HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-12 - Orange Coast Pilot(
-11111• UllY PIPll I
THUR SDAY M l\ Ht H 1.' 1 ih 1 UHANl.l l.c.'ll N 1 \' l A 1 I~ u:n ~1A ;;>~ CENT S
PoUticq/, prisoners ~ue release
Pakistan agrees to hijackers' deniands
DAMASCUS, Syria <AP) -
Only minutes befo r e the
threatened execution of three
American boata&es, one of them
from Ora.nee County. Pakistan
a1reed today to a demand by
three plane hijackers to release
SS political prisoners, the Syrian
news agency said.
They set a new deadline ol. 4
thi9 aftemooo for fulfillment of
their request , d i plomatic
sources said.
authorities from the plane at
Damascus airport. The letter
was released by the official
Syrian news agency, SANA.
with the deduction that they're
CIA a1ents."
In Washin~ton, the While
House refused-"'to discuss the
threa~ executions.
Some crouched in the bushes on
both aides of the auxiliary
runway where the plane was
parked. A haJf dozen dashed UD·
der the fuselage of the plane.
Later all were pulled back to
foxholes.
The hijackers. who seized the
Pakistani airliner 11 days ago
and new it to Afghanistan and
then t o Damasc u s, also
threatened to blow up the plane,
themselves and more than 100
hostages unless their demands
were met by 8 a .m. PST.
The sources, who refused to be
identified, said that after the
Pakistan a1reement ne1olia·
lions began to establish the Iden·
tity of six of the SS whose release
was demanded by the three hi·
jackers.
E artier in the day, the hi·
jacke r s labeled lbe three
Americans CIA agents and said
"be prepared to collect their
bodies." They made the threat
in a letter dictated to Pakistani
Tbe Americans bave been
identified as Frederick Hubbell
of Des Moines, Iowa, a lawyer;
and businessmen Craig Richard
Cly more of Orange County and
Lawrence Clifton Mangum of
New York City, who reportedly
lives in Spain.
A U.S. Embassy official in
Islamabad, Pakistan, said "we
h ave no idea how they (the hi·
j ackers) could have come up
Pakistan Pre si dent
Mohammed Zia ul-Haq sent an
"Import.ant. urgent" message to
Syrian President Hafu Assad
after the threat to shoot the
Americans was issued, a
Pakistani spokesman said.
Immediately after the hi·
jackers' threat, Syrian troops
and police moved closer to the
green and white Boeing 720.
Observers said the Americana
were singled out apparenUy in
an effort to get the Reagan ad·
ministration to put pressure on
P akistani authorities to meet the
demand.
,
Missile vessel
This missile-launchmg frigate will be christened Stephen
W. Groves after a fi ghter pilot from Maine who was kiJled
in World War II. A workman prepares the ship for its
April 4 launching at the iron works in Bath. Maine.
U.S. backs stand
The letter w• written by the
chief hijacker. identified as
Moujir Ghouluq, deputy com-
(See IDJACll. Pa1e AZ>
• or reiects
• assistance
Loeal merehant
Coast resident
aboard plane
• ther e," By JOHN NEEDHAM
Ofl .. Oellrl"llelSlilff
The 24-year-old 100 of a San
Juan Capistrano couple is one of
the mor e than 100 hostages
aboard a hijac ked Pakistani
airplane in Damasc~s, Syria.
Glen Cly m ore confirmed
Wednesday his son Craig, who
runs an import-export business
from his home in the Orange
Coast area. is on the captured
jet.
The younger Clymore is a 1974
graduate of Laguna Beach High
School who also attended Orange
Coast College.
sider ed to be cheap
Clymore said. .
He said his wife had suffered
the most from the ordeal. "She
doesn't even answer the door,"
Clymore said . "I know when I go
back inside she'll be crying.•·
Clymore said he believed the
Pakistani terrorists holding his
son and two other Americans,
identified as Frederick Hubbel or
Des Moines, Iowa, and Lawrence
Clifton Mangum of New York Ci·
ty. were using them as leverage to
get t he U.S. government in·
volved.
<See HOSTAGE, Page AZ>
'Best systena'
AMONG HOSTAGES
Coaet'• Glen Qymore
T he elder Clymore, who is a ten-
nis instructor in San Juan, said he
and his wife Thelma had been in·
formed their son was on the plane
by a U.S. State Department of·
ficial last week.
''We are very concerned about
Craig's safety because life is con·
Panel supports
Foreign
• action
rapped
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
<AP) El Salvador's ruling
junta has told othe r Latin
American governments not to
meddle in its war against leftist
guerrillas, and the United States
is supporting that stand.
''The revolutionar y govern·
ment of El Salvador does not de·
sire the intervention of tbe
Organization of American States
in the search for a solution to the
internal problems i n El
Salvador." the junta said.
The m essage, delivered
Wednesday by El Salvador's
ambassador In Washington,
Ernesto Peralta, called an OAS
mediation offer "comple1.ely uo-
jlcceptable" and rejected "any
ad hoc action by the OAS."
The United Stales boycotted
the session on grounds that El
Salvador rejected any OAS role,
said Ambassador Jose Rafael
Echeverria of Costa Rica, whose
government suggested media·
lion last week and sponsored the
meeting.
Boo-boo along beaches Social Security
WASJDNGTON <AP> -Ana-
tional commission cbncluded lo·
day that Social Security is sWl the
best system to support elderly
and disabled workers and argued
against any government move to
force employers to provide
private pensions.
Chile, Uruguay and Argentina
also were absent due to a "lack
of instruction," Echeverria said.
Those attending were
Barbados, Bolivia, Br azil,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti,
Five-mile quarantine believed unneeded
BJ STEVE MARBLE
Of IM o.llr ~llet Si.ff
Ora.nee County health offlciaJs
now believe that a five-mile
stretch of beach. closed to
bathen most of this week alter a
Newport Beach sewer line rup-
t'1red, wu never actually con-
taminated.
The five-day quarantine on
beacbel from the Balboa Pier
south to Scotchman's Cove was
lifted Wednesday afternoon
when telta revealed that bac·
teria counts were normal.
Monica Mazur , a county
healtb 1pedallst, said it'• now
tbou1bt that the six mllllon
1allon1 of raw sewa1• that
poured into tbe Newport Harbor
never made it to the ocean.
But the harbor. where tbe
1ew~e WH diverted after
Sat 't line break la fl'ODt ot
tbe Bal Bay Club, remalal
,off llmlll to batben. PortJone ol
tbe laarbor ma1 be reopened to
·twlmmert bJ tbe wHllead, .............. to be coadUdtd
·"'*1· • .,._.. aN ltilJ aome bot 1pot1
ID ... bubor." ta.Id t.be bealtb
offlelal.
Ila• eaplalned tbat the
barmful bacterta found ln the
~ a.nd_llquJd 91wa1e that en·
~ ~
tered the bay is killed off quickly
by ocean water.
"If the sun is bright. which it
was during this period, that aJso
will help kill it ," said Ms.
Mazur. "Thinas went in our
favor -it turned out much bet·
ter than we thou1ht. •'
Although county sanitation of-
ficials claim the reliability of
the sewer line in Newport re·
mains in doubt, steps were taken
Wednesday evenin1 to alleviate
those doubts.
Directon of Sanitation Dis·
UNRUH NABBED
ON DIWNK lUP
SACRAME.N'l'O <AP> -State Treasure~ Jesse Unruh wu ar·
rested on a drunk drivln.1 char1e
by tbe IDsbway Patrol, 1hertff
Duane Lowe ta.Id.
Un.tub, 51, WU ttooDed Wed-
ne1d •1 ntsbt at Pullon ud
Mareonl avenuea la die dt.J'•
no"' area, Loft Mid. ff• wu ukea to tbe eoun~all and later releued without .
ID lt'19, Uanab pleaded DO ton·
teat to a drunk drt•lal cbar1e
and paid a $315 fl.ne.
trict 5, which takes in the area
where the break occurred,
authorized engineering studies
for a Sl.6 million repair job.
Accordin1 to sanitation of·
ficlal Ray Lewis, the repair
project will be aimed at install-
ing a aecond sewer line -a •
"backup" llne -under Coast
Highway between the east side
of the highway bridge over the
bay and the pump station in
front of the Balboa Bay Club.
A dual pipe system exiatl the
entire length of the sew.er
system, which rum from the
brld1e to a HunUnston Beach
treatment pfant, exeept for the
. half-mlle stretch between the
brld1e and club.
Len said be told 1anltation
dlrecton that an additional ex·
penditure of *3.4 million would
be needed to put the entire
bridl•lo-f,lant 1y1tem la "relia-
ble order.•
"We're IOlaa to bava to take a
bard loot at our budset to find
tbe mOMJ " offered Lawll "but
we're bDDln. -.t laut to do the u.emiWOD~ w. tall.''
t;ewh de1erlbad la1t
weekend'• Uae break, which
buckled and broke pavement on
(8ee BEACH. Pase AJ)
&
Say it's not
so, George
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
<AP> -The former wife
of George Wallace ls ask·
iog for the prayen of "all
Christin people" ln hopes
that the former Alabama
governor wlll think twice
about marryiq a singer
half his a1e.
Cornella Wallace, whose
marrta1e ended in divorce
Jn Um, aaJd Wednesday
she Isn't ready to step
aside for Wallace to
marry blonde Lisa Taylor
of Juper, a 32-year-old
countr1·wt1tern 1ln1er
wboee fatber owns a coal
mlnlna CGDCem. ·
"I 'm not atvinl up on a .
reconclliatlon," Mn.
Wallace tald. "I 1lmpl7
Hk for the pra,en ot all
Ctarhtlan r•ople tllat
Gaorse wU Harcb bl•
beart and find God'•
Derfect wUl in thJt mat· • ier." ,
t
The National Commission on
Social Security issued ila report
after a two-year study. Congress
created and funded the nine·
member citizens' panel to COO·
duct the Independent review of
Socl al Security.
It came out aaainst the private
pension proposal advanced two
weeks ago by the President's
Commiulon. on Pension Polley,
wbicb wu appointed by former
President Carter.
That panel recommended a
new payroll tax of 3 percent on
employen to set up a minimum
unlvenal peaaion system. It 1ald
too maft1 wonen lack covera1e
or lose pemlon credltl when they
cban1e Jobe. eventually reacblq
old a1e witb no income other than
Social Security.
But tbe national commiMion
aald It "doel not believe tbe
federal tovemment 1hould re-
q u I re employers to provide
pen1loa1."
It 1ald tbe worllen who leek
pen1loa C09eraie 1enerally an
lower paid and tbelr waces mtc.bt
dro=nn further lf their emp were• bit wltb a new ,., •.
ltla.ldtblemployen wbodonot
provide pemloaa "tend to be
1mall bullneau or Ital 1ue-
ce11ful ftrm1 that are bard·
<IM,80CLU., Pase AJ>
•
($eoe JUNTA. Pa1e AZ)
DRllCI COAST lllTHll
Chance of rain tonight 40
percent lncreaainl to 70
percent Friday . .Lows
tonl1bt 50 at beaches, 57
inland. Hilhs Friday 61
alon1 coast, 67 inland.
Tbunde rstQrms, 1usty
winch likely Friday after·
noon.
lillDI TDIAY
If .,au•,. a coflee df'iftUr,
roii're ,... °' ape to . ,.C
cancer of tile pcPICrHI °'
non-co/fee dtillbrt -bwt
doc tora arn't advf1h•9
obflnffoft Jiff.,,. AU.
lllfl .,.,_._.. .. ,,_ .......
L..M...,. .. ....... cw ~ .. ~ Dt .. ~-"• a Cl••n ca ............ . ........... ,
, ...... , IC'f.lt ........ ... ..........
Tbne dump •ilea that contain
• aterla&I that are claatlfled u
sardoul under 1tate law are
ated ln HunUnston Beach, an
ran1e County COVernment Sur•
vev bu found ·
ThelJ&Mue:
-AmAnoil altt, ao101 Golden
West Street, operated by SlpaJ
Oil and Gu Co., and Buman OU
and Gu Co.
-80ucller tit•, Warner A.v.nue Md Bolla Chica Road,
also operated by the Steverson brothers.
The three sites are amont
eight that contain so-called
Group l waatea that, under tbe
Great wall of Huntington
Wetsuited s urfer slides left on a s mooth,
glassy five-foot wave on the north side of
the Huntington Beach pier Wednesday .
The waves were hot, even if the water was
not (59 degrees) and wave riders took ad-
vantage of a west s well to grab onto a few
fast rides.
Nude mustard act
viewed with relish
LANSING. Mich. <AP) Three sisters on trial for racing
around nude save for a coal of mustard, allegedly did so with rel-
ish -pickle relish.
"It looked like the s ame kind I put on my hot dogs," said
Barbara Dekell, who was the dispatcher on duty when the
women were taken lo Lansing Township police headquarters
April 17.
Miss Dekett said the women, charged with indecent ex-
pos ure and joyriding, had pickle relish in their hair.
SHE WAS AMONG SEVERAL witnes.ses who testified as
the women's trial opened. After a one-day recess, proceedings
were to resume today before Ingham Co unty Circuit Judge
Thomas Brown .
The sisters Ooshali.ne McCuin. 30, Charlene Roper, 27,
and Sandra Lewis, 26 a ttracted national attention when their
arrest was reported.
Defense attorney John Mertz said he would not dispute the
events leading up to the women's arrests: The women romped
nude outdoors covered with mustard, hopped into a delivery van
while the driver was gone and drove the truck a short distance
before stopping in front of the police station. where officers gave
them blankets and arrested them.
But he contended the women committed no crime. All three
rejected a deal to plead guilty lo reduced char ges.
"IT WAS THE STATE OF MIND in which these acts were
done." he said. "If there is no criminal intent, there is no
crime."
Mertz said he may argue the women were in a state of self-
induced religious fervor and that a psychologist may testify for
the defense.
Fro• Page AJ
JUNTA ...
Honduras, Mexico. Nicaragua,
Panama, Paraguay, Peru,
Surinam . Trinidad and
Venezuela.
Salvadoran troops battled the
guerrillas to the north and east
of San Salvador and in and
a round the capital Wednesday.
The United Nations Human
Rights Commission, meeting in
Geneva, Switzerland, called for
the appointment or a special
representative to investigate
"grave violations of human
righ ts and fund ame ntal
fr eedoms r e porte d i n El
Salvador."
The vote was 29 -1. Eleven
countries abstained. including
the United States.
Th e r uli n g j unt a in E l
Salvador has not requested any
additional U.S. military aid, and
the Reagan administration has
"no desire or interest to fob off
on E l Salvador any aid they do
not feel they need ,'· says
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein·
berger.
"l know of no plans to send
any more" military equipment
to El Sal vador, Weinberger said
Wednesday night in an ap·
pearance on the public broad·
casting TV program ·'The Mac-
N eil-Lehrer Report."
..
intb•C!CUltv.
''<>GlJ aloe otUM alt.I are..-·
ently ... l•Ced ln solld waate
dl1po1al operations, the others
bavla1 been either clottd or
abandoned," the repc>rt aald.
It continued. "The study hu
also ldeoUrted etaht 1ltes u con·
tainlng certain volumes of
Group 1 wastes that could be
consldend as hazardous under
Death case
• Ca1Uonda luuardous waate rec·
!'laUom.
• • Amoa1 them the moat
sl1nlflcant onea are the McColl
alte ln Pullertoo and tbe
Boucher 1lte in Huntlngton
Beach, ~ of which are cur-
rently under state and county ln·
vesUaaUon.
"Information on the other six
hazardous waste silea la sketchy
al thll pc>inl."
County raps
Disneyland
ANAHEIM CA P > Dis·
neyland officials have met with
harsh criticism by local health
officials in their handling of a
teen-ager who was stabbed at
the park and later died at a
nearby hospital.
Orange County health officials
criticized park officials Wednes·
da y for n ot calling city
paramedics last week and for
not having 18-year-old Mel C.
Yorba taken to either of two
nearby hospitals designated to
treat trauma victims.
The officials accused Dis·
neyland officials of not summon·
ing paramedics in order to avoid
a ny bad publicity that could
jeopardize the park's image.
Disneyland officials denv the accusation and contend they
made the best possible decision
in the Yorba death.
Yorba was driven to Palm
Harbor Hospital in Garden
Grove, which is not a trauma
center, in the back of a Dis ·
neyland van. accompanied by a
park nurse and two security
~uards. T~e van had no warning
hghts or sirens to speed its trip
through traffic nor any lifesav-
ing equipment besides oxv.r.?en.
Anaheim paramedics were not
notified.
Fro• Page Al
SOCIAL ...
pressed to meet their current ob-
ligations. The added financial and
administrative burden of man·
datory pensions would be more
than some could bear and still re·
main in business."
The commission announced its
major recommendations in
January. It called for raising the
eligibility age for full Social
Security retirement benefits
from 65 to 68 early in the next cen·
tury, restraining cost-of-living
hikes for beneficiaries when in·
rt ation cl imbs faste r t ha n
workers' wages and paying for
o ne-h alf of Medicar e from
general revenues. To do the lat·
ter. it recommeoded slapping a
2.5 percent s urcharge on personal
income taxes.
The commission, chaired by
Milton Gwirtzman. a Newton.
Mass., attorney, concluded , "The
Social Security system is sound in
principle and, of all alternatives,
is the best structure of income
support for the United Stales."
The Riverside teen-ager, who
arri ved at the hospita l in
cardiac arrest. bled to death
from wounds in bis heart and
liver, said the Orange County
coroner's office.
. "They <Disneyland> have an internal po11 cy n ot to call
paramedics," sa id Be tty
O 'R ourke, director of the
Orange County O ffice of
Emer,ency Medical Services.
She said her office has contacted
Disneyl and officials "but
nothing has come of it."
Although the health care ex-
perts refused to say with cer-
tainty whether trauma ca re
would have saved Yorba, they
said victims with similar in·
juries have been saved.
"We've been talking to people
at Disneyla nd about this for
years," said Martel Thompson,
c hief of oper ations for the
Anaheim Fire Department.
"Something like this is pretty
hard to s wa llow. especially
when we had a station just one
m inute away Our medical unit
was three minutes away," he
said
'Pink' tern
turns heads
of tipplers
MIAMI <AP> -When a pink
b~rd landed on a nearby dock.
diners and drinkers at a uni-
v e r sily ca feteria a nd bar
thought at first their eyesight
might have taken a tern for the
worse.
Except for its coloring, the
s o litary bird o uts id e the
University of Miami's School of
Marine Science cafeteria was
just like the normal white terns
nearby -in the pink of health
as it were. But there a re no rose~
colored tern species of any kind
anywhere, said biologist Oscar
Ow re.
So what made the University
of Miami tern turn pink'?
Owre figured a prankster or a
scientist who wanted to trace its
m ovements may have dyed the
bird. No one at the marine
science school had anything to
do with it, professors said.
Despite the fuss, the center of
all the attention sat quietly on its
piling, behaving just like a good
tern. But it did appea r a bit blue
for want of similarly colored
companion almost as if it
were thinking that one pink tern
deserves another .
A more detailed report ls due ln May.
Tbe survey team determined
that more than 1,000 water wella
have exllted or do exist within a
91'•-mlle radius of tbe ta dump tiles.
"No poelUve indicaUons of any
adverse health effects or
1roundw1ter contamination in
the vicinity of any site has been
found at tbia point," the report
said.
Fr .. PqeAJ
IDJACK •••
mander of Al Zulllkar. The or·
ganizalion is believed to Le
made up of s upporter s of
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the prime
minister hanged in April 1979 by
the current Pakistani regime of
Mohammed Zia ul -Haq.
The letter was handed to
Syrian me diators s i x hours
before the deadline was to ex·
pire. The hijackers have killed
o n e o f t h e ir captives. a
Pakistani diplomat.
"Only six hours are ten and
there is still no answer from the
Pakistani government to our re·
quests," the letter said. "If our
demands are not met, the result
will be b a rd and full
responsibility will fall upon the
Pakistan authorities." it said.
"We want the whole world to
kno w t h a t t hi s tragedy is
because Zia is an American-
Zionist agent and a traitor to
Pakistan," the letter continued.
Saying the Americans would
be shot if the demands were not
met. the letter added: "They are
CIA agents. I know everything
about them. Be prepared lo col·
lect their bodies.
"Zia is not interested in the
fate of the passengers. All he
wants is to score political advan
tages," the letter said. "We are
not extending the deadline. If
our demands are not met after
six hours. we shall take a violent
action."
* * * Fro• Page Al
HOSTAGE ..
"My wife and I both feel th at
Craig and the other Americans
are being used to put pressure on ~he Pakistan government to give
in lo the terrorists' demands "
Clymore said. '
Clymore said his son had been
in the importing business for
about two years and bad left the
c~untry in February on a buying
trip.
He said his son had been in the
business of buying carpets, shoes
and other items from Pakistan for
customers in Cali fornia who paid
in advance.
"We have a very close associa-
tion with our son,'' Clymore said.
"Even though he is a grown man
now we see him frequently and
we're praying for his safe re·
turn."
Clymore described his son as
being a "cheerful kid" who was
well-liked. "We beli eve he will
come home safely," he said. "We
have to believe that."
Plane deal OK'd
WASHJNGTON <AP> The
R eagan administration con-
firmed it has agreed to supply
the government of South Korea
with the F-16 warplane, the most
advanced fighter-bomber in the
U.S. air fleet.
Several witnesses testified that the women identified
themselves by various biblical names, including Goliath, Mary,
Jesus and God. They also called themselves Hercules, Zorro
and Charlie's Angels, witnesses said.
We inberge r s aid the $25
million in military aid already a nnounced by the Stale Depart· ,-----------------------------------------
Several witnesses said the women. when asked why they
were covered with mustard. replied "food for lhoueht."
The sisters, all divorcees, share a house and remain free on
bond.
Death ruling
brings cheer
LEXINGTON, S.C. (AP> -A
39-year-old former prisoner con·
victed of killing two m en that he
thought "society would be glad
to get rid of" cried ''whoopee!"
when a jury sentenced him to
death.
"We 've all got to go
sometime," Ronald F . Smart
told Circuit Judge Julius Bag·
gett Wednesday after a Lex-
ington County jury sentenced
him to die in the electric chair
for the 1978 slayinJls.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thoma P. Hiiey ........
Robert N. Weed ,,,_,.
Fr0taP,..e AJ
BEACH •.•
Coast Highway, as a ·•real dis·
aater" that waa minimized .
"because we did a super job."
"It was bad but things like
this happen," reasoned Lewis.
··A person counts on his car but every now an<1 then It's 1olng to
blow up."
Aid law studied
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Reagan admlniatraUon ls signal-
ing Congress lt may seek repeal
of legislation banning covert
U.S. military aid to rebel forces
in M arxlat Angola.
M. Thomat Keevil ,....
Thofne9 A,. Murphlne ........... SK-Clftl -·· peld el C•la Mew Cetffonlla IUPS 1..._..l. Sutncrlp041f! by ca rrier t40o ~lyj
llY mall U.50 monthly; mllllary cle1llnetlollt 14.00 11'1611tllly
CtwS.H.Loos ,............,. .....
~Schulman
C.ICerltenMn ..,......,
~l;.2oddard Jr.
ment represents all the as-
sistance that was requested by
the U.S.-backed junta.
Cops suspect
'10 killers'
A;I'LANTA CAP> -Police are spe~ulaUng that at least 10 dif-
ferent klllers could be responsi-
ble for the slayings and disap-
pearances of 21 black children in
ind around AUanta, according
to the county district attorney.
Fulton County District At-
torney Lewis Slayton is also
quoted aa saying that the kill·
lngs of the "last six or seven"
children could be connected
because of the similar cause of
death in each case.
His comments came in a
copyright story 1n today's AUan-ta Constitution. The cases under
investigation began in 1979. Ac·
cording to Slayton, the last
seven of the 20 children found
dead were strangled or suffocat-
ed. Others were stabbed, beaten
or shot.
Reagan to close
National Aquarimn
W ASIDNGTON (AP> -Presl·
dent Reaaan's bud1et ax would
drain the National Aquarium
more tban a century after It wu
founded u a aertea of tllb panda
near t.be w~ Monument. ~ o.partment oftlda1a ~ WedDe9da1 tlult no
faad1 are alated for tbe
... artam, the aatloa'I oldelt,
after Oct.. 1. 1111.
Jury selec-
tion con-
tinued in Los
Angeles to-
day in the
$10 million
libel suit l:Yy
entertainer
Carol
Burnett
against the
National En-
quirer. I n
high spirits,
Miss Burnett
said waiting
for the case
to come lo
trial ··has
been Like a
five -year
toothache ··
J azz pianist and composer
E ubie Blake, 98, was report
ed in fair condition al Long
Is land College Hospital after
s urgery to reset a broken
hip.
Blake reportedly fell out of
bed at his Brooklyn hom e
Blake. composer of "I'm
Jus t Wild About llarry ... had
• Comedian
Henny
Youngman,
trading
familiar /id·
dle for
Mideast
sitar, re-
hearses iune
he'll play
Monday at
his 15th
birthday par-
ty in New
Y ork.
been leading an active life
before the accide nt . On
March l , he and his wife,
M a riao, attende d the
Broadway ope ning o f
"Sophisticated Ladies." a re ·
view based on the mus ic ot
Duke Ellington and two days
later went to the St. Regis to
see a review based on the
music of Rogers and Hart.
Aetor faib
realit9 te•t?
J ... AM-• v.w. ..... , Z•. a tar of the Spanl1b
feature fllm "Deprlu,
Oeprha" which waa
awarded the Go&d Bear at tbe
Ber Un f•UvaJ in February,
wH arrested in Madrid ln
connection with a bank
holdup, police &0Urce1 said.
T h e sources said
Valdemolar and Ma .. el Sola
Tellea, 23, were arrested
shortly after a downtown
Madrid bank was robbed of
167 ,000 pesetas, about $2,000.
The robbers fied on foot and
s tole a taxi whic h , the
sources said , rammed
another car whose two occu-
pants were treated for in-
juries.
"Deprtsa, Deprtsa," which
means "quick, quick," was
directed by Carlos Saara and
still hasn't been shown in
Spain. It tells the story of
young law violators.
E . Y. "Yip .. Har burg,
the lyricist killed in a Los
Angeles car accident last
week, had been scheduled to
' gel the Johnny Mercer
Award at the Songwriters
Hall of Fame awards dinner.
So in his honor at the din-
ne r , composer Jule Styne
sang Harburg's latest song
"Let's Give the Waltz a
Chance." Tony Bennett, ac-
cepting a Lifetime Achieve-
ment Award, sang Harburg's
"April in Paris" and "It's
Only a Paper Moon."
Burton Lane accepted the
award for Harburg's wife
and accompanied himsell in
sin ging one of Harburg's
favorites, "How Are Things
in Cloccamora," which the
two wrote for the musical
"Finian's Rainbow." There
were a few tears then, and
again when the evening
e nded with the late Judy
Garl•nd's recording of
Harburg's "Somewhere Over
the Rainbow."
l n a joint pe rformance
with the Mormon Tabernacle
C ho ir, entertaine r John
Denver told an audience of
som e 8,000 at Logan. Utah,
that hunger could be stricken
from the earth in 20 years.
Denver, joined by the
choir, sang his hit song "I
Want to Live" at a sym -
posium on world hunger at
Utab State University.
Teachers seek raises
Demands issued for next fiscal year
T eachers and non tl·<Jch 1ng
employees of the Nt•wport Mesi.I
Unified School District have pn·
sented their 1nit1<1l dt•mands for
raises and other benefits for the
fiscal year beginning July 1.
Tht> Newport M C'Sa Ft•dcration
of teachers is seek mg t•ost·<>f
living 1ncrt•asc•s r<1nging
between 13 5 a nd IR 5 pe rcent
while asking for ont' less work
day next school ) t•ur. an ad
ministrator reported Tue!>day
The increases are sought for
Turtle Rock
birthday
parties OK'd
"Happy Birthda y" is a song
like ly to be heard more and
more in Irvine after the City
Council approved a birthday
party program at Turtle Rock
Community Park.
Since January fi ve parties
have been staged at the com·
munity center. complete with a
city staff worker, a birthday
cake, party favors and a dec-
orated room. Cost is $50 for a
maximum o f 20 c hildre n
between 4 and 12 years old.
The council agreed to review
the program after a citizen
criticized the party operation.
suggesting it iSn 't something the
city ought to be doing.
Deanna Manning, director of
Community Services. said that
the program was designed to
help belt.er utiUze Turtle Rock
park.
Miss Manning added that the
city Is only breaking even on the
venture and that fees will likely
be increased to $'75 by the end of
the year.
teachers at the upper levels in
the pay scale. those who have
taught the longest in the district.
Th e Ca lif o rnia Sc h oo l
Emp loyees Ass ociati o n ,
representing non ·t e ach ing
employees such as c lerks, food
servic:e workers, bus drivers and
custodians. seek increases rang·
ing between 15 and 21 percent.
The non·teaching employees
also seek a closed s hop clause.
one that would require payment
of up to $90 a year in dues to the
union by all 700 e mployees
J\ bout 200 cur rentlv are mem·
be rs of the union. -
The pay hikes sought by
teachers would. 1f granted. raise
the averaJ!e current teaching
salar y <minus fringe benefit
costs l from about $26,457 a year
to about $30.100 for 10 months of
work. administrators estimated.
T he teachers also are seeking
additional medical and dental
insurance benefits as well as vis·
ual and psychCllogi cal care
C hief teache r s uni o n
negotiator Bill Cue noted his or·
ganization also is seeking addi·
tional extra -dut y pay for
teachers and coaches. including
up to $175 a week for coaches
whose teams move into CIF
playoffs each year.
Also sought a re sabbatical
leaves for nine teachers who
would be paid benefits for the
year a s well as half their
salaries at an estimated district
cost of about $140,000.
Non-teaching employees also
seek additional health in-
surance. including full district-
paid coverage for dependents. ·
Both unions negotiated three-
year contracts last fall, retroac·
tive lo the previous year when
no :;etUement was reached.
Those contract expire in June
1982, and left open pay and fr·
inge benefit negotiations for tbla
114•-Ce ll~tenl~
The Daily Pilot wants to hear observations from Ua readers
-parUcularly comments about the paper itaelf. It's easy to tell
us your views. Juat call the number below and your me11a1e
wlll be recorded. Metsasea wUl be transcribed Mve.ral UmM
dally and delivered to the desk ol the approprlat.e ecUtor. No
circulaUoo calls, please. ·
TeJl us what's on your mind. The nUtnber t. ID aervlce 24
houn 1 d1y, seven days a week. 642•6.0BB
coming fiscal year.
Teachers were granted 8 per·
cent cost-of-living hikes for last
year and this year.
Actual negotiation on the new
requests is expected to begin in
about three m onths . Public
res ponse to th e de mands is
scheduled for the next board
session. March 24
College board
names veteran
coordinator
Rick Gorman, 29, or Fountain
Va l ley , ha s b ee n named
veterans coordinator at Golden
West College and Orange Coast
College.
Gorman will be available to
counsel veterans two days a
week at each college under a
federally funded program.
His schedule : Orange Coast ,
Mondays, 9 a.m . to 4 p.m .. and
Wednesdays, 1-4 p.m .; Golden
West , Wednesday 9.a.m. to noon,
and Fridays, 9 a .m . to 4 p.m.
At Golden West his telephone
Is 892-7711, Ext. 668 or 668, and
at Orange Coast, 556-5853.
Gorman, who graduated from
Golden West in 1976, earned bis
bachelor of science degree in
criminal j ustice at Cal State
Long Beach in 1979. He is cur·
rently completing a master's in
public administration.
A four-year Air Force veteran,
who served 10 months in Viet-
nam, Gorman served as as.sis-
tant veterans coordinator at
Golden West from July 1975 to
June urn.
Be&t service8 due-
Lon,Ume Newport Beach resi-
dent Sarah Best, who died Satur·
day at a1e 78, la to be buried at
sea this week in private
ceremonies.
Mrs. Beat, a member ot the
Newport Beach Aulltance
Lea1ue 1lnce 1M4, mond to
Newport ln 1•.
She la nrvhed by two
dauabten -Sarab f'nlebi ot San P*9ro and Allee llorptqe
or Newport Beach. Sbe alao
leave• 11ll 1raadeblldren and
two creat-srudeblldnD.
Tbe famll1 aua.u memanaJ
eontribuUon1 to tM ArtbrtUa
Foundatloa ol Oru1e Couty.
Sp~e doufJled
A $12. million twin office building <fore-
ground) project off the San Diego Freeway
at Ward Street in Fountain Valley is slated
for completion and first occupancy next
month. About 54,000 square feet of offic,..••
space will be available in each. Comple:
was designed to complement adjacent ITU ck
Cannon plant, formerly occupied by BASFates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--1 elf
HB district El Salvador policy
de-
rise
es .
1ays
feet turns down
sabbaticals
critic dismissed 25
'lOld ...
Sabbatical leaves for Hunt-
ington Beach Union High School
District teachers have been de·
nied for the first time in recent
years as a cost·saving measure.
The board unanimously denied
the requests or 10 teachers to
take a one-year leave to pursue
education in their fields.
The cost of $104,000 -to hire
substitutes and to pay half the
salary or the teachers taking
sabbatical leave, was deemed
excessive by trustees Tuesday.
"This is a painful act for us to
take," said Board President
Helen Ditte.
"But in view of all the cuts
w e've made, laying o ff
counselors, teachers and cutting
back classes. granting the sab-
batical leaves would not have
been fiscally res ponsible,'' she
said.
The school board r ecently
trimmed $3.9 million from next
year's projected S4 2 million
operating fund lo balance the
budget.
A sabbatical allows teachers
with at least seven years. in the
district to take a year off to
travel or do further s tudy in
their field of teaching.
Mrs . Ditte said it is the first
lime in at least eight years that
the district has not granted
some requests for s abbatical
leaves.
Camera shop
burglarized
Costa Mesa po lice said it
looked as though burglars used a
s ledge hammer and heavy pry
bar lo break through a door and
metal screen to take about $3.000
worth of merchandise from a
camera store.
Officers. alerted by a burglar
alar m . a rri ved a t Palex
Camera. 1145 Baker St.. at 1: 10
a .m .. apparently missing the
thieves by minutes .
Taken were cameras. lenses.
automatic winders and flash
equipment.
WASHINGTON CAP >
Former U .S . ambassador
Robe rt E . White s ays the
Reagan administration has fired
him from the foreign service for
disagreeing with its "ready-
made doctrine" of U.S. military
aid for El Salvador.
White told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee that the State
Department told him in a form
letter last week that he must ac-
cept one of two lesser jobs or
leave the foreign service. He
said he was ousted as U.S. am·
bassador to El Salvador in
January.
"In my judgment l'm being
fired for m y views," White told
Irvine backs
upgrading of
road medians
Citizen complaints or rats.
opossums and overgrown weeds
plaguing Irvine's g r eenbelt
areas have caused some pretty
fast action in city hall.
City Council members unan·
i mously approved s pending
$35,000 to upgrade landscaping
or fi v e m edi an s i n the
Northwood tract. Councilwoman
Mary Ann Gaido was absent.
Targeted for improvements
were street medians at Bran-
dywine, Mayflower, Yorktown,
Monticello and a greenbelt area
near Montecello and Yale.
Irate citizens packed the City
Council Tuesday night, complain·
ing of health hazards. rats.
opossums and thick algae as a
result of the overgrown and
neglected greenbe lt at Mon ·
ticelloand Yale_
T he developer for the area
failed to upgrade the greenbelt
s ince upkeep was not initially re-
quired, said Brent Muchow.
director of public works.
Residents living near the
gre enbelt complained that in ad·
dition to rodents, it was over·
grown with 3-4-foot-high weeds
that were causing asthmatic
problems for children.
-T-
reporters. "l got a letter sayi ••
there is no other assignme1
and out you go. :·
"Ir you have as this < •
ministration had -a reac a'
made doctrine which asse1e ·
that the solution for El Salvad Op·
lies with the introduction ilion
large quantities of armamer· ei-
and military advisers, then yo.age
firs t prior ity becom e.:; the \use
moval of an ambassador wonly
may complicate the applicati aid
of your doctrine," he tes tified. don .
"As in China or in Vietnamrev-
he said, ''lhe messa ge to ti we
career Foreign Service could r.l in
be more bell·like in its clarit he
do not send in reports that ccper·
f I i c t w i t h p r e c o n c e i v t are
theories." uca-
dost
AT THE STATE Departmer'. in
a spokesman s aid While w:tion
"being retired" from the forei1 ~ 0
service under regulations whi1 e
stale that career officers not r __
assigned witrun three montl
a fter completion of a preside
tial a ppo intme nt must I
separated from the service.
The spokesman said sever
possible assignments were di
cussed with White but that nor
was found to be satisfactory.
"It is not foreseen that An
b assador While will recei'
future assignments.·· he sai•
His retirement will become e
fective on May 23.
White publicly had disagree
at a hearing before t he commi
tee two weeks ago on Reagan
then-anticipated decision to sen
mor e m i litary aid t o E
Salvador.
THE PRESIDENT has sine
decided to send an additional ~
military advisers and $25 millio
in military aid to El Salvado1
and White expanded on his OJ
position in his testimony We<
nesday.
"I'm not predicting any Viet
nam," he testified "But l do no
understand the rush to action
The left is depleted. There is n·
possibility of its rising again i1
any reasonable period. So we
s hould use this lime for media
lion."
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
LENTEN SPECIALS
FresbBoned
Pan Ready SUver Salmon, s oL .. Z.zt ea.
Freab Pacific Red Snapper . . . . . . . . 1.zt lb.
Freab Frozen Local Swordftsb ...... 5.18 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
For that St. Patrick's Day Dinner, Delaney's will
again have that famous Home Cured Corned Beef.
Choice Boneless Beef Brisket.a trimmed of all excesa
rat and cured as only we at Delaney's know how. wltt\
our secret recipe.
W~ole or Point C.t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.18 lb.
Flat ~ ............................ 2.2t lb.
Lean GJ'OGlld Beef <Ground Hourly) .... 1.a, lb.
CANDEUTE BEAT AND EAT FOODS
Prepared Preah Dally From Delaney'a Own
Kitchen. C.lckt11 ... O.mplla1a c r.r u .............. 1.M ea. naet of Sole fkalftMI wk• s•rt•• c,. u .... i.a ea.
A•rleet AJ__. GrwH Calle ............. 1.M ea.
~lue1•1 F•..., Carrot Calle ............ 1.M ••·
PREE HOME OELlVBaY SERVICE CHt •Jill•••> Tbia ad etrtcttve Wed .. 3/ll Ulnl Tuet., 3/lT ·DElAflEY'S
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Fresh Large Sbe Asparagus ........ tte lb.
Large Sweet Local Strawberrles .. 7k bakt.
Delaney'• Own
Fresh Baked Sltortcakes ............ 8k ea.
Local Grown Larae Sbe
Solid Gftftl Cabbaae ................ Se lb.
DELANEY•s WINE CELLAR
Del.n~ Prtvate Label Clll1bU1 or vi. • WbM (750 mil > .................... 1.• u .
Korbucl Glneetet Wlnea 1t'7'
(750 mll) .......•.....................••... 3.25 ea.
CllcqlMlt-Gokl L8bet Brat llelm1
f'raaee V1Ma1e ............................ 11.M u . Scoresby Scokll (7$0 mJI> .................... u s ea.
Carlo 1leaal Vln ROM' or ChabUa
C•Uted For YMr C.0.venlence I Full Gal.) • , t.• ••·
Perrier Wa&er ca oa. > ••••••••• lie ea.
Store llMn M, CloMd SDday
ail Newport Bl•d., Newport lleacll
673-5520
I
-..A.l. --1 --~
NO n11: ama osrr. -.. .,._UM trouble ll t1a1t powm, up &IGq WI beat ot .U ,_. ....... it WM Im·
llOMlbli to ftad a job u ............. old Cbartie 100,000 in month
Pwrtl ..... a.arn., JOU ...... ,, .... .
· ID ft'tM ,.a'" bMll ---°"'ta. lut couple ol
dQa. au. b.-vutlJ ~bl UM IMlbUt prtata about c•arl• D. l'trrla, wbo beada our au1ta1t Federal
CommuDlcatioDI Commlaa)oa. aomeUmea llDOwn u tbe
PCC.
Aa ... d. Cbrll• ~ ........ aeyot••
p., JHI'-' and .... • •.,
cbautreund a\Mo .. a ~\ ~~!~ !=r~e~~!i _ll_l_l_l_l_Pl_l_l_I ~It
Charlie doelb't do any ~
work any 11\0N, He la
belo1 cba\dflVM to a noft·Job wt.ere b• DOn·worlla for the
55,000 amutttn.
AU OF Tlll8 a_ppareUy t0m11 about becauae tbe
Rea1an ldmlnlllraUon ®"n't t.ruat old Charlie an.y inch.
So they hav. alk>nd hlm to hana around. dolna nothin1,
and aettina paid ror it.
Listen, tbe la.st Ume I bad a poalUon where I wasn't
tnisted any more, lt was workin1 for two 1uys ln derby
bats who smoked bl1 ciaars and ran a used cat lot ln
Lakewood. When I refused to "just U1bten up" a 1et of
leaking brakes on a '39 DeSoto, they didn't trust me any
more. Did I get a frff salary? I did not. I 1ot the boot.
I didn't even get a ride to the bus staUoo ID the leaky·
braked DeSoto.
LATEa, LOOK.ING roa a soft Job in Lasuna Beach, I
caught oo al Harold Reed's old Jcebouae in Sleepy Hollow.
I was going to be an iceman and deliver to beautiful
women all over the Art Colony.
Lacking seniority, however, I ended up on the com-
mercial route, lugging 300-P<>tlnd ice blocks into saloons
Him? He's a federal heater value inapector, of course
that had been locked up aJJ night so that the stale beer and
cigar odors were still trapped inside.
Try that before breakfast. Charlie Ferris wouldn't like
that kind of a free ride.
Still later, I figured it would be romantic to work in a
fire engine factory, painting fire engines red. I got on ~l
the fire engine paint shop beCause I was the newest rube m
town.
Later, I learned that the rookie painter was the one
who always got to crawl underneath the fire engine and
make S~f aU of the undercarriage was spray.painted red.
ThrreC's Charlie Ferris might think this was a good
job because yo u got to do it while reposing on your back.
TROUBLE WAS, the paint guns they created in those
days weren't exactly leak-proof when, while flat on your
back, you tried to turn them sideways and spray all the
nooks and crannies underneath fenders, over mufflers and
around cables.
The guns invariably leaked a little. Not too much. Ju.st
enough to start a slow. steady trickle of sticky red that
rolled past your wris t, leaked toward your elbow and
headed down your upper arm.
It was always a frantic race. Could you finish the un-
derside before the trickling red ooze reached your armpit?
Hurry! Hurry!
COME TO THINK of it, maybe this would be a good
way to treat good old Charlie Ferris. Flop him on his back
and pour some red paint down his armpits .
Gulf presence urged
WASHINGTON <AP>-Army Chief of Staff Edward C. Mex~r
aid he favors a U.S. "physical presence of air and land forces m
he politically volatile Persian Gulf region.
Questioned at a House armed services subcommittee hearing,
Meyer said he considered the Persian Gulf "about equal" to
Northeast Asia, the J apan-Korea region, in strategic importance
!behind the primary commitment to Western Europe.
WASBING1'0N CAP) -
Peacetime re1lJtraUoo of 10UftC
10en and im.Pl'OV•mentl In the
Selective Serice 1ysteui bave cut
in half tbe time it would take to
provide 100,000 drafteet ln a war
e~er1ency, t.be Penta1on aa)'I.
The SelecUve Service ayatem
can now produce t.bJ1 number ol
lnducteee by about ao daya after
a mobWaatlon order, tbe Pen·
la ton reporta. Laat year, tbe
Penta1on has told Con1re11,
Selective Service "couldn't de·
liver 100,000 inductees by two
montha •r mobillaatlon."
Singers aid
Atlanta
killer hunt
ATLANTA (AP> Thanks to
Frank Sinatra and Sammy
Davia Jr .. the financially
st.J:apped police lnveaU1ation in·
to the slayings of 20 black
children ls more than $400,000
richer, Mayor Maynard Jackson
says.
The two entertainers crooned
their songs durin a three·hour
benefit con·
cert Tuesday
night that
drew a sellout
crowd of 4,600
people whose
dress ranged
from blue
jeans to eve-
ning gowns.
Those who at-
tended paid SINATRA
$25 or $100 each to attend, and
corporate donations and an auc-
. tion held after the concert added
thousands of dollars more to the
take.
Police mistakenly reported
another child missing early to-
day. saying later the 14-year--0ld
girl was found safe last week.
The original report said Shelecia
A. Williams had been missing
since Monday , but police later
said their records showed she
was ·reported missing March 4
and was found safe the same
day.
In addition to the 20 children
known dead, one other is listed
as missing.
Among those attending the
concert were 44 members of the
DAVIS
and local officials.
families of
t h e s l ain
children, who
rubbed
e lbows with
ce lebrities
Roberta
Flack, Burt
Reynolds and
D i z z y
Gillespie, as
well as slate
Mayor Jackson also an-
nounced after the concert that
$25,000 had been received from
the Coca-Cola Co. the largest
single corporate donation lo the
investigation.
Coast due cloudiness
Cooling trend forecast for Southland
o .. tal .,eatller
Outer waters wesl to nortllwest
ncls tO to 11 •nols wltl'I combln~
H ol S lo I l•I tllr°"91' Tl'lurso.y
91'11 El-"ert, .. st lo M>Vlhwesl
nos 10 to IS anott wllll 2 10 l ,_
incl wa""s Ws allllr-n l to S 1001
Sltrly swells CI011Cly with O<
slonal -1091"'°"9111,,. noOhl.
11• sowt,_m RoOlh Vol boll\,_.,,
d snow WtClnHdey and snow
••~ lt ll In Ille Horlllffsl from
tr MKhl-to Ille lllll)er Olllo
llo and tllt north•rn Allenllc
st ste1111.
Rein sNwln felt lrom Ille Tu••
1110 IN soutllern 1119'1 Plalfts.
Slllts -. c-y owr ,,,. HSlt<"
II Coefl reQlon, IN 1"'*..-Ollle
lley Md mucJI of tllt mlO.All.,lk
lltler•.
•Ir _.,,., P'"tvelltCI lrom Ille
lhtrn Plelns 111rou9ll tlle Mis·
slppl Valley and Into lht Ten·
UH Vallay, Gtor9la and Soutll
rolln.. 11 wM sunny and mlld In
Onota to lllt nortl'lern All antic coast
states. c.u1 ..... ,.
P.._.u r99l«I -,,,. """,,.." Soutlle"' Callloml• c-i.1 area1
...... will be ,.,, IOdey, but C-IMU wlll
.,,,,., ....... •I midday raf199(1 ln<rHM ..,,,. ...... lll'ld lhtno Wiii be
m 24 at BradforO, Pa., lo II at conslclerabla ct-lneu Friday.
laml. Oren99 c-tty can e~t lllQ111 I~
For loeley, sllowart -• fo-••I Oty •ncl l'rtdey In lllt mid .OS, wllll
Ille 1-r G<'eat L.alt" r•e!On encl cwernl9H ,_ '7 lo S7.
rou Tun lo lllt wttl..-n Gvll Otlltr SOllllll-c-i.1 and In·
ti. 1.ltllt -... forecast from l.,medlaw vau..,. wtH ,..,.. lllQlls I~
It• Superior to nort11ern N•• d•Y u to 7J, l"rld•v tO 10 u
t l•nCI ... Hew YOr'lt. WICllly K •I-own111111 lows .. to~.
ecl •~. with .,,_ at 111.,,.r Mo11nleln ertes will cloull llP
11etlons, was lorecut auou tontillt encl l'rlcla'f, and • aHthl l~n AIU... end ,_,_,. Hew cllence Of "'°"'"'s over norlllern
•lc.e. _ .. 1111 It~ HltN lOdlly S2
Hllflt In tr. 10I _,. P'Mk'" lw lo to, f'rf!My • llO M. Ownlltlll -.
llern "'1t • Callfomle, Ari-J4 te 40•
,....,_, HltN Ollly In the »t •llCI 0.Mr1S c.t elto tllPe<I ln<rMll"9
were predicted from North cloudlnH• 1on11111 and l'rldey.
I
• Honllt"' ~ Mtll\I lode'f ~ lo 74,
JI to .s .. ,._.,, IWllltnl -.n "'""
\ ....... 72 •• 11, .. t• 1* ,., • .,..,.
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.. _.., • C.Uler11I• ~,.....re ................... ..... A .. ... llW ... ... .., ,_ l • .. t • WSW 111149 MMe. l • , . a ' w ~ I t It 2 ' w ~ c::tllllty • • .. • J • ... rw ~1Nr1 ON te twel•t ,_ -1•
"Tbi1 accelerated schedule
will enable ua to meet a lar1er
part ol our total wartime man·
power requlreinuta wlt.b Induc-
tee• and reduces the need for u
even laraer pool of pre·trained
i.ndivldual.s" from the mWtary
reserves and the National
Guard, it said.
The report was delivered to
Conereas by actln1 manpower
chief Robert A. Stone as the
Rea1an administration con·
sldered whether to atop draft re1-
lstraUoo, which former Presi-
dent Carter be1an last June.
President Rea1an strongly
crit.icized peacetime registration
during t.be election campaign.
Gen. David Jones, chairman
of the Joint CbJefs of Staff, has
said the the nation's mllltary
leaders "contJnue to strongly ad·
vocate registration" and have
recommended Ila contJnuance to
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein-
berger.
Stone said that more than 3.2
millloo young men born in 1960
and 1961 already have reg·
lstered and that Selective Service
ia now processing registration
cards of youths born in 1962.
In addition, Stone said, Selec·
tive Service is taking a number
of steps to improve its readi-
ness, including meshing its com-
puters with the military com-
puter system "so that the induc-
tion of individuals can begin
smoothly should the need arise."
Princess pregnant
Britain's Princess Anne. expecting her second child in
May, inspects an honor guard during Tuesday visit to
Army Apprentices College in Harrogate. England. The
college educates tradesmen for service with the Royal
Corps of Signals.
Budget deadline set
But Congress makes no promises on cuts
WASHINGTON CAP > -
Congress is making no promises
about what President Reagan's
proposals for $48.6 billion in
spending cuts will look like after
it finishes testing the political
winds, but congressional leaders
vow to complete work on some
kind of economic package this
summer.
· "He won the election; he is
entitled to the chance to see if
his program works," said Sen.
Alan Cran ston , assistant
Democratic leader in the Senate.
But the Californian added:
"Congress will disagree in
specifics where we think people
are being hurt. Congress doesn't
give a blank check to an y
president."
The administration's plan
would save $409 billion in the
next five years, about
three-quarters of the reductions
needed to meet Reagan's goal of
balancing the budget in 1984.
The package sent Tuesday to
Capitol Hill contains reductions
in 300 domestic programs from
the projections left by former
President Jimmy Carter and
shoots for total s pending or
$695.3 billion in fiscal 1982.
''The thunde ri ng he rd of
sac r e d cows has now been
r educed to a handful ," said
bud get di rector Dav id A.
Stockmiil.'
But House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr., D·Mass, said the
package left too many questions
unanswered and predicted the
c urrent surge of pro-Reagan
sentiment will abate "when
people truly appreciate" what
the cuts will mean
"Then.· O';-.!e1ll s aid, "the
wind will blow "
The revised fi sca l 1982
program. which would boost
defense :.pending by more than
$4 billion. leaves a projected $45
billion deficit, partly stemming
from the adminis tr a t ion 's
separate proposals to cut tax
rates. Spending next year would
be about $40 billion higher than
this year's projected spending.
~~~~~~~~~
"' A calendar that keeps you
on schedule.
"' A weights and measures chart
that helps you convert.
"' A checking account that pays
you interest.
"' For you sports fans , an Angel
game schedule.
"' And a handsome check book
cover and wallet, to help you
keep it all together.
Come in and help us celebrate
the grand opening of our new
offices in Costa Mesa and
Anaheim.
We're having a party and
we've got a present for you.
A beautifully crafted check
book cover and wallet com-
bination with enough
pockets to keep
everything in its place.
And while you're
here. open up
your interest bear-
ing checking
account,• and we'll
give you a check book
to put In your free check boo
cover anctwallet combination.
ANAHEIM OFFICE
1700 Adame A.,..nue
Cotta MHa. California 92626
(714) 754·1801
• S2000 Minimum Betance Required
tor a FrH Checking Account
• end l.oan Aasoclatlon •
2100 East Katetla Boulevard
Anef\elm, Cahlornla 92806
{714) 97&-9174
• No Minimum Balance Required
tor a FtH Checking Account 1 fiot a hmtttd time only
\ .,
JCk
ates
self
de·
rise
es .
1ay~
feet
2~
bold ' ~· --;.
:·
tg~
Op·
a ti on
re~
1·age
a use
only
1a id
·don .
;>r ev·
t we
ID in
" he
•per-
i are
luca-
Most
tS in
1ction
d to
S, he
. .. \
l I I : I
_._,....,. ..... ----~ ........... ~-------------...-..... ----------..... -·---.... ~----~--.. ···-··-···---··,....,. ..... -.......
Navy recruits
fight disease
SAN DIEGO <AP) -U.S. Navy officials say an
estimated 500 Navy recruits are receivinc a
bacteria·klWng drue to prevent the spread of a
hiChly contaaious bacterial Infection that killed a
younc recruit.
The treatment began within hours after the
death of Seaman Recruit Cory York, 19, of Searcy,
Ark. He died at the medical center Monday mom-
inl or internal hemorrhaging after being infected
with a rare strain of meningococcus bacterium.
The spokesman d ismissed rumors of a
spreading contagion after it became known that a
second recruit had died within hours of York's death.
The other death was called "totally unrelated."
The second vicUm. whose identity was not
revealed, was suffering from pneumonia when be
vomited and then suffocated. a spokesman said.
Vote fleadllt1e paan
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown
says there will be no special
elec tion nex t June on t he
r e fe r e ndum oppo s i n g his
Peripheral Canal proposal.
The deadline for Brown to
call a special election June 2 was
midnight Tuesday. and Brown
had earlier hinted he would let
the deadline pass.
Brown gave no explanation,
and made no comment on any
other special election. uowN
Backers of t he canal had been urging Brown to
call a special election on the referendum in hopes it
would be defeated, clea ring the way for the start of
work on t he proposed 43-mile canal around the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
Banlc '•ccr•A' probed
LOS A"I GELES !AP ) The Jus tice
Department has begun taking evidence before a
federal grand jury in the probe of an alleged $21.3
million embezzle ment from Wells Fargo bank, an
attorney said.
Albert M Sheppard, an attorney for boxing
promoter Harold J. Smith. was sched uled to appear
before the grand jury in Los An geles on Smith's
behalf. Sheppard said.
The U.S. attorney's offi ce and the FBI declined
c0 rn ment on the gr and jury probe. a nd neither
ag 1cy would say whether arrest warrants have
been issued in the case.
LA luu otett 'laaieU.i'
LOS ANGELES (AP > The City Council
has unanimously approved a motion condemning
"hate groups" such as the Ku Klux Klan and the
Nazi Party.
The measure establishes a city policy to refuse
to patronize "any orga nization or business which
supports. financia lly or oth erwise:· such groups.
O..f'fletl
Felo~y drug
possessaon charges
have been filed
against comedian
Flip Walson, arrested
at LA lnterna(ional
Airport on charge of
cocaine and hashish
possession.
Increases
sought in
gas rates
LOS ANGELES <APJ
-The South e rn
California Gas Co. is
seeking slate permission
to boost its ra tes, which
would mean about a
$2.54 a month increase
in winter gas bills fo r
the aver age c ustomer.
the company said.
The company needs
the S229 million annual
increase in its revenues.
s p o k es m a n To m
Sanger said Tuesda},
because it is paying
mor e for natural gas
from its suppliers.
Sanger s a id if a p ·
proval is granted , the
ave rage inc r ease in
rates would be 7.1 per ·
cent for 3.6 million res·
idential consumers.
·'The increase would
a dd $2.54 to a typical res-
ide ntial cus tome r 's
monthly gas bill of 106
therms (currently $31.65
p e r mo nth > in th e
winter.
OrangeCout DAILY PILOT/Thu'9dey, March 12, 1981
Turnout cut early
Conce••ion, TV deterred 401,000 voien
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A poll
lndleatn 401,000 Callfomlana,
moat of them Democrat.I, didn't
vote ln November after
television networks declared
RonaJd Reasan t.be winner and
President Carter conceded
before the slate's polls closed.
from poWq places becaUH ot
early ·med.fa projectlon1 of a
Reacan victory or Carter'• con·
CH8IOO.
-7' ~t favor probJtMt.tna
early network proJectloo.a.
Secretary of State March
Fonc Eu said preliminary data
from the poll conducted by tbe
Field Institute confirmed her
belief that several lesialative
and congressional races were af-
fected.
Broken down by party, tbat'1
11.5 percent of non-votln1
Democrats, 12.5 percent of non·
v0Un1 Republicans and 15.38
percent of other voters, or a
total of about 401,000 people, Ma.
Eu aald.
Because Democrats out·
number Republicans in
California, that'• 253,806 DOD·
votlnc Democrats, 80,821
RepublJcana and 83,321 other
voters, according to Ma . Eu.
-eo percent favor votin1 on
Sunday and clc>11n1 the pollt at
tbe same time nationwide; 53
percent favor voting Monday
and Tue1day and clo1ln1 the
polls at the same time Tuesday
nationwide; 45 percent favor
opentnc the polll for two days
and cloeln1 them at the same lime nationwide.
-Nearly 27 percent said they
didn't vote because they didn't
like the candidates.
She said the survey found that
15.4 percent of non·voters ques-
tioned said they stayed away
She said the poll also produced
these initial conclusions:
-Of tbe identified ethnic
groups, Hispanics voted in the
least numbers.
School fees fought
for athletics, music
SANTA BARBARA <AP) -In a
c a se th a t c ould affect other
California public school districts, a
judge is being asked to determine
whether the state's schools can
c harge s pecial fees to s tudents
participating in extracurricular ac-
tivities.
Attorneys for the Santa Barbara
School District say it comes down to
whether sports or after-school ac·
tivities can be offered by districts.
which have been under a budget
squeeze following vote r approval In
1978 of tax-cutting Proposition 13.
But plaintiffs argue the fees are il-
legal and violate the state's constitu·
tional guar antee of a free education.
AT ISSUE in this case is a $25 fee
imposed by the district for the first
time this school year on participants
in athletics. music and drama.
But more than 20 local school dis·
tricts in California impose such fees
for extracurricular activities .
Superior Court Judge L. Donald
Boden, who began hearing the case
Tuesday without a jury. said he ex·
peeled the trial would last two days,
but conceded it could take until next
Monday.
tN OPENING arguments Tuesday,
the district's attorney s aid that
without the fee, sports or after·school
activities probably would be cut in
the future for the 10,000 students in
the district's three high schools and
three junior highs.
Thomas Anderle, attorney for the
district, told the judge he should pay
attention to the effects of Proposition
13, pointing out the measure cut
nearly in half the funds local govern·
ment agencies could raise through
property taxes.
"Everything cannot be free," An-
der le said. "If nothing else. Proposi·
lion 13 should have taught us that
those who use must pay."
HE ADDED that in bringing the
suit. the plaintiffs take a risk that the
e xtracurricular programs may be
terminated because there is no other
way to fund them.
T he plaintiffs who brought the
cha llenge a re Barbara Hartzel, the
mother of a student, and the Coali·
lion Opposing Student Fees . The
plaintiffs' attorneys Kirk Ah Tye and
Carmen Ramirez of the Channel
Counties Legal S ervices told the
judge such fees violate state pro-
visions for a free education.
··The plaintiffs don't desire to
eliminate these programs. rather
these programs are so important that
they mus t be free," Ah Tye said.
He added that the state attorney's
offi ce and the state Legislative Coun-
sel a greed t h at a fee prior t o
participation was absolutely forbid·
den.
Water fee
plan has
cost hike
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-The Metropolitan
Water District approved
a dual·price plan to help
ease the impact of a
drought by encouraging
local agencies to buy
more water than they
need and st.ore the ex-
cess.
The plan would in·
c rea se con s umers '
a verage bills by about SO
~nts a month, MWD of·
ficials said.
Under the plan an·
nounced Tuesday. the
MWD -which imports
water from the Colorado
River and the State
Water Project -would
sell the water to local
agencies for either $121
an acre-foot or $86 an
acre-foot.
The higher fee would
be charged for service
that could not be inter·
rupted during a drought.
The lower would be
charged to agencies that
agreed to buy mo r e
water than they need
and then s tore it. so
their supplies could be
cut off without ha rm
during a drought.
8
.,, ..........
Ut~a.,er
A Sal inas truck
driver demonstrates
the do-it-yourself
"life ladder" he de·
signed for high-rise
structure fires .
Philip Pascussi say~
his unit is 100 feet
long , weigh s 2!i
pounds and can hold
1,000 pounds. ~.
•'
Sex not :· .
'plumbing~
FR&5NO <AP> -Op-
ponents of sex education
have nothing to fear e~
cept increased teen-age
pregnanc ies bec ause
most schools teach only
"plumbing ," s aid
psychologist Sol Gordon.
"One of the most prev·
alent myths is that we teach sex education in
American schools ," he
said. Fewer than 10 per·
cent of the students are
exposed to sex educa-
tion. he contended. Most
encounter lessons in
"plumbing," instruction
th a t i s li mite d t o
biological functions, he
said
~~~~============:::::11
Art Show
11'\.(lllllllHO•"(ATIHO
Sofer Wet., H••tlnt s1 ••< 211es1
~ltW'Ct ltrT'9 51#1111 You' 00C'U
tC•ll StOffJ Ne•'*'' Yoo, ., .. )
COSTA Ml1A641-1289
1U.Ne_l ,.d
MISSION v1uo495-0401 2.-n c.-c ............
(Se• D1990 'IWY •1 •••ry '"•' I
Tl RES· R·US
:t.
HOUOWAY
We'd be better orr 1( we
retained more of what we
learn and less of what we
eat. ..
Our friend says his rinan
cial condition is a bout average. Worse than last
year, better than next
year. ..
Kids grow up so quickly.
One day you look at your
empty gas gauge and re-
alli e they're teenagers
New employee to boss·
"Well , lf I can't have a
raise. how about the
same pay more often?"
••
T ruth Is no t o nl y
stranger t ha n flcllon
these days -It's a lot
cleaner.
••
You 'll always be
"aomeooe special .. when
you do buslnea1 wtth Tire
Clty. When uked you may!
tell anyone "Yes~ have a
friend that'• ln the Ure
bu1lnes1."
do-if.yourself
KITCHEN DESIGN
SEMINAR
Free design kit upon registration
Bring your measurements to design school
Simple as A, B, C.
LIMIT 8 PER CLASS • CALL MOW FOR RESERV ATIOHS
l ·:11ro-.\m£riean Kih~~n & Hath~
1741 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach
Open 9·5 Mon.-Fr i. Sat. 10·3 714-631-7032
CLOSING CLOSING
SALE SALE
AGA JOHN ORIENT AL RUGS
is closing their branch
in Newport Beach
All Oriental Rugs reduced for clearance
Chinese, ln<tkJn, Pakistan, Persian, Romanian
I 000 Bristol St. No.
Plaza Newport
NEWPORT ll°ACH
851-0864
-1
'"'
lri1tol Ho.
Gotafltel f4fee-pa
15 Convenlefd Locltlon•
Huntington Beach
Pedftc: CoMt Hwy So. of Pier
Newport Beach
1400 P8dlc CoMt Hwy
( L. M. BOYD )
INFORMS ln the llllyPlat
CJl~IVICJNClS
S~VE
E:!Cl%
~NCJ
4Cl%
'., .. .._-:,, <r -, ·1,_,...,,,,... . ~ . . -, ...... \ '\
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Today through Saturday, the unparalleled
beauty of diamonds Is yours at remarkable savings . Here. we llst only a few examples of savings.
HUISMAN DIAMONDS-the wor1d 's most brilliant diamonds-are reduced for the
first time ever. Available exclusively at Bullocks Wllshlre. save twenty percent on
these exquisite 144-faceted diamond stud earrings and pendants set ln 18K gold.
For example: Stud earrings totallng .25 ct .. reg. $725. Now saao. Stud earrings totaling .50 ct.. reg . $1590. Now 11272. Pendant, .50 ct., reg. $3965. Now 13172.
TWENTY flfllCENT IAVINN on a lllec:t group of diamond SOI Ital re rings, brooches
and pendants. Examples lncJude: Brooch formed of eighteen marquise and thirty· one round diamonds, total welght appx. 7.5 ct., Htln platlnum. reg. $18,250.
NOW '11,000.Solltalre r1ng,1.31 ct.Mt In 14K Wht.gold , reg .$8000,Now IMOO.
FOllTY flf~CINT IAVINll on a dazzling Mlectlon of hoop 11rrlng1, cluster rlngsi
bractltt1 and neoklacn. Exlmpltl lncfude: hoop earrings, eight diamonds tota
weight •PP.JC .. 22 ct., Ht In 14K gold, reg. $850. Now Q7G. Italian 18K gold bracelet with thirty alnglt cut diamonds, total wtlght appx .. 25ct .. reg. $1 ,2'50.
Now 1780.
Repr ... ntattve setectton In Fine Jewelry
~UllOC~S Wll~Urn[
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH. 83 Fathlon Island 759-1211. Mon· Fri 10·9. Stt to 8, Sun 12·6
. ,
..
t
I
I •
Gasoline leak
• • .. ~ves wiw.rung
Fire officials say a major d.lauter was narrowly avert, '.;i in Huntington Beach when corroded underlfC)UDd plpes ·~eaked some so.ooo to 40,000,aallona of aaaollne beneath the
°'tntersecUon of SprinadaleStreet an. d Edlnier Avenue.
The fuel invaded an underfround utility box. triggering
a power failure. Miraculously a dangerous explosion was ~~ot touched off. ~-The most frightening aspect of the recent scare was that ~he fuel leak bad continued updetected for perhaps four
\lllnOnths. . ii . t ti l k
0 • Ftre Chief Ray Picard said sim ar servace s a on ea s
.. mavc occurred in the past, though not ln the volume of the
Springdale· Edinger seepage. . .
Picard said Huntington ~eac~ soll ts.particul.arly cor·
''i-osive to pipes and that stricter msulatton requirements
0 jtave been in effect since 1978.
f, But many underground gasoline lines were installed
u,beforethatyear. . . .~ Picard has proposed a ne w education progr~m to alert
... ,station operators to the danger of leaks . They will be urged
to maintain careful records and to watch for unusual losses
···in their fuel s upplies.
' The program sounds like a wise idea. It comes none too
1·soon.
rLaw goes too far
d Fountain Valley's strict carnival ordinance once' J again has become a source of grief for the City Council. ~ Last autumn, the local Lions Club blamed the law for
\ii causing the cancellation of the city.'s Halloween parade I and carnival for the second consecutive year.
" And early this month, the council was forced to make ~ e me rgency changes in the ordinance to permit the Elks ~ Lodge to hold a chili cook-off festival just 10 days away ..
~ Enacting emergency laws f ~r matters sue~ as ~his ~ clearly is an undesirable practice. The counctl might
~ not have been forced into it if the governing body had re· ~ considered the ordina n ce after the Halloween problems.
t' The law was adopted in 1979 to protect residents from ~ unscrupulous carnival operators. The ordinance r~uires
i: police screening of employees and mandates high ad·
-: vance payments to cover city expenses associated with a
carnival.
But as one councilma n noted, the carnival ordinance
: has succeeded in protecting residents from local service
· club-sponsored festivals as well. . .
Reluctant to tangle with the strict local requ1~e
ments, some carnival operators approached by service
clubs have opted to take their business elsewhere.
As a result, the city loses a family oriented recrea·
· tion event. and the service club loses a means of raising
1 funds for a worthy cause.
r The Elks, like the Lions last fall, should share som e
of the blame for not examining the city's carnival or·
· dinance earlier and avoiding a last-minute confrontation.
But the council members and the city staff also were
remiss in dropping the ball after the Halloween parade
., was canceled.
~ Th.is time, the council s hould stand by its vow to re-r, -evaluate the carnival law. As budget constraints place ~ some city-sponsored recreation in jeopardy, service club·
: sponsored events may loom more important as a source
:. of community-directed funds.
~.
: Leave students out
•' Seven months into the school year, teachers and the
:: Huntington Beach Union High School District finally have
• settled on a two-year. retroactive contract. .
~ · The bitter di s pute .. was not without casualties,
· ftowever. and one suspects it is the s tudents who s uffered
·:most.
. • During the contract negotiations, frustrated teach-:rs
; :staged pickets, sickouts and work slowdowns. Some ~
•. "structors even encouraged students to boycott classes m
: Support of the teachers· demands.
ln the end. the 800 teachers, represented by the Dis ·
trict Educators Association, settled on the same salary
offer the district announced last October.
District officials c la imed they wanted to speed up the
collective bargaining process by announc.ing early a
. ''bes t and final" offer of a 16 percent raise ovet two
' vears.
' -But the teachers didn't trust district financial figures
: and a quick settlement wasn't reached.
: And although the ink has hardly dried on the retroac-
: live pact. it is almost half fulfilled.
' Bargaining for a new contra~t will be~in next year .at
l about th.is ttme. Based on experience gamed by the dts·
! trict and the teachers' association. the next contract talks
should be s moother
; In any event. students s houldn't be dragged into a
, contract debate.
' They should s imply be a llowed the right to go to ~ i chool.
;, . ~ :Qpm1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Oatly Pilot.
!Other views expressed on this page ·are those of their authors and
• :'-firt1sts. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 .
~·-po~x.1~5~60~·-C~o~s-ta;..M~e~s;a .• C~A..;.9~2·62~6;..P•h•o•n•e~( .. 714•)•64 .. 2··4•3•2•1. ........ .
~ Boyd/ Computers .
:: By L.M. BOYD $ Computers can play chess.
.' do high math, process words,
: recognize speech, compose 1 music of sorts, an1tly1e ~statistics, or in brief,
\ tlupUcate countless functions ~ )>f the human mind . But f there's one thing they can't
~ •
•
lllllYID
One item we don 'l buy
any more is cottQn.
Just save the wad that
fills out pill bottles.
Come to think of it,
we're paying a pretty
sllft price for that cot·
ton, too.
D.M.
OIMfllly OW ~ Mt ~I"" 11¥ ,.....,, .,,, ,. ,.. :i::'11' r.n.ct u.
•i.wttflll9•••h lfl•· ~-.......... · .. O'-"' 0.., 0..ty .. !let·
\
do. They can't generate
humor, not jokes, as it were.
Curioua, that. Almost all of
your better computer pro·
grammers themselves ex·
hibit conalderable spon·
taneoua humor in their own
convenaUoos. They seem to
have a t\11hly sharpened
senJe of the ridlculoua. Dul
they cannot prosram that in·
tO"tbelr devicea.
The typical 10..1allon bat,
bear ln mind, bolda about
three fourtba of a 1alloa.
Q. Ia there any contlntllt
where there are no but·
terflles?
A. Only Antarctica.
On the two bind l•I• of ' male platypua are bollow
•pure, like fanp, from wbicb
that bea1t caq rel1a11
venom.
Tbe CouUt•Uon of tbe
United Statel er-mbel Uudi
a 1lav. M ~ u U......
fJl'tbt <A a l*'IOD·
•
Thomn P. H•ley/pUbUIMr Thomes KMYll/Edftor
.S.rbara Krelbk.h/Edltofl ... P-ee Edltof'
Cl'.A shadow hurts volunteers
W ASIUNGTON -A4 late.ma!
White House furor ls boWnc up
9ver the C<lGlrovenlal aelecUcm
of " former mWtary lntelU1ence
officer to
bead AC ·
TlON , the
multi ·
branched
aood-work•
aaency. The
move could
jeopardize
the safety of
American
volunteers
abroad.
For ACTION's most celebrat-
ed offspring ls the Peace Corps,
whose thousands of overseas
volunteen might suffer lI there
is the shadow of a suspicion that
Mailbox
they .,.. even remot.ety connect·
ed with U.S. lnteUJseo(e 1c·
uvllltt1.
Aotl·Ame rlcan elements,
Je.loua at the toodwUI the Peace
Corps volunteers have earned
throuab their selfless effort.a to
help the poor and tlllterate,
would llke nothing better than to
sme•rthem a.a spies. ,
This is no Idle concern:
Kidnapping and death threats
have resulted from scurrilous
rumor campaigns, linking the
Peace Corps volunteers to the
Central Intelligence Agency or
other U .S . esp i o n age
organizations.
One example or this danger
was Richard Starr, the Peace
Corps botanist who was held for
three yeara by communlat
1uerrWu ln Colombia, until be
was ranaomed a year aao. One reason be wu kid.napped wu
becaute bia captors suspected
he wu a CIA •tent usln1 the
Peace Corps as a cover. He wu
repeatfldly interroaated on UU.
point durina his captivity ln the
Andean jungle.
GRANTED, the man chosen to
head ACTION, T,om Pauken,
had only a r elatively brief
connection with intellieence
work. During his service in the
Army, he was an intelligence
officer stationed in Vietnam. He
stoutly denies any C IA
involvement : h e told my
associates Jack Mitchell and
Indy Badhwar he did only
routine reaearcb work oa North
Vietnamese leaden.
But the Peace Corpe bas
blatortcally been careful to keep
both its oUlclals and tu
volunteers free of any esploaa&e
taint. Uke Caesar's wile, Pe•ce
Corps personnel must be •bove
susplct.on -for their own
protecUoa if nothing else. Thia
has been the policy ever since
tbe 8leDCY WU founded Wlder
President Kennedy.
ACTION officials and some
White House insiders were
appalled at Paulten 's
nomlnatJon. And though it la bis
intellicence background that
upseta them most, they were
also disgruntled by the manner
of bb selection. Pauken's name
wasn't even on the list of
possible nominees until the last
minute, the critics claim.
MOREOVER, he was cleared
by an old friend, White House
Counsel Fred Fielding, who
survived the Watergate era
without taint. Fielding insisted
that while be was aware of the
misgivings s urro unding the
choice of Pauken, they were
"not a problem."
Pauken , an amiable
36-year-old Texan, figured in a
minor controversy in 1971, when
he was associate director of the
White House Fellows program.
He was roundly denounced for
writing an article in U.S. News
and World R e port o n an
unofficial trip lo the Soviet
Union
That little-noticed internecine
wrangle doesn't enter into
Pauken's present situation. It's
bis intelligence past that
troubles key administration and
agency officials -and could
haunt the Peace Corps in the
years to come.
Reagan should re-read campaign rhetoric
To the Editor:
Ah , the foibles that fructify in
our free-lunch society ! Many
beli~ve that our government
"should be run like private in·
dustries." Therein lies a prob-
lem : the same lethal methods
already apply to both govern·
m enl and business. Govern·
ment is broke, and so is a lead-
ing segment of private industry,
the auto industry. In govern
menl, it's the same old races,
growing fatter and sleeker and
less responsive to our freedoms ;
just like Ford, G .M. and
Chrysler, whose products grow
bigger, ratter and sleeker and
more expensive, while buyers
floc k to the s maller, more
stylis h, more economical im-
ports.
Now the "big three" are urg-
ing us to eschew the foreign
beauties and buy the ugly
domes tic Ii mitations; even de·
manding quotas and restraints
on foreign competitors. So, what
does Ford do (the company that
put the world on box-cars with
four wheels)? It styles a hodge-
podge of parts and ideas from
around the globe, calls it ''the
world car," and invades the
foreign markets. A dear friend
used to quote-misquote: "Oh In·
consistency, thou art a jewel.
ANYWAY, who daN!s buy a
domestic car, what with reealls
by the millions as a way of Life ?
And those rebates, why not ju.st
knock the price down to an af.
fordable level? Then there's the
oil industry spokes-whatever.
who tries to justify a continuing
gas price rise, even in the face
of an acknowledged oil surylu.s.
Quoth he: "Certain costs must
first fllter all the way up to the
retail pumps, regardless of the
oil glut." Whal costs? These in·
volved in trucking gluttonous
proflta all the way to the ba.nb?
And, I call attention to the UJ.
conceived notion, attributed to
President Reaean. that "Social
Security participation should be voluntary for those who can
prove they can provide for their
own retirement." Interpreted,
that means that the millions,
who are now stuck with lower
and middle level salaries and
wages, will pay the entire cost of
all the S.S. rip-offs and benefits
paid out to the millions of non·
contributors, and the rich wiU
escape all coet.s scot-frff, grow·
int richer thereby. Some of the
latter will sUU reap S.S. benefits
on a grand scale due to past
partlclpaUoo. I cannot believe
that President ~eagan will thua
betray all of us poor ones who
made him rJc.h and put him ln
the White House.
Yea1ir, Camp David ls lnfeat·
ed with a malaise -le1acy ol
lta former tenant , the
Plalnaman. President Reasan,
wbo quickly caupt oa-. to the
ldta ol lmb retteata, alao seems
to favor lncreulnt the feden.1 ... tu. He lbould, ln all bcJDM.
t1, re-rud hi• campalco rta~ u a vt1ble anUdcM to·
the malalae ol Camp David.
B.F. BORCOllAN
... ..• , ... ,,
To the Editor:
Wttat Stop Pornography in
Newport and the Daily Pilot
editorial evaded in their state·
ments about Newport's one and
only "adult book store," Talk of
the Town, is the fundamental
ract that none or us were born
with hang-ups about our bodies.
In Laguna Beach, which likes
to think itself to be an Art
Colony, the high school has
banned exhibition of a nude
sculpture created by one of the
world's most foremost represen·
talional sculptors, Donal Hord.
The Daily Pilot. which report-
ed that story about that ban,
published a front page picture of
the sculpture; ableit. with a
censored s ign hidin g that
sculpture's genitalia.
NOT TOO LONG ago, LagUlla
had no ordil'lance banning nudity
on the beach and the City CoWl·
cil was well on its way to declar-
ing clothing optional along its
tidelands, which was supported
by a s pecial survey of beach-
user opinion by the University of
California Irvine .
But, by the time of that or·
dinance's second reading, the
Council chambers were glutted
by screaming predictions of
Sodom and Gomorrah that begal
a law that states a kid can walk
around the beach nude until the
dawn or the 11th birthday -
after that, it's indecent ex-
posure.
How do you explain to some-
one who's t>een believing all
the time they've been decent
that now certain parts of the
body are not to be seen?
Travel due west to some of the
yet untouched Pacific Islands
and the natives there w()(lder
why the self-touted civilized
make all that fuss. The answer
is the senseless shame and de-
basement imposed ttpon too
much of the world over 2,000
years that continues to be
jammed lnto too many un·
protesting minds by a fractional,
neurotic fringe engendering a
love-bate psychosis about
human beauty that makes
billions for magazines and mov-
ies and the moral majority.
BRUCE HOPPING
•et•l •••In e•
To the F.ditor:
J am really quite concerned
about the declslon or t.be Hunt·
ln(ton Beach High School Dia·
t.rfct to save money by cuttlac
back ln t.be Important academic
area ol social studies. Al& the
world 1eta smaller and smaller,
we seem to teach OW' cbi!clren
ltt11 and Iese about the world
they are eolnt to have to face.
I've t.eu1ht seventh and eltbtb
irade in Founta.ln Valley for 18
)-eara. Tble year wben tbe
cou.uelcn came to talk \0 our
eltbth ll"8de ltoderita, and I at·
tended pa.rent nl&bt at Fountal.n
Valley High School, I undentood
that the dhtrict i• chualftl and
decreaatq tbe aoclal 1tudles
fro1ram in tbe hllb at.boot -in
act, ;the only clauroom t
'\
teachers being eliminated are
social studies teachers! I really
find this quite amazing
The children we are now
educating will face a world even
more interrelated with other
countries than it is now : interna·
tional affairs. international
busin ess. the Ullderstanding of
politics and history of many dif·
ferent nations will be very im-
portant to them . . . and yet you
cul the world his tory c lass
<which should be a two-year
course> to one semester?
This seems astonishingly ir-
res ponsible to me; I understand
there are problems, but I
seriously question the interest in
providing the best possible prep-
aration for our students when
you cut back on the class that
would provide some kind of un·
derslanding of the world these
students will have to face.
Where will they learn what other
countries are like and how they
have come to be that way?
Where will they learn to make
intelligent choices as voters?
Where wiU they learn about the
parts of the world upon which
their livelihood may depend?
A MINIMUM of a one.year
world history course should be
required of all gradu.a~lng
seniors. They should dehrutely
have choices of electives in the
social studies area. Granted,
American history is also impor·
tant. They study it in the fifth
grade. the eighth grade, the
eleventh. grade, and they study
American government in the
eighth grade and again as
seniors in high school. But
because of our lack of
knowledge of other countries in
tbe world, Americans are often
considered provincial, uneducat-
ed, and am~lngly immature.
We must prepare students
with the knowledge of the suc·
ceases and mistakes of
bumaolty's past, with a common
cultural heritage that involves
more than the 200 years of
America's history, and with an
understanding of what makes
people In different culturea
behave as they do. We will soon
be taken advantage of by every
industrial natJon in the world
(isn 't it starling to happen
already?> unless we can provide
our students with the back·
ground to deal with all kinds of
people in an informed way.
HEATHER SMITH ...........
To the Editor:
The clUJens are rl1ht to be WOI'·
ried abou.t the PorD01rapbJc book
Quotes
"Often we han to choose the
le11er ol two ev'lla. Tb• aonm
ment ln, El Salvador d•...,..
eupport ID terma <A mllit.arJ aid.
That doeln't mean the .,.,_..
ment in El Salvador la anaellc. I
don't know an.y fOYU'DIDeat tbat
11 .'' -£...-W. LefeHr, the
Reaaan admlniltratlon'a new
anlatant SffMtary ol atate for
hum an not.a.
store herein Newport. Youngpeo-
ple are very susceptible lo the
emotions raised by the materials
offered in these shops. I'm not too
old to remember myself when I
was impressionable in this
respect, but then, loo, I re·
member that a better known man
than I acknowledged lusting after
the flesh in Playboy Magazine!
The city is right to be concerned
but City Attorney Coffin errs in
his efforts lo have the porno-
graphic store moved to the busi-
ness district which is being zoned
for these" adult" businesses.
l 'LL TELL you why. I'm an
older man and I've traveled
around a bit. I've noticed in my
travels that the worst thing than
can happen to a city is to have an
isolated, built-up business district
where all the anti-social elements
of society are segregated. Now
Newport already has a large alld
growing bus iness center. To
move the pornographic store
there would be a mistake that has
been made over and over again in
all our major cities from New
York to Los Angeles. ·
What happens is this . Large
business districts are built up but
these places are not pleasurable
for walking or spending time
there. So the Jaw-abiding citizens
run in and out of the district for
their buiiness needs. Meanwhile,
city officials try to segregate un-
desirable elements into an area
that is already isolated from the
better elements of society. The re-
sult is decay that starts from the
center and works its way out. Of.
ficials should work to close the
shop and not create a no-man's
land in the center of our city.
GEO. BRUMMELL ....... , ...
To the Editor:
It seems to me that your
newspaper and others have paid
no attention to what the John
Wayne Airport expansion will do
to Santa Ana. I mean Santa Ana
north of the airport and not San·
ta Ana Heights. Is this because
you think the residents ln our
part at the county are leu lm·
portant than those south of the
airport? U you lived in my part
of town you would bear noise
that you could not stand.
Another thlnt is that the oae
ton ot jet polluUoo dropped by
the airplanes aM described in
the county's slide show probably
falls on Santa Ana. 11 tbat
because the county thinle we
are not important? We don't
want cancer t.bat is cauaed by
the fuel th.at falls &om tbeH
planes either. I do think you
newspaper people should 1t
leaet tell our side of tbe airport
roblem.
A. MARTINEZ
' '·
MORE OPINION ' Or~ Co11t DAILY PILOT/'O'tuntday, March 12, 1981
Bob Greene
Painful memories of life ~ith a 'classic ' car
bit t.be aide ot a bu1.lcllq.
I wo.&ld turn on tbe {pit.Ion in
tbt mornlnc and dltcover that
tbe motor wouldn't wort.
ribl• t1UaO bappen to It wlMD 1 ... beldM tM wbtelf
Tbe dlmu cam• in tbe wlDter
of i•. I bad Just moffd to
Cblcaso, and WH drlvlnc downtown to work from my
•
broken. 8o I MDt him a tbeck tw tao for a new batter)'. ·
Total prtc. for tbe clauic car:
$280. ~
Al savvy a (UY and briWaat ..
tbblker u l am OD m01t 1uue1,
it tUJ'llll out tbat OD tbe IUbJed al
motor can l 1Hm to be •atf•·
iDI from Juat the tlnlett bit ot
brain dama1e.'
AJlow me to explain.
market ii .,U., to eaeala~ He
bl1bet. Tbe •• llmtaq ii beiDC romantlclled u lf lt were a Vi·
ld.na saillna ship. Writers are
penning ocfes to the car, and
even contrivin1 adventure
stories about trylna to track
down the elusive '65 MuatanJ.
KDow1eci1eable peor•• in tbe
auto industry predlc that in a
few yean, the '15 lluatans wUl
be worth truly astronomical
sums.
I would drive toward a
dru11tore and end up on the
curb with the pedestrlana. . apartment on the North Side.
Al . usual, tbe Muatatl8 wu
lurcblnl and 1tallin1, ju.mplna
and acreecblna to a atop, u I
made my feeble attempta to COD·
trol lt.
1WJ lD tbe tntenecUOD. I walked
to a nearby tu station and •aid
tbat the cU' wu broken beycod
repair. A . tow·truek clrlver ac·
companied me to the abandooed
veblcle. He •tarted It ln two
aecondl bf simply turnin1 the
key and steppln& on the ac·
ceJerator. a tuk I bad been una-
ble to aceompll.lh.
Today J rHd about t.be •
Muatanp Jolnl for '8.000. Aod
$12,000. And $40,000. In recent months, newspapen
and masuJnes have been ftlled
with atories
about the
neweat
"classic"
American
car. Thia is
the t• Ford
Mustang -
an auto ·
mobile that
originally
sold for •P·
proximately $2,000. Today you
can get $8,000 for a '65 Mustang.
Some owners of the cars have
turned down o((ers of $12,000.
And there is one report of a
specially customized '65
Mustang being offered for
$40,000.
And all signs are that the
Art Hoppe
Which tUes us to the first and
:>nly car I ever owned.
It WU a '$5 Ford Muatanc.
Yellow in color, If you must
know.
At the time I was like any
other Ohio teen-ager. I lived for
my car. I waa 17, that yellow
Mustang was mine and the
world was waiting for us.
Soon after I took possession of
the ear, however, strange things
began to happen.
I would put tbe car in reverse
and back into a telephone pole.
I would make a right tum and
I ASSUMED that all of tbele
tbln11 were happenlnl because
the 'SS Muatan1 wu an awful
car. After all, wben you're try.
ln1 to cet to Ohio Stadium and
end up entanaled with a Jarba1e
truck, you belin to l01e faith in
your veblcle.
In later yean I would learn
that it bad notb!ng to do with the
Mustanc. The problem wu, I
was a terrible driver. Some peo-
ple can't work crossword
puulea. Some people can't
thread needles. I couldn't drive
a car.
But at the time, the idea that
tbe fault might be mine did not
enter my mind. The only ex·
planaUon seemed to be that thia
particular model of car was.
jinxed; .why else would sucb bor·
Confrontation site solved
The ne xt confronta tion
between the United Slates and
the Soviet Union will take place,
It can now be revealed, in the
Rattdom of Phynkia. The Rall,
himself, has signed the lease
making bis country available to
the two superpowers for the oc·
casion.
The agreement brought a col·
lective sigh of relier from del·
egates to the
United Na-
tion&. It bas
long been
recognized
i n l h e
diplomatic
c ommunity
t hat the
superpowers
must con ·
stantly have
confrontations in order to dem·
onslrate to ea~h ot.ber and the
world that they are, indeed,
superpowers. But there has been
an ever-growing problem as to
whe r e these confrontations
should be held.
Ever since the devastation of
Kore a , Vietnam, Cambodia,
Laos. Angola, Afghanistan and
sundry other spots, there has
been an increasing reluctance
among smaller nations to host
confrontations. And the thought
of a confrontation in a large
country like Poland gives
everybody the shudders.
"We don't care what tiny lltUe
country the superpowers have
their next confrontation in," as
the delegate from Mbonga suc·
cinctly put it, "as long as it's
$Om ewhere else.··
THE llATT'S OFFER of
Pbynltia 's facilities proved a
godsend. At the time, the two
superpowers were privately
wrangling over the selection of
El Salvador or a Persian Gulf
state for the next event on the
confrontation agenda.
Secretary Haig objected to the
latter as being too distant from
America's shores, while Soviet
Foreign Minister Gromyko
similarly complained that El
Salvador would give the U.S. the
home team advantage. It ap·
peared there might have to be
two simultaneous coofronlatioos
in order to satisfy both sides -a
prospect that alarmed EJ
Salvadorians and Persian GuJl
resideats alike.
Pbynkia. however, is ideally
localed in tbe center of the
Lesser Antilles Desert and is
thus equally inaccessible from
anywhere.
Its other major advantage is
that all native Pbyntians loathe
Pbynkia and have no objecUG:la
whatsoever to its devastation -
although it may be difficult to
determine when this bas been
accomplished. The Ratt, for ex·
ample, has generously granted
the superpowers permission to
drop all·the defoliants they wish,
there not being a wisp of foliage
in the country. Nor will the war
much interfe re with the
Phynkian economy. which is
based on sand mining and rock
farming.
UNDER TERMS of the lease,
the decision as to whether the
Rall, himself, will be a bastion
of democracy or an emerging
democratic people's republic
will be left to the flip of a coin.
His loyal royal subjects will
then become, respectively,
either Soviet-armed Marxist·
Leninist fanatics or American·
supplied running dogs of
capitalist expanaionism. They
will then set out to happily cut
tbe Ratt's throat and be wlll
happily retire to bis new villa OD
the French Riviera. So all tbe
Pbynkians will be happy.
Aa for Secretary Hail and
Forei10 Minister Gromyko,
each bas vowed never to bedl
down even should this coaftoata.
lion in Pbyntia lut 100 years.
The other memben ol the U.N.
certainly hope 10.
-~.._. __
):"'
; /,.
~v
ANNOUNCING . I~ ,.
THE NURSERY WITHIN THE GARDEN! ~-
Roger's Gardens nursery hos been d rama tically Improved to provide you with ··
greater variety, quality and value. We've mo de getting in and out quick and .
easy, with a new parking lot. entrance and checkout stand adja cent to the -,( ~
nursery section. We're also buying tree and shrub container stock In ~reot~r .. ~· ~
volume .to provide you with gr.e?!er selection and savings. Come JOln us 1n ·J ·
celebrating these new and exc1t1ng chang es. We will hove fresh-squeezed ~
orange 1uice. balloons for the kids and specia l values throughout the store. ~~
GOOD TASTE I ~
VCXJ can't eat a JU"4per but. a citrus plant IS a treat f()( the eye and the palate Come get r
acquainted with the whole family We hove quite a vanety Of Oranges, lemons. Tangelos. r .
Grapefruit. limes and Kumquats There will be a juice machine handy IOf sampling fresh J ,,1
squeezed orange Juice ~.
We also hove o terrific collectors book on Citrus
Well written and full of color photos. it's on A-to-Z
book. full of history, ideas and oractical 1nlormat1on
5 gal citrus trees reg 513.50 Sale $9.99
Citrus book reg S 795 Sale $6.95
SURPRISE
We hove o treat f0< you when you
visit our new parking IOt. Don't min ltl
AMl!MIC:A 'H MMT RP.A' 'TIF\'l, OAIUm."'i <Y.~'TRR
9-5 DAILY • 640-5800
San J6oquin Hlls Rd. ot MacArthur~
NURSERY • INDOOR PLANTS • FLORIST • LANDSCAPING • ANTIQUES
• l
At a mullve intersection near
Lake Shore Drive, I 1tepped oo
the clutdl, and everythi.ns Ult·
ed. I couldn't make the lluatanc
move. 1bb wu lo the middle al
rush hour, and there waa a
furiom snowstorm 1oin1 on. I
wu preei.1ely in the center ot
that intenecUoo -l w11 bold·
inl up six lanes of traffic. Homs
were blaring. People were
shouting.
I DID THE brave lhlng. I got
out of tbe car, wJ.lked away and
hid behind a buJtclins.
When I came bac~ an hour
later, the yellow Mustang was
It wu then I reallied that the
problem was not that of the
Muatans, but of myself. I vowed
never to drive asain, and I
haven't. I do not currently own
a driver's license, so I could not
legally drive even if someone
held a gun to my bead. Even lf
I tried It legally, 1 would prob-
ably hila wall.
Wliicb brings us to the point of
this tale.
Knowing that 1 would never
drive again, I sold my Mustang.
I sold it to a Northwestern
University student for $300. I
didn't care. J never wanted to
see it again.
He called me the next day and
said tbat the battery was
IF I BAD BAD my yel*'
Mustani towed to a wareboUM
and put In 1tora1e, I could be
looklnl forward to a worry·fr'ee
retirement. A few more yean'al
pampering that car in
motbballa, and it could set me
up a ntce little neaten.
But I let it go, for $280.
Ob, well. Some lhin&a aren't
meant to be. Most people, when
they' remember their '85
Mustangs, think of crulsinc
through a warm summer eve-
ning with the radio blaring and
llhe wind whipping through the
windows.
l think or driving to Ste~e
Grossman's house lo play
bas ketball and ramming my
Mustang into the s ide of bis
motber'5 garage.
CLEARANCE
3 DAYS ONLY
FRI., SAT. & SUN·-MARCH 13, 14 & 15
While Supplies
Last
ALL
DR EMEL
TOOLS
25%0FF
Sows, Mototools, Sanders, etc.
• discount does not apply to
accessories
sK1LSAw
~~~~ 71A " circular
saw-perfect
for al I sorts
of projects
around the
house.
Blllt:k a IJtlclalr.
WORKMATE®
DUAL-HEIGHT
WORK CENTER
61
STANLEY
POWER LOCK
TAPE$6'9
Limit two Lirrited
per customer Supply
25 feet x I lach
ALL SOCKET SETS
25%0FF
S.A.E. <X Metric -
reg. from 19.99 up
(While supply lasts)
·~
CROW• HARDWARE
lilOW J LOCAnOMI TO SRVI YOU Iii ill w ..........
(torrwty Alon)
lft4 .............. ,... .....
. Ml-ti 118 .
•, ...
JC!
··Doubles t ake ..•
Frances McLaughlin Gill and twin Kathryn
..... McLaughlin Abbe, holding their book,
,· • "Twins on Twins," are surrounded· by
other twins at B. Dalton bookstore in New .. ..
t21Jl 4~1461 CREl,IAllON •llUR•Al S 171418474101
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association
Executive Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave ..
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
Southern California Regional 011/ces
':1677 E La Palma Ave , Anaheim, CA 92807
8955 Valley View St , Buena Park, CA 90620
1656 Arne1ll Ad . Camarillo. CA 93010
20715 S Avalon Blvd. Carson. CA 90746 23021 Lake Center Or, (Lake Forest), El Toro. CA 92630
1001 E Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 G)
4140 Long Beach Blvd . Long Beach. CA 90807 =
22939 Hawthorne Blvd Torrance. CA 90505
1095 Irvine Blvd . Tustin, CA 92680 fQUAl c
235 N Citrus Ave., West Covina, CA 91793 ~~~~r".
"Mercury Room" 1v1111011 on a ruerwd Oasis
CALL TOM MARSTON . FOR A
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN -
INTEREST ONLY!
~'eivport Equity 'Funds· Inc
Licensed Broker Smee 1971 • (714) 760-6060
Privet• Notice
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
ARCHITECTS &
BUILDERS
Chi pman OHlgner Showroom 11 a lull service wholesale
showroom cat11rlng e•clu1lv11ly to th• tr•d•. W• represent a
wld• aelectlon of Ion• name brand lurnl1hlng1 and acc•HOrlM.
One• "ch 1"' we c/eer out ff/tcted Item• at co1t,
,..., COi i and below COii.
Sleeoe• Soles Matlres,.s PKhners Lamp\ Cur•c>\ OoninQ
Rooms • Bedrooms Uoholsll!rf'd C11a,,, Wall Sys1ems
GranOlathl'r Cloc;ks Solas LOvP~a1s COCkla11 Tables
Brass Tea Bar Cans 0 11om11ns F0<ma1 01n1n9 Game Se•~
Desk Secre1a11es • P1c1url's Oes~s T at>ll's Acc..-sso11Ps ano
much rnucn mote
FRIDAY Merch 13 10•m to 8 pm
SATURDAY M•rch 14 10•m to 8 pm
MONDAY M•rch 18 10•m to 8 pm
CHAPMAN DESIGNER SHOWROOM
17801 EHi Main Street lr1lne • 957-4074
(One block West ot MacArthur)
EXCLUSIVELY
TO THE TRADE
NOT OPEN
TO THE PUBLIC
NATION
New York 1Ub1idy for jewelry firm hit
York City. There were about 30 sets of
twins on hand and a few non-twins in back-
ground.
NEW YORK (AP) -A 1tate
senator 1ay1 ntf any and Co. ls
not • charity cue, and the state
1bould revoke a S5 snllllon tax
credit that hu beell atven to tbe
1"lltb Avenue purveyor of me1a-
buck broochea.
But ntfany'1 chief execuUve
11y1 bla company's 1ill-ed1e rep-
utation ls irrelevant. He 11y1
Tiff any la contrlbuUn1 needed
Jobi to the city and deserves the
1tate11 help.
· '•All we've done la follow the
law," Henry Platt, Tiffany chief
execuUve, said ln an Interview
Wednesday. "Maybe there
1bould not be this kind of pro-
aram. That's not for me to de·
clde, becau.se I did not write the
law.''
T H E TAX C R ED I T -
awarded In November by the
state's Job Incentive Program
-reduces the state income tax·
es of the world's most famous
jewelry store by about $504,000 a
year in each of 10 years.
As a result, the company,
which had sales of about $100
million last year, will pay but
$300,000 a year In state income
taxes, according to stale Sen.
Franz Leichter, a Manhattan
Democrat.
SUPERELECTRIC
•'The Many tax credit •hows
that the Job Incentive Procram
was badly nawed and 10 sloppily
adminiatered that it bas become
a multlmlllton dollar
1lveaway," he said.
WILLIAM REDMAN, ex-
ecutive deputy commissioner of
the state Department of Com-
merce, which administers the
program, was in meetings and
unavailable for comment.
The purpose of JIP ls to at.
trac t new businesses and to
persuade firms already in the
state to remain or expand.
Two years ago, Tiffany pon-
dered expanding its operations
and moving manufacturing,
mail order and other depart-
ments elsewhere, according to
Platt. He said New Jersey, with
its lower rents, was attractive,
and the firm already had a
silver plant there. .
Eventually, the company de·
cided to add three floors to its
Fifth Avenue building and hire
an additional 170 employees, but
Platt says that would not have
happened "without this incen-
tive."
"It was done at a lime when
New York was bankrupt and
business was leaving the city .
30" IASEIOARO HEATER
SUPERELECTRIC
OUAm HEATER
1400 watts. 16-314" heavy
duty quartz tube with coll
element 9" I( 14" I( 31''.
Model '8080. .... .,. ..
48.88
Instant fan forced heat. Tip
over switch. 1320 watts.
UL llsted
Model '3014. .......
23.88
The 1overnor and the mayor
were uldn1 bulineases to invest
ln the city," said Platt, who suc-
ceeded Walter Hovln1 u Tif-
fany's toll' man Feb. 1.
"We went out and invested in
New York City. We went out and
created new Jobs," he said, ad-
ding that through Increased real
estate and other taxes, Tiffany's
may end up paying more taxes
than ever before.
However, Platt wasn't com-
plaining Hi.I company had a rec-
ord year last year, with sales
increaalng by 25 percent. The
company, owned by Avon Inc.,
did not release its profit figures,
but in the past. company of-
ficials have said the firm's prof-
its usually run about 6 percent.
Besides the Fifth A venue store,
there are Tiffanys in San Fran·
cisco, Atlanta, Houston, Chicago
and Beverly Hills, and the com-
pany acts as a manufacturer
and wholesaler.
Leichter said other wealthy
firms also are getting breaks, in-
cluding the Philip Morris Co.,
which received a•$2.4 million tax
credit, and the Insurance Com·
pany of North America, which
received a Sl.3 million credit.
SUPERELECTRIC
DELUXE DUAL HEAT
Ribbon element. 1320 to
t 500 watts UL listed
11·3/4" x 18" x 6"
Model 1650.
.... 34.M
20.88
Get them
whlle
they're hotl
IUPERELECTllC
WU. All CIRCULATOfl
Colt lflment. 1000 watts.
ni.momt control. 7-314" x
13-112" I( 6". Model 1678. .... at•
Coll element. 800 watts. Ul
llsi.d. 13-112" x 13" x 9".
18.88
"UlllMllltlll••·
SALE DATES: Mar. 13 thru Mar. 19
....
Modll '806.
.... 1l•
12.88
••
' n---------... --------~·..,,,. ..................... ......-. .... ---------·-...-.-... _ _,.,,.,..._ .----·-...... -· .. . ...................... ~ ....... . . ....................... _.,_ .......... -, ...... .-.....-......,.. .... .__.., _____ ---·-"
Togo
with all
your new
tailored fashi~ns.
woven upper on
a smart stacked
heel.
Natural or wt11te $38 00
....._ I
10IS2 Irvine Ave
Newport Beach 5-48-8684
Westclill Plaza
You Don't
Have
to be
Irish ...
. . · . to share St.
Patrick's Day fun
~ with a Hallmark card ~~
..... 1 forTues.,Mar.17
Hummel Figurines,
Norman
' Rockwell Plates and
figurines .
. w • ...,........... l
_.cll•a. mid tt•U an 11 y.
All-new
coordinating
groups for spring,
·featuring ...
VIiiager
Campus Casuals
Pant-her
Patty Woodard
. A diclcvernon
0"91 I 0·9 Moft..fri., I 0-6 Sat. & I 1-4 S.•., 541-4121
If They
C:Ould Just
Stay Little
'Til Their Carter's
Wear Out.
HU/.f PTY DUNPrY
CHILDl.EH'S WEAi
I 051 nlRe • WHtclfff Plaa
M.wport leoclt
THREE DAYS ONLY
TOOL
CLEARANCE\
Mer. 13" Mer. 14 Mer. I 5
25 % Off and MORE
8""tecl to .... Cllll ......
CROWM .. HARDW~E I
1024 ............ Newport 1Hc11'4J.,, IJJ ----
\ ..
-wsmr:
THE SPRING TRIO
Seersucker Sport Coat,
Cray tropical slacks,.
and White bucks.
Tailored in the f
Halliday's
natural
shoulder style
that's always
right.
·17th & Irvine I •Ve., Newport Beaich, C~lif. (714) 645-0792
tw~ no
co
20,
stw
foul
th~ Un
I act
J ad\
• lea b th• ' an4 II tA
E Na
8 tr~
b aru
c up Jl
G ris
ris \l th1 g 8¥
Cq'
thl
th
Cl
ofl
A1
Pt
di •• et
UI
UI
d1
H
E
ol
a
p a·
ti
0
p
p
tc
p
..
ii
j.
ii c '
ti
i
t
. er-. Coat DAIL y PILOT /Ttl uraday. March 12. 1111.
Cut-Fate trans-A.11antic • 81)!
LONDON <AP) -MaJor alrllnel, particularly tbe COit ol fuel. &Dd IO York, up from $1,IO"J. 1ald thi company'• fuel bill Cor lMO
bad rtaea more than $250 milUon and
tbat Pu Am had l)>ent more than tl
bllllon on fuel for the first time.
... _,....
G. Gordon Ult·
dy, who helped
mastenilind tbe
Water1ate
break-ln, an·
nounced he is
opening an tn-
t er national
security consult-
ing firm in
Chic a go for
businessmen
who need help
with security.
bit by a world reets1loa and aoartq faret mUlt n... too," be 1aid. Laker, •bo 1t1rted tbe Nortb
fuel coeta, are bocMltlq trua-AUantlc Brltllb Airway• 1ald tbe C'Glt ol ttl AtJantJc fare war wit.It b.11 no-frt.lll
air tarea ., mucb aa 50 percent, end· one-way "Poundbopper' • tlcket oa Skytral.n aentee. haa boolt.d bl.I ad·
ha1 lbe era of cut-rate travel ru1bta from tbe United KJ.nfdom to vance•booklna, OM-way fan to New
ploneered by Brttaln'1 Sir Freclclle New York &Qd otber U.S. dettlna· York to al4 bom $172. A •PGk•man County board IDOVe8
Lak•. tbe carrten 1ald. Uon1 baa Id up 30 percent, to SIM .. ld tbe fare wUJ 10 up a1aln tbll
Laker A1rway1, Pan American from $191, and will rise to tstS.40 lhll auauner.
World Airway1, Trans World Airli.nea summer. Pan Am reported it lncreued fares against 8kinny-dipper8
and British Airway• all are blkin1 The carrier'• 1tand·bY tare to Loi an averace 10 pe{cent, while TWA
farea on their North Atlantic routes A111ele1 rot• th1a week to sm.20 aald lta fare atructu~ wu more com· VISALIA <AP> -Nudity is out in
between 10 percent and 50 percent, from '287.to and In the aummer -pllcated, with different lncreuet Im· Tulare County.
airline olftclalJ reported. tbe peak 1ea1on -will lncreaae posed foe different destlnaUona and County 1uperviaora have adopted
"Laat year'• fares on the North further to $400.40. no averace possible. an anti·nudity ordinance to stem re·
Atlantic were the bar1ainl ot the Firat-clasa travelers on Britlab For example, the Pan Am stand-by ports of akinny-dJpplng and nude sun·
seas on, • ' a Br .It lab Al r ways Airways will have to pay ~1~14 one-fare to New York went up J.,t week bathing ln the Three Rivers area.
spokennan said. "Now they are bav· way to 1et to Loi An1elea uus aum-to $264 from $207, and the fare io Los The ordinance prohlbits public
lna to reflect more realism. mer, compared with'tl,713.80. It will An1elee baa risen to $361 from '284. nudity. except among children,
"Coata have aone up •.• ... 1 .... nit_._1_can_t1....;;y...-,_c_oa_t_S._1 .... :1_rn_to_n .... r,__r1_r_•t_·~-•-u_a_to_N_e_w_· __ P_a_n_Am __ •._eok_es_m_an __ v_1_ctor __ P._a .... 1_e __ t_h_ro_u_.Bho __ u_t th_e_coun __ t'""'y_. ____ _
~esa SCC FOR THE RECORD
evaluated
• • • m review
Southern California
College in Costa Mesa
has been reaffirmed as
alt accredited institution
of higher learning by the
Western Association of
Schools and Colleges.
The acc r e ditation
pro cess i n c lude s
periodic review s
involving self.study and
a visit by an evaluation
team.
The col l ege wa s
visited" by such a team
Nov. 17-20.
The tea m orrered
ace redltation for 10
years, the maximum
period granted by an
ace rediting body.
Previously, SCC was
reviewed every three to
five years.
Elderly
_plan trip
The Senior Cititens
Cl.ub of Laguna Beach
wil.' sponsor a three-day
trip to the Furnace
Creek Ranch in Death
Va lley ..\pril 26-28.
A fee of $98 includes
bus tra1'1 Sportation ,
l odging ._,nd gui ded
tours.
For inforn.·ation call
~ 'irgin ia Sc h ott at
49.1-2441.
G\)"'C paper
wins t.'lward
The Br a:1d1ng Iron.
Golden Wl•st.' College's
student new '>P•1 pe r . has
won a merit ;. 'Waf cl from
the Ca l1 .f o rn ia
Newspaper PL •bh she rs
Association Editors of the Br and
ing Iron issues ev ah 1at-
ed by the judges w t •re
Tim C lanc y, J 'n"'l"I
Mc C urd i e . R o bt· r •'·
Fra nk . Cecel1 a
Wilkinson. Diann Brur.1•
ner. Te resa Kennelly,
Jan Corey and Sharren
Parsons.
Event slate d
"Meet the Industries
Night," an annual event
for Cal State Long
Beach students. will be
held April 2 at 7 p. m . in
the Anaheim room of the
Anaheim Con ventio n
Center.
Blrdu
HOAG MIU14011t1AL
HOSPITAi.. PllESBYTIUtlAlf
l'e-y21
Mr •nd Mi's. Aon.td FMm•r. Foun
t•1n ll•lloy, Girl
Mr •rid Mrs W1f11•m Pr....,IU Hunt
11191on a.~11. Girl
Mr •nd Mts OotWtd Htrr. 1rv1ne.
Boy
Mr •rid Mrs. CllriSIGpller Vile, COil•
Mn•.Glrl
Febr.,.ry U
Mr •no Mr~ Sloven Weel<s, CMI•
Mew. Soy
Mr •rid Mrs S<oll Sc.,." Hun11n111on Beach, Boy
M.r ind Mn Jamts Cam•ron, Coll•
MHa, Boy
M r and Mrs. Frllderlck un111r,
Founl•ln ll•lllY, Soy
Mr af\d Mrs Greoorv Meyer, trvfne,
lloy
M r afld M rs M1Chda' Plvnll•tt,
ti1.H1t•no1on Bedcn, Girf
Follrw•ry Jl
Mt •t\d Mr~ R•CMr'd Brow,,, Hunt·
1ngton Be•cn, Girl
M r •nd Mn D•n•el Mo.al\, Irvine
Boy
Mr end Mr\ Brian McOon1.1CJ,
frv1nr. G•r•
Mr •n<S Mt\ RC>Ottrt Potent1 Hunt
1ng 1on Bt•Ch, Boy
Fellrwfyn
Mr and Mn R1cnarct V•n .~~Ire
Hunl1nglon Buch, Boy
Mr •net Mr\ U1m•l!I Nttra~ Co,I•
Mew. Bor
M r •nd M r s Pn1l1p HOdQt'. S•n
C1emrnce. Girt
" ........ ,, lt
M r •nd M rs l(Urt j(er\t"" Fount••n
V•llty Boy
FoDnwry 11
M r •no Mrs M•'"-Woodttou'f'
Wettm1nsctr Girl
M r •nd M r\ M t<-haef 0t"nttn•1er
L•gun• N•Q.,.I. 8o y
Mt •M Mr,, Mark W4rffl\ t-4.~l\l
1n9ton Ekacn. Girl
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
Febru.J1ry U
M r •nd Mr'\ Ltoon•roo Y•squ~t ,
Huntington Be•cn. 01rl
M r and Mr\ Ral•b Nau .tr Founl•1r1
'JdlltY, tl)y
Fob,....,ry IS
Mr .and Mr\ Aicha,.d V•rall.t. Hunt
1noton Be•cn, oirl
Mr ano Mr>. R•IPh Lock•n. Hunl
1n91on BH<h. boy
Febr.,.ry "
Mr and Mrs Sleptwn Ric ho, H .. n1
1n111on Be..:11, 11or1
Jamu Motton •rid O•von JoM.on.
Co•l•Mtw,bOy
Mr and Mr,, AthM\\>O Mar• Huf\,.
•t111lon 8ffCh, OOy
Fe-.y1'
Mt ttno Mn D•w H•nley, Fount••n
V•Uey. QMI
Febnlary 20
Mr •no Mn St•-n Go•ooerger,
Hun11n11ton llN<h, oov
M r •nd /!Iv\ R•~lf V•Slh•, (Mt•
1'-Af'W, bat
F-...ryJI
Mr •no Mrs O.v•d Aenrwr ~unt
1f\OIO.., B•~rt. girt
Fe...,..,..,u
Monie• Fora •nd Robt-rt ltnG\f'Y
~o'"'''•'n Valley q1r1
M, 4 1'\0 M.·\ Rall001pn vanP•Uf'n
Hun11nolon 8',6<.f\, boy ,..on..ar., 1'
M, and Mt\ l g.,"\.C'o S•t•1ar Hunt
1n9 lon Be«h bOy
Mr al"<> Mr\ M1t.t.d-et Oyar Hunt
o~lon 8~«11, bOY
Mr •nd Ml"\ Oor•tr' Qa"'1\ C.O\la
Mt\• Qtrl
Fobru.ry Jl
M' •f'IO M n ()enn.§ Pf'nMh.f Hunt
•nolon Beacn, oirJ
SOOTH COAST
MfOICAL CENTER
F ...... •ry l4
Mr •no Mr\ V R1ch•rO Wolr•,
l .•oun _. Be.ch, boy
l'elwlWry ti
M r And ~n. Pt11hp Rolllwtll, C.Oil•
Mt.'~.boy ,. • .,.....rv u
M, •nO /Ii/II \. D•111d H•rttr, Oan•
POlf"t t. 91rl Fe,-....rytt
M r • •nd Mr\, ~ ":hrl1toe>f\er Sullon.
C•p1\I r•no a..c.h .. Doy
F-'<YJ1
M r •no M rs. 0• v1d Ktr\h•w,
L•11un• N11JWI, bc)f ,.,., •rid Mn R1t""r0 ~",.."" Sovcn
La9una. boy Mr •nd Mn Ptut10 l •'fh 1r UOuM
8HCh, bOV
MM"CA>
Mr •nd Mn. O••ld M.vr•r, S."
Cl•m•"'-· 11lrl
... rcll•
M r arid MIS P ... 1 F .. r-tller, $M1
Clemenle, boy
SAN CLIMIHTI
GllNlllAL HO$PITAL
l'.W...rylJ
Mr eno Mrs. P..,1 O Fl•llerty, 5.,,
Juen C414>1str-. 11lrt
M r end M r\ Ertc 8erger, S•n
C1emen\t, OOy
Mr •no Mis Oevld E'l>tno,.., San
c1emen1e, 111r1 '•llrvery n Mr •nO Mt> 8r1><1 Woley, S•n
J u•n C419151reno, boV '•llruary u Mr •nd Mrs. Abel Quu•d•, S•n Cl•m e nle, Doy
Mr. And Mrs 111envtr1lao S.na ch,
Oen• Pooni, OOy
, ......... ylJ
Mr. eno Mr1. Rlct'Mlro Zle11Jer, ~n Cl•men11, ooy
, ....... ,117
Mr •nO Mn Mlc11 .. 1 F•ll•I, 5.,. Cctmtnlt, 111r1
Mr. and Mr\. Geor11e Ne11<ln11 111,
S•n Clemence, 111r1
Merrie J.ck ano lt•NWlh 8ar11e11,
O•n• Polnl, 111r1
""""'" 1 Mr •nd Mrs Ou-Clark, San J uen
C•P•Sl••M, boy
loUr<lo s
M r •no M o John F 11oler,
C•Pl\lreno 8e•ch. 111r1
Institute
funded
The Orange County
Marine Institute has
received $200,000 from
the Oran ge Co unty
D e partm e n t or
Education following
pass age o f fun ding
legislation sponso·ced by
area Assemblywoman
M a r i o n B e r ·~ e s o n •
R-Newport Bea•.!h.
The money will be
u se d to co mpl e te
co n ~truc tion and
furnishing <1( the new
institute, and to build a
dock at lht· Dana Point
H .ubor site.
St.~H t•.>pic
of seflninar
·'T h e Self i n
Transformation", a
wee ke nd conference.
will be held Saturday
from 9 :J m. to 5 p.m.,
and Suriday from 9: 30
a .m. to 5 p.m , at UC
Irvine• 'E:xtenstion in 101
Scient'(: Lecture Hall.
Mor e! information is
av ai h.1 ble by ca lling
833-541'\.
Gent ~ral cited
Brig. Gen. Ronald R.
Blalaclt, USAFR, a
Newport Beach native,
received the Legion of
Merit for converting the
452nd Ta ctical Airlift
Wing at Ma r c h Air
Force l:lase , from
transport to strategic
tanker airc:r,qft.
.... iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilill--·-------1--------,~----·
Learn Cake Decora~~no
CLASSES ST ART THE WEEK OF ~~ARCH 23
Decorate beaut1f1..•I cakes it's fun and
it's easy when you ;oin our classes In
1ust six weekly, 2-ho.'Jr lessons you'll
learn to decorate cakes that will delight
your family and dazzle ;1our friends
Expert instructors will tea.::h you to
make beautiful 1c1ng flowers festcve
floral arrangements. fancy bo:ders
and whimsical cake top designs .the
famous Wilton Way'
CLASS SIZE IS LIMITED 1 S~e~ so REGISTER TODAY' ~PPllfSE>'A•·
FREE
CAKE DECORA TINl1
DEMONSTRATION
SAT., MARCH 21 12:00·4:00
Easter Cake decorating items also available .
------------~----~~~--_.,...._. ......... LOS ANGELES TARZANA TO~RANCE
(2131627·1.631 (2131 881 7555 (21313~7471
'·
CERRITO$ WEST COVINA
12131 924·0133 (2 13198tH~571
GARDEN GROVE
17 I 41636 3920
HUNTINGTON BEAC 11
(71 'I 8•2·•05
•
~ _ ...... , ............ -... ....... .-~"'· ' ... --.. .......
• 1n pancreas
cancer eyed .
BOSTON (AP) -People wbo clrlnk a •P or
two ol cOttee a day are nearly twice u likely u
non-drinkers to •et cancer ol tbe pancreas, and
coffee drinkin• may cause mor• than Jaalf of tbe
20,000 deaths a year from tbis dlleue, a Harvard
study concludee.
But tbe researchers 1aid that altbdu8b they
found a stron• link between coffee drinkina and
the fourth m08t common fatal mallpancy in the
United States, there wu no proof tbat coffee
R actually causes the disease. They s~ped ab.9rt of
Jt advlalnt people not to drink it.
w Tbe researchers found no usociation between
bJ tea drinldna and pancreaOc cabeer, 1ua1esUn1 w that caffeine -the 1Umulant found in coffee, tea
l>i and some colu -waa not a factor.
to SPOKESMAN DAVID KU~EaT AT the
B National Coffee Association in New York said the •
•• trade group wu bavin1 sclentistl review the study
bi and would lasue a response later.
cl The researchers found that people wbo drink
R up to two cups of coffee a day have 1.8 times the
G risk of cancer of the pancre_,i as non-drinkers. The W riak grows to 2. f times normal for those wbo drink
three cups or more. pj The coffee association estimates that the ~ average American over age 10 drinb two cups of
I coffee a day.
I
'
j •
The pancreas is a gland behind the stomach
that produces di1estive juices and contain$ cells
that make insulin. When this or1an beco'Jnes
cancerous, the outlook is poor, because the disease
often is advanced by the time it i.s discovered. The
American Cancer Society says that less than 10
percent of the victims survive for five years.
DR. BRIAN MacMABON, THE study's
director, said the researchers felt that if people
were concerned about a possible link between
coffee and pancreas cancer, "they shouJd know
there is at least a suspicion of this . But I don't
think it's time to put on the missionary role yet.'•
MacMahon is bead of lbe epidemiology
department at the Harvard School of Public
Health. The study was published in today's New
England Journal of Medicine.
"This association should be evaluated with
other data," the researchers wrote. "If it reflects
a causal relation between coffee drinking and
pancreatic cancer, coffee use might account for a
substantial portion of the cases of this disease in
the United States.
"If the distribution of coffee consumption in
our control group reflects that in the general
population . . . we estimate the proportion of
pancreatic cancer that is potentially attributable
to coffee consumption to be slightly more than SO
percent."
MacMAHON SAID IN A STATEMENT that
"the association with coffee should be confirmed
in other studies before too much effort is put into
identifying a specific causative agent or
ingredients.··
He s aid similar studies should be performed
by other investigators. Then a more detailed
investigation should be made into the duration of
coffee use, the strength of the brew, whether it was
perked or instant and what was added to it, be said . ,
·'If these things confirm the association, it
would be lime for animal studies of specific
ingredients," MacMahon said.
The doctors based their findings on interviews
with patients at 11 large bospilals in the Boston
area and Rhode Island. They obtained data about
the smoking and drinking habits of 3619 people with
pancreatic cancer. Then they compared this with
information from 644 patients hospitalized with
other diseases.
"A STRONG ASSOCIATION BETWEEN
coffee consumption and pancreatic cancer was
evident in both sexes." they reported.
The researchers had set out to see if there was
a link between this form of cancer and cigarette or
a lcohol use. They said they were surprised by the
association with coffee.
Like earlier studies. this one did find a weak
association between cigarette smoking and cancer
of the pancreas. But smokers also often drink
coffee. and when coffee drinking was taken into
consideration. the smoking link was not significant
statistically. The res earche rs found no link
between alcohol us e and pancreas cancer.
And they did not speculate about how coffee
could cause cancer.
They noted that Mormons and members of
other religious groups that shun coffee have a low
rate of pancreatic cancer. And they cited a recent-
ly reported case in which tbla cancer occurred at the
same time in a husband and wife who regularly
added coffee syrup to ground coffee before
percolating it.
Fe1nale students
accuse teacher
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Several female
students have brought sexual harassment charges
against a San Francisco State University
educational psychologist and associate professor
of counseling, school officials say.
A three-member faculty disciplinary panel
plans to examine the charges against Finis E. Dew
al a four-day bearing scheduled to begin March 23.
School officials declined lo release details or
the aUegaUons, saying only that the charges were
serious and lhat the professor and complaining
students "will have a chance to tell all."
If the char1es are upheld, Dew, who has been
al the school since 1970, would face possible
reprimand, suspension or dismissal.
Parole plan lauded
WASHINGTON (AP)-Oneinfourlnmatesre·
leased on parole was returned to prlaon before the
parole expired, accordin1 to a Juatice Department
aludyooM,OOOAmerlcan pan>Jees. ·
The study of people paroled from 1974 to 1975
reinforces "the tradiUonal view that three·fowtbl
of penom paroled are clualflable u 1ucce11es,"
aald tbe department's Bureau of Juatice Stan·
dard1.
Conductor ldlled
PEKING (AP) -A aioup ol Joatb1 attacked
and tilled a Pekin• but cooductor wbo bad
Ltopped them from 1moklq CJD U.. bus, the Pettn1
Even.lnc News reported .
•
\ This shiny Toyota was spotted parked in a
handicapped parking space in the upper lot
at Robinson's-Fashion Island at 1:45 p.m.
,Orange Cout DAIL V PSLOT/Thut"lday, March 12, 1981 ~·
Tuesday. No handicapped sticker could be
seen.
Bldllody
Wife slayer
convicted
PERTH, Seotland (AP>.-A man who killed
bla prepianl wlfe and hJd her body for more than
15 years wu convicted of mamlau&hter by a Hilb •
Court Jury bere..after a two-day trial.
John Traynor, 39, of Klrkcaldy, wJlo bad
pleaded innocent to murder, wu to be sentenced
today.
Traynor's wife, Jeanette, wu kUJed during an
ar1ument with Traynor at their home in Fife
sometime between July and Deeember 1965. The
mummified remains of her body were found
wrapped in a carpet of Traynor'• home in
December. "
Traynor testified that his wife bad taunted .
him, sa)'in1 another man wu the father of her
child. He said he hit her and sbe struck her head
on the hearth. ~
Traynor wrapped the body in a sheet and hid it
behind a wardrobe in the bedroom, where it •
remained four or rive years. When be moved to a ~
house 100 yards away. he carried the corpse there
wrapped in canvas and hid it in a coal cellar.
He said he often thought about telling police
what had happened but said, "The longer it wenl
on, the harder It became. I never had the nerve." .
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OrMQeCo• DAILY PILOT/Thureday, March 12.1811
l
MODEL BASE PRICE
2-Door $ 7757
I Town Landau . 8,895
11561
GRANADA
MODEL BASE PRICE
L 2-Door Sedan $ 6474
L 4-Door Sedan 6633
6875
L 4-0oor Sedan 7005
GLX 2-0oor Sedan 6988
QLX 4-0oor Sedan 7148
FAIRMONT
MODEL BASE PRICE
2-Door Sedan $ 6091
4-Door Sedan 6210
Futura 2-Door 6407
Futura 4-Door 6421
Wagon 6503
Futura Wagon 6735
MUSTANG
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Ghia2-0oor 6674 •
Ghia3-Door 6789
.
Ford and your P@rtici~ting_ Ford Dealer announce a 100/o Cash Assistance PrQgram. Make your best deal on any
of the new 1981 FordS listea above. Buy and take delivElrY between' February 1S-and March 21 1 1981 or order by
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you may apply the equivalent amount toward your down payment. Offer limited to one vehicle per customer.
0
\ FORD DIVISION I . ,
,
'
.,
\
' ' f
· By STEVE llABBLE
Of IM o.&ty P1M1 s .. H
Kansas City businessman
Richard Fatherley, a veteran
John Birch Soclet1 member,
wrun1 IUPI and wbiltles from
his Newport Beach audAence this
week u Ile· listed well·ltnown
personalities he claims are Ued
to soclallat interests.
"And then' there's William F.
Buckley, 'the counte'r!elt con·
servative," said Fatherley, after
breezing tbroueb bis "suspi·
cion" list that inoluded Dan
Rather, Barbara Walters,
George Bu.sh and CIA Director
William J. Casey.
