service station and then seeped into the electrical vault. . crrv FIRE OFFICIAlS were in wonderment that they didn't find out about the problem in a more ex.Ploelve manner. Traced to the sub-surface tanks of a nearby 1as Sta· lion, the operator told fire officials be was unaware that he'd suffered any leakage, much less 40,000 gallons of loss. "This caae is almost beyond the realm or reason," commented Huntington Fire Chief Ray Piccard. The station operator, however, did complain that be hadn't been making much money recently. To the rescue 'Ftltla9 Jaoa.e' Retarded bey kept prisoner DENVER (AP) -Mark Shupe, a 14·year-old retarded boy, was kept virtually a prisoner in h1a home . Neiabbon saw him o.nly rarely (n the backyard, when ~bey otten beard his "awful , nerve· wracking sounds" of crying. Mark waa removed from the custody or biB parents, George and Arlene Shupe, after bis 12· year-old sister. Dionne. called aatborities. What police found in the home in a middle·class east Denver neighborhood left one officer, be said, "petrified." Authorities said encrusted dirt, human feces and garbage were heaped every- where. ON A COUCH, officers found Mrs . Shupe's mother, 69-year- old Sara Klausner. She has since died or cancer in a hospital. cerebral palay, a disorder al the central nervoua 1y1tem re1ult- l n f from brain dama1e, especially before or durtn1 blrtb, and characterlied by spuUc paralyal.a and defective motor ability. William Threlkeld, cb1ef of the police juvenile division, aald Mark wu taken to a ha.pita! and bad to be restrained. "He looks like someone who tbould be runnin1 wUb the wolves," Threlkeld said. "It breaks your heart." Neighbors said Dionne seemed reasonably well -adjusted, althougi\ other chi ldren sometimes would taunt 'her about her clothes or her mother. DIONNE TOLD police her brother had been locked in bis room as long as she could re- member. You're left to wonder, however, about lbe margin or profit these days in the gasoline dodge if that much gallonage can ooze away underground and not too much ls noticed. CLEARLY, BVSIN ESS practices change a lot over the years. Some people used to believe there wasn't much Fireman Bill Mims of Austin, Texas, makes certain all \ives 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. Mark and Dionne were re· moved temporarily from their p a r ent s ' c ustody dur,ing a juvenile court hearing qn Fri- d a y . Another h earing was scheduled for May 6. Jerry Paulsen. director of the Denver Family Crisis Center, said welfare workers paid two visits to the home between 1976 and 1980. but were turned away by Mrs. Shupe. Cleanup requested at Three Mile Isle The Shupes maintained they treated the children well. "We feel innocent," said the 42-year-old Mrs. Shupe. "We did not feel we did any child abuse. We feel we're being maliciously prosecuted." Neighbor Howard Moreland said the Shupes may have had good intentions. ·'They try to do something," he said, "but they sure don't do a very good job." Bomb threat ··Thia puddle? Why it's gasolint', of course ... " profit in the sale of gasoline in bygone times. The profit was hawking oil. Service station trainees were schooled lo try anything for an excuse to get the customers hood up and quick, check that oil and peddle a quart or two. Super-salesmen would hawk an oil change right there on the spot. Today, it's different. Your intrepid correspondent pulled into a Corona del Mar station just the other night to purchase a tankful that hadn't already leaked away someplace. In the process. there was an engine check on the oil. Lift your own hood, baby. Dip your own stick; nobody else seemed interested. Theoldheapcameuponequartlow. YOU FINALLY GRAB somebody's attention: "I'd like a quart of oil, please ... " ··A quart of what,·· the attendant asked. "Oil, oil. You know. it comes in quart cans. Black gold. At least it USED to be in quart cans. May be in liters or something now . . . Grumbling, the attendant vanished for a moment. Soon he returned and handed me one quart of oil. "You don't happen to have an opener handy, do you," I asked politely. "IT'S OVER THERE on lbe wall," be grumped, point· ing feebly across the gas station parking lot. "You're sup· posed to move your car over there to put it in.'' · I'm here to tell you I refused to move my old heap. I trudged across the lot, opened the oil can and marched back to the car, probably dribbling some of the stuff on my way back. But that's okay too. The oil might just join the gasoline that's probably leaking back into the earth. WASJUNGTON <AP> -Gov· ernment experts have recom· mended that the site of the na- tion's worst nuclear accident be cleaned up "as expeditiously as reasonably possible" but con· ceded this will take at least three years and as many as seven. The clean·up at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant can be accomplished "without Incur- ring environmental impacts that exceed acceptable limits," the starr of the Nuclear Regulatory Com mission said on Monday. In assessing the reasons for a "timely " clean·up, the NRC staff said: "The clean-up opera· tions will remove sources of potential radiation exposure that cur rently pose r isks to the health and safety of station workers and the public." IT ADDED, "The most signifi- cant environmental impact as- sociated with the clean·up will result from lbe radiation doses received by tbe entire work force" involved in lbe projed. For an individual outside the plant, receiving the maximum radiation dosage from controlled releases of wastes into the at- mosphere during the clean-up has an increased risk of fatal cancer of "about one chance in 100,000." the rePOrt said. Snow covers north U.S. Clouds, rain cover 11111Ch of Southeast 11.S. ·-··,,, ly TIM Al••~ ... "'"' LtOlll II-1 .. 1 -ay over the norlMrn -c . ..,1r .. Ai>P<tla<ll1an1 and parts ol IN •-r Great UltH area, as -" .. nort,.,.rn Minnesota In Ille Soutll, Cl--t ome h Of\I rain ,.,,.,.Cl aero" m ucll ol Tellat •nd IOUlllern -c ... tr .. Fle><lela CIOuClt cow red mucll 01 tM area trom Ille GrHt t..aO• anCI Ille 01"0 Valley lo Ille northern Allantoc CCWl•I. ancl Ille upper MIHIUl!IPI V•lley Tiie nortllern Moll Ptatns llad ctouds, .. 1111 tome rain and snow •IOfl9 the Montan.·WVOmlno woer Temperahre& •r..,nd IM natlof> al 1 p.m . EST ranvect from 21 at Brad· lord. Pa., to 79 at Fort Myers. Fta. For TuuClay, wldety tcallereCI 1111111 snow -lote<Ht rrom Lower Mlclllgan and th9 u-Olllo Va~oy to northern New Enol•nd. A chance c>Hraln wat lore<a$1 ocn>u wutern •nCI lOUlll central Te.as. H llJlll In Ille IOI and low IO• were predlcteci oor lllt Southwest d• wrts, In IM IOI and tow IOI were pre· dieted owr Ille Soul-st cleHrh . on Ill• lh for mucll or tlle rut ot C•lifornta, soutMrn and u ntrat Florid• -soutllem hut. In Ille 50s and 60s acroH 1"9 Ptalaau Into Montana and Utall and from the so11tllern Rockies to Ille SOlllllern Atlentlc Coett. In tM 40s In Ill• nortllern and central Plelnt. and In IM 19' and 40I OCn>M th9 Nor111ea\I Te•per•t•ra Af ..... y Alllllctue AllCllOr ... Atlanta All ... IC Cly t alUmoro ..... e.s1on a\lffa lo CMY•- Clllcoto ClllCIMOCI Cleveland Cot11m- Oel·l'I Wiii °'""" O..Mol ... , Do troll 011111111 ... ,,_.., HtltllO ..-1111u H-tOl'I llldn-.111 ., " 42 '° .. ... ,. .. 11 .. .. .. .. 0 Q .. ., .. n 41 ,, .. .. ., JI 2t 2S u ,. ,. 27 ,. n " 21 24 >O It • JI 21 " 21 n u .. JO 14 Monterey ., ... T '111 IH .,..,ell t Ml Wit'°" SS J8 NtecllH I• S• Oallland IJ so Ont•r•o ,. ., PHaclena ,, 4l At11•rudP IS .. Red Bluff n 43 ReClw-C•IY 11 .. ~cramento .. 40 ~llnas 11 H ~n 8ern<1rd1no 15 4l ~n Oleoo 10 SJ ~,. FrancllCO ., SJ ~n Jow ,, •1 Santa 8aro.ra 11 .. S.nle Crut ,. 41 S.nta Monica •I S2 Stockton I) "° Tllermat ., ... Yu me 19 SI PAN AMERICAN o •• , ot Co""""''Jt ' Acapulco 11 Tl B•rbados " .. 8ermuCI• 6l SS Jaclttnvllt C11racao .. ,. 14 43 RltllmOlld SI J2 FrNport II .0 Juneau ., 1t Sall Leu s. JI Guadel•lar• •• .. Kans City SI 25 SHllll •I 41 Ou-loupe .. •• LesVeo-t ... ., St LOllll S4 JO He.,.ne 11 •• Liiiie RoO H ll St$te M¥1e ,. 2l Klnotton .. IS LOlllSvllle .. " Sc>oll•no S4 ,. Monteoo Bey .. IJ Mempllis SI JS TlllM s. J2 Marat Ian 19 u Miami 12 H W olll Intl/I 52 4l Meriel• ,, ... Mllw..,U. 0 2' Mexico City 7t so Nalllvllle " 24 Monterrey n $S New Ori-10 .. CALtl'ORNIA Neswu .. 61 New Yori\ so 0 A#loVollf't' ~ )A S.nJ11an .. I• Ollla City n J4 ...... ,,i.kl 10 SI $1 Kitti .. IS OmaM so 1t ......... 1J 4J T901Ki .. IP<t • tO Pllllad~ '1 • ... _9"4 70 40 TrtnldlHI t1 11 PMenl, " JO .... _ .. n Plllnutel\ " JI ··~ 6S Jt s-.• .. -.n.re. Reno .. " .., .... IO s. CataliN 12 ~ c111v ... c11y 11 s. TOOAT Judge named II Ceftlro 11 4S "'"''°"' • Ua.m . O.J Eurttia SI •I "'"' lllQll It. llp.m. J.9 ,.,_ 10 .. S.Condt-S Slp.m . t.2 SAN FRANCISCO ...._ .. .., ., u Sun MU s,u p.m., rl-T...Way u..e ..... 11 41 •.toa.m. (AP)-A San Frandaco ........... IO u Moon Mb t ·S41>.m •. rlsft Tue•d•Y M unlcipal Court Jud1• ......... •• ,, •·11 a.m . baa been ,appOjnt..s by .......... c ... , ..... ..,,, ......... the 1tate:~preme Coart to the Commiaatoe a. ..... .... lllrt ............. Judicial Performuee. 1:: .... '"1 .... "'~ A\OI MH Dtr Judie Cbarle1 1:. Ocl« t ,. t 4 w t • ,. 2 ' w wlll serve unttl .. ,. = . J ,. 2 • w c-.ty ' 1 .. , • NW tember, 1113. == ~y: otc, .. .,,., wri OllCI ... ,,. Courts a11e.. intet-Breten cases reoorttd and ln II percent of the totaf boUn ol lnterpretlnl. No other tanpaae accounted for more t.bu 1 peretat of the total ol either e&H1orboan. The same individual's chances of a genetic effect on offspring would be ''about one chance in 20.000." it said. However . the report also lists various possible radiation ex· posure levels for both workers on the project and those living nearby and adds the ranges are broad because "of uncertainties of the plant conditions and the amount or work that will be needed to decontaminate the re- actor building and its contents." FOR THOSE working on the clean -up operation, the NRC staff said, the increased risk would amount to ''less than one additional cancer death at· tributable to radiation ... among the entire work force." The risk of genetic effects on the offs pring or the workers would be "not more than two," the staff report said. NEIGHBORS SAID police and social workers had been called to the Shupe home in the past. A few years ago. neighbors wor· ried about Mark circulated a petition seeking help for the boy. Nothing apparently came of it. ·'People here don't · want to have anything to do with them," said neighbor Eugene Eppler ·'They wake up the neighbors fighting with each other." Police said they found Mark. who has cerebral palsy and can- not walk or talk, in a small, filthy bedroom. His father said t he boy was kept there because "he'd get into things." ORLANDO ROM ERO, Denver director of welfare, said in a re- port about Mark to a juvenile judge that "in the past he has been diagnosed a s severely men· tally retarded.'' And doctors at Denver General Hospital s aid he also appeared to s uffer from Gun victim pleads for mate's release PHOENIX CAP > "I love him," Barbara Wehrle told the judge. "I don't want him to do more time in jail." She said British Alfred Wehrle, 29, never meant to shoot her in their Phoenix home in 1974. Because of her wounds, Mrs . Wehrle required a walker to slowly make her way to the witness stand. AFTER A TWO-DAY hearing, Superior Court Judge Robert Myers ruled that after Wehrle finishes a California sentence in 1984 he is to be returned to Arizona to begin a 10-to-12-year prison term. Court records show that Mrs. Wehrle, who now lives in Baldwin Park, Calif., suffered permanent damage from a head wound. A jury convicted Wehrle or assault with a deadly weapon. He was placed on lifetime probation with the stipulation he be responsible for his wife's support tor the rest of her life. MYERS RULED THAT Wehrle violated this probation when he killed his brother last April in El Monte, Calif. Under a plea bargain with California authorities. Wehrle pleaded guilty involun· tary manslaughter and was sentenced to Soledad Prison. The court was told he is scheduled for release in 1984. The judge directed that he serve "not less than 10 nor more than 12 years" in the Arizona State Prison for violating probation. routs guests from casino ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . <AP> Caesars Boardwalk Regency executives are "curious" about an unprecedented State Police order to clear their 504-room casino hotel following a $6 .5-million written extortion threat. Caesars Wo r ld Inc . spokesman Herbert L. Wolfe said executives "might have something more to say later this week " a bout the Sunday morning evacuation. "THE INFORMATION we gathered from a number of sources indicated to us this was a hoax," Wolfe said. The Los Angeles-based firm, which also owns Caesars Palace and Caesars Tahoe in Nevada, has been at odds with New Jersey gaming authorities for more than a year. ABOtrr Z,000 employees and guests were routed onto the Boardwalk and streets for about 21-'z hours Sunday morning as FBI agents, state troopers and policemen waited for t he extortionist's noon deadline 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. Stolen art found ROME <AP> -Special art squads have recovered 300 an· cient vases, bowls and jars il- legally excavated and destined to be smuggled out of the coun- try. national police reported. The objects included some Etruscan works and many dat- ing from the third or fourth cen· tury B.C. GOURMET MARKET DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD LENTEN SPECIALS Fresh 8oDed MORNING FRESH PRODUCE . Pu Ready Silver Salmcm. a 01 .•. Z.zt ea. Freab Pulftc Red Saapper ........ 1.zt lb • Fresh Frozea Local Swordft.lll ...... 5.t8 lb. MEAT DEPARTMENT For that St. Patrick's Day DiMer. Delaney'a will a1aln have that famous Home Cured Corned Beef . Choice Boneless Beet Briskets trimmed ot all n~ fat and cured as only we at Delaney'• know bow, wlll our aecret recipe. Wlllole or Po&Dt Cut .. .. . .. .. .. .. . . .. t• m.. Flat Cat ............................ 1.11 m.. Lean Groaad Beef <Ground Hourly) •.•• 1 .. a. CANDELrrE HEAT AND EAT rooDI Prepared Freah Dally From Delaney'• Own Kitchen. C•ltke'A dd fhl1npUap (f'or I)••••• • • • •• , •,.I •• ea. ,,... of Sole s.nee1 wltai 8•nmp , rw 11 , •• , z.-ea. ,\prltot Almoed GntH Calle .............. l •• ea. , 0.1•"1'• F•tMU Carnt Calle ............ l.M ea. PRBE BOM B D~IJl SSAVICB <1H • T!t!t ad. t«ecUve Wed., 3/U UU'u Tuel., 3/17 Freab Lar1e 81ze A1paraps ........ lk lb. Large Sweet Local Strawberrle1 .. 7k Mb. Deluey'1 Owa Freu Baked Sboncakes ............ Ille ea. Local Grow11 Larae SI.le Solid Greee Cabbage ................ 8e lb. DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delau_y'1 Private Label C•ebU. cw Via lleee' WIM (750 mJI I . . . . .........••.... 1.• ea. ~ &orbaltd Glnntet Wlaea lt74 (750 n\ll) ..........................•....... I.JI ff. CUcq-..Gelcl Label lh11t a elma Fraaee V1Ma1e ...................... · · . · · · lt.M ••· Seo"""y Seokll (750 mil> .................... 5.11 ea • C~rlo ._..Via a..• or O abU. CblUed Fot y.., Coanaletite <FuU Gtl.> .. 1.• 11. Perrier Water <D oa.) ......... iie ea. 8&ore 8"n M, Oiled s-da1 am Newport Bin., Ne""" Beada 673-5520 • Man killed SANTA MARIA (AP> -A San Francisco man rldJn• a bant tllder waa killed when the &llder went out ol CGntrol and amubed into the aand at• Guadalupe Beach in northwest Santa Barbara County, aherilrs deputies aald. Tbe victim, identified u Robert llllllcan, 46, bad been f1yins for about one hour Sunday after- noon when be loat control ol the &llder. said dis- patcher Diane Cheney at the sheriff's Santa Maria station. Milligan's craft plummeted straight down and smashed into the sand at about 70 mpb, Ma. Cheney said. ~ .... ••I'm.I.., ..... EL CENTRO (AP) -Imperial County Sheriff's Deputy Robert HoJmes was doing his reiular overnight duty when he said he felt his car shaking and thought somebody was trying to BRIEFS scare him -but that somebody turned out lo be two small earth- quakes. The temblors rumbled through Southern California 's Impe rial Valley Sunday, awakening residents but causing no damage. The first quake, measuring 3.0 on the Richter Scale, hit at 3:09 a.m ., and was followed six minutes later by a 3.5 Richter-scale jolt. BoW ldl~d •~•r lraf• lrfU'lc POMONA <AP> -Twelve-year-old Kevin Thomas Cleeves of Diamond Bar was kilJed as he and three friends huddled in sleeping bags three to rive feet 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 head, and perhaps was bit by a protrusion from the train or by a rock. Mara bookrd '" ••• llwll CANOGA PARK CAP) -A Los Angeles man was booked for investigat.io~ of grand theft auto in San Francisco after the California Highway Patrol arrested him for driving across the Oakland Bay Bridge without paying the toll -in a fully. equipped Los Angeles city ambulance. Remi Anthony Pappe, 20, was arrested Sun- day, said CHP dispatcher Jim Dukes. Ca111~r lcU~d l'fl 1110•o.rfdr PINE VALLEY (AP) -A San Diego man died on a camping outing in Cuyamaca State Park of carbon monoxide poisoning after burning a manufactured log inside his camper in an attempt to warm up the vehicle. the San Diego County Sheriff's office said. · Gaelen Flatt, a 31-year-old Navy man, was pronounced dead at the scene Sunday after his wife. Barbara, 22, stumbled to a campground en- trance seeking help. State supports use of condoms SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state health de- partment, citing 134,070 reported cases of gonor· rhea and 12,270 cases of syphilis in California last year, is renewing its support for some use of con- doms. The report said the gonorrhea cases included 88,858 males, and 45,212 females. The syphilis caseload included 9,696 males and 2,574 females. Noting the number of males, the department said, "Condom use by males would be an ap- propriate way for men to assume increased responsibility for themselves and their sexual partners in the prevention of venereal disease." It also said there's concern about the substan- tial percentage of young persons infected: Almost 20 percent of the gonorrhea cases were among persons 14 through 19 years of age, and more than 33 percent were among those 20 through 24 . Consider the se statistics: or children over fifteen, 75'7' have some form of gum dis- ease and an average or 11 cavities. By middle age, 2 out of 3 people will have serious gum problems and be well on the way to losing all of their teeth. Why should such a technologically ad - vanced country as ours be In such a poor state of dental health? The answer ls: •etle~t! Few Americana see a dentiat aa often u they should and many have NEVER seen one. There are many reatona for this and one of them is money. Now aomethlnc ia belnl done about it. Wh ile moat Americans hlve aome kind of medical t~aurance, dent•! insurance has lagged far behind, but now dental coverage is growing by leaps and bounds. Today, some 65 million (3 out of every 10 Americans > are covered by some form or dental Insurance and estimates are that coverage could increase to 95 milUon by 1985. Labor unions have been striving for wider dental protection and are responsible for much ol thia increase. In these times of lnrtallon. the average American can use all the help he can aet. Gerald Wlakler, D.D.S. a•d Auoclatft lffl Avondo, Sahe MS, Newport Buell Phoee: MMltl Family Want Ads 3 Uan, Z days, $5.H M2·5118 •For only SS.SS •ny prlv•t• ,,.rty m•Y plate• 1n ~ to Htl •ny •rtlclt of personal property •nY two days In• row. --~----,.~- Orange Cont DAILY PfLOT/TUMday, March 10, 1881 s l'oight with vets Actor Jon Voight, center, who portrayed a disabled Vietnam veteran in the film "Coming Home," talks with wheelchair-bound vet Ron Kovic, left, as an unidentified vet, right, looks on during a demonstra- tion in Los Angeles on Sunday. CalJed ''Green Ribbon Unity Day,'' the vets were protesting budget cuts proposed by Reagan. Grant issued Hare Krishna profits taxable SAN Ji'RANCISCO (AP) -The Calitomla Supreme Court bas let 1taDd an appeal court rullnt that p~rty used by the Hare Krlabna aed for profitable rellliOUJ book publ.ilblq acth'itles lJ not entitled to a property tu exemption. A trlal court held the property exempt Insofar u It waa used for rell•loua book publl•bln1 but not exempt insofar as lt was UMd u a residence for followers. It denied wltbout comment a Lover's r: gL• request for bearing souabt by the •e fU New York-baaed International Society for Krishna Consciousness f O S Ue Up L -Id Inc. and its California affiliate. I~ They unsuccessfully argued such Los ANG EL Es < A p > _ A a an exemption should not be lost by Arcadia produce dealer who didn't derivin1 profits from use of the follow through on promises to property if the property Is used for divorce bis wife. buy his lover a religious activities and the money ranch and support her and her family goes for that purpose, not lo benefit for life, can be sued by his paramour private lndivlduala. for property rights, a Superior Court The Court of Appeal held the book judge has ruled. publlsblne and diatributlng activltes "One who enJ· oys the benefit of a were essentially commercial rather than the practice of a religious belief. polygamous lifes tyle must be prepared to accept its accompanyinc The Krishna groups said about 70 financial burdens, .. Judge Leon to 80 percent of the support for the Thompson ruled recently in refusing California affiliate comes from funds to dismiss a breach or contract suit obtained through book dlstrlbution, filed by horse breeder Janet with income used for devotees who Maynard. have taken a poverty vow. for 4 expansion of the movement and Miss Maynard, 32, is represented relief in India. by attorney Marvin Mitchelson, who A s uit was filed in September 1976, spearhe ad ed the "Marvin vs. against Los Angeles County seeking Marvin" s uit which established the refund or property taxes paid under right of unmarried live-in lovers in protest for fi scal years 1972-73 California to sue their mates. Viejo 01an dies deep-sea diving UC Irvine student through 1975-76 and a declaration But the attorney for Harry Richard Marlon Stein that property u sed for the Los Pries t er. 48, M iss Maynard's AVALON CAP> A Mission Viejo m an, ap- parently stricken with nitrogen narcosis during a deep-sea scuba dive o ff Santa Catalina Is land, removed his breathing equipment and drowned. The man, identified by s h e riff's deputies as J ohn L. Taylor, 53, was last seen alive by a div· ing partner about 4 lfl miles off Catalina Harbor on the island's south coast al 9 a .m. Sunday, Coast Guard Lt. j.g. Mark Jones said. The partner, alarmed when Taylor removed all or his diving equip- men t at a depth of between 120 feet and 130 feet. tried to approach him but Taylor began struggling. The partner s urfaced near the 75-foot Sea Raider, a diving vessel from which their party was based, and cr ew members radioed for help. Jones said Taylor prob· GWC paper wins award The Branding Iron. Golden West College's student newspaper. has won a merit award from t h e Cali f o rni a Newspaper Publishers Association. Editors of the Brand· ing Iron issues evaluat· ed by the judges were Tim C lan cy, Jim M cCurdie . Robert Frank , Cece l ia Wilkinson, Diann Brun- ner, Teresa Kennelly. Jan Corey and Sharren Parsons. has been awarded an Angeles Temple was tax exempt. A ex-boyfriend , argued that this case independent study grant second suit covered 1976·77· doesn't fall under the 1979 decision iq from the Chi Psi Educa-The property, it was claimed, the case of actor Lee Marvin and bif tlonal Trust to be used to should be exempt either as church girlfriend, Michelle Triola Marvin1 a bl y was s urtering investigate s olar -property or property us ed because Priester and Miss Maynaro from nitrogen narcosis powered transportation. exclusively for religious purposes. never lived together . or dizziness. euphoria 1--------------------,;=============: and irrationality 'Caused by an excess of nitrogen in the blood r esulting from high atmospheric pressure. Woman jailed in child case MADERA <AP> -A judge for the first time in bis 14 years on the bench se nte n ced a c~~~~~fc1ii:i··~£Ni~s 11 $ 360 ~.J~.~~o•~~!.~.E~n~~;Rv ,.,. ,,,...., pey efl ~ rnott Of t~ .. Cott ~ •04 f w.nct.a.....O bv th• Cat.t o..,. ot COf\'Wm .. Atlao, C.•••°''°'"'1 • 12UI •:M .. •61 CAf ... A1'0h & 8 URIAl$ 17141 907 •701 woman to jail here for l;;;:;:=;;;;:=====:;;::=;ir----------1 failing to make child .. 19 I CARS I support payments. and TRUCKS While an average of • three men per month are jailed for skipping the payments, Judge Jack Hammerberg said Thursday he could not recall ever putting a woman in jail on the same offense. • • • • • • • • Turn your unusables into usable cash.Call Daily Pilot classified 642-5678. CALL LINDA BLUE FOR A FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN - INTEREST ONLY! Newpor~,~!J~~!,~~!;.;!nc .. (714) 760-6060 The Superior Court judge sentenced Estella Lozano to 15 days after first suspending the jail time when the woman promised to send a $50 monthly payment. She didn 't , so Hammerberg lifted the sus pension and ordered FREE ONE HOUR INFORMATIVE PRESENTATIONS her behind bars. A family s upport officer remarked , ·'Justice is equal in Madera County." Poison week The Regional Poison Center at UCI Medical Center will display poison prevention in· formation in the plaza from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m ., March 16-20, in honor of National Poison Preven· lion Week. ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Ask For Ra.y. LEASE SrfCIAUST at HOWARD Chevrolet C-OI Qo.e ond o..I Sta NE\WORT BEA-CH THROUGH MARCH 15TH AT SPIRES Everything TOP s STE SERVED ANYTIME llEGGS ' . Tender Top Slrloln Steak 1nd two l1rge . eggs . Served with hashed brown potatoes and choice of t011t. '2~10 .•. AIAl<INO GOOD FOOD EASY TO FIND. eel to Know AbOut You want Wei ht LoSS Method··· tteSCHICK 9 t but never got around to asking. Some of the questions that will be answered I How is Schick different rrom other methods 1 2. Is dieting 1nvo~7 3. How does SchlCk help you lose the urges 7 4. How can SchlCk say 1t is the only method that keeps the weight off permanently? S. What Is counter-condltJonlng 7 6. ~s ~ Schick Method deal with nutrition 7 7. \Xllll I JUst be part of a group .as in ~ight Watchers 7 8 H~ much ~ ~Schick Program cost7 9. ~the Schkk Method have medical credentlals7 1 O. Why dO so many doctors recom~nd the Schick Method7 MONS..,., MARCH n THURSDAY, MARCH t2 SATUllMY, MMCH 14 &......-~ .. Orpt.. S(ln UlgYll HlllS Miii 7.00PM fGtWlldl llDomf ' 9 ... Olfton'S CMtterla 11 l..lllcw.tOOd Centtf 7:30 l'M ....... Old bM1I Miii 1~'HMV1ofne 111\11:1 10.JO MA & 7 00 PM ~"°°'"' c ........ lluHOdl\ lltstaurant 5ou1t1 COllSt l'Wa 700 PM car- CltliDnMlll C~lloom 2SO CMOn MM! lO:JO MU 7 00 PM OewMy . \Wnlln'S GA> Of Downey 9813 s l'aramounC 7.JO PM ~ Schtek Cff!tff 85 bwn & Councty Rd IOJO AM ,...,_ Old 1l1wr't Mall 19800 ~ lllllO IOOPM IComtfU't/lt'l lllOoml c.rrtt. Sc'nlck Cer<tei '" LOs etm1os c~ 10.JO,.,.. ....... IMM>t11 Or-.. SCtliOI~ 85 .,_., & Country~ 2'00 l'M Sex I w spa a ·legal tangle The coetly leaal macbiAaUou Mt on by a ple• of careless leaiaJ•tion that slipped :~uriq tbe claUDI days ol Jut year'• Lellalature eaeoura1e our lawmakers to do a little more thlnklnl before they act. At laaue ia the wordtn1 of a Jaw deai1ned to consolidate various child abuse atatutee. Aa lt atandJ, lt requires pbyaiciana, on pain of protecutloa, to report to law-enforcement authoritlea any evidence of HJuaal activity on the part of unm~ed female paUentl under the age of 18. Not surprislngly, the Calllomla Medical Aaaoci~, on the part of 28,000 members, prompt!).' filed auit!. contending the law not only violates the confidenUallty or the doctor·patient relationship, but could very well keep young women from seeking any needed medical care. ~ This was in no way the original intent of the meuure which was supposed to require doctors to report suspected incidents of child molestation. Now no fewer than three bills have been introduced to repeal the off ending word.ins and the state Supreme Court has entered the picture by temporarily baltin1 enforcement of the law pending arguments before the Court of Appeal. . None of this would have been necessary if the lawmakers, in their rush to get home, had paused long enough to think about what they were doing. Lesson that pays A recent TV news program showed a group of youngsters in Los Angeles diligently whitewashing a wall that had been covered with ugly graffiti. The kids, armed with long·handled rollers, seemed to be having a ball. Cheering the m on were residents of an adjacent apartment house who'd been forced to look at the offending wall. Could this be a new trend? It could indeed. In schools throughout the country, youngsters are being exposed to a program called Character Education Cur riculum. It's one of ma ny examined by the Thomas Jefferson Research Center in Pasadena, in an effort to pinpoint the ca uses of c rime, violen ce , vandalism and other anti-social behavior. The principal cause, according to the center, is the failure of our homes, schools, churches and other institutions to place sufficient emphasis on values, ethics, character and individual responsibility. The Character Education Curriculum, designed for kindergarten through sixth grade level, was devised to counteract this deficiency. Here are some of the results reported by participating schools: -In Indiana : Major improvement in school attendance; annual reduction in window breakage from $3,500 to $100. -In Texas: Attendance greatly improved; graffiti and vandalism rusappeared ; number of students referred to the office for discipline dropped from 40 to ~ a week to an average of one each day. -In Wisconsin: School break-ins, vandalism and graffiti almost disappeared. -In California: Vandalism reduced to one· thirteenth of previous cost. Di sciplinary problems almost disappeared. Beneficial effects reported by teachers include marked impro vement in honesty and truthfulness, ki ndness. g e n e ros ity and helpfulness . And administrat ors, understandably, note a resulting improvement in teacher morale and reduction in teacher turnover. If this keeps up, the acc~ation that the U.S. education syste m turns out "skilled barbarians" no lo nger may be valid. Civilization also is an acquired skill. Good question In the de bate over declining achievements of :lalifornia high school students, we keep hearing com· )laints from the University of California about poorly )repared freshmen who have to waste college time tak· ng re medial courses in English, math and other skills .hey already should have learned. The other day, state Supt. of Public Instruction Wilson Riles asked an interesting question: If the students are so >00rly prepared, why does the university admit them? The fact is that college-bound high school students in :alifornia are required to take fewer years of English, math and other academic subjects than students in many )ther areas. So they are not as well prepared. But, since the university continues to admit them, we >ee m to have a self-perpetuating problem. Maybe Riles has a point. If the university would step up its entrance requirements. we might see some prompt stiffening of course work at the high school level -and, eventually, rewer complaints from the university. • )p1n1ons expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. )ther views expressed on this page are those of their authors and 3rtists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 15_!)0, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Ph<?ne (714) 642:~2_1 ._ Boyd/Land ByL.M.BOYD Those who own the land on Nhich they Uve may best ap- >reciate an observation by :harles Dudley Warner : •Broad acres are a patent of iobilily and no man but feelJ more of a man in the world if 1e have buta bit of ground that i e can call his own. However 1mall it is oo the surface, ll is 1.000 miles deep." So you like &oap operas, do lllllY• Wbto are tbe unlOGI '°" lot to make ua NDiOr" cltlHa!I:.-, f« the alr webnildal?Balll 1.)1.8 . • you? Nothing wrong with that. A little time in dreamland doesn't hurt a thing. None other than Albert Einstein said: •'The gift of fantasy has meant more to me than my talent for absorbing posltivl' knowled1e.' · Remember, swat juat a lit· Ue behind tbe fty. FUt1 Aeap ort backwa.rdl. No IOl't of bride .. more prised amoe1 tlM rNMJa Cameroon• of -S.•atorlal Africa tu. the ....., I.Ms· perleneed 1lrl wlt~ a Bach.tor of Aril ....... What the ·u.s. · l'orHtry Sel'Ylce ll loc*iq f«, I'm told, 11 a vmdaJ.proof out-booH. No luet, IO ,.,. • W AIRINGTON -TM ...... adelalatratlOD to n.,-w•1 1ai'priM 11 llalllnl a cltdlkm • where to bale tbe llX ......_ mtalilt lD a delay that -. tbe Peata1on a1aln1t the State Oepartmtat aDd deUabU tbe•· vlraomeat.alllt lobby. Tb• delay over wbetlaer to baH t.b1I eountl'y'• m01t vital nu1 weapon oa Jud Of' Ma II frau1bt · wlt.b pottnUal dansera. It rat.HI the dla· turbln1 que1· tlon of whether President Rea1an. who ls totally coll)mitted to rapid MX deploy· ment, is kept fully abreast on whether and bow his dealres are carried out by competin1 bureaucratic power centen. Ronald Rea1an himself is partly to blame for the latest procrutinaUon over where the U.S. sbou.Jd base the 10-warhead missiles desperately needed to give the U.S. land-based system protection against possible So- Earl Waters viet attack. Bea1an pledttd wb!Je eampeialn1 1D Nevada and UtU tO tab a look at JlJD. my Carter•• ~lon to bue tbe mobUe syatem there dHplt. fterce envlronmentaUs\ oppo11· lion. I BVT·WllAT should hav• beeJl 'a pro forma Penta1on ,revlew "ft'ltb a foreaon.e conclualoo ma)' be heatlq up into a major teat. Favor:t.nc 1ea·bued deployment, a position he eapouaed while deputy dJrector of the CIA, la Deputy Defense Secret~y Frank Carlucc i. Defenae Secretary Caspar Weinber1er privately warns that environr mentalist lawsuits could con· ceivably tie up the Carter- approved Nevada-Utah plan "for years." But Weinberger says be bas an open mind on basing and a public commitment not to let the new study delay deployment of the system, ex- pected to start ln 1985. Why, then, bas Weinberger told bis panel of experts they have uniil "June or July" to make their report? The question is partic ularly rele vant for another reason: National securi· Thoma.s P. Halty/Publlaher S.r'Oara Krelblch/Edltorlal Pege f!dltor ty and bud,et officials in Rea1an'1 White House are com· mitt.cl to Jfevada·Utah bu.lna. ·They worry that another loot delay in the ever·recedin1 "final" decision will do exacUy what Weinberger privately waro1 aaalnst; 8ive envlron- mentalllu that much more time to mobilize fo,r a total assault on tbe Nevada-Utah plan. SECaETABY OF State Alex- ander Haig ls quietly advancing a blockbuster rationale ol his own a1alnat what the Pentagon calls "lloing to sea." If environ- mentaJlst and other political pre11uret are allowed to over· turn the Nevada-Utah decision, Haig predicts an irr eversible torrent of political reaction ln Europe against modernizing NATO's land·based nuclea r systems. Boiled down, that means en. vironmentally sensitized West Germans would physically block the nuclear modernization pro· gram agreed to by North Allan· tic treaty states (NATO) in Dece mber 1979 if the U.S . knuckled under t o politica l threats or legal suits by its own l ) ' environmental lobby. t European •ta*men vllitint be re have ~ lh1I polnt hard \ to Hala. They reuon that any 1 U.S. decision to "10 to Hf'' ' would be interpreted as a v~d I excuse for Eu.ropeana to demul)d 1 that NATO's new nuclear weapons should alao be baaed on boats <whlcb mllltary speciallsu l say would be impoeslble). When the visiting Europeans warn Welnber1er that moving l the MX to sea would create l massive political problems for j NATO, he not onJy appears to be unimpressed, but at least on ooe occasion argued that sea-baaing the MX might be the best deployment in view of environ· mentalist delays. YET PRESIDENT Reagan has a precedent to ask Congress for a special exemption from lawsuits and other legal delay- ing actions now being planned by the environmenta lists (by no means confined to Nevada and Utah). Con g r ess gav e the Alaska pipeline project such an exemption nearly five years ago. The project was built to specifications laid down by the Environmental Protection Agen- cy (EPA ), but it was immune from most special interest law· suits. A Reagan request for similar treatment for the Nevada·Utah· based M.X would get quick atten- tion: the nation a l security aspect is far graver in proleet- mg America's la nd·based mis· s ite system tha n in a ny oil shortfall. Moreover. White House ad- visers say that the courts have been fnendlv to Uncle Sam in reject.mg environmentalist law· suits involving military work. Federal courts have been loath to grant injunctive relief when government attorneys stake their defense on grounds of na· tional security. Accordingly, the preference of Ca rlucci and other officials for a sea.based system has little to do w ith envi r onmentalists and much to do with arcane debate over weapons strategies that was resolved last year by the Pentagon after years of agoniz- ing indecision. More indecision is not needed at this point. which is why some White House aides h o p e Ronald Reagan will himself end the delay forthwith. -I ' Shorter sessions might curb law glut Declaring ,sessions of tbe Legislature too long, Sen. Ollie S pe raw b a s p r op o s e d a constitutional amendment lo limit· annual, meetings to six months. He said it wa.s "a first step" toward a better way to ·to conduct the business of the citizens. Speraw, who decried much of the legislation currently being introduced as '•band-aids proposed for public ity'•, n o ted that "no action of importance has yet been tak e n thi s year al - though the l e g islators have been meeting for more than eight weeks." A Long Beach businessman, Speraw won a special election in 1979 to fill the vacancy left wben George Deukmejiao was elected attorney 1eneral. Last year Speraw won a full four-year term. He obviously hasn't been a senator long enough to become molded to the way the Legislature currently does busi· ness. But before he moves ahead too Sydney Harri8 far with bis proposal, Speraw should take a good look at how the Legislature operated for the first 100 years, and in fact up un- til 1966. FOR MOST of those years it met not longer than six months and only every other year. Upon adjournment the members re· turned to their regular occupa- lion s , businesse s and pro- fessions. This enabled them to keep in twie with their diltrict.s so that when the y came to Sacramento it was with the con- f i d e nce that the y truly represented their constituency. It also permitted time for in- terim committee studies on the various problems of stale so that at the next session well con- sidered proposals could be of- fered. Today's "full-tlme , pro- fessional lawmakers," away from their districts all year long, rely on polls and surveys to find out what their constituents are thinking. Tbeae are unrelia- ble and misleading because of the questions and the bapbuardneas of the responaes. And without time for Interim studies the legislative proposals today are half.baked schemes thrown ln the raw into the bop- per and even those that get passed are never fully thought through. The eviden~e or that is the continual amending of enact- ments immediate ly aft e r passage. SPERAW ISN'T exaggerating when he says most of the time spent in Sacramento is wasted. The lawmakers string out each week by meeting only briefly a couple of times a week during the early months of the sessions. Most arrive late on Monday and skip out early Thursday. In lormer years they met regularly five days a week and often six and held their committee meet- ings at night. They achieved in six moot.bs more than is now· done in two full years . It's Parkinson's Law, "Work expands to fill the time available.'' Those who lhlnk the annual sessions are necessary. if only to approve the governor's budget, overlook the fact the state operated 100 years with a bten· ntal budget. It was changed to an annual budget onJy becauae the then Gov. Earl Warren didn't want the embarrassment of proposing the state's lir•t billion dollar budget. The fact· is that the annual budget bas worked to accelera te state spending. State agencies find it much easier to enlarge more rapidly than when they were held to two· year budgets. REVERTING TO biennial sessions and two-year budgets would save both government and private business millions of dollars now spent in continuous budget preparations, a nd year around lobbying activities on the part of the state and all levels of local go vernm e n t a nd the private sector as well. Furthermore, since good busi- ness practice requires planning ahead with two-and rive.year plans, it is difficult to un- derstand bow business can prop- erly function with the Legislature constantly changing the laws. While it Is unlikely that his colleagues, most of whom have nothing better to do than remain in Sacramento and meddle with the laws, will approve Speraw's proposed constitutional amend· menl it is a certainty the vot~rs wo"1d if they get a chance. And if be amends it to return lo bien· nial sessions it would pass over- whelmingly. Quite simply, the J>eQple want and deserve respite from lawmakina. What you don't know can very well hurt you "What you don't know won't hurt you " la the most treacherous and mi1leadin1 maxim of all. What you doo't know can hurt you terribly, lf it ts 1ometbin• you ougbt to mow. Molt people before Colwnbua dldn•t 1r:now the earth was rouacl, • and thl' ii· norance didn 't particul•rly bu rt tbe'm . But they alao dldn't llnow that wltcJa· eraft Wll a m aUc&o-.1 .,..,iililtblil - I I a or a• ce ......... d ••b U8IMCtllU1 ,.., -, ... and .• ., .... "''••• I If ,.. .... tbat JOU daa't no..-«u ...... P~Hted q IM Hllll quencm of your nesclence; but tt you suppose that you know sometbln1 you really don't now, then you are ln deep trou· ble, andeo are those around you. TBB PSYCllOLOOICAL trap, for maift of ua, II that we ~me uxloua and uneasy ln a state ol sUlpended belief. It la lite btlnl on a Uahttiope: our obJfft la·to r•tacb t&e aalety of the platform at one end or tM other, to plump co,nfortably into a 1etUed belief rather than stand in tenalon on the qulverina rope. economic structure. We are ''liberals:" or "conservatives" or "Ubertarian1" or "1ln1le- taxen". or wbatever. But the fact ii that we bave yet found no objective way to validate t.bele potlUGm. and A ll very likel¥ that all ol them are aa mucb f aJH •they an true. Wll •PLY do not know, at tbl1 DO&at ln buman hl1tory, what la tbe optimum form of Uv· lat, aoelally, polltlcally and eeonomlcally. I have no doubt t.bat Mam Smlth bad 1 plece of tbe truth by the tall: but IO dtd Quotes · In many cuee, "I kpow wbt.l'9 I 1tud" mea.u "I know wbeN I ratt." We pNftt rettlnt AD a dolma U... IWMl'DC • •...,.. 9"D u.oup ... ..,.. mar aat ' •!Tbl freedom of UM prw ll corr•poacl to tb• f aet1, \be ou ol tbt areat b\llwarb ot ~•tMIAtuado9. • llbtrtJ and eaa never b• Al • priJDt aample. UDoit r9tr.._. bllilt bJ ~e p. .,.,,_ Ml t,n,1D coe.._ . ~" .... _'°' .............. Karl Marx.' How do we separate their valuable detached iNlgbta from the errors and exa11era· tlons and encruataUona? Nobody enjoys belnl tentative or Jndeciaive; much as we pro. teat belna "labelesl" by other people, we relfsh labelln1 ouT~elve1 •• one thtna or another. out ol • deep need for Identity and communality. eftll when we may not totally .,..... with eveeythlac the label 1tandl for, What-we don't know, or wut to kftow, leads U1 Into wan alfl4 mauatrtl Ind corrorate crueltiH that no lnd vldul woWd ~tenance oa hla own. We bave • lmlate drive for cer· taJ.Dty, IDd tM emoUollal MC!Urt· ty lt ...... to brtill; "but to ... ~ OI wtaM we lioUld IWl be ln tlo* abCMlt II I ttwm···o1 la· noruce tM.t ll aot ~ r.llab but too ... ra&aL,, 4 \ .. •• l • --------~--~...... .. . . . ........-.-..... --.. ----- o••·~._,,__..,. __ _ "Haven't you ever wondered why I never take my 1laues orr at the olClce'!" Man halt1 car with forklift WENATCHEE, Wash. <AP> -Basing his de- cision on the "two wrongs don't make a richt" principle, a small claims judge has ruled that Rex Barham had no right to stop a car that was trespassing in his orchard by bringing his forklift down on the hood. Judg e J . Kirk Bromiley awarded Maurice Kinzebach $103.33 for the damage that the forklift did to the hood of Kinzebacb's car. Ac co rd i ng to testimony at the hear- ing , Kiozebach's 17- year-old son Richard was behind the wheel when the incident oc- curred Oct. 13. The Kinzebac h s claimed the youth had pulled into the orchard just to turn around, while Barham con - tended the ca r was speeding through the field. The orchard owner s aid whe n th e ca r backed up, he lowered the forks onto the hood to stop the car long enough to get the license number. He said he wanted to report the in· cident to sheriff's dep- uties. "I'm skeptical of the younger p e r so n 's testimo n y ," said Bromiley. a judge lo Douglas County Small Claims Court. "I can't imagine Mr. Barham, for no reason, coming up and dropping a forklift on a car. But it's also not p r oper f or Mr. Barham to drop a forklift on a car to get a license number." Post filled SACRAMENTO <AP> -Former1 state Sen. Lou Cusanovich of Woodland Hills has been appointed to the state Horse Racing Board, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. announced. Cusanovich, 88, a Republican, was a member of the Legislature from 1957 until retirement last year. llATHS ELSEWllRE NEW YORK (API Bosley Crowther, award- winning film critic of The New York Times from 1940 to 1967 and an author of books on the movie in - dustry. died of heart failure Saturday, NORTH CALDWELL, N.J. <AP> -Geor1e Fran· coaero, .0. brother of pop singer Connie Francis and former law partner of Gov. Brendan Byrne. was shot to death Friday. MARATHON. Fla. CAP1 -Stealey Swltllk, 90, a conservationist who donat- ed thousands of acres to the slate of Ne.w Jersey for wildlife preservation and help ed perfe ct the par achute, died Wednes- daY,. TUCSON. Ariz. <API - Carl R. Plb, 63, a vice presi- dent of Nabisco Inc., in Arizona to look at retirement property, died Friday after an auto accident that may have bei!n casued by a heart attack, authorities say. Group nixed LOS ANGELES <AP> -UCLA faculty mem- bers have rejeeted col- lective bargaining in a negative vote of 51.4 per- cent as 824 chose the alternative of no representation over 78() who cut ballots in favor of the faculty associa- tion. The 1,604 mail votes cast represented 71. 3 of tbe eligible voten. PUBLIC NOTICE "C'TITIOUS au .. ••ss MAME STATE Ma MT The followlnt person• ere doln9 IMillMH es: V.I P., VALUE INSTANT PAIN· TING, 17tS Newport Blvd., Cott• Mese,CAt2427. Dee Cllllord Lydell, 4Ul Verl- Cr., Hu11tlrl!ll011 a..c11, CA tU47. A1111 f'•f\111 Lydell, .,st Ver•-Cr .• HunUntton leeclt, CA '2447. Tltl1 t>utlneu Is conducted t>y husl>•nd -wife. Dee Clifford lyOtll Tiiis stet.ment wes 111«1 '""" the Coullly Cler-of Or-County °" Mercll4, 1"1. l'U1JU Put>ll.-OrM19t Co.st D•HY Piiot, Merell 10, 17, 24, 11, '"' 1012-11 PUBUC NOTICE ~IC'TITIOUS 8USIMESS MAME STATaMEMT Tiie 1o11-1no peno•11 ere doln9 IMISIMUM THE STITCHIN' POST, 141l• 9roollltu'1t St., Founteln Velley, CA 70I All Tltlngl, Lid., • Celltorni• cor- poretlon, ,.,., _,_,,..,., St., 1'9Ufl· tel11 Velley, CA '27._ Tltlt -"'eM IS Conducted l>y \ ~O« poretlOll. All TltfntS, Ltd Wllll.m l . McGow.., Preslci.nt Tltlt Itel-I wes liled with IM ----------;cou11ty Cltrk of Oren99 Cou11ty °" rmct•cn ... s m&.•OADWAY MC>n'UilY 11 o Bro.adwav Coat& Mesa 6'2-9150 IALTZ .. •HOM Nnf&nmtlU WISTC"'9 CHAPll. 427 E 17th St .CO.ta Mesa ~371 PAC911C YllW relG'ltAlPAll Cemetefy Mottuety Chaptl 3llOO Peclflo View 0ri¥e Newport &lach IM4-2700 AMrcl1 4, '"'· ,IS7J26 Put>H.-OrMltlt Coelt OellY Piiot, AMrcll 10, 17, 14, JI, , .. , IJOe-11 PUBLIC NOTICE .... , ... 'ICT1TICIUI IMlltNaU llAMll ITAT ..... T TIM fell-lfte .-r-ere •t11t1 ........... : YIOIM IQUITY LOANS, .,S T-C..... Ortwe, Sul• UO, C.'8 Meu.Ce. ... Yetllll._ ..... , IM. (I Hew J«WY _.,..,._,, 0.. Mecll Cefttre ~·"· ...,_, .... Jer9eY '1652 TIIK ..._ts aMuc_. We CM· .......... YIORN ASilOOATat. IMC. ~ ........ ,.,....... Tlllt .......... -, .... """ a. ,, QeR "' Or .... C..-y "' ..,._., "· ""· ~-ICM. ...... •1.0t••• ...... ..... .... ca. ... ........ Or .. c.-. C)911y ...... ,. ..... """·,, .. ". "" ...., P\JBUC NOTICE PICTlftOOl IUll .. a• ...alTATaMIUfT TIM ... ......_ ,_,_ lrt fflllt ....... .,.. il!!.~ITMaNU, Ci t ""'"' . ,,_. v--.' c:.,,., ••• ,. ......... ,. •• ••Kit, Cefl""'6e ..... ..._ .................... ,, ,~ ... . ,_ I . 0¥9, ""' ....... II ,.,.. ... , a. lli*a. ... , •MCfl-.,_, ,,...~ftPN. Tiiie ...._ It c..--W e ....,..==:t...c. . ,,... ...... _, ........ .. C:-ty °"' .. Or .... c...e., ... Merell I. ""· UYIMl!L ..... ,,_. • ._ LAW.,..._ ,...,.. ..... ............. ~ ... ' ~ ·Jong, short of it DEAR PAT DUNN : How ' should you decide whether to use the new abort form when ftllna a state 'fX return! H.E .• HCUltinfloa Beach II• Gemts, d1Jef of tlle te•pllaaee ..... ._el ta.e FruelalM Tu Board, DJS &M 11ew .a..n ,_.. MIA 11 detllped .. ll•pllly tax retara preparaU.. fw ,.na•s wlteM prl•UJ t.e.•e II r.... saluy ud wain er fer u..e wt.. llave H tu llaWIKy, IMlt •DI to elalm tile rea&er's eredlt. Gem.._ a.at a •a.a•al amoat ol laformadea II~ • &lie faee ol tlae UtA form, ud tile ret1&er's endlt ~e II• Uie faadl. I• erder to flle &lie sllor1 fer•, aa lHIYidul mu& be a fall.year resl6ellt el Callfenla ud elect to take &M l&UMlard dedadlaa ratlaer tllu l&emlaed dedaetleu. Tiie sta•ard defte&Soa II '1,• fer *lie la~lvldaals or • arrled penoas flll•I a separa&e retua. For married ee.plet flllal a Jolat retara or &llose flllal as llead of lloesdoN Uie 1tudard cleGetloa If $2,Slt. Persou w'°9e Itemised cledadlou eseeed Uleae •-ta sllotlN file a recatar ,..,. Ste, Gab said, adclla1 tllat ta.e oaly odier • reqatremeat for fllla1 U1e Mort form llmtu lacome from la&erest or cllvlde9cll to ..... Penou Medial llelp la preparta1 tlaelr s&a&e au l°etU'U ca• coatad a.e ol &M more tlaaa 1,• 11&.es t1arot1111Mt tile sta&e wllere tralaed vola&een wlU llelp tllem prepare tllelr retara1. Plloae tile Fraae~ae Tas Board's toll-free aamber, (911) 852·5711, for more lalormatlon. Bftaldt ~•r~ •C""lftf DEAR PAT DUNN : Do you know where l could flDd information on current costs for various medical treatments in California'! I'm doing a research paper and have run into problems getting data. C. V., Costa Mesa ''Conaamer GaJde to BeaJtla Cue Costa," iJ1 a ll>pa1e pablleatloa ol tile Callforala Healtll Facilities Comml11toa <CBFC> complied to llelp commaalty groaps, basleess, labor aad coasamen. Altlloagla addreued primarily to Calllorala resldeau, It coatalas ex&easlve lalormaUoa laeludla& references and otller reaoarces for conaamera evef)'wllere. Free slagle copies are avaUable from CHFC, 555 Capitol Mail. Room SZS, Sacramento 1581'. f.Awcrfa. daca •• ..., DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you tell me where I can get some statistics on the success of Laetrile use in treating cancer among elderly persons? J am 78 years old, and although I don't have this disease, I dread getting it. Iii J .F., Newport Beach Coatad t-.e Committee for Freedom ot Cllolce la Cueer Tllerapy by wrida& &e HI Mala 8'., Loa Altos, Calli. MtZZ. •• &lie meaatt.e, make It a polat to see you clecter re&alarly for early de&edtoe ud treatmeat of ••Y diseue. • "Cot a problem? Then wnte to Pal \..1 Dunn. Pat will cut r~ tape, ~tting " the anSWt!r! and actaon you ne~ to 1oh~ 1nequ1hes an gowrnmnit and n biaiMS!. Mad your ~1t1on1 to Pal Dunn, At Your Snvace, Orange Cocut Daily Pilot. P.O. Boz 1560, Costa Me.a, CA 92626. Ai many letters Cl8 pouib~ will be aruwered, but phoned inqui~i OT ~tttrs not including the readeT'1 full name. addreu and bui1ness houri' ~ number cannot be conaadered. 'Adult' theater given $326,000 SAN DIEG-0 <AP> -San Diego bas been or- dered to pay $326,000 to the Pussycat theater for loss of "good will" suffered by the X-rated mov- iehouse with eviction to make way for downtown redevelopment. The payoff was decided by a Superior Court jury after the Pussycat was described as an attraction rivaling San Diego's zoo and Sea· World. In the words of Pu.ssycat lawyer William Bitting of Los Angeles: "SAILORS AND MARINES ALl-over the world know the Pussycat in downtown San Diego. They might be in Guam or the Philippines and de· cide what to do when they hit San Diego. "The zoo, Sea World, Mission B•y, the Coronado Bridge, the tattoo parlors and the .... Pussycat theater are the t.b.inp they mention." The award -in addition to $1.2 million awarded to Walnut Properties Inc., ownen of the Pussycat -is being appealed to the state Court of Appeal. COMMENTED A CITY ATl'OaNEY: The Pu11ycat theater dldn 't have $328,000 worth or Sood will to IOH, even if 1t Iott every bit of 1ood Will it pGeSetHd.'' Walnut Prwerties said the moviebouae la one of the most prOlitable of 35 in its chain. The com· pany alJo owna land, hotell and 1eoeral audience theaters. t ~u M•n•gement Center \ ~0r-.c..~..... . _... .. ,,........ ,.,.,.. -----------....;.~....;.. ___ _.. ..... ..__"" . . --I ® 11 '!... ... PIPll -ClllP TV e 111% WW Stata 10A814061< c~ ()di~ on ... tTtOOCf e ht· LIM 'ic1ltt• T•IM ~ t ~"~.~= F~11t~ 5269'5 • Atrte!Ntk Ctler CelltTol • MC . .Automollc Ffequerlcy Control • ~ Consc1oua-Solid -State Choaail • In-the Block Mo111x Picture Tube • Modular Cholsls Design • Custom Ptc:tule Control • Automatic Color Control :~~ COl.OI "'' V.OhJI flnllh on hrgh "'l)CXI plosfic; 2511 ...... OLOR TV • \OOt<lt &t'\ ~-.JP!!!~'1' ,! tf'\f'\ t41"f'I •le~ (rrrp ' t '0' hf't 04r '1~1 • ( oprg, )'" U'1"i CfCP (Ht"la1U •' • VIA II • Quartz Elec:tronlc • Program Aamot• Control Tuning PLUS SAYE 550 FROM DAVIS-BROWN . .. ) . . .,..,,....... ADVENTIST STORE FEATURES NATURAL FOODS IN KEENE, TUAI Ann• Aet•I•• aacb brown rtce In one of oolt1ge town'• bualneaHa Town owned by college Keene, Texas, operates /or by Adventists KEENE. Texas <AP > Travelers driving into this north centraJ Texas town on Highway 67 might not notice that the fast·food Joints end at the city· line. Without s topping , t h ey wouldn't know that the post offi ce is closed on Saturdays mstead of Sundays a nd that the sole grocery store ha~ '>ne of the mos t extensive arrays f natural foods and meat substitutes in the state. The modest frame and brick houses that line the highway reveal little about this town of 3,400, located 50 miles southwest of Dallas. The only hint comes from a s mall sign that points the \lYay to Southwestern Adventist '->liege. THE COLLEGE, B UILT in 1893, is the hub of the town - and its largest employer. The co llege pres ident. Dr Don McAdams, estimates 90 percent of the town 's residents are Seventh-day Adventists, and says most of them are involved with the college. Th at's because the college owns most of the town's businesses. including the motel, the gas station, the Loma Linda Food Store, the car wash, the s hopping cen ter , Brandom Kitche n Cabinet Co and Southwestern Color Graphics, a print shop Together, the college and its businesses gross $15 million a year. McAdams said. Southwestern Adventist has only 700 students, but its tuition is among the highest in the state $152 a s emester hour . McAdams said the professional prog rams offered require expensive equipment and low teacher-student ratios. • "The way the students pay 1lteiil•11er Donna Kay Rule tbrowa bii' hands lnto the air In lri'*Pb after beltlnl a plutlc erUMr used for calf ·tY,tnl Pl'ldiee at an Okl•lfo sna cu,. n l 1 h tap o t n •a r t 9' atock1ard1. For fa , COdoyt IDd Otben pit ~ 1killt ~almt thit device. it is by working," he said. "And that's sort of the essential uniqueness of the town ... That's why all these industries are here. About 8S percent of the students work 15 to 20 hours a week." Some busi ness -lik e Nu·Cushion, the nation's largest stick horse manufacturer -are not owned by the university but still rely on student labor . ·'Some of the industries were s tarted by t h e co llege specifically for the purpose or providing labor for the students. Others were started by people who just realized that this was a good labor market," McAdams said. OTHERS WERE TAKEN over by tbe university when they encountered financial problems. An example is Brandom, the town's largest operation. "The college, having several hundred students working over there, couldn't take a chance on letting it go under, because then where would all the students work? So the college ended up bailing it out and laking it over," McAdams explained. The university·owned bus inesses operate under the umbrella or Southwestern Diversified Industries. The college business manager is the mini-conglomerate's president. Managers of the various businesses a r e t h e vice presidents. "In a sense, we just change hats. We have a meeting as the board of the college. We then adjourn that meeting and start a meeting as the shareholders or Sou tbwestern Di versified Industries," McAdams said. ADVENTIST SHUN all drugs and most are vegetarians, McAdams said. They emphasize fresh air. exercise, and low intakes of salt, sugar and fat. "Adventists believe that when a person dies, he just dJes, that's all . " . But at some point in time , th ere will be resurrection," McAdams said. Iowa study When the resurrection comes, Adventists believe, the dead wiU rise holistically -body. mind and spirit. Thus, health is an important doctrine. Another characteristic of the Adventist lifestyle Is that they worship on Saturdays -the seventh day or the week. THE TOWN RAS no movie theaters or bars, and students adhere to strict curfews. Blue jeans are in abundance, but female students may not have hem lines above the knee, low.cut necklines or noticeable makeup. In the college's vegetarian cafeteria, 20-year-old James Weingardner was campaigning for student body president, running on a platform of more service projects and more spirituality. J e'fr Bromme, a 20-year-old social science major, doubles as the state's youngest newspaper publisher. He bought the Keene Chronicle for SS,000 last year at age 19. A staunch Democrat, Bromme jabs at the town's Republican majority in his editorials, but says, "I don't think there are any revolutionary new changes coming t.Q town. HE SA VS HE plans to sell the newspaper before leaving Keene to attend law school, probably at the University of Texas. If Bromme does l eave for graduate work, he may be an exception. "There's a certai.n number of people who come here to go to school and they sort or stick," McAdams said. "A certain number or parents come here to put their kids in school and they sort of stick." McAdams said he sees "a d e fin ite tendency among Adventists to clannishness." but he tries to discourage it. ·'I think people should go out and be a pa.rt of the society and influence others," he said. "They won't influence all)'one just living among themselves." Pregna11Cy perils in alcolwl tested IOWA CITY, Iowa <AP> -A atudy b)' a UnJvenlty or Iowa scientist bu provided wbM it Hfl la tbe ftnt experimental evidence \4at drlnklq durlal p,..pane1 can rnult ln retarded offsprtni. The researcb by Dr. Jam.ea Wat, a prol•aor ot anatomy, dealt with rat.a, and West aaJd t.be resuJta may not apply dlrecUy to bu.mana. ''But if I were a pre1nant woman, I would not drink," bt Hid. "We have demonatrat.d convtndn•ly that alcohol ent.n the brain cell coanectlom" bl tat ulmU.. SCR 'Merchant' superb IYTOMTITVI ........ ~ ..... Ill the U yean ainc• South Cout Repertory tlnt made Jta preMDce. felt ln tbe cultural climate of Uae Orans• Coast, the 1lay1 of WUUam Sbake.peare have been an lnteiral ·part of ltl artlatlc diet. But ooe muat harken back to SCR'a flnt Sbakeapearean o fferlnf, the masnificent "Othello" of H65, to find a presentation ol the Bard's works wbJch meuurea up to the Coata Meaa repertory com- pany's current produc· INTERYSSIQN lion, "The Merchant of nll Venice." It ia the most fully reaUzed example of claaslc theater mounted on the Fourth Step Theater's 1ta1e. Despite the discomfort 1enerated by Shakespeare's depletion of Jews u aome sort of cloven-booved demons, aa characterized by the vengeful money lender Shylock, SCR 's "Merchant" ia a powerful, lnvolvinl and immensely entertaining piece of theater. Brilliantly mounted by guest direc- tor John GOing aeainst Cliff Faulkner's muterfuJ scenic backdrops, it ls a superb venture on the part or alJ concerned. CASTING, FROM TOP to bottom, is inspired, with the performances of SCR's guest artists - John Wylie as Shylock, Katharine Houghton as Portia, William Nee4}es as Antonio and Stephen Russell as Bassanio -particularly impressive. Few classical efforts on any local stage have suc· ceeded in so pronounced a fashion as this one. ·--WALTDllNEY'S ••-FANTASIA !91 ..,..,.., , .... .._ •. •~•·4kM · ...... ,_, ... , TILi•~-· .... -l:l"lr:t:t--:":':''.'.::::~ .... -....... -............ s..-,, ......... ALL NIGHT LONG 1•1 ,,. . .., .. ~ .... , .. "THI OflEAT SANTINI" Cf'OI ................. "1 .. ~ "RAOINO •ULL" (Ill) ...,.., ... , .... 1':91 .... . ...... , .. , ...... , ...... MANIAC ·'~1\11 1 .... •o..~·,._..... W!~WllllillL...-.::: .. 1:..:.1'":'~...J Mt.AT CLl.AVlll MAHACflE 1111 f Ne AM CM lllAClie Wlll\ltnlll., Ac<•-• 8'1"' Y-0... AM l'lor1-------MOJADOP'OMfl CON HOM LA fl~U>f , .. _ .. _ .. __ .... flOADGA .. I !NI -COAIT TO COAST !NI "TMa ,.. •• CMAJtT Of' V•lffCr' A pie~ Illy Wlllle!tl IW.._.ere1. fired .. lloy~ .. ttl, lloy Clfll '~• ~ by Wllllem lclWteer, I lloy "" R1ulu , 'Nike! c ........ ,,.., ICMNtoV, """''' ••• Mondeys •11 p.m Mlli 9"111'\Ch •t I JO-• p "'""'"""~I IM Soutll CNll 111.,.,,.,,, •U T••n Ceftltr Or1¥e, C.te _...., 11_...u.n. ,,,.., TM• CAST Sll'(IOO • • ...... .,,,, .............. J-WYlle Por1i. • • ... •. .... .... . • • .... l(e.,_IM ~ Antonio. • .. .. .. . .. • . • • • .. , .. .. .. . .. . Wllllem ..._... 8euenl0 . ....... ... .. .. ................. S~lll-11 Gr•ll•no . , , , . .. ... .. . ... ,, .......... , lllkMrf o..i1t L.or•nio .. .. .... , , • . .............. W•Yftt AleUllliltfo Jen ice .. ... .. . . ..... .. ....................... Anni I.MIO Ner11se ............... , .. .. . . .................... LllllM o.rt.t l•unc:elot 0-. ... . .. . . .. . .. ............ Jelllt •ttlftlllfDft 010 OollOo/Oulle .. .. . .. • . .. .. ..... , ... Jolln-O.ve.1Cel1er Pr I net of Morocc.e.. . . .. .. .. ... , ............ St.wt II'*"'-' Prlntt of AneQO!' .. .. .. . .. . • .. .. , • • . • .. • .. .. • . ICellh F.wttr Tub•I .... , • ... • , , ................. O..r .. "Woee Seier lo .. .. .. . .. . .. • .. .. ........ J~ M01lw1ry Solanlo .. . .. , , ., •.. Jolln-FreOtrlCk JonH SltPll•no .. , . • . . ......... Tim NtllOll Wylie's Shylock is especially noleworthy. This highly skllled aclor takes his character from almost comic caricature through bitter vindictive· ness into humiliation and desperation with deft, polished strokes. Hi s impassioned appeal for un- derstanding ("Hath not a Jew eyes? When you prick us, do we not bleed?") gives us heart-I rending insight into a character with whom we , cannot sympathize, but who we can, neverthe-j less, understand. Miss Houghton, who clearly has inherited the talent as well as the name of her illustrious aunt,· Katharine Hepburn, gives a beautifully modulated interpretation of Portia, the pampered heiress who dons male attire to thwart a tragic dispensation of justice. Her wily, high·spirited nature is splend.idJy portrayed ·and her courtroom scene . one of· <See MERCHANT, Page Al) 1•1 ., ... ,_. ,,. ........ . 'FORT APACHE" ~lU·~ .. , ·ooas OF WAA" 11 I._,,\' -~~ uo1•• Niwa ITAMKYAHO Htn'CH •I ..-: ...,, ..,. ...... ...... .......,.., c.t. Cet~ Oii MOOf pollljCIOlt; l.lnde Herrte a.-etloc>- ~In ZWid\, ......... MO. 'IMAT'I.,., l.M Featured; a ,,.. ~ pfttt; ........ 000 few • ~ 009: a or~• """° .. .,, enny .. INtNCtor. • t..090 l.000 and hie cllputlee 00 undtr~ 10 bfeell vp • QI!" theft ""9· .MOYW • •.,. "And Mlllk>N w• Die" ( 1913) Richard BeMhert, 8uNn Str ... berg. Environment al u.pet1e 111• ltUmmoned to detetmlne tlle trelta of a mye11111ovt 90\lfct that hes killed MYetal thouQnd peoc>te ... J --· 8 9 """"""'DAYS Joannie end ChacN 8flMk off to a ~ In Chic:-uc> oot run Into problem• llM8klng back when their cat bl'Mka down (R) 0 MOVIE Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, March 10, 1981 ~· TUBE 'TOPPERS KHJ e 1:00 ~ 11The Cba1Jen1e." An international conflict la settled by a bat- tl& between two cbampiom lD t1l1I movie drama with Darren McGavin and James Whitmore. KOOP e 8:00 -''Testimony of Two Men." The return of the hl1torlcal miniseries which begins f ollowtn1 the Clvll War. William Shatner, Steve For- rest and Barbara Parklnl are featured. CBS 8 9:00 -"Hellinger'• Law." Telly Savalas stars as a d.lfferent sort of Philadelphia lawyer in thla new TV mov- ie (photo at left). a:aoG ltl ~~' 8Hlfll.EY ein'e "-Aelallona AC1. -~=--·---~ =' ..,,. ...,.. .. 4 --tt9111:r.... =.· =.::., ~ ~ wMrl 1fle .,. tied I '9W\._.._ .,_..._..ltaOOll'ICl••c i. ......... tlM.(J) MOV9 WNrt llrWtlt .... e """'· * * "Timber Tr--" .. ,,................. . -·~ el NI MOfltJ 10 ..,. .,... U 711 Ctavoe Aktrie. _, .... otocfl9 kl Hoe ..., Cohan. l,Jfl9. 1•. MOYll • IMMTTA •••"Or. Jaliyt! And Mt TOf!Y ooae unoeroo-•a / ~··I lt411 "*-T,._ tNllMr kl .... Ille k-°' Cy, """° '-""'*' .......... -prof>. • -· • ..,,. ~a 11'\dt llijadllnf Mo ..,...,_ NIWI 11:10• cot CAWTT t• e TNI I.OHi MNG1R Ou.I: Jaaft.....,,_ Ram-"'--OIOn Of Of6-Tlmeta1' pal. (Plll't 2 Ol 2) • MOYll uiao e ()) LOU MANT • ._. "Nlghtll\llfe In Wu" ~ Pynchon lalte Roael to ( 1NI) Camaron Mttohatt, keep .,, eye ou1 for mte-Anne Halm. .... In tN T,_, !tOt ,.... 1:81 I NIWI ~ llOW lar lie .. 00• (A) 1:00 • N1W1 • TNI MIT CW MOYie CAMON * * "Man Wiii! The Icy Ouaeta: lklddy Hac:ttett EyH " (1 tn 11 Kaan an \iutcn •~ a dl141mma wnan a tong-tlma detecu,,. tri.tld maltM a deal with a moc..tet to e11Qienga the ut. of an Inform« for the ~talion of Mevy glim• l>llng d9bta run up by the ln-tlgat0t'• wife Cl TIC TAC DOUGH • M*A*l*H Telly's 'Lam' • • 'J\ "The Cllali.nga" ( 11170) Darren McGallln. J-Whitmore. To el/Old a lutt-tcele ...,., . majOI' iio-• orgentza an lntet- nellonet conftlet to be decided by a battle between two solitary cnempions. The glt1e lnMk Into their bc>M'• otflce 10 retrtev. a nuty note 1119y WfOla to him when tll9y -• angry ,.,,~ THIATM "Denger UXI" The bom11 dt1po1a1 team come• ec roH Hltler'a lateet noY8lty -the butterfly bomb. (Pert tO) ~= I Elw~S::Dorner~ • H08M'I HMOa • 1:10 MOYie Hoean'a "*' dlac:i'edll • * * • '"Tiie Saxon Chaim'· Ktlnget bfMlta In another psyoh(> and the lut bo• of morphine from auppty -to be contaminated • OOOOTIMIS J J '1 got somelhlng 111at s-t Daddy want• ano Whether or nol he ~I It Wiii be a matter of Iii• or dNtll Morgan Stevens (left) and Telly Savalas star in "Hellinger's Law," a TV m ovie abo ut a flamboya nt Philadelphia attorney. airing tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. • '1i> El.ECTAIC COMPANY(A) ()) C88 NEWS (fl) ABC NEWS 8:30 0 BULLSEYE 8) WELCOME BACK, KOTT£R Gabe Is _,. 1n • •err compromising poaltlon • BENNY Hill Benny'• French tenon -• 10 tMt lull of promise for the apparent treats In store fID V£TERAN'S HOME. YOUNTVIUE A documantary on Nape Valley's state medieal cen. let, nuramg home and retirement home for dis· abled ,,.tetena, with a IO.>I< et the ect1111t1•• ot present· day men end women '1i) ST\JOIO SEE 'Cobblet" (RI C1J w ·A·s·H Me1 Houlihan s hence amves at the •07 7th end shOCkl Frank by &Slung him to be his t>est man !Ill 8AAHEY MILLEA Barney and his delec:t1ve1 are loc:tced up with a man with a mystettoua •-. a prosutute end lnapector Luger when the station IS ~arentlned IPart 1) 8:50 fll) PLEDGE BREAK Regutarty scheduled pro- gramming may be delayed due to pledge breaks. 8:55 IJ EDITORIAL &:I OVER EASY "EmRloyment" Guests. Tlah Sommer•. Lawrence Hochhelmet CR) 7:00 I) C8S NEWS D NBCNEWS D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Fonzie dtg• Into 111s lottte black bOOI< lo come up wllh en tnstenl data tor Al 0 ABCNEWS 0 JOKER'S WILD GI M•A*S•H Khng41f grows deSperate to return home when his ellort to bnng Toledo to the unit tails «I) STREETS OF SAN FAANCISCO Stone laces a •1c1ous CHANNEL LISTINGS IJ !\Iii( 1 L.13~1 l ,., ,\11 1 ' D l\NBC..1 NBt Lll t, '11·1 .... 0 KT LA 11111 I l .... l\'lq•· •. 0 MOC TV 1AFH .. 1 L'" 1\n w 11•, 18 "rMa 1c11-...1r.;, . .,,01'1" 0 l\HJ rv 1 lncJ I L ,, ... A'f ,, •• ' ffO' ,..cc; r p\HC.. • '>.tn u .. ·q . Q) ~IT\, 1 ln1.J , Lu"' ;\nqtolr• «l)KCQPf\i1l"l•l -.A111t •• m i<c.£, 1" Pa::-.1 L , "'" 1 .... c:!> !\OCl rv PH..,, ...... ,• i• "H•·, n youth gang WhlCh hH committed •2 eel• of vto- tence, Including murder. 1n two months. '1i) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT ()) TIC TAC DOUGH ®) MERV GRIFFIN Gueat•· Bo Hopkins, Jean Stapleton, Yarbrough 1nd Peoples, Franklin Aj1ye 7:30 II 2 ON THE TOWN Ho111· Sta11e Edwards. Melody Rogers Talk with people wno baheva paying ta.es 11 llleQat: v111t the Amateur Film Fest1111I wtl8f e people wl th no or I-Ow budgets make 8-m1t· 11me1ar hims D FAMILY FEUD 0 SHANA NA Guest Kim Carnes 0 EYEWITNESS LOS ANOE LES Hosts lnu Peorou and P1u1 Moyer take a looli 01 tile medtcel mir&clfl ot organ tr ansptenta, see one man s •11s1on ol a C•ly 1n •ts 200th year Tony Duquette s City 01 Angels meet some peo. Pie who 11ave outrageous pets 0 FACE THE MUSIC GI ALLINTHEFAMILY Archie sneaks ott to night school In hopes ot com- p1e11ng 1>1s nigh scnoot education EE MACNEIL I L.EHRER REPORT c:!) MEWS (J) P.M. MAOAZJNE A VISlt to TV Gu•de he•d· quarters. a •50-pound • ne1vywa1Qht skiing cha,,,. • G) P.M. MAGAZINE A vial1 to TV Gulde heed· quertera; a •50-pound heavyweight siding cllern- pion, Mery Gregori bolld1 storage ahetves. Capt Ceuot on Indoor pollution G) TE8TIMONY OF TWO MEH (Premtete) Mertln Eaton (St811e Forrest). returning from the Clvll War, dilcov- era that the woman (Bar- bara Park1n1) he loves has mamed Adrian Ferrier (W1lll1m Shatner). 1 wealthy aristocrat Mar- jor1e 1nd Adrian have two children. Jonathan (Oa11ld Birney>. one of them. t>ecomes e doctor and propoaea marr1age to Eaton's 1Neg11imat• deugll- 1.,-(Linda Purl! (Part t) &;) MOVA 'The AstetOtd And Tiie D•nosaur A radtcat ,._ theory as to why the dino- saurs died out after 150 m1ll10n yeats of successful dominance 15 examined c:!) PLEDGE BREAK Regutarty scheduled P<O· gr1mm1ng may be delayed due to pledge braai.s SENIOR Dl YMPICS Th•s annual compat1t1on features a group of mid- dle-aged and eld8fly eth· tates competing 1n sw1m- m1ng. track end field and other athletic events 8:06 '1i) MY8T£RY "Rumpole Of The BaJtey· Rumpote And Tl"te Fascist Beall .. Rumpole accepts tl"t• defense ot Captain Rex Parkin wl"to 15 charged With Inciting a flOt under Brit· aln'• Race Relatlona Act (Pert 4) ~~WTT Gu.t· Jlrn Nebora ()) KUH'S NOPLE NO 8 ()) MOVIE "Heninger'• L-" (Prem- lete) Tally Se1181u, Morgen St811an1 A flamboyant lawyer Is hired lo defend en employee of 1 1yndl- c.1a-connec:ted COl'tglOm· 8fete who 11 ecouMd of murdering a televlalon new.caater G 8J AND THE Bl!AA BJ discovers e porno ring operating out or 1 retlr• ment home 0 !Ill THAEE'S COMPANY Cindy's new pencnant tor collact1no maternity clothes leads Jeck to jump to a hasty concluSion end propose marriage GI MERV GRIFFIN' Gunta 8o H091tln1, Jean Stepleton, Yarbrough end Peoples. Franklin Ajaya Mary Ora)'lon 8:06 &:I MYSTE.RY ·Ruml>(>te 01 The Balley Rumpote And The Fesc:tll Beast' Rumpote ec:cepta the detense ot Captain R41• Perkin who•• cllergeo w1tll 1nc1t1ng 1 not under Bnt- JOHN DARLING 9*' 8 0 TOO Cl.OU FOR COMFORT Henry ooae Into a 11a1a of 8hocll end rabelllon wt>atl he -the eklmpy outfit S81e hU to -It>< her MWjob.(R) 10:00 D F\.AMINGO AOAO lane leatna that three peo- ple with whOm the Shared • MC:l'et put rec:mltl)I died under strange clrcum- llenc::ea, 811• NEWS • 9 HAllT TO HART Jonathan and Jennifer'• effona to find a mining brld90room entangle them In a murder lnvestige11on 1tretc111ng from N-YOrtc 10 Cllllforn11 (R) t&.06 '1i) IUTZ ON IAITAIH World War II newsreel end documentary lootege Illus- trates the hlatory ol the Battle ot Britain. Al1Sta1r Cooke narrates 10:10 fli) ~ Vinteoe ,_... footage from the ·30s and ·•0s 1lluatrates a numoroua and lolllng took at 1nventor1 and their ol1en dub+OUs eccomo11111men11 .... m-.r apy ...., .. (1 .... ) Robet1 MonlgOm- ~ .. an Amar1can ery, 8uMn Haywwd. olllcer. • MOW 11:81. ~A8C * "Cfou Cl\ennet· (11148). NIWI W•yne Morrie, Yvonne ..-n FIM",_11 -~, -a:111 NEWS 12lDO. M<M1 4:00 MOVIE • • ~ "Hetlow" ( 1985) "This Vanishing l end" Cetot Lynlay, Eltam Zlm-(t973)0oc:umentary be1ia1 Jr. 4:26 • MOYIE G O MOVIE • "C.lman OI Peria·· * * "PMlc: Al Leb Wood ( 1t4t) Cwt Eamond, Adela Manor" (1977) Suzanne Mare Somera. Robert Foxworth GI MtMIOH: IMP0881Bl.E The IMF'a uelgnment 1• lo tocete and dlaarm a 50- megaton hydrogen bomb. G) ONE STEP BEYOND "The Clown" A young hus- band Inadvertently kllla his wife In a tit of Jealousy when he misconstrues her rendez,,ioua In the quarters of a mute down 12:30 G TOMOAAOW Gueata animator Relph Bekalll, ec1ra11 011n1 Scenorid. author Donald Letnbro 0 DONLAHE Gu"'' Vincent Price Coral Brown., Leon Rul· Mii. Rocky Burnett. Angele Ayres Wedne•da,,'• Bayt inee Mo.,ie• 11:00 tit * •;, "Wlnda 0 1 The Weatetand" ( t936) Jonn Wayne, Pnytll• Fr-. -AFTERNOON----- 12:00 m .... 'It "R41treet. Hell!" (1115 t) Frenk Lovejoy, Rldlerd Carlson G) • • "Pate K .. 1)1'• Btuea" ( 1955) JICI< Webb. Janet Leigh 3:00 !Ill • ... ..,··she uves" I 1973) Season Hubley, Desi Arnar Jr 3·)0 0 * • My Friend Irma ( t!M9) Deen Martin, Jerry Lew.s by Armstrong & Batluk E3UT IHE CURTAIN~ Aa()UND 'THE. l\J SCREEN HAVE GOT IO GO.' Fro• Pagr AB MERCHANT ... 'Dynasty' -leverage for better TV programs Shakespeare's famed contrivances. comes across with authority and clarity RUS.SELL T URNS IN a staunch and solid portrait of Portia's well -meaning s uitor. though he plays in the shadow of Richard Doyle's boisterous depiction of his fun ·lovmg companion. Needles in the title role lends depth and credibility to a character a lmost too perfect, a willing martyr humanized only in his outspoken anti-semitism. Special mention must be accorded John Ell- ington, who stepped into the part of the comic foil Launcelot when an onstage injury forced the multi·talented Ron Boussom from the cast. Ell- ington enacts the buffoonish servant lured from Sh ylock to Bassanio with the pure s lapstick silli- ness norma ll y accorded a Shakespearean clown and comes off well. Impressive a lso are the romantic duo of Wayne Alexander a nd Anni Long, the latter a dis- contented daughter of Shylock, who provide a fine subplot. John-David Keller , a specialist in playing old men with one foot in the grave, does double duty in this capacity. Stuart Robinson swasbbuckles through a rip-roaring stint as a Moroccan prince who seeks Portia's band, while Keith Fowler plays a similar role with foppish a plomb. FOR "MERCHANT," SCR has raided the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and come up with a trio of regulars George Woods, Walter Daly and Louise Griffin-Rodecker. Only Woods contributes much impact as Shylock 's comrade and fellow Jew. "The Merchant of Venice" is a rarely pro- ·duced Shakespearean offering, probably due to its insensitive depiction of the Jewi sh people as a class though no doubt true to its historical perspec- ,Uve. Yet it is a giant of a production at South Coast •Repertory. where It will be on stage through April 5 at the Fourth Step Theater, 655 Town Center :orlve, Costa Mesa. By PETERJ. BOYER LOS ANGELES IAP > "What do I think about what I see on television? I see mostly wrong. I find much of it mindless and boring. And the characters I can't care about them ... Meet Esther Shapiro, a lady who m akes television programs. pro- gr ams which, in light of her regard for most of the products on the market, you might assume to be meaningful and uplifting, artful, even Mrs. Shapiro has a s~ries that's on networtk television right now - ABC 's "Dynasty." Never assume. "Dynasty," ABC's Monday night cousin to "Dallas," isn't remotely uplifting or meaningful (Mrs . Sha piro might argue on "m ean- ingful "). On the other hand, it usual- ly isn't boring, nor notably mindless, considered in the context of its breed. Mrs. Shapiro and her husband, Richard, earned their "meaningfuJ. uplifting" credits elsewhere. Among their television movies are listed some classy credits, s uch as "The Cracker F actory,·· "Intimate YOU'RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO M UCH. ErEWll'NESS ~ •Wt•wt:lfl'CMCO,,__ ~• ... Sovtll Coast (714) 494·1514 n• $1Hltbac~(714) Sll·SllO ,. COITA_.. II.A. MUTMOOMf OAANGR ., ......... -- Strangers" and "Minstrel Man." As a programming and writing consultant for ABC, Mrs. Shapiro helped develop "Friendly Fire," "Roots II" and the upcoming epic, "Masada." ·'The audience requires certain things," Mrs. Shapiro says. "If I sit down and do a series that the au- dience doesn't wat~h. I can't do the other things. 'Dynasty' isn't ·Roots' or ·Masada.' But it gives m e credibility at the network and allows me to do other things.·· "Dynasty" has met the unhappy fate that awaited all three of this year 's "Dallas" -inspired soaps -a message from viewers that affec- tions are not a lways transferable. CBS' "Secrets of Midland Heights" was quickly canceled and NBC's "Flamingo Road " s urvives only because its below-ma rginal ratings look better amid NBC's other pro- gramming statistics. ABC can't afford to keep ··Dynas- ty" at the level on which it is now pe rforming, a nd probably won't. Those middle-class men will have lo make do with "Dallas,'' "Knot's Landing" and "Flamingo Road." They'll survive. "ALL NIGHT LONG" (R) "FANTASIA" * BARGAIN SPECIAL * All Beata $2.00 ALL DAY every Monday a Tueacjayl ' - 1980 Orange County Press Club First Place winner -Richard Koehler: Best Photo Series and Photo Portfolio. ( ' Richard Koehler 4 l.J I .. • TU ESDAV, MARCH 10, 1981 COMICS BUSINESS STOCKS , .. : .. : .. ' £-,•' ... . 0 .. 1¥ PlleC SIMI ~ .. MARK SPINN (LEFT) AND JEFF PRIES LEAD SEA KINGS IN CIF SEMIFINAL PLAYOFFS. An old familiar setting CdM, Aztecs meet again By ROG ER CARLSON 01 tlle O•olJ Ptlet Si.ti Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings are getting ready for a Cl F 3·A semifinals basketball game lhls week -sound fami li ar ? It should. The Sea Kings, under Coach Jack Errion. are preparing for their 19th playoff ven· lure in the past h ve seasons and 1f Thursday night's contest at the Los Angeles Sports Arena needs more to enhance the game. consider this: The foe will be La Quinta High's Aztecs, the defending champions who captured that honor with a victory over Corona del Mar in t he finals a year ago. FOR ERRION, NOW IN his 31st year as a head coach, it would appear to be a ho-hum situa· tion for the veteran. Not so. ''This is a different group and a new ex· perience for me as weJI as the boys going there." says Errion. "And, playing som eo'!e (La Quintal that strong, well. we realize they are a very good club. "We're going to have to play a good, solid game to be in it." The tipoff will be at 7 o'clock Thursday even· ing and Errion is hopeful his team will be able to solve the riddle that wrecked its title hopes in '80. In that one 6-9 Johnny Rogers, who was to share Player of the Year honors with Los Amigos High 's Clayton Oliver in 3·A circles, dominated defensively so well that Corona del Mar was forced to go outside for its shooting atte mpts. "He (Rogers> has good reaction and unless you have someone able to go at or over him, It can be difficult," says Errion. "But overaJI we're a little better shooting team from the perimeter and Chris Lynch is a good little shooter who might put a little pressure on them trying to clog the inside. "WE'VE BEEN LOOKING to get there (the semis> and the fact it is La Quinta, well that makes it a little more interesting." As for defensing the 6-9 Rogers, Errion says bis team may find It more dlff1cuJt to sag off pn him because of the abiJitles of the other La Quinta players from the perimeter. The Corona del Mar story for 1981 hasn't changed much since the beginning of December. It's been the three-man assault of 6-6 Mark Spinn, 6-5 Jen Pries and 6-3 Steve Moore. What has taken place, however , has been the emergence of Lynch as a threat from the outside and the appearance or sophomore Mike Hess. FOR WEEKS EBIUON toyed with Pries, then Moore, at guard, trying to find the ri~hl combination. Nothing really worked right, however, until Hess was moved up with three games remaining in league play. Now the unit seems cohesive and Errion as· sesses his 20-5 unit: "Spinn is getting some of his mobility back after his knee injury and he has a little more in- centive to try and see what he can do a second time," says Errion. ··Pries has made great strides defensively and he wants to make a good run at it, with the season winding down. "Moore is a tournament player and is the type that this type of game brings out the best in him. "Lynch seems to improve with every game and Hess can get the ball up the court and to the open man, he gives us an opportunity to get Moore back where he belongs." Errion also expects to have 6·3 Adam Acone and 6·1 guard Mark Luer on the court. Stil.I, it's the double-edged sword of Pries, the league's Player of the Year. and Spinn, an All-CIF choice as a junior, which makes the Sea Kings tough. SPINN IS EXPECTED to be· up against Rogers defensively. "He is getting better at posi- tioning himself in relation to where the ball is," says Errion. "And he woru al it. We realize the talent we're up against, but if Spinn bas a good de- fensive night it may allow us to stay up on the other shooters a little better. "La Quinta has some good wine sbooten and I'm not so sure we can afford to give them a better look at the basket. That's one of the reasons Rogers 11 such a high scorer, hedoesn'tbavetoworry toomucb about .others ganging up. "We'll try to coqt.rol most of them and just hope be (Rogers) doesn't run us out of the place." BS 86 87 It's agreed America should reindustrialize but how? ... 86 o- 0 National surprise! UCI's Magee picked first All-America By JOHN SEV ANO Of Ille Dally ~li.t Stan Stunning would be an understatement. Su"rprise really wouldn't describe it any better. Shock Is "pretty mild, too, considerine the situation. But that's exactly the state Kevin Magee was in Monday night as he talked about bia selec- tion to The Associated Press' 1980-81 first-team America squad. "When they told me on the phone I was really surprised." Magee said slowly, as if re-living the moment. "I never thought I'd make first team my first year. It's a big thrill from me; probably the best thing that's ever happened lo me since I started playing basket· ball." THE STARTLING news . which seemed to leave everyone numb on the UC Irvine cam- pus. came shortly after a luncheon Magee at· tended at the Newport Beach Sheraton. "Bo (ass is tant coach Mike Bokos ky l told me after th e luncheon. I thought he was lying," admitted Magee "Then r got the phone call and I kinda tripped out when they told me." KEVIN MAGEE Magee Joined an exclusive first team list that included: 6·7 junior forward Mark Aguirre of DePauJ; 7.4 sophomore center Ralph Sam oson of Virginia : 6·5 senio r guard Danny Ainge of Brigham Young: and 6·1 sophomore guard Isiah Thomas of Indiana. THE TEAM -ONE of the yo ungest in the his- tory of AP All Americas was chosen by a panel of AP sports writers across the nation. And. that alone made Magee's placement in- credible in that none of the midwest. mideast or eastern voters were able to see the 6-8 pride of Magnolia, Miss during the season , since Magee's activities were principally confined to the west coast. "I've aJways dreamed about being on an All• America team," said Magee. "Coach (Bill) Mulligan, Rob Halvaks (sports information direc tor ) and all the cov~rage I got in the newspapers really helped me a lot.'' Magee, who enjoyed one of the best seasons of any player in the country, led the nation in scoring throughout most of the year before finishing third at 27 .5. His field goal percentage of 67 .1 ranke4 second, while his rebound average of 12.5 was fifth. MAGEE ALSO SET numerous UCI school marks along the way including most points in a single sea.son (743 >. most field goals in a single season (333). most points in a single game < 40 I and most rebounds single-game (22). "This is sort of like a dream come true," said Ma gee. "I'm considered one or the five best in thct nation with players like Aguirre and Sampson .. and a ll that!s hard to beli eve. "I guess what helped me out is that I produced in the big games and the coaches I played against said some positive things about me. ··Plus, I think my attitude helped. In this game today you have to have a good attitude because you could be the best player in the world and not gel anywhere without one." OF COURSE, WITH the spotlight suddenly thrusted upon him, the talk concerning Magee now centers around whether he"ll turn hardship or not and test the pro waters "I guess if the right opportunity came, I'd go for it." he admitted. "But 1f 1t doesn't I'll just come back and play next year ... One thing's for certain, Magee isn't about to change because or his new-found stardom . "I'm still going to be the same." he says. "The honor makes you feel good on the inside, but I'm going to be the same way I always was "Nothing's going to change me." • • • Aguirre, who helped skyrocket Oe Paul to its No. 1 ranking, was selected for the second season in a row and was the only repeater from the 1979-80 squad. "He's worked harder this year and is no <See NATIONAL, Page 83> Dau, ~ ... Stall .._. I UC IRVINE'S ALL-AMERICAN KEVIN MAGEE (44) GOES FOA A LOOSE BALL Cheever, the other American, drives in LBG P BJ BOWA&D L BANDY ... ...., ....... telepbooe from London, Entland re- cently. bad two years in F -Ford, one in Formula three and four · years in· Formula Two wltb last year in Formula One. He lJ the motl experienced driver of bis a1e that there bu ever been." feel. It fa much more delicate to drive. "Without the skirts, it wlll make racl in1 more interesting. It will be moN spectacular to watch from the public viewpoint. We will all be equal and everytblne will be a lot cloeer." 1 LONG BEACH -ffe'1 tbe otber American oa the FOrtllula One circuit but Pboenhl·born Eddie Cheever doesn't mind. · TIM tlnt, of eoune la Marlo AladretU1 a name well-known iD racln•, not oa.ly oa the Formula One clrcult tbat comes to Lon• Beach Sunday, but on the cbamp6oaabip car circuit in tb1I eouftlr)' uweU. .- AndretU b11 made bla aame ln P'ormula One~ wlnDlna tbe W.1• clrt~ p la 1'11. He aJle._at aleelalalm..Sb• WOlallelndl •• CbM\'91' wu la Pbolals II yean a10, spent two 1•an la AUltraUa and DOW c.:U. lta&J bit bome. , •• , ... born in .....,... -~plan to Un there (la Americal at U.. fillj -my "'"'•'' CbeewrtlllM"' ......... "ETen belnt considered in the same callbet u AndretU ia an bonor. He's been ~ peat champion. If 1 can fulfUJ evel')'tblDI tbat be baa done, it would be Incredible. I haven't had much op- portunity to race 'in America. 1be best w11 that I can ldenUfy ls t.o win and do well in Formula One. "I'm quoted lD Italy aa aaytn1 that wbn I wtiD I '• Italian and wbm I lose, lt'a tbM damMd American. I'll be car· rytn1 tbe American flag at Loni Beach.'' CIMenf wW be drlvln1 for .K• 1'Yr· rell tllll,.... and the cat owner la n · clW about Ida,._. driver. "8• Iii iult II ud yet be ii almoet U.. oldeet OP dft,_ ID the buUMll. He started dftwtal Kart when he wu 111 tb• bl told'a.Be u.l 1ot bl.a~ ana llltO .. mlD-ftrd wlat9 be Wiii ·\I. He Tyrrell aays Cheever la able to convey to the enatneer exactly what the car 11 doing on the track. "We hhe never bad a driver who could do Ulla before," tbe owner says. "Unfortunately, I only have Eddie oo a one-year coqtract and It will be very difficult for me to Ma1n him. All the wealthy teams will be after hlm." But that'• a story that will bave t.o be continued at tbe end of th• 1111 MHOO. Tllil year the Formula One can are •'tbout •tlrta. Cb ... er feela lt will make raclq more lDterettlftl. •'The car l'Ol1I mon and la much more dlfflcult to drtve without tb1 1&1111," be 1&1•· "Now~ car ........ CJtt WIJ ,0. tlliBll A reella CR ...... )' --~ In bil flrll year of Formula One drlv· int, Cheever wu with a poorly financed Italian team. Yet be finda aome eood lJ! the experience. 1 • 'Tbe car wu very uncompetitive but hallway tbroutb t.be year we started to q1aallt1 quite well, .. be aayJ. "We m1~ pl'OllMI and It WU I toOd ~ for me; Sve~ waa pOa!Uve .... we sot eT~ polllble out o( IM car tbat we-~ a.eft* N11 t11i1 Lon• BIMb Gran4 Pris la __, bla faTOrlte typet of 1raad prtx racial. . ·•1 like Loal r ... ch ind Monte Cara. ,._._,.v_•~rJ~ __..,.. llit ...,., "You can't .teat ma ...... , .. , ·- . . ' :, ;. • i . . i , . ' ~ i • I i • f I . $ I Frem AP dllpa&eMt CHICAGO -Veteran catcher Carlton Flak, • who became a free a1ent when the Bolton Red Sox failed to mail him a contract in Ume, soon will become a member of the Chicaco Wblte Sox. Fllk appeared at a White Sox preu conference Monday but offtclally has not yet slped a contract. Jerry Relnadorf, chairman of the board of the White Sox, aald "I'll be very' very aurpriled If a contract were not ex· ' 'ecuted by the end Qf the week." FiJk, who came from San Dteao with Relnsdorf and White Sox General Manaaer Roland Hemond, said he reached b1a de· cision to sign with the White Sox durin& the filgbt. Fisk added. that his agent, Jerry Kapstein, will meet with White Sox lawyers beginning today to work out the final details of the contract. Asked if the deal might fall through, L......m111t11,-,•,1t-..,. Fisk said, "There's always a chance. I'm actually not signed and, in actuality, I am a free aeenl." About joining the White Sox, Fisk said, "I think a major consideration was the city it.self. That and the realisation that the potential on this club is real and things are flowing in a positive direction. ''I mentioned to my parents a couple of years ago that if I ever was uprooted Crom New England, I'd like to go lo the Midwest." said Fisk. -----Qtlo•e of •lied•• ____ _, Harry Kalaa, Philadelphia broadcaster, introducing Phillies outfielder Gany Maddox at a banquet: "He's turned bis life around. He used to be depressed and mia· · erable. Now he's miser a ble and depressed." Tlpn' Wlaft•lc'r ~•mr• ••• roarf•9 Lou Whitaker singled home Laace Parrub • with the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning, while Riehle Hebner and S&eve Kemp blasted home runs Monday to give Detroit a 4·3 exhibition win over Minnesota ... First baseman Job.a Mayberry of Toronto was named the team's captain, the first such appointment in the five.year history of the American League club ... Minnesota said it has signed two players outfielders Ken Laadruux and Gari Ward -to one-year contr acts. No terms were revealed ... About 20 individuals and groups have shown interest in purchasing the world champion Philadelphia Phillies. including television game show producer Chuck Barria . . . Owner Ray Kroc of San Diego s ays he will keep the money-losing National League club "forever" if he can expect only what he called reasona· ble losses ... Outfielder Andre Dawson missed Montreal's wor~out Monday to have flu id drained from his right knee. 880,000 pafldGfl to NCAA If r•f •rONRdr r• MISSION, Kan. In an age when red ink is one of the toughest opponents for college athletic directors. the NCAA basketball tourna· ment promises a payday of at least $90,000 for m the 48 schools involved. $360,000 for the Philadelphia Final Four. NCAA sources said Monday that participating schools would earn. conservatively, at least 10 percent more this year than they did in 1980. thanks to a $1.S million increase in the television contract. Last year. each team that played in the first or second round received $81,594. The 16 teams making it to the re· gional competition earned $203,985 while the finaJ four earned $326,327. A 10 percent bike would mean $90,000 for the 32 casualties of this week 's action, $224,000 for the 12 teams eliminated in regionals March 19-22 and nearly $360,000 for the four teams advancing to the Philadelphia playoffs March 28·30. The income provides a financial windfall for athletic de· par tments wracked by soaring travel costs and expenses in· volved in the government·mandated Title IX program which calls for equal expenditures for men's and women's pro· grams. Oraap C"rull left•,..,,,,., Rrr.,r• laf rrd Red Miller has been replaced aa head coach of II the Den~er Broncos and Dan Reeves, offensive coordinator of the Dallas Cowboys, bas been named as his replacement, Coach Tom Laadry confirmed Monday night. Miller was fired Monday afternoon along with the general manager of the NFL team, unidentified sources on the Broncos team said ... Pat Cllmmla&a scored 30 points, matching bis single·eame career high , to lead Milwaukee to a 118·100 triumph over Cleveland. The loss was the seventh straight for the Cavaliers . . . Rookie goalie Doa Bea.,re of Min· nesota made 4-0 saves, helping Minnesota earn a l·l tie with Montreal in the only NHL action . . . University of San Francisco whipped Pepperdine. 96-82, in a WCAC title bout which secured an NCAA berth for the Dons. USF will now play Kansas Stale In the first round of the Far West regionals at Pauley Pavilion Thursday . . . Claes&er Havas Marcol, an NFL scoring leader while placekicking with the Green Bay Packers, was charged Mon· day with reckless use of a weapon . . . Former Olympian Larry Pleaa, the first player ever to silJl with the Hartford Whalers when the team W85 founded, was named head coach pder a two.year contract ... Former Oran1e Cout College standout Jim McCloskey, now a member of the Loyola University basketball squad, has been named to the WCAC all·conference squad. Tl', ...... TV: No events scheduled. aAl>lo: Basketball -San Antonio at Laken 7·30 pm KLAC (570). • . . .. NELION PIGUET WILL DERND Hll LONG RACH GRAND MIX T1TU SUNDAY IN Ht8 BAABHAM RAC!R. E' ..... P·~·· CHEEVER .• there because it is a street course and everyone starts equal. Ob· vioualy, there is always someone who has the advantage with the machinery, but I enjoy this type of racing very much. "This year every race I am in will be to finish and to finish well. Last year,· the main ex· er cise was to qualify and do the best we could. It will be a new experience and one I am looking forward to." TYRRELL IS NO newcomer to victory circle. But his last win was at Monaco three.years ago. The team is in a precarious finan· cial situation at lhe moment and is looking for a backer. A victory wouldn •t hurt {heir chances at all. Cheever has had one bad acci· dent in Formula One racing in South Africa. ·'On the morning of the race, it was raining," he recalls. "I had done five laps and I went in- to the pits to modify something. As I was going out, I ran through a puddle and then saw a car coming in my rear view mirror. ·'I swerved sHghtly and bit the wall going about 100 miles per hour. ll was a stupid mistake, but I got out with just a scratch. All I left in the car was a shoe, not a foot." EDDIE CHEEVER, the other American, will be very much in evidence Sunday al the Long Beach Grand Prix to conclude a week·long parade of activities that also includes Saturday's Formula Atlantic race involving three Orange Coast at ea drivers amonJ( others. For Cheever, it will mark the beginning of a new year. One he hopes will send him to the top of the circuit before he returns lo America lo live with his Italian bride. Rita. Poly, Serra in CIF opener LOS ANGELES -Long Beach P o l y a nd Serra c ap th e action tonight at 8:45 in the first CIF 4·A semifinals basketball game at the Sports Arena, .following a 7 o'clock sltirmi.sh between 2·A semifinalists Blair and Nogales. Poly enters with a 24·2 reeord against Serra (24·4 ), while No1ales risks its 28-0 mark against 21·7 Blair . Wednesday's venue includes unbeaten San Marcos and un· beaten Newbury Park at 8:45 in the 4·A, following a 7 p.m. game between Sunny Hills and Glendaleln2·A. Write r free lanoos LOS ANGELES CAP> -An at· torney defend.ins Newsweek Inc. in a libel suit brought by baseball player Steve Garvey and bis wife h85 told a federal judge that the author of the ma1azine story involved wu a free·lance writer and not a member of the magazine's staff. CARA FRANCY Eagles host semifinals Es tancia Hi gh School girls b as ketbal l team wi ll host defending 3-A CIF champion Alta Loma in a semifinal round game tonight at Edison High (7:30). The Eagles lost to Alta Loma In the title game last year and would like to avenge that defeat. Coach Joe Wolf's starters will include Shar Bilyeu, Bronwyn Hand, Kris Reid, Cara Francy and Vickie Simpson. The Eagles are 23·3 this year while Alta Loma is 19-2. Francy is the leading scorer for E stanc i a with an 18.l average and 10.1 rebounds per game. Hand is hilling 13.0 per game with 12 rebounds. .. ------- Prep baseball OV, Edison roll, Mustangs gallop Both Edison and Ocean View high schools moved into third round action of the Troy tourna- ment by virtue of their one·run decisions to highlight prep baseball action Monday. The Chargers had lo come up with two runs in the top of the seventh to defeat El Dorado, 2·1. while Ocean View got three runs in the bottom of the fourth to sneak past previously unbeaten Fountain Valley. 6·5. IN ANOTHER non·league con· test . Costa Mesa scored four times in the first three innings to breeze past Bolsa Grande, 5·3. Tommy Hill's bases loaded single to center with one out in the seventh frame provided the margin of victory for the Chargers (4·U . Mike DeBenon hurled the first five innings for Edison, a llowing an unearned run in the third while striking out five and allow· ing but two hits. Craig Cloney then reli eved DeBenon in the sixth and retired El Dorado in order to record his second win of the young season Rob Munson earned the save by working all three outs in the Golde n Hawks· half of the seventh. FOUNTAIN VALLEY, despite scoring fi ve unearned runs in the first inning. couldn't hold on against the Seahawks, who got three bits, including two doubles and four RBI. from designated· hitter Kevin Stanley. Ocean View, (3·0). which got three runs back in lhe bottom or the first. came back with three more in the fourth as two walks and a single by Doug Irvine loaded the bases. Then. with two outs. Stanley ripped a double to left ·center, scoring all three runners to give the Seahawks a 6-5 lead. Winning pit c h e r Eri c Reinholtz. who was touched for three walks, two hits a nd an er· ror for five runs in the first. set· tied down through the next five innings until he was relieved by Bill Small in the sixth. SMALL, WHO got the save, finished by striking out the side in lhe seventh. T he loss dropped Fountain Va lley's record to 4·1. Al Bolsa Grande, Roger Lacky and Steve Williamson combined lo keep Costa Mes a 's early season record perfect. Entering the third lied at one· apie<'e, the Mustangs exploded for three runs to put the game on ire Max Marold ended the day as Costa Mesa's big stick with two hits and three llBI in two official trips to the pl ate We're going )'9Ur wa~ '' W.'r• • OI>• ur l•mlly so -v. ~ I/le OCTO bus our s.eond ur Wly wit• uses IM buf to 11111• me Ir.Ids shopping end we both UM It to IX> to ""°'" There's • but "°" /ust •round the COfflflr from our llOW• I Mllef rH ll.ttld holll NS'/ riding the bus wes unll/ t tool! OCTO. You might uy. OCTO hn b«Om• t»rf of the t11mlly.,, T'Mnl110CTO. Dean Pitt• Wlelnt-nc• WIKh•nlc Wettem Cr•fra, C9frHe», CA More ,,.,,,,,_ -rldlno IM bus to-*· tchool IHfd ~ NceuH '""-,,... If .a -'I with -bl--. ,,.. rouleJ IHfd lnlprolled ~. Oon't --~-...,,,,. .... pufflf). s.w -'I Mid ride ,,,. ow. 5°' •ell• cwa -'*"'I on,...,..,,..._ Ow frlelwlly phone ..,..,. ,,,.,,.,_,""'.,.,... ..... fie OCTD M.11 Jl'Oll Mell_,.. .,,.,... ................... .. ""'_,.,.., Call 638-RIDE I I ! I: Weather a problem for 1pon1ori1 •1 HOWAao L BANDY 09 * o.ity,... MM Promoten, workers, backers and partJcJpantl' la aporta events bave always kept a wary eye on the weather ln bopet that it doesn't affect tbelr partJcular dates oa the calendar. One bu ooJy to look back at the first Women's Kemper Open ln Costa Mesa to remember the rain storm that bit early in the week and brou1bt about much scurryln• around to dry the course out for play. The pro-am wu washed out that week but t.be four-day loumament was completed. Recently, the Olympia Gold Classic at In- dustry Hills bad even more troubles from the raln. Alt~r completin1 the first two rounds, the ralns bit. The entire field was on the course for Saturday's round but it bad to be called off because of heavy rains and the subsequent two days of play were also washed away. The tournament promoters paid the players the full purse for the two rounds although in many instances, precedent hlls dictated that the purse would be cut when part of the event was rained out. Don Ruhter, tournament director for the Women's Kemper Open reminds us that when raln threatened the first event at Mesa Verde Country Club, Jim Kemper or the sponsoring Kemper ~nsurance Agency. said he would pay the full purse regardless of how many rounds were com- pleted. Ruhter and Jim Poteet, the general chairman for the men's club at Mesa Verde, are hopeful that the rains have been completed for the month or Mar ch and that they will have ideal weather condi- tions once again for the tournament March 26-29. I' AL.Malt Barltey of UCJ, co-chairman of the event along with Sires Modiri oC the restaurant. There are still ~some openings in the touma- ment that wiU be played on a scramble format with tee prizes including a pair of golf shoes and a shirt. Also included ln the $1SO charge is a dinner that evening at Apadana, green feea, carts, and participation in the prizes for the winners. For further information or to register yourself or your foursome, call Barkey at 833-5405. The only thing he doesn't promise for sure is good weather. But a further delay could be ar- ranged if the weatherman rails to cooperate. • * * IF YOV ARE GOING to be in the Palm Spr· ings area this weekend, keep the Vintage lnvila- GOLF lional in mind. Included in the field of 30 golfers. RVMOR HAS IT THAT there is a good chance all 50 or over. are such greats as Arnold Palmer, that Pal Boone will be playing in the pro·am and Gene Sarazan, Sam Snead, Tommy Boll, Geor ge then serving as emcee for the evening dinner. Fazio, George Bayer, Jimmy Demaret, Mike Ruhter would neither confirm nor deny the rumor. Souchak, Bobby Locke and many others. "We have been negotiating with him and if we are The tournament is being played Thursday successful, I'm s ure he will play in the pro-am,'' through Sunday at the Vintage Club in Indian Ruhter says. Wells with a pro-am on Wednesday. The first prize There are still some spots open for the pro-am is $50,000 and some or the older players have never which will be run in two sections with morning -' played for such a prize. starling times from 7: 30 to 9: 30 and arternoon • • • times from 11 :30 to 1:30. It will be a fivesome CIDP SHOTS Congratulations to Newport event on a better ball basis. Harbor High student Nancy Mockett. Nancy is Money derived from the pro-am is earmarked playing golf with the boys team at Newport this for Hoag ~e.morial Hospital ~is year as tourna-year and recently fired a 77 as the second player ment benef1c1ary. For further 1nlormation, contact on the team, this from the men's tees. Nancy will the Women's Kemper Open office at 540-1708. soon sign a letter of intent to attend UCLA in the A check of the li st of those who have com-fall on a full golf scholarship ... Hundreds of ~itted to play in the tournament is at 84 and grow-senior golfers from across the nation will converge mg. Among those committed are Amy Alcott, Pat on San Diego April 13-17 to test their skills on the Bradley .. ~oAnne Carner, Donna Caponi. Sylvia Torrey Pines South Course, the Tijuana Country Bertolacuu. Jo Anne Washam and the derending Club and Cottonwood CC layouts. The event is a champion Nancy Lopez-Melton. 54-hole tournament open to all men and women 50 And there are still season tickets available for and over and is sponsored by the National Senior $12 !or ~e e~tire week from various charitable or-Sports Association of Washington, DC. For further gamzattons m the area as well as at the tourna-information, write to NationaJ Senior Sports As- ment headquarters at the golf course. sociation. 1900 M Street, N. W., Washington, DC • • * 20036 or phone (202> 466-6395 ... The West Coast SPEAKING OF PRO-AM events. the first spring Apadana Restaurant-UC Irvine tournament at Irvine Coast Country Club has been re-set for next Monday alter being rained out in its first effort. Amateur Golf Association will play at Sao Clemente Golf Course March 21-22. Mark O'Meara played on the WAGA tour last year before turning pro on the PGA tour'. Anyone interested should contact the group at P.O. Box 2194, Westminster 92683 or call 892-2029. There are five events carded in May and two in April. "We are sorry we did such a poor job with weather arrangements on March 2, ·· says Ralph f'ro• Pagr 81 KEVIN MAGEE NATIONAL SURPRISE • • • longer just a scoring machine,·· said his coach Ray Meyer. "His defense has gotten better as well as his rebounding, and he·s given out more assists this year, I th ink, than in his first two years combined." In addition to his scoring average of 23.5. Aguirre handed out 130 assists, actually 33 shy of his combined freshman and sophomore totals but an as· tounding figure for a high- scoring forward. ··He's really improved," Meyer said. ··1n his freshman and sophomore years, it was hard getting him to practice because nobody could guard him. He was bored and never felt challenged "I thmk playing on the Olym- pic team helped because he was challenged every day in practice there. and that brought about a gre;it c hange in his game:· Meyer s aid. Demons a n NCAA pre - tournament favorite. ALTHOUGH HE tailed off al the end of the season, Sampson averaged 18.~ points and 11.8 re· bounds per game for Virginia. He blocked 92 shots. and even that figure is not entirely in- dicative of his ability to in· timidate. ------·----• Orange Cout DAil. Y PtLOT/TIJeeday, March 10, 1981 Hr• Ntad11 Cincinnati's Johnny Bench has a glove for any position the team might put him in. He has requested to catch only twice a week and has a first baseman's, outfielder's and infielder's glove along with one for catching. Angel The Kison puzzle· tliking shape • is From AP dltpatclles P'ALM SPRINGS -Angels right-hander Bruce Kison took a turn pitching batting practice Monday, the first time he bad faced hitters slnce underaoing arm sur1ery last year. "It was another piece• in the puule," said Kison of his workout at the Angels camp here. "I've been throwin& a lot on the sidelines. The arm feels good, and I wanted to face some batters. "I didn't air it out, though. The risk of hitting someone wouldn't be worth it." Kison suffered through a 3-6 record the first half of the 1980 season before his right arm was diagnosed to contain severe nerve damage. On July 24, he underwent surgery to repair the ulna nerve in his elbow, and sur- gery was also performed on the median nerve in his wrist. The nerve reeenerat1on proc· eas is slow and unpred1ctab1e, and KJson sWI lacks total COO• trol or the nerves regUJaliJll finger movement. He aafd, though, that he expects to 1>41 pitching with the Angels by mid.season. The Angels announced that they had renewed the contracts of shortstop Rick Burleson and outfielder Bobby Clark for the 1981 season , althouah negotiations continued with the two unsigned players. • *. VERO BEACH, Fla. -The Los Angeles Dodgers opened ex, hibition baseball play todax against the Tokyo Giants who are sharing their Dodgertown training complex. Bob Welch, Rich Sutcli({e and Steve Howe were scheduled to pitch the exhibition opener for Los Angeles. TIRE &. AUTO SUPPLY No liade-ln Nettled DORMAN'S LIMfTlD llTRfAD WARRANTY Lifetime llmlted wMranty against defect in wo rkman- ship clnd matericlls, free replacement up to 5 32~ after 5/32" 1here will ~ a charge o f 50% of hst price down to 2/32." No adjustment will be allowed after 2 32''. 3P. A78-13 llT SI 69 We helve proctucect millions ol 1op qu"hry 1e1re"ds w11h 1he best re1teAc11ng equtp· meni .111 .. llilble rod"yl Only Irr~• qv"l11y rhoroughly •nspe c 1ect '"song s M l' ~lecrect 101 our r('Ul'"d1ng process GlT YOURS AT DORMAN 51 B78Xl3 ______ 2 for $25.00 * D78X 14 2 for $25.00 * E78X 14 2 for $25.00• 560X 15 2 for $27.00* 600X 15 2 for $27.00* * Plus F.E.T. M-301~ SEMPERrr 31 50 t 55-1 3 FET 1.47 M EYER SAID Aguirre 's participation on the 1980 U.S. Olympic team had changed him. Besides scoring and assisting, Aguirre grabbed 248 rebounds in 28 games with UePaul for an average of 8.9, and his presence has he lped make the Blue .------ PUBLIC NOTICE Ainge already has his pro con- tract as an infielder for the Toronto Blue Jays of the American League. Although he does not contemplate an NBA career. for the past four years, basketball has given him his fame. 78 SERIES passenger llres for cl smoo1h. comfortable ride Two fiberglass belts and 2 ply polyes1e1 cord --------------~• casing in a broad. flc11 rread de~1gnect for a rapid w.uer The me designed 10 combine optimum handling char- acteristics with comforr"ble ride. Tread life frequenrly exceeds 30.000 miles under normal driving condi- 11ons This r"yon belied radial 1s more flexible on 1he road 1han steel strong. and has a wide "nd highly sr"ble cornering cc\pability CAl.L l'Olt al OS TO lt E NT ltESIDENT IAl l'ltOPEltTY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lNl the Boent of ~•iMln of the County of Oren99 lnl...01 to l•H• to Ill• lli91>ell ~'· on • month-to-montll besl1, cert.In rH-let rHt prooer ty, belOnQl"ll to the County or Or!WIO-. commonly dHcrlbld e1 JIO Vni•e,,lty Drive. end 33' Vni,..tlity Drive, Coste Mese, Cellforni•. Pr~I• to rent seld pr--11H """' lie submitted In wr ltln9, on form• provided by Ill• County of Or-. In Meted envetooe1. to tll• Cle rk or Ill• Bo•rd or SUt>ervl~. Admlnl1tutlon BulldtRQ. Aoe><n ..s, 10 Clvk eem.r Pleu, S.l\te AM. Celllornill. "102, end must lie rt celved DY 1"9 Clerk •I Mid iodclress betore J ,00 p.m., Mond•Y. April •. ttlt, In Ot-to lie ell9lble. No lett blcls or 0tel -will lie <-'*""'· Aentel -I tor'ms. encl eddlliONI lnlOf'metlon es to U. 19"\'I~ end c-1 lion• on Wllkll the -1les wltl lie IHMd, 'm.-t ... olltelMO from· A099r Cunnl11911em. GSA/A••• Estela Division. c:-.ty ol ~MOI. 400 Clvk Canter Drive Weit, Se nt• Ana, Cellfornle '2102; .. ...,.,_ 11-· 17141 a.USO; ,...... to· Pro)«t Y», Vnlverllty Ort ... Dated: F..,,,..r-, 24, 1t11 av OltDEA 01' THE BOAltO OF SVPEltVISORS OF ORANGE COUNTY. CAUFOltNIA. CSEAll JUNE AlEXANDElt C*1l of Ille 9oard of "'111W• )Mrl ol~ .... COUMy.CA PUOllslled Or-. COett Ulllly l'llOC. -r<ll '· 10. "· n. '*· "· 17, 11, "· 20, '"' 107'-11 PV8UC NOTICE I• Cof'w"'• •.,. .. ,el C:-..r.I c:..411 C..,...1 .. i..-•·0\,(I00"'4.,.., ............... • t-boMtlUflof,... 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IOl'·OUI 10 mimufACtvrer·s orlglnat s~cl(lutlons, using the most modern precision equ~nt UMITLD ALIGNMENT WA•AANT'I' -Dolman~ hont end lmlt~ WM· ianry. ~ wll tt~ •llgnmenc M no cost. In 1114! e~nt IMI It becomei nl'<OSN)I. •nd .u oltl'n .u needl'd. IOf thl' pl'rlOd of one yl'N tiom the datt of OflSINI job. ~a::M J 88 I ~~ ft88 HAKES •u•. ss.oo IUKlS 7.-;..--; ••. oo American &. Most foreign Cars excluding 4 Wheel/front Wheel Drive Cars Open dally 8-9, Saturday 8-6, Sunday 8-5. r .. 154 A.MIMI• 1280 N. Cuclld (S. of Hwy 01 ) 772.9840 .""" ....... U40 W. Uncoln Ave 9"·1Uf ........... I 0401 M.tinolWo A\118 (114) Ht-J4MI •5M11a AM Z60C S. Mltol St (OM lillo<k S. ol W•tMf .-.) 1M·14U ....... , .. ,. 5156 &e~h Blvd. (111 M<llwm across from K-~11) (714) H4·Ul0 Cott.a ... '719 Superior A._,. 64l·UM S..C.AM 415 N. r~nch eH0UH ., ....... v..., MIOWArMr~. (11•)"4·6411 •••••• 141 t. lmpe1~1 (114) JJl.6971 s.aa. ...... I I IS S, lJ CMNn0 it.II 4tl-MSO ., .. ,..._" . 2971 Yor~ Und• (1f4) '96-4780 • .... Mlr•41• I SOS I llTlf)*rlaJ HlghwAy (ZU) M7·S641 o.-n Monda)'·~ •·6 S~yl·S •Mia.ton VlefO 24.510 All<l.8 rt\tt.way '51-9175 Or•• 1100 N. Tuitln (Acron from f"oj1 Oflke) 178-JOOO O.-.noe Co• ~lV PtLOTtrueedav. Marvh 10, 1981 ~ > . NU "9$T .. lM CONfl•••NCa flllc-.,,,,..,_ w L. ~l ••1'11...Ua S3 21 .11• L.Mtn 0 u ·'" l"orllaM )7 " .514 GolWtlllMt ~ SS .J01 Sof\01-32 Jt .01 ... u •• JI •• .UI W.....CMv ..... Son Ant-.. ,. .Uf Ke"&a1Clty ,. ,. .JOO Houston » " . ..s 0.11••• >O '° .42' Ulell u •7 .JS. OollH 10 ti .UI IASTl•N CON .. a.IHCI Au.tk Dl•llleoo •·Pllll-llftl• s. u .m •·Benton n .. .ns New York •2 29 .St2 Wetlll1>9ton 35 11 .... NewJer .. , 20 JI .m '"'lrelOMM• a·Mllw-" u .. .7U 01 ~ IS UVI ...... ti 10 12111 u lO\I> """ I 14 21\.'l ,. ~ l' » . u. 13 ,. Alie~• ,. CltYtlenG u O.trolt 11 ,.cllrKNOOl•ISIOll Ullo a-< llnc-pteyofl _..h -•'•S<•re M•lwMik .. 111. c1e ... 1-100 TM!tM'l~I Clllc090•IAUonl• ,.,.,,_.~••I tndlono Plloonlael Delles Port'-•10en.,.r ICen~Clty•tSenO.._ Sen Antonio et u•era Colt.ge Kote USF 9', "9-rdlne 12 Al .. Amertc• "lnlT ..... ,. .JOO .. Yo fl .400 DYi 0 .U7 2'\i't SS 2:16 ""' Mer• Aoutr,., .. 1. Junior, O.Peul, Knill M•tte, •·t, JtHler, UC lnl•e; R•ll>fl s.mpson, ,_., ~ore, V1rgl1110; Oonny Al~, .. s. Hnlot, lrlQN>m Young, Ill., Tllome .. • I, l~e. lndlone flO<-TNm Al wooo ... ,, ..,.tor, North Corolino, Don· ny Vr•ne• •.. 1. unior, Ul•h Steve Jolln_, .. IOY,, •on1or, 0rlt9(lll Stele, Eric Floyd, .. l. 1unlor, Georgetown, Dornell V•ltfttlne, .. 2, .. nlor, KellHl. Tlllrd Tt-L..,.•ll L.loya, W , .. n-. Drao, Jey Vin teftl, •·t , Hn1or, MIChlgen Sloto, Som 8ow11, 7·1. lOphomore. Kentucky, Jell L.emp, •-4 • ..,.lor, Vlrglnlo. Roll Wlllloms .. 2, lOpflomore. Houlton. Women'• CIF palrtng aHH 4-As..Nn..h L.ono llffch Poly .,,, Rlverllde Pot, 11 RomM• HIQll, SMI Gollrlol •l. 8_.. Ol Venture HIQh ct p.m I >-A S.mlflMh Foothill V\ Gohr ol A"Hll HIQll, "Ill Lom• vs .• .._ ... , Ed•Mln Hl9" Wls.mltlllloft Chino o Artu11 •I Cerritos Hlgll; MIH•On Viejo •l. Gorey •• GonHllO HIQI\ l·As.tftltlMIS C111110.os vs. SI. Mory'• "c-my 11 L.oyol• HIQll, Son llef'nordlno vs. Temple City ol !>on Morino H19h. SfNll S< ..... , S.Mltlull Remona Con...,I,,.,.,. to RoiOmOftCI IM\e to w «Hlermlnea. Oronge L.utller., "'· Rio Honao Prei>•I P•-... Poly HIQll "II oemu al 1 >O union ot11erw1 .. 1nalco11c1. High achool .. _ ..... Vel..., It, MllUllH S7 100 I Grtllltll lMI, •.•; 2 Soulhword IFVI, 100, l Coulson tMl, 10 J 120 1 Grillllll (Ml. U '· 2 SouU.word IFVI, 2).l,) Couts (M), n ). «O -I. Emery (FVI, SI o. 2 Pouncey !Ml, SU, l. 0.. .. y (FYI. S3 2 NO -I H¥dWlcll CMI, 2 04.1, 2 .,.,.. derton (FYI, 2.0S.S, ). MMi.r IFVl.1 Gt.I. Mile I Erickson IFVI, •.)14, 1 Shlllds IFVI , 4 4S J, J Grill (Ml,• SO 1 2·m1lt 1 Erickson IFVI, 9 •• •· 2 Strelow (FYI. 9 SI •• l MO\lle• lf'VI. 10.10 .•. 120HH I Soulllwerd IFVI, 10 , 2 . .,.. drew• CFVI, IS 2, l . Fost (FYI, IS S )JOL.H 1 Houston !Ml, 40 I, 1. D•·•- Cl'VI, 40.•. J. Fl\l CFVI, 41.2 •40 rel•y I Fountoin V•ll•y ... •. 2 M1llll<on,u L Mile reloy • Founto1n VolltY, l JS 1, 1 Mllllun, did not llflltr. HJ -I. Wicker (Ml, .. ,Ito, 2 Hoynes (Ml, t-•, l Gooll (FYI, ..0 u -I. CoullOft (Ml, JO·I. 2 JonklM (Ml, 20-4, l. Solomon IMI. 20~o;. TJ -I Fut IFVI, 41·•. 2 Ewing IFVI. Jt·t V., J, Arnold IMI, )9.,1 PV -1 Tomlin (Ml, n.. 2 P1er10n tFVI, 12~. l 0.lcoure (FVI, II·• SP -I, L.omp•on !Ml, •1 111>. 1 Trejo (M). 4S.11~. ). Jouoll IFVI, 4>-J Ville Pork It, N--1 Hl,_r U 100 -I. Jl"""""r IHHI, 10.4; 2. Bryant IVPI, 10_., J Rineer tVPI, 10.1 220 -I. JlmMH (NH), U 5. 2. Bry.,_t IVPl. U.1, J. S.tetolO tVPl, 24 2 40Q-I Uwton INH), SJ 4, 2. 8rell!1-r l"HI, s.t.0; 3 Rljke IVPI, SO .. -I Turner CHHl, 1 ()4 0, 2. McKay (VP), 2:M.•. J Eellmork (VPI, 2.06, Mlle -I. lorry INHI, 4.:16.S, 2. Gr.,_ ('IP),4:JL2; J Byro (VP) •:.O.O. t ·mll• I Turfttr (NH). 10 02.1, 2. 0.ltty IYPI, 10.11.0; J. a.<9 CHHI, 10: 17.S. UOHH -1. S4utll.,. ('/It), U.J; 2. E•- IHHI, 1'.4; J. Emory (NH), 19,4. »tL.H -1. Stuflltr IVPI, Jt..J, 2. West tHHI, 4CU; J. lrell-r (HHl, 42.0. '40 r .. ., -1. N_,, Herllor, o .5; t. VIII• Perl!, no 11 ..... Mlle reley -I VIiie Perl<, J. JS.6, 2. NlwPo<t HM110r, J.17.2. HJ -I. Dougherty (VP), Ml, 2. Rkllllnh CVPI, S·IO; J. How.ry !VP), s.e. L.J -I. lryont (VPI, 21-4,,.; 2. Strepp (Viti, IMY,; >.Gaul IHHl, IM. TJ -I Stolftltr tVPI, 41-4\'t: t . a,..,. (NH), )t.10; J. P9teu !VP). ,..2. PV -I. Pitiers IVPI, ••>; 2. Olton (NH), IHI; J.llOK-. SP -I. Jellrlet (NHI, S).7Yt; 2, Gra, IVPI, 4-1, 2. Croucll (VP), .... IOYt. OT -I, JellrlH IHH), 141·2: 2. Croucll (VP), 121·•;). Goul IHHI, 11 .. 10. ~ l . ' .. • • Coleee C<tl Pely (,.._) t•J. l.Onl IHCll S4ltll 1·$ L.oy01a•,C•ISta1tl09m.Hlll1) 1 • Hlpecfteol ..... 1, •• Dw .. , fidllOO 000 000 .1-1 • * Iii Dor-001 000 0-1 2 I o.a-. c_, m. ~ m -s.. Morello; 1.-.n...i11 aflCI ,..,_. W - Cloney. L. -llenk91\.,.lp. 21 -$. Monlto (l!fl-l. Oc-VW6, .._.. VeHey t F-IMll 'lllltY JOO 000 1-s II 4 OcHll View *'° -•-4 1 1 Jon..,., Ayen W ond a.a; •t111M1a. Sn\ell It! ond --.y. W-lllolllflofb. ~ J t llH ft , 21-Stonley 2 IO<ton Vllw), w..,.ar C"-1411"' Volley). c:.a-.. ....... ~. C:O.le Mew ta 1\0 0-S 4 J lolN Gr.... ltl 100 0-J 1 0 L.ecky, WllllOll'IHll (S) eftd ...... ; 0.190 ......... , (4) -LMI. W-LAclly. L- Ooltedo .. 2a-w11111m1on, Cr111 ICMlo Mt.al, G11lilr'rH llol .. Grendel. H•- Totor ClkilY Gr .... I. NHl WAL.IS CC* .. l.RNCE MonlrHI 1u.,. Plt"ll•lfllll Horllora Detroit ........ Dl ... ,leoo W L. TO" GA l'b JI 19 II * 1'4., J7 11 t 27t Ul ll 11 ll t 1U M 6J 11 ll 16 , ... JU S2 II 32 U lo. .2'3 SI AUmtOl•lll• 81111•10 l1 IS 1' 2'7 NJ ll Mi..,..!IOI• JO 11 1• 1« 217 1' Botton )1 2S 11 2'7 2~ 13 OuellK 2l JO IJ 2U VJ ff roronto u l4 10 Ut JIO 56 CAMl>IELLCON,R•ENCI. NV 1lllllden Pnil•delPfllo G••oory HY Renger• WHhlnotan Petrk• Olvlll• l'lllllmW .. )1 21 10 21) 21• .. l4 11 12 27J 243 IO 24l1Ut.,m.o 20>01621'270.16 IMy-Ol•kHm a·SI. L.oul• O I) u J04 Z» 9' Chlcooo 21 21 u ,,, tn ., v OftCOU..., 24 21 17 20 UI '5 Edmoftton n J3 U 210 JIZ 56 Color-It 11 10 215 m 4t Winni-I .. It '°' DI • ... c11nc111c1division1111• _.,.,k_ _,, ..... ~ .... , ,.........o- Hew York R-" •I Oliebe< Color-•I W••lll"lll"" Horlford •l De\nllt v ... ,ou..., el Colg,ar, L.oeAla,...._ MONOAJ'$ llllS.UL TS l lMlf*eltiltt-.MMt ... I Fl'lt roe• -c.ec"""'° Olllf l~I. 4.M, t eo, 2.eo. PIIll'• wor °"" 1er-1. l.40. 4.00, ............ (Wllllemil, 1.111. U euclo IS. II polcl $12.40. S.cond rote -ArmllrO Target lll«Mtl, IS.00, 7.00, S.00. Tlwwv~ IO.nn111, • J0, 110, Hunler't Gold ICMnpOelll. S.JO Tlllrd roee -Tempest Girl CToddl, 2'.IO, 20 . .0. n '°· SlnQI o.-1c-1011c11. 21 oo, 1 IO. 1-1 Gorn CL10.er1. s 40 n uact.o I M l pelll 13'1.40 Fourth roc.a Bully For Vov ILonool. U .00, t.IO, •.20. Moaill• !Gretoryl, 4.40, J .20, M v P t ltotclltoral, • JO Fifth roe• Rici SoH 'Toocll, S.60, 4.00. 2.60, Kaworou Gold ICeml>Oelll, •.60, UO; Thrill SMiier H IV•llondln9"0m). J.40. '2 • noel• l).~l po1d $22.60. Sl•lh roe• Ho,..,91_ CRllclllll, • 20, UO, •.00, GllO!ftt Siar lll•url, >.20. l ,00, Fro•ty 5'1-r IAlnallderl, S.'°. Seventh roct -Cllercoet Hanover I Kuelllerl, 440, l•O. l•O. 01111111 A l Otsomor I. '60, 4.411, Cepleln Mork H IAulllnl, J.20. U HOCte (H I paid '49.IO. U Piel< Sia IJ.l·l·).S-11 peid U,IOJ 40 wilt) 11• winning UcUH Ill.,."°''°'' U Piek SI• CoftSOll llOtl !Nici '19.00 With 147 WIMlncJ lfchts (four"°''°"· Eighth roee HOlldO 8111 tl<uelllerl. 4.40. J 00, 2 40, Roy•I kolcll N 10.nnl•I. l.00. 2 20, I lock Storm A ICrOQllOlll, 2 .0 Nlntll roe~ -To\ICI Hono•er (AClltrm91\I, J.lO, 2.IO. 2.40, Tiger Alm•11Vr1t (layleul, 4.20, J IO, Micky Hoy IV•ll.,,dlnQllam), S IO ll eucl• , .. ,, pold s11.oo Tentll roce t..oyat t..od (Wllhem1), •.IO, s . .o, 4.60; Hl(llllend ChOmp t"ulllnl, ~ 40. J .. .eG; Cor-Cotnmolld (Pierce!, •.40. Uu· ocl• U·ll Pola '2$.411 Allendonc.e S.~. Wom9n'1 IOUmHteftt (etoel&lll ,Int ........... v1,..11110 w ... diet. s...., com"'· t-... 7•, ._2; Mlmo J-wc 49M. l.itlllo Allol\. H. ..4; Mery LOU Plettll *'· .. ,_., • ..__,, •·'· •.J; l•l•y He9ol1tft fol. P•m T....,.rdlilft. ,.._ 1 ..... I; llllMrta M<ColJwn ttahadtoof !Mlleit,IM~I ........ •owt1r-Ill .. ,, ~'• .. ,, *'· Mrl<kl~ M, Ott . ..,,._, W, Wf. a.tty, H ; Hor,w Ill -· W, •.O, W , •.O; K111tM Ill ...,, "2. M, W , .. ,; MlllOI Cl I -· W. .. , ... , ... , .. ~ c,.. ... ,.v ... Ill IOet to ,,....,y~rl-. i ... •O•\, .. ,, Voalll.C.rlM11 Cl> 1011, k , WOfl, 6-J; l(rlll•VM R-(I) ..,.,, 1 .. , 1 .. , .. 2. .. 2. LAe9M .... 1', _...,.... IM<lt. ....... LAO<ll IL.I I Ott • ...., .... ,, •t. lornorQ. W , •t. (#Oii, M , def. ~. M . lrwmllOld (L..I) '"t. k , U , ..,.,, .. ,, •.O; Oevklson IL.I > IOsl. 1 .. , :M, won, •~. •·2: Plulcllllll ILll io.t by •fault, lotl ey ... f-..11. ""' w. w .. ~ L.Hll•J""9<1a IL.II def. Anclr-1·Tlllet, 1·5, 7-S. def. LICondl·•omono, .. ,, "'; kll•ntl-<APoOlenc:o (Lil loll, 1 ... S.7, _,, >>. 7-S. Yachting HOlll CAT MIOWtNfl•'S WIST let SM flollf'O, Me .. I , .. ,. I HOOle Aller Jr. (Copl1tr-1, 2. Roll Perrin IL.eke Arr-odl, l Rey Howard IT1111lnl , .... 1. Dan Ketwrmen !Cosio Mewl. 2. Tom MlftdenhOll !Son Clemente), J. Oon Crlellr (0 0111 Point!. 16< I Rio IWCN..-(OcHnildel; 2. Eric Henactcl<M>n (Cr.ot~worlll). J. Boo hf· tenllOrt tukeAr..-llllodl. ........ k . I Mok• Clemen!\ I RIY•rt•cHI. 2 1(91\ McCo l I 1$en Dl•QOI , J, O••ld M•rlln (Pee Ille Beech). U·A I Jell Wollll lltwrly Hllltl, 2 DIO. a1 ..... 1 10.1 Merl, J. o. .... y SocMn 111g IHrl. , ... I Carlo MIUo (-tHrey P•rlll, 1 Mon Vovul ISoarl I.:"\• ObliPOl. J Greo CIM1l I Pl .. ~onl Hiii•). 14-0llCA I. J-klNcll IS.11 Mo<U$); t . 0.,. Ha lllcloy ~ Dl990); a. Jim Lontl l,..M Verde&). t•A I. I«* Thomes IOcHnlldel; 2 • .Win IW_, (Ollnerdl; 1 "1<1111 .. Rwll (VIit.ei. , ... I. Ed Hollor.,, ICMrllO&J ; 2. Slllp Hwrwltl II.I Jotial, J. HIOnl 1$10dll.,l. 1...-...U I. Scon Rofvw CCarllbOdl; 2. Miii• Whltwonll (t..ok-11; J. lrad Rotlloll IS- 01-1 Misc. llond91'• lr8ftNC:tion• IASllllAU. ---..i....- CAl.IFOflNIA AHGEL.S -ll-wod t11e ,_trocll of •k·a aw~. -•· .,,.. 1-,C10r11,0Ulfleldtr, IOl'I,_ ltll MoM>fl. MINNESOTA TWINS -SIOMCI Ken Wn- drHU• -Gory Word, ...,.,. .... , .. 10 -YH• contracts. R--,,. c.,trocts Of O•Y• EllOM. outlleldl<; Sol lutere, colcller. Terry Felton and Oofl ~. pltcllert, ond Cll<lck a.-er, l"'l•ldef'. Noti.o!Le .... PITTSIURG+i Pl-.TES Rene-d 1111 co111roct1 Mlc•tY Mohler end Pe"vel Porn. plt(hers; TOfty P9no, cetcMr, - Dorion Boyl-. lntltldtr. ..ac>TIAU. NotleMI ............... CL.EVEUINO 1"0WHS -AnnotMClcl tllol Peter H...,.ay, 91'Wret mMOflr -uec:1111 ... •k• pretldenl, wlll rftl9" offec· tiff Moy I. c.MIOA flo ... 11 LO ..... MONTREAL. AL.OUETTES Announced lhOt COftlrGlll11Q l,,..rffl of tlll fronc111 .. lies -pun:......,.., Nol-Sllolbafll•. NO(Kl.Y M••...,..N•·••YUOfW HARTFORD WHAL.ERS -Hemed Lorry Pteou, -d C.~11. -119"9<1 him 10 a ,_. uor controet. C:OLLRGI. RUTGERS -Hemed R~t G. R ... MI. lle••-~coocll High ICftool volteyball Cl" Coedlo9 T•lf I. L..-loKlt; 2. Sell MofCM; J SoMo Mo111<0; •. CopltlrMO Vellty; 5. S....t• lorMre; 6. L.oyote; 1. lt'Yllot1 I . Mir• C•to; •• la1Hd9; , .. """1M. Or-.. CMllty T• It 1. L...-W IHdl; 1. Calllstr-v111ev; l lrvl,.,•; 4. A!UrlM; S. E11an,111 6. Son Clemeftte; 7. Cwono del Mor ; I. C..te Mo.a; •. Hewpwl H....,; 10. HUlll ......... IMCll. Golf COMMUNITY cou.•o• TNm K-: °' .... CoHI Jn,""'..,_ *'°• Cetrlloe a1, Ml. S.... Alltonlo »3, S.... Diego Me.a 314, Gr.-"9; 5onto Ma 400. .. -lufOte COCCI. 1S-°"'* .. IOCCI; 71-0 'SMI, LelM COCC); lt-M<Croclton COCCI. 35 entries listed for Caho San Lucas race Tblrty·five off1bore aa1Un1 yacbta are acbedwed to set the atartin& ai1nal Saturday ln Newport Harbor Yacht Club'• !biennial Cabo San Lucu. The •tart.inc Uneup la brok• @ wn into 30 yacbta rated under e lntemaUODal Offabore Rule IOR) and five und•r the erformance 41udicap lladq Fleet <PHRI') rat.tnc 1ystea NHYC devlMd Ule t•·mil• ace to C.bo San Lucu at Ute p ol 8-Ja Califonl• for bNe at•r raun •Hao pref•r to tl.ni.Ja 1 rue wMre Ule wind 1top1. In mo1t uu1 from U1erD CallfonU to Medco tb• rac."S .UU1 nan out ol ,_. et t.M, eape aad ••· 4 • PVBLIC NO'l'ICB fllCTITIOUI 114111M8M FORTHERECORO/BOATING P1171tl Pvltll.._. Or ..... Coell 0.lly Pl._, fll"'1• llUtCll 10. 11, M. 11, 1•1 1-..1 PUBUC NOTICE ...,. ITATl .. MT PUBLIC NOTICE TM .......... ,.._ I•.._ Wt! t------------....... ! PUBUC NOTICE fllltAH OIM $TONH, 1'10 1•11> "!.CJ.'.°!?°"1,!~!~::- &t. •Hltl~te..c11,CAtt..a. -"' --W Terry "0" Lite, 1'10 1611 $t. • MIOI, Tiit 1oti.w1,.. .-r-1 or• dllfll Ofl~-~.:T N•w-1 IM<fl, CA"*'-OUel-•1 ........, Tll 11 '"*-alac~tM llY Oii i,.. YU•N Al• ACC:EPTAHC£, .. s COUNTYOflOllAMOe dlvllltlel. T-c.ntw Orl'ft, s..lte HO, C..to 7•0wtc c:.e.-Drt.,.Wett Terry ''G'' I.ti MeM, CL*» .... AM. CA ""1 Tlllt ~ w .. fllod Wllll -Yf9'1' AHoelotn. Inc. le """ MA .. •IAGI! OF PETITIOHI.•: J .. , ___ Oii ) O..MeOCI t OAVIOALL.l!HWAOOfiL.L. COllfllY Cton. ol 0rlft98 Coilftly °"' er ' on ' "',. RESPONDENT: MA•tfi MC A!Urcll 6, l"1. Orl¥t, Pet-. Now J-y 01652 HUGH WAOOI!• , flllnl1 Tllll ._.._It 'Oftdll<IM Dy I CM· .... P11lllllllMI Or .... CMll Dolly ~ florllloOI. WMMCMll(l.,...ya.w) Morell 10, 17, 2A. JI, 1•1 !U7 .. 1 vaGEN ASIOCIATI!$, INC. CAS8 MUN••: Dt-•kt1oraSvolodo NOTICal PUBUC NOTICE ~' v .. ...,. .... ..-.n..