HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-19 - Orange Coast Pilot--------------------~--
·Ylll 11111111 llllY PIPll
I • i l I I i ' ' I ) I\ '( ~., t. I ~ I I t I I ' • I
By PAMDA llAUAiil "'« ..........
It'• 1wallow aeuon in sU J'ua CQlibw.
Reporten ND U'O\&Dd looMal fW aew -~-about tacky'• unual return. Local mettll11• • •lab ol relief u they aee buMs Hne up • ._..... tM
aion •pUUna ~ata. And Jooal ~Illa IM'l•• ,... Jal'den bc:lllet to wuh away mud DeJta u fut u ~ .,.,
bUllt.
SWALLOWS GET lots of attention from people ..,
don't live ill San Juan. But thole ol ut who do lm fMr9 ...
them iro.D a •liihllY ~~ qt. •k~ have to u~e witb them until ~tober. • .
The legend of the swallows, ftnt.ptintecl la a ""1 t•
cifuJ boOk celled .. Capistrano Nithta'' tn·JllO, tel1I botr tbt
faithful •traUows return to the lll11loe .. ch Y•• on SL
Joaepb'1 D-,v. #-'
Actually, the blrda spend very UttJ~ time at Ute Mil·
sion. ..
The tr~ have grown tOo lars.e. inbJl>ltlnt theit' uest.
<See SWAUA>WS. Pa1e Ai>
OH AN Cf COUNTY < A L If OHNIA '2'l CENTS
Doctor's life ruined?
McDonald battles U.S. on murder caSe
By PATRlCK KENNEDY
Of IM o.11• "Ii.. llaff
Dr. J e ffr ey Ma c Donald
claimed today that his life is be·
ing ruined after government at·
torneys asked the U.S. Supreme
Court to reinstate his 1979 con·
viction for the murders of his
wife and two children at Fort
Bragg, N.C .. in 1970.
"lt wrecks my life again,"
said MacDonald, a Huntington
Harbour bachelor. "But I'm not
s urprised. The government at·
-tomeys will dcr anything to prove
they haven't been wrong in pros·
ecuting me for the last 11
years."
Justice Department lawyers
filed a writ of certiorari today
asking the Supreme Court to re·
verse the decision of the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals that
overturned MacDonald's 1979
conviction.
The appeals court ruled last
July that MacDonald was denied
a speedy trial. He then was re·
leased from Te rminal Island
federal prison after serving
almost a y~ar.
The former Army Gr een Beret
captain maintains that four
drug·crazed "hippies" burst into
his Fort Bragg home Feb. 17,
1970, and beat and stabbed to
death his wife Collette, 26, and
the daughters, Kimberly 5 and
Kristen, 2.
The police, called by Mac·
Donald, found him s uffering
from a knife wound to the chest.
After a lengthy army in-
vestigation, charges against
Mac Donald were dropped. But
in 1975, a federal grand jury in
Raleigh, N.C., indicted him on
murder charges. In 1979. the
U.S. District Court in Raleigh
convicted him.
"It seems like it's never going
to end,'' MacDonald said. "It's
absolutely beyond belief."
MacDonald says he 's spent
more than $600 ,000 defending
himself against the cha rges and
calls the government "ir·
responsible" for spending more
than that prosecuting him.
"I'm working again, but every
cent I make goes to lawyers. I'm
broke," said MacDonald, who is
a doctor at St. Mary Emergency
Center in Long Beach
J.n its a ppeal. the Justice
Department contends that any
delay in bringing MacDonald to
trial "does not constitute a
s peedy trial violation" under
standards established by the
Supreme Court in a 1972 de·
els ion.
The Supreme Court is not ex·
peeled lo act on the government
appeal for at least a month
"WRECKS MY LIFE"
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald
Revenge for Bitte rman
as s ain?
Arms s upply
U.S. ponders
•
Cuba actions
WAS H I NGTON (AP l -
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. said today the ad-
ministration is cons idering a
range of steps to t ake if
flecessary to stop Cuban supply
-of arms to Latin American reb-
els, but said it has no specific
plan for military action against
Cuba.
"With respect to a specific
plan, why no. The president has
not had an opportunity to ap-
prove or lo consider in detail
any courses of action for the
period ahead," Haig said.
Haig gave that reply when
pressed at a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing on
an administration ofrlcial's
testimony Wednes day that
specific administration plans do
not exclude military action
agaimt CUba.
"It ls the responsibility of the
executive branch to consider a
whole range of options, then pre-
pare a full range of options to
deal with this serious problem,''
Haig said. "And I can assure
you that process is under way.
•'But in no sense does it
represent an approved game
plan, if you will," he said.
Undersecretary of State
Walter J . Stoessel told the com·
mlttee under questioning that
the administration does hl\,ve
111111 ~lllT WIATHIR
Rain today with chance
of thunderstorms tonight,
tapering off Friday. Gusty
wind• 15 to 20 mph tool1bt
and Friday. Hlchs today
51 to 12, ~WI toni1ht SO LO
55. Chance ol rain 90 per·
cent today and 70 percent.
Friday.
•llTllAY
Goldn W•IC '8 the oNJl local
corrt•r to match the na·
Homndl cui• ftl air far••· See
Pog•B14.
11111
specific contingency plans and
·'I would say they do not exclude
anything.''
Sen. Christopher J . Dodd, D·
Conn., asked Stoessel the ques·
lion and pressed Haig today on
whether there in fact are such
plans.
Stoessel. a s ked by Se n
Charles H. Percy, R·lll., if Cen·
tral America could turn into
another "quagmire" like Viet·
n am. replied, ··We are de·
termined that this situation will
not develop into another Viet-
nam . . . the situation is con·
tainable."
Arms from Cuba and other
communist countries into El
Salvador have "substantiall y
abated" and the administration
hopes they will stop altogether,
he said.
<See HAIG, Paite A2)
Two a rrest ed In t h e driv er's seat
• o n co c aine Max, the pooch, stretches a bit and enjoys
the scenery as he awaits his master's re·
turn inside the cab of a truck in Hinghal'll-,
Mass.
sale charges
Two men -one a former
me mber of the Laguna Beach
based Brotherhood of Et~mal Humble heroes heralded
Love drug·smuggling empire By PHIL SNEJDEBMAN and the other an American once 0t11MD•11,,. .... ,._.,
held captive ln Cuba for three A more bumble trio of heroes
years -have been arrested by would be hard to find.
Orange County Sheriff's Depart· One rescued a woman from a
ment narcot.lcs lnvestigaton. rasor blade·wielding street at·
James LeRoy Crittenden, 38, a tacker.
transient, who lnvestiga{on say Another outguessed and cap· was once a ranking operative in tured three gunmen wanted for the Brotherhood, and Jerry Al· more than a dozen bank rob-
len Weaver. 37, of Long Beach, beriea, ·
seized by CUban officlala 1n 19'12 The third talked a woman and
while aboard a boat that drifted her husband through reausclta·
into Cuban waters, were amoaa tlon treatment by telephone,
alx people taken lnto custody savlnt the life of a heart attack
Tueaday nilht folJowtna a month' victim.
lone lnvesUcatloD lnto cocaine Yet the men, John Palladlno,
ulea activity. • Larry May and Steve Rotbert,
About 9.5ouncesol11 ~t honored·Wednesday by the Hun·
pure cocaine valued at SM.000 tlntton Beach Chamber of Com·
waa aebed by UDderCOYer acenta merce, lnalated to a man that
dul'ing a raid at a Loni Beach tbelr deeds wen more routine
addre11. Lone Beaeb Pollu thtn berolc.
Department ... ~ lD tbe In· Mayor Ruth Balley di•·
veat1iation. a1reffd.
Crittenden, who bu a lenctbY "TheM are people wbo nnt
anHt record and haa uaed Ju.at a UUJ• blt further than what
numerou1 alllHI. waa indicted lbttr cluty l•," abe aald.
ln tbe early lt?Oe by the Oran1e Recipient of an Award for CountJ Grand Jury ln CODMC· Valor, Palllldlao eam• to tbe aid
lion wtth tta lnv•tl1atJon lDto one al1bt IHt Au1uat of a
the Brotberbood. woman wboH car Ud brohD •
At tta peak, the Brothertaood down outtklt blt ...... tton.
picious man at 1 the scene,
Palladino returned minutes
later and found the man accoet·
Ing the young woman, holding
her down with a razor blade at
her throat.
The store owner confronted
the attacker, chased him on foot
and subdued him unW police ar·
rived.
At Wednesday's awards
luncheon, the soft·1poken
Palladino said be had acted
VF'W r aps Reapn
on vete ran cu te
WASHINGTON <AP) -Tbe
Veterana of Foret1n Wan,
wblcb broke precedent to ID·
done President RH1an last
·year, hu accused Rea1u ol
"balanclu tbe Vet•nna ~d·
mlnlttratlon bud1et on t be
break.lq bacu ol the v'*'•·
hi• widow IDd orphan ...
spontaneously. without consider·
ing the risks.
Asked if he fell like a hero, he
replied, "Not really. I'm still
just 5 -foot·S and nine ·
sixteenths." Ano~ Award for Valor reclp·
lent, Huntlng_ton Beach police
officer May bad studied the pat·
tern behind a string of Oranae
and Loe Aneeles County bank
robberies.
While checkinl out a vehicle
of the type stolen for use in the
robberies, May spotted a
Cadillac carryln1 the three
holdup 1uapeell. By hlrmelf, llay arrested the
tbrM mm, wbote car wu later
found to contain three revolvers,
110•• aad 1ki mukl.
"I W8I jail doln1 my Job," the
offtc• aaJd after reeelvinl bll
award. "I dl~t think I WU do-
lDI •utbba• heroic. I watJtllt lD
the rlabt place at tbe rlabt time."
Colombia
reprisal
reported
By IODI CADENHEAD
Ol IM o.11, "Ii.. IC.ff
Nearly 100 guerriJJas reported·
ly responsible for the killing of
American Bible translator
Chester Bitterman Ill March 7
in Colombia have been killed or
captured by Colombian and
Ecuadorea~ soldiers.
Colombian Minister of Gov-
ernment Germ an Zea
Hernandez said Wednesday that
soldiers killed 19 guerrillas
belonging lo M·19 and captured
74, including Carlos Toledo
Plata, a former congressman
who was second in command
and Rosemberg Pabon, a former
schoolteacher known as
"Com andante Uno."
A spokeswoman for Wycliffe
Bible Translators in Huntington
Beach, a sister organization of
t he Summer Institute of
Linguistics, where Bitterman
workejl when he was kidnapped
Jan. 19, said that M·l9 denied
any part in the kidnapping and
killing.
Following the execution killing
of the father of two, the guerrilla
group M·19 denied any part in
the kidnapping or killing, said
s pokeswoman Betty Blair.
Instead the guerrilla group
blamed the killing and kidnap-
ping on a splinter group called
"Coronado National Base," Ms.
Blair said.
Photographs printed in South
Ameridn newspapers f0Uowin1
the kidnapping showed the kid-
nappers posed with a Oat bear·
Ina the name "Coronado Na·
Uonal Base," she aaJd.
"Thia ls a bit nebulous now,"
said Ma. BJair. "Right now we
don't know if these really are the
people. I think we have to wait
for more lDv•titaUon."
LHt January 1uerrlllu kjcl;.
napped Bitterman and
threatened to kill hlm Wll.,
about 100 American• workiDC
for the Bible Tran1lattn1 ~
left the country.
Since ~ kJdnapplnC ud kill·
Ina none ot tbt famW. bu
ulred to leave Colombia, said
caee aou.a. Pa•• Ml
PILOT SALU,,_S
COA.ST WO MEN
Today'a Daily Pllot •al'*' U..
Otani• Coalt wOIDaa a.t her
aplrit ol aecom ... eat.
Look fOf' "I Am Wom•," •
12·P••• Ptrlteo,. •a •••l••
fHlW'tDI 1tori• aa4 plctlne
about UM 0r.._.. Cout ~
ber pvwtq "'pcmtll1llltl•. t..
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• WU =ble fOI' lmJ)Ol'tlq Tb• woman .... IM would mull.I dollar quaaUU. ol wall tor auto ctub u1llU8e9,
martJuw and hublP lllto U.. -and Palledlno lofted bis etor.
Art r.uwoct, comma.nclW·lD·
chief ol tbe vrw, Mid ........
releaH Wtdneada1 tbat tbe
Rea1an bud1et propo1t1 to
ellmlbata mon Oaa T,too
medlcal pertOMel from UM ltl1
ad, 1-I= 1ubml"*9 bJ lqrm• Prt JlmlftY Carter.
Rectplent of an Award for
Heroism, ffuntl.qtoa Bueb nn De.,..._.. dilPatcbel' llGdMrt
answered a eall I.alt October
from a woman wboM motlllr
llad Ju1t aufteN4 a m_~l.e
beut a&taek wbil• watc--. a bueballpm•· ' · acco~ and Hr daJ··
· <8M a.ovs ••• ,. AJ) and drove 1· Recalllat • ...
•, l
,._ naou. ••••A.a>
A
,to-4•1....... l
I'
' f I .
\ ..
I .• ..
'l'laree /tJfle jog
Bill Condran, a foreman at the damaged Three ~ile
Island nuclear reactor, jogs around the ledge ~r ~ cooling
tower. The Unit 2 reactor containment bu1ldmg and
another cooling tower are in the background.
Fr•• P,,,,. Al
SW ALLOWS RETlJRN ...
building by creating too many obstacles. So ~he bird~ look
for other places to build their nests. A favonte spot 1s the
freeway bridge over San Juan Creek. New developments
with equally new landscaping also are pop~lar. Any un·
obstructed place near open fields and mud will do. Except
for the city's official swa llow shelters.
SEVERAL YEARS ago stories began appearing that
the swallows were no longer coming back to Capistran~. In
an effort to squelch those rumors and encourage the bird~.
the City Council built swallow shelters and put them. in
public parks. They also declared San Juan. a ~1rd
sanctuary, malting it a misdemeanor to tamper with birds
or nests. ~• . The swallows ignor ed the shelters and ~ost locos r~s1-
dents ignored the ne w ordinance. A_n occas ional c<;>nsc1en-
tipus citizen will call City Hall asking for a pe rmit to re·
move a s wallow's nest, but most just wash them away or
put up shiny objects where they don't want a nest.
What is wrong with having a few nests under the eaves
of your house? Unfortunately. sw.allows n_ests are lined
with tiny bedbug·like crf7atures wh1.ch t~e birds eat..These
bugs can infest a house 1f the nest 1s built near a w1~~ow
There is also a problem with droppings. Some fast1d1ous
residents prefer not to have nests in their patios or over
their front door.
THERE IS ONE group of inhabitants who look
forward to the re turn of the swallows each year. Cats. I'm
reminded of the old Tom and Jerry cartoon in which Tom
runs off to Capistra no for the return of the swallows for_ ob-
vious reasons. But don't worry. swallows are plentifuJ.
despite the reports of alarmists.
ft seems to me that the return of the swallows was a
lot more fun when people first heard about them. They
ParMla Hollan a.s a former Doily
Pltot reporter. SM i3 a lifelong resi-
Mflt of San Juan Capi&trano and u
well acquainted w ith the com·
munUy's hUtory and .tegen:c". C~r
renflJl,IMilanodminutrahveo.tm-
tant totMcit11manager.
were romantic. Leon Renee wrote a song about them .
They made headlines in news.papers as far. away ~s New
York. They provided something constant m the lives of
folks who were surviving the Great Depression.
Imagine that. Mable. birds that actually return to the
same place on the sam e day each year!
IN MY GRANDMOTHER'S time. local children
gathered in front of the Mission to await the return of the
birds and they were usually not disappointed. Great flocks
of them new in to the then-treeless Mission. nesting in the
ruins of the Great Slone Church. Swallows were a local
. tradition. Everyone e lse ignored them .
Today tourists gather in front of the Mi ssion waiting
for the s wallows to return, expecting the sky to be
blackened with birds. Most leave town disappointed. It
isn't that there aren't the same number of swallows. They
seem to come in s mall groups and most of them avoid the
downtown altogether because of the crowds.
Yet for one week locals and tourists alike have fun
with the annual event.
During Fiesta Week everyone goes "cowboy" and has
for the last 23 years. They enjoy the beard growing con-
test, the various activities for children, the Mi ssion
Pageant, and the Parade on Saturday.
Bur COME Monday, the parade is over. the crowds
have thinned and it's business as usual in San Juan
Capistrano.
Swallows Day has come and gone.
And for me, so has the mystique.
Washington mulls inviting premier
CAP!! CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) -Several apace worten
paaaed out from lack of oxygen
today as they used nitrogen in
testina safety procedures on the
s pace s huttle Columbia two
hours after a successful dress
rehearsal ot pre -launch ac-
tivities, officials said .
NASA officials at Kennedy
Space Center said five or six
employees of Rockwe ll Jnterna·
tional, the private contractor .for
the shutUe project , were usmg
pure nitrogen to purge shuttle
systems after the pre-launch re-
hearsal.
The workers lingered too long
in a n area in which there was no
oxygen and fou r passed out.
space offi cials said.
Spokesman Rocky Rabb of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration said there are no
gas leaks, but that the workers
had stayed in an area that was
all-nitrogen too long.
Officials said they didn't think
any of the workers were injured.
One of the workers was carried
away fro m the launch pad on a
stre tcher. and that the others
were helped away.
It wasn 't jm mediately known
whe ther they would requi re
hospitalization.
T h e in cident came shortly
after NASA offi cials proclaimed
that the rehears al "went super ."
a simulated ignition at 4:25 a.m.
PST. marked the e nd of the test
run. NASA s pokesman Mark
lless said
The rehearsal was a dry run of
what astronauts J ohn Young and
Robert Crippen will be doing on
launch day, Hess s aid
·'The reason for the test run
was to establish a good time
frame. to know ho" long the pre-
launch activities will take on
launch day." he said.
Today. just as will be done on
the actual launch day, the night
team was awakened by NASA
officials. given breakfast. suited
up and taken to the launch pad.
Hess said. He said the activities
took two hours and 25 minutes
T he shuttle is scheduled for its
first blastoff into space on a
54-hour voyage during the week
of April 5.
HAIG ...
HE ROUTED RAPIST
John Pelledlno
CAPTURED 3 GUNMEN
Offtc:er Larry Mey
-----~-------------
LOVE •••
United States. ll also distributed
large amounts of LSD and other
psychedelic drugs .
Crittenden was convicted but
did not serve time in state prison
based on results of diagnostic
studies by prison officials. said
his former attorney, Matthew
Kurilich.
Crittenden was scheduled to
be transferred today to Orange
County Jail from Long Beach Ci·
ty Jail. He is being held on
$450,000 bail. including a $400,000
arrest warrant issued following
his indictment in Concord in
January , 1980. 1n connection
with a drug conspiracy case
Orange County Sheriffs Lt
Wvalt Hart s aid Weave r was re
leased from Cuban custody in
1975 after berng held on the
is land for three years following
his capture llarl said other de·
ta ils s urroundmg the capture
"eren't 1mmcd1ately available
Others arrested were 1den
t1f1cd a s Ric hard G ilbert
Talamentas. 35. of La Puente,
Ronald Lawrence Chavez, 31 , of
Long Bea c h . Sh e rry Ann
Chavez. 32, of Long Beach, and
Bernie Ralph Hall . 30, of Long
Beach.
U.S. couple
begin row
of Atlantic
CASABLANCA. Morocco <AP>
-An American couple hoping to
become the first husband-wife
team to row across the Atlantic
radioed they were 10 miles oH
the Moroccan coast today, one
d ay out from Casablanca in
t heir 25-foot boat.
·'They were in good spirits,
laughing and joking," s aid
Ahmed Hadi, an employee of the
U.S. Embass y in Casablanca
who spoke to the pair by radio.
Curtis Saville. 34, and his 24
y ear -old wife K a th y , o f
Providence. R.I . plan to cross
the Atlantic Ocean in about 100
days and land ··somewhere in
Florida ... according to Charles
Sten. off ic er at th e US
Consulate here. He said the two
left from the Casablanca yacht
club Wednesday.
"Their boat is a self-righting ,
self-bailing craft with enclosed
cabins fore and aft." Sten said in
a telephone interview "It's
equipped with a two-way radio
and battieres powered by solar Two arrested panels ...
He said the craft . called Ex
l·n drug buQt calibur. was equipped with an o automatic pilot for the rudder
but powered by nothing more
LOS ANGELES <AP> Two than human s trength.
men were in custody today after "It's got no sails at all, and
police seized 30 pounds of pure the trip will be j us t a lot of
Colombian cocaine worth an human drudgery," Sten said.
0.11~ ...... SuH .,_..
LONG-DISTANCE RESCUE
Firemen Steve Aothert
HEROES •••
Rothert kept the woman calm
a nd gave instructions for
cardiopulmonary resuscitation,
whic h we r e r e l ayed to t he
caller 's husband.
This treatment aided the vic-
tim until paramedics arrived.
The heart attack victim today is
reported alive a nd in good
health.
"It's part of my job, and I'm
just thankful I was a ble to help,"
Rothe rt said Wednesday . "It's
som ething all dispatchers at the
fire department are trained to
do "
The chamber of commerce rec·
ogn ized o ther public s afety
em ployees for their service.
Fire depart m e nt Captain
Roger Hos me r received an
Award for Merit. with a special
commendation for developing a
fire incident reporting and
evaluation system that has re-
ce1 ved nat1on.w1de praise.
Lifeguard Raymond F . Bray
received an Award of Merit.
with special recognition for his
work with the Junior lifeguard
program
An Award for Merit a lso went
to a Huntington Beach police
team that investigated the kid-
nap and murder of 12-year-old
Robin Samsoe.
A bout 10 .000 hours of in-
vestigation were involved in the
case. whic h led to the arrest and
conviction of Rodney James
Alcala
estimated $5 million in the The straight distance from But ir they increase instead, largest local drug seizure in four Morocco to Florida 1s more than
he said under questioning from years. authorit ies said 4.000 miles but the couple 's trip
Among the Huntington Beach
police detectives pra ised for
their work on the case were
Rruce Young, Ron Jenkins. Luis
Oc hoa. Carl Vida no a nd Craig
Robison
A s pecial award also was pre ·
sented to police dog Pas ha.
Chief Earle Robitaille called the
canme "a very aggressive law
enforcement tool ... invaluable in
building searches.
Dodd, "we would have to con-The arrest or Irving Hoffman. will cover considerably m ore
sider what steps to take to stop 41. and Hamir Morales. 34. at a dis tance.
that flow." c 0 n do mini um in s u bur ban "They'll be riding the currenL4'
Haig told the House Foreign Chats worth capped a four· month when they're not rowing," Sten
Affairs Committee on Wednes-investigation, police officer Bob explained.
day that the guerrilla m ovement Oswald said Wednesday. Saville. a photographer. and
in El Salvador is part of a four-his wife spent last ye ar building
phase communist strategy. Fro• Pag~ A I the boat in a barn near their Mount Etna slows "Phase 1 has been completed Providence home . Sten said. He
with the seizure of Nicaragua." added that the couple told him CATANIA. Sicily (AP> -The
Haig said. "Next is El Salvador, BIBLE they logged 200 miles in practice Mount Etna volcano rumbled
to be followed by Honduras and • • • trips. and spewed molten rocks for a
Guatemala ." Ms. Blair. The Colombian gov-He said the couple planned to third day today but the lava flow
Rep. Rober t K . Dornan, R· ernment has offered added pro-be in daily contact with a mateur slowed, easing the threat to a
Calif .. asked Haig if he believed tection lo the workers. radio operators in Casablanca town of 12.000 on the s lopes, of·
in a "Caribb e an domino Bitterm an's wife Brenda left andtheUnitedStates. ficials reported. However lava
theor y." a refe rence to the the country with the coupte·s .. Psychologically they seemed poured out of a new cr ater
much-discussed proposition of two small children following the ready for the trip," Sten said opened during the n ight and
the m1d-l960s that the Vietnam kidnapping. A memorial ser vice "They told me they thought we destroyed more woodland before
War had lo be fought to prevent will be he ld fo r Bitterman were entering a new age of ex· the s tream came to a halt about
other Southeast Asian nations March 29 at his home town In ploration and they wanted to be a mile and a half from Ran-
from falling to communism like Lancaster . Pennsylvania. part of it." dazzo.
a row of dominoes when the first .-----------------------------------------is toppled.
"I wouldn't call it necessarily
a domino theory." Haig replied.
"I would call it a priority target
list a hit list, if you will, for
the ultimate takeover of Central
America."
The secretarv also said that
t h e United ·sta t e s must
cha llenge what he called Soviet·
backed international terrorism
before it comes to America.
.. If we do not seize control of
this hemorrhaging international-
ly today," he said, "we are go·
ing to find it within our own
borders.''
Haig said the Soviets maintain
terrorist training camps "where
literally thousand s of Third
World embryo terrorists are run
through a training course to go
b ack to t heir countries and
deprive those people of their
human rights."
OUR lTh1E IS MONEY .
And o ur time
is incredible,
No w these gold
coin watches
from Corum
feature
eleclronic
quartz
movements,
accurale to
within 60
seconds a year,
and they're
completely
water-resistant.
No windjng,
WASHINGTON CAP> -ln a
1barp break with past policy, the
Rearan admlnbtratlon la tbink-lnc about lnvlUn1 South African
Prime Mlnlater P. W. Botha to
visit Wa1bin1ton , the
W ubinltm Star reported today.
Quoting unidentified State
Department so urces , the
newspaper said the administra-Bandit' 8 doa lion also was considering an in· ~
no worrying .
Handcrafted in
Switzerland
from 18 karat
yellow gold
and a $20 gold
piece for men,
ThomM P. Heley
~
=:N.WMd
r.., T'horNI Keevll
~Murphlne
~HJ':U... 1::::9 lcttulfMn
~<i!l::'"1
~Goddefd Jt.
t
vltation beforehand to a leading
black leader, such as Nigerian 1W CT;m ;nal Preaident Shehu Sbagari. ., .,
MAINOPP!Ca mwett9-9t.,C-.Mete,CA, .... ..._, ._ , ... , C.taMew, CA.,._
MENLO PARK <AP) -A
man ordered his dog to attack
an a ttendant ln a gas station
holdup, but the dog refused to
participate In the alleged crime,
police said.
Arnold Dobson, 41, ordered the
German shepherd to attack,
tugged at bJs leash and then, ln
apparent fl'Wltration, hit the at-
tendant with his fiats, police said
of the incident.
But ataUon attendant Damell
Davit fouabt back, knocked
Doti.on to lbt 1round, went into
t be 1tatlon and telephoned
police. Dobaon was arrest.eel
while walking aloaf a road wltb
the dot and ..,., booked fOf' in·
vt1t11at10ft of attempted rob·
ber1, police aald.
• •
J.
----... . .. . -. . . -. -. -~ -
§LA.VICK'S
Flrw Jt-~n Slnct 1917
a $5 gold piece
for women.
A . Man's, $5,990.
8. Woman's, ·
,.,809. lkautiful
jewelry says.
"I lovt you."
hahlon l1land, N.wpon Ctnter, Newport h~h. 714/644·1380
Wfttftlln "''I LAtwM Hlllt I Mltalon Vktjo I Not1h OT•~ I The Clly
lot Ctm'°' .. 8rt• t.UU.
Alto C19alH Lot A"gitln I S.n ~o / IA1 y._.,
u.. -to1 llll~t_.....,. ~ ,....,. .,, A-.V-11 &,_.. VISA . .,...... °"'IL
M,.,,.., Fmt lnwfnl Cwi1'
~ I ~ I
~ I
l
I•
. -
i ..
Band leader Cab Calloway finds himself with
some backup tooters in rehearsing for April 2 TV
swing through .. Sesame Street." The show ,
featuring Muppets and others, helps Cab
introduce his music to a new generation.
Mexico City officials
were stunned at the
sudden appearance this
week of Kathy Sweet.
15. who disappeared
there a year ago last
February w hile on
vacat ion wi th her
parents fro m Ontario.
Canada. No explanation
was given .
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
took time during a recent
Newport Beach reception to
direct this remark to Orange
Co unty Supervisor Thomas
Riley :
"And here's the supervisor
I appointed that was re-
elected."
Brown's other appointment
to the county board was
Edison Miller. who was
soundly defeated last year
Former Vice President
Walte r Mondal e s ay s
"modesty" prevents him
from predicting who the
Democratic Party will turn
to as its standard-bearer in
1984.
Mondale, who served in the
Carter administration, has
not said whether he will seek
the Democratic presidential
nomination in 1984 and try to
oust the Reagan administra·.
lion.
After a speech at De Anza
College, Cupertino, he was
asked whether he could pre·
diet who the next Democratic
presidential nominee would
be.
"No. I can't." he replied.
"I 'm overwhelmed by
modesty."
Bero leads
.,.plellfe
l'rallk 8erplee shook bll
head in dllbelief, 1tudytnc
the insr«lleata on the "Saltine
cracker packaee. "It'• such a simple thin&,"·
be said, rattling off the
label's lilt of preservatives.
"Th'-can be made witb flour
and water."
Serpico, shot during hia ef-
forts a decade aeo to expose
corruption within tbe New
York City police department,
became a hero thanks to a
motion picture baaed on
those effort.! -but doesn't
much enjoy the status .
"People want to make
heroes so they don't have to
d o anything about i t
themselves," he said during
a stopover in Oklahoma City
to visit a friend.
Now 44, Serpico has sold
all his possessions. He
travels on the college lecture
circuit and app ears on
television programs.
State Supreme Court
Justice Frank Richardson
says he has
b ee n an
h o n orary
m em ber of
Sacramento's
Sutter Club
six years, but
isn't sure he
knew it ad -
mits o n ly
men as mem-
1111cHA11tosoN be rs.
"I never ·thought about it,"
Ri chardson said when asked
about a report of his mem·
bership.
Richardson said when the
court meets in Sacramento
he takes meals at the club,
about a block from the court
building, because it's handy
and the food is good.
He said his wife often ac-
companies him and other
women are in the dining
room.
Scientist-a uthor Carl
Sagan, who said he wants to
marry longtime co-writer
Ann Druyan, has been grant-
ed a divorce from his wife of
nine years.
Sagan, 45, is perhaps best
known as the host and chief
writer for the "Cosmos"
series on public television.
He earlier won a court battle
with his wife, Llada, to bold
the divorce hear ing in
California. Mrs. Sagan filed
the suit in New York.
Theater to be studied
Proposal for outdoor facility due
The Airport Land Use Com-
mission of Orange County is to
meet tonight to make a recom-
mendation on a proposal to build
a 10 ,000-s pectat or amphi-
theater at Lion Country Safari.
That recommendation will be
passed along to the Irvine City
Council, which is to consider
the proposal Tuesday night.
The commission staff is urg·
ing denial of the proposal on
grounds the amphitheater would
be subjected to excessive noise
from milit ary jets operating
from El Toro Marine Corps Air
Fluor forms pipe
distribution unit
The Fluor corp. nas an-
nounced the formation of Fluor
Pipe & Piling Co. to distribute
pipe and piling to the central.
southern and southwestern U.S.
The company, to be head-.
quartered in St. Louis, Is to
beg}n~ oper lion April 1.
"I we'll be another leg in
the F r distribution group that
h•• grown dramatically, 1o sa.fd
Robert R. Witt, president.
"We'd like to break even lo
the fint fiscal year which ends
in October. Actually, I think
we'll do better than that, and
look forward to add.ills substa.n·
tially to Ftuor'a bottom line u
far as profits are concerned."
Piling b used as a structural
support ln the construction of
hlChway bridaes, office and in·
duatrial buUdlns•, power sta·
tions, wfter and aewa1e treat·
ment plants and docb. Fluor pt~ • PWn1 will dlStribute ff·
pWn1 and pipe pllln1.
Witt previously was manager
for U.S. Slei?l in the St. Paul-
Minneapolis area. He has 30
years experience in steel prod-
ucts sales and marketing.
Fluor's initial investment in
thP. company wUJ depend largely
on Inventory.
"We'd like to buy $5 million to
$6 million in inventory, but that
may be difficult," Witt said. The
company's facility in St. Louis
cost about $400,000.
Also named as officers were
Don C. Tobey, vice presl~nt
tubular products and John van
Nort, vice president·Pillnl pro-
ducts. Witt report.! to ff. Leon
SbackeJford, senior vice presi-
dent ol FIUOI' Distribution Com·
panies Inc.
Fluor Distribution, through lts
operatina companies, provides u .s. lnduttry with 1peclahy tub-
in1, plpe, oil fteld tubular aoocla.
industrial productl and full·
service truck dealerablpe and
truck leuing.
. ""''til l1°Jte11.i11.9
The Dally Piiot wants to hear obeervattons from lta readers
-particularly comments a6out the paper Itself. It's eaay to telJ
us your views. Just call the number below and your mtSHI•
wUI be rerorded. Me11a1es will be trantcribed several Umea
daUy and delivered to tbe dak of the appropriate editor. No
clrculat.lon calla, pleut.
Tell UI what 'a on your mlnd. The number Is In service 2•
houri a day, seven days a Wffk. 642•6088
Station, about one mile north of
the proposed site.
T he Irvine Meadows Am·
phitheater Partners hip, or ·
ganizers of the project, have
thus far failed to reach a
scheduling agreement with
Marine officials that would
guarantee that no jets would fly
over the amphitheater while it's
in use.
While declining to predict
what the commission recom-
mendation will be, chief com-
mission staff planner AUred
Brady said the com mission
members usually go along with
his recommendations.
He added that representatives
Crom various homeowner as-
sociations and the Orange Coun-
ty Environmental Management
Agency are also against the proj-
ect. The Marines also oppose the
project.
Irvine City Councilman Larry
Agran has said be is extremely
concerned with the implications
of jets flying over tbe am-
phitheater while it is in use.
The Airport Land Use Com-
m isaion of Orange County, a
state-mandate body established
to review projects near airfields,
meets at 7:30 p.m . tonight in
Room 208 of the County Opera-
tions Center, 1300 South Grand
Avenue, Santa Ana.
Wblle the Irvine City Council
has final say on whether the am·
phitbeater should be built, the
com miaslon bu the power to
force a so-calJ~ showdown vote.
Under state law, local 1ov-
ernmental aaenclea such u tbe
Irvine City Council must be able
to must.et a four.ftfthl vote in or-
der to overrule a flndinc of tbe
Ail'J)Ol't Land UM Commlulon.
Comml11lon members were,
unavailable for comment thl.I af-
ternoon.
Japan tribute
"r..Uval Japan," a tribute to
J apane11 culture featurla1
mualc, art ud dacllla. wW be
Mid Mardl ... at DllMJlaad.
DlllMJlaDd wt11 ... --from t a.m. to T p.m. OD llllS a,
ud UDUI 10 Y:•· • Marcb •. tNt U. aJlllllMI wtU appear ODlJ untill:•Melt da,.
·-------.,.._. ..... ..._._.._. __ .......,_. ____ .....-._ ... _. .. ._... ............ _. ____ .... __ ...,_ .... ,~·~~--.-·--···•-t•"'l'"·•· ..
Orange Coast DAIL V ptLOT/Thunday, March 19, 1M1· • *
Hospital shift mulled
Meaa unit would become nuraing home
Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital eventually would be
turned into a nunlnC bome un-
der a pn>p09al belnl considered
by its owners.
Hoapital Affiliates Interna-
tional says it intenda to make
the changeover in the medical
faclllty at 801 Victorla St. in or-
der to facilitate the development of a hospital It plans to build in
Irvine.
Nancy Corday, spokeswoman
for the Tennessee-based hospital
chain, explained there ls a limit-
ed number of licensed acute
care boepitaJ beds in the county.
Health authorities feel the coun·
ty b "overbedded" and are re-
luctant to Jl'Ut new licenses for
addlt.lonal hospital beds.
Therefore, t..be ownert of Costa
Mesa Memorial H08plta1 plan t.o
merely transfer lbe licensed-bed
capacity of that facllity to the
hospital they plan to build in
Irvine.
Presumably. they would be
able to obtain licenset for nurs-
ing home beds at Colsta Mesa
Memorial H08pita1. The changeover from an acute
care hospital to a nursing home
would only take place after the
Irvine bolpital project bas been
approved by local, state and
Organizations eye
Irvine for hospital
A number of competing or-
ganizations are trying to build
hospitals in Irvine, which of-
ficials say is ·one of the largest
cities in California without a
hospital. Here is a list of those
organizations and their pro-
posals.
-Hospital Affiliates lntem a-
tional, a hospital chain which
has filed a "Notice of Intent"
with state health officials to
build a 172-bed hospital in
Irvine.
-UC Irvine, which is propos·
ing to build an outpatient clinic
which Chancellor Daniel Aldrich
said might some day be turned
into a major inpatient hospital.
ln fact, he says he'd like to St!i?
the eventual establishment of as
m any as a "half-d o zen "
hospitals on and around campus.
-Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach, which plans to
oHicially notify state officials
later this month of its intentions
of establis hing a hospital in
lrvine.
-Santa An a -Tustin Com-
munity Hospital, which bu in-
di cated a willin gn ess to
participate along with other
local hospitals in establishing a
community hospital in Irvine.
-People for an Irvine Com-
m unity Hospital, a citizen group
urging the establishme nt of a
centrally located community
hospital for the city.
Time dating neachine
county authorities and after the
facility b built, Mt. Corday said.
Sbe added t.be Irvine bo.pltal
b planned to open ln July ol
1984.
But she admitted the varloua
levels ol review of hospital pro-.
poaals are demandin1.
"We have a saying in this
busineu," ahe said. "When we
break ground on a proj ect we
figure it bas a :JC) percent chance
of development."
....
Criminals 1
hit young
most often ..
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The l
young are far more likely than
the elderly to be victims orr
violent crimes and thefts,· a
University of So uthern
California sociology researcher
says.
The findings of LeMar Empey
run counter to a widely held
public view that the elderly are
the most frequent target.
Empey released his na ·
tionwide study this week show-
ing that persons aged 16 to 19
were eight times more likely to
be victims of violent crime than
those 65 and older.
"The most likely scenario for
a victim is not a little old lady
h obblin g a long Wilshire
Boulevard, but a kid being
pushed up against the lavatory
wall and having his or her lunch
money stolen, .. Empey said.
..............
A page from the 525-year-Old Gutenberg Bi-
ble was analyzed with a new cyclotron ac-
celerator time dating machine at the
University of California at Davia, and pro-
ved to be authentic. Studying the page are
Donald Kunitz, left, and Thomas Cahlll of
the university.
It pays to be· an
Idealist when you
buy a diamond.
RAFF jewel~
It
i
II
t
'I ..,
I ' I .
•• '
• !f
EASY TO SWALLOW: Ah, it was another 1reat day
for lradiUon along lbl1 best of alJ possible couta toda,
when the swallows returned to tbe Jewel of the Calllornla
M1ssions al San Juan Capistrano.
As they have dope every year that anybocfy cares to
remember the dartin1 little !orllt·tailed blrd.s swooped
down on ~ur 204-year-old miulon riatbt on time, on St.
about racing
Joseph's Day. How, you might
ask, would I know that
the flock was right on
time when I'm here in
the office, s l umped
behind a h o t
typewriter?
~ ,~~1
T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1.~~
J know because the . swallows are always right on schedule. leaving Goya,
Argentina. about the first of February for the 6,000·mile
flight to San Juan
WELL OKA V, there were a c~uple o! years when ~t
was publicly admitted that the little birds blew their
timetable. ln 1935 the swallows were allegedly three days late ar·
riving at the mission. Tardiness was blamed on storms
over the Pacific Ocean.
Again in 1947, certain Wrong Tttlnkers said t~at ~o
many "scouts" for the flock had arrived at the histonc
adobe founded by Father Junipero Serra that it should be
ad nµtted that the birds were four days early.
BUT NOBODY REALLY admitted that. You have to
uncte rstand the rules. Any swallows that arrive early are
"scouts for the fl ock." Any birds that show up late are
"stragglers." . . All the rest arrive on St. Joseph's Day and are on lime.
In 1969, a heavy blanket of March fog totally enveloped
Early San Juan tnrd? No, ;wt aootheT Capo pigeon
Mission San Juan and no birds could be sighted anywhere.
But the late Bill Smith, public relations man ~d voice of
the mission for many years, solved that vexation by an·
nouncing :
"THE SWALLOWS ARE here. They are flying in a
holding pattern, just like jets at a fog-bound airport._
"We can hear them up there above the fog ; flying and
twillermg."
In 1974, a ghastly goof was committed by Lion Country
Safa ri at Laguna Hills, when officials there put out the
word that the swallows had bypassed the old mission and
landed amid the safari's lions and other beasts.
This was promptly denounced as "nothing more than a
cheap publtc1ty stunt. Lion Country hasn't been heard
from smce on the ouestion of swaUows.
Admittedly. some myths have been perpetrated about
the t1melv return of the birds to Mission San Juan. One
year , a county newspaper trumpeted that the swallows had
returned to San Juan "for the 199th year."
You're left to wonder where the swallows flew to
before then?
T HE LATE MR . SMITH is going to be sorely missed
around the mission in the years ahead because he always
recorded the swallows' arrival so precisely-by hour.
minute and seconds. So the lime might go into the books at
9 :57:25 a.m. today
Mission bells peel out the glad tidings when the
swallows return to Capistrano. Once the bell-ringer was
asked how he knew the swallows had returned and it was
time to ring the bells? .. HE PONDERED that weighty question for a moment·
and then cast his eyes to the sky, as if demonstrating, and
replied
.. You look around."
LONDON CAP > -Prince
Charles, who has twice fallen
from hia new racehorse in five
days, was urged lo slo~ rislting
his neck so he can walk down
the aisle in one piece wben be
gets married July 29.
Newspapers called on Charles
to quit and the British Safety
Council warned that the 32-year·
old heir to the throne is pushing
his luck al a time of loo many big
changes in his life.
Counc il Direct or-General
James Tye said the warning was
based on a new U.S. Navy techni·
que of assessing a person's risk
pote11tiaJ from the number of Life.
disturbing cha nges he or she
faces.
Charles, he concluded. is in for
a tough lime unless he takes it
easy.
HE CITED the emotional strain
of becoming engaged to Lady
Diana Spencer, planning the
roya l wedding , undergoing
heightened public scrutiny and
now throwing himself into the new
and hazard ous s p or t of
steeplechasing.
The warning by the Safety
Council, a priva t ely funded
agency involved in improving in·
dustrial safety, came amid ques-
tions about whether the future
kin g s hould take so ml\nY
chances with his wedding only
four months away.
His great uncle. the late Duke of
Windsor who reigned briefly as
Edward Vlll before abdicating in
1936. was forced by family and
political pressure to give up the
sport of kings after a had fall m
1924 .
CHARLES JS not the only
member of the royal family to
have had riding accidents. His sis·
ter. Princess Anne, has come a
cropper several times and suf-
fered a concussion when she fell
while riding with the British
equestrian team in the 1976 Mon-
treal Olympics.
lier hus band . ex a rm y Capt.
Mark Phillips. who has also rid·
den for Britain. has broken an
arm twice and has had sever al
4 copters
shipped to
El Salvador
CORPUS CHRISTI CAP>
Four "Huey" helicopters were
shipped to El Salvador this week
from tbe Corpus Christi Naval
Air Station as part of a $25
million aid package to the war-
torn country.
The helicopters were loaded
aboard Air Force C· 130 transport
pl anes for the four-hour flight to
the tiny nation.
An Army test pilot and five
civilian mechanics left will re-
assemble and test the recondi·
lioned choppers in El Salvador.
The heli copters cost $900,000
each when sold to foreign gov-
ernments. but the four choppers
are being given to El Salvador.
Local rain ·possible
Showe.rs also forecast on East Coast
Cotutal aeeatltft-
LfQht v•rii101e wind\ south to
MK.Jlllwn t 11 lo 18 -"°'' lhis alltr
noon wllll J 10 S '"°' wind wavH
West to MK.Jlh-•I sw•lls 7 10 l '"' Contldor.tblt clou<11neu lllrOUQh to
ct•Y w1tn <hance ~ \hOwer\ 1n •Her
noo11
IJ.S.• ... •a111
A cold fr..,t pushed thund<lrslormt
lllroucin AIA!Nm• a11d Giorgia on
weonncley, bfl"91"11 some rtlltf 10
crnn f1Qhll1>11 for"t llrts, bUI In olll•r per11 of Ille Soullleast high
winds helped f•n tM ll•me•
Snow was tceUtred from ColOr-
to Montane end snow elto 1•11 In
perU ol 1111 Nor1111es1. wllere •
blluefd lalt lllt clay btfol'9 dumt>«I
up lo • loot of 1now on perh ot
Mel rte
NOf'lhe<ty winch ·-• across IM
Grt•I Pl•lns lo Ille ·-·· MIHlsslppl Yelley
Tlltrt were l.tlr lklH over Ill•
Sov111Wnl -Ille lnt.,.mount••n rt
9lon, end -1!y cloudy slllt• o""r '"*
WHI GoeJI, wltll • -, .... ~"
In Nort_.11 Celftornl•
T empet'llWtt •• mtddey r en91d
from 1• et Sellll 5fe AMrle, Mic.II .. lo
ti et Ml ......
For IOCl.ty, snow wH fortceSI
ecrou ,.,. NorU'tMtl wlllt rein In 1111
mlddle Atl .. tlc C:OHI tl.tlH, lteln
lllowers _,.. lor~Jl In c:.lllol'nl.t
with &now In,,,. nortlttlrn lto<llltt
H IQll.t llelow ''"''"' -·· prtcllc I· td fl'9m Mont-lo Ntw EnttlHICI, In
Ille .OS In CM Peclllc North-st encl
In 1111 60\ -'°' In 1111 M>Ulltern hell
otll1t<-'l't"
~so
......
11111!110
Crtence Of rain'" Orenve C . ....,nly h
SO percenl today -60 perctnl by IOftlgllt H'911• ,_., -Friday low
lo mid Mis, -tonlfllt 10 ton.
Olller So<A~ COHiii ancl lnlend ••114'ys wlll ,... .. lllQhS 111 ,,. .os;
lows In t"9 40ll to SOL ""°"'"'•"' -.... , wlll fell to •.ooo fffl by Friday. HIQlll lod•y 45
lo U, '•ldey Ill lfte-. lows 2S lo U .
Ont rt •rM.t pertly c~y today,
WIUI ~ l"ely lonlQlll encl ,,,. ... ,. °"''' --IHIY wlflch 20 lo JO mplt I.Odey -f<r ... y. HIQN 1• dlly 111 60I urpper .wt1, 70s lower
dtMrta. Aboul ' ...... COOi« Frt.
... ., l.O#I '°"..,,' In Ult --• "' ....... eflllll 40 l• JO._, ... ,, •.
Tr•ve'-' ..,1..,., ill Ille Sl•rr•
Htved.t for --Wind. Hltfl CIOtidlMU In C.11tr•I Cellfor111e.
Perlocts OI ralll ..,...,... Friday wltfl
,._ •• , • lo<t lly l'ltevy -I• In H-
"9H ..... • t lld Ctltlrtl C:.ilfor1tle. SMW Ill
lteln 1a tor41<<Ht 1or mMt ., .. , ol mo1111t elnt ••0 111 •.o~ ft1t 111
Soutlttm Celllornle tOdoly, •1111 locel "°"'"-•· •·• f.et ti_,.,.., sl-· ly owaty wlndS tOlllQlll •nd Frld•Y. ly 10.,.1rlr11 to J,000 lo 6,000 Iott -., •nd cooltr t""Per•llirH. Friday. lf'lt..-1111 .,_IY tM!lerly -----------,I w1..-INllll'( ...... w.t -over -t•l11,_. .... ,.....,.
r ..... ...,.,...
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Geneva
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concussions. Charles' fathe r ,
Prince Philip, 59, has had a couple
or minor scrapes driving his
horses in carriage competitions.
Queen Elizabeth II, 55 next
month, rarely rides these days ex·
cept for ceremonial occasions
such as the annual Trooping of the
Color when she inspects Guards
regiments.
BUCKINGHAM Palace of·
fi c ials declined comment on
whether Charles will do likewise
But the prince a qualified
parachutist, fighter pilot, deep-
sea diver and lifelong horseman
as apparently determined to
qualify to ride as an amateur in
the prestigious Grand National
next year by competing in 15
races He has ridden in four so far
The Safety Council said lt
calculated that the prince has
notched 220 "life change units"
enough to give him an even
chance of having an accident or
falling sick
First lady fall ..
Nancy Reagan was unhur t when she feJI over backward
as a boy at a children 's home jumped toward her in an at·
tempt to hug her. Mrs. Reagan was visiting the St. Ann's
Infant Home. in Hyattsville, Md
Colorado base chosen
Peterson to serve as space control site
COLORADO SPRINGS IAPI Peterson Air
Force Base east of here has been selected by the
LI S Air Force as site of a proposed $400 million
control center for American military spacecraft.
in cluding military m1ss10ns of the manned '>pace
shuttle.
Civ1ltan shuttle m 1ssions wall t•ontinue u11dN
control of the Nat11mal J\eronaut1cs and Sp:.tct· \d
m1111strat1on ·s Johnson Space Center in Houston
For securtt} purposes, the Air For<'t' has bel·n
seeking a !>Cparak control facility
Th<' cho1c-t• of a sat e for a Coni.oltdated Spa1·1
Operations Ct•nter was prompted by Peterson :-..
p111x1 m1t:, to the North American Ae rospace
Dcfensl' (.'11mrn<1nd, Air Forte Secretary Verne
Orr !>a1ct in CJ lt•tll·r Tm·-.d:.i:, to Sen. John Tower. R -
l'C'xas, t:hairman of lht· Senate Armed Services
Corn m1ltt'l'
Orr -..mt the Sp<t ce Ope ration~ Center. to begm
opt·ratJ<ms in mad 1985' would be able to share
1wr..,nn nl'I a net !><.'rv1ces Y. Ith NO RAD. the com·
pu1t-1111·<l clc•renst• sysl1·m-. l'ontrol center located
undl'r C'ht') ennl• Mountain west of Colorado
Spring~
:\font'' to 1•:-..tahh~h th(• military sp;ice center
h<t!> not yet h<.'l'n approvt•d b} Congress
Biautiful
siginnings
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Cake decorating supplies available
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See our beautiful SPlect1on of books gar
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A colorful array of net lune and ribbon
available at everyday low prices
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f7 U) 2tMl21 (7U) 41).5511 (714) 74S .. 2tt (7141142_._. •
MARCH 21
12-4
~UffiUa
Driver fund
facing cuts
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Beblnd·tbe·wbeel
driver training in the California 1cbool1 is in
doubt: An Assembly committee has rejected a
four-year extension of the rules.
Tuesday's vole would not abolish the program,
but it may let Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. cut most of
its state funding this summer.
Tbe Democratic governor bas proposed cut·
Ung the program from $19 million to $'900,000 in the
fiscal year .starting July 1, continuing behind-the·
wheel training for only an estimated 6,200 ban·
dicapped high school students. Brown wanls to
shift the rest of the money to other state programs.
~raUle•• .. llftlr•re•
REDLANDS CAP) -No damage was reported
after a moderate earthquake measuring 4.0 on the
Richter scale was reported near Big Bear Lake, a
>ki recreation area in the San Bernardino National
Forest.
The epicenter of the tremor. which hit at 10:07
p.m . Tuesday, was about eight miles east-
northeast or this San Bernardino County communi·
ly. about 70 miles east of Los Angeles, said Dennis
M e r edit h o f the
California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena. NEWS
BRIEFS The tremor was felt
45 miles to the southeast.
in Palm Springs, accord-
ing to a writer at The Desert Sun newspaper. But
he said the jolt was so slight that there was a de-
bate over whether there had really been an earth-
quake.
Unrula allotDed leaer rlta"fle
SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer Jesse
Unruh, arrested for drunken driving the second
time in just over fi ve years, will
be allowed to plead guilty to
reckless driving. a prosecutor
says.
Chief Deputy District At-
torney L. Anthony White said
Tuesday that there are stand-
ard written guidelines allow-
ing guilty pleas to lesser
charges for persons with low
blood-alcohol content, between
0.10 percent and 0.13 percent. UNRUH
They must also have had no accident, and
must have had no drunken driving arrest in the
prior three years. under the guidelines.
L A Count11 to rut alie. rare
LOS ANGELES <AP> -On a 3-2 vote, the
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors has ap-
proved a policy that would curtail medical treat-
ment at county hospitals and health centers for
thousands of illegal immigrants.
Despite opposition from 300 community ac·
livists, health care workers, union leaders and at·
torneys who were on hand Tuesday to oppose the
move. the supervisors approved a policy requiring
everyone wanting medical treatment to apply for
Medi-Cal benefits
Wriggling adnner
Ivan Cornelius of San Leandro holds aloft
his Rotary racer with a gloved hand after
winning the 14th annual St. Patrick's Day
snake race. The reptile race at San Fran-
cisco's Zellerbach Plaza was one of several
festivities staged in San Francisco on St.
Patrick's Day.
The Medi-Cal application includes a form that
must be turned over lo the Immigration and
Naturalization Service.
'Reelcle••·llre rltarge dropped
PO MON A (AP ) -Due t o insufficient
evidence, a judge has dismissed reckless-fire
charges against an Azusa man accused of starting
last November's Bradbury fire, which blackened
6,000 acres and damaged or destroyed 75 homes.
One man died in the blaze when he suffered a
heart attack.
A two-count felony complaint against John
Michael Budish, 23, was dismissed by Superior
Court Judge Sam Cianchetti on March 5, Deputy Dis·
trict Attorney Ronald Grey said Tuesday
a.,, gf1'eta auoneew
SAN JOSE (AP) A retarded boy whose
parents have refused to allow heart surgery for
him is entitled lo his own attorney, a judge has
ruled.
Santa Clara Superior Court Judge Peter Anello
made the ruling in the case of Phillip Becker. 14. A
San Jose couple. Herbert and Patsy Heath, sought
the action, and Anello appointed Sterling L. Ross
Jr , a San Francisco lawyer. as the boy's guardian
ad li tem.
Without surgery, doctors say. Phillip won 't
Ii ve beyond the age of 30. His parents. Warren and
Patricia Becker of Los Altos. have said they don't
want him to have the operation because they don't
want him to outlive them and be confined to a
s tate institution.
''I refuse to use credit cards.
So I use this~
Citizens VISX
CHE~1• '
Avoid the Credit Card Trap. Now you can
purchase the things you want without worry·
ing about the fees. interest charges anJ
mouming debts often associated wilh credit
cards. When you buy something with
Check Card~ the purchase price is deducted
directly from your interest-checking
account-just as if you'd written a check.
Enjoy Vlsa Card Coovenienoe. Check Car<l ~
is accepted wherever Visa is ... nationwide
and worldwide. Which means you can
use your interest-checking
account almost anywhere-
eve,n in places that don't
take checks!
Citizens Visa
Check Card~ One
beautifol way
to use your
interest-checking
account. See
your nearest
Citizens office today for details.
NEWPORT BEACH: 3300 Wut Cout Hleh-.y new~ llW.. 631-9205.
classif ied
ad.Call
642-5678 and a
f riendty ad-
viser wlll
hetpyou
turn your
Wheels Into
cash.
Orange eo .. t OAJLY PILOT/Thursday, March 19, 1981 s
Non-reader sues school •
Man claims disability cost career
LOS ANGELES (AP> -In a lawsuit that
could set a national precedent, a man s uffering
Crom a neurological disorder that scrambles his
perception of printed words is seekine $2.1 million
damages from his school district for falling to
teach him to read.
In addition to the damages, Ray McConnell's
suit seeks a Superior Court order requiring the
Glendale Unified School District to give him the
special remedial education be claims they should
have supplied before graduating him in 1978.
BY NOT DOING SO, the suit filed Tuesday
claimed, the district was remiss in its "constitu-
tional, statutory. regulatory, common law, pro·
fessional and equitable duty."
McConneU claimed that due to the district's
neglect , he was deprived of the ability lo read and
write, the chance for a college education and a
career.
McConnell's lawyer, Jonathan A. Adler, told a
news conference .that the suit could set a national
precedent.
"THER E'S NEVER to my knowledge been a
damage act against a school district on this
particular theory ,'' Adler said.
McConnell, a 20-year-old Glendale resident
who claims to have an IQ of 125 and an
"almost photographic'' memory, has been con·
fined in a wheelchair since childhood and suffers
from dyslexia, a rare condition in which word
perception is impaired.
The Glendale School Hoara re1ectea an earlJer
claim by McConnell In 1980 but has been advised
·by attorneys to see the case through, board presl·
dent Carl W. Raggio said.
At a news conference, McConnell said his
reading ability dropped from a sixth-grade to
third-grade level while he attended Glendale's
Hoover High School.
The school bad the "architectural niceties"
necessary for handicapped students, McConnell
said, but employed only two teachers lo run the
speclal education program in which he was
enrolled.
He said his class was loo large, the teaching
aide was inadequately trained and he was not pro-
vided with textbooks and other material ap-
prop_riate to his disability.
UNABLE TO READ, McConnell often left
classes because he was unable to keep up with the
work. But he said the school gave him grades and
credits for classes he never took.
He said the school board refused his repeated
requests to be bused to a high school several miles
away in Reseda, which he said had a program
suited to his ~eeds .
·•Here I want busing and nobody wants to bus
me," he complained. McConnell said that since his
graduation, he has learned elements of design and
computer technology from tapes of books. public
television programs and friends.
"I want to go into computer programming, but
I can't fulfill contracts," he said "I can't read
them ."
Carson raps magazine
Enquirer, writers called liars
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Comedian Johnny
Carson. in a departure from the us ual format of
his "Tonight Show," blasted the National Enqurrer
as a publication that traffics in "speculation" and
"innuendo ...
Carson told the audienc:e of the hit NBC-TV
variety show Tuesday night that the Enquirer,
which currently is defending itself against a $10
million libel s uit filed by entertainer Carol
Burnett. had printed a story that his third mar·
riage was heading for divorce.
He said the publication cited "close friends"
as a mong ils sources.
"I WANT TO GO ON record right here in front
of the American public, because this is the only
forum I have," said Carson. "They have this
publication, I have the show. This is absolutely
completely, 100 percent falsehoods . It's untrue for
openers.
"Now I guess I should be used to this.stuff be·
ing in the entertainment business as long as I h ave
been , but they also attack my wife in this
particular article. .and when they attack m y
wife, then I get a little bit angry
"Now I think it is becoming very aware in this
country, especially during the past few weeks ,
because of the national publicity via certain
lawsuits that bave been filed against this publica-
tion, how the National Enquirer works . It's based
on innuendo, it's based on gossip, it's based on
•
half-truths. it's based on speculation.
He said he had no plans to sue the publication
.. because I do not want to go through four or five
years of litigation in which they call friends in and
sources and put you through the mill. ..
"So I'm going to call the National Enquirer
and the people who wrote this 'liars.' Now that's
slander, or they can sue me for slander You know
where I am. gentlemen.''
Tax deduction
plan shelved
SACRAMENTO <A Pl A proposal to allow
Californians to deduct their federal income taxes
on state income tax forms died without a vote in a
Senate committee after a report the deductions
would cost the state $4 billion annually
Sen. Jim Ellis, R·San Diego, said he was
astonished at the revenue loss estimate given by
the Franchise Tax Board. but that he didn't dis-
pute its accuracy.
The board reported Californians pay an
estimated $33.2 billion annually in federal income
taxes and $7.5 billion in state income taxes.
l
I
prange Coatt OaJI~ P~t
'Closure delay
~ I
' ~will cost money
· Mooths or emotional deliberation over school cloeurea
: reached an anUcllmacUc noo~coocluaion when Fountain
· Valley School District lr\lltees decided not to close any
sites ror at least ooe more year.
The vote was close, with Cheryl Norton, Carol Mohan
and Betty Mignanelli ravorln1 tbe delay, while Shella
Meyers and Roger Belgen arcued ror closure of at least
one school. Even the trustees in the m-.tority conceded they are
only postponing the inevitable. But these three claimed
additional time is needed to develop a five.year plan that
will outline an orderly progression of school closures and
1 development of new programming alternatives, perhaps
including additional middle schools.
But the postponement is a costly move. Tbe district
had hoped to save about $1.a,ooo annuaJl.Y by .closing
either Bushard or Wardlow School, two sites with low
' enrollments.
School officials already predict they will have to dig
into reserve funds in order to balance the coming year's
budget. . . .
More pla nning is a worthwhlle goal. In f a~t. u the dis·
trict had done additional planning at an earlier date, the
one.year delay might not have been necessary.