Fatherley, lal~g before 140
people Tuesday evening at the
A5i
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1•1
FEATURES DEATHS 84
86
The 552 Club
celebrates 15 years
of continued growth
... Rage 84
Warns Newport audience o1 'collectivist' rule
Newport Inn, adnUtted -.noet of that the Ku Klux Klan ts a front world federation of disarmed na· tire Trilateral Commllsion ii a
these prominent figures b8'd de· for Communist interests. So are tiona under a collective rule.'' collectivist orcanlzation. .
nled socialist ties and bad, in moat eomervation croups, he Fatberle1said. · Without missing a step ,
fact, called Fatherley "a nut." added. He said most dru1 re-ln explalnlog what all that Fatherley pointed out that
·His 90·minute talk, ending babllltation centers, abortion means, the Kansas City man former Pres_ident Carter wu a
with a soft, ve~ion of .. America cllnJcs ~ family cr;t,sil centers said cqllectlvlsts are those seek· to u n d ing member of t b ~
the Beautiful • playing behind also an suaplcloua. ing a one·government rule Trilateral Group. ~e said Pres~:
Fatberley•s request for persona Next, he took on the mus lbroughowt the western world. d~nt Reagan .b as surrounded
to join the Birch Society, was media which be said ls COD· He said communism also lits himself by Trilateral veteram.
titled "Anatomy of a Cover.up." trolled by a biased few who that description.
Hi.s targets we~e the mass "manlae" the news. He said "Now David Rockefeller " m~di_a 4Dd the Trilateral Com· most of these news "managers" said Fatherley "ls not a co.;,.
mLSsion, a seven:year-<>ld group belong or have belonged lo munisl. He isn't a fascist either.
headed by_ David Roc~efeller Rockefeller's Trilateral Com· He's a collectivist."
that draws its membership from mission. ff e p 0 i n t e d 0 u t t b a t
the U.S., Western Europe and "The power of the mass R k c 11 • b kl g i Ja an oc e e er s an n emp re P · media. eapedall>: the electronic bas branches in Moscow and
He warm.ed . up sever.al media, ls increasin1ly controlled Pekipg.
listeners by lSSWDJ the cl81m by an elite few who advocate a In fact, Fatherley said, the en·
Suspects 'taped' in. Irvine
In a r ecent publication,
T rilateral Coordinator George
Franklin explained the com·
mission's purpose and denied
charges that it trys to influence
American government.
Frank.lln said the 290·member
commission attempts to gel
public attention focused on
foreign policy issues. Also, he
aaid, lt trya to 1et leaden la
Western World countri" to ua-
deratand each other and tbelr
policies.
Swltclrlnf oa a tape recorded version o Jobn Lennon'• btt
song "lmaelne," FatberleJ
charged that "bad apples" auqla
as Lennon also espoused coll:t· tivism.
Pointing out one line in ·
non 's song tbat proclaims
"Imagine there's no country,"
Fatherley smiled.
"There it is," be said. "That's
collectivism."
He said many pop sones ~·
courage "the dark age of if:
norance" and urge youtbf\d
listeners to challenge autborilf.
,i
Inspection bribes told
...
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of tM o.lty ~IM l .. H
A job superintendent wbo said
be wore a wireless micropbooe
to ,gather evidence against lwO'
former Irvine building inspec·
tors has testified the pair re·
ceived alcohol in exchange for
favorable inspections.
A personnel hearing into al-
legations that former Irvine
building in~pectors Daniel
"Bruce" Bullard, 50, of Costa
Mesa, and Arthur W. Peck, 51,
of Anaheim, solicited and re·
ceived gratuities from a de·
veloper got under way Wednes·
day in Irvine council chambers.
The pair. along with inspector
Manuel "Manny" Linares, 34, of
Corona, were charged last Dec.
26 with soliciting liquor, food
and. overtime from a construc-
tion firm in exchange for easy
sign·offs on inspection sheets.
The three men were subse-
quently fu-ed from their jobs.
Bullard and Peck appealed
their dismissars, and ad-
ministrative law Judie William
F. Byrnes is con acting the re·
sumng bearing in Irvine.
After talking to police, Collo
said investigators taped a
phone conversation between
Linares and himself in which the
superintendent allegedly told the
inspedor he had alcohol ror him.
But when Collo delivered the
bottle, he apparently bought the
wrong kind.
''He wanted Jack Daniels
black label, and the bottle was
green label," Collo testified.
"But he said not to worry
about it, that he would give it to
Bruce Bullard."
Collo said he the n asked
Linares if there were other ln·
specton he should take care or.
"He said 'Art Peck,"' and sug-
gested Collo get him a bottle of
Jim Beam.
"Belter yet," Linares alleged·
ly said, "Make it J&B green
label." '
Several days later, Collo said,
he met the city inspectors at the
job site, equipped with a wire-
less microphone and the re·
quested bottles of alcohol. He
also had a box of cheese for one
inspector who did not drink,
Collo said.
Collo said Peck pulled up
beside his truck in a city vehicle
to pick up his bottle, and Bullard
followed moments later in his
car to collect his.
Testimony from otber corf.
struction firm witnesses and city
officials was expected to COO·
tinue today.
Attorneys for Bullard and
Peck are expected to present
testimony from defense wit·
nesses by Friday.
When the hearings concludjJ,
Judge Byrnes will take ~
testimony under consideraUqn
and deltvµ a ·recommendation
to lrvh)e'City Manager William
Woollett.Jr. within 30 days. . 1!
It will be up to the city
manager at that time to de·
termine whether to reinstate the
two men. ·
Mannequins figh t
e viction in Mesa
Linares didn't appeal his fir-
ing.
At Wednesday 's bearing,
testimony was b eard from
Steven D. Collo, job superinlen·
dent for Western Commercial
Construction, Inc., who said he
was approached by Linares in
mid·August.
By JERRY CLAUSEN Of,,_ 0•11' Piiot Sl•ll
Four mannequins are huddled
insid e the doorway of Bessie
Mae Hill's Hill House Costume
Shop, afraid to go outside.
Actually, Mrs. Hill dragged
the dummies inside after a
policeman cited her for clutter·
ing the front or her costume shop
al 1914 Newport Blvd. in Costa
Mesa.
She pleaded guilty in January
to maintaining an outdoor dis-
play contrary to city ordinances,
but she said she is upset with
how the city handled the matter .
A policeman, she claimed,
threatened to handcuff her and
take her to jaiJ if she didn't sign
the ticket.
The City Planning' Com·
mission met this week to con·
sider her request to put the man·
nequins, clothed in period cos·
tumes, in front of her stor e
again.
But planning officials said the
bearing was postponed until
March 23 because Mrs . Hill
didn't show up ror the meeting.
Mrs. Hill said she was at t.be
meeting but didn't want to ap·
pear before the commission.
"They showed a picture (slide
projection) of clutter, and I
didn't want to speak," she said.
"All I want to do is clean the
place and put the mannequins
out.
"But they (commissioners>
would have brought up that first
permit ... "
Mrs. Hill's battle with the city
bas been a long one.
Planninl officlaJs cited her for
code vlolatibna lncludlnl outside
storage and displays aa early as
the summer of 1988 when she
opened the costume shop.
Olliclai.1 said she ipored their
complaint.
In January 1970, a cease and
desist Ol"der wu eent for her to
close up ...W she complied wtth
city lawt.
Offtdala said 1he bad to •et
t:ld of outdoor dl1play1 and
ator... areas, 1et a pet'Dllt to
Uve end ~ lD the same build·
lq, provide more perklfte and
remOft coanaerelaJ Items from
hel' 1ara1e.
Planners said she ignored that
order, too.
So, th e city attorn ey
threatened to take Mrs. Hill lo
court.
A month later, she received a
permit to live in her building
and sell antiques, gifts and vin·
tage garments.
But the permit stipulated she
would have to get rid of items
stored outdoors and clean up
debris in the yard. It also de·
roanded the display of only !our
antique-like items out front.
The planning staff contends
Mrs. Hill still hasn't complied
wi~h any of the 10-year-old
stipulations. They have recom·
mended that the Plannlng Com·
mission deny permission to
place the mannequins in front of
her shop.
Mrs. Hill doubts that she'll get
her diJ;play permit.
"Nobody ..can stand up to the
City Council or the Planning
Commission. Nobody is that
goo.d." she said.
She said she's thinking now
a bout selling the business and is
trying to clean the outdoor
areas. ··But they want me to bring
the old house up to code," she
sighed. "That would be too ex·
pensive.
"You kinda get tired after 12
years of fighting City Hall."
The company was construct·
ing industrial condominiums in
Irvine last summer, and Collo
testified Linares offered favora-
ble inspections in return for
alcohol.
'·He said if I wanted every-
thing to go smootbly, I should
take care of Art Peck with a bot·
tie of Jim Beam." ColJo said.
Collo said Linares turned to
Peck and asked, "Isn't that
right, Art?"
"Yeah, I'm the Jim Beam
man and you 'r e the Jack:
Daniels man," Peck purportedly
responded.
Collo said both men then
laughed.
The job superintendent said
his boss didn't report the alleged
briberies until four months
later, at a time when the com-
pany was constructing a second
project ln the city.
Re said Llnar~ approached
him for overtime inspections
(for which the city bills fhe con·
tractor) and more alcohol in ex-
change for quick inspections on
the industrial cqmplex and a
mini·atorage facility.
''Really, we were hopln1 the
thing would so away," Collo
said of the ccntinulng solicita·
lions.
It was at that time that James.
Eldrid&e. president of the COD·
structioD firm, went to city of.
flcials to complain about the al·
le1ed bribery. Collo tesWled.
B a ring a nice d ay
Beachgoers stroll, wade, romp and sun·
bathe on a balmy spring day at Aliso State
Park in South Laguna. The stream that
mother and son are wading in was caused
by Aliso Creek s pilling over in recent
rains.
Valley cutbacks viewed
R esidents ~ked f or views on reduction
A new City CounciJ.appointed
committee has been instructed
to ask Fountain Valley residents il they· !avor redut:tlon or
elimination of services such aa
street sweeping, tree trimming
and recreation programs as a
meam of coping with imminent
city bud&et shortages.
The committee also was told
to discuss possible fees for
paramedic caUs and new assess·
ments to pay for street lighting
and city landscaping.
"Propo5ition 13 bas arrived,
and the council is faced with
making some very important de·
els ions in the next few months,"
Mayor Al Hollinden told the five
committee members.
City Manager Robert Vollmer
told the committee Fountain
Valley expects a sbortaae of Sl
million to $1.S million (or the fi.s.
cal year belinninl July 1.
Vollmer said ~ city bu four
alternatives: dip into reserve
funds, reduce ci~y spendln~, in·
crease local fees or employ a
com binatlon of the three sOtu.
lions.
City of!lciala cautiontd
against uae of the reserve funds,
noting this money would o_cjJ
provide a short·lerm solution.
They also said the funds cannot
be replenished.
The committee's flnt eom·
munlty meeting baa ben
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. 1hun·
day, March 19 at the G~
Clu bbouae, 18222 Santa Joanana
St.
OCC speech ch.amps • Will agmn • The committee members are
Ellery Deaton, Sam Cubete, RoJ
A. Rodiera, Don Chaney an4
Devon Dahl.
'
Orange Cout Colle1e's two-
time defendinl naUoaal cbam·
pionablp speech team captured
the flrst·place sweepstakes
trophy at the Sprln1 Champa
Toornamt!nt recently at UCLA.
Tbe victory marked OCC'a
flftl• w,...takea cbampioublp
this 1e•.
Tbe Pkat,., c~td bJ Peil
Taylor and Michael Let1t., wtO
defend their state cbampkmblp
March Z1·29 at Cypress Collese.
OCC will put Its national cron
on the line ·April 13·20 In
Sacramento.
Tony Cuo mo of Newport
Beach woo a 1old medal ilor
OCC in penuuion at UCLA, 8Dd
earned a lilftl' medal tn oral in·
terpretatJoo. Richard Rieth ol New~ Beach captured a told
medal la duo interpret.lltloD and
a brome tn lnlormatlve.
Karaa, Miller of Coeta .....
and Doq Benion al Tustin tied tor ftnt In apeeell to eatenaiD,
wlille Rkurd Rliq QI Ooata
ll11a WM ftnt ID d90 lftterpnla·
t1oo.
Otbv tropbJ winners la·
eluded: Sue KJrwan of Santa
AH, lecaad lD Ro ............
Uon and third ln speech to mt.er· -
ta in; Alice Reich of Orange,
second ln duo interpret~tion;
111ark Gauthier of Coeta Mesa,
second in e:rtemrraneoua, and
, Ron Richards o CO!lta Mesa,
second in oral interpretation.
!Allee .lnaor of Costa Mesa ,.,reaebe4 .._. quarterfinals ln
lJaco&n·.DRJlu det>.tec OCC •Ul*'ior certlftcate win·
Den lnel\lllled: Stepbaale lrilb ol
1:1 Toro, Dave 1Uek ol 8'1Dt·
lDctoa Beecb and Mona Buet1e1
ofeo$lljlla. Exe91.lmt nrt.lftcalel went to:
Allee Enlor, Ilona Buckley, 1J
Smitll, .lobn Ulrlckaelt and
Barry Kinman ol COila Meta:
Doug Benson of Tustin;
Stephanie Irish ol El Toro, and
Tim Mum 'I Santa Ana.
One OC~-Reader's Theatre
team won a1sllv•r medal with ltl
pre1ent~tlon of ''Sky
Creatures." Th41 team lnchlded
·TODJ C\¥)IDC) ol Newport Beadl, )(art Gautlller of Oolta M•a,
and A.Mee Reldt of Oru••·
The other occ Reader'•
Theater squad finl1bed third
wllb lta performance ol
"Suck:C'S." Tbe team lncJuded
Karen Miller IDd Ron Richards
ol COila M•a, and Sue X.lrwu
of Santa Ana.
Public speaking .... .,
fean examined 1
Public apeaklnl la tbe nu= one fear of moet Amert ,
who plaeed lt dead ol ,
slckD ... baDknl,U, alid .....,
fears in a reeent ..,...,. * CODq\lel'JDI the fear ol pu
apeakiftl will b9 tM roe-;.a
tree, two·HHlon work••
acbeduled leturda111 ll~J: and 11, at Ooklm W•
in HwatlnltGD a.di.
Tbe cJUMI wW b9 betd la
coll•I•'• eommualtJ eH r from t :_, a.m . to lJ:ao p
I
I
I I
•I
I •
~-1'2.
~I
Safety
caps study
DEAR PAT DUNN: How effective have
safety caps been in r educing poisoning
among young children? Sometimes I wonder
if they are worth all the bother.
H.T., Corona del Mar
Poboa coatrol centers report that duria1
tbe flnt ah yean after safety packallal was
required, taaeaUoas of aspirin by cllUdrea
bad deereHed by SC percent. However,
lageatloa ol pracrtptloa drup by children
bad deellaed oaly IS percent.
Tlte Nadoaal Safety Council estimates
that betweea lit aad ztt clllldttn under a1e 5
die from accidental polsonln1s (solids,
liquid.I, aases ud vapors) and about llO
cbildrea behreea a1es 5 ud 14 are poison
victims eacb year.
National Polson Prevention Week Is
Marcia lS lo %1. laformatJoa materials from
the Couumer Product Safety Com mission
sbould be available at most pharmacies, and
consumers -particularly parents of
preacbool children -are 11r1ed to study
available materials and renew precautions.
Tbe CPSC also bas launched a pilot effort
to Improve compliance by pharmacists with
the Polson Prevention Packa1lng Act.
Elderly and handicapped persons who have
trouble uslag s uch packagla1 can obtain
re1ular caps under the laws.
Tocut to die lrlM
DEAR PAT DUNN : I've heard so many
versions of the Irish poem (usually used for
toasts) which offers the hope that ··may you
be in heaven long before the devil knows
you 're gone." What are the correct words for
this toast? In view of your name, you're
probably a good person to ask.
H.R ., Newport Beach
Not necessarily. Irish people tend to
diaa1ree about everytbinl, and seldom admit
It when they're wron1-Here's the version I
learned: "May He bold you ln the boUow of
Hl.s band. May the roads rise with you, fair
weatlter to your heels. May the wind be ever
at you back, and may you be a 1001 time ID
heaven before the devil knows that you're
1oae." U that's too bard to remember, just
toast with another old Irish standby: "Here's
mud lD yoar eye!"
DEAR PAT DUNN: 1 changed jobs three
times in 1980 and think I paid more Social
Security tax (FICA) than required. How can
I check this? Also, is it necessary to use the
peel-off label that comes with the forms
booklet?
S.T., Irvine
If yoa worked for two or more employers
dllri.D' 1• and to1etber tbey pa.id yoa more
tbu SZS,M in wa1e1. too much FICA tu
probably was witllbeld. If tbe total amoa.nt
wltblteld exceeded Sl,587 .17 for the year, you
are eatlUed to claim tbe uceu oe yoar Form
lNt or lNIA, U.S. 1Ddlvldaa1 Tu Retllnl. 1as says that ue of tbe peel-off label
1ave1 proceulD1 time aDd speeds refanda.
llake certala It ls correct. U It a.a•t, mark
tltroap It and make the proper corrections
oa the label. Show your apartment number II
yoa haveoae.
DEAR 'PAT DUNN: I have some
Hispanic friends who are interested in
learning about their consumer rights now
that they have become U.S. citizens. Are
there any bilingual cons umer guides
available? J .S., Newport Beach
The U.S. Omce of Couamer Allain, ~
Office of Hispanic Affairs aad tbe U.S.
Departmeet of Education have pabUsbed
••ell a plde. Tiiie plde profldel laformatioll
abollt eoenmer procrams ud se"lcea la
&Ile aoveramnt aad prtva&.e oraubatiou
relaU., lo dally basic aeeds ~ell as food,
lllHa_,, Mal&la ud traasportadoll. It also
empllalbes couamer respaulbWtJ of belal
lafenaed a8d aadentaadlal eeuamer lawa,
rllll&a ud metllodl of recoa.rae.
Coples can be obtained from U1e
Coanmer laformatloa Cent.er, Pueblo, Colo.
IJMt.
a "Got a problem? Then write to Pat I • ... 1 Dunn. Pat will cut red ta~. getting
"' tM an1wers and actMm JIOU nted to 1
•
•olve inequiUe• m govemment and mumeu. Mail JIOUr qw10ona to Pat . ri Dunn. At Your s.nnce. Orange Cooat
OoU11 PUot , P.O. Boz 1560, C~ Met0, CA nm. A•
mcn11 Wfff"I OI pouible will ~ CJMOatd, but phoned
tnqwrif• or l~tt•rt not fnclud.iftg Ow rtodtr'• full
Mme, addr• .. Giid butfft•ll hotlrt' p/tOM ftl&m~
cannot be ~cd Thu column appeara daU11 ez.
ocpt San:to,1."
,t
I 0 I l .... _...
PKlLAOELPHIA (AP) -Bablel wbo
tlHJ> an their atomacbl are mo" apt to dev•lop mal!ormed Jaws and unattrac-
Uve facial features than tlds who aleep
OD t.be1r backs, 1aya a apeclalilt who
preaeat.ed h1a paper -"Why Ralae U1·
ly Kids?" -to a dental conference.
Parents worried about proper de-
velopment of tbelr child'• featu.rea have
got it ~I backwards. saya Dr. Hal A.
Huggins, a dentist from Coto.redo
Springs, Colo.
"We say 'don't sleep the baby on its
back, you'll flatten the back of his
bead.' " be scoffed. " 'Turn hJm over
and mash his race!· "
frontal a...a, lite of OYer ~ UW. mem·
brane booel that will evtntu&Uy de·
termlne t•cla1 featur•.
"THE CALCIFICATION of the bona
around lhe face be1ina al about two
years," be said . "And by lhen ln many
cases lhe dama1e la done because of
preaaure exerted durin1 aleep.''
HugJina, who atresaed that outrlllon
also plays a vltaJ role ln healthy de·
velopment of jaws and teeth. noted
there are areas of lhe world where peo-
ple are almost free from maloc:cluafons
-abnormalities in the comin1 tocether
of teeth. And in these areu, he said,
children and adults sleep on their
backs.
''Tb.tr •SJ!MI ve luipt 1A fltll·llb -~ tlou and DO pntM&H it b~t to ..... ••ahlat u..u-,.~ ...
HuQlna said that back •*Pen hav.
flat backa and shoulder bladee ud they
stand UJ> straiatll.
'·My orthodontic patients slept on
their stomach•.'· he a aid. "Their
postures were 1louebed forward and
their shoulder blades stuck out llke
wtncs. They had recedinl chins, severe
anterior crowding and narrow I aces."
SIDE SLEEPERS, HE said, had one
shoulder blade that atuck out and were
more prone to unlhateral crossblte.
. ,.TUMMY SLEEPERS have receding
cnins. severe anterior crowding and
narrow chins, as well as curves in their
spines and a nasal septum deviation,"
Huggins said in an interview Wednes-
day during the 50th annual Liberty Den-
tal Conference here.
Huggins, a specialist on dentlll maloc-
clusions, explained that at birth, the
skull is primarily composed of cartilage
that eventually calcifies, or ha~dens.
He said the first part to calcify is the
occiput, or that litUe knot on the back of
the head . The last part, he said, is the
He has studied Indiana in New Mexico
and Arizona who were reared on
cradleboarda.
·'They have outstanding postures,·· he
said, "and a lack ot crowding of teeth in
their jaws."
HUGGINS ALSO NOTED lhat sec-
tions of the Amazon Valley have pro·
duced generations of people with ex·
cellent teeth and facial structures.
''Children in these areas are carried
in hammock-like slings," he sa id .
Huutns also noted that people who
slept on their stomach• or sides with
their hands under their bead s
sometimes developed one nostril that
was smaller than the other because of
pressure against the nose.
Asked bow a pillow, or even an im-
mobile hand, could exert enough pres-
sure to alter bone structure. Hu1etns
pointed out that most orthodontic tools
used to correct such things as maloc-
clusions exert only 30 or 40 grams of
fo rce.
"A human head weighs 16 pounds."
he said.
Patricia Roberts ,
Harris, secretary of ~
health and human
services durintr the •
Carter admintstra -•
t ion , will be a >
scholar-in-residence
a l t h e National 1,.
Academy of Public
Administration.
Washington, D.C.
SACRED TREASURE HOUSE • COSTA MESA ·
FIXTURES · SALE
:TMI It A Secriflce i. Deed.._.. ... WlMI Jlttf OM ti;MI-GIT RID Of OUI
~ STOCK & STOH AJTUnS ••• e. 11le ~ rottlMe n-.. . •v:•u Of Cott Or Lotti ....... "--Y• • ....., N hw S.. O• S• .. . To S.W 14114 S.Crifke4 At A,,._.. Of TIM ....... rrice.
STORE HOURS
DAILY 10 to 6
CLOSED
SUNDAY
THE onDERS ARE ...
SEll OIJT ENTIRE STOCK
REGARDLESS OF LOSS
STORE CLOS
TlL FRIDAY
TO SLASH
ALL PRICES!
OUT M>IS IVHYTHIH• .•• Al c:..t ••. ..._. Cott ... lelow Cott ... M•••
... ~ We lHlhe n.t IXTUMI LOW NICI la T11e Ollly TllilMI Tll ..
Wtl • .... .. qu1c1 • f'Osmvl UQUIDATIOMI eo-AM '"' ... Y• ~ .. w,_. At 111eN 584SATIOMA&. ClOSIOUT rllCIS!
• s EN s AT 1 o NA L Cli;:-v AL u Es
ALTAR SETS
"ARTISTIC" The co ....... set
i11ch1d e1 24 " cron, polr
ccmdlntidu with hlb• C--... pair
VCIMS with hen, ....... detille, 5
piece, noR t.,.sh. 2 Giiiy
BOOKS-BOOKS-BOOKS
:~!!5:~~ ...... 59888
TMolocJy • C0ttcordaftce -C011MMllfart.s • Sett Help -lible Dictionaries ·
Marriage • Falftily, ChoriMtatic, Gro .. Study, ChrisHan UvincJ. DotiRcJ,
WOIMll, Sciftce -Ev9CJelism • Prophecy • History • Mcrvic)ator Dfs-
ciplesllip. Victor Stvdy • Cllllh • MlsskHMry • •• • Christie11t Recdllig-
Christian Fiction -ChHdretts Plchwe looks • Story looks • lecniinq
looks and rnon. 1 OO's upon IOO's of c..,,..... books on virtualty any~
jech by many of the worlch l'ftOst rebown authors.
BIBLE ST ANDS OUR ENTIRE STOCK
"ARTISTIC" deh1xe brou tonH, 1 /3 1 /2 2/3 Off hea•y CJUOCJe b rass lecturn, • •
adlusfable. .. ........................................ ..
=~!:·~~ ...... 524 88
llcJ Mtectl_e~~~ss '°"' J°"'"'
---------------.. Mew American St011dwd, Th• • "PRECIOUS Uvlltg llble, lllllstrated Clllldl ... ...... Irides llbM, L-. rrw.
MOMENTS'' R.ferenc• liblH, Co~.
Ptf'SOftd shtdy, ClllCI ,,_,, ......
"JONATHON AND DAVID" dock Mmy are leattlet-bomd. • ...
lncludH Fl9urlnes, Vases, lud dlllae. A few are listed.
Vows. Cups, letls, W• ,....._ s488 P'ruellfatioll Plates, etc. HG. $7.95 $ 1" iCIMprlce ••••••••.••.
:~!·:~....... .. . . -!:P:.~!~~ .......... S6•
:i!~:~ ........... s2• =~~~ ....... s1p
=~~:~ ........... s311 REG. $42.95 s 19'8
_C_H_Al.-IC_E_&_P_A_JE_N_..... --CC::THiis.io $16.ts ..
Delo• solid brou, gold llned Y3 lo % OFF
ccwc•llnlon ctip, matchlftg,.......
:;:!~~ ..... : s29u ~DJ,!!.'!!! ----------------------•..s ..... ~ ... by .... CHRISTIAN =~~::·. 7.";~"';'ci.r·
JEWELRY :a:~~ ...... s3t1
FRAMED PICTURES
W.. ••a,.._wt of a.we. Art wn. Maly. Socn4. 5p11aa111, 11c.
OUI IMTlll STOCI
1/2 OFF
~ ........... 1911"!~
GREETING CARDS
~ assortment, All occosiom and
Specialty , lncludu notu,
mlllCMlftCemefth, party. baby. etc.
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
1/2 OFF
STATIONERY SETS
"DAYSPRING" wide y_.;ety of
IMplratt011al ••HGCJ91 dKorate
tJtH• Hts, variety of co1ors,
l•cl•des paper and matchlnCJ
_.e1opes 1n mt 01Tay of si--.
:;:.!·:~ ........... s 1 ''
:~!·:~ ........... sra
PLEASE NOTE
Hew advertised are but a aaifillng
of the ltetM on sale! I OO's .-i
I 00'1 of others, Gifts mid 9-s. ens. ._..,. sffcken, ..ts mid
crtlfh. w ..... wall dKor, kltdlew
ptoc .. s, clocks, 111lrron, book
_.... Ncet1M holden, wu:h....-y
....... desk ltetM, gfft .. bond cns.wedcht.._,md_...
Ylto%0FF
..._ 94hwffte4 •r• •led .. ...,_"-'...._ .......... .. ,.... .. .._.._..._.MST
COMl ... Mnsav•.
AT COST~ NEAR COST! BELOW COST! •• SACRED TREASURE HOUSE
122 East 18th St. • "COSTA MESA
Pl~·Of Free Pcrilng In Aear -SH Map A.boYe-
.. •• '.
,
112 East
18th ST.,
SEE MAP BELOW
Plenty Of Porlcing In Rear
CHURCH SUPPLIES
l11lletl11s, Colftftu111lo11 C•ps.
Wafen, Church Reccwdl. Cardi.
Marriage Certificates, .. lllMI
Certificates, Pastors Selpplles.
Welcome Cards, Membership
Certificates, Com"'u11ion wan,
TreaM1nr1 Supplies, nvelopes,
Ubrary and Church Records and
Much Much More.
ENTIRE STOCI
CLOSE-OUT PllCIO
50% to
80% OFF
SUNDAY SC~OL
SUPPLIES
TretMndous stock lnca..dn VI.al
aids, Pencils, TeochlfMJ Aids &
... piles, Rannel lack9a.ck. Art
supplies, Coutructlon Paper,
Croch RoH, Charts & a....n.
Show & Tell, AH~ Ccrds,
Arch looks, VIMICll SOIMJI. U11ua 'f
Tole...., GClfM Oftd Le....-g c.'Ch
and flWCh more.
ENTIRE STOCK GOIS
1/3-1/2&
MORE OFF
--.,--· .. -.. ., ............ ... ' --...... -...._. .......... , .. .. .......... . . "" ........ _ " .... -... ......... ' -I
.
'
--··· -. ... -. ,
I
•
I
12 Spedalty faniltan
centen under one roof
• Sectional Center
• Traditional Gallery
• Bedroom Center
• Leather Gallery
• Steeper Center
• Oak Center
• Family Room Center
• Contemporary Center
' 2 LOCATIONS!
' Ralphs Warehouse
131 05 Harbor ll•d.
at McArthur)
Cearance Center
CHOMI PUIMISHIM•S MAI.Lt
Pictured an actual Httlnl• In our
newly remodeled lhowroom.
·--' --' ... . (
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Thur.day, March 12, 1981
l I
7 FURNITURE STORES UNDER OtE ROOF!
CARPETS • DRAPES • TV
STEREO • ANTIQUES • DESKS
BEDROOMS • LIVING ROOMS
DINING ROOMS .
llllplls I •=:ISHINGI
.. MALL
,
•
.·
BJ ILUY .IANS ICAaCBLLO ot .. DeltyNll .....
Sunahlne after the ralnatorm was a
welcome 1ueat at the =• brunch for members ol the SU Club'• ol directors.
Jim and Barbara dtBoom boated the
catbertna lD tbeir Newport Beach home u a
final party before lnltaUat.lon ol new olfteen on
llarcb21S.-
Cecil Shirar, out1oln1 president, umouncecl
that the club will bave 2,552 memben by that
date, which alto celebrates the ll'OUP'• l5tb an-
Dlvenary.
Orl1lnally planned as a temporary
or1anbatioo, the 552 Club helped raiae fund.I to
bulld tbe boepltal '• tower and just kept on
1oin1.
"We were 1otn1 to bold membenblp to m ,
but of course we dropped that idea as IOOft u
we sot tbe 552nd member," aaid one club
director.
The next acMduled fund-raiser ia a barbeque
in June, but Tom Wblte, tbe lncomin• president,
may try to squeeze lD another before then.
Club memben are still recoverin1 from
their intenalve Clambake Wffk activities wblch
raised more than SI0,000 for the boepltal.
Gene Baum, lncomlD1 vice president, will
be in char1e of next year's Clambake Week.
Amoni the ,uesta were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Salata (he's tbelr roastmuter general), Mr.
and Mn. Harry Babbitt, Dr. and Mrs. Richard
Harano, Mr. and Mn. Paul Schloemer and Dr.
and Mn. John Drews.
Tom Caaey, this year's Clambake chair·
man, was there, as were Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Kilmer, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stevens and Dr.
and Mrs. Donald Drake .
A Scandinavian delight,
' A gourmet dinner with a taste of. the far
north was hosted by Reed and Rita Sprinkel of
Newport Beach.
They invited the Newport Beach Gourmet
Society, a group of friends who dine together
every month, for "A Scandinavian Cuisine -A
New Experience."
Mrs. Sprinkel, a representative of the Royal
Norwegian Embassy, coordinated the menu
with the help of Gene Piquemal, executive chef
at the Chanteclair Restaurant.
Alber Kramer, manwr of the restaurant,
carried out the theme w• an ice carving of a
Viking helmet and ship created from 160 pounds
of clear ice.
The host explained each of the courses
beginning with the Scandinavian hors d'oeuvres
of Steak Tartar, herring, smoked salmon and
Stavanger sardines served with beer and
aquavit.
Guests a lso enjoyed Creme d'Aspergus
d 'Argenteuil, salad, poached salmon and
Pommes de Terre Persille follpwed by a
champagne sor bet.
Main course was Escalope de Veau Piccata
and Legumes du Jardin, and dessert was
HAPPENINGS
"Omelette Norvetlenne," a namln1 baked
Alaska. E!Qoyinl the Nord.le dinner were Glna and
BUI Bennett, Berit and Larry Schenk, Martt and
• Stewart Swidler and CeCe and Claude Whitney.
A/Mewell to PTA. Peg
Pe11y Ttmmona ended her live years of
service to the Corona del Mar Hi1b PT A on a
musical note. ,
The fl'OUp's talented alumni played "Peg of
My Heart" for her on ll::uooe at a fareweU
luncheon held at the Sherman Gardens in
Corona del lhr.
Kn. Timmons wu honored for her work on
tbe ''Spinnaker" newaletter and her out.standing
Job with communlcatlons amon1 studenta,
faculty and parenta at the school. •
Table favon were Chinese fortune cookies
wblch read, "Conluclua say -Pean is Miss
PTA, PTA is Pe11y."
Mistress of ceremonies waa Mn. Donald
Sloper, and the pest of honor received a few
speeches aloo1 with a number of tributes and
good wiabes from the 50 attending.
Guesta included Dennis Evans, principal of
the blgb school, PT A president Mrs. Michael
McNalley, Mn. Dean Kates, Mrs, Rex Layton,
Mrs . Charles Ringwalt, Mrs. Robert Horne and
Mrs. Sidney Buell::.
Kicking up their heels
The Punch and Judy Guild of the Children's
Hospital of Orange County ·kicked off ticket
sales of their May "Bear Revue" with a wild
West roWtdup In Irvine.
The chuck wagon came equipped with chili
and all the fixings , and more than 70 members
and guesta kicked up their keels for cowboy
dancing under the direction of Phillip and
Kathy Dunmeir of the Cloggers of Irvine.
Sally Jardine and her Bear Reveuue com-
mittees are in the final stages of preparation for
the May fund-raiser to be held at the Orange
Coast College auditorium.
Helping with the cowboy roundup were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Jobbins, Jr. and Mrs . Robert
Pugh and Mr. and Mrs. Bud Gardener.
'March Mayhem' due
The "Cinderella Guild" of Children's
Hospital of Orange County will hold its annual
"March Mayhem," Saturday, March 28, at 7:30
p.m . at the Santa Ana Country Club.
The event will feature dining, dancing and
"casino gambling." The charge is $80 per cou-
ple.
For more information, call the Children's
Hospital volunteer office at 558-2462 ext. 277, or
673·6544.
Cap·ricorn: Do not force • issues
FRIDAY, MARCH 13
By SYDNEY OMARR
ABJES (Mar. 21 ·Apr. 19): Important proj·
ect is near ~ompletion. Know it, be willing to·
let go and to outline fresh concept. Focus on
property, security and rapprochement with older
family member. Leo, Sagittarius and another
Aries figure prominently.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Idea, originally
considered a long shot, proves valid. Humor,
versatility and intellectual curiosity combine as
"winning trinity." Proceed with confidence.
Call or message leads to short trip. Take in-
itiative.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20 ): Logjam to
financial gain is removed. Focus on money, in-
come potential and bunch which pays divi·
dends. Needed material becomes available.
Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius persons figure
prominently. Check instructions.
CANCEa (June 21 -July 22): Circumstances
favor your efforts; diversify, give full rein to in·
tellectual curiosity. Inquiries draw favorable
responses. Be aware of pertinent mailing lists.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
W ..... T .. W..t ........
IUJ...,.._.lh4
Co1fo ~ -541-11 H
ashions ·For M ' Lady
Up To 50% Off!
"We Go To All Lengths To Please"
Jr., Mlasy, Women'1 11Jea 4·20
# 17 Monarch Bay Plaza
Crown-Valley PkwJl!Ccxut Hiway
Laguna Niguel
499-381% 411-%%31
JACK ANDllSON
ftlVEALS In the
•·
llillPlll •
HOROSCOPE
Focus on communication, original approach
and personal appearances.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22 ): Insights are gained
in unorthodox manner. Associate relates ex·
perience which might border on the occult. Be
open-minded, but not gulllble. Pisces individual
plays prominent role. Accept invitation to
theater or dinner.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Doors which bad
previously been closed will open due to special
communication. Gain indicated through written
word. Focus on travel, variety and favorable
response to s pecial r equest. Romance is
highlighted.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Satisfaction re·
ceived as views are vindicated. Focus on busi·
ness enterprise, career, standing in community,
prestige and1lonor. Compensation received in
conjunction with promotion, added responsibili·
ty. Take famlly into confidence.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Travel, legal
affairs and special communications will be
highlighted. Streamline techniques, get rid of
superfluous material. Insist on definition of
terms. Overseas correspondence aids in
transforming abstract principles into viable
concepts.
SAGl'M'ARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Em·
phasis on credit ratings, financial prospects and
investment related to close associate, partner or
m ate. Capricorn, Taurus, Virgo persons figure
prominently. One in authority expresses con·
fidence and grants your request.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Surprise of
pleasant variety dominates personal scenario.
Don't force issues. Patience is an ally. Accent
on legal affairs. possible partnership, willing-
ness to make intelligent concessions. Project is
completed.
AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Peb. 18 ): New job
could be in offing -focus on independence, in·
itiative, clarification of basic issues. Leo, Sagit·
tarius, Aries persons figure prominently. A void
lifting heavy objects. Member of opposite sex
aids in achieving goal.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Emotional re-
sponses dominate scenario. True feelings
surge to forefront. Accent on children,
significant change of routine and outlet for
creative capabilities. One who t8ught vou much
in past is due to make reappearance.
madine's
A Private Hedth Cub
For Women
• Sauna • Whirlpool
• Sunroom • Masseuse
• Nutritionist • Aerobics
No Contracts
2 FOR 1 SPECIAL
.
Two can join M8dtne'a
for the price of onel
Off er Expires March 31st
' 3 Oraft9! ~ locations to ••"•.you
Newport Beach
2038 Quail
751-3200
·Huntington Beach
16857 AlgonQuin
846-3377
Mi&Jion Viejo
24194 Alicia Pkwy.
770-3200
•
Reed and
Rita Sprinkel
(left) host
Scandinavian dinner.
Chanteclair's chef
Eugene Piquemal
supervised all
preparations.
Meanwhile, Cecil
Shirar r below left ),
outgoing 552 Club
president, chats with.
incoming president
Tom White.
Deaf man
makes jury
LOS ANGELES <AP) -For m any peo· pie. jury duty is a nuisance to be avoided if at
a ll possible. But for Leonard J . Meyer. it was
a privilege he was ready to fight for.
Thanks to a st-ate law that took effe ct
Jan. 1, no battle was necessary as Meyer last
week became the first deaf person in the
county to complete 10 days' jury duty -in·
eluding sitting on a Municipal Court jury that
cleared a m an of soliciting for prostitution ..
''I felt the r esponsibility op me was
awesome, but I felt honored lo be silting
_ there," said the SS-year -old Meyer, who
''listened'' to the l wo·day trial with the help of a1
sign·language interpreter paid for the the
Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness.
Meyer had expected to have lo put up a
fi ght to get on a jury because he had been
scheduled lo report last Dec lS. before the
new law allowing deaf people to be j urors
took effect. However he fell ill and his
service was postponed until the new year.
More than a year ago. Superior Court
Judge David A. Thomas had refused to allow
a deaf woman lo serve on a j ury. citing a
state law that required a pr;ospective juror
"to be in possession of his or her natural
faculties."
The law specifi call y stated that blind
persons could be jurors but did not mention
the deaf Thomas ruled that hearing was a
natural faculty
Women's self-defense
workshop readied
A workshop series on women's self-defense
will be held from 10 30 a m to 12 30 p.m . on six
Saturdays beginning March 14 at Golden West
College_
The program, emphasizing techniques of
judo and aikido, will be taught by black-belt
judo instructor Ken Vanderlip.
He will include physical and mental train-
ing lo build self-discipline, confidence, self·
control and physical fitness.
Admission is free. but enrollment is limited.
Registration will be completed at the door on a
first·come basis.
Participants are asked to wear loose. com-
fortable clothing. Telephone 893·6250 for more
information.
Go Bass
or Go Barefoot
'Ba,~ Sunjun~. reJd~ no"' 1111.1k~ \OU ngh1 1hmu~h
'prin~ Jn<J 'umm~r. on J uniqul'I\ .:u,hfrnwd ,1 •k
1 h.11 pu" 'prln~ in ~our "~P .1111.l ,, 'ilHk 1111 "'ur l.•l l'
• '
I '
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 1randaon
asked me a queatJon I ~·t answer. Maybe
you can. He wanhd to know wby tbe
weathermen on national TV reter to lndlana u
tbe "llldwest." I a1ree with blm that Indiana II
Mideast.
Aa a former teacher I rec:all we &bowed our
puplls a map that divided the states accordin1 to the lllaslaslppl River. Tbe states alona the
Pacific were lhe Far West. The plalna states of
Kansas, Nebraska and tbe Dakotaa were the
Midwest. The states ejlst of tbe Mwisalppi were
the Mideastern states. The AUanUc Coast states
were the East. No way could Indiana be con-
sidered the Midwest.
I wonder what people in Califomla tb1nk
when they hear such statements. Please com-
ment. -0 .M. Of Syracuse, N.Y.
DEAR 0 .11.: I caUed Joa. CoJemaa, whoee
frleaclly, dowa·llome wea&laer commealat"y II
laeard oe ABC ("Good MOl"Dblg, Amertea").
Jolla said, "I've llad muy complaia&a aboat
bow I refer to vartou reglMs of tile C099try, so
I h·y to .Uck to tlle &llldebet of tbe Natlollal
Weatller Service. It ls lmpoulble to keep every-
body happy because there are so muy cllf.
ferent poalbWtJes. ladlana, for example, cu
rl&bUally be called one of tlle Great Lakes states,
or Ute Ollio Valley, also paft of tlle Ceatral
Midwest, and on rare occastoes, in Ute Eastera
part of tbe U.S."
I tbeD caUed Willard Scott, the jovial, su-
sblny wealberman who does bis lively number
oa NBC's "Today Show." He said, "People
from ladlaaa think of themselves as
Mldwestenaers -not Eastenaers. I refer to In·
dlana as the lower part of tile Oblo Valley, part
of the Great Lakes area or the middle Mlsslsslp·
pl Valley. Hoosiers do NOT consider themselves
Easterners." ·
F. Gordon Barnes, tbe golden-voiced mete-
orologist of CBS News, said, "I tbiak tbls pro·
blem dates back to the time when lbere wasn't
mucb west of the Rockies. Altllougb Indiana ls
In tbe Eastern time zone, It Is definitely con-
sidered part of the Midwest. I can teU you that
&M ..................... reeetd It ....
&laey are ealled Ealltenen."
So ... .....,,. .... 1WJ ................... ..
&lae 8Jl'H~ aellool1, ••JM &laey'd beater la· vea& &a Mme MW .... nub fw wrt&a.s.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I know the odds of
gettln1 a letter ln your column art about
2,000,000-1, but maybe I'll be lucky. · ·
I am writinl about the problem of mistaken
ldenUty. Here ls what happened to ·a hie.nd of
. mine: We were walkin1 home from church on a
beautiful day bavin1 a pleasant converaaUon.
Suddenly someone 1rabs my companion from
behind, belina to jerk him around and kick him
in the a;roin. The assailant yelled, "Mite, you
low-down dirty so-and-so, at last I caught up
with you -you lousy crook. I want tbe money
you owe me."
When the b1a-moutbed bully saw that be
bad made a mbtake, be said, "Gee, I thought
you were someone else." The poor fellow he ac-
costed nearly bad a stroke. We bad to caU a doc-
tor, who gave him medication to calm him
down.
We know it was unintentional, but all the
same it was a terrifying experience. Whal can
be done about an incident like this? -STILL
OUTRAGED
DEAR STILL: Your friend Cllll Ille Ulat bot·
tempered fellow for assault and battery. ADd I
hope be does. It might help him tlllak twice
before be attaclll ••other lnaoceat person.
ls alcohoUml ruining your U/e? Know the danger
signala and what to do. Read the booklet,
"Alcoholi!m -H~ and Help!" by Ann Landen.
Enclou SO cents with your request and a long,
stamped, ael/-oddreued envelope to Ann Landen,
P.O. Bo:r 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611 .
Home cooking no· more
If you are under 10 years old, there are
three things you cannot relate to:
A day without denim.
Real money.
A home-cooked meal.
Last year, in a typical household in this
country, everyone in it ate out 6.4 times a week
( m ainJy the main meal) at a cost of $25.86 per
week per household.
It should be obvious to everyone that moms
have not kept pace with the competition . While
fast.food emporiums were developing secret
sauces, mopping fl oors to music, hiding prize.
winning numbers under the lettuce and putting
apple pie under a red spotlight, moms were
pushing the same tired well-balanced meals.
Face it! Food is show biz! You have to have
pizzazz to keep kids eating at home. When was
the last time you saw your mother standing un·
der Golden Arches singing about hamburgers?
When was the last time she wore a derby hat
and tap-danced with a cane while serving you
pizza? Or cooked Chinese food at your table
while juggling two meat cleavers?
I don't excuse myself. I was one of the
mothers who thought home·cooked meals would
go on forever. l became sloppy, careless and
look the family for granted. Then I realized we
were eating out all the lime.
.. l said to my children one night. "How would
you like to stay in this evening and have a
IRMA IDMllCI ~-------------~,......._~~
home-cooked meal?"
"What's a home-cooked meal?" they asked.
"It's 'where we stay at home and mommy
cooks dinner."
My son propped my mouth open with a fork
and said, "I'll have two burgers, three fries and
a chocolate malted."
"No, no, dear," I said, removing the fork.
"You don't understand. Mommy cooks
whatever she wants and serves it ...
Later as I spooned beef stew generously on
their plates, I saw them heading toward the car.
"Where are you going?" I asked.
·'To the car. and' how do you eat this stuff
with your fingers ?" .
"You don't. You use silverware and you eat
at the kitchen table.'·
"What's silverware and where·~ the little
flag on the table that we raise for more catsup
and more to drink and seconds on the chips?"
"You get up and get the stuff yourself."
Afterward, as I washed and dried dishes in-
to the night. I couldn't help but wonder ii the
home-cooked meal didn't deserve to die.
When patient turns the corner
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Isn't it true
that often the patient is a better judge or his prog-
ress than the doctor? I am a registered nurse
(retired) and have on severaJ occasions ob·
served that the sick often know they have
"turned the corner'' sooner than their doctor re-
alizes it.
I think every wife will agree that this is •
often true when their husband is bedded down
with the flu. For the first few days he will be
quiet (except for a few groans) and docile. He
will talte his medicine, turn over and try to nap
some more.
Then, even though his temperature is high,
you will know the turn for the better has ar-
rived. He will suddenly become irritable, ~
gressive and difficult to handle. Within hours
his temperature drops and he is threatening to
go to work the next day.
As a doctor, don't you find that similar
signals are spmelimes better than scientific
tests to determine whether the patient is im-
proving?
-MRS. U.
Dear Mrs. U . : Some patients ask for a
cigarette again; others, for their favorite food.
It's true that patients have their own signals
that point to reeovery.
I t.bln.k you'll be Interested ID tbe following
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
letter to the editor of the Annals of Internal
Medicine, written by Drs. Alfered I. Kaplan and
Stanley Savin: titled "The Upetlck Sign."
"We bave noted that many of oar female
patients on feeUng better or on 'taming tbe cor·
ner' in their lllaesses greet as on monaing
rounds wtlb Upstlck on their Ups where none
was present earlier ID their bospltalhatlon.
"In interviews, they tell us of a· renewed
sense of well-being, of having 'lanled tbe cor-
ner.' Coa.seqaeatly, we have come to accept the
'Upstlck sip' as an accurate l.adlcator of oar
patients' subjective status when It appears,
even If physical flndlags seem to be at odds wltll
probable Improvement."
Some docton beliew that every ccue o/ obelity
should be conlidned OM o/ potential diabetes, .aya
Dr. Stdncrohn in his bookln, "Watch Your Diet
Becauu Fat Can Kill You." For a CCIJ1JI write mm at
thia newapapn', enclosing SO centa and a STAMPED,
SELF-ADDRESSED ENVEWPE.
Dr. Stdncrohn welcomes queatlonl from re~ra.
He cannot amwer all individually but wiU include
· those of general intere&t in his column. ·
The two-toned spectator Is back t
. Pappagallo looks better than ever 1n rich leather perked up with perts!
SUperb with your suits. ·
Baldwin
Pianos
Wtth Calf .......... "' and ,ox
•nd Organs
LESSON! INSTRUMENTS
TAPES · AECOAOS
-
MUllC CENT EA t.· A·rt .,ft04'9'ffft"'4 MMCtt•
,..,...,. llMM ....
OAtU tM.,.. tf • --T--.f'lll IM
White Cell Wlttl Ten Tip
•nd f'ox
both """ •acMcl .... ,
~ ~~~SHOES
99 Fashion I stand . . . Newport Beach
_,_
A.AA ?I010
AAtto10 I.,. .. ,o I
• 759-9551
Color it orange
Final judging in this year's ··color It
Orange" art c;ontest took place Satur-
day. Some ... 3,500 entries were submitted
by kindergarten through 12th grade stu-
dents from throughout the country, all
of which were receiv ed last month prior
to judging. Helping to accept some of
those entries were (above, from left)
Pat Hitt , Bobbie E vers and Aline
Thistlethwaite . Sally Storch f rightJ was
among the judges Saturday. Winners.
all of whom received scholarships to the
Laguna Beach School of Art, included
(below, from left) Costa Mesa High
School art teacher Lynn Pringle and
students Mary Fisher and Mike Paff.
The annual contest is sponsored by the
Designing Women , a support group of
the Laguna Beach School of Art. Area
winners included John Boucher and
Dick Krause of Irvine High School ,
Robyn Kennedy and Kristin Sherratt of
Marina High School , Keith Kliman of
Laguna Beach High School . and Jay
R,odriguez of Fountain Valley High
School.
15455 JEFFREY ROAD
IRVINE, CALIF. 92714
o.11,,. ...............
MUSic.
EDllC&:JaON c T8R
OfFeRiNO •••
Primary Course .............•...... ege 4 to 9
Keyboard Fundamentals .......... tge 7 to 11
Electone organ, Guitar ................ All IQM
Composition .................... Under 11ge 15
"" ""'I lld iNFdRMUiON'· Pl.81 ,. CBl4 • • • ;--:
.(714) 559·5440
•
Realtor1 tryin& to peddle new lma1e
liOnaWT1lW'f98'UM.a trtentMWIMllllMIW .._ .... taae llAMI ITATUll8'"
T.&.-. t'94 ,,.. ..,_."' ..,_ •r• .. ,,,.
"M.lllCAN ITATI UNI( .. "'!I-. _,_.., .,._.f!W T,_.. ~IM......... A MAH ftOtl AU. MAIOMi. ..
.._,._,. ... of If_. Wll.I. .. l.L. C ... k.-,W91N....._CA. ... I
AT "U II.IC AUCTION TO THI Mie,_ C. .-.-., -0.. ....
JOHNIONDAL& <AP> -W•nda U9't
wbat \beJ Ulld to be for tbe cantak• and 11 Nl6·
deatl ol tldl ..tim• Calllwwd• lumber mt.Qlal com....., ol IOO emJ>loy ... M boulea U4 taint
tflOHUT l lOO•llt POlt CAI" ue-e-....CA.-1
d1•lakla ............ , ........ , .i-1~ wua"'-·-•-r INJ'•• •• 11111e et ..,. 111 i.wtut o... ~.-......toe._"'" 'I"~ -a vm " -_.., 11\eMJ ti 1111 Ulll ... SC11e1> ell rttM, Lo..-IMCll.C.A. ..,, or u lduealkw1l w ,_.. ...,, 1111e _. ,,._. ,_,.. ..... ,... t111a _,_ .. ,....,,, .. w • ,.--~-----------...... .._~-~---.....:l llel4f "-" ~..,. 0... ti Tn.tt t,. ...., .. ....,_..._ ' Ille,,....,.., IW .. Mftor lltte....... ::-:1----
CT£tRlET081RMNOHTRK
L S J R E N k D R E A R E 0 A K R E
R A C 0 U L D L R D C S l F W W R M R
E ~ H tit N R N 1 0 A V V F L 0 W A Y U
T R T M U X E R E S U M 1 M L R 0 E l
V XS 0 Al HG I N'A SS 1 F 1 ST C
S T R N Y C L W U N H M E M F M L l A
0 S W 6 S A S t N R U C R 1 H U M E l
R A C E T M R A R 0 K l S E H U S A U
N Rt A M E S 8 C C R C A C E R l
E M H H E S T H P L S 8
N E H A E E P P T E 1 S H M R U W H S
V I L M Q S E R Q C 0 l L E H L C M
E N Q I A l R S I U K D N R D l E Z E
0 P N A 0 T V R E l T l C 0 l 0 A Y 8
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
11·11M P'ICTITIOUS •USINESS
SUPlltlOlt COUltT OP TH a NAME STATllMllNT
STATIOl'CAl.ll'OlllNIA Tllo fof-1110 119rson II doing bull·
POlll THll COUNTY OP O•ANOll MU H :
CASllllO: Ate1911 MOUTAIN EMPIR E FINAN· llOTlCllOPHllllONAL Cl.Ao, •4. A ... Clle11lllly, 1 ... wpor1
alPltllUllTATIVll'S SALll OP 8oecri, Celllomie tl!MO. ltlAI. NO..ll•TY AT Semuel Oltu, rt 4 Rue Cllenlllly,
PltlVATI SALll NewPOrl 8ooc11, Ceflfonrle 92'60.
Prell c 1•.111 This bu~lnou ~ conducted by .,. 111
EMett of dlvlduol
U.ltltfE A, CHASTAIN Somutl 0.M
Notl<0hher.Oy9l"°11tl\OI JEWELL This slot-I WH 111.S with IM
WILTY, H~rtonel rtPf"•tentelfvoof County Clerk of Or01190 Counly on
, ... esloto Ol .CARAIE A. CHASTAIN, Morell 10, 1911.
dt<teMCI, •Ill Mii et prlvoi. ••••· lo fU7stl
.... "''""' end boat bidder. under Ille PuDllslled Orengo CMll Dotty PUol,
101ms •114 c-IU-M roiNIUr m•,.. Morell 12, tt, 2', April 2, ••• 12.5'-ll
llllflM, --ioc1 lo conllrmollon by
PUBLIC NOTICE
ffCTfTIOUS •USllllSS
Ille Superlcw Cour1, on Merell U , 1''1,
•I 10:00 A.M.. or lllorHllor within Illa
lllfto •11-" by low, el Illa office Of S.
NOAM.AN Bl.ACK, all0<110y 10< IM
l>OfMINI r-ewnlellv•, et Suii. 101E, llOI E Perl<court Piece, Sente An•. NAME STATllMENT
Ce '2701, ell Ille r loflt. !Ille, llllorost Tiie foll-int ~ ti dotflO bu•I·
•1111 •ll•t• Of the oec .. sec1, onc1 ell u.e nu s H
rlglll1 tit It, Into roll, 0114 utei. tllat Ille 0 E LU X E FU A N I T UR E Ulelo of CARRIE A. CHASTAIN IM· HOSPITAL, 217 _. __ Strffl, Coll•
<Huct, flet ecqul'9d t>y -•ti~ 01 M«Mr, C•flfornl• 92627
low or otlltrwlw, otrier lllM, or 111 911. WHiiom G. Far_.u, 1121 Or•not
dlllofl to, INt of Ille dt<Nsed, el Ille Ave11U•, ColUI Mow, Celllorn1• 9~17.
Um• of lllJdNlh, f11 e11d to ell lflel u r· Tllll IMNMU Is concluc:ted by .,. 111· talll r .. 1 pr_.ty, sHuolod 111 Ille CHy dlvlduel
of So ni• An o, Oreno• c 01111ty, WllllernG. Ferewen Celllornfo, commonly described H This ttal-1 w .. Hied wltri Illa
23)$ H. O.kmonC SlrMI, ...., further Cou nty Clerk of Ore1100 Couftty Oii
del<rlbed•; Mercri 10.1•1 ·
L,ot 10, In 8t0ck B of T reel 3TI, 09,. fU1M
mOl'lt Perll., H shown on • Mep r•· Put>llSheel Or-Coest Oeoly Piiot,
trailer pub. In tact, .nothlJll much bu been the same liD~
t.bt town ae.tlld £n tbe 8eq\loU Natlooal Forel•
lott lta llwllbood In im wbeD the federal IDTWD·
mtnt IDd t.M lumber compeny coWd no Joq-er
work out dlftennces ln a Umber and l&Dd ez.
chance. · Loaint operaUou •tarted 42 yean earlier UD-
der the excbant• arrantement, whlcll allowed
A.mericu For'elt Products Corp. to tr ... f--1
land to tbe ICWU'ftment for Umber in the Sequolu.
TU COMPANY, a 1ublld.11ry of Bndls
Corp., 1av1 up m.Jor lopinc operatlou lD the
area lbortly after Conarees destpated aot,000'
acre• north ol the mill aa the Golden Trout WUder·
nesa area In 1971.
Bout•n1 a hllb school P'aduatin1 claaa of ooe
in it.I ftnal year, Jobnsondale abut two yean aro
after lo11ini at lta peak had brouebt enou1h bull·
neaa to support a bar, a community ball, srocery
store, restaurant, riding stables and several old
mlll offices. A vacant hospital house, where some of the
town's children were born, remains alon1 the
main street with Hilltop Coiffures, the community
beauty salon.
Now, a quick $3.5 million could brtn1 a
owner and a new face to the community.
THE OWNE&S, Sierra Producu of Terra
Bella, appar-1ly feel Jobnsondale is out or the
logging business for good and are looldn1 for a
possible buyer in someone wanting a resort area.
A real estate agency is advertising the com-
munity as a possible "conference center, ex·
ecutive or religious retreat, condominium sub·
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTICI TO CllllOITOlllS
OP •ULX TRAlllPElll
IS.CL 6101•107 U.C.C.J
Noll<• •s h•roby 01•011 to Ille
creditors of JEROM E TAUBE.
Tr•nsf•ror. ,..llOM t>usl11•u oddrou Is ,,, .. G••Y Fo., City ot C.oflyon L.tko,
Cou11ty ol 777??71?, Stele of
Callfornle, 111•1 • t>u" trensl•r It
•OOUI lo be .,,..,_ to JOtiN S. HOI'
MANN •nd MILOAEO JUNE HOF· FM.ANN, Trantl•r•os whow buMllUl
•ddreu It M Hempton Roed, CllJ of
Grout Point• Woods, Sl•I• of
MtclloOell Tiie pr-ly to t>o trensl•rrt<I Is
<MKrlDod 111 .. nerel es. All ltock Ill
tr•d•. flclu,..s, equipmenl •l'ld oood
will of that J-lry butlnou k110•n ••
AU PE AT'S DIAMOND PALACE •nd
IOC•ltd •• S"'4 Edlnttr Avenue. City Of
Hu11Unot011 a...:ri. County of Or.,, ... Stele of CAfilorlllo.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
ALDEN WYCLIFF
CARPENTER aka
ALDEN W. CARPENTER
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A107921.
To all heirs ,
benefic iaries, c reditors
and c ontingent creditors of
Alden Wyc liff Carpenter
o f Laguna H i ll s,
Ca Ii fornla, and persons
who may be otherwise In·
terested in the will and/or
estate:
A petition has t>ffn filed
by Mark H. Gilder In the
Superior Court of Orange
County requesting that
Mark H . Gilder be ap-
llAllROQT
,IOSIS ••• -113" a•
IUtllClOT '9 IOIM
#l'l:a ••• l •••••• '4" . .,., . #I ..•.... • . •.
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU• 8USINEU
HAMI STATllMlllT
.............
IOX•ftlll
180"1 .•
....... ··••· ·• 5 9(11. 54n a u,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITlOUS 8UllllllU
llAMll ITATllM•llT
Tiit foflowf110 PffSOllt •r• dOln~ Tri• loilowlfl9 ll9•ton• .,. doing butfM U OS TRENT BRAICICE ANO SCHAF IUal...un. HITZ, LTD:. 2 ... ll Neille Goll Ao9ll, INVEST0111$, LTD., 10101 Sloter
Leouno Hiiis, Cellf0tlll• t2'SJ ~:l~j~,~~1~11, Founlel11 Ve llOY",
Robert E WllH lor, Me11•oln~ PU•LIC TAX CORPORATION
G•ll•r•I P•rtMr of Tro111, Lid., • IHC., • (Aflforllt• C0'110f"Ollo11, 10101
C•fllorllie ..,.., .. pertMrtlllp, 2 ... 11 Sletor Ave., Suite 111, f ou11l•l11
Nt lll• G••I Roed, L•oun• Hiiis. V•ll•y Cellfonll••170I
C•llfornl• t2'». Thts' butfllOU Is COftd11ctod Dy •
J o mu G . Brekkt, G•11•r •I llmll•dl*1Jlf"hlp.
Perlntr of Trtnt, Lid., • Cellfor111e Pulllk To Corp., Inc
.. ,..rel _..,..rshlp, USJI Broken Bil T ...... Semte L•M. U.00-Hiiis. Cehfor11I• t2'SJ ~ •
GIOM w. Brekke, I ll Brodlord This ... ,_, WH tiled ..... the
SlrH I, ~. Cellfornlo t ll... County Clerk of 0r .. oe coul'l1y °"
M•ll-F. Sc:,,.rrfln.. lltll Fitch Fot>ruery 14 1•1.
Ave11ut, lrvlllO, C•llfor11I• '2714 ' "'"*
Tiiis bUllllOU is conduc:l•d by • Publl-Oronoa eo.11 Delly Piiot o-r•I pertMr"'lp. • TRENT, LTD. f'oll. 1'. MM. S, 12. It, 1''1 ts.-tl
by Ro«»r1 E Wn. ter,
M..-oeolflO G-r•I Portner
Tiiis stat-..! wn 111911 """ 11• Cou11ty Cl••• ot 0r ..... County on PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiit bUlk frM•f., wfll lie conwm meted Oii or eli.r trio 111 dtY of AJ>tll.
Itel •I 10:00 A.M. et PROFESSIONAL
ESCROW SERVICES. -•cldr ou
I• lt21 HOr111 Tushn ""°""' CPosl Of fo<e 8n llSll>. Se11to .Ane •2701
('27111. C..lllornl• TIWll UM IHI CS.I•
for II ling Clelmt In Ille oter-rel•rr•d
to llereu1 II Morcl'l llll, 1911.
pointed as persona l fmse1 PtCT1nousau111111u
rep r es en tat i ve to ad· Pub1;s11ee1 <>r•noo coH 1 o a11y Pllol, NAM• ITAT•M•NT
Mercri 10, '"'
So for es IS kno •n to 1110
TrensforHt, au ouslneu nomfl e11d
eoorei$1i useo by ,,. Tr.,,.sferor'tor
Ille put llVtt yoers ere AU PEAT'S
DIAMOND PALACE, 1 IOCOllOl'li, MIS
Cri•pmen Av•11ue, O er4o11 Grove,
C•lllornl• '2641 ANO JU Wost 4ltl
StrHI, S...to ""6. COlllorlll• t210t.
Oetod ,,_,_y 2711\ '"'· Joflll s. HOii ......
Miidred J-Hoff....,.
rr.,sloree
Put>lltheel Or-..... C:0.'1 Dolly Piiot,
minister the estate of Mare11 12,1t,u.~11 2.1"1 1•al Trie1e1...,,. .. per_,1,do411obut1·
Alden Wycfltt Carpenter, ,..,.:~01C1CEEPI NG P Lus, toto
aka Alde n w. Carpenter PUBLIC NOTICE Moody Sir•••. Cyprus, C•lllorlll•
(under the Independent *».
Ad i . t . E W•-... 1 ... -..... --y m nrs ration of states flCTITIOUS •USINIU SlrMI, c.,,,.... Cellfwlll• tOU>.
Act). The petition Is set for NAMll ITATllMINT 1o1or11 ,,,,.,.. .... MO vort.e Sir••.
hearing In Dept. No. 3 at Th• followl1111 P•rlO<lt •r• dOl110 Oro1190,Gllffonllot .... 700 Civic Center Drive, o..11,....... Trita llutlllft• " cOfldu<t•d by •
West, In the City of Santa THE A1GG1NG co. no1 w. co .. 1 llmll911 ...-11119.
Ana, California on April 1. ~1~ ...... ,.._, 8 .. , ... CellfO<'lll• Tiiis !°.:::!i '::"°111911 •It" 111e
1981 at 9: 30 A .M . L•wrenco AIM "'°'9911, ..-111 1111• c-ty Cl9" of 0 ... 11 .. c ... lllY on
IF YOU OBJECT to the StrMt, C..te-. c ou1or11I• t2'21. F.O. 11, 1"1. .,1...,. corded 111 8ooll ••. •I P•oe 4 of ml•· Merell 12. It, 26, April I, '"1 12u.11
<oll•n.ous moPS, Records Of Ofenoe
Cou111y. Colfforlll•. PUBLIC NOTICE
S.m Vocc.oro, lOllJ Hunt•r ullO, •JOU• granting of the petition, Hunu""°" 9Nch C•lffotlllot21M6 P'*411Nd 0r.,... CN•I Dolly Piiot.
you Should either appear Trirs bu•1,..., ·,, conducted by • , ... 1'· 2', MMC11 s. u. "'1 1M-t1
MAircll u, 1•1
Tlllt w te Is wl>je<I 10 current teus.
covt11en1S. <ondlt10111. rutrlcllont,
, ... rvotlOllS, rlgllls, rloMs Of way, P'ICTITIOUS •USIHESS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Hltm.itlt, •114 oxl1U110 •n<umt>rMCH , NAME STATE MINT NOTICE TO C•llOITOllS
of record. I Tl•• 1011-1,,. 119r10t1 Is doln11 lflll· OP' •ULIC T•AHSPE A trie term• •nd c-lllons of '"° .. ,. MH es cs.c ...... 1., u cc 1 .,. C•lll ill IOwf ... mo11t1 of'"° Unit· PETTINGILL MARINE, 111 Nolle• .~hereby 0°lv0•~ to lllt
"Slates of Amtnu h ll peru111 Oii Alvorsld• Av•nuo •• F , No .. porl <rodllOO of NEAL P. CARROLL,
Ille •m ount Dkl to eccom.,.riy the olf•r Boe ell, Cellforvie •2ll6l. Trensforor, -I>•"'""' -•ts fs ~ 1~• !M'ofonc• 10 l>o D411d on <Ol'I· Robert Ev•,,. Ptltl110111. 110S Oek 219 South J onson Wey, City of r0>• °" U I• by Illa courL T •us. H1vtn, ...,._im, Cellfornl• Full•rt011, Coullly of Orenoe. Stet• OI
,.,.15, -r•llllO ...., melnC~nu ... Trill busl110u 11 condvCIOd by .,, 111 C•llf0<nl• llWll o O..lk trMlfff Is .-.1
PtMOS, •1111 prerlllums °" insuronu dlvkluol. to lie mede 10 DEE c . LYOE.LL •"4
ocuptelllo 10 Ille pur<IWlter shell be AOCI P9hi11Qill ANN T LYOELL. T -Ifft wrio
IM'ff4llod .. of the CS.le of rocordlllO of Tllh tloloment WH flied w1tri the O..siM~ eddrtU It ;.SI V•r:... Cl':.
Ille convtyenct. TllO uamlnetlon of II County Cftrk of Orenoe Gou111y on cl• City pl Huntington Beech Count
ll!j_ rtcordlllQ of conveyenu, •114 any M•rcll 10, 1 .. 1 of Orongt, Stole of C..1110<111•.' Y
111111 l11wr....:o potf<y 111•11 be •I Ille '1S7• Trio ..,.,.ny to lie trMafen'ed It
t•lltnt• of the""" ..... '. PublltNd Or-eo.11 Delly PllOt, IMKrl-........ r.. .. All llOCk 1 ..
81dt or oft .... •r• lll•lted for '"" M•rcll "· ... u. Aprof 2, Itel •U•·•• tr•IM, '"''-· OQUl-1 -~ ""~''' -must be 111 .. rltlllO •l'ld will or 111e1 prl111 "'°" b<ltlMH k/loWll wlU be ro<elvtd el Ille oflko ol S. as VALUE INSTANT PRINTING elld
NOAM.AN Bl.ACK, 01torMy for tlla PUBLIC NOTICE PtrJOflol roproaentatll;o et Sull IOJE tocetod 01 17tS N_.I B°"lovord, Cl· JI • • • -IY of Colt.a ~ c-ty of Oren90, , .. , E. -<°"'1 PIO<t, Serita AM, PICTITIOUS •U"INIU Slet• of Cellfomle C• '1701, cw rney be lllocl wllll 1he ~ · Clerk of the S-lor Court or de· MAME STATllMllNT TIM bufll llMsl ... Wiii lie COflwm·
11 .. r•d lo JEWELL WE LTV ..., • ..,... Tiit IOllOWlllO PffJOfll •r• doing m•l•d Oii or •f .. r ·~ JUI d•Y of
ly...otenyll,,,. ftorfl 1 bll tl of 1>u1111ouM. Mere ll. ltll e t 10.00 A.M. •I I e '°' pu '° °" RETIREMENT PAOPIEATY' PA Ol'E $110NA L l!SC AOW "t:':''r~°rt~r~C::~::~~:~~d~~d PARTHEASH1P,SOSl7tllStrMl,HU11I SE"VICllS, •""SO eddrm h 1'21 f illQton 8"<11 Collfotl'lle ,,..._ Nor1ri Tlllllll A-C Poll Offk.e 8o•
:::: ~Y •t the olfl<• of lrit •I· O.rtt< .;.,, Cllrlsllrw ...... 1 ... 1 115171. St11lo A11a '1701 ltl7111, ,,,: .__ ~ 119..-1 r0tw....,tetl••· Roo .. voll Lene H1111ll11Qto11 i .. <ri C•flterl\lo. Thel Ille l•I del• lor fllflll ..... r.,..n • r_,,911 10 ,.l«I MY Cofllornle ~ ' • Cl•fml 111 trie -row rof'rrff to llertln •·• 011 el•. · 11 Morell iOtn 1'11 Delod. Morcri u, 1•1 GerJ -C..-01 Clerk, SOI 17111 •o rer .. ft k,._;, I• Ille l rMlf.,.H
JEWELL WELTY StrM I, Hunl1119ton ... ~ ... Cellfornl• •" Dutl'!ft• ,..,..... Olld edor-• 11Nd
• ,.,_ R-•Mlltellv• n..a. Ill' 11\0 ,.,_.._ tor ,._ PHI ,,,,.
• • OI CARRIE A CHAS"TAIN Llbor\eel Gollul•t. ,,.. Coo"#-. Y•••t ero1 .._.
--· • SH I 8•«11. CofHor11I• t07'0. O•wd MMCh •• ltll.
at the hearing and state 110Mr•1 P«\ll0'"'11"'· PUBLIC NOTICE your objec tions or file T11is .~=:~:0;1::' •"" '"-
written objections with the cou111y Ctork or 0r ...... eo .... 1y on •
c ourt before the hearlnn. Morc11 10. "" P1CTtT1ous •us1111ss • P:K'* NAMll STATllMllNT
Your appearance may be Put>u.-0r.,,.. C:O.•t o euy Pilot, Tll• 1ooow1110 D41rt.OM e re doino
in person or by your at-M•rcll ll, ... , •. Aorll1, l .. 1 12Sf..ll bu•':"~ .. M PAO OUCTtONS, 117
torney. 1-·R•••r1•oe A-. Sult• F, N ... po,,
I F Y 0 U A R E •A PUBLIC NOTICE Boocri. CA1lton11• tau.
CREDITOR or a con---------------MAirv LOU p,.._eost. ••so ""'
t jnne t Cr d "t f th d Slreot, MJ07, H••POrl Beech, • n e I or 0 e e -PICTITIOUS •USlllllU C•lllorlll• ne..>.
ceased, you must file your HAMii STATIMINT Leonard 8. HHcoll. 10 0 u 111
claim with the c ourt or T11• ,.,,_1,.. 119~ is 001110 b<l&I· street. MJ01. Newpo rt 8Hcll,
present it to the personal MUJ-;~ T HOME SERVICE, 11' w c·;~~..:.,:·1. <OllOu<lod l>Y Oii Ill·
representative appointed ••• vo1e 11<••. s.11 crome n te, di.idu••·
by the court within four Colltor111omn . Moryl.Ou Pr-... 1
months from the date Jernn Gooroe Turpen, t1' w. ••• Trilt stet-t wu fifed wftri 111a
date of first issuance of 9V1•,•7•2n.<I•, s.... c 1o ..... 111 •• c.111orn•• c oul\ly Cltrk or Oro11 .. cou111y ori Merell J, 1•1.
letters as provided in Sec· T111. bonlMU 1. <Oftduc: .. d Dy .,, 111·
lion 700 of the Probate dlvtduet.
'1S7tu
PUOll-Or ..... C:O.st Delly Pllol, Morcri S, 12, It. H, 1•1 IOSO .. I Code of California. The Tri•• ~:::'-~.::.T~;:11w1111 .,..
time for filing claims wlll cou11ty c1.,k 01 or ..... County on
not expire prior to four M•rch 10, 1"'· PUBLIC NOTICE
months from the date of Publl-o..,,.. coett o.i1~1::::_ .. ,..,
the hearing noticed above. Mereri 12. "· 2', Aprtt z. ••• m , .. , P1CT1noua au111t•M
YOU MAY EXAMINE MMUTAT ... NT
ttie fife 'ker,t by the court. PUBLIC NOTICE Tllo 1o11-1111 ,.,_ .,. •01119
If you are nterested in the IMHl~:~ANTY PINANcr•L
estate, you may fl le a re· PIC'flnout au1111H1 S11111vica. 11• T-CM11ro Pie<•.
quest with the court to re· ....-nAHMllNT s..itolN,AMllMm,Glllfoml•,... .
celve special notice of the Trio , ........ --•n '"'"' ~ 91ctric cudl1 C--•·
T•U$TO.-, lltOHAJ.,O I . ••NN•TT Tlllt -ltMll wllll ...
.... lllTTY •u1 ....... TT, e-1., °""'" 0r ..... c-wty ... Tr111 .... ti IW ._.. P-llt Trutl PtWuef'yM, Hlfl,
deled OoctMNr 1!-UH: end ,. ..... lt0N4&.D I . llHHa1'T .,.,, •llTTY Plltlll .... 0rlfllll c-t Delft "ltee,
Mii •llHN•TT,HUIMlldOftdWlfe. P ... u .... ~1. ,., "· "" a•Nlll'ICIAlllY AM•ltlCAH ftt .. 1
$TATI aANll, e Co lllor11 l ol-------------<.,.., • •""-· PUBLIC NOTICE ••urdlld Alltlltl U, lt1l .. lnatr. N•. ,_ 111 ..... ''*· ,... "°Of .. ____________ _
Offlelel ...... 111 Ille ollk • ., Ille PICTtnout IMnf .....
•t<orw If 0r.,... c:....t1. ,.,. .... •AMS ITAT8MSllT
., '""' ... ,, .... ,,,. lollowfftt ,,,. leltowl111 ,., ...... ,. ... ,,..
prwany: lllUtl-•:
Loi ttOI Tr.ct Ho. '"8. In Ille Cit; NINA'S llllCOlllO SHOP, 111 No.
tf Cott• Mtte, COlllllj et Oreftet, Steto Anellofm aowltvord, A11eri•fm ,
tf CofllOrllle, .. .,... ,.,._ rocor-In Coll!trnl• tmS.
loelt MO, P .... IS le 17 lllChltlw of C•llo CMnocho, '411 0.;1-Cir· Mlte•ll-llMjl&. In u.. Offko .. Cl•, Hu11Uf191011 •••Ch, C•llltrlll•
111e counw lllocw w of w td COU111y. .,...., JIM "I(•• Alrwey .Avt n.,., Cosle Nino carnoc: ....... II Oo'10fte Clr
MtM, CalflOl'lll• Cit, Huntl119ton ... <II. C•llftflll•
"Ill • tlnt1 _.,_ or ~oml'ftOll ·~ dnl911et1011 Is ,,,0..,11 •Dove , 110 Trils IMKIMu It c~led '" a
we rre n l y Is g iven •• to I ts-'•'--""'-· '°"'010-..1 or corrocllloul.'' COii• ~ Tllo lltfttlklMJ under Hid 0.d OI Trilt .... _ ..... fll911 wllri u..
Trull. by , .. ...,. of • brffCfl °' defoull COYllly Clerk of 0Uft90 Cou111y 011
In trit obll90tlon1 socur•d tllarol)y, Merch J, 1.,.
Mretoforo a.-cuted -dtflvor911 1o Pll19M Ille u,,_sltMCf • written OtclorotlOl'I Pu1111.-Or-C-at Delly Piiot.
Of Otfolll\ MCI OemMld for Seto, ofl4I Marcri S, It, It, 2•. t•1 llMa-tl
wrllletl noCk• Of ~·" -Of OIK "°" -10 ceu" trie ...-11_.:1 lo Mii .. Id
proPfrly to .. 1111y .. Id ol>ll90Uo11s,
ol'ld llltrMflff I.he underal(lll'led ceuMCI
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI 8USlllllU
NAMll ITAT•MlllT .. Id llotlco Of tiroe<ri -of ofKllOll 10
lie rocor-O<lobtr 22. ltlO •• l11ltr.
No. »919 111 boOll 13901, peoe ••. of
Mid Olllcl•I Ro<.orcb.
5eld Ml• wfll t>t Mede, b<ll wlll1ou1
tovenent or ••rrenty, ••Prt11 or Implied, r_,d"'9 Ullo, _ .. ,...,.. or
011<umt>rencft, le pey U.. rOMOl11lnt prl11<1Pol wm OI trio noCohl tocurod
lly Mid Ot9d Of Trust. •111111110,.sl es In U fd llott provided, ed•l<>Cft, II M y,
u111Mr Ille 1 ... ms of w ld Oo«I of Trust.
IHt, <lleroea end UP911••• of IM
TruslM OIHI Illa trutll crH tOd by
.. Id 0-of Trust. Seid Ylt wlfl lie held Oii TUOMMry,
April 1, ••• •t 11.00 e.m. •I Illa offlc• of T. o . Servi<• Compeny, Bo11k of
Amorlu Tower, Suot• 1110, Oii• Clly Boulovord W•ll, Ore1100. Cellf0<11oe.
At llM llmt ol 11W l11lllel put>ll<ellOll
Of 11111 llOllCO, llW lotel •-I ol lllt
unpa id D•l•nco or Ill• obllg•llon
.. cu••d by IM •bo•• descrllltd dHd ol
lrull •ncl ostlrnetod costs, expenses,
el'ld advo11c:.s II $171,~l7 It
To <Mlorm1119 the -n1n9 t>od, you
mey <•II 11141 t:11.-
0 •t• Morell s, '"1 AMERICAN S"TATE BANK
H Wld Tru1IH ,
By T 0 SERVICE CO. ...,,1
By L•ncle Moy••.
Au1tte111 Secretary
0... City Blvd. Wost.
Or..i .. CA 9' ...
tll•I US .. 211
Put>lltNd OrOllOO Cotst Oa11y Polot,
Me rell, 12, 1', 1•. '"' 12ll·lt
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tri• fallowlfll --11 OOlng t>ull· ,.. .... :
SERGIO'S MARKETING COM·
PANY, IU Y, Opet SCr .. I, H•wPOrl
Baocri, eatlfornl• •Ml.
Strolo o Korie11, 1JSYt Opel
Str .. t, Newport Boecll, C•lllornla
'2 .. 1.
Trilt builntM It conduelod Dt Ol'I Ill·
dlvldu•f.
SffQelCONn
Tlllt tle-1 ••• 111911 with llM County Clerk of Or•-Cou111y on
Merc111.1•1
P1S7"6
Published Or-C:O.ll Dolly Piiot,
M•rcll S, 12, It, 2', 1911 IO<f..11
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUS •USINIH
HAMI STATIMINT
Tiit fotl-lnt 119rton Is dolllO OUM·
lltU OS OllANGE COAST L.ANOSCAPE. 10101 Birch, • ». 54111141 Ane, Cetlfor11lo '1707
W•YM LOwll Ku p•r O , 20102
Birch, • ». Sent•AM, Cellfor11l••1IOI.
This OUSlllO$• It <Olldll<tod by en 111·
dlvldu•I.
W•YfW L IC•-oll
Tlllt stat-I ••• 111..i with tM County Clerk of Ore,..e c ... nty 011
M•r<h3, 1•1. PU19ff
PuDllsheel Or-Coesl De lly Piiot, Merell s. 12, tt, a, Itel 1os1 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS •USIN&U llAMll ITATllMllllT flCTITIOUS •USlllllH
TM IOlio...1119 per-. It dOlllQ b<ltl· llAMI ITATIMlllT MU H : Tll• follo•l110 portons er• doln9
CHILI TIME SHOWS, 191JJ t>uslnessu. •onoll• ....... HU11t1111ton Boocll, COSTA CARPET CARE COM·
A f2'4t A-Id BMntlt Mflr•, ltllJ' PAHY. 1019 ~ve Piece. Cotl• llMM,
e9110llo, • A·I, H..,,tl11Q1011 Boocri. CArllfornle t2'27 A '2646. Lu lotr 0 lf•nton, 101' Grove
Tlllt bullllOU 11 condu<lod by •11 111 Piao . Cmte Mtw, Ceflf0<nl• t:IU7 lvlduel. AIDorlfs CampDtll, 101' Gro••
A-Id 8. Mltr• Piece. Costa "'9141, C•llf0tlll• t:IU I
Trill stet-I ••• filed .,1111 the Tiiis bu•inou It conducled t>y •
Cou11ty Clffk of 0r .... Cownly Oii o•n•••I pertlltrtl'llP
Fob •. 1"1 Lttt•• O BlentOll P'1HJ$7 Triot •teltmttnf wes llled with IM
Put>lltNd Or-eo.11 Delly Piiot, Cou11ty Cl•rk of Ore11oe County on
l'ob. 16, Merell s, 12, It, '"' Merell 3, 19'1 ...... ,,,, ...
--------Put>lltNd Or--Co.•1 Dolly Polol,
PUBLIC NOTICE Merell s. 11, tt. Jt, 1"1 • S....,
P:ICTITIOU5 au1111au
llAMll ITATllMllllT
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• followlllO per-. 11 dOlllO b<Jsl· flCTITIOUS •USlllllSS
MH H : NAMI STATIMlllT
8.A Y CITY ARTS, u Storflsll The lollowl110 P•rsons ., .. dOlllQ
Courl, N_,I lkecll, CA n .. l t>utlneu .. · Bort>Or• N. Mwrpriy, ,. Storflsfl COINS BY RICK, 3120 M<Ki11ley
Court, N._, Btocri. CA '2 .. 3. Strttl, Costa llVU, Cellf0<nle t2'2'.
Tiiis """""'I• conducted by •" in1 Oo11e td Aou Sc Ilene-. 3120
dlvid,..f McKl11fey Strt el, Cost• Mou.
TlllJ stet-I was 111«1 wltri Vivie n Scl'IOll<k, Jl20Mc1Clnley SI ,
Counly Clffk of Or.,oo <;ounly Coll• MeMr, Cellfornl• 92'h
BM"t>tr• N M•l'P"Y ~C•llfor1110 m»
Fobruery 24, 1911 Trils buslneu Is tOllduclod t>y en In·
PIS. lvlduel.
Publl,_ Or.,,.. eo.11 Doily Piiot OoNld Aou S<,,.,.<k
F•b 16. MCI Mtrcri S, 12, 19, 1"1 This _,_, wH lolod wllll ,,..
_.. County Cl•rk of Or•1100 County on
Marc11J, 1•1
PUBLIC NOTICE flS7 ..
Publlslled Oronoo eo.11 Delly Piiot.
Morell s. 1:1, "· 21. "" 10.•.e1 PICTITtOU• •UllllllS.S
NAMI STATllMClllT
Tllo follo...1119 "''°" 11 dolflO buSI· PUBLIC NOTICE ....... , ----
LA Bl •LIOTECA, CULi N.ARV PICTI TIOUI 8USllllU
INFORMATION SE AV ICE, P.O. Bo• HAMii STATIMllllT
11647, 1S7J El-Awn .... <•t• JIM .. , TM IOlfowlflO per_., It dolllO Dul ..
Ceflf0<11ie t2'27. MU H :
Hort>orl K. Allll, 1575 Elden MISS TA.ACEY SECAETAlllAL
Avo11.,.,C..tallV ... C.flfor11let21t27. SEllVICE, 1" Boet Ce11yon Drlv•,
Trilt buslMH Is conducted by en In· L•ou11e a..c11, Cellfwlll• t:i.Jt.
dlvlduel. Greco L.. Motcorltolo, 261 Ce1on
Hfftlerl IC. A.1111 Str .. t, t...-a..cri. C.lltornl• Trill •tel-I was filed •IUI II>• Tiiis bUlinett 11 condueled bJ •11 111· Cou,,ly Clerk of Oro1>99 County 011 dlvlduol.
MercJ'), ••I. G.L. Mot<orttolo PU71M
Publf-0r.,,.. eo.11 Delly Pllol, I flit :::0.:.::.~!.'!'91!1911 wttri the
Merell S, 12, It. 1•, 1•1 IOSM I Counly Clor·k of Or-c-ty on
PUBLIC NOTICE
MercllJ, IWI
PIJ71U
Publl-Or-C:O.st Delly Pllol.' llullMM •: 11911, O .... Yortl <....,.ellofl. 21JO
Inventory of estete assets TWO 81tOTHElllS PIUA, ,,... Tow11t C•nltt .... u . Sull• 104, PICTITIOUS •UllllllU
and of the petitions, ac· .,_._... ~. ,_..,11 vou.,,. Ano11o1m. CellfWN•,.... ....,.. STAHMllN~
I "°""""' 8LAClt Oe11I Cieri!, 1011 Adell• Clt<I•, t' ~· t'*" 4.._, ,_. ...._., 111..,_..tlvo Humlngton a..cri, Cofllor11t1 •-· fr 11 ;.,::11
.... 1111 Donne uo-. tOS 17111 itrMt, HUii ""lllltlted~.,,.. C:O.tt Deily Pflol,
Morell S, Ill. It, 16, 1•1 1203-11
1tll II. Pmkwrt "'9ce llflOIOll 8Mcll. (ellfor11lo t,... Meteri t1, t•I IJ04.ll .-. ..._ ce mt1 Qor..,. u11-
c o u n t s a n d ,. e po r t s C•Ulwlll• "711. Tiii• ....,,.. 1• c.oMuclM .,, • <or· Trio f011owt110 ~--11 do411t 0..11.
described In Section 1200 _._s..~·~,~.?!.~.'°'0
-·11-nou .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
""'"-Or ..... Coe-1 0.ll Piiot Thlt llot-1 wa Ill .. wllri '"" Mer(ri 12 tJ 19 1"1 ', ....... ; C°"nlJ Cltrk Of OrM .. C..11nly Oii PUBUC NOTICE f th C llf j p ob t ,..,......__ --~ -0-04 lilctrtcCrodll BRITAIN SUMMER TRIP, JU 1171 .. 0 e e Om a r a e Mlft Je 1Ce111, U'7 s.m11rero C:.-etMll Woke Forut Rood, Coate Mose. PIC'flnout Mllfllllll
' • ' -· Mercri 10. ltll Code Awl!W, ~. CallforN• -... 111.0. ,,_._, coiffor1110 n••· MAMI STAT•IQNT ,~c:;,,T~'::!:~:.·:::s Johnion, Bjorn Ile & Mer· ~!, ~ CetldUClod lly • Tiii• ::::.. ~ .... wltll lrit Mra. J .... Mllll ,...,.,, m W•k• Tiit followllll ,_..,.s .,. dol119
,_Clll01'HMS
l&LllOADWAY
MOSTUAIT
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IAUZIH•HON
SMITH I TUTHIU
WISlCUflf CHANL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mes a &<te-9371
.... ClllO'ntml SMl'TMS" MOITUAltY
627 Main St. ...,nt~~::'ach
rAc:.te V•W
t•tOmA&.rAD
Ceml'9fy Mortuary
Chapel
3600 Peclflo View Drive
Newpof1 9HCh
844-2700
PUllll
Pwblislltcl Or-C..tl Dally PllOI,
/tMrcfl 12, It, u. ~11 1, ••r 1110•1
DEATH NOTICES
'". 1.11 .... 1~ p~~111 tr• dol119 rltt .....,_.,_ C of PorHI Rotd. COOta -· Cefllomlo IUMMSI•: ..• ··--.-. .._... _,y CloA Oun .. C-ftty Oii .,.,., ClllEST TlllOPHY A AWAllOS. IUll~~·~~OWN LIASINO, mn·O AttOrMyt•lUW Tlllt :.:..:..-:.. llltd wltll Ille l"OO. lJ, Itel PU•t Tritt bullMst Is concluclod ll't' e11 111· llOJ UM. N"dW.., Cll't, Colllorftlo
•rookllurtl MAOI, Founltlfl V•ll•y, 5455 Wiishire Blvd., #701 Cou111, Cfwll ef Orel\ .. Couftty Oii , ...... ,...._. ,.._ ,. ••• 1 ""'ly Pt·~. dlvfdu•I. '""· L A I C 'if 90036 '"" --------""" -J1111t Miiis F...nor •uewu Lou'" er-••Y. llS e. Colllornl• '2708. 01 nge •t, • • P.O. 11, 1"1 "'°· If, :116, Mwch S, 12, 1"1 f7MI Trill st•l-1 ... 111911 wltri Ille .. .,.,1, Plea, SMte ,,,,.., COlllorftl•
Cro•n Oldsmollllo, 12U Eu l (213) 936-4241 '1""1 "701
Coforodo 8oul•••r d, P•Hd•11•, Publls ........ 0 c t l"WlllNd Or .... Olest Delly Piie«. p•-L1c NOTICE so.~11clriyJ.,c,1.•rlk of Oro1>99 County 011 c:i.rot..., LMllte JtllNOll. '" E.
)..0111or111et110. ,,.... r ange oas , ...... -.Merdls,12,tte1 ....., vu ..... MOOREHEAD 11 1111l11<or~t..i u to<leuon other Daily P ilot, March 12, 13, _ ----Publl-Or-Coest 0ou~'.!:,:~ :.~'Piece, S..te ""' t:Mtlwftle
ALIC E M . MOOREHE A D , 111•11 •'Tit~8i.OSMO•ILE 19, 1981 1307·81 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICllOPP•ll"AltATtOH 11Mrcris,12,1t,2',1"1 1070-tl Jiii• '-'""•la co'*"'" llJ •
reside nt of Coste M e sa. C a . CNr1os N. Teclldll•n OP 11•o•T1v1101cu111ATIOH feMr04 ,_,,.,.,""· Tflft ...,_. ..... !0911 with Ille --....__ LeulM ~..tty lince 1974. P a11e d away c o.1111y Clerk ot Orenoe Cou111y on PUBLIC NOTICE ..,.., irvfMRencriwatorOlstrkt PUBLIC NOTICE o;;;;;;.._...JefwM!t
Mar c h 8 , 1981. S h e Is Mercri 10,t•1. PIC'flnoutMlllNUI ooico~Dr•w Tiii• ...--,..., w1t11 ,,.
I d b h h b
PU71a ST P.0.BoaO.I
1urv Ve y er UI and PllOll-Oreriot '-' O•llJ Piiot llOTIC• OP AYAILA81LITY llAM9 AftM4191T frvl11• C.At271• PICTlnOUI llUSlll•M c-ty °°"' of er-.. C:O-Cy ..
Harvey w. Mooreh e ad of Morcrilt,1',1'.""'11!.1"1 ns+el OPAllllUA&.lt•l'O•T Trio ... ,_,,.. '""°11' .,. dol119 Tll• i 111v1HE RANCH WATER UMSITAT•MSNT ,..,,,,,I ...
Cotta Me1a, C a .. 2 s on a PursUMlfoS.C11011'1 .. 1111 oftri.111. 1111t1:;-~ MAHAO•MINT co DISTRICT I• Pl'0110rl119 • N•eell•• TM r111ow1111 --Is dol119 bUll· ~•llllld Or-CM• Dal!'~'
K 'R M h d PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,,,., R._ Code !IOtk t ... -.. " 0.cferotlOll lw IN proje<t wacrlbed -M· -... .. ..... arv e y . oore ea of • • s .... r_, -, ..... ~. T ... tl,., CMllWl'll• 11e1-.A "Orlfr'N--'lw0.Ctor .. 'on TW0ENTIETH C£NTUlllY MUSIC Pet>.lt ... Msdll,11,ltl'I• ln-tl
S I ~k C l U h Ol•ell ..... Ille __ , •.-rt '"' .... .,... .._. ..... • t a e ty. ta and • U.LENO.Alt -'""of GEOlllOE T. . ,, .,. Ille 0( .... Olstrk l otflco •lld It PlllODUCTIONS. ,.,. ,._lllte ~ ...... Alb t W. M oor e h ead o f s~~=r•'°"0,~ .. uu"'Poo•'11~~1 Pl"LEGElt l"OUNDATION, • llt'lv•.. lllMiwtW.wi.ty,!7•ve1•-. ev•ll•bl• for public 111epoe11 .... A c.1e-..,c..1"'9nll••••· PVBUC NOTICE
Id h d ht D I -.. loulldellon. 11 ..,•llOlll• •I llM loul'ld•· Ml•IMY\Oi.. CollllfwMet .. 1• Nt1•Uw Oocferellen wlll be con· llltMld IC. McCot111tlln, 1U6 a • au1 e rs e n ze POlllTH•COUNTYOPO•ANOll ....... prlnclpel offlc• fot ·~u... ltotl'••• •• Cterll. Ult Per '""'"for ...,-ov•I or dlNWrll•llll Pl•ml111• Orlu, CUii MH•. o•M•TOIMOWCAUMPOll
Probe rt -Costa Mes a , C a .. o•oin-:t:Jw~Ulll durlflO ,...,.., buslMss "°"" 1,0,.., lorwtcll 1"1•<•. Newport 8Hcri ..,,,,..._.oto1reeono1t1100t1trk 1 COllllN1lle,... ~OPMMa
and Juanit a Bales of S alt 111 Re PITllll THOMl'SO~~ e .m. to s p.m. t>y .,,., clllte11 wl!O r• t:Mlftntt•..., •lll•m~t1111to11tlltklMerchH, 1•1. Tiii• ..,..,... •• c~ 11,.,, lft· CMS--• A-"'111
La k e CI l U 1 h 1 0 Ml11er. lrJ P'LOlllA THOM.....,N quests 11...itN11 1111 •rt •fl" tllt data Tiii• ...,.._, la ceHIKI" '' T11tproJ«tc..imo11ritfel._lftt: •Mw.t. '" .. ......, fl ... A#MCeUM .,
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• r a n c h I I r e n . 2 HI• .... ,,.,, for a..,... of Trio fOUfldO(fOft's office I• focetecl •• ,...,,.. ....... , Projt<I -: ·-"°"Of JOO It. of Tllll .....,.._. -Ill• wllfl Ille MICHA•L. l"ATT•~ •• 0.."911
step-grandchildre n . 10 ~:.7:10,..,.. Sullt 211, uo1 weatc1111 ortve, Tiit•......,... -111• "'"' , .. IMh domntk ••t•r me111 111 Her· c_,, Cltni et 0rllfl99 COUlllf °" ofN-
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1 reat -1reat·1 randchlldren . '"THoo,,,M.P,ao.llNJ ".,",,'.'aft, ·0'1'·p~'T•'"•' Tiit P'lllCIHI MltM9tf"Of Ille,_ ::Vti:'oictWM!I •PrtJoct LOUllH cuocttlcl : .. ,..,.,MICHAIL. .. ATTllltlOtrl "", .....
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• re • dotlo11 ftOIOlllGI T. PPLIGElll. ...,~.._I Nor111MMffJlfMldlel_,Mt_llle '°'*llflM °'Miit CNal o.lfy p;,.._ --'ftl91 Ill IN• -1,... 811 "*'el·
e r v I c es w e r e h e Id T1."1,0MPSOH_,. ,__ ...-r tltflt'911 Pub11.,.,..0r.,..~ oo11y P1io1, .. _____. __ ,. .... ..:.._..-......,, kf>J~~, .... 11 '~.,.. ltMt,. '-" ,...,. 11.-.Metdl1, 12, tte1 .. .., '"'"' .,...._ • ,,_.. 111..,...
Wednesday. March 11. 11181 w1111~' .. .,,:;T:°~~·~ Morcri 12,1"1 ........ ,...._,,_,_..,.y_ -..'110ott--_,,_Mll*DICOtflCttNtlMA
at 10::.>AM at the Harbor :'HFo~~1r:;',:''nV'n 1>0J.11 l"WlllflMG>lfllllCMMo.tty=li;,•b~~-: '0 "''"'"'°"c-· PUBUC NOTICE · ,.,1f~~!'.!.~811 ,__
Lawn Mortuary C hapel with SHELmr~~HOH: ...... 1',at, Mwdl .. II,"" OM1 Doterl11C1911 ..... , ... , "',... -.,..,...... Ill .. IMlW ........
Pastor Walte r o. Shetner of._::,~ lilO:::f.=:.'M:'':il: PUBUC NOTICE !~!:'~: ::i::;.~= '==::=~" ::-.-::==::: :n'.,:;~
the C hurch ot The Nazarene ~!""' 111a ~•:• •":i PlJBLIC NotlCE lleft!Htk ...., """" .,.._ lr91'f\ TM ,........... .......,. ,, ...,.. -.. • ...,.. ,..... ~ .. ~" ""·
offlclaUnf. Interment wUI be °'"'~;.~·~ el: P:1CTtnout1ut1•1• Mlc11e1H11 I• Mot11 1trot1. Trio ,. • .,.: , et 11:• .. datl e.111 ..... .,... .... at Rose Hilla Memoria l Parlt r-.. 111~ci-ot ' .., .. we•, .. : NAMl ITATllMllllT . 9!1CT1ft_ __ -...1c,.,,.._. ... «1i-ef1Mc-co ... 1t.o.1.• .. m l".OPHSION ..,. .,.. c.., " _, ...., """"
In Whittler. Servlcet under ~,.., eet ""'~=··"• --~"°-,.•"~. 111t 1«M11• 0'• •1~ ..... ""~ -11y. . "lllAlltCM OlltGANIZATION POllt ... ., .... ,...... 11r .,_.,...."' -t"' di I ff -• ..... 1i..,..........,,...,.--. .. _ .. Aelllt.,~lfte,.,.ttct: 1u11N .. 1.n•1""1111u•&. m, .....,,.. ... .._ ne rectlon 0 1rbor If I Atgmh SHILi.Y'S MIAT ~~I!. --lrvlMlltMtllW...,Dl*ICI UNITaCMWralltlCA COtlllOttA'nOH, II .. ......, ......... °"" ..
,Lawn•MOQftt Ollve. 540-&554. cen ., "'" .,._ ,, .,,.., c~\: N••P•rt hul•"•'"· C..t• M•H, "IUMAOMlllt TlltAV•L." ,., Cefttect ..-: °"" ,.,....,. .. , ,.,.. Jtt A,... om.. ow-.., Meir, •• wew • ... u.. .. ,.........
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'I ,.
l ' I.
•• ,..~lit
"There you go, llatenlng down to me again."
Se% frill
. TV editorial
stirs dispute
SANTA PAULA (AP> -State Sen. Omer
Rains' attorney says be hopes to setUe a dispute
with a Los Angeles television station out of court.
"Hopefully we can talk our way to a resolu·
lion," said Phil Drescher, who is representing
Rains in a dispute over an editorial run by
KA BC· TV.
Ra.ins, a Ventura Democrat, obtained a tem-
porary restraining order last week blocking KABC
from further airing the editorial, which blasted the
senator and other legislators for their handling of
a child-abuse bill.
THE BILL, RAINS SB781, WAS enacted last
year after a last·minute change
requiring doctors. teachers and
other professionals who deal
with children to report to police
whenever they have evidence a
girl under 18 has bad sex. Rains
said the last-minute change was
pushed through by con -
servatives over his objections.
Critics say the law violates
civil liberties and discourages
u 1Hs teen-age girls from seeking
treatment for pregnancy or venereal disease, or
advice about birth control.
New bills, one by Rains, have been introduced
to make the reporting discretionary.
The KABC editorial claimed that legislators
involved in the last-minute chang~ere guilty of
"plotting an illegal action" and should be proe·
ecuted.
IT DID NOT SA Y WHAT LAWS were believed
broken, and the station attorney John Mendonsa
failed to return two telephone calls.
Rains said the editorial ran seven times before
he obtained the restraining order.
Drescher said he had met with KABC
representatives and hoped to reach a settlement
before a court hearing March 19. He would not
specify what Rains was seeking.
Knife renwved
fro~ chest cavity
SEATTLE (AP) -A man wbo attempted to
use a table knife to dislodge a pill stuck in his
throat somehow got the knife lodged in his chest
cavity. A surgeon took S'r'.l hours to recover it, doc·
Lors said.
Dr. James M. Hanson said Wednesday he was
called to Swedish Hospital on March 1 when the
emergency room crew saw the knife on a chest X·
ray.
The J8.year-0ld Seattle resident, whom the
hospital would not identify. had taken an aspirin·
like pain-killer. But the pill stuck in the back of his
throat and was burning.
THE MAN TRIED TO RINSE the pill down
and to dislodge it with his finger before trying the
knife.
Hanson said the man persisted in working the
knife deeper in his throat because the burning
sensation made it seem the pill was still there.
When he finally went to the hospital, he neglected
to mention the missing knife.
Hanson tried to reach the knife with an al·
ligator clamp on the end of a tube down the food
pipe.
"We then assumed that the knife had passed
on down into the stomach," the surgeon said.
A small incision was made in the abdomen and
Hanson reached in and felt around. Still no knife.
ANOTHER X·RA Y SHOWED THE knife, with
the handle end down, in the right side of t.be chest
cavity.
"When we opened the chest, it was just sitting
there free in the cavity," he said.
Dr. Mason Smith, director of emergency
services at t.be hospital, said the knife apparenUy
broke through the wall of the esophagus, "nicked"
the windpipe and lodged between chest wall and
lungs. Neither the lungs nor any major arteries
were punctured, Smith said, and "That la in itself
almost a miracle."
The patient went home tut weekend, Hanson
said.
Daily Pilat
SENTRY SAFES
WEEIDAB 910 9 AD GOOD
SAT.-SUI. 9 TO & TDU JIAI. 11
FORTRESS
DEADIOL T LOCIS
SINGLE CYLINDER
5ss
DOUBLE CYLINDER
Mau.it~to
lock ~ up and
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With a full l" throw
in a pollahed br ..
finiah. 777
ENTERTAllMDT
CDTEI WITH
TINTED GLASS DOOU
Oak finiah and ea.y to
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glau doora will come out in
the back.
57!!
llACO
SUIDOWIEI
BEADLIGBT SEISOR
221!!
Tunu ca.r Ughta on and off automatically at
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SHELL FllE I ICE
10 I 40 WT. ALL SEASON
MOTOR OIL .
76~.
Good lltuff at the right price, and it'• th.
lOW I 40 -ight you -re looking for. S.. ya
at the llt.ore.
-I
I
WYll'S
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15 01. SPIT FJIE
W TIEATllEIT
15 01. aCllE Tm-UP
11 ¥t 01. CWOUIOI
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YOUR 97c
CHOICE EA..
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DESIGI PUITDS
6" 1.33
8" 2.33
10" 3.66
12" ·4.77
Nice aaortment of colon and a-.
IAIAIA
FUUITUIE su.n.. na.nw. ( WONier
how t.hie)o tut.? Or peel? )
Ha. t.hinla the)' WOl'k Mtt.r
out ~ th. pool In ,.Uow or
bl"OWI\.
CHAIR OR
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YOUR CHOICE 77!
CADET
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Three nwnber changeable combination lock,
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listed, 1700 degree fire t..ted.
' ..
STANDARD ~ .
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Same features as the Cadet plus a
removable drawer, 3"x5"xl l" deep. Thia
one weighs approx. 165 lb•. The bad guys
won't walk off with eithe1' one very easy.
WEEDEATEI TllMNDS
MODEL409
Ju.t tap ·n·Vo for liQht
trimming, cu ta 1 O'' path. 2
amp motor. 1977
XR-50 GASOLINE POWERED
Solidnataignition 9977 for quick starta and th.
tap· n ·go line ad•ance.
14" path.
WEEDEATEI
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POWDILOWD
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Hu adj\dtahLe air flow for raldn9
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lqhn..ight for ~ handling.
DOUGLAS BOSE ams
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No need to haft the ho.e
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Col\8truc:Hon grade.
( Hope UU.. guy ia on
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CANNON CRAFT HALF
LOUVERED Bl-FOLD DOORS
Unfh,iahed. you
stain or paint to
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12z80 13.77
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PRESERVATIVE
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Penetrate. d.Mp to proride a tough waterproof
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llily PHlt '
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1981
STOCKS
COMICS
TELEVISION
C7 ca
C10
Worry. about the future
sure sign of economical
hard ties . . . C6
'
• • ·Magee's next decision.
Coik ge or pros? The f acts give one choice
By JORN SEVANO °' .... o.11, ~ .... , .... Tbe biggest question -and largest
concern -circulating around the UC
Irvine campus these days ls whether
Kevin Magee will decide to test the pro
ranks or return for his final season with
the Anteaters.
Naturally, the rears of UCI fans are
justified.
The NBA must look pretty appetiz.ing
to the 6-8 center. especially in lieu of bis
placement on the Associated Press' All·
America first team.
Plus, there's the added reality that
Magee wanta to leave and tum pro ... if
the conditions are· right. "I guess if the
right opportunity came, I'd go for it,"
he said the other day.
All the lngredientl are there. 'It's just
a matter of whether be wants to take
the chance or not.
But, before Ma1ee makes hls de-
UCIREPORT
cision, maybe he'd like a few more
facts. -Like the scoutlng report put out by
Marty Blake and Associates, generally
considered the Bible among NBA
general managers. which doesn't have
Magee ranked among the top 10 Jlt the
center spot, nor among the top 30 at
forward.
-Or the opinion of Lakers special
consultant Jerry West, who watched
Ma1ee at UCI when the Anteaters were
playing the University of Paclflc, and
was at a loss in describlnJ Magee'•
ability. "I just don't know," West was
quoted as saying. "I didn't see him
shoot a ball further out than five feel."
The reasons for the skepticism are
simple: Magee played the entire year
out or position.
A natural power forward at 6-8, 230
pounds, Magee spent the year with his
back to the basket, not facing it. Thus,
some obvious questions were left un·
answered: Can Magee put the ball on
the floor ? Can he drive to the basket?
How does he move without the ball?
Can he defend on the open court?
In order to play in the NBA the
answers to the above questions have to
be yea.
"His two biggest weaknesses are put-
ting the ball on the ftoor and playing de·
fense," sa11 Coach BUI Mulligan, ad·
ding that Magee bas made tremendous
strides In both thla year.
"But, if he doesn't improve on those
he's not going to make a lot of money."
Translated, that means he's not going
to make it to the NBA either.
"He won't go," Mulligan tells you.
"He'd have to put himself out on a limb
... and he'd have no guarantees."
In order to be eligible. Magee would
have to declare hardship prior to the
NBA draft. In doing so, however, he
automatically forfeits his final year of
(See M.AGEE'S, Pase CZ>
D efense
on nllnds,
'Kings tie
A n e /,s ' D an Ford s e aks o u t
INGLEWOOD <AP > -The
Los Angeles Kings had defense
on their minds at the start of the
game against the Chicago Black
Hawks . That didn't work, so
they started thinking offense.
After falling behind 3-0 in the
opening period, the Kings ralJied
for a 4·4 tie with the Black
Hawks in their National Hockey
League game Wednesday night.
A BONUS PLAN for cutting
down on goals against, designed
by Kings owner Jerry Buss, was
much on the minds of his
players in the early part of the
game.
"Sure. I was thinking about
the bonus incentive," said Los
Angeles defe nseman Larry
Murphy, who scored the game·
tying goal with just 35 seconds
remaining in the contest . "I
think we were all concentraing
on defen:e, but when we fell
behind J..O, we went to playing
offense."
He's king of confidence
By EDZINTEL
OI Ult o.11, ~llet S&IH
Subconciously or not, pro·
fessional athletes of the contem·
porary age are the victims of a
real paradox.
For the Muhamm ad Alis, John
Mc En roes and Vince Fer-
ruamos of the world, it stems
from the perpetual question of
what is considered brash ego
and what is considered just good
ol' fashioned confidence.
Enter Darnell Glenn Ford, Sr.,
more commonly known as Dan
Ford or in these parts, Disco.
FORD IS, in a word, con·
fidence. In fact, he'd spell it
with a capit.al C -Confidence.
If anyone could have a corner on
confidence. it might be Ford, the
Angels' multi-talented right
fielder.
But egotistical? Well, perhaps,
at one time. But not anymore.
Ford is 28-years-old now and
nearing the peak of his caree.r ,
at least talent wise. He's also a
lot more mature than be was as
a sometimes moody and
withdrawn kid with the
troublesome Minnesota Twins
from 1975-78.
A~W~
THE ANGELS' DAN FORD WOULD LIKE . TO OET BACK TO NO . 1 AGAIN IN 1111.
VINCE FEAAAOAMO
Montre al
• to sign
Ram QB?
By JOHN SEV ANO
OI tlie o.11' ~II« Staff
Obviousy frustrated in his at·
tempts to negotiate a new con·
tract with the Rams, Vince Fer-
ragamo appears headed for the
wild tundra of Canada.
The Associ1lled Press reported
late Wednesday night that Fer·
ragamo would sign with the
Montreal Allouettes of the Cana-
dian Football League "in the
next few days."
A~ quoted Ferragamo's agent
-David Fishoff -as saying,
"We 'll likely sign with Montreal
within the next few days."
THE SIGNING , if it should
take place, would end many
months of fruitless negotiations
with the Rams and constant
rumors concerning the future of
the Nebraska College graduate.
The four-year NFL veteran
was thrust into the national
spotlight during the 1979 cam·
paign when he substituted for
the Injured Pat Haden and led
the Rams to the flrsl Super Bowl
in the club's history.
Ferragamo then substituted
for the injured Haden again
after the team's first regular
season game of 1980 and went on
to set club records in comple·
ti o n s (240 ), t o tal yards
Ten games ago, Buss offered
the Kings $1 ,000 each if they held
opponents to a total of less U\lln
30 goals for the next 10 games.
He also pledged to give each
player $500 for each goal under
30. With the four goals allowed
Wednesday night, the stretch
ended with Los Angeles having
given up 25 goals.
"When we ~ave up the four goals," said Murphy, "it cost us
$2,000 and I was thinking. 'There
goes the new dining room set'."
Today, the confidence that
Ford carried with him during
those years still drips off him
like juice from a popsicle melt·
ing in the hot sun.
But for Ford, that's all it's
ever been, the outer expression
of a man who has the ex-
traordinary drive to win and be
a winner.
teammate Rod Carew, Ford had
been the subject in charges of
r acism and unfair management
against Twins owner Calvin
Griffith.
Disco for his love of upbeat
music and lifestyle.
(3 ,199), touchdowns (30) and
wasn't the real Ford who was passing percentage (59.4). He
playing. also tied a club mark with five
NO ONE KNEW of the dark
troubles ahead.
"A FEW PEOPLE told me i·t TD passes in one game (against New Orleans) and led the Rams
On Nov.. 5, 1979, Ford un·
derwent surgery by Dr. Lewis
Yocum for removal of torn
cartilage in his right knee.
would lake a year to heal but I to a second-place finish in the
didn't want to believe it," Ford NFC Western Conference. Murphy had other things to
think about after the game, in·
eluding the fact he tied the NHL;
record for most points by a
rookie defenseman in a season
as his goal and an assist ran bis
point total to 65 -a mark set by
Bos ton's Ray Bourque last
season.
THE ANGELS organization
found that out during the season
of 1979. Acquired from the Twins
in exchange ror talented first
baseman Ron Jackson and prom·
ising young outfielder Danny
Goodwin, Ford was given faith
and freedom from Manager Jim
Fregosi oo down to just go out
and play everyday, the best way
be knew how. It was no coin-
cidence that Ford's. best was
enough for the Angels to win the
American League's Western
Division in his finest season
( .290 average, 21 home runs and
101 RBI ).
BUT NOW, BACK in his home
state of California, Ford has
been given his revival. "For the
first time in my life, I enjoyed
working with everybody from
the manager on down," Ford
said after his first season in
Anaheim.
The operation was pronounced
a s uccess and Ford immediately
went to Rams' trainer Gary
Tuthill to begin a daily leg
strengthening program.
said during a break in a r~ent The RQPls , who reached the
day of spring workouts in Palm ·playoffs as a wild card entry,
Springs. were eliminated by Dallas in the
"I wanted to play so bad that I first round.
"IT'S A GREAT feeling to tie
the league record," said the
20-year-old Murphy, a powerful
6·1, 210-pouoder. "I was just
happy to make the team this
season. The organization showed
a lot of confidence in me."
Part of Ford's new found joy
had to do with his spot in the
batting order.
"I hope to get off to a fast
start this year," Ford said just
prior to the 1980 season. "More
than anything, I want to make
the All-Star team. That's one
thing that's escaped me so far."
guess I was oblivious to the pain.
It turned out to be a bad move
now that I look at it. I could
blame it partly on the rebabilita·
tion program, partly on the doc·
tors, partly on the team or part·
ly on myself. But the fact was, I
wasn't ready. It hurt to run so I
made errors in the field. And it
hurt to put weight on my back
le~ so I wasn't bitting."
Murphy scored the game-tying
goal on a 45-footer that beat
Black Hawks' goalie Tony
Esposito. Rookie right winter
Darryl Sutter had put Chicago
ahead4·3.
For Ford. going from the
Twins to the Angels was like go-
ing from San Quentin to a condo
in Palm Springs.
By simply switching him from
sixth or seventh (as it bad been
in Minnesota). Ford hit third in
the Angels' order, allowing him
to concentrate on what he
believes he does th'e best
drive in runs.
Ford was a content man in
1979. The tuture was rosy. His
image had changed for the bet-
ter. He was given the nickname ·
There was no All-Star game
for Ford in 1980. In fact by that
time in the season (July), Ford
wasn't even playing.
The knee hadn't recovered the
way everyone thought it would.
Ford had played for the first two
mo nths of the season but it
Ford sat out most of what
would tum out to be the Angels'
worst season in history. His final
stats for 65 games: .279 average,
seven home runs, 26 RBI. And
that was after hittin~ .418 over
<See KING, Pace CZ> Along with former and current
CdM, Estancia try to take giant steps
Area teams face tough ob1ta cle1 tonig ht in 1eeking CIF 3-A /inal1 bertlu
ByaOGEaCARLSON
OIU1eO.i1, f'lle41&ett
LOS ANGELES-Corona del Mar and
Estancia -a pair of Orange Coast area
basketball teams with hopes of getting a
crack at tbe CIF 3·A champion.ship, are in
acUoo tooieht at the Sports Arena.
Tbe Sea Kin'8 ol Corona del Mar, Sea
View Leaaue champjons with a 20-5 rec-
.Ord, duel defend.in• champion La Quinta at 7, followed at 8:'5 with the Estanc1a-
1'\dUnduel.
The wtanen of tonight's two coatestl
aquareoftSaturday at 7 fortbe3-A crown.
PO& OOACB JACK Ea&ION and b11
Corona del Mar Sea Klnga It's one lut
ebance to MWe matten with 6-t MDH·
tioD John Roten and bta La Quinta team·
mat•, wbo won the S-A cf01m ln ·•at lb•
apeMt ol the Sea Klnca and who cap-
tured a 54-!0 dedlioll ln noo-leacue play
lb.lJ HlllCJO, Ro,... la tbe eentra• ft~for La Quln·
t a, but the Oarde1. Gro" Lea1ue'1
Play• ol the Year bu plenty ol belp -espeelallJ from ~1SeottBraclleyand5-10
pant Jon Dlmalante.
1'01en avera1ed M.I polntl a t•mt for
lbe A&tecl aa they awept tbroulh lea1Ue
play, while Bradley and Dlmalante
chipped in with 11.9 and 14.0 points a
game. All areall-leagueselectlons.
Corona del Mar counters with its Big
Three -Sea View League Player of the
Year Jeff Pries, 6-6 Mark Spinn and 6-3
Steve Moore.
WHILE P&IES 18 Corona del Mar's
chief offensive weapon, the rec .. \~urae ot Spinn makes him the moet al cut
IUSKETBALL 151
item lll the CdM attack. All all.CIF
selection as a junior, Spin'• defente and
reboundlftl, ln addlUon to bla IOft touch,
matea blm tbe player to watch as tbe
Sea K.tnp Uy to (l) keep tbetr oaenae
ro1Un1 ""d (2) 1low down Roten.
Otben ln the CdM 1ame tnclude
•tarten Cbrt• Lynch and .opbqmore
Mike Heu, wllb Adam Acone and llark
Lun f'lrltOtttbe bench.
:•we'd Uke to take away some of the
pusinc lanes from Ro1en lf we can:•
'
says Errioo. •'If you can deny him lbe ball
be can't score without it. We're not bil
enough or bulky enough to 10 it alone
<straight man-to-man).
"Still, I don't thlnk we can live up too
mucb because La Quinta baa some Cood
win1 1booterl. But if Spinn bu a 1ood de·
fen1lve nl-1ltit may allow us to stay up on
the otberahooten a little better.''
Wblletbe La Qulnta·Cdll duel co~ u
expected by many observers, ~da
en ten u a complete aurprlae acalnlt tbe
tall Tuatia Ttlt.n.
THE E~GLE8 of Estancia Coach
Larry Sundennn have compiled an lM
overall record, fb\lJbed second to Corona
del Mar ln leap.e play ,leature no starter
over e.a and bave no returDlnc atartert trom tbe~tam. ·
Neverthelee1, bolltered bJ ID ai·
_ greaaive board 1ame. bllb pereea~
ahota and a toulh SOM clefenH, U..
Ea1les IJ"e ln UM Mml&lall for tbt tint
time ln the tcbool'• bll\Or1.
Led by 5-tjunlor ~Jtlf 0....,., a
ftrat tum all-leasue player. ancl MCCllld
Uiam all-leape telectloo Mlk19 Mark.el,
••
the Eagles will be up a1ainat a Tustin
front line that measures 6-7, 6-7, 6-6 and
each ol those starters are All·Century
League atan. Tustin enters at 2'-4.
~ llAU LEWIS CM) avera1ed 18.7
polnta lll le.,ue play and lt.O overall. He
la a tbli'd Uiam All-Ore.nae County pl ck aa
cboaen bytbe Dally Pilot. A~ J'randl <e.1) averaaect i..1 ln
leap• and &-'1 Scott Prttebett scored at a
12.ltllp. Botbwereall-le.,uecholce1.
"I cb't see Tustin lbil year," H)'I
Suad«'man. "But J.'ve coached a1alnlt
GU'1 (I.anon) for t.bree.1ean while I wu
at COila Mesa and a year hen at Eatan-
cla.
·'They run a lot or«~ ucl we nm a lot
of 1tutf. We'll JUlt •o tbrOqb our nnera1
plan. Tbll la the belt tMm M <c.nc.>
bu bed (her., but tlM1 al•.,a ... ai to
ba•e"81.
··we'havetolimtttbtnatooaeabot."
Eatanda'• lt&rtJnt U..up, ..... from 0 ......... 11..n.a. ladudll &.nay
Sall la tM _.... .L.t:-1 Jim S.IQPICID &Del e.1 a... Knlu. nnt off tbt bench are
e-2 Jland)' rut, 5-10 Mlke Deutacb and e.1
Jhn MeCablll.
FERRAGAMO, WHO made
$52,000 in 1980, reportedly was
seeking a long-term contract
from the Rams . Al one lime, he
accepted, and then rejected, a
three-year pact worth a reported
$700,000.
"The signing (of Ferragamo
and Montreal ) would brine
about the greatest marriage in
the history of sport," said Fis-
hoff. "This is the firs t time
we've dealt direcll,, with an
owner. We never talked to tbe
owner in Los Angeles and we
never talked to the Hamilton
owner (Harold Ballard>.
The Hamilton Tiger Cats, who
own the CFL rights to Fer·
ragamo, brolte ort negotiatlom
with the quarterback last month
when they felt his contract de-
mands were too high. If Mon-
treal was to make the alpine,
Hamilton would have to transfer
its rl1hts and compensation
would have to be made.
"I just can't say anthlnc on
it," said Montreal owner Nelson
Skalbania, who aiao owna the
Cal1ary Flamu of the NaUoaal
Hockey Lea1ue and Cal1ary
Boomera of the NASL. "You
won't 1et me to talk about it.
I'm ln enou1h trouble aa It ta .
111 Aa80LUTELY love the
man1" •aid Flabaft of SkalbMla, "ana 10 doW Vlnce. We wrote out a eontract ud we•,. PftU1
sure he'll OK ll"
Tertpa of llontrHl'• patt
1 were nat Nftaled bat provllionl
IJ"e 1u:ppoMd to lDchade:
-a IQb salary eontrad .
' -bulnas opportuatU.. ln Monu.t.
-dMl'UCe to atteod medical
acbool dHlDI the fo'ot ball .....
Fetn1U10 couJd DOt M ,.
ached for ~m•t oe bil, polll· bl• ,......,, aor could Otlllllrl1
Mana1•r Don Klotterman or owner Oeorlie Jl'roaUtre.
Mize now a Hall of Famer,
even though he'd given up
Pre• AP dllpa&ebes
TAMPA, na. "I'd already 1tve up -I told Ill
m7 wlle, ·w~ll, that'• aQOtber year 1one'," Bii
Jobn Mlle said Wednesday after belns tardUy
notified that be bad been elected to baseball's Hall
or Fame alone with a plooeer or the Ne1ro Lea1ues, Rube
Foster.
"I was hopeflll became people were calllni me yesler·
day, aayinJ this m11ht be my year. 1 was in the bouae, listen·
lne to the 12 o'clock news, and when there
was no announcement I 1ot up and went
out in the yard to move some lumber," be •
added by telephone from his home in
Demarest. Ga .• 90 miles from Atlanta.
"I'm just sorry that it didn't come
earlier. My mother, Emma, is in the
hospital after having both legs removed
wltb five operations and she bad always
looked forward to seeing m e in the Hall or
Fame.
"Last year would have been fine. But 1;1111
now she just recognizes me and doesn't realize what's going
on any more than the man in the moon."
Mize and Foster were elected by the Veterans Commit·
tee, which reviews those players who fail to receive the honor
in the normaJ 20·year period by the Baseball Writers Associa-
tion of America following a five-year wait after the players'
retirement.
The announcement was supposed to come at noon, but
the Veterans Committee broke up shortly after 12:30 and
there was a delay in getting the message to Mize at his
Georgia home. "They had the wrong phone number -a 5 at
the end instead of a 6 -so when I didn't hear it on the radio
or get a call. I thought that was the end of it," Mize said.
Mize said he had thought luck was working against him
because the first year be became eligible, in 1954. the year
after his retirement. the BBWAA installed the new rule call-
ing for a player to wait five years before being considered.
------flttote ol tlae d•W ------..,
Don Pfitzer of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on
raising hawks: "You've got to keep the bird from imag-
ing in you. to keep it from wanting too much human con·
tact. It's like raising a child, giving it everything it
needs. but teaching it not to like you."
. . Fro• Pa~Cf
KING OF CONFIDENCE. •
the final 20 games of the season.
FORD SAYS THAT it was en-
tirely bis decision to step out of
the lineup. But what confused
him was the team's reaction lo
the move.
.. With the club losing. that's
all everyone seem ed to care
about." he said. "They sure
didn't seemed concerned about
me or any other one individual."
The only thing that may have
kept his motivation alive was his
confidence. That. and the fact
that he had exper ienced injuries
before during his c areer
albeit minor.
·'The knee wasn't back al all
last year." Ford admitted. "The
running program I went through
was 0·10 percent effective. When
I started running this winter. it
was like learning to run all over
again."
LAST W EE K IN Pa l m
Springs. Ford gave himself a lit·
tie test. He ran a variety of
sprints and performed a series
or exercises des igned to put
stress on the recuperating knee.
Wh en it was over, he happily
pronounced the knee "sound."
Yet he's quick to point out that
if he should bang the knee even
with the slightest impact now, it
could end his career.
"This spring has been the
m ost important o ne of m y
. career," Ford said. "I still con·
sider myself a big key to th.is
team even with all the changes
that have been made. I got little
encouragement out of last year
but I'm working hard It was a
trying thing for me. But I'm '10t
even worried about the knee
anymore. I guess I'm just trying
to prove to myself that l can
come back."
So the pressure is on. But
. that's just another part of Ford's
life. He loves pressure -always
• has.
"THAT'S THE NAME or the
· game you see," Ford said. "I
: thrive on hltUng under pressure.
It lets you know what kind of
' player you really are. Some
. guys will go into the batter's box
; against a pitcher llke <Rich)
. Goose Gossage and space out -
they're so uptight.
''That's why I Uke to bat third.