~_, DY Its Pl'ftlflellt dlec ........... ,_ ....._ ,._ ..... Thi' fl•__. w• lllod with 11111 ltoud -... ,......, w...._ • Cou11ty Cllf'lt ot Oron90 County°" '8ya ................... ...._. fllCTITIOUI IUM•IU Fe~ry It, 1,.1 AVllOI MAMa ITATeMaNT "ll•JU Utt .. lie 11• •1Maalele. at Tll• 1011-•t10 person I& aoino """ ITYSKAL. WllH & M&LCMION& lrt .... 1 ..... --c-• u ..... neuaa: ,. 0 ._.,. ....._ ... _ .. u._,....... MAJ a 5 TIC J AN I T 0 R I A L. Nd.... t .. Ca ,... ... ...... • ..._ LH M ...._ ... Sl•VICI$, LTD .. m w. Wiiton SI., Pllbllar.d Or .... 'eoa11 Delly l>llot -11.-. Coll• MlM, CA t'JIU7. "" 24 Mar J. 10 17 ,,.1 .,1.11 II you wtlll IO -1111 OdVlce ol en "on•ld ~" ""''" 571 W. Wll · • · ' · 1nor11ey In 11111 mollor, you tnollld ao SI., Cocto MeW, CA '26V. so promptly so lllol '°"" ._.. or Tiii& bwll,,..~ 11 conOUCted llY on In PtJBUC NOTICE pleOflno. II MY. moy lie I Mod Oft llm•. PUBLIC NOTICE dlvlwel. SI Ulllcl -· 1o11c11or et con .. )o dlt ll-ld MMtln llum • un ·~ en e1te atunto d•Oer1• Tllll ,..._, ,. .. lllod with tliit N ·71492 heurlo tnmealetamente.' de .... CouftlY Clerk of Or.,90 County °" NOTICE OF DEATH OF moner•, su ·-•to o olegocion, tJ Morc"6•1"1· Pll7JJICARL M . LOFTIS, aka~:,,~~·~ Mr reglllrocl•. am NOTICJ! ()fl nun•• .. IAL• Nl.Otl'1 P110lll/lod 0.009 Col•t Dolly Piiot, CARL Ml L TON LOFTIS TO THE RESPONDENT. On Morell 1'. ltll, et 10:00 A.M .. 111· \Ide 1111 moltl l°'*Y of 1..0wyer1 Tltlt ln•wrel\u Company, UOO Horlll lrooowoy lft ltll City of Sellto Ano, COUllty ol Or ..... Mfte ol C.lllornla, CAL.IFO•HtA •l!COHVEVANCE COMPANY, e Colllorlllo Cor-etlon, n duly -'ICM Tnn .. • -tnot cortel11 Dotd ot Tr1111 uec11led by GAllY HAHL.EV •OGEllS, e l"'ele men; RICHARD A. MARTIN. e mor •loll m111 11 lnillOI'&, ro<Ol'ded on 'llOUll 2', 1'17, e1 INtrumenl Ho lll22 In 8-11356, P090 OS, of Of llcl•I RKOfdl ol Or009 County, Stoll >f Colllornla. tinder '"' -of &0 le therein ,.,tolned, wlll , .. , al PUbllc l\Mr(ll 10, 11, 2•. >• •. 1•1 122s-e1 ANO OF PETITION TO Tiie pet111otwr 11es 1111e1 • petition ADM'NISTER ESTATE concern1no your,,_.,,_ tt you 1111 PUBUC NOTICE • ~ _,,, doll thet tllh 1ummons 1, 11rved an No o.~"! 07........ to Ille • •llPOllH wllhlft JO dltYi ol the T a I I h e I r s you, your 111t1-..11 moy e. 111ttrod ond "CT1Tious1ut.1N1ss beneficiar ies cred itors -c°"'1 ,,,.., .,.,.. • luclQlnetlt co ... NAM• STATllMRNT d r t' I f lol11lno lnJWlCll ... or other orde" co ... Thi follOWl"O per_, It doing t>vtl· an Con lflOen. Cred tOrS 0 cernlng dlvlilon of prOl)erty, •-&al nett u : Carl M . Loftis, aka Carl wpport, cNtd c.ntody, c1111d ._,, AMIASSAOOR L IMOUSINE Milton Loftis and persons •tlorney IOH,COlll.-...Chotllor ,. u•v1cE. ••. o .... ,.,wreoth wey, who may be otherwise in-~:! 10'a~;,,:,.f:''!"~ t:11~.:'~ •r•lne,Colllornlot271S t ted · th ill d / --·· " O.niM Cor-.• , Ouffntwreotll eres In e w an or m .... ey or pr-''· or other court Wey, Irvine, Calllorllle 9VIS estate; autll0rl11d P<OCIOdlng, moy elMI •I· Tllb 11u11,,..1 1s cOR<1VC11<1 by on In A petition has been f iled 'u~•lea J.,,uery 21 1tti d1"1°"°'0.,.. .. c ioo1 by Crocker National Bank ~EE "· BRANCH, tu<llon lo ._ lllQllHI lllcldltf' lor cosll, ••Y•lll• 11 ,,. time of Nit lft 1awt111 11011ey ol Ille United 51•1•• ol 'm•rlc.e .... _ worron(y • .,.,..., or •mptllcl .. to lllle, llM, _ .... ,.,. °" ""cuml><8'Cn, 111 riQlll, 11111 alld In· terHI ,.,.. llold lly II 01 SOKll Tr.nl• and to the lol!Owlng Oelcrlblcl pr_rt, •llllOllcl In -ofOfffOid County ond Stet1, 1ow11. T1111 11•-.:::/' was 1111e1 w1111 1,,. in the Superior Court of c•er• county CIHll ot Orengo Cou111y on Orange County request inn By. MARIL. YNH PERRIN, Fell 20 1•1 th t ,.. k N i " Deouty K•AVA IM.ITM a ... r oe er atonal WILLIAMW.WAT'SOH couNHLO•SATLAW Bank be appointed as •nw .. y•u• ... M«N111w---.-.,w1e>tt personal representative to~-===·~ !iMI Ntw-1lucll,Ce1tton11••.... administer the estate of T••· om .. Ms.,.· · Pullhsllld Oronge Cootl Di iiy Piiot. C M f · f · . L.ol 103 ol Tree I No 1172 111 Ille Clly JI CMle Mote, Coumy of Oren .. , StM• >I C•lllomlo, as per moo rec:orded 111 Boo SJ. P•oe& ., lhru o . mis :elle11e011S "'-• In t,_ Oftlct of 1111 :ou111y Recorder ol lOld c-ty Mor 1 10 17 24 ,,., ioso-1• arl . Lo tis o Irvine, Publl"*I 0.009 eoau D•llY Piiot • • · • California (under the In· Fe11 24,Mar J, 10. 11.1 .. 1 .,,.., PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS. IU$1NRSS HAMa STATRMENT Tllo IOllowlng penon• ore dolno ~ .... ., .. REEVES & WEIER ADVERTISING AGENCY, 247• Saftlo AM .,.,..,.,.. CP.O. loa tlS1'), Cotto Mew. c:ai11om11 •»11. Ill-Id L l..oft9, 1476 Soni• Me A.,.nw, C.C.11 Mew, CAllfonllo t1il17. JoOft C. 'Long, U76 Santo Mo AVlfltlO, C.C.te MHa, Gallforflla •»27. Tllh bwll .... s I& C~tecl °' ... In· Cll•l..,.1 ("'8eftd & wllel. ._ .. L. l.ol1t Thia 1111-1 •• lllod wllll tlle C.....,ty Clor' of Oronge County 011 .. ... J.1•1. .. ,._ l>ltbll ....... OrenQ9 CoHt Delly PllOt, Mor. J, I0, 11, 14, ltll l~I PUBUC NOTICE dependent Administration -------- of E states Act>. The peti-PUBLIC NOTICE tion is tet for hearing In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic NOTICE OF DEATH OF Center Drive West, Santa GRIFF W . HOWELL, aikai Ana, California 92701 on G R I F F W A L T E R March25,1981at9:30a.m. HOWELL , aikai G . W . IF YOU OBJECT to the H 0 w E L L A N D 0 F granting of the petit ion, P ET IT I 0 N T 0 AD · you Shovld either appear MINISTER ESTATE NO. at the hearing and state A·107933 your objections or file T o a I I h e i r s • written objections w ith the beneficiaries, creditors court before the hearing. and contingent creditors of Your appearance may be Griff w. H o well, aka Griff In person or by your at· Walter Howell, aka G . W . torney. Howell of Santa Ana , I F Y 0 U AR E A California, and persons CREDITOR or a cont· who may be otherwise in· lngfnt creditor of the de· terested in the will and/or ceased, you must file your estate: Tiie t--t Of trle -Id prln :lp11 lleloftc•. lnlereu 1111rool\, 1ogl lller wllll rHSONlbly ttllm•l•O :otts, e._ -Odvoncn el tlle limo ol ,,. lnlllol PllOllG•llan ot lhl• Notice ore loQ,Jtl,U From l"'ormetlon which "'" Trust" -m• rollet>te, llut lor whlcll Trint" ,,, • .._, no ~1.Clon °" worr.,,1,, Ille llrwl -... or otller common :11111111ellon ot tho el>Ove Oucrl- OfoPerty h . to ConQreu Sir"'· Cost• Mew, c1111orn1om» S.la -rty It being SOid tor the purpoH 01 peyl119 the olllf9etlon1 Mt urea l>'f Mia 0.00 ol Trust lnctua 1119 '"' -""-" of the Tr11slte ...a 01 So•• Olltd F~~~b'1t~':'l RECOHVEV"HCE COMP ... NV, HwldTrwH &y~Fa<eMnd EM<utln Viet PrHldenl claim with the court or A petition has been filed ~1cnnousau1u•11s present It to the personal by Jean w. H o well in the MAMa ITAHMa•T representative appointe d Superior Court of Orange Coll,. ....... _Y_•~Y NSIC.,_ .. ...,. ...... CA.tint um 701·UM T':.~~~1,.. _...,. .,. 001"9 by the court within four County requesting that THE Howu PL.AC!!, eoo .. months from the date of Jean w. Howell be ap- T.n11 .... M .. 1,SentaMo,Co.tt1os first iss1;1ance of letters pointed as personal PUllllllWCI Or-Cout 0011, Piiot, .. eo. U, -ell J. 10, 1"1 ttMI PUBLIC NOTICE Jofttl O.vla Giii-. 1,.i Orey as provided In Section representative to ad· 1."··.::-;:W~.: Orey 700 of the Probate Code o f minister the estate of Griff L11.,Hwci,....,e.c11,c.a.""1 California, The time for w. Howell, aka G riff T111• llWI,_. 1• co"'®<teci llY • filing claims w ill not ex· Walter Howell, aka G . W. nerot~.eer. p ire prior to four months H o well (under the In· T1111 ·~ •• lllod .11111.,.. from thedateofthe hearlng dependent Admin istration "CTITIOUI IUSINIU NAMR STATUUNT Tiit 1011ow1111 PO'-'' ore aolno DU1l11euas. Couftty ,..,... o1 Or-Covnty "" noticed above. of Estates Act). The peti- Fettn.tary JO, l"1. """_, Y~U MAY EXAMINE tion is set for hearing in s .. v INVESTMENTS. nso Alrwey ........ Unit OJ. Cost• Mew, Co. t2Ut Po111 T S.lole, .. Lindo Isle, NewPGr1 8HCll, Co '2660 P111t11.,.. 0r.,.. c-o.11y ~ the ftle kept by the c ourt. Dept. N o. 3 at 700 Civic F_..,_._,_ •• _.._ __ .i._10_._l7_,_1•_1 ___ .,.. __ 1 If you are interested In the Center Drive West, in the J ome& E . Votenllne, J07 Driftwood, ear-aet Mor. Co. '7•U Pail T. S.loto PUBUC NOTICE ... 1 ... PICTITIOUS IU"MIU NAMalTAT ... MT Tiie foll-1"9 poreona ore doln llU•lnou a : YEGEN MA•IHfi, .. s Tow CHltor Drive, SUl1-HO. Colle MeM, eo.mH Vegen AIMKIOIH, Inc. I• N•w JtrMY C"'1'0fellon), One Mock COnlr Or Ive. Poromu1, Hew WWY 07W Tlll1 _,,.,. .. la c-.Cllcl tty • ,or. porallon. VEGfiN ASSOCIATES. INC. R k,,.nl SWlodO ~· Tllll NI-' WO& flllcl wllll County Cl•r11 of Or.,ge County Fewwary It, 1•1. _ FIS. ITYlllAL. WIRH & M&L.CMIONI P.O .... ... ...... M ... .,.....,Ca.tltlt fl'llltllaMd Or .... Coeil Delly Pl Felt. 24, MM. J. 10, 11, t•t .,._. PUBLIC NOTICE UMICll'AL COU•T OP CAUf'OttMIA COUNTY Oft OllAleOI MA•_,.~ ClOUNTY .IUDfCIM. DflT•ICT .-i.,...,...-..., .. ........... ~ .... PL.AINTll'": AHAHllM .IAVIH0$ AHO l.OAH AUOCIATION O&l'IHo.t.HTI Jotl I . O•AHAM, VOL.AHOA GlllAHAM Ollf 001.S I 1N'Wt11 )(, lncMIW IU" W UMUIWflUt. Dt1TAIM8• ITATtl"°"lf ... ~W • • .., ...... n.. CAM._..._., lltOTICiml Y• ... ,.. ._. ..-. Tiii _, ................ .... ....__ ....... ,..,...... .... ...,.. ................ ... estate, you may f ile a re· City of Santa Ana. quest with the court to re-California on April 1, 1981 c e ive special notice of the at 9 :30a.m . Tllli \I .. .._. WM llled wllh l .. County Cieri< ol Oronge Coilnty on Fellru•rv 20, ""· ..I_ P111tll"'9cl Or009 Cooll Deity Pllo4 Inventory of estate assets IF YOU OBJECT to the and of the petitions. a c -granting of the petition, c o u n ts a n d rep o r t s you s hould either appear desc ribed In Section 1200 at the hearing and state of the California Probate your objections or file Fu u . Mor.>, 10, 17, 1,.I •.o.e1· PUBLIC NOTICE Code. written objections with the 1-11t court before the hearinn. NOTICR TOC•ROITOH Cooksey, Colemain & Howard, By : Cail H . Coleman, Attorney at uw, 1n12 E. 17th Street, West Bldg ., Tustin, California 92610. (714) 132·2474 Published Orange Coast Daily Pilot, Maq:h 3, 4, 10, 1981 1065-81 PUBLIC NOTICE • OP IUU( T•ANS .. I• Your appearance m.ay be In 11eu. t1t1 .. 1w u.c.c .> p e r son o r b y your at-NOTICE IS HEREIV GIVElol 10 torney t red I ton 01 Ille wllllln 11emed I F · YOU AR E A tre11steror11W1111>v11<1rondtf'lto-.1 10 Oe mede Oft perlOllal propert, CREDITOR or a cont· 111re1netterdncrlbed. lngent c reditor of .the de· ,,,!"~11~:,::.:C:,~~1:::!.°~"J'.:'. ceased, you must file your GRIEGO ENTERPRISES INC. la c I aim with the court or CollloMI• corporo11on1, S.O. wo111u1. present It to the personal trvlne, co. n11• representative appointed .~~n= ~ .... ':!1::!' =-::.:. by the court within four HARRIS -HELENA M. HARRIS, months from the date of "°' w11""'1, 1nr1ne, eo. "'" f · t I f I ett Tllet ,,. 1WG118rtY por11nen1 ,_,.to '' COASTCOMMUHITY 1rs ssuance o ers as 6Herl1*1 •n _,., •= lffuty ••ton ClOU.IOeDllTllllCT provided In Section 700 of oflCI '' toc.IOd oc so woinvt. ,,,,,,.., --1ceOP96' • the Prot>ilte Code of c..mta ...,, --C llf I Th ti f Tiil ttwi,... nomo UMCl lly 1111 said Ol'PeltlOffAL.fl•o·,.1•Tv ~ orn a . e me or 1,e11.,._ •t lolcl toc.tlotl 1., "SAKS TOHIOMHTIU>O•• filing claims w ill not ex· 0 .. IRVIHll" ,.::.i;:~~:':'111':!.":4'C:=:.': pire prior to four months ne1 .. 1c111u1111ron.,er 11 111teMH1o 11111011owt111UMC11fCllllpmet1IWhlch1101 from the date of the h ear· o. co11111R1mot•d et 1111 0111u 01 -lldl<lorWtur'lllllllollleneod&OftM ln~noticed above PAL.OS 'IE•Ol!S ESC•OW co .. INC .. CMJtC--'tyCtUegeOblrkt: · SOOE. C...eon Slr•t, • 10t. Cer1an, 111 IO·M£TER SLOO P OU MAY EXAMINE Co1Uornlet01'5onorefter1Mttll>O, (AUl(ILIA .. YI -MINIMUM 810 the file k~t by the court.'~~--......... , ... ,..._. "~O::iii. ,..11 ... _....o -pultltdy If you are n terested In the with •"°"' , .. 1,.,,1 ,.,,.., ... 11,.. 1, ... _, __ 2 00 .. ~·11~ 1,.11 estate, t°" may file a re· AIPll• M. L.err1111m, P•I•• Verna ,..,._ .. : t:;;..,...• ••.r. n t h the t,,. Conlerenu Of lllt u ltlrl(I queS W t GOUrt tO re• £acrow Co., IN:., 500 E. CWMfl 5'reot, ,....,.,,,, .. , .. ion w1c11.,.. mo AMIM celve specie! notice of the • ••. Cor1011, Co111or111 .. 01as. _ ,,,. • ~-,._,_ ..._. '""'I~..... •11 IHI doy for 1111 ... ctolmt Illy efly ;~-;;;;.;;-.~ t; .;;;;k ... ot Inventory of estate assets c'9fttor _., .. ~" 11, 1,.1, .tlkll 1111 PurCNtl"' :f::"' oc IM otiow-. and of the petitions, ac· '' 111111WMJ1 •Y.....,. ttw c....-. d ·~ .......... 1-·~1~·~-,, counts d t m1110f1.,....,..111H...,... '"' ..,.,,.. •• ,... ,,_ -· '" ..-....... · a n re p o r s Se ier • •• ~ to ui41 .......... Int 10 "" ollelltle 1or cont1e11ret1e11. desc ribed In Section 12 Tr~~-.. ~....._..._..,,~ ... -L•l• lll•~•occoPlod. _,.,,.._ ,. .....__... __..,..,., ,.._..,.,_ _ _,. .. 11111,.," of the California Probat ., ... ,,. folloWllll ... •'-• ~ 11-moywellteMld•llllePur~lnt Code. "°"'".,.,. ....,_ wltfllft tlle tine o..ttt,..... fl "'9 Olttrkt ot IN .. -, '"" •• pllt: "'-· ~ -...-........... ,_.__.~· Ootef Mlrell 4, 1"1. _._.....,_....,_.._._,.,. Bart F. Wade Attorney M.0,H...,. .. 111'-"""' ...-lllCm•,,t, <•11 Mre. at Law. 45• '..l. S•rl• ........ M. ""'''' MMllll ~rll\, l"Wcllell11tA9'"';(JI') , • ~ P' " "6-suo. Strttt, #nt, Loi Ai; .. •• ""'"°'~=.";=-:::'co .. 1tee. 11 .. -· ... atttmHfllM ••• Callforttl• HOU, JU) ••. ----·-Clrtlfl• tr CHll!lr'1 C:MO ..... ----•:r.:::• ,, 1111 C:tHt CMllftllflltr 626-HOa. c.nea.ca. ... c: Ol*kt .c., .... _. Publllhtd Orange coast ....... wntlu.C..La.o. ==-~~_:~ Oelly Piiot, Merch 10, 11 •;~-::.,.a-o.c,., .,.. .. ~ttflll«lMlllll_, •• 17, 1981 1265-8 Morell 10, 1"1 IDMI ..... te .. 9W'CMll --· .. =.:=..-::.. c:. ..., = Pl18UC NOTICI PtJBUC Nones ... ,. "',._, -..... .. -~--wflldlwlllw.., ... I, ""· '-''•MD MCIOllfT MO MllAt.TM AM •-flf C.-... .. ,....... ff ...... I ... rtf8 ....UM.ITATUMM'f ere tM 1zs ltllllf fl,_...., t YU98 .. DHCW~Of' ~UllT•-•---W ~Hln~At.t.INl..U 8~MY Oii! ................. a1a1•111 OP Plll~MUMA '""'...,.,· .... ..,."'914. 'tt f ....... ttUt ..... ,__ .. rtlltl .. rtl«t T .... I ....................................................... I 1,tta.1M,7d ...... ., .. NW., ..... ,............................................................. , ..... ,., .... .. -~ .. a . ':'..:=:::..-=-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: \"t:=: t 911 TIM CNll tr lllC,._ Co.c-1 lll~Ollf..,._ c.11 ... Clllilrlct ltllllt• M ..,llle"'9 ....... ,. .... : .... ,............................. L '..... .. wri............ ....... "' ·--"' lllarw1 H•ttlllwl9 ................................ """', ....... , •Jl'-'11•1. • Acc,.....,..Mellll.,_._................................. ....-..u N'fllMMlllMtn.1 ... ,,_.. .. ,.,. ·--"' ,.,., c.i-.... :.~:.-:r,:::,:;'.: MC===-·""iWM';:········••..................... ... ...... flllellal ... lfNll~ Olrett: ~ ....._..... .......................... -..,,.,., 'f'll1 ... 11 .. __. wlfl ~INll I ..... ~ ._ ...... .__ .. 111 ICC*llM<f wftll tM "-! ., ...... ~•--•eta. , ............... 9'W .... o.c.m.r "· ""ltlMt .... ·----..oMM I. WATIOM CWllM....._flf ......... Cal"94'711e, ,.,_... .. t.w. . • ...,...,,, ...,. .. ,,.,,..... ltlWI"'-... ...,. 0..ClltMMlltr Ctl.... ..,_ YICt ~ ~ '"'-'· .... ~Or._ CMtl Oelff "'""' ~ ..... Or-. CMtt Delly "'"'-_....., a. ... ,,,,.,,., ,.,.... Maf<lll•lt.1"1 ,."., ~Or--C.. Oell¥PllttMlr'dl1,l,t, It, It,,., • - Tim· P.ullLl' c1ac111 "But I didn't ASK Grandma for a piece of her cake. It was her idea." ~ Vlrglr Partch (VIP) .,Look. tell1, I'm not INTERESTED In your .,.,,...,.,, " M.4aMADIJKI by Brad Anderson "You don't Ilka the meatloaf? Do you mind If I get a second opinion?" WE CHECKED THAT ~!i TO~. LOU~! JEANNIE W~N'T A~! EllHER ~E TOOK ANOTHER eu!> OR ~E ~T TOOK THE CA& lO THE OU5 TERMINAL. AND THEN ENT El..f>EWHERE.' Ml88 Pl.4CH !ll'.A, WMY HAVEN'i ">()l.Al'C PA~&~ c~ 'TO ~ ... OOL. TO~V, AS r ~EQLAe;·neo f' c MOON Ml1LLIN8 ® bv Harold Le Ooux MEANWHll..E, ON A~!> HEADED FOR LO!> AN<:1£l.~ I Al..00 COMf10!t I THINK lT'b JU5T WONDERFUL ~C! l rnlNK YOO'ltf ONE Of THAT ~e·~e &OTH HEADED ~ THE NICE5T WOMEN l EVER HOU..YWOOD.' 00 YOU PlAYTHE DID MEET'! MY NAME'!> 'DY OOITAR AND &!No? ~! WW.T~ YOU~? by Mell Lazarius -by Ferd & Tom Johnson ··-· DR.4B8LI bE£, If IJA~ RE.All.'4 S~U. Of '4oU 1'0 lOME. OVER fO~llMtf, PltA8Sl.E ! K.8MOCK OKAY, CO.A91" c&UA"P, M•L.~ IS ON l'T'S WAY/ I • MtTH CRMPee.LoL! MtAftL PHC ti!IWOfi eolt-'ER\NG t-1:.! ------- WHAT'S YOUR PROBLEMf by Chartee M. Schultz TMIS ISNT ~ 74 7, ~00~~, ~--,<[) ,_ by Tom K. Ryan by Jeff MacNelly by Ernie Bushmiller 0 i by Kevin Fagan by George Lemont • I Onange CoMt DAICY PltOT/Tueeday, Meteh 10, 1911 mrn~~m~~~ I-- BUSINESS , 1. How u~s. should reindustralize hard to solve BJ JOllN CtJNN1Pf' A ............. NEW YORK -Does ~ Unit.cl St.ata need to retnduatrtau .. 1 A UtUe reminder mlabt help you auwer. lll1 lndultry II a di.laster. The demand lJ there, but the ability tn fU1 lt la not. r-Some crlUet maintain th.al wttb Hn'icet now dominant we shouldn't try to re-e1t.abU1h a~t.ad: America. Some fear reln- dustrtalbat1on ml1ht be lumed lnto a retum to the put rather than an attempt to crack new fronUera. Some claim the bru.kdown of the old economy should be left to run it.a course, because the new economy already 11 beln1 cletlped. ROUllq and can are buic lnduatriea. So la steel. SteelJ:oaketa · are manqlq, dnplte accuaatloaa that their producUon faelliUf-Tbe automotive lnduatry 1plUed more Ulan S4 billion ln red ink last year. lta share of t.be market la 1brlnklq, forclna cutbacks amon1 suppliers. Chrysler Corp. aUJl bieeda, loaln1 tHO million ln January. aren't c:omMUUve, but maln.ly beeauae they are dJverailytnc wtllde ot atffl. Puaenger railroads are probably a thlnl of the put., com· muter lines are losin1 money, and all but a few alrllnes are 1tru1· 1Jint to remain aloft. Meanwhile, the coat of enerty \o drive them rises relenUessly. SO DO INTE&EST RATD. Obe consequence ts that many aav· ln1s banks and savin1s and loan associaUons, which have lon1·term, low-rate home loans outstanding, ar~ loaln1 money every day. Many of them could fail. Small buslneu la also baalc, and It Is allc;, burt1n1. Hlth lntereat rates. taxes, paperwort, replaUona and frequenUy an ln· abiUty to compete for labor an harustna it. Small busineu, remember, II the vocation school for many trades, the apprenUceshlp 1ystem for Jobs . IF THE OLD BCONO•Y thou.Id be left to die, however, the question arises about bow to accommodate to t.tie death throes. If other energy sources are to propel automobiles, what is to be done with Chrysler until then? So, does the United States need revlUliza· lion? Of course; the system bu broken down. WouJd it be more the American way to simply relieve the negative pressure of Interest rates, taxes, regulations and other Impedimenta and let market facton dictate? Beyond the 1enerallsalion, however, the de· cuNN"'" Those are the question.a. Far tou1her questions than whether or not the country should reinduatrialize. Meanwhile. some of them are effectively out of buslneu, a condition to which builders and homebuyers can attest. The hous· tails aren't clear. There's even confwsion about the meanina of r& lndustriallzaUon. • WANTED Big jump m sugar prices unlikely General Pcrtners for JOJOBA R&D TAX SHELTER Sywdlata.. tw :ckty CHICAGO <AP) -Falling consumption worldwide and the rising uae of com sweeteners in developed countries have altered the outlook for the s ugar market, tempering forecasts of dramatic price increases this year, industry analysts say. But despite the r evised supply and demand outlook, a return to the low prices of the late 19705 is unlikely, the analysts say. (7141 846-5515 ext. 173 JOCADO AG RI CULTURE CORP. Arter selling for between 6 and 10 cents a pound since mid-1976, sugar prices took off in 1980, reaching (5 cents a pound on the Coffee Sugar Cocoa Exchange in New York last October. 5901 Woner An., llwatfngtott h och 92649 At the time, many in the industry were pre- dicting that wholesale prices could reach 50 to 60 cents. Medical Professional Space in Irvine EX< ELLfNT OPPORTL'Nln· \\ITH IMMEDIATE AVAILABILITI'' Thl''t' hr.ind nt-" hu1lding' "THE ARHOR" are lotated n•nually in 1he ( II) uf In rnc: Ont· of tht' fa,ft',t gro" 1ng ma\tt'r plan c111es in the: tounrr> It h,n l')(t dlcnt d(.(t'" 10 .td1 .. u~n1 ,urf .. u~ ~1reer~ and the fret:".t} ne1 ... ork . .i' "di .i' 1mmt'd1a1e prox1m11y ro loc .. I hou,ing. C,1,t'n 1hc: dt'mograph1t ' ;wd lolat1un 11 ha' 10 be one of rhe ou1\tand · 1ng -<•mmnu.il '""' an Ordn~c: ( ou111y. Thi~. coupled with the design o( 1hc huald1n~'· ,hould nMl..t' 11 horh an immediate and long term \Ul l t'"· T a rnutze r · Hamilron D evelopment Co., Inc. 714/557-2792 Contact Christopher Bennett PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE STATEMENT OF A8AHOONMEHT OFUSI OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMIE T ne lollowono ~''°" II•• •t>anclonoo the 1111 of the ftC llttOV\ OUl•nt-IS n.m~ FORCAR PARTS, IU.1 O•boro 1.n . Huntington &.bell, CA 92.._ The F1ct1hou\ 8u\•MH N•me r~ ttrrtd to •bOve wttt tilf'd m Oranor C°"nly on Feo 76, 1'111 P•ul Ju n Bloom. 4901 H••• SI Su••• SIB, Hunhr>QIOft Bo.ell, CA •1••9 This bUSIM'\I ••' conducteo by •n lndlvld11•1 PWI Bl_,, Thi• ,..,,_, wH 11led wltn ow Counlr Clerk ol Or.,,oe Co11nly on 11111#.r<h •. "'' FIS.74' Pu1111.-0r_.. c .... , Dally Pllo1. M•rch 10, II, 24, JI. 1'11 1100 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE --------l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS NAMI STATIMl!NT Tiit 1041-lno person Is Ootng OUM ,,. .... , FUTURA LEASING CO. 3'U W Ma<A-Blvd., S-l07, S.nt• Ana, C•lllornl• 92704. J•Cll J. ScllweH,.r, 1m W•llact Awnue. Cotta Mow, C.lllorn•• t2'V _ Tllta blnl~t h condu<ltCI by •n 1n dlvldtJal. Jeck J S<ll-11.ztr Tl\lt stat-I was flleo w11n 1n1 Counly Cler• or Oranoe County o• ""'-' 1. 1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE F!:; rlTIOU5 IU51Nl.SS NAME STATIMINT Tllo lollowong portont ••• doing t>u\tnt\S ., L E PARTNERSHIP I, It/ts t<onoswOOCI, Hunt1n91on Bu ell. CA 97'46 1.ulller EdW••d GrlbOlo, • Gener•I Pulner on L11n1ted Pa rtMr\J\lp, 1'7tS l<•nQi wooo. Hunt1nQton Be•ch. CA 91M6 E roe O Dela Crul, • Ltm lteo P•, tnrr 1n Limiltd Partner,f\lp, U16 N Sumrmt Ap1 C. PaY<lena, CA t llOl Thi\ bU\•n•\t '' t ondv<t•d by • 11m1ted pArtne"hlP PUBUC NOTICE -~~~~~~~~~~~~ PICTI nous auM .. IU ...... ITATl.Ml .. T Tiie ro11-1no perto11• ue doing tivtlnnsa: THE TRAVEi. CENTRE, 2•11 EHi CMst Hlgflw1y, CM-Oii ll!Wr, C•.'2W K••.., a.11, 111'2 Via Moftlura, san J11.., c;..,hl•-. ea. '2675 J M,_ Sc-. 670I w.tl OcMn Front, "-1 IMcfl, Ca. '2'6l J-a.II, )11'2 vi. -tur•, san J ...,. <:ap1.ar-. ea. m 1s M•rllfl E. Scl\IOm, ., .. Wen Oce•n FrOftl. HHrport 8••<h, C•. 91'6l Tllh bvt.l,,.u ts c~lecl by • geMr•t ....-tHt>. JEANNE SCHLOM. ~Pe..- Tl\lt --•et lltld •Ith tr. County Cterlc of Or.,.,. County on F~ryU,1WI THOMASWELLI ALA•~-......... ~on ... s.lt•tlt N_...., ..... ea.,,... Publlti.d 0r-. Coetl O•llY Pilot Feb. 14, ->. to. 11, 1w1 .,.,., PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI 01' AVAIL.A.al LI TY LullWr Edward Grt~e T "'' 'talft'TMJnt w•' hied wit" '"'• Counly C•erk ot Or.,,oe Counly on Morell• 1911 OP ANNUAi. •El"OltT Purs...,,t lo S.cUon .iG4 ldl of IM Internal Revenue Codt, notice II FIS7J.M r..rebr 9'...,, lllal llM -I,_,, of Publislleel 0r.,,.,. COHI D•oly p ,101. October 31. '"°· •• KENNETH AHO M•r<h 10. 11, 7', 31 1'11 l1'7-tl CLARA MURCHISON FOUNDATION, _ ----INC.,• prlv•ll lound.tllOft, It av•ll•ble •• Ille 1-llon's prln<l~I ofllce for IMP•<llon during regut•r bu•l,,.u -------llours from I 00 a.m to S 00 '·"' by N-7U1J any c ltlien .mo ritque•U It •llllln llO PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINIU d•y• •lier lfll IMlt• of this publlc•llOft NAMI STATEMINT Tiie lounCMIClon't 11<lncl~I offlU It Tiit lollo•lng ~rtont are doing loc•ttCI at 2'01 Edinger A,...nue, Hunt· bustnen -s: lngton a..c11, C.lil0<nl• t»47 BAMBOO GARDENS, 22"\IJ W TIM prlncl0.1 ,,,._, or ll>e foun· Ball Ro..i. Anothelm, c.a. '7904 dallon It Hugi\ R. Murcl\lwn V•n ~ o.o. U 31 F•rC1Ullar • 4, NO•MAN M. G•llH ANO co .. Los Al•mltot. C.. C"A• D•o Nri.-Tr-o, 3.5J1 F.,-qu,..r JU> L ... IMcll 81w., • •. Los Al•mltos, C• kit• OJ V«t NGM 0. '--I a..dl. C&. _, o... N,,._, Tr--o Pubflar.d OrolflQe C~•t D•llY Piiot, Tiiis ,t•t-1 .. ., flied wltll Ille March 10, 1981 12'1·11 County Cler-of Or«toe County on Ftt>ru•ry 19, "11. l'IMIW Publl•-Or11n91 C:O.tt 0.ffy Piiot Ftt>. 24, Mir l, 10, 17, 1'11 •n.t1 PUBLIC NOTICE Fl-J __ Pullllti.cl ():..,.,. c ... st Dolly Piiot, ""'-'· J. 10, "· 2•. IWI tt7 11 PUBLIC NOTICE ~~~~~~~~~ l'ICTITIOUI IUllNl!SS .. AMI. nATl.Ml .. T Tiie IOll-nt penon It dol119 tlval· ....... : HAalOR I.UMBER CO .. IUJ Meta Drive, S•nla Ane l1tl9hh, C•llf9rlllat1'27. ~llllp Jotwoi Jeao. 210 Mlr.,..•r. "-"" ...... C..llONll• '11MO. Tiii• M!Ma• la UW!dueltel bY .,., In· .,.,~. PNHa.J.Jet~ Tith ---•• llteo •Ill\ Ille COUflly ~ten of Or•noe C:e11111y on FM, I), l,.I, ....... Pull!llllN Or.,.._ Coast D•lly Piiot, ..... 11,Jt,MerdlJ, IO, 1'11 It Mt -------------- .. PUBLIC NOTICE I, , . Going Into Business? Aa required by l•w. new bualneaae1 using • Flclltlou1 Bu1lneS1 N•me muat register th•t n•me with the County Clerk. Call the DAILY PILOT LEG AL DEPARTMENT for fonM and further Information. $42-4321 Ext. 332 PUBUC NOTICE -~~~~~~~~~~·~~ l'ICTITIOUS aUllNIU NAM1 STATIMl.NT Tiii 104i-lno __ , art ODl"O bU5tM,SM PARK SERVICES, INC, 160S2 Buell &outeverd, S..llt 2U, Hunt 11191on llM<ll. C.lltof'ftl• ,._,, Olr•<IOtt Byron I. Wllll•m•, J•m•t I.. Cl•yton & Steven J Slier•-. a Del•••rt corpor•llOn. IM>U B_,, 8oulev ... d, S..1te 2U, H..,. Unoton 8Ndl, C.lltornla .,..,_ All '"'" dl...cl°". Burt N. Slnol.ton. Prnldefll, • D•I••••• corpor•llOft, IM>Sl &.•ch 8 oul•v•rcl, Sult• 2U. Hu1111ngton Bffch. Galllotnt. t3Ml. ByrOft 1.. Wiiii.ml, Vice Prnl- Olnl. • Del...,.,, corpo••tlO'I, tM>S1 Bu ell 8oulew•rd, Suite JU, Hllfll 1noton llM<h. C.llfornl• t»A7. Date Slevent·llMtuelot, s.<ret11ry & T, .. ...,..,, • O.laware corporau.., 1MIS1 BMC.I\ Boulevard, Sulla 2U, Hun llnoton 8ffc11, C.lllornl• •~1 Tiiis -nest Is conouct..i by a cor porat1~ D•le Sle,...n•·B<onue lOt. s.<. & T re.surer H1I• SI .. .,._, w.s llted wltll ''- County Clerk of Orange County on ~r. 2, Ull. FIMttt Publlslled Oran.,. Co.st Dally PilOI, 11111#.r l. 10, 17, 24, 1'11 10~ .. 11 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAMI STATIMINT The totlo•l"O per tons are dotn9 .,.,.,,,,..,,.,, CAMPUS GAS COMPANY. 9°'1 T albt!rt, S..lw IA, Fountain Valley. Cat ilornl• 92709. David 8-ISIMltky, 9092 Talbt!rl, S..He IA, F-1.Mn V•llrf, C•lllorni• 92709. Paul Her11ert & Sltll• Hergert llVS~ & wtte, '°'n RMI ........ 11un llnoton 8Mcll, C•lllornl• ,,...,, Roy,,.._ tn< .. • C:.lltornl• corpor•· tlon, )112 Wini Ocean FrO'lt, Na•PGrt 8MCI\, C..UlomMI tllMI. &Knie P. Sv•llt.ld This tlet-1 •• tiled w•tll tr. Cov11ty C11r11 of Orange County on ""'-'· 2, 1'11. SAMU •L cuan1. ATTO•Nl.Y AT LAW .,, 11411• A-. s.lle 1.U H....U .... .-9MCll, CellfWlll• tJM7. P..otl,,_, Or ..... (Mil 0 .. ly Piiot, Mar . >. 10, 11. 1'. 1'11 106041 PUBLIC NOTICE --·-·-----' ~-····-........... ..,,..-•• -.-.. ......... P"'!I-,-... .....-. ..... .-.. The projections were made amid industry and government estimates that world production would drop below consumption for the first time in seven years. Although that ~till appears to be the case. this supply-demand imbalance has changed since, sources say. Futures prices have fallen about 46 percent in the last four months. Last week, the contract for delivery in May was trading at around 24 cents a poundontheCofreeSugarCocoa Exchange. In retail prices, an Associated Press survey last week showe d decreases in February at supermarkets in nine of 13 cities surveyed across the country. The U.S. Agriculture Department says that easing in retail prices reflects the decline in raw and wholesale prices since prices peaked last October. The government agency s ays production estimates for the 1980-81 year still foresee output reaching the 87.1 millfon metric tons previously projected, but consumption will fall far below what it might ha ve been. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS H EW YOAK tAPl Cn•suu .•. , ,. ~:;r,c:r. • 31"'-JeOH NoE01 u<1 NASDAQ QUOlallo ::11ubb 4S •S•/, 11~ 73 NwlNGs \llOw1n9 l\•ghHI bid :_trf1co s~ • ••• Helm AK o . S·-• Nws1P5 tnc:I IOWHI ollorl b Ct11SoG• ·~ 1 ... HtnroF s 2S"' 1• NO.oll ..................... Cil1UIA l2 l21'. Holobm 2v. 211. Nu<orp 4 p.m Prl,•• OD not CIUUl8 ttv. tt"' Hoover 12'/o tl g~:~'C.1.": •nc '""* ret.i1 rn.rtc Cl••-JI. 2'~ lO HoruA\ 5'1 5"' ..n•rkdown °'comm ClowCp ~ •'• :!1;':~71. 22 ,. 01\Ferro 1u .fon tor -.y. Colr Tie 11-. 17\<o "'" 19\. OUerTP Stock Bid Al~ ColG•llot 1~1' '• Inf rt Ind • ...... PCA Int AEL Ind ·~· ComCIM ll~ ll>O Intel • ll\<o ).< P.OstB AFAPr01 • •v. CmlSl\r ,. 17 1r11rc Enr tli> '""1 PcGaR AVM Cl> l~ 414 CmwTel ""' It lnlmtGs 10 .... 1~ tJ•ulet P !~r~1w I~ 11 COllPAll l 3414 ~ 1~a11ws11 12!'t U P•yli s 1)11. ,,.. Corclh 2011. 20\I> lwtSoUt ~ 21 PMrMI Advllou s s CrotTre s llli> """ Jtmlby 1~ 20 Pen•Ent AdvP•tnl , J CutlrFd • , l 'h Jerico t n"' n Pentair All18111 l4"' lS'Ao Cycllron I~ 11'n ~~~7,~t.. •i.. Petrollt Al•8n<p 21\i> 22 O.nlyM ll'h ., • .., U lS<· Pelllbon AluAIH J).\lo l4 Otal>es a 1~ ISY, K•lsSI pl 16 11 Pllll•Nll •Allcoln< llli> ,.,,.. OaytMal 16'1'1 11 l(•IY•r 2• .. 1 PlerceSS AllynB IV. I Y, oa .. r I S.l2 •• ,. Kem•n )()·' ll Pinkrtn Allu 1V. , .. g:~t~¥ ~ ... KmpAm ll"'-"' P1onHtB Ame r•• ' l2 n •.i. 11 II ... IC•ri"m "''• s P1 .. 11,,. AFln t 111.4 ,, .. OewoE• 1... ] t<t lfiSv s lSVo 36' Pou is A Furn s .. S.\I. 01.Crys 21 n Keu let ~ lJI • 14 PruGM AGree1 12 11"'1 0 1x11Cru 1t ,. ..... Klmb•ll 111 .... 111 Pf\Sttyn AlnlGp l:Jl.<o 14 Oocutel ~,. .... K1n91n1 , .... 1 Progrp A Micros """ ....... DollrGn "'-Ill<. KIOOIG 11 .. 711 PbSvNC AN•llns 1) ..... u Doyl08 • .... """ ~~!~" .. ,. Purt8en AOu•" • ,. ..... 2•\/o DunalnD ''"' 11 ... 11 • 11 PutOC•P AAoMg ,, • .., 1211. Our Iron 11 ... 12'4 t<ullcu s 20 20'. QuakrCll AWeld119 M U 'h €t0rlef uv. 11"" L•n<oln l2lo. u·~ R•.,.nPr Amteu ... 1 •tnvnce • 9.\1, Land Rn s... s Aa ycllm An•dllo ·~ ' EconL•b ...... 1''11> L•neCo 31 .... "'" Raymno A119SA lll'I llV. EIPHEI 9V. ... Lllnvs 20 1011 • AHvCm' !::t':c~d .. ,"' .. Etci.ra. • . ..... l.ldStor 111. 1Jll't RtpNll• IS ·~ EleNu<I 1'11. ....... Lln8cs1 ' 29 ,,.,., A.,.dEa ApldMll s -111.4 EIMOClul 24'11 ?Siio ~°r.r 13~ u 11. RobOAo\y \ ArdtnGp )"" l'I\ EnrOev u 11. 14'h IJ1.1t 1]''• Rosel on IUdCot• Ull. l~ EnrMelhd s~. s.,, MGFO' IS'• IS .. ~Ou~., All Gt LI u• ... ·~ EnR•v , ......... M•d•GE 12~ 131111 AtJsStov AU.,,R\ " ··"" Ent•otU •'4 1 Ma~IPt ... "" Sid lier c •l•dCi u lllf· EqutSL ll&t 12' io M~mP -2t Slleco ollyP 10'"0 10' • ~~011. '""' ··~ 1111• r RI ~ l~ StHOIGd i:r,~~ o ·~~ 1~~ ] .. l li> ""• 1•ri ....... 49'\io SIP•YI F•brtTk J ,,,. M•rion s 1l 1JY. Sun DI Worldwide consumption is expected to be at 89.5 million tons, down somewhat from the pre· vious projection of 90 million tons. Kim Badenhop, a partner with the sugar brokerage firm of 8 . W. Dyer and Co., says the decrease is more severe when historical trends are considered. "If you go by trends of consumption over the years. it should go up about 2 million tons a year - so it should have been 92 million tons," he says. The move away from sugar has been in- fluenced partly by growth in industries for corn sweetener a sugar s ubstitute in the United States, Canada, Japan and several other de- veloped countries, according to the USDA . Government figures show U.S. per capita con· sumption of corn sweeteners was more than 41 pounds in 1980, up nearly 11 percent from 1979. At the same time, per capita sugar consumption con- tinued to decline, to about 85 pounds in 1980 -six pounds less than in 1979 and 15 pounds less than the record 100-pound-plus consumption levels or 1963 through 1973 6, 10•,, !iensor • n~'>o II uv. Svc Mer u•,, 12,. NASDAQ SUMMARY ll"t •• ~ ... Svctn\t lS"-11>'" 1t'. 2t Sn Med ,, ... lO 2l 2l1l'O Shwmt \ 2S 1S'• ,~ 11 SCalWlr 1~ II NEW YORK (API Tho loll-•ng lost ll 17'ra SwE15v U\:.. 1S' J 10';. IOilt SwnEnr ll1/• )9 sllows ,,. Over ~ Ille Co<Jnler stocks •no ••rr.nts 11\al twvt gone up ,,.,. "" Standyn 19 ,, •• Ille most .nd -1111 m<HI b•SO<I on 1)\, .. StdMocro 10 • 10', ,.rcenl of <"""'91t reQ.6rdlru of v~umt 1'' • "•n ~:~~y,· 33111 )tV. 71 1)'" 1•11'1 .)O•,, '°'No ::=rK 1r..i1~ 11e1ow u •r• in<I 11 ............ SttrlSt t it. .... old«d Net Ind perce••l<tlll cllen.,.s ••t ,,. '''• ., S•r•wCI 12•,, lJ 1itferenc:e bet~ the Of t'WIOUS t 10\lnQ I] 111,) Suba ru 12'• 1l 01d pritf' 4lnd tocs..,·s ••st bid pr1ct IJllJ I)~ Su~rEI 10"" 11 20'-20\1 Tl E O< .. .., s· • ,.,, .,I,, T•moe• lJ'• )J ... 17 ., .. TncoPd J/lt) 301 J 10•11 JO.it. TroyGIO 0 s... s .. UPS .. , , ... TysonFd IS"" ..... Name I.Ast .ct;\ Pel ••' > so., UnMcGll " , 11 Br•-<1HS 76 .. Up ll I lPt •'~i US Enr 12 ,,.,. ~~:W~l."" • • 1]·16 Up ?SS " ''• US Sur t 2•t. 11'" s~. .. ~ Up 111 s ... . ., us Tro lfl'ti ,,,, • Scoenlnd 2'• . .. UP 21 • 1'-\. 401., UV•8sh )7 .. 12~ s Pur.CY<I ~ + "" Up 201 )lo 36"'-UpPenP I t '1• 17''• 6 PetDv •-'· . ,.,, Up 20.7 ,~. .... VHIA .. 6S 1 f=~•n 10• ... . ...... Up 20.6 10'• tl1t V•IBllAr 36 ... 36"" • ... ... Up 20.0 11 • "'• veno us •• 1 ..... ' Ja y·t•• \ 6 .. . ' Up 11.• ISl• IS>I. Vrcoln \ 1'911. 1'fl,) 10 Datvsn H• . .,, Up 17 . u 11 '• ~~~f::sf .... , .. II Amrc wt 2'4 .. ... Up IS I 11 \< 12 '"" ••• 12 Numet•• 4 • Up Ill 10 /1 ~~d,:~~ 1•·· •• ,., 13 M tCfO\ l'. . " Up 1)( 1S 1S I. l,tll) ··~ 14 Rd Tell s , .. , . ] Up 12. J2•. )J~. Wsl\Enr .... """ ·~ ConteJC1 2 ... . . Up 12 s 1) ... 2]'. WtlOtrn l i> • " I.one Fin ti • J Up ns •2 o•. WollGo \ 1111) 211., 11 ~tr~". .,,. • "' Up 17 s ,.,, tO wenoy' 1l'I• 2J\\ ,. 2''• . '• UP 12 s 1'. ) ... Wtndy WI IS.. 1S'4 19 Amrco un .... .. Up 11 l ..... ~. WstOrtl .. , 10' 10 Cm""""' ~· ... "" Up 11 1 Uh 1S' t WOH p .. 4611. 11 1n1mtE• , . .., . '• Up 11 I Po 3"'-WHOld •s• .. .,,. .• 22 TennNG 101 ... . I Up II 0 J7•. 37 .. ::=~ l't ... ll RfflA" S'"' . .., Up 10 I 3'1.. .., • .., IJ•. 12 ... 14 :~~~'o is•n ,,, Up 10 I ~.0·111 WoOCILOI "~ 22''· IS , ... . ... Uo 10 s Wri9hlW ~ s•. B•utFr Z.... 21' 8aylaMk II'" IH FarmGp ~lO AolaulLP 1t'I') lO I 1~16 1 IS-I• l tonUI• u lS > Fidlcor IS"' IS"' "11ayPI • lS lS"-UPS AND DOWNS 8MllM ,., 1 Ft Bk Sys 42 .,~. :~l:?.:: ..v .. ··~) DOWNS BenntPll l'"' l'"' F 18osln 1Sll> 26 ..... , " ... H•tn« Ult c~. Pel BtnllYI. 37°) 12 ~:~~f~n 1S'h IS ... M<F•ri ,,.,, ,. ... M•troS." • 011 ll>O 8el1l.•b ., .... •lilt .,,. M<Qu•/ 14V> 14'4< u~,~ ,,, .. 0 11 23.1 B .. Mgl "'• 14' Fl•\Bks ""' ..... """'J."' 34V.. ).I ... Nt:W vUM .. IA"l Mo\t KhW't' O'W'l't 1 .... 011 20.0 811>11Co IO'n 11 ~:~,.,,,..,. 17 11 ... I txW IS"' 1611. tl't•·count•r •locks \upplled by NASO • Cd8arr 9 2 .. ., 0 11 11 • 8 1rdSon IS'• I) 29 2' .. dldC-.> ll Un s Ad•P .. nt J " Oii 14 ) 81ff(hf s • s FlaNFI• 11~ " ldlR" Mond•r • Pyr...,,011 ,., ' 011 11. Jlyvoor 1•''• u•. Fluroco ' ll'n u f~ 1 II 16 N•mt Volume 8•0 ASU O (..'.f.~ 1 Enler5y l•· •• 011 II S 8ona nio • •.. Fo• .. 10 J1'o ll •dlB•l JO• .. ~ Cetus lll,SOO 71 11'. • m:~-::: J '• 011 11 1 8rwTom i d • •Jl ~:~~~~~ µ. )I.. :~~e~G ,, ... 21'J. 8rhwdHS tOO,IOO ,_ ,,,. . , ... • • • Oii II 1 8u<•Off • • • 10 10>.. "'' 11 PremEnr 111,300 l !t1 1' 10 10 Ttlemln 2 ''• Oii II 1 Bull•I> )1"4 JI•· Fronk El , •• , .. 1611 Mol .. S Sl'I• SJ .. -.AnrA\ 2 .. ;100 tl•· 13"" . .. 11 Comsnr• 1l ,,, Ott 10 l ~~·t·t.~ 14 , •.. Ft H S Ci 4l ''7 ••• , .. MonlCol 4'"' 411. D•hsn 111,200 l .. JI> • '•.I 11 c .. 1 ... 11 1 • ()fl • 1 1 . ] Fremnt ~ ti ,,, ... ~~;id , ...... ,,,,, BrdyEn 109,M>O 31., l ] •• '• I) AdvMSy ) " Oii t I ~~1~ffv ., ... I] FullrHB IS IS''• 31 J2 PureCrCI 11'1,IOO ]~ l"'-. "" .. ~T~:' , .. , ''• 011 t .I ).I•) )lo GoloyO IJ\, 13"9 MorgAH s s ... Air Fl• .... ~ II'" ,.,, . " IS ,., ... Ofl '1 C•nr•dH 1'• l ''t GnAulm 91, ..... -.Aor \nln ., 12•. EnRsv 16•.100 1•V• .... . " HadrO'I 3'• ... Oft l .f ~=~t;~y l l I I GnOevcs 4l-.• s MolClub l )I;. MCIC 16~.200 I] • ll'• + ... ti !~~"t1 ,,.., " 0 11 ., H·~ U GnAIE'I 11'.1 '2'" Muefltr 21 ,,..., ,. ttt' J '" 0 11 l l CplnAor 1"'-''• GovEFn 1 • • ,,,. NarroCP ' lO 31' 1 Adv•nct<I U I It Exullb 1"' '• 011 l l ~=~~~~c u' ,,.t CirHnM 111.. 1) NOia s IS .. IS"-Oecll-•11 20 Ho.tCl'RP4• 1 1 ,. J.1' Oii 1.3 GrevAa• 511'> Ml NJ NG•• ,..~ ,. ... Unch•ngecl 1,111 11 St.,Glo .. ,. "" OJI • J I S.16 1 >It GtflnUt ' 20 21'n Nlc~OG • 7' 1•YJ Total ISWH 2 .... 22 Mobot s ... ,, 011 • 1 CnVIPS :~~ :r: ~::..°:'irt s 6 ••• NtCOilOI """ 20·~ New 1119M 11 ll s ... ntO'I 22'" 2 011 ., ChrmSll 14', 1S Ntel\11 A ).<"" lS New low, n 24 810Rse> wt ..... " ()fl • 1 t .... r lHO 1'91~ 29•,!H•rdw•t 9.\. 10•,, Nle•tn 8 ~"" lS Tot•I ••'" Jl.817.IOO IS &.o'-'l•m 17 , . ., Oii I .I C:hml.u U 0 > 26 HroRow 1~ 10'" NoCuGi 131" ll>O MUTUAL FUND -Ne"" fUMll IAPI i:aivln 8ulloc.k. Confla 12 ~ NI. Mull • S' 10.0 MMkOpt lt.H Prtm• 10 00 NL StStr .. t Inv .• ~~~.·a::;:::, i-lullU n 9S 11.0 D'1ny to.n . 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U ~I. f IClll llJ It,., (II lllWlt _ ~ It. iii IM ,.11 11 fflC 1 . l~wt St"W .:~~ • .:.. I. . ,. '•i·! lH{ ·=~ Ht··.:• I,:.. ~t ~~·:· ~ '",Tit ' !-:' flt ,,., 11'!... !.Hs. ••. "" r.; HI. I"" 1rtt ... ~ ·~.. ~m . ~ ~ , "l .:r:~~:lJJ "l~i ~. "fHR~:t:i ac i iii · rlv;_,tll ~ 1-r~s.:r:. .. =. It» Ct ~J HL Ill tt ... J.t " ·~. l1 rt:.. U:Jt :~ I .. __ _ ( .. r~~--""""."'"'--------------------°'-M99......;....;..co.t __ DAl_Lv PILOT/Tu.day, March 10. 1881 9 NYSE COMPOSI'IE TRANSACTIONS ouetan..1.-a.UN fllAHl>CNI , ........... :. ....... ,. f'.cJll'~ .... '°'"* ••UOlt a•o CINCl•lllAYI noes ••tJtAlle&I AJIO H ... 'C,a I \' Ttt I lllASO A• ltli"•ST • ' ./ ~ .. ~~Tax · audit ~· • very unlikely It'• only normaJ to want to know wut otMI' taxpayen in your lneome cat.corY will be dedueUDI for m~ upeu.11 ud eoeutbUdou wben JGU ftll bl your federal IDcome tu retu.rat. But curioeJt.y ll bard common ..,. u ..U ad can pay on ln aavlq doUan, time ad beadaebe. Let'• aay you're to the •iCJOO-.•,ooo *c>me bracket, a ran•• ln wblcll ml!llCJDI ol tupayen tall, 1 Did YOW' ta contrtbudona to cb1J1tle1 total · around $570? If you plan to deduct 1 Larser total, you are wavln1 a red rtae at an Internal R evenue Service aeent. I -Yl_lll_Pl_IT_ll-r.? THAT FIGUSE -A swollen total for contributions -may be entirely valid and you may have the receipts and other documents (be sure you do) to prove your claim. But lf your deducUon for contributions is far above typical deductions ln your income bracket, youtre asking for a second look by the IRS. And should your return be selected for an audit, you can bet you'll get It. Thia will hold for other major categories or deductions, too. In the medical expense category t h e $20,000-$25,000 taxpayer's deduction averages $561. How wiU your claim for 1980 compare! In tbe category for taxes. the average deduction comes to $1,876. Do you plan to claim more -or less'! Whal about interest? This is a big deduction with the national average coming to $2,280. Where will you fall? CLAIMING DEDUCTIONS WELL below the national averages should be just as much of a red flag -to you. It could mean you are spending less than other "average" taxpayers in your income bracket. Or it could mean you are overlooking some deductions - forgetting payments you made In 1980 or not makinl claims because you are unaware that they are valid deductions for you on your return. Either way -to highlight deductions that slick out because they are far above the averages or deductions that seem inaccurate because they are far below the averages -the national averages can be of major value. Here are the up-to-date figures prepared by the Research Institute of America: IF YOUR ADJUSTED GROSS income was $10·15,000, your average medical expense deduction would be $951 , taxes Sl ,235, contri bu lions $535, interest $1,895; if adjusted gross income was $15·20,000, average medical expense deduction would be ~. taxes $1,561, contributions $535, interest $1.895; adjusted gross income $20·$25,000, average medical expenses deduction would be $561. taxes Sl,876. contributions $570, interest $2,280 ; income $25-30.000, then medical expense deduction would be $498, taxes $2,245, contributions $644, interest $2,465 , income S30·50,000, then medical expense deduction would be $503, taxes SJ.007, contributions $869, interest $2,880; income $50-100,000, then medical expense deduction would be $668, taxes $5,309, contributions $1,825, interest $4,585; income $100,000 and up, then medical expense deductions would be $1 ,072, taxes $13,305. contributions $8,885, interest $10.184. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YOllK(AP) Fl,..1 0-·-'-•119' AMERICAN LEADERS ~~oete'T*"· MM.'· °i: HIQfl Low CloM cr.o JO 111C1,,, 17 "r.22 '62.1t t76.o~ 11.eo 20 Tn s. a .At ol00.70 «>~.o· 1.10 U Utl iOI. 1S 109.02 107 7S IOI.SI• O.«I .s s111 Jn.H m .47 J10.n J7U7+ 'u I~ •••• 100 Tren 1,7'9,700 u1111 m .• 6J 5191 7,J1't.100 WHAT STOCKS DID HEW VOllK (AP) ~er t p·r•v Aclvenced Tod:fl du. 0.ClllWCI UIS '11 v:.i:-:=:. JSI .. 1907 "" H••~' " f1 .... ~ 14 IJ WMA I AM(J D10 HEW VOllK (AP) Mer • Prn Aclverod T°":~ ~J1 Oe<lll'tld 241 in Un<Nn900 20S ~ T$ll~ IOl m Ht• II ,, JO Nt• lows 1 10 METALS C-~S UlllS a pound, U S 4"11,.. lions 1.tM JA cents a pound. ZllK •114 ctn1' a PoUnd. dlll•t<td. Tl• S4.ftl7 Met.fl w .. ~ com-•lt 111 Al•ll,,._ 76 CMb a pound, H Y Mercwy ~.00 per flHll. l'l•tl-'442.00troyo1 .. N.Y . ......,., monM"l 11•1"9 .. 7J.U, up ... u . ~: alllt,_ flalnt .. 74.U , up SJ .U . l'erla: 1111t,_11.1119ut1.-. wp64.tt. ''Hllfwt: 11•1"9 $414.02, up Jt.0) brlcll: 1• -"-ll•lne M73.00, llP '10.00. S47UO Hiiied. M••-Y & NerlfttA: only delly qllOt• M74.U,11PP.H. ,.......,._, only doallr wott M74.U • .,. v.u ........... ; only O.lly ..... ltlltkalltd ... Jn,..,,,,.._ i A .. Wlf'911MM NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (AP) -As man and boy, for Sl year•, Jim Pauline bu kept a weather eye on the AtlanUc for flab and ailna of aqualla, but now an economic storm 11 forewarned by his fuel aauce. not his barometer. ''The price of tuel baa gone be;ond burtlnl{ people, it's ldllln1 people," said Pauline, skipper o the awordllah loncliner Ti.kl XVIII, u be •tood on a pier in this home port of New EQCland'a bt11est fi•hlnl neet. Sunday m arked the fourth anniversary of the Flehertea Conservation abd Management Act, which eetabllahed the ZOO.mile fishing limit. Many baU the act aa tbe aalvaUon of tbe domestic fi1htn1 industry. Its ban on foreign boats in America's choice fishln1 ground.a and its limlta on the amount of fish the U.S. fleet may land have allowed fish t.o replenbh themselves. BUT J UST WHEN STOCKS of cod, haddock and yellow-tail flou,.der' have bounced back from years or overfishing, a new threat hovers over the men who hunt the sea, a threat marked by the numbers spinning on the race of a diesel pump at dockside. "When a guy comes in with a broker -a bad catch -the first thing be has to worry about is bis fuel bill," Pauline said. "He can't even begin to think about paying his mortgage or anything e lse. And if he can't pay off one fuel but, they won 't sell him any more." American fishermen can't get a high enough price for fish to pay for the fu el to catch them, said Brian Veasy, executive vice president of the New Bedford Seafood Cooperative Association Inc The Ale& that cost U.S. ftabermen 46 eenu a 1alloD in ttn now costa $1.19. Tbe price of froaen filb, however, baa stayed relaUvely 1table at about 3S cent.a a pound, and with forel1n import.a aceount- ing for 85 percent of the frozen fish eaten in the United States. "We can't get a price increase, because Canada won't lncreue their prices." Veasy said. ·•w e juat have to try t.o t\Old on to our thin market share." Efforts to get federal fuel sublidiea for American fishermen to match the government backin1 received by Canadian, Mexican and Icelandic boats have been turned aside by the U.S. Commerce Department. which regulates the fishing industry. IN THE FIRST MONTHS OF the 200-mile limit. a Russian tra wler and factory ship weA seized off the New England coast. Since then, foreign boats have stayed ln their assiped fishing "windows" to take the species the American market doesn't want, like squid and hake, Coast Guard Lt. Kent Morris said. On the East Coast, the 200-mile limit has cul the foreign fleet dramatically. A recent Coast Guard count noted 105 foreign boats Cashing from the Georges Bank from Massachusetts 'to North Carolina, compared to more than 500 In the same area before the law took bold, Morris said. New England fishermen are approaching the yearly 50,000-ton catch of haddock that was common before foreign boats cut the domestic share to 6.000 tons in the mid-60s, said Michael Sis- senwine. deputy chief of the resource assessment dt'ftortop of the Northeast Fisheries Center in Woods Hole. Mass. FISHERMAN TIES UP AT NEW BEDFORD, MASS., DOCKS Choke •ngllng thre•tened by high coat of fuel "The biggest single problem is that Canada is flooding the market with fi sh based on 70 cents ca gallon) for fuel at 23 cents (per pound) for whole fis h and $1.10 for filets and we can't com· pete." Veasy said. "We've got to get our boats more money for fuel to compete against the Canadians ." The yellow·tail catch has doubled from the 10,000-ton mark made in 1976 and cod catches have also improved greatly, he sa id. Cuatoma...kng L..a.o Etchlld <Nll"YCt•ft-W•-Doon <Abtnelt '"w.1 .. ,,. .. c--548-740 I !>e1~ lime 5,..,,, •• "°"' 0001 tC•tl SJote H•aiM,I VOtlt At••t COllA wu641·1289 ,.,. .. _,_ MIHION viuo-495-0401 ?1122 c.-c ....... .... II•• °"90 ,,..,,, et .... ..., l'llwy I COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Cotna & Stamps GOLD & SILVER Prices for 3/9/81 Gold Clow $41> 00 ~11 .. r Cl. \11.H Krugerntnd\ M•plo Lui 100 CotON\ SO Peso• 90 '• Silver 8"9• l wl Sell s-.oo $07 .00 $411.00 S4tJ.OO $ASS.OO '4•7 .00 U ... 00 U H .00 t 7 .U 'llo 1017 .SO'- CALL MITZI WELLS FOR A FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN - INTEREST ONLY! 7\'e1uporf Equity --r:unds ·Inc • Licensed Broker Since 1971 , (714) 760~060 $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECON~ ,.• lntere•t o nly p11ymcn1 !• lnco•c ·• Co•••rc .. 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' • . "' :;.! Granite Bench ~ Wate< Source 0 0 The Q Desert Land 0 0 0 'California Scenario.' a sculpture garden by Isamu Noguchi A touch with class lsamu Noguchi, whose works will be unveiled today in the sculpture garden in South Coast Plaza Town Center, is considered America's most dist- inguished sculptor. metal and stone are on display at the Dodge Fountain Plaza in Detroit, Yale University, a playground in Atlanta, the National Gallery in Washington and in many major museums. First-nighters enjoy SCR 'Merchant of Venice' ... C2 ., .... ·- '\ Born in Los Angeles in 1904, he spent his youth in Japan before re- turning to the United States as a teen- ager. Noguchi's abstract works of smooth He was one of the first to be awarded a grant from the Gug- genheim Foundation and be bas been honored by the American Academy of Arts and Letters._ I samu Hogue hi (left J converses with Henry Segerstrom about his sculpture I · From lima bean, a dream of richness By JODI CADENHEAD 0t • .,. oau, ,.;..,. SUH C.J . Segerstrom's grandchildren are planting a stone lima bean today where the Swedish farmer first began harvesting the vegetable and where Town Center high rise offices now mirror the sur· rounding metropolis of South Coast Plaza shopping center. Since 1898 the publicity-shy family has been an ene rgetic force in Orange County, refusing to give up their vast land holdings when taxes rose in the ·sos and '60s. They turned instead to commercial de- velopment. At one time the family was the largest producer of lima beans in the country. About 450 of the 700 acres owned by C.J . Segerstrom & Sons is still devot- ed to agriculture, although that land is zoned for housing and commercial use. To understand why the family is investing millions of dollars to create the "California Scenario'' sculpture garden by Isamu Noguchi, one must understand their dedication to continuously up· grading the county's lifestyle. "Their intersel is in improving the quality of life. The Segerstrom family will always have a special feeling for the land,'' said family spokesman Werner Escher. Despite the family's strong influence on the lives of generations growing up in the county, little is known about them. Requests for interviews are routinely denied. May Co. was the first store opened in 1966 in the monolithic mall along Bristol Street, followed soon by Sears and 183 other specialty and department stores. Companys leasing land on Segerstrom-owned property include the Times Mirror, Polaroid, AMF Voit, Digital Equipment, Datsun and Lear Siegler. Three generations have been responsible for the sprawling growth north of the San Diego Freeway. There is the Town Center High rise office buildings and South Coast Plaza Hotel. South Coast Repertory stands near where the future $40 million Orange County Music Center will be built on five acres donated bytheSegerstrom f amity. But despite the massively impressive glass an<1 concrete buildings rising skyward along Bristol Street the dream of an urban center has remained incomplete. In the past Henry Segerstrom has ref erred to the development of a sculpture garden as a sort of Euro- pean style center for pedestrians. _ The creation of the sculpture garden together with a walkway next year over Bristol Street between the shopping mall and Town Center will complete that picture. Noguchi Creating another work of art Wiry, intense, awesome and almost painfully sby, lsamu Noguchi can look back on a SO-year career as the country's foremost sculptor with few contemporaries. His works of nearly humanizea atone and metal grace eardens and plazas around the world from the Billy ~ Sculpture Garden in J erausalem to the Dodge Fountain and Plaza in Detroit, the National Art Gallery in Wublngton and tbe Storm King Art Center ln New York. In a white cap and won pants tbe 77-year-old artist 1tood in the thick mud •ur· rouadini bll ftnt won to be commlelioDed in Callfornla u be wavered between be· IDI illtentewed aad remain· lD11lleat. P'laally tbe fiercely In· depeDdent man tuned bll ,... from wlMre workmm were ftnllldn1 ''the Spirit of lb• Uma Bean," and be1an 1pealdni quietly, lntentely. t Wby do you use stone so oftea? "It's part or the question of life. lt's..lhe continuity of our own being here on earth. We are all the tip of a develop- m en l that is going on. Everything goes back to the earth. It's not even a ques- tion of going back to earth, but how it relatea at any elven moment. StODe la very basic. l Wte that,... ot COD· tinuity." 11 tllere enr a,....... wt&la yoer , ... .&:C' I • &1ae way of ,._ a enadYI· t1T ' "If I toot lt Mriomb' It cer- tainly would be." Tlllla la Jeu tint prtn&ely e•• •luloae• work la CalUenla. W.1 ..WT ''I'm dolnl a piece tor the Japanese community and l tbou&bt lf I wu 1otn1 to do oa• I miibt u weU do two." .... ,.. ........ k • .., di••,_ .. , .......... .... .. a .... ot,.... .. d .. . Jery • e...-el 7ean •l•f "I work the same. My work has been going on. A far bigger factor than my health is my age." Wbat keeps yoe 1o1J11T ··Interest, curiosity. If you bave an artistic ability you've got an obligation to be an artist." Wlay did YOtl lmpert tlle 1toaea for Ute llaa beaa 1&a&11e from Japuf Do Uley lta •e 1ome 1peelal 1lp.llkuceT "I spent my childhood in Japan. I feel a sense of the earth there. I don't feel tt quite the same way here. Ill ltaty marble doesn't have ao much of tbe eartb •• it doee the hl1tory of Greeee and Rome." Wb ... ,_ &nHI te Y•· ea v.a.,,... ... el IM .... , ...... , "I wanted to 1et 10me dm· ert :::re beeauH U'• a Cam a farden. J pieied tbe ....... --out u.. three tlme1. I fHI H1'J fortunate ln 1ettm1 UM ltoDe and beln1 able to place them." Henry Segerstrom and his son Toren traveled to: Japan last year to meet with Isamu Noguchi at hl$ studio in Shikoku. Finally the master sculptor was persuaded to accept his first commissioned work 1n California. He created the lima bean sculpture from stones gathered on the island, and with the help of four 1 workers Noguchi finished in four months the painstaking job of chipping and molding the pieces of earth into art. . .• Two weeks ago Noguchi arrived in Californi~ with two assistants to begin reassembling the statue that was first created on the rainswept island thousands of miles away. The statue has been erected on a two-acre sit e in the Town Center between American City BanJc and Great Western Savings. Using tools that date back hundreds of years, he discovered that engineers had failed to evenly grade the site. So under a gale of rain it was done again. The five other elements in the garden will in- clude: "The Desert Land," "The Forest Walk," "Water Source and Water Use," "Land Use" and "The Energy Fountain." So, from a field where lima beans once grew the family will now plant another kind of dream that promises to be as rich as any other touched by the Segerstroms' strong hands. l lsamu Noguchi's concepto/thelirna bean waa unveiled today m the sculpture gardm in South Cocut Plam Town Center. It waa ma jirat work in California. 8JMNDISIOY ......... ,.... ..... A bcMM iaD 't a bome, la)'I l(n. Jay Reed, unJtU lt'I ftlled wltb cooklea and candies. And ao, the'• made her Linda lale houae a real home, wttb almoat every room filled with bowls and bowls or aoodles for her children and 1ue1ta to rubble on 11 they enjoy the hospitality of the lovely bayfront home. Enjoytq that hospitality last Tburaday evenln1 was a couple \of. dozen persons, many of them pttrons for the Aaseaament and Tteatmenl Services Center's up· comln1 benefit ball. ATSC, which is a non·a:>rofit counselint program for youthful law offenders and their families, is planning an elegant $200-per· couple ball March 27 al the Mar· riotl Hotel, Newport Beach. The ball represents quite a switch from the carnival-like Nostalgia Night benefits held the past two years al the Balboa Fun Zone for the Santa Ana Heights-based organization. But judging from invitations to A TSC's Champs Elysees Ball. a memorable evening is in s tore for those lucky enough to attend. F or starters, th e re'll be cocktails and a display or price- less classic cars followed by a French country dinner and a show starring French enter· lainer Jean Gabilou in one of his first U.S. appearances. Gabilou h as headline d s ho ws at LeCabaret in Monte Ca rlo. the Olympia Theater in Paris and even at the Eiffel Tower. MAS. JAY REED (LEFT). QUESTS LIZ TOOMEY, DOROTHY DOAN, LORIE WARMINGTON If that isn't enough, there'll be an auction for a one year lease on a Rolls·Royce. Minimum bad $6,000. General chairmen for the ball are Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Doan. The Doans were among guests at Mrs. Reed's last T hursday, and Dr. Doan, a dentist. JOkangly dropped has calling card an a huge silver bowl of candy bars gracing the Reed home e n tranceway Also am on g Mrs Reed 's guests were ball patrons John and Fran Applegate . Roy and Francie Carver I he 's the Rolls Royce man), Robert and Marj Weed Che's preside nt of the Orange Coast Publishing Co which publishes the Dai ly Pilou. Russ and Carol Land. George and Sug Jones. Nancy Hanson. FRANCIE, ROY CARVER (LEFT), BRIGETTE BASTlANS HAPPENINGS Charlie and Nora Hester. ank Helen Shepardson. Patron chairmen Donald and Dorothy Koll were on the guest list but didn't m ake the Landa Is le part~. perhaps because of the ramy weather Among those who did brave lhe ram. however. were Liz Toom ey and Brigitte Basllans. who are in cha rge of decorations fo r Champs Elysees Also among guests were Mr and Mrs. Robe rt Wa rmmgton and Mr. and Mrs . Tho mas Murphane. Both couples are on the host committee for the ball Food and wine chairman for Cha mps F.lysees as Peggy Cotton and invitation:. chairman is Ela ine Parker In addition to the many bowls or candies falling the Reed household last Thursday. guests were free to sip champagne and nibble on dozens or gourmet cheeses and hors d'oeuvres The piece de resistance was t he chocolate covered strawberries. Almost all the guests agreed the stra wberries. some as large as s ma ll apples. were absolutely marvelous More goodies were in store for Orange Coast folk s Friday at the o p e nin g p e rfo rmance of Sh a kespe are's "Merchant of Venice" at S o uth Coa s t Repertory Theater. For starters. the re was an e nlightening 1 a te-afte rnoon s emi na r al whi c h gu est performers J ohn Wy lie a nd Katharine Houghton discussed their roles with a few asides by SCR Literary Manager Jerry Patch. Wylie, who plays Shylock, en- de a red himself to s emina r guests when he e xplained he took the role because he had done six or seven pre vious plays with John Going, the director, and. so. he didn't have to audi lion for the role "That's such a blessing,·· Wylie quipped He aJso said he took the part because of the opportunity to come to Southern Calafornaa "'It just finished snowing 12 inches in Ne w York.·· he noted. Miss Houghton s aid she ac cepted the role of Portia because of the opportunity to work with Going in a new theater and because s he ne ver had done Portia. DallJ ~llell ,._.., ~-kll O'o-11 ACTRESS KATHARINE HOUGHTON (LEFT) TALKS WITH SCA PRE-SHOW QUESTS MR. AND MRI. YINCeNT CONANT She noted that Portia was a difficult role because "you don 't feel warmth coming from the a udience. .not like playing Kate in 'Taming of the Shrew."' She also noted that her Portia was "more girlish" than the one portrayed by her aunt. actress Kather ine Hepburn. who did the role when she was in her 50s Following the seminar. the SC R board of trustees held a backstage reception to honor r e presentati ves o f Carte r Hawley Ha le 1CHH 1 Stores which last year pledged $.50,000 to the theater CHH is the parent compa ny of The Broadway Stores and Neiman·Marcus · Among honored guests at the reception. held in the theater 's workshop, were Mr. and Mrs Vincent Conant (He's CHf'I vi ce presadentl a nd Mr. and Mrs . James Vandebe rg !he's CHH corporate secretary 1. Joining them to s ap cham· pagne and s ample at least a dozen different French pastnes and petit fours were Don and Bonnie Christeson <he's an SCR board member ). Maury and Carolyn De Wald (he 's chairman of SCR"s Benefactor's Commit- tee). Kae and Louise Ewing. An nette Hurwitz. John McClintock. Peter and Gail Oc hs and Win Rhodes SCR Boa rd President Don Smallwood also a ttended the pre .show party as did Randy and Lynda Guthrie <he's general manager of South Coast Plaza Hotel>. Katty Lesli e of Neiman Marcus and her hus band Hal. Dr and Mrs. Walter Brandt. a nd Stephen a nd He dd a Ma r os1 <she's anSCR board me mber > The Brandts are winners of the Greater Irvine Industrial League membership drive. Other guests included Mr and Mrs . Janvier Wetzel and Mr and Mrs. Michael Hecht I both couple s ar e fr o m th e Broadway>. SCR fo lks joining them in· eluded Miss Houghton. SCR Producing Artistic Director David Emmes, P r oduction Coordinator Martin Benson, Special Projects Director Kay Brown. The gathering was catered by South Coast Plaza Hotel. Following the r eception. guests were ushered into the theater where Smallwood pre· ceded the opening curtain by in· troducing some of the honored gues t s in cluding th e Van · debergs, the Con a ns. the Wetzels, Hechts and Leslies . He also gave special recogni· lion a nd welcome to Tom Haley. new publisher of the Daily Pilot. and to the Brandts. Following the production, there was yet another reception, this one for all the first-ni~hlers . Once ag;un, there was cham· pagne and hors d'oeuvres plus dozens of tiny cookies and huge platters of fresh vegetables. All in a ll. a delightful e vening. I• EC1 rher la:.t week there was another SCR event, a breakfas t an SCR's 4th Step Theater com· plex 111 Costa Mesa a t which C'll H C'o r por <.1tc Sec r e tar y James Vandeberg presented a c hec k for Sl0.000 to Maury Oe Wa ld . m a k ing C HH co · product•r:. of the current pro· duct1on Bob Corban of Corvan Yama· ft1J1 and Partners In c of Irvine also presented check one for S2.500 at the breakfast meeting and Carl Neisser of the Neisser Co pledged Sl.OOOtoSCR 's 1~·81 annual giving program. The $10.000 CllH contribution as the second of a fiv e.year $50.000 pledge to SCR. In other happenings, the Mon · day Morning Club of Laguna was entertained at its monthly luncheon yesterday by Rena and Sta nley Waxmal\.. an a cting duo "'ho performed a va r iety of ska ts Assisting wath arrangements a t ·lhe meeting, held at Ben Brown 's an South Laguna. were Lee C hi ldress. pro gram chairman. Don s Otto. social chairman . Eleanor Davis. dee· o ratio n s c hairm a n ; and Gertrude McClintock, reserva· lions cha irman Vi olet Lansdell, club presi- de nt . announced a variety of ac· tiv1ties coming up for the group, among them a trip lo the Gar· ment District in Los Angeles . She noted that Florine Roper. who is theater a nd travel chairman. has chartered a bus for the March 24 trip to be follow e d b y lun c h at t h e Biltmore Hotel. During May, the group will take a four·day bus trip to Lake Havasu, the Grand Canyon, Las Vegas and taping or a Merv Griffin Show. Wh en the Soroptimist Interna- tional of Irvine last met (that was Feb. 27 >. the group honored 74lh Dis trict Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson at its Dist· inguis hed Womans Award lunctieon. The award to Ms. Bergeson holds special honor since this is the Irvine club's first year and, thus, the firs t ti m e it has bestowed its award. 0renoe Co•t DAILY PfL.01'/TUMday, March 10, 1981 It's good idea io always get a second opinion DllAR ANN LANDERS: I am not anti· doctor. but I am belln.nlnc to wonder about tbem. Here'• wb,y: 1. When our daqbter wu a few moatha old, a pNlatriclaa 1uc1e1ted we put ber le1 ln • cut to 1tralshten it. My buaband and J decided a1alnat it. 'the girl is now 15 and her lee ii perfect. 2. When another daqbter wu ftve, a dif- ferent pediatrician recommended 1ursery as a aolutioo to ber bedwettln1 problem. We isnored bis recommendation. At the age of seven, sbe stopped wettinl the bed. 3. In 1919, my nnecoJoatst told me I ou1bt to bave a hysterectomy a& a preventive measure. When J asked if anytb.in1 was wron1 with me NOW, ~e said, "No, but you will need this operation within five yean. You are better off to have it done before you are in bad shape.'' 