In the meantime, the school board mus t confront
some hard facts: The state is unlikely to grow any more
generous witti education money. in . coming ~ears, and
Fountain Valley's enrollment. which is the basis for state
funding, will continue to drop. . .
At the same time, teachers and other dis trict
e mployee groups are becoming more militant and will
continue to demand regular pay raises to keep up with in·
flation.
In view of these prospects, trustees would have been
wiser and braver -to Close at least one school now to
avoid spending some of the reserve funds that un·
dou btedJy will be needed for future financial crises.
Dog law tricky
Huntington Beach city officials are considering an or·
dinance that would require registration of all guard dogs
so their locations could be listed in a computer.
The proposal has some problems.
The idea is to let emergency personnel, such as
firefighters, know where the guard dogs are so they can
be prepared to defend themselves against attacks while
on private property.
It is easy to sympathize with Cirefighters, paramedics
and police. It's no fun being chased by a vicious dog.
The proposal seeks to force citizens to sign a state-
ment if they believe their pet is a· guard dog.
The problem here is that some dogs' bark may be
worse than their bite. And who decides?
The definition of a "guard dog" most likely would
become a confusing issue of interpretation, making the
ordinance difficult to enforce.
Most of the problem seems to center around busi-
nesses that lease guard dogs. If that is the case, the com-
panies that train and lease them s hould provide the city
with a li st of their customers.
This would serve as protection for emergency person-
ne l and bypass the need for still another ordinance in a
city that already has too manv laws to enforce.
Cooperative neighbor
Fountain Valley residents and business leaders reg·
istered loud pr otests last summer when the Pacific
Mutual Life Insurance Company sought permission to
build a 14 -story office building at Brookhurst Street and
La Alameda Avenue.
The protesters said the city should stand by its cur·
rent height limit of 50 feet (about three stories). The Cit y
Council later supported th.is view.
Though it had a lot of time and money invested in the
14-story design , Pacific Mutual decided not to press for a
high.rise the community did not want. The company
withdrew its proposal and promised to reconsider the proj·
ect according to the community's wishes.
This month, the company kept its promise and re-
turned to the city Planning Commission with a revised
design that includes three three-story structures. .
AU three buildings would be within the city's 50-foot
height limit.
The recent meeting was solely to discuss the revised
design with city officials and community representatives.
No major objections were voiced, and a formal applica·
tion to build the project is anticipated.
Pacific Mutual should be commended for standing by
its promise to consult with the community on a new de·
sign and for altering its project with local standards in
mind. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dail~ Pilot, P.O.
Boi< 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Food tastes
ByL.M.BOYD
Q. What sort of commonly
known food is least liked by the
most people?
A. Buttermilk. The surveys
repeatedly show that. Second
on the leut liked list Is brains,
it's said, possibly be.cause of
avallablllt.y. You see a lot
more butt.ermilk than brains.
Other leut liked items, in
deacendinl order, are oys~n.
------\ lllllYC91 ................ ______ ,
First. they take
cl1a.-eue1 away from
us and now \bey ire
proPC»inl to take coffee
-(or our o.n 1ood, of
courae . Someday selen~ II aotftl to 10
too far.
F .&.
eggplant, turnips, clams and
parsnips.
How do you account for the
fact that the suicide rate
among women baa gone up 4:1
percent in the last lSyears?
Somewbel'e on earth, the
raln is fallin&, always. Never
lets up, say the weather folk.
They calculate there are about
• 1,800 thundentonn• an bour.
Also thia a1e of aate1Ut.es
prova that 10 times u maa.7
U1htnina ltorma oeeur o.er
laoduovenea.
Q. Uthe buck deer Joie t.belr
antlen •••1'1 1prtn1, bow come tbe fGrest floor ltD 't eov·
ered with t.blm? ..>.. PoteuplJm eat them. 8o 66t•'*"· mice, too.
II I jurJ SCoUand doeln'l
"aatto~adefmdant
plltJ or IDDoeeDt, tt can re-
tura a ""9letol ~·not p,..,.en." .
WbJ 4lld llr. ad~
call It .. A ........... lflllilt'I
Dream".._ UM ac!Uoa, ta
tact. oeewawe la UM l)lriq ol
t1M1•ar?
.
Thuttday, Matoh 19, 1981
JaCk Anderson
High~fl~g drug smugglers
WASHINGTON -Mll.)or drug
1mu111Ln1 or1anl11tJon1 are def·
inltely bit bual oeur even
thouah they 're not in the
Fortune ~ lttt of leadine cor·
· poratJons. In 1978 alone, for ex·
ample, Ullcit drug trafflc in the
United States ge ne rated an
estlmated SM billion in retail
sales.
Not surprisingly, the dope ped-
dlers have aped the corporate
s tructure of
legitimate
bu si n ess
firm s . "A
structured or·
ganization .
comprised of
b ot h le ·
gitimate
and il licit
businesses ,
e nables lbe
traffickers to sus t a in losses
without baving to halt all of their
operations," a classified Drug
Enforce ment Administration
study reports. The m asquerade
of respectability also makes it
tougher for law e nforcement
p eople to separate the legal
Mailbox
from tbe We1al activity.
The clualfied DEA atudy save
a detailed description of one
tar1e-scale marijuana and co-
caine amuJglinf operation that
was baaed ln lUnols, Georcta
and Florida. Int e llige nce
aourcea told my associate Dale
Van Atta the lnlormatlon was
developed on the outfit's ac·
tivltiea lo 1977 and 1978 from
both surveillance and inform·
ant.a.
HERE'S THE "t y p ical
scenario" for the s mugglers'
high.flying illicit operation ,
taken from the DEA report.
·'The aircraft would depart
the United States, usually from
a controlled airport, and either
fly directly to Colombia or via
o ne o f several Canbbean
islands. The plane would land in
Colombia after dark, where as·
sociates loaded and refueled the
a ircraft for the return to the
United States.
·'The group had access to
seve ral U.S. airpo rts and
airstrips capable of handling
large aircr aft. Several hours
prior to the a rrival of an
&lrcraft, a team or group sup-
port personnel , r anging (n
nnmber from 8 to 20, would ar·
rlve at the airstrip with multi·
wheeled vehicles, including trac·
tor ·traUers and 2 ton dump
trucks.
•'Electronic equipme nt, In·
eluding scanners, alr·to·ground
radios anc) CBs, would be used to
monitor law enforcement activi-
ty in the area and to permit
communications between the air
and ground crews . Upon arrival
or the plane, the ground crew
would use n ashlights to ii·
lumlnate the strip.
"THE PLAN ES u sually
landed in the early morning
hours and were offloaded by
means of a human conveyor
system; typically, a plane was
completely offloaded in less than
one hour. The drugs were loaded
onto the large vehicles a nd
transported to several storage
facilities and distribution points
in Missouri , Ill inoi s and
Georgia."
The smu~gling organization's
corporate tlrUcture was that of
any legjtlmat. conglomerate. Its
various companies served as
fronta to buy, sell and reSister
the vehicles and aircraft nt.sed.
Senior management set budgets
for the various activities, lnclud·
Ing acqulsltion of remote farms.
warehouses and airports to ac-
commodat.e the shipment and
storaee of the dope.
·•Eac h e mployee had a
specific job title and function.
and a dermite place in the chain
of command," the DEA report
said. The highest salaries went
-as in any legitimate corpora-
tion to top executives. But
t hose e mployees "directly
e ngaged in smuggling ac·
tivilies" also made top dollar
Pilots of the large aircraft, for
exa mple DC-4s. DC-6s and
DC·7s reportedly were paid
$1 00,000 per trip. while the
ground crews got $10,000 apiece
per mission.
NO SALE : Ray Sena was an
~mployee of Rockwell lntema·
tional for more than 20 years. He
was fired after he blew the whis·
lie on massive waste and mis·
handling of government funds in
the com pany's s pace shuttle
contract.
Sena has brought suit for $300
million against the company,
and reports that Rockwell has
made him a number of interest·
Ing settlement offers.
First, he says, he was offered
$12,000, then $18,000, then $25,000
and a job with another company
Final ly, he said, Roc kwell
emissaries offered him his old
JOb back. plus back pay and re·
im bursement for any financial
damages he had incurred. All he
had to do in return was drop his
lawsuit
Sena refused A Rockwell
s pokesman s aid nobody had
been authorized to make any of
fers on the company's behalf.
M eanw h ile. Sena 's
wh1stleblowing has had results·
The s pace conglomerate has
become the subject of t hree
federal investigations Sena sus·
peels there 's a connection
bet ween the investigations and
the company's efforts to get him
to drop the suit
Federal airport funds mean federal rules
To the Editor:
You and your newspaper and
others have recently printed
several misleading ·'letters to
the editor" that claim users of
the J ohn Wayne Airport. and not
the federal government, will pay
for its expansion.
The fact is the federal govern-
ment will pay for most of it.
These letters mislead Newport
Beach citizens who are a ware or
the consequences of federal con·
trot of the airport. Newport's ap-
prehension is not misplaced.
Indeed, the compromise
worked out between the FAA
a n<J the county already looms
om~otlsly over us. The com·
pr ise was that the FAA would
fun the purctiase of additional
land for the airport if the county
agreed to open up the facility to
more airlines.
THE CAB says the county's
noise abatement plan is illegal
and co un ty officials
ac knowledge the FAA will
probably be the agency challeng·
Ing the legality of county restric·
lions.
The county plans to get
federal grants for most of the
terminal expansion and runway
expaMion from the funds made
available by the Airport and
Airway Systems Development
Act of 1980. This act states
specifically that the recipients of
funds must foster competition
and prevent unfair methods of
competition in air transportation.
The federal government will
not fund a fancy, big terminal and
an extended, stronger runway
without enforcing airline "com·
petition." Which means In·
creased use of the airport.
If the t.erminal is increased
ninefold, wUI nine limes as
many jets taJce off over our
homes? Yes la proba bly the
right answer.
PAT LEWIS
lte9C r•,,e
To the Editor:
I believe it la time to declare
war on rape. Tbe rapist la an
ar10Di1t; With blm be canles the flrea ~ torment and de1tructioo. He 11 a buntem:. we are the hunted.
Small children or 1rown
women, it ~ekes no cl1tfel'enct to
lbeae deranCed lndlvlduala. I tee no reucm to be merclNl to a
penoa wbo lbowl 110 merq. wi.1
1bouJd ..,bodJ be 1ubJeet to the
individual wbc> lovee cleat.b and
d•tnacdan! SDoucb la noap.
II, 1q1ntlon 11 to make
rapl.tl pbnteally \&Qable to baw
eaual ~ bJ medlc:alb'
alterille lbelr 1•nttw. 1 r..a
ll111 •et ol lad1mnt ,irlU be
Mlleftdalto~
It wU l eliminate costly prison
terms for the taxpayers. but will
do little, I am sorry to say. for the
victim. other than the knowledge
that this individual will never be
able to inflict this violent crime
again.
DOUG KR EM ILLER
Clark •ale
To the Editor:
A recent Daily Pilot article
described Supervisor Riley as
"piqued" because Frontier
Airlines chose to announce its in·
tentions to buy quieter jets
through Supervisor Clark's office
rather than his. Really, it isn 't
pique, it's a n affront.
But everybody knows Clark Is
the point man for unrestricted
air port growth and mghts, which
endears hlm to the corporate af-
fluence of the Fluors. Smith ln·
dustries, Irvine Company. Koll .
etc.
Clark doesn't risk a single vote
because it is Riley's constituency
that is being immediately raped.
Other s may follow . but not
Clark's.
MORE POLITICS at the ex·
pense of a misguided public who
made the area desirable as a
Sydney Harri8
place to live The entire Newport
Beach-Costa Mesa area and its
elected officials had better be
mobilized to ft~ht airport ex
pans ion all the way!
Noise variances are an insult·
3·4. 8·10. how many in thP next IO
years? In the process. Clark sees
the area as a gigantic airport with
many hotels and an airplane take·
off every JO seconds, if need be.
After all. Fluor, Smith Industries
might not stay. or would not have
come here so they would Like us
to believe. After a ll , Clark's
altruism in this area doesn't cost
him a single vote.
This isn't progress because it is
a patchwork expedient for an
airport facility that was not sup·
posed to be. The supervisors have
mocked and misled the pubtic as
to their intentions over the years.
It is taxpayers' money whether it
is state. county or federal.
Relocate a regional facility now!
C.G SIEGLE
Park •lte1
To the Editor·
Recent newspaper photo·
graphs of the severe erosion of
the graded site north of Ford
Road and between Jamboree
Round-the-world quiz
We're going to take a fast trip
around the world l.n today's quiz,
and see how many countries and
areas you can identl/y from the
origins of their names. I haven't
chosen any obscure or dubious
ones (like "Canada," whkb
etymologists sUU argue about),
so one.quarter correct does not
seem to be aaklna too much.
l. Name at least three coun·
tries that are named after direc·
lions, or points of the compass.
2. What country Is named
after a metal?
3. Which countries are named
alter foreirnera who conquered
them?
4. Whal Iara• area or the
world ta named titer an animal?
$.What countl')''• n•me means
"land ot the aun·bumt people"? e. What countrY la named tor
the man who Uberat.d It from
foreip rv.le!
7. What people'• name means ''I'•• ftlb eaten''? t . Wbat cowrtry la 1t1med after
afamU1T
I . Wbat co&antry't na\f\e. ui.rallJ meam "llDd of tht ,,... .. ,
ANSWERS:
1. Austria (East); Norway
CNorth>; Viet Nam <South).
2. Argentina, after the silver
(' · a rge.nt") that was thought to be
burled there.
3. The Philippines, after King
Philip ll of Spain, and Rhodesia,
after Cecil Rhodes.
4. The Arctic, whose name
comes from the Greek word
meanin¥, "bear." (Ursa Major,
or the 'Great. Bear" conatella·
Uon, was Men in the North.) ..
5. Etblopla, formerly known
by lts Arable name of Abyssinia.
6 . Bolivia,, after Simon
Bolivar! the sreal liberator of
much or South America.
7. The Elkimoe, which la what
the name signifies in naUve ln-
dlan tongues.1 (Alt.hou1h, Uke
moat primitive peoples, lnclud·
•n1 American Indiana, their
name for lhemaelvH munt
simply "man" or ".,.ople," aa
d luln1ul1hed from other
creatUNJ.)
8. Saudi Arabia, after the lone·
nillQI Saudi family. t . Thailand. (Slam, ltl former name~u applied to It b)' ltl
nel1b .)
_,
and MacArthur reminded me of
the Grand Canyon.
I propose lhat Congressman
Robert Badham who failed to
gel us a national park between
Newport and Laguna might try
to get thls canyon area set aside
as a national park. It could be
named the Great Abyss National
Par k
Simultaneously , he might
work to incorporate into his na-
tional park the Upper Bay which
could be called the "Upper Bay
Meadow." Such a name would
appeal to the nostalgically
minded who would remember
that at one time the meadow had
been a bay.
G.L. de CARDENAS
'DUe .. e' •preau
To the Editor
The voters of Orange County
have witnessed delays at alrnost
every election in the length of
time it has taken county govern-
ment to tabulate the votes. Ap·
pa renlly. this "disease" has
s pread to the office of the Coun·
ty Tax Collector .
In looking at my bank records.
I find that the tax collector look
six weeks to clear my check for
the payment of my first install·
ment of taxes on Dec. 8 last
year, and further compounded
the matter by failing to clear the
check ror my second installment
which was mailed on Dec. 30 ~
the check has still not cleared as
of mid-March.
IN THIS DAV and age when
the country is facing budget
crises at all levels, I find It dif·
ficult to believe that Orange
County Ls so wealthy that lt can
afford the luxury of dragginC its
feet in picking up money sent in
by property owners and failing
to invest It for the benefit ol the
community; and this in an era
when deposits are capable or
e arning Interest income at
astronomically high interest
rates.
Perhaps this is a matter th1t
ahould be referred to the Grand
Jury ln order to determine JUJt
who is responsible for this able
or affairs and how far it impedes
the flow of funds to tbe ex·
chequeroftheCountyofOranp.
DAVID A. W. YOUNG
Th• olfic• of th• Count1t toz
Collector blamed o comp•Utr
breakdown for the dfkly b1 Pf'OCCU-
i"C1 ~tu ch«lu. E:ciltor
• L.ell•n ,,..,, ,.....,, .,. ... k-. "'· I ,. <~ .. =· '''·--·., t llll\11\Mt •
"........ • fl --·· ., -.. ~J:==~~°rtfAll=-.;;,~ '1: w"'1~~ • ~L.itti~· .... ,......,_. • 9'emt
11111T1w· et ._ ''""' lie ... Wfllktt\tll~
____ ... ___________ ~ .... .-...... ......... -....... , .......... -.. ....
I
I
, ~ORE OPINION . I
Bob Greene
.
Orang• Cout DAIL y PILOTfThurtday. March 19, 1981
P1111e•
...... ..,
People tend to defend Reagan· .
··-..cs ... ITS
GRAPEVINE. Texas -I have
been traveling for these lut few
weeks, talk.ins with a number of
people about a number of things.
In off houri -over dinner. over
drlnlu -the conversation
sometimes tums to politics, and
one fact Is becoming bright and
clear.
It is this:
' Americans are in no mood to
bear Ronald Reagan criticized.
In the brier ·
lime he has
been in office,
the new presi-
dent hu done
an amazing
job not only
of persuading
his COUn ·
trymen to
like him -
but of making
them feel that, in some way,
they should be protective or him.
I KNOW that is traditional for
a new president to enjoy a
"honeymoon" a brief time of
grace during which he is treated
with deference and courtesy by
members of both political
parties.
But what is happening with
Reagan seems to go beyond this.
He appears to be drawing out a
visceral affection from his coun·
trymen that would have seemed
impossible during last year's
campaign, when he was being
widely knocked as everything
from a low -mentality buffoon to
a red-eyed warmonger
I got my frrst hint of this a
couple of weeks ago, when l
wrote what I considered to be a
fairly low-keyed and good-
natured commentary about
Reagan. In the column l pointed
P,ut that, while he liked to tallt
about the beleaguered dollar,
Reagan himself never carried
money -he bad an aide handle
all bis cash. I said that it was
difficult to imagine a president
feeling real empathy for people
who were in financial trouble
when he didn't even know what
a wallet felt like io his own
pocket.
TUE RESPONSE from read-
ers was amazing . The
Reagan-money column was
written half in jest, but those
who read it were angry about it
almost to the point of fury. The
letters mostly read the same:
Ronald Reagan is a good man,
and we're sick of people in the
press sniping at him. He's going
to make our country better. and
we're in no mood to hear your
snide comments on whether or
not he carries cash.
And in my recent travels, this
feeling has been reinforced. Peo-
ple who voted for Reagan, and
people who voted for Jimmy
Carter and John Anderson, are
banding together in an effort to
give the president a chance
without undue criticism from
outsiders. They're doing this in a
way they never did for Lyndon
Johnson, for Ri chard Nixon, for
Gerald Ford or for Jimmy Carter.
WHY IS this? Part of it doubt-
less has something to do with
Reagan's famous public style.
He is so good at being soothing
and comforting that people tend
to be on his side even when they
don't completely agree with the
words he is saying. The words
aren't as important as the im-
pression he gives as a man who
is willing to try his best to make
things better.
Another factor may be
Reagan's age. During the cam-
paign, il waa widely assumed
that his relatively advanced
years miebt prove to be a detri-
ment to him ln the eyes of bis
count.rymen. But the opposite
seems to be comintt true.
Because Reagan ls older than
the rest of our recent presidents
-and, indeed, much older than
the bulk of the American
citizenry -he may be receiving
a certain kind of respect that is
due to the fact that not only is he
president, but he Is 70. When we
thought of Nixon or Ford or
Carter, they seemed like bigb-
level executives or prosperous
corporations, still climbing. But
Reagan's years place him in a
kind of dignified stratum to
which Americans are reacting
positively.
BUT THE MOST important
thing of all is that the citizens of
this country seem finally to be ·
tired of having every president
knocked for everything he does
and every human mannerism he
shows. For so long, critics have
made s port of presidents'
frailties -and now' the people
seem to be realizing that things
did not get better as a result of
all the meanness, and that in·
deed the nastiness toward our
presidents may have contribut-
ed toward our nation's low self.
image.
So in a sense, Reagan seems
to be the beneficiary not so
much or his own qualities, but of
the times. He is fortunate
enough to have come along at
precisely the moment when
Americans are in the mood for
some kind of national rebirth. If,
in recent years. it has been
fashionable to jump on a presi-
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•
dent tor every 1U1bt blunder and
Uny misstep, now the national
inattnct la lo 1tve President
Reaean the benefit of the doubt.
ALL TID8 may change at a
moment'• notice, of course. We
are a flckle people, and Reaaan
may use up tbla reservoir of
goodwill in one bad 24-bour
period. But for now. at leut -
in the eyes or a tl'aveler who has
spent the Jut few weeks liste~
lng to Americans talk about
what Is on their minds -the
odds are that Reagan ls going to ·
benefit from this new mood, in
which people are equating the
way they feel about their presi-
dent with the way they feel
about themselves.
"The new edl11on la dlvtded Into amoktng and non-
smoking eectlon8."
Jointsavin
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•
1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNER
$5 ftft SUPERI
e77DINNERI
()
0 c -0 0 z
Good IOf lhrff pltctt ot juicy, golden brown Kentucky
Fried Chicken, plua alngle aervlng1 or cole alaw,
mulled p0111oea and gravy, and a roll Limit two ollers
per purchaM. Coupon oo<><I only lor combination white/
darll Ofdera Cualomer paya all applicable aalea tu
Good IOf nine p1ecea ol 1u1cy, golden brown Kentucky
Fried Chicken. w•lh four 10111, a large cole slaw, 1 large
mashed potatoes Ind 1 meoium gravy L1m1t two ollers
per purchase Coupon good only lor combination wh•tel
d1r1t ordera Customer pays all 1pphcabl1 Hin lax I
I Oller e•pnes March 29 1981 Oller expue!> I Ma•ch 29. 198t
Prlctt may vary 11 p1r·
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Spring Sale
331h~o off on 5-Piece Place Settings and Selected Open Stock!
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POTTERY SHACK'S evtrJJdaJI low pric11. Th111 bargains include tM moat
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Children's Set ta alao on tale at 20% off/ Patt•rm aooilable for im~e
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HOUM: ~ltol
Phone Ordera Aocepted , cm 494-1141
1212 South Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, CA
r; •
r
'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT{Thuraday, March 19, 1981
APWtre ..... to
Strong staff
Stunts crazy,
man admits
NEW YORK (AP>-Byhlaownadmlssion,Jack
W a lab ls "cruy. ''
Asked to describe hlmsell, he says, "I'm 50
years old, 5·fOOl·9, weigh 190 pounds, my biceps
are 17 inches and my head ls stupid.''
To better understand this fellow. imagine this :
He lies on his back along the gutter of Seventh
Avenue and '7th Street and orders the driver of a
four·ton pick·up truck to run over his belly. which
he has covered with a one-inch board, while he
holds his breath for 20 seconds.
CRAZY, RIGHT? EXCEPT THAT it could
earn this Trenton, N.J .. strongman entry to the
Guinness Book of World Records. That's why he
did it.
Walsh performed the stunt before a gasping
crowd near an Iris h watering hole called
Sullivan's Bar.
The s treet s how was enhanced by nine
giggling women who. clutching their drinks. piled
into the back of the truck to add to its weight.
Painful progress
"IT'S STUPI D AND DUMB AND I'm so
nervous about doing it," admitted Walsh minutes
before. "It's the most difficult thing f've ever done
because you have to hold your breath. I passed out
the last time." A little TLC helped ease the road to
stardom for this apprentice ballerina in
Hingham, Mass. Three-year-old Jennifer
McArdle hurt her finger during practice.
but some concern and a quick kiss to the
injured area by Instructor Debbie Kerwin
made it all better .
Afterwards, Walsh s trolled into the bar to
perform some other. ·•more routine" tricks like
bending a three-inch long iron nail and teari~g in
two a full deck of cards
I
BEGINS AT
ROGER'S
GARDENS!
Welcome spring w ith splashes of fresh color You will find everything at Roger's to help you coax the
best out of mother nature There are those famous one-of-a -kind creations, a wealth of products and
services and the new nursery within the garden Get set for spring with top quality. values and expert
help from Roger's
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Fresh cut flowers brighten any room
We're offering spring savings on a ssorted
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grown snap dragons.
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Comfortable outdoor living and enter-
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of styles in patio furn iture and a o-
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delivery.
I NDOOR P LANTS
Enjoy special savings on two popular
favorites: 8 oz. of Oxygen-Plus with a 10"
Ficus Benjamlna ............... S2'9 .99
\
NU RSERY SCHOOL
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seminar on vegetable gardening.
Morch 26. 11 f\.M .
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make the job easy. beautiful and
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The popular and versatile Coprosma
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Coprosma thrives well in beach weather
and is used widely at Roger's Gardens.
1 gal. reg.
Sgal. reg.
2.98
s11 .do
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COLOR
For that colorful Roger's look
4 .. Marigolds reg. s 1.09 NOW
4 .. Begonias reg. s 1.09 NOW
S gal. Camellas
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$ .89
s .89
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NATION
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITICIUI MIMNHI '9CTITIOUI •UtJNHI
ll&AMll ITATeMaNT NAMtl tTATIMeNT TM fe1'°"4111 ,.,_ It ....... it¥JI· Tl\e IOll-lft9 ,.....,, ate ......
MAHI llMl•lneu ..
e .c . OOlltlNO co . UH IMl~O L.Al(f, 11'.0 . loll uot.
M4RH•WI• ..... No n . New"'' ..... ~ ~., •• wwue. M .....
aMCll, CA '*I 11,,.1.., a-:11, c:.tllonll• nw'.
aoe11lord C o .. r l llt , IUt C.IWlll M. Leullt & IC•IMffn II Mo11rowl• An , NO 12, Newpert 1.911f!t, *I ltad C.-11 Of' ...... H\lllt• aeKll, CA nMa 1"910ft a-:11, Celttoml• ,_.,
Tflla ....._, I• ~IN lly Oft 111-Cltmlftl lt.M. l....nt Mfl Cla"'°r
dM41wal. M Y L_,., .. .U AM C-11 Orlvo •
.._.,..,.. C. 0.0.-11\t HullllllOIOfl lle«h, C:.llt°'llle , .. ,.
Tl\la !llel_. ... lllM wllll llw Gole1011 Oek 111ve•IMe111, A
ChlllY Clef11 Of ~-CovnlY Oft C•lllotnle Uml!M P•rtlWOlllp, 161 ..
Fe41. 24, 1•1 •toth llovlev•rCI, Swlle 2St. H1111t·
,., ..... lftQlon 8HCI\, C:.lllornl• t»A1
11'111111....0 Orengit (OHi Delly PllOt,
Fel». 2', MllrCh S, 11. It, t ... I
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUI aUllNUI
Nit.Ml STAT•M•NT
,, ... ,
Tiie IOll-lnQ ,_,..,,. 11 clcHftQ l>u&l· neues·
Cahll11M.1..t1111Q
Thl1 &tel-t w•s llleel with the
Cou111y Cieri! OI Orange County 011
Merch J, 1"t
l'U1 ...
Publl&l'IOcl Or-COOS! Delly Pilot,
M.,ch S, 11, "· 1•, ltll 1202·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
JOAN GREEN & ASSOCIATES, ' mu kHtr•1 u11e, LaQu"" N10 ... 1,
CA. '7•12
l'ICTITIOUS auSINISS
NAME STATIMINT
Joen M. Green. 2tUS kotrol
Lene. ~NI-I, CA .,.,,
This ~lneu ts c-1.0 by on 111
:llwleluel
J°""M Gr .. n
This stet-I wu 111.0 wllll 1,..
Cou111y Clerk ot Ora"ge County on
Febr11ary 23. ltll ,.,,....
Pul»hstwcl ~-Coa11 Oelly Pilot.
Feb 1', -March s 11 It, '"'
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITtOOS aUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
.. ,.11
fne tollovrtlnq Pt'tOn 1\ dOU\9 Dust neu .,
BAI rAIN SUMMER TRIP, lll
W•kt Forest Road Co\te M e\•.
C•lllorr\IA 9'2b26
Mrs June Miii; Fenner Jll Wut
Foreu Road, CO\tA Mn•, Celllornl•
9161&
Tn1\ bus.1ne\\ '' conouoed bY •n •n
cJ1v10u•I
Junt Mitts FennM
fh1\. \t•temer1t wa\ fitt<t with Hw
Counly Cieri< 01 Or•nge (oun1v on
M•rch l, 1981
FUIO.J
Publl•ht'<I Oranqe Co.t•I 0 .. 1, P11ot,
M•r<h S, 11, 19 a . 1911 tOIO 81
PUBLIC' NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8USINIESS
NAME STATEMENT
The tollow1no ~,~ 1\ 001n9 bu\1 rteu .,
LA BIBLIOTECA, CULINARY
INFORMATION SERVICE P 0 Bo•
tlM>J, HIS El.,._, A••n..e (Mt• M•••
C•hlorn1• 91'27
HerDtrl K Allf\ HIS EICltn
Av•nut C~I• Mtw C111torn1• ''1•11
T"1\ Du\•ne-!t\ '' conouc •~o b v •n 1n
01v10u•I
Htrbtrt I( Ahn
fn1\ st•tef'nent ••i •11.ci w1tn tne
County Cluk of Orin~ (ountv on
Marth l 1911
FISllM
Publ••ned Orolnqe (o.t'1 D•llY P•IOI
M•rcll s. t2 I~ 16 1911 t0)3 ft
The 1011ow1n9 per10111 .,e do•nt 1>u1t11eu .,
THE RIGGING CO, 2801 W CoalJ
H1onw•y1 Newporl 8e•cn, C•lifOt'nlf
~1"3
L•wr~• Alilt\. Mor941n, .... 1•1 tllf'll
Slrtel, Co<i.Meu, C•lttorr\I• •2626
~m ll•l'•ro, JOMJ Hunter Lane. H1.1ntin~1ton S.•cn. C.•••torn•• 9h46
Jrus bu\1rM~' ., conoucieo or •
Qtn•r•I Nt•ner\n1p
U•r.,..<• 4 M0<9.tn
f "',. "•••me-nt •• , hleo ""'"' ,,. County (l•rl< of Oran99 Cour\ly 011
M.,(n 10, 1991
FUlJ• Pubh~ OranQO: C.o .. t O••IY P olOl, MAr(n 12 19, l• AP,.11 1911 t2St 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
r nr to11ow1ng per \CH\\ •re aoino
0'-ft.•neu •t.
TRENT, BRAKt<E ANO SCHAF
NI f Z, L fD , 1481 l Neille G••I Ro.O
L•own• H•H\, C•hforn•• CJ'OS3
R ooert E W'1eel~r. Mana;1no
C,tntr•I P•rtner of Tren1, L IO d
(t;tllrorn1d ~nerat pdrlner\hfO. 14811
Ntll1t G•1I Ro•d, La;una H dh,
C•l1torn1• 'n•SJ
JomP\ G 8ratli ._l' Gl'nerttl
P•rtntr or Trl!'nt t..td tt C•l1Jorn1t1
Qtntr•I partnership 1•SJ1 Broi.•n 811
L•nt1. ldQYM H•'''· C.•l1forn1• 426.>l
C..ltonn W ttrttllk•. 8/l Br•Oford
Str et-I Pomon• Cal1torn1• '11164
MdttrM"w F Scnatn111, 11c>11 F1tcn
Avt'nut Ir w•ntt. (•hlorn1d 92114
f t'U\ bUS1nf\S I\ (OnOu( tf'd bv d
Qtnt'rdl p.1rtn~f\tup
rRENT l ro
t>y Rootrt E Wnt.-.ltr
~n1tQ•nQ C.f'nf''•' P.trtf'\t•
r n., >ldlttnent w•\ tt1ea wun tne
Counl 1 Cito ot OrMlQie tounty on
M•rc.n 10 1911
I' lSIS411
Put>h\neO Ordf\9" C.o.i\t Oa1ty P11ot Mctr n '1 l'Q 1•. Apr11 J 1Qlt UJQ 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS aUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
f ntt IOflOW&l\0 Pf'r \On\ ., t d01no
PUBLIC NOTICE bu\'"'""' SHELLV S MEAT SHOPPE. 1UOO
NP-PO' I Boulevard (ost• M r\il
H 1 t'°' (tUtfO' n14' <t1•11 SU PERIOR COURT OF fHE Sri.1don D Kor•P4H•tk. ••1
STATE OF CALIFORNIA b<Ooelw~y C.o\14 Meu C.el1 lornoa
FOR THE <;OUNTY OF ORANGE ~1•11
CASE NO A1010S1 JtTan 11t.1rkp"1r1(k, "b2 BroiMJw~v.
NOTICE OF PE RSONAL C0\14 Mn •, Cal1lorn1.; •lt.11
AEPRESEHTATtVE'SSALE. OF TrH\ bu\.nf'\\ I\ conoucttCI b\I an 1n
REAL PROPERTY AT 01¥1dUAI
PRIVATE SALE Jtttn Ku11.pdlt1c1o.
Prob C ll0.112 l n ... \ldltmfnl 111rt•\ file<J w ith the
E\11:Ht or (oun1 'f (.,,.,, 01 Or•nof' County oo CARRIE A CHASfAIN M•"n IU l'ltil
WELT V •i OE"r\Ot\61 'f'0ft-\4tnt•t•'IP Of PuOll\f"tt"O OronQe COcl\t Octtlf P1tol I Nol•to """'fbY Q• .. n lh4'l J" i.v t l l F lSIS11
In• ~\t•I• ol CA~RIE A (.HASTAIN M .. tn IJ ·~ 'b Aprotl ·~e· 1/li081 oe<.t•..eo will '\f'll •• pnv•t .. ,.,,._. to
IP\~ tuQl'\t"\l ano Oil"\t b•Odf'r undf'' '"'°
tto,-m~ dnd ton<J•fl()n\ hPr•;n•ttrr '"".,."
t1onrd •nd Wb1tr t 10 <untum•C•on th·
th'" Suswnor Court. Of'I Mar• n /'!J "" 1
'' 10 00 AM .. ,, lf'Mtr .. •ttf,. w1tf\1n tM
ttmt •llowf"O o. •dw di int oft1t.-. o• ~
NORMAN BLA rl .t11Dr"11!'y tor tnf'
~rM>n•I 'tC>'hf'nto1I v• .ti !>u•ll' t()JE
1101 E Parke urt Phtt • .,.."'• An•
c. ~2101 d i '"f' r•ont ''"'" .n'"'""' •nd l!'\t•te of I~ ~tf'•\to •nC:S •I· thfl
r1Qh\ t•\h• 11\lrrp\I •nd •\l•I• th•I tnr
E\lalt 04 CARRIE A CHASTAIN Cl~
Cf'•\fd hd\ dtQUlrtO O't OC>f' dllOn ot
l•w or ottwrw1\e otMr tnlM"t or tn .a
0111on to. trwt of t~ Ot<t•sf'!O •t tht-
t1mt ot n•\Of:•tn 1nandto tt1t '"''''' l•1n rtt•I proewrty \1tuc1t.o •n thr Ctl't'
ot Santa An• 0'd"0" County
Ca li torn1d , commor1it CSt)U 1tH-O 11
llH N O•l<monl \lff"I Ancj lurl""r
O~\C,.tbf'd ·~
LOI 10, on Bloc>< B of f ••ct J/8, Oe•,
mont Park, •\ \hown on a M •P ,,.
c.orOtd 1n BoOk 1~ ttl P•~ • of m1\
ctllan~ou'i mao\, Re<o, o~ ot Or •nor
County, C.tl1,orn1a
Tn1s sale is \U01f><t lo currt'nt td•t''
covttn•""'· co"d1t1on\, rf\lr1ct 1on\,
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 01' AVAILABILITY
OF ANNUAL REPORT
f.#ur \udnl to~' t1on lt10Af0 o• \nf' ln
lt·rn1111 'lt'Yf'ni.llt (.OOt> not1(f' • ., '°lt''f'Oy
Q1vf'n tt\91 tnt> •nnu•I rt'i)Or-t fOf' tr\f"
(ALENDAA , ••• •vllOOI GEORGE r
PF LEGE II FOUNDA flON • Pro••••
tounO•l•on. 1-. •v.t1l4IO•t 41 '"" lourtda
t•">n s P"l"KICMI Otlt(f' tor 1nSP*( lion
Gurin; r19ut•r bu\1ne'\\ nour\ trom Ii
• m to Sp m O• ttny t•hltn wno rP
qut\ti It W'tln1n llO d•1\ •fttr t~ Cl•Je-
01 I"•~ o-ubl1<•t•on
T "* 1ouna.-1on s o•••tt t\ loc•teo ar
\uflt 1'1 1\01 W E-\l(ldl Or1vf
Nf•OOrt 8•~nn C•l1f0fnt•
r f'if' pr1nc 1pa1 rn•t'WOe'f or tne rovn
da"o" I\ GEORGE T PFLEC.ER
Put>lt\hed Of' ttnoe (oa~1 OaJ1~ Pilot
Mar<rt 12 1"81
I JOI 8
PUBLIC NOTICE
ru•r.,t1on>. roQhl\, r.9hl• ol w•y FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
e•\.emenh. and t1u\t1nQ tncumbr•nc~s NAME ST• TE ME NT
ot record T nr tof10..r1no Pf''M>n '' do1no ous1 Tne terms •nd concht1on\ o t .,,,. .,.,. nf'\\ tn
.,. C•"1onlawlulmonrrollh•Un•I MOUTAIN EMPIRE f1 N4N
ed St•tt\ o• Am~,.1ct1 f•n p~rc•nl ot C.IA1 ::,. Rut Cnant111v Npwport
lhf' •mouot b•d to •uomo~v '""" offrr 8e•cn C..11torr11• '12000
•nd the balance to b~ N•O on con S•mUif'I Che\!'. :: f Rue-C.na t'lt•ll•
f1rm•t1on of i•I• by tne (0Url T•tif\ Ntwport Bf'•<h Cahtonrtd cn060
rpnts. OC>ftt!lhnQ •nd m•1nt.-n•n<t r .-Tn1\ OU\1MU 1\ <-on<JuClfd O'f '" 1n
pensf\, and orrm1um\ In 1n\urttncf" 01v-1ova1
•cceot•bl• to tM purcndH'' \h•ll Df' S..murl c~s.s
prorateo tt\ or tnt d•tt of rKord1n; ot fh•\. st•ttnwnl wa\ '''"° w1tn tl'te
the c.onvr-vance rne t ••m•n•t1on ot 11 Co ... n1y (ltr'-ot O'•"Of" County on
tlf" f"fCOf"ChnQ or conv•y•nc• •no •ny M •rtn tO t<ftl
tltte 1nsur•n<r oohcv '\n•ll two' •t t~ FU1St1
••~nse of uw purcf\4\tr PyOll\hed Or.,,grt COlst O••IV Pilot~
81ds or offer., ara 1nw11eo tor tn1\ M•rcn 11 1~ ?& Ap.-11 J 1911 US04f
proprrly •nd musl be 1n ••tr1ho9 .tna ••II 04' rtc••veo •t thf otf•cf' ot !> NORMAN BU.Cl< •ltOrr\ty tor lllt
pe:rson•t re-pre\enl•ttv• •t Su1tr 101E
1801 E P•n.court Pl.f<.f S.nt• An•
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ce 91701, or m•y bl' t1llCI w1lll '"" FICTITIOUS auStNESS
Clorl< of I"" Superoor Courl O• dt NAME STATEMENT
l1 ver•o to JEWELL WELTY Pt'f\Of'l•I fnf fOflOWllWJ ~r\On ,, do1n; t>U\1
·~. •• .iny t•mt' after first publl<•flon 01 n•t \ •s llllS notoce M>CI bo'IOr~ me1<1n9 I ... Hie 0 E LU X E FURN I T U A E
For furt""r 1nlor m•loon •nCI l»ld HOSP! fAL, 117 A•oUdo Slrttl, C0\16
rorm• •PC>IY al 1,,. oll1c• ol ltwo •I Mu •, C•lllorn•• q1U1 torney tor tN ~r\On.11 rt!'prr\irnt.i1vt W1fl1•m V far.-we11, 1119 Or•nge
Tiit rlQITI "r~•l'f•e<I lo ,.,.,, •ny Avenue, Casie Me~. Cellforn1a 92611
and •II bicts fhl\ bu11nflu I\ conoucteo bl' •n in
O•ftCI M••ch 2S. '"'' dlvidu•I
JEWELLWELTV Wllll•m G F•rewtll
•• ~r\0081 Rtprt"'"l•llvt Thi\ >t•lemenl wu Ille<! with lh•
of CARRIE A CHASTAIN, Counly Cieri< ol Orttnge Counlv on
dece.ufCI March 10, , .. ,,
S. NORMAL BLACK
Allernt y tor Peno11•I Ret1rHe11le110
Suite t01E
11101 E. Pertlc011rt Pfeu
Se1t1• AM, C. t2701
Publishod Orttnge CO•\I Delly Piiot,
Merch 11, 13, 19, 1"1 1.l02·11
P UBLIC NOTICE
FU7ff0
Publ•'hed Orange COUI O•••v Pilot,
Marc It 11, 19, U, Aprll 1, 1911 12$3·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS
NAM« STATIMINT
T ... loll-1119 per..,.. I\ C1ol119 buSI·
n .. su
CALL l'O•••os PETTINGILL MARINE, 111
TO •«NT lt«SIDINTIAL A•vtrstde Avenue, •F, Newpori
ll'ltOf'•1tTY &Hell, CahfOMi. 9""3
NOTICE IS HEREBY G ii/EN 11\al Roller! Event "-111119111, 1205 0.k
Ille Boero of ~Ison ol t,.. County H••en, A~ln\, Calllornl•
ol 0••1199 lnltnds lo loase to lht This busl,,.H Is c-leCI by "" Ill
hlgllasl ~ Oii • moflll"4o-molllll o lv1C1u•1 Wsls, cerUln rosldotlll•I •H I ,,,._,. Roti ,..11111911
ty, M IOllQino"' the County ol O•OftQO, Tllll st•l-1 WH fllecl wilh IM
commonly Oetcrltleel •• 310 Ulllvonlly county Cl•" ol or...,91 count y on
Orlvo, and U(Ulllvorslty Drive, Costa Merell 10. '"' MOM, Calllomla. Prepowh lo ronl ,u,116 u l4' P•-1ln rnllll lie wtlmlttect 111 Publltlled Or.,91 Coal! Delly Pllol,
wr1t1110. Oii lorm1 provleled by tll• M•rcll u , tt, 11>, ""'ii 1. 1'11 Uj9-tl C01111ty of Orenoo. 111 welod e11v••-•.
lo 1110 Clerk ol tho loerCI ol Slltlervl~ Adl'll1t1111t•t..., a1111t11nt.
Room -.s. 10 Clvk Ctnter Plah, Sant•
PUBLIC NOTICE
Alli, C•lltor11le, evw. alld m11Jt.,. ,.. ,.CTITIOUS •USINIH
CtlYOd by lllO Clerll •I M id ... ,..,, NAM• STATllMllNT
lltloro 2:00 p.m,. -•y, Aprll •, Th• 1011owt110 pers0ft1 ere dol"O
1"'· 111 onlef lo lie ollOlllM. Ho lal• lllltlt1eu •s.
bids Ot etel,llldt •Ill lie Cortll4'tf't<I. RETIREMl!NT PROPERTY ••,.l•I Pt'GPQttl lorm1, Ind ecldlll..,.I lnlorm•tl9ll at IO the llH'mt alld c-I· PAltTNER$HIP, 50J 1111l SlrMI, 1-411111·
tlOllt Oii wlll<ll the ,,.....,lies Wiii bo lllOIOll llM<ll, Celllorllla ,_...
, .. -. ll'WIY .,. obtall'lltcl from· ltotff O.rek •lld CNllllM PoPe, ,..,,
c 11nnlllQl\am , OSA/llo•I eat•I• Rooaevetl I.•"°· Hu11tt119ton ltHlt, CollfOtlllt '2M'I, 01¥111111, Clunty of 0rlfttll, ~Clwl( Q.,y e11C1 Corot Cl•ni, SO> 11111
C•llltr Orin WHI, ••11•• All•, ,., •••• Hlllltl1\910ll ... 11. ColllOnll• ColllWtlla '2l'02. lltletll*W 11u!Mef': '2UI.
OU) &t+lUO; ,..fir ... ll' .. f4KI Y .. , LlllOl'lacl OOl\Hle\, 4J .. ~off.
UnlHt'lllly 0t1..... ' •· t "·•I ~-• 0• ... 1 '"*'-Yu. ,., -•• eac:n, -,_,,,. t01.a.
ay 01t0•1t Olt fMl IM)AftO OP O.fl! Cl•fk, t022 A .. 11. Cltcle,
IUf'lltVISOIU orr OltANOe H11nll...,,IM<ll,COllfcwnl••--· ~Iii TV, CAl..-OltHIA, ~ Utlfw, Ml Htll lt""4, H1111·
t•eAI.) JUNa Al.ll(ANOlll llrttlOll -..Cll. CelNetnlU2'4. OttlMUtlew (..,.., .... ~ Tiii• .... _, ... ,.,. •ltlt ... °'1 •1 ,...,.. c-1, (let"-ot OtM91 C..flty on
•Oreftllc:..M\r,CA Merell 10, '"' ......... Or .... QMl I.lolly ll'llet, ,.,.,.,..
Ma~ t, M, II, It, U, 1'-U, II. It, 1"114111.,... 0r-.. CMt1 Dairy ~.
M. "" IO .... , Merell n. tt, ... A(llfll t. ,., UINI
I
GENERAL NEWS
N8v.y
I'
CO RONADO <AP) -Since
1955, a 257-acre s trip of
state-owned beach south of thls
affluent community has been the
si te of d oze n s o f m oc k
amphibious assaults by armed
naval forces.
Those mock battles over the ·
deserted beachhead have turned
into the real thing, at least on
paper, a fter a Na vy offi cial
declared his intention to ask
Congress to condemn the land
and hand it over to the Navy.
The decision by Rear Adm.
John Paul Jones. commanding
offi cer of the Western division of
the Naval Facilities Engineering
Com mand at San Bruno. stems
from a dispute with state park
officials over the upcoming
n egotiation s f o r l ease
of the property.
-....... ,. ............ .., ........ -. ' ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thursday, March 19, 1981
MCCartney makes list
Famed Beatie now in British 'Who's Who'
LONDON <AP > -Paul EmpirebyQueenElizabethllfor "lt'sa bit crazy,"hesaid.11t'
McCartney finally has joined·the ''servicestothenation." took fou r of them. It's 100
r a n k s o f t h e B r i t i s h percent or nbthlne."
Establishment -the ex-BeaUe A S POKESMAN FO• the McCartney's entry lists 23 of
is listed in the 1981 edition of publishers, Adam and Charles the hits be composed with
"Who's Who." Black , sai d o f the r ock Lennonfrom "LoveMeDo,"the
The 39-year -old rock music musicians' long omission from Beatles' first British hit in 1962.
s uperstar, son of a Liverpool the reference book : "Their to "Hey Jude" in 1968. It also
fa<;tory hand now reputed to reputations may n ot be detailsMcCartney'scareerafter
eal'n $50 million a year, gets a altogether permanent. We were · the breakup, parti~ularly his
41 -line listing, more than many very doµbtful about the Beatles success with bis band, Wings.
judges, politicians and other as fouf separate people. We M cCartn ey is th e on ly
publi c figures. wanted to wait and see if they ex -Beatie to have consistently
While McCartney was given made a continued mark, which made hls mark In show business
the accolade, neither of the J ohn Lennon and McCartney since the split. have done." other two s urviving Beatles, It was not clear whether John G eorge Harrison and Ringo Starr. was mentioned in the Le nn on , M cCa rtn e y's
famous 2,800-page red book, songwriting partne r 1n the
whose l a t est editio n wa s Beatie days, would have made
published today. "Who's Who." He quit mµsic for ~lord .. ner
University of California of-
ficials, Ber keley, have a n-McCARTNEY MAY be the
five years and had just laun ched
a musical comeback when he
was slain outside his New York
apartment Dec. 8.
HE HAD A MULTIPLE listing
in the Guinness Book of Records
two years ago as the most
s,uccessfuJ composer of all time,
with 43 songs that sold a million
copies each: winoer of a record
63 gold discs with the BeaJ!es
and Wings; the world's most
successful recording artist. with
estimated global sales of more
tha n 100 million singlei and 100
million albums.
nounced t h at Presid e nt only personality in the tome,
Dav id Saxon h as condi-widely regarded as the last word
tionally accepted a three-in social standing, to have a
month fellowship next fall at string of drug busts to his name
O x f 0 rd u n i v e r 5 i t y in -although they are discreetly
o"'itted. England. The UC Board of Re declined comment on his
Regents is expected to gra nt elevation, but many felt it was
Saxon a leave when it m eets long overdue.
Friday. rt came nearly 19 years after
Call 642-5678. years after the lads from
The publisher's s pokesman
commented that Harrison and
Starr "have rather faded from
the public eye." The Beatles
broke up in 1969.
AP W1rephoto
The st.ate is demanding more
public access before approving a
lease for the Navy's continued
use of the site in 1985. Rather
than make concessions. Jones
asked for full control of the
beach. [ We Beatles became famous and
Put a f ew words verpool were made Members
___ t_o_w_o_rk_lo_r ..... y_o_u.__, tbe Order of the Britis h
J OHN CHAMBERS OF the
Beatles fan club in their native
Liverpoo l w e l co med
McCartney's accession to the
Establishment. but criticized the
c ontinued snub of the other
Beatles.
Among other new entries in
this year's "Who's Who" were
author Andrew Boyle. whose
book "The Climate of Treason"
unmasked roya l art histori an
Anthony Blunt as a one-time
Soviet spy, and actor Tom Conti
wh o won acclaim on Broadway
for "Whose Life Is It Anyway ?"
NEW PRESTIGE
Paul McCartney -==-=======::======-======-=-=======::==---~
E~ecutlve Offices. 7812 Edinger Ave.,
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
Southern C11ltlorn1a Regional Oll1ces
5677 E La Palm.:> Ave . Anane1m, CA 92807
8955 Valley View St. Buena Park, CA 90620
1656 Arnell! Rd .. Camartllo, CA 93010 20715 S Avalon Blvd., Carson, CA 90746
23021 Lake Cent8' Or. (Lake Forest), El Toro CA 92630
1001 E Imperial Hwy. La Habra, CA 90631 G:l 41ot0 Long Eleach Blvd . Long Beacn. CA 90807 :
22939 HawthOrne Blvd . Torrance CA 90505
1095 Irvine Blvd . Tustin. CA 92680
235 N C11tus Ave.. West Covina. CA 91793
"'Mercury Room"' ava1labla on a reserver1 basis
CALL MITZI WELLS
FORA
lQllAI
HQU'iUH;
lfNOf O
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN-
INTEREST ONLY ! Newport,~~~!~~!.~2"~;,'f'.'.c ~
(714) 760-6060 .
Everything
you've~s
wanted in a
Seafood Platter
I
••• and it's only $349
• Crispy Fish
• 2 Tasty Shrimp
• 2· T •!Ider Scallops
• Fresh Cole Slaw
• Crunchy Hushpupples
• Golden Fryes
C>1•1 us
CWngGjohn8iJver~
SEAFOOD SHOPPES ~
14111 "!t'!~T Ro~
lntne _ .. ._ ... ...,,
• I
If weeds and other pests are taking over your yard we have
the products to help you keep them under control.
GERMAIN'S
BLUE-GREEN
LAWN SEED
~lb box
"" 5.99
3.88 .
YOUR CHOICE
TRUE TEMPER TOOLS
Pointed shovel (#SLO).
rake INSB14) or hoe (#SG6)
4.88 ea.
33 PLUS
LAWN WEED
KILLER
Pint
""· 4 19
2.88
"NEW" ORTHO KLEENUP
WEED & GRASS KILLER
24 oz trigger spray
Ready to use . Alt. U9
2.88
SALE DATES: Mar 20'thru Mar. 26
QAAD!N QROYI
1701 Garden Grove Blvd.
537·1571 or ns-un
Optn: Mon thru Fri. a to 9 Sat. 8 to o Sun. I to O
•• 1
CORRY'S
SLUG & SNAIL DEATH
I 2·1/4 lb
"" 2.79
1.88
Al"WI .......
New k i d on blof!k
Connie. the collie pet of Mike Tompson of Grass Valley,
doesn't let this kid get her goat. When the new~rn
pygmy goat, Sally. lost her mother. the collie readily. ac·
cepted the nursing infant and, as we see, dutifully hcks
her clean.
Boxing in barroom
• • • arouses cr1t1c1sm
NATION
Des pite ple a
Nancy won't stop ivear.i,-,g mink
WASHJNGTON <AP> -A full·lncth mink coat w* •he U Mn. Reacan knew all lbe I oat La• small_ part of what ahe
1roup wbJcb oppoaea ldJUn1 accompanied President Reacan fact.a, the committee said, abe 1 Posner> ls talklnc about. If she
anlmall to make fur coata aa,ya to Canada lut week. The f\lr wouJd consider the "lnvlalble, feel• her point of view is of
lla effort.I to have Nancy Rea1an reportedly cost about t.25,000. but very ~al cotta, in animal universal concein to people, she
atop wurtn1 her mlnk coat have Tbe committee said it "was au!ftring and death of wearin1 ou1ht to focus her efforts on a been Te buffed by tbe White made of lbe skins or probably ~ fur." and decide not to do It. I.ar1er education campaign." Houee. to 60 9-montb-old mlnb." 1
Jn a letter to the While Houae, ln a preaa releue, the Ms. Patton said she bad a WIOLE 118. Patton said she
the Commltt.ff for Awareness committee uld lt aoucht a ''long conversation" with the had not d.iacu.aed the issue with
About Fun requested a meeUna meetln1 with Mrs. Reagan aft~r head of the committee, Andrea the flrst lady in detaU, "she's
with the lint lady to explain its lt became apparent that the Posner, "and I suggested what aware of the queaUons that have
posUion. The group said it glamorous, high-priced style or she might consider dolne la been asked of me. I think it's in·
received a form letter r~sponse the new Reagan admlnlstraUon taking her views to the public teresting that this is directed
aaylne the request was denied. was causing an upsurge of generally. The fact that Mn. just at Mrs . Reagan. Why not at
ShelJa Patton, the first lady's interest in luxury furs. Reaean wears a ranch mlnk all prominent women?"
press secretary, said she dldn 't lf!llliiiim;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;illiiiiiiii;;;-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;Oiiiiiiiilllila;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:====;;;;;;;:;=;;;;;;;;;;i:;:;:::;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.m;;;;:-.-... thll)k Mra. Reagan " cares lo com-
ment on the substance of the areu·
ment at this point. The wearing of
furs is a subject that women all
have personal opinions on."
ASKED WHETHER Mrs .
Reagan intends to continue MARKET wearina her fur. Ms. Patton
replied: ''I'm sure she does."
The first lad y wa s
photographed in her new DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
Di1tribution
of B i ble1
1tir1 flap
FRESNO <AP> -Some San Joaquin Valley students are
receiving Gideons Bibles at
school in spite of legal opinions
against their distribution.
REPEAT OF A SELLOUT
Fresb fillet of PactRe Bed S.apper l .zt lb.
Fresh FUet of Nortbera Sea Bau .. 2.98 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top choice bee( aged al least 30 days to the
peak of perfection.
Thick Juicy Loadoa Broll Steak or
Reg. CUt Top Round Steak .......... Z.98 lb.
Boneless RolJed Beef Roa•u ........ Z.t8 lb.
Lean Center CUt Chuck Roasts .... 1.19 lb.
Lean Ground Beef <Ground Hourly> .... 1.39 lb.
CANDEUTE HEAT AND EAT FOODS
P repa red Fresh Da lly From Delaney's Own
Kitchen.
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Extra Large Fuerte Avocados ...... 4/1.00
Fresh Local Asparagus ............ 9k Jb.
So. American Bananas ........ 3 lb. for l.00
Green Onioas and Radishes ...... ltc bunch
F ROM DELANEY'S BAKER\'
Carrot Cake .. \ ................. 1.98 ea.
Apricot Almond Cake ............ 1.98 ea.
DELANEY'S WI NE CELLAR
Delney's Private Label Chablis or
Vin ROM' Win~ 1750 mil>
Beringer Cbenlo Blanc 1750 mil> Scoresby Scotch 1750m1l1
or f l liter 1
l.69 ta.
3.7S ea. s.ss ea.
6.85 ea.
Some Merced County school
districts permit issuance of
Gide ons International New
Testament although the county
counsel's office has written
several opinions declaring the
practice illegal.
LA VERNE (AP> Deputy Attorney General Ron Russo says Trustees of Dos Palos Unified
he'll notify city officials that unlicensed boxing matches at a bar School District approved a
Stuffed Baked Potatoes .......... 9k ea.
Encblladas with Sauce .......... 1.41 ea.
~agraos VO c I liter J 10.80 ea.
All liquor a nd wine plus tax
Ba. ha'f' fire. side"\J>a -'hi ti (a)r -.srd\ n:
where patrons can wear boxing gloves and fight in a ring violates a request from the Protestant
penalcodesecionthatsays "fightingisacrime. basically." o rganization to offer
Russo said he was acting on behalf of the state Athletic pocket-sized versions to fifth
Commission, which determined it has no authority to halt the graders this month.
matches. Copies o f the G i deons
Meantime, Vic Ayvazian, 21, of Duarte, remains in critical paperback also were given to
condition in a coma after a bout at the bar last week. pupils at Liberty School in
Lynn Miller, owner of The Last Chance Saloon. said boxers at Tulare County. A s im i la r
his bar sign waivers of liability and take blood pressure tests program was approved recently
before being matched with opp<>nents of roughly the same weight. by Pixley trustees .
... iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiililliiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii1
Shr imp Curry .................... Z.41 ea.
FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE <ISO mfnlmuml
ThlS ad effective Wed., 3 18 lhru Tues . 3124
DELANEY'S
Pe psi 12 oz. six pack. Diet or Re!!ular 1.99
Store Hours 9-6, Closed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd .• Newport Beach
67 3-5520
informal discussion about the Baha'i Faith (founded 1863, by
Baha'u 'llah) and Its principles of world unity, the oneness of
mankind, and the essential ag reement of all religions. Sometimes ac·
companied by a short, Informative talk. Usually attended by a
diverse group of friendly, intereste d people. Open to all. SYNONYMS
see absorbing, thought-provoking, fun, enlightening. See also Peace,
Unity, Love, Equality, World Government, Justice.
RUSSO'S INVITES YOU TO ENJOY
BAHA'I FIRESIDEI FRIDAYS, 8 P.M.
NEWPORT BEACH 640-9010
wh111nil19 Pool
Splash Into Spring
Build Now Before
Summer Price Increase
Exquisite custom built pools. constructed to
exacting standards by a local firm that stands behind
their work.
From your original idea to the finished pool. you
couldn't be in better hands.
SAVE
20°/o
.NOW
Spec/al/zing In Elegance & Quality
• Pools
• Spas
• Decks
• Custom Brickwork
• Landscaping
• Fountains
• Sprinklers
• Drains
• Patio Covers
SAVE
20°/o
NOW • Waterfall
Getting
E1timate1P
CALLUS ANO
COMPARE
YOU'U BE GLAD
YOU OfOI
·cAL. STA UC. #38&174 SSl-9185
''•" a '"'•' AutttorltJ wm be
here to •n•••r · , ... , ......... .. . ,..... .... .
....... 11.11 .. °"" 7.,. ...... Weelutlfltl• 'tit t , ..............
Tetra's Wonderful
World of Tropical Fish
Sale Good thru March 22
BrllWTowaA Coma try
Tetra Min
• Complete fish diet
• World's leading hsh food
• All natural
iogred1ents ro
enhance growth.
color. spawninq
~oz. Aeg. 2.31
Sale 1.59
GUARD THE LIFE IN YOUR TANKI
WE'VE SLASHED LIFEGUARD PRICES •. ; I
Modet 100 1°"40 .... ,1Reg.1• Sale 129
200 40-190 .... 237 157
-200 .... 271 189
400 -' .. •• S10 219
800 -.... 3IO 259
Flnanclne Av....,.. •
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Here's An lmfibrtant Notice To All
Domestic & Imported Car Burers ...