See. if 1 bat sixth, that takes
away a lot of the challenge. If I
bat fifth, I'll get a lot more
strikes to hit because a left·
handed pitcher won 'l want to
pitch to (left-handed designated
hitter) Jason Thompson ii he's
batting behind me."
Ford is "tickled to death," in·
deed proud, to be playing on the
same team as Fred Lynn, Rick
Burleson. Rod Carew, Don
Baylor and others. "It'll sure
take some of the pressure otr me
lo produce. Especially with
Lynn in there. He's a leader. A
take control kind of leader."
One thing that Ford isn't too
tickled about is his contract. His
four-year salary of a round $1.3
million expires in 1983. He signed
an extension on it last year. But
of course that's when he wasn't
playing. Perhaps there were
some feelings of guilt to ask for
a raise then. Now , Ford feels
differently.
"NO, l'M NOT satisfied with
my contract," Ford s ays mat·
ter-of.faclly. "I was when I first
signed it. but now. the ceiling is
so much higher. I'm probably
one of the lowest paid starting
outfielders in the league.
"About aJl I can do is go along
with it now. But it's something
that I'm definitely going to have
to deal with sooner or later .·•
This past winter, Ford's name
h ad been mentioned in trade
rumors. Ford said his name was
put on the waiver list at the
winter baseball meetings but
that apparently with the doubt
over his recovering from the in·
jury, he wasn't considered good
bait.
"J UST LIKE anyone else, I
want to be covered," Ford said.
"That's all I'm asking for -to
feel that I'm being taken care of
and listened too."
In essence. Ford finds himself
as a potential s uper star caught
in a mirage of established super
stars.
But with the kind of potential
he has, Ford may soon find all
his confidence coming In very
handy.
••,., ... ,..,. c.ua ,...c •• ,,.
Lany BIN bad 29 polnta for ta. Bolton m CeltJc1, who pulled. away midway tbro\llb t.be
third uarter and went oa to a m.1oe National Baalu~baU Alloclation vlct«y Wednesday ni1ht
over the Milwaukee Buen . . • 1n other t•mea, "'ftlllleT
Keat 81 .. a a.Del fuard a. IM 1*1 a fourth-quarter nurry
tbat carried Detroit past Atlanta, 100·97, 1na~ln1 the
Plltom' three·1ame tot1AC streak . . . .ldu Br a~ed
21 polnta and Pblladelpbia'a cltfeDM abut dowa New ort ln
tbe affOnd half u tbe 71era beat t.be Knleta, 115-95 ror their
fourth eonaecutive victory . . . Fre4 Brewa poured m 15
polnta in the flnaJ 7~ minutes, and laet &Akma Jed all
sC?Orera with 28, to pace Seattle to a 101·'5 triumph over
Cleveland. It wu tbe Cavallera' eltbth cooaeeuUve def eat
. . . CUlf aob.1a ... •1 28 poi.ntl lifted New JerHY to a lOt-10.
victory over Wuhlnlt()n, dropptn1 the auUeta two 1amea
behi nd Chicago in the race for the last playoff spot . . .
Houat.on's Mose• llaJOM scored a career·hl1h 51 points to
lead the Rockets to a 10&·82 victory over Golden State . . . .
Kanau City's PIUI Ford ii expected to be out of action a
weeek to 10 days with a congenital kidney problem.
OH.,_.,• eltde• ltU .. ,.,,. T•~••
Al OU.er'• double and Bllddy BeU'a sln1le Iii drove in three runs in the fifth inning to give Texas
a 4.3 exhibition victory over the New York
Yankees Wednesday ... alkMe Hebller belted
four hJts -hJs second homer in five games, a double and two
singles -and drove in three runs, powerin1 Detroit to a g.4
triumph over Boston ... S&ne Beede~, hitless if! four
earlier tries, singled to the opposite field with one out an the
ninth inning to drive in the winning run in ~
the Chicago Cubs' Hi win over San Fran·
cisco . . . Ed MWer singled in the top of
the 14th inning to pace Atlanta past
Kansas City. 3·2 . . . Rookie outfielder
Mike Pat&ersoa's tie-breaking home run in
the fourth inning and Brian Doyle's steal
o r home later in the inning sparked
Oakland to a 6·4 win over the Taijo Whales
of J apan . . . The Hanshin Tigers of Japan
nicked reliever Kea Clay for four runs in
the seventh inning, breaking a 4-4 tie on oL•vu
their way to a 9.5 thumping of Seattle ... Mark BrOG.bard's
two-run home run in the eighth inning gave Milwaukee a 6·5
decision over Cleveland ... Rookies Jerry Manuel and Rick
Eagle, the winning pitcher. delivered sacrifice flys in the
fifth inning, enabling MontreaJ to take the lead enroute to a
4.3 win over Toronto ... Jack Moma pitched five innings of
one-hit baJI to lead the Detroit Tigers' No. 2 squad past the
Chicago White Sox. 9-3 ... KeaJJ Awagucbl slammed two
triples to drive in three runs, leading the Tokyo Giants to a
7·2 thrashing of Minnesota ... Bob Elson, who broadcast l2
World Serles, six All-star games and was inducted into
basebaJl's Hall of Fame in 1979, is dead at the age of 76.
Elson was the voice of the Cubs and While Sox for decades
... Former Cincinnati iMtcher Pedro Boarboa will be retried
on an assault charge as a result of action by the Ohio
Supreme Court which disallowed a Hamilton County pros-
ecutor's appeal.
SPORTSBAEAK /llASEllALL /BASKETBALL
ftiiNli ,. ... •II ,., CW•••• ........... ··•:=.bfCGMredo u aloes ................. mm l4Mftd. • '
rebound wtt.ll 1:01 left to lift .a.. loftiet a W
victory °"' tM New York a.,.. la NatSoaal
Hockey LNPe action Wetba•d11 nJOt . . • aM Laqwa7
teored a ,.,..,.pla11C>al wWa S:U left to ctve Moetnal a 1-1
victory O¥er Plttaburlb . . . 'haJ aante'1 abot from tbe
r11bt faeeoff circle deftected off Quebec defeaMman
N•r•_. ~ aod put ioalle D• ... eltar41 with •~ mklulel lei\ to help St. Louis earn a s-~ Ut witb the Nordl·
guet . . . Second-period 1oa.la by l&eH art.aa.tf and Gre1
8•1&b ted Minneaota to • 3·1 victory over Buffalo ... Pet.er
•cNab'a 31st eoal of the 11euon 1ave BoetoD a 4_. Ue with
Toronto. The Maple Leafa blew a 4·2 adv1nt11e . . . On.ab
Mara had a goal and two ualata \a lead Waahlnston to a 5-2
triumpb over Hartford . . . Mae .... , netted hia S2nd goal
of the seuon aa the New York Islanders downed Winnipe1,
8~. •
IJ•lalr lahr elua,... -•••t R•s•lr.'1
Oakland Raiders· guard Ge•e Upaltaw, the •
president of lbe NFL Players Association, said
Wednesday he has instructed the executive
director of the NFLPA to file an unfatr labor
charge against NFL Commissioner Pete lloseUe. "He's bad
his gestapo force out investigating me," Upshaw said . .
Six Flor ida State football players, Including 1979 All ·
American noseguard Roa SJmmou, were charged in connec·
lion with the theft of about $27,000 worth of merchandise from
a department store. Tallahassee police said An
Arizona State booster testified that ex-Sun Devil football
Coach Frank Kuala pressured some of his players to lie and
say they had not seen him punch punter Kevla RuUed&e in a
1978 game as alleged . . . Roscoe Tauer has joined the
field for the tennis tournament at Silverado Country Club in
Napa March 24·29 ... E ric Heldea, winner of five speed.
skating gold medals in the Lake Placid Olympics, has been
added to the field for the Bell Helmet Bicycle Race, a sup·
porting event to Sunday's Grand Prix In Long Beach _
T~don, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV tonioht. Ratings
are : " 11" excellent;./ .11 worth watc hing. " "fair ; , foroet 1t.
[.) 7:30p.m.,Ch•nne11 ../ ../ ../ ../
NBA BASKETBALL: LakersatSan Diego.
Announcers: Chick Hearn and Keith Erickson.
Magic Johnson is back and improvino with each game as the
Lake r s head toward the playoffs. The Lakers are 4111-games
behind Phoenix w ith 10 to play while San D iego is battling to move
into fourth placeandga1n a playoff P<>S1l1on . San Oieoo is 41/1 games out of fourth place.
RADIO
Basketball -Lake rs at San Diego, 7: JOp.m., K LAC I 570).
FRIDAY RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers vs. M innesota at Orlando, 10 .30 a.m., KABC{790) .
Fro.Pap CJ
MAGEE'S DECISION: COLLEGE OR PROS? • ••
eligibility.
"He's just hit the limelight,"
says one NBA source. "He
would enhance his position by
coming back and playing a
forward spot and capitaliziq oo
the presa. Folks need to see him
play another year."
Of course, the final decision la
ultimately Magee's, but it looks
here like there's really only oae
choice to make.
. . . and it should be nice to
see Magee in an Anteater un·
iform again next season . * • * How close did UCI come to
getting an NIT bid?
Well, as has been the policy
for the past 10 years. most NIT
offi cials aren't commenting.
One, however. did elude -
without divulging names -that
UCJ was still in the running up
until the final announcement
was made Tuesday night.
· 'l will s ay this." said Pete
Carlesimo, a prominent member
of the selection committee.
"because there was a lot of con·
fusion surrounding the final two
choices. The losers of the two
games in question <USF -
( e pperdine and Princeton·
Penn) were not automatic selec·
So. it looks like we'll never
lcnow for sure . It appear s
· though, the Anteaters were stili
breathing until the bitter end.
* * • As for next season. Mulligan's
wants are simple. He needs to
bring in between three-to.five
players with the emphasis being
on high school athletes.
"I would think we'd take three
freshmen and a J C (junior col·
lege) guy • maybe," explained
Mulligan. "If I thought we could
get a CJC> guy who would come
in and be dominant, we'd lake
him."
Mulligan, for the moment, has
his eye on three high school
freshmen -6·7 Troy Carmon of
Long Beach Poly High; 6-6 Mick
DeLavallade of Westminster
and 5·10 J ohn Barkey of Troy.
Carmon is the leading scorer
on the J ackrabbits. who will
play for the Cl F 4·A title Satur·
day night. He 's averaged 15.3
points and 8.5 rebounds per out·
BISBEES
' '· . , . ' '
406 S B ay Front
n -.... __ •-•--.4 c.. .,c.._ c_ • nn•
ing. He's also being pursued by
Colorado State. Cal and Iowa
DeLavallade scored at a 24.4
clip despite the fact his Lions
fin ished out of the running in the
Sunset League chase.
Barkey, a play-making guard.
has rippled the nets for an 18.8
margin.
Carmon and DeLavallade
figure to move right into a start·
ing spot if they decide to choose
Irvine.
For B a rk ey, it will be
somewhat tougher as red·shirt
Leon ard Johnson , a two.year
starter at Utah and a former 3·A
City Player of the Year al
Fairfax. figures to assume the
point guard role with Jason
Works. while Kevin FuUer and
Randy Whieldon battle at the off·
guard position.
Jo' orw ard Kay Uon nelty,
another red·shirt, is also eligible
for the 1981·82 season .
As for departures. guard Louis
Bremond has quit; forward Don
Barnes as transferring to UC
Riversid e ; freshman David
Jones has already left for Long
Beach City ; and transfer
forward Scott Hartman also
seems to be on the outside look·
ing in.
Mulligan says he will make a
decision m October on some of
his "other" players
* * * Mulligan on Magee being
selected as an All·America
"The thing a bout it is we
didn't do anything to push it
because we didn't think it could
be done. I know he was among
the t op f i ve in three big
categories <scoring, field goal
percentage and rebounding ) and
the other guys weren't."
Was Mulligan surprised?
"Sure. pleasantly. Now. he'll
probably turn out to be a pain in
the butt," said Mulligan with a
s mile. "lt won 't change him.
He'll be a (bleep > no matter
what."
COAST GENERAL
TIRE
2855 HARBOR BLVD.
tions like everybody thought ~~~~~~~~~~ they were. In fact, that was ~
YOUR
COASTAL
SERVICE CENTER COSTA MESA
540-5710 evidenced by the fact we took
Pan American instead of the
West Coaslloser C Pepperdine).
"I hope you understand my
position.'' he added. "We feel
the selection process is a very
complete thing. We feel it was
fair to every team concerned.
The selection is time consuming
and very detailed.
"We told Cal-Irvine prior to
our meeting they would be given
very serious consideration.
Other than that I can 't say
anything. We have a policy
we've never varied from in the
past 10 years."
Clippers collect
From AP Dispatebes
r········-····-···· ............................. ,
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I •a;/· . ~ i ' l ! } '·. l • "'l.. .. . : I Businessmen 1 I t I y o u a r t' d'rn n g ~
lbus1nrss under a ~
;f"1cl1!1ou11 8u111nru !
j 11/ame you are required :
l by law 1 Rusmeu and j ! Professions CodR. Sec .
l. 17900 to 179.101 to /1/e a l
1 r1ct1t1ous Business 1· i Name Statement and i have 11 published /or i
j /our consecutive weeks j
i WE at the DAILY i· i PIL.OT can help with I ! both Coll lht' LEGAL
i DEPARTME NT otj i 642-4321 Erl 332 fo r I; i /urlhtr rn/orm411on . L. ............................................. _I
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IMPORT CAI SPICIAI;
SALE • SALE • SM.I
Mefrk Ftlbric R ...
SAN 01 EGO -The San Diego
Clippers will collect $1.25 mUUon
from Lloyd's of London as out·
of -court settlement of the
lawsuit by the National Basket·
ball Association team concern·
ing the insurance on Bill Walton,
a team spokeamal'! said . !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.-~~~~--~~~~~~~...:....~~~~--'-~~~-:--~~~----1 .,
LEASE DIRECT AND $AVE!!!
5. LUBE & OILSJ95
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On aPPf'O\l'H credit. By lelllng ~th ua. we eliminate
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there is no
bitterness
VERO B£ACH, Fla. (AP) -
Former Brooklyn and Lo•
Antelea Dod1ers Mana1tr
Walter Alston expressed dlsap·
pointment but not bitterness
Wednesday when he was not
selected to the Hall or Fame by
the Veterans Committee meet·
lng in Tampa, Fla.
••You media fellow1 started
talking about it so naturally, I
started thinking about it ," said ·
Alston, 69. "Sure, it would be a
great honor, but I have no com·
plainta. Baseball has been very
good to m e . I'm happy for
Johnny Mize."
The slugging Mi ze and Rube
Foster, the founder of the Negro
National League, were seleeted
by the Veterans Committee for
the Hall of Fame.
Alston managed the Dodgers
(or 23 years, guiding them to
four World Se ri es cham ·
pionships ahd seven Na lion al
League pennants. He is one of
six managers to win 2,000 or
more big league games.
I
Orange eo.. DAJLY PILOT/Thur'8dey, March 12, 1981
De/ending state 00.ketball champ• book, but not without a sweat
By Cll&T SSIDBN
OflMOeiff ..........
Defendin1 state champlonl in any
sport are not supposed to have uphill
battles, but that's exactly what Cypreu
Colleee's basketball team raced ln
1980·81.
Rletlt from the beatnntn1. Coach Don
Johnson could see lt was ioinl to be a
long season. His team's first two vie·
torres turned into forfeits because of in-
eligible players.
And the Chargers went on to 101 an
early 2-6 Southern Cal Conference rec·
ord. Before that, the Chargers suffered
some embarrassing defeats to El
Camino (61-27) and Riverside (65-62).
Still, there were glitters of hope, like
a 62-60 decision over Fullerton and a
59-54 decision over Long Beach CC, both
eventual champions of their respective.
leagues.
It was victories like that and the addi·
lion of guard Stan Davis in the lineup
that also contributed to the Chargers'
long season, too.
Given up for dead midway through
the Southern Cal Conference, the
Chargerit have now reeled off 11
1tral1bt vtctorlea, lnchacUD1 playoff
trtumpba over both Golden W..t (IM'J)
and Sadclleback (8.1-G) to advance to
today's ·ftret round of tbe Pony
Callfomta Commwlity Collea• Cham·
plolllblp Butetball Tournament at Cal
State Fullerton.
It'• tbe ftftb 1trat1ht appearance in
the atate playotfa for the Charten. and
ton11bt they face one ol tbelr t~cbeat
challqee -meet.int the stale'• No, 1
ranked team, City Colleae ol San Fran·
ctsco (31-2). The Rama have not l<MJt in
their lut 20 outines.
Other matcbups today bad El Camino
(29_.) tan1lin1 with Moorpark at 2· San-
ta Monica (25-7), facing Chabot cif-7> at
4; and Lone Beach CC (22·9) testin1
Contra Costa (26-7) at 8. Tbe Cypress-
St\l Francisco bout is set for 6.
The winner of the El Camlno-
Moorparlt game will meet the Santa
Monica.Chabot victor at 6 p.m . Friday,
while the Cypresa-Sllll Francisco winner
faces the survivor of the Contra Costa-
Lone Beach contest at 8 Friday night.
The championship contest is set for 8
p.m . Saturday.
Cypress' most recent victory, Satur·
day n!Pt'• a -a decision over Sad-
dlebadr certaln1y wu deja vu for tbe
Gaucbol.
For the aecood con1eeutive year, the
Char1en ouated Sadclleback from the
pla.yoftl. Lut year, Cypress banded the
Gaucbol their only defeat ol tbe aeuoo,
a 7'-64 verdict in the/aemiflnall of the
state playotfa. I
Lut Mason, Cypress went on to cap.
lure the state title with a victory over
Chabot in the finals, and each team
benefited from two players now tolling
in the NCAA playoffs.
The Chargers boasted a towering
front line led by 7-3 Mark Eaton, now at
UCLA. Chabot Used the talenta of Lea
Conner, now a starter for second·
ranked Oregon State.
* * * The 26th annual Orange Coast College
Crew Alumni Day Race will be held this
Sunday, beginning with refreshments at
11 a.m. and inspection or the Vlll's .
Lunch for the first race -the 1981
Frosh Vllls vs. Elder Statesmen
Oarsmen is set for 11: 15, while the 1981
varsity Vllls meet the Experienced Cil
SEE ALL THE GREAT DATSUN TRUCKS
AT YOUR DATSUN DEALER NO•
PRICES STARTAT$5,8S9.tl0* ·
•Manufacturer~ Suggf!St!d ~tall Price. Does not inchl<* tam. destination ~ ~and~ fie.
•_1 __ I' -
•
allabtly winded) Profenionall tome and
The raeea are held at the NOIF lb.rouah
Channel in Newport Beach, 'lb• .. _
ll lnvlted. ,,,.., m8'p
• • * nefttl ...
OCC's baseball team may be ft~::.~·
ranked No. 1 in the Southland ~rent ti the rest or the South Coast Con def err
isn't too shabby. eea wt
Pirate Coach Mike Mayne a(. cODJ
one of five teams can capture ~lch tYI*
ference title. Along wlthuxlmutl Fullerton, Cerritos, Santa Ana r •
San Antonio have a combinl
season record of 43-8. h tM ~
•·Any of those five can win , " smut Grossmont ls a vastly improve< :
They're the darkhorae," says .'
whose team opens conferenc
Saturday at Santa Ana (noon).
* * * Golden West is off to it.s
base ball start since 1979. The
(2-7-1) are suffering from a lac
ting (as a team, GWC is ba
and a freshman pitching staff
combined ERA of 5.40.
'?
IMG
....
ED
oecom ·
· im •
ly Uv·
di rec(
com·
c hine
have ntror
upplt ..
'f' giv•
Ol·lik_t our
e loQ
uted
"' ••• ~ •••
' l
ByBDZINTSL OIMll....,.._._..
ulQI eeema to be a little·
art relepted to lb• back
of Al ahope and aportinc
~tores. ~ aklers, even the good ·
mow little and have little in·
In learn.i.n& bow to take care
rownslda.
all that's really needed ls an
uaehold iron, a $10 packlc•
W>rted varieties of wax, a
I or plastic scraper , an
ne·base cleaning aolvent
natplacetowork. .
THE WAY, don't expect to
e iron for anythlne else once
euseditforwaxing.
Alpine skilne. basically all •ax is used for is to protect
KllN.G Ii
1seofthe ski, which is coated
a polyethylene material
irtoTeflon.
: base of the ski can oxidize
it gets nicks and scratches
Waxing not only gives you a
· glide, but it prolongs and
ctalbe Ufeof your skis.
·ng in your closet, the bot·
f you skis get a dust film on
, but even whenyou'reskling
ick up grit, lift grease, mud
;and. You spend a lot of
y on your equipment and
~to take care of it.
the most part, the average
doesn't take advantage or
e information available to
in the form of waxing
shops, conducted by many
ops.
lN CASE you haven't the
est notion how to wax your
1kis, here's an easy step-by·
st, place your skis, bottoms
n a flat surface. If there's an
•ax build·up, use a scraper,
rably metal, to take orr the
1ax. Use the acetone-basj
nttoclean the ski.
en. select your wax.
e yellows are usually the
complete, broad-base wax,
111 the brands are not com-
ly uniform yet. They're all
s_olor ·cocled dependmi OD t.be
temperature and tM bwnldlt.)o.
Whatever bl'ad ol wu )'OU
select, tbere will be a co&ot<CQded
dJa1nm telllnl )'OU wbieb la belt
for what concllUoat. Before you
buy. make aute the dlreetiona are
lo Engliah -unless you 're fluent
in FreochorGerman.
II' YOtJ NEED to blend twodil·
ferent types ol wazu, you can
melt them tocetber 1D a pot or app-
ly the waxes almult.aneoualy. U
you chose lbe latter, IOften one
side of one of the ban aaainst an
iron to make the two aticlt
together.
Then bold the ends of lbe wax
cakes to the iroo and drip the wax
over thi bottom of your alda. If
you chose to run lbe tip of the lron
along the ski, as some coaches
prefer, make sure you don't hold
it in one spot too long. The bottom
or your ski will burn.
Try to cover the entire base of
each ski as thoroughly and con·
sistenUy as posslble.
Ne¥t with a fiat end file, metal
or plastic straight edge utensil,
car,fully apply even strokes to
the ski bottoms, going with the
grain of the ski fTom front tip to
backeod.
When that's completed, do the
sametotheedgesoflbeskis.
With the knowledge that your
skis are in rme tune, you can now
bit the slopes, assured that your
sit is' performance levels are at
their maximum.
* * * American Tamara McKinney
rallied with a blistering second
run Sunday to win the women's
giant slalom in World Cup com-
petition at Aspen Mountain.
McKinney, in third place after
the first run through t he SO-gate
course, was clocked in one
minute, 6.58 seconds to overtake
first·run leader Erik.a Hess of
Switzerland.
It was the 18-year-old McKln·
ney's third giant slalom victory of
the season. Her performance
enabled her to add 16 points to her
season-leading GS total. boosting
her lead over Marie-Theres
Nadig of Switzerland to 100-82.
McKinney is from Oly mpic
Valley. Calif.
rtists rebound;
'ikes still sizzling
the verge of dropping three
1ght games, the Laguna
h High volleyball team bat-
back to overcom e a stub-
Estancia squad in five
es Wednesday night, and
1 na High collected its second
ght upset to highlight prep
•n.
!anwhile. on the community
•ge scene, Orange Coast
ed Long Beach CC while
ten West dropped a four·
e set to Santa Ana.
ter dropping the first games
fontical 15·9 scores, Laguna
c h Coac h Bill As hen
ched from two setters to
and the Artists battled back
5·9, lS-7, lS-13 victories.
What we did was move
ce Stewart to the lone setter
lM, Miraleste
ee l in tennis
potential preview of the CIF
tennis championship is on tap
lay at Balboa Bay Club where
lime CIF champion Corona
Mar. led by Antony Emerson,
ides with Pioneer League
erMiraleste.
ction in the non-league contest
1 under way at 2 p.m. with the
:>ols using the four show courts
two others for the match al ...
J•
mong the Miraleste squad is
tican star Jorge Lozano, who
med with Raul Ramirez to win
I doubles in rece nt Davis Cup
on against the U.S. at La
ta.
Art ShoW
Huntington Center
daily thru &Jn
t requtrH by law,
ew bueln••••• alng a ,.lotltle1t1
uelneuN ..... ....a
, •••• , th•t "•"'· ltll Ute Couftly Cieri&.
... ..,. DAILY ll'tLOT
EGAL DE.PARTM!NT
r tonne and further
form9tlon.
142-4321
EJlt. 332 •
midway through the third came
and that just changed things
around," Ashen explained.
"Give Laguna Beach credit.
We had them pinned with their
backs to the waJI and they came
back," added Estancia Coach
Mike Pomeroy.
Ashen said Stewart s lmply
"took control" once he switched
things around.
The Eagles got fine
performances from middle
blocker Brad Elligood and out-
side hitter Jeff Culler.
Meanwhile, Marina, coming
off a big upset over Dos Pueblos
last week, did it again, this time
stopping No. 4 rated Capistrano
Valley in a match that took
nearly three hours.
''After being a nobody for so
long, you wouldn't believe how much fun it is to win," said an
elated Viking Coach Tim Reed.
Both Kevin Fischer and Brian
Koontz turned in strong efforts
hitting, while Bill Lennertz led
the Vikings' defensive game.
The victory improved Marina's
record to 3-1.
At Fountain Valley, Ocean
View needed just three games to
down the Barons.
Middle blockers Mike Simek
and Jim Gane were sharp for
the Seahawks, while Brian
Paterson was adept at back dig·
ging.
In community college action,
OCC won its second strateht
five-game match as Bobby
Wheelock and Tom Gregor y
were sharp aa the outside man
and inside blocker respectively.
'),,
WAYNI! CARLANDU.
No contest
as Royals
win No. 26
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .. Dally .. I ... '"'" LOS ANGELES -San Marcos
Hi gh's amazin g unbeaten
Royals swept to t heir 26th
baa.ketball victory in a row Wed-
nesday night as they over·
wh e lmed once unb eaten
Newbury Park, 91 -65, to set
themselves up for a CIF 4-A
showdown with Long Beach Poly
Saturday.
Before a combined crowd of
7 ,246 at the Sports Arena, the
Royals put the wood to the Pan·
thers in a style seldom seen, one
which defies defense, strategy,
muscle, height or common
sense.
In the 2-A semifinal, Glendale
High swept to a 68-'3 victory
over lifeless and puncbless Sun·
ny Hills, setting Glendale up for
a 2·A UUe game with Blair, a
team the Dynamiters have
beaten twice in Foothill League
play.
BUT THE STORY of the night
w as San Marcos, the super
quicks from Santa Barbara who
revolve around 5·10 guard Jon
Korf as.
Korfas rmished with 23 point;
and 6·4 teammate Jeff Azain
clicked for 22 points. But the
story of San Marcos can hardly
be written off so simply.
Sizzling from the outset, San
Marcos attacked with a relent-
less press and fast break,
penetrating, popping from out-
side and dominating the boards
against a foe which featured a
6·7, 6-6, 6-5 front line.
Korfas led a first quarter
surge with a dozen points u San
Marcos jumped to a 19-10 lead
before settling for a 23·20 first
quarter lead.
AT THE HALF Newbury Park
trailed by a 48·35 margin despite
the Panthers' crisp attack which
netted 14-0f·29 from the field and
7 -for-9 from the line.
The reason such a dilemma
persisted was that San Marcos
had made 21-of-33 from the field
(63.6 percent) and 6-of-7 from
the line.
San Marcos moved into a 64-47
lead late in the third quarter,
saw it dwindle to 70-55 with 4:43
remaining, then spurted away
with a 21-10 margin in the ftnal
minutes to claim the lopsided victory, snapping Newbury
Park's 25-game winning streak.
Glendale tuned up for Blair by
beating the Lancers in a game
which found Sunny Hills lbe vic-
tim of a malady which oftens af.
flicts teams at the spacious
arena.
THE LANCERS ran into a
stone waU in the form of a lid
over the basket as they could
manage onl y 6-for·23 from the
field in the first ball and 16·
for-53 overall.
Glendale, meanwhile, hit :;o
percent of its shots in the first
half ln racing to a 26-13 lead and
finished with 2.5-of-45 (55.6 per-cent.
Mike Martin (6·8) and 6·7
Colin Swaln5ton scored 21 and 20
polnta for the winners-Jim
K arsatos and 8-7 Ch arlie
McClelland could net only 11
point.I apiece for the Lancers.
\I
SKIING I BASKETBALL / BASEBALL
~arlander, OV romp
lmpre11i1'e day for area teama ~
Wayne Carluder showed WedMsday tbal .
be'a Juat H adept at tbrowtna the small.
borsehict.-eovend bueball u be la the the larier.
rubber'.eov.-.d buk.tball.
Carla.nder. bavlDa Juat flnlabed a brilliant
buketball career at Oceu Vlew ffiJh tut week
by lead\DC lbe Cir l ·A lo ac=ortn1, went to the
pitcher'• mound for the flnt time thl• aeaaoo and
overpowered Anaheim for four ln.nin11 11 the
Seahawb won a tbird·round eame In the Troy
Tournament.
Fowitaln Valley, EdlJoa, Estancia, Laeun.a
Beach and Marina allO coUected victories. Here's
bow tbe action went:
Oce•n View 7, An•hetm 2
Ocean View downed perennial CIF powerbou.te
Anaheim, and tbe Seabawlta did it a1a1D1t lbe
Colonlsta' ace from tut year -Steve Ev-.m.
Evans wu 18-3 lut aeaaoo, but wu rocked
Wednesday by the Seabawlta for four rum lD lbe
PREP R4SEBAL£
first Inning. Carlander meanwhile, struck out six
in hls four innings of work, including the first four
batters be faced.
Joey Jennings pitched the final three innings
to preserve the Ocean View victory.
The Seahawks' Kevin Stanley had two bits and
an RBI, Fred Tuttle delivered two hits and two
RBI, and Greg Villaroel added a triple and two
RBI.
Foungln Y•ll•Y 7, Le Quint• O
Mike Zagner and Dean Roberts blasted two-
run homers, and Jeff Cohen and Garrett Cornish
combined to blank La Quinta as the Barons im·
proved their record to 5-1 with a third-round vie·
tory in the Troy Tournament.
Fountain Valley also cot offensive support
from Howard Noack who went 2-for-4 with an RBI
and Tim Martino who added a double and scored
twice.
Eegncle 8, D•na Hilla 4
The Eagles, trailing 4-1 early, came back with
four runs in the fourth inning and went on to gain
their second win in as many games this season.
Greg Forge walked to open that inning, ad-
vanced to third on a double by Eric Riggs and
scored on an error orr Ken Curtis' ground ball.
Lou Dieley then tripled in two more runs and
then scored on J ohn Cornuke's single.
Dieley, a senior catcher. was 2·for·2 and had
three RBI on the day.
Edleon 18, Sunny Hiiia 1
Edison exploded for two. three and seven runs
in the first three innings and colJected 12 hits for
an easy win over the Lanc~rs in &be Troy tourney.
Robb Munson pltcbed the flnt three lnnin11
for Edi.Joo_ and waa relieved by Gre1 Cloney. Tbe
two combined ln allowinS Sunny Hll1I just three
hltl and one unearned run.
EdiJOD pltcbert have not allowed an earned
run over the last 27 inninaa.
Mike DeBenon Mlke Powell, Tom Hill and
John .lelloe all had bJ1 days at the plate for the
Cbar1ert1. DeBenon was 3·for·3 with one home run
and three RBI, Powell bad a double and three
RBI, Hill was 2-for-4 wlt.b a home run and three
RBI and Belles was 2·for-4 with two RBI.
M•rtn• 10, LB Wlleon O
Marin• pounded out nine hits in its laugher
over Loog Beach WUson.
Doug Paschal pitched five innings of shutout
wort, allowing six bits . He was also 2·for·3 at the
plate with four RBI.
· Second baseman Ken Bodle was 4-for-4, in·
eluding two triples, a single a walk and four RBI.
L•gune Beech 5, Irvin• 4
Laguna Beach scored four runs in the third in·
ning to take a 4·1 lead, then held on for a 5·4 vie·
tory over the Vaqueros.
Laguna Beach picther Kevin Clark breezed
through the first six innings then had to fight off an
Irvine rally in the seventh to pick up the win.
Irvine and Laguna are both 2·3 on the season.
Caho race tops
yachting calendar
Highlight of the local yachting scene this
weekend will be the start of 35 crack yachts in the
sixth biennial sailing of Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's 790-mile Caho San Lu cas race. The race
starts at 1 p.m. off the Balboa Pier.
Rivaling the Caho start -which will take all
of 10 minutes -will be the continuation of Long
Beach Yacht Club's Congressional Cup match rac·
ing series featuring 10 of the most talented match
racing skippers and crews from throughout the
world. The Congressional Cup started Thursday
and will continue through Saturday -weather
per mitting.
* * * In OC.twr SoutMr" C•llforni•
V Khlt"9 AlJOC••llon Mffl
LotA .... ln·L-.. «~
LOl AnQetH VKhl (IUD 8UO•
r•c• Sunoev
C.•Dntlo a .. , .. 'f•U•I CluD
Spnno Set1t' No 2 C•ll ct•ot'' ~un
d•V Bucc•nt•• V•cht (IUD •n••ll
•<I Sl••l ra<e IPHRFI S.lurcuv
Long B ••Ch Y•Chl (.luD
C.on9rHs1on•I LUI>. tO<to. ~ "d•V
S.lurdn
* * * ~nU-ft1U l•Y
JC 1nQ H•roor 'f"•<hl Club
loprtn9 Rl'9dll" 1•11 CIU .. \I S.IUr
d•v
De! R~y V'acnt Club C.•ta1trw
C.n•nn~1 R«Mt-tS.'Of' S.r1tu ~lur
Clay
'tVOvOvri Hull Owntrs A\iO( ••t~on
Ont Mort-T1mf re9•1t•. S.tur0•1'
Poc1ftC Mdr+ntr-s V•cnt Club
Open NO••U R•o IPHRfl Sund•V
!--------------------------~----------------~ Shields
to fight
. INGLEWOOD -Irish
Randy Shields meets
Jose Duarte Monday
night at the Forum in a
critical boxing match for
Shields.
Shields bu signed to
meet Tommy Hearns
May 9 in Las Vegas for
the World Boxing As ·
sociation welterweight ti-
tle held by Hearns.
The. Shields-Duarte , -::SUPER SPECIAL bout is a featured 10·
rounder on a card that
spotlights unbeaten Gato OH THISI I SIDS
Gonzalez against top-
ranked lightw~ight con-Ml CHELI N x tender , Vllomar
Fernandez of th e
Dominican Republic.
A loss to Duarte would
ruin Shields' chances of a
shot at the title with
Hearns.
Basketball I
scores
College
NIT
l'W.aMM
Teus-EI P-S7.Seft.JoMSUleU
G-eloa 74. Old Ootnlfllon.O
T oleclotl, "'-IUft u. a
Mlft""41tat0,0.--.77
S.AlaMfN74, THAIS·Arllftll'°"71
MAIA ..... .....
Hlllldele,Mldl.».8rlerClltt ..
Hu(en,S.0.52, Blot.SO
Belll•nv N•ur-N . ~lllern
Tech SI
MldwHlerft Stele 104, Llft<oln Memorloll7
H•nowr, lftCI. 72, $.C. $tl011enlwrg
60 • Augsburg,Mlnn.11,l(ffrMVSl.17
Al•b•m•·HunlSvlll• 67, Oregon
Coll99'f'2
t
Hltlflechool Cl,.M
leMlllMfs Sen Morc•9'. N...,.,ry P••llO
Cl,.l·A
SMR!f ..... GltflCY .. 61, $1#11\y Hllls4J
Com""'""Yooh.-women
sen-.~ 10..Getdtf!WHIU Fuller101111.cern .....
~n Ot..,Meson ,SMUAM47
T .... uWMtew•
HURRY I THEY\WN'T LAST!
llU SUGG SALE EXCH. PRICE Pf'!ICE
l1o5-Jj116/111ft14 s 1 ()()35 S6990 8'~14
~..!'21al7Ml4 s10741 S]'J!O Qfl~14
tt'-J '21u1&111a Sl] 6 82 s7990 Qfl~16
W-.Jb11M16 s131 61 s 8990 ~11
Uo0-.!Aaw6AI& s 144.ce s 9990 ~,.
Ul"JbmiR16 SJ4892 s10490 U.~11
MICHELIN X
TUllLISS WHJnWALL
SUG0 EXCHANGE OUR PRICE
BR78-13 .... $ 96.14 .• 7o.90
~78-14 .... 100.35 •• 79.90
ER78-14 .... 105.06 84.00
FR78-14 .... 107.41 .. 85.90
~78-14 .... 116.03 .. 89.90
t-R78-14 .... 122.95 .. 92.00
~78-15 .... 116.82 .. 93.00
t-R78-15 .... 121.52 97.90
• ~78-15 .... l'Zl.79 99.90
P165/7S.13 . . 82.32 64. 90
!tgt~l~
I ~16.5 ., ,. 149.00 t <'• • 126.90
87SR16.5 .... 161.2·i .••• 136.90
95M16.5 .... 183.99 .•.. 156.90
1CR16.5 .... 191.75 •••• 163..90
MICHELIN XZX st..t lelhd ..... I *-,..,..... c.n
T.W.11 llec:irw.I
SUGG OUR EXCHANGE PRICE
155-12 ...... $58.99 .... .fl.00
145-13 ...... 54.52 .... 43.90
155-13 ...... 62.23 .... 49.90
165-13 ...... 69.80 .... 55.90
175-13 ...... 76.87 .... 59.90
165-14 ...... 72.75 .... 58.90
175-14 ...... 79.56 .... 63.90
1 SS-14 . . . . . . 86.30 .... 68.90
185-14 Ren ... 95.36 .... 75.90
145-15 ...... 60.36 .... 45.90
155-15 ...... 69.72 .... 54.90
65-15 ...... 77.22 .... S9.90
70 SERIES 175(70.13 .. $75.03 •... 59.90
185(70.13 .... 83.03 .... 65.90
185(70.14 .... 88.60 ..•• 69.90
1 MICHELIN
S,XVS ANDXWX
S....a.th41 ....
, .... 1 ........
suoo EX CH ANOE
165-13XAS . . $80.29
165-14XAS .. . . 83.66
165-lSXAS.. .. 88.82
18S-14XVS .. 120.11
185(70.XVS .. 117.17
195(70-14XVS 123.03
205/7Q..14XVS 131.26
185/70.15XWX 181.36
205/70.1 SXWX 'l!J7 .'J9
215/70-1 SXWX 214.60
OUR PRICE
64.90
66.90
69.90
95.90
92.90
97.90
105.00
15'.90
116.00
183.00
Alf-.. Ol'-OkaFE.Tol1121DlllOM
JY~ S'ilte ~enki
TIRU • IUDS • ALI......,. • SMACK AISOalHS • TUMI UP
JOOO I. COA.ST MWY.
COIOMA D& MM
• PHOMI 644-1022 VISA'
\'
----------------,----------------··· ·-·-··-................. . ..... ~ -................ __ ..,.. .................... _________ _
Mi ••• .. •••
• •
t ' ' t
'
~ > .
NBA
WUT91tN CION .. lltlNCI
ll'edtlc OMIMll
tC•PllotnlX
X•Ulltn
POt'tlanO
GolOtn Stat•
San 01"90
Stttllt
W L ~t. 01 n n 101
.. 24 .•S1 ,,_,
JI u .$11 14
,. )6 JOO u ....
u '° "' ""' JZ " ••• 20
Mlftttl Ol •lslttl c ·Stn Anconlo .. 21 uo
KanM• Clly JI )6 .S07
Houston .lA • •n 11~,
Otn•tr )0 " OJ u
Utah u '1 .~S. 10
Dalla. 11 •t ISl :141,
lASTlltN CONl'lltlNCI
All ... li< Olvisl"'
•·Phllta.tp/loa SI U 7'S a Boston S4 16 111 ._,
Ntw York '1 .JO S&3 IS ,
WUhlllQlon lS JI 41q 13
Ntw Jtrsty 11 SI 291 ll'>
C.ntrtt Ol•bltt1
y·M•lwaukff
tnCll1n1
Ch1C1go
At11n1a
Clt •tl•na
Ott roll
SJ 20 111 n lJ 141 IJ
JI )6 SOI IS• 1
uu:ll•H
H o JS? Wo
11 SS 1'1 ).I• 1
V·Cltn<MCI d!Ylslon loll•
•·<llncMO pleyoft btrlh
Wt~Y'tSctr ..
Bo\lon 121, Mn ........ IOI
Pll1ta<1t1p111111s ....... York •s
Sutllt IOI, ClevtlenCI •s
"l•w Jtr~y IO'I, Wl\ht!'IQIOn 10•
Oelrool IDO, A1l•nl1 91
Houston 10'I, Gol""1 St•lt.,
Tonltfll • Gamu Laktna1S.nDleQO
GoldtnStattal Dallas
1no1tn1e1WnNngton
Den'WtrAlM11w-.1'te
Exhibition
A't •. Wllaltt 4
111 scotadltel
T ••VO Wh4110 100 000 OJO • I I
O•~lanCI 010 201 ... • II I
Htrom•l\U, Ar11 'u S•to (4J, F11•0-• ,,,
tked• (I J •nd Fuk!i.i\h1m1. 1cn1tt1t1W1 (It
Norri\, Minetto (.tJ, L•c•v ( 7) •nd He1th W
M1ne110 L A•tt HR O.•lano, Pai
ler\on
Tt9t<1 t, Wl\lte SH J
t•t S.rest1a, Fl• I
Otlrott ?JO 200 OOJ 9 " 1
Cnocavo IALI ooo 100 001 l s 1
MOrrt,., 8.a11•'1 1 •J RObbu\\ t'I I nd Par
n sn, &urn\, Rob1n\On t•>. Hoffm1n (1J and
Eu11n, Foity 161 W Mo<fl• L B""" H~s Dtt•ool Brook~ns (ll1t190
Nordn•9"'"
11a.,..n•,Y•n-M•l
l•I Fort uuoerdaltl
feU\ 0 10 030 000 • 6 I
Ntw York A 000 001 :>ol J 6 )
Hon•tCtJtt. l..f""tc)ltyn U J. R•J~fth C 1) ano
SunaottQ, B JOM\On 161, John Grott1n 14).
Sl•Vlt Ill ..,ct Ctront O•lt• tu E•oino 11 w HontfCUtl L Jonn
Tl .. rs •. lltd Soa • (~l W1ftl•r H•"'"'"· ,.,,.J
Dt1ro11 lOJ 001 ooo • tl •
Bo•lon 010 001 100 • I O
U10\lr S.u<1fr t • ~tf'tlf'n u ~tl"fMY
.. , .. Ro1nstn11a 18, ana Ca,1t110. Ectttr)lty
St6nlf'y (4J Oot\ty rn ttnd L•Ctl.f'rl Scnm•dt
111 W U10ur 1.. EOtr\lfY HR\
Oetro1t Htbn•r Lea<"
E•POH, Bh•e Jay\ J
tat WHI Palm S.a<~I
I or onto 110 000 001 J 9 o
Mon1rea1 IDO 010 10• • 1 2
Tooo, Ja<k.on l'I. Woray Ill 1no Wh11t.
Wh1lmar 181 Ro~''· En1111 141 wor1nam
I 11 anCI Caner C Smolh 1•1 W Entlt L
Jac•\on HA MOnl•••I W•11acn
To.,yo I, Twin• 1
Cat OrlMI .. , Flt I
lo• VO 010 JOO 10) I 10 0
M1nnoo1a 1DO 000 000 I • o
N1ur• As.-no 61 ieno V•m•-.ur• R•dftfn
Corbell 141. 0 Connor 01. Sarm1tnto 1•1.
Oooner t 91 and wvnrv•r Smith 1 SI w
Nu"'a l. ~P<lf~rn HR To•yo Harra
Brew•" 6, tn411n1 s
111 TIKtol\)
M11way•ff 011 010 010 • 10 I
Cl•••l•l>CI 110 021 000 ~ • l
C•IOwtll Bo1l1no Ill Clovel•nd I SI
B•rnaro 111 Porl~ 1•1 anO YO>I FOltY Ill
B•rker. Puryear c.t), Cuetl•r h•. St•ntort
181 1nCI 01.u 8.tnao 11• w 8orna rct L
Stinton HR M••w•u~tt Brouf\aro
HMih1n t, Mariners S
(II Tempel
H•n~llon 100 001 401 9 11 ~
St•lllt OJO 100 010 S a l
Yem•mo•o. Emoto t61 Om1ch1 t91 MIO
W•om• Os .. m. ISi Abl>Oll, BUlllt '"· Clay t II and s-aoo•. Guldtn Cl>I w
Emolo L c1 ..
CutH I, Goll\U 6
C•tM .. I)
San Fran<oKO 000 110 101 I> 10 I
Cllocavo INI 000 011 OOJ I 13 I
Btut . Wh1\lon UJ Minton •nd M•Y. S..O.k
t61. AeYHlltt. N•ll" 141, P1r-.u 161
Chu<Clllll C.i anCI t'ooto, HOH (II W
CllYrthllt L Minion Hll St n FrM>
Ct\Co. Htrndo"
...... >. "'"" J Ctl l'on Myers, F1' 1
Allantt 110 000 oo6 ODO 01 J 10 o
KC 070 ODO ODO ODO 00 ·2 11 I
Htnnt, B•a<llO<d "" Mahler II. Ptt ttway 1101, M<Murtry llll 1nC1 Na!larOClny,
Owtn 111. Splltlorll, Marlin (4), Ovl...,.
berry (II. Twitty (IOI, l.atktY l tJI Incl
Grole, Oe•o l'I. Stau111i1 111, W1lhM1 1121
W McMurtry L LA•ku
Colleoe 1cora1
C•I Poly (Pomona fl 1,cs1.01AnQtlH)
CS Northrlcl9t•.L-Btac~SI S
S.nltCltral.ArltonaSI 0
GOl\ltgt S, Calltornla •
UCLA•_.LaVt•neJ
Community college
Sooltlltnl Ctl C.nftrtflCt
LA Her Dor s. Ettl LOS A~ltsO
Nttl<•l..-1
Fulltrlon 12·1,0xnuOl·O
SantaA.ntl, VCL.4JV•
AtoH-1,Compton•
High ec:hool L..-S.acll J, ,,..._ •
Lagyn1 8tecll ~ OIO o-s s 1
trvlnt 101 000 2-e t o
CllVll Ind "°"''°"· Wttlbr-. Sims UI
-l'tlll'ttlbacll. W-Ctark. 1.-Wtsll>tOOll.
28-8trryltlll (1.aguna luclll, Gu llo
llrvine).
Ge-View 1, Atlallelm I
Octan View 400 070 1-1 I I
An.fltlm 001 000 0-J ) 1
Certtnoer, Jtnn1n11 UI •nd M11_.,
Ev1111, Jord111 171 al\d Palmer. w '
Certancter 1.-E•t na S J1n11l1111. II
Stanley (0cHft Vie•), e .. n• l-'nalMltnl J8-VllltrlWI IOc .... Vltwl. •
••~•••,O...NUlt4
Oana Hiiis 040 000 O • o
l ttancl• 010 401 ._. • 1
H•rrl•, Stnllll 141 1110 H•rvty;
RoDertlOll, Coriwltt UI. Mllreff UI tncl
Oltlty W-Mllrtff L-Harrlt, 21-11119'1
(EllMt.la l ; te-4t*'1Mft, OltltY lil11M-
cla); Cmtllli, k-11 <Oet1t Hiiiei.
......... ".....,'·&.a ...... L• Oul11ta OOD 000 O -4 J I
'°"11talll v ... .., °'' ., •-7 , 0 Orlll"1, Wffver (41 tncl Kele; Cllfltfl,
C.,1111111 (6) -.. .._ W-<oflen, L-Orltltll.
21-Martlnt "-tatn ..... ...,1, Je.-i..e1
IL.I Oull'llA); 141t-W-'• ltOO.rtt Cl'...,_
taln vau..,-1.
........ ._., ...... ,
•elt6n U1 .. _,. II I
llUM'I HUit 000 10-1 J • Mii"""' OMrt m Mii s. .......,,. ..,
l.l11•11ard .. I; .... HI, Sltfha IJl, alld
Mllllf. W-M4#Weft (l.0-11 L-'°ttMI. 1e-
,.,_w1ll «•fhonl. KtlllCll CIUllllY Hltl&J,
Hlt-Dte.ntft. Hiii ICtllen).
............. IHcll ......
Marine •• Oil) 0-10 t I
l.0110 IM<h WllJ.111 000 000 0-0 6 I
P1tcllal, OIUll l•l l llf HttUI\,
HtllMUCll eftd 111.Ull.... W-ll'eKl\al, L-
Htlllbf ICll. H -Vtl\lllt'a (Marina). Ja-
Bedlt 2 IMtr"'-l
Men'• tournament
l•tOW.-,,11.1
'Se(tMlll ..........
8u1c11 Wall• def Guillermo Au«lofte, .. 2.
.. ,. A-I ........ 1 Hol Otf. '"" WUUson, .. 2.
•·S, Sam111yOJarnmat••0tf.JotWIA1t•-.
•·1, 1-., Jeff Bo<-owltk tlef. Ricky ll'tgtl, .. J,
.. 2.
Belfll•n lndoOr
tatlrv-ltl *-" ..... ""'"' Jimmy Connondtt. Pel OuP••·'"· •·>,•->, Peter Aenntr1 Gel. AOCI Frtwley, •.J. 1-S,
Frlli ButN>l"9dtl TrtyWallkt, .. l,t·1
Woman'atournament
ltlO.lletl
Sec-lttwldst"tfl ..
l(ethy JordAn dtf Zina G•rrlton, •·l, l •.
._,, V1r9inl1 Au11cl Clef. Stacy Margolin, .. l.
• J , Blllte Jtan Kint dtl F t llc la
Aa.c ntalort, •·>. •·•. Bttlln• BunQt Ott Sut
Barker, .. 1. •.:i. Mary Lou Plt ltk Cl•I eauy
Na9'1lt.on,Otltull
l'tntlt..,,,.0 ... 1>1"
M•rt1n• Nevrelllo••·P•m Shriver det
Marjorie B•acllwood·Y•onne Vtrm•O ... 1. •». Lesh• Alltn ll•n• l(IOH oet Ao•I•
C•Ul .. Wtncly Turnbull,. I, •·l , Anne Smith-
Kathy Joroan dtl Virginia W•Clt·B•l•Y
Ne9tl1on. Rtnte 8 tount·Ktlt l etll•m
det. Aobtrl• M<C.llYI" Mary Lou Pl•ltk, l·S,
I •• Mirna JausoYtC·Pam TttVY••dtn tie+
StnCly Cotllnt·Btrt>era Ltml>e"i· • 1. • 4, •->,
LU Antonopll .. Btlh Norlon Cltl OC:a1t<1na
Skron•k•· Iv• B\ldaro va,6 I, •.J
lntern1tlon1ltournam1nt
lalCalrtl
FlrtlA-SlRVIU
GY1llermo V•l•s oet. Helm Arlot0rotl, .. o.
• I
Community college
S.ddltOICk t, Cllntt t
Slntltt
Downey ISi oer Mann,• 0, • 1, Patton CSI
dtl Boelntr, .. 1. 6-0, WllltntierQ ISi Ott
Cven, 6-4, 6-0, lleck (SI Cltl AbulWmto, ._O,
6 0, M1tc,,.11 IS> Cltl LIOl>ll, 6 ), l·S JonH
ISi dtl M11-. ... 1. 1 .. 1
Ooul>lu
Dow no Pi llon C SJ oet Minn Bodnar, •-1. •·I, Wltt...,btrg Btc• tSt Ml Abunamao
M11don, J s ... o. M•ICl'tlll ~rr1no ISi Ott c ... no Llocm I S. •-O
High achool
Vnl .. rlity 1', u ... ,.. aucll 11
SlnglM
Brumt•tlO ILBJ lost to D. Do. I •. 10$1 lo
Grttk, I·•. clef Ntlton, •». Cltl Ntldlr. 1·•,
D•••Clt.on I L8l 1011. 1 ... 1-•. won • 1., lost.
•·•. Scnanu ILBI lost. I·•. J •. 3 .. , .... foi11C1,.nl ILBI lost, 1 .. , t·•. •·•,I·•·
~"' .. Lucn-~1...CO IL81 Clel Do·N•tk•Y. •->. •·J. d•t Snerman·Mtrtlnei, 6·2. 6 1,
Junoct .. ·LUll~ IL8 > to•I. 1-4 1 •.won,'"· •·•
F ..... Ufl\ V•llty IS, L8 WllMn IJ
s1,,.1 ..
PlkYlln 1FVJ IOU 10 ACktrmtn, I •. def
Mt(hUl1en, • J, Cltl Da y, • I d•I
~hro .. •toa .• I, Stoa tFVI lost, 0 •• k """'·
• 0, •·O, Spooner IFVI loll. o ... "'°"· 1 s. IOSI.
SI, won, 6 I, SlleYgM (FVI loU, 16 won,
6 J. IO•I. •·I, #on • 2
0-M
Buchanan·Caou1on11 C FVI •Pill with
Ctvrtltk Grot>trl. S I •·l Cltt Lt•Y
lltOhtn. • l, • J Molltr Ramo• IFVI •Phi.
6·1 6 l, IOSI, J ... 1·6
ltHr1y Hilh 14, C•-11t1 Mir U
I l••ff1y Hilla wins on t•mt•, tOJ.ttl
SlntlM
J 1m1nu ICOMt 1011 10 L•••nvuon. I •. tosl
to C•nror, 1·•, tost 10 H•ck, O·•, 1011 to
Fontrm•n. l>·I, Gtrk..., CCdMI 1011, J •. I·•,
I·•. won • 4 Ger ie ICCIMI 1011, l •. I •. I·• ?·• Heywe•O ICdM) lost, 4·•. J •• s-1, """'· 6J
OOMMe1
WHh•• E,.,..uon CCdMI det ~llwtrlt
HOCl\mtn, •·O, •·1 . .,., A Htck·Sm•th. •-O,
1>-t 8e"9110t»Ew•no ICOMI won. l>O •.. 1,
won. •·l. • 2
Mirlna Jl\li, Pacfllca •V.
s1,,.i ..
(hO• 1M I Cltl Scn10tm•nn ••• Gel
T 0 10<, f>.1, clel Oe•lne. l>-1, dot Nvuyen,
II I. Crttt.on CMI won, 1·6, 6 I, 6-l, •..O. Be
monl IMI loSI l 6, won, • 4, • J • O.
Rotht\ton IMI IOU,, . ., won, •·4, •·2 .• I
0.WIM SeAton LeO•tm•n t M) sphl 8•rrv
Rentontll., •·•· 6 J, def J1men11 T •kemo10,
•·O. b •. Chanin Agl•ouo IM I IOSI, 0 •• J·•
won. • 0, •·1
lnrlM 14"'1, F11Utrton J"'1
S1"1tlff
A osr tll.ran\ tfl aef Jue, 6·1 dtf
Armllr0"9, 6 I, 001 JUClwln,. I, d•I Slaltr,
• 0, Harper It I, won,•}, •·1, •-O 11..0, t(n1Qlll
l 11 won, I> J, 1-6, • I 6·1. Vong c II won, ._J,
6 •. •·3, 1>-l oou ....
Miller (Nvu Ill sc>lol wllh Jot·Hollmen,
1.s. l •. ctet o. .. ts·Marllne•. •O. •·I, Kr111
V•n Ra .. 11) IO•l.1·•, l ·•. won. •·1 •• I
Mlttr 0.111, Capht•an• Vtll•Y II
Slngltt
tC lont tMOI oot L1l>Cl•lrom, • 0, del Frtat,
6 o. def Dff•er. •~. 0.1 Solon. 1>-0, Hall
CMOI "'"''' •-2, • I, •·2. "J, Ru99oer CMOI won • 1 • J. ·~ •• 1, Rtt<Bkf IMDI IOU .. 1.
won•.,,_.., lostl •
Dolll>lll
Gont•ttt~Lu1v•no CMO> d•f .... ,,.,.
W11he1m , ..-0, •"'· Maler Del 1or1e11to ne>tl
two tnalCMl Wllllt mS·Nt11rt1 (MDI ~t.
)6,)6.2•,0-•.
High ec:hool track
Merlftt IOI, LNrt 2t
100 I Groft IMI, 1114, 1 Mor1tno CMI,
10.S, J S<oH IL). 10.1.
i10 -I Moreno (Ml, U .I; J. S<hullt Il l.
JJ.t, J OuOoil IM), 1J.t 4<1(1 -I Tlt<llola (Ml, ».9, 2. Groll (Ml,
S•.O. J eeach ( L). S• •. llO -I Tlecholt t M). 2 OU, J. Bltalllon
(LI, 2:01.S, J. Rrttit CMl, 1.07.1.
Mlle -I. Smith IMI, 4;40.1, 2. l0<enll
(LI, 4 4l.4, S Ptall (M). 4;S2.l.
t2QHH -t. Lui IMI, 1'.2. J. Fllllfmtn
(Ml, SIU; J. er....atr (l), IU.
JJOLH I. Du8oll IMI, ea.a, J, 8rliCI (LI,
O . I, J. FlllV"*1 CMI, 0 .2.
440 rll•Y -I, Marina, 45.S.
Miit rtll'( -1. Marl,.., J;tf.J.
HJ -I, Davit (M.1, M ; 2. lr-r (LI, •.o. J. Smllll INU, H .
l.J -t. Da•lt (M). 20·tl'>; J, HtlM (Ml,
It IOV.; 3. HOdllllln_.. Cl.I, 1 ... 1~.
TJ -I Davit (Ml, 4).J\Cr, J. l(tlo (Ml,
l t-tl/1; ). Hodgltlnaon (LI,,,.,.
PV -I. LuStlc (Ml, U00; 2. Pe<httr ILf,
, ... , J. Lui IMl, 11.0.
SP -I, Q UAI ILi, eJ.llVa; 1. H...,11 !Ml.
•S,..tl'>; J. CM-tar tMI, fl·N
OT -1, H_,lt <Ml, llf.1; J. Car"~ler
IMI. n .. tlh. '· Cona ILi. 111-0.
'Y' • • ,,. . "
Women'• aoftbtlet
CIOMMUMIT't' COLL•H
ML ._"'°""''I, Cit' .... CM1t t
Mt, lell ,t,Mtlllo 000 1• 0-1 t o. ..... c... .. -._.. J
1'91111 "'° K-: Cul11 _,. c;r11L
LoeAJe...-0•
W•&Ne•IOA'f''S•H\#1.TI ,, ..................... __...,
l'lrll rec. -'-'' Httf1 (li.rrW!I, 21.•. U ao, a ... l!JNrY Dir.a (f ... ), I"· • •:
Mlnltler IHOll), •.10. f2 "f<IA If.•> Nkl
~JUO
SKOf\4 r.u H-IOYM I ()rvndyl,' ...
J 00, 2.40, Ne,,..le I.Incle IC..-l•ndl, 10 10.
UO;ArW'Vll11"910.llOrflJ,i QO,
Tlllro re(• Netl,.. a-c o.Mttl, 14.IO,
..... i.eo; M-.>Y 1111HOO!ler1w1111erne1, '·"°· / J 00; R M'aCINIY ..... ,er-1.uO.SJ•--s·
ta 11-71,.IOUM.
l' ... rtll rec. -JMCIY A (Al•a...,09•1, •,'41, a.ao, 2.60, Noble Aul• Cl•rntll, •.eo. J 40;
P0995U<k1Sften.,.1,uo.
Filtll re(e -C,,.pequlcll<k IAUOln), t.l'O,
2.ao. 2.ZO; IMe<ltlve (l.Ofl901, •. 10. 2.00.
Moftll.erdl ... rry),J . .O U•U<tl IJ.IJ pelel
tlUO
s1lttll rece -Anclyt FOtO•l•l>le 101.Mnl,
IUO, S.IO, UO; MoflslOnor Oele IA111>ln), S 60, J tO, Al. WMllS(Longol,J .00. '
S••tnlh rece -51.0lt HtnCI CGrundyl,
U .20, a.JO. S.JO; Cllatnpegne PrlnCt
CO.IOrnerl,l.tO,t to, D.aUt(l(utt>i.rl,•.'41
UtUCta (._1) pal0$65.00.
l2 Piek Slw IJ-2-S-H-41 pelO t l1,720 to wlll\ on• winning llclltt Ii.la llOUttl " P IO. SIJ
contolatlon palO $I°' 20 wllll H wlnnlllQ
11Clltl$(11 .. llorlffl.
Elghll\ rec• Young Mii hon (HUOltl, s .o. •.•o. J • .o. Ory S.cll <Lonool. • oo, 2 . ..0, sm.,1
l(oala (l(uebltrl, 2.to.
Nlfllh ract O'Cal Amy IAUOln). 10.40,
J 00, l .20, My EllH .. 111 I0.tomtrl, J.IO, 2 ... ,
Jlndt'l lmave I AtlCllitl, •. oo n •HCta IHI
PtlCISU 40
Ttntn rec. O...clng 8uua A IGrYndYI,
11.40, 1.0, l.IO, Panawa Bay 1£111011), 10.40,
10 00, Br•••''"" IKutbltrl, J IO U uacta
II 0 paldSl•l 20
Alttnelan<ct e,to'I.
S.nta Anita WIDNESOAY'S ltESUl.TS
U4111 .. 17-Ult "'-tillWH -tl"ll
Ftrsl rt c t -Tlltrnt't GupcO.t
(MCHtrOUtl. 1 '°· J.40, 2.IO. My Otar Tarn (Plnc1y), l •O. 2.10; Domini Arlyn
(Vt ltnl ... llJ, 4 40
Second r 1 ct Siient Outlook
IDtlallouuayel, 11.IO, 8 IO, e.40, Ktm Win
AYltr IMalgarlnll, 1 XI, l 60, Tb• Tl,,.,..
(McC1rron>. 2 IO. U Dally OOUOlt 1,_.I pal<I
~10 fhlrd ra<t Any Tlmt Pat IMc Har011tl,
11 .0, S DO, 4 20, S...cy Bil (McCtrronl. J 60,
3.<IO. Tlrn .. r LiQlll !Plnceyl, S 60
Fourrn race -TrU<kloeCI CC111tn..s.1,
J Ml, 1 IO, 2.40. Bengaltro I Torol, • 20, 3 40
Sor Sp1tlm1st 1w1n11nCll, J.20
Fifth race ACluena I Poerct J. 14 . .0, 110,
• Ml. Atlnstace ITorol. 1• 20, t I IO. llold
~amp !McH1•1 ... 1. • .o U ra1<1a tl-11
ptlCI '913 SO
S••tll rece Lt Due D• Bar IS'-mnerl
II .... oo. ) IO, P11ton IM<Cauon1 .• 40,
3 40, Royally Tr.,. IP1ncavl, 2.90.
Seventn r•<• S•m s Comel
tVt lef\l ... 111. J1 60, 101 • 40 F0<t Calgary
I CorCltrOI, l IO, 3.20. Sh41sy CCHtt neClll,
S 20 SS eucta 19 41 paid us• SO
U Pock SI• 1•+1·l S·ll Pl!ICI '5.4U 00 wolh
JI #lnn•"9 lkkel\ (II•• hor .. tl. SJ Pock SI•
con•ol1t1on p11d ~I .O w11n Sst w1nn•"9
tit Uh (lour no•.,.•> Eighth race Tolll PIHS\lrt (Plncayt
13 20, • ..0, e.80, Fo< Don IOll•trt•l. S DO. • .o. Reoe11ier101cutM1..i.I. • 60
.... ntt'I ract C"l•roKuro csnoem•ktr J.
I •0, 4 00, 3 00, N1l1•t lt<ll<S
I Ot lthouuaytl S.40. J 40, Nthmtl (Pin
Uy),. 20 u uacla (4 SI paid SIO so
Attel>Clanct U,388.
NHL
WALISCONf'llllENCI
Montru l
'""'' Prt11ourg11
Harll0<d
Dtlroll
Nwrlt Dl•lsltt1
W I. T 0" GA l'tll
JI 19 II 1tO "J tJ
31 u 10 m 141 "
21 l1 ' 2~ JOO ., ti i. 11 1Sf U I Sl ,, 32 16 110 ,., SJ
Adams Otvltlttl
8ull1lo lJ 1' 19 2 .. 20t 13
Mlnn,.ol• ll 2l It 1'1 na 11
Solton JI JJ 11 111 240 14
Quebec 7' JO 1' J"' ttl U
Toronto 1l J• 11 JIJ l U S7
CAM,.111.L CON,.lltlNCI
ll'ttrlcll 01•1•1•
"I Y .. ltncl•trl 40 11 II JOS JJO ti
Ph1la0t1pnla 31 21 10 l1J 21' *'
Ca1Qtr1 JS 21 11 ?a< 20 11
NY Ran(lfr\ 14 l• 11 21• ltJ 60
wunlnglon 21 JO I• 241 21• 60 SmytlW Olvltl~
~ SI l..OUll " ll IS JO'I JJI .,
Ch1<a110 JI 11 u 1U 116 ..
Vancou•tr 1• 11 11 10 1S9 tS
Edmonlon 11 ll 12 110 212 5'
Colorado JO 31 10 221 199 SO
Wlnnlpe9 I '9 ll 211 lll 11
• Cl1nc"8:0 d1v111on tttlf,
W-HdaY'I Sc:en1
l(lftt••.Chlceoo•
Cotor-4, NY lltnQtr\ J
WUhl"910n S, HarttorCI 2
Montreal 1, P•ll>burQll I
SI Lou1• S, Outbec S
Boston•. Toronto 4
Mlnnt>olt J, 8Ylttlo 1
NY .. lendtrs•. Wonn1pe9 l
hnltlll't Gt mtt
SI Lou11 at Montreal
Ot1rot11I Ptoll-lpNt
NY hlM>Clus•t EClmonton
Mlnnnot• a l Cal91ry
Kings 4, Black Hawk• 4
Sc:_,.,"'" ...
Cllocago
LOt AnQelH
l'lnt ""'"
3 0 I 4
0 l H
C111ca911, Murray 10 ISYlltr. l.y .. tkl. 1 IJ
ChltaQO, Sulltr JS !Murrey, Lysotk),
It 21 J Chlcavo. St<0<d 11 I I( err, Marl<sl.
1110 PentlllU G Fox, Chi l ll. G Fo•
Cllo, 1 OI, Kelly, LA, 1'.ll. S.Cond ,..,,..
• Lol Anljtlts, SI Laurtnl S CH•rrlt,
Hopk Intl' 1; 5' s LOI An9flts, Ktlly I IL
Murphy I. S' SJ. 6 Los A~ltl, KtllY I CL
Myrphy, S SJ • Los Angett1, Jtn..., IS
I Ttrflon. Well•I. 14 J.4. Penalty Bullty,
Clll, 2 '1
Tlllrd Ptrltd
I Clll<l90. Sutter Jlt (ZalWrko), I ;fl. t.
I.OS AnttlH, l Mul'pfly tJ I Dionne. H1rrl1I,
19 1S PtntltlH -8r-n. Clll, .0. Taytot,
LA, 40, M. Mul'pfly, LA, II 02.
Shots on goat -Cllfcavo ..... 4·H. l.ot
A<>9tlH 11-ll·l:Ml . GHllH -<N<avo. E'l>OtllO Los A~.
lHH rd A·ll,111
Misc.
Wedneedllr'• traneactlon1
IASKITI Al.I.
N1ti-1 aUllttM M Asat<lel ...
OETAOIT PISTONS -Wal•td 8011>
McAdoo, torwaro, 10< IM 1>11rpoM ol giving
lllrn !Ill ,.letH
l'OOTMl.1. ..., ... ,,,_ .. II 1..e .....
DENVER BRONCOS -Att•lned st ..
Jonu, Otftntlvt lint co•cll, AlcMy
McCtbt, dtltnll .. N Cklltlcl coach; !lot
Ziman, llntbtcller cHCI\, end Jot Qllltr,
dtltntl .. ,_.01r1etor
Yotteybell
COMMUNITY COLLI••
Oranoe C:O..t dtf. t.ono he<ll cc ... u.
IJ.10, t •IS, IH, lJ.10.
Sal\le AN d91. Goldtft WtOI, I-IS, IM, IJ.11, ,._,._
HIOHICMOOI.
Laguna lta<h dtf. £1tanc1t. t ·IS, •·IS,
IS.t, IS07, IS.IJ.
Ma rini dtf. c.tttr-v.11..,, 1-u; 1t-1J,
IS-•, U01J, lJ.10,
Oett n Yltw ..... F-Utn Yallty, IS,..IJ,
1 ... 11, I J. IS.
TONIOHT'a KM•DUL•
Marine et 0c9., vi.w <•: 0 1
IU r-111 MIMltfl VltlO ".UI ,,_ .. ., Ott et it. hfflMf m
Orange Cout DAU. Y PM.OT/Tl'tul'8de)', March 12, 1981
Tax investment timely ~
Selection thiru tu year progre11e1 .s
8y LO&IANP&TaY
Investors ln the 41 puc.ot or b11ber tax
bracket -and their numbers are 1rowtn1 -should eona1der 1981 tax lnv11tmenta now while the
telection la varied.
The eriticel prtnclple to remember wlth tu
lnveatmentl la i.bil : If lt la not a IOQd lDvt1tment
it l1 not' a lood ldea. A sound '
tax lnvestment muat offer tbe
potential for profit aa well u
for tax deferral and reduction.
The Int.emal Revenue Service
takes a dim view of tax invest·
menta that are deslfoed to pro-
duce tax lo11ea but have no
economic viabHlty.
Many inve1tor1 sby away
from tax investments becauae
they question t.beir legitimacy. ~.,av
However, as Judee Learned Hand wrote in a 1934
U.S. Court of Appeals decision, "Anyone may ao
arrange hia affairs that hls taxes shall be u low as
possible.' He is not bound to choose the pa~em
which will best pay the Treasury.
Sound tax investments are sanctioned by
Congress through tax incentives designed lo en·
courage investment in critical areas of the
economy.
A tax investment is a revenue·produclng
business venture, in real estate, the leaslng of
capital equipment, or the sale of oil and gas. It
works because businesses are permitted to take
tax deductions and credits related lo operation ex·
penses.
Jn exchange for assuming the risks of In·
vesting in certain businesses, you receive tax in·
centives. The higher your tax bracket, the lower
your out-of.pocket cost, diminishing the risk you
actually assume. Therefore, tax investments are
generally appropriate only if you are taxed at a
rate of 50 percent or more, when much of the
money you put into a tax investment would have
otherwise been paid out to the IRS.
THE INCENTI VES might be some combina-
tion of tax deductions and/or credits, tax-sheltered
i~come, or cash flow and future capital apprecia·
lion. Generally, you are not eliminating taxes, but
simply deferring them until some later date. In
so~e cases, you are converting ordinary income,
:ovh1ch may be taxt:d at r~tes as high as 70 percent,
mto long-term capital gams, which are taxed up to
28 percent.
Most tax investments are structured as limit-
ed partnerships. Your liability is usually limited to
WANTED
DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewel• by Joseph purchaaes dl1mond1.
genwtonee. gold and lllYer !tom privaw lfldM.
~ and esta•. careful exam!Nlion and
evaluation by our axper1a. Highest pncet paid
1()..8 ci.lly. Sat 10-6. Cloaed Sunday. Phone
.ooay. M/11. tor Betty Grace or Eric Zllatltus.
A TMDITlOfl Of TMIST f<* OVO. 60 TtAM
J[W[LS by JOS[PH
~ C099I pt ... COiie Meu • 540-90H
CALL LINDA BLUE
FOR A
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN
INTEREST ONLY! Newpor~~2'a!,~~~;.;!nc •
(714) 760-6060
COUECTOAS
CORNEA THE BEST
the money you have lnveated and all Income and
los1e1 that the partnenb.lp produce. now throu1h
to the investor partners.
Tax investment.I cenerally should be m ..
early ln the year to maxJmbe their tax beneflta.
But keep Ln mind that even if you.r tu bracti
ia hl1b enou1h to Juat.lfy tu lnveatmeota, It does~. mean that they are all ri1ht for you. DUferent
lnveatment pro1rama may offer credit&, defen
ca1b now or capital 111n1 in dilfertnc de1rees wt
varyina dell'ees of risk. You should always con•
with your own tax adviHr to determine wb.lch tysj
of tax investment will 1ive you the maxlmuii
benefit. •·
f Lorion Petf'l/ u an account r.ucutlw with tta. soi
ta Ano office of M.mU Ll/f'ICh, Pferce, Fmnn Ir SmUi.
Inc.). ~
LidG NaL1tilL1s
FITNESS CENTER FOR MEN & WOM EN
3295 NEWPORT BOULEVARD
WHY HAVEN'T
YOU JOINED YET ?
FOR ALL NEW MEMBERS
ON INDIVIDUAL ANO
FAMILY MEMBERSHIP
CALL NOW 675-1171
DISCOVER
THE WORLD
OF
WORRY-FREE
TRUST DEED
INVESTMENTS
~er MortcJage
Investment Seminar
Tues., March 17. 2 p.m.
Villa Restaurant
22731 A~n. El Toro
(lake Forest & San Diego Fwy.)
THESE .AIE FUM & IMFORM.A TIVE!
MO CHARGE • CALL TO IESERVE SEA TING
497-4874
1112-B So. Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach, CA
92651
CHARTER
MORTGAGE
COMPANY
licensed Real Estate
CorPorat1on
OUA SERVICE
IS NOT AUTOMATED
"
..
A•r• Colna 6 Stemp•
GOLD & SILVER
Prkes for 3/12/11 0.14 C ... MJ... ~(I .. tll.7'
Krugerr-
Miplt LHI
IOO Cor_,
50Pt sos
90% s11.., 8191
a.., Sell .... Mtt.• .......... MP• ...,.... ..... .....,.
t.1~ 1e..1t
IN READING 'ENJOYMENT
COMES TO YOUR HOME
7 DAYS A WEEK IN THE
By Terry
Grant,
R. Ph.
,,......... .. ~·--· Cellw -..-. (114) SM IMO
Sou"-COiiet "8u VMtege .............. , __ .._c-_,
~ Daily Pilat
(~ft.1t.»i1S fJ~~~U?e~~
t st In Features, Performance, Price!
TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER
..... , •.
e S.,.ctacular Color
Orephlc• and Exciting
Sound
• Plug·ln Progrem Pak• for
Entertainment, Peraonal u ..
e Write Your Own Program•
And lawe Them on
C..Mttla
a !My lorleglnnenrto UM ,
!1pendabte for experta
UM .,our own COIOf TV ~no .
ca-HI r.corder or buy oura
RADIO I HACK HAS OTHIR TRl..ec> COMPUTI RS
TO ,fT IVERYONl'I Nl!EDI FROM 1241 TO $101000.
Automation is becom•
Ing of g r eater im •
portance to our dally HI(•
ing. We approve or dired
dialing. ilp codes. com-pute rs and machine
'bookkeeping. We hav•
automatic stock control so everything we supplt
Is freshly potent. '
But. we will never giv•
you automated robot·likf
service. We believe our
customer friends are to<>
Important to be treated
casually . We hope you
will uk us for our In..
formed opinions about anything we supply. We
are a personal service
pharmacy.
YOUR oocfoR CAN
lHONE U$ when you ,-.'e'ed a m~clne. Pick up
your prescription if shop pln1 nearby, or we will
deliver promptly without
~xtra charae. A great
JDIDY people entrust ut ~lb their prescnpUons. May w e compound
mr:!l -
PAILL90PMAIMACT .... ......., ... ~ .... . .. , .. ....
• ' J .. ...
Call 142-1171.
Put • tewword1
lo work for u.
Orange Coat DAll-Y PtLOTIThU'9day, March 12. 1881
1 mm~~~~~~ 1
Uncertain future sign of troub'Le
SetlnVP
William C. Lochmoeller has
been ap~inted executive
vice president of the 13-state
Western territory of Sears,
Roebuck and Co .
Lochmoeller will direct the
operations of. all retail stores
and supporting facilities in
his area, which extends
from Texas to Hawaii and
BJ JOHN CUNNIFP ............... y ..
NEW YORK -You know.thin1s aren't weU with the economy
when so many people are tti.ln.klna about the future, a tuture 10 ill·
defined that you can peddle almoet any conceivable type of
fore cut.
Blame it on the times. Many Americana have had their
economic faith shaken, and even Ronald Rea1an mlcht bave a
time restoring lt. They thlnt 10methln1 bl1 l1
going to happen. They don't know what, but
they want to be prepared f0r whatever it ls,
good or bad, whenever it comes.
In good times, it has been demonstrated
over and over again, Americana are busy
with the present, with maklnc money, rais·
Ing kids, running businesses, enjoyln1
themselves, expressing themselves.
In the past few years, though, they haven't
been making the money (pay raises have
fallen behind inflation> or raising kids (small cuMMI""
families and sometimes no kids. are in,) at least to the degrees
they bad. -
Small businesses are hurting, as shown in surveys by the
Federation of Independent Business and the National Small Busi·
ness Association, which cite inflation. Interest rates and
paperwork as the big culprits.
While the matter or people enjoying and expressing
themselves might be too subjective to measure, you may get a
growling response it you ask resort operators or the local art
galleries "how's business?"
, includes Orange County.
Some will say that the marketplace is hardly a measure of
life's quality, but it is an indicator of sorts. And what it says is that
Plant budget • survives
Atomic project due despite objections
WASHINGTON (AP> David Stockman once
ridiculed a huge atomic project as "totaUy incom-
patible with our free-m arket approach to energy
policy." But when the budget director unveiled
President Reagan's 1982 budget, there was the proj·
eel all Sl.4 billion of it.
The Clinch River Breeder Reactor seemed like
a prime candidate for extinction in Reagan's as·
sault on government spending.
more weapons-grade plutonium fuel than it con·
sum es.
Stockman 's opposition was on economic
grounds. In a letter to House colleagues in 1977. he
provided 15 pages or a rguments on why the Clinch
River project would be a drain on the Treasury
and "a large uneconomic subsidy" to the electric
power industry.
But the reactor, like Senate Majority Leader
Howard Baker . is from Tennessee. And Reagan
· heeded lobbying from Baker in overruling
Stockman on a project both Stockman and former
President Jimmy Carte r opposed.
But the Reagan budget unveiled Tuesday
would reverse Carter's four-year refusal to spend
money to build the plant. Reagan a sked Congress
for $1.4 billion over the next five years. The proj·
eel is expected lo cost $3 billion with the govern-
ment picking up 91 percent of the total.
Asked about the inconsistency of Reagan's
budget and his earlier stand, Stockman said: "I
am not running this government single-handedly.
There were disagree ments but overall we came to
agreement."
Carter's opposition stemmed from concerns
• about nuclear weapons proliferation. The breeder,
· in addition to produ<'ing electricity, also makes
,.
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645-1342. 731-7777. 831-2493
O• uN 1n1 .. 11111itn ltt 1111 Answ1r P•9' olll<t "''"" ,..,
WAlllED
General Pea lners
for
JOJOBA R&D
TAX SHB.TER
Spdlallom .. ,..,
17141846-5515 ext. 173
.JOCADO AGRICULTURE CORP .
5901 Wonter ..... Hwlfleagtow l.ach 92649
$50,000 to $500,000.
INCOME PROPERTY SECON~
f* lftlfl'«•I onJy INIV-«nl '
··•--e .• C-•e«:Mll
• R-ldeft0al
• Weekly co-IO,•ftU j
• lltoftt"lv faftdl99a ,
• 6 -ftllll• lo S ye41n
• Sotrtlilcra Callfonu.
Cf•Oldtt ••Ur
loaft lftfonaatlo• ••"'~ '
f •I V• our hn30Cln!J n .... d,
I'
(714) 759-1515
AMERICAlt HOME MORTO.AGE 230 NiJwPOrl Center Drove
Oesogn Plaza
Newpon Beac,, •
Ca11rorn1a
92660
Earn Money Market rates and. get casb when you need it.
Borrowupto90'4ofyourbalanceonany SJ.014.79 for an annual percent.age rate
certificate or Money ~rket account with our of 9~.
Savings Account Loan . You avoid the interest Stay Hquld and ftulble in Umes of money
penalty for early withdrawal. And your entire market rate changes. Have ready access to
Sllvings keep earning interest al their es tab-your money for the next opportunity. We can
lished rate. transfer funds by mall for you from banks
Repay at an annual lnterHl rate of and other savings associations. Call or write
Juat 1'4 more than your account eama. today.
For e>Uimple. borrow $ J ,000.00 from an ,..,.~._ =,..,.., tft...-..~..,. _.,
8% account. 60 days later you pay bac k ~.:.w;:. .. ~;:io!:~~~ ..,_...
• • * • * * REPUBLIC FEoERALSAV1NGs ¥
IRFSlllllll =-~'~;i.~;;=;m~ l1icl ~~~~~=~46t.,~(71•>e94·""' FS
Heed otrke: ALTAOEhA U46 N I.au A~ (21.3) 791-1281 / 681·6611
~· ~ ·~ • 8UltlW« ·~. ~HOOKT&· ~~· LOSNtOELf.S Mil" SPRINOS • ~ • PICO llMA\ • MNTA MA• ~...mt• W'OOOV!l'C> HUI
\I
people are po1tpontn1 purcbues, deJayln1 fr\joymentl untlJ tomor-
row, when presumably tbinp will be clearer. Aak home buyers or
car buyen.
• Maybe times will be worse. You can have your pick of hlsh·
priced newsletter• forecastin1 the •dvent of terrible Umea, of food
shortages and riotln1 In the streets, of total economic collapee.
They are full of advlce on how to atop Uvlng : hoard food and 1old,
and hlbemate.
"The physical possesalon or prectou1 metals ls your ultimate
security agalnsl lnllaUon," announces a gold trader, unmindful of
t.be seem.inc oontradicllon in sellin1 away all that "ulllmate
security." Announces a stock investment Clrm : "Gold aa an lnvesl·
ment? Don't bet on it."
AS MANY "OONFIDENTIAL" newsletters seem to exist as
there are points or view. good and bad, and almost all of them deal
witb the future. The president will win his 1amble and we'll have
an era of Republican prosperity, and he will lose it, leavin1 a dead
party and economy.
What can be said about those who make a living from such
forecasts is that they're unlike their readers. They believe In the
present; they enjoy themselves and express themselves and make
money in the present. A~w1.....-.
They need not fear contradiction, because nobody else knows
very much about the future either, and it's a general fact of Ure
that as old subscribers catch on and qwt, unknowing new ones will
be signing up.
Nete pe•t
Walter C r on kite, who
recently stepped down as
CBS anchorman, will be a
member of the board of
directors of Pan American
World Airways. He will be
paid $10,000 a year plus $300
per 20 -m embe r board
m eeting, a spokesman said.
THEY'LL DO THE SAME thing. They'll retreat from the
market and ha\ch their plans for the terrible or great future that's
just around the corner, figuring that if they plan now they'll look
pretty then.
In so a cting, they become a forecast or a commentary
themselves.
So long as they re main engrossed in the future you can be cer-
tain some form of economic distress remains. But when they begin
returning to the present, you know good times are here and that
the future is now. Alcoa responds
Firm makes land sale
CARLSBAD IAP> -Escrow
has closed on the sale or 3.573
acres or land to the Daon Corp
or Ne wport Beach. The $110
million price reportedly makes
it the largest real estate deal 10
San Diego County history.
Allard Roen, board chairman
of Rancho La Costa, and Daon
chairman Jack Poole signed the
final documents this week. The
land would be developed over 15
years. Roen said La Costa Hotel
and Spa. unaffected by the Daon
deal, plans expansion of its golf
and tennis fa ci lities and
restaurants.
MIAMI <AP>-Responding to
pleas for new business in the
riot-scarred Liberty City area,
Pittsburgh-based Aluminum Co.
of America says it will open a
r ecyc ling plant in the
neighborhood in several weeks.
The Miami-Dade Chamber of
Comme r ce and written all
Fortune 500 companies asking
for help in replanting businesses
in the area.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
NEW YORK IAP) t •••ln 8ullo0 (.onho 1-1 'l'I NL Mull 9 SJ 10 Jo -Th• fOllOWlft9 quo 8ullck IS qi 11 J9 Ostny 10 •• Prog • ,. s IS
1•110n•. 1-lled t>y C•ndn • 10 q SI Eq IO'I( lO lo NL T •• E• l 1S 3 )9 Ille N•llonat 4Uotl Ol•ld 7 qi J II e O(l't lJ 9) NL Stock lO as 22 66 •Hon of S.cvrlt10 Ho Inc II OJ It t'I Magel 77 •• NL !>elect 6 U l.l6 OHl•n. tnc .. are Month q I• 10 61 Mun 80 6 SO NL V•r Py q_lS 10.l' ll'te pr tees"' wl'tlcll NI WS 9 31 10 tt F ulel 18 81 NL In• Restt s II s 91 ll't .. e W<urllles TaFrt 9 U •60 C.vl SK 901 NL l>lel 32.20 NL ~gr~0 .~:~· .~r ~~~.~"~o :~: ~rn ~:·~~~ .~.::: ~t ~·; cfr~n 1rn 1f.~ ••lue) cw t>oughl Cl'tp Olr 20 11 NL LI Mun I II NL JP tnco I.SI 1.16 l••lut plus Hlts Cll .. lnut l6 II NL Purotn 11 40 NL J•nus 9,18 NL <ll•rge) Wecl . Colonl•I Funds 5•1em 1 8A NL Jol'tn Hancock:
At>I• ~'.'IS '"JL ~~~~... 'U~ ·~ l~ ~ ~;gJ 2rn ~t g~~~.. :rn :~:~
:b0V" F ~t: ~t rn1c!~td ::;: ! ~t Flo~~~l•I p;'1, NL ¥:~·'(,. ::~ 1::rs
Aluturt 14.42 NL Optn 10.66 11 6S lnOu>I • 34 NL K•ulmn 2.26 NL AIM Funas: Tea Mg IS.It 1614 lncom 8,.18 Nl Kemper Funds. CvYld 14.1'1 U.Jt Colu Gth 20.19 NL Fsl investor•. lncom 7.61 1 16 Ed$0n IJ.40 14.ll Cwllll AB 1.11 I )I &no AP I) '12 IS.01 Grow II.CS 12.SI HIVld t.16 t.90 Cwlll1 CO 1.69 I a; 01.co 9. 10 9.9S Ho YIO 1.69 ,,J2 ,t,lpha F 16.21 NL Comp 8d 9.00 9 61 Grwlll 9 U 10.00 Mun 8 7.48 1.U
,t, 8 1rttt T 12.'1 13 57 Comp Fd 9 JI 10.oe tncom 6 69 1.31 Optn ll.17 15.os .-.m•rl<.., Functs· Concord 20 " NL Oprn 6 14 1.21 Summ 11.S.S 20.17
.-. 8•1 In 9.5' Conne<llcvt Genl Stock 1 l8 101 Tech 1l.1l U.90 Amcp 13 JS r..n Fund 1J os u 11 r.11... ex e O'I e.n Tot Rt 12.:M 11 0
A Mull 12 U U J1 lncom • t• • .. ,. WIEo 8.67 9.42 t<eyston. Funcb. An Giii 9.S9 10 .. Mun 8d , 02 1.S9 •• W•ll 20"' NL Cus 81 13.• IO.SO 8oncl 11 31 12.4.1 Cons Inv 17 17 IJ JI Fn<1 Gitt S II S st Cus 82 t•.st 11.12 FO Inv I.SO 9.29 Conltal G 19 en NL Founders Gr-Cus 8 • 7.04 7.69 Gr•th 1200 u n Constltu unav•ll Grwtll 1.•I NL Cus Kl 7.29 1.91 lncOIY\ 1.04 I" COftl Mut 1.0. NL tncon. IS 07 NL Cu• K2 •JI I" ICA 1.90 9.ll Ctry C•P U" 11.70 Muta! 9.St 9.ft Cus St 11.SO 20.12 N Pers 1.16 I 0.t•w•rw Gr-Spec! 7Ut NL Cus !>J 9.7' 10.10 A::~:!-'.~~ I.. g:f:! :; : :: : F':G~1" Grr: l.n fnut!r!>,,~ ::~ ·rn
C•P lkl 6 It 6 14 Oelch I OI 11• Brown S.SO S.9l Mau 12 69 IJ.11 Enlro 14.00 IS.JO r. Fr• • 46 • ,. ONTC 13.07 14.0t l.••lftlllon Gro. HI Vld 9.29 t 9' Otli. I.Sol t lJ Grwth 111 I.JI Cl! Ldr 14.:ll IS 61
Mun B 16 04 I~ Olr Cap 2 16 "l Uhls 4.07 4 Jt G"MA 1.M NL
Vtntr 2065 22.n OoOCa 81 U.•1 NL tncom '·" 7.0. Grow 10.'2 NL Cmstk l>.'1 14.17 OodCa St 20.36 NL US Gov ,. S3 7.04 Rtsll IS,C NL E•ch • ., NL Oru e ... 14.7' NL C•Pll 1.n •.st TaFOI I en NL Fa Am 11.10 11 u Oreyrus Grp Eqult s... •·to Lii• tns 10.ft 12.01 Grow JS.)4 "L A Bn<I IUD NL F11ncls Inc Llnclnr 11.to NL H•rt>r 11.67 12.70 Oreyt 14.56 IS.ti Cmru t .SO Nl LOOfTllS 5aytas: P•U 1'.1• 29.JS Levge 22.02 74.07 Ind Tr 12.U 12.tS Caplt 11.n NL Provld J.to 4.70 N NIM 12.~ NL Piiot t.a NL Mui 14.40 "L A OthFO 7.JI 7.tt Spt IM 7.49 NL GT Pu IU.S NL ol'd Alltletl: A Herlt9 2.G NL TU Ea 10.0 "L Gate Op IS.U NL Alllltd ..,, t,Af A lftsAtlld .... .S.O Thrd C t .40 NL GE S&S 29.27 NL llnd ell> t.JI 10.24 A Invest IUS "NL .. , G(h '·°' MO Ge SS L9 t.11 NL Ot• Gt 16.71 1U6 A lnvtftC 11.4.S NI. t:afot1t.How•rd: Gen Sec 12.01 NL tncom 2.n 2.9l A NIGll't 4.04 4.'2 ll•l•n Lilt t .OJ Grin Ind 16.13 NL Luth.,.., 81"0: A Nlln< ti.SJ 16.ft Four\ 10,14 NL H•mlllClft: Fund II.SI 12 ... Amway 7.$4 1.0. Grwtll 19.6' 21.2J F HOA s,IJ UJ tncom 7.7t I.SI 4ae HOU9flton; lncom 4.JO 4.M Orwtl't t.2J 10.0t M11n1 6.51 7.19 Fftd a •. ,, t.49 SoKI ta.ao !U~ ln<Om •.ts NL vs Go• 7 .• Ul lncom •.11 4.47 &loclt 11,n 12.IO Hart Glh 11.41 NL HI f'INnct: SIO<lt t.lt 10.0f l!l>eol-Gl"Oup: H•rt Lev ,..,, NL M18 11.11 11.i. llLC 01 i·· .. II.II Cllem f'tl H•rOICI 1.0.eo NI. ""~ IUJ !Ut BLC Inc ).71 U.06 ''i 10.ll Mor M•n 2'2.07 UM M IS.to IUe lllK Ill< t.. NI. tE119lh I'· 1•·4 INA HIV I.. t.52 M 0 11.M 26.11 .... lllY 11.a NL Survo •• 1.1 ISi Or-: Ml"O 11 ... 12.71
l«l'lt C"-""llr: 'llun Tr It........ Orwlh "II .... M"B II.JI 12.41 a1Y1e t.ai 1o"s 111111 Ta &.h .•• ~ 111com u,1 a... MMI 1.1' e.11
IMllll IUO 11.11 vrtfft » )4 ... Trsl Sii t.'4 1.... MllH UI •·"' •0.C alrlld t.tl t. TrPa $1\ -v•ll atllen It.II NL. IJ.i 14... rm 10 tut IS.1• lnd11ttry ti NL rrtlf LllllUI: THI• I. NL '4MratH l'Uftdt: ltu' HY I ... 11, am lt.22 !l.11 l!lffC 0th II NL /!Im Ldr t.12 t,/J II~ lftd t 00 11J C6Plt 11."1 !t.tJ
h6C Hiii IUI NL llKll I0.11 NI., I Ta ft t. E~i Id ~ t.tt
r rn• §!""' 11-tt lffi' ft lftYft I II, Hf fie 7 &.Ot t ,.d I NI. ltt 12 fl• lftfl( • • • • HI 011 t 19.K
I I lld tO NL ftTlt It !4 lowQ.ull ,!f t.$9 lftt.,rm t. 101· .... .., c:a· '" Fre NI. '"" ... ti.Oii 14.0J LtMar •• ,. •
11"1 Ille It.It tr. V$ O¥t 4 NL 111""1'.,._ ~· MIHIHY ""t. .11111 C.1'.tl N ,.!*Ill( 11· 10 ad .. 4. M1tllll11 J1 7
... I ,ftd It; JO, Al» I.. NL 10 On t>.: 'tfi 'ec"d I&. l'i lltll t. IMt · ..,.. NL 1g "'y Ut » ~.VM O. 2. C...,. It .,~ c-n 47 Nl I NO t• I .It Id AM .. It L
NASDAQ SUMMARY
N•""' ROO\lnv C•mt>Roy S1mK•r ~~~Geil O•lv~ Oogo1S.. un
M\llltbt. S.tmN•I l(CR TKh
Glctfd Uun
On"on.-
En1810 ' ~!~fl~ Sttorewct Fd•nel Otg1IS"'
NOf\UI
EmporOG Ctt.tlto G•""'' M•rcus T<•n'1na SlctLOQIC "'1
N•rne EouCmp
UPrMC:O 8•sES wt Entor!>y 8k(OM h N0<0$1Eno GolOTrl .-.mPllntA ~~"'W1 4n..,mp RctTcll s e .. es un POiy Am ColrTle OetU.Ota l't ~~~:r., P enn Pee
T••AmRs. Vlllg5'.op CmptU>Q 4mSol•r FSC Synccw un
Uf'S
L.ut C"ll PU.
1 '• Up 33 l , • ., • Up l2 0
q 7 Up 21 •
l • • 1 Up 1tf 0 11'. •l'• Up \11
)l.. ,. > Up U •
·~ • t Up IS 7 :U 1 • ) " Up t• & 1 • Up u 3
q • 1 '" Up ll.1 2 ~ ' .. uo tJ l 10"-• I • Up 13 l
II\. ~ 7 Up 11 1
) 1 • ._ Up 170
U I 1 Up 110
19 ' • 1 Uo t 1 4
'"' • .. Up II l S , Up II I
S ' Up II I ll 16 •S II• UP 1oq I • "-Up 10 l • • ._ Up 10 J b'• .... VO 100
24• • Up 100 S" '> Up q I
DOW"S L•nl
) ' s•' ,.,,
Cng PCI
'"' 3'> U 11 1 ,.,.
2'"1 2'.
2''• 1S'• 1111
I 0 11 111
1 011 IS• ._ 0 11 IJ.6
\, 011 IJ 6
• Off 11 S 1 Oii 11 I s lo 011 n .• 1 .. Off 10s • 011 100 • .. 0 11 100 l\<o 011 • q
2 Off 9 8 " .... -11, 011 t I
IS'• 1' J -1''> 1211
•. , 011 's ... 011 9]
'• 011 9 I • Off 9 1 t•. Oft 9 1 l-16 011 •• 2 , ... S•• ~
-'• 011 I ) ~ 011 I l
S'• -J ... • .., 0 11 10
• 011 18
" 011 II .Ii, 011 1.l
~~~~p~ ,1: :: I).. Prime 10 00 NL ~l~rm 8 1 12 .. NL
M58 FO 1161 NL Ta Fre 1 9' NL !>1~1:~~1 tn:..01 NL
Mui &en 10 u 11 Pr~.~'!,'"'(~ SJ NL F•OI 42.11 NL MIF Fvncl> Fund I SI NL ln•est 64.71•501 ~~~~.. ~:: : l~ 1 ncom 7 13 . NL Stuom.,, Funds
N•18d 1.6.J 9.lJ l>ru 51 p IJ °' ti.Jo .r.m ln<I l.45 NL Mutual ol Orn.1\41 Putn•m Functs ~uoc '12 NL .r.mer 9" NL Con• tJ SI 14 11 nvtst l.S7 NL Grwl~ ... ., S.40 Int Eo ••.JI 11:u St~~·~r;. F~s~ NL
lncom 1.71 1.9' Georg 12.IA "OJ &•t•n 70 13 NL h Fre 10.02 10.19 Grwth II 11 12.16 C•P 0o 70.'ll NL Mui Snr 43 9S NL HI VIO 14.90 IS ... 'I' . Nuss T urwivall lncom S 19 •.21 •• Miid 1J.l3 IO.S7. N•I A•I• 9 '1 NL lnvtst 9 2S 10.11 Tmpl Gt 7.47 I. I• N•t Incl IS.29 NL 'optn U.62 14.19 Tmpl w 11-"7 It.JI. Nat Securities· Tu E• t1.'9 11.11 Trns Cap t.U I0.•71
8•1•n 10 3j 11 12 Vlst• ••.tJ 17.•3 Trns Ill• l.O'I 1.79. &ond 3'11 3·61 Voy•o 14.51 is.fl Trev Eq 17.U 11.1• Olvid s'40 s"n Ralnbw J.17 NL TuOr Fd 10.S7 NL Grwlh 1'rz 1'>2 Rtv•re 1.21 NL TwnC GI II.It NL Prtlo .. °' •sr S.ltco S.cur· r wnC Set 14.19 NL
tncom • " •s• Eoull "" NL SAA GI 11.12 NL StoO 10 M 11 SI Grwth 1•.2S NL SAA IM t .SS NL Tu Ea 1.. 1'•1 tnco 10 t7 NL nl Accu S,21 NL NELll• Fund • StPaul lnwst nlf MUI 10.'4 NL
Equll 19 Q 21 12 Caplt n.• 1•." nit.., Funds. Grwtfl t•.H ., _.. Grwlll 1J SJ 14 11 A«m 1.49 9.21
tncom '11 10 13 5"<1 21.4' "L a-•... s '2 Ret Eo 11.tt 20 u Scudder F-. COft Gr 12.13 ••.en T uEa .. en • JO COii'\ 51 u 10 NL Con lftC 9.97 10.90
"•ut>er-eann Deve l 49.7' NL Flduc 27..Jf 19.tJ Enrgy 21.1• "L tncom 10.SO NL HI tnc 12.9' u u Gu•rO JI '3 NL lftll Fd 11.40 NL lncO/I'\ 9.a 10.U LIDf'r l°1s NL MMB 7.U NL Mufti . '·" 6.51 Manllt ia NL !>SM<I 47 71 "L UIScl t.a 10.U P•tln 1.:. NL r.Frt ... "L V•.nQ 11_. U.42 Scnus u., NL S.Curlty F..,,.. Id S.u S." Ml. N1wt Gt 2007 NL llC>ftd 1-"1 1.G •lue LllW RI: Ne•t tnc 1.jt NL Etvty 7,12 7.11 f'ulld 14.St 14 .•
"lcllot• 11.M "L tn ... 11 t,6$ 10.JS IMCl'Tl 6.1) 7.01
"orust 10 40 NL Vltr• 1.9' 9.11 Ln ~-17.JI "y Vent ....... S.leclecl FUNIS: ~I Sit 11.27 11.st Nuv"n une11•ll . Am Sfls 7.71 NL 4111Ca "' o,_.. IS.. NL Sr.I Sfls 16.IS NL ln<O/I'\ IQ.IS 11.09 Otta wm 17:ss "L 1 emaro o.-. 1nve1t 7~ 1.74 O~nelmtr f'd· llrO.O lUt 1s.1 CaoE I 4',71 Nl n t SI 1•0 46 "•t 1,.., 1.11 9. Camm '·" t.71 H YIO 1t: 1J lt'4 V Cap t .6$ 10,40 0.~t I
Inc Bos 7.16 e:n Un Inc 11.00 11.16 Overs I J2.IO NL OOtn ZJ 64 u 14 S.nl M l 0-: $,.cl 17°73 If• Apt• ltl 4,l7 4'.03 NL r. Frt 611 HI. hl•n 1.11 1.M Eals 1 61.'1 NL. • AIM 20"u HQ com s IJ,jQ IUS E•FO I '°·" NL
Time t:Jt 10:41 Orwin II.JI l>.42 r~ifdll '"~ NNLI. ore S« 24,70 a..es q1101a u.n NL --P•rem "" t.w t0.41 fttry 21.11 n . .o 59e<1 14.14 1a.u
PuWld t.4' NL ™•rlOft l"uncb: *"llll•rtl G,,.._:
P•nn ~ .... NL A~ 12.10 U.51 ~:.nr tt'l: ~t
Penfl Mu , OS NL lllCOl!I 16.il 17·" GNMA l.W NI. Phlla 10:•1 11.. N910lr IU7 U.tO lvetl l2.. .,L Pl\Otnl~ CNJe· Tri~. 11.ot ti.• ,...
.. 1..,, a.6' '·'° 11:'~ '6' ,._.7 NL Mo~ 11.n EL
Orwtl't t.11 :· .. S rm t.U NI. =~·-t~t"t LL Stoo a.» 01 1tm• """"'' ..,, .. Pllgrl"'1 Of11 ° C::..h u •• t7 .Jt M11tnl IQ.JI NL
ffl19 "4 titt IS.SJ 111<0 6.ts 1,. MllL• "" NI. ""*' c .-,. us r"'. tus u~ iBl: 11 'Jjf t!t M .. 111 7.14 111 ru1• 9.01 u2 1rttCo II.ff NL "1-r l"llf'ld· Vt ftl tU:7 IJ. W.llll ti. ~L .oM .. o. ... I 1 E • .., ,u. M.U m FllM 10. It II... It.Gr Ut t.41 tJ.111! 10.1 L
II 111< 1U9 11.7' ft lft IS.7' 1. H ~= 11; ~t
14111 lftv 11.0S NL w fftVI 19. .. 11-., Wlltlv 1t.~ ML lltlrffl tt.Ja te.0. WlllllK 4 II 4..., lllr'lld ~7' tU7 wr Ill 1-,14 1UI •!lit 0 1 MO
U l'llfldl• '!';.. a..t Gn. HI I• K. NI.
Onottll 1i.r. ML ~:: IC Ui t. :. '~: NI.
&1E,. ~I =t .... ~~ !'.: '"' rr: ~I Et
__________ ..... __ •• --... -·-·-·-· ~ ··-··· ... ···-······..._ ......... ~ ••••••••• ' • ···--... t
Mi ••• • •••
l
h
I
(
If : '
----------·--
~1 . • ..,-·· • • ·<r• ~~ -.
s
with pensions
President Reagan haa aolemnly pledted lbal
millions al Amertcana on Social Securily will not be
targetl la the aearcb for rederaJ bud1et cull. But
have others ln the executive branch and on Capltol
HJU beard Reagan and agreed? Propoula Lo 1cale
dowo Social
Security
benefits have
been surfacing
with ominous
frequency since
bud1et cutting
has become
earnest
-~ IYlVIA PIRTIR ~., Z
polltJcally and economically.
So to rut a rew fundamentals in order.
Socia Security is not th.e kind of government ac·
tivity to be worked over every year to meet short· •
term budget aims. On the contrary, the proeram Ls a
deeply rooted institution with long-term obligations
-promises made to be kept for years.
OUR SOCIAL SECURITY system is not financed
out of general revenues as are other government pro-
grams. It is financed out of earmarked contributions
by workers, their employers and the self-employed.
These contributions are not miniled with other tax
collections . They go into trust funds maintained
separately from aH other funds in the U.S. Treasury.
By law, the money in the Social Security Trust
Funds can be used only for the payment of SocjaJ
Security benefits and any essential adminlstrative
costs.
True, the program faces a short·term financing
problem until 1985. But it is a manageable problem
not requiring drastic or unprecendented remedies.
Proposals for cutbacks in benefits are much
more immediately concerned with "prettying up"
the bottom line figures in the national budget than
with the financial stability of the Social Security
system.
The dangerious effect is to erode even further
publlc confidence in the integrity of an institution vital
to the future security or the 115 million workers who
pay Social Security contributions -and vital also as
a basic support or the national economy.
MOST AMERICANS, YOUNG and old, do not
want cuts in pension benefits and, if necessary, are
willing to pay higher Social Security taxes lo main-
tain the program's protection at levels now set in
law. . Jn a nationwide survey for the American Associa·
lion of Retired Persons there was impressive agree-
ment among those ages S5 and over and 24 through
54 .
Both age groups.
-Oppose reductions in benefits. A fuJJ 78 percent
of those under 55 and 81 percent of those 55 and over
are against reducing benefi ts for people already on
the rolls or those drawing benefits in the future
-AGAINST PUTTING ANV ceiling on cost-of·
living benefit increases and oppose elimination or the
$255 lump sum death benefit or benefits for depen·
dent spouses.
Support financing hospital insurance part of
Medicare out of general revenues even tf it means
only lower·income persons would be covered.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appearlntheDaily Pilot.
Due to late transmission·
today's l ist ing will not·
appear in the Dally Pilot. •
AMERICAN LEADERS
t
PC1
Up 51 0 Up U.O U P 14.C Up 13.t Up 12 J Up ti I Up 11 2 Up 10.t UP ti
Up '' Up t 2
UP '' Up I.I Up I.•
Up U Uo I\
Wl1Af l\MEJo.OIO
Too:;,
170 ,,.
1nq ., 1•
NEW YO~I( (AP) Mar II
Ad vented Oe<llned unc,,.,.., Tote• luuH New NGfl$ Ntw tows
TOCS.y
245
J.16 '°' 1'1 20 •
GOLD QUOTATIONS
I.e....,.: morn1':!'v~•[.75S0,011111.IJ
l.•n••n ••ltrnoon ll¥in9 lH• U , 11J1
U l 00
'•rh: •lltrnoon 11•1119 Ul0.44, oft l2 . .0 .• •
l'rl flllf"'1 • llAlnQ Mii 9'. off l1 tt '
Z11rl<ll; l•lt altt~ 11•1"9 M74 00, oll '16.00, t.411.00 aSke<I
H11••Y a H•rman only da lly qu•ht
t.tlt.2~. oll Jll 00
l111tlMrd: only dally quot• Ml6.JS, 9'1
Sll 00 • a11eai-.. on1v oeuy Qvote l•l>•I<•~
~U.>O, 011 $11 ...
. ..
a
"I can't find any socks in my drawer that look
the same."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
C> , •• IJM«1, ..... 5,.._.,. '"' l/,.z. ~L1f Cl.t1o-J
"Well, you didn't have to rip the
Big Bad Wolf's picture out of
the story book, did you?"
JUDGE PARKER
WELL ll Jl':Ol
WHERE HAVE lOll MEN THE l5N T ~l(iHT
LP6T TEN YEA~ TELLIN0 A JEANNIE'
WOMAN 5HE CAN'T l'>UY A
MAN A MEAi..?
MISS PEACH
M~.ANDM~.~OM, DID vaur: ~ON
EVE~ TEL.L. YOLA rHAT ME L.O~T HI~
ENGtL.1-SH BOOIC ?
,., ...
"Look. Juat bec1uH I once took 1 thorn out of your
pew la no 1'9HOn to kHp bugging me."
DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
~~1 ;
c~ :
"I know I shoufdn't hit "Mrs. Wede? Your daughter
girls, but she said you had it comlngr·
were a lousy cook!"
by Harold Le Ooux
I HAVE A FEELIN6 YOU AND I AR~ OONNA MAKE IT 610 IN
HOlt.YWOOD. ROY.'
IF I DON'T 6ET IT
IN TOPA~ l'M DOOMED!
NANC\'
GORDO
HE~S llf W<llD !&MI
FlVIN6 M,E ~~NP
BEMI LIHES.JtlS MISSION
IS TO 6ET ™E SECRET
PWS ... SODOENLV:
HE SEES HE.R .•.
SClfl NU
5CR18&.f
S!RIHLE
./.II
by Tom K. Ryan
by Jett MacNelly
;
I
J:
n tJ b
by Ern ie Bushmiller , I JUST LOST MY
JOB AS A
BABY -SITTER
c,.,.........,,.....,.,~ n. .--~
by Gus Arriola
FlJNK\' W'INKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk
by Mell Lazarius
9~~ WITHOlAi ,.He ~, r 010N1r
'ttNOW HOW TO
PHt:A~E IT ....
i ' I DRABBLE
A ~ L.l~E C,.OO'RE
&:>IN& TO HAVE TOQAC.> ...
SHOULDN'T HAPPEN m A
fXX:, !
by Kevin Fagan
...._ _ ____;;I, 1'~& fROCflASfl~EO U>tl& L__'.--':::::=--==:::::t.-:__ ___ _:~~~~-~---~/Vt£E"-'L~:i.!:l1il~r\AJ..I':~. ___ _;1~-·~2 &~c-M ! 11"~ "fi fl4t -ro
SfAR'f ~rfitU:i M'f 1'~RM
W.'(6£ I ~1.0
5\IAIJ£ f1t<~'f ..•
MOON MlJLLINS
ACROSS
1 Ooze
6Edlnboy
10 Converte
14 Fright
15 Competent
1e PreMnl
17 C.tkln
18 Peper pi.nt
need:
2worda
., 20 Httlerltt
'21 Toupot
22Hindu,1.g.
23 Revolve
• 25 W.-pons
27 Of mlllc
.30 Agenda
31 Ethan -
32 Mtwlt
.33 Agt.
341&Mnce
3 7 Sc:llool group
38 Plglon
39 Olltr ... Ilg-• NII
• 40 OlthOn«
41 Oumee
42.,
44~
45 °""""9 .. , ...
-~
l
Mtts town UNITED Feature Syndk:lte
49 WMle group Wednnday'a Puzzle Solved
50Jabbera
54 Superllcillly
57 lsnc:'•
mother
58 Economize
511 Bri dell
60 Twinkling
81 Singles
82 Be loolllhly
lond
el Annexed
DOWN
1 Brldot
2 Dalal -
3 Glrl'tnamt
:J'.l:JJ J::l!J:J [][JOlJD
'..1.JIJ'.l .JD'.!::l i.irJrJOl:l
J]'.JJ '.lJiJ~ C:ltJDrJO
IJJJ :.l.J.J!JLIJDllDDLI
:::J'.liJiJ].J.J 0 3[)0
.JOJ ..lrJ.J(] (l[)IJ
3'.l.JOJ .J~.J~ Ol!HJU
::J.J.J.J ~'.l.J:Jl.l (Ji.JOO
~UO.J .JOJ.J LitJCJ()i.i
iJO.J :.J::.J.Jil JUrJ
J'.].)(J ~'.l:J~LJ[J[]
:J.JJJ'.l.J'.JLl~JLJ DUil
'.l'.l.J::JJ J Ol::l Jt:JOc:J
::JJIJ.JLI ::JJrJJ rJ:J()[:;
:JIULIJ J::l:JO inllJU
4 Cabinet 24 F11ttntr 40 Owr1low
4 1 Collttlon
43 Oerments
44 Color
mtmber 25 T tct
5 Outlf': Prtllx 28 ~rlglf llM
8 Fowl 27 Allan land
7 Adjoin 28 Man'a name
8 Ntlgllbof of 211 NMt ICCI·
Ind. dent:
9 catnip 2 wordl
10 Vlrtuout 30 Pley
11 ~Ing 32 Jlf9e
pllnt 34~
12 Of• locllt 35 NulUnct
13 See blrda 37 Bigger'l 'tec
19 ~ 38 Ship repel(
21 Thul piece
45 Singer
4e "-Freme ..
47 lriall river
49 Town map
5t Dr;
52 VtlOClty
53 Hut
S6Aoeo
58Court
57 Atwrttt.n:
Mui.
___ ....,..._....... •. ---. . . .._ -.. . . . ... --.. . . . . .. ... .
1 2 I 4 I
-... _ .. --····-··· .......
,_ftR!
DR.SMOCK
SHI!! .JUS1" SAi~, "IP 1"MIS HOSPl'T"AL..'S l!!VI!!~ Hl1" e>Y AN
AVAL.ANCHe!!, -rHE!Y't..t..
FINP MfJ F=l~s-r•
ANP WA~•P AWAY/
)
by George Lemont
by Lynn Johnston
MIKE, '/OU D0Nt" t<.NOW W!-W"
~N ITO'\ IS LIKE. 'TILL YOO'Vf!. I
HAD ONE '/00 CffiT SCM'Tttt.
A,
. ........ ._ ... _._~· --------·-\
•• .. •••
l;
b • (
c t
I
By TOM Trl'tJS
Of .. Oallr ..... 1Wt It'• alwaya a treat to watch a bunch of old pros
at work on 1ta1e. W~ll, almost always.
Sometimes the bt1 names don't bave It
to1etber as well 11 the local actors in the com·
munlty playhouse down the street. But it you're
there to see t.be stars rather than the show, that's
no particular drawback.
AT SEBASTJAN'S WEST Dinner Playhouse,
three seuoned veterans of movies and TV. each a
star tn his or her own right, are teamed for the
local premiere of a cute little comedy called
"Murder at the Howard
INTERttlSSION
Johnson 's." It's the
latest rwmber from the
stable of Ron Clark and
!Sam Bobrick who gave
us the outlandishly funny
"Norman Is Thal You?" and then tried in vain to
duplicate that magic with someting of far lesser
impact entitled "No Hard Feelings."
''Murder at the Howard Johnson's" doesn't ap·
proach "Norman" on the laugh meter. but it has
"Feelings" outstripped a country mile. It's a con·
trived little caper about two people trying to do in
a third -the murderers and murderee are
switched each act.
The billing reads Dennis James, Virginia
Mayo and Alan Young, though ID terms of timing.
talent and overaJI stage presence. Young is the def·
inile "star" of the show. James spends far too
much lime posing with hands on hips, while Mi ss
Mayo Ca replacement for June Lockhart) requires
a bit more familiarization before she can con
tribute fully.
JAMES (WHOSE MARVELOUSLV honed
broadcast voice errectively dominates the stage 1 1s
a used car salesman whom his wife (Miss Mayo) and
her dentist-lover (Young> elaborately plot to execute
in Act I. The shoes are on the other feet io Act 11 , and
it's" change partners" again in the finale.
To render lttis Light comedy palatable, pin·
point timing is needed, and Young alone possesses
it. His comic mannerisms are first rate, while the
others are forced to press harder for the quick
laughs.
Umted Artists
Now / edwards LIDO CINEMA PLAYING ... EWP'ORT llVO. AT YI.A LIDO
I NEWPORT BEACH 673-8350
lOWlllOS'
CllKMA CllHUI
Cost• Mes.i 979 41 • i..
mwuos·
FOUllUI• HlllY fountJ•n Valley 8)9 1 )()()
lOWAllOS' UOOlllACl STADIUM DlllYH• [ Toto 8, 'J8~') it It' fdq ~
UA CllKMU
Westmmste< a<Jl 0~~
AMC DllHGl MA ll OrJn9t b); 03¢0
lllfCDlll Dlllfl·llf
"AM>•O•• AT TN• NOWA•OJOHNIOH'S"
A comtd, llY "°" (141<11 eftd s.ni BoOtlc~~ "' 0... Vtt're, •• OHl911 .... lit<MluJ Oif'Kllell 111 Wn11e , _. •M IJeMlfl9 DY 'll•ve Mam•, 11<'9-.nlH "lfllll• uctCIC ~n el 1r1r11119 (llr• tat" llmK llvOU9fl April s 11 se .. 1t11n'1 W..i OIMer Pl•1110Vse, 1.0 A~tfthM Pko, $an Cl-le. ,. ... ,...,...,, -a...w
TH• CAIT P111I Mllltr ... , ... • .. • . .. , ......... ., .... 0-lt J-1 Arlene Miii., • .. .. .. • .. . . .. • . • . .... • . . • Vlr9ll1i. Me~ MllCMll ~II ...... ., , •• , .......... , • .. .. .. • .... AIM V~ Hotel maid • . .. . .. • • .. . • .. • .. .. • • • ... Miry Lov H•rtl
Nevertheless, lt is a run evenina, even if the
script lends to run out of laughing 1u in the
stretch. It would be nice to see Bobrtck and Clark
come up with a script that d.idn't involve a woman
leaving her husband after a1enlthy marriage.
• •'Murder at the Howard
Johnson's " continues through
April 5, playing nightly except
Mondays, at Sebastian's, 140
A venida Pico, San Clemente,
after whieh it moves into
Anaheim's Grand Hotel for
another five-week engagement.
* REHEARSALS ARE
under way for the Orange
YOUNG County premiere of Oliver
Hailey's seriocomic study of marriage, .. Red Rov-
er, Red Rover," at the Irvine Community Theater.
The story focuses on three couples at an ex·
tended party which culminates in four of the
guests "staying over" with the other two. Paired
off in the Irvine cast are Marvin Maron and Kris
Hagen, Terry Marchiniak and Susan O'Connell.
and Pat Oswald and Mary Benton.
"Red Rover, Red Rover" will open April 3 for
three weekends and eight performances Fridays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m . with Sunday matinees at 2
on April 5 and 12 in the Turtle Rock Community
Park auditorium, on Sunnyhill Road off Turtle
Rock Drive in Irvine.
* CALLBOARD -Auditions for Saddleback
College's production of Henrik Ibsen's drama
"Hedda Gabler" will be held Tuesday from 5 to 7
p.m. and Wednesday from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Mis·
sion Viejo college theater the title role is pre-
cast. but all other roles, for three men and two
women, are open the play opens May l, in the
Studio Theater.
Al Theatres and Orlv•lns Throughout Saulhtrn CalHornla
Crack into 11 platl' of hot. -;renmmg crab legs. Or pop a generous
crving of ddicit,u:-. Popcorn· .... hnmr. And then do it again!
Ir's all you can l';it Evl'rV d;1v pf the week .
~·-f
Ench spcctal 1s ~crvcd with Vt)Ur choice of :-i crisp tos ed salad o r cole
slaw. baked pot:-im or rice pilllf. and another favorite, sourdough bread .
All you can eat. All week long.
Alaskan Snow Crab Legs
All you can cat $10.95
Popcorrr Shrimp
All you can cat. ...... $6.95
l
JW~.
lbr the se8'>od kMI' lo~ ,
7001 Bnach Blvd , ~Park, 99+tHl
16811 Be;'lch Blvd , Huntlnatun Beach. &48-1956
11. lO:. m.· 10:00 p.m. Su~.· ThuT11.
11 30 a.11' • ll·OO p.m fn & S.t
x.
II
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 12, 1991
Daddy's a fan
Actor Joel Grey embraces ttls daughter Jen-
nifer during a surprise visit to Chicago to see
Miss Grey perform in the play "Album."
'Conflict' slated
to end trilogy
HOLLYWOOD CAP> -Sam Neill stars as Da·
mien in "The Final Conflict," the third and final
trilogy in th!! saga of the son of Satan.
Damien · is grown to manhood and is de·
termined to thwart the Second Coming of Christ in
this movie from 20th Century-Fox.
Neill won critical acclaim for his role in the
Australian film "My Brilliant Career."
--------------
E'int tor Tl'
Reagan :plan~
• Oscar s,peech
HOLLYWOOD <AP> -President Reaaan f'ltt address this year's Academy Awards cerem·ony
March 30, becomina the first U.S. prealdent to d]
so since the Oscar presentations were firs
telecast.
Reagan's appearance will be pre-recorded a
the White House and wlll be aired -.ioward th
beginning of the awards show. said Art Sarno,
spokesman for the Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences.
''PRESIDENT REAGAN WAS once a member
of our industry and it seemed fitting for him to join
us," said Norman Jewison, producer of the awards
telecast.
Sarno said the theme for this year's prograrQ
is Film is Forever, "and Reagan is going to make
some reference to that in his remarks. He's going
to chat about having been part of the industry. that
kind of thing,"
Franklin D. Roosevelt spoke at the 1941 Oscar
ceremony over radio, but no president has ever
participated in the televised awards show.
Although Reagan, a former actor and
televis ion-radio personality, has never been
nominated for an Academy Award, be is no
stranger t-0 the Oscars. His appearance this year
will be his fifth at the awards ceremonies.
AT THE 1947 OSCARS, when he was president
of the Screen Actors Guild, Reagan introduced a
group of award-winning films
Jn 1950, Reagan presented an honorary award
to the late Jean Hersholt, an actor and onetime
academy president, and ID 1953 he was a special
commentator at the first awards ceremony to be
broadcast on television.
Reagan's most recent Oscar appearance was
in 1958, when he presented the scientific or
technical awards.
------------------
YOU RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE
THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MU( H.
EYEWl1'NESS
~ •• fW(•ntt•Cl•f-f()> ~
Edward•
BRISTOl CINEMA
SNEAK PREVIEW
TOMORROW AT 8:00 PM
of the international
#1 BEST SEI J ER
A Stephen Friedman/Kings Rood Production
DONALD SUTHERLAND KATE NELLIGAN
J EYE OF THE NEEDLE
IAN BANNEN CHRISTOPHER CAZENOVE
Screenplay by Besed on the novel by Music by
STANL~MANN .KEN FOLLETI MIKLOS ROSZA
P\'oduced by · • Directed by
STEPHEN FRIEDMAN RICHARD MARQUAND
O~GE, Cinetlorne 6~4-2553
Regua... '-lure Shown ~and Alta the l'1"fNtew
t
1111 1<-..1> \'
;.._EVENIG-
e.1eeN1We STAMKYNC>
HUTCH
8t819ky and Huldl I~ \he
dlfftcutt laell of htlplng a
yoirth -oome deep bit·
, ........ whirl hie innoc.nt
l•ther dtM In • polloe
lhootlng.
I TIC TAO DOUGH .......... B e's c hanged
A "c:tlMI CiUUer" and I
nurM from the aoe3rd -
aenl to the .077tll In return
lw Hawk.,.. and l\WrM
Blgelow.
• GOOOTIMES
When he tries to rescue Anne Curry
from an abandoned colony. Gil Gerard is
transformed into an evil hall-man, half·
goat creature on "Buck Rogers" tonight
at 8 on NBC. Channel 4.
WlllOn• I• faro.cl Into the
1tlltld of • llletlme when
P9nny's naturlll motllef
comes to reclaim W~lon•'•
ldopled d.ugfller.
• Cl!) ELECTRIC
COMPANV(R)
Cl) C88N£W8
lt§I A8C HEWS
8:30 CJ BOU.sEYE
... WUCOME BACK,
KOTTER
The s-thogs go tor
some klCkl Md wind up
Wtlh 1 ,_ turptl-when
they discover Hotsy Tolly
11 an exotic: dancer Ind •
mother
ti) BEHNYHIU.
Benny k>o«• •I the hr• of
an 1megln1ry famous musl·
cl•n from boyhood to
manhOOd
&l) MIUT ARY WIVES
The ohen lonely and '-olat·
ed lives of several women
married to IOldler1 Ill·
tioned et Fort L-is Army
Base In Tacoma. Washing·
ton are e•plOred (R) «1> ST\JOIO SEE
"Unicycles" The St Hel-
en's School Unocyc .. Drill
Team on Newbury. OhlO
CHANNEL LISTINGS
perform• gymnastic• on
unlcydes. (R)
CJ) w ·A·a·H
Col. Pottar plana 10 thow
hi1 all-time l1110tlte w .. 1.
ern u a pick-me-up lor the
compeny'• badly ugglng
morale
Q! BAAHEY Mill.ER
A rich man who hll ano-
plllted llngerle and 1
pe<!Mtrian who was hit by
• flying toilet ... , are perl
of 8arney'1 p.01>1em1 on
elee11on noQht
8:66 8 EOOOAIAL
7:00 f) C88 NEWS 0 NBCNEW8 D HAPPY OAY8 AGAIN
Fonzi41 helps fllChle UPOH
somolhing rotten 1n the
ctty'a sanlletlon depart·
ment U A8CNEW8 0 L YNH SHACKEU'OfW
Lynn talk• 10 Hvetal key
Lakers about their g1me
with lhe Sen Diego
Ctopoers m M·A·s·H
Hepplly m1rroed B J tells
ror 1 beaulllul wa1 corre-
spondent (Susan SI
James)
0 l<NXT 1CB51 L,.., An J""
0 KNBC 1NBC1 LO'> Anqclo•..,
D l<'TLA ilno 1 Lo-. Ang •. 1 .. -. u M BC TV cABC1 Lo-. Anqt>Iµ~
'l "FMB 1CB...,l ':> 1n D•t>qo
0 l(f'IJ fV(lnd I Lu'> A'1·WI"'
@) KCST 1ABC1 ~an D11'IJ''
G) KTTV (Ina I Lu<. AnQl'h•
Q) l<CQP TV t In l 1 Lu'> An111••• ID W.CE T f\. PBSt Lo., >'\n,1• , .. ,
ail '\OCF TV 1P8S1 Hunt '"I' ,, Ht• •C'•
I • ITAEET8 cw 8AH
FR.+MC800
Stone and Keller head up
an unu9'.lal manllunt lh11
lakN pl-In one ot the
grNI holell ol San Fren-
clsco Sl OWAEMY
Guella Vincent Price,
Chef Narsal David, Or
Donald Clllne. (R) «1> MACNEIL I LEHRE.A
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH l!DJ MERV GRfflH
Gueet1: Loni Anderl<>n,
Jerry Fl)wejj,
7:20 U NBA BA8KET9AlL
LOI Angeles Lei.WI VL
San Diego C11ppe11
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Holl• Steve Edwards,
Melody Rogers Tlllk with
sctent11t1 and u1r010ger1
wh<> Hpt-their views on
how p111ent1 can chOOM
the se• ol their children
before birth. experience
the thrill ol "llOlrlng" -ffy-
lng wlthOut an engine.
