HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-17 - Orange Coast Pilot•--•1rua
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/
• e bribery figltre 'out of c·ountry'
8~ STEVE MITCHELL
011i..o.i1y ...... ~ .. " An attorney fort wo fired Irvine
building inspectors says that
charges of bribery a"ainst one of
bis clients couldn't have taken
place in mid-August as a witness
testified. because the inspector
was out of the country at the lime.
Defense attorney Vance
Simonds said Monday he also ex·
peels to show the only thing that
can be proved is that the two in·
spec ton each accepted a bottle of
alco.hol and a lunch two weeks
before Christmas.
And that, Simonds said, is com·
mon practice, standard and a
tradition in the building trade and
in the City of Irvine.
·A personnel bearing into
charges that former Irvine build·
ing inspectors Bruce Bullard, 50,
of Costa Mesa, and Arthur Peck,
51, of Anaheim. solicited and re-
ceived gratuities from developers
enters Its fifth day today in Irvine
council chambers .
The two men, along with inspec-
tor Manuel "Manny" Linares, 34,
of Corona. were charged late last
year with soliciting liquor, food
and overtime frotn construction
firms in exchange for easy inspec·
lions.
The three men were fired
following a police investigation of
charges by Western Commercial
Construction. lne. that the men
solicited favors.
Bullard and Peck are appealing
their dismissals. Linares did not
contest his firing.
Prosecuting attorney David
Larsen questioned Western Com·
mercial job s uperinte ndent
Steven D. Collo last week aboulaa
alleged bribery In the summer ol
'980.
ln that alleged incident on Aug.
15, Collosaid Linares and Peck re·
quested liquor in exchange for
favorable inspections.
But attorney Simonds said
Monday that Peck was not on the
job site that day. "he was not even
on the coastal continent -he was
vacationing in the Caribbean."
Simonds, who was to begin
questioning nearly two dozen sub·
ppenaed contractors and city
employees today. said testimony
will show that Peck and Bullard:
Did not ask for bottles or
alcoholatajobsiteDec.11.
Did not ask or demand a
lunch from another contractor
that same day.
Old not accept gifts or alcohol
Crom a job superintendent in ex·
change for favorable inspections.
In his opening remarks,
Simonds referred to a tape re-
cording reportedly made by Collo
with the help of police and a wire·
<See BRIBE, Paie AZ)
OC judges don't agree
on private TV decoder
Foreigners wed
to stay in U.S.?
Embezzlemen t plea switch e d
Ex-
Oppos i te rulings
Judges differ
on TV piracy
Two Orange County municipal
court judges have tackled the
same issue the legality or
California's law prohibiting pay
television decoders and issued
divergent rulings.
In Wes t Orange County
Municipal Court, Judge Houston
Snidow granted the motion of de·
fense lawyer Kenneth Golden to
dismiss charges against Stephen
Robbins , who sells so-called
pirate decoder kits in Cypress.
Snidow ru led that the
California law violates anti-trust
Tegulations by letting pay
television stations alone decide
who can and cannot sell the
service.
In Harbor Municipal Court,
however. Judge Donald Dungan
overruled Golden 's motion in
another case dealing with pay
TV decoders. holding the state
law is constitutional
Senator guarded
in drug threat
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP I Sen.
In the Harbor Court case.
Golden represented a Hunt·
ington Beach man. Theodore
Abel. who was charged with
violating the law by selling de·
coders through Wavemasters, a
Hqntington Beach mail order
firm .
Asked the significance of the
rulings, the Westminster lawyer
said, "We now have in Orange
County the law west or the Santa
Ana River and the law east of
the Santa Ana River."
Golden said the conflicting rul·
ings only serve to further com·
plicate an area or law which is
already considered quite confus·
ing.
The lawyer has contended in
these and other "pirate de·
coder" cases that it is the
federal government, not the
stale, which has exclusive
jurisdiction over what is
transmitted and received via the
airwaves.
Golden said prosecutors in the
West Court case have told him
they will appeal Judge Snidow's
ruling.
In the Hart;>or Court matter.
the lawyer said he will wait until
the end or the case to appeaJ.
• c Ie
""w1 ... •,.t•
T rol l ey d isc-o
It may look like a streetcar gone astray, but it's really
the entrance to a discotheque in Darmstadt, West
Germany. Visitors pay their entrance ree where the
driver once collected fares. Dennis DeConcini is under 24·
hour protection because of a
death threat made earlier this
month after statements he made
about drug smugglers were
broadcast on national television,
a spokesman has confirmed.
The Arizona Democrat has
been under continual .,rotection
since March 4, three days aner
he appeared on CBS' "60
.Minutes" ~uring a report on co--ca in e trafficking , press
Oymore arrest due?
secretary Robert W. Mayes said
Monday night in a telephone In·
tervlew frovi Washington.
DRAIGI COAST WIATHIR
Increasing high cloudi·
ness tonight and Wednes-
day. Lows tonight 48 along
the coast, 53 lnland. HJghs
Wednesday 68 to 75.
111111 TDIAY
fhru hundred pla11
m11••nv IOI~ al a we1kmd retreat m Ntw YOTk. See M2.
11111
8
A ttorney 1ay1 Syrian1 may a ct soon
By 1011N-Nf:EDRAM
Of""' o .. ry ~, ... s .. 11
The allOl'ney representin&
freed OraJ!ge County hostage
Craig Clymore says he fears his
client, who has been indicted on
federal drtlg smuggling charges,
will be arrested by Syrian
authorities within the next few
days.
Clymore. 24, was one or the
more than 100 hostages aboard a
Pakistani jeUiner that wu hi-
jacked March 2 on a nt1ht from
Karachi to Peshawar by oppo-
nents or Pakistan's President
Mohammad Zia ul-Haq. It wu
eventually Oown to Damascus,
Syria, where the hijackers sur-
rendered Saturday.
Attorney Ronald Kreber of
La1una Beach. a former Pmt·
ecutor for the Oran1e County
Dl1trict Attorney's otflce. said he
had recei ved Information
Clymore would be' arrest~ by the
Syrtana ln ordel' to pre11ure him
Into returnlns to the United
Statet.
ltreber cbar1ed U.S. State
Department otnclall with puttbac
prt11ure oa UM SJriiyat to at'Nlt
Cly men in 1 minor cbaU•·
''Wt belitYe be wfilbit arn1ted
on a small, innocuous cfiarge,"
Kreber said. "He would be de-
tained until he agrees to sign
waivers to return to the United
States."
The State Department has re-
Cops adm it
racial joke ·
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP> -Two
policemen say they dumped four
dead oppoeums outside a soul food
eatery as a Joke. but the black
reetauraleur says lt was racist
harHsmentbysevenofftcen.
The police department ls ln·
veati1atlng the incident. Burier
Barn owner George Powe con·
tends five police cart, with two
untf orm~ officers in each, drove
up to the 24-bour restaurant at 10
p.m. Tlnand•v. Seven pottcen:•
1ot out, 1atMnd at the trunk ol
one car and dumped the op.
po.uma on thesidewallr, be ta.Id.
Tbe dty C!OmmlHlaner's olftce
HY• the two omcen who ~~
mltted involvement wW be dlt·
clpUned.
voked Clymore's passport. ap-
parently to prevent him from flee-
ing prosecution. He has been is·
sued one-way travel papers to
New York. where the announce·
mentor his indictment was made
Saturday. The United States and
Syria have no extradition treaty.
Kreber said if he has his way,
his client will remain in Syria UD·
til the drug smuggling charges
are resolved.
Clymore is alleged to be the
ringleader of a nine-member in-
ternaUooaJ hashish and heroin
s mu11lin1 operation, according
to a federal 1rand Jury indictment
released by the U.S. Attorney's of·
flee ln New York City.
Othen named in the et1hl·
count lncllctment, which charted
conspiracy, possession with ln·
tent to dlatribute and llle1aJ Im·
portatlon. were:
He)en Ftancet Plesko, Diane
Mae MONman and Klm Marie
Mowltl. All 1ave the aame Lake
Forest addra• where Clymore
resided before his trip to Pa.k1.ltan
la1tmontb.
more moved from lb at unln·
co eommunlty juat prior
to ~accordln1 to hll fat.her.
(lee IUSPECI', Pa1e..U)
ISee Page BJ >
u
Fac illg
s t a t e
• p r i s o n
By DAVID K UTZMANN
Of tlw O•tly Ptlel Sgfl
Wilh a n Orang e County
Superior Court jury already .
picked and waiting in an adjoin Ing room, the former director or
Hunttncton Beach's federal job
lralnlng program changed his
pJea from innocent to guilty on
two felony counts of misusing
public funds.
Robert L. Cunningham, 34,
former chief of the city·s Com-
prehensive Employment Train·
ing Act program. could race up
lo four years in state prison as a
result of his change in plea Mon ·
day.
Judge Everett W Dickey or·
dered Cunningham. now free
without bail. to report to Orange
County Jail on Sunday He will
be sent to the state prison at
Chino for diagnostic tests and
return for formal sentencing on
June 16
Cunningha m had, been
charged with embezzling $16,000
in federal funds for his personal
use. The Or ange County Grand
Jury indicted him in October. He
entered his innocent pleas a
short lime later .
Mon day. however. prosecutor
Dave Himelson and Deputy
Public Defender Kathy O'Leary
reached a negotiated plea just
before opening statements in the
trial were to be given.
Himelson later said the
cha nge in plea was due to the
prosecution's "very strong"
case against the defendant.
Dickey made it clear that even
ttrough Cunningham was volun·
tarily c hanging h is plea,
chances or his getting probation
wen~ slim.
The judge said the law Crowns
on probation for public officials
charged with embezzling public
funds. except in unusual cases
where probation is justified.
In entering his pleas, Cun-
ningham admitted to charges
that between June, 1979, and
Januury, 1980, while workinl as
jobs chief In Hunlintton Beach
a nd president of. Western
<See CETA, Page AZ)
Pic kford a u ction
brings 8400,000
Gl.ENDALE (AP) -Nearly
f'OC),000 waa brou1bt ln from the
auction of aUent movie atar
Mary Pickford'• estate and tbe
bt1h-1pender was apparently
Charlene Tilton, or the "DaiJu"
tele vlllon aeriu.
..... 1\lton boutht th• hi1hest
prived item at tb• Wffkeod auc-
tion as the abelled out "10,000 of
the "Ewin& oil" money. Sb•
pald •.ooo SUnday for a Louis
Vullton upriaht vanity steamer
trunk wttb II~ lnlUat1.
OAilY "llel italf -·
ADMITS FUND MISUSE
Robert Cunningham
Irish para des
flourish on
St. Pat's Day
By The Associated Press
Thousands of Irish-Americans
were parading in New York,
Chicago, Savannah, Ga .. and
scores or other cities today in a
restive tribute to their patron.
St Patrick. Cardinal Terrence
Cooke urged the celebrators to
be r eligious, not raucous.
Meanwhile, in California, two
snake races were being held to
honor the saint credited with
bringing Christianity to Ireland
and driving the island's snakes in·
to the sea.
For some, St. Patrick's Day is
a chance to raise a cup of good
cheer perhaps in the form of
green beer. But Alan Luk.s,
director of the New York Af.
filiate or the Notional Council on
Alcoholism, said the holiday has
become "an annual orgy of
abusive drinking."
Cooke. speaking at an annual
m ualcal celebration al St.
Patrick's Cathedral OP. S\md~.
urged New Yorkers to
"moderate any grossness in the
spring festival that has been
growing up atround St. Patrick's
Day."
The New York parade route
soes up Fifth Avenue, rtaht put
the huge, o rnate Gothlc-1tyle
church. Tens of thou1anda of
marchers were eKpected. and
more than 2,000 extra police
were on hand. In Geor1la, parades were Ht
ln Allant• and Savannah, where
city offl(1lala contend their
march 11 second lo 1lae oa1)' to
New York '•·
Savannah'• parade was to ln·
elude 11 n.oata and • banda.
"The pJac• ls loaded up wltb
people who Just wait, alJDolt
Ulle Mardi Gru," 1tld Jerry
(8'ee SAINT. Pase AJ)
...
•'
.. .
I
-..
Tru~kers feeling sheepish
AP Wlrepholo
A flock of 900 ewes and their kids owned by
a Stockton rancher head down a road near
Turlock to find greener pastures, much to
the consternation of truck drivers who
were wondering how they'd explain their
late arrivals .
Ride's last
miles free
FRESNO <API Whal
can a taxi driver do if he
drives a passenger 600
m iles a nd the passenger
then refuses to pay t he
$900 fare·•
van U.S. Embassy
bombed; 3 injured
_ Drive the passc•nger to
jail
At leas t lh<1t 's what
Fresno cablue Will1<1m
Giacalone did Mond<Jy lie
s howed up at police hl•CJd
quarter '> and had
Kris lapour I Taslak1an .
36 . of Los AnJwles <Jrrc!'lt
ed for failing to pa) even
though the driver hcid c·ut
th e fare in ha If fro m
Sl.800
Giacalone told officers
that he p1chd Taslak1an
at the Gre\ hound Hus
Termrncil her"e Sunda' and
agreed to dn\(' him t"r, Lo:-.
Angele:-. a nd h<H'k for hair
fare
From Pag.-11 I
SAINT ...
Hogan. parade l'Oorctrnator
Dublin. Ga . foumh•d t69 _\e ar<.
ago by an Iris hman n amed
Jonathan Sawycr. had a paradt•
scheduled for Saturda\
In Chicago. part c1f toda) ..,
celebration lt•d h) Ma.'<1r
Jane Byrne inc luded turning
the Chicago River grt'en with
hundreds of pounds of dye SI
Paul. Minn . outshine!'> t~1n nl)
MinneapolL'i 1•vt'r) St Patnt k "
Day with a mul'h t>1 ggcr parade
In Denver. the Volunteers of
America were s erving 23.000
corned-beef.and cabbage meals
to the city's elderly Cooks s tart
ed the day with t .200 pounds of
cabbage and 3,200 Irish soda
br ead biscuits
I n Sa n F rant1sto . :.e
spo kes woman for thl' l'ahforni<t
Ac adem y of Sc1t·ncc!. said tht•
or ganizatiort's snake rate 1s 1n
tended lo help ch1ldrl'r1 g(•t ovpr
a fear or the rcplllc!.
· · W e s t a r t t• d I o d o 1 l
particularly a!'> un l'duC'atwn
event for youn~Sll'r!> who think
that all snakes are evil." said
Pa m Wing. a s pokes man for the
academ y·s Steinhart Aqu<Jnum.
site 9f the race for seven year~
Youngsters racl· lht· -.nake<.
around a bright 1.trcen trac k
Sh e su1d the -.tor } of St
Patric k a nd the -.nakl''> 1!> a
myth
"T here never really were an)
s nakes in Ireland." Ms Wing
said
The othe r race. ~pon:-.orcd hy
radio station KARI. t o hl'nchl
c h a r ity, 1s h eld downtown
* * *
SAN JOSE. Costa Rieu <APl
An explosion tort' through a
veh icle belon ging to the U S
E m ba"Y here-today <rn d t hrer
U S Marine passengers wert· in
jured. one of them serwuslv. an
l'mbassy s pokesman :-.a1<f l k
dc,scnbt'd lhl' blast a~ an allac·k
Thl' spokcs m an !'>;ml I ht• l ' s
Four Marines
arrested in
fat al attack
LAKE llA \'ASl' CIT Y. /\rt1
< ,\ P 1 Callforn1 ;.i off1<'1ab hav1•
arreste>d four Manm·s in connl'C'
tw n '41th the de Ltlh of l>c•nisl'
R A Lt•Cro1x. "'ho authonllt•s
sa~ "'a!'>· l1t>d . bt•att•n and ab;m
dont•d m the de!-.t•rt
Mis!-LeCro1x 1hc•d Sundav in a
San D1 t•gn hosµ1tal Sht; had
ht'l'n lrl'alt·d Jnd n •lt>a\t•d b\ ;.1
Lake Ha\ :i ... u C11 ~ hoo;p1t.1l a da:--
Pa rher
Tht• .\1 dnne., ,ill ... 1at1om•d al
T"' ent' nin1• Palm:-C<Jl1f and
J rrt>'dt'd :\1 o nd:i' b\ Sa n
Hernard1n11 C ount~ or°fll t•r<,
"'t're 1dent1flt'd J :o. ·.\I 1thal'I I>
Cllok 22 . En c C \\ Jrf1l'ld 23
T1moth) P Streitz. 23 and
J ames S H•J'>'41·ll. 22
Tht· arrt·'>t '4arranl 1ssu1·d
M ond<t,\ h) I.a kt· II a' J SU City
Just1ct· of lht• l'1·a«1· Hl·rtram
Stott chargt•d tht>m with "''<·cmcl
degree murder and <t,J.:gravati:d
a ssault
l nvcst1J.(al or!'. :-a id Mi s s
l.cCro1x w as l1t•d ""1th h r r
clothes. twaten and ll'ft 1n th,.
d e s ert along Arizona 95 A
motorist latN took h<•r lo l.akt·
llavasu City
Iran trying
ex-official
H1':JR L'T. Ld1anon IA1'1
I r a n · s form l'r ck p u l} fl ri ml'
m 1 n 1 s t e r a n d g '> v t• r n m e n I
s pokesman, Abbas Amar En
tezam. '4 e nt on trial lod av on a
charge of c·ons1.>1ring agains t th1•
hlam1c revolution 1n collus1on
with the Central lntel11gt·nce
AgenC'y, Iran's off1 c1al Par'>
ne ws agency rl'ported
In the o~nmg ('ourl Sl''>~.ion al
Tehran·s Evin Prison, form1·r
Prime Minister Mehdi Ba7.arg an
d<'fended the actwns of his one
time subordinate
Begorra it's S
Quints born today in NY
ROCH ESTER, NY. t AP> St Patrick's J>ay qulntupkls
'A-e re born he re today to an Ontario, N Y .• woman of In ah a n
cestr y.
The two girls a nd th ree boys, r anging in weight from 2
pounds. 8 ounces to 3 pounds, 7 ouncf's. were born at Stronl(
MemoriaJ Hospita l at 5:30 a .m . to T im othy and Corine Buch
The hospitul said a ll were in satisfac;tory condition
Mr. Beach refused lo say in February whether h la wife had
been lak ing fe rtility drugs, which improve the c hance• of mulll·
pie births
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
Thoma• P ~atey ~
Ro09rt N. Weed
~
M. Thoma• Keevll .....
Thomaa A. Murphlnt ............
Chaflet H. LOOI A..-...c ..............
Befnard Schulman a..-
~&!=:en
~n1!\t';.!oddard Jr
Clae11fted edvertltlnt 7141142·1171
All other department• 142·4i21
MAIN OFFICE
JJO Wttl Ila, SI , C•I• ~ ... CA
Ml II tdClreu ... I*· Got II MIH, c A .,.,.
Cot1yr1vm '"' Oran99 GolJI l'uDtl1lll119C-y H o new' 11o<1ot, 111u11ra110"'· tdltorlal M4111tr or 111
.. r11umenll "•'"" m1y IH r1p;oe1vc:1d 111111110011 •1Mcl11 permfn lOI! ol copyr10111 o,.,,.,
van was driven hy a Costa Rica n
employee of the l'mbassy and
was takin~ three Mannes from
lhf'1r re!-oldt'n ce to ·-l-h~ t'"nttta~:ty
for a rout1nt· change of guard
About two m inutes after the
explosmn. a s1•cn11d bomb wl'nl
off at th1· hutldmg hou~ing the
t•mha:-.s.) of llondura!'>, polln·
!'>aid Report!'> -.aid therc \\>ert• no
IOJUrlt.''> from that blcist
Thl·n· """no 1ndica11o n if th<.•
bombing., wt·n· related Polic:t·
1mmt·d1;.ately M'alt•d off tht• arc:t
.irouml tht· llonduran Embass~
Askl•<I 1f ti "'<1s an attack. lht·
<,pnkt's man who dC'cline to bt·
1dl•nl1f1l•d. -.aid . ·y t''-· 1t wai. an
attack llut '4 t' an· not '>u re 1{ it
"a:-a bomh lh;.il "'"" prl'v1ously
placNI in tlw H·h1l'll· or af the
H•h11·l1• '4'1!'> att.11·k1•tl hy a pro
jl'('l tit•
lit· saul tht· 'an tauli(ht fin·
and "a-. d 1•!'>t ro~ t·tl near the
Y ost''i r1·~1dl·nt ial d1stnl'I on the
t'il'>t ..,1<Jto o f thc• eap1tal.
TIH• s p o kc·-.m a n said Sgt
Stl'n 'n c;an·1a. ll, of the Bronx.
J'\e"' York Cit'. suffrn·d senoui.
"nu nib 1n hoth legs C pl
.I t' r II m •• w a 11 l' r s . 2 t . 0 r s l
Alban!'>, (lUl't'n!'> Nt•\\ York and
Sgt .John E Hobt'rt!>, 22. of
Robinsdale. Minn . both suffered
light '40unch . he said . add mg that
Roberts ma,\ have a broken arm
;.irm
Tht• dra\er . 1dt-nt1f1ed as
Emtl1n Camat:ho. '4 <1!. s light!)
1n Jun·<I lhe '>pokt•sman said
1'11hc·1· !'>a1<1 an un1ktermmed
nu m lwr of q·h1l'les tra V('hng on
tht• -.amt· road "'l'rt' damagl•d by
lht' hla!->I
l'nl 1k1· 11th1•r ('t·ntr;.il
,\m1•nl·a11 nation'>. lhl'rt' art· no
lt•r1 u n :-.t gr<JU IJS op(•rat1ng in
Cos I ,1 Ha· a and tt•rron<,I altac·ks
arP t''llri·rne·ly rcJrc•
f 'ront Pa9.-1\ I
CETA ...
lnst1tutt• or Career~. Inc . ht'
fraudulc·nlly <ippropnat<•d the
mon1•y
111 mclson ~aid the form<·r of
hC'1al UM'd lhl' mom•y as a down
JW} ml•nl on i.I nt'"" ·home in thl'
S<1uth countv
Cunningham latt•r repaid tht'
fund:-in two 1nc;tallmt:nl!>
Orangt• County MCJnpowc r
{'om mi..s1on auditors or11-:1nally
hegan st-rut1n17.1n g the c11y ·s
Jobs program early lcist year
a ft<'r allegations of mis manage·
mt•nt , cxtravai;:ant'<' and conflict
o f 1nH·r~st Wt'rt' levele d 111
W••Stl•rn lns t1tutc . th(• <'orporatc
opC'rator of the $2 6 million a
yc•ar fl·deral job progr am in
llu ntington Beach
In February, 1980. the com
m1:o1s ion , th rou g h which a ll
fe deral JOh dollars pass into the
C'Ounty. term inated a ll contracts
with Cunn ingham 's West ern
I ns tilul£•.
Th e lluntmgton Beach City
l'ounC'il h as culled for a gr and
Jury probe Into Western.
Inquiries into other C ETA pro-
gram s in Orange County a lso
follOW<'d
Fro• Pagt-A I
BRIBE ...
lc1111 microphone Dec. 11 on the job
11ltc
"All we have Is a tap<' of a man
!Collo) who ke pt pus hing a botUe
at these people, saytn1. "You're
aolng lo toke care of m e, aren'l
you 7"
SI m onds said s ubsequent
responses by the two ln1pectora
never lndlcotc they offered
110ythlna other tha n advtce on
how the contractor could prepare
for tuture tnapec:tlons .
The attorney al so said
te1tlmony wtll sho w the lenathy
police r port and a transcript or
the tape recordln• wore "worse
than ne11t1ently prepared,"
1ddln1 the report points the
tinier ot wron1dotn1 at Llnarea,
not Peck and Bullard.
• '
s • ID hijack
..
Soviets may have aided trio
It
WASJUNGTON (AP> -The
State [)epartment, c har•tn1 that
three hijackert of a Pakistani
Jetliner received machine iuna
dur i n g a s topov e r in
Afghanistan, says It la holdln1
Soviet authorities accountable .
The allegation. outlined Mon·
day by spokes man Wiiiiam
Dyess. was based on eyewltneas
accounts of the events at Kabul
airport. where the Pakistani In·
ternationaJ Airlines flight spent
the first five days of the 13-day
hijacking ordeal which began in
Pa k ist an.
"At one point. all three hi·
jacke rs stood in view of Afghan
and Soviet security pe rsonne l
without any apparent concern
for their own safety," Dyess
said.
li e added that s everal
passengers aboard the plane al·
leged t.hat the hijacke rs received
a dditional weapons while in
Kabul
* * * Frofft Pagr Al
SUSPECT ...
G l1>n Ctr mor e . of Sa n Jua n
Capistrcrn~o has declined to
n•veal hisson ·s curren t address
C>theRi n<tml"d in the md1ctment
wt•re Ll'onard Wyh e of Stanton.
Robert A Lt·e of Ornni.:e. Dale E
Donnell of Anah£'im a nd Kenneth
c;risi.om of Santa Ana
.\cc·ording t11 federal drug cn-
forl'Cml'nt authont1t·s in Ne"'
York . Mt'>s Mosl•man a nd Miss
M11w1t1 '4t·rt· c aui.:ht carrying
hasl11-.h 011 c·onc·eal<·d 1n C'C>ndoms
in thl'tr 'aginas dun ng a !.t·<irch at
.John F Kenned) A1qmrt in Ne"'
York mJanu<:tr)
Ht•porkdly thl' two women h ad
arrived on a fhghl fro m Karachi.
l'ak1st<1n C'lymorc <Jnd Miss
Plt·sko \H•n· on the• -.aml· flight,
hut th<·' ...,<•n•n 't !'.l'arched. ac
eorclrng. to ft•dt•ral drug enforce
mc•nt authoril1t•:-. in N(•w York
l'ly mon•!'> allornt•y '-LIY :O. ht' will
fight lht· t•Xtracl1twn of his t'IH•nt
from Svna "I h:.tvt• some· very
po1nll·d· qUl'StlOllS to a !>k lhl' em
bassy offtC'1als tlwn"" ht• s <i1d .
'Tht• battlt• ground will bt· in
l>arn aM'Us Wt• ate· i.:oing to fight
1t out lht:rt:om· stt·p al a t1ml' "
'Mace war'
in the sky?
SALT LAKE C ITY 1AP1 A
JH year old Was hington man was
hooked for investigation of in
tnft:nng \\ llh a f11gh1 crew after
a n a1 rlant> pilot fatC'd with a
p11s !-.1hl1· Mal't' w<1r an th£' air ·
madt• an unschl'dult•d stop here.
polll'l' saacl
Tht· f><'lla Air Lrnt·s Jl·t. bound
from S t•a tlle for Dallas , sc·t
d o"' n 1n Sall l.<1ke City on Sun
cla} a ftN a pasS('llUl'r pulled <•
1·an of ll'ur ~as. thn•a lt.•nt•d to
l:tkto thl' plant• on a "tour" of the
l 'nikcl Slaks and found hims elf
(' o n f r o n t t• d b y t w o o th e r
pa:-.s eng l'r s u l so he ar ing
eanislC'rs of chemical repe llents.
pol ice said
lklta pubh<' relations director
.lames Ewing said today he had
hl•arrl r<'ports that an inebriated
passen~er prompted Flight 628
to land in Salt Lake City on Sun
da.' Ill' said he was not aware
of rt'po1 ts of a possible "Mace
"'ar
0
"They arrived with platola,
they lelt with machine 1un1," h e
said.
A statement from the Soviet
Embassy In Washln1Lon called
the accus atio ns ''comple te ly
groundless" and "crude a nd un
digntrled.''
The hijacking s tarted Murch 2
and e nd ed Sut urd ay In
Damascus when t h e three
Pakistanis surrend e r ed to
Syrian authorities and freed
m o r e than 100 hostages in ex-
change for the release of 54
Pakistani political prisone rs .
Dyess suggested that the So-
viets, because o ( the 85,000 troops
the y ha ve s t atio n e d 1n
Afghanistan. are the controlling
authority in that country
As ke d whether the Soviets
sh ould be held a ccountable for
the eve~ls at K abu l airport,
Dyess said, "I don 'l see how the
Soviet s can e ntire ly escape
responsibility for what took
place " He added that the So·
viets refrained from publicly
condemning the hijac king ror 10
days .
Dyess said he did not know
what moti•e Moscow may have
had for its allt'ged complicity in
the hiJacking, but o ne offil'iul
theorized the Sov1l'ts' actions
m a y h a v <' b e t· n a i m e d a t
weakc n i n ~ t h e r e~im e of
Pakistani Preside nt Mohamml'<1
Zia ul·flaq .
T he hijackers haH 1denlif1Pd
thl'mselves as m c·mbt'rs or
poht1cal group ll•d b} Murta7a
Bhutto, son of former Prtmc
M mis ter Zulf1kar J\11 Hhutto
who ""as ousll'd by Zrn in a <«>Up
four } l'ars ago
Tensions hl•t..., l'l'n thl' Soviet
l"nion a nd Paki s tan havf•
Hetlltfd alnce 1979 because
At1hao rebels h ave used
P akl1t11n u a haven for guer
r l l la acllvltles against
Afghanistan's Marxist govern
ment.
T he Reagan adminis tration's
allegaliorui of Soviet complic1ty
In the hijacking follow previous
chareea that Moscow has been
eneaaed In International te r
rorlsm in s uch areas a s El
Salvador, lht> Middle Eas t and
Africa
HB intruder
steals man's
money bag
A taco rt•staurant employt-t•
who took hom1· $800 111 rt'c1·1pts
from his bus lf\l'Ss "'as robbed at
gunpoint m his lluntmgton Uearh
apartment. pol1ct' reportt'd
The 30 year CJld v1t·l1m, who
w as nol idcntaf1<:d h) JJOliCl'. trild
offlc·c·rs he was aslt·<·µ 1n his tl'n
l r al l'lly apartm{·nt when a
hl'droom hght was '>n(lflpl·d on ti\
an intruderat3 20 a m Monday ·
Thl· intruder, \\ho d pµan·nll)
hlld t•llll·rt·d thniugh an 11pn1 \\In
duw . po1nll'd an aut11mat11'
handgun and d1·mand1·d mor11·\
:J<·c-ordmg to I ht• 1111l 1l'f• rep11rt
The -.u~µc·c·t found <i lilac·k 'in) I
h<ig <·onlam1ng lht• n ·.,l aurJnl n ·
Cl'l lJI~ and fll·d "'1th 1l pol 1<'1· ... a1<1
Tht• int rudt•r "'a!'> dt·:-.i-r1 lwd <J-. J
"'hit(' m•rn tn hi!'> l'.trl> 20~ "'1th
blon<l h:11r
Fire that was believed touched off when a n engine of
Vol ks wagen bus ignited Monday night destroyed home of
Frank and Nancy G riffo. 32031 Via Oso. in Coto de Casa
Loss was estimated al more than $300.000 to structure
a nd contents of 3.600-square·foot mountains1d<' home Sioe-
family members escaped uninJured
PIA GE[
Making a rare publ~c appearance'. Reza Pahk;ivi (left), self -proclaimed Shah of
Iran, watches the finals of the Catro International Tennis Tournament. Widow
Farah Diba sits beside her soft drink -swigging son in front row seats at the
Ghezira Sporting Club.
Kif t hifs drug
011 1vest eoosf
Eartha Kitt , s 1n J:H .
ac tress a nd d a ncer. says
she's going to move from the
Wes t Coast t o the East
"because thE're's "'' one out
there for me lo play with any
more."
"Everyone's on cocaine or
marijuana ." Miss Kitt said
during a visit in Charleston.
S .C . "They ca n kill
themselves if lht•v want. but
I don't want lo be a purl of
it ..
M iss Kitt was v1 -.1l1n g
Ch arles ton with a nc•v.
filming her life fo r Wl'sl
German telcv1swn Miss Kitt
was born in South Carolmu
Operc. star Mary ('oi.la and
Washington. 0 C . e1ttorney
Anthony G. Chas~ v.111 marry
June 6 in Be\•e rly lhlls hl'r
publicist . Phil Pulacl1no,
announced
Miss Costa. v.ho he1 s '>Un~
with the Metropolitan Opera
and 1n the fil m "Song of
Norway." returned from a
six -m onth opt'ratta tour
Chase is a member of the
Drinker, Biddle and Wreath
law firm . They plan to live in
Los Angeles and Wushan~ton
August A. 8u<tch Jr., the
8 1-year old h on o rar y
chairman of Anheus (•r-Busch
Companies Int . has lakf'n
his fourth bridt-. Mari~arf't
M. Snyder, 61
Busch. who also ov. m. the
S t Loui s Card1nJl s .
announ<.'ed he married Mrs
Singer Jzmmy Buffett is
le nd i ng support t o
FloTlda 's Save the
Manatee effort. .. You
c an 't help hut like
manatee.·· h e said .
"And their only
predators are people
who aren't aware of the
problem.·· Fewer than
I.000 of the "gent/,e
giants" survive.
S nyder in a privat e
ceremony.
The new Mrs. Busch , a
widow since 1974, was a
secretary lo Busch for many
years and is a vice president
of Anheuser· Busch a nd the
first woman director of the
corporation
Although slopping short of
declaring h imse lf a
candidate, stale Controller
Ken Cory claims he can beat
a ny rival for the Democratic
gubernatorial nomination in
1982.
"I think I can
o ut-campaign Los Angeles
M ayor Tom Bradley or
an y body else in the
Democratic primary," Cory
said.
Cory, 43, in his second
term as comptroller. said
there was "a high degree of
probability" that he would
e nte r the race for the
governorship if Gov. Brown
decides to run for a U.S.
Senate seat, as expected.
"Desig ner creativity has
reached the heights." said
Killy Les li e of
Nei man -Mar c u s .
"Unfortunately. too, so have
the prices. But it doesn't cost
a nything to look."
Ms Les lie made her
o b se r vat ion whil e a
co mm e ntat o r at the
Childrens Hospital of Orange
County fas hio n s how at
Anaheim Convention Center.
Pope John Paul II asked
Romans to be understanding
of his frequent trips outside
the Vatican because he must
carry out his "pastoral
se r vice'' to all Roman
Catholics.
The pope made t h e
comment as he told a crowd
of 50,000 gathered in St.
Peter's Square of his plans to
celebrate Mass for the
workers at Terni, a town in
central Italy on Thursday.
Bacteria death denied
Germ warfare tests cited in $11 million suit
SAN FHANCISCO IAPI The
govern m e nt s ays that the
Arm y's spruying of San Fran
cisco with bacteria 1n germ
warfare tests 31 years ago did
not cause the death or Edward
Nevin. a prumint•nl resident of
the city
The contention cam t! as open
ing arguments beg<rn Monday in
the trial o f an $11 million
wrongful death laws uit brought
by Nevin's relatives
Assis tant U.S. Attorney J ohn
Kern told the court 1n the non
jury trial that 1t wai. not an
Army bacteria used in the germ
warfare tests in 1950. but a dif-
ferent strain that took ~ .. v1n's
life
Coucilman
raises funds
for scouts
Huntington Beach City Coun·
cilman Jack Kelly will host a
noo-per·person cocktail recep
tlon at his home Thursday to
raise money for local Boy
Scouts .
Reception coordinator Susan
Osborn said Kelly was asked to
host the fundra1ser because as a
councilman and recognized ac-
t.or be "might be a good draw."
Those interested in attending
tbe evening reception in Hunt·
ington Harbour can gel Curther
information by calling 963·9591,
Ms. Osborn said.
, Proceeds wtll be d onated to
Runtlngton Beach and Fountain
Vllley Boy Scouts , s he said.
But attorney Edwin Nevin Ill.
grandson of the dead man,
argued it was the same "SUK"
strain of serretia marcesens
ust'd by the Army in s pray tests
from a Navy vessel off San
Francisco that killed his
grandfather . then 75.
Tht> purpose of the tests , kept
s ecret for 26 years. was to trace
the distribution or bacteria
aimed from a ship al a coastal
city According to government
records. germ clouds covered
much of San Francisco and its
s uburbs
THE ARMY SAYS two kinds
of bacteria were used in the
tests. bacillus globigi and ser·
ratia marcesens. the latter be-
ing blamed in Nevins' death.
The elder Nevin died at Slan-
f or d l 'niversily hos pital fi ve
weeks after the tests Sept. 26
and 27. 1950. Twelve cases of ill-
nrss attributed to the bacteria
were reported at the medical
facility.
A gov<'rnment panel later said
that Nevin's d~alh was an isolat·
E'd incident and that the bacteria
could be used without risk.
Nevin's grandson told U.S. Dis·
tn ct Judge Samuel Conti that
thE' v i c tim 's chi l dr e n ,
g randc hildren and great
grandchildren are not claiming
the government didn't have a
"valid and appropriate goal In
pre paring a defens e against
germ warfare.
"The issue is narrower," he
said. "By what basis in Jaw does
the government justify dis-
persion or bacteria on a large
P<lpulation?"
HE ALLEGED THE govern·
m ent negligently used the bac·
: "4''te li.1tenin9
The Dally Pilot wants to hear observaUons from lta rHdera
-particularly commenL'I about the paper ltself. It's easy to tell
'Ill your views. Just call the number below and your meN•I•
wUI be recorded. Me11aa11e wlU be tran11cribed several Umet
dally and delivered to the desk of the appropriate editor. No
ctrculation calla, pleuc.
Tell us what's on your mind. The number ls In 1ervice 24
houn a day, seven day& a week. 642•6086
teria without informed consent
of the people of San Francisco
and without an adequate pre-test
in vesligation of the risks.
Kern told the court the ser·
retia marcesens blamed for the
e lder Nevin 's death was "a
strain of a different variety"
and that the government will
prove its contention in evidence
lo be submitted.
The Army said the serretia
m a rcesens bacteria was used
because it was believed to be
safe . it simulated a bacteria that
an e nemy might use in real
germ warfare and because its
bright red color made it readily
identifiable.
In a report on the tests ob-
tained by the younger Nevin, the
Arm y concluded that a germ
warfare attack on an American
coastal city was feasible and
that success or failure of such an
attack would depend primarily
on weather conditions.
Easter Week
day camp set
E l ementary school age
children from Laguna Beach,
L a gun a NI g u e I , San J-u-a n
Capistrano and San Clemente
are eligible to take part ln the
South Coast YMCA 's Easter
Wee k Day C amp April 13
through 17.
The cost of the camp is $80 for
YMCA members and S70 for
non-members. Hours of the
camp at Cr own Valley Com -
munity Park ln La1una Niguel
are from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m .
Extended h o ur s and
transportation to and from camp
are offered for an addlllonal fee.
For more lnlormaUon call the
YMCA al 831-9622, or 495"°'53.
Huntin~on man
aviation graduate
George Alfred Evan1 of Hunt-
ln1ton Beach, recently craduat·
ed from the Co1Je1e of A vtatlon
Ttcbnolo1y at Northrop
Unlverally, ln Jnslewood.
Re IUCCellfullJ complet.d t.bt
air frame and power plant main·
ten1n ce pro1ram and la
quallfled to bt an avlaUon
tecbAldan.
Orange Cout OAILY PILOTITueeday, March 17, 1981
Schools'
·hazards
detailed
SACRA MENTO <AP) -
PotentJally hHardous weak·
ne11et have been found ln pre-
c aat , pre-stressed concrete con-
struction at 33 Californ ia
schoola, the state architect's of-
fice aald Monday.
Al nln.e schools , structures
were cloeed or given temporary
shoring untll major repairs
could be made. Minor repairs
were needed at 24 other school
facilities.
The architect's office began a
survey of California s chool
structures after a portion of the
roof of an audilorium-
gymnasium building collapsed
last year at Antioch High School
in Antioch.
FRAMING IN THE collapsed
portion of the roof was made of
pre-stressed concrete.
Meanwhile, the architect's of-
fice urged local building officials
and owners of buildings that
contain pre-cast, pre-stressed
concrete to check their facilities
for signs of weaknoss.
"If significant distress is dis·
covered in the pre-stressed
framing me mbers or in their
supporting members , use of the
buildings in the area or distress
should be discontinued until a
detailed analysis . . can be
made and corrective action
taken ... the office said in a state-
ment.
MOST OF THE s tructures
with weaknesses we re built in
the late 1950s and early 1960s,
the office said. More rece nt de·
signs or pre-stressed concrete do
not appear to have the struc-
tural problems found in earlier
pieces, it added.
Donald Jephcott. the office's
chief of structural safety, said
major repairs we re required al
these schools :
-Classroom buildings, Park
Junior High School, Antioch.
-Gymnasium, King Junior
High, Oakland.
-Classroom buildings, Cope
Junior High, Redlands.
Seal Beach
seeking new
• city manager
The Seal Beach Cit y Council is
engaged in its first round of in-
terviews for a new city manager.
Mayor Ronald Krede ll predict·
ed Monday that an appointment
will be made in about one
month.
The council interviewed three
candidates Saturday and will in-
terview three more later this
week. Kredell said the council
will narrow this group to two or
t hree flnalisls. then will make an
appointment , possibly a rter
second interviews with the
finalists.
The city received 58 applica·
lions for the post.
The new city manager will suc·
ceed Dennis Courtemarche, who
resigned last December in a dis·
pule with the council over the
city's financial problems.
Mayor Kredell said the new city
manager's greatest immediate
challenge will be balancing the
city's 1981·82 budget. City of-
ficials predict that Seal Beach
will be $750,000 short of funds dur·
ing the coming fiscal year.
APW11·9pM\O
STUDENTS SPENT FOUR MONTHS ON THIS PROJECT
Professor Wiiiiam Guentzler with 'miracle' engine
Auto gets 110 mpg
$5,500 proj ect • ID
SAN OIEGO 1AP 1 In four
month s' tim e Har o ld
McEowen·s MG roud!.te r wl•nt
from 30 miles per gallon or gas
lo I 10 The onlv trouble ti 's J
drag getting up ·a hill ·
The remarkahll' things a
fe llo w professor al San Diego
Slate Un ivers ity did to his
e n g i n e c a n b c· d o n c h )
automakers in Detroit as Wl'll.
McEowen said in an interview
Monday
First. Prof. William Guentzlcr
and four stude nts paicl SJ.000 for
a Kubota diesel engtnl'. usually
used in tractors
THE ENGINE WAS bc11lcd to
a Toyota f1v l' c;p c ed
t r ansmission wit h a special
adaptor pl a t e made o f a
machined piece of aluminum .
The engine a nd trans mission
were installed in the MG
The engme·s revolutions per
minute were set as lov. as poss1
ble "because tests ha ve shown
that d1es cl -pov.e r ed . high
mileage e n gine s running
between 1.500 and 2.000 RPM at
60 mph got over 100 miles per
ga ll on in fifth gear." said
Guentzler
"We were able lo reduce the
RPM in the engin<' to 1,875 at llO
mph If we eould have reduced 1t
to 1.500 RPM, we could have
come close to 150 mph "
The car was llghtt•ncd without
s truc turally weake nin g 1h
fra m e The radio ancl healer
were removed and the air dams .
or deflectors. and ruhbe r air
skirts installed to m ake 1t lcsi.
wind resistant
EVEN WITH THE radio and
healer left in. Guentzle r s aid 1t
would get 102 miles pe r gallon
I n ev e r ) o th e r wa )
McEowen·s car 1s as ht· hought
it from the factory
The proJ<.'cl cost SS.500 mclud
1ng the st1<·kt·1 price of the car.
Six months latt•r . Mc Eowen says
his car took him more than l.000
milf.'s on lht• first 10 gallons of
d1esPI <1nd still gl'l-. llO miles per
gallon
"It a ccclt•ratl'S well . can gel
up to 75 mph a nd gives quite a
C'Om fortahl•· rid~ T he only
problem 1s 1t pulls a hill at only
15 to 20 mph," h<.• s aid. "And the
diesel ful'I I ust' costs only 18
Cl•nts a gallon 1r1 T1Juana." <; uentzlcr. an industria I a rts
µrofcssor v.ho :-pec1a li2es in auto
en g in e td f 1 c 1 t• n t y . s a id the
J \ <.•rage c·:.r nwnt-r l'an increase
ful'I <'fft<.·1t•m·~ from 20 mph lo 27
mpg . for <"o.:.11nplc. for Jess than
$1 50 by
-INSTALi.iNG AIR dams
ancl rubber air s kirts. readily
a vailable. to save 4 to 7 percent
an fuel costs
l 's 1ng qu a lit~ s ynthe tic
lubr1C·ants in..,tcad of oil in the
l'ar's cng1nt'. trans mission and
differential lo savt' up to 1r '2
m1l t.>s per gallon
Using a 1wrmanent "low·
rest nction. afll·r·m a rket " air
filter madt• of cotton a nd wire
mesh instC'acl of lh<' typical dis-
pos able filler found on most
l'arc;. a onc .. ltml' in vestment· of
$19 t o $24 to g<.>l your car
another half-mile per gallon.
I N<'fl EAS ING
s parkplug ~aps by installin g
s 1 I 1 con Jar k l'I t· d ~park p I u g
WlrC'S
"It 's enou~h to make any self-
rcs p<'cl 111g Oil <.'Ompany ex-
ecutive a hit nervous." said
Mr Eowen. a lso an industrial
<•rts professor
This summer Guentzler will
m <'r'iel' a fuel ~conomy sym-
posium for t•ng inc designers
from throughout the nation. He's
ul o putting his ideas 1n a book to
he publtsh<'d next month
A question 11 1ew11ler often hears is "What's the price of a
1-<:arat diamond?" The same is asked of ruby. emerald end other colored stones. There is no simple answer. The value plaoed on a precious stone is
arrived at after c areful
conalderetlon of severel quetlty
fectora. In general. value Is affected by be1uty, rerlty 1nd
durability.
(~
6EM WISE
demand Gi ven two equally attrecllve and equally durable
stones. th e one rnost requested
by the public will be the more valuable Th ere are many
stones lhe public is not very
familiar with Therefore. even though they are scarce. the
cost may be tower than that of
a more abundenl but more
popular stone As a case in
point, 1f you were looking for a
medium to dark blue stone. would you ask for a sapphire. tanzamte or ben1to1te? Most
would asl\ for sapphire because lhey·ve never heard of
the other two stones Tanzanite
1s becoming better known. yet
bent101te t ags back In
obscurity Although benitoi .. ls
the rarest o f t he three gemstones. tack of 1ware,,_ of its e1111tence and the
resultant low demand keep the
price down.
Ba1uty Involves cutting, color. cl1rlty 1nd Interesting opttcal properties. These .,..
the factors considered when
Malgiflng a part1cut1r grlde or
M!'les of grades to 1 gematone.
The cutting of the atone affects the way light lnter1et1 with It.
The propcnlons of the stone,
the number ind placement of
fec.t.. and the quallty of polllh
affect brllllance. fire, depth of
color 1nd luster.
In diamonds abatnca of 1ny
color la usuelly most
deslreeble. In colored stones
bright. lively color ta usually
' mott highly prized. A atone
with fine clarity, one wtilch
approach•• total abat!'ICe of Interior marks and lnclual0f'4..
la almoat atwaya contlderad
the mott attractive. Gematonea Wh ich ahow a ap.alal effect -.n lni.ractlng with tight we Judged by the quality of that en.ct. e.g .. the play ot col« In
op11. the eolor changt In
~ti., the adutarncenoe
of moonetone. ' Rarity lnvolvff more then
Juet a atone'• acarclty In
nature: It at.o ct.panda upon
J __
--
I I
'
Mery Barr, C..rt1f1ed Oemotog1s1
CHARLES H. BARR
Durabrllty Is a combinetlon of
a atone a h1rd nest and
toughness -Ila resistance to scratching. chipping and
breaking. Ail other factor•
being aquat. the more durllbte
stone will be the more valuabte.
Piecing ti value on a
gemstone IS no simple manw.
That'• why eKpert appralaenl
are 10 vital to the Industry.
Hopefully this e11plan1tlon hat helped you understand the
tremendous price range you
have probtbly encounttr-4 wt\en lhopplng for fine Jewelry.
If you have any quattlont on
thit ot any other g4Wn subject.
~ come Into the at0f'9 and
Ilk mt perwnatty
·I
>
VW>RLD I NATION Otange Coast DAILY PtlOT/Tunday, Maroh 17, 1981 .--------------.r ___ .;... ______________________________ ....._.._ __________________________________________ .._ ______ ..,.. __
I,
I
A toast·
to in~h-01aker.s
amAll&OC& MYTHS 6 PANCIU DSPT. -A11 you
-.CS 11 a lut handle Uk• llllae and upon St. Palrlell1'1 Day, tv•rYbocb' ftcw'ff you fiw huh and you•u be apl'C*tlAJ
&hamrockl out your ean today and villtinl tb• comer pub,
pu\tlDI down &rHD brew. So let 'em Wok it for today.
On St. Palric.k'1 Day, everybody 1hould be al leul a
little bit lriab.
In trulb, lbe rrtsb t\eed au our help because so many
dreadl\&1 Calry tales ll,Jld untruths have been told about
them over lhe cen · ~ turles. Just consider:
W R 0 N G . ~~
\~in:o~'gehdavt~ast"\dhe~ TOM MURPHINI .~,~ It
Cre at o r invented ~
whis key to keep the
Irish from ruling the world. Why, even Mark Twaln, who
also wasn't Iris h, wouldn't buy that terrible falsification.
Twain straightened that one out when he wrote in 1883:
"Give an Irishman lager for a month and he's a dead
m an. An Irishman is lined with copper. and the beer cor-
rodes It.
"But whiskey polishes the copper and is the saving of
him ...
That having set the record straight, let's get lo those
snakes. Again, Wrong Thinking historians have painlully
concocted this tale whereby they s uggest that once,
somewhere around the Ice Age, Ireland was connected lo
the British Is les.
These same ract-knockers then suggested that a nimals
like the weasel and others migrated across into Ireland but
lley. fella -we rt'n't 11ou /oolm around on page one?
the snakes didn't make 1t in time The Irish Sea split the
Emerald Isle from Great Britain
It might be addt'd that was really a split. which has
persisted for some lime
Anyway. the~l" Wrong Thtnkers would have you
believe that 1t wa~ tht• com1n~ of the Irish Sea that slopped
Ire land from having un y s nake:,
In fact. howt'ver. e\'erybody in their right mind knows
that St Patrick drov.-all the snakcl. from Ireland
CERTAlf'; TEXTBOOKS also try to suggest that the
report of St Patrick u~1ng the ~hamrock . Ireland's na-
tionat'rtower. to explain the Trinity "is unsubstantiated by
facts "
Do note that the Lex ts d1dn 't s ay it was untrue. Only
unsubstantiated It'" a bo unsubstantiated by the fact that
if I wash my car tomorrow it''> going to rain. But it will.
Further. certatn (.'VII talkers have prattled that St.
Patrick claimed to have converted all of Ireland lo Chris-
tianity. But there's no record he ever made that claim. So
you guess we can say that one is "unsubstantiated by the
facts ..
Finally. we mm<· to this htlle dilly about laws that
havf been passed t" ~uppress the lnsh
· 0 Paddy dear. an· did ye hear the news
that'$ gom' round''
The shamrock 1s by law forbid tu grow
on lnsh ground '
No more St Patnck's Day we II keep.
hu color can· 1 bf.' seen .
For thne's a cruel law agm the weonn·
o· the Green'"
THE SUSPICION llERE is that the law in question
could be allributed to the Bntish And today. as we all
know. it's a law that didn 't hold up too well over the years.
So today let·,_ all ltrt a salute to the sons and daughters
of the Emerald Is le Long may they be wearin' o' the
Green
Five win
• privacy
lawsuits
NEW YORK <AP) -The IOV· ernment bas ••reed to pay
$10,000 eacb to five peorl• who
were spled on by the FB durtna
the early lt'10s, accordln1 to
civil rilhll attorneys.
The awards, verified by
Patrlcla Hynes, executive usls·
lant int.be U.S. Attorney's olflce
in Manhattan, are in aetUement
of laws uits brou1ht In 1977
charging violations of civil
rights by FBI wire tapping,
break-lna or mail openings .
The plaintitfs learned of the
spying t.fter the indictment of
John J . Kearney, former bead of
the FBJ's internal security unit
here. T he charges against
Kearney were later dropped on
grounds his superiors bad sanc-
tioned his activities.
Those who will receive the
$10,000 payments -said lo be
possibly the largest ever made
in such cases without "definable
injury" are:
-J ohanna Lawrenaon,
longtime companion of Abbie
Hoffman, the Yippie leader who
last year surrendered on drug
c harges a fter year s under·
ground and is now awaiting sen-
tencing.
-Sara Blukbuna, short -story
writer and book reviewer who
once contributed money to the
Black Panthers.
-Lewis Cole, free -lance
writer who was a leader or the
Students for a Democratic Socie·
ty at Columbia University dur-
ing the disorders of 1968 and
1969.
-William Price, who was
fired as a reporter for the New
York Daily News when he in·
voked his First Amendment free
press rights before the Senate
Internal Security Subcommittee
in 1956.
-Deborah Offner, an actress.
Leon Friedman. a New York
Civil Liberties Union lawyer
representing Ms . Blackburn and
Cole, said their telt!phones were
tapped for two weeks and their
homes robbed by FBI agents.
Khome ini
hails women
'adv ances'
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP>
Ira ni an leader Aya tollah
Ruhollah Khomeini s aid one
of the great accomplishments
o f hi s revolutio n was the
return of the veil for women and
condemned the use of "horrible
cos metics." the official news
agency Pars said.
··Even if this Islamic revolu-
tion had no other outcome, this
evolution regarding the faith of
the Iranian women was enough
of an achievement," Khomeini
was quoted as telling a gather-
ing of women from the holy city
of Qom at Tehran's Jamaran
mosque on Monday.
Women. the Iranian leader
said, could serve the nation as
"fine mothers for their children
and good advisers for the toiling
masses of society," Pars said
Snow showers prevail
Cold Canadian air h i t s southern mountains
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' • ' i...-
Camp'aign ads analyzea
Which one• qualify for tax credit•?
WASHINGTON (AP> "Did
you know Tom ltqletoo voted to
clve away U.e Puama Canal?"
a1ked one commercial.
"You mean you're vQtin• for
Javita?" ubd another. "You
mutt be k1ddln1. If he serves
another term he'U be 82 yean
old."
The two televl alo n
commercials were sHown to a
Senate subcommittee lookt..n, at
whether the second should be
eligible for tax credits while the
firs t is not.
T HE SUBCOMMITTEE on
taxation of the Senate Finance
Committee opened hear ings
Monday on a bill overruling an
Internal Revenue Service ruling
that denies tax c r edits for
contributions to so·calle d
"negative campaigns."
J ohn T. Dolan. chairman of
t he National Conser vative
Political Action Committee.
showed the commercials . One
was s p o n so r ed by the
conservative co.mmiltee in its
unsuccessful effort to defeat
Sen.. Tbomu Ea11etoo, D·Mo.,
tut year. While lt baubly crltlcld~ Ea1leton, It did
not mentJon his opponent. 1be
other waa apon1ored by the
campaip committee for Sen.
Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y .. who
defeated veteran liberal Jacob
Javlta. ln addition to Clayin1
Javlta, it urged a vote for
D'Amato.
Dolan argued that the NCPAC
ad was 1¥> more ne1alive than
the D'Amato ad , and said , "lt
seems a pretty arbitrary notion
to say we have no ri1ht lo say
what anyone else has a right lo
say."
Robert F . Bauer . general
counsel of the Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee
-several of whose candidates
were targeted by NCPAC last
year defended the IRS ruling,
sayi ng that "n ega t ive
campaigns are an ugly ne w
phenomenon in A m erican
politics."
· · Wh..v s hould we send out a
clear signal that we favor. ratify
A bird? A pla1ie?
Dan Jackson of Columbus, Ohio. holds binoculars for son
Eric, as they and hundreds of others m ade annual pil-
grimage Sunday to Hinckley, Ohio, to spot buzzards . The
la rge birds return to the small town every March 15.
and endorse the kind or
campailfllnl that unfortunately
waa 10 prevalent In 1180?"
Baueruked.
Members of the aubcommtiue
indicated they favor extendln1
the tax credit. Sen. Robert
Packwood, R·Ore., chairman of
the panel, ls the sponsor ol the
bill to do so. 'And Sen. Harry
Byrd, lnd.·Va., said, ·•we are
1ettln1 on ve ry dan1erous
1round when we let an a1ency of
lbe government make a
determination of what is
negative or positive ln politics.
John E. Chapoton, assistant
secretary of the Treasury for
tax pol icy , said the
administration takes no position
on the bill but believes Congress
s h ou ld d ecide t h e issue
one way or the other to keep the
I RS from belng en broiled in
politics. Chapoton said the
revenue loss from extension or
the credit would be minimal.
FEDERAL LAW provides a 50
percent tax c r e dit f o r
contributions to .. further the
candidacy" of a candidate for
federal office
T he IRS ruled in February
that contributions to "negative"
campaigns did not qualify for
the credi t because t hese
campaigns do not further the
candidacy of an individual.
Packwood, who was himself
t h e target o f "n egative"
campaigning by anti-abortion
groups last year. said this
interpretation is incorrect and
"will di s courage citizen
participatio n in political
campaign s a nd protest
well-ensconced incumbents from
some public scrutiny."
His bill is s upported by both
the American Civil Liberties
Union and the U.S Cham ber af
Commerce
Cyclo t r o n device
to treat cancer
HOUSTON <AP> The fi ve-
month job of installing the na-
lion 's first medical cyclotron is
to begin this week at the
University of Texas M.D. An·
derson Hospital & Tumor
Institute.
The $2.8 million device will be
used to treat certain cancers
t ha t r es is t con vention a l
radiotherapy . Anderson 's
specially -constructed S,692
square-fool cyclotron center is a
joint project with the University
of Texas Medical Branch in
Galveston.
SHOP WITH MONEY-SAVING
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YOUR POCKET
Start saving today.
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Coupon Savings -one
more reason people all
along the Orange Coast
value the
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Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTIT~y. March 17, 1981
IBITffiIT"~
State losing war on paperwork
SACRAMENTO (AP) -ln the paperworkandwaated$18,540,702
state Employment Development becau.se of inefficient rorms and
Department's war on exceaslve procedures."
paperwork, the batUe cry could Tb i d ~ "U you can't beat 'em, join e excess ve paperwork stu y , 'em." concedes that "EDD's approach
At least that's tbe impression to reducing paperwork prolifera-tion has had Umtted success."
one could gel from a wordy 23· Among the report's format'rec-~age department report titled, · o m mendations were such
, . Pr~~al for Paperwork Reduc-• specific actions as "eliminate
lion. f bi hh " "Paperwork proliferation and ormsw c avenopurpose.
its associated costs will be re-
duced by the implementation of a
departmental project designed to
study, review and enhance the
processes whi ch create
paperwork and its peripheral ac·
tivilies," the report says.
A COVER MEMO estimates
that in the 1979-80 fiscaJ year the
Employment Development
Department "spent approx-
imately $66,216,795 to process
Why does it take 23 pases to
reach sucb conclusions? One
reason is that the report takes
nothing for granted. For exam-
ple, two of those 23 pa1es define
technical terms such as "forms,"
"paperwork," "records" and
"system."
Some of those definitions:
.. FORMS: any piece of paper
which has spaces to fill in or re-
quires information to be added
before lt la complete."
"PAPERWORK: work involv·
Ing the hand1in1 ol reports, let-
ters, forms and the Uke. •'
"RECORD OR RECORDS: all
' papers, maps, exhibits, magnetic
or paper tapes, photo1raphlc
films or prints, punched cards
and other documents produced,
received, owned or used regard·
less of physical form or cbarac·
terlstics.' ·
"SYSTEM : a natural informa-
tion processing function without
regard to organizational slruc·
lure, people, responsibilities or
geographJcal boundaries."
To eliminate unnecessary
paperwork, the study says at least
786 of the estimated 10,000 dlf.
ferent forms used by state
employment offices could be
eliminated, savin1 $1.06 mllllon ln
printing coet.s alone.
HOWEVEa, IT would take "an
estimated 8,856 personnel-hours
at an estimated coal of $151,850
and $6,000 for non-personal
services for a total of $157,850, to
ellminale thole 786 forms, the
• study added.
Asked what the department
was doing with the paperwork re-
duction -proposal , EDD
s pokesman William Lawson
replied, "It was not adopted. They
were told to report back in 60 days
with anew draft."
No c lues in search
LA JOLLA (AP ) -The
whereabouts of a 26-year-old
college teac her remain a
mystery two weeks after she
vanished with her car, leaving
the rest of her belOngings in her
apartment.
Friends fear Judith Sherer
was the victim of foul play. In
Georgia, her parents also were
reportedly concerned.
"This is totally out of
ch aracter ... she is super
responsible." s aid Alexandra
Todd. "The fact that she would
miss a class where she is the
sole teacher is unheard of."
Although the case is being
handled by UC campus police,
San Diego city homic ide
detective Gene Back said checks
by hi s m en have proved
fruitless.
~~ --------
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.. ,. . .,......
Fi rst 'B ' s tomp
The first 18-cent stamp sold at a U.S. Post Office is held
by buyer John Curley of Santa Barbara. Collectors stood
in lines with as many as 20 people Sunday waiting to buy
the · · B' · stamp at the Rincon Annex Post Office in San
Francisco. The Postal Service has raised the cost of mail-
ing a one-ounce, first-class letter from 15 to 18 cents ef·
fective March 22.
Bids low on Pickford remnants
GLENDALE <AP> -Remnants of the estate of one of
Hollywood's first famous movie queens, Mary Pickford, went on sale
over t.he weekend, resurrecting memories of Hollywood's early
royalty.
On sale Sunday were such curios as the black cape and mask Miss
Pickford's swashbuckling husband, Douglas Fairbanks Sr .. wore in
the silent film "The Mask of Zorro," costumes worn by their good
friend Rudolph Valentino and even her 1920 wedding gown.
About 2,400 items from Pickfair, the 45-room mansion where
Miss Pickford and Fairbanks ruled early Hollywood high society,
were auctioned off during the three-day sale.
Some of the items fetched pnncely bids. Miss Pickford's mono·
grammed gold vanity set brought in $3,750 and guns from the collec·
lion Val en ti no had given her husband brought in about $2,000 apiece.
But much of the Oriental art, silver, porcelain and furnishings
went for very low prices. So low, that auctioneer C.B. Charles ~x
claimed at one point: "Listen, folks, you understand you're not rent·
ing these things, you 're buying them.''
James Goodman presented the auction, which began Friday
night and ended Sunday. Goodman hoped to raise $300,000 to $400.000,
all of which is to go into Miss Pickford's estate and then be parceled
out to charities.
Chavez, solons' rift continues?
Pork p loynaate
Little Girl, a 4-year-old killer whale, made her debut dur-
ing the weekend at Marine World in Redwood City. The
whale, 101h-feet, 1,650 pounds, came from Vancouver,
B.C. and will join Vaka in performing in the park.
Water pressure drop
due t o n atural cause
FREMONT (AP> Engineers
with tt~e Alameda County water
district have round a natural
explanation for a mysterious
drop in water pressure following
an earthquake that struck
. Fremont in the middle ot the
night two weeks ago.
"The onJy explanation for the
sudden drop is that the quake
awakened most of the residents
in the area," said Stan Saylor.
general manager of the water
district.
··Apparently . mos t of the
toilets in the area were flushed
at about the same time," he
said.
Within 15 minutes after the
March 3 quake, a moderate
tremor measuring 4.1 on the
Richter scale, pressure in the
'"Water system dropped from its
normal 6()-pound pressure to 6
pounds. It was back to normal 20
minutes later . Saylor said.
DANGER SIGNALS
Of
PINCHED NERV_E\
1. Headaches. dizziness. loss of sleep
2. Neck pain & tight muscies
3. Patn down arms & shoulder pain
'4. Numbness in hand~~ feet
5. Pain between shoulders
6. Painful Joints. nervousness
7. Lower back pain, hip pain. pain
down the leg
LOS ANGELES CAP> -About 700 representatives of rural and
urban Latino groups met here to heal the much-pubUcized breach
between United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez and Los Angeles
Democratic Assembly men Art Torres and Richard Alatorre.
But Alatorre didn't show and Torres left the meeting early,
without talking to Chavez, the featured speaker al the Mexican·
American Urban-Rural Solidarity reception al the Hyatt Regency on
Sunday.
Chavez. however. called
the banquet a "reunification NEWS BRIEfS of the urban and rural
leaders hip" and said the
group was divided where it
counted on the issues.
Chavez admitted there was a rift between the two legislators and
himself and said he tiadn't spoken to either since they backed San
Francisco Democrat Willie L. Brown over Los Angeles Democrat
Howard Berman in a divisive Assembly Speakership battle last fall.
Co11111111ter fllgltt N••• tll~•• llea.r
BAKERSFIELD CAP) -A G<>lden Gate Airline commuter flight
from Los Angeles to Stockton was forced to land here after a bomb
threat was received just after the plane took off, authorities said
The Convair 580, carrying 3.5 passengers and a crew of three,
landed at Neadows Field Sunday after the threat was phoned in to the
airline's Los Angeles office eight minutes into the fiight, said John
Tot pois o n ed
b y marijuana
MONTGOMERY. Ala. (AP> -
A 6-month-old Montgomery in-
f ant suffered poisoning from
marijuana contaminated with
the salmonella bacteria, state
health officials said.
The infant, who wasn't iden-
tified. likely caught the disease
from contact with parents who
bandied the marijuana, said
Thomas Chester of the State
Health Department on Monday.
He sa id the baby was
hospitalized last month and is
recovering well.
The case was the first such
con firm ed poisoning in
Alabama.
S.tWla ft,.._ SI.,.. M 'fOllt 0oot
fC .. t S'°'• NMrett YOUI AteaJ
COSTA eau641·1289 ,,....._._
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CS•" Dleeit '""'· e1 """ l'hry I
CORRECTION
In the Sears March 18th advertising
section there is an
• advertisement for a
#15678, 2 HP
Sprayer. Regular
$624 .99 . The
description and the
Regular price are t:orrect; however. the
'Sale pr ic e is
incorrect. The correct
sale price is $499.99.
We sincerely regret
this error.
I Sears I
.............................. ~ ................. !
Businessmen !
If 11ou ort doing
With no obligation. call or come In
for a friendly conaultlllon.
410 1.ltltM llY4.. ..... Prntn 11
CALL LINDA BLUE
FOR I\
· bu afntu undtr o
r1ctttlou1 Bu1lnu1
Nomt you ore rtqulrtd bJ1 low ( Buain«H ond
Pro/earionl Code. Sec.
17900 to 17930 J to fllt o
r 1ctWou1 Bu1lnt11
Namt Stattmtnl ond
hau .. ii publt1Md for
four conatcutlue coetb. FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN -
INTEREST ONLY I 675-5307 .................. ,.. 'Nwport F.quity 'Funds · Inc
Uc9"ted Brotlet Since 1971
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both Call the LEGAL
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furtltu tn/ormat6on.
•
Matheson. the airfield's assistant director of aviation. No bomb was
round.
500 oppo•e b1.,oleeW11t I• El Sa l.,ader
FRESNO (AP) -An estimated 500 people marched two miles to
a park here to "send a message to Washington, D.C .. " opposing Unit·
ed States involvement in El Salvador. The marchers waved signs and chanted "one adviser. then more,
Vietnam. El Salvador'' as they headed for Roeding Park. Once there,
they heard speeches and folk music.
Man w o11nd• tent,...,.,,., ldl& ••It
BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A standoff with a gunman ended after
four hours when officers discovered the man had critically wounded a
teen-age hostage before taking his own llf e.
Eric Givan, 24, was found dead of an apparently self-inflicted
gunshot wound Sunday, and 13-year-old Lisa Moreland was found
shot in the head in a back room, after the siege at a house on Cheatam
Street, a Kern County Sheriff's spokesman said ..
Ma n lteld att•r P~"9 •u drf .,•r
BERKELEY CAP> -A 3.5-year-old man is in custody after he al·
legedly punched a female Alameda County Transit bus driver several
times and was thrown off the bus by a male passenger, police said.
Victor Young allegedly started punching driver Barbara
Marcellus after he boarded the bus in Berkeley with an invalid
transfer and Marcellus asked him to deposit his fare.
\
Join us tor
o special show1nq of
the Spring '8 1 Collection
Fashion Consultant
Alison Davis will b e
ovo1lob le to a ssist you
on Morc h 25th and 26th
from 10 a m to 4 p m
1n the Designer Solon
Upper Level
Mini show on
Wednesday. Morch 25th
o t ll OO om
Please co II to make
reseNotions by Morch 20.
540 .. 3233 ext. 217. ?18
Saks Fifth Avenle. ScxJti Coost Plaza
Even cOffee is Irish
New York 1aloon bedlam on St. Pat's day
~ .
!L-IVUl ... .,, .. LOll ......
N 1:w iOiii -°Tia a sr&Dd
old tradlUGD they hoeol-every
yHr at a ~ IUoon Just olf
Fifth Avenue. 'Tl1 called
bedlam.
The place II Charley O'a. ln
New York, on 8'. Patrick'• Day
in the momin1, lt 11 where the elite meet to eat.
To do a little pre-noon drink·
ln1. too. Lut year -It wu a
chllly mom1n1 -the lad at the
breakfa1t counter poured
somewhere between 900 and
1,000 Irish coffees before he lost
count. That waa at the breakfut
counter, mind you, not the bar.
You can't 1et near the bar.
Not on St. Patrick's Day. Not
unJeaa you arrive very early.
"The place la a madho~.
You can't move In here," Jerry
Johnston was saying.
"Last year," Gene Morgan
added, "we had to put a man at
the door to let in only as many
as he Jet out. It was that full."
rttu. AWDue, •allttd • whlle ID
tb• parade, flew to Waablqtoe and made the formal annomace-
ment for tbe televiaion cameras.
To the 1an1 at Charley O'a. it wasoldnewa.
Since then, senator•, aov-
ernon, coo1reaamen, mayors,
poUUclana of every type -and
nationality -have made a pre·
parade breakfast at Charley O's 1the atart of the St. Patrick's Day routine.
After the parade, auorttd
ba1plpen, tin whistle tootlen
and boozy balladiers keep the
joint jumping until the wee hours.
·'The way we get ready for
It," Johnston said, "is first to re·
m ove all the furniture .
Everything goes -tables,
chairs, stools, the works. Then
au of us become bartenders, me,
Gene, everybody. We put on 11
bartenders . It's as crowded
behind the bar as in front."
For saccharin
Jn more HH drculllltanees,
1uch u every other da1 W the
year, two bartenden (Pliand Mike, naturally) are au dent
to band.le Ute crowd a~ C ley
0 '1, and the crowd la ahlthina
but rowdy. .I .
It ls a comfortable, untlllrried
place: tUe floor, oak-~ueJed
walls, Iota of brass an *1aaa.
The atmoepbere is club 'f, tbe
patrons are regulars, the drtnb
are honest. the pickles art aour,
and a Gene Morgan corn .. beef
undwich la an act of cre.Uoo.
"It's always been a friendly
crowd," Johnston said1 "The
customers themselves, Ute reg-
ulars, are the ones who see that
no trouble starts. In all my years,
there never has been a fipt in
Charley O's , not even on St.
Patrick's Day."
"How couJd there be?"
Morgan said. "On St. Patrick's
Day, there's no room in this
place to raise your hand.
SONS OF ERIN SMILE AT CHARLEY O' ON MARCH 17
J e rry Johnston's brogue is
from Belfast. Gene Morgan's is
from a s mall town in Donegal.
Jerry ia the wait.er. Gene Is the
meat carver. Their lime at
Charley O's goes back to when
the swinging doors first swung
open, 14 St. Patrick's Daya ago.
Gene Morgtn, right, handa Walter Jerry John.on a Hndwlch plate Researchers test
Nazi-s: 'good old days?' "lt was a popular place right
from the s tart," Morgan re·
c all e d . "Be ing h ere i n
R ocke fell er Cente r we've
always had celebrities dropping
in. But the second year, 1968,
that was when the St. Patrick's
Day tra dit ion began, the
breakfast and all the to-do."
sugar substitute
Some Germans nostalgic about Hitler era C HI C A GO (AP )
Researchers at the University of
Illinois Medical Center are stud·
ying a sugar substitute that Is
widely used in Japan and
Paraguay and could one day
replace saccharin, which has
been linked to cancer in rats.
Funded by the government's
National Institute of Dental
Research. the study is designed
to determine whether the sub-
s t ance causes tooth decay.
Researchers also plan to feed it
to mice to discover whether it is
poisonous or carcinogenic.
BONN. West Germany 1AP >
A public opinion poll has
found that 18 ~rcent of West
German voters look back on the
era of Nazi dictator Ad olf Hitler
as "the good old days." a
magazine reports
The magazine Der Spiegel
s aid Monday a year-long survey
by the Sinus Institute of Munich
found that 18 percent of the 6,968
voters surveyed nationwide
agreed that "unde r Hitler.
Germany really had it better "
Der Spiegel claimed the sur·
n•y findings so alarmed the of·
fa ce of Chancellor Hel mut
Schmidt that they have been
kept under wraps since it was
completed last year .
A government spokesman con·
firmed that the chancellor's off.
ice requested the survey to de-
termine the extent or rightist
1•1 R J RfYl<O\.OS TOIAC.COc;o..PA"•
st'ntam e nt withi n We s t
Germany
The spokesman. who asked
not to be identified. said he read
the Spiegel report and found it
"correct "
ln addition to those sym -
pathetic with Hitler's rule. the
survey reportedly fou nd , a sizea-
ble number of West Germans
s upport many of the fundamen
tal doctrines of Nazism. despite
a generation of democracy.
Most of the potential Nazis are
more than 50 year s old. the
magazine said Th at would
make them old e nough to re·
member Hitler. who ruled
Germany from 1933 until his
suicide in the ruin of Berlin in
1945.
.. A . total of 13 percent of the
\'Oters 1about 5 5 million ) have
)0
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.(',;,.
an ideologically closed, extreme
rightist world view, the main
supports of which are a National
Socialist view of history, hatred
of foreigners. democracy and
pluralism and an exaggerated
devotion to people. fatherland
and family," the magazine said.
"Unpreced.entedly, many
rightist radicals com e from
villages of between 2,000 and
5,000 inhabitants. from small
"Wasn 't that the year,"
Johnson said, "that Sen. Robert
Kennedy stood on the bar and
announced he was running for
president?'·
"The ver y year," said
Mor gan. "He tipped over a tray
climbing down from the bar and
broke six dozen glasses.''
The glass s wept up , t he
senator strolled a half block to
towns and from r ural areas That's incredible around big cities," the m agazine
quoted the survey. "More often Mc MINNVILE, Ore. <AP) -
th a n not they have no pro-It took 200 bananas, 20 quarts of
fessional training." topping, 24 gallons of ice cream,
The team received a $318,000
grant to study s tevioside, a
sweet substance derived from
th e leaves of a wild South
American plant.
Douglas Kinghorn, one of the
four researchers. said the sub-
stance has been used for cen-
turies to sweeten bever ages in
Paraguay. And the Japanese use
stevioside in soy sauce.
mouthwash and chewing gum,
he said.
The survey also r eportedly seven cases of whip~d cream ONE RESEARCHER will
found that 37 percent of those and an unknown am ount of travel to Paraguay a nd Argen·
s urveyed rejected Nazism, c o ppe nu s, h d t but 200 hi. gh Una in April to gather large
m ilitarism and the "fuehrer school students staked a claim quantities of the plant to ship
cult" but were "authoritatively to the state banana s plit record here for resear ch . Kinghorn dispos~ed:....:_·_"~~~~~~~~~~w~it_h_a~10_1_-r_oo~t-c_re_a_t_io_n_.~~~~~s-a_i~d ·~~~~~~~~~~~
•
20 CIGARETTES
Later. foods with stevloside
will be taste-tested. Kinghorn
said
IF IT PASSES all initial tests.
the sweetener then may be ex ·
tensively tested by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration and
eventually mass-marketed.
One reason for the study Is a
continuing concern that sac
charin still might be removed
from the market, Kinghorn said
The FDA has tried to have sac·
charin outlawed as a food ad·
ditive since urn. but Congress
prohibited the move.
Another group of artifi cial
s weeteners, cyclamates. was
banned in 1979
:?O CtGARE T TES
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LOW TAR · CAMEL QUALITY LOW TAR · CAMEL QUALITY
8 mg. 'W', 0.8 mg. nicotine w. per clgartne by FTC mtdlod.
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I -........ ....-~ ... ~ ..... -------------···-· . --.................. ___ __.~----· ......... . ..... ·-.-.-~ ..... .. -.-.-...... ...._ ...
-........... ....,
•111
t•r1
I 'f
·/
I•'
I•
., .
,,
'I
•I'
.,
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
-Major marine
1aoctuarlu off the
California coul ahould be
open to petroleum
exploration , an oil
lnduatry spokesman aaya.
J . R. Jackson Jr. of
Exxon Corp . told a
con1ressional
subcommittee that the
Channel Islands and
Point Reyes·Farallones
Islands sanctuaries, as
well u others around the
country, can be safely
probed for oil without
endangering rish or
animal species.
TestUyiog for the
Am ericao Petro le um
Institut e . Jack so n
charged that the ma('lne
sanctuary program has
been u sed b y
environme ntalis ts to
prevent oil exploration
along the nation's coasts .
Judge. rules
Boys Town
can aid girls
OMAHA. Neb. <AP> -A dis·
trict judge: citing a growing
public policy against sex dis-
crimination, has ruled that Boys
Town -long a benefactor of
'• troubled boys -m ay help girls
as well.
Boys Town, incorporated in
lt29 as a home "for indigent and
wayward boys" filed a petition
in December asking for a court
declaration that it could work
• , with girls as well as boys.
Specifically. it sought approval
for a n urban education program
for girls.
Attorneys for Boys Town said
the organization wanted to make
sure it would be ''perfectly legal
in every respect.·'
The decision by Douglas Coun-
ty District Judge J ames Buckley
marked another change for Boys
Town, which in 1971 expanded
its goals to maintain and operate
homes and schools for "home-
less. abandoned, indigent, un-
derprivileged, wayward or re-
tarded boys."
Boys Town has provided limit-
ed services for girls in the past.
Coupk jig/it
evil spirits
MONROE, Conn. (AP> -Ed and Lorraine Warren lead what
seems a peaceful life ln the lut bouae on a dead-end road. But ln
their darkened baaement they have some eerie souvenin -relics,
they say, of evU spirits met and overcome.
For 35 years, the husband and wife aay they've been battling
the devil -and, they say, winning.
They have worked with Catholic priests durint exorcisms.
They have been called in to help famlllea whose homes were
believed infested with demons, includin1 the cue on Long Island
that inspired the best·sellin1 book and movie, "'the Amityville
Horror."
ONCE, THE WAaaENS SAY, THEY helped West Point rid
the commanding general's house of the ghost of a 19th century
porter.
Now the Warrens are preparing to help a Connecticut criminal
attorney in his attempt to prove in court that the devil ex.ists and
can inftltrate the human body.
"We always felt that if they ever bring us into a court of law,
we will prove that the preternatural exists -that the devil exists,''
Warren said. "The old cliche that 'the devil made me do it' is not
going lo go here. We're going to have to prove it."
Martin Minnella, a Connecticut criminal attorney, plans to
argue that Arne Cheyenne Johnson, 19, charged in tbe Feb. 16 stab-
bing death of a 4-0·year-old dog kennel manager in Brookfield, is in ·
nocent because he was "possessed" by demons at the time or the
act.
MINN ELLA SAYS HE'LL ARGUE THAT the devil exists and
that Johnson, through his participation in attempts by priests lo
rid an 11 -year ·old Brookfield boy or demons, was ultimately
possessed by the demons.
The Warrens have been involved in the case since last sum-
mer, long before the killing. and say they aren't surprised that the
devil turned on Johnson. They've seen it happen to others, they say
and even to themselves Dabbling in the world of demons is
dangerous. they say.
While the Warrens have been present during 't'hat they say
were attempts to exorcise evil spirits, they have no official stand·
Ing within the church, said the Rev. Nicholas Grieco, Diocese
spokesman in Bridgeport.
"While we do believe in the existence of evil spirits and de-
mons" it is dangerous to assign every unusual occurrence to the
devil. Grieco said. "The church is very cautious in these matters.
THE WARRENS, BOTH ARTISTS BY profession, now travel
the college lecture circuit . warning students not to tamper with the
occult. One common way to invite the demonic presence. the War·
rens say, is through board games that purport to give the power of
psychic communication.
The Warrens say they have seen objects levitate, vanish and
reappear in houses where demons are present. ln more serious
cases. demons take possession of a person, they say.
A few years ago. the Warrens were asked to help two young
women who complained of strange occurrences in their house, ap-
parently caused by a rag doll. The Wa rrens say a demonic spirit
was moving the doll, and called in a priest who recited an ex·
orcism-blessing in the room.
At the women's request, the Warrens took the doll home.
WEEKS LATER, A CATHOLIC exorcist visiting the Warrens
asked about the doll. After bearing the story. the priest picked up
the doll and said: .. You're just a rag doll. You can't hurt
anything.''
On his way home, the brakes on his car failed and he narrowly
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tunday, M1rch 17, 1981
College su11 lovers
Students cram the beaches at Ft.
Lauderdale , Fl a ., o n their annual
p iJ gr i m a g e to t h e s u n s hine state .
Repairing While You Reat
C,omplete Shoe Service
SiJ~ Slwe Slwp
• Slloe SfytliMJ
• C11111-.,._. s-daf1
• 9•.Mly MGteri•b ~
9•.Mly Wort-Yip ol
Tiit LowHI, Folrut l'nu1
l 00/o Off 5-&or-
Citbetl Dfscomt 551-5667
5394 Walnut I nine
Authoriti es s a y the s tud ents a r e
we ll-behaved this year and welcome
tourists.
i:T r: ... k:' 0 0· ,,.-~··1l~ -v 1 e .vs n l . ~· I c;n t 1 1:.I l ~h l -' .\.. ,;:. · uen a riea fii \~'.,1 ,~..-
By GERALD WINKLER, 0 .0 .S. "N / ''
BADMOUTH OR SWEETMOUTH~/
I kno\\ 11 .., not a
pll'a :.ant :.uhJt:l'l. hut
hiJlllOSIS ,,, a fal't ol
hum:rn lift-It 1:. not a
ct1sea:;e. hut a :.1i:n that
l>Uffil'lhtn,1! I' h.1ppl'01ng
tn 'our mouth fl might
bt: a" s 1mpl<· a:-. the
natural artwn of ... all\ ii
on hih of fo1i<I or a ..
M'rtOu::. a!'> tooth dC'ray.
!(um d1:.<•a:-.t• or t'\ t•n lht·
..,,mplom 11f a mort·
'>l'flCIU!'> cll!'>l'a\I'
Bib uf food lt•ft in tht•
mouth. t!'> ll\ far. th1·
most l'nmmon l';1u:-.c
Food dt·bn" gl'l:. ('aught
an an~ numbt•r of pl<JC-l'!'>
1n the mouth m1xe'
\\1th bat·ll'na and lht·
produ«t 1... bad
hrealh Onion' !(ilrhl'
akohol and toban·o. h~
lht•ir n aturt'. <·an a ls•1
r<111se fu11I hrt•<Jth
C;iv1t1e' •1Ah1th art·
food tlJJl' for
hat·tt·r1;i tartar
hu1ld11p and
poorly f1ll 1n1: rll'nlurl''
a r t• a I :. 11 t' o m m 11 n
t·au,e!'> 11f h<ilttu-.1,
Wh<1t can \1111 do
about h<1litn!'>1!'>" 11 ·,, a
:-.1mplt•. t\\11 prongl'd
.1 1> p r 11 :1 « h II 1· n l ;J I
a1iporntmt·nt' on a
r t•,l!ular ha-.1' and
n·gul:ir horn<• <an• for
\our teeth Tht• dt·nt1st
\\ 111 fall th<· t·;H1t11·!'>
rt•mo'<' thl' tarl<Jr. <ind
makl' 'ure tht• bnd.11c•'
a n d rte· n t u n·' f 1 t \
propt·r bru-.h1n,I! an<!
lhl!->!'>lllJ! re,1!1mt•n '' tht·
kl'~ lo ~our Jll'r!'>on<il
d l' n l a I h ~ )( 1 1• n l'
Bt•l "t•c-n ll1 u-.h1ni.:'.
rtn'ot: \our mouth lo
clt'>lndgl' foocl part 1111·'
Bt• a "H't•lmouth '
(;t>rald Wink Irr. U. D.S .
and A'S-Ol'iate:-.
1~0 1 ,\\ocado. ~uitf' 505.
'r" port Bt>u h
Phone : 640·4100
escaped death in a car wreck. the Warrens said.
~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~"-~~~~
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PoUticSI iames
delay lftwmaking
There's a aame 1oinJ OD up ln Sacramento wherein
one Republican bill aft« another 1eem1 to be beld up
aJong the way while the Brown Aclmlntat.ration comes up
with a countermeasure. Latest victim of tbe maneuver it AB 210, an uraency
measure introduced by Newport Beach Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson. It seeks Immediate. action to formulate
a contingency plan for dispo&lnl of low-level radioactive
wastes. ·
California ls a major producer of these materials,•
mostly generated by medical facilities and univenlUes.
They consist of such Items as clothing and equipment
worn or used by persons employed in nuclear meclJclne
and research.
At present there is no disposal site for these
materials in the state, and in fact there are only three
such sites in the nation -in Nevada, South Carolina and
the state of Washington.
But Nevada closes its site from time to time, and last
year voters in Washington approved a measure that
severelyJimits the types of radioactive waste materials
that wilif)ie accepted.
If medical treatments and research are to continue.
the state urgently needs some guarantee that the
re;;ulting waste materials can be disposed of safely.
Mrs. Bergeson's bill proposes establishment of a
15-member task force to examine and classify the types
of material involved and set up a contingency plan for
disposal in the event of closure of existing sites.
No one seems to argue the fact that this is needed,
and urgently. But AB 210 seems destined to rest in limbo un-
til a comparable Democratic bill can be produced.
Mrs. Bergeson is willing to work on a compromise
measure. so long as some action is taken. The emergency
is real and calls for something more responsible than this
sort of political game-playing.
But who pays the bill?
Bureaucrats are quick to lay down rules and
regulations, but less ready to help foot the bill for
carrying them out.
In the latest maneuver in the San Juan Creek
dredging saga, Orange County is trying to persuade the
state Department of Recreation to put some money
behind its demands.
Faced with a pile-up of 280,000 cubic yards of sand in
the mouth of the creek at Doheny State Beach, the county
was ready to have the sand removed and sold, an
operation that would have cost about $40,000.
The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission said
the s and should be placed on the beach "if economically
feasible." But that would cost the county up to $600,000,
so the commission okayed the idea of selling the sand.
Into the picture came th~ state Department of
Recreation. which appealed the permit, contending
removal of the sand would disrupt the natura~ flow of
sand to southern beaches.
So the s tate Coastal Commission overruled the
regional commission and ordered the sand placed on the
beach.
Now the Department of Recreation says it never
intended for local governments to be saddled with the
cost of the ruling.
Since the county can't afford the $600,000, the coastal
com missions aren't in the financing business, and
requests for federal aid have been turned down, the
county now is going after some financial help from tt1
Recreation 'Department -which may or may not be
cooperative.
And the creek may or may not be dredged by the
time next winter's rains arrive, with more flooding.
ln any case, a great deal of time and money will have
been expended because the rule-makers seem blandly
unaware of financial realities.
Money nilll grinding
It's not an election year,·but fund -raising activities in
Sacramento are in full swing.
ln a single recent week four state Senators and three
Assembly members put on fund-raising affairs with
individual contributions ranging from $100 to SSOO.
The tab at some of these affairs goes as high as $1,000
and most of the invitees are lobbyists who are informed it
would be a nice gesture to reserve a table for 10 or so.
One lobbyist flatly called the procedure an
··unconscionable shakedown."
Some of the money is needed to pay off outstanding
campaign debts, but mostly it's destined for 1982
campaign war chests, or for contributions to other
legislators whose support is needed to form blocs for
getting bills passed or defeated.
There's no doubt political campaigning has become a
costly affair, what with television, direct-mail, fancy
brochures and s imilar "essentials."
But this you-scratch-my-back-and-I'll-scratch-yours
approach is beginning to take on the aroma of out-and-0ut
corruption of the lawmaking process.
It's time for those who still believe there can be some
ethics in politics to find a way to put the brake on this
in-house money mill.
• Opinions expressed '" the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O .•
Box 1~, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PhC?ne (71•) 6-42~~2_1 ._ _
Boyd I Model trains
ByL.M.BOYD
Q. You've seen those model
trains labeled "HO gauge ..
I've had lt With abort.-
tempered., UJ·mannered
local re1taurant
employeel. They won't
be 1eau., my bulllMM
unUI I bur ol a chaqe
In atUtude.
M.R.L.
What does the "HO" 1tand
for?
A. Half 0. When trains
called "0 Gauge" were flnt
made in Eneland, they were
scaled 7 mm to a foot. Later,
trains scaled 3.5 mm to the
foot were introduced, and
they were called Hall o or It>
sauce. To ....,.at, that ... lo
Entland. When the trains wtre built in the United
States, the O 1au1e wa1 cbaapd to a quarter lncb to
the fOGt. bUt lH HO 1au1e re-
mained U.. aame. No, slr, I
don't know why the 0 1au1e waa c~ed t.Mlt. Will check
further.
llaytM )'OU didn't know
tbat *ckena, too, 1t.ampede. 11MJ do. One wild atampede
can 1..trocate hundred• ot
them.
TuHday, March 17, 1981
..
Thom•• P. Haley/Publisher Thoma$ KHVll/Edltor
Barbera Krtlblct\IEdltorlal P999 Edltor
security poWer struggle risky
W ASRINGTON ~ The clear
IOMr ao fat In t.be backlt-.e
power atru11le over national
Mc:u.rlty pollcy wa1ed oveT Ute
paat month la not Secretary of
state Alexander HaJ1 or Pret·
ldenUal a11latant Richard V.
Allen. It la Ronald Reasan
blmttll.
fn IMld.nt k> avoid conll.lct,
President Reacan unwlttlnaly
baa re•ped
confusion .
How mueb
confuaton was
reflected at a
National
Security
Council
( NSC) staff
meetlng when
the new So-
viet expert,
Dr. Richard Pipes (formerly of
Harvard), asked NSC staff
director Allen: "What I want to
know is, what am I supposed to
be doing here?''
Amidst the confusion of \nore
than 30 interagency committees
dealing with national security
Earl Waters
that 8l'e' chaired by the ~te
Department, the pretident atlll
baa no plao ror crtsla mana,e-
ment .. The coudoua downp-ad·
int of Allen to avoid the N'SC·
State .Department bott1llty ot.tJM
past and make Kall the Mll·
styled "vicar" of forei1n policy
has left the president's interest.a
unprotected al)d vainerabJe.