'
Orange Coast DAILY Plt.orm.IU>day, Maren 19, 1961 , -
il~---~ SOUTH COAST DODGE
il HARBOR BLVD . ~ 2B88 SA, CA 92626 il COSTAME ~L~c~7~1~4:__)540~·-0_330~~~~~ NOTICE c
: JHSCD CHD
il 3 /19/81 MVD MESA CA 0900 EST il 3-08145 SJ098 TRDN COSTA ~ 7145400330 NTO ~ ALL NEW CAR BUYERS il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
ND FRIDAY! , CTORY REBATES E M $320.
CHRYSLERS FA HANCE TO SAVE FRO (EXCEPI' MISERS),
THIS IS YOUR LAST ~NGER, COLT, OMNI OF YOUR CHOICE.
TO $1000. ON ANYCAS ST REGIS, ORARIES-K RS FACTORY
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il
il ~
il
. .
•
Ts MIRAD • . MANUFACTUE DIPLOMA ' TO 6% OF THE
REBATE IS EQUAL LUDES OPI'IONS. R PRICE-INC STICKE
ARIES K (#42291 ) PLE. 1981 DODGE
EXAM · BATE
$583.20 RE (#00457)
EXAMPLE: 1981 FWD=
$502.44 RE NGER (#53445) EXAMPLE· 1981 CHALLE
. $457.02 REBATE TO OUR
ARE IN ADDITION THESE REBATES REMEMBER -OUNT PRICES.
USUAL NO PROBLEM O.A. . REDS OF THOUSAND
GREAT DISC C S
FINANCING~AY AND JOIN THE HUND '.AGE OF THIS COME IN TO , y TAKEN ADVANT 0 HAVE ALREAD
WH LE OFFER. RE MARKAB
BUT HURRY!
SOUTH COAST DODGE
HARBOR BLVD.
2
888
CA 92626 COSTA MESA,
(714) 540-0330
0900EST
MCP DMV
-2
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---------...-----------------------------. ...... ---. ~-~
Orange Cout DAILY PtLO'!'/ThUnday. March 19. 1981 / CONSUMER
State law
DEAJl aEADEU: A MW l&ate law II
mall.la-, It eaaler for coaH•er• &. ne ·
buslaeaH Uaat do ba1taes1 -*' a fldllllu
aame. Tiiie la• allow• Ute plallldlf &e •• ... nu., papen &e c1taa1e &lie •••e .; &lie
defelHlut la 1lt•a&hMu a. wlaklt a •lltde wa1
madL ·
. Pftvioasly, lf IOIDeolle Red a Aon aH
later loud out &Jaat &Jae Mon wu lie& a
corporatloa, but waa owaed by aa IMl•ld•al,
tbe plallltllf laad to start &lie Adt •lala &e
rttover a J11d1meat a1alut &lie o.-r. Ueder
the new law, a plahdlff ua ••IMltlt•te die
owaer's aame for U.at of &Jae store.
c...i ....... ,.,,.
DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm thinking about
buying a hair piece, but have found. they are
very expensive Do you have any WlSe buyer
tips ? M. E., Huntington Beach
The Board of Barber Esamlaen, ••
agency wltbln the state Departmeat •f
Consumer Affairs, says that slace a laalr piece
is so lndfvldual, you sboaJd laave a cleflal&e
agreement <written preferred> regardla& &lie
type, service, guaraatees ud Lbe total prtee.
Be sure tbe color of tbe hair piece matc:Jtn )'OU
natural hair and fi.nd out what base of moaatlag
Cplasttc. net, etc.) is used, as weU at Ito• U.e
hair is to be mounted to the piece <lied, molded,
etc.>. Be sure you know wbetber ayaUte&lc or
human hair ls used. It it is bamaa lilair,
determine the type t Orteatal or Evopeaa).
Also check into bow the balr piece is to be
styled, ii the color will fade, and care aad
cleaning procedures.
/fffleflfle ded11ef161e
DEAR PAT DUNN: Occasionally I have lo
dr ive 23 miles to dell ver papers and reports for
my company. Since l must use my own car, can
I deduct mileage expenses from my taxes? I'd
also hke to know if life insurance premiums are
deductible.
W.H .. Huntington Bea ch
If you are not reimbursed by your
employer, IRS says you may claim zt ceats
per mUe for busi.ness trips. Report tbis oa
Form 2106, Employee Bui.Dess Espeues,
and on line 24 on Form UMO as aa adjutmeat
to your income.
Life insurance premiums are not
deductible and cannot be i.ncluded as a
medical expense. In add1Uoa, life i.nsaraace
proceeds received on the deaUa of aa i.nsared
person are not taxed to the beneficiary.
Order sdll •• f•P
DEAR PA.T DUNN : I ordered and paid
fo r a .. Mr Boston Offi cial Bartender's
Guide" last November. I received a letter
from Old Mr. Boston Glenmore Distilleries
Co . in response to my first letter of inquiry
when the book didn 'l arrive. It said that my
book had been mailed.
I waited awhile and finally phoned to ask
what had happened . I was told that another
book would be mailed lo me after the holiday
rush was over. I'm still waiting -I hope not
until the Fourth of July.
M.M .. San Juan Capistrano
A YS contacted Valerie Lewis at the
Louisville, Ky., distlllery. She will mall the
book to you If you send a copy of your
canceled check to her attention.
Qal_.•..,,Pre•Nfl
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've seen ads for
various "sur ge s uppressors .. that are
supposed to prote ct solid-state circuits
against lightning or internal surges of power
and save e lectricity at the s ame time. Do
they work as claimed?
L.W .. Irvine
Not according to the Federal Trade
Com mission, wblcb Is reapoaalble for
monitoring unsubstantiated advertlsl•I
claims. AJ'I FTC spokesman warns, "They
might keep your TV or stereo from buralag
out. bot they can't reduce energy
consumptionJ'
The FTC also 15 invest11atlD1 claims for
powe r factor capacitors, a.otlter aupposed
energy·saviD1 device. The ageacy ~clade1
this product may be beaenclal to iadutry
using big electric motors, but It is of DO value
for home use. ___ \
• "Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat
1 Dunn. Pat will cut red ta~. getting
.. the aiuwera and action 11ou need to
•
solve inequities 1n government and
,.., bu&lMu . Ma il your q~stiona to Pat
Dunn, At Your Service, OTan~ Cooat
Daily Pilot. P.0 Boz 1560. Co&ta Meaa . CA mM. A•
many Letten °" pou1b~ will be aM1.0eTed. but phoMd
mquine.'l or ultera not mcluding the re<JMr'• full
name. address and bu.sine" hours' phoM numbn'
cannot ~ coriNered. Thia column a~ars doil11 ez·
cept Sunday&."
Orange Coast Collegfi Adventure Tour
DESERT HOT
SPRINGS SPA
Sun., Mar. 29 -Wed., April 1
Fee: $155, inc. transportation, lodging, b~fast &
dinnet at spa. visit to Palm Springs. aerial tramride,
unlimited use of 6 mineral poolt & Muna. Space
Limited.
Vin-Mastercard/Info -551-5880
REOllTIR NOW 'OR JUIT 121.00 ,.,,. .. _.. .. _ ... ......__
BURIALS MY CIMETfRV
f
...........
Several AUant• televlaion ata·
Uou wW broad·
eaat warntn1 me11a1e1 to
children by
Gary Coleman, atar of NBC's ••Diff 'rent
Strokes," advla·
Ing them to take
precautions
because of the
slaying of 20 black younf·
sters inAUanta.
... "'--Good Tl!N Merd't 25, ltl1
AM .... ,..,,,. .,. 9"bject to
8-k Oft Hend. All
"'11tDrlPhlO.T~Ncal.
a.ttce1 end """'"' Err0t:1 9fe ...... to Cot""°"°".
tu ... ,
In hot water
30·g1llon he1ter with
energy-uvl ng high-
temperature 1hut-olf.
gla" lined tank.
11415
lllarflia aaleed
. 3 I
Cut out that bird dropping
............
&AN Dll:OO (AP) -A "1•aa. war• C\llaln1 a. belu ••J•d ti>' chaplain lobn "· Hawklna Ill at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot.
Hawkins, 1n an article 1n the
bate newspaper Chevron, pull
these queaUons to the • ,242
youn1 Marines and lealhel")'
drill aer1eanta:
•'Tired of cuaa word• betou.Un1
your sound environment? Still
want to be able t.o vent your own
spleen with pun1ent but
relatively harmless bellows
rather than physically amuh
D
D
IOai.clllMe&a.'11"
1natead of the comrqon
four·letter word for manu're,
HawklDI s u11ested that
di11u1ted Marines shout out:
"Blrd droppings!"
Instead of teUlng a ~rson to
10 to bell. he ur1es they say "Go
bob for frencb frtes ! "
The chaplain, notinf that the
Lutheran Council in the U.S.A.
la campaigning t.o clean up the
nation's lan1uage, said in an
Interview: "During Lent, we do
need t.o take stock of ourselves."
But he said his suggested swear
I \
worda were moat1y ''tongue ln
cheek."
The day the Chevron came
o ut , Gunne ry Sat. Gr e g
Meriwether saw a Marine whip
out the--arllcle and t e ll a
particularly toul ·m o uthe d
Marine t.o "Read tbla."
A 17-year veteran in the
Marines, Meriwether bears as
much swearing ln the Corps as
the day he jolned.
But he has yet to hear a single
leathe rneck c r y o ut, neck
muscles tighte nin g : "Bird
droppings! · •
murder
the mlldew
X·14 Mlldewclde Paint Additive
protects new latex or olf-baM finish
from mildew t oz.
Reg t 99 40 gallott ......... 124.95 ..,_.~__., 111 SO galloft ......... 164. 95 ...--..------r
.......
gobbler
Badge< I by ln-slnk-erator handle• big
Job• eulty. Quiet. dependtble.
Reg. 39.95
2988
WD-40
tor de car
Spray lube 1tops aqueek•. protecta
metal. fr"' 1tlcky mechanism•. 9 oz.
Reg. 2.39
111
cflM'gll
Charge Alf battery charger tor 8 to 7•1t
volt batterlff. Save• money!
Reg. 11.95 7••
...... ......... Illy, YlgorO .........
Lawn tentllHr with controlled releaN
formula tor heelthy lawnt. 25 lb. bag.
Aeg.10.81 a••
D
spray
mlldew
away
Spray mlldew away and dis-
courage It from returning.
Reg. 2.95
spred the satin
Famous 11tu flat paint from Glldden
S<:rubs c1e1n, stays color1aat
Reg. 11.99
. l seal of
approval "" SealS around tubs. showers, sinks. Oap
KwlkSeal stays flexible, waterproof. 6 oz
Reg 2.15
12s
handy, sharp
cutting tool
Stan1ey·s veraatlle utlllty knife. Extra
blades store In handle. #99-P
Reg. 3.49
1''
be I Ull·led bullder
7V4' 1uper-duty worm drive taw. Cuts
2" full dlmenllon luml>er. 4400 rpm motor. f77.
Aeg.13U6
12911
I
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Daily Pilot D ' 1 THURSDAY, ~rch 19, 1981 Auto import limit
FEA TURES 86 likely, but will it D COM ICS 810
TELEV ISION 812 bail out Detroit? Bl4 ll
It's 'Match Day'
1tfed students'-pubes quieken at VCI
By &OBE&T J. SCHIEa
~ .... .,..,, "" .. Henry Ng, an electrical
en1lneer at Fairchild Semicon-
ductor in Mountain View who
bad decided to 10 into medicine,
awoke that overcast San Fran-
cisco moming June 21, 1977, to
the insistent ringing of bis
phone.
An official from the medical
school at UC Irvine was on lbe
line, saying that someone had
dropped out that opening day
and there was a spot available,
and was Mr. Ng still interested
in a position in the entering
class?
Sue Wickes was not surprised
at tbe last moment. The 25-year-
old human biology major from
Stanford bad known for several
months that sbe would be at-
tending Irvine. Like Henry, she
had labored through four years
of intensive study.
-It is 8:50 Wednesday morn-
ing, and while graduation is not
until June, the culmination of
those years for her will arrive in
only 10 minutes.
second year at "The Guad" he
received good news from the ad-
missions office at Irvine.
THIS DAY DOUG, too, awaits
the envelope which will de·
termine lbe course of his next
half decade.
These three senior medical
students, along with thousands
of others across the country, are
gather ed a t the ir medical
schools to learn where they will
be spending the next one to
seven years of their lives in
training.
It is the day of reckoning.
Match Day.
THE CLIMAX of a year-long
selection process informally
known as The Match.
I
1'
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Four hours later Henry was
sitting in a crowded lecture hall
with 72 other students, listening
to pep talks a nd welcoming
speeches. Now, four years later,
he is waiting for a pla in white
envelope with his name typed on
it.
Doug Reavie bad more de-
termination than most. Unable
to enter an American medical
school immediately a fter
graduating with a degree in
biology from UC Irvine, he left
home in Newport Beach and
enrolled with 3 ,500 other
Americans at the University of
Guadalajara Medical School in
Mexico. He had applied again to
U.S. schools, and early in his
A student who has completed
four year s at an American
medical school is well trained by
the standards or most or the
world. But though formally an
MD at graduation, he is not
licensed to practice.
Years ago, unlicensed MDs
straight out of school did a year
of apprenticeship, call ed in-
ternship, after which they look a
government test and were
licensed if they passed. They
could then either go into private
pr actice or could take extr a
training in a specialty, a period
of two to six years known as res-
idency.
~i
JUANITA WATTS (LEFT), KATHY REAVIE EXCITED
Juenlta end Kethy'• huab9nd, Doug, go to ume hoapltel
SENIOR MEDICAL students,
in applying to internship pro-
grams, dealt directly with the
hospitals involved, and were in-
formed individually by letter or
phone if they were accepted.
Now things ar e different.
The word "internship" is out
of official favqr, having been
replaced by "first year of res-
idency." (Though it is still
almost universally known by its
former name.)
And while some interns do opt
to go out on their o~n ,tter
llcensure, the vast majority con-
tinue on with further residency
tr aining.
THE BIGGEST CHANGE bas
come in deciding where students
will do their internships. In or-
der to control the under-the-
table back-room arr angements,
deals, and other assorted cor·
j
O•llY ,.ii .. P ... lff ., Cary AmlreM
MIKE MORRIS (LEFT), SCOTT HELTON WATCH PAM THIENE GET THE NEWS
He.,.,.neH for her la • "metch" with UC lrvlne Medlcel Center
ruptions made all too common
by the intense competition for
top spots in a lucrative field, the
medical colleges and hospitals
joined forces in 1949 and institut-
ed a new system.
Under the new rules, senior
students still apply directly to
the hospitals, but neither they
nor the hospitals have final say
abo ut who will go where.
Instea d, students lis t their
choices in order of preference.
and the hospitals do the same
with their applicants.
THE LISTS are fed into a cen-
tral computer in Illinois, which
matches appli cants with posi-
tions. Then, al a given time na-
tionwide, those results are un-
veiled.
That time this year was Wed·
nesday, March 18 at 9 a.m. PST. And the students anxiously
clustered outside the dean's of·
rice in the crisp morning air
were waiting for Dr. Stanley van
den Noort. dean of the medical
school, to walk out with a stack
of envelopes. each labeled with
the name of a student, each con·
taining the name of one hospital.
IT HAS BEEN rare these last
two years for the Class of 1981 to
meet together as a whole. Scat-
ter ed in clinical rotations at UCI
Medical Center in Orange, the
Veterans Hos pital in Lo ng
Beach, and other centers both
in California and out of state. the
sen se of fell ows hip and
camaraderie which had been so
s trong during the first year of
classroom work had weakened
geographk area or s pecialty or
first choice.
At 9 a.m. the excitement real-
ly begins in front of the concrete
block dean's office. Dr. van den
Noort, dressed in a gray suit,
steps into the boisterous crowd
carrying a tall stack of those
long awaited envelopes. Starting
with "a," he slowly works his
way down the alphabet.
SCRE AM S OF DELIGHT
become frequent as many find
their best hopes fulfilled. Some
couples hug and dance Others
raise clenched fists in glee and
take lon g s wigs from the
numerous champagne bottles
circulating hand to hand.
More than a few stand quietly,
slowly shaking their heads and
trying to smile at friends.
Battered kids' home· advances
Only special occasions these
days draw them together, and
they a re gathered in small
g r o ups in a high -s trun g ,
freewh eeling atmos phere.
participating in this s pecial
secular communion, and recall·
ing with laughter and delight the
past and all the changes four
years have wrought.
THIS WAS A CLASS then
which, like young soldiers after
a tour of combat. had grown up.
AFTER ALL THE envelopes
have been passed out and the
backslapping has died down. the
students and hangers-on begin to
drift away; some towards the
parking lot and home, others in
no particular direction, hoping
for some solitude to talk or
simply to think. Many wi ll find
their way to a Match Day Party
being held off campus in Irvine,
where the beer and champagne
will both heighten joy and soothe
disappointment.
Conceptual drawings of a new
home for battered and abused
children have been approved by
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors despite questions on
how the $6 million facility will
be funded.
The s upervisors. however.
seem ed confident Wednesday
that the money could be raised
by a non-profit corporation
formed solely to seek public and
private grants
The chairman of that commit·
tee is retired Maj. Gen. William
Lyon of Newport Beach, head of
his own land development firm
and a prospective buyer of
Orange County -based Air
California.
Lyon told the board members
that the fund-raising campaign
may start slowly because It
could appear at odds with other
drives to finance youth services.
But he added: •'These children
are victims, not criminals."
The home ts proposed to be
built on a seven-acre site in
Orange next to the Albert Sitton
Home, the county's current 88-
bed facility for d e pe ndent
children.
The new home will replace the
J.P. Greeley School for severely
handicapped students. The coun·
ty Board of Education's lease of
the county-owned facility runs
out this summer , and the hand-
icapped classes will be moved
to a new site.
Forest camp ground
due fo r r e novatio n
El Cariso Campground on
Ortega Highway near Lake
Elsinore 4n the Cleveland Na-
tional Forest, will be closed
M arcb 23 through April 16 for ren-
ova Uons.
Volunteer groups wishing to
participate in planting, painting
a nd pruning should contact
Maryjane Harris at 836-2144.
Russell J edinak, a Huntington
Beach architect heading a group
of volunteers designing the new
home, said the construction is
scheduled to replace the old
school in three phases. Each
phase will cost about $2 million,
he said.
J edinak said the architects'
primary goal was lo design liv-
ing quarters , a dining hall. class
rooms, a multi-purpose room
and administrative offices that
would provide a home-like at-
mosphere.
As such, the 70,000-square-foot
building space will have shingle
roofs a nd othe r "warm"
features. Each of the six living
FV man holds post
Roger H. Gray, a Fountain
Valley High School graduate and
son of Mrs. Lloyd F . Olson, is
the editorial editor of the Daily
Trojan, the campus newspaper
at use.
"cottages" will have its own
fire place and small kitchen, he
added.
Attending the board meeting
Wednesday were more than two
dozen members of the Newport
Harbor Junior League, which
has adopted the new home as a
service project. T he league has
donated about $117,000 toward
its construction.
Book sale
set in S A
Friends of the Santa Ana
Public Library Used Book sale
will be held March 26-27, begin-
ning at 10 a.m., in the Spurgeon
Room of the library, 26 Civic
Center Plaza.
Records in foreign languages
as well as old and rare books
will be available.
Swallows may _head for tower
When the swallows show up
three years from now, they
might find qua.rt.en ln a new
bigb·rlse bell tower ln San Juan
Capistrano.
City Council members in the
Ml11lon City approved pla.na last
y~ar for a $2.5 million church
project that will see a replica ol
the O&d Stone Church at Milaion
San Juan conatructed abOut aoo
feet north ol the orlgtnet cburcb.
The new 16,000-aquare-foot
atructure wW be built at the cor-
ner of Camino Capistrano and
Acjachema Streeta -at the
northwest end of the milalon
property.
Church otrlcia11 say the new
bulldlna -which ls actually a·
little lar1er than the ori1tnal -
will permit more parlahlonen to
attend Sunday mUHS.
PreMntty 10 muau ue be&d
In the Serr a Chapel 'on
""ktlldl, MMI three a daJ d'ur·
ta1 tM wen week.
But tome tn San Juan hope UM
UM-foot beU tower will auraat
lh• fork·t.a.lkd tMJ'da lo the mll· ••••
Before the city was heavily de·
veloped, the misaion was the
tallest building ln town, and it
annually attracted thousands of
swallows.
In recent years they have
neated ln other areas or south
Oranae County, abandoning the
205-year-o&d mlulon.
Arcbltect John Bartlett saJd
tht deslp ot lhe new church will
be a Spantah Renai11ance
Colonlal detlp. And wblle the
or itlnal church w11 butlt of
stone, It had a plaster flnlab. Tb•
new one wW include an uneven platter ftnlabover masonry.
· Tbe new church la expected to
be completed 1n 1 ....
118 man graduatee
GMl"P AJhed Svana of Hmt·
'
ln1ton Beacb haaJraduated
from U.. Colle•• Aviation
Tecbaolor1 at Northrop
Unlnrtlty, ID IASlewood, ..S
recel...S a eerUlleate of~ Uoa ill Airframe an4 Pow ant
¥ala~ .
And it was this class which, in
the waning minutes of uncer-
tainty Wednesday morning, was
engaged in Ii vely, fast-paced
talk amid the crush of friends,
spouses. children and school of-
ficials
Not all the class was present.
however. Two of the '81 graduat-
ing seniors had been placed in
programs which t hey did not
choose through the Match. And
eight Irvine seniors had failed to
match anywhere.
Failing to match usually hap-
pens to several students in each
class. A poor student may not
m atch because all of his choices
were very good programs that
filled up with applicants listed
ahead of him. A good student ap-
plying only to top-notch pro-
grams may be left out for the
same reason. Any student may
fail because of bad luck .
As for the three students men·
tioned earlier. all m atched high.
Henry Ng succeeded in his
major goal of finding a program
in Northern California. The 30·
year-old ex-engineer will spend
the next three years in a job far
from his previous field ; he was
accepted by the Family Practice
Program at UC Davis.
Sue Wi ckes was very sur-
prised this ti me. Also going into
Family Practice, s he matched
at the prestigious Mayo Clinic in
M ionesota. "It's frightening,"
she exclaimed. smiling broadly
and bouncing on her toes.
"That's really a hard program."
Just as buoyant was Doug
Reavie. The ta ll 27-year-old had
THINGS ARE NOT hopeless made his first choice, Kaiser
for them, of course. Only 14,000 Hospital in Los Angeles. "This is
of about 18,000 internship posi-great," he said , one arm around
lions nationwide have been his wife, Kathy. "We can live
filled. near the beach and be out of the
Non-matching students re-smog."
cei ved a . booklet Tuesday with Doug will have plenty of time
all the positions that didn't fill to enjoy his new location. It will
listed. Everyone will find a take him seven years to become
place, though not necessarily in a plastic surgeon.
-----* ·---------* ·----
Author
Robert Schier, 28, is
a fourth -year
medical student at
UC Irvin~. He
matched up Wednes;
d ay wit h t h .,
Veterans A d ·
m lnistration Hospital
near UCLA ln West
Loa Anlelet. He ln·
tends to spend the
next four years there
b ecomln1 • radloloclst. He HYI
be'• ~Y wtth the
1natcb.
I \
Orenge CoMt DAIL y PILOT/Thureday. March 11, 1911
ARNER SPRINGS (AP) -
r more than 65 years,
uunds of the nation's
altbiest people cavorted in
1urely s plendor while
oym, back-country privacy
reaort in San Diego County.
nW financial troubles forced
sure in June 1979 of tbe
5-acre playground for the
ltby, Warner Hot Sprincs
acted an exclusive ctlentele
ich wished to vacation in .
ury.
be rich flocked to Warner
rings t o relax in the
rapeutic mineral s pring
ter, which gave the resort its
'1e. Guesta spent their days
aying golf, s huffle board ,
minton and volleyball white
.rounded by scenic sweeps of
n grassland and stands of
cient trees.
two awhomlna pools, a banquet
ball, ctubbouae and ridln& stable
sit unuaed.
The resort became the victim
of complex financial setbacks,
c ulminating when a West
German company which bought
the property in December 1976
declared bankruptcy.
VARIOUS PARTIES have
attempted to refurbish the area,
but they have met opposition
from enYironmenlalists and
representatives of Indians who
still live in the area and protect
o ld burial grounds o n the
property.
Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa
also attempted lo acquire the
property.
• ''We're very sen1lttve to
the concern• for preaervlaf
the natural beauty and history of
the resort," Rossi said. ''This is
what always attracted me to the
Warn er resort in the first
place."
The co unty Planning
Commission approved his plans
Feb. 20, paving the way for final
approval by the county Board of
Supervisors. If endor sed , full
plans and environmental reports
will go before the
Environmental Review Board
and the commission and
supervisors.
OBITUARIES
0 INCREASE THE feeling of
atioo at the resort located 70
es northeast of San Diego,
The most recent attempt lo
restore the land lo its past glory
comes from a 44-year-old San
Fran cisco developer, who has
restored the historical Stanford
Court hotel in the Northern
California city.
Ironically, it was another San
Francisco businessman, William
Gri ffith Henshaw , wh o
developed Warner Springs in
1911. Hensh aw bought the
acreage on which the resort
s tands and spea rh eaded
irrigation developments which
nurtured the semi-arid land. LUXURY RETREAT HAS AUN INTO HARD TIMES
w.,ner Sprtng1 northeHt of SD look• to future
ne of the 96 rooms were
nected with telephones or
A. Cal Rossi Jr., a fo rmer
partner i n t h e resort, is
proposing a $60 milli on
renovation project which
includes restoration or the resort
and development or as many as
700 new units.
BEFORE SHUTTI NG two
year s ago. the resort was
considered uncommon because
it blended modern vacation
conveniences with relics or the
Old West. Stagecoaches, barns,
an old chapel and adobe
buildings recalled the time when
Indians inhabited t he ranch
land 200 years ago.
Mexican government to build a
rancho. For years it served as a
watering hole for U.S. federal
troops in the Mexican and Civil
Wars. It also was a way-station
for miners who sought gold in
Southern Ca lifornia and Mexjco
But it wasn't until the early
20th centurv. when Henshaw
bought the land on which the
resort now stands, that the
luxurious r esort started to
become the rest spot for the
wealthy
evision.
oday. weeds sprout among
lkways which were once
iiding, neatly m anicured
ths. The cottage living units.
raduates
~ . ust rise
arlier
1'ifADISON, Wis. (APJ
i University of
sconsin eraduates
have to get up a lit· ttt earlier this year if
l~y want to pick up
t~ir sheepskins.
t 's part of an effort bf university officials to
rf tore dignity to the s ing commencement
c emony. which iJi1 re·
~t years has featured
d,8nking and graduates
attaching helium-filled t>_, I I o o n s t o t h e i r
~larboards .
Jr h ose ceremonies
11t,re held in the after ·
"-°n, giving graduates
o feel a need t o
ebrate more time to
t imbibing.
ut this year, the May
ceremony will begin
9 :30 a .m ., wit h
duates asked to con·
egate 45 minut es
ore that.
Th e university
'mates that some
will get degrees .
se who go to the
emony have been
ed not to bring
holic beverages "or
r items that detract
f9m the significance of ur occasion."
~
Jfage talk ~ d llanne
EKING CAP> -The
rker's Daily told
de rs not to as k
isners about wages
eveal state secrets. t said asking about
ces may be con·
s ered impolite, a nd
t when "conversing
foreign guests. we
uld avoid political
troversiea.
4When we n eed to r!wer various ques ·
s, we should use cor·
r t , concise and re·
yed language and be
to protect state
rets.''
'POW camp'
• • training set
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. CA P) -Marines at
this base, where Pfc. Robert Garwood was con·
victed of collaborating with the enemy while in a
Vietnam prison camp, are building a mock POW
camp lo train soldiers to withstand psychological
torture during captivity.
The camp, with barbed wire, interrogators
and prison guards, features a five·day training
program that may also provide practice for
Mar ine interrogators, the News and Observer of
Raleigh reported.
The program is the only one of its kind in the
Marine Corps and one of three in the U.S. military,
officials said.
THE TRAINING COURSE COMES as of·
ricers. psychiatrists and others here debate the
proper behavior of military captives. The debate
intensified during the trial of Garwood. convicted
of collaborating with the Viet Cong during two of
the 14 years he spent as a prisoner of war.
His attorneys contended his treatment in the
camp had pushed him into insanity.
Marine officials said Garwood's case had
nothing to do with the training program. They said
the camp was built at the request of Maj. Gen.
David Twomey, 2nd Marine Division commander.
Col. Carl E Mundy Jr . chief of intelligence
activities for the division, said the camp is an ex·
tension of t he military's Survival Evasion
Resistance and Escape training, which trains men
to live in the wilderness .
THE CAMP CONSISTS OF guarded concrete
block buildings, originally marked for demolition,
on a remote area or the base. It will house about
150 Marines, and Mundy said former POWs prob·
ably will ser ve as advisers.
The camp will focus on the psychological
torture soldiers may suffer in captivity. teaching
"a resistance to interrogation-type things," said
Maj. D.H. Ingram, intelligence operations officer
for the 2nd Marine Division.
The pr ogr a m will consist of a two-day
classroom instruction period and a three-day ap-
plication of classroom training, with enlisted men
and officers receiving the same treatment
But the emphasis will be on infantry units like·
ly to be on patrol.
DEATH NOTICES
HALL
DONALD HA VEN HALL.
long·t1me resident or the
Harbor area, died suddenly
on March 16, 1981 in Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital. A
native of Aurora. Illinois. Mr
Hall had hved 10 Southern
California most of his lire He
was a graduate of Art Center m Pasadena During World
Lumber
layoffs
reviewed
-'ll!!!lt-~~--------. War 11 he served as a
SAN FRANC l SC0
(AP) -The U.S. Labor
Department is asking for
comments on a proposal
to provide benefits to
som e Jumberworkers
laid off after Redwood
National Park was ex·
panded in 1978. IAL.TllB•HOM
SMITH & TUTHILL ,. WISTCU,. CHM'IL
4Z7 E. 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
.... Cl laOTMllS
SMITHS' MOtTUAI Y
627 Main St
~ntinQton Buch 536-6639
'ACIPIC Y•w ....,llAL,All
Ce!T'elefV Mon uarv
Chae>el 35oo Pacific View Drive
Newl>Ort Baach
&44·2700
.. CC ... ICll MOITUAl•S
Leauna Beach
"94-9415
Leauna Hiiis
788--0933
San Juan Capistrano 495-1ne
WlllOnml
~llOADWAT
MOl'NAIT
110 lroedwe¥
Co.ta Mela
W-1150 I
Ph o tomapping Officer
assigned to the &4th Engineer
Photomapping Battalion in
the Central Pacific Theater
Following the war. with a
partner he established an
advertising agency one of
the earliest such agencies in
Or ange County. Later he
joined the art department of
EE CO. a Sa nta Ana
e lectronics firm When he
retired 212 years ago, he was
Sales Promotion director.
Mr Hall was a long-time
member of the Balboa Yacht
Club A m e mber of St.
Andrew's Pres byterian
Church in Newport Beach. he
was active in the Voyagers
Fellowship , Men ·s
Fe llows hip, and on the
Audio·VisuaJ Committee of
the church. He Is survived by
his wife, Menalh V. Hall,
daughters , Mrs . Julie
Glazebrook of San Diego, Ca.,
and Mrs. Dennis Brantley of
Rlveralde, Ca., aon1 Mars ball
and ClyanHallofCoeta MesaJ
Ca ., brother Dean Hall or
Kallua -K o na, Hawaii,
step-mot.her Mn. Lillian Hall
of Laiuna Hiil•. Ca., and
arandlOl\I Scott and Todd
Glazebrook, San Dleao, Ca.
Memorial servke1 wlll be
held at llAM on Friday,
Marcba>.1111 atSt. Andrew'•
Presbyterian Cburcb,
Newport Beach, Ca., wU.h Dr.
John A. Hulfmao,Jr,and Or.
David Wallace officlatln1. 1n
lleu of nowel'I th• family
request donaUe>n1 be made to a special fund In hll memol')'
at St. Andrew'• Preab)'tetfao
Church, IOO St. Andrews
Road, Newport Beub, Ca.
Final regulations will
be issued after written
comments are received.
The deadline for those
comments is April 13.
The amendments lo t he
R edwood Employee
Protection Program ap.
ply to workers let go after
Sept. 30, 1980 and before
Sept. 30, 1984.
The changes are de-
signed lo clarify stand·
ards used to determine
whether workers can re-
cel ve the benefits.
Any worker who has re·
mained on a layoff that
s tarted before Sept. 30
will continue to be
quaHfledforlbe benefits .
Written comments on
the proposed a mend·
ment.I may be sent to
Redwood Employee
Protection Program ,
Room NS639 , U .S .
Department of Labor, 200
CoutJtution Ave., N.W.,
Wasbl.ngton,p.c . 20210.
Snake found
SACRAMENTO <AP)
-A stolen /)'thon was returne to the
Sacramento Zoo by a
man wbo aaAd be found
the tflne.toot anak• 1n a
piper be1 on hit front
porch.
In 1844, the first white man to
take over the land was Jonathan
Trumbull Warn e r . He was
granted 44 ,000 acres by the
Cord Short Sale!
5.Jle pnces good thru 3122 i.Ji1/e ~upphes
las! 511,t(e-, sho••in are represenianve al !he
~elec11on
JR. BLOUSES
FOR SPRING
Rt9ularly S 18. voo·ll l<M the rainbow 1Mor1men1 ol
cure colorlul 5(>1'1ng blov~ 10 c00<d1n6le with all your
favcmre pants Junior<, S M L
BOYS' MEN'S
~~:o 1099 1349
Rt9ularly boy!.' S14, men's Sl8. (811IC>\+) Ger 1nro
Cahlorn111\ favorirt• ~hurl~ Save on the fam<>us Op
t.argo pocket cord~. siyle #8000 Boy-.. wc11..is 23 30
men\ 28 J8
MIA ltUO f lmf*lll Hwy ICfOSS from Bru "''" 1141529·'914 CElff#TOllAlf1ESIA 18600 Grldltr. Of)POSlte Los Oemlos M•H 2131924-lllJ
fJ. CAHHI 816 JICkman, F/f!Chtr Pkwy 11 Marsh1H 1"1442-1616
EICO#OIOO 119 N Esconaklo 81vt1, II Mt$$/Ofl Al'f 11411'$-J:JOO
,OU#TAI# ~AUIY 9J60 W1rntr Ai'I W1mtr 11 !hi 405 Fwy 114196-f·:JOOI
Htllffl#010# llACH 10111 Ad1ms Al't. lrookhursl' Adama. 1'4/9'4-3323 LA MIU 1921 El CNotl Blwl, 11 ~l/1motf Dr 114169'"'601
MMHt ~llJO 2s;52 Mclnlyrt, 405 Fwy. LI P11 tt1t 1'4/Sle.f100
110111Hl#Oll 19320 Nofdftolt St. oppositt Norttlrltlgt Pla11 21Jl,,,3-70f1
OltMltl 7ff S rus11n Al'f, ru•tl11" !hi G1rdt11 Gro11t FWf'/ Tl41U9·1111
MEN'S
0.P. SCREENED 499 599
PRINT T ·SHIRTS
Regularly boy!.' S7.50. men·., S9. {Left) Be cool in
great screened rmnr ree o;h1r1~ from rhe honesi name
brand Ocean Pacific. 1 , nlf aw?ned '\hon sleeve
~es &o,r. or rnen S M l XL
BOYS' MEN'S
"CALIFORNIA 80" 699 799
JERSEY T-SHIRTS
Regul.vty boys' S9. men's SI 1. {Left) From Crazy
Shirts ol H,,w.,11 comes 1h1't fun loorball ~e 1et!oeV
Bnghr con1rasi1ng colo" Men or bc¥ SM L XL
~ $22.95. Saw 20% Oil tM All Cour1, from
the blggtSI neme In active shoes \Mille cames IMfti
ro,el blue, llghl blue °' nal\lral cob ~ "~."
Men's sizes ?·13
OtllMO 200 fsplf""1t Dn11t, ooposJtt Tiit Esp11111111 ctnltf I0514'5-<J606 f>AIMllllM 366() E Foothill Blwl Ronmud & Footfllll 2131518·169'
Nmr l#tU I 1851 E Cof/1'111, 1111 of Putn/1 H1/IJ Miii 2131~·61.21
IWl#IOI 3502 Tyltr. l>trl door to Tiit rr11sury 114151"1322 ,,,,,.,. ... 4530 VMI Nuys B!Vd, next lo Hught1 M1rtlf 2131113-251 I
IMnA W 3'JO S lttttol Ait, Ill-milt north ol SOcllll Com P1W '141151-4100
IMnA JM1MA 120 StMI St. Ill dOwntowrt Slnll ~lf>lll _,IMNJ4$ •
Sii ~ O/IMI ltUH·F 10.I 30, Tu·W·Sll 10.1, Sun lo.f
10MMa 22124 H"'lflornt l/W. 114·1'1N!t soulll 0( Otl Amo l1JllTHlt4 Wf~lf 15412 00/dfnwttl St. MMI to GOlflt11 Wt1I Collft. r"..,_4S41
STORE HOURS
Mon·frf 10-9:30. s.. 10-7. Sun 10-6 Your Galilornia Clotlllhg 'Stbre!
' ' •
I
I
I
' I
••
----··-·-
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOTIThurldey, March 19, 1981
Downey SaVfngs Announces .The OrJenlng Of
SERVED BY THE FOLLOWING AIRLINES •••
TWA Trans World Airlines ~P~~.~!.C Republic Airlines
e Eastern Airlines • Air California EASTERN
~ Western Airlines ~ Pacific Soutllwest
Airlines
IA American Airlines ~ Frontier Airlines
0~,,;. Delta Airlines a Mexicana Airlines II\ .. -._ .....
OPEN ·MONDAY TH·RU FRIDAY 9AM TO 5:30PM
* Mexicana Airlines open Saturdays 9AM to 3PM
FREE CONVENIENT PARKING
The Airline , Travel Center is located in the
lobby of the Do.vney Savings ·building at the
Bristol Street exit · of the 405 Freeway in
Costa Mesa.
. I •South Coast Plaza Hotel
J ~ . ·:.
~b-:~;v . (405) SAN DIEGO FWY. ' " _____,, r I
I Downey Sevtngs Coste Mesa office Is located M
JD> Bristol Street, right off the ~ Freeway
Wt. W. _..open to sew )'OU from 9 to '4 ~ ttrouah~ from 9 to 6 on A1de)4 8ndframt•f• .... ..
J
·-14 Orange Coul OAJLY PILOT!Thuraday. March 19. 1981
Hardhats, gays best .
tippers, barkeeps say
tamp act ready
A U.S. Postal Service employee stands behind packages in
Louisville. Ky . containing 5 million of the 18-cent stamps to go into
I use nationwide next Tuesday. Some 20 milli~n ~f the higher-_Priced
stamps are be ing processed through Lou1sv11le post offi ce to
1 branches in Kentuck~· and Indiana . __
LIVINGSTON. N .J . <AP) -
Bartenders are better oft serving
coos truct lon work ers and
homoseituals than doctors and
politicians, according t.o .Bartender
MaguJ.ne's survey of tipping habits.
After telephone interviews with 250
ba.·keepers, the trade monthly
complied a tongue·ln·c:heek guide to
the best and worst tavern tippers.
Topping the list of best tippers
were people who depend on tips
thems elves, ptu11 con struction
workers. homosexuals and people
who s port diamond pinky rings.
"Guys who work in gay bars
always make a lot of money," said
publisher Ray Foley.
Politicians and doctors headed the
list of worst ti ppers. followed by
teachers. wives. insurance agents
and pipe s mokers . Politicians don't
know how to lip "because somebody
else is usually buying," Foley said.
And doctors "sa ve all their money, I
think "
Women were on lost year's list of
"seven s tiffs ," but they were
replaced by wives this year, said
Foley
"Now. u lot of women out in the
world working are used to tipping
when out a lone or with other
women," sold Foley, "but wives hate
to see their husband11 tip."
A s for Insurance agents. he said,
they ·•watch every cent they spend.
Pipe smokers? Nobody can figure
thut out."
Freeway suits OK
SACRAMENT O <AP > An at-
tempt to stop traffic accident victims
from suing lhe government for fail-
ing to build a freeway median bar·
ricr was rejected by a Senate com·
mittee. A 3.4 vote of the Senate
Judiciary Committee killed SB224 by
Sen John Foran. D-San 1''rancisco.
one art.
,
You won't fi nd thousands of people in
crazy costumes at your local GTE Phone Mart.
But you will find plenty of colorful
decorations. plenty of friendly salespeople
and a drawing for a free phone. So come in
and browse around. •
You·Jl find shelf after shelf of telephones
that match everything from your color scheme
to your personality.
If you re the executive type. one
of our Executive phones 1s <? <>
perfect for calling your
stockbroker or phoning
your overseas office.
If you're the conti·
nental type. one of ou r
sophisticated French
phones is just what you ~
need to speak with .-:-pQ
a French accent. o ·
For kids of all ages. there n
are SNOOPY & WOODSTOCK
and Mickey Mouse phones.
For those of you who can't
afford to miss calls. there's a /1
Code-A-Phone that takes (> a
messages for you. 'J o
Whatever kind of t/f;
phone you decide on. the G
GTE Phone Mart is the best
place to get it. Because the
GTE Phone Mar t can handle
all your telephone needs t.o
under one roo f. If you lease from '\\
GTE. you can even get your phone
fixed here. usually in the same day. a<'/>"
So come In to your local GTE Phone 0
Mart and celebrate Mardi Gras.
Just fo llow the party line. r-----------------1 Here's a chance to win your own phone.
J\lst fill In this coupon and bring It Into your nearest GTE Phone Mart. .
I Winner will win a GTE Imagination Line phone of his or her cholc..e
Oncludes Dawn. Doodle Phone. Alexander Graham Plane Phone & Contempra Phone.)
I
I Name _
Address
DO NOT MAIL BNTRY BLANK .
-------------------Telephone No.----------
I City ___ _ ____________ _..tate~---------~ZIP ------
I
I
I
I
I I You! caupon mu"~ rnmtd 1nto1CTe llhoo.-t.Urr by Spm. w.d~ry. Aptll 1 1981 Nopurch11e ntcttur, to tnttr Not ntct11uytobtprenn1 to w111 I ___________________ ..
AZUSA
Foothill Shopping Center
BELLFLOWER
Arteala Center
COVINA
(See West Covl(la)
CUCAMONGA
(SM Rancho)
DOWNEY
Stonewood ShOpplng Cent•
I
HUNTINGTON l!ACH
Huntington Center
HUNTIHQTON ll!ACH SOUTH
10106 Adema Ave,
LAK!WOOO ~Center Miii
~=MaH
LONOMACH
Tiie Mtwtlet Piece
•
ft11ARINA
VIiie Marina Shopping Center
MONROVIA
412 So. Myrtle
MOHTCLAIR
Monlclalr Plaza
NOVATO
1450 Grant MmJ•
PALMIPNHGI
Suf'lr1te ... art S~ Centtf
ai u
<·' ~
D
<-[]
n~q c::t->
<> 'J <)
0 ~ 0
~ () c::>
PANORAMA
Panorama C11y Mall
RANCHO CUCAMONGA
9799 Buehne Rd
REDLANDS
Redlands Mall
<::)'
ROLLING HILLS ESTATES
The VIiiage ShOpp\ng Center
SANTA BARBARA
Loreto Plaza
SAN B£RNAROINO
Central City Mall
SANTA MARIA
Town Canter
SANTA MONICA
130161h St
SOUTH BAY
Oel Amo Fashion Square
THOUSAND OAKS
JenSI Mall
WllTCOVtHA
FaahlOn ~i.ta
WEST LOI ANGELES
10&e G9yley Ave
WHITT1!1'
Whltt'M>Od ~ng Center
\:I
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTlnOUI l"tlM•U MAMa ITATILMllMT
• I
NATION
PUBUC NOTICE
"<TJTIOUI MIJIMllt MAMI ITATIMllMT
Th• ltllewl"t --., .......
Tiie IOllowl ... --·•re 901111 .... 1-.. IMnil'IH••· NINA'S ltCCOltO SHOP, n1 ....
IHV£.5TC>lt$, LTD , 10101 11.-.. Anelle lm l•Olever o. Anellel m ,
Ave., S11lle Ill, l'o..,Mel11 Velley, C:.lllomle ,_,,
Celll0f'lll•t2,_ Celle C:-llO NII O.yt-Cir·
PUILIC TAX COltl'OltATIOH, <I•, """""''" ... ,11. C•lller11I• IHC., • Ceiltomje co-•llOfl. IOIOI .,._..
Sieler Ave., S\111• Zll, "°"nleln Nine c;..m«M, .. 11 0.rt-c;Jr·
Valley, c.lllot!IUH* <11, H1111t1111ton &Hell, c allror111a
Tlllt ~tlneu I• coo4vclld lly • "~ llmit•O _.,,.""'P· Tiii• bllll,.._t I• cono .. cteO llY •
P\Hllk Ta11 Corp , Inc oener•l l*'IM~lp
T.,.... S-..., Celle C-llO
Pretlclenl Tllll "-1-nl WM lllecl w ith IM
Tr.I• •t.t-t wa• 111ec1 wltll IM Co11111y Cltrll ., Or•noe County on
Co11nly C1tr11 of Or.,99 c ... nty Oft Merell >. l"I.
Febr11•rv 24, '"I. ""' ... l'IMW P110ll""4 Orenve Coa.t O.lly Pllol,
PuDll•lled Ora.nge Coe•I Dally Piiot, Merell s. 12, ''· 2•, '"' lo.ti Feb U , IMr. S, 12, 1', l"I ,,,...,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUllMISS
NAMI STAT.,1j1RMT
Tl>• tollowlftQ per _, I• Ooll"IQ O..tl· ,,...,,.,.
CHILI ll ME SHOWS, ltlU
•11noll•. • ,., .. , HllftllllQlon BH <ll,
,., """ R..,.ld S.rneH Mitre. 1'131
•11noll•, """I, Hunll119lon B••<ll, ,., 91""
This °""""'Is <on4"<ted or .,. In· lvldu•I
"on41ld B.Mllre
1111• '"''-I .. e. '""' w1tll '"" County Cl•r-ol Ot-Co11nty on
Feb.•. 1'"
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
"441
f hf' touow1no i>er1>0n '' OO•nQ C>u'• n ... n as.,..
J""Y l HOME SERVICE 179 W
A'lile V•ft!nttd, ~ctr• <..ltmrntv C•ll lor ntd q'Jb/1
James G\-'O'oP f1.HJMm, u• W Avtt
\11tl1nt1a, Sdn C1emrnlr, C.al1torn1d
~2612.
l t11s ~\Inf'\\ I\ tonduc. tea b• an in
dtv1dual
Jam~\ Georg;~ Turoen
T rw, U.tlttTWnt wd~ ftled with tnir
Count.,· (1ttk ot Ora nQe County on
March 10 1981
FUJM'
PuOh\Md 0.•nQO Coa•I O••lr P•IOI.
Marcl'I 17, 1q. i. ,.,ori11. l'itl 12H 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOOS aUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The tollo•ln9 P•'M>n\ •r~ do1nv
Du\tMS.S •s
A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS )ti)
Cito St., LIIQUne EH.tell, C"" .,.11
M•<'-l C Jouttn•I, ltO Cito SI
L•11un• Beach, C,., 91651
On•d C Jouvenol, na Ruby Pl .
L•Qun• llH<lt. CA 91651
ThtS bu\1,...ss I\ <onductea br 1
Qener•I p.trtMf1olup
MICl\MI ( JOUYtn•t
fnt\ \t.tPf1'Wn1 w•s ftltO w11n ,,.
County Cttrk"ol Or...-.Qe C.ounty on
Ff'bruary 1•. 1'91
I
1'1MS64
Publl\hed Or•ntl" Coa\l O•lly Pllol.
f •o 1& -M.,<h S 17 " 1~1 ,11 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
N.t.ME ST""TEMEfH f ne toU01A11no ~r\Of'I 1\ 001no bu\I
"'''it\
I SERGIOS M"RKETIN(. COM
PAN"(, •JI'' Ooa• Sl•ttl Ntwporl
8e•ch, C.al1rorn•• 92Mt
I
SorQIO 0 Koh•n 1 JI', Op•I
Strret Nrwporl Brath Cel1 lorn'4t
'1"' Tr.is Dus•n.-\\ ,, conouCtf'O Oy •n 1n
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIH
NAMI STATIMI NT
l nt 1011owlnt1 penon• ore do1119
bu•1nt\\ •• "" I CROWN LE,.,SING 11111 0
Brooknurtl Slr"l, Founl•1n V•ll•)',
Cellforni• 91708
Crown Old•moDole, IJSl Ent
Co1or•Oo Boule"•rd. P•i •den•,
~~u~~~~o!~•tt'd •noc1•hon other
th•n • ~~~S:8LOSMOBILE
CMflH N T •<ll<li••n Tnos si.tement ,. .. ltlt<I w•lh 1r.., C.ounly Clero ot Oren~ C.ounly on
M•r<fl 10. l'ltl
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOOS aUSINESS
NAMI! STATEMENT
The fcMl-lllQ ""''°" " do1nt1 ....... neu .,
MISS TR,.,CEY SECRET,.,Rl""L
SERVICE, 2H Bo•I Canyon Orlve,
L•11un.t BHch, C•htorn1• 91'51
C.r•tt L MoK.troto10, UI C•ion
Sl•HI, L~no B .. cn, Celllornl"'
TM\ bu~1nn' I\ conducled by •n in·
dovlOU•I.
C. L Mo•oro1010 (dt>o11MIHTrtt•r
r11 .. •1•1-1 ... , Hied with lhe
Counly Clerk ol Oran(le Counlr on
M•rcn J. 1911
FIS7M5
PuOl"'-0 OranQll C°"'I 0•11y Po1ot,
M.,<h i, 12, 19, 1•, 1'191 110J II
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOOS I USI NESS
NAME UATEMENT
f P\t toUowl"-Q piprson 1\ 001no bu\1· "''\ ., 111 PR 0 BE , 111 PROFESSION
RESE,.,RCH ORG,.,NIZ,.,TION FOR
BUSINESS ENTREPRENEURS Ill,
UNITED AMERICA C.ORPORATION,
Sil l'nQelll• Orlve. C.orOft• <HI M•r,
C•hlorn•• tltlS
Ntl'°" c; ~-Y 111 AnQllhta
Ori.;ie Coron• dtt M•r C•llfotn1•
926H
frH\ bv\,nt\\ •S c°""uc led by •n un·
1ncorPor•teG •no<••t•on oo-er '"'" •
P•rlntr\l\1p
N•ISO<>G M•m•r
Tnt\ \t_.em_,,t w•\ ftled w1tn Int
Coun1.,. Clerk ot o,•nOf Count\' on
M •r< h l 1911 •
FUIMl
Publt\~ Or•n~ (04\1 D•1fv P1to1,
MArtl'I i, 1) lq, h , 1qe1 101111
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CAEOITOAS
Of' IULK TR,.,NSf'E R
CS.o '101·'107 U CC. I
N Ol•C.*' 1\ ,..Jf,fb'f o•vtn 10 lht"'
• ,,.0•10f\ ot N E AL P (A.RAOLL.
fr ,1n\tt'tOr. ~N>'\f' OU\•M\\ aOClrt\\ 1\
11 ' Soutn Jt.-n\tn W•v City o'
J'.u11,.non (.ounh 01 Qrc\I\~ St•lr ot
(dlllOrn1c) 1"61 j) but._ lr.tn\f,., 1~ aOOul
!O 1>t' rTtdOt' lo OEE C. L'l'OELL •nd
,.,NN r l rOELL T••n>l•ro~ wno>t
OIY•Ouat t>u\•"''' dOdt~\ '' •~~t Vf'tl,.nt"' C1r
Thi' ~'1~n!::'.a;., ftlf'd w•O• Int t ,,._ (11., ot Hun1.no1on 8t•<." (ounly
<.ounh (lf'rll 01 0 1 .. n9,. County on ot ~::"::-~:,': ~~ ':!,''~;:~~ttrrf'O •S
Maren l 1991 °'"'' 110.-0 1n Qt"ntor•1 d\ All \lO<ll. 1n
f U70St tr•o.. l•.tturt\ t"Q1.11oment ano OOO<I
Puo1 \hit'O Or•roqP ( •d\1 U•1•y Pnol wit• OI t~t pr1nl \n(I() bu\1,..,.\\ known
M•-cn s IJ .-1• ·~·· 10•9 11 d VALUE •N~TANl PRINllNC. .no
I
•oc •1.-d ctl IN~ Nftwport 8ou1•"'•"d Ct PUBLIC' NOTICE Ir OI (C>'lld Mt\ii (ounh ol or .... Q« "'"'"'or (cth•orn1a
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS rn.::':a o~~tr. 01,'~1'::: ~1 J~l<-::~ur;;,
NAME ST,.,TEMENT M.ir 11 lqijl ai I~ 00 4 M •I
T ,.. foll0 .. 1"9 ""'son •• dO•n11 l>U\• I' R 0 I £ <; <; I 0 N .. L E s c R 0 w neu 1s
ORANGE COAST L""NOSCAPE
20101 B"<". 11 36 S.nl• Ana C•hrorno•
'7101
wavnf Lou1\ K•\O•rtlr. 10•01
1 °·;~~s ~3::~,",'~,";c:;~::;~~~·:~~~~
divlOual
Wavrw L ICawwrok
HHS st•tement w.,, Wed Wlff'I tne
County Clerk ot Q,-anve Counlv on
M•rcfl l, 1981
FUIOH
Publ"ned Or•n99 (°"\t Oa•IV Piiot, March 5 11, 1q, n, 1911 1011 ti
PUBLIC NOTICE
SL RVl(t'S wnCJ'\~ dOOrtu •\ t~1t
NOtln fu,l1n Av~n~ 1Po,1 Off1c@ Bow
llllil San1• An• 9'1U1 1q11110.
C.•llfo' nt• fnctl ttw l•st d•lt-for t1ltnQ
ti.aim\ 1n inf' t\Ctc.iw ,,.,t,,to lo ""'t•n
., Mdrtl\ )Otn 1~81
~o fdl ct\'' tlnown 10 tnf' Trdrt•lttt>f',
•fl bu\tf"NI\\ n•m~\ •nd aodrt'S\f'\ u\td b'r int Tr an\t\"ror lor ow O•\t tnrft' ~••r\ .tr.-S..me Dal~d M•!Ch ~. l'l'SI Off ( Ly~ll
4nn T Ly~ll
Trdf'i,.ftr~\ Publ1\t\td Orc:lnctt' Co.'' Oa••v P.aot,
MMCh 11 1"111 1}04 81
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINIESS NOTICE 0, TRUSTEE'S S""LE
N.t.ME STATEMENT LMn NO. 1004
1 nt tollow1t\9 otrsons •'~ do•no T S No. Jim ,.,.
OU"""".' "MER•C""N ST,.,TE B"NI( •• Oulv
(.OST,., CARPET C""RE COM appoon leo Tru\lee undor tn. lollowont1
PANY, 1019 Gron Place, Cos••~··· O•H••--ol frll\I WILl SELL
C•llfornoa91'17 Af P UBLIC AUCTION fO THE
Loltr O Blanton 10 .. Grove HIGHEST BIOOER FOR C.""S H
P l•c•, CO\I• Mes-a, C•hforni• '11'11 t O•Y•blt 1t time of \•If' 1n tawtul
A ltJf'rt1s C•mo:bell 101• Gtovt m oney d t~ Ufl•l.O Sl•lti > a ll rtOPH
P t•ce (O\I• ~~ C•llfcwn•• •1'11 t1tlt •nd 1nlf'te\t convf'ye<> 10 •no now
Thi; bustM S\ ~\ conduc l•d by 1 nttd by ti under Mid Ott~ of Tru\t 1n
Qf'n!'rll oartntr~ip '"• prooitrtv twrrttNfltr d•\<riDPd
Lt•ltr O Bl•nlO<'I TRUSTOR RONALD S BENNETT
Thtl Sl•lt,,._,I wa• 1111!<1 wllll Ille and B E 1 T Y SU E BE N NE Tl ,
County C.lerk ot Or•n~ Counh on fru\lee\ Of lhe 8tniwtt F•"uly Truit
M•f<h l , .. , O•l•O Ot <tmbtr 15, 1•76 ano
' l'UI-RONALO S BENNETT •nd BETTY
PuDI'-""" OranQll C.oint OlllY Pilot $UE BENNETf, Hu•l>lnd•nd W•le
M•rchS,11,. 2&,t911 HMi BENEFICl,.,RY ,.,MERIC,.,N S TATE 11,.,NI( a C .tlolOrn••
corpor•t•on PUBLIC NOTICE Rt<Ordf!d ""u11u•I 11, HI/ dS instr
NO 2JH8 '" -11:U. oa;e J:IO of
0 111<>•• Record• '" t"9 Oll1Ce OI lne F~C~~'::!:~~·:::s Rtcorder o1 Oun~ Counlv. '"'d d•l!<I
Tll•}ollowlnt1 person> •rt doln11 ::0~;~1~' dtHrlbts lhf 1011ow ont1
Du>l'neu u Loi J7 ot Tf<KI No 9379 '" lht Coty COINS BY RICK, 3120 McKinley 01 C.osla M4t'WI C.ounly of o;.,11~ Sl1l1
Strut, Co<la MeH, C•lll0<nl• 9762& ot Celllornia 'as per map recorood on
Oon.tlO Ro.-Scnen<k . l1'0 Book HO. P~Qe• Ii 10 II •ncou .. •e ot ~.~1:Co'.~:::2.~ru1, Co•I• Me.a. MIK•ll•""""' ,._.p,, In IM 0 11><• ot
VI 1 ''he k 3110 Mc Kini 51 lhe Counly Recorder ot H id County "'•n~ nc • ey • Jtl • ''K "trw•y Ai;enue Costa Co•I• MeM, C•lltornl• 91U6. MO\•, C•lllornla '
Thi>.,....,,,. .. I• tonduct•d by"" •n ·111 e •1•Ht Mldreu °' common
dlvldual dHlt1n•l•On I\ \nown above, no
Oon411d Roff Schen<k ... ,, • n t y I ' ti I". n • • I 0 • "
Thi\ •IAll.......,t was 1111<1 wl!h tne comp1e1-uorcorre<.tneu1:
County Clerk ot OranQe County on The O.nellclary uncMr U •d 0..d cM
M.,<11 J, '"1 T ru>I, Dy re••on of • DrH<f) or ~·•ull
l'U7 ... 1n In• oDllQ.tllon> secured tl'lertby, Publl\hed OrMIQe Coe>I O•lly Piiot, llttetolore ueculeO Mid dell••red to
Maren s. 11, I', 1•. '"' 10.9 11 11te unders•~ • wrllttn Oecl•rallon
or Oel•ull -Dem-lor Sale. encl PUBLIC NOTICE wrlllM notice of b<oacll -of elKlloft 10 <•uH IN _,.,_., to Mii ... o
oropertv to Mll>ly ,.kl ol>H~lon>.
SUl'IEltlOlt COU"T 01' THI •llO ll'lerNllH tl'le UNIHllo'""' c•uYCI
STATE O~CALll'OltNI,., .. ,d l\Otl<• or bfN<fl -Of electron 10
l'Olt TH~'/:.'li~:JltANOR O. recordlld Oct-12, 1'90 •• in>lr
OltOIElt TOSHOWCAUSll No UtJt In Oooll 1*'· -lJI, or In Re PETER THOMPSON a ,.Id Olfkl•I -onh
Minor, DY FLOlt"" THOMP~~.. Said Mle wtll lie...-, 1>111 witllout Hi• Moti.r, •nd OTT THOM~N. <O••n•nl or ... ,, .... ,. eapreu Of ~~·.:.~tMr, tor CIWll"IQe 01 IMPll.0, r~Olfttl 1111•. poswulon ...