4. Our SQA .was byperkinetic from the day he was born. The doctor suggested Ritalin. He said the child would never function normally without it. A friend wbose child bad the same problem was given the same advice. She went to another doctor and he said, "I stopped using Ritalin a DltTOR IN THE HOUSE How's your bedside manner? By DR. PETER STEINCROHN FOR MRS. T.: Yoa are DOt belnl 1Uly ill believing that good bedside muaer Is aa Impor- tant fador la treating a palleat. For years I've been telllag newly llatched doctors that bedside manner Is aa eueattal therapeutic arm of medical treatmeat. My older disbelieving a11oclates have also beea U1e targets of my exbortat10111 to keep remember· IJlg that the patient Is a hamu belag aad Bot an inanimate object wltboat fedlag. I've beea saying to my feUo·,.. pllysiclaas that tact, sympathy, empathy, good bamor, kindness, compassion and full 1-:.terest lJl the pa- tient are like beallag balm for the sick. Tkse are esseatiaJ elements of lood bedside aaaaer. Therefore Mrs. T .. yoa wW aadentaad why I was so heartened receaUy read.lag an article iD FORUM magadae ( aa offldal pabUcatioll of tbe American CoUege of Physlclaas) called "Is Bedside MaDDer An Art?" It was writtea by Wllbar W. Oaks, M.D., and BarbJlra Rablll. Here are some eacerpls wtalcb attest die im- portance of good bedside manner. "At crucial times, the physlcians's de- meanor at the bedside is the paUeat's true llfellne. Tiie often maligned term 'bedside maa· aer' sboald be restored to ita great lmportaace. It may laelp alleviate tbe patieat's emoUoaal problems tllat arise from ill.Dess aad so oftea become overwhelming aad blacler recovery. "There are times when credible re· assar&He can brtag comfort, aad bamor can evoke a moment of relief. Pertlapa doctors who lack the wttact could be laeiped to lean a bedside maDDer la school aad acqaire aew In· sights Into the patient/doctor relalloasblp. "In this way, we may yet reldDd.le the spirit of medicine as an art without detracting ID aay way from tllerapeatlcs. We sboald aot forget: When there Is ao longer care, we caa still ue compassion to help patients." * * DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm concerned a bout my husband's sleep habits. Every night he 's asleep, as soon as his head hits the pillow and sbortJy thereafter he starts to d ream. He talks, sings. laughs and puts his dreams into action leaping from a sinking ship out of bed onto the floor with a bang or against a piece of furniture. I sometimes become the person in his dream and he wonders why I don't act along with him in the scene. I usually awaken on time to prevent him from hurting himself. He has several episodes a night and has sustained cuts, swollen nose, black eyes, a broken elbow, etc .. when he acts out his dreams. He is 65 and retired. Even previous to re- tirement, he required an unusual amount of sleep (10 hours a night>. Also sever al daytime naps. When we took trips he'd get sleepy al the wheel. Once he drove off the road into a ditch and hurt his shoulder. Is there any connection between his drowsiness during the day and his dreams at night? -MRS. D. DEAR MRS. D.: I suggest your basbaad vlalt bis doctor before be raas off the road again aad really harts himself. One gaess Is that be is salferlag from narcolepey. Proper medication wW help tills. Maybe bis bad dreams, too. * * * If you are inclined to develop crorn of boil&, have a cM ck\q) on urine and blood to l"UU out t~ po1~bUit11 of ~ected diat.u1 ~llUUI, 1a111 Dr. Strincrohn in Ilia booklet, "Prochcal GldcU to Siem Prob~." F'or a COJ>ll write him at P. 0 . Box 15'0, Coda Me.a, Ca. ~. enclo.mg 50 ceftl• and a •tamped, ulf-<Jddreued envelope. * * * Dr. Stftncrohn .,,_lcome• quel11oru from re· adtt1. He cannot a~ all ~M but will in· clU<U tho.e of ~ mterelf m hU coA.mft. ... ...,1 RelP JOUl'Nlf to a He ..... MlecUoa ol Qualifted Hopefuls la the DAILY PILOT RELPWANTZD A.DS RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTHY W.....Y•W..t ....... lt22 ....... 4. I Cett•Mew-141-llH llCW "91-CUAll PIKQI -l CllPlf ~---""'. UTIMATES 8Y PHONE •: • ...::,~ S41 540-8011 -CIC MS..1313 . ··-. PIMt 17 .. ~ " , .--:: Cotti ..... Newpott et 171t ••. • . llllllllD Ion' Ume a10. You can accomplish the same thing by ch&nlin1 your cb1ld11 diet." 5. We deelded to take our cblld to that doc· tor, and the reaulta were terrific . Our youn11ter ls functlonln1 beautifully both at home and ln school. We thank tbe Lord every day we didn't put him on dru1s. I know you are pro-doctor, so I don't expect to see this letter in print -but I had to write it an1bow. -A.G.F. FROM HOUSI'ON t' 21 mg. "ta(. 1.8 mg. nicotine w. per cigarene by FTC method. Dlleue''>, PNrta• < .. Tnll&...t, Yes -~ Ne"), lleart °"9eaM ( .. 8dU Ou Ne. I &tller"), f l• ... •rt ( .. I& •a1 Net 8e All la &lie 8ea4"), II C-tnee,aa. cuw1aaa u.e WeU·DnuM •• 8'e•l4 Wear i• Bed .. >, fte Bysteree&e•jd <"Ou ._ Vueeeuary Opera&IGa"), He•ef'l;t; rlleWI ("'Ne IA•PJ.al MaUer"). Cueer (4'NewA! Horii ... , Ne• Hope aad llere Optloas");..11 Artllrtdl ( .. Fact.a ud Faa&uJ">, &lie Bad Baclro C"Aa Abel'll8t1Ye &o DlH S...1ery") aad m•dl·o more. "See.ed Oplalom" a. oee of &lie moet valaa. l ble boob I llave seea la 1ean. Y• simply m•st•c• 1et It. Pltbllllter: Linde• Press. Price, SH.15. If Q tkls ...,.. .. aot la yoar '**"°"· wJlte aad r comp1ala to Joel Evaaa. sa.e a. die p•bU.ller ·, aad edl&or·lll·clllef. For that ex tra lV1 ore. f tisf action . nieasu re o, sa > I / 1·- i Warning · The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigtrette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. . ( .. .; ~ :~j ·i ::~ lij ::~ ':~ :~ :~~ •.'I =~ ·)! :~ -.. ... ::t ~~ ':!i :~ -~ t ;~ ~ ~4= ... ~--...___ Intimidated by hubby's· mail '!)ere lan't a woman in the world wbo bu not been lnUmldated by her husband'• m.all. The division la obvious. I cet the lett.en with .tndows, the packet of coupona marked, "Oecu- pant. Do not retum to sender," and the mlmeo- frapbed cards invltln1 me to an appllance sale by moonll1ht. • On the other hand, my h"-'band teta 35 pounds of literature a month from the Franklin Mint addressln1 him as a "dlscernlnl colltic· tor," personal letters rrom Jacques Cousteau and Malcolm Forbes, and invltaUons to study the migratory journey of the Blue·f'ooted Booble birds. Last week, I saw among bis discards an en- velope with his name on It and a typewriUeo message in the lower, left-hand comer: "Should you be punished for bein1 born with a high I.Q.?" Inside was a pitch I had never seen before. It was an invitatlon from a magaline to "ex- perience first-hand the friction and exchange of exceptional minds" on its pages. They pointed out it was definitely not a magaline for the m ass market. Out of 220 million Americana, fewer than one million read it. If that doesn't st.op you from playing with your bubble gum, nothing will ! "Thia ticks me off," I said to my husband. "I don't exactly have training wheels on my brain." "Don't be so sensitive," he said. "It ju.st means it's a magazine in which you won't find any ads for doubling your bust size in 30 days or your money back.·• "What kinds of ads do they run?" "Oh, white wine. Perrier, jeweled watches and possibly a reminder of a classic television show sponsored by an oil company." "How do they know I'm not being punished for my high I.Q.?" "Computers, probably. Throughout your contacts you've probably sent out a profile on yourself without realizing it." WeU , computers everywhere, pay attention! I'm going to make it easy for you. Put this in your data programmer and stuff it. I've never understood a single word Carl : ... agan has ever said. I laugh when William F. Buckley laughs . but I don't know why. Minnie Pearl is m y role model. I only bought a copy of the Saturday Review because Woody Allen was on the cover. I have a poem in my billfold by Edear A. Guest. I put catsup on escargots. I thought the gold "G" on the back of shoes stood for Goodyear. I do not consider J ohn LeCarre the greatest writer of fiction today, but the person who writes the ads on how to double your bust si:i:e in 30 days or your money back! HOROSCOPE Aquarius: Give of yourself WEDNESDAY, JIARCH 11 By SYDNEY OMAR& ARIES (Mar 21-Apr. 19): You have chance to be selective choose quality in ideas, materials and products. You 'll finish significant assignment -and you wilJ "pass the test." Define meanings, see places and people in realistic light. Another Aries is in picture. TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20): Grasp financial opportunity don 't permit others to dictate terms. Focus on self-enlightenment. Lunar em- phasis on collections, payments, interest rates -getting money's worth. Make this a power· play day! GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ): You strike chord of "universal appeal." Means you can please more people -you gain added recogni- tion. Judgment, intuition ring bell of accuracy. Trust and like yourself! You emerge victorious. And you also find love! CANCER <June 21-July 22): Renew contact with one who has been temporarily handicapped -hospital visit makes you feel better and could lead to profitable transaction. Leo, Aquarius persons play key roles. You'll make fresh start. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Focus on pro- cedures which make wishes "come true." Rela· tionsbip ii at a place where you accept or reject added responsibility. Aquarius, Cancer and another Leo figure prominently. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): You gain more authority -and "additional working room." Gemini, Sagittarius and another Virgo figure prominently. Expand personal horiioM. Plan ahead for travel, educational and publisbiot programs. You get green light! LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Good lunar aspect coincides with special communication, fuHillment of aspirations, successful dealings connected with Aquarius, Scorpio persona. One who aided you in past la back on scene. You make significant advance u result. SCO&PIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on involvement, important variations, possible chan1e of scenery. Taurua, Gemini and another Scorpio fipre promlnenUy. You will be asked for financial advice -and could be handllna · other people's money. , SAGm'AaJlJS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Modera- tion should be keynoted -hmar and numerical cycles point to low profile, nece11tty for diplomacy. Taurus, Libra, Seorpto _peraou fiture promiDenUy. You'll be "atteDd.lnl" to legal-marital mitten. CAParcoaN <Dec . 22·Jan. Y>: Deftpe terms, study Sa1lttarhas }lletaa1e, focus on baalc lauet, job-at.hand -and nutrttklllal re- quirements. Take •tock, aet MCCIDd emotional wind. Plscfl, Cancer and ScorPiO natlvtt pJIJ key roles. AQtJAalV8 (Jan. 20·Ftb. 11): Ol•• of younell, id.here to your own style ud poUcJ. Jl'oc'1s oo creativity, •d•enture, · apeeulattoa, 1pecla1 relatiomblpe, chlldren &Dd CGDt.U. Tbe D\lmber I ftcur• lD 1cena.rto -and ao-. a Caprtcona n.aUH. PllC&I CJ'eb. lt·llar. 20): CoaeJade tranaaetim -refUH to DetoUat. ...-oee wM' b11 low ae.lf..tteem and la bd.-t • wutlal your tlme. Yoa'U be nll....S of ..... -• rtahtly JOUI' owa Jn flnt place. Tenttortal rllbta wW be eetab&llbed. ........ John Smith, 10-year-old ion of John and JoAnne Smith, of Irvine, bu been named member--Of-the-month by the East Bluff branch ol the Harbor Area Boys Club. Writing class topic Handwriting Analysis, a three-part lecture series, will begin March 20, 7:30 p.m ., at Orange Coast College in Co.ala Mesa, Science Lecture Haul. Registration for the free series will be con· ducted al the door, and more information is available by calling 556-SIB>. Author due at OCC Orange Coast College's fourth annual "Writer's Day" will be held March 1', 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., in Fine Arts 119 al the Costa Mesa Campus. Tbe $15 registration fee which includes luncb may be paid at the door, and lecturers will in- c I ude science fiction writer Ray Bradbury, story editor Judy Burns and actor Leon Aakin. Cl888 8lated in Japanese A class in basic coo- v e rs a tiona I Japanese will be offered by the Japan Cultural Associa· tion beginning March 26 in Santa Ana. Information may be obtained by phoning 547-7733. PUBLIC NOTICE Plc:TITIOUI 11411111aU NAMaSTATaMallT T~• toll-Int P«IOftl ••• doing 11u.i,...1es; THE MAIL co .. J41U Coast Hith••Y. Oen• Point, Ceilfornle t2'1t. Carey o. T. Ward, 1111 Pe91 Clrc ... Hwnlintt., a..<11. CA n .... Scotti Ward, .,,2 Peet Circle, H .... 1. l119ton 9Ncll. CA m.. T1111 llullftft• 11 conclwcad by ., 1n- Cllvldwe1. C.ey 0 . T. Ward Tlli1 ,..._ wes filed •1111 IN c-1, Cl-of Ot.,.. Cowntr on Merell t , ttll. Plt7•1 PubH-Or .... CN1t o.lly PllOI, Merell 10, 11, 24, JI. "" IUWI PUBLIC NOTICE Plc:TITIOUS au1111•U llAMa ITATIMallT Tiie foll-1"1 "''°"' ••• dolnt ;,wslneues; ALPHA OMEGA EHTEllPIUSU, 10245 ,,_. A ..... 8-Perk, CA *20. "•Mk Ellis Pierce, 10241 Flor911<t 4ve., a-PMll, CA "'311. Ca role Jt•l\f'le Pltree , 1020 Florene• A,,.., awne l"•rk, CA••· Tiiis bvliMH la coll<hKt•CI by • ~,.,., pe11Mralllp. ,,_ £1111 Pierce 1"11ia ,..._. ... flleel wltll IN Cownty Cltrk of Oren91 Ctvnty Oii Marcll 6. l"1. I . llUJUI Pwbli-0retl9' CMn D•lly l"llot, •rel\ 10, 17, 2 .. JI, ltll 10t4 .. I PlJBLIC NOTICE Major errors led to sinking ANNAPOLIS, Md. CAP) -On the nilht of May •• ltel, there WU a common reeuna or helpl-.•n•• amoni the 2,200 men on the Blamarck, the pride or the German navy and the world'• w1ett batUe1hip. Sbe waa eicbt days into her rlrat mission. Two days earller, her huge guns had needed only 1lx minutes to sink the Hood, the battle cruiser which was the symbol of Britain's se• power. But now the mi1hty Bismarck was a floating coffin, her rudders disabled by a torpedo from a British biplane which looked like a World War l left.over. Unmaneuverable, she and her men could only await their rate from a pursuing British task force numbering 42 vessels, including three battleships. WHEN THE BISMARCK WAS SUNK the next day, only 11 men survived. One of them has written the first account or Operation Rhine from the German side. Baron Burkard von Muellenbeim-Rechberg, author of "Battleship Bismarck, a survivor's Story," never forgot waiting for the end. "I said to myself at the time, 'This is unbelievable. It's grotesque'," recalls Muellin· heim, a 3l·year-old gunfire control oHicer at the time. "It was unreal to me, but it was a reality . . . When the first salvo fell, I was relieved. "I was convinced I would not survive." Muellenheim's recollections are an account of an adventure punctuated by errors, many of them made by Adm. Guenther Luetjens, who commanded Operation Rhine. WHEN SHE LEF't HER BALTIC PORT May 19 accompanied by the "heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, the Bismarck's mission was to reach the Atlantic undetected and ravage Allied shipping. The Bismarck's course was through the heavily traveled Kattegat strait between Denmark and Sweden. The British quickly knew of her presence and began deploying warships. Luetjens was poorly served by German intelligence. He was told that there was no movement out of Scapa Flow, the British naval base in Northern Scotland. In fact, a battleship, battle cruiser and aircraft carrier had left in search of the Bismarck. On May 23, the British cruisers Suffolk and Norfolk began shadowing the Bismarck northwest of Iceland. Luetjens could have attacked but didn't. The cruisers kept the British command informed of the enemy's location. MVELLENBEIM SAYS THAT HAD HE been in command, he would have either engaged the cruisers or turned back to wait for a more favorable time for a breakout southward into the Atlantic. The following day the Hood and the battleship Prince of Wales arrived. The Hood was sunk with 1,000 men. But the Bismarck in turn was damaged by the Prince of Wales. Muellenheim says the slowed Bismarck had at least a 50-.50 chance of out.running the pursuing and converging British and reaching port in trance. On May 25, Luetjens used fog to slip away from the British. But within hours, he sent two radio messages which enabled the pursuers to pinpoint his position. MUELLENBEIM BE~VES THAT had Luetjens maintained silence -and there was no need to break it , he says -the Bismarck would have reached safety. Instead, it was just a matter or time. On May 26, Swordfish biplanes attacked. A torpedo disabled the Bismarck's rudder. The battleship was heavily armored in many {>laces. The rudder was not protected. The vessel carried much spare equipment, but there was no spare rudder. Unable to maneuver. the Bismarck found herself on a course leading to the main body of her pursuers. On the final morning, Muellehneim was directing gunfire from the aft control station. Just as he was zeroing in on the battleship King George V, a shell destroyed his rangefinder . HAD IT BEEN A Ll'ITLE LOWER, HE says, he would have died. Muellenbeim, a retired diplomat, went over the side as the Bismarck sank. He was rescued by the cruiser Dorsetshire. Fearing the presence or German submarines, the British ships withdrew from the area leaving, be estimates, 700 Germans to die in the water. "Battle1mp Biamarck, a Sunnvor's Story" is pubU1hed bl/ IM Navol lnilitute Preu. ------·-·- PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ....... _.... ... , ,,. I I ~ )' • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A i S I S I F I E D ...... _._.... , ....... ~ .._ .............. #flt.•4 INDEX TtPIDY•M.tal 642-5678 .U.SF•Ulf =~l euuw-.. ut c.r-4.iMar c..111 ... l>Mthllll r.:IT.,. ,..,.. .... v .... , itwill~CMI lleit~ trylM l..Ollu .... llt•rh WWllHlllt , !Mlfl)t l'ila~I .. 11 ...... \Ii.JO .• ,."totl Btlf~ a.11Cttmonto I:.!"~ Cal)Ult11M1 S.el ... \ Swill l..a11U1• • IA'ttellllMlet Mot.li.llomH :lol• IEAL ESTATE A<r .. ao ,,_ S.le A,..n-nu lot S.I• :::~~r...;::,,, C:erntttf) LaU Cr~ph =~~:'!r~•rt> DIAIMt•ft l'A.lh S411" ll-..lo~Mo>ed IN<Hnt Pr-"1 lnd...inal Pr-ni Lau'"' !141• Mobol• ll""' Trir l't~> MowntA.Oht-n Ht\ort O.~eCo Pr<111 ~ ol ~'::~~!~"" RancM• farm' Gruvh R .. I ulllr Exrh1n1r Rul u111t Y. 101td RENTALS llW>n fur11 .. n"4 Houut. t:nrurn1t.ht"d H®•n t\lrn Uf l nt Condom1nu.•flh f urn t:ondom1ntum• l 'nt To•n~~ f'urn Tu~ nhou~ .. -. l nl OuplHH furn Duple••' ' nr Aph F'uro Apt\ Cnt"rn Aph f\1rt1 ur l nf R<.<mi> Koom' 80 .. rd Hot~h M<ltt"I' Cunt llomf'~ "'-'mmrr Rf'nUd't \ arallun kl'nt•I;. R~.Js to Via, .. • Gat•IH ft>< Rrnl OHi.,. Renhl 8w.1ftft.1 Rf'ntttl 1nd~tn1I R~nlil ~:.•.t \la11ted Miu RtnUI• BUSINESS. INVEST MENT, FINANCE fkl""""'" UpPor1 • iku1M"'h Y. .nlf'd lf\'tf°Sln\rftl (Jp~I \ 1no.ntnwnt "4ftl~ '40fW) lot...o..n Mor.t':) ~ .n1rd• Mon1•lH Tli' AHNOUNCEMENTS. PERSONALS r. LOST & FOUND A.nnountf'~nn t •r f'ool Le-cal '"'•"f .. L. ..... f ll<lnd PttMWtll\• """'"' c1u1 .. • foH·1• SERVICES wrw1t•t: 0 1rf'ttor.) EMPLOYMENT i PREPARATION ~ .rhool• JA.Strurtiort .. •ob 'A' •nl•f1 • l••lpV.an1«1 M • ~ MERCHANDISE °'nOqU'f'' Apptuncn AllC'lton ::u.•:-; M •'"''•I• c .. untru 6 f:qu1pm•n' Cau Doc• r.ftto\ou f'wrnth.rlf Cauc•~le-Horws -c-i. Jn.ti')' '-'·--MKNMt)' w ..... u • .MOU" M •.tttll&.M"O'n ~ anti"'d MwM<"aJ lM\rumtfth Ofrlt'f' t .. um • l.ca'"" P•O ~!'=~~~~~rt~ """'11naGM<I• Stort Rntaurant Ket ~~-rMttO H ..... , scu"'' BOATS i MARINE EQUIPMENT t.l'nHal Rc;u1tft M•1nt "W'r"',. &11' .\brinf' t:qu1p l\o1h ,Yo• ft Roah Rfl'nt l'tl•ttt'f Ho10 s.1111 llnal> ""'' Oo<•• llo••• ;,""""' .. "' Koats. MOf' •Ill' TRANSPORTATION Airr-r•'' t •mptr' ""'" krnl [lf"'t"'\t1r lat\ Mob1llfHom,. .. Motor Cy<IH , ~-ett· '4Ulor Um1 '\al" Rtnl Tn 1ff'n Trl "«'I Tu.1 .. 0 l llhh At.Ko 'Wr\ 1r• l'.,-H AUTOMOBILE (if'Mf•I AuhqwH l'l•u 111o H"''"•llon \ rhn lfl' ~~,i~:~ .. ~f-d rr"'k. \ .... 4ut~ Lf'atin~ Auto. V.•nl«d AUTOS. IMPORTED l.trMl•I \U• fifofTiit"u \ud1 Awlln Hr•I .. > ll'llW l".•pn au-CA>11 O•llun fe-rnrt r •• , llund• J41U•r Jen1 .. n ~·~:.'!.\~·· w •• ~ ... M.-n t-d''" Btont \lli M<Jll Opel Plitnlt!t1t Pt~lh··o• Pont.hf! Rttn•ull Ro111 Rurt• Ro\f'r Sa•b .... S..beru To)'Ol• t'r1umpll Vo4k"J••1en Voho AUTOS, NEW IOGll 1• ,., 1011 um IClal lllCll lOlt \Q.'M 1040 lo.4 UMI 1060 IOU !Oft •• 1071 IO'll ICllO IOM IOll HM 1100 •••••••••••••••••••••• EQUAL HOUStNO OPPOATUNITV ,....._...1Motfce: All real estate ad· ve rtiaed In thi s newspaper ls subject to the Federal Fair Hous· Ing Act of 1968 which makes It illegal to ad· vertise "any preference. limitation , or d is· crimlnation baaed on race, color. religion , sex, or national origln. or an intention to make any such prefe rence. limitation , or dis criminalion " This newspaper will not knowingly accept a ny advertis ing for real estate wh ich ts an viola lion of the law • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C~lllYIMI LOCATIOM Sll,100 Super up1raded con domlnlum, oeu ever ytblna. Sacrifice sale Seller tranarerered. 752-1700 THE REAL ESTATE RS T• Yow CIMNce We have 4 homet listed for sale ()II Bayview St in the backbay area. They all have creative terms, views of the mountains. city lights and beckbay. Some have pools and s pas. They range in . price from S16S.OOO to S220.SOO. Call for viewing appt TRADITIONAL REALTY ~ .................... 1 HOMES &. INVESTMEN TS 631-7370 :000 :::t ERIOllS: AdnrtlHrs = shollld chKJ& ttMlr od1 ~ dolly mMf report •r· ... oc .. "ff,..SA•111o"NT•- J7oo ron itnmedlatety. The .,_,...r.l ::! DAIL y PILOT ouumes Choice comer duplex 3 •WI bdrm. 2 bath up 2 ••~"' llobilfty for th. flnt Bdrm . 2 bath down . ::: incorrect Insertion Great rental or home+ •All -ty income un1l SELLER ·~ .... .,, . '"' WIL L ll E LP !~ ----------f''INANCF.' S89S.000' :~~ lcAoa lay Prop. ·~· Holllft for Sole Reaffon :~: ••••••••••••••••••••••• *675-7060* General I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ 1!1!11 ___ 11!11!~ ..... ~"' VA TERMS! ~!i~ Mesa North 4 Bdrm. 2 ~ bath beauty N~ar "°' schools and shopping ..u» Ca II $46-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS LUXURY + TERMS ASSUME I 01/•% Nestled on hillsidt! with ••.J"' a p a n o r a m 1 c v 1 <' w fo rever. this home or fers so many features we cannot list them all. 3600 sq ft includes romantira lly ins pi red master winJ':. 4 Rdrms. formal living and dining rooms. Dumb watter. supplies the downsairs family room Oak inlaid bar. complete with brass fixtures F.verythmi.? 1s custom m this executive delight Owner says he may help you fananl'e . and it's priced to sell NOW ' (1) SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-6.31-6990 GREENBELT CONDO $79,900 2 Bdrm 2 bath . near South Coast Plaza Owner will carry large 2nd. Call 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS COSTA MESA 511-SI 25,500 OWHH SAYS SELL Nol an add-on or con· ASSUM LG 91h% I.It J Bdrm. 2 ba home + pool Pnde or ownership home Take advantaJ?e, only $1 05,900 Call 979·5370 now ALLSTATE REALTORS &llANOUY 2 Bdrm, 2 ba. unfurn New. $850 yrly. IAYFROHT 3 Bdrm. I ba. unfurn Mintrond. S850 Yrly CHAHHR FROHT 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, unrum. S750yrly associated BAOKE R5--REA l TORS lOl~ 'W Balboa o 1 • '601 SHOPPER'S SPECIAL Lowest priced 4 bdrm home in area Very at traruve noor plan. Close to beach Wall sell VA Only $147.500 Call today 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS Palm Desert Condo Deep Canyon Tennis Club Secunty Gale Entrance 12 COUrls·poolS·Spas TEAM UP Own a Peters "E" plan 12001/f2Br 2ba. atrium lricJM mtd leautfM Decor & Comp! f urnishings $113.500 Call for details. Principals Only Bkr /Onr 714 /544·3158 version A real 5 Bdrm l~~~~~~~iiiiii famiJy home in one or II Costa Mesa's nicest areas Handymans de· light. Call now'8nd save• @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 2UMITS $94,900 J• : • . . ! . . . ~ . 'f ... : ' • :·· llUL U TArf U CfUfHCf SIHCf , .. , llGCAHYOH ONLY $435,000 Dramatic e ntryway leads to this lovely lge 3 br, 2"4.1 ba townhome. Huge' Uv rm & fo rmal din rm. Walls of glass lead to brick patios. Priced under the market w /excellent financing. Ut-7300 H.I . Super Investment! Two 2·Bdrm units, one with fireplace! Current In · come-S'140 mo. Financ· I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ing! 1 yr home protec· tion plan Inc luded . Hurry. this won 'l last. M&-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS ~ ....... 3 & 2 Br. compl. furn. Bit-Ins, 4+ car aarace. Offer down payment and t..ake over "28,000 loaa at only 12"4~ for 80 yean. -.000. ~St1.ooo JACq'U~LTY 3 Bdrm , l it\ B•t--------- townhoule type. 2 car THIS IS IT 1ara1e and Ira patio -...-. Very amall dWft area. Assume lat T.D. _. .-and owner may help pymt. Seller w /carry finance. Hurry on thla t~~~a=· fJ.'r:!i one 1 acrow. 152-MIB MAMA'S &ONET.O CHICAC50 OlaDt 4 Mrm beaulJ, lo~ated near Oran1e CcNnlY'a moat Popular •hoPPlal center. Ttlla lovtt,y ~ ls loeat.ed on a qui« cul de .. c. The home la a former model and abowe like one. HUfe roomt lhnaout. bit Uvtac room, ankle deep plwh PlJe carpets. Space •le ldtcbeo, bl1 bdrma, park-like 1rounds with e~rtalnera dellaht ba~ yard. Decorative rotb. roltina hills and a sofar heated pool. Thia unique hocne ls priced way below market. Seller must sell. Take ad•aotage, call now' 75>-1100 THE REAL ESTATERS $5,500 p~ you into your own 4 Bd,rm. A/C home. 12 7 /&A financing. Call for d &t a i I s o n o u r "TlCKET'' program . • RED CARPET 754-1202 IACK IA Y VIEW laOWMAIKET Thi! beautiful view pro· perty in Newport 1s priced below market value and below ap- praisal. Space age kitchen with break fast area. Huge Uving room. la nai w ith view . fire place and open beamed cathedral ceil· in&s. Hide -a-way master suite. separate childrens wing. Dash to the pool Call today for details. HAllOI YllW HM l f 1471,000 A LUI "HILLSIOIC'lUeH" MODIL Impressive front elevation to this estate· like 5-bedroom, 2-story Lusk-built home. DrarnaUc entrance hall with vaulted ceiling, large living rm, formal dining rm, spacious family rm, & lovely master su.ite with private dressing rm & bath plus deck for sun bathing off mstr BR. Two fireplaces, a separate utility rm & 3-car garage. Surprise: a gorgeous large pool in a woodsy rear yard. A real family home. WISUY M. TAnOI CO.. llALTOIS "~ c5:/a k£ ... '-::...,10 SPLENDOR 0 ... THE liY 4 bdrm, 4 ba, in immaculate condition, Dover Shores home with garden court yard warm family den. designer papers, rosewood paneling. Day and night light view at $.510,000. U~l()U~ ti()Mt=~ REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 Eaat Coast Hlghw•y. Coron• d~I M., WE HAVE 43 OF THE BEST L!STINGS IN TOW~ 1 Owner highly motivated and will work with very ~1 -.. p111XfM"'llfll611f11511A•f,_. creative financing. Call C,.,....DO ll(i 4 752-1700 "'" Well planned 2-sty home with formal dining and family room. central air w /purifier and an inv1t ing spa. Features in· elude cus t om draperies. thick carpet· ing, and a seller anxious to sell. Priced below market at $168.500 751-3191 THE REAL ESTATERS 8HAs:t/C 1-4 2044 Oc•• ll•d 2 Bdnn. 1 bath cottage. Beam ceiling, frplc. 3 car parking. Priced at $295.000. associated BROKERS REAL TORS l ''H W\; (;1lt'->O 6 1 ) lti&I *** A. T°"""'MMt 19001 Elbert Circle Fountain Valley You are the winner or 4 frft tfcllds ($32 value), to C ircus Vargaa Mar. 17th. 8PM at Montgomery Ward 405 Fwy. at Bristol Costa Mesa Call &42-5678, ext 272 to claim your tickets • * * AnEMTIOM BUILDERS Rare Eastside, Costa Mesa buildable R-2 dou· ble lot 100Xl40' Room for 4 units! One lot has existing 2 Bdrm unit + bachelor Only $185.000' Owner will carry! Ca II for details 6'6· 7171 THE REAL ESTATERS COSTA MESA Cb arming 4 Bdrm, 3 ba hoine with family room. Corne r lot. VERY private ya rds . Im · m•culate and ready lo move in. $174,500 Thia 3 Bdrm charmer was once a model home. Localed on a huge cul· de-sac lot and filled with e xtr a s . FINISHED 1ara1e. Cloee to schools, Offered at SH4.SOO. IRVINE Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba single family home with vtty PRIVATE yard. Xlot. location, close to scfiools. shopping a nd freeway. $164.500 and owner will carry 2nd. Cote Realty * " - & Investment 64()..5777 JASMIHI ClllK Parquet floora, luscious carpets, plantation abutlera, 1orfeous dt~PH ln • I mply m.lrulou1 a l'drm. F.enlent., security CdM community. t'• • ctream. aas.ooo. t ____ ,_ Deep Cnyn Tennis Club Security Gate Entrance 12 courts-pools-spas TEAM UP and Own a Peters "E " Plan 1200s1r 2Br 2ba. atrium Bright 7 beautiful decor and complete furnishings. $1 39,500 Call for details. Principals Only Broker /Owner 714/S44-3158 C::SELECT T" PROP ERTIES Sell things fast with Daily Pilot Want Ads. macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY HILLTOP ESTATE! An exciting custom-built multi level home on a lmost 1 acre offering privacy and nestled in the hills of Orange w /a magnificent sweeping 180 degree view. Over 5000 sq.ft. of quality construction. 5B RS, 3 + baths, elevator,• a ir-conditioning, pool, spa, etc. Creative terms. Try small down and owner will carry. $800.000. E lliott/Jackson 551-8700. 752-1414 (ompu\ Volley (ente< 642-IZJS Cl() I Do,,., ()m,e 551-1700 Woocbrdqe Cen•e< 644-6200 1-bbor v-Cen•e< OPEN 1-5 WED, THURS & FRIDAY 2 "AXER" CHALLENGES Come by ZZS Vio Or•l.to, Lido lsi. CMd cl1cus1 theae opporlunitiH. lullct.n & d•corotors in•tt.d! Low•tt priced coupe. houae for first fftM buyer °" Udo 1•. 3 ldnft, 2ba, clnllMJ """ HHdt some 'TLC" to make It odoraba.. $229,000. Lanj9 Hom. -GrHt LocoHon Cwb ..,..._ HotM tlaa l«ln)e h . ""' cllMtg ..... '9t fanNly "" and 4 bdrw. Stnet to ....... locaffott. $349.000. WATERFRONT HOMES, 1rtc REAi ESTATF '-" •• , Ht•nfAt, Pro()-•ff\ M.t""")f'n-.nt 2436 W CoastHwy 631_1400 Newpcrt Beach WILSON PAii CllllMIUMS CllCI & COMPARE TD ffl rum 90% FINAM:llC 1~% INTER. :t BOR AREA LOCATIO ./MICRO OVEN I COMPACTOR IDlSHW~H~R I DBL GARAGE ./ Sl.ZE-1650 SQ. FT. ./ ALL SHO PPlNO ~ BLOCK ./ AIR CONDITIONING I CEMENT DRIVES {WALK IN CLOSETS W/OPENER WAID IMVESTMIMT IMC. SALIS °"'Cll714.6Jl .... I •W.W....Sf.MJ..JttO e-. ..... c.11.· I REALTORS 675-5511 LOOKING FOR PERFECTION? W• ~-ff and ff'a in M•M V.rct.. With 3 ~1 • 2 l/• bah, O deft, fOMlly rooM .d fonncll-' dlnlftcJ room. Thia newly retnodeled hCNM hos plenty to ofhr, and It reody for YOU to MOY• riC)ht in. $2 49.500. Col us today. COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 25 I 5 ~ Cooat Hwy., Corona ct.I Mar 675-5511 MCC:P:rtci I 2 BDRM Immaculate 3 Bd rm PRACTICALLYFREE family room in pre I $68,900. If you have httle s t1gious Turtlerock ' cash and are looking for Beautiful decorating., a golden opportunity to vaulted cei lings. atrium. own your own home. covered patio. Priced to don't wait. this is it ! This sell at $197,500. lovely condominium 1s a 2 Bdrm. very clean and neat. and located in a quiet areo Approx - imately S2.950 down and owner w1 II carry 2nd with small payments. Call now for all the de- tails. 752-1700 The fastest draw in the West. . .a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Call T<>- THE REAL ESTATERS day642-5678. Want Ad Results 642·5678 lllME ON WATIR-VIEW Mon IR 1...,.cHately ..t -foy tMa 2 dory 4 .,..... wtftt bek~ .... patio °" wot.r. D•cor otor ah_,.. loot 1llp. Sl.100,000. PrlHte C1r9CL DISTINCTIVE LIOO ISLE Corn•r a cross f r oM loyfront." DistfftcHn 3 ldnn, 4 bath, fcwlty room -. with many wfllities. S....... to atre.t location wtth patio for y.cr rcMlftd ~ Spulal decorator featwet indude Fretteh doors, leadtd CJlosa Clltd ~t kitctt.n. $675,000 . WATERFRONT HOMES, IN( RI Al ~~lATI 2436 W Coasl Hwy Newport Beach ,. ,. ···~· ,. t ' 631-1400 CE BEDIBE ILllRS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE NEW LISTING Tastefully Decorated "Q" Plan With Cozy Conversation Ptl & Spacious Living Dining Room Area. Ideal Location Wtth Large Enclosed Patio On Greenbelt Near Pool & Tennis Clu b Pedec t Ho me f'or Entertaining' S230,000 MEW OFFERJMG ..)ne Of NewPQrt's Finest Gated Commu n1ties Lovely Free-Standing Home With Three Bedrooms, Family Room. Simply Spectacular View Of Ocean. Bay & Nifht L1ghts. Tip ·Top Condition. Community Tennis & Pool. $405.000. ® ·--, •••••••• n• 759-9100 #Z eor,.o.-• Piao ... .,....Cewht- Sfll( & ,,Nlf WORLD HAASORS C S M 0 P D W H I 0 T D R Y E A L S H U H S J 0 A X L S .L A 0 S £ W N'I N W£A A AOAOAYR R CAI G L M U N N 0 N G U J U 0 K H P 0 M H E 8 E P P F R A N T 0 I A L H Y A 0 H G A R R U R M H D R A R L A T E J U A 0 EA 9 RE A E L L F AS l.L RA S V V U M 0 R M J N T P E C l S E N T I L A S V P A Q I C R R K I C E 9 I L R H D A T N U M C T I R E R I l R ~ O R a H 0 E 0 0 I H V 0 S A W 1 P E R Y A E N I P R N 0 l Y R S C M T A M 0 J L C R A E T " C W A f I Y 0 T H M ~ H E 0 H R 0 E R E M K I A Z L 0 E A I 0 C S S I I T N R V A H Y L L V S N T ........ I Hlddln ............. ....,., ...... ..... 1111 ..... ., , • .... '"" ........... " ~. - ........ ....~-Qty ... t uMMw ... .....,. ._ .. .... ........ An--. i ..... ..ffwlll. ...... ......... ..... ...... fOMtMW:tdlotll LIDO ISU Newly remodeled traditional style 3 bdrm. 2 bath home featuring large recreation room & 2 patios. Living room has attractive beam ceilings, fireplace & f ~ch doors leadini onto brick patio New kitchen blt·in a ooliances, b9se tQ tennta.-~our•-~ sandy beacheJ '4t clu.bhOUM. ~.ooo . . . IAYNOMT We have several fine homes with pier & slip, starting at Sl,500,000 RANCHO MIRAGE Springs Condo. 9th fai rway. 3000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm. 3 bath. furn . Gotr clb mbrshp. Will trade fo r invest. prop: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J-< 1 Boy"d" Dr'"" N B 6 7S 6161 l ' .• • . . . ' ..... ' , .. . f'l•"o LOAH This 4 bdrm home has b~en com le t el re - ' •de«>rated. Many extras. Loni Beach bayfront home with u-1baped boat dock. 31>r. den, Sba. Ort'at .Mtimlloe Bay Joe. A Itta! al "95.(l(IO. P.P. Dya: llU)U O·OIOO (Ron). E ves /wll:~nds: (213)43-1-UO'I. C/MESA XLNT ANANCING 6u.lh. Sl 75.000. • Unlh. $420,000 •12 &Wh, $6'5,000. Call for information &U-91&1 · OPEN liOUSt REALTY /' AIMOIMAL How can you find a pro- perty four doors from th~ So. Bayfront with a 45x85 lot on Balboa Island where lht• owner will ronsider anything of a value stocks. cash, land. units you name it and the owner will trade Includes plans for a new duplex. Asking $595,000 lal»a lalCMd Rtty 673-8700 Open Sunday. 2-Spm. 1841 Orchard Or. Sbdrm. 3ba. freshly painted colonia1.•n beauty. Family room, separate dining room, t/ frplc, new roof. Priced .q al $160,000. for quick"' sale. Xlnt fin1tncln&" <1 THE WI EDEMANS 494-0066 or 751 ·4293. • q MEWPORT IEACH ~J.. $34.000 down, owner will' '' finance at 13~~ with··• SlSOO /mo payments. •J Total price $279.000 ·1 East Bluff, 5bd rm. 3ba. ca 11644-7063. DESPERATE Mo QualifyincJ S20K dwn , 3br, 2ba. Prtn On ly 631-5737 AGT " ' ; 38R. 21h ba rondo. Nr So Cst Plaza. Skylttes. • patio. dc<·k. 2 car gar.m may upgrades $130.000 .• 1 Ry owner OWC 2. I 540 40J3. Jo: s 1qe 4 Bdrm w at- .... : . : =·,. Assume 9 1'•~ loan i---------1 5'YGLASS HILL We have two beautirul listings on Spyglass One t a t hed 1 Br u n i t $155 ,000 By Owner ·1 f>46117S8 llUlfSfAIE UCfU(NCf StHCf ttO Price . $115,000. Call to- day 979-5370 .. • LIDO ISLE Complete luxury with an ever changing marine view. Thi!! spacious two bedroom and den condo has been magnificently upgraded wit h deep pale carpel and h ardwood floors. Mirrored entry and wet bar Complete s ecurity s ys tem M o d ern elevat o r service Pier and shp available' You own the pro~rty in fee $650,000. 63 1-7300 H.I . C honn. Pric•. T~rms of them will fit vour BUILDER HELPS YOU IUY! Appealing to the pocket· price ranJ(c Call to 1>ce book as well as the eye these gem~' The vast improvements D.M. Marshall Rltr NEW C ONDOS in th.ts older home make 644-9990 Xlnt Tfl"nls! ··· 2&3 RR 1t a delight to live in. And I al a price gratifying to lolboG Peninsula I 007 Pvt decks & patios Month of Mart h For30davs escrow FRF:I:: d·rapc :. & m1Cr(IW3Vl' the most careful bu\•e r. ••••••••••••••••••••••• at Sll0,000 Call for terms & deta11s . 556 2660 1• .. c"d"s"r"8"C""A•o111111C"i .... 1 t;::SELECT T" PROPERTIES Find what you want in DaUy Pilot Classifieds. Cadillacs to Go-Carts Whatever the F'ad Roll 'em off the market Wllh a Classified Ad Call Now' 642-5678 COUNTRY CHARM:-BALBOA IS. Totally upgraded and remodeled duplex. Front unit with beam ceilings, stained glass & french doors. Both units have 2 bdrm.s and loads of cha rm. $398,500. WATERFRONT HOMES. INt RIAi f '>lATI \ ..., 1 • k, t ~ ·, ·~· t ,, I' 1• I 315 Marine Ave Balboa Island 673-6900 Ill '>llJf llT IA, I'[ At I ">IATI 'of µVII f <; OPEN WEDHESDA Y I 2-3 I 939 IRVINE AVENUE COUNTRY ESTATE Back Bay. Sprawling 4 BR. custom on double corner lot. Circular drive. Pool & spa. Formal Dining Rm. Fam. Rm. Wet bar. 2 fireplaces. Absolutely gorgeous condition & price. $345.000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 HARBOR RIDGE 3 bdrm. w /loft, 3 balconies, A/C near tennis courts & pool. Owner motivated . 1031.i 'lc assumable loan. $479,000 '::~~~' $~~c«llJ\-~£tfS• ::: -----.... , '-1 QAY .. POUAM •=":...i.tr"-~ b: ---- low 10 fOff!I fov1 11"'1>19 -dt I StPRAH I I I r I I VOG LE I ~,--r-1 ...--cl i I ONUGY Ii' ' I I' I I . l I I I' I • I IGIM>a Peninsula Steps lo bay and beath This beautiful new home reatures. 3 Bdrms. fam1 ly room and library 21~ baths. ct>ram1C· t ile thruout 4 fireplaces Oa k rab1net ~. 2 skylight.!>. )otained glass windows French doors. 2 patios and xtra large garage and bea ult fu I spa off the master bdrm orrered at $471 .000 F'or an appointment to 'll'e. call 540-1151 •:!.v~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS C orona deot Mor I 022 ..•..••..•..•.......... EBUEOWXEi Plus Income REO to $272.500 OR 3 Bdrm 2ba home wllh isolated master bdrm <ca n bl' parent retreat or in-law <1rtrs I and a 2 Bdrm rotlage ANY WA V vou dt'scribt' 1t It's cha.rm mg up to date -beautifully located. CALL FOR DETAILS 644-7211 OP£-:N l 2-4PM 2000 MEYER PL. 64 I .199 1, ogt. LOVELY 4BR, JBA WITH SPA $22,000 Down To existing financ-1ng of 121 .'. <no qual 1 1-:nd of ru l -dt• S a <'. will C'flo perate w bkr s SIH4 00) 0 '4 ner 645 6669 Dona Point I 026 .•..•.•......•..•.....• NODOWH Dana Pt Duplex 6 mo I yr lea).C option with o w n e r f 1 n a n 1· 1 n g Spaciou.-. 3b<lrm 2ba & 2bdrm 2ba Lrg '1e\\ rlc•c k s210 .11110 • Owner al(t 661 ·9343 ~ :-.0 0 DOWN• Terms or lease option or " 3 br. 2 ha 497.3034 bkr Fountain Voti.y I 034 .\ ...•................... TRUE VALUE 1n the ever popular,) Westmont home!> 3 lr2 Rd + Bonus rm Belo\4 market prite $1 27.000 C:all Anne McCa:.lancl 631 1.2166 elm liiJJtJ~ Huntington IHch I 040 ' 1 JUST LISTED Charmin~ Duplex with French doors on front unit. shake roof Walk lo . .•..............•..... ' OPEN SUM 10-12 2br. 2ba. $125.000 21l9th St 213-399· 1028 all shopping Sl98.000 l••i•R•efi•.x-... •a-y•o_FF_E•R• Call for appt. lo '>Ce ~ """ Be rnita F:ilcrtse n . Lovely 3br, cstm home Broker, 675 ·2373 or near beac h & park.·. 770.8598 formal d1n1nR. heavy • S200I( .... I ~I/ o;. shake roor Call now for : "" " 2 0 information regarding : FtHANCIHG the g!\,•: assum loan · ' CDM COTT AGE Seller "' carry part of PLUS INCOME the buyers down pay- 0 r 3br, 2ba home . ment & 'lays bran~ any ... w I i so I ate d m aster offer bdnn/Parent rl'treat or I EST PRICE ·: ln·Law quartel"l'i + 2br IM TOWM ·: cottage. An yway you 4b od led k h describe 1t. it's charm· · r. rem e itc en. plush <'arpets. c-ustom •' 1ng. up t o date . & d beautifully decorated rapes, freshly painted, " Priced at $280.000 with seller bought another & " verAWcial financinf. has priced thousands ., below market value for C FOR DETAI S quick sale Crea live -.. 644-7211 termsok-bellerhurry . , ~60LDENWESt ~ ~NIGH [}AILEY & ASSOCIATES ~ REALTORS '~~.J.· ?ASSOCIATES __. ________ , 141-1511 .• ~~·h 9 mos. new. 4 bdrm + 2 l!;,~ ... ~,~.~s=+~s=1~s~.: bdrm unit, 3 fi.reflaces. 4 ~•tclAL! "· car gar., bu It ins, ~ beams & used brick. Executive Duplex for Fren t'h wind o w s . discriminating taste .. sprinkler system. BBQ. 3br, 3ba, each. central\" 7 09. 7 09 v. Or c h Id . air, woodbuming trplcs. , 138S,OOO. Call for appl to custom drapes/ carpets,·. 1ee, 851-9135 (will coop heavyshakeroof,.11 ~'*;, w trltrs) Owner /bkr. loan is assumable, no qu11if)'lng necessary J asmine Creek decorator home, plan l on green· ) belt immac. '305.500 SIOK Doww OrL"t 14().81415 MOVIS YOU IH •\ Ce>• Mne I 024 N o q u a I I f y I n J ••••••••••••••••••••••• necessary. Your moo· .... _._ ______ 1 thly s-yment ca.n a. ad· •• I&: juated\omeetyou.rmon~ ~ u-. ... 1 thly budret. We hav. r--"""' many a. 4bd.rm born• In V' Terrifi c finan cing beat Oran(!e Count1 ~ ,valla~. t.arse 2 story loca~ w1tbea•ttrm1. ramUy home wltb lovely Call our ap«lallat for poOI, enclOffd ~urtyard mOremformallon .. and ttptrate muter ~ ' "° :::-.~~~"~~ =· sr! S40-111l for more In· EALTORI teonaUGn; ' ~ ASSOCfATM ...... I Dlvorce/forec loture fore.ct HI• on beaut. Hunttn1ton Harbor .llome. Worth 129S.OOO. 'J'ty 9e.OOO Low down. take over ulatlnf flnanctn1 at 13~ Int re1turibn14drm1. 3 full baths. a ftplc1. 0(' an view. a car,., + xtras Call 831-6313 for more Info. BEACH GIANT s Bdrm' family rm. On ly $'131.500. MWlt sell this wedl:end. Bnt buy this )'tar. 846'""48$. ~--'· ',111 I ' 'I I 1 '"• 1 .'i lll(l 100/oDOWM PIMTMOUll c:....-Oidl I 4HOUlll WJ~I CO.la Meta, 2 as t bomei all rented owner motlvatA9d and wm bell! with flnancln1. Make Offer-won t last! a Bdrm. lbl, 280 dtl otun. bay, mtft, c1ty view Pool, uc. Lit al· 11.1mabl• loan. Balbo• Penln. he land. C/11 Newport Cntr 9UAIL PLACI PIOPlllm MO-US'7 1eo.m1 LOWDOWN Venalllos l8r /ttudlo, pentMt condo. w 111 H · s .... ._ I 010 aumable loans , only ••••••••••••••••••••••• $105.500. Owner ta1t. Sooc>Qulet ~'1. 979-5370 H k for VA TerMtl Jim ___ _ VA 1ubetltutlon avail•· llG CAHYOM ble on t his 3 Bdrm. Prime view building 11lte Decorated In hea~t y on golf course. Plana In· earthtones. Gleaming c 1 ud e d Redu c ed hardwood noon. Owner 71~1920 OPfllCllLD• 30 Units. l<>"k nnandn1. owe s10.ooo w /no pymts. S425 .000. Alt 846-15'4. MEWPOltT llACH AAA raoran1s ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ,.,...lted • •••••••••••••••••••••• ..... , ....... 3107 -----------------1 ..................... 0 H*"lhgluw leoclt 3240 Oranieln!e patio home, 2 Charming 5 bdrm, 3 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• br, 2 ba, adults. lease, bayfront with 38' boat 5 blka to ocean. Elegant 2 9"S. 955-2558 float. SUIOO mo. Bill bdrm, ram rm & den, Grundy,67Hl81 ($750 mo). Plush crpts. 3bd Townhomea. nu 38r, JBa, dlnlnt rld1 country llltcben, fOOCI l'ood. llOO mo. tTl-OUI Sbdnn, pvt beach • i. nil cowt, S700/mo. s:n.aoos. 2 BR. den, 2 Ba, fpl~, t•raae. walk to beaeb. Pool •tennis priv. 1'750 lie. M0-5272 .. StOOOOO with terms w ill h elp f inance . avaliable. $1,100.000. S92.750, TARBELL . I. 3 Triplexes In a row. south ol PCH in Corona del Mar. 2~ ba, cedar & glass. Turtlerock S850. Wood· 3202 Dbl car pvt gar. fully bridge $550. Helen BLUFFS BARGAIN. 38r ••••••••••••••••••••••• malnt. yd. Adults. no 833-8800, 851-0188 Agent b Call Dan Bibb BKR_._540-__ 11_20 ___ _ 675-2311ot60 7665 ev II. 2duplexes + 1 triplex tn a row oo Bal. Penin. l lot rrom sand /surf. By OWNER. formal dln. ts I i 527 18th twn m. s155,500 All. · 3 br: pool. Now avail ri . ·7~~~~:~.t8331 0 ~ L.,_.hach 3241 675-5930.608146 ••••••••••••••••••••••• m. 1 duplex on water with dock for 30' boat. Arrowhead Coun try 960-5112. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CI u b are a . San -------Oceanfront lbr, tr lr Bernardino. 1·864 1732. • • * +cabana $650/mo. t-884-7258 A.D. HClftMft adults only 499-3816 COZY 2Br house. close to beach. near Beach & Warner. Huntingto n Bch. $4.SOmo. 751·8967 88S.S-AS15 Sutter Cr. For Rent. So Laguna Superb !bdrm hme w /view, deck & rrplc. $600 incl util Chuc k 4bdrm, 3ba. 2 story. frplc. encl gar, microwa ve .• comm. pool. tennis. no pets Sl975. Avail now ' s.48-•769. S....AM 3210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Zbdrm. lba. drive by. GoWN Wftt htotff Beautiful S&S Exet' 4 bdrm home Ele1?anl wet bar. bit in bbq inside & many other amenities incl. a huf!e yard that bat'ks to n beaut1ru1 park J ust 2 yrs old ' Broker. 963 8182 THES"4AICES Weathe red c ed a r shakes. that 1s . Custom designed 3 bdrm. ram rm. 2 baths Extensive us e or wood glass & l'eram1c tile Beam ceil- ing. rrplc. Sl6S.OOO M1ss1on Realty (714 )494·0731. CorGMdel Mor 3222 Huntmgton Beach You are the winner or 4frffHck.+s ($32 value). to Circus V Clr90' Mer. 17th. 8PM at Montgomery Wa rd 405 Fwy. at Bristol Ayres 499·2512 -2006 S . Garn1e1 . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cha rming. newly re· 644-7083. Divorce .for eC'lusu re fort'cd sale on he <iut. Hunlinl(lon llarbo r home Worth S295.000. try $26.'i,OOO Low down. take over ex 1s t1n g finant'inl( ut 13'. inl Fcalurtni;? 4bdrm 3 full ba ths. 3 frplr~. Ol'l'3n view. 3 t•ar f!<tr + xlru\ Call 631 6313 for mor<" info DUPLEX RXIR!! Brang your paint br ush & broom to save SSS on this dirty dawg 1' Prime La~una Real'h duplex w 1ocean vie w & a t tat'hed garaj?e. Submit o rr er' 759 1501 o r 7521:.m UMDAISLE Lease option. 1·2 yrs. 3 boat slip, Sbr, maid's qtrs. Owner/Bkr. Con tact Joanne Ko rnay. ( 1 I 4 ) 8 2 8 I 2 8 0 . (213)598-1363 Shoreclirfs 2 br & den. lge yard. Mini view SI 100 Agent. 67~5354. Costa Mesa Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to claim your tickets. modeled 2 story. 3 Br 2 ---------- Ba. House. Ocean view, So.fh&,4llJllRCI 3!16 fireplace. Near beach & ••••••••••••••••••••••• town. $75-0. 494.5973 & 2 Br. +. l 'h Ba. View, 2 499·1036. firepla ces. gara1e. backyard. Avail. April 1. ~ 499-3251 IOU ...••.•........•••..... **LEASES R a n c h Rea lt v h a'>, leases. JS lo C'houH' 1 from SS5().S9SO mu Cull for information. e RANCH REA LTY 551 2000 wsss 3 ldnn with Spa Nicely upgraded Plan II Northwood Park d1• latched home w1lh air cond, skinny dip spa area. J;(real iundsl'apin l( and del'oraling $103.000 in usable rt nanl·1ni? Priced to sell at Sl52.000 644-7211 M!lla vc * *S128,900 ---=Walker 8 lee DESPERATE $34.000 down. owner will finance al 133.•'1 with $1 500/mo payme nts T ota l pnl'e $279.000 Deluxe rustlt' I bdrm Avail Now 2Br I ba with frplc. Nice. No pets. no children. 1st/last + $200 sec. 9600/mo Call Ltnda at 675-2311 CostaMHa 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •• I Bedroom Condo nea r Brookhurs t /Adam s . Pooltrennis. Etc. $450 mo 646·«77 rl EAL ESTATE TIMl-:SHAR E O\.\n I week forever ' l.aj?una Sho res Uotcl of fc rs pool. spa . maid ... erv1ce. s leeps 4 You can even trade weeks m lernallonally Offered al ~perwet>k 497·3331 East BluH, Sbdrm, Jba. Ext'ellent financing 23 I C'all_644·7063 Freemonl $39,500 I CHOICE CO RNER 3 Br ltOMfS OCEAHFROHTDPLX -WAHHFRONT I 714J 6 7'3-4400' 121 ll '21-2121 2 BR. encl gar. adlts, no pets $450 773 W Wilson, ... , 631·4889 Brand new house ror dlS· criminating fa m ily 3 biles lo ocean. 3 Br 3 Ba . fam rm. Totally upgraded & custom ized. Sl200 m o 833-0145 AM IPM up. 2 dn Sell or trade REAL ESTATE Submit your deal Ca pri 631-1400 HARBOR AcrHCp for Sale Properties F.d 642 9601. •i!!~!'lllll!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 644·4720 Res • L1·ngo--c-'f"·pe-c--... ~ .. ,= ... -~~-~~ii~i&~·~g~-~~ --.. --lnte-rest Rate If you have $164,000 and A Division or II arbor ln\'estment Co. • • J 2200 •·= lh.ihw • Lo~forrr:.....L... ....,.. • .,,. 4 bdrm. 2•,-, bath with want JSo/, yield annual· n ~ plush carpet & wood ly.purchaseS200.000two ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANT LAG UNA rtoors F a mily room year deed or trust bear· WATBlFROMT with fi r eplace. G re at ing 20o/. interest on 25 LOTS financing with a 13'7r acre avoca o gr '" A few CABO DEL ESTE Have l"lu~nt with cha r m· d ~ · m g 2 Rdrm. 2 ba pool fiyed rate & 2001, down inactive develo ent ho m l' in 'Shores area " ~ 1• V' t waterfront home sites S245 .000 Hurry , with area near 15 a. om· remain on Lake Misson or I.a Jolla will trade terms Like lh1's It won't bined So/. Isl + this in-v· . ......., th fin I f 1eJO. ams is e a or Laguna property last' vestmen t repres ents opportunity t o build SZ3.'i.000to S275.000 less than 50'7. or the ap-your dream home. From L~a Villa«Je R.E. praised value or land. 1285.000_ Call Henry 497-1761 MAl•appra1sal on adja· Durantat71485S-108l. cent 2"'.i acre parcel at WOODSCOVE St5o .ooo each Ca ll l+AcreLoh c h a rm I n j( w 0 0 d 1~~!1!!!!!!~~~!1!!!!!!~!!!111 7t4n51-482!6, •93-1153 or owe 20% DWM ,-756-JmS shmJ;(lcd 4 Bdrm home 3 bdnn·Z ba den-pool 9 7 9 . 7 3 O O 9 9 4 . 2 1 7 I With loads or glass and Mint. Sl83.000. Own/agt ca ..... rcJal Owner/Agt !. o o th 1 n g s p a A m 1 d 548-8665, 548_5758 P1 opetiy 1600 1 -0-A___,--L'----B--h towermR trel's. m de ••••••••••••••••••••••• cres, aguna eac . ~1 rablt• Woods Cove OCEAN VIEW CONDO ---••llll•--•I zoned R-1. $395.000 297' Flexible financmg or a Owner must sell this unit D zW dwn. owner ~4244 possible lease option NOW, 2 Bdrm 2ba ..... & prof.s'- S289.995 Versailles condo with RIVEttSIDE • 2br House w gar. quiet 4 Br 2 Ba Fam. Rm. no pets $450/mo 848 2474 Xlnt loc Gardener Call days art 6PM 1695 840-6203 2 Br 2 run bath condo 2 car gar Pool. Jal·uzz1 Gas pd S700 mo Days 213 /861 ·8207 . h o m e 213 !9'l3-2660 5 Br. 3 Ba 2 Sly $1100 mo. lse. 494-0066 Small o~r 2br. Iba hse orr stree pkg but no gar. $375 635-CliO? Sharp Jbr, gardener incl cstm det'orated, frplc, lg e patio $650 /m o. (2 13 >656 ·9680 o r (714)962·04.'i8 4 BR 2 Ba. fam r m . Co ndo. 3 br. 11,.~ ba , dinette. 1700 sq ft S750 r e frig , frpl c . patio, mo. Grdnr incl 642·4623 t'arport, $475. 893·3645 Huge 3 br. 2 ba. s ubmit on kids & pets. avail now, '625.631~ 2br . 1ba Condo, 1mmac cond. common pool. at tached gar. rerr /micro, M e s a Ve rd e are a S47S /mo 64 5 3 028 eves/wknds Lge gar. l.lny Ilse. lbr. I ba. adults. no pe ts . $400/mo 892·3731 Cozy 2Br hse. d ose to b e a c h . nr Bea c h & Warner S450 m o 751-8967 HWll~ H~ 3242 .•...•••..........•.... WOODS COVE 370FLORA OUTRAGEOUS! 2br, 1 ba. skylights. antique doors / window s. beamed ceiling. frplc. new kitchen I bath $675 m o . 833·3544 da ys , 497-2278 eves Trish New 2Br. 2Ba Mobile Home. good ocn view. pvt bch. S850 mo Adlls only. 499-3816 LCHJWMI Hih 3250 .....•.•...•........... HOMES FOR RENT 3 & 4 134.rm $.57S.SS95 F e n t'ed ya rd s & garages Kids & pets welt'ome. 964 2566 or 973-2971 Agt .. no fee . LaCJWMI HkjNI 3252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm Lag Niguel 1650 mo Gardener lnt'luded Call 951·9031 or 831· 1939 Ask for Jimmi. Missiolt Viejo 326 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMES FOR RENT 3 'Bdrm . $550·575 Fent'e d y ards & garages Kids & pets welcome 964-2566 or 97~2971. Agt.. no fee Newport hach 3269 •.......•..........•... NewpQrl Shores Canal front 4bdrm. Jba. newly decorated. 2 blocks lo ocean. 962·6683 Harbor Ridge Lautre· ~---------' CCMlda•iRl ... 1 .,.,.,..IMd 34!5 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbdrm lux club & spa facil. ocn view. NewPort $4 75 /mo Todd (213)~9077 Beautirul Park Bristol Adult Condos. Pool. security, spa. !Br. 9450: 2 er. S.'500. 646-0686. Woodbridge Condo Yrly Lse ~. 2br , tba, lower unit. lge backyrd races park . incl pool/lake /boat Cacti. 957·1081 days. 552-7819 eves Bachelor CONDO vacant, $500 /mo . Newport Beach 978·0423 ToMlhcMne UftfunMJMd 3515 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice Twnhse. $495 mo. 2br, 1thba. Savage Wild & Co 675-6606 Apw lw•nts Fw.itlte4 ....................... , .. Cor.a del Mar 372Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cozy, small rum. Studio. No kitchen. Employed Female. Non s moker. Ref's. 1275. 64~999. Bachelor Apt. 1 room . w /ba, priv. ent. s mall - but very t'lean $200 64~eves Can you bel!C'Vt' that pn t'e for a 3 Bdrm 1 1 ~ Ba attached homC' 1n Woodbndli(e? Seller will h elp w ith r re al1 vc fmanrm~ Wa lk to park and pool Call for deta ils on lh1s super bu~ don osen rcaltors exrel assumable Cmanc ing Only Sl55.950 R F:Al. ESTATE STORE Lot, 62~x292"'1 oppos ite Costa Mesa Hospital, $275,000 Roy McCardl., Rttr. l+ AcreLot.s owe~ OWN 979-7300. 994 ·2171 Owner/agt. 3Br w/garage Newly de corated. Eastside Lrg yard. ssas. 673-0884 Seagate Waterfront T ownhome . 40' boat dock m rront. 3 Br. 3 ba New cpt. newly painted thru-0ut. Pool, s pa. ten- nis. clubhouse. GREAT VIEW. Vacant. Asking $14SO. 84().3341or840-6045 SEABRIDGE Waterv1ew Condo 3br. 3ba. frplc, wet bar. patio. pool. ten· nis. spa. kids/pets ok Avail. 4/1. Ent'I gar. lndry $975/mo. 631-0995 mont Model Full ocean Costa Mna 3724 view.S2500mo 760·1977 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1213 N COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH 497-4848 675-1771 •~~!5~4~1-!7!7!2!9!!~~ Capistrano Beat'h R-2 lot. ----ocean view. plans & LIDOISLAHD 3br CONDO $325,000 20': D11plHH/ permit. S90.000 661·2871 fiiilWa~!:.':(jt! ~~~.~!I!! ...... !~.~~ ~ 551 .:woo LEASEOntOH dwn. assum Isl T .D of Onits Sc* I 100 S70K at 7:1r'•"I. ()WC 2nd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Two R-2 lots. Capistrano 675·3967 MEAR THE SI.HD Beach, view. by owner , $2500 DOWH lal>oa Pett. DuplH terms. 4~ 1~! _ 2bdrm. Iba duplex, ~a r. washer/dryer hook up, new Ooors. crpts, pamt. $475 + dep. I s mall child ok. No pets. 1952 Meyer. 549.3484 lr•lne 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new condo. 2bdrm. Woodbridge lease. 2 Br. 1920Rarran1·a f'k,.~.l non~ fl beautiful new homes Live by beach, bachelor Seconds lo the water. R·l lots. Fountain Valley co ndo . va ca n t . by F:xcellent 3 BR owner's Nr Mile Sq Pk. Doris J Vzba. kids ok. S600 /mo 770.~78 or 642· 1430 I '>'.t Ba, patio, pvt loc .. boating. tennis. pool. S600 /mo. Agt. 640-9900 WOODBRIDGE GLEN 9 >/4°/o Assum. 2br. 2ba . study. frplr comm'ly pool Jar lake: $1 28.000 R .. 0\.\ ner 559.4922 . *Now Must Sell This eleji!antly det·orated '.l Bd r m 2 •, fl a to wnhome. halo 2 l(rl'al assumable loan'i and overlooks park and pool Owners are very an'< ious This is one or Wood brid f!e 's be-.t op Portunit1es Woodbridge Really 551·3000 4t20Barranr1 Pkw).l,.fno YOU ASKED FORIT W e 've round il a specious 3 bdrm. 2"" ba. Townhomc with nice slud family room Bat'k patio overlooks green· belt. Within walking dis· ta nee to pool J va1lable fo r leas<' with option to buy Exl'elll'nt tl'rms Best location owner. $107 .500 no qua Ii "home hke" unit & 2 962·7302, 842-1418 Agl rying. Prin only 978·0423 AR. 2 ba, rental unit Westside 4Br 2ba. en c gar. sm pet /ch1ldm ok lmmed occ up. S650 548-t~ days. 751 2340 ev LEASEOnlOH S p yglass or H a rbo r View, no monthly pay menL'I Call for det ails Agt. 640-9345 ---- •SI 33,900 IH MEWPOttT HACH * 114 loQ_ 0333 _, Imagine 3 spacious brs Lake forHt I 055 & 2'"> ba upi?raded lo the ••••••••••••••••••••••• hilt! This fine home also Beautiful s pacious Jbr features encl'd parking housl' Lk view & ~reen & in-ho use laundry be I t Co n v e r t e d facilities + assumable j?ar 'covered patio.in· rinancing. Call 759·1SOt door laundry. frph' LJ;( or 752·7373 assmrn r1rsl. :it 11 1 .'1 s219.500 By o \.lo ner ~Walker 8 lae 770 4R6S H•wport l.ach I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~V11Hlls Ocean vu. 3 Bdrm 2v, Ba , 3 c a r garage $325.000. ~ 759-9221 REAL ESTATE cli#AXOIR Quality built family home. Pool and enclosed yard. 3 Bdrms and fami- ly room. 4 baths. all rooms arranged for family privacy. 642~200 Ideal for home & in· Mountmt, Deserl, come Close to Newport Resori 2400 pier & shops $289,950 •• •••••••• •• •• ••••• • ••• Wesley H. Toytor Co. Tahoe City. Contractor's Rffltors 644-49 I 0 quality home 4 Br. 2 1~ Ba. Fam rm. 2 car gar. lnco.M P'...,,.,ty 2000 Try xchng for Or. Cly West.side 2br 2ba corner home, lg yrd with at tached store zoned for sml business. Co mplete· l y r enovated S750, 548-1905 dys. 751-2340 eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pro perty. S215.000 APPLE VALLEY Near new 4 Ple x , 2 bdrm, 2 bath each unit with fireplace. enclosed patio. double garage $165.000. Bill Gr undy. R ltr. 675-6161. FOURPLEX Westside Costa Mesa. Needs aome work . 122.000 yr income. Full price $225,000 Owner will carry 10"11 interest w /'60.000 dn. 916-583 ·0284 Tahoe Northshore Realtors MAMMOTH COHDO S79.SOO. 2 br. rrptc. close· i n w ith 20 ~ down t<J.W XC. AT 12"1, B. M ace. 497-4874 or 661-6143 3 8d 2\7 Ba 2·sty condo Pool /spa. frplc. dbl gar Ava i l now Diana 631·12l66. Agl. Incline Village. No. Shore New. dlx 3 br. 2"'1 ba. condo. Lake Tahoe vu. frplc, dbl gar. w /opener, S80 per night. 3 Br. 2ba. yards. paUos. gardener. Design R eally . Kids /pets OK. $750. 702/831·5550 Lorri, wkdys 547·9571 ; RUNNING SPRINGS eves/wknds S46·5'M. On the way lo Big Bear. 2 BDR. S430. Adlts. Beautiful 3 view lot in 645-810-1. No Pets. _ _ perm. home area. 333 E. 218l. #3-D. Woodbridge Sy camore Plan. 4 Br. 3 ba No pets. $750 mo. incl gardener 752·2881 Large 3 Br Condo 21"z Ba. Din area. ramily rm. frplc. crpl. 2 s tory. comm. pool Avail. 3·16. $865 mo +deposit Call 752-1282 9 to 4. 4bdrm. 2'-"2ba. Wood· bridge ho me. across rrom swim club & park. no pets S825 /mo. 551-l983. HOME FOR RENT 4 Bdrm. $665. Fenced yard & garage. Kids & pets welcome. 964·2566 or97J..2971. Agt .. no ree. Lakeside condo. pool. tennis, jac. 2 br. I th ba. -50/mo. 857-0211 R. E Investments $25,000 ----------1 Nice 4bdrm. 2~ba house. 3333 W. Coast Hwy, NB 640..9998 640.1649 OPEN HSESUMDAY 2 frplc. nr s ho ppln& 645-6646 2Ss.4 Elden center, pool, Jae. tennis. ---------10..tofShlh 3Br.2\.'IBaCondo,pool& $725.SS1-693lafter6pm. INCOME PaOPEltTIES P'ropeny 2600 jacuuJ, lake over 1st Looking for income un-•• ••••••••••••••••••••• 10'Ar~. CraeaUve rtnanc-L !! ASE Tur l I e r o ck Ila!! We have 5 pro-40 A scenk Oregon Coast. tng. PP. 642·*3 Glenn. lrgest single fam Nl'WPort Crest 3 Br 2°"' Ba Ocean view. Pool. tennis. S790 mo. 642·3491. 3 Br. 2 Ba lar~e yard. 2 c ar garage. S745 mo. 675·0062 Yearly rental 3 Bd. 2 Ba. incl. stove $750 /mo. Possible lease option. Agt 673-:m!i House w /pool. $995 mo. 3Br. 2Ba + 2 utll bdrms. fam rm. patio 640..1327. 559-6188. or ore 159.5597 WATERFROMT w /boat sUp included 3 8dr 2 Ba. dbl gar . rm for Power boat up to about.JS'. $115-0/mo JACOIS REAL TY 675-6670 SPACIOUSH.I . TOWMHOUSE New 2 br. 2th be, Back Bay loc. Gar. pvt patio $925 mo. Susan: 957 ·6507, 540-7238 3 Bdrm. frplc. walk to beach, pool & tennis. $795. Agt. 760-9278 3 Br 2 Ba oceanfront h ome. nu paint . & draPes. xlnt cond., paUo & yro, furn. or unfum. $1200/mo yrly. Owner may consider winter rental. No pets please. Lloyd at Jacobe Realty. 615-8610 pertJes in C.M. Priced Electricity, fenced. out-home, Sbdrm. 3ba. ram VICTORIAM right at less than standing view. accessi· W•atslde. 2 Br. 1 Ba. rm. central air, 3 car tllf,.•!lll!9'!"9•1"!PW!ll BEACH HOME 11XGross. No bank ble,owner•92-Z499 House. Eodsd 1ar .. w/d gar. walk to pool & ten· A PETE BARRETT ·.. REALTY New 3 BR 3~ Ba. Quali· flnanclng required. In· hook up. crpts. drapes. nls. SJ.050. Call Gary t y handcrarted oak terested?Then call us. ....._ Fsw. 2700 renced back yard. No aftertpm: 752-8318. lhruout St.ained glass. rr:-ca. 2 1 I• 1076 , ~" ....... $t35. no.5629. •pa -· J • •••••••••••••••• ••••• • ti"'"° Woodr...&.1-...__...__ 2 " ········-············· • .,._ ... ·---· I Lovely 4 bdr home In story, I br, bJ ~ ls Lee 4 BR m Ba ln pr me Coll-e Parlt. Chlld~n pool, lake. ..Ti/mo. Sau eaem.e.t area with ~ .. Plan_lllReal. ty good ouaa ., lew FAUlaOOIC oil, no pet.a. ll50 546-6147 551-SS.la.,.,... -752_6499 SllS,000. Priced for 714 /641·-0763 93.hcres with avocadoa or64M'718 Woodlllidll _,.fin ree. quick ..... or au ume 2787 Bristol St. and m1cad1mla nut.a. 2 COUNTRY RENTAL BY a Br. I Ba. atrium. leaae op\. Alt. Ron Cosla Mesa,C A houses Including new PUBL~C <S EAl..ED) •Ttt /•o. laclda + den. 2v. ba. l850 LUXURY VIEW CON· DO. 2 Br, 2ba. Security bldJ. $1250/mo. HVH cuatom 3 Br. Sba "'/pool. Profesalonally decorated. Compt. ocean/bay view. $2500. UDO ISLE. 2 Br, 14'. ba home. Yearly $1200/mo. * •2 MASTERS! oc~·NFRONT Pou1tm•1110 -----caretaker house. Owner am on Aprll 8. 1981. o ....... Yr ..... call No. not 2 bosses but 2 Lft S....... COSTAMISA will carry tloanclng. (oae>2•llbdrmhomea. --•-1.Dl. Aalt WaterlrontHomes.lnc. SUSCASITAS Furn 1 br. apt. $325 & up. Encl. gar. Adult•. no pets. 2110 Newport Bl. 548-4968 btwn 8 & SPM Bach. Apts. Utils . paid. Weekly or Monthly . • McNash Realty 642-1334, 642-6578 eves. Stunning large 1 Br. Garden Apt. Pool & Rec. area. 710 W. 18th. St. HWlllwcJhMw leach 3140 • •••••••••••••••••••••• $375 /up 1·2 bdrm. popl, jac. adlt, 18992 Florida. H.B. 842·2834 or 842·31T2 LGCJ19Mt leoch J7 41 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Studio. tux. s pa,· TV. maid service, phon e. $100/wk . 499.2227 Prof /Sil. 40+. non-s mkr. St. Femat, pool •94-001 LGCJ19Mt HRh 3750 • •••••••••••••••••••••• YEA,.·ROUND AMI: Social Activities Oi· rect"' •Free Sunday Brunch• 880 s •Per• hes• Plus much tnotf OMAT Mc.ATICMtl Tenn11 •Fr" L111~n1 • • (1)10 & pro shop)• 2. ~11th Cluba•Seunal Hydrom1111g1•Swwit- m1ng • or..,.ng Rangt •AUTlf\ll A~· MINTI: S1ngte1. I 6 2 8101oom• • Fur• n11h1d & Unlum1111td • Adult Living •No Ptll separate m amr Bdrms Pen Cilfhb-1071 7 Units. Bread" Buller. S2.~.000 BackbayUnlv. Dr. area. forJ--..Anllf.1-11. Realton 831·1400 that highlight this super ••••••••••••••••••••••• That's what these units Wl\TI tffKONT For Info call: COUNTY =R~.=~CH=O~ .. ~ .. ~~J:O:-:A~Q~U;::IN:;l•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll gorgeous attached home 3 ..... ,.. M.... a re referred too. AP· ltOMI ~ IM. 0, 0 RAN 0 E Gs A IU'I' ~,.. a•...a • Models Open dl1t• 9 to 6 01kwood Garden Apart_. bullt by Warmington . prox. \Al acre. conve· REAL ESTATE R E AL EST A T E 2Br + den view condo. vrr~ 1646 1q f\' and aaklng Wl'nf OCIAM VllW nlent to all storet. 3 2Br. DMSJON (7H ) 831.2550 F~ rent until 3/31. Up-Bayview lie a br, 2'r't ba, only 1..-.s.-. & • lBr. $2501000. Good 17M900 araded. Comm pool. '950,&M-OSM,AS-7• $149,900 ............_ terma. Poulole trade. *bdnn + ..... room, toe •.u ,...,_ NEWPORT HEIGHTS ...__ M N Iii ..... .. '""'-Bii Can""" Townbome IN WOODBRIDGE! CHARMER Over 3,000 aq.ft . o f c as h R e a It y. yrd. ura1e. atove, ...---T......,,G,.,,E,.--:P~A".'"'R=K~l -1 ,,_. ! eleoance. Exclusive new '42·1334, 84.2-U18 evea. When JOU call Clulln.td tt!frta Pmo 1-498-0177 E Ri A I on 1011 count. 2 Br. ~·~ 38d:rm.2Ba. Fam.Rm . ., .. f • ,. OOO .. toplacemad,you'reaa· 3Br, 2"" ba, family rm. Den, 2~ Ba. £xten1lve •-,p' Formal D i n . Rm . uomea.L .rom t1;11, • Ma.e your advertl1ln1 aured of a frtendb ffu•e •BR 3 81 condo. frmld/r. Pool. '750/mo. ltnprovementa. Never •--a.1 o 0 u rm• t k lt ch en . 14""~ ranancln.g av1ll. dollar JO fart.her I Lilt 1 -&40-ll41 " ...... In .. _. .-. 11C41n Fenced. 1-_ tn•--at 1 Charter Rlty • tnvett. your bualnele every day welcome and help n micro. relril. pool. 1p1, uv-...... ,,..,..act, w.-.· Nl·3'M "'""' -·~ 498-tl.22 831411 ln the ClaMU1ed aect'-wor6IC J'O'lf ad t« best ~rm, nr Back Bay. No SELL idle ltema with a bu, '-la; pool, Jacuut ... • u1 ,. .. 1.sni-lest tennll John Va· ---------.,,0 r lh' tt1poue. Call No•l peta. 9850 mo. le111. Dally Pilot Claulfled ls patJo. 8llt available. _n_1_an_C_o_.sn_--0e00 __ . ___ &el\idleitema MM6tt~ H•apaper. ..... n1. .... A41&.f'7S.7114 Ad. SU00mo.1'0-0M9. ' - ---4 Newport ..... /lo. 1700 1911' St tDonr .r 111111 (7") Mt-IUI Newport IMdl/Mi. llO lrf1n• Il l 1tt111 1114> -.uoa ........ •••1 I I .. .. ...................................... ·····~················ ...................... . -~----~ .... l•luta • &oddi.rt Go WeCareCarpetCl .. Mrt &S DESJONS -El ba~ to wan • 1"llrTf Steam t leao 6 upboll C~ Orape7. Wln· 1 .... I Mlont chUdrea Work auar . Trurk do.. LOOO't ol abrtt'I, ....... ..... M1 be~ ln· momt unit "5-3"1UI SS.llM.915 yd, LO day del "lfllofJ ... 11•• •••••••••••••••••••••••• Property Manafemu& Need belpwith reatallf 87S.IB NICU ...... •U.UU. cludal trainlnl ID child ' f'reeell. !Qyn In aru DUMP JOBS J7 a.. ft.I. ra.lillnl. Unlftnlty Park 8\TYt.hN carpet lnataller 6454654 **ATRllJMS** Small Movlna Jobe ....................... . ...................... ' .. ALL ,.•yfouul¥ 1 .,..1am-1pm-.ai34 at whol••le. Ftee fft. Do your lndool'Joutdoor CallMlKENl-1»1 Alllolma.u Pll Also carpets laJd & re-Drywal alrium1 need plantlnl or---------Problemt? I Writ~ any fora paired. .,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• refurbisblnc ! Call 2 YI· rnpoulbl• men risk, lo monthly rates. ~~J •d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ja.y 754-6550 Drywall Speclaliat Newport At r i u m , have 'i(.T 4WD ln.lclt, )'d Plrlrel Ina. Mi&-3995 111 the GEN. CONSTRUCl'ION • Qual. & prod. New & re· $44-08127 tree maln. equip. Can do DAILY AddiUom, Remodela C ..... Acoustic mod. 11389944. 532.5549 anythiot! 960-08tS ht•-~ Uc/lnl.Mark979-441J ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERTLAWNCARE •--'--...;;;..______ HoMtfMllMH PILOf AcousUcCellinas DRYWALL our ex-Monthly service. Trees T ree/shrub trim. con·••••••••••••••••••••••• •VICI •f U fer +custom band texturina pertile. Quality with the & cleanups. 548-2049 c r e t e r e m o v a I , For Ins. purposes. we llllCTOIY ....................... Llc.w.&4. 532.5549 rightprtce.831·2004 '-----'tr-'---c leanups. Free eat. videotape prol). & con· DOITNOWI REMODEL·REPAIRS ---11.1r_,_..._ .,..,....... _......,.~ SST-8271 tMit. Call 640-0100 Video Alll,_.lii• 8 AllloCUltomCablnets _,_..........._ Electrical ....................... Verification Jnter/Ext.er/llellnllbln1. New •~en. Repair celllnp/Wall~per. Lie 1peclall1t/1tay-bu1y . Caln•Som,-.5l05 prlea. lleUable, S43-451Z RALPH'S PAINTING Lie. Int /Ext. Low Rates Fr8 b t. M4-M66 DAVE'S PAINTING Serving area 9 yea rs MOit reasonable Insured, lic'd . 760-7301 QUALITY ROOFJNG All types, free eat. Vlsa, MC. 541·5930 HARBOR ROOFING Leak Repairs , a. Complete Roofin& Jobs. "Raln Or Shine Roof· lng"6'5 4396 Tiie ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd aeneraUon , 17 yn in ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Complete mobile home H~ ----------1 Your Da1'1 PllOt area. Uc'd. Top qual. Foundations. Retaining ELECTRICIAN-priced service, relevels to re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• M4110N"Y Paiotin1: Comm 'I, In· Directory Mr. Palombo, 962-8314. Walls, Hillside Restora· right, free estimate on models. 968-4341 Want a REALLY CLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• dustrlal. Residential. ....... taUve lion Slabs Patios largeors malljobs HOUSE ? Call Gingham BRICKWORK : Small Free Eat. Low rates ~ •est 311 CUSTOM INTERIOR Block & Brick: Lic'd ' Lie. #396621 673-0359 H........ Girl. Free est. 845-5123 J obs. Newport, Costa 673.{1737 Tile installed, ull kinds. guaranteed. refs . John 893.1667 CARPENTRY S42-8387eves. ----••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa, Irvine, Refs. --------- .nnrvr;•PJNG By Jay 842·8809 Top Quabty, Dependable Carpentry, roofing. Expertise housekeeping, 675-3175 QUALITY PAINTERS ·-------~ -=-Wide.. Service. Reas. Rates. l8 masonry, plumbing, equip & s upp Ii es __ ;__ _______ 1 Bargain rates lhru4/8 Tre. s.r.Jce aTAX SERvtCE ustom Cablnm & Bars ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs experience. 531-5055 stucco, drywall, etc. furnished, trustworthy & EXPERT Brick & Free est. 848-5684 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R•.rat.et. 496-0913 Ii Finishing, Garage UC.CIDLDCARE -646-9990 depG4l·4!1'70 Ma&Ont)'. Small jobs & ExpertTreeTnmmer .u ... , • BUSINESS UnJta MS-6521 My Corona del Mar Electrician Sm Jobs. repairs. Frplc facings. Plcntw ,Jltepafr Ten years experience .... ~ rvi ~ t-lce home 673-2945 maint. & repairs Lie. ,Carpentry, plumbing & Tender Loving Cleaning Refs. 551-4555, 7~7074 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 545-1865. 751·2128 "14 -.°"•I se ces, reaa. -r" _...,. #2331()8..ClO. 548·5203 electrical. Llc. contrac· by Starr We give you Neat patches & textures fft.la,&68-4171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $31 .9"CK tor.Gene,642-8537. the kind or service the MASONRY and remodel· frft..t. 893-1439 Tree/shrub tnm. remov, .._..,. ampoo & steam clean. ELECTRICAL and re· Id h r ing. Quality with the ----~---dnups. haul Concrete, ::r.::: ................ Color brighteners, wht Hot lunch .. M. Chris· modelmg Quality with Carpentry /Handyman wor as orgotteo. best price 631·2004 ~ dirt.etc.Jim631·4S30 Driveways, parking lot crpts 10 min. bleach. tian Preschool. 646·5423 the best pnce 631·2004 Drywall. painting. patio ~:~r:x:t ~~:37i~1~ -~--------... •••••••••••••••••••••• repairs. sealc:oatlng. Hall, liv.-din. rms $15: COfthodor -.-. ---covers. Your specifica-,,.2 ,,1•9. Mo•lng Holleman Plumbing WhtdowCIHniftcJ SU Asphalt. 646-4871 avg nn $7.SO; couch SIO; ••••••••••••••••••••••• Electrician ~ual work. tions. 753-0899 ""' ..,, .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales-Service·Repairs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ltc'd. chr ss. Guar. elim. pet Construction-All types reas. rates. No job too Will clean your house. Student will move you al Free estimates SS2·7183 "Let The Sunshine In " -.----------• odor. Cr-pt repair. 15 yrs 20 yrs exp. Free est. s ma 11 ' Free e s l Houtwood Roon ap(, or office and leave it re as. rates . 752· 1493, 1----Call Sunshine Window I exp. Do work m yself. Lie. #334S89. 645.5973 646-1050. ••••••••••••••••••••••• E R f 848·m7 or847·3309 roper+, ManOC)ftftettt Cleaning, Ltd. 548-8853 ··~•••••••••••••••••••• Refs. 531·0101 HARDWOOD FLOORS DAISY FR SH. e 5· •••••••••••••••••••••• Bab11lttlng in my home,•---------R -Gcw d11~ Cleaned & Waxed 675-2839 PalnttncJJPaperin9 Prof. service to save you People who need People 1 yr as N v · rt ESIDENTIAL & Com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• An · 832 4881 SA ••••••••••••••••••••••• lime & money Newport That's what the up. r tcto a. Malte your s hopping m ercial remodel1'ng . ytime. ·· · · ROBIN'SCLEANING D IL PfLOT CMe&z-8482 •VERY LOW PRICES• Se . th hi Fine ext/int painting by PacificR.E 645·3683 A Y ~ easier by using the Daily Quality with the best Landscape malnt·Clnups Find what you want in rv1ce a oroug y Richard Sinor. Lie. ins. SERVICE DIRECTORY Cl~ Ads 64;!·5678 Pilot Clasailled Ads. price. 631-2004 George. 549 2015 Daily Pilot Classifieds. clean house. 540-0857 Try me. 631.4410 <24 hrs) Want Ads Call 642-5678 is all about! --- A;.thuw11t1 Fw.ashed Apa hM't'th URfwll. Apcat1M11ts u..fum. Aporbne11ts Unfunt. Aparhne11b UnfunL ROCMM 4000 R...tatsto Share 4300 Office Rl'fttal 4400 8usiness Retttat 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Mt.._. lffch 3769 Coato MHa 3824 osta Mna 3824 HunllitiCJhwi leach 3840 Newport hach 3869 Laguna Beach Motor Inn. ••••l•~~~•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 985 No Pacific Coast Fabulous. Wkly ; Easter, Quiet l Br 1 Ba. New 2 br, l ba.,1 sty. gar, lge. THEWHIFFlETREE Hwy, Laguna Beach Sutnmer, Now. 2·4 Br. crpts & drps. Good clean. nice decor. no Luxury Adult units at af. YEARLY. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Daily, Weekly. Kitchen Prlmeloc.673-7873 Eastside loc. Mature ~ts. $400. 21788 Placen fordable living 1 2 & 3 Steps to ocean. Sl695 per available. Lo"" winter Lu1ury Oceanfront Weekly. 2or3 Br. Comp. furn. in cld linens 64CM7M. ·==.d Adult.sonly $32.5.l47E taa.545-7983 Rr Well d eco ~ated _moBkr.645-3683 rates.494·5294. 18th. St #4, C.M. Olymp1l' size pool, haht I, 3 Br 2 Ba . 1 n ~ 1 1 Br Stove, carpets & " ' drapes. No children or ed tennis court Jacuzzi. stove/refrig. yrly rental pets. DlO mo. 646.4382 park hke landscaping. $675 imo Agt 673.JJSS Most beautiful bldg in ----·---- H B Verasailles 1Br/stud10 From S360 846-0619 penlhse condo. adlls.no Corona del Mar sunny room & ba w/laundry facil. $275 Ask for Faye. 64().9900 M IF shr lge 2br house. CdM. l Blk beac h $250/mo incl utils 675-5020. Professional Ma le to s hare Park Newport T o wnhous e . N B Amenities. spa. jacuui, tennis. racquet ball. Call A n s wer Ad #409 . 642·UIO. 24 hrs ....................... 3102 2Br. IYzBa. w/gar Adlts. cpts, drps. bltns. fncd yd, water pd. 636-4120. 667 Victoria St. $HS 2619 ''J " Santa Ana Ave. $410 INSTANT IN Eastside 2 Br 1 Ba Apt Pool, laundry rm Small WOODLAKE APTS . 846-6591 pets. $4.SO mo + 1st-last + sec dep 645·3447 . 4bdrm house. residential area. Mission Viejo lbdnnforrenl.$2l7 /mo. Resp Ma ture Empl * DB.UXE OFFICES• From l room up to 2300 sq. ft. S1 08 per sq. rt J rooms and up. No lease required 2172 DuPont Dr Adj Airport.er Hotel 83J.3223 9-12 NEWPORT CENTER Full Service Suites SCUTCOSTSS All you need for one monthly ree 1 640-5470 For store & office space at reasonable rates. 500 to 2700 Sq Ft. MESA VERDE DR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M 545-4123 PrilM l.ocation ••••••••••••••••••••••• AnMTS FOi REHT H.B .. N.B., Costa Mesa Something for Everyone Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. Apts. Certain locations o ffe r : Pool . s pa . flrtplace. laun. room. b eamed ceiling s. garages. all built-ins. Garden & Townhouse tMe81iBJHt child OK. TSLMgmt 642-IUOJ 979-5370Jim M /F 77().2163 women to shr 2bd nr Adult luxury I & 2 & J OCC S200+979·5897 o r Now available ldcul 1270 Sq rt on bU!ly Beach Boulevard Huntington Beach Ideal for real estate office. store or other suitable business 2 Pn"ate baths . availa· ble 1mmed1ately 10 Vear lease Attractively pru•ed detitp\. TSLMGMT. . . ...... 642-1003 3806 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1625. 2 Br, modem. patio a. garage. 227 Coral 213!a-351l BAYFRONT 2br . Iba. 1231,A, E Bayfront $595 /y rl y Nanc y < 213 >m-45 u • .. ..... ,. 3107 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br. Apt. Close to beach & Balboa Ferry. Yearly rental. S365 . Call 675-8806. C.Wllrmo 8HCh 3818 •• ;i~ •••••••••••••••••• Guest hse studio. full kltch, yard, avail 3/20. $320. 661-6747 C.,_delMar 3822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice vtew. 3bdrm, 2ba. 2 sundecks, frplc. beams, no r>ets. Richard 640-1850 dys: 64G-7072eves. Spacious 1 Br w/garage. laundry facil. S.S2S Ask for Faye. 64().9900 Avail. April lst. 2 Br 2 Ba. with sundeck. Close to beach. No pets. S700 mo.117s.-Ol.2A Jackie. 2 Bdrm. 1 Ba. deck. carport. adults, no pets. Lse SS30. 644·6382 or 67S-0473 3824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Z Ir. I la Apt Ne•ly decor. Gas pd, enc l gar , pool . d /washer. Adults. &C-5073 31rToMlh-._. N9'rly decor. gas pd .. e ncl gar .. p ool . d /waaher. Adults . 84No'73 YDECC>a. 1 Ir. au pd, encl gar, d/ftU,ber, pool. Adults. Mt-Jor3 Srlcioua 3 Br Duplex M 0. Poo1 fi laundry fac. 1556from 12·7PM. Near new Zbdrm, 2ba. ff'llllr. laundry fac. new ~. drpe Ir paint. Encl 1~. $4'75. Adults, no ...... f'7S..Z113. 494-5758 APARTMENTS 2 b r . S 3 8 0 o; t o ' l' . refr igerator . pool Beautifully lands.caped adults. 00 pets 423 w garden apts. Patios or Bay548-9516 decks. Pool & spa. Heat __ paid, covered parking. Jbr . $340 utll p';nd . Adults. no pets. 1 or 2 carport. adults. no pets persons OK. 383 W. Bay 548-9516 1 Bdrm $390-$400 ----- 2250Vanguard Way E. Side triplex Jbr. 2ba. S4().9626orS48-2408 immed occup no pets EASTSIDE $550 /mo incl ut1I 851-9647 3 Br l'h Ba . Townhouse. --------- No pets." S495. 127 21st. Westside Duplex Apt St. Days 646-4262, Eves Upstairs. 2 Br. I Ba 645-9543. Refrige.. stove. enclsd ... * * Ro.t Plotfoot 890W Wilson Costa Mesa You are the wanner or 4 hetfckets (SJ2 value). to Circus Varqas , Mar 17th, 8PM at Montgomery Ward gar No pets or small children S390 770-5629 $225. util. pd.. I bdrm. patio. adults , quiet Avail Apnl Isl 644-6958 Lovely garden apt Lrg 3Br. 2Ba. frpk, bit ins Call da y 631·4402 night: 760-0734 4a> Fwy at Bristol $395. 2 BR . gar. Isl. last Costa Mesa + SlOO. 132 E Bay St Cal.I 642-567~. ext. 272 to 541.5331. 646.2325 · claim your tickets · ~~* __ ,_'_Super Back Bay 3bdrm Condo All new + EASTSIDE fireplace & wood floor Country Woods ing. enclsd ~araj.!e~ 2 Br. & Study, lri·level. $695. 642·6100 fi replace. skylight. deck. No children or 2 Bdrm W/patio. garage. pets. ~. 180 E.21st. St. Child OK F: side. $425 Days 646-4262 . Eves Isl & last 64S-1387 645-9543. ---Sunny 2 Br upstairs apt 2 br. ,.,., ba, W. side. $425 E'side. Gar. deck. laund + sec. dep. No pets . rm. no pets. $450 /mo 645-cm9 Avail Apr I. 631 1094 2Br,l \.'J Ba.2 Br2v.r Ba.2 Br 2ba lg co nd o Frplc, dishwasher. laun· w /bltins. encl J(ar Isl & dry facilities, carports. I a s t de p $4 9 5 m o 548-0967 aft 4. 832·52162 wkdys art S or l Br Stove & refrige. anytime wknds Small yard Adult. no WESTRAY APTS large pets. $315 548·1377 2 Br. 2 Ba. S480·S485 New garden apts. patios. spa. Adults. no ~ts 398 W Wilson. 631 5583 Bdrm Beautiful lakes & Sunny upper w 1patio 2 Room with kitchen pr1v 54().3233 location ror Attorney. s treams Comple te Br 2 ba. S585 /mo Near bus & shopping Real Estate or F.n a ml•n1t1es No pets Dshwshr. no pets. 789 center. 962·7520 art 6PM Pro. woman needs M /F trepreneur in beautiful fo'rom $38.'i Amigos Way. 644·0685 or or wknds. to shr 2br hse CdM $25-0. I Y main ta In e d r u 11 642-432 I. ext 286 Weekdays Mariners Walk Apts. 631·2029 ----64().2S74 aft 5pm. se rvice bu i Id 1 n R ---------Hotels, Mohh 4100 G tComer Westcliff Dr & Lrg 3 Br. Apt. Fireplace. Westcliff adult condo. 2 ....................... °'tor:f:-. 4350 Irvine Newport Beach l. SUBLEASE washer dryer hook up. bedrooms. 2 baths. Din· Balboa Inn oceanfront. CTn Patio, dbl car garage. ing room. Fireplace. Low winter rates. Daily ·~··••••••••••••••••••• SOO sq. ft. Call Melissa ChildrenOK.S.S75 NrH Freshly decorated. Un· or weekly. Kitchenette. Single Car Gar for _645·6101. OHice & warehouse 1n The Esplenade. Redhill nr Bristol. 1·4 yr lse 4 of- f 1 ces. rer('pl area , warehouse w lge s hdtn~ door. full sec svstem all new crpts & pnt 2500 s q ft Ava il after J l25/81 Call after IOam lfarbour840S623. f ..,,,,.. 63 7300 S90&up.67S-8740. storage purposes only. 2""E.17thSt urn. _.,.., mo. 1· . C M -."/mo 645 2679 ""' Bk · · _., · -· · Cost a M es a s u 1 t e s 3 Bdrm apt 4 blks to __ r.________ 646-5506eves beach . New c pt . S£A LARK ---------- -JS0.900 sq ft from 75' All $425+ S2SO dep will move Newport Heig}\ts Duplex Gar. space. storage only amenities Call Terry you in. C/21Surf536-7542 2 Br. 1 Ba. Adults, no MOTEL $35 /mo. 360 Victoria. Cressman SS4·9000 peu. $495. Mo. 1st. last C.M. 631 -2177 1>44.6500 2 Bdrm. 2 ba apt. frplc. deposit. 517 Bolsa. Days •Weekly rentals now encl garage $455 Agt 631-3520, Eves Wknds avail. • $98 and up 960 4614 or 848·2780 548-SOU. •Color TV * Phones in rooms. 2 & 3 B e d ro o m s 2bdnn townhouse. SS50 & 2274 Newport Blvd C M $4()().S4SO Kids OK. no S62S Adults no pets. 1409 ~7445. pets please Wate r / Superior 645·8684. acoHo.---...... 4250 Trash Paid Carport 964 2566or97J.2971 Agt . Across from beach. 2 br. no ree adults only, pool. gar. $450. 64().5078 New plu.'lh 2br, 2ba apts 2.245sq ft F.xtras 5041 Dumbar St 846 9.'iOI 3 br. 2 ba. frpk. yd. j?ar 7851 Garfield S525 848·23:16. 968 6692 SUPEltl VIEW Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. over- 1 ook in g Bac k Bay Loads o f closets . fireplace. 2 carports. 2 balronys. 745 Domingo Dr. Call before SPM SS75 l~autiful 3 Br 211 $745. 979-8889or645·1260. Ra Owners unit Built--ins & indoor garden Nee d qui ck sub ·lse' Near Hunt ll a rbour Prime location. l Bdrm. 47!\2 Pcarn• St lfurr" • 1 ba. Amenities. S600 no Won 't last • dep. 6 mos. lse. 673-8432 G~min1 Rily 531 2200 2 Bdrm. 2 ba. cpl~. drps, d w, end !(ar, beach & 5 Points area $4!\0 1m o 842 8032 LCICJWMI Hills 3850 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nwpt Island waterfront. dlx upper dplx. 3 br. 2 ba, frplc, sundeck, slip avail. Mature cpl pref. No pets . $850. yrly 675-7672 IESTVALUE Versailles corner pen- thou_,e 2 Br 2 Ba. comm pool, jac.. wgt room $700/mo. 675-3787 Leasure World Lease 2br. 2ba. Villa Nueva on hill, gat e 14. s pectacular view, no pets, no s mok- ing S2 or older $575/m o Westcliff area 1 Br. Up- --per. S395. Ul1ls. incld. (7141551 0788 Missioft Vi~ 3867 Fireplace. 642-6097. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm, 2ba condo on North Shore of Tahoe Fully furn 5/min from North Star. $400 /wkly 95 7 ·32216. 530-3946 Be rt Big Bear. close to slopes. sips 8. frplc. $45/day, $175 /wkly 546·0116 art 6pm. Large Big Bear Cabin Pool table, color TV. 2 frplcs. sips 14 545-6916 Will trade 2 wks in lovely home, Sno Summit. Big Bear Lake. for 2 wks in beach hse during sum· mer. (2131988 4300 Mammoth luxury condo. sips 4-8, 9-day Easter Speci al. 830-9352 . 837-7553 ---.....toShcwe 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving? A void deposits & cut living expenses' Professionally s ince 1971. HOUSIMATES 832-4134 4400 ....................... Elegant prof bldg an H.B. 8S< per sq ft. lse. Red Carpet. 893-1351 1Sl7 Westclirr N B. Want financial inst. 7000s r. tst floor. Agent 541 -5032 KOLL CENTER NEWPORT Ele1tant executive suites in pres tige location. With complete support services. 714/851·0681 KOLLCEMTER NEWPORT Elegant executive suites in prestige loca t ion With complete support servic«:S 714/851 -0681 BEST RATE in NEWPORT BEACH 60010 4200Sq F1 •Janitorial Service & Utilities Included •Adjacent to Airport & Restaurant Row •Access to 3 M a1or Fwys. 833-8813 WESTCLIFF AREA Exec uti ve s uite ~ ground fl oo r loc Secretarial bookkl'e p 1ng serv avail Call for m o re det a1li. 1714 >631-3651. Westside 2Br 2ba corner home. lg yrd w attach s tore, zoned ror bus1 ness Com pl reno" ated $750. 548 1905 d ys 751·2340ev N B. Z700 sq ft fully 1m Commerciat proved space. St S1sq ft Rlfttak 4475 pleasantly divided into 8 ••••••••••••••• ••••• ••• offices. 2 sec'y areas. + Store Space for lease. conference room For m 1500 sq. rt & 1260 sq ft formation644·6580 10 Huntington Beach Flex ible t erms . 2131596-7202 EXEC OFFICE SPAC E Newport, 1675 sq ft lor morel. full service , 3700 sq rt deluxe ~round nr.. ample prkg. showroom & warehouse avail 3/16 . SI.JO/ft Seetoapprec.631·4402. Terms neJ!otiable. To - see, call 975·0403 wkdys 4,000 sq ft for lse. s~orage C rt l b k work area. potential or-ou esy 0 ro ers r 1 c e s e t · u p W i I I 545 SQ.FT. negotiate good lse. 17th St . Costa Mesa 3 Harbor & Warner. S.A. room suite. $450 mo. 546-3700 Realonomics 675-6700 l1tdustri-;., Retttat-4500 CdM Deluxe Suites. AC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ampl pkg, util pd 2855 ~up 1640' lndus'l/Of· F. Cst Hwy 675·6900 f1ce 18101 Redondo Cr "P" Hunt Bch. 842-2834 Suite avail. approx 1100 sq ft. Newport Arches Marina Bldg 642 4644 Offices. 300·800 sq ft Street level, sky htes. nr Laguna C ity Hall 494·5688. MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK 711 W. 17th. St. 2 HUGE Bedrooms in super location. Fully ca rpeted, built-ins. ground floor Adults, no pets. S350 mo. Apply Apt E 568 W. Wilson . 646-4477. 2 Br. l Ba. $46.'i Finisterre Condo 2 Br 2 161 E. 18th. 642-0856 Ba $650 No pets. s ....... Caplatr-.o 3878 Male 4G-4S shr 5br, 2ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• hse. C.M. Spa. Nr SC Condo. lBr. frplc. encl. Plaza• Frwy. S200. Shr Luxurious, full service of- fice space. 1·6 rms. con- ference room, sec' I services . Newport Beach, Call for inro· 752-6188 2300 str low cost . r.ewly dee. Costa Mesa. Costa ~sa. Calif . 642-4463 2 Br. Gar. Child/Pel OK. $485. Ask for Mike. 641-0763 3bdrm, 1 'h ba, $450/mo. 795 Shalamar. Call Ron at 522·1734 or Noa at 642·7919. Wenfield FAMILY APTS. Brand new beautiful lrg apt, for families with 1 or 2 children. Near park . Heat paid. No pets . 3Br. 2 Ba. SS60 398 W. Wilson. 631-5583 --------1Dana Point 3826 Newer, cl08e to beach. lrg •••••••••••••••••••• ••• 2 Br w/frpl. lrg garage. vacant. $490/mo. Isl & balcony. $495, 1st. last last. DlO sec. Frplc. bit· + $100dep. 631-7900 ins. No dogs. 542.3597 751·4330 3 Br l1h Ba. Condo S.S2.S gar. Water & gas paid. 1_u_u_1s_._64_1_-49_1_a. ____ -1 mo. No pets No pets: $425. 775·2114 7.'il·4330 -----2 Br. l Ba. Condo. Quiet, N•wport leach 3869 private, nice view. $450 • • • •••••• •••• • • • • • •• • • • mo. 496--2109 aft 5. PARK NEWPORT COUMTIY CLUI UVIHG Singles. 1&2 bedroom apts, & townhouses. 3880 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 1 ba, near So. Cst Plaza. Security gate. pool. 1 child o«. No pets. $42Smo. 752·7474. •~U•lacJ* Cowwelons to penonally select your compatible rmmte to suit you r lifestyle. Shared·LMna. 833 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB 631-1901 Fem wanted to shr home w /same nr OCC . $225 /mo. R efs req. 540-0808. FromM29 644-1900 ----------McFadden /Standard 2 •----------l Oceanfront for Winter Bdnn. 1~ Ba. 2 Kida Share nJce HB home, • 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo nr SC 2 Br. 1 Ba. wilh refrige.. Rentals Furnished a. OK, no pets please. quiet nei1bbol'hood, nr Plaza, SA. Pool. SSOO. built-ins. ca rpets & unfum. Broker.675·4912. Water paid. Pool. bcb, w/jacuui. $195 mo. Child OK. 549·3232 or drapes. $410. 951·0881 or Carport. $395. 964-2S86 or 8'8-515'1 eves. · 841-1480. 951·7630. Ask for Louie NO FEE! Apt. & Condo Secludedl! Br. l Ba. patio 33801 Mariana. rentals. Villa Rentals. t7S-l!l"1. Agt .. nofee. Workini Male 25--35 all 675-4912 Broker $CMllltt L..,.... 3116 p r I v . a v a l I . home with comm. pool. 3 br. 2 ba. ya.rd. gar. wet ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• ldtcben/lndry, etc. faml· •2® sq rt warehouse 200t09SOSq ft, pre· avail for immed OC· cupancy. •2780 sq ft sUglous bldgs, freeway warehouse avail late close. Feb. •2·1800 sq. ft. units Right RHlty avail early March. •33< 450 sq. fl. Delightful 979-1533 sq. ft. •Leasing office working s pace with !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I hni. Mon. thru Fri. 8-4. ocean view. Full bath. 3 Sat. 1().2. ·-----~-~--yr old bldg. $450 mo. 1..-.1 ltetttal 4450 Mt Irvine 50 ooo sq rt Turner Assocs .. 494· 1177 · •••••••••••••••• ••••••• fenced, gas diesel tanks, PRIME WATERFRONT RETAIL SPACE modern s hop/offices 551·3008 ..-.ij'IR•est/ All•c• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ......... Opp I ,....., 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *** ca.m1ro ... 2019·Anabein St. "" Adulta only, no pets. bar a. more. '600 mo. 2 br, lt,A, ba + gar. Hoag I •· ••-all lar•e 1 Bdrm. Avail ~13--11. ISOO per Call493--6384.661·9343 Hosp area, nu decor. Oceanfront studio apt !a!'~':iioi: Ll:o;~ pt •p I ,._ mo. 2453 Orange Ave. open hse Sat & Sun 11-3, with patio, overloo«inl 1st TIME AVAILABLE 500-2600 Sq. Ft. Costa Mesa You are the 'trinner of • • 00 •rec. ManagerApt.2. Hull d IHclt 3140 423• Hiiaria Wa y, pvt beach. SSSO/mo utll ~mlllOO/mo. itW.110W.18lh. St. • " incl. a.2253or..,..5021. 1----------t NEWBREEDAPTS. ~/mo.830--5875 Roommate wanted, 3 "a.c~-=~~ I Bdrm • Bach rrom 2 Br. 2 Ba. Penthouse At;=~~O ::.';,!.:=.~.'= Shlrley and boy want ~ share home by beach. Call .. m~pm. 5.57-11112 =~ Newport Beach Sl15 Apt. w/oc vu. S'700 /mo ........................ M/F.548-... . "'1f. 21 unit com· Frplc, rec room, pool, Mo lo Mo. 714/824-1325 S E _. W I ~ D ,.. wttb tennil court, he: 11111 . enc loa ed • "2 811 Patio AIMt Eves. "' " DOii 1pe. '1000 per. mo. aaraiet. Gas • water • Ott11wn11trs ' 880 s •·S_p_a_ct-o-ua_a_bd_r_m_c_o_n_d_o VILLA6E (:.iJiWbaMJ..toa. pd. Adult.I. DO peg. 393 • Pool Ute Aoo111 HamUton, C.11. ~11. ~ 6,, .. L•nOScap•AQ 2~ ba. Quiet loc. New 162 bdrm luxur)" ~~~.:-:f I br. crpt, dralJ. blt·lnl. • JoO to .. ~' SllOP' S:S\·l:.~:..,... ;::: ::. 2 In~~!!: ":~~:::..'!'at ':rt. ~b: It • t r l • i • r t I s» 1 AduMa. -· 2:112. 11 a pie. Tst-9100 1505 + pools, tehnft. , cpt/draJ* nr Bch H.B • ...,._1 Detlt Pilot Al..., . waterfalls. pondll Gas '200511-lHO =rz l'W ~To,-. Lie ar. b , aar. ram. ~=~t':,~ ~nbd .. c;:~:~~ ~~ :.0 ~~;~ •·,.-,-m-rm_m_t.e_z._•_to-ab-r-l MD'• ladl. In KB. 2, M.ail'°""u4 phl.l4*1:1CamlnofD. '500.ITJ.2111 P'rwy drive North on abr home ID Irv . ICl.ft. R.edueecHo • 0 'W Ad-VIiar •. 111·5G51 (Mpml Beach to Mc: Fadden SIOO/mO. Call a.a..a.ue mo. lat. Bed Carpet,· ,_. l br, 1 ti.. frplc, DW, encl. 2br, lbe. fr-pie. Newport then West on llcFaddto a:JNpn MaacJ -.1111 • tl!" a;.a.;; 1ar. Nr Hunt. Harbor. Hilt. 915/mo. to Seawtnd Vlll•I•· ---------.1 • ,_ lan, 841-1111. 1'7J.OMt CTl4)9Wlll. Cl...an.d Adi ea.-ni Want Ad it.ult.a -...,. NEWPORT BEACH SPECIALTY COOEI S,.llllLMI ... tnnM•HMew 1714N7M6H l--~ if ..... ..,.,,. .... • .... • • .... ................. -··,.. . -.. .. - ~- ------- 4freetkDta (132 value), to c1raav .... Mar. l'7tb,8P11 at Mool(OmttJ Ward a Fwy. atBriswl CoetaMeH CaU 642-5818. e:itt. 2'72 to claim your tlc~et.a. *** ft for f urthr lnfonttafion • Nt•nli'*I acl•erfiain1 " lacement in flte Sdtools & lasfrvdions Directory .. coll Louise Griffiflt, • " 642-5678 ext 322 .. Tap,laltt,Jaa. t D•cerclse, A..-obk, lalll OCMftt ''Country & West.n.. Hawaii• & laton (U ,, I ' Dorothy Jo Dance Studio 2515 E. Ct!. Hwy, CdM Doroltty Jo •-• 2411 E. Cd. Hwy, CdM MatalH Foulapi 673-3420 ,. .... *2li PILOT TRAINEES Earn your wings down under in friendly Australia. Exceptional training. reasonable cost. enjoyable visit Call Bill Hawkins. 957-8317 aft 7p.m. lnvfthnent Lost & Found 5 300 CREA tlYE COLOR Peclflc• ... ...,... ... C.tor c .......... . ...... ""--... .. celar llt co-'k1 a werdrolt• for tlle .......... c .. 645-1301 fwlafo . JOLEE MILLER VO{ AL TRAININC DICTION as openings for students of all ages a nd lev e l s. Graduate Westminster C h oir Coll ege Princeton, N.J. ' 546-6985 PRIVATE TUTORING Special education Speciali st provides individualized instruction & counseling for exceptional children and their families. $10 per Ir. 673-8432 • Slit ••irmaat lr .. aal OIUNCI COU/'#rTS OL.0151 A '1Nl51 /'alYATI SCHOOL GrodesK -8 tsu w. 111.we. A"*'-i ""-n•. aou MATH TUTOR For hi gh school & jr. high students in Trigo]lometry, Algebra, Geometry and general math. JANE -760-8628 eves. (714 ) 826·5110 ext. 256 days. Tile Private school dedicated to Academic Acn1evemen1 Tr~ditiOIW 3 R's Smaft Classes Soood Study Habit' GrHeiK-8 Transportation • Extended Day 121 Soul'1 Citton. N1lhetm (714) IS-Tm SPECIAL LEARNING DISORDERS • DIAGNOSTIC TESTING AND EVALUATION • INDIVIDUALIZED ACADEMIC INSTRUCTION • EDUCATIONAL COUNSELING • PERCEPTUAL TRAINING • SPEECH & LANGUAGE THERAPY WITH PSYCHOL.OGICAL SUPPORT SERVICES llCEllSU PSYCHOLOGISTS & CIEOCllTIALE.O rUCHERS GLADYS E. SIMMONS · P.H.O. DIRECTOR THNSPORUTION PROVIDED .HAMPUS RCTAll CllRllS & OIHfR lNSURANfC PLAHS ACCCPTCO 544-0556 17 772 IRVINE vene vance Cen ef' • BALLET •TAP • JAZZ • MODERN DANCE •CHILDREN • TEENS • ADULT'S How llei)llterittlJ for Classes 6WeetiSetf-def- Cle1ae1forw- "" ,.,...._ .... llw:tt:!t:; .._ .. Ne! W ol 8tOOl<llv<tl "9.i 10 S•on"Y-.,,. -962-5440- Opportunity 5 0 I 5 •••• •• •• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost & Found 5300 Persoftak 5350 Help W-.hd 7100 Jobs Wanted, 7075 Help Wanhd 7100 Help Wanted 7100 LOAN $)(X) or more Ohl • • • ••••••• •• • •• ••• •• •• • •••••••••• •••• ••• • • • ••• •••••••••••••••••• •• • •• ••• ••••••••••••••• • •• •• •• ••••••••••••• ••• • •• •• ••• ••••••••••• • •• • •• • • • yoftt mone~ Loan 1s Lost Blk Lab Fem 6S found . Small lnsh Settet •PACIFIC* Companion. Professional ASSEMIL S secured by unpreredent FOUND ADS lbs. 1 yr old "Shadow ·· near Victoria & Placen· Health Practitioner. BANKING ed ll>t in film financin~ Vic Heil /Newlanll. HB tiaC M.6'5·7292 •ESCORTS• Mature woman avail ~~~ M~:~~~b~~~;o ,;~2 h1slorv 714-9574086 ARE FREE 847 6365 Famil y -----549-1519EXT.7tl5 part.time. Call 631·9112 yrs. exp. Candidates Immediate openings for l . b heartbroken. reward Found Male yellow LAB Just Opened Z4hrs 6-8pm must hav• gd. manual the following positions nique us ml'">"> oppty C II d V B h d /B NOW HtRING "' SSK·S20K nec·ded un 3 : og. IC us ar an· Back office Nurse LVN dexterity, gd. eyesight. secured. lo" r1i.k. h1~h 6 .. 2 5678 Found green Parakeet. ning, HB. 964·1940 seeks full time employ neat in appearance & de· .. • Hrookhurst 1Adams . ATLAMT1SMASSAGE ment In NB & CM pendable.Work1's 1·n11·fe return If vou like to 'I B cc7 o,.,,1 646 3081 Found 14 Kt gold watch or•& .,a-.le w t.hn odds in ~ "" ·ov• • ~-support medical elec· " ,.,...,, .. r---------1 Nr Irvine Ave, NB Call Be pampered by 16 67~1706 t ronics. Gd. benerits . vour ravor call \11k1• Found M Golden Rel to identify 646·7069 Lost Cat. It 11rn.v, blun · Beaut. Girls . Open Manicuris t wants to On l y responsible (21318586969 "" • cross dog. v1c Jam P M d eyes pt s1amesc Irv. borl't' Rd. N R S4S·99S8. Found · Small Yorkshire 10AM·4 1 sys specialize in pedicures persons seeking perms· 5020 ...••.................. Introductory Offer 7 5 pLc; comm1l>wm on all 2nd TD '-; $10,0(X) ~0.000 I & 2 \ r I 0 Limited offrr C~ll Liberty lloml" Loan. & Investments 661 q34J WaDL ln\estor for prim<' ' _JSupurt oceanfront pro -per;l.y G1vt" '>'ell ..,rcurt'd 2nd TD PP 673 7677 MortlpJes, Trust DffdS 5035 ..•..•................. Sattler Mtq. Co. •\II types or real estate' 1nve!>Lments s1n<"e 1949 S~clall1in9 in 2ndTDs 64~·2171 545-061 I Widow has money for 2NJ) TD 'i; any Sil<' a~ve $10.000 No <"redit I 'ho pnlty For al·t10n c ~·11 AG T 6 7 3 7 3 I I arlttime W a I n u t s q u a r I.' 540 1761 Terner type male dog Phone64S-3433 evenings 546·7462 nent emplymt. need ap· R N h S & R··"'I d ply. Call. Mrs. Parelli. t-:WAIW 1!34 SS2R r. lSt l =ans. TOUCH A CLASS Help Wanted 7100 S81-3Dl SS2·5ffi5 SCRAM-LETS S48·Z722 ESCORTS 752·0817 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~I Help me r111rt Brantly ANSWERS FOUND Fem. Siberian 2•2vr old llH·r & '>'ht Husky. VI(' or Canyon & ~erman short hJ1rc•rl Pansh Glove Victoria , CM 3 7 po 1 n t er Va(' 1n1 t v Youn~ Behind S48·7Sl9 Wallal'I' & 19th s t ISYOU nt-:WARI> Ma l' 548 li2fil! I gave up woodwork1n~ FOUND Small Green orR33-l\4JOr\'C when I found out the Parrot v1<" Ralboa "ood JUSt lie!> there The Island 673 0191 THE Girffriends •ESCORTS• Home /Office jHotel * 759-1216 * Accounting Af'CLEalC Excell career oppty Exper nee. for Fashion Island investment firm M ed1ca 1 tdenta I benefits fully paid Computer ex· per. Call: 640...0123 ASSIST MANAGER Auto renlal No exper necessary Call 979·8826 or 772·6550. AUTO RENTAL AGT No exper necessary. Call 979-8826 or 772·6550. t.m.t lri-.h S<>tter ~1 mix 5 mos olrl. ,!!Olden red " white on l'hest \'l' rv fr1endh $100 RF:WARn for return 5411 0294 642 •\TIO ont.' who does the work in~ IS YOU FOUND · Brwn /Wht l~e Rabbit. vir Mariners 24Hrs Now Hiring ~~!!!!!!!!!!~~I Attendant. p rr. to help MC Visa with the morning care of Lost Mair 7mu o ld Golden Retriever Near Newport Pi e r Red 'blondr & rnrl<'Y RF.WARO ir round 675-4358 or 675 2244 Lost $100 Reward Small black & brown do!{. male.842 2156 I.OST· Oo1c lg blk female w wht on chest & paws. red collar. 496·3265 Found hltle white male School do~ Westminster Spr inl{dale 893-8356 round address book . Sea View Ave. CdM 673-5733 642·1055 ADVHTISIMG AM BER formerly with Acd. Coorchator Found Germ an COVER GIRL is now Immediate opening for Shepherd 1Golden w i t h T H E agency exper 'd Retriever mix !Omo GIRLFRIENDS' coordinator with gd H B Brookhurs t managerial /organiza. Adams. 968-1483 • • tional skills. Industrial Found Malamute, silver SPIRITUAL or trade accounts back· & white remale. Wiry Pe"°"41b 5350 READINGS ground preferred Call Terner mix. tan female ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOam·lOpm Fully L1c'd f'n!ddi at 714.730-0355 Shepherd Lab. bl~<"k PRE LAW student needs 492·7296 or 492.9034 1815 ~~~~~~!!~~ male Pointer mix , $25,000 Will do anything S Camino Real, Sanl= blark & white remale Legal. Confid entiai Clem Alarms Winning team. <:olden Retriever. DVM P.O. Box 3242, -Experienced personnel remale Hound mix. N.B. 921663. LOST Reward $100 Sml required by Orange black & tan female blk cat. fem. Requires County Security Con. Corker. brown male. COVER GIRL medication548-6539 tracting F irm . Low Newport Beach Animal ,. OUTCALL * * * * * * volt.age & electrical ex· handi capped man S4S·4522. Babysitter wanted 3pm lo 7pm. S days. 2 girls m our Woodbridge home. 752·Sll l days: SS J.1506 eves, Laurie IAIYSITTER FullUme. I infant Sep. liv. qtrs on Balboa Island. Refs. 67S·2S45. Babysitter wanted for 1 child. Hours negotiable Corona del Mar area. Call SJ6.7830. TELLER/ MEW A CC OU MTS• Some S & L or banking experience preferred. but will train the right applicant with cash handling experience Bilingual CSpanish & English) TELLER Part Time Some S & L or banking experience preferred but will train the right person with cash handl ing experience Hours 11am·J ·30pm NO SATIJRDAYS. Our company offers ad vancement opportunity a nd company paid benefits. Contact Ellen Cuesta 833-8383 FAR WEST SclY..._&Lo• 4001 Macl-rthur Blvd. Newport Beach, CA F.qual Opportunity "'!~··· ''" .................... toea•··~ h • Poe. ...... ., ,.. Ora. . Co. lnvettlDtat ftrlR,. •·: Iha& be exper'd. Iii • me\Dtalnln1 complete 1 1 Mt cl booU U.ru tt.t• ~· menu, A /R , A /PJ I pa)'t'Ofl taut. 8&11.ry • '1 benenta eotnlb. w /ex· 1 per. Pia. tend re9Umt • • Hlary bittt)' to: 17~. ' Daily Pllot. P.O. Box. = C.O.ta ...... ea. ~ BOOKXl:El>ER·Oeneral ledger knowled1e. Faft , growtna N.8. R.E. de· r velopment Ir brokeraae. great worlt101 condi· Uom oo the water. To be bonded. 640·8250 or '•' wlmda Ir eves 675-9374 IOOl(KWH '" CLBICAL Home furnishings re· tailer needs alert person for general bkkpg, , clerical, expedittn1 or-• dens. customer follow· up. Must be self starter. Call Mr. Tice 644..USO . t ' 1()()1(1(--.,. .. Rapidly·growing Cos(a Mesa manufacturin g firm is seeking an ex· perienced Cullchar1e bookkeeper. Interesting & pleasant work en· virorunedt. Computer Ir budget experience a plus. but not nereasary. G rowth potentlal- contro lle r within 2 years. Salary SlJ.15,000 a year to start. Send re· sume to· S020 Campus Drive. N.B. 92660, attn: D.A.F. IOOIUCHPEa Assistant, Laguna Beach Financial Service firm needs person with basic bkkpg & ad· min1strat1ve skills to h andle a variety o r duties. Typing req Good oppty for growth Call for appt 494·1748 BOOKKEEPER F /C SECRETARY Costa Mesa location. Good w /phones. Full time. Typing. general office procedur es . 645-2244 loolckeepinc) C lerll Full Lime, ex per. helpful .... but not nee. Many com· pany benefits. Apply al· 1660 Placentia Ave .. Costa Mesa •CAI DRIVERS• Checker Cab 770-0222 • *. Candi l<IHwefter 8221 Pennington Huntington Beach You are the winner or 4 free tickets 1$14 value>. to Anaheitn loot Show Mar 4lhru Mar 8 Anaheim Convention Center Ca II 642·56'78. ext Z72 to claim your tickets • *. CASHIER Fulltime for large manne hardware store Xlnt benefits & working conditions 645·1711 CASHI ER HOUSEWARE SALES Apply in person· Crown Hardware. 1024 Irvine. <Westchff Plaza I NB CASHIERS UTDTEM MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shifts We promote to manage· ment & supervision from within. WANT A CAREER? Costa Mesa lllDel Mar 631·9421 Laguna Beach 494.9233 Huntington Beach 962·9116 Modtettl Rats Mtq. ' SINCE 1981 lst~d TDs. $SOK $1 M + OWher /Non Owner "' SFRs & Condos Colt1tnercial & Industrial PETER DOBBS Classified Ads 642·56'78 Sheller. 644·3656 953-0778 MC/VISA perience necessary. Ex· ----------. FANTASY perienced only need app-FIRST LADY ty m4>838-6310 Babysitter Employer M /F /H/V Working mom needs lov· i-----------i ~~~!!!!!!!~!!!~!!!!~ ing mature person to•---------·---------~,, 64o-eG16 573.9043 -....,____ de AMSWBIMG sav. Escort. Mo Is ESCORTS Plsnt. ofc. NB. Exp. or Perty D.cen. will train.' 3-llPM shif\. * 972-1345 * 12 ~~l40•M Wed. thru Sun. Also """""'" "' p/time opening. 631·5511 MC & VlSA Accepted 96M Grdn Grve Bl. GG Babysitter for infant in * * * * * AICHITICTUIAL our CdM home, s day care for t/yr old baby, l-!11111!.-... -----i CLalCAL ., 8·Spm, 3 days a week. Ba g Pos. avail. for A /R :-. S.C. Plaza area. Hm: clertt. Exper. desirable 557·4827 : wk: 558·2411 TELLER but not nee. 10..key. Hrs.·• ask for Cindy Smith. 8 to 5 Mon thru Fri ~ Call : Rose ~t 556.0540';. , ..... ,... (Irvine) •• .. WOlft 2~22% Yield? On YourT.D. ·s. Notes SS Raisers-Investors S$ CJall DeMison Assoc. 67~7314 Dot"·+~t~ b 1htphorv Gt...t c..,_y Senior & Intermediate week, xlnl ref's. Bonda· The beautiful Laguna hcorh Parties for mature. free· Draft.spersons ble. Gd salar y. Call Beach office of a leading ~-111111!1111 ____ __,~ 24Hrs. 641.0180 thinking adult couples. W. Rylee AIA , 640..2912 673-1217. savings &t loan has an Clerical • Want investor for Npl bayfront home Give well secured lst or 2nd T.D. Agt. 675·6161. 2 n tJ. T r· u s t D e e d purchases arranged For details, call 96().J9S7 bkr. TrlUt deed for sale SlB.000 T.D. subordlnat ed.. to a new construction loAfl for 2 new bayfront co11dos located on W. Bay Ave , Newport B~itch. Note Is for 12~ ~t pay1ble 1180 per mp, All due In 11 months. Dl,.~ted to SlS,000 to yl,t,Jd 34.4~ .1'7$-1111. ---2nd Trult Deed for Hlt. p~ S30'l.50 mo. for 2 yf:L Dlacounted to yleld 26A~, Buy in at SZ0.5'70. IMMJ.115'7 Bk:r. ~~'~you want ~MIU td .atdo lt •• u. IQ.511'71. e~eu e, an 8a ((.{rtniV'.4 - u se Answer At/ servic~ when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $7 .SO week. For more informa- tion and to place your ad ca II 642-5678. ) R s v p S4~7605 immediate opportunity C-"/Checkt · · · · AmSTIC for a Teller. Experience •&pfMC/VIH INTROSPECIAL Business in CdM needs Banking in SAL ii prefernd. We GENERAL MYSTIC MASSAGE artlat.lc persona to copy ERS o ffer an ex c e 11 en t M~GE pow /AD noral designs. Parttime, TELL salary. free parkln1 and Q CE Santa Ana sse-4658 pleasant surroundlnga, Immediate, fullt,me paidcu-eerapparel. For ffl :·· nexible hours. 64()...018?. openlns• ln Newport more information. -.NSWUBY· Ot.rrCALL ONLY VISA MC WANTED: Balding men 644-4088. Beach aree. ~pre-please contact Gene RCA currently haa a ._ &t women. For Inf or Toll 1---------v l 0 u1 b a•• I• 1 ex. Friaelle at (714 > 494-7506 fuU·Ume position av all•· • • 972·1131 * Free: 80()..772·3545 oper. •--------1 perienM. MH•• wtll· PIDBJTY ble for an individual · 208 ASSa.tlL•S lnl to u.a ........,... ,_llAL with eood olllce 111:1111 •• ucm TRAINEES • ex· with hu~ c.-.ertat • Savtnp and Loan ac~te l>'Pnl ability. SSl-1948 24 Kr. Service Serving Or. Cty ForDat.esCallHeather& perlenced needed Cor public coatact bad:· APoclatJon and pleuant, pro· Trt.sh. lMPM TWO major Oran1e aromd. An...,uaJQpportunlty fesaklnaltele~onetman·9 54()..1373 • County manufacturinit Ex~ _ .. pro-mplO'Jer ner. Please •PP 1 ln flrma centrally located. teaua1 ..... ~;Jary • •-------• penonto: ••• LT__.. ~:= ••••••••••••••••••••••• S......I .......... 7001 lG1'Luttn f'ountaln Valley You er. the wtnneT of ............ . .......•.............. Flamenco • cluelul (llhalue), lO lultar inltruet.lon, bHJc c1ra1v..-oradY..-.rorapJ'• =:::.:::~ lafo, ....... -J'w)', at Brlatol Rtadlu .. .._ ebUdrn, c.ta ..,.., Chriltlan waeller, ,.. Call ... .,.. ext. 1'71 to • I 0 D • b I • r • ' • I • Call Immediately to beDlllMa. ~apply In ---------make sure you don't ....... )I .. 11 m ....... _opportunltv. pel'IClll -.. arcn • .-uua , between lOlm • tpm. Ml11ll 1055 N. Maln St., Santa M•ott Ana, 2nd Floor, Suite Temporary 200· 117·9760 CAUPOIMIA. 4500CampwDr.,NB MSTIAMI l'taal Opp. &mpl1r 711·1617 lGU Yorti. It, T\atfn 1.,. ,.._to Appllcant II F 8"..Ud9 ~CUTTlll WA ..... AmST MASSA•I Eatablhbed pro · r...aon.11 OlllJ for a 11Dl· ~ue nt• salon In ewport Beach Ol*llnl March 11. A ftw 1*11· U.. available for ie .... ..... fttDAllLSU laloe RCA Service .£!.~1 ... SM&aAM. Am'TOl clalmJOUttkbta. certJntct. 541-•JO afl • * • tPll. Wut Ad ... ? , • -... ""' ... .. • ........... ~· ............ .._. ........................ , •• .._.. ..... /A .. ---- ~ t ~ ~ ~ ~ ' \ -~· ~ • ~~~':'!:.~ ..... ?l~c::t. ~~;.~ ..... !!.~ !!~~.?~ ..... ?!.~ ~~!~:.~ ..... ?!.~! ~'f.~~ ..... ?!~ Orange Co .. t OAJL Y PILOT/Tueldle1y, March 10. 1981 .,_ 1 G ~lllCP AL DllllillAHl IUll '11t Clerk needed tor Hou1ellop•r Lhe>ln M~haolcoeodedforauto HttpW..-.4 7 1ot~W..eM 71H W..e.4 7111 HeffW~ . 71M toreo. matir.. = ~: C-.ir '*· RDA Ir X·ray N.B. lnluruioe aaucy. Compan.lcm for •ldtl'IY malnt4nallc 6 repaln at ••••••••••• .. •••••• •••• ~~~T••••••••••••••• •••: •••••• .. •••••••••••• ••• •••••-••••••0 •••••••• h r Htl•I work In ~c·Jr· '"'1 day w-. 5*I001. moblle cool• muat carnntal •iency. Call Plumber.mia.J/yraup. ll'fAILSALIS Ci: I STOllNAMA .. plwMt otc. Oii P.C.H . N''B ~r·~· :a .• 0r.: PU..!CLDK·P/I" .,.. S..U.b. bavt a 511-1711 4pbrl. a.s.ZS/llr. 1Ya•••s UMTAI. ''The Plan," ., ...... Npt. ,llell. !:xp. • muat. tTi.Mmwknl tens. ' toa,otc. Tta1ll ratbl1 Ir nUd d rfvtr1 Uce1\u. Medleal Aaalstant In· •07•. Bed • Bat.II •Ptti•Uty COMSUl.TAMT'S ~J:T!'; ~~·p=t ~!~ Accurate t7pln1. no clalmt .... M.1711 /111'. R.t~ ...... ~ te-•-bac .. om-. af· P--.......__•Ttac .. ·r-ant· abopttoeocllnStoP'OWt· • 11 t ahrUd. • br. •k Hn: DelT Al ASIT n.-• .... • ·---""' .. taln Valley. Neecl. exp'd Br• u n • r • 1 B • o t • .,,xce •nt bent U.1 I Sun lloa. Tues. Wed t RDA expu4ed dutlea H~r. Uve-ovl for ter"lllOClnl oaly, exp awte. od, t't'td«IJJala or exp. 11i.~ S:JO.t·OOPM hmkuce aena ca,..... ulary. Saperleot••· to {PM. S.L 10:30 to rorpedlatrkduU.t. Or. N.IC~ · N.8. homt. 5 half daya LaiwuiNi1uel,-..Oll. P'/T.CallftO.mt. Mon·f!1_. Some wtndl. on.act s-recn for to.;. Call CJU)IJl..1"2 ror 1:30PM.Ca0:'4f.1Ul ....__,~.,•-...... ..._.. La,,_1 .......... nt9 •te"""v per wit. En.aJiab 1peak· ..-.--.. call Mr. Anderson try level Pol· in bomF aptlll uvumu-1·-·-· .,._ .. ___ ., .. , int. mutt drive. hnmac -~-PR!!SSPERSON ex· ...._, fumllhlnp.8rfuntt'1 l.al';iiiij;jjiiii;;;jiiijj;;iii~iiiii;;jjil d:bl r:r' ::r-:..i:~.~= howtelHAlnC, laundry, headed. Mutt hav• own per'd. wanted for com· Callrornla •a larceat Ill DllleM clerk. PaJd company erranda. occutonal Ute tram • Jood clrlvlnJ ,... met'dal ctttet job •bop aMl 1·7 fum. NDtal co. Ir nffd• STUDENTS CLmnPtST La1.una 8Hch etec· tron\c mr1r. has Im· mediate openlnl for •h•r,> penon ror ieneral clerical duties Including l)'plq for our PurchH· lng Dept. 4c working In stockroom pulling job kit.a, laauin& materla I, keepln1 records. Gd. typlngakill a must! Min, 50 wpm. Stockroom ex- per. belp(ul, not nee. We offer gd. pay & beneClts plus a 4 DAV WORK WEEK Call for in· lerview appt. Personnel Dept., Telonic Berkeley. 714.494.9401 . Laguna Belldl, E.O.E CLRIC Insurance co. nr. O.C. airport needs rating & coding clerk with ap· titude for math & detail work. Typing -40-45 wpm . Exp. helpful but not nee. SB25 a mo. Gd benefits. Call : Laura, 833-8450. 1401 Dove St .. N B. COCKTAI L Per s on, even in g shirts. ex- periencecl only 642-7880 Counte r h elp wante d F /T . M ichelll''s Cleaners, 496·5124 -benefit.a. cau· Linda at coottnc. Send rttume a: cord 6ntatal'Pfaranee. M • K Println1. San CHAIGtl MUISI qvalif\ed aatee 6 mcmt. ••th s.a•~ dulred ular y t o . Hra. a to 5. Mon·Frl. Clem '11~1 F /Ptlm• 80 .. _ .. ECf'. stafrforexpandlnl/ mkt. Mrc. co. In Ml11loo Vlelo _,, Salary plus mllta1e. '"' _,... R~-11 exp -r Wiil area need• exper. n !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Cl ... l&dAdHIS.Dally Call for 1 ppt: SSJ-4050, PRISSIOOM well sta rte d , aood ~ · r--e lectrical connectora, ,.,..,.,. _1 Pilot. P.O. Box 1sso. Tom sc.•VISOI salary. M4!3a Verde Con· train. 14· hr .. depenrlng h e t met 1 c 1 ea I • , ..,.,.., ~ Cotta Mesa. 921828. · vale.cent He>1pltal. Ml of exp. Full or p/t me. ___ .. d I FUU.TIME ._._..___......._C Poe. requires min 10 c ... -St "-t M E.0 .E. M /F. Mon-Sat. trarmuucer nan. com· Medical Sec'y ll Book· Ho\&Mlleeper. M Va days --'""'......,, o. yrs. prinUn1 up. Strong emcr .• '-'Ult a esa 9·5:30 ft Sun. 12Noon-pon•nta malt!rbls & .. Parttime mm dl•tribu· mechanical, technical 548-M&S 5PM. Contact . J etr et.bods .. eeper. Exp. nece111ry. a week. general clean· r & llln c t f Duties lnclude design, San Clemente Write Ad ing. lndry, hrs ar days ~:"m e: a k!·,. ~e'c a~~ ~~,l~Yin :_eSeb nodffsre!: RN 11 7Char1e nurse-80 Thomu al~772 draftln" materials t-t 1123 c/o Dally Pilot PO flex SS /hr. 780·8443. R I p d ti " bed ECF. Full le part •· ""'. BOX CM C am c ro uc ons. iume: Box t673, Dally Ina & RllD projects. lS4IO A 92628 ,Mrs. Park. N wpt Bch 833 244' Pll po lime, &d. salary. Mesa .. • · ot. . . Box lS60. v rde Con H Mechanical Engineer· FUU.. TIME Graveyard CDavtd>. Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 e v ospt .. 661 Ing degree pre r' d A Housekeeper/Companion Center St .. CM 548-5585 Qualified candidates ns. serv. No exp nee. for elderly person. Live· H-.clofll/f &-a..... ----· ----- send resume to : Mrs Call: 833-3333 EOE . out 833-2009 f lt .-t -111111111111111 ... -----Route drivers wanted for . • a 0 s . 2 3 8 9 1 v I a in or · · 1 J OMI' pr•t •R l'IODUCTION deliveries of new snack -Gardener/Helper needed IC ..... ? M.a.a...1.a.G Fabricante. Suite 603, HOUSBCHPUS """"" H food products to local SALES TRAINEES Full or pt/time, excell. oppty. for college stu· denta & moonlighters. Easily earn $10-SL5 /hr. CaU: Jack at 951·26'2, 1on•s , .. ,.._ ... MUST BE ll OK OVl!R CALLlOAMTOSPll 714-847-2422 ~SIOM ---· Dua.MB Career opportunity avail. for talented & ex- per 'd. lndjvldual wllh Mission VleJ·o. Ca. 92691 full Ume, gdjob for right We have an immediate If you are avail morns Electro-mechanical as· supermarkets. Some person lo xlnt working untU nooo .. this may be d cond. eau 675..elOl, M·F, o P e n i n g r o r 2 the job for you. (f you sembly plant needs a top up. g driving record. 1·4PM -well established 1&,1row· DISIGHIA OUFTllt Laguna Beach elec· tronics manufacturer needs. •an experienced person to be responsible for drafting & mechanical design functions. Must have thorough knowledge or drafting procedures. PC board layout. digital. analog, microwave circuit de· sign, & some knowledge or electro-mechanical packaging. Opportunity for advan- c e m en t & career growth. We offer xlnt. pay & benefits + 8.4pm for app't. hol.dekeepers. Full time can work 3 or 4 morns grade person lo run Perm. position 848-1900. pos itions. 10PM·6AM per week along with manufacturing oper a· -- ---------shirts . Excell. fringe wkends & avail eves. lions Equipment ex Sailboat maintenance & G ardeMr benefits package. Apply perience on punch pre c I ea n in g. Newport IMTBIOl in person at: Advanced ywou can earn xtra cash. sses & screw cutting Beach, P rr Incl wkends. • .._.,._SC•P-Health Center, 1300 orlt ~/hrs per week equipment. Primarily Min . kno wledge o r _,_ • A'l depending on your in· s · h HILPR Bristol St. North. Ste come needs & our work pan1s s peaking as-sailboats mech. & elec P Uai bot 1 b . #100, Newport Beach. 1 d w f 11 s em b I Y wo rk ers . systems. Call 645·7100. res ,..ous . e as 1.m· E.0 .E. M/F oa · e pay or a Responsibilities include ------- med. full time opening --------training & all travel production. direct labor : ..... -------for exper'd. landscape. IMMRAl .a.TE t ime, we have a pro· ts 1. Sales helper. Knowledge on in· """'"" gr essive pa y raise ~osd 't~ua1 ity ~ontrol & terior plant main· JOI system. We primarily an us ria engineering AHEXCmHG tenance a must. Enjoy ~olTU .... ITY worit in the O.C. area. Approximately 25 to 30 SALES OPPTY. excellent co. benefits in· VI"'; " This is a P rr job taking workers. Excellent OP· We a r e e n te ring a eluding a free meal per ,,. o..aa.. ,.lot calculator inventory portunity for growth tremendous new field or hl"t A I · -·J w1thour crews1'nreta1l. with 8 national or entertamment that is s • . PP Y an person ls looking for a Motor · t• 1 d. 9AM l N M F · R Deli p gr"""'ry •·drug stores. ganaza ion. mme iate s weeping the nation. We o oon, OD· ri. oute very erson """' "' opening. Call Brian at look Personnel for the Newport Beach are ing for a s ales MARRIOn HOTEL are a . Re I i a b I e Apply at ...._.r S4S-047? <7·»4:30 M·F ) onented person who has 900NewportCenterDr. Transport ation is a locaffoft: a d esire fo r above Newport Beach must. For details call P /T from home. am· average income You EquaJOppEmplyrMIF Foster Ouell et at 680 LORCJl~orf Dr, bitiousperson toset own must be personable & SICIOAIY In g Civil Englneerln& firm nr. O.C. Airport. Apply in person with re· sume to Mr. Fuentes at Robert Bein. William Frost & Associates. 1401 PARTTIME Temporary April 9-April 21St. Typing + gen'I of· fi ce dutie s . Days 760-8868 Eves 76(}3671 _ Qua al St.. Newport SICRETARY Light bookkee ping Plumbing knowledge helpful Fulltime. 848-3636 Sec r e tar y Typis t . Beach SUPE R V ISOR - Fiberglass. 3· 11 shirt. MacGregor Yacht.a, 1631 Placentia. Costa Mesa Newport Beach Law Of· fice, ask fo r Cand y Ray Switchboard Operator. p /ttme, days. wknda. _ Will tram. 642·3013 (7 14 )644·~16 Secret ary . 20 fl ex. creative hrs /wk Will train simple word pro· cessor Nwprt Center 644""31 I Teacher-pre·schooJ-ltind. Part, full lime. Irv. s ub· stilules exp. 551·4533 TEACHER 642-4321 M·F from St..211 hrs&incomelevel For confident in yourabihty 10:00am ·6:00pm fulerfoft, Mott-fri.1·4 lo communicate with l•-111•11••••••-I ~~ ... L OIU!ICE n.--c t I-I 0 app'tcat1 557 5675 others & have dependa· ••SECaET'AllES• • COUHTEI HELP 4 DAY WORK WEEK Preschool. Full time. Needs ECE Costa Mesa area. 6-42-6411. wlir'ERA m ..,..~ oas 7 3 I 2 --ble transport"t1·on. We Immediate opening for a D~ Piiot O Real Estate .. SlOO/travel IFl$15,900 d e pend ab 1 e , e x 4 50 c.,.,... Dr.. SUCCESS OR will train If necessary T60/GreatGrou'J>Sl3.200 perienced person with 330 W. ay Street Sh 441 Excell fringe benefits S90(f'rainLanaerS15K xlnt. typing skills & a Costa Mesa. Ca I H • w po r t I e 0 ch, FAILURE IH 'II? Apply at: Teleprompter Recpt/1'55 /FunSJ0.800 p 1 ea s I n g p h 0 0 e E q u a I 0 P Po r l J ( I.Have you <:onsidered of Newport Beach. 901 Liz Reinders Agency ------- TEACHHA.IDE F: C.E. units requires. Costa Mesa. Garden Grove areas. 6'42·6411. Ambitious. bright and FaciUty 1s in beautiful energetic people wanted Laguna Canyon near for full and p/lime help Beach & Resort areas for busy deli & sandwich Call for appt . Personnel shop. Good starting posi-Dept Telonic Berkeley lion with xlnt chance for 714·494-9401 Laguna advancement in grow-Beach. E.0 .E. ing company. To set up ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~ appt for interview call r: personality. Duues will ,~~!!!!E!m!p!!lo!y!e!r!!!!!!!!!!I• across the pi tr alls of com w 16th St , Newport -4020 Birch Est '64 EOE also include fihng &1--: ff'Ofll airport). Moe & mercial&res1dent1al re Beach Newport/833 .. 8190 /Free Ti ACHERSASSISTANT general office work I D T-., 10-2 al estate? For example ·--------•'·~~!!!~!!!!!!~-II!' S . I I f h Stan at 673-9000. I DIRECTOR ntenor es1gner 17<7. INT rates. long 1-pec1a c asses or an· Xlnt. benefits & working Exclusive 40,000 sq fl WASH I HGT 0 N escrows. farmin~ for SALES Clerk for retail SECRETARIES dicapped adults. 2 yrs. CPT 8000 Sec retary. ECE & Elem. Ed. units Newport Beach Law Of· & exp. req_'_d_. 64._2_·64_1_1 conditions with a grow-h f h' t 1.uvEHTORY h d "Oii a 'd E ome um1s angs s ore "" listings. competition. manne ar ware store. ' e.,e ex per. req . X· ing CQITlpany Apply '" with design studio. car-SEltVICE etc.! p /time. exper. n ee. IVICKI HESTON I ce ll vacation & in· ri ce. ask for Cindy Ray (714)~16 DISHWASHER Privat e men's club. Newport Beach, lOam· 3pm, M·F' Ca ll Al. 752-7903 rH1:°'1Ja6LLY ROGER rying the finest tradi -----ProfHsional l•d Call Balboa Marine. _ • s urance benefits. Wkdys tional furniture hnes NEEDLEWORK KITS 549-9671 . E OE M1F 1H 8 30 to 4PM. United INC. _ _._ hi hi t 1 t d Production line. Min. C~ioe -C b I P I A 1700G1llette Ave ne.,..,, g Y a en e · l·las ... _answer tor your & AssociatH ere ra a sy ssoc .. e l I l . t d · exp. req'd Familiarity uic S-'-• S ta A c.,'5760 ms.nc. nrift & LOGR l_.llMJ-S&L lrvine x reme Y mo iva e in sue-· in 1981. _.., A Temp Help Service an na . .....,.. l · d 1 M t w it h em bro id er y . ..~ t d open n f 11 ------714·546-0331 e raor es gner us 2.Leam to market low mme · 1 gs. u 540-0400 Dog grooming position a vail. at veterinary hospital 837 7660 or 497·5641. have m•n 6/yrs exp de fabrics, threads helpful time & part time reader TEACHER .... · · cost lots and acreage in 18004 Sltypark Blvd al with prestige cUen· FT /PT. Tuslin. 730·0142. So. Calif. We have l0'7' ad representatives for Suite 235 lrvane F:lementary readjng. ex· Newport-based com- puter service bureau. se rving finan c ial customers state.wide. r equir es c us tomer service representatives with extensive bank or savings & loan opera lions or thrift & loan e"- perienre. Excellent fr inge benefits. great OP· portunlty for growth Call Norm dePlanque. ON-LINE COMPUTER SYSTEMS. 6-44-1801 G&faAL OFFICE F ff' employment salary is open. 891·S893 tel SC PL a S30K inside sales positions p·d Garden Crove area. e, nr . . az . Nursing INT. rates. Earn SS-OK to -971 .cc,... db r'l All Gd. company benefits."· ........, + It e ne 1 s . LVN. J.ll. M-.. -•· tre~t-SlSOK, first year. year, ~cretary rep es "'" slnc es ment.a. Good ~orka'ng unlimited leads• more! ~ ~ y. U ... Id in · t t """"' • Apply in person · Pen· -..._ ir--• ';rr Drapery Coordinator. exp. person needed for drapery department in our des ign s tudio. Get OFC CLERIC Operations dept . Major brokerage firm near O.C. Airport. Hrs · 6·2 PM Ca ll Jud y ,.d s d .. nysaver. 1660 Placentia con 1 ence. en re· c 0 n di ti 0 n 8 . New L.la.M re-'ced. C 20-25 hrs. per wk . or one S me Classlfed ad • ....,,. ..-Ave.. .M. Monday. ( 3 l u : '"""'• graduate acceptable. For success in 1981. ask Friday, 1 to5 woman m a n Daily Pilot, P .0 Box Mell Verde Con vales· for Mr. Telles. engineering ore. in Costa 1560,Costa Mesa,92826. centHospitJ1l,S6lCenter ~3Glr831-&557 •SALESLADY• Mesa. Excell. salary. 550-1601 ____ _ F.ckert: 54().8121. JG91Cr MK"-fc Exp'd-Service Manager. mini mum require· ments. 10 yrs. exp. must be factory trained. good ref's, salary $2000/ mo. Just Jaguars Inc . (714 )9151-3288 Full •· p T Please call : Mon. thru St .. Costa Mesa . uc-,....,,.IST "'art ime F . f t 30P M •:.o .. ..---''""" SHOWOFF r I . • a 4 . . Earn up to S8 00 per hr.---------• Set your own hours. Car .....,....._,, Penon to .-,._.tie 645-2842. Thom~so n •· ....... ..--22 Fashion Island EO OfflCE TaAIHEE on tract sales office . 8 r Floatallon Co. & phone necessary. 8-46-2172, 8-IOA M _L_ GENERAL Register today for local temporary assignments Lite t Y Ping . ~ o o d days, days of week nex. SALES ---c M loc u t b SECRETARY-TYPIST telephone voice, iling, · · · ... us e 642·5830 cheerlul •presentable. Metropolitan n eeds 90WPM Electronics Assembler 557-0045 Cf\-Llr\:. SS/hour. Terl.979-3376. multi-line sales reps Temporary "Cras h " Training provided Project requires power Data ProcnslRCJ Operator needed for nax dorf lentrix systems for long term assignment Call for more info Tod I yr exp in electronic as· sembly incl solder ing. color code & schematic reading Gd benefits. C M. area. (714)54()..4271. JAMITOllAL llCsrT.,ISIC'Y • Salary to SSOO wkly Call Typist. Either days or N e w po r l Ce n t e r . Mr. Silva. 634·4922 eves. S-6 hrs. a day. 2082 OfffCE MANAGER Full time . Work in beautiful Dana Point Harbor. S3.50/hr + benefits. Please apply Tues. thru Sat Dana Point Marina. 24701 Dana Dr. Dana Point. Challenging position. Must be self·starter. creJ1Uve, with good or- ganization skills. Salary negotlable. Call for in· terview. 630-6523, Tues. or Thurs. 8AM·5PM. Ask for Ferne. Phones, accurate typ-Equal Oppty Employer Michelson. 11212, Irvine ing. Salary to t61hr de· ----752·0234. fl~ flllSONNU S£11\11ClS Services. 979·8900 -l•E•lectro--m•ec-ha•n•i•ca•I--3723 lllCH STRED MIWPOttT IEAC H E.O.E . pending on qualifica lions. Jack Armstrong or Norm J acobson. 759-9036. SALES Newport Beach leading I•--------• Jewelers seeking full Secretary time Employee well PollcyTypist Dal. FIT & P /T_ Eslary's. M« E. Coast Hwy, CdM. 675· 1354. Deliver L.A Times to h omes i" Newport Beach 3·30am to 6am $550/mo. 548·8441 o r 646-1413. ~ Must have 3-5 yrs exper. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ with schematics lo read r: - off analog schematic & i-------•-114 kewl A"ettdont F ff' 759-191 1 design finish product. ~BBAL OFACE Also design sheet metal Fine jewelry store needs PACKAGERS RECEl'TIOHIST Phone order taker, Frozen Food Plant L.B. Reqbires lite typing. good wtfigures 497 1741 versed in sales & otrice Do you love to type'! Nd procedures. 5 day week someone w /gd. typing including Saturday, no skills. Judy, 540·6055. evenings. Call 673·9334 Coastal Personnel Agy, · 2790 Harbor Bl, CM finishes. Salary depend-r e liable person for Legal Secretary, exp in mg on exper . Send re· variety of office duties. ht1gation. gd skills. H. B s ume to: Gary Rice. 40 hour week . co . Non·smoker.848-1400. $.1.-40/hr to start Merit raises 1537 Monrovia Ave., N.B Sales Never a fee. EOE Coastal Personnel Agen benefits So Coast . . -----PART· TIME 4·5hrs . DEHT AL cy, Z190 Harbor Blvd .. Plaza. Call: 54().9066 Live-.rn housekeeper com· ,.seneral office for C.M F.RONT & BACK Of'· Cos ta Mes a , 92626 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'j panion for elderly lady "'Sub-contractor. 642-9937 FICE 5E-400·E6055. Never a lee '-UARDS _M_l ·<Xli6__ _ _ ------- Xlnt o ppty for am · .. ---------Part r· bltious, self motivated '~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Full & part time All 1me individual in Laguna i: areas. Uniforms fum'd MACHINE Co. ....-y-........ Ag-21 or over, retired •NwdC) _.... Bea~h practice Must be Ha ve something you = SHOP Carrifl'S flexible. Call Ann at want to sell? Classified welcome Noexper. nee '494·9788 ads do it well. 642-5678. A pp I y · Un i v e r s a I Adults with outstanding ---------Protection Service. 1226 TRAINEES attractive personalit ies D •1 p•11t" W Slh St .. Santa Ana Im med. openings for lo spend JS hrs per week •••••••• II J I • Mln00le~Fn·ew. hrs· 9·12& 1·4, mach. operators. Will ~~~~~elinlv~~uit~g~ge: ., train for C.M. plant. Ex Weekends Available. S75 --cell. c o benefits *•HEY ICIDS • • Deltronic·S45-0413 P e r w k · C a I I --- RECEPT.JTYPIST CPA firm in prestigious Newport Beach location lookinj? for bright in . dividual to fill front of· fice position Phones. 55 wpm. Salary range S950·S1050 955·3641 between 8 .30 & 5.30 ReceptioniBt /Secretary Small sailboat a c - cessory manufacturer nr John Wayne Airport req a dependable recep· tiomstfsecretar y. Lite bookkeeping in a one personorrice 751-8774 -• Cameraman : •• tlere's your chance to 2:3().5:30pm. Mon thru • make extra s pending Fri 642-4321 ext 343 • Experienced at least 5 years. e money, AskforLorl. R~El'TIOHIST Must be able to use newspaper • working only a few days MACHIHIST Or-. Cooat Full time Mon-Fri Must • camera and p I ate ma k j n g a week'! Become a sub· for tooling & prototype Daity Piiot be personable & well • syst~. Excelle nt wages find • script.ion salesperson for work. Some production 330W. day Street groomed, & enjoy meet· b (' t A l . • the Daily Pilot. Earn as work on vertical mill & Costa Mesa. ca. ing the public. Requires e ene 1 S · PP Y In per son much as SS0.00 PER lathe Read blueprints. E qua 1 opp 0 rt good spelling & pen· e w /resume to Orange C.oast Daily e WEEK! Positions open owntools. E.O.E. Employer manship. No typing. Of'POITUHITY COMTIHUES 'YOKHOCI When you work for the I.os Ange les Times Circulation Dept. as a field represenative in a part time sales program which involves signing up new subscribers in the community. Many now in this program earn more than $200 per week for working just a few hours a day. we·re looking for sharp Individuals who have a neat appearance and a knack for talking with people. We pay hourly wages + generous com· missions Previous sales experience helpful. but not necessary. Call Monday-Frida y 9AM-5PM. 957-2361 ext #1204 • Pilot. • in Huntington Beach . 3-DINSTRUMENTS Phone experience pre· Fountain Valley and l.SS42Chemical Ln. • • • rerred. Full company e • Costa Mesa. If you are HunUngtonBeach PatHlltter benefits. Apply: Pen· SALES/Order Desk . • Trainee • outgoing, enthusiastic 205 WakeForestRd. nysaver, 1660 Placentia Must be English & • and at least 12 years old . ... ...... S~l. Costa Mesa Ave .. C.M. Spanish speak'g. Ma rine • For District M...,..-C A L L · '"""""' Vou are the winner of oc auto. exp. helpful. e T h is highly successful local e TODAY!!!! !642·021 Immediate iring. App· 4 fnetfcbta RECEPTIONIST F ttlme pos. Excell. co. • newspaper has an openinf for a • Ext. 211 before6pm. Ask I Y Ang I e at San With or without typing benefit.a. Call: Balboa trainee in the c 1·rcu at1'on • forVicOwens CElemandenteslnCnl. 125 c'E va~e>.to needed. Top pay. Tem· Marine. s.49·967,l E.O.E. • ar_,. C t spl Ian. an em. sno• ,. _.... ... •-f II · c II M /F/H • departme nt. Basic skills will • Daly_ "' Mar. 11th, 8PM at po,ary"' u tame. a • e ntail supervision of 10 to 14 year e E q u a 1 o"P'°: 0 r t MA.HAG• TRAINEE Montgomery Ward Tod Services •t 979-8900. SAUSPEaSOH old boy and girl home delivery Employer StstS700 405Fwy.at8ristol Fulltime. a mbitious e carriers. Areas of s upervision e Mature, exp, "person Costa Mesa lllCB'T10MIST salesperson wanted to ·u be d li 11_,..; d • HOSTISS friday" type wanted to Call 842-5678, ext Z72 to Exper'd. persoo needed work in m a r In e • Wl e very' ·co.u~uons an train for position of claim your ticket.a. handle b bo d . Sec. s..r-Oppt'y in one ol N. I rvine's mos t luxurious ex - ecutive office suites. Sec /Rec for diversified professional people. Co. benefits. Good t yping s kill s Outgoing persooality a must. Call 731-1888 Security officer. P /T . wkends for lrg apt con· plex an N.B. S3.50/hr. For info contact Jim Lu pis al 64-4-1900. SEC'Y fRECEPT. Sales office for national companu. Variety or duties. Excellent com- pany benefits. New of· rice in Fountain Valley. The Standard gister Co. 962·9361 Equal Oppty Employer Sell Cosmetics ayerage SS-0 day. Will train. For interview. 831·8012 Ser vice Station A tten · dant, Full time. Apply in person Laguna Chevr~n. 604 S . Coa st Hwy. Lagma Beach. Service Station Allen· dant. F ff. with exp & ref's. 125&/wk lo start. 644-'71.Sl. • sales. Selecte d a~plicants will • Lunc hestDlnnera. 18 manager of small. uni· * • * dtoynamlc N~YBch.•rcom~ hardware stfore:.~oaXtllngt . I h d I d y-+ Apfly m' person r exper. pre err..u. n Servic-Station Atten· • receive regu ar y sc e u e e '"' · · que buaineas. Type60-6S. i----------m 'l. broltera1e om ce. "' , bo l..eBiarr ta 414 No . k . PIX ..., benefits II working con-danl . P /T, 4.1opm. 6 ra.ases, nus opportunities and Newport Blv d . N.B . phone, book eep1n1. l.1Csr 1 • Pro fessio n al •P· _d_lll_ons __ .MS-__ 11_1_1_. ___ 1 days week .