THE EXTENT TO wblch this
haa happened became clear ln
an NSC ataff meeUnc when Al·
ten· wu urged by his assistants
to obtain "rough draft" cables,
written In the State and Defenae Departments, before
tbey are dispatched to
diplomatic posts abroad. Allen's
reply 1tunned his staffers. Read-
ing cable traffic was often bor-
ing and time-consuming, he
replied.
In fact, Allen knows all too
well that cable traffic is the
lifeblood of policy. Under any or
his predecessors, no cable or
significance was allowed to
leave the U.S. without first being
cleared by NSC staffers.
Allen's problem ls not ii·
'norance but weakness. Hai1.
backed by the Rea11n dktum ot
State Department precedence in
policy-making, decided on his
own not to clear his cabJes with
AUen. Reagan and preaJdential
counselor Edwin Meese. Allen's
boat, almost certainly would
support Haig in any showdown
over cables. To challenge Haig
on cables, Allen fears, would in·
vile defeat.
ALLEN'S SEPARATION from
cable traffic is a symptom of the
threat to President Reagan in a
national security staff system
forced to cede its true function:
protecting the interests of the
president. Far worse. despite
weeks of backbiting ove r Haig's
control of day-to-day NSC staff
work. the question of .. crisis"
management has still not been
decided. That is shown by the
fact Vice President George Bush
'has now become a possible can-
didate for that important role.
"Crisis" management is quick
handling of unexpected trouble
IN 400,000 YtA~
UCUENS G~bW EYt).
. .,AND A LITTLE. BOD'!
AND BE<.AMf A WORM.
~ (~ ..
,.AflD SO 60D -CRF..ATED MC$.
--------~
such as the 8hya1uez a/fair
durln1 the Ford admlnilltration.
Under every previous NSC a.r-
r an 1 em en t . Allen would
supervise the U.S. re3ponse.
pulling together contllctlog
atrategles of the departments,
as Henry Kissinger and
Zbieniew Brzezinski did in thelr
day.
But Allen has been down-
eraded so far by Reagan's dic-
tum that. as one national securi-
ty specialist Lois us, it would be
"unnatural" for him suddenly to
seize the helm in a crisis. Since
Haig i1s perceived as having a
parochial interest to protect -
his own department -Meese is
known to be considering Bush as
a compromise.
BUT BUSH would be most im·
probable as a crisis manjlger,
despite sometime experience in
intelligence <CIA director > and
diplomacy <ambassador to the
U N and China > He lacks
authority over the departments.
is not a full partner in the NSC
committee syste m and is
charged with numerous political
chores for the president incom
patible with national security.
The continuing inability of the
White House staff to resolve this
question is a time bomb for
Ronald Reagan compounded by
his own inexperience with na
tional security.
At one Reagan meeting with a
visiting foreign leader , Allen
barely gained a seat al the table.
By s uch downgrading of his na~
tion a l sec ur ity a ssis tan t ,
Reagan has insens ibly down.
g r a d ed a syste m of self ·
protection 30 years in the mak·
ing. This ts the real source of
tro uble, n ot Allen 's well
publicized opposition to Haig's
selection of ex-Kissinger deputy
Lawrence Eagleburger as an as·
s1s tant secretary of state .
For the time being, Reagan
must hope that no sudde n crisis
a rises But insiders predict that
when the president realizes the
consequences of what he has
d one. he will reha bilitate the
NSC system. That means grant·
mg All en the authority he needs
to coordinate national security
for Reagan while leaving Haig
as the nation's chief diplomat.
Legislators' car privileges trimmed
They received five cents per
mile to come to Sacramento. At
the end of the session, which
last.ed about six months, they re-
ceived the same allowance to re-
turn to their homes. If they were
members of an interim commit-
tee, meeting between legislative
sessions, the same mileage was
paid to and from the bearings.
They traveled by train, plane or
their privately owned autos.
It wasn't until recent years
that th'e members of the
CaUfornia
Legislature
blo s somed
out with
leased cars
for everyobe
for whatever
use th~y
wished. in -
C/l u d i n g
personal af-
fairs, with all
expentes, including unlimited
1aaoline, pa.id by the tupayers.
Alt.hough it is contended the
cars are for official business,
their use is almost entirely
Art Hoppe
anything but official. Just bow
much official business can a
legislator have outside of the
Capitol? The fact is that they
are used mostly for trips to and
from home. Some use them to
commute daily rrom distances
as far as the Bay Area.
Others use them for week-end
trips to their home districts.
Others for week-end or loneer
vacations. Their wives and girl
friends use them. The gasoline
credit cards have been used to
fill up campers, pleasure boats
and airplanes. Worst of all.
many use both the cars and the
credit cards in their campaigns
gaining an unfair advantage
over challengers.
THE COSTS for car rentals
alone has reached about $500,000
annually. Gas and other opera-,
tional costs boost the figure
closer to the million dollar
mark.
Seeking to bring a hall to the
abuses inherent with state
furnished vehicles and eliminate
what be calls "the appearance
of special privilege" As -
semblyman Bob Naylor pro-
posed doing away with rental
cars and gasoline credit cards,
instead granting members 15
cents per mile for "job related"
travel in their privately owned
cars.
He was as popular as a skunk
at the picnic. His proposal was
rejected more quickly than Jim-
my Carter conceded his election
defeat.
Nevertheless. Naylor persist-
ed to gain the right to forego a
state rental car himself and use
his own on the mileage basis
with a limit of $3,000 a year. He
said it was "inconceivable" that
official business wouJd require
him to travel anywhere near the
20,000 miles it would take to
spend that much.
AND BIS AUDACITY also ·
served to bring about some
changes in the corrent arrange-
ments for others. Cars will
hereafter be leased from the
state's Department of General
Services instead of Hertz. This 1s
expected to result in some sav·
ings for those models which can
be o btai ne d thro ugh fl eet
purchasing. It probably won't
save much on Cadillacs and
other luxury cars favored by the
lawmakers.
ALSO THE solons will pay 10
percent of the lease costs up to
$265 a month and 100 percent on
anything over that. Additionally
they will pay 10 percent or their
gasoline bills.
It still is a s weet deal. It still is
special privilege. More than that
it makes the elected represen-
tatives "unrepresentative" by
removing the m from the re-
alities or car ownership. Not
having to face the high purchase
prices of automobiles, the high
interest rates and high monthly
payments, or even the high costs
or gasoline and auto insurance.
their legislative minds cannot
s ympathize with their consti-
tuents to whom the auto is a
vital necessity.
Grounds for divorce need realistic approach
ln his new book, The Ezploding
Nucl~ar Family, Dr. Homer T.
Pettibone, D.M.V., makes· a
cogent and persuaalve argument
for lightening the nation's
divorce laws.
"In all too many states,"
writes the noted marriage
counselor .
"the bonds of
matrimony
c a n b e
severed for
specloua. if
not downright
frivolous rea·
sons . The
American
family will
never be
saved untll the 1roundt tor
divorce are 1trfcUy Umlted to
tbe seven major ~•UHJ of
martJ,al breakups end Jusillfable
hon«cldet. ''
Dr. Pettibone ll1t1 them
tbu1ly:
lade•la•M.e WUI p.,,... -
"Tbe abUU.7 to reject food or
drtDk ln UM PHMDce ol an onr· welpt lpouM II UM lead.tac lac· tor In the tacreuln1 number ol
broken bolMI," be 11.11. "Btlon
1ou a...,....... 'Ob, l Jut loYe
chHMCak•, but I'm oa a diet.'
I I
ask yourself whether the pound
you wiU lose is worth the mar-
riage partner who will accom-
pany it."
As a case in point, Dr. Pet-
tibo n e cite s Lorelei
Harmswortby of Sarasota, Fla.,
who quit smoktng. went oo the
wagon and lost \eD pounds -all
in two weeka. Sbe waa feeling
much better, he says, until her
husband, George, ran over her
In a truck. ·
Cova1e a. tM Face of Acl·
nral&y -Thia covers a wide
1amut ol sins, ran1ln1 from the
all-too-familiar spouse who
stoically lnalatt on helpin1 wltb
the di.shes altboulh runnins a
temperature of 103.6 and cav·
.. red wttb small red spot.a to the
insufferable helpmate (usually
male) who lnsltts he Is n't the
·1eut bit frl1htened by au•·
plcloua noises on aircraft.
tJaclH•&ed Claeerl•IHH -Common 17mptom1 here, •&YI
01'. Pettibone, Include Jum•1
out of bed or maklq any otbel'
1.adden mo .... before breakfut.
wbiltliol before lunch, 1a7'n1
"Have a nlc• day"°" M~ys,
or d1Uverin1 comment.a like
''Don't WOtTJ, dear: an1on•
could h8ve • npor lock be.re an.
the fast lane or the Santa Ana
freeway.''
Creative Resoarcefalaeaa -
The problem with creatively r&-
sourceful spouses is not that
they are oflen wrong: it is that
they are often rtsht. A typical
example. says Dr. Pettibone,
would be one spouse workine for
two hours to start an elec:trtc
power mower and the other
spouse lnqulrlng, in panln1 by, "la ll piqged in?" A spouse
should always check for unim-
peded escape routes before be·
ln1 creatively resourceful,
warns Dr. PeWbpne.
blelledaal Prowe11 -Thia
lncludet knowing the seven·
letter word (across) for the
medleval anct1tor of the
1locken1plel, how to pronounce
thal.H ~. and not merely
that ti takes ten pointa to bid two clubl over one heart, but
aaylnf ao out loud. Thlt quality
la often eucerbated b)' a pMf.
er.nee ,.. silent German mov-
ies to football od televtalon or,
for that matter, televllloe1
lteMf Hl U•aelfl1••111 -
Here ,.. have the 1pouae wbo In·
variably to• the burnt tout.,
orders the cheapest diO on UM
m e nu, r e fuses to buy n ew
clothes and often says, "Why
don't you go see what's on tee-
vee while I clean up?"
"The sole goal in life of a
steadfas tly unselfish s pouse."
says Dr. Pettibone testily, "is to
inflict unbearable guilt feelings
on the spouse who is not.·•
· Uafla11l•I Hooesty -Dr.
Pettibone feels unflagging
honesty s peaks for itself:
"You'd better check. dear; I
think the waiter gave you too
much change." Or: "You 're
right. by golly: you are putting
on a llttJc pot."
I
BY NARROWING the grounds
for divorce to tbue seven m~or
causes, Dr. Pettibone belleve1
we will not only save tbouaanda
of marria1es, but also unciutter
our judicial system. As It stands
now, he point.a out, our courts
ue constantly preoccupied witb
dJ1pute.a over auch rnatten u
cbronlc infidellt.y, the squanchr·
lq of Jolnt bank accounts and
unexplalntd se ven-year
absences.
''Tbe.M minor lrrttanta to a
bapp)' marrtafe.'' he concluda, ''~d mon eully be raolved
by •boutln •. "
'
"Story or my hfe"'
Sip less
for good health
DEAR PAT DUNN: A fri end told me lhat
drinking a lot of ginseng tea can cause high
blood pressure. ls this true?
J .P., Costa Mesa
GIAlleng can cause problems for some
long-term users, according to researell done
at UCLA School of MedJcbte. Bypeneuloll,
diarrhea, akin lesions, Insomnia aJMl aervotta·
nesacu ~alt. Tllese and other erfed.s reported by loag-
term uers were neltlter aalformly negative
nor pred.ldable, but U.gestlag larce amoaats
of glueag over a long period ol Ume la DOl
advised.
U problems do occur, wt&!tdrawaJ from
glDSeng sbou.Jd be monitored by a pbyalclaa
in case bypotenslon (abnormally low blood
pressure) ~curs.
BHUng •er•ftlnl
DEAR PAT DUNN : l'm having a prob-
le m ge~ting a n accurate bill from On
Subscription Television. Last June I skipped
a payment, but paid it in July with a double
payment. My account still has not been
credited. I've called, written and sent copies
of the canceled checks. but still can't get this
correction made P.T .. Huntington Beach
An On Subscription Televlaioll blW.g
supervisor ls sending a "credit lllstory" of
your account to you. He told A YS Ute prob-
lem is not tbe missed payment wbJd1 yn
made up iD July, but another noa-paymeat
recorded du.ring lbe billing period from Sept.
zt to Oct. z.t, lM. U you dJsagree wltb any laformatloa
sbown oa your billing history. contact lff
Orm again and send proof ol paymeat for tbe
disputed period. Keep a copy of Ute credit
bbtory for your records.
Falrn••• •%•rebftl
DEAR PAT DUNN : I'm thinking about
joining a health studio, but I don't know
much about contracts. Can you tell me what
to watch for?
P.R .• Costa Mesa
To proted the consumer from unfair, de-
cepUve or misleading practices, Ute State
Legislature ba s pa ased a law wlillcb
specifically states wbat certaim contracu
must Include, and what tbey ca.naot.
Health studJo contracts (imcladlng any
place used for instruction, tralalag or as·
slstance In galnlng physical cu.ltare or skills,
body building, uerdslng, red•ciac or fipre
development) fall Into tbls area.
Tbe CaWornJa Trial Lawyers Assoclatloll
aays tbe law states that any contract tbat
does not comply wltb tbe followlng provuions
ls void. Moreover, any buyer wbo sastain•
damages as a result of any vtolaUon or Utb
law may be awarded attorneys' fees, cost.a of
a lawslllt and three times tbe amount of ac·
taal damages suffered.
Tbe customer ls entitled to a written copy
of the coatract at tbe time It la slcned.
Altbougb services may be furnished tile
customer up to seven years after the slgnlng,
paymenu cannot be spread over a period H ·
ceedlng two years from the date signed. Tile
total amoua& cannot e:aceed sset and tile
services must start wltbbl sl:a montlta. from
tbe slpinlC date.
Eacb contract must coataln a claiAse pro-
vldln1 Utat If the castomor dies or becomes
disabled, no one estate la Uable for tbe
balance. U tile contract ls prepaid, a pro rata
sllare mut be refunded.
Tap eeal•r'• k•f
DEAR PAT DUNN : My neighbor claims
soft water Is better than tap water for house
plants. Is this true?
H.C., Costa Mesa
Tile Cooperative Ell&eulaa'• fana ••·
vlaer'• otnee ~· aot reco•meM •laC left water for pl..U beea ... ..-left water
Hlta replace ealel••· ............ ttMr
ml.eral• la tN water ..-...... Aleal
wltla nmo•l•C tlleH •l8el'all _.. 1117
plHll, toll water alM dettreJt ..a ............
beae,ftdal to lllHIUly pllld, la.. a .. ...,,.
1rowth.
r_
Orange Coast DAILY PtL.Or/TUllday, March 17, 1811
Phone bill not funny •ICT'ITtOUI IUllNC•
'9MMtTAtaNNT Ti.. tel ... t ... P9t~• et• H ln9 Wal-•
Dial·A·Joke, recordings co8tly to U.S. '"'" I NVl l T M I N TI, CIO l.ey111e11, H-, ~' & .., .. ,, I
Cer,arett fl'leu, Ne*"" aee<ll,
c.11 tor Ille t2WO
Ito""" H ~M ......... per,
ltvlM, '9ilforflle '111', NEW YORK <AP) -Tbe
federal tonrnment tboulht It
could chop $1,000 a month otJ ttl
pboa. bill by tettlna screenln1
devices to prevent ltl workers
from ca1Un1 Dlal·a·Joke and
other 1pedal aervtce reeofd1ncs.
But New York Telephone Co.
wanted to charae more than
$1001000 ror the acreenlnt, and
the General Services Ad-
minl1tration says a similar pro-
gram for twice as many federal
employees in Chlca10 cost only
$800.
So the government bas taken it.a
case to the state's Public Services
Commission, claiming that the
cost ol screening the unwanted
calls is exorbitant and that the
phone company is frustrating
government economy efforts.
The services ln9lude, ln addl·
Uon to Dial·a-Jolte, racln1 and
1port1 retu.lta, and Dow Jonea
report, the time, the weather,
h orosco pe• for th e 12
11troloeica.l aJpa, and words ol
wisdom from psycholoailt Dr.
Joyce Brothers.
The New York Telephone Co.
received 298 million calla for the
services ln 1980. It earned $18
million from the calls in 1.t79,
the lut year for which fi rures
are available.
CHARLES BEaNDON, a
telephone company spokesman.
said the company would not
comment on de tails of the
screening dispute while it was
before the state rel{ulatory body.
Herndon did say that the cost
Sl,100 lut year to screen 7,000
phones on one exchanae.
THE OFFICIAL SAID 63,000
other city government phones
have not yet been screened. He
said the expecting savinta would
be $250,000 but that the price of
blocklna the calls was being
ne1otiated with the phone com-
pany.
The Washington Post reported
a monlh ago that the GSA was
attempting to crack dowQ in
Washington on the "junk calls"
federal employees wer e malting
through the C&P Telephone Co.
there. It was to be the start of
nationwide campaign and New
York was mentioned as one of
the first cities ta rgeted for lhe
crackdown.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IU51NUI
NAMI ITATIMINT
f ll• totl-1119 ,..,_ '' dOlno Du.i
nen •• RECREATIONM . PRODUCTS.
10~ 8e<l'I•~ River. fi!o...,11tn v1110 .
C.IHornie '11111.
M•rk Alan ROCIQen, 10111 Moon 11<1~ Clrcl•. Hu1111no1on Be•c n
C•lll0<nla t?MI..
Th" b\IMl\ft' "condv<.ted tly an In
dlVlduAI
Mert..ROc190r\
Tnll \141.......,I we\ lllod .. 1111 llM
County Clerk of O•onu-Covnty on
Mar 1. '"' "*51
Publl"-0 Or-'°''' D•••Y PolOI Mor J, 10, 11, 1•, 1"1 IOCM II
"ewt1 a. 0.,.. 21'41 AH(ho, El
Ttfo. Cetlforlll• m»
l'r..,ncto B a.lfll<ll. .. ,, Aencn 01•~•. I tvlM, C..litot111e h71•.
Tllh tusl11tn h conductt0 •r •
..... r•I -1noo11111.
l'f-flUI S.1n10
Int' ill l-1 we• llllCI woll'I Ille
Co11n1Y Clerk ot Or enee Co11nty on
Marcil J, 1•1
lA'IMAlf, HANION, JONRS & VOSS
LAWOl',.CIJ
I 0.-ttor ... fl'lau
Now,.11 IMe<ll, C1llf0<"I" t-
l'U1811
P11011,...., Oran~ (OHi Dally P1iol.
Mortll 10, I/, 14, )I, 1•1 1110 .. 1
P UBLIC NOTICE
lf-7-
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINI»
NAM& STATIMaNT
Tl'le fOllOWlllO perlOM .,. dolf\9
IMl•IMHM YEGEN EQUITY LOANS, •O
Town ,..,,., Orlw , Sult• 160, Cool•
Mtta. C. f?•»
Y•oen .Uto<l•ttt, Inc I• No.,
JtrMY ,...._.uon>. One -" Cefttrt Orlve, PM-, N4w JefMY Ol•U
S CONDUCTED of screening lhe calls depends on THE G A a the phone system already in-Dial-It services are a vailable
s urvey in December which led it stalled and can vary from through nine phone companies PUBLIC NOTICE
Tl'I•• -• •• c-u(ll1d Ir(• tot porallon YEGEN ASSOCIATES. INC
Rt<hardSvoloel4
Pr.-.tOtnl to conclude that calls to the including New York Telephone
al · b f customer to customer. speci service num ers rom and C&P Telephone Co. which
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS
N-E STATIMIENT Th",,., ........ ••• liled wlll'I llM O.on91 covnty on
federal offices in New York A spokesman for the New cover 11 metropolitan areas in·
were cos ting about $3,000 a York City Department of e luding Denver, Oma ha and
r n• fOUOWtl\Q °"''°" t\ 001nQ C>U'll MH .,
Covnty Clortr. Of
Fetiruary ti.,,., l'UU ..
$TYSKAL. WllH & MILCMtOMI
1'.0 .••• .., month. ____ G_e_n_e_r_a_l _Se __ r_vi_ce_s_sa_i_d_lt_p_a_i_d _ Phlladetehia.
L '° R APPLlllNCE!., ts9 W llln SI
unit R, C0\1• Mew. C-' '12UI
Vt<lor Tomblin le• 91• D•k ~I ,
Cost• M~w. CA '12UI N ... tll Hell.,....., Ce. ,_
Publl"'9d Oranot c ... sl Dally Piiot • PUBLIC NOTICE --------------NOTICI TO CONTRACTORS
CALLING l'Olt llOS
SCllOOI Ol•lrlCI. NEWPORT-MESA
UNIFIEO SCHOOL 01$TRICT
Bib o..ctll,.. 1·00 o'tloo p m of
Ille 2nd cle'f ot April, !'IL
Place ol Bid RK•IPI !ISi Placenll•
SI . Co•I• A.WW, Ollfornoa 9UV
Pro1t <t ld1nt1f iC•t•on H1m1
REPAIR OF PAE STRESSED CON
CRETE
Place PIM" ., e an Ille M .. 0 O.pl,
HIS·B Bo•t St , Co•I • M u a ,
Calofornoo th»
NOTICE IS HERE8Y GlllE._ thel
Ille •Dovo·M,,..d S<'-I O"lrlct of
Orange County, C•llfotnoo, acllnv by
•nd tllrougn ''' Go .. rn1no Bo••d,
htr e 1n1tt•r referred t o •1
"DISTRICT .... 11 rece1 .. up lo, .....
not l•I~ t,..,, Int •Do•• •lelect time.
se••ect DI~ lor uw •••rd Of • contrect
for u .. -,,. IWOtKI
BtCh •lwtll bit rocelvoo on Ille piece
•oent1t1eo abOw • ..,., •n•ll bit _,.d
•ncl PuDlo<ly roao •tOUd fl ,,,. 000••
sl•t..S lime •ncl poece
Tiier• W111 .... NIA mpoMl raquirod
tor ••<II '"' 01 Did document> 10
ou•renttt the return tn QOOd <onOUton
w1tn1n NrA ""''after Ille Dig -n•no dale
E •<h btd mu\t conto'm •nd be
re\OOtl\1¥1 co the t ontr.ct 00<um1nh
E ocn t>od """ 11o accompanied Dy the s•curuy r•terrld lO in uw tontr•<t
dO<ument• •no by Ille llil or pr~
iub<ontrktors.
The DISTRICT r~r•H Ille right lo
rt••ct any or au t>'O\ or to we1ve •n'f'
1rr1gulartl1•\ CH' 1r'tform1llU1s In 1ny
bid• or on the D•O<llllQ.
Tne DISTRICT hes Otllalned from
the Ooretlor ot Ille 0.partmont ol In
du\trt•I Rel•hOM the oener•I Pf'tVl ll•
1no t•lt of °"'' diem w199\ ~n the
•oc:•lity 1n wn1cn U\1\ work I\ to be
perlor,,..., tor oecn troll or type of
workmen "ffded to eaecute the con
troct TlleM ralft •r• on "'" •t Ille DISTRICT 0111<• tocoted ., •U I
Pl•conho ~ . CCKl4 Mew. C.llfotnla
t2'11 CGP<H mA'f lie mt.alned Oii '9•
q.,..i A "IC>Y ol t-ratft "'411 De
PoSlecl .. IN joD Mle
Tho '°'-'"9 t.clwdule ol per cllom "'"~' " --• --'no oe-, "' 019111 lll 100<'" Tiie ratt IO< llollda'f
and overt!-_,,. •lwtll M at lent llme ano _ • ...,,
It Sftall i. ,...,..c141ory _, U.. CON
TRACTOR to -'"" (Oftlral II •w•rO.d, _., uoon •ny "'beontr« tor
uno.r '"'''· to o.y not in , 1fYft 1he
w 1d \oe<:tfted '-'"" 10 ell -ontmen omployed by 11\om 1n llw oae<utlon of
tt\t't ontrac.t
No blddr9r m.y w1th6r•w hi' bid for
• ptrtod of fOfty flw 10 1 clay1 afte r
tne d •l• '61 '°' tht -"•no 01 t11C1•
A pay,,..,., -.o and • penormenc:•
boftd will be requir.ct prtOf' to ••KM
hon of llw contract. Tiie peymenl _..d
ln•ll tie on Ille form \ol 1.,..111 In II ..
contr•ct do<umef't\
Go,..rni119 Bo<lrd
by Oo<OChy H•rvey Fl~r
Purcn.a•triq Director
PuDl"IWd Or•noe Co." Da lly P1101,
Mar 11, 14. 1911 131• 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINIESS
N-E STATEMENT
The tollowt"O P•rtoon' 1rf' do•nQ
bu'•MU a\ REEllES .. W EBER
ADllERTISING AGENCY, 147• S.nla
Ana 11 ....... (PO Bo• llS .. I. Co•I•
MeH. C-4•lort\1a •11111
Ron•ld l LonQ. 1'1• !>Ania An•
Avon.,., CIM14 Mew . C•hlornla •at1
Joa" C Lorog, 1H• Sa nt• An•
Avtnut (Gile Mtt4. C.llfornla ••11
fh1' ~nns h tonducted by •f"I tn
d•••du•I (,,.,._.., .. wlft)
11ona1c1L L-rr. .. , .. ,..._, ... , 11100 .. ,,,. 1ne
County Clor~ ol Oranu-Covroty on
Feb 3, '"'
PuDht.Md 0.•"90 to.it D•llY Piiot
Mer l , 10, ll, 1•. 1"1 1°"'111
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINRH
NAMI STATIMINT
Tiit foll-lnQ ,..,_, I• cl0'"9 lluM
MHH. ACCOUNTING DEPARTMENT,
ACCOUNTING 011/ISIOH, ACCOUN·
T I N G SECTIO N , P AYAB \,ES
DEPARTMENT, • MOllllor, t r.fine,
Ca. 92114
Jay Edw•rd Ron, • Monitor,
lr•lne. Ce. t 'J/14 Tiiis lkdlness I• conouceed by on 111
dlvlOU•t.
J•Y EdwMd R~t
Tiii• •l•t-1 wn llled with tho
CO\lnl., Clerk of 0•8'19' Count., on
Fe~uary 20, 1'11. "~ Publl ..... Or-. Coe" Delly l'llot
FeD.14. MM.). 10, 11, 1 .. 1 t ... 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUS IUllNIH
NAMl ITATIMINT
Tiie folt-lnq pe'-1 I• do"'9 """ ........
MA JEST IC JAN ITOR I A L
SERVICES, LTD., S7' W, Wll--. SI.,
Gelle -., CA n.11. R_ .. Met1lft 11..wn. 51' '#, Wit--.
St .• Coste MeM, CA 9Ml1
TNt ....,_. It <onduCIMI D'f M Ill•
div._..,
....... MIWtlll ''"'" Tiii• .....,_. -llled wllll 1111
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE T "'' C>u~!nt-'' •• tonout tea Dy •" 1n 01wldua1 f t b U, M4r l. 10, 11, 1 .. 1 U2·11
~---~-~~ -~---Lll'lf ANOACCIORNTANOHRALTN FICTITIOUS I USINESS
NAME STATEMENT
I tio 1011-1119 penons ire clO 1110
ll•ctor T_qmblon Lu
Thi\ it•tetneii w•i fllf<J with t'M
Coull1V Cltrk ol Or'""ge County on
M•rth t., 1911
PUBLIC NOTICE 5YNOl"SIS0" THIE ANNUALSTATIMRNT
YEAR 1.NOIOOl.CIMalflUt. IWO,
MINLOUNION Ll,,lf INSURANCIC.OMl'ANY
14t10. ... s1.,s .. 11eu• ... ...,.r1-11.ee.n ... bv\1ntn '' FUIJ2t
Publ•Shed Or•n~ CO•>I D•ll• P1101.
l"ICTI TIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT Tot•l•ClmltttOHMU •••••• ____ • ____ ····-------------
Tolal ll•blllll.. . . • • ,
Cap1t111 pa1dup .
U.dll.~I
SU,011 soo.aoo
•n.•1'
PARI( SERI/ICES, INC , l•OSf
BH th Bouleverd, S111tt Hi. Hun~
1noton 8fl•t h1 C•l1torn1• ,,._., MaTctl 10, ti. t•. -31, l'ltl IO'I 1·11 fh4t-IOHOwLAQ Olt~l\"" 411!-dlUD.Q
1>u\1ntu e\ THE STI ICHIN POST. lbl)Q
8rOOU\uf\l SI , Fountain 'i/ .. ltf'~ CA
Q1/Qt
Groupaodln-contri!Mlll'dsurplu•
Unaul9nodlundtlSlll'pjUS)
G11n t L05"1 from-rotlon•
ln<ruM t OecrMMI on C•Pll•l ancl Surplus
tS>o,0531
"·'°"
ln~~~~~!~~5Forc•~._.11onw1~... '°i:~~
ln•ur•nc:eln Fore• C•lllornl• Bult non Po91 l,SJ1.1'9
Wt neooy ctr Illy 11wo1 Ille •bOve Hems are In acc0<dan<1 w11n Ille Annual
Stotement for tlw yH r •-Oecem_. 11. '"° ,.._ to tne onwranco Com
m1u 1onerof '"* St•toof C•lll0<nia, purW4nl tola•
"John Snyder llouueau
PrHtdenl
\/M4r.n•ll A Sir•~
Ant S.c ro1arv
Directors Byron l W•ll••ms.
J t me\ L Cl•tton " St•••n J
SherwOOd, • D•l•w•rt corpora1.on1
PUBLIC NOTICE
I.OS? Bo.Ch Bouloaro. Suitt 21S, Hun l'ICTITIOUI IUSIN•SS
111191on &teen. C•l1for,,1a •1•41 All N""'OTATIEMENT
lhrff dlt!P<lars Tht loll-1119 Penon i' dolnQ bu"
Burt N StnQleion, p,.,,~nt. • neu a\
Otl•wtrt <Or po,.loon. I.OS? B,.,,. PAT RICK CONOVER AND AS
8oulov•rd. Suite 71S, Huntington SOCIATES, 1'°'75-YPA'k Soutll, Sulle
Bt•<h, C•htotn•• 91647 e, trvtN . c. .,,..
Byron L w 1111•m\, V•<t PteSi· P•trlck Wtley Cono•tf ••11 °'"" • Dttaw¥t corpiorat•on, l.OS1 8 t rmu0.. Circle, t"'1M, C• t27U
li••cn 8oul•1J11•rd Suut lU, Hunl Ttu\ ~nes' •• conout•d by an 1n
inQlon B••<h. C.lltornt• •1'47 01v104.l•I
O•lf StevH1'~&..nuetoi, S.CretMY P•lrK• W Conoyer
All fh1nQS l td • C•l.totn1• lO'
por•tion. 1~11>• 8rooknurSI St F=o~n
1••11 V•llty CA '1108
T ,..,., OU\•t'Wf\\ 1\ conouc r~d l>Y " 'or
oor111on
""" I h•llQ> LIO
W11114'm L McG-ch11t•n
Pt~\10f>nt
f n1\ \laltffW'nl ••\ t11...o w11n H•r
C.ounlr C1trk ot Ordnqe C.ount., on
M•ttn ti 1911
FIS1l1•
Pubh\heGOr-CO<tll Dally PtlOt""4rch 16, ti. II."· 20, "" IID'41 ·&. Trt•\urtr. • Det•w•re 'orpor•hon, Ttu\ \.l6t....wnt we\ ltlld w•t" UW Publt\Nd Or •nOf' (04\I 0.t••'I P tlOI
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS BUSI NIH
NAMIE STATllMENT
The foll-1119 Plfton I• cl0'"9 IMIM
M\$ .,
SPEER PROPE RT IES LTD . a
L1m1te0 Part.-tllip, 1151 Dow Street,
Suite 160, "-'1 Beacl'I, Ca. '26'0
Stepllen M. Chau, CO.nerel
ParlMr, U l!eJUalle, lrvlnt, Ca. t2MO
Tl'111 bull-It c-ucteo Dy • limit· elll*'!IWll'I ..
~M.Cllaw
0..-el Pertner
Tiii• llel-1 was lllod with ti.
CO\lnly Clerk ol Or-CO\lnty on
FM<u•ry 11, '"'
STR~Hllf M. CMASI.
It St 0.... It., Wle 1M ..... ~ ..... ea.._..
Publl"*' 0r-. eoasi D•ll'f Piiot F.O 24, -·). tO, 11, 1 .. 1 t,._.1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINl.SI
NAMa STATIMl.NT
Tiie foll-lnQ pars~•• aro d<lin9
llu•t,.u n
A.E.C. W I M<F-n. H .... llnoton
aMCl'l,CA.,....
Jemfl Mini!, 1..a Cl>eet-u..,
l't..,.11,,..... e-dl. CA n...
111<1• ....._. "'2 ~·-Or., HUftlll'IQllon llMc:h, CA ..a.
M•r<•llM A11Dlo, 7U• llequeptt
Aw • Pk • Rr ...... CA.
R-11 Mont-rv. 11115 e1 Moro,
MIH lon VleJO, CA f?MI
Tl'll• l>UMMU ,, <ondutltd by •
...... r•l ~tp
JamH MIHll
Tl'I" Jl41-I wn fllod Wllh Ille
County Cler -or Or-County on
Maren U. 1~1
FU716J
Putlllll'leel Or-COllll O•lly Pilot,
M•r<h 11.1•. 31, Aprll 7, 1"1 lll'-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
F ICTITIOUS IUSINHS
NAME STATEM•NT
Tllo IOll-1"9 per-IS "°"'9 ""''
neu •• URD STREET SPORTS, 117 2lrd
SI • N1wporl Bean, CA .., .. ,,
lou1• B Dorl.....,, H0'1 W. <><••n
Front, Ntwpor! Baach, CA '12Ml
Tllll IMISIM U .. tondu<leo by .. In
dl¥10Uel
louh e Dor lmon
Tn" \l•t-nl wH lllect w ith lho
County Cler~ of Or ... u-Couroty o"
M1rc~•.1•1 l'ISIU1
Publl"*I Or-CO.ii D•llY PtlOI.
M•r<h 10, 11, 1•. )1, t .. t 1:io..t1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITlOUS IUSINHS
MAM• STATllM•NT
Tllo 10110 .. lng ...,_,, are fl<llng
IMl•lneues THE FLOWER PLACE. llOO N
Tu•lln, Suite I. Sent• Me, Ca. '110$
Jolln O.vls Glllmen. 17111 Or•y
Lii .. Hunlinglan &Mtll, Ca. f?M7
11 eronl co Tine C«t, 17111 Orn
Ln., Huntington &.e<h, C... .,._.7
Tl'll• t>uslntt• is conducted by •
91nere1 pertnorsnlp.
lleronlc.e T. Cort
Thi' •1111-1 WM llled wlll'I Ille
Cou,.ly Clerk 01 Oranee County •>n
Februa ry 20, 1•1. ,.,,..,
Publllheel Or-. Cont Dally Pll'fl
Ftll. U , Mer. J, 10, 11, t•1 •~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IU~INIESS
N-E STATEMENT Tl•• fOfto•lno 1>or'°"' ere do•no
IMlsonou •
CAMPUS GAS COMPAN Y. ~
TelDerl. S..1i. IA. Fo...,taln \/alley,
C111fornla '121111
D••lcl 8 '""'"''ky, tot7 TalDerl.
Suit• IA, Fount.,11 vallev. c.111or"11
'7109
P•ul Hor9erl " Slt llo l'torgerl
hutb•nd " w1I•. :io.11 AHi Lene, Hun
llnoton leacll, C.lolornla '7•4t
Roymo, In<., • C.llfornla COf PGr•·
llun, 31 lZ Wini OtH n Fr.,,.t, Newport
BHch, California t M J.
Bernie P S••l•llld
Th" \la._I •U filed wltl'I t,_
County Clerk ol Oran~ Count y on
M•r 2.1•1.
SAMURL cu••T•
ATTORNIY Al LAW
•11 Stet• A-. Soolto IU
Hw"'I ... • IM<ll, Cellfllnle UM7. Publl""'° Ortn9t Coast O.ally Piiot.
""4r l, 10, 11, 14. 1'91 10.0~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINIS.S
N~ STATIMINT rna 1o11-1119 ,,.,_, er• ootng
o.niness • B EARLY l l GAL, JOOI R-111
81119 • 4 Sutt• 1ot. Co.I• Mu•.
C1IUotn••m »
P•,.,.'• Prent1u Fe ltman, 11>0
G•l••Y 0ffv•. ,..,wport Bt•Cf\,
Callfornlat2~
t:a1111rn A ~1. 1140 T..w•nv
"t 10. Cott• Mew, Coltlotnl• 'I02t1
Th" t>u"n"'' 1, conducted bY •
90nera1 pertnenn1p p..,,.,. E Foltmen
l(athlyn A Duponl
In" u .. omenl w•s flled wllll lho
County 'Cler tr. ol Or an91 County on
M•rclt 13, 19'1 ,.,,_
Publlt.Md Oren90 Co.•I 0 .11., PtlOI,
M•r 11, 14, )1, Al>< I, 1 .. 1 1)19·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
flCTITIOUS IUSINIU
N-E STATEMENT
T n• 1011-•llQ per_, " dOlnO Du~I
""""' R A D E NTERPRISES, 101/ W
l l lh Strtet, C0\11 Mt\•, C•htorn1a
'7U1
Ro Al"lllur Oo•I\, l•ll Barllado•
Place. C~te MeH, (allfornl• •1-1•
fl\" D•lllneU II conctucll'd Dy .,, on
01¥10·u•I
Ray Artllur Dav"
Tll" •l•lemenl WH llled wllll 11\t
County Clor' of Oran~ Counrt on
M•rcn 13, 1"1
"'""' PutlllSlwCI Or-Co.•I Delly Pilot,
M4r 11, 14, ll, Apr I, 1 .. 1 lJ'°-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITlOUI I USINEU
NAMIE STATIEMINT
Tl'le loll-lnQ per Mlf't I\ do"'9 bu.i·
MUe S
AOllERTISINO .. MARKETING
NETWORK, 117• Pullman Strut,
Co•I• MtH, C.llfornl• t1'2'
Edw•rd Gordon l(e lly, 1111
Ocu nway, Le9U'WI llae<ll, C.llfornoa
t JH1
Thi• 11u1lntt1 It c-•o by en 111
dlvlouat.
E. Gordon Kell'f Thi• 1111..._I wel 11190 wllh lhe
Count., Cltrk of Oren0t Co11nly on
M•rcll 1J, 1•1.
"ISi .. ,
Publl"'9d Oranoe Co.SI D•llV Piiot.
M•r. 11, 2•, 31, A1K 1. t"t 1121·11
t.OS1 Boacn Boultvard, Sull• 115, Hun~ counly (le<k of Orango Coul\fY Oii M•ten 10. II 1• II 1~11 10• 81
t1no1on Beacn. C•llforn1• tlft;I F ooru•rY • t"l
Th1\ bu\.lnt'\s 1\ conduttl'O t>y • cor FUIJn
por•t.on I PuDhll>td Ort"9t Co"'I Delly Piiot
O•lo Stov•ro• BanutlO\ Fob 1', M4r l 10, II lttt 01 II
Sr<. &, T rte\ur~r
P UBLIC NOTICE
fhi~ ~l•t~nt ••' t1lf'd with the County Clerk ol Or•nOf Countv on
Mar 1. 111111 t
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS Bt)SINESS
NAME STATEMl >H
I f ne-fot1ow1no P~' \On\ 6t • do1nQ 1 bu\1nt1u •\
FlS .. 4' FICTITIOUS BUSINESS VIP , VALUE IN)tJ"<l P~fN
flNG, 11~~ ""11wpor1 Of'f'd (OUa Publl......, Oran90 CO<l>I Daily Pilot, NAME STATEMENT
,,,,,., J, 10, 11, 14 19'1 tOS~•·, The tOllOw •nQ Pt'"°"" .,e OO•n• Mtu C-''7•11
Ou\1nt\" a\
PUBLIC NOTICE
'101 I
THE F~UIT PEODLEq~ 101J
Mtr•m•r OrntP, B•IOO•. (11litornt4'
NOTICI OF l'UILIC ME AltlNG Marn••• Ooylf 1011 M11 •m•r
To con\lder Ille Enolneorlng 0.Mll" 01 Oro•e. B•ID<N C•l•lo•n••
Ille Wldtf'llllQ of UniverMIY Orin In CMrvo Snow, l>O'l 171n Strtol, Hunt
tl'lo Cil'f ol l,..lne from C11lver Drive lo 111g1on Buch. (•11101111• •2MI
tf\it S." Ot.,go F,..,...Y l•.o-5 r n1\ bus1n•u " condul ltc:I b't' •
WHERE CITY OF IRlllNE Q•nor•I partntr\1111>
COUNCll CHAMBERS. 11200 Jam· Marneta Oovlt bof'•• Ao.d, trvfne, C.llfornle '"'' sl•lrtnenl w•\ "'"' wttf"I I~ WHEN -T ... Mlay. March 24, County Cltr' 01 D•.,,g• County Of\
1"1, J·)Op.m M•rcn S. •'Ill•
NOTICE IS l'tE RE8 Y Gii/EN tlWll r:uno•
Ille City ol l,..lnt will tondu<I •Public PuDlo\M<I 0rdf\C)t Co .. I D••ly PolOI
l't .. rlng to canslm r Ille E1191ftffrlng Mt-en 10. 11. 1•. JI 1tt1 IHI II 0.•191' IMt..-M ror tlM wloenl119 of --- -
U11t ... n lly 0.lw from Cul•~ Orin lo
ll'lot Sen ~ Fr-oy
Tiie HtMlnQ Wiii be N ld an T .....
...,, MoWCll 2•, '"'· ., I )0 p.m In.,.
lrvlne C-.11 CIW!mbe". 17100 Jam
-•• --· ,,..,,.. Celllomla. Tl'lot _,,.. '' te ........ ecl lo aff0<!1 tM -1 ..... ly f0< ,....,,IC partlctpe.
llon 111 c°"Mclitr .. lon of Ille 0.sl91'
futuru and EnvlrOftm..,t•I Oocu·
menh Tlw Envl,....,....,tel dDc:-t. ,.,,.,,., dr•wl-. Mid otller lnf0<m•·
lion .,. •••"*" tor i_ u.,,. -<0Pyln9 at Ille City Clerk's Office.
trvl11t City Hall. 17100 J a m boree
Roao, Irvine, C.!llornla.
Wrltt.., -0<et ncord1 from •ny
lnl~Hled ,,.,_, or 9rOU1> r-rdln9
Ille proposed lrnpr.,..,,.,..,t wlll tie rt ·
<el••d at tlW llo4rlnq for •"lry Into tne
olfl<l•I transcript Public Hu rlno
Records will be ktPI OPOn 10 CS.rt •fltr
lht Public 11eorlno until Aor II l . '"1. durtno wnlcll period letters or an y
ttatemen• m ey be lntluded In Ille
r.c;ord, Tl'lotM mev be mall.Oto·
Mr. G. Brant MuchOw
Olrtc 10< ol P\lbllc Wor~s c.11., ol ,,..1,,.
11100 J •mborff Ro.d
lrvlnt. Ctlilornl• •2113
Doled FtDtuory 1). 1"1
NANCY C ROWU.NO
CllY Cltrlr.
Publl\lled Orang• Coo l D•llV
n1101 Feb 2•, M4r II, 1"1 '43-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
N·IH U
l'ICTITIOUS IUitNESS
NAME STATEM•NT
Tf\t followlnv p1rton1 •re 001n;
ouslntt• .,
ST-'NOAllD LEASING COM·
PAN y. UC> Nor1h Batavia. Or•noe. C• ., ...
Brue• R Galey, UO Nortll
.ewvte.o.enoe.c..t2..,
Rtthard v tno••. UO North
Balnlo. 0.-. Ca '7WI
Brue:• R Galt V
Tiii• •lel-t '"" ltlod with lho County Clertr. of Oron~ County on
Ftbruery 11, 1"1 l'U .. st
Publlt/>td Or-Coo•I D•llY Piiot
Feb. U, M4r J, 10, 11, 1"1 •~11
PUBLIC NOTICE
"'CTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAMI ITATIEMINT
Tl'lt followl119 persons art doing
bln lnen ••
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ISUM
STYSKAL. WllESE '° MELCHIOHE
P.0.IHMS
Nerti! Ht11ly-. Ca. ti ...
Publl•lwO Or en90 Coait Delly Piiot
F•b. 14. M4r 3, 10, 11, l .. I t»ll
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
lht loll-inQ per'°" o\ dOof\g Du•f
M\S •s FUTURA lEASING CO lf>n W
MuArlhu• Blvd S JOI !>onto •n<1.
C•ltlorn.•9'1IOA Jat k J Schw .. llfr, "l'I W•lla<t
AYenue Cost~ ~,., C•l1torn11 '~11
T h1'\ bu\fl'M'\\ ,,, tondu< '"' DY •n 1n
01v1Gu•t
JKtl J Sc"we•U•t
T111> st•l......,,I wH fllod w1lll tnt
County Cieri. ol Orange Counly or
M ., 1, l"t 1'1*5l
Publl•lwO Oran91 Coast 01111 Piiot.
Mar l , 10, ti 1•, 19'1 'ltl II
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEMENT OF ABANOONM•NT
Ol'USIOF
FICTITIOUS IUSINHS NAME
Tnt IOllOWlllQ per-h•• •llandon•d
Ille uu of tho II< llllou• O..llntu namt
FORCAR PARTS. 11»1 O•bOro ln .
Huntington &.ech. CA •1..e. Tiie F•CllllO\IS Bu••ntu Namt rt
terrto to t1b0Yt1 w•\ filed 1n Oranve
Cou"IY on Fob 1', Ifft
Pt ul JH ll Bloom, 4'IOI Holl St., Sullo
s1B, l'tunllnoton Bu ch, CA '2•••
rhi• 1>u1lneu ,. .. condu<tt<I by •n
ondlvldu•I
P•ul 81_,,
Thi• steto,,...,.t wu tiled with IN
county Cltrlr. OI 0rMlj9 Coul\IY on
Marcil•, l"t
0 •• ChHQtd LyO~H f>QS1 Vtrlp"'
Cr • H•nl•nQlon Bt•<". (A 91••1
Ann f •'fup Ly-oell 6'i~1 Y't"rlent> t r
Huntorooton BH<h CA q7b•I
l ru \ ous• nts\ '., tonouc.1 rd o •
hU\bflnd •OO "'-'fh:'
Off (fttrotd LVOPll
fn1\ St•letnenl #~\ l1lt."(I N1ln In•
(.ountv C.luk ut Or.tnoe C.ountv on
M•rtn b 11)91
F ISllll
Publl\nt-d 0rd"Qf" (.oa"-I 0d+ly P•IOl
M•"n 10 11 1• 11 •'1111 •on 81
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS IUSINESS
N-E STATEMENT
f '" •ollowtf'Mit perM>I'\ •'• do•nQ
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
rr-e toH0•1nQ prr\on\ arf' dom9
>usmeu d !i.
ALPHA OMEGA E NTERPRtS.ES
101A~ F1orenc~ Avf' Burntt PcHk t r
10•?0
Fr•"' £111\ P1t•rtt> 1020 f 1orrnt t
Gt.vt , 8\Htn4l Par11. CA Qr0&10
C•rol, Jf'dnnf" P1t1rt • tOI•~
Flor•ntt ••• Buena Pa•'· CA ~10
fn1\ bu~1n'°\~ t~ t.Ol"lduc led D'r' 3
~41't'\tt•I p.tr,~rSl'hP
Fr•nk Elli\ P1fr(f'
Thi\ \tlttrnent w•-. file<> .-•11U"I fnf'
County (ltrflt. 01 Or•n()e' Count\' on
M•r<n ~ 1'1111 Cl\IJU
Publt•hod Or•f\C)t (o.t\I D•llY Polol
Moren 10, ,, 1• )I 1'181 10•• SI
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS I USINIESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tiie IOll-lnq ptr'°" •l 001n9 tiu-.
ntu .,
THE SllC MAllTlETS, .,.., l'tub01
Point Ctr<I• Hun1tngton Bu ch, CA •1••• (n•rlf1, R W•\N>urn, ... , H•rbor
Point Cirtle, Hunl1nvton Be.en. CA
'1•~
Tnl\ °""r'"' " conduc ltd by en 1n
dlYldU•I
(llerlH R WHhl>urn
Thi> Slatemenl #U hied with the
Counly Clerk or Or.,Ot County on
Maren'· t"l l'U1UJ
Publl\hed Ou 119t Co.st O•lly Pilot.
Martn 10, 11, H , JI,,,., 11M»8t
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUJ BUSINESS
NAMl ITATIMINT
SOUTH PRI T C H A ll O
PARTNERS, 11()() O<Ulll, Suitt 100,
NtWPOrl Be.Kii, C•ltfornl• tMO
Edward M ""'"•non, Jr , 71753
TohOe.'EI Toro, C.llfornl• •»lD
Edward M Muterton, 12012
FalrhOpo R.,.d, Sen Ole90, C.llfornla
l'IMI
PublltlwO Orflf\Qll Co.•1 Oelly Pilot,
Tiie foll-1"9 ,..,_, I• dol"9 lluSi·
M H a1; . FIELOSTl!AD INSTITUTE, 2091
l11•lneu Genier Ori••· 5'11t• • no.
1rv1ne, ca. n1u '7111.
Margeret M Master'°"• 12011
Felrhopt Rood, Sen Ote90, Cel.tornlo
Marcll 10, 11, ,4, l l, 1•1 1700'41
PUBLIC NOTICE
'2111 "CTITIOUI I USINIH
l'rento Reilly, 70.14 ElllOl Awnue, NAMI STATIMINT
MIO<ll• V111eoe. N y tl)I•. Tl'I• 1011owl119 H rs.ns ere doln9
8oure vord. •tit, Long Beach, lluSl,..ues
Colllornla...,, FLOAT TO RELAX, 1000 Brit IOI
Tho,._ A SongUer, JJ1't TOdd Strool North, Newp ort lleec h,
Drive. ~.,.....eel, Ctlllorllla •,. u 11r.rn1e t2M0
'"'' buMlleU II (Ollduct.O Dy • (;0<por•ll011 for lllnlf ... .c •.• _,.,,..,.wnl'llp. C•t llor11la cerpor1tton. ISStG
EllMt'd M. Mest..-, Jr. Nercluu•. Wet tmlntter, Cellfornl•
Tllh •Ill-.... Ill• Wlih IM fMa,
Coulll'f C••rtl of Oren .. c-i., .... Tiii• Dusi ..... II Ctl\ClllCltd llY. cor
Mar 1 "". _.,eltOft. • "M94 COltl'ORATION FOR IHHlfR
l'towM'd F. A/'ln'lenMlf'I, Jr .• Hl•
O<H n Blvd • Coron• del Mar. C•
n•is Thh -4nftS ;, <-•d by on In
dtvldllel _.,.. F ...,.,,._.., Jr.
Tl'llS \let-• .. ., rn• wllll t,.
c ... 111y c1er1o ot 0r....-co1111ty 9"
l'W llU Y 20, 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
C-'• Q9fti .. OtMet ~,, 4111 Publlsned Or-. CoHI o.ily fl'lleot, ,IAC•
Mar. J, 10, 17, 24, 1'et t•t_.l .......,,. M. W..,...:. ,., ... .,, ~116,ltll. ,111m PUBLIC NOTICE ~0r.,.. CM•• oan, fl'llet, -·------------Mwcti 1tt 17, 2', )I,. 1'11 ltJJ.11
PV9UC NOTICE
Uc None• Tllta tteltll'll9flt •• fifed with IM PUB • C:-l'f Cttfll ., Or•"OI ,_.,y ." ,,,..,, .. ,.,. ,I ...
~11•11.,... OrMOI CNst Detty fl'tlo
llM!r. '· 10. 11, U, t•t 100H
PUBUC NOTlr.fl:_. _
TSO -Active in car nutea, Douc Peanoa of
Mountain View aporta plate calllnt for "Ume,
speed, dlatance.,.
DEATH NOTICES Next time
oowswELL get foot
RO BE RT J A M E S
DOW SWELL. resident ol 1 b b • Costa Mesa, Ca Passed away 0 ra lt
on March 14. 1981 at the age of
63 A native of Minnesota He
was a graduate of the Min·
neapolis Institute of Art He 1s
survived by his wife Thecla
and sisters Mrs J a mes Shields of St Paul. Min·
nesota, and Mrs Marion
Ha ker of Sacramento, Ca He
was a well known artist in the
commun ity, and an active
member of the Costa Mesa
Art League. he was a former prl's1dent of the Santa Ana
Ha mmond Organ Society, he was an employee of Robert
-St-in Wilt111 m rro:st & As·
:.ociate:. No rormal services
wi th l0remat1on private In
lieu of flowers the family re
quei.ts memorial contribu
lion~ be m ade to the
J\ merican Il ea rt Assoc1at1on
PERR\'~
E l' G E :-; I A M A R I E
PERR\'. former[) of Corona
del Mar. Ca Passed away on
~1 arch 13. 1981 an Houston.
Texas She Ill l>un ·1ved by her
~on Grant E Perry of
lloul>t on. Texas . 6
gr<1n d<'h1ldren 14 great
grandl'hildren and numerou!>
n1ecelt and nephe \\S
Gra' es1dt• lten ire:. will be
held on Wl'dnl•sda\ March
18, 1981 at J OOP~ at the
Pac1f1c View Memori al Park
\\llhRe\' DonaldW Kutzand
<'ha plrr !f568 of the 0 rd er of
Eastern Star offl c111ting V1io.
1ta11on will be on Wednesdll).
~1arch l!S. 1981 from JO OOA.M
tu 2 311P~I Pa('1 f1c V1t'"
.'1orluan. :"t'" port l'h•al'h
dirt'<'lor~
DEATHS
B.SEWHERE
SAN DI EGO <AP J
Retired Vice Adm Lloyd
Toulmln ChalJcer, 97. known
as "father of Coast Guard
aviation.· died m a lo<'al
hospital Thursday In World
War II. he ra n the Coast
Guard brieny while the rom
mandant was 111
LONDON <AP 1 Robin
Maugham, 65. who wrote
more than 3.'i books includ
IO~ a biography Of hlS unrle, nove li s t W So m e r :.f't
~augham. died Friday
RE NO 1AP 1 Marla
Zlmballst Bennelt, 65, the daughter of violinist Efrem
7.imbalisl Sr , died Sunday
in a hospital She was the
sister of Efrem 7.1 mbali:.t
J r . wh o starred 1n the
telev1s1on 'eries "The r BI
MILA N, Italy t AP 1
Paolo Gr1111l, 62 a former
director of the La Scala Opera House and head or
Jlaly's stale run RA I broad
c.ast network, died Munday
at a London hOt1p1t<il four
days aherhe underwentcur
onary bypa"" aureery
IALT1180HO ..
SMITH & TIITHff.L
WISTCUl'f CHANL
427 E 17th St
Costa Me1111
646-9371
f'tUCJ llOTHMI
SMITHS' WOITUAIY
627 Mam St HunhnQton Btiach
536-6539
'ACIAC YtlW
MIMOllAl. , .....
Cenwt4HV Mortu1rv Ch1pel
• 3500 Pacihc View Drive
NewP0'1 Be1ch
644-2700
MsCOllNlal WOITY•••• Leaun• Beach 41M•IM15
LaQun1 H1ll1 768-0933
San Juen C.pl1treno
495-1776
HAUOI L.A..._MT. OUYi
Mortuar; • C.met•t'Y
' Crenwtorv
1&2$ Ol1t.1 Ave •
CoetaMeN
540-5564
BANGKOK, Thailand
<AP) -Kham Saeng, a
40-year -old e le pha nt,
cam e to Bangkok from
his home in northeast
Thailand to bring good
luck to city dwellers . He
left behind an injured
elephant driver, a trail
of broken jars and a
s m ashed g ate at the
hom e o f a n arm y
genera!.
The Bangkok Post. an
English language daily,
r e p o rted that Kha m
Saeng's owner hoped to
m a ke money from peo-
ple who believe tha t
w a l ki n g under an
ele pha nt br ings good
luck.
Bu t whil e th e
pachyderm was waiting
for a client on one of
Bangkok's back streets.
a boy gave his tail a
s harp p ul l. sending
Kh am Saen g i n to a
frenzy, the ne wspaper
re_ported.
The elephant crashed
into several houses and
dest royed the jars and
fence gate before it was
subdued b y e lephant
drivers. one of whom
was injured in the proc-
ess.
Store backs
crisis center
Costa Mesa's Fa mily
Cris is Center has re-
ceived $2 ,626 from
Me rvyn's, a Huntington
Beac h department store.
T h e fund s will
pur<'hase furnishings for
the non-profit counseling
center and shelter .
14'igure fears
unnecessary
Seminars for people
afra id of math courses
are being offered Thurs-
day morning until June
11 in O range Coa s t
C o 1·1 e e e · s W o m e n ' s
Center , in Costa Mesa.
from 9-10 a.m
Information is availa·
ble at 556-5557
Board e lect 8
J e nnife r Wa lte rs of
Laauna. Reach has been
elected t..o the board of
d1rec U>r5 of the Southern
Ca h forni• A11oclation
for Mamage 1md Family
Ther apy
PUBLIC NOTICE
'ICll flOUI lllalN•H
NAMI ITATHHNT
Tl\f llltlOWlllQ p.r.on I• dolnt INll ,,. ....
l'IHATE GEM \fQHU, "10 16111
\I • H 101 Hewl)<H 1 IMKll, CA '7 .. J
h "Y '(,''Loe, lt/0 161/1 ''· • HIOI, Hewporl a.ecll, CA ., .. l
In h Dutlneu " "'"-"'" 11' en In d••l""ll , .. ,., "(, ....
fn11 ••et-• ,.,., 111.0 wll" ""
''"'"' ,,.,, 01 o .... "" Counly on
Mer<ll •. "" '"'"' l'uOll•-0--C..tl Delly 1'119!,
Mercn 10, 11, 14, 21, 1"1 1u111
PUBLIC NOTICE
,,CllTIOUI lllllNHS
...... ITAtaM•MT , ... , .. ,_.,,. ,.._ ,, ...... Ollll
MO U
ANAUTICI, llft ll'ell.,_ Drive, 0., .. ,. O<-, CA.,..,,
DOf\lld I Slnllll, 16ftl Lowtll Cir
tie, Hllllllftt!M 9Hcll, CA,,...
Tlllt MlftKt II <**"IH 9Y ., Ill·
Cll¥1Clv•I,
DeNld •• Stllltll
Tllll Ii.I~ ,. .. Ill• wltll IN
Ceunly CMl'lc Of OfMet C.v111y Oii
Mertll 6, '"'· ""* Pvltll .... 0!'111191 (Ntl O .. ly l"li.t ~•rCll It, 1', U, I I, Itel 11 .... f
P\JBl.JC NOTICE
'ICTITIGUI llltlMHI MAMlllTATIMl.,T
Tiie , ...... 1111 __,_, ••• .. l"I Mltlllt ... l
llLANO YOOU"T IHOPll'I, tit ~'"' ....... --.u. ...... ... ,;z .. .,. MM10ll 11--.. ,.,.
Ct lwtl A"'9., c.t MtM, CA .a,
Tllll ........ llt~ ....... 111-
lllY'-iet ....... .., .. ,_..
Tlltt .......... -" ... *fttl 1M ,_,, aw. " o. ... c:e.ty ...
~'""·· ,,...,
~
.TWA of~ers deep cuts
in domestic air fares
NEW YORK (AP) -Trana World
Airllne1 hu annciwaeed that It la cul-
tinl coach f&rM by u much u 10 r:rcent on mott domeatic ru1hta dW'·
I a flve·weelr period ~prll 20
round-trip Ucktt pu.rcbue.
TWA sald aeata would be Um.ited.
For rooet ol them. a 16-day advance
purchase and a mlnimum IU.y wUl
be requl.red, the announcement Hid.
In most matketa t.bil will mean •t•Y·
Ing tbrouab a Frlday nl1ht. On
tranaconttne ntal fli&bU. the
minimum stay la seven days.
throucb May 31.
"Our 1oat . . . i• to e.nUce ~
people to Oy -tbote wbo bave never
flown and t.bole wbo baven•t flown
for a while,'• TWA 1enlor vice preti·
dent, Donald Cuey. aald Monday.
"And the beat way to do that la to
offer a simple, sensible super
bargain fare to t hl1 inflation·
beieaiuered, price-senaitlve market.
We want to help Americans see
THE Al&UNE SAID the cuts wlll
amount to about 50 percent on Its
lower-priced Super Saver fares In ef·
feet.
America.··
TWA'S CUT WAS the latest ln a
series of airline fare reductions in·
tended to combat laHln& passenger
As· an example, TWA ·said the
latest cuts would enable a family of
four to fly New York to Phoenix for
$792, compared to $1,248 on the Super
Save r fare and $2,639 on re gular
coach fare.
"It's not impossible to think of
othe r periods of each year when we
might introduce concentrated dis -
counts fo r a l i mited period to
stimulate business." declared Nell
Effman. a TWA senior vice presi·
dent
business.
The fare schedule calls for a $149
one-way fare based on a round·trip
ticket on all domestic flights except
between Chicago and tbe West Coast.
Children up to 12 years will pay no
more than $49 one way, based on a
FOR THE RECORD .......
UINTA ANA· TUSTIN
COMMUNITY HOSl'ITAI.
,.-.. , 1J
Mr eno Mn Mlcneel Coll.,.., C0tt•
M IM.girl
l'-.ierr1t
Mt •n<J Mo Crtg Y elH, L.•gun<1 a .. ,,, boy ,.., ... ,,u
Mr •nd Mr\ PAUi W•IMl•De '1unl
1n9 ton 8•~n. co,
M•r04
Mr •no Mn ~nee Gordon L•oun• 8••<". 0•'' ST JOSE'" MOS,.ITAI. ......... ,u
Mr .,,., "'" M•<N •I Atnne, t<ulll 111glon 8-.<h. girl
MIU ION COMMUNITY HOSl'ITAI.
J_,uryH
M r •no M r\ Lloyd W"1rr , S•n
C temt nte. 91rt ......... ,.,u
M r •ncl Mn John 0 ~111¥en $en
Jw•n C•C>•Str.no .. .w ... ,,u
Mr •n<I Mr' Auo, H•d•IQO l.•Qu ...
N10 u•1. Q1rl
M r •nd Mis JoM Woltrr L•Qun•
H rgurl, DOY
.... ,,..,, J4
M r •'ld Mt\ O•v1d Flomtrteu, !Mn
C•tmtnte Doy ......... ,, u
M r •nd Mr\ Robrt'rt .Joiner, S•n
Ju•n C•e>•str#\0, 91rl
........ ,, lT
M r •n<I Mr• Wllh•m 8 1t\tr l..•gun1
Be•ch, girl
Marc!> 2
"•rY•\ Cren1t1•w •nd Fr11dtinot
T rauttno.>cn. L.otgune Nlgutl. glrl
Marci! J
Mr •nd Mn. Vuen Hui. D•n• Po1n1,
o•rt
"OAG MEMOAIAI. HOSPITAi. ,.AEaYTEAIAN ......... ,, u
Mr •no Mrs ,,_,~ Nevin~. C0\14
Mn e, DOY
Mr •nd Mrs Chn,,u•n R•\\1nou•.
!>•nl• Arw, boy
Mr •no Mo OeM" Broldy ugurw
8 .. cll, DOy
Marcll I
M r •nd M rs Edw•rd l(unlm4nn ,..unll~lon 8t.cft, DOy ·
,,,., •nd Mt' H 6'1•n Ancterwn. (O\t•
Mtw,OOy
Marcll 1
Mr •nd MI'S Herbert ~l•r C~I•
Moe.ooy
M r •nd Mrs Ectw•rct Jone\
Nt wporl &teen, DOY
Mr end Mn fll0m4\ O••t Nt •PGfl
Bo t h DOy
Mr •nd Mrs Bruer 8e1Chu Hunt
1ng ton Ek•<n. g:1rt
M r •nd M rs A:obett 81n0•••1 .
Nt wc>Ort S.ech, girl
NYrO J
Mr •nd Ml\ (ly610.lh, Ir""""· t>oy
Mr •~d Mn C•rlo• Aomo. CO•I•
M e\•. 91rl
M•rc~ 4
M r •nd M t\ J~llrfy H o bb\ Nt•POrt Beech, t>oy
Mr and Mr\ Rooer• M•\on, lrv1nf",
girl
M t 1 nd M " J •mn I B•rn•)
M•ll•nQtr. Newpart Bu ell, oov
Mr ttncJ Mr\ H•n' John\ L•qun•
N19ue1. Qlrl
-•<Il l
Mr •ncJ Mn Robert Moore. (O\I•
Mt ••. OOf
M r •nd Mr\ M•••n•w A•r\vOld, t1unt1tu~•on Beath, bOt'
Mr •no Mr' Jerry SH¥tr Ne wport
8e•t n Q"I
Marc II•
Mr •no Mr\ Jottn Law rence lr¥1ne
0•'' M r •nd M r\ Wlll1•m M<Ctan.ey,
Fou"t••n V•ll•v. girt
Mr •no Mrf R•nde ll Wltlhorn
Nt•porl 0.e<h, llO'
Mr •nd Mr\ O.•id Bu,....11 Ce>tle
M•••.o•rl
M t and M r\ Aobtrt WOif (O\t•
M•u•. 9ut
M r •no M l\ W llli•M HOHleta.
H•wporl S.e<ll llOy
Husband's
sickness
rewarded
-------------------
A,WlrepMIO
.MASTER 'ENGINEER' HARD AT WOAK
Wiii Shortz conetruc:t• croHword puzzle
Sharp pencil
all he needs
By J ULES LOH
Al' S,..Clet Cr...._..,.
STAMFORD. Conn. -Question: Who is and
who is not an enigmatologist ? Haven't a clue?
Will Shortz is. Every body else is not.
"That is correct ." Shortz affirmed, chatting
between rounds of the fourth annua l Ame ri can
Crossword Puzzle Tournament, which he directs.
"~ a m the only person of record in this country
wtth a bachelor 's degree in enigmatology ."
Puzzle a mome nt over that word. There is
nothing enigmatic about it . Enigmatology , clearly,
is the study of enig mas. Puzzles. Will Shortz is a
14-lett.er word for a puzzle expert.
IN ALL THE LAND, ACROSS and down, there
breathes no other .
"My degree is from Indiana University.'· he
sa id "I designed the course. I took it. So far.
nobody else has . Why should they? I mean. how
m a n y jobs a r e wa itin g out ther e ror an
enigmatologist?"
AMERICA
You don 't have to
look in the back of the
book for the answe r: not
m a n y . Wi ll S h o r t z,
t hough , has m an aged
nicely . Expertly.
He is 28, just four years out of law sc hool ,
seven years out of enigmatology school. eight
years out of economics school ... But. wait, we
ar e getting ahe ad of the game. Back up, t o square
one .
"WHEN I WAS A KID GROWING up in
Crawfordsville, Ind . .'' he said, "my mother limit·
ed u11 to one hoµr of television .a day. Other kids
watched television, I did puules. I did book after
book of them .
BLOOM INOTON t Ill. ''Soon r begun cons tructing my own puzzles . It <AP> A woman who claimed her husband'• w as fun. I sold my first punle to a ma1azine at
work-related UlneH cost age 13. When I was 15 I had a regular word-1ame
he r years of com)>an· fe ature In Dell's puule maaazlne.
lonshlp 88 well 81 his "I was aoing to major ln punles. Nobody took
sexual aervtct11 has been m eserioualy,ofcour"e ...
a warded ~.000. He wu aerlou1.1, all right. Afte r three yean he
A McLean County jury had complete d a ll hl1 req1Lirement1 fo r an
ordered North American economic• de1ree, but economics did not interest
Aabeat08 Corp. to pay him . Puzzles did. All manner of puulea: word
C harlotte Hammond puzzles, math pu11lea. loaic pu11les, you name it.
t l 2 6 , o o o In c 0 m . he had conalructed and worked them all .
penul.Ory dama1e1 and "I WA8 ALSO INTERE8TED in the history or
075,000 In punitive puulet. 1 prowled llbrar1ea. l du1 up every scrap
d • ma I e •. North I of lntormaUon I could find. My own shelves now
American aald It would contain about 2,600 boob and maaaalnes. I believe
appeal. I know-as much about the hiatory of punles as
M r I . H a m m o n d anyone alive.''
claimed her huaband de· A1 it happened, Indiana University bad what
veloped a han1 dJ1eaae was called an tndlvlduall1ed Majora Protram. If
from. worldnt around the 1chool didn't offer a m_,or a 1tudent wanted,
Hbellol told by North the 1tudnt could dealan bi• own.
American to a Bloom· Shona told hJ1 counaelor he wanted to m_,or in
in Ito n • r • • p 1 ant pu11I•. 8be looked at him qululcally. but 11reed.
between 1951 and 19'11. "I DID A THE811 'TBS Hlltoey of Amertcan
Her hmband, Charle1, Word P\alal11 before 1850. • Theo I found that old
1Ull reqwrta frequent word, emsmatolOlf, and duated tt off. That'• my boapltal t reatment for coune .. ·
,hla dlMMt. ab• •aJd. 8bOrta went oa to law ~bool -"lawyera are
problem IOlven, ol a tort'' -aOt b1a law dtlJ'H1 but deetded tbat puaa. w.t. bla CUP at pe-oe na
took a Job at Gam• m11um..
Al'Wlte~l9 FlflM• If X ,
R e p . R o n al d !
De llums, D-Calif., I
says he'll seek help
fro m the Mormon
c hurch in his figh t
against the MX mis -
sile system. which is
planned for location
in Utah.
Breatli
testing
for pot?
LOS ANGELES <AP J 1
Four do<'tors at UCLA ·
say the y have developed-1
a breath·testing devic e 1
th a t can d e t e r m in e '
w hether a person has J
been s m o king m<1 r i·
juana I
The dev1<'e, a s mall I
por table plastt<' box wrth .
a solid cor e three incht.'S
long, {'an be used to ob
ta in breath sam ples that ·
then can be analyzed ror I
tetra hydrocanna bmol
the substancl' S<'1entists
say produces the mari-
juana hi gh
IT CAN O i':TECT
whet her lhe person ha d
be l'n s mok ing mar 1
juana within two hours
Drs St anley Gross.
E m ory Zi mme rm a n .
J a m es Soa r es a nd
J a m es G rant of t h e
U C L A S<'ho o l o f
M edicine 's Anato m y
De partment introdu<'ed
their "breatholizer" a t
an American Forensic
Sodety meeting here.
T he scientists said the
m arijuana breathohzcr
is "fast and accurate"
and <'an be used by law l
enforceme nt officers a s,.
ea sily as the e le<'troni<'
devi<'es used in the ar I
re st of people s uspected1 or driving under the in
fluence of al<'ohol
POLICE SAID THE
devi<'e would be useful
in prosecuting a driver
unde r the misde meanor I
charge or driving unde r
the mrtuencc of drugs 1 "Sure. it would be ,
he lpful, but not rcvolu-
t i o n a r y . " s a i di
Hollywood 1><>li<'e officer
Louis Rivas.
"We ha ve other ways
or telling if someone has
be e n s m o kin g mari·
juana, li ke eye reaction.
OBITUARIES
Two institutes .
advise Reaga:ll
97 THO•A.8 D. BLIA.8
Tbe Hoover lnstltuUon baa made lta lnlhaence on
the Reagan adminlatrat.ton obv1oua. Both Martin
Anderson and Richard Allen, tbe preaident'a
domestic affairs and naUonaJ aecurlty advisers. are
former staffers at the Stanford University think ta nk.
But two other California research institutes are
als o becoming major facto rs in the ne w
adminlBtralion. Their presence ls more obvioua in
policy than personnel.
Both the San Francisco-bas ed Institute for
Con tempora r y Studies a nd the Clare mont
Economics Institute have long advocated the kind of
conservative economics Reagan proposes.
0~ THE TWO ICS HAS closer ties to Reagan. It
~egan m 1974 as a refuge fo r officials who had worked
in R€'.agan's California administra tion, with a
founding board or dir ector s including Edwin Meese
III, Reagan's top adviser , and Defense Secr etary
Caspar Weinber ger
The JCS has for year s called for tight controls on
fe d€'.ral spending. It has advocated changes in
environmental a nd othe r government regulations to
give business incentives r ather than "commands,"
and has pushed a series of
rede ral i~come tax cuts CALIFORNIA coupled with a program to
adjust persona l in<'ome FOCUS t a x bra c k e t i. so
w a ge-ea rne rs a r e not
bumped into higher brackets when they get a raise.
Reagan's economic m essage included m ost of
the I CS program. but the institute's influence may be
even more telling in sha ping the administration's treatment of the pT'ess
. .f>:-new ICS study on .. Pohtacs and t he Oval Of·
fac t· cal~s fo r less mingling of press office rs and
other White House staff members with journalists
T.hl' book has <'lrcul aled among Re agan appointees
since l>e<'l'm ber in m anuscript form
"'FOR PRESIOF.NTS ," WRITES D UKE
Unive~s1ty ~rof. Robert Entman in the 'lrrt perial
Media ~cct1on. "thE.' question h~ not been whether
the media wo uld obstrud their leade rs hip, but how ·
To preve nt this. Entman advises keeping the
pressst aH"in the dar k ·· aboutdec1.s1on·makmg. .. rr the press ofrl <'ers are not pn vy to the
president's political strategies and future plans ,
they can honestly fend off re
porters' ·why' inquisitions and
steerthe focus to the 'what ....
Reagan appeare d to follow
this advice when he chose James
Brady, not a longtime adviser
hke most of his other top aides. to
be White House press secretary
The study also <'alls fo r less
frequent press confe rences and
m ore de<'orum when they are
~.c .. u o At.L.EM he ld , ad vi{'e Reagan followed at
his firs t presidential press conference by rerus ing to
call on any question<'r who stood and sho'uted for re-
cognition
JCS ALSO RECOMMENDS THAT t h e
administra.tion "ta m e White House beat reporting
by decreasing reporters· expect ations of full access
to officiaJs "
Cla remont lni.tit ute president John Rutledge
and his aliSO<'iates worked without pay for six weeks
to help assess the impa<'t of va rious econom ic
pr oposals and to JUStiry the !>weeping Reagan plan to
the pubh<'
Their main contribution to the budge t-s licing
process was a mathematical for mul a tha t considers
the "rationa l expe<'tat1ons" of cons umers a nd
financial markets in developing programs. T he
for mula evolved over s ix years of providing
for ecasts a nd invest ment a d vice to private
businesses, Rutledge said
BOTH SMALL INSTITUTES S EE the next few
ye a rs as pros perous times for the m .
"Now that a numbe r of our directors ar e taking
key positions in the administration, we"ll be looking
to ta ke on new proje{'tS to assist them in grappling
with major public po li<'y questions," said A
La wren<'e Chi<'kering, the I CS executive d irector
1 Ehasisacolumni.st gasedm Santa Mon1ca 1
But fewer applying
Dentistry expensive
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
De ar Joyce: I have beard that
becoming a dentist Is ve ry expensive.
Is that true?
-J .R., Oklahoma City, Okla.
Ma ny denta l school graduates
e merge near ly $20,000 in debt, a< ..
cordinl{ to a l'itudy by the Council on
De ntal F.ducation . They then must
borrow bet ween $55,000 and $100,000
to equip th<'ir offices
R es ult Students from lower· and
m iddle Income fa milie s a r e not
choos ing dent ist ry .
That 's bad nt>ws ; here's some
good .
-THE NUMBER OF appli ca nts to
d e ntal schools has dropped from
15,000 in 1975 to 9,000 In 1980 for ap·
proximately the sam e 6,000 pla<'es. so
ge tting In Is less com petitive.
-Dentists' average Income ex-
ceeds $48,000 a year.
Trends In the field Include a push
towa rd general practice dentistry -
only 15 percent of the graduates
enter specialties -and the rise In
gro up practices. Thia ye ar's
freshman dental class is 20 percent
wo men, a dramatic: Increase over the
past deeade.
A boon for new denllsts Is the Na-
tional Health Profeasions Placement
Network 11t the Unlveralty of Min·
neaota, a computeriied system for
m1tchln1 dent.1st.a and Jobi. About
1,800 dentiats UBed the service last
year.
University of Oklahom a College of
Dentistry. sees the prim ary role of
de ntists s hifting from filling cavities
in children to providing periodontal
work for adults . He thinks that the
gr owing inclusion of denta l insurance
in health care plans will continue to
inc reas e the number of people who
utilize dentists· services.
Despite his optimis m . a r eport by
the U.S. Department of Health and
CAREERS
Human Services has projected a s ur-
plus of 7.000 dentists by 1990. General
de ntists. orthodontists, periodonlists
and oral s urgeons are likely to pre ·
vail, accordin_gto Brown.
J ERRY OllNEll, CHAJllMAN of
the department of community den·
listry al T e mple University ln
Philade lphia, s pent several years on
a study that contradicts the notion
that dentistry is a hi&hly stressful
profe ssion. Examioln1 death
certlficates of dentists over several
years, Omer concluded that their
suicide rate was below the averaae
for white males.
Says Dr. William Ayer, • social
scientist with the American Dental
Association, ''There are many
psychologically healthy aapecta to
dentistry. Dentist. have more control
over their work environment than do
many ot.Mr people.
~Or .. CNtt o.llY....... ' MMcll 11, Iii, 11, •11 1, "'' 1-., .._ ________ ...;..__,
Now bit .. ueoela&e editor of tM m111dDt,
editor at anot!Mr called TM ...... Puuler ror
hard-oan pualf addleta, and hu wtttien or Mtted
a llall .,._ boob ol punl11.
\JNUlll! THE M\JCH heralded an·
U·cavl\y vaccine. which 11 still ln \be
uperimental 1ta111. fluoride i1
aJre1dy cbullna U.. face ol den·
Uatry.
Dr. Wllliam Brdwn, dean of the
READER SERVlC~: If~~ Wt.
a 11-page conn booklet,,.,_., br '"-
Am•ricaft OfMol AuodotCott, Nftd o
fklmped, Ml/«ldf'fUfd, loftO tddff fft•
vc«ip. fo JOf/Ct Laa. K ....... t a.t Sor
180, CoeCa Al.,,o nnf. AM for ''Oft.
tUtt."
'
lll!LAlll9,.. .._ ------~ ---.-----___, ______ -..-.-.. ......... -.-_ ... -~ ,...,._ .................. .._..._....~----·,·· .... , • __ ... ....., ...... .......... ._... .....
TllE
FAJllLl'
c1ac111
"Don't cut my sandwich in quarters, Mommy.
The guys will think I'm a baby." "How do you like THAT for a stuff shot?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE 30 YEARS AGO TODAY
~ 11 i i
"I'll have to hang up now, Helen. It looks
iike it's time to get dinner started!"
Jt:DGE PARKER
••
~-;.
~
;~-,
~
1
~l!l!l!::::.:m:lt::==-fli~tf'5E'Nll1M!l IF TIM ADMll5 THI!> TO 6E THE
TRUTH, I MAY 6E A6LE TO MAKf
A DEAL FOR. HIM WITH THE 0.A.,
E5PECIALLY IF WE RECOVER
THE MONEY.'
ACROSS 52FUM
5" Bartered
1 Tally 58 Reign
UNITED Feature Syndbta
M<>M1y's Puzzle Solved
6 Slat 59 VrM
10 Endure 81 Coated metal 3~'.J J3'l:::J::J :Jij;JCJC!
J'.JJ J'.J'-l'lJ rJ:J:J:JrJ
:JJ.U'.JJ'.J:J.J iJCJ:.JL:lil
:JiJll.l:.J O.J.J LJ;!J::J
iJl.l:.J J:tO.JiJ .:rJ:.JU
14 Spun 02 Czech rtwr
15 Asian Clfpet 83 Arm bone
16-0ttler 64 BNu monde 17 Confonn 65 Predicament ~i'4i'tilmlti+.1i'
18 Rind ee Expos or '.JJJ :JU.J ~]~LJ
'lJ'.JJJ:.J .:t.:J:::Jli UCICJ
~::JJJJiJ:J :.:J !rJLil.JlJU
'l:J'.J JU.J:.:J .JUiJiJ~lJ
.JJiJ.J .1'..LI J.J~
'J.JJ'.J J.JJJiJ .J .• KK .
111 Dlllik• Red•
20 Wan 87 FN1ted
22 Contrected
24 Corroalw DOWN
29Qulwrlng
27 Led
31 Numb«
32 Enjoyed
33 Debel•
35Ct0Wd
38 Wle6ded
3tQoudlw
40 Sutimerge
41 Not n . or lg.
42 -met*>-
"'"' 43 F'Nlt drink
44 led: Pr9tlx
45~
47 ...... eourm
51T ..
1 Exclllnge
2 Flnlle
3 E1119ee
4Superteded
.JUJ Jll.J ~H::J:JlJ
O.JJJ_J J JiJ JU.J.J~ll
.J'.J.JiJJ J'JJ J.J .J..JU
.J.JiJ.JJ JJ;;J..:.J ..Jr.m
5 Lured 27 -pudding
• Circuit 28 AIClnt
7 Old 2t -out:
8 Kiimer WOftl Med9 do
9 Time petlod: 30 Chelrlell
2 wordt 34 Outburlb
10 Comport 35 Ff9lldl .,..
1 t .._.Nippy H Stow pert
12 flowlr 37 lot ,,..
131....... 39Ylk
21 becuttd 2 wordl
23 Voctltlon 40 lfttWI ,,M.
25 MN 42 Sorrow
43Wooed
44Trtc:tatn
48 1<11ctien Item
47 Cotton cloCh
48 -ofCom-
mone
49 °'*' toundt 50 Ollmt>
538-J**
66 Mellll rMr
MM!g:lp.
57 Adlle\llNflt eo Mell
1 2 J t I
bv Mell Lazari us
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
~f 1C> BE ONE OF
il1c F~INGE
BENEFITS OF
UNEMPLOYMENT ...
1PMNIJTI
i
WEU_I MAV~A
UntE DIFFICUL lY
REAofN6 IT ...
______ _., S'ftWCAJaNIN&-"'-------==--_,
M9Nl>UN~
Hli-P8MRP
HAAtHOCKER! -~
It·s~t
fa'~,but ...
by Ern ie Bushmiller
,_ _____ _ I'LL MAKE
SOME SOUP---
THAT'S GOOD
!=OR A COLD
PHOOEY---IT
OH 1 t:>EAR---
J' M G·ETTING-
A CCILD ~--
FUNKl' ttlNKERBEAN
TASTES
AWFUL
by Gus Arriola
Hl·FI-Fo·FUM! l~LL n4E I
....ORK a: A
.L/TTU: e.JM!
AND f'.()W ~ A 5PECJAl
1REITT IN HCN)R OF t:AINT
FA'TRI CJ( '.S DA') ...
HE.RE'.5 00~ HO SINGING
1HAI 01...D FAVORllE ...
LOVElc..> HOUll HAN .'
DR. SMOC!I"
c;:::::======------=-:J A~1·~u~'~
ADVIC.E Cl-IN\C
foR 80'(S
w 11" F' ROBl.fA\~
A"TH<A~, WMAT OOES A
Cillll. M&AN WHEN ~c
TEL.I.I Me iO 621' 1.0~,.
AND C:S.T TM& MliC" OtA'T'
OF Ml~ 1.1S:f, r::t1ftVf" ?
by Kevin Fagan
II 1\L
C~tlK ~CK ~rfl(
~OU ON~~\~
~LS'.
by George Lemont
DEPEND~.
IN WHAT CONTE~i
DID ~He 'JAY IT?
I
vl•TH GIRLS ~;;
~· )>
, c: .... -----' )-<fl.-\-
'
/,! .. _'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~_---_-__ ·~---.. V ~ \.'1 TTTrV.>-', J ·IJ
FOB8ETTE·i•O• roa •ORIE
SO, I HE.AR Tt"I Rf
LAWRENCE GOT' T~E
CASTOFF H\~
LEG TooAY!
'I~-we WAN~D
~IM 10 BRING-IT
INFOR~
~·TELL.
--~ ............
ME. SA'IS HIS \.EG-
Fa:\..~ FUNtW,
8UT HE CftN
WALK FINE ...
by Lynn Johnston
t'e JVST WONT
BC~B\..E"0
KlCK f\N~ONE
FOR f\Wt'\1\.E.
_)
I
e>r.,.ge CoMt DAILY PtLOTIJUMday, Maroti 17, 1981 NATION
Sleuths shprpeD. skills
My1tery loven gather to 1olve 'crime'
NEW PALTZ, N.Y. CAP) -A
body la found aft•r di.DMr, &Dd
t.be weetmd la devokld to •v· ln• tbl crime. It'• a UtU• bit of
heaven for tbt 100 banken.
Murder Ink, told newcomen.
"You can 1lt there and watch
everyone else make fool• of
tbemHlves."
old New Yorker 111ehae1 Colrtoa
aolemn.l,y told hll parentl.
• lawyers, boulewtva and other
umebalr detec:Uva · drawn to
the Annual Mobonk · Myatery
Weekend.
Flr1t-tlmer1 are instructed
1tern1y not to ldenlify the culprit
before the appolnted hour.
"Hard to beUeve. but there ar• people who would tell you
without bllnklna who killed
Ro1er Ackroyd," muttered Ms.
Brener, referrlna to Aaatha
Cbri1Ue'1 cluslc mystery novel.
"Wbo Killed Roter Ackroyd?"
"Wboopt, I've locked ua out ol
the. locked room," M1. Snit's
''1boet" told one eater team of
lnve1U.1ton. Tbe room m•t be
locked between toure, 111.
Brener 11ld, because "there are
people who aU!aJ clues."
Beading for bea~h
U.S . Marines in amphibious landing
vehicles aim for shore at Pohang, on
eastern coast of South Korea. They are re·
.,,.,,,,.._
hearsing for annual U.S. ·South Korea jol nt
military exercise, "Team Spirit '81."
Some my1lery lovera eame
from u far 11 California to
spend four day1 at the MoboM
Mountain HouH, a towerln1
112·year-old landmark eo milts
north ol New York City com·
plete wtth tower1, dark wood,
creakiDI floora ind dim
slalrcues.
Authors held forth lo admirin1
audience., experta talked about
eaaenlial my1tery component.a
like forgery and v1Ua1e let.el,
and contests -like spottlna
blunt 1.nslrumenll strewn over
a hillside -challenged the
sleuths to sharpen their skills.
"YOU ALSO DON'T have to
e nter anything,'' organizer
Carol Brener, the owner of the
New York City mystery bookstore
The narrator did It, just for
the record.
AT THI! PIFTll annual
weekend, "Avaracla Snit" waa
found 1la1n after dinner Thurs-
day. A moonlit lakeside buriaJ
followed, tbtn iueats beaan
work. The 1uapects lncludlna
Bette Nolr, Sherrill Koamea,
Red Tape and Sue Torte were
q14eaUoned. M1. Snil'a locked
room wu checked
It wu dead aertou• work.
·'I found a Upstlck under the
bed, but there was no llpatick on
those ci1arette b~tlll ," JO.year-
118. B&ENE&'S F&IEND8,
some of them mystery writ.en,
portrayed the victim and the
suspects at the weekend, wbicb ,
cost ruesta up to $2SO per penon
for room and board.
Sunday, the beat solutions
were read. Once, just fin1ertn1
the perpetrator was enou1b, but
Ms. Brener later added awards
for creativity for inventive
responses.
Marshall Dickman, a , New
York marketini analyst al bis
fourth mystery weekend, called
the reading or the winning
answers "the ~t two hours of
the year."
Coffee-cancer evide1ice mi,s/,ead~ng?
THIS YEAR, AUTHO& Sher·
rill Koames bludgeoned Ms. Snit
with hia little red typewriter.
The motive? He was afraid
ahe'd expose him because sbe
alone knew his beat.selling
thriller .. 332-0" was pla&iarized
from the unpublished "221B·
Plus."
Several teams of investigators
named the murderer. But, says
Dickman : "Who the murderer is
la always the easiest part. It's
figuring out the motives, the op-
portunities and so on that keeps
people working.·'
NEW YORK (AP) -Despite
a study Linking coffee to cancer
of the pancreas. it's too soon to
bang up your coffee mug for
good, researchers say.
The latest evidence may be
misleading, they explain, and
three more studies on the dis·
ease -whose occurrence has
tripled in the past 30 years are
on the way.
The most recent study, by Dr.
Brian MacMahon and colleagues
at Harvard, turned up a Link
between coffee drinking and
pancreatic cancer. the fourth
leading cause of cancer deaths.
The Harvard researchers re·
ported that people who drink as
much as two cups of cofree a day
nearly double their chances of
the disease, and three·cup-a day
imbibers nearly triple their risk.
Two month s ea rli er, a
University of Maryland study
said drinking decaffeinated cof·
fee was a risk factor for pan·
creatic cancer . along with dnnk·
ing wine and occupational ex-
pos ure to dry c le aning or
gasoline.
But MacMahon warned that
his results must be confirmed
elsewhere before scientists try
to pin any purported cancer·
causing ingredi~nt in coffee. The
culprit probably is not caffeine,
since no similar link was found
with tea.
And the American Cancer
Society said it was ... too early for
any kind of clear cut conclusion
to be drawn."
Studies examining the risk
racto.rs of pancreatic cancer are
under wa y at USC, t h e
Am erican Health Foundation in
New York and Johns Hopkins
University.
All these investigations are
aimed at explaining why cases
of pancreatic cancer have
tripled in three decades.
The American Cancer Society
estimates there will be 22,000
deaths from the disease this year.
compared to 13,675 in 1960 and
8.952 in 1950.
Pancreatic cancer is especial·
ly hard to treat because lb e pan·
creast a flat gland behit 1d the
s tomach that s ecret.es a
digestive juice, is so well-111.idden
that the cancer usually is l far ad-
vanced by the time it's dis·
covered.
The disease also is h ard to
diagnose, and some patients die
or it without ever know! .ng the
exact cause of their malii :nancy.
A major problem for re· 1
searchers is separating the ef-
fect of coffee from t hat or
cigarette smoking , a !ready
known to be linked to pa1 lcreatic
cancer, said Dr. Thoma·; Mack.
who heads the USC study .
"The fact is there a re very
few people who are heavy
s mokers who don't als o drink
coffee. and people wt 10 don't
smoke tend to drinl : small
amounts of corree. It m eans we
have to be very carer ul about
disentangling the two," he said.
Another difficulty is that
studies like Mac Mah< >n 's and
Mack's can establish only a
"link" or "association" between
Savory e ngs.