IJ FAMILYFtUO D SHAH.ANA
Guest Troy Donahue U EYEWITNUS LOS
ANGELES
Hosll Inez Pedroza and
P1ul Moyer look at
cowglrl1; meet "' appren-
hce soroerw. vlalt a h<><·
--analyzer
G) AU. IN TiiE FAMILY
Edith and Glori• quarrel
oWlt' Archie's ,,...,,,_,, ot
women tD MACNEM. /LEHRER
REPORT
Cl!) N(WS
Cl) P.M. MAOAZIHE
A man who UMS apc>lejack
tor tuel; • stunt 1rwohnng
tee, • bed of nea. and •
sl9d0ehammer; Chef Tell
~:?':!;=
.... ...... .. fNlll• tr.,:
........ llolN.
Ml. (I) TMI WM.TOMI
~ .... wlltl W ....... 0r-u.
fYtlel • ..,. of~ '*'.. owNld ~ .,_,
n~ ....
..... l\IM lfttO tolN 111111• "*'· Mlf-oc>et ~ end 11.U turning IMO~
of "-· -~ •• ,. "In~
bldence'' (1t7t) Aay·
mond Bun, MMll HemMI. A
Oft09 ti CC llllM ~la
~of ouitnv .....
,,... to per)lt9 lllmMtl. e dl MONCNC>
tMM/1'(
Mindy unltHht1 Hit
... ~ ll!lQlt -whtn IN .,.,..... Mont
to 1t11ft dating othet peo-
ple.
• P.M. MAGAZIHI
A btfllnd..~ IOOk
•t how ~ .tfect• .,.
u.-cl In tht "'8lllng of oom-
mtrc:lal1: • 1tun1 lnYOlvlng
loe. • '*' bl ,,.,.. and •
liedgellammtt; Chef Tell
mek .. rlcle ulad: Judi
MleNll hU Jaaetc19M for
tile k..-; Joyc:t Kulh•Wlk
h.. lttms to m•kt tra.
........... thomt e TUT1MONY OF TWO
MEN
(Prtmltra) Martin e.1on
(St...,. Forrtsl), returning
ltom tile CMI W.,, di9cOV·
.,. that ,,,. woman (Bar·
bar• Parkin•) lie ~ hu
m•rrled Adrian Ferrier
(Wllllam Shatner). a
-.llhy ar .. IOCflt. M.,.
jOrte and Adrian have two
chlld<eri Jonathan (David
Blrnay), ona of them,
t>eeom" a doctor and
propo1e1 m1rrl1ge lo
e.ton'a llklgltlmall daugh.
tar (Linda Purl) 8D TliE PAPEI' CHASE
"Greel Expectallons" A
ltudlllll IS c:tlar09d with a
crime he did not commit
that could end hil law
cer-When a drunken
young woman he Invited to
a party retusea to ••Oil·
eretehim «1> PLEDGE ~K
Regularly IC:heduled pro-
gramming m1y be delayed
due to pledge break1.
8:06 «1> TliE PAPER CHASE
"Great Expectatlona" A
student rs ch1r09d wfth a
crime he did not commit
that could end his l•w
c;ar-when • drunken
young women lie invited to
1 pMty relu-lo ex011-
er1le llim
8:30 U ®) BOSOM BUOOIES
Kip Ind H«lry, dl19ulsed
u Burty and Hlldegerde,
see aomethlng upse1tlng
while woriting 11 • hospital
u candy 1trlpe11
• CAROL llURHETT
ANOFMNDe
Sklt1 "Mra. Wiggins And
The Are Drlll." "Harry's I
Mirage And GrlH "
KHJ . 7:00 -La.ken BuketbaU.
The San Dlqo CUpPen ~:;'de the op. posldoo for the re1ur•ent en.
KTLA P, 8: 00 -"ID ctrcumatanUal
Evidence : Raymond Burr. who 1atned
TV fame .. Perry MHOD~ pl•1• •
law1er accuted of cauaina • wit.nee• to perjure hJmselt in this movie with Mark
Ramlll.
NBC e 9:00 -.. MUlion Dollar
Face." Intrigue in the coemetics in·
dustry is the focus of this new TV movie
with Tony Curtis and David Huffman.
t:oO . Cl) MACMUll. P.I. I
, Ml!QlllJfn II hHd 10 llnd 8
man who dlopped out of
light tO yMrl ..,...,,
u ~.
"The MHllon Ooflat Feoe"
(Pretnlere) Tony Curtle.
POiy Bergen. The rvthleu
owner ot a coemetlce firm I ~ Involved In h>NI·
ad com~tttlon wllll • firm
run tll hla former !Over.
8 0 IARHlY MILLEA
8amey la Jailed tor con-
letnpl ~ lie rafUMI 10
neme an lnform911t during
8 trial. (Pert 1) • uu.v OAlff1H
G~ta: Buddy HIClcett.
Kaye Ballard, Jenilee Hat·
rlaon, D•vld F•u1one,
Sutan T arjan. 9 PLEDGE 8AEAK
Aegulalty acheduled pro-
gramming mey be delayed
due 10 pledge btNkl. «1> 9P£AKINQ Of' LOVE
Dr Leo B<Jscaglla e11p10t"
Ille concept ol mMkind's
Hmm .. 1 po1en1111 tor gl¥·
~ and r~ving lo¥e
t:06 flJ ART CfTY
Michael Cal,,. narratN
th11 1<>j0urn lhrough ma)or
public: and private South·
l•nd ert collectlons, lnclud·
Ing the Getty Ind the
LAC MA
t:30 8 \11 TAXI
T ony'1 lackluatllf boxing
car-seems 10 be draw-
ing to a cJoaa when 1111
boll~ HotrlM .. r9¥0lced
10!00 8 (j) ICHOT'I LNDNG
While l ti.nding a pot pal'•
ty, Sid and Karen'• aon
Erle reeclUM a gift trom
dr ... l llO /~
™E Alff OF 8E.INQ
FUU.Y HUMAN
Or. Leo Suacaglla. highly
acdelmed apeeker and
poQUlar aduc:atlon ptOlee-
IOI' 11 use. pr-11 hi•
enthualNllc: -aoe ol
"Love your tellOw human
being."
10:10. ~ PAEVIEW8
Roger Ebert and G-
Sllkel revt.w "Amtrlcan
Pop," "T rlbUte." "Cll1r1le
Chat1 And The CurM Of
The Draoori a.-·· and
"LI C-o-Aux Fol ... II "
10:30. NlW8
• INOEPEHOEHT
~NEWS 1~..46 9 THIS OLD HOUSE
Bob VIia loOlls al Ille wlr·
Ing need• In tile barn unit,
demonstrates lethlng and
plastering and lalkl eboul
cnoo.lng lllM for Ille toyer
In IM main h<>UM
11:008 D U (l)QJ) .,EW8 8 8TAATREK
CJ HEWl. VW£O GAME
G) M •A•a•H
A sudden deluge ol
wounded al Ille 40771'1 IS
followed by • fire and a
r11ns1orm
JOHN DARLING
HEY ! YOU 5WllCHE0 A LL-
~ MY COPY AROl.JND.'
Are our teens ready for 'Young Lives?'
By PETERJ.BOVER
LOS ANGELES <APJ --Susan is distraught
after discovering her mother in bed with a gangster.
Her football hero brother, Brad, is confused. He's
been having sex with one girlfriend but want.s to date
another without feeling guilty.
Melanie, a high school friend of Susan's and
Br ad's, is not getting along with her parents But her
problems are dwarfed by those of her 14-year-old
brother. an under-achiever with an affection for
dope.
Hmm. I don't think
this is quite what the TV REVIEW Federal Communications
Commission had in mind
when it asked for more TV
programming aim ed at youngsters.
"Young Lives." a syndicated soap opera, wasn't
invented to please the FCC. The 30-minute weekday
serial is meant to capture the elusive teen.age au-
dience (and its spending money). The series. made
by Post-Newsw~k Productions, will be peddlecj to
stations at next week's National Association of
Television Program Executives convention as a
late-afternoon transition program that can bridge
the daytime soaps and evening news.
Kenya s eries due
"Black Man's Land," a three-part series
which chronicles the history or Kenya from its OC·
cupation by Europeans through its war for in·
dependence, airs Tuesday, March 24, at 10:30 p.m .
on KOCE, Channel SO.
The first program. "White Man's Country,"
explores the origins of white colonialism in Africa
from the black man's perspective. "Ma u Mau,"
March 31 . examines the African struggle for in-
de pendence and the myths surrounding the Mau
1'Jau.
And "Kenyatta," April 7, focuses on the
career of Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta.
ELECTRICAL
PARADE
AUDITIONS
Dltsneyland wilt be holding audilions
lor our (1981) Summer Electrlcal
Parade at the following dates and
times:
Males: SaturdaJ March 21st
5 '11 andup 8:30a.m
5 ·s· to 5·10· l0:30 a.m.
5 ·5• and under 1;00 p.m
Females: Sunday March 22nd
5•0• and under 8:30 a.m
s ·1•to5'6• 10:30a.m.
5•7• and up 1:00 p.m.
Appllcants must be at least 16 years
of age by March 21, 1981, and must be
prepared tor a dance movement
tryout. A Social Security Card and
verllloatlon of age will be required to
be ellglble to eudltlon. Report 10 the
Winston Road gate 15 minutes prior
to your tryout tfme
Casting Office
---~Disneyland .
tll) 11•R80ll 81.W • ANAl1(jfol CA 1'*'
.... -~IHl'ICW\0¥ ..
C.1S-81 (OP) ,..,_°'_........,_
,_,.,_ __ _
A viewing of the show's rive half-hour pilots
leaves the impression that teen-agers, who compose
a healthy portion of soap opera audiences already.
will eagerly embrace "Young Lives." It has all the
seductive qualities of classic soap opera, but with
teen-age situations and cha racters.
The trick will be to convince stations that
"Young Lives" is worth the trouble it may bring.
Notwithstanding the producers ' protests to the con·
trary, "Afternoon Special" or "CBS Afternoon
Playhouse'· this ain't.
"People have already asked me. 'How can you
have this kid snoking marijuana and not be punished
for it?· The answer to that question is that problems
in real life are never solved at the end of 30 minutes,
as they are on most episodic television," says Ken
Livesay, who created "Young Lives" for Posl·
Newsweek.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
Al.l ti m ANO l8J Ftl""S RECEr•E
f>tE SEAi. OI THE MOTIOH PICTURE
COOE Of' SEl~ REOU\.ATIOH
FANTASIA
1 :15-3:30-5:45
9:00-10:15
SUNDAY LOVERS
12:1S-2:3CM:45
7:15-9:30 (!]
~~NOWPLAYDIG ~~ ....
South Cont
(714)494·1514 n•
ctlTlllSA ..... -Bnttol Westb1ook Stadium Orive·ln
(71')15'0·104 (114) ~30·4401 (714) &39-8770 .. Saddltback (714) SI l ·S880 Woodbt1d1e C714) 551 0655
) ~.
"lf you wanl to give teen-agers som ething
positive, you can't preach, you can't be didactic,
because they'll turn it off .. underlying the soap
opera is the m essage, "Hey, this problem is
something that will eventually be solved."
Underlying. is right. Way under. The prime ob·
ject here is clearly to gr ab the teen audience and
worry about flak later. Nothing wrong with that am-
bition, I suppose, but where youngsters are con-
cerned, propriety is always a question. And an argu-
ment could be m ade that lhe behavior presented to
teen-agers as acceptable by their teen peers in
''Young Lives" is borderline.
None of these doings will shock many teen·
agers. certainly , but stations buying the show can ex-
pect some heat from parents. It is said t hat some
parents aren't thrilled with television's influe nce on
kids.
Running from thf' post,
and bocking into love
e ....mA
To-iy w • ~ ~ .............. ~ .. _ ............ ..,
---~. u:tte OOCCAWTT
a...· ---....,, ... Nwle ........ u•e (I) nt1•1 sao. o-o• tllOf"t• 111a1 UOlltl Ind ,,.,.,,.,, • •
~·-··"·'"' • ntll9TOI'
CAMON aw.· «>-oe~d. Joli~ • .,., Ueck« IRl e &MCNIM NltaNTUNI
I JOKMl9 Wll.O
HOGAW8 HUIOa
Col K.llnll, Y8ftlped by a
~ IC)y. deddal ,...
,,.. like tht Ruellall
Front
11:41. CAP'TlONID A8C
NIWI
-Ml>NGHT~
1~ 8 Cl) MCMIUAH l
WR
Sgt. Etvlgnt teeigna from
IM torca lor tht unllltely
r.uon ot marriege to a
wHltlly and bHulllul
woman 9 MOVIE * • * "Double lnderN\lty"
( 1$44) Bar bat• Stanwyclc,
Fred MacMurray.
8 @ CHA~'8
AHGELa
A heallh ape's plastic; IUr·
geon .. held hoetage Ind
lorc:.d to operete on an
Internationally ltnown
crlmlnll (RI
fl F~ THE MUSIC
• Mt8SION:
IMPOSSIBLE
A brllll1n1 crime 1ynd1Ute
00... beCOmes Ille tlllgel
Ol lhelMF
ti) OHE 8TV> BEYOHO
"Hou .. Of The Dead" A
Brltlah Army Lieutenant
beC<>mH atllangled in a
search lor hos m1Ulng llan-
cee In Hong Kong
12:30 IJ TOMORROW
Guest· comedian Alber1
Br00k1
0 OONLANE
Gues11 T Olly Curtis. Leslie
Caron, Louis Jordan.
Patchwork
ti) ONE STEP SEYONO
"The Lonely Room A ahy
sen .. tove young men has
been admiring a lovely
woman lrom alar
l:OO G) MOVIE
... i. .. ~ ...
... "(ttN>T ..........
ltd*AI~ • .... w . ......_ ...
14 •• ,_ ........... ,...,,..,..,.. ..
• CWIOl. IUlllm'T """.....,. Qu811: wtlllMI Cofwlld. t•• THILONI~ "PN Altd ,_o ..
-~ • \4 "lerrfftad" ( t*l lllo<I
tAurwt, 8twt o.-.....
~=1= tJOO NIWI
MOYll
·~ ''Wl6d H.,.._t .. (1947)
Al an L•dd. Dorothy
~. 1:101 IDfT~ 1:11 MOYll
• • • "Cry Danger·•
11951) Dietl Powell, Rhon-
da Fleming.
1:48. MOYll * * "Creature Wtth The
Atom 8rafn" ( t95SJ Alch-
ttd o.nnlng, Angela St•
VW\I. a:ooe MOW • * "Blood Menl•" ( 1970)
Pet• Cetl)enlM. Marl•
Aragon
1:108 NEW9
'S:N 8 NEWS
4:00 8 MOVIE
• • "The Bengal Tiger"
( 1972) Ooc:umentary
4: 16 • MOVIE * * "Security Rllk" (1954)
John Ireland, Do101hy
Malone
4:30a') NEWS
f 'rida y'•
D o y fitr1 t-.Horir•
-MORNttG-
11:00 ti) * • "The Star Packer"
( t934) John Wayne, v.,ne
Hiiiie
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 G) • * ·~ "Puule Ot A
Downfall Child · 1197 II
Faye Oun1w1y Barty
Pro mus
Cl) * * "T'he COOi Ones'
(1967) Roddy McDowall.
Debbie Walson
3:00 tI§l * * • • 'Double 1noem-
n11y· ( 19731 R11:hard Cren.
na. S1m1ntha Egger
3:30 0 * * "• "Battle Circus ·
(1953) Humphrey Bogart,
June Altyson. •
by Armstrong & Batiuk
TUI
Sm: BLOWS!
Whale Watch Cruises
WEEKDAYS
IOAM
Wl:.EKENl>S
9 .\\I & I P.\1
Leaving F.rom the
MhlM PIWllalDll
Adull~ SH. Children SS.
IL ro..o ... AMlca•.-.oc N I ~
COITA..aA
II.A. 90U'IWCIOMY
ORANQI "-·-.... meno. ·
NINE
TO FIVE <PG)
r ·--_,:. I "THE JAZZ.
_ SINGER" !PGI
• ,. -.~ iw..;.; i ''FORT APACHE
' THE BRONX" 11111
I "ALL NIGHT
LONG" (A) ----11 "FANTASIA"
i:=Wttl
"INCREDIBLE
, SHRINKING WOMAN"
"THE NUDE BOMB"
I ''THE DEVIL
6 MAX DEVLIN"
"HERO AT LARGE" Cil"OI
t • -I "RAGING BULL" 1111
"FORT APACHE"
I ··~ ., . I "TRIBUTE"
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"
(Ill
I "ST;;~~~.:-
"USED CARS" 1111
c: -·'A'NV wR1ci18
WAY YOU CAN"
"HONEYSUCKLE
A flct1t1ou1 8u•lnHt
Heme St1te-nl fllell
wit.II ttle Cowrcy ~ le
ollcl tor fl.,. ,..,. 11tet
whlcih time cont1n111no
IKl•lneH .. m118' rente.
P\llllteetkln le -INI')'
only It tlute ert
Chl n .. a, C.-tM 1.epl
Dep•rtment at the
DAILY PILOT t or
l nformetl on end
lleCHUIY l'orml •
142-4321 bt.m
•
.. -. ...,__~ .-.r ···--· ,~ .......... _ ..... ·-··· ----·---·-. . . .,.. ......... ·-. . ·-. . . . .. . . ... ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ···--·--....-.------------·-··-····r ··
(
t
i
'Saturday N iglit'
changes producers
NEW YORK (AP> -Dick
Ebersol, who helped develop
"Sat'41'day Nleht Live" for NBC
ln uns. will return H the pro.
1ram 's executJve producer, and
the show will return to the alr
Aprll 11 after a montb.:on1
hiatua, the network announced.
Ebersol will immediately
replace Jean Ooumanian, who
baa quit, NBC said. Ms. Douma-
nian this season had succeeded
the serlH' creator, Lorne
Mlcbaela, who len to pursue
other projects.
M1. OoumanJan wu quoted by
NBC u s aying she had decided
to hand the pro1ram to someone
else "because the show has not
yet attained the high standards I
had set for It.
•'I believe the sbow bas a
strong nucleus that ls ,eapable of
wonderful things,•· the state·
ment said ... Perhaps a fresh ap·
proach ls wbat is required for 'Red Shoes' set 'Saturday Night Live' lo realize Its full potential."
f KTLA ~al Ebersol, who at 28 became the. or SP'-"'• youngest vice president in NBC
KTLA will air "The R e d history when he was appointed
Shoes," the classic ballet mm in 1975 to oversee late-night pro·
which won three Academy gramming, said he was "thrilled
A,. w1,....... Awards in 1948. on Channels SW\· to again have the opportunity to Edeft'• gardea1 day at 2 p .m . It will be repealed be a part" of the program.
Barbara Eden slogs through Tuesday at midnight. "Saturday Night Live" set a
Orange Coast DAILY ~LOT/Thursday, March 12, 1981
PUBLIC NOTICE P\JBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
•tCT•noua autt•• .,_. ,tCTtnow __,..,.. ..
....... tTAYSM91n Menn_._..... UM91TATUll9NT
TIW llflewlfte .,..._ It ~ lllltl• NAMa t'rATeMellT TM hll'-lllf --er• •l1tt ....... ; Te. ,......,.. ..,_ ff• Wl"I llllMMM•:
ALLISON o•••ON H•v1c•. llllitlMa•· ITllATA Uf'l.0.A1'10H, IN(. -UH N. Ora11• ..... lat1t• Aft8, LllAut·1 P&.Olll&T, UtH ..... " ,.,.,,.,,.1 IT •A'T A
C.llt.rllleft1tt lucll• Alt8114't, Oer•eft Or•n, l!lC,.l.O'IATIOH, INC. -~ ,.,._
C:fler• All!-Wh"'-. 11Jt H. c;.tl,.,...._ tram; ITllATA .lC .. LOllA'NON, Ot•nd, .... '-ta AM, (Allter•I• ...,.. ,,., m ... o.. Or .... , INC. -... ., ,,..,Mii ITllATA ft701 ~"""8..... .JC .. LObllOH, INC..-,_._. _.,..
• "''' ........ ,~ ... _,, 111 lfl• lll•r911 Mllciwtt. ,,. le. Oall, t•a"': ITAATA ••11'1.0llATION.
Cll•lduel, Of"..-.. , Clllfwlltet.... INC, -1 .. H ,.,...,_, 1'01 IHt
Chu• A Wlttl\evl "*-tr'ltfl i..nt..n ...... W.. W. LI HMte,
IMrM M11e11e11 eam .. ,. ~ • Tlllt 118~ -· flllld wllll 1M C..,ftty Cltrk of Or11199 c ... nty on ,...,.,.,..,u,1tt'I.
"*" P111111"'9d 0r-. C..11 0.lly "''°'·
.. ... , •• """" '· 12, "· 1 .. 1 -..1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI aUllN .. I
NAMl ITATIM•NT
The fOll-lng per--. ll dOlng IK.ISI·
MUH.
COMMERCIAL. INVESTMENTS,
JSH Col11Mbla Drive, Cosl• Meta, Calllornl• mi. ~Oftn M. Sol>a<kl, U41 ColVMbla
Drive, C•I• MtH, Calllornla t»»
tllll llu>lMSs lS CondUC: led Dy •n In· dhtldwal.
JOfWI M. Sotla<lll
T'-11 •tmtM WM filed I ... II• 6lltATA IJC~ATIC*, INC ••
w .,.. .,. Oftlt <M1*' ..... ltOI ~ail& '"'"" C°""IY CIWll or 0r81'1ta C-ly °" bert ••ad, hit• IOI, u Hallre, , ... ,,, "'1 (AlllOtnl•..,.
,,...,. Tiiis IMllJneu I• (91\Cki(IH by • PllllllllllN OrWlttl CM1t o.lly, FM. llmlt9CI ~p.
1', 2', llMrc:n •·IL 1•1 en .. 1 ttreta l1111ioretlon, inc.
PUBUC NOTICE 1af\arY T. Telllf!'I, ~
Thlt tla._t w.s llled with ,,,.
"CTITIOUI aUllN•ll County Cltttl of Ora119t C.1m1y on
"AMS ITAT•M•NT . Febtu•ry JA, 1'11.
Tft• IOHowlnt jMtton1 are dOl"9 .. ,..,,l butlrleH M: P11bll"*I Or ante CN•I Dally Piiot,
J ERWEL. ENTl!•PtUSES, 1111 Fell. U, MM. S. 12, It. 1'11 ,.,...,
Centtr °'1 .. , HUftllngton llaac:ll, CA -., ... , PUBLIC NOTICE Gerald Kltln, S31l2 Valtt R~. S.n J11an Caplstr-. CA Earl Welk, ... Sll.yllne Drive,
Latllfta le«ll, CA This IKlll,..u Is conducted by a
e-neral .,.,,,_ll\lp.
$1 ...... C.,,_
.. l~ITIOUS IU51NIH
KAM• STATIM•NT
The ro1towln9 perM>nt are doing
bulln•u•t TlllS stat-I wet llled with the
County Clark ol Or•"(le County on
Ma re 11 >. ltll Tllll ttal-1 Wal llled with the
l'Ul .. J County c1 .. k of Oranoe County on
Publl._ Otano-CCNtt Dally Pilot, Feb 24, 1 .. 1
BEST M ARl(ET I NG AS
SOCIATES. ,_,.Lotan A•"""· C~ta
MeH, Calllornle t»2'
Arthur C Peacou. Sr . 1'01
Wa1<tllam Pl•<• Sa nt• An•.
C•lltorl'Ha '2704 M.,cll ), 12, 1', U, "'I t°" 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
J-. MalillMey & .,..,..
Anw•"etuw
Avce l'i-tai T-
Wllilam w Barrio; JO Grona
Avenu•. Apt • S, Long 8eacn,
Call lornl• ,_,,
P\JBUC NOTICE
plC'flft.,.--'MM ...... .,. .......... T TM ........ ,__ Jt _,,. !Miii· --· '·'· ooa1t1NO c:o .. 1Ut M•11rewl• A.e., Ne It, NewtNrl he<ll,CA~
t•ewl••• C. 0•"'"'' 1Ut M•fttevl• Awe., NO. U , ........ ,t hec.11,CA~
Tlllt ....._.Is undwctff llY .. i-
dtvl.,•1 ._,,.,.. c. ~Mt
Tllll ttM-1 w• llled with t"8
Covnty Clerti of Or-c.e-ty .. ,...,_,.,, ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI IMIMllaa HAMlaTA'rlMm•T
-t
Tiit roll-1"1 ...,._ are d0l1t1
llualnMI •: AVOCADO CONDO L.TO
PA"THl~I .. NO. I & 2, Mii Via Liao, Suite Jll, Newp•rt leach,
Catltornla t2M1
Tii e 9alalls Corporation, a
California c.,_allon. WI Via L.lao,
Swlte Jll, N-1 leac:ll, CAlllor11le .,..,
Thi• bualnfls Is c.ono11cted by •
11m1tec1~ .. r1111p.
The e.1a11s COt"poratlori.
P...iL. &.lall1
Prftl-
ThlS tla'-1 *M llled wllll lhe '
County Clet11 ol Oranoe Co<lnly ""
Foll 11.t .. I
PU ....
Ann Miller, star of stage and new tre nd for late-night comedy
a s wamp during the taping film. will introduce "The Red and over the years sent several "cT1T1ousaus1Ness
of an episode of the ''Harper Shoes" and discuss h e r involve· young comedians on to HAM• nATHUNT
•:tt N~ caMar Or., $¥lie :tt5 New,_.. 9eac:lll, CA tlMe
Publl.-Or ..... Coa•I Dally Pilot,
Fob. U. Matti! S. 12, 19, Uet
JemH N Cllalll, tlSl Juon1t•, Cypreu, Cahr0rn1a ~JO
PuDll"*" Or~ Coall Dally Piiot,
Feb It, 1'.Mercll), IJ, ltl1 ..... ,
Valley PTA" TV series . ment in dance. Miss Miller also Hollywood and Broadway, in · t>u!::!.~0~~~wlng iMriOn• are doing
You'U see how she got that will introduceaballelshortatthe eluding Chevy Chase, John sir .. ~~c'!!~~!.:.$c.:1::,:::,1.,~"h
Trus buson•u I• c:onauclld by •
oener•I P9rlnet\h1p
AC. l'eKo<k, Sr PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
way March 27. end of the movie. Belushi and Gilda Radner. w.H. - R.R .. '"'··. c.111ornt• ----
Tnh statemant was hied w•ti'I the
Count~ Cttrk ot Oron99 Count\I on "CTI Tl OU$ IUStN•H NAME $TATEMINT M•r<h ], 1 .. 1 PIS1 .. t The loll-Ing per--. It dOttlil bu5'
Put>ll>hecl Or•n~ Coast Dally Pilot, n•u ••
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~c:orporetton. 119 W•~ t91h Sl~el, Pt~ITIOUS•U~NE$$
Costa MHa, C.llroml• 92t21 NAME STATEMENT
·--WALTDflNEY'S •-FANTASIA 101 ...._.,
tl;i9•J.:9·~·~···-
---l'll':'l~----::-'.""7.:----..oa,. MACOC .... ,,_._..._
F'r-aytl
a11.A..-s1
879·9850
ALL NIGHT LONG .. , ••·t·11•klt·--··--
"THE Gflll.AT SANTINI" !POI ........ , ... ,.~ ..... lt9 .. fllAOINQ MIU. .. (ft) ......... , ... , .......... .
I • .,,....., ...... •• .. 0.. , .......
MANIAC • o--11 --~11!1!J!IL~1;!Qj~j MEAT CLUVEfll-..ASSACAC 1111
,.."0.... ........... -r.o.o..r ...... •• -..,., MANIAC
., ... f'W"tl\lt t .... ...0.. ........ 11.........-
l!IO.IU.:llll ... L--..; .. .;;1~1.;: .. .:...._iMEAT CLEAVER MASSAC·Af 1111
r No AM Car R-W1thlgn11ton Ac<ft-Y llr1ng Your Own AM Pot1allle
, • .,....,.....AU..waa1
MOJAOO l'OW£A
CON
NOfllA LA AHELOE
, .. 'mitt .. ....,.,. ........ --.. -"
AOAO GAMES (POI -COAST TO COAST '"°'
II No AM Car Radio wm lgn111on Ille:<•-· 8'1ng YOIK Own AM Pot1abl
6-~f'I ftlvo
\0 •I C..-OM c,, ... ,,.,, •• .,
.. , lit'f)
fM ... -----STIOlrleAIOO ALL NfOKT LONG c•t -fllllTllll 1•1
II No -c..r Radio With lgnttlon AcCft-Y 8'1ng Your Own AM Pot1abl
I ~~~~~~~ .. ~-~~··~·~~~~~":!cy~a~VOtt~vrru~~·i .. ~-~WIUlllll~~~~ I, Jc • . ,::.:: ::-.:::;. ml\_, •LAZl,!G IAODl.H 1••
"' •t> UP THE ACADEMY c•t
f No -Gar Recllo Wiii> lllf'lllon Ac<•.,Y 8'1ng y-Own AM Pot1a
( Piiot )C•ndld commontorl ...
Logbook I ·1 p·1at
Hctualvely In th• II J I
W.H. •ncl R R • INC Th• ro11owtng per1ons are doing Merci'! s. 12. 19, ,., '"' 1041 81 CALIFORNIA MIRROR DESIGN,
1341 Reilly Or., Hunll"910n Bea<h, CA RancUll J. RusMll bu•lnen es.
This 1ta1ement w•s flied with ,,... EMERALD LAKE, P.O. Boa 2SO'I,
PUdLIC NOTICE County Clerk of Orenge CounlY on 161111 8Htll Boulev•rd, Suite U•. Hun-
March J, "'' llngton Beach, C.llfornl• 926-17.
PU7t71 Catvl11 M. L•ung ~ t< .. lllun R l'l~ITIOUS IUSINEH
Publlshecl Ore11oe CCMISI O•liy PllOI, L.eung, 6'12 Reel CCMIC:h Drive, Hunl-NAME STATEMENT
Maren s. 12, "· u. "" 11)46 .. lntton B .. c:n. C.llrorlll• 9™7• Th• fOllow1~ person ,, ooong bUSI Clement t<.M. L.eun9 and Clover ·~
PUBLIC NOTIC E
l'ICTITtOUS IUSINESS.
NAME STATEMIN"T
The lollowino oe,.ions •'• oo•no
buSifM\\.\
(11 AUDIO. LTD , 111 L.100 CAR
LEASING. CJI AUTO AUDIO. 149
Rlvtr5lde A...,...., Su•I• "E . N-porl
Buen Coill<><n•• tMJ
T L C.. lndustrots, Inc , •
C•htorn•• corPQ<eUon. u• ~1v1r\1de
Avtnu•, Suite E", N•WPOrl BH<h
Ca lororno• .-3
T,..n, ~ne·n •s condv<tH ov • <or
Por•hon
T L c ln<lustrtu. Inc
M Broou Gunning,
S.C.retary/l r11s\ir1r
This Stlt~t •IS 111• ••lh the
County Cltrk or Or•nge County on
M•rcn J, "'' FU7111
PuDil•M<I Or•nve CCNSI Delly Pilot, M•rch S, 12, It, U, •'111 1004 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
M y L."""9. M.S2 Reel CCMICh Drive nen " Huntington 8HCh C•llfornl• ·~] • A 0 c 0 N s T A u c T I 0 N Gold•n Oek lnvettmtnt: A MANAGEMENT CO . 11"t Cow•n
Calllornl• L.1mllec1 P•rtner>1>lp 1•1111 tr•lnt , C.lllOrn•• t111• Buch Bou•evaro Suite UI •Hunt AlcNlrd M. D•llon, Jr. 5AIOS R•v••
lnglon Bea<h c.ur~nl• 9~7 ' Avenue. Newoorl Bt•tl'I, Ca1trorn1•
' 92MJ
C.hnn M LeunQ f Pus Ou\.tMU ., conoutt~ b' '" 1n Thi\ si.1......,1 was flied wllh 1,,. 01vldu•I
County Clark ol Or•nge County on AlcNlrd M Dallon. Jr Muell J. 1'11 Ti'l11 st•t.,.,,..,1 ,,.., llfocl with the
FISllM County Citr~ or Or•n~ Counh on
Publls....., Or-CO.SI Daily P110t. Merell J, '"' I' ISIHI
Merell s. 12. ''· 2•. 1 .. 1 1202·81 PubilSM<I Otange CCM\t D••ly P1iol.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS MISINH$
NAMl ITAT•M ... T
The IOll-lng per-. ll doing bu•I
""'-' 11: WESC!> CONSUL. TING CO .• 245'S o .. rl•kl, El Toro, C.lllornla t:lllO.
Eu9eno L. Colomblnl, 200 O••rl•k•, El Toro, C.lllornia t2'JO. Thi• llUsl,.u Is c-.c lecl by an tn
dl•IOual.
E....,.. L. COiombini
Thi• stal.....,.1 was flied with the
M•rcn s, 11, "· n '"' !OS• 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOU$ a USINIH
NAME STATEMENT
The IOll-ng -'°" IS dotn9 bwsl Nil a1
GAS 2', 1tl01 llaech 80Y1e•ard.
Hu""""°" 8aKllt Caillor,.la t2'441 Anthony S.t...,, 10611 Henclarwn,
G•rClln Grove, C..tllornla •~ Thi) butlneu It conducted by an In
dlvloua1. "~ITIOUS aUllNEU County Clert ot Oranoe County on AnthonyS6'em
NAM.a STAT•MlllT F.c>. 11, '"I
Tiie loll_.ng --It delng blltl· PU .... ness aa: PubtllJlecl Or-Coast O•lty Piiot,
GNEISS P"ooucn COMPANY. FM>."· 2•. Merell s. 12, "" 141-tt
tll West 11111, •11. Co.ta Men. C..lllomi•taV. . NOIM I . J-, 7to H.,,.1119'1, •U.COIUlllWM,CAll~t1U'1. 1------------PUBLIC NOTICE
TlllS ll•l-1 was lllocl with the
County Clerk or Oran~ Counly on
Feb. ti, t'll
P1M8t>S
Pubil.-Otano-CNst Daily Pilot,
F•b. It, U. March S. t2. 1 .. 1 14t 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
,, ...
Dianne A. L.IM•ey Pierce, U.,
Re Illy Or ., Huntington Beach. CA ., ...
Thi• but111tu I• conouct.eo by "" 111
dlvlduel. OlanM R u nowv·Pie<ce Tiiis ... ,.,,,_, was llled wllll IM
Counly Clerk ot or .. oe County on
F•bru•ry 2•, 1911 1'156161
PubllsMO Or-CCN51 0•1iy Pilot,
Feb U , and M.,ci'I S. 12. 1' 1'191
'72·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICT1nous I U$1NESS.
NAME $TAT•MINT
Tl'I• fOl1-lng o..--. h -ng bu"
nH' IS
CAL.IFOANIA REAL. ESTATE ANO INVESTMENT PROPERTIES,
11• 11 A•61on Lano, Huntington Buen, Calllornlanw Cl•udl J. o.m.,., 11411 Av•lon
Lent . .-.unlH''IQton 8«1ch C1l1tornia ., . .,
TM\ but.mess n c.onoucwo b't .,. .n.
dlv1 due1
c1..-J, 0.rTWr> This stat.,.,,..,I wH lilf<I with tM
County Clerk ol Or•n~ CounlY on Feb 17, 1911
FUStU Publllhecl Or-Coast Dolly Piiot, Ftb 19, 2t, ""-r<l'I S. 12, 1'11 11• II
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU$ aU$1NEH
NANIE STATEMENT
Tne loiloWtng Ptt_, Is doing bust•
nen •• FASHION GAL., 1)42 Ed1n9"r Thll ..... ,,.., 11 candll<lttd by all In PICTITIOUS IUllNlll
dMtlwal. ll&AMa ITATlllUNT ------A•• , HuMlnvton 8ea<l'I, CA 911>46
-.. E ~ The rott-ne _ _.. It dol"ll bwlll PICTITIOU$ •USl'•EH S-vo Bat. 1011 Hooe PtKe, 0..
MAME ITAT•MENT lar10, CA 911•1 .Tllla --t •• llted wllfl Ille """ as: C-ty Clan of Ot .. ta c-..ty Oft C.C SYSTEMS, USJ RlverslM Tne IOltowinv per-. I• Ootng busl Tnls ~nns Is conou< i.a bv •n '"
I".-. 11, ltt'I 0r1 ... Sant•""'•· CAlllO<nl• tVO. neu .,. dlvlduat
JOAN GREEN ~ ASSOCI ATES. Saw>i>vo 8-'' Kt•ln Pwt Rl19etsberver, 2JS2 "'*II-0r.,.. <:Mat Dally Pl .... "lverlll• Ori .. , s.nta Ma. Calllornt• mu Knlrtl Lane, LAVuna Nlg.,.1 Tllll stat-t ,.., l1if<I ••th tM
..... "· 26, """"dis. 12, 1"1 ..... I "'°'· CA t2•n Counly Cieri< ol Oranve Counly on
Jo•n M Gr••"· JtJO Kotte< Februa,., U 1911
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiiis bwlllnets ll <.onduc:lltd by a" In Olvl-1 Le,,., l.aguna NI-I, CA t'2U2 1'1-
t<e.tnP R._t_..,. Tllls builnes.t h c-..CllCI by •n 110 PuDl•Shecl Or•n<Jt CCNsl Dally PUo4.
T11l1 "9'-1 was flled #Ill> Ult
C-ly Ctert of Oranoe County o~
FIO "· 1'11 .
:llvlduet I FeD 2•. -""-r<" S 11. 1' 1"1 J_, M Grfftl lt'l-11
1'1Htl1
Publl-Or-(.OHi o.lty Piiot.
FIO 1', U, Mar'cn S, 11, 1'111 ISJ.t•
Tiii• si.tomenl WH ,,,.., .. ,,,, IM
County Cler• of Or•n~ County on February 73, , .. ,
1'1-Publl-Or.,_ CcNsl Delly Pilot,
Feb. U , -March S, 12. 1•. 1 .. 1
PUBLJC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINEH
NAME STATEMENT
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
ELEANOR BENIGNO
AND OF AMENDED
PETITION FOR ~PROBATE OF LOST PUBLIC NOTICE ILL AND FOR LET· -1 tl2·11 Tiie IOll-'ng oe~an " 001ng bu\I
EAS TESTAMENTARY, PICTITIOUllUSl .. US A I I N T H E NAM• $TAUMENT
LT EA NAT IVE, LET· The rotl-lng _ _, Is dotno bollll-l'l~ITIOUS IUSIN•H
E R S O F A D . nen •s NAM• STAT•M•"T
M I N IS TA AT I 0 N AN O PAC~~~7:E~~ ;;.,"';'.'I.AG:.~~! bu~::.~.~~~owing persons 0'' dol"g
A u T H 0 R I z AT I 0 N T 0 A••nue, SI.Ille E. MaltJIM, C.illornl• K & 0 SE RV ICES, 11103 Sl<y p., ...
E D E A t2IOI Soul"· 1101.1 rvlne, c.11rornl• 9211' AOMINIST R UN WHl•y e. Hoov<1r. 215 VI• Mon· Ktltll Alan Louch 10)1 N•l•I THE IN 0 E p ENDE NT , ... ., •. AnaMlm. Calllornl• t2IOI. Drive 11114 w ... 1mln•l;r Calllor11I• ADMINISTRATION OF n 11 1outtneu 1s conc1uctec1byanll\· "11113 . • •
E S T AT E S ACT • N 0 . dlvldualMll•Y B. Hoov•r Thh buslneu h conduClecl by •
A 107 S60 This ttat...,.nt w•s lliocl with lhe venuat :":~~;:"~~~s
T o a I I h e i r S • Cou11ly Clerk or Oran~ County on Tiiis , .. ,.,_, ••• tllocl wilt> the
benefteiaries, creditors l'ell.ll,l .. l. l'IMlff ~:;n::.~rk or Or.,ge Counly on
nd c ontingent c redito rs of P11b11"*" Oranoe c.,.,, oa11y P1101, p116111 Eleanor Benigno and Feb.1t.H,Marcfls.n ,1tt1 .. ~1 Pub11.....,0ranoe coatt oa11,P1101
PUBLIC NOTICE
,...,u.,
MS .MANAGEMENT SERVICES,
t•ISI PllllPJ I.AM, Hunlltlillon 8ea<i'I
j C•ll~;;4:r:!.~a1her Cottr•ll. 167S1
Pll•IP• L.ane. Hunt1nglon Buell
Ca1Uornt• t'2M9
Thi\ bu\i'W'JJ 1~ conducted by •n '"
c:llvldu•I
DtbOr•h Mather Cottrtll
T~lt tlal..,._I WH filed wit,.. !ht
Counly Cl•rk or Oranve County on Feb J, 1tl1 1'1SSotl
Publl~M<I Or•n<Jt Co .. t O•lly Pilot ·ob 26, ""-rti'I S, 12. 19, 1tl1 ..... ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
er sons who may be i PUBLIC NOTICE--F"1b.H.1t,1111erc11s.n.1,.1 .. u, "~C:,:.~~!~~!1:::S
therwise interested in the P U BLIC NOTICE Tiie ro11ow1ng oerson " oo.ng buso
i II and/or estate: l'ICTtTious 8 us;;E$S--no• es
A Petl'tt'on has been ft'led VANL.EY'S GIFTS ..... , Unlverw ~ NAME STATEMINT 1'1,...ITIOUS IU"INt•• G j B ' k '"' "' .,. An , WHtmlM1tr, CA '12"'3 y race . en1gnO, a a Tht loll-Ing person h OOttlil bwal NAME STAT•MENT Corn•iu• L. Van d., L.oe, IM1
r ace B. Riggs, in the ntnr::ESEL. ENGINE SERVICE & The IOllowlng P..-50tl h doing bust Unlver H Ave , Westmlnsl•r. CA
uperior Court of Orange "EPAIR co. 2701 s Or-. Unit L. MUP.~CIFIC INVESTMENT GROUP, t'l~" buslMS• "conouct..i by •n 1n
ounty r e questing that s.n1aANi.CA '2701 22120vpon10.1ve.Sull•Q.1rv1ne.CA aivldu••
race J . Benigno aka JamH A Hurlty. n.i1 Hllana n11s COt'MlusL.vanaerL.11
B R · b' Cir .• Huntl"91on Beac:h, CA 91.-. 0 ll O race • 1ggS, e ap· Tflls tloNneu Is <.ondu<wd t>y an In-ou91et A L.ora, 12 uponl Thi> \t.l-1 """ hied with tM
01nted as eJCeCUtOr Or, in dhldual. Or:~; s;:~~l~:~:~~~d~:!!i by 1 County Cltrll. ol Orange County on
he a I tern a t i v e , ad • J...,., A. Hurley um1t..o -1nt"11fp Feb u . "" ,.1_
ministrator to the estate Of Tllll st.t-t ... llllCI with the Oouvf• A Lord PuDilsi'led Or-CCN51 O•lly Pilot,
E B . Th . Counly Clerk 01 Or-county on Genaral Partner '•" 16, March s. n . "· ,,., leanor en1gno. e pet I· F'•bru•ry 2•. ltll Thi• tlal.,...,I ••• llied with the 909-lt
ion iS set fOr hearing in l"ISU6a Co111\IY Clerk 01 Oranve Counly on -----
Dept. 3 at 700 Civic Center Publl-Or-Coa•I Dally Pilot, February II, ltl1 PUBLIC NOTICE ~;~~!' ~:~.t. ~~1~roer~i~Y o~ Feb.,.,-""""" s., n . "· ,,., 'llM' Pub11.-Drano-co .. t o.11~1~.~1,'. CALL l'o• ;1~ ----
Feb. 26. -March s, 12, 1', 1t11 April 1, 1981 at 9:30 a .m . PUBLIC NOTICE t1H1 To • 1,,. T • ir s 1oENT1 AL.
IF YOU OBJECT to the Notice ,:~O:REE"eTYY GIVEN iha1 granting of the petition, $UP'l•ICMCOU•TOf'CAL"O•NtA PUBLIC NOTICE 11'1t8oardolSuper•IM>nofllle Counly
you s hould either appear COUNTY OP OlllANO• or Or•noe 1n11n•• 10 1uu 10 1111
at the hearinn and s tate .... A1Wnt O•ANOICOUNTY$U .. ERl0" i'llgllesl bidders. on. MOllln.t.o-monlh • OlllDlll TO IHOW CAUS• COUlllT b•11•, certain ruldentlal rul proper· your objections or flle 1n 111e INltw of.,,. ..,_.katlon o1 i•et•ko.Meron .. wea1 1v, 1>e10ntlngtotMCountyofO.anvt.
written Objections w ith the IAMA JEAN H199A"D lcw Chante Of s...... AM,c.11teno1a•1111 commonty dacrllled as JIO University
cyourt before the hear'".?..: N~.:iuASt•MAJUN Hlll9A"0· PLA;~::I~ OE L.OS ANGELES !!~::: ~1~:~7is.::.~~~·~;,c~~~
our appearance may """ ""11-• .._ 111«1 • pe«111 .. wllfl Ole ORNELAS H id prooertles must be suom111e0 in
in person Or by your at· Cieri! ol tllla Court tor .. ot'llltr <M119' DEFENDANT· writing, on foirns pro.,,ldecl by the
torney Int •PPll<•nl'I name from t•MA LAU..0 P. RUIZ· EL.VIA BLAN· .County of OrMQe, In, .. ,.., tl\Yeloe>H, IF . y OU ARE A JEAN Ht&•A"D to JEANNE co , FEDERAL. NATIONAL. 10th• Cieri! 01 th• Board or O'SHIA. . ORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, • Su1Mrvl18"S, Administration Butldln9, CREDITOR or a contln · IT ISOAOEAEOttwtl•ll~-·~ Corporallon. CHICAGO TITL.E Roorn4U,10Cl•kC...terPlez•,S.nta
gent creditor of the de .. , ...... In IM ........... 1111• ........ INSURANCECOMAPANY,. MlllOU"I Ana, Callwnla, '2102, ano Midi lie ....
ceased you must file your ~r ....,. ""' c-1 et 11 :ao a .m .. C•Pon11on, -ooes 1 '"tOUllll 10, cel••d "" 111e c1er11 at u1d -"s 1 on April t. 1w1. I-c~ OI tn<tuJlve ~lore 2.00 pm .• -.,. Aprll .•.
claim with the c ourt or Department 1 at 100 CM< c e11ter C.."""'9W: .,.,_ ""· 1n.,.... 1e be e1191.,.. No 1eee
present it lo the personal Ori"•· SMtt. Ana, Ora"19 County, SUMMOM$ Dlds or Ot"al bids wllt be <-idltred
representative appointed ca111orn1a. -.,_ c-. II any, NOTICEt You !\ave"""_., T,,. "•11i.t ..,.....1 ......, .. ano ac1c11t1one1 , wlly Ille "'Ill'°" tor <htln9e of "'"" O<lrt may decide ._.i,,.1 yov wit-I lnrormatJon •J to Ille terms •nd _,.,,. by the COUrt W1th1n fOUr .,_.Id nal lie........... our being -d UftleH you r""°"41 tlonl on wN<h the pr~lll Will be •
months from the date of 1T 1s l'UltTl-41!" o"ol!"Eo ww1 • 11111n » ... ., .. •eac1 t11e lnforfftatlon 1"'"· "'-Y 11e '*-'"" 1rom· ROl!ff
first issuance of letters as ~c::11~11:•1~. "o~ ~~:. 9: 1~~ _.111 .., _k ""advice of.,. ~r,,~~~.g=r :s~:.;:.i~sg.': •
provided In Section 700 Of n•••P•r:r or ,.,..,., ctrcu1a11911 11--.. In IN• matter. yow llooWld 0o ce11ter Ori•• Wut, Sant• An•,
the Probate Code of ptlnl•d l\Or .... CIM!ty, CAii......, • promptly .... tll•I yo11r written C•lllorflla tt1tl; .. ~ nVM-:
California. The time for ..ce • .__..,._.NC<•llwWMb ,ll9fly,may11e11te«1ont1me. 11141 U4.WO;,...., to. Pro1«1 YM,
fl I ..... I Pfl0<101McleMl9llwheer .... Mlllt AV1501Y"9d .. ~~.l!I Unl•eraltyOrlw. ·
llng c a1i .. s w II not elC· """Ofl· rlillulllal ........ dKldlr ~ontra Ud. Siii OatH: F_,,.ryJ4, 1tl1 pl re prior lo four months D•INt ,,..,_., "·"" ..-tM<i. • -..... Ud. r.....-IY o•o•• OF THE BOARD OF
from the date of the hear-•-'llH. '"'-,,. •».._..Le• i.1n1°""ac1on su ,., •v1so"s OF o"ANGE I ...J.I ed bo tltw COUNTY,CAL.ll'O"NIA.
ng n1nc a Ve. J......... 11u1t.d ......... 1c1uwa1con~jodlt IHAL.IJUNEAl.l!llANOE• I YOU MAY EXAMINE ..,._.c.wt "°"'*"'"" Mullto, dM!trl1 a.rttof111 .... ,.. ~he file kept by the Court. Publl ..... Or .... C:-.1 Oel..,"'""' •Urlo IMmtlllalunam•, de Hla ofl~l9on
If you are Interested In the '" ... ••· """'· •· 12• "·"" _., •Mra, "' .._ .. "''"•· '' "•' ot0r-.c~y.cA
estate, you may file a re· 1~/o'= 'O'.'::'~~ai:,~ tt';l':11 P'u1111.-0r .... coe.c ua11v P11o1. t
que.t with the court to r•· PUllUC NOTICS ..,.p1a1111 "" ~ "'" llY ttM , .. ,... MA1rc11•.10. 11, it. ,._ ,., 11. 1e. "·
celve notice of the tnven-ttt ,..11111 vou. 11 .,w wi111 io...,.... 20, 1•1 101M1
tory of estate assets and of liJtCTt"out 1Mo11t••• 1• 1••wtt. 'l'MI 191111t, •'"'111 • day• , 11t 1e11 .. 1.,. w•• ••• 001"' NAMS ITATil ... NT er llllt -la _..,.. 811 'l'tll, Ml_ Ml the petitions, accounts and TM,.....,.,.~ 1,..,,. w•· 11 .. w11111t111cowtewr1t1911,_w TH• MAIL ITO•, .... , C:Mat l reports described In S.C· ,. ... 1 <"""4!1M. UllMM .,... ..... -.... , •• ~CA.t161t uon 1200 of the California • ._,.o.TacH '"ac1110N w11w1M•t11WM9fl._.lutl9fl ee,.., .. o.T.w.,..,1111 .....,.0 , ..
P O .. ·te c--~AC:Ht"•· 1114 Httlt•' Orin, Ille ,..!Miit, IM "''' ceun may Hwil~ llNdl. CA.-. r .,., ......... ......, IMcill. CA..... "''" • ~ ... .., .. "" ,., '"' k8"1 -.-. 11t1 ..... Cw., H\IM-N•~-A CllerlH lfl•M, !1'• tlltf ~--lft t!W ,_,lelflt, 1ft1toM liMdl, CA, ..... J. m •'I M. H •••• ft ""'• :..:..•crt '""'·CA.... kll <"*' ,_.. ... ..,,...,,,,_. .. 'tlllt ......... c~ _,, ........
I _...' ,,. • ~-... 811 ...... ...-. talN .. _.,., ~., • ., .... . Mua ck,~· ... & Garrwn, ........ .......,........lfttlltc........ Clf'tyO.T.Wn Attorneys at Law, One ..,.,..... °"''Ot~tl."9 ... ..,.. Wlt11tlra 81vtl., L•• T11 ............. _ 1.._ w1111.. ....."-......,~ ,.... ...,.. _ ,..., •••-.
... , .... , C.. 90017; tel: C-1Y Clel1l .. Or-. c:.uMy"' .., .... ~~ c-t'I' C.... et Or ... C-.y 811 ) (21 ) ,,,_ ~• PM. M, Hll. ......... I ....,_., ... "91. _Y",,_ ,,.., ,,,, .... ......, ,, ...
"'-'I--o,.,.. c:-.c o.llY """' ....... c.e.... ... ...... ~ c..t o.tty,,... ~ltfted OrMl9t CMtl Delly Pl..C 11 ....... ~II S. 11, ... "'1 ll'vall.,.. Or .. QR! Dellf ~ ............ MWOI A, tt. "' 1'1,
AMI. 11, 12, '' 1•t l ..... 1 Ul~I MMCll 5, 11, tt, ... 1"1 lltt.fl UMI
t ••
"Eventng fotkll A robbery la In progreu. I'm the
lookout aaalgned to detain you untll the job has been ~.. compi.ted."
il;
al Murder trials
i~: Case shadow
~{ . •
[ over doctor·
;"
t . TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -The iron priaon 1atea
1wun1 open 17 months a10 and Dr. Carl Coppolino
yalkedoutafreeman.
i Outside, be bas found an unforsivinl society that
fers no escape from the stigtna of one of the na·
on '1 most celebrated murder cases.
., "There are people who will never be satisfied -
even after the 12 years I spent in priaon," he says.
UTo those woo believe me guilty, my debt to society
ii not paid. And it never will be."
·i '. THE YEAll80F INCARCERATION don'tseem
tashowon tbe48-year-old grandfather, wbo baa writ·
•n a book about the case entiUed "The Crime That
Wever Was." But bis glamorous, fut-paced lllestyle
and circle of well-to-do friends are gone.
As a coodltlon of parole, he's barred from prac·
Ucing medicine.
J In 1967, the nation's newspapen and magazines
•ere filled with Coppolino, just as they were recenUy
with reports of another high-society love triangle
murder case -the conviction of former bead·
mlatress Jean Harris in the slaying of "Scarsdale
Diet" doctor Herman Tamower.
1 Twice in 1967, Coppolino, then 34, went on trial
for bis life-first charged with murdering bis lover's
bus band, then accused of killing bis wife.
HE llUlED ATl'ORNEY F. LEE Bailey and was
acquitted in the July 1963, death of Rel. Army Col.
William E. Farber, 52, in Monmouth County, N .J .
Five months later, a jury in Naples, Fla., found
the Brootlyn-bom anesthesiologist guilty of second·
degree murder in the death of his
wife, Carmela, a 32-year-old
physician. The government said
be murdered her with an injec-
tion of a paralysing muscle reJax-
ant. He was sentenced lo life in
prison.
Key testimony came from
Coppolino's spumed mistress,
Marge Farber, 18 years his
senior. After Coppolino married
co~P>OuNO someone else, she went lo police
and claimed her ex-lover killed her husband in New
Jersey andbis wife in Sarasota.
Mrs. Farber testified she was a hypnotic "love
slave" in the throes of Coppolino's trance when she
tried to kill her bus band. She said Coppolino finished
the job by smothering him with a pillow.
AN AVTOPSY ON FAllBE&'S EXHUMED
body showed a heart attack didn't cause bis death,
the state said, attribut1n1 death instead. to suffoca-
tion caused by a fractured neck bone.
Balley arsued that happened when the cofrm col·
lapsed during exhumation.
In the lecood trial, proaecutioo witnesses paint·
ed a picture of a playboy doctor, used to the good life,
who had the dru&, the motive and the opportunity.
Tbe defense branded the testimony the vendetta
of a woman scorned.
But in the end, it came down to a batUe of ex·
perts.
The New York City medical examiner Dr.
Milton Helpern and bis chief poison expert, Dr.
Charles Umber1er, testified they found enoucb SUC·
dnylcboline, the muscle relaxant, in Carmela's
body tocauseberdeath.
... DEFENSE EXPERTS SAID THE DRUG was
untraceable. The jury believedHeJpem.
Tbe conviction cost Coppolino 12-.., years of bis
life, bis plush lll•tyle on fashionable Longboat Key,
and his medical liceme.
"But lt probably made me stronger," be says.
''It chanced my whole sense ol priorities radically.
"You carry ootbint with you. Prison even takes
your name away and lives you a number. All you
have ii you. And you learn that you become lmpor·
~nt."
COPPOLINO SAYS 818 STaENGTB tbroup
!~ yean came from bis second wife, Mary
bson, a former bridte partner and wealthy
them diTOrcee five yean hia Htlior. He married
taeralzweeb after Carmela's death.
An indepeadent, •trona·willed and articulate
woman. she raised her two cbildren and Coppolino'•
two dauebten, worked, drove 500 miles every
~eekend for five yean to visit blm in the state prison
M Raiford, and pencmally Jed the campalp to free
blm.
Ironic.ally, lt was Umberter's conntctina
teltimony lo a cue 10 yean later that paved the way
~ CoppolJno'• freedom. Umberpr 1ald tests were
ipll beiqdnloped to trace 1ueelnylcbollne.
l AND NM' LONG Ann THAT. Dr. Franco
l'loNM, a tnlcolocitt, aald he wu sworn to secrecy
fb~ Ilia teltl clklll't c:oaftrm tbe H.ipern ftndlnp. ~Um.,....andB=.,.nowdead.
Wltll tlaat MW aticm, llUJ CGppollao t..aMi • .U, ID ttate a.p. Anett Glardeau of 'Aeacm.W., U.--daalnn• of tbe committee on .r-reetian, puole and tfObatloD. e~ tH Girardeau: ''After a year and ot eoUecUq lafonutlma Uld aeleaUfte
, J Md tlle lrnftltable proof_ tllat Dr. BelDern
ucl Dr. om-.. .... 1at--.u, fabrteated ...
faeta ... ••0r.0411DllD4>wu,.,....la0dobermtan.
lollaC IJ , ... "' .. llf• 08 a c:ciewtctm for. 'erim•
that..,...wu."
Coca-Cola to market a light wine
ATLANTA (AP) -Coca-Cola
1ub1ldlar1 WlD• Speetrum 11 proe:-=r.. ~ plw .. ~ in .... ..... IDriu a ..... with
fewer calort .. ..a a -lower alcohol
CODteDl than the aYerate table wlM.
Tb• product, Lltbt CbabU1 of
Callfonala, will be tett-mart.tecl ha
Seattle Saa Dleao. Milwaukee,
Naabvlaie, Albany, Tampa and St.
Peterabur1, aceordlnt to Wine
Speetnun Preelcletlt HUT)' £. Teuley.
Li•ht CbabU1 of Callfornlt.. wlll
contaba I .I percent alcohol by volume,
compiled witb 12 percent alcohol for
tbe aver .. e table wine, Teuley said,
and wlll contain 41 calories per
four-ounce aerviq, compared with a in
reauJar wines.
to Illy
In hot ......
Dependable 30-gallon
gaa heater with g1 ....
llned tank. h igh·
temperature ahut-off .
114111
40-tillH .. 124.95
SO.,.llH •• 184.95
support
yow local
tomato
Galvanl:red wire
tomato 1uppot1 to
lnaure healthy,
large fruit•.
CoHapHS to atore.
1••
I great
lkles
Germain's oc:i.gon
planter 11 a
beautiful way to
houae your growing
lrlenda. fHOM·P.
Reg. UMI. 3••
"'"' ..... Big f10 beg of Germain'• fY9 graaa
Ned to green up your lawnl
Reg. 2.99.
.1''
Wlae 5peetn1m•1 plau for marketbat
tb• .wlM...,.. ltalled t.mponrl11 wbM
U.. federal Bureau of Altc*ol. Tobuco
aad Flrearipa refuaed to l11ue a
eertllleate ol label approval for the
product.
Tbe COIDJ>UlJ ft.led 1u1t .. alnl( tbe
bureau ln federal court, aad U.S.
Dl1triet .Juqe Aubrey Roblnloa Jr. of
Waahlnaton, D.C. aided wltb tbe
company.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms refused to tuue tbe
certlftcate because of the company'• ln·
tentlon to use the word "lltht" on the
product's label.
· The bureau ar1ued, amona other
tbinaa, tha.t the word "Usbt," when
refer to beer, meana'fewer calories.
spred
Iha satin
but ..._ ntentq to wtu, meam 1 ...
tbu 1' percent alcobol.
Tbua, the bureau 1ald, couumen •
would be m1lled ii they buy winel, odaer
tban u,td Cbabll1 of CaJlfonda, U..t
are clelerlbed u Upt, beea ... 1ueb
wln• lo all Ubllboocl wW not ban
fewer ealori•.
Robimon ruled, however, tbat the
lnformaUon slated to appear on the
Ll1ht Qaablla of Callfonda label wu
relevant and accurate.
And be laid the reaponalbWty of tbe
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms II to "prevent a wine maker
from deceivinl or mialeadlnt those who
mitbt purchase thelr wines, not tbolle
who mllbt purchase the products of
others."
I \
tolllt lrOublel
gOt you down?
Replace your old
ballcock and float with
quiet. water-saving
Fluldm&1ter.
Reg. 7.59.
411
the room Is
getting dimmer
. .. beeauae Leviton dim·
mer awltch lets you
create llghtlng effeeta.
Push on/off 20V. 600-
wt. #6600BP
Reg. 5.39.
2''
·n lley
Keyed window lock by Belwlth lor
e.tra MCurtty. Durable construc-
tion, burglarproof. #1423.
Reg. 3.99.
211
Famous latex flat wall paint from Glidden. Beeutlful flat flnllh
scrubs clean, stays color faat. Euy water clean-up.
'
slkll 'n stop
Aluminum window •llde atop lets
you atop-loek window or ecreen
door anywhe~e on the track. #1408.
Reg. 1.10.
59°
... ....
you ... llddln
Kld·tHtadl Latu Hml-glOH
anart* tor a auper-tovgh, non-
~ng flnleh.
11:..
10
"~
t
l
;
•
;. ..
0
,,
" ' b
t
r u
. .
i• ..
I·
( , t.
I .
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~
r
'
OWHH
WIU.ANAMCE
Larfe 3 bdrm custom
home In preatlflous area. Immacu ate.
Owner wut carry lst TD
of $100,000 at 12~ in·
1 terest onl y . Price
$185,000. Ca I I now
979-5.'70.
ALLSTATE
UCKIAYYllW
l&OWMAlllT
Ttdl Mautllul view rro-perty In Newpor i•
priced below market
value and below •P·
pralsal. S pace a ae kitchen with breakfast
THE REAL ESTATERS
ladlbay V• ,HCMM
Older upgrad e d
charmer with great view
of the hllls and back bay
area. This 3 bedroom 2
bath home has been up-AEAL TORS graded and the owner
-will carry a large 2nd.
2UHITS
$94,900
Super Investment ! Two
2-Bdrm units, one with
fireplace I Current in·
come-$740 mo. Financ·
ing! 1 yr home, protec·
tion plan in c lude d.
Hurry, this won't last.
646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
LUXURY + TERMS
ASSUME I 01/4%
Nestled on hillside with
a panoramic view
forever: this home or
fers so many features
we cannot list them all
3600 s9 .ft. incl udes
romanticall y 1nspi red
master wing, 4 Bdrms .
formal living and dining
rooms. Dumb waiter.
supplies the downsairs
family room . Oak inlaid
bar. complete with brass
fixlure5. Everything is
custom in this executive
delight. Owner says he
may help you finance,
and it's priced to sell
NOW!
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
CHOICE IRVINE
LOCATION
Sll.500
Super upgraded con
dominium. near ever
ything. Sacrifice sale
Seller trans fer ered
752-1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
COSTA MESA
51R-$12S,500
OWNER SAYS SELL
Not an add.on or con
version. A real 5 Bdrm
family home m one or
Costa Mesa's n i cc st
areas. Handymans de
light. Call now and save'
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
MAMA'S
GONE TO
CHICAGO
Giant 4 Bdrm beauty,
located near Orange
COWlly's most popular
s hopping center. This
lovely home Is located
on a quiet cuJ de sac. The
home is a former model
and shows like one.
Huge rooms thruout. big
living room . ankle deep
plush pile carpels . Space
age kitchen. big bdrms.
part-li ke grounds with
e nter tainers delight
back yard. Decorative
rocka, rolling hills and a
solar heated pool. This
unique home is priced
way below mark et.
Seller must sell. Take
advantage, ca 11 now!
752-1700
THE REAL ESTATE RS
y....._y ..... 1
Assume 11~1 lst Full
price S180,000.
TRADITIONAL
REALTY
HOMES 'INVESTMENTS
631 ·7370
2BDRM
PRACTICALLY FREE
$68.900 H you have little
<'ash and are looking for
a golden op port unity to
own your own home.
don't wa1t. th1s 1s 1t 1 This
lovely condominium is a
2 Bdrm. very t'lean and
neat. and located in a quiet area Approx -
imately $2.950 down and
owner will <'arrv 2nd
with small payments
Call now ror all the de-
tails. 752·1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
Condo S9 I .OOO
3 Bdrm . l 'h Ba
townhouse type. 2 car
garage and lrg patio
area Assume Isl T.D.
and owner may help
finance Hurry on this
one'
ATIENTION
BUILDERS
Rare F:astsade . Costa
Mesa buildable R-2 dou
ble lot IOOXl-40' Room
for 4 units• One lot has
existing 2 Bdrm unit + bachelor. Only SISS.000'
Owner will carry ! Call
for details 646-7171
THE REAL ESTATE RS
$5,500
puts you mlo your own 4
Bdrm. A 1c home 12
7 18'1 hnancmg Call for
d etail s o n o ur
"TICKET" prori:ram -t2• RED CARPET
·-754-1202
&C Sat/S.. 1-4
2044 Oc.an ll•d
2 Bdrm. 1 bath cottage
Beam ceiling, frplc. 3
car parking. Priced al
$295.000.
associated
BROKERS--REAL TOR"
Ml'. W Oolbno 6'1 1~6 1
*** Da,vld Adams Sr.
275Santa Isabel
Costa Mesa
You are the winner or
4 free tickets
C$32value). to
Clrc• V arqas
Mar. 17lh. 8PM at
Montgomery Ward
405 Fwy. at Bristol
Cost.a Mesa
Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to
claim your tickets.
***
Pftly lS~ down for this outstanding nearly new
condo. Z Br + den. faml·
ly room, view ten·
nia/pool. A 1reat buy at
1210.900.
--,-
ow.a Wa.L: 111MAMC1
l~DOWM
Buys tb.1s 2 plua dee home. S6 montha
new. double Iron gated entry,
cathedral celllna•. brick fireplace,
gourmet kltcbeo. French doors to
paUo. $119,000.
......... POIMT IUCl .. ONI'
Panoramic view at wect1e, from 1
prime large lot, " bdrm, 3 bath cuatom :,:
home. 3100 sq. ft. fe1turin• m1rine
. room, entry, living room, dlnln1 1
room. bull~·lna, etc. $1,385,000. . . . • This 3 Bdrll\ Chfrmtt wu once a model home. ~·ted on a butt CUI·
de-aat" lot and nued with extras. FINISHED
gara.ce. Clole to 1chooi..
Offered at auuoo.
WAI.I TO NIWPOIT llACM
Yow Beach place this SUD\mer or all
year long. $2091900. Pl~ty of room for
the whole family with ' large Bdnru
and family room. Lovely rear garden
and patio cover. Owner will help
finance.
HAUOll VllW H•&I 1471.oto
A Ull '"HIUSIOlcuetr MOHL
Impressive front elevation to this
estate-like 5-bedroom; 2-story
Lusk-built home. Dramatic entrance
hall with vaulted ceiling, large living rm, formal dining rm, spacious family
rm, & lovely master suite with private
dressing rm & bath plus deck for sun
bathing off mstr BR. Two fireplaces, a
separ~te utility rm & 3-car garage. SUrpnse: a gorgeous large pool in a
woodsy rear yard. A real family
home.
UDO asu
Newly remodeled traditional atyle 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featurtne lar1e
recreation room & 2 patloe. Uvina
room has attractive beam cellinaa,
fireplace & french doors lead.in• anto 1
brick p atio. New kitchen blt·h•·
aooUances. Close to tennis .Callrilt.
IRYINE
Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba
single family home with
very PRJVATE yard.
Xlnt louUon. cloee to
schools, shopping and
freeway. SUW,SOO a nd
owner will carry 2nd.
CJ.MIO HIGHLAMDS
OCIAM YU, HH,000 '
Reduced ~nds! Spacious living
room features glowing fireplace. 3
large Bdrms plus den. Great
assumable 1st and owner will carry a
second.
, sandy beaches & ,clubhoUse. $420.~ 1 '"
IAYNOMT
,We have several fine homes
with pier & slip, starting at $1,500,000
• *CoteRealt
& Investment
640-5777 CORONA DEL MAR OFF1CE
673-8550 . WISUY M. TAnOll CO.. llA&.TOllS' llAMCHO MIUaE
Springs Condo. 9th fairway, 3000 sq.ft .
3 Bdrm. 3 bath. furn . Golf clb.
mbrshp. Will trade for invest. prop. N~,c~\U.--~......,10
OCEAN .. ONT
2 Bdrm. 2 ba, unlum.
New. SBSOyrly.
IAYAtONT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba. unfum.
Mint rond. SllSO. Yrly.
CHAMNa AtOMT
3 Bdrm. 2 ba. unfu m .
$750yrly.
associated
BROKERS Rf Al f(,RS
l Ul'i Vw ~ulnr •If,' !r r,'
..
•
HASTINGS & CO. REAL TORS
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3 4 1 Buy,,cf, D•·~· N k f,J·, r. tJ
IEASTILUff -CAPI COD
IUIL T IY WSI
3 Bdrm. Family room. Large •1
Assumable loan . llW'l'o. FEE land
18%
ASSUMAILE
Sharp 3 Bdrom. comer
lot in El Toro. Ne w
carpels and paint. New
central air conditioning.
Large shaded yard. Ask-
ing $98,850. VA a nd FHA
terms available. For an
appointment to see. call
540.1151
ASSOCIA11S ....
We have openings for 4 licensed real
est ate sal espersons -s uccess
motivated individuals.
* 3 Experie n ced resid ential
s pecialis ts -commission split s
negotiable to 90%.
7 IDRMS. IN HARIOR VIEW HOMES Ex~ Palermo 3500 sq. ft. 3'12 baths,
2 flreplacH Oii fee 1-4 2 l"OOll9 cWocl:ed!
llOOllll fofo 11M1ld, hHaw or worldRg at llo.e.
Mtidcmo pa .. n . aHt adhe dKor, co•end
paffo -great foMHy -'gNi Oftloo~ Of·
fend at $395,000. A listt.g of Sara
Mona
-not leasehold .
2127 ANll•-S27',500
Dri .. by ..t c.tl •
.... lwy "' Anal Jacque or Chris 644-7315
IROKU 631-7300
~.s ~ HERITAGE
* 1 Commercial, r es. income
specialiSt -institutionaJ clients wait·
ing to acquire strip centers in O.C.
Fantastic potential for the right
person.
REALTORS. 675-6000
WILSON PARK CONOOfltlUMS
CHECK & COMPARE THESE FEATUR~ • • REALTORS 2443 Eaec Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
WE HAVE 43 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWl'J
Pal"' Desert
Condo
Deep Canyon Tennis
Club
Co.toct lhlt H......,.. 640.5560
CAI •ne• _.. a.t1•w1WJ. SHOPPER'S
SPECIAL
Secunly Gate Entrance
12 courts-pools-spas
TEAM UP
Own a Peters "E " plan
1200s1r 2Br 2ba. atrium
lric)ht and bautfful
D eco r & Comp l
f'umishJngs I
$113,500
C'all for details .
Principals On ly
Bkr ;Onr 714/544-3158
REALTORS
675-5511 .
Lowest priced 4 bdrm
home in area. Very at·
tractive noor plan. Close
to beach. Will sell VA.
Only S147,500. Call tOda y
979-5370.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
l s
Dttl¥EIY
LOYaY .""E" PLAN. Molt .a ........
........................ Slt:mt1d -~
203 4 I .. Strfft
Owner has bought a new
home & is most anxious ror quick sale Warm
rozv dollhouse! 2 bdrm.
2 car garage + extra
parking. Land included
al $179,5001 But -submit
your offer
...... CJN ... •" wlfft All ....... 3
... F.L '"t IMly ilt tM .... .t $252,fOO.
COU OF NIWPOIT UALTOIS
ZS 15 E. CoOlt Hwy .. eor-.. Mor
675-1111
lcAoa lay Prop.
Rfflton
•675-7060•
A WATERFRONT llJr.I W/SUP
In a pri•ate co• :tty. Wood. brick. "°5s & watef' ere a plf"t.d cOlllllao fofo
this 3 ~ct. fondly home. LCH'Cje & opett
U.N:cJ ~· plus 1:-i-t..ily rooa
PriYah ftltry and yow OW1S beocJ9 Ir
IOAT SLIP. OwHr wtl eulst wltl:
~ $550,000 '"·
WOODS, WARMm-tll!
t.ClllllM clKOrahd 2..tory co.do ....
firtplou Ir 2 IMkoMet. 3 bed. _. ..
fonMll dhs. ""· Co.•.... Hewpoti
locatioft wftt: parffal vu. a. ... .,. y wt•
dows & hl91t cellf•gs. •••ud to
$199,500. OWC wcCMMIT.D.
NEWPORT CREST-OCEAN VU
Comer ... with QOOcl vu._. .........
dKor 2 bed. 21/2 ba. W"'1. to pool & ....
nis $I 80,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC
REAL (STATE
~t.-' Rt'nt,.I\ ,.,u.pvrl~ M'"""CJ"l'N""'
2•36 w Coast Hwy 631_1400 Newpon Beach
RESIOfNflAl REAL fSfAfE SEAVICES
llDUC• IM llVM 191ACI
A perfect small home with view of
ocean and bay from very private
spa and deck. New kitchen. New
paint. Move·in condition. Now
$305,000. Large assumable lit.
Owner will carry big 2nd.
Want Ad Results 642-5678
macnab I irvlne
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IAVINE COMPANY --------
NEWLY LISTED LIDO ISLAMD
LIASE/OPTJONI ExcejXionaJly love-
ly 4BR home w /too many amenities
to mention. Fantastic financing.
$495,000. Berit Mitchell-Schenk
642-8235.
PllST1510US IRVIHE lBliCE! 3BR
home on large lot in super location.
Terrific financing. $259,000. Coby
Ward 642-8235.
PIHINSULA POINT OCEANNONT!
Absolutely charming Cape Cod
style residence just listed! 2BRS,
2i,.; baths, den and studio w /bath
over garage. New kitchen, brick
patio, hardwood floors and custom
molding. $1 ,175,000 incl. land
Martha Macnab 642-823.5.
71Z·l414
Compus Vot.y Cen1•
111.a100
642 .. JH
OPEN 1-5
WED, THUIS & FIDAY .
2 "AXER" CHl.l.ENliES c ... by 221 Vitt om.to. Lido , ...
ed clscma tt.M 1pf11t lazllleL .
.. • ., ................ Le .... ..,..... -=--............. -...,.,. ....... ~J ......... ,...
......... 'TLC .. to .... 1111 I .... .
ptt,000. -
Li-. 14--Gre• Loe....._ Cri ....................... ..: ....
...... ..., .... 4 ....... ............... u •. -.
WATERFRONT HOMEs,CNC
lt£Al EST A~
s.ln. llmt.i. p._,tv M......,_
2431 W Cout Hwy
Newpoft S..Ch
90% ANANCltli 12%% INTER.
.f HARBOR AREA LOCATIO
.f SlZE-1650 SQ. F1'. ./MICRO OVEN
I COMPACTOR
.f DISHWASHER
.r DBL GARAGE
.f ALL SHOPPING t,.4a BLOCK
./ AIR CONDITIONING
I CEMENT DRIVES
{WALK IN CLOSETS W/OPENER
WARD IMVESTMBfT IMC.
SALIS Offllc:IC714J6Jt-IOll
llO W. WINa St. M~HOO
c.... ....... c.. . ...
Find what you want in
Daily Pilot Classifieds
C!E ~
110181 ILllllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF S ERVICE
ILUFFS llAUTY
Tastefully Decorated "Q" Plan With C.Ozy
Conversation Pit & Spacious Uving/Dining
Room Area. Ideal Location With Large
Encl06ed Patio On Greenbelt Near Pool &
Tennis Club. Perfect Home For Ent.trtain-
ing ! $230,000.
-llG CANYOM ONLY
$435,000. Dratftatlc ••tryw•y
leads to this to .. ty 1cJe 3 br, 21/1 ba
to.,..,._, HticJ• II• nn & forrMI
ells nn. Wah of C)la111Hd to bridl
patios. Priud under tt. ......_.
w/.xcehttt flnanclftcJ.
4 IEDROOM & OHL Y $141.000
ASSUMAIU LOAN
04 ut•MJ home Oft ...... MC
113 choice locatloR. Mmy ., ...
... exc:eleltt fllt.cMcJ. T• owr ~ to ......... trwf clNd ..
I J/40/o .............. ,.., Newly
offeted Ir wll ltOt Iott.
75S:161& I
.... ....
-----IAotl l;y QAT I. POUM -----
•=n:~.....:. :: law lo ..... '°"' .,,,,.... _...
I GIDNIO r I r I I
I REPPA I · I I I I i t
I LOOFI 1 .... : . I' I I I _ , What )'OU Oon't know ~·t
l'tun you -wtllol't would ••·
plain wtty IO many kid• 1od4ly
,..l _T_l_P_M_A_C __ l a,. Immune - -.
.. I I I' I r -•~:-...~.::.-: Yow .... .._ ............
THISISn
164.900. Very small dwn
pymt. Seller w /carry
2ndTD. w/no mo. pymts.
Seller motivated for fast
escrow. 752-6499
Plan Ill Realty
Wolflfro.t~a-t
Right on the canal ln
Newport Shores. A hup
3 Bdrm 3 Ba family
home in Immaculate
condition. A super loca-
tion only steps to thf
beach. Attractive owner
financing available. A
super buy at S280.000
lcAoa ttlmod llty
673-1700
~.000.DONT LET
PRICE "FOOL YOU"
Yucca Valley, clean air,
blue skies. 1380 sq ft. [2
br. lVJ ba. atrium. Lte
kit w/blt-ins. eating
area Din. rm. fam. rm
w /frplc . Gas heat Ir
cookin g . C rpld ,
draped.RV act'ess. Must
r e locate. Ow n e r .
1-36S-5ml.
P~DISIRT
COHDO DeepCnyn Tennis Club
Security Gate Entrance
12 courts-pools-spas
TEAM UP.cl
Own a Peters "E" Plan
1200s/f 2Br 2ba. atrium
Bright 7 beautiful 11 decor and complete
furnishings.
$139,500
Call for detalla.
Principals Only
Broker /Owner
714/544·3158
.,.._ .. _. .. T_...~
Owner anxious. be sea sell and he will carry an
A.l.T.D. with only ~
down. 3 huurious units
In excellent location.
With these tet:ms lt
won't last! Call now for ~~ete d etall1.
CSELECT -:-
~ PROP~RTIE~
..... ,1111 .... tot7 . ................... ~~
fUCI .. '"' SUti . Older Balboa boale wtth
terrlflc potenUa~. Bdm:I, 4 Mtht, fam roocn. 1unde6 aad bit ........ Could be't.
Penltuula P oint
1howpiae.t .. It t
MZ.1100
•
' .
• (
I
,..
I
I • • • l
*' u
Ir ,_
'·
•• ... ~
\.-r
..........
.... u1z.100
OR I 8dnn 2b• home wltb laolated muter
bdrm<can b• parent
~ ot in· law qrtn)
and a 2 Bdrm cott•1e.
ANY WAY1you describe
It • It '1 ch'l'rmlng up to
date • beautHully
loeated.
CAU. llOI DIT AILS
'44-7ZI I
WALNUTS
•IUT •
Nltt 2 Jl.or)t "C" plan 2
bdrm t'Oll4o. Freslaly ~alnted. central 1lr rn~ ~low compara
ble Nlee for lmmecH1lt'
actioo, M.SOO •
CAUMOW
644-7211 REAL ESTATF.
SATUIDAY. MAICH 14ATMOOM
OPB4 HOUH S..AY 11·1
IAMCHO SAM JUAN ISJATIS
Exclusive view homes located in San
Juan Ca lstrano at the intBSectlon of
Del Obispo and Aguacate. Near
beaches, marina and misalon .
Startin' at $~1s .ooo. For more intonnatlon. call :
CHARTER REALTY &INVESTMENT
4tMIZ2 IJl-lell
9UAIL PLACI
'IOPllNS
eallstoh hct.ltt 2100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rin Nll,fl
I )1\1 l I 'v ~.
l\'lt:>Ulll\1 ES
WANT LAGUNA
Have client with charm· Ina 2 Bdrm, 2 ba pool
home In "Shores area"
of La Jolla · will trade
for Laauna property.
sz~.oooto S27S.OOO.
Hewport hoclt I 06 S• C1'1M11h I 07 6 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Am.I VALLEY
.Near new 4-Plex , 2
bdrm, 2 bath e"ch unit
with nreplace, enclosed
patio, double garage.
$165.000. 8111 Grundy.
Rltr. 67~161.
S1/2 ACHS
JUSTLISTID
Charming Duplex with
French doors on front
unit, shake roof. Walk to
all shopping. $198.000.
Call for appt. to see
B ernita Eilertsen .
Broker, 615-2373 or
77~.
C~llMJlfsh DWI.EX
9 moe. new. 4 bdrm + 2
bdrm un.lt. 3 fireplaces. 4
car gar .. built-Ins,
beams It used bric k.
F r ench windows,
sprinkler system . BBQ.
709-7091t!i Orchid
sa&.000. Call for appt to
see, 851-9135 (will coop
w/rltn> Owner/bkr
-------i WOOOIRIDGE GLEN
"' •• ftj .... "' ••
1111
•
111
••••••••••••••• 91/4°/o AssloWft.
TRUE VALUE 2br, 2ba. study, frplc,
comm'ty pool/jac/lake
1n the ever popular $1 28,000 By Owner
Westmont homes 3 lrg 559 4922
Bd + Bonus rm. Below -
market price. s121 .ooo. *Now Must Sell Call Anne Mccasland
L.,..a Vlllacp It.I.
497-1761
LCICJllllCI Hih I 050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----11111111111-•l LEASEOPTIOH
6 ~autiful new homes
available for lease with
option to buy. Excellent
terms. Best locatlof!.
VICTOllAM
BEACH HOME
New 3 BR 3.li'l Ba. QuaU-
t y handcrafted oak
thruout. Stained 1taas.
spa.
PtanN8'alty
752-6499
3 bdrm·2 ba-den-pool
Mint. Sl.83,000. Own/agl.
~.548·5158
UDOISUHD
Jbr CONDO $325,000 ~
dwn, assum 1st T.D. of
S70K at 7~%. owe 2nd.
675-3967
$2500DOWM
LGE I 31/40/o LM.
C•taM 0cffft View
Beaut. 4 br h o rn e
w /C'edar siding. Many
ocean vu decks 70' ·
s kylite Great terms
54~9113 ---
Tnffn 1090 •••••••••••••••••••••••
E
WOlll('S DONE
In lhb ~autlful home
which f eatures 4
Bdnns. 3 baths, 3 car
garage , lovely pool and
spa. Move-a.n condition
Assumable 12!\.'7. loan
Asking $195,000. Call
54~1151
-: • HERITAGE
COSTA MESA
7 Units. Bread & Butte r.
That's what these units
are referred loo Ap-
prox. "'a acre. conve-
nient to all stores. 3 2Br
& 4 lBr $250,000. Good
terms Possible trade
M c Na s b R ea l ty .
642-1334, 642-6578 eves
20 Unit s 10'1 down
$360.000 Riverside
7xgross Owner ' Agent
673-6720, 544-0333.
MEWPORT IEACH
AAA PROPERTIES
t. 3 Tri,lexes in a row,
south o PCH in Corona
del Mar.
VIEW
L ocated am o n a ex ·
pensive homes jus t
minutes from Dana
P oint Yacht Harbor
Perfect site for a luxury
horse ra nC'h $650.000
clear Will exchange
C7141 67'3-4400' '-
121J1 Ut.JIH
HARBOR
A DI\ i-.wn of
llJrbur Investment Co . . .
Real Estate
Wc:..ted 2900 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Jasmine Creek decorator
home, plan I on green·
belt immac. $305.500
640-8145
631· 1266 This elegantly decorated -•FO_Xl_Ol-•o•H-G•T•s•.-1
3 Bdrm 2 1.>i Ba E~~~I townhome. has 2 great "The Gracemont" mdl.
• assumable loans and 4 br. 2o/.o ba, prof. de-
Live by beach, bachelor
condo, vacant. by
owner. $107,500 no quah·
fying. Prin only 978-0423 l!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!ll~
. • R EALTORS II. 2duplexes + 1 triplex
in a row on Bal. Pen in I
lot from sand/surf.
I need a 4 bedroom house.
duplex or C'ondo. I 'II buy.
renl or lease with option
547-3182.
The Sunniest Home in
JASMINE CREEK
1 k k d 1 corated & landscaped . C• I over oo s par an poo · Shows like a model. L"e ,,_ ·-·-Owners are very anx-" ious. This is one or Wood a ss u m a b I e Io a n
bridge 's b es t o p Ownr/Agt $359,500
LEASE OPTION
Spyglass or Harbor
View. no monthly pay.
ments. Call for details.
Agt.~9345
Ohr Real Estat• •••••••••••••••••••••••
MobHeHom.s ForSale 1100 2bdrm & den, cheeer v
kitchen. plantation shuL·
ters. pvt comm with
p ool, juc & te nnis
$275,000. By Owner
759-1176.
LOVF.LY MEADOW
Large 3 Br. Cam rm, 21 ~
ba Laund rm, lge mstr portunit1es. 831-11638 -•..•..••.••••.•.•......
CostaMna
Br Corner lot . boat [g
gate Lg existing. In. ~I Wuoobrtdge
s152,500. · Rea Icy
SUNSET R E I 024 542·~ M6 8803 55 l-3000 -~920 8arranra Pkll), lnin1 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• HwellhgtOft leach I 04 ·
•••••••••••••••••••••••JASMINF.CRF:F.K Nt•w
lt-2 ZONED OPEN SUH I 0-I 2 model home 3 hedrm',
Comfortable 3 Bdrm 2b 2b Sl2S 000 2•2 b<\lhs . built m ap
Lab f.orftt 1055 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Aeaut1ful spacious 3br l
!1ou.w Lk view. & green
belt Co n ve rt ed !
•SI 33,900 IN
NEWPORT HACH *
Imagine 3 spacious brs
& 2"'1 ba upgraded to the
hilt ! This fine home also
features encl'd parking
& 1n ·house laundry
facilities + assumable
CinanC'ing. Call 759-1501
or7S2-7373
h. om e . I a r g e s t o n e 211 ~ Sta:il3-399-to2S pliances. su!X'rb l'arpet. fireplace. sunny patio ing & draptos rnm pl ete
room a!ld room for 2 ly landscaped Owner
gar 'covered patio.in·
door laundry. frplc Lg
ass mm fi rst. at 11 ' , ":
$219.500 By o wner
770 4fl6S
Newport B.ach 1 06t ~Walker I lea
moreun1ls.fl40,000 IRIHGANYOFFER will carrv finanrrni:
Roy McCardle. Rltr. Lovely Jbr. cstm hom e Shown b.v· appQmtmenl
54 .. 7729 near beach & park. formal d1n1n g. heavy only l.F.1 1\1 !-:RT ('() '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!-•_!!' shake roof Call now for (2131466-8591
..•.•..........•....•••
S3.9000own NB lbr,
~4646or631-7653
John Lembeck <Agent)
information regarding
the 9~.'·; assum loan * * 2 MASTERS! OCEANFRONT Seller Wtl'arry part of h the huyers down pay· No. not 2 bosses but <! Pemnsula Point ome 4
I separate master Rdrms Bdrm, 3'h . ba ~50,000. ment & says br ng any that highlight this super Call for hnancing de -
orrer BEST PRICE gorgeous atta<·hed h•1ml' ' ta 1 I ~ 0 w n e r I Ag t .
REAL ESTATE
I .... TOWN built by Warmineton 675-8676
,.. 1646 sq rt and ask in ~ 1._ _____ 11111!!111!!!!1~-·l •-11!!!!!!!'!!!~!!!~~
JASMINE CREEK
Take advantage or my
a.ssumable 8:Y•o/r loan.
Beaut Jasmine Creek
rondo, plan 1. 2bdrms.
den. g uarded gate
comm. Pool , tennis.
Owner/agl. $315,000
64~6188, 831-8638.
Trailer at bC'h S8500
Terms. OWC or tradt•
499-:1116
New Modular type home.
El Moro Beach Park. s p
70 2Br. spacr rent $175
mo. 20 yrs lse $69.900
499-:1116
s Star Park. C M 2b<lrm.
l ba. S218.SOO
646-7048.
HEWPOIT IEACH
Sharp 2 Bdrm. double
wide in Lido Park 24
Anza Only $44,950
Deluxe rust1<· I bdrm
F:xcelle nl finan<'ln ii 23
Freemont S39.500
WATf:RrRONT
ttOMt-.S
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
Open Sunday. 2-5pm, 1641
Orchard Dr 5bdrm. Jha.
freshly painted C'olonial
beauty. Family room.
separate dining room.
frplc. new roof, Priced
at $160,000. for quick
sale Xlnl financing
THE WI EDEM ANS.
494·0066 or 75 l ·4293.
4br. remodeled kitchen. only I"
plush c•arpets, custom s149!HMl N F:W(>O RT HF:lGHTS l2l/40/o NewfliftanclncJ ~llllllllm __ .. ___ _
drapes. fres hly painted IN W<X)l}HHI nc: lo:• C'llAR M F.R ! Open Sal/Sun 1·5 at 2522
NEWPORT IEACH seller bou~hl another & 3 Rdrm 2 Ba Fam Rm 23rd St Prime location
has priced thousands [g]Wudb Id F o rmal 01 n R m JOOO +s1r Super k1tr hen,
Mobile Home. 15X30.
!bdrm. Cost a Mt.>sa
adults. no pet~. SHI !100
673-3826
$34,000 down. owner will
rinance at 133.'. with
$1500/rr.o paymt'nts
Total price S279.noo
East Bluff, 5bdrm. Jba.
call&U-7063
~lov. murk<'t value ror O r ge c; ou r m et k i l e hen sep breakfast rm Mstr
quick sale ('reat1ve Really fo'enC'ed 12"t. interest • suite w 13 closets and
terms ok heller hurn 551 -3000 Rest terms' J ohn Va deck Oak Ors & rlus h I 8 0 · u n 0 h s 1 r u c· t c• d
'9ftll8rraau Pk,..),lr¥1a .. n1an Co 6310900, t•pt.slhru-out. Frm din Mt/Coastal v1ev. Int ,,
GOLOEllWCST. ing rm. garden window. aC're, ,.., mi 10 '>ch L
DESPERATE IHtl LOW DOWH 2 cov'd patios. trlr ac Niguel s.130.~1 ~36 096fi REALTORS I 00/o DOWM Versailles 1 Br/studio. cess Xlnt ter ms Of· 962 1632 Ho Qualifying
S20K dwn, 3br. 2ba Prin
Only631-5737 AGT
>:.._,.,,. ~ASSOCIATES Northwood Candll-twrrv penthse condo. w/lg as f e re d at $269.900
148-8588 model $154.950 Sun:.el s umable loans. only 581 1000 Mission Viejo Ac~forSafe 1200
magazine stvlt· J:;irden $105,500 O wner/agt Realt~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio home \1r ;Hiii• 645 3447. 979-5370 ask fo r F, s ide 4
tached
$155.000 64t).()'758
Bdrm w at
I Br unit
By Ownt.>r
INVESTORS
SPECIAL!
door . .iuto <,prmkll•r., .Jim
F:xeC'ul1 vc Duplex for
Shows hke <.1 mndt'I J B1
2 Ba. Call Tim llhom•
631-l266.
d1st•r1m1n ating tas t e ·--.---LOVELY ~R, JBA 3hr. 3ba. each. central E ~ ~J ~~-'tD air, woodbuming frplcs. P .. ~
WITH SPA custom drapes carpels.; i u
$22,000 Down heavy shake roof 11 1 , •·: '·-·-···-•I
To existing financing of loun is assumable. no
12N.o;: <no qua I) F:nd or qualifying necessary. DISCOURAGED?
cu l -de-s a c . will SIOKDownOrLeu DEPRESSED? s1~.~~o~~e;~~-~~ MovEs You 1N DIS~PPOIHTED?
N o q u a I i r y i n g T hink you will nev<'f
AXER UPftER necessary. Your mon· find that 3 bdrm home
Good College Park loc thly payment can he ad· you really want at a
This 3br. l"•• ba home justed to meet your mon-price you can afford?
needs some work but the thly budget We have Don't des pair. we have
potential is there As many3 &4bdrm homein just the home )Ou've
sum. loans. $120 000 best Orange County b een looking for al
ACT 760-8520 locations w these terms SIS9.000 ll '~ 1n a con ve
TERRIFICTF.RMS I
Ocl•anfront duplex. re
adv to move into Owner
fman. Unbeatable, offer
on dn pymt Consider
trade Mutivatcd
R .. :Al. 1-:STATfo: STORE
675 1771
LINDA ISLE
Lease option, I ·2 yrs 3
boat s hp, Sbr. ma1d'!'I
qlrs Ownert Rkr. Con
t art J oanne Ko rnay,
I 7 I 4 J 8 2 8 I 2 R 0 .
1213)598 1363
5 Br J Ha Harbor view WORST CO l 'l.D RE
11 0 me s 3 4 9 . 5 o o RF.ST l''OR VOi'
, C If you have $164.000 and Owner A!:l om m want 35•·; yield annual
pool 673-~61 ly, purchascS200.0Cl()tv.n
Newport Htc; 2bdrm up
d ated. 2 ga r ,
Eves 1Wkends : 679 9667
Secluded. gated comm in
Bark Bay with Newport
Beach address. Roi.lie
private setting for these
elega nt, s paciou s
homes. On ly 3 left.
Brok e r s w elcome .
Newport Glen Cou r t
<end of Tustin Ave l
642 0430. 979-9445 dys
675-0043 eves
year dl't'd or trust br<.1 r
in~ 20'4 interest on 25
acre avocado ~rov(' 1n
inactive dl'n•lopmcnl
area near Vista Com
bined 8'"1 Isl + thiio in
vest ment represents
less than so~; of lhl· a p
praised value of land
MAI appraisal on adja
cent 2•,, acre parcel at
$150,000 eaC'h Ca ll
714/751-4826 . 493 11 53 or
756-:e9
C0t1w111rcial ,roperty 160 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ill. l duplex on water
wilh dock for 30' boat
All these pro pert1t•s
have large, assumable
loans a t 12 5",{. Call
S m ith·Meyer, Hkr
64~5357 or 548 7813
Do You Want A
4-Plex for $38k Dn
All 2 Bdrms Total pru•e
$170.000 540 3666
•Whelan Real Estate
•24UNITS•
Investment principal
seeks lo purctiase small
a partment units I ri
plexes. 4-plext.>s l 'p to 24
u"' ts 641 88.'>5
Rentals ..............•..•...•.
......•................
Balboa Penins ula 3 I 07 .......................
Charmml? 5 bdrm 3 bath
bavfront with :18' boat
float Sll>OO mo Btll
Grundy li75 fiHil
Corona del Mar 31 22 . ..•...•....•...•.•.••• $250,000 dn. 8 vrs old
11 ,.,, financinl? Prin ,,n (keanfront 4Rr, 2Hu f'ul Iv fum1~hed 1n ont•ntal ly Ms Draton or Mr d e c 0 r K 1 1 c· h t' n Schemme agL-; 7:ll 2525 o r97S.0361 rquipped Year ll«1:-.e S3.000 mo M:tr1•1J
lndustriat/ Working. A~t 1144 !HHIO
Property 21 00 or 673-5595 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H~
STOfl RENTING H~ 31 42
Ruy your own 1ndu:ttrial •••••••••••••••••••••••
un1l 1000 5000 s q ,'t l' pgr;icil'cl <'<1 11<10 n r
l\va1I m HB or f'V l all duhh~t· 1,.101 & FH' :1 hr
Paul 545.0057 2' ·• ha S1200 MO 17H'I
Lots for Sale 2200 Ml> 1:171 I M;in Ell1•n' . ..................... .
WATERFROHT
LOTS
A re~ CABO OF.I. ESTE
waterfront home site'
remam on Lake M 1s~on
VieJo This 1s the final
o pportJJnlly t o build
vour dream home From
S285.000 Call llenn
Ourant at 714 855 1081
HoUSM Unfurnishrd ............•..•..•.•..
3202 ...........••.•..••••••
R\ OWNER formal din
j br. pool !'lov. "3Va1l
Ar rowh ead Country
Club ~1r l',1 S<.1n
Rr rnardmo I Mlil 1732
I AA4 72Sll
OWC 20% DWH heach. nt·ar Ht•;it•h &
I + Ac~ Lots I COZY 2Rr hou,t· <'lo~<· to
WC1rnt•r Hunl1nj?lon 979 73011 994 217 I Rrh S450mo 75111967 Owner 1Agt
Coronad~I Mar 3222 10 A<·res. La1?una Bt•adl. ••• •••••••••••• •• •• •••.
lOned R I. $395,000 2!l' · Sub· lease 3 Br 2 Ba ·111
dwn. owner 640-4244 11 15 81 S950 mo t\j!l
RIVStSIDE
I + Acre Lots
OWC20"l OWN
!179 7300, 99 4 217 I
Owner / a1?t.
673-33.S.'>
Shoredifrs 2 hr & den. ll(f'
vard Mini view SI JOO
Agent. 673-5354
Two R·2 lots. Capistrano Cotta Mfla 3224
Beach. vie"'', by owner. • • ••••••• •• • •• •• • •• • •• •
terms. 496 1542 2 BR. encl gar, ad Its no pet-; S450 773 W Wilson.
631·4889 R 1 lots. Fountain Valley
Nr Mile Sq Pk. Dons
962-7:.>'Z.842-1418Agt 2 Br 2 full bath condo 2
-----· -car gar Pool. 1acun1
Call our specialist for nient location ll1ghly Large Family ? more information upgraded Owner 1s or-
SubMit Off.n! ~ GOLOEmST rering ~enerous term~ to
DESPERATE
$34,000 down. owner wi ll
finance at 13J.'1 with
$1500/mo payments
T otal price $279,000
F.ast Bluff. 5bdrm. Jba,
call 644 7063
llGCAHYOH
GOLF COURSE LOT
OwMr Must S•U !
Agent. Dann Bibb
Mowetmn, Dttert, Gas pd S700 m o Days ~-• ..... •11111!•11!,....,,.!ll!l!EO~~-~ Resort 2 4 00 2 1 3 861 8 2 07 . ho m e
llU""" .. '-"""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2131923-2660
Huge two-story home 4 help you purchase Bdrms. about 2200 sq
feet. Dining room . REALTORS
separate family room. '+cr.._rt;· G-ASSOCIATES
fireplace. Sits on lai::ge 841-1588
lot amongst fruit trees "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!fl!!ll!!!!!!~I!!!~ S129,900. TARBELi.. ~
BK R. 540-1720
BUILDER
Ha.PS YOU IUY!
HEWCOHDOS
XW Tffft'lsl
2&3BR
Pvt decks & patios For 30days escrow.
FREE drap es &
microwave
Loving home 3Br, lrg
family room, 217 Ba
Shaded patio Near
schools & s ho pping.
Sl35.000. Ry owne r
892·0'.m
Hwlfihgton
Hcri)c)ur 1042
•••••••••••••••••••••••
.. 523 CAMPtlSDa·IRVINE.
DB.UXE4 BR
Magnificent 4 Bdrm, 3
bath home in lovf'ly
N o rthwo o d area
OCEAHAtOMT DPLX
CHOICE CORNER 3 Br
up, 2 dn Sell or trade
Submit your deal Capri
Propertiei; Ed 6429601,
644-4720 Res
675·2311 64~ 7665
San Clemente 1076 •••••••••••••••••••••••
l.ge 4 BR 21h Ba in prime
San Clemente area with
AdlM\. & Profeu. Incline Village. No. Shore
Lot. 62'-"x2921t!i opposite condo. Lake Tahoe vu
Costa Mes a Hospital, S80 per night. 3 Br. 2ba
$275,000 O e s I g n R e a I t y
Roy McCardle. Rltr. 1021831-5550
541-7729
g o od ocea n view !ml!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" .... ~
Sl65,000. Priced for
quick sale, or assume
5 Br 3 Ra 2 Sty SllOO
mo lse
494-0066
Huge 3 br. 2 ba. submit on
kids & pets. avail now.
S625 631-6994
___ .... _ .. ___ , lease o pt. Agt Ron
Eastbluff Estah
SfMclal
C ondomlnlumt /Town
houses for sCIM 17 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••
RUNNING SPRINGS
On the way to Big Bear
Beautiful 3 view lot in
perm homearea
$25.000
Lge gar . tiny hse. lhr. I
ba, adults . no pets.
$400/mo. 892·3731
1 ...........
Poulton 498·2510
2Br condo Fallbrook
golf country. S89.500
7 1 4 548 16 98 .
714-728-0366.
ONE OF A KINDi
Truly one or the m ost un·
ique and dramatic
homes in all or San
C I e m e n t e ! wit h 3 Income Pr'OfMrly 2000
Bdrms, 2'"1 Ba, walking •••••••••••••••••••• •••
distance to beach. ocean FOURPLEX
64().9998 640 ll.i4!1
HAWAII 3Br w/garage. Newly de·
We have a beaut new corated. Eastsidf' Lrg.
3 b r . 2 b a h o m e on Y!.rd. ~· 673-0884
KAUAI. We ran arrange 2bdrm. Iba duplex. gar.
lo keep it rented for you washer /dryer hook-up.
until you are ready to new noors. crpts. paint make a move you 've
Wutalde. 2 Br. l B•·
ffOUM. Eoc:ltd 1ar •• wtd
bcdt up, crpt,, dnlpa,
fenced backyard. No
peU .... no.~.
Lovely 4 bdr bome In
Collea• Partt. Children-
ok. DO pet.I, S750. 54e-e1'7
or&464799
COUNTRY RENTAL BY
PUBLIC <SEALED)
BID on Apnl '· 1981. <one> 2 & 3 bdrm homes.
Backbay Unlv. Dr. area.
For Info call: COUNTY
OF ORANGE GSA
REAL ESTATE
DIVlSION <114) 834-2550 ·
3bdrm + xtra room. lge
yrd . earage, s tove,
refrig SSS6mo 1-498-0177
Huge 4 BR 3 Ba condo,
micro, refrig. pool, spa,
tennia. reC' rm. nr Back
Bay No pets. $850 mo.
lease. Avail. now. Agt.
675 7694
Refurbis hed 3bdrm, Iba,
crport. lrg fncd bkyrd.
patio. crpts. no pets.
SSSO/mo 581-1716
East.side small older uni-
que 2 Br I Ba. House.
No garage. no pets 228
S1erks $415 mo 548·6680
2 Br Duple x. Fe nced
yard Pets & Kids OK .
$450 mo. + dep Avail
1mmed. 645-8369 or
963-7600
3Br, 2'hBa Condo Mic ro.
wet har. many extras
G reat location. S695.
644·0685. 857·2302
4 Br. lrg yard, avail. 4/1.
$625 /mo. Isl . last & fully
refwida ble dep. 545 6010
dys, 751-3865 eves.
F: side I Br. pvt patio,
avail 4 l $325/mo lst .
last & Cully refundable
dep 545-6010 dys Eves
751·~
QUICK MOVE IH
Huge near new 3 Br. 2
Ra Townhouse type, 2
car garage, pat io .
fireplace Small c hild,
!>mall pet OK Like your
own home S650 mo
Wont last. Drive by 2195
Maple St t h en call
642-lfiOJ
3hr , 2ha. no pets S600 mo
.. ~Cl'urity
54f,..5050 aft GPM
fo: 's1dt' all rae 2Hr Iba. no
pt•L.., Avail Mar 15 $450.
M6·3937
lmmat· 2bdrm house.
c·rpL .... drps. new stove.
~ar fenced yrd Im med.
;nail $395 mo 646·6961
Jhdrm, 1'3 ,ba fresh pnt.
rrpt drps. fam rm SS90
529 01 18 e\•es
3226 ...............•...••..
4bdrm 3ha. fam rm,
palm. I m1 10 harhor, no
pet' S760 492-3051
•192 299tl evt>:-.
Pr1vatr 2 Br Bungalov. I
Ba No yard Garai(e
Adul~ $450 673 2181
El Toro 3232
•••••••••••••••••••••••
2bdrm. lbacondo. lndry
hook-ups, gar, pool , no
pets. $475/mo. 1st. las t
770 ll22. 759-3806 offc
Hwitlttgton bach 3240 ...............•.......
5 blks to ocean. Elegant 2
bdrm. fam rm & den.
1$750 mol Plush crpts.
2''7 ba. cedar & glass.
Dbl car pvt gar. fully
maml yd Adults. no
pet'i Inquire at 527 18th.
St 7 14 1960 6331 or
9605112
•• *
VlMJlnia HCIPlteft
20SS2 Pierview Ln
Hwitington Beach
You are the winner of
4 fne tick.ts
CS32 value l. to
Circus V arqas
Mar 17th. 8PM at
Montgomery Ward
4«> Fwy. at Bristol
Costa Mesa
Call 642·5678, e xt. 272 to
daim your tickets. •••
I Bedroom Condo near
Brookhur s t I Adams .
Pooltrennis, Etc. $450
m o.64&4477
OPEN 12-4PM
2000 MEYER ftL.
641-1991, GC)t.
$9,000 DHJOFFH
DESPEkATE
4bdrm home. vacant.
comer lot, $120.000 f' /P
No qual. owe 2nd TD
913-4759.
Goktftl West Estates
Beautiful S&S Exec. 4
bdrm home. Elegant wet
bar. bit-in bbq inside &
many other ame nities
incl. a huge yard that
backs t o a beau tiful
park Just 2 yrs old!
Broker. 963-8182
1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
·Gorgeous y ard with
c ustom s pa an <t
waterfall Spacious
rooms. and beautifully
decoi:ated thruout.
Great financing ava1la· ble. $224,500.
don osen
r• .dthr'
4 bdrm. 2'·'1 ba th with
plush carpet & wood
floors Family room
with fireplace. Great
finanrin(( with a 13~
fixed rate & 20"1, down
$245,000 Hurry. with
terms like this it won't
last!
Redh1ll~Re.1lty
1;7;{ 7:{110
view from d eck and
much more! $199,900.
498-4950
Westside Costa Mesa
Needs som e work
S22.000 yr income. Full
price $225,000. Owner
will carry I~ interest Lingo W/tfi().ooodn.
.... h .. " A eREn1G€ l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ____ ~----~-HOM€~
always wanted to make . $475 + dep. I small child
Contact Karen Bender ok No pets. 1952 Meyer
( 8 0 8 ) 7 4 2 . 6 4 3 6 • 549·3484.
<~>822·9477 -----Brand new condo, 2bdrm.
Out of State I ~ba. kids ok. Sl600/mo
Property 2600 77~5578 or642-1430. •••••••••••••••••••••••
40 A scenic Oregon Coasl
Electricity, fenced, out-
standing view. accessi-
ble. owner 492-2499
Westside 2br 2ba comer
home, lg yrd with at-
tached store zoned for
sml business. Complete-
ly renovated S750.
548·1905 ftys. 751-2340
eves.
New condo in Seaside
Village, Beach & Atlan-
ta Blvd. 2 br. den. 2~ ba.
1650 SQ ft. sec. gate. ten-
n ls el s. pool & jac.
$975/mO. (213)833-1369;
eves & wknds ,
<213)831-5734.
SOUYIT'S
IHtilSOU>
lTI'H AT PROSPECT **LEASES ruST1N. 131:!~11 _____ _
Ranch Re a It y h a s LOCJlllNI hoch I 048
I 069 R.E. ltlvestments
3333W. Coast Hwy, NB
la what you'll hear lf you
don't call raatl Home Is
s uve r s harp Ir xtra
clean , wire-t ested
II.it.chm. A.uume low in-
terel& on exiAUng loan.
Seller will help finance.
Near So. Coast Plaza
$45-Nel
~ .... lie
REAL F$1'ATE
leases, 15 to choose •••••••••••••••••••••
rroi:n. SS50-~ mo. Ca II THE SHAKES
for inlormat1on. We at h ere d c <' d o r
e-1·:1.Nl,ll
1 · f /\ l f y
1,·. i /IHJO
•UNIV. PARK Lr14 Bdrm 2th Ba home
shakes. that is . Custom
designed 3 bdrm. ram
rm. 2 baths. Extensive
use or wood g lass &
ceramic tile. Beam ceil-ing, frplc. $165,000.
Mission Really
(714 )494·0731.
In prestigious University 1---------•1 Park, steps from pool
and greenbelt. Assume Litue .. _,11 Claulned ble financing. C..11 ror •d• are reellf •m•ll details.
To place your mesH1e
befor.the
reedln1 public,
phone
Daily~t
Claaalned, 842.'871
. ..,.....=···--........ ,.........,p
..... 1Topla9 ~ .. _-.w ....... -. u0 : ..... . C
--,,,
• I I ,
, )11
t
' ,~...,-·-·--
BOATER'S HAVE~RT
"' ... 2 .... JM, ,... c.4p wttll
....... sllp.Crow's .... Yllwltre. .... lo•tfy -..... wltlt .. ,.a __
,_.. fOf' 2 cen. lee-• of .....
Martty '°" -· c ....... -.., .. ..... ,..
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
'1£AL ESTATE
~ Hn1t.il• Ptuc-riv M""-'rwn•
315 M1rlnt Ave
B•lbOa Island
i ''
673-6900
___ 6_4_M __ 6_4_6 ___ 1 Alb. N.M. New custom
IHCOMI Ne>rHTllS built 3,000 sq tt 4-plexes.
Looldnl for income un-Very positive cash etrect
Its?! We have 5 pro· fo r 50~ bracket 11'1·
perties In c.M. Priced vestor . Sll5,000. Bldr;
rlght al less lh an <7_1_4_>846-85 __ 1_o. _____
1 llXOross. No ba1nk lealw.te
flnanclnf required. n· lb~ 210 tereat~ Then call us. ,••••••••••••••••••••••• •••
714/641-07&3'
2787 Brl1tol St.
Costa M.eu, CA
Sell wttb EASEi
lt'aa llRl:ICZE
Cl..aned ACll t4WIT8
!Mobile Homes-Lakeside
Big Bear Lake or
Ocnfront Laguna Bch,
terma or trade. 499·3816
Private lnvestor wlshea
to exchange certificated
dlamorids, rubies, sap·
phi,. for R.E. equities.
FrM • cleu preferred.
F'uU ciocnln. to brobr1.
Call Mr. Suela: 539-8931,
1-457.00LD.
Brand new house for dis-
criminating family. 3
blks to ocean. 3 Br. a
Ba., ram. rm. Totally
upgraded & customized.
Sl200 m o. 832·0145 Secluded 2 Br . 1 Ba. patio AM/PM. home with comm. pool.
Adults only . no pets. Small older 2br, lba hse
Avail 3-13"81. ~ per off st~ pkg but no gar,
mo. 2453 Orange Ave. $375. 63S-<XI07
Manager Apt.. B. --.;;,_------1 Condo, 3 br. I~ ba.
3 Bd 2~ Ba 2-aty condo. re frlg, rrplc, patio,
Pool/apa, frplc, dbl aa.r. carport, $475. 8a-31145
Avail. now. Diana
631-lJllll. Agt. Cozy 28r hse, c1oee to
-----=------1 beach, nr Beach •
New, dlx 3 br, 2V. ba. Warner . $450 mo
frp&c, dbl &ar. w /opener, 751.-r.
yarcla, l)lltioe, audener., --L------~-1-.-.
Klda/pets OK . S150. "-• Lorri, wkdya 541-15'71: •••••••••••••••••••••••. eves/Wtmdt 548-5434. Woodbt141e 1 ..... 2 81, 1~ Ba, pet.lo, p'lt loc ..
Ml WJB boatln1. tennl1, pooL . .00/mO. Att. MO-llOO Sell tdJe items
(
• •
' y
e
It
I·
I·
t
1l
'l,
;)f
n.
d .
ie
(
T. .,. ,..,.
•x· ltdl· '°
.r
Oi'ange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur.dmy, Mwch 12. 1881 ••
...................... . .................... .
W'NUllH&a.: •MArtdte S1camor• OcieM .._, • raiOt V\l
P1•.4 Ir, Sba. No'*'· BeM&.'4 br, lba,lormai
"6t mo. Incl. 1ardeoer. DR, pool, comer loe..
'llZ•all. Avail. lmmed. LHH
LI-1 8r "-............ 8 lllOO/mo. "4·1• ••w •""'8Uil•~ A,1~~~~~~~-
DID •re•, famll,. rm, Bil Can)'Oll Townbome
(tplc-, trpt, 2 atory, on aolf to11rse. I Br.
comm. pool Avail. 3-18. Den. a"' Be. Extemlve
•mo. +~It. Call lmprovement1. Never 1Sl•tmtto4. Uved ln. Ptrtplace. wet·
Laknlde condo, pool, ba.r, tennll, PoOI. Jacuul tMDlt, Jae, 2 br, 1 ~ ba, & petJo. Best available. •tmo. 857-0211 Sl.200 mo. 780-0448.
H.l. .... tlST
__... z.t.aa. LMn1I
Beaudtul put.llU 1ur·
roundln1a. Terraeed
-pool &aftltn IU bbQ, ap1rklln1 rountaln1.
Spaelou s r oomt .
Separate dlnlaa area
W&llt·ln clOMIU. home-
like kitchen Ir cabinet.
W a lk to Huntln1 t on
Center.
1 Bedroom·unfum.
from S400
aer. 1i.;Ba. w/aar. Adlta.
c(ltl, drpl. bltns, fncd
)'d, wlter pd. QMUO.
., Y1ctot11 St. $4 ti
3819 "J " s.nta Ana Ave. MJO
lfe8ti.B#I.. MIAR NIW APAiTMMS 2 Bdrm w/frplc. blt-lna.
WHtcUlf adult condo, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths. Din· Laree Ble Bear Cabin
65c for ground noor. 17th St. & Bristol.
Close to courtbo~e & all freeway1. Up
to 2.500 sq. ft. John.
140.MU
LEASE Turtle,ock 2bdrm. pvt beach & ten·
Qlem, lrsest slngl fam nis courtisf~0·
home, 5bdrm. 3be, fam --
i;m, central air, 3 cer 2 BR, den. 2 Ba. fplc,
pr, w&Ut to pool & ten-garage, walk to beach.
nLI. Sl.050. Call Oary Pool & tenhls prlv. 1750
i Bedroom.rum,
from SQQ
2 Bedroom·furn. $490
Adult.I, no pets.
UUUtlct Free'
Beeuttfully landscaped Ir J C • r a a e , q u I et
1arden apt.a. Petloa or ne11hborh()()d, walk to
decks. Pool & spa. Heet park & abop $4", lat.
p&Jd, covered parllln1. last + dep. Call M11ry.
Adult4. no pets. 1 or 2 857·2040
ina room. Fireplace. Pool table , color TV. 2
Freshly decorated. Un· frplc., alps 14. SU-6918
f a.MW\ •
um._,., mo. 831·7300• M aual condo avall.1-------------------
aft.erSpm: 752-8318. lse. 640-5272
Woodbridae Townh1e. 2 BIG 2 BR. Across from
1tory, 3 br, by tennia & bch Blt-ins. patio,
pool, lake. HTS/mo. lndry, gar . $700 yrly.
SS 1.s.528-& 750-S403 962-4914.
SEAV1EW-4Br. 21ttBa.
best ocn view. secur ity,
pool. S1600 m o. (213)
4»3629
BLUFFS BARGAIN. 3 Br
LA QUINTA HERMOSA
16211 Parkside Ln, l blk
W. ol Beach, 3 blka S. of
Edln1er.
847-5441
L.....-hoch 1741 .........•.... , ....... .
Studio, lux spa, TV.
maid service. phone,
$100/wk 499-2227
Prof/Sgt, 40+, noo·smkr,
St. Femal, pool
494.0451
Woodbrid&e angl rm res.
3 Br. 2 Ba . atrium.
S795 /mo . t n clds
Gardener. Yr tease call
599-988S or 596-1821. Ask
forJanlase. AvaU 4·1·81,
RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN
2Br + den view condo.
Free rent until 3/31. Up·
graded. Comm pool.
644-5a
twnhm. $155.500 Agt Newport leach 3769
675-5930. 640-8146 •••••••••••••••••••••••
H ERITAGE PARK lg
3Br, 2~ ba, family rm,
rrml d /r. Pool. 1750/mo.
640-8146
4 RENTALS
1750
4bdrm. 3ba. 2story , frplc,
encl gar, microwa ve,
comm pool. tennis. no
pets. $975. Avail now.
548-4769
Big Canyon Townhome. 2
br. 2"'1 ba, din rm. den
w /wet bar. drape d .
crptd, S850. 759-94 __ 23 __
2br+Den 2~ba
3br 114ba $550 1--~--1111111111 .... ~-$675 HAllOl llDGE 3br 2ba
3br 2"'1ba
4br2'1'lba
1785-SSSO 4 bdrm. family room S900 townhouse in prestigious
Woodbridge-CONDO 3br.
i v.ba. all amen. incl.
~90/mo 640-7690
guarded gate communi·
ty Avail now S2000 per
mo
Prestige Irvine Terr ace
3br . lg pool & s pa. Newly
decorated & landscaped.
Walk to beach 640·7319
a ft5pm
Fabulous. Oceanfront.
Wkly: Easter , Summer,
Now. 2-4 Br. Prime lac
673-7873
----~-----
Luxury Oceanfront
Weekly.2or3Br Comp
furn. in c ld linens .
640-4784.
YEAR·ROUNO FUN:
Social Acl1v1t1es 0 1
1ect"r •Free Sunoa-,
Brunch • BBQ s •Par
lies •Plus much more
GREAT RECREATION·
Tenn•s •Free Lessons
IP'O & pro Shop). 2
Health Clubs• Sauna •
Hydromassage •Swim
ming . 011v1ng Range
personsOK. ---t Bdrm ~MOO 2 Bd 1 Ba. S375. Garage,
22S0Vang-u11rd Way yard, no kids/pets. Call
54().962,6 or 548-2408 Craig. 559-9400
EASTSIDE
3 Br.,..., Ba. Townhouse.
No pets. 1495. 121 21st.
St. Days 646-4262. Eves
6'5·9543.
••• Cec.tH.t10tt
347 C. Woodland
Costa Mesa Y,.ou are the wanner of
4 fr'ff Hclc•h
<mvalue>. to
Circus Vargas
Mar 17th. 8PM at
Montgomery Ward
400 Fwy. at Bris tol
Costa Mesa
Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to
claim your tickets .
• * *
NEWLY dee. 2Br 2 ba
townhouse. fr pie, patio,
encl gar. $525, no dogs
998-8128 $150 de p
d ii,
drps.
-2bdrm , Iba, xlnt toe
<a c r oss s t . from
Oakwood Apts ) Rear
patio. ~/mo. 645·3114
Cozy 1 Br guest un1t
E's1de. Util pd. Avail
Apr 19th. $425, 645·6625
IEASTSIDE
2 br, 1 ba. frplc Will
show Fri .. 4·6PM S485
mo. Ownr 549·2042 -----Dana Point 3 82 6 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VaconL $490/mo. Isl &
last, S300 sec Frplc. bit
ans. No dogs. 542.3597
2 Br I Ba with refr1ge ..
built-ins . ca r pe t s &
drapes. 5410 951 Mill or
951 7630 Ask for Louie
33801 Manana . 2 bdrm . 1 1,.,r b a .
hwasher. crpts
gar. 995·3311
995-3311 . S4 70 Hw1tlM)tOft l.ac h 3840
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IEASTSIDf THE WHIFFlE TREE
Country Woods Luxury A~ult units at af-
2 Br & Study. tri-level. I fordable hvmg. 1,2 & 3
fireplace. s k y lig ht . I Br \\'.ell decorated
deck No c hildren or Olympi~ sire pool. ligh~
pets. SS35. 180 F. 2lst St ed te~1s court. Jacuz7.1.
Days 646 4262 Eves park like landscaping.
645-9543 · Most beaut1ful bldg m
2 Rr, '"''Ba. 2 Ar 211'1 Ba
Frplc. dishwasher. laun
dry fac1hties. carports
548·0967 art 4.
HB
From $360. 846·0619
s~o AOUL T
,Bkr. 3·31-to 4-13. S800 for
Newport Heighta Duplex 2wlts. Sleepe S. Call VI:
2 Br. l Ba Adults , no 7S&-1SOl. 846-l769
pet.I. ~95· Mo. lat, lHt On the beach! 2 Br 2006
deposit. 517 Bolsa. Days w. Oceanfront. (Lower 631~20, Eves Wknds Unit). Weekly or Mon·
548-5041. lhly 759-1817 su,a. VIEW R-..... --to-S.... ___ 4_3_0_0
Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. over· • •••••••••••••• •• •••• ••
look i ng Back Bay . Moving? Avoid deposits
Loads of c l oset s, & cut living expenses!
fireplace, 2 carport.s, 2 Proressiona lly sin c e balconys 745 Domingo 1971
Dr Call before 5PM HOUSEMATES 1725. 979-8889or645·1260:_ 832.4134
Need quick s ub-lse ! --
Prime location, 1 Bdrm Male 4<HS shr 5br, 2ba.
1 ba. Amenities $600 no hse. C.ftf. Spa. Nr SC
dep. 6 mos. lse. 673-8432 Plaza & Frwy. S200 Shr
---utils 641-4913. IESTVALUE
Versailles l'orner pen-
thouse 2 Br 2 Ba. comm
pool, Jae., wgt roo m
1700/mo. 675-3787
J ust refurbL'lht'<I 2 br. 1
ba. 2 doors to beat'h. Yr
ly $S50 mo. 673-2113.
W ESTCLI FF 28r, 2Ba
frplc. pool. adlt.s only
$.550 mo. 631-5596
CAMALFROMT
Spacious 2 Br. Quiet ,
private. big gar .. slip for
40' boat avail $750
673-6336 & 642-9666.
BACH.UNIT
2 blks from beach on
Peninsula Avail 1m
med $2751mo Util. inC'I
Tom ('amard1 6 Agt
559.9400
S 1ng lt'S I & 2 Br
Versailles Apts From
$450 760 9333. M t Rod
•Shared LMnCJ •
Counselors to personally
select your com patible
r mmte t o s uit your
li festyle. Shared-Living.
833DoverDrSuite31 NB
631 1801
Fem wanted to shr home
w sa me nr OCC
$225 mo Refs req.
540.0S«J.
W ill s hr my plus h
s pacious Hunt Ben
home. micro. frplr. '•2
mi to beach $265 incl
a 11 S36--8090
Fem 18-25 lo shr 3br. 2ba
h s e n o n s mkr n e w
l'pttdrapes nr Bch H. B
$200 536-1140
Fe m rmmte 25.35 to shr
3br hom e in I rv
S300tmo Call 543 8456
8 »Spm Nancy
Roommate Needed 4 br
condo. HB lst, last. +
Offk•l...tal 440 l11drultrtal ....... 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now avallabl• Ideal Ml Irvine 30,000 IQ ft
location for Attorney, fenced, ga1 dleael tanlll.
Real Estate or En· modem s hop/offices
trepreneur in beauurul 551-3006
ly maintained full ---------s er v Ice bu 11 d in g . Prime Campus Or
(Comer Westcllrf Dr & Location
in Across from Airport Irv e. Newport Beach ) Office/Warehouse Space
500 sq. n Call Melissa Reasonable
645-6101· Lease 'rerms
NewPort Center Lawy~r
o r other professional
single ore in exec su.ite.
Law library, recep't,
telephone answe ring
avail. Lease avail. AV
CO Financia l To wer
955·2411
2:.1 E. 17th St
Costa M esa s u i tes
SS0-900 sq ft from 75< All
amenities. Call Terry
Cressman. 554.9000
WESTCUff AREA
Execu tive s uite s,
ground r loor loc
Secretarial /bookkeep
ing serv avail Call ror
more det a il s
1710631 3651
Owner 549-4066
MESA
INDUSTRIAL
PARK
711 W. 17tt.. St.
Co.ta M••a, Calff.
642-4463
1-L870 sq. ft. Unit avail
ror immed occupancy
1·2900 sq. ft. & 1-3700 sq
ft unit<s> avail. April
1 s t . 2 S torage
Warehouses a vail for
1mmed. occupancy, 2000
& 2800 sq. ft • 336-34< sq
ft. *Leasing office hrs
Mon Lhru f''r1 8 4 Sal
lO 2 545 SQ.FT.
17th St. Costa Mesa J St~ 4550
room suite 5450 mo • • • ••• •• • • • • •• • • • • •• • • •
Realonom1cs 675 6700
CdM Deluxe Suites. AC.
ampl pkg. ut1I pd 2855
E Cst Jlwy 675 6900
Suite avail approx 1100
s q rt Newport Archei.