Petit!..,.~ encumb<~ to pay IM refTt•lnlllQ
WHEREAS, FLOR,., •nd OTT Pflncipel '""'of ll'le no4eUI H<11r.O
THOMPSON, r•IHione,., t> the Oy M id OMd of TNll. with lnterefl et mother ana etller OI PETRA lnHld noleprovlded,eclV.,.<H,11..,y,
TiiOMPtoN • perton ....0.. eltlllMil 11noer lhe tHm> of Mkl D .. o of TrU>I, Ill> yHrtoY-oe, ll•v• tlteo •petition fn•, <f'l•roe> end ... ,.,. .. , of IM
wttll 1111 Qerto,'" tlll> Court lor an or· Tnutu •ftcl Ille trusla cruted Dy oar <hell9nt •l)l)ll<ent'> name from P&TEA T~OMPSON lo PETER H id Offdol Trtnt. SHELOOH THOMPSON; Se id >elt wlll bt NICI Oft TuesdeY, 1.::.::d0::,0,~~~~:1,r::-::,::; :r~'. 10~~~1~!·~~::.11:::•: =-::~1~1 r~t·.~~ ~!..'A~~~':I Amtrl<• To-r, S..11• 1110, One City 0.perlmen >,al l!lt COllrtMUH IO<•I· Boultv•rd W.•t, Or ..... , C.lltornla , tel •I 700 Cl>ric C:...ler Drive We.t, hn· At IM Ume of Ille llllUal pu1>1lcell111
le Ane1 ~lll"llle, •IMI '"°"' c euM, 11 of 11111 notl<•, llW total '"'°""' or the .,.,.,, wlly 111em:;1tl011 lor cll.t!loe or unpaid Oelenu of lllt obllgallon
'"''" lllOUld n arenttd. MCured by tM •bevt -..Crll>ecl ""4 Of IT IS l'UltT llt OltOl.ltlO 111411 a Irv.ti and Hllmet.o tOJtt, e•penut, (ffY of llllt orw 10 tllOw < ..... ~ j111llllU1•C1 It\,,,. Oa fly l'lfol • •lld•dvaMHll$111,W,lt,
ftew>P•Ptr el 0111erel (lf(\llall o11 To oetwmlne IM ._.,,,,., bid, you
prlnleo In Or-Olul\ly, C•tlfOrl!I•. lllllY U tl 0 141 .,, ......
onu • w~k for IOllf u1111t uilve 0•1• Mer<f'I s. '"' .... u orl«,. ""' ... Ml fOf' 1War1111 AMEltlCAN$fATE IANI(
°"cl:r.:,1.111on. .. Ml4 ,,......_
I
r .... l!fi--:"t-toc'";'* *:.::::E CO.,
,,;111.,-A• ..............
, ... Deft JU ON City l lW '#Ml. ' l\~.=c'c.1....,...,... Or-.CAN
O'tfl ....._
l"-'1""" Or._ CNtt C>91Y l"IM, ,....._.cir.., Cloltl Delly ll'(llt,
Mlf(ll '1. t\ 1'. ..... ) 1911 ,.., MeKtl. ... tt, "" 1111
. '
MO ~· ............. ~ ............................... _._ .......... -·.,~ ..................... ~ ...... --~,... ..... ,. ...
•• .,_.
-
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St
nd
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' • • 11
GENERAL NEWS
QUEENIE
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March 1Q, 1981
Car sale rule opposed
Dealers, consumer groups against adoption
~
WASHINGTON (AP) Used
car dealers and some leading
consumer groups agree, for
different reasons, that the
Federal Trade Commission
s hould kill its proposed
regulation of used car sales.
The comments are on a rule
tentatively adopted by the FTC
last year that would require
dealers to say in writing ii any
major systems on a car are
"OK," "Not OK " or "We Don't
Know." Another commission
vole will be necessary to put the
rule into effect.
various s tages ol thi s
rulemaking have filed
comments arguing that the
optional inspection rule wlll not
be effective," s aid Albert
K ramer, bead of the FTC
Bureau ol Co0$umer Protection
in a memo to the fiv e
commissioners.
These consumer groups
include the Center for Auto
Safety, Automobile Owners
Action Council and California
Public Interest Research Group,
which represented consumers at
the FTC hearings on used car
sales.
organizations in favor by SS to 9.
Among dealers, 283 of the 292
who commented were againBt
the rule. Such Industry
organizations as the National
Automobile Dealers Association
strongly opposed any regulation.
They argued the rule would be
unfair because it would apply
only to dealers and not to
individual ~e lle rs. because
dealers who misrepresent the
mechanical condition of vehicles
might still do so even if they
make promises in writing and
because the meaning of "OK"
and .. Not OK" would not be
MOT ICE
,,. ..... .o N.... ..._, MemlMltll1•P
IUll•l~AOf•ll
HALE CREST A ,..,ATI U T·-S a lWIW
PUllCU. IMCOlYA "4tU
557-7234
clear. 1-----~~:--"r" ...... .-----...,
••
"' ..... , ...
GOP activist
and insurance
executive
William Edward
Mc ca nn has
been nominated
by President
Reagan as am-
ba ssador t o
Ireland.
Tl R ES .. R·U S
\
-I sh1~:· .. 1::;n:;d ..
DEALERS ARGUED that the
rule would put pressure on them
to inspect cars before sales.
the r eby increasi ng their
expenses . Most individual
cons umers, consumer groups
and state and local government
offi cials who commented argued
for the rule.
"Yet. the major cons umer
o rganization s who hav e
pa rt1c1pated throughout the
T H EY ARGUED T H AT the
proposed rule, which is weaker
than an earlier recommendation
from FTC staffers, would be
worse than no rule because auto
dealers would not be required to
inspect the cars they sell.
T his contr asts with the
com ment s of individual
consumers favoring the rule by
243 to 83 and of consumer
KRAMER URGED T H E
commission to adopt the rule
with minor changes made by the
I-IC staff
"l believe the record is clear
that oral m1sreprcsentat1ons of
me c hanical condition arc•
prevalent in th e used car
industry," he said.
COSTA llKI A641 -1289 t"9H._ ... o
l y AL .____..__. __ __.
HOUOWA.Y
I has response F ·rat: MALE MAN
.. ISllOH Vll..o49S-0 401
,..,, C•tNno c .• ,....,."'°
(Sen °'9911 ,_., et ... .., '-•Y I
llal111 1:-l1k<• a wft lll'll
l'J:>\ w j!d 1nt11 hJrd 111
j.!l.'t out of
1-:,t·u-,t•., \\t· think up fur
11urM:lvl·:-. nt·\ l'I' "·1·m 111
.,ou n d J., J.:1111d "ht·n
"llllll'!Jnt' P IM· ll"t'l> lht:rn
' I
! .
c
I
"H I didn't own them. somebody else would,"
White House adviser Lyn Nofziger says of the
run-down slum housing he says he purchased three
or four years ago in Baltimore.
In h.is first public comment on the report since
it surfaced this week, Nofziger said in Newport
Beach "there's no question but that I have
invested in some housing there (Baltimore); did
that three or four years ago. Ir l didn't own them.
somebody else would "
an unusual discount store E '< pvrtt·m·e ., kn"'' h·dj!•·
Oll'(jUll l'd lo11 l;1t1•
TENANTS OF T HE ROW HOUSES owned by
Norziger as we ll as similar substandard
Baltimore housing owned by President Reagan's
personal secretary . llelene von Damm said
Wednesday they are not happy with the conditions
in the rental properties
Marie Spedden. who pays $165 a month in rent
for a house owned by Nofziger. was quoted by the
Baltimore Sun as saying she was unable to get
plum bing leaks fixed and that water was seeping
into her bedroom The 80-year-old woman said she
was forced to move her bed because pieces of wet
plas ter were falling into her eyes.
SAMPLE DEPT.
(Mediums Only)
50% off
CHEMISE
ROBERT BRUCE
HUK-A-POO
ARNOLD PALMER
JIM MY CONNORS
s1099
Value to S22.00
SLACK SALE
s 1 'Z'9
Value to $26.00
Ont• 11( till' ht•..,I \\a\.., 111
J.! 1• I a d 1• I a t I l' d
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Nofziger also owns a "graffiti-scarred duplex"
in a run-down Washington 0 C neighborhood,
according to a report by the Srripps-Howard News
Servire.
BALT I MORE {'ITV OFFICIALS
reportedly said one of three row hous es
owned by Nofziger there s hould have been boarded
up months ago But Nofziger said he periodically
checks with the property management firm that
handles his properly, "and they tell me there are
no problems. so I assume there are no problems."
Men's Fashions -Name Brands -DISCOUNTED -20°/o-40°/o Every Day .I 11111 t ht· pt·npl•· '' htt I'll
Ill\
Nofziger. who was in Orange County to
address a state agricultural meeting, added that
he had no plans to divest himc;elf of the property
but suggeMcd ht• might change managem ent
firms
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•
•••• 4 ...... ...
OrMgeCout DAJL'(PILOT!Thur'lday, March 19, 1981 FEATUAl!S . .
omen get acquainted with ~xper~r:ice Center
ByMARYJANEICAaCEUA> °' ... DMty "'91 ....
The Irish, partly Irlab, almott Irlab and
ould-be Irish celebrated St. Patrick'• Day at an
ishCoffeeiQCoronadel Mar.
Cleva Howard opened her Harbor View Hilll
ome to acquaint more than 100 women with the
xperience Center. a hands-on science muaewn
Irvine.
She was assisted by Olivia John.Ion, Barbara
eckenpaugb and Ann Mound, who save two-
inute ·'commercials•' for the center at intervals
urine the party.
The museum , now in its third year of opera-
on, has grown through private donatlODJ and
elp from such organizations as. the Irvlne Co .•
teel Foundation and Fluor Corp. but ii still
oused in a temporary location.
The board of directors, beaded by Robert
Howard, is considering permanent sites and
hopes to begin construction next year.
Women enjoyed pastries, strawberries and
Irish coffee (or the plain variety) while hearing
about the museum. Dr. Pauline Merry. educational director at
the museum . brought along some small' 'sample"
HAPPENINGS
exhibits with magnets. mirrors and prisms for
guests to handle and see. in the spirit or the
museum. Noting that adults who bring their children_ to
the center find themse lves enthralled with
science. Dr. Merry said,·· It's a treat for me to see
the expressions on the faces of the adults when
they make a discovery while 'playing' with an ex-
hibit."
And while the party wasn't a fund-raiser. the
women organizing it are already planning a Sep-
tember holiday boutique sale with some unique,
ha nd-made gifl items for holidays throughout the
year
· Guests at the coffee included Susan Strader,
01ane Sweet, Gwen Johnson, Jean Wenke, Karen
Smirl, Hedda Marosi. Annette Hurwitz and Peggy
Ogden.
Crittenton lunch successful
The luck of the Iris h was with the Florence
Crillenton Services of Orange County the day
before St. Patrick's Day. ·
An overflow crowd gathered for lunch and
fashion show at the Balboa Bay Club to benefit
the organization's work with teen-age girls.
It was a great day for the Irish and a social
hour by the pool.
Inside. green and white helium balloons were
tied to each chair back and green plant cen-
l£'rp1eces featured a down-to-earth Iris h potato
for decoration
Suzie McGehee led the crowd in a prelunch
Irish song medley accompanied by Jean Tan·
dows ky on piano.
Monsignor John Sammon gave the invocation
with a touch of Irish humor.
He and Donald Nielsen. president of the Crit-
tenton board of directors. were among the few
men attending
Lunch was a salad (with some greenery, of
course) and ice cream topped with green creme
de menthe.
The fashion show, presented by Shelley Kauf-
mann of Saks Fifth Avenue in South Coast Plaza,
exploded onto the runway with Irish jigs, laces
and linens.
Dancers and models continued through a fast-
paced presentation or bathing suits, daytime wear
and glittering evening gowns in desert tones,
junizle prints and a nautical motif.
The fin.ale was a salute to America, but a
leprechaun stole the show when Travis Parry, a
cha racter actor, appeared complete with green
top hat, green shoes and a s hillelagh.
After the awarding of the door prizes, which
included a $650 travel wardrobe from Saks and a
weekend al L'ermitage in Beverly Hills, Patricia
Groth, chairman for the event, thanked guests for
helping Crittenton with their spendable greenery.
Her committee consisted of Katheryn
Nielsen, Elsabeth Blalack , Suzie McGehee, Mary
Lou Hopkins, June Kawamura and Sandra
Koistra.
Attending the
1 r vine Philharmonic
dinner were
(from Left )
Connie Hacuk, Carroll
Daulton and
Jane Daulton,
co-chairmen.
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NOW ENROLLING FOR
APRIL CLASSES
Primary Ages 4-6
1~&& JEFFREY A0AD
IRVINE, CALIF. 9271~
. MuSic.
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WleRiNe ...
Prtnwy Courte ....................... to e
~d Fundamentals •.•....... 1g9 7 to 11
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Compoeitlon •.........•......... Under ege 15
~t~9Ri~rcRMTioN CBLI. •••
(7~) 559-5440 . .
Among those to
get acquainted with
the Experience Center
during Irish coffee
were (from left)
Barbara Peckenpaugh ,
Olivia Johnson
and Cleva
Howard, hostess.
Attend.mg the
Florence Crittenton
Services luncheon
were (from left J
Mrs. Jay Reed .
Mrs. Andy Devine
and V'irginia
Bender.
Evening of good taste
It was "An Evening of Good Taste," good
music and good fun when the Irvine
Philharmonic Committee hosted a sold-out
crowd at the Turtle Rock Communlt)' Center. With an attendance of about 450, 1l was b~ far
the largest fund -raiser ever staged by the eight·
year-old group.
A dozen Orange County restaurants con-
tributed gourmet fa re to the event.
Diners began with Danish tartines from Am·
brosia Restaurant in Newport Beach (with Geril
Muller in attendance to be sure everything was
just right ) • pate from Chez Cary in Orange, and
Nachos and Tostaditos created by Ray Marshall,
fo under and master chef of Acapulco
Restaurants.
A tall ice carvin~ of a rooster m arked the
Chantfflair Restaurant'• ent.r'M table, where
1ue1ta 1ampled Crepes a la Reine, and Cano'I in
Newport Beach served Seafood Newbur1 ln patty
shells.
Maxwell's by the Sea ln Huntlncton Beach of-
fered seafood mousse en croute, appropriately
shapedasaaeahone.
The menu also includecl Mozzarella Marinara
by Rlstorante Ervlno and a Caesar Salad from
Bob Burns in Newport Beach.
Dessert was Chocolate Mousse Cake from
Lafayette Francaise and Extraordinary An1el, a
whipped cream and freah strawberry concoction
from The Warm Table ln Santa Ana, which alao
provided Cafe Diablo, a hot-coffee-and-rum drink
flavored with orange and lemon.
For anyone who still had room, domestic
and imported cheese from Wholly Cheese plus
Lazzaroni Amaretto liqueur and Amaretto
cookies from Oscar Frank of Transcontinental
Trade Company accompanied the repast.
California wines and sparkling water were
arranged by J ames Francis of the Bronco Com·
pany.
After guests filled their plates, they sat at long
tables arranged throughout the community
center, and musicians entertained in many
rooms.
Guitarist Richard Glenn performed from the
s tage for diners. Chez Cary Strings entertained
near the entrance, a string quartet played in
another room, and mime Clyde Dodge traveled to
tables to perform.
After dinner and the awarding of door prizes,
guests enjoyed harpist Rosalie Corson, Doug
Lima and Celeste Pence on piano and flute , and
Terpischore, an unusual musical group perform-
ing 15th and 17th century music on exact replicas
of instruments from the period. ·
Co-chairmen for the evening were Jane
Daulton and Leslie Petrosky assisted by Elaine
Delman, Irma Siler. Judy Carlson, Gwen Byrd,
Lenore Silby, Francine Steinbrenner. Marcia
Snidow, Marjorie Sweeney, Vicky Greer. Britt
Ascher, Karen Phillips and Linda Mayeda
A sello u t i n one week
Tickets for the $25-a -person dinner sold out
within a week, and committee members report a
waiting list for next year 's event.
Profits from the evening, estimated at S6 000
to $8.000. will be contributed to the Orange Cou'oty
Philharmonic Society fund.
Celebra tes 90 years
Rose Mellin of Costa Mesa hosted a 90th birth·
day party for Margaret Frazee, nee Christiansen.
ad ire ct descendant of the King of Norway.
Mrs. Fraze.e is the widow of Broadway pro-
ducer Harry Frazee. who owned the Boston Red
Sox baseball team during the 1920s.
Guests included Norma Hertzog <former
mayor of Costa Mesa l. Roger Peterson, Hugh
McPhillips, Rosemary Keck. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles McKinnon , Doris Cor bey and Ronald
Raaum.
Free trip to Vegas
Las Vegas no longe r is the onJy place with
lucky winners.
Betsy MacKenzie of Balboa Island was
a mong 15 Southern Californians to win all-
expense paid trips for two to Las Vegas, compli-
ments of Bullock's.
Mrs. Jack Delman
(from leftJ. Mrs.
Reginald Silby and
Francine
Steinbrenner
also attended Irvine
Philharmonic dinner:
D.llly l'llOI Sl.tlf ...... ,
madine's
A Private Heath Cub
For Women
• Sauna • Whirlpool
• Sunroom • MaaMUee
• Nutritionist • Aerobics
No Contracts
2 FOR 1 SPECIAL
Two can join Mldlne'a
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Offer E><Pires March 31at
3 Orange eo...ty locatlon1 to sen• you
Newport Beach .
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18857 Algonquin
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1.:l.1--.-..--.1..
•
I
I
t
(
I
......... _....
FEATURES Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuradav. March 19. 1981
e I She's ~fed up with ·1. R. and the Texas loo'k
A few montbl ago, I auuested that
lelevlllon ease up a Uttl~ on sex In Texas and
live the other 49 states a chance to be
Un.crupu..loua and lmmoral. So far, no one bas
taken the bait.
"J.R." and the Ewin& clan have made sex
the bluest group sport since water volleyball.
They've also succeeded in setUne a style the
entire country la lrying to emulate.
' To be perfectly honest, I've had ll with the
Western look. If l never see anotJier fanny in a
pair of tight jeans it will be too soon for me. If I
never see another chase between a pick-up
t r uck and a sports car, it'll be just fine. If I
never see a man in a ten-gallon hat arguing
about bis inheritance, I can live.
No wonder we don't have any oil in this
lllA llllRI : ...... · __
country. We can't get the oUmen out of the
1 bedroom and back on the oiJ rtas where they
belong.
I'm not exaageraUng when l talk aboyt the
impact Texas has had on the country. In one
week alone, I received booklets and ads that
offered: Western pillows, boots wit.b matching
bags, a doormat that says, "Hi Y'all,''
horn-shaped beer steins, a stuffed Clydesdale
for the wall, a tie clasp in the s hape of'
Conestoga Wagon, a bolo Ue, a belt made out of
Cosmetic surgery is legal
All LANDIRS
didn't marry her for her shape, and she looks •
just fine to me. She said she always felt as if she
was built like a duck. Last year she went on a
diet and lost 65 pounds. Now she says she can't
stand all that loose flesh hanging here and
there.
What do you think about all this un·
necessary surgery? I have heard of face-lifts.
but a tummy-tuck and inserting silicone bags to
make the rear end more round are so far-out
that I can't believe a woma n in her right mind
would go through the pain and inconvenience to
have it done.
Please talk to your experts and let me know
if these operations are legal. legitimate and do
they h elp : NEED TO K NOW I N
BAKERSFIELD
Dear Bake: The operalloes yoa describe
are indeed legal -and tbey do help. BUT, any
woman who would consider sucb surgery aboald
clleck the credenUals of the doctor and speak
wllb bis patients who have bad tbeae procedures
and find out bow they 1lke lbe results -and
whether It was worth It.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I didn't care for
your advice to the woman whose husband
divides the newspaper with her and then falls
asleep under his half.
You have an eye for business, all right. You
told her to buy TWO papers. I say, why waste
the money? If the big oaf is going to sleep, he
can sleep just as well under yesterday's paper. I
wish you would correct that answer. It bothered
me. -MINNIE IN DA VIS, CAL.
DEAR MINN IE: Sorry, dear, yoa didn't
read &be whole letter, and I did. It seems Sleep·
log Beauty Ukes to fall asleep with tbe paper
over his face. Wben she tries to Utt It off, sbe
wakes him up and be gels mad. He wants to
sleep under the current paper, so when be
wakes up be can start In where be left off.
The man ls a llgbt sleeper and bas a bot
temper. Once wben sbe tried &o remove tbe
paper ~d substitute It for tbe baU sbe bad read,
be belted her. So I suggested two papers, and I
stand by my advice. It's worth lbe utra money.
A fat Up can be a nuisance, and dental work ls
expensive.
She suffers anxiety attack
DEAR DR. STEINCROIIN : My proble m
began about four months ago It happened while
I was driving to work a fter a night out dancing
with friends .
I fell as if l was going to faint. My hands
were s weaty and my breathing was fast. Ter·
ritied, I pulled over to the s ide of the road.
Finally, I managed to drive to work. After a few
hours I felt much better.
The next time it hit me again was when I
1 was driving. I we nt to a doctor who said I was
probably having anxiety attacks. He gave me
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
"nerve" pills and told me not to worry about 1t.
I took one each morning before work. 1 was
afraid lo get into my car without it.
Dissatisfied with my family doctor's opin·
ion, 1 went to anothe r doctor. He thought it
might b e due t o h y pothyroidi s m or
hypoglycemia It proved to be neither
But the attacks continued. Whenever I went
out to lunch with m y fellow workers I fell faint
and nervous. How I envied their composure and
apparent freedom from "nerves."
When the attacks do come on it's a feeling
of being spaced out as if I'm 80 percent here
and 20 percent not. I start to sweat. My hands
are clammy. I feel that everyone can tell I'm
going through some kind of attack. Especially
when my heart starts running away with itself
and I think I'm going to die right there.
I've never been a loser. Always conquered
any obstacles that came m y way. l try not lo
think of it, but the anxiety will not go away. I'm
a female, 23 years old. ls there any hope I'll gel
better? MISS H.
RUFFELL'S
Dear Miss H.: Yours ls a typical history of
a patient suffering rrom chronic anxiety state.
As you've described, it can cause Intense dis·
comfort and Interfere with normal social and
business activity.
I'm tempted &o call It a psychoneurosis. But
that can be a vague diagnosis. I suggest con·
sultation with a psychiatrist. I thlnk be will as-
sure you that chronic anxiety can be helped.
But improvement may not come im ·
mediately. You sa y you've "never been a
loser ." That state of mind will help you recover.
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN. J woke up one
night a couple of days back, sat s traight up in
bed and was gasping for breath. It was 4 a.m . I
a wakened my son who immediately heJped me
by wrapping his arms around me and pressing
so I could breathe.
I was terrified My heart was racing, but
has s hown no trouble since. I'm afraid to go lo
sleep for fear I' 11 gasp for breath again.
I know I don't suffer from hyperventilation
or a ny other nervous disorder. I happen to be
what m y family and friends call a "nerveless"
person.
I'd appreciate any ~uggeslions. Do you
think it m akes any sense to see a doctor for this
sillyupset' MR.H.
Dear Mr. H.: What may seem silly to you ls
·reason enough to have a heart checkup. Oc·
casionally, an attack of shortness of breath suf·
ficient to wake a person, Is often the flrst
manifestation that the heart muscle is not up to
its normal work.
Have your family doctor or a cardiologist
order X rays, ECGs and whatever other ex·
aminatlons seem necessary to prove that the
heart is not involved.
UPHOLSTERY
wi...To..W.,t ....... ,.
"22 Harbor ll•d. SPECIAL PRICE
Cotlo Mete -SU· I 156
Baldwin
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enct Organs
LESSON! INSTAUMENtS
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REDUCTION
LADIES VB.OUR
TOPS • .., PANTS
REDUCED
33%to40%
Good Selection
But Broken Sizes A:----And Q>lors.
BUY NOW AND SA VE!
SINCE 1949
a diamond-back ratuesnake h.lde, and a 1ame
called "Go to Texas" wltb the objective being to
be tbe rtcbtlt player.
There's allo a 1llver boot mattb·boldm',
packeta ol Texu chlli-wltb enamelwan to serve
it in, belt bucldn, a pound ol Texu leath•r to
carry around because It looks and smells great,
an oil can with J .R. 's otnclal emblem on lt, an
elf ht-lncb ceramic armadUJo flUed with
ja apeno lollipops, barbed-wire awlule sticks
and napkin holders and (get ready) ror $25 you
can buy a square toot of J .R. 's ranch,
Soutblork. (You can bet ii J.R.'1 Jetting it eo, it
dled.)
I don't deny Texas is easy to fall in love
with ... the warmth of its people , the outgoine
honesty, the extremes and the laid-back
Jlfestjle, but let'a not get limited by our
imactnatlon. What's the Mldweat city you think
ol when you think of aln? Cleveland!
Try thl1 plot on for alze. An envelope baron
ls buying up all the statJonery manufacturers in
the Midwest to create a monopoly and brine
corporations to their kneea. He has a wile who
winters in Akron and a mistress in Chagrin
Falls. He is trying to marry hls only daughter
off to a glue mag11ate and ls upset because his
only son wants to clerk in a maternity shop. One
night the Cuyanoga River catches fire and one
of his envelopes is seen on the banks, near the
crime.
I'm telling you. Give it a chance and in
three months the whole country will be talking
with a Cleveland accent and wearing loafers .
Leo: Pieces fall together
FIUDAY,MARCH %t
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES I Mar. 21-Apr. 19): Review pro·
cedures, become familia r with legal rights,
permissions Obtain definition of terms. See
people as they are, not merely as you wish they
might be.
TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20): Emphasis on
responsibility, basic tasks, ability to handle
added pressure and responsibility. Co-worker
aids in making long-range decision.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Focus on emo·
tional responses, finishing tasks at hand and
universal appeal. Barrier lo progress is removed.
Love dominates scenario. You are able now lo
bridgt culture gap. Aries, Libra natives aid in
clarifying message.
CANCER (June 2l·July 22): Define ter·
ritorial rights . Emphas ize ind~pend ence ,
originality, willingness to get to heart of mat·
ters. Member of opposite sex inspires. offers en·
couragement
LEO I July 23-Aug. 22 J: Puzzle pieces fall
into place: you get on more solid emotional and
financial footing. Learn by teaching -family
member becomes valuable ally. Discuss past
~rievances. Air will be cleared .
VIRGO I Aug 23 -Sept. 22 l . Good news
do minates in connection with personal
possessions. basic values and income. You
locate "missing link " Money picture takes on
brighter hue.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Timing, judg·
ment will be on target. Lunar cycle high-take
initiative, make new starts in new directions.
get rid of superfluous material.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): You gain "in-
timate glimpse" behind scenes. You'll have ac·
cess to confidential material. Clandestine meet-
ing could top agenda
SAGITTARIUS < r-{ov. 22-Dec. 21 l . Impor·
tant change. adjustment occurs in domestic
HOROSCOPE
area. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio persons figure
prominently. Rare opportunity exists to fulfill
hopes and wishes.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): One who is·
sues instructions may be sincere but confused.
Know it and prepare accordingly. Request
clarification. Pierce clouds of deception.
Pres tige rises if you a re vigilant.
AQUA RIUS I Jan. 20-Feb. 18 ): Solidify
plans regarding journey, publishing, long-range
aspirations. Your position is more secure than
might be apparent on surface. Capricorn.
Taurus, Virgo persons fi gure prominently .
PISCES <Feb 19-Mar. 20>: You gain
clarification of financial status. Emphasis is on
money as related to one close to you. including
partner or mate. Initial complication will be
clarified.
Animal center seeking help
.. Who Need.$ You'" JS a weekly luting of volunteer
opportunittes in Orange County.
The Irvine Animal Care Center needs
volunteers lo help in exercising, bathing and
grooming homeless animals. Help with office
duties, lost and found and adoptions is also
needed. For information . call Teresa at 754.3734
or Lynn at 855·4236.
The Women's Divis ion of the Jewish
bers must have made individual gifts to that
campaign. Call He len Pines at 730-1638 before 10
a .m .
The Orange County Red Cross Chapter
needs a volunteer typist with record·keeping ex-
pe rience to work part-time weekdays typing let·
WHO NEEDS YOU?
Federa tion of Orange County is seeking people ters, keeping records a nd compiling lists Call
to fill its slate or officers and directors for 835-5381. ext. 242.
1981 -82. The division serves Jewish residents in A health agency needs people to help with a
26 communities as sponsor of the Shalom Wagon s peaker 's bureau. pre-natal clinics and other
for newcomers, the J e wi sh Community Forum projects. Training is provided when needed.
and the United Jewish Welfare Fund annual For information about this and other op-
fundraising campaign. Potential board mem· portunities, call 675·9210 or 833·9285. ~~~~~~~~~~.......:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We're going f9Ur way.
,,,, seem• II••. IUChOl IS •l••YS
tr•pped with Pllf'e' ""°'• So Im••• tri. mMI of my llfne by or•dmo
papers while the OCTD CWs drilfflS
me to school And the bus sched-
ules •r• so lreQ<Jent •nd fl••lble II !l
11mple lo •ll•nd meellnos •her
school •nd still oet home """"°"' •ny fuss or botri.r Now On encour·
-'JffllJ •II my stV(Hnts to ride lhtOUs,,
Donna Ber••ch
Te.cher
Cyf"•SS Hloh School
fl/lore people ere 11dlno the txn
to ""°'*' schOol •ltd shopplno
~·· -W made If IO US)' with MW buNS. new roulH
•ltd /mpt'Ol/9d .. rvlce.
Don't .... ,. your_, ef the
118• pump. S.lfO mot,.y •ltd rldo
IN bus. 500 fl e# # c-. -....,. on reQUIM roufea.
Our friendly~ opw«on
w111 ,,.,,, you plett '°"' trip on ~ OCTD but. If rou-"~ .. ""°"""''°"· .... -"' # to you-'"~EI
Call
636-RIDE
..
'
r
"Look, I don't want to give the wrong Impression-
you might not get vtdeo cassette recorders straight
away."
BB¥1'JCA
Grand Canyon
trip slated
Registration is being conducted for a slx-day
excursion to the Grand Canyon for youngsters
aged 12 to 16, sponsored by the West Orange Coun-
ty YMCA in Huntington Beach.
With adult supervisors, youngsters will depart
by YMCA van April 11 a nd return April 17. Stops
will include Hoover Dam, the Lake Mead Recrea-
tion Area, Old Vegas, Zion National Park and the
Grand Canyon.
Participants must register and submit a $25
, deposit by April 4. The cost of the excursion is $125
• for YMCA members, $135 for non-members. I Registration forms and information are
available at the YMCA, 7262 Garfield Ave .. Hunt·
iogton Beach. ... . i Auto racing
!films set
I' Auto racing scenes from around the world will
be presented in a free four-week film and lecture
I series, beginning Friday al Golden West College in
Huntington Beach.
The program will provide commentary on the
~Indianapolis 500 and other road races .
l' Sessions will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in '
Fine Arts room 222.
Leading the discussions will be Fred Bailey, a
documentary film producer and director who is
, owner of Championship Racefilm Productions.
I
Club to off er
: wetlands tour
The Long Beach section of the Sierra Club will
conduct a public tour of a portion of the Los Cer-
-ritos WeUands in southeast Long Beach from 8:30
to 1 p.m. Saturday.
:-The Los Cerritos Wetlands, totaling about 130
acres, is the last section remaining of the Alamitos
'::Bay marshlands, or San Gabriel River estuary
which once covered about 2,400 acres. '
·: The area supports many endangered species
,.such as the least tern and Belding's savannah
~sparrow.
' Access to the wetlands and the tour is off
Studebaker Road, just north of Westminster
Avenue.
Information on the tours is available from
Sierra Club members Larry T. Lee, (213) 597-7491
-and Bob Lamond, (213) 425-3268, or from the
California Department of Fish and Game.
Series /or new
authors slated
A free four-week series on how to get your fint
book publl.sbed will begin Saturday al Golden Weal
College in Huntington Beach.
Arthur Roberts, author of a new novel entitled
"Incredible Interlude at Lake Tahoe," will lecture
from 10 a.m. to noon ln Administration room 209
Roberts lived at Lake Tahoe two years white
writing his book.
Sea creatures
head upstream
BALTIMORE (AP) -Va1abond sea creatures
are sbowini up in the Chesapeake Bay and oyaten
are reproducing with new vt1or u cfroulbt con-
tinues to lncreue the bay's salinity, marine ex-perts say.
Accordln1 to the Univentty of llU)'land'a
Chesapeake Bay Laboratory in Solomoea river
nows to the bay an averqlq about a fuu. ot
normal and two-lhlrda of the low-reeorded 15 7ean
•10.
, The 1a1Uer, denaer, ~ean water bu penetrat·
ed far up the bay, to the sreatest eneat Oil neord
Recordl were tint kept in im. ·
''TRI! WBOLB •••crat111 or WllAT ......
aeein1 baa cban1ect aatonJPln1l1." Hid Doe
Bauch. a Cbeaapeab Bay romdatloa "'oloGlt.
Such marine ere8ture1 u Ma borHI m IQ1dd
have to& •eel the blab •allnltJ •far MU.. ....
ent RlVerJ harvnt flab from .. .._ ........ ban 1un1e..t ln e""b U'CMMI Amapalll ... ~rt flabermen bue repon.ct tq e.._ ot
flouAder ....... tbe il"td• ..... ,, .........
IUCb numben for, ..... -up to ... ..,~ ror tbe ftnt Um• •bace ~ ,,.._. U.
NPl'Odudnl with nDJaruble ..... ,,. • * ltocb of baneltabl• •bellftM ............ .,
• pred)lff.oul deeltM.
GOY. ffarrr H..,.... a,,._. 11r --ta federal sranta to bin wa-.. .. ~ 1J11t ff 1119
o,lter crop~ ud ............ .. :=::---..:::i::::=.•• tW
1
, .. _..__ ........ ,..-
___ STAILD POWDLOCI 11
I" 125 FT. POWD
IETUU TAPI
.. ,,.,:llh
Meuure -..rything n .. t and accurate. If
you buy by In-and nam., bet you'"
already met Stanley .
~-· i"-.,._ ...
IOITOI
FLEl'I SAID
SAIDllG ILOCI
93~
Sandpaper can be a pain when it teen.
UM thia inst .. d, it>'e waah&ble, reuaable
and won't tear. ( M.aW MnM.)
ILACI I DECIO
~BP IOUTD I
SPECWOFFD
29~!18
o..tcrn-ln wood, p1-tlc, and compo.ttiona.
With proof of pwcha.e on carton
plu.e aa1-rec.ipt you can recei-born
B. & D. a FREE Cai-Vac or Cai-Lite, or Spark
PlUQ Cleaner.
o...t ........ ._..
........ , ...... t.~.
· 8,.. ....a tt. lt won't
... .... .,.(At
......... J'O'I ...... ........ ~--..m.)
ILACI I DECID
IOUTD TOLE
·24•7
'78-400
Aooept8 all Black A Decker rout.en and
mc.t other mall.. Equipped with shaper/
joint. type fence, and guard.
ILACI I DICID
111 IDCI
WO•lllAn
89~0ll
v ... , ... 38" wide that open.to 18'4 ••
......... eri.-that OU\ haNU. odd ...... and lwnher up to ....... and a·
~·
ll"DuAL 6997 RZIOlft' WOIUOIATI! 171.001
hat's how long ago~
started in Bellflower. We've
come a long way Thanks ~o
you! You '·re swell.
SUNBEAM
GAS GRILLS
H.... .. go: On the '9031 it'• cNome plated with coold.n9 crrid of 280 eq. in., 20 lb. tank. la•a. rock. 18,000
BTtTa. Model l9330 b a little more better with two
burnen lndirid~ conbollecl with the lite. a -ma tic
ipitor. 32.000 •·The '9361 t. the better.t J.t with
up front panel conbol, cooking fuel indicator and lob
more. (What echool did you .. ,. you went to?)
SIN QI.£
BURNER
'IWIN BURNER
DELUXE
'IWIN
BURNER
20" SINGLE BLADE
89~e
18" TWIN BLADE WITH
~-OVER HANDLE
97
#9031
97
#9930
97
#9361
RUllEIJWD
ROUGBNEel
TIASB CAIS
10~~32
GALLON
I 19~!A Don't fool around
with th ...
roughneclu. th.,. li"
up to thelr ~.
The 20" has power cut -off that etope blade
in 1 .. than 2Ya ..concla. The 18" I.eta you
re..ne direction by flipping the handle.
TORO
TRIMMER/WEEDERS
The...,. way to handle all the
...da in your life. Show them
who'• ham right away. ( Gi"
'em an inch, th.,. take the
whole yard.)
HOME 188! DUTY
SUPER 29!! HOME
DUTY
HEAVY 39!! DUTY
SCOTTS FAJllL Y f
GUSS SEID
2 97 .
ioooso. rr.
'MUck, lu.ah and green, and
91'0W8 well in 8\ll\l\J' or not·
80•8\UU\J' ueu which jwrt
about co.... the whole yard. <uni-you ha .. iota o1 u.... >
ICOTTl TUU
11JU.DDPLUl2
2000 so. J'T.
4000 SO. FT.
8000 80. FT.
7.77
13.77
17.77
Ql.,. the laWI\ a healtl\,., well·
ha1a.....A meal while dol.ne awaJ. wtth 40 4*ftlMft lawn ••• , ......... llmowthe eoocl 9'&711 "-' the ..... ,.1)
DURALITE
OUTDOOR FURNITURE
If your outdoor furniture didn't make it
through the winter and you 're plannlno a
big huh in a couple of weelu you'll need to
check th ... out .
EITRA WIDE WEI
Fi.ta pattern. Plastic an:n.a.
CHAIR
9~!
CHAISE
l:~g. 17!!
TEIALllE
Heather pattern with
molded yellow arma.
CHAIR 15!!
SPOSmON
CHAISE
72" lonv. 27!!
STAClllG STUP
Y .no.. and white
.trape. l.p It arnui an
furniture pacle 1 ~"
alwnlnwn tubing.
CHAIR 24!!
~
j I
..
Af'llll;,... ~.,., ...... ........_. • ••• ,.,.._.........,.,.,.. _.. •••.-.. ,..,~ ....... -..;-._,...-....,. • .._.~,._~ _...,,, -,,.,,.... .,.""
-__ ..... ..,............ ----------~~-. -
REMEMBER THIS
PLACE?
I'heN'• Mel putting out the
ICNens, Carl is feeding the pigeons
out back, and Sol is bringing more
nail.a in the pickup.
OAI WBISIEY
HALF IAllEL
777
• • I EVEREADY c OR D
A BATTERIES
ISCEA.
Bure are lot.a of thiner• that run on
Mtt.ri• th ... d&)'9. M.ak.. Mn.M to haft
a tlp&N on hand. Or two or th .... at th ...
pricee.
BEIRY WET SURFACE
PLASTIC ROOF CEMEIT
GAi, ....... . 3 77
SGAL .... 1477
Think you're aafe ju.t becau.ae the raina
haft gone away? What hal.:i:9 if th.,.
come aoain? Drip, drip. ( 1-lu ..... n
ln the rain. ) •208
TIE TAINEIY
Conditiona while it clean.a any
color of leather and rinyl. Hear
about the guy who wanted to get
rich quick? Sold hia peanut. and
bought jelly b.ana.
I 2~ooz.
DUIO IUPD
CLUE
5 .SC.IOO'L
U it holda a ton rnu.t be aood
stuff. Don't be CA\19ht with a
bNe..k and no ootfee, (I meen
olu. to fta it > ..
DD
OD
-' I
Let's not wait another ·37
years to get together. Do:t\~t
call, just .come on over. .
aaa aaa aaa aaa aaa
Cl [J
c•c
Cl IC
DCC
CIC
IJDICI ca
DOUGLAS FIR
ENTRY DOORS
A bunch of good looking entri• and at the
right price. Doon are all l~" x 38" a 6'8".
Our neighbon jun got a new front door,
Nally looka nifty.
4PANEL
tN-44
18 PANEL
•N-2060
6997 8997
12 LITI
IN-2039 DD.110
IN-30180
IDAllY IOJIAlllQVI
IN798
COIOIADO IDCVTIVI
IN2113CE
LWD IWI lllDT
IN21
IOJIAlllQVI
IN2013
YOUR
CHOICE 99'7
YOUR
CHOICE
11997
l&"x27" DOOlllATS
HONEYCOMB .. 2 77
SJSALLOOP .... 3 77
And a new door~ a new
doormat. Kida will wipe th.eU feet lor a
whole ..U whether they need it or not.
UJ.TU-1111
WAllrvDACa
Jl,..ITl'I
=~AT .. 137.77
;.~UIOftAT .. 1•7 .77
~ITl'IMIUWAl.L HM~AT .. 187 .77
r.a::wotrl'AT .. 197 .77
.Al..,. Mt to JN,. •Ma na1 tti.u at the
.._. oi tM •M NL a.ta .... -.i ...
~-thenmt ... 1n.
llASS PLATED
GLASS TOP
TAILE
Br._ and gia.., ho, a good
looklnq combination. You
.-.mbl. and .... bunch.
19aa
Th ... ha" a melamine laminated aurface
to ward off mot.stun . In stock but K.D.
Faucet.a and counteriope eztra.
Wlll CAllllTI WI w11ns
12"a30'• HIGH .• JA... 12"1134" IDGH .. Jl.'9
19 .. dO" HIGH .. 27... 19"1134'' HIGH .......
l8"a30'' HIGH .. JI... 18''1134" HIGH ..• 7 ...
21 "a30'' HIGH .. JS... 21 "1134" HIGH ..... ..
24"1130" HIGH .. Jt... 24"1134" HIGH .. St. ..
2T'd0" HIGH . . ..... 2T'a34" HIGH .. JI.ft
30"a30'' HIGH. . ..... 30"1134" HIGH .......
W 'dO'' HIGH .. J7... 38"1134" HIGH .. 71 ...
IOULCO COOL WllTE
FLUOllSCDT TVIES
U your bull. are gettiJ\9
WM.Iser and WM.Iser, replace
them, yeu .01\'t be eorry.
You'll be able to ....
•rr .... 73c
a:r~» 187
TELEVISIONS
Now they are~ u.
to U89 the manufacturer'•
nun.. ( w.u. tMF aid
it wu OK if we wantacl 11---------------t to.) National will~ OAI Flllll the Anoe!'• tam. uu.
EITDTAllJIDT CDTD wacm. eo tais. • look.
T&TVIC
la" A/C
BLACK a WHlTE ....
D.D.I.
13 .. COLOR
23777
D.D.I.
ll"OOLOa
277'7 ~~
KRACO
AtrrO STEREO
8-TRACK
CARTRIDGE
PLAYER
19•z.340 .
SUPER MINI
CASSETTE WITH
AUTO STOP
25!?.~A
Eight track h.u manual pJ"091'arn Mi.ct
button, hi/lo tone awitch. c....tu h.u
automatic stop that ahuta off when
tape enda.
.. PE~~~pll l
~
lo\yt5 GAse>LJ" .. ---
SDCOI
REFRIGllAIT 12
74 c1•oz.
Time to check out the
air conditioner. If it blowa
nothlncr but hot air
( hurnnun, eound
fanilliar?), maybe all it
needa la freon.
PEllZOIL
MOTOR OIL c
30 WT .••••••• 81 <Yf.
10W /40WT .••• 91 ~.
Both 1"ight. eo you can decide which you
need. S.,.. it .a,,.. ga80line. Can you
afford not to try it?
STAI lllTE
POLY 222
PROTECfOR PLUS • • • 18 oz.
4 ••
POLY SYSTEM ONE • • 18 oz.
Protector la a pl'Otec:tant (what elM?)
for rinyl, rubber, plairtica, etc. The Poly
8,..tem giYM two year warranty for new
car protection.
Ill.Al IUCIET
SEAT COVDS
IUllUTD 11111
Ol lllllUTD
WWW
199 !.
The clear wife'• .,_ lit up when ahe MW the
ldmulatacl rn.lnk. Threatened to get one for a
l\ew rn.lnk irtoi.. Okay by me. From jolly old
1:1\ lancl.
SPAii TIU
49c1ooz.
•3822
~type stuff heN. Good to haft
to repabo a flat whel\ you can't get to the
station for ~
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
\
by Bil Keane
·i ..
l1
i
l n ~
6~)h
.::1-19
r '-"'' ,-;).._ ... ,_
t ... -.. -• 11Jeffy's making ice cream soup." "Yeah, but can ht 'play dead'?"
MRMADUKE -..... • • -... ....
• ... .. ..
. ' .. -
-~·
by Brad Anderson
•.;: C 1111~, .. ,..,,_.,..,. '3 ·1'1 -... '"I wish he'd stop bringing them home when ....._
_ he can't get the lids off!" "Okay, now go stick her doll m the doghouse." •
.:IUDGE PAR8'ER
'MISS PEACH
... A~THv~·s
ADVlc.E CLltJlc.
r:" o R G-1 lL. S
""'™ Pe.oBLE/W\S
wmt &o"ft .
II
THAT'ei Rl0HT... ALL 0£CAU!7E VOV"ltf HEADEO
Of THE CUENT5 TOU !if.ND Mf.! IN TH£ RluHT
by Harold Le Doux
00 DOWN AND TELL ME AU
A~OUT TIM AND JEANNIE
WHlt..f I C,ET YOU !X>ME
M CON AND EOO!I!
l'M HU Nu RY! HOW AOOVT DIRECTION'
OOME eREAKfA~T ?
Air'THtASf, r iHINk:' A 80V
Wll..L.. 5T'tADlOU~Y lliNOICE
THI! GllZ'L. HE'~ MOST'
'""'Tlilr!~l&C' IN . ?
W ... AT 00 YOU n-oN" .
Wet.L ... 1
ALWAYS .JOST
CALL E:D IT
"-fH~ !:NGINE . .''
by Mell Lazarius
I~ TI-4AT~ TSflAE I
THl!N YOlA AlrE OIEPL.Y
AOMl"EO SY !V!JC'Y
~IN"T"HI~
SCHOOi-.
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
PPANIJTI
,.,.,
TIJM8L£ttEED8
HUIMNV HUNTlftS HANVlllOOH
Problems, Future Bride? May-
be yt'U,re too ~shy • .Be shy. ..
demure. Let Him :know you've
changed.I
SHOE
NANCl'
I HEAR
YOU HAVE
A BAD
CASE OF
HICCUPS
GORDO
HIC -THE DOCTO R -HIC-
SAYS I CAN'T -HIC-GO
TO SCHOOL-HIC-TILL
THEY STOP
FUN8'l' ttlN8'ERBEAN
...... ..,, ....... ,. •• .,, •• fl'
by Charles M. Schultz
HE£0LES
BPI.
S50ft
0 I
I
f
f
'
by Tom K. Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushmiller
n41!>~ W.As .4L01'~R
70 S IESTA IN
&FOteE m£
S1'EREOf •
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
IH15 15 Ml~NIE
CAME.RON WITH 1HE
FIR5i IN A 5ERIE5
ON WHA'f'.S HAPPENING '~ 10()AL.>'6 ~001...S !
WE'RE AT WE~1\JIEW
Hl6H 5C.HOOL· 1AU<lN6
Wl1H 115 PRINCIPAL, ALBORC.~ ! triR. BIJRCH I
HOW DO lX>LJ HANDLE.
AC.IUAU.Y I MINNIE I
WE JU6T FIX WHAT'!>
BE.EN DAMA6E.D OR
THROW II AWN-) I
WE. FEEL IHAI
IY\OONllNG rf WOOL.D
ONL<..> E.NCDURA0£
IHE.M !
BRABBLE
letters to
th~ Edit.or.
'TJ.IE P~BLEM OF
f'mUNTlN6 VANDAL.15/Vl
IN sc.HOOLS ~
FOR 8ETTEa OB FOB •ORIE
FARLEY 's G01NG To
8CHOOL t FARLE'i'S SUCH
A BIG,BIG BOY!
HE'S GOING-TO BE.
OAOO'( '5 GOOOD
PUPPV~ HE1SGo1NG
To t>O E\IE.R'fn-\ING
OROD'( ga.'f 5 !
9
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
ANP SAY, *we WAN.,.-YOUR ei..ooc:> .' H
by Lynn Johnston
WOOLON'i IT SE il'U&T
AS RE~URING-
IF He CRL\.EO ME
BY MY Flf\Sf
NRME?
--~!':...._-· _. -~ -· • . .. •. ... ·-•
• l t t
MOVIES '
Movie economics, Wilder styk
' .
81 BOB TBO•AB
HOU..YWOOD (AP) -Movie
1tudlo1 affllct•d by obese
bud1et1 mllht consider aendln1
their youne rum makers to
MG )I 'a Staae 11 for lessons from Prof. ·BlUy WUder.
At 74, Wllder ia directl.n1 Qld
pals Jack Lemmon and Walter
Matthau in "Buddy, Buddy." No
"Heaven's Gate" is this. After
returnin1 from a complicated
location In Riverside, Wilder's
film is two days ahead of
schedule and movin1 along
smartly.
"Tb.if IUY la amadns," •I.YI
hi• admlrlna producer, Ja1
Wetton. "He prlnll only one
take, and u.sually It's the first
one."
Nolhlng unuauaJ, says Wilder.
"l'VE ALWAYS worked th1a
way -except with Monroe." be
adds.
He referred to the historic
"Some Like It Hot," which
many experts con.sider the beat
performance by Marilyn
Monroe. The director recalled a
simple scene in which sbe bad
Angel for Coppola?
HOLLYWOOD (AP>. -Francis Coppola may have found an
angel in Canadian businessman Jack Singer, wbo wanta to invest
S8 million or more in Coppola's current movie "One From the
Heart" to help keep creditors at bay until the movie ls released Ju-
ly 4.
Coppola, director or the .highly successful "Godfather" movies
and more recently ·•Apocalypse Now," apparently inspired enough
trust so that Singer. from Calgary, reportedly will add $7 million to
the S1 million be lent Coppola's floundering Zoetrope Studios.
Singer, who shuttles between bis office in Calgary and ~
home in Palm Springs, was not available for . c~mmenl, b~t bis
business consultant Bill Hornaday said the deal 1s an the mak1.ng.
An all-new mualcal stage spectacular featuring
Jim Henson's SESAME STREET MUPPETS.
t , ~ •• • • .f £ r I ,. ,• •'* r .. 1•f"' lfll•. "'° •'"'I
Now Playing thrv March 22
"'' i All Seats Reserved $750, 6 '°, 5 50
~-~ LONG BEACH (} X~ ARENA
~ ~ \ l Thurs Mar 19. 7:30/Fri. Mar. 20. 7:lJ
, -Sc1t. Mar 21. 11:00am. 2:30& 7:lJ/
Sun. Mar. 22, 1:00pm&4:lJ
INDI PINDINT PRiii FAMiLY NIGHT
'. ,. , M.l' ' I ., 'Pdl!> S6 00 ') 00 I 00
CHILDREN 1, 1n 1 1Pde• $1 SO ofl any l•C~l?I
~··Oa1 Md• ;io 7111 l' '1 SAJ M.ir ;'I 710
TtcKETS ON SALE FEB. 16 at Long
Beach Arena Bo~ Office all T1cketron
outlets
GOOD SEATS
STILL AVAILABLE
CHARGE TICKETS BY PHONE on
MasterCard or Visa. Call (213) 436-3661 .
Also appearinQ al AHAHEIM CONVEMTION CEHT£1'. Mir. ZS.29.
GAOUP SAlU-CAU JIM AUOTT 111>11$1-17541
(JA•:K ANDERSON) oa·111 ,.,,.~
REVEALS in the
merely to knock on a door, an-
nounce benell and enter, aak.ln1
for some bourbon.
"I had to do 87 takes," WU4er
recalled. ''In the middle of them
I stopped everythin1 and took
Mu11>'n uide and said, 'Now I
don't want you to 1et worried.'
And she said, 'Oh, I'm not wor·
rled'."
A 1ood part of Wilder's swift
rtlmlng I.a preparaUon. He knows
what be wants, since he la co·
author of the script -with
l .A.L. Diamond, hla collaborator
for 24 years. Nol that Wilder
considers the script as gospel, as
did the late Alfred Hitchcock.
Diamond remains on the set at
all times, and be and Wilder
change lines when necessary.
WILDER'S instructions are
usually laconic, and he doesn't
overwork the actors.
"Too many prints only confuse
the cutter," be remarked. Re
chuckled over the legend about
George Cukor, a me ticulous
craftsman who likes to print a
number of takes so he can select
the one he prefers. Once his as·
slstant printed the same take
nine times . According to the
Crack into a place of hoc, steaming crab legs. Or pop a generous
serving of delicious Popcorn® shrimp. And then do it again!'
Ic's all you can eat. Every day of the week.
Each special is served with your choice of a crisp tossed salad or cole
slaw, baked potato or rice pilaf. and another favorite, sourdo ugh bread .
..
All }'Oll can eat All week long.
Alaskan Snow Crab Legs
All you can eat . . . . . . . . . SJ0.95
Popcorn-Shrimp
All you can eat . . . . . . . . . $6.95
Jed~ 1W the eemod kMI" in )UL
7801 Beach Blvd .. &en. Pan. 994-1241
168111Xach Blvd., Huntinctoo Beach. 848-1956
11:30 a.m ... 10:00 p.rn. Sua.·Thurt.
11:30 a.m.•11:00 p.m. Fri.&. S.t .
story, Cukor looked ,at all nm.
and Hid, "I think the ftl\h ta,
beat.''
"Buddy, Buddy" ls Lemmon'a
seventh film with Wtlder-
Dlamond, his third with W·D
and Matthau (others: "Tbe
Fortune Cookie," "The Front
Page">. Needless to say, the
qua rt e t wo rks s m ootbly
together.
.. IT'S A DREAM," said Lem·
mon, drying out in his dreuine
room after a fully clothed
shower scene. "Not only do
Walter and I know what each or
us is eoing to do. We also bad
the advantage of three days of
rehearsal, something Billy
hasn't done before . This movie
is like 'The Odd Couple,· with
much or it scenes between
Walter and me."
The film casts Lemmon as a
discarded husband trailing his
wife (Paula Prentiss> to the
sanitarium of a sex therapist
<Klaus Kinski). Matthau plays a
Mafi a hit man.
Says Le mmon: "The best
script I've read since 'Some
Like It Hot '."
&11111 M~Ro~.~ ..... I CHf.APf.::o~:tp Hf.A .. ,A, 3 bt 994•21()() IUO.U t.Ut.I M.I M ltM
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OrlnQI COMt OMl y PtLOT/Thu'9day, March 19, 1981
1111 !{'ill\'
-EVBING-~ •••• NIW8 -
•\ STARIKY AHO
I HUTCH
A ,.t.tur~-lnlO<met 11
murdered 1>tl0<• he cen
le9d pOllce to the elualve
boM of• drug ring.
I TIC TAJ; OOUQH
u •A•&•H
"' Col. Pollet atrlk.. up a
warm friendlhlp with a Ill•·
ltlnghMdnurw
Little denw11
•eooo~ Wlllona'I Cfviattnae joy le
threllened when •h•
i.wne thet her moat ptec:l-
ous gill may l>t t.iten lr6m
her.
Tony Cox (right ) is a thorn in the side of
Gil Gerard as Buck Rogers aboard the
starship Searcher on "Buck Rogers"
tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4.
G El.ECTAIC OOMPN4Y
(A)
Cl) C88HEWS
QI MCNE.WS
•108i) Pt..EOGE~K
Regularly scheduled pro-
g<ammlng ml!)' be delayed
due to pffKlge brnk•
8: 11 fll El.ECT"IC COMPANY
(RI
8~ 0 IUlLSEVE
G) WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
When Gibe IS promoted to
vice principal. the
Sweethco• wanl lo drop
out of school 10 11ke 1ob1
(Pan 1)
61) BENNY HILL
Benny does a comedic
take-otl on ' Bonnie and
Ctyde " m> STUDIO SEE
"Tubing Cowbcy Oanny
Swe1tza< ndes in I Wiid
musreog roundup, Cllhy
Shernll tubes down Farm-
ington RMtt (RI
(])NEWS
@) BARNEY MILLER
Berney has problems wtten
the tlgnl1 go out 1n the pre-
c.nc:l and a woman psych1-
•tt1SI takes a 1n1ne to htm
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8:50. OVER EASY
0.-1. Bitty Oamels (RI
l :M 8 EOOONAI..
7:00 11 C88 NEWS D NBCNEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Troubles With his atudoes
and an inauthng profHSOt
c•use Potlle 10 quit
school
D A8CNEW8 Q JOt<ER'S WILO
G) M0 A•S•H
When a general dies at the
4077th, hos aJde struggles
10 make It seem he died
herolcalty In ballle
II) STREETS CW SAN
FRAHCISCO
Stone becomes luttous
when his prisoner won1t
hght !or his innocence
wnen new evidence sheds
1.!ihl on the truth
'1i) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
(J) TIC TAC OOUOH
@) MERV QRtFFlN
A Visit To The Homes 01
Eva And Zsa Zsa Gab<><
Guests Eva Gabor Jami·
son Zsa Zsa Gabor
OHara
7:30 I) 2 OH THE TOWN
6 i\N'< I 1L8 '>1 I ll A11q1•ii
O i\NB< oNBt 11 o A" w , 0 l\TlA 1111 11 I A .......
0 l\ABt Iv I Alll I l" ''" l•' ..
• •r11.1A1CH·t'1' l··11• 0 l\tlJ I\ 1ln•l 1 L•>-A•1 ;1 °1 ..
tl! l\CST 1AfH. 1 ~.In !>1•'<!
Q) l\TT'J1tr1111L11 An'i•'"
Q) l\C,L)P fV 1 In• I 1 l '·~ A11 ,,.,,..
fr) K(.I I f\ PH<.1 L ,\,. 1• •
{!') 1\1)\. l Iv I'!•, II"'' II )I ' 1~. I .
10ther 11e1vs gains
Hosts Steve Edwards
Melody Rogers A visit to
Los Angeles 1 buaoest
wedding chapel where
oppro . ..,natery 240 couples
are married daily MetOdy
talks with Jane Fonda •'ld
learros about he• cuttent
and future plans 0 FAMILY FEUD U SHANA NA
Guests Edgar Bergen and
CharHe McCorthy
0 EYEWllNE88 LOS
ANGELES
Hosts Inez Pll<lrozo and
Paul Moyer took 11 a real
Samad! tank Ilk• the one
used 1n "Al!ered Stales'',
see some UFOs. v11Jll lhe
Hotel Oet Coronado and
the nauntt!d room ~2
0 FACE THE MUSIC
0) ALL IN THE FAMILY
Arcn18 su1p11ses ev11tyono
when h8 comes homl' hem
wo•k bunng gifts and
good cneer
fr) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
{!')NEWS
8 P.M MAClAZINE
A 5-year-olo genius sk111
ny Sk11ng gomg downhill
oo cross-country skis
8-00 I) '}' THE WAL TOHS
A young newl)'Wed r111tves
nos days ot m1111ary combat
ona J1m·Bob invests 1n
m1htary "Surplus lot prof11
0 BUCK ROGERS
Buck rescu11s a 9roup ot
gnome\ who~e 11 ee-wtie(ll
ing ways land him "' trou
ble
0 MOVIE
• • Tho Bro lho1s
0 Toolr-" ( t'l7:>1 John
A,r111 Pat CdrtOll A pair ol
sl1c~ d111ter~ 111111 into thl'
sleepy 1>1okon down min
1nQ town or MolybtJenum
Colar8do, In ttie 1NOL e o MOMA-.o ~
Motif ...,,. 11\at Mindy
OOl'llOerl ,.., flt'* IO be
IN Mff.CI "10" 1M "** 10. plaallG -~ to tie trllnlforl'Md. (RJ
• MCNll
•"~A Flowtr"
(1fTOI Jteli A1"'1ton.
Wllttr CNaitl In order lo
pt0Ulc:1 lhe NCtetl of .. -''°"' • Mlflall bu~ cohott, an 11...,,
monk IMwt Iha COUPl.ry
c:lulehlng hie MCtat lc><mu-
la IM a 'll8fY line home
brew.
• P.M. MAGAZlHf
A 6-)'Nl-old genius; llkln· 1
ny llkllng going d~nhill
on crou-counlry •Ide. m TUTIMOHY M TWO
MEH
Jon'• rulhleH and power.
ful anemlea revive an otd
acandat In a dNper8ta
attempt lo ruin htm, but a
long·MCl•t letter clea11
him of hla wlta'a abO<llon
dHlh Jon then turns
~11n11 Herakl
S)li) THE P~
CHASE
"The Man In The Ch81r.
Aller 1ngretlatlng h1maell
Wtlh letlow students, •
par apleglC atudent turns
OUI tO be a mU18< at
manlp..itatong otnera 1n
order to gel what he
wants
1:30 0 ®l BOSOM BUDOIES
H11nry writes about adven.
turea ne and Kip have had
whlle dlagu1sad as lemetes
0) CAAOl 8URNETT
AND FRIENDS
Guest Vincent Price
~I) (J) MAGNUM, P.1.