-------AIOUT
1 s199GREAT I 9 DINNER
("')
0 c ~ 0 z
I
Good for lhrn pieces of 1u1cy go1oet1 browt1 Ket1tucky
Fued Ch1cket1. plus s1t1g1e servings of cole slaw.
mashed potatoes ano gra"Y. ano 1 roll L1m1t two oflers
per l)\lrchase Coupon good only for comb1na11on while/
dark orders Customer pays a ll applicable sales la~
------·-AIOUT $5 ftft !iUPERI e77DINNERI
Good lor nine pieces or juicy. golden t><ow n Ket1lucky
Fried Chicken, with four rolls, 1 large cole a t1w, a ferge
mashed potatoes end a medium gravy Llml I two 0 111111
~r purctiaae Coupon good only for combin aflon white/
darl< orders Customer paye 111 applic1ble ea les tu
Oller exp11es I M1rct1 29 1981
I Prices may vary 11 per
t1cfp1flno locaflona Good
only fn Southern
I California where you see
America·• Fl1vorlle
Window BaM er
I
GOURMET
MARgET
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT
. Fresh nld of Pacific Red Snapper 1.zt lb.
· '· Fresh nld of Northern Sea Bus .. Z.18 lb.
MEAT DEPAR_TMENT
Prime and top choice beef aged at least 30 days to the
peak or perfection.
Tltlck Jmcy LoadoD Broll Steak or
Reg. Cat Top lloud Steak .......... Z.M lb.
Bomeleu &olled Beef Roas&.I ........ Z.M lb.
Leaa Ceeter Cat Chuck Roasts .... I.ff lb.
Leaa Groaad Beef <Ground Hourly> ...• l.Jt lb.
CANDEUTE HEAT AND EAT fOODS.
Prepared Fresh Daily From Delaney'• Own Kitchen.
1
8t11ffed Baked Na&oea .......... Mc ea.
Eaellll .. 11 wl&la Sa.ce .......... t.4' ea.
artm, Carry . : .................. Z.ff eL
raES eo•E DELlVl:&)Y 8EaVICE ($St mlld•••
MORNING FRESH PfllODUCE
Extra Lar1e Fuerte A vocadoe ...... 4/1.•
Fresh Lecal Aaparaps . . . . . . ...... tk lb.
So. Amertcu Buuaa ........ 3 lb. for 1.•
Green Onlona ud Radlalles. . . . .. ltc buch
I FROMDELANEY'S B~LKEiY
Carrot Cake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... I.ti ea.
Apricot AJmoect Cake . . . . . . . . .... 1.• ea.
DELANEY'S WINE 4CELLAR
DelasteL!e Printe Label Cll•blla or
Vt. ',,._ C750 mlll......... . ......... 1.• ea. aen.,er a.e.lm Blue (7SO mil> .............. s.11 ea. Sc--,~ (750 mil) . . . . . . . . . . ......... Uha. or (llltet) ................................. : .. t.Mea.
S.atraM VO (1 liter> ....... ,, ............... It ... ea.
All liquor and wine plu a tax
1 'P.l lloa. ab peck, Diet or Rt(\:llar ........ L.~ f ·
!lore a.n .... -a-1,.t s.iMay
na Newport Bl••·• Ne.,..,... Beac.,
673-552;!0
some habit and some disease,
not prove that one c.auses the
other. Scientists then must
figure out why the link occurs.
The studies also are oc·
casionally contradictory. The
Maryland study by Dr. Ruey Lin
and Irving Kessler found wine
drinking raised the risk of
cancer. But MacMahon found
drinkers of alcohol were slightly
Handgun license
requests soaring
NEW YORK (AP> -Nearly
twice as many New Yorkers are
applying for handguns now than
a year ago, an increase police
attribute to fear of crime and a
new law that speeds up the
paperwork for getting a cun.
Between Aug. 12, when the law
went into effec~. and March 5,
police received 5 , 758 applica·
lions for handgun licenses,
almost twice as many as were
filed in the same period a year
earlier.
leas Ukely to get sick, alt.hough
the effect eou!d have been dlJe"lo
chance.
Under suspicion as possible
cancer·causers are some of the
solvents used to extract caffeine
from coffee beans for decaf·
feinated coffee.
And caffeine. although not sus-
pected in current studies, has
been proposed by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration for re·
view because of evidence it
causes birth defects in rats.
M a c Mabon sai d he has
stopped drinking coffee himself,
but in the absence of more
evidence cannot advise others
what to do.
So individual coffee drinkers
mus t decide for the mselves
whether to give up the beverage,
just as they must decide
whether to smoke, drive a car or
take any of life's other choosable
risks.
"I wish there was an easy
answer," MacMahon said. "You
pays your money and you takes
your chances ...
Train driver
held in theft
CHICAGO <AP> -The driver
of a rapid transit train was
charged with felony theft alter
aUegedly robbing an undercover
police officer who was posing as
a drunk, police said. ....,
Edward Anderson , 24, .J/t,,"'
Chi c ago Tr ans it Au thorit:Y!'
driver, was arrested after tak-
ing Sll from the omcer in a sub-
way station, police said.
"We can't believe it," said
Sgt. John J . Thulis. "Things are
a little tough, but here's a guy
making $12 an hour and he's
grabbing money from a downer.
MOT ICE
--....,,_, Ml-"'°P 11-.1--."4/lttl l
11.(Y'S
SHiii CUSS Lin
Springtime's A Great Time on
CATALINA HALE CREST .. "'"""'"·--. ·--CUl8 .. COITA -•
557·7ZJ4
..
C.--.-.o...-E-~0-1ww<0 ~OooooC.-1
.,,. w. I .. ·~ c.--from Long Beach or San Pedro 541-7401 CllUISES EVnY DAY 1Dl'TMN OR
(213) 775-6111 (714) 527·71 H (213) 132-4521
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just a year ago
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t
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TUESDAY, March 17, 1•1
MOVIES 82
TEJ:EVISION 83
FE1'TURES 84
STOCKS 87 ~
Top ffll:lnagement
shakeup at Irvine's
VTN Corp .... 85
o) w
Rush hoUr bus riders 'face fare hikes
By F&EDE&IC& SCBOEMEm.
OI ~ Dl6ty ~ IUoH
For the lint Ume in the 11-
year hi.story of' the Oranae Coun·
ty Transit District, riders will
pay extra for the privlle1e of
rldlnl buses durin1 peat com-
muting periods.
Under a fare increase package
approved Monday by the district
Board of Directors, riders will
pay 75 cents one-way on local
routes between 6 and 9 a .m. and
3 and 6 p.m. and 60 cents one-
way on similar routes during
non-peat hours.
The existing fare for such
routes, regardless of the time of
•
It'll be 75 cents fro m 6 to 9 a.m., 3 to 6 p.m.
boardinl, is 50 cents.
Tbe new fares will take effect
June 1.
In addltlon, directors •P·
proved boosting the fare on ex·
press routes -non-stop service
between major commuter points
-to $1 .50 per one-way ride,
compared to the $1.25 now
charged.
Commensurate with the new
rates will be increases in
amounts charged for reiular
m onthly bus passes, student
passes, handicapped passes and
express service passes.
The price of a regular monthly
pass will climb to $21.50 from
$17 .50. The price of the student
pass to $18 from $13; of the
handicapped pass to $12 from $10,
and of the express pass lo $56.50
from $43. 75.
Pass prices will r ise even
higher effective June l , 1982
when the price of a regular
monthly pass will rise to $25.50; a
stude nt pass to $22 .50; a
handicapped pass to $14, and an
express pass to $60.
The two-step approach to in·
cr ea.ing the pass charges was
pro posed by d i r ector Al
Hollinden, as a means of soften-
ing the financial effects on
purchasers.
The new pass rates will reflect
discounts less than those now en-
joyed by purchasers.
Curre ntly regular m onthly
pass buyers reap an 18.6 percent
rare discount.
Under the two-step plan that
discount will drop lo 10 percent.
The respective percentages for
student, handicapped and ex-
press paas buyers are 39.5 and 20
percent, 53.5 and SO percent, and
16. 7 and 5 percent.
The fare increases will permit
the district in the Ciacal year
beginning July l to comply with
a state mandate that at least 20
percent of its oper ating revenue
be raised through the farebox.
The district will not meet that
target this year, in part due to
the 22 -day work stoppage in
February. Loss or ridership cost
the district about $1.6 m illion in
farebox revenue, officials said.
The state law, however, does
provide (Or a one-year erace
period in complying with the
farebox revenue requirement.
To meet the 20 percent re-
quirement during the current
fiscal year, a 00-cent fare, effec-
. live immediately, would have
been required.
The fare increase breezed to
unanimous approval with sur-
prisingly litUe opposition voiced
from those in attendance al the
meetmg.
Fares last were increased in
September 1979, from 3S to 50
ce11ts.
1
OC foreigners' ma1·riages probed
No b a il
forOC
fugitive
A 23-year·old transient, shot
twice by a Newport Beach
pa trolman Friday following a .
struggle over a knife, is being
held without bail in the UCI
Medical Center jail ward.
Authorities placed the no-bail
hold on David Dean Sellles wben
police discovered he was wanted
on s us picion o f attempted
murder in Indio and on a $10,000
Palm Springs burglary warrant.
Selliez reportedly led police on
a· h igb -speed c hase from
Newport Be ach to Costa Mesa.
He crashed his motorcycle into
a parked car but continued· his
flight on foot, according lo police
accounts of the incident.
When police caught up with
him , be allegedly pulled out a
knife. A struggle with NeWJJ19rt
Patrolman Gary Bruton enaued,
police said.
Bruton reportedly fired two
shots at Selliez, striking him in
the hand and thigh. Police claim
Selliez took off running after be·
ing shot and later was dis -
covered hiding behind a l>Qat
storage yard.
The Riverside County sheriff
claims the 23-year-old Selliez is
the man who left one of his
deputies unconscious on an In-
dio street last Feb. 20.
A spokesman at the Indio sub-
station says a sheriff's deputy
stopped Selliez that day after
recognizing him and recalling
that Palm Springs had issued a
$10,000warrantfor his arrest.
Authorities claim then, when
the deputy tried to place the
young man under arrest , Selliez
drew out a claw hammer and hit
the deputy on the head.
The deputy, authorities in In-
dio say, did not suffer perma-
nent damage from the hammer
blow. They say investigator s
have been searching for Selliez
since the incident.
FV trustees
• se t screening
for top post
Fountain Valley School ·Dis·
trlct trustees have approved a
series of procedures lo be
followed in selectin1 a new dis-
trict IMlperintendent.
Tbe \J'Uateea fired Superinten-
dent Glenn Hardy in February,
clting • dlsa1reement over
"leadenblp styles and educa-
tional philosophies." Jack
Mahnken wu appointed actin&
superintendent.
The school board bu •creed
to permit a committee made up
of staft memben, teaeben and
parents to develop a list of
quallfleatloftl for the cllatrict's
top admlnlatrative post.
Tbeae ltandardl wW be used
to dnelop an advertisement..._
solicitlnl applicants tor tbe poal·
tloo.
A con1ultmt blred by the dis·
trict wW W«k with tbe eommlt-
1 I
tee lft leNIDIDI tbe applleatlom
aad narrowtnc tbe fteld to •· Tbt eomultaat t.ben wiU wart
with a eommtuee member ud a
preHDt or former board
member to trtm tbe sroup to
ft••ftn•lltl· nc.....,. o1 v-.. u.. wW
tatenlew tbe ftve ftaall1t1, alOlia wllll.., evrrent u1lltant ••~ wbo wt.bee to .,., ,.. die '°' post, and will
llMke-. ...........
•
o.lly ...... llafl -·
DOING FOR OT HERS -Members of
Catholic church conftrmation class do yard
work at home of elderly Co.ta Mesa resi-
dent. Boys are (f rom front to back) John
Bater, Pat Borja, David Ledet, MichaeJ
Baker and Martin Dix.
Youths lending a hand
Church c lass helping Costa Me s a e lderly
Five members of a Catholic
c hurch confirmatio n class
turned out over the weekend to
help Costa Mesa's elderly and
got hooked on doing things for
others.
Al Spacer, a confirmation lay
teacher at St. John the Baptist
Church in Costa Mesa. joined up
with Roberta Button o f
Transportation, Lunch and
Counseling (TLC> for a mutuaJly
beneficial half-day outing.
Spacer's boys learned the
pleasure of doing for others
while discovering that there lru·
ly are people who need help
these days.
Ms. Button was able to launch
a n experimental program de-
signed to draw more individual
help from the community in car -
ing for the elderly .
The boys from St. John the
Baptist groomed an 82-year-old
woman's lawn. hedges and
trees. washed windows at two
other elderly women's homes
and cleaned up around the house
or a 9().year ·old who . 'is too
·weak to pick up a flower pot,"
Spacer said.
"It 's part of their religious
training," said Spacer, "and the
boys were really enthusiastic
They want to do it again one day
next month, possibly."
Ms. Button. whose TLC group
is part of the Feedback Founda-
tion, a non-profit group based in
nearby Santa Ana, said the ex-
perimental program probably
will continue.
She is seeking others who
might like to pitch in to aid
elderly Mesans.
TLC serves a hot meal at
noontime to 40 senior citizens on
a reguJar basis, she said. Many
of them need some strong young
bodies to do odds and ends that
they themselves are too ill or to
weak to perform.
And TLC could use a few more
hot-lunch delivery drivers, she
added
Anyone interested in helping
s h ould call Ms Button at
835·8011.
Smoking levels off
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Prelimin ary figures by the
Agriculture department showed
a six-year downward trend in the
average number of cigarettes
smoked by Americans m ay have
ended last year. •
But officials said the downward
tr end m ay resume in 1981.
Salvace crewman on top ol Air Callfornta
plaae UH8 power 1aw to cut tbrou1b
lut•l81• • eo-worken watch proceedbl11. Boelnl m erubed at Oraqe CcMmty'1
John Wayne Airport Feb. 17. It ii now be·
ln1 cut up for scrap. An unknown wa1 let·
t.ered "Boa Hoc Airlines'' on tbe side of
the plane.
U .S. residency
seen as goal
By JERRY CLAUSEN
OI -D•llr Pl ... St•lt
The U.S. Immigration Service
is investigating the possibility
lh at a ring is operating in
Orange County to arrange mar-
riages that give foreigners,
mostly Iranians, permanent res-
idency in this country.
The possibility was discovered
last month by Cost a Mesa
homicide investigators working
the murder of two roommates in
their Baker Street apartment
Jan. 31.
Found shot lo death, execution
style, in their second-floor apart·
m ent's living room were Giovan·
ni Paz, 27, and Brent Wheeler,
23.
Each was s hot twice in the
head at close range with a small
caliber gun, detectives said.
The two had moved into the
Baker Street apartment last
December, leaving other room·
mates in the Dana Point and
Laguna Beach a reas.
Initial Investigations led de-
tectives into Southern California
gay co mmunities as t h ey
followed theories that Paz, a
hair dresser, and his younger
roomma te. a restaurant food
salesman. were victims of rob-
bery or reprisal, said Lt. Jack
Cal non.
In the course of the murder in-
vestigation. police learned that
both men recently had married
Iranian women, students at Cer-
ritos Coll ege.
Detectives said they could find
no indkation that the men ever
had lived with the women
despite claims to the contrary
by a lawyer representing the
21 -year-old Iranians.
The couples were introduced,
detectives said, by a woman
close lo the gay scene in Orange
County.
Paz, officers claimed, pre-
viously had married another
Iranian woman in 1974. They
said they could find no record
that the two ever had divorced.
"It appears," said Costa Mesa
police Sgt. Sam Cordeiro, "that
the going rate <for Americans
who marry foreigners> ls about
$1,500."
Cordeiro said his department
never discovered any evidence
that such a transaction had oc·
curred in the Paz and Wheeler
marriages.
He said detectives shelved the
Iranian m~rrlage investigation
because it appears that sel(ment
County j udge
of the two men's lives had
nothing to do with the murders .
Their evidence was turned
over to the U.S. Im m igration
Service in Los Angeles late last
month.
"There were indications,"
Cordeiro s aid, "that a local
woman was setting up possible
marriages of convenience in the
gay community."
Phil Smith, assistant district
director of the Immigration
Ser vice for investigation, said
his officers are pursuing the
Costa Mesa lips.
"It's not unus ual," Smith said.
··where we have homosexuals
male or female who accom-
modate each other for immigra-
tion purposes. Usua lly it's
hom osexual Iranians married to
<American> lesbians."
Smith said foreigners who
marry U.S. citizens can change
their temporary residency to
.. green card <perm anent>"
status.
And, he said, the spouses are
eli gible for citizenship within
three years instead of the five
normally required through im·
migration procedure .
"The Jaw doesn't specify any
length of time you have to re-
main married." he said. "If
fraud is found in such an ap·
plication, though, we would have
five years in which to prove it.
After that, we can do nothing."
Cases resulting in proof of
fraud end with deportation. he
said.
"We investigate a number ( or
such cases>. but we don't have
the resources to investigate
many," Smith added. "Our off.
icers believe the percentages
'are high. but no real study has
been done."
As immigration o fficials
launch their investigation in the
Orange County area. Costa
Mesa police are back to their
theory that an acquaintance or
robber killed the two Costa Mesa
m en.
Missing from the ransacked
murder apartment were both
men's wallets and, possibly.
jewelry that friends and rel-
atives said the two owned.
Neither the wallets nor the
jewelry, which police concede
may have been pawned or sold
to finance the Costa Mesa apart·
ment move. have been found.
Nor have officers found the
murder weapon.
Archie Walters'
final rites held
I
Funeral ...tea were con-
ducted llardl 14 for Archie L.
Walt.en,·· interim' municipal
court J...,• ID south Oran1e CoaatJ .me. 1t'72, and a former
ma'IOf!of Glmdale. Juqe Walter. died in San
Clem_.. llareb 5 at the ace ot
79.
Judte Walters retired from
tbe Bucbank llwliclpal ~
bench in 1171 after 11 yean ot
service, but waa Mlected bJ the
1tate11 chief JuaUce to Prell ... OD
an ~m baal1 oa trtah
tbr the ltate.
At Ume ot bit death, Judi4t
Walters waa heart~ e ... a
South Oraqe Countrtl.Sdpal
Court ln La~a Nl•wl· .
• ,.
WhUe •ttenclini nJ1bt classes
at use durinc the late ltQOe,
where be earned a law desree.
Judae Walters polishe d
f vnlture at a Sears Roebuck
store in Loe An1eles . to belp
finance bia studies.
He beaan pract1cln1 law in
Glendale in 1921, where, ~ 19;'11 at the -,e ol 3', he was eleewa
mayor.
In llSl be wu named to the
Burbuk Muafelpal Court bmda
by tben-Oov. Sdmund G. "Pat"
Brown lftel' ten1aa u elty at-
tome1 fw Paudena alnee 19".
Fuaeral Hnlce1 for Jud .. W •I ten were conducted at
Form Lawn llemortal Part ln
Gleft4ale.
I t
Or.no. Oo8lt DAILY '-ICOT(1'.)»iday, March 17, 1981
.. t0• 'llft1I ... ~-... ..... TM D1Ua ol,..... CarmlcbMl,
--clMcribed u a ml.Dor le... NeU llmoD. !aa•• .,.. m,.s oft.a at the w .. t.m•oeter
Community Theater tb• put
... yon witb vUTlDa de.,...
., euee.a, ud to follow tbe lm·
m....&J popular "Teabo.-ol
tlae Au•uat lfooa" wltb a
Cal'llllcbMI script miabt Hem
foolbardy at best. Yet "Vic·
\oria's HouH," a rqualn1 Uttle
"Vl(TOlllA'S ..OUM"
A "''.-V W '"' .. C:.Wl'llldlHI, .,,.Clad W J . 0. ' lte lclMIMlwtw, ..... "' ...... , lt•Y Ve11119. t!KMk ... ,....,., o.tY MOWllll.,..•, _.. W C•••• eu11eu. cu1w111u •• 1.•,,•111• McWll"-, ,,_..-l'r,_ys ellf s.Nr~ ..
11• ~ ~' • et .,_ w .. tmlfltlfl' c.m.
''"'"'"' TlllMer, nn Mlilll• st., we•ml....,. ................... ,,,,
TMaCAIT ...... _.Mff, ........................ McAlll-
Vlcterl• 9Mrll~ ....... SMr.,. Itek.....,_
Mn. ~ ................... lllOOll<• Mc/411"*9r
C:Nlflet ........................ JONl'*'MICll
Wllll-Sc91l .......... · ....... · · It-~....., Mer .. ret $&. J-•· .. , ................ G9{el Hiii
JAIM 1.ellflton ...................... Aide ....... .. Wln11le ••••.•....... , .•.........• Si.llMftl• Wolle
Sit ............................... C!Mrl" Teti«
1ho1t story with a Brttllb ac-
cent, bolds lta own quite handily
on the Westminster ataae where
a atrm1 cast and some well-
con cei ved technical efrects
serve to bring the mystery
drama up to ita potential.
VETE&AN ACTO& J . 0 .
Reichelderfer. in just his
1ecoDCI :u;:;&ria1 effort, C:
doD• • coatawwltble job -ratber 1taadard Pf 1Cho10lieaJ
t.brtll•, ud be muq• to bep
th• = .... peaked dUl"l.q a cum c seeee Uaat ll, ladeed, u cbilllq u aay In the,...,..
Tbere are moment.I wbm tbe
play 1.,., u It almoet mu.at, but
the overall aura of forebodlnc
menace II nicely acbleved.
The atory, reminiscent of
"An1el Street" (most
Carmichael plays are reminla·
cent ol somethln1>. lnvolvea 1
alckJy )'OUDI ).aeiresa whose new
huaband plots to do her ln for
her considerable estate -ln· clud.lri.f a house which filhta blm
every step of the way. The
house, in fact, ls a major
"character" ln the play.
Peter McAIUster plays the
murderous cad with a pro~r mixture of charm and 1uile.
Only ln momenta when be ls
called upon to hei1hten bis emo-
tion does bis performance tend
toward arti.ftci all t)I.
AS HIS HELPLESS wife,
Sb1roa Reichelderfer ls quite ef·
feet.Ive, beJ' slim stature enforc·
... w ,.usd 'etaaracter. Mamea
Mc AIU1ter ..... a 1t~:.s
portrual ol • ldlembal • ·::::.r JUlt 80 fu to fuJta. ... ft plot. ,... k• to
We1tmln1ler productloa'1
• u cc •••• lao•••er 11 tbe 1plrlt•d
performance
of Joaatbaa
llotU u t.be
c haracter
who Uea tbe
f u11le • 'o••tber . MOTu ••
Volumee ol vertuae are required 1D tbree brief appearaac•, an In·
berent pltfaU In pJaya ol WI type,
but llatU akilltull)' dellven tbem
wttb stimulative effect.
Ronal Gribaby and Aide
Porru contribute a nice llWe
romantic subplot, tbe play'a only
Ueht touch. Carol Hill is fine as
an amateur 1hoat chaser, while
Stephanie Wolfe and Charles
Taylor play the servants, tbe lat-
ter with extreme strength.
THE DUO OF Gary and Lor·
raine McWUUams contribute in
lar1e measure to the success of
•' V ictorla 's House." b e
masterminding the myriad
technical erfect.s and ishe creat-
Who~ masked man?
New Lone Ranger draws boos from fans
By IAU&INDA KEYS
HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -In the
years when Clayton Moore was
known as t.be Lone Ranger, be
stood for justice, decency, aelf·
sacrifice. The actor who starred
in the 1950s television series
believed in the character and so
did bis fans. Only the most
depraved would have booed him.
But tbln&s have changed now.
For one thing, the Lone
Ranier is no longer lone.
There's Moore, who still makes
public appe.arances, although he
wears WTaparound sunglasses
instead of a black mask.
TBE&E'S &LINTON
Sp Us bury, the young actor who
1tara in the new movie "The
Legend oft.be Lone Ranger," to
be released in July. He tries to
make as few public appearances
as pouib1e.
And there's John Hock, a stunt
man who makes the public ap-
pear an c es that Spilsbury
declines.
The other changes are that t.be
Lone Jlanier DOW &els bad press
and Jeers at publtc appearances.
Part of the negative public re-
action to t.be new Lone Raneer
was caused by Moore's lawsuit
attempting to retain the right to
wear the Lone Ranger mask and
costume in public appearances,
which is how the SS-year-old ac·
tor now makes his livin1.
Wrather Corp. bad acquired the
rigbta to t.be Lone Ranger im-
age.
THE COMPANY says it of-
fered to let Moore wear the Lone
Ranger's mask if he wanted to
and offered him a part in t.be
movie. but not playing the Lone
Ranger. Since the American
Humane Society has panned the
movie for treatment of horses
during filming , a nd since
Spilsbury has not lived up to the
Lone Ranger image, Moore says
he wanta nothing to do with the
movie. He also denies that he
was offered the mask back.
When Hock, the stunt double,
and Michael Horse, who plays
the new Tonto. rode down
Colorado Boulevard for the
Pasadena Rose Parade last Jan.
1, t.bey were booed by part of the
crowd and largely ignored by
the rest.
The movie's publicist, Dale
Olson, attributes that to the con·
O'Toole at Oscars
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Oscar nominee Peter O'Toole wUJ
make bis first appearance at the awards show at the 53rd annual
presentatiooa of the Academy Awards March 30.
O'Toole will be a presenter. His nomination as best actor for
"The Stuat Man" is his sixth nomination. The show will be telecast
live on ABC, Channel 7.
Dolly Parton will make her singine debut on the show, singing
"Nine to Five," the son1 she wrote and sang for the movte.
troversy over Moore. not to
news stories about Spil!bury's
location brawl in an Arizona
barroom or his reputation for
not wanting to make ap-
pearances in the white coat and
black mask.
BOBBY BUTLER, a disc
jockey at radio station KKJJ in
Ariiona, staled a petition drive
to get Moore the job of Lone
Ranger in the new movie. Since
that faUed, he said. be doesn't
plan to call for a boycott of t.be
movie. But he personally won't
go to see it.
Whether Butler's feelings are
widespread remains to be seen,
when the movie comes out.
Originally t.bat was to have
taken place at Christmas. And
Wrather Corp. anticipated the
release date with boxes .of
Cbeerioa bearing a Lone Ra.n,er
likeness. Most of that cereal will
be eaten by this summer, when
the movie is now scheduled few
release.
Olson said t.be writers' strike
last summer delayed the release
of the mm, and it's next IOllcal
campaign period would be sum-
mer, when young people are out
of school.
He believes that the con·
troveny over Moore will not af.
feet the movie 's s uc cess
because, "Movies stand on their
own merits. If the movie is a
good movie, if Klinton and
Michael Hone come across as I
think they will to the public. t.be
movie-going public will 10 see it.
I don't think the Moore sup-
porters are the movie-going
public. I don't think they will
matter at aJJ at the box office."
YOU'RE NEVER MORE VULNERABLE
THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH.
=!:r'.:!"O#J
NOWSHOWl~G Mn.--.-Drive·tne '-vwtlel•I COITA..U
IEDW. CINlllA cmna
l?l-'141
FOUNTAIN YALUY
P.Y. TWIN ... 1.
fOUNTAIN YAU.IV ,.Y. DIWRIN .....
Nll"l-cTIO 1"'9,.:!.. "::. ............... ::111~wll(l'le.
lllOOll9 Ul'a'l 11 ~D 4At9~....,_,
NINE
TO FIVE <PG>
I "THE JAZZ
_ ~-NOER" <~> ,
I "FOAT APACHE
THE BRONX" t•>
I "ALLNIONT
LONG" (R)
fErEWl'INIESS
~ o _____ r.'t
_.e•d
N•I..-
.... SONS
.... r.., ,.n-c• rtr " .,,....-
._.-.'::';!:'1;i'8"
Cal
lnl tbe tw'D ol the century eo.· tum•.
Tbe "baunt.ln•'' will be ,...
created for t~ree more
weekends, Fridays and
Saturda)'1 It I : IO throu1b A»rt1
•• at tM wcr theater. 1m Ila·
pJe St., Weatmtn.tter. · • 8ACUTAG& -COUl'MI "'9
beln1 offered at South Cout
Repettory'1 1prtna and aummer
conservatory, which 11 accept. 'n' appllcaUom ln \hree l1'0UJ)I -tbe Evenln1 Conservatory (Of'
adult.I, the Youne Conservatory
for children 8-17 and t.be Sum·
mer Conservatory. a pro-
fesalonal training program . . .
call SCR at 957-2602 for
detail.a ...
* CAu.BOARD -Auditions for
the musical comedy "Redhead"
will be held Monday and
Tuesday at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse on the Orange County
Fairgrounds ... DIRECTOR
Pali Tambellini will bear
sln1ers and dancers Monday
and those trying out for
speaking parts Tuesday, both at
7 :30 p.m ... the show opens
June S for four weekends.
Ge11le
Susan Sarandon gets a kiss
from Wms ton Rekert and a
Genie Award (Canada's '
Oscar) as best foreign ac-
tress for her role in · · Atlan-
tic City" at the presenta-
tions in Toronto.
I
.... .._. ............ .., ......
"EVEWITNHS" (fl) , .... 1:•.•: ... t ....... ..
·--WAU OtlNEV'S
'ANTASIA tot
.. _
omr..o tt •·••·t::•·••·tt• .-r 'flLHIPM ...
........... ,...,'-........
"BACK ROADS" (R) ,, ................... .
',. .... ,. ·-....,, ..... ,~" ........
"IACK ROADS" IRI
.. _., ... -= ............. .. .. . ''· ,, "
fM._.Ot,..M•&. ............
"AMUUCAN l"OP" (R) .................... , .....
"AMEfUCAN HOT WAX" (PO) ....,.,,.. ....... llffl , ......... .
. "~N~"(R)
A ... _ -"AMl~N HOT WAJC" IPOI I No _CM A-. WIU. 1..,111_. Acce .. y er1,. V-Owft AM "9'1e
.. it( ........ ,. .. o.-. o, ... ,, .....
••• Jt•J
.......... ~·-~----.::.:::-..::.. _ __..~IAOOlll 111
"' Jo<l UP THI ACMllMY 111
I Ne -C. ..... Wllll lf1Mtlt11 Ac<c•-Y er1,. ,_ 0.... AM
"'" -Ot"'" ... "'"""" -• "AMlllUC~ ~" (R)
"TOMMY"(POI -.... .. -.. n..-··n. A* HCXIH" (R) -"TMI la&.ANO" (Rt
·----!1 , J lo!Logbooll
C.nd'4f COftUMftt8fl",
••cluetvely In th• , •
' INTERMl88fON
Wnews
rapped by
newscaster
RADNOR, Pa. CAP> -Mott
Americana "don't need news,''
but were conned into thlnkin1
that watdUn1 It on televltioo is
.. a kind of aoclal hygiene, like
regular toothbrushing," says
public TV newsman Robert
MacNeU.
The commercial broadcuUnc
industry convinced American.a
that it wu "good cltlienahJp to
consume news at regular In·
tervals," MacNeil writes ln this
week's TV Gulde.
"The anxieties of the Cold War
years made it easier to sell, and
that period coincided nicely with
the need to captur e TV au-
diences," MacNeil said.
MacNeil and Jim Lehrer CO·
host the Public Broadcasting
System's "MacNell ·Lehrer
Report," which focuses on one
topic each ni1ht.
''The. public is e ntirely
justified in thinking that a lol'of
American journalism is unfair
or inaccurate," he said.
(Ill -~l lMIO
"Beck Roede" (A) ..... n.w. t ... I· ... te·M
-EY89G -= e:oo1•• HIW8 ITAMKYAHD
HUTCH
A Nlfwey houM for ••·
conYlc:t• ~ the Ml·
ll"Q l0t en e!•bOt•t•
lra-.up lnvoh1lng an
lmpOat« ptleal and • deal
mute.
G TIC TAC DOUGH
• w ·A·a·H
Hawkeye undergoa1 •
drutle Change wMll he
~ temporery com-
mander or the 4077th
Growing up
• GOOOTIMO
Good fortune thlMI on
the Event fwnlly and c,._
at .. the llapj>IMI dly of
FIOfid1'1 lile.
Brian Wilson (left) and Jermain
Johnson star as youngsters growing up
in the rural South of the 1930s in
"Palmerstown" tonight at 8 on CBS.
Channel 2 (see story below).
e G El.ECTI\IC
COMPANY (Al
(IJ C88NEW8
(fl A8CNEW8
t:ao 0 IUU.SEYE
• WB.COME BACK.
KOTTEA
Tiie Sweat!logs chip In 10
buy• Clll frorn Batt>arlno's
uncle.
.., 8EHHY Hill
Benny has • rlv•I In Henry
McGee lor the hand of •
charming widow ID 81¥*EN AAAOW
"Can A Nuclear Weapons
Accident Happen Here?'
SI.,,. Talbot prot>n the
hk:lden htslory of nucMMtr
weepona ac:cicMnll, pon-
polnts whue nuclear
-apona are atored In
Nor1her Calllornla and
uncove<s fa~ In the way
the military handles these
-l>ON-
'1!) 8T\JOIO SEE
"Friends" Scul>e dove<s
NICOie and Damien Eide·
mire explore the Cayman
Islands, Chicago Girl
Scouts play ear1hball (R)
CJ) HEWS
@) BARNEY MILLEA
The detectives must arrest
• 70-yeat-old m•n wno
hun't felt his aparlment
for 35 years u weU u
eope wltlt two runaway1
and • preacher of dOOm
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8:154 8 IDl'TONAL
7:00 8 caa NIEW8 I NllCNIEWS
HAPPY DAY8 AGAIN
Chachl la conned Into ped-
dling • "miracle wex" lhlt
turns out to be phony
8 MCNEW& Cil JOKEW8 WILD m M•A•a•H
Ma.N call brings • hint to
Henry th•I hla wife may be
1traylng and upHl tl"Q
-10 Father Muleahy. ,. STMIT8 ~SAN
fRANCi&CO
An operetlve In llte
underworld returns to Iha
U S lrorn France only to
be Ml Up tor a hit.
fJ:) OVER EASY
"Altet 65 -Living T<>geth·
er" Guell 111orney Harllet
PUpet (R)
'1!) MACHllL f LEHRER
AEPOAT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
®) MERV GAIF'FIH
"Cover Goris" Guests.
Charyl Tiegs, Brooke
Sh1efd1, Shelley Smith,
Mk:hele Manote, Nonnoe
Moore. Sheun Casey. Cris-
tina Ferrare
7:30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN
Holts Steve Edwards.
Melody Rogers Grapholo-
gtSll, handwriting expertS,
show SI-and Melody
how to analyze their pen-
I) KNXT 1CBS1 L1-.. Angell"'.,
Q KNBC I NBC1 Loo; Angele ...
0 KTLA In l 1 LO'> Angeles
0 K.ABC TV 1ABC1 Los Angele.,
T '\FMB 1CB<;1 S.in Diego 0 KHJ TV (lnCJ I Lo~ An l"'""
@' i<.C5 T I ABC' San D•t'IJO ID KTT'v 1 lri(I I lo!> Ancjf'l1·
Cl) KCOP TV 1ln11 \Los Anqe1r>-.
ED KCET I\/ 1PBS> Lo-. Anqt>I•·., a1l KOCE rv I PB SI HuntontJIOn Bl'ach
manshlp; take a look at
#hat the legacy or the
world lamou1 Edg'1 Ceyce
hN done lor medicine
today.
I FAMIL y fEJO
8HANANA
Gu..t: Frankie Avalon 8 EYEWITNEl8 LOI
AHftE!P8
Ho9ta Inez Pedrou and
Peul MO)"W viii! Hawlll,
often celled the Grand
Canyon ol the Pactlle In
H.....W; look at itome und·
caetlet; ,,_, comic Amty
&;metal.
0 FACE THE MUSIC
• AUIHTHEFAMILY
Trouble atart1 In the &ink-
., hOUM when the family
llndl an 82-year-old pa)•·
ma-ctad atranger In their
living room.
I) MACNEIL / LEHRER
AEPOfrr
a!) NEWS
(I) P.M. MAGAZJH£
San Ooego in111n1ors end
their inventions, including
the world's lllNt pa••·
chute.
7:56 fJ:) PLEOOE &MAK
Regularly 1<::heduled pro-
gremming may be del•yed
due to pledge breaks
1:00 IJ PALMEASTOWN
(Season Premiere) W O ·a
aon Willie Joe 1>ecome1
rornenllcally onv°"'8<1 wilh
the de..ghter of W O ·1
swornenemv
D 8JAHOTI4E8EAA
Rutherford Grant etternpll
to frame BJ tor stealing
llnanclat records which
snow • short~ In Grant's
eccounta
D MOVIE
• • • "The Big Sleep"
( 19-46) Humphrey 9o0lr1,
Leuren Bactlll. A reOrec:I
gen«af Uk• privet• .....
PhlUp Merlowe to In-ti·
gete • e«ies of slrenge
eventa lnvoMng his two
dlughterL
eO HAWIO.'ta POClle ,..... to ,......,
--.... ~ flll.lrl ~ '° ,.,.. . Lori ee.•1r1cttr--.. .... * • *" "To Hell AM ._ .. C tMI) Audie Mur•
~ .......... ~
~~~,_.
Mlflntlle~ ......
llonof hll~ __ ,.... ., ...... ~
A lllllt wMfl ,,..,., V .. Md
IN FOUi leMonl: ttle IOne """""°' of tN ~
bf.ak.out .. Aatr-.
• 19lftitONV M1WO . ... ·~ Jon'• NINata Md pc!Mt•
I fUI anemlat tevlve In qld ,
ecandll In • deaperlt•
~ attempt lo ruin him. bl.It•
. ... long-.C *'" ~ him 01 hie wtfe'a abortion
dMth. Jon t'*1 turna
~tHarllld
• NOVA
"Animal Ofympj-" The
bHuty, endure.nee and
l>OW8f OI 1n1ma1a In the
wild ere ju•tapoaed wUh
Otymple athletea perform-
ing fNta Which have paraf-
lela In the anlmar kingdom
G M'YITPY
.. Rumc>Ole Of The Balley:
Rumpole And The CourN
Ot True Love" Rumpole
defend• • taecnar dwll'd
with the corruption ol one
or hla t 5-year-old female
atudenlL (Plll'I 5)
(IJ THE llAlCT£AI
"The Other Woman"
8:30 • (fl lAVIJllNE &
8HtM..EY
Laverne and Shlrtey'a
Ingenious plan to retrieve •
note trorn their boH' otty
result• In some hHly
meneuverlng on their part.
(Part 2)
m CAAOl BUANETT
AHOAHHOe '
Gu.ta. John Davidson.
Ruth Bu.DI
(IJ 8M.AIT CANCEA
R>f'UM
Holt· Janet l.eppell
t:OO 1J (IJ MOVIE * * "VOICH" ( 1979)
Mlcheet Ontkean, Amy
Irving A dMf danc:.r end
an aml>ltloua but ln.oallat·
ed nightclub linger fall m
love and devote them·
selves to he4plng each
othe< find aucce11.
0 FLAMINGO AOAO
L.,,. tllk•• the chance ol
losing Sam and rushes to
Fielding Cartyate •tier She
lnjur• Chrlllle In • cer
Ct uh
8 9 THAU'&
COMPANY
The Ropers pay e surprlae
vlaot to Jack and J-t
m MERV OAIFflN
"Cover Girts" Gueata.
Cheryl Tlega, Brooke
Shields, Shelley Smith.
Mlehele Manole, Honr1'e
Moore, Sheun c-y, en.
tine Ferr ere.
ID """'A "Animal ~ .. The
beauty. endure~ and
po.-of anlmall In Iha
wild -ju~ with
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA • 8:00 -11'1be Bil Sleep." Humpbrey ---S01art plays private eye
PllWp ·Marlowe 1ft UU. 1M8 crime opus
with Lauren Bacall.
KHJ e 1:00 -"To Hell and Back!'
Aud le llurpby. the moat decorated
sold1er of World War H, plays himself in.
this movie about his wartime experiences. ·
•CBS 9 9:00 "Voices." Michael
Onktean and amy Irving star in this
movie drama about a night club singer
and a deaf dancer (photo below).
Oly"'I* atNtt• patform·
Ing teetl wtllch have paral-
.... In the animal kingdom. l\OI. MY8Taff "Rumc>oit Of The 8alt41y·
Rumpole And The CoufM
Of True love'' Aumooie deNncl•. tNCtlar dlatged
wltl) the corruption ol one
ol hla 15-~-old female
atudentl. (P811 5)
t;30 8 0 TOO CLos't FOA
COMFORT
Jackie getl an une•pected
visit frorn the wile 01 the
man She 11 dltlno
1 10:00 D fl.AMtNOO iK>Ao
Sam and Conatance have I 1 brief l~ng. and Sh«off
Semple pays oll Chrlllle 10
I ·le•v~o; HEWS
9 HART TO HART
.Jooathan. sulterlng frorn
emneele. is 11CCuaed ot
murder (R)
10: 10 fl} AN EVENING WrTH
WAL TEA 0 '1U!£FE
"The First 80 Years Are
The Hardest" Announcer.
v•udev1lllan and
sono-ner Walle< O'Keele
ramln1scea about the gold·
an ege 01 TV and radio and
the celebrot1es he has
known.
10:~ID NEWS
'1!) DON'T FOMET THE
KHMER
Fiimed on 1oca11on 11 a ref·
ugee camp 1n Thailand,
this documentary tocuaaa
on the plight of the Cam-
bodl•n people ·-the vlc>-
lencle they have~ sub-
~tec:t to and the uncer·
tafntlet thlt the Mure
hold• for them (A)
11:00 ID • (IJ 9 NIWI
I 8TAllTMK
Holflle a11en bratne take
av« the mind and body of
one or the EnterprlN '• er-
I NEWLYWE> GAME
M•A•a•H
Reder trlea to get some
tomato juice for Col
Potter and winds up
lnvolvtng the gene<el of
Corpe HMdquarte<a
g) BA.RETTA
Tony hH hlmae!f put Into
prltlOf'I to get Information
on a )ewelry heist alte< two
suspects end up dead
11: 15 fm OICI< CAVETT
Guest· Glttnda Jackton
11:301J CJ) LOU GAAHT
While Lou la absorbed with
family problems, Rossi
gets caught up In • con-
11ructl0tl acendal (Al
Q TOHtGHT
Host J ol'onny Carson
Guests Selly Flefd, Mei
THtls
0 11§) A8CNEW8
HIGHTUHE fJ LET'S MAKE A DEAL ID REX HUMBAAO
'1!) CAPTIONED A8C
HEWS
11:40 fl} CAPTIONED ABC
HEWS
-Ml>HIGHT-
12:00 9 MOVIE
• * * * Too Red ShOes
( 1948) Moore Sllt111rer
Anton W•ID<ook A be•uh·
JOHN DARLING
HERE. CANOY.' 0E~ VOU ENTe::?
IHf5 !'REA, -Vu HAVE. 10 WEAR
S>FETY SUNGLASSES.'
Haley's 'Palmerstown' returns
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP> -These
d ays Alex Haley can be found
not at his home typewriter but in
• a cluttered offi ce on the movie
lot where David 0 . Selznick
Independent
filD18 viewed
Years of struggle are often re·
quired to produce a film outside
of the traditional Hollywood
studio system, but the result can
be a product or high quality and
outstanding artistic merit.
filmed "Gone with the Wind" 42
years ago.
The author of "Roots" is ex·
ec ut ive co -pro du cer or
"Palmerstown," a television
series which is returning to CBS
tonight at 8 on Channel 2. The
show had a trial run last year,
drawing critical acclaim and
respectable ratings, though not
strong enough to make t he
network's fall schedule.
a car chase -not t.hat we would
do those things, anyway.
"THE EMPHASIS of the new
season has been more on the
adults and on the boys' teen-age
siblings. I think this has given us
more powerful shows e motional·
ly as well a s phys ically. I
believe the show is now ready to
give across-the-board competi-
tion to the most s uccessful
shows in television.··
Jermain H. Johnson and Brian
G. Wilson return as the boys of
Palmerstown, with Jonelle AJ·
len, Beeson Carroll. Bill Duke
a nd Janice St. John as their
parents.
said I felt that the South as a re·
gion had been slim pickings on
television; most of the things
had been caricatures or both
races. Both Nor m an and I
agreed that the culture or a
s ma ll town and the relationship
between the races could sustain
a show."
For Haley the relationship
was epitomized by his friendship
with Kermit Anthony, a white
boy who lived across the street
in Henning, Tenn.
"We could not have been
c loser , Kermit a nd I ," the
a uthor rec a l led .
IUI INllarlna II °"""' !ft I
web °' lllidlOlllCwl ovw whlelllll .............. to ...................
" Of ..., ~llO Clll'-. •o..,..,. • * ... ··~ Whl1• o-,,··
(117•) Wen.ti Oal•, ~
Olh'f lot1om1. n., ••
...... ~ IOll lft.,..
ArGtlo In 1atl.
-~ ~!t_ c:onrronta the outlft
~._ purault he had
delayed tO help I email boy
fllld hit mothet (Pan 2)
• MUK>N: •
""'°"*-E
The l>NutllUI wile of a
d••d ayndldte bon
bee-fhe target of the
Underwoc'ld and the IMF
• ONE STEP IEYONO
"The Oreem" Aller Iha
t'lacuauon of the Btltlth
Army at Ounklrtt. • Home
Guardsman 1t1nd1
looilout duty on the Eng·
lith Channel.
12:30 D TOMOAAOW
Gue at s singer Don
McL•an. poet Dorothy
Graena-Peppat. actor
Pete< Strausa
g) ONE STEP BEYOND
"VIiion" During World
War I, lour French toldlera
on petrol l•y down their
weapons and retuM to
hght
12:40 IJ (IJ MOVIE • • ·c ....... 1111n1 JNOl'I e ...... a. Leon Ames Thr"
man band together to 11ve
the ,..,oenta of an Alaal<an
town lrorn • murde<OUI
gnaly bear
1:00 0 OOH LAHE
Guest Allan Carr ID MOVIE
• • * '' "GHtighf' ( !llU )
CharlH Boyer. lngrod
Bergman A d11bot1Clll hus·
bend aats ou1 10 drive his
wofe Insane
ti) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK MEWS
1 :30 Cl) MOVIE
• • ·~ "Nine Hours To
Ram•' ( 19631 Horst
Buchholz, Jose Fe1rer
Mahatma Gandhi s IHI
D11el hours are seen
through his assassin s
eyes
2:00 00 HEWS
2:40 1) NEWS
2:560 HEWS
3:00 0 MOVIE
• • "• • The Redheld And
The CowbOy' ( 19SOI Glenn
Ford Rhonda Fleming A
~·· ~ joli'8 • pelf OI 8Duttwn ~ ........ to-..
,...... 10 eon,_. ... .,,...., .. •...we 1:•1 ::w-
...... "Tiit ... Of
Gr ... " ( 1M7) lpenow
Trecy, Kattwlllt ~ .
flgillt• btl....,. fannwe
and rllnCIWa to ~ the
g<Wepllt a hlmlly
a.:11 9 MOVW * * * "The Seal'" (1e.8) Paul Henteld, Joan hn-
"911. A klller doMty r-
bllno • etrtllln doctor
•ttempt1 to hide behind
Ille good doctor'1 Identity.
4;211 NEW1 •:ao MOVW I • "Oedd)'-O" 1111s111 01ctt
Contino, Sandra Gllee A
oeng of etookl get • tr\ICll
driver 10 drive their gtll-
away CM unaware thAt ht
11 an undercover eoc>
Wt-dne•day'•
Bayt i•t-Mo.,le•
-MOR""1~
11:00 mt * '"' "Lawttaa Fron_!!ll" I ( 11135) John Wayne, Shella I Terry A cowboy atrugglea
to exonerate hlmaetl ol
etlmeti blamed on him by •
crOOl<ed llhertn
11:*> Cil *•**"The Bank
Dick" ( 1940) WC Flelda.
Una l\Awket A man oned·
ve<tentty lotla • robbel'y
and 11 awarded the job of
bank guard, forcing him to
lace 11 real holdup
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 ID * * * "FuH Of Liie"
( 1957) Judy Holtld11y, AICh·
'1d Conte A man d1Stupt1
the Wves of hit son and
pregnant dllughler-on·law
ti) * • * "The Exploawe
Gene<ellon" I 1961) Pally
M cCormack. William
Shatner When a high
schOOl teacher 11 suspend-
ed tor ciaSStoom discua-
slons of sex. his atudants
rally to hos defense and
force 11 cruoal confronl•·
toon with schOol b08fd offo·
et81S.
3:30 fJ • * "King Kong
Esc~s" ( t1168) Rhodes
Reason, Linda Mlllflt Or
WhO constru<:tl a giant
rObOI and ptlS II agaonst
King Kong 1n a struggle '°'
worid dornonatoon
by Armstrong & Batiuk
No lta•dl~ap1
Am y Irving stars as the
d eaf girlfriend of an
a spiring singer in the
movie "Voices,·· airing
tonight at 9 on CBS,
Ch a nnel 2.
"Video/Film Review: The
New American Moviemakers"
looks at seven of the best in-
dependent productions of recent
years and talks with the new
wave or filmmakers that pro-
duced them when it airs
Wednesday at 10 p.m. on KOCE,
Cha nnel SO.
"WE'VE MADE 10 new
shows, and I think they're much
stronger than the first seven,"
said HaJey. "You learn so much
by doing these shows . We start-
ed from scratch, and it's hard to
get everything right the first
lime.
"When Norman <Lear> and I
first worked on the concept for
'Palmerstown,' we talked about
portraying two families -one
white, one black -in a small
southern town 45 years ago, cen·
tering on the two boys of the
families. The thrust of the first
shows was the boys.
After writing for most of his
life. HaJey turned producer as
the result of a party conversa·
lion with Norman Lear, the TV
dynamo.
-: -;;_1.--I
BRING m ;;;;c;N FOR 1
,-
: 1
Excerpts fro m Academy
Award-winning "Best Boy" and
the Cannes-hon or ed epic
"Northern Lights" wrt! be shown
as well as scenes from "The
War at Home ," "Get Rollin',"
"The Wobblies," "Joe and
Maxi" and "Heartland."
"This is not to criticize t.bo6e
shows, but I do believe that
focusing on the boys may have
renctled an inherent weakness.
Boys can only do so much. They
can't g~ slugging people or have
"We mutually liked each other
at the start." recalled Haley, 58,
"and we sta.rted talking about
the possibi lity o r doing
som ething together. I admitted
that comedy was foreign to me.
but he mentioned that he would
like to be associated with a
dramatic series.
"WE TALKED about our
respective boyhoods and how
much we enjoyed being bOys. I
I
n... NEWMAN ifl r~l ~E
t.lfROHx ' I
t! ... ,.!1.~~~ ',
WlltMINSTER ....... ctweu wttf •tt·HH I
ORANQI
---634·2~"
..... ION Vie.JO I .......
¥1UO ,.,.. IH·•••• I -
COSTA..U
U.A.MVltlOI IT .....
m•no .. I OftANCll ., .........
/W::F I
''THE MAN WHO
ELL TO EARTH'
I
I ·~~~=~,
UH lh Dally PUot
"Fut R"ult" aetvlce
11-.a:1M:•
(R) 1:-.10:00 dtrtctory. Your L.....
· ... vtce lt our
apetlaJty
Call '42·5111Ht.312
--
50COFF I
OUr 95C Deposit l
You Pay Only 450 Deposit I
(Regularly 950)
1a1ance Due Just S12.oo I
to 0ua1-1nwge pottralt I
' photogi llPhY. ~No ............. tor....,..1 ,_ _ lllectlon. ... .
~~~=-I ~~·-~ ... "° ~y ................. , . ................... ; (~ ......... :
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Ii ..... r
I
--
, '
Fell.Ciano iu-Rns comic
ay IANDll IOY ...... , ..........
~: Wbatdo you do U you•,.. playlll1
tolo and YQUf sultar 1\rina brew dwin1 U..
llnt number! .
Aalwer: lf you're Joee Felkldo aDd you're
dolnl a beoeftt ln Newport Beach. >'°" tell a
fro1 joke.
AttuaJly, tbe youn1 compoaer/mualclan
seemed to be filled with Joket 11 IM performed
Friday nl&bl al the Balboa Bay Club. "Thll affair la no atriqa attached," be told
the 300 penom who had shelled out $15 each lo
munch hon d'oeuvrea and hear him play at a
HAPPENINGS
benertt arran1ed by the Lawyers Wives of
Oranae County.
While waltinl on repairs to bis 1ultar, Feli-
ciano quipped, "l '\'.e never had lo deal with this,
but you figure you gel half comedy and h&U
muaic so lt'• not half bad.''
Feliciano donated bis Ume and talent.a to
the low-key gathering, proceeda of which will ao
to the Georee A. Parker Foundation for lta re-
habilitation program for first-time juvenile of·
fenders and its legal education pro1ram for
achoolchUdren. The foundation la a non-profit
organization of the Orange County Bar Associa·
tion. Drawing attention to the foundation's work,
the performer noted, "This ls the first time in a
long while I've done a gig all by myself, but it's
for a worthy cause."
FeUciano appeared relaxed and sensitive to
the mood of his audience as be performed a
variety of numbers beginning with "Oh
Lonesome Me " followed by ballads and
classical selections. and ending up wilh a
medley of his hil tunes and a concerto be com·
posed.
Co-organizers for the event were Janet
Stapleton and Donna Wall, who attended with
the ir husbands, Marlin Stapleton and Martin
Wall. The Walls ' daughters, Andrea and
Kjirslin, also attended. . .
In addition to the lawyers and their waves,
guests included a sprinkling of doctors and real
estate folks. And, there were judges galore in·
eluding Robert Todd. Ali~emarle Stoller, Bill
McVitte. Mary Ellis and Mark Soden.
Other guests :ncluded Mary Lou Soden, at-
torneys Ann and Eugene ~dre5, Bar Associa·
tion Executive Director Ri chard Lytle, Beverly
and Sam Barnes, Liz and James Bear, and
Kathy and Ri chard Bonner.
C. E. Parker of Villa Park. son of the
namesake of the foundation, attended with his
wife Marilyn.
Also attending were Anna Freeman of
lrvine Karen and Ferrall Weber, Sandy and
Michael Cappiizi, Audrey and Whit Liddens of
HOROSCOPE
Gemini: Avoid
self-deception
WEDNESDAY,MARCH18
By SYDNEY OMARll
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. l9): Logjam is re-
moved, job gets done and you are free to make
necessary changes. Relationship with member
of opposite sex once again runs smooth course.
Express views, get ideas on paper and give full
rein to intellectual curiosity.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20 ): Major
adjustment in lifestyle is on agenda. Focus on
adventure, speculation. dealings with children
and spirited persons. Libra, Scorpio and another
'Taurus figure prominently. Money comes from
surprise source.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20): Avoid self·
deception: see situations, people in realistic
light. Accent on practical issues, special tecb-
n iq ues and willingness to define needs,
aspirations . Vital information is gai~ed
concerning property and your personal potential.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Older relative
shares benefit of experience. Forces that had
been scattered come into focus -sense of direc-
tion is r~lored. Telephone caJl or message re-
s ults in revision of plans. Be flexible, versatile,
\dlling to use available material.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Burden is removed
and cas h now resumes. Aries. Libra and
another Leo figure prominently. You'll be at
right place al crucial moment and profit re-
sults. You get needed material and wlll locate
lost article.
VlllG-0 (Aug . 23-Sept. 22 ): Fresh start re-
sults in "remarkable" progress. Highlight in·
dependence, originality, confidence and willing·.
ness to pioneer a project. Leo, Aquarius persons
play key rolet. Tim1ag, Judgment will be on
target. Be direct!
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): What se~.ned out-
of-reach will become available. Empbui.a on
secreu, confidential data and activity connect-
ed with holpltals, clubs, organizations. Cancer.
Capricorn, Aquarius persons figure prominent-
ly . Follow hunch! .
SCO&PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Good news re-
ceived from afar; empbasil on communleatlon,
travel, educational and pubU1bin1 projects.
Gemini, Sastttarius penons ftpre prominently.
You'll overcome distance, lancuag~ barriers.
Perceive potential.
SAGl'l'TA&WS (Nov. 22-l>ec. 21): One in
position of authority requires addlUooal detaila.
Orsanlle material. Check ftlt1 8ftd reference..
Be poliUve of sources. Proceed with revilloat
apd rewrites. A9uariu1, Scorpio, Leo penooa
n1ure prominently.
CAP&JOO&N <Dec. ZZ·Jan. it>: Focus be
lona-raftl• projtcta, written material and eom-
municatlon whl•b could lead to travel. O.mlnl,
Vireo. Sa1tttarh1,1 natives hl1bll1bt your
personal scenario. Accept qtdlaity for tllu1e
of acenery. AQl1A&IV8 (Jan. 20·Feb. 11): Find out
more about COit.i, dnlpa -Improve clluctt
for harmony on hom• front. Taw\11, IJbra.
Scorpio pertOM ft,ure ba ·ac:enuio. Wbat bad
been an obstacle •Ul be removed. Denatte
career. bualnell advance take. place.
~dCSI (J"eb. lt-Jllar. JO): Be aware ol
leiat reqvi.remeata. aped.al tenm, a,,..menta
made prtor to JOO!' entrance OD lffM. Vtr10
and aftOtlMr PtKel play ke1rolw.111alntaln low
' profll• 1treamllne pl'OCedW'tl, be cUterett, be a
threwd obHrver and a careful ll._., ·
' r
Cinderella Guild members (from left J
Helen Koberstein, Jean Mahoney and
Nancy Graves anticipating 'mayhem.'
Costa Mesa. Rebecca and Charles Brady of
Laguna Beach, Jan and Don Martens, Marie
and Roland Rublecava, Mary Lou Czerner,
Joan Hepp, Peggy and Barry KJein, Suzanne
and Michael Nezin, Sharon and David Baziack,
and Charles Wiggins, who hosted a large group.
Following a 4S·minute performance, Fell·
ciano, who lives in Vi lla Park, joined the Walls
and Stapletons for dinner at the Lakeside
Restaurant in Newport Beach, where Mrs. Wall
said be kept them in stitches.
Complimenting Feliciano's wit, Mrs. Wall.
who is president-elect of Lawyers Wives, report·
ed, " ... Jlaughed all night until my face hurt."
Joining them for dinner were Dr. Al
Rosenstein of Newport Beach, his wife Joan and
their son, Craig, and his fiance, Holly Lemkin.
Rounding out the dinner party were Feli-
ciano's fiance, Susan, and her parents plus his
sound man. MikeUrain.
Another fundrraise r
Following on the heels of last week's big
CHOC fashion show in Anaheim is another fund-
raiser for the Children's Hospital of Orange.
This one, March Mayhem, an evening of dinin1.
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
S01oking harlDS
your children
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: l bave a WOD·
derful wife except for one bad habit lbe bu.
She practically has a cigarette oo her llpe all
day. ll starts early in the morning until she
takes a cigarette for what s he calls a
''nightcap."
I'm not a s moker. I tell her she should quit
for the sake of the children if not for herself.
She says she can 't.
So I have to go through the unpleasantness
of seeing her nurse our youngest child while a
cigarette dangles from her Ups. I've also noticed
that our three older youngsters have colds a ll the
lime.
Do you t hink there is any connection
between her smoking and their coughing? -
MR. V.
DEAR MR. V.: Ullleu you wife ls de·
Ubera&ely keepla1 Iler mlad clo.ed to what site
• ay be readJJl& la the papen lately, alte shald
kaow Utat cl1arette smoke cu harm lllle lllnoceat
belaolderaswellastllesmobr.
lleceat shldles ba ve shown that noasmollers
la a smoke·fiUed room suffer from t.lte effect. of
tobacco smoke. For example, report• from
Ea,laDd lndlute that there la a deflal&e coaaec·
t•• between parental 1mokla1 and clllfdrea's
c:Old1, broachJtll -and even paeamoala. Suell
c:lalldretl suffer lug trouble twice aa macb aa
others.
You wife'• habit of smofda& wlaile •lie
aarHI Iller baby really lavHel a poqlble attack
of pne.moala -wlalc:b ls a tlareat to Ute We of
lafaaa.. U &k baby does•'t eome dowa wttlt
pneamoala, &kre'• tJae llkelOiood of clevelopbi&
broecldtll for many years.
Smote la an enemy of Ute bellolcler H weU
aa of Ute amoker. I ltope yoar wtfe realbes lt la •
time.
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Can lt be my
imaclnatloo? Since I've been taken up 1001 dis-
tance runn1n1 on our c0Ue1e track team, I found
that I did not menstruate for four months. I was
perfectly regular before that.
I had to pve up running because of a badly
spralned ankle. Within two montbl after my
track days were over, my period.I came back and are now regular again. Can you account for
it? -MISSH.
-DEA& Kl88 H.: Tllere lane beea repona
&Ila& dlere la ... e relat ....... t.etw ... •llM4
............. dlataaee FF '91, 8Mlt weaa
......... affl'•I .. •Hr It .... el,_., ,er
-.............. ,. ............ ...., 1aYe ..
I ' •-lnaCMa HM .... la_.. C ....
.......... -.. .......... MIMr ..... ... ... • ,_.., afteclM ,.,_,, ·
rc. MRS. Z.: Bladder tnlect.lon (cy1UU.)
....... eommoa and 1tubbom ln women. About
-la tbree bave It at IOllle Ume or otbtr. AltMalb ...Ubiotlc1 oft.en help, reeuneac11 ot
IW'8dta8 an eommon.
Somttlm11 the ortslllll inleeUoa be1ln1 11
an extmlion of lnfeet.lon ~ around \be rec·
tum. Proper and earetul ianltaUon la lmpor·
I laftl. Tub bath• may apread tb• lafectlon .
,,.
Tbtr.tclre; it ml1bt be h•lpnd to II" up 1Wim·
mlna ud taklnl 1bo•en. If bafec:tloa penllu,
better Me a urololilt or famil1 pbf'lelu.
Dr. 5C•h•C?oln• ••lco"'" ~M1Un1 fro"' ,....,, ff• e....-°"""'oil ...... b .. ..., ..,, ...
~ thoet of~ ""'7't.CMMIC'Ohlma ••
I
LeAnn Dobson, Miss Golden Girl
dancing and gambling al the Santa Ana County
Club, is sponsored by CHOC's Cinderella Guild
of Newport Beach.
Among guild members looking forward to
the affair are J ean Mahoney, Helen Koberstein
and Nancy Graves, all of Newport Beach.
As they did last year. guild members are
111 lllllf II
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your reply to
"Obsessed at 41 in Macon'; Che wants to photo·
graph hi11 wife in the nude) leaves a lot to be de·
sired. While I agree with you that her consent
and willingness are essential, I strongly object
to your labeling such activity as "bizarre."
I am in my 40s and have been happily mar·
ried for over 20 years. Ten years ago my
bus band and I took up nude photography. It is a
delightful hobby we can share. We photograph
in all seasons, almost always outdoors, and
have acquired an impressive library of nude
slides. Nude photography can be beautiful. Our
slides range from the artistic lo the candid and
the comical. They are all in very good taste.
With so many marriages ending in divorce
these days because the couples have nothing in
common, it is unlike you to criticize any
medium that requires togetherness and com·
munication. Thanks for letting pie have my say.
BOLSTERED IN BURLINGTON
Dear Bo: I'm clad you aad yoar busbaad
have found "togetberneas" tallln1 aude pictures
of one another -outside, yet -but I a1ll aot
about to recommend lt as a meu.od to cemeat
marriaaes.
I &rut you have your lmpresalve coUec:tloa
of aade 1Udff uader lock and key, eapeclall1 tl•e
"caadJd" a•d "comical" oae•. If 1omeoae
altould bappe• to atamble over tltem acc:ldeatal·
ly U•ey llllp& aot view sacs. ~ H art.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:-You have printed
several letters over the years about affection
and devotion between brothers and alstera. But
I don't think I have ever read anythin1 about an
older sister or brother who literally raised the
younger ones. I am one who did .
My father was a drifter, never held a job for
long and we couldn't depend on hlm for
anything. Mom was the backbone of the family.
She died at the age of 42 abd left five children. I
was the eldest -in high school at the tirM. l
waa a cood student and loved school, but I had
to quit ln the 10th grade and •o to work ln order
to keep all of us toe ether .
I looked for sales, bou•bt material and
made clothes for the gtrla and shirt.a and pant.a
for the boys. I cooked, cleaned and wu both
mother and father to my 1i1ters and brothers.
They all have ,ooc1 Jobi now and are dolnc
well. But not one bas ever eiq>reued 1 word of
cratltude for what I dld. I aomeUmn wooder lf
they know. -NO REGRETS Deu Ne: Of e.-ne .., bew, b9t ....
people .... It ......... ..., ....... ...
wor••· I .. ..,., laewewer, &M& tMJ 91111• .
&Mir.,,.. ........ ~-.,..
AM 1A1tt1n't ~1 m drMP LU ·-..
mrtlta. ti• rtGIUWa. IAGm.tht fad' ==· a andYou-ForT..,.-Gf"•~.''flf • -'°clftUondo lollo,Mll-oddf•Pld,...,... • Ann~.P.0.Bo~ll#S,Cldcaflo,tll.al.
~ continuous Wear
Contecl-lenttt
2• Hrt/Oay tor 2 ~·
RUFFEll'S
UPHOLSTllY
~, ...... ...... ,,u ...... ~ c .... ...__ ... tlN
FEATURES
• •
Newport Beach
reaidents Mr. and
Mrs. C. Thoma&
Wilek fright)
were among guests
at the Coro
Foundation awards
dinner. With them
is Mrs. Caroline
Ahmanson, one of
four Eagle Award
~ recipients.
busy putting together a list of fabulous door
prizes lncludlng a weekend in Indian Wells
donated by Tom and Jean Mahoney and a
week at a condo in Maui donated by Sue Turner
of Newport Travel Service.
Chairmen for March Mayhem are Alice
RoselUni and Gretchen Gorman.
For reservations to the S80·per-couple af-
fair, call the guild office the CHOC , 558·2462, ex-
tension 277.
Miss Gold Girl tide
An Edison High School sophomore, LeAnn
Dobson, was recipient of the Miss Golden Girl
title in a beauty pageant held recently in Corona
del Mar.
Miss Dobson, 15, is the daughter of Mrs .
Joan Dobson of Huntington Beach and ls a stu·
dent at the Dorothy Shreve modeling agency in
Newport Beach.
Coro awards dinner
Among the more than 600 guests attending
the recent Coro Foundation annuaJ awards din·
ner at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel were Mr. and
Mrs. C. Thomas Wilek of Newport Beach.
The foundation, a non-profit educational or·
ganizalion conducting training pro1rams in
public affairs, used the occasion lo bestow its
Eagle Award on Caroline Ahmanson; Arco
President Thornton Bradshaw; NBC "Today"
s how host Tom Brokaw; and former HEW
Secretary John Gardner. The four were honored
for their public service leadership.
IRMA IDlllCI t!'-------~------""~--
Mter 7 years,
• a masterpiece
I don't expect anyone to get too choked up
about this, but I just completed my '' lS x 20
STAMPED FOR BEGINNERS-ON PURE
IRISH LINEN -TOMORROW'S HEIRLOOM·
COLONIAL LADY AT WHITE HOUSE."
It has a $35 frame on it and if I do say so
myself, it has qualities I've seen only in
tapestries on museum walls.
I started lo embroider "Colonial Lady at
White House" in 1967 ... the very night I
bought it. It had been one of those days where
the most creative thing I had done was to wit·
ness/assist at/applaud a b.m. from a child who
thought a bathroom was God's playroom.
As soon as l started it, I knew in my heart
that I wanted to dedicate my entire life to em-
• broidery. I didn't go lo bed that night until I had
finished stitching the Colonial Lady's face,
skirt, parasol and dog.
The next morning at breakfast, I was at it
again, driven by some stran_Jle creative curse.
Someone bled toward the end of the week and I
stopped working on it temporarily ... and
then I was on a phone committee . . . and went
to the store a few times ... and made a few
beds, and the next thing you know, it was 1973.
Every time I discovered it among the sew-
ing supplies, I would do a few more stitches and
renew my vows to finish it in my UleUme. After
awhile, it got to be quite depressing. It was like
a con.science that shouted. "You never fini•h
anything!" As I saw it tucked away amon1 an
unfinished needlepoint glass case, a couple of
squares of a granny afghan, a h&U·done crewel
pillow top, and an tmfinished Christmas wreath,
I knew It WU right.
In 1976, I was sick for a couple of weeks and
dragied out "Colonial Lady at White House." A
trtend of mine was vlsitinl and oblerved, "If
handlworka and crafts could only Wk ... what a
story they could tell."
Iris h linen, tomorrow's heirloom, in my hand
and knew there was only one way to silence her.
But I cou.ldn't help but wonder what would hap-
pen on the day I finished it. Would the clocb
stop? Would my heart stop beatlna? Would this
end an eraT
Lut Monday, I brou1ht "Colonial Lady at
White Houte" home . . . framed and ready lo
hans ... exactly 14 years in the m1kin1.
"WbatdoYoU think?" I asked my husband.
"Wbat'1 the matter with tbe tree? I tbink you
for•ot to 1Utch It!"
I l•anecl in closer for a better look, I had . •'•Md it.
"Are you c1'1&)'7 It'• March," I slid. "Trees
doO'tbaveleavwin Marcb."."
Wbat'• aucb a. tq deal about ttnJ1hin1
IOmttldnCT '·
(
I
I
•i
AmerlcM Cl&J .... , Calltornla't Mtb lar1 .. t eom..ual bank, will move into ltl ..... t ,._
liooal aftle. ba tbe 15-atol'J tower bearta• lta name
at South Coat Plua Town Cent« in Aprtl.
S. Joa Kreedman, chairman of tbe board ud
ch.let executive olftcer, aald, ''Our move to South
Coast Plua Town Center <froal Newport Beacb
re1loaal oftlce) reflecta our pb.UOlopby of locaUD1
our rqlonaJ offices bl a,......lvely developlll1
bualneu and (lnanclal'centera. Our olftcea, which
will serve u our Oran1e County hea~uarten, wlll jive ua vislbllity in the county • moat
,preau,loua center of activity.·'
a.rt D. Knata ls director of intemallonal
KRAAT'l
service and support croup ol
Alpba Micro, 'an Irvine-based
manufacturer of computer busi-
ness systems.
Mar~ L. Fraaler is cor·
porate controller and secretary
of Barratt American Inc., an
Irvine-based builder /developer
company.
Barbara J. Derry is assistant secretary at
Home Federal ,Savings and Loen Association,
Irvine.
Victor H. JulllDlkl bas joined RE/MAX
Realtors, an independenUy owned brokera1e, with
offices in Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and Irvine.
Martla M. DeHertocll is assistant secretary of
Home Federal Savings and Loan Association, San
Juan Capistrano. She lives in El Toro.
Lee D. S&ewart is senior vice president of
Richard E. Rigler & Associates. Irvine-based ex-
seculive search and management consulting firm.
Walt Chespak is vice president in charge of the
health care division of The Sa nborn Co .. an ad-
vertising and public relations firm in Newport
Beach.
Joaepb LelDdecker is creative director of
J a nsen Associates. Inc .. lrvine . .Jle lives in Hunt-
ington Beach.
Craig Wblttacker has been promoted to
manager of Von's Supermarket, 185 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa.
• • • • • ., • •
Turn your
unusables
into
usable
cash. Call
Daily Pilot
classified
642-5678.
COLLECTORS
CORNEA
R8re Coin• • Stemp•
GOLD • Sil VEA
Prices for 3-16-11
Ge ll! C-M'M.st Sllvw Cl. SU.• •toT s.11 Kruoerr-1 U..U Ull.J.S M•ple L.,., utl.U UIS.U
IOQ Co1.,,..1 W7t..• ...._ ..
SO Po01 1411.5f 14M.5f 90"1. Solver 8 -It.-It.~ ,,_ec__._ ... c:.. .... __
(714) S54I 1150
South Co.alt Pfau VIiiage ......... _ ...
ft.•·---~,....,
¥1N te& major staff chenges
By KEITH TtJBU retire from active partlclpatJoe of all °"'"" oe •.,..., ,.....,..... Poellkml wtUl VTN, and all olftHr and dlr.etor Tbe youn1er man who wiU take over H
prealdent and director ll John II. Leacb, 44,
formerly pre1ident aQd 1eneral mana1er ol VTN,
San Dlqo ..
VTN Corp .. Irvine's bu1e en1lneerln1, duUet wltb lta 1ublid1arte1.
arcb.la.cturaJ, planaina and enviroomentaJ ftrm, They wW, however, coatlnue on VTN'• board
haa announced a major abakeup ln ltt top of dlredOn and aerv' at an adrilory committee to
mana1ement 1t.ructure. help amootb tbe tramltiop ol power. Trinclle wUI
"It'• ll1nd ol tou1h to llre yourself, and we remain u board cbalrman.
"He may not know It yet, but be'U be puttina
ln 16·bour day1," Carllon aaJd.
wouldn't have done It u.nleu we tboulbt lt wu ln "We've been t.hlnklq about doln1 tbll for
the beat Interest of the company," •aid Kenneth· aomtt-.ttme," Carbon salcf. "We wanted to 1et a
W .'CarllOO, chief execµtive olftcer. . youna man ln charae. We've been aervln1 as a
CarllOO, aloq with Jam• J . Trindle, board committee, and after 30 yea.rs. we fell we needed a
VTN bu 13 re1ionaj and four lnternaUonaJ
offices, and hu worked on projecta for Knott'•
Berry Fann, Disneyworld and other theme parka.
Conatructlon of a f70-mllllon amuaement park in Kuwalt along lhe Arabian Gulf la currently ln
proereu. chairman and C. Richard Nellon, president, will youn1er man's drive."
Medical Professional Space in Irvine
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY WIT~ IMMEDIATE AVAILABILITY!
These brand new buildin.ss "TH~ ARBOR" are locared cen1rally in 1ht'
Ciry of Irvi ne. One o( the (asces1 growing mas1er plan ciries in rht'
counrry. Ir has excellent acceu to adjacenr surface stree1s and she
freeway nerwork. I ) well as immediatt proximity 10 local housing.
Gi\t'n rhe demographin and locacion i1 has 10 ~ o ne of rhe oumand ·
ing commercia l silt') in Orange Counry. This, coupled with the design
of 1he buildings. should make it borh, an immediace and lo ng 1erm
succeu.
T arnutze r -Hamihon Development Co., Inc.
714/55 7 -2792
Contact Christopher Bennett
----------.
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cau 953.1234
lfit'sgot
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
EXT. 721
c lassified
ad.Call
642-5678 and a
friendly ad-
vise r will
help you
turn your
wheels into
ca ~.~.
I
I I
A~sn
A slide to be
used to analyze
human blood ls checked at
Eastman Kodak
Co., Rochester,
N. Y. The slides
are miniature
c hem istry
laboratories
used in blood
analyzer
machines.
Cynicum meeta Reagan'• cutback goall
Br IORH CUNNIPP _..._A1Mtf91
NEW YORK -Cyl).iclsm about
rorecuUni thete days wu exempUfl
1reuma.n'1 comment to Dcaald
tbe other'• views are woven ot dttam1.
SWl, R.epubJJc&n1 claim, lbey have t.M beat or
lt. They aay tbe old economics ii lhffadbare after
at leut a decade or failure, and that Demoeratt
1hould wear the weavery ol dttama u sackcloth
and ashes. Recan recently that the ad·
mlnlstratlon'a tax-cut 1o•ls
sounded "ba1Juelno1enic."
While lbe remark may have
been inappropriate, eapeclally
to the Treasury secretary dur·
ine a congressional hearina. it
glves an ldea of how some
critics view the new "supply
They concede that with credJbWty atraloed
they may be unable t.o ofter convincin1 evidence
that the new Republican economics will work, but
they add that neither can anybody disprove It In
advance.
side" economics.
Bluntly stated, the new cu"""" Republican economics is held ln about the same
regard by Democrats as the old Keynesian
economics ls held by most Republlcana. Each feela
That ii the collapsed state in which economic
forecutin1 finda itself today, a consequence of in·
numerable economic recipes falllnt to produce the
results intended. The field is pocked with fears and
suspicions.
============================::::::=1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;:::;;:;:::;;:;:::;;:;:::;;:;:::;;;;;;;;;;;:=;;::=;;:;;;;~ * * *
The very first issue or the Chase Economic
Observer, just begun by Chase Manhattan Bank,
traces the crisis of confidence to the 1960s, when
Inflated claims· were made about the wlzardy of
economiata.
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111.1~ .:.1111 ll<"n lu :?l"u 1hrrn1i:h 1111,1 dl.'1.·d imc,1-
1111'111\. •dqll.·11d111g 1rn 1h1· 1.111.·, h1·111f d1;ug~u 1h1.·
hi 11111\H'I
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HERITAGE
HOME LOANS
I //"II/ I •\\ 11'"1•/ /, \o,/ l//f\I
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JOJOIA -A crop whote ti-ltn c-.. , .... .._.. ........... -.,...._ -..-. ,.......,..,_,. .................... .. .. _ .. ,_.
:r~··-k-·
CIMTUIY JAJOIA C OIPO•A TIOM
fAn A~ M-'"~"' 6 ln.i•t''"•"t CO#"P<t"¥1 11uwc ·-•···~c• tun
Tel. 111411ll·01~S ~
~,
CALL TOM MARSTON
FORA
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN-
INTEREST ONLY
Newport Equity 'Funds · Inc
L1(.f'nsed Broiler Smee 19 71
(71 4 7 60·6060
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECON~
• lnln••• onlv p.yment
• lnco••
•Co••nd•I • Reeldent6-I
• w-1i•v c __ ,,_ ...
• No ntltJv felMlt .. •
• 6 montlll1• to S v-n
• Soecllera CaUfontU
( •••• , t tllJf
lo•n info .--.tlon ecnolce
(J\C.t\ \'\U•:K,O'\)
REVEALS in the
1 ' llf l111.u~1.1n4 rw~d..,
(714) 759·1515
AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE
?JO N11woor1 Center D11ve
Design Plaza Newport Buell
Calolornoa
92660
DailyPilai
A regrslror.c..n state ment re1ot1ng to these secUJrltes hos been tiled with the Se c ur1f1es and Exchange
Comm1ss1o ri but hos nol vet becom e efff'c lrve TtiPse sec unltes mov not bP sold noc may offefs to buy be
a ccepted p11o r to lhe 11me lh<> reg1s1ro1to n storemenl becorrres effec tive This advertisement shall not
c onsf1tufe on offer to sell o r the so1tci1011o n o f on offe r to buy thf'SP sec u11t1es nor sholl there be any sole of
1hese securities rn onv state 1n which suc h otter so11c 11ot1o n o r SOIP wo uld b P unlawful pno r to registration or
quo1tf1c o t1on under lhe secur1t1es tows o f any suc h stole
PROPOSED NEW ISSUE
700,000 Shares • ••u technology 1!111 J I marketing illiAi incorporated
Irvine. California
COMMON STOCK
(no par value)
A copy of this prellmlnory Prospectus for review only
may be obtained by c olling or wrrtlng to the address below
Montano Securities Corporation.
Members Pacific Stock Exchange~ SIPC
52.3 West Sixth St Suite 24A 19752 MacArthur Btvd Suite 120
Los Angeles. CA 90014 IMne C A 92715
(213) 680 3620 (714) 752-6f65
Nome :
Address: City: ________ _
State: Zip : ___ _ Phone:( __ )
'Economy
recovery
forecast
The claims attracted attention, and during the
1970. there existed a great public awareness or
economists, accompanied by a surge in demand
for them in business, government, finance and
academe.
ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(AP) -University of
Mic higan economists
p redict the nation 's
economy will b e
somewhat sluggish all
this year but will surge
ahead by the spring or
1982 due to President
Reagan's lax cuts.
Chase doesn't say so, but some economists
may have believed what they beard. They ap-
peared in newspa per interviews , talk shows,
forums. They became celebrities. Their egos
swelled when they were asked t.o show the way to
the promised land. They took the bait. And most
failed.
Explains Chase: "The greater interest in
economic affairs exposed pronouncements or the
economics profession lo intense public scrutiny
at a time when the unprecedented volatility of
business conditions was making economic advice
and pr.edict.ion increasingly hazardous.'' According lo th e
economists' scenario,
released Monday, "by
the spring of 1982, busi·
ness investment activity
begins to reflect the in·
vestment incentives in
the lax cul program,
consumer spending con-
tinues to reflect lower
personal tax rates, and
the economy begins to
experience substantially
m ore rapid r ea l
growth.''
The disenchantment, it says, hasn't been con-
fined to outside critics. Within the discipline, it
s tales. economists have undergone self-doubt,
soul·searching, and critical examination of their
basic assumptions.
Especially bothersome are breakdowns of
once predictable relationships or economic
variables -between lax cuts and deficits, deficits
and prices. inflation and unemployment, monetary
growth and interest rates.
When t hese old relationships change. the
forecasters' roadmaps are less reliable and, as
they have found out. might even lead the economy
into areas never foreseen.
11 II HarpGp 1 :It )t NoEOt un ._,.., U'9 H.,llNI 23"'-2J NwlNGl ~ •'"' HtlmRK S'-S' NwUPS • I.. 1\4 Htnrd F l UV. U Noatli l2..,. 31'11 HotOC>m 1•1o 1 Nucorp if if: ~~~·,{, I~ 1! ~:~?a": ,t: I~~ r-u1:~~1 • ~~ .. ~;, gr,:~1·t
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l "• >'-l S-16 l 1·1•1 StPaut >'-J-. Mtt.-rt ~ 50'1J ScanO
l214 l2'1J Marlon s 11"'-13 ScrlppH IS'-IS+-MaulLP 211/J JO U U \o'I MtyP I 1 lS JSIJ. UPS AND DOWNS ~~ ~!.,. ~E~?.!: ~ ~~
S SIA> M< F arl ZlllJ 22"' , :;"" :;~ ~0::1 ~ ~;~ s JO\l't JI 1'Juw IS\'t 16'4 NEW YORK CAP) -Moll •chvt °"" • , ..... 1'\lt McllCICAi> 12~ 13\4 IM -tountlf stock• supplt.cl by NASO I 14 U lt. MICllRo l\l'J 1~ Name VOiume Bid AOed CllQ I JS U V. MICllllks JO'I\ J0-11o RoaCIE• . 344~ 0 n.a. + Ill. 9
• 4\l't ""e' 11~ 2,.,., "Pacrn 271,-2-2 "·" .s." 10 10 II IH tG 16Y> I~ h ltlM.. IM,SOO 2\1.o 2 13·16 • 1 3' fl 1W 11•Ao It• l ~ S.f Ntndyl • • 111,«JO 24~ H \lo + .. 12 •'4 46ll4 nlCoC 414 ... "'•Flt . .. 110,a IJ IJ'i'o I] 11'-I~ .,C,p tt 1t v. "PPlt C • 1 ... 100 211<> 2~ '• "
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ICM ICIY> NOCarG• ll\l't ""
MUTUAL FUND
NEW VO .. K lAPI c:,11 S IU l HL :::: ·~= =t -Tiit lot-lne.... 0 UI t!-11 HL C -.II NL
l•tt-.._tied lllY t.lorl11 Ml«ll: • -· ~ Ille Ha\lenel AH«t· euHCIL "-" 11-02 COllffCI 12.SI HL atlon of S.CWIU.. ,_ I.ft t.71 0s1,., 10.1' ..... DHI...._ Inc., .,.. !)lvld J.11 s.a l!q Inc IO.IO NL I,.. prlc.. .. WlllCll HllM 11.• 11.H E1tcll JS.II NL t,._M -wMln Mef!tt1 t.71 t0.'2 ~I .... NL
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. .... ,,~
Leslie Spangler is
manager of the
Newport Beach
branch of Far West
Savings and Loan
Association. She will
work at corporate
h eadquarters. 400
MacArthur Blvd.
Shortage
of grain
unlikely
WASHINGTON (AP>
Good crops in the
Southern lie mls.pJiere
and favorable prospects
elsewhere have eased
fears of a global grain
crunch. lhe Agriculture
Department has said.
•·Early prospects con·
tinue lo indicate an in·
crease in global grain
output during 1981-82
and the likelihood of 're·
serve> stock rebu ilding.
especiall y of wheat ...
t h e department ·s
Foreign Agric ultural
Service said.
N•""' EnltfSy COdeno11 8owl1M COdenol un ,...,.,,..,..,
S.cAFon
8a\ES wt
Cnonwr " 011111Sw OrtQMI \ S.mptr
Oe-1no PortaSy PWoltrCI
DrumFn
0191tS• ""' An.dtt• SollCIPh 01 C0<P SAi un S11prCrt Aot>l>M, ~r~,~m~
Mtrd\.rCO
Name TtnnMll M•r-IV Comdltl WI MallrRno
C•tNJ un Ct mbAov AmN..ct IHly :~.r~.'&."~ flrr:~ ~:ri~.
Nu Md ' Game• Halt Tt,1Rn1 Gt Ollln S<rlpto CllatOtll D•V•SWt US fie., 810.pNr EmP'rOG SldLOQot wt
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------
Tax interest
• rate increases
f T'lrU ii tlw flllCOftd o/ a ldfW11Grl .m.1 °" 1'otO to ecrw °"
MC*' 1M>tau1.)
The lnterett rate on any lax ref\.llldl owed on any
unpaid taxet1 wu doubled Feb. 1, ltl80. UnW that date,
the Internal RevHue Service .,.Id Interest on tax re· I
fund• at an annual rate of 8 percent and ehar1ed you at the aame 8 percent.
But because of the hutoric upsur1e In the prime
rate ebar1ed by banks to top corporate borrowen in
1979, the tax law was changed to r~ulre an adjustment
In thlt annual lo·
tereat rate. rt ~ waa ralaed to 12 percent, begin·
nin1 February ~ i«
l980.So if you IYlVll PllTER ~.:;,_.
don't pay your -, '
1980 income tax-
es in full by April 15, you wUl be charged interest at the
new 12percentrateonunpaidtaxes.
If, though, the IRS should owe interest on a refund.
it. too, mwst pay the interest al 12percent.
YOU'RE AMONG millions if you were hit by
casually losses (big or moderate) in 1980 -and or
course, you can deduct the loss. Ironically, if you spend
money in order to prevent a casually. that expenditure
has been held not dMuctible under a tax court ruling in
1980.
In order to prevent his pine trees from interfering
with power Lines to his home, a taxpayer bad the
branches of the trees removed on the side facing the
power lines. The removal of the branches on one side
made the trees subjectloorealtTng or bemg uprooted in
case of an ice storm. Should this happen, his residence
could be damaged.
To prevent damage that would have been a casual-
ty loss, the utility company was requested to move the
trees, and did so. The homeowner claimed a casually
loss for the decrease in the value of property. He did not
succeed.
Preventive measures, ruled the lax court, are not
casualties. rr cutting trees down to prevent a casualty
were deductible, other individuals could claim that a
burglar alarm system or a smoke detector came under
the category or casualty losses. the court reasoned.
IF YOU RAVE neglected lo get the maximum
benefit out or an Individual Retirement Account < IRA )
for 1980. you still arenottoolatetorelrievethe error.
Assuming you could have set up an IRA in 1980 or
that you could have made an added contribution to an
existing IRA, you can set up an IRA or make an added
contribution to an existing one, if you act before the due
date of your 1980 return. including extensions.
Thus, if you get an extension until June 15, 1981 , you
have until that date to set up an IRA and/or make a con·
tribution to <me.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW VOAIC;IAP) Final Oow Jontt aYQS ~~oc~r. ,,.., ,.
()pen HI°" LO• (I~ ChQ lO Incl ,.. .. IOOS ~ m ll 10021'1· 11 °' 10 Tm oo l4 •?7 7• •l7 '2 •17 ll • •.n 111, IS Utl 108 7l 11001 10908 '°'SJ• 0.•2
• "• U Stk Jll .. -&S ll• 0 Jl7 10 • S.ICI ,.. lnchn • •50.«XI . •. r,..,. 1 10.JOO • ,, Utll\ Sl',200
U St• 6 106. 'IOO
AMERICAN LEADERS
. , ...
• 6 .....
• 1'.4 ... ... . , ..
... 11;., ..
•1
NEW VORk (API . S.IH, Monct•r proc•
end n.i <...._ of '"" ten "'°" ec11.., Amerk.., Stock E•<~~ is-s. tr9dlno Ntlon•llr •1 more tll•n '1
W•rnrtom w1 '"'·'°° 1t~ • ,,. HouOllM 114,400 411'1>
AtltsC:M 11•.600 '"°' • \,, (tf'"llllAfl<• Cl 110.200 ,. • ,,.
Our\ Air 101,ICID ev. '" GllC.,, o s ",0 10V. A!Nlallt '7.<IOO )4 •2 PellC«p s •S, 100 :n • ,,_
unttAttlettos "·'°° •~ • Ii· Goldfield (p 71,000 I~·
Pct Up 2S.4 Up 24.S Up 11 I
Uo 11 S Up 16.J Up IJ.t
Up 11.1 UP II 4
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WHAT STOCKS DID
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GOLD QUOTATIONS ,.......,
L...-: mornlno li•lno ~'9.H. up $1 u
L-...: efle,_ ll•ll'IJ ~'9.1S. "P ll.IS.
I' eris: •fltrllOOn tl•lno il4t. 1 t, "P $U .. l'••MNn: tl•lno '501 01. up,.,.,
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I~: only delly quote, 1eo..1c.e ... ''"·'··up"·°'
+
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•
I .
Daily Pilat
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1981 The scores were close,
the pace was fast
in Monday's NIT playoffs ... See C4.
WAYNE CARLANDER MICK DelAVAllADE MARK SPfNN JEFF PRIES JEFF CHRISTENSEN
Carlander (who else?) tops area t~run
By ROGER CARLSON
01 11'e D•ilY PIMlt SIMI
He was a starter as an El Toro High freshman,
s hared Empire League Player of the Year honors
as a sophomore at Ocean View, followed by a
junior season in which he was the Empire
League's Player of the Year and a first team All·
Cl F 4 A selection Already he was known as "The
Franchise "
college team in the nation, has narrowed his
choice lo either Iowa, Duke, USC, Oregon or Utah .
His 33.0 scoring average and 18 rebounds a
game make him the most prolific scor er a nd re-
bounder in the his tory of Orange Coast area
basketball. His high game was 50 points in a
performance at Katell a .
choice and that league's Player of the Year follow·
ing an unbeaten season for the Barons. is being
recruited by Brigham Young University, among
others, after fashioning an 18. l scoring average on
a leam which thrived on balance.