Marina Bldg. 642 4644
Orfices . 300·800 sq rt
Street level. sky htes, nr
La gun a C ity H a l l
494·5688
Storage Warehouses in
Costa Mesa avail. for
1mmed occupancy 2000
& 2800 sq. ft 33"' per sq
fl Call 64 2·4463 Mon
thru Fn . 8·4 Sat 10·2
Retttak Wanted 4600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Mature. reliable lady
w rriendly . quiet pet
wtshes to rent I br gues t
hl'e or mohile home.
H B 1·679-7246 collet·t Orangetree patio home. 2 Santa Ana 3280
br. 2 ba . adults. lease. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~. 955-2558
BEAUTIFUL APART·
MENTS. Single~ 1 &
2 Bearoom s • r u1
noshed & Unlurn1shed
• Adult L1v1ng •No Pe1s I Br. Stove & refr1ge
Small yard Adult. no
pets. $315. 548· 1377.
~ff.. LIVING Cute 2 Br I B a .
fireplace. garage in lov
ely Newport Heights .
S535. 675 0349
sec Call 963·0796 a ft
1
________ _
5pm 2300 s/f low cost. newly Reliable party want!> to
lease home with water
view & beach act•ess.
Newport/Laguna area
Aug . Sept Oct. M w.t be
JIDCONDO
• Mooe1s Open Oa·ly
9 lo 6
2bdrm. lba, drive by
2006 S . Garnsey
644-7063. Walnut Sq .. nu carpetJ. -------Oakwood
paint, no pets. Submit on 3 Bdrm. 1 ~ ba S C Plaza Garden Apartm•nta
kim. S625/mo. Greg As· area. Newly dee, kids
lie. agt. 559-9400 . OK. S650. 557-2783
TURTI..EROCK, 3bdrm. 3 Br 2 Ba end condo, adult
2ba. pvt yrd, atrium. park. security gate &
gar . no pets, 1775. Agt: encl. gar. Patti. 540-3666.
1
644-6996. 839-0008. ssso. ------------LOCJUIMI leach 3248 Soutti LOCJllfta 3216
Newpcrt Beech/So.
1700 t6th St Do·~· ai •61h .
1714) 642-5113
Newpcrt Beach/No.
880 Irvine
a1 •61n1
17141 64S-1104
2 HUG E Bedrooms in
s uper location. Fully
carpeted. built-ins ,
ground Ooor Adults , no
pets. S3SO mo. Apply Apt
E 568 W Wil so n
646-4477
2 Br Gar Child/Pet OK
S485., As k for Mi k '-'
641-0763 •.•...•••••.•.......•..••....•.•..•..•......•• ,
New 2Br. 2Ba Mo bile 2 Br. +. l h Ba View. 2 "-----------\!· Home. good ocn view. rireplaces. garage ., -----•2Br 2 8a.CondonrSC h -en di Plaza. SA. Pool SSOO. pvt be , .,.,.,, m o A ls backyard. Avail. April I AP.'?' l11M1ts Child OK 549.3232 or
only. 499-'.11116 499-3251__ •&....&.-:sMd ~ 641·1460
Oceanfrnt IBr. lrlr +
cabana, deck, pvt bch.
rum/unfum, adlts only
1750 mo. 499·3816
3 Bdrm /den . 3 Ba .
lmmed. lease $850. 1075
Noria. 556-1656. 760-9596
LOCJUIMI Hilk 3250 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOMES FOR RENT
3 & 4 Bdrm. S.565·$.575
Fenced yards &
garages. Kids & pets
welcome 964-2566 or
973-2971. Agt .. no fee
C onctai... • •••••••••••••••••••••• u:t:::i:Q 3425 GeMnll 3802 2 br. crpt, drapes. bit-ins.
••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••• • Adults. $395. 2272 Ma pie
Lux condo, 3bdrm. l~ba.
pvt patio. 2 car car /elec
opener . close to S C
Plaza S5951mo. ls e
549.0259
AnMTS FOR RENT 631 ·2927
H a .. N.B , Costa Mesa t 3b 2b F Something for Ever yone .ge r, a. gar. am
Bach to 4 Br Unfum prer. 1034 El Camino• D
Apt.s. Certain locations $435. 832·5057 C6 8pm l
ofr'!r : Pool , s pa ,
Be aut1ru1 Park Bristol fireplace. laun room.
Adult Condos Pool. beamed ce iling s ,
secunty. spa IBr. S450. garages, all built ins
646-0686. Garden & Townhouse
---design Bachelor CONDO vacant. TSL MGMT 642· 1603
S500/mo Newport ---- -
Beach978·04.23 lafboa Island 3806 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 br, 1 ba, l st y, gar. lge,
clean. nice decor . no
pets. S400. 21788 Placen
t1a 545 7983
IMSTAMTIM
F.ast.side 2 Br I Ba. A Pl
Pool. laundry rm Small
• I & 2 BA Patio A1>IS
• 01shwu11e1s & 880 \ Proressional Male to ,..Qec.Costa Mesa.
• Pool & Rec Room
• Gi rden l 'nOSeil>'"O
• Joo 10 Buen & Snops
Se I Giles
SEA ENVIRONMENT
9611 HAMIL TO N H B
962 4">00
Bayfronl Apl I Br S350
mo Yearly lease. No
kids or P<'ls 673-8222
E Blufr Jbdrm 212ba
twnhse apt. 2 car gar.
$540. 644-1010
s h are Park Newport
T o wn h ou s e . N B
Amenities spa. jacu7.zi,
tennis, racquet ball Call
An s wer Ad 11409
642·4=->0. 24 hrs .
Res p Mature Empl SOit Juan women lo sh r 2bd nr
WOOOLAKEAf'TS. Capistrano 3878 occ S200+979·5897 or 146-65'9 I • • ••••••• •••••• •• • ••• • • 540-3233
Adult luxury t & 2 & 3 Condo IRr. frplc. encl.
Bdrm. ~autiful lakes & Ji?ar Water & us paid
s tre ams Compl e t e Nopets $425. 775 2114
Roommate for lrg 3bdrm
house. Irvine S220, 1.1
util. Zoe· 891-3765 dvs
857 2553 eves
amenities No pe t s -From S38S ./> 2 Br. I Aa. Condo Qu1t•t
Marinen Wall Apts.
Lrg 3 Br. Apt Fireplace.
washer dryer hook up
Patio. dbl car garage
Children OK . $575. Nr H
Harbour 840-5623.
1br.1 ba, frplc, OW. encl.
gar. Nr Hunt Harbor.
Jan, 846-1186
2 & J B e dr ooms
$400-$450. Kids OK , no
pets please Water
Trash Paid Carpo rt
964 2S66or 973·2971 Agt .
no fee
private. nlCP view S450
mo 496 2109 aft 5. Colorado woman would
SantaAna 3880 liketoshryourfurn apt.
Promonto r y Pt pre· ••••••••••••••••••••••• (e rred Lve m ess
2 Br. I ba, nea.r So Cst 1213)821·6676. Pina Security gate, -----
pool. I child ok No pets Co7.y hme to shr w fem or
5425 mo. 752· 7474 male CM no move in cost
Mc Fadden 1Slandard 2
Bdrm I''.! Ba 2 Kids
OK, no pets pleas e
Water paid . Pool
Carport S395 964 ·2566 or
973-2971 Agt . no fee. --
$250/mo 631·9259
Fem rmmle wanted lo
shr hme-lrvtne 2br. 2ba
pool tjac avail non s mkr
$300/mo induding util
646.3379 ---
200 to 950 sq ft , pre
st1gious bid gs. rree" av
rlose
Riqht Realty
9,9-8533
fu r n Turnke y
1714)328-9820
lusinns /lnved /
Rnanee ......•....•.•.........
2-Story Office w 1pnv en Business
trance. bath Ocean Opportunity 5005
View $475 631 -7770 • • • •• •••• •• ••• ••• • • •••.
ACCOUNTANT
Attnv or other prof'~
wanted to fill full svc ex
et· suite 2 spacious wan
d ow ofcs avail 1mmed
Cmplt Tax lib m ronf
rm Near Irv me Cit v
Hall. Call Mr Vance
549-4023
•NEWPORT HACH
EXEC SUfTES
Prestigious building al
One Newport Pl Recep·
l1onisl. waiting room
* ...
C.M.larber
17442 Ze1der Ln
Huntington Bearh
You are the winner or
4frH tickets
1mvalue). to
Circus V GnJCIS
Mar. 17th. 8PM at
Montgomery Ward 41Xi Fwy at Bristol
Costa Mesa
Call 642·5678. ext 272 to
l'la1m your tickets •• *
confe rence room ·11---•••-··-·-·--· secretarial space. sup
port services. From 120
sq n. 714 18J3..8100
Small off1 l'e I R27
SE C R E T AR I AL
SERVICE
Costa Mesa
LOCJUIMI N'9uel 3252
child OK
TSLMgmt 642 1603 New plush 2br. 2ha apts
Soutti LOCJUfta 3886 Wanted: Fem rmmte lo
• • ••••• ••••••• •• • •• • •• • shr 4br hme Irv $168 75
Oceanfront studio a pt +ut1l 559-6050avail4fl
with patio, overlooking
Westcliff Dr N R Good
loc.S150P<'rmo fi31 ·0900
Same location for 16 yrs
5 d y wk E Z operation.
Low rent. Owner will
tram Sl5.000dwn ••••••••••••••••••••••• BusinHs Rental 4450 3br. convt den, view. rec
racil ya rd maint .
$725/mo 1714 )496-2130
3br. 2ba Irvine Condo. RAYFRONT 2br. Iba.
pool S600/mo before 5 1231.'z E Ba y f ron l
551·3m'7778-5113afl5PM SS 95 I yr I y N a nc y
-(213)277-451 I
F: Side triplex :lbr. 2ba
1mmed ocrup no p~t~
S550 mo incl uttl
85l 9647
2.~ ft F:xtras 504 1
Dumbar St 846 9501 pvt beach SS.50/mo ulil GaroqH
incl. 499 2253 or 499.5021 . fOf' •em 4350 •••••••••••••••••••••••
JONES REAL TY
673-6210
-----Minion Vleio 3267 •••••••••••••••••••••••
* Jbr. ram rm, frplc. par
quet·tile noors. covered
brick patio. lge yard.
cul-de-sac •S625 tmo•
737·3U6
2br. Condo + den.2'12ba ----
Hunt Harbor 1700/mo Capistrano IHch 3818
Linda AGT 846-1371 • •• •••••••••••• • • • • •• • • ---Townhouse
Unfumistt.d
Guest hse studio. full
3525 k1lch. yard. avail 3/20
$320. 661-6747 ....................... --------
Nice Twnbse. $495 mo. CCH'OM def Mar 3822
2br. 1"2ba. Savage Wild •••••••••••••••••••••••
Westside Duplex ,\pl
Upstairs. 2 Ar 1 Ba
Refr1gc . stove. enclsd
gar. No pets or small
children $390 770·5629
$.575. &aut1ful 3 Br 2•,,
Ba Owners unit Ru1lt
ins & indoor garden
Near Hunt Harbour
4752 Pearce St flurry'
Won't last '
Gemini Rlty ---531 2200
..........•.....••.....
ApcalmiMtsFurnish•d Sing le Car Gar for
or UMumlsti.d 3900 storage purposes only
• •• •• •••••••••• •••••••• C M S50 mo 645 2679. s E A w I M D 646.5506 ev'l
VILLAGE Extra large garage. in
Hntg Bl'h, S60 mo
9624471 . 968·9853 ----
For store & orfke space ~~-~~!'!~!!~~ at reasonable rates ,-
500 to 2700 Sq Ft.
MESA VERDE DR
PLAZA 1~25 Mesa Verde E. C.M
545-4123
Prime Location
Ladies figure s alon.
established 15/yr chen
Lele F'ully equipped
$15.000. Call 631-2444
lnvestmftit
Opportunity 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Co. 675-6606 Spacious l Br w /garage, Newport leoch 3269 -------laundry facil. ~25 Ask • ••••••••••••••••. ••• • • Duplexes Unfuni 3600 for Faye 640-9900
Lovely garden apt. Lr~
3Br. 2Ba. frplc bit ms
Call da y 631 4402
night 760-<1734
2 Bdrm, 2 ba . cpls, drps.
d/w, encl gar, hea(•h & 5
Points a rea $450 mo
842~
New 1&2 bdrm luxury
adult apts in 14 plans
from SMO. 2 bdrm from
SS05 + pools, tennis.
waterfalls, pontls ' Gas
fl>r rookinl? & heatinit
paid F'rom San Dieli?O
Frwv drive North on
Reach to Mc f'adden
then West on McFadden
to Seawi nd Villalole
17141893 5198
Office Refttat 4400 1270 Sq rt on busy Beach
Boulevard· Huntington
Beach. Ideal for real
estate offi ce, store or
other suitable business
2 Private baths. availa
ble immediat e ly 10
Vear lea11e. Attractively
priced.
LOAN $500 or more Dbl
your money Loan is
secured by unprecedent·
ed 1st in film financing
history 714-957·4086
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ha rbor Ridge I.autre ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----
mont Model. Full ocean Nr Lido Village 3br. 2ba. 2 Bdrm. I Ba. deck.
view. S2500mo. 760·1977 rrplc. S625/mo 514 carport. adults. no pets
F.legant prof bldg in H.B.
SS< per sq.ft lse Red
Carpet. 893· 1351
Yearly rental J Bd. 2 Ba
incl. s tove. S750/m o
Possible lease option
Agt. 673-3355
WATERFRONT
w /boat slip inc luded
3 Bdr 2 Ba, dbl gar. rm
ror power boat up to
about~'. S1150/mo.
JACOIS REAL TY
675-6670
3 Br. 2 Ba. large yard, 2
car garage. $145 m o
675-0062.
SPACIOUSN.1.
TOWNHOUSE
New 2 br, 2th ba. Back
Bay loc. Gar. pvt. patio.
S!J95 mo. Susan : 957-6507.
540-7238
3 Bdrm. frplc. walk to
beach. pool & tennis.
17~ Agt. 760-9278
NEWPORT CREST 2 Br
+ den, 2"4 ba. S850
LUXURY VIEW CON-
DO. 2 Br. 2ba. Security
bldg. Sl250/mo.
HVR custom 3 Br, Sba
w /pool. Profeulona11y
d ecorate d . Com pl.
ocean/bay view. $2500.
LIDO JSLE. 2 Br. 1'14 ba
home. Yearly Sl200/mo.
Clubhouse N 8 998·5868 Lse $.530 644·6382 or
----673-0473
Apw tments Furnish•d L---2 b-d--2 ba
••••••••••••••••••••••• a rge rm . COf"OftO def Mar 3722 Avail. immed. No pets
•• •••• ••............... S635 mo. 559·9265.
Cozy, small rum. Studio. Jbr. 2ba, 1750/m o
Westclirf area I Br Up
per. $395 Uhls meld
Fireplace. 642-6097 . -----
Super Bal'k Ba y 3bdrm
C onda All n ew +
fireplace & wood floor·
Ing. cnc lsd ga r a~es
$695 &12-6100 No kitchen Employed Property Mart
Female. Non smoker 640-9019 QUICK IN Refs. $275. 640-4999. ---1 ----. --New 2 Br 2 Ba, ocean vu. Large 2 Br. + poo ·
On the beach. Pr1~ate 2 car gar. $65()/mo. Refs. Eastside Only S395 mo
gale. ssso. Clnclds ut1ls ). req'd. 497.2381 No last mo. req. Must be
No pets. 714/675-7764 or ------seen. Drive by 149 E .
2131928-1844 Small Bac helor Apt Ba y St Th e n call
f · s f 642·1603 and get ready to
C__..._ ...,._ 372 w tre rigerator . o .. o move.
2 Br 2 ba, microwave.
frplc $500 /mo Call
963-6490 or drive by 21792
Brookhurst Apt 18 . ---Newport leach 3869 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PARK NEWPORT
COUMnYCLUI
LIVING
Singles. 1&2 bedroom
apts. & townhouses
From $429 644· 1900
Oceanfront for Winter
Rentals. Furnished &
unfum. Broker. 675 4912.
Rooms 4000 ...........•..•......••
1617 WestcUrf. N B. Want
financial inst. 7000s.r
1st. noor. Agent 541 -5032 --------
KOLLCEMTER
MEW, ORT
Elegant executive suites
in p restige location.
With complete s upPort
services.
Laguna Beach Motor Inn.
985 No. Paciril' Coast
Hwy, Laguna Beach
Daily. Weekly, Kitchen
available. Low winter -
rates. 494.5294
71 4 /85 l-()681
KOLL CEHTER
vuu ....... a Coast Hwy. $250/mo. m -
••••••••••••••••••••••• cl util. 760-1813 aft 6PM. -----. -NO FEE! Apt. & Condo SUS CASfT AS Su?~Y 2 Br upstairs apt. rentals. Villa Rentals.
Elegant suite. pool. Fash
Is l. No smk . S375
640.6594 Joyce 540.3822
Garage?
NEWrORT
Elegant executive suites
in prestige location .
With complete support
services. ----
Furn 1 br. apt. $325 & up. Delx ocean vu, 1 Br. new· E side. Gar. deck. laul'\d 675-4912 Broker 4bdrm house. residential
E ncl. gar. Adults. no ly decorated. w /gar. rm, no .pets. S450/mo. ----------area. Mission Viejo.
pets. 2110 Newport Bl. Adults S675/mo. Ask for Avail Apr 1. 631·1094 2 br. 1~ ba + gar , Hoag !bdrm for rent. S217 /mo,
-54M __ 968_b_t_wn_8_&_5P_M __ 1_F_a_y_e_.640-__ 9990 ____ -1 WESTBAY APTS: laroe Hos p area. nu decor, M/F.770-2163.
" open hse Sat & Sun 11-3. CostaMeta 3124 2 Br. 2 Ba. S480·S485· 4 238 H ilaria Wa y , CASA DE ORO
ALL UTILITIES PAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ne w garden apts. patios. $500/mo. 830-58'75 MEWL y DICOI. spa. Adults, no pets.
Room wlth kitchen priv.
Near bus & shopping
center. 962·7520 aft 6PM
714/851-0681
Luxurious, full service or.
flee space, 1-6 rms, con·
ference room , sec'I
services . Newport
Beach, Call for info.
752-6188
1 Br. gas pd, encl gar. 398W Wilson, 631-5583
d /washer. pool. Adults.
642-5073 1 Br. $395
2 Br. 1 Ba. S46S
161 E. 18th. 642-0856
Versailles I br/studio. or wkn~. new crpt, drapes, pool, ---------•450 sq. fl. Delightful
rec. sec. bldg. Adults. no Hot.II. Motif. 4100 working apace with pet-5. 1475 + tst. last . sec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ocean view. Full bath. 3
dep. S>e5981 Balboa Inn oceanfront. yr old bldg. '45-0 mo.
642·4321. nt 286
Weekdays
SUILl!ASE
Office & warehouse ln
The Esplenade. Redhill
nr Bristol. 1·4 yr lse 4 of
fi ces. re<"ept area.
warehouse w /lge s liding
door. full sec. system.
all new crpts & pnt. 2500
s q ft. Avail. after
3/25/81. Call arter 10am
644·6500
Westside 2Br 2ba corner
home, lg y rd w/attach
store, ioned ror busi
ness. Compl. renovated
$750, 548-1905 dys,
751-2340 ev.
4475 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Unique business oppty
S5K·S20K neede d un-
secured. low risk. high
return If you like to
gamble w/the odds in
your favor call M ike
( 213 )858-6969
"THAT'S
INCREDIBLF."
Your 1725 inves tment
can bring you a return or
$18.125 within 3-4 mos! A
free introducto ry
seminar will show you
how. Call now for re·
servaUoos
714/997-7088
MON°FRl9·5
LEE ENTERPRISES
R.E. Tax Sa..thr
Sl,775,000 cash down on
SIO.'T7S,OOO existing pro
ject. Approx. SS00,000 a
year shelter + S2,000,000
Store Space ror lease sales profit pot ential
1500 sq. f\. • 1280 sq. ft. downstream. Crook In·
In HunUngton Beach. t ernatlo nal Realtors,
Fle xib l e terrns . Wm. Crook, P.O Box
213159&-7202. 1194, Redlands. 9237l----------1 7141'7»2'721S
Compare before you
rent. Custom design
features: Pool. BBQ.
cov 'rd garare. new
furniture, surrounded
with plush lan~caplng.
Adult living at its be11t.
Nopeta.
1 Bdrm fumlahed S410
2 Bdrm furnished $480 assw Wilton, 1M2-1f'11
Jlr. I laApt
Newly decor. Gas pd,
e n c l gar , po ol .
d /waaher. A d ults.
642-5073
Low winter rates. Dally Turner Auocl., 494·1177
2 Br. 2 Ba. Penthouse or weekly. KltcMnette. ""2sslfll!ld Apt. w/cx: vu. 1700/mo. $90&up.675·8740. MD'a racU. In KB. 2,000 3700 s q ft d e l uxe I.I. Tase.thr
., Mo lD Mo. 714 /62A·132S SQ.ft. Reduced to St200 abowroom & warehouae.
FAMILY A"~· Eves. sr1 LARK 89m~·l}!le. Red Carpel, Seetoapprec.631-4402. Sl,'T7S,000 cub dowt1 on
1 Ir T ,. U\ ,,. _ s1o;ns,ooo exl1tln1 pro-
N ~ .. ~~... Brandt ne.,w beilautlfuil hlrg S pacious 3bdrm condo ---------• 4,000 sq fl for lse, stora1u• jeet. Approx. $500,000 a B b Apts Utlla Id ew _...vr. IH pd.. apt, or .am les w t t MOTEL MIWPOIT CIMTll wort area, potential of· year shelter + SZ.000.°'°
Wac · .. 1 · M · tPh•I · enc I a r .. po o I. or 2 children. Near park. 2'-' ba Qu.lct lex:. .... .• 1 .. __ •1 8 ,._ r t c e 1 et.up . w l 11 ules profit ~tentlal eea Y o r on Y· d /waaher. Adul•11 . Heatnald No....t• ~/mo. •Weekl1 rentals now rw ~"ce u,...., d McNash Realty M2·l334, • ..-· ~-· SCUTCOSTS S n egoUale good lee. ownatre•m. roOt la· 842~78evea 642·5073 3~~B;.;llaon 631: 831-1759,831·47«. ·~~I. .;J9~lh:,d ufi. Allyou eedfo o Hartlor 4' Warner, S.A. teroatlonal Re•llora.
Waterfront Homes. Inc. -----·----Near new 2bdrm, 2ba, • • 759-9lOO • or · nea n mon~blyfe:! ne MS-3700 Wm. Crook. P .O Box
Realton Ul·IAOO Stunnlna lar1e I Br. ftptc, laundry fac, new Ne-Hts. Lr• tbdrm, a 8 r 2 ea • l n c I . r2Z7ooms4N;,...,..,.rt Bl -" c M .....,,......,70 1-... -1-.... -.-__._.---4-S_OO_, 1194• ltedlanda. 12311· 'llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Garden A~-Pool4' Rec. lb_,...., ~ to ~-,., va . · · --•ma••--'714f119i.1128 :: ,_.. crpg, drpa Ir paint. Encl a , new c , s ve, atove/refrtg, )'rly rental 848-7445. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••••----------
.. 1...._ ar.a.110 ........ st. aar. $475. Adults, no 370~ La Pere Ln. "75. 1175/mo. Aet.fTS-3355 •D&UXIOMCIS• l500 • lMO' lndua'l/Of-lllf''911•.t -...rr• pet.a 873-2113. 414·5758 78().0759 5_,.._.. 4200 Fr6m 1 room u-p to 2300 nee. 11101 lledondo Cr . w..-... IOIO 8a'1Viewllelbr Z"'ba, H ..... •IMda 3740 eves ----·------1Varuallle1 J8r/1tudlo ••••••••••••••••••••••• aq. ft.. $1.0l per aq. ft. 3 "P".H\lntlch.Ml·JIM ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ............. sai.,. •••••-.••••••••••••••••• ---------1 Newlypaln&.ed28r.28a. penthee condo. adlll,no OCEANrROMT SUM· tooma aJ)d up. No luae Wut •~for,,.._ ~-------•SS?&/up 1-2 bdnn. pool, Stunnlnl Iara• I Bdrm. PaUo. built·ins. '8ra1e. peta. l&W mo.+ t•t·latt MEJl RENTALS tuo requlnd. 11'1 D•Pont Trach 1°'lr old*"" 11w Mewpeut~t P'9:
Jae, aclJt, l"'2 Florida, 11rden apt. Pool • rte. Adult.I. no pets Immed + att. dep. 845·344'7, wk. A.dltl onlJ. Now tall· Dr. Actl. Alrporierllltel. new 1oodlea wtt• • J181't1. Gtv. ,..u ffri.re11
H.B.IM.2-M34or842·Sl72 area.110W.18th. St. occ.845-9157,548·'211 fft.UTO.llm lnateMrvallonl411-1571 aaa.ml ... U Clualftaded . ....,.. lndTD. PP.1'71-""7
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Aa I I ---:. "l~ c·~/C .. -c .. v ,_ . ·--....,. H .... H c-;----~,;;---,-d --.. p.........;..·---........ ........... .. - -····------•DJ•• •••• _, ·~ __,,. .. ..,....._, ....................... ....................... .............................................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....J9111lm1tt ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
--,-GIN. t'OHSTRUCTION Pound1Uou, Ret1lnln1 Top QUlllty. [)esleodable Ca..,.U,1 plumblnf .l Tmder Lorina' C1euln1 ....................... RALPH'S PAINTING TUe lnltalled. atl kinda. ftlliu£1-Addlclam, Remodels Walll, HUls._ Ratora· Senict. a.... Ritet. ti el.ctrk•I. !.le. contrac· by Starr. We 1lve you For lna. purposes, we Uc. lol.JExt. Low Ralft JU•tanteed. refa. Jo.hn
_... Ue/IM.llan~u lion, Slaba, P1t101. ynuperience 531-.5055 toT.0..,t4U537. the kind or servlc• thci videotape prop. & Nn· Freer...t 984·5.SM 193-1887 ~Bl'f'IAL C••Lfa BloctfiBricll. Llc'd. • world bH torcotten. tellf. Call &40-0100 Video · -0-mtom--Ce-r•_m.t_c_T_l_le-
.Jf"UI ••••••••••••••u••••••• -...rev•. Elfftriclu -Sm. Jobi. C~=,~~dym•t 15/yn exp. Ref'e. Call Veriftcatloo OAVE'SPAfNTlNG New·Remodel·Rtpair
67 Pe Da RlllOOELRf.lPAIRS ctiMC.. m~~ repaln. LJc. coVft'I. 'vo.Jr .s!~&r:.~ Barbara •L 552·7'72 or L••c-.ill1 Servtnaareaiyeara Freeeat. Chuck.~·5817 r IV Allocu.torn Cablnett ....................... • 10. $4&.5203 u m.-. t4.2-11't. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Most reasonable
'•ALL you el1 and ,_..alloa, 17 yrs ln lJC. CIDLD CARE ELECfRICAL and rt• Olftl. ROBIN'S CLEANING RcnovaUna·Rototllllng Insured, Uc'd. 1G0-730l Trw 5-nk•
for1 are•. Uc•d. Top qu1I. lt)'ConicladelMar modellnt. Qulllty with H•ct4adflloon Servtce-alhorouihly Sprtnklen·lawna-clnups Painting: Comm 'I. In· ...................... .
10da11d Mr.Palombo,tl2-U14. home 873-2945 lhebeetprtce.831·20CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• cleanhoute.54(>.08S7 Dave&U-4853 duslrlal, Residential Expe_rtTreeTrtmrner •the -H,\RDWOODPLOORS BudNa-Mll Free Est. Low rates Tenyeanexpertence DAILY CUSTOM.INTERIOR SJl.fOJWI( !leetriclan-Qual. work, Cleaoed&W•xed Will clean your bouse, M-673-t17J7 ~1866,751·2128
N.OT ByJ~yAR.PENT~~ ... -Hot lunch. C.M. -Cbria· reu. rates. No Job too Anytlme,832-4881S.A. apt,oromceandleaveit •• :;;;;:••••••••••••••• ---Tree/shrub trim, remov. •Ytcl .,._'""'"' UanP'reecbool. 646-5423 I m a l l! Free eat. H-6Mj DAISY FRESH. Refs. BRICKWORK : Small QUAUTY PAINTERS clnuJlll, haul. Concrete.
DtllCTOltY Remod-RepaJr-ReUable CCMllh ector 8*-lCl'50. ....................... 675-2839 J obs. Newpo.-t, Costa Bargain rates thru 418 dirt, etc. Jim 631·4530
DOITNOW! Fences, cates, docks ........................ G...... Haul,cleanup.concrel~ Mesa. Jrvlne. Refs. Freeeat. 848•5684 T..._._ A*,,_ S •*-bomea, etc. AJ lr75-6:2:94 Constru-'--All ty ..... s •••••••••• ••• • •••• ••••• removal. Dump truck I will clean houses. Per 675-3175 WI.NITER RATES -·-..., --~uuo ..--n..c k • •2 7aeo d C j I b I • • • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • You.rDaUyPilot C.,.tS..-.ke 20yraexp.Freeeat. •VERYLOWPRICES• ...,...c serv ..... v..., M•Y: ~ .. ~;a • e EXPERT Br ick & lnt./ext.Painting PRIVATETUTORINC ~~~~ ••••••••••••••••••,•••• Lic.#a:wti89. 645-59?3 Landsa:~e~~1:~~UPI DUMPJOBS ana: · -Masonry. SmaJI Jobs & Cleun o~~~~servlce Special education
64 ..... 71 xtll I Sh1mpoo,&1team clean. RESIDENTIAL & Com-SmaUMovlngJobs HOUSECLEANINC rep.airs. Frplc facings. __ 11P<'.clalist provides In·
.,._ • • Colol' brichtenel"I, wbt merclal remodeling. Landacaplng-Cleanups Call MIKE646-1391 Exper. reliable. refs . Refa. 551-4555. 160-7074 Plaster/Repair d1vtduallled Instruction ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~! crpta 10 min. bleach. QuaUty wltb the beat Treelrlmming-Hauling 645-8394 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & counseling for excep·
IM;)OKKEEPJNG
&TA.XSERVICE
Hall, llv.-din. rma SlS; price 6ll·200C Maintenance. Free est. 2 yg. responsible men -MASONRY and remodel· tional children & their avg rm f1.50; couch SlO; · Amie, 548-84l4 have ~T 4WD truck , yd Hot11iwJHlng Ing. Quality with the Neat patches & textures families. SlO/hr. 673-8432
chr ~-Guar. ellm. pet Dr ... rlet tree main. equip. Can do ....................... best rice. 631·2004 6 f,.. nt. 193-1 439
odor.Crptrepalr.15yrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••ATRIUMS•• anylh.lng!960--0895 EXEC UTIVE will p .AJ.... --WMdowCleaMtc)
SMALL BUSINESSES exp. Do work myself. S.S. DESIGNS Do your Indoor/outdoor I . housesit. xlnt refs, ex· Small jobs wanted. Brick ~~ .................................... .
All ........ services, reas. Refa. 531·0101 Cu.stom Draper!. Win· atriums need planting or Tree/shrub trim. con-per-'d 947-5407. 644· 1248 and Block. Low hourly "Let The Sunshine In"
Reas. rates. 496-0913
...... ,.. d refurbishing? Call i crete removal. clean--rate.499-1226aft.6pm SHo111emSean .PlumRbin~ CallSunshlne W1ndow lr7S.12188,146-4871 WeCareCarpet Cleaners ows, lOOO'a of abrics. Free 557 827 Reliable, experie n ced a es· rv1ce· epa1rs Cleaning, Ltd 548·8853 ----------1S h S3.9S-4.9Syd.10daydel. Newport Atrium . ups. est. • 1 womanwillglveexpert Mo•'---Freeeslimales 552·7183 A•.._.. team clean & up ols. Free est. 30yra In area. 644-0027 .... ..,.._. w k T k H---a...-&.... ca re to your home, ••••••••••••••••••••••• p ~ ___.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or guar. rue 64R 6614 ---------~ ropenyM•CICJ9"''"" mount unit. 645-3716 ~ EXPERT LAWN CARE ••••••••••••••••••••••• animals and yard while Student will move you al ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' ':" , Driveways, pa.-king lot
rep1ir1, sealcoatlng.
S&S Asphalt. 646-4871
Llc'd.
BUY WHOLESALE D~ Monthly service. Treea Want a REALLY CLEAN you are away. Short or reas . rates 752 1493, Prof service lo save you
Coast Window Cleaning
Prof window care-reas
rat.es. refs. 642-5668
& cleanups. 548-2049 HOUSE? Call Gingham long· term. Very re· S4S.-3'T7'7 orS47·3309 time & money. Newport Thru Carpet Installer. ••••••••••••,••••••••••• as on ab I e rat es D II S I 11 Girl. Free est. 645-5123 · P~/P--a..CJ Pacific R. E. 645-3683 Free esl. A•--carpets rywaii:;_p« a st Y rd int T R f II bl _...... ..,..... ••• .,._ ""' Qual & rod. New & a ma .enance. ree e erences ava a e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ _ __ _ ~ IClbyslttlng 71!~d""~. repaired. Jay. mod.".~: S32-S549 l"e· l rim & r e m o v a I Expertise housekeeping, Connie 837-9670. _ Fine ext /int painting by Property Management
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"'FAST
RESULT11
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
'·' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"""""" C leanups . Free est. equip & s upplies lnSW'GnCe Richard Sinor Lie. ins Needhelpw1threntals?
.,, EXP. BABYSITTINC c.-... Acomtfc DRYWALL our ex 752·1349 furnished. trustworthy & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Try me. 631.4410 124 hrs l 673-121i6 646-4871
";
....
·:
..
HaS:1~":ft.~es ••••••••••••••••••••••• pertise. Quality with the "Q" GARDENING dep641·4970 Auto Insurance --Rooflnc) ----------1 AcousUcCeiUngs rightprice.63l ·2004 _ Landscape malnt, cln· Problems? 1 Write any Painting lnt./Ext. ren· •••••••••••••••••••••••
lusNu 5-Mrlce +custom hand texturing Etectrical ups. Reas. rates. Free MRS. CLEAN MAK ES IT risk. lo monthly rates tal.s our specialty Ac· New & recovers. Repair
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lic.389944. 532·S549 ••••••••••••••••••••••• est.Reliable.646-9878 GLEAM• Homes. apts. Pirkellns.646-3995 cousticpainted. Prompt. spec ialist st a y-busy
Prof Secy. Bilingual ELECTRICIAN priced office. Carpet. 646-2240 -Seaside Paint.mg, Greg prices Reliable 548·0512
Type both Eng. & Span. People who need People right. free estimate on General S..-.lce1 S36-4806
mat'I myhome54o-7364 That's what the large or small jobs. •••••~••••••••••••••••• General Housecleaning Placing a Classified ad is -----QUALITY ROOFING •
DAILY PILOT Lie. #:11662l 673.0359 Complete mobile home Reliable. refs. Margie or as easy as dialing your Inter/Exler/Refinishing, All types. free est
642-5678
ht. l22
Find what you want in
Daily PUot Cluslfieda.
SERVICE DIRECTORY service. relevels to re· Connie , 541-3437 o r pbone. Give us a call. ceilings/wallpaper Lu.•_ Vasa. MC 541 _5930 WantAds Call642·5678 models.968-4341 1213)425-4470aft.4pm. We'IJdotherest.642·5678 Caan&Sons.898-5105 HARBORROOFING WanlAdHelp? 642-5678 is all about!
Mo.y W..tect 5030 Hoppy Ads 5120 Lost & Found 5300 ~01t & Fo.d 5300 IP•noMh 5350 Help Wanted 07100 Help Wonted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 .••....•...••..•.•...........•.........................................•..•................. , ••••••••.••.•.•....••••..•••..•....•••..........•......•••..•.•.........••..•.••...•....•..........•...•...........
Investor for 2nd TD on
nice home in Costa
Mesa. 673-QlO, 673-2493
Lost: Blk Lab Fem. 65
lbs. l yr old "Shadow."
Vi c Heil/Newland. HB.
847-6365 Fam i l y
heartbroken. reward.
Found : 3/8. Lovable
older male Collie mix
N eeds good home
537-3189. 638·2478.
WANTED Ba ldini! men ---------•I & women. For infor Toll Automolive Ban.king CASJll ER
M0tf91!9". Trust Deidi 5035 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SaHler Mtg. Co.
All types of real estate
investments since 1949
Speclalblnc) ..
2RdTD1
642-2171 545-061 I
Macbnf Rah MhJ.
SINCE 1981
lst&2nd TDs. SSOK·SlM +
Own e r /Non Owne r
S FRs & Condos
Commercial & Industrial
PF:I'ER DOBBS
640-6016 673.9043
Widow has money for
MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY
MAKE SOMEONE SMILE
Place a HAPPY AD
m th.is column
for only $3.25.
Call 642-5678
2ND T .D.'s any s ize Welcome Home
above Sl0,000. No credit Jimmy D.
I. no pnlty. For action I LOVE YOU
call AGT 673-7311 LadyDamron
_a_n_yU_._m_e ______ Lost & Fomd 5300
W_. 20-220/o YI.Id?
On YourT.D. 'S. Notes
SSRaisers-lnvestorsSS
Call Dennison Assoc.
673-7314
Want investor for Npt
bayfront home . Give
well secured Isl or 2nd
T .D. Agt, 675-6161.
2nd Tru s t D ee d
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5671
purchases arranged. Ill!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
For details. call 960-1957
bkr. Lost: Cal, ll grey, blue
eyes pl siamese. Irv.
W alnut s quare
REWARD 834 -5528.
552-5075
Found green Parakeet.
B rookhurs t I Ad a ms.
'H. 8. 557-8071. 646·3081
Found: Blonde Cocker
Spaniel. female. Oso
Parkway. Laguna Hills
831·5877
Found: M Golden Rel Found: Fem . Dog. Beach
cross dog. v ie Jam-& McFadden. Med sz.
boree Rd. N B 545-9958. bmfwhl. 893·3791 __ _
540.1761 ... r'SOlds 5350
Found little while male
dog. Westminster /Spr·
ingdale. 893-8356. ----
Found: address book.
Sea View Ave, CdM .
673-5733.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
PRE LAW student needs
S25,000. Will do anything
Legal. Confidential
DVM. P.O Box 3242.
N. B. 921663.
COVER GIRL
•'OUTCALL *
953-0778 MC/VISA
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
Party D.cen. * 972-1345 *
MC & VISA Accepted
Free · 800-772-3545 oper
208
PHONE FUN
8AM-12PM M.C./VISA
(714) 636·6853
TrGYet 5450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1 way ticket. L.A. to
Boston. Cheap. March
17. 9am. 631-2425.
&nploytMnt & ,,..,.atlOft
•••••••••••••••••••••••
7005 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Flamenco & c lass ica l
guitar instruction, basic
or advanced. For appl &
info. 494-2884.
Reading taught children.
Christian teacher. re-
ason ab I e rat es .
certified. 548·983-0 aft
'6PM .
Jabs Wanted, 7075 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Found. Malamute . silver
& while female. Wiry
Terrier mix. tan female
Shepherd Lab. black
male. Pointer m ix .
black & white female
Colden Retri e ver ,
female. Hound mix,
black & t an fe male
Cocker. brown ma le
Newport Beach Animal
Sheller,644-3656 -llllll!!!llmlll!lll----• Back office Nurse LVN Gn.t CCMRpmy seeks foll time employ
Found: Male yellow LAB
dog. Vic Bushard/Ban·
ning. HB. 964·1940
Escorh ment. In N. B & C M
24Hrs. 641-0180 ~S.l706 _
Cash/Checks Motel manager, 5 yrs ex·
Found: 14 Kt. gold wal<.'h Am bp/MC fYi1a per. would like pos1l 1on
Nr Irvine Ave, NB. Call ---------•I in Or Cty 494 5294 or to identify. 646-7069 49'7·3967
Found: Small Yorkshire
Terrier type male dog.
Nr LSth. St. & Redlands.
548-2722
FOUND: Fem Siberian
•PACIFIC•
•ESCORTS•
549-8519 EXT. 7935
Just Opened 24hrs
NOW HIRING
Mature woman wants
position a:. l ive-in
housekeeper. refs.needs
transp. 548-7168 Jane
2nd Trust Deed for sale,
pays S302.50 mo. for 2
yrs. Discounted to yield
26.4~. Buy in at S20.570.
96o-1957 Bk r. Lost: Irish Setter M mix. Husky, vie or Canyon &
5 mos old, golden red Victoria. C M . 3 /7 .
w/whit.e on chest, very ~-7519
friendly, StOO REWARD FO_U_N_D_:_S_m-all Green
for return. 548-0294. Parrot vie Balboa
Help Wanted 7 t 00 ---------·1 · ..................... . *FOXY LADY•
OUTCALL ONLY
••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-4770 Island 673-0191
A...-.c111111nt1 5100
••••••••••••••••••••••• SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Indigo -Paper -
Folio-Impact -
TOPAJN Whal you don't know
won't hurt you -which
would explain why so
many kids today a re Im-
mune TO PAIN.
Want Ad Help 1 642-5678
Lost. Ma le 7mo. old
Colden Retriever Near
Newport Pi e r .
Red/blonde & c urley.
REWARD if found.
675-4358 or 675-2244.
Lost: SlOO Reward. Small
black & brown dog,
male. 84.2-2156.
GARAGE SALE ads in
the Daily Pilot bring
happy results. To place
your drawing card .
phone 642-5678 today!
Use '1wwer Ai service
when placing your ad ... a
Dally Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
... we take your messages
24 hours a day . . . you cal I
In at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
th ls $ervlce Is onlv S7 .so
week. For more Informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642-5678. ' \
FOUND: Brwn/Wht lge
Rabbit. vie. Mariners
School
642·105.5
Found . Germa n
S h ephe rd /Golden
Retriever mix. lOmo.
H.B. Brookhurst I
Adams. 968-1483
FOUND. Lab mix. F.
w /choker chain. Ed·
inger /Newland. 2·21.
53().1312
Found. White Cal. Mesa
Verde Dr. Country Club
Dr./Giesler. 751-0419.
Found: small black & tan
dog, looks like a mix. Vi c
C .M. area, nr S .C
Pl ua. 5.56-2888.
Found: Male 2 tone gray
Schnauzer male. No col·
lars. Nr Brookhurst &
Atlanta. Call 988-7287.
REWARD
Loat. While male
Samoyed. Sund ay .
3-8-81. Vicinity Lynn/
Pearce. Huntington
Harbour area. 844).6419.
964-:.175.
VISA MC * 972-1131 .
Exoffc Escorh
558-1946
24 Hr. Service Serving Or. Cty
* ••
KenOwflt
961 Paularino
Costa Mesa
You are the winner of
4 he tickets
(S32value). to
Circus Varqas
Mar. 17th. 8PM at
Montgomery Ward
4«i Fwy. at Bristol
Costa Mesa
Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to
claim your tickets.
***
A nAHTIS MASSAGE
SPA
Be pamper ed by 16
Beaut. Cirls . Open
10AM·4PM 7 da ys.
Phone~3433
\ •
AIDE/HOUSEl(EEPEI
11 :30-7 :30. Various
duties. Friday & Sat
nights. Newport Villa.
642-5861.
Alanns -Winning team.
Experienced personnel
required by Orange
County Security Con·
tracling Firm . Low
voltage & electrical ex-
perience necessary. Ex·
perienced only need app-
ly (714 )8J8.6310
ARCHITECTURAL
Senior & Inte rmediate
Draft.s persons
W. Rylee AIA, 640-2912
PEP BOYS
Manny, MM
and Jack
ON THE
MOVE AGAIN!!
EL TORO
GRAND
OPENING
IMMEDIATE
OPPORTUNITIES
•CASHIERS
New Accounts
Counselor
Experience Preferred
Also part. time pos1t1ons
a vaialable in our South
Coast Pla7.a oHu:r. Call
-
Kuthy Am burJ(l'\'
540-4006
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
Sa•iftc)s & Loon
695 To~'rl Cenl<'r ll r
Costa Mesa. Ca 92626
Equal Opportunity
Employer
*SALES BeauticiaD
•MECHANICS HAIR CUTIERS
•INSTALLERS MAKE-UP ARTIST
,.. and Part Time MASSAGE
aHalble E s tablished pru
HO SEWARE SALES
Apply an person· Crown
Hardware. 1024 I rvinf',
f West.cliff Plaza> NB
CASHIERS
UTUTEM
MARKl-:TS
For 2nd & 3rd Shirts
We promote lo manage
ment & superv1s1on from
Wllhm
WANT A CAREER"
Costa Mes a 111 Del Mar
f\31 9421
l.Ji.:una Rt•at h
494 9233
lluntington Rear h
962-9116
A• ress1ooals only fnr a uni· This is an exciting op q u e new s a I 0 n in i--111111!• ..... --1
portunity to join one of Newport R1>ach openinJ( :AL
the na tions leading March 16_ A rew...s>os i. Pos ava il ror A 'R
automotive a nd lire lions av:iilable fo_.ase clerk Exper desirable
specialis ts Excellent 67~:£!8. but not nee 10 ke" Hrs
pay and working cond1 The DAZZLERS Salon 8 to 5. Mon lhru Fn
lions Our be nefits i---------• Call Rose at 556-0540 p a c k a g e i n c I u d e s ---II rvme I
medical and life Ins .
paid ,·acations. pens ion
plan and more!
APPLY IH
fJERSOH AT
COSTA MESA
STORE
Thun-Fridoy °"'Y
I pn to 5fM" only!
2946 Bristol St.
Costa Mesa. Ca.
Equal Opportunity
Employer M F
NABERS CADI Ll_J1\'C
11-00 H.tlll<.11 lilll1I
l 1 ... 1.1 \l\c_ ..... 1 '>40 1>100
IOOt<KEEPER F /C
Pos. avail. w an Org
Co inves tment rarm
M us l be exper'd 1n
maintaining co mplete
set of books thru stale·
ments . A I R , A I P .
payroll taxes Salary &
benefits comm w ex-
per. Pis send resume &
salary histry to 11785,
Daily Pilot. P 0 Box
1560, Costa Mesa. Ca.
92626
BOOKKEEPER
CLERICAL
Home furnishings re·
tailer needs alert. person
ror general bkkpg , ~~~~~~!1'!1111_ clerical. expechting or·
ders. customer follow ·
up. Must be self starter.
Call Mr. Tice644·8860
Ct.F.Rl CAL matur ~
person for I person ofc
Other assorted duties. ruu or p/lime. 646-fl688
CLERICAL
Gen Ofc P time pos
for mature person In·
t e r esting w o rk n
pleasant ore on P.C.H ..
Npl Bch Exp. a must
Accurate typing, no
s hrthd 20 hr wk Hrs
Sun. Mon. Tues. Wed. 9
to IPM. Sal. 10:30 to
2:30PM. Call:646·7431
CPT 8000 Serretary
Newport Beach f.aw or
face. ask for Cindy fl a'
<714 ) 644·6516
DATA ENTRY OPER
Exp . I RM 3742
979 5AAO
Daytime bartender .
f('male ok. upply in
person Camino Mex
1t·an Restaurant. 20111
Hrookhurst. II H
DELIVERY PF:RSON
Gen ore work. Npl
Rr h No dependabl<'
car $3 SO hr to start .+
car allow Mon Fri. 9 5
851 1325 Joyce
Deliver LA· Times In
h o mes 1n Ne wpo rt
Beach. J·JOam to flam
S550 mo 548 11441 or
r.461413
Dental Assistant 1.
Chair side. RDA & X ra) I.
It c re14 4 1 1 day v. k • •
be-nefits. salary open
N R are a 642-6880
673-34-03 wkns & eves .
Dental
Cornputff SystMt
CUST SERVICE
REP
•
0
r • d
1t
Safeguard Healthcare .,
Systems. West Coast ·., O
111 computer b1lllnJ( •
syst em 1s seeking a -·
qualified person to work
m ou·r internal customer
service dept. Must ha V<'
experience m dental ad
m1n1s tration Good ra
verbal skills & the ab1h
ty to work with people
Please call Linda
DeVorkin 714 957-1121
or send res ume with of
s a I a r y h 1 s t o r y t o Jy
Sareguard Health Care be
Systems. 2283 Falrviev. ag
Rd. Costa Mesa. 92626. '.n·
DPS/MPS in· at
DEMTAL TECH
Frame person. 3·5 yrs ~
experience . C&B and 'h
plaster. 631·5349 (8·3J.
...
"'9pw.... 11oow.wc:llUI 11Htw.w..w 11ooitw.w..-M 1tH w.w.-. "'° Orange~astOAJL't\Ptl.OTfThufldaY,March12.teet _ __ _ • ······················· ··~'T ................... ~ ......................... 1-••l'··················· ·~•'T................... ~ --J~ -
DlllC109 GSNlllAt: front otc. J"'~Oll1"'L PAJlT·TIM! t -5"n ~IT ~WmlM 7100 .W,WllilH 11 ~W~ 7,tll ... W__, JIN P.C~ fl ~. f'.d unit.I 2-IP•. lfuat l11>t 6 Fulltlm~ w:k In 1enenl °"1ee for C.M'. F\all tlme Moa-Pri. l&uat -•• .. -••••• .. • ......... ••••••••••••• ••• ........ -....... t.t.•TM•-•• ..... _.
11 ti:p. req'd. &a·Ot.11 • p •II. l d • 1 I for beautltw Due Point Sub-contractor. MZ·•ST. be penooebte II weU s.i.. _, -~ -81~:.~~::.~~:~~· ,: SICllT AIY SHOE IALIB, Dal . .,..
Doi ,roomln1 position homemUw or alud.enl. Uerbor. H .50/br + PAM'·TlllE ~fw~ -:it-et· AMUCITIM4J CdM. 3 daya/wk. Good Pu......_. ftrm bu UP· port. f!•~b •fll' al t t 1 m.ant beeeftta. Pleaae apply dI fa1 the ~ .... c. eq ,.. SM.ISOH'lf. l.yJJlniraq msrn mtdl&l• openlns for nff, -v; • "° av · a Her nery 1 T\aea. lh.ru Sal Dana La " or men. Work lood 1pe.JUn1 If po• We ire eohrln1 • --· 1ecretary wlth 1ood ~.Tope--.••
boapllel. U7·7110 or GUAUS Point •arlna, 1001 from bocnt on new manahlp. No typlo1. t.rH~rm. new neut of Secrl'U ry Typ, It. compot1ltloo • typtni atatf Mr. llarowUa.
d74141. Fu.U •part time ~II OauDr.OanaPolnL telephone pro1um. Pbant uperic11ce pre-HtertaJnme.nt thal la Newport~acbLawOf• •kllll Who wUI atao bt ~
D ..... ......._. areu. Unlfonn• rut"Q d. Eam 14. •· ind more fer.-.d. Pull eom~any awfelint the naUon We fi<"t uk lor Cindy Ray rt1pon1lble for ad --------.---
Exp'd ltoateH/Book· Al• 21 or over, retired t---• • • per hour. Call Ml·llet. bentfill. Apply: Ptn· ant looklnl ror a iale• c7ti)M4.e5Le c09t"dlnatloa. Xlot. co. ,Statlallul typlac ad· k welcome. Ho aper. nee. 141111r 4rtieclde 4-tpm, o)'NVtt. 1tlO Placentia oriented peraoo who bot benenti • pJeeunt vtltWq, nwt L)'pe 15 .;-~~~:SP~t = Apply : Un•veraal .. , ..... ...,&. Part 1._8 Ave..,C.M. a dt1lre for above Secretary. 80wpm , worklni cond. Call wpm. a: .. S,.. t d7I
ParitlcCoutHwy EOE :.~JanSt Sn-vlSa tee. }'l2t San&aADa 1111 tvtNIO Income. You lrantrrlblng machine, BartluaR.~. 11lary n,ooo. CaU LoM
· _., ·• n • nna. YouaretMwinoerof c .. y--...._... rnuat be pereonable & intt~tJ.ng varied office SmJtb~
ElectrooksAtaembler lntenie•hn: 9·l2& 1-4. 4free....,a•a I -lllC9'11°"9~T cOftlldeot In your •blllly dutie1 Xlnt salary 11••,,.-•I
1 yr up ln electronic as-Mon-Fri. (13:ZValue), t.o c.....-.. ~~te S::i:;3~ to communicate with Soundcral'Um•n Audio fUT/ 8l8~~~J~~act~Na./:
1embly Incl solderlog, H...l-..A....-.-~-w~ .Clral V~t Adults with ou&.at.andlnt .., ' othen & have dependa· (71').sM-6193 ltlC9'!10MIST color code ' schematic ~ _._ M l7th IP , attradJve peraooalltles d)'Oamic Npt Bcb. com· ble transportation. Wo --Reapon.alb le, re.Ua'-1•
re .. lng. Od benehts, Appty It The Halrport ar. I •• to spend 15 bn per week m 'I. brobra1e omce. will train If neceasuy wurrm1 Ptl"IOb needed &o ,....a.
C M (7l4)S40-4271 '551 W. Coast Hwy NB MootaomeryWard coW11elln1 youth aces Profeulonal •P· Excell. fringe benefits. ••~-{Allm~** Ml • 1tockrm•rabpa1tw.,.
· ·area. · 678-SSUTOl\)I G !!Jt:. aMl !riJ
8
tol 10· 15. Ev en In a• ' pearaoce & mannerism Apply at: Teleprompter Medi.Buyer/FJ123,000 Sh•l'1> penon with front tlcal • wholaln. P IHH
•.,......,......IC ---'V"9 • """' Weekends Available. 17$ a must. Call . Laila, r "' rt n & h 90 SlOO/travel/FlSlS,900 omce appearance " gd. call 71'/Ul.0141 ffW ln· -'""'" •• .. Y IUDS•• Call 642>567J. ext 272 lO p e r w k , C a 1 I 833-2900 ° 1,ewpo ""11c ' 1 TeD/GrealGroupSl!.200 lypin1 akllla to act as terw.tto5. ASSIMILEtl Here's your chance to clalmyourtlckets. 2:00.5:~m. Mon thru W. 16th St.. Newport S90/'framLanlerS15K Receptionist " provide ---------
Sea level electronic as· make extra spending • • * Fri. 842·4321 ext. 343. Beach Lit Rtiftdera Aaency Secrellrlal aupPorl to STOii MAMA .. umbler needed !or • hn1 I rr w 'd money, Aak !Of Lori. ...__ 4020 Btrch Est '64 EOE our tee ca all . e "The Place,'' Fulilon
rap1 Jy expanding In· wortd111 only a rew days ICtwl AHcccd •t o,._. C00tt 1me•, '"""'~, SALES Clerk for retail Newport/833-8190/Free are a computer software Island, Newport iseaa.
temalional company In a week? Become a sub· F rr1~19U o.ai.. Piiot Jr VQU Uke r--.ple & are marine hardware store. co. located in the Santa Junior apparel ., ..... stable energy field. acriptJon salesperson for ... , ~ ,,..,.,. Ana/Irvine area. Offer-Excellent beoefU• I Qualified candidate thel>ally Piiot. Earn as KITCHEN Prep. help n>W BaySlreet Jd.onphones,lhlsiathe P /lime, exper nee. Secretary -Ing excel!. atarllnc salary. Experie~d.
musthave6mos.expr. much as S:S0.00 PER wanted.Exp.nee.Apply Coeta Mesa,Ca Job.for you! Atturate Call: Balboa Marine. &ec.S.C'y.l'/T s alary & bent Clls. Call (%l3)nl·l~ for
lnPCBassembly.Excet WEEK! Positions open In person only. IPM-Equa l Opport . typmgat45-S.Swpm&the 541)..9671,E.O.E.M/F/H 20-25hrs.perwk.lorone FuturegrowthPQtential. appt
working cond. & com· In Huntington Beach. 6PM. Sebutlan's West, Employer ability to handle pre· woman ( 3 man ) Must be a non·smoker.
peUUvebenefits otrered. Fountain Valley and 140Ave.Plco,SanClem. PART TIME Person ssure situations with SALES engineeringolc m Costa For immed. interview.~
For more inlo. contact Costa Mesa. Ir you are needed in Book pasteup. :~~~~rne=~~t~o. Full Ume pos. Do you Mesa. Excell. salary call Caryn Whalen at
Ray Gilman al Seientific oudlgoin1 g. enlhusiast1dic LEGALjRECEP"T Mon & Tues. No exp. (114) 831_7792 have an Interest or flda1r Please call : Mon. thru 714·540-6952CS .._.C
0,-illing lnternallonal. an at east 12 years o , N .8 . Bayfront Office. A 1 660 Pl ._. ............. 5 L-&L... for art! Interior e Fri.. a rt 4 30 p M. M , I" , 557-~l.E.0.E. C A L L exp . n o l r equired nee. PP Y 1 acen ........,., c'"""'r corating"Arts&crafts" 645-2842 . T hompson 2960S.Da1mlerAve.
T ODAY! ! ! ! ! 642-4321 548-2283 lia Ave., C.M. l'et"IONMf Agettcy If so, we are a unique Floatation Co. EOE Santa Ana, ca. mos
Ext. 211before6pm. Ask ---x REC En. 2 8 O 5 2 C a m I n o kind of sales oriented - -Equal Opp Emplyr forVicOwens. Legal Secretary. exp in r-• Capistrano store. Aaron Bros Art SECRETARY-TYPIST
crows.cretory
STUDENTS 70TMRS
P.tn.Jolts
MUST BE 11 OR OVER
CALL 10 AM TO l"PM
Sl,100 +. Must have 2·3
yrs. escrow exp. Typing
55wpm . Neat ap-
pearance Contact ·
Judy, ~. Coastal
Personnel Ag y., 2790
Harbor Bl.. CM. Never a
foe . EOE
e>r.g.Coast liligation,gd skills.H.B. Part time . Maj o r J~LagunaNiguel Mart , Hun tington 90 WPM
Daffyl'Hot Non·amoker.848-1400. Brokerage firm near NOFEE EEO Beach, 7470 Ed1ngt'f Temporary "Cr ash"
E q u 8 1 0 PP 0 r l 0 C. Airport Hrs : Ave., 847 4515. We offer ProJect requires power
Employer &..cJal S.Cretary I: 30-4PM Call M ilz1 a customer oriented po~ Typist Either days or
in5:"e~~rrv1~e·s _7 L 4-84!·24~2
_ __ Civil liligation/business 5-40-8121. RECEPTIONIST w /lots of variety in a fun eves, 5 6 hrs a day 20A2
HOMEMAKERS matters . Exce llent --------IPM-SrM & rreativeenv1ronmrnt Michelson. w212. Irvine
Beat inflation Would skills. Word processing Permanent F/T Recep. Phone answering and Art supplies. PH'tun· 752-0234
you work an extra t().20 ex pe rie n c e he IP f u I. lionist. moderate typing Lite clerical in Executive fr a mes • r r a m 1 n ~
hrs /wk for $60-SlOO'> Small busy Newport s peed with accuracy. Suite operation. Plaza furniture, pa1ntings.1---------•
FILECLERK·P /T 846-:n;sbef. lO/a rt 6 Center firm Con~enial CalJMargie559-5222. ExecuUveSuites P lease graphics & unique gift Secretary
Ins.ore. Train rating & --___ office Excellent com· l'BSOH FltlDA y apply Fri. or Sat. 2~2 items. We seek motivat Policy Typid
claims. 835-3437 M /F HOSTESS pensation 955·2411. Mr. Miehe.Ison "212, Irvine ed. creative sales peo Do you love to type? Nd
---------Lunches/Dinners. 18 Hunt. needed for busy sales pie. Retail exper. pref'd. someone w/gd. typing
yrs+ Apply in person -----ofc Typing, phone & fil. Recept. Mpt l ch Cd co benef1 ts & s kills Judy. 540·6055. FILE CLERK
Large insurance agency
has immediate opening
for fast. energetic file
c lerk. Paid company
benefits. Call: Linda at
e9-8161
LeBia rritz 414 No LUMCHCOOI< mg.s.s7-0482 _ _ Challenging last paced pluUled rareer ad,an Coastal Personnel Agy.
Newport Blvd NB MonthruFrl9to3.App. PHONEOperatorwanted position open in one of cementprogr am EOE 2790 llarbor RI. CM
92663 ly Cask and Cleaver for sm plumbing co. No Newport Beaches most _ Never a fee. F:OF.
- -b660twnDo9 anNdB4 wk2days. exp. nee. Mon Fri . prestigious real estate
Housecleaner Reliable 1 ve. . 752· 538 brokerage and develop· 111111111! .. --------i personneededtohelpin ---7 :30AM ·2 PM Non ment co.Weareseekmg Sales
res cleaning. 675·2839 MlcMAISf _:imkr. 540-22S3_ _ I a reliable congen1a I FineM-~sew5ueitlrsy
-PUNTS diplomatic person abl~ ~··
FRONT OFFICE -Housekeepers wa nted for tooling & prototype lo juggle busy. busy
FULL TIME
Medical Ser'y & Book·
keeper. Exp neressary.
San Clemente Write Ad
#823 C/O Daily Pilot PO
BOX 1560CM C'A 92626
Seacliff Motel. 1661 So work. Some production Need person to maintain phones. typing. 50 sales
Coast Hwy, Laguna work on vertical mill & indoor plants. Expr. not & administrative s taff
Beach. 494-4892 lathe Read blueprints. nee. must have good elficiently. comfortably ,
----own tools. E.O. E. driving record. F /time. & with a sense of humor
Men's Accessories
Cosm•tics
Matwe W omen's
Shop
Women's HOUSB<EEPER 3-D INSTRUMENTS 5-45-6252 __ __ Excellent typing skills a
Live in. Care for 3 yr old I~ Chemical Ln Pre-school Teacher want-must. Real estate & pre· Nice home. Corona del Huntington Beach v1·0 us reception ist & M R r 640..5629 ed, credentials or exp az:.. es. F rr. Call 640-8820. phone experience de·
Housekeeper Must have MAG CARD [ l Word sirable. Paid holidays
al least 1 yr ex per. to Processing Operator. rreKhoolTeac~r Major medical. pension
-keep4 bdrm house clean Exp only. Lepl sec'y Sat. only C.M area & profit sharing. Salary
Gardener/Helper needed for 5 adults Must pre trainee Non smoke r 642-0411 ° Pen · C a I I P a t
FULL TIM E Graveyard
Ans serv No exp nee
Call . 833-3333 EOF:
full time. ad 1"ob for right l · C l H 8 -- -Parkinson. 752 1920 ,., paremea s m an onese · PRESSPERSO N ex -
Accessories
C redit
fo'ull & part t1ml' open
angs i.lva1I in the abm"
Dcpts Wt> offer Lht-ue~t
benefits pro~ram (If <1nv
r etail t•o 1\ppf\ 111
person
J.C.PEHHEY :~onc~~I ~~~~1;t~'.~ d& Amwerican style. Launk _ ~-l4~ _ per'd. wanted for com-RENTAL AGENT
ry age $134 per wee ..... •IDS/U•R. mercial offset job shop. Busy Property manage-24 Fashion J~land 8·4pm lor app't. +private room & board ....._. r M & K Printing. San ment firm has immed. EOE M 1-· - -------T k d t th D rt Immediate hiring APP· · r I 11 l. I a e a o e epa Clem. 114.4924241 operung or u 1me n· EBiEIX[ oMcE ment of Employment, 1 Y An gie a l S an House Rental Agent
IOOl S GrandAve .San C le me nte Inn. 125 l'ROIATE Dutiestoinclude:heavy LileR~~:;>~·~~ried la Ana. Calif 9'l705 or Esplandian. Sa~Clem_ _ PARALEGAL persooal & telephone in ·
du t 1 es. f u 11 ti me call 714·558-4379 MAINTENANCE Person Certif)cated. 2-3yrs. ex· terviews. negotiation &
Pleasant ore For in --wanted. Day shift App· perience A-Z ability preperalion of rental Housekeeper Companion ly lll person only !PM-th-·",,. laves. Salary to agreements. m edium terview, ca II Bev. 9 to f Id I L' '""'6'' "' lPM, 752.1683 ore er Y person• ivr 6PM Sebastian's West. $1300 +benefits. typing (60wpm>. Credit
inor out 833-2009___ t40Ave Pico.SanClem PARALEGAL background. R E .
--PLAC~M ENT license & professional
Mamlenanre person. full AGENCY altitude pre l e rred
& p/l help wanted. Call 752·1334 Salary SU>OO + benefits.
HOUSEt<EEPER S
646-5604al\er5pm Hours M-F 9.5 Call
-Real Estate Leslie at 964-2S66
lmmed. openmj!s. full
time & part llm<' readt•r
ad repre5entat 1 \'I'' for
inside sales poi.1t1on ...
Gd comµa ny benefit.,
Apply m !K'rson l't·n
nysaver. Jftf,() Plflf·1•n11a
l\ve . CM Monda\
Friday, I lu 5
SECRETARY
I lealth('are mi: ml CC> m
lrvint-has !In 1mmed
111H•n1n~ for 1nrl1v to
perform secretarial
dut1e~ for 5 of our
Ml'<11 ral Dept s taff The
1<1eal ca ndidate will
wnrk well under pre·
ss ure. have the abilit v to
estabh1'h pr1t1rit1es. be
dependable & hav€' self
inil1athr ~horthand or
'peed" r1 t1n.: prrf'd
M l.'di<'al bkgmd or ex·
per h<'lpful Gd salary
& frinf?C' benefits pk~
For interview. conti.l l"l
Sharo n Rusin'>
714-641 1616 EOE M /F
SECRETARY
F /C BOOKKEEPER
Costa Mesa location
<;cHl<I w phones fo'ull
l1m1• Typm~. ~enrral
riffi<'c prnrc•d u res Co
tll'nt'fllS fi.1~ 2244
St'crrtaries
We will help you
find the right
position to fit
your skills.
most luxurious ex-
ecutive office suites.
Sec/Rec !or diversilied
prolessional people Co.
benefits. Good typing
s k i ll s . O utg oi ng
personality a must Call
731·1888
Security officer. P /1 ,
wkends for lrg apt. con·
plex in N B. S3 50/hr.
For info contact Jim
Lupis at 644· 1900
SEC'Y /JlECEn.
Sales ofl1cc for national
companu. Variety or
dul.Jes. Excellent com·
pany benefits . New of·
fice in Fountain Valley.
The Standard gisler Co
962·9361
F.qual Oppty Employer
Sfll. AVOM F /time
Earn S6+ an hour
Call 5-40-7041
Sell Cosmetics average
SSO day Will tram For
interview 831·8012
Se rvice Station
Managers. M IF. 3twks
paid training. gd loc a·
tions in Orange County
Salary + commissions Ot~er service income.
Small investment req
Automobile req. For de
t ails call Station
M a nagNs. Inc Dys
1714 1731 2215 ; eves
17141395-2136.
F. 0.E.
SNv1ce Station Allen
dant. F T. with ~p &
ref's. $256/wk to start.
644 7151.
SUPERVISOR -
Fiberglass. 3·11 shirt.
MacGregor Yacbta., l&Sl
Placentia, Costa Moa
Switchboard Operatbr .
p /lime, days, w1tft41.
Will train. 642-3013
Teacher·pre·school-klnd.
Part. full time. Irv, f\lb·
stilutes exp. 551-~
TEACHER-Pre Sc~ ai
Aides needed. HUllC
Bch. area. Call Marff)ln
847·5284
TIACHH
Preschool. Full lime.
Needs ECE. Costa .Mesa
area. 642-0411.
TEACHER AIDI
E C.E. units requires.
Costa Mesa. Garden
Grove areas. 642·0411.
TEACHERS ASSISTANT
Special classes for h•n·
dicapped adults. 2 yrs.
college exper. req 'd. Ex·
cell vacation .t In-
surance benefits. Wlldys
8:30 to 4PM. United
Cerebral Palsy Assoc.,
Santa Ana . ~5760
TUCHY
Elementary reading, ex·
p 'd. Garden Grove area.
971·5533
TEAC HER lnla n t
Development Program,
p /tl me. Member of
transdisciplinary team.
Special ed. imP«>f1ant.
Call : Jackie P opp .
!>46-5760
GENERAL OFFICE
Newport Reach Stock
Martlet Advisory Firm.
If you can type. han
die phones. do lite book·
keeping, & you want lo
learn ... about the '>tock
market & data l'nlry.
ca 11540-9237
We have an immediate
ope nin g f or 2
housekeepers. Full time
pos itions. IOPM·6A M
s hills. 1':Xl·ell. fnnJ.?e
benefits package Apply
m person at Advanced
Health Center . 1300
Bristol St North. Ste
11100. Newport Beach
E 0 .E. M/F
Mamcunst
Orange Co. finest sa lon
needs you with chenlele
Rive Gauche Salon 2300
S E Bris tol , NB.
SUCCESS O R _ ----
FAILURE IM '81 ? Restaurant
•SALES LADY•
Full & Part Time
SHOWOFF
22 Fashion Island
Please c all or
come by for an
interview. We need
iSECRETARIES
" RECEPTIONISTS
CLERKS
Service Station Allen-•-............. -• t.1ant. P tT. 4.1opm. 6 ftCtlilclXA
General Ofrt{·e Worker
Must type 40wpm
Costa Mesa 549 3942 HOUSEKEEPER
-FACE Full time. 5 day week. G&elERAL 0 hve-in or out. Refs req 'd F IT employment salary Call Answer Ad # 3.'i7.
is open. 891-5893 642-4:.>0. 24 hours
G&e OFC CLERK
Operations de pl Major
brokerage fi r m near
0 C Airport Hrs
6·2 PM C all J u<ly
Eckert 540.8121
G&eEAAL OFFICE
Laguna Beach Financial
Ser vice firm nee d s
p e r son with ad -
ministrative skills &
basic bookkeeping pre·
ferred. Would handle a
variety of duties. Typing
req . Good opply for
growth. Call for appl
494-1748
Ir you need extra money
and have 3·4 hrs. per
day. <'all 4-8pm
642·3169
U:JSUH .. 21
SECRETARY
Top quality opportunity
for so meone wi t h
personal lines e xper
Excellent salary &
benefits Local a rea.
!'114) 831· 7792
Helen Schaffer
Personnel Agency
2 8052 Camino
Capistrano
#:!ai Laguna Niguel
NO FEE EEO GENERAL OFFICE-Will
train. must be sharp.
good sense of humor•--------
help(ul. 646·9664. 871 B
W. 15th St .. N. B.
G94ER.AL OFFICE
Immediate opening in
our purchasing dept. for
an expr'd person with
xlnl typing skills & a
pleasing ph o n e
personality. Duties will
also include filing. order
taking and other general
o fllce work Xlnl
benefits & working con·
ditlom with a growing
company. Apply in
person al:
THE JOLLY ROGER
INC.
1700 Gillette Ave
Irvine
7141546-0331
a1wxc8M21
Fine jewelry store needs
reliable person ror
varidy of ofrlce duUes.
40 hour week . co.
benefits. So. Coast
Pla.u. Call: 540-9066
m nt.._.hyCWt ............
HoatjMotte11
Sa~SUn. Mon, Tue.
S:ICHLPM. Exp. pref'd.
Interior Designer
Exclus.ive 40.000 sq tt
home lumishings store
with design studio. car
rying the finest tradi·
tional lurniture lines
needs highly talented.
extremely motivated in·
lerior designer. Must
have min 6/yrs exp. de·
al with presUge clien·
tele, nr S.C. PLaza. $30K
+ gd benelits. All
replies held in strictest
conlid ence .. Send r e·
sume: Cl&ssiled ad #690,
Daily Pilol. P .O. Box
1560, Costa Me!a, 92626.
J....-M•ch•lc
Exp'd·Servlce Manager,
minimum require·
ments, to yrs. exp. must
be ractory trained. good
rers, salary $2000/ mo.
Juat Ja1uar• lnc.
(114)961·3288
JANrt'ORlAL
MBMOHEY7
P'ut ll'OWinl Org. Co.
Janitorial serv, needs
your help today I
Hutband ' wtte team
needed for early AM route. F.xp. pref'd., full
time. Call: Western
CoWJUet Maintenance.
631-o723
,,._.De* CIHil Tb_. IJtUe eds ~•II>'
.......... -"-~ NCRM"" • or II. I J o I n t b t ~· ....... --·· "'"" U.0.-ende ol ether' peo-
Pl•&M call tor •Pft. 145·7UI Mon· Fr ., •:•5PM <
pM In dllil area who a ...
ret •hr u1tr1 of
C1&11d8ed. C.U oar ad
tU..-llllG-SIJI,
\Have you considered FRY COOK. COUNTER
th e pitfalls of com & ~IST MGR pos1-
mercial & residential re· lions open in fa st food SALES
days week S4thr to Field Service Tech. lo
start_644_·71_S1_ service mini-computer
_ al eslllte" For example restaurant "Nr. Airport.
............. ICURIST 17"~ INT rates. long 6~1:112
540..8177. Newport Beach leading
J ewelers seekin~ full
11m e Employee well
versed m sa.les & office
procedures 5 day week
including Saturday. no
evenings. Call 673 9334
l"'tA" e~rows. farming for
Newport Beach Salon. listings. competition . i---------• Able to do acrylic nails. etc.! Restaurant
Will guarantee la rge r rotessioftal L.ct McDONALD'S
clientele + 707. lo 80~ Cor-atlon Now h.iring lull & part comm. Call soon. · r-· D G 6?3-41.86 673-8644 Has the answer for your lime ays. eves. real -----
SALES /Ord er Desk
M USl be Englis h &
Spanish :,peak 'g Marine
or auto exp helpful
f' ttime po!i Excell co
benefits Call Balboa
Marine, $49·9671 E.O E
M/F/H
-----__ -success in 1981. career opportunities .
MEDICAL Ofc.-Pa rt & 2.Leam to market low On·lhe-job training For
f /lime pos. for both front cost lots and acreage in more i nfo . . ca 11 :
& back ok . in Npt Bch So Calif. We have !Ort. 754·9M3. or inquire al ·
Excell. working cond's. INT. rates Earn SS-OK to 3141 Harbor Blvd. Costa
i · · s d StSOK. fi rst year year. Mesa n presUg.1ous area. en unlimited leads & more' 1"!!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!111-~l resume to 11789, Daily License required. 1-:
Pilot. P.O. Box 1660· For success in 1981. ask lET AIL SALES
EVEHIMGS Cos_ta_M_e_sa_._c_a_. 9_2626 _ for Mr Telles.
Bed & Bath speciality
shop expanding to Foun·
SALESPERSON. maturt>
for specialty shop Exp
helpful but oot nee Full
& p/time. Call 646-5388
for appl.
MEDICAL
RJCEPTIOMIST
Sm. clinic located in
Npt.. Bch. has an imtned.
opening. Ideal applicant
will possess a min. of l
yr. exper. Job includes
heavy phones. schedul-
ing of patients. typing &
filing. Knowledge of
Org. Co. area a plus. Ex·
cell. Cringe benefits pkg.
For interview contact :
Jane Foley. 114·975·0660.
EOEM/F
MGR TRAINEE
Learn Film Processing.
$1600/mo. guaranteed.
No ex per. nee. will train.
Call971-9201 (Lou l.
955-3402 & 831-8557
RECEPT /SECY lain Valley. Need ex p'd
Restaurant design firm, salesperson 5:3Q..9 :00PM
has immed. opening lor Mon-Fri. Some wknds. Sales
dependable s harp call Mr. And erson rrof.S.s~ple
person w/good typing 644-8860 ____ Only
s kills. Able lo handle Retail Sales Marketing Reps to sell
correspondence, filing. Women 's F /T retail. rod th · d adding machine. er · a p uct at is wante
rands. busy phones & days, exp. preferred. & needed by everyone
lronl oflice. Congenial xlnt benel ils Call Earning poten tial
small offi ce localed in 770. lSTI ask lor Larry· 140.~$.'iO.OOO
lrvtne industrial com--•Co. Training
plex. Xlnt medicalfden· RETAIL MAHAGER •High Income
lal package. Orange Apropo, a women 's con· •Qualified Leads
County Restaurant temporary European UqufdyM &tercjy
Services. 2601 Daimler speciality shop is seek · Systems
S t . Sa nt a An a . ing a selling mgr. Exp'd. Al· 754-~. S-45·6793
714-641·5700. in fashion & with top re· _
lerences lor Org. Co. SALESTRAINEES&
RECEl'TIOHIST location. Salary open. DELIVERY DRIVERS
Ne wport Advertisin g full benefits. Ca ll · Full or pr/time. excell
Agency needs full time 714-838-62162 oppty. for colle~e stu
recept/sec'y. Answer RHl l·7 dents & moonlighters
phones, general ollice cu•ltGE ... URSE Eas ily earn SUHI5/hr duUes, 65wpm typing ac· nA " Call: Jack al 951·2642
curate. Full medical & F /Pt.ime 80 bed ECF, btwn l-4PM
lVICKI HESTONI
& Associates
<S pec1alizjng 1n tern·
porary Clerical Person
nel)
540.0400
18001 Skyp11rk Rlvd
Smte235 Irvine
Sewing Machin9
Opetator
Costa Mesa loc. Canvas
& uphol. produrts .
Perm. F /t i me pos
avail. Exp pref'd Co.
benefits. 645·2244
Have you read today's
Classified Ads? If not.
you're missi.ag the best
bargains in town' -----·
•••••• • Daily Pilni • • : Editor's :
• Secretary •
•. A l'llllllengmg opportumly 1s being offered ••
b) the Dally Pilot Cor someone with the e intelligence. wit and slnlls required lo be •
•
secretary lo the editor It's an interesting •
pos1t1on requiring the tools of the trade
• 80 wpm dictation . 70 wpm typing, •
• d1ctaphone -and the ability to shift e
mental gears on short notice. The benefits e are generous. the pay reasonable. •
• Applications being accepted only lhrough e
appointment by calling 642-~1. ext.
• 277 •
• Camera • • • • Operator •
•• Experienced al least S years. Must be •.
able to use newspaper camera and
• platemakinl! systems. Excellent wages •
• and benelils. Apply in person wtresume •
NEEDLEWORK KITS
Production line. Min.
exp. req'd. Familiarity
with embroidery .
fabrics, threads helpful.
FT /PT. Tustin. 730-0142.
Night clerk, for liquor
swre, mature adult. Ap·
ply ln person. 1011 El
Camino Dr, CM.
dental benellts . w e ll staffed, good
(714)~ salary. Mesa Verde Con-
valescent Hospital, 661
• to Orange Coast Daily Piiot •
scnY JRcn . • Trainee •
Ute typing and record e For Dlatrlct M__,.. • RECfPT./SEC'Y Center St., Costa Mesa
Newpo rt Center. 548-5585
Phonet, accurate lyp.
iog. Salary lO $6/hr de· RN 11-7 Charge nurse-80 M...,., Yardllt• pending on quallfic•· bed ECF. Full & part
lo do deliveries and help Uoos. Jack Armstrong time, gd. salary. Mesa
w /s tockl ng. F /llme or Norm Jacob100 , Verde Conv. Hospt., 661
wkdys. Apply In person 759-9038. Center St .• CM 548-5585 Tues lhru Fri. Ask for ----------1
Jerry. Lloyd's Nursery llC.-T.JTYl'IST Route drivers wanted for
fr Landscape Co. 2038 CPA firm ln PrHltalous deliveries of new snack
Newport BI , C M . Newport Beach location food products to local
648-7441 looltln1 for briCht In· 1upermarket1. Some
dMduaJ to fill front of. exp. 1d driving record.
Nurttna nee poslUon_. Phones, 55 Perm. poa1lloft848-ll00.
keeping requ1red for sail • • making business in This highly successtul local newspaper
Newport Beach. Starl e hos an opening for a trainee in the •
$700 mo. Call 631·4660, • circulation department. Basic skills will • 646-S806 entail supervision or 10 to 14 year old boy
• and gir.I home delivery carriers. Areas of •
SECRETARY e supervision will be delivery, collecllons e
For aircraft mainl. dept. a nd sale!!. Selected applicants will receive •
Gd. with figures. lite • r egul arly scheduled raises, bonus
typing. previous exp. e opportunities and many Cringe beneri\a •
with auto or a_ircrall re· • such as company paid dental and health •
pair work orders 'parts plan, group lite Insurance, vacatlon and
l.VN. J.11. Meda Ii tl'eat· wpm . Salary r an1e
meotl. Good worklnl ttS0-$1050. 155·360
c ond It I 0 ft I . New ~•:3065:30.
1radu1te acceptable. --uc------...--ST--i
Inventory d eal red .• sick leave. Company vehicle ls ru.mllbed •
p A Rs ON S ' A I R • e durlDg Working hours. Appllcan&.a m\.llt be •
551-1900 • o er 18, have a 1ood drivln1 record and • be neat appearln1. Hours are 1enerall,y
SaUbott maintenance & SICllTAlY e Monda,y thru Friday. Some overtlmt e
clunlo1. Newport Light b oollkeepln1 .• available. If you are qualified and •
Ma• Verde Convalea· .-''""' cart Hoapltai, Mt Center Exdt.ln1 poaltlon ln our
St., Coat. M ea a . dulp atudtol Buay
Mt-51185 phon ... TYPING at · rlLJNO. Nur John
PACIACfRS
IUO/br to at.art. Merit
r-alaes. 1,55'7 Monrovia
Ave,.N.8.
Wa,yneAlrport. W.1801.
llC9'f./TfPtST
self .. terter. Small or. nee. -.Olmo. '7J.0744.
can to.5171 Clautned Adi &U-51"11
Beed\, P/f t.nd wkeods. Plumbing ktl\owledae lnterealed In learnln1 the elttWat1on
Min. llnowled1e of helprut. Fullllme. e bualneN contact Don Wllllama or ICtn •
Hllboa&.a mecb. Is el~ _ ..... _____ ~--i e Codd•rd. M2~l. • ' •
lftttml. Call 145-7100. • •
SD;RETARYPtr • • ;n·~ SAl..J!s.Computer Life fMurance 11enc1 e D •
Telmwtletlnl aalu n p f\8ett\. I m•ture, U • • • -W af • Deeded for pro.pectln1 'perlenced ••~retary. .,,.,., • •
tn u.. micro• mlnJCOM• Typlq, 1hortll1nd ff· •. iEqual Op~~~.~· ~~'-'yer ,. pdte' matt ... Tra.lftlnl quired. P tr t-1. Salary rv ~ .....-.
::.;:~~~.~08ut + m:f'uratew/u~r. ········~·······-··-
.........
systems . Mus t have
min. 2 yrs. ex per. in field
service or system test
tech. For more info ..
contact: Noel at 557-8640
Telephone Sales
BE A WINNER!!
$5.50 i.o.ty HMry
Daily pay available.
S.WOto SlOOOcommisslon
weekly. Call Dewey,
or Chuck. 714-498-2953
TB.LB
Your cashiering exp. or
6mos. in typing ol only
20-25wpm could open the
door lO the interesUn1
world of banking. In-
terested applicants con-
tact John Laun at
675-4500
L.A. FID SAVl.-S
M e w port I ra•clt
EOE/F
TH ERA PIST-l nfant
Developmt. Program ,
P /lime. Member of
traNdisciplinary team.
NDT & leeding bkgmd.
import.ant. Call: Jackie
Popp.~5760
TOPLISS MOOas
$75 DAY, PAJO DAILY.
No exp. nee. 8218·25U
•'RAIMH•
Printin1 Ii packacln1.
Starts at 13.50. Gd op..
portun lty ror cood
worker. 979-7680.
TRAVEL AGENT
Lookin1 for a chan1e ol
pace? Exper vacation
agn la needed ror •
lar1e multi-branch
agency ln lrvtne. xlnt
Hlary Is beneftla, oppor
for advancement, ca ll
Tommlem.aM
TRAVEL AGENt',
motivated new •I ·
1re11lve comm'I apn-
cy, Irvine. ll1n 2 yn h ·
pr . bet WOl'tinl coedl-
liona. Call TU/l'tl-0100
TIAV'&AMMT'
Immediate openlnl tw
quallfled •ltnt. Sx-
eelleot opportun It 1.
Al,,...--.Ml-4001.
Ty pla t., 1 0Wp11l ,
lraaaatllbtt a aclllae,
.......... uted ..
hUu. ltnt aafar~. ~A.~ (tt4.... .
-=-~..;;~~ Call JUL trr.ma.
'
l
-•.
I
........ y~ 1041 '8• • .. ............................................................... , ..
I IUY AIPUAMCB I•• u t l f a I I m o . Twfo bed • m1t\rff1 hrt U.. J.l 4a1I Ptr lAi 117 .. lD llmmute. Needs &ovln1 Llkt ...... C4wkl old): w. v.-NI.let. Ap-at aa ft ........,., United lilome. <>wiM_r au.talc. 11..t ..U d9e to retoea· 2 ~ Di• a.so cu .• * ll: ... Pi.ac.Ua, uprlcbt. 11lot cond. •11111 tJoa.tlO.s.MNJ. l.7Sctt . ff••• ap. aalt or trade U' ---------c..11.. ..,,~ ~ --... ...-.... --1, prallal.I. •.ooo. Will '18 "J:f: llotorhome, ,.._. ,..., .. ,~, .-r-to........, ...._e •m• • Antique wblte 4 poe\er Sac C1ll for loto. cocn root air, ll500
Apt aa Lad1 lteomort d 01 . "er 1 10"1 a I · canopy bed, loci 1natt. • 511-TrN or best offer. u1.-. ~ wuher fl d(yer, lJOV. Ml·llilev•. •P'iftlll .•. 1'7Mm. or Uf.ml.
'
......... _ . Diamond pierced ear· Stat JV.ts w -. -· • 1114 Preetoiood llme puppies ~al cUnln, tablt <Trad1· r ln11, .50 eta. A ppr, , ________ ,T,....,.. T.....e t 170 --------
t :t JPN Ref'a clean wort 1oocUIO ~/Chow rnllt Uonl), 11.Jr bl1b bac\: 11200. Will sell h'75. i.._--------•1 •••••••••••••••••••••• • -GMC 1 .. _ Pl Dicta SectyS • SUIO. Retnt Ft, clean ~7-.w chain •· KiDI bdnn sam& ---------4'" tll24 Arlltroc~ Ulte new ;•keolf~'"' ckup,
. r .. -~ illnt•. P'nr, uert1bt, ..... 1010 ·:r-.. :...~rdd. nit~ -~-ct-.-d-.-.m-on_d_r_ln-,-.' M= IOIJ SACRIFICE 15.000.(~-•• ). 548-9897 u.Rf. s cle•. 1'ortta toOd 9100. ....................... • my-,... •• r. ~···· --~ w~1 to rr ~u~ :o:sh•~s cl~~r -~~~· * * 1 IU-Y * * !!o.~~O:J~~r~ves =· !!1~,:·~=~!: ~~;;;:;;;:;:;;::: 73 IAYUMH 1955 Plltrtm. l2X55'. im· '!~to~~·::hor.i~r·y,n:S~ ~r9 tH ':!:.po~:~:: •. clean, wotu I~ S'15'. Good Uled Pumiture • K toi Sa Witerbed . 91.25.P.P. (2UM31~5115 with ca1e. l!:xceltent 27ft.twll UO mac.~=s 1uto, m•1s $1995
ent.t 1llow1 you 548-85U, 541-4415. A~ancet-OR I wtll tell Heeter Pedeetal Heevy· Women's free.form wed· conclttJon, $100. $75-8052 YOlYO' M 547-2869 Ive m.a1·call
... ~,1•nextblHty. Sein Retriserator, Top 0M.~r5YfUCTIO .... dutytopollbellnematt. dl.naaet,neverused,lo· _a_fte_. _re_P_M_. _____ 1 C.W.......,IHt T.....,.,uttlty tllO _e_v_es__,, _____ _
la1ll arevalu1ble. of•L.-Une 17 cuf\ Xlnt ••-"" " Oak bdbrd S sets vestment quality Iba e I t I It ..tT ....... a.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '-"R'"..,CHEROGT On Une tnvltea you to ~ .. • ~ GE Po. rt . 64U616, 133-9621 aheet1/plllowcaaes &t dlamonda, .70 ct. + two n a e ec r c 1u ar. • ..-., MotorcycleTreller •• "'" join our wtnnlnt team 1 .. ""'~· _. . . a 05 Prol. model with Tree of ..... I W..y 3. ral.11 lood cond. SMC> Air. pa, pb, cruise cont.
Call ror appointment ble Dl1bwasher •uo. llUYRllHfTUll vel vet patchwork 'is-tC:' at.ones, appral1. Llfeaolnfuptotheneck bftw.$15,000 Dettoff540-t'1S2 tilt whl, am /fm stereo,
Nevtr a fee · Sean Room Air cond. Les 1157.8133 bed1pread $200/080 · l.1200. &40-2440. Wood1raln body with C.-671-J6tl xlot cond. Call Jay.
557 .. n ftJlt $50. 545-9223. 55H50ll M arquiae Diamond In· bard shell case. s:soo. l\'1•11 Awto Ser-flee,,...,. 640-45'79, 644-1988
,.U'N R "-' New stereo cabinets, roll Custom cou.ntry llv. rm, veator Grade 1 .40 5'8-6M8 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I I•-_....;.,a_ t .. 00 • 11 I bed emterator. Fri1idaire. top ber cabin ets for li ---------r: --.ces--. .. 79 oyota one . auto.
cn•Lfin:_ 5'1-lff92t.:1B.Wblte : sioo. vans, bookshelves, new xlnt cond. saoo firm. cbaradts. So 'tatre l&KG YAMAHA TIUM'n LIVE "'board boat In ••••••••••••••••••••••• alr,$4150. .. b .... -aft. • an appraised SIOK 1.IU\ •~•.31.. ~ -... .. 11u.. .. ..,,.. wo.dys 30 ltn 1u 1tove .,_ . ._., ·"· will sell S8K (7 l4 ) llilV -..., Llve·aboard 11lp. 40' ...._. ,,..,,...._., .. ~7z~~~s. o,..oodE. u.priah. t freezer, ad :::::~:v:~~:,:s~I~ Twinbedlw/C!Omertable 549-l:M3Ken 5 pc. Onam set, xint for ~:.-NB~~Y ... !? move Dahwt % _'77_G_M_C-..,-ton--P-.U-.-ps-. • • --..,,..._., ... tl.50 le lamp. Includes covers M -" 1071 student SZSOOBO. _._.. pb, lo mileage, xlnt Hew~rt leecll 548-0010. &PM. le bolsters lo ltlnt cond. oc-•ry 557..a.393 motor con d . SS 8 O o I 0 B 0 . ---------1 $300 (7!4)875.1724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------'11 Penn Yan 33' custom 492.~ .
. 0 .1!:. GE refrtf/freezer, 21 cu Dinette Set Wbt 42 " AlrCompressorService Offlct,_,.a• & Sportfbber. full elec-+other,.... ---------
tt, lcemaker, 9 mo old, ropholund wwi/2lealvesh + 4sboolk Country French King l hp port. comp, $315 1.-p 111nt 1015 trcoica, full fishln1pkg.1---7_6_1-_5_1_3_7 ___ 1 '70 Ford 1 ton. ate. radio.
Wfltw/W ....... •
Apply btwn 9AM .tr
UPll. Charlie's Chill.
3001 Redhill, Bid&. u.
St.. 12218. CM. 9262111
Uke new, warr, •~so. u s ve c rs l Headboard (wood). New Tbisweek. S40-4286 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Twindleselorturbogas. heater. util bed with ... 6711 ......,. C U f bo t b · Porsche 914 western style SS2·1717 aft. 6 ..... ,..., S400, sacrifice S195. MlsC41 ..... -1010 C 0 , I E R a or a s ow pnce. I u m b e r r a c k 759-1685 -(213)582·2859 ma& wheels. SZO ea 11000/0BO. 645-7325.
FREEZER. 15 .3 cu ft Couch & loveseat. SlOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• $I 00/010 548-9744. 548-&446
bo ... 4 to b' t . 6' portable spa, pwr pack. , 8 p y frotUess Sears Coldspol. ..... s rage ca me s. Fnday Only·d~n comer deliver, set up 12200. 559-5978 l e n n a n Vmt1 9570 1285,759-1685 S20ea.842-5304 1roup, 1100. 6 sofa. $50. 631-6519 645-?2&5 Sportftsbers & Cruisers . CHEAP!! ••••o•••••••••••••••••
~tresses/Walter. P IT Maytag Washer/Gas New Beauty Rest dble
day. over 18, will train. Dryer 7mos old cost S900 Spring & Mattress WO.
Sln1le bed & desk. S75. ---·------2 rilinf cabinets. S80 ea. all inboard, no out-drive Slightly used turbo kit V~ Rahd
545·7645. * * • 30 new 8' fluorescent problenu. gas or diesel. '7C). i40atsun z cars u--...1 c-•.•.
Shiraz. 548-7948. sellror 1700645.1679 Kenmore hvy duty 1as dryer S75. S48·2654 2 sofas. coffee table &
sofa ba c k t ab l e,
purchased from Fari
Furniture. 7 mos. ago.
Value 12800. Asking
$1500. Hendredon king
bdrm set, triple dresser,
2 night stands , head-
board. S2300new. Asking
S7SO. Misc leather chair,
$175, plus other items.
Call Dean 675-6000
Joe ,.......y bulbs, $3ea. 842·5304 20', 22', 23'. 24', 26'. 28'. 768-5837 --• 30', 33'. Custom for your ---------'81 GMC llalty Van
1113 Valley Circle 2 desks, 30"x60" w/40" specs.CaUcz13>592.2859. Wanted: '68 or later 7.000 miles, power win-
WAITRESS/CASHIER, Old Perfect Cond. Gas
LINE TENDERS. Sr. Stove Charming s150 TV & Co mbinatio n
George 's . 2810 So. Used Refrigerato~ sso. Record Player S2SO.
Br Is to l. SA A pp 1 y 4115·2487 Ref r I g e r at or S1 2 5 .
Costa Mesa return. 2 exec chairs. Squareback VW body, dows, Ult wheel. cruise
You are the winner of 64C).323()or640-9900 loah. Sall 9060 stk, no41 I's. 751·4524 control, air, 3 seats. and
4 tr... lfclleh 1----------I •••••••••••••••••••••• • 1---------more
($32 value), lo Pl..os & OrcJ-• 1090 Erickson 32'. '75 loaded, S Chev Mags, 2 Goodyear
2 Spm ---------l Freezer $50. Cash only, · · -llcyct.s 1020 all week . 200 K ings
Clrcul v_.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bristol cond. Offer. R.E . 9·Rl.S jeep tires. wheels.
Mar.17th,8PM at Console Wurlitzer piano, or terms 968 -7903 B/0964·6917
Mont1omery Ward excellent condition $950. 968-0872 •
4a> Fwy. at Bristol 631·3474 "' . ..£.... for 5...1.. Costa Mesa ----------114' HOBIE, good cond, no :'.=. ..... :=: ••••••••• W a r m L o v I n g ••••••••••••••••••••••• Place. N.B.
Grandmom to sit for 3yr 26" men's 10-spd, xlnt ---------
old le 6mo old Ref cond.S80. Beautiful Liv. Rm set
642-38151 895-2174 S400. Din. Rm S600. ------1 Mahogany bdrm set
Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to 51" Undeman studio UP· sail. $.'500. Days 639-4912;
claim your tickets. right, all ivory keys, eves644-6148. ~ l Schwinn mini.cruiser S700. Cash only. 200
••••••••••••••••••••••• S85. l girl's bike. like nu Kings Pl. N.B. Ceramic table lamp blue * * *
.......... 1005 MS. 8411-8827 grey 42in high w /shade I John Wayne Tennis Club
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1..n.a.... M.....a...-'al110•5 Couch Sl.25 •. brass lamps 714-5.36-9941 I ram . memb e r s hi P . ~ ~ "" S3S ea. chairs pr 2 end --. * * * ·~··••••••••••••••:•••• tables, coffee tabie. Sl7S G~ SaM 8055 SllOO. incl. transfer.
S. Hetwy 6 folding d~r. S40 8 lad-. Singer sewing machine ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-1549
741 ~ain St reet ::Is:'· 30 ladder. SSO SllS. 549-3984 Children's clothing Sz. _N_w_pt_B_c_h_T_e_n_n-ls-C-lu-b
Huntington ~each nu born . 8yrs Bytgrl fam. membership avail,
YouaretheWU1nerof REDWOOD 2•6•1 12' cstm made couch, 11' A!I wk, Cash only. 200 SSOO. Call Ans we rAd
4 free tick.ts S for S. Xlnl. decking. sofa table inlaid Ta pa Kmgs Pl. NB #4Sl, 642_4300. 24 hrs
perm blk finish w /bench
S800. Call aft 5pm or
before noon 963-2865
Hammond Organ, Model
M·lazA Just like new.
Xint tone & response.
$1300 1714 ) 675-1724
Must Sacrifice Kimball
Organ SllOO/OBO
661-&455dys 631·8052evs <S32valuel, to 14,000' in from mill. shell. II' cstm made cof· DO·IT-YOURSELFER 'S ----------1
Clrcm y_.... SS</~. 645-9137 ext. #127 feetable. must see to ap· DELIGHT ' Sacrifice: New fish tank. fully as· SportMgGoodt 1094
Mar. 17th. 8PM al anytime preciate. 76().8239 , 1 sembled, S50 or best of· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Montgomery Ward contractor s s u rp us fer. Call 642-3187 .
18' Catalina Cat. New
main sail, furling jib.
Marina del Rey loc. !st
$800 takes. (213)676-4340
eves /wk' ends.
'66 Coronado 2S. Wesco.
loaded incl. spinnaker.
full boat cover . leak
grate. knoll meter .
VHF, immac, S'9000. 1112
HP Honda w /tank. SSOO.
Auto pilot, $350. 300' 'h ..
anchor line. SSS. 494-5608
4Q) Fwy. at Bristol Custom window security Red upholstered chair in sale. Tools. materials, __________ 1 Brand new Chrysler
Costa Mesa grills from lbdrm home good condition S4S. Hid· equip . house goods, all REDWOOD 2•6'a SOliP outboard motor, w ANTED : u p t 0
Call 642-5678. ext. 272 to incl entry way & 2 slid· a · bed SSS · Ea r I Y quality at mus t sell S for S. Xint. decking, stilJ in box. 1 yr wmty. 36'sailboat /slip. I will
claim your tickets. Ing doors. Submit offer American console radio prices. Sat/Sun. 8·4pm. 14 .000' in from mi II. ~~.~ asking S7SO. assume your loan on late * * * or trade. 642.0862. S45. 2 lamps tables & Com er E. 15th & Old 55</ft. 645-9137 ext. ltl27 mdl boat. Wkdys 8·S,
IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
The price of it ems
advertised by veh icle
dealers m the vehicle
classified advertising
columns does not in
elude any applicable
taxes, license. transfer
re es. finance charges.
fees for air pollution con
trol device certifications
or dealer documentary
preparation charges un-
less otherwise specified
by the advertiser
952 •••••••••••••••••••••••
(3267·AI
$10,500
'61 Corva1r Van. runs
good, needs paint. Sl200
494.0648
Custom Ford Van Xlnt.
cond Many extras
Run s o n regular
7SJ.4268
'75 Ford Econoline 250.
s elr-contained. lo m i.
new tires. bubble top. pp
$4 ,999. 551·4858
matching coffee tables Newport Blvd. Don 'l anytime Trampoline, 6x12 bed, Jerry: 834·~
Amer. Oak Rolltop Des k CmMral & all for S75. 631-3474 miss it ! ---------I f s-.a__. 8030 -----Newcomb Lo o m . s pr ngs, r ame, new loots, Sii-/ '41 Chev, runs great, Alltos Wanted 9590
Scurve, ex cond. S2SOO ...,..,........ A u· Se . M h' RUMMAGE SALE 3/14 W S895. now S375. 645·8063 .... -.a.-r-9070 S2800 or trade Days •••••••••••••••••••••••
PP546-8209, 962·0049 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n que wmg ac ine . eavers Delight. all .,_,.. 5812003; eves 855·8984 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
---------Vivitar Series I, 70.210 solid mahogany S135 8 · 30AM . Mesa Verde parts incl. $200. 631·0295. TV, Raclo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1930 Chippendale dining MM lens, Macro 1175. 642-4315. 979·2600 Methodist Church 1701 S56-3TI8. HIA, St.reo 8091 Newport Beach mooring
room set. Table & 6 957.0989 BakerSt.CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/36'sloop,S2S.OOO.
;-;6 F ord W oodie . for lop used cars·
restored. Sl3.000 ALSO foreign, domestics or classics If your car is '29ModeJATownSedan. extra clean . see us
4 dr. restored Ideal for FIRST' chairs. Server. china ---------Medit. Bdrm set , 6 pcs ---------Spring Cleanjng at our Still new 19" color TV set, 675-8513 633-<>489 YASHICA 35mm SLR. (no bed) $200 Tradi 3FAMILYSALE house: 9x12 Br/biege lid i
----------• w t'IJJ. 50, 135mm Jens tional Dining Rm set. 6 Antiques . car ousal wool rug S75. Hexcel so state,wth cabinet. ··~o"'KS"'Lir. cha1·rs, 2 leaves, solid h b II Bl 1· 85 k' S3channels.remotecon· _ "" """' s21 9 Dys Virg E . o rse , gum a ue1te 1 s i's S75. t 1 id s727 wood.beaut flnish ~.,co. machines . ..._nches. '78 S cott boots 9'L D ro . pa new. Table, Chairs . ·•Cup-549-3666 -" .,.... ~ make offer 842·0642 call boards, Side Boards, Corner Bdrm group VW van, Dodge wgn. 2 S85 (package both for anytime.
Washstands. Dressers & D09t 8040 Sl.SO. 545-9223 cash registers. racquet $145 !)
Iota of Misc. Open Mon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------s tringer. s k i equip. 675-0421 HARDLY USED Mar·
Sat. Sunday by appt. KEESHOND Pups. AKC. 2 Couches. 2 dressers, I much more. Windward ----------• rantz Stereo & spkrs
FREELANDS. 864 w Champ sire. M/F Pet & bar with stools. SSOO PP Ln & Irvine Blvd. N.B. Underwood typewriter $300. Beaut. 25" color
19thSt. s how . P v t pl y 840.5874 Fri, Sat. & Sun 9.s . S20. Eleetric hot curler console TV $200. 641-2998
642-7331 645-6434 213/697·1345 aft 6 pm 642·9424 set in case, like new SIO.
Slips available, Newport
Beach, 2S' to 57' Avail
s tudent SI 0 ,000
675·6161
now. 642·4&44 ---------1 '58 Chevy Impala. 8 cyl.
•TRADE•
Use of boat for slip. We
have 26' sailboat. need
Newport slip. Will teach
sailing also. Ross or lin·
da. 1·535-1161.
blk . 2 d r H urr y
S3200/best ofr 833-0340
ALMOST NEW contem •....a-8010 AAA HOME DOG I f & I Hibachi $2 .50. Large .,.,..... ... n porary sty e so a ove Sat 9-3. Furniture, misc I ts S2 CJ\ 631 3474 • •• TRAINING t ~ .. Cl\ Be t P an ·""ea. ·
23" color Hitachi, super picture. stand incl Sl9S. WANTED Boat with slip PP.~0166 in Newport Beach.
Mustang '65 Conv p/s
disc brks. pwr top, auto.
pony mtr 289 4· V eng.
s traight body , xlnl
mech. wire whl cvrs,
tonneau. bool. Ong pvt
ply (714 )968·2042 • ••••••••••••••••••• sea .*"""'· au · pecan h shld goods 6662
HARBOR AREA Complete IN HOME cof. tbl set w/glass in· Gatehill Circle Seacliff WANTED· Stoller &
APPUANCESERVICE Training, Obedien · lay. Dbl bookcase wall H . B 1 c '1 a y & high~hair also misc
We buy used appliances ce/Problem Solving. unit. Smoke glass dining Goldenwesll baby items. 751·8967
··we sell recond. guar. protection. S39·761S. set S350. Can help to -lo•• 1 -.._1 appliances. 549·3077 move. 641-2998 Men's clothing. 2 reg. size 1111_,
Must sell my Chow.Chow bed sets. misc items. Send someone you love a
loots & MariM
( .. ,..,..... •••••••••••••••••••••••
9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waahen, Dryers : Refri1, puppy. very friendly. Wicker Rattan Furniture s l 9 6 3666 s bouquet of 30 multi ,:ol·
Whirlpool, Kenmore, Makeofr. S51·9499eves BIG DIS COUN TS Ma ·1·1 aim-, pm. CC 1 · ored balloons Green for * * *
Maytag, Recond , re· 838-7239. 11765 Edinger a , rvine. o ony St. Pat'sDay&yourown Edltho.llen
Springer Spaniel puppies. ( 1 b' ... w. Harbor) section >· Person a I m es s a g e . finished, guaranteed! "' 11(5 St. James Rd. IL55 delivered750-3103 AKC C h ampion ---------!Gar age Sale. 3250\'J Perfect for every oc NewportBeach
bloodline.1150.545·8527. Broad St, N.B. Sat & casion . We deliver Youarethewlnnerof
Sun, daylight hours. 673-4419 4 free ffc•m
ESTATE SALE POOL TABLE 100" X 56" <S32value>. to
S300 incl. 4 cues. over· Cl--V~ Sat/Sun 9-3. GE washer ·-SIOO. Old Oak S-curve head Ute etc. 646-4025 Mar. 17th, 8P at
roll top 11200. Old parlor _e_v_es _______ -.f Montgomery Ward
751·8967
30' Dock. Powerboat or 1973 Volvo Sedan. good
Taberncale Mast No eng, body needs some
overnighters. $160/mo. repair. SllOO. 548-7249
_1_s_2._2584_._67_~_1_26_1___ R•creatlOftal
2boalslips for rent. Veflic!H 9530
30' &48'. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Joan: 841).4.337 '78 Dodge RV Van. Self·
contained. Xtras. low
Sidet.ie, 2S' or Jess. miles 842·5241
$175. 673-2631 Co r v air turbo l' h g .
---------Dunebuggy, sand tires &
TrmuplM't.._ trlr. Sl600 rirm. 642·8447 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Motoe ired lllle1 9140 '79 CJ7 Jeep 3 spd lo m1.
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4Qi Fwy. at Bristol
pump organ S37S. Vic· Lovely twin canopy bed & Costa Mesa HEW PUCH MOPEDS
toriaJ? down filled s~fa chest. Nice div Jan & ·call 642-5678. ext. 272 to Any Model-Wholesale
xtras. alarm sys. V·8
S6100 Randy 857·4514
$200. 69 280SE MBZ .. 65 tables. Refrigerator. claimyourtickeu. SaveuptoS187
Mustang convert, 52 Lots o f ladies' & *** 631 Che~y PU. 10 rine gun childeren's cloth es •----------• -~·-2S04 ____ 67_3-_1_45_5_,4X4Dodge, '66,2000mion cabinet $225. Cedar . · M ped Hood new eng ~ .. o water a·n
Chest S7s. Much m ore. Cash only. 200 Kings IC·I Roe'--l(avali o • a. '72. very · .... · ·
Xl °"' -r 1 -1 In d ject, port converter. gas
Balboa Penn Pt. lcc2 Place. Newport Beach. nt S400. 548-3188 o ml ea1e. x t con . ~.. Windshield. helmet. shocks. stage II s hift kit
Miramar. ltl 673-1194 John Wayne Tennis Club 14' outboard. fiberglass & szao. 536-&t?4. & trans , new radials.
reg membership $1000 wood. $200. 631·1710 or am/fm cass, camper Gigantic Garage Sale. . · · Moforcydn/ shell. lots more xtras
Sat/Sun in rear of 2318 incl. transfer. 675·5-US 974·12m Scoofen 9150 $6000/0BO. 833-0086.
NewportBlvd.CM. TIFFANY 'S Club ONAN generator .•••••••••••••••••••••••---------~
Everything goes cheap! lifetime membership, no marine. overhauled, in '79 KAW KDIT5, xlnt cond ·~7f ~ge6 ~ 2°;5 b~s~
Furn .. collectibles, dues$335.673-4666 xintcond.548-9617 ridden 4X 's S600/0ffer
4 WhHf Drhn 9550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MARCH 17, 1981 ..
#I e. o,..,.. C..ty
2925 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
979-2500
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
COHHRL
CHEVROLET
'X'>l 11.,rl•n Ill' ol
' 'i:.. r ' ,, .. '' 546-1200
HIGHIUYER
Top dollars for Sports
Cars, Bugs, Campers,
9J4 's, Audi's
Ask for U/C MGR
JIMMARIHO
VOUCSWAGEH
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142-2000
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAN
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda 6616525 556-3TI8.
much misc. Santa Ana McLane mower Sl50. Nu l~MsiM · -------' 50 1--1. --Hgts. 20182 Bayview 903 '79 Toyota Land Cruiser 21 Haw •ncl. Ave. Sat/Sun 9_4. wgt bench, barbells 1100 ... :::~!~ ........... '78 Yamaha YZlOO. xlnt 12K mi. Mega·extras COlh M9M 645-5700
Cal H2-31t1 fOf.arcu•
Information
IT'S EASY! Look for your name and address
in today's classified section. If you find It, call
6:'2-5678 Ext. 272 and we will arrange for you to
pick up your tickets at
the nearest off Ice of the DailyPilai
•'2 Circus tickets
for the price of 1 ''
1·1 ·I· l I. I'•' •' I I.
Chrys. 4-spd trans, nu cond, '650. S7700/0B0~.7694 eves
Antiques, glass ware, clutch &Hearst 1150. CB Brand new Chrysler 50 979-1942.
marble vanity. oak tower 1100. Lange sz 10 HP outboard motor, still Trudu t560
dresser, 2 refrig. clocks. _s_k_l_boots __ seo_. _642_·84<4_7 __ , in box, 1 yr wmty. Orig '73 Honda 350-4 motorcy-••••••••••••••••••••••• S950asking S750. 751··8967 cle, needs work. best of.
butcher scale, sew. Good Luck "Black" fer.631·21857
mach .. stainless steel Balloon Bouquets for 8' rubber boat
tanks, compressor, Fri. the l3tb. _.97.1044, StOO.never used '72 HONDA C83SO. S32S.
wood stove, much more. 494-l3M 673-38215 See Sat/Sun. 76().1807 or
20142 Riverside Dr, S.A. ----------• 'l8CH238
Hgts. Sat. 9-3. University Athletic Club 4 cyl. Volvo marine w I ---------membership, ssoo + S2S gear box, needs some '78 YAMAHA ENDURO
M ovlng q uickly! Full transfer. S40-S505 work. 646--4&24 DSlOO, runa gd, S200
hsehold to sell. Twin ~--------~1----..--,-----9-0-4~ •Z!ISS aft.. 8pm.
bed, fuzzy contour chair. Post bole dluer, 2 man, -owwr ---------
50's fri1·swivel rocker· S300 7bp Mani rototiller ••••••••••••••••••••••
run set ol china·slz~ 9-12 ssoo: MS-512A 311' CHRIS Tri·cablo. T /S.
women's clothes & Gd. cond. $19,000.
linens. blke·mlsc. Fri· Warehou1e Clearance _87_'-_8080_·------1RENT: 22' lux . mtr
Sun 8-6. 8:IJS2 Atlanta #21 Sale. Linoleum and '79 Bo1tAJn Whaler. 100 hp home. SJpe a. self·cont.
H.B. (betwn Bch &t carpet remnants. Open E·"--..a-trlr U" U75/wk. + 8• m I.
Nwlnd). to public. Fri-Sun. 1015 SlO~·-ae nu. ~.
W .18th St. CM. 645-9989 ---------
General clean-out sale.
Spec lat
PwchaM!!
LowMMeocJe!
1980 4 ...... ..ct 5 •pd.
D..._PfcllUp'• ,,. ........
S..lltcn!!!
Mli&edOw.
...t uwwwlMr ,.,-. .. ta
BARWI CK DATSUN
\u,. J11t)n (_ op1-.tr •>"0
8 31 ·3 3 1 I
Friday, Sat. & Sun.
l ,000'1olitems. All muat
go.221E.19lhSl.,C.M.
Raccoon Coat, man's full
len&th, Canadian
natural coon. a mos old.
Was f1800. sell $3500. You ~~D be a
YARD SALE: Misc. 559-lfl81aft.4pm.
~ : '.:
Houtehold llema ,1----------41 WINNER furniture, clothes, vw Kingai&e bed, ltlnt cond. ~
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos . Ca l l us
TODAY!!!
................ c .........
" 64'·00>., u .... .,
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow U1 the opportunity
to comlder the purchase
or trade-in of your clean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today!
and other auto parts. with mattteu cover Just by ••ndlng ·u· your name and rrt. •nd Sat. 1722 s. SlOO. 7~2539 or ll no an11 ..,._ ao Top Dollar o,..,v1ue, Senta Ane. ,_•_t7_-«11_• _____ 11 address and by watching for your
Ort Edin1er near Valley Bini • Orondal mot.hen DA me ln tbe Cl8Slifted ads Of the Paid
HlP. day plat.el 71-72 $15e•. Dally PIJot. • ForYourCarl
...,_ 106 Cbrlltmaa 70.U SU•• Wt ticket lh l · • • • • JOMMSOM I SOM ...... •••••••••••••••• ~ t n ~ta to · n• c reua, area amu1emtot : : : I fforaerc. I.Aue. Boarded --------• • ra and or •POrtl.l\I tvtnl.I. Just nu out u.11 . . . Una .. Uerary
at Ooldeo W•t. EUia. Lawamoww. tabk uw, coupon man tt tocray to the: .... J" .: CO::.::."* 8=-sao
C&UJomUIMl'' piano, Ml•, rectlaer. CUlllled n...-al'tment, nan .. Pl.lot ~ rocker, bootcuu, JM W Bay St~ .., ~ · " ... " ,,.. .,.. ,_ wat ta
ct .. tn.d Ack to-5171 _:1~~~191:;;;·:;; .. ;;•~eas;;:·~=:l!::::===·===·='"=t,::C:•:::ta:Men=::='=C=A=t=Zll2==M==~~~~1,.11~~~1>11;;aUJ~PlllA=~,,_,~~n.::11~
c
'
Wl·PORICR&-AUDJ
~£.Coat Htway
ll Bayikle Drive
Newpwt Beach 173-0900
Premhun prices
pucUOI' aay used car
('""'or domestic)
le IOOd condltlon. .
SM U1 P'lrst !
1911 ALFA
SPIDERS
IEACH IMrORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
'78 280Z 2 +2. xlnt cond,
Am/Fm cass. a /c. snrf.
$7450. PP. 640-1948
eves/wkends.
'7 3 240Z. needs work.
S2900
761·0113
'78 Alfa Spyder Convl ·73 280Z 2+2. xlnt cond,
Xlnt co nd. s ilver am/fm cass, a /c, snrf.
w /maro o n int S7 ,300 (Crickie) PP
BI a upu n kl Am I F m 640-1948eves/wknds stereo. 35 .000 mi .
S72S0/080. P P. 548-2 184
eves.
'74 Spyder. melt. s ilver.
am/fm stereo. lo m i. nu
lop. $4500. 646· 1815.
Auel 9707
1976 280%. 2 +2
Automatic
Transmission. Air Con·
dttioning. A M /FM
Stereo. Mags, Xlnt
Cond. SS.SSS 1714 )
528·1024
••••••••••••••••••••••• Honda 9727
'76 100 4·CYI. lo mi. high •••••••••••••••••••••••
mpg, good cond. F.ves
673-6397.
'74 Aodi Fox 4 spd nu :
trans-brks·clutch. Nds 1
eng & bdy wrk S700. Bst
ofr. af\ 6pm 675· 1883 J eff
VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
'73 ~E 4.S. xlnt cond. I 0 I 20 Garden Grove Bl
must s acririce. S6SOO. _G_ar_a_e_n_G_ro_v_e_s_J_0-_9_1_9_0
IMW 97 12 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HONDA
HEAD9UARTERS
TODAY!!!
UNIVERSITY
SALES & SERVICE
Ol.D$)14011LE
HONDA
GMCTRUCKS
2850 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
~36-_3422_._ • '77 EMS in like· new
1980 4.50 SL. under 1500 cond, only 35,000 mi, a/c.
miles. Loaded with ever· am/rm. S4600 or best of·
ything. Dark grey ext. fe r 551-9441
AlllolMwwe
Problems? I write any rislt, lo monthly rates. '78 Seville. yellow. lthr.
Plrkel Ins. 646-3995 sunroof. loaded. 37K mi.
-....,----------.,. Sl0.500. 760-9'l'78 '61 IUG SllOO
1801s-18l 1s
U..Orluy
lyPhone!!
with blk ~eather inl.r . Subanl 9762
Last 450 imported 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Calif. S40,000. 675-911 l '74s.bwu
64S-915<rlor642·2434 Don '77 Seville, loaded, Desert
'60 VW BUS. Xlnt shape. Rose color. $8950. Bill.
Sl.SOO. nu paint & tuneup. _83_1·_l.257 ______ _
'68 280SE. orig owner,
well maint. drk grn.
_ Beaut. $4500. Call eves:
675-4.560 ..
WCICJGll Excellent transport•·
tion. built to last longer!
!080YMY>
67S.1028aft4pm. '7S CdV. rully equipped.
540-9640
ASk For The ·77 Civic 3 dr. good car!
'67 Squareback 4spd .
runs great Sl2SO
644-5053
S2SOO or best orr.
642-2881
ttl7 .. Fleet Clearance"
Department 12995
s4s.31141 aft s PM MGI 9744 I ---••••••••••••••••••••••• $1995 c-... ---------1 .......•.•.•..•...••... Fiberglass Bug. st. legal. McLCINll IMW
522-5333
For The Best
Buy Or Lease Deal
In Orange County
Come See Us Today'
1'79 HONDA 4dr. auto. '79 MGI 645-5124
stereo/tape. a/c . $6520. 4 speed, 24.00 miles , new
IJ= ~-O.SSO _
97
3_
0
lires, stereo tape. (936G > Convt. '74, xlnl cond. New
-.,--CREVIER IMW radials. auto. 14.500.
••• •••••••••• •••• ••••.. 1st & Broadway 963-4090. Santa Ana 835 3171 '72 JAG XJ6 - -~ llQl1 77 IAlllT ..
Dyna mile . ye 11 ow. '79 MGB xlnl cond. 21K ~ 831.QOl 4 spd. 4 door. low miles.
loaded luxury sedan. mi, am/fm tape deck, stereo, very clean.
Bes t r ide & drive mags, lugg rack SS900 Toyota 9765 Priced to sell. (618TPG)
Sl.500.
a n y where CI e a n O B O . 6 4 S · 3 0 2 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494-0lJSor 497-2388 SADDLEIACK <70SGNR> eves/wknd.s •79 Celica Llftback. a/e. --------
284«l Ma~~~te Pkwy $4995 ---:s8'MGB GT amtrmt cass. s unroor. '6.;e:":r~~::'7;a~~~~
JIM MARIHO S3000/0 BO $4600. P.P. 974-422'1. new, new Urea, Mexico Mission Viejo VOLXSWAGEH C II 1600 Avery Pkwy. exit (5 l8'7ll Beach Blvd. (714)673-1937 '71 Toyota oro a ready asking $2200
Fwy.) wagon. Good condition. 496-2782 83 1 2040 495 4,49 842-2000 Opel 9746 needs engine rebuilt.
• • ---••••••••••••••••••••••• S400or makeoffer. 1978VWConvert. Cham·
7 6Ce.vy
c~
Power windows. t ilt
wheel. stereo. mags,
49,000 miles , Razo r
Sharp!!! (95ePQT)
$3995
'77 XR Cougar, xlnt cond.
bronze with houndstooth
int. Bucket seats . a ll
·'
...
• ·I·
xlras. ~0737_. _ ~ ic:ai
Dodp 9935 49)00) 831®.> •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••
'75 Dodge Monaco.
-cond. S950 firm.
645-7350.
xlnt · 7 7 0 I d s C u l I a s s
Broul!ham Colonnade
HT coupt'. ll'~S tha n
C~Kedt 3025Samoa Pl
Costa Mesa
'78 Challenger. s spd xlnt
cond, am/fm . other ex-
tras. 548-3289 N. B
31.000 m1 Orig Owner.
air. cruise rnnt rol. V 8.
auto t r.ino; am rm
+ mnv 11thl'ro;. t•xcep ctn You are the winner of
4 free Hckm Ford 9940 S 3 5 O o fl 4 0 6 R fl 7
($32 value). to • •• •••••••• ••• • • • •• •• • •
Circus Varqcn '72 LTD damaged rear.
Mar. l7lh, SPM at driveable. parts tre:.tore
Montgomery Wa rd S350/best 960-00l5
405 Fwy at Bristol 67 Ford Station
Costa Mesa runs S250
W~n
Call 642-567~. ext. 272 to · 646.4624 claim your tickets ..... MffCWY 9950 ----------...................... .
'76 Nova. 6 cyl. a uto
trans. PS/PB. radio &
htr. A/C. new brakes &
s hocks . new stl belt
Ores. Outstanding cond.
Wheel alignment for life
or car. S2400.S36·3932
19734 Dr Impala with air.
Good cond. $1350.
548-7249
SELL idle iterm with a
ORANGE COUNTY'S
FfMEST
LINCOLN-MERCU RY
DEALERSHIP
·~?IAllJH-
LINcoi..N-MERc uR·v.
l&-µ!Auto Cenler Or.
SO Fwy-Lake Fores t
exit
IRVINE
130.7000
Daily Pilot Classified Classified Ads~your one-
Ad. 6'2·S8'78. slop shopping center
<'V<'s wknds
'80 Olds
Cutlau
Brqhm.
Air tilt. 1·ru1sl'. II track.
µower w1ndo'-"i.. doOT
lot·ks. and Ii way Sl'als.
wire whe\'I 1·11\ f'r,, 1100
miles. tRm01
$7995
-... Pinto 9957 ····················~~~
*SALE*
1979-1980 ..
CREVIER
__ c_1os_ed_S_un_d_a_y_s_...,... '67 Jaguar 3.8 MK llS all '71 Opel Kadette 58,000 mi 330-3157 pag.ne Edit. 8,000 mi, 1
orig. very well main· looks runs gd S995. Michelin tires, chromel------,,,,,,,."J'--......_~-~
tained Must Sacrifice S52·-0976 eves/wkends •77 Toyota 4dr sedan. Air, wheels, AM /FM cass.
PINTOS
• 30.
lo C'hOOSt' &I ST • UOAOWAY
SAMTA AMA
835·3171
THE ULTIMATE O~IVING MACHIN[
•USEDIMWs•
'762002S/R <4266 )
'76S.30iA S/R (2419)
'77 6.:.> csi auto ( 0040)
•79 320i (7560 )
'80 528iA sunrl 062.S)
Clowd s..dcly•
SaH1back IMW
UMdCar
and
Demo Sale!!!
ALL CARS
Drastically
R.etcecl!!
This Fri. Sat.
OMLY!!!
C-IR Today!
ARCISAVE!!!
21402 Mar9uerlt~
f'llwy.
MisiionVlefo
131-2040
Closed Sundays
751MW
Dynamite 2002
a utomatic. Air condi·
lioning. stereo & low
miles. Jt ·s s queaky
clean! (419NKQ>
$49'5
JIMMAllMO
VOl.kSWAGEH
1.81U Beach Blvd
142-2000
O~f COUHTY'S
OLDEST
~ &'·
846-857_o_ •69 0pelKadet.7S,OOOmi. stereo, 35,000mi. Xlnt. S8250. Call Dean .
'68 XKE Jaguar . x lnt running cond . S3600.494·1374· 675-0000
Roadster. new eng. mint $1200/bst. 631-0741
cond. 90pt car. Call p~ -9748 '79 Corolla Deluxe. Xlnt VolYo 977Z
644-4147 arter 7pm. '"-r-' cond. Low milage. P.P. •••••••••••••••••••••••
-----······················· Merida 9738 ............•..........
'79 Mencia RX7
GSSCoupe
Yellow/black. All OP·
lions! Super Sharp''
<Ol.A4)
LEASE
DIRECT!
1981 rEUGEOT
TURIOs
S4SOO. Steve at work
642·9531. home 979-4759.
'77 Toyota Chin ook
camper, 6' poptop. Full
equip. S7000. 911 RZX.
760-0916.
Tri..... 9767 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'80 Mcnda RX7 I ll! •CH IM•ORTS Triumph Spitfire '78. bm,
l:.A r am trm, must sell. Gd
GS5Coupe
White/maroon. All OP·
lions! Mint Cond '' _
OHV109)
848 Dove Street cond. $3900. 559-5480. NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900 VolmWOfJtft 9770
-------1 ••·····················
Sait•1bad& IMW
28402 Marguerite
f'llwy.
Missloft Vieio
131-2040
Closed Sundays
7 9PEUGEOT
504 Diesel. Automatic,
sun roof. 22.000 miles &
just like new. 02210)
$7995
JIMMARIHO
VOUCSWAGEH
18711 Beach Blvd
'73 Mazda RX-3, make of· 142-2000
Cer Private P a rty
(714 )542 -4437 Ive Porsche 9750
~es.sage. ___ •••••••••••••••••••••••
PORSCHE 1979
928. Fully loaded. 15,400
orig. mi.; xlnt cond. in·
side & out. Blue book
wholesale is S26,375 : our
sale price Is S26, 775.