Magnum 11 hlred by a
young woman whose h<><!Wl
11 being thru111ned by
extortionists 0 MOVIE • * • "Which Way Is
Up?" ( 1977) RlcMrd Pryor,
Lonett11 McKee A se•·
sturved lrult picker is
caught on a comic crossfire
betw-. hll unt0n and the
mob. and a hypoc11t1ca1
preacher fonds neaven on a
ladies chOtr
0 @) BARNEY MILLER
Barney. jailed on Charges
ot contempt of coun. sits
1n a cell Wtlh a murder sus-
pect wtt1le his lawyet trt•s
to make a deat with the
/Udge !Part 2)
0) MERV ClRIFf"IN
'A V1sn To The Hort\fl 01
Eva And Zsa Zse Gabor
Guests Eva Gabor Jami-
son Zsa Zsa Gabor
0 Hara
{!') SNEAK PREVIEWS
Roger Eben and Gene
S1skel eum1ne this year's
Oscar nominees and
pr11<11ct the Winners
11:05 fr) THATS A-PLENTY:
THE BEVERLY HILLS
UNUSTEO JAZZ SANO
En1oy a tun-hlled evening
or muSic wtth The Band .
leaturong George Segal on
ban10. Conrnd Janos on
t•ombone, Allen Goodman
on drums claflnetost Russ
CBS slips with Rather
By P ETER J. BOVf:R
, LOS ANGELES 1AP1 When
.the A.C. Nielsen rating~ came in
on Dan Rather's first week as
•a nchor of "The CBS Evening
News." CBS didn't inv1le com
'parisons lo the ir news pro-
g ram's performance the week
1before. when Walter Cronkite
: was anchor. ~ That suggests, of course, that
1.Ra ther's ratings fell off com
. pared to the numbers Cronkite
.earned in his final wee k . And
they did.
FOR THE WEEK March 2·6.
, "The CBS Evening News with
'Walter Cronkite" averaged a 16.6
.,rating and 29 percent share of the
..audience.
For the week March 9-13,
"The CBS Evening News with
Dan Rather" aver aged a 15 1
percent rating and a 26 percent 1 s hare of the audience
Tonit?ht' picked up 4 percent
and NBC's "Nightly News '
added 2 percent
C B S PR OTESTS that
Cronk1te·s five·day finale w<1s an
ana m oly, that viewers tuned in
to honor the departing Cronkite
This is certainly lrut" but 1t
should follo.,., that Rather's first
week was also an anamoly, that
Rather . too, benl'ftlcd from
viewer curios itv.
CBS s uggests that instead of
comparing Rather·s first week
to Cronkite's last, a look at the
ratings of a year ago are in or
der Rather's perforrnan<:c was
about the same as Cronkite·~
ratings yie ld ror the week ending
Ma rch 10. 1980
networks· ('Ombtned share of the
t'\'C'n1n g news time audience
secml-ln be significantly lower
than 1t was l<1l-t year In 1980. the
com bmed network news shows
drew an average of 74 percent of
the view<'rs . In the week Rather
made his debut. the three
n(•twork:. attracted only 71 per·
eenl of the viewers.
That ('ould reflect the fact that
last year was a "hot" news
year. with th<' Iran s:risis and
primaries and all, but it could
also si mply mean that fe wer
folks are s pending their time
with networks Network prime
t1m<' shares have dropped also.
ANVWAV, IT will be interes t·
1ng to see what happe ns in lhe
lucrative evening ne ws market,
C'lpec1a ll y if A BC and NBC
make some changes. It's said
TUBE TOPP.ERS
KTLA • 8 · 00 -•'The Brothers
O'Toole.'' Jc>hn Astin stars in this mov-
ie comedy about a pair of drifters and
their misadventures.
NBC 8 9:00 "Wh ich Way is Up?"
Richard Pryor takes on three roles in
this movie comedy about an orchard
laborer in the big clty.
KCET @ 9:05 That's a Plenty:
The Beverly Hi lls Unlisted Jazz Band.
Actors George Segal and Conrad Janis
are featured in th is musical combo.
Relnbet'g. Biii Goble on
coronet and Arnold Ro11
on piano
8:30 IJ ti)) TAX!
For no apparent roaton,
Reverend Jim become•
ob-..d with hll cab drlv·
i~(R)
WT~AOWI
TODAY
A toek at new develop
rnenls 1n science and tech
notogy and how they altec:t
ourllvH
10:00 I) (]) KNOTS L.AHDINO
Vat 11 the object or
advances trom Earl Trent.
and Richard suspects Lau-
ra er aie.i>•no with her
bOIS uom> NEWS 0 11:§) ABC NEWS
CLOSEUP
.. Soldlera 01 lhe Twillghl"
Marshall Frady reports on
the tile and personality or
the mOder" mercenary
10:25 EI!) SNEAK PREVIEWS
Roger Ebert and Gene
Siske! uam1ne th11 year s
Osctr nom1r1ees and
predict the winners
10:30 0) NEWS m> MYSTERY
"Rumpole 01 The Bootoy
Rumpote And Tiie Cou•S6
01 True Love Rumpote
d11lends a teachet cnarged
woth the c0<rup11on ot one
or htS 15-year-old remate
s1udant1 (Pert !II
11:00 IJ 0 0 ({ID HEWS
IJ STAR TAEJ<
Tl>e Enterpriae encounlets
•n 1ncredlble magnetic
f01ce emanating from a
wrecked spac:unop
Q NEWL YWE.D GAME CD M0 A·s·H
Frank dec:klel to make
money by auchon1ng oft
tne camp gatbage while
Hawkeye s love Ille suiters
a SetlOUS 1118cic
61) COLLEGE
BASKETBALL
··N t T Championships·
fD DICI( CAVETT
Guesl l eontyne Price
11:30 I) (I) THE JEFFERSONS
Florence quits when the
Jellersons 111lus1.1 to 1e1 her
boy1t1eno 11ay overnight
IRI 0 TONIGHT
Ho11 Johnny Carson
Guest David Steinberg
0 ®.) ABC NEWS
NIOHlLINE
Q LET'S MAKE A OEAL
0) HOGA.N'S HEROES
Hogan's men, with help
from the undergrouna
destroy a Nazi m1ss11e bat
lety fD m> CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
-MIONIGHT -
12:00 I) ([ MCMILLAN &
WIFE
Mildred s wealthy aunt
d111s and ner prandn1ece
JOHN DARLING
,_ANOY 11-115 1<& .JAN NIUP~K
At.C' <CV LL 0E. A'5615 TIN6 HEI=? )
II i iHE. ~OOUCTION Cf ™E OAat 1,...-; S HOW : --
Wl!O -... .. .,,..,.
eetete, • murdtfed tl\Oflly
tllerMn ..
• MOYll
•• " .. Cotter'' ( 1177) DOii
Munty, C.,ol l.ynlty AA
uMeppy lncltan Clowfl t•IW
lo r~th himMlf In
Illa homelOWTI lollOWlf!O a
tlagle. toel«> llOdOen I
• CHAftl.IE'8
AHOn.8
The Angela go uod«oo....,
In the WOt'l<I ol high IUhlon
to 1rwMt1ga11 a modeh
mU<det (RI
Q OUHSMOt<E
A gang or outlaw. 1ry1ng 10
re<:ov8" IQme loat 1001
runa Into Matt (Part 11
QI MISSION·
IMP0881BLE
The IMF conv1nc.s • thief
thet he hu pr11Cog11111on in
orcler to recov11r 1101e11 ort
treasurH
12:30 0 TOMOAROW
Oueat 11lng11< Mel l or me
1:00 Q DON LANE
Guests Bernie Wonter~
Ugly Oava G1ey KamAhl
Chrialle Allen
0) MOVIE * * ·~ An110 119681 Rob
ort Mitchum. Peter Falk
An ovtll caut1ou• and
stubborn genetal •warty
turns the Aniio invasion
onto a d1saste1
II) INOEPEN0£Nl
NETWOAJ< NEWS
1:10 0 MOVIE * * .,. Day 01 fl>e Evil
Gun ( 1968) Giw>n Fo1d
Arthur Ker111e<.1y A ma"
enlls1s the B•d or a cOhort
to hunt down the Apache1>
wno abducted his wore ano
family
tl~ CAROL BURNETl
ANOFRIENOS
Guests Tom Conwoy 1110
Polfltttr SostMs
1:30 II) MOVIE
• • , 'Impact ( 19491 Bt1
an Oonlevy. Ena Ralftes A
w<111 conce1vt10 pl1Jt by a
woman ana he1 paramou1
10 dispose or het hu~11ana
via on · 11Lc1011nta1 OAelh
backh•es lfOn1ct111y tor lh<•
'>Chem•ng pmr
1:55 0 NEWS
2:000 NEWS 0 MOVIE • * * > Born Io Bue k
( t97 I) Documentary Nor
rated by Henry ron<111
Casey T101>s a rOdf'n
Chllmpt0n t11('!, IO Orive 11
he1d of 400 ''"'" horsM
=1~i::•PMM t:• ~
••• ~ .. (1"4) 0111
M.ollon, Rhonda Fleming
A mM tall• pett In a
lore-cl memega In 0<dat to
eec..,. •JleCU1ton *'°°• MOYll •• "OemenllA 13" ( 19'4)
W11kem c..npball, luena
Andeu A paychopath
CllnoJng to Ille memory Of a
dNd altter 11 reapontlble
IOI e -181 Of axe ~dart
In an ltllh caa11e
I : 10 QI MOVIE * * * .. Talk Of Tt\41 Town"
(19421 C•ry Grant, Jean
Anhu• A Supreme Courl
ludge and • teacher help a
man clear 'himaetl ot an
eraon charge
3:55 8 NEWS
4:00 0 MOVIE
• • "Aun To The High
Country ( 11174) Erik Lar-
~en An vcotogy-mlnded
young bOy dedicetn hit
e110111 towerd the pr--
vati<>n of mountain w11<1Ule
43011) NEWS
f 'rid apf •
Dayt i m t* tfot•if*•
-MORNING-
11:00 II) * A1d11rs 01 Desrlfly
( t933J John Wayne Gabby
~idyl!S
11;30 U • • • Return To Pey·
ton Pl.i<.e IP8rt <'l ( 19611
CQ1ot I yn11>y Jell Chan.
dlfif
-AFTERNOON -
12:00 QJ * * S 0 S Pac1t1c '
l 19641 Richard Attanbo1-
ough f va Burtok
II) • • . ·vou·1e A Big
Boy Now· ( t96 71 Elizabeth
Ha11rr1an G&1ald1ne Page
3 00 10 * * , t~n t It ShOCk·
mq7 1 IC,731 Alan Alda
l O<J1se Lasser
3.30 0 • * • Jump•ng
Jock5 ( IClS<>I Ooan Mar-
tm J1·try Lew•~ •
';,~ -...... . ' I ·~ f~NKGGO.) A t~AL "'1;
~
De af bl~t
CB S: n o
captio1is
I.OS A~c;1-:1.r:s •AP t
l'r11lt''ill'rs "'ho ennll'nd deaf
pcopll' shoul(I ht· ;rhll' tn see caµ-
t1 onl-on T\' :o.hrtwl-t·omplaincd
about CHS l'apl1onll'.ss telecast
TU('l-da; 11f "\'oH·es ." a 1979
mo\'ll' ahoul a tkaf woman
CBS. unlike NBC and ABC,
11oes not ,\'l'l µ1m 1dt• capl10ning
for its programs. suid protest or-
gan1:wr <'••M'Y Bright
"CRS tl-1nsl'nl-1t1ve to the
rights of lh<' dl'af for showing a
p1c·turc• not captiont•d ... Bright
sa1c1
If thl' lot· al N flt' or A BC sta·
lions had µirked up ··voices ... he
s<11 c1 . "11 would hcivc been cap
t1oncd ..
Rather lost 9 percent of the au
dience that tuned to CBS for
.news during Cronkite's last
week. ABC's "World Ne ws
IT SHOULD BE noled again.
hov.ever, that Rather's debut
week figured lo allract a lot of
viewers tuning in just to see
what an S8 million anchorman
does If so. Rather 's ratings will
decline this week.
that ABC IS interesled in bring-That 's hi111 all right 1ng NBC's Tom Brokaw to
"World News Tonight" and that Singer Patti Da vis. daughter or Pres ident Reagan. lJstens
Roger Mudd will step in for John Lo comedian Rich Little's impressions or her father dur·
However . the CRS owned sta·
lion tn Lo~ Angt•les. KNXT, tn
«onJunct1on with public TV sta·
lions KCET here and WGBH.
Hoston, is developing Teletext, a
vis ual "m a~azrne" ty pe text
format that will not be dem·
o ns traled until Apr il.
Chancellor if no inroads are ing a taping or NBC's "Midnight Special" show. airing
made a~a1nst Rather. Saturday at 12:30 a.m. on Channel 4. P arentheticall y, t he three
~~~~~~~~-
Talk is Cheap.
It's ea sy to proclaim
"the lowest prices in town"
on television or radio. But
advertisers who mean what they
say commit their price pledges ..,.
to print tn newspaper ads.
·For bargains you can
bel ieve in, rely on the
U\CAGE
AUIFOllES
II ,Rj United A1111t1
YOU'RE NEVER M ORE VULNERABLE
THAN WHEN YOU'VE SEEN TOO MUCH.
EYEWITNESS
~ , ___ (ii).
PORT
.MY UNCLE
IN
AMERICA 1.,,; ~.:'~ .. ; .;., : ~;~"~11. En llah Sub-Th
Watch The Ac.demy Aw•rda
M•rch 30, on ABC
..
' INTERMISSION Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfThut'lday, Match 19, 1981
M a, Lagana opealng "19UC NOTICE PV8UC NOTICE I P\JlQJC NOTICE
Come di.es cover coast
Big 3
losing
ground
BJ TOK TITtJ8 OflllleOMtY,.....__,
A trio ot comedies -one in Laguna Beach and
two in Costa Mesa -bring thelr lights up Friday
nlght, while San Clemente's community theater
arou_p will counter with a variety show. ·
Comedy will have a British aecent at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse when Alan
Ayckbourn's "Re latively Speaking" receives its
Orange County pre miete. T he Costa Mesa Civic·
INTERttlSSION
Playhouse will revive Ira
Wallacb's "Absence of
a Cello" and nearby
So uthern California
Co llege ha s "T h e
Matchmake r " on the
boards.
Laguna's "Relatively Speaking" features
t~ree fourths or an all-British cast and an Englis h
director, Eileen Fis hbac h (the Daily Pilot 's
woman or the year in theater for 1980). Performing
in the show are Britons Les Reed. Jean Hyde, Pip
Church and a lone Yankee. Barbara Edivan.
-FOLLOWING OPENING weekend, "Re lative·
ly Speaking" will be performed Tuesdays through
Saturdays at 8 p.m . until April 11 with matinees at
2: 30 this Sunday a nd next a l the Moulton, 606
Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach. Reserva·
Lions 494-0743.
Pati Tambellini, founder and managing direc·
tor or the Cost a Mesa playhouse, is s taging
"Absence or a Cello" with Jim Holway and Robbi
Scboonovt!r in the leading roles of the in-
dividuality·vs.-conformity s poof. Others in the cast
a re Dan Larkey, Me lissa Jo Maxwell. Flore nce
Ehlers. Michael Collingsworth and Kassi Crews .
Performances will be given Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 :30 for four weekends in the Civic
Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrounds in
Costa Mesa Reservations 754·5159.
THORNTON WILDER'S "THE Matchmaker"
is an all-student production or Southern California
College's drama department and wiU be presented
in the courtyard of the college's administration
complex. 55 Fair Drive. Costa Mesa. Melia Lynn
and Jerry Godsey play the leading roles of Dolly
Levi and Horace Vandergelder under the direction
or Morris Pike
The comedy. which inspired the musical
"Hello, Dolly." will be staged Friday and Satur-
day or this week and next at 8 p.m. in the outdoor
staginP area. Reservations 556-3610.
Six performances of the San Clemente Com-
munity Theater's first a nnual variety show will be
given. tonight through Saturday and Ma rch 26·28
a t the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 Avenida Cabrillo,
San Cle mente . Curtain is 8:30 with information
available at 492·0465.
WRAPPING UP THEIR respective engage-
m ents this weekend will be "Same Time, Next
Year" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse and
"Catch Me lf You Can" at the Saddleback Valley
Community Theater
Other coutaJ attractloos eonUnuln& t.Mlr nana
are :
-"The Merc hant of Venice" at Soutll Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957--6033), playing olgbUy except Mondays at 8,
weekend matinees al 2:30, through April S.
-"VI CTORIA'S HOUSE'• AT the
Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St .,
Westminster (995-4113), playing Fridays and
Saturdays al 8:30 thro~gb Apr114.
-"A Bad Ye1tr for Tomatoes" at tbe Hunt·
ington Beach Playhouse. Main Street al Yorktown
Avenue. Huntington Beac h (847·4465), playing
Fridays and Saturdayll al 8:30 through April 4.
-"Tom Jones'' at Golden West College, on
Gothard Street in Hunt.ineton Beach (892-7711),
RADNOR', Pa. (AP)
-The domlnaUon of t.bt
nation 's televit lon
scr e ens by tbe CBS,
NBC and ABC networks
rnay be "nearing lts
end" after more than 30
years, TV' Gulde has
s uggested.
''Nobody is· ter. :bly
panicky about this, least
of all the networks
lbe m selves," s ald the
weekly TV magazine .
"Nobody's going to gel
eaten alive.
playing Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30, ''AND the big winner
March 29 at 2:30. will be the public ...
-. ··~urder a.t t he Howard J ohnson's". at 'roaming free in the
Sebastian s West Dinne r Playhouse, 140 Ave . Pico. pastures of electron ic
San Clemente ( 492-9950). playing oighUy except plenty."
Mondays at varying curtain times through April 5. T v G · d · d ut e sa t
------------network audiences have
........... --, been shrinking slowly as
viewer s s witch lo in-
dependent stations, pro·
grams created ror cable.
video games or pre -
recorded videocassette
shows. In addition, ex-
penses are rising and
1ldvertiser s are looking
WESTMINSTER
';::=::c====-=i=::==--~1 ro r ne w a nd cheaper
ways to reach au -
diences. FANTASIA
1 :15-3:30-5:45
9:00-10:15
SUNDAY LOVERS
12:15-2:3CM:45
7:15-9:30 ·--·· -·
Networks now h ave 90
percent of the prime ·
lime audience, down 3
percent since 1977, it
said . And a study by J .
Walter Thompson Co.,
an advertising agency.
pre dict e d it w o uld
s hrink to 85 per cent by
1984 and 75 per cent in
1989, the magazine said .
"MORE people are in
front or their TV sets in
prime time. but t hey're
s p end i n g less time
watching ABC, CBS and
NBC." it said.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS MIMMaU
MAM8 ITAT .. IWINT TIM fallowlno penon It clotl>Q llUM·
nuaas:. Dll!St!L ENGINE SERVICE I. ltl,.Allt CO., 2701 S. Or ...... Unit L,
Sanl• ..... CA. '2107 J•mn A. Hurley, 21•11 Hllen• Cir . H11ntlnQCon a.ec:ll, CA . ., ...
Thft butlMU IS 'ondu<led tty an 111-dlvlclli•I JernnA.H .. rley Tiii• •IAl-1 was 111.0 wlll\ ,,,. CCMinlY C)erll OI Of-(Ounty ""
Fe«>rv•rv 14, '"' '1~ P"bll.-Or-Coell Dally Piiot,
l'•b u . .,.., -<tis. n, tt. ""
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS aUSIN!SS NAME STATEMENT
• •••
Tiie IOll-lng perllon I> doing .,,_,,.
neu ., COMMERCIAL INVESTMENTS,
H'7 Co1 .. mbl• Ortve, Cost• M•••· C•lllornl• '2U•. , Jonn M Solwc•1. 7~1 Columbi• Ori••. C~I• MeH, Calll0<nle UU6. Tiiis busln.u I• conduclfd t>y en •n· Olvlduel.
Joh<\ M. ~«•I , Thll , .. ,_, WH ltlt<I wltn tnt County Clerk or Or•nga COll"IY on Merchl, 1•1
FU70.7 Publi>htel Or-Coa•l O•llY PllOI, M•rcll S, 11, 19, u . l'8t 109'1·91
P UBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PtCTIT10US aUMMaU NAMatTAT•,.._NT PUBLIC NOTICE Tll9 lollowlne parton It dolne till -----........ ,ICTITIOUS 8UllNaH A E AO· TECH P It EC I SI 0 NAM•ITATaMllMT MACHINE , 211' Hiiitop Orlv Tlla 10flowl"9 per9on •• •I'll IMl•I· Newpor1 IH<h, CA,,..., neu u Norm•n Cllerlu Sh•n•. 27 PACIFIC INVEST# 'NT GROUP, Hlll""P Or., ,._I 8a«ll. CA ft..o uu o._... Drive, 5'111• Q, lrvfne, CA. Tlllt bl.lei""" Is COl>dluci.cl by..,
'27U dlvldu•I
Norm~ Dougln A Lord, 1212 Dupont Orlw,SuiteQ,lrvine,CA '27U Tlllt na1.,,,.... wn 111.0 wlU\ t
DY • CO\lnly Clerk of Of-C-ty Tr.I• bll1lneu Is concl\lcted Feb h , ttll limited _,,.,.,.Ip
°""91• A lA>t 0 Ge,.r•I P•rintr Pubtllt\eCI <>"""91 C-.1 Dally Pll Tiii> •let-I •es llle<I with ,,,. FeD U . -<ti S, 12, lt, 1•1 Co.,nty Clerk ol Oren99 County on Febr.,ery 11, '"' l'IMlll Publllt\eCI OranQe Goa•I O•llY Piiot, Fell u . and-"" s, n, "· 1911 tt.J.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
IS.u . •IOl-4111 U.C.C.I NOl•t• '' nereby QIYltn "'creditor\ lhe w1th1n rwmed 1NrtiH tr..t • .,..
tr•n\ltr ., 1ntel'MM<I to be m•O• f lCTITIOU$8US INIESS Ptr>on•I proper ly htrein•ll• NAME STATEM!NT oncr11H!d Tiit followln11 P•"On\ ue doing ftle n•mt '"" ouslness •O<lreu bu$ln•ss •s tht intended lr•n\teror •re. L &. M PRv:::.1.TIONS, 171 llOO MARI NA RESTAURANT Riverside Av-. Su•le F, Newpori I NC , JO O 111• Oporto, Sult• BHCtl, C•llfornla 'Ml NewPOrl Be•<l'l. C1!1forn1• Muy LO<I Prencler~>I, ••$0 1'ltl Do.no .,..\oneu •• "WtlOlly Gow' Streel, Ml07 , NU•PO•I Beach, rt11 n .. nw anO !11.slneU •Odreu C•lll0<nla "2143 tnt Int•,,.,.., tren•toree •re: Ltonord B H .. call, i•so 1•111 CAMELOT RESTAURANT Slrett, MJOI, Newport Beach, INC. 3~ W BalbOa Blvd . Newpo Calllornla '2o.J 8Hctl Cahlornoa Thi> bvsl~> •s conOucttd I>• •n in· Tn•I ,..,. pr-rtv perUnent nerelo f'ICTITIOUS 8U51NESS dlv lduel dU<rit>ed 1n Qentral H M1ter1atl NAME STATEMENT -ry LO<I Pre.-r~>l \UPPl•n , mtr<tl•nd1U, eQuopmon
TM f~tO*IAQ PfflOn •s OOtnQ oust-Ttus \lal..,.,....,t w1n filed w ith tn• tor• turn1turt f1•twrtt ""° equ1pm~n ne1• •t. County Cterll ot Or•noe County on QOOdw1t1. l••\if', •nd l••WhOld 1mprov R D C 0 N ST R U CT I 0 N Merell J, 1911 mtnl> •ncl I\ IOC•led al l•?O V MAN#>GEMENT CO. llffl Cow•n. FUIO.J Opor to. S\l•lt 7, Newport Beactt, trvlM, C.llfornla '1714. p.,l>h>MO <>"-c°"'' Oa••• Pilot, ::a111orn1• 1 ltltl>anl M. Dellon, Jr , 5005 River Marcll s. 11. 19, 1', 1911 10$0•1 Jnel W•d l><llk lransler i• 1nten<kd a Avon"•· N-r1 k6Ctl, Olltornl• ---bt conwm.red •l Ille ofllct 01 Fr ....
'1Ml P UB C E Na,da EKrow C0<poreUon, 3'11 well Tllll t>u\lneu Is conclUCttd by •n in· LI NOTJC E111ntn SlrHI, LO\ Ar>Qelt>, Cahlorn .. d1vlcl\lel 'IOOOS, on or •lier Apr I, 1911 i Rkllard M Oallon,Jr 0RANG£COUNTYSUl'EIUOR L•>I Olle tor hlonQ claims 1n Ill' Tllll >latemenl w•• ltltcl wllr> ll•e COUltT .. ,,o,. •>Aorll I, 1'111 Co""'V Clerh 01 Oran99 (CMintv on 711 Chrk C...tM OrlYt w .. 1 ~ l•r •• '' kno•n lO wlo tn~ncl M•rcll J, "" S.llU AN, C.111..,.,• U711 Tr•MlerH s.t•d lnl.-.. Tren•ler FUIOS7 PLAINTIFF UHd lht loll-1"9 •ddfll-1 .,,_.,n Publl>lled Or-Coe>I Delly Piiot, MA R 1 A 0 E LOS ANGE LES namei. and .OOreHts •ltllln tne lnr Merell S, 11, lt, U, "" 10~·11 ORNE LAS YUr\ IHI PHI none _ ----DEFENDANT C.,,...104 Re> .... renl•. Inc. LAURO p RUI Z ELVI A BLAN 81' Geor99 R•stlcll PUBLIC NOTICE o : F E o ER AL NA r 1 o NA L P.,DI"""° 0r.,... Goa•l Dally P11 !OWAllOI
CINUU Wl ST Ill.JU I
ORANGE
CINIOO• ht•'"'''
MISSION VIEJO
IDWAllOS
VllJO TWIN IJO·llto
COSTA MESA
U.A.80UT14CO.UT MCMIM4
ORANGE STAOtUMOflMIN 19 k
-----MORTGAGE ASSOCI AT IO N, e Mutll l9,1911 1.0. ,ICTITIOUSBUSINESS Cor poretlon , CHICAGO TITLE NAME STATEMENT INSURANCE COMAPANY,. Mlnourl 't Tiie lollowlnQ persons ••• dolnQ Corporation,.,,., OOES t ll\rou11n 10, PUBLIC NOTICE , blalneu e• 1nc1....... _ -~
JE RW EL ENTERPRISES. 1111 C-N11mller: JHIM NOTICE OF DEATH o•
The ne tworks. while '
continuing to battle each
othe r for viewers , ar e
not ignoring the growing
competition from in·
depe ndent stations and
cable system s. and ac·
tually ar e trying to do
business with the m .
Center Orlw, Huntll>Qlon 8«..:11, CA SUMMONS l"f ~•H NOTICE' Yo.. ti•••"""" \U4'd rr.e A L D E N W Y C L I F " Gtr•ld l(leln, 33131 V•ll• Ro.a. (OUrl may OK•d• 419aln•I you w1lhOul c A R p E N T E R a k i S.nJuenc..pi>trano CA y®r be•ng hffrd uni">'°" rnponcl ALDEN W CARPENTE Earl Welk, 99t Skyli ne Onvt, w11111n JO !Mv>. Re.0 ,..,. inlorm•llon • L•o""a e .. ct1,CA below. AND OF PETITION ·T This .,..,lneu h coMucled by• llyou wl>tllO-klt..ICl•let ot•n ADMINISTER ESTAT oenerel pertntrsnlp •llorney "' lht> ,...lt•r. YO<I '"°"kl do NO A 107921
·-no.AU* ... , A--·· -AK
PUBLIC NOTICE
st..,. C J-• >O promptly >O tllel you• written • • . Tiii> .... ,.,.,..,, w•• flftcl with Ille response. II env. nw1y be lflt<I on ....... T 0 a I I h e I r s • Couftly Clerk ol Orenve Co.,nty on Al/ISO' Ysle<l~>U<ll den•b0.01 El benef1c.1arieS, Credit0r'6 Feb 20, 1•1 trlbun•I .,._ Oe<Kllr contr• Ud sin and contingent creditors of
F1S4114 •ud••net• • tnenO\ q~ UO re\OOnd• J-, ,.._Ya.,..,,... cs.n1ro o. JO d• .. LH ta .ntorme<1on Alden Wyctiff Carpenter
"Same Time" closes out with performances at
8: 15 tonight throug h Sunday with Michael Boyle
and Laurel Adams comprising the cast at the
Harlequin. 3503 S Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana
(979-5511 > Harvey Dahling, Cn stine Nichols and_!~!!!!!!!!~=====-~
Best
Cock-eyed
Comedy Since
M·A·S•H
810 NO. u-11 CONTRACT HO. II.fl LEOAL NOTICE NEWPOltT·MlliA UN.,110
SCHOOL OIST!tlCT
N.UC•l""ltl .. -
Attw•ra • uw Que >19ue o f L a g u n a H i I I s AW'C• f'i-... T-SI U>led-• Mlilclter el conw10 de C I f · d ' .,.......,._c..t ... 0r .. Stli••* ..,, ·~en .. 1 • .....,.to, -r•• a 1 orn1a, an p~rso.ns Paul G<X'dhart hC'ad the cast or "Catch Me" Fri·
day and Saturda) at 8 p.m. al the Saddleback
theater, 24751 -C Obrero, Mission Viejo (830-9252).
Call 642-5678.
... _,_ ... ~-·
THE lAST CHAPTER IN
THE OMeiTRILOGY
Put a few words to work for ou.
Hew--'-"· CA..,... 11aur10 1mm.<1l•t•men•• . .,. e>la who may be otherwise 1n-Pu1111.-<>"-c.o.u Da••v P1101, ,...nor•. w r-u. _,.,, ., hay terested In the wilt and/or
Ftb "· -c11 s. n. "· "'' _,, ·•~u;-0~ ~,{,'1~~"':1• 1~~:':11 estate: . . . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN trwt PG-'*lllAl ~ SUllDTID C>' ..,,_ wn-..., .,. .. ..,, • ..,...., '°9~ thf' 8o•rd of Edu<•tton 01 lft• comp1a1n1 --111.0 by 111e Pl•ln-A pet1l1on has been fried
-----1111 •1111ns1 .,_ 11 .,.,.. •1•11 "'d.tenc1 by Mar k H. Gilder in the
PUBLIC NOTICE '"'' 11ww1t. '""mutt. wt11\1n JO .s.y• Superior Court of Orange Now SHOWING Newoorl WW Un•'••d ScllOOI Ol>lrlCI ol O,.•nCJlt County will re<e•w w.tl.cl
At The•tre• and Drive· Ins :•:,•.,~~:/."':."roe W..,11':';, '= ;:; ~:.,:: __ --------•fttr tn11 JUl'f'Hfmn' 11 Mrved on YCM.I. • f'tCTtTiouseustNESS 111tw111111>1>eoolttewro1ten res0011Mto County req~esttng that NAMESTATEMUCT the complaint UnleuyouOo >O yo"r Mark H. Gild er be ap-Ev~ywhere! Oi>lrt<l, IOC•ltd ., IUI Plec:enll• ANAHEIM Slrtfl, Co•l• MeH C•lilorn.,, •I Tlle IOll-1"9 per11on •• doing IJUSI· del•ull ..... bt enltrtd on •Pl>llOl lOn p 0 I nt e d a 5 p e r s 0 n a I ,,. .. e• of '"• Pl•1n1111, enci tt1•• court rn•v rep re 5 en ta t i 11 e t 0 ad. VANLEY'S 61F1'S IM? Unlwer .. tnlor a 1ud!lmtnl agaln>I you lor I,,. .
ANAHEiM D.I. wll1Cll llmt U •d t>ld• ,.,11 oe publicly
879·9850 ooen•d ~;~~~':;us FOAMS
COSTA MESA All bids art lo oe In •ttord.-ict will\ C-ono1t1oru. lnitruct•On\, 1no
••• W••tmlnster CA.'2'83 re11e1d•m•ndecl 1n 1111 comp1•tn1, minis ter the estate of cornatu• L. van de• LH. , .. 2 w1uct1 cCM;IO rewll In garnl>nment of Alden Wyctiff Carpenter, u111vor" Ave., w .. 1m1Mter. CA. w•Q•S. """'ii of mono or prooerty 0 ' aka Alden W Carpenter ., .. J olhtr rellet ·-led In lM complain · r1111 t><Nnen ,, conaucted by •n in· DATliD· A...,,, u . 1"° ( und.er the. Independent
Ct NEMA CE NT ER SP•ti••c•t•on• wn1tn ,,, "°'"on rut 1n 979-4141 lne office of tnt P .. rcllH•nQ Director
FOUNTAIN VALLEY of •••d Ser-I Dl•l•l<I, llSI Pla<enll• dl•t«Ne• L .. A.e..-11,c1a.-. Adm1nlstrat1on of Estates eom.1"' L. ven.,., u• ., -..Sy OleN. O.puty Act). The petition is set for s1r .. 1, cosi. Mew, California 92671
F . V. TW IN Bid pack-• •nd HmPIU mo lie 839-1500 p1otd up•l lN Purctl•>lnQ,Sloru 01·
loct, 2915 8tar Slreel, Colla M .. •. CA
FOUNTAIN VALLEY 9UU, lrom Mr\ B•••rle• B•r•er. Buytr. F. V. DRIVE lN A Performance Bone! may DI' re· 962-2481 Quortd al Ille Olscrellon ol ltlt OIW•cl "'-----~====~~ No Bulder may w1thdr•w h1\ Bid •or • Ptrioa ol forty ·•••• I 0 ) oen all tr lhe dalt ''" IOt ,..,. open1nQ llwreol
T ht801 rd of Edut •t•on of l"t Ntwporl·Ws.t Un1l1td 5<1-1 01\trlel
,.f'strvts t"t' ri9r.t 10 r•1e<.t •n'f or •U
Bids •nd not nect\Wnlr •<t~l U'tt
tow~sl Bid, •nO to w•1¥t 1nv 1n
formallf'Y or 1rre9ul•r1lv tn •nr 81d rt
'''"•d NEWPORT MESA UNll'IED SCHOOL DIST RICT ol 0•-CO<lnty Ceh lorma
Dorothy H•r~•Y F 'tner. C PM .
~rcl\A\1nig 01rtctor
ti ••1 l~J711 Oaltd -rcll 11, t91t
Tllll ........... was llle<I with lht ·-· K. Stritklencl h r . D t N 3 t 1111Na1111••-••v ear ng 1n ep . o. a ~:n~;, ~1'" of Oran99 co .. ntv on s.m. Ana, ca. UIOI 700 Civi c Center Drive, ..,,._ Publl\lledOl'•nQll cout Dally Pl101. w est in the City of Santa
Pubtllt\eCI Or""91 Coe•• Dally Piiot, Merch s. 12· 19• "· "'' 1101 '' Ana, 'california on April 1,
Feb.it.-c11s,12,l9,19l1 ~-11 PUBLIC NOTICE 1981 at9:30A.M.
------t F YOU OBJECT lo the
PUBLIC NOTICE oMJ granting of the pet ition, LIFE ANO ACCIOE Nf ANO you should either appear
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS t1EAL TH at the he aring and state SYNOP!.tS OF THE ANNUAi. · · NAMESTATIEMENT ST ATEMENT OF COMMERCI AL your objections or f1te .,..~~n~.:o~~owln11 P•"on• arr dolnQ BANKERS LIFE IN!.UR ANCE written objections with the
Ill AUDIO, LTO .. Ol LIOO CAR COMPANY, UOl Oo•• SI Suit• S$0 court before the hearing.
LEASI NG. ()) AUTO AUDIO, ,., ~:;::~~.~:;;~·;.·•1:!o'°° Your a ppearance may be Rivtrsloe •-.Sulit 'E". N•••P0•1 Tote1 admo11e<1 uwh 0 1.101,11/9 in person or by your at-Bu ci., ea111om11•MJ. To1a1 t.e1>ol•llts 11 CMS QtJ torney. T LC lnd .. slrln . Inc . • Celllort11• cor'POf•llon, I" Rlver.,dt C•Pll•l .,.•d "P l>OO.OOO I F Y 0 U A R E A Avenue, Sult• "E". N~-· Bea<h, Conlro1> .. 1ton Cetl•'"•" s.ooo.ooo c R E 0 IT 0 R 0 r a c 0 n. C•lll0<nl• ~ Gro\$ paid 1n and Tr.I• llUSlnen" c-.c~d t>y • cor-S:.~~·;:;~?u~ .. ;~':, 111us1 tingent creditor of the de· por•••on ° ceased, you must file your PuDh>llt<I in lM OranQt Coa>I Oa•IY T C 1 1 1 Uneuioneo funds ""'plus IS9.6'2l Pilot, Marer> 19, 76, l9tt 1,,\..-":"~:;,~;.'il'." G•in ILO\sl trom oPtrallon\ JJl,]70 Claim With the (.OU rt Or uo.11 1ncro ... c DKro•~• ·n C•P•t•• present it to the personal ------___ __ SecretarvtTreHurtr ano!.urp•u•duriRQ l4tO •91S.llO re presentative appoint~ ... Tnls •!element wes llle<I with Ille lnsur•net 1n F0<ct """' PUBLIC NOTICE County Clerk ol OranQe CO\lnly on Nat1onw1~ I l()q m 000 by the court within four
M•rcllJ, 1'11 A«1denlandnea1lP\pron11ums months from tk,e d~ 1<u1011 •r 'ICTITIOUS aUSINaSS Publl•htcl Orenot Coa>I Dally Pllol, lnsuranct 1" Force 11,87• date Of first issuance f NAME STATaMaNT 00... Callfornl• Buw•eH Pa~ I tt 'd d I S The lo41owl"9 ~ II clot"9 IMIJI· Mirth S, l2, 1', 7', l9ll l II Accident anO lw•llll H9,0ll,01' e erS aS prOVI e n • MH .. , .r prtm1um• Olr~(I C•lllornle t ion 700 of the Proba
FASHION GAL, 1562 Edinger PU~LIC NOTICE Bu•lneuP-l,/U,19, Cod e of California. T A••·· H"ntlnQCon BHch, CA.,,... we 11ere1>y ctr111v 1n•1 11\fo ebo•e time for filing claims wn1 Soonpyo ._, 2071 ~ Pl«•. On· lttm• •r• In attordanu wllh Ill• 'f t•rlo CA •17'1 SU,Elt109I COUltT 0' CALl,OltNIA Annual SlalemMI lor ltw yur ended not expire prior tO fO! This ~nn111 conaucled bY an In· COUNTY O'OllAMG• D•cemt>er J1 100 meat to tnt months from the date f
dtvlduel He. Attrm Insurance CllmmlHIOt'ltr ot th• State the hear' nOtl'Ced abo ~--o·-·To·---... •us• ing v ~ ... ,. ,._ ....... .,...,_.... ol Calllorn<•. pu uant to le"' 0 Tiii• ~-t wu 111.0 wllll tht In Ille MMler ol the Appllc•tlon f1' JOHN ..,l•\IDER ROUSSEAU, Y U MAY EXAMIN ' co.,nty Clertr. of oun99 covnty on IRMll JEAN HlllARD '°' CMnoe of Pre>1oen1 the file kept by the COU ,
F•tl,...ry n.1•1. ,, ...... ~JEREAS IRMA JEAN HIBBARD, MARSHALL A STRANGE. If you are Interested Int Sevetery t t fll ..,.. P"b11.-0r..,.. eo.11 Dally Piiot, palltl-, -111.0 •petition wltll u. Publlsllecl OrMQe Ce.a•• 0.11, Piiot, ~s a e, you may e a • ,... FM> 2' -Merell S 12 1t 1•1 Cl•r• ol 11111 C:--t tor an order chanO· Merell I•, ti, II, 1•. 20, 1911 13•~·11 quest with the COUrt tO r~· . ' ' ' ' 1'241 Int •Pllflcanl's name lrom IRMA celve Special notice Of t..._ JEAN HllaARO to JEANNE '"'°
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTIT10US .UMMass MAM9STAT8 .... NT
TM 111--.. ~ 11 delne llllnl· MH aS: ALl.150N OESIGN SE!tVICI!,
t1IO N. Gra11d, .,., Saftt• All•, C•lllorftla '2101 GNt1e Alll*' Wit ...... , t1'0 N. Gr•""· •M. Sant• Ane. Callf«lll• '2101 Tlllt"""""' ts <IMU<M r, ell In• fl•l ... •1. a-...." wi-..
P\JBUC NOTIO*
O'SHEA. PU BLIC NOTICE Inventory of estate assets
1r1sORDl!itEO-•t1per9Clfts ln-, -----_and of the petitions, at· :::;::!~ .:.:-lrll~~ul~JO"'!.':. ,ICTITIOUll 8UllNIU c 0 u n t s and rep 0 r ls
._. .,., .... ltll, ·-cwr .. --. Of Tll• .:.!'!~!'::.~::N.~. CIOlnt described In Section ,. 0•11•rt,,....t > at 100 Chrl< Cenler bus•nen•: of the California ProbaJt Ori••• SMllA Me, Ora ..... Co..nty, RONSTADT'S. 11• Wnt 1'U1 COde . • C•ll*"'' -.._ < ...... ".,,y, StTfft,eoau.-.c.111or111ann1 Johnson, BJoml .. & M4'-·
wt\., the ,.tltloll lor c-.ge ol NI-W.H ..... A R. Inc., e Calll0<nle ltl .-1. Mil be ... ..,. cor,oratlon, 71' Wtsl 1'th Slrttl, r IT IS f<UltTHElt OROl!lt l!D ... t • Cotl• """'CAllfoml• ••27 Attorneys •t L•w ~~:1 1~11:•,~. 100::':; ~T:~. ": -:!..~~ii~~c S4SS WltMlre Blvd., #701
new911eper ol 9M•'el clrcul atlon Tiiis tlet'"*" w•• 111.., wltll VII LOI Angeles, Calif. 9003' .-1111H 111 ~ county, CAlllorllll, C01111ly Clertr. '9f <><•nte c;_,ty "" (ljl) tl6-6241
OM• • _.. 1or...,, "'" ..... .,. -•s aurc11>.1,.1. Published Ore~e C ,,, ... lo ... -Mt lor llNrlne •" Ille '-'""" "'1t1M. hbll....., °'.,...ea.st Delly ,1,.., Delly Piiot, Marc 12,
OalH! ""4lrwf'Y 1', ,,., M•rcll S It It '6 1 .. 1 J~I 19, 1981 1307 ""'9NH.,,..... , ' , • ~-~-~~-~--"'~-'--~~-~~~~.:.,_~-~
P UBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE
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o,_,. COlllt eAILY PILOTfrhut"8day, March 19, 1981 . I .
pol~en W~t
~e County airline jolru TJJ' A, American
cuts fares
87 IODI CADINllBAD • OflM~Nlilt-
' Only ooe carrier at Jolla Wayne Airport baa
cLlt faree foUowtnc announeementa t.bil week by
1enraJ major airlines of fare J'Huct.lom up to 50
percent.
said Golden West mar1teun1 vice p,...Jdent Fred
Davis.
Davit aaJd about M percent of UM travelen
wbo pay in advance 1bow up for the fillht.
Oo Monday Trani World Alrllntt revealed lt.s
pl-n to cut round·trip prlcet up to 50 rr'C*lt for
a flve·week period be1lnnin1 Apri 20. That
: aQAc>uncement wu followed by tlmilar clilcou.nt
• offerlnat from United Airlines and AD)erican 2 Altllnes. A
'' Alrllnea are aulferin8 from an acute problem
of f,uaencen Jetervinc ticket.a and not lbowi.na
up, • be aaJd. ~fire trylna to eliminate that no·
show problem.•'
Air Cal bu no plans to reduce farea, alt.boulb
the company presently olfere several discount
packa1ea.
Under the Five Great Take-Off plan, which re·
qulrea a seven day pre·regiltratioo, a one·way
flight to San Francisco ls $44, compared with '68. : Golden West Airlines unveiled it.a plu, effec·
: ttve immediately, to reduce fares on ru1bta de··
• parting John Wayne Alrport enroule to San Dle&o,
: Los AnseJes, Lake Tahoe and Santa Barbara.
: Reservations must be made seven days in ad· ~ vance in order to take advanta1e ot lb~ special
: fare. Under the plan, a one-way ticket to Lake
The airline rues to Fresno, Lu Ve1as, Mon·
terey, Oak.land, Port.land, Reno, Sacramento and
·San Jose.
In Minneapolis, Republic Airlines spokesman
Tyler Redmond said the company has no plans to
slash prices. : Tahoe would be lowered lo $58 from 189; Loa
• Aneeles $22 from $34; San Diego $2S from $39 and ~ Santa Barbara $29 from $4S.
T he airline, wblcb acquired Hughes Airwest
last October, currently offers several discount
packages with savings up to 50 percent, said Tyler. A A
' A A A
A • A • • Al
'" .. I .. I .. 1 ... ,
.. 1 !! "' Al ... Al ... ... Al ... ...
:1 •I ~I ...
"' A( AC Al Al Ar "' AC A( AC .. ( Al
!I !J A( !i
A• Af ,.,
AS A1 ... , , Al "' '
A A A • A • A • A ,.
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Al At •• A• •• ,., •• Al
• • • • • •
•1 •• ..
r.· 1)
II
!I IC
~ 0
0 •
"What we're trying to do is create business
wbere there would normally be an empty seat,"
$50,000 to $500,000-.
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS;
I
i J'' lntereet only pev--1 ···--• w-llll" c_ ........ j
• 111-tWt1 ....... I
•eo--.u.I • •-w-1111,t •6 -tlllato 3~re :
• So.t....._ Callfo...U
C1,nldCI 11ut
IOll• lnfo.,..tlo• .. !'Vke
'"' V•llJf !llldOCln\j Ol'l'd~
(714) 759-1515
AMEAICAlt HOME MORTGAGE
230 N~wpon Cen1er Orove Design PtaJta Newp0t1 Beacl\ 1 Cahlorn ..
92660
When you're away and someone's trying
to reach you, an Answer Page beeper lets
you know-instantly!
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fl~Sl\JER Pfl[jE
645-1342• 731-7777 •831 -2493
0. UI llllttNlltft !or IM AMWlf , ... olfct .. fltil , ..
"We like to think that other airlines are cut-
Unc thelr fares to meet our compe lion."
·WA!!~!W
Jewel• by Joaeph purchaaea diamond•.
gemstone.. gold and liMlr from private I~
<1Aala and ....... Catetul .utnlnatlon and
evwation by our ~. Hlgheat pnc. peld.
l<>-e dally, Sat ~. Cloeed Sunday. Phone
today. Ask for Betty Grace or Eric ZalalWs.
A TMOITIOH OI fMISI ~ OVlll 60 Yu.A$ •
J[W[LS by JOSEPH
Soul't Cont Plaza, Coeta Mesa • 54().$0H
Orange Coast College
Spring '81 Bu1lne11 Seminar
.. ,.~::j..\~'J ,8 ce \~~ Y1t1e '" 11etP N'ar"
This seminar wtll help you outline a business
strategy for dealing with Mexican companies and
the government. A realistic portra yal of the benef11s
and problems engendered by U S. ci tizens doing
business in Mexico Featuring Or Robert Molino. an
expert in Mexican business practices
SATl:JRDAY, MARCH 21
Orange C oast College
Fine Arts Bldg. 119 -9 a .m . -3 p .m .
2701 Fa1rv1ew Road, Costa Mesa
REGISTRATION: $45 per person
Vlea/M•tercard Accepted -5~5llO
CALL WALT SELLERS
FORA
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN'-
INTEREST ONLY!
Newpo~.~~~=:f::!~' ~
(71 4) 760·6060
Cou..ECTOAS
COAN!A
R8r• Coln• • St•mpa GOLD A SILVER
Prlcn for 3·11·1 1
Gel<IC-.-.M SllirwCl.SU.lt • "' Sell Kru~rr-ts2t.7S UJl.7S
DO YOU KNOW THAT
25% ARE STILL ALIVE?
By Ttrry
Grant,
R. Ph .
Maple 1...i tsH.71 UU.7S 1oocoronas Mll.M sse1.M We are living in an PtSOt 1616.71 MJt.7S • Of II lh tO,., si1 .. r ~ ,.,,.,. ,.~ amazing age. a e
'·-~-.;. human beings who ever c.e ... _.,.... lived. 25'7c are still alive.
(114) 5M-lt50 90"/, of all 11cienusts are
South CoH t fttua VIiiage s ti 11 Ii v i n g . A f e w
111 • ..::=-..:..-C:.:-;.... hundred years ago few I'"'...;.-'•-----_,....,.,, people were alive at 40.
Now the average person
lives more than seventy
@ff. rt.IA ,ht§~I~tg~~E'i?~
years . With n ew
d iscoveries fu ture
generations will li ve
longer. Seven out of ten of the
Ingredients in today's
prescriptions were unknown 30 years ago.
Every day adds better
drugs. As soon aa they
are released for safe use
we stock them. Keep in
touch with your
physician.
111 In Features, Performance, Price!
TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER
,,....,.
• Spectac:ul•r Color
Q,.phlc• end !xcltlnt
Sound
• Plug,.ln Proe111m Pllka for
Entertainment. Perlonel
UH
• Writ• Yout Own Proor•m•
And S.we Them on
C.IHttea
• E .. y for Beglnnen to UN,
1!15)9ndeble for Expertt
UH your o~ coror 'TV and
CHMI .. recotdtr Of buy OU"
RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TR8-IO COMPUT!RI
TO FIT IVPYONE'I NllDI FROM ~4t TO 110,000.
.............. __ ............ _,. ·---,-·-r , ..
~OUR DOCTOR CAN
,PHONE US when you
,ieed a medicine. Pick up
your prescription ii shop·
plnl nearby, or we will
!lellver promptly without FKlr• cbarce. A 1rut
jnat>y t>ec>Ple entrust ua
with t.Mlr PffSCMptJons.
'May we com pound
)'OUrt?
PAllL~~CY .... ....., .............. ""' ....... 6U.INI
C.11 Ml-1171. ,.. ............ ........
,
0.11, ,, ..............
Will PROPOS!D RESTRICTtONI CREATE SUPPLY AND DEMAND PROBLEM?
Th•t'• wh•t Newport D•t•un Prea1cNnt Jim P•rtdn.on bellev••·
Limit on imports likely
By KEITH TUBER Oltlle Dall,,,, ... Staiff
The ailing U.S. auto indUJtry received en·
co11ragement when a report from Tokyo said the
Japanese 1ovemmenl was ready to impose limita
on automoblles shipped to the United States .
Jim Parkinson, president of Newport Datsun,
took the news in stride.
''I feel sell-restraint is the way to go,'' Parkinson
said Wednesday: "I never thought J apanese im·
1 ports pe.r se hurt the domestic market. They fill a
void. Detroit Is going to have to build competitive
cars, and they're startinc to do that now. But who
knows how long It will take them to catch up?
While tbey'rP. improving their product, so are we."
The question of whether imports are responsible
for Detroit's woes is a controversial one. Those
favoring restrictions -including the United Auto
Workers, Ford Motor Co. and Midwestlegislators -
cite market share as the foundation for its beliefs.
Imports las't year accounted for 30 percent of the
total U.S. passenger car sales and for hall of all new
car sales in California. or those, 62 percent in the
first half of '80 were Japanese. Proponents of restric·
tions contend there is a direct correlation between
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
~:r~:,~ CartCp Ca•1111hC CnVI PS Chr,,.Sh Ch•rlHo Chml.H Cht1Ull
MUTUAL FUND
the number of imports on the market and domestic
car sales.
The Southern California Datsun Dealers' As·
sociation, a group of 58 Datsun dealers in six
Southland counties, Including Orange, dispute this
contention. The dealers point to a study com·
missioned by the American International
Automobile Dealers Association that found of the 1.7
million car sales lost by the domestic industry last
year , only about 80,000, or 4 percent, were picked up
by import dealers.
A Reagan administration task force is likely to
seek limits on Japanese imports, while the J a panese
government is s aid to be agreeable to some volun·
tar y reductions wh ich have not yet been detailed.
Congress. meanwhile, is considering legislation
that would limit Japanese auto imports to 1.6 million
a year , a reduction from 1.9 million .
What does all this mean to consumers?
"Higher prices," said Parkinson.
"Whal restrictions will do is raise the demand
and lower the supply. People are still going to want
the quality product. not to mention the better gas
mileage, of the foreign cars . The dealer, with less in-
ventory, will holdout for higher prices."
NASOAO SUMMARY
Na,,,.
AliomShcl SwU•'4 A tour'\ Ele<IT.O Goldld un Omn1AK For6ettr
F rtl11C
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.. .
/TIU u the /ou'f'l}t of o rdfw.porl ~' on how to toff
mOMN on your 1N0inco1M laz.;
Favorable ' tu news was ltsued by UM 1 llS for
dear persou 1n 1980 lD tbe Conn of a ruJJn1 oa tbe eotl
of special.equtpment eoeblln1 the deaf to undentand
the audio part ol TV PN>&rama.
This ~u.lpment dlsplays the audio portion as sub-
titles on the screen of the TV set. The equJpment
co,,,es in two forms. One Is a self-contained unit that con be attached
to any conven-
tional color TV
set. The other is
a conventional
color TV set in·
to which the
special equip-
ment i s in ·
--~ SYLVIA PORTIR . , z
corporated when the set is manufactured and which
costs more than the same model without the special
equipment.
The IRS ruled that qualifying H deductible
medical expenses are: ( 1) the cost .:>f the self·
contained unit: and <2> the amount by which the cost
of the specially equipped color TV set exceeds the
cost of the same model conventional color TV set.
Another favorable IRS ruling came in the form of
a 1980 IRS private letter dealing with a woman who
had become dependent on prescription drugs and
medication. She entered a detoxification program
. which required a hospital stay followed by a self-help
borne program. During the second phase of the pro·
gram, there were to be weekly counseling sessions
with the program's psychologist.
BECAUSE OF THE considerable distance
between the woman's home and the psychologist 's of-
fic e. the psychologist recommended that the woman
phone each week for the counseling session. The
woman's husband asked IRS whether the long dis-
tance phone charges for the counseling sessions
qualified as deductible medical expenses.
IRS answered that they were deductible medical
expenses because "it appears that the long-distance
telephone caJls made by your wife to her psychologist
for counseling are for the purpose of alleviating and
treating her illness.··
Tip! Each or the individual cases and rulings in
this column may be applied in a relatively wide
range of your real-life experiences. If you on your
own cannot see a connection or direct application,
ask for an informed professional opinion. It is in
these wider applications that your hidden tax savings
may lie.
As an illustrat ion of how you may or may not
be nefit from a tax ruling -depending on how YOU
handle it -in anothe r 1980 pf'.ivate letter ruling, the
IRS held that the cost of having facial hair removed
by electrolysis and thermolysis did not qualify as a
deductible medical expense.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HE¥" YOllKIAPI Fl1>a1 OOw.JOl'IM ..,II, •or Wod , Mar If noctcs
AMERICAN LEADERS
<>1»11 Hlql\ lo,. Clow O>o IO Ind .. , lS 1001UJ ..... IS -.06 • 1 S3
10 Tm '14.35 0 1.'1 4?0.14 411 rn-1." 15 Ull lOl.14 1ot.64 IOI 04 IOI U.. 0 1 S
U Slit lk H *·'° ., 1 I 31".3~ 0.40 lndu\ 4, ... ,tOO fntn 1.13',tco Ullts 6!7.000 .s $t• •.m ,tao
WHAT STOCKS DID H l'!W YOlll( I A Pl M•r t•
,Atlv8'Qd OKllMCI Unc:llallg9d Total 1-t
New hight New I~
WH.Af AMU 00
Tocto '67 61, )62
"" 118
7
NEW VOAK IAPl Mar 11
Advanced
OKlllllCI UnchaMed Total IYUH New lll(IM Ne,. tooors
METALS
Tod41y
:t:tlt 161
108 llOS
]I
6
Prtv
"~ J1• '13 83S JS s
Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear in the Daily Pilot.
SILVER Due to late transmission
today's listing will not
appear In the Daily Pilot.
GOLD QUOTATIONS WecM•'41•Y
'
..
..
< . .
PHO~l~ (AP) -Ptoenix
Coach John 11.acLeod ~ the
Suna followed their game ~ to
perfection Wednesda,-1'lgbt
against the Lo9 Aogelea caters.
"We talked about bela1.relent·
leas in our attack and we came
in wilh that frame ol mile,"
MacLeod said after ~·tcJt~ his
t.eam PoSt a 126·114 v\ctory. 'We
came out stron1 it. 'be first quarter and tber& wh op' back-
ing down. We didn't 1et up at
aJI." I .
FOllWA&D LEN .~·Tru~k "
Robinson an4 guafrf'ter Davis combined for 2f in
the third quarter to b ··n a
close game and carry!~~ Suns
to the win, wblch r~ ·tibeir
PaclCic Oivlaton le•~/ ··~J~'h games over the sec~'9·~ce
Laltera. '
Phoenix is now 54-zt """" Los Angeles dropped to 49·2-. •
Any combination of three
Suns' wins or Laker JoaHs wilt
give Phoenix its first division ti·
tle since joining the NBA. 13
years ago. ,
The third period spurt helped
the Suns increase a 63-58 ball·
time lead to 97-83 heading into
the final period.
Davis connected on six of
seven shots from lhe field for 12
points as Phoenix bit • ~
bined 65 perce.nt from the floor.
Robinson added 11 po~ts 11' the
period. Robinson, D• 14 and
guard Dennis Job111&q• all
ttniahed with 23 poin'8 '~ the
game. . ~ THE SUNS LED by u mapy
as 20 points in the fourttr'quatter
before MacLeod took out bis
starting lineup. •
All wrappe d up in t h e N B A
Johnson and Robinsoci, tea111ed
up for 22 point.& ln the first
period as Phoenix opened a 3'·26
.,.,...,.... lead . Center Kareem -~ul·
J a bbar and guard:;;ic ael Cooper, bowewr, CDQi · tpr
17 points to bnng u.ters The Lakers' Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (left) is in the grasp of the Suns'
Johnny High while Philadelphia's Caldwell Jones <right) tries to J(rab
the ball but is wrapped up by Indian~·s George McGinnis during NBA ac-
tion Wednesday night. 1 • • • -ba~k to ,_ :t7-~1_lie~ :Aleft ht tlM ftilt hadl' t I 't.ift.' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~""""'-':''-'"-TbeSunspromPtfypert.tr.-Oie
Hassler's fate was in his hand
By ED ZINTEL
Ol 1 ... Dlllly P'llec Slaff
It didn't make sense. Andy Hassler
was a fun-loving guy a throwback to
the old days when baseball was a game,
not a business.
But for seven years, Hassler was just
short of miserable. Getting him to smile
was like getting an eight-year-old in a
dentist's chair to do the same.
THE REASON FOR IT was obvious
-Hassler was unwanted. From late
1973 to mid-1980. the big left-handed
pitcher bounced around to five different
major league clubs. He was a perfect
example of inconsistency.
Then, in June of 1980, the answer to
Hassler's grief became known. Ironical-
ly. he had been carrying it with him 24
hours a day for 28 years . The problem
was in his right hand his right glove
lo be specific. By simply turning the glove outward
instead of inward like he always had on
his follow -through, Hassler found that he
was able to throw with better control,
with better accuracy and generally.
with more success.
This spring, Hassler is one of the
more wanted players on the Angels
staff. a guy who is being looked upon as
the ace of a strong bullpen.
"It's such a simple thing, really ,"
Hassler says in describing the modifica·
tion he made. "We found out that when
I kept the glove turned inward on my
deli very, my shoulder tended to fly
open. Whereas, if I turned the glove
away from my body, I was able to keep
the shoulder in."
"Now, I guess you can say I was a
late bloomer." Hassler says with an ob·
vious tone of sarcasm. "You see J broke
in very quickly and I wasn't ready (in
1971 l . My first year was like a coffee
break. I didn't belong in the big leagues
yet. ..
The great discovery occurred after
the Angels picked Hassler up from
Pittsburgh. It was the second go-round
with the Angels who originally drafted
him in 1970.
THE ANGELS thought so too. So they
sent ~ back down to their AAA Salt
Lake City club.
ANGEL PITCHING coach Bob Clear
was the one who gets the most credit in
changing Hassler's life, or certainly at
least, his career.