Sea Kings to the CJF 3·A championship. When the
chips were down it was Spinn who suppbed a de-
fensive net around the opposition's best, capped by
a brilliant effort in holding 6-9 La Quinta star
Johnny Rogers to six points in the semifinals.
DeLavallade showed pure shooting ability with
good range for his 6·6 frame and led Westminster
to its best season in nine years Making a strong
bid for DeLavailade's services is UC Irvine Coach
Bill Mulligan. OeLavalladc. despite being saddled
with a one-man reputation, averaged 24.4 points a
game and scored in the 30s four times.
Earning spots on the second team list:
Coach of the Year laurels go to the same man
who tabbed as Orange County Coach of the Year
by the Daily Pilot Estancia High's Larry Sun-
derman. who took a team with no one as tall as 6·3
and with one returning letterman on the roster . to
the CIF 3-A s emifinals.
Richard Chang. l!;d1son High's two-time All:
And the 1981 campaign has seen Wayne
Carlander already garner honors as Orange Coun-
ty Player of the Year. in addition to MVP honors
in league play again.
Sunset League star, who averaged 20.9 points a
game a nd was a model of consistency.
So. 1t doesn't come as much of a s urprise that
Carlander has been named the Daily Pilot's
Orange Coast Area Player of the Year following
Ocean View's 22-4 season.
Rounding out the fi rst team are Fountain
Valley's Jeff Christensen , Westminster's Mick
DeLavallade, and Corona de! Mar High's one-two
punch of Jeff Pries and Mark Spinn.
Pries. a standout for two years with the Sea
Kings. became more evident after Spinn went
down with an injury and he didn't disappoint Cd M
fans. scoring 20 points or more in 11 of the Sea
Kings' 12 games prior lo the CIF semis.
Jeff Hughes, whose outside shooting turned
Fountain Valley's Sunset League champions into a
complete team.
Rick Ciaccio, who came out of nowhere to
become a force for Newport Harbor.
The 6-8 star , eyed by virtually ever y major Christensen, a two-time All -Sunset League Rounding out the top five 1s Spinn. who led the
Tim McLaughlin. University's one-man star
<See CARLAN DER, Page C2>
CHANG M<UIUGHLIN LU<*GO USEYITCH
Brown has UCLA players near tears
.. Farmer expected to be named new Bruin coach today
LOS ANGELES (AP> Arter two
winnin~ seasons al UCLA. Larry Brown
has been lured back to the National
Basketball Assoc1a11on as coach of the
New Jersey Nets.
H e disclosed his decision to the
Bruins at a closed-door meeting with
them Monday. and although he would
not confirm he was leaving. two players
who askl'd to remain anonymous said
that was what Brown told them.
They also said Larry Farmer, a Bruin
assistant basketball coach for six years
and a player under former coach John
Wooden would be the new UCLA head
coach.
N e t s General Manage r Charlie
Theokas confirmed late Monday night
that Brown, a former coach of the
Denver Nuggets, had signed to coach
the team starting next season.
Theokas, in an interview with ABC
Radio Sports, said: "We're reall y excil·
ed about Larry and about next year. We
feel we have half turned around our pro-
gram and with the addition of Larry
Brown we feel next year basketball in
New J ersey will be exciting."
Several players were near tears as
they filed out, one-by-one. from Mon-
day's meeting in Pauley Pavilion.
Freshman center Kenney Field5t who
Howard L. Handy
had been dropped from the team and
then reinstated by Brown. said. "We
hate to see him go Coach has a tenden-
cy to get real close to his players
Wherever he goes. I hope he keeps 1n
touch."
Brown had been rumored to be leav
ing UCLA for the past month. but said
he would wait until after lhe Bruins
finished the season to make a decision
Monday's talk with the team came two
days after t he club lost its openin~
game of the NCAA tournament.
He becomes the t hird UCLA head
basketball coach to leave in the past six
years Following the end of Wooden's
A carnival weekend
By HOWARD L. HANDY 01 ,.._ D•ily Plie. SIMI
LONG BEACH -tr you were lo take a poll of
the people in attendance at the Toyota-Long Beach
Grand Prix this past weekend, the answers might
startle you.
suns hine, there is no place like the beach for a
noisy Sunday afternoon, a lbeit someone has
coughed up $20 for an admission ticket.
Even the publicity director's wife wasn't up to
it when she was asked to go out to the course for
the start of the race and wound up deep inside the
horseshoe U of turn 7. Oh. there's the usual reason for atttnding -to
watch a major sporting event involving interna·
tionally known drivers and automobiles.
And there's even the excuse to be a part of a "I WENT THIS TIME but I'll never go again ,"
happening. said Joan Ives. "'.fhe noise is impossible and when
But the individual reasons such as girl they started to go in different directions, I don't
watching, getting something for nothin1, finding a know why I thought it would be safer up on a
booth with a free sandwich or beer, strolling curb."
around in the garage area or just sittinl in the sun· -Fortunately for her and about 150 others lo the
shine might suffice for some. area. none of the racing machines even came close
lf you have ever wondered how those to the area although two went out of the race at the
television cameramen get so proficient in picking turn the first time around.
out a good 1ooking girl with the skimpiest of Then there are those who have placed their
bikinis'; you should be on hand for the day preced· motor homes in strategic locations around the
ing the actuaJ race or on tbe morning thereof. track ror at least rour days with the supply of beer
These men with the zoom lenses and eaale replenlabed eacb nlaht.
eyes, must have spotters at all turns around the Frlendl and acquaintances drop by for a cold
track. They can pick one out and spend a half bour one and the parties last late into the nt1bt.
or more In getting every possible view for the Tbere are other problems for the security
closed circuit watchers awaJUn.a the track action. fon:e tbat ls entar1ed for the race. Fithll occur for
WHILE GIRL-WATCHING bu a major role
both on the closed circuit TV and for otben on
strolls around1 _lhe two-mile eoune, lt la no the
only endeavor Of those who pretend to be therefor the .
race, then never see any of the action.
tbote wbo imbibed too freely or for other d.1aa1ne·
meta. Fin department equipment, includin1 two
lar•e booll and ladder unlll, ta trapped ln1lde the
area for the three day a of race activity.
27 year reign at the school, Gene
Bar tow. Gary Cunningham and Brown
each guided the team for two years.
This season Brown ·s 10th-ranked
Bruins. who suffered an embarrassing
78-55 NCAA playoff loss to BY U Satur·
day , finished with a 20·7 record. In
1979 80. Brown coached the team to a
second place finu;h in the NCAA tourna-
ment and a 22-10 overall record.
Arown, 40, had become the focus of
ronsiderable controversy at UCLA dur-
ing the past two months The s pecula·
tion about his going to New Jersey was
never really quieted.
But tbele same ones are able to clileuas the
event ln rul1 lhe 1next day even tboulh they are
somewhat bl~ry-eyed from watehlns a taped re·
run late the 5'me nilht. '=•s-appur to be the IDOlt widely diatributed
"free" item wl\b Toyota, Cannon, Briqestone and
many, many more commercial produeta dlapla79d
prominently with the manufacturer ftprt111 be ll
gelt\na some free adverUaement beneftta rrom
lboae who wear them.
TBS MICBBL08 IEEP baa a red l11ht and
.siren and the driver enjo)'I com1n1 up behind a
alrl ln hip heel• and lettin1 the alren alnt out aa
tbe WIRllpectiq victim Jumpe to aafet,.
If you know tbe people or have an lnvltaUon to
the Perra.rt mobile unit, rolll lllCl coffee are the or·
der of the day in the rnorninf, sandwlcht1,
cook\•, fruit and potato cb1111 at noon.
P•tting IJest loot fo....,ard
Charlie 'stmmer of the Ktno shows tO a pre11 conference
hll lea which was operateCl oa recenUy aa a result of a
hockey-related accident. Docton have pronounced the
operaUon a success and Simmer ls expected to return to
the Kings 'fneup by next season. For those sltUna on the arau and enjoyinl the
' ,.
The Loi Antelea Times even 1et1 into the act
down the row a waya with a tarae pot of chlll and
<See CA&NIVAL, Pate Cl)
'
-
~TEWAIH HAR RV
Zahn hopes
good ways
• continue
By ED ZINTEL
Ol I,_ O~lly Piiot SI.lit
There was a time in his career
when Geoff Zahn wasn't s ure if
he should keep pitching or toss
in the glove and use his degree
in education to teach .
T hat was in 1975 when Zahn. a
left-handed pitcher with the
Chicago Cubs, had s urgery on
his left elbow to take out frag-
ments .
His record (2·7) and ERA
(4.45) up until that point <July
• 21) wasn't so hot and Zahn won-
dered if sticking with it would be
worth it. He did and today, he's
glad he did.
ZAHN'S INJURY was such
that he wasn't able to pitch
much in 1976. He appeared \n
three games for the Cubs before
being sent down to the club's
Wic hita farm club. His s tatistics
there weren't particularly im·
pressive -8·8 with a 4.21 ERA.
In 1977, Zahn was acquired by
Minnesota and he won 12 games
for the Twins in his firs t full
season.
"I have<Gene) Mauch to thank
for reviving my career," Zahn
said recently after being ac·
quired by the Angels in the re.
entry draft last December. "He
put me out there every fourth or
Cirth day, and it was live or die. I
adjusted. The second season
with the Twins, I started to use a
lot more chan ge-ups and I
became more effi cient and con-
sistent.''
APPARENTLY SO. In 1978,
Zahn won 14 games whlle ap-
pearing in 252 innings. His ERA
dropped to an admirable 3.ot,
among the l op ten In the
American League.
Zahn was 13· 7 in 1979, lberi
14·18 in 1980. Now, he's be1q
counted on by Angels Manaa.-r
Jim Fregosl to be a con.aiJtent
starter. If Zahn can again wln 13
or 14 sames ror the AnaelJ, lhen
P're1os1 and a lot of other .,.._
pie will be happy. Afterall. ~ahn, al 34, la no lonaer a apri.aa
chleken.
''I feel SoOd about t.be lbcM&lder
now,0 Zabn aaya. "U l were 1
power pltc:ber, maybe I'd be
mote CCJMef¥d. ~· lt la, J feeJ r un keep pltehlftl for a num
of yean."
TOD& 1', llilN wUI be
atarter far the Ailee.I• 11
face Su Frandleo ill Pbc*'l
for an uh.lblUon 1ame.
"I didn't have conftdence
(See ANGa.,, Papa>
Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Tuefday, March 17, 198~ ~RTS BREAK I BASEBALL / BASKETBALL ·~--------i--"!'"----~'1' ___ ....; __________ ~-----------------~--------~------;.........;. ______ ~--~...;;..--_;
·.· :•,
88
Fro•AP .... tellff
MAUI, H•wail -Comm.Wloner Pete Roielle EE
of \be National Football t.earue said Monday he c II•
sees UttM chu~e of an ou\.of·cou.rt settlement in a
sul\ aeekin8 to switch the Oakland Ralden to tbe
Loa An1eles Coliseum.
"Tbe four corners of tbe suit compound tbe chances of
a ae\Uement aa much aa we would like to have one to avert
lengthy lltiaatlon," Rozelle told a news conference.
The commiaslooer talked with reporters covering the
annual NFL owners' meetina and most of tbe discussion
centered on tbe anti-trust suit involving the league and the
Raiders. "Involved are the Oakland Coliseum and fans, the Los
Angeles Coliseum and fans, Al Davis and tbe Raiders and
the 27 defendants," RoieUe said. The defendant.a are the
other owners or teams in the leageue.
An NFL rule permits a team to move only with tbe •P·
proval of 21 of the 2.8 members.
Renelle said the HUgation could go as far as the United
States Supreme Court. A U.S. District Court trial ls
scheduled to start March 23.
-----q.,.ie ol tlae da11 ------.
" I f~l like someone bas lifted a gorilla off our
back." -Washington's Denoia Marak, after the
CapitaJs had bombed Toronto, 7-3.
Par~r'• tlr•t sprt• ldt a .....
Dan Parker belted a two-run home run on his ii
first swin« of the exhibition season Monday. lead-
ing Pittsburgh to a 7-3 victory over St. Louis ... In
other exhibition games. former Angel Jim Aa-
dertoa hit a leadoff homer to trigger a seven-run ninth inning
as Seattle rallied for a 9-8 victory over San Francisco . .
Milwaukee's CecU Cooper had three hits, including a bases-
empty home run and Roy HoweU doubled home two more
runs to lead the Brewers to a 5-2 win over
Cleveland ... Home runs by Pete
Mackuin and Jobn CastiDo and the fine
pitching of left-hander J erry KOOiUDu , led
Minnesota to a 14-3 romp over Toronto ..
Onie Smith's sacrifice fly capped a three-
run San Diego ninth inning as the Padres
handed Oakland their first exhibition de-
feat, 5-4 . . J obruay Oates' run-scoring
single gave the New York Yankees a 4-4
tie with Texas in a game that was called
PAIUCU after 17 innings because of darkness. The
contest lasted 4 hours, 33 minutes, with a total of 47 players
seeing action . . . Ken Slagleton drove in two runs wtth a pair
of doubles and three pitchers scattered nine hits in leading
Baltimore to a 3-1 victory over Atlanta ... Veteran Carl
Yau tremskl keyed a three-run outburst in the first inning
with a run-scoring double, and Boston went on to defeat Mon-
treal, 6-5 ... Rookie catcher Mike Colbern's two-run homer
highlighted a four-run eighth inning as the Chicago White Sox'
rallied for a 6-5 victory over the New York Mets . - . Rookie
Ken Phelps drilled a two-run homer to spark Kansas City
over PhiladeLphia . . . Cincinnati routed Nolan Ryan with 10
runs in two innings and then held on for a 12·10 victory over
Houston .
aa .. hlr• \'•rldarftla ....... , ... ,
The Rams announced Monday that Jim s
Vechiarella, an assistant coach at Tulane 4. >
University for the past thr~ years. bas been
hired as a special-teams coach by the club.
Vechiarella. 44, was an assistant at Southern Illinois
University for two years before his move to TuJane.
In two Rams ' coaching shifts, Herb Paterra. special·
teams coach last year, becomes the linebackers coach.
and Frank Lauterbur, who was the linebackers coach, was
named defensi ve line coach
\'a• Breda K._olll pt• ...,,.,.d•d
Butcll Van Bred a KoUf, whose basketball m
coaching career has gone from the colleges to
the NBA and back, was suspended Monday
from his job as coach of the New Orleans Pride
of the Women's ProfessionaJ Basketball Leal(ue. No reason
was given for the suspension ... Indiana Pacer forward
Mlke Bantom, injured March 10 in a game against
P hiladelphia, will be out another two weeks with a rrac·
lured rlb ... Moses Malone of the Houston Rockets. who
leads the NBA in rebounding and is second in the league in
scoring, was named NBA Player of the Week, for the
period ending Sunday, March 15 .
U.nard b4P'fll11• ll'Orfcolll• tor Cltl• tlglif
Welterwei"ht champion S~gar llay Leo•ard •
began training in preparation for his March 28
World Boxing Council title fight against Larry
Bonds. Leonard worked out for two hours in the
basement garage of the Onondaga County· War Memorial,
which has served as the site of past world title fights . .
Rodolfo "Saper Gato" Goualea, rated No. 4 by the World
Boxing Council, knocked out VUomar Fernandez at 2:03 of
the second round in their lightweight fight at the Forum
... The Naismith Commitlt?e bas selected 10 finalists as
the top college basketball player in the country. They are:
Mark Aguirre or DePaul. Daany Ainge of BY U. Sam
Bowle of Kentucky, Steve J ohnson of Oregon Slate, Albert
Kin& of Maryland, Durand Mack.lln ·Of LSU, Ralph
8amp1on of Virginia, la.lab Tltom11 of Indiana, Kelly
. T rlpucka of Notre Dame and AJ Wood_ of North Carolina
T~don, radio
TV: Noeventsscheduled.
RADIO: Basketball -La.Jeers at Dallas, 6 p.m., KLAC .
(570); Hockey-Buffalo at Kings, 7:30 p.m.,KOGO (800).
WEDNESDAY RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla .. 10: 10
a.m .,KABC (790).
Unseld to retire Q WASHINGTON <AP>-Ceoter Wea Unaeld,say·
19' "it's Just time to quit," announced Monday nitrbt
~the will retire from the NaUooal Basketball As-
ICICiatlon'a Wuh1nston Bullets at lhe end of thia
eson, the W u hinitoo Post reported.
• ''I'm ret.Lrtnc basically because of the way my
tfia are actine, eapeelally the 1ood one," UDJeld, tbe
mainstay of the Bullets for t he laat U aeaaons, told ttit POil. .; "I don't know lf I'd be able to play next seuon
den lf I wanted to . There a.re other thinaa I want to 66 anyway. It's Just tim e for me to atop pJaytn1
.a;.eketball."
:• Unaeld said he infor med Bullett oner Abe
P..Dllln ofblldec1alon twoweeua10. I' "1 e~alned my realOftl to him and be un· ... tooc1!" .. Unaeld 1a1d. "J told him it w11 up to him tt auounce It whenever he tbo\Jtht the Um e waa
t11bt." Tbe BWJ.U are expected to formally •nnounc~ ta. Nttnment.tanewa tOftfennct Wednesday. T UDMld, wbo turned as tut Saturday. bas been .,...,... mueta of WI Haton by arthritic me. and
... ........, miSHd 1, Camel •
•
A
Good authority ' . ·~--~-+--------~~--"---~~---
Kuhn's tummy
.
says no strike
PHOENIX <AP) -Baseball
Commluioner Bowie Kuhn said
he does not think there wUJ be a
player strike this year.
Kuhn, in Arizona to visit
spring-training camps, said
Monday while watching the San
Francisco-Seattle game at
Phoenix Municipal Stadium lhat
he doesn't consider the current
impasse over tree-agent com-
pensation to be a serious threat
to the SPOrt.
ASK ED W ... Y he thinks
owners and players will be able
to get together, Kuhn replied:
'"My tummy tells me so."
The executive board of the
Major League Players Associa-
tion voted unanimously Feb. 25
to strike May 29 if the com-
pensation Issue is not resolved
by then.
Kuhn said he thinks a solution
will be reached once the two
sides devote their full attention
to doing so.
··I think once the s pring
camps are over and both sides
s it down to some serious
bargaining, the issue is e minent-
ly solvable." he said.
"THE UNION is in no rush.
That's not an abnormal thing in
a union· management situation."
Kuhn said he does not agree
with the idea that the publi<: is
becoming fed up with baseball"s
labor·management spats.
"'This kind of happening has
gone on for 15 years." he said.
.. , think the rans lake it pretty
much in stride."
But he admitted that he would
prefer to be rid or such hassles.
CARNIVAL.
"0 \JR PaOBLEMS are na1·
gin1 -they need solutions."
Kuhn said. "But I don't see this
as a critical year for baseball."
He said that the free-a1ent
compensation matter is just a
drop in the economic bucket as
far as baseball's overall picture
is concerned.
·'Only a small percentage of
players would be involved in
compensation," he said. "And
there is a tendency for the good
pJayers to head for the teams
that have a chance to win. Those
teams have a greater supply of
players for compensation."
Kuhn said he considers rising
ticket prices a far greater coo·
cern.
..EVEN SINCE free-agency
ticket prices have not moved up
dramatically," he sa\d. "It's
below the rate of inflation. If
they went up dramatically. that
would be a danger sign."
Kuhn was asked whether he
could sympathize wit h
Philadelphia Phillies owner Ru-
ly Carpenter, who announced re-
cently that he wants to sell his
team because of escalating
player salaries.
'"I'd like lo say no, but the
answer is yes." Kuhn said .. Ru-
ly Carpenter didn't see things
adding up right.··
Kuhn said that he does not
foresee realignment in the near
future but that the National
League may add a couple of
teams within the next five years
He li sted Phoenix as a
possibility for an expansion
fr anc h ise , a 19ng with
Washington D.C., Denver. New
Orleans, Southern Florida, Cen-
tral Florida, Buffalo and Van-
couver. British Colum bia.
ANGELS ••.
rpyaell in put 1prtn1 Haaons
but I've always felt lbat lf you
wor k h..-d, t.hJnp wori out."
Zahn says. "People told
me that I hadn't thrown bard
enouah over the taat couple
years, tbal I hadn't recovered
from the SUf'lery. But so far, I
feel pretty good.''
* • •
Rod Carew and three rookie
pitchers led the Anaels to a 2-0
victory over the Chicago Cubs
Monday at the Angela' spring
training stadium in Palm
Springs.
Carew, the Angels' seven-time
American League batting cham-
pion first baseman, bunted for a
single and scored in the first in-
ning. then drove in a run with
another single in the fourth.
HITLESS IN four spring ap-
pearances until Monday. Carew
has been assigned to the leadoff
spot by Fregosi in hopes of
averaging five at bats a g~me.
Mike Witt, Steve Brown and
Ralph Botting limited the Cub5,
who have scored only two runs
in their last 27 innings, to six
hits, Including two doubles by
Steve Henderson and a double
and single by Jody Davis .
Wilt was the winner. Lynn
McGlothen, who pitched five in-
nings, was the loser.
WITH TH E SHUTOUT, the
Angel mound staff ran its string
of innings without allowing an
earned run to 30, going back to
the seventh inning or the second
game lhis spring. Nine pitchers
have contributed to the streak.
The Angels are now 3· l on the spr-
ing season .
"The guys have been pitching
really well,,. said Fregosi Mon-
day, who may face a bittersweet
task when he has to decide
which young hurlers to keep on
the squad.
Butch Hobson also had a pair
of hits for the Angels, including a
double. beans for those interested in
gastronomical pleasure. WAYNE CARLANDER
The a uto expo inside the
sports arena is full of displays
and hawkers seeking customers
for their products.
f'roae Pag~ Cl
The garage area where the
cars are housed against the
night weather and for major re·
pairs off the course. costs an ad-
ditional fee just to gain admit-
tance. The drivers of the
Formula Atlantic car s are
usually near their machines and
ready to talk The Formula One
drivers are seldom seen by the
general populace
CARLANDER TOPS ALL-AREA TEAM. • •
BUT ONE MUST NOT forget
t he ract that Ocean A venue and
other streets surrounding the
civic complex are closed and
that action goes on at a virtually
unstoppable pace from 10 to 5:30
each of the three days or the
Grand Prix weekend.
Viewers from atop nearby sur·
rounding-buildings and paid
nothing for their location as far
as the Grand Prix promoters are
con cerned . To look at the
myriad of badges, passes and
wrist bands on others inside the
compound makes one wonder if
anyone actually paid to get in-
side.
The lines at the ticket booths
outside would belie this rear.
But even the loud noise of the
Formula One cars in practice or
during the actual race doesn't
seem to matter to a large
number of those inside. They
parade around looking at ex-
hibits, booths and other facets of
the carnival weekend rather
than watching the main event.
One said : "Why bother. You
can only see the race at one
location and tonight I can watch
the whole thing on television at
home. It might make that view-
ing less desirable if I knew who
won or what happened on the
course ahead of time ...
Which brings up only one
question: Why are they there in
the fi rst )>lace?
Such is the atmosphere atten-
dant to the Long Beach Grand
Prix with more than 182,000 in
attendance during its three-day
run in 1981. A phenomena in
it.self.
who led the Trojans to the CIF playoffs .
Rick DiBemardo, Edison's Mr. Defense, as
well as Mr. Rebounds.
Third team honors go to two.year All-Sunset
League star Frank Luongo of Fountain Valley. 6-9
junior Jim Usevitch of Ocean View, Newport
Harbor sparkplug Cory Everhart, Laguna Beach's
Mr. E verything, Lance Stewart, and Emile Harry,
Fountain Valley's adept guard.
All-Orange Coast Area
First Team
Player, school Ht.
Wayne Carlander, Ocean View 6-8
Jeff Christensen, Fountain Valley 6·3
Mick DeLavallade, Westminster 6-6
Jeff Pries, Corona del Mar 6-5
Mark Spinn, Corona del Mar 6-6
Second Team
Richard Chang, Edison 6-5
Rick Ciaccio, Newport Harbor 6·8
Tim McLaughlin, University 6-8
Rick DiBemardo, Edison 6·3
Jeff Hughes, Fountain Valley 6·2
Third Team
Frank Luongo, Fountain Valley 6-7
Jim Usevitch. Ocean View 6-9
Cl. Avg.
Sr. 33.0
Sr. 18.1
Sr. 24.4
Sr. 20.7
Sr. 15.7
Jr. 20.9
Sr. 12.5
Sr. 21.5
Jr. 17.8
Jr. 16.0
Sr. 8.8
Jr. 11.6
(J ~C:K ANDERSON) ' 111·1 P1·1at
REVEALS In the
What does a marathon
runner have in common
with a Volkswagen?
LONG
DISTANCE
MILEAGE!
Cory Everhart, Newport Harbor
Lance Stewart, Laguna Beach
Emile Harry. Fountain Valley
6-3 Sr 17 1
6-0 Sr. 13.l
6-0 Sr 9.5
Sirnmer's leg 0 K
lNGLEWOOD t AP> Injured Kings· star
Charlie Simmer said Monday that his doctors con-
sider the operation on his badly broken right leg a
success and expect him to be able to resume his
hockey career, perhaps as early as next season.•
'"The doctors have done their job. Now it's up
to me and the leg and how fast it mends," said
Simmer, the National League's second-leading
goal scorer when he fractured the leg against
Toronto March 2.
"They've made me no guarantees," he said.
"But they don't see any reason why I shouldn't be
able to play. I'd like to think I can go to training
camp with everyone else next season. But I'll have
to wait and see.
'"The best news I have is that I should be able
to play hockey again."
Simmer's leg was fractured in two places with
5:49 to play in the Kings' t-0 victory at Toronto.
DENVER
TIMES
MARCii. 191!1
Con1inental Airline' con1inue!> 10 meet the
needs of busy bu!>incs-. traveler.; with conVl!nient
!>chedules and superior on-time perfonnance.
Continental rcponi. chat in the latest nine
monlh period, nearly 90% uf all Continental
nighl!I syl.tem-wide. departed on Lime.
So when your success depends on itettlng
there on time. save yourself some ti111c. C11ll your
travel O$Cnt. comp:iny travel department
or Continental Afrllnc~.
All rhrhh rMtn'lh..,, uflllf'' ttkhu1,...i • f\'t Jfn-,1 "hhcJul" ~hff'\t ._,
'"'""P~ ,. .. ,_...,, "'k"' '"""'-"·
CONTINENT~L
AIRLINES•
-·
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTIT~Yi March 17, 1981 Cl)
Kemper ~n countdown: it's a week away
Four amateun •elected to play in annual MeBa Verde L P GA to urnament
BJ llOWAaD L. llANDY °' ................. Wtt.b the Wom•'• Kemper Open at 111 .. a
Verde Country Cl1ab a little more t.baD a week
away, time ii nmnlnl out OD jobain& the field for
tbe Wedneeday pro-am and toe dete:nnln1DC t.be
neceulty of a quallfylnl round.
"We .on't know about a quallfylq round on
Monday \IDd1 the end of play ln Lal Ve1u t.b1I
week," toumament director Don Ruhter 11y1 ... At
last eoant there were 108 pros alped to play and
we abould have more by the middle of the week.
"Rlebt now we have four amateurs who will
join a qualif)'inl field 11 we have one to determine
three apota. If we have exactly 132 pro1 alped to
play, there will be no quallfyiq and we will be
forced to eliminate the amateurs but we hope tb1a
doe1n't happen."
For the record, the four amateurs have been
selected. Kathy Kostes of Palmdale, 15, la one of
the lucky youn1 ladies . She ls a three-handicapper
out of Antelope Valley CC and is the 1980 state
1lrl1 champion.
She was a semlrmalillt in the state women's
amateur tournament at Pebble Beach and 1he won
the American Junior Golf Association invitational
at Lake Tahoe. She holds the women's .course
record in Palmdale, breaking a mark previously
held by Amy Alcott.
A SECOND AMATEU& is Susan Thompson of
Garden Grove who ls 17 and a two-handicapper.
She tied for first in the champion.ship fll1bt of the
Los Anaeles City junior girls tournament but lost
ln a playoff. Sbe alto qualifted 15tb of 1~ at the
USOA national toll school.
Joanne Paell.lo of Torrance la the tbtrd invitee
and LI a frelbmaa at Stanford Unlvftl lty. She
boldl the low women'• team avera1e with a 15.e
mark and in lMD won the western Junior UUe. She
GO LF n
aJao q~IO-play in the flnt Women's Kemper
Open here two yean aao.
COllPLETING TBB FIELD of amateurs is
Klm Salti, 15, who ls a member at Mesa Verde
and a student at Ocean View lfieh. She ii ranked
loth amona Southern Callfomia ju.nlors and went
to the quarterfinals of the staie ju.nlor cham·
plonablpa ln Monterey. She bas won 13 of 2e junior
tournamenta in whlcb she has participated and is
the No. 1 player on the Ocean View boys team with
a four handicap. roa TB08E WONDE&ING about the season
ticket situation for the Kemper, better take a good
loot. U you plan to attend the event two days, a
season ducat will save you money and they will be
available until the third round is completed Satur-
day. The season ticket costs $12 and a dally pass is
$8 for any one day of the tournament.
These tickets are being sold by charitable or·
ganlzations throughout the county.
. Another thing Ruhter adds is that all who still
hold season or daily tickets to the Olympia Golf
Classic at Industry Hills that was r ained out, wilJ
Merlin surfing· along
Holds big lead in Cabo San Lucas race
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dellyl'llet ....... WrllW ''We're surfing down big seas in an 18·knot
northwesterly breeze," said Dick Steele in a ham
radio communication with Chuck Cotton of
Newport Beach Monday.
Steele said the 67-foot light-displacement sloop
Merlin was hitting speeds in excess of 18 knots as
it slid down the big rollers south of Turtle Bay off
the coast of Baja California.
Merlin's position placed her past the baU-way
mark in the 790-mile Newport to Cabo San Lucas
r ace sponsored by Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
If the strong winds continue, Merlin could
finish by noon Wednesday which means she would
lop more than nine hours off the existing elapsed
time record of 4 days, 9 hours, 7 minutes.
Elapsed time records are not new to the big
"downwind sled" Merlin also bolds the record in
the 2,225-mile Los Angeles to Honolulu race.
Computations by Tom Wilder aboard the
escort vessel Hawkeye II indicate that Merlin ls
also the overall and Class A corrected time leader
F i dryc la s harp
Tigers trounce
Dodgers, 9-0
VERO BEACH, Fla. <AP> -Lance Parrish
tripled twice, doubled and sing.led and Al Cowens
drove in four runs with a triple and double as the
Detroit Tigers trounced the Dodgers, 9-0 in exhibi·
lion baseball Monday.
Five Detroit pitchers, includin1 Mark
Fidrycb, held Los Angeles to four sin1les a~ the
Tigers won their seventh exhibition came 10 11
starts. Los Angeles is 2·4.
Jerry Reuss became the first Los Angel~s
pitcher to go five innincs. but was taued for sax
runs four in the rant lnnin1. Fidrycb, rocked for
six ~ in one inning by the Chica10 White Sox in
bis lut appearance, started for Detroit and cave
up three singles in three innings.
Detroit sent eight batters to the plate in the
first inning. Richie Hebner singled home one run,
Parris doubled home the second and Hebner
scored oo Cowens' infield out. The fourth run came
home as the result of an error, one of three by the
Dodgers.
Cowens' two-out triple in the fifth accounted
for two more runs, the Tigers added another in the
sixth and two more in the seventh.
The Dodgers, who are batting only .218 as a
team, twice bad runners u far as third, but were
unable to score and suffered their first shutout of
the 1pring.
Rookie pitchers Ricky Wript, Rieb Rodas and
Tom Niedenfuer followed Reuas to the mound.
Tbe Dod1ers host Texas today at Vero Beach,
with Burt Hooton and Fernando Valenzuela
scheduled to pitch for Los Anaeles.
In the 30-boat International Offshore Rule ( IOR>
division.
The rest of the fleet were also experiencing
strong winds but were no match for t he downwind
capabilities of Merlin.
Class standings as of 8 a .m. Monday:
CLASS A -1. Me rlin; 2. Night Train,
BOATI NG
Walters/Thor , PMYC; 3. Hana Ho, Morrie Kirk,
BYC.
CLASS B -1. Ol'Roler , Kirk Elliott, NHYC; 2.
Travieso, Terry Lingenfelder, SDYC ; 3. Ghost,
John Reynolds, NHYC.
CLASS C -1. Spirit, AJJen Brown , Voy agers
YC; 2. Midnight Sun, Dick Arneson, SDYC ; 3.
Shenandoah, Bill Palmer, NHYC.
CLASS D -1. Intrepid, Mike Schachter, BYC;
2. Bigwig, Ron Melville, BYC; 3. Renegade. Sandy
Purdon, SDYC.
PHRF -1. Sneaker , Donaldson/Morris,
LBYC; 2. Monopoly, Peterson/Rowe, NH YC ; 3.
Sidewinder , Richard Bluel, BCYC.
HOUSTON
TIMES
MARCH. 1981
Fll())floSTON fJ ~. 1 ~t . . =t
3:IOPM•
3:34PMt 5:30PM
·~~·
Compare fare.'> between Los Angele.'> and
Houston. You' II find nobody beats our $89 fare.
It's avai lable on our 8:25 morning night. And the
rest of the day. there's no lower one-way fare than our
S 109 unrestricted Coach fare . Make reservations now:
scat.'> are limited
Next compare Continentafs on· time perfonnance
record with other airline.'>.
Continental reports that in the late t nine
month period. nearly 90% of all Continental
flights system-wide, departed-on time.
So save yourself time and money. Call your
tral(cl agent. company travel department or
Continental Airl ines.
be able to exchan1e them for Kemper tlcktll at
half price. In other words, a $12 season ticket to
tbe Women>s Kemper Open w11J cost only $6 with
each Olympia ticke t exchttnged. The same for the
d ally variety.
fluhter is concerned abou.t the success of th/
coming evt nt.
"We're all holding our breath and hope it is go-
ing to fl y this year," he says. "The key Is 1oln1 to
be the num ber of people that come through the
gate. If they are not willing to pay the price of
tickets thia year. I don't know what they would
pay. It is one of the best buys for any women's
tournament in Southern California, if not the entire
country. If the tournament doesn't go across, I may
become a tour caddy next year,'' Ruhter adds.
I F YOU ARE AN experienced caddy and are
interested in signing up to work at the Women's
Kem per Open, a mandatory meeting bas been
called for Thursday in the Fairway Room of Mesa
Verde Country Club.
At that time, procedures will be explained and
a drawing will be held to determine the order in
which caddies are assigned to the LPGA pros who
have requested local caddies.
Standard bearers also are needed and they
will be drawn from the ranks or caddies who are
not picked to caddy for a pro. lndivlduala Interest·
ed solely in 11tandard bearing duties should also at·
tend the meeting. • .. •
IT'S A WAYS AWAY but mark the date on
your calendar for the Capistrano Valley Tourna·
ment at San Clemente Municipal Golf Course April
25.
The event ls sponsored by the San Clemente '
Savings and Loan Association and profits will aid •
the day care facilities offered to the disabled
senior citizens of Sout.h Orange County
This group offers aduJt day care services,
nutritious hot meals, special tr a nsportation,
recreation activities and counseling to residents 60
and over who are moder ately handicapped. The
center is located at 154 Avertida Victoria, San Clemente.
Further details and registr ation which in-
cludes a $50 donation to the San Clemente Seniors,
may be made by calling 498-2020 or writing to San
Clemente Seniors, San Clemente Savings a nd
Loan, 621 S. El Camino Real, San Clemente.
The event will get off the tee at 10 a.m. and
will be conducted in four handicap flights
''Pressure Fused''
We ™~ producl!'d million~
o l cop quality rl!'trl!'o1ds wllh
chi!' ~st recreo\dlng equ11>
ml!'nC oWo\ilabll!' Cod<\yl Only
f11s1 quo\llty. 1horoughly
l nspl!'c led Co\Slng~ Me
selectl!'d for our relll!'.ldlng
procus. GET YOURS AT
DORMAN'SI
lfor
2~
DOllMAN'S LIMITID RlTilEAD WARRANTY
Uferime limited w.irr.inry .ig.iinsr defect In workm.in·
ship .ind mclten.ils, free repl.icement up to S/32;· "her
5/32" rhere wlll be "charge of 50% of tlsr puce down
to 2/32:' No .idjustmenr will be .illowed .1fter 2,32"
POLY--FOURS
BLACKWALL
B78X 13 ______ z for SZ5.00 *
D78X14 Zfo r S25.00 *
E78X l4 Z for S25.00 •
560X 15 Z for SZ7.00*
600X 15 2 for S27.00 * * Plus F.E.T.
No lfa<le -ln Needed
No rhump Polyesrer Cord resists ff.it sporting
.ind .innoying cold start rhump
WHITEWALLS
SIZl PlllC.l ru
878-13 30.00 I 71
C78-13 30.00 I 84
C78· 14 30.00 I 87
(78-14 31.00 2 04
f78-14 33.00 2 14
G78-14 15.00 2 28
H78-14 11.00 2.52
G78-15 36.00 2.36
H78-15 18.00 2.57 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
All SEASON
4()00
rtSS/80Rt3 m ,, S2
Aggreulve ro1dlo\J treAd detlv('r!> l!'xcelll!'n! •o"d g11pp1ng '"
clon In o1lmo!>t o1ny wl!'Ather P Ml!'mc !>pe(lflCo\tlon\ o\llows ror
more Air pressure. combined with rAdlo\I conscrucclon. meo1n\
lu s rolling reslstAnce o\nd greo11er luel s.1Vings Two polyl!'ster
body piles o1nd two A~rglASS bf:lls combine 10 give " \mooch
ride And SllO"S 1111!' body
RoAd Kilts )0,000 Mlk H.odomwtdt U..lttd WanMty lloMI King
Gl.lu llM11Al Is wM•M>1ed co gl~ you l0.000 mMes of crell<1 weN "'
norm<1I p"ssenge• CM use on che s"me '"' If 11 d~s noc Co\l..e you• flrt
ro MY RoAfi King dt'Ale1 They II rep4<1ce r1 wlch" new one rree during
che flrs• I l2 Inch or cre<1<1 wtM or. chMglng you only ro1 che
mlle,.gc 1ecelved plus feder .. 1 eAclse CM bA.se<1 on 1he cuuenc "djusc menc prlu• 101 rceA<I wCM In t <eeU or I )2 inch r'roor ol mWtAgt'
1equlred II smAll ~rvke chArge m"y be "<lde<I Ask lor wrluen wM Mnty wilh eAcluM<>ns Anet de1ah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
~[I 11' -., Ir ·•• ".• t 1111 •
SERVI& SPB:.IALS
E'..I!_ • ) l hill Alln,, ... ,,..lfbl•lpuel"''~cJ''""'•'""-' ;,w ,.\ft,_., ..... ~ ~"":Jvft'"' EA.UBO D gir 088e8 no-~r ... ,, ....... ~~···•lw"f<•t!llo""""'""'•k< ror "'°" AIMllCMI &. forelg" Un with di~~ b<•ll4tS on
DISC BRAKE SERVICE RR'\kl 1-\\11111
\Ill '\II'' "•1 11 \1< I\
\\\II \Ill I Ill! ... It\\
lllW•lll<.11 \\1111111\\
DRUM BRAKE RWNE
549.~"·" 6491 ... H
"'''°''"~.r \4 CONTI N E~f L lroflt &. drum l)'P« bf•us on rH r Lisa Baker, a Ju.nlor rilbt-haoded pltcber for ,1 1SMeMULMTmwM1Nnr
EdllOll High' a softball team, threw a no-bitter for .... "°"' dlK poott-.""""""'"""" ,.. 289S-
elaht '-•-" .. •• and catcher Anpe llallotto bit a AIRLINES ~.,..,......w1tt1c11elw'wlluld in-• ............ -' th ,,,_, C)lllMtr. &. rood -CM 'IJMl'llD llAlll WMMlfn home run in tbe bottom of the elthth to •• ve e . a1 ., .... ..aUWl'EOwAUAHTY· 4995* ,., ........ .,.,.,......,."'.,.."
Cbar1en a 1-0 victory over Dana lUUa llonday ln '-"'""•"in·. 772.6000 • lk~rl Hiii• •lld San F<-niandn \lillf,: .,116 llMKJ lftc .... ., o1tot>1 1 ""''~NM rtMon . ........,, •--••d °' ........ '"''°'"'"• ~, the •.... ___. round of the •s•--cla •-·-am-t. !Nf*• ~ --.. ~~ .,._, .. ,.,. ~ "" .. """vuu £1 .._ .._.. u ..,.. Burbllnk. Glendale and na. 246-718.I •Loni Buth '7·441)0 _ -·--, 11."""' _ Baker, who bu recorded all ftve of Bdllon'• 0n1arit .. nc1F1mH .... Ot1a-6"6l •O..nstCt•un1y.,n.111• •11• .... .miu.now11UANTT· ,...._..,,,,,, __ ,.....,
-'--..... year (the Cbarien are 5--0) wW see IC· Ri~n11di!1ndSa11 1k1111n11111'1011 Frtt(I00).5ls.<12so ir.wde•.,"'foba '1 "11.P'n .. pi..c••.., ::::: ... -=:=:-...::..:;;: w~ Mu.9 S1n01briet V.lley:.579-•210 •S11111Mon1C111ndSou1h B•t M6·22WI "*lp.m«NN,.. dMM. rtlNIO tt.tt-o1 dwp.., ,,_.,. -fl/ -tion •lain Wednesday in tM third round of tbe C)'INlen.d•.,, .. ...._.,. .... o.ina'*1" 69fttc.* ....,. , 4\15---tou-·--t. ...... .. pte·att..S -· .,_ °" .... .. ...... ,...,,,~ ... --........... "" -,..... ..=:::· ... =__...== .. -----...-----~-----'-'----------------------1 *"""" ~ -....c;r _ ... "" ... ----·
lS,000 MIU fOB 40,000 MIU fOB
for most llmertcan &. foreign urs wtch drum cype bfAku
HERl'S WHAT WE DO:
I lnltAil bf.-., ~
l _,.... -dlum> l .._ '°"' whttl ~n
-r c}lndef'• ~
ptmG • o. ... .,,., ~ botUlrla pMtn
s . ..-... flom -~"""'·
6 ~l'l)ld·--· 1 ... -,..-.y duly bf--....s
·~ ................ 9 .._._,(~
I 0 Ito.ad -U1
I I
. I
MOTICI c.. .................. c-.. .., ... I,......., .... ~,........ ..... ...... ._..,..,
HALIQIST .. ,.. ....... u .. .... ... _ .. CIOI\' .. .....
• • • • • •
117-7234
Turn your
unm1bln
Into
usable cam.c.n
DaHyPllet
cl•ulfled ·
'42·5671.
............ 111
TWO HUGE HALLS PACKEO WITH
TAUCl<S ~TRUCKING EQUIPMENT Anlheim r.en11on Center
(Acrml""" ~
116 8* 11. lL 20 · 1 :oo to a:30 p.m. Daily
THE NUMBER ONE 1RUCK SHOW IN AMERICA
Open dally 8 -9. Saturday 8-6, Sunday 8 -5 . T-155
AMhelM
1280 N E11elid
(S. of Hwy. 91)
771..9140
•AMhelm
23'0 IN Uncol" Ave
999·1611
..... ,......
1040) ~l!Ofl,t Ave
(71•) 159.1041
• ..... AM
1604 $ • ..,,tot St.
(OM bloek S. of W•mcr
,..,.)
7'4·1UJ
luena Part&
S256 8uct. Blvd
(1o1 MAivern c\Crou
trom K.-Mlort)
(714) 994.1120
<:.o.e.a Mesa
17 )9 Superior Ave
641-UIM
S.nt.a Alta
••SN r~nch
aJS.lJSS
•s.....AM
1302 C.. 17th Sc
fSJ.6CNI
• fountAln Valley
9880 W1oml!'I Ave
(714) 964-6417
• J ulle rton
1•1 t lmperl.\I
(714) 7)1.6971
•fullerton
2978 Yo~ UndA
(714> 996·41IO
•t.. Mirada
I 5081 Imper\.\! HlghwAy
(JU) 947·5641
·~"VMfo
2'510 Alkl.\ r.·11kw"Y
951·917S
Oran1•
1100 N. Tustin
(Acrou ~om l'ost Olftcl!')
111.J OOO
W..TIB WUWlllW,_:
I
Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/TUHday, March 17, 1981
~·--------------------------.... ~,-----------------------..
NBA
WHTlllN CONflllllNCI.
l'Kllk Olvl•leo\ w L l'<I 01
a P"oen•• SJ n IOI
a L.•ll•n •• 11 UI
Porllano l• 34 110 ..
Golcle11 Slalt >• .)8 ... .. .
San Olego 1' " O J ..
SHUit JJ H HO 10 M••n• Otvtt •M
a $•n Anlon10 •I ll •21
l(•nwiC•h JI .Ml HJ 10
Hou\ton >• lq flO 11
OtnYer )I 0 "' u >
VIAii l• •• JSI 20 ' Ot ll t\ 11 u lo/ 34 ,
f.ASTf.ltH CON,EltENCE
Al~nll< 01Wlt1011
• Pn11•oe1pn.o \II II Ill
• 80\tOn $/ II /10 I
a Ntw 'l"0t' .. Jo) S9S I) '
W•V11nQtOt\ JI •O .. 1 1l
N ew Jtr\ftlf H H 10 )I I
C•ntr1t Oiv111on
SI 10 Ill 'f M1lw•u«M
lndi•n•
Cn•ct90 Alltnlt ci, .. 1.no
Otlro11
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)8 JI
l• 0
11 •I
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j()I 11
1'11 n •• »I 1/ I HJ lo
'f cl1nct~ dt¥1\1on 1111.-
• ·< hncrwa pl•yoft t>trth
MOfWlty 's Camt•
NOQtmeH<twdYIMI TonltM'•G•mH
Lthrs 41 0.11"
Indian• •I N•w YOf II, Atltlllt ti CltYl!l•nd
Ph1l•cHISJf'tte al Nf'W Jt,.\e't
llf\lort •I wu no1191on
Ultll •I S.n AnlortlO
Mllwtullff ti Cho<41QO
»•lllP tilt O.nvef
S•n Antonio al Pot lldnO
NBA playoff rices
t T wt• wt te•m\ QtHl1ty tor t~ N 8.A o•ayotfs
\I• trom t~n cont•r•nc.t ,,.._. two O•'"''°"
ch•mp1e>ns .not~ tour tt•m\ w1tn U~ nf'•t
C>f\I l'fCOteh » EASTERN CONFERENCE
A 80\fOn
a N~w 'IOfll
ln.d1•n•
(tuc•oo W•\runoton
• clH'l(,,,,.d 0•11va1f orttn
w L P<I G•
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H IO IJO J >
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•• J• s.i 11 Jt JI SOI 20
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M •r< n ti •I Npw r or 111. 1d ttt Pn11oa,.1on14 tt
v\ Nl'W Yon J1 v \ ( ll'"v,.ldnd 1• .ti Atian
t• )I "' Wchr.nq1on 1~., (.rue •OO
CHICAGO 11 Qtlmt"\ • nomr ) dWd\'J
M•rc n u 'i'\ M 1lw•u1ie• 1-; •' (it .-tii•no 10
Y\ Pt11l•CMlpt\1d di Ot"trOil 1• ... (lf',,,ldl'\d
)IV\ Atl4Wll•. ,,. di All'9nld
WA SHINGTON " ~·mt\ ~ nomt 1
awayJ Mdr(h 1f V'lt BO.\IO·n 10 di 80'\ton /1
v-, ••••nt;, 1\ "' Ntw Y(u • 11 i'lt lnd11n.t
18 "\ Oeitro•I. 1~ Y\ (ltYf'l,1nd
WESTERN CONFERENCE
w L Pct ce
• Ph0t-n1.e )j 11 /QI
• L•ll:•r\
• Sdn Al"lton•u
Porlland
4B H b )I 4 4
•I 18 ~I o
I• Jo S10 1'
K.tn\~H (tly
C.Oldon Sl~tt
HOU\ton
11 l3 ,qj 10
lo .18 'lo lb ,
Jo l~ •liO ti
G•m•\ r•m•1n1ftq
PORTLAND I 44mt\ 4 hOm" 1 «t•d-1
Maren 11 "' ~n 01,.QO 10 v\ HW\ton 11
"\t\ lt1•f'r\ 14 "'' ~h()fi'nit n ., '>f'•lfl .. 11
"' 0•11•\. ~ dt .,.n D•~QO
COLOEH STATE I ~""' ; nom• J
4 111t•YI ~tCh 11 11'\ HOU\IGn I~ •t S4n
01f'90 11 "'' Pftof'nt.tc 11 .., L"'.fr\ 1• •l
Ld~~' \ l) .,. ~n 0•"00 /8" 0,.nwt'r l'I di
St"•ll'f'
HOUSTO.,. I qdmt-• 1 no•nr \ .ttlllf•V
M•r<h le ctl (,OIMn 'lf41t I~ di Porll•NI 11
di .C.•nW\ •Iv 14 dt 0dtid\ 1) "'' "Mn An
10•·110 11 .. , ~ ttrt'•' ( ••,. I""' \•n Antonio
l(AHSAS CITY o,.mt6 I hornf' J
dW•'( Mdf<,, 18 Y\ 0f'tl"~' 10 Y\ ~ .. n Al'\
1on10 0 " t10U\1Uon /4 •' Utdn 1S 411
Pn~n·· ,, ,,, H()U\l(ln 7, .... lJ•llA\
NBA leaders
I Thro"'lh Swnd•Y 'qtmtU SCOR INC
q lq fl pi. ovq
D•nll•• Utan /1 UJ SI~ 110 JI I
M•lont •-4ou .. 1on lj I•• ~48 1041 1' U
Ver v1n Sttn Antomo t\ f&u 441# 10Jtl 11 J
AIMii Jb1><,Laon 11 10 m 111• n • I nompwn,C>l'n••• II bMI •O llY• HJ
Btrd\OnQ, K11n"t\(•1'f o• b)& 190lt.11H1
E•••nci, Pn11 I\ Ill l•l 1118 1• I
r ••• Ciolorn Sl•I• b() O• •B~ ,.,~ "I
M11<n•ll. CIP•tl8nll 1' 111 111 1&1/ 1• o
EnQlo\n l>fon••• IJ 018 Joi 111• n I Af.80UHOINC
q Oii dtf IOI tvg
MtloM HOY\lon I] 01 OJO IOOS 1' 0 Ntlfl s.... Ooeoo II 110 blO q40 11 0
Smolh GOIMll Sldlf I< )II •8• US II 0 11 .. d. Bo\lon /4 11• o]q llS II 0
Abdwl J-, u-on II tit 10 741 10 S
ASSISTS . ". . .. Ford l(•n••' C•IY oo SiO I I
Htao", u .. n 11 Ut I I
Porttr W4,htt"tQton ,,. o•t I 1
Arc h1CMIO 8o~lon 11 ~· I .. A1tn••asonNtw \'c><• 11 ISJ l b FIELO COAL PE RCENTAGE
C,tlmOff (hi ~
O•wk1n\ ~•l•Ott•P'\••
l(ono C.o•OtnSt•"
Mall•"ll Bo\ton
0 1 ntlf'Y U11n
•• • ... pct
\00 IV Ml)
l•• o\8 oOo
o\I 1098 1•1
'""" 011 ~ iJl ..... \o8
NCAA pl•yott echedule DIVISION I
IHI ........ , Somlh11•I•
tTIWt.Uy ti Allanlt)
Vorgln1t 116 ll •• hnM\...., pl 11
No••• Dame Ul s1 •• 8Yu cH.,
WHI R .. 191\tl Somlf111alt tTIMl..W.y at $4111 uh City)
Ulah 12S •Iv' Norlh Ctrolint 116 11 l(•n•H SI U3 II vt 11111>01\' UI II
MldWttl 11,.1ona1 Somllln•ls
, ,,1411,•t N ... 0r1 ... 110
Kanw•C1f.l1 Y\ WICh•IOSI us bl ArUllS ... U• II V\. LSU 11q J1
Mi<INtl lt .. lon•I Som1l1ft•I•
f F rodo •I Bloomington, Ind I
SI Joupf\ '· Pt U• " ., Bo\lon Coll-
111·•1
Indiana 111 ti •• Alal><lmt 81rm111Qt>•m
CH II
OIVl510N II
S.tlll'UY'• Somllif"lt (ti $tl<l~i.ld, MeU.I
Flornl• SoYIM•n 111 I I •S C.t l Poly ISLOl
lJ].IJ
Mount $t M,ery \ t 11 >1 V\ Wtuontu'\
Orton 8•Y I 1) 11
College
NIT TOURNAMENT
IS.C. .... 11-41 Purd,.. j(), Ot~Oft,.
M1nn•tot• ... (Oftne< lltul ..
So At-mt ll, c;.orqit /1 Ouk• IS, Alabtma 10
W11t VlrglftlA II Ttmptt I• (011
Syr•<-11, HOiy CroH SI Tuitt n Tt11u El Pootl
Women·• top 20
1 1.0U"I..,, Tt<h 150) JO 0 I ,SOC>
2 re .. ,,._ n s 1,17'
J, 010 0om1nl011 1S • 1.9'0 •use u • 1,0.. s cnnnev st. u 1 1,0..0
• 1(•111411 11 • 1,0S.
I Long BHCn S1 1'-t ti•
t Rultffl 1• ~ 111
'· Muyl.ncl 1 .. 1 t'° 10 a UCl.A tH. 41'
11 1Ca1111,uy to m
12. Ttxtt 11·1 J1t
11 •·H ~Ollfta St JO' )'S
u °'"°" ,... '" U.MI-• lM JIDO
I• """"'' ""'"" 1).10 w II C•lor.-ti • th 11 0r....,si ns ,.. u. O-el• M 11 • u• JO,,~ ,,., "
•·111(1_. Nf! .. t wl11 evtr S Cer041M
~ . ' . . ' ..
! xhJbltloft ·-•.u.c-.• (ti ,,... •• Arll.1
Celllor111• 100 100 000 1 1 o c111ce110 CNJ ooo 100 OO• -4 • 1
Wiit, Br-11 !ti, Bolling (II MICI R-.
MeOIOl/lell, Merli i.1. C•Udlll (1), Tlarow
tel tt10 81ao.well, O•v" !ti W Will L
M<Olotllen.
Tl .. "'· Otllfee"• 1•1 Vtro hK"• ,.I.I
Ottron 400 on too • 10 3 LOt Angaln 000 000 000 0 4 3 FIOryC,,, Aorema Cfl, Cappuntllo 111,
RuU•• It), Roll-&cl'lllO 191 •nO Perrish.
Atl.IU, Wrogl\I <•I. Ao.Ml Ill. Nladllfllue• Ill •nd Forguson B.,d (I) W Fydrldl
L Rtun • •oylls•. 1'11111~5
(II fort My•n, fla.I
Phll•CltlP"•• 110 :IOO 000 5 I 0
K•nw1 C•t• 000 21) 000 • 10 •
W••k. 8ru\1:•r '''-At1am1tano '"· MtGraw Cit "'° Me(ormacll Spllttortl Mtrhn UI, OY1se<1berry C 11 alld Wat...,,,
SlaugM Ill w Mtrl1n L AlttmlrtllO
HR,·Pl'l1l-lpftlt, S<l'lm10t l(a111e1 Coty,
011> Pnelp;
""'"" s. lfWllAlll J 1•1 SUll City, Arll 1
Cto•el•M 000 000 002 2 • l Molw.tullff 100 010 Ola S t I
Donny, (uofl•r tS11 C.lt.e• Ill Monge Ill .,.., Haney c BMIOO Iii Vu<l<O•I<". 1.trth
10 , 8trnoro (II, Po•IO• <II ond v .. 1 w V11tk.ov1cn L·Dennv HR\ Cl•v•l~no
Cage M11w.oukH, C-r
......... s.A'SJ
l•I Sot-I•, Arla.I !.an Oo•go 000 001 OU 5 I ~
Oakland 000 100 OJO 4 11 1 El(l'ltlt>ervt•. Ar m\trong C•I. Sumon Ill,
Snow (81. Boone 1•1 and iC•nn•ov. Fttwv ttl.
Norr ... L•e•v (ti 8Hrd c 11. SoYH "' .,.d Newm•n,Hulhlll w !./low,L Buro Plrat., 1, CtrdlMIJ l
l•t ludenlOft, Fl•.I SI Louil 700 100 000 J I I
P11ISOyrql'I 110 011 01• I 10 2
M•rlone1, Mtrlln tll, (lldmberla1n 161,
Little •81 Mid Portr-r. Brummer C \J, 81bbv Solomon l•1. Aloi• c11. Mthltr 111. LH cq1 ano Oil w Solomon L Mtr1111
t1R P•fl\OourQh. P•r•rr
Rod Soa •. Eapot 5 C•I West Ptlm llH<h. Fl• I Bo•lon JIU 010 000 ~ ,. 0 Mon11u1 OlO 000 001 S 10 I
E<ller\ley, s1an10 ISi Ct ur 1•1 •nO
S<nm1dt Rooirrs EnQI~ t 4f worO\•m ••». ,:,..,mt1n 19 So-. ... 19} .tnd R•mo\ V1ton•u\
ttf• W Ec11.er\IP1 L A09tr~
~nnff\t,.G1•nhl 1at PMen1a, Aril l
~•111• hlO 000 101 ' 10 l Sa11 l'r.tnu.co 001 01) 100 t ll 1
ADOotl Don Glotlon \I Mt H•nr y II L
Anoerso.n "' •nd Si-.•oo,.. "'•"on t11 8olt•no ,,, C,rtU1n. Alt•dnO&r I \t HOHMtO
t41 •nd un1.-1onn W McHenry l HollMld
HA Sulit~ At>Mrson
Ot'1ot" l. ar •we\ I
(•tM•Mn••
AUant• 000 Oto utlO I ,.. I
B•llomorr 001 010 00• l I O
Hdnnd Bradloro 4 Mehlf'f 181 •"d
NdnOteHJr,~ ~f~r1Qnt I; ~IOl'W f:ord 0~
I M.trltrwt 18' ctnd C,ttth.4m .. 4uPpf'rt ~ti• w ')tont> l .-.dnno MR AH6t"t•. Pocorocu
Whole Soa •. Moh S (•I SI Ptltnbur9, Fla. I
(..h•t •Qo•AL.• •oo a10 u•o e. Y t
Ne w YO,. o Nll 001 001 100 S 10 1
8urn\. HIJ'fl lbJ Hotfrnc\n I /J •nd Hill,
(Ol~rn 111 Smith ll"d''f ''' -'""" HL Gl.,.nn ,q, .tnd r'l"v•no w Hollmdn L Allen
HR\ (..n1tdQO, <..01oPrn Ntw Vorll. Normdn
Reeb 12, A•lros 10
UI Coco.t, Fl• I
C..HH 1nnd!! ll:K> 000 101 11 '' 1 HOu\lan OOJ UIU Jll 1r 0
P•\tor• lir110 '" ".M.IW,, .. , u, K•n .,.ttn
•91 ttnd Noian. Cntl\lma\ '' qytln 'wHon
ll ). M o"-OorMld lf1 600 Pu1ol\ W Pa\fOff'
L Rr.tn HRs (1nt1nn .. u 1 O~\lt'ir CiflHPlf
E \,.)\" y Hou\ ton (rut
College scores
USC ; (d• SI LO• An9"'•t\ I
Or•I Aobrert~ 10 U(...LA I
North4!rn Anzorw I Pcunl Lom1 l
Mt"m1 1()ruo1 -A M1•m, Fl• I 1
Nf''t.Od L.n Vf'Qd\ I Nf'bf.t\k.t ~
Community college
SOUTMEANCAL(ONFEltENCE
~ .. n10 ~ld) LA ~vtn ...... \t J
High school
V1U~ P•r-111 4, Oc:e•n Ytew J
0Cfdn V1tt"'11 000 ,.. ) l • t
V1lf* Pirk 101 '* I 1 c M ••not-r Re1nnot11 4 l n I M•IOM'(
'>tQO'f'•d Cr•nford 11 t...r •mC•On OJ,
Mt llC.4V f l M\d F•'W~W S..90w11 l
(drl•nlH'r 11 11 t1R M{r<.c1-1 (\l•lt• P•ru
0
NHL
WALES CONFERENCE
H0<r1t 01v1\lon
Montr~••
K 1A9\
P11t~OUfQh
HArltOrd
u roil
W L T Cl' GA Ph .au 1 ~ 11 140 1'A ~1
.II! 11 10 1~1 h I 11<o
11 Jl 10 111 JIO b•
·~ Jb •• 1S8 J)t u
I• ,. I• 111 211 \1
Ad•n'H D1v1\1on eu"a•o JJ " 1~ 11• 110
Ho\toti JI ,, II 181 1•1
Minn• '1d ]I ,. 10 1~· lJ•
0'-IPOt: 1> •I /I~ , ..
T tHOnto I• II 111 Ill
CAMP8ELLCON~~~ENCE
P•trt<ll 01vu1on
tit Y f\l11m0t'r' I/ ]IJ JIJ
Pn1ldOf'lotl1.i .)<! II 11 is• ns
t •IQ•tf •• II 1) l•J HI
N f RinQO" /) I• ,, 111 1•1
'tYtt\n •nQIQtl 11 31 I• /II 1114
Smytht 01v11o1on
')I L.OU•\ •I " IS JI / /Je
C.h1cc100 18 11 " 11' lU V11ncou'ter /0 ll 11 n1 1u
Edmonlon B l • I) 190 lq6
toiorado lu •0 10 lll JO•
W1nn1pe9 8 ~1 17 11' ]}()
11 (ltnt.~CI dt'i'l\IOl'I lltlt
MOnO•y't Score
E Clmonton 1 P1 tf\OurQh •
Tont9ht'' G•mtl O.;tfaio di Konqs
Our~c. At Otlro1I
MonHf'•I .it NY t~l4no~f\
P1tl\burQh •t Vancouvttr
High KhOOI volleyball
ORANG( COUNTY TOI' TEN Lt9Ul\AIWach CAIW"r-V•ll•~
M•t1M (t1tl S•nCl..,..nt•
S trvuw
• E•I-.. I Co•ta~
t Nt•-ttt.rbor
'· Corona OOI MAr 10 Edison
Clf •guno !Wach
1 ~•nl• Mon•<•
l CaPlt1rA110 V•llty
• S•11 Marco.
s S.111• &.,bar•
•· S•n Clemente
1. M•rona I LOyOla
t Mlra eotl•
10 1rv1,.rne1 Oo• PU41bCO\
MIOHICHOOt. IC .. DUlll
Nnpott...,.
T""'', Mt<Cill 1 '--'• ci.-1
IS
" II
61
.0
•• ..
II
ol
60
~
10
H st
}() ,.
.. t .. ~II 21•4he<h Cl''" lllvltal._I
(home/, 10• t'll ,
Tllvtt., ~'" fOj""' (~I Tllwr\., .-.,11 I ., feut11.in V•llev'
'9t , "41rll • Cl\tlfty I Mll1•tloll91
Thwrt , ""'" • Al\«lne' "'411 I0-11-Qr .... '-IY lnvlf•t19<MI •I
MIHI"' Vle19
S.t A.-11 It 411 Arc.-• lllYlltlltNI
'""''·· "•'" n H1111t111tt•11 •H<"' 1i.-1
Wff , A!Wll 1' Wtttln1Ml9f' IM!MI
Twe• .• M9Y .-. ~ prellm1 •I .._. lflttell a..t11 '~rl., '1My t ~ llMI• tt Ht""ll"919ft ... (ti
• _.....,,....l.•9tlltdll•lm.et
Alld11.6IMethMJ U
Htatl tchool ,_,,.."valley it, a... An11..,. • ., ......
Plkulln (l'VI IOtl to Pr•tl. l>4, del. LY.1•6,
cltl. Ad•M• by d•l•ull, 0•1 Ryu, •·A;
Spoori•t (fl/) ICKI, .... won W , 6~, t ·2; SacMI
l'VI Iott 2 .. , won• 0, rtllr9d, "'°" .. 2. •~.
~•uo11n lFVI won by <Mf•Yll, '°'' 2·•. _, H .H
0...111 ..
0Y<h•n•n CllYIOng IFV> def Pllll•· Pompeo, • I, •·1, Otl VOii.iig HOY, • I, •• ,,
A•mo• Miller I FYI won• I,,_., •·l, •·2
~ •H<ll 24, llU.aMi. t
si,..1 ..
Lu eh 1L81 Cltf B•..S Fltgg, •·I, Cltf
Brog(I \, • '· '"•b0m1. lost by dtlau11 lo ln•bOmo, 001 Gllcnr .. 1, •~ Brumlltld CL81
WO" • I, I S 6 I, 10\I Dy CMl•ull Se .... nlt
ILBI #Oii • • 6 4 • < •• C-n IL81 IO>I
l•,O•.-•• •I
0....111•• Lt\hP 0.YIOW>n tLBI dtl B•ro-r 8rown
• ), ~ 1 <Mt Sl>lur ·JOhn Fl•Qg, .~. l>o1,
C•poD1.on<C>Junqc1.-IL81 wort o O. 61, • 1,
• 1
MAlw Oo1 U, MArint U
Sl ... I•• HOol\till CM) lo~I to l(lton, 0·6, 10\l lo H•ll . o o, oer Rtugoer. • J oe1 Rttowo.o, 1>o1. Solon (Ml totl 0 •. It, S·I. won O·I.
A•<h•uon CM) lo\I 0 •. won I S, IO\I 14, won
6 ), AQhOUO CMI IO\I I 6, S /,won •·2, •·l
Dov111 ..
H•lloy Chall•" IMI •Piii with Goll1i1lt1
0DY11tn, • O 61. •Pl•I w11n 01\0n-Wfllo•m•. s I, 0 3. (how Cre•\On IMI IOU,•-•. l·I, -6 o .• I
Women
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Or•nee CNtl •. s.11111 ... 0 > Slntlff
A ftd l occ I IHI Gentle r.tn, , S, • , . Goel·
1\cr1 tOCCI 001 Limon, 0 2, • I, Gtrlleld
10CCI oor Al'lltr\, • " 01, Kl'lorey COCCI O•I L•m~rl 6 l, 6·3 TriDolel ISi def
OrHt11n. 6 2 Io Wollok ISi O•f Elwin, 6 '.
0 ... 111 ..
C.•'''~10 Knorrv 1occ, Ottf C.ens1crw,... Ahlt•\ O 0. SI IS vot'll\<h Ano lOCC1
Jpf L •mon L•mbt-rl. o I tt 1 l r1t>olrt
Ntlht.. ISJ ~t Or.Hntn E1111n. I •. 4 • •I
Lo•Alamltoa MONDAYS RESULTS
t ltllloHO·ftl ... I ll•r•n me .. 111e l
F--1r\t r•u-Pu.11f' \ war Cn1pt l (r•rw>,
11 tO, I 10 J 60 (.K humA Ct11•• t Lonoo1 2 60.
J .. 0 El TorPonto 1SonntlvllhU '* 10 \1 ~••ct•
•I 11 Pil•<IO• 10
Stitond ,.,,,. \llv•t \ ~l.,let (\lillttn
01ngh~m1, I JO, • 1U J 00 Porl Sl•r ICirun Oyl, ) 60 c 1tJ Hunter' C,010 •C•mPDell/,
) 10
frurd '"c.•· ICft'ctl G.-m tl•ckP'tl. I bf)
J 00, 1 80 l<ttwctt<tU C,old tCttmPt>ell.l1 1 •Q
1 40 lnC:Wc.1\1"''' 1 \nf'tf'n) l IO Sl e••ct:.
fij I 1 P-•aUO IO
J"vu,lnr\Kf WrtnQVlllt lO\t>o,,,>.1810
,. 00 l •0 fo, r1\J tlt'•u 10 Ht1t"n1 • 00 '00
~fH ~lO"Qul JJO
.,_ lflP, r.cr Andp \ Ovndmo l Kurb•f'r)
l'<I .. 0 I JI) .a 40 Urctnpctr1t. bflllOy tSherrttH,
l •O 180 MV P "'Ulldfl 4Jl0 Uha<t.I
t J I 1 P••tU\) 10
>1.,1n 'lKfl Ru\f•C Xoll tGrurt0y1 S lO
J 00 1 60 -y lllYO Longo 1 2 IO 1.0
N•t1wf' Plctym•-.t'r ()fnr11\I J .O
Sf' .. fntn •dtt W1ntd110 t\n1nn1 I •O 4 .O
J .. u C,rtt,,tt S.tt 'Wdn••uJ. ~ 10_ • 13. OfY.
~•<' t LQn90~ 1 40 '1 •Attt t• t l tJ SN•d
"' 00 \I Pie .. s.... j. 1 l 0 )I P••O u 116 .a w1tn
1n,, .. i11r1nn1nq ti<~f'I\ 1~u "°'~" U P1c ir.. Si.a
<On\ol•l•un P.ft•CI \'18 .O "'"'" 11 #1nn1nq
It -. .. h f1v• f\Ot ~\
£1orun r~·· Pot Luc11. \ hP\I O\oorn'
11 00 ~ 00 ., 80 W1n\Ofl"tf 6o't tSonnttv1llf'1
• 10 I 10 fop lo"" SM"~'" • 00
Ninth,..,.. I \J\ ~1CutOltt1 11 IO S 00
t 40 Gtt•w•, Perry1 J "° 1 •0 G•rry A-;r
Ot\Omer' 4 OU U~•dC I• It. HP••dUI 80 •tttnCS.ntt' ),,,,
Misc.
Monday'• tran•actlon•
8ASE8ALL NA llONAL l EACIVE Anriouncod ,,,.
rtt1rf'mf nt Of Andv 01'\ttn. umpire, tffect•Y•
1mmf01•lttl'f
H•llOMI Le•tue NEW VO~K M(TS S1g11.a Doug Flynn,
-...c.ono O.\l'rndn to • t1w vt•r \1 mllhon
conlr•c.I FOOT•ALL Ntl-tl F..,llMll L.,,.,.
LOS ANC-.E l ES RAMS H•meo Jim
V•<n1~.,,.11 .. \O .. C••I , ... ,,,~ <O.<.n Nlmed
Htrt> Patf"na 11neo.<11t.W\ co.en.•"" Frank
l auttrour n..\fM\1'te-l1M co.en HOCKEY
NtloOMI Ha<hy l.ea-b0S I 0 N BRUINS Annoyncea lh•I
l(f'1tn Crowder r1oht w1n.v n•i been "'"'
~n<lfod ror lwo g•m•• Dy tl>P NHL 1or 0.1119
Inf' fir \t pl.tyf'r Olf t"°f CJto~h '" IP\.e Ftb 2•
80\tOn M1nM\OI• 1>r•wl f••m fmed U.000
o-; ""NHL.\ d ftWH OI ben<h Cl••rtt"f9 1n
< 1dtnt 1n th4'1 ~n'\f'
OETAOllAEOWIHGS AoctlledO.n
'"' Poion1tn cft'nttr from Adiron60<k Of ttw
Amf't u, 6t\ Hoc kt"'( lt~u~
MIN NESOIA NORTH STARS -An·
,,ountf'O ·~•' Steve P•yrw left wi"9. hAI DHll \Y\l)en""° IOI CwO O•mu Dy IM NHL lor •DY\1119 • 11nt1men our Ing• ~ell el Hr.
1n9 Drtwl tt Bo\lon on F.et> 16 Foned Olen
Sonmor. cote l'I, • 1.000 lor hi\ post·o•m• ,o,..
dYtl on f"tb lb Flnod llW NO•lh Sl•r
trt11n,h1M \3,000 ., a rt,ull of the Feb. U in-
<10••11 PHILADELPHIA FLYERS Wert lllled
$1 000 Dy tne NHL I01 l••tong to resl••ln ll>eor
01aytr> from 1eaw1ng Ille ~nch during • Feb 2• bench CIHr1no 1ncloen1 wltl'I \1•<1·
<ouvtr C•n1o1tk\ Announceo Ch•t Fr•nk
8•1ht, ClfofonMm•n, WH lln.O UOO for his
SM'I 1n the 1nc1dflnl OVEBEC NORDIOUES Announetd INI
M•r10 M•tO•\. tormer V•ncouvtr Cit·
ren.em•n, ""' """ loneo UOO by IM INgue os • rewlt 01 ti. DMCl'I c1earln9 1nc1oon1
~lw .. n vancouvtr eno Pl'lll~elpltlt
VANCOUVE R CANUCKS -Wtrt lltwd
•1.000 DY tne NHL lor l•lllng to rettr•ln their pl•ytrl from IM••llll tow De«ll dYrl119 • Ftb 1• bencl'I <I N•lng •n<kMlll with ,,.
Pl'ltlAOelpftlt Flytr\
Women'• gymnHtlc•
COMMUNITY COLLllGI
Gal-w.tt t17.U, OtMf9 CNtt llJ.11
VAi.iii I ~Inger tGWCI, I U, VMv.,
""" l s..rrnoer tOWCI, •.u . 8AIMIU tMam I HOlll'IWf' IOCCI, 7.SS, 1'1-••· t r<llMll I Trwtb'( COCCI, I I; All..,,_,.,
I $prlll(ltt IGWCI, J1 10
Community college eoftHll ~W"ll,LAH•n.rl
LA Hlr-000 000 0-4 1 S Goldoll WHI on 202 • 1 s J l'oll .. I, Danqul (JI .,.d Wl ... S, HOIW .. 11
•fWI Hlomeri W Honr•tll 11·0). L l'ofltll.
or.,... CN1t 11 ......... .tc., st. J
Lone .. ec.,M•t• 010 ooo 100 000-2 •s 2 Ora11 .. eotst 000 002 000 001-J 5 1 Murplly Ind Sm'flll; Curt .nd Cru1. w-
C11ll L Mtolr!lllY
Hlaft ec:hoot eoftb•ll ,. __ 1, o .... """.
O•na Hiit• 000 COO -...0 0 0 ldllOft 000 000 01 I I I
lllvlt1'9 tn4I TllomH, ••-tr alld Malletto w-1.-., 1~1. i. "M•r•. "11 -M111.n1.
11Mrt11e ti, llM ltl(a t
l'e<lf'" 100 00 J I
Mtrlll1 J• I >a 11 10 J
Cllftse0, k lrtet m MMI •r-; fi.tc,., l llf MerCOll W-f'lttc~r ll·OI . L-Cllf'IK• H HMltMlltll, flet<~, hf'f'Y
CMul11e 1 H Cr•lt (Mtrllll l Mll-
HellAM\ltll IMtrlflel
yFOR THE RECORD/ BASKETBALL
West Virg~ia a d vances
Mountaineer• nip Temple in NIT thriller
From AP dllpaut.ea
MORGANTOWN, W . Va. -Dennis Hosey and
Donnie Gipson sank crucial Cree throws in the Clnal
minutes or ,.overtlme to llrt W est VlrginJa lo a 77·'76
victory over Temple ln • National Invitation
Tournament thriller Monday nlgbt.
The victory, W est Virginia's 19th in 20 home
games Utis season . sends tbe 22·8 Mountaineers in-
to the quarterfina ls at Minnesota Thursday .
Neither W est Virgin ia nor Temple was able lo
open a lead of more than six points in the tight,
tensely played game. So~homore guard Diego M cCoy scored West
Virginia's first five points o r overtime a fter
Temple's Alton McC ullough missed a l 5 ·foot
jumper with two seconds lert In regulation that
would have w o n the ~ame
Due defea•• Al~ 7S-7e
DURHAM, S .C . K enny Dennard·scored 2S
points and Vinet Tay lo r added 17 as Duke beat
Alabama, 75-70
Dutte, 17 12, will m eet Minnesota. which de-
feate d Conne<.'ticut. 84·66. in a quarterfinal game.
Duke. 17 1 2. will play a l Purdue in a
quarterfina l game Thursday night.
Duke he ld a 61·58 le ad late m the second half
when Tay lo r hit a free throw to e xtend the lead to
four. Tay lor, w ho s h o t Jus t o ne o f five fro m the line
in first h alf. hit two more free throws with 2 :55 re·
maining t o J(ive Duke a s ix-point advantage, 64·58.
Syra.-ue rout• Holy Cro••· 11·!i7
SYRACUSE. N . Y Leo Raulins and Erich
Santifer combine d for 4 l points Monday night as
Syracuse ran over Holy C ross 77-57.
Rautins. a 6·8 s ophomore transfer from M in-
nes ota. scored 21 points and pulled d own 10 re·
bounds a s Syracuse ran its record to 20-11.
Syracuse h osts Michigan in the quarterfinals
Thursday
Sant1fer ftnts h ed with 20 points an the game
played before 18.750 spectato r s in t he C arrier
Dome.
The v ict o r y w as the fifth Mra1ght m pos tseason
play after Syr acuse finis h ed with its w o r st regular
season in a decadl' and was e xclude-0 from the
NCAA tournament for the rirs t tame in nine years .
Tuba •urt•lre• El POiio rally. 12·61
TUL-'ii\. Okla Mikt· Ander son hit t~o free
thro w s with 12 Sl'C'Ond.., lt•ft as Tuba s urvived a
Curio us Tl'Xas El Paso mil} for a 7267'1ctory
Th e 11 1ctory m<He'o Tul:.a into the
quarterfanab, whc.'re 1t will ho:.t S()uth Alaba ma
F riday nag h l
Tulsa oubrored th(• M inc•r.., 25 5 t o break a w ay
from a 'l7 25 first half def1c1t tu lead 50·32 early in
the s econd half
T h e Jlurnranl' wa:. still uµ by 18 at 65·47 with
5 :44 le ft w hen UTl<:P mounted its comt>back.
Purdew hfJld• flit Da'11fltt. 50-·16
WES T LAFAY ETTJ-:. Ind F o rward Mike
Scearct' had thn·1· l.ta:.kt•ts and two a ssis ts in the
final seven minute:.. helping Purdue hold o rr
Dayton. 50·46
D ayton was forced t o play mos t o f the game
without M ike Kan1esk 1. its leading scorer a nd re
bounder for the sea son The 6 lO Junior cente r
spr a med hi:. right anklt' taking a JUmp s hot al the
17 .02 mark o f the firs t half
HP w:.s sent t o the hos pital for X -rays. at half
time a fter soaking the ankle in ice
Scearce beRan hl• spurt wtth 6: &4 remainin&
with a tip-in, glvln1 Purdue a 31·38 ed1e.
So. Al••••• ftfps f#erwf-. 1:1•1%
ATHENS, Ga. Ed Ealna h it two pressure
free throws with four seconds remaining to eive
South Alabama a 73·72 victory over Georcia.
Rains. who Clnishe d wltb a game·hlah 25
poin ts, hit the free throws after Georgia bad called
three c onsecutive time-o u ts before h e went to the
line.
South Alab ama. whic h trailed 70-65 with less
t h an three minutes r e maining, advances to the
NIT quarterflnal!t with a 25·5 record.
H erb Andrew h ad two k ey baskets in the late
comeback a jumper from the right corner with
2: 57 remaining a nd a lO·foot jumper In the lane
with 2: 12 lo go. cutting the lead to 70-69.
SOUTHWEST
T IMES
TO PHOENIX
\ 9:35 AM
5:28PM
\I \Kl II. l'>l<I
TO TUCSON
10:05'AM
4:15 PM
TO EL PASO
8:00AM
10:05 AM•
10:30 AM
•rth'l'M•
TO S"ANANTO?'JIO
7:10 AMt
PM
9:35 AM•
10:30 AMt
6:05 PM
1:30 AM•
( 1olllllll111,tl \lrlllll'' l I llllllllll'' Ill llll'l'I llll'
11,yd, ••I hu,, 11,,,,·k1' """ "'"''·111,·111
,,hnl11I,., .111d 'lljll'C1t1t 1111 llllK' f1'.'tlt1r111,11tll'
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111n111l1j'l'll•11.I. IK',11" 'HI', 111 .di { 11n11111·111,il
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< ·, 1111111,·111.1' .\1rl111,.,
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CONTINENTAL AIRLINES ~ ,, .. .... • H II ''. I ' 11tl \ .11 ., .. , ''"'!Ji' II ol' ' l 1'1 •"I •I II . ,, ' ;H•1
I• I' I ., ... ,. I 11•11 ' Ii I
~! ' II I • ,, ' .• ... 111 , ........ " .. , .. ,111 H" ,, .. . ..
We're going y_our wa~
&
''Last year. I discover·
ed it was cheaper to ride the
bus than to maintain a
second car for the sole
purpose of going back
and forth to work. I've
been riding the bus to
work ever since. OCTD
takes me to work, to
the bank or to my favor·
ite restaurant for lunch.
I've even used the bus
to take my wife out
to dinner.,,
Dick Greer
Budget & Research
Supervisor
City of Costa Mesa
More people are riding
the bus to work, school
and shopping because
we've made It so easy
with new buses, new
routes and Improved
service.
Don~ w•ste your money at the o•s pump. S•v• money and ride
the bus. SOC Is •II It costs one
w•y on regul•r routes.
Our friendly phone ~r•tors
will help you plan yoor trip on
the OCTD bus. If you need sched-
ule Informal/on, we 'II send It to
YoU-FREEI
Call
836-RIDE
'90YIC• OP It.UM.IC Witt• CCIPf-•lt h City Ctet1(1 Office, lrvlM City :ro tal ll•r U. Eftllr llFN 1.°"'8n of h H•lb1191J..,.,,._ llloM, lrvlM. CaUfoml1. W.....,. of University Df'tW'lft ·-.r1 atj ef ·Wdtten •nd or•I records from •ny
lrvllte · '"°"' Culvet' Drive tD tM SM DIM a=-inpenon or &f'OUP re .. rdJne th• Fr•N~l~-r.·s HEREBY GfVEN tMt the City Ing ~~! = :;=a::n:r::.
ftf trvlM wlll con4uct • Pulttk HMrtno to Public HMrlng Recordl wlll be -.. oplft 10
COMMllr the l!nglneerl.. Desltn ,..._... for days after the Publk HNrlng until April 3, 1'111 the wtdlnfng of University Drive from cutver during Which period letters or any statement
Drive to the s.n Dleoo F,.....y. may be lncluc:ted In the ...cord. These may be
The HMrlf'O wlll be held on Tueldlty, AUrch malled to:
24, 1"1. at 1:30 p.m. In the lrvlne Council Mf. G • ..._. MKllew
Ch1mben, 11200 Jamboree Road, trvln• Dlnctw el ,....le Wwu CaJlfOmla. _.. ' City el lf'YI•
TIM hearing 11 scheduled to afford the 171M J..-1,.. llNtl
opportu1Uty for publlc participation on lrvl•, Cal ...... • tl11J conalderatlon of the Design features and Dated: Fetwuary 23...c. 1911 Environment.el Documents. the Environmental Nancy '-· Rowland
document, maps, drawings and other City Clerk Information are available for Inspection and Published Orange Coast Dally Piiot, Feb. PUllUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
°"1 LIFE AN O A CCIDENT A N O
HEALTH
SY"IOPSIS OF THE ANN UA L
STATEMENT OF COMMERCIAL
8ANIC ER$ LIFE INSURAN CE
COMPANY, 1401 0o .. St., Svite.550.
N••P<>r1 BMcll, Calltornla '26'0
YHr ended Oeca.nDer 31, "90.
Tolel tclmlllecle>Mta Ul,IOJ,11•
Totel llabllltles u.oo ,ttJ
C•plte1 pelo"" 600,000 Contrll>ullon Corllllctlt S,000,000
Gron palcl In •nd
conlri"'*" wrplus J,Jt•.•Y
Speclal Sur"plus F-• o
Uneulgneo tunos Uuro1u11 IPS•.•tJI
G•ln ILOSSI lrom-r•ltons J37,Jl0
ln<r•• .. IOotcr-1 In Cepttel
•"4 Surplus d\lrlng 1990 •.•1S.no lnsvren<e In FO<c.t
N•ll-ide 1, lOt,IJS,000 Acclcltnl MIO hetllll prenllums
lnwrence In Force "·'" Ct llf0<nle Business Pe91
AttlOenl -hetllll SH,OP,019
e>remlvms-Olr•<I C1lllOf'n1e
Buslntts P... 1 IJJ "' We llerlDy tot<llly 111•1 Ille' a!M.•e
Items •r• In •tcoroence wllll the
Annutl 51atemenl tor Ille yu r HlcleO
Oecemller JI, 1910 med• lo lhe
lnsvrt nu Cornmlul-r ot 111e Stet•
Of Celllornle, pursuant 10 lew.
JOHN SNYDER ROUSSEAU,
PrHIOenl
MARSHALL A. STRANGE,
Secrelery
Publlsllecl Or ..... Coast O•lly Piiot.
lloller<ll t•. 17, II, "· 20, "" 130-111
PUBUC NOTICE
PlCTITIOUS 8USINllH
NAMe STATeMeNT
Tiie follOWlnQ PerlOfn .,. oolng
OUSlnttlff
scon JEWELERS, M94 EOln~r
A'lfellue, ..._..llnllton lleecll. C•lllornl•
Joll11 S -.......... "' >iemplon 1!04CI, G.-Point w-. MlchlGen ..,,.
Mlldreo J une Holmenn, U•
H•mpton Ro •• Grou Point wooos.
Ml<tll-Clll
Tiiis lluSJftftS Is c-..Cted lly 1,..
dl•l-ls I--Wllel
John S. Hof menn
Tiiis \ltt-1 wet 111.0 wllll Ille
C°"'nl, Cler-ot Or., .. County on
Merell IJ, 1•1
'llOPllSSIONAL ESCllOW
Sll"VICl!S ... 0 .... 11.,
S..la""" Gal.....,1 UPll
EKrew-..-·Mf'
'1f1-Pullll"'9cl Or-Cotti Oelly Pl•ot.
M•r 17, 24, )t, Apr P, 1'11 1371-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10US au11N•H
NAMll STATIMaNl
Tiie tollowlng per-.1 ••• oolng
l>Uslness es:
OICIC CHURCH RESTAURANT",
201 Newport Blvd., Co•I• MHt,
Calllornlt '2•»
CHUN HIEN KING, llU N
OreSden, Aft-Im, C.lllOf'nlt tllOt
S...., Mtl IClng, llSl H Dresden,
Antllelm, C.lllornlt tlllOI
This 1>16iftfts Is conduc:•o llY ., In.
dlvlcll.lel.
Chun NI.,, King 2
This slttement wes lllec:I .. 1111 tile
Count' O erll ol 0r .... Covnty on
Merell'' 1 .. 1 ,.,...,
Pullll-Orenve Coast 0•11• PllOI,
Mer 17, J4.JI, 4Pf' /, "" tln-tt
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICll OP DISSOLUTION
0 .. PA"TMe"SMIP Pvllllc N>tl<• la ,,....11y elven llwl
MAUREEN A. HARTY,. prof .... lon1.1
corporetlon, -L.oul• M. Merlln, "l
professional corporation, herelofore
dolr10 11u1111ess under llM fictitious
firm name anll llYI• of Mtrlln A Her-
''· at 2SU Chemt>era Rd., City of Tu1tln, County Of Oran11t. Sl•I• Of
Celllornle, dlo on tlle hi dey t Oc·
totler, t•t. 1>p mvtuel consenl, dla-
solv• Ille u ld part,.•rslllp end
terminate their ret•tl-H partne"
lheleln.
Stld -lneM In N luture wlll lie
condu< led l>p I.bull M. Marfin, • pro-
fe11lona1 cOf'portll.,, wllo wlll pay
encl olsctwr .. all lletJlllllM -detllt
ol Ille firm ...0 rectl .. •II monies
payable a Ille firm.
Furlller nolk e la llHffy elven tllet
the .. n.,.,,,.,,.. •Ill Mt be rffPOllll·
ble, Iron! tllls •r on lor ..,, 04lli_..
Uons '"°""' b' UIUl1 M. Mtrlln In llll_,. __ l,.ltw-of lie
llrm.
OA TEO AT lr-.1,.., Ctllt0tnla, 11111
•tll .,., "'Mwcl\, 1"1.
.....,_ A. Hart'(
Pvblll!Wd Or-'6HI Oah, PllOI,
Merell 17, 1•1 IMl.fl
PtJBLIC NOTICE
24, and AMrch 17, 1911 1----------
PtCT1Ttou1 aUatMUI
IUMll ITATIMtlMT
'
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
MUNICIPAL COUllT 01' SUPl!lllOll COUllT HOTICI INVITING 8105 CAUPO"MIA
Ol'CAUl"OaNIA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lh•I OOUNTYOPOllAMGI
COUNTY OP OllANOll SHled propowls will be re<elveo Dy HA"'°" O"AN011 OOUNTY
P•Ovk c:.e.r onw W.tl Ille c11, of Cost• Mew., lhe olllce OI JUDICIAL OllTlllCT
S... ._,CA ft7t1 Illa Cll' Cler~ el Ille Ct11 Hall. 11 I< air -,,...__ ....,,
MAll,.IAGE OF PETITIOHER Drive, Cost• Mew, C.lllornl•, vnlll .. ._, a..dl, GalHwlll•tlMe DAVID ALLEN WAOOELL he "ESPONOENT: MARIE ~c 1 "°"' OI 11.00 •.m on Marci\ U , PLAIHTll<F. ANAHEIM SAVINGS ~ 1911, •I whi<ll time,,.., will be OpeMO ANO LOAN ASSOCI ATION
HUGH WAOOELL pvDllCly -••acl •I-In Ille Covncll OEFEHOAHT· JOE E.. GRAHAM1 SUMMOWSCl--,lawl Cl\•mlleri lor FURNISHING ALL YOLANDA GRAHAM •"4 DOES I
CAN NU .... •: 01_, LABOR, MATERIALS, EOUIPMENT. lllrovgh x. lnclusl ...
Tiie lol-1111 --• ere d91"t lluSlMts•:
"OUNTIU!I! "INI AltTS, t rmllaae lMle, .._rt .. ecll, c.. ...
J-T. ,._,.,.., t Hermllaae
aM, '"-1 .. adl. ca. fN60
•• ,_. "· "-'"· t ltenftli.et ,,., .._, .. «II. c.. '2MO
Tiiis ......_It Ufl~"41llyefl 11'1 1'111~1.
J-T.11-f"W
Tiits ... ....._. -llltd #ltll Uw
ou .. 1, c1 .. k of °'-Ca\IM' "' ,....,..,.,., .. ,.., . ,., .....
Pvt>llllWCI Or-ea.11 Oally Pli.t• lffl». 24, MM. S, 10, 11, ltl 1 t41.fl
PUBUC NOTICE
N·'1•11 PICTITIOUI au11••11
M.AMll STATl!Ml!NT
Tiit loll-lfll pertoflt ere CIOlng
l>USlntH tS:
BAMBOO GARDENS, 2nt .... W
Bell "oao. Al'lallelm, c.. neo.