(200368). Ask for Duke
or Mike.
'79 MERCEDES
Showroom new. 2400 ,
only 22.000 miles. Still in
warranty. 4 speed. air
conditioned . steering,
cruise. Original l Like
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$16,950
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FORD
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SEUJNO YOUR MB 7 7 J POISCHI
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7 passenger, looks &
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(7270)
C llEVIHIMW
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Santa Ana 835-3171
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81 RABBIT
~498
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ruel injection engine, 4
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power a111ist brakes,
tinted 11881, leatherette
interior, cul pile carpet-
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I
(
News ekates pGrents of Coast eaptive _
A tut-minute agreement pre-
vented the execution today of ·
the son ol a San Juan Capistrano
couple who is being held bostaie
aboard a bljaclted PakiltanJ jet
in Damascus, Syria.
·'Ob, thank God is all J can
say." said Glen Clymore upon
bearina the news that his 24·
year-old son Craig was sWl alive
after the 8 a .m . (PST> deadline
passed and the plane was not
blown up. '
Clymore said he and his wife
* * *
Thelma were Uatenin1 to the
radio in their San Juan home
when they learned that Patlatan
had agreed to· meet the ter-
rorists' demand to release ~
political pruonen in excban&e
for the freedom of the 100
hostages on board.
The younaer Clymore, • m•
graduate of Laguna Beach Hilb
School, runs an import business
from his home in Lake Forest
and was lo Pakistan on a buying
* * *
trtp when the jet waa hijacked ll
d~y1 aco.
Cbarbe Dana, a close family
friend, spoke for the Clymon!
family. "Right now they're just
in seventh heaven," Mrs. Davis
said.
"They're sitting back, r~
lieved over the fact Craig is go-
ing to be all rtgbt."
Earlier, the elder Clymore, a
tennis instructor in San Juan,
said his wife bad suffered great-
ly from the ordeal. He said she
* * *
bad not been able to answer the
door or the telephone since their
son wu taken boslaeet
Clymore said they had been
"very coocemed about Craig's
safety because life i.s considered
to be cheap there."
The younger Clymore re-
portedly left the U.S . In late
February on one of bis periodic
buying trips. His father sald be
thought bis son was headed for
Germany.
The senior Clymore said he
* * *
bad lost all track of time since
belnl notified by a U.S. State
Department official last week
that bis son was aboard the
seized Pakistani airliner, which
was first flown to Afghanistan
and then to Damascus.
The relieved father said he
believed the three Pakistani ter•
roriats holding his son and two
other Americans, identified as
Frederick Hubbell of Des
<Stt PAJlENTS, Pa1e A.%)
* * *
Pakistan meets demands
Hijackers call off executions, bomb threat
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP> -
Only minutes before the
threatened execution of three
American hostages, one of them
from Orange County, Pakistan
agreed today to a demand by
three plane hijackers to release
55 political prisoners, the Syrian
news agency said.
The hijackers, who seized the
Pakistani airliner 11 days ago
and flew it to Afghanistan and
then to Dama scus , also
threatened to blow up the plane,
themselves and more than 100
hostages unless their demands
were met by 8 a.m. PST.
They set a new deadline or 4
this afternoon for fulfillment of
their request, diplomatic
sources said.
The sources, who refused to be
identified, said that after the
Pakistan agreement negotia-
tions began to establish the iden-
tity or six or lhe 55 whose release
was demanded by the three hi·
jackers.
Earlier in the day, the hi-
jackers fabeled the three
Americans CIA agents and said
·•be prepared to collect their
bodies." They made the threat
in a letter dictated to Pakistani
authorities from the plane at
Damascus airport. The letter
was released by the official
Syrian news agency, SANA.
DB businessman
Nazi lwlocaust
• survivor to sue
By PATIUCK KENNEDY
Oll .. Delly ...... S&Mf
Huntington Beach busi-
ness man Mel Mermelstein has
filed a $6 million lawsuit against
an organization that offered
$50 ,000 to the first person who
could prove that a single Jew was
killed in the prison camps of Nazi
Germany.
Mermelstein is a J ewish sur-
vivor of a Nazi prison camp and is
a well-known lecturer on the
holocaust.
His lawsuit conte nds the
Institute of Historical Review has
failed to live up to the offer, bas
libeled him in a newsletter and
has caused him intentional men-
tal distress
"They're a bigoted group try-
ing lo erase that era, and they're
trying to use me to do it,"
Mermelstein said today.
The non-profit organization
first made the public offer two
Truce threatened
WARSAW (AP> -Workers in
the Radom dis trict south of
Warsaw today stepped up their
threat to shatter Poland's un-
easy labor truce with a strike.
Union delegates from nearly 340
factories were meeting lo en-
dorse a list of 17 demands, some
of them stemming from grudges
left over from the 1976 riots
there over government price
hikes.
years ago, claiming the holocaust
Is a hoax and that no Jews were
killed.
Then. last November, Lewis
Brandon, director of the organiza-
tion, wrote a personal letter to
Mermelstein challenging him to
prove the holocaust happened, ac-
cording to the lawsuit.
According to the lawsuit, the
letter warned Mermelstein that if
he refused the offer, the group
would "draw our own conclusion
and publicize this fact to the mass
media ... "
Mermelstein accepted. His at-
torney wrote Brandon of the ac-
ceptance and stated that the cor-
respondence was tantamount to a
legal contract.
Mermelstein says be submitted
a list of evidence and witnesses to
prove genocide occurred in the
Nazi prison camps but that be was
not allowed to present it to the or·
ganization. Last month, he flJed
the lawsuit in Los Angeles
Superior Court.
Brandon or other officials of the
Institute of Historical Review
couldn't be reached for comment.
The organization's only address
is a post office box in Torrance.
The lawsuit claims Brandon
sent Mermelstein another letter
on Jan. 27 and that Brandon stated
the offer was being postponed
because Simon Wiesenthal
"wishes to claim lhe $50,000 for
proof of the gassings and the
(See SUIT, Pa1e AZ)
Left tl1rns?
Bircher expound. on Bl
Are Dan Rather, Barbara Walters and George Bush
tied to socialist interests?
Did John Lennon's hit song ''lmaelne" espouse collec-
tivism?
Veteran J ohn Birch Society member Richard
Fatberley made such claims in a Newport Beach lecture
reported by Steve Marble in today's Coaatal Scene, leading
off the newspaper's S section.
Other features in this easy-to-find, easy-to-read
package of regional news cover:
BOl'l1.ED B&IBE&Yf Wireless llllcropbooea on COD·
structlon auperintendeoll picked up oa-tbe·job eommenta
about liquor gift.a requ.eated by two Irvine bu.lkllnl S.pec·
tors .. South County · bUreau. chief :;teve Mltc:bell outllDel
tettlmony as the pair appealthelrfttlnl.
SAGGED DOLLS -Colla lleaa r9P0rter Jerry
Cla\dea looks at four outdoor mannequins that almost
perlODlly Bessie Mae Hill'• 10.year atrucale to kHp her
vlntap coawne shop open.
SQUBDE oa RES -WW Fout.ID Valley Nil· ~u dowttboat street 1w""8c1 tne trlamlD• or reerea~ tloD Pl"Oll"Ull to cope wtdl ID tmml .. t dtJ badset
1bortapt Reporter Ptlll ....,._ .....U.atea.
' TAKING ,,.. • nrra -0rup eo..t con ... ·,
The Americans have been
identified as Frederick Hubbell
of Des Moines, Iowa, a lawyer;
and businessmen Craig Richard
Clymore of Orange County and
Lawrence Clifton Mangum of
New York City, who reportedly
lives in Spain.
A U.S. Embassy official in
Islamabad, Pakistan, said "we
have no idea how they (the hi-
jackers) could have come up
with the deduction that they're
CIA agents."
In Washington , the White
House refused to discuss the
threatened executions.
Pakistan Presid e nt
Mohammed Zia ul-Haq sent an
"important, urgent" message to
Syrian President Hafez Assad
after the threat to shoot the
Am e ricans was issued, a
Pakistani spokesman said.
Immediately after the hi-
jackers' threat, Syrian troops
and police moved closer to the
green and white Boeing 720.
Some crouched in the bushes on
both sides of the auxiliary
runway where the pl ane was
parked. A half doeen dashed un-
der the fuselage of the Plant.
Later all were pulled baclt fo
fox boles.
Observers said the Americans
were singled out apparently in
an effort to get the Reagan ad-
ministration to put pressure on
Pakistani authorities to meet the
demand.
The letter was written by the
chief hijacker, identified as
Moujir Ghoulam, deputy com-
mander of Al ZuUikar. The or-
ganization is believed to Le
made up of supporters of
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the prime
minister hanged in April 1979 by
the current Pakis tani regime of
Mohammed Zia ul -Haq.
The letter was handed to
Syrian mediators six hours
before the deadline was to ex-
pire. The hijackers have killed
one of their captives, a
<See ID.JACK, Page AZ>
Great wall"of Huntington
Wetsuited surfer slides left on a smooth,
glassy ftve-foot wave on the north side of
the Huntington Beach pier Wednesday.
The waves were hot, even if the water was
not (59 degrees) and wave riders took ad-
vantage of a west swell to grab onto a few
fast rides.
Beach said.
not really
contaminated
By STEVE MARBLE
OI .... Deify ~IMC Sleff
Orange County health officials
now believe that a five·mile
stretch of beach, closed to
bathers most of this week after a
Newport Beach sewer line rup-
tured, wu never actually con-
taminated.
The five-day quarantine on
beaches from the. Balboa Pier
south to Scotchman's Cove wu
lifted Wednesday afternoon
when testa reveaJed that bac-
terla count.I were normal.
Monica Masur, a county
health specialist, said lt'1 now
thou1ht that the six tnlllion
gallons of raw ~ewace that
poured lnto the Newport Harbor
never made Lt to the ocean.
But the harbor, wbere the
sewase wu diverted after
Saturday'• line brHk lD rr.t ol
the Balboa Bay C~•atns
off llmlll to batben. am ol
the b1tbor may be NOl*Md to
1wlmmera by the weekend,
pendtnc tetta to be conducted
Friday.
"There are •WJ IODM bot tpotl
in the twbor," aaid tbe btaltb
olftclal.
Sbe explained tbat the
barmlul bacteria found lD the
10Ud IDd Uq.ad Hwa1e that en·
tered tbe bey la killed on quietly
Judge UJOn't save
student break/ as ts
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Luis Cardenas has turned
down requests to reinstate a
federally funded breakfast pro-
gram for needy students in the
Santa Ana Unified School Dis-
trict.
Judge Cardenas, In matln1
bis ruling Wednesday, declined
to "exerc.lse jurisdiction," HY·
ing the state's appeals court
ought to decide lhe matter.
A class action lawsuit against
the school dlatrict bad sought re·
Instatement of tbe program for
about 1,000 younsten. That case
is pending before the 4th District
Court of Appeal.
But representatives of the
UNRUH NABBED
ON DRUNK RAP.
SACRAMENTO {AP) -Stale
Treasurer J ... Unruh wu ar-
rested on a drunk drivinl cbarte
by the Highway Patrol, sberll!
Duane Lowe aald.
Unruh, 58, WU stopped Wed·
n-.aday nl1ht at Fulton and
Marconi avenuet ln tbe cltJ'•
nortb area, Lowe said. He w ..
taken to tbe county Jail.and later
releated wit.bout bail. ,
Legal Aid Society of Orange
Count y and American Civil
Liberties Union bad sought re-
instatement of the program, in
the meantime, on behalf of a stu-
dent al Wilson Elementary
School.
Cardenas, however, declined
to become Involved in a second
lawsuit while the appeals court
is weighlnl lhe first lelal action.
Representatives of the ACLU
and Le1al Aid Society said the
judge merely avoided ruling on
the merill of their suit.
The school district's board of
truateea decided last summer to
terminate the breakfast pro-
rram for the 1880-81 school year
even tboulb it was funded by the
federal aovernment.
Tbe school board alto bad
failed to renew the .prosram. tbe
prevto. school year, leadinl t.o
the flnt lawsuit. An Oranp
Couty auperlor court Judie bad
ordered the bnak.futa relDltat.
ed, but the dlstrtct appealed.
Sprinlder8 aoURht
SAVED FROM DEATH
Coaat'• Craig Clymore
Firm ends
plans for
high rise
By PIDL SNEIDERMAN
01 t11e o.i1y Pllet su11
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
Co., which withdrew plans for a
14-s tory downtown Fountain
Valley office building in the face
of heated community opposition,
has unveiled a new development
plan for the same 11.5-acre site.
At a meeting with city plan-
ning commissioners and com-
munity representatives Wednes-
day night, the company dis-
cussed a proposal to build tb.ree
three-story buildings on the
southeast comer of Brookhursl
Street and La Alameda Avenue.
The revised design would in-
clude a landscaped central
courtyard and possibly a cov-
ered parking structure.
Stephen Gavin, spokesman for
the Newport Beach-based cor-
poration, stressed that Pacific
Mutual has not formally applied
for permission to build the office
complex.
He said Wednesday's meeting
was calJed to obtain the city's in·
itial reaction to the revised de-
sign.
Numerous local homeowners,
as well as the Fountain Valley
Chamber of Commerce, voiced
opposition last s um mer to
Pacific Mutual's 14-story design.
Opponents said the proposed
205-fool-high structure would be
too drastic a departure from the
c ity's current 50-foot height
limit.
In the new Pacific Mutual
plan, none of the buildings wouJd
exceed the 50-foot limit, Gavin
said.
·'The problem uppermost in
everyone's mind before was the
h ei ght ," the corporate
spokesman said. "We feel we've
dealt with that in the new pro-
posal."
He s&d 1t 1s not known at pres-
ent whether Pacific Mutual
would occupy ;my of the Foun-
tain Valley office space, if the
project is approved. Pacific
Mutual currently is construcllnl.
twin seven-story office buildings
in Newport Center.
Frank Bryant, vice chairman
of the Planning Commission,.
confirmed Pacific Mutual's new
design does not appear to re~
<See PLANS, Pase A%)
DRAllil COAST llATHll
Chance of rain tonight 40
percent increasint to 70
percent Friday. Lowa
tonight 50 at beaches, 57
Inland. Highs Friday 61
along coast, 67 Inland.
Thunderstorms, 1usty
winds likely Friday after-
noon. ,
111101 TIDIY
II ~·,.. o coif-. drMJcer,
flOU're fw6ce OI opC lo ,,.,
COftC., o/ tM poncr .. oa
rtOft·Colfee drfnlcnt -Intl
doc.tort arert't odvf1h1g
ot>.tnt(ioft Jld. Page All.
11111
·~ .... ptebd UP ·~ cbamploetblp No. I ror U. ,.... at UCLA. Read allllout tM • apeuen wbo wUJ ..,md tbetr national Ut1e nut moat.It lD Saeramento.
C8ee Bl!ACR. P•C• Al)
In 1'18, UANb pleaded no eott•
tett to a drunk drtvlnt charce
and paid a S31S flne.
CARSON CITY CAP> -A
commlaalon formed after lu&
November's dl111trou1 MGM
Grand Hotel lire bu called for
the installation of sprinkler
aystema, new fl.re alarms and
other aalet.y features In
Nevada'• hlgb·rtae buildln.11. • \ -----------• ' &
.. I
• 0 • t I 2 0
..
o.u, ..................
SURVIVOR FILES SUIT
HB "'9rCMnt Marmetnetn
Fre•P..-AJ
SUIT •.•
$25,000 for proof that Anne Frank's diary is authentic."
Mermelstein was a teen.age
prisoner of the Nui death camp of
Auschwitz. in Poland. He said bis
parents, two sisters and a brother
died there.
He lives in Long Beach and bas
a pallet business in Huntington
Beach.
Fro•P .. eAJ
IDJACK .••
Pakistani diplomat.
·'Only six hours are left and
'there is still no answer from the
Pakistani government to our re·
'q\Jests," the letter said. .. If our
·demands are not met, the result
wil l be hard and full
responsibility will fall upon the
P'akistan authorities ," it said.
"We want the whole world to
know that this tragedy is
because Zia is an American·
Zionist agent and a traitor to
Pakistan," the letter continued.
Saying the Americans would
be shot if the demands were not
met. the letter added: "They are
CIA agents. I know everything
about them. Be prepared to col·
le ct their bodies.
"Zia is not interested in the
fate of the passengers . All he
,wants is to score political advan·
lages," the letter said. "We are .not extending the deadline. If
pur deIQands are not met after
~ix hours, we shall take a violent
action."
* * * Fr .. r .. eAl
PARENTS. •
Moines, Iowa. and Lawrence
Clifton of New York City, were
using them as leverage to get
the U.S. government involved.
Clymore described his son as
t>eing a "cheerful kid" who was
·well-liked by the people be met.
He said his son attended Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa for
a short time after his high school
graduation.
Clymore said he and his wife
had reacted to the ordeal "like
any other human beings who
have kids." He said they "con-
~led each other. cried a little and
did a lot of praying."
'Pink' tern
turns heads
. of tipplers
: MIAMI <APl When a pink
~bird landed on a tnearby dock,
;diners and drinkers at a uni·
;versity cafeteria and bar
'hought at first their eyesight
1'1ight have taken a tern for the
worse.
: Except for its coloring, the
6olitary bird outs ide the
University of Miami's School of iM arine Science cafeteria was
~ust like the normal white terns
)learby -in the pink of health,
~s it were. But there are no rose· ~olored tern species of any kind
nywbere , said biologist Oscar
1 wre.
: So what made the University or Miami tern tum pink? 1 Owre figured a prankster or a
cientht who wanted to trace its
ovements mav have dved the
ird.
stands
alone
-SAN SALVADOR, El Salv.._.
<AP) -El Salvador'• rullnt
junta baa told otber Latin
American covemmentl not to
111eddle ln Its war a1alnat left.lat
cuerrillu, and the United States
la 1upportln1 that atand.
"The revolutionary 1overn·
menl of El Salvador does not de·
slre the intervention of the
Ortanization of American States
in the search for a solution to the
internal problem• in El
Salvador." the Junta aaid.
The meaaage, delivered
Wednesday by El Salvador's
ambassador In W11bin1ton,
Ernesto Peralta, called an OAS
mediation offer "completely UD·
acceptable" and rejected "any
ad hoc action by the OAS."
The United States boycotted
the session on grounds that El
Salvador rejected any OAS role,
said Ambassador Jose Rafael
Echeverria of Costa Rica, whose
government suggested media·
tion last week and sponsored the
meeting.
Chile, Uruguay and Argentina
also were absent due to a "lack
of instruction," Echeverria said.
Those attending were
Barbados, Bolivia. Brazil,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti,
Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Panama, Paraguay , Peru,
Suri n am, Trinidad and
Venezuela.
Salvadoran troops battled the
guerrillas to the north and east
of San Salvador and in and
around the capital Wednesday.
. The United Nations Human
Rights Commission, meeting in
Geneva, Switzerland. called for
the appointment of a special
re presentative to investigate
"grave violations of human
r i ghts and fundamental
fre e doms reported in E l
Salvador."
The vote was 29-1. Eleven
countries abstained , including
the United States.
The ruling junta in El
Salvador has not requested any
additional U.S. mmtary aid, and
the Reagan administration bas
"no desire or interest to fob off
on El Salvador any aid they do
not feel they need ,'' uys
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein·
berger.
· · 1 know of no plans to send
any more" military equipment
to El Salvador, Weinberger said
Wednesday night in an ap·
pearance on the public broad-
casting TV program "The Mac-
Neil-Lebrer Report."
Weinberger s aid the $25
million in miJitary aid already
announced by the State Depart·
ment represents all the as-
s istance that was requested by
the U.S.·backed junta.
Chili cooko//
to aid kids
in W. County
A three-day Chili Cookoff
festival to benefit handicapped
children will be held Friday
through Saturday at the Hunt·
inglon Beach Elks Lodge, 10480
Talbert Ave., Fountain Valley.
The festivities, which will in·
elude carnival rides, game
booths, bands, dancing arts and
c rafts exhibits and a pool
tournament, will begin each day
at 11 a .m .
The cook-off competition will
take place Saturday and Sun-
day, with separate categories
for the public and for the
res taurant· beverage industry.
Admission to the cookoff is $5,
with no additional charge for en·
try lo the carnival. The event is
sponsored by the Elks Club and
by Straub Distributing, a
wholesaler for Anheuser-Busch,
Inc.
St. Helens quiet
VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) -
Mount St. Helens remains quiet,
continuin1 to vent about 500 tons
of sulfur dioxide and l,000 tons of
carbon dioxide gu each day.
Geophysicist Bob Mallia of the
U.S . Geological Survey said the
gas emiuiona are much lower
than they were last spring.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Piiat CIHalfted 9dw ......... 714/142-N71
All other...,,,....... 142-432'1
Thomas P. Haley ,__.._
~N.Wffd
M. Thomat KMYll --Thomee A. Murphln• ....... ---0.letH.Loo• ~-......~-
Bemerct Schulman a-.... f:!.'.s:=-n
Kenndt N. Goddard Jr. ~ ......
MAIN ()fF1Ca UD W•lt a., St., C .... IMM, CA. Men.-...: ... ,,.., cau Mesa, CA. tMa
•
••
r
«*A .... lln't • ~ Ula& II ,.UH~
.,..'taCICa Utt1e n11laJ~•"c..-. '"" W-..._,,.,.ar~ Once OUck fell'owt ot .. 1 _. 8' Ill
E. lltll It. early tb1a mon&na. abe nlled Pol•• tO...., w
back under the covert.
I Otfte9I' Bob PblW .. WU d&IHtfMd ...... 09'e-'•
bom• and ..mt.ct ber ba~ llM bid 1t ''*-' l :• 1.m. Then, Pbllllp1 reported, the aaked blm to m1~t bet'
two peanut butter 1andwleMI, llU two 1l111t1 wllh mtlk
and serve the supper to ber ln bed.
''Millloo aecompllabed," he noted ln hla rtport to Lt.
Tom Luar.
Missing man's car
found; driver held
OKLAHOMA CITY <AP) -A
California man has admitted
Wednesday to the theft of a car
whose owner can't be found.
The car -later found to con-
tain bloodied clothing -was
stolen in Oklahoma City last
December.
William Francis Delagarza
Hand, 22. pleaded guilty before
Oklahoma County Special Judge
William Allen to larceny of a
vehicle. He wa.s handed a three·
year prison term as agreed in a
plea·bargalning arrangement.
Hand was arrested in Stanton,
Calif., on Dec. 30, when police
discovered he was driving a car
owned by Tom Corbitt of
Bartlesville.
Corbitt's parents told police
their 28-year-old son had left
home the morning of Dec. Z7 for
Vancouver, Wash.
Corbitt has not been s een
since.
California authorities dis ·
covered Corbitt's wallet, his
glasses and bloodied clothing in
the trunk of the car.
But Jim Anthony . an In·
vestlgator In the district al·
torney's office, s aid no murder
charge can be flied without a
body.
Stanton Police Sgt. Robert
Ohlemann, who attended the
hearing Tuesday, confirmed
that police had employed the
services of "a reliable psychic"
from Orange, Calif.
She thought Corbitt had been
killed along Interstate 40, but he
discounted reports the woman
had gone into a trance and en·
visi<;>ned the victim scratching a
message into the sand in the
Amarillo, Texas, a rea.
Ohlemann said he contacted
Amarillo Police Officer Rick
Webb who told him he had dis·
covered etched into the dry
ground the date 12·27·80 and the
word "Minnesota."
''But, the woman we employed
ne ver envisioned anything." he
said. Officials in the district at-
torney's office said Hand told
them he had worked in Min·
nesota recently.
I
Reapportion talks
slated for Friday
The first hearing on reappor-
tionment of Orange County's
state Senate and congressional
districts will be held Friday in
Santa Ana.
The COWlty lJ due for several
Fr .. P.,,e AJ
BEACH •..
by ocean water.
"H the sun is bright, which it
was during this period, that also
will help kill it," s aid Ms .
Mazur. "Things went in our
favor -it turnea out much bet-
ter than we thought."
Although county sanita.tion of.
ficials claim the reliability of
the ·sewer line in Newport re·
mains in doubt. steps were taken
Wednesday evening to alleviate
those doubts.
Directors of Sanitation Dis·
trict 5, which takes in the area
where the break occ urred,
authorized engineering s tudies
for a Sl.6 million repair job.
According to sanitation of-
ficial Ray Lewis. the repair
project will be aimed at install·
ing a second sewer line -a
"backup" line -under Coast
Highway between the east side
of tbe highway bridge over the
bay and the pump station in
front of the Balboa Bay Club.
A dual pipe system exists the
entire le ngth of the sewer
system, which runs from the
bridge to a Huntington Beach
treaiment pfant, except for the
balf·mile stretch between the
bridge and club.
Lewis said he told sanitation
directors that an additional ex·
penditure of $3.4 million would
be needed to put the entire
bridge·to.plant system in "relia·
ble order."
"We're going to have to take a
bard look at our budget to find
the money," off~red Lewis, "but
we're hoping at least to do the
$1 .6 million job this fall."
Lewis described last
weekend's line break, which
buckled and broke pavement on
Coast Highway, as a "reai dis·
aster'' that was minimized .
•·because we did a super job."
. "It was bad but things like
this happen," reasoned Lewis.
·•A person counts on his car but
every now and then it 's JOinl to
blow up."
Death ruling
brings cheer
LEXINGTON, S.C. (AP> -A
39-year-old former prisoner con·
vlcted ol ~I two men that be
thoulbt "IOciety would be pad
to 1et rtd of'' cried "whoopee!"
when a jury sentenced him to
death.
.. we•ve all 1ot to 10
sometime," Ronald F. Smart
told Clrcult Judie Julius Bae·
sett Wednetday after a lAX·
tn•ton C.Q\antJ fury Hntenced
btm to dlt bl the electric c.bair
for tlle 1.t'111laYirutl.
•
changes in districts because the
population increased more than
33 percent -to more than 1.9
million persons -between 1970
and 1980.
Sarah Reyes, an aide to the
Senate Committee on Elections
and Reapportionment, said
leaders of several His panic or·
ganizations are expected to
testify after the hearing con·
venes at 9:30 a.m. al Santa Ana
City Hall.
•'City and county boundaries,
communities of interest and
basic equity will govern our re·
apportionment efforts." Ms.
Reyes said in a notice of the
hearing.
Preliminary figures from the
1980 census ,· sne said, s now
S e nate Distric t 3 7 n o w
represented by Democrat PauJ
Carpenter to be slightly un-
derpopulated while the Senate
and congressional dis tricts
"vary from slightly over to •
grossly over the ideal size."
Among committee members
who will bear tes timony is Sen.
John Schmitz, R ·Newport
Beach.
The committee's ultimate de-
cision on reapportionment will
apply only lo Senate and con-
gressional districts. The state
Assembly will conduct separate
bearings to determine how Its
districts should be reappor·
tioned.
__ _.... .. .._ _______ _ . ............ ... .-... .................. ____ _
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -A na·
tlonal eom.mt111on concluded to-
day that Social Security t. 1UU the
belt l)'ltem to IUppe>rt tld«ly
and dlaabled workers and a.rsued •
aaalnat any aovemmeot move to
force employen to provldt
prlvatepensiona.
The National CommlHIDn on
Soclal Security l11ued Its report
after a two-year study. Concreaa
created and funded the nine·
member cithen1' panel to con -
duct the independent review of
Social Security.
It came out a1ainst the private
penaloo proposal advanced two
weella ago by the President's
Commission on Pension Polley,
which was appointed by former
President Carter.
That panel recommended a
new payroll tax of 3 percent on
employers to set up a minimum
universal pension s ystem. It said
too many workers lack coverage
or lose pension credits when they
change jobs, eventually reaching
old age with no income other than
Social Security.
But the national commission
said it "does not believe the
federal government should re·
quire employers t o provide
pensions ."
It said the workers who lack
pension coverage generally are
lower paid and their wages might
dro p e ven furt he r if their
employers were hit with a new
payroll tax.
It said the employe rs who do not
provide pensions "tend to be
small bus inesses or l~ss s uc-
cessful firms that are hard·
pressed to meet their current ob-
ligations . The added financial and
adminis trative burden of man-
datory pensions would be more
than some could bear a nd s till re·
main in business."
The commission announced its
major recommenda t ions in
J anuary. It called for raising lhe
eligibility age ror full Social
Security retire me nt bene fits
from 65 to 68 early in the next cen-
tury . restraining cost -of.Jiving
hikes for beneficiaries when in·
flation climbs fas t e r than
workers' wages and paying for
one-half o f Me di care from
general revenues. To do the lat-
ter, it recommended slapping a
2.5 percent surcharge on personal
income taxes.
The commission, chaired by
Milton Gwirtzman, a Newton.
Mass .• attorney, concluded, "'The
Social Security system is sound in
principle and, of all alternatives ,
is the best s tructure of income
support for the United States."
Fro• Pag~ Al
PLANS ...
quire parking and h e ight
variances, as the original pro·
posal did.
He said additional traffic
studies probably will be done re-
garding the need for a new
Brookhurst Street signal in front
of the complex.
Bryant sa id redevelopment
subsidies were not discussed at
Wednesday's meeting.
Pacific Mutual's original 14-
story plan included the proposed
use of $350,000 in city redevelop.
ment funds for street and sewer
improvement in connection with
the project.
PIA GE[
....,__ __ --._.......,. ....... .._
Say it'• not
10, George
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
<AP) -The former wUe
of G9Cqe Wallace la atk· Int for the pt'ayen of "all
ChriaUu people" in hope.a
that tbt rormer Alabama
1overaor will OWlk twice
about marrytq a. 11D1er
half hll aae.
Cornella Wallace, whose
marrta11 tndH ln divorce
in lt78, aaJd Wednesday
aht lln't ready to step
aside for Wallace to
marry blonde Llaa Taylor
of Jasper. a 32·year-old
country-western alnger
whOM father ownt a coal
mlnlna concern.
"I'm not giving up on a
reconclliatlon. · • Mrs .
Wallace said. ''I simply
ask for the prayers of all
Christian people that
George will search his
he a rt and find God 's
perfect will in this mat·
ter."
Disneyland
criticized
in knifing
ANAHEIM 1AP 1 Dis ·
neyland officials have met with
hars h criticism by local health
officials in their handling of a
teen-ager who was stabbed at
the park and later C.1ied at a
nearby hospital.
Orange County health officials
criticized park officials Wednes-
da y fo r not c al lin g c ity
para medics last week and for
not having 18-year-old Mel C
Yorba taken to either of two
nea rby hospitals designated to
treat trauma victims .
The officials acc used Dis-
neyland officials of not summon·
ing paramedics in order to avoid
a ny bad publicity that could
j eopardize the park's image.
Disneyland officials denv the
accusation and conte nd they
made the best possible decision
in the Yorba death,
Yorba was driven to Palm
Harbor Hospit a l in Ga rden
Grove. which is not a trauma
center. an the back of a Dis·
neyland van. accompanied by a
park nurse a nd two security
guards. The van had no warning
lights or sirens to speed its tnp
through traffic nor any lifesav-
ing equipment besides ox v~en.
Anaheim paramedics were not
notified.
The Riverside teen-ager , who
a rr ived at the hos p ital i n
cardiac arrest , bled to death
from wounds in his heart and
liver , said the Orange County
coroner's office.
''They (Disneyland l have an
i nte rnal policy no t to c a11
param e di cs ," sa id Betty
0 ' R ourke, directo r of the
Oran g e Count y Office of
Emergency Medical Ser vices.
~he said her office has contacted
Dis ney land officials "but
nothing has come of it."
Although the health care ex·
perts refused to say with cer·
talnty whether traum a care
would have saved Yorba, they
said victims with similar in·
j uries have been s aved.
"We've been talking to people
at Disneyland about this for
years," said Martel Thompson,
c hief of operations for the
Anaheim Fire ~~partment.
Jury selec-
tion con-
tinued in Los
Angeles to-
day in the
$10 million
libel suit by
entertainer
Carol
Burnett
against the
National En-
quirer. In
high spirits,
Miss Burnett
said waiting
for the case
to come to
trial "has
been like a
five-year
toothache."
Jazz pianist and composer
Euble Blake, 98. was report·
ed in fair condition at Long
Island College Hospital after
surgery to reset a broken
hip
Blake reportedl y fell out of
bed at his Brooklyn home
Blake. composer of "I'm
Just Wild About Harry," had
I
1 Comedian
Henn11
Youngman,
trading
familiar fid-
dle for
Mideast
sitar. re-
hearses tune
he'll play
Monday at
his 15th
birthday par-
ty in New
York.
been leading an active life
before the acciden t On
March 1, he and his wife.
Marian , attended t h e
Br o adwa y openi ng of
"Sophisticated Ladies." a re·
view based on the music ot
Duke EUlngton and two days
later went to the St. Regis to
see a review based on the
m usic or Rogers and Hart.
Actor fails
realttg test?
Jose Aa*-ie Valdemolar,
24 . star of the Spanlah
feature film "Deprtu.
Deprlsa " which was
awarded the Gold Bear at tbe
Berlin feetival ln February,
was arrested In Madrid ln
connection with a bank
holdup, police sources said.
T h e so u rces sai d
V aldemolar and elaHel Sola
Telles, 23 , were arrested
s hortly filler a downtown
Madrid t>ank was robbed of
167 ,000 pesetas. aboul $2,000.
The robbers fled on foot and
stole a taxi which, the
s o u r c es s a i d , r a m m e<i
another car whose two occu-
pants were treated for in·
jur ies.
"Deprisa, Deprisa," which
m eans "quick, quick," was
directed by Carlos Saara and
sti 11 hasn't been shown in
Spain. It tells the st ory of
young law violators.
E . Y. "Yip" Harbur1,
the lyricist killed in a Los
Ange les car accident last
week, had been scheduled lo
gel the Johnny Merc,r
Award al the Songwriters
Hall or Fame awards dinner.
So in his honor at the din·
ner, composer Jule Styne
sang Harburg's latest song
"Let's Give the Waltz a
Chance." Tony Bennett, ac-
cepting a Lifetime Achieve-
ment Award, sang Harbur g's
"April in Paris" and "It's
Only a Paper Moon."
Burtoo Lane accepted the
a ward for 1 ~arburg's wife
and accompanied himself in
singing one of Harburg 's
fa vorites. "How Are Things
in Cloccamora," which the
two wrote for the musical
·• Finian's Rainbow." There
were a few tears then, and
again when the evenin g
ended with the late Judy
Garland's recording o r
Harburg's "Somewhere Over
the Rainbow."
In a joint performance
with the Mormon Tabernacle
Choir, e ntertainer Jobn
Denver told an audience or
some 8,000 at Logan. Utah.
that hunger could be stricken
from the earth in 20 years.
Denver, j oined by the
choir, sang his hit song "I
Wa nt lo Live" at a sym-
posium on world hunger at
Utab Stale Univers ity
I
Teachers seek raises
Demands issued for next fiscal year
Teachers a nd non -teaching
employees of the Newport·Mes<1
Unified School District have pre
sented their tniti<1l de mands for
raises and other benefits for the
fis cal year beginning July 1 ,
The Newport-Mesa Federation
of teachers is seekin g cost-of
liv in g increa SC'S ranging
between 13 5 and l8 5 percent
while asking for one less work
day next school yC'a r. an ad
ministrator reported Tuesday
The increases are sought for
Turtle Rock
birthday
parties ()K'd
"Happy Birthday" is a song
likely lo be heard more and
more in Irvine after the City
Council approved a birthday
party program at Turtle Rock
Community Park.
Since January five parties
have been staged at the com-
munity center, complete with a
city staff worker. a birthday
cake, party favors and a dec-
orated room. Cost is $50 for a
maximum o r 20 c hildren
between 4 and 12 years old.
The council agreed to review
the program after a citizen
criticized the party operation.
suggesting it isn't something the
city ought to be doing.
Dearota Manning, director or
Community Services, said that
the program was designed to
help better utilize Turtle Rock
park.
Miss Manning added that the
city Is ooly breaking even on the
venture and that rees will likely
be increased to $75 by the end or
the year.
teachers at the upper levels in
the pay scale. those who have
taught the longest in the district.
The Ca l if ornia Sc hool
Empl oyees Asso ciation .
repr esentin g no n -t e a c hing
employee~ such as clerks. food
s.ervice workers. bus drivers and
custodians. seek increases rang.
ing between 15 and 21 percent.
The non teaching employees
also seek a closed s hop clause.
one that would require payment
or up to $90 a year in dues to the
union by a ll 700 employees
About 200 currently a re mem
bers or thl' union
Th e pay h1kt•s sou g ht by
teachers would. 1f granted, raise
the averc:12e currer1t teaching
salary C minus fringe benefit
costs) from a bout $26,457 a year
to about $30,100 for 10 months of
work. administrators estimated.
The teachers also are seeking
add1t1onal medical and dental
insurance benefits as well as vis-
ual and psychological care.
C hier t eac h e r s union
negotiator Bill Cue noted his or·
ganization also is seeking addi·
tional ex tra ·duty p ay fo r
teachers and coaches. including
up to $175 a week for coaches
whose teams move into Cl F
playoffs each year.
Also sought are s abbatical
leaves for nine teachers who
would be paid benefits for the
ye ar a s well a s half th eir
salaries at an estimated district
cost or about $140,000.
Non-teaching employees also
seek additional health in·
surance. includin~ full d1strict·
paid coverage for dependents. ·
Both unions negotiated three-
year contracts last fall, retroac-
tive to the previous year when
no settlement was reached.
Those contract expire in June
1982, and left open pay and fr·
inge benefit negotiations for this
/Ve•i:t1 li.1tt1nln9
The Daily Pilot wants to heat observaUona h~m Its readers
-particularly commenu about the paper itself. It's easy to tell
us your views. Just call the number below and your me41a1e
will be recorded. Mesaa1es wlll be transcrtbed severtl time1
dally and delivered to the desk of the appropriate edltor. No
clrculadon calla, plea!e.
Tell ue wbat•a on your mind. The number lt tn aervlce 24
houra a day, seve,n days a week. 642•6086
com ing fiscal year
Teachers were gr anted 8 per·
cent cost·Of·living hikes for last
~·ea r and this year.
Actual negotiation on the new
r equests is expected to begin in
about three mo nths Public
res ponse to the de mands is
scheduled for the next board
session, Ma rch 24.
College board
names veteran
coordinator
Rick Gorman, 29, of Fountain
Valley , has been named
veterans coordinator at Golden
West College and Orange Coast
College.
Gorman will be available to
counsel veterans two days a
week at each college under a
federally funded program.
His schedule: Orange Coast,
Mondays, 9 a .m . to 4 p.m .. and
Wednesdays. 1·4 p.m.; Golden
West, Wednesday 9.a.m . to noon .
and Fridays, 9 a .m . to 4 p.m.
.At Golden West his telephone
is 892-7711, Ext. 668 or 669, and
at Orange Coast, 556-5853.
Gorman, who graduated from
Golden West in 1976, earned rus
bachelor of science degree in
criminal justice at Cal State
Long Beach in 1979. He is cur-
rently completing a master's in
public adminislraUon.
, A four-year Air Force veteran,
who served 10 months in Viet-
nam, Gorman served as assis·
tant veterans coordinator at
Golden West from July 1975 to
June 1977.
Best services due
Longtime Newport 8('ach res i-
dent Sarah Beal, who d ied Satur-
day at age 78, is to be buried at
sea this week in private
ceremonies.
Mrs. Best, a member of \he
Newport Beach Aaalalaace
League sin ce UM4, moved to
Newport in 1939.
She ls survived by two
dau1hten -Sarah Fretchl of
San Pedro and Allee Morrrtdle ot N ewporl Beach. Sbe abo
leaves sill 1randchlldren and
two areat-srandcbUdren.
The famUy suueata memoriaL
contributions to the Artbrttla
Foundation of Oran1e County.
O t
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT(Thuflday, March 12, 1981
Dally l"li.t llaff ,. .....
Space doubled
A $12 million twin office building (fore·
ground) project off the San Diego Freeway
at Ward Street in Fountain Valley is slated
for completion and first occupancy next
month. About 54,000 square feet of omcl
space will be available in each. Complex
was designed to complement adjacent 1rrr
Cannon plant, formerly occupied by BASF.
HB district
turns down
sabbaticals
Sabbatical leaves for Hunt·
ington Beach Union High School
District teachers have been de-
nied for the first time in recent
years as a cost·saving measure.
The board unanimously denied
t he requests of 10 teachers to
take a one-year leave to pursue
education in their fields.
The cost of $104,000 -to hire
s ubstitutes and to pay half the
s alary of the teachers taking
s abbatical leave, was deemed
excessive by trustees Tuesday.
·'This is a painful act for us to
take," said Board President
Helen Ditte.
··But in view or all the cuts
we 've made, laying off
counselors, teachers and cutting
back classes, granting the sab·
batical leaves would not have
been fiscally responsible," she
said .
The school board recently
trimmed S3.9 million from next
year's projected $42 million
operating fund to balance the
budget.
A sabbatical allows teachers
with at least seven years in the
district. to take a year off to
travel or do further study in
their field of teaching.
Mrs. Ditte said it is the first
time in at least eight years that
the district has not granted
some reques ts for sabbatical
leaves.
Camera shop
burglarized
Costa Mesa police said it
looked as though burglars used a
sledge hammer and heavy pry
bar to break through a door and
metal screen to takt' about $3,000
wor th of merchandise from a
camera store.
Officers. alerted by a burglar
a larm. arrived at P a lex
Camera. 1145 Baker St .. at 1 10
a. m .. apparently missing the
thieves by minutes.
Taken were cameras. lenses,
automatic winders and flash
equipment.
....
El Salvador policy ::
critic dismissed
I .,
WASHINGTON CAP > -
Former U .S . ambas s ador
Robe rt E . White says the
Reagan administration has fired
him from the foreign service for
disagreeing with its "ready-
made doctrine" of U.S. military
aid for El Salvador.
White told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee that the State
Department told him in a form
letter last week that he must ac-
cept one or two lesser jobs or
leave the foreign ser vice. He
said he was ousted as U.S. am·
bassador to El Salvador in
January.
"In my Judgment I'm being
fired for my views.·· White told
Irvine backs
upgrading of
road medians
Citizen complaints or rats.
opossums and overgrown weeds
plaguing Irvine's g r eenbelt
areas have caused some pretty
fast action in city hall.
City Council members unan-
imously approved s pe nding
$35,000 to upgrade landscaping
of five median s in the
Northwood tract. Councilwoman
Mary Ann Gaido was absent.
Targeted for improvements
were street medians at Bran-
dywine, Mayflower, Yorktown.
Monticello and a greenbelt area
near Montecello and Yale.
I rate citizens packed the Cit y
Council Tuesday night, complain-
ing or health hazards. rats.
opossums and thick algae as a
result of the overgrown and
neglected greenbelt at Mon·
ticelloand Yale.
The developer for the area
failed to upgrade the greenbelt
since upkeep was not initially re-
quired, said Brent Muchow,
director of public works.
R esidents living near the
greenbelt complained that in ad-
dition to rodents, it was over·
grown with 3-4-fool-high weeds
that were causing asthmatic
problems for children.
reporters. "I got a letter s aying
there is no other assignmerf..
and out you go. •
"If you have as this ad-
ministration had a ready
made doctrine which assert~
that the solution for El Salvad'{
lies with the introduction tJf
large quantities or armaments
and military advisers, then yo41
firs t priority becomes the r.q·
moval or an a mbassador wbp
may complicate the application
of your doctrine," he testified ....
"As in China or in Vietnam,!'
he said. "the message to lHe
career Foreign Service could n'ltt
be more bell-like in its clarity ..
do not send in reports that cod·
f I i c t with pr e conceived
theories." ..
AT THE STATE Departmerri.
a s pokesman said White was
"being retired" from the foreigh
service under regulations which
state that career officers not ~
assigned within three montl't~
after completion of a presiden
ti a I appointment m us t 11e
separated from the service.
The spokesman s aid several
possible assignments were dis
cussed with White but that none
was found lo be satisfactory
"It is not foreseen that Ai·
bassador White wi ll recei ~
future assignments," he sai4
His retirement will become el ·
fective on May 23. "
White publicly had disagreed
at a hearing before the comm1\·
tee two weeks ago on Reagan~
then-anticipated decision to serjCI
m ore m i Ii t ar y a id to !:'I
Salvador. 1 .,
THE PRESIDENT has sin ce
decided to send an additional ?P
military advisers and $25 mimon
io military aid to El Salvadofl.
and White expanded on hi s Oil·
position in his testimony Weq ·
nesday.
"I'm not predicting any Viet-
nam," he testified. "But I do ndt
understand the rush to action.
The left is depleted. There is no
possibility of its rising again ln
any reasonable period. So vie
should use this time for media-
tion."
GOURMET
MARKET
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
LENTEN SPECIALS
Fresh Boned MORNING FRESH PRODUCE ,
Pan Ready Silver Salmon, s oz .. 2.zt ea.
Fresh Pacific Red Snapper . . . . . . . . 1.29 lb.
Fresh Frozen Local Swordlhb ...... 5.98 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
For that St. Patrick's Day Dinner, Delaney's will
again have that famous Home Cured Corned Beef.
Choice Boneless Beef Brisket.a trimmed of all excess fat and cured as only we at Delaney's know how, with
our secret recipe.
Whole or Point Cat . . . . . .. .. . . . .. . . t.18 lb.
Flat CUt ............................ 2.zt lb.
Lean Ground Beef <Ground Hourly> ..•• l .31 lb.
CANDELITE HEAT AND EAT FOODS
Prepared Fresh Dally From Delaney's Own
Kitchen Clllcltn alld Dumpllnp , ..... 11............. 1.18 ea.
Fllet el Sole St11ffecl wl~ Sllrl•P ,,. ... 11 •••• z.n ea.
Apllte• Almond Gnnu ~alte . • . . . . . . . . . . 1.M ea. ~laaey'a f'alftOU Carrot C111le . . . . • •..... 1.18 ea. .
FREF. HOME DELIVERY SERVICE UH mfalm••> lilii'ii;S
Fresh Large Sile Asparagus ........ t9c lb.
Large Sweet Local Strawberries .. 7tc bakt.:
Delaney's Own .
Fresh Baked Shortcakes ............ Ste ea. ·'
LocaJ Grown Large Sise
Solid Green Cabbage ................ 8c lb. •
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
Deleney'1 Private Label Chablla or
Vla Reee' Wine 1750 mil> .................. I.It ea. Korballd Gtneatet Wlnea 1174
1750 mil> . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . • •• . . . .. . 3.15 ea.
Cll«aaot·Goid Label Brat Relmt1 Pra~ Vleta1e.. . . . . . . . . ................. It.ts ea.
Scoreaby SC!otdll750 mil > .. . .. . .. . . . . . . . . I.SS ea.
Carlo RGMI Via ltoH' iK Cllablla
Cllllled For Voar Coeventienee 1 Full Gal.) .. 1.• ea.
Perrier Water <ZS oa.1 ••••••••• lici ea. ,,
Store llDara t -1, Cloeed Suday
2IZt Newport Bl•d., Newpert Beacll
673-5520 .
.. r,--.-. ............... --.. ._...... .................. • • • ............................. ~---------~----.. .... "' .. '"' ...... \._~ ........ f> I t
NO nas uoa osn. -Maybt tbe ttoubl• 11 taat srowa.., up aJoni W1 beat ol all pau&ble eouta, lt wu Im·
poealble to find a Job 11 load u UM cme lood old CbarU•
J'errla bu. CbarUe, Ca'"· baa It made. lo event you've dllplae..t o•w tM lut couple ol
day1, It bu been vuUy reported iD the pubJJe prtnta about
Charle• D. Ferrl1, wbo bead1 our tu1ust Federal
CommunlcatJOOJ Commlulon. aometlmea known u the rec. .
A1 bead, Charlie • ~
set.a a 1alary ot sss.ooo
per year and baa a •fk
chauffeured auto u a \ ~~~!; !~f ~e:'J.'!i J_O_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_l.~t;
Charlie doesn't do any --------~-~-.... ' work any more. He Is
being chauffeured to a non·Job where he non-works ror the SS,000 smackers.
AIL OF TIQ.S apparently cornea about because the
Reagan administration doesn't trust old Charlie any more.
So they have allowed him to han1 around, doin1 nothln1 and getting paid for it. '
Listen, the last time I had a position where I wasn't
trusted any more, it was worklnt for two 1uys in derby
bats who smoked big ciaars and ran a used car lot ln
Lakewood. When I refused to "just Uahten up" a set of
leaking brakes on a '39 DeSoto, they didn't lruat me any
more. Did I get a free salary'! I dld not. I aot the boot
I didn't even get a ride lo thf! bus station In the leaky· braked DeSoto.
LATER, LOOKING FOR a son job In wauna Beach, I
caught on at Hatold Reed's old lc~hous.i In SIHpy Hollow.
I was going to be an iceman and df!ll ver to beauUrut
women all over the Art Colony.
Lacking seniority, however. I ended up on tho com·
mercial route, lugging 300-POWld ice blocks into saloons
Him' He's a federal heater value 1~c1or. of courtt'.
that had been locked up all night so that the stale beer and
cigar odors were still trapped inside.
Try that before breakfast. Charlie Ferris wouldn't like
that kind of a free ride.
Still later, I figured it would be romantic to work in a
fire engine factory. painting fire engines red. I got on at
the fire engine paint shop because I was the newest rube in
town.
Later, 1 learned that the rookie painter was the one
who always got to crawl underneath the fire engine and
make sure all of the undercarriage was spray-painted red.
. The FCC's Charlie Ferris might think this was a good
Job because you got to do it while reposing on your back.
TROUBLE WAS, the paint guns they created in those
days weren't exactly leak-proof when, while flat on your
back, you tried to turn them sideways and spray all the
nooks and crannies underneath fenders, over mufflers and
around cables.
The guns invariably leaked a little. Not too much. Just
enough to start a slow . steady trickle of sticky red that
rolled past your wrist, leaked toward your elbow and
headed down your upper arm.
ft was always a frantic race Could you finish the un-
derside before the trickling red ooze reached your armpit?
Hurry! Hurry'
COME TO THINK of it, maybe this would be a good
way to treat good old Charlie Ferris. Flop him on his back
and pour some red paint down his armpits
~e~aco glves rebates
Shell cut• Uiwle1ale price• 2 cent•
' NZW VORX ~AP> -Teueo Inc. ,_,, It bu becun olfertq
dealtl'I acrou tbe country n-
bat .. ot • ceb a 1allon on IOCDe
1110Une pu;rcbaaea, while tella·
bit lnduttry IOW'Cet 1a1 Shell
Oil Co. has cut wboleaale
aaaollne prices a ceotl a aaJJon
ln the llldwest.
Analysts said the moves were
taken to spur aluHl•b sales
after UM lncreaH of almoet 12
cents a aalloo in retail 1uollne
sales prices that haa occurred
sloce the federal oU-prlce COD·
trots were lifted J an. 28, etlbt
moot.ha ahead or schedule.
Texaco, tbe nation's third·
lar1est oil company, said
Publisher
guilty of
• extortion
PATERSON, N.J. CAP) -The
publisher or a weekly communi-
ty newspaper faces up to 15
years in prison and a $S,000 fine
after being convicted of extor·
lion in what maybe the first trial
of a publisher for attempting lo
coerce people into cooperating
with his publication.
Alex Bldnik Jr., of Clifton ,
publisher of the IndepeJldent
Prospector, was con victed
Wednesday by a Passaic County
Superior Court jury on five of six counts.
J OURNALISM HISTORIAN
Edwin Emery said he believed
the trtal marked the first indict-
mentof a newspaper publisher for
extortion.
Bidnik, 45. was convicted of
extortion in incidents involving
William Elias, former Clifton
athletic director; Ari Tasiou and
Charles Italia, owners of Clifton
restaurants ; Edward Looney.
owner of Henry's Delicatessen
and Liquor Store in Clifton; and
Edward "Hahn, advertising vice
president for New J ersey Banlt
in Clifton.
ELIAS HAD testified Bidnik
threatened his job and reputa-
tion when the athletic director
refused the publisher's demands
for an interview. Other wit·
nesses •estified Bid nik
threatened to write damaging.
articles if they rlid not advertise
with his publication.
Jurors could not reach a de·
cision on a sixth indictment
count, and Assistant Passaic
County Prosecuto r Bruno
Mongiardo said he would move
to have that charge dismissed.
Wednesday It be1ao olferln1
"rebate." ol 4 cent.I per 1a.Uon
to dtalet'I March l.
Texaco Hid It.I 4-cent a 1allon
rebate would apply to deaJen
who sell more than 80 percent of
the qua0Ut1 of 1as0Une they
sold ln March iaeo.
Dan Lundber1, publisher of an
oil industry newsletter, said
Texaco's rebate might show up
shortly at the pump.
"It will be on a staUon-by-
staUon basis. Nothing requires
dealers to pass lt on to the
customer, but many unques-
tionably will," Lundbere said.
Ployf ul pair
L undber1 said Te xaco's
leaded rtl\llar 1uoUne waa aeU-
lnl for an averaae of SUl a
1aUon at full service stations u
of Mard>t.
He said the avera1e price of
the fuel for smaller, Lndependent
rertners wu $1.34 and the na-
tional a erage price of the f\.lel
was Sl.38.
G aaollne demand dropped 4
percent ln 1979 and 7 percent ln
1980 In the United States as
prices climbed. The drop in de·
mand has left U.S. refiners'
gasoline s upplies within 2
m illlon barr e ls of the 283
milUon-barrel record set last
April.
APWlreplMlo
Everybody knows pandas are cuddly -even other pan·
das. This playful pair enjoy the warm sun at the zoo in
Berlin, Germany. Bao Bao (top) and Tian Tian were gifts
last year from Chinese Communist Party Chairman Hua
Guofeng to Chancellor Helmut Schmidt.
,Mother
guilty
in death
BUENA VISTA, Va. CAP) -A Judre bu found a woman fui.lty of
1econd~1tee murder and sen·
tenced ber to 20 yeara in prlaoo for
pourina black pepper down the
throatofher3-year-olddauahter .
"J Jutt poured it (the pepper)
from t.be box into her mouth. I
didn't mean to kill her,'' Diana M.
Pugh, 30, said in a Police st.ate·
mentreadtothecourt.
Buena Vista Circuit Court
Judge Rudolph Bum1ardner III
heard the case without a jury and
handed down the sentence on
Wednesday.
P OLI CE CHI EF Ers kin
Campbell, who read the state·
ment, said Mrs. Pugh al.so ad·
milted beating her daughter,
Mary Elizabeth.
D r . Wi l liam Wedd le o f
Stonewall Jackson Memorial
Hospital in Lexington said the
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation be
administered to the child burned
his mouth. He said he tried to put a
plastic tube into the child's throat
to make an airway but failed
because it was blocked with pep·
per.
IN HER statement, Mrs. Pugh
said she did not know how much
pepper she had given the child .
Weddle testified the girl
weighed 17 pounds and was 21h·
feet tau, whi ch he said was the
height of a 2-year-old and the
weightofa9-month-old baby.
"It looked like the baby had
been starved," Weddle testified.
"There was no subcutaneous fat,
which meant it was skin and
'bones."
HE SAID the child's body was
covered with bruises from head to
legs on front and back and that
mostorthe bruises appeared to be
threetofourdaysold .
Mrs. Pugh, separated from her
husband at the time of the chil d's
death, sobbed as she answered
questions frdm the judge and kept
her head in her hands through
much orthe proceedings. She had
pleaded innocent to the charges
July 15.
Con s u mers to pay
WASHINGTON <AP> The
Federal Communications Com·
mission has approved a change
in accounting rules designed lo
ensure the financial integrity of
the na tion's tele phone com-
panies but at a cost of billions or
dollars to consum ers during the
next 10 years .
Snow buries mountains
Texas , Great Lakes expecting rain
j;ll' A calendar that keeps yo u
on schedule. c o .. tal .,,eatlaft-
C.h•nce Of ,..,n t0 oerc.l'nl tonu3n'
1ntre1s1ng 10 10 oercef'\t Fr1d.tv
thAn(e ot lhuncJtt"Uorms •nO Qu\ly
wind\ F r.O.y afternoon
Co1\ta1 tow SO 1n11ncJ !>7 (oa\la l
l'\•Qn •1, inl«"0•7 W•ler 60
Etuwtwro, wln<n 1outllwl\t 10 to
10 -nots out•r waltf> 10•1111111 betom
1nQ wut~tly to to 10 •nou F"d•Y S.a• •to I Ifft thrOUQll Ffldn lnnu
wattrs, winds southeflv I to IS -nots
ton1Qllt, '°"'"~I to w~•I 10 lo 20
•not\ Dy Fr•o.r •fteriioon Wt,terly
>wttl\ 1 10 • Ifft ~tty ctovdy wt111
\P\Owtrs sor•«li"9 M>utr,westerfy l•te
ton1Qnt P•r11•1 ctu rlnQ F•tdav w1tll
\C•lt•'•d '-"ower'
(J.S •...... ,,,
,._,,.,.,
(nu)
I a"'' ~ Cold Wo1"" ---itr.o••'' \•ft• 0"'0'• Ouh14•d ~ ---------NOAA V $ o.,. •f C••~••u
The tJ'H>Uf11•ins Of Cotor100 were
buried una.r ,,...,Y snow e•rty IOdl'f', rain 1111 on • U<:tlon ot the country ..., _____________ ...:;.:::.:;...::..:..:::,::;..::,..:.,:::.::.:,:,.,1
trom th~ lOuti.ern Roe-lo to int
WHtttn Gulf Cont .• ,,., hglll •now
dulled the H \tem Grut L•-o 10 tllt tenlrat ApPela<h•ans
A.ttn ••• ••Pt<ted lo sprt•<I ovtr
\OUlhtrn Teus lodliiy. •nd r•1n •nd
'now !ihowwt wtte tor•c.•st •round
ln•Grutt.Ak".
hmperatur.s early tod•Y ranQld
from IS ""91'"' I" Bodford. Pa . 10 61 d•Q•Hsln t<eyWest, Fla
CaUlerrtla
Clouch ~ mov11111 1nto Southern
Cal1toriwa toct.av and i1>0wtrl wer•
••P•< led In Ille mountains latt
tonlont, SPf'tadlnQ to all art•• Fri·
110 . tile Natlo,,.t Wtatlle• S.rvlo
Wild
A 40 pert.,.t t llen<t Of rain WU
loracau tonight and 10 per(enl
Friday, wit/I moderate '"°""'" end t"underttcw"" llU ly
Snow si-111 fall to ll>t 5,000.fool
ltvtl.
Highs Frltley wttt range from SI to
U In l.ol AnoelH and 1he valley1
"""• -~n tamperelllfft raacll on1, Into Ille mld-lOi and •Os.
Afternoon winds from U to U mph
,..,. forKest for tllt dtlct•h.
Te..perat•r•
Albany
AlbuQut
""'•rltlo Astlevlllt
Atlante
Atlante Cty
at I ti more Blrmlnghln
lls,...rc,~
HI I.a f'<lll•
0 ,. .01
s• n .to
U al .SI
5' JI
62 " 0 al .1l
SI 29 •s n
SI 2t
Bo•'t II) JO Boston •l 30
Brown1v1tt •• u Bultalo l• 1•
Cllart•tn SC .. ...
CllarlstnWY ., JO Cheyenne •I l• ChtcaQO •• JO
Clnctnnatl •1 13
Ct•v•lancl JS 24
Cotumtwa •3 37
Oat·FIWth ., •I
O.nver SI )1
On Mollie• SJ l2 Detroit 3• 21
Oulutll ., l• Hartford •• 26 HalaM n 23 Honolulu IS II
Houlton 10 H
lndn•Plll •O 11
J et hnvlla I) ,.
Kan' City SJ 34
Lu vaoas u .. Llllla AoO 61 .,
LOl Anoe'" IS '° Loul1vllla •• 11 Memp11l1 u u Mleml u SI Mllwauue 0 11 Mpl1-St.P 53 u Nuhvllle ., 16
NawOrle-11 ..
Naw York .. ll
Norfolk S7 " Okla City .. • Omaha .H " OrlendCI ,, ..
Pllll•cletpttte .. 29 Pnoenl• •• " Pltllbur;fl ,. lJ """""·,.,.. ,. 2t
f'tlend,Ore .. " Aepld City '° ..
Atno 60 ,.
J Al<llm-,. 21 Sttt Lallt $4 • Sen Olt90 ., '° Sen Frett .. SI
Statue St .,
SI LIM.Ill st u
St f'·Tempe 10 .. SI Sit M.trlt " 11 ...... R • Tul .. " ,.
I WHhl"91n J6 u I
C4U~lllA ----------'!"' ...... ,.,letd ")I
Btytna 81 SI
F•Hno IS SI
IS Lancaster .. 0
OJ Ma•vsvllle 73 ..
Monterey 61 S1 Netdlu TS
O•-land •• I• Paw AOCllH .. 0 Rafi Btull 11 •• Aotlwoocl City 10 Sl
01 Rtno to 16
Se<ra m..,to ., ..
S.llnas ... 11
S.ntt Bari..ra u SJ Sto<kton ,.
Tllarmal 11 " Ukiah 11 0
Barstow 72 0 Big Btar SI 2l
81ll\oc> u 21
Catalina 10 SJ
Et Centro II 47
Lono Beech 67 SJ
N t w P<>r1 8e.cfl .. $4
Ontario 10 ..
P•tm Sprlno> to H
PaaedeNI 14 •• Sen a~ 74 ..
Sen JIM 10 •• S.ntaAne n so
Sentacrui ., SI
Senta Marie ., .,
u WORLD
Am l tanNm S7 S2 allftllloll " 79 ·~ .. 7J 8elrvl '2 SI
.12
.01
...., ... .. $4 8trtln J7 14 a09041 .. ..
.ti a ...... 1, " 44 B'AlrH I) •• Cerro ,, so Cerecu 12 19 COP9n""'9ft ,. JO 1<r111u un ... so Ot nna 70 ..
HaveM et .. Hetatn-1 u s
·-··--... ,,
HOnQ Kor>Q IS •• Jtru,4ttm S7 0
Jo INrQ 62 S1
l(lf'W n )Cl
L.1me 79 10
L.l1bon .. ~
L.oncton SI !O
Mttlrld 10 0
Mantia .. ..
Montreal J6 21
Mow ow 1! s
N•u•u It '1 New Ottn1 12 SS
Nltoal• I) S•
Olio H 14
Parlt M 41
Alo 9S ..
Rome S9 .,
San Juan •• IS
Seo Paulo .. 64 S1nQaPOra 91 IS
Stockholm 28 n
Svtln•v H .. Ta1~I 11 u Tai Aviv .. 14 Tokyo S4 39
Toronto JI l1 H
"'•"couver 14 0
Vl•nn• .. SS
PAN AMI AICAN
AUpUICO 90 10
Barbad0$ .. n
Bermuda .. SJ .n
B090t• 10
Curat eo .. 7J .06 FrHp0rt 11 " .CM Guadatajera 11 so 03
Guadeloupe .. ..
H1v1n1 It M
t<tnQston .. IS
Montevo Bev 12 n
MaHtlen IS ...
Mertda " .. .21
Mul<oCtty 11 SS .OI
Monterrey S7 n ·°' Na ueu n •• Sen Juen 13 1S St t<llta " 1S ,.
T~llC'.I~ .... 12 •• Trinidad " ,, .CM
varacha 12 ..
CANADA
Ca'9ary 52 JI
EdmontOll .. 21 Montru t ,. 21
Otta we ,. 21
Aootna 54 2J
T0<onto ,. 21
Ven<ovver H 41
Wlnrt1"9 S$ 11
s-.11 .. -.r,..
TODAY
Sec:Oftd tow l:IJp.m u
fl'AIOAY
l'lr•t 111911 2:JJe.m. ••• ,.,., low IO:lle.191. ••• t.<91141!\ltfl S:llp•. u
~-t .Jtp.m. l,A '"" ..u toMy s:• p.m .• rllff l'rt· day •:O.a,m,
Meon MU l'rtdtY, lt.01 1.m., rlttl lllft .....
j;ll' A weights and measures chart
that helps you co'nvert.
j;ll' A checking account that pays . you interest.
j;ll' For you sports fans, an Angel
game schedule.
j;ll' And a handsome check book
cover and wallet, to help you
keep it all together.
Come in and help us celebrate
the grand opening of our new
offices in Costa Mesa and
Anaheim.
We 're having a party and
we've got a present for you.
A beautifully crafted check
book cover and wallet com·
bination with enough
pockets to keep
everything in its place.
And while you're
here, open up
your interest bear·
ing checking
account.• and we'll
give you a check book
to put in your tree check boo
cover and wallet combination.
ANAHEIM OFFICE
1700 Adame Avenue
Costa Mesa, Cahlornia 92626
(714) 754-1801
•12000 Minimum Bai.nee A.Quired
for a Free Checldng Account
2100 EHi l<atella BouleVlrd
An1helm, C•tlfoml• 92809 ( n•> &78·9174
•No Mtn1mum Ba.l1nce A.quired
tor a Free Cheoklno Aoeount
For a limited tlrM ontv.
' . ·-····~ . -. ....... -..... --....... -· ---·-.-·· ..• . ... -·--·-· . _____ ..,.._ ____ ..
•
,,,,. . ...._~,,,.. ~.· .......... _ . ... . ··-,.~ . .._ ................. ,..-. . _,_,
• • I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(l'hureday, Maroh 12, 1981
Anti-busing forces hail ruling
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Oppo-
nenta ol forced buatn1 reacted
ec:atatlcally to a atate Supreme
Court dectaloa that could be the
deatb blow to the Loi An1eles
Unified ~bool Dlstrict'a man-
datory lnterratlon proaram.
"I'm thrll.led, I'm excited, I ·
don't know what to say," school
board preaJdent Roberta Wein-
traub aaid Wednesday after
learnini that the high court had
let stand an appeals court rullne
upholding the state's anti-bu.sing
amendment, Proposition 1, and
its application in the Los
Angeles school district.
But Superior Court Judge Paul
Egly called it "cruy."
''IT'SSOMETHING I didn't ex-
pect. I won't comment further,"
said Egly, who bad spent years
overseeing the development of
the school district's integration
plan as the result of a 1963 civil
rights lawsuit.
The Supreme Court in San
Francisco denied without com-
ment a petition by the American
Civil Liberties Union to throw
out the Court of Appeal ruling,
although Chief Justice Rose Bird
would have granted the hearing.
The ACLU said it would com· meot on the rulln1 and on
whether the case would be
pursued in federal court at a
news conference today.
But state Sen. Alan Robbins,
D-Van Nuys, author of Proposi-
tion 1 -the so-called Robbins
Amendment -said the measure
w aa worded in such a way that it
could not be overturned at the
federal level.
"This was our bieeeat hur-
dle," he said. "We have a very
liberal Supreme Court in the
slate or California, and now even
they've found that mandatory
busing is unconstitutional."
"l'M THE happiest person in
California," Robbins said. Mrs.
Weintraub, who leads an anti-
busing majority on the school
board, said the district's 2~·
year-old forced busing program
would be ended •·as soon as
humanly possible" and called a
special board session for
tonight.
''This is the most exciting
news in my life," she said. "I'm
so excited for the kids and the
parents and the schools."
"lt'a a wonderful vlctory for
all of us wbo worked on the Rob-
bins ao:iendmeot," Robbim said.
"It's everythin1 we could have
possibly wanted, it's a dream
come true.
"NOW WE can devote our
schools to education, we can end
forced busing, we can take
millions of dollars that right now
ls belng spent on buses and bus-
ing and use it for education."
Robbins said .the district
would not lose millions or dollars
in federal funds earmarked
specifically for integration pro-
grams.
"We'll continue to use it for
voluntary programs," be said.
"We're going to prove that
volunt.ary integration can pro-
duce more integration than
forced busing. Once parents
know that they don't have lo bus
their kids, we're going to get rid
of the bitterness and resentment
around busing and they'll be re-
ceptive to busing their kids
shorter distance and other pro-
grams."
PROPOSITION 1, passed
overwhelmingly by voters· i•
1979, ban state courts from 10-
lnt beyond federal guJdellnes lo
aaslgnint pupils in d,aegreaa-
Uon cues on the basil of race. It
says mandatory busing can only
be imposed ln districts where
se1re1atton has been inten-
tional.
In a rullne last Dec. 19, the ap-
peals court found that Proposi-
tion 1 does not violate federal
law , that integration in Los
Angeles schools was based on
residential patterns and was not
intentional, and that the district
therefore was not required to
maintain its mandatory busing
program.
SINCE THE appeals court rul-
ing, the school board bas been
planning for an end to forced bus-
ing, which now affects about
23,000 of some 530,000 students in
the 600-square-mile district, the
nation'ssecond largest.
Although the district's first
mandatory program was im·
plemented in 1978, the legal bat-
tle over integration in Los
Angeles schools dated back to
1962.
State cracks caviar black market
SAN FRANCISCO C.'\P) -State fish and game officials, look-
ing o~l for the welfare of California's sturgeon population, are
crackrng down on a gourmet black market that provides caviar to
those who crave it.
..
the buses and coaches needed to keep up our transit services. If we
do not get it, that will hurt the elderly, the handicaooed. the low. income workers. and the commuters who rely on transit."
\la" Houtf!R apl'f!al -..w.1 Orange crush
H/F
Four agents seized 65 pounds of the black fish eggs from a San
Francisco oyster merchant as part of a drive to wipe out the illegal
trade, a fish and game official said Wednesday.
The roe, carefully packed in 130 eight-ounce jars, was valued
at $6,500.
Staff! fraftdt •ladtn ...na
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The California Transportation Com-
mission says that all state and local transportation services must
be cut -unless new revenues are found.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Manson family member Leslie Van
Houten's bid to overturn her murder conviction has been denied by
the California Supreme Court.
Miss Van Houten bad claimed the verdict should be set aside
because gruesome photographs, including those from a crime she
was not involved in, were viewed as evidence
by the jury.
Pico, a chimp with a circus performing in Santa Monica •
this week, knows how to take a nutrition break. He calm-.
ly makes short work of an orange by biting into the fruit
(top), draining the juice <center), and attacking the skin
(bottom).
Commission Chairman Dean Meyer commented on the draft
bienmal report to the Legislature that the cuts would affect every-
thing from urban bus systems to country roads.
She was convicted in 1971, along with
Charles Manson and two other family mem-
bers, in the slaying of grocery executive Leno
LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, on two
counts of murder and one count of conspiracy
to commit murder.
In a statement accompanying Wednesday's draft report,
Meyer said, "ll is not a ques-
tion of being unable to afford
new freeways. The message NEWS BRIEFS ... is that we cannot keep up All were sentenced to death, but the
penalty w as set aside when the California
Supreme Court ruled the state capital puo.ilb·
ment law was unconstitutional. Tbe sen-
tences then automatically became life terma.
what we have now. and that
will hurt everyone.
... "We need a billion dollars more in the next five years to buy
Art Show
Huntington Center
daily thru Sun
S•f'~• rime Start1 a1 YOv• Ooor
tc111 S•or• Ne•'"' 'four ~'••)
COITA MUA641-1289
IUI N""'°" ..... d "'""°" v1uo495-0401 2"22 Ce-C.pletrono
(Ion Dloto '""' ol A•..., """' I
Tl RES· R·US
:i
HOLLOWAY
We'd be better off if we
retained more of what we
learn and less of what we
eat.
Our friend says his flnan·
cial condition is about
average. Worse than last
year, better than next year
Kids grow up so quickly.
One day you look at your
empty aas gauge and re·
alize they're teenagers.
New · employee lo boss:
"Well. lf I can't have a
raise. how about the
same pay more often?" ..
Truth i s not only
stran1er than fiction
these days · it's a lot
cleaner.
••
You 'll alwaya be "1omeone apeclaJ" when
you do bualneu with Tire City. When a1ked you may I
tell anyooe "Yes I have a
friend that'• ln the tire
bualnets."
• 1 .
(
do-it-yourself
KITCHEN DESIGN
SEMINAR
Free design kit upon registration
Bring your measurements to design school
Simple as A, B, C.
LIMIT 8 PER CLASS • CALL MOW FOR ltESERV ATIOMS
t :uro-Amcrican Kitchen & Bath~
1741 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach Open 9-S Mon.· Fri. Sat. 10-3 714-631-7032
CLOSING CLOSING
SALE SALE
AGA JOHN ORIENT AL RUGS
is closing their branch
in Newport Beach
All Oriental Rugs reduced for clearance
Chinese, ln<tian, Pakistan, Persian, Romanian
I 000 Bristol St. No.
Plaza NewPort
MEWPORT liACH
851-0864
lri1W Mo. • A.GA. Johll
Oourfltet Coffie Sltoppa
15 Convenl-"t Locations
Huntington Beach
Pactftc ~OM1 Hwy So. of Pier
Newpc>rt Beach
1400 Plldftc Cout Hwy
)
INFORMS In the
L M. BOYD l1ilyPilat
~
J .
Wall to stop slide?
one lane of the highway. MALIBU CAP) -With more
rain expected to reach the area
by Friday, stale transportation
officials have built a 100-yard·
long earthen wall along Pacific
Coast Highway to halt a minor
rockslide that forced closure of
"It's nothing major, just 1
dribble of rocks. it's more an-
noying than anything.'· saii
stale Department of Transporta-
tion spokesman Mark Watts.
CJl~IVIClNCJS
S~VE
CCJ%
~NCI
4CJ%
TOday through Saturday, th l unparalleled
beauty of diamonds Is yours at remarkable savings.
Here . we list only a few examples of savings.
HUllMAN DIAMONDS-the world 's most brllllant diamonds-are reduced for the
first time ever. Available exclusively at Bullocks Wilshire. save twenty percent on
these exquisite 1«·faceted diamond stud earr1ngs and pendants set In 18K gold.
For example: Stud earr1ngs totaling .25 ct .. reg. $725. Now $&80. Stud earrings
totaling .50 ct .. reg . $1590. Now 11272. Pendant .. 50 ct .• reg. $3965. Now S3172.
1M'NTY mCENT IAVINBI on a select group of diamond solitaire rings . brooches
and pendants. Examples lncJude: Brooch formed of eighteen marquise and thirty·
one round diamonds, total weight appx. 7.5 ct., set ln platinum, reg. $16,250.
Now 111,000.SolltJlre rlng,1 .31 ct.set In 14K wht.gold, reg .$8000.Now H400.
FOm mCENT IAVINU on a dazzling selection of hoop earrings, cluster rings,
brateta and necklaces. Examplet lncfudt: hooe> earrings, eight diamond• total
wtlght appx •. 22 ct .. aet In 14K gold, reg. $950. Now 070. ltallan 18K gold
bracellt with thirty alnglt cut diamonds. total weight appx .. 25ct .. reg. $1 ,2"50.
Now 17IO.
Representative selection In Fine Jewelry
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT 8EACti. 83 FUhlon ISiand 7&9·1211. Mon · HI 10·9. Sit to 8. Sun 12·&
. ·. .
. ..
··' ..
•/'. ... ,..;.
•.;. ... , ..
' ..
. '" •U
.. ---~···~··· ~ ................. -...... Ao ...... ,.. .......................... .. •• a ~ *".,.• 41 ''• • • ....._~ ....... -..... -................ _ .................... ---..... ~·"'\,•• .... .-..... .... . . ·.~ ...... -.._............. ._ ---"-'~ . ....__....._ ' ... ,,.,~.....,~ ., '* ..._," '
l I
Gasoline leak
• • ,~ves warmng
,c: Fire olflcials say a major disaster waa narrowly avtrt·
ed in HunUngton Beach when corroded under1round pipes
~eaked some 30.000 to 40j()()() gallons of aasollne beneath the
btintersectlon of Sprinada e Street and Edln~er A venue.
Thetuel Invaded an underiround utility box, trtuertna ..,I power failure. Miraculously a dangerous explosion was
2'9ot touched oft. ~. The most frightening aspect of the reeentscare was that
9-Nle fuel leak bad continued u~detected tor perhaps four
loOlOOlbs.
a ; Fire Chief Ray Picard said s imilar service station leaks
!nhave occurred in the past, though not in the volume of the
Springdale· Edinger seepage.
. Picard said Huntington Beach soil is particularly cor·
J 'tosive to pipes and that stricter insulation requirements 11~a ve been in eff eel since 1978. ~I\..-But many underground gasoline lines were installed
,.,.:forethatyear.
bnr Picard has proposed a new education program to alert
'ltetation operators to the danger of leaks. They will be urged
to maintain careful records and to watch for unusual losses
~..tn their fuel s upplies. < i: The program sounds like a wise idea. It comes nonetoo
<'$oon. l1n
.-..-w goes too far
Founta in Valley's strict carnival ordinance once
again has become a source of grief for the City Council.
Last autumn, the local Lions Club blamed the law for
causing the cancellation of the city's Halloween parade
and carnival for the second consecutive year. ·
And early this month, the council was forced to make
emergency changes in the ordinance to 1>4:rmit the Elks
Lodge to hold a chili cook-off festival just 10 days away.
f Enacting emergency laws for matters such as this
elearly is an undesirable practice. The council might
not have been forced into it if the governing body had re·
onsidered the ordinance after the Halloween problems.
The law was adopted in 1979 to protect residents from
uns crupulous carniva l operators. The ordinance requires
police screening of e mployees and mandates high ad-
'' ance payments to cover city expenses associated with a
carni\'al.
But as one councilman noted, the carnival ordinance
has s ucceeded in protecting resid ents from local service
club.sponsored festivals as well.
Reluctant to tangle with the strict local require-
me nts, some carniva l operators a pproached by service
c lubs ha ve opted to take their business elsewhere.
As a result, the city loses a fa mily oriented recrea·
lion event. and the ser vice club loses a means or raising
funds fo r a worthy cause.
The Elks. like th e Lions last fa ll, s hould share some
of the bla me for not examining the city's carnival or·
t dinance earlier and a voiding a last-minute confrontation.
But the council members and the city staff also were
' re m iss in dropping the ball a fter the Halloween parade S was canceled. ! This time , the-council should stand by its vow to re-
evaluate the carnival law. As budget constraints place
some city.sponsored recreation in jeopardy, service club-
sponsored e vents may loom more important as a source
of community-directed funds.
e Leave students out ~ ? Seven months into the school year, teachers and the
t Huntington Beach l 'nion High School District finally have
.. settled on a t wo.year , retroactive contract. ! ; The bitter dis pute was not without cas ualties,
1
. r~t::~:",::::::::c:;~:~.:~:n:'.·r:::::.::: :::::::
~taged picke ts. sickouts and work slowdowns. Some in-
~tructors even e ncouraged stude nts to boycott classes in
• $Upport of the teachers' demands.
' In the end. the 800 teachers, represented by the Dis·
trict Educators Association. settled on the same salary
offer the district announced last October.
District officials cla imed they wanted to speed up the
collective bargaining process by announcing early a
"best and fin a l" offer of a 16 percent raise over two
years.
But the teachers didn't trust district financia l figures
and a quic k settlement wasn't reached.
And although the ink has hardly dried on the retroac·
tive pact, it is almost half fulfilled.
Bargaining for a new contract will begin next year at
a bout this time. Based on experience gained by the dis-
trict and the tea chers· association. the next contract talks
should be s moother.
In any event. stude nts shouldn't be dragged into a
contract debate.
They should s imply be allowed the right to go to
1chool.
l>pin1ons expressed 1n the space :bove are those of the Daily Pilot eher views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
1sts. Reader commenl 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
, x 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd! Computers
By L.M. BOYD
Computers can play chess,
do high math, process words,
recognize speech, compose
music of s orts, analyze
it a tt s tics, or in brief,
uplicate countless functions
f the human mind. But
· here's one thing they can't ,
lillllY Ill
One Item we don't buy
any more is cotton
Just save ·the wad that
fills out pill bottles.
Come to think of it,
we're paylng a pretty
stiff price fol' that cot·
ton. too.
O.M.
do. They can't generate
humor, not jokes, as it were.
Curious, that. Almost all of
your better computer pro·
grammers themselves ex-
hibit considerable spon·
taneous humor in their own
conver.sations. They seem to
have a highly sharpened
sense of the ridiculous. But
they cannot program that in·
to their devices.
The typical 10-gallon hat,
bear in mind, bolds about
th~ee fourths of a gallon.
Q. la there any continent
where there are no but-
terflies?
A. ~Y Antarctica.
On the two b.lnd le11 of a
male platypu1 are hollow
spurs, like fanga, from which
that beut can reJeue
venom.
The Conetltullon of tbe
United Statet er-cnbel tibat,
a •lave be counted •• three· fllth• ol a penon.
Thu..-day, March 12, 1981
'Thom11 P. Haley/PubUsher Ttiomas t<Hvll/EdRor
S.rbara Kretbldl/Edltorlal Paoe Editor
·CIA shadow h11i-ts volunteers
W ASIUNGTON -An Internal
WhJte House f\lror ls bollinl up
over the controversial Hlection
ol a former m1Utary lntelllaence
officer to
bead AC ·
TION, the
multi ·
branched
good -works
agency. The
move could
jeopardize
the safely of
American
volunteers
abroad.
For ACfION's most celebrat·
ed offspring is the Peace Corps,
whose thousands of overseas
volunteers might suffer ii there
is the shadow of a suspicion that
Mailbox
they are even remotely connect·
ed with U.S. lntelUaence ac·
UylUea.
Antl American elements,
jealous of the goodwUJ the Peace
Corps volunte,rs have earned
through their selllesa efforts lo
help the poor and llllt..crate,
'would like nothing better than to
ameartbem as s pies.
Tb is Is no idle concern:
Kidnapping and death threats
have rei;ulted from scurrilous
rumor campaigns, linking the
Peace Corps volunteers to the
Central Intelligence Agency or
other U .S . e spionag e
organizations.
One example of this danger
was Richard Starr, the Peace
Corps botanist who was held for
tbru years by communist
1uerrillu in Colombia, unW he
was ransomed a year ago. One
reason be was k1dnapped wu
because b1s capt.on 1U1pected
be wu a CIA 11ent using the
Peace C.Orps u a cover. He wa.a
repeatedly interrogated on Ulla
polnt duri.ng his captlvlly ln the
Andean jungle.
GllANTED, the man chosen to
head ACTION, Tom Pau..ken,
had only a relatively brief
connection with int elligence
work. During his service in the
Army, he wu an intelligence
officer stationed in Vietnam. He
s toutly denies any CIA
involveme nt ; he told my
associates Jack Mitchell and
Indy Badhwar he did only
routlne researeb work on North
Vietnamese leaders.
But the Peace Corps baa
hiatorfcally beesl carelw to keep
both lta officiate aad lta
volunt.een ~ of any etpi~aae
taint. Uke Caesar'• wife, Peace
Corps penonnel must be above
au1plclon -for their own
proteclloa If oothi.Dg else. This
haa been tM policy ever since
the agency wu founded under
President Kennedy.
ACTION officials and 10me
White House loslders were
appalled at Pauken 'a
nomination. And tbou1b It la h1I
lntelUgence background that
upset.a them most, they weTe
also disgrunUed by the manner ot hia selection. Pauken's name
wasn't even on the list of
possible nominees until the last
mlnut.e, the critics claim. •
MOREOVER, be was cleared
by an old friend, White House
Counsel Fred Fielding, who
survived the Watergate era
without taint. Fielding insisted
that while he was aware of the
misgivings surrounding the
choice or Pauken, they were
"not a problem."
Pauken , an amiable
36·year.old Texan, figured in a
minor controversy in 1971 , when
be was associate director of the
White House Fellows program.
He was roundly denounced for
writing an article in U.S. News
and World Repo rt on an
unofficial trip to the Soviet
Union
That little·noliced internecine
wran&J_e does n't ente r into
Pauken s present situation. ft's
his inte lligence pa s t that
troubles key administration and
agency officials and couJd
haunt the Peace Corps in the
years to come.
Reagan should re-read campaign rhetoric
To the F.ditor:
Ab, the foibles that fructify in
our free-lunch society! Many
beli~ve that our government
"should be run like private in-
dustries." Tbereln lies a prob·
lem : the same lethal methods
already apply to both govern·
ment and bus iness. Govern-
ment is broke, and so is a lead·
ing segment of private industry,
the auto industry. In govern·
ment, it's the same old races,
growing fatter and sleeker and
less responsive to our freedoms ;
jus t like F ord , G .M. and
Chrysler. whose products grow
bigger. fatter and sleeker and
more expensive, while buyers
flock to the s maller. more
stylish, more economical im·
ports
Now the "big three" are urg.
ing us to eschew the foreign
beauties and buy the ugly
domestic Hmitalions; even de·
manding quotas and restraints
on foreign competitors . So. what
does Ford do (the company that
put the world on box·cars with
four wheels>? It styles a hodge-
podge of parts a nd ideas from
around the globe. calls it "the
world car," and invades the
foreign markets. A dear friend
used to quote·misquote: "Oh in·
consistency, thou art a jewel.
ANYWAY, who dares buy a
domestic car, what with recalls
by the milHons as a way of life?
And those rebates, why not just
knock the price down to an af.
fordable level? Then there's the
oil industry spokes-whatever,
who tries to justify a continuing
gas price rise, even in the face
of an acknowledged oil surplus.
Quoth he: "Certain costs must
first filter all the way up to the
retail pumps, regardless of the
oil glut." What costs? These in·
volved in trucking gluttonous
profits all the way to the banks?
And, I call attention to the ill·
conceived notion, attributed to
President Reagan, that "Social
Security participation should be
voluntary for thos e who can
prove they can provide for their
own retirement." Interpreted,
that means that the millions,
who are now stuck with lower
and middle level salaries and
wages, will pay the entire cost ot
all the S.S. rip-0ffs and benefits
paid out to the millions of non·
contributors, and the rich wtJJ
escape all costs scot-free, grow·
ing richer thereby. Some of the
latter will still reap S.S. benefits
on a grand scale due to past
particlpatJon. I cannot believe
that President Reaaan will thus
betray all of us poor ones who
made him rich and put him In
tl1e White House.
Yeulr, Camp David is infest-
ed with a malaJJe -le1acy ol
ita former tenant, tbe
Plawman. PTealdent Rea1an.
who quickly cau1hl on to the
ldea ol luah retreats, also ae~nna
to tavor increutn1 \be federal
IH tu. He should, In all bonel-
t 1. re-read bil campalsn
rbetorte u a viable anlldote to
the malaile of Camp David.
B.F. BORCOMAN
0
..... , ... 1
To the Editor:
What Stop Pornography in
Newport and the Daily Pilot
editorial evaded in their state·
ments about Newport's one and
only "adult book store," Talk of
the Town. is the fundamental
ract that none or us were born
with hang·ups about our bodies.
In Laguna Beach, which likes
lo think its elf to be an Art
Colony, the high s chool has
banned exhibition o r a nude
sculpture created by one of the
world's most foremost represen-
tational sculptors, Donal Hord .
The Daily Pilot. which report·
ed that story about that ban.
published a front page picture or
the sculpture; ableit. with a
censored sign hidin g th at
sculpture's genitalia.
NOT TOO LONG ago, Laguna
had no ordinance banning nudity
on the beach and the City Coun-
cil was well on its way to declar-
ing clothing optional along its
tidelands, which was supported
by a special survey of beach·
user opinion by the University or
California lrvine .
But. by the time or that or·
dinance's second reading, the
Council chambers were glutted
by screaming predictions of
Sodom and Gomorrah that begat
a law that states a kid can walk
around the beach nude until the
dawn of the 11th birthday -
after that. it's indec ent ex·
posure.
How do you explain lo some·
one who's been belie ving all
the time they've been decent
that now certain parts or the
body are not to be seen?
Travel due west to some of the
yet untouched Pacific Islands
and the natives there wonder
why the seJr -touted ci viii zed
make all that fuss. Tbe answer
is the senseless shame and de·
basement imposed upon loo
much of Lbe world over 2,000
years lhal continue s lo be
jammed into too many un·
protesting minds by a fractional,
neurotic fringe engendering a
love·hate psychosis about
human beauty that makes
billions for magazines and mov·
lea and the moral majority ..
BRUCE HOPPING .. et•l•••tne•
To the Editor:
I am really quite concerned
about the decision of the Hunt·
inctoo Beach Jlith School Dis·
lrict to save money by cutUnt
back in the important acaaem1c
area of social studies. Al the
world get. ainaUer and smaller,
we seem to teach ou.r children
leH and less about the world
they are 1oln1 lo have to race.
I've taucbt seventh and elahth
1rade lo Fountain Valley for 18
years. Tbla year when tbe
counaeton came to talk to our
el1b ... aract. students, and I at·
tended pa.rent nl1bt at Fountain
Valley Hlib School, I uodentood'
that UM (liltrict la ebanctDC and
decreuillt lbe toeJal •UldJes
fro.ram ln the hi1b acbool -In
act, .tbe only cl au room ,
teachers being eliminated are
social studies teachers! I really
find this quite amazing.
The childre n w e are now
educating will fa ce a world even
m or e interrelated with ottier
countries than it is now; intema·
tional a ffairs, internationa l
bus iness. the understanding or
politics and history or many dif·
ferent nations will be very im·
portant lo them .. and yet you
cut the world his tory class
(which should be a two·year
course) to one semester?
This seems astonishingly ir·
responsible to me. I understand
there are problems , but I
seriously question the interest in
providing the best possibl e prep·
a ration for our students when
you cut back on the class that
would provide some kind of un-
derstanding or the world these
s tudents will ha ve to race.
Whe re will they learn what other
countries are like and how they
have come to be that way?
Whe re will they learn to make
inte lligent choices as voters?
Where will they learn about the
parts of the world upon which
their livelihood may depend?
A MINIMUM of a one-year
world history course should be
required of all graduating
seniors. They should definitely
ha ve choices of electives in the
social studies a rea. Granted,
American history is also impor·
tant. They study il in the filth
grade, the eighth grade, the
eleventh grade, and they study
Ame rican gove rnment in the
eighth grade and again as
seniors in high school. But
b ecause of our lack of
knowledge or other countries in
the world, Americans are often
considered provincial, uneducat·
ed, and am~ingly immature.
We must prepare students
with the knowledge of the suc·
cess e s and mistakes of
humanity's past. with a common
cultural heritage that involves
more than the 200 years of
America's history, and with an
understanding of what makes
people in different cultures
behave as they do. We will soon
be taken advantage of by every
Industrial nation In the world
(isn't It starling to happen
already?) unless we can provide
our st~dents with the back·
ground to deal with all klnds of
people in an lnformed way.
HEATHER SMITH
r .... ,.....
To the F.dJtor;
The cltbenl are right to be wor·
ried about the pomographJo boot
Quotes
"Often we have to cboole the
leaser ol two evile. Tbe IOYem·
ment in El Salvador deeerv•
support in terms ol mWtary aid.
Tbat doeln't mean tbe .,._,..
ment ln El Salvador ta ans.Uc. I
don't know uy pernmtnt tbat
la.'' -Ene11 W. lAfeftr, UM
R•a•an ada\lnl1lraUoa'1 new uliatant MCretary al atate tor
human rl«ltt.1.
•
store here in Newport. Young peo·
pie are very susceptible to the
emotions raised by the materials
offered in these shops. I 'm not too
old lo remember myself when I
was impressionable in this
respect . but then. too. I re·
member that a better known man
than I acknowledged lusting after
the flesh in Playboy Magazine!
The city is right to be concerned
but City Attorney Coffin errs in
his efforts to have the porno·
graphic store moved to the busi·
ness district which is being zoned
for these ·· aduJt' · businesses.
l'LL TELL you why. I'm an
olde r m an and I've traveled
around a bit. I've noticed in my
travels that the worst thing than
can happen to a city is to have an
isolated, built-up business district
where all the anti·social elements
or society are segregated. Now
Newport already has a large and
growing business center. To
move the pornographic store
there wouJd be a mistake that has
been made over and over again in
all our major <:ilies from New
York to Los Angeles. ·
Whal happens is this. Large
business districts are built up but
these places are not pleasurable
for walking or spending time
there. So the law.abiding citizens
run in and out or the district for
their business needs. Meanwhile.
city officials try to segregate un·
desirable elements into an area
that is already isolated from the
better elements of society. The re-
sult is decay that starts from the
center and works its way out. Of.
ficials s hould work to close the
shop and not create a no-man's
land in the center of our city.
GEO. BRUMMELL
... ........
To the Editor:
It seel'.Q_s to me that your
newspaper and others have paid
no attention to what the John
Wayne Airport expansion will do
io Santa Ana. I mean Santa Ana
'orth of the airport and not San-
ta Ana Heights. Is this because
you UUnk the residents in our
part of the county are less im-
portant than those south of the
airport? If you lived in my part
of town you would bear noise
that you could not stand.
Another tbiJll ls that the one
too of jet pollution dropped by
the airplanes and described in
the county's slide show probably
falls oo Santa Ana. ls that
because the county t.binb we
are not important? We don't
want cancer that la caused by
the fuel that falls from tbMe
planes either. I do lhlU you
newspaper people should at
least tell our aide of the airport
problem.
A. lllARTINltZ
t •
-----··--... ·-·--....... ...--....-.. -.-.. : .: ·-•:"'1 ... •: .• ~ ..... :: .............. ·-.-~.-_ .. ::-: ... .-. : .... .,.:::·· ... -.:. ... :;..~ ... ._. --............ --··--..... --.. ---............... .-......... . ........ . . .. . . . .............. -.... -.. . -._, -....~--. ..... -,~-· ~ ... ,....... ~"''"""
·~ ••
By STEVE •ARBLE
Of .. Dllltt Hee ..... Kansas Clty businessman
Rlcbard Fatberley, a veteran
John Birch Society member,
wruna paps and whistles from
his Newport Beach audience ttlia
weet u he listed well-known
personalities be claims are tied
to soelalla• interests.
"And then there's William F.
Buc.kley, the counterfeit con-
servative," said Fatberley, after
breealne tbrouah bis "suspi·
cion" list that included Dan
Rather, Barbara Walters,
George Bush and CIA Director
William J . Casey.
Fatberley, talking before 140
people Tuesday evening at the
Newporter, admitted most of
these prominent figures had de-
nied socialist ties and bad, in
fact, called Fatberley "a nut."
His 00-minute talk, endina
with a IOft veraioa of "America
the Beautiful" playina beblnd
Falberley's request for pel"ICIDS
to join the BireJl Soclety, wu
titled "Anatomy ol a Cover-Up.''
His targets were the mus
media and the Trilateral Com-
mission, a seven-year-old group
beaded by David Rockefeller
that draws Its membership from the U.S., Western Europe and
Japan.
He warmed up se veral
listeners by issuin1 the claim
that the Ku Klux Klan ls a front
Delly ..... II-" ......
BESSIE MAE HILL FlGHTING CITY OVER MANNEQUINS
Coat• Meaa coatume •hop owner want• dleplay outdoora
Mannequins fight
eviction in Mesa
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of Ille Dally """ S&alf Four mannequins are huddled
inside the doorway of Bessie
Mae Hill's Hill House Costume
Shop, afraid to go outside.
Actually, Mrs. Hill dragged
the dummies inside after a
policeman cited her for clutter-
ing the front of her costume shop
at 1914 Newport Blvd. in Costa
Mesa.
She pleaded guilty in January
to maintaining an outdoor dis-
play contrary to city ordinances,
but she said she is upset with
how the city handled the matter.
A policeman, she claimed,
threatened to handcuff her and
take her to jail if she didn't sign
the ticket.
The City Planning Com-
mission met this week to con·
sider her request to put the man-
nequins, clothed in period cos-
tumes, in front of her store
again.
But planning officials said the
hearing was postponed until
March 23 because Mrs. Hill
didn't show up for the meeting.
Mrs. Hill said she was at the
meeting but didn't want to ap-
pear before the commission.
"They showed a picture (slide
projection) of clutter, and I
didn't want to speak," she said.
"All I want to do is clean the
place and put the mannequins
out.
Planners said she ignored that
order, too.
So , the c it y attorney
threatened to take Mrs. Hill to
court.
A month later, she received a
permit to live in her building
and sell antiques, gifts and vin-
tage garments.
But the permit stipulated she
would have to get rid of items
stored outdoors and clean up
debris in the yard. It also de-
manded the display of only four
antique-like items out front.
The planning staff contends
Mrs. Hill sWl hasn't co mplied
with any of the 10-year-old
stipulations. They have recom·
mended that the Planning Com-
mission deny permission to
place the mannequins in front of
her shop.
Mrs. Hill doubts that she'll get
her display permit. ·
"Nobody ~ stand up to the
City Council or the Planning
Com mission. Nobody is that
good." she said.
She said she's thinking now
about se!Ung the business and is
trying to clean the outdoor
areas.
·'But they want me to bring
the old house up to code," she
sighed. "That would be too ex-
pensive.
'·You kinda get tired after 12
years of fighting City Hall."
for Communist Interests. So are
most conaervation croups, he
added. He said moat drug re·
habilltation centers, abortion
clinics and family crisis centers
also are "suspicious."
Next, be took on the mass
media, which be said ls con·
trolled by a biased few -cbo
"manqe" the news. He said
most of these news "managers"
belong or have belonged to
Rockefeller's Trilateral Com-
misaioo.
••The power of the mass
media, especially the electronic
media, is increasingly controlled
by an elite few who advocate a
l
THURSDAY, MARCH, 12, 1981
FEATURES
DEATHS
world federaUon of disarmed na·
lions Wlder a collective rule,"
Fatberley said.
In explainina what all that
means, the Kansas City man
said collectivists are th~e seek-ln g a one-government rule
throughout the western world.
He said communism also fits
that description.
·'Now David Rockefeller,"
said Fatherley, ''is not a com·
munist. He isn't a fascist either.
He's a collectivist."
He pointed out that
Rockefeller's banking empire
has branches in Moscow and
Peking.
In fact, Fatberley said, the en·
H/F
84
86
The 552 Club
celebrates 15 years
of continued growth
... Page 84
tire Trilateral Commission ls a
collectivist organization.
Without missing a step,
Fatherley .pointed out that
former President Carter was a
f o unding member of the
Trilateral Group. He said Presi-
dent Reacan has "surrounded"
himself by Trilateral veterans.
In a recent publication,
Trilateral Coordinator George
Franklin explained the com-
misslon's purpose and denied
charges that it trys to influence
American government.
Franklin said the 290-member
commission attempts to get
public attention fo cused on
foreign policy issues. Also, he
said, it tries to get leaders in
Western World countries to wii
derstand each other and their
policies.
Switching on a tape recorded
version of John Lennon's bit
song ''Imagine," Fatherley
charged that "bad apples" such
as Lennon also espoused collec·
tivism.
Pointing out one line in Len·
non 's song that proclaims
"Imagine there's no country,"
Fatherley smiled.
"There it is," he said. "That's
collectivism."
He said many pop songs en-
courage "the dark age of ig-
norance" and urge youthful
listeners to challenge authority,
Suspects 'taped' in Irvine
Inspection bribes told
By STEVE MITCHELL Of U.. o.lly ,., ... SI.Ill
A job superintendent who said
he wo~ a wireless microphone
to gather evidence against two
former Irvine building inspec-
tors has testified the pair re-
ceived alcohol in exchange for
favorable inspections.
A personnel hearing into al·
legations that former Irvine
building inspectors Daniel
"Bruce" Bullard, 50, of Costa
Mesa, and Arthur W. Peele, Sl,
of Anaheim, solicited and re-
ceived aratuities from • de-
veloper got wider way Wednes-
day in Irvine council cbamben.
The pair, alona with inlpector
Manuel "Manny" Linares, 34, ol
Corona, were charged laat Dec.
26 with soliciting liquor, food
and overtime from a construe·
Uon firm in exchange for euy
sign-offs on inspection sheets.
The three men were aubse·
quently fired frqm their jobe.
Bullard and Peck ppealed
their dlsmisaals1 and ad-
mtnistraUve law Juoae WUllam
F . Byrnes is con ucUna the re-
sulting bearing in Irvine.
Linares didn't appeal his fir·
ing.
At Wednesday 's hearing,
testimony was heard from
Steven D. Collo, job superinten-
dent for Western Commercial
Construct.ion, Inc., who said he
was approached ~ Linares in
mid-August.
The company was construct·
ing industrial condominiums in
Irvine last summer, and Collo
testified Llnares offered favora-
ble inspections in return for
alcohol.
·'He said if I wanted every-
thing to go smoothly, I should
take care of Art Peck with a bot·
tie of Jim Beam," Collo said.
Collo said Linares turned to
Peck and asked, "Is n't that
right, Art?"
"Yeah, I'm the Jim Beam
man and you 're the Jack
Daniels man," Peck purportedly
responded.
Collo said both men then
laughed.
The job superintendent said
his boss dido 't report the alleged
briberies until four months
later, at a time when the com-
pany was constructing a second
project ln the city.
He said Linares approached
him for overtime inspections
(for which the city bllls the con-
tractor) and more alcohol in ex-
change for quick inspections on
the industrial complex and a
mini-storage facility .
''Really, we were hoping the
thing would go away," Collo
said of the continuing solicita-
tions.
It was at that Ume that James
Eldridge, president of tbe con-
struction firm, went to city of-
ficials to complain about tbetal·
leged bribery, Collo testllled.
· After talking to police, Collo
said investigators taped a
phone conversation between
Linares and himself in which the
superintendent allegedly told the
inspector he bad alcohol for him.
But when Collo delivered the
bottle, he apparently bought the
wrong kind.
"He wanted Jack Daniels
black label, and the bottle was
green label," Collo testified.
'·But he said not to worry
about it, that he would give it to
Bruce Bullard."
Collo said he then as ked
Linares if there were other in·
spectors be should take care of.
"He said 'Art Peck,"' and sug-
gested Collo get him a bottle of
Jim Beam.
"Better yet," Linares alleged-
ly said. ''Make it J&B green
label."
Several days later. Collo said,
he met the city inspectors at the
job site, equipped with a wire-
less microphone and the re-
quested bottles of alcohol. He
also had a box of cheese for one
inspector who did not drink,
Collo said.
Collo said Peck pulled up
beside bis truck in a city vehicle
to pick up bis bottle, and Bullard
followed moments later in his
car to collect his.
Testimony from other con-
struction firm witnesses and city
officials was expected to con-
tinue today
Attorneys for Bullard and
Peck are expected to present
testimony from defense wit·
nesses by Friday.
When the hea rings conclude.
Judge Byrnes will take the
testimony under consideration
and deliv'e.J" a r'ecommendation
to lrvin\f City Manager William
Woollett :k within 30 days.
It will be up to the c\ty
manager at that time to ~e·
termine whether to reinstate the
two men.
Having a nke day
Beachgoers stroll. wade, romp and sun-
bathe on a balmy spring day at Aliso State
Park in South Laguna. The stream that
mother and son are wading in was' caused
by Aliso Creek s pilling over in· recent
rains.
I Valley cutbacks eytid
Residents asked for views on reduction
A new City Council-appointed
committee has been instructed
to ask Fountain Valley residents
if they favor reduction or
elimination of services such as
street sweeping, tree trimming
and recreation programs as a
means of coping with imminent
city budget shortages.
The committee also was told
to discuaa possible fees for
paramedic calls and new assess·
ment.s to pay for street lighting
and city landscaping.
"Proposition 13 has arrived,
and the council is raced with
making some very important de-
cisions in the next few months,"
Mayor Al Hollinden told the five
committee members.
City Manager Robert Vollmer
told the committee Fountain
Valley expects a s~rtage of $1
million to $1.S millitn for the fl•· cal year beginning uly 1.
Vollmer said the city has four
alternatives: dip into reserve
funds, reduce city apendin_g, ln·
crease local fees or employ a
combination Qf the three solu-
tions.
City offi,ials cautioned
agatnst use of the reserve funds,
noting ttlis ,tnoney would only
provide a short-term solution.
They also said the funds cannot
be replenished.
The committee's first com·
m unity met!Ung bas been
scheduled for 7:30 p.m . Thurs-
day, March 19 at the Greenbroot
Clubhouse, 18222 Santa Joanana
St.
"But they (commissioners)
would 'have brought up that first
permit ... " •
Mrs. Hill's batUe with the city
baa been a long one.
Planning officials cited her for
code violJtiODJ including•outstde
storage and dilplays u Urly u
the summer of 199 when she
opened the costume shop.
OCC speech champs • • wm again
The committee members are
Ellery Deaton, Sam Cubete, Roy
A. Rodaera, Don Chaney and
Devon Dahl.
Offlclala aa1d she ianored their
complaint.
ln January 1970, a cease and
de1l1t order wa1 sent for her to
cla.e up unW ahe complied wttb
city la ...
Olftdala said 1be bad to aet
rid of outdoor dl1play1 and
1torap areu, t« a permit to
live and work lD tbe Nm• build·
tq. pro¥ide more Mftfal aad remow commerdaf lt.ma-trom
lla•r ......... \
)
. -.
Orange Cout Colle1e'1 two-
time defendiDC n.aUoaal cbam·
ploD.Sblp speeeh t.am captured
the first-place aweepstallea
trophy at the Sprin1 Champa
Toumament recenUy at UCLA.
The victory marked OCC'a
fil\b aweepetakea • champioublp
tbia year. .
The Plratea.. coecbed by Pet
Taylor aad Michael Leich, 1rill
defend their atate cbampiouhlp
March 27·29 at Cypress CoUe1e.
The Cotta Meaa acbool wm put it.a
national crown on tbe line April
lJ.20 in Sacramento.
Tonf Cuomo of Newport
<
Beach won a told medal for
OCC in persuuion at UCLA, and
earned a ailver medal in oral in-
terpretation. Richard Rletb ol
Newport ~ach captured a aokS
medal in duo lnt.erpretatloo and
a brome in informaUve.
Karen Jl(iller of Costa 11 ..
and Doq Bensoo of Tuatln Ued
for nnt In speech to entertain,
while Richard Riley of· Colta
lleaa wu llrat in duo interpreta-
Uon.
Other trophy wlnnen in·
eluded: Sue Kirwan of Santa
Ana,· MCODd ln duo ~
lion and third ln apeeeh to em.er-
'
t'1n ; Alice Reich of Onnae.
second in duo interpretaUoo;
Maril Gauthier of Costa lleaa,
aecoad In extemJM>raneoua, and
~on Richards of Costa Mesa,
aecoad lD oral interpretation.
Allee Ensor of Costa Meu
r,acbed the quarterfinals in
Uncoln· Jloullu ct.bate.
1 OCC ••rtor certificate wtn·
n•r1 Included: SWpbule lrtab of
El Toro, Dave lUek of Hunt·
iDtton Beach and Mona Buckley
of Coata Mesa. ~xcellent drtiftcatea went to:
Allee Enlor, Ilona Buckley, U
Smith, John Ultlcben and
Barry IJnman of Cotta Meaa;
Do111 Benion of Tustin ;
Steplamie lrillb ol £1 Toro, and
Tim 11-otSan\aAna.
One OCC~eader'a Theater team ._ a ver medal with It.a
pre1enta io9 of "Sky
Creatww." e team included
Tooy Cuomo ~ N•wport Beach,
Mark Gauthier of C01ta lleaa,
and Alice lle6cb ol Oran••·
The other OCC Reader's
Theater aquad flnlabed Utlrd
wHh It• performance of
"Sucken.'' The team lnchaded
Karen llWer and Ron Rlcbardl of COit.a Meaa, and Sue KJrwu
of Santa Ana.
....... . . ........... ' ~
Public speaki1J8
fean examined
Public spea.kln& la the auma..
one rear of most Amertc~
who placed lt abead ol chetb,
aicknesa, bankruptcy and otbet'
fean in a nteent l\U'Vtf. Concauertni the rear ot public
1peallln& wU1 be tbe rocua ol • free, two-aeulon workabop
1cbeduled Saturdays, MIM 14
aad 11, at Golden Weat caD111
in Runth\ltA>D hach.
The clUMI will be held In tJl1a
coll•&•'• commualty cent• from t :JI) •.m. lO ll:ao p.m.
r.
f } • .
I ,
~
I I
I
' I
•·
•
Safety
caps study
DEAR PAT DUNN: How effective have
safety caps been in r educing poisoning
among young children? Sometimes I wonder
if they are worth aH the bother.
H.T., Corona del Mar
Polson control centers report that daring
the first stx years after safety packaging was
required, ln&eatloas of aspirin by cbUdren
bad decreased by 51 percent. However,
lagesU.. of prescription drugs by d1Udren
bad declined Ollly 15 percent.
The NaUonal Safety CowacU estimates
that between IN and Ht cblldren under age 5
die from accidental polsoQlngs (solids,
liquids, gases and vapors) and about 190
cblJdren between ages 5 and 14 are poison
victims each year.
National Polson Prevention Week Is
March 15 to Zl. Information materials from
the Comamer Product Safety Commission
should be avaUable at most pharmacies, and
•consumers -particularly parents of
preschool cblldren -are urged to study
avaUable materials and renew precautions.
The CPSC also bas launched a pUot effort
to Improve compUance by pharmacists with
the Polson Prevention Packaging Act.
Elderly and handicapped persons who have
trouble using such packaglag can obtain
regular caps under the laws.
TOfUttotltelrtala
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've heard so many
versions of the Irish poem (usually used for
toasts) which offers the hope that "may you
be in heaven long before the devil knows
you're gone." What are the correct words for
this toast? In view of your name. you're
probably a good person to ask.
H. R., Newport Beach
Not necessarily. Irish people tend to
disagree about everything, and seldom admit
It when they're wrong. Here's tbe version I
learned: "May He bold you In the hollow of
Hls band. May the roads rise with you, fair
weather to your heels. May the wind be ever
at your back, and may you be a long time In
heaven before the devil knows that you're
gone." If that's too bard to remember, Just
toast with another old Irish standby : "Here's
mud la yovr eye!"
DEAR PAT DUNN : I changed jobs three
times in 1980 and think I paid more Social
Security tax (FICA) than required. How can
I check this? Also, is it necessary to use the
peel-off label that comes with the forms
booklet?
S.T., Irvine
If you worked for two or more employers
dorlng lW and together they paid you more
than $%5,,.. la wages, too mocb FICA tu
probably was withheld. If the total amoant
wltbhekt e:aceeded $1,587.17 for the year, yo11
are entWed to claim the e:acess Oil yoar Form
lNI or lt4tA, U.S. lndlvldual Tu Retana.
IRS says that ase of the peel-off label
savea processing time and spee«b refands.
Make certala ll ls cornet. If It lsa't, mark
tbroap It and make the proper correctioea
on tlae label. Sbow your apartment nomber lf
yoa have one.
~rg•de ...........
DEAR PAT DUNN : I have some
Hispanic friends who are interested in
learning about their consumer right.a now
that they have become U.S. citizens. Are
there any bilingua l consumer guides
available?
J .S., Newport Beach
The U.S. Office of Couamer Affair•, tH
Office of Hl1pa1Jlc Affairs aad the U.8.
Departmnt of Edacatlon bav~ pabll1lled
1acll a plde. Ttae guide provides laforma&loll
abo•t ~•mer pregram1 ud 1enlcel la
tile 1nenmeat ud private or1ubatlou
relaU., to daU1 bHlc needs ncll aa food,
.. ..,..,, beattla ud trauportaU.. It alto
empllubel coaHmer respoatbUlt1 of beta&
laformed ud udentandlag eouamer laws,
rilllU aad metlloU of recoane.
Coples eaa be obtalaed from tile
C01111111Mr blonnatloll Cnter, Paeblo, Colo.
HMt.
-·-
PHILADELPHIA (AP> -Bablet wbo
tleep on tbelr 1tomacbl are more apt to
develop malformed Jawa and wsattrac·
Uve fa cl al f eaturea than kid.a who aleep
on their backs, says a 1peelal11t wbo
preseatod b1a paper -"Why Raile U1·
ly Kids?" -to a dental conference.
' Parents worded about proper de-
velopment of their child's features have
1ot lt all backward.a, says Dr. HaJ A.
Huccins, a dentist from Colorado
Springs, Colo.
"We say 'don't sleep the baby on its
back, you'll flatten the back or bis
bead,' " he scoffed. " ·Turn him over
and mash bis face!' "
"TUMMY SLEEPERS have receding
cblns, severe anterior crowding and
narrow ch.ins , as well as curves In their
spines and a nasal septum deviation,"
Huggins said ln an interview Wednes·
day during the 50th annuaJ Liberty Den·
tal Conference here.
Huggins, a specialist on dental maloc·
clusions, explained that at birth, the
skull is primarily composed or cartilage
that eventually calcifies, or hardens.
He said the first part to calcify is the
occiput, or that little knot on the back of
the head. The last part, be said, is the
fr-ontal area, alte al o•er .0 little mtln·
brane bonee I.hat wW eveqtually de-
ttrmlne facial futurtt.
"THE CALCltlCATION ot the bonea
around the face befin• at about two
years,'' be said. "And by then ln many
cases the dama1e ii done because of
pressure exerted dwinc sleep."
Huagins, who stressed that nutrition
~lso plays a vital role in healthy de·
velopment of jaws and teeth, noted
there are areas or the world where peo-
ple are almost free from malocclusions
-abnormalities in the comln1 together
or teeth. And in these areas, he said,
children and adults s leep on their
backs.
He has studied Indians in New Mexico
and Arizona who were reared on
cradleboards.
"They have outstanding postures," he
said, ''and a lack of crowding of teeth In
their jaws.''
HUGGINS ALSO NOTED that sec-
tions of the Amazon Valley have pro-
duced generations of people with ex·
cellenl teeth and facial structures.
"Children in these areas are carried
in hammock-like slings," he said.
"Tbelr •olnel are kept lD fttal·Ub po1I·
Uom and no preuu.re la broucht to bear
a1al.oat UMtr races.··
Hu111N 1ald that back aleepen have
flat bacb and shoulder blades and tbty
stand up 1trai1ht.
"My orthodontic patients slept on
their stomachs," be aald. 'Their
postures were slouched forward and
their shoulder blades stuck out lite
wln1s. They bad recedln1 china, severe
anterior crowding and narrow faces.''
SIDE SLEEPEas, HE said, had one
shoulder blade that stuck out and were
more prone to unilateral crossbite.
Huggins also noted that people who
slept on their stomachs or sides with
their hands under their beads
sometimes developed one nostril that
was smaller than the other because of
pressure against the nose.
Asked how a pillow. or even an im-
mobile hand, could exert enough pres-
sure to alter bone structure, Huggins
pointed out that most orthodontic tools
used to correct such things as maloc-
clusions exert only 30 or 40 grams of
force.
"A human head weighs 16 pounds,"
he said.
Nete rele
Patricia Roberts
Harris, secretary of
health and human
services during the
Carter administra-
tion , will be a
scholar-in-residence
at t he National
Academy of Public
Administration,
Washington, D.C.
SACRED TREASURE HOUSE • COSTA MESA
f IX TURES · SALE
Al.TAR SETS
"ARTISTIC" The co ...... aet
h1clude1 24" crou, pair
~wl .. hhc...._palr
.... w1 .......... ...,. ..... s
piece,"°" tcrftllh. 2 ollly
:;,:!s:~~ ...... 59888
BIBLE STANDS
.. ARTISTIC" delue brals toMs,
hea•y guag• brau lech1n,
;Tlilt 11 A S.Crfflce la DHcl '--" ••• Wltll J.tt OM GMI -GIT RID OF OUR
INT1U STOCIC & STOH FtXTUllS ..• i. 11ie 5Mrt.1t Pe11lMe n-... a.91:•" Of Coat Or um! ...... ..._ Yoe R...., H l•er SH Oa StM .•.
Te S.W AINI S.Crfflced At A,.._.._ Of Tiie..,..., Price.
STORE HOURS
DAILY 10 to 6
CLOSED
SUHDAY
THE OnDEIJS ARE ...
SEll OUT ENTIRE STOCK
REGARDLESS OF lOSS
OUT GOH IVHYTHIHG ••. At Cott .•• He. C.lf ... a.tow CHt ..• M.iin
Mo DfHw-•! We RHhe lW IXT'UMI LOW Pl.ICI 11 T1te Ollly T1t11Mt T1tet
W11 • _ _. .. 4j>UICIC & POSmVI LJqUIDAT10HI c. .. AINI ltry ... Y•
C:..... Ch w,_. At l'MM s.tsATIOHAl. CLOSIOUT PRICISI
• SENS AT I 0 NA L c~u5i" VALUES
BOOKS-BOOKS-BOOKS
TMolocJy . Concordoftce • Comrnetttaries • Seff Help · II* Dictionaries·
Marriage • Fantity, Chorbtnatic, GroYp Study, Chri1tfm1 U•iftg. DaH11CJ.
WOfMft, Science • haitcJeUsm • Prophecy • Hlttory • HGYlc)ator ~
clplnhip • Victor Study • Cutts • Mltsk>ttary • R. • Christt. leoclng ·
Chrisffmt Action • Childrens Pictu,.. looks • Story looks • learNng
looks and ~. I OO's upon I OO's of curn..t books on •lrtualty any •
jech by many of the worlds mod r-ffnown authors.
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
1/3-1/2-2/3 Off ........... .. .............. ~. .. .................... ..
=~~:·~~······ 52488
Ilg Hlecff-8~~~~.sliftg ~ ..... GREETING CARDS
---------------.. Hew A1nerlca• Sta•dard, Tile Hltge cnsorffttent, Alt occaMons Cllld
Specialty, lftcludu •otu,
cmnMteetnenh, party • .,.,, etc. "PRECIOUS
MOMENTS''
MJOHATHOH AHD DAV1D" dock
l•clllCIH Fl9•rlne1, VatH, lud
Va.n. c..,., I.ti-. Wda ,......_
P'reMfttatloft Plat.•, etc.
REG. $3.98 $ 111
Mleprice ...•.......••
=~~:~ ........... s2aa
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
U•lng lible, llhl•trcrhd ~ ....
llbln. lridet llble, a...,. Print,
Refere•ce llblH, CoftCOl"'dcMc:e,
Penonal •tudy, and MC111Y ....-..
Many a ............. bCMlftd. • ere I /2 OFF dellae. A few are tided.
=~~:~ ........... 5488 STATIONERY SETS
REG. SI 2.95 $,. "DA YSPRIHG" wide •-'-'Y of
MN price · · · · · · · · · · · · l•tplratfotu1t Menage• dtconrh
S 12'8 theH teh, •arlety of color•,
REG. $22.95 l•cludu paper a.d MC1tchl•CJ
Mle price • • • • • • • • • ••etotM• In • ""GY of .a...
------------. :;,:!·~~ ...... s 19" :~!·:~ ........... s 1 •• CHALICE & PATEN Ai.LOTHERSTO $16.95llOW $'Ml
=~~·:~ ........... s3aa
Del•xe 10Ud bran. gotd 1111.d VJ fO % OFF :~!·:~ · · · · · · · · · · · ~ --
C.OCUIU .... Oft cup, lftlltchiag....... l-~~~~~.;...~~:;:~;..-1---::-:~==;-:~~:;---1 :;::·~~ ...... s29u ~E2DJ .~ .. !. ~~! _ ~~~~ tt9,JOO'!.,.ICJ
-------------.. .ct *--;!~ .... by te.. of the ...... Oft Hie! I ..
CHRISTIAN ="or cal ~";~~· !~ ~~"~~:.. ~"= PIHDAJ~W~~~lns :.::~ -~~ ...... s3 91 ~~:-:~~:=
PIMS -IARRIHGS by "H.J. -----------.. "-. detll ltetlls, gift ...... ltoucl
SIBMAM" ht gold. fJDld f9ed. FRAMED PICTURES c.ds.weddiltt._,_._... 1terll1t9 1Hnr. MG•Y _.. II.cl ~
.......... Wt 1electloR. Mw • '-tit ......... of~ Art 1 /_3 to 2· OFF I ...... Wartl, Hoey, Socred. ~1 .. 11, lie. /~ UG. sz.oo to $36.IO OUI .._...111 STA#fl>tl IV•YTHIN• 9iOIS _.., v...
1/2 OF,......F ~1/2 OFF~
~ ~
AT COST~ NEAR COST~ BELOW COST~
SACRED TREASURE HOUSE
122 East 18th St. • COSTA 'IESA
...... _ ................ ,. -~-··· . ..... . .. ... ....... .....--. ····-· ..... -..~ ........ r · ... ;·
t •
112 East
18th ST.,
SEE MAP BELOW
Plenty Of Portclng in Rear
MARCH 13th
AT 10 A.M.
CHURCH SUPPLIES
lulletln•, Co "'"'""1011 c .. pt,
Wahn, Church Recorck,, c-ch.
Marnoge Certificates, laptl..,..
CertlflcatH, Pattors SuppllH,
Welcome Cardt, Me1nbenhlp
Certificates, Com1nunlon ware,
Treawren SuppllH, ett•elopet,
Ubrary and Church Recordt Cllld
Milch Much More.
ENTIRE STOCK
CLOSE-OUT ,.,CID
50% to
80% OFF
SUNDAY SCt«>OL·
SUPPLIES
Tretn1ftdou1 stock lncludn VllllClll
ald1, Pencils, TeachlllCJ Alck &
..,.s, R....t lack9 OiRll. Art
suppllu, Con.tructloa Paper,
Cradle Roll, Chort1 & hMen.
Show & Tell, Affettdcmtce Cards,
Arch loob, Vlwal Soncp. MIMOt 'f
Tobm. Game and Le..-..g Cwdt
ed ftlllCh mon.
EMTIRE STOCK GOH
1/3-1/2&
MORE OFF
t II • 0 0
0 0
0 2 , s • •
. '
, I
Al
U1
m
be
D t
tic
dr ....
ab
nt
re
th
es1
co
co
I
h
I
39-
vi c
tho
to
wti
de1
SOI
tol1
gel
ine
hill
for
OAllY PI LOT
••
with pensions
Praldent Reaaan bu tolemnly pledatd that
milllom fA Americana on Social Security wlU not be
Laraeta lo the search for rederaJ buqet cub . But
have otbena ln tbe execuUve branch and on Capitol I
KW beard Rea11n and aereed! Propoea!J to scale 1 down Social
Securlt y
benertta have
been surfacing
with ominous
(rtcJUency alnce
budget cuttlng
baa become
earnest
A j
-.,-1,,-. -,.-IT-1•-·i;~r 1
politically and economically.
So to put a rew rundamentars tn order: ...
Social Security is not the kind of government ac-.
tivity to be worked over every year to meet short-'
term budget alms. On the contrary, the proeram la a .;
deeply rooted institution with lonc·term obUgallons
-promises made to be kept for years.
OU& SOCIAL SECUlllTV system is not financed
out of gene ral revenues as are other government pro·
grams. It is financed out of earmarked contributions
by workers, their employers and the sell-employed.
These contributions are not miniled with other tax
collections. They go into trust funds maintained·
separately from all other funds in the U.S. Treasury.
By law, the money in the Social Security Truat
Funds can be used only for the payment of Social
Security benefits and any essential administrative
costs.
True, the program faces a short·term financing
problem until 1985. But it is a manageable problem
not requiring drastic or unprecendented remedies.
Proposals for cut backs in benefits are much
more immediately concerned with "prettying up"
the bottom line figures in the national budget than
with the financial stability of the Social Security
system.
The dangerious effe ct is to erode even further
public confidence in the integrity of an institution vital
to the future security of the 115 million workers who
pay Social Security contributions -and vital also as
a basic support of the nationa l economy.
MOST AMERICANS, YOUNG and old, do not
want cuts in pension benefits and, if necessary. are
willing to pay higher Social Security taxes to main·
tain the progr am's protection at levels now set in
law.
In a nationwide survey for the American Associa·
lion of Retired Persons there was impressive agree·
ment among those ages SS and over and 24 through
54 .
Both age groups:
-Oppose reductions in benefits. A full 78 percent
of those under SS and 81 percent of those 55 aod over
are against reducing benefits for people already oo
the rolls or those drawing benefits in the future.
-AGAINST PUTTING ANY ceiling on cost-of-
living benefit increases and oppose elimination of the
$255 lump sum death benefit or benefits for depen-
dent spouses.
-Support financing hospital insurance part of
Medicare out of general revenues even if it means
only lower-income persons would be covered.
WHAT AMO DO
TOdt{i
170
371 , ... ., ,.
NEW YORK IAPI N<•r 11
AdY...Cecl ~lined Un< llel'9ecl Tol•l IU..S New 111111>• Hew IOW\
Todf/s
3'6 106 ,.,
20 •
..
METALS . c.,.... 13~1 cenlS • --'· u s oetlll\-· uons •
L•HJ.ccenlsapeund
1111< 41 cents• PoUl'ld. Oellvtrecl. :
TIA $6.9* AMl•I• W"I< <-•II• lb
Al11"'l-16cen1ta -,N Y
Mere...-, U.. 00 per lies" ,., .. ,,.,,...~OOlrov or . N Y J
SILVER l
•• If Tiie Alte<l•l ... l'rest • H-'lndy ~ Hermen, 'll.7JO per troy oun<
GOLD QUOTATIONS
.. ......,: mot'Nnv 11•1"9 '477.50,-up s• 21.,
L-: ., .. ,,_, 11•1"9 M1'.00, WCI $14
l"ert.: •l,.rnoon 11•1"9 S.JU • .a, oft S.J.IM.il
'r•Mllwt: ll•lr>e '47' CM. oll u .•s. -"1
l11rkll: lelt en-ll•lnt M7'.00,
$2.00 . ._,77 00 •111.0
K•••Y I " ........ , only .... , Cl
toCrt.00, .. l1.7S •
• ......,.., only d4111y quo4e M7e.OO,••
$1.7S .