The rest of 1980 gave Hassler plenty
of reason to smile. From June 18 to the
end of the season, he appeared in 38
games, posting a 5· l rescord, com·
plemented by a club-leading 10 saves
and 1.82 ERA. His overall ERA of 2.49
was the lowest on the Angels' staff
Hassler was brought up for the tail
end of the '74 season, then sent back
down for the start of 1975. From that
point on, Hassler bad a seuon Ucket to
the big baseball roller coaster. He had
brief stints with Kansas City, Bolton,
<See ANGELS, Pa&e C%>
Water polo showdo~
U.S. to h o st world's best teams
By CURT SE EDEN
Ol Ille D•ll• P'll .. Stall
LONG BEACH -Water polo
followers say the United States
poaae&sed one or its best ever
teams in 1980, a squad that
should have finished with no less
than a bronze medal in the 1911>
Olympics in the Soviet Union.
But the U.S. boycott or the
Olympics prevented the U.S.
from showing ju.st what it could
do. Even more tmportanUy, the
abtence of a U.S. water polo
l .. tOHOM CAMt'••u.
team in the Olympics stripped water polo power with a stroll&·
the American team of ita No. 3 sbowma ln the tournament.
1eedin1. "We got bumped out of the
In an effort to find ita way Olymplcs with a pos1lble gold
back into the lnternaUonaf pie-medallat team," H)'I Hermatad
ture, the U.S. will boat the top who bu IUlded Golden West to
water polo teams in the world -back-to-back state community
includlnc Olympic 1old medalllt colle•e water polo tltlea .
• Soviet Unloa -April 25-lhy 2 ln "The only way we can set
the II FINA World Water ~o back into a seeded position for
Cup at Lout Beach State. the Olympics 11 by playhla IA
Alao jolnln& the competition tbh kind ol tournament. ata*al·
are 1110 1llver medalllt ly, we're back.at~!""'~
Yuaoatavia and bronae meda.Ult we want to to '*(.__....
R un1•r1 alon1 whb Spain, ourselwt " be~·
CUba, Aultralla and Bul1arl1. Tbe q]., a t• ii loiDI 10
While tbe FINA Cup will con· far M • .. UM PINA Cup
1l1t ol JllOI play, tbe one PIM wklclt ....,. ,.,ma teams llke
tb1t 6111 out ln the mlDdl of PM! ...... Ualon, Y11101lavl1
tit• u.a ...... mei)lml w 8ul,aria to partlelPate in Alll'il • ...... .;-. toarulnem.
. Colle• ._. IWllD countl'tel' traftl up1•• eo -
.
have met in water polo. The U.S.
scored a 6-3 victory that year in
the fir st FINA C up in
Yugoslavia.
The U.S. squad ts comprised
predominately of All-American
talent from six universities on
the West Coast. Among the team
members ls former Newport
Harbor High player Kevin
Robertson, now at the Universi-
ty of California.
At Berkeley, Robemon bu
become, a four-time All ·
American and was the 1980 co-
player of the NCAA cham·
pionablpe. He was also tbe No. 2
scorer in the" flnt FINA Cup
with 12 polnta and aeven 1oe11.
Otber Oran1e Co~st area
players clot tbe lineup, lacludlna
ex-·NeWPOrt Barbor Hilb •tat
Japitt 8•;1:;.on and former IJn\•nil)' and current UC
lntae lt.aDdout Peter Campbell.
Lob1 Beacb City Col1•1•
Coacll llaate Nltlkowakl, a Ruit·
tn1ton B•~cll rHideat will eo•eb U.. JI.man u .s. aquad.
8'aoe UM l'INA C\lp aeedt!lp
an Miid GD OIJmP6c 1bowlllp,
tbe oel1 •IY tM U".I , eould Ji*t
Ulil ~·· eompeUtlon •• bJ ..... It.
LaiT, Pae., (8), J aek 8roWDICtiidle (18) of St. Lo.a Ud
WHf P"'8aaebt <•> of Toronto.-ndl 1et a dUftll'ellt pen~•e u they watch play cturiq a 1ame w ........
day Dllht in Toronto. Toronto woe. '92. •
vi'etU..-;§6 ''We Uft ta,., ta.. OUllel' eo•=•Te OHHl••• r•·H&abll•••• •• Re a W of lie• world waw polo," ff ........ ••Wll cc-....,WMellll nlUlill. DrtD011 tM PUCA Qlii tD tM Tbe lo•lel U•loa· .I •• u.1 .• ..,. ... Amlrtcw -· ............ m.n ... ftraa&me ••uh Into a poelUOD u a wGrtd alae• 1111 t.bat UM twq countrt•
la M4ttlon. the U .s. oeedl a tood lbowtDI in UMl Loni Beacb eom~ lD order to eena a Wwld :a.a.pAaMMp bertb. ID
twll, '=! from ~. Worid Q121I• r, an 1lled to cle-w.--. , .. lbe 111&
Olympic Gem•. ,,
next six potnta al'.MI w~ D9'1er
bemded after tbat. • f;
Pboenix bad » -d~ In the t•nie, the'"' moiilt-y eif by
the Luers this seaoa. }216
points lied for the bigbelt, ~1
given up by I,,os Angtt~,.dlis
year. • ,
•'They challenged u91H ~s
Angeles Coach Paul W~d
said. "They we re alert ad
played inspired -goinf' ·after
every shot. ··
"WE PLA VED slJQJ'adlc and.°
we got ripped," he added. '°()ur'
defense wasn't as sharp and thatt
accentuates the problems on the
offensive boards. We let them
have too many o ffensive
boards." '
'the Suns outreboun4~ .¥s
Angeles 46-36 overall an43•1s
offensively. Phoenix held.• l .. 6
offensive edge in the first ¥1f
and 28-15 overall. '
"It was a s uper eften~"
MacLeod said. "That wa tie
best reboundin& ball we've,tyd.
We couldn't have a.Ke(.~ a
better effort than whal ~
W esthead said: "Tbil e.tlre
Phoenix team did a tetrtlle )ob.
We're still in the procen ol fet·
ting our team together. " we
still have seven gamea to ,.·macs
a couple wins can cbanct''tbe
team's slogan. We are ainUaa to
have our rhythm by the M~of
the season and get ready fot tbe
playoffs."
OrMg9 Coat DAJLY PILOT('f"huraday, March 19, 1981 SPORTS BREAK I BASEBALL I UC IRVINE
~~~ ............... ~~--.. ..... ~.. i ::---------------------------------------------------------------~------------...;..;..;. _______________ .;;;...~~
of bizarre mismatches
FN•AP -•&dlel
NEW YORK -Sporta llluatrated, whleJJ lD ill • llarcb 1e iuue expoeed tbe World Box1q Cowacu
for ltl q•tiopable raUns •r:tem, aceutes the
World &o;un, A.asoctatJon ln l Mareb 23 laaue ot
"blatantly 1anctionin1 rlillculoua title fi.abts wbUe clo11ln1
the ratino with fighters who are ruiked tar hlaber than they
should be."
Tbe WBC bas produced "some ot \he moet dubiOUI boxer
raUnp aQd biazare mismatcbel in the blltory of the sport,"
the m.,utne said last week.
But ln the story in this week's iuue, alao written by Pat
Putnam, the magaline malntalna: "Tbe World Boxln1 Coon·
ell at leut attempts a facade ot respeetabWty. Snq in their
safe Panamanian haven, the WBA powen care not."
The .WBA is called "a fraternal club tor La Un Americans,
with Ila base of power in Panama. A few auxUaries have been
1ranted conditional licenses in South Africa and the Orient,
but for only as long as South Africans continue their un·
answering support and the Far East provides a ati ady cash
flow. Complainers are banished to the rear of the line, just
· behind the U.S.'· ·
However, it should be noted that halt or tbe WBA's 14
champions are Amer icans. One of them, middleweight
Marvin Hagler, also is recognized by the WBC and is the only
universally recognized champion in the sport.
"With the exception of the two years 1978·79 when Man·
dry Galindez of Venezuela was president," Putnam writes,
"since 1975 the WBA bas been in the tentacular grasp or Dr.
Elias Cordovus and Rodrigo Sancbaz, Panamanians who
maintain iron control of the only executive posts that matter:
tbe presidency and the ratings committee chairmanship.
Everything else is a rubber stamp."
-----q..te •I tlae dalJ -------,
Long lime sports writer Red Smith, on the subject
of y achUng : "Watching paint dry is more excitinJ( ...
K~ e.ra• cotdd nul Sia,.,,•11 car••r
PITTSBURGH -Willie Stargell, a 20-year fix· m
ture on the Pittsburgh baseball scene, will undergo
a knee examination Friday. and the outcome could
determine the rest of his careeer, according to an
article in the Pit tsburgh Post·Gazetle.
The Pirates announced Wednesday that St argell will
travel to Lansing, Mich., to have his left knee examined by
Dr. Lanny Johnson. who operated on it last August.
Set Saturday
Grei.s•• .... He• .......... .,..
W~ Gr~1. the NHL'1 leadinc aconr, tied •
a 1eaaqa aul1t record tor centen and Brett ' claua-score twice to lead the Edmonton Olien
put the MIMnol• North Stan, 5-3, Wednesday
niibt. O~llly'• four aulsts left h.lD:l at tbe top of the NHL
with lJ8 point.I on SO goals aJ>d 89 assists. Philadelphia center
Bobby O'ark 'also bas 89 ass\ata. Else-bere arou.nd the leac\!e . . . a. Zaaual and Bill Derlaco ored two 1oals each lo
tead Toronto to a 6·2 victory over S Louis . . . Splendid
goaltending by Steve Baker and a three-goal New York rally
in the second period paced the Ra.neers to a 3·2 victory over
Bosioo ... Blal.De S&oa&b&oll a.nd Doa Naelabau scored two
goals each as Hartford defeated Montreal, 9-3. The nlne 1oals
are the most that Montreal has permitted in a came tn 11
seasons . . . Bobble F&orek scored three coals and Jaequea
Richard two to lead Quebec to a 6·4 victory over Waahlnaton
. . • Bob Murray, Do•• WUIOll and Darrvl Satter each
scored once during a seven·mJnute span of the lirat period
that staked Chicago to a 3·-0 lead on lts way to a 5·1 win over
Phlladelphia . . . Goals by &lcll Dadley, Dave Clarl1&IH and
Tim Tr1mper within a two-minute, 14·second span or the
second period sparked Winnipeg to a 4.3 victory over
Colorado.
Da•tletf, Qrlltli• Mt 77 I• lass d•
Utah's Adrian Daa&Jey and Darrell Grtl~ m
combined tor 77 points to spark the J au to a
120·113 National Basketball Association victory
over Dallas Wednesday nipt. Dantley scored 48
points, including 15 in the final quarter . . . Elsewhere in the
NBA: Reserve guard BWy lleKbuley sank a floating one·
hander from the lane with 22 seconds left in the second over·
time to lift Denver to a 126·124 win over Kansas City
... Bemard Kini made a short jump
shot with tour seconds remaining to give
Golden State an important 118-117 victory
over Houston ... Guard Mlcll1ael llay
Richard.loo scored 12 fourth.quarter points
to stem a Milwaukee charge and help New
York to a 116-103 win over Milwaukee
. . . A lH oot jump shot by rook.le guard
Larry Drew and a free throw by Kent
Beason in the final 44 seconds lifted
Detroit to a 118·115 win over the short·
DANTLEY handed New Jersey Nets ... Julius Er~
lag scored a game-high 25 points, 10 in the last quarter, to
power Philadelphia to a 107·95 win over Indiana. With the win
and Boston's loss to Atlanta, the 76ers regained first place in
the NBA's Atlantic Division by a half game ... Eddie
Johnson poured in 20 of his game-high 38 points in the third
per iod when the inj ury-riddled Atlanta Hawks rallied from a
six-point deficit to post a 108-97 victory over Boston.
Fbk ...... 11.,~!l~•r lt'Jdte Sez paci
SARASOTA, F la. -Free-agent Carlton Fisk m
ended 10 days of intense negotiations with the
Chica go While Sox, signing a five.year contract
We dnesday with the American Lea gue club,
General Manager Roland Hemond said.
Financial ter ms of the contract were not disclosed , but
published reports have set the figure as high as $3.5 million
for the five years. The Boston Globe had reported earlier that
the pact also involved a personal-services contract for a
broadcast career after the veter an catcher finished playing .
R · ld l ANGELS ... ain cou ca nee the New York Mets and final~
Pitts burgh. before returning to
the Angels B h C • t • t "I was young and st ill learn-e ac l ie s me e i':'g, or trying to. I lost a.II con· f1de nce. Instead of trying to
alter a couple of mechanical By BOGER CARLSON
Of .. O .. ly l'llee S\llf Orange Coast area track and
field on the prep level -assuming
it can gel an assist from a
cooperative weatherman -will
. be on dis play Saturday at I· Newport Harbor High where the r,·'. Beach Cities Invitational is on
I .\ l lap. ill) Rain, however. just a bo1:1t any
t
meas.ured amount at all, figures
to wash it out because of the poor
condition of the track al Davidson
Field.
"Any rain al all will make it
ver y tough to run the event, .. says
Newport Harbor Coach Eric
Tweil. "Because of schedule con·
ructs, if it is rained out we'll
probably have to cancel it for
the 1eason, but that isn't for
sure."
Assuming the athletes get a
break and It does n 't rain,
Saturday's menu reatures a ster·
lln1 mile and two.mile field, in
addition to som e individual
stars.
.Beals' homer
leads SoCal
Dusty Beals went 2·for·3, in·
cludlq a double and a grand
alam home run, to lead Southern
C~llfornia Collece to an 8-7 vie·
tory ewer the visiting Panthers
of Chapman College.
I Beals' irand slam was his
; 1econd home run of the year and
1 came in the third inning to give
1 ! the Vancuardl a 4·1 lead.
But after Cha pman scored
three rum in the s~venth and
two more lD tbe elchth, sec bad
to aerap foe a couple of rum in
the bottom of the ninth to win
the same.
: · In tbe ninth the Vancuardl
scored two runs when Olen
But it is the mile and two-mile
where records are in jeopardy
a nd they are of the more storied
be longing to one·time Laguna
Beach sensation Enc Hulst.
Hulst's 1974 marks of 4: 16.4 and
9:00.6 are within range of Edison
High standout Jon Butler , who is
scheduled to run both races and
figures to be pressed by Corona
del Mar's Shawn Gall agher and
J im Hartford. Mater Dei's Robert
Planta and Fountain Valley's Bob
E rickson and Tom Strelow.
As for stars on an individual
basis who figure to be the ones to
b ea t in t h ei r p art ic ul a r
categories. there is Mission Viejo
hurdler Andy Kerho, Edison's
Mel J ackson in the quarter mile
and Richard Chang in the high
jump.
Also, Capistrano Valley's Dan
Westerfield enters with a best of
177 feet in the discus and figures to
be pushed by Newport Harbor's
Kevin Jefferies, who has a best of
161 feet. Jerferies is one or the
leaders in the shot, too. with a
personal best of 56· 10.
One of the key duels of the after-
noon could come in the 440 relay
where Edison's s peedy quartet
figure.s to be tested by Ocean
View. which features 9.9 sprinters
Rick Moser and Rex Brown.
Also scheduled to compete is
F o unta in V a lley's Steve
Southward in the sprints, high
hurdles and44-0 relay.
The team t itle favorite is
Edison. although Corona del Mar
a nd Fountain Valley could
threaten.
Among the e ntries are
Capistrano Valley, Corona del
Mar, Edison, Estancia, Fountain
Valley. Huntington Be ach ,
Laguna HiJls, Marina, Mater Dei,
Mission Viejo, Ocean View, San
Clemente, University and
Westminster, in addition to the
host Sailors.
problems minor things the
coaching staff would try to get
me to change my whole de
livery It all just went to hell.··
And Hassler was hi s own
worst enemy through all those
rough years. He felt defensive.
He couldn't unde rs tand why
coaches were constantly work·
ing with him on his wind·up or
on his delivery
"I didn •t know right from
wrong," Hassler said "AJI I
wanted them to do was leave me
alone."
Fortunately, Hassler d idn 't
give up on himself, nor did
Clear.
"A LARGE PART of my prob·
lem had to do wit h not pitching
' enough.'' Hassler says. "With
the Mets, I was starting half the
time and re li eving lhe other
half. There's a big difference
between the two that's hard to
describe."
Now Hassler has a world of
confidence. "Two years ago, I
thought every time I went out
there I'd gel my tail whipped. I
hated the thought of starting
games. Now, as strictly a re·
lie ver , 1 feel like I'm more a
part of the team."
There are other important
t y pes who a lso a r e behind
Hassler. Like Angeles Manager
Jim Fregosi: "You couldn't ask
more of a man than what we got
from Andy last year .
And General Manager Buzzie
Bavasi: "During one stretch in
Detroit, where he pitched three
days in a row and helped us win
one and saved the other two,
well, that was the best I've ever
seen a man throw three days in
a row."
ANDY HASSLER
Angels blast
Brewers, 12-4
SUN CITY. Ari z. CAP> -Fred
Lynn drove in four runs on three
hits, including a home run lo
lead the Angels to a 12·4 exhibi-
tion baseball victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers Wednesday.
Lynn singled in a run in the
first inning. then hit a three·run
homer in the second when the
Angels scored fi ve runs off
Brewer starter J im Sl aton. Bob·
by Grich's two.run home run
added the fin al two runs of the
inning.
Gr ich also singled in a run for
the Angels in the third inning.
Slaton. making a com eback
after being sidelined with a
s houlder injury much of last
season, gave up 13 hits and nine
runs in the four innings he
pitched in rus third starting as·
signment of the exhibition
season.
Robin Yount hit two solo home
runs and Paul Molitor aided a
solo homer for Milwaukee.
The victory was the fifth
straight tor the Angels, who
Set1Ule'a ~--Peli .... fe h Crt111-'
Outl '*'.,... ........... ..,. .. ....... II to be t.-ct '° be He haft a .... to plar tldl
Mason, ...._ ID .._ rw ••11•11 to IMd
SeatUe to. 10-S eOIMU. -·~·" ._., OHi~ lht Cb.lealO Cubl. Paelortik. ldUllla .ltl U. IJ>ltu, eilde hll
trade 1'9qUMt· to llarlDll' pnajdeat Du -o·•rtea after
Manapr M.-, •• tol4 Padorek ... waaJd bavt a touab
time m--. *Seattle 1'0lter Md woWd be used spariaelf ll
he dld • . . LarTJ Pant.ai 1maeked a
pair of two-run home rum and Montreal
Jumped on IOHr Im Acker rOf' nvt runa ln
the seventh tnnini to take a 12·8 victory
over Atlanta Left fielder o ...
atdaarda drove ln tour rum wttb a palr of
triples and 1cored thrM Umn u San
Dlego routed Cleveland{ ll·Z . . . II•
alee and Dwtpt Eva.. eel a 20-blt Bolton
attack that burled PhJtadelobla. 15-a .••
Jim Farr walked Dnut1• ......_. wtth
l'ACIOHK the bases loaded ln the top ol the 11th to
push Baltimore put Texas, 5-4 . • • , .... , &.e•a1&er'1
baaes·loaded single with two outa In the nlath lnnln1 cave San
Francisco a 1-0 victory over Oakland. Th• A '1 were limited to
one bit by three Giant pitchen . . . Due C.d 1ln1led
with the bases loaded in the 11th inntn1. llftln1 Kantu Clty
paat Cincinnati, 7·6 . . . Spurred by the tive·hlt pllchlnc of
atellard DoUoa and Ml.Ile Proly, the streakinl Chlca10 White
Sox scored their tlflh straiaht exhibition victory. defeatlns
the New York Mets, 3·1 . . . Ru&y Tones, Toey Pna and
Dale Bern hit home runs and Lall Tlaa& notched the vidory
as Pittsburgh beat St. Louis, 11·3 . . . Pitc~er Bob Fond1
hit a three-run, pinch homer and led St. Louil to a 8·2 vidory
over Toronto . . . Dave Ea&Je'• el1hth·innln1 double and a
single by Pele Mackaala lin.ed Minnesota to a 3·2 win over
Houston.
Brltl•la a9al11at lfN MfleldUt
The British government Wednesday came out •
against a United Nations blacklist of sportsmen
who have competed in South Africa. The blacklist
reportedly included 39 British s portsmen and
sportswomen ... Nearly 90 woman 101fers began their
chase for the $30,000 fi rst prize in the Desert Inn pro·am golf
tournament in Las Vegas today before moving to Mesa Verde
Country Club in Costa Mesa next week for the third annual
Women's Kemper Open .. Al DavlA, the Oakland Raiders'
m anaging general partner , said he wasn't surprised at the
denial of a change-0(-venue motion for the pending trial on
his efforts to move the team to Los Angeles . . The Los
Angeles Aztecs acquired goalie Cllrla Taner from San J ose
in a trade that sent forward Gary Etherington to the Earth·
quakes . Heidi Ward captured the women's slalom and
Bart Tuttle took the men 's in the U .S Ski Association Junior
Olympics at Squaw Valley.
Televlnon, radio
TV: Basketball A quarterfinal round game matching
Michigan and Syracuse in the National Invitation Tourna·
ment. 11 p.m .. Channel 13. Taped
RADIO: Hockey Pittsburgh at Kings, 7:30 p.m .. KOGO
(600) Basketball BYU vs. Notre Dame (NCAA playoffJ.
6:30 pm .. KMPC (710J. FRIDAY RADIO
Baseball New York Mets vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach.
10 . lOa.m .. KABC (790>
Baseball team hot
Magee will return
for final season
By JOHN SEVANO
Ol llW Oa•IY P1lol Sl•ll
ANTEATER NOTES
Surprise! Kevin Magee has
decided not to go hardship and
will return for h is fi n al
basketball season at UC I
B asket ba ll Coac h B i ll
Mull igan is back cast this week
on a recruiting trip . .
The Anteater baseball team is
ranked 13th in the nation with a
16·4 record
The 16·4 mark signifies the
best start in the school's history
~: UCI REPOKI
even better than the 1974
campaign 148·81 w hen the
Ant eate rs won t he NCAA
Division II title
T he Ant eat e r s h ave six
players batting above .300, led
by shortstop Mike Nagle, who is
hitting al a .434 clip.
intermediate hurdles with a
winning time of 50.89
UC l 's m ile re l a y team
re<'orded one of the fastest times
1n the nation so far this season
with a winning time of 3:09.65 at
San Diego State last week ...
It's finals week al UC!. so the
baseball team will lake a rest
unt il it o pe ns SC B A play
Tuesday against the lOt h·r anked
Waves o f Peppe rd:ne at
P epperdine
Following Pepperdine, t he
Anteaters will host fi flh·r:anked
Stanford Wednesday
Tigers trip
Dodgers, 6-3
LAKELAND. Fla. <AP) -
Steve Kemp went 3·for·4 and
scored the winning run
Wednesday to lead the Detroit
Tigers to a 6·3 exhibition victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
I
First basem an Dave Glick,
who played second base last
year on Orange Coast College's
state championship team. leads
UC I in extra base hits with eight
a nd is tied with Nagle for the
club lead in RBI with 17.
With the score tied 3.3 in the
Detroit sixth, Kemp and Les
Filkins hit successive singles off
reliever Robert Ca stillo. Kemp
scored the go-ahead run from ,
thir d on AJ Cowens' fly to center.
ReUef ace Larry Hicks, who
was a te ammate of Gli ck's last
year at OCC. leads the pitching
corps in appearances with 12 (in
20 ga mes). He's fashioned a 4-0
record with six saves during
that span with a 2.60 ERA.
Th e Anteater team ERA.
however . is a woerully high 4.47.
UC I, as a team. is hitting .296
UC l's men's track and field
team will compete in the USC
Invitational Saturday ...
Senior Bill Dorval! qualified
f o r the N C AA o utdoor
championships in the 400·meter
The Dodgers had just lied the.
game in the top or the sixth
when Rick Monday singled
hom e Candy Maldonado and Joe
Fer guson.
Detroit took a l·O first inning .
lead when Rick Peters singled, ·
went to second on Allan
Trammell's sacrifice bunt and ,
raced home on Kemp's single.
The Dodgers made it l·l in the
second when Monday tripled and
scored on a grounder by Derrel
Thomas. but the Tigers went
back on top 2·1 when rookie Vern
Followell, who also went 3·Cor-4,
singled home Lance Parrish. -
• Rieb.,._ .wu hit by a pitch I 1 with lM .,..... loaded and BUib
' Autln fClllowed with an inlleld
I sin1le.
I ... f ~ I
The first finals event is
scheduled ror 1:20 (two·mUe),
following sprint and burdJe beal.9
atna.m.
Those kind of comments are a
rar cry rrom the kind Hassler
was getting In years· past. "My
goal now la lo get into 65·70
games and get us into the World
Series," Hassler says. "This is
the perfect place to play. When
I'm through, I tbink maybe I'll
coach. Q What does a maratnon
runner have in common
with a Volkswagen?
' . ' -~
I .... .,,_. ·'-· '>:·\' (\
I . ... 4 • Businessmen 1~ If. 11011 Clrt do i ng
bMtlnt•• ~ndtr o . fi'lctfUoM• 8Mtlnu1 ' I Nam. ~ ON requirfd •I • ~ low fhibw11 ond Pro/11"'1u Cc*, ~c.
l'ltOO to l1'NOI to JU. o
PlctfHOu• Bu•fntU
Nam• Staf•JMJtl alld
MN U pMbUtlNd for
fovr~tOHb.
WI at "" OMLY
PILOT "°" 1wz IOUh Ooell. CoU tM• £GAL
DI PAltTMINT fa' Ht·fUJ Czt. m ot ,.,.,,.., .._, "--· ..,
I
TWO HUGE HALLS PACKED WITH • Anaheimr;:;i;c~~~~UIPMENT
(Actoaa rrom Olantyt1nd)
Mln:h 18, 19~ 20 · 1 :oo to 8:30 p.m. 'oauy
THE NUMBER ONE SHOW IN AMERICA
A LONG
DISTANCE
MILEAGE!
-Orange Cout DAIL V Ptl.0Tffi'tur'9dlly, March 19, 1981
I
ustangs ~e EStancia
CdM, Ediaon alao triumph
Costa Mesa H11h relief apeciallat Steve
Qlllamaon picked up bla fourth aave of tbe year at the Mu.stanga defeated Estancia, 5-3, in prep
lseball action Wednesday. The win kffpe Costa
esa unbeaten In Sea View League play and tied
th Corona del Mar. a 3·2 winner at Irvine.
In non-league , Mike DeBenon pitched
a wo-hltter as Edison defeated Kennedy, 7-1. :
: Coeta II•••.&, Eu ncla 3
:At Estancia, the Mustangs scored four times in
t~e fifth lnning to overcome a 2·1 deficit. All the
Wu
• were scored with two outs a5 Joe Cnu hlt an
I single, Jeff Field an RBI double and Ribby
S nk a two-run double.
Pn tfie day. Field was 2-for-4 with two RBI.
f'leld aJso doubled off the lelt·centerfield wall in
uie first inning.
Williamson saved the game for starter Austin
Smith, who is now 2-0. Williamson entered the
r PREP B.4SEB.4 LL
game in the fifth inning and the bases loaded. He
gpt Mike Deutsch to hit into a dOl~bleplay and
tOen struck out Enc Riggs for the final out.
. It was the second save in as many games for
Williamson. He pitched three scoreless il\nings in
dosta Mesa's league opening win against El Toro.
: The Mustangs are now 6·3 overall and 2-0 in
league play. Estancia's record drops to 0·2 in Sea
View League action.
, Corona del Mar 3, lrvln• 2
· Srent Melbon hit a double to drive in a run in the
top or the seventh inning and give the Sea Kings
the win. Corona del Mar played catch up after Irvine
LA Yacht Club race set
Los Angeles Yacht Club will give sailors in the
Whitney, Los Angeles Times. Little Whitney and
Todd Pacific series an easy race this weekend with a
race around the buoys Saturday.
It will be the third race in the prestigious series for
International Offshore Rule ( Wh1tney Performance
Handicap Racing Flee t C LA Times>; Midget Ocean
Racing Class I Little Whitney); and Small Boat Rac-
ing Association CTodd Pacific) series. All four
classes will race a day race over the s ame course.
Balboa Yacht Club will stage the only regatta in
Orange County, a race for one-design boats.
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club at Dana Point will ob-
serve season-opening ceremonies on Sunday.
Local yachting fans will have their ears pinned
down Mexico way where the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's biannual Cabo San Lucas race is winding
down
t'olle ybal I
Jumped out to a 1.0 lead ln the third lnnlnc. A dou·
ble by Cbarlle Fehrenbach drove home Manny
Gaudier.
Tbe Sea· KJoga tied lt in the sixth innln1 on al
sacrifice fly by Jeff Pries.
Ken Santoro went all the way for Corona del
Mar, allowing seven bits as the Sea Kings raised
their Sea View league record to 2-0, 4-1·1 overall.
Irvine, playtn1 on Its new baseball diamond ffr
the first time, outhit Corona del Mar, 7-4 but
dropped to 1-1 in le.ague with the loss.
Edlaon 7, Kennedy 1
The Chargers scored all of their run.a in the fifth
inning to win the consolation championship of the
Troy Tournament.
DeBenon,. a junior right-handed pitcher.
threw a two-hitter for Edison and struck out eight.
In the fifth inning, Make Caroua hit a bases
loaded sacrifice fly for one run, Joe Kwolek bit a
two-run singJe, Tom Hill tripled in two more and
Dwayne Bush knocked in one with a double.
Another Edison run scored on a heads-up running
plav.
Edison, now 8-2, plays Huntington Beach Satur-
day night at 7 at Mile Square Park in Fountain
Valley.
Merlin, Hana Ho
arrive in Caho
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Oail1,.ilol •Nllrt9Wrtwr
CA BO SAN LUCAS The 67-foot sloop Merlin
boiled across the finish line in front of the Solmar
Hotel in a fresh 20-knot breeze at 8:40 a,m. Pacific
Standard Time Wednesday for an elapsed lime of
three days, 19 hours and 40 minutes in the 790-mile
Newport toCaboSan Lucas yacht race.
Skippered by Dick Steele of the host Newport
Harbor Yacht Club, Merlin knocked 14 hours off the
previous elapsed time record set by the 79-foot ketch
Miramar in 1975.
Merlin was s potted from the finish line early in the
morning as she rounded Ca bo Sal so standing upright
in a light breeze. But as the morning breeze filled in
she tacked off shore and set a s pinnaker, then jibed
and came screaming across the finish line on a beam
reach.
Second boat to finish was Morrie Kirk's Santa
Cruz-50 Hana Ho, Balboa Yacht Club at 2:36 p.m .,
also ahead of the old record. At 11 p.m ., no other
boats had reporte d their estimated times of arrival.
It appeared that the wind had died on the Pacific side
orthe peninsula.
Hana Ho knocked Me rlin orf the handicap lead and
was the corrected time leader until another boat
beats her corrected ti me
\
NFL rules e hanges
Stickum banned from hands
LAHAINA, Maui, Hawaii (AP) -The Na-
tional Football League Wednesday barred the use
or stickum on players' fingers.
The new NFL rule states that no adhesive or
slippery substances may be put on the hands.
In another change, a team would be allowed to
reverse its original decision to change players pro-
vided a timeout is used. In other words, if a field
goal team is sent into a game and the decision was
made to replace it with the offensive unit, the rule
would apply.
Clarified was the interpretation that a
Schramm, chairman or the Competitions Commit-
tee, because a quarterback might be 25 or more
yards behind the line of scrimmage and would lose
less by the intentional grounding than by being
sacked. I
The owners approved a resolution against •·
chop blocking by interior linemen, a rule already
in effect for the ends. Coaches will agree not to
coach the chop block. If an official notes an infrac·
tion, it will be a 15-yard unsports nrnnlike conduct
penalty The block is one when~ a player goes after
the knee of one already
Pirates, Eagles, Vikes roll
player would be credited with a catch so long as he
controlled the ball when his second foot landed on
the ground inbounds.
As an example, a player making a legal catch
would not be required lo make a move or as the
old rule stated, "do an act common to the game."
The new move was made in a further effort to
prevent knee tnJurics. and provides tbe com-
missioner be notified of a ny such 1nfractjon noted
in films which was not called by the officials .
There was a clarification on protection given
pass receivers who can be bumped only once and •
within five yards or the line of scnmmage. The
clarification is tha t the rule will not be effective if '
Orange Coast College opened the 1981 South
Coast Conference volleyball season with an im·
pressive 3-0 victory over Cerritos while Estancia
and Marina were winning on the prep front Wed·
nesday night.
Orange Coast's Pirates, ranked No. 1 in the state
with a 5-3 overall record, had little trouble with the
Falcons, winning 15·2, 15·4, 15-4.
Fres hman Bob Wheelock played an outstanding
game for the victors with Tom Gregory and Bob
Rieden joining him as hitters. Dan Vrebalovich
was the Pirate setter in the action on the winner's
rtoor.
Estancia's Eagles posted a 15-7, 15-6, 15·10 win
over Newport Harbor in a non-league outing with
Doug Hartung and Dan Rieden, a pair of outside
hitters. playing well for the Eagles.
"The entire team played well on defense and
Newport couldn't get the ball to drop against us,"
Estancia coach Mike Pomeroy said.
The Eagles improved their season record to 4·1
and will open Sea View League play Friday
against Corona del Mar.
The Sea Kings have had a good practice season
as well and Friday's match could determine the
favorite for the league title.
Boes, Rustle r s win
Orange Coast College improved its South Coast
Conference record to 3-0 in women's basketball ac-
tion with a 74·67 victory over Mt. San Antonio
while Golden West handed host Cypress a 66-61 de-
feat in Southern California Conference play Wed-
nesday.
• Kris Kroye had 25 points and 14 rebounds for
the Pirates while Michelle Deyden scored 15 and
pulled down 16 rebounds.
Timi Pitzer was the star of the Ru!ttler victory
with 21 points Including 9-for·l4 from the floor.
Carol Krikorian scored three straight baskets to
erase the only Cypress lead of the night midway
through the second half. She also puJled down the
crucial rebound before her go-ahead basket.
Orange Coast will host Cerritos Friday night al
7:30 while Golden West will host Los Angeles City
College at 5.
HOTICE
·---M4mber'I M---,.._ _,.,.,
r HALE CI EST ..... "..., ........ _
fYl~ .. COIT•-•
557-7234
Marina's Vikings. one of the SUJ:Prise teams in
the Orange Coast area, handed Mater Dei a 15-3,
17-15, 16-1-4 defeat in another non-league outing. It
marked the second time this season the two teams
have met with Marina holding a 3--0 earlier de-
cision as well.
Wednesday night's victory didn't come easy as
Mater Dei went ahead, 12-3, in the second game
before bowing, 15·12.
Steve Miller played well on defense while Rob
Webb and Bob Notley both came off the bench to
do a good job for the Yikes In hitting.
Fountain Valley is still looking for its first vic-
lor y of the season after losing to Capistrano
, Valley, 15-9, 15·11, 15·4.
Kirk Harty had six blocks for the Barons while
Todd Story had five kills in nine attempts as an
outside bitter for Fountain Valley.
The rule on advancing fumbles was modified
in relation to snaps on field goal. extra point and
punt attempts and also on shotgun formations. If
the ball is fumbled on such plays, a player may
pick up the ball and attempt to advance it.
Previously. in all cases, only the player
originally handling the ball could recover a fumble
and advance the ball. ·
Also passed was a rule where a passer inten-
tionally grounding the ball will give the defense
two options instead or just the 10-yard penally and
loss of down currently in tihe book.
In the future, the deftnse can choose whether
to take the 10-yard penalty or force the offense to
put it in play at the point where the thrower did the
intentional grounding.
The ch an g e w a_~ made . said Te~
., the quarterback does not stay in the pocket a nd 0 rolls out. ,
The owners voted to retain the present rule 4
concerning onside ki cks. If one goes out of bounds. j
the kicking team gets to kick over from five.yards
further bF1ck. The defeated proposal would have
given the receiving team the option of taking the ,
ball at the point it we nt out of bounds I
Also turned down was a proposal to lessen the 1
penalty for pass interference.
"The feeling was that reducing the penalty ,
would cause more violations," said Schramm, the :.
pres ident of the Dallas Cowboys. The rule gives :
the offensive team the ball at the point of infrac-l
lion. l
.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
~OPHl~TIC4T£0 PR{)(}RAMM!NO ..
Beaulilul ~IBrBo Mu~ie
NBw~-MarinB WBalhBr-
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SUPll IMPOIT SNCIAl.S l lecllw .. S...,.I ...
I 75/70R 13 ................ $39.50
115/70113 .•.....•.....•.• $45.IO
115/70Rl4 ................ $47.M
205 70Rl4 ................. SS7.7'
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---------------.---------GUAIAMTEID 2. ALIGNMENTS ·QUALITY 521'~
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STIUT CAITllMIS
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FOUi COMPUllR
IALAHCI W /ROT ATIOH
51750 ·
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• ~Coat DAALY PfLOT/Thuraday, March 19, 1981 FOR THE RE CORO I FOOTBALL I BASKETBAL:L ________________________________________ ......, ______ ,__ ______________________ __
-(_ >·
NBA
WESTliltN CONl'lltlNCI
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OIVlilON I RCGIONAl SEMIFINALS
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Men'• volleybell
Commuftily Cotl ...
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H19ll S<heOI
E \l•n1 •A (Jfl'I Nl'«Por t H•rbOr t ~ I I~•
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l(ING lOUlli OPIN
1•1 Ovtrltnd P.,k, Ktn.I
SttOfld Round Lt•de,.
Mall SurtM 1,171
Ma<Ml•ll Holm•n 1,711
MIKt M11ttr 2,/10
ao a-ci.,. ,,..,
D•v& Bte•mann l,'8
Hlgll 1Cho04 aocc:er
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l'fntTUfft
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MorHn, h.tllt>«k, Gltn SltfChen, torward;
Wtstmlnslef Ed Stnchtt. Nll.,.ck, HUftt•
1n9tCW1 llHth WH Ow..,, l11llt>tck, Miiie
lloOtrn, luUINO, Mtfln• LH or .....
n•llb•<k. l'ounl••n V•llty J immy
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Runell, h.tllllotO
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l:nQtd•I, OO•li•; Merla FlorH, tullbaO,
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Marine Jim HoftWu.r, lonl'trt, JOflll
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lulll>•k, l'<-11111 Vtlltv Miii• Mull.n,
Mlfbt<k, Miki ,...I"*!, QNlle, Ntwll0t1
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11rHr<flt{ll, full~ll. •1<"4lrd Htrrey,
na1111e,11, ...,,..Intl'"' e.ec11 lrett O.•lt, lltllllt~•. MIU O<llUll, forwtrel, RIMY
M•rtllltl, lllllN<•• M•rln a R• .. ,
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SOUTH
C•r•,.. ... Mer -8oO SllOllln, Roter
RCMllt, Ktvln Slltl~. Kirk $<;w•r1hoUI, Cl•V
Tucktr, O'W•vnt Pryor, 5<011 $1•rntt,
Ctlri• HKktr.
Cesi. Mew Me• MerOICI, Ore9 Ttrtflt,
ForrHt W.rllN, Cllll Elbollfll, ltotl H .. tle,
JtmH Allen. Mlkt Hyde, .. ,.,,.,,Swift.
... ._ "" ... AltHftder, M•rll """'°'
P•ul Rtl-11, Troy Stvrtr, Ito& W••*"·
Mtl J•OMI\ Ou<llM J«ktOft, Oh~o Bell,
Scott Str""'""', 11111 T~•. Steve Welton,
Grt9 Ste111, Mlkt G<>rr11y, Sltvt 9eck, Jim
McClurt, Ovts Melnlw1<dl Troy ~Y
l 1t•11clt M.,ll C•rn•lltn. Ttrrv
fllOmp-., Bob Urm\Otl, Jollll 1.tmt1t11on,
O•vtS1-
l'o1111tll11 Vtlltf Tim Finley, Ouv•I
Lo••. EmHt ... ,,y, Br-• Houcllen, Ro
Gul>erJuck, J.ci. BrMTWn, Jell H•ll. J •l'llft ~thw•rd. O.ve Ot-r, JOf\n K•l-r 14111111...-9Ncll BOO Thompson
lrvi•• Erik Hec141v•••
Lttun• lucll L•ri<• Sl•w•rl. Eric
Cl•rk .. Mike O•v1s. 8 1U Turf\f't
M•r111• Boo Cirtncht•ll. Tim Btnton,
Cnra\ Venlur•. Dw•yn• Fuhrm•n. Oovo
NIChOIS.
M•t•r Del l•rry Wlll1•m•. 0•••
Ur•n1cn . M ike Trotter. l<ev1n H i99in\.
J t mes Mtc1el, Otn 8on,..1, M•rk S<htltr
N••-1 H•rlMlr MIU GIOdlnQ•. Joe
c;oul><'rl, John SlocklWlm, Cl.,kt Smith, D•••
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roe I, Mark F1em111Q, Rty Flelc,.,.r, Er""\I
MtQdil"'10
UnlYtr\fty Dan Genlt, Rot> Hot>trt,
Rand~ !>UUL
Wt1lml111ttr lee Afu\la, CIWlrh• Artnt,
J 1m Carlson~ Chunk Gr1n1•H•. D•v•d
t-1•rr1s, Mttilie Ltwellyn, Stev• Or.bOrne. Etlt
w1111nonam
Bois. Gr-M••• Pruitt
Ctphtr-Valier D•ve Marolln•c. Er1t
Fo•. Bnx:e &o.1man, $1eve L•nh•m. JOl'ln
t<:tnefik. Otln Wtsttrf1etct S.Colt tnn1\ Steve
G•intts
El M-.., Jeclo. Farts, l(urt Bure-r.
Rot>ert <;ou10, Bot> Set>nnv, l •<><• C-.
M•lo.t Finn. JOhn U ndl>erQ Randy York,
Grtg !.tronl. Scon I um•tr
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Jonn Gii~ J~rty H•rmon. Ron Jonn'liOft.
Oovo Dortm...n Scou All~" M•IP.• O•m.ron
M•t-S,1~1
FooUUll Tom Ft\(tltw<k JonnM •r\h•H
Jim Holf,nQer Cr••Q Ftnton Xott 8t•1\1nQ
(r••Q M iller Tim Quinn 0 J Oult~r 80b
lltlt!r~n. Tooo ~b.n~
L• Qu1ftl• W•rd lltoll•r John
01m•lvntt-
L . .19w"• HUI' John frout Jffl ferQu\O'l.
Pat Ho~. M.in. t ah·,,hno
M 1•11on V1110 Jtft 8Pr9•n Oer•k
'IW•1man 0•"4 Jonn~n Ano., ec.,.. D•te
Sir 1ppipr Jim w.,., .. .,. Jttl' Moor• Aoo
Mc .Ct'nt•t" &rd<J (har11on
P1tc1h<• Rtcn Burn\ Scott Urttdlt:'"I
S•ddl•b•ctl O dnny Ll•r 91 E UQt"nt' ~mdn, M•fl Wood M ont'f p,.,.,k R•r
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S•n Clemente Jonn S\ "'<»f'OPr
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Ru!)\ell Cctbtt . J"mP\ 8oya Daniel Sh•PO
S•nti•go Jf'!i.u' Lund
Tt.l\ttn Todd p,.,,..o(\ J~ "-<>Mt>t-r
NORTH
An•M•m Sit-Vt: E"•n\ V•f'Kt Oow""°v
tom Ew•1t. ~tt P•lmt•r
It•• frat Swtt-1 8ob turn~ P'11I
Ro~ll
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~t•111Warl_ J•fl tta1hti#ttlu Eo 0.1 C•rm•n
C•nyon J•U BufltnQton Jim H•n cJer,on
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Et Oot.00 Ku,.t LPVn\ 6urr NorthtoP
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ESP«tanu John Acwwv 8•rnit• Hf'
r1(-. M 1llu t 8d"f'' R•ndY AuOOIPh (h11\
Nttl,am, JDf't E ll10lt Tom G·lf'J'ttn OOUQ
fdnO,.
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T 1n0<.o ~ 8••n6'en~p P•ul M oltnd
t<•nMCfy C.•ry Ruhlfn 8r ••n I( tldJtMit.
R1Cll f;td~ Jon n A ll/ttrfl'/ MArllu L01Y'I
or411no
L.• H•br• O•v•O S1•MPt>h K.-'"" lonq Rdndy Jonn-,on
Lo•ra Monl..,. r •vlor JOhn r ... nt-1 JO.•
Hamlin
Lot Alamttos P•ul ,,,,,,,., R 1Ch•rd
Ttletr 0-aimon t..•nt~r. M ••e l:yn\•Y
M•9noJf• 8en Smith, Rdul L•mv)
Melodyt•nd Trov 80d1~, J 1m Ft•lc.:twr
Or•nte LuttMran " .. .,.n Bunoe, Scou
B•uer
Ot•nte Joe-KtlP; Oet Htlm\, John
Ht!nn•,'JY
A•n<ho Al•mUo\ <:.:011 8011on, .,tf"nry
PM•. D0\19 CdY', D•v• HOUOhlon
S•••nn• M1t<.h Oetihoo
S•r•ill'-foekt H•r'l, Gino Al"Q(!li41. M6/W
Mel< her
SolM>r• O.vt: RobinWJn lom H•rv•y
Sunfty Hiii\ Jim lt••WIO\, 801> Mtll•no,
Chtrll• M<Cl•ll•llO, G•rr•ll Brffl•nd. Wtl
ly T lrhe.nwr, Al•• M•r-llMI
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Tony l.tvtl•
'I/tit• P•rtl John Cron. JC>f'\n Kr•vw
P•l HOll@r•n
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High achool women
l1lan<la 61, Ntw,.rt 4e
100 I. Oet•cy IN), t2 2, 220 I OtlteY
IN I, 21 J 440-1. Walltce IEI, I 01.1,
180 t. Foil IE), 2 11 s. mll•-t $aY•Ot
IEJ, S JS.O, l·mile t. Colllton (N). 12 0..
tOOLH I RodrlQ.,.> IE>. t•.6. 440 rel•y._I
E1l•n,1a, 51 •. mile rtlay t. Ettancl•,
•:1t.S; HJ -t t.tior•ll <E>. •·10, LJ-1
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JS-t. OT -1. Gilmer UE>, 101-tO
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llt lltld ltl t nO !."'"her, TlnQl•v C11
8 tyl•"•" Gr1m\ley t)J. t;1el\n•n ti t
~.,,."" (9) •nO H•~s•• w w.,. L 81fl .. t n
At1111l• It, Breww• 4
(ti S..n Cll1, Arol.f
C•l1fornl• ISi 101 001 12 17 I
Mllw•uk• 101 IOI 000 • 10 2
M•t1rne1, A•'t CS>. S•n<httl ti t •nd
Oown111Q, R..iar Ill Sl•lon, F1"90n Ut.
OtP•no U1. 8trn•fc:I t9J •no S1mmonti,
Moore 111 W Martinet l S1a1on l~R•
C•lfforn1•, Lynn. Gr1tn M1lw4tukre Yovnt
1, Molitor
R.O Sox IS, Ph1lllH I
ttl C .. •rwtttr, l'la.1
Bo\lon 101 S02 122 Is 10 U
P~•IOOolpto14 011 000 100 l • I
Ot•QO 8urgm.,1&r f4)1 Rftmmer"lowa.tt t)J
M•cWnorttr fl) ~net D ~t-nm1dt Ru1nveo
E\plnou ISi, M 04••\ .,,, Lfle IY1 41t<l
8oon'1. Mortland 1!;1 W CJrdOO L Ruth.,rn
HA 8 0'>IOn, 0 Scnm1dl, Ru,•• E·u•n
Pn11•ottlptua, M <,c.nnhCJI
Ortoftt S, R•nters •
l•l Pomp•no a .. c h, Fl•.I
B•1t1more )()() 100 1 lO Ot t; 0
h •t\ J10 000 010 00 • ' 0
P•lmtr f-l •n•v•n )1 'litOO<.a-tro 1"' R°'1"tt
t11 dnd C,rdn•m ~•uopi rf I Jrnk1n'.
lilf"\ • .,, Jonnw>n e 8t10f •t.i> "'' f-itrt
t01 ~no Sut\dOt·rq Nd'fwtr " w ~IOOO••O
l ( littr HR\.b..,ll1fOt)o vhH•rtMfl tO'#h 't
(4f"CIJn•h 6 8hH J•y\ 1
f tll \I Pettr\tx.lr9, Fl~ I
I oron10 too 001 JlJO 1 I 1
IUO IJl)U .. , c • t
'l>ht'.., c,,.,.,.n M1~,, .. , i; ann WP\•U
C,htr , .. ., *>tup~t 4, vu..... 6 E:dPIPn •
\iJllror '' •"'° h t~l f 'Ill Utt .. o l (,.1, 111t4
HR 'lt l Ov•\ J Or'' h
College
SoCal Coll-I, Ch•Pm•n 1
Cn•pm .. n 001 JIO )JO I " j
soc •• COll"llf' lllJ• Y10 001 b i 8
K fll• Youno &t War<t • &1 ;and M1llpr
S•••nH ~•001• •Ii Soo\lof•r 111 anc:J folbt-rl
Av\t1n ll' W S-uuac•1 11 tu l WMIJ 18
8t•l\1\C(t ftf'fu,ti•C1apmon1 HRH"'"' l~CCI
ouwr Scor•'
tJtl A ~. (.,u ~ldifl• ffv11,.r1un1 I
(J, .11 Au°"'" I U. l onq H•"• I• 11,111
Ar11o n•S1.;11•/I ft<,11'1of1P.,,.01J
(di ')1•tt N (lflht•<IQf" I} f ,11 l ultin.-.r+ c
\JC. J.11~1·r-.HJf.' I) vS1u HJ
""" ()11·00~1n1~ '' U•J"n1·1(1 Ar11on.1 A
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
South Coest Conference
W L G8
S4<1I• AM ) 0
MI 'l•n AntrA'htJ 0
U1•nQ• (<W\I
r ull•r-ton
t.frr1fO\ I I I
~•n D••OO Mtw
C..rO\\MOf\t
TOd.Ar'\ G.,nt1
Or•nOf'! (.W\t at Mt ~n Anlon•o
"ltHH4 AM •I (Mr.tu• .>•" 01,.00 ~v• ~t r__.ru\\rnont
0
0
Southern Cal Conference
W L GB
(ypr.\\ ~ I
LA t11.,DOt
C,oiotn w ... ,t
I
I ' I
C,,•nld MOn1r d
LO\ Anllf'I•\ (C
E•\1 l O\ ArliQf'lt"\
LA '>oulnw•\I ~ .
TOdly t G•m ...
H 10 •'4on00 41 GoldPn WP'iol
LO\ Ar>Qlllh Ct •I LA Harl>Or
LA !>outnwto'-1 at E tHI LO' Any, .....
CVPtf\\ •t s,,nto Mon•rtJ
Mlulon Conference
SOUTHERN DIVISION
'•" 01100 cc ~•OOltlMC.
w l G8
0
Sow1hw•\tf'orn
P•tomar
HOllTH(ltN DIVISION
Ch•llty
I
J
I J
) I
S,..,n 8ern41rd1no
A111t r\1°"
C1tru\
I J I
I I
l
Toes., \GamH
S•Odl.O.Ck •I Patom•'"
S•n D•flQO CC 4t 4loutnwf \t•rn S•" Bern..ra1no •• Ch•ftt.,
C•lru' •t Rtvtr\•04-
High School
Ceroft.I Otl M•r l , ftv11"e 1
Coron• Ot• Mtr 000 001 11 J •
tr..rtnf 001 001 00 l 1
S•n•oro ~ Murar Wlfil.\lbroo~ Simm\
(If •nO F"tnrettb•c r. w Sc1n1oro l
Si1mm' JB F1nrrruMch ttrl/tnftt M•iOl>n •Corona OC!I _,,
1: ....... ,, K ...... Ot,
l(~Mtdy 000 100 0 I 1 J
E.01•on 000 010 • 6 •
Add1\0n <1nd f'1yber , Dt8 tnon dnd
MOrtllO 28 8u\h. I E01Son1 JH Hill
IEOIM>nl
Cott•~ .. S, EtUn<I• J
Co\IA Me\t 100 O•O o s • s
E \l•nt 1t 001 110 O J s I ~mllh, Wllllam1CW1 I St •nel Fl•ld, M11co1t,
F'orQt I SI &nO Dl•l•v W Sm111!. L M11rolf
lB RIQQ\ I E1ttncla), Sink, F1•ld (Costa
Mtttl
HIGH SCHOOL STANDINGS
Se• View Leegue
W L GB
CorontdtlMtr 1 o
(Oll•MtH 1 0
El Toro I
Irvine t 1
U11l•ersl1, 0 I
Esl•nt•• O 1 __ .._,.,S< .. et
CoronadelMtr l, I "'IM1
El ToroJ,Unlv•rsllyO
Co1l•MeYS, E•Unclat
l'rl .. r'tG-•
E\lanc:1eall,.IM
El Torot1Cor-d91Mtr
Unlv•nllyttCofl•-•
Soutttco .. tL .. .;u•
S•nCltl'Nftle
Ml•lonVlejo
Otn•Hlll•
Ctplttr-Vall•Y
Lavuna9NCh
W L T
1 0 0
t I 0
) 0
I 0
I I
I I LaQuna Hlllt 0 ........ , •• k ....
C•Pltlr-Vallo•. O.n• HllllJ
SanClenwntU,MIHIOllVlajo}
01
I
I
I , .... ,,..,
L•11un• ••ech •. L..t~ Hiii• • (t IM•.
ctllNdPMIHI ,,.., .• o~·
L•O\IM Hlll••llMCltlMlllt
1.1111,.. .... 11.1c;,.itt1-v111ev
Mlttl1111vi.1u10-H111t
k••lt• llt,,._AMM , .. ,. ...
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....... 'f'•k-
•l•lllfl""""4· Me.., Ott t
'ff
t
I
I • 0
kr41 ...... ""'" ._...,.,._,,, ··"'·' ............... , ..... ,Del
I fltwt• llll!lfAMA
~ ..
0
0 ....
I I
I Ito,
J i
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• Communtty c-otteoe 1wlmmln9
TOI' ITATI ~lllO l~Motrc11111
400 madltv ••I•.-t Olablo Vtll•v , ~ a a 1 ........ u,, a o .e . >
rl<tn Rl ... r, a .... ' f'UtlfflOft, J 41 >. tlllfflW.~J ..... .
t,000 Ir" I 0.vl\ tl'ullfrlonl, 10 O.t,
I . L111•11elm ($•••tO•O.), IO ; u .e ; J.
ltUIUIO 10~.:'.c Woll, IO U I, 4,
••••••-lit kl, 11: u.•; 1. fllck•tt IOelihn Wull .... , •••• OO•rt: tJ.
Awerllat11jt l$e---c111. 1tt41 ••.
200 I'" I Brown (Dltl>lo ValltJ),
I •4.7, 1Wtlll•tr101.tlloVtllty), t 4't, J
0••1• 1Fullt r1on1, t.O t , '· '°Ulffftllrt ($ell• dleNclll. 1,47.1; J, Rt.i .. ,. IOel-Wnll,
1:'9.7; ~" 11. Wllltmart 10•1"* WHO,
1: SI. I : U. lt ... rhlMH I .. _•IN<lll. I; ti.JO
SO lrtt t M1oolt16n tOleblo V•llt1l.
21 I . 1 J•lt" tfulltrton1, 21 9, l Wtlllvtr
I Do•blO V•ll•v). 11 I, 4. Mu•• 10•1 .. n
WHtl, U .•, S N.walld , ...... ltN<kl, U .,
0 1 .. ert 11 lrewn IS.CNltlN<kl, U t, U
NtllO" IS.dclltlM<kl. IJ 2
100 1nd0 I l(•n•n•I• I f.ullerton1 l 01 •
1 W•lllwtr ID1•lllO Vtlltyl 1 0) S l
r11ore11 IO••Olo lltllt ¥J I O> • • huooi.
I U••bto V•llOI 1 0•) S F•mbr0<19f1
•C.,."u· 1 I» 4 Olhen t. PICkttl (G•ldtn
WHll, 1 01 J, 14 Ytltn<t tSaddltlN<kl,
2.0I.
100 fly 1 """"•"'' • O••b'o v.11,, I He l Twl>O .. D1talo Va ltovl I S~ I J
W tlU•m-.on O••blO V•tlt'y J 01 1 "
E lmort f P•IOM•r 1 1 OJ ~ ) K•n•""'" ~ F ullu ton1 J 0) ) OU,tr-t • FwJ1mur4
IS..ddl•IM<kl, J OJ 7,. Sl•pll•nt0n !Golde ..
Wtltl, J 0. S, 1J Ortll IOoldtn w .. 11.
J ot I 14 JtU•r tOol-Woll. 1 Ot •
tU() frff t J•U•t" tfuHfittOfl •I• 1
O•"•\ •F-u11.-rton1, Alt J M•d4.11ttun
'O••Dlo V•11er 1 .. , ) • •••• Wttll1vf1
01.tblo V•••tt"l. 48 t. i::irO•ll 4 l>••OIO
V•ll• fl O • Olh•n 1 R1dnon I Gol .. n
Welti. 0 ,4, u F1111mwr• ISIOdltt>.ICk),
SO t, 14 lh•l Whitmore (Ooldtn Wtttl. J0 7,
ISMddleM<kl.H 2
)()U CMt lo. I fh0,.11 I 01dblO V•ll .. 1
I ~lt ~. 1 PrtthbOtw • f ull&t W'l I 1 U) .J )
P 1t•tt1 t Ooldt n Wut), 1 O• l, • lJ•"' 1 ~u11.,1on1, 1 118 ~ S Horntftdtl 1doldtn
Wot/, 2 11 o. DUI•,. 14 UmPh•~OOr
ICioldtn WHll, 1 1'tt
)IJO ,, •• ,. t U,u .,.,n t01at>IO V•llf')l
' 'l v 1 w .. fl•v•' 1 O•dblu V.tlh '' • HJ J
Jdf1,.t-1fu11,.,tvn1 ; •'18 4 fMJlmur• CS..d
dltb.C~l. 4 JO S, ) I R f\lllCI I Moel .. 101
• 14 I OtMn 1 Rodr19UH IS•ddl•t>.lcll),
• H I, • Whllmort IGold•n Woll. 4 Sl.l.
10 R•dlson IGolOtn Wutl. • St l, ti P1cktt1 IGoldtfl Wul), 4 St 4, 14 l1ndhe1m
t S•Odlt .. O l, S Ol •
100 D'~Ct\I t Ui1v1'1J t t vlh·rt0fl1 I 'O ij
l J.•mbrouQ'1 <.v,_,,., J lti 1 J l UtJ
N ..... 110 IS•Odltl>•O), 1 ,. • V•l•no
I S•ddletwtlu, J 1t • S It' uU>rrq 'utt•rt.~1,
I 11. Olhen 11 HUlfll ... tGoldtn Wt\U
1 1' l
4QCJ ,,,.,. H •<tf't C.hdD•o '/,\1•, 1 ~ I I I 1 •
..,,,,. .I ,,.,,., J U I I I ullf"rtun J 1-t J "
Gold•" W1t\l, ) JI l f.t..tu.1m..tr J }l I
Otft•r• • WdelltNO, J 21 •
High school
Ed•lOn ... Cor ..... dtl M., •4
1W mf.1(11~~ ff'la; t f Ol~Oft I \0 1
100 t •r• I Muc ho I (I I \) u
JJ,.tfl>t .. •Jn l• t >I J Mouuw CttM'
''""" /OIJ IM I M41tnt>w \ ~ It.\ I
rl1.11'\.CfWk •t J /Uft J f 1\ht't ll 1 1 I;')
J ,,.,,. 1 M ... uo, t( 1 }J \ 1 f romunt1·11
' IM1 1.t b j Urt1lh11tn' 1(1IM >• l
'''"'''"' ' ,.,,.,1(,1\IP•" 1 l , 1(,0 tly I MtilltU j ~f ~\ I I f UM
l'ltf J MJtth••#\,1 1 1 tXJO
100 .,... I 'lHHth Ct t ~J 1 I l;t1Ql\AI"
t.JIM1 )t I J W"''"''~~n •CcJMi \• ~
'iOO ,,,,t-1Pt"ttor._,.,,,1(1 \J•O I
Uuo• it t.>uryrt t l 1 ) '" 0 I •"''' l•.t,.•n
tlJM • ~hb
I()() t;it!.. ' Mu•l\u ll )I I 1101111.tn < tJM, 'M1 t t I 1 .. hrr ( I 06 ti
\IJU bPt'd\l 1 ~\.lllOf' f I~ If t
11 •Jl)'t I Lt.JM I l.)'1 t t '>•ult C tlM I ~ I
4f)(J lftf· ,,.liltV I l 4.h"iUn I J.' IJ
Women
HIGH SCHOOL
Ed1Wt"il• Coron•d•tM•tll
11.N "l~I ,.,,. '' • .,....., l (Jl'lol)ff I .J\ 49 /llJ
h,. r I flt <>rtJ<W • I '" 11) ntJ<> I f.f..,QO r,UM I t '>Q .,,., t M b1ro
(.(JM I) JI. {J·~mQ (hr n t(.IUhf'r'W!n
l IUO .. , I ~ .. , ,,. ,, I l ' 01 01 lf)l.,1
h• • ' M H1rrJ UM ,._ r<t/ lQfrr~ t I(
h r•J ((JM &/ _,., ti-) ll·• ~ 1 Kc.r1>1. ""''
1t 1 ()<,,t H. tC'Altur·A·t I Urt'\(C>fa CUM
II IJ """'"' .. ,~, ... , I (tHyn .. nt·I M•r
• ,, llf
Rotterdam lnternatlonel
f•t Rolt.,ct•m, N•th•rlAnd'I
Th"d Round S1nQI•\
Ur1ou1 1,(11tlf11•0 011 lor11tt\ C,m10 b) ti I
R11UUI l(d'1htt I ct+ f Vijrlf Ami dtttf I ti, ·, 1
, ,., w u1h ., '•tM• ,., ... , r1••y """"•t· b J , ,.
l.,11 ,,. M.t.,1•t t11•t f 1m Vull1k "'°'' I b I ~
Women's tournament
••• Bo\lonl
F1ril Ao41nd Suu1l•t.