Van Howl 0.0, l~I Farqu,..r ••.
Los Alamltos, c..
Oeo Nhutn Tr-.g, 3531 l<t rqullar
• 4, Lot Al-ltos, Ce.
Ven NQall Oeo
0.0 Nhutn Tr'*'I
Tiiis sl•l-1 wes 111.0 •1111 Ille CPvnty Clerk of Or.,, .. Covnly Oii
Fott>ruery It, 1911
f'UHM
Publllllecl 0r.,,.. Cotti Ot lly Piiot
Ftll. 14, Mer. l , 10. 17, 1911 .,._.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
ltOTICl!I T RANSPORTATION ANO SUCH SUMMONS
Y• ....... _.. Tiie <-1 ... , OTHER FACILITIES AS MAY BE UNkAW .. UL OllTAINl!ll NOTICI INVITING 1105
-.C141e ....... ,.. ........ .,.. ...... II E 0 u I R E 0 F 0 It T H E STATI! HOUSING LAW NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE"! lllet
.... ,. ..... ,... ,....... ......... INSTALLATION OF 2,2.c> LINEAL ,o., ......... Tlme su leO pr-sel• tor fvrnfshlng •II
.. .,. ................ -.. FEET OF CONCRETE SAFETY CA51!NUM81l"-' lellor . melero•ls. eQufpmenl .
AY1IOI STRIP ANO APPROXIMATELY l.•~ NOTIClll Y• Mft --. TIM lrensl>O'tallon -SV<h olher fec11111 .. Uate• Ila 11 .. •••a11••••· Ill SOUARE FEET OF PATTERN CON c ... rt ,..., _..,. ....... , ,., wl-es m•y be requtreo lor HARBOR ...._.. ..... ~ <-• U'-1111 C RETE O N AOAMS AVENUE -_..,. _,,_...t .,_re ..... BOULEVARD SIDEWALK WEST ...._,.A - -U'-,_.... MEDIANS BETWEEN H4RBOR wlllll• J Mrs. ........ l•ler....tlH SIDE FROM FAIRVIEW ~TATE
....,.. ....... LH 111 1..._IN BOULEVARO ANO FAIRVIEW....... HOSPITAL ENTRANCE TO THE
......... ROAD "'°"'""'"loMelllhe«IVlceof .. SOUTH BOUNDARY OF GOLF
II 1ou wlllll"' Mell Ille aclvlce of ., A HI of pl•n•. 1pec1flcellon1, eno a11orne1 In 11111 m• .. r. Y°"' si-IO 0o COU ASE will lie reu1....s 11y Ille Clly
•n•ney In 1111• melt«, YO\I lllOvlO c1o other contrtc:I OCKuments mey oe ol>-so promo111 so th•I your written of Cosl• Mew et Ille Offiu of,,,. C•ty '° promptly 10 --r-or telneo •n 1111 Olhct of Ille O.swrlmenl rtlPOft ... ii .,Y. ,.,., be flleo on time. Clerk, 11 Ft•r Ort•t, Co111 Mtst,
PINCll,... H My,,...,, lie fUed on time. of Leisure ServlcH, 1' Ftlr Drive, AVISOI U-i.. 11'9 •-•· Ct llfornl•. uni II I he nour ol 11 oo • m
SI Ulled dl9ff Hlkltar el conMjo di Coste Mew, C.lllornl•. upon rt<elpl of e1 lrl.._.1 _.. _.., <-• U'-Merell 1'. 1911, ti which time tr..y wolf
un ·~ en Hit •~lo, detlerlt • nonrelund4"'* lff ol s...oo II bldde'I II• a-..:le • -.-u._ ,_. lie openeo pybllct, •"4 rtacl eloucl 1n lltcerlo lnmtOl•l•m•flle, d• Hie requeu pl•ns end •P«lllc11ion1 lie N ..,.,,.. • s ••·Lat Ill,.._,,..,.,. lhe Council Chambers SH leO pro
menere, "' •-•It o •1-'ton, s1 mtlled, Ille <h•rae will lie '1 so per ... ..... powla Slltll l>ffr Ille 1111• OI Ille work
lley ••-. ~ wr reolatracle • ••I. SI U1ttcl dl9ff l<llkllM el conMjo dlt end Ille name ol Ille bl40er l>UI no
lltmpo. Etth b•O ,.,,.II lie m-on Ille pro. un • ...,.._ en est• eaunto, det>erl• oilier 41•1111QV1sh1ng mark .. Any bid
TO THE RESPONDENT· po .. 1form1no In Ille mtnntr provlo.cl lle<erlo lnmtOltlemante, de ••I• recel....o titer the Klwclultcl cloStng
Thi petitioner ""' llled • petition in lhe conlrtc:t ClcKum1nl1, eno shotll mantra, 111 '"""''It etocrltt, s1 lley tlm1 for Ille receipt of lllda 1h1ll 1>e re·
concerning ~ marr1491. II you fell lie •tc~mpenled lly 1 certllleo or •IOVflt , .,._ -reglttr-a lie,,_, hirn.o lo the~' u.._ntcl. 11 Sh•ll
lo Ille t r-wltllln JO Gays of Ille <Hiiier S cheek °' e blO 1>0nc1 for not 1. TO THE DEFENDANT: A d'lfll IN Ille sole rni>on1lblllly ol tht lllocMr
dell lllet IN• Ma"nmOnS Is s«"9CI on leu lh•n 10 percent ol tha •mount of 'omplelnt '* bMfl flied lly t,. plelnt1" to we tllel his l>lo la recel....O In Pf'OPI•
Y°"'· your def...it may lie .,IAf'ed Md tne llld, ,_ pay.Ole to the Clly 01 aoalnat 'l'OU. 11 rou wllll • _,..,.. w 1 Ume.
Ille covrt ,..., ..Cw • 1""9menl co,.. CO\te Mew ltwulll, 'l'OU """'· wltllln s uys alter A HI OI pltn•, S...Cl•I Pro•l>lons
telnlno lrlj.._,11,.. • olher •den co,.. Tiie Conlrtctor •hell, In Ill• tllh •-11 ...-on "°"· Ille ncl •d01tlon1 to G.nert l Provisions to cernlnt •lfl.i., of tw-rtv . ._. ... perform~• of Ille wor'k -Improve-wllll 11111 c-.t a w lllan r_,_ m tlle St•ndtro S...Clllte llona mey lie ob•
-port, cNkl custady, <NIO -1. me1111. c0fll0<m lo Ille Ubor c-of Ille c..,,..tl..t. UN ... -,. a , row ta lneo ti th• 0111ce of the City
•tlof'ney f-<aab. Mid IUCll oowr •• Ille Stet• of C411fornle •nd ottwr la-. dllaull 111111 lie..._.., -'lc.allotl Ene•-. 71 Ft lr Or1w, Coste Mesa, ll•f •• .....,, lie .,.,,.,. tor Ille cowt. of Ille Ste .. of C.lllOf'nl• ..,...k•-of Ille p1.iftuff, ...., 11111 c-.1 ,...Y C.lllornl., _, nonrelun0.111• IWY
Tiie 0trnl"'"*'1 ol waein, ttlll"!I of tllereto with 1111 ••<epllon only of s...:11 tff • ,....,_......., -1or , .. menl of $7.00 Ari tdclllion.1 CllAr~ of
m .... , or "'~'· or olller covrl .. r1e11ons es m.y lie rotc1vlr.O .,,,., rellel •-•111 In Ille c-,ialnl, .oo will i. ,._ If llAndleo 11y m•ll
•ull1orl•ed --1-may •1111 ,..._ Ille ~ltl 11.elulu llU"UMlt •• •Ille.II wlllcll ~ """" lfl ..,...,_ of Plans, ..-<lllcelloru end ollltr con
Wit. IH'OC .. Oin91 ... r-. ••• lalleft end ... s. ,., .. of_., or IWllN'1Y O< rt e I docvmenh may •••o D• ••
Oeted J__, 17, 1911. wlltch haw -Ileen ,_,Mdtcl lly uw Ille r 'rellel ,..,.., .. '" t ... c--lntcl at Ille Offk• of lhe Clly Cler•
LEEA BRANCH, pro•1slon• of the Lellor Code. Int UW Cll,DICO&ttMt ..
Cl«tl Preltrente lo It--II i. 91 .. n onl' OelM: ~ tJ, 1•1 Eacll bid Slit II lie meOe on the
• lh : -RI LYNN PERRIH, In Illa....,,,.., provi..G lly •••• J. PETE!tSOH, p,._.. ... lwm, "'"'' p I lhrCK>gfl p ..
o.My No llld ,.,,.II lie cOIW-unteu II Cleft o•lded In Ille contrect oocurnentt,
WILLIAMW. WATSOtl II medt on• form 1 .. n1..i.ci Dy Ille Cl· ., v . L. OI,..., nd Slltll bt •tcomptnled lly •
All••' .a Law ty of C0\14 Mfft, ...0 la ~ In et· ~., erlllleo 0< c'""ler'a check or • 11to
t-._. ....... S-. t <Mdeno with Ille pro•1111on• of the LVA,.AOO, "us a McCUlu.A" d f0< not 101 tr.en """ of Ille
M• ....... -. C... -P•~I reqvlremenll ...,.. ef .--.c.e T-mounl of Ille bicl, mtoe 1H11ellle to the
Ttf: O M> I0-8" Eech ~r mvst 11e llcenwo encl Cit'....._ Wes\, tty of Coste MeM No Pf'-•' 11\all Pwll-Or-Coast Oelly Piiot et10 prequelllled ••required lly l•w .. 11• con110erot<1 unleu ec<-1•4 11,
Fell. U , MM J, 10, IP, 1''1 '27.fl The Cl1y <.ow>ch of Ille City OI Cotta ..... CA WM u<ll CH Ner•• check, call, or bidder s
------------Mew r~ Ille rlgfll lo re1ect •ny 114) U..••
PUBLIC NOTICE or •11111111. PubllllWd 0r.,,.. Coast Delly PllOI, No ll•d .,..u lie conslclereo unlH• 11
Etl .. n Ptunney rcll J, 10. 11.14, tt'1 1~1 S mt oe one bltnk form lurnllheG by
------------! City Clerk ol the the City ol CO\ta Mew """ la m-In
T-Jft OtyolCosl•Mew _,_UC NOTICE •ccoroence w1u. lhe 11<0 .. Slon• of tlle NOTICE Of' T"USTIE'S SALE Pu1111-Orenve Cool O•llY Pllol r OLJ D PrOPOWI reqvlrementl.
T.S. Na. TSl·ffeNO Mtr. II, 17, 1911 1111 .. 1 -E•ch bi-r must i. ll<enl44 •nd
On Frloay, 4Pf'll 10, 1911, el 11.00 -NP'6.. also prltQutlllleo es rltQulreo lly l•w.
•. m .• u N 1 TE o 1 H v Es TM E H T PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS •USINllSS Th• City Council of 111e City 01 cosi• CORPORATION, H duly •Pl>Ointeo NAMll STATl!Ml!NT M ,._,,., the rfgfll lo r•tKI eny
Trustff ..,.r _ py.-nt lo 0..4 of -Th• lollo•l1111 person> ere oolng r •11 lllds.
Trull, recordtel July 11, t9IO, u inst. NOTICllOC"llOITO"SOI' t>usinetsM The Conlrector >hell comply with
No. 11'11. In -k 13642, IWQe 111, ol aUU<T,.ANSPll" MEADOWVIEW INVESTORS he pro•lllan•ol $ecllon 1770101710ln· Olllclel "-cOf'cfs In Ille olllce of Ille lSecs.4101 .. 107U.C.C.) JO•t St• Co•e Lt ne Coste· Mesi luslve, ol Ir.. Ct lllornle Lallo< C-,
Covnty Rocor-of Oren~ County. Notice 11 heretiy11....., to< redllOrl ol Ct llfornl• tzt:lll.. ' ' he P••••ll11>9 r•1• •"4 suit 01 w•ae• C•lllornlt. Ille wllNn ,,.meo tr•n1teror 11wl • Wlllltm Smith 30 SlmpsO'I Old slebll•htd by the Clly 01 CO$lt Mete
WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION l>Ulk trenifer Is ebo<ll to lie m-on BellltMIQtt, N.,. y.,/k, lllCM. ' Iller. ere 111.0 wolll the City Clerk ol
TO HIGHEST BIOOE~ FOR CASH, personel properly llerelntller Oe vld Prl'lfte 222J Hlll•lew 14 City, &nd shell torlelt penelliH
CASHIER'S CHECK OR CERTIFIED Oe~ro-. Fullerton, C..lllornlit:lll.31. • •H<rllleO therein for noncompllen<e
CHECIC, (Pty•t>I• ., time Of Ml• In The ,,..,.,. -home tddr•H OI Ille M•leot Communicetlons CorPOf't · f lhe MIO c-. ·-1 .. 1 -y OI , ... United Sltlesl •I lntenoeo 1r .. 11eror ... llon, inc .. •1 SA• Cow Lene, Costa EILEEN p PHINNEY
Ille South lr011 entrtnee to Ille Old GIM JEONG, 1132 hpulveoe Mete, Cellloml• n•». • Calllornle CllyClerkol Ille
Or•1111• Count' Courtr.oust IO<elot<t In Bl•d .• Harbor Clly, C.lllornle 90701 corponllon. City ol C0$14 MeM
Ille :IOO BIO<k OI Wnl Sent• Arlt Bl'llO., Tiie n-• MIO llOme •• .,.of Ille Thi• buliftftS Is <On<lucttcl lly ... un-Pvbhlhtd Or..-ge co .. , Ot lly Pllol
(formerly WHt •111 StrHll Sent• An•, intencleO tr.,.sfer .. a •r• lncorponteo euocl•llon -11\tn • er 11, 17, ttl t 1'91 It Celllornle, •II rigllt, lllle eno lflttrell E5M41EL OOOSTMARO eno perlM,,.Np,
convoeo to -now llelO lly ii under SHEILA L. OOOSTMARO •ncl LINDA M A L A G A c 0 M .
.. 10 Dff<I of Trv1I In Ir.. Pf'oPerly KELLY, 3341 E (out Hlgllwey, MUNICATIOHSCORPORATION PUBUC NOTICE
s1tue1eo In sa10 County •"" Stt l• Corof'le dltl Mtr. C..lllornl• '21U~ ""--' G. Rice,
described... Thel the pr-rty Pllf"liflenl hereto 11 PreSldlnl CAU. '0" at OS
Lot II OI Tree! Ho. 1700 In the City cMicrllleO In _r .. es This stel-1 wes lllld wllll 1"9 T 0 • IE NT " I 1 1 0 II NT I A L
Of Newpon lleech, es per m"' re-PIZZA PARLOUR -Is loutecl C-IY Cle<lt ol Ore"lll Count, on P~"TY <orcle<I 1n 8o<* SJ. PtQttS 7 tnO t of •t 1911 Garlleld A•en,.., Founl•ln l<eb 1), 1 .. 1 NOTICE IS HE,.l!BY GIVEN 1 ... 1
MlscellMWOUS Mti>s. 1n Ille Olhce OI V•lleJ, C.lllMnl• t%1GI "'"'42 the 8oar4 OI s...ervi--s ol tl'M c-i,
llle c-1y Recor-ol saoo Covnty Tr.. llusinlu name -Dy ,,,. wlo Pul>tlSllld Orenve Cot•t Dally Pilot ol Ortft99 Int-• to I•••• lo the
TruslOf' OI record _, DENNIS irensferor et Mio loc.llo" It PIPO's Mer.>. 10, 11, u. 1•1 1osr-ti llltlle•I ~ on •_,,.~
F. SCOTT-PENNY SCOTT Tllel MIO bulk 11.,51., 11 lnl-d to beSls, certain •H"9otnllt l •H I pr-r-
Tlle street --end other com· II• consvmm•l•O •I Ille office of PUBUC NOTJC&" ly, llelo"""9 '° t1W c-, of Or.,, ... mon Oesl_.lon, II eny, ol the rHI ESCROW ENCOUNTERS, INC , IPJ·:io D < __ , deeultled .. JIO Ufllwrllly
pr-rty cleKrllleO el>Ove 11 pyrPQrtec:I 8•ec II Bl•O., Hunting Ion Bet ell. Ori,.., and :aaot Unl....-slty ~ .... Coste
to be. Ul2 Sant-Ila, COlorw del Mer, Calllornle n .. 1 on or titer APrll t, N·n .. llt\ew, Celltomla. ProP9Mll to rent
C.lllornl• mzs. "" PtCTITIOUS ltUSIMlllS Mid pr°'*1JM """' ..... 11m111ec1 In Tiie _"......, Tnlstee dlsclelms The ,..,,,. tnd tddrett of Ille IHIUO'I NAME STATllMaNT writing, on lorm1 provided by Ille
ny ll•blllty fOI any lncorrtclne~s of wllll whom <ltlms m•y be 111•4 Is Tiie foll-lfll pertofls are doing Count, of Orante, In ... ...,...,..._,,
Ille tlrMI -•u eno otr..r common Escrow Encounter•. Inc., 11no Beech l>Uslneu .. : lo Ill• Clerk of Ille Boe rd ol
slgnetlon, 11 eny, "'°""herein. Blvo., Huntington 8tecll, Ct lllOr,.la y EGE N MAR IN e , HS Town "'""WllGr"I, Admlnlstretlon 8ulldlfll,
Se id lel• wlll lie m-. l>Ut wll,_t n••1. end the••• oay '°' llllno clalms c.i.ter O.lw , s..tte MO, Coatt -... A-., "5. 10 Clvk een•or Pl•u, Sant• O'lfenarll OI ..,.,.,..,,.,, ••press or Im· b' any CrHllO< shell be Marcll JI, Ca . '2'26 AM, CelllOrnl.t, fVOZ, ancl mv.I be re.
Itel, rotQtrcll"' title, posteulon, or 1911, wllkll Is Ille.,.,.,,,.., o., t>elore Yeoen ,usoc1a1 .. , Inc. I• N•• celwect lly .. Clerk •I MIO MCl•Ht
ncumllrence1, to pey Ille unp•ld Ille consumm•llon 4•1• specll .. 4 JerMy COl1*'tllofll, Orie Mack C..nlre before 2:00 p.m., Mortdey, "prll •.
lence Ol lhe noltltl MCUrtcl by stld tbove. Orl'lft, Per.._, ....,.Jef'•Y07'52 1,.1, In order to be ell9'"'*· No late
Offel of Tr111I, to-wit: $J0,6J1.MI •P-So tar H Is known lo w lo lnlendtcl Tiiis bulineM 11 cOflltuettcl11y •<or· 11141 or oral blcls wlll be c-ldertcl.
.. 1m ... 1,, lncl11"lng .. Pn>'lfl-In Transter9" wld lnten<Mo Tren1leror :porallOfl. Renttl _, lorms. AM eddltlonal
Id not•UI, adlttl>Cet, II t ny, under uMCI Ille IOl-lno td<tltlonel t>uSlness VEOEN ASSOCIATES. INC. lf'llOf"nltllon es to ltw lerms arid <-I-
lle ttrms DI aid 0.ed of Trust, '"'· nemes MIO eddrH-wllllln lhe tllrH RkllanlSWOION · Ilona Ofl wtllcll Ille ~let wlll lie
llar .. s anll Ul*ISes of Ille Trust.. years lttl PMt: None. PAil-1..-, may tilt OIHAllMCI from: RoOH
tld of Ille tnists Cl'Mtael Dy Mio Oee<I Dated: FeOr'uary It, 1911 Tiiis ......_. w• llled wltll Ille Cvnf'llngllam, GSA/"e•I Ell ale
Trvll. l!tme!el Oooslmaro °"'"IY Cl«ll of 0r..,.. Covnty "" Olwl1hln, Caurlty of 0r.,.., 400 Clvk
Tiie i.nefkltry under said O.ecl of Shella L Ooollmard FMlr'uery 1', 1•1. Center Ori we Wut, Sent• A"•·
rust llerttetor• uecuteo ano d•· Linde IC•lly Fis.JU C•lllOf"tlla '21112; lit~ n.,,,,...,:
11 .. ,.4 to ,,,. undenl9MO • written llSC"OW •NCOUNT ... s. INC. 11'YlllA1.. ..... & ••LCHIONI! 11141 0.-JUD; ~ lo: l"roject Y»,
0tcleretlC111 of Oefeull .. o O.mtnd 111a11MC11 .. ...._, ,..0 .... -u .. 1,,en1ty~... •
or Sal•, "' • wrl114'ft Nollu 01 "~"'"" 9M(JI, CA '2'47 .._.. ..,., i. c;.. ,.._ OetM: l<ellNery H, 191t
0.faull ..... ale«lon lo Sell. The un· PUl>llllWd Or..-.. Coast D•lly Pilot, Pv4MlllWd Or ... C:-tl O.lly PllOt aY 0"0«" 0" THE aOAitO OF
ertltned caused H id Nell<• ot Merell 11, 1911 tau.ti Fell. 2•. MM. I, It, 11 *' t».f1 SUP I" VI SO" S 0,. O " AHO E
ftult ..... El«tlotl lo Sell to be re· I-------------.!_. ---COUNTY, CAUl<04'NIA,
ordecl 1 .. Ille <-Y -·· tll• •NI p• ... uc NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE (Sl!ALIJUNIALllXANOE!t -rty ls !«Med. vu C1"tlo#IM._,..
Tn11tff 0t Pffly conduc:ll"t H I• -------------OfS4.lpwvleon ITLE IHSUllANCE AHO TRUST PICTITIOUlaUllNlll PIC'TIT10Ul9UllMIUI DIOr ... Ceuroty,CA
OMPANY, »40 Wllslllre 81....S., LOS llAMe ITATaMIMT llAMe ITAT ...... , • Put>!Klwlll 0r..-.. c-. Ually l"li.t, nee I•, Calltomle 90010, All!Wlllon: Tiie ,_.leWlt19 ..,_, are Nlf\9 Tiie let ....... per-It ... ,. ...U· MMcfl t, 10. 11, tt. tl, 16, 17, II, It,
Orr,1F-Of'l (t1tl•l"4-70tS. llwMrwWN•O•O: •••TNl!,.SHl a , •o• tlell .. : SMILllON WIST, 1 .. tl 20,ttl1 ,.,._.., • e: Mltcll . I I ..... ,. ,.. • • Ma"ttefl, l l'llltle, Cl llllrftla tJ114, -------------
UNITl!O INVESTMENT .,,,.,.._A-, NeWPOrt aH<ll, 11•"1" 0 , W.tt ... , 14"1 Me,1et1, PUBLIC NOTICE ORP , cal......... lr-.IM , Ce!...,.. 9014. Tiiis ~
Tiie •11-1111 ,.,_,•••doing .. ,,,..,.. ll'llltl P, o.11....,. 111t M••'•" 11 cll!M: ... W•..........,. -------------
Wll-•: 11, Tiiie '--•-'--'· """"" .... c;..tl-..1•.,... ""'-" o, _...,. P1CT1nou1 •u11•111 l"IAltWOC)O AUOCIATlll, IUJt Trwet ~. ..,_. L. ....,,_, 1!211 l'llMIM Tlllt ........... -!Mell wltll ,,_ NAMe ITATl!MtlMT
aarrett LMW, lellta Mt, CA ftPDJ. •"""" ~I ....... 9Mdl, C.tllforllll .... C-tt Clef'tl ., Of ..... c:-ty .., Ttle foll-1119 '"''°"I are N lf'll
Tllll'llH OIWM, UHi ••rr•ll lyJerry""""' • TIMI ......... It <Afl4Nel .... , ......... ""· IMIMMU•. t.aM,SaM.sAN,CAtl10f, PlllMl"*'Or .... C:O.Dall'tJ>I... ................ ,.-, .. ,., (I I Ml•"ITT O 'MA"A
J-hlMlr, JM Ma ...... , '''"'· ell 17,U,'1, "'' ,...., ,,,.. ,,._.,_ "'*ltllM Or ... CWtl Oelly li'IMI •NTI""'"''·'· "' tH• COVI c..ca...._.CA.... TIM .......... -fllW Wllft .... Mardllt.17,N,tl"" 1 ..... t APA,.TMIHTSL Cc) HO TaL
Mary Mill "'111"9, ... ..,,., IM , PlJIU.JC NOTICE ea.tt Cltr'l ., o.r-.. ~Y t11 ' CALl"O"lillA. tJtt a. C..tt Hleltllf•Y.
11 .... tu, 1..t ~. ver!Mflt 1--------------.cu.""· .,,,,... PtJBLI<; NOTICE :,:;, •.02. L..,_ •Hell, ea1110tn1a ~:..Kim, ICU 11Mtt11 ... , Wllltller, MOTICa OP J>Vauc ,._..__Or ... c;.oa11 Dally l'llfC, Willllfft M. Cll#C1Ut11M11, tMe CA...-S. IMN'9CTIOMOI' li'•IVA1'e --.r.11,M,11,Acit. 7, t•t 1-..1 PICTITIOUllMlllMHI Carmallt-, a...a.--..Cll, Co10'9f'nle
...... ltlta. , .. ci.tla, M-c,.... ~M"°" °" __. ITATIMSMT .,.,,
Meltlln,CA•f7•. ......,AL••,...T •• ,.. •c NOTJc• T11• , .. _,119 ~-· .,a c1e1,.. tt.11, o-.,,., 1..a ..,,.. c:1er•.
'"""' Cntl'llP, au "•lf'IMttla, ,.,. •111111al r._.,t of Ille Mue I "--ICI lilutfMH •: OaN ....... C.tll,.,. .. .,. (_ ......... .._ ,. .. -, ... "!.... .................... ,, •• Yol.... AllT LYONI IQUl .. MaNT. ,,.., Tllla '"*-· .. e~..-""' •
----·"'" -· t olt -...........,.,, llrf"CIHI Offtce i.... (l~le. ~O-. CA ftMO, tl!IM .. ,.,._._. ' Oano11' J-lfttt1 .... OerNnle 1""'9<l,_. Mt-tllt lllun If NOTICI OP ....... .._...tLtT"\' Amur L,_, 1*2 1.tvl Clrcle, Wit'*" Mlrf'll1 OirlttlM-
A=, .:::-:::. ~ ~'~llNr :• a.fft\ lfllll 41• .. ,.., ...-n -N.i~ It ""'"" .... IMt Ille -OMWll Ol'wt, CA.... Klffy Cl'._•
..,..._ C1111i1 ~CA-. ,... 1 _.fl I• •rt 1"'1' Ult 4llllte _,.= .... rwt ie ,...... ... fowl ~ L.,_, IMa I.Av• Clrcte. O-tlt "9rtNn • .......... kM.lta ..... ,_t, It. """' ., ,...,,..... CMU'ec• "' Oa,..... 0.-CA... Tiii• .......... -'"" wlttl IN Tiii• ........ c JbtW "' • , ............ ,.,.llC, ... I Oflk• ... ltAIN•OW voou•T ., ,..CttJIC TMI --.. (....a.111 lly ... ,,.. C-ty Clenl: ., o. .. Clw!lly ...
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IA&al SOhl'ft 1..oa1 • r ... nc1 P"M"'414• Sorul O wta• Tru..-1•
SC.VICES
!111-rv.n O.rtttor,
EM"-OYMCNT &
rtEPAIATION
StNiob IMfr\N'IM>n JOO W••l•fl• H•lto Yo" onlecl M 6 Y
MEICHANOISE ,. .. _.
ApPtanc.1
"""-tc.-=: Mattrt•I-' c.,._,._. 6 £,q"'pmenl
C.u Dae• f'rM lO You f"titl"ftt•wn Cara&• S.Jt --G-• J ..... ,., 1..1..-..ocl
MH;IUftH)
lol1>«U-Mtwet.1~ "ar1lff
MDKaJ IMtNft'MMt
Olfitt ""'" 6 1-:'l"'P , ...
=~~== s.cinooeG-~RnlhtaMS..r ~T.s ... H1f"t.S.er.o
IOATS & MAllNE
EQUl~EMT ~·· liNiu.N•JN~ntn ..... lhruwt;...,p
lloo.U ...... H lo8U.Rl'M 01nt-r ao.u.s.11 lloet>Sllpo Oo<h ao.10~ .... •S111 Boela . .SCont •
TIANSPOIT A TION
A.trtreft
CatnPff'l S.lt ""'" fJ«tnt Car-' No1>oltJtorn .. llloe.C)d•.~· Mot.or Hrna.Mlt-Ren•
Trtt-..ra.Tr•••' !~"~~·~~·~11iaru
AUTOMOBILE
Cf'Mtal ..
AAt.qvn "-"IH11ra Rttr~1l.oe VdU(IU ~~t ~)~~~~Och
h11rl.t v .... AvlO~Ulftl Awtol Wan&.N
AUTOS, IMrGIT(O
G.Mrat Alhltomte
"""' A.....,.Hnl~)
•NW C•pn ~ o.u •• f'ttr•h ..... -J•1111r JtMH ~'· Jll•.ld• lhrndh•u Ill(; 11101 °"'' P'MUA't•
P .. oO\ Pond•• Jtoavh Roll• RO)'H 11 ..... t.: Swbarw J~r.~pll
Votkt••Stn ve1 ..
MITIS. lfEW
-... 1191 IOIJ •• ... :; , ...
loet IOU t6ot ,...,
IOU I art
109 1m 1111
IC*! ... ,. ·-lllO
11111
IQ
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UGO
llOO lllle ID IM
:WO 21111 ZD
ZD 1 ... aao ls» -1'1'111> --
100!> 701)
1100
ll006
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!IOIO
9110 91:111
VIJii
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0-.al lllO
lUTOS,DSB t,;....,,., -· AMI: -..... MIO ~~~! ::~· Clio,.... -Clor1ai.r IGS c.-fl9l1 c--... 1 -o ...... i. -
$:' = •• ,.,... 9M1
'-""' INS ••wnrl IN1 ~ ....... -.... . ........... -
ow. It -~ ·········~··-' ,_, ...... ···--............... -.,_,...,., ··-V••• "" ........ .-..
USITHI
DAILY PILOT ..... ,
llSULT"
SBYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642-1671
MIU .....,.. =---°'*""'9 1 1111 ~ .,_ .. lht11t ,._, VOOUltT CIOMJ>ANY, ell er olftlw W. ...,..... IMRll M, "91.
• _.,. _ - , .. ~ .... ._ IQ et ,,_ 11, .,,_, ...._,. ..... • MWl;.""9 . neoMM•.LU ---'-•a a 'ft:..A ......t a... ..... --,_ •-... 11,CA...._ D111Mt111ttM1etyetMerefl,t"' ,,... ......,.. ... ,.... _.111 111e Aa.-cw,._ ..... ..._ -• .-.-• 8 =•~·.,Or.,. CeuMy 911 .,.,,...,.,.._, =~..,,_.. c-1r <.-"' 0r._ CWlll't.,. • ......,.....,.,...... •....,• ..... '/OS"
,......~C...Olll ............... ----,., ,.,.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY.
,.......,.., Hoffee:
All r eal estate ad·
vertised in t hi s
newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hous-
ing Act of 1968 which
m akes it illegal to ad·
vertise "any preference,
limitation , or dis ·
cr lmination based on
race. color. religion,
sex, or national origin,
or an intention lo make
any such preference.
limitation , o r d is
criminatton."
This newspaper will not
knowmgly accept any
advertising for r eal
estate which is in viola·
lion of the law
ERRORS: AdnrffHn
sholild check ttMlr od1
daffy ..ct report .,...
ron ""-dla.hly. Tht
DAILY PILOT 01...,...s
liabllty for ffM flnt
lncornct lnHrtlon
Oftly.
HCMISel for ScH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
911,.°lo LOAH
This 4 Bdrm home ha-.
been complete ly re
decorated Many extra!>
Ass ume 91,•: loan
Price SHS.000 Call to
day979·5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
Classified Ads. your one·
st.op shopping center.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••
INVESTORS
SPECIAL
168,900. If you bave UUle
cuh and are.l.ookinc for a golden opPQrtunJty to
own your own home,
don't wait. this is it! Thi.a
lovely condominium ls a
2 Bd.nn, very clean and
neat. and local,ed In a
quiet area. Approl(·
imately $2.~ down and
owner will carry 2nd
with small payments
Call now for all the de· tails. 752·1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
CHOICE IRVIME :
LOCATION
$11,500
Super upgraded con·
dominium, near eve{·
ylhing Sacrifice sal•
Seller transferered
752-1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
LUXURY + TERMS
A'SUME t 01/40/o
Nestled on hillside with a panoramic vi e w
forever: this home or.
fers so many features
we rannot list tht;m a Ii
3600 sq rt includes
romantically 1nsp1red
master wing, 4 Bdrms.
formal hvmg and dining
rooms Dumb waiter.
supplies the downsairs
ram1ly room Oak inlaid
bar. rompiete with brass
fixtures Everything is
custom in this executive
delight Owner says he
mav help you finance.
and it's priced lo 'lell
NOW• @
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714·631 -6990
RCTaylorCo
640-9900
SPYGLASS 7 llDROOM
Tremendous View home ideal for
large family with maid·s quarters
or guest s uite. Pool and private
jacuzzi.
RCTaylorCo
640-9900
CUSTOM PENINSULA POINT
VocClftf -move ri9ht in! Totally new
Inside •d out. 3 bdnM; 3 bath. lorcJe
family room + dlnlnCJ rm. Steps to bay
..ct beoch. $465,000.
MAGNIFICENT OCEANFRONT
One of o kind ond never to be
duplicot.d. Penltt1ulo Point "Gold Coast"
loc:otlon. A londlnartc you can '" from
yow boat. I 0 total bed! ooa. VIEW of
oc.., ond boy with exdtiftg ~ &
'8nk. Lorge mtd beoutfMly decorat.cL
Cal for cl.toils ta p,..•lew this exciffltc) r.operty. Perlect for COil* affoR or
· OflllliH who wont to buy tocpttwr.
$2,200,000. 63I·1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, IN<.
RtM I <;rAn
,,,,,., Hvul.41 f't11p1 ''' M ,, t•fll ffW'''
2436 W Coast Hwy
Newport Beach
STARTING
631 -1400
A NEW BUSINESS?
Accorclng to C•IHornta llultne ..
•nd Prof•Hfon• Code (lee. 17900 to
17130) an peraon1 doing bualne11
under • flctttlout name mu9' IMt •
•t•t•ment wttti the County C..11 •nd
have H publlth•d tour time• In •
neW9peper MrVlng the .,.. In wMctt
th• bullMM 11 located.
The etettment It requl""9 ~ law
end I• MGeeNf'Y In pfOt~ng rout
bu•lne.. neme. Mo1t Mnlila reqWre
proof of ftffng to open oommerctel
accounta.
The OAILV ,..LOT pt0vtde1 both
ftltnt and pubftcatlon etntc.1. We
.. .,, ........ MOHHry fonftJ •nd
Maintain • Clllr ~ to N ~
CoUftty c.--· ot.r ..... .., .... Of Hr~--ofkel Of ...... tM L.IGAL M'TllllNT ..._.,, lat. . ........................... . • . ,...,,. MIM9I! -..-.. ,. .. ..:....... 11111«.ll ta,""· ....... ............ .... = Ohll •• eall.
.._.. " ...... ,...,.... Or .... °""' Dotlty ..... ..... ... Or ... c.e. bfljly ,.,._, ........ 0..... Q9ett Olll; ...... ,... .... Gt-. c.... .... " -illDtlleftll....,.
_...,tJ.M.tl,...,tf1,"9t IJl1.t1 Mlf'Cll l1.1"1 111Mi Mer 17,1'M,.ttet , ...... Mar<lll1,M,J1,a.,AJ,1"1 IJI..., ~.tr,M,tl,AIW.1,1"' tsn:fi _...:._J.:========~=:J.!:=:::=::::=::::============::!..
-------R~ ·~8J
HAllOI VllW HIW •471,000
A IA.II "HILLSIOIOU..,-MOOR
Impressive front elevation to this
1 estate·like 5·b edroom, 2-s tory
Lusk-built home. Dramatic entrance
hall with vaulted ceiling, large living
• rm, formal dining rm, spacious fa mily
• rm, & lovely master s uite with private
dressing rm & biitb plus deck !or sun
bathing ofr ms tr BR. Two fireplaces, a separ~te uti lity rm & 3-car garage.
Sw-pnse: a gorgeous large pool in a
woodsy rear yard. A real family
home.
WISUY M. TAYLOI CO.. UA&.TOIS ".~ lc'::a c I ...... N.1. 6~4tl0
\
SPYGLASS aEGAHCE ~njoy the inner beauty of thl.'t <tbr home & u lllO
degree view of t he orean. harbor. r1ty lights
S6SO.OOO
PRESTIGIOUS llG CAHYOH
This briJ(ht cheery 4br Broadmoor• reflects
1mmar u late ran· in & out Well landscapt>d
yard inrludl•s pool. spa, f1rt'plt $645,000.
Bonnie Barnn.i:ton 675 6000. 644·0452
U,__l()U~ ti()M~~
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Eul <.:oa•I Highway. Corona del Mar
WE HAVE 43 OF T iil': BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
For an Ad In WOflltn's Worid
Cati S..~ 642-5678, Ext. 330
Lacy Pullover
lop ofl s•1r1s o< pints "•th thlS
lacr ton1·slttvtc1 1umc I D11m11tc; squi re nttkhne •Sit
cented b) 1n 1HOYer dts11n ol
p1etty p•nu pplrs C1ochrt lun•c
ol medium '"'&ht • pJ1 \yn
thetoe spo<t 111n on 1 sof1 pnttl
P1ne1n 759' S11n 8 l • •ncl
$2.00 101 eatll Plltt•n Ado 50<
each 011te1n lo< fll\t eta\\ a1•
m11t 1nd h1ndl1n& Stlld to:
Allee ltoob
N .. dlecreft Dept. 105
Delly"'°' e. 163, Old CllthU Sta. Nt•
Tll\, llT lOllJ. r1111t ••111t.
• Udf111, n,. '"""' llu11111t1 Catch on to tht craft t>oom' ';tlnd
101 OUI NlW 19111 NCIOllCRArl
CATALOG Owt1 111 dtulll1' J
htt p111e1ns '""dt SI 00 AU CllAIT IOOU .Sl.75 ud1
Seamed to ~lim
lht conctpt of 1 \uot "" '"'"i'd Wh~e Ull(r I .. o \t11ct now tht1e 1\ le"'1n1n1ly <11
you \!'~ h•1t •n lhf "''llop•d
V ntckhnr ~nd indented 1111111
P11nttO Pattt1n 97'1 tl11f
!>1m 1011 171, t•'> 1611
18'' 70'1 17'' So" I•'> rbus1
Jll IA~f\ 7 lt8 yd\ 60 •ftlh
Stil-U,00 for 11th ,....II,
Ad4 so. !tr t.Kh ptlWlll i.
fil\l-d• 111111.tl, h111.i111a,
Stii4 ...
ltlMIAll ltlAa'llll
•anem Dept. 442
Dally l'ltot
ZU ht lltl1=St. .... , ... lfY lOlll. r1111t ADDftU
llr Sitt M4 -···. NEW SPRING SUMMLll 1981
PAn(RH CATM.DC bnfll\ JOU llRRlflC SAVIN~ on llmt, WOI~ lllOfttf •1111 Ml I 00 Int,
m, P1ller111 1'1111 fret °'""" cw~:vo=. Get•~ SI IJ4.14 . , 1.71
ISW .......... 1.71 ................. 1.71 1 ......... .,.. 1.n
..... A POINT llACl•ONT Panoramic view at wedfe, from
prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom
home. 3700 sq. ~. featurtni marine
. room, entry, livln11 room, dining
room, built-Ins, etc. Sl,385,000.
LIOO Ill.I
Newly re modeled tradltional style 3
bdrm, 2 bath home featuring lar1e
recreation room & 2 patios. Livln1
room has attractive beam cellln1s,
rlrepluce & french doors leading onto
brick p a tio. New kitch e n blt·ln·
aooliances. Cl9se to tennla _ CQ.tlrt" sandy beuches & .clubhouse. $t20,000
IAYPIOMT
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip, starting at $1.500,000
· ltAHCHO MIRACH
Sprinl(s Condo. 9th fa irway, 3000 sq.fl.
3 Bdrm . 3 bath. furn . Golf c lb.
m brs hp. Will tra de for Invest. prop.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
J41 flu v~·d• o,.,,, "J k ,,:•, tilol
A.WA.RD WINNY
T h is hom e t ruly d e
se r ves i t s n a m e
Eleitantly d ecor ated 4
Bdr m home f eatu res
d ramatic cathedral ceil
ings. a ccented by plush
carpe ting. decorated
wallcoverings, drapes &
mirrors. Lovely gard en
features custom d e ·
s igned llpa and cove red
patio T o top 1t all
c re ative f1nanc inti i!f
a vailable This hom e is
truly a Select P roperty
Call751 :1191
«;::SELECT
I PROPERTIES
INVESTORS
TICKET
is now in Cost• Mesa of-
fering res ide ntial pro·
pertywith:
No Negative Cash Flow
No Tenant Problem s
Capital Gttin~Onl)
Hil(h Returns
I not 2nd Trust Deeds!
Call for information fill RED CARPET I 154.1202
$24.000 MESA VERDE
FIXER Assu!C?i~.~!an on
Superb ba r Rain' (.'uv this heautlful 3 Bdrm 2
e red en tn wav leads lo ba th home with b rick
a5 Rdrm.3balhtn level fireplace F.xpanded
home with fa m ily room. family room, wetbar.
2 fireplaces. formal din shaded covered patio
1nJ!. 2600 sq ft of livinR •s urround s s pa rkling
area that needs f1xin~ pool. Many extras. Call
Ca II now for more de ( o r m o re d e t a i I s
tails SM> 2313 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
A letht-Woy of Life
Hard to find s~I sto r y
rondo ~lo win~ w it h
warmth and comfort
F.ndowed with features
you always wanted, de
rorator wallpapers. pi:tr
quet rloors . fire pla('f'
a nd m<>re 2 Hdrm. den
a nd dininj.? room Only
Sl2H.500 with te rm~
556·2660
«;::SELECT
I PROPERTIES
HORSE
PROPERTY!
We have 3 diffe rent , ,
a cre horse properties in
the Santa Ana He1~hts
a rea available Sta rtin!!
a t $202,SOO Call for mo rt
details S46 2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment• Two
2 Bdrm unilll. one with
fireplac·e ' C urrent in
come 1740 mo fo'manr
inl(' I vr homf' protec·
t ion r>lun i nl'lul1e d
llurry, th111 won't h111l
64417 171
THE REAL ESTATERS
THE REAL ESTATERS
COSTA MESA
Charminit 4 Bdrm. 3 ba
home with family room.
C orner lot. V ER V
p ri vate y ard s Im ·
maculate and ready lo
move m Sl74.SOO
This 3 Bdrm char mt>r
was onre u model home
Located on a huge cul I
de sar lot and filled with
e x tras FI N IS H E D
garage CICM!e to schools
Offered at Sl44.SOO
IRYINE
Lovely 3 Bdrm. 2 ba
single family home with
very P RIVAT E ya rd
Xlnt location, c lose to
schools. shopping and
free way Sl64.500 and
own<'r will r•orry 2nd
*Cote Realty
& Investment
640-5777
WANT ACTION"
Clauifed Ads '42·5678
WILSON PAii Cllmll•S
CllCI & COMP• 11ISE FUTURES
90% RNAIClll 12%% INTER. ... CANYON Da.UllYI A PAM.ous uv111 .. 111 .. san.ooo
Deane Homea larieat Ii moat
spectacular model & situated on the
larrest lot of Deane Hornes. A glorious
view looking thru a lovely yard with
tall trees to the Big Canyon golf
course. Huge patio surrounds the lge
pool & s pa + the sweetest gazebo ever
(even has a lovely chandelier). Gated
entry to the front courlyd with
fountain. Marble fl oor in foyer with
glittering crysta l chandelier . 4 BR,
den & form DR. Call for a pi:t.
¥ BOit AREA L0cA110 I 81.ZE-llSO SQ. rr.
I ALL SHOPPIWO ~BLOCK
I AJR OONDl'l'IONING
I CEM£NT DRIVES
(WAL]( lN CLOSETS
I MJCRO OVEN
./COMPACTOR
I DISHWASHER
I DBL CAR AG It
W/OPENER
WAID IMYISTMINT IMC.
SALIS OfRCI 17 I 4J 611-Nll
•w.w....se.~
C.... ..... c.lf.
WISUY N. TA YLOI CO., REAL TORS
JI t I S• Jo ....... Rood
MEWPOIT CENTH, M.I. 644-49 I 0
REALTORS
'75-551 I
r
VA
BUYERS!
LOVEI. Y "I" PLAN. MOit ........... MOd9f
ner bullt I" the llllfft: $th1ated 011
tpecfaculer ....... " wttt. wt• •lew.
l ldr, F.I . IHt b..y I• t1te arH at
$252,tOO.
We have two homes that
we·n sell VA. <One > 4
Bdrm. 2 bath. N o rth
Cost a Mesa 1126.900
<Two) 3 Bdrm. 2 bath,
hu li(e ba c k y ard .
SIOS.000. Call for more
details on the11e. s.46·2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
COLI OF NIWPOIT RIAi.TORS
2 5 I 5 E. Coast Hwy., CoroM .. Mar
675-5511 lttAMDNEW
OldH.wport
Commercial + resaden
t1al. Near Newport Pier
Live in larae upper 3
bdrm. 2 bath unit aboVl'
commer<'ial·!!hop, store
or office. Call for d eta ils
Priced at $350.000 Eves.
67S-4m
ATTENTION
INVESTORS
T his beautiful view pro-
perty in Newport is
priced below m a rket
value and belo w a p·
p r a isaf. Spa re aiie
kitchen with breakfa11t
area. Huge hvinl( room.
la n ai wi t h vie w .
fire plac e and o pen
beamed cathedr al ce1l·
rngs Hide-a-way master
suite. separate r hidrens
wing Dash to the pool.
Cati today for details.
Owner highly motivated
and will work with ver v
creative finanrrnR Cail
752·1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
SPYGLASS HILL
We have two beautiful
lis hnl(s on Spyglass One
of them w ill fit your
pr1re range. Ca II to 'il'e
these tie ms'
D.M. Marshall RMr
644-9990
THEHUKEE
associated
BROl<fll'> REA L TORS
10 1' W ti<.1•t1r <J b, I lbb I
$96,500 *AlEE*
F.xrellent Anaheim loca REAL ESTA.TE
lion Te rrfific fam1l v INVESTMENT
home. cl06e to shopping. LECTURE
xln t sc h ools Near Leamthe secretof ho"'
Anl(les and Rams home I a ' I IMH pro pe rt v
81J1 home with bea m ed I cre alivelv Sat evenin~
ceilings . rece ntly re Ma rch 2i. 7 JOP M 1714 1
decorated K1trhen has 963-3710 bfr 5P M for re•
new microwave. raniie servation & info
and oven. The ba ck y ard
is big enoul(h for a ball I•--------• field Call for details. OCEAN VU CONDO
752·1700 L<>west priced Versailles
W• ft..t G&.t rondo on m a rket todav ~~~~es~·~·~u~~ N-!L!{iii#I 2 8r2 b:7~~~7~
3 Bdrm 3 Ba fam ily .__ --··--
home in immaculate ---------condition. A super loca·
lion only steps to the
beach Attractive owner
financing available A
super buy at $280,000
lcAoo Island Rlty
67J..1700
COSTA.MESA.
s•-Sl25,500
OWHB SAYS SELL
Not an add-on or con-
version. A real 5 Bdrm
OCIEAHROMT
Choice comer duplex 3
bdrm. 2 bath up 2
Bdrm. 2 bath do wn
Great rental or home +
income unit. SELl.F.R 1---------· WI LL H E l.P
FINANC F.! 1895.000'
lcAoct lay l'rop.
RMlton
•675-7060•
family home in one of 1---------Costa Me s a 's n ices t
Plctwt Perl.ct
Imma c ulate 3 Bdrm
family room 1n pre
s t1 ~1ous Tu rt le rol'k
Beautiful deror at 1nJ?
vaulted ceilinfls. atrium.
covered patio Priced ll>
self at S184,SOO.
are8$. Handymans de·
light Call now and 11ave'
~
SEA COV£
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
MUSTSaL
SPYGLASS
Portsmouth model Only
S395.000 Agt 640 9345.
IA.YROMT
40 foot lot with private
pier & noat on exclusive
H a r bo r I s land
Sl.780,000 Assume 91.,"I
TO
1714) 673-4400'
12111 ua.1121
HARBOR
A Dw1slon of
Harbor lnvestm~nt Co -. .
NOTICE
how Daily Pilot Class·
tried ads display their
messages with legibility
and impact" Our ads.
we are proud lo say. re
ally get result$ Phone
642-5678.
C!E
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
146oaTriDlex
2·2 & l Br, tw,'boo down
and we think the seller is
half cuckoo-he wants
low interest payments'
Asking S260.000
JACOBS
REALTY
675-6670
Vu HoMe $220,500
This remodeled backbav
home has a iireat view of
th e m ountains and
backbay area 3 Bdrms .
den. family room. pool &
'i pa a re som e of the
features T he master
suite hai. vaulted ceil
inli(s. custom llle worlj. in
the bat h and a ha lrnny,
Owner will c·ons 1det
larl(e 2nd TD with JO'/
down
BUILDER'S
BARGAIN
Outstandinl! h u1 l<ll'r ·,
lot li6x:.>O' with !'harm
tnl! 3 bdrm homt•. c·m
en'<l pat1n L t\(' then·
while vou bu1ltl' Lot ne1'1
ct no·r al <.o f •lr
'\a le fi fix3011' N r
Nc·wport ·.., Ba1·k H<I\
llurrv <'all for 1l('la11'
f>.167171
THE REAL ESTATERS
OCEAN & VALLEY
VIEW
('01v 3br. 2ha homf' dc•n
fr pk. t•tc•
+ :1 mun• -.c•paratc· horn<''
on II? lot CJll no"' ror
ii ppt $485 IM)O ""' nt•r
wlfl finant·('
Roy McCardle. Rttr
548-7729
l· t .. .. : . ., .. : .
• ~ .. : ' ' : • f '
~fAl U fA" ftCIU.INCl Sl!tCI lfO
COSTA MESA.
T win townhouse t vpt•
duplex Two bedroom!>
ups tair.1 f ull hath up
and h a lf buth down
Private. fl'n('Cd palm~
f o u r ca r r a r p or t
Sto rage S uhm1 t on
terms Sl41.SOO
631-7300 H.I .
lalboa Island 1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Iii !,IOI NllA1 RIAi f'>lh lf SfHVl(f.., ILUFFS HST IUY
COUNTRY CHA.RM
T ota lly uparaded and
remod eled dup lex
Front unit with beam
celliniis. stained 11lass
a rfd french doors Both
units have 2 bd rms &
loads of charm 1398.500 $92.000
VA.or FHA
Supn rl(•an 3 fir t \~ Ru,
frph'. dhl 1(11ru1<1· Coll
114~ 91111
IXCLUSIVEI. Y USTB>
Ra re · 'Q " Pla n With Spacio us
Living/Dining Room Area & Cozy
Conve rsatiop Pit. Ideal Location
Wi\11 HI HONl
llOMI., lftC.
REAL ESTATE
l7MIOO
QM COTTA .. .........
oR'P~£.1Ume
with Isolated ntUter
bdrm<cao be parent
tet.rnt or in-law qrtl'I >
. and a J Bdrm cott41e. ANY WAY )'OU dett rlbe
ll • It'• charmin, up to datt · beaut fully
located.
CAU. FOi Dlf AILS
•~721.
Leue/optjon. Spyglaa., 6
br S30.000. l3000 mo
644 1450 AM or eve be1t.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Open Sunda y. 2 5pm. 1641
Orcha rd Dr 5bdrm. 3ba.
freshly painted c•olonia I
hea ut v fo'amilv room
separa te dmm~ room .
frplr. new roof Pnrf'd
a t S160.000 fo r quJC·k
sale Xlnt r1na nr1n ~
T H F. WI F. I> f': M A N S
494 0006or 7SI 4293
NEWPORT IEA.CH
S.14,000down. owner "'111
finance at IJ't': "'Ith
Sl500 mo pay m ent ~
Total pr1 l'e S279,llUll
East Bluff. Sbdrm. :-Iha.
call 644-7063
FtXER UPPER
Good College Park lu1
This 3br. l1•ba homP
needs som e work but thr
potential 1s there• lb
s um loa n!> Sl211 tllHI
AGT 760-8520
SORRY IT'S
HEH SOLD
1s what you'll hear 1r vou
don't rail fai.t ' llom{• I!>
s urie r ~h arp & xtra
l'le a n . wi fe t es t <'d
k itchen Assume low in
terest on ex1stin.1< loan
Seller will help financ<'
Near So C'oa~t P laza
545 M!JI
~Walker B lae
RF.AL F.STATF.
DOH"T POST?OH!
HAPPIHESS
rr you a re looktnl( for a
nict' home in an '<Int
neighbor h()()(f l.1•1 u ...
show you this on<'' I.I!•'
lot . RV. home wa rranl\
included a l th1~ lo "'
P rlC(' 545·9491
......,.. Walker B laa
REAL ESTATE
HO! YES!
HO! YES!
H you're undecided . SC('
t his lvly & s pa cious
h ome Assumf' this
super low interest VA
loan 9wner wall help
finance Call now for
showing Won't last at
this pn ce. 545·9491
·~Walker Blee
REAL ESTATE
MOVE UP TO
MESAYHDE
This s pacious 4 Bd 2-atv
home has an outstand-
ing comer location and a . OPEN HOml
r-'I AI IY
A popular PALERMO model with a
pool in Harbor View Homes . Prime
corner lot a c ross from the park.
Four BR's. 21h baths + Family
Room. Amenities include built-in
bookcases. A s uper value. $284 ,900.
· With La rge Enclosed Patio On Lush
Greenbe lt Near Pool & Tennis Club.
T as t e ful l y D ec orate d & In
Immaculate Condition. P erfect
Home For Ente rtaining. Owner Will
Carry Second Trust Deed. $230,000.
!~~~~~~~~~~ 91"1~ fully assu mable loan. The price is rlfht
at '219,000. Call Anne
McCul1nd. 631·1266
/
To pl1ce your meauae
before the
reading public.
phone
Dally Pilot
Cldllfied. '42·5678
'
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
@ ·--..... , .... ,,
759-9100
#JC_.,., ........
NewportCewhr
·::~~.~' S@\\~~-li£tRs· .... ....
U-11f C\AY I. rouAll ----_,..
••-•o""' le"9f• ol ..,. IOOH l(IO""'led -dt beo-to.. ,. ...... loo.• ll"'llle -·
I PU G YSM
1 I I I I I
I O NEVY I I* I I' I 1 I R E W 0 H I ; Tiiey eay th• tMne ••• 1111 r I I r ... dengltfOUI ~., •. Kid• .,. try· -• . -Int new t111no1. to hOw coma
they dOn't try -? l RENKIT I I' I I' I I • tJa= :-,.,:~~
----------..... • ,,_ ........ , Mlow.
I :~h(1ttJ0¥.;smm r r I' r I' t I' J
I trtt:=r'· imtu io I I I I I I I I
ICl•Mol.ITs A•twWI .. Cl9liffl11ll111 UOO
Ca ... lfr..olHCh 1011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
AFFORDABLE VIEW
This large 4 Bdrm. 2.,..,
bath ocean view home
has lots of room for ex-
pans ion! Close to beach
and harbor Owner will
be c reative S\75.000
498-4950
~
MISAVRDI Beautiful 5BR. Pool
home nr golf courte. No
agls please E ves :
631-~lg\.
ESTATE SALE Coll~ge Part 4 Br, 1~
b11 . 1120.000 cash
805 /5 24 ·1S90 o r
905 IM4·5380. eblflgO
On t~ Oranae Co11t· 1-•MOft--· ... -c·OMD-·.-
look to Llnfo fll"St Immaculate aBr, Ill•.
CONM .. Mw I OZ2 N ea r new pa I n t .
•••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Sprinklers front &t back. Covered patio. Near
c 'U:...':t .. school•. Aaltlna odly
112$.000. Call 540-1151
· HERITAGJ
klJ\tlOH',
t m01. new. 4 bdrm + 2
bdrm unit. a rtreplatea 4 oar 1ar,1, u1ed brlt~,
rrench windows.
T 0 t • 7 ot ~ 0 r ch I d ~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .._000. Call '°' •Pl't to Trlld9 "°"" old ttulf tor
Hf, •1•1as CwUl c:oop> new toodJti wlt'-• 0.....11*1'. ~ .... ...,.
• .. • q .. • p
Ot'ange Cout DAILY Pll.OTfT~. Match 17. 1981
\
• Pri vate Parties only -no commer'ctat businesses please.
DlilyPilat
Any classif ication . • No cancellation Rebate.
........ ,..,. We Ho.a ... For We "-"For We ........ For Sde OtMr-IHI hteh °"*'•"' ...... H041MS UllfwwillMd ...... u.fwwl.... " ... " u ......... d ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~ ....... !·~~~ ~':~ ....... , .... !~.~~ ~~~~ ..... !~~~ ~~~~ ... !~.~! c:-~:'~i7o'O ~~~~!.'!~~!!! .. ~!.~~ !:: .......... ?~.~~ ~.~~~~~ ... ?~.~! ~~!~~ ... ~?~!
10. 754!( LOAN : Three DB.UXl 4 II VIEW VtlW Newport Hts. 2bdrm ur» ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEVEllACiE By OWNER. formal dl,n . ~~ bed 3 b th h • d u t e d 2 11 a r 28 rond F llb k 1 h 3 br : pool. Now ava I "boutroom2100' .... •f ...... t.oDmlnt· MaJnificent 4 Bdrm. 3 Exclusive Porta fin a Eves/Wk~nd . 679 ~ "Orlf "OU~try~ sa":°.500 P r de or o wne r s ip Ar rowhead Countrv MEWPORT MACH
HAllOR VIEW HOME
MONTEGO MODB.
n ..., ""' bath home in lovely ho~e with view Master 5 · . 7 1 4 ~ 5 4 8 . 1 6 9 S fou~ex loc~ted within C I u b a re 8 • S a n
ins room. family room . No r t hwoo d area . suite with fireplace Secluded.icatedcomm.in w11 1og dist a nce to Bernardino. 1.864.1732,
b r lc:k fire place. Two Gor geous yard w ith Huge declla. De.n w/wet Back Bay with NewPort 714-728-0366. Or e Mall. 3 Bdrm 2 1.884.7258 story floor plan. Loc.ated c u s t om s p a a n d b a r . E x e c u t l v e D t. Ba er's unit It three --------
on QUI ET cul-de-sac. waterfa ll. S pacio us nei11hborhood. $345,000. Beach address. Rustic ~ 2 Br 2 Ba unita. All have Costa Mesa 3224 4 Bdrm , 2 Ba, gardener include d.
Children and pets welcome. $1050 /mo. Aasume 10. 75~ loan, ooms and beautifully L V..__ R E private setting for these Ol'llh 5 1800 fiarages Assume 12V.''4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ' ClrJllll9G ~ • e l e 0 ont . s p acious ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·d i ll owner will help finance. decorated thruo u t. 497 1761 " oa n an owner w 2 BR, encl gar. adlts . no 1154,090, TARB ELi,, ·G reat financin11 a vail•· • ho m es. Only 3 left MIAITHISAMD c a r ry 2n4' with 20~ pets.MS0.773 W.W1lson. J QUAIL PLACE
PROPERTIES BKR.~1720 ble.1224.500. Lease Option. 3bdrm . B roke rs welcome lcAoaP-.Dtlplex d o wn .P 'ill p r ice 631-4889
S30.000 option money. Newport Glen Court Seconds to the water S250.000. \. - ---
IACllAY 3br, 2ba home plus Ideal
mother-in-law quarters.
Compl. w/bath. $220,000.
loy McCwdle, ltttr
541-7729
don osen
r•·.-.lr 11r ....
Sl200/mo 1395.000 sell Cend of Tustin Ave I Excellent 3 BR owner's 2 Br 2 full bath condo 2
P r ice. P rin t' Onl v 642-0430. 979·9•'45 dvs "home-li ke" un it & 2 car gar Pool. jacuzzi 752-1920 644-1284 497_1~ 675 0043eves · BR. 2 ba rental unit. Gas pd S'700/mo Days
---Ideal for home & in· 2 13/861-8207. home ~_.................,
lmt AT P ROSPECT 2Br cabana & trlr, s ublet· llG CANYON come. Close to NewPort 213/!rlJ.2660
TUSTIN. 731·3111 ting allowed. 3 pvt bchs. GOLF COURSE LOT pier&shops. $289.950.
Woodbridge Land inf( pool & fish ing pier. OwMrMustSelt ! WesleyM.TaytorCo.
Brand new 4Br 3Ra $29.900.17 14 )499·3816 Al(ent,DannBibb Re._,. 644-4910
5 Br 3 Ba 2 Sty. SI 11>0
mo lse
494-0066
Hut1tiMJton l.ach 3240 Ml1sion Vt.fo 3267 • •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
frplc in mstr ste. £ Z as· Lo-_ -;;:.'--1 -I 0-52 675·2311 640.7665 Fout• v.-.y I o 34 ~-"""f""""
••••••••••••••••••••••• sumab le S150.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hte-. Property 2000 I~ Jluge 3 br. 2 ba. s ubmit on
kids & pets. avail now.
$625 631·6994
I BR. nl>w cpts. drps . • 3br, fam rm. rrplc. par·
walk lo bch Clean & pvt quet-tile noors. C'OVered
$400 1st + S250 dep brick patio. lge yard.
TRUE VALUE
in the ever popular
Westmont homes. 3 lrg
Bd + Bonus rm. Be low
market price. Sl 27 .000
Call Anne Mccasland
63 l · 1.2166
Uii!NI
HIMflMjton l.och I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IRIMG AMY OFHR
Lovely 3br. cslm home
near beach & park . I
ror mal dining , heavy
shake roof. Call now ror
informat ion regard1nl!
the 9~•"' assum. loan
Seller w /carry part or
the buyers down pay
m ent & says brinsi anv
orrer
HST PRICE
IN TOWN
4br . remodeled kitchen.
plush car pets. custom
drapes. freshly painted.
seller bought another & has priced t housands
~low market value ror
quick sale Creal 1vt·
terms ok·hetter hurrv
INVESTORS
SPECIAL!
E xecutive Duplex for
discr iminating tasll'
3br. 3ba . each. central
air. woodbum ing rrplc~.
custom drapes' carpels.
heavv shake roor II ' ,r:
loan · is ass(Jmable. no
qualifying necessa rv
SI CM< Down Or LH\
MOVES YOU IN
No qu alifying
necessary Your mon
thly payment can be ad
Justed to meet your mon
lhly budget. We have
many 3 & 4bdrm home tn
best Orange County
locations w tthese lt>r ms
Call our specialist for
more inform ation.
~ GOLDENWEST ~ EALTORS ,., .. ,,;-!ASSOCIATES
84MSll
OCEANFRONT
Distress Sale 2Br co-op.
view unit on sand & surf
Exclusive adlt comm 24
hr sec bldg. PrH:ed al
owner's cost for fast
escrow. S\79.000.
l&H ... nshMfttt
752-21'7
(M.IHMAI
life 4 Bdrm 2ba. up
1traded w/s hake roor.
hot tub. encl patio Love·
ly a rea. 1129.500.
SUNS ETR.E ,
~5808 846-8803
Hwt~ H.-.. 1042
····················-·· 6..._Wnthteh1
Beawtul· S&S Exec 4
bdrm home. tlegant wet
bar, bit-in bbq inaide &r
many other am e nities
incl. a hu1e ya rd th't
backs to a beautlflM
park. J ust 2 yrs old I
Broker . 983-1182
~ 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * •DEERFIELD L er•ut m o d e l I n
l)ffrfleld . The P lan S done u never belortl Pool, apa, maanlflcent
ffcor and IHdacapln1. All tl\la and uaume a ruo loan balanH. c an
~.
S239.500 645-9850 agt
FOXlotlO HGTS. * * C 0 l l [ G [ "The Gra<'emont" mdl. 4 br. 2:v. ha. prof de·
PARK corated & landscaped
. Shows like a model. Lge Lowest-l>nce Syracuse -ass u m ab I e l o a n
i n College Park Ownr/Agl S359 500
Owner's anxious Good 831·8638 '
location Ass umable1·----------r1nancing Call fo r de·
tails Mission Vl.jo I 067
~ HANC H
Hf Al TY
~)~) 1 2000
**LINCOLN!
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HOME In tt. SUN! On a grassy hill' Beaut.
vu! Adil. sel"d. peaceful
comm Pvt club w lpool.
jac. sauna. & l(olf 2 Br.
single stry Quality de·
cor in warm neutrals '
SI08.000 Fantas ti c
IA YRtONT HOME Luxurious 4 Bdrm . 4 ba
w /pvl dock ror your
yacht, right al your front
door Excel. Peninsula
Poin t l oca t ion
Sl .295 .000
Owner /BuOder Charles
McK\nnon. 675-2763 ancl
Dan Ribb640-7665
THEILUFFS
3 IR-Split bvel
Finest original a rea
Massive greenbelt vista I
Smartly decorated in I
popular tones. nearbv
pool orrered at $212.000
rw1th assumable h1 bal
loan try $43.000 down)
Agl, 640 5560 No. not the President·
but a beautiful 3 Bdrm
a t tach ed 'home in
gorgeous Woodbrtd~e
Estates. This is the best
priced prod uct or •ls
type in the area Flex1
hie financini.t loo Call
price' Tolle Rltrs •Oc·eanfront dplx. xlnt
586·8500 5R1·2994 loc. fin. & price! Prm
now
$165.900
\\\loo bridge
Realrg
551·3000
t'208arranu P11.voy,~rvlnr
3 Bdr. 2 Ba. counln like
home in The Colon\
Take over extStinJ? loan
& owe m .ooo 640 M77
Agt
LOOK WHAT
Ne¥tpott leach I 069 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VICTORIAN BEACH HOME
New 3 BR 31~ Ra Quall
tv handcrarted oak
lhrunot Stained glas1..
spa
Plan_ Ill Realty
752 6499
LOWDOWN
Versailles 1Br'stud10
penthse condo. w lg a!'
sumable loans. only
SI 05.500 Owne r ' a gt .
645·3447. 979·5370 ask ror
Jim
onlv 673 7677. 673·7873
I 0%0wn, I 31120/olnt.
3 br. 21-i ba condo Ten
n1s. pool jac Mu~t ~t-11
A~l 642 1523
OCEANANT DUPLEX
2914 Oceanfront. Corner
Sell or trade Submit
your deal Own I Agt Ofr
642 9601. Res. 846-3939
ATTHEIEACH
N1t·e 3 Br house m super
r ond Terrine financml'?
S23.5.000
SUNSF:T R E
542·51a 846-8803
$40,000
WE FOUND
Incredible rind. good DESPERATE
location near park A S34.000 down. owner will
large 4 bdrm. 2•., ba rinance at 13'•'1 with
Plan 4 in Northwood Sl500 'mo pay ments
Place Immaculate Tot al priC'e S279 .000
and owe balance 7 vr'
new 3 (rplcs. v1ev.: &
'ltc•ps to beach
Rafferty & t.loyd Hkrs
963-5568
throughout. Ceramir tile East Blurr. 5bdrm. Jb<1 San Juan
entry. bei2e C'arpeltnl'? call644·7063 Coplstn.o
and nice wallpapers 1----------1 ·••••••••••••••••••••••
F:xternnve brick and ce EastW.ff Estate 3 MllH fr Marhta ment patios I.ow 1n
terest assumahlt loan Special WfTM OCEAN VIEW
Inter.st Rate Rmtdlo S.. J"°"
4 bdnn. 21'.I bath with Estates
plush carpet & wood Over 3.000 sq rt o r
floors. Fam ily r oom elegance. Exclusive new
With r1replare. Great homes. from $515.000
rinancing wllh a 13'; J4'h ''i nnancing avail
••••••••••••••••••••••• , 2100
APPLE VALLEY •• • ••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • Near ne w 4-PleK. 2
bdrm. 2 bath each unit
with fireplace. enclosed
pat io. double u r oge
U6S.OOO.. Bill Grundy.
Rltr. 675-6161
FOUR PL EX
Westside Costa Mesa
Need s ~me work .
522,000 yr income . Full
pr ice $225.000 Owner
wi ll carry 10"? interest
w/S60,000dn.
A PR€H IG€ '--l---...--__,.~_HOM€\
R. E Investments
3333 W. Coast Hwy. NB
645-6646
INCOME ,ROPERTIES
Looking for income un·
Its?! We have 5 pro·
perties in C.M-Prired
r ight at les s t han
lt XG ross No bank
n nancing required In·
terested? Then call us
.Jx· NEI&SER mm tJ!J,U..11~
714 641·0763
2787 Bristol St
Costa Mesa, CA
MEWPotlT IEACH
AAA PROPEttTIES
I. 3 Triplexes tn a row.
south or PCH in Corona
del Mar
II 2 duplexes + I triplex
in a row on Bal Penin I
lot from sand /s urf
I II. 1 duplex on water
with dock ~or JO' boat
All t hese proper ties
have large. assumable
loans at 12 5'1 Call
S m ith M,eyer. Bkr
640-S357 or 548· 7813
Do You Wont A
4-Plex for S38K Dn
All 2 Bdrms. Total prier
Sl70.000. 54().3666
STC>r RIHTIMG
Buy your own industrial
unit. 1000·5000 sq rt
Avail. in HB or FV Call
Paul 545-6057
Lots for Sale 2200 •••••••••••••••••••••••
RIVERSIDE
1+ Acre Lots
OWC20"4 OWN
979 7300 . 994 2171
Owner /agl.
MEWPORT IEACH
llGCAMYON
Goff Coww Lot
Owner Must Sell '
Agent. Dan Ribb
675-231 1 64(). 7665
Arc h Beach Heights
between 1950 & 1972 Del
Mar Ave Ocean view
Approx 25x80 Eves
call 2131320-M-42
Mo....tain, DeMrl.
Rnort 2400
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HAWAII
We have a beaut new
3b r . 2ba h o m e on
KAUAI We can arrange
to keep it rented for you
until yoo are ready to
make a move you've
a lways wanted to make
Contact Ka ren Bender
(80 8 )742 6436 .
(~)822·94TI
Special Lmtd Sol•
Orean view lots, Morro
Bay area. 2 lots SI0.990
E·Z terms Beaut views I
or the Pacific Ocean.
Estero Bay & Cayucos
Call 805-772 3958 or
805·772·8612. Agt
2bdrm. l~a duplex. gar.
washer /d ryer hook ·up.
new noors. crpts. paint
$47!1 + dep T sma11 c11tld
ok No pets 1952 Meyer
549·3484
Lge gar. tiny hse. lbr I
ba. adults . no pet~.
S400/mo 892-3731
Secluded 2 Br I Ba patio
home witti c·om m pool.
Adults only. no pets
Avail 3-13·81 S500 per
mo 24$.1 Orange f\ ve
M anagrr Apt R
Nt>w !'!Ix :l br. 2• ,. ha,
frplc. dbl gar w OJ)('m'r.
yards. patios. j!ardent'r
K 1ds 'pl'ls OK $7 50
Lorri. wkdys 547-9571
eves wknds 546·543'1
COl'NTRY RF:NTAI. BY
PURI.I C CS 1-: A I. F: [) I
BID on April 6. 19RI
<oneJ 2 & 3 bdrm homes
Backbay Univ. Dr ;irea
For info rt1ll COUNTY
OF ORANGE GSf\
R .. :AL F:STATF.
OIVISION 17141834 2550
Refurbished 3bdrm Jh.i
crporl. In~ rn<·d bk vrd
pattO. t rµls . no pt>ts
S550/mo 581·1716
QUICK MOVE IN
Hui.te nc•ar new 3 Br 2
Ba Townhouse type. 2
car garage , pa tio,
fireplace. Small child.
small pet OK Like your
own home S650 m o
Wont last. Drive by 2195
M a pie St. th en call
642·1603
O.tofStah F:'side uttrar 2Ar Iha nn
Property 2600 pet!. Avail Mar 15 $450. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546 3937
40 A scenic Oregon Coast
Electncity. fenced. out
standing view accessi
ble. owner 492 249!!
Alb. N.M New c ustom
3 Rr 2 Ra Fam1h room
f1r('plare RV a c<'eo;<,
corner: cnl'lsd ~ ard
971 9511 & 546·4093
536·6288 cul·de·sac •S625 mo•
737-3116
f:xec Home Cul de·sat•
3hr 3ba ·ram rm
Gardener. $750 lease
2131373-3267
3bdrm house. cul -de sar.
nr Westminster Mall
Fenced yard. dbl i?ar.
S65()1mo No ree to te
nants Coat~ & Wallace
962 4454 .
Adult c·om plex 2bdrm.
2ba. atrium. pool sra.
tennis. million dollar
rlubhouse S650 mo Ca II
Phyllis 962·4454
Coals & Wallace
H .. 1t~ HartM>ur 3242 .................•...••
View condo. 3bdrm. 3ba.
2 rrpk. dbl gar. patw.
tennis. pool. s pa. xlnl
cond S875 631 0995
Newport l each 3269 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NewPort Shores Canal
front 4bdrm . 3ba. newlt
decorated. 2 hlocks to
ocean. 962 6683
3 Rr 2 Ba large yard. 2
car gar age $745 mo
675 0062
Yearlv rental 3 Bet. 2 Ra.
ind · s tove S750 tmo
Possible lease option
AJ!l 673 3355
3 Bdrm. rrpk. walk to
beach, l'(>OI & tennis
S745 Agl 709278
ILUFfS
3 bdrm. 21"1 baths. ram
rm. mso 2 bd rm. 2 hath.
$875. 3 Bdrm. ram rm.
SJJOO Pools Rltr
644-0134
Irvine 3244 2bdrm. pvt bearh & ten
••••••••••••••••••••••• n1s~oun .S700 mo
Large3Br Condo211 Aa 551·~16
Din area. ramilv rm .
frplc. rrpl. 2 ~torv
c·omm pool. Avail ~I Iii
$865 mu +depo:-1t (.'all
752 l282 9 lo 4
l.F:ASE Turtl t-roe k
Glenn lrl'?est sm11h• ram
home. 5bdrm. 3ha r:1m
rm. eentral air. 3 t•ar
gar. walk to pool & lt•n
ni~ $1.050 Call Garv
after6pm: 752·11318
llDCOMDO
Walnut Sq . nu carpel/
paint. no pets Submit on
kids S 625 mo Grell f\s
tie. aJ{l 559-9400
For Lease Woodhridge 4
Ur 3 Ba 2 Story homr
on eul·de·sac Warmlv
decorated · Immaculate
Private atrium & patios
with brick work S900 per
mo. melds Gardener &
assoc fees. 731 ·6395
Beaut 2 Ar 1 Ba. douhle
..:a rage Ma ny extr<i ~
S650 mo. 5411·602:! &
67S 8918
RIG 2 BR AtrOS!> rrom
heh Rlt ins patio,
lndry, ..:ar $700 ~·rly
962·4914
Presti~r Irvine Terraee
3br. lg pool & ~pa. Ne,. ly
decorated & landscaped
Walk to beach $1700 mo
640-7319 aft Spm
The Bluffs. 4bdrm. 3hu .
ram rm palm on gn•t>n
be lt. t·omm pool
Sl200tmo 759 168.S
Rig 2br. across from bch.
built-ins. lndrv. J?a r . S700
yrly962-4914
NEWPORT BEACH
11'\o blocks to th(' ocean
heach Three bedroom
two bath home Vcarl\
lease. First and last
SJOOO per month
631 ·7:ll0. AK R
HARIORVIEW
Super e xec 5 Adrm
w /VU. $1350 mo Agt
644-9990
lfS23 CAMPIJ5Da·IRVINE
LGCJWIG l.ach I 048
Redh1l1¢~Realty
fil:~ 1:~1111
fixed rate & 20'1 down Charter Rlty & Invest
S245.000 Hurry. with 496·8122 831·8811 • Whelan terms II ke this it won ·1
last ' ~~~••••••••••••!?.~~ . Real Estate
built 3.000 5q rt 4·plexes. ':lbdrm with l!ar. nt•wl\'
Very positive cash effect dee F: side. Ir.I? vr<I.
ror so•·; brack et In·' $585.673<»184
vestor Sl 15.000 Bldr.
( 714 1114f>.85 70 LGF: 2br horn(', r pto;, '>t'
re frig fnt·d vet. gar
adull'I. S.150 mt> 644 9806
Woodhridge Townhou~c 2
c;torv. 3Br. 11"1 ba. pool.
ten..;111 & lake t.650 mo
551 5526. 750 3403
Ocean View ' I.gt• 2nr
Condo ser hldg adull:-
only S795 lse 5~ 5111
Steps lo the beach. lge 4
br dplx. 21 :> ba. patio, 2
sty. immac SJOOO vrly
673-25(Y7 .......••......•.......
THE SHAKES 1~~~~~~~1 W e a t here d c e d a r 1-=
shakes. that 1s Custom l•---------1 desiJmed J bdrm. fam JASMINE CRHk
rm. 2 baths Extensive Take advantal(e or m y
use or wood glass & assumable 8"•'~ loan
ceramic tile Beam re1l· Beaut Jasmine Creek
mg, frpk. Sl65,000 condo. plan 1. 2bdrms.
Mission Realty den . guarded gal«>
*•HISTORIC 445 P acific·T ustin
Owner's anxious. BrinJ(
a ll o rre rs . Restored
beauty on 1 , acre. For
more info call Ranch
Realt . 551-2000
PRIDE
OF OWHEttSHIP
TRIPLEX
Assume 111."~ loan and
owner will participate In
secondary financing
Only Sl.80.000 Call now 1
979.5370
ALLSTAT.E
REALTORS
2700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F. s1dr 3bdrm. 2ba. xlnt
loc~
6:l1·6990 Pat
Northwood Mdl hou~(' 2
stry 4 nr. 217 ba 2500
st ( msormo 551 ·8731
Have two acre horse pro·
perty & house in Norco
W /JO register Arabian
horses Will trade for
property in Costa Mesa
or Newport Beach area
Phone 714·737·4MI Brand nttw 2 Br. 11.., ba
condo. t600 mo No pets
2800 770-5578 ••al&tah b~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
WOODRRIDG F. 3 Rr 11 •
Ba. Condo S600 1 mo
W r k (7141833 602!)
Rama lf omt'
f 2131498·6090
Turtlero c k N e w
Lg 3Rr. 21'.!Rll Condo. fpl.
dbl gar S'775. 36" ooat
s lip optional S200
675-1225
town house 2 M ;J<, le r 1111!1'~1!111 ....... ~~-.... !lll
bdrm. fam rm 2'., Ra VILLA BALBOA 2 Rr
1750sq. rt Prof rlerorat I'':' ba.ocean view. a vail
ed Pvt patio Pool. trn short term $850/mo.
nis. park close. $'900/mo VF.RSAILLF.S 28r 2ba. (714)494·0731 comm Pool. tennis
Owner /agt $315.000 Rustic 4 bdrm $199.000 640-6188. 831·8638. OtMrRHI h'* Costa Mesa E side 4·
plex. poss. cash flow.
S325.000 27 7~ down owe balance at 13~ 13 9
X gross. Pr ine. Only
640-0097
Mobile Homes·Lakeside
B ig Bea r La k e or
Ocnrront Lattuna Bch,
terms or trade 499·3816
2 Br l Ba No pets I c•hild
OK 2097 Maple Ave
New crpt.s. drps. utils tn·
cld
833·8277 or 752·6492 luxury rum Condo Short
terms 1247 Starlit. motivated 1----------1•••••••••••••••••••••••
seller. Jim Mt'Broom Moblt"°"9H REHTALS
2+den. 2'h ba
3br JI• ba
Waterfront Homes . Inc
Agt 499.2395 5 Br 3 Ba Harbor viel4 ForSale
H ome S:l49 .500 1100 Private investor wii;hes
to exchange certificated
diamonds. rubies. sap
phires for R F. equities.
Free & clear prererred.
Full comm to hrokers.
Call Mr. Suess 539·8931.
1·457-GOLD.
Sharp F.asts1de house on
quiet street 3 Br 1 Ru
frplc. refrige, ds hwshr.
J(arage $625. Waynr.
Agent 646·81116
$750
$550 Realtors 631 1400
S675 $775 ~~~~--~~
Have something to sell"
Classified ads do it wel I
Owner /Agt Comm
pool. 673 77111
Newport INch I 06' Classified Ads. your one
•• ••••••••••. ••• ••• •• •• stop shopping renter".
I macnab I Irvine
reaJty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
IXCIPTIOMAL IUY OH UDO ISU!
4BR home w /center court ya rd ,
French doors, hardwood fl oors,
beam ceilings . Street to streef"
location on lot and a half. 3-car
garage . $495,000 in c l. la nd .
Young/lmbern.ino. A68
117' OM MIWPOIT IAYI SBR, 8
baths or casua l elegance w/pler and
slip for t h ree 70' boats . Super
construction and design w /views
from nearly every room. Spacio~
rms fo r f amil y livin & a n d
large.scale entertaining. H.y<fraullc
elevator to pvt roof sun~eck .
'4,250,000. Cathy Schweickert or
Jo&M Akerman. A69
70-1414 c°""""' v-, ,.....,
MWlll ~l~DIW•
•••••••••••••••••••••••
T ra iler at bch SI4.900
Terms, OWC or trade
499·3816
New Modula r type home.
Ocean view -El Moro
Beach Park, s p 70. 2Br,
space rent Sl75 mo 20
yrs lse. 169.900. 499·3816
Mo bile Ho m e. 15X30.
Jbdrm. Costa Mesa.
adulta, no pets. SJ0,900.
673-31126.
•EXCITING•
Socriffc• Beautif ul custom ized
24x62 Lancer Home . 7 yra. old. 2Br . 2Ba . ra m
room. Garden tub w tall
appllancea en c l. In
La(una H1lls nicest sta r
park. 21 yrs & older.
1.11,500. (Jfll359).
.... ..,lllTow.. A Doll Houle, 20x4.2. 28r.
tBa, -•llr·ln closets. Many~tru. SZ2,SOO.
CLASSIC
MOllLIHOMI
IALIS 2709 Harbor 8te JO&. A
14Ntl7
Costa Mesa W side 4·
plex. poss. cash flow.
S225,000. 25 '~ down,
balance carried at 11 &
12~. 12.4 X gross P rine
Only. 640-0097.
Du p lex . Costa Mesa,
2bdnn ea Assume 1st. owe 2nd . St53,500.
640-8585.
-----1
'58 Owens 31' F.xpress
C r uiser T op shape.
R e placement va lue
S30,000. Exchange for
local R.E . equity Bob:
(714)498-2229.
2bdrm end unit, maste r
b'drm with balcnny.
prime location. S750/mo
Call Phyllis 962-4454
Coal.II &r Wallace
HwwtlMjton leoch 3240 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3br2ba
3br 2ba
3br 2"'7ba 4br2"'1ba
S1250 furn
S850
S900
3280 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdr m . lba. dr ive by.
2006 S G11 r n s ev
644-7063. .
3 Bdnn. 1"1 bo. SC P laza
area. Newly dee. kids
OK S650. 557-2783
3 Br 2 Ba end condo. adult
park. security gate &
encl. gar. Patti. 540.3666.
839·0068. ssso.
!!IMVISTotlSI! ..... 5 bllts to ocean. Elegant 2
bdrm. ram rm & den.
IS750 mo>. Plush crpls,
21,; ba. cedar & glass.
Obi car pvt gar. rutty
------c~ .... L~IHCh 3248 Ullfwwlshed 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Long Beach 7 U, 9.!IX
Anaheim4-Plex llX
Los Angeles 6 u. 12.X
Pasadena 7 U. 9.5X
Call for more info.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~n~n:U~~ ~~~sist':i~ Ne w 2Br. 2Ba Mobile ,..._,, .. , ... 3107 St 714 /960-6331 o r Home. good ocn view.
714/847-96al
pvt bch. llJ50 mo Adlts
••••••••••• • •••• •• • •• • • _96(). __ s_l_l2_.______ only. 499-3Jl6
Charmlna 5 bdrm, 3 bath I Bedroom Condo near 1-------
20 U .... ITS ,. M bayfront with 38' boat " ~. • float. 111100 mo . 8 111 Broolthur s t /Adams.
Be a u t . t ye a r o Id Grundy 675•6181 Pool rrennla. Etc. S390 Twnhse Units. F111lcs. ' ' mo 646-4417
Oceanrm t lBr. trlr +-
cabana. deck. pvt bc:h,
rum/unfum, adlt.s only
S750 mo. 499-3Jl6
Lux condo. 3bdrm. 1 ~ba.
pvt patio. 2 car car /elec.
ope ner, cli>se to S.C.
Plu a. S595/mo. lae .
549-0259.
3br, Zba Irvine Condo.
pool S600 /mo before 5
551-3al7778·5113 an $PM Nice area. 11H.._= .... ._ TSL JNVSTMTS 642·1603 Hw ~ 142 New condo In Seaside ~ IJ .. _ h •· Atl d d • B 3br, 1\;ba. 2 ml from O(n • ••••••••••••••••••••••• VI a~. ocac .,. an· 3 B rm I en , ., a · pool 1525 1213 )418 •• 122 S7AN2A7ff,JEOJOM U p l(raded condo nr ta 81vd,2br.den.2~ba. lmmed. leue MSO. 1075 Paul (?U )H 3_1 758 cJubhM. pool" Jae. ll br. 1eso aq ft. sec. irate. ten-Nona. 5M-t'5e. 780-9596 h
18 larft Unit.I. Unit.I rul· 2~ ba. 11200. 84()..l'T89, nla eta. pool " Jae . •---------,_<_ome __ > __
ly occupied . Each In· 848-l3'7l (Mary i;;nen> 1975/mo. t21ll>S!S·lJ89: Ocnfront Mobile Home Ocun View 1 Lae !br
c I u d ea c arp e tl n I , e v e 1 • w It n d 11 1 ZBr. pvt bcb. $1,000 mo, Condo le<' bldi. adults
drapes . b u I It -1 n .,.t IMdl Jl" (213)131-5734. yrly, adltaonly. rum/un-OftlY '195/lae S2l8-5tll kitchens, toretd air heat ••••••••••••••••••• •••• rum .a1e
• alr, Louwel ln h11h, B AL B OA I s LAND • Br. l"'ba.sln11e ra m ll1 --------•rllEE R.~ tJI J/Sl/11.
1pac:.loua 1arden 1lyle BAYFRONT . Short home. 1700/mo, Rd 1. .......... 3110 Hnti Landmark s BR
complex. New 75~ 30 tenn rental. Avall now ple .... 147_..,,l ...... ••••••••••••••••• condo. b r and new .
'1tloutbftld llotorHmt ~T~~.~oal~~e!~~~rnet~; ~;1~ ':rrn!5i t"'~;;:; s BR, 1 ba, new plu~h a 11•0:=~ ~:t~n. !!,.taltt ~ ~ 401n.
2S'Cfua'A'IK mt, lint 714~. cluplu apt.. a-ca r cpta., MW drpe, rovd. Fenced y ards Ir ____ mo_._,_. _____ _
cond. loaded w/xtrae' 1---------praee .• '1000/mo. Lou patJo. fnc:d. yrd .• ~•lk to 1ar•itt. Kida fr "t• 2br, *· pooltjac /clbi.e, T•h In late m odel ' rlnO what you want In B rec htel Ir A noe . bch.-. lit+ t300dep. w1 Jeome. "4·HIC or nr S.C. Pl••• l.WO/fl'IO.
Ced/Unc:ol.n 831·17• Dally Pilot Cl ... ln.dl. nJ.IDl m.-trJ.arn. Aft., no fee 551.Qll eVtl
r
OCIAMlllOMT
3 Bclnn. z Ba Duplex
UPftalrl, 2 t'ar iaraie
w /auto OPftMt, washer
& dryedndd Avail. H .
TSL MG lfT. 142'1803
65c ror ground floor. 17th St. & Bristol.
Close to courthouse & all fl"eeways. Up
to 2500 sq. rt. John.
4,000eq ft for 1#. atorace
wort uea, PCJtmtlal of· flee aet -up . Will
ne1ot1ate 1ood lae.
Harbor 6 Warner. S.A.
$44.3'100
.... , ......
tl.i1S.OOO ~aah down on tio.m.ooo exlatln1 pro Jen. Appro11. '500.000 a
)'Hr shielter + SU00.000
aales profit ~tentlal dowmtream. rook rn.
ternatlonal ealton.
Wm. Crook. P .O Box
ll94, Redlands. 92373.
714 fm.2721S
............... 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------Quirt 2 Br. 1 Ba. with JIZ6 11rau. patl4. pool. ~~ ........... ~ liSOO up. 1940' lndua'l/Of.
nee. 11101 Redondo Cr. t.•,•···················· ijq, the beach. Private ute. "560. C Inc Ids uUh1 I No peb. '714/875-778' or
Office...., 4400IOH1ce..... 4400 "P".Hunt&cb.142-2834
DOM.., SILL ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••.•••••••••••••••••• PrtmeC•mJ>Ut Dr.
18tTWe.tcUff.N.B.Want Small o ffi ce : 182'7 Location your house ! Thal 's
right! Jr you have SOo/. or
more home equity, then
First Home Investments
can help you make SSS.
No increase In your
monthly house pay·
menta. Call (114)729-2112
1ZU/W.8.l • 1---------1 Sparkling <'lean 2br
ri " 2 bdrm. J ~ b a , di S • 2 Br. 1 Ba. with rerrtge.. 1 "!iba, patio.. adults, no
,.,_,.,ntastlc townhouse, hwasher. crpts. drps. bulll·ins. c arpets & peta 1500 631 ·3888.
'pool, tenn is court. gar. 995:3311, 1470. drapes. 1410. 951-0881 or 6-46-6822
n nanclal Inst. 70009.f. WestcUff Dr. N.B. Good Acrwa ftom Airport
lit. noor. Aicent 541-5032. loc. llSO per mo. &31·0900 Office/Warehouse Space
1925/mo. 780-9117. • 995·3311. 951-7630. Ask for Louie. ---------
33801 Mariana A':=~·Woo
kOUCIMTH
MIWPOllT
Elegant executive suites
In prestige loc ation.
With complete support
services.
3724 IASTSIDE . , ................... .
' SUSCASITAS C~Wooch
Fum l br apt SJ25 & up 2 Rr & StUdy. trl·level.