• ........,., only clelly cwot• •• .,,.
MO, It, .. ll.12.
SYMB8LS '""
.,...._.., 1 trent .. UIM .... othf . .-.. ..... IMf, It.-., ... , ....... Oft M.09.
MHklll fO ,..._ I.I I~ 61., SMS.00, off ..... A...,...'100 ~,_,,, .... troy 01., tA1J.00, .... ., ...
.
, "I can't find any socks in my drawer that look
the some."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
C>•••,,_, ..... s~"'"" l/i.z. 11io_j~~
"Well, you didn't have to rip the
Big Bad Wolf's picture out of
the story book, did you?"
JUDGE PARK EB
WHERE HAVE YOU r>EEN THE
L~T TEN YEARS TElLINC, A
WOMAN 5HE CAN'T ~UY A
MAN A MEAL?
MISS PEACH
M V!: AND M~. ~OM , D ID YOUC ~ON
EYEll TEL.I.. YOLA. iHAT ME L.O~T H I?
E NU. L.l-SH BOOie'. ?
,., .
"Look. Just beo1uH I one• took 1 thom out of your
p1w It no ,.,'°" to kMp bugging me!'
DENNIS THE MENA(;E Hank Ketchum
~I L~ :
"I know I shoufdn't hit "Mrs. Wade? Your daughter
girls. but she said you had it coming!"'
were a lousy cookl"
by Harold Le Ooux
I HAVE A FEEl.IN0 YOU AND I AR~ OONNA MAKE IT ~10 IN
HOLLYWOOD. ROY!
by Mell Lazarius
9~~ WITHOOi
'f'HE ~1 I DIDN'T
l<NOW HOW TO
PHJ:.A~E IT . .,.
i
'
·-·
GOBBO
FUNKl' ttlNKERBEAN
I BRABBLE
A C#i L.1~£ ~'RE
~IN6 10 HAVE lt)()At.,) ...
...__ __ .;I, 1'11~ f'ROC~AS'Ti~1'EO l.OM6 L_:=.:=--==:::::_ ___ __.:~~~~-~---.!!.""~EV\.~~l..q~rv.JJ".~.:._ __ _:1-~1~ £~t.M ! 11''~ 1'i ME: 'fO S'f'A~'f ~rf'jNl, M'i 1'£~M
MOON MULLINS
ACROSS
1 Ooze
6 Eden bOy
IOCorwwM
14 Frlgtlt
15 Competent
16Praent
17 Catkin
18 P8'* plent
need:
2worda
20 Hltlertte
21 Tonpot
22 Hindu, e.g.
23 RIYolW
25Weepont
27 Of milk
30 Agenda
31 E!Nln -
32 Mewtl
33Agt.
Je&Mfa
37 8dlOOI group
3e Pigeon
31 Dllt,.. llg--
nal
~C)WION)r
41 Ouulel
42.., 44""" . .,...... .. ., ... ...........
sett• town
49 Wl\Mgtoup
50 Jabt>ert
54 Superliclally
57 llUC'I
mother
54 Economln
59 Bricleal
60 Twlnkllng
61 Slnglee
62 Be foolllhly
fond
63AnMlled
DOWN
1 Bridge
2 Dalal -
3Q1rt'1name
UNITED Future Syndicate
Weclnelday' 1 Pume SolYed
'.l'.J:J::J '.l:-:lrJ:J OIJOOEJ '.J.JO~ .JOJ::l iJrJlJm.l
:J.J'.J.J '.:UIJ::l ~rJDOU
O.J.J :J.J.J'JiJJOiJODrl
:J'.liJiJJ.J.J oa:.m
.JO:J ..l'J.JO JlJlJ
3'.J.JIJ.l .J!JJ:J [J;!JUU
:::J.J.J.J :.i~.J:Jil auoa
'.J :J II J .JU .J J l.J:J J llli
iJU.J :J::.J:.111 J...10 ..l~JJD :J~:J~:J::.JU
:J.JJ...l~.J~iJ:J .• hl .JOiJ
'.J'.J.JJ.J .JO.J::l :J;JUC:l
::J.lO.JiJ :.:l.JrJ.J r.J:JUG
::JOJiJJ J::l.J~ iJ~UU
4 Cabinet 24 Futener 400verllow 4' Collltlon
43Glnnentt
44Colof
45..,
"*"'* 25 Tact 5 Outr. Prefix 28 Refrlgef'•t•
6 Fowl 27 A'*' land
7 Adjoin 21 M111'1 name a Nelol'lbor of 21 Nell' acct·
Ind dent:
' Catnip 2 WOtdt to 'Muoul so PltlY
11 Swn-teaklng 32 Jenglt '*"' 34 Lewi t2 Of.~ 35 NulMnce
13 .. lllrdl 37 8lgOltt 'tee
1t LuNletel 3e Ship,...
21 """ ,,...
441 .. _ Frome"
47 ll'WI,....
49Town!NI)
51 Ory
52 Vttoclly
63Hut
S&Agld seeowt
57AI~ ....
' ' '
'" --~-
fAf'tR!
DB.SMOCK
SHI! .JUS"f' 9AIP,
"IP 1"HIS HOSPl1"AL..'S
eve~ H l"T" &Y AN
AVAL.ANCHI!, "T"HESY'L.L-
Pl Nc:> M9 Fl~S'T""
ANP WAL.t<8P AWAY.'
FOB •n"l!Ea oa FOa W'O alE
by Jeff MacNelly
i
'
f i
II •
by Ernie Bushmiller
l .JUST LOST MY
JOB AS A
BABY-SITTER
..v.ac ..... ,
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
by Kevin Fagan
~'fl5€ I ~LO
~MA\/~ ~tRC:.'f .••
by George Lemont
by Lynn Johnston
MIKE, '/00 OONt° ~ tA>..wrr ~N .rTCH IS U~ '1iU. YOO"JE. I
HRD ONE '/OJ CfflT SCMn:tt.
I
\
1 >f • I\ NC, [ 1__ JUN I Y CA l If 0 P NI A I'> CE N T '->
Neics elates parents of CO.Ut eaptive
A last-minute acreement pre·
vented the execution today of ·
the son ol a San Juan Capistrano
couple who is ~ held bostaee
aboard a bijaclllCr Pakistani Jet
in Damascus, Syria.
·'Ob, thank God is all I can
say." said Glen Clymore upon
hearlnc the news lbat bis 24·
year-old son Ctai& was still alivtr
after lbe 8 a.m. (PST) deadline
passed and the plane was not
blown up.
Clymore said he and bis wife
* * *
Thelma.... were llatenlnf to the
radio in their San luan bome
when they teamed tbat Pakistan
bad acreect to meet the ter·
roriats' demand to release 55
political prisoners in excbance
for the freedom of the 100
hostages on board.
The younger Clymore, a 19'7'
graduate of Laguna Beach Hiah
School, runs an import bU51ness
from his home Lu Late Forest
and was in Pakistan on a buying
* * *
trip when the jet was hijacked U
days •to.
Charbe Daw, a close family
friend, spoke for the Clymore
family. "Right now they're just
in seventh heaven,"' Mrs. Davis
said.
"They're sitting back, re-
lieved over the fact Craig ls go-
ing to be all right."
Earlier, lbe elder Clymore, a
tennis instructor in Sao Juan,
said bis wife bad suffered great-
ly from the ordeal. He said she
* * *
bad not been able to answer the
door or the telephone since their
son was taken bolltace.
Clymore said they bad been
•·very coocemed about CraJg's
eafet.y because life is considered
to be cheap there."
Tbe younger Clymore re-
portedly left the U.S. in late
February on one of his periodic
buying trips. His father said be
thought bls son was beaded for
Germany.
Tbe senior Clymore said he
* * *
bad loat all track of time since
being notlfted by a U.S. State
Department official last week
that bla son was aboard the
selled Patiataoi airliner, which
waa first fiown to Afghanistan
and tben to Damascus.
. The relieved father said be
believed the three Pakistan! ter·
rorists holding hia son and two
other Americans, Identified as
Frederick Hubbell of Des
(See PAaENTS, Page A.%)
* * *
Pakistan meets demands
, Hijackers call off executions, bomb threat
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -
Only minutes before the
threatened e xecution of three
Americans, Pakistan's military
regime agreed today to free 55
politicaJ prisoners in exchange
for more than 100 hostages held
by hijackers in a plane here.
The three hijackers, who
seized the Pakistani airliner 11
days ago and new it first to
Afghanistan and then lo
Damascus, threatened to sboot
the Americans and then blow up
the plane and aJl aboard unless
their demands were met by 8
a .m. PST.
They set a new deadline of 4
this afternoon for fulfillment of
their request, lbe news agency
said. Observers speculated the
exchange would take place in
Damascus. The hijackers bad
previously demanded to meet
face to face with released
Pakistani dissidents.
In Islamabad. Pakistan, a
government spokesman con-
firmed the agreement, but said
six of the 55 political prisooers
on the hijackers' list were un-
traceable. He said they would be
allowed to leave the country like
the others if found.
The Syrian agency s aid
negotiations were under way
fl.bout the six. ·
Earlier in the day. tbe bi-
Raps 'negativism'
Isaacs quits LB
Arts Commission
Laguna Beach photograpber
Arline Isaacs bas resigned from
the nine -member Arts Com-
miss ion. s aying the panel is
bogged down by "nit-picking,
negativism , and obs truc-
tionis m."
In a letter of resignation ad-
dressed to the City Council, Ms.
Isaacs said she felt like a parent
abandoning a chlld.
She was appointed to the panel
nearly two years ago after her
recommendation to the counciJ
that s uch a commission be
established.
And wtille she lauds the ac-
com plisl\ments s he says the
commission has achieved in a
Death ruling
brings cheeF
LEXINGTON, S.C. (AP> -A
39-year-old former prisoner con-
victed of kiJling two men that be
thought "society would be glad
to get rid of" cried "whoopei!!"
when a jury sentenced him to
death.
"We 've all g o t to go
sometime," Ronald F . Smart
told Circuit Judge Julius Bag·
gett Wednesday after a Lex·
lngton County jury sentenled
him to die in the electric chair
for the 1978 slaylnts.
short time, M.s. laaaca says the
panel does not have active City
Council support.
Pointing to two recent events
that were unattended by council
members, the photographer
said, "lf we are not supported
by the City Council physically aa
welJ rui idealistically, we cannot
convincingly present ourselves
to the city."
On the other band, she says,
the council is not qualified to
select arts commissioners.
"We were formed because the
City CoWlciJ recognized the need
for those with art expertise to
oversee the arts.•· her letter
reads.
·•How then can the council be
expected to judge those best
qualified?"
She said one reason there is
dissensioo and a large turnover
on the panel is because com-
missioners are selected from
among "friends and neighbors''
to serve on the panel.
She suggests that arts com-
missioners sit in on the in-
terview process and recommend
their preferences to lbe council.
The council is expected to ac-
cept Ms. Isaacs' resignation.
along with that of commissioner
Dorothy Kirkland Tuesday
night.
Ms. Kirkland bas 1hd1cated
she does not have the time to de-
vote to the arts commission.
Left t11rns?
Bircher expounda on Bl ·
Are Dan Rather, Barbara Wallen and Georae Buab
Ued to socialist inlel'est.s?
Did John Lennon's hit song "lmaitne" espouse collec·
Uvism?
Veteran· John Birch Society member Richard
Fatberley made such cJaima in a Newport Buch lecture
reported by Steve Marble in today's Coutal Scene, leadlnc
off the newspaper's B section.
Other .features in. tbla easy-to·find, easy-to-read
package of regional news cover: ' . '
BOl'l'LED BRIBE&YT Wireleu mlcropboall-. ecm·
•truction auperintendeata plcked up OD·Ule-job ~
about liquor gifta requested by two lrriae WW!ll~ Lon. South County bureau cblef Steve llttdM&.l ._..... __
tt11lhDOQY .. the pair appeal t.beir ftriD.a. I
&AGGBD DOLLS -Cotta Meta reporter Jerry
ClaUMn loob at four outdoor mannequilll that a1mOlt peJ"ICJldt7 Bessie MM Hill'• 10.year •trucel• to keep her
vlntase COltume 1bop open.
M'l•D• oa ..... -WW FOUD~ Valley nill·
dent.I do wit.bout Iv.et 1w...-.. trM irtmmlq er rwrH·
UoD Pftll'8• to cope wttla aa laaqWleat ettr badcet •bortafl' llepoNr Pbll ......._ lD.,eetlptet.
TAKING TIR n.,._ -Oraq1 Cont CoU1•1'1
t;eeda tMm ptebd up 1ww;e*U11 eMIDp6oublp N~ s
for dlli ,_,. at UCL£ 11...a .. tlal top 1peat .... tr11D
wUI deftllid tbelr utlonal UUe nest manth ln Sacramento.
; •, ' r
jackers labeled the three
Americans CIA agents and said
"be prepared to collect their
bodies." They made the threat
in a letter dictated to Pakistani
authorities from the plane at
Damascus airport. The letter
was released by the official
Syrian news agency. SANA.
The Americans have been
identilied as Frederick HubbeU
of Des Moines, Iowa, a lawyer;
and businessmen Craig Richard
Clymore of Orange County and
Lawrence Clifton Mangum of
New York City, who reportedly
lives in Spain.
A U.S. Embassy official in
fslamabad, Pakistan, said ''we
have no idea bow they (the bi-
j ac lters ) could have come up
with the deduction that they're
CIA agents."
At the White House, press
secretary James S. Brady said
the United States had been in
constant touch with Syrian of-
ficials as the deadline neared.
He said he was sure there bad
been communication with
Pakistani officials as well but
that he did not know if the Unit-
ed States bad encouraged them
to free the 55 prisoners.
Pak is tan President
Mohammed Zia uJ-Haq sent an
"important, urgent" message to
Syrian President Hafez Assad
after the threat to shoot the
Americans was issued, a
Pakistani spokesman said.
Immediately after the hi·
jackers' threat, Syrian troops
and police moved closer to the
green and white Boeing 720.
Some crouched in the bushes on
both s ides of the auxiliary
runway where the plane was
parked. A half dozen dashed un-
der the fuselage of the plane.
Later all were pulled back to
foxholes.
Observers said the Americans
were singled out apparently in
an effort to get the Reagan ad·
ministration to put pressure on
<See HIJACK, Pa1e A%)
.... i....-..
SAVED FROM DEATH
Co.et'• Craig Clymore
Captives
concern
Reagan
WASfilNGTON CAP > -Presi-
dent Reagan expressed concern
today for the safety of three
Americans he ld in a planeload of
hostages in Syria but said "you
can't do business" with the hi·
jackers who seized them.
"Th.is kind of case is very dif.
ficult for us," said the president,
whose admirustration is on rec-
ord as refusing to negotiate
with terrorists.
·•What consequences would
you take if harm comes?" the
president asked. "You can't
blame the Syrian or Pakistani
governments. They were vie·
tims also."
Reagan spoke to reporters
shortly after the Pakistani gov-
ernment agreed to the hijackers'
demand for the release of 55
political prisoners, only minutes
before the threatened execution
of the three Americans among
more than 100 hostages on the
Pakistani airliner held in
Damascus, Syria.
"I think they zeroed in, or 1course. on the Americans."
Reagan said. "The threat was
aimed at them. I hope they're
free and safe.··
The president was questioned
by reporters as he left the White
House to visit Sen. Bob Dole, R·
Kan., who is recu~rating from '
surgery.
A While House pr ess
spokeswoman said the Reagan
I administration brought no pres·
L:::::.::..:.:.;::11C.:~-..:__---~;.:.._----------' sure on Pakistan to free the political prisoners.
Great wall of Huntington
Wetsuited surfer slides left on ·a smooth,
glassy five-foot wave on the north side of
the Huntington Beach pier Wednesday.
The waves were bot, even if the water was
not (59 degrees) and wave riders took ad-
vantage of a west swell to grab onto a few
fast rides .
Trio booked
in smuggling
of illegals
Border patrol agents are call·
log tbls week's capture of 107 ii·
legal aliens in a tractor trailer
truck one of the larceat ap·
prebenaions in a single vehicle
since the mid-70s.
The large truck was stopped
Monday olgbt at the San Onofre
checkpoint, just south of San
Clemente and all 107 aduJt males
were I.den into custody.
Meanwhile, a u .s. maciattate
in San Dl~o set ball at $5,000 for
Eugene Montijo, S3, reportedly
the driver or the truck.
Ball was set at $3,000 each for
Rex Hostetler, 52, of RaaioGa,
and Manuel Avila Mendosa, 55,
a Mexican cltlleo with resident
aUen·atatua.
Tbe trio were booted tor ln-1
veati••tion or atJen amuattni chariea and were beln.t de·
talned pendin1 arralfnmeot
nHtweek.
Most of the atlena w-. re-
turned to Mexico, but autborttJes
aatd they are boldlns nnral as
WilaUHI.
· Aid law 1tudied
W ASBINGTON (AP) -Tbe
RH~Dlft.tatloe ti llpal• ln• lt may Mtk nipeal of le&)alaUon bannln1 conrt
U.S. mUitary aid to rebel foteel
in Man.ill !-nlola.
'
Judge won't save
student break/ as ts
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Luis Cardenas bas tu.med
down requests to reinstate a
federally funded breakfast pro-
gram for needy sWdent.:S in the
Santa Ana Unified School DI.s-
trict.
Judge Cardenas, in makin1
his rulinc Wedn~ay, decllned
to "exercise ju.rildiction," say-
ing the state's appeals court
ought to decide the matter.
A clau action lawsuit .,ainat
lbe school district bad aoupt re-
instatement of the pro1ram for
about 1,000 younsten. That case
la pendl.nc before the 4th Diat.rlct
Court of Appeal.
But representaUvea of tbe
UNRUH NABBED
ON DRUNK R4I'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Staie
Treuurer leue Uon&b wu w-
rested on a drunk drivilla cbup
by the Hlcbway Pa,tro!, •beriff
Doane Lowe 1atd.
Unruh, 58, waa atol>Ped W•-
neaday Dilbt at fultoll and
Marconi avenue. lD tbe dtJ'•
north u.a, Lowe aatd. ff• ••
take to the county Jail ucl lat.r
releued .tt.bout ball.
1n.1m. UDnab plea4M DO coa·
tat to a dnlnk drlViftl char(•
a.ad Pfd a $31.S fta1.
Legal Aid Society of Orange
County and American Clvil
Liberties Union bad sought re-
instatement of the program, in
the meantime, on behalf of a stu-
dent at Wilson Elementary
School.
Cardena&, however, declined
to become involved in as~
lawsuit while the appeals court
ls wel8hin1 lbe tint legal action.
Representatites of the ACLU
and Le1al Aid Society said the
Jude• merely avoided rulln« on
tbe merit.I of their au.it.
Tbe lebool dblrict'• board of
truateM dle:kl9d lut summer to
termµuate ~ breakfaat pro-
1ram tor ._ J.9.11 school year
even ~ lt w .. tunded by~
fMeral ....... IDt.
Tile Hlllool board also bad
rallell to NMW tbe procram the
,,..,._ ~ 7ear, leadlq to
the tint lawsuit. An Oran1e Coatr ....... court Judie bed 'ordered t.be bnat.flltl nlnttat·
Id, but tbe d.lltdet appealed.
Sprinklers aought
CARSON CITY <AP> -A
commllaloD fonned after tut
November'• dlHllJ'OUI MGM
Grand ffoCel ftn bu eallld for
tb1 lnatallat•on of 1prlDkler •r•tellll. new ft.re alarms and other ••flt¥ I eahartt in
N1vad_.1 b.lab·riae buUd.lnp.
"We did nothing to tell the
Pakistanis to release any peo-
ple," said White House deputy
press seeret.ary Karna Small.
I The administration applied
"a bs olute ly no press ure on
Pakistan to r e l e a s e any
prisoners,'' sbe s aid.
"It's our hope that th~ culprits
be brought to justice,·· she
added.
Ms. Small said the ad-
ministration welcomed "any ac·
lion that could bring a quick
close" to the hostage drama.
Pressed whether the ad-
ministration was retreating
from bis stand against negotiat-
ing with terrorists, she· amended
her earlier remark and said
merely that the administration
"welcomed a qulck end to tb1s
unfortunate situation."
ORANlif CUil IUTHIB .
Chance of rain tonight 40
percent increasing to 70
perc.ent Friday. Lows
tonight 50 at beaches, 57
inland. Highs Friday 61
alon1 coast, 67 Inland.
Thunderstorms, gusty
winds likely Friday after-
noon.
llllDf TllAY
If p 'N o coffH drtftlrn,
f0\l1rf twic• GI opC to ~t
CO,.C'1' 0/ the paftef'eot CU
"On·COl/H dn~• -but doctori aro•t odu.,htg
O~Vft.POQeAIJ.
11111
cw1,..r...1 .... .._.
SURVIVOR FILES SUIT
• HB lfterCMnt M8nnetateln
•..
Holocaust
• survivor
files suit
ByPATRICK KENNEDY
OflM0.hy~lle4SUllf
Huntington Beach busi·
nessman Mel Mermelstein has
filed a S6 million lawsuit against
an organization that offered
$50,000 to the first person who
could prove that a single Jew was
killed in the prison camps of Nazi
Germany.
Mermelstelll is a J ewish sur·
vivor of a Nazi prison camp and is
a well-known lecturer on the
holocaust
His laws uit contends the
Institute of Histon cal Review has
railed lo hve up to the offer. has
libeled tum in a newsletter and
has caused him intentional men-
tal distress
"They're a bigoted group try.
ing to erase that era, and they're
,trying to use me to do it,"
Mermelstein said today.
The non -profit or ganization
firs t made the public offer two
years ago, claiming the holocaust
is a hoax and that no Jews were
killed.
Then, last November, Lewis
Brandon, directorof theorgaruza.
tion, wrote a personal letter to
Mermelstein challenging hi m to
~ovethe holocaust happened, ac-
cording to the lawsuit.
According lo the laws uit. the
letter warned Mermelstefn that if
he refused the offer, the group
would "draw our own conclusion
and publicize this fact to the mass
media ...
Mermelstein accepted. His at·
torney wrote Brandon of the ac-
ceptance and stated that the cor·
res pondence was tantamount to a
legal contract.
Mermelstein says he submitted
a li st of evidence and witnesses to
prove genocide occurred in the
Nazi prison camps but that he was
not allowed to present it to the or-
ganization. Last month, he filed
the lawsuit in Los Angeles
Superior Court.
Brandon or other officials of the
Institute of His torical Review
couldn't be reached for comment.
'The organization's only address
is a post office box in Torrance.
The lawsuit claims Brandon
sent Mermelstein another letter
on Jan. 27 and that Brandon stated
the offer was being postponed
because Simo n Wiesenthal
"wishes to claim the $50,000 for
proof of the gassings and the
$25,000 for proof that Anne
. Frank's diary 1s authentic."
Mermelstein was a teen-age
prisoner of the Nazi death camp of
Auschwitz, 1n Poland. He said his
parents, two sisters and a brother
:-died there.
I
,
PARENTS. • ~Oines, 1owa. and Lawrence
J:;lifton of New York City, were
ilsing them as leverage to get
lhe U.S. government involved.
: Clymore described his son as
being a "cheerful kid " who was ~ell-liked by the people he met.
Jle said his son attended Orange
J:oast College in Costa Mesa for p short time after his high school
sraduation.
{ Clymore said he and his wife
llad reacted to the ordeal "like 1 ny other human beings who
ave kids." He said they "coo-'
oled each other. cried a little and
· d a lot of praying ...
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomu P. Haley ..........
Aot>er1 N. WMd ..........
M. Thomas Keevll ~
Thomu A. Murphtne ................
Char ... H. Looa --...... .....
~Sdtulman
Cetl Cent•nNn ....... ~
~Goddard Jr.
stands
alone..
W W.VADOB, SI Salndar
CAP> -II W•Wor'1 r1IUal Junta bat told other Latln
American IO'fel'Dmuta DGt to meddle In lta WV ap!Mt leftlft
perrillaa, and UM United Statet
ll aupportlna tbat at.and.
·'The revolutionary aovam-
ment ot El Salvador doe• oot de-
al re the loterventlon of the
Organization of American States
in the search for a solution to the
internal problems in El
Salvador," the junta saJd. <Reial·
ed story, Page A3)
Tbe message, delivered
Wednesday by El Salvador's
ambassador in Waahin1ton,
Ernesto Peralta, called an OAS
mediation offer "completely un-
acceptable" and rejected "any
ad hoc action by the OAS."
The United States boycotted
the session on grounds that 'El
Salvador rejected any OAS role,
said Ambassador Jose Rafael
Echeverria of Costa Rica, whose
government suggested media·
lion last week and sponsored the
meeting.
Chile, Uruguay and Argentina
also were absent due to a "lack
of instruction,·' Echeverria said.
Those attending were
Barbados, Bolivia , Brazil,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
Grenada. Guatemala. Haili,
Honduras. Mexico. Nicaragua,
Panama, Paraguay, Peru,
Surinam , Trinidad and
Venezuela.
Salvadoran troops battled the
guerrillas to the north and east
of San Salvador and in and
around the capital Wednesday.
The United Nations Human
Rights Commission, meeting in
Geneva, Switzerland, called for
the appointment of a special
representative to investigate
.. grave violations of human
rights and fundamental
freedoms r eported in El
Salvador."
The vote was 29· l . Eleven
countries abstained, including
the United States.
The ruling junta in El
Salvador has not requested any
additional U.S. military aid, and
the Reagan administration has
"no desire or interest to fob off
on El Salvador any aid they do
not feel they neep," uys
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein-
berger.
"I know of no plans to send
any more" military equipment
to El Salvador, Weinberger said
Wednesday night in an ap·
pearance on the public broad·
casting TV program "The Mac-
Neil-Lehrer Report ...
Weinberger said the $25
million in military aid already
announced by the State Depart-
ment represents all the as-
sistance that was requested by
the U.S.-backed junta.
Missing man's car
found; driver held
OKLAHOMA CITY CAP> -A
California man has admitted
Wednesday to the theft of a car
whose owner can't be found.
The car -later found to con-
tain bloodied clothing -was
stolen in Oklahoma City last
December.
William Francis Delagana
Hand, 22, pleaded guilty before
Oklahoma County Special Judge
Wllliam AJlen lo larceny of a
vehicle. He was handed. a lhree-
year prison term as agreed in a
plea-bargaining arrangement.
Hand was arrested in Stanton,
Calif .. on Dec. 30, when police
discovered he was driving a car
owned by Tom Corbitt of Bartlesville.
Corbitt's parents told police
their 28-year-old son had left
home the morning of Dec. 27 for
Vancouver, Wash.
Corbitt has not been seen
since.
California authorities dis-
covered Corbitt's wallet, his
glasses and bloodied clothing in
the trunk of the car.
But Jim Anthony, an in-
vestigator in the district at-
torney's office, said no murder
charge can be filed without a
body.
Stanton Police Sgt. Robert
Ohlemann. who attended the
hearing Tuesday. confirmed
that police had employed the
services of "a reliable psychic"
from Orange, Calif.
She thought Corbitt had' been
killed along Interstate 40, but he
discounted reports the woman
had gone into a trance and en-
visioned the victim scratching a
message into the sand in the
Amarillo, Texas, area.
Ohlemann said he contacted
Amarillo Police Officer Rick
Webb who told him he had dis·
covered etched into the dry
ground the date 12-27-80 and the
word ·'Minnesota.''
"But, the woman we employed
never envisioned anything, .. he
said. Officials in the district at-
torney's office said Hand told
them he had worked in Min·
nesoia recently.
Reapportion talks
slated for Friday
The first hearing on reappor-
tionment of Orange County's
state Senate and congf'Msional
districts will be held Friday in
Santa Ana.
The county is due for several
changes in districts because tbe
population increased more than
33 percent -to more than 1.9
million persons -between uno
and 1!8>.
Sarah Reyes, an aide to tbe
Senate Comm.ittee on Elections
and Reapportionment. said
leaders of several Hispanic or-
ga ni zalions are expected to
testify after the hearing con-
venes at 9:30 a.m . at Santa Ana
City HaU .
"City and county boundaries,
communities of interest and
basic equity will eovern our te·
apportionment efforts,'' Ms.
Reyes said in a notice of the
bearing.
Preliminary figures from the
1980 census,· sne s atd, snow
Senate District 37 now
represented by Democrat Paul
Carpenter to be slightly un-
derpopulated while the Senate
and con1re11ional districts
"vary from slightly over to
grossly over the ideal size."
Among committee members
who will hear testimony is Sen.
John Schmitz, R -Newport
Beach.
,.,....,..,,.AJ The committee's ultimate de-
cision on reapportionment will
apply only lo Senate and con·
gressional districts. The state
Assembly wiU conduct separate
hearings to determine bow its
districts s hould be reappor-
tioned.
IDJACK TENSION .•.
Pakistani authorities to meet the
demand.
The letter was written by the
chief hijacker. identified as.
Moujir Ghoulam, deputy com-
mander of AJ Zulfikar. The or-
ganization is believed to lie
mad e up of s upporters of
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the prime
minister hanged in April 1979 by
the current Pa.Jtistani regime of
Mohammed Zia uJ-Haq.
The letter was banded to
Syrian mediators six hours
before the deadlin'e was to ex·
pire. The hijackers have killed
o n e of their captives, a
Pakistani diplomat.
· 'Oniy six hours are left and
there is still no answer from the
Pakistani government to our re·
quests," the letter said. "If our
demands are not met, the result
will be hard and full
responsibility will fall upon the
Carrier saves 17
JAKARTA <AP) -Seventeen
people, the crew and passengers
of an lndonesian helicopter en
route to an oil drilling site in the
Natunas Islands, were rescued
by the U.S. aircraft carrier
Midway when their aircraft
crashed in the South China Sea,
the newspaper Sinar Harapan
reported. The helicopter sank
but all aboard were rescued by
the Midway, it was reported.
'
Pakistan authorities," it said.
"We want the whole world to
know that this tragedy is
because Zia is an American-
Zionist agent and a traitor lo
Pakistan," the letter continued.
Saying the Americans would
be shot lf the demands were not
met, the letter added: "They are
CIA agents. I know everything
about them. Be prepared to col·
lect their bodies.
"Zia is not interested iri the
fate of the passengers. All he
wants is to score political advan-
tages," the letter said. "We are
not extending the deadline. U
our demands are not met after
six hours, we shall take a violent
action."
Chiropractor
admits guilt
• m sex case
A Newport Beach chiropt•ctor
has pleaded gullly in Otan1e
County Superior Court to sexual
misconduct char1ea invo1vtnc a
14-year-old female patient.
Judge James Turner, in ac-
cepting the guilty plea of Gordon
E . Braham, 36, Wednesday,
scheduled sentencing proceed-
in111May1.
AddiUonally, two psycbiatritta
were appointed to examine
Braham, arrested with hil wife
by Newport Beach police Jut
October when the sirl's mother
learned ol the eexual incident.
If the chiropractor la juqed to
be a mentally disordered sex~
fMd,er ameaable to treatment,
Jude• Turner could send him to
a atate mental bolpital.
However, Braham also could
tac• a 5-year state prlaon term.
Tbe ehlrol>ractor and bit wUe,
Nancy Braham, 21, were botb
taken lnto cuatody by police
after UM strl ~ told her
mother tbat tlle couple bad
en1ated ln aaual aetlVky wttb
ber at tWr lllome .
Cbar1H are atlll peadln1
a1alllllt Mn. Braham tn Harbor
Munldpal Court.
)• .
St. Helens quiet
VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) -
Mount St. Helens remains quiet,
continuing to vent about 500 tons
of sulfur dioxide and 1,000 tons of
carbon dioxide gas each day.
Geophysicist Bob Mallis of the
U.S . Geological Survey said the
gas emissions are much lower
than they were last spring .
.,.. ...... ~
WASHJNGTON (AP) -A na-
tlon.l commluloo concluded U>-
day that Social Security la 1UU UM
beat 1y1tem to support elderly ,
and dlaabled workers 1nd ar1uect
aealnat any government move to
force employers to provide
private pensions.
The National Commission on
Social Security iaaued it.a report
after a two-year study. Congress
created and funded the nine-
member citizens' panel to con-
duct the independent review of
Social Security.
It came out again.st the private
pension propoeal advanced two
weeks ago by the President's
Com mission on Pension Policy,
which was appointed by former
President Carter.
That panel recommended a
new payroU tax of 3 percent on
employers to set up a minimum
universal pension $)'Stem. It said
too many workers lack coverage
or lose pension credits when they
change jobs, eventually reaching
old age with no income other than
Social Security.
But the 'national commission
said it "does not believe the
federal government should re-
quire employers to provide
pensions."
It said the workers who lack
pension coverage generally are
lower paid and their wages might
drop even further if their
employers were hit with a new
payroll tax.
It said the employers who do not
provide pensions "lend to be
small businesses or less s ue·
cessful firms that are hard·
pressed to meet their current ob-
ligations. The added financial and
administrative burden of man-
datory pensions would be more
than some could bear and still re·
main in business."
The commission announced its
major recommendations in
January. It called for raising the
eligibility age for Cull Social
Security retirement benefits
from 65 to 68 early in the next cen·
tury. restraining cost -of-living
hikes for beneficiaries when in-
flation climbs faster than
workers' wages and paying for
one-half of Medicare from
general revenues. To do the lat-
ter. it recommended sla pping a
2.5 percent surcharge on personal
income taxes.
Seal hunters
begin work
ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland
(AP> -Crews from seven Cana-
dian and three Norwegian ships
have begun killing harp seal
pups on ice floes off southern
Labrador.
The hunt originally was
sch eduled to begin today but
opened a day early after sealing
s hip captains expressed fears
that ice on which the seals were
breeding would break up
quickly.
The 45-by-S mile hunting area,
known as the Front, contains
thousands or seals and is the site
of an annual seal catch "bigger
than anything else in the world,"
Federal Fisheries information
officer F.d Quigley said.
1-&iy it'• nOt --:~
10, George
MONTOOKERY, Ala.
<AP> T'be lormu wife
ol Geor1• Wallace I.I alk·
tn1 for tbe prayen ol ·•all
Cbrt.U.. l*PI•" la bopes
that t.bt fonD.r Alabama
1ov1naor wtU t.biDk twice
about manyln.a a llD,pr
halt hit ap.
CorneJJa Wallace, wba.e
mania,. ended ln divorce
In 11'71, Hld Wednesday
1he ltn't ready to step
ulde for Wallace to
m1rry blonde Liu Taylor ot Jasper, a 32-year-old
country-wettern singer
whose father owns a coal
minln& concern.
'Tm not giving up on a
reconciliation,'' Mrs.
Wallace said. "I simply
ask for the prayers of all
Christian people that
George will search his
heart and find God's
perfect will in this mat-ter ..
Disneyland
criticized
in knifing
ANAHEIM (AP > -Dis·
neyland officials have met with
harsh criticism by local health
officials in their handling or a
teen-ager who was stabbed at the park and later died at a
nearby hospital.
Orange County health officials
criticized park officials Wednes-
day for not calling c ity
par amedics last week and for
not having 18-year-old Mel C.
Yorba taken Lo either of two
nearby hospitals designated to
treat trauma victims.
The officials accused Dis·
neyland officials of not s ummon-
ing paramedics in order to avoid
any bad publicity that could
jeopardize the park's image.
Dis neyland officials denv the
accusation and contend they
made the best possible decision
in the Yorba death.
Yorba was driven to Palm
Ha rbor Hospital in Garden
Grove, which is not a trauma
center. in the back of a Dis-
neyland van, accompanied by a
park nurse and two security
guards. The van had no warning
lights or sirens to speed its trip
through traffic nor any lifesav-
ing equipment besides oxygen.
Anaheim paramedics were not
notified
The Rivers ide teen-ager, who
ar ri ved a l the hos p ital in
cardiac ar rest, bled to death
from wounds in his heart and
liver. said the Orange County
roroner's offi ce.
"They (Disneyland) have an
inte rnal policy not to call
parame dics," s aid Betty o· R ourke , director o f the
Orange Count y Office of
Emergency Medical Services.
She said her office has contacted
Disney la nd official s ''but
nothing has come of it.·'
Although the health care ex-
perts refused to say with cer-
tainty whether trauma care
would have saved Yorba, they
s aid victims with similar in-
juries have been saved.
"We've been talking to people
at Disneyland about this for
years," said Martel Thompson,
c hief or operations for the
Anaheim Fire Department.
I
Orange &at OAJLY PILOT/Thuraday, March 12, 1981
·Anti-busing forces hail ruling
LOS ANGELES (AP > -Oppo.
oenll o1 forced bua!n1 reac~
eoat•Ueally to a state Supreme
Court dedsloo that could be the
death blow to the Los An1eles
Unified &hool District's man·
datory lnteerauoa program.
''I'm t.brilled, I'm excited, I ·
don't know what to say.'· school
board president Roberta Wein·
traub said Wednesday after
learning that the high court had
let stand an appeals court ruling
upholding the state's anti-busing
amendment, Proposition 1, and
ils application in the Los
Angeles school district.
But Superior Court Judge Paul
Egly called it "crazy."
"IT'S SOMETHING I didn't ex·
peel. I won't comment further,"
said Egly. who bad spent years
overseeing the development of
the school district's integration
plan as the result of a 1963 civil
rights lawsuit.
The Supreme Court in San
Francisco denjed without com·
ment a petition by the American
Civi~ Liberties Union to throw
out the Court or Appeal ruling,
although Chief Justice Rose Bird
would have granted the hearing.
The ACLU saJd lt would com·
ment on the rulln1 and on
whether the case would be
pursued in federal court at a
news conference today.
But state Sen. Alan Robbins,
D-Van Nuys, author of Propoei·
lion 1 -the so-called Robblns
Amendment -sald the measure
was worded in such a way that it
could not be overturned at the
federal level.
"This was our biggest hur-
dle," he said. "We have a very
liberal Supreme Court in the
state of California, and now even
they've found that mandatory
busing is unconstitutional."
"l 'M THE happiest person in
California," Robbins said. Mrs.
Weintraub, who leads an anti·
busing majority on the school
board, said the district's 2\.'J-
year-old forced busing program
would be ended •·as soon as
humanly possible" and called a
s p ecial board session fo r
tonight.
··This is the most exciting
news in my life," she said. "I'm
so excited for the kids and the
parents and the schools.··
"It's a wODderfUl victory for
au of us who worked on the Rob-
bin• amendment," Robbiru said.
"It's everythln1 we could have
possibly wanted, it's a dream
come true.
"NOW WE can devote our
schools to education, we can end
fOT ced busing, we can take
millions of dollars that right now
is being spent on buses and bus·
Ing and use it for education."
Robbins said the district
would not lose millions of dollars
in federal funds earmarked
specifically for integration pro-
grams.
"We'll continue to use it for
voluntary programs," he said.
"We're going to prove that
voluntary integration can pro-
duce more lnteeration than
forced busing. Once parents
know that they don't have to bus
their kids, we're going to get rid
of the bitterness and resentment
a round busing and they'll be re-
ceptive to busing their kids
shorter distance and other pro-
grams."
PRO POSITION 1, passed
overwhelmingly by voters i11
1979, ban state courts from 10-
ina beyood federal guidelines in
a11ipina pupils in de1ecre1•·
tJon cases on the basis of race. It
aaya mandatory busing can only
be imposed in district.a where
segregation bas been inten-
tional
In a ruling last Dec. 19, the ap-
peals court found that Proposi·
lion l does not violate federal
law, that integration in Los
Angeles schools was based on
residential patterns and was not
intentional, and that the district
therefore was not required to
maintain its mandatory busing
program.
SINCE THE appeals court rul·
ing, the school board bas been
planning for an end to forced bus·
Ing, which now affects about
23,000 of some 530,000 students in
the 600·square·mile district, the
nation's second largest.
Although the district's first
mandatory program was im-
plemented in 1978, the legal bat·
tie over integration in Los
Angeles schools dated back to
1962.
State cracks caviar black market
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Slate fish and game officials, look-
ing out for the welfare of California's sturgeon population, are
cracking down on a gourmet black market that provides caviar to
those who crave it.
the buses and coaches needed to keep up our transit services. If we
do not get it, that will hurt the elderly. the handicanoed. the low-income workers, and the commuters who rely on transit."
\Ian Ho11•~• apl'ftll ._Wd Orange f!rush Four agents seized 65 pounds of the black fish eggs from a San
Francisco oyster merchant as part of a drive to wipe out the illegal
trade, a fi sh and game official said Wednesday.
The roe, carefully packed in 130 eight-ounce jars, was valued
at $6,500.
Stat ~ tran•ff •la.Ms H'ftl
SACRAMENTO (AP) The Califorma Transportation Com-
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Manson family member Leslie Van
Houten's bid to overturn her murder conviction has been denied by
the California Supreme Court.
Miss Van Houten had claimed the verdict should be set aside
because gruesome photographs, including those from a crime she
was not involved in, were viewed as evidence
by the jury.
Pico, a chimp with a circus performing in Santa Monica
this week, knows how to take a nutrition break. He calm· ·
ly makes s hort work of an orange by biting into the fruit
(top), draining the juice Ccenter>. and attacking the skin
(bottom>.
mission says that all state and local transportation services must
be cut unless new revenues are found . She was convicted In 1971 , along with
Charles Manson and two other family mem-
bers, in the slaying of grocery executive Leno
LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, on two
counts of murder and one count of conspiracy
to commit murder.
Commission Chairman Dean Meyer commented on the draft
baenmaJ report to the Legislature that the cuts would affect every.
thing from urban bus systems to country roads.
In a statement accompanying Wednesday 's draft report,
Meyer said, "It is not a ques·
lion of being unable to afford
new freeways. The message NEWS BRIEFS .. is that we cannot keep up
what we have now, and that
will hurt everyone.
·-··we need a billion dollars more in the next five years to buy
All were sentenced to death, but the
penalty was set aside when the California
Supreme Court ruled the state capital puniah·
ment law was unconstitutional. The sen·
tences then automatically became We terms.
Art Show
Huntington Center
daily thru Sun
l'lUMe...O·•ltr:ATINO u .. •.te'fHe•ttftt
S• l•C 111651
~•tonCf f1mf> !ii,.,,, ~I 'fout ()on,
fC•ll SlO'• ~,.,.,,You, "''"
COSTA MeSA641-1289 1u. .. _, .... ct
MllllOH vKJ0495-0401 -c.-c.,.. ...... IS.ft °'"90 ,...., et A•_, l'in.y I
Tl Res-R·US
:t
HOUOWAY
We'd be better off 1f we
retained more of what we
learn and less of what we
eat
Our friend says his finan-
c i a I cond111on 1s about
average Worse than last
year . better than next
year
Kids grow up so quickly.
One day you look at your
empty gas gauge and re-
alize they're teenager,s. ..
New employee U> boss ·
"Well. if I can't have a
raise. how abollt the
same pay moreonen'!"
••
Truth Is not o nly
stranger than fi ction
these days · it's a lot
cleaner.
••
You 'll alway1 be
"aomeone apecial" when
you do bualneu with nre
City. Whenaskedyoumayl
tell anyone "Yea I have •' friend that's In the Ure
bualnet&."
do-it-yourself
KITCHEN DESIGN
SEMINAR
Free design kit upon registration
Bring your measurements to design school
Simple as A. B. C.
LIMIT 8 PER CLASS • CALL MOW FOl l ESEIV A TIOHS
l·:ur••-,\.~rican Kit ch~n & Hat h~
1741 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach
Open 9.5 Mon.·Fn. Sat. 10·3 714-631-7032
CLOSING CLOSING
SALE SALE
AGA JOHN ORIENT AL RUGS
is closing their branch
in Newport Beach
All Oriental Rug s reduced for clearance
Chinese, ln ctian, Pakis~an, Persian, Romanian
1000 Bristol St. Ho. -1 lri1tol Ho.
Pima Newport
HEWPORT HACH
851 -0864
..,
Gourfltet *,,,,,,
Huntington Bea~h
Pactfk Cout Hwy So. of Pia"
L. M. BO"D )
INFORMS In lhe
15 Convtnlchl l..oc.Mlons
Newport Beach
1400 P.ok CO..t Hwy
•
Wall to stop slide?
MALIBU (AP > With more one lane of the highway.
YANMOUTIN
rain expected to reach the area
by Friday. state transportation
officials have built a 100-yard-
long earthen wall along Pacific
Coast Highway to halt a minor
rockslide that forced closure of
"It's nothing major, JUSl ~
dribble of rocks. it's more an:
noying than anything," said
state Department of Transportllf
tion spakesman Mark Watts.
CJl~IVICJNCJS
S~VE
2CJ%
~NCJ
4CJ%
Today through Saturday, th J unparalleled
beauty of diamonds ls yours at remarkable savings.
Here, we list only a few examples of savings.
HUISNAN DIAMONDS-the world's most brllllant diamonds-are reduced for the
first time ever. Avallable excluslvely at Bullocks Wllshlre. save twenty percent on
these exquisite 144-faceted diamond stud earrings and pendants set In 18K gold .
For example: Stud earrings totaling .25 ct .. reg. S725. Now $580. Stud earrings totallng .50ct., reg . $1590. Now $1272. Pendant, .SO ct., reg . $3965. Now 13172.
TWENTY l'f~CENT SAVINOS on a select group of diamond solitaire rings, brooches and pendants. Examples lnrJude: Brooch formed of eighteen marquise and thirty· one round diamonds, total weight appx. 7.5 ct .. setln platinum, reg. $16,250.
Now 111.000.Solltalre ring,1.31 ct.set In 14K wht.gold, reg.$8000.Now $MOO.
FO~TY MtCENT IAVINBI on 1 dallllng selection Of hoop earrings, cluster rings,
brlCllttl and neckllcll. Examl)ltl lncfude: hoop earrings, eight diamonds total
weight appx •• 22 ct .• Mt In 1•K gold. rtg. $950. Now 1870. Italian 181< gold
bractlet with thirty single cut diamonds, totll wtlght appx .. 25ct .. reg. $1,250.
Now 1750.
Reprnentatlve Hlfctlon In Fine Jewelry
BUllOC~S Wll~UIRb
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACtt 83 FUhlon llland 759-, 211. Mon. Ff I 10. 9. Sat to 8. SI#! 12. 6
.·
,.
·1 . ...
'• ...
• f ,,, .. ,
• lo .,,
I\
'4 . ,.
•II
0
Editorial Thom11 P. Haltyl Put>lllhtr 'Thamn Kenlll Edltof
Cable promises
.Wl&&ot sufficient
• Laguna Beach council membel"I made thelr lntenUon
plain when lhey held over COl\llderaUon of a rate hike for
:·Storer Cable TV unUl summer.
• The t.aiuna Nl1uel tranchlH ll ••klni a dollar in·
crease -from $7 .so to $8.SO per month -ror aube.crlbe-n
Qf the cable company.
. •' Comf any representaUves say customers wlll 1et a
"'":bundle o new services for their extra buck, but the City
·~Council wants more than promises. _ By continuing r ate hike hearin11 until June, the coun·
cil has indicated it expects to see some improvements
and services tn effect by thut time.
Specifically, the council wants to see the erection of a
new earth station that will bring at least seven more
channels to Lag'una Beach customers.
The panel also wants to see the results of a promised
:!luestioMaire in Arch Beach Heights and other areas of
town that do not receive cable service.
That request com es after many residents complained
they can 't get service to their areas.
And the council wants to hear specific plans by the
company to improve service to existing customers,
something many user s say should be a must before rates
are increased .
By holding off a decision on rate hikes until June, the
council is giving Storer an opportunity to prove to the city
it intends to provide the services the increases are sup·
posed to fund.
It's now up to the franchise to prove its sales pitch is
not just empty promises.
~ ~ Fun for the kids
Laguna Beach might soon have a bicycle motocross
track for youngs ters. following City Council approval or
the concept last week.
The proposal was introduced by Councilman Kelly
Boyd, who says his own youngster has to go to Irvine or
Westminste r to participate in t he competitive bicycle
sport
The motocross would be located in the Act V parking
lot on Laguna Canyon Road, just north and across the
street from the Boys Club.
The council majority agreed the lot offers many ad·
vantages for bike racers. including an already existing
parking lot for up to 300 cars. electricity, good spectator
view spots a nd no nearby residents who could complain
of noise.
Drawbacks include the danger for children crossing
the canyon road to get to the park. ·
But Boyd s uccessfully argued the concessionaire
would have to provide guards to help them across before
and after races.
As to a concern the young riders would tear up the
terrain. Boyd said the area can easily be reseeded to look
lik e new
Wh at remains to make the motocross f acitity a reali·
t y is approval by the Irvine Company, which leases the
lot to the city. and a n organization to construct and
operate the motocross.
If and when that happens, Laguna Beach youngsters
will be able to participate in an enjoyable , challenging
sport in thE>ir own back yard.
Beach safety step
Glass containers will be forbidden on Laguna Beach
sands next month. but that doesn't mean you won't get a
sh ard in your fool.
Laguna Beach council members have approved an
ordinance that prohibits any glass article on city
beaches In the next breath. they rea dily admit it will be
next to impossible to e nforce.
It's a lot like the dog-on-leash ordinance. sever al
council skeptics say.
Not to mention the litter law.
But the council majority said it's better to have the
law on the books than not. It at least gives policemen and
lifeguards something to stand on when they confront a
flagrant violator
The council intends to put a decal on existing signs a t
beach entrances warning visitors not to bring beer and
soda bottle!\· ontv citv shores
But watch your step. anyway • Op1ntons expressed m the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those or their authors and
an1sts Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot. P O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd! Computers
By L.M. BOYD
Computers can play chess.
, do high_ math. process words,
recognize speech, compose
· m us ic of sorts, a nalyze
'1 s tatistics, or in b ri e f ,
:. ;,duplicate countless functions
-: '<>f the human mind . But
' \here's one thing they can't
Singers Jerry Lee Lew\s
and Mickey Gilley sound re·
markably alike. Could have
caught a few o( the same
gen es m aybe . They 'r e
cousins.
The typical 10-gallon hat,
bear in mind, holds about
three fourths o( a gallon. do. They can 't generate
humor, not jokes, as it were.
Curious. that. Almost all of ; ~~~~~:::r t~~~~:1t:;s P;~·
h lbit conside rable s pon·
taneous humor in their own
conversations. They seem t.o
• -h ave a highly sh arpened
~ sense of the ridiculous . But ! they cannot program that in·
: to their devices. .. • ' .. • • •
• • • :-• • • • • • • • . • • t . •
• • * • .. • j
' • • •
SllllYlll
One Item we don't buy
any mor e la cotton .
Just save the wad that
fills out ptll bottles.
Com e to thlnk of It,
we're payln1 a pretty
stiff price tor that cot-
ton, too. D.M
Q. Is there any continent
where there are no but·
terflies?
A. Only Antarctica.
This cleanup in the govern·
ment's bureaucracies bas
been underway for quite
some time. evidenUy. Report
i1 that the number of
eruployees fll'~ for lncom·
petence has gone up fltt.een·
fold since pa11a1e of tbe
Cl vU Service Reform Act ln
1978.
Sacb of the 8,500 nten ln
the ConfederJte Air Foret -
IOS World War 11 fl•hUna
al.reran -bolds the rank
tblreln of colonel. lCentuck)i·
type nomencla\W'e .
On me two ll1Dd Jep ot a
male n~tJJ>UI are llollow
lflH'I, fanp, from wbleb
t .. at beHt can releaH
veom.
The ConstltuUon of tbe Ualtact 8taa. er-crtbel t.b8l
a lla.e be eom1ted u thrM-
fll\M ol a pena
Jack And rson
CIA shadow hurts volunteers
WASHINGTON -An 1nwnal
White Houle furor ll bolllnl up
ovtr the cootnweralal aelectkla ot a former mWt.&ry ln\.ell11ence
officer to
head AC ·
TlON , the
multl ·
branched
aood ·worka
a1ency. The
m ove could
jeopardlze
the aaf ety of
Ameri can
volunteers
abroad.
For ACTION'S most celebrat·
ed offspring Is the Peace Corps,
whose thousands of overseas
volunteers might sufCer If there
la the shadow of a auapkion that
Mailbox
t.bey are even remotely ioMect·
ed with U.S. Intelligence ac·
Uvlt1es.
Aotl·Amerlcan ele m ent s , Jealous o1 the 1ooctwm the Peace
Corps volunteers have earned
through their selfless efforts t.o
help the poor and llllterale,
would like nothing better than to
smearttiem as spies.
T his Is no idle concern:
Kidnapping and death threat.s
have resulted from scurrilous
rumor campaigns. linking the
Peace Corps volunteers to the
Central Intelligence Agency or
othe r U .S . espionage
organizations.
One example of this danger
was Richard Starr. the Peace
Corps botartisl who was held for
three years by communlat
1uerrtUu in Colombia, unW he
was ransomed a year a,go. One
reason he wu kidn1tpped was
because his captors auspected he waa a ClA agent ualn1 the
Peace Corps as a cover. He was
repeatedly interrogated on this
point during his capUvl\y in the
Andean jungle.
GRANTED. the man chosen to
head ACTION, Tom Pauken,
had only a relatively brie f
connection with intelligence
work. During bis service in the
Army. he was an intelligence
om cer stationed in Vietnam. He
s t o u tly d en i es any C IA
invol vem ent ; he t o ld my
associates Jack Mitchell and
Indy Badbwar h e did o nly
routlne research work on North
Vietnamese le,adera.
But ihe Peace Corps h u
hlatorically been careful lo keep
both Its officiate and Its
volunteen free of any espionage
taint . Like Caesar's wife, Peace
Corps personnel must be above
su s picion -for their own
protection If nothing else. Thia
has been the p0Ucy ever since
the agency was founded under
President Kennedy.
ACTION officials and some
White House ins iders were
a ppall ed at Pauken 's
nomination. And though it is hla
intelligence background that
upsets them most. t hey were
also disgruntled by the manner
of his selection. Pauken's name
was n 't even on the list of
possible nominees until the last
minute, the critics claim
MOREOVER, he was cleared
by an old friend. White House
Counsel Fred Fieldin g. who
s urvived the Watergate era
without taint. Fielding insisted
that while he was aware or the
misgivings s urrounding the
choice of Pauken , t hey were
"not a problem ."
Pauken . a n am i able
36-year-old Texan, figured in a
minor controversy in 1971. when
he was associate director of lhe
White House Fellows program.
He was roundly denounced for
writing an article in lJ S News
a nd World R e po r t on an
unofficial trip t o the Soviet
Union
That little-noticed internecine
wrangle doesn't e nter into
Pauken·s present situation It's
his i nte lligence past that
troubles key administration and
agency officials and could
haunt the Peace Corps in the
years to come
Reagan should re-read campaign rhetoric
To the Editor:
Ab, the foibles that fructify in
our free·luncb society! Many
believe that our government
"should be run like private in·
dustries." Therein lies a prob-
lem : the same lethal methods
already apply to both govern·
ment and business . Govern·
ment is broke, and so is a lead·
ing segment of private industry,
the auw industry. In govern·
menl. it's the same old faces,
growing fatter and sleeker and
less responsive w our freedoms;
just like Ford. G .M . a nd
Chrys ler, whose products grow
bigger, ratter and sleeker and
more expensive, while buyers
flock to the s malle r . more
stylish, more economical im·
ports.
Now lhe "big three" are urg·
ing us to eschew the foreign
beauties and buy the ugly
domestic limitations; even de·
m anding quotas and restraints
on foreign competitors. So. what
does Ford do (the company that
put the world on box-cars with
four wheels>? Jt styles a hodge·
podge or parts and ideas from
around the globe, calls it "the
wo rld car," and invades the
foreign markets. A dear friend
used to quote-misquote: "Oh in·
consistency. thou art a jewel.
ANYWAY. who dares buy a
domestic car, what with recaJls
by the millions as a way of life?
And those rebates, why not just
knock the price down to an al·
fordable level? Then there's the
oil industry s pokes-whatever,
who tries to justify a continuing
gas price rise. even in the face
of an acknowledged oil surplus.
Quoth he: "Certain costs must
first filter all the way up t.o the
retail pumps, regardless of the
oil glut" What costs? These in·
volved in trucking gluttonous
profits all the way to the t>anks?
And, ( call attention to the ill·
conceived notion, attributed to
President Reagan, that ''Social
Security partJcioalion should be voluntary for those who can
prove they can provide for their
own reUrement." Interpreted,
that mean! that the miUiona,
wbo are now stuck with lower
and middle level salaries and
wages, will pay the entire cost of
all the S.S. rip-Offs a nd benefits
pald out to the millions of non·
cont.rlbuoors, and the rich wUJ
escape all costs scot-free, grow·
lnl richer thereby. Some of the
latter will still reap S.S. benefits
on a grand scale due w past
particlpatlon. I cannot believe
that President Rea1an wlll thus
betray all of wt pooT ones who
made him rich and put him ln
the White House.
Y ualr. Camp David la lnfest.
ed with a malaise -lt11cy of
lh former tenant, the
Plaineman. President Reaaan,
who quietly caulbt on to the
ktta of lUlh nrtreau, aho ....
to favor lncreaalnt the ledenl
1ae tu. tt. lboWd, le all bones·
ty , re·read bta campatcn
rbetorlc • a ¥fable antidote to the m.alabe of Cemp Darid.
8 .f'. BO.RCOMAN ..
nwiiwtu•1
To the EcUlor :
What Stop Pornogr a phy in
Newport and the Daily Pilot
editorial evaded in thei r state
ments about Newport's one and
only "adult book s tore," Talk of
the Town, 1s the fundamental
fact that none of us were born
with hang.ups about our bodies
In Laguna Beach, which bkes
to think itself to be an Art
Colony, the high school has
banned exhibition or-a nude
sculpture created by one of the
world's most foremos t represen-
tational sculptors. Donal Hord.
The Daily Pilot. which report·
ed that story about that ban,
published a front page picture of
the sculpture ; ableit. with a
cen sored s ign h idi ng lha l
sculpture's genitalia
NOT TOO LONG ago, Laguna
had no ordinance banning nudity
on the beach and the Ci ty Coun·
cit was well on its way t o declar
ing clothing optional along its
tidelands, which was supported
by a special survey of beach·
user opinion by the University of
California Irvine.
But. by the time or that or·
dinance's second reading. the
Council cham bers were glutted
by scr eaming predictions of
Sodom and Gomorrah that begat
a law that states a kid can walk
around the beach nude until the
d a wn or the 1 llh birthday
a fter that, it's indecent ex-
posure
How do you explain to some·
one who's been be li e ving all
the time they 've been decent
that now certain parts of the
body are not to be seen?
Travel due west to some or the
yet untouched Pacifi c Islands
and the natives there wonder
why the self-touted civilized
make all that fu ss. The answer
ia the senseless shame and de·
basement imposed upon too
much of the world over 2,000
years that continues to be
jammed into too many un·
protesting minds by a fractional.
neurotic fringe engendering a
love·bate psyc hosis about
buman beauty that makes
billl005 for magazines and mov·
iea and the moral majority.
BRUCE HOPPING
lfd.,.. ••ase .. r•
To the F.dit.or.
How embarrasalng for
Barbara Jobbln1' children! She
an'nounced to all Dally Pllot
readen (Mailbox, March 5) that
her children ••could not read nor
add more Lban one Cigure" when
tbey were admllled to Oran1e
Coaat Coll~ce. She says the
•'burden of edueatin1 them'' was
11ven '° t.bl eoUege. I'm • sraduate of ooc, but
WH unawan of 1uch remedial
COUl'MI belAc otftNd. Counel
a.re offered to briq a student'•
lkl.111 QP lo a bllbeT lne.l, but
they do aot belln at Ute lWwa.te
len.I lmpUed by llln. Jobblnl.
Tilt" are bulc entrance Na·
qulremeota t.o be met by enter· . ......
mg students. and her children
must have bee n taught
something along the way.
She a lso exaggerates when she
claims no teache r e ncouraged,
p r aised , o r inspi r ed h er
children. That is impossible to
believe
Teachers do teach. but stu
dents must want to learn. and
parents must reinforce that
philosophy at home and instill
respect for education at an early
age
One of Mrs J obbins' most re ·
vealing statements was, "We
finally tried tutoring them
ourselves . " A parent should
always want to help the chi ld
who is having trouble with some
aspect of school. Teachers try to
point this out at conferences, but
are sometimes rebuffed. The
parent's ego then becomes in·
volved. and instead of accepting
the advice in the caring spirit it
was intended, the parent takes it
as personal criticism and usual·
ly las hes out at the teacher and
the school. These parents refuse
to accept any responsibility for
their own child 's learning.
J AGR EE with Mrs . Jobbins
that money alone does not im·
prove teachers or schools. but ir·
responsible attacks like hers do
nothing w further the goal or
education.
Her ideas on "pay-as-you.go"
schools have some merit and
have been proposed many times.
They have been used in some
stales, even some counties or
Ca lifornia. This is called the
Voucher System. and is not a
ne w idea.
Her thinking, however, is ii·
logical and faulty when s he pro-
poses that the voucher system
be used only by people with
school-age children. "Seems {air
to me t.o pay only for what I
use." Does this mean she will
not support hospitals, because
she's not ill today -nor prisons,
because she hasn't committed a
crime and needs no protection
from those that do -nor cancer
research, because she doesn't
have it -not ftre/police prolec·
tlon on any other street but her
own, etc.?
I will close m y letter as she
began hers -"a t.axpayer, on-
goin g college student, and
parent... and, rm proud w aay.
a teacher!
ARMIDA MILLIGAN ,,.,... .... ,,.
To the Edit.or:
The citnerus are right to be wor·
ried about the pomo1raphlc boot
Quotes
"Often we have w chooee the
lesser of two evils. Th• 1ovem-
ment ln El Salvador dtHrVes
support in terms of mUlt.an ald.
Tbat doeln't mean tbe .,...,..
menl ln El Salvador ii u1e1Jc. I
don't know ay 1overnmm\ t.bat
11." -Sr.-w. Leiner, tM
Rea1an adminlalraUOD'a new
au1st.ant aecretary ol at.at.a for
human rtibt.I.
store here m Newport. Young peo-
ple are very susceptible to the
emotions raised by the materials
offered in these shops. I'm not loo
old to reme m ber myself when I
was impressionable in this
r espect. but t hen. too. 1 re-
member that a better known man
than I acknowledged lusting after
the flesh m Playboy Magazine'
The city 1s right to be concerned
but City Attorney Coffin errs in
his efforts to have the porno-
graphic store moved to the busi·
ness district which is being zoned
for these" adult·· businesses.
l 'LL TELL you why. I'm an
olde r man and I've t raveled
around a bit. I've noticed in my
travels that the worst thing than
can happen to a city is to have an
isolated. built-up business district
where all the anti·social elements
or society are segregated. Now
Newport already has a large and
growing bus iness center. To
move the pornogr aphic store
ther e would be a mistake that has
been made over and over again in
all our major cities from New
York to Los Angeles.
What happens is this. Large
bus iness districts are built up but
t hese places a re not pleasurable
for walking or spending time
there. So the law-abiding citizens
run in and out of the district for
their business needs . Meanwhile.
city officials try to segregate un·
desirable elements into an area
th at is aJready isolated from the
better elements of society. The re·
suit is decay that starts from the
center and works its way out. Of.
fidals should work to close the
shop and not create a no-man's
land in the center or our city.
GEO. BRUMMELL
A .. e.,k-tf ..
To the Editor:
lt seem s to me that your
newspaper and others have paid
no attention to what the John
Wayne Airport expansion will do
to Santa Ana. I mean Santa Ana
north of the airport and not San-
ta Ana Heights. Is this because
you think the residents in our
part oC the county are less im-
portant than those south ot the
airport? If you lived in my part
of town you would bear noise
that you could not s tand .
,\ootber thing is that the one
ton of jet pollution dropped by
t he airplanes and described in
the county's aUde show probably
falls on Santa Ana. Is that
because the cowity thinb we
art not important? We don't
want cancer that la caused by
the fuel that falls from these
plane• elther. l do think you
newspaper people a.hould at
leHt tell our side oC tile airport
problem.
A. MARTI.NEZ
t~.
WASHINGTON (AP> -Prom
what Ronald Rea1an aa1d laat
year aa a candidate, the naUoo'•
draft re1latratloo machinery
abould be 1athertn1 duat now
"
bat be'• prealdent.. Jn,tead,
bere are lodlcaUonl the pro-
1ram ll be.re to stay. I
Tbouaand.I of t.een-agera atJU
alp up each day, and hundreds
or ot.ben break the law by not
re1tsterin1.
Nearly two months into the
Reagan presidency, there ll no
slan of any move to dismanUe
the program that Reagan the ·
candidate said was ineffective.
Ul-consldered and morally un-
justifiable except in "the. most
severe national emergency.':
IN HIS ACCEPTANCE speech
at the Republican National Con-
vention in Detroit, Reagan said
last July:
"I do not favor a peacetime
draft or registration, but I do
favor pay and benefit levels that
will attract and keep highly
motivated men and women in
our volunteer forces and an ac·
tive reserve trained and ready
for an instant call in case of an
emergency.''
During his campaign for the
GOP nomination, Reagan said in
Grievi11g mother
Salem, N.H ., OD hb. .. im.
tbat re1t1tratJoa would NH
only a few daYI ti a m1lltar1
callup became necea.aary.
"You would ban to a« up a burea~racy to band.le It, and J
doa 't believe It would be worth
It," he added,
The 135 QlUUon pros.ram re1·
ularly ridicUled tut fall u a
paper U•er threat to the Soviet
Unlon wu spared IDY cut.back
in the president's budcet-
prunlni drive.
FA& F&Oll SE'ITLING lnlo
obscurity, Seled.lve Service just
moved into a new buildinl and a
pilot program is 1ettln1 un-
der way to recruit and train draft
board members in the event
Congress decides to revive the
draft it.self.
R eagan 's plan to build
America's military muscle and
his tough talk about the Soviet
Union and Cuba, as well as the
threat o( Soviet intervention in
Poland, have prompted specula·
tion that, if anything, registra·
tion will be expanded.
"Frankly, I'd bet a new bat -
and I think I'd win -that reg-
istration is not going to be in
any way diluted," said Sen.
R oge r Jeps en , R -Iowa ,
.... "' ......
Ofelia Jones, mother of Robert Smith, 15, whose heart
and lungs were given to a 45-year-0ld dying Arizona
woman, reflects at home in Chula Vista. The boy was
killed Friday night in a bicycle-car accident near his
home. and his organs were flown to Stanford University
Medical Center.
Anti-truancy pay
• • wins extension
SAN DIEGO IAPI -A plan to
cut truancy by rewarding atten·
dance at Memorial Junior High
School is successful enough to
keep it going after a four·monlh
trial, say city school trustees.
The controversial plan has
drawn worldwide int er est.
Memorial's 900 pupils are eligi-
ble for a privilege card worth 25
cents per day of attendance and
used only to buy school items
such as books, erasers, pencils
and gym uniforms.
PRINCIPAL ROBERT Am-
paran said unexcused absences
dropped from 65 to 55, on the
average. He predicted truancy
-highest in the city -will drop
~percent.
An additional $800 in state per·
pupil funds has arrived with the
lower truancy, but Amparan's
plan bas cost $10,000 since it was
launched in late October.
Another $12,SOO was voted
Tuesday night for the spring
semester.
Amparan told tbe Board of
Education ther e have been side
effects of the experiment among
minority students in low-income
Laguna gardenen
to meet Friday
The Laaun• Beach Garden
Club will meet Friday at the
Nei1bborhood Con1re11Uonal
Cburch, 340 St. Ann's Drive, ln
La1waa Beach at 11 a.m.
Mn. Lillian True ll to dem·
onatrate the care of auc-
culeata. .\ demonatraUon on
noraJ ltran&1n1 wW bettn at
t :IO p.'ln.
southeast San Diego.
A number of pupils who
"wouldn't have been caught de-
ad" wearing T-shirts with the
school's name on them are buy-
ing the shirts, he said , and
pupils are using their pirviJege
cards lo buy their own alarm
clocks and getting to school on
lime.
Amparan said be also may
s toc k inexpensive pocket
calc ulators because pupils
believe they can afford them.
Priest /aces
molestation
• sentencing
VENTURA (AP) -Sentenc·
ing has been set April 14 for a
Catholic priest who pleaded no
contest to three counts of felony
child molestation.
The Rev. Donald P . Roemar,
36, of St. Paschal Baylon Cbun:h
in Thousand Oaks went before
Superior Court Judge Robert
Shaw.
He faces a maxlmum sentence
of 10 years and 4 months in state
prlaon.
He often worked with children
and said be bad earned an
honorary service award from
tbe national Parent-Teachers
AllOCltaUon for b1J.efforta.
"Wbat a farce now," Roemar
aald.
SberUf'a investl1at.ors betan
lootdnc lnt.o the priest's act.IOm
Jan. 22 when a Thousand Ow
mother m1de a complaint.
.... - -4 . -
caalr'mu ol tbe Armed a.me.
manpower aubeommltter.Ud ·
bOMt. of "-acaa'a cudld.aey.
BITl'U TllAT Reaaaa baa
not killed dHft reslatr atloa,
Jead'n ot t.be anti-draft move-
ment Worry that U.S. iavolv•
ment ln ltl Salvador
fore,ab.adows Americans f\CbdDI
ln another Vietnam-type war
and the renewal ot tbe draft.
A national marcb on
Washinit.on ls belna planned fOf'
tbia aprina -probably ln May
-to demonstrate oppotltloo to
rectatraUon Ind tbe draft.
"Tbe mood of the country ll to
10 out lo tbe streets a1aln," aald
Barry Lynn, bead of a coalltloo
of anti-draft organ111tion1 that
mobillud 30,000 demonatrat.on
in Wuhlntt.on lut Maccb.
Within the adminlatraUoo, of.
ficlaJs say the president opposes
the draft, and Rea1an hu em-
phasized be sees no likelihood ot
sending fighting forces to El
Salvador.
THE QUESTION OF whether
to keep draft registration, re-
y i ved by form e r P resident
Carter, ia being reviewed at the
White House and no decision is
expected for months.
.... bavt neelved lutnae·
tiGel. t.o coatiaut OD wttb bull·
neu aa UllWLI. My •Umate la UM prorram will coatuuae tbnlqb ta. yeu,•· aald Ken Stout.. aa
Ala1ka bullD..,maa blrtd by
Ute admla.lltratSoa u a surz.,a.
4l1y cooaultant·•atcbdo1 over
S.Jectl\16 Service operations.
On Caplt.o& HW, lePHD and
other lawmakers wbo watch
'over mWtary manpower lllUel
SH DO chance of draft HSUlrl·
Uon beinl scuttled.
U anyt,h1na, Je .. ea predided,
tbe procram will be espuded to
include some type of claulftca-
Uon ot YOUDI men u to their
ell&ibWty for eervlce.
MORE THAN S.• million.
YOUDI mea hive rectstered
1ince summer. Selective Service
said 87 percent of eUCible men
sicned durinl January's mau
registration,, compared wlth 83
percent durina another one·
month mass re1istratlon tut
summer.
An estimated 472,000 young
men have failed to register and
are liable for felony prosecution
with a maximum penalty of up
to five years in prison and a
$10,000 fine. Selective Service ls
waiting for a signal from the ad·
Damaged slopes
Repair awaited
by homeowners
Residents in Crown Park and
The Hill in Laguna Niguel say
they will wait and see if AVCO
Community Deyelopers make
good on a promise to repair
damaged slopes in the two com-
munities.
About 60 homeowners showed
up at a meeting with AVCO and
Orange County officials Tuesday
night at the Ron Williams Real-
ty office on La Paz Road.
Several residents voiced com-
plaints about the condition or
slopes on both sides o( Golden
Lantern , Pas eo Escuela,
Gardenia and Crown Valley
Parkway.
THE HOMEOWNERS said the
vegetation on the slopes bad not
been watered and maintained as
AVCO promised in purchase
agreements.
The residents said they bad re-
peatedly been forced to place
plastic sheeting on the hUJsides
to prevent erosion and slippage
during the rainy season.
made up with state funds.
"Indications are that we won't
be able to depend on receiving
that money from Sacramento
for much longer," Herman said.
"However, it is our intention
that if AVCO repairs the slopes
properly, after the maintenance
period expires we wm talte them
over .''
Seniors
planning
tours
Laguna Bea c h 's
senior citizens are plan·
Ding a tbree--day trip to
Death Valley in April.
The $98 fee includes
transportation, lodging,
and lours.
mlniatraUon before takin• ac-
tion.
At the White House, .DouaJu
Bandow, apedal usistant to the
president for pollcy develop-
ment, aaJd whatever Rea1an's
decision on draft registration,
"tbe pretldent la committed to
the all-volunteer force."
Bandow aald the basic ques-
tion la whether registration
aavea a kit al time in the flV
of an aU-out mobillaatloa to
mfft a mWta.ry emer1ency. UHt cfoe•. be •ald. teeplnf r•s· Uon aeoda a •troaa slpal to
Sovleu. U It doesn't save mu b
Ume, It la a weak •lfnal. ~
The U.S. Supreme Cowt
bear arguments March 2A on e
cortstitutionalily of an •l1·m•e
re1i1traUoo program and drat\.
A federal court in Pblladel; ruled last year the all-male 1 gram discriminated a1a Djlt
men. I
Upgrading heart
treatment eyed
I
BOSTON (AP) -A closer
loot at the symptoms of a heart
attack vicUm may tell doctors
whether the patient should be
discharged or ltept under the
speciallled care that could save
his life, a new study shows.
"Having guidelines can be
very important," said Or.
George E. Thibault, assistant
chief of medi cine at
Mass a c huse tts General
Hospital. "Lack of them results
in hospitals transferring out <of coronary care) some patients
who will soon unexpectedly de·
veJop serious and often fatal
complications.•·
THE MOST reliable tip-off to
a chronic heart problem is the
recurrence of chest pains a day
or more alter a patient's ad·
mission to a coronary-care unit,
sai~ the h ospita l · s s tudy.
pubbshed in today's edition of
the New England Journal of
Medicine.
Other symptoms pointing to
later complications are lungfluid
sounds, called basilar r ales,
especially when accompanied by
chest pain ; at l e a s t one
hospitalization in the previous
year, and a history of chronic,
obstructive lun" disease.
The study said most patients
returned lo a coronary-care unit
had chest pains either sug-
gestive of a new heart attack or
an extension of the first heart at·
tack . For others, sever e
dysfunction of the heart's main
pumping chamber, the left ven-
tricle, and heart-rbytbm dis -
turbances forced the patients to
return.
IF A PATIENT bad recurrent
c hest pains a nd lungfluid
sounds, he stood a 55 percent
cha nce of re-admission to cor· v-
onary care, the study said.
The r esea r c h e r s at
Massachusetts General said'
their findings can be used to find
which patients will need Jonger
stays in coronary care.
The study showed that 12 per-
cent of the patients who sur-
vived their initial stay in one
coronary-care unit had to be tt·
admitted within three days of
discharge after they developed
complications. Of those who
.came back, more than one-
fourth died in the hospital
The two-year study was con-
ducted by the hospital's Medical
Practices Evaluation Unit and
involved 485 patients who sur-
vived their first slay in coronary
care.
William Gaboury, direct.or of
project development for AVCO,
told the Laguna Niguel residents
his company would be spending
from $140,000 to $170,000 within
30 to 6-0 days to repair and
replant the slopes.
The weekend trip
features air-conditioned
bus transportation, lodg-
ing at the Furnace
Creek Inn, and tours of
Scotty 's Castle and
other desert attractions.
For reservations, call
the Senior Citizens Club
at 497-2441.
POWER TOOLS
Now In Stock!
Gaboury said vandalism had
been partly res ponsible for the
failure to water vegetation
growing on the slopes, but that
irrigation pipes had been re-
paired.
PETER HERMAN, executive
aide lo Orange County 5th Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley,
said the county would take over
maintenance of the slopes as
soon as AVCO could show they
had been repaired correctly.
Herman conceded that since
passage of Prop. 13 the county
has been less willing to assume
responsibility for maintaining
slopes and sidewalks.
·'The slopes in your area
never have been in a satiafac·
tory condition for the county to
take them over,'' Herman aaid.
"In pre· Proposition 13 days I
suppose we would have been
more willing."
Gaboury said his company
had beep WTestling with the prob-
lem of turning over slope main·
tenance to the county for three
or four years.
"THE PROBLEM IS to get
a ny two people in charge up
there lo both nod their heads yes
at the same time," Gaboury
said. "Since Proposition 13 it's
been wone."
Herman sald coatinuin1 cut·
backs 1D funds avaiJabJe to the
county couJd wta.U improvements
to hillaide areu.
He said spending in the
Laguna Niguel area was exceed-
ing the bud&et of County Service
Area 3, witb the deftclt being
Architect&'
plans ready
The architects wbo are deai1D·
in1 llouJtoo Meadows Park ln
Arch Beaeb Hel1bta will p~t
their plans at a community
meet.tna llareb M.
Officlal1 from Recreation
Systems, Inc. wiU be on band to
answer questions a.ad •bow PN·
Umlnary r.au f~ the 10-.ere
park ott alboa Avenue lD tbe
hlUtop commUllity.
The meettns will be Mid lD Q .
ty Council cbamben, 505 FOl'elt
Ave., bePnaint at 7:30 p.m.
'Sting'
tickets
available
Free tickets are stiJl
available to senio r
citizens for the s howing
of "The Sting,'' starring
Paul Newman and
Robert Redford.
The film will be pre-
sented at 2 p.m. March
20 at the South Coast
Theater. It's free to
sen iors becau se of
sponsorship by Laguna
Fed eral Savings and
Loan and the Senior
Cifitens Club or Laguna
Beach.
For tickets, call the
center at 497·3'41.
Group8 off er
legal help
Free legal advice is
available to Laguna
Beach senior citizens
from 9 a.m. to noon the
second and fourth
Fridays of each month.
Senion are invited to
call '97·2441 for an
appointment.
The service it offered
by the Semor Cttbeas
Club al Lquna Beacb
and the Lecal Aid
Society of Oran1e
County.
Laguna 1ela
streu clus ·
Cbar7I Roberta, a
streu and relaxatloa
speclall.st, wlU te1ch a 1
free c:laaa oe ho" to
avoid streaa '*rinDlu
Wednesday la [acu•i
Beach.
Tbe cla11, 1ponaore4
by tbe Senior CltJleU
Club ot Lacuoa Beacta.
wUl meet at 10 a.111. 1'
tbe City Couaetl
cbamben at City Jlalli·
505 ForHt Awe. 'AU
Hnlor clth••• r invited.
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Nems elates parent# of Coast captive·:
A lut·mlnute acreement pre-
vented the executloa today of
the aoa ol a San Juan Caplltrano
couple wbo la beinl beld boetqe
aboard a hijacked Paklatanl jet
iD Damucua, Syria.
·'Ob, thank God is all I can
say," said Glen Clymore upon
bearing the news that bis 24-
year-old aon Craig was sUll allv~
after the 8 a.m. (PST) deadline
passed and the plane was ~
blown ue.
Clymore said he and his wife
* * *
Tbelma were UateninC to the
radio ln their San Juan home
when they learned that Pakistan
had •creed to meet the ter-
rorlJts' demand to release 55
political priaonen in excbanle
for the freedom of the 100
hostages on board.
The younger Clymore, a 1974
graduate al Laauna Beach Hieb
School, runs an import businea
from bis bome in Lake FOJ"eSt
and was in Pakistan on a buying
* * *
trip when the Jet was hijacked U
days aao.
Cbarbe Davia, a close f amlly
friend, spoke for the Clymore
family. "Right now they're Just
in seventh heaven," Mrs. Davis
said.
"They're sittlna back, re-
lieved over the fact Craig ls g~
ing to be all right ...
Earlier, the elder Clymore, a
tennis instructor in San Juan,
said bis wile bad suffered great-
ly from the ordeal. He said she
* '* *
had DOt been able to amwer the
door or the telephone since t.belr
son wu taken boltage.
Clymore. ea.Id they bad been
"very concerned about Craig's
safety because life ta considered
to be cheap there."
The younger Clymore re-
portedly left the U.S. in late
February on one of bia periodic
buying trips. His father said be
thought bis son was beaded for
Germany.
The senior Clymore said be
* * *
bad Jost all track of time since
belq notllled by a U.S. state
Department official last week
that bt1 100 waa aboard the
selaed Pakistani airliner, •bicb
was lint nown to Af1bantatan
and then to Damascus.
. The relieved father said he
believed the three Pa.ki.stanl ler·
rorists boldlnl hi.a son and two
other Americana, identified as
Frederick Hubbell of Des
(See POENTs, Pa1e AZ>
* * *
Pakistan meets demands
Hijackers call off executions, bomb threat in Syria
' .
DA~ASCUS. Syria <AP> -
Only minutes before the
threatened execution or three
Americans, Pakistan's military
regime agreed today to free 55
political prisoners in exchange
for more than 100 hostages held
by hijackers in a plane here.
The three hijac kers, who
seized the Pakistani airliner 11
days ago and flew it Cirst to
Afghanistan and then to
Damascus, threatened to shoot
the Americans and then blow up
the plane and all aboard unless
their demands were met by 8
a.m . PST.
They set a new deadline or 4
this afternoon ror fulfillment of
their request, the news agency
said. Observers speculated the
exchange would take place in
Damascus. The hijackers had
previously demanded lo meet
face to face with r e leased
Pakistani dissidents.
In Islamabad, Pakistan, a
government s pokesman con-
firmed the agreement, but said
six of the 55 political prisoners
on the hijackers' list were UD·
traceable. He said they would be
allowed to leave the country like
the others if found.
The Syrian agency said
negotiations were unde r way
about the six.
Earlier in the day, the hi·
'Horrendous person'
Prosecutor urges
death for slayer
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Ol 1 .. Oalty PIMt SUM
Sa· yi n g that con vi cl e d
murderer John Alan Keith of
San Clemente killed out of
greed, hatred a.nd boredom, an
Ora.nge County prosecutor urged
today that Keith be put to death
in California's gas chamber.
Describing the curly haired
killer of Corona del Mar real
estate agent Ruben Martinez as
a "horrendous" person, Deputy
District Attorney Dave Carter
told a.n Orange County Superior
Court jury:
••He killed not only for
pLeasure and excitement, but for
greed and to eliminate a wit-
ness."
Defense attorn ey James
Reagan to close
National Aquarimn
WASHINGTON <AP> Presi-
dent Reagan's budget ax would
drain the National Aquarium
more than a century after it was
founded as a series or fish ponds
near the Washington Monument
Interior Department officials
confirmed Wednesday that no
funds are s late d f o r the
aquarium, the nation's oldest,
after Oct. 1, 1982.
Merwi.n was to address the six·
man, six-woman jury later to-
day.
Keith was convicted of fU'Sl
degree murder by the same
panel several weeks ago. The
jury also found there were
special circumstances qualify-
ing Keith for the death penalty.
Carter said the grisly de-
capllatioo slaying of Martinez in
his home in August, 1978 was the
act of a "cold, calculated"
killer. "Is there any remorse?" the
prosecutor asked the jury. "No.
There's only brgagging and
words of death."
Evidence during Keith's
Orange Cou.nty Superior Court
murder trial indicated that he
and a companion went with
Martinez to his Newport Beach
bome where they fir s t
bludgeoned and later decapitat-
ed the 40-year-old real estate
agent.
"Keith is horrendous," Carter
claimed, "because Keith puts
the saw into the deceased and
saws into his neck ... "
Carter claimed that Keith
killed Martinez lo prevent him
from being a witness against
him in court.
The prosecutor had contended
during the triaJ that the San
Clemente man went lo Martinez'
(See KEITH, Page AZ>
Left t11rns?
Bircher expound. on Bl
Are Da.n Rather, Barbara Walters and George Buah
tled to socialist interests?
Did John Lennon's hit song "lmalioe" espouse colltt·
tiviam?
Veteran John Birch Society member Richard
Fatherley made such claims in a Newport Beach lecture
reported by Steve Marble in today's Coutal Scene, leadlnl
off the newspaper's B stttioo.
Other features in this easy·lO·flnd, eaay·lo-read
packace ol regional news cover:
llOITLED B&IBB•Yt Wlrelen mlcrop~ OD COD•
structioa auperintendenta plcked up OD·tbe-Job COllUIMDtl
about liquor gifts requested by two Irvine bullc:linc lmDec· ton. South County bUreau cblef Steve Mltebell oatllDel
teatlmGGY u the pair appeal their firiq.
&AGGED DOLLS -~ta lleaa reporter Jerry
ClaUMll looks at four outdoal' mannequinl that alm01t
per~ Beaale Mae IW1'1 10-year 1tru11le to keep her
vlnta,. COlltume ahop open.
IClUBDE oa PBU -Will Fountain Vall91 .......
dnte do wltbout street •• .....,, tree trlmml.nl or ncrea·
tJoo procramt to ~ wlUt an tmmtnet city bud.pt
•liortatef Reporter Phil SMWel'mu lnft9tlaatel.
TAKING TllS nna -Oraqe eoa.i Coll•••'•
1peecb tam Jtcbd up IWMPltM• ~P No. a
fOf' U.,..,. at UCLA. Read about tM top apeaken wbo
wUJ defend tbelr aatioftal tltJe ant moatb ln Sacramento.
jackers labeled the three
Americans CIA agents and said
"be prepared to collect their
bodies.'' They made the threat
in a letter dictated to Pakistani
authoriUes Crom the plane al
Damascus airport. The letter
was released by the official
Syrla.n news agency, SANA.
The Americans have been
identified as Frederick Hubbell
of Des Moines, Iowa, a lawyer;
and businessmen Craig Richard
Clymore of Ora.nge County and
Lawrence Clifton Mangum of
New York City, who reportedly
lives in Spa.in.
A U.S. Embassy official in
Islamabad, Pakistan, said "we
have no idea bow they (the hi·
jackers) could have come up
with the deduction that they're
CIA agents."
At the White House, press
secretary James S. Brady said
the United States had been in
constant touch with Syrian of-
fi cials as the deadline neared.
He said he was sure there bad
been communication with
Pakistani officials as weU but
that be did not know if the Unit·
ed States had encouraged them
to free the 55 prisoners.
Paki s tan President
Mohammed Zia ul-Haq sent an
"important, urgent" message to
Syrian President Hafez Aasad
Great wall of Huntington
after the threat lo shoot the
Americans was issued, a
Pakistani spokesman said.
Im mediately after the hi·
jackers' threat, Syrian troops
and police moved closer lo the
green and white Boeing 720.
Some crouched in the bushes on
both sides of the auxiliary
runway where the plane was
parked. A half dozen dashed un-
der the fuselage of the plane.
Late r all were pulled back lo
fox boles.
Observers said the Americans
were singled out apparently in
an effort lo get the Reagan ad-
ministration to put pressure on
<See HIJACK, Pa1e A.Z)
Wetsuited surfer slides left on a smooth,
glassy five .foot wave on the north side of
the Huntington Beach pier Wednesday.
The waves were hot, even if the water was
not (59 degrees> and wave riders took ad·
vantage of a west swell to grab onto a few
fast rides.
Beach said
not really
contaminated
Orange County health officials
now believe that a five.mile
stretch of beach, closed to
bathers most of this week after a
Newport Beach sewer line rup-
tured, was never actually con-
taminated.
The five-day quarantine on
beaches from the Balboa Pier
south to Scotchman's Cove was
lifted Wednesday afternoon
when teats revealed that bac-
teria counts were normal.
Monica Mazur, a county
health specialist, said it's now
thought that the six million
callona of raw sewa1e that
poured into the Newport Harbor
never made ll to the ocean.
But the harbor, wbere the
aewa1e was diverted after
Saturday's line brejlk in frGDt of
the Balboa Bay Clu~ remalnl
off limits to bathen. rortloal of
the harbor may be reopened to
awlmmera by tbe weekend.
pendlo& teste to be coad1kted
l'rldaJ.
"There are 1UU aome bol 1pot1
lD tbe harbor," said dae bealtb
ottlelal. Sbe explained tbat tbe
barmful bacrterla fOUDcl ID tbe
aoUd Md liquid ..,,.,. Uaat •·
tered the bay la kllled olf qalcklJ
Judge won't save
student break/ as ts
Orange Cou.nty Superior Court
Judge Luis Cardenas bas turned
down requests to reinstate a
federally funded break.last pro-
gram for needy students in the
Santa Ana Unified School Dis·
trict.
Judge Cardenas, in making
his ruJinJ Wednesday, declined
to •·exercise jurladiction," say-
ing the state's appeals court
ought to decide the matter.
A claaa action lawsuit a1alnat
the school diatrlct bad aoupt re-
instatement of the prolJ'am for
about i ;ooo younaten. That cue
is pending before the 4th District
Court al Appeal.
But representatives of tbe
UNRUH NABBED
ON DRUNK lUP
SACRAMSNTO (AP> -stale
Treaaurer '"" Unruh wu ar· rested OD a drunk 4rivlnt cbar~e
by the fflabway Patrol, 1berUf
Duane Lowe Nlcl.
Unruh, 58, wu at.opped Wed·.
ne1day al1bt at Fulton and
llarCODl avenues 1D tbe db''•
north ara, Lowe Mid. He w•
taken to t.be coua~all aDd lat. releued wit.bout .
ID 1171, Unruh pleaded DO CD6-
tat to a drunk drtviDI C .....
and pa.Id a S115ftne.
Legal Aid Society of Orange
County and American Civil
Liberties Union had sought re-
instatement or the program, in
the meantime, on behalf of a stu-
dent at Wilson Elementary
School.
Cardenas, however, declined
to become involved in a second
lawsuit while the appeals court
is weighing the first legal action.
Representatives of the ~CLU
and Lecal Aid Society aaid the
judge merely avoided ruling on
the merit.I of their suit.
The school cliatrict' s board al
tru.atees deeided tut aummer to
terminate the breakfast pro.
cram for tM ~ 1cbool :year even tboulb tt wu fUnded by the
federal fO"l'Dllllllt.
Tb• acbool board alao bad
failed to awew tbe pl"Olfam tbe PH"*-Mlllool year, leadinc to tbe ftnt law1ult. An Oruse
County 1...-tor court Ju~:. blld ordend die breakfuta tat·
ed, but tbe district appealed.
Prime falh
NEW YORK.. (AP)
Cbemlcal Bank, tbe natloa'a lbl·
tb·l...,.. eommvdal but, cut
tta prime a.cu0 1 ra .. toda1 b7
••. half pll"C9Dtq• point to 11.J percent. tM Jowell amoq ma-
jor U .$. banb.
,.,..,,.,.....
SAYED FROM DEATH
C0118t'a Cralfl Clymore
School
will retain
5-6 graders
Newport-Mesa school ad -
ministrators say most Harbor
View E lementary students who
will be fifth graders next year
and all who will be sixth graders
will remai.n at the school despite
enrollment shuffles that have
angered some parents.
Some of next year's fifth and
sixth graders were scheduled to
attend n earby Anders en
Ele mentary to make way at
Harbor View for students from
Corona del Mar Elementary,
which is closing in June as dis·
trict enrollment continues to
decline.
To make the move lo An·
dersen were all children living
in Newport Beach north of San
Joaquin Hills Road. Those soutb
of the road remain at Harbor
View.
I Pa rents of Harbor View stu-
dents to be ousted by the plan
were irate. Some demanded that
portable classrooms be moved
to Harbor View so their children
could remain in their original
school.
John Nicoll. district superin·
tendent, said that by working
within guidelines set by district
trustees, he and Dr. Norman
Loats, deputy superintendent.
decided to keep all of the fifth
and sixth graders al Harbor
View School.
To make room for them, he
said, educationally handicapped
students being taught this year
at Harbor View will be moved
next year lo Eastbluff Elemen·
Lary School.
That decision has raised the
ire or a group of Eastblulf
School mothers.
"Whenever public officials
make decisions behind closed
doors , a.n investigation is called
r or," Carol Boi ce, a
spokeswoman for the group, told
trustees last Wednesday.
"Particularly." she added. "if
the ravor is granted to a.n af.·
fluent special interest group."
But Nicoll said Wednesday the
decision was based on the fact
that the Harbor View fifth and
sixth graders would have to be
uprooted twice within the nexl
<See REMAIN, Page A.Z>
DRANGI COAST WIATHIR:
Chance of rain tonight 40
percent increasing lo 70
percent Friday. Lows
tonight SO at beaches. 57
inland. Highs Friday 61
along coast, 67 inland.
Thunderstorms, gusty
winds likely Friday after-
noon.
INllDI TIDAY
I/ ~·re a cof/H d~.
JIOU'r• ha6ce aa ape lo ~t
ca1teer of tlN pancrN.a aa
flOfl ·CO/IH driflken -'"'' doctor• aren't advjdrag
ab1tenffon I/ft. Page All.
llDll
•m,· <See BZAC8. .... Al) • y t
--· " -. , .... _
~...._ ............... ,..._ ....... . . .... ....
SAN &ALY ADOR. Sl Salndor
(Al'> -Zl klndor't ndlDI Junla baa told other Latin
American iovenunentl not to
meddle lD ita war .,alut llftllt
auerrlllu, and tbe United Stat.
1• supportlq tbat 1taod.
•'The Hvolutlonary aovern·
""ment ot El Salvador doe• not de· / aire the Intervention of tbe
Or1ani.ut1oo of American Statee
in the search for a aolutloo to tbe
i nternal problems ln El
Salvador,"theJunta1aid. (Relat·
edstory, PageA3)
o.11rl'IMt1we ......
SURVIVOR FILES SUIT > HI mercNint MermefaNfn
.~ .
Holocaust
• survivor
files suit
ByPATRJCX KENNEDY
Ol llle Dell• ~lle4 llalf
Huntington Beach busi·
nessman Mel Mermelstein has
filed a $6 million lawsuit against
a n organization that offered
$50,000 to the first person who
~ould prove that a single Jew was
l:Hled in the prison camps of Nazi
Germany.
Mermelstein is a Jewish sur·
vivor of a Nazi prison camp and is
a well-known lecturer on the
holocaust
His lawsuit contends the
Institute of Historical Review has
failed to live up to the offer, has
libeled him in a newsletter and
has caused him intentional men-
tal distress.
"They're a bigoted group try-
ing to erase that era, and they're
trying to use me to do it,"
Mermelstein said today.
The non-profit organization
first made the public offer two years ago, claiming the holocaust
is a hoax and that no Jews were
killed.
Then, last November. Lewis
Brandon, directorofthe organiza-
tion, wrote a personal letter to
Me rmelstein challenging him to
prove the holocaust happened, ac-
cording to the lawsuit.
According to the lawsuit, the
letter warned Mermelstein that ii
he refused the offer, the group
would "draw our own conclusion
and publicize this fact to the mass
media ... "
Mermelstein accepted. His at·
torney wrote Brandon of the ac-
ceptance and stated that the cor-
res pondence was tantamount to a
legal contract
The message, d ellvered
Wednesday by El Salyador's
ambassador in WaahJn1ton,
Ernesto Peralta, called an OAS
mediation offer "completely un-
acceptable" and rejected "any
ad hoc action by the OAS."
The United States boycotted
the session oo grounds that El
Salvador rejected any OAS role,
said Ambassador Jose Rafael
Echeverria of Costa Rica, whose
government s uggested media-
tion last week and sponsored the
meeting.
Chile, Uruguay and Argentina
also were absent due to a "lack
of instruction," Echeverria said.
Those attending were
Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador,
Grenada, Guatemala, Haiti,
Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Panama, Paraguay , Peru,
Surinam , Trinidad and
Venezuela.
Salvadoran troops battled the
guerrillas to the north and east
or San Salvador and in and
around the capital Wednesday.
The United Nations Human
Rights Commission, meeting in
Geneva, Switzerland, called for
the appointment of a special
r e presentative to investigate
"grave violations of human
rights and fundamental
freedom s reported in El
Salvador."
The vote was 29-1. Eleven
countries abstained, including
the United States.
T he ruling junta in El
Salvador has not requested any
additional U.S. military aid, and
the Reagan ad ministration bas
•·no desire or interest to fob off
on El Salvador any aid they do
not feel they need," says
Defense Secretary Caspar Wein-
berger.
"I know of no plans lo send
any more" military equipment
to El Salvador, Weinberger said
Wednesday night in an ap-
pearance on the public broad-
casting TV program "The Mac·
Neil-Lehrer Report."
Weinberger said the $25
million in military aid already
announced by the State Depart-
ment represents all the as-
sistance that was requested by
the U.S.-backed junta.
Ool&a ... ln't 10 b&C Uaal Ill ,.alee .........
cloeM9t .... a Htt.M ~ Mniee ••ellila;
WMD n.,...,.-oaa o ..... GUek fll • ol ._ W It"'
I!. 1tua •. earlJ thla ........ abelcallld,.... to wp ..... back UDdel' lbe coven.
Oftleer 8ob Pblllipe wu dllpatdled to Mn. Gliet I
bome ud ...n&.d bv back blt.o bed at about i :• •·•·
Tbm, Pblllipa reported, tbe uked blm to make .ber
two pfanut bUtter aandwicbel, nu two llUlea wltb milk
aad 1trve the 1upper to ber lD bed.
"Mt.uion accompll1htd.'' be noted lD b.1a report to Lt. Torn Luar. ,,...,,_ ....
BEACH ALARM FALSE?. • •
by ocean water.
"II the sun is brilht, which it
was durtn1 this period, that also
wlll help kill It," said Ms .
Muur. "Things went in our
favor -it turned out mucb bet-
ter than we thought."
Althoueb county sanitation of-
ficials claim the reliability of
the sewer line in Newport re-
mains in doubt, steps were taken
Wednesday evening to alleviate
those doubts.
Directors of Sanitation Dis-
trict 5, which takes in the area
where the break occurred,
authorized engineering studies
for a Sl.6 million repair job.
According to sanitation of-
ficial Ray Lewis, the repair
project will be aimed at install-
ing a second sewer Une -a
"backup" line -under Coast
Highway between the east side
of the highway bridge over the
bay and the pump station in
front of the Balboa Bay Club.
A dual pipe system exists the
entire length or the sewer
system, which runs from the
bridge to a Huntington Beach
treatment pfant, except for the
half-mile stretch between the
bridge and club.
Lewis said he told sanitation
dlrectors that an addUional ex-
penditure or $3.4 million would
be n eeded to put the entire
bridge-to-plant system In "relia-
ble order."
"We're going to have to take a
hard look at our budget to find
the money," offered Lewis, "but
we• re hoping at least to do the
$1.6 million job this rail ...
Lewis described l ast
weekend's lin e break, which
buckled and broke pavement on
Coast Highway, as a "real dis·
ast er" that was minimized'.
"because we did a super job."
"It was bad but things like
this happen," reasoned Lewis.
"A person counts on his car but every now anc1 then it's going to
blow up." --
Reapportion talks
slated for Friday
The first hearing on reappor-
tionment of Orange County's
state Senate and congressional
districts will be held Friday in
Santa Ana.
The county is due for several
changes in districts because tbe
population increued more than
33 percent -to more than 1.t
million persona -between 1t70
and 1980.
Sarah Reyes, an aide to tbe
Senate Committee on Eleetkm
and Reapportionment, aaJd
leaders ol several HiapaDle •·
canizationa are expect .. to
testify after the be~ c.-
venes at 9:30 a .m. at Santa Ana
Cltv Hall.
·'City and county boundaries,
communities of interest and
basic equity wiJJ govern our re-
a pportionment efforts," Ms.
Reyes said in a notice of the
hearing.
Preliminary figures from the
1980 census,· sne said, show
Senate District 37 now
represented by Democrat Paul
Carpenter to be s lightly un-
derpopulated while the Senate
and con1reaaional dis tricts
"vary from slightly over to
iro-•lY over tbe Ideal size."
Ame>91 eommlttee members
who wUl bear testimony is Sen.
John Scbmlh, R -Newport
Beada.
Tbe committee's ultimate de-
dlkJD • reapportionment wlll
appi, Glib to Senate and con-
srnaiaaal dittricta. The state
AIMmMJ wil coaduct separate
bearinll to .aetermine bow its
dlstricta should be reappor-
tioned.
F,....P.,.eAJ
•
Mermelstein says he submitted
a list of evidence and witnesses lo
prove genocide occurred in the
Nazi prison camps but that he was
riot allowed to present it to the or·
ganization. Last month, he filed
lJle lawsuit in Los Angeles
Superior Court.
FNmP~AJ PARENTS.
Moines, 1owa, and Lawrence
Clifton of New York City, were
using them as leverage to get
the U.S. government involved. 'Brandonorolherofficialsofthe
Institute of Historical Review
~ouldn 't be reached for comment.
The organization's only address
is a post offi ce box in Torrance. ,. The lawsuit claims Brandon ~ent Mermelstein another letter
on J an. 'l7 and that Brandon stated
'the offer was being postponed
because Simon Wiesenthal
"wishes to claim the $50,000 for
~roof of the gassings and the
a2S,OOO for proof that Anne
Frank'sdiary 1s authentic.··
Mermelstein was a teen-age
prisonerorthe Nazi death camp of
Auschwitz. in Poland. He said his
parents, two sisters and a brother
died there. ,-
f
~iles opened
;
lor evidence • t DALLAS <A P ) -Authorities
•ere and in San Antonio were go-In g back over their files of
brutal, unsolved killings today
~eking to verify statements
om a man who allegedly im·
licated himself in seven deaths,
lice said.
David Villarreal. 26, spent
lnuch or Wednesday talking
hbout the killings -four in
~alias and three In San Antonio
after bis Tuesday night arrest
or questioning In a pair of slay-
ngs, Dallas detective Gerald
obi0500 said.
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thomas P. Heley ~
AoOeft N. Weed ...........
~-Thomu Keevll --Thoma A. Murphlne ..............
?-~~'1!...,,
~dSchulman
Cetl car.t9nMn ........... ~
Kenneth N. Godderd Jr. ~~
,_
HIJACK TENSION ...
Pakistani authorities to meet the
demand.
The letter was written by the
chie f hijacker, identified as.
Moujir Ghoulam, deputy com·
mander of Al Zulfikar. The or·
ganization is believed to lie
made up o r s upporters o r
Zullikar Ali Bhutto, the prime
minister hanged in April 1979 by
the current Pakistani regime of
Mohammed Zia ul-Haq.
· The letter was handed to
Syrian mediators six hours
before the deadline was to ex-
pire. The hijackers have killed
one of their captives, a
Pakistani diplomat.
"UnJy six hours are left and
there is still no answer from the
Pakistani government to our re-
quests," the letter said. "If our
demands are not met, the reslllt
will be hard and full
responsibility will fall upon the
Carner saves 17
JAKARTA <AP) -Seventeen
people, the crew and passengers
of an Indonesian helicopter en
route to an oil drilling site ln the
N atunas Islands, were rescued
by the U.S. aircraft carrier
Midway when their aircraft
crashed in the South China Sea,
the newspaper Sinar Harapan
reported. The helicopter sank
but au aboard were rescued by
the Midway, it was reported.
Pakistan authorities," it said.
"We want the whole world to
know that this tragedy is
because Zia is an American-
Zionist agent and a traitor to
Pakistan," the letter continued.
Saying the Americans would
be shot if the demands were not
met, the letter added: "They are
CIA agents. I know everything
about them. Be prepared to col-
lect their bodies.
"Zia is not interest~ in the
rate or the passengers. All he
wants is to score political advan-
tages," the letter said. "We are
not extending the deadline. U
our demands a re not met after
six hours, we shall take a violent
action."
Chiropractor
admits guilt
• m sex case
A Newport Beach chiropractor
has pleaded guilty In Orange
County Superior Court to sexual
misconduct charges involving a
14-year-old female patient.
Judee James Turner, ln ac-
cepting the 1Uilty plea of Gordon
E. Braham, 36 , Wednesday,
scbedllled sentencing proceed-
ines May 1.
Additionally, two psycbJalrilta
were appointed to examine
Braham, arrested with his wife
by Newport Beach police lat
October when tbe girl's mother
learned of the sexual incident.
If the chiropractor Ja jucl1ed to
be a mentally disordered aex ol· .
fender amenable to tftatmenl,
Judie Turner could aend b!m to
a state menta.Nl09pital.
However, Braham also could'
face a 5-year atate prison term.
The cbiropractor and bla wife,
Nancr Braham, 21, were botb
taken Into cu•tody by oollce
alter tbe llrl rePOrtedlY '°1d 1Mr
motb•r that tbe couple bad
en1a...S in Msual activity wttb
lter at tbelr bome.
Cbar1 .. are 1tlll P.adta1
11a1a1t Jin. Braham lD HMtior lfuatct,.a Court.
• '
Clymore described his son as
being a ''cheerful kid" who was
well-liked by the people he met.
He said bis son attended Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa for
a short time after his high school
graduation.
Clymore said he and his wife
had reacted to the ordeal "like
any other lluman beings who
have kids." He said they "con-
soled each other, cried a little and
did a lotofpraying."
'" ,.-. under I.be oriataaJ ~-•. . . l ~' _. -.d, wbea I.bey aH
..... to AndeneD School and ... ..._ tbe7 move Oft to IJD.
cola-....&bool.
Mrs. Boice claimed tb• ad· minlltratbe dedlloa wtll ume
dhrupUon at her 1ehool,
EHtblutf.
llONTGOllZAY1 ~la. <AP> -1be former wife ot Oeorae Wallace ll Uk-
101 for the prayen ot "all
Cbrtatl&n people" lD hopa
that tbe fonner Alabama
IOV•rnor wW WU twice
about ~ • •lnrer ball bta ....
EHtblu:ff already bu bard-of.
beartnc •tucleata. Movin1 about
17 educatlonaUy handicapped .
students Ollto the campua will
create leaching and learnln1
problem.a, abe claimed.
Cornella Wallace, whose
marriace ended lD divorce
In 1'78, Hid Wedbeaday
ahe isn't ready to step
ulde for Wallace to
marry blonde Lisa Taylor
of Jaaper, a 32-year-old
country-western singer
whose fat.her owns a coal
mlnlne concern.
"Never lo Uie history of the
(district) have two handicapped
programs been bouaed at one
elementary school," she told
trustees.
··At Eastblu!f, one-fourth of
the student body will be han-
dicapped.''
She charged: "You are going
to spare Spyglass, Bren, Rld1e
and Sea View fifth and sixth
traders the inconvenience of be·
iog disrupted twice.
··What. will you do for the
educationally handicapped so
that they will not be disrupted
twice or even three times at a
school mentioned for closure."
Eastbluff had been a strong
consideration for closure next
June along with Corona del Mar
as area attendance lags.
School board president Ken
Wayman, said EastbluCf parents
who had begged for their school
to remain open should be happy
with the new influx or han-
dicapped students.
Their number, he indicated,
will help keep the school in
operation. at least for a time
Fro• PageAJ
KEITH ...
home to rob him after picking
him up in a Laguna Beach gay
bar.
Testifying in his own defense,
Keith had admitted to the jury
that he had participated in the
1978 slaying, but claimed he did
so out of anger and a fear of
homosexuals.
Keith's companion in the
crime, Anthony David Bies of
Dana Point, also was convicted
or first degree murder late last
year. He is presently undergoing
diagnostic studies to determine
if he should be sentenced to the
California Youth Authority. Now
20 , Bies was 17 at the time or
the killing.
Keath, dressed in a light blue
three-piece suit, was closely
watched again today by up to
four Orange County Sheriff's
Department deputies foUowing
the convicted slayer's unsuc-
cessful attempt to escape from
Orange County Jail early Tues-
day morning.
"He plans, conceives and plots
a daring and almost s uccessful
escape attempt," Carter told the
jury, "not even waiting for you
to decide."
Truce threatened
WARSAW (AP> -Workers in
the Radom district south of
Warsaw today stepped up their
threat to shatter Poland's un-
easy labor truce with a s trike.
Union delegates from nearly 340
factories were meeting to en-
dorse a list of 17 demands, some
of them stemming from grudges
left over from the 1976 riots
there over government price
hikes.
PI A GE[
"I'm not living up on a
reconclllation," Mrs.
Wallace said. "I simply
ask for the prayers of aJI
Ch ristian people that
Georee will search bis
heart and find God 's
perfect will in this mat-
ter "
Disneyland
criticized
in knifing
ANAHEIM (AP) -Dis·
neyland officials have met with
harsh criticism by local health
officials in their handling of a
teen-ager who was stabbed at
lhe park and later died at a
nearby hospital. Oran~e County health officials
criticized park officials Wednes-
day f or not calling city
paramedics last week and for
not having 18-year-old Mel C.
Yorba taken to either of two
nearby hospitals designated to
treat trauma victims.
T he officials accused Dis-
neyland officials of not summon-
ing paramedics in order to avoid
any bad publicity thal could
jeopardize the park's image.
Disneyland officials denv the
accusation and contend they
made the best possible decision
in the Yorba death.
Yorba was driven to Palm
Harbo r Hos pital in Garden
Grove, which is not a trauma
center. in the back of a Dis ·
neyland van, accompanied by a
park nurse and two security
guards. The van had no warning
lights or sirens to speed its trip
through traffic nor any lifesav-
ing equipment besides oxygen.
Anaheim paramedics were not
notified.
The Riverside teen-ager. who
arrived at the hospital in
cardiac arrest, bled to death
from wounds in his heart and
liver, said the Orange County
coroner's office.
"They (Disneyland> have an
inte rnal policy not to call
paramedics," said Betty
O'R ourke, direc tor of the
Orange County Office of
E m ergency Medical Services.
She said her office has contacted
Disneyland offi cials "but
nothing has come of it.·•
Although the health care ex-
perts refused to say with cer-
tainty whether trauma care
would have saved Yorba, they
said victims with similar in-
juries have been saved.
"We've been talking to people
at Disneyland about this ror
years." said Martel Thompson,
chief or operations for the
Anaheim Fire Department.
---------.~-~
Jury selec-
tion con-
tinued in Los
Angeles to-
day in the
$10 million
libel suit by
entertainer
Carol
Burnett
against the
National En-
quirer.
Jazz pianist and composer
Eable Blake, 98, was report·
ed in fair condition at Long
Island College Hospital after
surgery to reset a broken
hip.
Blake reportedly fell out or
bed at his Brooklyn home.
Blake, composer of "I'm
. Just Wild About Harry." had
Come<Uan
Henn11
You~, tradmg
I amiUar Jid-
d~
Mideo.t
litar, r~-
bearses tune
he'll p1ay
Monday qt
his 15th
birthday par-
. ty in New
York.
been leading an active life
before the accident. On
March 1, be and his wife,
Marian, attended the
Broadway opening of
"Sophisticated Ladies," a re·
view based on the music ot.
Dake EWngteo and two days
later went to the St. Regia to
see a review based on the
music of Rocen and Bart .
J ... ~ VaNeaelar,
U, atar of the Spanish
teatur• film "Deprlaa. Deprha" wbleb waa
awarded the Gold Bear at tbe
Berlin l•Uval lD Fftn&ary,
WU anwted ill Maclrld LD
connection with a bank
bold up, pollce source,. 1aid.
Tbe aources 1ald
Valdemolar and MuMI Sela
Telles, 23, were arrested
ahortlf after a downtown
Madrid blnk WU· robbed of
187 ,000 pesetas, about $2,000.
Tbe robben fied on foot and
stole a taxl which, the
sources said, rammed
another car whose two occu-
pants were treated for ln·
Juries.
"Deprlsa, Depriaa," which
means ''quick, quick,'' was
dlrected by Carlol Saua and
still hasn't been shown in
Spain. It tells the story of
young law violators.
E. Y. "Yip" Harbarg,
the lyricist kHJed in a Los
Aaeeles car ac6ident last
week, bad been scheduled to
1et the Jollaany Mercer
Award at the Songwriters
Hall of Fame awards dinner.
So in bis honor at the din·
ner, composer JaJe Styne
sang Harburg's latest song
"Let's Give the Waltz a
Chance." Tony Beuett, ac·
cepting a Lifetime Achieve-
ment Award, sans Harburg's
"April in Paris" and ''It's
Only a Paper Moon." ·
BartoB Lane accepted the
award for Harburg's wife
and accompanied himself in
singing one of Harburg's
favorites, "How Are Things
in Cloccamora," which the
two wrote for the musical
"Finian's Rainbow." There
were a rew tears then, and
again when the evening
ended with the late Jady
Garland's recording or
Harburg's "Somewhere Over
the Rainbow."
ln a joint performance
with the Mormon Tabernacle
Choir, entertainer John
Denver told an audience of
some 8,000 at Logan, Utah,
that hunger could be stricken
from the earth in 20 years.
Denver, Joined by the
choir, •anc his bit son,1 "f
Want to Live" at a sym·
po1lum on world bun1er at
Utah State University.
Teachers seek raises
Demands issued for next fiscal year
Teachers and non·teaching
employees or the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District have pre·
sented their initial demands for
raises and other benefits for the
fiscal year beginning July 1.
The Newport.Mesa Federation
or teachers is seeking cost-of·
living increases ranging
between 13.5 and 18.5 percent
while asking for one less work
day next school year, an ad-
ministrator reported Tuesday.
The increases are sought for
Turtle Rock
birthday
parties OK'd
"Happy Birthday" is a song
likely to be beard more and
more in Irvine after the City
Council approved a birthday
party program at Turtle Rock
Community Park.
Since January five parties
have been staged at the com ·
munity center, complete with a
city staff worker, a birthday
cake, party favors and a dee·
orated room. Cost is $50 for a
maximum or 20 children
between 4 and 12 years old.
The council agreed to review
the program after a citl&en
criliclled the party operation,
sUHettinl it isn't somethinc the
city OUlht to be doing.
Deanna Mannini. dlrfft.oc' of
Community Semces, said Chat
the Protr•m was designed to
help better utilize Turtle Rock
park. -
Miss Mannln1 added tbat the
city ii _,, bred.inc even oa tile vent~ • tbat feet will likely
be inc,....e to '15 by the ad ol
theyee.
I
teachers al the upper levels in
the pay scale, those who have
taught the longest in the district.
The California School
E mployees Association,
representing non-teaching
employees such as clerks. food
s ervice workers, bus drivers and
custodians, seek increases rang·
ing between 15 and 21 percent.
The non-teaching employees
also seek a closed shop clause.
one that would require payment
of up to S!K> a year in dues to the
union by all 700 employees.
About 200 currently are mem·
bers of the union.
The pay hikes sought by
teachers would. if granted, raise
the avera~e current teaching
salary (minus fringe benefit
costs> from about $26.457 a year
to about $30,100 for 10 months of
work, administrators estimated.
The teachers also are seeking
additional medical and dental
insurance benefits as well as vis·
ual and psycb<llogical care.
C hi er teachers union
negotiator Bill Cue noted his or·
ganizalion also is seeking addi·
tional extra-duty pay for
teachers and coaches, including
up to $175 a week for coaches
whose teams move into CIF
playoffs each year.
Also sought are sa bbatical
leaves for nine teachen who
would be paid benefits for the
year as well as half their
salaries at an estimated district
cost or about $140,000.
Non-teaching employees also
seek additional health in-
surance. includin,r full district-
paid coverage for dependent.a. ·
Both unions negotiated three·
year cootracts Jut fall, retroac-
tive to the prevtous year wben
no setUem~ was reached.
Thoee contnct nplr9 bll June ua, and left o.-. ~ Md tr· #lte beDIQt 11!11\2 .. ,.. ,.. Wot
~
/4''ttil~ .
The Dally Pilot wanta to hear observaUont from ill readers
-particularly comm~nta about the paper itself. Jt'a easy to tell
us your views. Jusl call the number below and your me••1e
wlU be recorded. Me1aa1e1 will be transcribed 1everaJ Umes
dally aad deUvend to the deek of the appl'Opriate editor. No
ctreuladoe caU1, pie ....
T.U • wbat'a on JOQt mind. TM number ls la Mnlce H
boun a clay, """'days a wee. 842•6088
_ _.;
coming fiscal year.
Teachers were granted 8 per·
cent cost-of·living hikes for last
year and this year.
Actual negotiation on the new
requests is expected to begin in
about three months. Public
response to the demands is
scheduled for the next board
~ession. March 24 .
College board
names veteran
coordinator
\ Rick Gorman, 29, or Fountain
Valley , ha s been named
veterans coordinator al Golden
West College and Orange Coast
College.
Gorman will be available to
counsel veterans two days a
week at each college under a
federally funded program.
His schedule : Orange Coast,
Mondays, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and
Wednesdays, 1-4 p.m.; Golden
West, Wednesday 9.a.m. lo noon.
and Fridays, 9 a .m. to 4 p.m.
At Golden We.st his telephone
is 892-7711, Ext. 868 or 669, and
at Oranee Coast, 556-5853.
Gorman, who eraduated from
Golden West in 1978, earned his
bachelor of science degree in
criminal Justice at Cal State
Long Beach ln 1979. He is cur·
rently comp,eting a master's in
public admlriistraUoo.
" four-year Air Force veteran,
who served 10 months in Viet-
nam, Gonnan served as usla-
tant veterans coordinator at
Golden West from July' 1975 to
June urn.
Services held
for Mrs. Beet
LonsUme NewPOrt Beach resi-
dent Sarah Best, wbo died Satur-
day at ace 78, is to be bwted at
aea this week in private
ceremonlet.
Mrs. Best, a member ol tbe
Newport Beach Aul1tuce
Lea1ue alnce 19". moved to
Newport ln 1m.
She h aurvlved by two
dau1bten -Sarab rr.ebl ol
San "*lro and Allee llOl'IJidC•
of Newport BHeb. Sile alto
• ... " ••• srucleblldree and
two sreat·srandehl)d,....
Tb• I amUy 1ua..u memorial
• coatrlbuUODI to ttte Art.britla
Foundation of Oraqe County.
SpGc:!e doubled
A. $12 million twin office building (fore··
ground) project off the San Diego Freeway
at Ward Street in Fountain Valley is slated
for completion and first occupancy next
month. About 54,000 square feet of office
space will be available in each. Comple'(,;
was designed ~~complement adjacent I'IT-"
Cannon plant, formerly occupied by BASF.
HB district
turns down
sabbaticals
El Salvador policy
critic dismissed !· .t
Sabbatical leaves for Hunt·
ington Beach Union High School
District teachers have been de-
nied for the Clrst time in recent
years as a cost·saving measure.
The board unanimously denied
the requests of 10 teachen lo
take a one-year leave to pursue
education in their fields.
The cost of $104,000 -to hire
substitutes and lo pay half the
salary or the teachers laking
sabbatical leave, was deemed
excessive by trustees Tuesday.
"This is a painful act for us lo
lake," said Board President
Helen Ditte.
"But in view of all the cuts
we 've made, laying off
counselors, teachers and culling
back classes, grantina t.he sab·
batical leaves would not have
·been fiscally responsible,·· she
said.
Tbe school board recenUy
trimmed $3.9 million from next
year's projected S42 million
operating fund to balance the
bud.et.
A aabbaUcal allows teachers
with at least seven years ln the
district to take a year off to
travel or do further study in
their field of teaching.
Mrs. Dille said It is the first
time in at least eight years that
the district has not granted
some requests for sabbatical
leaves.
Camera shop
burglarized
Costa Mesa police said it
looked as though burglars used a
sledge hammer and heavy pry
bar to break through a door and
metal screen to take about $3,000
worth of merchandise from a
camera store.
Officers. alerted by a burglar
alarm , arrive d at Pal e x
Camera. 1145 Baker St.. at 1: 10
a.m ., apparently missing the
thieves by minutes.
Taken were cameras. lenses,
automatic winders and flash
equipment.
WASHINGTON ~AP> -
Former U.S. am tfassador
Robert E . While says the
Reagan administration has fired
him from the foreign service for
disagreeing with its "ready-
made doctrine" or U.S. military
aid for El Salvador.
White loJd the House Foreign
Affairs Committee that the State
Department told him in a form
letter last week that he must ac-
cept one of two lesser jobs or
leave the foreign service. He
said he was ousted as U.S. am·
bassador to El Salvador in
January.
"In my judgment I'm being
fired for my views," While told
Irvine backs
upgrading of
road medians
Citizen complaints or rats,
opossums and overgrown weeds
plaguing Irvine's 1reeQbelt
areas have caused some pretty
fast action in city hall.
City Council .members unan·
imously approved spending
$35,000 lo upgrade landscaping
of five medians in the
Northwood tract. Councilwoman
Mary Ann Gaido was absent.
Targeted for improvements
were street medians at Bran·
dywine, Mayflower, Yorktown,
Monticello and a greenbelt area
near Monlecello and Yale.
Irate citizens packed the City
Council Tuesday night. complain·
ing of health hazards, rats,
opossums and thick algae as a
result of the overgrown and
neglected greenbelt at Mon -
licelloand Yale.
The developer for the area
failed to upgrade the greenbelt
since upkeep was not inltiaJly re-
quired, said Brent Mu chow.
director or public works.
Residents living near the
greenbelt complained that in ad-
dition to rodents, it was over-
grown with 3-4-foot-bigh weeds
that were causing asthmatic
problems for children.
MAR'KET
reporters. "l got a letter sayini
there is no other assignmenf,
and out you go.
"H you have as this adr
ministration had -a read~
made doctrine which asser.~
that the solution for El Salvador
lies with the introduction of
large quantities of armame~
and military advisers. then Yc:iw'
first priority becomes the r~
moval of an ambassador whp
may complicate the application
of your doctrine," he testified . .i
··As in China or in Vietnam, f'
he said, "the message to tbe
career Foreign Service could not
be more bell·like in its claritYJ:
do not sentl in reports that con·
flicl with preconceived
theories." '
AT THt: STATE Department,
a spokesman said White wa~
"being retired" Crom the foreign
service under regulations which
stale that career officers not rt!·
assigned within three months
after completion or a presiden·
llal appointment must be
separated from tbe service. ,.
The spokesman said several
possible assignments were dis·
cussed with White but that non,e
was found to be satisfactory.
"It .is not foreseen that Am ·
bassador White will receiv'.e
future assignments," he said.
His retirement will become ef·
fective on May 23.
White publicly had disagreed
at a hearing before the commit-
tee two weeks ago on Reagan"s
then·anticipated decision to seitl
more m ilitary aid to El
Salvador.
THE PRESIDENT has si~
decided 'to send an additional 20
military adv1sers and $25 million
in military aid to El Salvadw.
and While expanded on his o~
position in his testimony Wed·
nesday. ·
''I'm not predicting any Viet-
nam," he testified. "But I do nQl
understand the rush to act.ion.
The left is depleted. There is oo
possibility of its rising again in
any reasonable period. So we
should use th.is time for media·
tion." .,
·'
... DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
LENTEN SPECIALS
Fresh Boned MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Pu Ready Sliver SaJmoa, s oz ... 2.zt ea.
Fresh Paclftc Bed 8Dapper ........ 1.zt lb.
Fresll Fros.en ~al Swonlftah ...... 5.18 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
For. that St. Patrick's Day Dlnn\!r, Delaney's will
•1-.m have that famous Home Cured Corned Beef
Choice Boneless Bee.I Bnakets trimmed ol all exceM
rat and cured as only we at Delaney's know how, ~ our secret recipe.
WHle or Potnt Ort ................ 1 .. a: Flat~ ............................ 1.11a.
Leaa Gl'UllDd Beef <Ground Hourly) ••.• t.a •·
CANDELITE BEAT AND EAT POOD9
Prepared Fresh Dally From Delant1'1 Owa .K.llcben.
Clllclle11 ... O.mpllll1• 1rw 11 ••••.•..•..... t.•••· n1.-o1We8'tdfed wtt11 s.11 .. , ,,.. " .... ut ea:
Apr1C9t AJ-4 a~ .. Cab ... , •......... 1.• ea.
DelueJ'• I'•._. Camlt Cw ............ t.• ea.
Fa.EE HOME Ol:LIVE&Y 88&VJCE (SH •00•••> _ . T!UJ_.cl_elfesti..!~.ed., ~l'J. tbru Tues., 3/11
DELAllEY'S
Fresb Large Sf.le Asparaps ........ tie lb.
Large Sweet Local Strawberries .. 7tc bskt.: Delaney'• Own '
Fresh Baked Siaortcakea ............ Ste ea.
Local Grown Lar&e Sf.le '•
Solid Green Cabbage ................ Be lb • .,
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
De~~:i;:.~(~be,!.f,~~~. ~ ............ I.It ea.
&orba..S Glllett.d WIHa 1'74
(750 mU) .••••......•...................... I .ZS ea.
CllcqM·GoW Label Bnit llelm1
f'Ta11c. v.t&are ....•.•..................... It.IS ea.
8cor"'1 ae.c11 <TllO mUl .................... U& ea.
Carlo...., v .. llele' or QaWla
CllUW For Y•r C.vealence (Full Gal.) .. 1.• ea.
Perrier Water <D oa.> ......... lie ea.
8&ore....,. M, Cleeed s..day -
2tlZll Newport Bh·d., Ne ..... ••da
673-5520
' ..
NO nsa IUDD osn. -11a11Mt u.. ~ 11 tUt ~ ap Uoq tJm bat ol all •IR 'We eouta. it WU lm· DONibM to ftad • job u IOOd .. tlM ..... o6d Cbarlle hrrli ... aa.u.. ,_ .... bu It ... .