• 4 /hr to • many fringe benefits such as • nes3 payr oll, c u atom e r Part time. Major pearance &c m•nnerlam • e company paid dent al and health e "---------service. etc. Apply in Brokerage firm near a must. Call : Lalla. SALESPERSON. meture start. 644-'1151. TEA C HER Infant Development Program, p /time. Member of transdisciplinary team Special ed. & Spanish important. Call · Jackie Popp. s.40-5760 TICHMICIAH Field Service Tech. to service mini-computer systems Must have min. 2 yrs. ex per. in field service or system test tech. For more info .. ~Ont.act : Noel at SS7..a640 Telephone Sales BEA WINNER " $5.50 howiy salary Daily pay available. SSOO to SlOOO commission weekly. Cal.I Dewey, or Chuck. 714·498-2953 Temporary labor , hard worker to move dirt Ii take out plants 631·9255. THERAPIST Infa nt Developmt. Program , P /time. Me mber of transdisciplinary team . NOT. feeding & Spanish bkgrnd. important . Call : Jacki e Popp, s.40-5760 •TRAIHH• Printin& & packaging Starts at s.1 SO. Gd o~ portun1ty for good woriter. 979·7660. TR.;A. V EL AC ENT Looking for a change of pace? Exper va cation agent is needed for a large multl·branch agency in Irvine. xlnt salary le benents. oppor for advancement. call Tommie &:n-2977 Typist-General office. H.S. graduate. No ex· perieoce required. Cood benefits. Located In Costa Mesa. Wiii be moving to I r vine . Farmers Insurance Group. 540-4100. E.O.E. TYPISTS •Immediate Openings •P/l.ime,F/tlme, Temp. •Top Pay For more info. call Tod Services at 97t-l900 . nPtST Part tJme 2·3 days per wk. Vacaao;, rtll•t. Ap. ply at: 1880 PlacenUa, Cott.a Meaa e plan, group life insurance. e HOST!f=,?!, f~0eea~~11vd~~~~r. ?:·~:,pAJ~'~:1t1• .rir:.; m.aoo ~':.;~~~~='. ~=ri •-s-t-at-11-t-lc_a_l _t_y_p_ls_t _a_d_· e Cov •cation and sick l e ave . e ::::.... . bui ..... u .. •tcURIST s.N121. R • p/Ume. can: ... _. ~~~a~'ao.~~~~>'r d~ •-v-11-.-..... --.-51-,- • mpan y vehicle is furnished • not '*11 J. A,,., ln _,,,_..... . i--------~~=K. COUNTER rorappt. Hlary si.ooo. Call LolA FIT. Hardwo,.lnc. ,... • during wor kine hours. Applicants e .,._: o-,11. • E. Tu~••-·Sat . Nice at· n-~'°"ror .. b .. '!JYA•'•lea • A.S91ST MGR. -1. Sales Smith17~JO ·uable ~non nffd.ff. must be over 18, h ave a 1ood l'nll a. c.•. Mo phone moe re.· .,_ -,.....food ......_. S-' CaU•l·l11518Dua Pl. e drivinJ recor d and be neat • 1-c_a_u._,_,_,_•_•·----ttalrHandlen otc. Typla1, pboQe • fll-Oont open tn fut .......... a••••" STOC K PERSON • • appeanng. Hours are 1enerally • Ro..-ie... Reliable 84.2-1414 lll&.51'7·C>ea ;.ia:t. Nr. Airport ........ °t4. 11 SHIPPING CLERK. WaltNUa/Watter. Ptr e Mon thru Frid ay. Some overtime e ,._._...to help ln Market Otmonatrator. PRONE Opera&or wanted _ ; •••cUW ... wi:n'.:CS Rt1ponslble, rellable day, ~ II. wtU lrala. • is available . Jr YOU ~fied • ,.., 11 h f .1'71--rrr opportA ll-!'Y~ s~lrtb• foT t m. plombincll tor. Nio lmlt•ella-arnt ______ 6 wdecl "7 enryone. :::'rm~,:~:::~ W~:·D ·. ,...Olr.a. IO - • and interested in I the e •111 pr • • .. • ••P· nee. on· r • __........,..... ..... !!~•~• pot•nttaf: Af'lll.r. .... W U b HOVSllCLEANERS .... 50/br, cloH to your 7 :IOAM ·ZPll . Non· ~,_.,., • ...,_..,.-.,000. tlcal wholalt1 Pleaae 0,,.r for premotloa • CW'Cl f~a on uslnelt cxmtact Doo • Pff' « F(f. Start Im· home. (211)2'7'1·5'114 ; srnkr.~ Now btriQJ toll le part •Co. TraiDJn1 uU n 4/D1.o1'1 for In· work .• Co1matolo11 • Wi ll ams or Ken Goddard , e mediately. Top dollar. C21J)lll..,.afttrtpm. P l •. ,. •11 um .. Da~. •vee. Great •Hllbtaeome t•rw..Ho5. bad.,.._, prtftn"ell. • 6C-4.12L • ,_..,_a._ia __ or_......, ___ 1__ c~urt rame "l er. career opportunlUea. •QllaTU\edt.udl Call1118rl •P.M ( ) ... MATUUADU&.T CU.tom qvalhy allop, Oa·U..JobtralnlnJ. P'ot tf_ lf,M._ MOW•TMIT...a . ...,_ : TH • • HouHllH,.n wanted. llalure paraon who up. rel'a. Cott.I Me11. snore lnto., eal l : ·--=~·u • •.....,.. 1.o cbeck • t • ~~ • Stec:lltr llotel. Ulll So. n.-• IOOd home in U.· C114)MM16'. .,,......_ cw Inquire at~ • 1 1 tM DallJ PUet Help W a r m L o v l a I .. _ CoH\ Hw1. Lacuna ellanie for llJh\ 1H 1Ra..-11nt ea.ta AJ. ,141-t'r11 ...._.~U..lf Onl411r•l.od,...IJ'r e 330 ., Street : e ,_Boda __ .• _ .. ______ ._.....,..., • coot1A.t P\AMTS Mau. Maka 1011r adwertlaln1 die Jo'"°"' wut II ao& el( • l •o old Ref. • Costa Mesa, CA e ror l 1aay. SalarL + Nt«t,...tomalntalo dollar'° fattta.r: Litt ...,.,_-'lllteoMW.r, ~ • 11'-uaJ Opportunltv E"""'loyer • ~ ..... ~~rd ve lndoor pleatab. ~pr.ooclDOt ,.. .._. .. everJ dar _...., ,.... Mnifte·-u•-.;; ... _'1._~-·-----o-·--- •.ll:Af # ..... u .. ta.CanforlyTO..... l>lenlw on IA Laf'un•. ""· m"8l ... ~ ISU. ... .._ .... ID tM Clwtn.d Met ......... la u. l oll ••H '.)'Mir •llilli1:= ••••••••.•••••••• :•:.:C::Mf::• del ~o~a4'.~Ume. =record. F me. ::,a~:: ClutlftM !!._~• HW•P•P_•r, .......... IN/ . ..._. ...._~·=--~ --·... --~ - --.. ._a -MIL . . I RENT: 22 ' hu:. mlr bome. Sips 8. self-cont. 1215 /wk . + a• m l. ~. '76 Tioaa Motorhome, ••• ••• .. •••••• ••• •• •• •• TWIN 8eda like n•• • foldlnl door, -.o. 8' l•d· c.o.t 9IOOS.c sm der. Ill). ao· l~r. -.W. 11s.s11hlUPll WANTE D: Stoller • bllbtba1r a110 misc bab>'tt.eml. fJ51.aM'7 complf!te roof air, t8500 --------- or bett otter. 8U-0295, '79 GMC Stepelde Pickup, maJte otrer. "70 ___ 548-_989'1 ___ _ 842...uo. "'--------~ Wrou1bt Iron II 1la11 ~··-$4'ftd IOIMC)fte you love a •WOOD bi's dinette aet. 4 cha Ira, S fw S. Xlnt. dtckl.-.1. veryJ.d cond. SIOO. , _ __;,, _____ _ 14,000' ln from mill. 552·71 . . · 55'/ft. M5-91JT ext. 11171----------1••····················· anyt.Jme New Beauty Real dble Hol'M for Leaae. Boarded * * * --• Sprlnc 4c Mattress $350. at Golden West, Ellis. bouQuet ol 30 multJ col· ---------r ored" balloOn.I Green tor St. Pat's Day fr your own ~ !.~-person a I measa1e . -.....-w Perfect for every oc· 1222 Delaware St. caaion. We de llve r Hunlli\itoo Beach 6'73--4U9 You are the winner of ie <It D. ""~ I 1 t IOJO Kenmo. re hvy duty 111 Call Jonnl 536-8176 " •--_._.,--•-.p•t• d S'15 548-2856 POOL TABLE 100" X 56" 90W.15thSt. Sp.16 .... ,.................. ryer · Ho•1•1ld Gooch 1065 S300 incl. 4 cues, over 4fnetldl.ts (l14 value>. to .......... paint/ upholstery, 350 Motorcycle Trailer aut o , m a gs S 19 9 5 3 rails good cond. S35-0 547-2669 Ive mess-call '' NewportBeach lvltar Series I, 70.210 V & Combination ••••••••••••••••••••••• head Ute etc. 646·4025 ·Y~aretbewtnnerof MM lens, Macro $175. R~cord Player $250. C ontest Prlae-20 pc Best off 540-9"732 eves ' 4fNetldllh 957-0lll!l9 R1efrigerator $125. waterless cookware. ev~ IOGfShow Mar. Hhru Mar. 8 Anaheim Convention Center A.to Senke, rorts A_utot_W_..ted ___ 9_590 Ir Acc: .. tor1e1 9400 ••••••••••••••••••. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAYTOPDOLLAR <SH value), to CHJI 1040 Freezer ~. Cash only, Sac. at S2SO 557-9856 aft All••• ....................... all week. 200 Kings _4....:.p_m _______ _ ao.t Sltow EESHOND Pups. AKC. 1-P_l_;_a_ce_;_._N_.B_. _____ ,J•welry 1070 Lovely twin canopy bed & che st. Nice divan & tables. Refrigerator. Lota of ladies ' &c c hilderen's clothes . Cash only, 200 Kings Place, Newport Beach. Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to claim your Ucltets. SSAVESAVE S for to p used ca rs · Mar. 4 thru Mar. 8 Champ sire. M /F. Pet & Beautiful Liv. Rm set ••••••••••••••••••••••• WITHUSED PARTS foreign, domestic11 or Imported car parts classics . If your car is Anaheim Convention h P t t ' G Id •· Sii t d II Center s ow . v P . $400. Din. Rm $600. o .. ver, op o ar. 213/69'7·134.Saft 6pm. Mahogany bdrm set Classrings? IMPORT extr a clean . see us AUTOSUPALY FIRST ~ ••• Call 6'2·5678, ext. 272 to 1---------957-8053. ·~Mar-. clailD)'OW'ticltets. AAA HOME DOG $700. Cash only . 200 •---------* * * TRAINING Kings Pl, N.B. 2 loose Dia. 1.50 els.- Amer. Oak Rolltop Desk S curve. ex cond, $2500 PP546-3209, 962-0049 Complete IN HOME ouch Sl2S. brass lamps 1. 7 Sets , H a ve a p · Training , Obe dien -135 ea , chairs pr. 2 end praisals. $38,000. Will ce /Problem Solving, tables. coffee table. $175 Sac . Call for info. ..,.,.... 9030 John Wayne Tennis Club ••••••••••••••••••••• •• reg. membership, $1000 Brand new Chrysler SO Incl. transfer. tnS-5455 HP outboard motor, still in box, 1 yr wmty. Orig TI FF ANY 'S C I u b $950asking $750. 751·8967 101 N. Manch~ter Anaheim 776·9900 "r© Fouale . k DatswtZ motor + other parts 768-5837 protection. 539-7615. . Singer sewing machine 1-558-_7_27_6 ______ _ 1930 Chippendale dining p o o d I e s • T o y &c SUS. 549-3984 Diamond pierced ear- room set. Table ~ 6 miniature. Blac k &c Drexel party table, dk rings, .SO cts . Appr. McLane mower SlSO. Nu lifetime membership, no 1 • 9040 dues ~. 673-4666 oats. .-ower ••••••••••••••••••••••• chain. Server, china. brown. Males/Females. 0 $1200. Will sell S37S. .__ h b bell SlOO ---------~n..o Span., 4 chairs, S25 . wgt .,.,.,c . ar s . ~ 586-~.586-8526. Sofa, 8', gold /olive leaf. 558-7275 Chrys. 4-spd trans, nu Porsche 914 western style mag wheels. S20 e a 548·9744, 548-6446 AnADUqueBargain.3pc BARKLESSBASENJI $75.Recl.chair,$25.14" 12c t . BLU E TO PA Z clut.ch&HearstSlSO.CB Maple bedroom set 1695. Red/white F pups, AK , elec. mower, SJS. 42" stone. Only $'200! tower $100. Lange sz 10 SACRIFICE CalltnS.0421 $200. 964•2119, 962-4657. glass-top coffee table. 640-8688 ski boots S80. 642·8447 7J IA YLINER CHE.AP!! J.. 0 wood base, $40. 640-9888 27 ft L.-1-. I 30 Appl-.ces 801 MALE Cocker Spaniel Must sacrifice m en's l"'• Zenith color 23"TV S4S. 3 """'"' Slightlyusedturbo kit ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 twin beds (or king bed). Old bikes S20 for all . Yol•o's. M '70.. '74 Datsun z ca rs pups. AKC. SlSO. c arat gold dia mond 64"'·9502 c...1..1.... '---t.loat 768_ 5837 631 <1754 extra long length. 135 ea ring. New S3000 ; S2000 "' -•~ HARBOR AREA APPLIANCE SERVICE We b1.ty used appliances . 8045 540-7987 firm. Kimball organ . Mi1celaneou1 ..ctTralt.r. Fty d '611 1 t toYou •.U-.•.M-, Wante : or a e r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 studio beds. bolsters & Sll00/0BO. Muskin style Wanted 8081 ---.r -Squareback VW body, Be au t A u s l r a Ii an table. $225. pool, S700 with equip. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Extras. S 15,0 0 stk. no 4Jl 's 751 4524 Shepherd Fem, spayed 2 64()..5040, 673-3350 B es l 0 ff e r · 0 Y s : Sm all Portable Elec -Cal 675-2695 E•es. I IUY APPLIANCES yrs old to good home --661 -6455. Ron Refrigerator 5 Chev Mags. 2 Good year Les 957-8133 64s-4:.is 6' designer glass clock & 832-6311 9-RlS jeep tires. wheels. .....:._:..:..._. _______ r--------matching corree table by Ladie's dia. cocktail rin g, ----36' CHRIS Tri-cabin. T !S B 10 964-6917 Washen.Dryers:Refrig, 1 1 . d l d f 1 aprais.S16SO;takeS800.IMusic:ol Gd c d s19 000 - Whirlpool, Kenmore. ~~~ily-f~gyg ~v~h:p: ~~~:~· law ess. 1,<.i ct. dia. sol., appra is . I lmtn.Mtth 8083 67J.9wJ~n · · · A..tosforSale fMa·nalysthaegd .. Rgueacoranndt.eerde'.· mix. 966-1528 aft. 5. -$2150; S900. ~·2287. ••O••••••:••••••••••bo•••• l_o_ah_ r...11 -.. 060 ••••••l•M•P••O•R••T•A•N••T•••••• -------Din. table. mahog, 78", 2 C NN Director trom ne • -.,. Sl55delivered7~3103 Free to good home small Ives. & buffet. $300. :v. cl. dia mond rin g , with case Excellent ••••••••••••••••••••••• NCYflCF:TO d I · g ,_, SlOOO. 14 ct. pea rl ring, condition. SlOO. 675·8052 Erickson 32', '75 loaded, READERS ANO 21 Cu ft "'---z.er, Una'ted o g , v e r Y o v 1 n . 646-luo r 1 r•= -S3SO. cultured pear s . arter 6PM. Bristol cond Offer, R E. ADV ERTISERS Uprl.gbt, xlnt cond . 64l·92S6 eves. · 25 PP (2 3) 31 5175 9 7903 12· cstm made couch, 11 Sl . • . 1 4 · o r te r m s 68· . The price of items $350/offer. 754·6757 Free to good home 11 yr sofa table inlaid Ta pa Ibanez electric guitar 968-M72 advertised bv ve hicle old female cat due to shell. 11 · cstm made cof-Woman's free-form wed· Prof. model with Tree or dealers m ttie vehil'lc Apt sz Lady Kenmore sonshealth.898·1503 feetable,must see toap· dingset.never used .. in· Life goingup tolheneck 14'~0BIE,good cond.no classified advertising washer & dryer, HOV. -preciate 760-8239 ve s tment qu a li t y Woodgrain body with sa1l,$500.0ays639·4912; columns does nut in w/stand. $300. 496-8364 FYl"llihre ~ 8050 _ _:_ ---diamonds, .70 ct. + two hard shell case. $500. eves644-6148. c:J ude any appli cab le Kenmore Washer& •••••••••• •••••••••Red upholstered chair in .OS ct. stones, apprais 548-6446 ___ 18, Catalina Cat New taxes. license. transfer FOR SALE! good condition S4S Hid-$.5700. $3200. 640-244-0. fees. finance ch ar~es . Dryer,$250. b d 85 E I Bea ut Stude nt Base main sail, furling jib, r r · llut'1on con Antique English oak a -e. S a r .Y M ... ~ 8078 ees or aar po · 498-7514 sideboard in perfect con· Amencan console radio a__, J needs restringing $240. Marina del Rey loc. Isl trol device certifications 20 cu ft, avocado, Philco dition with nice detail, $45. 2 lamps tables & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-8581 SSOO takes. (213)676 4340 or dealer documentary --we sell recond. guar. appliances. 549.3077 #I '" O~ C-.ty 2925 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 979-2500 WEIUY CLE.AM CARS AMDTRUCKS CONN Ell CHEVROLET ~ llarbnr Bh d l'OST A M Jo:S,\ 546-1200 HIGH BUYER Top dolla rs for Sport~ Cars. Bugs. l'ampers . 914's. Audi's Ask for ll 1C MGR JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 1!1711 Beach Blvd lllJNTINGTON BF:ACll 842-2000 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOO&CLEAM USED CARS! refrig, with ice -maker. $350. Dresser. maple &c matching coffee tables Air Compressor Ser vice eves/wkends. preparation charges un- l"k $300 548-0 30 French provincial. $100. all ror $75. 631·3474 1 hp port. comp, S31S YAM.AHA TRUMrET loah. Sips/ less otherwise speriried • e new. . 1 . -Two matching dressers. ----This week. 54~4286 Sl50 548-3168 Dodo 9070 by the advertiser 2 I 50 H.t:.or ll•d. Ref's clean work good S60 maple &c country style, Antique Sewing Machine Mlsc:elaneous 1010 Fender Rhodes 73 Key ....................... A~/ Costa Mesa 645-5700 miracle mazda & llOO. Ref rig FF, clean $1 00 fo r the Pa ir solid mahogany $1 35. ••••••••••••••••••••••• suitcase w /amplifier & Newport Beach mooring CIGsllcs 9520 xlnt $200. Frzr. upright, K ingsize waterbed in 642-4315. 979·2600 FLY INTERNATIONAL /'JS' loop .-.c ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean, works good SlOO. perfect condition with s pkrs. '600642·9126 w s · ...,, · on Pa.m Am with airline -· 675-8513 '41 Chev, runs g reat. Washer. clean works oak frame. non-sway Estate Sale Round Blk two-for-one ticket s lip. Office fw1litwe & s2800 or trade Da y:. good $85. Dryr, ga s. mattress & heater . $200. Dining Tbl + Chrs, Anti-Singapor e . Central Equi....... 1015 SHps available, Newport 581.2003; evesS55·891!4 clean, works good $75. Call !)48..7827-MUST sell ! que Wht twin beds. mall America , Germ any -••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach, 25' to 57'. Avail. 548--8513,548-4485. - -------& dresser. many other any of 11 countries . C O p I E I now.642-4644 '63 T-Bird. completely * * I BUY * * items. 499-3074 Hurry! Good until Feb. restored, like new. over WANTED! Late model Tovotas and v 0 I II 0 s c· a I I u s TODAY!" Earle Ike Sea.rs Refrigerator, Top of the line, 17 cu ft. Xlnt cond . $3(1(). G. E. Porta· ble Dishwasher $150. Sears Room Air cond. sso. 54.>9223. Gocxt.used Fumiture .&·Meda't. Bdrm se-t, 6 pc; 28.760-1999 $100/010 U f•boTRAtDfE•1. W Sl 2M s p e n t . t a k e A 1 OR I 11 SS9-S978 se 0 a or s ip. e $8500/0 BO Le a ving PP iances-wi <no bed l $200. Tradi· 6' porta ble s pa, pwr pack, h 26 ' ailboat need · 1 '"Hort.or •i.4 sell or SELL for You . . . ave s · country 642·2287 Co••• M• .. MASTERS AUCTION laon~I Dmmg Rm set._ 6 deliver, set up $2200 2 filing cabinets. $60 ea. Newport slip. Will teach I -,... •4'-flOl or 540.,.., TOYOTA-VOLVO chatrS. 2 leaves . solid 631-6519, 645·7285 30 new 8' fluorescent sailing also. Ross or lin· · 4 6 F ord Wood 1 e . 646-1616, 833-9625 wood. beaut. finish $250. bulbs. SJ ea. 842·5304 da. 1-535·1161. restored. $13,000 ALSO Corner Bdrm g ro up * * * ------------. . '29 ModelATown Sedan, llUY RIRMITURE St SO. 545_9223 Chris hllows Pets 8087 WANTED Boat with s hp 4 dr. restored. Ideal for For Ad Action Les 957-8133 --------- -9040MazaCircle ••••••••••••••••••••••• in Newport Beach. t d t $10 ooo Parrot&stand, 751·8967 s u en · Fountain Valley $90. _____ 675-6161. New stereo cabinets. roll top bar cabine t s for vans, bookshelves. new 30 " blt n gas s tove <Almond>. various hshld furniture. 536·6676 a rt 6PM. 2 Couches. 2 dressers, I bar with stools. $.500. PP 840-5874 You are the winner or PORSCHES WANTED Call a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 Dinette Set Wht 42" round w /2 leaves + 4 blk uphol swivel chrs $100 675-4759 ALMOST NEW contem- porary style sofa &c love seat. $450. Beaut. pecan cof lbl set w /glass in· lay. Dbl bookcase wall unit. Smo.ke glass dining set 1350. Can help to move. 64 I ·2998 MARCH 17, 1981 ' . C•H 152·3191 for Clrcu• I nforrnetloft .. IT'S EASY! Look for your name and address In today's classified section. If you find It, call 642-5678 Ext. 272 and we will arrange for you to the nearest office of the pick up your tickets at Da1·1y P1·1mA CLIP THIS COUPON FOR f. GREAT SA'llNGS AND FUN J ~·················--··· ''2 Circus ticke ts for the price of l · • • ' I If I l :t+ 4 .&-.....-&J-L,j., 642-5920. 30' Dock. Powerboat or Tnr'W'n11;11...,.. ------Tabernca le Mast No ($32 value). lo Pianos & Organ• 8090 overnighters. $160/mo. '58 Chevy Impala. 8 cyl. Allow us the opportun1t~ b I k . 2 d r · H u r r Y to ronsider the purrhase Circus Vorqas ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752·2584, 675-7267 Mar. 17th, 8PM at IAIY GRAND -------- $200/best ofr 833·0340 or trade-in of your clean Montgomery Ward ,1...,.._.0 2boatslipsforrent, R~c~ Porsche <.:heck with Ur. •• ~.~.C:.~ •.•••••• !~.~~ rT::;;od_a_y;:-' ---~ 405 Fwy. a t Bristol ,,_,.. 30' & 48'. Costa Mes a M ah o g an Y f in 1 s h · Joan : 840..4337 f Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to a lmost new. Premie r '78 Dodge RV Van. Sel · bo I ah S....... ..090 contained . Xtras. low claim your tickets. piano. S3500o . o , 101 C1CJe .,. a""9300 • miles. 842-5241 •• * ~ ••••••••••••••••••••• • ------ ------Ask for Ter ry •Lido Pen ins ula Boat *** Lois r. Taylor 181<~ Dewberry Way Irvine You are the winner of 4 free tf c:keh <S14 value>. to .......... loatShow Mar. 4 thru Ma r. 8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to claim your tickets. *** Nwpt Bch Tennis Club ram. membership avail, $800. Call AnswerAd #451, 642-4300. 24 hrs. Balboa Yacht Club Mem- bership for sale. 851-1600 S torag e . S to r age, Console Wurlitzer piano. launching & c r a ne excellent condition $950. s er vice for the dis- 631-3474 criminating boat e r. s-..a-Gooch 1094 14-30'. 673-9330. 675-5901 ....., •""'JI <Steve> ....................... --------- B5rOaHnPd onuetbow arCdh rmyostloerr, Tr..., a rtatioft Co r vair tu rbo <"h g . Ounebuggy, sand tires & trlr. S1600 fi rm. 642·8447 '79 CJ 7 Jeep 3 spd lo mi, xtras. alarm sys. V-8 Sl6100 Randy 857·4514 4 ~ Drins 9 -s5b • •••••••••••••••••••••• . . bo . t ••••••••••••••••••••••• stall 111 x, l yr wm Y' M torhed , .. __ 9140 4X4 Dodge '66 2000 mi on Orig t9SO asking S7SO. 0 ~ new eng, 0440.· waler 1·n· 751 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,.,.,, ject. port converter . gas . MEW rucH MOrEDs Trampoline, 6xl2 bed, Any Model-Wholesale s prings , frame. ne w SaveuptoS187 $895, now $375. 645-8063 _ 631.2504 673-1455 shocks. stage II shift kit & trans, new radia Is. am /fm cass. c amper shell. lots more xlras. $6000/0 BO. 833-~. TY.::-o~ I09I Moped, Honda , '72, very • lo mileage, xlnt cond. •77 Dod $4000 best ••••••.••••••••••••••••• W1'ndshleld, helmet, ge. or o rce r . 63 1·0295 o r Beautiful Color TV: 2 yr $230. 536-6474. 556.3778. wrnty. Free deli very 1....:..------------- $1<18. 646-1786. Mol::vdn/ 9150 '79 Toyota Land Cruiser SHER St Seo hn 12K mi. Mega.extras Complete FI ereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• S7700/0B0646-7694 eves 536-1104 '79KAWKD17S, xlnt cond ridden 4X's S600/0ffer Trudrs 9560 661..6525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s,.clal Purchase!! LowMllHp! 1910 4 spcl. mtd 5 1pd. Datsun rldl Up's Tn•ndow Sen .... !!! Mak•£wn ........... papM•h 13631 H•1but ltlvtJ Ga1den G•o~ '" 636-23)3 Top Dollar Paid For Your Car' JOHNSON & SOM Linc:olrt-M•rcury 2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540·5630 W~Pay OYER Btu.Book For Your Good VW, Porsche or Audi '.~-VW-POR...c;cHE-AUDI 445 E. Coast Hi way at Bayside Dr ive Newport Beach ~3-~ Premium prices paid for any used car (foreiltJI or domestic) in good condition. See Us First ! l888 llarbor Hhd Costa ~ksa 5-10 0330 BARWI CK DATSUN '-H1n .iUt]O c lJPl\.h «7'0 • Autot .... pomd Sprint Cleanln1 at our houte: t xH Br/bleat wool rut '75. Hexcel BlueUte J.8S akl'1 STI. ·Scott boou t \.\I> eu. (pactaae both for P.451). 8 J 1.3 3 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alfa ltCMMO 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! ltll ALFA SPIDllS llACH IMPOITS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 712·ff00 tu. 11 Blttr ci .. tned ada a.rt ? email ''people to ,, ..... calla wttla read9nldp Qd bli r.\llt.ll To ptae. •---... ·--.... ·&:.-·,~,..·-;~•k 1"f' ~ eel, C!all •-,.._ -CD today..... DaU) PUG& . - I . G I ............. l,LMlfOP...,.. . I .....ii' J-rorThe "n.t et.aranee" ihl Dl,part~ent Llktnew '8UU. S/maa1. . Md.•• IMW •--------5500 on new enftne. AU W.1333 '740 records , /18,9SO. ball .... ~!oi-·--------•••••••••••• .. •-••••••• blue. (7~~272-7910 ~ 1l'or The Best 71 M•CIDIS , ' A BuyOrLeue Deal 218 S8AM 78~ Ponche 924, Red p fnOranaeCount.y... Automaue. itr cond., w1t;an int. every factory ~ComeSeeUsToday !. AM·P'M. Mercedes ... o~oo only t4K ml. car . value resale reUabitity. is tmmac. $9900 eves t: ~ ' ·The import of all im· 1_67_3-6394 _______ _ ~ 'i1' ports in ' superb condi· Rois Roye• 9756 ji . tlon. (J6UCRX) ••••••••••••••••••••••• • SADDLllACIC $3'9t '-1 DEALER IN [S.A~· IMW IOI WfTHAM fs402 MarJuerite P.kwy. VOLKSWAGEN '! M.is111on Viejo 7600 Westm inster Ave. ~~:VER Avery Pkwy. exit (5 inWest mlnster ROUS-ROYCE J Fwy.) 893-7Ml 638-7880 •11.2040 4tS.4'49 IStOJemllwM Ntw(llel1l.itcl1 Closed Sundays & I ST 4o HOADWAY SAHIA AHA . 835·3171 .,,.E ULTIMATE OlllVING MACHINE ;.•USEDIMW1• .,76.30csi4s peed (0247> jS2002a (003.5) 9 320l (7560) 7 6.30 csi auto ( 0040 l 'SO S28iA sunrf. 0625 l CloHct Sundays !, 751MW ~ynami te 2002 automatic. Air condi· tioning. stereo & low qiiles. It's squea k y 1 ~lean! (419NKQl $4995 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST ; Q " Sales-Service-Leasing 'Rov Carver,lnc. '!<>lls 'koyce BMW • 1S40Jamboree ~ewport Beach 640-6444 Dworced. must sac '79 320i blk/tan, Luxus pkg. steve: 731-2221. Iv. msg. l!>JO BMW 5281. 4 dr. lf>aded · like new 26,000 ,i. Assume lease or buy O:Ut. 714/646·6950 ·~ 200l, 4 spd. good cond .. l1Jl tires. am 1rm radio. ~-Call eves 645-7234 _._ ___ _ C,itsh and/or ? for '70 dassic BMW 2000 sedan yiooGreg 494 ·6992 Dil,tsut 9720 ........................ :. '78 DATSUN ; 280Z ~namite 5 speed sport coupe. Air conditioning, s t ereo , wh eels & shadow. It's Beautiful ! <26..sUPZl . $7295 JIM MARINO VOUSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 842-2000 '79 MERCEDES 1111-------' .-.... Showroom new. 2400. CLOSED SUNDAYS. only 22.000 miles. Still ~ Saab 97 60 warranty. 4 speed, air conditioned, steering, ••••••••••••••••••••••• cruise. Original! Like LEASE New! (l.2209) DIRECT1 $16,950 • JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. 142°2000 ------------ 4SOSL /maint. in xlnt cond. F. equiP.. Poss. n eg . p rice.' Dan . 646-2128. '72 MBZ 280SE. 1 owner, super clean. service re· cords. Michelins. $6900. 497-2382 eves /wknds 1981 SAAi TURIOs IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752·0900 ORANGE COUMTY SAAi BUY or LEASE DIRECT OVERSEAS DELIVERIES '79 450SL. executive's car. $32 ,250 Assume lease or purchase. Ma -·1·~~ .... ,......,~ ... ,--~-,-,-1~-.--ple yellow tba m.boo . r ' Loaded . 16.000 mi • • : 760-1831. 548·9094. I --.;1 C~ASSIC280SL 10 120 G~rdE>n Grove 8 1 72 000 Gdrdf'n L•'' >vP ?30·9190 Orig owner, . m1 . al e. nu tires. 2 tops Subaru 9762 I Showroom sharp. Have ••••••••••••••••••••••• all s er vice records 74 Subaru $29.750. P.P. 540·3136 WCHJOft ---Excellent transµorta · '76 ~E. river blue, tan lion, built to last longer' int. snrl. cass. Sl4.000. 1080YM Y l 499-1998. 972-9143 Dr Pugh. Mercedes '75 2400. -;nrf. l o mi . air . tape/Fm /s tereo. im - mac Ask $8950. Must sell re~ardless . Dr . Mason 675-0941 . MBZ280 -1973 XLNTCOND. $6000 CALL 760-9278 $1995 l.MOllllA~t . 4~ 83i .(JD) ---- Toyota 9765 '69 Mercedes 280SL. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond . Sl4.000 /0BO. 1975TOYOTA sst-9S85after 6pm. COROLLA '71CLASSIC280SL 4 cylinder. 4 speed. What Orig owner. 72.000 mi. will you do with all the money you save? A very a /c, nu tires , 2 tops. pretty car with low showroom sharp. Have all ser vice records . miles and economy to spare. (516NLX > $19.750. S2499 P.P. S40·3lJ6. IOI WITHAM MG 9742 VOLKSWAGEN ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76()() Westminster Avt! '79 MG Midl!et · Dark in Westminster brown. Xlnt cond. $3950. 893-7551 638 7880 Days 645 5570 E ves 645-0948. MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73COROLLA $1600 645·9502. 642·2434 Don '79 MGI '79 Celira Liftback. a c. 4 speed. 24.00 miles. new am 1rm /cass. s unroor. tires.stereotape (936G ) $4600.P.P.974-4227 CREVIER BMW Volts;,_ 9770 lst & Broadway -~·· Santa Ana 835~3171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1979 RABBIT '79 MGB xlnt rond . 21K mi, am 1rm tape deck. mags, lug~ rack $6300 645-3028 eves /wknds SEO AN ~,;;;;;;;i;;ii;;i~~i;;i;;~iii:ll '64 MGB. reblt eng & gear 4 cylinder, 5 s peed. radio. heater. Virtually br and new condition with only 14,000 miles. (594XZP) This beautiful Rabbit is spotless in every way and the sale price is onl y CHEAP!! :Slightly used turbo kit '70-'74 Datsun Z cars 768-5837. '78 280Z 2+2. xlnt cond , ~m /Fm cass. a tc. snrr. J 7450. PP. 640-1948 e\'es/wkends. F5pt 9725 ·!······················ ''$ Fiat 2000 124 Spyder. p 1ue. Power windows, t~ereo, hardtop incl. Xlnt. cond . $7 ,000. fl's-998.5. box. new top & int. new am tfm. new michelin radials. $2300. 640-8090 arter6pm. Peucpot 9748 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! 1981 PEUGEOT TURI01 IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 9727 752-0900 ·•····················· ~ VISITYOUR ~RANGE COAST 4 HONDA ttEADq&JARTERS ~ TODAY!!! ~ UMIVllSITY ~ SALESltSERVlCE ·: OLDSMOllLE !: HOMO A ~ GMC TlUCKS ~ 3ISO Harbor Blvd. 11 COST A MESA ~ 540.9640 Prelude, gold, ate. tereo. lug. rack, Im· ~ac . cond. S7100. 8 33-8383 X292 ; l213)5'7M'll3 ---------' 79 PEUGEOT 504 Diesel. Automatic . sun roof, 22.000 miles & just like new. (12210) $7995 JIM MARINO VOU<SWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. 842-2000 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1979 POISCHE "928 .. COUPE V8. 5 speed, air cond., pwr. windows, cruise. AM /FM cass. & under 16,000 miles! (9200368 >. $27,911 THEODORE RO BINS $4999 IOI WITHAM VOLKSWAGEN 7600Westminster Ave in Westminster 893-75.51 638 7880 76VWVAN 7 passenger. looks & runs great. All original (7270) CREVIERIMW Isl & Broadway Santa Ana 83.5·3171 1969VW S9'JAREIACK 4 cylinder. 4 speed. radio. heater. Without a doubt this is a true bargain in the used car markett-Oday. <489ACE l An excellent tr ansporta- tion car in excellent con· dition for only $1299 IOIWITHAM YOU<SWAGEN 76()() Westminster Ave. In WeslminSter 893-7Ml 638-7880 BIWlllW 8~ IABBIT . ~.~ .........•.•.• !?.~~! 'tJaauar u MK ns all if. very well main· lned Must Sacrifice FORD .'<.t. I 111\RBOR bl VO ( l\1/1 Ml~A t,.1, 0010 1498 ~ulpt_ db ' cylinder fuel ln]edion en11ine, • speed transmlulon , power assist brakes. tin~ glass, leatherette Interior, cut pile carpet· Ing. factory undercoat• Ina. <93819) 0 JIMMAllHO VOUSWA•._ urm Beech Blvd. 142·2000 74YW 4llWA•OM • .,...... • •"*°-"'!l!:.s AM·rll rtdio. 'l'tat y w :::. ~ .. NOID ..... , -ffOlmlll'/. CtTJICLL> A ·1or1.ou1 chtn7 red and ready to bt owned for only $14tt IOIWITHAM v~sw••• 1800W•lD'liMter Ave. in W•lml.nlt.er 89S-7Ml 638-'1880 BRAND NEW 81 VW JETTA $6995 Equipt with S s peed trans mission. radial t ires, power assist brakes, dual remote con· trol mirrors, reclining seats . stereo prep, metallic paint. fu ll carpeting and much more. (87570) JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd_ 842-2000 74VW 412 SEOAH Auto. trans .. r adio, heater. VW reliability & economy is built into this little car. You can save money and headaches, because it is in very good co nd i ti on <039MCNl On sale for only $2199 IOI WITHAM VOLKSWAGEN 7600 Westm inster Ave in Westminster 893-7551 638-7880 79VWRAlllT DIESEL! 4 speed. sun-1 roof. stereo. jet black I "L '" model . 4 door Dynamite' C525XDB ) $5995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN . 18711 Beach Bl vd. 842-2000 '79VWBUS Dynamite 4 passenger 4 speed. Original brown & Beige. 05710ZZ> $6995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 '6(). '65 VW left & right door. '73 left door. $50 each. Western style whl rims' for Super Beetle S20 ea. 548-97 44 '79VWRAHIT Dynamite, low mileage, custom 2 door automatic & air conditioned. Origina l , S ha rp' (792S(TI l $4995 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN .18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 '66 for $1600. '67 for $2600. Or Best offer p.p. MUST SELL 548-1095 '77VWIUS Dynamite 7 passenger 4 speed with air condition· ing Low miles' Original! (791TDFl $5295 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 111711 Beach Blvd. 842-2000 VW Convertible '73, looks nice. runs great. Radia ls. $3900. 494-2407 -------- '70 BUG xlnt cond, auto stick. stereo/cass, $2500 PP 839-295S 76 Scirocco. web, konis. lowered. $3975. 548-698.5 Auto Insurance P roblems? I write any risk. lo monthly rates. Pirkel Ins. 646-3995 '68 IUG $1800 645-9502 or 642-2434 Don '6-0 VW BUS. Xlnt shape $1500. nu paint & tuneup 675-1028 aft 6. Vol•o 9772 • •••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO SALES. SERVICE AHDLEASIM& OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS EARLIHCE VOLVO 1966 llarbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 646-9303 54-0.9467 OllAM61 COUNTY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer tn ~nge County! BUY or LEASE DIRECT Mm~ 10120 Garden Grovt el , Garden Grove 530-9190 '7• Volvo lME, xlnt e!ond, ne111 Hrea , brkt , .~ ....... , ... to ....... llua\ "" Sac.-.•2117 '71 POID PICKUP '71 FIAT II.AVA Ill '73 FORD fo,,no S1oon Only •8.202 OhQfM I m1•I Th.. CAI 11 Jn 1*"rll~ cono..hon' Outatand•nQ lrlnll'(>ttllllon 1I2<4MUF I '78 DATSUN 200 sx Cana'y Yellow Coup• ""''" ~ • .,( l\M .. fM •o.i "''* AU Of"IQtn&I and Pflf»O to N II ""'-' (J20VFDI '76 ALPHA ROMEO Nphln.a ~ .,, tnowtOOl'n c:oncl•hon VflllY "-"O CAf 10 t1na .. pec1al1r '"' '"'' cono1tton1 (0796001 53496 '69TOYOTA ~ ~ Wllff'I •utomauc Grell ~uon ,.,,,,, n•w 11--,., "'°"I_, 1831AFZI '72 MUSTANG SQ v .. tn lf'W)Wtoom eondnf()f'I• NI optH>nl 1nclud1nQ fe(.tOfY au ......._ .. and ctuw thtt cute _. f'6'PWl. 53486 '76 CHEVY HOYA 8'Q & cyl Wllh A.C. PIS All 5,,.,0 'Y•llow l'\/b•ck COUP• looi-1 '"" df'1v11 new' C9:llll'COI 53199 '76 COUGAR 11·7 53484 '78 AUDI 5000 T ob1cco 8tO'llt'" one--ow-n.et 'Nlth 111, CIU<M, 810Ul)Unkl AM-FM Showroom condition muat dttw tn11 'PtMUge Beauty! , ..... ~ 568a '67 MERCEDES 250 s J1ri1lly autom1tlc fe11unng *'°'Y .,,, M. eunrool. IHI'*. ...,. __ lllO<ll(N*i Orange Coast DAILY PfLOr/Tueeday, March 101 1981 . .. 9940 Catllac "11 '79 Monza good cond air Foret . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •--, C II ft s' •••••••••••• •••••••••• ,76 c---+ x ...... a 11 • or -wknd, 556-0724. 71 FORD FIESTA S.•lh 4 cylinder. 4 speed. radio I.AWi' .. Low miles. tilt wheel, 76MONU heater. front wheel ~ &Jl• cruise. new tires, Not a 2 +2 , 4 cyl. gop d drive, economy, ap· --------~ mark or a scratch !! mileage, a /c , ra d io. pea.ranee, affordability. Plato 9917 (LP-3301 ) transrerrable warranty. Hav e I ml s s e d $7995 YOUR #I CADILLAC DEALERSHIP IH ORANGE COUNTY! SALES. SERVICE AND LEASING ~Abi.ti~~ 2600 H.\rbof Blvd CO!>!c\ ~ 540-QIOO SeVille Elegante '81 , diesel, every option ( 38K mi, 891-l588 aft 5PM -------- '78 Sev i lie. lea th er, am/rm stereo w/tape, c ruise. etc. xlnt cond, $8500. 495-6988 ----Camaro 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Che•y Camaro P ower windows. tilt wheel, ste reo, mags, 49,000 m iles, Razor Sharp!!! (956PQT) $3995 '78 Camaro Air, automatic, power steering, 27,961 miles, (882VEI) $4911 Barwick Imports 831-3311 '70CAMARO $1800/0BO 759-1130 aft 6PM '78 CCllMf"O RaHy Tinted wi nd o w s. louvers. super lig hts with TA's, bra . $1200 s te r eo s ystem , $6700 /0BO . (714)536-9696 eves. '68 Camaro. 327. new tires, paint. etc. Very s harp. MUST SELL FAST. 545-9227 '78 7.28 Camaro 4sp-air s tereo-mags-bra-posi- clean $5100644-6806 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEI US FIRST! We have a good selection o f NEW & USED Chevrolets ! CONNELL CHEVROLET .~lf.1 rl••I l\l\d 1 ·os I ., .., ~ :-. \ 546-1200 ••• Wftt6y Ecntrn• 378 E'. 23rd St. Newport Beach You are the winner or 4frNtlck.ts ($32 value ), to Cil"CUI Vanacn Mar . 17th, 8PM at Montgomery Ward 4CXi Fwy. at Bristol Costa Mesa Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to claim your tickets. ••• ••• Tmya ICJ1t91tld 9074 Cockatoo Ave. Fountain Valley You are the winner of 4frNtlck.ts C$14valuel, to ........ loaf st.ow Mar.4thruMar.8 Anaheim Convention Center Call 642-5678, ext. 272 to claim your tlcket.s. *** ~ NEW BUSINESSMEN Contect the DAILY PILOT tor lntotmetton re91rdlng IN county requirement• tor uelng 1 ,tctltlous 8u1ln1 .. N1tn1. MM311 m.m ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5S7·352'7or7S9·0060. anything? (855TLNl Ah yes. It ls on sale for only *$ALE* 1979-1980 PINTOS • 30. COllHM..tal tt 30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71UMCOLM MARICY "'" IOIWITHAM VOUSWA&DI 7600 Westmlnater Ave. in Westmlnater 893-7Ml 638·7880 '72 Torino. Xlnt cond. orig owner. $1495. 080FNH) 642-1710 to choose from $2895 Power windows, seats. stereo tape, Landau top, le ather interior. tilt wheel, cruise control. Bring your chauffer and test drive this diamond with only 19,000 miles. (931004) The value is un· questionably valid for '78 Ford Fairmont. ex· only cellent condition, priced <817XKS> ALL-Low Mileage ALL-Automatic Trans. ALL-Power Steering ALL-Runabouts, 3dr. , SOME-Air ConditioninJ SOME-Station Wagons, , ALL-Guaranteed 1 $6899 to sell. 496-3987 IOI WITHAM · '74 Cour lor . excellent VOLKSWAGEN care throughout. new ORANGE COAST ' TRAMSPOIT A TIOM1 CL<>SETO FREEWA~ 2167 Harbor Blvd. 7600Westminster Ave tires, many xtras, must in Westminster see96(}.8960 893-7551 638-7880 Mercury 9950 Co"ette 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S Costa Mesa Call C714) 631-6441 ~ Value Rated FIMEST UMdCart!! LINCOLN-MERCURY 78FOIDPIMTO '19 Cornffe L82 DEALERSHIP RUHAIOUT 4 s-d. I 0,000 miles, ~-~ ifl"Jt.l/J.o• 4 cylinder. autom atic, r--~ T' radio. h ea t er . A 41lau T top, door LINCOLN-MERCURY . bargain, a steal, a good locks, stero, power 1&18Auto Center Dr. buy. affordable.~ great windows , sport SO Fwy-Lake Forest value.Theyallapplyto exit this little car. (692TSVl whfffs, IRVINE Kick up your heels and <llOYMY > 830.7000 drive it home for only $13 900 ------$2499 '78 Marquis wagon . 9 IOI WITHAM pa ss . loade d . New VOUSWAGEM Michelins. Xlnt cond. 7600Westminster Ave .. SSOOO. Owner, 675·6161 in West minster MustClllCJ 9952 893-7551 638-788Q' ~··•••••••••••••••••••• Plyntoutfl-9960 66 Mustang VS. 289, good ••••••••••••••••••••••'• cond. $2800/0 BO Reply . ~ ~HICUf~ Answer Ad #434 642_4300 7~ Duster, _great cond\. 49)00j 83i~. 24 hrs air. new ti res. gd gas '79 CORVETTE Low m ileage. Dead s h a rp Loaded & original. (693XV H l $10,950 JIM MARINO VOUSWAGEM l871l Beach Blvd. 142-2000 SHOWROOM COMO. '75T-TOP · mileage. Call after 6pm : '68 MUSTANG. needs 968-o:.JO. work. SIOOO/bei;t orfer. Pontiac 9965 832-2111 dys ext 3334 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dawn •PONTIAC '7 6 Oldsmobile 9955 SUNllRD COUPE! ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 otds. Cuttas1 6 cyclinder, automatic, crulse control. power windows and seats, ste r eo casse t te . (241UMY) Auto. trans .. power steering, light color, etc . N eat little c ar! C651PVJ ). OHLY $2995! HOWARD Chenolet Dove & Quail Sts NEWPORT BEACH Power brakes. power windows, power steering 833-0555 with tilt/telescoping fl;995 s teerin g wheel. air. .'4J '65LeMansConvt AM/FM stereo. rear GoodCond. $1700 w i n do w d e fo g g e r . 759-1580 automatic trans. Snow --- white with Burgundy in· '78 FIREBIRD Formula. terior. 27.000 miles. Im-stereo, pin strip, A/C. m aculate thr uo ut ' elec windows & dr. lock $8.100. 754-6790 or l.MOIJIAIC&Al New tires & brkes. Xlrft. Answer Ad 11209. 642-430C ~ 831.<JDl cond., low mi. $5,000 · 24 hrs. 675-7259 ---------------=;;==::.L===;;.;;.....;; --~- • "· on 7 or lf Casu \\\ eouoW ad~e1tise1s1 Here's a sure tn\ng ior orange TE 1981 GRAND PRIX'S 1981 PHOENIX 1981 FIREBIRDS INCLUDING DIESELS GM's X BODY INCLUDING TURBO CASH SAVINGS DIRECT PROM GM INCLUDES: •AM radio •Heater • 4 speed trans • Tinted glass • Whitewall tires • Power steering • Power disc brakes • 18.5 gal. fuel capacity •Tilt wheel 1978 CORVETTE 350 V-8 engine, factory air, anvfm stereo tape. automattc. power steering & brakes. heater, & much more (401189) • MUST SEE 1979 OLDS REGENCY V-8. automatic. factory air. amtfm stereo tape. white walls. full power. vinyl roof & more (519WZE). HURRY WHILE SELECTION IS GOOD "•ffw• ..... Mercll ltlll NEW 1980 PONTIAC SUNllRD OR 5995 DOWN AND Ccnll or Trade Pllll Tu, Uceae & Doc .. 111ta1 'f fff 1979 POMTIAC TRAHSAM Automatic. am/Im stereo tape. air conditioning. pwr. window. custom wheels. custom interior & more (832XZR) 1978 CHEVY CAPRICI CLASSIC Automattc. factory air. power steering & brakes. power windows. am/Im stereo tape, custom wheels & much more (211138). 54795 1979 DODGE COLT 4 cylinder engine. gOOd gas car (419XHA). 53695 1978 HONDA cvcc 4 cylinder. 5 speed transmiSS1on. am/Im stereo tape. (788URX) 53495 4 Cyl. 4 Speed UM theM n"""°9"1 fOf como.t11s,on Your "'' .. • may wary oepeno1no ~:.~~:·~ ·~~~~~J,: "''~~ ... orOIJiM>ly be tns 1975 FORD ELITE Automatic. factory air. am/Im stereo. white walls, tilt. vinyl top & more (935NWX). ' 51995 1978 CHRYSLER COUOIA Automatic transmission. A/C. AM/FM stereo tape. power steering. vinyl top, cruise. (IAOV127). 53695 .,..~ LADY DIANA WOWS 'EM AT LONDON CHARITY BALL StrepleH gown relMa eyebrow•, bring• whl1tte1 Lady Diana's dress stuns ordookers LONDON (AP> Lady_ Diana Spencer stunned onlookers with a glamorous outfit when she turned out for her first public e n gageme nt with Prince Charles, whom she is to marry in July. Her strapless bl1ck taffeta evening gown brought gasps from an elite audience at a chuity show. A crowd or about 200 cheered the prince and his bride-to-be as they drove up in the rain to Goldsmiths' Hall in the City of London financial district. There were whistles as the 19-year·old earl's daughter. following the prince, stepped out of a black limousine. When blonde Lady Diana. looking relaxed and happy, took off her wrap inside the haU, BBC television reporter Keith Graves commented: "Lady Diana wore a low-cut gown ... well off the shoulder. There were audible admiring gasps." , The couple attended an eve- ning or verse and music to raise· m oney for the Royal Opera San Clememe • • COIWlCt lll escape try A San Clemente man facing a death penalty determination in the murder of a Corona del Mar real estate agent was among three men alleged to have at- tempted an escape today from Orange County Jail. Orange County Sheriff's Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said the trio broke through a vent grate in a n eight-man cell about 3:30 a. m. and were heading through a plum bing conduit to the r~f ofthe four-story jail building when deputies heard noises. Hart said it was not yet known bow the three men would have left the roof had they made it that far. Investigation is continuing. Hart identified one of the three as John Alan Keith, 23, of San Clemente, convicted recenUy in the murder of Ruben Martinez, 40, ofCoronadel Mar. Keith was scheduled today to appear in Orange County Superior Court for a bearing to de· termine if he should receive the death penalty for his role in the 1978slaytng. The others lnvolved in the at· \empted escape were identified u Mark Albert Foster, facin1 aiurder and robbery charges, and Robert Errol Stoner, facin1 rob- J>ery and bur1lary cbar1es. The three men were among ei1ht housed in the cell on the fourtbflooroftbeja11. Mother arrested LOS ANGELES (AP) -A ll·year-old woman bu been ar· reated after her two amaJI eblldren, as" 5 and 2, dled 1lffplnc 1.8\attended ln a fire at l.belr South Loe An1el• home, tberiff'1 deputies 1a1d. House Covent Garden, of which Charl ~s is patron. Princess Grace of Monaco read Poems on the stage. The 300 guests paid $110 each to attend. . 'd Prince Charles took al slri e, aJUtoqb Lady Di ... -~ pears In demure s kirts an sweaters. The prince, aware or tbe c'rulb or photographers, turned and said with a laugh. "Have all the fashion writers finished?" New advisers • • arrive 1n El Salvador SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador 1 AP) As U.S. milHary ad· visers arrive in San Salvador, the army is battling guerrillas Z7 miles north or the capital. About 20 of the advisers ar- rived over the weekend, bring- ing the number in El Salvador to a bout 50, sources said. Th e a dvi se r s in c lud e helicopter mechanics, helicopt~r flight instructors, and S",lall urut training teams to teach mfantry tactics. A flight instructor and a mec h anics instruc to r , in· terviewed at the llopango air fo rce base eight miles east of San Salvador, said they were un- der orders not to fight except in self-defense or to save another U.S. adviser. The flight instructor said Salvadora n helicopter pilots were being put through a five- week training session, four men at a time. to learn how to fly Huey transport choppers. The mechanics instructor said the Salvadoran troops seemed · much more highly motivated than the South Vietnamese troops he bad worked with dur- ing the Vietnam War. ·'The proble m is n ot the capability of the Salvadorans, it's their support, their equip- ment," he said. "They are very capable." Both instructors said they were commissioned Army of- ficers, but declined to give their names or ranks or have their pictures taken. A Salvadoran army aource said relnforcementa were · ru•bed Monday to Sucbltoto, a am all town Z1 mllet north of San Salvador VCl'S MAGEE ALL-AMERICAN UC Irvine's Kevin Macee hu been named to the Alloclated Prell flnt team All·Amertca. M.,ee, the naUon'a tblrd' Jeadlnl 1 scorer this season, 11 UCI'• lint All·Amerlca basketball player. See Sport.a, Pase 8'1. . Lawsuit aimed at district By PATRICK KENNEDY Of tM o.11, ,.,._.Stall Counselors scheduled to be laid off next month have sued the Huntington Beach Union High School District, alleging they are being illegally replaced by unqualified workers . The suit is a response to the district's decision last month to lay off 43 counselors and to hire 18 "counselor technicians," next semester. District officiats contend the classified technicians will give college placement information and do paperwork involving class c hanges but will not counsel students. Currently, there are eight counseling technicians doing clerical work for counselors. The suit alleges that those eight class ified worke rs are violating state law by perform- ing counseling functions and that the additional 18 proposed technicians will continue to violate state r egulations next fall. The suit, filed Monday in Orange County Superior Court, states that students will suffer "irr~parable injury" by receiv- ing unqualified counseling. -. eaieaelor ,.,.,,....,. pert or the district's '3.9 million re- ducUoo_Ml next year's pr= budref'Xccordin1 to tit- plan, penonal counael.lni will be eliminated and replaced with in· formation handouts. Orange Counly Superior Court Judge Robert R. Fitzgerald is· sued a writ of mandate Monday ordering the district to answer the charges in court next month. "It's a slap in the face to me," said counselor spokesman Ken McCluskey. "I've got a master's degree and they're replacing me with a clerk." He said the school board will be told o( the lawsuit at tonl1ht's meeting at 10251 Yorktown Ave. at 7 p.m. At the meeting, the board is scheduled to discuss further re- ductions in the administrative budget and the new regulations on maximum class loads for juniors and seniors. Fluor stock earnings due to decline? By FREDERICXSCHOEMEBL OttlWo.11, ,., ... , .. " Everything seemed rosy at the outset of the Fluor Corp.'s annual shareholders meeting at a posh hotel not far from its Irvine world headquarters. After all only six days before, the global 1engineering firm had announced that net earnings per share for the first quarter of fiscal 1981 were uo 24 oercent compared to the same period in fiscal 1980. And stockholders were smiling because the company's work backlog had jumped to $17.1 billion a record amount, com- pared io $11. 7 billion for the flrat quarter last year. But the amlles -aome of them, anyway -faded momenta after the meetin1 was over Monday on the statement to reporten by J . Robert Fluor, president and chairman of the board, that earn- ln11 in the second or third quarter of1981coulddecline. Perbape by u much as 10 cent.a per share, Fluor aald. Despite any "blip" in eamlnp -to use Fluor' a term -net eam- inC• Jar the current ftaeal year are expected to be 15 to 20 percent blcber than fiscal 1980, the com· pany'a chief esecuUve ottlcer said. But the mere tu1ceatlon quarterly eanW.11 'mllbt drop torc.d na . .oo ..,.,.. of ~ ttoek to be lold lD UM tw._.- period prec~t.be cloleoftrlld- tn1 on the New ,York Stotk Ex· chan1e. \ Tbe 1toclt, which 9-•d blt a h(jh ot U'41D I.be IDOl"ltJDI, HU to I , ... n.uoa. Pa1• AJ> Limp blimp repaired Ever wonder what the Goodyear Blimp looks like with the air let out of it? Something lik e this (top ) after a windstorm deflated one of the company's four dirigibles last week. Below, the gon- dola rests upside down in a hangar at Tustin's MCAS CH) helicopter base where the problem is being resolved. WASINGTON CAP)-~· dent lea1an, declaring, 11the next s~ are up to Coniresa," pro1 $48.6 billion · 1n spend· ing c for 1982 across the bread of government today, spari defense and little else from~ chopping block. Tb $695.3 billion budget for 1982 uJd leave a deficit of MS billi . It cont.ains newly an- noun spending reductions of $13.8 million in more than 200 arei , including veteran and JOb pro ams, water projects and hou g. The budget includes Reagan's call for a three-year tax cut, but the overall theme or the spending document is simp l e a nd dramatic: More guns and rel· atively less butter . As a result or the military in- creases and sharp cuts in social programs, the defense share of the federal budget would rise from 24 percent in 1981 to 27 per- cent next year and 38 percent by 1986. Payments to individuals, the chief means of federal help to the poor and near-poor, would re- main roughly steady at about 48 percent. The social cuts are certain to provoke a battle in Congress. Rea1an is seeking to double his proposed reduction in welfare spendlng to more than $1 billion with a "workfare" requirement that he favored as governor of California. He wants to bulld 50,000 fewer units of public ho~ing than he reeommended just a month aeo. and 85,000 fewer units than the 260,000 proposed by J imm y Carter in Janualj'. On education, Reagan recom· mended a 25 percent cutback compared with 20 percent out- lined ln his February 18 budaet meaaafe. His food stamp plan calls for ad· dltional cuts of $500 milllon to a total reduction of $2.3 bllllon. "The plan I ouWned will atop runaway inflation and revitalise our economy lf liven a chance," Rea1u declared in a atateaient that outlined cuts in more oearly , 300 pfOIJ'ams from food atamps to apaceesploraUon. <lee at1DGET, P11e Al) 'BEAN SPIRIT' ENSHRINED I SeQlptor llam6 No1uebl'1 ''sr.r!t of &be Ltm• BHa. ' Ilia flNt CaUfonla creatloa aad &lie ftttt of 1la worlla plaaaed for7 a ~•re 1arden. w11 • ...._.. '°' •• , la Ca.ta ........ l'Ht•re1, P•1• Cl, for •tort• ~ pbotoe. Harbor pollution spoils sunny day BySTEVE MARBLE · • OfU.o.11,,.lletS&llH Warm beach-visiting weather is aettlinc in alon1 the Oranie Coast but beaches aion1 the Ne~pOrt Beach coasWne will re- ·malnolf Umita for atleut-another weell folJQwing a massive sewace aplll. Orance County health officials stress the contaminated water situation la even w~ in the Newport Harbor. Tbey predict the llarbor waten will be elo.ed to bathenfortwoweeks. Six mllllan 1allona of Uquid and solid aewace poured into tbe harbor Saturday and Sunday wb•a_. UDe beD .. th Padtlc Coa.Jt ••ay in front ol the Balboa 91rClubnaptwed. A~ the tlDI wa repaiNd Sun~Q afternoon. 1u1tadoo of. ftciab N1 the CODCUUon ol the aewer UM betw ... tM Cout lm111wu Midi• ud UM cha~ re-•••.-tlon. ··--.o1t1aat~.··11ea1.-Dl1U1at IP*•maa -., Wwta told ffewpal"l eomeilmea M• •• ,, .... u thin u • •beet of C . ••·re~alotofpraJ· water could be e xtremely dangerous. He said bacteria in the sewa1e can produce eye, throat and intestinal infections. In severe cases, he said, It can cause hepatitis. Wehner said pinpointing when the water in the harbor will be (See SEWAGE, Pace AZ) IUISI COAST llATHIR Sunny and warm. Lows tonight 48 at beaches, 56 inland. Hllha Wednesday upper 809 along coast, mld 701 to low M>s inland. 1111111•1 A S~h·Doll Adu.,.tiat college ii U.. M&b o/ Kene, fe%Gt, o amoll tovnt 11eor DolJol. SH \MW, Pao-Al. IDll Shuttle talks With a scale model of the space shuttle Columbia in front of them, astronauts Robert Crippen (left) and John Young talk to reporters at a press conference in Houston. The pair are scheduled to fly the Co!umbia on its first or· bital mission during the week of April 5. FLUOR EARNINGS DIP. . ' low of 46~ and closed at47'1/ii . Fluorclosedoffll/e points on the day's trading. But at 10 today, it was up 11,8 to 48~. A Fluor spokesman said the selloff was directly attributable to Fluor's "quantifying" the reduc- tion that may occ.ur to earnings over the next two quarters. In his address to shareholders ~athered at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa, Fluor didn't mention figures. "Let m e c aution you , however," Fluor said after de· hilini;i the first quarter earning results. "Don't give in to the temptation of assessing Fluor's outlook by the results for one or two quarters. The nature of our business can sometimes result in Quarters that can have un· usually high or low earnings relative to the comparable period the previous year or the preceding quarter · · Fluor. wearing his trademark bow tie, used an example to demonstrate the growth the company's stock has achieved in the past 21 years · First he held up a Sl bill. Then he produced a $100 bill, a S5 bill, a SI bill. a dime. a nickel and fou r pennies $106.19 total. Fluor said, "$106.19 is what this 1!8> dollar would be worth today if you had invested it in Fluor stock." Fluor predicted the company's near·exponential growth will continue. The firm now employs 29 ,000 people . lt expects to employ 42,000 by 1983 and 50,000 by 1985, Fluor told shareholders. Oa!IJ ,. • ._.Slaff ,.-.. SEES EARNINGS DIP J . Robert '1uor The company chairman said "newly emerging technologies" will join past ones as the firm takes on future projects. "Right now, as an important example," Fluor said, "We're keeping a watchful eye on the very active field of genetic en~ineeriog, or biotechnolo~v. through which living organisms can be artificially altered to syn- thesize or degrade various or- ganic and inorganic materials." From Pag~ Al BUDGET CUTS ASKED. • • Also, Reagan would eliminate le~al service assistance to the poor, sharply reduce spending for environmental and consumer protection and pare the budget of the Equal Employment Op- portunity Co mmission. ·'These are unprecedented cuts to meet an unprecedented situ&· lion," the president said as he signed the package in the Rose Piano class set at GWC A Thursday registration dead· line has been announced for a children's beginning piano pro- gram at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. The classes, for ages 6to12, wiJI start Wednesday , March 18. Lessons are conducted in the col· lege's electronic piano lab, in which students wear headphones and use various levers. The fee for 12 lessons is $25. Pre· registration must be done ln the college's Community Services Of. flee. ORANGE COAIT Garden. "They mark the end of an old era and the beginning of a new one." In a revamped version of his 1982 spending plans, the president said he is prepared to recommend still deeper spending cuts if necessary to keep federal spend· ing from rising faster. In relaying his plan to Congress, Reagan pointedly reminded lawmakers and special interest groups that he felt he was acting on a "man. date for change" delivered by the voters last fall. ·'There is nothing more impor· tant than putting America's economic house in order. The next steps are up to Congress," he said. Reagan submitted his revised 1982 budget ln tandem with the de- tails on his proposal for a three. year cut in personal income tax rates of 10 percent a year. Top Republicans on Con1ress' tax· writing committees were to in· troduce the adminlstratlon's tax plan today. Rea1an'1 budget makes deep cuts ln the spending blueprint President Carter recommended beforeleavingorrice. Dilly Piiat MAIN°"ICE Thomu P. Hai.y ,....... Robert N. W9ed ....... M. Thoma• l<Mvll ..., Thomaa A. Murphlne .............. etwi.H.Looa A-..... ...... ,... ~Schulman v=!.er:::-n t:='."'.;,2oddw, "'· QO W•tl 9ey St., Cott• Mfta, CA, Mell Hdl"MI: hA I .. , C..lt M!p!, CA.,.._ d Decll~in1 enrolhnent may force Ocean Vlew School 1>11· lttct officials to cle>1e elemen· tary achoola and to couo.Udate Junior hip classea in 1112. Dl1trlct apokeswoQ1an Gayle Wayne aala a committee of tru11teu, school olllcfals and cltlaen1 'W1U consider these measures next fall. Enrollment in the elementary d11trict of 11,000 atudentl la ex. peeled to drop by 454 pupU. next year. By 1985, district enroll· meat i1 expected to drop by about 1,800 students, according to school officiab. The 23-school district serves Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and Midway City. Mrs. Wayne said several elementary schools are under· populated. She said the district has 10 campuses with kindergarten through eighth g rade classes. Consolidation may eliminate seventh and eighth grade in- struction from two of those, Mrs. Wayne said. HB patrolman injured in road· accident' A Huntington Beach police of- ficer was injured when his motorcycle was struck by a motorist pulling over to pick up a hitchhlker, police reported. Officer Preston W. Linker, 29, was reported in fair condition with minor injuries today at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. According to police, Linker was southbound on Beach Boulevard near Talbert Avenue Monday at 11 ·25 p.m., when his motorcycle collided with a southbound auto driven by James Philip Wombold, 22, of 20222 Flaxman Drive, Hunt- ington Beach. Police said Wombold was in the lane nearest the center divider and was swerving to the right to pick up a hitehbiker when the collision occurred. The accident is under in- vestigation by the California Highway Patrol, which routinely probes officer -involved col- lisions. Valley briefs committee on city budget -The Fountain Valley City Council will hold a special meet- ing tonight to issue instructions to a newly appointed committee that will focus on city budget problems. City officials have predicted that Fountain Valley may face a budget shortfall of more than Sl million for the fiscal year begin· ning July 1. Last week the council appoint- ed a five·member committee to discuss the budget squeeze at various community meetings and to seek solutions. Committee members include Ellery Deaton, Sam Cubele, Roy A. Rodgers, Don Chaney and Devon Dahl The council wilJ meet with th.is committee at 7 p.m. in City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. Woman routs jeiool thief in Newport A Newport Beach woman reclaimed a ba& filled with her Jt:welry Monday afternoon when she bumped into a burglar in her bedroom, yelled "Oh no you don't" and chued tbe youtblul crook out the front door. Deborah $perber1 told officers ahe lut aaw the freckle·faced man runntn1 down the street. Police aaJd the woman entered her Corona deJ Mar home at 12:30 p . m. and heard nolae1 in a bedroom. Officers Hid sbe bumped tnto the crook HCODdl later when lhe turned a ball cor- ner andentel'ed t.be bedroom. The bar1lar. police uld, Mcame IO rattled by the tuna ol evnta that 1111 -= a brown •bc>DDtm bill ftU with JenlrJ an4 · bOlw. Tia• bomeowaer •tared .... blldad. 'n.. ... .., WM .. IC~bad U Wa IDd IPCJl'Uq .... , tail and mmtadte . • • Bergeson's waste bill tmder study SACRAMENTO (AP > -A skeptical Assembly Health Com· mittee heard Republican As- semblywoman Marian Bergeson of Newport Beach call for a special task force Monday to study what California should do with its 200,000 cubic feet of low- level nuclear waste. The committee did not take a vote on AB210 by the As- semblywoman. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is expected to have a bill soon to attack the same problem. The committee members ques· tioned Mrs. Bergeson's bill fordif· fering reasons. Some did not like the idea of establishing a new task for ce when state agencies could do the job. Some did not want dis· posal sites in the state at all. Other members want the federal gov- ernment to tackle the problem. since it is national in scope . Low-level nuclear waste is ·generated by hospitals in medical tests and by universities for re- search and industries for various products. It does not include waste from nuclear power plants. Currently, there are only three places where such wastes can be ·dumped. Waste from California's 2,000 producers of low-level nuclear wastes, which total 140,000to250,000cubic feet a year, now go to Hanford, Wash., or Beatty, Nev. But a Washington referendum prohibits any but medical wastes at Hanford after July, and the Nevada governor has periodically closed the Beatty site. Supporters of the bill from the University of California and private industry said most nuclear users could store wastes for six months if both those dumps were shut, but no longer. · Mrs. Bergeson's bi ll would establish a 15-member low-level Radioactive Waste Technical Task Force to classify the low· level was tes and decide what to do with them. The task force would have until 1983. The bill is supported by the California Medical Association, the University of California and other nuclear users. It is opposed by the Department or Health Services, Brown. the Natural Resources Defense Council and Friendsofthe Earth. Aoabelm homicide lo · ve1tt1aton tald today they bave lnte"lewed 1' witneaae1 ln a fatal 1tabblne incident at Dlaneyland Saturday nilht but are 1tlll not certain what led to the slayln1. TbedeathofMelC. Yorba,18,of Rlvenide wu Disneyland's flrat homlcldelnlll2J6..yearblatory. Police S,i. Del Wade said thls mornina that reports or a pinchlne-lncident triggering the violent chain of events hu not been verified. "Wecan'tabowthatoccurred," Wade said. Somewitnessesindicatedthata young man had Pinched one of the auspectl, Julie Holdeoer 1 251 of San Diego, on the buttocks, and this may have led to the alleged attack by the other suspect, James O'Driscoll. Both O'Driscoll and Miss Holdener were expected to be formaJJy charged with murder to- day bytbeOrangeCounty District Attorney's office. Each is being held in lieu of $250,000 bail, O'Driscoll at Anaheim City Jail and Miss Holdener at Orange County Jail. Wade said both suspects have refused to talk with police in· vestigators. The slaying occurred near the submarine ride ticket booth in the Tomorrowland area. Yorba, who apparently did not know his as- sai I ants. was taken to Palm Harbor Hospital in Garden Grove, where be was pronounced dead. The stabbing occurred at about 10 p.m. while the park was filled with guests of the Rohr Corpora- tion of San Diego. An estimated 10,000 people were in the park that night. Both O'Driscoll and Miss Holdener are listed as un - employed. Wade said it is un- known what connection they had to Rohr . O 'Driscoll was arrested by police who found him hiding in bushes in the area of Adven- t urel and. Miss Holdener was taken into custody by park securi· ty personnel at the scene of the s tabbing. APWi ........ OI FACING CHARGES Julle Hofdener SL.A YING SUSPECT Jame1 O'Drt1coll l'roM Pap A I SEWAGE DANGERS. • • safe is difficult because "we've never had a spill of this magnitude in a bay before.'· He added, though, that the sewage was diverted to a point in the bay where currents are strong, a fact, he said, that could · help "flush"outtheharbor. The sewer break, reportedly caused by natural corrosion of the 33-inch pipe, caused pavement on Coast Highway to buckle and crack. The problem was compounded, explains sanitation spokesman Lewis, because there is no backup Line along the half-mile stretch between the bridge and break point. Except for the half.mile stretch in Newport, Lewis said the sewer path is served by two pipes. The two-pipe system al· lows workmen to divert the flow to a backup line in case of a break. Lewis sa~d sanitation officials had hopes of installing a second line in Newport but were forced to spend the $850,000 set aside for the project when a pipe at the Huntington Beach treatment plant ruptured last year. · ··We are res huffling our budget," he said, "and looking for some money." Lewis potnted out a nother potential problem with lines run- ning under the harbor near the Coast Highway bridge. He said these lines are made of the same material of the pipe that rup- tured. "Most of our lines are encased in plastic but not in these two areas," he said. "The lines cou Id last forever or, on the other hand, they could blow up next week." --FIND OF THE WEEKI® Look over our four-leaf dover. • All the luck;ou can handle for St. Patrick's Day. O~r fou~·l~af clover is a 2 karat gold-plated replica o( the ~lorentme ong1~al. You can hang it over the door for luck or use 1t as a paperwe1~ht. It's inscribecf on the back with "One leaf is for hope, and one ·~ for faith. and o ne is for love, you know. And Cod put another in for luck." The luck starts with the price -$15.00. Ben11t1ful .