E ncl. "ar Adults. no rlreplace, s kylight,
,.peta. 2110 Newport Bl deck No children or
2 br. l~• ba. nu crpts. wet
bar. rrplc. sundeck ,
ocean vu. Must see. SS50
493·6314. 661-!t343
~4968btwn8&5PM pets.~ 180 E 21st. St -----Days 646·4262. Eves 2 br. balcony. D W ..
Bach Apts. Uhls. paid 1>45.9543 clean. coin laundry &
Weeklv or Monthl v - --.-ws hr. gar , nr ocean
• J.tcNash Realty 642 1334. 2 HUGE Be~rooms in 493-5953 aft 5PM
6f2-6S78eves s uper location. F.ully
--- -ca rpete d . b u 1lt-1ns .
Stunn inli! Lge J bdrm ground noor. Adults. no
o rden apt . pool trer: pet.s.S350mo Apply Apt
areaS3915.710 W 18thSt E 568 W Wilson
lt..1Mgfo..1~h l 740 -846-44T7. ----
•••••••••••••••• ••••••• • 2 Br 2 Ba Condo nr SC S3'15/up 1·2 bdrm. pool. Plaza. SA. Pool. SSOO.
jac. adlt. 18992 Florida . Child OK 549·3232 or
"'41B.842·2834or842·3172 641 ·1460.
LoCJWMllffch 3748 E Side triplex 3br. 2ba.
:•••••••••••••••••••••• immed ocr:up no pets ~tudio. lux. s p a . TV. S5 50 /mo i n c l util.
maid s e rvice. phone. 851·9647
, 1100/wk. 499·2227
Newport leach 3769 Sunny 2 Br upstairs apt.
E'side. Gar. deck. laund
rm. no pets S450/mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Fabulous . Oceanfronr
"'Wkly: F.aster. Stammer
Now 2 4 Br Prime lo<·
673 7873 ......
Luxurv O r eanfr11nt
'Weekly 2 or 3 Br C'omp
furn 1nrld linen'>
640.4784.
Avail Apr I, 631·1094
WESTBAYAPTS
New ji!arden apts, patios.
pool. spa Adults. no
pets
2Ar. 2ba $480 S485
396 W Wiison, 631 5583
t1wl...,_ leocll 3140 •••••••••••••••••••••••
THI WHIFFU TRH
Luxury Adult units at al
fordable living 1,2 & l
Br. We ll det'orated
Olympic size pool. light
ed tennis court. Jacuz21.
park like landscaping.
M~t beautiful bldg. in
H.B.
From DIO. 846·0619 --
\~o /\DUL T ~~. LIVING
• 1 & 2 BR Patto Apls
lL O.snwulleis & 880 \
• Pool & Rec Room
• G•rden l •nosc•p1n9
• JOQ 10 Buch & Snoos
S G
SEA ENVIRO NMENT
'lb l<' HAl\llll TON Ii A
96] 4')00
I 21 R8rr.1 Ra S39S4655 1br.1 ba. frplc, OW. encl
VILLAGE
New 1&2 bdrm luxury
adult apt.s in 14 plans
from 1440, 2 bdrm from
S505 + pools. tennis .
waterfalls. ponds! Gas
for cooklnJ & heating
paid. f'ro111 San Diego
Frwy drive North on
Beach to McFadden
then West on Mc Fadden
to Seawlnd Villaire
('7\4)893-5198.
ROOtM 4000 •••••••••••••••••••••••
71<V8Sl·0681
BEST RATE
in
NEWPORT BEACH
60010 4200 Sq Ft
•Janitorial Service &
Utilities Included
•Adjacent lo Airport
& Restaurant Row
•Access to 3 Major
Fwys.
Loguna Beach Motor Inn. 833-8813
985 No Pacific Coast 1------
H wy. Laguna Beac h Luxurious. full ser vice of
Dail.Y. Weekly. Kitchen ri ce space. 1·6 rms. con·
available. Low wfnter rerence room . s ec 'I
rates. 494·5294 servi ces . Ne wport
Room with kitchen priv Beach. Call for info:
Near bus ' s hopping _752·6188 __
center. 962-7520 oft 8PM 450 s q. ft Delightful
or wknds. w orking space with
Swedis h exchange stu ocean view. Full bath. 3
dent. 19. male. needs to yr old bldg. S450 mo
rent room. 4/mo period I Turner Assocs . 494·1177.
Starting 2nd week April. 1 s peak s Swedish .
F:nglish, some German
N B are:. R eas
549·9294. 549-9295
NO
LEASE
gar Nr Hunt Ha r bor
161 F. 18th 642·0856 J an.84f>.1186 Unfurnished Room hte
REQUIRED
YEAR·ROUND FUN
Social Act1v1t1e\ 01
rectn1 •Free Sunoc1 y
Brunch • BBQ s • Pdr
l•es • Plu~ much morP
GREAT RECRE.ATION
Tpnn1s •Free LPS~on~
(pro & pro s'10p1 • i
Hea11n Club~• Sa11na •
Hyoromas\age •Swim
ming , Or1v ,n9 Rc1n9e
BEAUTIFUL APART
MENTS $1ng1e, 1 &
2 Bl'Jronm\. rur
~ \l'f'O & u"r1.1r" \h!'O
• l.Ou·I L v ng • ,._o PE-I\
• M oOPI\ >t.>P" Od y
910 6
Oakwood
Garden Apartments
Newport Beach/So
t700 161n SI
FAMILY Ans.
Brand new beautiful lrJ?
apt. for families with I
or 2 r:h1ldren Near park
If eat paid. No pets
38r. 2 Ba. S.560
398 W Wilson. 631·5583
Newly painted 2 Br. 2 Ba.
Patio. built·ins. garaJ?e.
Adults. no pets lmmed
OC(' 645·9857. 548-4291
WALLACF:ST APTS
Newly deroraled 2 Br I
3 Br. 21-i Ba 2 Storv.
lrplc. lndry rm m 4
Plex Bolsa Ch1 <'a
Warner area S580 per
mo ~5504
2 & 3 Bedroom ~
S400..S450 Kids OK. no
pets please Water
Trash P aid Carport
964 ·2566or973 2971 As:t ,
no fee.
2 Bdrm. 2 ba. epts. drps.
d lw. encl ~ar. beac h & 5
Points area S450 1mo
842 8032
Ra S425 Small child 2 Br 2 ba. mirrowave.
0 K . no pets 2 O 4 9 fr p I c S500 'mo Ca 11
Wallace• I. 645·6452 963-MOOor drive by 21792
HEAR HEW
2 Bdnn w/lrplc, bit-ms.
quiet ne11Z hborhood .
walk to park & shop
S495. Isl. last -+ dep Call
llal 631 7900
Arookhursl Apt 18.
FREE RENT t1I 3 31 181
Hnt1-t Landmark 3 BR
condo Brand ne~
Adults only over 40 yrs
S650 mo. 759·9:116
kitchen pnv. I m1 to bch.
priv ba St75 963-1887
Younji! male. pvt home.
Mesa Verdt' area. k1t<'h.
priv 642 4 546 wk
549.91347 hm
Hotek, Mot.ts
Balboa Inn oceanfront
Low winter r ates. Daily
or weekly Kitt•henetle
S90 & up. 675 8740
SEA LARK
MOTEL
•Weeklv rental:. now
a v a II • $98 and up
•Color TV •Phones in
rooms
2274 Newport Blvd C M
646 7445.
0 ('eanv1ew Studio Apt
S350 & ..,erurity deposit
673-4154
J.J~"' ,j; 'bt•
17141 642·5113
2 Bd I Ba. s:n5 Gara1?e. !Br. s:llO mo-. separat(' Su""""' Rentols 4200
yard. no kids pets Call bldJ?. pvt patio. no J)('b •••••••••••••••••••••••
Crall? 631 1266 121314340·6148 OCF.ANFRONT SUM Newport Beach/No
880 ,,. "l'
,~ 't>"'
714 1 645-1104
2bdrm. Iba . xlnt loc
(ac ross s t fr om ••••••••••••••••••••••• G Mral 3802 Oa~wood Apts . i Rear
• patio s.szs 1mo 645·3114 , •..•........•......•.•
Co7.y I Br guest unit
E'side Util pd Avail
Apr 19th S425. 645·6625
2 Br I ba. E'side. Pool.
Newport hoch 3869 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PARK NEWPORT
COUNTRY CLUI
LIVING
Singles, 1&2 bedroom
apts. & townhouses
From $429 644 1900
AnMTS FOR REHT
H B . N.B .. Costa Mesa
Something for F.veryone
Bach to 4 Br llnlurn
Apls Certain loC'at1oni;
of f er P ool. s p a .
fireplace. laun room
beamed re1l1nf?i.
J?a r aji!es . all built 111s
Garden & To~ nhousc•
gar pvt yard. new r ptl· Ot'eanfront ror Winter
paint S450. 673-0731 Rentals Furnished &
F: side lrg 3bdrm. 2ba.
pvt patio. $550/mo
64(). ()')9'7 design
TSL MGMT 642 1603 2Br . !Ba duplex. Ots·
Col"OftCldelM~ 3822 hwas her. newly r e
••••.-•••••••<.;•;•••••• modeled. laundry hook
Spacious I Br w garage. up S5251ease 646·2135.
laundrv fa<'ll SS25 Ask
for Faye 640.9900 EAST SIDE
203 E 1911-1 ST
unfum Broker 675·4912
NO FEE' Apt & Condo
rentals. VIiia Rentals
675-4912 Broker
2 br. ,,., ba + 1-tar. Hoag
Hosp area. nu decor.
open hse Sat & Sun 11 3.
4238 Hilaria W ay.
S500 Imo. 83(). 5875
Avail April Isl 2 Rr 2
Be with sundeck nost'
to beach No petR S700
mo. 675-0124 .Jar:kie
28r. IBa. frplc . Will 2 Br 2 Ba Penthouse
show Fri 4·6PM. $485 Apt. w toc vu $700/mo
mo Ownr 549·2042 Mo lo Mo. 714/624·132.'i
E ves.
MF.R Rf:NT ALS $650
wk Adlts onlv Now tak
ing reservations 499.3579
Vacation Rentols 4250 ..••..•.........•..••..
Big Bear, r:lose to slopes.
sips 8, rrpk. S45 /day.
$175/wkly 546·0116 11ft
6pm
On the heach ' 2 Br 2006
W Oceanfront I Lower
Unit) Weekly or Mon·
thly 759· 1677
NEW PALM SPRINGS
Fully rum condo Ten·
nis. pools Wknds. S150 Wkly. $300 645-8171
Will rent time-share con·
do 2 wks . Aprl 24·May 8.
new beachrront hotel. in
f abulous Cancu n .
Yucatan. Penin, Mex·
1co Incl 2 qn sz bds, dai·
ly maid svc. 1700 Don,
546·4220. ext 269
RefttahtoShare 4300 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MO's facil. in HB 2.000
sq It. Reduced to SL200
mo. lse. Red Carpet.
1193-1351
NEWPORT CENTER
Full Service Suites
SCUTCOSTS S
All you need for one
monthly fee'
64().5470
* DB.UXE OFFICES* From 1 room up to 2300
sq. fl. Sl.08 per s q. ft 3
rooms and up. No lease
required. 2172 DuPont
Or. Adj. Airport.er Hotel
833·3223. 9-12
Now available Ideal
location for Attorney.
Rea l Estate o r En·
trepreneur in beautiful·
Iv m ai ntaine d lull
s ·er vice bu i I d i n g
!Comer Westcliff Dr &
Irvine Newport Beach I
500 sq. fl Call Melissa
645-61Q1. ---------
Newport Center Lawyer
or othe r professional
single of<' m exec. suite
Law library, recep'l,
t.tepho ne a nswering
avail. Lease avail. AV
CO Financial Tower
955-2411
OJflce/warehouse nr OC
Airport, 1800 sq ft offices
& warehOUH. Ortlces
full carpeted & atrcond.
AHume l "'yrs at 1750
mo or ne1otlate longer
term w/ownr. :!IWl·9900
I 0,000 Sq. Ft.
SIMGLEUSER
OFFICE
BLDG.
85C
persq ft
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
Reqonable
Leue'I'erms
Owner 5'9·4086
MESA
INDUSTRIAL
PARK
7t I W. 17tll. St.
CodwMH..CaUf.
642-4463
1·1870 sq ft. Unit avail
for lmmed occupancy
1·2900 sq. ft. & 1·3700 sq
It. lA'tiUs> avail. April
lst. 2 St orage
Warehouses avail. for
immed. occupan<"y . 2000
& 2800 sq. ft. •33<·34• sq.
rt. •Leasing office hrs . Mon thru Fri. 8-4. Sat
10-2.
MoeeyW..t.cl 5030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Private party wants
l200f(.S250K l year note.
secured by Isl T D. on
i i,.; milli o n dollar
Bayfront home Phone
645·9195 resid e n ce .
842 · l Ill t om ce
MortJ1gn. Trwt .,... 5035 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Saltlet-~ Co.
All types or real estate
investments since 1949
S,.ClaNUtc) "' WTDs
642-2171 545-061 '
405 Fwy /Harbor Bl. 5.__ 45-5-0 Widow has money lor ...... _,.. 2ND T.0 .'s any s ize
COMMERCE
PARK
979-9997
N e wp o rt Ce nt e r
Prestigious 9th floor
view location approx
2300 sq It
(714 )640-1560 Mr J oe
Fletrher
•••••••••••••••••••••.•• above St0.000 No credit
Storage Warehou~es m 1. no pnlty For action ~osta Mesa avail. for c all AGT 673·731 t 1mmed. occupancy. 2000 anytime
& 2800 sq. rt. 33< per sq ---
It. Call 842·«63 Mon Mod&enf Flah Mtq
thru Fri. 8-4. Sat 10·2. SINCE !981 •
S G C M lst&2ndTDs. $SOK SIM + to rage a rages 0 w n e r I Non 0 w n e r --~41-3871 SFRs & Condos
Fence d Yard 8000 · Commerclal&lndustrial
bathroom . fac . elel', PETER DOBBS
ideal for contractor ~l!_ 673 9043
548·91131 days Want Investor for N pt
lniMssltetltal 4450 R W ---baylront home Give • • ••••••••• ••••• ••••••• etlhlh ont.cl 4600 II ed 2 d For store & office space •••••••••••'••••••••••• we se<"ur Isl or n ·
at reasonable rates. Reliable party wants lo T D Agt, 675 f!.161
500 to 2700 Sq Ft. 1i:a~ home with water 2 n d T r u s t D {' c d
MESA VERDE DR view & beach access. purrhases arr an ~cd
PLAZA Newport/Laguna area For details. call 960 1957
1525 Mesa Verde E . C M Aug .. Sept. Oct. Must be hkr.
545-4123 ~7~f)~~u r n k " Y
Newport Bea<"h. SI 25
sq. fl. New dlx om ce or
r etail w /p vl bath,
security, a /c. 600·2400
sq. ft. 509 31st St. (next
to Bank ol Newport.
Lido Cannery area )
675·3236. (2131641·9700
PRIME
WATERFRONT
RETAIL
SPACE
1st TIME
AVAILABLE
500-2600 Sq . Ft.
NEWPORT BEACH
SPECIALTY
CENTER
HiCJh Vlslblllty .................
Traffic Locaffon
S,.CW LeosincJ
htc...tf•H How
(71416 75.,662
'"'-Locaffott
1270 Sq ft on busy Beach
Boulevard-Huntington
Beach. Ideal for real
estate office. store or
other suilable business
2 Private baths. avalla
ble immt>dlately 10
Year lease. Attractively
priced
lnlMss/ht•est / FlnaRCe
A~/ PH"IOM!ls/
Lost&Fo.d
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Lost&Fo.d 5300 luslMss
Opportuntty 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ...................... , _________ _
Ladles fi g ur e s al on.
established 15/yr clien
te le . Fully e quipped
Sl5,000 Call 631 ·2444.
Own your o wn J ean
Shop: RO direct · no mtd·
die man. no salesman's
ree. Ollennji! all the na
tio nally known brands
such as Jordache. Van
derbilt. Calvin Klein.
Sed1tefield. Levi & over
70 o th e r brand s
S16,500.00 in clu des
beJ?inninR inventor y.
airfare for l to our na
tional warehouse. train·
1ng, fixtures and Grand
Opening Promo tions
Call Mr Kostecky al
Mademoiselle Fashions
!6121432-0676 Ext. 6
Business for sale Burglar
Alanns. Wireless. Home
bus . vehicle $24 ,950
(714) 848-3180
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5671
REWARD SOO for return
of the two fully equipped
electn <"1ans belts taken
from mv residence on
Anaheim Ave 1-:1ther re
tum or send information
to Mari or Audrey. P P
Box 11 07 . New p ort
Beach. Ca No questions
asked
• LOST Alaskan
Malamute Male 1puppy1
C.M Wallace/19th Of
fering Reward. 642 5225
•
htYffflMwt Lost. Mar. II Keeba, a
Opporfwlffy 5015 t ~yr old M Irish setter F.
••••••••••••••••••••••• s ide C M, REWARO
"TIIAT'S
INCREDIBLE"
Your S725 investment
can bring you a return or
Sl8.12S within J.4 mos• A
free i ntr o du cto r y
seminar will show you
how Call now for re
646·4667. 536·2878
Found· Brown Ing haired
cat. under Npt Is le
bridge 675-7380
LOST : Cat R F:WA R 0
Small Bl a<"k F em
N.B.IC M area Need!'i
medication 548-6539 -
servat1ons F OUND · Doberman
714 /997-7068 Pinsher F em vie
MON-FRI 9·5 M aRnolla /Hell F V
LEE ENTERPRISES 842·7<Xilleves
Eager buyers read the LOST Dark brwn w /ji!old
Classifiedadseveryday eves Bermese ca t
If you have something R·eward 774.5740 d ys
for s~le, reac~ them I ast 548..f745 eves.
ANSW£IS
0 )1JMlllJ -r..voy owner -Ttnk., -
WORKING
They II)' t.h9 t ... aN
the dan1erou1 1oari
Kld1 are tryln1 new
thlnp. IO how come they
don't lf')'WORKlNG!
FOUND: Female Pup
Shop fl erd vie .
Baker /Bear CM
557·2844
FOUND: Fema.le Kitten
Brwn/Blk lone h11lr ~'"
CM 557·99'21
Found : Blk & hwn
female doa . Vic. Edison
High, Hunt Bea c h .
968·5528.
Found: Sml Collie type
puppy. Male. Blk, camel
& whJte. Greenville at
Sunflower 631·4498 or
548·m3 , ...... USO
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
PRE LAW student needs
125,000 Will do anylhinl(
Legal Confidential
DVM P 0 Box 3242.
NB 92663
COVER GIRL * OUTCALL * 953-0778 MC /VISA
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
Pcriy Dmcen.
• 972-1345.
MC & VISA Accepted
GreatCCMllpmly
Escorts
24Hrs. 641 ·0180
Cash/Checks
AM Exp/MC/Ylso
*FOXY LADY*
01.!l'CALL ONLY
VISA MC * 972-1138 .
&otkhcorh
558·1946
24 Hr Service
Serving Or Cty
A TLAMTIS MASSAGE
SfllA
Be pampered
li eaut G iris
IOAM 4PM 7
Phone 645·3433
••
by 16
Open
da \'S
SPIRITUAL
RF.A DINGS
IOam IOpm Fully L1c'd
492·7296 or 492·9034 1815
S Camino Real. San
Clem
THE
Girlfriends
*ESCORTS•
HOMe /Offic~ /Hotel * 759-1216.
24Hrs Now Hiring
MC Visa
AMBER rorme rlv with
COVER GIRL is now
With TH f.
GIRLFRIF.NDS'
WANTED Balding men
& women r l)r inror Toll
Free RO(). 772-3545 oper
208
PHONE FUN
RAM·12PM M C VISA
(714) 636~3
F'or A the rapea ut 1<·
massa1-te h y a lir'd
therapist S20 lo all N F:W
r l1ents M I f' 10 7PM
548·2817
Starvmiz F.nlrepreneur
needs to raise mon~}'
Will do anvthinR legal.
confidential 641 ·5989
5450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"V ive Le s acre '
mercenaire" l.ookin1-t
f o r overseas work
673·2.828
&tDlo~& ,,..,.. .. ion
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
Dix ocean vu. I Rr. newl.v
d ecorated. w 111ar
Adulls $675 1mo Ask for
Faye. 640.9990
Townhome apl. 2Br. 2Ba .
close lo s ho ppi n g ,
hospital S495 mo Agt.
1145.9850
Spacious 3bdrm rondo
2'" ba. Quiet loc
Moving~ Avoid deposits
& cut hvlng exl)('nses'
Professionally sinre
1971
WESTCLIFf AREA
Executive s uites.
ground fl oo r loc
Secretarial /bookkeep·
ing serv. avail. Call for
more detail s
(7141631-3651 .
642-4321 .... 216
Weekdays and tnexpens1vely, call
642-5678. I.OST CAT. Lrg. all blk. Schools &
South or PCH 2bdrm .
Ib a . frpl c . deck .
washer tdryer S675
675-2424 af\ 5pm
Separate house. newlv
de<"orated <"h a rm ln11
2bdrm. lba Well located
dn quiet st S700 No pets 613-~17
2 Bdrm. I Ba. deck.
adult.a. no pets . Lse $530
673-0473 or 644-&182
$695/mo.
Lrg 2Br. I Ra. duplx. gar 631-1759, 631·4744.
W ID hkup, no pets. S425. _ ~59-~l_IX!
2178 B . Pla c entia 3 Br 2 B a. Incl
5_45·798.'l_ _ stove/refrig, yrly re ntal
3Br . 2Ba . 4-plex . gar. ~75/~~ ~t. 67~3355_
adults. no pets. S480. 1040 Verasailles l Br /studio
C. Valencia 545-7983 penthse condo. edits .no
l..,ST.6'.._ 1.., peta. S450 mo. + l!!t·lu t
" "'"' " + sec. dep 645·3447. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. Xtra lrg 979·S370Jim
Apt. 2 s tory, 2 car 1------
garage, frplc. yard, w /d
hook up. Small child.
s mall pet OK. A must to
see.
IESTVALUE
3124 TSL MGMT 6-42-1603
Versailles comer pen·
thouse 2 Br 2 Ba. comm
pool. jac .. wgt room
1700/mo. 675-3787 ..................... ••I :----:---:------1-..:.:..:.:.::_::.:.:.:....:.:.:..:=
MIWLYDICOlt. Stunning Lge lbdrm. Cute 2 Br. 18;.
11 Br. gaa pd, encl gar, urden apt. pool/rec fireplace. garage In lov·
d /wuher. pool. Adults. area 1375. 710 W. l8th St. ely Newport Heights ~2·5073 __ 2Br. new cpt.a. drps. 2273 S535. 675-0349
•} z ... I la A.. Ma pie. 1395 mo. VersaJlles. 2 Br 2ba. de·
Newly decor. C:11 pd, 545-SOCN corator mirrors '550.
~ n c I «at . po o I . $465 J .... Zia Sandy&U.-6149
d /washer. Adults . 2 children ok·no peta. . 642-5073 557_1-... 541-9%48 Versailles. Beaut P /II ---------1 ___________ 1 2er 2ba auites. Mlrr0ra
JlrTowalaH" Newer large lbr w/gar. thru·out. blHn wine
'Newly decor. IH pd.. Adults, no pets. 13'70/rno. rack. View of bay. 1750, ·~ n c I It a r • So o I . 548-5788 Sandy&4Wl49 O /washe r . A ult t .
·&f2·5078
HOUSEMATES 832·4134 ,__ __
Male 40.45 shr 5br. 2ba.
hse. C.M Spa. Nr SC
Plaza & Frwv $200 Shr
utils. 641·4913'.
N.B. 2700 sq It. fully Im·
proved s pace, Sl.5/sq rt.
pleasantly divided Into 8
ornces. 2 sec'y areas. +
•Shand Ll•iftcJ* conlerenre room For in·
Coumelors to personally formation (7141 844·6580.
selttt your compatible 846·028'7
rmmte t o s uit your ---------
lifestyle Shared·Living. 545 SO~FT.
833 Dover Or Suite 31 NB 17th St. Costa Mesa. 3
631·1801 room suite. S450mo.
Fem wanted to shr home Realonomlcs 675-6700
w / 11 am e n r 0 CC CdM Deluxe Suites. AC.
UU /m o . Refs req. ampl pkg. utll pd. 2855
540-0808. E. Cst Hwy. 875-6900
Colorado woman would Suite avail. approx 1100
like l4shr yourrurn. apt sq .ft. Newport Arches
Promonto r y Pt. pre· Marina Bldg. 642·4&44
rerred . Lve m ess ·---------
(213)821-6678. ACCOUNTANT,
Attny, or other prof's
Wiii shr my plush, s pac. want.eel lo fill full svc ex.
home, ml<'ro, frplc. p00I, ec suite. 2 apacloua win·
hot tub, on 11olf course In dow oles avail lmmed.
Back Bay, N.B. Chris· Cf'9plt Tax Ub ln eonf
llan principles. Pref .. no rm. Near Irvine City
smoke/drink. 851-1910 Hall. Call Mr. Vane•
Retp Non..Smkr Fem to _54_M023 _____ ..___
shr abr. 3ba hse avail •Hl'WPOITllACH
lmmed. Cdfll Im/mo. ~ IUITIS
'7eo.Ml9. '752·'7o0otxU230 P...UP>ua bulldln1 at
N'ar new 2bdrl1). 2ba,
frplc. l•undry fac. new
crpU, drps fr paint Encl
Clean Eastalde 2Br. 251
Ulh Pl. No pet I .
1425/mo. Eves call: ""*'·
Newport KelRhta Duplex
2 Br. t Ba. Adulta. no
peta. Mt$. mo. lit. la1t
depoait. 511 Boba. Daya OMcit ._... 4400
131-3S20. E•a fr Wk.nds •••••••• .. •••••••••••••
Ortt New port Pl. Recep-
tion lat , waltinl room,
conrer ence room .
tttnitarlaJ apace. aup.
port Mrvitte. From 120
tq ft. '714 llS.'MUIO
a•r. 1415. Adult1. no
• pell. 873--2111. 494-5'7~
eves
•
:t Br.1 Ba. w/1ara1e. Pet
OK. tas mo. Aak tor
Mlke.t41-o711
$4N041. Eltcant prof bids In H.8.
• per eq.ft lie. lled
Want Ad Result.a MZ-5t11 Cal'Jll(. m.1a1
r
Use·,,,..,,. At/ service
when placing your ad ... a
Dally Piiot ad number will
appear In your '~assified ad . we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your .ad ...
this service ~s onlv S7.SO
week. For more informa-tion and to ~ace your ad
call 642-5678.
M . I n g h r . 8 I 9 lltlfrucffon 7 005
REWARD. 494.0092 ••• ••••••••••••••••••••
Lost · tan & blonde Shellie
cr<>Ss. R~ently s payed
9/mo. 645-2146.
Lott: R•ward
Wht Malt•n DoCJ
wel9h1 7lb1. Mal•
a111wer1 to .. , .J."
H orthwoad areo
'" .. Sat. l/14 . .,. pro1 7AM. 135-7156 • ... s,. llt-1426
aft
Lost: Desert Tortoise. Nr
Newport Heigbta. Pl.ah &
game tag . N e eds
medication. 646,.905
Found: s mall white nutry
adult dog, rhinestone
collar. vie 22nd & lrvlne
Blvd, N.B. 645-4$33,
Found: blactc dog with
while collar. male. By
El Rancho Store In E.
Blu(f, N.B. 67&-1209.
Found: 1<>ld rtn1. croth
World parkln1 lot .
Adame • Ma1nolla.
H.Jt.IG-4170.f\er 5:30.
ll'ound; Cockatlel. C.M.·
N.8. area. Call• Iden· tlfy, .......
Pound: P Doberman.
eara nat cnppell. Nw-pt J ffarbor HS..tn-141hv•
Guitar. Begi nners
C hildren or Adults .
L a 1-tuna a rea S ~ rgeanl 499-4409
JobsW..t.d, 7075 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Back office Nurse. LVN
seeks full lime employ·
ment. In N.B. & C.M.
675-1706
Motel mana11er. 5 yrs ex·
per. would like position
in Or. Cly. 494-S294 or
497.311157
Nurse/Companion exp
w/convalescent & elder-
1 y, xlnt loc ref'a ~
days/wk le/hr negot.
838-f788
~~~ .... ,?!.~~
ACCOUMTI ... ,...,oa
1000-. ...
To u1lat In developinf
the P • L. WMk under
minimum supervision.
Required to use lndep_en·
dent Jud1ement. lhy
Halm work to liower-
level cJerb. Xlnt ~
pa nf benertta. Call
1111 te •rt er ta 111 . MS--
,.~~ ~ •• ..._. ' r .. ' ... -
I
I ~,:~ . t .i _,> ~ .... ~: I" : ! : -~ • ... j • -. :: i t : ~... 1 1 .~ 1 > ~ ... ~ " t .~ 1 =·~ l ·~ 1 . :'• .~"J r 1 -;·;· · > .• • LI . 1 ~ 1 ;~ ~~: .. ""' c., ... l'oo ..... /Clllll.. •'9tdriul .... _._, "-'-• ·-I .--.-·. .. • .......,,...... 1....,s.r, ... ~ ..................................................................... •········••······••••·· ..................................................................... ···········'··········· ...................... .
R!MODQ..REPAIRS Patloa. t>rlv wa y• ' Top Quality, ~r.odable •-.11..--•lltW_._... HAUl.JNG/CLEANSNO SRe~a1tlnc·Rotolll1UnJt Palntlosr. Comm'! In· D RESl 'UMfSd •t l11'1
SUMMER
SPECIAL
~~lAr~to~!lr
lot•
30.d a,y ad
an the
DAILY
PILOT
s•VICE
Dll~TOltY
OOITNOWI
A9'l For s.dr•
Your Dally Pilot
Service Dirtttory
Representative
64Z.5671, ... 311
BOOKKEEPING
&TAXSERVICE
Keas. rates. 496 0913
SMALL BUSINF..SSES
All acctg services. reas.
673·1266.646-4871
Asphalt •••••••••••••••••••••••
Driveways. parking lot
repairs. sealroatinR.
S&S Asphalt 646 4871
Lic'd.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Prof. Secy Bilingual
T ype both EnJ! & Span
mat'I my home 540 7364
..••.••................
A)90C\»to-mC1blntb Wahays. Rea1. 'R•tea .,.,_..1_. Reaa. at•s. IS -···-_.. -· ... maP •-tlnl p ...... en-luvns·c nu1>1 dus trlal. R<•iclclcntlal •• 1n• o pro. ...... -t'"' 11 rs I LI 'd _.., """2 ,..,... gooorva~., .. Mo-.. -........ n •• r-.. ln•. l•-UI .... ...... .. ... ·-· r I 1 1 ' :;;.~-U~~d~'iot> 1qual eef.mi.,,,., · .... .,.,...,, yruxperlence 531·~ 1 ., ~~ P j 0 i . Ft e'e or!! Ray, 914-4271 _ ;;~•;;;;:a. __ i~e~:•t Lo w rat ea .:ri~.0~~l~c~f1!~:"1r
Mr.Palombo.962·131' C......,.,._ Electrician Sm jobs. estimates. '41·0944 or Haullnt6DumpJobs. •potential to proepectlve
_ _.. • • aint ... -pal... LI" MS 57'7 .. _ .. 'or n-.. dy. M.....-v Wl"""'L:u RAT~ employers. 534-7248 CUSTOM rNTERIOR ••••••••••••,•••••••••• m,2,..., • c• ... '... ~. "'"''' ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'' '"·" ,..., --CARPENTRY LJC.Cttn.DCARE ...,_.09-l0.548-~ CLEAN-UPS/LAWN S4l.&42'7 BRICKWORK Small Int ext Pulntln~ ltooflllt
By J ay •-"2 ... ,..,. ""' "--na del Mar L Ecr M 1 I n t e n a n c e • Ho---••hl J obs. Newport. Costu Clean outs fuNt :-1t'rvict-••••••••••••••••••••#".•
Y" 'O<.J'-R ho.ml""'v 113-2945 Emodeli~~C~alri~d wl:h Landacape •• :::::::::::; ••••••••• Mesa. lrvlne , Refs. 536!1MJ QUALITY ROOf'rNC{ Ce~~~~~~~· l11:m!~t~at $Jl.f~I( thebestprlce.631·2004 .!._reeest . 642·99&7 WanlaREALLY CLEAN ~~ __ Colleile Stut.ll'nt f:l(p·d Alltr.rl'ffea\930
tor ~e.642-~'7. Exp Oar1iener -mow H!)OsET Call Gingham MASONRY and remodel ant ex nny Joh for ll'll:-1' V~~~RRoo1li:to
_ __ _ Hot lunc.b. M. Chns Electrician-trouble nits. ed&e. cln-upe. Free eat'. Gari. "'°"eat. 845-5123 Ing Quality with the t':tll Al~x 851 !#:nl --
Re mod·Repalr-Rellable tian ~hool 646-5423 repair, additions. install Tiie outlets. remodel s . Rsnbl.CMarea.S48·489l Expef'.tlle.!'°usekeeplng. bestprice.631·2004 Paintinu,1nt 't"<I ttentals •••••••••••••••••••••"• Fences. gates. docks. T L .C. C hild Care. 1 .. 11 "' • homes.etc.Al67S-6294 an""ime,exp'd.refs-. 548·9881. 646-3854 GeMNISenlcn equ. P s upp es Smalljob!lwanted .Hrirk our spedaltv l'rompt Tile 1n11talled, a ll kinds.
7• Wheeler Electric. Inc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rurmshed. trustworthy & and 81oek t.ow hourly Se11~1de Pa1nt111.i Cirl'~. l(uaranleed. refs John
Carpet Senlce 9'7H648, 646'1161 O.G. ELECTRIC Complete mobile home de p S4H9'10 rate. 499 1226 art Opm 5~ ~ 893 1667
••••••••••••••••••••••• CL..-'--~-k-I l ls to --... ......, _,..,, .... lndus./Retld /Comm serv ~. re eve re· MRS. CLEAN MAKES IT M '-Ploate.-/R-ir - --Shampoo & steam clean ••••••••••••••••••••••• m~els 968-4341 __ -GLEAM! Homes, apu. o.,...,, ~r-\ustom Ceramic Tile , Color bright.eners, wht Newpe>rt Cleaning Serv Quality work, free est. ffl C ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• New-Remodel· Repair
crpls 10 '!'•n. bleach. Ca r Pet , Up h 0 1• Lir. 400143. (213 )867·3857 H~ 0 ce arpet. 643-2240 _ Stud~t will move you ut Neat p11t(•h1•-. & te'<ture" .. ·reeest Chuck, 494·5887
Hall. hv ·din. rms Sl5. Housecleaning. Win G .... ....................... ROBIN'SCLEANING reas rates 752 14\13. Free est. 193-1439 - --
av1t rm $7.50; oou.ch SIO; dows H"'rdwood firs. or 9CJ HOME IMPROVEMENT Servi.....___ a thoroughly 848·3'T17or847·3309 H•-aa....on leoc:h
h •c: G I t " •••• ••••••••••••••••• •• Remodel'"g-Odd jobs ~"-_ .... ..,. r r ..., uar. e 1m pe 631 . ...,,,.., ... 1 h ""0."""'7 ---Tia... Co "'"' ____ •VERY LOW P. RICES• 28 yrs ex........ 97 ... """'S c ean ouse ..... .._, Moving? The Stan 'm" L'.l}'.S 1•1 .•sTL:RIN<; • · odor. Crpt repair 15 yrs L ds I ,..., """"v --.. r " r Ct'ram1c New & re exp Do work mvself C:Otllroctor an capt"ma1nt-c nups -HOUSECLEANING College Students Movan~ AllTyp('s Int Ext modl'I. reas r a t u
Refs 531.0101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ -~rge. 549·20~ Carpentry. cabinets. roof Exper. reliable. refs. Co. has 11rown. lnsurect 645-8258 FU EE EST i;75 2284
----Construction-All types Landscapan11·Cleanups repairs. plumbing Free 64$-8394 s ame 11ood ser v1cl' Pl·~ WeCareCarpetCleaners 20yrsoxp. Freeest. T . . 11 . est Call Answer Ad -----#Tl24 ·436 L•<·ense _,_......, Tree Service
St I •· h I "' reetnmm1nl(· auhng #4G .,. • •••••• earn c ean "' up o s Lie, •334589. 645·5973 Maintenance. Free est. 1 . .,..,2·4300, 24 h~. -H ouse c I ea n 'n ~ . 641 -8427 •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Work 11uar Truck Th "h Id r h --llolkmanPlumhmll Jo:xpertTreeTrimmer mount unit. 645-3716 RESIDENTIAL & Com Amie. 548·8414 C11 rpentry1Handym11n orou., · 0 as ion PalftttncJ/f'aperinCJ Sa l~ Service Hepairs
RUY WHOLESALE
Thru Carpet Installer
Free est Also carpets
laid & repaired. Jay,
754-65.50
NO STF.A M 1SHA M POO
Stain s pecialist. fas t
dry Pree est 839 1582
Ceilinq, Acoustic .................••....
Acoustic Ceilin.Rs
mercial re m odelanu ---Dry wall. •painting, st yle By day. Refer ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vret'Pst1mate., 5527183 Te54nv5ela865rs.e7x5pel·2rile28nce .-'"' ••ATRIUMS• • · 541-3709 Quality with the best patio covers. misc re----Fine ext/ant pa intinie h\ price. 63!·2004 Do your indoor /outdoor pa irs Your s pecific a· HOUSF.CLEANING Richard Sinor Lie. an~ Property Manoqerfteftt Window Ca..MC)
atriumsneedplantingor tions.Qualitywork ISOURBUSINESS! Try me 631·4410 (24hr1,1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••.e
Drywal •••••••••••••••••••••••
Drywall Specialist
Qual. & prod New & re
mod 11:119944 532.5549
DRYWALL ou r ex
pertise Quality with the
right price 631 2004 Lockhart Mqmt.
r e furbis h1ng? Ca 11 75.._0199 Janice's RaJu~ed v Ann. --Prof St>rv1t·e tn ~ave you "1..et The Sunshine In"'
New p o r l A Ir i um . -----_ lnter/Exter1Refin1s hiOi(. ti mt•~ rnont'y Nt•wport Call Sunshme Window
644 ·09Z'l Hardwood Roon _ 675·~~ ceilin.RS 1wallp:iper Lit· f';11•1fl(' H I': f>45 :lf.83 Cll'anm.R.}td. 548·W3 _
F.XPERTl.AWN CARI': ••••••••••••••••••••••• HoUlftitffftcJ Cain&Sons.11911·5105
..onlhl• s"rv1"4 Trees 1-f A RDWOOD FLOORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• RALPl''S p INTI Ne· ~,' "'"t'hrt '1 "v1 anlav1·in1·~t.,
&m rlean.'u..,. ". 54"~::,..9 Cleaned & Waxed Ex E cu TI v E w I 11 1 • A I li7 '1'''1'~,,.,,c· I'\,\ If I I ~:'1'.t:•1;,., ... ~ ",.,.. Anytime. 832·4881 SA houseslt. xlnt refs. ex Lie lnt/El(t Low Hall'" ""~'
-per'd. 947 5-407 . 644· 1248 F~ee ~st. 9i;.$ 55fili Houlincj -·
GEN, CONSTRUCTION 1+.1.cl'~.hand te5x32tu.r554in.R9 B•ctrlcal Additions. Remodels ...,,,.......
Yard maintenance. Tree
t rim & r emoval
Cleanups Free es t
752·1349
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • lnlllr"'mtC~
Ha ul. cleanup. roncrete •••••••••••••••••••••••
removal Dump truck AMfo lnswaftCe
DAVE·s PAINTING
Servin~ orea 9 year'
Most reasonable
L1•1 ""' ht•lp \Oii Y.llh
hno1·-.1 Jl•'r '11 11,11111·<1
M•rv1n• "llt't 1Jll11n1: an
11n 1h 1 >a .1111-:I' < 'u J rt·
of1· 1111 II II c· .tit
911:! k>\411
orPOltTUNrTY
knocks often whe n you
use result.gelling Daily
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Or ange Coast
market L ----1 .. ,.._.__.•••••••••-.•••••• •c'i~:_ Mark 979 401 If you're looking for a bet ELF.CTRICIAN priced "Q" GAROF.NING
Landscape maint. cln
ups Reas rates Free
est Reliable. 646 9878
Quick serv 642 7638 Problems" l Write anv Insured. hC''d 71>0 7:\111 Phone 642-5678
Trade your old stuff for ter JOb. you won·t want right, frtt estimate on
new goodies w ith a to miss the employment lar.Reors malljobs.
Classified ad. 642 5678 l'Olumn:i m Classified. Lie •396621 673·0359
--risk. lo monlhlv rates
Tree /s hrub trim. con· Pirkel Ins. 646·3995
crete removal. clean· -
QtJALIT'f PAINTl-:ns
Rargain rates thru 4 K
Free est 84!1·5611 I ~:int \•I fll"'11lh t.i:! 5"71! ups Freeest 557-8271 Cla<;i,1fed Ads 642 5678 -------
-'--
HelpW..t.d 7100~W-t.d 7100 HelpWant.d 7100HelpW..t.d 71001HelpWGnhd 7100tWpW.ted 7100 HefpW..t.d 7100 HelpWant~d 7100 HelpWClftted 7100 ..................................................................... ·······················l .................................................................................................................. .
GENERAL
Register todav for loral I
temporary uss1.Rnm1•nh
A.UTOSA.LES Rusaness e xp11ncl1n !(. 01\TAF:NTRYOPl':R DUllbanRestaurant CeneralOffire Workt•r C'a:N l-:f!AI. fro111 of<' llouskE'eper tCompanion.
Career opportunity for Bankini: need amh1t1nus ,goa l r:xp .. IBM-3742 Exp'd Hos tess /Book Must typ{•40wpm l Kl'M M usl I\ 114' & L1 H' in Mus t have car,
salespeople with the Jc oriented penple . op-979·5860 keeper Wed.Sun days Costa Mesa 549 394;i 'p 1• 11 I r1•·11 I r " r No .,mok1n g Call aft!
sm .• to ~uC'eeed Join the TELLER portunily to earn Un· apply 3.4 ·30PM al 16360 h1111,..m:1kl'1 or ... 111111•111 :11'"'1 64().0099 •
staff of Johnson & Snn 1a m1ted. t11x be nefits DELIVERY Pa_c~f1cCoastHwy EOF. G&IERA.LOFFICf 97111111 --
Lincoln M e rrur~ and Part·Tlftle f or app·l c:ill 496 44:16 fo°rl'eway Auto Supply, llou -.ekl'epers wanted! 557·0045 becomC' a thorouohl.' cves6.8pm Mas.,100 Vie10 831 1666 F.am to S8/hr Set vour Immediate opening in Sl'adaff Motel l661 5oJ ,... 0 hrs car & ph. o'nn our purrhasinl? clept for GUARDS c II I traln°d prnf0 ss1onal Th b t r I L -wn · ' ua<,t "'Y · ,a~u n•
w -Previous ex•"'rten rc• not Beach ofra·c·nof a lnad•n" •CA.I DRIVERS• nee,,...,. lleac·h.494·4892 • en Lin-' " e eau 1 u a.Runa DPI men over 18 for LA aAc 2172 an expr'd person with ... ull l<: 11:irt 111111• 1\ll
...-' • ,.. Tim~ to homes in NB xlnt typinit skills &· a .irt•as l'naform ... furn cl .. IEMPOllAllYPE~ONN!l SllM~ a rt•quaremenl Of savinJ!s & loan has an Chec•ke r Cah & (' M S400 /S450 -+ Elertronacs plea s ing p h 11n1• t11.!t·~2111r·m1•1 .11•l1r••tl l1 11u\t•kN•p;or 1Companlon
3723 Birch Stttet
MewDOri leoch
t .O.F:
AIDE/HOUSEkEEPER
1 t ·36.7 30. Various
duties l""riliav & Sat
n1.Rhts Newpurt Villa
642 5861
A.IOE NEEDED
for paral y1C'c1 vn,I!
woman Mon Fri Mu~t
drive Wall tram. Se1la ry
open Ralh11.1 l~land
675 5652
A nswer1ng St'n ·11·t•
Pleasant ofr N B F.x
per or will Imm R1\M
4PM shifL MF fl:ll 5511
.A.SSEMILERS
Irvine electronic<> dis
tnbutors nds C"all6c A s
s emblers Solcl l'ra n g
exper. n f'<· E xC'ell
working ron!ic; &i co
c· o ur " e . <'o m Pa n Y immediate opportunjt v 770-0222 "Anus 64,,0637. 646 584• RE.WORk personalat.v Uut1eo; .... ,11 "'"I'"'",.. "'" ,., 111·r lll't' r ... 1 b ft d the de or r T II E '"' .,. ,, ,.... "' t•h1C'r v pe~on La ve ene I s an g~• R II or a e er ,xpenenc•e C "R W "SH Irvine manufacturer of also include film I! nrcl1•r A I' f• I' I n ',." r' ·' I m' rout ~1 2009 bein~ thC' hesl ·7'-'"e 1 in S&L is preferred We "' "' DENT AL ASSIST taking and olhl·r itent'r JI Pro1lt'l'l11111 S1•1\11·1· l:!:!ti 1
Harnld General Sales offe r an excellen t C'ASlil f.RSphme.~R Ft1me chairside ·F:x d~~.:~bq~!~1iJ~~ o ffi ce work Xlnt W r11h St :--0.1111.1 A11:i llnu-,ckPeper \\anted ~ada)!er. f~~ a meelln~ saladrv. frl'e parkinf ~nd & Orange 644 1460 pC'r pref GP office work person for circuit benefits &i wo rkanl! nm lnlPf\lt'Y. hr' •1 I:! & I I "', ... krnct... for older
o iscuss is unu::.ua pa1 career appare or CASHIERS 545 45.S3. board Xlnl workin11 ctilions w1lh a )!row1ni.: '1•>11 ~·n .... oman LO replace re nireer opportunity more information. rompanv Applv 111 h 1 d rr Johnson & Son Lincoln p lease C'Clnlac t G enr IOXPERSOMS DentalAHlstant cond w ith lrg Co Hairdr~sser Wonted ,.:u lar "p·s a\' 0
Merrurv 2626 flarhor Fn1elle al C714 I 494 7506 No"' a~ceptln" applll·a benefits & small Co TpeHrsonE JaOt I I y I' C)(' f' I' 1'1'1 S.'i62
RI C0<;ta Mesa ftDEUTY t1ons. Ptt1me Wall tram ~~a·~:~e.4~~Ad!; :ak~ flex ' iN'c ' ' '' ~J~~1\./\.;;.~~; ::~·~1~71 HOUSB<EEPERS
rE..ftr••L NrAirport 8389570 b•>nefats. salary 01>en FtNALASSEMILY J7042G1lletl4:Avt• li735:l42Ton\ " h _ .. A.UTO TRAMS. ~~"' ~ Req good mechanical I n't• a,·c an 1mm.,-u1ate
R&R.MAN F ull tam e SavmJ?sandLoa n CASHIER NB area 6426880. ability Knowledgeelec 1 '~~n;;3·11 ••HEYKIDS•• op l'n1ng f or 2
Toolsn;oq uared 54R22RR Association Full time. l(oocl pay 6733403wk ns&eves tronics helpful but not 14 . ' ll r r.'" '"ur 1'11;1111·,. Ill hou!>l'kt'epers Full lime
An F.qual Opportunilv Dental nee. Good entry level G_.,"L OFFICE pos itions lOPM 6A M
Auto
WHEB. ALIGNMENT
Front end overhaul Lite
mech helpful Own
toob-. SO'. comm Must
be j?ood Busv ~hop
l.arrv Hunt Auto Center
1825 l,;.il(una C'anyon Hcl
l.ai:una Heach 497 2030
or 83.1-891;6
Babv!>1lter Irvine. work
mR. mom needs lovan)!
mature person to care
for 6'mO old baby Call
559-~7
E I (-;rowth rompany 5loca ....,.or;;ft,.. · m.1k1· 1•\lr.1 "l"'llil loi! t rt "" JI r ae ,mp oyer position We will train '11 s r.xce ran,. lions Cu henerils We C-.t-Sy•....._ Small Co near ocean mor11•' I r k A t
R E A ll T I C l A N
HAIRDRF..SSF.RS . with
followin(l. a ssistance &
manicurists Apphr a
lions now been~ acrept
ed for busy growing N B
Salon TOP PAY Marc
642-6164
BF: YOUR OWN ROSS.
--~ .. .---Contact Tracie Lyman wn<· •t" pac· age PP Y train CUST SEltVICE 17141557_374'4 need~ sharp mature in Y.orkmi: nnl' • '""' rt."., m fl\'r<>nn at Advanced
METROCA.R WA.SH REP _ _ d1victual for a \arael\ of 1 "'t't'k' H1•rnrn1· J '"h llo•allh Center 1300
2!l50 Harbor Bl vd a.~-...1c office duties Hea\'\ "t'r1pt11on -,a lt:'\µt•r-,on for Bristol St North Ste Safeguard Healthcar e in-'""'" h •-XI h l> I I' I L· Costa Mesa S C P ones "' typm~ nl I e ai v 1 ot .-.arn a~ a too Newport Beach.
CASlll ER
HOUSEWARF.SA L~:s I
Apply an per.on Crown
Hardware. t024 Irvine I
1 Westc hrr Plaza I N R
ystems. West oast's ASSEMILH ro benefils Call Donna m11<'h a~ $~111 oo r1-:R fl: o Jo: Mil"
Ill computer billing Sea level electronic as· 645-3632 WEEK ' 1'11.,1t1nn-, 11111•11
sv!ltem is seeking a sembler n eeded for · 111 llunt111l!l1111 ll1·:a<'h
qualified person to work rapidly expanding in GENERAL OfFICE f'nunlJan \'all<'\ ao.t j
m our mtemal custome r temational company an 1.o<'al leadin.R pe"t ccin ( o-,t:i 1\11•-,;i If '"" are
service dept. Must have stable ener gy fi eld trol company n erfl-, 11ut i:flln)! l·n1hu,1asl1«
experience in dental ad· Qualified c andidate general office persnnrll'I I ancl al lc·a~l 12 H•ar., olrl.
m1n1s tral1on . Good must have 6 mos. expr Entrv-level position l' A r. I.
verbal skills &theabih· inPCBassembly.Excel, Typin.R & offi ce expPr TOl>AY ""'IH2 t12t
l y lo work with people. workin1t cond. & com· helpful Call Tim 1-:xt.211hefon•flpm Ask
HOUSEKEEPER
Full t1mr. 5 day week.
h\'t' m oroul Refs req'd
Call Answer Ad •357.
1142 4~. 24 hours
benefits Contal·t Rob 1---------• Tracy. Mon-1-'n 8 5
S E T Y 0 LI R 0 W N
II OURS Sa I es & cl e
ltverv Fulle r Brush
Phone ll42 3169. 5 9PM
CASHIERS
UTUTEM
Please ca ll : Linda petitive benefitsorrered Thursda\'.3·>9btwn 9&I' fnrV1cOwen~
neVorkm 714·957·1121 For more info. rontact 3.979-6021 ~c
or send resume with Ray Gilman at Scientifit• ..... ---r oost
IM PORT M anal(er for
r e rs io n & Oriental
ruRc; S yrs exper re
<i'd Must have the com·
pre hens1\e business ex
pl·r of Per s ian
handmade carpets 1n
Iran Must s peak. rea d &
.,., rate Farsr & Enithsh
M u'I h<tve ex per in
.la11ancse rxport busi·
nev-Sl.300 mo Send
resume to Oriental Ru2
«:allerv :l617 F, Coast
llwv . C:orona del Mar.
(_'._i 92fi2."l
549.09()4 Banking
Local Newport Beach
S&L needs loan service
supervisor Minimum BOAT
SHOW
s a I a r Y hi s t o r Y to Drillinit Inte rnational G&IERA.L OFFICE Oaity Pilot
Safe11uard Health Care 557-!lail E O.E. Lite bkkp~. rccep·t t.. 1-: 'l 11 ll I <> n J>" 1 l
MARKETS Systems. 22.83 Fairview -typin~ full p t. nex hr" 14~",plovPr
Rd Costa Mesa . 92626 F.xp Medical Assistant . pleasant workml? cont!
ASSEMILHS 3yrs exper Musl know
LO<' Mission Viejo t'o all aspect s or loa n
For 2nd & :!rel Sh1fl<>
We promote to manage
mrnt & supe_'n·1~1on from
within
DPS /MPS front & back. hrs & in enJ!ineer:. ore S:il
s alary ope n . No n open call for <1ppl
needs Assemhlns .... 2 serv1cinii Must he an
y r s exp Canc11c1ate~ de pendent seJr.~aa rtrr
must ha\e l!d manual Salar v commensurate
dexterity. l!d <'~ r -;1ght. with exper Contact Ms
neat 111 appearan<'C & !le Denny P arisia 645·6.505
pcndable Work as an lift> f, O.E.
support medil'al Pier ·--~~~~~!!"~ tron1cs Gd bl•ne frt ~
0 n I y r e s p o n s 1 h I l'
persons seekm)( pPrma
nent emplymt nee11 a 1>
ply. Call Mr~ Pa rr lli.
581·3830
Banking
New Accounts
Counselor
llousew1 ves . s tudent.,
P T t e mp help
Cashiers. tic•ket.taker~.
pa rkani:: lot attend , etc
Call Maureen 646-3963
Bod yshop F:x perienced
metal man needed for
no n·product ion body
shop Metal finishinl? &
lead work desired Fial
r a t e & comm ission
Mon. F"ri II 5 631 ·4939
for appt
WANT/\ l'l\R EP.R ''
Costa Nt•sa
Ill OPI Mar
fl:ll !H21
Lai?una Beat·h
<\94 92:tl
Huntington Beach
962·9116
CLERICAL
Dental R ece p
taon1st Assistant. exp,
needed for new office in
Mission Viejo. X Ray
he req. ( 213Hl80·3091.
Oental X Rav Tech New
office Santa Mana. or
tho & per i exp Call
1213)54().4101
DF.NTAL O FFI CE
MANAGER Busy of·
rice, You name it. We'll
pay at. 645-7580
smoker 54().4376 644·6660 Dale Kar1ala &
F"ull time employee fo r
assembly & clean-up
Will train $3.35/hr II PS
Systems . 645·9552
FULL TIME Graveyard
Ans serv No exp nee
Call: 892 1212 EOE , __
GENERAL OFFICE Will
train. must be s harp.
good sense or humor
helpful. 646·9664. 871 B
W. 15th St . N 8.
Assoc
GENERAL OFFICE
Fine jewelry store nee1b
reliable person fo r
va riet v or orface ctut 14''
40 hour week . r 11
benefit s So Cua-.t
Plaza. Call 540-9066
G&I OFC/RECEf'T.
ASSIST MANA.GER
Auto rental No exper
neressarv Call 979 8826
or 772·6.SSo
Experience Preferrel1
Al so part lime pos1t1ons
ava1lahle in our South
Coast Plaza office Call
Bookkeeper Secretary.
P rr. R E development
I construct ion bal•k
ground helpful. Send re
sume lo P 0 Box 8209.
Newport Beach. 92660
Type 60wpm. f11tn11 .
telephone run errand~
646 0221
_______ ,----Duties will ancludt•
J!reeting chenls. ans" c·r
1n1t phones. t vp1n2 &
other Ren. duties P os r
lion open April I Com
petitive salary for, 1(0<1rl
expr. and typin~ sk ill'
Will train word proC'ess
inf!. teletype and com
puter terminal 1r not ex
pr'd in these areas For
appt call Marilyn Se1le'
955·2000
AUTO REHTA.L AGT No exper ner(•ssarv
Ca II 979--8826 o r7 72 6S5-0
AUTOMO'TfVE * LOT PERSONS!
Kathy Amburgey
540 4066
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
Chevy dealer offers full $aYinc)s & Lomt
or part-time. Permanent 695 Town Center Or
positions to youths to ai; COl'lta Mesa, Ca 92626
sist in the body & ~ervlce Equal Opportunity
depts in varied. in· Employer
teresting tasks. Opp for i---------• advancement See Mr ----------
Wright.
HOWARD CIM.,ro•t
Dove & Quall Stli
NEWPORT BEACH
AUTOMOTIVE
NOFISSIOHAL
SBlYICE
RB'RESEMT ATIYE
Bankin.R
Credit Checker
Part Time. flex hrs
Irvine Top Pay''
Irvine Personnel Agy
488 E. 17th. Costa Meu
Suite 224 642· 1470 ~
Bookkeeper. con strue
tion tdevelopement firm
in H B Req mature
person to work with min
s uper vision
Responslbilitles incl all
bookkeeprng 1account·
1n .R f unctio ns Both
manual & EOP sytems
21yrs exp nee SOOO/m o
lo s tart Call Sally
536-8832.
BOOKKEEPER
Permanent. 30 to 40 hrs
wk Prestigious Newport
Beach insurance agen
cy. Good co benefits.
non-smoker. Call Twyla
CLERICAL
Gen. ore P /tame pos
for mature person In·
terestinJ? w o rk in
pleasant ofr on P C H .
Npt Bch Exp a must
Acru r at e lyp1n ~. no
shrthd. 20 hr wk Hrs·
Sun. Mon. Tues. Wed 9
to IPM. Sat 10 ·30 to
2 30PM. Call:646-7431
CLERICAL Clerk for re·
tail store. Must be ex·
per. Ca ll : Balboa
Marine. 549·9671 . E.O.E.
M/F/H --
COCtcTAIL LOUNGE
DESIGN
ENGINED
MfJ!. co. In Mission Viejo
area needs exper in
electrical connectors.
h ermetic s ea I s.
tra nsduct>r design. com
ponents materials &
methods .
Duties include desi1tn.
drafting. materials lest·
ing & R&D projects.
Mechanical Englneer-
1n11 degree pref'd .
Qualified candidates
send resume to: Mrs.
Jans . 2389 1 V ia
Fabricante. Suite 603.
Mission Viejo, Ca. 92691
Bartender/Barmaid. ·---------Cocktail Waitress 1
Waiter + Food 675·1094
Roy Carver Rolls Royce ,_ _______ _
is looklnll for an ex·
perienced professional
service representative
If you h ave t he
qualiflcallons. ca ll
Daryl Sickle for an ap-.
at 644-4242
DISl6Ma
DltAFTB COMM 'L . cleaners for Laguna Beach elec·
ore bld11~. Dependa ble. tronlcs manufacturer
8 nkln flex. hrs. Equlpmt. & needs:
• g training provided Pay •an experienced person
polntment at
640.6444
TELLER IOOICl< .. IMG by job. Min ~ hr Lall to be responsible for
NEWPORTOP'FICE A~D ott Hills area Call Lo. drafting & mec hanical 831·6856eves desl«n function& Must Excellf>nl opportunity ACC MTl .. G --h 1 v e th 0 r 0 u 8 h
for an Individual with a To assist In developlnl( CUSTOMllt knowledge of drafting
minimum six months the P & L. Work under ltll.ATIOMS procedures. PC board
__ experience . Wiii be minimum supervision. Installation deak. he•vy layout, digital. analo(I,
AUTOMOTJVE performing new ac· Requll'Tdtouselnder:.n· rrb-. -pe>rtJI • hill microwave clrcult de· count.a duties 111 well as d t j d t .,.,_, '"' 1 •-k •Ml'rAL WOltlHI all tel~r functions. Wiii en \I gemen ay nit. s an.• some nowled11e
Body shop expansion! conalde r s harp In· assiirn work to lower· 901West1flhSt. o r electro·mecbanlcal • -"-t kl level clerks. Xlnt. com · Newport Beach packaflng. a:.•"""1....,1 pay. wor rut dlvldual with six months ~anf benefits. C11 ll OpPQrtunity for advan· COnd.itkJns at busy body CHblerlna back•roun(t ( 9 642.328() 1
•hop In JoJ!n Wayn e fr 25 wpm typlna. Con· ti l e a ter am . ----ce ment &r ca re e r
Airport complex 4 ytt. tact: 845-!llOO. Data ProcnlMg 1Jrowth. We otrer iclnt.
expmence Ir hand tools John Laun Opt>rator needed for nix-pay Ir benefits + ~uir«t. ,,ber11au 01>· t714l 815-'500 111 ..... 1 •• c._._ dorftentrht s-tem1' ror 4 DAY WOii( W.
tl"'-aJ. Opp. for 1dvance-S& 1 • 1 ._. ., . Facruty ti ln beautlfw "" LOS ANGELES Full tlmt. flllper. helpful Iona term 1111-nment. L C ment. See Mr. Wrltbt. FEDERAL bul ..,.. ....... Many com· Call ror more Info. Tod a1una an yon nHr
HOWAIDC ....... _.._.. .,. .. ~""'OSlr'"'A"' '""" '"'" S --Beadl It Raort 1re11. _.,.._... »nvm ....., "' pany benellta. Apply at: ervlce:A, .,.....,._, ___ Call for appt: PerMnnel
DltftlrQuallSts EqualOppty!mployer 11110 Placentia Ave ..
N&'WPOR1' BEACH COila Meta --va~e your ahopp'na Dept. Telonic Be.rkeley: "" a I Tl 4·414·t401. Lacuna
Cl.-ned Ada, your ooe· Have eomethiftt to aell? "8d .w '°" wan& ta ualttbyualnathe Dally Beadl. !l.O.E. ltOl>~c.ntt. Cluatned ads do tt well:... Dall1 PUatClalalftedl. PllotClua&ned Adi. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NOW IS THE TIME
for job seekers to check
the Dally Pilot Help
Wanted classification. If
the job you want is not
there you might con
sid er o ffe ring y our
services with an ad in
the Job W a n ted
category. Phone 642-5678
·••••• • Daily Pilai • • : Editor's :
: Secretary :
• A c hallenging opportunity is being orrered •
by the Daily PUot for someone with the
• Intelligence, wit a nd skills required 10 be •
• secretory to the editor. It's an Interesting •
• position requiring the tools or the trade •
"80 wpm dictation. 70 wpm typing.
• dlctaphone -and the ability to shin •
• mental gears on short notice. The benefits e
are aenerous. the pay reasonable.
• Applications being accepted only through •
• appointment by calling .. _ 642-4321 , ext e
• 277 •
• Camera •·
: Operator :
• Experienced at leaat s years. Must be •
• able to UH newspaper cemera and •
• platemaklna systems. Excellent wages •
•
and benefit.a. Apply In person w/rnume •
to Ora.nae Coaal Dally Pilot.
• . o~c._. •
: • l:ii.~"rtreet I e Coata Mesa, CA e
• Equal Opportunity Employer e
····~·~·~·····~·~! ,
HOMEMAKER
HGYe the lest
of Both W artds
En1ov an 1·'1Clrt11n1·1lffil' &
l'ltrt•er arul '''" main l:i1n vour fam1h laf1' In lt•n•~h·d" l";oll fM<' lfi:J'1
Tm·:.. Thur-. •1 :1
llC lSTJo:.'{S llllST
1 Mntt1rc•1
W:11tn .. ;i; W,11tn Short
hour. <!'In l1p.,l <:nml
ho11rl.v wal!e' pr"·atr
<'luh Ac;k for Sherif'\
ti7:1 nJO
llotel
HOUSEKEEPERS
AM & PM
We an• 'iP<'krng rrhahle.
pPoplC'·Ortt•nted j'l{'r.;on:;
to JOIO our llousckeeprng
Starr 011lstanlitn1? run
t1mP opportunilit•s im·
med1atelv avJelahle
Enjoy exce llent co
benefits including a free
meal per shift A ppl~ in
person 9/\M Noon Mon
Fri Personnel
MA.RRIOTT HOTEL
900 Newport Center Or
Newport Reach
Equal Opp Emplyr M I F
Ho·usekeeper Wante d
wrekends for older
woman to replace re-
1( uha r help's day orr
499 5562
Aot~I
MARRIOTT HOTR
'.ART TIME
I "!St 'RANCF.
Carrer Opportun1t 1e!I
have never been so
Close In Home
Mail Ck-rtt
Dato Entry o,.,-.
lnlrrest ing divers ified
work with an estabhs hed
insurancl' co. Insura nce
experience not required
We will train. Pleasant
workin.R conditions. xlnt
employee henefits in
cludm~ profit s harln11
honus. s avings. plan .
med1ral/denlal. Apply
in person. Mon thru Fri
dav8 30to2
Safe.co 1.....-..ce c-.-y
17570 Brooihurst. FY
Ph: 962·TI1l
INTlltlOlt ftLANT
CARE TECHNICIAJlil
Startin1t position IVlll
with Tustin based plant
Co Will train·healtll ln·
surance. Arboretum In-
terior Plants. Ask for
Wendy. <714l730-64e0.
INTF:RIOR Of:SlO N
SAU:S. Fh1ir for da-
c oratan R n ecessary.
Flexiblt> hours. W'll
train. 499-1'61.
HOSPITALITY KITCHEN Prep. hel'p
wanted Exp. nee. Apply
HOST/HOSTE.SS in person ol'l11 . 1P11-
&PM. SebastJan'a Wal.
Unkioe oppor1 unity ex· 140 Ave. Pico, S.l'I Ciera.
lats tor a Re<)ple orient~ --
lndMduarto 1tre-0t & 811· Le9lll S.C~
slst 1:uests In our hotel. Clvll Dt11atlon/bualn ..
Ouallrle<d applicant matter,\. Exull11at
should d~irt purl tlmt skllls. ~ Dl"OC...aiftl t m ploym t'n 1 & be experlenct · helprlaf.
available for rtt'xiblc Sm•ll bUIY !'f•trP«t~
shlR.. Apply ln per•on Cent.tr ftnn. Coqnlal
tAM·NOon. r,t on-Frl. omee. t:xeeOul CC!!'-'
Peraonnel I~ 115-Mlt. llq.r
MAUIOTTHOT& ~----tOONt-wpon ~nl~ Dr.
Newport Beach
Equal Opp Empl)'r MJ F
I
.I
..
.~~ _ : + r+ -~--: .. eo.t DAtlY PILOT~~~· March ~7, 1~1. ~~?~ ..... ?~~ ~~=-!~ ..... !!.~!~~-'!~ ..... !!.~ ~~ ......... ~!!! :'!!~ ........ ..!!'.! ....... £. ,._ -.. W-'-' ,. • ..,.,--,..,, , ... ~ ..... •• 1tllaacarrA•Yt0ftl Ole. ~a.u.At....a.M 1'YPtST lblis•h•lntieMMn HH.,WICO H...-t•pe ~I ................ i... .............. ....................... ... ................... ... ... ~Oen°"'~ ........ ,... '1N IAll '° I Part Ume w d l1JO a. n• Xlru·mlnl '"' box •II Rubi•• ....... 1kUW • Ml-Amil, _ 8C9'llOMllT ...,....., .....W. Pa.rt _.._,. . 2:80PM ~ Part time wt. v~.UC. ,..:,~ r: ~-ma ...... 1050 ... !090
-.lintlled lralHH. ...-.;::: ..... -ft.c '° WIUI • ...... tri&it Ume. r .. albl• lloura. -evee • whda XI•' ply It' -Plate"nUa. U5m .. -.H •ieo
._.... ·~~ tldert1 ,.lMata. WlJl needed. Top pey lfem· Ovu II Pbon• • •orttn:. ~Tl!xper Cotlallfeu 1 Mi .. 1 l 1011
• W. • •·. -• traJn q•Wled peraoo· ..,,..,,. •nail Umt. Call 1H·t1Nl. lOAM ·lt>ll, lccs1 .... 1 raq. ac-a exaro f42,11'7a •u•;::t,;;• ........ ..
CllJ ..... ,~ HI. hrn while )IOU Todain1c.watt1Mt00 .,....,_lalapd 1 We will help you Mrvire. Beach II Ellis. 1'Yf't~ Com . mecltanJt
,,,. learn. Appl>' uu .-:..,---.M. find the right tef«IOS •Jmmtdlaa.()pen.in11 Women's bltytle. xlnt tooll. nail ,...,., paint I -•llT su.,.rtor. .............. ___,....d -won to fit •Pltlmt.Yltlmt.Ttmp eond '100fbtt otr. Nffd 1 • ldln• t .. tiiU.c;:;&&&? Chai-.-fut pactd E•.P•tluu oaly. --"' s.wti.eW.CW., •TopPay to sell 152·1511 d y1. tc,un · • 1na1.
fo« ....., 6 pi'OtOt,)'Pf OrtlN Aa1btant: T)lpe po1lt.lon ope11 In oee ot f'. T I P . T . W a I uh your akllls. 0,.1 a•or 1-'or more lilro, call Tod 75M07hv• rrhtia. Yiael 541-JllH "'°'*· eom. oroduc:rn sowpm , aome ex : Newport S.acba mott Cl1tk•'• So. Coaat Pleaeullor c.o.u Maa Jot. Canvas Strvlreutm..noo. 111 .. "' ........... 1025 Mllc1I••-IOIO
.... • vutfcal m 6 pe~neHNaf1. Will crestt~ real mate Plan. Costa Meu CO"""""""~oran It uphol. producu • jtl tow ••••• .. •••••H•••u••H
'
•...... Reed blueprinll t .... ""-•-~ ..__d 1s1-''"""' P F t tl \Al......__~_.__-, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._.. · ra .. , . ._.....,... .. er.-u rok«aae and develop. •• .,.,.,. lnt"""''-~. en--"'·. erm. me po1 .....,_..,... _........ t'portable1pa.pwrpadt ~~ER·~f!t......-ru. woe Co P.O. Box a.. ment co. We are lftllln1 -·-v.v avail Exp. l>f"'rd. Co Apply b wn tA M & Cu1tom w\ndow MCurttr d 11 12200• -;u~...:.._~1 .. ,,,. ..... 1 ~!.<> sunMt Beach,I074Z. a reliable con1enlal SALIS .. IOMM& /SECRETARIES benenta.14$-2244 t2PM CbarUe'1 Chill. Crills from :tbdnn home J1~~· :..:_~ . -" .... '' ~ ..,, dl...i-J 1 n••ded tor cont em· ~RECEOT'IONISTS JOOl Redhlll =Id 12 lncl entry wat fr Z 1lld· ·
(,.u.-1-..t ....... ~a"h -La ~ .. at e person abt • " r•i SHIPPl""G /R I I ;"J . ' I .a........-S It ff ...... _.......... .. ~•c • to Ju111e buty, but)' porary women I wear. /CLERKS l' ece v nc Ste. '221S.CM. "' uuun. u m 0 er John Wayne Tennla Club
FIT accounllnc/ceneral phones. typtn1• 50 sales Muat.beeicper'd. Salary • Clerk. Proareulve ortrade.MZ·0912. tam. membership .
I. M•t.: CARD II Word office dut ies idnt & admlnlstntlvt ttaff plua comm. Pleaae •PP· IVICll HESTONI medical device co. 3194 WAITRESS/CASHIER. snoo. Incl. tranlfer. ~C" 'benefit I . ca II Bob efficiently. comfortably ly or call: A_propo. _ • "C" Airport Loop Or.. LINE TENDERS. Sr. RIDWOOO 2 X 6'1 6«·1549
Pr0tn1ln1 Operator. no.um & with aaenaeof humor. 6«·m2 or 129 FHhion & ... 6~_........__ C M. <Redhill btwn Oeorge'a. 2810 So. S 4 S. Xlnt.decltln&. \OK ' --------·-E•t>· onl~. Le«•I 1oc'y laland Npt Bth ----8 1 1 s In from mill. 55' /ft. trainee. Non amoker. , ... cu•GHS Excelltnttyplng11llll1a • (SpeciaUatnatn Baker&405> r sto . A. Apply 645.9131 ext •t2T WANTED: Stoller It
H 8 ,. ~ must. Real estate & pre· SALES TRAINEES It Temporary Clerical 2·5pm. anytime hl«hthalr alao m lac
"· · 848-l .. OO SUO/hr to 1tart. Merit vious reception lat fr DELIVERY DRIVERS Personnel> SHIPPING AND W ed H d -----.:-------baby Items. 751·9987
·· rala~. 153'7 Monrovia phone experience de· r II /U 11 • 5 .. A ,.,.00 llCllVIMG ant • •n ymun 're-D-1040 MAINTENANCE Person Ave .. N.B. alrable. Paid hollday1. u or pr me. e•ce · ,._,. Male. ex per helpful. tlred/semi·retired > tor •• "";.'!;•••••••••••••••••• Major medical. pension oppty. for tolle1e 1lu· UIOCMSltypark Blvd. some Uftlng C50-80lbs.) apt. maintenance in ex· KEESHOND Pu~. AKC. i1~t~~ :11:.. ,'pl>~: ParHOOlme sale1. Earn up & profit sharlnf. Salary dents & mooollghtera. Suite 235 Irvine xlnt tompany benefits. change for rent·free a1tl Champ sire. M IF Pet I<
CPM Seba U • Weal to Sl weekly to start. ope n C • I Pa t E111ly earn Sl0.115/hr. Informal otrlce C. M Cum apt. 64.2·8870 show pvt Pt Y
· 8 an 'er · Car. phone needed. Parkin11<>n 'T52·1920 Call: Jack at 951-2942 SICUT ... aY~ Call Mlllle after 9am 213/697-1345 art6pm. 140-Ave. Pico, San em. Phone&42·ll69, s.gPM btwn HPM ~ 645 5800 Weldlng fabrication. Part
,. r II RECPT/CEN OFC. See ltlC.,,OMI T -·-·_ time.Ti1t&·Mi1tweldin1t AAAHOMEOOG Maintenance person. u 4r-.t..-..-1 D'--_...__ Ir pit help wanted Call Part time 13.50/hr. + ad under Gen. Office -__,.,._.. WANTED'. SH JPPING Clerk part experience necessary. TRAINING ft bonus. Choose hours : 9SS·2000 Exp'd.-dynamlc. ECE time Mwit have exper SS·SB/hr. depending on Complete IN HOME
64f5.SIJ04a erSpm_ 10·20/wk. Easy work & Elem. Ed. units req'd Sharp pel"50fl with front Call Balboa Marine. experience. 545-5271. Training. Obed I en·
Ma.aicer. Office work. M&-9'm l•R•~•ta-u•ra•n•t _____ 842-0Ul office appearance & ad. 549·9671. E 0 .E M /FIH Craig ce /Problem Solvlna
counter help for food McDON • LD'S SCTIY JaC". tRy~ionsk!~lst !_o paroctvldaes SHOE SALF.S Xlnt OP M•rc.hmtclM --protection S»-1615
service. Seasonal. 16 Part 11m· e ~ .-.1 , .. nd d """"'~ "' ... mo.>. H.B. area. Call E Now hiring rull & part Lite t,..,.ng a recor Secretarial support to port Newport Bch ex pr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Springer Spaniel puppies
C-=IRIJ YCMlth time. Dave. eves. Great lreet'fil required for sail our technical staff. We nee. itd Incentive, no A~ J OOS A KC . C h am pi on Son••nth. 1114)S44 5378 --"~ · b 1 · • " c--t-career opportunities. ma Ing u1 ness in areacomputersoftware Sundays Top chentele & •••••••••••••••• •••••• bloodline S150 545.9527
or write 1,.581 Acacia Dr. Adults wi~tanding On·t.he-job training. For Newport Beach. Start co. located in the Santa s t arr Mr Marowitl WANTED TO IUY ---- - -
Tustin. Ca. 92680 -attractive personalities m o re info.. ca 11 . S700 mo. Call 831·4660. Ana/Irvine area. Offer· 548·8684 1 bu y o.I d g u n s . German Shepherd 1n
MAHAGEll to spend 15 hrs per week 7S4·9943, or inquire al. 646-51Kl6 in g eiccell. starling --• diamonds. ivory. jade & telligent pup!!, 6/wks.
ServlceStation.xlnlOP· counseling youth ages 3141HarborBlvd .Costa SICRETAIY s alary & benefits STOCK Clerk purt lime collectibles. Call (7141 AK C. while . 11 75 Pt~. profit shar inic. buy 10. 15. Ev en in gs & Mesa. LI h b k k . Future growth potential. for marine hardware 972.,.926& ask for Dane. 968-0331.
"h ff ed 6733320 Weeken<JsAvailable.S75 ~~~~~~~~~~! gt oo eepang. Must be a non-s moke r. store Coll R a lboa -------~~-er __ p e r w k C 8 1 1 Plumbing knowledge For immed. interview. Marine. 549 9611. f. o f: 1930 Chippendale dininll Golden Retriever pups.
Manicurist 2.30-5 30pm. Mon thru RESTAUIAMT helpful F ulltlme . call: Caryn Whalen at MWIH room set Table & 6 AKC. It. icolden, champ.
John Wayne Tenn14 Club
reg. memberthlp. SlOOO
incl. tra.nafer. 675·5455
University Athletic Club
membership. S500 + 125
transfer 540-5505
Raccoon Coat. man's full
l e nicth . C anadian
natural coon 6 mos old.
Was S7800. sell 13500
559·1991an4pm. ---
IEDWOOD 2 X ,.,
S 4 S Xlnt decking. lOK ·
in from mill 55'/h .
645·9137 ext •127
anytime
EQUIP "Makita" Model
8900N. Jack Hammer
'375 w/barrow. shovels.
mattocks S2S. x.lnt cond.
673-2514 aft 3PM -----Oran1te Co. finest salon Fri. 642-4321 ext. 343 S7 AanMd~3iPc~ Mi:~~r Fhr'is. 848·3636 __ . ------114·54().6952 chain\ Server . china. 971in9~;:....Stt. evoe:.me & sire n~ you with clientele Ask for Lori. 646_8883 Secntarv /Chwch MCS, IMC. STOCKROOM 633-0489 _, .. _ Firestone < R78·15l Used 1
Rive Gauche Salon 2300 an..g. Coast _ _ _ 25 hrs/wk. Mon-Fri. typ. 29605. Daimler Ave. ASST. TRAINEE ---Frff to You 8045 mo. Sell 5 tires for S16Q
s'."t . Bris tol. N B DaHvPHot Retail Sales ing. gen ofc. exper. SantaAna,Ca.mos Pull electronic parts & ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-_00_ls ______ _
5-40-8177. mw.Say Streel Women '!; F IT retail. Mature. CdM. IM .. ·0745 EqualOppEmplyr fillkits forproductionin LARRY MORGAN Black Labrador. 6/mo ----- -d f d Mon·Fri sm . friendly rirm over f H 11 Reasonable! John Wayne MANICURIST Costa Mesa. Ca. ays, exp pre erre . - -lookiniz ocean Work "' u old, ree. as a shots Tennis Club Family
Newport Beach Salon. E Qua I 0 PP o r l x.lnt benefits Ca ll SECRETARY P /T c lean. quiet environ ANJIQ [ 549-9847after6pm Membership 6U-1613or
Able to do acrylic nails Emplo!er_ --_77CH677 ask_!or Larry Life Insurance agency Secretary ment tile hftmiz & at FunMtun 1050 759.9471 (Judy>
WUI guarantee large PA RT Tl MF. Person Re+ait Sain needs a mature. eit EXECUTIVE tent1on lo detail needed AUCTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• --
clientele + 70"'. to 80~ needed m Book pasteup 1 mm e d 0 Pen in ll perienced secretary SECIETAIY S65-0 per mo to start. I BUY ANGEL TICKETS Call
comm.Call soon Mon & Tues No exp pleasant workinic condi· Typing. shorthand re I to Markelinl( Di r in ra1se30d ays 645 3693 * * * * Or Me aft 8pm. Limited
613-4186 673-8644 nee Apply 1660 Placen lions. apply in person quired. rrr S-1. Salary I financial services firm STllDF.N'l'S PARTTIM 1-: TUHdoy Good used Furniture & supply'!' 673-7795 . . ------.-.-•-•I tia Ave .C M -Ripple's Office Supply commensurate wtexper. Res p .. challenging pos rr sales & mumt ""Ith March 17 . 6:00PM Appliances OR I will sell Amer Oak dresser S2S-O
3x3 Garden window new
SlSO Paintings & prints
Sta med l(laas.. &46·3478
-...nmMG PHOTO CLERK·S4 00 per
SICRETAIY I hr . S.6 Wed. 9-6 Thur &
Mature person for small 9· l Fn 645-0404
technical orl(anizat1on - -
in SJC. Typinic. cor Pool Maintenance.
respondence. quota t..al(una Beach
tions. s ales leads & 497·5100.
mailers. Excell skills --req'd. Must be self Pre school Teacher want
starter & work without ed. credentials or exp
supervision Great JOh FIT Call 64G-8820
for career oriented ---
Salary commensurate Pr.Khool Teoctt.r
w/exper. Call : 493·6624 Sal only C.M area
for appt. E.O. E. 642·041 l
MATHIAL
HAMDUMG
1 m med opening for
parts clerk. rubber hose
products. must pass co
physical including back
x·ray. Takinic apphca
lions betwn 8 & lOam on
ly. Stratoflex. 17671
Armstronit A.ve . Irv
EOE A Kendav1s Ind.
Co.
Mature person for lad1ec;'
figure control salon
PIT. mom in gs 642·3630
M EOICJ\l. Ofc Part & r /lime pos for both front
& back ofc m Npt Reh
Excell workinll cond's
in prestigious area Send
resume to· 11789. Daily
Pilot. P 0 Box t560.
C09\a Mesa. Ca 92626
Medlcal Froftt offiu,
646-3903
MIDtCAL COUllEI
Must have own trans &
be familiar w /Call(omia
Frwy system. No sales.
pleasant position for in·
dividual who enjoys
driving M· F 9-5168·8500 ---
Medical
RlONT OfflC E
FULL TIM E
Receptionist Sec'y &
Bookkeeper. Exp
n ecessary San
Clemente Write Ad 11823
cto Daily Pilot PO BOX
1580 CM CA 92626
Medical. Office Manner
for pediatric practice
Experience required
Write ad no. 794. Daily
Pu-it. P.O Box 1'1560.
Gotta Mesa. CA~·
Messenger.Office Helper
for N.8 . law firm Must
have reliable car F IT.
8:JC)-5::.>. $4/hr + 20' a
mUe. Call Joyce &40-5650
for Interview.
MGR TllAINll
Leam Film Processing.
St900/mo. iuaranteed.
Noexper. nee. will train
Cal1'71·9201 CLou>.
Jfodela. Sharp, fem only
Ma1utne. Non-faahlon.
sq.em.Bob .. ~
· 1tOUStKEEPER !'~,Per'd . blll'lJUal
pref'd.
Ir· aAq.lllfe .......... l515S. Coast Or .• CM
(tOhl Harbor 81. >
"' • 15'1 ·5141
PRESSMAHM/F
A R DI C K & :IM
Camera. multilith, 2/C
Hamada. 25" Harris. We
are lookiniz ror people
w /exp who can do qua Ii·
t v work Salary open for
cap ablt> per so n
Ins urance & ot her
benefits Irvine loc Call
Pat 8 30 5 PM M · F
979.1834
PROIA TE
PARALEGAL
Certificated. 2 3yrs ex·
per1ence A.·Z ability
throll.Rh taxes Salary to
11300 + benerils
PARAtEGAL
PLACEM F:NT
AGENCY
752 1334
P I T Counler /OHice
person. for equipment
ren~al store Typinf( req.
appr o x . 25 1hr s
Saturday!! req Salary
open. United Rent All or
Costa Mesa. 645·0760.
PIT demonstrators. exp
preferred but will train.
Store in your area every
Fri /Sal. S4/hr Car nee
For interview call
s.41·<1718 or 775-7037
QUALITY
CONTROL
lmmed opening In final
Inspection. hose & fit·
l1n11.. mus t pass co
physical including back
x-ray Taking applica
t1ons btwn 8 & IOam on-
ly Stratoflu. 17671
Armstron~ Ave. Irv .
EOE A Kendavis Ind .
Co
RECEPTIONIST
Experience helpful. lite
typinit & fiiture work.
Xlnt. co. benefits. In-
formal office. C.M. Call
Millie a(t. 9AM. 645·5800
HCB'TIOMIST
Exciting position in our
design studio! Busy
phones. TYPING &
FILING Near John
Wayne Airport. 556-1601.
Receptionist !T ypist.
rapidly icrowing Co. has
openlnR. Gd phone voice
& typing s kills . Xlnt
workinit cond & Co
benellta. Douglas Corp.
Irvine. 754-166S .
llCIPTIOMIST
Corporate o tc ice.
Pleaunt peraonallty.
Lit~ typing. Newport
Bead\. 640-8950.
llC.ilOMIST
full time Mon-Fri. Must
be peraonable & well
1roo:Md. fc enjoy meet·
·•· • Ing the public. Requires
--J Y• ... Sood apelllni Ir pen· lo dodeUverl• and help manahlp. No typ\nr.
El Adobo Plata S J c 557 564.2 in v a Iv i n g are a o f .. This IS our finest lot or SELL for You
· -secu.-ilies. insurance. hiich commissio ns & of auction items 1n MASTStSAUCTIOM
RETAIL MANAGER Secretary needed for real estate Xlnt scholars hip benefits 646-1616 133-9625 busy Newport Bch law shrthd/lyping skills re· sound good call aft over 10 mo. We have _ ----'----Apropo. a women's con·
temporary European
speciality shop is seek·
ing a selling mJ!r. Exp'd
in fashion & with top re
ferences for Org Co
location Salary open.
full be nefits C..:a ll
714·838~262
office Speed & s kills a q'd.114-040-0123 4PM.833-1974 American oak &
must. Legal exper not ~~~~~~~~~-!'!•--------•! walnut from New
I IUY FUIMITUIE
Les 9S7 8133
S600 Gloria Mars ha ll
Membership SSOOIOBO
673-8213 re quir ed Contact .rtu"' ET IY SUIDIVISIOH England . French Dolores.644·9450 ~• A Bronzes . clocks. 12' t'Slm made couch. 11' -----
RN 11·7 Charge nurse 80
bed ECF. Full & p'art
time. l(d salary. Mesa
Verde Conv Hospt . 661
Center St . CM 548·558.S
Route drivers wanted for
deliveries of new snack
food products to local
supermarkets Some
exp. 11:d dnv1njl record
Perm. position 848-1900 -----
Sales
COMMHCIAL
NOPRTY
SALESPEltSOf'f
Learn brokerajle & pro
perty mji?ml skills bv
joininll? a leadinf! local
firm. Call Ken al·
675-6700
SALES Clerk for retail
marine hardware store
P l time. ex pe r nee
Call. Balboa Marine.
549·9671. E.O. F. M fF IU
SALES in discount dress
shop. mature. 2 dys wk.
Thur& Fri. 645-1665
Saleslady. experienced.
full time or PIT HiJ?h
pay 548-1007 1803
Westclirr Dr. NB
SALES
Metropolitan needs
multi-line sales reps
Training provi ded .
Salary to S500 wkly . Call
Mr. Silva. 634·4922
Equal Oppty Employer
SALES
Newport Beach leading
Secret.ary tryp1st. P /T. 4
hrs pr day. H B nr
Beach/Adams 963-0516
Secretary Fashion lsl
Good typing & record
keeping skills impor·
tant. Ptror F /f. Salary
~n. 545--lSSS._
SECRETARY
X Int opportunit y for
sharp person for position
with larice packaginR
Co at executive offices
in N B Good secretarial
skills needed. t yping
above 60wpm. dictalinlf
m achine exp a must.
shorthand preferred but
not req Superb benefits
Sl2SO/mo+ Call Lois at
(114l752·Z1t\.
SECRET ARY-I
Need xlnt telephone I
voice & manners for
Huntington Beach of
fi ce Work includes
secretarial. billing. &
some insurance work
Xlnt. benefits Respond
with resume & salary re·
quiremenls to. ad no
793, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box IS1560. Costa Mesa.
Ca. 92626.
Secr eta r y . 60wpm .
tr anscribinit machine,
interesting varied orrice
duties. Xlnt s alary.
Soundcraftsman Audio.
(714 ) SS&-6193
SECRETARY
Publishing rirm has im·
mediate opening for
secretar y with good
composition & typmjl
skills who wlll also be
r esponsible for ad
coordination. Xlnt. co.
benef\ts. & pleasant
working cond. Ca II
Barbara R. S49-4834
Jewelers seek in ll ru 11 •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii time Employee well
versed in sales & orrice procedures. 5 day week
including Saturday. no
evenings. Call 673-933-4.
SALESPERSON. Inside.
must be exper 'd In
plumbing field, guar
S750 mo . Comm .
benefits. training for
mgmt. Potential SlSOO +
per mo. Please apply the
Earl's Plumbing 211922
Camin o Capistrano
.. 95--0*>t.
• •SICalTAlllS• • Expd Consultant Ours
Bltpr /F.C.Sl5.600
Acct.a Pay fr55S14 ... 00
Secy(TrainLanier)
Sl3.800
Liz Reinders Agency
4020 Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport /833-8190 /Free
Clas11tled Ada are the
answer to a succenful
garage or yard Hie! ft 'a
a better way to tell more
people!
HERE'S A GEM
Slavick's J ewelers has an opening
for a Jewelry Salesperson to work
closely with customers in selecting
fine jewelry and custom designs.
The job requires a hiah degree of
responslbillty and go00 knowledge
of Jewelry merchandise. Excellent
Company Benefit Package.
COMT ACT Ml. McDmtMOrT
1714) .... I llO
IOOtCK&rEI F/C 94GIMEBS & sofa table inlaid Tapa
Wide variety of auties DESIGMYS music t>oxes. and an shell. tr cstm made cof·
for sm business. lnclud· DRAFTSPEllSOM assortment of hall reetable. must see to ap
ingcustomerserv .. bill· Ca r eer opport unitv trees. tables . chrs. preciate 760-8239
ing. & posting. Pleasant avail. for talented & ex ice boxes. c hina -
atmosphere.645-224_7_ per'd . individual with cabinets & many Medil. Bdrm set. 6 pcs
well established & grow I I d c no bed) S200. Tradi· SECRETARY sma er e corator llonal Oinino Rm set, 6 iniz Civil f.nitineerin~ " Healthcare mgmt. co. in firm nr 0 C Airport. items too numerous chairs. 2 leaves. solid
Irvine has an immetl. Apply in person with n· to mention. lnspec· wood. beaut finish S2SO.
openiniz for indiv. to sumeto Mr Fuentes at t1on on Tues Corner Bdrm J?roup
perform sec retaria l Robert Rein. Wilham 9·00AM to 6.·00PM SlSO 54~·9223 duties for 5 o f our F -Medical Dept. staff The rost & Associate!\. 1401 Wicker Rattan Furniture
ideal candidate wdl Quail St · Newpo rt Larry Morgan BIG DI SCOUNTS Beach A · work well under pre l•--------•I uctioneer 839-7239 11765 F.d1n11?cr ssurt!. have the ability to -TakP Harbor RI north ( l blk W. Harbor 1
establish priorities. be SWITCHIOARD from the San Diego Fwy. dependable & have self tum west on Suonower Twin bed & mattre ss
initiative. Shorthand or Ol'TR to Cadahc. tum right on Like new 14wks old I
s peedwrit ing pref'd P time. davi. wknd!. Toronto to 1685 Toronto, Must sell due to reloca
Medi ca I bk g rnd & Will tram 642 3013 C' M tion S50 546-8947
c re~ent ia I ing e.x per Tearher pre school kind 540-3955
pref d Gd . salary & fr· Part. full lime ln sub ------·---•!Custom rountry llv rm.