"·•thy J'lfClan ""'' O•tb.i1rf4 H•ll•lUl\t fj,
1i, I P .. otnuf lOU•fl' Of'I Pttm (..-. ... _, l 1; • -4
I, I UttrQ(ir~ Pr}fll•' fJt-1 Mdr 10• •f
I' •Af t.. Willl"MXI b 1 t f>. & J
S.co<ld Round S1nt1"
M 1m.. J4' 1•.,ov,.t (J,i.1 foe .Uf I .tH\ctM I •
,, I >IV• l'\dy Tvrr)tl.JI it• t Am• Sm1t t\ ti •
~I H,f~ M .. n(ll1 kOl/lt tJ• I \,,, tn Mt11 •• ~.,,
..... 111
Hlgh1chool
M1t•l•1teJ4fH.-wpc»rl 4
S1nq1"
M1tc1,.• u 1u• t 10 O\un• 16 •\I '"
A1nwnd 1 • to JoM-..on,, I, Mt ~ 1Ql•l1•n....,n• I
.. v.-nO\•n t NJ lo\l 4" 16 41 tt 4 • J M ry,i.f\
N J •on• .. I01ol A • A •,won• I John Mt.,,.,"
NII •\I 1 b I• J • "'on••
Dovltl"
C.Odbi:·r rnorv 1N1 IO\l tCI r ruttlttn Wootf'f1
J lo l • tu\l IO• HIS Murphy, 16 1 •. SpAnl•ll
Std'"tU \m1th N l'>'t l • J 6 U • J-6
M.tltr D•l lt, Lot Amlto• I
S1n9IH
f(.l1n• O)d~f Pf•lt1 1 \, dt:tf AdtUTl\bYdff
ot.i Ly, b I, rlCll Ryu, b 0 H•ll IM I 10\l 1 o
won~ 1,IO•lbVdttaull,won • l RutQQtrtM•
IU\I I •,won b I 1 b • ' Lt'upotd . M . lo\l' #\.
0 &. I •. •·6 Do.blu
C,on1al1t1 Ovultl'f1 IM • def t 1Hlt< Pont~.
f) J. ~ l, d9t, 'f'u'lQ ltiou. • 1, t> • W•llt•m\
Ol\ontM1won6 1•1 6 I,& I
CdM n, Ptim Sprln1••
SlntlH
Emet\:>n IC• O•I lloolh, • 4 d•I Ram1r•1
• O, Ofl Ar-nto • O dlll McC.ow•n. 6.0
HowMO •Cl IO\I • • won & 0 • U & 0
J1mtn•1 <Ct IO\f 1 • won• O. •.O • 0. Sull1v4A
• C 1 IO\I J 6, won• 0,•.0,6 O
o ...... " Gerken w.,,.., tCI loll 10 M•tAv•nl•
CollH, 7 I, I I dtl W•lll\ Avtdllo.1•~ • • & I
SolO•l P ... 11c1 lolls I 1 • •O<lt l I S
ldtH rl 1', LAtuMIHt~ U
$1ntlt\
LHllt tll IOU lo MellH, • 1. clef Sulton.
Ii. IOSI lo Htttmtftn. , .. de! Simmon• I '
O.vodt.on Ill, IOU) 6, WO<\ 6 I, 10\l • 6, wOll
•2, 8rumlleld Ill IHI 0 .. 16. I •.won I >.
PIUlthln• ll) IO•IO 6, I •,16,won•·t
Oeullltl
CaPOt>ttnto-JunQ<ltt ILi tost to Nownow
Ptrktr, ._,, )..•, 1051 lo Olt.on S.1>11lved•, ~ t.
, •• Lta<ll kNnll It.I -• J, 6 I; WOii i J,
61
UlllWMlly U, lll'•lal Vtrdet IJ
""''" M••ll,,., IUI lot! lo Tv•ntclllf,) •• 10>110
YouqQ, • •. IO•l lo Chaellltn, o ... Iott lo
$peatmt11, I 6, !intrmtn IUI to\!, I t, o ... 5-7, ••1, MtlOy (U) IOll, 3 &, , •• I .. , WOft, 6 l ,
P11rovl<11 IUI Iott,,,.,)•· woll,••l,•.J. °"*' .. 0•~ Day IUI IHI HOii WllH•mt, t.f, ... 3.
dtl, Monl~·HUQQtrO, 6.J, to<I, NIOtll
Crttr(Ulwnn,H,N •• ,), .. )
Co"'""'.wty Cofle .. women
o.i• wtt« •, 1tt• 1teHe• ._...
911yt u IOWI Clet. JIC...,, a 1, .. ,, "!ton
<GWI cNI, Ot\1911ttfl, 1 •, •I, Tr11mllell
lCWI .. , "'"'"la,U. H : Clenl IGWI ...
A Htr-1, w, •I• ftl•tflt\111 IOWI •t
StU<tO., ........ HkllOl• tOWJ 11411 Jt""' •-O.•·• o.-.. lll~~Hl-IOWI etf J.COltl'·O ...... tary,
...2. M 1 ~"'"*"l<leacl tOWI .. ,. Htll
lula ·A ~.lot, 1 .J, N . Ttlteflallll
M~uu IOW) ... J..,,., s.vc.-' .... , . H
NHL
W•LH CON"IRENCI
Ntfrl• o .... , ...
MOnlrHI
l(lllfl
Pllhburpn
H.,lloro
Ocrtrcllt
W l T OP GA "1>
40 1U II lOl /11 '1
llt I J 10 "J I\• ~
11 J4 10 V> J" M
" l• 11 l•I H• ~I
ti ,, ·~ l/~ '" ll •d.tm1C>1w111..,
eull•lo J• 11 19 "' Boston ll 1~ 11 1¥•
Mlnnhol• )1 1S 1~ 111
Qu.t>et 11 JU 11 180
Toronto H J• 11 /Ml
CAMPllELlCONl'E~EHCE
P•lrl<k Olv111on
Ill .I
,.. II
IJ• 1¥
191 •Y
t;J "
NY l•l•nd<',. •1 II IJ Pn11•ovlot••~ l8 11 11
C•lgory J<> n u
NY A11n<1•r\ lb J.tf 11
Wi9Vt1fHJIUi11 11 '' tti
JI• l.M> YI
J¥J /JO KS
l'•J HI I~ I& ,., ••
/)6 111 ~
S"1ytM D1111t1on
( St L0\11'
(hlt•QO
"V'an<.0-.1"-'
Eomun1c;11
Co1or•d<1
I( I 11 ll'f /,H N
/'f /'If i l/t l•U I I
11 11 , Ill' 1trt It /' t ll\ IM II
'Nrnn1f,..4'
I ti 11 tiM \0
I tJ J)) .. ,
(. hnCnfiftd••• ~•un, ,, ,,
W.an.-so~aiv ' Sc 0t • \
N 'f "'•~" J 8C1\ltf• I Uul"t>W<• Wo1\n11-..,.11. '•'
H '°'' ttoro f Mur1ff .-'41 J
foran100 ~t l11U1-. /
( n1 d'IU Ph1•aa '''''·'I
( rltf1Qf1luti \ M ,,-,,.,. 11f i
N nntJHQ 4 \..IJIOr~W l
r onu~ht \ G•mr'
f-'•11\0••' Jt' ttf te1nqi.
L ti Jttr" U C,. 110,1
t;trJ\.l•.1fl 11il l'h1l,1<1rot1Jn,,1
l Ut(lf\I01tt Uult.J•r
Los Alamllos
WfDNf.\OAY ~ ff ESUL I ~
t )ht ot .O n1qht h•''"-'" m ttt1nqt
J "" '"',. c ,1 11m•11111h • Aufn'' I bU
I •I.I I 11 A Jiu' A.1 11" 1 ,1,1 " •t JI
JVCJ lru\t.tr f•,1tr11t.l\1 •.t l.~ /\1
, •• , .. J \lo~
>t •. ma ,.rt• f-.rbl r tt• H• (J ,,.,,," '4J
i ~J J~L> (Ju,. ~~Ht'J ,,, ,. I 1 N
... ,,. Ar nu VAll4U1•l1tt(Jt1 '"' ,
Tr11tdt,..1• f»<>U •t M •1• ''' •tw
J O:J I 00 1tt,11J1&11 lh• If, '• 1 '/'t ti .utt'
JltlJ JU(,, J-c,'•' J r flt. .u lijt U
I •H t;I ~' C.lol•tJ \14 S
f ,urtt1 r~ • ~4""'°"'' U'J , •• ., (•• .11KJ,
• I 1 8(, J \iJ \dfl\J, A I • t, ,,., J 0.
-4 'ivb,. ut tif"tt1.tl JI
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Women's aoftbell
COMMUNITY COLLEGE S•"'" Mon•<• l, Goldtn W•it 1
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HIGH SCHOOL
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Cop Bowl
scheduled
atOCC
Cop Bowl Ill, that perennial
bAttle on the football field
between the Costa Mesa ·
Fountain Valley and Garde n
Grove.Buena Park police de·
puctments, kicks off Saturday,
Apri 14 at Orange Coast College.
The idea of playing a tackle
football game between police as·
sociations was admittedly stolen
from the Sacrame nto Police
Department which each year
stages its "Pig Bowl" before
crowds in excess of 25,000.
"A BUNCH OF US got
together after Proposition 13
was pas:.cd and we talked about
ho"" the schools' athletic depart·
men ti. were losing money," ex
pla ins W H "Moose" Bechtel, a
seq~eant in the Costa Mesa
Polltt' Department.
.. As law enforcement officers,
Wt' wen.• interested m keeping
kids involved with school
athletics rather than have them
on lhc streets The proceeds
from this game will go lo the
high st•hools and at the same
tirnl' h<'IP the police depart·
mcnts' image." Bechtel con·
t1nucs
Hoth police teams have been
working out for the past few
wt>cks under the watchful eyes
of thl·1r c·oaches
In the C'osl<i Mesa Fountain
Vall<•y team's ca se. n 's Foun·
tam Valle.> ll1gh football coach
M 1kc M1lm•r and his staff which
1s conducting the workouts.
Pac-1r1ca ll1 gh Coach B~I
Craven and his assistants handle
the Garden Grove Buena Park
lt•a m and both coaches say
th«ir teams are making great
progress
"Initially, the game was set
up for ev"ryone lo have a good
tunt'. · t•xplc.iins Bechtel. "But
t ht•r1'' also '\ome hard hitting
g111n~ on out the re There are '""'t' H·r~ good football players
1111 both tt•ams
lloY. long do the men prac·
(I ('t"'
.. J\~
allow
much as uur bodies will
answers Bcl'htel
Tin: GAMt: WILL look and lit·
('Ollllllf'lf'd JUSl like <JOY football
I! amt'. a :.:.u r es Hechtel The
pollt•1· clt•part men ts have even
lurt•d :'oi<.'1\A offlc1als. including
rn (' m ht·r~ or ;J group that of
r11·1al<'d last y<•ar's Rose Bowl
Cop Bowl I. which was playeo
at Newport llarbor lligh on Feb
:$ 197!( dn•y, 1 uoo rans who saw
a o u tlc•;,11llo"k tn t·old. rainy
Y.1·Jlht•r
l 'op Ho\\ I 11 was played on
.I ,1n 12. l<tsl y c'ar at Garden c; roq• ll 1~h. '>' llh the Garden c; fll\ (' tt•am taking a 9 0 victory
B('(·htel o;a;o, s a crowd in ex
n•ss of 7.1100 1~ expected for the
April I IJatll<' Tic:kets are priced
at $3 00 for youngsters. 7-13,
$5 00 for adults and $15 for a
familr tH•ket. Children under
seven 'will be admitted free.
Til-kN:-. ciri' available at any of
thl' part1t·11Jalrn g police· depart·
mc•nb or al Orange Coast
{.'ollt•j.!l' the <lay or the game.
Blackman
conipletes
all-stars
Kansas S t a t e 's R olando
Blackman. t he hero of his
team 's NCAA playoff victory
over second-ranked Oregon
Slate , 1s among fi ve basketball
players named lo complete the
squad for the all-star team that
will play Athletes in Action on
April l.
Rlackman, a 6·6 guard, hit a
16 foot Jumper with two seconds
remaining in Saturday's game
to provide the Kansas State vie·
tory over Oregon State.
Also named to the all-star
squad were Notre Dame
forward Kelly Tripucka. DePaul
guard Clyde Bradshaw. Florida
State guard Mickey Dillard and
Iowa forward Vince Brookins.
Maryland's Left Driesell will
coach the all·slars in the fourth
edition of the post-season game
at the Anaheim Convention
Center. AIA. a team made up of
Christian amateur athletes,
plays many of the nation's 'top
collegiate teams during the
course of the season.
Pacific's Ron Cornelius,
Maryland's Albert King ,
Ariiona Slate's Alton Lister,
Maryland's Orea Mannine and
Loyola·Marymount's Jlm
McCloakey had been named
e,arller to the all•star team
AlA, coached by Wardell Jef·
fries, won the first two meetings
with the all-stars, but l04lt 115-8'
last year.
I
Anteater run 1et
The third annual Anteater Run
wlll be held Saturday at UC
lrvlne. The five·kllometer r•Cf
wlll btgln at 8 a .m . with the 10.K
to follow at nine o'clock.
For more lnformaUon call Ed
Newland at 833·8288.
NEWS FEATURES
Steer• De1ROerai•
Manatt gets
rebuild job
BJ THOMAS D. ELLU
For the seClOOd time in 10 years, Democrat.a
are tumln& to Charles Manatt 1n hopn of rebuild·
)nf to challenge a Republican party dominated by
l\ooaJd Rea1an.
It worked the last time. Manatt served lwo
terms u state Democratic chairman, 1911·73 and
19'15·77. When he began, Secretary of State Jerry
Brown wu the only De mocrat 1n a state constllu·
Uonal orrtce. When he tlnis&etl, Brown was IOV·
ernor and RepubUcans held onJy one major
1tatewide office.
Now the Los Angeles lawyer and bank presi-
dent has been tapped to lead the national
Democratic party back to political prosperity.
"I SEE THE S ITUATION AS disUnctly
parallel," Manatt says. "Reagan was totally in
control out here, with the same people in key roles,
tbe Michael Deavers, the William French Smiths
and the Edwin Meeses. We have lo do nationally
exactly what we did here.·'
And friends t~ink the way he won the
c hairmanship will help him do that job.
For the first time, the job was thrown open to
a campaign, rather than having a presidential
candidate n ame the
-----------party chief. Manatt
CALIFORNIA FOCUS campaigned hard for
the job, making eight
~astern swings after
Thanksj?ivinf!.
One published report claimed he spent $200,000
to win the post. prompting two defeated rivals to
claim he "bought" the office.
"We actually spe.nt between $60 ,000 and
$80,000," said Manatt, "almost all of it on travel."
ADDS MICHAEL KANTOR, A MANAM law
partner and veteran manager of Democratic cam·
paigns in California, "We went out and won it. No
one has ever gone out and campaigned for this
kind or job before I felt like the national commit·
tee members loved it. For the first time, someone
came to them and asked for their help."
Now Manatt wall try to beJp them.
"We're asking for specific plans from each
state on how the national party can help
Democrats there," he said. "We 'll start holding
state. regional and national training sessions for
candidates a nd campaign managers and we will
set up opposition task forces on virtually every
major area of federal activity."
Manatt says the national party's needs today
are sim ilar to what he round on taking over
leadership in California
"FOR INSTANCE. DEMOCRATS HAD gross·
ly neglected some parts o f
California, just as Democrats
now have grossly n eglected
some parts of t he nation ,
especially the · West. We must
vastly expand our emphasis on
the West in future elections."
Manatt also said he'll try lo
ensure that Democrats don't
"sit passively back and let
them <the Reagan administra·
.,,.,.ATT lion I try lo gut a lot of the
things that are or gr eat concern and gr eat interest
to people who predicate their political life on the
principles or the Democratic Party."
He said 1t would be "too loyal and not quite the
opposition" to remain s ilent while social programs
are "chipped away "
With ties to e very major Democratic figure ,
Manatt backed Jimmy Carter last year even
though he is far closer personally lo Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy, D Mass
"TED KNEW WELL AND UNDERSTOOD
that l would stick with Carter," Manatt said. ''We
all know that there is always a tomorrow."
T hat's also Manatl's theme for the Democratic
Party
"I believe I have som e expertise in working
against a Reagan·dominated Republican Party,"
he said. "The president may be popular today. but
polls are just footprints on the sands of time. It's a
long grind down from the period just after an elec-
tion."
f Elias u o columnist based in Santo Monica.)
Two-year program
. .. ., ... ,... ...
LOce• B·J
Ohlo Gov. James
Rhodes bas urged
President Reagan to
select B·l developed
by North American
Roc kwell "to fill
Ame rican's need for
a multi -role
bomber."
Natural
dry look
• Wins vote
PALO ALTO CAPJ
There may t;>e more
shirts and unde rwear
than ever flapping in the
breeze in Palo, Alto.
where Mother Nature's
solar clothes dryer has
received a vote of con·
fidence.
The City Council has
vot ed 5·3 for an o r
dinance lo prohibit any
limitations on the use o f
clotheslines in the city
THE ORDINANCE
drew opposition from
Mayor Allen Henderson,
who argued that panties
a nd sheets flapping
from porches and
balconies would create
problems for apartment
and condominium build·
ings constructed without
provisions for lines.
"Jt's one thing to hang
clothes in the backyard
or oth er r estricted
areas. It's another thing
to hang clothes out in
full view of other resi
dents," said Henderson.
who r ecommended
rewriting the ordin ance
so that only new build·
ings would be affected
BUT COVNC IL -
wom an Ellen Fletcher,
saying the use of a
clothesline could s ave
the 744 kilowatt hours of
electricity used by an
average electric dryer
each month, r e1ectetl
argument s that
underwear hanging out
condominium windows
would give t h em a
"tacky tenement look."
She added. "I think
it's all in the eye of the
beholder I think it
would be a sham e 1f
Palo Alto, which as held
in high reputation na
tionwide in the field of
conservation. were t o
pass something wis hy
washy or ineffective "
Technical jobs open
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: My parents say l cao't
get anywhere without a college
degree but I hate the thought of cotag
to school for four more years. One of
m y friends just got a job as an ID·
dastrlal engineering tecbnJclaa. la
there any future ln that klad of work?
-R.L .. Bellevue. Wash.
Industrial engineering technician
jobs are for the plucking nationwide
wilh the greatest demand in the Sun
Belt.
Beginners are m akiog about
$15,000 annually and those with about
five years' experien ce, $20,000.
Average pay on a national basis is
$24,000 and some qualified lechni·
clans can earn up to $80,000, say in·
dustry insiders.
1f this sounds good so far. check in-
to a community college or technical
institute that offers an accrediled
two-year program in industrial
englneerlog technology. About 30
percent of the course work ls lab
training.
DONALD STRONG OF the
American Society for Engineering
Education says a high school studenl
can beat prepare for en1lneertng
technology by studylnf math,
algebra, geometry, Ena lsh and
science.
CommunicauoO. ·are at.ressed by
Fran Day. member lervlces
manaaer for the American Institute
of Industrial Enalneera. Math and
En&llah are particularly Important
since the rocua of yOW' work wtll be
worklnl wit.b oumbe,.. and writlnl re-
port.I, You'll ftod joa,. wberfter ln-
dultrtal eqtneera work: muuf ac-.
turtn1 plant.a. lnlurance companies,
~anka, ccaauJUn1 firms. educaUoaal
institutions, department stores.
h ospitals, railroads, government
agencies and more.
Work measurement is likely to be a
big part'Of your job, a nd you may use
a rrovie camera. stopwatch and
other equipment to observe and
record workers' methods and speed.
YOU MAY DO industrial produc·
tion planning, diagram work·flow,
make floor layouts and construct
CAREERS
charts that show materials handling
and machine utilization.
To boost productivity and quality
standards, you could expect to
write reports recommending changes
io equipment layout and work pro-
cedures.
Having earned an associate degree
in industrial eDflneering technology.
you mllht qualify to be a methods
technician, plant layout speclaUst,
production planner, quality control
specialist, 1alety technician or work
measurement technician.
Quallfyln1 u an indus trial
engineertna technician could drop a
plum lo your lap: a 1ood·pay1n1 Job
almost anywhere you ch009e.
READER SERVICE: To 1•cftv. o
conn' ~I and Hat of oc~tftited tram·
ing prog'fOtnl, C0..'11~ Of tla. ArMric:on
1ntffl1* oJ l~ f:ftgfuera, tftCfoM o 1tamp«I, wl/1Jdd,.ued, lono wMI• ,,..
H~ .,,Ula WC*' NqW•f to JOf/CI Lobs
Kn~ at 8oz l!IO, Co•to AUto nof.
Aak for "lndutrial E~ Techtd-
~."
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Orange Coat DAILY PILOT!Thunlday. March 19, 881
.........
The marketplace
on the orange coast . 642~5678
•••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
'G...,.... IOOZ ca...,.. 1002 G1 .. cel 1002
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
,,,......, .• , Hoffee:
All real utate ad· ve rtl se d in this
newspaper i8 subject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
Ing Act of 1968 whkh
ma.ket it iJlegal to ad·
vertiae "any preference,
limitation . or dis·
crimination based on
race. color, reliRion,
sex. or national origin.
or an Intention to make
any s uch preference.
l1mitatlon. or dts · crimination "
This newspaper will not knowingly accept a ny
advertising for real
estate which 1s in viola
tion of the law.
.....................................................................
INVESTORS
SPECIAL 1&8,900. lf you have little
cash ~ are looking for a aolden opportunity to
own your own home.
don't waJt. th.is Is l.t ! This
lovely condominium is a
2 Bdnn. very clean and
neat. and located in a
quiet area. Approx·
imately $2.9:50 down and
owner will carry 2nd
with small payments
Call now for all the de
tails. 752-1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
MESA WOODS
TIEASURE OM 5'YGLUS HILL
Tastefully done with ocean and bay
views. Portsmouth model looks
smash ing ! And has assumable
financing! A real value at just
$535,QOO.
U,_.l()Uf: ti()M~i
REALTORS. 675·6000
2443 EHt Coaat Hlghwey. Coron• d•I Mar
WE HAV~ 43 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWj'll
THEHUKEE
$96,500
~ , ..................... 1
Bright. airy 4 Bdrm pool
home with spa & a few
steps from the master suite. Dual fireplace
between family room
and con versa lion pit.
this home makes enter·
taining a delight. Full
price $183,000 Call
751·3191
F.xcellent Anaheim Inca·
lion. Terrflfic ramily
home. close lo shopping,
xlnt schools . Near
Angles and Rams home
Big home with beamed
ceilings, recently re
decorated. Kitchen has new microwave, range
and oven. The back yard
r.xwamoFF
EASTSIDE. C M. Two
well built houses on one
lot Pool, double garuge
1,1ve in 2 Bdrm. rent :I
Bdrm. S700 mo
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Viii i•I ( lur--.• y,.,,.,.
SERVICES
""r\Ut' l .. rri tl"°l
EMPLOYMENT l
PREPARATION
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BOATS l MARINE
fOUIPMENT ;,.,,..., ..
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"FAST
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SIRVICI
DIRICTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642·1611
lat.JJJ
Cluallled Ada are lhe
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shoelld check their ads
daity -report .,.... ron ....._.atefy. The
DAILY rtLOT CISll9Mt
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••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 . ..•.•...............•.
ASSUME 11/JO/o LM.
Only SJ 13.500 for this 3
Bdrm charmer with
healed pool and fruit
l rl"eS C'a II now 979 5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
OWMIER
W1LL RMAMCE
Lar~e 3 bdrm ruslom
home 1n prest 1~lous
area lmmac·ulale Owner will <'arry lst TD
or $100.000 al 12r1, in
t e rest only Prire
SJ85.000 Call now
979.5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
COSTA MESA
5 aa-$125.500
OWHB SAYS SELL
Not an add·on or con
version A real 5 Bdrm
familv home 1n one or Costa Mesa's n1 ce!>I
areas Hanclymans de
h~ht Callnowandsave•
Cl)
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
7 '4-63 J ·6990
2 UNITS
$94,900
Super investment' Two
2·Bdnn units. one with
fireplace! Current in
come S740 mo f'inanr
mj!' 1 yr homl' proll'c
t1on plan 1nl'luclr d
Hurry, this won't last
646-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
WEST CUFF
V4CAHT
R educed $25 ,000
Desperate owner says
bring all oflers. No qualifying. Low down. 4
Bdnn single story home.
totally upgraded. Call
for more details
Cl)
SEA COVE'
PROPERTIES
714·63 '·6990
C::SELECT
I PROPERTIES
OWNER W /RMAMCE
12°/oDOWM
Buys this 2 plus den
home 56 months new.
double iron ~ated entry.
cathedral reilin$:s. hrick
fireplace . go urmet kitchen. French doors to
p11t10 St79.000 Call
673-8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
OwMr' Altanciftcl
Channing 3 Bdrm ~ Ba
Eastside with huge bri<'k
fireplace Situated on a
comer lot with 2 car
garage and covered
patio Try 20'1. down Full price $162.500
WALK TO
MWPT
BEACH
Your beach place lh1s
summer or all year long.
S209.900 Plenty of room
(or the whole family
with 4 large bdrms and
family room. Lovely re-
ar l(arden and patio cov.
t'r Owner will help
finance Call 673-8550
INVESTORS
TICKET
1s now m Costa Mesa of
rerin!! residential pro·
pertywith.
No Negative Cash Flow
No Tenant Problems
Capital Gains Only
High Returns
tnot2nd Trusl Deeds I
Call for information
d' RED CARPET
-754-1202 ~
CAMIO HtGHLAtotDS
OCEAMVU
$339,000
Reduced thousands! Spacious living room
features glowing
fireplace. 3 lartie bdrms plus den. Great assuma-
ble lst and owner will
carry a second~ Call
673-8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
c~!:~~-1 , __ CO-S-TA·M-E.SA-
c harrnin1 (Bdrm. 3 ba SI I ,500 home with family room.
Super upgraded con· Corner lot. VERY
dominium. near ever· private yards . lm·
ythln11. Sacrifice sale. maculate and ready to
Seller transferered move in. $174,500
752.1100
THE REAL ESTATERS
UMllATAIUTHMS
Only l5% down attd owe the balance at a low lntereat rate. 3 lux-
urious unlta which In·
elude owner's unit (3 Br 2 Ba w lfrplc Ir 2 c:a r
1arap}. Call now for
complete d C'l tallt . 558-3118()
•
SELECT '
PROPERTIES
TIUs 3 Bdrm charmer was on~ a model home.
Louted on a huge cul·
de·sac lot and filled with
utru. PtNISHED
garaie. Clote to schools.
Offered at n44,500.
IRYINE
Ldvely S Bdrm, 2 ba
sln1le family home with
very PRIVATE yard,
X\nt localklft. cloae to •chool1, 1bopplng and
freeway. $114.500 and
owner will carry 2nd .
is blg enough ror a ba 11 !-~~~~~~~~
field. Call for 1letails .
752· 1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
BUILDER'S
BARGAIN Outstanding builder':.
lot. 66xJ90' with «harm
ing 3 bdrm hom e, t'O' ered patio Ll\'C then·
while you build' Lot ne1tt
d oo r al so for
sale 66x300 ' Nr
Newport's Buc k Bay
Hum. call for details,
646-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
642 5678
AnEMTIOM
INVESTORS
This beautiful view µro
pe rty 1n Ne~ port 1s
priced bclov. market
value and below ap
pra1sal Span~ aiie
k1t rhen ~1th brl'akfasl
a rt.>a lfuge h ving room
ln na1 with v iew .
f 1repla l'e and open beamed cathedral ce1I
in$(s Hide a way master
1w1te, separate chiclren•
~ml( Dash lo the pool
t'all today ror details
Owner highly motivated
and will work with \'{'ry
l'reauve financinR <'all
7~2 1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
A COHVfNICNl SHOP91NC ANO~'.ilZf•~
SEWI~ CVIDl FOR IHE
CAL ON lH( CO
For an Ad in W°"'"''t Worid
Cal S..e 642-5671, Ext. 330
Jiffy-Knit Tops Must-Have Jacket!
ON YOUR WAY to woi\ play,
•aullon l Wu• 11 loose or belt
this IOO'tJ !JCMI O'ltf Mr,1hin1 ~I •IY to som up IHI yur s
l*s tod oohsll "" ones Punted httein 9178 M1ues
S1itS 8. 10 12. IC 16, 18 20
S11t 12 (bull JC) 11~ 216 1•rds
60.1nch tab11c .... suo .. Mell .....,...
w.SOC••"~""' tint-elm 111111111, M1-11a. .....
..willMTI•
lllatteni o.,t. 44t .,.,., ....
m""' 11• :.':" ,._ '" 10011. ,1111, t !!!SS· zir sm,.,mu-1 NlW SPRl!fG.SUMMER 1981 PATitRN CATAlOC 11111\0 fO\I
T(RRtnc SAYINGS oa llmt. *Olk,~, •• ~ Mr 100 last. easr patttmt Plus lltl pettt<11
,,.... . .. n
'8\twer lo a succ..,ful ---------*cote Realty
&c lnvntment
cov~==-t.1l'' J)>f ....... 1.11 m.-1 ... QIMI . $1JS praie or ya.rd Hle ! It '1
a bell• way to tell mon
people!
8ell wtc.h EASEi
lt'aa88BUS ct.-n.d Mt • .,. 640-ST17 . 1JN _. .. .w.u.n
'
• Daily Pill
Any classification. No cancellation Rebate .
....... For w. , ....... ,... w. ~.~~ •••••••• ~.~.~~ .••... ~:.~.~ ..•.••. ~:.~.~ •....•. ~:.~.~ .••.... ~:.~~.~ ....... ~:.~.~ •.•.•..
....................... ••••••0·~··000•0• Ii .e 1002 ........ 1002 ....... 1002 ._,.. 1002 Corw .. M• 1022 Cott.M.N 1024 "... 1044
'9a&Ns.. 1002 9:1 .. r.e 1002 •• ~::!::••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •• .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• •• •• ................ ••••••• ••• • ............ c I aAt; ...,.... ESTATE SALE 1 • , .....suLA POIMT llAC ... OMT . IMWLU WALMUr 5qUAll ~ '"? WILSON PAii l'MlftftUltlUMS Panoramic view a{ wedge, from 9 moa. new. 4 bdrm+ 2 Coll~ Park 4 Br. lo/4 •llSTIUY • ~ ~ "unw"" primelargelot 4bdrm 3bath custom bdnnun1t.3ftrephaces.4 ba . 1120 ·000 cash . Nlce2story"C"plan 2 -• • . . car gar., us~d brick. 8 0 S I 5 2 4 · l S 9 0 o r bdrm condo. Freshly
CllCI & COMpanr ~ rraTURES home. 3700 sq. !t .. featuring m.ar.me French w indows . 805/&U-S380. painted, central air.
, ~Int« rUt . room, entry, hving room, dmmg 709·709\.'z Orchid E.aidelBR,2~bacondo. Priced below coplpara·
room, built·ins, etc. Sl,385,000. ~.000 Call for appt tb Skyli~. deck. patio, 2 ble sales for Immediate . .90°' f1UlMf'IY.' 17*°' INTER. . . see. 8Sl·913S cw11l coop> M action. a .soo. . . ' /0 """" nlll /0 Owner/bkr. car gar. any UP· LIDO ISU grades. By Owner. owe CAU NOW
HA.1101 VIEW HIW 1475,000 ?'HARBOR AREA LOCA110
I SIZE-1650 SQ. rr.
I ALL SHOPPING ~ BLOCK
I AIR CONDITIONING
I CEMENT DRlVES '
( WALK IN CLOSE.'J'S
I MICRO OVEN
I COMPACTOR
I DISHWASHER
I DBL GARAGE
W/OPENER
Newly remodeled traditional style 3. Jasmine Creek decorator 2. $1:.>M. 540-4083. 64._7211 bdrm, 2 bath home featuring large home. plan 1 on green· E . side C.M. 2 homes on
recreation room & 2 patios. Living beltim~a'l:·soo trg lot Carpets drapes,
room has attractive beam ceilings , forced air heat. Lots or · ~NIGEL
OAIL[ r &
ASSULI I\ TES
A. IWll "HILLSIOllOUGH"' MOOIL
Impressive front elevation to this
estate·like 5·bedroom, 2-story
Lusk·built home. Dramatic entrance
hall with vaulted ceiling, large living rm, formal dining rm, spacious family
rm, & lovely master suite with private
dressing rm & bath plus deck for sun
bathing off mstr BR. Two ft.replaces, a
separate utility rm & 3-car garage.
Surprise: a gorgeous large pool in a
woodsy rear yard. A real family
home.
WAD INVISTMBCT INC.
fireplace & french doors leading onto Lease/option. Spyglass 6 xtras. Great for 1st time
bric k patio. New kitchen blt·in · br. S30.000. S3000 mo. investors. Prine Only.
aooliances, Close t Q tennls. courts &M·l450AM or eve best. Owner. 642-~. -
,sandybeaches&.clubhouse.$420,000 : ss oK O wn . Cameo •VA~41dS I OIK • ORANGETREE
SAUS OfRCI 1714» 6Jl-1111
•W.W.. SI. Mi.HM c..e. ...... c:.. IA.YNOMT
We have several fine homes
with pier & slip, starting at $1,500,000
RA.MCHO MIRA.GE
Shores, S695K. 3 brand VA appraised 4 Br 2ba
new condo/ dplx. S420K No dn pmnllo vets
ea Ag t 673 -7761 . Princonly7Sl·6836
7SO.l:m F;;...-V~ --.-034 1---------1 ·················· ..... DOH"T CALL ME TRUE VALUE
Lowest price 1 Br + loft
condo. Sharp end unit
$83.950
640..5357
C/ZI M•:"portC"'!·
WISUY M. TAYLOI CO.. llM.TOIS
2111 S..11 ; I .......
Springs Condo. 9th fairway. 3000 sq.rt.
3 Bdrm. 3 bath . furn . Golf r ib .
mbrshp. Will trade for invest. prop.
A DUPLEX
I'm a perfect home for
owner occupant or
maybe 2 a s a
partnership. Two nearly
equal 2 Bdrm 2 ba units
w ith mas ter s uites.
stone frplcs. & wood
beam ceilings on an
overs1 lot w /pvt patios
and deck New on the
martcet at $320,000
in the ever popular
Westmont homes. 3 lrg
Bd + Bonus rm. Below
market price. $127,000.
Call Anne Mccasland
631 -1.266
Woodbridge Landing
Brand new 48r, 3Ba.
frplc in mstr ste. E-Z as·
su mable Sl:>0 .000
S2J9 ,500. 64.S·98SO a gt. MIW""'l'Ol-.~ITn CIMTll. M.I. 644-49 t 0
REALTORS
675-5511
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ~.iii fl * •COLL'EGE
PARK NEW CONDOS
XLNT TERMS
CUL DI SAC
8,ACK BAY, Udy 3 Bdrm
2 bath home with re·
modeled kitchen. In ex·
cellent condition. Just
Sl 16.SOO-presenl your
t erm s! Call Eileen
Dinwiddie
34 1 B<1 y\1cl1· Dr •vl' N 8 675 6161
121 JZ l6MJet'
E of Harbor Blvd
641-1991 agt
LOWDOWH
Versaille l Bdrm /studio
penthouse condo with
lge assumable loans.
Only SHXS.500 Call today
979-5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
SPYGLASSHIU
We have two beautiful
listings on Spyglass. One
of them will fit your
price range Call to see
these gems!
D.M. Mcnhal Rltr
644-9990
642-5200
COlOMA D~AR D\ft.EX -A. ~
Spr04ll btdlt~t~ ..... ltl Olde Corw del Ma. ~ & 2 ledrOOM,
ftt-eplocn md • U.._ kJtdwtt i..
.... •It. $291,00. J PETE J BARRETI ... REALTY
COLI OF NIWPOIT UA1. TOIS
25 IS E. Coost Hwy., CorClllO .. Mor
675-1111
HEWPOIT HGHTS De l uxe townhou s e OCIAM & VAi.UY
duplex. 3 bdrm + rami-VIEW
ly. 2"'1 bath. each unit. Cozy 3br. 2ba home. den.
Frplcs. all buill·ins. frplc,etc.
decks & patios. Park-+
I 1 k e I a n d s c a P i n g . 3 more separate homes
SELLER WILL HELP on lg lot. Call now for
FINANCE! $295,000! appt. S48S,OOO. Owner
1c6oo lay Prop. will finance.
1ea11on aoy Mee_., 11tr
Trade your old stuff for
new goodies with a
Classified ad. 642-5678
UHlc;>UE DUPLEX
Poppy Ave. location
w/pool. Xlnt income.
Well priced at S29S,OOO.
•675-7060• 541-772'
TtnltS,Tenns! riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I Only lSo/, down for this
out.standing nearly new
condo. 2 Br + den. fami-
1 y room . view ten ·
nistpool. A ~reat buy at
$210.000
IEA T THE HEAT
The possibilities and
potential of this Balboa
Island property are
tremendous Multiple
units can be used for
summer.winter income
or as a combination in·
vestment and summer
residence Top condi·
tion. Loads or charm
Flexible terms Now
S399.950.
lcAoa 111-.d Rlty
67J.a700
9'1•0/o LOAH This '4 Bdrm home has
been completely re-
decorated Many extras.
Assume 9 V"~-loan.
Price SllS.000. Call lo·
day 919-S370.
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
:rBllACTaMS
Oceanlroot duplex. Xlnl
owner flnan. M UST
~SELL!
675-1771
llAMDMIW
OWMtw,aici
Commercial + residen·
tial. Near Newport Pier.
Live In l.r1e upper 3
bdrm, 2 bath unit above
commerclal·shop, st.ore
or oft'ice. Call for details.
Prieed at SIS0,000. Eves.
11~.
associated
P,).I .. I W -11 ". ' .. ,
t l'fl I ' .....
llALllTATI
MISTl•IT LICTUll
J.Aam tbe MeNt o1 how to purchaH property
crntlvely. Sit evealna
Mardi Zl, MOPM. (114) -.mo b(r sPM ror re-
~•Info.
CE
llDBIB BLlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
ILUFFS HST IUY
Rare "Q" Plan With Spacious
Living/Dining Room Area & Cozy
Conversation Pit. Ideal Location
With Large Enclosed Patio On Lush
Greenbelt Near Pool & Tenn.is Club.
Tastefully Deco rated & In
Immaculate Condition. Perfect
Home For Entertaining. Owner Will
Carry Second Trust Deed. $230,000.
DECORATOR'S VILLA BALBOA
Completely fumished with at1tlq11es,
china, sUnr, crystal Clftd a "wortd of
mimn" & ~ «Mcor. Sec:riy bide).,
lorcp paffo: spocioul & coordinohd 2
bed. Reducfd to $398,000. 631 -1400.
VU-VILLA BALBOA-VU
2bd.. lbo., "'lcrowove, hU.-deck,
sec:riy, pool focunJ, bor b .... VocCll'lt,
o wn.,. at1xlou. o,e11 S••· 1-5.
$290.000. 240 Hice LOM #306
W ATERFRON T HOM ES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
!NIP•. R•n1.it Pr~ny M.n.gtnwn1
2436 W Co..11 Hwv 63 I I 400 Ntwpor1 Beach •
• ...,,.,.,... ""'" ol .... ,.,.,, ttn1...0led -ch be-
low 10 fon11 '°"' t1111p'9 -ch
1
1
HN00CM
I DUSEE I I I' I I i t '
1
W 0 N N K i I I'm not a 1wlnQef. II l tatle , 1 1 1 1 •boll• ~·nv bttl•nd ffl'1 . I •PGllM'I beck, I'm '81111"0
-------abcwt he"111Q 1.notri.t pleoe r rrrr , !•~:-.. "':::.-== ..._..__ ____ ...._ __ "°" -,_ ........ , .....
....... ____ __._ ...
Hr<,10tcNllA1 Al Al I S lllff Sffl\/IUS
IAYSHORES
Picture perfect 3 BR. Great decor .
Stained glass. Custom waJlpapers &
carpets. Located on Bayshore Drive
near beach. $395,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
HAllOR llDCll ISTATIS
Owner will carry up to $300,000
financing on this 4 BR
SPECTACULAR view home. Call
now!
-ASSUMAILE LOAM/S 141,000.
Cits aa g 4 bdrM hotM ca .W
c•l·d•·aac 011 choice locatlow.
Mny •pgradH pl•• exulle•t
-..C1'MJ. Take ~••r ~ to
nhtlltg T.D. at t V•o/o ..... Mt.
,...._ Newly oH.r~d.
-AISUMAILI LOAM + Ylew.
.,..., lock hy •lew. TaM ~
to Stl0,000 T.D. at 10'1'1• _..
lllt.Nh.4W...3Hlll...,.
.... .......... J frplcl ..... for
lto•t or co•per. Offered et
SJH,000.
-11• CAMYOM -$431.000.
Df • •• . ..trrw.y ......... l•••IJ It• ) ltdr•, 21/t It• ................ .,.. .........
dla.r•. le ••I. ltrlcll pellet.
lxtr•••lr well 'riced w/x .. t . ...
\ ................
COMMBCIAL
rROPHTY
SPECIALISTS
Learn brokerage & pro-
perty mgmt. skills by
joining a leading local
firm Call Ken at :
675-6700
CGll 644-72 1 I
M.lm 51
Costa~a 1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1--~~~~~~1·--·Ml~s~A~v:a:o:E~-i
Fc.itastic ~Hon
Of Oceweft CNtts
We have 8 or 9 as a mat-
ter of fact We will take
trades. exchanges or
just sell with tremen
dous t erms f'rom
~.OOOonup
We even have a couple of
gorgeous oceanfront
bluff lots in Encinit as
from $225,000 on up with
terms
CHA.RMB
Beautifully decorated "
Bdrm home with atrium
and 11eparate mast~r
suite Private corner lot.
lovely carpels and wall
coverin~s thruout fo'or
an appointment to 11ee.
call 540-llSJ
.... #:.. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
HWttilwJtolt hoch I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lowest pnce Syracuse
1n College Park
Owner's anxious Good
location Assumable
financinl? Call for de-
e-RAM I I
Hf A L l Y
~s 1 2000
IRING AMY OFFH
Lovely 3br. cstm homt!
near beach & park.
formal d1n1ng. heavy
shake roof Call now for
information regardinl(
the ~<'!, assum. loan *•LINCOLN!
Seller w tcarry part or No. nol the President the buyers down pa v ment & says bring any but a beautiful 3 Bdrm offer a l t a c h e d ho m e 1 n
BEST l'RICE gorgeous Woodhridge
IM TOWH Jo:states. This 1s the best
4br. remodeled kitchen. priced product or it~ type in the area Flex i plush carpets. custom ble financing too Call
drapes, freshly painted. now
seller bought another & Sl6S.900
below market value for ~I Woodbridge
quick s ale. Creativt' ftoaltu term-; ok -beller hurry " •
has priced thousand ~ [g]
551·3000
TRY $5000 GOLDENWEST mGBarranc• Pk,.). Irvin•
Owner will consider a REALTORS 3 Bdr. 2 _Ba. country like
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
'•···di' L'ASSOCIATES home in The Colony VA or creative orrers ~ P-" 5 IEDIOOMS Cute 3 Bd 2 Ba home 84M588 Take over existing loan & owe m.ooo 640-6677 Perfect home for an ac· Features sparkling pool l~~!!~!!!!~!!!!'~i Agt t1ve family Large Priced to move fas t ,-
enclosed yard. family GregAslle 559-9400 IHVESTORS ~~~J;:;.tf,'{l•=l: liiiiltl
. 17141 673-4400' '·
!Zill U l-1121
SPECIAL!
Executive Duplex for
discriminating taste
3br. Jba, each. central
air, woodburnin~ frplc!>,
custom drapes I carpets.
heavy sbake roof ll' • '>
loan is assumable. no
qualifying necessary.
HARBOR
Waterfront older duplex
'695,000. Will exchimge.
768-0654
IHDMDUALITY
AHDCHAIM
Terrific location near
the Main Street Charoi·
ing 2-story, 3 bdrm, lge
kitchen. formal dining
rm , maste r bd rm
w /frplc. Newly painted,
carpeted & draped Two
patios. Loads or wood.
warmth & Island charm.
$4.4(). 000.
-
'-'J\TI. HI HOVT llOMI ., Inc.
REAL ESTATE
87M900
Open Sunday. 2·Spm. 1641
Orchard Dr Sbdrm, 3ba.
freshly painted colonial
beauty Family room.
separate dining room.
frplc. new roof Prired
at $160,000. for quick
sale Xlnt financing
THE WlEDEMANS
494-0066 or 7Sl -'4293
HEWPORT llEACH
$34,000 down, owne r will
finance al 13~<7, with
SlSOO /mo payments
T otal price $279,000
East Bluff. Sbdrm. 3ba.
call 644-7063.
MOVE UP TO
MESA VERDE
This spacious 4 Bd 2-sty
SI OK Down Or Less
MOVES YOUIH
No qua l i f yiniz
necessary Your mon
thly payment can be ad
justed lo meet your mon
lhly budget. We have
many 3 & 4bdrm home in
best Orange County
locations w /these terms
Call our specialist for
more information.
~GOLDENWEST ~:REALTORS '•,""'.<JI' ?ASSOCIATES
t4M5H
home has an outsland· l~~!!~~~!!~~I ing com er location and a
9'ho/r fully assumable
loan. The price is right
al $219,000. Call Anne
McCasland 631-1266
OCEANFRONT
Distress Sale 2Br co·op.
view Wiil on s and & surf.
Exclusive adlt comm . 24
hr sec bldg Priced at
owner's cost for fast
escrow. 1179.000
l&Hht.-shnefth
752-2197 ~~~~~----
MESA.VERDE GUHMAR ..... , ....... 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautl/ul SBR. Pool lge 4 Bdrm 2ba, up-
hom e nr golf course g raded w /shake roof.
CUSTOM HOME w /lrg assumable loan hot tub, encl patio. Love· No agts please. John: 1 Sl29 500 lcAoaPa•.... Y area. . . 631-1266agt. SUNSETRE
YOUR DREAM
HOME
F.xquisile Deane Home.
beautifully landscaped
warmly decorated This
4 bdnn home 1s in im
maculate condition One
or the finest homes in
Irvine pnced at $241.500
'+523 C.otP05Dt·IR\ll,.E
• Northwood Park Sgl
Family. 2sty home
Located on quiet cul-de
sac with nice view of
partc orr master bdrm
balcony. 4br. 21,o;ba .
+built-ins owe at
13~% for 2 years with
20"k dwn. $180.500 Call
John ~3174 or 730-3894
eves
WOODIRIDGI
2 Bdrm Wa rmington
"B" end unit. Great
loution. Open house Sat
& Sun 12·4 a t #10
W\ndwood. Agt. 552-0660
HIGH ASSUMA.IU
4br home w /s pa, xlnt
cond. $169,000. ~·6940
LGCJ191G leach I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stepe t.o bay and beach. · ·
Thi5 beautiful new home 548--SIQI 846-8803 THE SHAKES
features: 3 Bdrms. fami-NEW CONDOS We at h ere d cedar ly room and library, 2""' Hwl~ shakes. that is. Cuttom
baths. ceramic tile XLMTTIAMS H..t.Ow 1042 designed 3 bdrm, fam
thruout. 4 fireplaces. OHL Y 3 LIFT ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. 2 batha. Eiiteiulve
0 a k ca bin et s . 2 Lg private decks. G..,_ W"t &t.tn use of wood glass &
skyUghu. stained glass & patios Beautiful SltS Exec. 4 ceramic tile. Beam cell·
wlndowll. French doors. For 4S day escrow bdrm home. Elegant wet Ing, frplc. 1165,000.
2 patios and xtra large Bldr provides drapes. bar. bll·ln bbq inside & Mission Realty
garage and beaullful 2000 Meyer Place many other amenities (114)494.()'731 .
spaolfthemasterbdrm. "'--Mr IM incl. a huge yard that
Offered at $477,000. For -r-1"' backs to a beautifu l ~HOMI an appointment to see, 641·1" .... park. Just 2 yrs old! 1ftboMpre-caU 54().1151 .... ________ Broker, 9S.l-8182 clous antiques. Hut1 llv-
-1• ln l room, massive fn>lc. 1,,,,.. I 044 beamed celllngs. Priv EASTSIDE
ONy $125,000
~~.~~ ... !!~~ VA/FHA TERMS
~ HERITAGE
REALTORS
JASMINE CREElC . New 3 Bdrm, fplc, ramlly
model borne . 3 bedrma; room. Call MS-tlll 2"' bill.ht ; bullt ln a P' ·
•••••••••-•••••••••••• spa off masur. Eutt lot . * .,\..oEERAELD m~ v..;. u
Lar1eat mod e l In 497-1761
Deerfield. TM P\an s
done u never ~ore! Leaae Op\lon . abdrm.
Pool, spa, mag cent $30,000 option money.
decor and landlc pinf. $1200/mo. s-:ooo aell
AU this and assume a p rld. Prlnc. Only. pUa.Mea; auperb carpet· · blgb loan balance. Call m Ull5 ln1 6 drape1; eomplet. now --·--·-----ly landacaped. owner ' zBr cabana Ir trl.r 11.1blet· ;:::..:·w .~:~::; . lf I )"°""'.u:.:' ...... _,,.., .. , h•. on11. LElMEllT co. •-r pool Ir ft1nln1 lfler.
cna> --· The futM draw ln t.ht ..... • ••. (lU) ••ii
CIUlllfled ~.your oee-Welt. .. e Dally Pilot ~ 5$1·... 1'. WANT ACTION' •lholl9'na C!lll.&et. Cluallled Ad. M2·58'71. rn11«a ftwy, I"... Clwiled Ada Nl-tfrl
14Y2% ANANCING AVAILABLE
LIMIT9 TIMI OM. Y
ONM HOUll DAILY t l·I
IAICHO SAN IJAN ESTATtS
Priva~ ga~ community. Exclusive
view homes located In Sao Juan
Capistrano at the intersection ol Del
Obispo and Aguacate. Near beaches,
marina and mission. Starting at
$51 5,000. Courtesy to brokers. For
more information, cull :
CHARTER REALTY & INVESTMENT
4tMIZ2 131 .. 111 e--; f:,,l\J( Ii
1\1 \l I\
1,:, 1 )()()() I ........ hach I 041 Newport hoclll I 06t . ............... ... . . . . . .. .................. .. -----~~--1
DWI.IX .... ,
OCIAHVllW
Brin& your paintbrush &
broom to save SU on this
(llrly dawg! ! Prime
Laguna Beac h duplex
w /attached garage. Sub·
mil offer! 759·1501 or
752·7373.
Walker Ilea
REAL ESTATE
L..-. ...... 1052 •••••••••••••••••••••••
$10,000 CASH ON
I Br. furnished condo nr
H0&g Hosp. Pool. spa.
security. Assume loans.
640-5357
C/21 Hew c•.
BOAT PEOPLE
PENTHOUSE CONDO
with boat dck 280 deg
forever view Fee land.
Assumable loan.
640-5357 c /21 M.wport c•
WXUllOUS,
AMDLOVB,Y
Spacious ' Bdrm custom
home in excelle nt North Tustin area. Beautifully
landscaped yard with
large pool and spa. Huge
family room, with ex·
tensive use of brick.
Fantastic gou rmet
kitchen with gas BBQ.
Large assumable low in·
lerest loan. $369,000.
don osen
rt•,l} (Ill ....
lmf AT PROSPECT
DoY•W.tA
...... forSJll(Da
All 2 Bdrms. total price
1170,000. 540-388e
•Whelan Real ESUlte
Costa Mesa E. side 4·
plex. poss. cash now.
$325,000. 27 7~ d own.
o w e balance al 13~ 13.9
X gross. Pr ine. Only.
~
Costa Mesa W side 4·
plex. poss. cash flow,
1?25,000. 25 ~ down,
balance carried at 11 &
12%. 12.4 X gross. Prine.
Only 640-0997
4 Br, l.,., btt, single family
home. S700 /mo. Refs
pleue. IM7-Mal
N,=::o.~:~Sb~, ~::i~ C=: 1i: :::r a l400
decorated. 2 blocks to ••••••••••••••••••••• • • ocean. 962.-U. u r.1raded condo nr ---------i c ubhle. pool & jac. 3 br, 3 Br. 2 Ba. large yard. 2 2 \Aibath . 840-1789 ,
car garage. 1745 mo. Me-1171 (Mary Ellen)
8'75-Q5Q.
SPACIOUSH.I.
TOWMHOUSI
New 2 br. 2\.; ba, Back
Bay k>c. Gar . pvt. patio.
S8ll5 mo. Susan: 957-6507.
~72311
3 Bdnn. frplc, walk to
beach. pool & tennis.
$745. Agt. 76Q..9278
IL.UffS
•••••••••••••••••••••••
3br, l~ba. 2 m l trom ocn ,
pool mzs <2m•86-s122
Paul (7 U )963-7758
(home)
Ocean View' Lge 2br
Condo sec bldg. adults
only $795/llle S28·5111
2br . 2ba, paol/jac /c lbhse.
nr S.C. Plaza SSOO/mo
557-4351 eves THEILUFFS ·
l IR-~ Le•el Finest original area.
Massive greenbelt vista.
Smartly decorated in
popular tones, nearby
pool. Offered at $212.000
<with assumable hi bal
loan try $13.000 down I
nJSTIN, 731·3111 Duplex, Costa Mesa, W--~--------,-0-9_1, 2bdrm ea. Assume 1st.
Harbor V. homes. 4Br.
ram rm .. 2 stor y. xlnt
cond. Avail 1 /5 Tel ·
644·:i897.
3 BR, 1 ba. new plush
cpts .. new drps, cov'd.
patio. fncd. yrd .. walk lo
bch. t825. 1st + S300 dep.
53fHl288
3 bdrm. 2~ baths. fam
rm. SSO. 2 bdrm. 2 bath,
S87S. 3 Bdrm. ram rm.
$1100. Pools . Rltr.
644-0134.
3br Condo, new dee. Ten·
nis, pool. sauna . nr
ocean. '650. 962-7469
A PLACF. TO HANG
YOUR HEART
This lovely Pacesetter
home has 4 Bdrms. 2 Ha.
is situated on a tree lined
street. There is an all
new kitchen and the
home is freshly painted
throuj?hout SJ4~.ooo
495-172()
.bin.go
A gt. 640-SSfJO
•Oceanfront dplx. xlnl
I()('. fin. & pnce' Prm
only 673-7677, 673-7873
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Near Westminster Mall,
co7.y-clean 3 Br. $20.000
dn . 131.'i'r.-int. $94,500
Agt. 639-1204 -----
OHwr RMI Estate •••••••••••••••••••••••
1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I 00/oOwa, 13'/lO/olnt. T railer at bch $14,900
3 br. 2•~, ba condo. Ten Term-;. OWC or trade
nis. pool . jac Mus t sell 499'3816
Agt 642_·15_23_____ New Modular type hom e.
OCEAHRtMT DUPLEX Ocean view· El Moro
2914 Oceanfront_ Comer Beach Park. sp 70 2Br.
Sell or trade. Submit s pace rent S175 mo 20
On the Oran$!<' Coa~L your deal. Own/Agt Ofc Yrs lse S69.900 499-3816
Look to Lm0 o first '"2 9601 R 0~" .,;.39 " ~ · · es ·,,...,-= Mo bile Ho me. 15X30.
MissbtVl.Jo 10671---------• lbdrm. Cost a Mesa , • ••••••••••• •••••• •• •• • IACI IA y adults. no pets. SI0,900
HOME In Hw SUM! 3br. 2ba home plus ideal 673-~-
mother·m·law quarters. ---------• Com pl. w /bath. $220.000.
Roy McCarcle, Rttff
541-7729 •EXCITING•
On a grassy hill' Beaut
vu! Adil. sec'd. peacehll
comm. Pvt club w /!>')01,
jac, sauna. & ~olf 2 Rr.
sin~le stry Quality de
cor in warm neutrals' -~~~~~~~~ Sacriflce
Beaut'ful c ustomized
24x62 Lancer Home. 7
owe 2nd . SI53 ,500
640-8585.
!!INVESTORS!!
Long Beach 7 U. 9.5X
Anaheim 4·Plex llX
Los Angeles 6 U. 12X
Pasadena 7 U. 9.5X
Call for more info.
7141847-9626
IUCHDUPLEX
Villa Balboa Cond o
Prof. decor, compl. furn.
2 br , 2 ba. den, din. rm,
fam. rm. Lse $1500/mo.
~7-4l.'i6
Hws Uftfwtll•d ••••••••••••••••••••••• G........ 3202
Owner will finance at •••••••••••••••••••••••
1211f'.o/, with 25-30o/, down . Sy OWNER, formal din,
Fee land, one 2 Br. one 1 I 3 br: pool. Now avail.
Br. garage. laundry! Arrowhead Coun try
room and good location C I u b a r e a , S a n
5220.000 Bernardino. l-864-1732.
RECORDING STUDIO
Fully equipped + a good
2· BR home. $160,000.
Agt. &46-4380
1-884-7253
Costa Mesa 322 ••••••••••••••••••••••
2 Br 2 full bath condo. 2
car gar Pool. jacuzzi
Gas pd. $700/mo. Days
2 13 /861 -8207 . h o m e
2131923-2600
5 Br. 3 Ba. 2 Sty SllOO
mo. lse.
494-0066
l BR, new cpts . drps,
walk to heh. Clean & pvt.
~oo. 1st + S2.SO dep, 536-6288 ---------Exec. Home. Cul.de-sac.
3br. 3ba. ram rm
Gardener S750 lease
2 l 3 /378-32167
3bdnn house, cul-de·sac.
nr Westminster Mall.
Fenced yard. dbl gar.
S650/mo. No fee to le·
nants. Coats & Wallace
962-4454
Adult complex 2bdrm.
2ba, atrium. pool, spa.
tennis. million doller
clubhouse '650/mo Call
Phyllis 962·4'54
Coats & Wallace
Close LO beach 3Br Pf• ba.
dbl gar. Lg l/r, frpl. corn
lot, quiet cul ·de-sac.
fncd y rd $600 incl
gardener. Call 536-2'789
Lge e xec hom e 4br,
2V,ba, fam rm, lge s pa,
S850/mo inc l pool
The Bluffs, 4bdrm. 3ba.
fam rm. patio. on green·
belt. co mm. pool.
Sl200/mo. 759-1685.
NEWPORT IEACH
11.'J blocks lo the ocean
beach. Three bedroom
two bath home. Year ly
lease. First and lasL
$1000 per month .
Lge 2br. 2ba condo, Villa
Ba lboa $750/mo 1st/last
+ sec deposit 645·2158
Newport Crest, 4bdrm.
2"'1ba, 2300 sq rt Tennis.
pool, s pa. 644-8053.
Tow111lun1N u. ... Wct )525
••••••••••••••••••••••• 63l-7:n>. BKR --------3 Br 1"'1 Ba, Townhome.