«ifts say, "I love you." ' I j I Beauty f Debbie White J grooms the beast ("The Gen-Genbacher' J at Six Flags Over Georgia'! $31h-million addition to amusement park. The 11 -foot-tall ogre is part of the Monster Planta- tion. Television newsman Ken Joae1 has been in touch with his employers at KNXT and hopes to resolve allegations by his bank that he cashed $200,000 worth of checks that bounced, a station offi cial said. Jones was in the middle or a two·week vacation when Security Pacific Bank of· ricials accused him of defrauding the bank through a check-kiting scheme over a four-day period in February. The bank filed a $210,000 civil su.it against him Monday Cleveland Orchestra Con- ductor Lorin Maazel is now a n offi cer in the French Legion of Honor Maazel was awarded the honor on his 5lst birthday during ceremonies in Paris at the residence of U.S. Am· bassador to France Arthur Hartman. Actor Jack Klugman , TV's crusading medical examiner Quincy. con- verted last week's show theme into real life Monday when he testified before con- gressional committee to spur development of so- called "orphan drugs" for rare diseases. lllUtalce .. Me .. -.;; ... •bo starred ln a Mrl• of ttallan·made "ffereulel" movies alter be· lol naQled llr. America and Mr. Unlvene, aaya pualnl up t.he role t.bat made Clll$ Eaa& .... a atar waa a mW take. Alter a run of .. B .. films portrayln1 squacle men, R,evea said he mt•l\t have become known mott u an actor if be hadn't tunMld down the st1rrin1 role lo Ser1lo Leon'• "Fistful of Dollar.a.'' Reeves sald he didn't t.h1nk an Italian direc· tor could make a successful American western from a Japanese samurai story. '!be role went to Eastwood, who went on to become a major star. Reeves retired in 1972 and bought a H-acre ranch on a highlands northeast of San Diego where be lives with bis wife, AUDe. Edward Cricks admits a news paper ad designed to catch him a wile has opened a "can of worms ." Now he's ready to go fishing. The •S -ye ar ·old s upe r marke t produce manager placed an advertise· m e nt in a Ba y Area newspaper, showing himself leaning casually against his sportscar. The copy said the want·ad suitor , who calJed himself "an honest man with a touch of class,·' wanted to give up the single ttfe with a woman in her "early 20s to mid-30s, fun· loving, curious and with a sense of humor. So far. 135 women have responded. President Rea1an and his wife, Nancy, attended a cello r ecita l by M&U s lav Rostropovicb, conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra, at the Bethesda, Md . home of Leonard Silverstein, president of the orchestra. Other guests were Chief Justice and Mrs. Warren Burger; Defense Secretary Caspar Welnber1er and his wife ; Sen. PaaJ Lault, R· Nev., and his wile; Deputy Secretary of State WlUlam Clark and his wife; and Edwin Meese, R eagan's counselor, and his wile. Wrong victim reported in Irvine crash P()r.tion of N ewpo·rt gem loot recovered A Dai ly Pilot a rtic le er roneously reported on March 2 that a South Pasadena man was killed in a traffic accident that day on the San Diego F reeway near the Santa Ana Freeway interchange in Irvine. The actual victim. was Dennis Pavalonis. 37 , of Lakewood. ac cording to th e California Highway Patrol. He was killed when his car struc k a car parked o n the side of the freeway, the CHP said The driver of the parked vehi cle, Ernest Brooks. 47, of South P asadena, wasn't injured, ac· cording to the CHP He told of· ricers that he parked his car because he was tired and want- ed to take a walk. In the initial article, Brooks was identified incorrectly as the man killed in the accident. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. FBI agents have recovered a s mall portion of $600,000 in jewelry snatched a year ago from a Newport Beach shop by two armed men. Although the two, one an ex- Santa Ana police captain, are serving prison terms for the rob- bery at Brett Walker Jewelers in Newport Ce n te r , the whereabouts or most or the miss- ing loot remain a mystery. FBI agents notified Newport detectives last week they had re· covered eight pieces of jewelry, including a $16.000 watch, from an undisclosed source in Long Beach. Police say the ite ms . worth $60,000, have been identified as jewelry stolen March 18. At the time of his arrest, Hop- p e r was on parol e from Terminal Island federal prison alter serving time for a 1976 coo· viction of aiding a jail breaJt and possession of stole n ba nk money. While a member of the Santa Ana p olice force in t h e mid-19605, Hopper was fired as the alleged ringleader of a group or John Birch Society members within the department. Hopper won back his job several months later but qu.it to attend law school. Early closing of Belmont Pier approved ~~ut DAILY PtLOT/TUMday, March 10, 1981 . .. Delly .......... .., •ldlM't ~ • MOURNIAI JOIN HANOI AT •Rvtee fOA 11.AJN TRANILATOR IN HUNTINGTON IEACH ~ ..........._ ·-·,....... • '°., worttt ctytnt tor,• .. ,. w,c1tte cNef Rehnquist turns down porno shop A U.S. Supreme Court justice has denied owners of the Talk of the Town book.store permission to reopen lheir white stucc9 sex shop along Newport Beach's Mariners Mile. Justice William Re hnquist handed down the denial order, sealing, for the time at least, the fate of the controversial book and video center - JOSH KAPLAN, attorney ror bookstore owners, asked Rehn· quisl last month for permission to reopen. The request to reopen legally known as a writ or s upersedeas -would have re· suited in a stay of an Orange County Superior Court order that tbe shop stay closed. The case of the Talk of the Town bas now traveled the en· Ure length of the legal ladder. The Pacific Coast Highway bookstore, set on fire by ao arsolldt at one point Jut year, opened Jut year, btlt did only 10 days ot business before being c loaed down. IT REOPENED for three days last month when the California Supreme Co urt 1ranted Kaplan's request for a writ. Less than a week after granting the writ, though, the stale court re- ver sed itaelf and ordered the shop to close up. Owners remain hopeful of re· opening the shop and are pursu· ing a separate legal angle to do so. Kaplan has appealed the Orange County Superior Court ruling to the State Court of Ap· peals. If the court of appeals agrees to take up the case, the Talk of t he Town m ay get another day in court. JIB service held Bitterman project 'worth dying for' By PHIL SNEJDERMAN Of -o.lty ~ ... lwtf Slain Bible translator Chester Bitterman was pursuing a goal · "worth dying for," and bis passing will spur a new flood of recruits into international religious work, George Cowan, president of Wycliffe Bible Translators, Inc., declared. Cowan addressed about 200 people attending a memorial ' service for Bitterman at Wycliffe's Huntington Beach head- quarters Monday. BfiTERMAN HAD BEEN working for Wycliffe in Colombia for two years, when he was kidnapped Jan. 19 by the M-19 guerrilla group, which claimed Wycliffe and a sister organization are a front for the CIA. The Bible-translating organization refused the terrorists' de· mand lhat it leave the country, and Bitter man was shot to death early Saturday. Wycliffe president Cowan dismissed the alleged CIA tie as "pure fabrication," and said his organization's only goal is to make the Bible available to primitive cultures around the world. "We believe we should press into areas where the gospel has not gone before," he s aid. "We believe this is a goal worth living for. We believe no greater gift can be given. "AND AS SOMETHING worth living for, it's also worth dying ·for." Oowao said the vloleMe done to Bitterman underlines the need to spread biblical teachings . "Every time we have a loss of this type, there's been a tremendous reaction," the Wycliffe otficlal said. "This kind of thing seems to challenge the best in a certain kind of people." Cowan repeated the orgaruzatioo's vow not to remove its 200 representatives from Colombia until the Bible translating proj· ect in that nation is completed. COWAN SAID WYCLIFFE has lost international translators before. Ke said three adult workers and a translator 's child were slain while on assignment in Vietnam. "We see this as one of the risks we all take in doing our job," he said. During the m emorial service, Sara Petty, Bitterman's teacher at Columbia Bible College, observed, "He knew what it would cost to stand by bis convictions, and he paid a price." OTHER SPEAKERS RECALLED Bitterman's "zest for life." "I think his delight in living was contagious," said Chuck Sheldon, a former classmate. "He was a joy to be with." Bitterman, a native of Lancaster, Pa., leaves his wile and two daughters. I I Panel to eye Frederick Hopper, 51, former police ca ptain , and Hu g h Coughran, 45. entered guilty pleas on the robbery charges. Hopper was sentenced lo seven years. Coughran received a nve- year term. The bandits had entered the shop wearing wigs and sun· glasses. They told clerks they had a radio·controlled bomb. The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has ap- proved closing the Belmont Pier in Long Beach at 10 p.m . in an effort to curtail late night crime. art colony's goals report Laguna Beach planning com- missioners will review a citizen· prepared report on goals for the Art Colony when they meet Wednesday in council chambers at 7 p.m. The ISO-page document, pre· pared by five citizen groups, out· lines issues and objectives in Laguna Beach that will be in· corporated in a' planned revision of the city's General Plan. In addJUon, the commission Wednesday will revlew a sub· divialoo planaed on a 97·acre parcel in the Top of the World community Uiat would take ac· cess off Nesta81 Road. The developer proposes creat- lot ft .slotle-family Iota, alon1 with a 51 acre open space area. One ring worth an estimated $5, 700 was recovered several months later in Reno where Hopper's former wife was Liv· ing, police said. Final NB bay tour Saturday Final season tours of the upper Newport Bay Ecolotlcal Reserve are scheduled Saturday. Groups will leave the comer of East' Bluff and Back Bay drives, Newport Beach for the two-hour tour approximately every 15 minutes, beginninl at 9 a .m . More information can be ob- tained by contacUn1 the Depart- ment of Fish and Game (2U) 590·5126, or the J'rieada of Newport Bay Cn4) m.ml. We're Listening ••• The Daily Pilot' wants to hear from lts resdera, what 1ou like about the paper and what you don't llke. We also would like IO publish your views on any subject in our letters to the editor col· umn. Call the number below and your menace will be recorded. Mesugea will be transcribed Mveral times dally and delivered to the dak of the appropriate editor. Mailbo" contributiona will • be delivered to lhe editorial page editor. Mailbox ' contributors must Include their name and telephone number for verificaUon. Ml circulatlon ca(ls, pleaM. Tell ue what •1 on your mind. The number la ln • aervice 24 houra a day, seven daya a week. ,· . fM2.fJ086 ------- Long Beach City Councilman Wallace Edgerton told com- missioners Monday in Hunt- ington Beach that operating the pier from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. -in- stead of the present hours of 4 a .m . to midnlgbt -might curtail violence on the structure. The Regional Coastal Com- mission ruled that the earlier cloatn1 lime wouldn 'l un- reasonably restrict public ac- ceas totheocean. - Jn the past year, there have been two reported assaulta with deadly weapons between 10 p.m. and midnight on the pier, accord· inl to Long Beacfa officials. The 950-foot·long pier bas a gate slammed abut at cloeing time to prevent vandalism and to clean the atrueture. "Our city bu found that the police department cannot any lon1er provide safety on the streets," Ed1erton said. "Tbinp are out of control." Drugs, alcohol seminar 1ubject A aemlnar fo~ parenta of •do&et· cea&a wttb ctrtUIDI or dnaC prob-lem-. II ICMdtJed WNnllday .; SURPRISED? 'Neve been doirC thllt to people lately with our ladies ~t. Come in and• our new spring collection, including Lady Norman, Lady Thomlon and J. G. Hook. \t\le think rou11 · · be pleasantly surpri9ed. at 7{• p.JD., .. S.lp lllddl• ·---------..... ---~ Scbool, 2000 tllfl, Newport B.nkAmtri~ Chargt leaeb. " ~PlaU llore lllfOl'Jrlttloa can be ob- tafned by u1Un1 Mary .,...,. • • Jembeatt75-'T72T. \ ., J akistani. liijackers set deadline ' OAIOUNS ALLEY Dan. -0.. ol tbe mor. biaarre w.. to eomt aJoDt our coutliae In reeMt Um• bu been tM "MlleaUonal'~ campalp bellll lauaeW..= tbe HU11l· laston Beacb f'ire Departmaat tD 1ave I u itatlOD operatora from themselves. Tbat'• rf•ht. AU ot \bis surf aced just tbe otber day after some 1asollne came close to surfacing in Hwallnston up Hat tbe corn•r ol Edinger A venue and Sprin,dale Street. Tbt fueJ leaked into an underground electrical vauJt and triuered a blac~out In the re· ~ glon. Later, lt was de· • ._ termined that between r-.'\ so and 40,000 tallons of ~r ~~:"1:;dou~~·ri:n~~ TOM IURPHlll ·kti' / der1round storage · tanks of a nearby service station and then seeped lnto the electrical vault. CITY FIRE OFFICIAlS were in wonderment that they didn't find out about the problem in a more e.plosive manner. Traced to the sub-surface tanks of a nearby gas sta- tion, the operator told fire officials he was unaware that he'd suffered any leakage, much less 40,000 gallons of loss. "This case is almost beyond the realm of reason." commented Huntington Fire Chief Ray Piccard. The station operator, however . did complain that he hadn't been making much money recently. You're left to wonder. however. about the margin of profit lhese days in the gasoline dodge if that much gallonage can ooze away underground and not too much is noticed. CLEARLV, BUSINESS practices change a lot over the years . Some people used to believe there wasn't much "Thu puddle? Why it's gasoline. of course ... " profit in the sale of gasoline in bygone times. The profit was hawking oil Service station trainees were schooled to try anything for an excuse to get the cus tomers hood up and quick, check that oil and peddle a quart or two. Super-sales men would hawk an oil change right there on the spot. Today. it's diCCerent. Your intrepid correspondent pulled into a Corona del Mar s tation just the other night to purchase a tankful that hadn't already leaked away someplace . In the process. there was an engine check on the oil. Lift your own hood. baby. Dip your own stick ; nobody else seemed interested. The old heap cam e up one quart low. VOU FINALLY GRAB som ebody's attention: ''I'd like a quart of oil. please ..... .. A quart of what." the attendant asked. "Oil. oil. You know. it comes in quart cans. Black gold. At least it USED to be in quart cans. May be in l.iters or something now . . Grumbling. the attendant vanished for a moment. Soon he returned and handed me one quart of oil. "You don't happen to have an opener handy, do you,'' I asked politely "IT'S OVER THERE on the wall ... he grumped. point- ing feebly across the gas station parking lot. "You're s up- posed to move your car over there to put it in." • I'm here to tell you I refused lo move my old heap. I trudged across the lot, opened the oil can and marched back to the l.'ar. probably dribbling some of the stuff on my way back. But that's okay too. The oil might jus t Join the gasoline that's probably leaking back into the earth. DAllASCUS.rSJria (AP) -fllJaden Ot a Paklltanl airliner ut a Wednelday deadll.ne today r• fulft.WDJ their demudl and lb• more than 100 bo1ta1ea aboanl UM plu• at Damaacua airport were reported ••tUna lD- creaslngly nervous. But a top Syrian official expre11ed op- tJml1m tbelr oJne-day-old ordeaJ "wlll soon be over.'' Brit. Gen. Mohammed KbawU told ~porters a metHte from the Pakistani government in· cludect ••propoeaJ1" and tbat the three Pakistani hijackers !old- ln1 the plane had alto m ade new demands . He decHned to e laborate. But in Islamabad, Pakistan, a ran.king defenae of· ttcial said Pakistan was pre- Boy, 12, charged in truck chase MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP> -A 12-year·old boy accused of driv· ing a stolen gasoline lanker into eight vehicles during a police c ha se "i s a user and manipulator of adults," a juvenile counselor s ays. ··He's the kind of kid who slips into your heart. .. n ot maliciously. but to gel what he wants,'' s aid Dr. Jack Rum baugh, s uperintendent of the Tennessee Preparatory School in Nas hville. where the boy once lived. The Brownsv11le , Tenn .. youngster was charged Monday by Juvenile Court authorities in She lby County with grand larceny in the theft of a vehicle, reckless driving and driving without a license. THE OFFICIALS declined to identify the boy. The 4-foot -3-inch tall youth was arrested Sunday night after a s even minute chase on In· terstate 240 in north Memphjs that began alter a motorist re- ported a ·'reckless driver and possible DWI" in an llJ-wheel tanker from Lindsey Transport. Among the eight vehicles damaged in the chase was police squad car that was r ammed before the truck ran up an em- bankment and stopped. Three people, occupants of cars damaged in the chase. were injured . On e woman was hospitalized for a broken rib. multiple bruises and head in· juries. THE YOUTH SAID his Mem· phis adventure was not the first. ··I s tole three trucks in Nashville when I was al TPS." the 92· pound boy told th e newspaper. "J stole one from Ryder. American Freight Lines and Clement Papers. Then I was 11 years old. They were aU 18· wheelers." R ain to turn· white New Mexico mountains hit by heavy snow Warm ....a \l.inl"Y W""'•\d•Y Cou1a1 low "· •nl•ncl S4 ,.,.,1a1 n19h \lpptr .ot.. 1nl•nd '"'" lot to low 90• W•ltr 60 EIHwi.rt, loQl!I, ••rl•blt w ind\ n1on1 •nO ...-n11191>ouH wllll smoo111 W•\ be'tom1nq Wflt"r-ly Wtnd\ \0 10 II knoi. Wtont\441y aller,_n w•tll J to• foot w1ndw•ves. Wt\tt rly uwell 1 IO • Itel F•lr lhroUQll WtdnHCl•y v.s ....... ,,, Sc •llPreo \.nO•ers ove r New Eno1an0 anO lllt n0< th Atl..,11< tout w1U turn to \l'tOW tod•Y over 1nl•nd peril of Now EnQlanO lht Grttl L•k•• •nO lht tovttwrn 01\00 Vallfy Sno•trt will •l\O bl! K ellt•.O o•tr \OllU'ltrn end \OUlh-.t T .. H L1Qht r•in Of lohO"J•rl Otfll .. O OYU nortf'lwHl ~ \out.r..rn Tt••s '"'° soutf\ern llhnot\ ••riv tod•v. ""''"'" ll9h1 snow ••1t •cron I"• Gre•t Le•u 1n10 lne NorlhHSI Some ne•vv snow 'nowers nit the N1w 1o1 .. 1co mounta•n• Mcut othtr artn had cle•r iok•I' T1mper•h1re\ •round tnt nation •t 1 • m EST r anged lrom 19 1n GOOdlanO, l(a.,. lo 69 1n M••m• ano Forr La...,..roa11, Fla Calllertda II \hOUld be sunny ano qulle warm Wedntscln 1nrouQllou1 Soutnt rn Celllornoa, Ille Nalionel Wutner S.rilftt ~'(\ femperelures "'"' eape<lecl 10 r .. <lllhe~IOtlriL01A~l1t. Tht velleys -IO neat up Into Ille mid TOi end IOI WeclNMJey. Tiie mounl•IM ...... lor9t6\I to be 1un11y .. 1111 cleV1l,... .. l'nl>tr•lures 111 IM .,pper «It elld SOS l owt IOlllOM sllould be In Ille 70S to m id JOI. OeHrl lempeul11r.s illOUIO r•~ trom the ~too lo upoer tot 81•marck 80IMI 8o"on 8rown•vll• Butfa lo C11ar1s1n SC Cllerisrnwv CIMyon,.. c111ce90 C•ntlMeU C1tv.iano Columllut Oel· .. lWlh Denver 0.1 ""ol"" Oelrolt OUIUlll Heriford Htlena N-fulu Hou"on lndnepll• Jaeksnvlle l(aM City Lu VIQft •• 2) se 32 .. ~ ll •l llO 11 " .03 s• o .. JJ " n .. lO .. 1S .. ll 01 ., )j n,. •• lO .i 11 en 46 1' Ol lJ 21 44 lO SJ 70 .. .. .. S2 0 J2 ,. 4J SI 16 .. " I SI Louh S• 31 51 P T•m1» II II ___ .._. __ .. SI Ste Ma111 .I' 21 LUllt Aoc• SS Lo• AnQtlff 10 Loult.1111 .. MtmPlllS SI Miami n Mllwauue 0 MplS·St.P 4J NH11¥llle u Ntw OrlM"l 70 How vor• so Norfotk .. Okie City S7 Oma lie so OrlenclO 11 Pl\llecMlpflla ., Pnoet1l1 ,. PllUbllrtlll " Pllenel, Me. 41 P11ane1, ore .. RIM •1 RltlU'I•-SI S..11 L1lc1 56 $In 0!1911 10 S.n Fren •I ....... t7 SPokane S• U Tulle S6 JS WHlllnQtn 57 ll CALIFORNIA 8ek1,.fle+d 10 S• 8 1ytllt 11 S3 Eureu .st •• OJ Frn no ID d Lancel1or 61 •O Merysvlllt 12 •• -••r•v ., so NttdlU 16 O••lana 67 Peto Roblei 11 42 lhd Blull 11 41 Aedwooo City 11 " Reno 61 H Set rtmen1o .. 0 S.1lnu II d s1001on 13 1,. , fllermal 11 Sl Vllell 10 ,. St JI 4J .. 37 32 ,, .. • )2 17 2S ~ ,. !l n JI .. n JS JI S• )1 .. earuow 71 o Sig Bee r o 11 81'1>0P 6S 11 C•1ellna 11 SA El Ctnlro fl 15 Lon9 8fftll ,. 0 OJ Newporl Be6th .. 41 'on1eno 11 11 Pandtna 11 4l Sen e ... nerdll'IO Ii i1 S.n Jow 11 41 S.nr• Ana 1t 11 Sant• Crut I• 41 Senle ~rle 16 41 Tellot v ... .., ,, " Acapuf(o 8•rMOot .Ol .. rmucla Cure<ao ,., .. _, l'AN AMllltlC.AN OUM•••••• Ouecllloupe HIY•M Kingston Molll-.. y Me~••len liillerlde 11 .. •l • 11 II • at • .. " . , 1J .. u ,, '° 4' •• •• IS ,, Ml LA .. c,, 41 » Marriage costs nose M .. 1u91Y Monterrey NHMU Sen Jv.,. It Klltt " 12 .. .. .. SJ .. so u ., ,. Aloenr Albvq ... AmarlllO AWYllle Alleftl• Alf..,tl<Cfl'f aellllMR ·'""""""' '1 JI se 21 ,. ,. .0 ,. " 11 •• JO ,. ,. NEW DELHI, India IAP> -Inhabitanb of a remote central Indian vlllare chopped off the nose of an "untoucha· ble'' HJndu woman as ----------. pu.n.lahment for her for marrlage to an upper 'caate MllJl, tbe Uni~ .News of lndla reported. Th• ac•cy nld 15. Nt--dlci Mll.Oo Bal ·JfU 01pltallnd ln Guaa OWllJ, -ml• to.t,b the lndlan c8111tal .. nhya Praden na&e. Hind"' 1oclet1 fa vlded lnto tr-41Uonal hereditary cute groufs, each avoidlna soc a l deallno with tbe other. Tbe caste system bas been outlawed, but un- touchables, memben of the lowest c._,te, often arl forced to live io aetre11ted aectJona of hamlets. T .. 1Kl91tl ... Trlnld9d • .. TS '° 11 s-.• .. -.114- TOOAY S.COfUI-S •• ,,lfl, I,, Wll*llOAY Finl low '' 2'• "'· ).I l'lnt "Ith 1·ft'"-"'• i..t S.C.Olld low 1:ia e.m. o.• S.COllCI 1119" •.IS p.m. 1 e 11111 Ill• i:tt p.M., rlMt W-· .., ...... ,,. MOO'I HU 11.0I jl.ITI , rlut WHIWtcNY IO '1 • "" ... .... ..... ............. "'"' .... '"' ,. .... .... J • • ,. .... ~ ' ' .. I • W I 1 W ~ .. __:._ f f ,. =-~~ ••1: °"',.-""_. ........ •· J • w ; . ... " tared to ananse with the hJ. uJd the leader of the hijackers aclcert a "sJmuJtaneoua" re· w u 1ometlmes "wild and ease ot polltlc•l prisoner• and abualve." boat.set. Ouri.Q& talks today. he said, 'Db• Pakistani oCCiciaJ, the b.Uacken gave a list of S5 Defehle Secretary-General M. political prisoners to be treed Rabin Khan, said the hijackers but Pakistani officials noted had set a new deadline of 4 a .m .. aome of the names had appeared PST, Wed.Dea~, for tbe releue on an earlier Ust or 92. ot political prisoners or they Pakistan baa agreed to releue would take "drutk action." 15 of lbe orialnaJ 92 prisoners The hijackers shot a Pakistani and the number might rise if the diplomat when the plane was in charges involving 32 others Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday. provenottobeserious. Khan said. At various times during the A 22-year-old flight attendant nine·day.old drama, the trio released by the hijackers Mon- have t hreatened to shoot all day night, Farzana Sharif. told Pakistan.I government officials reporters the hostages were be· aboard, every passenger one by ing treated well. But "the one, and blow up the Boeing 7~. psychological situation of the Khan wld a news conlerence. He passenger.s is extreme ly dif· Ti111eless love preeails ficult." 1he said. " . . . espeelat- ly since they all know the h.i-jacke~ wtll blow up \he entire pJane." The hijackers. after they brought the Boeing 7~ jeUlner from Kabul. Afghanistan, to the Damascus airport early Mon· day. made new demands for the release of imprisoned opponftlt.s of Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul -Haq's authoritarian military re1ime. They wamed they would lake an "extremely drutic measure" if the ir demands were not met. The demands were radioed to Pa kistan. but early today there was no word of any response from the Pakistani government AP WortpholO Dave Williams, 101 looks adoringly at his bride, Lou Miller. 70. as she admires her bridal bouquet. The cou~le were married Monday in the activity room of a Colum· bia. S.C. nursing hom e which doubles as a chapel. Reagan aide won't quit Regrets association with female lobbyist WASHJNGTON <AP> Rep. Thomas B. Evans Jr. says "I deeply regret·• a relations hip with a female lobbyis t who posed for Playboy Magazine. but adds it won't affect his job as one of President Reagan ·s top congressional lieutenants The Delaware Republican de· nied that hjs vote on agricultural legis lation was influenced by his links to Paula Parkinson. 30, who lobbied on behalf of in- surance interests against the bill and who is said to be writing a book about her experiences. "I resent deeply any implica- tion that my vote had anything to do with any s pecial interests other than the interests of our country," Evans told The As· sociated Press. As ked about a widely circulat· ed report that Mrs. Parkinson may have made videotapes of some of her encounters, Evans said: "l do not know anything about videotapes or any of that. It 's ridiculous . I am not on videotape." The interview , conducted Monday night in the office of Evans' lawyer, was the con· gressman's first public com- ment since he and several col· leagues were linked with the lob· byist in published reports late last week. Evans. 49. a former co- chairman of the Republican Na· tional Committee, said he had no intention of eithe r r esigning his seal or s t e pping as ide as Reagan's chief bill manager in the House. He declined to characterize the nature of his relationAhip with Mrs. Parkinson. other than lo state. "I deeply regret any as· soc1alion I've ever had with Mrs . Paula Parkinson ... Evans· hands trembled as he r ead a prepared statement and then answered questions with his la wyer. Myles J . Ambrose. watchinJ? Disagreement airs over strike force WASHINGTON <AP > Thecommanderof a military team plan- ning the proposed Rapid Deployment Force has disagreed with other Pentagon officials. saying he fa vors putting the force under a separate military command based in the Indian Ocean. Marine Corps Lt. Gen. P.X. Kelley, responding to questioning al a Senate hearing Monday, said a new Indian Ocean command would give the force the cleanest lines of communication possible. The chiefs of the Army. Navy and Air Force. however. have pushed to place the force -which is designed primanly to protect U.S. interests in the Pe rs ian Gulf area -under the joint U.S. Euro- pean Command in Europe . The Marine Corps, on the other hand, has pushed for a new Indian Ocean theater command that would place heavier emphasis on Marine and naval involvement. XS M~RKET DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD LENTEN SPECIALS Freab Boned Pan Ready Sliver Salmoa, a oz .. 2.zt ea. Fresh Paclftc Jled Snapper . . . . . . . . 1.zt lb. Fresh Frozen Local Swordftab ...... 5.t8 lb. MEAT DEPARTMENT For that St. Patrlck·a Day DIMer, Delaney's will aJaln have that famous Home Cured Corned Beef. Choice Boneless Beer Briskets t.t'lmmed or all excesa rat and cured as only we at Delaney's know how. with our seer« recipe. Wb•le or PGIDt C.t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l.98 lb . Flat Cut ......... '· .................. t.zt lb. Lean Groand Beef !Ground Hourly> .... 1.39 lb. CANDEUTE HEAT AND EAT FOODS Prepared Fresh Dally From Delaney's Own Kitchen. Ctllckea allMl Dumplbl11""'11 .... . .... l.M ea. f'lltt ol Solt Stllffed "Uh Slu1•P 1rw 11 ••• 2.31 ea. Apricot AllftOllCI Grteau Cake ... . . ... l,M ea. Deluey'a Famoua Carrot Cake... . . . . . . . . 1.N ea. REE ROJI£ DELIVEIV SEaVICE UH •llil•••> ThJJ eel effective Wed., 3/JJ Uiru Tiits .. 3/17 MORNING FRESH PRODUCE Fresh Large She Asparagus ........ tk lb. Large Sweet Local Strawberries .. 79c b1kt. Delaney•• Own Freah Baited Shortcakes ............ 8k ea . Local Grown Large Size Solid Green Cabbage ................ k I~. DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delaney'• Private Label Cbabll• or •VIJI 8-e' Wbte <750 mill...... . . .•••••• . . I •• ea . Korlfalld Gbteslet Wiiiet 1174 (750 mil) ........... . . 3.Uu. CUcq•·Gekl Label Brwl &tlms Fraece Vlnta&e. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lt.tS u . Scorelby Scoklf 1750 mil >' . . . . . .. '. . .... I.IS •· Carlo it.I.I Vin Rote' or Chabll• ChlJled For YMJ' C.O.vealnte 1.-Ull G•l ) .•.• H . Perrier Water (23 01.> . ......... liit! ea. IELAllEY'S &ore Ho11n ~•: Cloled Saaclay tm Newport Bl Yd •• Newport Beaela 673-5520 Rent control law ·rapped . . Santa Monica must ease restrictiom COMPTON CAP) -To the de- Utht cl landlords and the disap- pointment of tenant actJvbts, a Superior Court judge has declared key sections of the · tough Santa Monica rent control law "confi~catory " and un- conatJtutlonal, and has ordered them heavily rewritten. landlords to receive larger rent increases. Lavine said parts of the law fail to assure landlords ol a "just and reasonable return" on their investment as required by a 1976 state Supre me Court rul- ing that set standards for local rent control laws. Tbe ruling by Judge Richard A. Lavine said the law -re~ garded by landlords and tenants alike as the nation's toughest - must be reworded to allow S~lmonella charge halts ra-w nlilk sale THE LAW, passed two years ago by voters as an amendment to the city charter, rolled ren~ back to 1978 levels and set up a detailed bearing process for new rent increases. SACRAMENTO (AP> -Tht California health department has ordered the removal from sale of Alta Dena Dairy's certified raw whole milk bearing code dates Marl2D, Marl3D. and Marl40. can cause nausea, vomiting, diar- rhea and fever. It also blocks landlords from raising rents when apartment units are vacated, a legal prac- tice unde r the weaker Los Angeles and Los Angeles County rent laws. State Health Director Beverlee Myer~ issued a statement Mon- day saying tests by the Los Angeles County Milk Commission Laboratory identified salmonella organisms in certified raw milk produced by Alla Dena's herd D. The stale says salmonella can be serious and occasionaUy fatal to infants, the elderly, and in- dividuals in poor health. It issued similar recalls against Alta Dena on Jan. 23 and Feb. 13. Also, condominium con- versions and apartment demoli- tions are virtually banned under the Santa Monica law. But AJta Dena spokeswoman Carole Virgin said the state action is ·'a continuation of the con- spiracy t-0eliminate raw certified milk." Ms. Myers said Alta Dena has stopped further distribution from herd Oeffective March 9. She said milk bearing the codes Marl2D, Ma rl3D and Marl40 is con- sidered potentially contaminated and should not be consumed. LA VINE'S MONDAY ruling gives Santa Monica's city at- torney 90 days to draft new re- gulations for calculating rent in· creases, so rents won't be affect· ed right away. The judge's other objections to the law. such as con- trol or condominium conversions, will bededded in a separate trail Alta Dena, of the City of In· dustry in the Los Angeles area, produces almost all the raw milk consumed in California. It has been at odds with the state for years about salmonella. which She said she acted at the request of the state Department of Food and Agriculture. Her order re- quires local health officers to re- move the milk from stores. A landlord's profit is cur- A LANDLORD'S profit is cur- rently figured by the five- member Rent Control Board by defining hi' investment as the price he paid for his building rather than the building's cur- rent market value. Ms . Virgin said the state test was on one farm bulk sample from Chino. She said Alta Dena's own laboratory tests on the bot· tied milk that went to the stores were negative. SF arson threat fai& SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Threats to turn the downtown Hilton Hotel into a blazing rerun of a Las Vegas high rise disaster have led lo the arrest of an unemployed gardener . police said . John Worthy, ali as Johnny Waco, was accused Monday of trying to extort $1 million from the Hilton with threats of arson, said police Inspector Jam es Burstrom. The 43-year-old San Franciscan was held in lieu of $10,000 bail. Burstrom said a man called Hllton executives on Feb. 21 and said if h.e were not paid $1 million, he would turn the 46-story downtown tower into "another Las Vegas," a p- parently referring to the fatal Feb. 10 Hilton Hotel fire there. believed lo have been set by an arsonist. Bank rollfH.rt1 trial .,..,,d RIVERSIDE (AP> -Because of extensive news coverage. a judge has ruJed that three men accused of killing a sheriff's deputy after robbing • a bank in Norco should --------stand tria l ou t s ide NEWS BRIEFS Riverside County. . Riverside Super ior --------Judge J . David He n- ningan said after his rul- ing Monday that another site will have to be found "because of the reasonable Likelihood that there will be difficulty in getting a fair jury here." The defendants are Christopher Gregory Harven. 30, of Mira Loma; his 27-year-old brother Russell , of Anaheim, and George Wayne Smith. 28, of Cypress. Pa~I d~lat1• •'% ...... SACRAMENTO <A P > -A bill dropping a re- quirement that doctors, teach~rs. counselors and other professionals te ll police if they think a girl under 18 has had sex bas been approved over- whelmingly by an Assembly committee. But the Senate refused Monday to waive its rules so an identical measure could be acted on by one oAts committees next week. By a 10-1 vote, the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee sent SB518 by Assemblyman Larry Kapiloff. D-San Oie20. to the Wa ys and Means Com- mittee. Takeo.,er re•l•tftl SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Continental Airlines s a ys it has an obligation to its stockholders to resist a takeover attempt by Texas International Airlines. The $13-a -share price Texas International is offering for Continental stock is grossly inade· quate, attorneys for Continental told the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Monday in asking for more time to fight the takeover bid. The arguments are on appeals by Continental of separate rulin2s bv 11 S nistrict Jud2es Bruce Thompson of Reno. Nev .. and Consuelo Marshall of Los Angeles. Hol04!aaut e..pluufzftf LOS ANGELES (AP> -Declaring "we must not be passive to the evil in our society," school board member John Greenwood has s uccessfully convinced his colleagues to, pass a resolution call· ing for renewed emphasis on teaching students about the Wor ld War II holocaust and other genocidal acts in history. Greenwood said Monday a recent "rash of an- ti-semitic activities" in the Los Angeles area, in- cluding an increase in graffiti in the west area. prompted his resolution. The school board member said "there is a real need to have the memory of the horrors of the holocaust experience etched into the minds of each generation of our students. parents and teachers." Orange Cout OAILV PILOT/fUMday, March 10, 1981 H/F Targets Two wild burros, part of herd of 2,225, trot across runway at Naval Weapons Center in China Lake. The herd has become target of controversy since Navy hired professional marksmen last weekend and reported 381 animals killed . The Navy said beasts seek warmth of paved runways and at night become hazard, endangerin~ li ves of jet pilots and the ir planes. This photo was taken prior to the shootings. Navy clears woman sailor SAN DIEGO (AP} -A 27· year-old woman sailor has been declared innocent of engaging in homosexual a ctivities by a three-m e mbe r Navy ad- ministrative board. The two·man, one-woman panel Monday unanimous ly found Petty Officer 1s t Class Joan Dowling of New York City not guilty and recommended that s he be retained in the service instead of discharged. Dowling's civilian attorney, Katherine Bourdonnay. said she was "terribly happy" and "re- lieved " by the verdict and ex· pressed hope that similar cases c~~~~~i·fc5iii·~~£·~~:s II $ 360 AT SEA OR ANY CEMETERY $ocf.M S-.urily Of \l•t•'•"' 8•"-ftU --=::' "'UY CMY •II Of tnOtl OI tht1 cO.I ..--\\-Of ft MnCl•OfteO by tf'I• C•M D•P' ot Corttoum., Atf•1,-1 C•e,ot-'°'"'• cAmerican ~amil~ Sociei~ 17131 •341•61CAflilA!o()N &BUlllAl~171•1 80•701 ·"·1981 CARS I andTRUCKS • do not s urface in the future "l hop<' it would be established that the government should not proceed unless they have better evidence than what they had in this case." Bourdonnay said. "They shouldn't drag people th rough the mud with the masses of innuendo presented here." • • • • • • • • Turn your unusables into usable cash.Call Daily Pilot classified 642-5678. CALL LINDA BLUE FOR A ALL MAKES! 833-0555 A• For Ray, LEASC SPlCIAUST at HOWARD Chevrolet C,,,_ Of~ -0..... Sts NEWPORT BEACH FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN - INTEREST ONLY! Newpor~.~~~~~~!~'.:!~~;f 11c .. ( 714) 7 60-6060 FREE ONE HOUR INFORMATIVE PRESENTATIONS , .. . . . .,. i:Tr· .... ~ 0 ®' ,,.~~~ ~views n ~·~ ~ental Healtlz ~~1 r·1 By GERALD WINKLER, D.D.S. ~J THROUGH MARCH 1~TH AT SPIRES . WHY DENTAL INSURANCE? j Co n s ide r these statistics: or children over Ci/teen, 75o/r hove some form or gu m dis-ease and an average of 11 cavities. By middle age. 2 'out or J people will have serious gum problems and be well on the way to losing all or their teeth. Why should such a technologically ad · vanced country as ours be In such a poor state of dental health? The answer Is : •e1letl! Few Americans see a dentist as often as they should and many have NEVER seen one . T h ere are man y reasons for this and one of them Is money. Now 1omethln1 ls belna done about It. While mo s t America.ns have some kind or medi c al lnturance, dental insurance ha~ lagged far behind. but now dental coverage is growing by leaps and bounds. Today. some 65 million (3 out or every 10 Americans! a re covered by some form or dental insurance and estimates are that coverage could increase to 95 mllUon by 1985. Labor unions have been str ivi ng for wider dental protection and are respons ible for much of this Increase. In these ti mes or inflation, the average American can use all the help he can get. Gerald Win.kier, D.D.S. and Astoelata 14tt AYOCado, Sake 5t5, Newport Beach Phone: Mt-4lto • ., .... Family Want Ads 3 llniet, ·z day1, $5.95 MZ·5878 •For only $S.5S •nv prlvat• ~rty may place an ad to Mii any artlcl• of personal property any two d•ys In a raw. ·. Tender Top Slrtoln Stelk and two large eggs. Served with hashed brown potatoes and choice of Joast. SERVED ANYTIME Everything AbOUt You wantedWeto Kl ~~~SS Method··· theSCHICK 9 but never got around to asking. Some of the questions that will be answered I How is Schick different from other methods 7 2 fs dieung involved? 3 How does Schrck help you lose the urges? 4 How can Schick say 1t 1s the only method th11t ket-ps the weight oH permanently? 5 What is counter-condltlonrng? 6 Does the Schick Method deal with nutrition 7 7 Will I just be part of a group ... as In Weight \Xlatchers 7 8 How much does the Schick Program cost 7 9 Does~ Schick Method have medical credentials? I 0. Why do so many doctors recommend the Schrck Method? • .. DHUMY, IMKH tt THURSDAY, MAIKH 12 IAT'UltOAY, MARCH t• ~°'Pt SCOtt L8guN Hilb Mall 7:00.('M l~llooml ......... Qft.on's~ 77 IAkfWOOO CM«I 7.lO PM ,__ Oldbw!M~ 19'00 ~I· ""'° 10.JOAM & 1<00 l'M (~~' W IAI....,. llkll!Un's~ WtlUTlll ... Miilt " 700 l'M c..e..-.. llullOdl's llnla#Mlt Soulh Coast l'IAU 700""4 c.nOA ClltlOn MM! C~llOol1' 2SO CM10n Ml!ll 10.lOiW & 1-00 l"M ......., ~'s ClvO ol Downey '8' l s Plwlifnount 130 ~ ... --.. 0r-.. 'ichldt Ctntef es ~ & country 110 1030/\M 'hwr-OIO 10-Mw MM! 19800 H...wiomt BM! tOOPM fCOl!WTIUM)' llooml c;.,.,.... SchlCk Cftlltr 123 Los Cfmt'OS Ctm'f 1030AM SUNDAY,~11 °""'P SchlCll Ctnttf 8,5 1t>¥wfl & CourMry ltd 2001'M Sex law sp&rks a legal tangle The coeUy le1al macblDationa Mt Clff by a piffe al carelesa leai•latton that .Upped bi durial the c...., days ol lut year'• Lellllalure liOu1cl mcour11e oor lawmaken to do a little mon thlnktn1 Wfore they act. At issue ia U.e worclbaa of a law d .. !f:S:.~ to consolidate varioul child 1buee atat\IUI. Al h ,-It requires pbysiclanJt on pain of proHCutloD, to report to law-enforcement authorlUet any evldenc• of feXUal activity oo the part of un~ed female paUenta under the age <4 18. Not surprislnaly, the California Medical Association, on the part of 28,000 memben, promptly filed suit, contending the law not only violates the confidentiality of the doctor-patient relationship, but could very well keep young women from seeking any needed medical care. This was in no way the original lntent of the measure which was supposed to require doctors to report suspected incidents of child molestation. Now no fewer than three bills have been introduced to repeal the offending wording and the state Supreme Court has entered the picture by temporarily halting enforcement of the law pending arguments before the Court of Appeal. None ol this would have been necessary if the lawmakers, in their rush to get home, had paused long enough to think about what they were doing. Lesson that pays :-A recent TV news program showed a group of youngsters in Los Angeles diligently whitewashing a wall that had been covered with ugly graffiti. The kids, armed with long-handled rollers, seemed to be having a baU. Cheering them on were residents of an adjacent apartment house who'd been forced to look at the offending waJJ . Could this be a new trend? It could indeed. In schools throughout the country, youngsters are being exposed to a program called Character Education Curriculum. lt"s one of many examined by the Thomas Jefferson Research Center in Pasadena, in an effort to pinpoint the causes of crim e, violence, vandalism and other a nti-social behavior. The principal cause, according to the center, is the failure of our homes, schools, churches and other institutions to place sufficient emphasis on values, eUftcs, character and individual responsibility. The Character Education Curriculum, designed for kindergarten through sixth grade level, was devised to counteract thjs deficiency. Here are some of the results reported by participating schools : -In Indiana : Major improvement in school attendance; annual reduction in window breakage from $3,500 to $100. In Texas: Attendance greatly improved; graffiti and vandalism disappeared; number of students referred to the office for discipline dropped from 40 to 50 a week to an average of one each day. In Wisconsin : School break-ins, vandalism and graffiti almost disappeared. In California : Vandalism reduced to one-thirteenth of previous cost. Disciplinary problems almost disappeared. Beneficial effects reported by teachers include ma rked improveme nt in honesty and truthfulness, kindness. gen e rosity and h e lpfulness . And adm ini strators, understandably, note a resulting improvement in teacher morale and reduction in teacher turnover. If this keeps up, the accusation that the U.S. education system turns out "skilled barbarians" no longer may be valid. Civilization also is an acquired skill. Good question In the debate over declining achievements of Clalifornia nigh school students, we keep hearing com· plaints from the University of California about poorly prepared freshmen who have to waste coUege time tak· ing remedial courses in English, math and other skills they already should have learned. The other day, state Supt. of Public Instruction Wilson Riles asked an interesting question: If the students are so poorly prepared, why does the unive~ity admit them? . The fact is that coUege-bourtd high school students m California are required to take fewer years of English, math and other academic subjects than students in many other areas. So they are not as well prepared. , But. since the university continues to admit them, we seem to have a self-perpetuating problem. Maybe Rlles has a point. If the university would step up its entrance requirements, we might see some prompt stiffening of course work at the high school level -and, eventually, r ewer complaints from the university. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 15_!>0, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Ph<?ne (714) 642:~321 .. Boyd/Land ByL.M.BOYD Those who own the land on which they live may best ap- preciate an observation by Charles Dudley Warner: "Broad acres are a patent of nobility and no man but feels more of a man in the world if be have but a bit of ground that he can call his own. However small it is on the surface, it i!J 4.000 miles deep.'' So you like soap operas, do lllliYlll When a,. tbe unJona 10· ln• to make ut tellior ctthena pay for tbe air we brutbe? Bah! ....... you? Nothing wrong with that. A little time in dreamland doesn't hurt a thing. None other than Albert Einstein said: "The gift of fantasy has meant more to me than my talent for absorblne positive knowledge.·• Remember, aw al Just a lit· tle be bind the fiy . Flies a.ap off backwuds. No aort ot bride II mGn prlaed amQQI Ua• Preaeb Cameroons of Sqaatorlal Africa dam tbt ..._., lnea- p er leaeed 1lrl with a Bacbelar GI.Alta clelne. Whal lb• U .s. f'orHtry Service II loc*tnc ::!# I'm told, la a wanclal·p out· bouae. No lock, eo far. t.lt• 1pen of proleulcmal f"-t~all player• II 1t1•lllcaatb aborter u.u tlu t of. oller m ea. A Unl••rtltJ of WlacoHlD atur .......... that. Tbe .... ._..._Uptnm- ~.....,. Thomes P. Haley/Publllher Thomll KMYll /Edftor ) e.rtwwo Krelblch/!dltorl•I P-oe Editor . Rowlmd Evaq./RObert Novak Land or sea-for MX missile? W AIRINGTON -Tbe ROian 1dmllal1tl'atlon to everJODe'a qrprlae II 1ta11lq a deelliGB OD "llen to baM tile lllX mob6le mluUe ID a delay tbat p1ta tbt Penta100 a1alnat tb• State Department and deUChta the en· vtronmentalilt lobby. Tbe delay over wbelber to base t.bil cou.otry 't moat vital new weapon on land or sea is fraucht · with potential dan1era. It raises the dis· turbing ques· tion of w h e.t h e r President Reagan,\.. who Is totally committed to rapid MX deploy- ment, ia kept fully abreut on whether and bow his desires are carried out by competin1 bureaucratic power centers. Ronald Reagan himself is partly to blame for the latest procrastination over where the U.S. should base the 10-warhead missUes desperately needed to give the U.S. land-based system protection against possible So· Earl Waters Declaring sessions of the Legislature too long, Sen. Ollie Speraw bas proposed a constitutional amendment to limit annual meetings to six months. He said it was "a first step" toward a better way to to conduct the business of the citizens. Speraw. who decried much of the legislation currently being introduced as "band-aids proposed for publicity'', not e d that "no action of Importance has yet been taken thi s year al · though the l egislators h ave been meeting for more than eight weeks." A Long Beach businessman, Speraw won a special election in 1979 to fill the vacancy left when George Oeukmejiao was elected attorney general. Las t year Speraw won a full four-year term. He obviously hasn't been a senator long enough to become molded to t h e way the Legislature currently does busi· ness. But before he moves ahead too Sydney Harris vtel attlct. Reagan pled1ed wblle campaJ1n1n1 ln Nevada and tJtab to take a look at Jim· my Carter'• deciJlon to base t.be mobUe ayatem there deaplte flerce envl.roctmentallst opJ>(».l· Uon. I BUT WHAT abould have been a pro forma Pentaaon review with a foregone conclusion may be heatlna ~P into a major tett. Favortna aea-bued deplo~menl, a position he espoused whUe deputy director of the CIA, ls Deputy Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci. Defense Secretary Caspar We inberger privately warns that environ· ment.alist lawsuits could con· ceivably tie up the Carter· approved Nevada-Utah plan "for years." But Weinberger says he bas an open mind on basing and a public commitment not to let the new study delay deployment of the system, ex· peeled to start in 1985. Why. then, has Weinberl{er told his panel of experts they have until "June or July" to make their report? The question is particularly relevant for another reason: National securi· ty and bud1et officials in Rea1an'1 White House are com· mUted to Nevada-Utah bu!q. They worry that another tq delay tn the ever-receding "final" decision will do euctty what Weinberaer privately warns aaainst; aive envlron- mentallata that much more time to mobilize for a total assault on the Nevada-Utah plan. SECRETARY OF State Alex· ander Haig is quietly advancing a blockbuster rationale of his own against what the Pentagon calls "aoin& to sea." If environ· mentalist and other political pressures are allowed to over· turn the Nevada-Utah decision. Haig predicts an irreversible torrent of political reaction in Europe against modernizing NATO's land-based nuclear systems. Boiled down, that means en· vironmentally sensitized West Germans would phfsically block the nuclear modernization pro- gram agreed to by North Atlan- tic treaty sta tes <NATO) in December 1979 1f the U.S. knuckled under to political threats or legal suits by its own environmental lobby. European statesmen vialUq here have made tills point bard to Haig. '11My reat00 that any U.S. decltk>D to -"to to sea" l woUld be interpreted as a valid excuse for Europeans to demand that NATO 's new nuclear weapons should also be baaed oo 1 boats Cwhich military specialists l say would be impossible). , When the visiting Europeans warn Weinberger that moving the MX to sea would create massive political problems for NATO, be not only appears to be unimpressed, but at least on Qne occasion argued that sea-baaing the MX might be the best deployment in view of environ· m entalist delays. YET PRESIDENT Reagan has a precedent to ask Congress for a special exemption from lawsuits and other legal delay- ing actions now being planned by the environmentalists (by no means confined to Nevada and Utah ) Cong r ess gave the Alaska pipeline project such an e xemption nearly fi ve years ago. The project was built to specifications laid down by the Environmental Protection Agen· cy !EPA>. but it was immune from most special interest law- suits. A Reagan request for similar treatment for the Nevada-Utah· based M.X would get quick atten· lion . the national security aspect is far graver in protect· mg America's land-based mis· sile system tha n in any oil shortfall. Moreover, While House ad- visers say that the courts have been friendl y to Uncle Sam in rejecting environmentalist law- suits involving military work. Federal courts have been loath lo gr ant injunctive relief when government attorneys s take their defense on grounds of na· tional security Accordingly, the preference of Carlucci and other offi cials for a sea-based system has little to do with environmentalists and much to do with arcane debate over weapons strategies t hat was resolved last year by the Pentagon after years of agoniz· ing indecision. More indecision is not needed al thjs point, which is why some White House aides h ope Ron a ld R eagan will himself end the delay forthwith. • sessions might curb law glut far with his proposal, Speraw should taJce a good look at how the Legislature operated for the first 100 years. and in fact up un· til 1966. FOR MOST of those years it met not longer than six months and only every other year . Upon adjournment the members re· turned to their regular occupa· lions, businesses and pro- fessions. This enabled them to keep in tune with their districts so that when they came to Sacramento it was with the con· fiden ce that they truly represented their constituency. It also permitted time for in· lerim committee studies on the various problems of stale so that at the next session well con- sidered proposals could be of· fered. Today's "full-time, pro· fessional la wmakers," away from their districts all year long, rely on polls and surveys to find out what their constituents are thinking. These are unrella· ble and misleading because of the questions and the haphazardness of the responses. And without time for interim studies the legislative proposals today are half-baked schemes thrown ln the raw into the hop· per and even those that get passed are never fully thought through. The evidence of that is the continual amending or enact· m e nts imme diately afte r passaee. SPERAW ISN'T exaggerating when he says most or the time spent in Sacramento is wasted. The lawmakers string out each week by meeting only briefly a couple of times a we~ during the early months of the sessions. Most arrive late on Monday and skip out early Thursday. In former years they met regularly five days a week and often six and held their committee meet· ings al night. They achieved in six months more than is now· done In lwo full years. It's Parkinson's Law, "Work expands to fill the time available." Those who think the annual sessions are necessary. if only to approve the governor's budget, overlook the fa ct the state operated 100 years with a bien· nial budget. It was changed to an annual budget only because the then Gov. Earl Warren didn't want the e mbarrassment of proposing the state's first billion dollar budget. The fact is that the annual budget has worked to accelerate state spending. State agencies find it much easier to enlarge more rapidly than when they were held to two-year budgets. REVERTING TO biennial sessions and two-year budgets would save both government and private business millions of dollars now spent in continuous budget preparations, and year a round lobbying activities on the part of the state and all levels of local government and the private sector as well. Furthermore, since goOd busi· ness practice requires planning ahead with two· and five-year plans, it is difficult to un· derstand how business can prop· erly function with the Legislature constantly changing the laws. While it is unlikely that his colleagues, most of whom have nothing better to do than remain In Sacramento and meddle with the laws, will approve Speraw's proposed constitutional amend· ' ment it is a certainty the voters would ii they get a chance. And if be amends It to return to bien· nial sessions it would pass over- whelmingly. Quite simply, the people want and deserve respite from lawma.ldng. What yo~ don't know can very well hurt you "What you don't know won't hurl you " is the most treacherous and misleading maxim ot all. What you don't know can hurt you terribly, if it ls something you ought to know. Most people before Columbul didn't know the earth waa round, and thla ii· ,. norauce dlda 't particularly burl them. But they alto didn't kaow that witch· craft waa a mallctoua m1",andW. l1aora1ee DUPetuai.d much unnec ... arj leai aad rqe and UQJUIUlled •loJen~. . If you know that you don't know ICllMthln1. you a,. partly protect.I acal~t th• coeae. quences of your nesc:ience; but if you suppose that you know 1omethin1 you really don't know. then you are In deep trou· ble, andsoaretbole around you. TBE PSYCHOLOGICAL trap, for mott;of us, ia that we become anxious Md uneasy ln a state ol suapeoded belief. It la like beinl on a tilhtroPe: our object ll to N.acb the aalety of the platform cat one end or the other, to plump comfortably into a HtUed ~ rather than it.and ln t.euion on \ht qulverln1 rope. ln many cuet, ''I know where t stand'' meana "I know wbeN I rest." Wt prefer 'retUnl ln a dosm• tbaD ........ ,.. • a doubt, eYeo ~ tbt i09ma may DGt corrHpoad to the facta, the trutba, or the aitualloa. M a prime example, al.meet ev•fJ'OM bu a ftrm convtdioa Hout ow poltieal, aoclal aDd economic structure. We are ''liberals:" or ''conservatives'' or "libertarians" or "single- taxers'' or whatever. But the fact is that we have yet found no object.lvt; way to validate these positions, and lt is very likely that all of them are aa much false u they are true. WS llllPLY do not know. at thta polnt ln bum an hlatory. what ll UM oPttmum Corm or Uv· ln1, socially. polltlcally and economically. J have no doubt I.bat Adam Smllh had a piece of tbe truth by tbe tall: bul so dld Quotes , ·-n.. freedom ot t.b• ~la one of the 1n1t bulwarb f1 liberty aad can ne•er be netr&laed bat by fflpotic P · · enamllll." Karl Marie How do we separate their valuable detached insights from the errors and exaggera· lions and encrustations? Nobody ettjoya IM:in« tent.aUve or indecilive; much as we pro- test being "labeled" by other people , we relish labeling ourselves as one t hina or anothet, out or a deep need for Identity and communality, even when we may not totall:v ~ wlth everythine the label ata:ndl for. What we don't know, or want to know, leada ua into wan and ma uacres and corporate cruelties that no individual would countenance on bit own. We have an lnnate drive tor ~r~ ' talntJ, aad the tmotlonal aecm. • ty lt """ to brtnl; but to .. c:ertaln ot. what " 1&ould still .,. hl dGabt about la a form ol ii· • noranee that II not. onlY fooll&h b\d. too on. I.a.&. ____ ,_,_ _ _.....,.._. __ ~·· -~ ' HIF Or~ Coalt DAil V Ptt:o:TIT ....... Match 10, 1N1 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------..... • I ·•' Tax audit ·very unlikely ll'a only DOl'Glal to wut co lmow •bat other taap•Yft9 lD your ioeome catelOl'Y will be Mcluct1n1 tor major npenaet ud coatrtbntimt when JOU ftll ln your federal lacome tu teturm. But cw1oslty la hard ~mon MAM u w.U ud can pay oft la HYIQI dollan, thM ucl beadac:be. Let'• uy you're in t.be ao.ooo-as.ooo lDeome bracket. a raoie in wbJch milUons of t.u.payen tall. Old your uieo co.ntribut.lona co chant.let total around $57()1 U you plan t.o deduct a lar1er total, you are waving a red tla1 at an Internal Revenue Service agent. -~ IYlllA PllTll £ 7 THAT FIGU R E -A awollen total for contributions -may be entirety valid and you may have lbe receipt.a and other documents (be sure you do) to prove your claim. But if your deduction for contributions is rar above typical aeductions ln your income bracket, you're asking for a second look by the I RS. And should your return be selected for an audit, you can bet you'll get it. Thia will hold for other major categories of deductions, too. In the medic al ex p e ns e cate go ry the $20,000-$25,000 taxpayer 's deduction averages $561. How wUJ your cfaim for 1980 compare? In tbe category ror taxes, the average deduction comes to Sl,876. Do you plan to claim more -or less? What about interest? This is a big deduction with the national average coming to $2,2M. Where will you fall? CLAIMING DEDUCTIONS WELL below the national averages s hould be just as much of a red flag -to you. It could mean you a re spending less than other •·average" taxpayers in your income bracket. Or it could mean you are overlooking some deductions - forgetting payments you made in 1980 or not making claims because you are unaware that they are valid deductions for you on your return. Either way -to highlight deductions that stick out because they are far above the averages or deductions that seem inaccurate because they a re Car below the averages -the national averages can be of major vaJue. Here are t he up-to-date figures prepared by the Research l~titute of America: IF YOUR ADJ USTED GROSS income was $10-15,000, your average medical expense deduction would be $951. taxes $1 ,235, contributions $535, inte rest Sl.895; if adjusted gross income was $15-20.000, average medical expense deduction would be $680, taxes $1,561 , contributions $535. interest S 1,895; adjusted gross income $20-$25,000, average m edical expenses deduction wouJd be $561 , taxes Sl,876, contributions $570, interest $2,280; income $25-30,000, then medical expense deduction would be $498, laxes $2,245, contributions $644, interest $2,465; income $30-50,000, then medical expense deduction would be $503 , t a xes $3,007, contributions $869, inter est $2,880; income SSO·l00,000, then medical expe nse deduction would be $668, taxes $5,309, contributions $1,825, interest $4,585 ; income $100,000 and up, then medical e xpense deductions would be $1,072, taxes $13,305, contributions $8,885, interest $10,184. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YOAl<(API Final Oow·.J-•VVS. AMERICAN LE'AOERS tor Monday, ""4r t STOCKS ()pef\ Hlllfl Low Clow OIQ JO Ind .... J1 .. f.17 .. 2.1t t7' 42• II.ID 20 Tm "°'~ a ."' t00.10 «>S.43 • 1.10 1S Utt IOI.IS lOt.01 107.7S IOI.SI+ O.«> u st• m .1s m .'1 110.n l7S.'2• >.u lndv• ' .. . . . ..-.100 Tr Jn 1,7,.,7llO Ulll• ffl,JOO •S Slit 7,17', 100 WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORI< IAPI ,,_., t .... w. AOwMICJCI TOO.,/,, d1' O.cttnect 5'S •n UncNn;ld m .,. To1a11-lll07 111' Htw fllOl\J 79 '1 Htw tows ,. 11 WHAT AMEX 010 NEW YORK IAPI Mar Pf'ev ACIYMIC9d T°":lo a.JI Oectkwd 14 m Un<l\an9ed JOS m T°''' ,_ .,, m Htw M<;IM J2 JO Htw tows 7 10 METALS C•-a:>•t> ,...,u • PoUl\O, V.S o.Jllna "°"' LH<ll 34 ctnb a _....i ZJ1tc ...... CtftlS a _..,.i, 0.lowe,..., ' Tiit S6,.. Me!AIS w .. , comp0sJlt II> Alll"'llWfft 7•c ... tsape>Und, H y M.,cwy"" 00 per flu~ 'tall-.. $«2 00 troy 01 , N Y SILVER Due to late transmission today's llst109 w ill not appear In the Dally Pilot. GOLD QUOTATIONS L.•Melt: mornu19 11••"9Ml-I.JO,wp $10.U L•11•M1: a fternoon flat no SAU .25. "° 'IJ 00. ,aria: alter,_ 11•1"9 Wl.04, up• 1 tMt. 'ra11lrfw1; llxtnoMU.tt. up$9 1•. Z11rtcll: feto alter,_ ll•tno .. to.00, 1111 17 .oo, $o1'100 as-eel H1t1•1 & Har,..a11: 0111, 01lly quoit 7 u. 1111 lll.OO. a.......,..: onty dally quote 5411.lS, 1111 IJ.00 ...... _.., only °"''• Quoit ••btl<•t.O .1'. ue>l1U2. SYMBOLS ~uel price hurts 1"Shing industry • NEW Bl!:DPORl>. Mua. <AP> -Al man and boy, for 31 yean, Jlm Pauline bu bpt a weatber eye on tbe AUanUe for fllb and liDI ot1quaU., but DOW u eeonomle 1ton:n ll forewarned by b1J f\lel 1auce. not b1J baromtter. ''Tbe pri~ ot tuel baa IQDe be7ood hurt1n« people, h '• Jdll101 people," said Pauline, alllpper o the awordfllh lon1llner Till! XVIII, u he stood on a pier ln UU. bome Port of New EQlland'1 bl11est ftlblnl neet. • • Sunday marked tbe fourth annlveraary of the P'ilberies Conaervatlon and Manqement Act, wblcb e1t~U1hed the JOO.mile f11hlnf llmlt, Many ball tlle act u the salvation of the domestic n1bln1 industry. Its ban on foreign boats ln America's cbotee fiahin1 1roundl and lta llmita on the amount of fish the U.S. fleet may land have allowed flab to replenilh themsel vea. BtJT JUST WHEN STOCKS ol cod, haddock and yellow-tail nounder have bounced back from years of overfishing, a new threat bovera over the men who hunt the sea, a threat marked by the numbers spinning on the face of a diesel pump at dockside. "When a l"Y comes in with a broker -a bad catch -the first thin1 he hu to worry about is his fuel bill," Pauline said. "He can't even begin to think about paytn1 his mortgage or anything else. And tr he can't pay off one fuel bill, they won't sell him any more.