!nge be_nef1ts pkic For stil te."' "XP 551 45,.,., xlnt cond, S800 firm intervie w . contact u on .,., Baby Grand Piano. Burl 832-2828af\ 6
S h a r on Ra s 1 n s Teacher Director walnut Fr Dresden . 714-64_1..:_l~l~EOF.~ F Small CH RISTI A , ~~~: P 54611209 . Twin beds w comer ta bit>
& lamp Includes covero;
& bolsters in xlnt cond
S300 1714 ) 675·172.4 SK. s-.,. ODDt'y in one ol N Irvine 's
most luxurious ex·
ecutive office suites .
Sec /Rec for diversified professional people. Co
benefits Good typing
s kill s Oulfl:oinl(
personality a must Call
731-1888
rres('hool Sala r '
neRotioble 646-5423
T •iephoM SoHcitors Res ponds 1ble youniz
women to work evei;
5 · 30·9PM S un Thurs
f'am SJ 5(). SS 50thr to a p
ply rail Kelly 540·4088 aft
5. 30Sun-Thurs
Seci:ru;-office~. P IT. Te lephone Sol1t·1t or~
wkeods for lrg apt com Needed 1mml'd111lel.Y To
1 . N 8 • ., SO lhr work J.9. Mon F'ri No P ex. _m · .., · exrX'nenc<.' nN· No sell
For. mfo contact Jim in11: C'all after I PM Lupisat644·1900 966 0151
Security
TM IGIMHI ky Chlb
k "°"' hirinq~
TF.I.F:PllO N F:
SOLICITORS
Uome. contrarl no ~ell
tnlf , non profit orJ.? P T
714 6.'11 3122
S.C.MtGwd T H ERAPIST Inf ant Tues .. Thurs.. Fri . l2PM·8AM Sat. 5PM· Developmt Pro1tram .
lAM. Must have own P /time Member of
t r a n s po rt a l i o n . tran.sd1sciplinary team
telephone, CPR train1n~ NOT & fC(!ding bklfrnd
&sQmeexper pref'd important Call J ackie Popp. 546 5760
Please call for appl TRA VEL AGENT
645 ·13:>8 Mon -Fri · 8:30-5PM mot1_va t ed n ~w aJ(
icressive comm I 111ten
SEC'Y /IECEPT.
Amerfran Oak roll top
desk . S-curve. X Int
l'Ond p i p 5•6·8209. ICounlry Frenc h K1niz
962 0049 Headboard <wood l New
-$400. sacrifice S195 Oak desk. Hoosier chop 759.168.e;
pinit blocks & mort> ----
646-3037.645·7848 DininJ.! Rm Tbl + 4
--Caneback chrs S200. An
ApplancH 8010 tique Green Striped Chr ····~·~~-~~R~·~~·;.... 160. Spanish Dresser-2
APPLIANCE SERVICE this SlOO, Coffee Tbl + 2 we buy used appliances end Tbls S22S Xlnt Cond
·we sell recond. guar. 955.0525
appliances _ 549~~7.2 Couch & Love Seat $300.
I IUY APPllAMCES Glass top din rm table
Les 957.8133 with 6 chairs S300. 1 Sofa
-Bed ~ Call 963-2550
afl 6 Washers. Dryers· Rerng.
Whirlpool. Kenmore.
Maytag . Recond. re-
finished. ~uaranteed'
'155 deli vered 750·3\03
R oc k e r . s wi ve l
Upholstered In antique
ROid velvet Sl 2S 6
month's old. like new
2137 Miramar, Balboa
Peninsula 673·&456 Sears Rernicerator. Top
of the line. 17 cu rt Xlnt
cond. S300 G.F. Porta
ble Dis hwas her S15Q
Sears Room Air cona
Frigidaire Gldtone Cstm
Imperial cu ft S350. Din
lnlf Set Mahogany w 16
-chrs. buffet & others
955·0325, 759·0226
$50. ~9'Z23.
G. F.. upright freezer. J?d
cond. SlSO
546-0010. 8' Sofa + matching 41"1 •
love seat SIOO. Dining
IRVINE COAST COUN
T RY CL UB f'amd v
members hip 644 -8036.
tOam·Spm wkdays
Beaut mahoR. 3°"1" slate
pool tab le Leath
pockets. Must see S800.
646·3037. 645·7848
Wiacrl••w W.ted 8011
••••••••••••••••••••••• Wanted · Display s pare
for hand ca r ved d e~
corator bird decoys 30':
c om paid Rru ce
1 714 )~7876
Mwsical
IMhUIARh 1013 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
CONN Director trombone
with case Ex celle nt
condition. SlOO 675-8052
arter6PM
6 STRING ACOUSTIC'
GUITAR
S22S 675-8172
Office~&
fcpli........ 8085 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 desks. :.>"x60" w l•O"
return 2 exec chairs
640·8230 or 640-9900
Exec desk wtchr +
credenza Rnd tble w 16
c h ai r s & s tora J?e
cabinet S425. Ca ll
752-8353
T~pewriter table S2S Or
rice chair SJS. Utilit~· la·
ble S2S. 675·8172
1017
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Ugly, loving. devoted,
family-type yg M Shep.
mix SS. 966--lS28
~----~----PICIROI & OnJ-a 1090 •••••••••••••••••••••••
51" 1.J,ndeman studio up.
right. all ivory keys,
perm blk finish w/bench
$800. Call aft 5pm or
before noon 963-2865
Hammond Organ. Model
M ·102A. Just litre new.
Xlnt tone & response.
$1300 (714) 675-1724
For small CPA firm.
Dulles will also Incl.
some bkkpg. 833-9062. •
cy. Irvine. Min 2 yrs ex
pr Ex.nt worlunic condi
lions. Call 714/915·0100
TRAVaAGEMT
Immediate openinit for
qualified agent. F.x
c~l l enl opportun ity Airport area. IMHOOl
G F. refriic lfreezer. 2t cu
fl. icemaker. 9 mo old.
like new. warr. $450.
552-1717 aft. 6
Tbl wlleaf + 4 r hrs S50. Spinet piano, unusually
6'40·2.560 small. + bench. antique
S~VOMF/HIM Em 16+ an hour
Call 540-704 l
SERVICE STATION AT·
TENDA NT. 6A M to
3PM. Apply Shell Sta·
lion. 17th & lrvlne. NB.
64z.1258
--------
TIUCK DRIVER
Exper'd.. with current
OMV Report. for Irvine
furniture mfr. 17672
Arm1tron11 . Irvine.
S e r v I c e S t a t I o n _54o.8111M:.....:.....::.:. ______ _
Managers. M /F. 3/wks TYPISITT8
paid training, gd loca· w Ith pu te up ex ·
tions in Orange County. perience. Positions open
Salary + commission•. In Qista Mesa le Dana
Other aervice income. Pt. The Composing
Small investment req. Room, f79..3S41.
Automobile req. For de· talla call StatlonTyplat. 60wpm .
M anagera. Inc. Dys : tranacrlblnl( machine.
(Tl .. )731·2215: eves : 'interestlnR varied ofrlce '"38 duUea. Xlnl salary <71,.>m.... · Soundcrattamen Audio E .O.E.
SenlceP.,....1
needed for our Hunt.
lnston Bch location. In·
div. must be • tell·
1tarter, Interested In re·
1714)558-8193.
Typl~t. Love to type? Be
busy all day? To l900
Call JIU. 957·9331.
2 Couches. 2 dressers. 1 finish. l300. 963-T~.
-----
FREEZER. 15.3 cu rt
rrostless Sears Coldspot.
S28S. 759-1685
bar with stools. S500 PP SPINET. 3t,.; yrs old .
640·5874 Teak wood. Excel cond.
New stereo cab-in-els-. roll Sacrinre t95o. S48-S956
Ma ytag Washer /Gas
Dryer 7mos old cost S900
sell forS700645·1679
Like new Kenmore dryer
top bar cabinets for
vans. bookshelves. new
30" gas stove <Almond>.
va r io us hsehld
fu rniture. 536·6676 art
6PM
S175 964·2878 2 trundle beds with cov-
-~ J erlett.s. Sl.50. GE ~frost Refrig. Xlnt Call 968·3761.
cond. clean S12S s.48-!M87. 673-0912 8' yellow velvet sofa, pair
black & white checked
Montgomery Ward 18 cu chain. rotfff table. end
rt frolll fre.e reftig. U4ed tables. pair 1lu11 lamP41.
9 mo. S32Sfinn. 751-3294 S52-M27 dy1, 10-tpm .
Seara l& cu ft. Refrlg, xlnt
TVJ.ltlllct, "IFl.Steno 1091 •••••••••••••••••••••••
BeautJlul Color TV. 2 yr
wrnty. Free delivery
$148. 1148-1711.
23" tolor Hitachi. super
picture, stand incl. $195.
PP.551-0181 ....., ...... .,., ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... tOIO • ••••••••••••••••••••••
H' outboard, nber11a11 •
wood. DOO. 1»1110 or
f7HJlll5 cond. Uke new. Frost· Oak dinette set. parquet
freelremaker.tN-1390. top. l yr old. must at\\.
$380. IMl-'7297. ON AN 1 en e r a to r .
UPRlOHT FREtZER
Llke new. $300.
645"2SI
Je elry 1070 marine. overhauled. In
..::••••••••••••••••••• xlntc:GOC1.S48-.t111
M1rqulse Diamond In· loah.tt•taa•n/
Whirlpool 2 speed W.M. veator Orad• l.tO s..tce fOJO
Xlnt cond. 1150. Call carata. Soll\alre 18KG •••••••••••o•••••••••• !ocklnt. F /Ume Phone experience pre· ,.., APP'7 In peraon fe rred. rull company
Uma Fri. Atk for beneflt1. Apply: J>en·
. Lloyd'• Nurterr nyaaver. u1eo Pl1cenll•
41 J.Andlcape Co. to39 1.~~"-•;.. .. _c_.M_. ____ _
&.;r.tort 81 , CM . SLA VICK'S ·
t•ll operatlona. Dutl•a wfll Include CHhlerln1
atocklnJ. prlcln1 an<i
varloua other retall
d\ltMe. !xpr. pref. In· te~ appUcanta app-
lJ In .,.rwon. see M1r.
lh Schwamber••r
ll'or a ... 1nec1 Ad
ACflON
CaUa
ev•. elt.1875. band 1ppraleed St OK
llcyd&t Wa ~ta:s~~UK CT14)
Mutne Ea.ctriclan Detlp/lnatalJ ,,..,.,,
Qual. wortr. --·"· BOAT MAINTENANCE
s,.dalbe In Teak
Wu.II.I Ir R..torta1 m.2711
Tellinl the ft)Oll people
pcmlble II tmportut lo 7o\ar a.d verUaln1 tb• aucce11 or •DJ 10 fatt.berl La. .,,_ ,... ......... flVW'/ d17 ,.,... _, .... '""
...... Cllullleid -:..~.:..:. JOUrl •• ll1tecl In
of tbte u••paper Ch11tf1ed, pllione ..... • IQ.9ra.
Fine JeWelera Since 1917
f,
Dall)' PUot
AD-VISOR ..,.
llodat9l'1 loc. t9l2 !:d· I:::::=:::::::::::::::::::::~~=
hllW A•, HB. Ran ICllM'tldnl \0 .. UT _1_0_1:1,_,,_ .. ,;..,,._____ c1 ... lfted ... ft well. • -... •
....................... ---------
Peu1eot lOspd. Blk fr P'lne bid. PBAR dl•mond a .. utlful xtraa xlnt rln1. a.eacu. AO\n1
cond G00/080"5-*3 U7 .000. Al10 , hd.
Schwinn s 1pHd Tandem ROUND diamond rifti,
Bib ntS. rm Gana« a.11c:U. uklac m.ooo.
Dr.C.ll.MS-1171 I Pvt,party.t~. W1ntMHe!pf lfUl1t
. .... . "--·-
I .
Orange Coast DAJLY PtLOTf f\.ield,y. March 17. 1981 ........... ......_...w:t.1/ ~ A.._W-.4 . 91t0 ......... m1tw4 "t ·! ' tOJO tllO Cliulca tlZO ............................................. .
...... ................ .. ..................... ~~P~~~~.~~~~~-IMW t71J ....._,_,,..w ...._bpuW AlllM.l .. 1.W ...... UM4 f.:
4 c"L VotYO D\IJ'ine w/ rld•r. 29 t'OR D Model 'A ' rorelrn. dome1tle1 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••tt•• ••,••••··~·•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••.....,_, •eu boll, oeed1 aome black w/extra1 Runs umbl~ Seat. nne car. cluafca tr your car I• '72 8MWJ002.4lpd, look1 .,..,....... '740 T.,.e. t761 ,_,.. '112 c.r..... ttn 1lf
woJ'lt . .....U ~real . 14,000 080 stoffer640-lls.2e extra clean. •e• u1 1reat.sa.oc>. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• .. ,. 11 ...... Power harla. •sm -SEVI'' .. Jo'IRST! 4.M-1475 '!7 Mtrtedea 1906L. xlnt "T8 Ceflca Uftblct. 51pd. OtlANaolCOUMTY SHOWIOOM COMO... J •••uu••••••••••0 •••• D 'tl ~ ·~ ...... c. '-'-9720 cond Both lope. •.IOO. Air. pwr 1teerlni • '1$T TOP '•;;
'7t 8oAoft Wbaler lOOhp W~btr •urb tuNc~sl.f new.loaded ~ ••••u••••••••••••••••• Muattell.557·0111. bnkes. AM /FM /ca11. YOl.YO Power brake•. pow*~ Ev~. trlr. Uke 11u. s .. •."-.Iris.a.A .. 9Z al·z:M40r981-l055 44 50 ooo rrwy miles rm t.argtst Volvo Dealer wlndowa l)OWttlteeri~ r.~ ugJ _,. .. , , M4tl 97 · · inOranaeCouni• with t1it1teleaeopht ~ 131-282$ i-----Corvalr Pi~kup Trucks. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mae.141$(), *'41211. BUY LEAS 71DIOOOLTD I or 1teerlnf whHI. air. l For ule or trade 25' w /Xtru, Blad:• Red w/slde ramp. spare ent1 7t ,_... '•Corona. 4dr. 1800. nd• DIRECT A 11( /P'M' 1tere-o. reat •
PalrtlMr Cabin Cruiser. Xlnt Cond. 7D> miles S250Chill. :M8·96l7 l'I •°"-ft_ C....ty 4 a peed. M,00 mu ... new en•· body perf. ( nds w Ind 0 w d ~to 11 er, "
:::! tc:r~~~1t~·;,1!:~ ~.~~~M ••cr ... 1111.e tno ~~~~~~d "c:=;e.;.~> pnt1.k'SO.Ni-eoee ~'~ut.~+~fil~n.~ !~tt:'!\!t, ~~~;'::i.:;
( 114 ) 1S l 9 5 48 or -------•• "!.~••••••••••••• 979-2500 1'Uc Brv8dway '7S Toyota pick-up new T tenor. 27.000 mlla. Im·· •
(213)9'-3829Dallas 'T5 XRT5 Basunl ex· .78 Dodge RV van Seit SantaAna 835-3171 e,..·•hell. Ila klt-1un· maculate thruout l
haust. mudderrenders, contained Xtras. low WllUY roofS2900obo5'8·l4TT 10120GardenGrovt81 $1.lOO . 154•6790 qr I
P as c en ro an . uns miles. 842-S241 CLIAM CAIS •~••••••••••••••• ,,..._,.. 9767 Garden Grove 530-9190 . 24 hrs. I ti do l k r ,__. '741 Answer Ad •2~. 642-4300 I ,
stronJ, good rond. $295 .& ...._ TIUC ••••••••••••••••••••••• I SACRIFICE
7JIAYUMIR ·
27 ft. twM I JO
VOL VO"S. M
C..._G ..... loat _.,,,...,..Fly
559·6901 Charlle.644 1805 Corvair 110 Dune Buggy ,.."" KS -CHEAP!! LEASE •79 Spitfire xlnt cond 17K -CMp' HU ~
torHo.n Sole/ Rail big tires. spoke SUghtlyusedturboklt DIRECT•. ml. radials, stereo. '79 Volvo ~GL. s lvr blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ..t/Storoft f 160 rims . steerinJ( bru~es. ,7().,74 Datsun z can 14000. 544-0508 lthr. lo miles. mech xlnt "AISOLUTB. Y" ·• I I
must see to appreciate 768-5837. ---675-9619eves .,....,...,, •CUL •Tl" . 1 I I ••••••••••~•••••••••••• SJSOO. 631·2239 1911 PIUGIOT '77 Spitfire new hurd top. -----~ ""
WI CAM SILL T---L-9560 '78 28al 2+2. xlnt cond, TUllOt cslm steerlniz whl/stick '73 1800 ES: 80,000 miles. Must see to appreciate. YOUI Ry nKtU Am/Fm cass. al e. snrf. shirt S3500/0B0673-S041 Xlnt cond S6SOO Call '67 COUGAR XR-7. 72K
1rid9t!M9.y
btNI. SI 5,000
C4'7S.Z6t5 ...... ,,
559-l3oi • •••••••5;;;:·.;;i••••••• PQRSCHES-!!!:1~k;,!;, 640.
1948 IEACH IMPORTS Volbwagett 9170 ~~~!2~3:~~;56 3961 ' ~~~~=~c.":.!irea!~~I ~~:: ~:
R O::NT · 22 · tux mtr Pwchose!! s •••••••••••••••••••••··----ers.bestorrer overS2500 r, '73 240'.Z. needs work. 848 Dove treet '79 ~ 962·5900 home Sips 6. self cont Low Ml'"4Je! S2900 NEWPORT BEACH Y" Alltot, UMd ----• ·
S275i wk + 8• mt 19104spd.CMd5spd. WANTED 761•0113 75Z-0900 SCIROCCO •••••••••••••••••••••••Dodge 9935:
64().8511.5 Dot.. rick Up's Dyna mite platinum G....,.. 9901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I All th rt 't '78 28al 2+2. xlnt cond. '79 PEUGEOT Sport Coupe. 4 speed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 Dodge Charger 325 hp .•. Rent motr hm. sips 6. Trt ..... n+o'L.. OW us e oppo uni y so· diesel s unroor. air ma•• & stereo only I d . ~ LIVE Aboard boat in Ulllrw• to cons1derthe purchase am/fm cass. ale. snrr. .. · ~ . • •CARS WAMTED• 383cu x nt ron OnA. · Live-aboard slip 40' self ·ront · nn sm k rs Sa•'---!I! or trade-in or your clean S7 ,300 CC ri ck ie > PP automatic and just like 3l.OOOmlles on this beau· RUNNING OR NOT Sl80096J.7298 pr er P P S40 d y "".f• d new (122101 ty. IEZCurt) .,.. _,,... '/. Owens ready to move 556.6468 Malle doWll TP00orsc~e Check with Us 64G-1948eves lwkn s $7995 56495 CASH Ford 9'40 •
onto. NB 642·4644. and "'°"tht'f ______., ay M •RIHO •• •••••••••••••• •••••••' ----o roffen,Tro•_. 9170 ,...,........ 1976ZIOZ.2+2 JIMMARIHO JIM "" FREETOWING .72 LTD damaged rear.
18' Electric Duffield ooat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A u t o m a t 1 c VOUCSWAGEH VOLKSWAGEN OPEN WEEKENDS driveable. parts /restore • BARWICK DATSUN like new, y~llow & blu~ x24 Aristrocat. hke new Transmission, Alr Con-18711 Beach Blvd 18711 Beach Blvd Call Ed 1714)891 -0517 SJSOfbesl 960-00IS
Mustsells&500 673-6111. S3,800.IKP6858> ditioning . AM t FM 1 4 z.zOOO 142-ZOOO c•Rsw•....,EO
631·TT77 499-3816 Stereo. Mags, Xlnt ------* "" """' * 67 J.'ord Station Wgn, .,
Son Juan C opl\tres>o
831-3311 '60 Hunter Tri-cabin. 44 '.
just hauled & painted.
new canvas. everything
but radar. 631-4221 dys.
675-0766 eves
42' Uninite. Aft Cab '73.
tw. dsls. loaded w txt ras.
terms Avail . askini;i
Sl3SK /make orfer
67S-9007. 960-1725 eves
19' Deep V 10 Lots or
Xtras. Very dean Jeff
963·8412 aft 6
1955 Pilf(r1m . 12x55'. 1m-
mac cond !i6000
1·526·~3
'7 1·25' A1rstream. J?Ond
rond. sips 2. furn $5000
64S·4SJO llef. 5.
Est 1n pk, C M S7500. Low
space rent. forn '77
Nomad 8x32. CN98831
F.hte 894-4401
'76 Terry. established .
s pace rent SI05, compl
furn. md TV. ISS94SI
26' Cab1nrru1ser rblt en!(. F.lite ~ 4401
VHF. full ranvas in :irt
area. many xtra!' S4500 railen, Utility 9180
1213 )343 9478 , !ROS I •••••••••••••••••••••••
486·8319 mall lockable uttlil~ trlr S35
26' Chrisc:rart Cabin 548-3316
Cruiser. xlnt cond SSSOO I ..... r __ • p rfs 846 7522 .-ro ~•ce, o -· & Acceuorie1 9400
'79·26 ' Penn Yan, 200 hp •••••••••••••••••••••••
turbo diesel. rulh Forsale
equipped, 1mmar rond Dat Z
Bariiain priced Pvt par 5181
t y _ns-112.5. 673 3729 motor
Wi ll trade Bi#( Rear Lake + other ports
or oenfronl Moblll' 768-5837 Home or trlrs ror sport
fishinR boat 31 ' 499 3816
loots, Sail 9060 .•••...................
/Erickson 27 , spotless.
dsl. sips S. $24.500
•833-0818. 640 0300 •
Erickson 32·. '75 load(•d
Bristol cond orrer. R t-:
or term ~ 9611 790:1
968·002
Newp<>rt Brh mooring.
wll2ft vawl 1955
125.000 644 9904
0-dav 12. xlnt t·onn. "'1th
traiier. S800
548 4288
Fixer upper o lder
sailboat w1shp Ne1.1. port
Beach. 7Sl·8967
'62 Ramhler Alt or
nothtnJ? S225 Dr i i
home Apt R206 425 Mer
rimar C.M
CHEAP!!
Slightly used turho kit
'70.. '74 Datsun 7. t·ars
76R 5837
Grl'at deal Sc1rorro alto'
wheels l'sed I 'r S.'J(IO
hst offt'r 644 131R
••••...................
IMPORTANT
NOTICF.TO
Rt-:ADF.RS AND
AOVERTISF.RS
'79 Toyota lonj.!lled. auto.
air. S4150
540·5505 wkdys
'77 GMC ':• ton P ll ps ,
ph. lo mileaS(l'. xlnl
C'Ond . SJl!00 10RO
492·3023.
'70 fo'ord I ton . a 1l' radio.
healer, util bed with
lumbt>r ra t-k
SIOOO/OBO 645-7325
'72 J• ton P ll 'lnl rnncl
S2000 ORO
1142·45.li
'7f; GMC Sprint 350 t'nf!
askinJ? S.'1JOO
897 451).'>
'74 FORD COURIER
Reblt motor. rlutrh. h\'
div radiator. nercb onh
minor hodv & ele<· 1.1.nrk
SI 800 540.AAJ I
Jewel ·72 Dodl!e l'l 1 ..
t1m . 6 ryl. auto lrnl't wn.
ve 1101.1. fi42 41) Ill
'614 Ranrheri1 mmt r ontl.
<·ompl restort•d ma t?~.
$5400 645·4R:l2
Vons 9570 ••••.........•..••.••.•
Value Rated
Use-d Cars!!
'81 GMC Rally Van
7.1100 miles. p<>wer win
clows. lilt wheel. <'rUl~l'
l'ontrol air. 3 seah a nrl
more
I J2h7 I\ I
$10 500
Top Dollar
Paid
'For Your Car!
JOHHSOH & SOH
Llncoln-Mercury
2626 Harbor Blv<f
('osta Mesa S40.S630
Weroy
OVER
.... look
F'or Your Good
VW. Porsche or Audi
·~,r-
vw PORSCHF.-AUDI
445 E Coast lfiway
at Bayside Drive
NewPort Bt>arh 673-0900
Premium pr1res
paid for any u:-.ed car
< roreiRn or domestic 1
m Rood rond1llon
See Ui; First'
J~B ll.1rt~11 111\11
Cond. ss.sss 1714 1 rorKM 9750 76VWYAH RUMHINGORHOT runs S2SO ~28_·_1024_ _ •• • ••••••••••••••• •••• • 7 passenRer. looks & S25-S300 646-4624
PORSCHE 1979 runs great. All original. c •sH ---.r '74 260Z. new paint, air, "" Mo•erick 9947
polished mags , xlnt 928 Fully loaded IS.400 17270> FRHTOWIHG •••••••••••••••••••••••,.
S4600/0BO. 64S-8171. ori11. m1 · xlnt cond in CREVIER IMW OPEH WKEHDS '72 Maverick areal cond. -side & out Blue book Jst & Broadway ,, •
'70 Datsun pickup. Sl500 wholesale is S26.37S. our Santa Ana 835-3171 CALL ED Runs great A IC new '
------(7149191-0517 lires.t.300080979·7592 ' or best orter. Call art sale price is S26,77S. -
SPM: 642-2011 1200:ll8l. Ask for Duke 79 YW DIESEL MC 9905 Mere--t 9SO.
'78 Silver Datsun 280Z.
M'k 'L' Model 4 door. sun -r
or I e. roor with stereo. Jet ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '·
A I C, am Nm stereo.
S7100 1best orrer
640-5799.
'72 240'Z new pntluphol,
73K orig mt ,
Grey /maroon int. I 557.2792
I '71 Datsun SlO, 2dr sedan,
blu. great shape S2500
962·7145eves
'80· Air cond . sunroor.
am t rm . gold low
mileage.~ 955·2689
Fiat 9725
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2060 HARBOR Bl \10
COSTA MESA 64'2 0010
'76 911S. Sspd. maRs.
stereo cass. snrr. silver
1 m mac Sl2.9SO PP
640-1948 eves wk ends
'67 912 Ssµd am rm 8trk
clean. new shm·ks muf
rter. rblt s eats S5200
752 8786 davs S51 5076
eves 'wknds
••••••••••••••••••••••• '58 S~ster all Orlj?. rut
'74 Fiat X 19, amtrm I\ rei.tored . Red' A
stereo rass. S2500 t0BO heautv Ofr 675 9619 eves 960-8254 .
Hottda 9727 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VISIT YOUR
OR.ANGE COAST
'80 Porsche 91 ISC
Petrol Rlut>, (ult equip
SS6·4347. 642 8722
black beauty! !S2:>XDB > '76 Gremlin. brand new ORANGE COUNTY'S
$5995 eng. fantastic m1leaRe. FtHEST
JIM MARIHO xlnt con d Sl795 l.INCOLN·MERCURY 760-9204. 759·1121 DEALERSHIP VOLKSWAGEN
1871 l Beach Blvd luick 9910
142-ZOOO ..••...................
------• · 74 Ce n l u r v 4 d r .
'60· '65 VW left & right cassette. loaded Good
door. '73 left door S50 cond 673 7677 or 673 7873
each Western style whl Cadiloc 9915 rims for Super Beetle ••••••••••••••••••••••• S20 ea 548-9744
'66 for Sl600. '67 for $2600
Or Best offer p p. MUST
SELL548-109S
'73 VW Convertible F.x
cellent. radial tires Best
o fre r over $3000 .
494 2407 Must see Sell
or trade
Autolnwrance
Problems? I write any
r isk. lo monthly rates
Plrkel Ins. 646-3995
YOUR #I
CADILLAC
DUL.BtSHlr IH
ORANGE COUNTY!
SALF.S, SF.RVI CE
AND LEASING
' ~ ?t.tlJH_ ·:
LINCOLN-MERCURY
16-18 Auto Center Or
SD Fwv Lake Forest
exit ~
IRVINE
130-7000
'78 Marquis waiion 9
pass loaded New
M1 rhehns Xlnl cond
S5000 Owner, 675·616t
'78 Zephyr. xlnt cond. rull
power S3500
540-7987
Mustang 995z· . ..................... .
I '•"I .I \11•:-.. 1 .'>Ill 0:1:10 HONDA ~~.~·.~~~....... HW>qtlARTERS
'64 Porsche, suiwrh <'Ond.
no rust. SJ0,000. 558 1966
dys or 544"8822 eves
'77 91 IS Porst•he. black on
black. lthr seats. elec
wmdow. snrl. telephone.
fully loaded
17 14)~299S
'67 Squareback 4s pd. runs great St250 Se VIi ie EleRante 'I! I .
644·50S3 diesel. every option I 38K
m1. 891-1588 art SPM
1970MUSTAHG
GRANDE
White with •inyl top
Alrcond.
Rwt1 Stronq!!
AHoRCMMO 9705 .....••.•..............
LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 ALFA
SPIDERS
TODAY!!!
UMIYERSITY
SALES&SERVICE
OLDSMOllLE
HONDA
GMCTitUCKS
2&'50Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
540-9640
BEACH IMPORTS 1 ·73 Honda Civic.
848 Dove Street xlnt running cond 4spd.
$1950
6pm 752-0900 848-7Z76. ----
'66 Porscht> 912. xlnt
cond. reblt eng, new
paint. beaut1rut class1r
w tmany xtras S5.695 1
best ofr SS!:I 8664 or
559.8663
'67 VW Cami1er t600cc
ne w trans. transaxle
new. new tires, Baja re
ady asking S2500 496-2782
1978 VW Convert Cham
pagne Edit 8.000 m1.
M1cht>hn tires. chrome
wheels. AM FM cass
S78SO Call Dean .
675-6000
'69 VW , clean. J?ood
motor Reasonable
964-2878
'67 Cadillac Limo Sl't' lo
believe
642 442!1
'78 Seville H•llow lthr
sunroof. loaded 37K m1
SIO.SOO 700.9278
'76 Seville . xlnl c·ond .
loaded. all extras 56450
Eves 499 3745 d vs
951·9500
Gf'MtTn11t1. Cor!!
Rec)lllor Gos!!
GoodMI~!!
$1200
Ens. 640-5527
'GS Must Conv Rare OP·
lions See ad under 9520
Antiques 1c tass1cs
'70 Mu.~tanj? OrlR own.
eveninRS
960-1874
loafs, Slipa/
Docks 9070
The pnre or Hem ~
advertised b,· \ehtC'le
dralero; tn ttie veh1 rlr
<·la,•Hht•d ad\•ert1s1nS(
rolumn~ cloe!i not 111 ·
elude any appltcahle
taxei.. lirense. transfer
re(.'s . finance <'harees
ref.'S for air pollut1on l'lln
trot device 1't'rtirirat ion~
or 111.'aler documentan
preparation l'harges un
less otherwise spe1·ifled
hv thl' adver1 iser
NF:WPORT BF:AC'H 1842·9946 arter
1 '7R Alf;t Spydcr Convt •77 Civic 3 dr, good car'
X I n I r o n d . s i I v e r $2995.
'70 91lS Coupe. beaut blk
w new tires & allov
rims 20k m1 on rblt eng
new trans clutch. this 1s
a rast car & runs
beautirullv S9500 ask for
Nick 497 13.57 or 951 0200 '79YWIUG
Super clean. 7 psgr .. 4
speed Original brown &
beige. <IS71022)
'77 SeV1lle desert Rose
Color. loaded w t'Xlras
S8950 Bill 831 1257
'6S New patnt , new tire~
Good cond Priced to
sell 673 4623 art 6. days
67S·3701 .........•.............
•TRADfi:• '6t Corva1r Van runs
good. need!' patnt ~12110
494 0048
w maroon 1 n I 646·384laftSPM Rlaupunkt Am /F'm
s tereo JS.1100 m1 .
S72S0'0BO P P 548-2184
'72 914. dean. rblt eng.
'76Cvcc8SK mis. cover. am lfm cass. bra.
$3400.GoodCond. many xtras S4200
644·9904 64S·6418 f.'Vf'S
$6995
'80 Eldo. hlk on blk .
loaded. take over lease.
S463/mo !>44·0333 OlcfsmobHe 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Use or boat for shp We
have 26' sailboat. need
Newp<>rt slip Will tra<•h
sailing also Ross or tin
da. l·Sl.5· 1161
-~--~ ---' 77 Chevv Aeauv1lll•. lo J 9730 mll!. lo1.1.dt-!1 . Xlnl C'oncl '74 Spy!lf.'r melt silver. CICJUm' '75 914 Porsche 2.0
JIM MARINO
VOLKSW AGEH
18711 Beach Blvd
'75 Coupe DeV11le Wh1tl'
Rest Orfer
8SI 9049
'64 F-85. I owner. runs
itood. S37S or best orrer. ·•
SS7-2824 Rest nHer494 4060 am irm stert'o. lo m1 . nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• Special whls . CB .
top $4500 646 t81S '67 JaRuar 3.8 MK llS all AM /FM cass & radar 142-2000 Camero 9917 rinto
OHL Y 20K MILES
26' Sailboat. sound &
seaworthy 56. moortn)(,
NB Slfi.000 fl7 5 7 I 3R Ant~s/ Clos sics 9520
'77 Dodge Trade's 200
mint l'Ond . r S. p R
A C Cruise. cstm in
t ext f.\'er\' xlrn a\'atl
Make offer 962-5900
eves
Slips ava1lablt>. Ne1.1. JX)rl
Beach 2s· 3S ' Avail
now 642-4644
NEED end t1P for 2S '
Trimaran w 18' beam
Call· 548 6432 or 552 166fl
artsPM
...•..•.•..............
Aire.raft 9110 ......................•
1969 Beech Musketeer.
midtime. !Sp Lvcomini:
eng. 2 Comm nav '!'
transPonder 8404109
eves. eves /wknds
91ZO •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 COLEMAN TF.NT
TRLR. Sleeps 6 <Used 4
Times ) Stove. Sink. Ex
tra Canvas ( 7141995-8989
Motoriudll&e1 9140 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HEW PUCH MOPEDS
Any Model-Wholesale
0
Save uf to Sl87
Peugeot 103
D>Oor best orter
Call Debbie: s.36· 1692
Sell with EASE'
ll'sa BREEZE
Classllled Ads 642·se78
••.•.•.•••..........•..
'46 F'ord Woo d1 P .
restored. SIJ.000 ALSO
'29 Model A Town Sedan.
4 dr. restored ldf.'al for
s tudent SlO 0011
675 6161
'58 Chevv Impala R l'VI.
hlk . 2 dr llurrv
S.1200 hesl ofr RJJ-0340
M uslan)( '65 Conv p s
d1sr hrks pwr top. auto,
piinv intr 2119 4 \' en1? .
s lra1 1?ht body . x lnl,
me<·h. win• whl cvrs.
tonneau hoot Orii: pvt
pty 1714)968·2042
1973 Volvo Sedan. Rood
e n11. body n('('ds some
re pair. SI 100. Owner
!>48·7249
'60 PORSCHE 3560
CONVERT! BLE
Ptlv restored. needs
some work . S8250:
879-1687
'48 Lincon Cont. Mark I
('pe ~750 Olds En11me
1192TPLJ 661 ·6210
'64 Thunderbird convert .
68.400 oriit. ml . swing·
away steerinS? whl. auto
spd control. A tC. full
Power. Kelsey Hayes T·
bird wire whls. Sl2.000
Dys 752-2SS2. eves
_!_55·~ Mr. Ph~I~-· _
Want Ads Call 642·5678
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAM
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda
2150 Hwbor ll•cl
Costa M"4I 645-5 700
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos . C all us
DAY!'!
l fUH~lhC. c •••• M•H
""'44·tl0l w H0-907
HIGHIUYH
Top dollars for Sports
Cars. Bugs. Campers.
914's, Audi's
Ask for U/C MGR
JIMMARJHO
VOUCSW AGEH
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
HZ-2000
You can be a
WINNER
Just by sending us your name and
address and by watching for your
name In the classlfled ads of the
Dally Pilot.
Win Ucketa to th' circus, ·~· •muaemel'.'t auracUbnl or tt1>0rtln• events. Just r out tbis c9upon and mall il loefay to the:
~ Department Dally Pilot
ut W. Bay Stl'fft, Cotta Mesa. CA t2ae
• I • '
·73 Spyder Pf.'rrrrt cond
New top low miles
$4 500 54.'I 33911
Audi 9707 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IMW 9712 •••••••••••••••••••••••
For The Best
Buy Or U!ase Deal
In Orange County
Come S<>e Us Today '
SADDLEIACK
IMW
28-102 Marguerite Pkwy
Mission Viejo
Avery Pkwy. exit (5
Fwy.>
831-2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays
CREVIER
& I ST • HOADWAY
SANTA AHA
835·3171
THI 111.TIMA Tr DlllVINO MACHtNl
•USIDIMW1•
'76 20025/R C4266)
'76 S ~A S/R 12419)
'77 6.30 csi auto C0040)
'79 320I (7560)
'80 5281A sunrf C 182:5)
CloMd 5-deys
The Mott bcltMt
,_.OfYIW
IMWPwc .... Or
LHMC..Wh
Ma....IMW!t
l"fOrlMM l_yOw,._.,._,
17141122·1JJJ
01..-.cOUMTY•
OLDIST .-e·
orig. very well main· Mus t see 646 3037. tained Must Sacririce 64S-7848
846·8570
'69 Jaguar XKE 2+2. gd
cond. S7000.
631·Sl89
SELLING YOUR MB!
WE'AY
TOP DOLLAR SS
Call Jack Bacon
JIM SLE:MOHS
IMPORTS
1970 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
631-1276 833-9300
'66 91 I Porsrhe Classic
Newly painted. rebuilt
engine ~.000 or best or
fer Days 768 OISO .
Eves· 951·1008
~~~VER
ROLLS·ROYCC
I S4t J•'" lilorff ... ,,..,.,,8H<ll \._ ___ ~
ClOSEO SUNDAY~
~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I Saab 976
MBZ 280 · 1973
XLN'TCOND. S6000
CALL 76().9278
'73 450SL. alloys, both
tops. Xlnt! Sacrlrice
$13.950645-9628
••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 SAAi
TURIOt
'79VWRAlllT
Custom 2 door 4 speed.
low miles . fact. air 11 's
squeaky clean 1832
XIH)
$4995
JtMMARIHO
VOUCSW AGEH
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
'79VWRAlllT
Dynamite low mileaize.
cus tom 2 door .
automatic. air. oriS?inal sharpcar (792507 )
$4995
JIMMARIHO
VOUCSWAGEH
1871 l Beach Blvd
142-2000
'79 VW Rabbit 'L' Blue
auto. ale, am/rm. new
tires, best orfer Ken
Donahue 979-4200 --------
'66 Bug. Good condition,
radio, new clutch /plate
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'78Camaro
Air. automatic. power
steering, 27,961 m lies.
1882VEI>
S.981
Barwick lmPortS
131-3311
9920 •••••••••••••••••••••••
• 1971CHEVY
CHEVETTE 4-DR.
Auto trans . air rond .
etc. Cute little c ar'
1193UZV>
OHLY S2tt5
HOWARD Chnrot.t
Dove & Quail Sts
NEWPORT BEACH
133-0555
SEE US FIRST!
We have a good selection
o r NEW & USED
Chevrolets !
COMMELL .
CHEVROLET
•••••••••••••••••••••••
*SALE*
1979-1980
PINTOS
.•
• 30.
to choose
from $2895
1817XKS >
ALL-Low Mileage
A LL·Automat ic Trans
ALL-Power Steeriniz
ALL-Runabouts. 3dr
SOM E·Air Conditioning
SOME-Station WaRons
A LL-Guaranteed
ORANGE COAST
TRAHSrORT A TIOH
CLOSE TO FREEWAYS
2167 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa
Call (714) 63Hi441
1980 450 SL. under 1SOO
miles. Loaded with ever-
ything. Dark grey ellt.
with blk leather intr.
Last 450 imported in
Calif. $40.000. 67S-91l1
'X.?dl 11 h ·• Ill , I
' I ..... I \ \1 I ' ' IEACH IMPOITS !!r.>IOBO 67s-5105 must
848 Dove Street 1--------~= 541>-1200
'72 Pinto xl nt cond .
cassltape, mag wheels.
4spd. 640-6010 daysJene.
857 ·4475 eves
'8() Pinto. 4spd. am/rm
cass. lo mileage, xlnt
cond. like new 631-9665. NEWPORT BEACH '66 VW Bug Beige good '79 Monza. good cond. air
752-0900 rond S1800 631-4836 days. + xtras. Call art 6 or
'79 300SD. like new.
6000mi. slvr /blk. snrr.
129.000. 9M·2699
-642-8019 eves wknd, 556-0724.
ORANGE COUNTY
'73 Runabout Sharp, ~
tone. ale. 4spd, 11200."J
S .a •a '78 VW VAN Blaupunkt '76 MOMIA
"',.. am /(m 8trk. tinted win· 2 + 2. 4 c y I. good 968.6586 ,•
'68 280SE. orig owner,
well mainl. d rk grn.
Beaut. 14100. Call eves:
BUVorLEASE dows. xlnl cond must mileage, a /c. radio. '73 Pinto Squire Wgn.
DIRECT II ..,"""951 7982 t f bl t runs fine. needs bod.,....._ OVERSEAS se ~ · rans erra e warran y
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'69 230 absolutely mint!
Always gara1ed 14990
Gordon 67$-9137
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out, new pnt. stereo,..,__________ Louvers . lettered
7tM.AMI
101 20 Garden Grove 8 1
Garden Grove 530-9190
ShOWT"OOm new :UOD. on· •7 EMS I Ilk ly 22.000 miles. 1UU ln • 7 n e·new warranty. •'speed, air, cond. only a&,000 ml. a/c.
s t eer i n 1 , 0 ru l a e. am/rm, MeOO or beat or-
orltlnal ! Llh Newt 1_re_r_.~_1._ttt_1 ____ _
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YO&MSWA... wap. Good coodlllon.
11711 Bta.eb Blvd. nffda enflne rebuilt.
14z.JOOO NOOormahoffer. uo.am
radials, runa like new '7S lmpal1 4 dr. only radials. Super cln. 12895.
S2750PP846-4395 39,000 ml. loaded, new PP.~
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or m.otTL 1 • J
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1978 CORVEnE
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1979 OLDS 98
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1978 BUICK
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53495
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56395
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\
j·oh chief enters guilty plea
I .
Oally l'li.t ,..,. .. llY Gary Am!IW ...
WAITRESSES AT HOULIHAN'S IN NEWPORT BEACH TOAST EARLY ARRIVALS TODAY gt. Petrtck'• Dey began at 8 a.m. •• reveler• got their lrt•h whl•key up
Top of the morning
Irish tipplers-start early along Coast
By STIWI! MITCHELL
Of Ille O•llY l"llOI SIMI
Some folks like lo get an early start on
their St. Patrick's Day celebrating.
Take the dozen or so patrons who showed
up al lhe Shamrock cocktail lounge in Costa
Mesa shortly alter 6 a.m . today.
There was Jay O'Maley and George
Thomas O'Hara sipping Bushmill's Irish
whiskey at the bar. recalling past St. Pat's
Day happenings at the second oldest tavern
in Costa Mesa.
BARTENDER TRAVIS 8 . "Sparky"
Sparks poured drinks and talked about past
years at the 40-plus year old watering hole on
Newport Boulevard.
·'They used to serve free chow here on
St. Patrick's Day,·· Sparky said .
··corned beer hash and some pretty big
meals.··
· "Now all we've got is the harc:1-core
drinkers," laughed O'Maley, an Irish Protes·
tant who says Catholic O' Maleys have two
"L"s in their names.
O'MALEV SAID HE'S been frequenting
the Shamrock for the past two decades, as
has his Catholic buddy O'Hara.
When a reporter asked how the pair
planned to celebrate the day of the Irish.
O'Maley piped up, "I believe we'll have a
BushmHl's on you.
"And thank you," O'Hara grinned.
No. St. Pat's Day celebration is complete
without a rew yarns. and the pair regaled the
bar with stories many had doubtless heard
before
"O'HARA WENT TO jail, sent there by
Judge Dungan," O'Maley said, pulling ·an
arm around his friend.
<See IRISH UP EARLY, Page AZ>
HB • • COmmISSIOner fired
Dally l'llOl IU.11 ........
'CAN'T REACH HIM'
CouncMman Thom••
Councilman
cites Greer
attendance
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of tlle 0•11' 1'1 .. 1 SU.ti
Huntington Beach City Coun·
cilman John Thomas fired hJs
appointed planning com-
missioner, Bruce Greer, claim·
ing Greer misses too ma11y
meetings.
"P~'s out of town most of the
time and I never can reach him,
Thomas told the council Monday
of the man he appointed in Oc·
tober of 1979. • 'l( I can't get hold
of him, then I know the public
can't."
Thomas said he hasn't select·
ed a replacement for the plan·
ning commissioner. In fact, he
said, Greer probably doesn't
know he's been ousted because
Thomas said he hasn't been able
to reach Greer ln three week.a.
OUSftD FROM PANEL
Ex-pl•nner Greer .
I
Sentence
due on
June 16
By DAVID KUTZMANN
OI tM Oally 1'119' SU.ti
With an Orange County
Superior Court jury already
picked and walling in an adjoin·
Ing room, t.be former director of
Hunti.ngt.oD Beach's federal job
training pf'Oll'am chan1ed bis
plea from innocent to guilty c.n
two felony counts of misusing
public funds.
Robert L. Cunningham, 34 ,
former chief of the city's Com·
prehensive Employment Train-
ing Act program. could face up
to four years in state prison as a
result of his change in plea Mon·
day.
Judge Everett W. Dickey or·
dered Cunningham, now free
without bail, to report lo Orange
County Jail on Sunday. He will
be sent to the state prison at
Chino for diagnostic tests und
return for formal sentencing on
June 16. '
Cu nningham had be-en
charged with embeuling $16,000
in federal funds for his personal
use.
The Orange County Grand
Jury indicted him in October-. He
entered hi• innocent pleus a
s hort time later.
Monday, however, prosecutor
Dave Htmellon and peputy
Public Defender Kat.by 0 '1..eary
reached a negotiated plea just
before opening statements /ID the
trial were to be given.
Hlmelson later said the
change in plea was due to the
proaecutipo's "very strong"
case a1a.Uist the defendant.
Dickey made it clear th•t even
lbouih Cunningham was• volun·
tarily changinl his plea,
chances of bis gettin1 probation
were slim.
The judge said the la-.(. frowns
on probation for public officials
charged with embezzling public
funds, except in unusuld cases
where probation is justified.
Jn entering his plea&, Cun·
nlngham admitted to tharges
that between June, 19,9, and
· January, 1980. while wo~king as
jobs chief in Huntington Beach
and president of W1estero
Institute or Car eers, Jnc., he
fraudulently appropriated the
money.
(See CETA, Page AZ)
Budget rap
irks Reagan
WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan, meeting with
Republican mem~er s of
Congress lo reinforce support
for his economic progr~m. today
declared "phony" a report by
the Congressional Budget Office
that his budget target was $25
billion off.
"My response is -· I would
start out with the word 'phony',"
Reagan said. "Tha t's them
practicing what they have been
practicing for the last 30 years.
The figures are phony. Their
estimates are baaed on continu-
ing thlnis the way they have run
them for the last 30 years."
Reagan told the gathering that
"the people" are in favor of his
plan tor big spending and lax
cuts. "They are in support of
this pro1ram. They know that
something has to be done dlf·
ferent than we've been doing
tbln1s for some time in the
past," be said.
Iii
0 ~ w
WARNFR AV ......
I Med<al ::: ()ll1CH I
IEJDD
Proe>o..,d
Oll•ce
MONlillm ~---<R>
Dally l"llOI "'-
PARKl NQ DISPUTE
Hospftel va. complex ---
2 judges
at odds on
TV piracy
Two Orange County municipal
court judges have tackled the
same issue the legality of
California's law prohibiting pay
television decoders and issued
divergent rulings.
In West Orange County
Municipal Court, Judge Houston
Snidow granted the motion of de·
fense lawyer Kenneth Golden to
dismiss charges against Stephen
Robbins, who sells so-call ed
pirate decoder kits in Cypress.
Snidow ruled that the
California law violates anti-trust
regulations by letting pay
television stations alone decide
who can and cannot sell the
service. In Harbor Municipal Court,
however, Judge Donald Dungan
overruled Golden's motion in
another case dealing with pay
TV decoders, holding the state
law la constitutional.
In the Harbor Court case,
Golden represented a Hunt·
ington Beach man, Theodore
Abel, who was charged with
violating the law by selling de·
coders through Wavemasters, a
Huntington Beach mail order
firm.
Asked the significance or the
rulings, the Westminster lawyer
said, "We now have in Orange
County the law west or the Santa
Ana River and the law east of
the Santa Ana River."
Golden said the conflicting rul·
ings only serve to further com-
plicate an area or law which is
already considered quite confus·
ing.
The lawyer has contended in
these and other "pirate de·
coder" cases that it is the
federal government, not the
slate, which has exclusive
jurisdiction over what is
transmitted and received via the
airwaves.
Drunk driver
• given term
of 16 months
An Orange County superior
court judge has sentenced a
drunk driver who seriously in·
jured two people ln a Fountain
Valley accident last March to 16
months ln state prison.
Judge Everett W. Dickey, in
handina down the sentence
aaalnst John Lund1reen, 24, aaJd
Monday he hoped the defendant
would atop drinkin1 to avoid
even more serious char1es ln
tbe future .
.HBdumpeyed
i
The former plannin1 com-
mlaaioner is a cootultant ol an
internaUonal tool company. An
unsucc .. ful candidate for City
Council last year, Greer, 5',
finished ellbth ol 12 candid.at.I
with 2,823 vOU._.
Lunttcreen bad been on proba-
M B I lion for a almilar drunk drlvtn1 Ore On offenM when the rear end col-
1by planners
· The Hunttncton Beach Plan·
'nln1 Comml11lon will deeld•
: tolllabt ll a developer' a propoHd
1afe\1 meuuret are adequate to
belin aeav1Un1 an abandoned
· cbemleal damp near W6rner
· /.Hnmmd8olaaCblcaStrMt. i Mola Development Corp. la
~---buUdial permits to con· . 1tnet t:M condomlntum1 on a llt.
; that ln.cludH the three·acr•
'. cHmlcal clmnf.. .,Tb• Ptun DI Com111l11lon
mMtl at 1 p.m. at the Ctm C.nmr, 2IOOO Main St.
f ,
TbomH contributed more
than SZ.000 to Greer'• campalp
for City Council, lncludlnt the
purcbue of Iar1e 1lp1. But lNt
nl1ht Thoma1 aaJd he wouldn't
support a Greer candidacy
a1aio.
Greer could not bl reached for
comment.
Altboulh attendance fiprea
ana't comDlledJ. a ctty otnd.al eOftftrmed that u,..,•, "auend·
anee ll poor'' blcauae be fre.
quenlly leavn town on bualneu.
r
I
,i
U1lon occurred near Fountain
Valley Commu.nity Hoepttal.
Local newa /eatured yo~:~0=:. i::r:,d :.:,~ ~':
present ln Dickey's Santa Ana
There'• more local newa on Pase Bl of today's Dally courtroom Mooday for the MD·
Pllot.Here'aasampleofwbatyou'llflndt.be,..: tenclq.
Probation reporu bad 1u1-
-ICAllDAGU 01' CONVZNIBNCS -Co.ta Meaa seated that Lund1reen bl al-
police believe some people In Oraqe County may be arru1· lowed to ... main f'rff so be could
lnl muria1• between forelpen and U.S. cltl.HM for tbe '"" CNt treatment ln an alcohol
COD•enMnce o1 aUem .,ho want to Uve ln Ulla eountr)' dtvertlon Pf'Oll'•m.
permanently. lnv..U.aton came acrou tbl1 lmml1r•Uoo However, Dtckey 1aid be wu
twlatdurtDf a murder Iaveatl1auon. upset at lb• fact Lund1reen
cboae to continue drlvlnc -llVI Pila lJP-Tbe COit otrtdlD• an Oraue Coull· wit bout in1uranee and added
ty Tranltt Dlltriet bua la I~ u~ June t~ut what you'll pay tbat a prbon t.rm would at. a...t
depeadluapootbetlm•oldaJ. • l keep the defendant oft th• ._ _________________________ ·---·-----------------------·--... •trfftl . ..
I .. .
"'
Complex
design
opposed
By PfUL SNEIDER MAN
OI Ille Dall' 1'119' S~tl
The owners or Fountain Valley
Community .Hospila.l and the de..
veloper of a new medical office
complex adjacent to the hospital
have locked horns over lbe de·
sign of the proposed office com·
plex.
Hospital officials say the de·
sign of the new complex. with
the buildings set close to Euclid
Street and parking in the rear,
would block the view of
motorists leaving the hospital,
posing a serious safety hazard.
The hospitaJ wants the new of.
fice complex to put the parking
lot in front, with the buildings
set farther back.
The developer of the complex,
however , denies that he wj ll
create a safety hazard and con-
tends that keeping the parking
lot in back enhances the ap·
pearance or the project.
The design dispute will be con·
sidered tonight by the Fountain
Valley City Council. Meeting in
City Hall. 10200 Slater Ave., the
council will convene at 7 p.m.
for a study session with the
Parks and Recrea tion Com·
mission, followed by the regular
council meetin~ at 8 p.m.
The office complex has been
proposed by Molseed and Rylee.
a Newport Beach firm.
The firm want1 lo bulld a
series or two and three-story
buildings on the east side of
Euclid Street, some 900 feet
south ol Warner Avenue.
The project is immediately
south of Fountain Valley Com·
munity Hospital, adjacent to the
hospital's driveway
"We're not trying to block
these people. we're just trying to
make the project safe," con·
lends Dr. Richard Ayers,
chairman of the Fountain Valley
Medical Development Company,
which owns the hospital.
Ayers said traffic is increas-
ing daily along Euclid Street,
and he claims the new complex,
as currently designed , would
prevent motorists leaving the
hospital from seeing oncoming
traffic.
L. Wendell Rylee. architect
and developer of the project,
contends that the buildings are
pulled back far enough from the
s treet. and will not block
motorists' vision.
The city's traffic engineer has
found no hazard in the current
design, and the project has been
approved by the Fountain Valley
Planning Commission.
The hospital 's owners,
however . have requested
tonight's appeal hearing to
argue their case before the City
Council.
Cutback r e jected
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
Senate Finance Committee bu
rejected Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. 's plans to save nearly $1
billion by cutting welfare and
aid to local government.a. But
the chairman predicted Mond•Y
that the committee would re·
verse itself in two weeks when
the same bill returns.
'ORllll CIAIT IUTlll
lncreuin1 blth cloud.I·
. neas toftleht and Wednes-
day. Lowa lonitht 48 aJon1
the cout, 53 lnland. Hltba
W edneaday 88 to 75.
llllDI TlllY
Thr11 hundred plar mrttnw .,...,. at a _.....,
r.trlGI ... NN York. SH AJJ.
11111 ... .,_..._ .... .............. "-Ill...,. ... ......... ..., c......... ... ~ a.u
C-.Ct "" m-"" "" M ·==·• •eN . .. ........ ..
H/F OrW1Q9 Cout ~A&LV Pl~(Tunda~. Mitch 17. 1981
I
''Tbe Juda• told hJm he'd 1ta, there uaUl
be dried out. 11
'•lli•~wvan.•jlJWt•leq...._,
After 42 day•~ O'Hara .. nl a letter to lb•
jud1e, 1&ylq .. Otar Your Honor, I 'm eo dl"J
now I'm a ftre h.-ard."
UlJ.a afternoon," Hall Hld
e'N 1oln• to ti.ave 1,100 people
·.--."" every year."
"Tbe )~ae let me out three da)'I later,"
O'Hara~.
Another round of drlnlcl later, and
O'Hara offered a toast:
.. HEaE'S TO T HE world's areatest
fi&btJna force -my wife. 11
publ and reatauranu we,..
Meanwhile, things were a bit more
sedate at Hoollhan's Old Pl,ce in Newport
Beach, with a dozen or so wa'.jtresaea decked
out in areen T·ahlrta, white ahorta and trays
full of bloody Marys. 1 "We've tot 400 reattrvationa for
breakrut," said Steve Hall, tnana1er of the
Irish eatery.
I VLIE O'MALLEV. MAN AGE• or
Malarkey's in central NewPort. aays she'll be
servln• greepi beer , lrlah coffee and
sandwtchet tod•Y.
Pat E1an. 'f'ho pours drinks at the Little
Knight In Costa Mesa, has dyed his hair
green to match the beer at that tavern. But by half past 8 there were only a few
tables ruu of diners, mostly dressed in three·
piece suits and silk blouses and wool skirts.
They were ordering corned beef
And operators at the Blarney Stone in
fountain Valley say they'IJ have Uve music,
green beer and corned beef and tabbage.
Fornier hostage
Clymore to face
arrest in· Syria?
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Ol llw 011ty Pllel Stall
The attorney representing
freed-Orang~€ounty hostage
Craig Clymore says he fears his
client, who has been indicted on
federal drug s muggling charges.
wi ll be arrested by Syrian
authorities within the next rew
days.
Clymore. 24. was one of the
more than 100 hostages aboard a
Pakistani jetliner that was hi ·
jacked March 2 on a fli ght from
Karachi to Peshawar by oppo·
nents or Pakistan's President
* * *
Russians
linked to
hijacking
WASHINGTON CAP1 The
State Department. charging that
three hijackers of a Pakistanj
jetliner received machine guns
durin g a s topover in
Afghanistan. says it i~olding
Soviet authorities acco table.
The allegation. oullin on·
day by s pokes man William
Dyess. was based on eyewitness
accounts of the events at Kabul
airport. where the P akistanj Jn·
ternational Airlines flight spent
the first fi ve days of the 13·day
hijacking ordeal which began in
Pakistan.
Mohammad Zia ul-Haq. It was
eventually flown lo OamascUA,
Syria, where the hiiackers $Ur·
rendered Saturday.
Attorney Ronald Kre ber or Laguna Beach. a former pros-
ecutor for the Orange County
District Attorney's om ce, said he
had r eceived information
Clymore would be arrested by the
Syrians in order to pressure him
into returning to the United
States.
K reber charged U .S State
Department officials with putting
pressure on the Syrians to arrest
Clymore in a minor charge.
"We believe he wiH be arrested
on a small. innocuous charge,"
Kreber said. "He would be de-
tained until he agrees to sign
waivers to return to the United
States."
The State Department has re·
voked Clymore's passport, ap·
parenlly to prevent him from flee·
ing prosecution. He has been is·
sued one-way travel papers to
New York. where the announce·
mentor his indictment was made
Saturday. The United States and
Syria have no extradition treaty.
Kre ber said if he has his way,
his client will remain in Syria un-
til the drug smuggling charges
are resolved.
Clymore is alleged to be the
ringleader of a nine-member in·
ternational hashish and heroin
s muggling operation, according
to a federal grand jury indictment
released by the U.S. Attorney's of·
fi ce in New York City.
O~lly Piiot Sllif Photo
ADMITS FUND MISUSE
Rober1 Cunnlnghem
Fro• Pagr A I
CETA ...
Himelson said the former of-
fi c ial used the money as a down
payment on a new home In the
south county.
Cunningham later repaid the
funds in two installments.
Orange County Manpower
Commission auditors originally
began scrutinizing the city's
jobs program early last year
after allegations or mismanage-
ment, extravagance and conflict
o r intt?rest were leveled at
Western Institute, the corporate
operator of the $2.6 million a
year federa l job program in
Huntington Beach.
Airport
'attack'
mappe'd
By STEVf} MA&BLE
Ot ... oeilf ~... ..... '
Newport Beacta elty officials
have announced that they will
try to lnvalldate the John Wayne
Airport muter plan with a
series or le1al attacks.
City Attorney Hush Coffin said
Monday a lawsuit ch,alleflllnl
environmental sections of the
m aster plan will be filed no later
than next Wednesday.
Comn said it is likely that
other courtroom challenges will
follow.
At a midday press conference
M o nday, Coffin and City
Man ager Robert Wynn in-
troduced lawyers from two na·
Uonally known law firms that
have been retained by the city.
The rlrms -Beardsley,
HurstedJer and Kemble of Los
Angeles and Luebben. Hughes
and Kelly o( Albuquerque -are
to jointly help the city fight
growth at the county airport .
The Los Angeles firm, which
includes a former California
State Bar president, speciaJbes
in courtroom litigation. The
Albuquerque ftrm specializes in
environmental issues.
Newport councilmen agreed
I ast week during a closed
session to hire the firms . A
formal contract is expected to
be approved next Monday dur·
ing the council's regular session.
Wynn said councilmen are
unanimous in their feeling that
they s hould "do anything possi·
ble to stop airport growth." He
predicted that a $250,000 airport
war chest will be set up to fund
the fight.
··All fertile ground will be
plowed," added Coffin.
Lawyers from both firms
agreed that the firs t suit will
argue that county supervisors
fail e d to co n s id er all
alte rnatives before adopting the
master plan l''eb. 18.
Further. they said, the s uit
will allege that approval was
based on an inadequate environ·
mental impact report.
One or the attorneys, John
Kelly. said that suits dealing
with Calirornia environmental
laws normally come lo trial
within 90 days after being filed.
In a related announcement at
the press conference. Newport
Beach resident Tom Williams,
who heads the newly formed
Airport Coalition. s aid his group
a lso will be filing suit against
the county.
"At one point. all three hi·
jackers stood in view or Afghan
and Soviet security personnel
without any apparent concern
for their own safety," Dyess
said.
He a dded that several
passengers aboard the plane al-
leged that the hijackers received
a dditiona l we apons while in
Kabul.
Others named in t he eight·
count indictment, which charged
conspiracy, possession with in-
tent to distribute and illegal im-
portation, were:
Helen Frances P lesko, Diane
Mae Moseman and Kim Marie
Mowitz. All gave the same Lake
Forest address where Clymore
resided before his trip to Pa kistan
last month.
Ocean View says
English key goal
"T hey a rrived with pistols.
they left with machine guns." he
said.
A statement from the Soviet
Embassy in Washington called
the accusations ··completely
groundless" and "crude and un·
dignified."
HB intruder
steals man's
money bag
A taco restaurant e mployee
who took home $800 in receipts
from his business was robbed at
gunpoint in his Huntington Beach
apartment, police reported.
The JO.year-old victim, who
was not identified by police, told
officers he was asleep in his cen-
t r a I city apartment when a
bedroom light was snapped on by
an intruderal3:20a.m . Monday.
The intruder'. who apparently
had entered through an open win·
dow . pointed an automatic
handgun and demanded money,
according to the police report.
T he sUApect found a black vinyl
bag containing the restaurant re·
ceipts and fled with it, police said.
The intruder was described as a
white man in his early 208, with
blond hair.
• ORANGE COAST
Clymore moved from that unin·
corporated community just prior
to his trip, according to his father.
Glen Clymore, of San Juan
Capistrano, who has declined to
re veal his son's current address.
Others named in the indictment
were Leonard Wylie of Stanton,
Robert A. Lee of Orange. Dale E.
Donnell of Anaheim and Kenneth
Grissom of Santa Ana.
According to feder al drug en-
forcement authorities in New
York, Miss Moseman and Miss
Mowitz were caught carrying
hashish oil concealed in condom!'i
in their vaginas during a search at
John F. Kennedy Airport in New
York in January.
Reportedly the two women had
arrived on a flight from Karachi,
Pakis tan. Clymore and Miss
Plesko were on t he same night,
but they weren't searched, ac-
cording to federal drug enforce-
ment authorities in New York.
Clymore's attorney says he will
fight the extradition of his client
from Syria. "I have some very
pointed questions lo ask the em·
bassy officials there,•• he said.
"T he battle ground will be ln
Damascus. We are going to fight
I tout thereonestep at a time."
Relations broken
NOUAKCHOTT, Maurita'1ia
(AP) -Ma uritania broke
diplomatic r ela tion s with
neighboring Morocco today after
foilln1 a coup attempt by two
former members of tbe rullnl
m ilitary committee.
Dally Piiat MAINOfPICI
Thoma P Haley
~
Robert N. Weed ,.,...,,.
M. Thomu Keevll ....
ThomM A. Murphlna ..._. ....
Charlee H. LOOI ~ ........ ·-Bamatd Sctlulman a...
c.i c..i.nten ~-~Goddard Jr.
I
I» WHI..., IL, C:.. ..... CA. .............. , .. ,c.a .... ,CA. ..
~ .. ----~-
Trustees or the Ocean View
School Dis trict have decided that
rather than teach immigrant stu-
dents in their native language, it
is more practical to teach lhem
English.
The 23-school district. based in
Huntington Beach, has about 500
immigrant students speaking 22
diHerent languages.
School offi cials said Monday
this diversity makes it impossible
to meet state requirements on bi -
lingual education.
The state requires a public
school with more than 10 foreign
speaking students in a grade level
to give instruction in both E nglish
and the native language oflhe im-
m I grant pupils.
The board unanimously s up·
ported a "philosophy s tatement
on bilingual education with the
e mphasis on English instruction
as recommended by a committee
of parents and district staff mem-
bers. ·
A "further goal" of the pro·
gram should be an "ongoing em·
phasis on teacher training" In or-
der to improve communication
with immigrant pupils, the com·
mitteeatated.
Moat of the district's lmmi·
grant students are Indochinese,
according to district officials .
The district ser ves 11,000 stu-
dents in Huntington Beach, Foun-
tain Valley, Westmlnater and
Midway City.
"In order to meet the needs of
these (foreign.speakin g> stu·
Allegations
not proven
A front paae index atory calllnt
readers' attention to a story on tbe
lnalde pages March 12 erroneous-
ly stated that two former Lrvtn4I
bulldln& inapeclora requested
liquor from a contractor.
The paraaraph, part of a,, index
invlt1n1 readen to turn to at.oriea
on Pase Bl, lftterred t.he pair re·
queated alcohol, which, 1n fact,
bHn't been proved. Tb• atory
made noauch atat.R>ent.t.
· Tbe Dally Ptlot re1reta the
error.
dents with equaltty. a base pro·
gr am of English as a second
language becomes the primary
goal due to the unavailability of
m ate rials in the various primary
languages. as well as the lack of
qualified bilingual personnel,"
the committee noted.
District officials said that, in
Southern Calirornia universities.
the only bilingua l teaching
credential available is in English
and Spanish.
uinta bom today in NY .
~ESTER, N.Y. (AP> -St. Patrick'• Day quintupletl
were barn bere today to en Ontario, N.Y .• woman of lriah •fl· eut.ry.
Tbe two strll and Ulree bo.)'I, ran1Lnc in wet1ht from 2
pounds, 8 ounces to 3 pounds, 7 ounces. were born at Stron1
Memorial Holpltal at 5:30 a .m . to Timothy and Corine Beach.
The hotpltal said aJl were ln satiafac:tory condition.
Mr. Beach refused to aay In February whether his wire had
been taking fertJUty drugs, which lmpron the chances of multi·
pie births.
B 'stralnt urged
Irish on parade
across the nation
By The Aaaoclated P reu
ThoUAands of Jrish·Americans
were parading in New York,
Chicago, Savannah, Ga .. and
scores or other cities today in a
festive tribute to their patron,
St. Patrick. Cardinal Terrence
Costa Rica
blast hurts
3 Marines
SA N JOSE, Costa Rica (API
An explosion tore through a
vehicle belonging to the U.S.
Embassy here today and three
U.S. Mari ne passengers were in-
jured . one of them seriously, an
embassy spokes man said. He
described the blast as a n attack.
The spokesman said the U.S.
van was driven by a Costa Rican
employee of the embassy and
was taking three Marines from
their residence to the e mbassy
for a routine change of guard.
About two minutes after the
explosion, a second bom.b went
off at the building housmg the
embassy of Honduras . police
said. Reports said there were no
injuries from that blast.
There was no indication if the
born bings were related. Police
immediately sealed orr the area
around the Honduran Embassy.
As ked ir it was an attack, the
spokesman, who decline to be
identified. said. "Yes, it was an
attack. But we are not sure if it
was a bomb that was previously
placed in the vehi cle or if the
vehicle was attacked by a pro-
jectile."
He said the van caught fi re
and was destroyed near the
Yoses residentia l district on the
east side of the capital.
T he s pokes m a n said Sgt.
Steven Garcia. 22, of the Bronx.
New York City, suffered serious
wo unds in both 1-e g s . Cpl.
J e r ome Walters, 21. of St.
Albans, Queens, New York and
Sgt. John E . Roberts, 22, of
Robinsdale. Minn., both s uffered
light wounds, he said, adding that
Roberts may have a broken arm.
arm.
The driver. identified as
Emilio Camacho, was slightly
injured, the spokesman said.
Police said an undetermined
number of vehicles traveling on
the same road were damaged by
the blast.
PI AGEI
Cooke urged the celebrators to
be religious, not ra ucous
Meanwhile, in California, two
snake races were being held to
honor the saint credited with
bringing Christianity to Ireland
and driving the is land's snakes in-
to the sea.
For some. St . Patrick's Day is
a chance to raise a cup of good
cheer -perhaps in the form of
green beer. But Alan L~
director of the New York Al·
filiate of the Nationa l Council on
Alcoholism, said the holiday has
become "an annual orgy of
abusive drinking."
Cooke. speaking at an annual
mus i cal celebr ation at St
Patrick's Cathedral on Sundav.
urged N ew Yorke r s to
"moderate any grossness in the
s pring restival that has been
growing up around St Patnck's
Day."
The New York parade route
goes up Fifth Avenue. right past
the huge. ornate Gothic·style
c hurch. Tens of thousands of
marchers were expected, and
m ore than 2.000 extra polite
we re on hand.
In Georgia. parades were set
in Atlanta and Savannah. where
city officials con tend their
march is second in s ize only to
New York's .
Savannah's parade was to in
elude 18 floats and 38 bands
"The place is loaded up with
people who Just walk. almost
like Mardi Gras.·· o;a1rl Jerry
Hogan, parade coordinator
In Denver. the Volunteers of
America were servin ~ 23.000
corned-beef·and·cabbage meals
to the cit y's elderly. Cooks start-
ed the day with 1.200 pounds of
cabbage and 3.200 Irish soda
bread biscuits
Remap topic
for tonight
Huntingto n Be a ch Cit:.
(elementary l School District
trus tees tonight will consider
changes in school boundaries r e-
quired because of the closure of
schools at the end of the current
term.
The trustees meet at 7 p m. in
Clapp School , 20581 Farnsworth
Lane.
The boundary changes to be
considered by the board take in·
to account the closure of LeBard
and Peterson schools a l the end
or the current term. The trustees
also have voted to close Clapp
School. but this facility houses
only special education students
from all parts of the district
Making a rare public appearance, Reza Pahloui (left), self-proclaimed Shah of
Iran, watches the finals of the Cairo International Tennis Tournament. Widow
Farah Diba sits beside her soft drink-11.Digging son in front row seats at the
Ghezira Sporting Club.
Kitt hits drug
on west coast
Eartha Kitt, s inge r ,
actress and dance r. says
she's going to move from the
Wes t Coast to the East
"because there's no one out
there for me to play with any
more."
"Everyone's on cocaine or
marijuana," Miss Kill said
during a visit in Charleston,
S .C . "T h ey ca n kill
themselves if they want, but
I don't want to be a part of
it."
Miss Kitt was visiting
Charleston with a crew
filming her life for West
German television. Miss Kitt
was born in South Carolina.
Opera star Mary Costa and
Washington, D.C .. attorney
Antboay G. Chase will marry
June 6 in Beverly Hills, her
publicis t , Phil Paladino.
announced.
Miss Costa. who has sung
with the Metropolitan Opera
and in the film "Song of
Norway." returned from a
six -month operatta tour.
Chase is a member of the
Drinker, Biddle and Wreath
law firm. They plan to live in
Los Angeles and Washington.
August A. Busch Jr., the
8l ·year-o ld h o n o rar y
chairman of Anheuser-Busch
Companies Inc.. has taken
his fourth bride, Margnet
M. Snyder, 61
Busch, who also owns the
Sl. L o u is Cardinal s.
afnounced he married Mrs .
Singer Jimmy Buffett is
lending support to
Florida's Save the
Manatee effort. ··You
can't help but like
manatee,'' he said.
"And their o nly
predators are people
who aren 't aware of the
problem." Fewer than
1,000 of the ··gentle
giants" survive.
Snyder in a privat e
ceremony.
The new Mrs. Busch , a
widow since 1974, w as a
secretary to Busch for many
years and is a vice president
of Anheuser-Busch and the
first woman director of the
cor poration.
Although stopping short of
declaring him se lf a
candidate, state Controller
Ken Cory claims he can beat
any rival for the Democratic
g ubernatorial nomination in
1982.
"I think I ca n
out-campaign Los Angeles
Ma yor Tom Bradley or
anybody else i n the
Democratic primary,'' Cory
s aid.
Cory. 43, in his second
term as comptroller. said
there was "a high degree of
probability" that he would
e nter t h e race for the
governorshlp if Gov. Brown
decides to run for a U.S.
Senate seat, as expected.
''Designer creativity has
reached the heights," said
Kitty Lesli e o f
Neiman -Marcu s .
"Unfortunately, too, so have
the prices. But it doesn't cost
anything to look."
Ms . Leslie made h er
observation w hil e a
co mmentator at th e
Childrens Hospital of Orange
County fashion s how at
Anaheim Convention Center.
Pope Jolla Paal II asked
Romans to be understanding
of his frequent trips outside
the Vatican because be must
carry out his "pastoral
service" to a ll R o man
Catholics.
The pope made the
comment as he told a crowd
or 50.000 gathered in St.
Peter's Square or his plans to
celebrate M ass for the
workers at Terni, a town in
central Italy on Thursday.
Bacteria death denied
Germ warfare tests cited in 81 I million suit
SAN FRANCISCO (APl -The
government s ays that the
Army's spraying of San Fran·
cisco with bac ter ia m germ
warfa re tests 31 years ago did
not cause the death of Edward
Nevin. a prominent resident of
the city.
The contention came as open-
ing arguments began Monday in
the tria l or an $11 million
wrongful death lawsuit brought
by Nevin's relatives.
Assistant U.S . Attorney John
Kern told the court in the non·
jury trial that it w as not an
Army bacteria used in the germ
warfare tests in 1950, but a dif·
ferent strain that took Nevin's
life.
Councilman
raises funds
for scouts
Huntington Beach City Coun·
cUrpan Jack Kelly will host a
$100-per-person cocktail recep·
lion at hls home T hursday to
raise money for local Boy
Scouts.
Reception coordinator Susan
Osborn said Kelly was asked to
host the fundra1ser because as a
councilman and recognized ac·
tor be "milhl be a good draw."
Tboee lnteretted in attendina
the evenina reception in Hunt-
inaten Harbour can get further
information by callin1 983-9591,
Ma. Osborn aald.
Proceedl will be don1ted to
KuntinataG Beach and FoaMain
Valley Boy Stout.a, sbe aald.
But attorney Edwin Nevin Ill.
grandson of the dead man,
argued it was the sam e "8UK''
strain or serretia marcesens
used by the Army in spray tests
fro m a Navy vessel off San
Francisco that killed his
grandfather. then 75.
The purpose of the tests, kept
secret for 26 years. was lo trace
the dis tribution of bacteria
aimed from a s hip at a coastal
city. According to government
records. germ clouds covered
much or San Francisco and its
suburbs.
THE ARMY SAYS two kinds
or bacteria were used in the
tests, bacillus globigi and ser·
ratia marcesens, the latter be·
ing blamed in Nevins· death.
The eJder Nevin died at Stan·
ford University hospital five
weeks after the tests Sept. 26
and 27. 1950. Twelve cases of ilJ.
ness attributed to the bacteria
were reported at the medical
facility.
A government panel later sai~
that Nevin's death was an isolat-
ed incident and that the bacteria
could be used without risk.
Nevin's grandson told U.S. Dia·
trict Judge Samuel ContJ that
th e victim 's c hildren ,
g randchildre n and 1reat
grandchildren are not claiming
the governm ent didn't have a
"valid and appropriate goal in
preparln1 a defense a1ainst
term warfare.
"The issue IJ narrower," he
said. "By what basis in law does
the government juatlfy dis-
persion or bacteria on a lar1e
population?"
BE ALLEGED TU covem·
ment negllgenUy used tbe bac·
te ria without informed consent
of the people of San Francisco
and without an adequate pre-test
investigation of the risks.
Kern told the court the ser·
retia marcesens blamed for the
e lde r Nevin's death was "a
strain of a diffe rent variety"
and that the government will
prove its contention in evidence
to be submitted.
The Army sajd the serretia
marcesens bacteria was used
because it was believed to be
safe, it simulated a bacteria that
an enemy might use in real
germ warfare and because its
bright red color made it readily
identifiable.
In a report on the tests ob-
tained by the younger Nevin, the
Army concluded that a 1erm
warfare attack on an American
coastal city was feasible and
that success or failure of such an
attack would depend primarily
on weather conditions.
Easter Week
day camp Bet
Elementary school age
children from Laguna Beach,
Laguna Niguel, San Juan
Capistrano and San Clemente
are eli&ible to take part in tbe
South Coast YMCA's Easter
Week Day Camp April 13
through 17.
The coet of the ump la .., for
YMCA members and no for
non-members. Hours of the
camp at Crown Valley Com-
munity Park in La1UDa Nlpel
are from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m .
Extend ed h ouri and
traJllportation to and h'om camp
are offered for an additional '"· For more lnformaUotl call the
YMCA at 111·9822, or -..cM51,
Huntington man
aviation graduate
Georr_~ l:vam' ot Hmt· lnlta1t • recent11 sndaAt· ~ fl"Oll) tbe Coll .. • of AvtllUaa Teebaolo11 at Nortbrop
Unlven.tb', lD tncJ•wood. He~ eomoletecl tbe
air frame ad power pfant malD· ten1Dee pro1ram a Dd 11
qu1lllled to be an nlattoa
teehnldu.
Orange Cout DAILY PllDT(Tueeday, March 17. 1981
Schools'
hazards
detailed
SACRAMENTO CAP) -
Potentially haurdous weak-
ne11es have been found in pre.
ca1t, .,,...atreued concrete con·
1tructlon at 33 Californ ia
achooll, the state architect's of.
flee aaid Monday.
At nine schools, structures
were clOled or riven temporary
1borin1 until major repairs
could be made . Minor repa..ln
were needed 1t 24 other school
facilities.
The archltect'a office be1an a
1urvey of California school
structures after a portion of the
roof of an a u ditorium ·
gymnasium buildin1 collapsed
last year at Antioch High School
in Antioch.
FRAMING IN THE collapsed
portion of the roof was made of
pre-stressed concrete.
Meanwhile, the architect's of.
rice urged local building officials
and owners of buildin1s that
contain pre-cas t , pre-stressed
concrete to check their facilities
for signs of weaknoss.
"If significant distress is dis·
covered in the pre-stressed
fra ming members or in their
supporting members, use of the
buildings in the area or distress
should be discontinued until a
detailed analys is . . . can be
made a nd corrective action
taken," the office said in a state·
ment.
MOST OF TBE structures
with weaknesses were built in
the late 1950s and early 1960s,
the office said. More recent de·
signs of pre-stressed concrete do
not appear to have the struc-
tural problems found in earlier
pieces, it added.
Donald Jephcott. the office's
chief of structural safety. said
major repairs were required at
these schools :
-Classroom buildings, Park
Junior High School, Antioch.
-Gymnasium, King Junior
High, Oakland.
-Classroom buildings, Cope
Junior High, Redlands.
Seal Beach
seeking new
• city manager
Tbe Seal Beach City CounciJ is
engaged in it.a first r ound of in·
terviewsfor a new city mana1er.
Mayor Ronald Kredell predict·
ed Monday that an appointment
will be made in about one
month.
The council interviewed three
candidates Saturday and will in·
terview three more later this
week. Kredell said the council
will narrow this group to two or
three finalists, then will m ake an
app ointment. possibly after
second interviews with the
finalists.
The city received 58 applica·
tionsforthepost.
The new city manager will suc-
ceed Dennis Courtemarche. who
resigned last December in a dis·
pute with the council over the
city'sfmancialproblems.
Mayor KredeU said the new city
manager's greatest immediate
challenge will be balancing the
city's 1981 -82 budget. City of-
ficials predict that Seal Beach
will be $750,000 short of funds dur-
ing tbe coming fiscal year.
APW1re11MI•
STUDENTS SPENT FOUR MONTHS ON THIS PROJECT
Proteasor Wllllem Gu•ntzler with 'miracle' engine
Auto gets 110 mpg
$5,500 project • ID
SAN DIEGO tAPI In four
month s' time . H aro ld
Mc Eowen's MG roadstt!r went
from 30 miles per gallon of gas
to 110. The only trouble : it's a
drag getting up a hill
The r emarkable things a
fellow professor at San Diego
State University did lo his
eng ine ca n be done b y
automakers in Detroit as well,
McEowen said in an interview
Monday.
First. Prof. William Guentzler
and four students paid $3 ,000 for
a Kubota diesel e ngine, usually
used in tractors.
THE ENGINE WAS bolted to
a To yot a fi ve -speed
transmission with a s pecial
a daptor plate made o f a
machined piece of a luminum.
The engine and trans mission
were installed in the MG.
The engine's revolutions per
minute were set as low as possi·
ble "because tests have shown
that diesel-powered . h igh.
mileage e n gi n es running
between 1,500 and 2,000 RPM at
60 mph got over 100 miles per
gallon in fifth gear ," s a 1ct
GuentzJer.
"We were able to reduce the
RPM in the engine to 1.875 at 60
mph. If we could have reduced it
to 1,500 RPM, we could have
com e close to 150 mph."
T he car was lightened without
structurally w e akening its
frame. The radio and heater
were removed and the air da ms.
or deflectors. a nd rubber air
s kirts installed to make it less
wind resistant.
E VEN WITH THE radio and
heater left in, Guentzler said it
would get 102 miles per gallon.
In e very ot h e r way ,
McEowen's car is as he bought
It from the factory.
T he project cost $5,500, includ·
@
mg the s ticker price of thl' car.
Six months later. McEowen savs
his car took him more than l ,OOo
miles on the first 10 gallons or
diesel and still gets 110 m ilcs 1>er
gallon.
"It accelerates well, can get
up to 75 mph and gives quite a
comfortable r id e . The only
problem is it pulls a hill at only
15 to 20 mph." he said .. And the
diesel fuel 1 use costs only 18
<.·ents a gallon in Tijuana ."
Guentzler. an industrial arts
professor who specializes in auto
e n gine e fficiency. said t he
average car owner can increase
fuel efficiency from 20 mph to 27
mpg. for example. for less than
$150 by :
-INSTALLING AIR d ams
and rubber air skirts, readily
available, to save 4 to 7 percent
in fuel costs .
Usin g quality synthetic
lubricants instead of oil in the
car's engine , transmission and
differential to s ave up to 112
miles per gallon.
Using a permanent "low-
restriction. after-market" air
filte r made of cotton and w1r<>
mesh instead of the typical dis-
posable filter found on most
cars. a one-time in vestment of
$19 to $24 to get your car
another half-mile per gallon
I N C REA S I NG
sparkplug gaps by installing
silicon -jacketed s parkplug
wir es .
"It's enough to make any self·
res p ecting oil company ex·
ecutive a bit ne r vous." said
McEowen. also an industrial
a rts professor
This summer Guentzler will
oversee a fuel economy sym-
pos ium for e ngine designers
from throughout the nation. He's
alo putting his ideas in a book to
be published next month.
A question • jeweler often
hMrl ia "Wh•t'• the price of •
1~r•t dl•mond?" The aame la
uked of ruby, emerald •nd
other colored atones. The,. It
no almple •n•"'· The v.iue ,
plec.d on • precioua atone It
arri ved at after c areful
consideration of aeveral quality
f11c:tora. In general, value 11
affected by t>Muty, rarity .nd
du'9blllty.
&EM WISE·
demand Given two equally
attracltve and equally durable
s1ones. the one most requested
by the public will be the ITIOf'e
valuable. There are many
stones the public is not YfJfY
lamill1r with. Therefore, even
though they are acarce. the
cost may be lower than th•t ol
a more abundant but more
Popular atone. As a case In
Point. 11 you were looking for a
medium to dark blue stone,
would you ask for a sapphlrw,
tanzanlte or benltoite? ·Most
w ould ask for tapphlre
becauM they've never heard ol
the other two stonea. Tanz#\ltie
la becoming better known, ,-
be n Ito It e laga bac k I n
obscurity. Although benltoite It
t he rareat o f the three
gemstones, l•ck of awuene.e
of Il a exi atence end the
retultant low demend keep the
price down.
Beauty Involve• cutting,
color, clarity and lnter .. tlng
optical propertl ... Th ... .,..
the fac:tora conaidered wnen
Meignlng a particular gr8de Of
aerlel of gredes to a gemttone.
The cutting of the atone 8ffecta
the 'ltW'f light lnter90t1 with It.
The propottlona of the atone,
ttlt numbef and pl~t ol
t.oet.. anc:t the quality of pofietl
.n.ct brtlllenoe, tlN, depth ol
color end lu•e.t.
In dlamonda ebMncie of ""ff
color I • uaually rnoat _.,_.., In ook>Nd 1tonee
bright, llV.I)' color I• ueutllly
moet hlghly ptlzed. A •tone
with fin• cletlty, one Which
IPP'Ot10tte. tow lbeenc. o1 '"""°' merb anc:t lncluelona, It almoat 1lw1p con•ldtred
the mott •ttractfv.. Oemeton.
which 1how 1 apeclel en.ct
whetl lntenlGtlng 9'1tt\ ltght .. tt.idQed by the quettty of hi ........ o .• the -ot oolor !ft ~~· c olor ot11n1• In ... the ldulereeo11m , °' moolletone. "ltlty llWOl\'et mofe lNn
fu1t • 1tone'1 1carolty In ,.,,.; It lleo d.Penc:tt upon
Mary Barr. c.rtefled Gtm01091a1
I
I
CHARLES' H. BA RR
Oureblllty Is a combinetlon of
a •tone'• herdneu and
toughneu -It• resl1t1nce to
1cr1tchlng, ch ipping and
br .. klng. All other factor•
being equel, the mOfe dur1ble
9tone will be the mo,. valulble.
P iecing • value on 1 gemetone 11 no almple rnener.
That'a Why eltC*\ epp,..,. .,. eo vital to "'-lnduatry.
Hopefully thl• e11pttnetlon Mie
helped you u,,derttand the
trtmenooue price rangt ~
h11te probeb\y encount-.d
~ lhopp4"' tot nne JlweWv.
" you hewe .,,., ~,Or.
1hlt Of' WI otNr ""' 9Ubfect. .,._ come lftto IM •tore IN
-.,. peNOf'lll!y.
l
Orange Coaat OAtL Y PILOT/Tues ay. March 17, 1981 'leO RLO I NATION
1\. toast
•
yth-01akers
• lllAllaoc& •)'!8f 6 PANCIU D&PT. -All you
.-la a tut Wdle Uk •lne and upon St. Patrtcll'• Day, "wYbodJ ftt'\lr• you tw lrilb and you'U be aprouUns
1baa rocu out your ean today and vlllUnt tbe comer pub,
P'8tUD1 down 1reen tw.w. So let 'em think It for toda y. On St. Patrick's Day, everybody should be a t least 1
little blt lrtab. hi tnatll. the Irish need all our help because ao many
dreadf\&l f alr)' talea and Wllrulhl have been told about
them o ver tbe cen · ~ turles. Juat consider: .... W r o n 1 t b l n k · • r.\
e r a h ave snide · ~
ly .alleged t h at th e TIM MURPHll' ~ t;. C r eator l n vented ~ I "'
w hiskey to keep the
Irish from ruling the world. Why, even Mark Twain, who
also wasn't Irish, wouldn't buy that terrible falsification.
Twain straightened that one out when he wrote in 1883 :
"Give an Irishman laaer for a month a nd he's a dead
man. An Irishman is lined with copper, and the beer cor·
rodes it. •
"But whiskey polishes the copper and is the savln1 of
hlm."
That having set the record str aight, let's get to those
snakes. Again, Wrong Thinking historians have painfully
concocted this tale ..whereby they suggest that once,
somewhere around the tee Age, Ireland was connected to
the British Isles.
These same fact-knockers then suggested that animals
like the weasel and others mjgrated across Into Ireland but
Hey. fella -weren't you /oolin' around on page one?
the snakes didn't make it in time. The Irish Sea split the
Emerald Isle from Great Britain.
It might be added that was really a split, which has
persisted for some time.
Anyway, these Wrong Thinkers would have you
believe that it was the coming of the Irish Sea that stopped
Ireland from having any snakes.
In fact, however , everybody in their right mind knows
that St. Patrick drove all the snakes from Ireland.
CERTAIN TEXTBOOKS also try to suggest that the
report of St. Patrick using the shamrock. Ireland's na-
tional flower. to explain the Trinity "is unsubstantiated by
facts."
Do note that the texts didn't say it was untrue. Only
unsubstantiated. It's also unsubstantiated by the fact that
1f I wash my car tomorrow it's going to rain. But it will.
Further, certain evil talkers have prattled that St
Pa trick claimed to have converted all of Ireland to Chris-
tianity. But there's no record he ever made that claim. So
you guess we can say that one 1s "unsu~stantiated by the
facts."
Finally, we come to this little ditty about laws that
have been passed to suppress the Irish:
"0 Paddy dear. an' did ye hear the news
that's g<>m' r01Jnd'
The shamrock is by law /OTbid to grow
on Insh gr01Jnd!
No more St. Patrick's Day we'U keep.
his color can't be seen.
FOT there's a cruel Law agm the weann'
o' the Green'"
THE SUSPICION HERE is that the law in question
could be attributed to the British. And today, as we all
know, it's a law that didn't hold up too well over the years.
So today let's all lift a salute to the sons and daughters
of the Emerald Isle. Long may they be wearin' o' the
Green.