ID .._ ,.,a'" .._ ..... OYV tM lut couple ot a,., u .... been vutly nported la u. pubU~ priDta •bout
Charla D. l'errl1, wbo beadl our au1u1t Federal
CommualcaUou Commlaatoa, aometlmes tDown aa tbe
FCC.
i Aa bead, Cb1rUe
1eta a salary ol '55,000
per year abd ba• a
chauffeured auto as a
llttle frin1y benefit.
Thine about thla t. Uaat
Charlie doesn't do any
work any more. He la
~ T-Dl_l_U_RP-Hll-1~-,,
being chauffeured to a non-job where be non-works for the
55,000 smackers.
ALL OF THIS apparently comes about because the
Reagan administraUon doesn't trust old Charlie any more.
So they have allowed him to hang around, dolog notblng, and getting paid for it.
List.en, the last time I had a position where I wun't
trusted any more, it was working for two guys in derby
hats who smoked big cigars and r an a used car lot ln
Lakewood. When l refused to "just tighten up" a set of
leaking brakes on a '39 DeSoto, they didn't trust me any
more. Did I get a free sallry? I did not. I got the boot.
I didn't even get a ride to the bus station in the leaky·
braked DeSoto.
LATEll, LOOKING FOR a soft job in Laguna Beach, I
caught on at Harold Reed's old icehouse in Sleepy Hollow.
1 was going to be an iceman and deliver to beautiful
women all over the Art Colony.
L.acking seniority, however, I ·ended up on the com·
merc1al route, lugging 300-pound ice blocks into saloons
Him? He'1 a federal heater value inlpector, of COMrle.
that had been Jocked up au night so that the stale beer and
cigar odors were still trapped inside.
Try that before breakfast. Charlie Ferris wouldn't like
that kind of a free ride.
Still later, I figured it would be rom,.ntic to work in a
fire engine factory, painting fire engines red. I got on at
the fire engine paint shop because I was the newest rube in
town.
Later, I learned that the rookie painter was the one
who always got to crawl underneath the fire engine and
m ake sure all of the undercarriage was spray-painted red.
. The FCC's Charlie Ferris might think this was a good
JOb because you got to do it while reposing on your back.
TROUBLE WAS, the paint guns they created in those
days weren't exactly leak-proof when, while Oat on your
back, you tried to turn them sideways ilnd spray all the
nooks and crannies underneath renders, over mufflers and
a round cables.
The guns invariably leaked a little. Not too much. Jusl
enough to start a slow. steady trickle or sticky red that
rolled past your wrist, lealted toward your elbow and
headed down your upper arm.
It was always a frantic race. Could you finish the un-
derside before the trickling red ooze reached your armpit7
Hurry! Hurry!
COME TO THINK of it. maybe this would be a good
way to treat good old Charlie Ferris . Flop him on his back
and pour some red paint down his armpits.
Shel.I cut• Uilole1ale price• 2 cent•
• MSW YOU (AP> -TeucO IDe. ..,. It .... beCu on.taa
dealen acroe1 UM eouatry ,.
batel of ' ceata a lallGD OD IOIM aatoliDe purcbaMI, whlle rell•·
ble lnduatry nourcea say Sbe1l
Oil Co. bu cut wboleHle
111011ne onces z cent.I a •alloo
in the llla•eet.
Analysts aald tbe movea were
taken to apur 1Ju11l1h sales
after the lncreue of almost 12
cents a talloa in retail 1uo1ine sales prices that baa occurred
slnce the federal oil·price COD·
trola were lilted Jan. 28, eteht
montba ahead ol 1chedule.
Texaco, the nation's tbird-
lar1est oil company, said
Publisher
guilty of
• exlortion
PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -The
publisher of a weekly communi-
ty newspaper faces up to 15
year s in prison and a $5,000 fine
after being convicted of extor-
tion in what maybe the first trial
or a publisher for attempting to
coerce people into cooperating
with his publication.
Alex Bidnik Jr., of Clifton,
publisher of the Independent
Pros pector , was convicted
Wednesday by a Passaic County
Superior Court jury on five of six
counts.
J OURNALISM HISTORIAN
Edwin Emery said he believed
the trtal marked the first indict·
mentor a newspaper publisher for
extortion.
Bidni.k, 45, was convicted of
ex.to~ion in. incidents involving
Wilham Ehas, former Clifton
athletic director ; Ari Tasiou and
Charles Italia, owners of Clifton
restaurants; Edward Looney,
owner or Henry's Delicatessen
and Liquor Store in Clifton; and
Edward 'Hahn, advertising vice
president for New Jersey Bank
in Clifton.
Wedneacla1 l\ _,.1an otter1nt
"rebatef" ol 4 cent.a per 111100
to deaJen Marc 1.
Tex.co u.ld ltl •·cent a gallon
rebate would apply to deaJera
wbo sell more t.ban 80 percent of
the qu~ntity of 1a10Jlne they
sold ln March 1980. 1
Dan LWldberJ, publisher of an
oil industry dewsletter, said
Texaco's rebate mi1bt show up
shortly at the pump.
"It will be on a s tation-by-
statioo basts. Nothing requires
dealers to pass it on to the
customer , but many unques-
tionably wiU ," Lundberg said.
Lundber1 uld Texaeo'•
leadecM-eplar cuollile •u Mil·
inc for u averaae ol ll.41 a
gallon at full service ataUOU aa
of March a.
He •atd the average pl'\ce ot
tbe fuel for smaller, independent
reliners wu $1.M and the na·
Uonal average price of the fuel
was $1.38. ·
Gasoline demand dropped '
percent in 1979 and 7 percent in
1980 in the United States as
prices climbed. The drop in de-
mand bas left U.S. refiners'
gasoline supplies within 2
million barrels of the 283
million-barrel record set last
April.
NATION I WIATHIR
MotheF
~ilty
in death
BUENA VISTA, Va. <AP) -A
Judie bu found a woman pllty ol
aecond-desree murder and HD·
tenced ber to 20 years ln prlaoa for
pourlna black pepper down the
throat of her 3-year-old daucbter.
"I juat poured it (the pepper)
from t.be box into ber mouth. I
dldn 'l mean to kill her," Diana M.
Push, 30, s(lid in a police state-
mentread tothecourt.
Buena Villa Circuit Court
Judge Rudolph Bum1ardner III
heard the case without a jury and
handed down the sentence on
Wednesday.
POLICE CHI EF Erskin
Campbell, who read the state·
ment, said Mrs. Pugh also ad·
milted beating her daughter,
Mary Elizabeth.
Dr. William Weddle of
Stonewall Jackson Memorial
Hospital in Lexington said the
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation he
administered to the child burned
his mouth. He said he tried to put a
plastic tube into the child's throat
to make an airway but failed
because it was blocked with pep-
per.
IN HER statement. Mrs. Pugh
said she did not know bow much
pepper she had given the child.
Weddle testified the girl
weighed 17 pounds and was 2'r'.i·
feet taJl, which he said was the
height of a 2-year-old and the
weight of a 9-month-old baby.
·'It looked like the baby bad
been starved," Weddle testified.
"There was no s ubcutaneous fat,
which meant it was skin and
bones."
HE SAID the child's body was
covered with bruises from head to
legs on front and back and that
most of the bruises appeared to be
three to four days old.
Mrs. Pugh, separated from her
hus band at the time of the child's
death, sobbed as she ans wered
questions from the judge and kept
her head in her hands through
much oftheproceedings. She had
pleaded innocent to the charges
July 15.
ELIAS HAD testified Bidnik Consume.r s to pay threatened his job and reput.a-A,. w1,.._..
lion when the athletic director Pl f I i WASHINGTON (AP I -The refused the publisher's demands 0!1 U po r Feder al Communications Com-
for an interview. Other wit-mission has approved a change
n e s s es ~es l i f i e d B id nit Everybody knows pandas are cuddly -even other pan-in accounting rules designed to thr~atened to write damaging. das. This playful pair e njoy the warm sun at the zoo in ensure the financial integrity o(
articles if they did not advertise Berlin, Germany. Bao Bao (top) and Tian Tian were gifts the nation's tele phone com· with his publication. 1 t f Ch panies but at a cost of b1'Jlions of
J uld as year rom inese Communist Party Chairman Hua urors co not reach a de· G { dollars to consumers dur1·ng the · · · b · uo eng to Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. c 1s1on on a s1xt indictment next 10 years. count, and Assistant Passaic r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
County Prosecutor Bruno
Mongiardo said be would move
to have that charge dismissed.
Snow buries mountains
Texas, Great Lakes expecting rain
Coiuial .,,eailaer
Cl\•nce ot r••n 40 percent tonight
1ncre•sJno 10 10 oercent Fr'O•y
CP••n<t ot 1Plu-11orms •nd gusty
winds Frk14y •flernoon
Contai low so. 1n1eno SI Co.tsl•I
n1on 61, 1n1-•1 W•t•r •O
Eloewr.re, winds \O<Jlnwut 10 10
?O knou outer ••ter\ ton10f\t ~com
•"9 westerly 10 10 10 ltnotl Frod,y
M•• • lo I leel through Froa•, tnrwr ••lers. ,.,nds \O<JllMrly I to U knots
ton1gl\I, ..,..,,,,....., \0 wot 10 lo 10
knoll Cly Fnday ., .. ,,_., WHttrly
''"'"' 1 lo• fMI MOslly cloud y wltn ,...,,..,. "'re.ct•no tou1n"'"1er1, l•t•
ton1of'll P•rt••I c•••""O Fr•d•v wfth ""'" ., \Ullertd ,_,. (!!:!:!)
11.S •...... ,,,
Tne mount•ln> ol ColO••CIO wt••
buried under.__..,, \now e•rl'f' IOCl•'f,
ro1n ltll on a ~Ion of the C<>untry
from ti>« "Ntnun Rocio.II\ to the
western Golf eo.\I. •nd llgnt snow
Ousltd llW H >t•m Great Lou to rne
ctntr•I APPtl«fllan"
Rol11 was UP«ltd lo sore..i over
touthern Tex•s tOO.y, and ram •ncl
snow ShOw.,-s were fore<•st •rourid
tr..Grut L..111.".
Temoeratures early today rono-ci
from IS cMQrM\ In 894ford, Pe . to '1
dtgreesln K•rW•1t. Flo.
Calllonda
Clouds o.oan mov1nv Into Southtrn
Caillorn., tOdty at'CI >l>Owers were
••oec ted 111 Ill• mountains late
IO<>IOhl, HJre.cllnQ lo •II .,... Fri
dor. llM Natlonol Wulner S.rvou
"'o A 40 percenl en.nee of ral11 wes
forecau tonlglll •nd 70 o•r(ent
l'rldey, with .-.aie lllowers •ncl
lllundenlormsllk•ly.
Snow S/IOUld ••II lo the S,OOO·loot
level.
Hlghl Frld.ay "''" ·~ from SI lo
u '" i.o. AnllelH -"" ••lley1 wllll• ~In le,,_rahires retell
only Into UW mid-Jiii -40s.
All•,_ winds from IS lo H mp/\
were lo-11.,.tM"'"-"•·
"' Le ,.,,. •l H .01
S9. 3' .10
U JI ,SI ,. l1
'2 S3 ., n .u
SI 2t u n
SI 2t
•o•• 10 ~ Cotd Wotf"I
IUUlJ -= 70 S~o••1 • Stn• ., .... ,. Oulvded
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Boin
80•lon Brown""''• 8ullelo
Cl1trlstn SC
Cht rlstnWV
Cheyennp
Chlcaoo
Cl11clnnall
Ci•••l•ncl Columbus
Ot l·FI Wtn
Oe11ver
Oe1Molnes
0.trol\
Oulutll
Ha rtford
Hele,.. Honolulu
Hov1ton
1ne1nw t11
Jo<ll.11\vlle
Ka ns City
Lt1Ve9n
l ittle Rodi
L<K Ar>Oel• Loulsvllle ""-mpflls
Mia mi
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At1>a11y
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Amerlllo Asllevllle
Allont. Atlante (ty
la Ill more l lrmlnotwn
l lamerck
34 n .Ol
" 2t .01 .. 42
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lalll..allt
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Blytlle II SI Fresno 7S St
L•n<aster .. 43
M•rnvlll• 7J ..
Monterey " n
Needles 1$
Oekland .. s•
Paso Robles ., 4S
Red Bluff , . ..
Redwood City 70 u
Reno 40 ,.
Sacromento ., u
Sallna1 .. S1
Santa Berbar• u SJ
Stockton 74
Tnerma1 u ff
Ukiah 11 0
Barstow n 0
8 1g •••r SI n
Bishop ., H
C..lallna 70 Sl
El Centro 11 47
lon9 8HCll ., SJ
Newpol18-t\ .. S4
Ontario 10 ..
P•lm~ IO S4
PllMdeM 1• ..
Sallhnw'dlM 1• ..
Sllf'IJ ... 70 4t
S-teAN 7> so
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SoMIMlw1a 67 41
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81'V$Mlt st 44 ... ,,.. 7J ..
Carro 7> so
Corec•• 12 70
C..lll\atllfl ,. JO ,..,.,,.Mt w JO 0-Yo 70 ...
Hn:: II w Holtl11 I 14 J
Hong kono IS ..
Jerv"ltm 51 •S
Jo·ouro ., S7
Kiev )9 JO
Lima 19 10
Lisbon .. ~
Lond0<> S7 so
M•Orld 10 4S
Menlla .. ~
MonlrHI )6 28
MoKOW 2S s
N•H•u 79 61
l'lew Oelnl 12 SS
Nicosia 13 54
Olio l• S4
Paris .. 0
Alo 9S ~
Rome S9 0
San JuMI 14 7S
Sao Paulo .. ...
Sl119epon " IS
Sto<knolm zt n
Syd no 7S 61
r.1oe1 11 4J
hi Aviv .. S4
T•yo u )9
Toron10 )1 n H
Vel'lco11ver S4 4l
Vl•nna ... SS
"AN AM•RICAN
Acaouico 90 10
Barl>telos .. 1J
Bermuda .. Sl .u
809ota 70 -Curacao .. 7J .06
FrHport n 41 JM
Ouadatajaro 11 so .OJ
G11odel-.. ..
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flCl1111t1on • 7S
Monlt90 Bay IJ IJ
Marat Ian 7S w
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""-•lco City 11 SS .01
Monterrey SI S2 .OI
NHMU 11 w
San Juan u ,,
St flClllJ 14 7S
Tevu<lgalpa 12 w
Trl11ldacl " n .CM
Veracr1n 112 ..
CANADA
ca190ry 52 ,,
Edmonton .. • Montreal M .tt
Otta,.• • ,.
R99lna 54 2J
fOfOfllO ,. ZI ...... covv..-54 41
WIMl"9 SS H s-.11 .... r,..
TOOAY Se<Olld ._ l :IJp.m. 2.J
l'•tDAY
l"lrll 1119'1 2:.Ua.m. 4,9
"lrll low IO:Ue.m. 0.1
5-( oncl """ S:Up.m. u * ....... •iM.,m. 1,4
Sun NU IOdaJ S:• 1>.m., rlNt Fri·
day•:06a.m. ~ llQ "" 'n , tl:'7 a.m., rise• 111t1 a.m.
-~ IMC
..... , ___ ..,...._ ________ ~-.. ·-------·· ·-........
..................... .-.~;.,,,-,,....,,. ....
' '
6' A calendar th at keeps you
on sc hedule.
6' A weights and measures chart
that helps you convert.
6' A checking account th at pays
you interest.
" For yo u sports fan s, an Angel
game schedule.
~ And a handsome check book
cover and wallet, to help you
keep it all together.
Come in and help us celebrate
the grand opening of our new
offices in Costa Mesa and
Anaheim. ·
We're having a party and
we've got a present for you.
A beautifully crafted check ,
book cover and wallet com·
bination with enough
pockets to keep
everything in its place.
And while you're
here. open up
your interest bear-
ing checking
account.• and we'll
give you a check book
to put in your tree check boo
cover and wallet combination.
ANAHEIM OFFICE
• $2000 Minimum Balance Reciulred
tor• Frff Checking Account and Loan A.uoclatlon
2100 E•tl l<atell• Bou1tv1rd
Anehetm, CIMtoml• 92808
(714) 971-9174
•No Minimum Bal•~ Requlrtd
for• Free Cn.ck1ng ~1 For I Nmtt9d time orly.
,,_,...., _____ ...,._. __ .__.__. __ ··-~· .......... -..... -...... -.......... ·-
Anti-busilfg forces hOil ruling
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Opp0-
nentl ol forced busLnc reacted
ecataUcally to a atate Supreme Court deelaiOA that could be the
death blow to the Loa Anceles
Unlfled School District "s man-
datory lnteiration program.
"I'm t.brllled, l'm eicited, I ·
don't know what to aay." school
board president Roberta Weln·
traub said Wednesday after
learning that the hi1h court had
let stand an appeals court ruling
upboldin& the state's anti-buaing
amendment, Proposition 1, and
its application In the Los
An1teles school district.
But Superior Court Judie PauJ
Egly called it "crazy."
''IT'S SOMETHING I didn't ex·
peel. I won't comment further,"
said Egly, who bad spent years
overseeing the development of
the school district's integration
plan as the resuJt of a 1963 civil
rights lawsuit.
The Supreme Court in San
Francisco denied without com·
ment a petition by the American
Civil Liberties Union to throw
out the Court of Appeal ruling,
although Chief Justice Rose Bird
would have granted the hearing.
The ACLU aaJd lt would COD'I·
ment on the rulln1 and on
whether tbe case would be
pursued ln federal court at a
news copf erence today.
But state Sen. Alan Robbins,
D-Van Nuys, author of Propoel·
tion 1 -the so-called RobbinJ
Amendment -aaJd the measure
was worded in such a way that lt
could not be overturned at the
federal level.
"This was our bluest bur·
dle," he said. "We have a very
liberal Supreme Court in the
state of California, and now even
they've found that mandatory
busing is unconstitutional."
"l'M THE ·happiest person in
California," Robbins said. Mrs.
Weintraub, who leads an antJ-
busing majority on the school
board, said the district's 2~·
year-old forced busing program
would be ended "as soon .. s
humanly possible" and called a
special board session for
tonight.
''This is the most exciting
news in my life," she said. ''I'm
so excited for the kids and the
parents and the schools."
"It'• a wondertul victory for
all of us who worked on the Rob-
bin• amendment," Robbins said.
"It'• etterythinc we could have
possibly wanted, it's a dream
come true.
11NOW WE can devote our
schools to education, we can end
foTced busing, we can take
mlUlons of dollars that right now
is being spent on buses and bus-
ing and use it for education."
Robbins said the district
would not lose millions of dollars
in federal funds earmarked
specifically for integration pro-
grams.
"We'll continue to use it for
voluntary programs," he said.
''We're going to prove that
voluntary integration .can pro-
duce more integration than
forced busing. Once parents
know that they don't have to bus
their kids, we're going to get rid
of the bitterness and resentment
around busing and they'll be re·
ceptive to busing their kids
shorter distance and other pro·
grams."
P llOPOSIT ION I , passed
overwhelmingly by voters i~
1979, ban state courta from 10·
Ing beyond federal guidelines in
aaal1ninl pupils ln desegrega-
tion cases on the basis of race. It
says mandatory busing can only
·be imposed in districts where
se1regation has been inten-
tional
In a ruling last Dec. 19, the ap-
peals court found that Proposi·
lion 1 does not violate federal
law, that integration in Los
Angeles schools was based on
residential patterns and was not
intentional, and that the district
therefore was not required to
maintain it.a mandatory busing
program.
SINCE THE appeals court rul-
ing, the school board has been
planning for an end to forced bus·
ing, which now affects about
23,000 of some 530,000 students in
the 600-square-mile district, the
nation's second largest.
Although the district's first
mandatory program was im-
plemented in 1978, the legal bat-
tle over integration in Los
Angeles schools dated back to
1962.
State cracks caviar black market
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -State fish and game officials, look·
ing out for the welfare of California's sturgeon population, are
cracking down on a gourmet black market that provides caviar to
those who crave it.
Four agents seized 65 pounds of the black fish eggs from a San Francisco oyster merchant as part of a drive to wipe out the Ulegal
trade, a fish and game official said Wednesday.
T he roe, carefully packed in 130 eight-ounce jars, was valued
at $6,500.
State traft•lt .,,..,.,. ~
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Transportation Com-
mission says that all state and local transportation services must
be cut unless new revenues are found.
Commission Chairman Dean Meyer commented on the draft b1enmal report to the Legislature that the cuts would affect every-
thing from urban bus systems to country roads.
In a statement accompanying Wednesday's draft report,
Meyer said, "It is not a ques -
the buses and coaches needed to keep up our transit services. If we
do not get it, that wiU hurt the elderly, the handicaooed. the low·
income workers, and the commuters who rely on transit."
1'aft Bout'" appeal detllftl
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Manson family member Leslie Van
Houten's bid to overturn her murder conviction has been denied by
the California Supreme Court.
Miss Van Houten had claimed the verdict should be set aside
because gruesome photographs, including those from a crime she
was not involved in, were viewed as evidence
by the jury.
She was convicted in 1971, along with
Charles Manson and two other family mem·
bers, in the slaying of grocery executive Leno
LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, on two
counts of murder and one count of conspiracy
to commit murder.
Orange crush
Pico, a chimp with a c ircus performing in Santa Monica
this week, knows how to take a nutrition break. He calm·
ly makes short work of an orange by biting into the fruit
C top), draining the juice (center>. and attacking the skin
<bottom).
AP) With more one lane of the highway.
tion of being unable to afford
new freeways. The message NEWS BRIEFS ... is that we cannot keep up
what we have now, and that
will hurt everyone.
.. "We need a bituon dollars more in the next five years to buy
All were sentenced to death, but the
penalty was set aside when the California
Supreme Court ruled the state capital punish·
ment law was unconstitutional. The sen·
tences then automatically became life terms. VAHMOUTEN
to reach the area
by Friday. s te transportation
officials hav built a lOO·yard-
long earthen wall along Pacific
Coast High y to halt a minor
rockslide that forced closure of
"It's nothing major. just a
dribble of rocks. it's more an·
noying than anything ," said
state Department of Transporta•
tion spokesman Mark Watts.
Art Show
Huntington Center daily thru Sun.
S•rYJce f1f'T'illll' S•ans •' vou, 0ao,
IUlf 510'• Pltea,est VOVf Artll
COSTA .... 641-1289
1S2tN-INYd,
MISSION v!U0495..()4()1
2922C:.-~ ....
th• 00... ,..., et A•wy "'""' I
Tl RES-R-us
ly
AL
HOLLOWAY
We 'd be better off if we
retained more of what we
learn and less of what we
eat
Our friend says his finan·
cial condition 1s about
average Worse than last
year . better th an next
year ..
Kids grow up so quickly
One day you look at your
empty gas gauge and re-
alize they're teenagers
••
New employee to boss:
"Well. if l can't have a
raise. how about the
same pay more of'len?"
••
Truth Is not only
stranger than rictlon
these days · it's a lot
cleaner. ..
You 'll alway& be
"someone special" when
)'OU do bulioela with Tire
City. Wbe'ft uked you may I tell•~ "Yea.J bava a 1
rrtend that'• ln the tire
bu•lna1."
do-it-yourself
KITCHEN DESIGN
SEMINAR
Free design kit upon registration
B ring your measurements to design school
S imple as A. B. C. .
LIMIT 8 ,ER CLASS • CALL HOW FOR RESERV A TIOMS
t:11ro-.~crican Kitchen & Rath~
1741 Westcliff Drive, Newport Beach
Open 9·5 Mon.· Fri. Sat. 10·3 714-631-7032
CLOSING CLOSING
SALE SALE
AGA JOHN ORIENT AL RUGS
is closing their branch
in Newport Beach
AH Oriental Rugs reduced for clearance
Chinese, l n~an, Pakistan, Persian, Romanian
1000 Bristol St. No.
PICllCI Newport
NEWPORT tiACH
851-0864
-1 lrbtol Mo.
..,
Gourfltd fAl/fee SW,,,.
l 5 Con ventefll LocatloC'l s
Huntington Beach
Pedftc Coaat Hwy So. of Pier
Newport Beach
1400 P8d8c Coatt Hwy·
'( L. M. BOYD )
INFORMS In lh• Daily Plllt
•
\.
Cll~IVICJNCJS
SA..VE
E!Cl%
A..NCJ
4Cl%
Today through Saturday, th 1 unparalleled
beauty of diamonds Is yours at remarkable saving$.
Here, we list only a few examples of savings.
HUISMAN DIAMONDS-the world's most brllllant diamonds-are reduced tor the
first time ever. Available exclusively at Bullocks Wllshlre, save twenty percent on
these exquisite 144-faceted diamond stud earrings and pendants set In 18K gold .
For example: Stud earrings totallng .25 ct., reg. $725. Now S580. Stud earrings
totaling .SO ct .. reg. $1590. Now 11272. Pendant, .50 ct., reg. $3965. Now $3172.
TWENTY l'E~CENT SAVINBS on a select group of diamond solltalre rings, brooches
and pendants. Examples lncJude: Brooch formed of eighteen marquise and thirty·
one round diamonds. total weight appx. 7.5 ct., set ln platinum, reg . $16.250.
Now 111,000.Solttalre rlng ,1.31 ct.set In 14K Wht .gold. reg.$8000.Now SMOO.
FOlfTY l'ElfCENT SAVINGS on a dazzling aelectlon of hoop earrings, clutter rings,
bractlet• and necklaces. Examples lncfude: hOOO earrings, eight diamonds total
weight appx •. 22 ct., set In 14K gold. reg. $960. Now U70. ltallan 18K QOld
bracelet wtth thirty slngle cut diamonds. total weight appx .. 25ct .• llO· $1 JSO.
Now 17&0.
Representatlvt selection In fine Jewelry
~~ llOC~5 WI l~U I Rb
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH. 83 futllon lallnd 7&9-t211. Mon · F1t 10·9. Sat to S, Sun 12·5
..
..
• ... , ...
~
'" .... .,,.
.,, ,.
'I
•
Housing proposal
~.needs more study
Irvine R.nch Water Distrkt dii'ecton are comkler· 'ln1 financial anlstance for ..vater diltriet employe• to
iQe'enable tbem to take up realdeaee in lrYtne. •ir~ Water Diatrlct General Manaaer Arthur Brulaaton
said the employee benefit it needed to attract . ldlh~ ~uallty protessionala and to lllure their •cceutbWty ln ..,,.\1me of emerfency. He not.et that many major com·
.'ll•panies in Orange County have 1lmilar policies. ~ 1 However, he admits he doeen 't know what the f)Ollcy .
"'•'~ill do to the district's budget:· •. . Before directors vote on the matter. they should have
• ., before them a close estimate or what the employee
benefit would cost and how t.hll cost would affect water
and sewer rates. '·· In a sense, the water district ii in competition with :·~'private companies in the labor market. It may be forced to
• >J off er a housing assistance policy in order to stay corn·
':.'petitive with them. .
'""' However. the water district isn't a private company
.atjlnd It has an obligation to protect the interests of lts
ratepayers -the pwblic. It shouldn't approve the housing
. ., assistance policy without knowina its full economic impact.
·:··Sunirne r school funds
~-: Irvine students will have a chance to attend a com·
; prehensive summer school pro~ram this year, but in ~ some cases they or their parents will have to come up
. with approximately $50 in tuition.
! The Irvine Unified School District trustees have de·
, cided to allow the District Advisory Forum, a non.profit
• parents' group, to run the progra m. Under state law, ~ school districts can't manage educational programs in
which tuition is charged.
Under current plans, the forum will hire instructors to
teach tuition-paying students in basic and extended skills
for grades 1·6. fine arts for grades 1-8. practical arts for
grades9-12: and enrichment classes for grades 9-12.
Additionally, students can enroll free of charge in a t number of classes to be funded through state and federal
· sources such as remedial education, migrant education and
classes for graduating seniors.
The District Advisory Forum s hould make every ef·
fort to secure private donations to allow for a tuition sub·
sidy for children who'd Like to attend summer school but
can't afford it. Private donations for summer school have
been gathered in the past and the effort should be re·
newed.
Summer school s hould not be an elitist affair open
only to the well-to·do .
Too Dlnch service?
~
The City or Irvine has gone into the birthday party
business.
For $50 per party. residents can avail themselves of a
complete ··11appy Birthday" package at Turtle Rock
Community Park. including a birthday cake. party
· fa vors, a decorated room and a city worker to supervise
.. 20 children between the ages of 4 and 12.
\ Undoubtedly the city's Community Services Depart·
ment had only good intentions when it began the program ~ in January to better utilize the community center.
But already there are problems. At $50 a party, the
department is 1ust breaking even and it's expected the
fee will have to go up to $75 by the end of this year.
Private operators say they can put on a similar party
: for $50 or less Perhaps it would be better to leave things
· like this to private enterprise.
. When government agencies get involved, a project in·
: ,.evitably grows like Topsy and soon needs more equip·
. ; ment, more personnel and more investment And the
·=-~Community Services Department's $1.2 million budget is
: :: only 21 percent self ·sustaining as it is.
• • If it's a question of utilizing the center, wh y couldn't
': :pa rents just pay a nominal fee for use of the space -or
: "book it for free and take care of their own party fare
and supervi sion.,
~ .
~ Opm1ons expressed m the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
~ Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
; art•sts Reader comment is •nv1ted. Add(ess The Daily Pilot. P.O
~ Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 .
\ .
. Boyd! Compute rs
:-By L.M. BOYD
: Computers can play chess.
~ do high math. process words.
:• recognize speech. compose
:· music of sorts. analyze
•' s tatis tics, or in brie f, ~ duplicate countless functions
~ ,of the human mind. But
~ ;there's one thing they can't
.~,--do . They can't gene r a te
: ~humor. not jokes. as it were. ~~Curious, that. Aln'lost all of
~~your better computer pro·
~ .~rammers themselves ex·
~ ~ibit considerable spon-~ \aneous humor in their own
' conversations. They seem to $ have a highly s harpened
, sense of the ridiculous. But i they cannot program that In· i to their devices.
t s :· ... ~ t ;
Q. What's the difference
between a "wild animal
~amer" and a "wild animal
.trainer?"
•j A. No real difference.
pome experts in that game,
lllllY SUI
f I
One lt~m we don't buy
any more Is cotton.
Just save the wad that
tllla out pill bolllea.
Come to think of it,
we're paylna a preUy
stiff price for that cot ..
l ~. t.on. too.
like Clyde Beatty, chose to
make a distinction. Beatty
called himself a trainer, not
a tamer, to push his point
that wild animals remain un·
tamed so dangerous, even
though taught to do tricks.
Showmanship.
Old 1 tell you there's room
enough for 37 ,000 people to
stand together on a U.S. foot-
ball field?
Tbe typical lO·gallon hat,
bear In mind, holds about
three fourths of a gallon.
Q. Is there any continent
where thue are no but-
terflles1
A. Only Antarctica.
Tbit cleanup In the govern·
ment'• bureaucracies bas
been underway for quite
some Ume, evidently. Report
is that the number or
employees fired for lncom-
peteace has gone up fifteen·
fold since passaae of the
Civil Service Reform Act In
1978.
Each of the 6.~ flJer.a ln
the Confederate Air Force -
lOS World War II fighUn1
aircraft -bold• the ranlt
lher1Ln of colone1. Kentucky-
type nomenclature.
On tbe \wo hind lee• ot a
malt plalypu• are hollow
1pura, lite fup. from whJch
tbat beast can rtl1a1e
venom.
The Con1l(tutlon of the
Unlled States 'efeacribel taat
a slave bt ~ltd u lhfee. flftha ot a penoa.
'"
Thomai P. HaltV/PUbtllhtr ThlWNI t<..vll/Ultor
81'1Nl'I Krelblch/Edhort11 Pat1 •ctltor
CIA shadow h11rts vol11nteers '
W ASlllNOTON -An internal Whtie Houle ruror 11 bolUn1 UJ>
over the ccntrov1nt1l telectlon ot a former m\Uta.ry lnlelll1eoce
offleer to
head AC ·
TtON. the
mulli -
branched
1ood·worka
agency. The
move could
Jeopardise
the safely of
American
volunteers
abroad.
For ACfJON's most celebral·
ed ott1prin1 is the Peace Corps,
whose thousands of overseas
volunteers mlahl suffer lf there
la the shadow or a susplciat1 that
Mailbox
they are even tetnOUJly cooneel·
ed with U S. lnte11t11nu ac:·
Uvllles.
Antl·Amerlc:an elements,
Jealous of the CoodwUI the Peace
Corps volunteers have earned
through their selfleH elloru to h~lp tho poor and Illiterate.
would like nothing better than to
smear them as spies.
This is no idle concern;
Kidnapping and death threats
have resulted from scurrilous
rumor campaigns, linklna the
Peace Corps volunteers to the
Central Intelligence Agency or
other U .S . es pi o nage
organiiations.
One example of this danger
was Richard Starr. the Peace
Corps botanist who was held ror
three years by eomanuallt
1uurlllu lD Cok>mbla, uoUI he
wH rantomed a year a10. One
reHon M was kidnapped wu
because hJ1 captors au.a~ted
he wu a · CJA •cent u1ln1 the
Peace Corpe as a cover. He wu
repeatedly lnterroeated on thla
point durlns t\11 capttv1ty ln the
Andean jungle.
GRANTED, the man choaen to
bead ACTION, Tom Pauken,
had only a relatively brief
connection with intelligence
work. During his service in the
Army. be was an intelligence
officer stationed in Vietnam. He
stoutly denies any C IA
involvement ; he told m y
associates -Jaclt Mitchell and
Indy Badbwar he did only
routine reNattb work on Horth
Vietnamese leaders.
Bul tbe Peace Corps has
hlttorle:ally been careful t.o keep
both tu oUlclala and Its
volunteen free of any esplonaie 1
taint. Uke Caesar'• wife. Peace
CorJK penonnel must be above
auaplclon -for their own
prot.ectloo if oothJnt else. This
hat been the policy ever since
the agency wu founded Wlder
President Kennedy.
ACTION oUlclala and some
White House insiders were •
appalled at Pauken 's
nomlnaUon. And though it ts his
lntelllgence background that
upsets them most, they were
also dis1runUed by the manner
of hia aelection. Pauken's name
wasn 't even on the list of
possible nominees until the last
minute. the critics claim.
MOREOVER, he was cleared
by an old friend, White House
Counsel Fred Fielding. who
survived the Wate rgate era
without taint. Fielding insisted
that while he was aware of the
m isgivings s urrounding the
choice of Pauken . they were
"not a problem.··
Pauken , an amiable
36-year-old Texan, figured in a
minor controversy in 1971, when
he was associate director of the
White House Fellows program.
He was roundly denounced for
writing an article in U.S. News
a nd World Report on an
unofficial trip to the Soviet
Union
That little·noticed internecine
wrangle doesn 't enter into
Pauken·s present situation. It's
h is intelligence past t hat
troubles key administration and
agency officials and could
haunt the Peace Corps m the
years to come
Reagan should re-read campaign rhetoric
To the Editor:
Ah, the foibles that fructify in
our free-lunch society! Many
believe that our government
"should be run like private in· dustries." Therein lies a prob-
lem : the same lethal met.bods
already apply to both 1ovem-
m en t and business. Govern-
ment Is broke, and so is a lead·
log segment of private industry,
the auto industry. In govern·
ment, it's the same old Jaces,
growing ratter and sleeker and
less responsive to.our freedoms ;
j u st like Ford , G.M. and
Chrysler, whose products grow
bigger. ratter and sleeker and
more expensive. while buyers
flock to the s maller . more
stylish, more economical im·
ports.
Now the "big three" are urg-
ing us to eschew the foreign
beauties and buy the ugly
domestic limitations; even de·
manding quotas and restraints
on foreign compel1tors. So, what
does Ford do <the company that
put the world on box-cars with
four wheels>? lt styles a hodge-
podge of parts and ideas from
a round the globe, calls it '"the
world car ," and invades the
foreign markets. A dear friend
used to quote· misquote: "Oh in·
consist.ency, thou art a jewel.
ANYWAY, who dares buy a
domestic car, what with recaUs
by the millions as a way of life?
And those rebates, why not just
knock the price down to an af-
fordable level? Then there's the
oil Industry spokes-whatever,
who tries to justify a continuing
gas price rise, even in the face of an acknowledged oil surplus .
Quoth he: "Certain costs must
first filter all the way up to the
retail pumps, regardless of the
oil glut." Whal costs? These in·
vol ved in tr~cking gluttonous
proflts all the way to lhe baruu?
And, J call attention to the UJ.
conceived notion, attributed to
President Re agan, that "Social
Security participation should be
voluntary for those who can
prove they can provide for their
own retirement." Interpreted,
that means that the millions.
who are now stuck with lower
and middle level salaries and
wages, will pay the entire cost of
all the S.S. rip-orrs and benefits
paid out to the millions uf 000·
contributors, and the rich will
eacape all costs scot-free, grow·
Ing richer thereby. Some of the
latter will still reap S.S. benefits
on a grand 1cale due to put
partJclpatJon. J cannot believe
that President Reagan wlU thu.
Mt ray all of us poor ones who
made him rich and put him in
the White House.
Ye ... lr, Camp David i1 infest·
ed wltll a malaise -le1acy al
ll1 f orrner tenant, t h e
Plainsman. President Jlea1an,
wbo quJck.ly caught on to the
ldea of tuah retreat&, also aeems
to favor tncreutni the federa1
fa.a lax. He abould, ln all bcoet·
1 . re-read bi1 camp1l1n
rhetoric u a viable antidote to
the D\alalM ol Camp Dnld. P.F. BORCOMAH
........ , ... '!
To the Editor:
What Stop Pornography in
Newport and the Daily Pilot
editorial evaded in their stale·
ment.s about Newport's one and
only "adult book store," Talk ol
the Town, is the fundamental
fact that none of us were bom
with hang-ups about our bodies.
In Laguna Beach. which likes
to think itself to be an Art
Colony, the high school has
banned exhibition of a nude
sculpture created by one of the
world's most foremost represen-
tational sculptors, Donal Hord.
The Daily Pilot. which report-
ed that story about that ban.
published a front page picture of
the sculpture. ableit , with· a
censored s ign hiding that
sculpture's genitali a .
NOT TOO LONG ago, Laguna
had no ordinance banning nudity
on the beach and the City Coun·
cil was well on its way to declar·
ing clothing optional along 1ts
tidelands, which was supported
by a special survey of beach·
user opinion by the University of
California Irvine.
But. by the time or that or-
dinance·s second reading, the
Council chambers were glutted
b y screaming predictions of
Sodom and Gomorrah that begat
a law that states a kid can walk
around the beach nude until the
dawn of the 11th birthday
afte r that, it ·s indecent eit ·
posure
How do you ex plain to some-
one who's been believing all
the lime they've been decent
that now certain parts of the
body are not to be seen?
Travel due west to some of the
yet untouched Pacific Islands
and the natives there wonder
why the self-touted civilized
make all that fuss. The answer
i1' the senseless shame and de-
basement Imposed upon too
much ol the world over 2,000
years that continues to be
jammed into loo many un-
protesUn& minds by a fractional.
neurotic fringe engendering a
love-hale psychosis about
human beauty that makes
billions for magazines aAd mov-
ies and the moral majority.
BRUCE HOPPING . .,~ .. ~ .....
To the Edit.or:
How embarrasalng for
Barbara Jobbl.na' children! She
an'nounced to aU Dally Pilot
·readen (Mailbox, March 5) that
her children "could not read nor
add more than one figure" when
they were admitted t.o Orange
Coaat College. She uya th•
"burden ol educatin1 them" was
given to the colle1e.
I'm a graduate of OCC, but
waa unaware of auch remedial
cour1e1 be.I.QI offered. COW'MI
are offered to bring a student's
Milla up to a hither level, but
they do oot belln at the Illiterate
level lmpUed by Mn. Jobblna.
Tbert are bHlc entrance re-
qu.lremenll t.o be met by eolflr· •·
ing students, and her children
mu s t have be e n taught
something along the way.
She also exagger ates when she
claims no teacher encouraged,
praised , or inspired her
children. That is impossible to
believe.
Teachers do teach, but stu-
dents must want to learn, and
parents must reinforce that
philosophy al home and instill
respect for education at an early
age.
One of Mrs . Jobbins' most re-
vealing statements was, "'We
finally tried tutoring them
ourselves . . ·· A parent should
always want to help the child
who is having trouble with some
aspect of school. Teachers try lo
point this out at conferences. but
are sometimes rebuffed. The
parent's ego then becomes in·
volved. and instead of accepting
the advice in the caring spirit it
was intended, the parent takes it
as personal criticism and usual·
ly lashes out at the teacher and
the school. These parents refuse
to accept any responsibility for
their own child's learning.
I AGREE with Mrs. Jobbins
that money alone does not im-
prove teachers or schools, but ir-
responsible attacks like hers do
nothing to further the goal of
education.
Her ideas on "pay·as-you·go"
schools have some merit and
have been proposed many times.
They have been used in some
states. even some counties of
California. This is called the
Voucher System, and is not a
new idea.
Her thinking, however , is ii·
logical and faulty when she pro·
poses that the voucher system
be used only by people with
school-age children. "Seems fair
to me to pay only for what I
use." Does this mean she wUJ
'not support hospitals. because
she's not ill today -nor prisons.
because she hasn't committed a
crime and needs no protection
from those that do -nor cancer
research, because she doesn't
have it -not fire/police protec·
lion on any other street but her
own, etc.?
I will close my letter as she
began hers -"a taxpayer, on-
going college student, and
parent,'' and, I'm proud t.o say,
a teacher!
ARMIDA MILLIGAN r.,...,... ..
To tbe Editor:
The cit.liens are right to be wor·
rted about the pornographic book
Quotes
"Often we have to choose the
lesser <A two evils. The 1ovem·
roeot lo El Salvador deserves
support in terms of military aid.
That doeln't men tbe Softl'D·
ment ln El Salvador ls aorellc. I
doo 't know any government that
ls.'' -~ W. Lefe"1', the
Rea1an aclmlnlstratlon'I new
asslatut aecreta.ry ot au.c. f«
human riJ(hta.
store here in Newport. Young peo·
pie are very susceptible to the
emotions raised by the materials
offered in these shops . I'm not too
old to remember myself when I
was impressionable in this
r espect, but then, too, 1 re·
member that a better known man
than I acknowledged lusting after
the flesh in Playboy Magazine !
The city is right to be concerned
but City Attorney Coffin errs in
his efforts to have the porno·
graphk store moved to the busi-
ness district which is being zoned
for these·· adult'· businesses.
l 'LL TELL you why. I'm an
older man and I've traveled
around a bit. I've noticed in my
travels that the worst thing than
can happen lo a city is to have an
isolated, built-up business district
where aJ I the anti·social elements
of society are segregated. Now
Newport already has a large and
growing business center. To
move the pornographic store
there would be a mistake that has
been made over and over again in
all our major cities from New
York to Los Angeles.
What happens is this. Large
business districts are built up but
these places are not pleasurable
for walking or spending time
there. So the law-abiding citizens
run in and out of the district for
their business needs. Meanwhile,
city offi cials try to segr egate un -
desirable elements into an area
that is already isolated from the
better elements of society. The re·
suit is decay that starts from the
center and works its way out. Of.
ficials should work to close the
shop and not create a no-man's
rand in the center of our city.
GEO. BRUMMELL
AIN .,wtl ..
To the Editor:
It seems to me that your
newspaper and others have paid
no attention to what the John
Wayne Airport expansion will do
to Santa Ana. I mean Santa Ana
north of tbe airport and oot San-
ta Ana Heights." Is this because
you think the residents in our
part of the county are less im· •
portent than those south of the
airport? U you lived in my part 1 of town you would hear noise
that you could not stand.
Another thing is that the one
ton of jet pollution dropped by
the airplanes and described In 1
the county's slide show probably
falls on Santa Ana. la that ·
because the county thinks we '
are not lmportnnt? We don't ~
want cancer that ls caused by ~
the fuel that fall1 from Ulete t
planes either . I clo tblnk you II
newapafer people should at t
le11t tel our side of the airport ~ problem. A. MARTINEZ
• I '--1~ '""",..._.an~. TM,..._ W I • ConOefl~• .. "' ... ., ••"""'* ..... " ,...."'"' " -.... w ....... .. f lvt'I erftl(t. All leU~• lllwtl llKl-,~ .. l'Mlilllt .... 8 W -"'9P .. • . "' """"" If __ ..... ~ .... C""t· • .., .. ,...~.....,._, .w..:9-..~ :.r= -~-=:i: ¥ef'lll~----
Otwlge Cout DAILY PILOT/'f'hured~, March 12, 1911
.
Anti-busing forces hail ruling
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Opp0-
nenb of forced bwilna reacted
ecataUcally to a state Supreme
Court declalon that could be the
death blow to' the I.a. Anaeles
Unified School District's man-
datory intelJ'allon program.
''I'm thrilled, I'm excited, I ·
don't knqw what to say,•· school
board president Roberta Wein-
traub said Wednesday after
learning that the high court bad
let stand an appeals court ruling
upholding the state's anti-bu.sing
amendment, Proposition 1, and
its application in the Los
Angeles school district.
But Superior Court Judge Paul
Egly called it "crazy."
"IT'S SOMETHING I dldn'tex·
peel. I won't comment further,"
said Egly, who had spent years
overseeing the development of
the school district's integration
plan as the result or a 1963 civil
rights lawsuit.
The Supreme Court in San
Francisco denied without com-
ment a petition by the American
Civil Liberties Union to throw
out the Court or Appeal ruling,
although Chier Justice Rose Bird
would have granted the hearing.
The ACLU 11ld lt would com-
ment on the rulins and on
whether the cue would be
pursued In federal court at a
news conference today.
But state Sen. Alan Robbins.
D-Van Nuys, author of Proposi-
tion 1 -the so-called Robbins
Amendment -saJd the meuure
was worded in such a way that it
could not be overturned a.t the
federal level.
"This was our biggest hur-
dle," he said. ·•we bhe a very
liberal Supreme Court in the
state of Calllornia, and now even
they've found that mandatory
busing is unconstitutional."
"l'M THE happiest person in
California," Robbins said. Mrs.
Weintraub, who leads an anti-
busing majority on the school
board, said the district's 2'h-
year-old forced busing program
would be ended "as soon as
humanly possible" and called a
special board session for
tonight.
''This is the most exciting
news in my life," she said. "I'm
so excited for the kids and the
parents and the schools."
"It'• a wonderful victory for
all of us who worked on.the R()b.
bins amendment," Robbi06 saJd.
"It's everythln1 we could have
possibly wanted, it's a dream
come true.
"NOW WE can devote our
schools to education, we can end
forced busing, we can take
millions of doUars that rlaht now
is being spent on buses and bus-
ing and use it for education."
Robbins said the district
would not lose millions of dollars
in federal funds earmarked
specifically for integration pro-
grams.
"We'll continue to use 1t for
voluntary programs," he said.
"We're going to prove that
voluntary integration can pro-
duce more integration than
forced busing. Once parents
know that they don't have to bus
their kids, we're going to get rid
of the bitterness and resentment
around busing and they' II be re·
ceptive to busing their kids
shorter distance and other pro-
grams."
PROPOSITION 1, passed
overwhelmingly by voters ill
1979, ban state courts from go-
lnJ beyond federal guidelines in
as11l1nln1 puplla in deaegrega-
llon cues on the basls of race. It
says mandatory busing can only
be imposed lo distrlcll where
segregation bas been inten-
tional.
In a ruling hut Dec. 19, the •J>·
peals court found that Proposi-
tion 1 does not violate rederal
law, that integration in Los
Angeles schools was based on
residential patterns and was not
intentional, and that the district
therefore was not required to
maintain its mandatory busing
program.
SINCE THE appeals court ruJ-
lng, the school board has been
planning for an end to forced bus·
ing, which now arfects about
23,000 of some 530,000 students in
the 600-square-mile district, the
nation's second largest.
Although the district's first
mandatory program was im·
plemented in 1978, the legal bat-
ti e over integration in Los
Angeles schools dated back to
1962.
State cracks caviar black market
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Stale fish and game officials, look·
ing out for the welfare of California's sturgeon population, are
cracking down on a gourmet black market that provides caviar to
those who crave it.
F~ur agents seized 65 pounds of the black fish eggs from a San
Francisco oyster merchant as part of a drive to wipe out the illegal
trade. a fish and game official said Wednesday.
The roe, carefully packed in 130 eight-ounce jars. was valued
at $6,500.
State I ran•lt •llUltes U'ftl
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The California Transportation Com-'
mission says that all state and local transportation services must
be cul -unless new revenues are found .
Commission Chairman Dean Meyer com mented on the drart
b1enntaJ report lo the Legislature that the cuts would arfecl every-
thing from urban bus systems to country roads.
In a statement accompanying Wednesday's draft report,
Meyer said, "It is not a ques·
the buses and coaches needed to keep up our transit services. If we
do not get it. that will hurt the elderly, the handicaooed. the low-
income workers, and the commuters who rely on transit "
\Ian Bouten ap,,.al .,.Wei
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Manson family member Leslie Van
Houten's bid to overturn her murder conviction has been denied by
the California Supreme Court.
Miss Van Houten had claimed the verdict should be set aside
because gruesome photographs, including those from a crime s he
was not involved in, were viewed as evidence
by the jury.
She was convicted in 1971 , along with
Charles Manson and two other family mem·
bers, in the slaying of grocery executive Leno
LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, on two
counts of murder and one count of conspiracy
to commit murder.
Orange crush
Pico, a chimp with a circus performing in Santa Monica
this week. knows how to take a nutrition break. He calm-
ly makes short work of an orange by biting into the fruit
(top >, dra ining the juice (center), and attacking the skin
(bottom).
Wall to stop slide?
MALIBU <AP> With more one lane of the highway
lion of being unable to afford
new freeways. The message NEWS BRIEFS ... 1s that we cannot keep up
what we have now, and that
~jJI hurt everyone.
··we need a billion dollars more in the next five years lo buy
All were sentenced to death, but the
penalty was set aside when tbe California
Supreme Court ruled the state capital punish-
ment law was unconstitutional. The sen-
tences then automatically became life terms. VAMMOYTEN
rain expected to reach the area
by Friday. stale transportation
officials have built a lOO·yard·
long earthen w4ll along Pacific
Coast Highway to halt a minor
rockslide that forced closure of
"It's nothing major. just a
dribble of rocks. it's more an·
noying than an ything," said
state Department of Transporta·
tion spokesman Mark Watts.
Art Show
Huntington Center
daily lhru Sun
l'\.'-HO·Hl.ATINO
So&•t • .,_. H••ttftt
S• l'C 111551
!>fot'l'C• f•tfte ~fl'l .. •I fOUt 0oot
tCelt StOff' Neatttl Vour Attt••
COSlA 11€1A641-1289
lUINo-111•d
MISSION ~95..()401
2~eo ........ c.,.. ... ...,
II•• '*to ,...., •I ... ..., Pkwy I
TIRES· R·US
~
HOLLOWAY
We 'd be better off if we
retained more of what we
learn and less of what we
eat ..
Our friend says has ri nan.
cial condition is about average. Worse than last
year. better than next
year ..
Kids grow up so quickly.
One day you look at your
empty gas gauge and re·
alize they're teenagers. ..
New employee to bo5s:
"Well. if r can't have a
raise. how about the
same pay more often?" ..
Truth Is not only
stranger than fiction
these days · it 's a lot
cleaner.
••
Yo1.1 'll alwa ys be
"aomeone 1peclaJ" wbea
you do buslneu with Tire
Clty. Wbenukedyoumayl tell anyone "Yee I have a
friend tbal'a ln the UN
bu.lneta."
'(
do-it-yourself
KITCHEN DESIGN
SEMINAR
Free design kit upon registration
Bring your measurements to design school
Simple as A. B. C.
LIMIT 8 PER CLASS • CALL MOW FOR RESERV A TIOHS
l·:11ro-Amcric11n Kitchen & Hath~
1741 Westctiff Drive, Newport Beach
Open 9-5 Mon.-Fn. Sat. 10·3 7.14-631-7032
CLOSING CLOSING
SALE SALE
AGA JOHN ORIENT AL RUGS
is closing their branch
in Newport Beach
All Oriental Rugs reduced for clearance
Chinese, lncfion, Pakistan, Persian, Romanian
I 000 Bristol St. Ho.
Plaza Newport
MEWPORT IE°ACH
851-0864
-1 lristol Ho.
""'t
Ooulfrtet fAJ1ee _,,,
Huntington Beach
Padftc ~Hwy So. of Pier
15 Convenl«flt Loe~•·
Newport Beach
1400 PKiftc Coett Hwy
-1!!!11
)
tNFORMS tn the
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TWENTY PERCENT SAVINGS on a select group of diamond solitaire rings. brooches
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BU llOC~5 WI lS~ IR~
NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH. 83 Faahlon laland 769-1211. Mon· Fri 10-9. Sat toe. Sun 12·&
.•
•I .
'•' .. . ,.
•'" •'" ••• '•' ''I.
I • ··" t•l
.. c -
~mergency; system
~,needs correction
·.u A nearifat&l epllode durlna a recent public meetln1
brou1ht out what appears to be • serious naw ln a
t:i' re1pome a&reem~t betweea fire deputmem. lD eo.ta
~Mesa and Newport Beach.
Minutes alter testif yiq at an airport nolae beart.nr at
Costa Mesa's Harper CommUDlty Center, a ~year-old
"'Jnan was stricken wltb a heart attack. 11, While &everol quick·thlnJdn1 persons started mouth· ;+o· mouth reauscitatlon and cardiac maa1a1e. one
1;• ,member of the audjence placed a call for help. i-.~ Remembering that Newport's Marinen flre station
JC;Was only three blocks away, he placed his emerr,ncy call
to NeWPOrt. Newport officials, though, told him he'd have
to call Costa Mesa. ,,.... According to officla1 log entries, it took five minutes
~~·for a Costa Mesa fire engine to arrive and an additional
"" three minutes before paramedics were on the scene. ·~~ Fire officials later explained that a jurisdictional ruJe·
•mfestrains one city from respondinJ to a call in the ~neighboring city unless the host city gives permission.
Further. fire officials said, a common desire between
·,,the two towns to institute an automatic response system,
·•;such as is used in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley,
··'is something city councilmen would have to approve.
It would appear that the time bas come for coun·
cilmen and firemen to put together an automatic
response system -and in a hurry.
W elconie addition I Costa Mesa dedicated a brand new 12.4 million
Neighborhood Community Center last weekend, an event
l that saw 400 people brave rain-threatening s kies to
welcome a new addition to the downtown area.
It'll be a month, though, before the auditorium's
: capacity audience of 1,100 can sit down. That's when the $ ·~hairs and othe r furnishings -on back-order -are ex-
1 -peeled to arrive. ~ ' Meanwhile. city Leisure Services personnel will bor· :f. row equipment from other centers around town to make
1 do for smaller gatherings in the three seminar rooms
~ housed in the new concrete edifice.
.., The space will be welc omed by many organizations .
4
t
t
looking for adequate meeting room at a nominal cost and
will give the city's senior citizen groups a place to call
home at last.
And it offers s pace for up to 500 diners to sit down at
one time in Costa Mesa, a feat duplicated only at South
Coast Plaza Hotel and the Estancia High School com·
mqns area, often unavailable because of school sessions.
The new downtown neighborhood structure also will
enable the city to offer 20 more recreational classes in ad·
di lion to the 40 already provided at s mall fees.
It's a welcome addition to a city that takes pride in
increased ser vices to its citizens .
Position puzzles .. t The position of teachers in the Newport-Mesa School
~ District's financia l crisis is confusing. ·
:: Their union is floating a request for cost-of ·Living in·
creases next school year ranging between 13.5 and 18.5
;: percent, plus increases in fringe benefits.
·: And the chie f negotiator for the teachers, who
:; aver age about $26,450 a year for 10 months' work right
.: now. insists the request is not a demand. He says only
·: that the teachers are entitled to that much.
·· The previous week another teacher leader suggested
•• .the district hold school six months instead of nine. This,
·: ;we nt the reasoning. would assure money for hiring
: ; teachers instead of depending on volunteers to handle .:~; som e enrichment prog r a ms expected to be cut from next N school year 's budget. ~ That raises the question of whether teachers would
~~.expect to be paid 10 months of salary for six months'
~ ~work . It's doubtful many would hold still for long if their ~ 1ncomes were cut a third t . The reaction of those who are facing lay-offs in the t fina ncially pressed district is understandable . They are
} wa tching careers dissolve before their eyes . t Regardless of the sympathy felt, it's difficult for
"" parents and tax payers to come away from the whole ~. school mess with a feeling that teachers are truly looking ~ for a reasonable solution to the district's money woes .
i.. •
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Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those ot the Da11y ·P1lot
l
Other views el(pressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-432L
• ,.
i ~ •' ~; ,.
Boyd/ Computers
, I By L.M. BOYD ~ f Computers can play chess,
~~do high math, process words,
~~ reco,nize speech, compose
;:~mus i c of sorts. analyze 1!~statistics , or in brief, ~ ~uplicate countJess functions ~ l>f the human mind . But ~ there's one thing they can't
~ do. They can't gene rate ~ humor, not jokes. as it were.
...,. Curious, that. Almost all of
-
\YOUr better computer pro-
grammers themselves ex·
bibit considerable spon·
taneous humor in their own
,conversations. They seem to :~ave a highl y sharpened . ,. ~
lllllY Ill
The Newport· Mesa
School District has
rinally found a way to
balance the budget;
close the neighborhood
schools, aa&ifn \be ltids
to the other side of
town, then char1e them
$20 a month for the bus
rlde. E.L.P
..
sense or the ridiculous. But
they cannot program that in·
to their devices.
Did l tell you there's room
enough for 37 ,000 people to
stand together on a U .S. foot·
ball field?
The typical IO-gallon hat,
bear in mind, holds about
three fourths of a gallon.
Q. What's the dicterence
between a ''wild animal
tamer" and a "wild animal
trainer?"
A . No real difference.
Some experts in that game,
like Clyde Beatty. chose to
make a distinclion. Beatty
called bimaell a trainer, not
a tamer, to push his point
that wild animals remain un·
tamed so dangerous, even
though taught to do tricka.
Showmanship.
Each of \be 8,500 men in
the Confederate Air Force -
105 World War II rilhting·
aircraft -holds the rank
therein of colonel. Kentucky·
type nomenclature.
On the two blod lt11 of a
male =t,pus are boll ow
.1pur1, t r-... from wbldl
that beast can relea1e
venom.
The Con1tJtutJon of the
UDlted Staie. erescribel that
a 1lave be counted aa three· n.ttb.1 of a penon.
e Thureday, March 12, 1811
Thomas P. H .. ey /PubUwr
Jack Anderson
CIA shadow hurts volunteers .
W ASHlNG'l'ON -AD lDlernal
WIUte Houle rwot la bot11nc up
ewer tbe coat1"0¥ersJal Mlectloe fl a lonmr m.Wta.ry tateW~
•f flcer to
llead AC ·
TJON, tbe
mu lti ·
branched
IOOd·VtOrkl
a1ency. The
move could
Jeopardhe
the safely or
American
volunteer•
abroad.
For ACTION's most celebrat·
ed offaprtna is the Peace Corpe.
whose thousands of oversea•
volunteers mllbt sutler 11 \here
11 the shadow of a auspiclon Ulat
Mailbox
Uae7 are evea remotely coueet·
ed wlth U.S. htle1U1enc. •c·
Urill•.
A•tl·Amerlcaa tlemenu,
Jealous of tbe loodwW tM Peace
Corpa volunteers tiave ea.med th~uch their aelfleaa eff orta to
help tbe poof and llllterato,
would Ute nothln1 betur than to 1mearthem auplea.
Tb ta la no ldl• concern:
Kldnappin1 and death th.reals
have resulted from scurrilous
rumor carnpai1n1, llnltinc lbe
Peace Corps vohmUen to the
Central loteWcence A1ency or
other U .S . e1piona1e ore anisalions.
One example of thls danger
was Richard Starr, the Peace
Corps botanist wbo was held for
lhree 1ear1 bf commual1t
J\l•rrillu ln Colombia, unW he
wu r11n10mecl a year aao. One
reaaoa be was kidnapped wu
becauae bis captort suspected
be WN 1 CIA a1ent ualq the
Peace Co~ aa a cover. He wu
repeatedly interro1atec1 on thlt
point durfne his captivity in the
Andeu Junile.
G&ANTEO, the man chosen to
head ACTION, Tom Pauken,
bad only a relatl vely brief
connection with intellicence
work. Owing hia service in the
Army. be wu an intelll1ence
officer 1tat.looed in Vietnam. He
stou tly denies any CIA
lnvolvemeqt ; h e told my
associates Jack Mitchell and
Indy Badbwar be did only
'fOUtlne ~ won oa Notth
Vletaameee leadena.
Bul the Peace Corp1 baa
bhtoric..Uy been ca.retu.l to lteep
both 1U officials and It•
volunteers ~ of any esplonqe
taint. Ulte Caesar'• wife, Peece
Corpa pel'ION\el must be above
1u1pJc1on -for tltelr own
protectJoo lf nothln1 else. Thil
baa been the policy ever since
the agency wu founded under
Prtaident Kennedy.
ACTION officials and 90me
White House in1ldera were
appalled at Pauken's
nomlnat.loo. And thoush It II bis
inte1U1ence bukground that
upsets them mo.t, they were
also diasnmtled by the manner
of hia selection. Pauken's name
wasn't even on the list of
possible nominees until lhe last
minute, the critics claim.
MOaEOVEa, be was cleared
by an old friend, White House
Counsel Fred Fielding, who
survived the Watergate era
without taint. Fielding insisted
that while he was aware of the
misgivings surrounding the
choice of Pauken, they were
''not a problem."
Pauken , an amiable
36-year·old Texan, figured in a
minor controversy in 1971, when
he was associate director of the
White Jfouse Fellows program.
He was roundly denounced for
writing an article in U.S. News
and World Report on an
unofficial trip to the Soviet Union
That little-noticed interoedne
wrangle doesn't enter into
Pauken's present situation. It's
his intelligenc e past that
troubles key administration and
age ncy officials -and could
haunt the Peace Corps in the
years to come.
Reagan should re-read campaign rhetoric
To the Editor:
Ah , ~ foibles that fructify in
our free-lunch society! Many
believe lhat our government
.. should be run like private in·
duatries... Therein lies a prob-
lem: the same lethal metboda
already apply lo both govem-
m en t and business. Govero·
ment ls broke, and so is a lead-
in1 se1ment of private industry.
the auto industry. In govern-
ment, it's the same old faces,
growing fatter and sleeker and
less responsive to our freedoms;
just like Ford. G.M. and
Chrysler. whose products grow
bi11er, fatter and sleeker and
more expensive. while buyers
flock to the s maller, more
stylish, more economical im·
ports.
Now the "big three" are urg.
ing us to eschew the foreign
beauties and buy the ugly
domestic limitations; even de·
manding quotas and restraints
on foreign competitors. So, what
does Ford do (the company that
put the world on box·cars with
four wheels)? It styles a hodge.
pod1e or parts and ideas from
around the globe, calls it ··~
world car," and invades the
foreign markets. A dear friend
used to quole·misquote: "Oh in-
consistency. thou art a jewel.
ANYWAY, who dares buy a
domestic car. what with recalls
by the millions as a way of life?
And those rebates. why not just
knock the price down to an al·
ford able level? Then there's the
oil industry spokes-whatever,
who tries to justify a continuing
gas price rise, even in the lace
of an acknowledged oil surplus.
Quoth he: "Certain costs m\13t
first filter all the way up to the
retail pumps, regardless of the
oil 1lut." What costs? These in·
volved in trucking gluttonowi
profits all the way to the banks?
And, I caJI attenUon to t.be ill-
coneelved notion, attributed to
Preaidenl Reagan, that "SociaJ
Security partlch>ation should be
voluntary for those who can
prove they can provide for their
own retirement." Interpreted,
that means that the millions,
who are now stuck with lower
and middle level salaries and
wages, will pay the entire ccel ot
all tbe S.S. rip-offs and benefits
paid out to the millioM of Dall·
cQntributon, and the rich will
escape au coats scot-free, grow-
lnc richer thereby. Some of the
latter will sUU reap S.S. benefits
on a 1ran<1 scaJe due to put
partJdpatioo. l cannot believe
that Pretldent Reagan will thus
betny all of u.s poor ones who
made him rich and put him in
the W~te Houae.
Yeulr, Camp David ls infest·
ed with a malaile -le1acy ol
Its f ormer tenant, the
PJahwnan. President Reagan,
wbo quickly cauibt on to the
kSea of IUlb retreats, also ... ma
to faYOr lncreaalq tbe federal
, .. to. Be abauld, tn all bonee·
t1, re·read bl• ta'::L:!1n
rbetortc u a Ylabl• an to
the malaise of Camp Darid.
8.P'. BORCOMAN
.... •• , •• 1
To the Edit.or:
What Stop Pornography m
Newport and the Daily Pilot
editoriaJ evaded in their stale·
menta about Newport's one and
only "adult book store," Talk of
tbe Town. ls the fundamental
fact that none of us were born
with bang-ups about our bodies.
In Laguna Beach, which likes
to think itself to be an Art
Colony, the high school has
banned exhibition of a nude
sculpture created by one ol the
world's most foremost represen·
tational sculptors. Donal Hord.
The Daily Pilot, which report·
ed that story about that ban,
published a front page pict\lre of
the sculpture; able il, with a
censored s ign hiding t hat
sculpture's genitaUa.
NOT TOO LONG ago, Laguna
had no ordinance banning nudity
on the beach and the City Coun-
cil was well on its way to declar·
Ing clothing optional along its
tidelands, which was supported
by a special survey of beach·
user opinion by the Uhiversity of
California Irvine.
But, by the time of that or·
dinance's second reading, the
Council chambers were glutted
by screaming predictions of
Sodom and Gomorrah that begat
a law that states a kid can walk
around the beach nude until the
dawn of the 11th birthday -
after that. it's Indecent e x·
posure.
How do you explain to some-
one who's been be lieving all
the time they've been decent
that now certain parts of the
body are not to be seen?
Travel due west to some of the
yet untouched Pacific Islands
and the natives there wonder
wby the self-touted civilised
make all that fuss. The answer
ta tbe senseless shame and de·
basement Imposed upon too
much ol the world over 2,000
years that continues to be
j,mmed into too many UD·
protesting minds by a fracUooaJ,
neurotic fringe engendering a
love-bale psychosis about
bum an beauty that makes
billions roe maga&i.nea and mov·
lea and tbe moral majority.
BRUCE HOPPlNG .., ... ,. ... "
To the F.ditor:
How embarrauing for
Barbara Jobbina' children! Sile
announced to all Dally Pilot
readen (Mailbox, March 5) that
her cblldren "could not read nor
add more than one n1ure" when
they were admitted to Oraqe
Coaat College. She 11y1 the
"burden of edueaUn1 \Mm" was
1tven to tbe co1Je1e. r•m a graduate ol occ, but
wH unaware of such remedial
eoul'HI belnc offered. ~
are offend to brine a 1tudent'1
1klll• up to a lli1ber level, but
t.be1 do not belin al the llliwale
level haplied by Mn. Jobtlml.
Tbue are baalc entrance re·
qu.lrementa to be met by eater·
ing students, and her children
must have been taught
something along the way.
She also exaggerates when she
claims no teacher encouraged,
prais ed , or ins pired h e r
children. That is impossible to
believe.
Teachers do teach, but stu·
dents must want to learn, and
parents must reinforce that
philosophy at home and instill
respect for education at an early
age.
One of Mrs. Jobbins' most re·
vealing statements was, ··we
finally tried tutoring them
ourselves ... " A parent should
always want to help the child
who is having trouble with some
aspect of school. Teachers try to
point this out at conferences, but
are sometimes rebuffed. The
parent's ego then becomes in·
volved, and instead of accepting
the advice in the caring spirit it
was intended, the parent takes it
as personal criticism and usual-
ly lashes out at the teacher and
the school. These parents refuse
to accept any responsibility for
their own child's learning.
J AGllEE with Mrs Jobbins
that money alone does not im·
prove teachers or schools, but ir·
responsible attacks like hers do
nothing to further the goal of
education.
Her ideas on "pay-as-you-go"
schools have some merit and
have been proposed many times .
They have been used in some
slates, even some counties of
California. This is called the
Voucher System, and is not a
new idea.
Her thinking, however, is ii·
logical and faulty when she pro-
poses that the voucher system
be used only by people with
school-age children. "Seems fair
to me to pay only for what I
use." Does this mean she will
not support hospitals, because
she's not ill today -nor prisons,
because she hasn't committed a
crime and needs no protection
from t.bose that do -nor cancer
research, becauae she doesn't
have it -not fire/police pJOt.ec.
lion on any other street but her
own, etc.?
J will close my letter as sbe
began hen -"a taxpayer, on·
going college student, and
parent," and, I'm proud to aay,
a teacher!
ARMIDA MILLIGAN ............
To the Editor:
The clUsem are rtcht to be wor· rled about \be pomocraphic boot
1torebere1nNewport. Younspeo-
ple are very 1U1ceptlble to the
emotlonl railed by the matertall
offered lD t.bele 1bope. I 'm not too
old to remember myself when I
wu lmpreulonable ln tbla
respect, but theft, too, J re·
member that a bett.r known mu
tban I actnowlqed ha1ttn1 after
tbe fiee.h ln Pla7bo1 MailliDll
Tbe cJtJ ii rtpt to be conceraed
t>.at Clt1 Altone7 eomn em lD
bl.a eftorta to ..... th• ~
arapb.lc llON.,.... to lbe bult-
ness district which is being zoned
for these ·· adult" businesses.
f 'LL TELL you why. I'm an
older man and I've traveled
around a bit. I've noticed in my
travels that the worst thing than
can happen to a city is lo have an
isolated, built-up business district
where all the anti·social elements
or society are segregated. Now
Newport aJready has a large and
growing business center. To
move the pornographic store
there would be a mistake that has
been made over and over again in
all our major cities from New
York to Los Angeles.
What happens is this. Large
business districts are built up but
these places are not pleasurable
for walking or spending time
there. So the law-abiding citizens
run in and out of the district for
their business needs. Meanwhile.
city officials try to segregate un-
desirable elements into an area
that is already isolated from the
better elements of society. The re·
suit is decay that starts from the
center and works its way out. Of·
ficials should work to close the
shop and not create a no-man's
land inthecenterofourcity.
GEO. BRUMMELL
P..itleeU
To the Ed.it.or:
A couple of weeks ago your
paper had a full page on the
YMCA and it was said to fit
anyone's pocketbook.
1 am a senior citizen and have
arthritis. For the type I have. l
am not to walk for exercise but
am to swim.
I have called both high schools
and Orange Coast Coll ege. They
have no public pool use. l
called the Recreation Dept.
<Boys' Club) and they have a
pool open from noon to 2 p.m.
People who work cannot go then.
However, they said if there were
enoueh people wbo wanted to
swim in the evenings they would
open it.
I went to the YMCA twice and
reaJJy like it. However, it's very
expensive for me. They do not
make an adjustment in dues for
only partial use of their
faolUUes.
Maybe you can help get the
word out le? people who want to
1wlm in the evening to call the
Recreation Dept. You wowa
think in a town this size there
should be a wa)'. for senior
citlsena and others lQ have a
pooJ open ln the evenings.
S.E. LOVING
• l..ettert from reodlrs are ~lcomf!
Tht rlghl lo cown1e Idlers to fll
•poet or eliml ate libel lJ re1trwd.
Letters of 300 rds or leu will be
giuen pre ct. AU lelttr• ""'-''
-Uteld • gnature alld mailing od·
drflt bu.I narMt may be wilhlwld
Oft rtquett f/ tu/ffcitnt ''°'°"it ap-
po ruc. Pottr11 will ftof be
publlthtd. Letl•rt mo-lJt
telephofwd to "2..fOef. No., Oltd
pho~ ~ Of IM eotlt,.._,,
m1ur bt gh>t" for otrf/iceliofl
p1'rpoM.t.
, ~ -
·-••• . ··----·~ ... ,_, __ ............................................................ --.""'---~--~ ........................... ---·-·-..----.... .---. ----------' I
;il!O I •
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GENIML NIWI °'9'81 Co..t DAN.. Y PIL.Or/fhul'lday, M.,oh 12, 1981 c
Reagan . lets gaft r.eptration system ride j
w ASBJHOTON <AP> -,..._. lal•m. N.H., on hb. ~ U., cbalrman o1 tbe Armed s.rvlHe "W• ban ne.l•ed iDltnae· ..... a lot ot thu ta tbe "-'
wbat ac.atd Reaca.a 1a1d 6-t tbat reitatratioa woula Hn manpower lubcommlttee ud Uou to coatlaue on wttlt bull· 'aK\llr AMAIYftS of an all·out moblllHUOD to
year u 1 candldfte, tbe natkm'• ODl7 a f.W days lf a mutUrJ boolt.-ol ...,u'1 eudldaey. n ... u UIUal. M1Mtlmate11 UM ~n~ NW. .JI mMt a mllital'J •mer•eDCY~U
draft re1l1trat(on macblD•r1 caUup became neeeaarr. prolf'Ull wt11 CODtiDu. ~ don, be aakl, keep6.q re .
11-cudd be 1•tbertDI dUilt aow "You woukl bave to Mt up a arnu TllAT ••-.u u. tbe year,'' •aid K• Stout. an mlntltratkm before takJna ae-~ Miida a ttroq al,.W to
tbat h•'• f:rHldent. Jn1tead, bureauuaey to bandl• lt, ud I not killed draft t•1l1traUoa, Ala1ka WllMllman blnd by Uoo. 8ovieu. If lt doesn't 11ve mu•
... ere ·-dlcatlou tb• ,,_.._ don't believe lt would be worth leaden ol the anU-draft move· ·Ul• •dmln•atrat.lon u a fm.a· At the Wblte Houte, "'-·••H Ume lt ll a weat l-aS -_... .... .. -meat -tbat U.S. ln............ d uJ B nd laJ '-....._.... · 1 -' •ram II here to atay. tt,'' he added. --·1 ._,,.,... ay COAi tant-watcbdC>• over a ow, spec au..-tant to U.. Tt.ou11ndt of teen·asen atiU The '35 mUUoo procram rec· m • n t t o I! l S a l v ado r Selective Sentce operatioGI. prHldent for poUcy develop. The U.S. Supreme Court wtll
1l1n up each day, and hundredl ularly ridiculed lut fall u a foretbdowl Americana flptlq On Capitol HW, .,..,.. ad s:nent, Mid whatever Rea•an'a hear 11'1\1.Dlenta March 24 on the
of others break the law by not paper t11er threat to the Soviet ln aoot.ber Vletnam·t)'pe war other lawmaken wbo watch decialoe OD clratt re1l1tratioa, conatltuUonallty of an •ll·male
re1l1tertn1. UoJon wu spued uy cutbK• and tbe reuwal of the draft. 'over military manpower luUlll "the Pr'elident ll committed to re•i•traUon proiram ud draft.
Nearly two montha Into lbe In the president'• bud1et· A national march oo '"no chance ol draft .....,tra-theall-voluPteerforce." A federal court ln Phlladelp~a
Reaaan presidency, there ta no prunina drive. Waa~ ii belq planned for tlon bel.nc aeuttled. . Bandow aald the bask ques· ruled Jut year the aU-male prO-
slen of any move to dlemanUe thJ1 •Pl'inl -probably in May If Ul)'lhin,, JeJ>Mn predjcied, tlon l1 whether re1istrallon gram discriminated againtt
the proeram that Reaaan the PAR F&OM 8£1TUNG into -to demonstrate o,,_ltlon to tbe pfOIJ'am will be expudecl to men.
candidate said was Ineffective, obscurity, Selective Service Juat re1lltraticm and the draft. include aome type of clU1Ulca·
IJl-coneidered and morally un· moved into a new bullclinl and • .. Tbe mood of the country ll to tlon o1 y~ men u to tbelr
' justifiable except in "the most pilot program ls •ettina un· 10 out ill the street.I aaaJn," laid eU1ibWty few aervice.
severe national emergency." der way to recruit and train draft B•ITJ LYnn. bead of a coalition
board members ln the event of antl-draft or1anlaaU001 that MO&E TSAN '·' mUllon
IN IDS ACCEPTANCE speech
al the Republican National Con·
venlion in Detroit, Reagan said
last July:
"I do not favor a peacetime
draft or registration, but I do
favor pay and benefit levels that
will attract and keep highly
motivated men and women In
our volunteer forces and an ac·
tive reser#e trained and ready
for an instant call in case of an
emergency."
During his campaign for the
GOP nomination, Reagan said in
Congress decides to revive lb• mobllbed 30,000 dem001tra.ton 1oun1 men bave re1l1tered
draft It.self. la WullinltGo Jut March. alnce summer. SeJecUve Service
Reagan's plan to build Wllhln \be admlniatratlon, of. said 81 pereent of eU1lble men
America's military muscle md flciaJs say the president oppoees signed durfna January's mua
bis tough talk about the Soviet the draft, and Reagan bu em· re1lltratioa, compared with 13
Union and Cuba. as well as the pbasl&ed be Ifft no likelihood ol percent durlne another one·
threat ol Soviet intervention in sending fighting forces to El month mass re1istratlon last
Poland, have prompted specula· Salvador. summer.
Uon that, if anything, reetstra· An estimated 472,000 young
lion will be expanded. THE QUESTION OF wbet.ber men have failed to register and
·· Frankiy, I'd bet a new bat -to keep draft registration, re-are liable for felony prosecution
and I tbink I'd win -that reg-vivecl by former President with a maximum penalty of up
istratioo is not going to be ln Caner, ll being reviewed at the to five years in prison and a
any way diluted," said Sen. Whlte House and no decision is $10,000 fine. Selective Service is
R o g e r J e p sen , R · Iowa , expected for montha. waiting for a signal from the ad-
Damaged slopes
Repair awaited
by homeowners
Residents in Crown Park and
The Hill in Laguna Niguel say
they will wait and see if AVCO
Community Developers make
good on a promise lo repair
damaged slopes in the two com-
munities.
made up with state funds.
"Indications are that we won't
be able to depend on receiving
that money from Sacramento
for much longer," Herman said.
"However, it is our intention
that if A YOO repairs the slopes
properly, after the maintenance
period expires we will take them
over."
APWi,...._.
Double duty
Construction worker Levi Dreapeau appears to have a
twin assisting him as he works on a building in Holyoke,
Mass. The scene actually is a mirror image reflected in
the glass on the store front.
About 60 homeowners showed
up at a meetini with AVCO and
Oran1e County officials Tuesday
nl1bt at the Ron Williama Real·
ty office oo La Paz Road.
Several residenta voiced com·
plaints about the condition ol
llopee OD boCh alde9 ol Golden
Lantern, Paseo Escuela,
Gardenia and Crown Valley
Partway.
Sect denies charges
Grieving mother
Ofelia Jones, mother of Robert Smith, 15, whose heart
and lungs were given to a 45-year-old dying Arizona
woman, reflects at home in Chula Vista. The boy was
killed Friday night in a bicycle-car accident near his
home, and his organs were flown to Stanford University
Medical Center.
Anti-truancy pay
• • Wins extension
SAN DIEGO (AP> A plan to
cul truancy by rewarding atten-
dance at Memorial Junior High
School is successful enough lo
keep it goi ng after a four-month
trial, say city school trustees.
The controversial plan has
drawn worldwide interest.
Memorial's 900 pupils are eligi-
ble for a privilege card worth 25
cents per day of attend ance and
used only to buy school items
such as books, erasers, pencils
and gym uniforms.
PRINCIPAL ROBERT Am-
paran said unexcused absences
dropped from 65 lo 55, on the
average. He predicted truancy
-highest in the city -will drop
25 percent.
An additional $800 m stale per.
pupil funds bas arrived with the
lower truancy, but Amparan's
plan bas cost Sl0,000 since it was
launched in late October.
Another S12,500 was voled
Tuesday night for the spring
semester.
Amparan told the Board of
Education there have been side
effects of the experiment amon1
minority students in low-income
Laguna gardeners
to meet Friday
The La1una Beach Garden
Club will meet Friday at the
N eigbborhood Conaregallonal
Cburdl, S40 St. Ann's Drive, In
Laguna Beach at 11 a .m .
Mn. Ullian True la to dem·
01utrate the care of 1uc-
c1'1enu. A demon1tr1tlon on
floral arranctn1 will bepn at
l :IOp.m.
...
southeast San Diego.
A number of pupils wbo
"wouldn't have been caught de·
ad" wearing T-shirts with the
school's name on them are ~y·
ing the shirts , he said, and
pupils are using their pirvilege
cards to buy their own alarm
clocks and getting to school on
time.
Amparan said be also may
stock inexpensive pocket
calculators because pupils
believe they can afford them.
Priest faces
nwlestation
• sentencing
VENTURA (AP> -Sentenc·
in1 bas been set April 14 for a
Catholic priest who pleaded no
contest to three counts of feklny
child molestation.
The Rev. Donald P. Roemar, .
36, of St. Paschal Baylon Cbarcla
in Thousand Oaks went before
Superior Court Judie Robert
Shaw.
He faces a maximum sentence
of 10 years and -4 mont.ha ln state
prison. ·
He often worked with chudren
and said be had earned an
honorary service award from
the national Parent·Teacben
Aaaodatlon for bil effort&.
"What a farce now," Roemar
said.
Sberifrs lnveatt1aton beUD
looting Into the priest'• adJcim
Jan. 22 when a Tbouland Oab
mother aiaM a complaint.
..
THE llOMEOWNE&S said tbe
vegetation on the slopes bad not
been watered and maintained aa
AVCO promised in purchase
a1reementa.
Tbe residents saJd they bad re-
peatedlJ been forced to place
plastic abeeting oa the hillsides
to prevent erosion and sUppqe
durin1 the rainy season.
William Gaboury, director of
pl'Oject development for AVCO,
told t.be Laguna Niguel residents
his company would be spending
rrom $140,000 to $170,000 within
30 to 60 days to repair and
replant the slopes.
Gaboury said vandalism bad
been pa rtly responsible for the
failure to water vegetation
growing on the slopes, but that
irrigation pipes had been re-
paired.
PETER HERMAN, executive
aide lo Orange County 5th Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley,
said the county would take over
maintenance of the slopes as
soon as AVCO could show they
had been repaired correctly.
Herman conceded that since
passage or Prop. 13 the county
bas been less willing to assume
responaibility for maintaining
slopes and sidewalks.
''The slopes in your area
never have been Jn a satisfac-
tory condition ror the county to
take them over," Herman said.
"In pre.Proposition 13 days I
suppose we would have been
more willing."
Gaboury said his company
had been wresWng with the prob-
lem of turning over slope main-
tenance to the county for three
or four years.
"THE PROBLEM IS to get
any two people in charge up
there to both nod their heads yes
at the same time.'' Gaboury
said. "Slnc:e Proposition 13 it's
been worN.''
Jlerman 1aJd coaUnu.m, cut·
backt la funds avaUable to' the
county could ltall improvementl
to hillside areas.
He said spending in the La1una~l el area was exceed-
ln1 the el of County Service
Area 3, Lbe deficit belns
Architects'
plan• ready
The .-tbltectl wbo are deslp~
lnl Moulton Meadows Park ln
Arch Beadl ffeltbtl will preMllt
tllelr •ln1 at a comm&mlty
meetlnc March 26.
Oftlclal1 from Recreation
Syttema, Inc. will be Oft laaDd to
auw• qwUonl and 1bow pre-
Umlaary plana for the 10-acre
park off Balboa Avenue ln the
hllJtop community.
The meet.I.al wUJ be beld ill Ci·
ty Council chambers, IO$ Fon.st
Ave., bqlnnlnf at 7:• p.m.
-• I
Child abuae allegations labeled false
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Mem-
ben of the fundamentall1t River
of Lile sed have denied alle1a·
lions of child abu.e and their
founder insisted he was not
"another Jim Jones."
The group told a news COO·
ference Wednesday that nine ol
their cblldren, who were placed
in foster homes pending an in-
vestigation ol child abuse aUega-
lions, were in.stead being abused
by San Bernardino County
authorities.
Guyana, colony in 1978.
"They (the interviewers) say,
'Do you think that you 're
another Jim Jones?' I say it's
totally false ... and there's no
basis for it. r trunk it's untrue
and unfair," he said.
, "THERE IS NO place in
Christianity for brutalizing
women and children," Mitchell
said. "I say we are not a cuJt. It
is going to be shown that we are
not a cult. It's easy to label
someone out here and try to
prove it."
Dori Webster, daughter-in-law
o( "Fantasy Island" TV pro·
ducer Skip Webster and a sect
member, also appeared at the
news conference and said
psychological tests by county
authorities found the children
who were taken from the ranch
were emotionally traumatized.
But she contended the trauma
resulted not from abuse at the
ranch but from repeated at-
tempts to lake the children away
and by the experience of being
"arrested" by sheriff's deputies.
Mrs. Webster, who lived al the
commune with her husband
Dennis and three children before
her children were taken away,
said the youngsters were not al·
lowed to eat until 11 p.m . on the
day the deputies came for them.
·'The child abuse charges are
totally false and replete with lies
and innuendo," said Peter
Hughes, pastor or the River of
Life Ministry near the Apple
Valley community of Hesperia
70 miles northeast or Los
Angeles.
INSTEAD, HE TOLD a news
conference, there have been
abuses by grandparents and rel·
atives who hired "criminals" to
kidnap the Chrisllan sect's
members.
Pickle ruling guilty
Sect founder Ed M ilcbell said
every interviewer bas asked him
if bis group is similar to the
Peoples Temple se<:t founded by
Jim Jones which committed a
mass suicide of more than 900
people at the Jonestowp,
~ ........ ,,.,,
SAN DIEGO <AP ) -A federal
court jury has convicted Paul
Rowton Bailleaux, the alleged
"Pickle Poisoner," on three of
five counts involving extortion
attempts a year ago in San
Diego and Palm Desert.
During the one-week trial, a
handwriting expert testified that
Baillea ux's print samples
matched an extortion note .
Ronny WlllUocll, 311 an unemployed carpenter from
Greenfteld, Calif., feat luc~ and put about SIO In a 11ot
machine in Reno. He hit for a m ,115 Jackpot, tbe laraest
ever paid by a quarter machine in Nevada.
•
Bailleaux. a 63 -year-old
jeweler from Corvallis, Ore.,
was found guilty of trying to ex-
tort diamonds after lacing a jar
or pickles and a teriyaki sauce
at two San Diego area
supermarkets.
In both cases, he tipped
employees on the location of the
poisoned items and both were
recovered by the stores before
they could be sold.
Bailleau.x was acquitted on the
two counts involving an extor-
tion attempt and bomb threat at
the Black, Starr and Frost
Jewelry Store in La Jolla.
Sentencing was set for March
23.
The extortion conviction was
Bailleaux's second in three
months.
Hands across
border full
of golf balls
MEXICALI, Mexico <AP>
The hands across the border
here are fu.11 of golf balls bit
through and over the chain-link
fence separating Mexico and a
U.S. golf course.
As they have for SO years,
Mexican boys run down the er-
rant balls and hand t.bem back
through the feac:ea -at as centa
each.
"The out-of -the-country aolf •
ball• live the kids OD the lfo-
1 can slde a dlance to earn
1pendlnc money," aaya Efren
Quiros, pro at Calexico Intern•· •
tlonal Golf • Country Club, :
wblcb rum alone tbe border.
But there'• aeldom a Up for
mariachl bands that stroll up
and down, aerenacllnc for U9
fl'om Solfen playtnc on the u .S.
llde. I
A •olf• aa)'I l\ ''lan 't MIJ to , coacentrate on a allot wlMD u. •
marlachb are blannc awa,."
... .,,. ..... .-........... ...,•a.,.-..-... --..... ...._,. ..,...~ .... ~-.. -~......, ..... ...........,. ... ----· .... -.................... _~tll• .......... , ........... ..,,..,,.,.. ................................ ·-· ... ---~----.......... ..,.. ......... _-=--~-~~,...,...-..:.~~...,
.. I
' -• " ' i
.-
Oritp OOut DAILY PILOT/Thurtday. March 12, 1981
Anti-busing f orces h liil ruling
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oppo-
nents of forced bulln& reacted ecatatkally to a atate Supreme
Court deelllon that could be the
death blow to the Loe An1eles
Unlfled School District'• man·
datory intecratlon procram.
"J'm thrilled, J'm excited, I ·
do'1 't know what to say.'· school
board president Roberta Wein·
traub aaid Wednesday after
learninl that the hleh court had
let ataod an appeals court ruling
u_pbolding the atale's anti-busing
amendment, Proposition 1. and
ita application in the Los
AnReles school district.
But Superior Court Judge Paul
Ecly called it "crazy." •
"IT'S SOMETHING I didn't ex-
pect. I won't comment further,"
said Egly, who bad spent years
overseeing the development of
the school district's integration
plan I! the result of a 1963 civil
rights lawsuit.
The .Supreme Court in San
FTancisco denied without com·
ment a petition by the American
Civil Liberties Union to throw
out the Court of Appeal ruling,
although Chief Justice Rose Bird
would have granted the hearing.
The ACLU sald it would com· ment on the rulln1 and on
whether the case would be
pursued in federal court at a
news conference today.
But state Sen. Alan Robbins,
D·Van Nuys, author of Propoel·
tion l -the so-called Robbins
Amendment -said the meuure
was worded in such a way that lt
could not be overturned at the
federal level.
·'This was our blegest bur·
dle," he said. "We have a very
liberal Supreme Court in the
state of California, and now even
they've round that mandatory
busing is unconstitutional."
"l'M THE happiest person in
California," Robbins said. Mrs.
Weintraub, who leads an anti·
bttsing majority on the school
board, said the district's 2~·
year-old forced busing program
would be ended "as soon as
humanly possible" and called a
special board session for
tonight.
·'This is the most exciting
news in my life," she said. 'Tm
so excited for the kids and the
parents and the schools."
"It's a wonderful victory for
all of us who worked on the Rob-
bins amendment,'' Robbins aaid.
"It's everything we could have
possibly wanted, it's a dream
come tnae.
.. NOW WE can devote our
schools to education, we can end
forced busing, we can take
millions or dollars that right now
ls beln' spent on buses and bus·
ing and use it for education."
Robbins said the district
would not lose millions of dollars
in federal funds earmarked
specifically for integration pro-
grams.
"We'll continue to use It for
voluntary programs," he said.
"We 're going to prove that
voluntary integTation can pro·
duce more integration than
forced busing. Once patents
know that they don't have to bus
their kids, we're going lo get rid
of the bitterness and resentment
around busing and they'll be re-
ceptive to busing their kids
shorter distance and other pro-
grams."
P ROPOSITION 1, passed
overwhelmingly by voters ita
1979 ban state courts from go-
ing beyond federal 1u1de1Jnes in
aHilnlnl pupils in dese1re1a·
Uon cues on the basis of race. It
says mandatory buslna can only
be Imposed in dlslricts where
secregatlon bas been lnten·
Uonal.
In a ruling last Dec . 19, the ap-
peals court found that Propoei·
lion 1 does not violate federal
law, that Integration in Los
Angeles schools was based on
residential patterns and was not
intentional, and that the district
therefore was not required to
maintain its mandatory busing
program.
SINCE THE appeals court rul·
ing, the school board has been
planning for an end to forced bus·
ing, which now affects about
23,000 o( some 530,000 students in
the 600-square-mile district, the
nation'ssecond largest.
Although the district's first
mandatory program was im·
plemented in 1978, the legal bat·
lle over integration in Los
Angeles schools dated back to
1962.
State cracks caviar black market
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -State fish and game officials, look·
ing o~t for the welfare or California's sturgeon population, are
cracking down on a gourmet black market that provides caviar to
those who crave it.
F~ur agents seized 65 pounds of the black fish eggs from a San
Francisco oyster merchant as part of a drive lo wipe out the illegal
trade, a fish and game official said Wednesday.
The roe, carefully packed in 130 eight-ounce jars, was valued
at $6,500.
Scace c ran•IC •lflllltn M'ftt
SACRAMENTO <AP> The California Transportation Com :
mission says that all state and local transportation services must
be cut unless new revenues are found .
Commission Chairman Dean Meyer commented on the draft biennial report to the Legislature that the cuts would affect every·
thing from urban bus systems to country roads.
In a statement accompanying Wednesday's draft report,
Meyer said, "It is not a ques·
the buses and coaches needed to keep up our transit services. Ir we
do not get it, that will hurt the elderly, the handicaooed. the low-income workers, and the commuters who rely on transit "
"an Ho11Cen apPftll *-Wd
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Manson family member Leslie Van
Houten's bid to overturn her murder conviction has been denied by
the California Supreme Court.
Miss Van Houten had claimed the verdict should be set aside
because gruesome photographs, including those from a crime she
was not involved in , were viewed as evidence
by the jury.
She was convicted in 19'71, along with
Charles Manson and two other family mem-
bers , in the slaying of grocery executive Leno
LaBianca and bis wife, Rosemary, on two
counts or murder and one count of conspiracy
to commit murder.
Or ange e rush
Pico. a chimp with a circus performing in Santa Monica
this week, knows how to take a nutrition break. He calm-
ly makes short work of an orange by biting into the fruit
(top ), draining the juice <center), and attacking the skin
<bottom).
Wall to stop slide?
one lane of the highway.
lion of being unable to afford
new freeways. The message NEWS BRIEFS ... is that we cannot keep up
what we have now, and that
~tll hurt everyone
"We need a billion dollars more in the next fi ve years to buy
All were sentenced to death, but the
penalty was set aside when the California
Supreme Court ruled the state capital punish·
ment law was unconstitutional. The sen·
tences then automatica11y became life terms. VANHOUTEN
MALIBU lAP> -With more
r ain expected to reach the area
by Friday, state transportation
officiaJs have built a l()().yard-
long earthen wall along Pacific
Coast Highway to halt a minor
rockslide that forced closure of
•·1t's nothing major. just a
dribble of rocks, it's more an"
noying than anything ," said
state Department of Transporta-
tion spokesman Mark Watts.
Art Show
Huntington Center
daily thru Sun
S•'"<f fof'?'e Star11 ., 'fl)ut O°"r
IC•ll S10fft' Nea,hl Yov• A.t••>
COSTA wu641-1289 ,,,. .. ..._....,.,
MIHIOH Vt1r:.io49S-0401
211tn ca"""" c.p1o11o,... ISo•-., ,,..,., •1 Aw..-, 'kwf I
Tl RES-R·US
~
HOUOWA.Y
We'd be better orr 1r we
retained more of "'hat we
learn and less of what we
eat ·
Our fnend says his ftnan·
cial condition is about
average. Worse than last
year. better than next
year. ..
Kids grow up so quickly.
One day you look at your
empty gas gauge and re·
alize they're teenagers ..
New employee to boss.
"Well. if I can't have a
raise. how about the
same pay more onen., ..
Truth is n ot only
stranger than fi ction these days . It ·s a lot
cleaner.
••
Yo u 'll always be
"someone apeclaJ" when
you do busineu wtth Tire
City. Wbenultedyoumayl
tell anyone "Ye. l have a I
friend th•t'a ln the Ure
bualneaa."
l
.. ..._,.
do-it-yourself
KITCHEN DESIGN
SEMINAR
Free design kit upon registration
Bring your measurements to design school
Simple as A. B. C.
LIMIT 8 PER CLASS • CALL MOW FOR RESERV A. TlONS
l·:uro-.~mcrican Kit ch~n & Hath~
CLOSING CLOSING
SALE SALE
AGA JOHN ORIENT AL RUGS
is closing their branch
in Newport Beach
AH Oriental Rugs reduced for clearance
Chinese, Indian, Pakistan, Persian, Romanian
I 000 Bristol St. Mo. -1 lrb tol Mo.
Pima Newport
MIEWPORT IEACH
851-0864
Huntington Beach
Paclfk Coast Hwy So. of Pia
• ., A.GA Johft
15 Gonven1er11 Location•
Newport Beach
1400 Paclftc Coast Hwy
)
INFORMS In the
L. M. BOYD l1ilyPlllt
....... _.._ .
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Today through Saturday. th ) unparalleled
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these e)(qulslte 144·faceted diamond stud earrings and pendants set In 18K gold .
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totaling .SO ct.. reg. $1590. Now 11272. Pendant, .50 ct., reg. $3965. Now $3172.
TWENTY PERCENT SAVI NBS on a select group of diamond solitaire rings. brooches
and pendants . wmples lncJude: Brooch formed of eighteen marquise and thirty·
one round diamonds , total weight appx. 7.5 ct., set ln platlnum, reg. $16,250.
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FOlfTY PElfCENT SAVINGS on a dwllng selectlon of hoop earrings, cluster rings,
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NEWPORT BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH. 83 Falhlon Island 769-1211. Mon· Ftl 10·9. Sal (0 8. Sun 12·S
,. ...
.. , . .. ...
.-.
·~
' . ,. . ,. .,,
' '' ' ...
'1 , .
.\.._ A near-fatal episode durina a ret9t public meetlnc
uroupt out what appears to be a lerioua flaw ia a response acreement between fire ctepertmeeta tn COit.a
.Mesa and Newport Beach.
Minutes alter t~stif .Yinl at an ai~ eoJ.H beartn1 at
Costa Mesa's Harper Community Cdter, a 83-year-olcl
.,..1nan was stricken with a heart attack. ">;' While sever a l qufck·thlnklnl persoea started mouu;.
· ~lo·mouth resuscitation and cardiat ma11a1e, one
•• 1 '.m e m ber of the audience placed a call fw help. ~:. Remembering that Newport's Mariners fin 1taUon ~. as only three blocks away, he placed Ms.emer1ency caU
to Newport. Newport oCficials, though, told him he'd have
to call Costa Mesa.
' • According to official log entries. it took five mlnutet
: .... 'for a Costa Mesa fire e ngine to arrive and an add!Uooal •~three minutes before paramedics were IO the scene.
;·1'• Fire officials later explained that a jurisdtcUonal rule·
.. ~.'.restrains one city from respondin1 '° a call in the
4...,peighboring city unless the host clty gives permisak>n.
Further. fire officials said , a common desire between
.·t he two towns to institute an automatic response system,
... s uch as is used in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley.
·. is something city councilmen would have to approve.
It would appear that the time has come for coua-
cil men and fire men to put together an a utomatic
r"response syst e m and in a hurry.
J Public in the dark
1 ' "
It's pretty hard to keep somethint like a lawsuJt
quiet, but e lected officials in Newport aeach a ppear to ? have done their best to leave the public uninformed.
:. The city filed a la wsuit against Orange County in
~ .early February objecting to elemen ts of t1'e redevelopment
. • f ..
I
plan for the Newport Dunes Aquatic Park.
But it wasn't until early this month that councilmen
;.~dmitted the s uit had been filed.
Granted. the suit is a public record and news re-
porters dally plow through t hese reports. However. it's
easy for a s ingle s uit to be overlooked in the mountain of
leg a I paperwork filed daily.
Usually. city officials not only announce it when they
come to a decision to s ue someone or something: they
can 'l s tay quiet in trying to explain their le&al thinking.
But things were different this time in Newport Beach.
And the reason is n't hard to spot.
As explained by one councilm an. city officials were
hoping to stay on the county 's "good side" at least until
county supervisors made a decision on the airport master
plan. which they did Feb. 17.
Appan•ntly it was felt that a newspaper accoun t or
the lawsuit might rattle the supervisors and cause them
to look unfavor ably on Newport when lt came to the
master pl an vote .
As it turned oul. lack of a news story on the s uit failed
to m ake much differe nce on the vote.
But what a ppe ars lo have been overlooked in the en·
tire episode is the general public. which ia footing the bill
.. ~ for the lawsuit. Certainly the public should have been
~ informed
!• , Position puzzles
:: The po::,1t1on of teachers in the Newport.Mesa ~hool
:: District's financial crisis is co_nfusing.
: Their union is fl oating a request for cost-of ·living in·
cr eases next school year ranging between 13.5 and 18.S
percent. plus increas es in fringe benefits.
And lht' c hie f negotiator for the teachers. who
: : avera~e .about $26,450 a year for 10 months' work right
·: ·: now. ms1sb the request is not a demand He says only ::~that the teachers are entitled to that much.' :! :! T.he prt·vious week a~other teacher leader s uggested
~· :. the d1strtC.'t hold school six months instead of nine. This,
.: :went the. reasoning , would assure moftey for hiring
~ ·teache rs instead of depending on volunteers to handle
· some enrichment prog rams expected to be cut from next
} school year 's budget.
I That raises the question of whether teachers would
expect to be paid 10 months of salary for six months'
:-vork. lt"s doubtful m~ny would hold still for long if their
incomes we re cut a third. t . T~e rea ction of those who are facing lay-offs in t he
, fmanc_tall,v pressed_ district is understandable . They are
· watching careers dissolve before their eyes. ~ Regardless of the sympathy felt , it ·a difficult fOf' ~ p a rents and taxpayers to com e a way from the whole
~ school mess with a f e~ling that t~ac~ers are truly looking
: for a reasona bl e solution to the d1stnct's mOfley woes.
• rt • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot
Other views expressed on lh1s page are those of their authors and
:. artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. PO
~ ,. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 64~321 ~~ ............................................ ..
I I' ~{ Boyd/ Computers ,. ~ ~ : By L.M. BOYD ~ • Computers can play chess,
~ do high math, process words,
, recognize speech, compose
I'-mus ic of sorts . a n a lyze
statistics, or in brier,
duplicate countless functions
I o r the human mind . But
there's one thing they can't
d o . They can't generate
~~umor, not jokes, as it were.
; urioll!, that Almost a ll of
1 ·:
I
'·
GllllYlll
Th e Ncwport·Mesa
Sch ool District has
Cinally round a way to
ba I a nee t he budget ;
close the neighborhood
schools. assign the kids
to the other side of
town, then charge them
$20 a month for the bus
ride
E.L.P
your better computer pro-
grammer s the msel ves ell·
hibit cons iderable sp on -
taneous humor in thelr own
conversations. They seem to
h ave a highly sh arpened
sense of the ridiculous. But
they cannot ptogram that ln·
to their devica.
Did l tell you there's room
enough for '7,000 people to
stand together on a U.S. foot·
ball field?
The typical 10-tallon hat,
bear in mind, holda aboUt
three fourths el a 1allon.
Each ol tbl 8,!GO ft6en In
the Confedertle Air ~ -10~ World '#ar II fl1bU ..
aircraft -Mlda U.e rant
therein of colanel. Kentucky·
type nomenclature.
On the two hind lq1 of 1
male platypus ll'e boJJow
Apura, like faqs, from whkb
lbat beast can r e lt11e venom.
The Cobatltutlon of Ult
United !Ulel pescrtbe'I dlill
a alne be ~ u tJlr9. mu.. of • .,.,..,
• AIMING'l'ON -~ ~aJ
White Houle f\uw LI biolhl up onr U. c.ll'oYtrtial ~
ff a......, •UlluJ lalell.._.
off leer to lie•' AC · TION, tt.t
mulll · bran~h•d
1ood-workl
•l•ftCJ. Tht •ove coyld J~opar41u u.. •lll•y of
A•erlc•n
•ohanteera abroed. r« ACflON'• mott ~.,.
ed offtpriq I.I the Peece Carpi,
whoN tftoutand.a of OHratH •°'Wll4erl mlpt .Wier a .....
la U.e all-'ow ol a auap6etc. tue
Mailbox
1'hot'Ns P. Hale;/Publllher ThOfnas K-.vlllEdJtw
Betbel'a ec,..11Mcf\1edftorla1 ,. ... •dltor
ow hul*ts volunteers
UMrJ are ttee remo&eb conn«t-
td wltb U .S l•te1U1enct ac·
U•IU...
Aatl-Amerlua e lemtah,
Jeetioue el lllil IOOdwW t.M PMce
C0191 volunteen la.ave tvned ~ tbftr Mlllftl ef'fortl to
btJp Ute poor and Illiterate,
would like nothlnt Mttff taan to
smear tbem u 11Me1 .
Tbla la no Idle eoneern :
Kldnapptq and death threatt
bavt resulted from scurrilous
rumor campalana, Uuln1 the
Peace Corps volu.nteera to tbe
Central lntelli1ence A1••cy cw
other U .S . e1plona1e
or1anbationa.
One example ol lhiil daa1er
w H RJdlard Starr. the Peace
Corp. botanist who waa h.W for
lbrte )'HU by commu.altt
IYerrUl• ln CobnbAa, •ntll 1M
wu rUIOlned a year •IO· Ont
NUGa be WU kldJaapped •• '-tau.e bit capt.on l\atped.ed
M • aa a ClA •tent u_sU\I Ullt Peace Corpe u a cover. He wu
repeat4!dly tnterrocated on UU.
point durtna his u pUvlty in lbe
Andeu Juncle.
CaANTEO, the m an choMn to
bud 'l\._CTION . Tom Pauken
had onfY a relatively brlei
unnectlon with intelli1eace
.work. Du.rina bia service in the
Army. Ile wu an intelUaeoce
oltlcer ataUoned in Vietnam. He
stoutly d e nies any C IA
in vohement ; he t o ld m y
au~lates Jack Mitchell and
lady Badhwar he did only
l"CMIU... riMard wort OD North
VlttallMMle .....
Bwt tile Ptaee Corp• baa
lalat«kally .._ e~ to kwp
both H• olflclala and lt• vohaa~ me of any .. .,.. •• e
lalat. IJb CMtar'a wlle. Peace
Corpa penonnel mwtt be above
napiclon for their owo
proteeUon ii nothlna elae . Th.ls
haa been t.IM policy ever alnce
the TJ:::>' wu founded under
Pres Kennedy.
ACTION officials Hd tome
Whlte Houae lnsldera were
appalled at Paulten 's
noml..UOO. And lhou&b it ia hi.a
h11teUlaence back1round tbat
upsets them moat. tbey we~
alao diJCrWllUed by the m.aer
ol ht. M&ection. Pauken's name
•aan 't even o n the lis t of
po.slbie nominees wttil the last
minute, the critics claim
MoarovEa, he was cleared
by an old friend, White House
Counsel Fred F ieldln1. who
s urvived the Watergate era
without taint. Fielding insisted
that while he was aware of Ute
misgivings surrounding the
c hoice of Pauken. they were
"nota~m."
Paull en , an amiable
36:year·old Texan, figured in a
minor controversy in 1971 , when
he was associate d1reclor of the
White House Fellows program.
He· was roundly denounced for
writing an article in U S. News
and Wo rld 'Report o n an
unofficial trip to the Soviet Union
That JittJe·noticed internecine
wrangle doesn 't e nter into
Pauken's present situation. It's
hi s intelligence pa s t th at
troubles key administration and
agency officials and could
haunt the Peace Corps in the
years to come
Reagan should re-read campaign rhetoric
Tot~ Edit.or:
Ab, the '°'b&es that frudlfy i.a
our free·luncb aoclety ! lluy
believe that our 1overnment
"aboUd be run like private ta-
du.ttrl•. ·· Therein Uea a ~ ... : ta. aa.me lethal met.hodl
alre adJ ltPPl.Y to boU IOYer11o-
men t and -business. Go.ern·
ment ii brote, and so u a tead·
lq Htmftll ol private indv:stry,
U1ie a.to iadustry. In 10.ern·
meat. tt'1 l.be aame old f.cft,
Po•lne fatt«t" and s)eeker and
leaa reaponain to our freedoms;
juat like Ford, G. Ill . and
Chryaler', whoee products crow
bluer. fatter and slttlter and
moce expenalve, while buyers
floe It to the s ma Iler, more
atyllah. more economical im-
ports.
Now the "bil three" are urg.
ing us to eschew the foreign
beauties and buy the u1ly
domestic limitations : even de-
mandlnt1 quotas and restraint.&
on foreign competitors. So. what
does Ford do (the company that
put the world on box-cars with
four wbttlJI >? [t styles a hodge·
pod1e ol parts and Ideas from
around the globe, calls it "the
world car," and invades the
foreign markets. A dear friend
used to quote-misquote: "Oh in·
consistency. thou art a jewel.
ANY~AY, who dares buy a
domestic car, what with recalls
by the millions as a way of life?
And those rebates. why not just
knock the price down to an af·
fordabJe level? Then there's the
oil Industry spokes-whatever.
who trie8 to justify a conUnuin1
1a1 price rise, even in the face
o( an acknowledged oil surplus.
Quoth he: "Certain costs must
tint filler all the way up to the
retail pumps, regardless of the
oil glut." What costs? These in·
volved in trucking 1luttonowi
profils all the way lo the banb?
And, I call attention to the ill·
coocelved notk>n, attributed to
President Rea1an, that "Social
Security participation should be
voluntary for those who can
prove they can provide for their
own retirement." Interpreted,
that meana that the mllliona,
•ho are now 1tuck wttb lo1'tt
and middle level salaries and
waaes. will pay the entire coat d
all the S.S. rl~tfs and beneftta
1>9ld out to the mllUona of non-
contrtbulora, and the rtcb wtll
escape all cost.a scot.free, crow·
lat rtcber thereby. Some ol UM
litter will atJll rup S.S. benefttl
cm • trud aeaJe due to put
partldP9tic1n. I cannot believe
that Pree6dent Rea1aa wlll U.U.
N\ra1 all of ua poor OHi who
made "1m rld• •ad put hlm U1I U.. WM~ ltoGM.
Yllllr, ea.,.o..td la...._ .......... _..,_,.,
tu fer nur h• a at , &~•
Platmmen. PNtident Reaa.•,
wk> qalckly ea.acht oe to ta.
lde• ol t• ,..,... ... alto .....
to fa.or ~lal UM fedlnl
... tu. Rt Mouad, .. ..u ...... tr: re·re•• ~ii e~c•
, .. Mrte •• YlabM ~---.. U.•llWNofCe•pDuSd.
1 .P. BORCOllA.N
.... ... , .. ,
To Ute Editor:
What Slop Pornography in
Newport and the Dally Pilot
edJtoriaJ evaded In their st ate-
ma\ta about Newport's one and
Oftly "adult boolt st.ore," Tallt of
tat Town, ia the twtdamenW
feet tha t none of ua were bom
wlUt han1.ups about our bodies.
In Lal\llla Beach, which lib s
to tbinlt ltaelf t o be an Art
Colony, Ute h l1h school hH
banned eJlhibitioo of a nude
acuJpture created by one of Ute
world'• moet foremo.t represen· taUooaJ a<:ulptors, Donal Hord.
The Daily Pilot, which report-
ed that story ab<xlt that ba.n,
published a front pa1e pictw-e of
the sculpture : ableil . with a
cen sored s ign h idin g that
sculpture's genitalia.
NOT TOO LONG aao. Laguna
had no ordinance banning mu1ily
on the beach and the City Cowl·
cil was well on its way lo declar·
ing clothing optional a lone its
tidelands, which was t upported
by a special survey of beach·
user op4nion by the University o(
California Irvine.
But, by the time of that or·
dinance's second reading, the
Council chambers were tlutted
by screaming predicliona of
Sodom and Gomorrah that begat
a law that stales a kld can walk
around the beach nude until the
dawn of the 11 th birthday
after that, It 's Indecent ex·
posure.
How do you explain lo some·
one who's been believin1 all
the time they've been decent
that now certain parta ol Ute
body are not to be seen ?
Travef due west to some ol the
yet untouched Pacific lslaoda
and the natives there wonder
wby the self.touted clvlll1ed
make aJI that fuaa. The uwwer
la the aemeleu shame and de·
basement imposed upon too
much ol the world over 2,000
years that continues to be
jammed into too many un·
protestln& mlnda by a fractional,
neutotie frtnae en1eaderlftt a
love·hate .paychoala about
buman beauty that maltea
bUllons lot ma1a1lnes U1ld mov·
let and the moral majorit7.
BRUCE HOPPING .., ............
To tbe EdJtor:
How ernbarra11la1 for
Barhra Jobbina' cbU*-! 9be
announced to all Dally Pilot
rt9den <Mallbo•. Maret. S> \Mt
her cblldren ••could oot ~ad '*'
1d4 mor. than one f\1we ' wha
U..1 ..,. admit'" to Or .... ~oHt C0Uie11. SM aera tile
;1'--of.t•aU..tMe''WM
..... to u. colleee· I'm a tradua~ ol OCC. but
wa1 ..,..,are of tudl relDldtal
COQJ'H9 belq off9"d. Oounta
.,. offend to bri ... It ...... .w. .. &o • hi ..... ..a_ but
.. , ., llGt .... et ... ua..
level lmplled bJ lln. '1111 . Tl!l•re are baale ~ ,.. ..Sretnea&a to be .... •1 _..
ing students, and her children
must h ave been taught
som ething along the way.
She aJso exagge rates when she
claims no teacher encouraged,
pra ised . or i n sp ired h e r
children. That is impossible to
believe.
Teachers do teach, but stu-
dents must want lo leam. and
parents must r einforce that
philosophy at home and instill
respect ror education at an early
a1e
One of M rs. Jobbins · mOl!lt re·
vealing statements was. "We
finally tried tutoring them
ourselves . . " A parent shouJd
always want to heJp the ch.ild
who Is having trouble with some
aspect o( school. Teachers try to
point this out at conferenC'es. but
ar e sometimes rebuffed. The
parent's ego then becomes in-
volved, and instead or accepting
the advice in the caring spirit it
was intended, the parent takes it
as persona.I criticism and usual·
ly lashes out at the teacher and
the school. These parents refuse
to accept any responsibility for
their own child's learning.
I AG&EE with Mrs. Jobbins
that money alone does not im·
prove teachers or schools. but it·
responsible attacks like he"' do
nothing to further the goal ol
education.
Her ideas on "pay-as-you-go"
schools have some merit and
have been proposed many time&.
They have been used in some
states. even some counties of
Califor ni a. This is called the
Voucher System. and is not a
new idea.
Her thin.king, however, is II·
logical and faulty when s he pro-
pose• that the voucher system
be used only by people with
school-age children. "Seems fair
to me to pay only for what I
uae." Does this mean she will not support hospitals, becauae
1he'1 not ill today -nor priaona,
becauae she hun't committed a
crime and needs no protection
from those that do -nor cancer
research, because she doan't
have it -not fire/police protee.
lloD on any other street but Iler
own, etc.?
I will close my letter u she
be1an beta -"a taxpayer, on-
1ol a 1 college student, and
parent," and, I'm proud to HJ,
a teacher!
A.RMIDA MILLIGAN , ..........
To the att«:
TM dtl.., an ript to be WGr·
ried •...,_ lht ponolfaP'ie boc*
Quotes
"Oft9ftllHe'8~tll.e ._..,. ti two t'Yt ... fte .,.....
mettt in 11 Salvador deHrT•
IUptOf't Sn t«lnl of mllltal'J aid. nat ._. .• meaa UM _....
m•t ln 1:1 SaJ•edor ll ...,.Ue. J
cloe't Dow Ul1 fOWl'UleM tMt ..... -....... Ldl••· ... •••cu admtalatratJoa'1 MW ... ..... tecretarJ of •late for H.laaanota.
store be re in Newport. Young peo.
pie are very susceptible to the
emotions raised by the materials
offered in these shops. I'm not too
old lo remember myself when I
was Impressionable in this
respect, but then. too, I re-
m ember that a better known man
than I acknowledged lusting after
the flesh in Playboy Maguioe!
The city is right to be concerned
but City Attorney Coffin errs in
his efforts to have the porno·
traphk store moved to the busi·
ness district which is being zoned
ror these .. adult .. businesses.
l 'LL TELL you why. I 'm an
older man and I've traveled
around a bit. I've noticed in my
travels that the worst thing than
can happen to a city is to have an
isolated, built·up business district
where ail the anti-social elements or society are segregated. Now
Newport already has a large and
growing business center. To
m ove the pornographic store
there would be a mistake that has
been made over and over again in
all our major cities from New
York to Los Angeles.
What happens is this. Large
business districts are built up but
these places are not pleasurable
for walking or spending time
t Mre. So the law-abiding citizens
run in and out o( the district for
their bu.slnesa needs. Meanwhile,
city offi cials try to segregate un-
desirable elements into an area
tha t ls already isolated from the
better elements or society. The re-
s ult Is dttay that starts from the
center and works its way out. Of.
ficials ahould work to close the
shop altd not create a no·man's
land in the center of our city.
GEO. BRUMMELL A,__.,, ..
To the Editor :
It seema lo m e that your
newspaper and others have paid
no attenUon to what the John
Wayne AJrport e11pansion will do
to Santa Ana. I mean Santa Ana
north of the airport and nol San-
ta Ana Hei.lhts. Is th.is because
you think the residents in our
part ol Ute county are less im·
portant than those south of the
airport! II you lived ln my part
ol town you would bear noiff
that you could not stand.
Another Wnc is that Ute one
ton ol Jet poUution dropped by
the alrplanea and deacribed In
t1'e county's 1Ude show probebiy
falls on Santa Ana. II that
btca.-e u.e county thlnb we
art 9ot important'? We don't
waat c~ tbat ls ca\aHd by
tbe hMll t:Mit tails from theae
,. .... t&tber. I do thtnk you
aewspapu people aho.ald at
lea1t WI '*' aide ~ th alrpott proMem.
A. MARTJNU
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
euorAf!0911 IWC~UH TltAOH041 , ....... YO•• • ._., ... .,. PU., le ...... e.T'C*, HTllCHT .... ClltClti•ATt ifOclr ··~H ........... , •• •V , ... •••• 4NO IN•T11t•T
Up 22.16
Cloelng-.13
•• ~ ' <£~\ ~ Don't fool .~ I ~ with pensions
President Reagan 1\aa solemnly pledged that
millions ol Americans on SociaJ Security will not be
targets in the search for federal bud1et cuta. But
have others in the executive branch and on Capitol
Hill heard Reagan and agreed? ·Proposals to scale
down Social
Security
bene fits have
been surfacing
with ominous
frequency since
budget cutting
has become
earnest
--~ IYlVll PllTll ~ ~
politically and economically.
So to put a few fundamentars in order:
Social Security is not the kind of government ac-
tivity to be worked over every year to meet short-
ter m budget aims. On the contrary, the program is a
deeply rooted institution with long-term obligations
-promises made to be kept for years.
OUR SOCIAL SECUa lTY system is not financed
out of general revenues as are other government pro-
grams. It is financed out ol earmarked contributions
by workers, their employers and the self-employed.
These contributions are not mlniled with other tax
collections. They go into trust funds maintained
separately from all other funds in the U.S. Treasury.
By law, the money in the Social Security Trust
Funds can be used only for the payment of Social
Security benefits and any essential administrative
costs.
True. the program faces a short-term financing
problem until 1985. But it is a manageable problem
not requiring dr astic or unprecendeoted remedies.
Proposals for cutbacks in benefits are much
more immediately concerned with "prett,Ying up"
the bottom line figures in the national budget than
with the financial stability or the Social Security
system.
The dangerious effect is to erode even further
public confidence in the integrity of an institution vital
io the future security of the 115 million workers who
pay Social Security contributions -and vital also as
a basic support of the national economy.
MOST AMERICANS, YOUNG and old, do not
want cuts in pension benefits and, if necessary. are
~illing to pay higher Social Security taxes to main-
tain the program's protection at levels now set in
law.
In a nationwide survey for the American Associa.
lion of Retired Persons there was impressive agree;
ment among those ages 55 and over and 24 througb
S4.
Both age groups: .
-Oppose reductions in benefits. A full 78 percent
of those under 55 and 81 percent of those 55 and over
are against reducing benefits for people already oq
the rolls or those drawing benefits in the future.
-AGAINST P lJ1TING ANY ceiling on cost-of·
living benefit increases and oppose elimination of the
$255 lump sum death benefit or beneflts for depen-
dent spouses.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
SUoeMln ' PfllllPSPM ~Ur TWCon> I( ,,..,,
. ,.,. . ' ...
• \o
IS..100
1:i. • .ao 106,600 ... 100
2·~
I• .. )() ..
14'"' •• ""' 10 ,,,,
.... v. .. .,. .,. ... ..
St«QitTech
"-nn!Oll Tewaco Inc GtWnFln
9'11,.00
SOl,600 433,500
40'l.600
.cn.100 Jtl,500
311,100 3'A,IOO
356,000 JSJ,000
lAHOO
• I •''" .. ,,,.. ... , .. , _. v,
'°·500 7'.600 7',SOO 61,200 ., .soo
U.600
..... ,, .. • 14 .,.,
"'"'••Inc kat Food '-•"Ra.ti ,.-.OHat "'IO Mobil
"'·'°° 33UOO 127,.00 317,200
UPS AND DOWNS
. "' . ,,~
• \o • v,
'I
t , '~
Ul't ...,,.,. LUI ChO Pel
1 H~-o t: : 1~ Up IU l :~A 10 • I ~~ :n 4 FostnMl!r s 21'h • 21~ Up 10 1 s G~ s t~ • 'h Up 10 0
4 $tOf91TK" 11 • 1 Up 10.0
1 Sedtoln< s 41 • J"" Up •.I
I Fst ,.._ ,:: ; ,: ~~ ::;
1: X:rrn wt 41h • ~ UP •.1
II ~ 1~ • 2\4 Up •I l ~I WV. • 4!h Up t 0
11 iE "-'< 14\'> • 2 Up I.• 14 KC Corp 40c 121V. • 10"'1 Up t t u HC n n,... • 2114> VP 1.e
14 l'Nllllll'lll .,~ • 3"' Up 1.4 1 SMUTms 31 + 1"'° UD I 0 DOWNS ..._ ust Chi! Pc1
I 1"0dUlcn>Sys n 13"' 1\& Off U s 2 StolltVC Of I"" ->,co Oft t .1
, Ch!'ltC F , "" Ott '·' 4 111,.. 4. U Y. -IV• Oft 7 .6 S ~IVS J 311> V• O!f 4.7 • 8'Nf s '°"' ,,.,.., -s Ott 52
7 II-cv ptA SI~ 14 Off S.1 • OWYllff wt ,,... -"" Off • s
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tl #«1"111n pf JI -1 Off 4.S S...... llK 1S¥ -"" Off •.S Wlltlltnr 1"' -114> Oft •J I Al'll-8"t 10"° -V-Off 4.4
14 ~relM S ~ -llh Off 4.J 1~ 1 n 1414 -"' Oft 4 ' , ' ·~ 2tlo ,,. Off u I ,.,,.,. .,_. S2 -2 V. Oft 4.1
Ill -A~I -,.,.leas late WadN•
-· .... UllM,~ wltll T .... y'I ..,-.
~ llf'OYOl,,UOUO,ofta7.00 •.
._. llNI, 1 ,,..,.,., ...e.oo. off s..oo . ......-• ,...._ u tt'OY ei .. ~.oo ... , ....
• _... 100 (fWWll, ,.a ll'•'f •• ... 7UO, .. ., ....
METAlS
c~ 13-7 cents• "°"""' u !> 0..11-
tloni ...... ~ c..-u. pound.
Zi"c 4114 cents a pound, detfvereo.
TIR 54,no. -1•1• w-composite lb.
Al•ml-1• ClftlS a pOUnd, N Y
Mtrcwy U9'.00 per flffA>..
Pl•ll"""' ~00 troy 01 • Pl Y.
SILVER
•YTM-let•P,...t
H.,1dy & Ha<men, tll.750 per lroy 01111Ce.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
'--' momlno ll•lno '417 .so, Ull st..U. 1...,..,.., .,,.,,_ ll•lnos.t71.00, uoit.7S.
Parlt: afternoon 11-lno UU.«1, off U.61 ~r•Htw1: llxl119 Wt CM, off Sl. 0 Z•rlctl: late •II•,_ llldno .. ,._., W
U.00. $417.00nlled
H•114lly a "•rift••: only dally 41AM11t
'471,00, uo 51.7S.
............ : only dally quote M71 ... , W
'1.7S . • .........,., only dally quota labt!P..,
$4'7 .12. uo 51.12.
,...
PUILt'
c1ac111
"I can't find any socks in my drawer that look
the some."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
C IWl~''""'•S'f"dl<ot<t"" J/,z. ~ji~e>N
"Well, you didn't have to rip the
Big Bad Wolf's picture out of
the story book. did you?"
IUDGE PARKER
WELL ll Jlt~l
WHERE HAVE YOU ~EEN THE 15N'l RIOH1
LA51 lfN lEAl<:51ELLIN6 A JE'ANNIE'
WOMAN !:>HE CAN'T f>UY A
Mf\N A MEAL?
MISS PEACH
M'l:.ANDMR!'l?.~M , DID YOU~~ON
EYEll TEL.I.. VOL.A. iHAT ME L-~i Hl5 ENt:itL.f~H ~ ?
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
'
.. TIJM8LEWEEH ~
,.,.
j
I
1 G
"Look. Ju1t becauH I once toot 1 thorn out of rout'
paw 11 no ,.11on to ketp bugging me."
DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
~~I ~~
"I know I shouldn't hit "Mrs. Wsde? Your daughter
girls, but she said you had it coming!"
were a lousy cook!"
by Harold Le Ooux
I HAVE A. FEELIN6 YOU AND I
ARe OONNA MAKE ll f>10 IN
HOl.l..'YWOOO. ROY.'
by Mell Lazarius
9~~ WITHOlAT
'T'~e Ba?1C, I 0 1DN'r
ICNOW MOW TO
PMl!~~E IT ....
I
'
NANCY
GO BOO
FVNKl' 1t1NKERBEAN
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