·• American fishermen can't get a hith enough price for fish to pay for the fuel to catch them, said Brian Veasy, executive vice president of the New Bedford Seafood Cooperatife Association Inc. The fuel that coat U.S. flahermtn u eeau a talion tn 11'11 now cott. •1.w: The price ot froaen flab, however, baa a&a,ed relatively •table at about as centa a pound, and wtth roretp Imports account· ing for 15 percent of the frozen flab eaten m the United Stat.ea. "We can't a•t a price lncreue, because Canada won't increase their prices," Veasy said. "We Jt,at have to try to hold on to our tbln market share." Eftort.1 to 1et federal fuel s ubsidies for American fishermen to mat.ch the government backinl received by Caaadian, Mexican and Icelandic boats have been turned aside by the U.S. Commerce Department, which regulates the fishing industry. IN THE FIRST MONTHS OF the 200·mile limit_ a llussian trawler and factory ship were seized otr ,the New En1Jand coast. Since then, foreign boats have st.ayed in their assifned fiabing "windows" to take the species the American market doean't want. like squid and hake, Coast Guard Lt. Kent Morris said. · On the East Coast , the 3lO·mile limit has cut the-foreign fleet dramatically. A recent Coast Guard count noted 105 foreign .boats fishing from the Georges Bank from Massachusetts to North Carolina, compared to more than 500 in the same area before e law toot bold. Morris said. New England fishermen are approaching the yearly 50,()()().ton catch of haddock that was common before foreign boats cul the domestic share lo 6,000 tons in the mid·60s, said Michael Sis· senwine, deputy chief of the resource assessment cttmion of the Northeast Fisheries Center in Woods Hole, Mass. FISHERMAN TIES UP AT NEW BEDFORD, MAIS., DOCKS Choice •ngllng thr••t•ned by high coat of fuel "The biggest sintle problem is that Canada is nooding the market with fish based on 70 cents (a gallon) for fuel at 23 cents (per pound) for whole fish and $1.10 for filets and we can't com· pete," Veasy said. "We've got to get our boats more money for fuel to compete against the Canadians." The yellow·tail catch has doubled from the 10,000·ton mark made in 1976 and cod catches have also improved greatly, he said . S•~<e '""" Stat1• ., YOUI OQo. ft.fl Stew• He.lwn• VOi.ii 41••1 COSTA MHA641•1289 1121...-- MllllOH -.,o495-04()1 1.ac.-~ ... Cl•~ Ole9o,....., •• • ...., "'""' I COLLECTORS CORNER R8re Coin• & St•mp• GOLD & SILVER Prices tor J/9/81 0. .. Clow '47J ot Sltve< Cl. JI I.Ill Kruoerr~ ,._.pie l..eal 100 Corona• S0 PHO\ tO'o Sol.er B•!I' 1111 Seti '*·· $4'7.00 '4t1.00 '4'1.00 '4SS.OO '4t7 .00 UM.00 Utl.00 '7.U% 1017,50' ,,_.,..... __ ,~ c;.,a..,, __ _ (714) 55&-6850 South CoHI P1H• VIiiega ...__ ....... .. tAc.r ................ CMet ~••• CALL MITZI WELLS FOR A II'=:======~==============~ (J \C.t\ \' nt:H~O' ) oa•111 p•1111"' REVEALS in the FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN - INTEREST ONLY! 7\ewpor~,~~~~t!~~~;,;!nr • (714) 760~060 $50,000 to $500,000 .INCOME PROPERrY SECON~ ;.• lntcreet onlv pev-ent :. lnco•• ·• Co••ercl•I • ReeldenU•I r. • We•lllv co•..Jtmp•nt• · • llton .. lv •••dine• ' • 6 -•lll• to S v-n • Sotatlllen. Callfornu ( ttntttll c IUf loan lnfo,...tlon een1lce • I• .. , tt\H t1ndnc1n.q rtt1t•d' (714) 759-1515 AMEAIUH,HOME MORTOAGE 730 N&wporl Cen1e1 Drive Desogn Plaza NewPOr1 Beach Cahlornoa 97660 ~ft. I t.1; ,f tJg~~~~E~~ 1st in Features, Performance, 'Price! TRS-80 MODEL Ill f:. •-·I '· .. ' -'•'~.... , ~"1 -}I I I Io '1 e. ,t~ .. -· .. ··~ .:.J ~ -··-~· • Compact Integrated Design With Built-In 12" Monitor Fits Easily on a Deak top • Over 80 Ready-to-Run Programs to Choose From, Or Write Your Own Programs For Business & Personal U1e • Easy Internal Expansion to 48K and 2 Disk Drives -------:::==;;;'P • The Perfect Starter from sggg Computer That Grows with Your Needs RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000. AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS AND DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS, I I O•d\Nt...t t OUNl Y l.Al 11 OHNIA 25 C[NT S Lag~a teachers OK ·two-stage wage hikes ' .,. ........... Bonus in cash included By STEVE MITCHELL OI-. o.i1y "'let ltaff Laguna Beach school teachers have approved a two-year con- tract that calls for a 4.5 percent salary increase this year and an 8 percent hike next year if state funding allocations remain the same. Dave Hagen, president of the Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Association, said 94 teachers cast ballots Monday afternoon, accepting the district offer by a "slim margin." LADY DIANA WOWS 'EM AT LONDON CHARITY BALL StreplHI gown relMI •Y•brOWI, bring• whlltlel The agreement also includes a one time only one·hillf percent cash settlement to all district employees. Lady Diana's dress stuns onlookers The raise, retroactive to last July. could also include a~other one-time cash settlement if the district's reserve budget ex· ceeds 2 percent al the end of the year . Next year, district teach~rs will receive an 8 percent in· crease, unless anticipated state funds do not materialize. LONDON (AP) Lad.v. Diana Spencer stunned onlookers with a glamorous ouUit when she turned out for her first public engagement with Prince Charles. whom she is to marry in July. Her strapless bJac& talfete evening gown brought gasps from an elite audience at a charily show. A crowd of about 200 cheered the prince and his bride-to-be as they drove up in the rain to Gold5milhs' Hall in the City or London financial district. There were whistles as the 19-year -old earl ·s daughter, following the prince, stepped out of a black limousine. When blonde Lady Diana, looking relaxed and happy. took off her wrap inside the hall, BBC television reporter Keith Graves commented: "Lady Diana wore a low -cut gown ... well off the shoulder. There were audible admiring gasps." The couple attended an eve- ning of verse and music to raise· money for the Royal Opera San ClenwnJ,e • • COTWlCt lll escape try A San Clemente man facing a death penalty determination in the murder of a Corona del Mar real estate agent was among three men alleged to have at· tempted an escape today from Orange County Jail Orange County Sheriff's Department Lt.' Wyatt Hart said the trio broke through a vent grate in an eight-man cell about 3:30 a .m. and were heading through a plum bing conduit to the roof of the four-story jail building when deputies heard noises. Hart said it was not yet known bow the three men would have left the roof bad they made it that far. Investigation is continuing. Hart idenUlied one of the three as John AJan Keith, 23, of San Clemente, convicted recenUy in the murder of Ruben Martinez, 40,ofCorooadel Mar. Keith wu scheduled today to appear in Orange County Superior Court for a hearing to de· termlne if be should receive the death penalty for hJs role tn the 1978 slaying. The others involved in the at· tempted escape were identified u Mark Albert Foster, faclna murder and robbery cbar1e1, and Robert Errol stoner, facln1 rob- bery and burglary char1e1. The three men were among ei1ht housed lo the cell on the fourth Ooor of the Jail. Mother al-re8ted LOS ANGEL£S <AP) -A l1-1ear-old woman bu been &r· rHtecl after laer two 1mall cbtldren, a1e1 S and 2, died 1leeptna unattended ln • nn at tbeir South Loi Aq•lel bocne, alaerttr1 deputies Hid. House Covent Garden, of which Charl~s is patron. Princess Grace of Monaco read poems on the stage. The 300 guests paid $110 each to attend. . . Prince Charles took it stride, aJthougb Lady rn,. UMalk». pears ln demure sklr'(s'-.nd' sweaters. The prittce, aware of the crush of photographers, turned and said with a laugh, "Have all the fashion writers finished?" New advisers • • arrive 1n El Salvador SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP) -As U.S. military ad· visers arrive in San Salvador, the army is battling guerrillas 27 miles north or the capital. About 20 or the advisers ar· rived over the weekend, bring. ing the number in El Salvador to about 50, sources said. The advisers include helicopter mechanics, helicopter flight instructors, and s~all unit training teams to teach infantry tactics. A flight instructor and. a m echanics ins tru ctor. Jn· terviewed at the llopango air force base eight miles east of San Salvador, said they were un- der orders not to fight except in self-defense or to save another U.S. adviser. Teachers had sought an 8 per- cent increase this year. and a raise next year tied to the Consumer Price Index for the Lo01{ Beach/Orange County area. Aod'wb.ij.e the m~ority (I(,,.. sodati.on members approved the contract offer, Hagen said his group la not pleaSed with the set· tlement. "We're dJstressed that Laguna Beach teachers remain the lowest paid in the county," Hagen said. "We've come from a district of high quality pro- grams and highly paid teachers to one that ranks among the lowest in the county.'' 8 ut district superintendent Robert Sanchis said he is pleased that a settlement has been reached. He said the salary increase, "In no way keeps up with i~a Uon and the level of salary m· creases that tiave been given lo faculties in other school dis· tricts ·•However, it does reflect the fact that our staff recognizes the difficult financial situation our district is facing and has taken this into consideration in the salar y settlement." Fluor stock earnings due to decline? The flight instructor said By FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL Salvadoran helicopter pilots 0t11Wo.i1,,.u.uutt were being put through a five· Everything seemed rosy al the week training session, four men outset of the Fluor Corp. 's annual at a time, to learn how lo fly shareholders meeting al a posh Huey transport choppers. hotel not far from its Irvine world The mechanics iMtructor said headquarters. the Salvado.-an troops seemed After aJl, only six days before, much more highly motivated the global engineering f!rm had than the South Vietnamese announced that net earnings per troops he had worked with dur-share for the first quarter of fi5cal ing the Vietnam War. · 1981 were uo 24 percent compared •'The problem is not the to the same period in fi5cal 1980. capability of the Salvadorans, And stockholders were smiling it's their support, their equip-because the company's work ment," be said. "They are very backlog bad jumped to $17.1 capable." billion, a record amount, com- Botb instructors said they pared to $11.7 bUllon for the fint were commiuioned Army of-quarterlaatyear. ficers, b\ll declined to give their But the smlles -some of them, names or ranks or have their anyway -faded moments after pictures taken. the meetln& waa over Monday on A Salvadoran arm)' 1ource the statement to reporters by J. said reinforcements were Robert Fluor, president and rushed Monday to Suebltoto, a chalrman ol the board, tbat earn· small town 2'I mllea norUa ol San in11 ln the second or third quarter Salvador. ofl18).coulddecllne. .. ------------, Pemape by aa much aa 10 centa • per share, FlQOr aaid. UCl'S MAGEE ALL-AMERIC~N UC Irvine 's Kevin K a1ee bu been named to the Aaoclated Preal ftnt team All·America. MaJ:i tbe nation'• tbkd lea 1corer tbil 1eHon, 11 UCl'1 flrtt All-America b11ketb1JJ player. See Sports, Pa1e Bl. Despite any "blip" in earninas -to use Fluor'• term -net earn· ln11 forlbe current fllcal year are eJCpected to be 1! to 20 percent b11ber than flteal ltlO, the c:om· pany'1 cb1ef 'xecutlve officer 1ald. But the mere 1u1st1tlon q-.artert, earnlnp mlpt drop forced 111.400 ...... of nuor at.Gell t.o be IOld la the two-bow period pnced1na tbe cloH ottrad· lnl OD the New York Stoel Ex· ebaaie. ( ... PUTOa, Pa .. Al) • Limp blimp repaired Ever wonder what the Goodyear Blimp looks like with the air let out of it? Something like this (top) after a windstorm deflated one of the company's four dirigibles last week. Below, the gon- dola rests upside down in a hangar at Tustin's MCAS (Hl helicopter base where the problem is being resolved. ·$48 billion1 cuts asked ~·Reagan WASHINGTON CAP> -Presl· dent Reagan, declaring, "the next steps are up to Congress," proposed $48.6 billion in spend· ing cuts for 1982 across the breadth of government today, sparing defense and little else from the chopping block. The S695.3 billion budget for 1982 would leave a deficit of $45 billion: It contains newly an- nounced spending reductions of $13.8 million in more than 200 areas, including veteran and job programs, water projects and housing. The budget includes Reagan's call for a three-year tax cut, but the overaJI theme of the spending document is simple and dramatic: More guns and rel- atively less butter. As a result of the military in· creases and sharp cuts in social programs, the defense share of the federal budget would rise from 24 percent in 1981 to 27 per- cent next year and 38 percent by 1986. Payments to individuals, the &hief means of federal help to the poor and near-poor, would re· main roughly steady at about 48 percent. The social cuts are certain to provoke a battle in Congress. Reagan is seeking to double his proposed reduction In welfare spending to more than $1 billion with a "workfare" requirement that he favored as governor of California. He wants to build 50,000 rewe.-. units of public housing than he recommended just a month ago, and 85,000 fewer units than the 260,000 proposed by Jimmy Carter in J anua.ry. On education, Reagan recom- mended a 25 percent cutback compared with 20 pe.-cent out- lined in bis February 18 budget measaae. His food stamp plan calb for ad- ditional cuta of $500 million to a total reductionof$2.3 bUllon. "The plan I ouWned will atop runaway inflation and revitalize our economy ll atven a chanc.," Rea1an declared ln a statement that outli.ned cuts ln more nearly 300 procrama from food stampt to apace exploration. <See avoorr, Pa1• .U> 'BEAN SPIRIT' ENSHRINED Sculptor llamu No1ucbl'• "Spirit of the Llma Bean," bl• fl111t Cellfornla crHtlon and the flr1t of tla worll1 1 plana.ct for ~ 1ewptur• 1a"'-.......... '°" da1 la c.ta 11.... 8" Featuret, Pa1e Cl, for ,. •tori• and pbotol. • • ' . Harbor pollution spoils sunny day By STEVE MAJlBLE • OlllWl>eily,..letSUtt Warm beacb-vlslUng weather is setlllng in along the Orange Coast but beaches along the Newport Beach coasWne will re· main off limits for at Least another week following a massive sewage spill. Orange County health officials stress the contaminated water situation ~ even worse in the Newport Harbor. They predict the harbor waters will be closed to batbenfortwoweelta. Six mllllon gallons of liquid and solid sewa1e poured into the harbor Saturday and Sunda)' when a aewer llne beneath Pacific Coa1t Hlpway ln front ol the · Balboa SQ Club ruptured. Altboqb the ltDe wu repaired Sunda1 afternoon, 1anltation ol· ftclala gy the condition ol ~ lfwer UM between the Coat IHl1hway bridle and the club re- ma.lulDqueatfon. · •'Some ol that pipe,•' Sanitation Dlatrtct apokeamu J\ay Lewi• told Newport councilmen Kon· day, "la U tb1n U I lbeet of r.aper. We're dolnC a lot ol ptaJ· n•theledaya." ' tCNDty bealtb olftclall bilan teaUu the polluted water We.a· da1, llut Mid ...Wu woe't be lmoWll aaw late today. I lllk• W._., •count)' water quail\)' rvilor, •aid buman contact ': . the contaminated. ' ' wate r could-be extremely dan~erous. He said bacteria in the sewage can produce eye, throat and intestinal infections. In severe cases, he said, it can cause hepatitis. Wehner said pinpointing when the water in the harbor will be <See SEWAGE, Pate AU ORAiia CUil WllTIHR Sunny and warm. Lows tonight 48 at beache5, 56 inland. Highs Wednesday upper eos aJona coHt, mid 10. to low 80s inland. ~ 111111 ,_.., A SnnUa·Do11 Advnun co&Uge ti the lalab of Ke~ Tuai, a tmall '°""' "ear Dollot. SH ""'1/, Paoe Al. lllEI At Y-lenkt Al .,.. ........ (4 LM • ..,. M =~ .. .. Al rii .......... ~ IMWF' P M l ~ I I t 1' I Shuttle talks With a scale model of the space shuttle Columbia in front of them astronauts Robert Crippen Cleft) and John Young t~ to reporters at a press conference in Houston. The pair are scheduled to fiy the Co~umbia on its first or- bital mission during the week of Apnl 5. Fro• Pagr A l FLUOR EARNINGS DIP.·. The stock, which had hit a high of 52~ in the morning, sank to a low of 46o/• and closed at 47 Ye. Fluor closed off 3Vs points on the day's trading. But at noon today, it was up 'h to47"4. A Fluor spokesman said the selloff was directly atlri bu table to Fluor's "quantifying" the reduc- tion that may occur to earnings over the next twoquarlers. In his address to shareholders li!athered al the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa, Fluor didn't mention figures. ''Let m e cautio n you, however," Fluor said after de· tAilinli! the first quarter earning results. ··Don't give in to the temptation of assessing Fluor's outlook by the results for one or two quarters. The nature of our business can sometimes result in quarters that can have un- usually high or low earnings relative to the comparable period the previous year or the preceding quarter." Fluor, wearing his trademark bow tie, used an example to demonstrate the growth the company's stock has achieved in the past 21 years. -First he held up a $1 bill. Then he produced a SHlO bill, a SS bill, a $1 bill, a dime, a nickel and four pennies -$106.19 total. Fluor said, "$106.19 is what this 1960 dollar would be worth today if you had invested it in Fluor stock." Fluor predicted the company's near-exponential growth will continue. The firm now employs 29 ,000 people It expects to D•llr l'tlee S"-tl ,,_ SEES EARNINGS DIP J. Robert Fluor employ 42,000 by 1983 and 50,000 by 1985, Fluor told shareholders. The company chairman said "newly emerging technologies" will join past ones as the firm takes on future projects. "Right now, as an important example," Fluor said, "We're keeping a watchful eye on the very active field of genetic engineering, or biotechnololi!:v. through which living organisms can be artificially altered to syn- thesize or degrade various or- ganic and inorganic materials." FroaeP .. •A I BUDGET CUTS ASKED. • • Also, Reagan would eliminate legal service assistance to the poor, sharply reduce spending for environmental and consumer protection and pare the budget of the Equal Employment Op· port unity Commission. "These are unprecedented cuts to meet an unprecedented situa- tion,'' the president said as he signed the package in the Rose Meeting set on slope talks Residenls in Crown Park and The Hill in Laguna Niguel will meet with officials from Orange County and Avco Community Developers tonight to discuss slope maint.enance problems in the two communities. Resident.s claim the slopes on both sides of Golden Lantern are not properly maintained. The meeting will be held at Ron Wllllams Realty, 27841 La Paz Road, beginning at 7: 30. For more information, call Wick Hartung at 831-8440. Ga rd en. "They mark the end of an old era and the beginning of a new one." In a revamped version of his 1982 spend.in& plans, the president said he is prepared to recommend still deeper spending cuts if necessary to keep federal spend- ing from rising faster. In relaying his plan to Congress, Reaean pointedly reminded lawmakers and special interest groups that he felt he was acting on a "man- date for change" delivered by the voters laslfall. "There ls nothing more impor- tant than putting America's economic house in order. The next steps are up to Congress," he said. Reagan submitted his revised 1982 budget in tandem with the de- tails on .his proposal for a three- year cut in personal income tax rates of 10 percent a year. Top Republicans on Congress' tax- wriling committees were to ln· troduce the administration's lax plan today. Reagan's budget makes deep cuts in the spending blueprint President Carter recommended before leaving ortice. tiiiiylilat MAIN ~ ThomM P. Haley ~ Rot»ert N. Wffd ......... M. ThomatKffVll .... ~Murphlne awt..H. Loot ................ ~Schulman ~~ ~C:~ard,Jr. DO Wttl..., II., C.la Mata, CA .. Mall...,,_, eo11 IMO, C.ta ~ ... CA. '26Jt Thr~ men have been arresMd la the stabbint death Jut AUIUll of an Irvine man wboee body wu later found in the wrecka1e ol bil plckup truck wblcb bad been blown up in tbe desert. Sheriff's deputlea at the Blythe 1µb1taUoo in Riveralde County said Glen Stewart Godwin, 23, and Frank Soto Jr., 31, both of Rancho Mira&e; and Roy Dickey, 35, of Camp Verde, Ariz. were to be ar· rai&ned today on murder cbar1ea. The lrlo, and perhaps others, are accused of stabbing Kim Robert La Valley, 26, inside a con- dominium 1n the affluent Rancho Mirage community between Palm Springs and Indio last Aug. 1. La Valley. who was a pilot. lived off and on with his parent.s in Newport Beach, Captain Padilla said. He said the victim's last known address was in Irvine. Investigators believe LaValley's body was lhen taken into the desert between Indio and Blythe where his pickup was blown up with explosives with his body inside. Capt. Nick Padilla, station commander of the Blythe substa· lion, said investigators believe robbery was the motive in lhe slaying seven months ago in the condominium shared by Godwin and Soto. The Blythe official said his de- partment's investigation shows evidence the slaying was drug re- lated. ·'The s u s pects believed LaValley was going to be carry- ing a large sum of money that particular night," Padilla said. But he stopped short of saying Lavalley might have been in· volved in illegal activity. "He knew all three suspects and had s tayed at the <Rancho Mirage) condominium from time totime,'' Padilla said. Padilla said the slaying OC· curred late on a Friday night Aug. 1, and said deputies believe it took place inside the condominium. The body was found inside LaValley's new pickup truck, parked at the Navy's Chocolate Mountain Bombing Range. The truck had been torn apart by a homemade bomb. ''The purpose was to dispose of the body, make it unidentifiable,'' Padilla said. "It didn't work. There was enough left of the body to make a positive identifica- tion." Dental records verified the body as La Valley's nearly a week after the truck was found . Soto and Godwin are being held in Blythe and Dickey is in custody in Indio. All three are being held on $350,000 bond. They were to be arraigned at Desert Municipal Court in Indio today. Deputies said they are looking for at least one more suspect in the slaying. Lizard caper good/or a laugh in LB You can always tell when things are a little slow in Laguna Beach by reading the police log. The woman on Flamingo Road called to report a large lizard in her home. An animal control of· ficer arrived and tossed the rep· tile out. However, the police log entry was slightly embellished: "Reporting party requested assistance in capturing an un· known type lizard that her cat dragged into the house," the en- try begins. ·'Officer located large lizard in custody of reporting party's cat. Lizard was advised and re- leased." Couple flee Viejo blaze A Mission Viejo couple jumped from a second-story bedroom window early today to escape names which eventually destroyed their home. Steve and Jacqueline Bickel ot 2•831 Daphne, were awakened by a smoke detector. They suf- fered cuu and abraaona and were treated at Mlaalon Com- munity Holpttal. A firefighter also suffered minor injuries in battling tbe blaae, which caused an eatlmat- ed $114,000 damaae to t.be atruc- ture . The cav.ae of the fire ii un- der lnv..U.aUon, by the Oraqe Cou.nty Jl\re Department . Iran nixes p eace BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) - Iran claimed that lraca bad ftnd Sovtet-made mJa•ll• blto tM oU center ~ Abwu, and botll llctle reporttd heavy n1hUn1 ~. att.r Ira r.jec., an hlamlc peace plan. p rime rate NP YOU <AP> -llaAorb..alBNMrYon aad Cblc-.o tod•J e•t tlM6r prime led'ni ra• bJ. ODe•half PH'HDl&I• polDt to 1J percent, Wl· dercutdnl tM bulk ot tlae banttn, ladustry. Citibank, tbe nallon '• aecond-lar•e•t com- mercial bank, led the move by trimmln1 Its prime rate from the 18.6 percent level that bad 'Prevailed nationwide. Finl National Bank of Cblcaio, ranked 9th in aise nationally, quickly matched Citibank, and No. 6 Chemical Bank followed suit. Some smaller, re- gional banks also dropped their rat.es to 1.8 percent. Bergeson's waste bill lDlder study SACRAMENTO <AP) -A skeptical Assembly Health Com- mittee heard Republican As· semblywoman Marian Bergeson of Newport Beach call for a special task force Monday to study what California should do with its 200,000 cubic feet of low· level nuclear waste. The committee did not take a vote on A B210 by the As· semblywoman. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is expected to have a bill soon to attack the same problem. The committee members ques- tioned Mrs. Bergeson' s bill for dif · fering reasons. Some did not file the idea of establishing a new task force when state agencies could do the job. Some did not want dis· posal sites in the state at alt. Other members want the federal gov· ernment to tackle the problem, since it is national in scope. Low-level nuclear waste is generated by hospitals in medical tests and by universities for re· search and industries for various products. It does not include was.tefrom nuclear power plants. Currently, there are only three places where such wastes can be dumped. Waste from California's 2,000 producers of low-level nuclear wastes, which total 140,000to2SO,OOO cubic feet a year, now go to Hanford, Wash., or Beatty, Nev. But a Washington referendum prohibits any but medical wastes at Hanford after July, and the Nevada governor has periodically closed the Beatty site. Supporters of the bill from the University of California and private indus try said most nuclear users could store wastes for six months if both those dumps were shut, but no longer. Mrs . Bergeson 's bill would establish a 15-member low-level Radioactiv·e Wa ste Technical Task Force to classify the low· level wastes and decide what to do with them. The task force would have until 1983. The bill is supported by the California Medical Association. the University of California and other nuclear users. It is opposed by the Depart ment of Health Services. Brown, the Natural Resources Defense Council and Friends of the Earth. Anaheim homicide In· veatlaaton aald today they have interviewed 14 witneuee lD a fatal atabbi.na incident at DlJsneyland Saturday nl&ht but are 1UU not certain what led to the 1laytn1. TbedealbofMelC. Yorba,18,of Rlvenlde was Disneyland'• flrat homlcldelnltaJS..yearhistory. Police Sgt. Del Wade aald tb1a mornln.c that reports of a plncblq-incident triggering the vlolebt chain of events haa not been verified. "Wecan'hhow that occurred," Wadeaaid. Some witneues indicated that a youna man bad oincbed one of the suspect.a, Julie Holdener 1 251 of San Diego, on the bullocks, and this may have led to the alleged attack by the other suspect, J amesO'Driscoll. Both O' OriscoJI and Miss Holdener were expected to be formally charged with murder to- day by the Orange County District Attorney's office. Each is being held in lieu of $250,000 bail, O' Driscoll at Anaheim City Jail and Miss Holdener at Orange County Jail Wade said both suspects have refused to talk with police in· vestigators. The slaying occurred near the submarine ride ticket booth in the Tomorrowland area. Yorba, who apparently did not know his as- sail ants, was taken to Palm Harbor Hospital in Garden Grove, where he was pronounced dead. The stabbing occurred at about 10 p.m. while the park was filled with guests of the Rohr Corpora- tion of San Diego. An estimated 10,000 people were in the park that night. Both O'DrlscoJI and Miss Holdener are listed as un · employed. Wade said it is un- known what connection they had to Rohr. O'Driscoll was arrested by police who found him hiding in bushes in lhe area of Adven- ture land. Miss Holdener was taken into custody by park securi- ty personnel at the scene of the stabbing. ••• ,,11..._... .. FACING CHARGES Julle Holdener SlA YING SUSPECT Jamee O'Drtacoll F rOMPap A I SEW AGE DANGERS. • • safe is difficult because "we've never had a spill of this magnitude in a bay before." He added, though, that the sew age was diverted to a point in the bay where currents are strong, a fact, he said, that could · help "flush" out the harbor. The sewer break, reportedly caused by natural corrosion of the 33-inch pipe, caused pavement on Coast Highway lo buckle and crack. The problem was compounded, explains sanitation spokesman Lewis, because there is no backup line along the half-mile stretch between the bridge and break point. Except for the half-mile stretch in Newport, Lewis said the sewer path is served by two pipes. The two-pipe system al· lows workmen to divert the flo.w to a backup line in case of a break. Le wis said sanitation officials had hopes of instamng a second line in Newport but were forced to spend the $850.000 set aside for the project when a pipe at the Huntington Beach treatment olant ruptured last year · ··we are reshuffling our budget," he said , "and looking for some money." Lewis pointed out another potential problem with lines run- ning under the harbor near the Coast Highway bridge. He said these lines are made of the same material of the pipe that rup- tured. "Most of our lines are encased in plastic but not in these two areas," he said. "The lines could last forever or, on the other hand, they could blow up next week." --FIND OF THE WEEKI® Look over our four-leaf clover. All the luck you can handle for St. Patrick's Day. Our four-leaf clover is a 24 karat gold-plated replica of the Florentine original. You can ~ang it over the do~r for luck or .use it as a paperwei~ht. It's inscnbecf on the back with "One leaf 1s for hope. and one 1s for faith, and one is for love, you know. And God put another in for luck." The luck starts with the price-$15.00. Beautiful gifts say. "/love you ." s- l'1 HA N~~l COU N TY C AI II OllNIA 2~ CEN TS Airport lawsuit due llomeowDers gang up on county ..... , ......... LADY DIANA WOWS 'EM AT LONDON CHARITY BALL StrapleH gown relM• eyebrowa, brtnga whlattea Lady Diana's dr.eu stuns onlookers LONDON (AP> Lady Diana Spencer stunned onlookers with a glamorous outfit when she turned out for her first public engage m ent with Prince Charles, whom she is to marry in July. Her strapless black taffeta evening gown brought gasps from an elite audience al a charity show. A crowd of about 200 cheered the prince and his bride-to-be as they drove up in the rain to Goldsmiths' Hall in the City of London financial district. There were whistles as the 19-year-old earl's daughter. following the prince, stepped out of a black limousine. When blonde Lady Diana, looting relaxed and happy. took off her wrap inside the ha ll . BBC television reporter Keith Graves commented: "Lady Diana wore a low-cut gown ... well off the shoulder. There were audible admiring gasps." The couple attended an eve-. ning of verse and music to raise? money ror the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, of which· Charles is patron. Princess Grace of Monaco read poems on the stage. The 300 guests paid $110 each to attend. Prince Charles took it stride, although Lady Diana usually ap· pears in demure skirts and sweaters. The prince, aware of the crush of photographers. turned and said with a laugh, "Have aJI the fashion writers finished?" Emotion ·damages claimed By STEVE MA&BLE Of tlle OallJ f'lltt It.If The leader of a coalition representing 23 N~wport Beach homeowner groups has revealed that a lawsuit will be filed against Orange County charging that John Wayne Airport has left homeowne r s emqtionally damaged. Architect Tom Williams, leader of the newly formed Airport Coalition. predicted at least 1,000 homeowners will be named as plaintiffs in the suit. Williams said the amount of damages to be sought bas not been determined and a filing date has not. been picked out. Williams spelled out the coali· tion's legal plans during Monday evening's Newport Beach City Council meeting. "We want to weld all those that face acoustical annihilation into one giant legal cause," ex- plained Williams. "It's our de· sire to put an unbearabll! finan- cial burden on the county supervisors.•' The coalition, representing residents from Corona del Mar to Balboa, was formed prior to the supervisors' approval of the airport master plan. Williams said members of the coalition also are expecting Newport city leaders to late leg9' action against the county to block implementation or the master pl.,_. R.M'. ·•PJug'' White, pretldent of the Unda Isle Community As· sociation -which is alianed with the coaliUoo -su11ested city leaders should file a lawsuit against the county this month and publicly urge "individuals and groups in the city to file as many lawsuits as practical." The Linda Isle leader also asked councilmen lo write Presi- dent Reagan and demand that federal funds for airport growth be withheld. Although Newport councilmen did not publicly respond to the requests, they did spend two hours behind closed doors Mon- day. reportedJy reviewing their legal options. Councilmen were scheduled to meet in closed session again to· day. reportedly to interview two atorneys with airport expertise. As explained by one council member, the city has until March~ to file a legal response lo the master plan in order to fall within the California En- vironmental Quality Act's 30- day response period. Fluor stock goes down Earnings report triggers sale of shares By FREDERICKSCHOEMEllL Ofllw0al1Jf'llet5t•lf Everything seemed rosy at the outset of the Fluor Corp. 's annual shareholders meeting at a posh hotel not far from its Irvine world headquarters. After all, only six days before, the global engineering firm bad announced that net earnings per share for the first quarter of fiscal 1'81 were uo 24 percent compared to the same period in fiscal 1•. And stockholders were smiling because the company's work backlog bad jumped to S17.1 billion, a re<:ord amount, com- pared to $11.7 billion for the first quarter last year. ings in the second or third quarter of 1981 could decline. Perhaps by as much as 10 cents per share. Fluor said. Despite any "blip" in earnings -to use Fluor's term -net earn- ings for the current fiscal year are expected to be 15 to 20 percent higher than fiscal 1980, the com- pany's chief executive officer said. But the mere suggestion quarterly earnings might drop forced 313.400 shares of Fluor stock to be sold in the two-hour periodprecedin1thecloseoftrad· in& on the New York Stock Ex· chao1e. usually high or low earnings relative to the comparable period the previous year or the preceding quarter." Fluor, wearing his trademark bow tie, uaed an example to demonstrate the growth the company's stock has achieved in the past 21 years. · First he held up a $1 bill. Then be produced a $100 bill, a $5 bill, a $1 bill, a dime, a nickel and four pennies -$106.19 total. Fluor said, "$106.19 is what this 1980 dollar would be worth toda)'. lf you had invested it in Fluor stock." (See FLUOR, Pate AU Limp blimp repaired Ever wonder what the Goodyear Blimp looks like with the air let out of it? Something like this (top ) after a windstorm deflated one of the company's four dirigibles last week. Below. the gon- dola rests upside down in a hangar al Tustin's MCAS <H > helicopter base where the problem is being resolved. $48 billion cuts asked by Reagan WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· '9si~1 JIMl&n. decla®•• . ·~~· lbf steps are up to Cc>li(rl!U,-1t proposed k8.6 biJlion in spend- lnl cuts for 1982 1cro11 lbe breadth of government today, sparing defense and little else from the chopping block. The $695.3 billion budget for 1982 would leave a deficit or $45 billion. It contains newly an- nounced spending reductions of $13.8 million in more than '200 areas, including veteran and job programs , water projects and housing. The budget includes Reagan's call for a three-year tax cut, but the overall theme of the spending document is simple and dramatic: More guns and rel- atively less butter. As a result of the military in- creases and sharp cuts in social programs, the defense share of the federal budget would rise from 24 percent in 1981 to ~ per- cent next year and 38 percent by 1986. Payments to individuals, the chief means of federal help to the poor and near-poor. would re- main roughly steady at about 48 percent. The social cuts are certain to provoke a battle in Congress. 'Reagan is seeking to double his proposed reduction in welfare spending to more than Sl billion with a "workfare" requirement that be favored as governor of California. He wants to build 50,000 fewer units of public housing than he recommended just a month a10, and 85,000 fewer units than the 260,000 proposed by Jimmy Carter in January. On education,· Reagan recom- mended a 25 percent cutback compared with 20 percent out- lined in his February 18 budget message. His food stamp plan calls for ad· ditiooal cuta of $500 million to a total reduction of $2.3 billion. "The (11an I outlined will atop runaway inflation and revitalise our eC<lftOmy if oven a chance,.' Rea1an declared in a statement (See BUDGET, Paae AJ) Harbor pollution spoils sunny day Warm beach-visiting weather is settling in along the Orange Coast but beaches along the Newport Beach coastline will re- main off limits for at Least another week following a massive sewage spill. Orange County health officials stress the contaminated water situation ia even worse in the Newport Harbor. They predict the harbor waters will be cJosed to bathers for two weeks. Six millloo &allons of liquid and solid sewaae poured into the harbor Saturday and Sunday wb•n uewer line beneath Paclftc Coatt Hltbway in front ol the Balboa Bay Club ruptured. Highway bridge and the club re- m a ins in question. ·'Some of that pipe,·· Sanitation District spokesman Ray Lewis told Newport councilmen Mon- day. "is as thin as a sheet of paper. We're doing a lot of pray- ing these days." County health officials began testing the pollut~ water Mon- day, but said results won't be known until late today. (See SEWAGE, Pate AZ> 111111 CUii lllTlll But the amilea -some of them, anyway -faded moments after the meeting was over Monday on the· statement to reporters by J. Robert Fluor. president and chairman of the board, that earn- The stock, wbicb bad bit a bi&h of 52% in tbe moraln1, sank to a low of 46'N and closed at 47~. Fluor closed off 3~ pointaon the aay'I tradiq. But at noon today, itwasup~to4'1~. Crl1ne tlnled Alt.boucb tbe line waa repaired Sunday afternoon, 1anitaUon of. fldala .. , the CODCBUon ol the sewer llDe between the Cout SuMy and warm. Lowt tonight 48 at beaches, 56 lnland. Hiehs Wednesday upper 80I aJ001 coast, mid 709 to low 80s tnland. UCl'S MAGEE · A.LL-.4MERIC.4N UC lrvlne'a Kevin llaaee hu boen na~ to t.he Alloclated Pren tint team All-America. Ma1ee. &be nation'• Lh1rd leadiD1 scorer tbl1 HHOD, la UCJ'a flrat All·Amerlca butetball •ptayer. See lpona, P.,e Bl. A Fluor 1pok•man aald tbe aelloffwudirectly attributableto Fluor'• "quantlf)'ln&" the reduc· tlon that may occur to eaminfl overtbenexttwoquarter1. Jo hll addJWI to 1bareboklen ••tbered at the 8outb Coalt Plua Hot~ Colta Keta, Fluor didn't men .n..-. • , ••Let me caution you, however," Fluor uid all« de- talUo• the ftnt quarter •andnl r•ulta. "Don't live ta to the temptatloG ot uaeaalq J'luor'• outlook by the retalta for ooe « two 4uarten. '1'be nature. ol our bu.ltoeu ca t0metJmes result in ouarten that can bave un· 'Burglar' merely a lamp A Newport Beach police SWAT team, alerted to a )>011lble bur1lary ln pfOINH, cbal'l9d in tb• &oat door to a cun brive boD\e late&md~ only tqdllecwer Ult culprtt wu a Uriq room lamp 1'tred to a tUsalal denee. Police were 1unmoaed JUlt before ..... _ ............ HW • llbt 10 oa ID UM ITU atft DrtH rwicleDee. llM told aftl~ Ute bomeowaer wu •••1 on neaUon. WIMD= ant•ed• nplalMd Lt. Jim ara, the llabt wlllt olf, 'BEAN SPIRIT' ENSHRINED Sculptor Jlamu No1ucbl'1 "Splrlt ot tbe Lima Btan,j• bll flra& California creatloa ud tb• flrat of ala workl planaed for a lftlftun ........... uaWUeld ... 4•1 bl ea.ta •••. ... reaturea, :;:::. Cl, for ttorl•aad . 111101 TlllY A !nnth·Do~ Advntift colt.~ u tlw hMb of KHM, ftZGI, a nnoll '°'°" 11.ar DaUcu. Sec \Olav, Paflf Al. lllEI 0rwp Co91t DAILY PILOT/l'uelday, March 10. 1981 PollUH -not proflta - domluted diacuaaton at the an- nual meetina ot shareholders ot lrvine·baaed Fluor Corp., lbe world petrochemical engineer- ing and con.atrucUon firm. Shareholders defeated pro· poaals M'onday that caUed for the firm to terminate its con- tracts with the iovernment of · South Africa and disclosure of the amounts and recipients of corporate contri bu lions to domestic political campaigns. Termination of the contracts with South Africa was sought by the United Presb~terian Church, ~arrknoll <N.Y.) Sisters 01 Saint Domini c Inc., and Congregation of the Paasion. Spokesmen for the religious groups unsuccessfully argued that the firm should not be doin1 business with the ruling white minority in South Africa• And they claimed the com· pany was putting its employees at risk in South Africa, citing a bombing at a coal liquefaction facility and the discovery or two bombs at Fluor offices located in Johannesburg. Critics or the firm's ties with the South African government, in a resolution submitted at the meeting, said: The $2.8 billion SASOL oil· from-coal plant under construe· lion is designed to provide 15 percent or South Africa 's oil Fro• Pag~ A I CHllr f'llet Se.ti~ 8E£8 EARNIN08 DIP J . Robert Fluor needs upon its completion, and as such is an installation or great strategic importance to the, white minority govern· ment." SASOL is an acronym for Suid-Afrikaanse ,Steenkool-Olei· en Gas·Koporasie (South Africa Oil and Gas Corp.). Arguing against approval of the proposal, Fluor manage- ment said, "Termination or our * * * contracta would conatltute a breach ol tboM eontracta and re- sult ln aubltaDUal loeaea to tbe company and lta l.nveatment lo South Africa. "Chance la comin1 slowly to South Africa and our etf orta in that country have aasl1ted ln tbat cban1e. The company hu trained over 5,000 black penons and tbe akllla they have learned have made them a productive element of South African society." James B. Hoy, a Berkeley stockholder, su1gested dis· clotures of political contribu- tions. J . Robert Fluor, president and chairman of the board, said the company in fiscal 1980 ending Oct. 31 made $202,405 in cor· porate contributions. Through political action com· mittees, e mployees gave $192,000 in contributions, Fluor said, in states where corporate contributions are not permitted. A mounts of contri bu lions ranged from $480, the maximum permitted in municipal electiooa in Irvine, to $25,000 to Califor- nians for Fair Taxation, an op- position group to an oil industry tax proposition that appeared on the November ballot. Fluor later told reporters he and his wife each donated $1,000 to the campaign of President Reagan. * * * BUDGET ... f'ro• Pap A I that outlined cuts in more nearly 300 programs from food stamps to space exploration. FLUOR EARNINGS DIP. • • Also, Reagan would eliminate legal service assistance to the poor. sharply reduce spending for environmental and consumer protection and pare the budget or the Equal Employment Op· port unity Commission. Fluor predicted the company's near·exponential growth will continue. The firm now employs 29,000 people. It expects lo employ 42,000 by 1983 and 50,000 by 1985, Fluor told shareholders. The company chairman said ··newly emerging technologies·· will join past ones as the firm takes on future projects. "Right now, as an important example," Fluor said, "We're keeping a watchful eye on the very active field of genetic engineering, or biotechnology, through which living organisms can be artificially altered to syn- thesize or degrade various or· ganic and inorganic materials." "These are unprecedented cuts to meet an unprecedented situa- tion ," the president said as he signed the package in the Rose Garden. "They mark the end ofan old era and the beginning of a new one." Robbery motive? In a revamped version of his 1982 spending plans, the president said he is prepared to recommend still deeper spending cuts if necessary to keep federal spend· ing from rising faster. In relaying his plan to Congress. Reagan pointedly reminded lawmakers and special interest groups that he felt he was acting on a "man· date for change" deli vered by the voters lastf al I. Three 1nen nabbed in stabbing death "There is nothing more 1mpor· tanl than putting America's economic house in orrler. The next steps are up to Congress." he said. Reagan submitted his revised 1982 budget in tandem with the de· tails on his proposal for a three· year cut in personal income tax rates of 10 percent a year. Top Republicans on Congress' tax· writing committees we re to in· troduce the administration's tax plan today. Reagan's budget makes deep cuts in the spending blueprint President Carter recommended before leaving offi ce. Mesa physician's office burglarized Burglars broke into a Costa Mesa do c tor's office and escaped with medications, a copy machine, a typewriter, scalpels, a radio and testing equipment with a total value or $2,000, police said. Entry was gained over the weekend by removing louvers from the front door of Or. S.L. Hulse's office, 1831 Orange Ave., police said. Burglars ransack I Mesa High theater Burglars entered Costa Mesa High School's theater through a roof batch and escaped with $3,600 worth of stage lighting and other equipment, officials reported Monday. The weekend haul included beadpbooes and electrical drop cords, police said. ORANGE COAST Three men have been arrested in the stabbing death last August or an Irvine man whose body was later found in the wreckage of bis pickup truck which bad been blown up in the desert. Sherifrs deputies at the Blythe substation in Riverside County said Glen Stewart Godwin, 23, and Frank Soto Jr., 31 , both of Rancho Mirage; and Roy Dickey, 35, or Camp Verde, Ariz. were to bear· raigned today on murder charges. The trio, and perhaps others, are accused of stabbing Kim Robert La Valley. 26. inside a con· dominium in the affluent Rancho Mirage community between Palm Springs and Indio last Aug. 1. La Valley, who was a pilot, lived off and on with bis parents in Newport Beach, Captain Padilla said. He said the victim's last known address was in Irvine. Investigators believe LaValley's body was then taken into the desert between Indio and Blythe where his pickup was blown up with explosives with bis body inside. Capt. Nick Padilla, station commander of the Blythe substa- tion, said investigators believe robbery was the motive in the slaying seven months ago in the condominium shared by Godwin and Soto. The Blythe official said his de· partment's investigation shows evidence the slaying was drug re- lated. ''The suspects believed La Valley was going to be carry. ing a large sum of money that particular night,'• Padilla said. But he stopped short of saying LaVaUey might have been in· vol ved in illegal activity. "He knew all three suspects and had stayed at the (Rancho Mirage) condominium from time to time," Padillasaid. Padilla said the slayln1 OC· curred late on a Friday ni1ht Aug. Dally Pilat MAIN OfFtCE Thomee P. Hiley ,.,.... ~N.Wlld ~ M. Thomu KHYll .... ~Murphln• ~°U.. f::d &chulmen ~~n ~ot'~d1rd. Jr. l,.1 UO Wul aay SC., c ..... MeM. CA. l!Mll ~: 1oa 1w,c:. .. -.., CA.,.. c .. ,,ltJM '"' 0r.,.. c. .. "'9fft111,..c:-.... 11••• 1110fltt, 111ut1r1t10M, te11•rt•t mact.r ., •• v1rt1t1me111s llerelll M•r 119 reproct..cfCI wll"°"1 lPKl•I ...,.,..1nlctfl of <ottY•IOll• -,.r. 1, and said deputies believe it took place inside the condominium. The body was round inside LaValley's new pic kup truck, parked at the Navy's Chocolate Mountain Bombing Range. The truck had been torn apart by a homemade bomb. "The purpose was to dispose of the body. make it unidentifiable,•· Padilla said. "It didn't work. There was enough left of the body to make a positive identifica· lion." Dental records verified the body as La Valley's nearly a week after the truck was found. . Soto and Godwin are being held in Blythe and Dickey is in custody in Indio. All three are being held on $350,000bond. They were to be arraigned at Desert Municipal Court in Indio today. Deputies said they are looking for at least one more suspect in the slaying. Growth topic of NB meet Slow-growth advocates in Newport Beach will meet public· ly Wednesday to discuss the Irvine Company's plans to build a new hotel and office buildings in Newport Center. T he 7 :30 a .m . meeting , sponsored by members of SPON (Stop Polluting Our Newport). will be held in the Oasis senior citizens center in Corona del Mar. The development firm 's ex- pansion requests come before the city 's planning com· miasioners March 19. The plan calla for a 2S percent expansion of the center. Critical step in transplant STANFORD (AP) -A 45· year-old woman who la the world'• only 1urvlvln1 heart· lun1 'hnaplant recipient faced a crltlcal hurdle today as doeton planne4 to beatn ltlttlnt the or; 1ana tunctlon on tbelr own . Mary Gohlke ol Meta, Arla., mu1t be 0 weaned" from a retplrator used to 111llt tbe new lun11 after her '1ur1ery Monday at Stanford Un.lveralt, Medical Center, a 1POke1woman 1atcl. Mn. OOhlte. wbo WU COD· ukMal .,._. tbe four·bour open· UoD, ... ll.ttecl la •table but erlUeal CODdlU., u .. ~ If SW YOU (AP> - MaJar ....... i8 N .. Yen aa• CIUHIO telay eat tMir pftm9 ........ ,. ... bJ one·b•lf perc.nta1• ec>lDt to 18 percent, Un· dercutuna tbe bulk of tbt banltlnf laduatry. Citibank, tbe nation'• 1tcond·lar1eat com· merclal bank, led tbe move by triinmln1 ttl prime rate from the 18.5 percent level tbat had prevailed nationwide. Flnt National Bank of Cblca10, ranked ttb ln alle nationally, quickly matched Citibank, and No. 6 Chemical Bank followed s uit. Some smaller, re· glonal bank.a also dropped their rates to 1B percent. 18c sta1np use begins March 22 WASHINGTON <AP) -The cost of mailing a first-class letter will go from 15 cents to 18 cents on, March 22, the Postal Service said today. The governors of the service, who had requested a 20·cent rate, took issue with the Postal Rate Commission, a separate agency that Feb. 19 approved the 18-cent rate instead. "To achieve a lower stamp to- day. the commission has chosen to ignore more than $1 billion in revenue needs that will have to be collected in the near future," the governors said in a state· ment released without elabora- tion. The governors said they would ask the rate commission to re- consider its decision. Jr that de· cision stands , the s tatement said, the Postal Service will soon ask for another rate hike. "The 18-cent stamp is a rec· ommendation fo'r fi scal ir- responsibility in postal matters. It is a recommendation for con· stant rate changing and it is a recommendation for higher than necessary postal rates in the future," the governors said. Woman routs jeiool thief in Newport A Newport Beach woman reclaimed a bag filled with her jewelry Monday afternoon when she bumped into a burglar in her bedroom, yelled "Oh no you don't" and chased the youthful crook out the front door. Deborah Sperberg told officers she last saw the freckle.faced man running down the street. Police said the woman entered her Corona del Mar home at 12:30 p. m . and heard noises in a bedroom. Officers said shP bumped into the crook seconds later when she turned a hall cor· ner andentered the bedroom. The burglar, poli ce said , became so ratUed by the turn or events that he dropped a brown shopping bag filled with jewelry and bolted. The homeowner stayed close behind. Anaheim homicide ln· vest11aton said today they bave interviewed 1' wit.neaaea in a fatal stabblnl incident at Disneyland Saturday night but are sWJ not certain wbatled to the slayin1. ThedeatbofMelC. Yorba, 18,of Rlvenide was Dlaneylaod'a ftnt homieidelolta26-year history. Police Sgt. Del Wade said this mornio'l that reports of a pinching incident triggering the violent chain or events bas not been verified. "We can't show that occurred " Wade said. ' Some witnesses indicated that a young man bad Pinched one of thf: suspects, Julie Holdener. 25, of San Diego, on the buttocks and this may have led to the atieeed attack by the other suspect JamesO'DrUcoll. ' Both O' Driscoll and Miss Holdener were expected to be formally charged with murder to· day bytheOrangeCounty District Attorney's office. Each is being held in lieu of $250,000 bail, O' Driscoll at Anaheim City Jail and Miss Holdener at Orange County Jail. Wade said both suspects have refused to talk with police in- vestigators. The slaying occurred near the submarine ride ticket booth in the Tomorrowland area. Yorba, who apparently did not know his as· sailants, was taken to Palm Harbor Hos pital in Garden Grove, where he was pronounced dead. The stabbing occurred at about 10 p.m. while the park was filled with guests of the Rohr Corpora· lion of San Diego. An estimated 10,000 people were in the park that night. Both O'Driscoll and Miss Holdener are listed as un· employed. Wade said it is un- known what connection they had to Rohr. 0 ' Driscoll was arrested by police who found him biding in bushes in the area of Adven· tureland. Miss Holdener was taken into custody by park securi- ty personnel at the scene of the stabbing. ....... ,...." FACING CHARGES JuHe Holdener SLAYING SUSPECT Jamee O'Drtacoll f',.... Pllfl' A I SEW AGE DANGERS. • • Mike Wehner, a county water quality supervisor. said human contact with the contaminated water could be extremely dangerous. He said bacteria in the sewage can produce eye, throat and intestinal infections. In severe cases. he said, it can cause hepatitis. Wehner said pinpointing when the water in the harbor will be safe is difficult because "we've never had a s pill of this magnitude in a bay before.'' He added, though, that the sew age was diverted to a point in the bay where currents are strong, a fact, he said, that could help "flush" outthe harbor. The sewer break, reportedly caused by natural corrosion of the 33-inch pipe, caused pavement on Coast Highway to buckle and crack. The problem was compounded. explains sanitation spokesman Lewis. because there is no backup line along the half-mile stretch between the bridge and break point. Except for the half.mile stretch in Newport, Lewis said the sewer path is served by two pipes. The two-pipe system al· lows workmen to divert the flow to a backup line in case of a break. Le wi s said sanitation offi cials had hopes of installing a second line in Newport but were forced to spend the $850,000 set aside for the project when a pipe at the Huntington Beach treatment plant ruptured last year.' · ··We are r eshuffling our budget," he said, "and looking for some money." Lewis potnted out another potential problem with lines run· ning under the harbor near the Coast Highway bridge. He said these lines are made or the same material of the pipe that rup· lured. --FIND OF THE WEEKI® Look over our four-leaf clover. All the luck you can handle for St. Patrick's Day. Our four·ll'af clover is a 24 karat gold-plated replica of the Florentint;• original. You ca n hang it over the door for luck or use it as a paperweight. It's inscribecf on the back with "One leaf is for hope, and une is for faith, and one is for love, you know. And God put another in for luck." The luck starts with the price-$15.00. Bea11t1f11/ .~ifts sa.11. "I loue you." Or111pCoaat DAILY. ALOT/fu.day, March 10, 1881 --------------------.-.------------...... NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSAC110NS IWO"~'IOMl l~UO• t•AOU M ,1Mauw 'tOll1C, .. 10WaJf, •1tC1PIC, •IW, .._,.,.., o•HOlf .t•o CIMCltellATI lt'OCll O.ata•at """8111,..\'WO 11 ""'•II.ct••• lllll"T1111n Dow Jones Final Off 3.76 Cloalng 972.M ~~' ~,._. Tax audit .... very unlikely It's only normal to want to know what other taxpaye.rsln your Income cate1ory will be deductin• for major ex~n5ea and conlrlbuUona when you flU lo your federal income tax returns. But curiosity is hard common sense aa well and can pay ofr in saving dollan, time and headache. Let's say you're in the $20,000-$25,000 income bracket. a nnge in which millions of taxpayers ran. I Did your 1980 contributions to charities total around ~70? Lr you plan to ~ deduct a larger total, you are waving a red ~ ~ f 1 na lg e ~ tn : ~ SYlVIA PORJIR """"' -'~ Revenu e -, T Service agent. T HAT F IGU R E -A s wollen total ror contributions -may be entirely valid and you may have the receipts and other documents (be sure you do) to prove your claim. But if your deduction for contributions is rar above typical deductions in your income bracket. you're asking ror a second look by the I RS. And should your return be selected for an audit, you can bet you'll get it. Thls will hold for other major categories of deductions. too. I n the medical expe nse category the $20,000-$25,000 taxpayer 's deduction averages S561. How will your claim for 1980 compare? Jn the category for taxes, the average deduction comes to $1 ,876. Do you plan to claim more -or less? What about interest? This is a big deduction with the national average coming to $2,280. Where will you rallli CLAI MING DEDUCTIONS WELL below the national averages should be just as much of a red nag -to you. It could mean you are spending less tha n other "average'' taxpayers in your income bracket. Or it could mean you are overlooking some deductions forgetting payments you made in 1980 or not making claims because you are unaware that they are valid deductions for yo u on your return. IF YOUR ADJUSTED G ROSS income was $10-15,000, your average medical expense deduction would be $951, taxes $1 ,235, contributions $535, interest Sl.895; if adjusted gros-income was $15-20,000, average medical expense deduction would be $680, taxes $1,561, contributions $535, interest $1,895; adjusted gross income $20-$25,000, average medical expenses deduction would be $561, taxes $1,876, contributions $570, interest $2,280; income $25-30,000, then medical expense deduction would be $498, taxes $2,245, contributions $644, interest $2,465; income $3()-50,000, then medical expense deduction would be $503 , taxes $3,007, contributions $869, interest $2,880; income $50-100,000, then medical expense deduction would be $668, taxes $5,309, contributions $1,825, interest $4,585; income $100,000 and up. then medical expense ded\Jctions would be $1,072. taxes S13,305, contributions $8,885, interest Sl0,184. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS SOLD COINS . ~ -IV. ~ ,_ •'"' :. y, "" "' v. -" -~ + .. . .,...,,...., ''"*' .... $t01.00, -...... ,......_.,,.,.. oa .. ""'·•· uott.00. ................ ., .......... , .... ..... ......... "'c-. .tltt ,,.., ...... ,. .. ..... METALS t•-• al~ U cents• POUnd, U.S o.s11- llon1 l.H41 lCcenU•-d. 11,.c .iv. c.nls • _,.,.,, dellver4"1 Tl,. '6."'11 fMl•ts w-.-comp00Ue 111 A tvm'-91 ,. cenlS • pOul>O. N Y ,...,,..,., "'6 00 s-r llasll 1'1•11-'44> 001roy 01., N.Y SILVER '' nw Auoc:I•'" "'"' Ju .O«I per 1roy ounce. Hendy ., H•rmen A~WI ....... FISHERMAN TIES UP AT NEW BEDFORD, MASS., DOCKS Choice •ngllng threatened by high coat of fuef Seo-.c. T1Mt 5,.,,, •I You• 00CM tC•H Sf<wt NNtett VOi,# A'e•I COIU •1A641-1 289 lutN-llfyd ..... '°" ~95-0401 11122c.-ce.ietro"° Clo• Dloto '""' ol A•OtY ~-wy I COLLECTORS CORNER CALL MITZI WELLS FOR A BUSINESS Fuel price hur fis.liing inditstry • 0 NEW BEDFORD, Mau. <AP) -As man and boy, fi~Sl 1 The fuel that cost U.S. ft.abermen '5 c~1' a talion lo 1171 pow yeart, Jlm Pauline baa kept a weather eye on tbe Atlantlc for h c:ostl $1.19. The price ot froeen ftab, however,., .. 1tayed relaUvely and •llns ot squalls, but now an economic storm ii forewarn by stable at about 3S cent.I a pound, and with fohllD Import.a account· his fuel 1au1e. not his barometer. lnt for M percent of the frosen fish eaten in the United Statea. "The prtce of fuel bu 1one beyond hurUnl( people, it's ldllillc "We can't get a price increue, because Canada won't increase people," said Pauline. skipper of the awordfilb lon1liner Tiki their prices," Veasy said. "We just have to try to bold on to our XVIII, u be stood on a pier in tbil home port of New Entland's thin market share." bl11est fiahln1 fleet. Efforts to gel federal fuel subsidiet for American fishermen to Sunday marked tbe fourth anniversary of the Flsh.rtes match tbe government backing received by Cuadlan, Mexican Conservation and Mana1ement Act, which established the JOO.mile and Icelandic boats have been turned aside by the U.S. Commerce ftsblne limit. Many hall the act u the salvation of the domesUc Department, which regulates the fishing industry. fisbln1 Industry. Its ban on foreign boats in America's choice fishing grounds and it.I limits on the amount of fish the U.S. fleet may land have allowed fish to replenish themselves. atJT JUST WHEN STOCKS of cod, haddock and yellow·tail flounder have bounced back from years of overfishing, a new threat hovers over the men who hunt the sea, a threat marked by the numbers spinning on the face of a diesel pump at dockside. ''When a guy comes in with a broker -a bad catch -the first thing he bas to worry about is his fuel bill." Pauline said. "He can't even begin to think about payin1 hia mortgage or anything else. And if be can't pay of( one fuel bill, they won't sell him any more." American fishermen can't get a hlth enough price for fish to pay for the fuel to catch them, said Brian Veasy, executive vice president of the New Bedford Seafood Cooperative Association Inc. "The biggest single problem ls that Canada is flooding the market with fis h based on 70 cents <a 1allon> for fuel at 23 cents (per pound) for whole fish and $1.10 for mets and we can't com· pete," Veasy said. "We've got to get our boats more money for fuel to compete against the Canadians." IN THE FIRST MONTHS OF the 200·mile limit, a Russian trawler and factory ship were seized off the New En1land coast. Since then, foreign boats have stayed in their assi1ned fishing "windows" to take the species the American market doesn't want, like sqwa and hake, Coast Guard Lt. Kent Morris said. On the East Coast , the 3>0-mile limit has cut the foreign fleet dramatically. A recent Coast Guard count noted lOS foreign boats f11blo1 from the Georges Bank from Massachusetts to North Carolina, compared to more than 500 in the same area before the law took hold, Morris said. New England fishermen are approaching the yearly 50,000·too catch of haddock that was common before foreign boats cut the domestic share to 6,000 tons in the mid·60s, said Michael Sis· senwine, deputy chief of the resource assessment ctt.tm>n of the Northeast Fisheries Center in Woods Hole, Mass. The yellow-tail catch has doubled from the 10,000·ton mark made in 1976 and cod catches have also improved greatly, he said. $50~000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECON~ ({;ft. 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