Senate anel .-pproves
SalvaJdor military aid pushed
• WASHINGTON (AP > -ln what may be the only Senate test of
new U.S. mllltary aid to El Salvador, Prffldent Re&1an has won
subcommittee aooroval to send~ mUUon worth of helleopt.ers and
other gear for u.se against leruatfuerrilla inlillratlon.
The Senate Appropriations foreign operations •ubcommlttee
approved the ~ million Monday by a 8-2 vote. A thn.Uar House sub·
committee ls to vote next Tuesdn.
senior Democrat. Sen. Danlel K. Inouye of Hawaii. ab.tatned .
Sen. Bob Kut.nmeier, R·Wlt .• the subcommittee's chairman,
said be Is convinced U.S. military activity in El Salvador will not
eac a late like it did in Vietnam.
However, he acknowledged that ''all of us are worried about
the fact that we have Americans now In El Salvador and all of uis
are worried about the possibility or the United States getting em-
Reagan Is sending $20 million ln mifttary asd under tua own
emergency authority, but the two subcommittees have veto power
over the additional $5 million because It Is being redire~ed from
programs for which It was orlainally appropriated. ·
broiled in a dlfflcult situaUon. •• ,
Meapwhile, the White House Ls publicly dlaputina a Stale
Departtnent complaint that lbe news medla overplayed the e merg-
int U.S. role in E l Salvador.
The $5 million is earmarked for helicopters, patrol boats,
radar and other equipment the administration said El Salvador
needs "l-0 interdict the infiltraUon of men. arms and equipment in·
lo El Salvador and to counter the continuing threat of Marxist
guerrillas."
''The president is running foreign policy In this country, not
the State Department," White House press secretary James S. Brady
aa ld aft.er lengthy questioning on the subject Monday.
Acting Asalatant Secretary of State John Bushnell said last week
that "our Impression is that this story is running about five times as
big as it really is.··
The two committee members voting agatnst the aid were Sen
Mark Hatfield, R·Ore., chairman of the full Senate Appropriations
Committee, and Sen. Patrick Leahy, D·Vt. The subcommittee's
Referring to 54 U.S. military advisers either in El Salvador or
going there, Bushnell said, "Judging by the press coverage of this.
I would have thought we had deployed a whole division ...
College aid
applications
put on hold
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Reagan Administration is re·
ported to be holding up
thousands of applie-alions for the
federal government's principal
college aid program. which
gives money to one student in
four. while it tries to gel
Congress to tightt:n require·
men ts.
The Washington Post quoted
unidentified officials todav as
saying they had blocked proc·
essing of "basic educational op·
portunity grants" by Systems
Development Corp. in Santa
Monica. Calif .. the contractor
that does the paperwork.
The grants can pr6vide up to
$1.750 a year About 2 8 million
college students are gelling
them this year. about six million
are expected to apply e ventually
for 1981-82grants.
Grants are awarded according
to a formula that dete rmines
how much a family sflould s pend
on coll ege expen ses. The
formula deducts certain living
costs from total family income
to determine ho"" much 1s availa
ble for collegl'
The Carter administration de-
cided in January to increase the
a llowable deduction for 1981·82
li ving costs by 12.5 percent to
compensate for inflation. thus
reducing the amount to be ap
plied to college expenses. The
Reagan adm ini s tr a tion .
however, announced a regula
lion to eliminate the adjustment
The elimination probably
would drop 100,000 s tudents from
eligibility, and would save Sl83
million in the fi s cal year begin·
ninl! Oct. I. administration or
ficials ha ve said Most of t hose
dropped probably would come
from families with annual in
comes of $21 .000 to $25.000
Russia n s m a neuver
WASHINGTON <AP) The
Soviet Union has told the United
States the planned military ex·
erc ises near Poland do not
threaten that country and are
too small to require notice to the
West.
lier boys
Coal 01ine
talks at
• tIDpasse
WASHINGTON <AP> Con·
tract talks between the United
Mine Workers and the sort coal
industry -broke off today itr '3n
apparent impasse over the
volatile issue of miners' working
hours.
Representatives of the UMW
and th e Bitumino u s Coal
Operators Association. the in·
dus lry's baJ1tammg arm. had
continued to talk past the un
ion 's self.imposed m1dn1ght
deaclltne. s 1gnal1n g progress
toward a settlement that would
avNt a strike March 27. when
the current three year t <>ntracl
expires.
But the session at a downtown
Wa s hingt on hotel bro ke up
s hortly afte r 4 a m a nd
negotiators left the> room gn m-
fat ed
And. for lht' first lime c;1n<'e
the talks e ntered the C'rtl1cal
s laJ?C over the weekend. the two
s ide!-> failed to announCl• Jointly
when they would meet agaan
Aul l'MW !-tpokesman f.ldon
Callen s aid a contract settle
menl could still be achl(•ved in
time to avm d a !-tlrike
Britain·s Queen Mother Elizabeth sits with members of
Isl Battalion Irish Guards at Chelsea Barracks in London
after presenting shamrocks to them on the eve of St
P_atnck's Day
.. If \H ' work through the night
tonight and Wcdnesduy night.
we could jam the adman1strative
procedures up front and still
make our strike deadline." he
said
6,000 salute centenarian
MI LLVILLE. N J <AP> The birthday party
was grand indeed more than 6,000 well-wishers
t urned out but don't expect to find the man
hailed as the dean of American glass manufactur-
ing away from his desk just because he's 100.
Frank H. Wheaton Sr .. head of Wheaton In·
dustries. beli eves in work. In a vast warehouse
decorated and filled to overflowing. Wheaton's lOOth
birthday was m arked Monday by praises by a gov·
crnor, a senator. employees. customers and com-
petitors
"We all affectionately call him Father
Wheaton but always behind his back ," said one
citizen of this factory city of 25.000 who requested
anonymity
Wheaton is a strict fiscal and political con-
servative who demands the company's bills be
paid on time Until last year. he refused to borrow
money for the business
A millionaire. Wheaton owns no yachts or race
horses. No one remembers him taking a vacation.
To him, business is his fun .
Joyriding nudes
face prison terms
Wind waves lap E. Coast
Gov Brendan T Byrne and Sen. Harrison A
Williams. 0 -N.J ., hailed Wheaton as a giant of in-
dustry and dean of American glass manufactur·
ing.
Patrick Desjonqueres. a customer since 1949.
<'a me from Blangy Sur-Bresle, France, to praise
Wheaton as "the true son of this everlasting coun·
try."
LANSING, Mich I APJ Three sisters who
stripped naked. covered themselves with mustard.
mayonnaise and pickle relish, and took a ride in a
delivery van. face up to two years in prison after
being convicted of indecent expos ure and
Joyriding.
Snow falls across U.S. midsection
CaUlonda
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ll'trouoh Wtdne•d•Y H int niol't·
pte11ure ly1tem movtd ••''· m•k•AQ room for uw low·-4tr•nurt sr111m
lo<tltd t bOul 100 m lln oll ,,,.
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Even at 100, Wheaton maintains daily control
over the privately owned company founded by his
father 1n 1888. Today, the company has sales of
$300 million a year and more than 10,000
employees in 41 factories in the United States,
Canada and Brazil
R e agan aides
real estate
speculators
BALTIMORE (AP) -Two top
aides to President Reagan who
reportedly are speculating in
rundown Baltimore housing
"share a com01itment to decent
housing" and will nx anything
that needs repair, the While
House press secretary says.
City officials said one of three
rowhouses owned by Lyn
Nofziger, an old friend and top
political advisor of Reaaan 's,
shoµld have been boarded up
n\,onlbs ago, according to the
Baltimore Sun. " tenanl of
Helen von Damm . Reagan's
personal secret.ary. complained
that her house had been without
heat tor three weeks, the Sun
said.
The case attracted national attention
Judge Thomas Brown scheduled sentencing
April 15
Doshaline McCu1n , 30, Charlene Roper. 27,
and Sandra Lewis. 26. all divorcees who share a
house in Lansing Towns hip, could get 90 days in
jail on the first charge! and two years in prison on
the second.
City records indicate Nofli&er
bought tbe three rowbouses In
1979 for $19,200. MIH von Da rnm
paid $25,000 that year for her
th ree properties.
Nofziaer was unavallable for
comment. Hb wife. Bonnie. told
the Baltimore Sun the properties
were purchued ·•for tax
purpo1ea."
Dressed tor action
"We·re paying aomeont to
man a.re them.·'
t
In t helr formal black and white attire. -topped .,.
feathered hats, these pel\l\lin.s appear ready ror a ril&ht
on the town. Actually. They're rock pen1ulns ln residence
at the We1t Berlin Zoo. , '
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTnuetday, March 17, 1981
•
t
LA students ponder choices on
'
LOS ANGELES <AP> -When Easter break ends
for school children here, Loi An1eles' pro1ram of
mandatory bu1in1 to combat seareaation will be
over.
The Board or Education voted 5·0 Monday to al·
low students who so desire to return to their
neighborhood schools on April 20. ,·
The vote, which allows students being bused the
riabJ to complete the semester at their current
school_s, foUowed last week's state Supreme Court de·
cision upholding a lower court decision in favor of an
anti·bualng amendment to the slate Constitution. The
amendment bans forced busing unless a school dis·
trict has intentionally discriminated. The court de·
cislon eliminated any le1aJ requirement for forced
busing in the nation's second largest school district.
For four hours before the vote, a dozen speakers
from parent, teacher, employee and student or·
ganizations urged the board to wait until the next
Sky's 11ot the li111it
school year betore dlsmantlin& the mandatory busin&
plan Implemented last fall.
The board's sole pro-busing member, Rita
Walters, was in Washington on board business and
did not vote. Los Angeles Urban League director
John Mack read a statement from her urging the
board not to approve an action which would ·'serious-
ly tum back the clock" on desegregation of the
525,()()().pupll district.
Most of the speakers said they favored ending
busing in the 710-square-mile district next year, but
were concerned about potentially disruptive conse·
quences of mid-sem ester student transfers.
Teacher11 and other board .employees said they
feared layoffs or transfers and parents said they did
not want their children's education to suffer.
Board members have u epeatedly stated their
commitment to voluntary integration programs. At
Monday's meeting -In accordance with a judge's or·
der that intearatlon 1radu&lly be expanded from tbe
current 11t·9t.h 1rade1 into 10th·12tb ll'•dea -tbe
board lnued an all-voluntary propoeal to deae1re11te
senior h11h schools.
Superior Court Judie Paul Ealy offtclally
withdrew earlier Monday from the lnt.1raUon case
he bas supervised for five years. He had announced
his intention to withdraw Saturday, sayin1 he felt the
predominantly white board was prejudiced in favor
of white children at the expense of the dlatrtct'a 73
percent nonwhite enrollment. < Egly lives tn Laguna Beach.)
To implement the board's action on buslne.
parents of all 23,000 children involved will be malled
quesUonnaJres Friday on whether they want their
children to transfer this year.
Meetings to answer parents' questions will be
held at all 163 schools concerned on March 24-25.
Reassignments are to be issued April 10 and Im -
plemented the first school day alter Easter vacation.
Victims win unique
• • suits in rape case
FRESNO (AP) A jury has awarded damages to two
waitresses who were raped during a robbery at a restaurant here.
The jury Monday found Sentry Intrusion Detection Systems 75
percent responsible and Swift Janitorial Services 25 percent
responsible for failing to guard the Black Angus Restaurant
properly and failing to lock the back door. One woman was ______ _
awarded $25,000 because she £WS BRIEF ~as. raped twice. The other N s· v1cttm was awarded $18,000.
Three ma s k ed and
armed bandits ente red through the unlock~d door after the
restaurant had closed Sept. 21. 1979. Two of them raped the
waitresses while the third served as lookout. Three men were later convicted.
80 1Dorbr• ft'afttatftf fro• Rlllce plaRt
SACRAMENTO CAP> Sixty workers were evacuated from
the reactor building at the Rancho Seco nuclear power plant near
here after a control valve released a small amount of radioactive
gas.
Sacramento Mun icipal Utility District spokes man Jeff Marx
said a "high-ra diation alarm" triggered the evacuation at about 10
a .m. Monday. But the workers went back less than three hours
later.
Buono face• trial°" I0 •11rd•r ro111tl•
LOS ANGELES <AP) Angelo Buono Jr. has been ordered to
stand triaJ on 10 counts of murder in the Hillside Strangler case.
after a 10-monlh closed-door hearing that included a gag order on
attorneys.
Thal gag order expired Monday when Municipal Court Judge
Randolph Moore ruled there was sufficient evidence to bring the
45-year-old Glendale upholsterer to trial. and scheduled a Superior
Co~rt arraignment for March 30.
Bill Blackwood polls hes his plane in approved paraplegic pilot, he wa-s named Man p~ad• gtdlt• to lddRap, ro•tw.,,
VAN NUYS <AP> -A 21-year-old Compton man, Markham
Anderson. has pleaded guilty to kidnapping a wom~n who was a
house guest at the Sherman Oaks home of electron1cs czar Earl
"Madman" Muntz.
Carlsbad's Palomar Airport. The nation's flight instructor of the year in 1973 and is one
firs t Federal Aviation Ad minis tration-of l.OOOfliers with physical handicaps .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~
Lawn mowing opposed
Group urges homeowners let grass grow
mi tlee o f Am e r ica n
Ve getarians , says s he is
spearheading a national drive lo
save grass. .
Shriver said. ·'and over their
ankles, and even up to their
knees, if grass can grow that
tall "
The reasons. Ms.Shri ver says,
Anderson also pleaded guilty Monday to robbing Muntz's
houseboy and a second female guest during the Feb. 10 incident.
Superior Judge Richard Kolostian set sentencing for Anderson for
April 16.
LatD-enf orc~fttf IHwlwd Mlb I•••
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Assembly Criminal Justice Com·
mittee has killed two bills backed by law-enforcement lobbyists.
One would allow as evidence police photos of persons not sus·
pected of crimes. The other would broaden the crime of im-
personating a law enforcement officer. The defeats came on Mon-
day.
·~ . .,..,..... RECORD DIVORCE CASE
Soraya Khaahoggl aulng
Divorce
denials
face appeal
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Al·
torney Marvin Mitchelson says
he will appeal any Superior
Court decision refusing a hear·
Ing in state courts on Soraya
Khashoggi's $2.5 billion divorce
suit against her husband, Arab
billionaire Adnan Khashoggi.
Arguments were continuing
today on the motion to throw the
case out of California. Judge John
Loomis has said he plans to take
the case under submission and
make a decision later.
Mitchelson, representing M rs.
Khashoggi, predicted the case
would become a major prece·
dent on the question of jurisdic·
lion and whether a man with
many corporation!Wn a state can
claim to have no personal contact
in the area.
J l "THIS SHOULD be the
penultimate jurisdictional case
that will recognize you can't
hide under a corporate veil,"
M itchelson said Monday. He
said he would take the case to
the Supreme Court if necessary.
In arguments aimed at throw·
ing the Khashoggi case out or
California, attorney J oseph Ball
told the judge Mrs. Khashoggi Is
"hardJy poverty stricken" and
can afford to take her case lo
her native England where he
said it belongs.
"Her net worth is better than
$1.4 million." Ball said ... Her as·
sets are pretty solid assets. She
has the ability to pay."
BUT MITCHEi.SON conterids
Mrs. Khashoggi cannot afford to
return lo England or pay a
lawyer there to take her case.
Ball told Loomis depositions in
the divorce ease disclosed that
Mrs. Khashoggi owns property
in England, including an apart-
ment house and other real estate
worth a total of $1.2 million, has
stock in Litton Industries and
U.S. Steel. has bonds in U.S.
Gypsum Corp. and owns two lux-
ury cars. including a Rolls·
Royce worth $40,000.
SAN DIEGO <AP ) -A
spokesman for a national group
of fruit lovers has launched an
attack against one of the most
hallowed American homeowner
traditions: the neatly manicured
lawn.
The organization says it wants
people to l oc k up their
la wnmowers.
are many. But the pri mary ones -----------r----------------------
Nellie Shrive r , national
coordinator of the Fruitarian
Network. an offshoot of the Com-
"We are strongly urging that
everyone who owns grass should
let it grow under their feet,"
Enquirer's editor
nixed retraction
LOS ANGELES IAP > The editor of the National Enquirer
·testified during the $10 million libel suit filed against the
newspaper that he decided not to have a retraction of a gossip item
about actress Carol Burnett appear with a separ..ate headline as
her attorneys had requested.
Ms . Burnett was expected to testify today about an article
which she contends Implied she had been drtnkint".or was drunk.
"We didn't use the headline because we feft\1>eople wouldn't
read an article that said 'retraction' or 'correction,' " editor Iain
Calder testified Monday in Superior Court.
"People who read the gossip column will be attracted to the
column and read the retraction. To put 'retraction' in the headline,
I thjnk. would be a disincentive," he added.
DANGER SIGNALS
OF
PINCHED NERVES
1. Headaches, dizziness, loss of sleep
2. Neck pain & tight musctes
3. Pain down arms & shoulder pain
4. Numbness In hands ex feet
5. PaJn between shoulders
8. Painful joints. nervouaneee
7. Lower back pain, hip pain. pain
down the leg
which crop up are the organiza-
tion ·s belief that gr ass is a living
thing and has a "conscious-
ness." and that large stands of
g ra ss could be h o m e to
thousands of tiny creatures who
would otherwise be s lashed to
pieces by a lawnmower.
Small r odents and insects
aren't the only things that would
be saved. Fruitarians say. Ac·
cording to the group's statistics
more than 55,000 people a re
killed or injured by lawnmowers
annually nationwide.
In addition, the vegetarians
say, hu ge quantities of fuel for
power lawnmowers would be
saved.
The end results would be a
yard runn ing ra mpant with
weeds, which would eventually
turn into a meadow. and a
meadow into a forest. Once trees
begin to take root, the group
contends, cool, shady areas and
erosion-resistant soil would be
the chief benefits ..
With no obllgatlon, call or oome in '°' a friendly conaullelion
4101. .... ltY&. ..... , I ••
CALL LINDA BLUE
FORA
675-5307 FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN-
INTEREST ONLY.
'Ntwpo~l~~J.~~,·~
(714) 7eo-eoe<>
I
1,
S•'•<e ''""' 5,.,, •t Y~ Ooot
IC•tt Stor, ~"' Y0411 At•••
cosu .... 641-1289 IU.---MllllON vivo495-04()1
2922C.-~ ...
(lro Olep ,_., MA_.,~ I
CORRECTION
In the Sears March
18th advertising
section there is an
• advertisement for a
#15678 , 2 HP
Sprayer, Regular
$624 .99 . The
description and the
Regular price are
correct; however, the
Sale price is
incorrect. The correct
sale price is $499.99.
We sincerely regret
this error.
I Sears I
IUU. &OIMIOl Al"D(O
·············-·····-··········-·············,··1
~-i ••·f·. i -... , ,,, l
. r (~ ~
~ ·--. ; Businessmen I
l f you ort doing
bu11nta1 undtr o
F'1c titlou 8ual nu1
.'Vomt yoµ o~ rtqulrtd
b]I low r Bualnell ond
ProftuiOM C<XV. Ste.
17900 to 11930 I to fllt o
Ficlltioua 8u1fntu
Nome Stottmtnt ond ho~ u publlahtd for
four conateUllu. WHlcl.
WE ot tht DAILY
PILOT con htlp with
both. Call the LEGAL.
DEPART MENT at
UMUJ Erl 3J2 /or
furthtr lftlormollon.
Join J~ for
o special srinw1r1q nf
the Sprinq '8 1 Collect1( >r 1
Fashion Consultant
Alison Dov1swill be
available to assist yQu
on Morch 25th and 26th
from 10 o m to 4 p m
1n the Designer Solon
Upper Level ...
Mini show on
Wednesday. Morch 25th
at 11 CX)a m
Please coll to make
reseNot1ons by Morch 20
540-3233 ext 217. 218
Saks Fifth AvenLe South Coast Plaza
~ven coffee lriJJh
New York &aloon bedlam on St. Pat'& da
$0NS OF ERIN SMILE AT CHARLEY O' ON MARCH 17
Gene Moro•n, right, h•nd• W•tter Jerry Johnaon • Hndwlch pl•t•
NazUl: 'good old days?'
Some Germans nostalgic about Hitler era
BONN. West Germany <API
A public opinion poll has
found that 18 percent of West
German voters look back on the
era or Nazi dic-tator Adolf Hiller
as "the good old days." a
magazine reports.
The magaz.ine Der Spiegel
said Monday a year·long survey
by the Sinus Institute or Munich
found that 18 percent of the 6,968
voters s urveyed n at ionwide
agreed that "under Hitler.
Germany really had it better "
Der Spiegel claimed the sur
vey findings so alarmed the of·
fi ce of Ch ancellor Helmut
Schmidt that they have been
kept under wraps since it was
completed last year
A government spokesman con·
firmed that the chancellor's off·
ice requested the survey to de·
termine the extent of rightist
•1111• RJ 11£•NOLOS !08ACC0COMPAN•
se ntiment withi n West
Germany.
The spokesman, who asked
not to be identified. said he read
the Spiegel report and found it
"'correct."
In addition to those sym·
pathetic with Hitler's rule, the
survey reportedly found , a sizea·
ble number of West Germans
support many of the fundamen·
tal doctrines of Nazism, despite
a generation of democracy.
Most of the potential Nazis are
m ore than 50 years old, the
magazine said. That would
make them old enough to re·
member Hitler. who ruled
Germany from 1933 until his
suicide in the ruin of Berlin in 1945.
··A total of 13 percent of the
voters <about 5.5 mill ion I have --------
20
an ideologically closed, extreme
r ightist world view, the main
supports of which are a National
Socialist view of history, hatred
of foreigners. democracy and
pluralism and an exaggerated
devotion to people. fa therland
and family ... the magazine said.
··Unprecedentedly . many
rightist radicals come Crom
vi llages of between 2,000 and
5.000 inhabitants, from s mall
towns and fro m rural areas
around big cities," the magazine
quoted the survey. "More often
than not they have no pro·
fessional training."
The s urvey also reportedly
found that 37 percent of those
s urveyed r eject ed Nazism,
militaris m and the "fuehrer
cult" but were •·authoritatively
dis posed."
•
• 81IULDL08
It# ...... CIW iffi:I I NEW YORK -' a pand
old tradition they honor every
year at a corner 1alooG juat oil
Fifth Avenue. 'Tia called
bedlam.
The place la Charley 0 11. In
New Yott, OD St. Patrick'• Day
In the momln1, it i• where the
elite meet to eat.
To do a UttJe pre-noon drink·
lnt, too. Last year -lt wu a
chllly mornln1 -the lad at the
breakfast counter poured
somewhere between 900 and
1,000 Irish co((ees before be Joel
count. That was at the breakfut
counter, mlnd you, not the bar.
You can't get near the bar.
Not on St. Patrick's Day. Not
unless you arrive very early.
"The place Is a madhouse.
You can't move in here," JerTy
Johnston was saying.
"Last year," Gene Morgan
added, "we had to put a man at
the door to let in only as many
as he let out. It was that full."
J erry Johnston's brogue is
from Belfast. Gene Morgan's is
from a small town in Donegal.
Jerry ls the waiter . Gene is the
meat carver. Their lime at
Charley O's goes back to when
the swinging doors first swung
open, 14 St. Patrick's Days ago.
"It was a popular place right
from the start," Morgan re-
c a 11 ed . "Be ing here in
Roc ke fe lle r Cente r we've
always had celebrities dropping
in. But the second year , 1968,
that was when the St. Patrick's
Day tradition began , the
breakfast and all the to-do."
"Was n't that the year ."
Johnson said, "that Sen. Robert
Kennedy stood on the bar and
announced he was running for
president?·'
·'The very year.'· said
Morgan. "He tipped over a tray
climbing down from the bar and
broke six dozen glasses.··
The glass s wept up. th e
senator strolled a half block to
That's incredible
McMINNVILE, Ore . <AP> -
It took 200 bananas, 20 quarts of
topping, 24 gallons of ice cream,
seven cases of whipped cream
and an unknown amount of
cho pped nuts. but 200 high
school students staked a claim
to the state banana split record
with a 101-foot creation.
FILTER CIGARETTES 20 CIGARETTES
LOW TA R CAMEL QUALITY
..
Warning~ The Su_rgeon General Has Determined
That C1Qarette Smoking ts Dangerous to Your Health.
... .._,.'
LOW TAR · CAM EL QUALITY . ,
8 mg. .. tlr", 0.8 mg. nicotine w. per cigerlttt by FTC method.
rtfth Avenue, walked I wblle in
the parede, flew to W11blqtoo
and made the formal announce-
ment for the televlalon cameru.
To the 1an1 at Charley O'a it waa oldnewa. '
Since then, senators, 1ov·
ernorsA congressmen, mayors,
poUtlciana of every type -and
nationality -have made a pre·
parade breakfast at Charley O's
•the start of the St. Patrick's Day
routine.
After the parade, assorted
bagpipers, Un whistle tootlers
and boozy balladiers keep the
joint jumping until the wee
hours.
"Tbe way we get ready for
It," Johnston said, "is first to re·
move all the furniture .
Everything goes -tables
chairs, stools, the works. The~
all of us become bartenders, me,
Gene, everybody. We put on 11
bartenders. It's as crowded
behind the bar as in front."
For saccharin
In more HDe clrcum1bnee.,
auch u every other da~ tbe year, two bartenders CP and
Mike, naturally) are 1 dent
to handle the crowd at atley
0 '1, and the crowd is att)thln&
but rowdy.
It is a comfortable , unh"'1ied
place: tile floor, oak·•aneled
waUs, lota of braas and l!au.
The atmoephere is clubt;t, the
patrona are regulars, lh4J lrinka
are honest. the pickles ate IOW',
and a Gene Morgan corn~ beef
aandwicb is an act of crea on.
''It's always been a f endly
crowd." Johnston said. "The
customers themselves, the reg-
ulars, are the ones who see that
no trouble start$. In all m11ears,
there never has been a flt:ht in
Charley O's, not even · on St
Patrick's Day.".
"How could there be?"
Morgan said. "On St. Patrick's
Day. there's no room In this
place to raise your hand.
Researchers test
sugar substitute
C HI CAGO (AP > -
Researchers at the University or
Illinois Medical Center are stud-
ying a sugar substitute that is
widely use• in Japan and
Paraguay and could one day
replace saccharin, which has
been linked to cancer in rats.
Tbe team received a $318,000
grant to study stevioside, a
sweet s ubstance derived from
th e leaves of a wild South
American plant.
Douglas Kinghorn. one of the
four researchers. said the sub·
stance has been used for cen-
turies to sweeten beverages in
Paraguay. And the Japanese use
Stev ios ide in soy s auce.
mouthwash and chewing gum,
he said.
ONE RESEARCHER will
travel to Paraguay and Argen-
tina in April to gather large
quantities or the plant to ship
here for research, Kinghorn
said.
Funded by the government's
National Institute of Dental
Research, the study is delligned
to determine whether the sub-
stance causes tooth decay.
Researchers also pl an to feed it
to mice to discover whether it is
poisonous or carcinogenic.
Later. foods with stevloside
will be taste-tested . Kinghorn
said
IF IT PASSES all initial tests.
the sweetener then may be ex·
tensively tested by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration and
eventually mass.marketed.
One reason for the study is a
continuing con cern that sac-
charin still might be removed
from the market. Kinghorn said.
T he FDA has tried to have sac·
charin outl awed as a food ad·
dilive since 1977, but Congress
prohibited the move
Another group of artificial
s weeteners, cyclamates. was
banned in 1979.
20 CIGARETTES
LOW TAR CAMEL QUALITY
H/F
• rate increases
(TIU u the wcond o/ a niM.port MN• OR'Jaot.o to iow on
lfOUr J9f0fo.ul.)
·The Interest rate on any tax refunds owed qn any
W\pald taxes was doubled Feb. 1, 1980. Until lhat dal•,
the Internal Revenue Service paid Interest on tax re·
funth at an annual rate of 6 percent and charged you at tbe same 6 percent.
But t>iecauae of the hbtoric us>Jurge in the prime
rate charged by banks to top corporate borrowers in
1979, the tax law was changed to require an adjustment
in this annual io·
tereat rate. It 0 was raised to 12
percent, begin·
ning February --------~": 1980
.So if you SYlVIA PDRTIR ? don't pay your • ~
1980 income tax-
es in full by April 15, you will be charged interest at tbe
new 12 percent rate on unpaid taxes.
If, though, the IRS should owe interest on a refund.
it. too, must pay the interest at 12 percent.
YOU'RE AMONG millions if you were hit by
casualty losses (big or moderate) in 1980 -and of
course, you can deduct the loss. Ironically. if you spend
money in order to prevent a casualty, that expenditure
has been held not deductible under a ta.x court ruling in
1980. 1 In order to prevent his pine trees from interfering
with power lines to his home, a taxpayer bad the
branches of the trees removed on the side facing the
power lines. The removal of the branches on one side
made the trees subject to breaking or being uprooted in
case of an ice storm. Should this happen. his residence
could be damaged.
To prevent damage that would have been a casual -
ty loss, the utility company was requested to move the
trees, and did so. The homeowner claimed a casualty
loss for the decrease in the value of property. He did not
succeed.
Preventive measures, ruled the tax court, are not
casualties. If cutting trees down to prevent a casualty
were deductible, other individuals could claim that a
burglari alarm system or a smoke detector came under
the category of casualty losses. the court reasoned.
IF VOU HAVE neglected to get the maximum
benefit out of an Individual Retirement Account (IRA J
for 1980, you still are not too late to retrieve the error.
Assuming you could have set up an IRA in 1980 OT
that you could have made an added contribution to an
existing IRA, you can set up an IRA or make an added
contribution to an existing one, if you act before the due
date of your 1980retum, including extensions.
Thus, if you get an extension until June 15, 1981, you
have until that date to setup an IRA and/OT make a con·
tribution to one.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONIS AVERAGES
NEW YORI< IAPI Final Oow-Jon"' avos fof Mol>dev. Mar 16 STOCKS
()pen l"lloll Low Cl~ Cl\Q lO 11\d '86 •9 100S.<IO 979 38 1001 79 • 17 0) 10 Tm •10 :i.t •11.7• •! 1 '1 0 1 13 • 6 n 111, 1s uu 10913 11001 u>eoe !ll'H· ou
, >;, 6S St~ 381 "' 188 6S 37q •3 J87 70 • s 80
1>+ ln(lus •.•SO.~
AMERICAN LEADERS
Nal'nO t MetEd plH 2 Robins AH 3 Hem~ Cap 4 SHrton Cp s s GrayONa 6 Pneumo tp s ~~~~";.a ' .. ,.,,..,"' 10 Ul'Prll Min 11 Ono.to 11 11 SIQdl!Wn s
.13 "°"'°" t• StJotMln s 1S J"'91Uf 16 Net._
GOLD COINS
Pct
Up H • Up 74.S Up 11 a
Un 71 S Up 16.3
Up U.• Up 11.7
Up 11.• Up 11 7
Up t0.6 Up 1g S
Up t .1 Uo •.7 Uo •.6 Up •.S
Up •.•
Pel
Off 6 • Off 6.7
Off 6.S Ofl 6.S Ott 61
011 S.7 Off u Off S,S Off S.• Ofl S.4 Ott S.3 Off S.1 Off s.o Off s.o Off u
Off ...
HEW VOlll( (APl -Prices late Monday
01 11010 tOIM, t ompertd with Frt~y·s pr Ito.
I(,,...,....., 1 troy OJ., J$21.00, WP '6.00, _...,._!Mt, 1 troy oL. JSU.oo, ~ is.oo.
MHIC• '°PHO, 1.2 troy or .. $(12'.00. Ull
M.00 • ............ tOO cro#tl .. 'lel)f VO\' 01., '492.00,
ilP $4.00.
Traf\ , 117.lOO
Vtlls SJ9.200 6S SI~ 6.206.900
WHAT STOCKS DID
N EW VOA"\ IAPI Mar 16
f TOdey A<l••l'C.cl 1oes
OecllMd "• Un<1'81\9f'd J71 Tolel 1'5U!'S 19SI
N•w r.1q11s 178 N•"" OW'\ q
WHAT AMfX OIO
NEW YORI< IAPI MM 16
Pr""
AOVat>efd Otcllne<I
Unchanoed Total Issues
N•w hlQl>s N.ew tows
METALS
To<lav
J'IO 2:13 198 {!11 7q
~
day :M4 '"" 10? 811
}l
1
co,.,.r 13~89 tenh a pcund. U s d~slin•
t•oru
Load :u.c..,ls• PO<>nd
Zinc o v. conh a paund. dt'li•tr•d.
Tin u .0211 Wl•I• W"k compcs•t• tb
Atwml1>11m 7~<entsa pcund, N Y
More wry ~S 00 per ttn•
Ploll!llHn SASS.00 troy Ol N .,
SILVER
ly TIM Auo<ilt..i PrHS
Hendy & Harm..,, Sll.22 per lroy ounce.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
Lo114o11: morn!119 fixing SA'8.2S, off s I.SO.
Lolldeft: oiler,_., fixing SAU .2S. ofl '4 SO
Porlt: afternoon fhtl119 U.2.4•. oll ~ ol
~,.,...lwt: ll•lng lSOl.02, o" SO '19.
lwrlCll: late •lie,.,._, l••ing SA9l.OO, o~ S4 00. S•"6.00 -.Skt!d.
H011•y I H.,mo11: only oolly Quoit UU JS, Oii $6 SO
111 .. ll\onl: onty daily ouolo lA"3.2S, oH
$4.50.
111,.1,...,., only cM•ty quote labrtcel ...
UU.'11. off $6.7 •.
SYMBOLS
-
~~ee'~
I
~q'l\bA'l.) •
I
I
~ ,.s \.o"' ,.s ~ff,A&O •
I i
;Attorney ·fears
i
ICly~ore arrest
o.llJ 1'1114 Staff l'Mle
OVER THE SEA WALL ANO ONTO THE BIACH
End to wlld, lnlury-fltled ride In Laguna
Rampant jee p hits
three; woman held
. A 22-year-old Carlsbad woman
·was being held by Laguna Beach
police today after allegedly bor·
rowing a friend's jeep Monday
· a n·d h i tt i n g a p e d e s t r i a n , ~smashing into another car and
oose-diving off a seawall, injur·
• Ing two beachgoers.
Stacey Re ne Arthur, who
police said was visiting fri ends
ln Laguna Beach, is accused of
.driving under the influence of
·.alcohol and felony hit and run.
. Pot_ice said she also is wanted in
connection with a n 'earlier
drunken driving incident.
Police identified the injured
··T w o gunmen
kill witness
pedestrian as Fred Bonn, SO, of
Laguna Beach, who was listed in
guarded condition today al Mis·
sion Community Hospital in Mis·
sion Viejo suffering from chest
inj uries.
Robe rta R eyes, al so of
Laguna, one or the sunbathers,
is listed in stable condition $l
Mission Community with a frac·
l ured pelvis.
The second sunbather. Becky
Maldonado of Laguna Beach, re-
portedly received less serious in-
juries and was not hospitalized.
Police said the series of inci-
dents began at about 2 p.m .
when Miss Arthur and two
friends went for a ride in the
jeep.
Reportedly the jeep hit a car
near the intersection of Temple
Hills Drive and Cresta Way and
then hit Bonn.
CLEVELAND CAP) -One Police said Miss Arthur fled
man was killed and four others the accident scene before of·
were i.atjured when two gunmen ricers arrived, but was found 10
invaded a store and a restaurant minutes later at the end of
on the east side. Dumond Drive near Wards Ter·
'rbe gunmen burst into Gene's race where she had driven the
Comer Beverage store and shot jeep off a seawall plowing the
two customers before cbuing front bumper lnto the sand 10
the store manager into a nearby feet below.
restaurant, police s aid. The ' The two sunbathers were re-
manager and a restauraQt clerk portedly lying on the sand below
were wouMed and a pa"Sser·by the seawall when the jeep
was shot and killed. plunged over tbe side and ran in·
Police said the robbers to them.
seemed to be trying to eliminate A police spokesman said Miss
wltneues. The pair ned with an Arthur was taken into custody
undetermined amount of cash near Victoria Beach where the
lrom the store. jeep landed.
More on Bl'
U:Jcal news /eatured
I There's more loeal news on Pa1e Bl of today's Dally
Pilot. llere'sasampleof•batJOU'Pftndthere:
-llAUJAGU OP CONVEMBNCE ~ COila llesa
police belieYe some peopl~.c;!::e County may be al'TUlC· tac marrf.,.. betwMD I ud u.s. clU... for UMt
cODYllllW'I of aUw wt.or::: to Uve ht tbtl....., ,..........,. lavestl&aton aero11 lbta laun...-atlan
twllt ..... a murderlnv..U,atlGD.
-MJIPUDUP-TIMCOltolriclinlanOr_,.eoa.
t1 Tramtt DIMrld baa 11tolAI up June 1, bat what 1ou'U ..-,
• ,... ... tMUmeofdaJ., . .
Syri 8 n s
may act
sooner
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Ol•IMllJl'llet$Uff
The attorney representing
freed Orange, County hostage
Craig Clymore says be rears his
client, who has been indicted on
federal drug smuggling charges,
will be arrested by Syrian
authorities within the next few
days.
Clymore. 24, was one of the
more than 100 hostages aboard a
Pakistani jetliner that was hi·
jacked March 2 on a flight from
Karachi to Peshawar by oppo·
nents of Pakistan's President
Mohammad Zia ul-Haq. It was
eventually flown to Damascus,
Syria, where the hijackers sur-
rendered Saturday.
Attorney Ronald Kreber of
Laguna Beach, a former pros-
ecutor for the Orange County
District Attorney's office, said he
had received information
Clymore would be arrested by the
Syrians in order to pressure him
into returning to tbe United
States.
Krebe.r charged U.S. State
Department officials with puttin1
pressure on the Syrian.a to arrest
Clymore in a minorcbar1e. ··we believe be will~~
on a smalf, innocuoui ebarse,"
Kreber said. "He would be de-
tained tmU1 be acre-to lip
waivers to return to the Unlted
States."
The St.ate Department bu re-
voked Clymore's passport, ap-
parently to prevent him from nee-
ing prosecution. He bas been is·
sued one-way travel papen to
New York. where the announ«·
ment of his indictment was made
Saturday. The United States and
Syria have no extradition treaty.
Kreber said U he bas his way,
bis client will remain in Syria un·
til the drug smuggling charges
are resolved.
Clymore is alleged to be the
ringleader of a nine-member in·
ternational hashish and heroin
smuggling operation, according
to a federal grand jury indictment
released by the U.S. Attorney's of-
fi ce in New York City.
Others named in the eight·
count indictment, which charged
conspiracy. possession with in·
tent to distribute and illegal im-
portation, were:
Helen Frances Plesko, Diane
Mae Moseman and Kim Marie
Mowitz. All gi-ve the same Lake
Forest address where Clymore
(See SUSPECT, Page A.%)
* * * R e por t s a ys
Russ a r m e d
hijacke rs
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
State Department, charging that
three hijackers of a Paklstani
jetliner received machine IUDS
during a stopover ln
Afgbaniatan, says lt la holding
Soviet aufborlt1e1 accountable.
The allegation, ouWned Mon-
day by spokesman William
Dyess, wu baled on eyewttneu
accounts of t.be events at Kabul
airport, where the P._lltani In·
t,rnatlonal Airlines ru1bt .. pent
the flrlt five days of t.be 11-day
bijackin1 ordeal wblcb bepa In
Pakistan.
'·At one polnt, all three bi·
Jacken stood in view of Mahan
and Soviet ttecurlty penouel
wltbout any apparent coneern
for U\elr own safety. '1 DJeA
sa1d.
He a d ded that ••••ral
paueqen aboard lbe pl ... aJ.
leled that tbe bljaeken rteel'ftld
addltlonal weapons wblle lit
&abW.
"TIMJ' arrived wltb pit..,.., ta.er Wl wtdl maehlae PM,'' IM aalcl. A..........._ from tM Soriet
&mbMIJ bl • .....,._ n1led
tb• aeeuatl.a1 "eompletel;
ll'OUDdlMI" and "crude and •· atptfted."
WAITRESSES AT H04LIHAN'S IN NEWPORT BEACH TOAST EARLY ARRIVALS TODAY
St. Petrick'• Dey began et 6 a .m. H reveler• got their lrteh whlakey up
Top of the morning
Iri sh tipplers start early a lo ng Coast
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ille Oallr l'llM Staff
Some fol.Its like to get an early start on
their a . ~k'a Day celebrating.
"Now all we've got is the hara-core
drinkers," laughed O'Malcy, an Irish Protes·
Lant who says Catholic O'Maleys have two
.. L"s in their names. T• *-t CW 10 patrons who showed
up eoettail lounge in Costa
Mesa y after a a.rn . .today.
There was Jay Q')(aley and George
Thomas O'Hara •ltplng Bu.hmill's Irish
wJUHey at the ~, recalUtl pllt St., .P.Jlt's
Day b.appenlngs al the second ol"c!est tav~i'n
in Co.ta Mesa.
O'MALEY SAID HE'S been frequenting
the Shamrock fo r the past two decades. as
has his Catholic buddy O'Hara.
When a reporter asked how the pair
planned to celebrate the day of the Irish,
O'Mal~y piped up, "I believe we'll have a
Bushmill's on you.
'"And thank you," O'Hara grinned.
a A&TENDI:& TRAVIS 8. '"Sparky"
Sparb rr:Snks and t&1all u..t past years at th s year old wldWiltf llole on
Newpprt ard.
No. St. Pat's Day celebration i.s complete
without a few yams, and the pair regaled the
bar with stories many had doubtless beard
before.
"They Uled a. serve free cbow bel'e on
St. Patric&'• n.J '' Sparky •aid.
"Corned b;'d bash and some pretty big
meals."
"O'HARA WENT TO jail, sent there by
Judge Dungan." O'Maley said. putting an
arm around his friend.
<See IRISH UP EARLY, Page AZ)
OC planners back
subsidized units
Construction of a federally
s ubsidized 56·unit a~artment
complex near a Laguna Niguel
neighborhood has been endorsed
by the Orange County Planning
Commission.
Only Commissioner William
MacDougall, a Laguna Niguel
resident, voled against the pro·
posal submitted llGDday by Av-
co Community Dewlopers Inc.,
builders of &be J.alUD• Niguel
planned community. Com-
missioner Eu1 Wooden was
absent.
Under the company's plans,
the 56 units would be part of a
140·unit apartment development
for per sons with low and
moderate incomes.
The federal government,
through the De partment of
Housing and Urban Develop-
ment, will provide a low-interest
loan to developers and provide
rent subsidies so that persons
who lease the 56 units wUI not
have to spend more than 25 per·
centoftbeirincomesonrent. The 58 units would be set aside
for renters with children; the re·
maining 84 units would be
targeted for elderly persons.
Negotiations with HUD on those
units hasn't been completed.
The project would be located
near Niguel Road and Ali cia
Pa rkway.
Paul Hazeman president of
the Laguna Niguel Community
Association, condemned the
planning commission's action
and predicted it would be ap-
pealed to the county Board of
Supervisors.
He said a rental project should
be constructed farther away
from the $200,000 homes that
now exist in the area.
Proximity of the rental units
to the houses, residents said ,
may cause crime to increase
and property values lo decline.
County offi cials urged a p-
proval of the project, noting that
it will not be long before the
Reagan Administration blocks
funds for federally subsidized
housing projects.
Develope'r plans
topic at LagUna
' .
The i..,una Beach city coun-
cil will consider 1 developer's
request toftll.bt to develop aa lob
for stnile family residences oo a
'7·acre parcel lD tbe ~ of the World eammwllty,
Tbe Planalal Comm cm bu
reoomlDIBded cleolal of tlM ,.
quest foUowt.ac tom: meellap
=wtdeb~=== •It•, l~Jut of( NeataJl
Roa4. .
Tbe developer pr0Po1• to mamtma • acne lD open IPtft and for rwnadoul uaee.
8ut TOD ti t.bt World rethtenll eomptala..S to eomml11loaen
tbet tbe develoDment would
create add.iUonaJ iraffic conaea·
lion in the nel1hborhood and the
potential of landtlldes ln the
area once developed.
Otber Ltema racing council
conslderation tonight at 6 p.m.
lnclu.S.:
-Establlahlng a law that
would meke We1al rental unlta
end bulldln1s constructed
wtthou& f191'1DlU a mildemeaaor
offeut. _TIM City CW'l'8Dtb calla
tucb otrsm11 ''lDfr•eUou.''
-llttinlQdat .. for meet-
lD1s wtdl tbe ftve dtllem croups
worktq on ehan1• to th• city's
1eneraJ plan .
Tbe council meet• ln Clty
Hall. I05 Forest Ave. '
T wo judges
diffe r on
TV 'pir a cy'
Two Orange County municipal
court j udges have tackled the
same issue -the legality of
California's law prohibiting pay
television decoders and issued
dive rgent rulings.
In West Ora nge County
Municipal Court, Judge Houston
Snidow granted the motion of de·
fense lawyer Kenneth Golden to
dis miss charges against Stephen
Robbins, who sells so-called
pirate decoder kits in Cypress.
S nido w ruled that the
California law violates anti-trust
regulations by le tting pay
television stations alone decide
who . can and cannot sell..>the
service. •
In Harbor Municipal Court,
however, Judge Donald Dungan
overruled Golden's motion ln
another case d ealing witb pay
TV decoders, holding the state
law is constitutional.
In the Harbor Court case,
Golden represented a Hunt·
lngton Beach man. Theodore
<See PIRACY, Page AZ>
DRllll CUil IUTlll
Increasing bitb cloudJ.
. ness tonight and Wednes·
day. Lows tontcbt 48 aJon1
the cout, 53 Inland. Hichl
Wednesday 88 to 75.
111181 TllAY
Thro lauftdud plor m111tnw IOlwr cd o _.,__,
rctrHI M Nft1 YorJc. SH A1J.
11111
1
-t
I
~
I
"B£aa•s TO TSE world'• 1r11teat
flihtlna force -my wlfe."
Meanwhile; thln•a were a bit more
aedate at Hoolihan'• Old Place ln Newport
Beach, wtt.b a do&en or 10 waltreaaea declted
out ln """ T·ablrta, wblte abortl and tray1 full of bloody Marya.
··we've 1ot 400 reHrvatloH for
breakfaat," said steve HaU, mana1eT of the
lriab eatery.
Bul by ball past 9 there were OG1y a few
tables full ol dlnen, moetly v..ed lD three-
piece aultl and alUt blouses and wool akirU.
They weu orderln1 corned beef
Ex-HB jobs .chief
admits embezzling
0.11, l'llet SIMI "'-•
ADMITS FUND MISUSE
Robert Cunnlngh•m
Donald Hall
rites Friday
in Newport
Me m orial se rvices a r e
scheduled Frid ay for Newport
Beach resident Donald Haven
Hall, retired commercial artist
and advertising executive, who
died Monday at the age of 67.
Riles will be at 11 a .m. in St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
Newport Beach, for Mr. Hall,
who was raised in Laguna Beach
and was the son of o ne of
Newport Beach's first m ayors.
He s uccumbed at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital after a brief
illness.
Mr. Hall was a graduate of the
Art Center In Pasadena.
He was an officer with the
Arm y's 64th En g inee r
Pholomapping Battalion in the
Central Pacific Theater during
World War II.
He and a partner opened an
advertising agency -one of the
first In largely undeve loped
Orange County -and he lat.er
joined EECO. a Santa Ana elec-
tronics firm, working In its art
department.
He was sales promotion direc-
tor when he retired 2""2 years
a go.
He was a longtime member of
the Balboa Bay Club and St. An·
drew's Presbyterian Church.
His father. the late Cly an Hall,
was one of Newport Beach's
first mayors, Mr. Hall's widow,
Asenath, said today.
Survivors in addition to Mrs .
Hall include sons Marshall and
Clyan Hall, both of Costa Mesa;
daught e r s Mr s . Jul ie
Glazebrook. of San Diego and
Mrs . De nnis Brantley, of
Riverside.
ffe also leaves a brother, Dean
Hall, of Kailua·Kona, Hawaii;
stepmother, Mrs. Lillian Hall, of
Laguna H i ii s, and two
grandsorul.
The family s uggests me morial
contributions In his name to St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
600 St. Andrew's Road, Newport
Beach.
Cremation and scattering of
Mr. Hall's ashes at sea are be-
ing bandied by the Neptune
Sqclety.
By DAVID KVTZMANN
Of .... °"''' l'llet la.ft With an Or-.nge County
Superior Court jury already
picked and waiting in an adjoln-
lng room, the former director of
Huntington Beach's federal job
training program changed his
plea from innocent to guilty on
two felony counts of misusing
public funds.
Robert L. Cunningham, 34,
former chief of the city's Com-
prehensive Employment Train-
ing Act program, could face up
to four years in state prison as a
result ol his change in plea Mon-
day.
Judge Everett W. Dickey or-
dered Cunningham, now free
without bail, to report t,o Orange
County Jail on Sunday. He will
be sent to the state prison at
Chino for diagnostic tests and
return for formal sentencing on
June 16.
C unningham had b een
charged with embezzling $16,000
in federal funds for his personal
use.
The Orange County Grand
Jury indicted him in October. He
entered his innocent pleas a
short time later.
Monday, however. prosecutor
Dave Himelson and Deputy
Public Defender Kathy O'Leary
reached a negotiated plea just
before opening statements in the
trial were to be given.
H imelson later said the
change in plea was due to the
prosecution's "very strong"
case against the defendant.
Dickey made it clear that even
though Cunningham was volun-
tarily changing his plea.
chances of bis getting probation
were slim.
The judge said the law frowns
on probation for public officials
charged with embezzling public
funds. except in unusual cases
where probation is justified.
In entering his pleas, Cun-
ningham admitted lo charges
that between June, 1979, and
January. 1980, while working as
jobs chief in Huntington Beach
and president of Wes te rn
Institute of Careers, Inc., he
fraudulently appropriated the
money.
Himelson said the former of·
ficial used the money as a down
payment on a new hom~ in the
south county.
Cunningham later repaid the
funds in two installments.
Orange County Manpower
Co mmission auditors originally
began scrutinizing the city's
jobs program early last year
after allegations of mismanage-
ment, extravagance and conflict
·of interest were leve led al
Western Institute. the corporate
operator of the $2.6 million a
year federal job program in
Huntington Beach.
In February, 1980, the com-
mission, through which all
federal job dollars pass into the
county, terminated all contracts
with Cunningham's Western
lnsti~te.
The Huntington Beach City
Council baa called for a grand
jury probe into Western.
Relations broken
NOUAKCHOTT, Maurllanla
c AP ) -Mauritania broke
diplomatic relations with
neisbbortnt Morocco today alter
foilins a coup attempt by two
former members of the rullnJ
military commJttee.
O"ANGI COAIT CIHeMed.._ ....... 114/Ml·M?I AH Gt'* dlpa•enta M2-4121 Dilly Piiat MAINOPl'a
ThomM P. Haley ~
~N.WMd ..........
M. Thoma• KMYll ......
~Murphlne
Ctwlee H. LOOI ....................
~Schulman
f:J~
Len::t!'.~•rd Jr.
llD W•lt..., ll .. C.... MIN, CA. M4111...,_; ...... ,c.u-.., CA ....
,
Fro• P.,,e AJ
SUSPECT ...
resided before bis trip to Pakistan
last month.
Clymore moved from that unin-
corporated community just prior
lo hla trip, according to his father.
Glen Clymore, of San Juan
Capistrano, who has declined to
reveal hlsson's current address. ·
Others named in the indictment
were Leonard Wylie of Stanton,
Robert A. Lee of Orange, Dale E.
Donnell of Anaheim and Kenneth
Grissom of Santa Ana.
According to federal drug en-
forcement authorities in New
York, Mias Moseman and Miss
Mowitz were c,a ught carrying
hashish oil concealed in condom!\
in their vaginas during a search at
John F . Kennedy Airport in New
York in January.
ft eportedJy the two women had
arrived on a flight from Karachi.
Pakistan. Clymore and Miss
Plesko were on the same flight.
but they weren't s earched, ac-
cording to federal drug enforce-
ment authorities in New York.
Clymore's attorney says he will
fight the extradition of his client
from Syria. "I have some very
pointed questions to ask the em·
bass y officials there,•' he said.
·'The battle ground will be in
Damascus. We are going to fight
it out there one step at a time."
Bikini sues U.S.
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
people moved from Bikini Atoll
35 years ago to allow early
atomic weapon~ tests sued the
United States for USO million on
Monday for tbe destruction of
their homeland and their alleged
suffering In exile.
BJ IT&Ylt llA&al.E Ot•DMIY ........
Newport Beach clt)' otftclaB
have announced that tMY wW
try to invalidate the Joba Wayne
Airport master plan with a
aeries of leeaJ attacks.
City Attorney Hu1h Cofftn a&ld
Monday a lawsuit chaJlenilnl
envlronmeotaJ aectlona of the
master plan will be filed no later
than next Wednesday.
Coffin aald lt la likely that
other courtroom challenges will
follow.
At a midday presa conference
Monday , Coffin and City
Manager Robert Wynn in-
troduced lawyers from two na-
tionally known law firms that
have been retained by the city.
The firms -Beardsley,
HufatedJer and Ke mble of Los
Angeles and Luebben, Hughes
and Kelly of Albuquerque -are
to jointly help the city fight
growth at the county airport.
The Los Angeles firm, which
inc ludes a forme r California
State Bar president, specializes
in courtroom litigation. The
Albuquerque firm specializes in
environmental Issues.
Newport councilmen agreed
las t week duri ng a closed
session to hire the firms. A
formal contract is expected to
be approved next Monday dur·
ing the council's regular session.
Wynn said councilm en are
unanimous in their feeling that
they should ·'do anything possi-
ble to stop airport growth." He
predicted that a $250,000 airport
war chest will be set up to fund
the fight.
··All fertile ground will be
plowed." added Coffin.
Lawyers from both firm s
agreed that the first suit will
argue that county supervisors
failed to co n s ider all
alternatives before adopting the
master plan Feb. 18.
Further. they said , the suit
will allege that approval was
based on an inadequate environ-
mental impact report.
One of the attorneys, John
Kelly, said that suits dealing
with California environmental
laws normally come to trial
within 90 days after being filed.
In a related announcement at
the press conference. Newport
Beach resident Tom WllUams,
who heads the ne wly formed
Airport Coalition, said his group
also will be filing suit against
the county.
Ocean View says
English key goal
Bonte leveled.
Fire that was believed touched off when an engine of
Volkswagen bus ignited Monday night destroyed home of
Frank and Nancy Griffo, 32031 Via Oso, in Coto de Casa.
Loss was estimated at more than $300,000 to structure
and contents of 3,600-square-foot mountainside home. Six
family members escap~d uninjured.
Irvine inspector
backed in hearing
An attorney for two fired Irvine
building inspectors says that
charges of .bribery a~ainst one or
his clients couldn't have taken
place in mid-August as a witness
testified, because the inspector
was outorthe country at the time.
De fense attorney Vance
Simonds said Monday he also ex·
pects to show the only thing that
can be proved is that the two in·
spectors each accepted a bottle of
alcohol and a lunch two weeks
before Christmas.
And that, Simonds said, is com
mon practice. standard and a
tradition in the building trade and
in the City of Irvine.
A personnel h earing into
charges that former Irvine build·
ing inspectors Bruce Bullard, 50.
of Costa Mesa. and Arthur Peck.
51 , of Anaheim, solicited and re·
cei ved gratuities from developers
enters its fifth day today in Irvine
favorable inspections.
But attorney Simonds said
Monday that Peck was not on tht•
job site that day. "he was not even •
on the coastal continent he was
vacationing in the Caribbean."
Simonds. who was to begin
questioning nearly two dozen sub·
poenaed contr actors and city '
em ployees today, s aid testimony
will show that Peck and Bullard
Did not ask for bottles of
a lcohol at a job site Dec. 11
Did not ask or demand a
lunch from another contractor •
thatsame day.
Did not accept gifts of alcohol
from a JOb superintendent in ex
change for favorable inspections
f'ro• Pagr A I ·'
PIRACY ...
council chambers. b I h h d · t> Thetwomen.alongwithinspec A e · w 0 was c arge wit
tor Manuel "Manny" Linares. 34. violating the law by selling de
1 coders through Wavernasters. a . of Corona. were charged late ast Huntington Beach mail order ~ year with soliciting liquor, f~ firm
and overtime from construction
firms in exchange for easy inspec-Asked the s ignificance of t he
tions. rulings, the Westminster lawyer •
The three men were fired said, "We now have in Orange.
following a police investigation of County the law west of the Sant.a ·,
charges by Western Commercial An a River and the law east of r
Construction. Inc. that the men the Santa Ana Ri ver ... Trustees of the Ocean View dents with equality, a base pro-solicited favors. Golden said the conflicting rul· •
School District have decided that gram of English as a second Bullard and Peck are appealing ings only serve to further com··:
rather than teach immigrant stu-language becomes the primary their dismissals . Linares did not plicate an area of law which is
dents in their native language, it goal due to the unavailabUlty of contest his firing. already considered quite confus-"
is more practical to teach them materials in the various primary Prosecuting attorney David ing.
Englis h. languages, as :-veil .as the lack of Larsen questioned Western Com· The lawyer has contended in ·
The 23-school district, based in qualified bilingual personnel," mercial j ob superinte ndent these and other ·'pirate de-· '
Huntington Beach, has about500 lbecommitteenoted. StevenD.Collolaslweekaboutan coder" cases that it is the
immigrant students speaking 22 District officials said that, in alleged bribery in the summer of federal government. not ~he ~
Southern California universities, 1980 stat e which has exclus1v6'< dlfferenllanguai~,s . the only bilingual teaching Jn.thatallegedincident onAug. jurisdiction ove~ wh~l is:
School officials said Monday credential available is in English 15, Collo said Linares and Peck re-transmitted and received via the " this diversity makes it impossible and Spanish. quested liquor in exchange for airwaves. ' •·
to meet state requirements on bi-,....----------------------------------------== lingual education.
The state requires a public
school with more than 10 forei111
speaking students in a grade level
to give i.Mtruction in both English
and the native language oftheim-
migrantpupils.
The board unanimously sup-
ported a "philosophy statement
on bilingual education with the
emphasis on English instruction
as recommended by a committee
of parents and district staff mem·
be rs.
A "further goal" of the pro-
gram should be an "ongoing em-
phasis on teacher training" in or-
der to improve communication
with lmmisrant pupils, the com-
mitteeatated.
Moat of the dis trict's lmmi-
1rant students are Indochinese.
according to district officials.
The diatrlct serves 11,000 stu-
dents ln Huntington Beach, Foun-
tain Valley, Westminster and
MidwayCity.
"ln order to meet the needs ot
these <foreisn-apeakine> stu-
Allegations
not proven
A front paie Lodex story caW~t
readers' ttenUootoutoryoatbe
lnalde papa Marcb 12 erron.eoua.
ly atattd that two former fntne
butldlnt lnaptctore requ•at.a
liquor from a contractor.
TIM pu'8'l'apb, part of aa 1Ddn
lavttlnl ruden to tum to ttod•
oa P.,. Bl, lnlel'Nd the,.... .... cau•ted alcohol, whJd, In fact,
baan't been proved. Tbe atory
madenoauebautementa.
/ Tbe Dally PUot r..1reta the error.
PIAGEl:
,. NB to· challenge
.·
• airp
87 STEVE MAaBLE
Al .; Of .. OMly ,.._. IUH
:'" ·~Newport Beacb city officials : 'bave announced that they will : · ·1:"1 to invalidate the John Wayne
A :t\jrport mHter plan with a
: ... ries ot le1al attacks.
A :~ =·=cuy Attorney Rugh Coffin said !~ JMonday a lawsult cballenCinl :~U ~bvironmental sections of the
A ma•ter plan will be filed no later
:, ~an next Wednesday.
Coffin said it is likely that
other courtroom chaJlences will
follow.
At a midday press conference
Monday , Cofrin and City
Man ager Robert Wynn In·
troduced lawyers from two na·
UonaUy known law firms that
have been retained by the city.
The firms -Beardsley,
Hufstedler and Kemble of Los
Angeles and Luebben, Hughes
and Kelly of Albuquerque -are
/'
to Jointly help the city fight
growth at the county airport.
The Los Anaeles firm, which
includes a former California
State Bar president, specializes
in courtroom litigation. The
Albuquerque firm specializes in
environmental issues.
' Newport councilmen agreed
last week during a closed
session to hire the firms. A
formal contract lit expected to
be approved next Monday dur·
inl lbe council's regular aeuion.
Wynn said councilmen are
unanimous In theit feeling that
they should "do anything pos$l·
ble to stop airport erowtb .. , He
predicted that a $250,000 alf'Mt
war chest wiU be set up to f1lllil
the fight.
·'AU fertile ground
plowed,'' added Coffin.
_, ___ _
~aster plan
arcue that county supervlaon
failed to consider all
alternaUves before adopting the
master plan Feb. 18.
Lawyers from both firms
afreed that the first suit will
• .Further, they said, the suit wQI aJJece that approval was •ed on an inadequate environ·
mental impact report.
One of the attorneys, John
Kelly, aald that suits dealint
with CaWornla environmental
laws normally come to trial
within 90 days after being rued.
In a related announcement at
the press conference, Newport
Beach resident Tom Williams,
who heads the newly formed
Airport Coalition, said hia group
also will be filing suit against
the county.
i:~· .
At Ill Al .,,
:~ . ., !~ Plaza to_wer OK ... A .. :2
ii ~! Mesa backs 15-story project
An :~ A( AC AE An .,
AC
A( AC AC A .. A .. A .. ... Ill\
•11 A~ 115 AS An •s An
AS AT Ill AT AT AY An :• An An :2 :;
:~ ·~ •11 All
A" ... A• ... o.ily~~.,~ .......
All A ... •• At WAITRESSES AT HOuLl.W.·s IN MEWPoRT etiSl"f6dt ultt'~ llttHVALS totid.r.
An :~ St. Petrtck'• Dar Mtan 81 1 •·"'· •• revelera gDt their lrtah whl9"ay up
An An
Ari
Ari Ari Ari Ari
lln
Top of the morning
An A" An An An A"
Irish tipplers start ear l y a long Coast
An Ar' Ar Ar ASI
Asl ASI
ASI A!lo All All
.All All
Atl .All All
.Au Au Av
/Av Av Av Av ·~ ~
u
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of I .. Dally ~I ... St.ff
Some folks like to get an early start on
their St. Patrick's Day celebrating.
Take the dozen or so patrons who showed
up at the Shamrock cocktail lounge in Costa
Mesa shortly after 6 a.m . today.
There was Jay O'Maley and George
Thomas O'Hara sipping Bushmill's ·Irish
whiskey at the bar, recalling past St. Pat's
Day happenings at the second oldest tavern
in Costa Mesa.
BARTENDER TIU VIS B. "Sparky"
Sparks poured drinks and talked about past
years at the 40·plus year old watering hole on
Newport Boulevard.
·'They used to serve free chow here on
St. Patrick's Day," Sparky said.
·'Corned beef hash and some pretty big
meals."
"Now all we've got is the hara.core
drinkers," laughed O'Maley, an Irish Protes-
tant who says Catholic O' Maleys have two
"L"s In their names.
O'MALE'Y SAID HE'S been frequenting
the Shamrock for the past two decades, as
has his Catholic buddy O'Hara.
When a reporter asked how the pair
planned to celebrate the day of the Irish,
O'Maley piped up, "I believe we'll have a
Bushmill's on you .
"And thank you," O'Hara grinned.
No. St. Pat's Day celebration is complete
without a few yarns, and the pair regaled the
bar with stories many had doubtless heard
before.
"O'HARA WENT TO jail, sent there by
Judge Dungan," O'Maley said, putting an
arm around his rriend.
(See IRISH UP EARLY, Pa1e Al)
1 ! Two OC judges differ
! I
! ~Opposite rulings made on pay TV deco~ers
: t f Two Orange County .nunicipal l court Jud1es have tackled the
f 11me wue -the le1allly of f California's law problbitina pay
f television decoders -and issued ! diverpnt rulings. ~ I n Weal Orange County ! .llunidpal Court, Judge Houston t ~ Sni<tow sranted the motloo ot de-t ; fense lawyer Kenneth Golden to ..
federal government, not the
state, which has exclusive
jurisdiction over what is
transmitted and received via the
airwaves.
Golden s;ud prosecutors in tbe
West Court cue have told him
they will appeal Judie Srudow's
ruling.
In the Harbor Court matter,
lbe lawyer sald he will wait unW
the end of the cue to appeal
Permits to construct a 15-story
building to house offices, a
Broadway Department Store and
other retail outlets have been
granted to South Coast Plaza of·
ficials by the Costa Mesa City
Council.
Only Mayor Arlene Schafer \!Ot·
eel Monday against the proje<!l
estimated to cost about S60
million.
She said her conscience
wouldn't let her vote for a project
that would house abou~ IOO
employees without offertnc them
some hope for housing in tbecom·
munity.
She also indicated that she fears
traffic coneesUoa that could be
general.eel 1'J tbe project planned
just east ot t.b• carousel i.o the
plaza mall.
Coun4i1mu U •el'arland
welcomei tM addldon u en·
couragement for ma• transit
systems aJona the propGMdlanta Au &rdc. corridor UUina Dik
neylaDd with the Santa Ana Civic
Center complex, South Coast
PlaaaandNriportCenter.
"We need these denaiUes to en·
eou.rap It <mus tr au it>." he
said.
The len~ b ... before the
council was fougti& ~ally by
trafficenglneen.
South Coast Pia' 1pecia1ists
and a city coMllltant claimed
Costa Mesa streets and intersec-
tions will handle traffic resulting
from the plaza addition. City plan·
ning staff members, who recom·
mended conditional approval for
the plans, agreed.
But traffic engineers represeat·
ing May Co. and Federated
Department Stores -own_, ot
Bullocks and I. Magnin -faalbt.
approval. The two chalu maiD·
taln stores in the plaza.
Their eneineers suggested that
plaza environmental studies pro-
jected anticipated traffic volume
and parking needs on days when
customer traffic counts were low.
Darrel Magnin, a Federated
spokesman, questioned plaza
principal Henr1 Segerstrom's
contention that .. U.tory addi·
lion would gen .... more busi· ness as the ...,.., .-..J prom-
inence is t_.... by other
commercial -ters planned in
the coastal area.
As May Co. an Federated
spokesmen char1ed
Segerstrom's people had not l)ro-
duced a plan for increased plaza
parking to result from the pro-
posed tower, Ma1nin opined that
ii plaza customers can't find con·
venient and adequate parking
they will shop elsewhere.
Plaza officials propose a new
underground partln1 facllity,
possibly another parkin1 tower at
the shoppi.n1 center and use 9' un·
used parttn1 space across Bristol
Street at the Town Center com· pl ex.
Main features in the 15-story ad·
ditlon are to Include a glassed,
five·story atrium and a
MoftonBI
Local ~ews /eatured
There's more local Dewt on Pqe Bl ot today'• Dally
Pllot . Here'• a aampleotwbatyou'Uftndthere:
landscaped bridge spanning
Bristol for pedestrians moving
between the plaza and Town
Center.
The only major issues beyond
traftic, smog and parking result·
1n1 from Monday's council hear·
Int was raised by the nearby
Brookview Condominium
Homeowners Association and a
Costa Mesa resident who charged
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
blocked him from gaining access
to plaza proposals for his study.
Brookview's Jim Carlson
argued for and verbally gained an
agreement from Segerstrom that
South Coast Plaza will install
television systems on their tower
to eliminate ghost images on the
neighborhood's television sets al·
legedly caused by Segerstrom·
inspired high rise buildings.
Council meeting regular Jack
Polans sought a second hearing
on the proposed new plaza tower
to allow the public and opposing
department stors to prepare
arguments.
(Sft PLAZA, Pace Al)
B rib e ry c harges
Irvine ins pector
hacked in hearing
'
An attorney for two fired Irvine
buUcUa1 inspectors says that
cbaraes ot bribery a«alnat one of
cilentl -rou.ldn't have taken
Mlt:tr• rbid-Au~t as a witness 119itil• -because the lnspector
•M•GIJhe country at the time.
Dltenae attorney Vance
StmOlllll said Monday he also ex·
perts to show the only thing that
can be proved is that the two in-
spectors each accepted a bottle of
alcohol and a lunch two weeks
before Christmas.
And that, Simonds said, is com·
mon practice, standard and a
tradition In the building trade and
in theCityofJrvine.
A personnel hearing into
charges that former Irvine build·
ing inspedors Bruce Bullard. 50,
of Costa Mesa, and Arthur Peck,
51, or Anaheim, solicited and re·
ceived gratuities from developers
enters its fifth day today in Irvine
council chambers.
The two men. along with inspec-
tor Manuel "Manny" Linares, 34,
of Corona, were cbaraed late last
year with sollciUna liquor, food
and overtime from conatructioll
firms in exchanse for ea1y impec·
lions.
The three men were fired
following a police investigatioo of
charges by Western Commercial
Construction, Inc. that the men
solicited favors.
Bullard and Peck are appealing
their dismissals. Linares did not
contest his flrina.
Prosecuting attorney David
Larsen questioned Western Com-
m e rcial job s uperintendent
Steven D. Collo last week about an
alleged bribery in the summer of
1980.
In that alleged incident on Aug.
15, Collosaid Linares and Peck re-
quested liquor in exchange for
favorable inspections.
But attorney Simonds said
CStt BRIBE, Pa1e AZ>
E x-Irv ine teen dies
a s car overturns
A former Irvine youth on col-
lege break from Texas A&M was
fatally injured when he was
hurled from a tumbling car onto
jagged boulders In the bottom of
a drainage ditch in north Irvine.
police said.
The driver of the car, Wendy
Sue Lepper, 161 ~f 6, Bran,
Irvine, escaped uuury in Mon·
day 's rollover accident ·on
Trabuco Road near Yale
Avenue, wlice said.
Police investigators said they
understood the victim's family
lived In Irvine's College Part
area until moving to Texas last
year.
Youn1 Mitchell was an elec·
tronics engineering major in
collece.
His father, Glenn, is a retired
U.S. Anny offic~.
A memotial service ls pend1ni
for Mitchell, a guitar player u
well u a 1in1er with Irvine Hilb
School musical croups.
Burial will be in Texu.
Glenn Wayne Mitchell, 19, a
1980 1raduate of Irvine High
School, died of massive multiple
injuries about 7:20 p.m . in Santa
~:.~~~. t In c 0 m mun it y• ·1111c1 CUii IUTlll
Police said Miu Lepper's lncreutna hilb cloud.i·
small compact car, westbound neaa toniebt and Wednes-
on Trabuco Road, appuenUy day. Lows tc>ni&ht 41 81001 struck the center divider, veered the <!OUt 53 laland ffilba
Into a 1tid and fiipped over WedHlday •to 1s.' twice, comlna to rest 9'I Its
wbeell ln Utt draina1e d.itcb. llllf Jllll Traftlc set. Bob Kredel aaid It
appean M.ltcbell wu burled on·
to the roeb.
Farmer t o coach
UCLA buke thall
Tll,.• Juu1dred plof
tnWltft'W awr at a ..,. .. M
NtNGt DI Nn> York. SH All.
11111
I I
1'
I I
"8£&£'8 TO TRB world'• 1reatest f~btlnl force -my •lit."
MeanwbUe, tbln11 were a bit more
sedate at HooUhan't'Old Place lD Newport
Be1ch, wttb a doMn or so •aJtnuet deeked
out ln peen T·lhlrtl, white shortt and trays
full of b1oo4Y Marya.
"We've eot 400 reaervatlona for
breakfast." said Steve Hall, mana1eJ' of tbe
Irish eatery.
But by half p11t 8 there were only a few
tables full ol diners, mostly dreued ln thl'ee·
piece suits and silk blouaes and wool skirts.
They were ordering corned beef
Clymore a1Test ·.due?
Attorney Bays Syrians may act 800n
By JOHN NEEDHAM
OOIWOMIYl'i*S•lt Tbe attorney representin1
freed Orange County hostage
Craig Clymore says he fear5 bis
client. woo has beenmdfctecf on
federal drug smuggling charges,
will be arrested by Syrian
authorities within the next few .
days.
Clymore. 24. was one of the
more than 100 hostages aboard a
Pakistani jetliner that was hi·
jacked March 2 on a night from
Karachi lo Peshawar by oppo-.
nenls or Pakistan's President
Mohammad Zia ul-Haq. It was
eventually flown to Damascus,
Syria. where the hijackers sur-
renderedSaturday.
Attorney Ronald Kreber of
Laguna Beach, a former pros-
ecutor for the Orange County
District Attorney's office, said he
had re ceived inform.ation
Cly more would be arrested by the
Donald Hall
rites Friday
in Newport
Memorial services are
scheduled Friday for Newport
Beach resident Donald Haven
Hall, retired commercial artist
and advertising executive, who
died Monday at the age of 67.
Rites will be at 11 a.m. in St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
Newport Beach. for Mr. Hall,
who was raised in Laguna Beach
and was the son of one of
Newport Beach's first mayors.
He succumbed at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital after a brief
illness.
Mr. Hall was a graduate of the
Arl Center in Pasadena.
He was an officer with the
Army 's 64th Engineer
Pbotomapping Battalion in the
Central Pacific Theater during
World War ll.
He and a partner opened an
advertising agency -one of the
first in largely undeveloped
Orange County -and he later
joined EECO. a Santa Ana elec-
tronics firm, working in its art
department.
He wu sales promotion direc·
tor when he retired 2th years
ago.
He was a longtime meaal>er of
the Balboa Bay Club and St. An·
drew's Presbyterian Church.
His father, the late Clyan Hall ,
was one of Newport Beach's
first mayors, Mr. Hall's widow,
Asenath. said today.
Survivors in addition to Mrs.
Hall include sons Marshall and
Clyan Hall. both of Costa Mesa;
daught e r s Mr s . Julie
Glazebrook, of San Dlego and
Mrs . Dennis Brantley, of
Riverside.
He also leaves a brother, Dean
Hall, ot Kailua-Kona, Hawaii;
stepmother, Mrs. Lillian Hall, of
Lag una Hills , and two
grandsons.
The family suggests memoriai
contributions in his name to St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
800 St. Andrew's Road, Newport
Beach.
Crematloo and scattertnc of
Mr. Hall's aabet at sea are be-
ing handled by the Neptune
Society.
O"ANQI COAST
Syrians in order to pressul'e him
into returning to the United
States. Kreber charged U.S . Slate
Departmentm!iclala with putting
pressure on the Syrians to arrest
* * * Russians
linked to
hijacking
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
State Department. charging that
three hijackers of a Pakistani
jetliner received machine guns
during a s topover in
Afghanistan, says it is holding
Soviet authorities accountable.
The allegation. outlined Mon·
day by spokesman William
Dyess, was based on eyewitness
accounts of the events at Kabul
airport, where the Pakistani In-
ternational Airlines flight spent
the first five days or the 13-day
hijacking ordeal which began in
Pakistan.
.. At one point. all three hi·
jackers stood in view of Afghan
and Soviet security personnel
without any apparent concern
for their own safety... Dyess
said.
He added that several
passengers aboard the plane al-
leged that the hijackers received
additional weapons while in
Kabul.
"They arrived with pistols.
they left with machine guns." he
said.
A statement from the Soviet
Embassy In Washington called
the accusations "completely
groundless" and "crude and un·
dignified."
The hijacking started March 2
and ended Saturday in
Damascus when the three
Pakistani s surrendered lo
Syrian authorities and freed
more than 100 hostages in ex-
change for the release or 54
Pakistani political prisoners.
Traffic jam
finally over
for Newport
Newport Beach patrolmen
heaved a sigh of relief when
C altraos work men finally
hooked up a new traffic signal
control box at the intersection ot
Pacific Coast Highway and
Bayside Drive.
Llgh~ al the buay intersection
went on the fritz Sunday noon
when a motorist rammed a Ught
atandard and control box.
Police olficers were ordered to
direct traffic w,blcb bad backed
up to Newport Cent.er. The 21-
hour-lonc sifnal outaee was
compounded Monday mornln1
when workmen closed off a
southbound lane of Dover Drive
at Paciftc Coaat H11bway.
Police. who are used to trafftc
bottlenecks neat the Pacific
Coast Hlcbway brl d1e .
dHcribed the episode aa a
"nl&btmare."
lilly Piiat MAIN OflP'ICa
Thomel P. Hai.y ........
==:;:N.WMd
L Thomaa KMYll
~:..Muri»hlne
~°Cw t=f:c1 aon'ullftan
~~
===-~~"'·
Jll W ... ..., ... C.-. Mete, CA. ,_..,...,_: ... I ... , C-. Mete, CA._..
Clymore ln a minor chnae.
"We believe be will be arrested
on a small, innocuous charge,"
Kreber said. ''He would be de-
t1l1ned until he agrees te~ttn
waivers to return to the United
States."
The State Department has re·
voked Clymore's passport, ap·
patently to prevent him from flee·
ing prosecution. He has been is-
sued one-way travel papers to
New York, where the announce·
ment of his indictment was made
Saturday. The United States and
Syria have no extradition treaty.
K reber said if he has his way,
his client will remain in Syria un-
til the drug smuggling charges
are resolved.
Clymore is alleged to be lhe
ringleader of a nine-member in-
ternational hashish and heroin
smuggling operation. according
to a (ederaJ grand jury indictment
released bylhe U.S. Attorney's of-
fice in New York City.
Others named in the eight-
count indictment, which charged
conspiracy. posse!'lslon with in·
tent to distribute and illegal im-
portation. were:
Helen Frances Plesko. Diane
Mae Moseman and Kim Marie
Mowiu. All gave the same Lake
Forest address where Clymore
resided before his trip to Pakistan
last month.
Clymore moved from that unin·
corporated community ju.al prior
to his trip, accordina to his rather.
Glen Clymore, of San Juan
Capistrano. who has declined to
reveal his son's current address.
Others named in the indictment
were Leonard Wylie of Stanton,
Robert A. Lee or Orange. Dale E.
Donnell of Anaheim and Kenneth
Grissom of Santa Ana.
According to federal drug en-
forcement authorities in New
York, Miss Moseman and Miss
Mowitz were caught carrying
hashish oil concealed in condom~
in their vaginas during a search at
John F. Kennedy Airport in New
York ln January.
Reportedly the two women had
arrived on a flight from Karachi.
Pakistan. Clymore and Miss
Plesko were on the same flight,
but they weren't searched, ac·
cording to federal drug enforce-
ment authorities in New York.
Clymore's attorney says he will
fight the extradition or his client
from Syria. "l have some very
pointed questions to ask the em-
bassy officials there,·• he said.
•'The ballfe ground wlll be in
Damaacus. We are going to fight
it out there one step at a time."
BRIBE ...
Monday that Peck was not on the
job sit.ethatday, "he was not even
on the coastal continent -he was
vacationing in the Caribbean."
Simonds, who was lo betln
questioning nearly two dozen sub-
poenaed contractors and city
employees today. uld testimony
wlll show that Peck and Bullard:
-Did not aak for bottles of
alcohol atajobslte Dec. 11.
-Did not ask or demand a
lunch from another contractor
thataameday.
-Old not accept gifts of alcohol
from a job superintendent in ex·
chan1e for favorable Inspections.
Allegations
not proven
A front pace index story ca1Un1
readen' at.tefttlon to utoryon t.bt
lnaide Pll• March 12 em>GIOQI·
ly 1t.at.d lbat lwo former ln1M
bulldJDC lupeetora req...ated
liquor from a eoatraetor.
Tb• perqrapa., pari ot 1n lndex
lnvltiq reacler'I to tum to atorlt1
CID P ... Bl, inlernd tbe paJJ' r.
que1i.d alcobol, wbJelr, la fact,
batG't .,._ pnwed. TIM 1tory
m1de ...,,_b ltateal•U·
Ttae· Dally Pilot re,,..U U..
error.
• ~ ttdrnitl Jund theft
at'MYIDa•,..llliM'lll ..... .,-,.......n
With an Oranae County
Superior Court Jury already
picked and waiUn1 iG an adjoin-
ln1 room, the former dfrwetor ol
HunUncton Beach'• federaJ Job
tralnln1 pro1ram cban1ed h.ll
plea from innocent to 1u11ty on
two felony counts of ml1uato1
public funds.
Robert L. Cunnln1ham, 34,
former chief of the city's Com·
prehensive Employment Train·
lng Act program, could face up
to four years ln state prison u a
result of his change in plea Mon-
day.
Judge Everett W. Dickey or-
dert\d Cunningham. now free
without bail, to report to Orange
County Jail on Sunday. He will
be sent to the state prison at
Chino for diagnostic tests and
return for formal sentencing on
June 16.
Cunningham had been
charged with embezzling $16,000
in federal funds for his personal
use.
wben probebaia If Jutlfted .
Jn enterln1 hia pleaa, CUn·
n!n1b1m admitted to cb1r1ea
tbat between June, 1979, and
January, UllO, wblle workl"' u Jot. chief ln HwrtlnftOn Beach
and president of Weetern
ln1Utute of Careers, Inc.. he
fr1udolently appropriated the
money.
Hlmebon said the former of·
ficlal uaed the money as a down
payment on a new home ln the
south C0W1ty.
CunnlnCham later repaid the funda ln two installments.
Oranfe County Man power
Commiuioo auditors originally
began scrut.inh:lng the city's
jobs program early last year
alter allegations or mismanage-
ment, extravagance and conflict
of interest were leveled at
Western lnst.itute, the corporate
operator or the $2.6 million a
year federal job program in
Huntington Beach.
ADMITS FUND MISUSE
Robert Cunningham
The Orange County Grand
Jury indicted him ln October. He
entered his innocent pleas a
short time later. Restraint urged
Monda¥. howevu, -prosecuter-
D ave Himelson and Deputy
Public Defender Kathy O'Leary
reached a negotiated plea just
before opening statements in the
trial were to be given.
Himelson later said the
change In plea was due lo the
prosecution's "very strong"
case against the defendant.
Irish on parade
across the nation
Dickey made it clear that even
though Cunningham was volun-
t a r i I y changing his plea ,
chances of his getting probation
were slim.
The judge said the law frowns
on probation for public officials
charged with embezzling public
funds, except in unusual cases
Three yachts
in Caho race
'in trouble'
By The A11odated Press
Thousands of Irish-Americans
were parading in New York.
Chi cago. Savannah. Ga., and
scores of other cities today in a
festive tribute to their patron.
St. Patrick. Cardinal Terrence
Cooke urged the celebrators to
be religious, not raucous.
Meanwhile, in California. two
snake races were being held to
honor the saint credited with
bringing Christianity lo Ireland
and driving the island's snakes in·
to the sea.
For some, St. Patrick's Day is
a chance to raise a cup or good
cheer -perhaps in the form of
green beer. But Alan Luks.
director of the New York Af·
filiate of the National Council on Three boats in the Newport to Alcoholism, said the holiday has
Cabo San Lucas yacht race to-become "an annual orgy of
day suffered gear failures which abusive drinking."
have put at' least two of them out Cooke. speaking at an annual
of the race. mus ical celebration at St Dick Arneson's Midnight Sun Patrick's Cathedral on Sunday,
out of San Diego was reporting u r g e d N e w y 0 r k e r s to
steering problems off the San "moderate.any grossness in the
Benitos islands and was headed spring festival that has been
for shelter at Cedros Island. growing up around St. Patrick's
Neil Underwood. skipper of Day " ,
Sunkist said his yacht suffered a The New ~ork parade route
broken spreader which forced goes up Firth" Av enue, right past
him to abandon the race at Tur· the huge, ornate Gothic-style
tie Bay. church. Tens of thousands of
The yacht Driller out of Lido marchers were expected, and
Isle Yacht Cl ub reported a more than 2.000 extra police
broken rudder quadrant which were on hand.
the crew was attempting to re-In Georgia, parades were set
pair and stay in the race. in Atlanta and Savannah, where
The problems were apparently city officials contend their
caused by strong winds up to 25 march is second in size only to
knots during the night. Winds New York 's.
were going light at the head of Savannah's parade was to in-
cabbage and 3.200 Irish sod;i
bread biscuits.
Jn San Franci sc o , a
spokeswoman for the California
Academy of Sciences said the
organization's snake race is in
tended to help children get over
a fear of the reptiles
"We started lo d o it
particularly as an education
event for youngsters who think
that all snakes are evil." said
Pam Wing. a spokesman for the
academy's Steinhart Aquarium.
site of the race for seven years.
Youngsters race the snakes
around a bright green track.
She said the story of St
Patrick and the snakes is a
myth.
"There never really were an y
snakes in Ireland." Ms. Wing
said.
The other race, sponsored by
radio station KABL to benefit
charily. 1s held downtown. •
Dublin. Ga • rounded 169 years
ago by an Irishman named
Jonathan Sawyer, had a parade
scheduled for Saturday
Jn Chicago. part or today's
celebration led by Mayor
Jane Byrne included turnmg
the Chicago River green with.
hundreds of pounds or dye. st:'
Paul, Minn .. outshines twin city
Minneapolis every St Patrick's _
Day with a much-bigger parade.
l'ro• Pagr A I
PLAZA ... the fleet off Cape San Lazaro elude 18 noats and 38 bands.
where Dick Steele. skipper of "The place is loaded up with His request was denied by":
the leading yacht Merlin, was people who just walk. almost Mayor Schafer. ·.
reporting northwest winds of like Mardi Gras," said Jerry Then he sought a hearing aimed
less than 10 knots. Hogan, parade coordinator. at chastising Sorsabal for al-4 Taking over the lead on cot· In Denver. the Volunteers of legedly blocking access to public
reeled time was Intrepid. a Class America were serving 23,000 records regarding the plaza. '
D yacht skipppered by Mike corned-beef-and-cabbage meals That bid was denied unan·
Schachter. Balboa Yacht Club. to the city's elderly. Cooks start· imously by the council. "' ~S_e_e_e_a_r_lie_r_s_t_o_ry_._P_a_g_e_C~3·~~~~ed~t_h_e_d_a~y~wt-·th-'--~l.~200-'-~po~un~ds~~of"---~~~~~~~~~~~~_,·:
PIAGE1
-·-
Off 10.27
Ctoelng 112.52
• rate increases
f Thil ii tM ••conl1 of o nhw-porl Nr'Wt on how to toot on "°"' 19tlDton1.)
The lntereat rate on any lax refUndl owed on any
unpaid taxes was doubled Feb. 1, 11110. Untll that date,
the Internal Revenue Service paid interest on tax re·
funds at an annual rate of 6 percent and charged you at
the same 8 percent.
But becauae of the historic upsurge In the prime
rate charged by banks to top corporate borrowers in
1979, the tax law was changed to require an adjustment
In this annual in-
terest rate. It
was raised to 12
percent, begin-
nine February
1980.
So if you
don't pay your
1980 income tax-
--~ SYlVll PORTER , Z
es in full by April 15. you will be charged interest al the
new 12 percent rate on unpaid taxes.
If, though. the IRS should owe interest on a refund,
It, too, mwit pay the Interest al 12 percent.
YOU'RE AMONG millions if you were hit by
casualty losses (big or moderate) in 1980 -and of
course, you can deduct the loss . Ironically, if you spend
money in order to prevent a casualty, that expenditure
has been held not deductible under a tax court ruling in
1980. In order to prevent his pine trees from interfering
with power lines lo his home, a taxpayer had the
branches or the trees removed on the side facing the
power lines. The removal or the branches on one side
made the trees subject to breaking or being uprooted in
case of an ice storm . Should this happen. his residence
could be damaged.
To prevent damage that would have been a casual-
ty loss, the utility company was requested to move the
trees and did so. The homeowner claimed a casualty
toss f~r the decrease in the value of property. He did not
succeed.
Preventive measures, ruled the tax court, are not
casualties. If cutting trees down to prevent a casualty
were deductible, other individuals could claim that a
burglar alarm system or a smoke detector came under
the category of casualty losses. the court reasoned
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
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GOLD COINS
17 .. " II ' JI._ .....
SI"' S7' 31" \]II
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73"' 70 n• 17
.. ..
I
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Pct
uo "' Uo 11 0 Uo 11 0
Up 10 • Up 10 J
Up 'I UP 'J Up 1 1 UP IJ UP 1.0 Up I 0 Up 71
Up 11 Uo 14 Uo 14 Up 11 Uo 1 I
Pel OH t7 t
Off " ()fl 1 • Ofl •• 011 ..
Ofl '' Off • ' Off •O
0 11 '° 8" j7 " '. Off '.
Off '. Oft 'l Off ,,
Ott '' Oft '0
NIW YOAK (AP) Pr1<t1 late M-.y
OI tolCI ~°'"'•<~•.CS wltll Frieler 1111>rl<• .
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M9'M IMf, I troy 01., U U 00, 1111 U.00 llM•k• to OHO, ' 2 troy ., ... ,. .... uo MOO ... ,, .. ,. 100 v own, "901 troy 01., Mt2.00,
~ ... oo.
NEW VOii!( IN'I -hlM ,,_ "'' .. -,,.. ~ of tr'9 ._,,, motl K1• ... Amef~ ltocfl ~ -1'9<1"'0 • .._ .. ..,. ......... ......
t'11c .-. 9 I 777 fOO .... '" llowv .. i.. • 110 100 u • .. '111>rrir(,,,.. wt I,. 500 II•• Gol<ffi.ta C'o •nooo 7 Mou()llN' II I 100 •7"' ,..,,,,bu,.o ' tOf,000 ,...,.
1 .. 1rC't'tl"<\ 0 100.000 IJ'"
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Morc .. ry UtS 00 ,,., rt•O
.. lall""'1'1 MSS 00 lroy 01 , N Y
SILVER
l y TIM A1-1a1et1 '"'"' H•l'\Oy &. "•'m-' \t111 per lfO• Owl'Ce
GOLD QUOTATIONS
L•llM<I• morn1nq fl•1r19 M9t.U, olf 'I IO
Lo......,: allernoon 1t11ng M9J JS, Oii W IO
.... 11: •Hornoon 1111"9 uo ... OH u .,
''•ftlllton; 11••"9 'IOI OJ, off Ml" Z11rlc1t. 1e1e titer,,_ 1t11ng MO 00, oo
.. 00 ''" 00 .,~.., Ma11t1y a M•rma11 on1y O•ily quote
'4'1Holl "'° 11,,..iw. only .,.,,, QUOI• '4•l u. oO .. so
ilftfel-; only dally quote l•brl<el uu ... Oft .. ,.
SYMBOLS
~r..00\'°t
lq'.1\t.A'l) •
1A ,.s \.o'lfl ,.s ~f~A&O ·.