HAUORVIEW
Super exec 5 Bdrm w /vu. $1350/mo Agt
644-9990
Ocean View ! Lge 2br
Condo sec bldg adults
only $795 /lse. S28·Slll
Steps to the beach. lge 4
br dplx. 21".r ba. patio. 2
sty, immac SIOOO y rly_
673-2Sl17
L~ 3Br. 2'h8a. Condo, fpl.
dbl gar. f175. 36' boat
s l ip optional S200.
67>1225.
pool. HB. Near beach.
children welcome No
pets S575. 842-•474 or
~9222.
MONTICELLO 2br. 2ba
Twnhse. Lge 2sty model.
encl 2 car gar w /opener
Pool/Clbhse privilege~
Avail approx April 1st
S525/mo. 963-7144 days.
•98-1812 eves
DuplHH u.mr.. )601.1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
M75/mo. 2bdrm. Iba
Costa Mesa
963-7600
Sl08.00() F'antas t1 c·
pri~! Toll(' Rltrs
586-8500 581 2994
ATTHEIEACH
Nice 3 Br house in super'
cond Terrific financing 1 yrs. old. 2Br. 2Ba. ram ·--------• room. Garden tub w /all
2bdrm, Iba duplex, gar. service. Century 21. ml!l~l!lm~lllll!l~~~ll!!l•I Apwhu1111b Furnished
washer/dryer hook·up, 848-l885 or 642.7185 VILLA BALBOA 2 Br ......... ••••••••••••••
new noors, crpts, paint. -----11.';i ba. ocean view. avail lalNNI lslcMd 3706 M~wpor+ IHch I 069 ....•••................
VICTORIAN
BF;ACH HOME
New 3 BR 31"1 Ba Quall
ly handc rafted oak
thruout ~ta med ~las ..
s pa
$235,000. l
SUNSET R.E. I 542·~ 846·8803
$40,000
and owe balance 1 yrs
new 3 (rplcs. view &
steps to beach
appliances encl In
Laguna Hills nicest star
park 21 yrs & older
$39,500. (JE8J59)
lest luy ilt Town
A Doll House. 20x42. 2Br.
I Ba. walk-in closets
Many xtras S2.2.500
,,... ............
HEWPORTIUCH
CORONA oa MAI
2Triplexes in a Row
on Oceanside of PCH
BUY ONE OR ALL
$475 + dep. t small child l"N )244 short term S8SO /mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
ok. No pets. 1952 Meyer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VERSAILLES 2Br 2ba, Bachelor . Attr a cl i ve S.~34114. Large 3 Br Condo 2'h Ba. luxury furn Condo. Short w /beam ceiling. wood ________ __, Din area. family rm. terms. paneling, plush carpel-
Lge gar. tiny hse, lbr, I frplc. crpt , 2 s tory. Waterfront Homes. Inc. ing. $400. 213 /557 3.535
ba, adults, no pets, comm. pool. Avail 3·16. Realtors 631-1400
$400/mo. 892-3731 S86S mo. +deposit Call 1~~~~~~~~~1 ConllMI det Mer J722
~Li!ii!:litt.~ ••••• ~?.~
Studio. lux. 1pa, TV.
maid Hrvlct. phone.
IJGOM .ae..mr
... ~ .... J76t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fabulou1. Oceanfront.
Wkly: Euler, Summer.
Now. 2·4 Or. Prime 10<'
813-787,
Luxu r y Oceanfront
Weekly. 2 or 3 Br. Comp.
furn. incld linens .
MCM'l'M .
•
NO
LEASE
REQUIRED
YEAA·AOUNO FUN:
Social Activ1hes O•
reel"'• F1ee Sunday
81unc11 • 880 s •Par
11es •Plus much more
GAEAT AECAEATION
lenn1s • F1ee Lessons
(pro & pro sriop1 • 2
Health Clubs • Sauna •
Hydromassage • SWtm
ming • 0• 1¥1ng Range
8EAUTIFUL APART-
MENTS· Singles I &
2 Betlrooms •Fur
n1s11ea & Unlurn1sriea
• Adult Uv1ng •No Pets
• Moae1~ Open aarty
9 lo 6
Oakwood
Garden Ap1rtment1
Newport Beech/So .
1700 16th SI
•OO•t• di lfJlh
17141 642-51 t3
Newport Beach/No.
880 Irvine
•' •bth
,1•41 s•s-1104
A'-9 flllwuuts
UwfwUlllWd •••••••••••••••••••••••
3802 •••••••••••••••••••••••
A.~SFOtlREtn
H.B . N.B . C05ta Mesa
Something for Everyone
Bach lo 4 Br Unfum
Apls. Certain locations
o rre r · Pool . spa ,
fireplace. laun. room.
beamed cei l i n gs .
garages. all huill-ins.
Garden & Townhouse
design.
TSLMG MT. 642-1603 ------lolboa Pettiltwla 3807 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 Bdrm. 1 bath at 15th SL
$495 mo incl util No
pets 675-5800 Agent. -----COroM de4 Mor 3822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rarferty & Lloyd Bk rs
963-5568 CLASSIC
MOlllEHOME
SALES
l.ALIOA HHIH.
1'wo duplexes and one
triplex in a row. 1 lot
Crom sand and surf
Secluded 2 Br. 1 Ba . patio _7_52_·_1282 __ 9_to_4__ 1 ~ i• •-s ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..vrr Fantas t ic townhouse Spacious 1 Br w/garage. home with comm. pool. 3 Bdrm townhouse in New 3br. 2ba . !>onita pool . tennis cour t. laundry racil S525 Ask
Plan lll Realty We-;tclirr 4 Br 2•, Ba. Ir~
com er lot. RV spact>.
$2.50,000
Adults only, no pets. Heritage Park. Highly plan, microwave & all $925/mo. 760-9117 . for Faye 640-9900
Avail 3-13-81. S500 per upgraded. Ex ce llenl a men SI 15 O I mo
7~·6499 2706 Harbor Ste 206·A
540-5937 BUY ONE OR ALL
Ideal for partnerships
or syndications
m o. 2453 Orange Ave. location. No pets. S600 644-2300 Costa Mesa 3724 Avail April Isl. 2 Br 2
Managtt Apt B ..... 8J3.9293 ---------i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba with sundeek. Close
LOWDOWN S.S0.000 down AfTD at ~~~~~~~-..., · · mo ._.. · Comfortable House with SUS CASfT AS to beach No pets. S700 New. dlx 3 br. 2"'z ba,
rrplc. dbl gar. w /opener.
yards, patios. gardener
Kids/pets OK. S750.
Lorri. wkdys 547-9571 ;
eves /wknds 546-5434 .
LEASE Turlleroc k
Glenn, lrgest single fam
home. 5bdrm. 3ba. fam
rm. central air. 3 car
gar. walk to pool & ten
nis $1.050 Call Gary
after 6pm · 752-8318
pool. pri vate. nicely Furn l br. apt. S325 & up mo. 675-0124 Jackie Versailles I Br s tudio
penthse condo, w I~ a-.
s umable loans. only
SI05.500 Owner 1aJ(I
645-3447. 979-5370 ask for
Jim
DESPERATE
134.000 down. owner will
finance at 133>~r\ with
$1500/mo payments
Total price $279.000.
East Bluff. 5bdrm. 3ba.
ca11644-7063.
EmlbWfEstcrt.
SpKid
lntettstRcrt.
4 bdrm. 21>.! hath w11h
plush c arpet & woo<!
floors. F'amllv room
with fireplace Great
financing with a I J":
fixed rate & 20'1 down
S245.000 11 u rry. w 1th
terms like this 1t won't
last!
Redh1l1 ¢~Realty
1 ;-;:~ 7:~110
12 7527 yrs 768-0654 '79 Southwind Motor Hme
25' Class'A' BK m i. xlnl
LINDA ISLIE cond loaded w !xlras·
lease~ 1·2 Yn. Take in late morl<>I
3 Boat Slips. 5br. maids Cad 11...incoln 631 1726
quarters. o wne r is
broker contact Jim
ThomptiOO (714 l 828-1280
(2131598-1363
-.
I JI-•r ' "
-• ) ' •• -. ~ t .....
•t-.... ) •• !';._•
~EAi fS1A1C CICEUIHCE SIHCI tf0
leach & lcrvfront
LIDO PF:N l'NSU LA
Furnis hed 2 Br mobile
Hv owner $115.000
71411·346-3523
2br, 24X60. 5• adul1 1p('l
pk Hunt
Bc h l Beach Atlanla
xlnt lease & rental mmt
cond <Kll3013 4 I P P
96().2286
Mf'T ISLHD AREA
Duplex with dock
ror 30 ft boat.
NEWPORT HGHTS.
'T'riplex with Pool
Fountain Valley
Fourplex and
many many more'!!
Al ,.rime Properties
and Locatfo.ts
NEWPORT HGHTS
()pew daily 1-5
421 San lentardifto
Custom three bedroom
home Family room with
wet bar Every detail
suggests quality Owner
will carry complete
financing. down pay-
ment Clex1ble Lo
qualified buyer Bay
view• Priced reduced
$30.000! Now $330.000'
Cftfhry21
MewponC...ter
COM1t11rciol 640.5357
Properly 1600 ·~~~~~~~
631-7300 H.I .
BLUFFS BARGAIN
3 Br twnhme S155.SOO
A lrt 675-5930. 640-8146
.......................
WHY8UY?
When you can sublease
for 12 yrs + thousands
helow the mkt Excep
t1onal 7000'. o m ces &
o pen s pa ce. near
airport BKR. 953-1220
NEWPORT ILVD
Loh for Sole 2200 •••••••••••••••••••••••
RIVEttSIDE
1 + Acre Lots
OWC20"1. OWN
979 7300, 994 217 1
Owner /agt.
NEWPORT IEACH
llGCAMYOM
Goff COWM Lot
Owner Mu.st Sell '
Agent. Dan Bibb
67S-23ll 64().. 7665
COUNTRY RENTAL BY
PUBLIC <SEALED >
BIO on April 6, 1981.
<one) 2 & 3 bdrm homes.
Backbay Univ. Dr. area.
Por info call : COUNTY
OF ORANGE GSA
REAL ESTATE
DlVTSION (7141 834-2550
Refurbished 3bdrm. Iba.
c rport. lrg fncd bkyrd.
patio. cr pts. no pets,
SSSO/mo. 581-1716
c;>UICK MOVE IH
Huge near new 3 Br 2
Ba Townhouse type, 2
ca r garage. patio.
fireplace Small child.
small pet OK. Like your
o wn home $595 mo
Wont last. Drive by 2195
Maple St then call
642-1603.
3 Br. 2 Ba. Family room.
fireplace. RV access.
corner. en<'lsd yard _
9'71·9511 & 546-4093
Beaut. 2 Br l Ba double
urage. Many utr as
S650 m o . 548·6023 &
675-8918
Woodbridge Townhouse 2
story. 3Br. l'h ba. pool,
tennis & lake. Sl650/mo.
55 I ·5526. 750-3403
WOODBRIDGE 3 Br 11 •
Ba Condo. S600/mo
Wrk (7141833·6029
Rama . H o m ·e
(213)498-6090
Turtlero c k New
to wnhouse 2 Master
bdrm. fam rm. 2'h Ba
l750sq ft Prof decorat
ed. Pvt patio Pool. Len
nls. perk close. SOOO/mo
833-8277 or 752-6492.
UMTALS
2+den.2.,., ba
3br 1v. ba
$750 ssso
S67>S77S
S1250fum.
3br2ba
3br2ba
landscaped. S995 mo. 3 Encl. gar. Adults. no
Br 2 Ba + 2 utility pets. 2110 Newport Bl.
bedrooms. fam rm, 54S.4968btwn8&5PM
fireplace. 640-1327.
559-6188. office 759-6597.
WESTCLIFF. Xlnt loc.
3Br 2ba. lovely yarci,
gardener provided
SlOOO /m o . 646-6789,
646-6710
Harbor H ig h land ~.
3bdnn. 2ba, frplc. $700.
522-7:.>5 eves.
LIDO ISLE
Spacious 3 bdnn + conv
den. Lge s unny patio.
wide 47' lot. $1200 mo.
Lawson Realty. 67>•562.
3 Br 2 Ba. incl. refrig.
fenced yrd. t7501mo yr·
ly. Agt 673-3355
SClftlaMCI 3210 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2bdrm, Iba. drive by.
2006 S . Garnsey .
644·7063
3 Br l 'h Ba. newly de·
coral.ed, nice So. Coast
Plaza area. kids OK.
557·2783. SS9S.
CASADEOIO
ALL UTILITIES PAID
Compare be for e you
rent. Custom desil(n
featur es : Pool. BBQ,
cov 'rd garage. new
furniture. surrounded
with plush landscapinJ(
Adult living at its best
No pets .
1 Bdrm furnished S420
2 Bdrm rum1s hed $180
365 W Wilson. 642· 1971
Bach. Apts. Utils paid
Weekly or Monthl y
McNash Realty 642-1334,
642·6578 eves
Stunning Lge I bdrm
garden apt. pool /rec
area $375 710 W 18th St
S325 Mo Deluxe Mobile
Home. Mature adults
No pets Quiet. secure
1991 Newport Blvd
646-8373.
Find what you want in
Daily Pilot Classifieds
Dix ocean vu, 1 Br. newly
dec orated, w /gar
Adults 9675/mo Ask for
Faye. 640.9990
Separate house. newly
d ecor ated charmin~
2bdrm. Iba. Well located
on quiet st. $700. No pets
673-3017
2 Bdrm . I Ba . deck.
adults. no pets. Lse $530.
673-0473 or 64-4-6382
lbdrm duplex yearly ren-
tal. S450/mo 673-3801.
644-2252 964·5752.
Bachelor Apt 31"1 blks to
Big Corona $150/mo
851 ·3890. 640-6825
3 BR 2 ba · S7501mo
Property Mart
640-9019
Coly loeh. $350
Pvt patio. so of hwy
6161.'J Begonia C2 13 l
43(). 9l.'i6
i Br 2 ba w /master suite.
beamed ceilings. walk lo
Lillie Corona S650 m o to
mo. 644-7211 Agt. llVIHETBIACE
,.OOL AHD VIEW
A cozy 3 bdrm home
with formal dining rm
and pool. Highly expan
dable view or harbor and
ocean. A great lis ting at
only S330.000.
VERY PRIVATE
FRONTAGE
Par<'el sz· 64.000 sq ft
Bldg sz: 15,000 sq rt
Sl.:n>.000. Grubb & El·
lis. Curt or Don. 833-2900
~~~~!!~!!~!!~Arc h Beach He igh ts r: between 1950 & 1972 Del
LGE 2br home. cpls. stv.
re rrig. fncd yd, gar,
adults, S350/mo. 644·9806
3br21.'Jba
4br2.,.,ba S850 Find what you want In
S900 Dally Pilot Classifieds. MewportlHch 3269 Cost.Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 312~
644-7211
/JD.NIGEL
01\IL(Y &
ASSOCIATES
5 Br. 3 Ba. Harbor view
H ome . SH9 .500
Owner /Agt. Comm
pool. 673-TI6l
HCAHYOM
(90lf COUISI LOT
OwMt-M9lt we !
Agent, Dann Bibb
87S-Z311 64().. 7665
Secluded Westcliff & CoU1doU1Uini1tM1/Towtt-
Dover 4 Bdrm. ram rm. houses for sale 1700
courtyard. 2 frplcs. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Of>en Sat /Sun l-5 at 1514 c 0 n d 0 9 for s a I e ·
High I a n d Dr . A~ t Capistrano beach. spec-
552·0060 tacular ocean view. -sf16•500l ~~.i~1er has plans
Unique opportunity to
b u y i n t o a g e n Income Property 2000
partnership and "OWN" ••••••••••••••••••••••• a two or three bdrm
"HOME" in Eastbluff.
Own /Bkr 953-1220.
64o.S296
FOUIPUX
Westside Costa Mesa.
Needs som e work .
S22.000 yr income . Full
price S225.000 Owner
will carry l~ In terest
W/liO,OOOdn.
Mar Ave. Ocean view_
Approx. 25x80. Eves
call 213/320-llS42. Northwood Mdl house_ 2
slrv 4 Br. 21.'l ba. 2500
s /( R<>/mo. 551·8731 M ..... Dewrt. leacri 2400 -------1
••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new 2 Br. 1 'h ba C-laf L..d S. condo. l600/mo No pets
....-77()..SS78 Ocean view loo. Mor ro
Bay area. 2 lots: 110,990. 2 Br. I Ba. No pets. 1 child
E·Z terms. Beaut. views OK. 2097 Maple Ave.
of the Pacific Ocean. New crpt.s. drps, utils in· Woodbridge area lrg 3
Estero Bay & Cayucos. 1 cld Br. 2i,i, Ba. 2 car gara•e. Call 805·772-3958 or --· -------,. e.m-8812. Agt Sharp Eutside house on fam nn. dln area. frplc,
2 house on a lrg lol. All
sorts or potential.
Sl40.000. Agt 641-0763.
quiet street. 3 Br. 1 Ba. crpt.s, drpe, window C'OV·
MAMMOTH COMDO frplc, refrige, dshw1tir. en. Comm. pool. Avail
179,500. 2br, frplc, close-garage. S625. Wayne, an. 3-25. ~per mo +
€ TIG€ ln with ~downO.W.C. Agent~te. depoelt.752·1212 9·4.
House62 cargarnrhigh ~ AT 123. B . Ma ce. •-•-tt 3241
sch o o I. Fee I and . ---HOM€' 497-4174or 861-6143. 2bd _ ... unit master ..._,_.. --,... --+--1--u· 1 1 rm 'CTN • . •• •••••• •• •• • •• •. •• ••••
$130,000. Agt641-0763. R.E. lnveetmenta o.tofSNh bdrm with ,balcony, New 28r . 281 Mobile
IA YFIOMT HOME
Luxurious • Bdrm. • ba J M.OCKS
w /pvt dock for ~our TOii.ACM
3333W.CoatHwy ,NB ,...,.,..,. 2600 prime\ocaUon.l750/mo. Rome, good ocn vl~w.
'
4• ..,646 • ••••••••••••••••••• • • • Call Phy Illa 962·4'54. pvt bch, tsso m o. Adlta -----------1 40 A acenlc Oreaon Coast. Coets 6 Wallace only. 488-38UI
yacht, rtgbt al your front S&La door. Excel.· Penlnsule
P ol n t I o c a t I o n . DISl'll.Anl!
I 1 . 2 9 5 , o o O Has bou«ht another pro-
Owner/BuUder CharlH perty. facing 2 pymta.
McKinnon. 87S-2783 and Unique 3 br home In
O•n 81bb'4Q..79M Newport Shores. A•klng --------11175,000. Owne r will
"
rwDQRT CREST carry lit T .D. at 12~. 1.nr 758·1!01 or'752-'73'73.
Two prime front unit•
llOdec vtew. Pool• ten·
rtb.
IMCoe.9PIOPBT11S Electrictly, fenced, out· 5br.. 2'18. •1mo tat/last oceanfml lBr, trlr + ~for lnC<Ome un· 1tandlna view. a cceaal· uod security new "Ah
I • r h • ble owner 492 2499 cabana, deck. pvt ..,. • ta 1 e ue ., pro· • • cpt/pnt, .eperate dlnln1 rum/\lnfum, adlta only. perUee ln c.M. Priced 1_....... ._ '154--0la rlJ;hl at leaa than __,.._.., · S150mo.-.a1s ........ 2700 ~~----~~ ~~--~~--· 11 Orou. No bank ••• .. •••••• .. •••••••••• 4br. 2ba hm w/fp, bltnt. Ocnfront Mobile Home
flnanclna rtq\itred. In· Have two acre horn pro-dbl 1ar. n\ce yd ln 2Br, pvt beh, Sl,000 mo.
terestAld?Thenc11llu.a perty •house ln Norco Cot.Pt.KldaokS750. yl'l)',adltaanly.fvm/un.
•
W /10 rqta~ Arabian 5'Ml4'7,MM79t fun\-.1911
bonee. WUI trade for .!/SIDE a BR t 1ty condoi Mk ... V1eftD JJ67
property to ea.ta ..... w 11re .,.uo1J•cu11t Db ...................... .
or Newport Beach area. sar .. rroo . .._._, HOii• _...'R RENT Phone 71t-m-4Clll. • r v 714/&U..o763
2787 Brlatol SI..
Costa Mesa, CA
BB d ~ G N a Nnn. 91'?5. Feeeed
S.Udh&ASBI 2 u n . ar. o Y•rd .,_,.,.. ~ • It'• a anus peta. ta. + tlOOdep. ,.. ....,., .. _ a MledAdl....,. MIO.Avl.•l.*"'°71 ' 0ttma71.Ast.,no'-.
macnab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IAYINE COMPANY
WXUltOUS IA YNOMT'I 2BR, 2 bath
residence w/large deck on the
water. Available now at $2500/mo.
yrly. Larry Dyer 642-8235 A 73
HARIOR VllW HOMIS W/,.OOL.t
Somerset Plan.-SBRS, family rm,
formal dining rm. Pool and spa.
Perfect condition. $1650/mo. yrly.
Larry Dyer 642-8235 A74 ·
Wll1'CUflf w /POOIJ Great family
home. 4BRS plut dining rm and
pool. Available until mid July at
Sl250/ mo. Larry Dyer 8'2-8235 A 75
STUHNfMG UNTAL -$971/MOI 3BR
-2 baths . Avail. immediately.
Com~u~lty pool and tennis. Mary
Lou Manon. 64.2-8235 A76
711-1414
C~V*rC.-
MMlll
I 0...o.;..
•. ...
Ill
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HEW\. Y DECOR.
l Br. gas pd. encl gar.
cl /washer. pool. Adults.
642·5073
21r. I laADt
.Newly decor. G"as •pd,
encl ga r . pool .
d /waaher. Adults .
842-54173 -------
J .. To ... •M
NewlY decor. gas pd ..
encl gar .. pool ,
d /was her Adults
142.5073
Near new 2bdrm, 2ba.
rrpk . laundry fac. new
crpta, drpa 6 paint. End
aar, $4'75. Adults, no peu. 813-2113. 494.5753
eves
28r. l~Ba. w/gar. Adlta,
cpta. drpa, bhna. fncd
yd, water pd. as.-•110. .r Vldoria St. SUS
1119 "J" s.nta Ana Ave .
tUO
l
•
Or111ge C:O•t OAtl V PILOT/Thu..Oay. Match 19, 1891
salll
·SPECIAL
$1.67 Par Day
n&t'• AU.you paiy Remod-Repalr·Rel11ble ror I Fences. gates, doclts. 30~tI:d homes. etc. Al67S.S294 = ~~~~•••••••• Hot ~~h!~~hrie
Shampoo & steam clean. tlan Preschool. 646-~23
~~T Color brlptenera. wht T . L .C. Child C are,
DOITNOWI crpts 10 min. bleuh. anytime.exp'd, refs.
......... .__._..........._ tJall, llv.·dln. rma SIS : 91f.6$48, 846-6761 _,.._.. _. avg nn S7.!w>; couch SlO: -i
Your Dally Pilot chr "5. Guar. ellm. pet C~ Ser¥1cft
Service Directory odor. Crpt ~p•ir. IS y~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
ftePr"tMnt.tlve exp. Do work m yself Newport Cleaol1JS Serv. 642-1671, •d l 11 Refs. 531-0101 C a r pet . l1 p h o I .
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Ho use cl ea o in g . W In· WeCareCarpet Cleaners dows Hardwood firs .
BOOKKEEPING
&TAXSERVJCE
Reas rates. 496-0913
~~~~f. ........... ~ .. .
Driveways, parking lot
repairs, sealcoaling
S&S As phalt 646·4871
Lic'd.
·~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
GEN. CONSTRUCTION
Additions, Remode l!!
Lie tins. Mark 979·44 I I
UMODB.IMG
Resid./comm. No JOb
too lge or small. 631·2004
Steam clean & uphols. 631·92'T1
Work guar. Tru c k -------
mount unih 645-3716 · C•octor
BUY WHOLESALE
Thru Carpet Installer
F~ est. Also <'a r pels
laid & repaired J ay.
7$4~
NOSTEAM/SllAMPOO
Stain s pecialist . rast
dry l"ree est 839-1582 ---
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Conatn1c\ion All types
20 yrs exp Free est
Lie. #334589 64:>-597 3
Drywal •••••••••••••••••••••••
Drywall Specialist
Qual &.prod New & re
mod. #389944. 532-5549
CeilftcJ. Acoustic DR Y WALL 0 u r B"
••••••••••••••••••••••• pert1se. We can handh•
Acoustl<' Ceilings your problems 6~J .2004
+custom hand texturing S.drical
Lit• 389944 532 5549 •••••••••••••••• •• •• • •.
c--;..;;titt Ctt'lllftt/Concr.te ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ELECTRICIAN rmred
ril(ht. free esllmale on lari~e or small jobs. REMODEL-REPAIRS Foundations. Retaining
Also Custom Cabinets Walls. Hillside Restnra-
2nd generation. 17 yrs in lion. Slabs. Patios .
area Lic'd Top qual Block & Brick Lic'd.
Mr. Palombo. 962 8314 642-8387 eves1960-3835
Lie. 11~1 673·0359
Top Quality. Dependable
Service. Reas Rates 18
yrs experience 531 5055
Eltttridan.trouble c1Jt1.
N-palr. tddltlOfts. ln1tall
o ullell, te m ode ls .
541 9881 . f0·3854 Wlleeter F.lectrlc. Inc
O.<;. El.ECTRIC
lndus./Rnld./Comm.
Quality work. free est.
Lie. 400143. <2l3)86T·3857
REMODEIJNG
Electrical Work
Resld. /Commerci•I
631·2004
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Crpt, Lino. Wood firs
Installed/repaired. Lil'.
• 369260. Greg 499-2652
G•••·~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
•VERY LOW PRICES•
Landscape maint·clnups
George. 549-2015
Lond:\capmg.Cleanups
Tree trimmmg-Hauling
M a1ntenance free est
Amie. S48·8414
EXPERT LAWN CARE
Monthly servire Trees
& cleanups 548-2049
Yard maintenance Tret'
trim '& removal
C'lt'anups Free est
752 1~19
GardntftCJ Wanted
Mowing, edµin11. raking.
" w t' c p 1 n J! I-' r e e
estimates 646 0944 or
645 57:r1
CLEAN-lTPSILA WN
Ma l ntena nc•·
Landttape
Preent. 8'1-9907
Exp, Oarden•r-mow.
edae. cln-upe. Free etl.
Rsnbl. CM area. 548 4891
C. ........ Senlcff ••••••••••••••••••••••• Comple~ mobllo home servtce.. relevela lo re·
mockls. 968-4341
Hwtv-u •••••••••••••••••••••••
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Remodeling Odd jobs
28yrsexper. 979·2265
Ca~try. cabinets. roof
repairs, plumbing. Free
est. Call Ans we r Ad
#461. 642-4300. 24 hrs
Carpentry/Handym~n
Drywall. • paint1nJ(.
patio covers. misc re
pairs. Your spec1fica
lions. Quality work
754-0199
Remodel. Repairs, Puint,
Panel no job too small
qual work only 545-2901
HAUUNO/CLEANING
Tree trim It Palnliftl
or?? R•Y.914-0'Tt
Haulint • O\lmp Jobe.
A.tit for Randy
6U·Mn ..
Ho•1d.•h1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Wanta REALLY CLEAN
HOUSE? Call Olnabam
Girl. Free est. 645-5123
...........
Prolllerna? l Wrhe any
rllk. lo monthly rates.
Plrire.J Ins. 646-3995
MetOIWY •••••••••••••••••••••••
BRICKWORK . Small
Jobs. Newport. Costa
Mesa. Irvine. Reh.
675-3175
MASONRY &TILE
-Our Specialty. We solve
Expertise housekeeping, yow-problems. &31·2004 equi p & supplies -'--~------
fumlshed, trustworthy & Mo• ..
dep641·4970 •••••••••••••••••••••••
-- ---Student will move you at
MRS. CLEAN MAKES IT reaa. rates. 752·1493.
GLEAM! Homes. apts. 848-3'T77 or 847-3309
omce. Carpet. 646·2240 ---------Moving? The Starving
ROBJN'SCLEANING College Students Movtng
Service a thoroug hly Co. has grown. Insured
clean house.$40-0857 sa me good service.
HOUSECLEANING
ISOUR BUSINESS'
Janice's Raggedy Ann,
675-2514
Two girls want to clean
houses by day Call
Charlotte. 631 5584
HOUMSitflng
IT 124-436 License
641-M27
PoWiltc)j?aper iltq ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fine ext/int painting by
Richard Sinor Lie. ins
Try me. 631-4410 124 hrs>
Has dwood Roon • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1
•••••••••••••••••••••••EXECUT I VE will
HARDWOOD FLOORS ho~esil, xlnl refs, ex
Inter /Ext er /Refinishing.
ceilings /wallpaper Lie
Caln & Sons. 898-5105
Cleaned&Waxed perd 947-54Q7.644·1248
Anytime, 832-4881 S A lncOSM Tax
Houlnc) •••••••••••••••••••••••
Halli. rleanup. C'oncrcle
remova I. Dump truck.
Quick serv. 642-7638
Tree1shrub trim. con-
crete removal, clean
ups. Free est. 557-8271 ----
•••••••••••••••••••••••
TAXES AND
INVESTMENTS
Tax 1>rep. shelters. TDs
Mr Leonard, 661 9343
lf you're looking for a bet
ter Job. you won·t want
lo m1ss the e mploym ent
columns m Class1f1ed
RALPH'S PAINTING
Lie. lnt/F.xt Low Rates
free Est. 964-5566
DAVE·s PAINTING
Serving area 9 years
M05t reasonablt·
Insured. li9'd. 7611 7301
P ainting l'omm 'I. In
dus tnal. Hesidentl<JI
Free t-:st Low rate:.
673-0737
QUALITY PAINTERS
Bar1aln r•ta thru 4 It
Free at. 84115884
WINTER RATES
•nt /ext Palntlnf
Clean out.a-rut aervke
S3S-9't01
Collese Studt.int Exp'd
\nt /ex. any job for less'
Call Alex 851-9371
Paintin.i. inl/ext Rentals
our •~laity. Prompt
Seaside Pumtlnj(. Grc11.
536·4806
•STEVENS PAINTING
Int /ext Free itemiied
est Neat, quality work
546-4$61
ftlanoTllNrtq •••••••••••••••••••••••
EXPERT PIANO tunmg
& repair Member P1'G
848-8818
Plastft' flepalr •••••••••••••••••••••••
Neat patches & textures
FrH est. 19 3-I 4 39
1-:o ·s PLASTF.R ING
All Types Int F:xt
645 ~ f'REF: EST
Int /ex t plast('r
p11lch1ng. 30 vr~ exp
Neat w1>rk 545 2977
1 Paull
Pl~
·•·•••••·••·••········· Hollcmun Plumhing
Salcs·Scrv1C't' Ht•pa1rs
Free estimate!> 552 1111:1
Classified Ads. your one
stop shopping cente r
-
Pro/. aerv1ce lo save you
time • mooey. N•wport
P1ctnr R.£ '45-38U
t..odlWtMpit.
Let U1 htlp you with
honest perso nalliod
service, apec:lallzlng In
• unlta. Ora.ntce Co. are.
o r e loc H 8 Ca ll
!IQ.884(),
RooflltCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUAl,ITY ROOFING
All types, free est
Visa. MC. 541-5930
HARBOR ROOFING
Tiie •••••••••••••••••••••••
Tile installed. all kinds.
guaranteed. refs. John
893 1667
Custom Ceramic Tile
New-Remodel Reµatr
f'n •e est Churk. 494 .51'187
HunttwqtOft leaclt
Tile Co.
reram1c New remorl
re11s rates 675·2284
Tf'ff Ser\'ice ...•••..........•......
f:xpen Tret>Trimmer
Ten years expen enre
54S-IR6.'i, 751-2128
Window Cl•onittcJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
"Lt>l The Sunshine In ..
C<ill Sunshine Windnw
C'lc•;ininlo?. 1.td S48·88.'i3
Nu nl!~ lo travel all over
luwt) lo look for garage
:.ah .. -s you'll find them
nght here m Classified
To plate ~our ,Rarage
~ale Jd, l·all 642 5678
Apwtwtents Ustfum. Apartntents Ussfum. Apartments Unfunt.. Apartments Unfurft. S"""""" Rentals 4200 Office R...tal 4400 lusinns R...tal 4450 Rentals Wanted 4600 Lost & Fowtd 5300 ..••.•...............•...........•......•..........................•...•.....•...•...........•...........•......•.•.......•........•..•••..••.•.•............................................•....•............
CostaMna 3824 Costa~so 3824 H"'1tinqt0ftleoch 3840 Mewportleoch 38691ocEANFRONT SUM For store & office sp;ice Retin•d Chri .. tiJn I.iii\ REWARD SSO for return
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••I••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• MER RENT A LS S650 l~il~a~~~fh~~s~ ~~=~t al reasonable rates nds I HH <i11arlmrnt nl'J r of the two fully equipped
Spacious 3 Br Duplex MEAR MEW THE WHIFR.E TREE q~1t•I 2 Br I Ba with I ~k. Adlts ?n.'Y Now lak l'it noor Agent 541·5032 500 to 2700 Sq Ft. bus lmc• (' ~ 5~ H~B>I electnc1an'i belL'l taken
$410 Poot & laundrv rac 2 Bdrm wtfrpk . bit-ms. Luxury Adult units at af 1:<1 r.i~e pat 10 · pool lll.R ~ervatio~ 499 3579 MESA VERDE DR from m' residence on
5-48-9556 . I q u1et neighborhood . fordable Living 1.2 & 3 AdulL" ~t> rwt.s 111111 II Vacotioft Rfttfals 4250 KOLL CENTER 1525 Mes~~~;:e E l' \1 I • /1 t/ \nahe1m Ave 1-:1ther rP-
EASTSIDE
Ca•tl~ Woods 2 Br & Slu y, split level,
fireplace. skyl1J:ht.
deck No children or
pets. ~. 180 F; 21st St
Days 646-4262, F.vl.'s
645-9543
2 HUGF; Bedrooms In
super location 1-'ully
carpeted . built ins ,
ground noor Adults. no
pets . S350 mo Apply Apt
E 568 W Wilson
646-44'n
Condo nr SC
walk lo park & shop Br Well decoratrd l!'ilh St "'t'"JH1rt ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW'PotlT us...ss nYes turnor senrlinfor matmn
$495. Lst. last + dep Call Olvmp1c size pool hi?ht llP1ghh S4!)11 1;.12 1:1411 Big Bear. close 10 slopes Elegant executive suite.. 545-4123 ••~•~••••••••••••• to Man or Audrey P P
Hal 6317900 ed tenni!> court, .lal·un1. :!hr 21>a "rh l!n•at loc in ~lps 8 frpk. $45 d;iy. in prest1.Re location Newpon Rearh $1 25 lusinns llox 1107 Nt•.,. port park hke landscapmj? Sl75 wklv $46 0116 art With complete sup""rt r N -'I ff n-......."" Beach. ('a No qut.><;lwns S t unn1n.1? l.ge lhdrm. Moc;lbeaullfulbld~ in BBrokl·r 6pm . ,~, sq t ewuxo iceor -....-·-'"' 5005 :..;,,ked H B i;7~ 4!112 services rt• la 1 I w p \' l ti at h ••••••••••••••• • ••• •••• .Rarden apt. pool rt•<' 7141851 0681 area $35.S. 7JOW 18th St From S3liO K46-ll619 \'pr-.t11llt•' I hr '"' On the heach' 2 Ar 200fi o;ecur1ty. a 'C 600 2<100
W Oc·t•anfront l lAw"r 4~0 sq rt Onliohlful sq ft 500 31st St lnexl
2Br. new cpts. drps. 227:1
Maple SJ95 mo
545-5004
s.465 31drm. 21a
2 children ok -nu pets
557 1634. 546-9248
Newl.'r larJ?e lhr w J!<ir.
Adults. no pets SJ70 mo
548·5766
3 Br 21 ,. R<1 :! Sl t>r-.
frpk. lntlrv rrn in <1
P I ex B 11 h J Ch 1 <' a
Warner Jre<1 SSllO p<'r
mo 840.5504
11norn, 'l'<·urt·~I adult.... ~ " • "' l B k f N -V15il mo 5'1H 5!1HI t 'n1ll Weekly or Mun wnrk1ng s pacr with 0 an ° ewpnrt ·
lhly759-t677 ocean view full bath :1 Lido Cannery area 1
Son Clemente 38?6 yr old bid~ $450 mo 1175-32:.i. 12131641 !HOO
••••••••••••••••••••••• NF.WPALM S PRINGS TumcrAssocs ,494 1177 Fully furn condo Ten
01s, pools Wknds. Sl50
Wkly. S300 &15·8171
M n·s faC'1l. in llR. 2.000
sq ft Redu<'ed to $1200
mo lse Red Carpet.
893-1351
Prime Location
Rusiness for !.ale Burglar
Alarms. W1n·lt'!>~ lfomc
bus veh1C'IC $2<1.!l!'>ll
( 714 J 848 JlllO
lttYntfMSVf
n-.-6.-it 5 0 I S -....-·-·.Y •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOAN S500 or more Dbl
your money Loan 1!'.
secured by unpret'edt•nl
ed lst in film fman<'llll!
history 714·957-40R6
• I.OST Ala!>kan
Malamute M;ile l pupp} 1
(' M Wallat•e 19th Of
rt•rin)! Hrwa rel 642-5225
•
Lo~t Mar , 11 Ke1•ha. a
12\roldM lnsh:.elter E
~1 d t> <'M. RE W ARD
ll16 4661 ~· 2878
• 2 Br. 2 Ba
Plaza. SA
Child OK
641 1460
Pool ssoo 2 Br I Ba w garal'!<' PPt
549·3232 or OK S42S mo A'>k fnr
Mtk<' 641-0763
2 & 3 H e d r ,, o m "
$4()(}$450 Kids OK . no
pets please Watf'r
Trash Paid C;irpurt
964-2S66or973 2971 t\~t
no fee
2 Bdrm 2 ba. cpts, drp'>.
d w. encl gar, beach & 5
Pomts area $450 mo
842~
Near nl'W I hr apt Huell
1m •. carpel. drape". t'ar
purl laundry rarllily.
publw tennis t•ourl!> and
,zolr \'\.lUr~<' right brhind
prop<'rl' Arlults no
pcL ... Avail April l ~n5
mo Ownt•r.642 OIJM
Nr SC r.ennal Hosp. :1
hr. lrplC'. 2 ha -;to\'<'
l' r ph " \ a ii /\ II r 1
~50 mo 891 11;.14
Will rent time·share ron
do 2 wks, Aprl 24 May II.
new beactifrunt hotel in
fabulous Ca n cun
V ucalan. Penin. Mex
1ro Incl 2 qn sz bds. da1
Iv maid svc $700 Oon.
546 4220. f'XI 269
MEWPORT CENTER
Full Service Suites
$CUT COSTS$
All you need for one
monthly ree'
640.5470
1270 Sq n on busy Re<tr h
Boulevard ·Hunt in,:!ton
Beach Ideal for re<1 I
estate office. store or
other suitable busmes~
2 Pnvate baths. availu
ble i mmediateiv 10
Year lease AttraC'i1vf'h
priced.
642-4321, ext 286
Weekdays
DOHTSELL your h ouse! Tha, .,
ri~ht ! If you have 50'1 or
more home equity. then
First Home Investment!>
can help you make SSS
No inc rease 1n your
monthly house pa'
ments.Call<714 l729 2112
I.OST Cat RF.W ARD
S m ;i I I R I a 1· k F e m
~ H (' M area Nel.'ds
med1t:il1on 548 6.'i39
I.OST Rik >4 .:old t-\'t''o
ll<'rml''f' Cilt TI1•1Aoard
Mfi 4352 2 Bdrm tnplex near 5(1
Cst Plaza S pacious.
walk-in rlosets. bit mi..
patio, Rarage No pets
$450 mo Agent 833-9293
E. Side tnplex 3br. 2ba.
immed O<'cup no pets
$550 /m o in c l 11111
851-9647
L-Ovely garde n ;ipt Lrl?
A vail no\\ Li\RGf.
RACllELOR w patio m
quiet adult complex
Pool. spa. bbq no pets
S325 mo Mesa Pines
Apts 2650 ll arla
549-2447
S385 mo 2bd rm l ha
duplex. no doJ?s . 645 V11·
tor1a 546-9124
2 Br 2 ba m1crowavr.
frpl c $500 mo Call
963-0490 or drive by 21792
Brookhurst Apt 111.
3842 .......................
Jbdrm. 2ba. c lose lo
watrr. tennis, pool
S800 mo 968-3495
New Mam Condo. ~Ip!. 9
Son Jym, 2br loft alt amen. "k
Capistrano 3878 1 -;pec1als 8.13-0277 .........••..•••.•••.••
Condo 1 Rr frpk c·nt'I I Rentals to Share 4 300
..ear Water & .l?<tll Ill"" • •• ••••••• • • ~·· • • • • • • • •
No pets $42.5 775 2114 I Mm•in.R? Avoid deposit .. & C'Ut llVIO.I? expenses'
2hdrm. 2b;i pcnthousl' l Professionally si nc-e
lcvrl. VC'rv neat $490 1971
491\ 11122 c Iona HOUSEMJ. TES
Pritnr Harbor llYd, •DRUXE OfffCES• Location. 2()(10 ~<l r1
From I room up to 2300 Sl500 mo 548 1156. t'' <'' ~q rt $1 08 per SQ fl 3 675.2213 room-; and UI> No leai.l' j
required 2172 DuPont Cona11ercial MOM'J to LOClft 5025
Dr Adj A1rporter HotPI Retttals 44 75 •••••••••••••••••••••••
833-3223 9 12 ....................... Business loans IOK up
Isl & 2nd mort$!31i1<'~.
5K-10 mil 494-7108
5030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I A~l Ian & blondl' Shell it•
ao:-!> Recent I' o;pa v{'d
!I mo 645 2146
1.o!>l ~ert Tort1>1se N r
!llrwport He1J(hts r1sh &
iiame taR Needs
med1cat1on 646 4905
JBr. 2Ba. frplc. bit ms
Call da y : 631 4402.
night· 760-0734
IAYTIMIERS
SPAC I Ot:S
BEDROOM Newport lffch 3869 .~~~.~~~ ••••• ?~.~~ 832-4134
"'1 ale 40-45 shr 5br 2ba.
hse C M Spa Nr SC'
Plaza & Frwy S200 Sltr
utils 641 -4913
N B 2700 Mt ft full~ 1m
proved space. SI 5 'iQ fl
pleasantly d1v1dcd into 8
offices. 2 sec'v ur<'as. +
t•onferenre room l'~or m
formal1(1n 1714 1 644 6~0
1146·02H7
Store Spa('e for lease
1500 sq ft & 1260 sq fl
in Huntington Reach
Flrx1hl e lt•rm s
213 '591) 7202
4.000 sq rt for lsc. -;tnra.:c·
work area. potential of
flee :-l'l up Will
nt·,rnt1ate good l.s•·
llarbor & Warn£'r ~ /\
546 3700
Private party ~ant s
S200K S250K I n•ar note'.
secured h.v I st T n on
11'.I m1ll1on d1>ll<.1r
Bayfront hornt'. l'hun<'
645-9195 rcs1df'nce
642 H~l office
Found small white fluffy
adult doi.?. rhinestone
collar. v1r 2'.!nd & Irvin('
Blvd. N. B 645-4533
Sunny 2 Br upstairs apl
E'side. Gar, deck, laund
rm. no pets. $450/mo.
Avail Apr I , 631 1094 --- -WESTBAY APTS
New garden apts. patios.
pool. spa Adults. no
pets.
2Br, 2ba S480·S485
398W. Wilson. 631·5583
1 Br. S39S
2 Br. 1 Ba. $465
161 E. 18th 642-0856
FAMILY APTS.
Brand new beautiful Ir!(
apt. for families with I
or 2 children Near park.
Heat paid No pets
3Br. 2 Ba. SS60
398 W. Wilson. 631·5583
WALLACE ST. APTS.
Newly decorated 2 Br. I
Ba. S425. Small <'hlld
OK . no pets . 2049
Wallace IH. 645-6452
f'rplc. lrg patio. walk 1n
closet. dishwasher, gar.
p()ol & lndry fac 399 w
Bay St. 646-9883
S39S F;tSide 2 BR I Ra.
r hild OK . no pets
541-5331. 646 2325
Easts1de. lge 3 br. 21 , ba.
2 sty. dbl gar. 2 patios.
immac $700 Imo Bent.
642-8235
EASTSIDE
CCMtf!y Woods
Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. lort
a pt $545 m o No
children or pets 180 2 lsl
St Days 646-4262. f.\'es
645-9543
2bdrm. W side, l child
ok $365 /mo + dep
64S-45.29or (2\3)598 1219
2bdrm. l'"iba. W side.
$4~ + sec dep No pets.
64S-IS79
......•................
PARK NEWPORT
COUMTRY CLUI
LIVIMG
Singles, 1&2 bedroom
apts. & townhouses
from $429 644 1900
Oceanfront_ for Wintl.'r
Rentals Furn1sht>cl &
unfum Broker 675 4912
NO FEE' Apt & Condo
rentals Villa RentJI~
675-4912 Broker
2 br. 11 ~ ba + gar lloa~
Hosp area. nu decor.
open hse Sat & Sun 11 3.
4 2 38 H II a r 1 a W a~
s.500 mo 8.10 SR7S
SpaC'1ous 3hd rm t•on<lo
21-, ha Quiet loc
S69S1mo
631 1759. 631-4744,
759·9100
Spacious 2 BR. $365
Pool & laundry facil
548.9556
Versailles t Br '!>lud 10
penthse rondo, udlls.no
pel'i. $450 mo + lst.l;isl
-+ sec dep 645·3447.
3126 979-5370 Jim
2 Bd I Ba. S375. Clean & ~~·c~·:t•;;;~·0~·~~;·~·
quiet. no kids/pets Call last. s:.X> sec Frplc, bit-BEST VALUE
Craig. 63l-l266 ins. No dogs 542-3597
Ort>anfronl studio <ipt
with patio. ovprlook 1ng
pvt hcaC'h $.550/mo util
m1•l 49!1 22.'\3 or 499·5021
Apo; 111......+s fwftished
CK Unfumish.d 3900 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
SEAWIND
VILLAGE
New 1&2 hdrm luxury
adult apt" m 14 plans
from S440. 2 bdrm from
$50$ + pools. tennis.
watt>rlallo;;, pond~' Gas
for cooking & heating
paid From San Diego
Frwy drive North on
Reach to Mc Fadden
then Wt>!4t on Mr radden
to Seaw1nd Vtllage
17141893 5198
•Shared LMnCJ * Counselors to personally
select your compatible
rmmte to suit your
lifestyle Shared L1vm.1? R.13 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB
631-1801
\oloradn woman would
h kl' lt> shr your furn a pl
Promontory Pt pre
rerred Lve mess
12131821-6676
Will shr my plush. spac
home. mkro. frplc. pool,
hot tub. on ,golf course in
Rack Bay. N B Chris
tian principles Pref no
s mokeldrink. 851 -1910 Rooms 4000
••••••••••••••••••••••• female, non smoker. to
Lal'(una Beach Motor Inn. share 2 Br. 2 ba, Costa
985 No Pal'if1c Coast Mesa S262. 546-6303
llwy, La~una Beach. Oceanfron~er; nice Da1lv. WE'<'klv. K1t r hen avai°l<lblt• t.i>w winter 3Br. yrly, need 2 rmmtes
rall°l'> 494 5294 for hdrm, mstr·s w /own
halcony & bath. 675-2319
NB Room with kitr hcn priv.
Near bus lot shopping
center 962·7520 a rt 6PM
orwknds
CdM Deluxe Suites. AC'
ampl pk~. util pd 2855
E Cst Hwy. 675 6900
Suite avail. approx 1100
sq.rt Newport An•hes
Marina Bid!? 642 4644
Small o rr1 ce 1827
Westclirr Dr N B Good
lo<' SISO per mo 631·0900
Office warehouse nr OC
Airport, 1800 sq rt offices
& warehouse Offtces
full <'arpeted & a1rcond
Assume 1''2 yrs a t $750
mo or ne~ot1ate longer
term w ownr SS6 9900
Newport Center ·
Prestigious 9th floor
view locatton approx
2300 sq r t
1714 )640 1560·Mr Joe
Fletcher
OFACE/W AREHOUSE
SUa..&.EASE
Industrial Rental 4500 Mo~. Trvst
••••••••••••••••••••••• Deicll 5035 S500 up. 1640' rndus ., or •••••••••••••••••••••••
rice t8JOI Redondo <:r Sattter Mt9. Co. ..P .. UuntBch 114221134 /\II types or real c~t;ite
mvestmrnL~ s mre 1949
MESA
INDUSTRIAL
,fARK
7 j 1"\¥. l 7tti. St.
Costa Mesa, Calif.
642-4463
I 1870 sq rt Unit II\ atl
for 1mmed occupant·~
I 2900 sq rt & 1 ·371KI Sil
fl urnt<sl avail /\pril
I s t 2 S t o r a Ji! t•
Warehouses av<11I for
immed. occupancy, 2000
& 2800 sq. fl. •33'-34' SQ
rt •LeasinR offi ce hrs
Mon thru f'ri. 8-4 Sat
10.2.
SpKlali'listc) in
21tdTDs
642-2171 545-061 I
Widow has monev for
2ND TD ·s anv '\17<'
ahove Sto.000 No l·rrd1t
ii. nu pnlty f'or 11rt um
call AGT li73 7311
an_vt1me
Modceref Rats Mt9.
SINCE 1981
tst&2nd T Ds. SSOK SIM+
Owner 1Non Owner
SFRs & Condos Commercial & Industrial
PETF:R DOB RS
640-6016 673·9043
Want investor for N pl
bayfront home G 1 ve
well se<'ul'ed 1st or 2nd
T. D. Agt. 675-6161
f-'ound · hlat'k dog with
wh1lr C'ollar. male R~
El llunl·ho Store in E
Rluff N B 675-1200
found ~old ring Cloth
World park1nJ? lol
Adam~ & Ma!(nnlia
II B 962 4370 artl.'r 5 30
round COC'kat1el C M
N B area C;ill & 1den
t1f\. 645 8626
Jo'ound f Doberman
ear.. not cropped. Nwpt
II arbor HS 979-1418 eve~
POUND Female Pup
Shrp h erd v1f'
Raker Bear CM
557-2844
f'Ol'ND female Kitten
Rrwn/Blk long hair vw
CM 557 9921
i-·ound Rik & fawn
female dog Vic . Edison
ll1gh . Hunt Beach
968.5528
Found: Sml Collie type
puppy. Male Blk. camel
& white. Greenville at
Sunflower 631·4498 or
548-33.53
2 Br I Ba. with refr1ge .
built·ins. carpe ts &
drapes. $410 951-0881 or
951-7630. Ask for L-Ouie
33801 Manana
Versailles corner pen
thouse 2 Br 2 Ba, comm pool. jac .. wgt room tlnfum1shed Room lite
S700tmo. 675·3787 kitchen priv. I mi to bch.
Fem rmmte wanted to
shr w/same. Newport
rondo. $250/mo. 63i-2259
ev /wknd
4 offices. reception.
w14rehouse w /lrg sliding
door. sec system, new
paint. new crpt. Redhill
nr Bristol. Avail after
3/25/81. 1·5/yr lse. Call
644-6500 or 760 1377.
Fe male shr hse Eastside 2-Story Office w /priv en
C.M. $250 + util avail trance. bath Grea t 4~1·81646-Z7,88 aft 6pm _ Ocean View $475 63t-7770
1000 sq. I\. S32S.OO mull!
purpose -f or en
trepreneur · 6 29
Terminal Way #14 I 17th
N P. Blvd.> 646-4636 2nd Trus t Deed
pur<'hases arran~ed
For details. call 960 1957
bkr.
Reward: Cross & c hain
lost Sund. 3/15 at Coco's.
Narcissus. CdM Sen-
timental value. 646-1400
2 Br 1 ba. E'slde Pool.
gar. pvt yard. new cpl/
paint. M50. 673-0731
2 br, I~ ba. nu c rpts. wet
bar. frplc, s unde<'k .
ocean vu. Must see. SS50
493-6384. 661·9343
Cute 2 Br I Ra •
fireplace. garage in lov
ely Newport lle1ght ~
$535 67:).0349
Versailles 2 Br 2ba. de·
corator mirrors SSSO.
Sandy 642-6149 2Br. lBa duplex. Dis ·
hwuhe r . newly r e -
modeled. laundry hook-
up. '52!5 lease. &4&-21~ 2 br. balcony, D W . Versailles Beaut P H
·c:tean. cotn laundry & 1 2Br 2ba auites . Mirrors
wshr. gar, nr ocean thru-out. bllin w ine 9E~~~l-r. 49).5953 aft5PM. rack. View or bay. f1SO.
2Br, lBa. (rplc. Wiil HwlLw:glCMtl~" 3140 Sandy~61~
s how Fri 4·8PM S485 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cross rrom bch. Lit brtl(ht
mo. Ownr. 549-2042 2Br l ba. part rum. D/W.
Townhome apt, 2Br. 2Ba.
close to s hopping.
hospital 1495 m<>. Aft.\
~smc>
3Br, 281, 4·plu, far,
adaJtl,nopeta. S480.1ot0 c. Valeftc:la 545-'19U
IMSTAMTIM
• I ' ~ 8111 fllllO Apt$
• 01,nwas11t11 & 880 s ·
• Pool & Ate Room
• Garden l•nc1•cao11K1 • Joo 10 1tac11 & stioo, . ,
·,f /\I NV IHl>NMF:.N l
. '·.•.• • '•,,ft . . 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Xtra lrt
Apt. 2 at ory, 2 car
l8rlfe, lrplc, yard, W/d
hoot up. Small ehlld,
1maD P« OK. A mutt to 1bf',1 ba, frplc, DW. encl.
11r. Nr Hunt. Harbor.
942' tl03 Jan. ... 1118.
....
TSLllOMT
patio. 16SO/yrly. 968-8263
Newport Heights Duplex
2 Br. 1 Ba. Adul~. no
pets. $495 mo. tst. last
deposit. 517 8olaa. Days
631·3521. Eves & Wltnda
548-SCNl
OCIAMPIONT
3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Oupleit
UpsC..lra. 2 car faraac
w/auto opener, waaht r
fsdryttlncld Avall.4-t.
TSLMOMT M2·1803
Se.1J ..._,. fut wtt.h Daily
Pilat Want Ada.
t
pr iv ba Sl7S 963-1887
Room for rent Sleeping
room onlv. $4S twk
631 1254 .
Young mate. pvt home.
Mesa Verde urea. kitr h
pr1 v 642·4S46 wk
S.9-9847 hm.
Elegant Suite. pool Fash
I No s m o ke . S385.
&4o-6594, ~3822 J oyce.
Hot.h. Mohh 4 t 00 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Balboa Inn oceanfront. Low wtnlcr rate11. Daily
or weekly. Kitchenette.
S90 & up. 675-8740. ----
Will share 2bd 2ba Park
Newport $300 mo furn.
incl utll & linens w /resp
rmp. wom Ref 's
r~8693 ,
Fem 25-~. noh smoke. to
shr3Br2badpb in CdM.
w /2 fem. S240/mo. 4 blks
to heh Janet 752-8585.
ext 404. M-F. 760-8299
eve/Wkns.
M /nnmte lo shr 4bd hse
In East C.M. mature
resp. nonsmlcer avall 4·1
831-1.5117 or 548-9443
EX EC SUITE Prim e
Newport Bch ICX'. Prof.
de ro r . co nr .
aud10/visual seminar &
other facll, 752-5299
HWl'T ,...SULA
Exe<: offices ln elegant
s u rroundin1s. Across
from City Hall. All sup-
port services nailable.
Fl'Om 225 lo 4750 sq.fl.
673-3002
1900 s q ft. Orrice &
Warehouse Main Sl
Irvine SOSO/mo. 631·7770
1100 sq tt. 2 om ces. front
& rear entry overhead
door. 220 power. s:uo on
lease 675-6251
4550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Stor1ge Warehouses in
Costa Mesa avail for
immed. occupancy. 2000
& 2800 sq. ft. 33' per sq.
ft. Call 642-4463 Mon .
A.....c.......ta/ ftenaa .. 1/
Lolf & Folind
•••••••••••••••••••••••
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Common Suede
Known Afford
OF CAKE
Los t Mi c r o f1 s<'h e
machine in gray case.
Vic Costa Mesa Inn <out·
side> REWARD .
1714 )281).1836
Lost · Clmeo pin in or
aroand parking area
Red Onion Restaurant.
Pe ter's Landing, ff
Harbor 3113 /81. Sen·
timental value. Rewal"d.
{213)541 -4461.
thru Fri. 8-4. Sat 1~2. I'm not • swinger. It 1
ta lk a bout c heating
N 8 ft.-1 Pl i t behind m y s pouse's LOST, SSOUWAID · · ....,,. ID aza. 0 • StonageGara~es C.M . back. I'm talklnl about Keeshound·gray & black
flee In auile, ocean view. 54 .. 3171 having another plece OF furry do11 nr Z3rd & San-
s hare recept. rm ·•-------CAKE. ta Ana St. 962-7788 or
1315()/mo. Sec'y & a ns. Fenced Yard 8000' 851-0140
SEA LARK Spectacular view w/sec aerv.avaU.CallTuea.or bathroom, r11c. elec. Lottl'-tl SlOO ---·------
gau. pool, Jae, $145/mo. P'r1. 840-8984 Ideal for contractor ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Found: youn g fem a le
MOTEL + tt hskpg. 159-1428 -------54&<98M.days --------1 Doble. 1'\18t color, fr.e to Spac. condo. Blutrs. prof. l7tliSTIMT ___ ....;... ____ , gdhome.9118-1483.
•Weekly rtntala now toahrw/same,see\Oap-Cost.a ll•a. 3 tm •ulte. l .... W..eH 4600 fO N ;::;;;;;;;;;:;;;;.::;;;;;::;::;:=
avail. •SH and up. prec 190-lTSOeves A/C. Pllnty ol parlltn1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . U DADS ~Color TV. •Phone• In · · 54Slq ft. '78' tq. f\. Swedish uch1n1e •h•· 1"0f'CluaLned Ad
rooms. Office......, 4400 Realonomld '75-9700 dtnt. 19, male, needa to ARE fl££ ACJ"ION
2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Offtce/Store/Buslneaa ~room, 4/mo portod. Call a
846-'f..S. El•1ant prof blda ln R. a. ip.ce, mU40. Cbolce :t:~f !'"'s ~~d 1~i': Call: Dalb' Piiot
Oc:e•nvlew Studio Apt. 8't per aq.ll. lae. Red K1rbor.81hr Center. Ent.U.h. some Gtnun. 642-1671 AD-VlSOR
$3$0• ecurttydepoelt. C&l'lll'l.8'1-1.35l Coate Meaa. Vacant. N • ., area . R eas ~ 9G-511T8
~\54. WanlAd RaWta Ml-5171 '4olS. qent. wt-1• &41-'*.541-1215.
-. '
I
t.ifA,._ IJM ... w--. 7071 Htf;W..e.14 7100 HtlpW..W 7tot IWpWtlllM 7100 ............... ~······· ........................................................................................... .
Pound~ 1J~red mile. lact onk.. Mane. LYJe AllJOTIAMS.
blade Poodat mlx. Wh to ._, f\all tlme emlMot-a pot on chfat Can't meat ln N.B. It. C Iii. R Cr R MA?ii. hi\ \lme.
kffP. tDall2 f15-J708 ----·Tools ~ulrtd. 548 ~
Founct: "or adopt" "'•Y N.:t'!!~~r::;,~':"el::~ a,a:~~t~~nT:,e:'1ri:h
Cockapoo w•\h black 11 , xlnt lot ref's s t :»1:30. Boy 8 on year
aro1a11d ou. 8 /mo deya/wk M/br nesot. rouod chool v11catlon.
$41-aM. saa.rres H erlta u Pa rlt aru
Found: Keffhound, f : 551·8035. ___ _ .... W-.hd 7100 Terril!O(>. old. wh•lo. M: •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Bab)'lli\ter, lrvlnt!, work· 4 pul)llks, mo•tl>' black. _________ , inf mom need• tnvl.n1<
Newport Beach Anlm•I ACCOlJNTING ma.lure persoa tu care
Sh•lttr.944 ~----tor 8/mo old baby Cull
FOUND: Wht Dog w /3
te11. Fem. vie E. Bluff11
Cartcha 78().8423
FOUND: Pink Women's
Wallet Safeway 8aya1de
Or. 7fl0.3329
F o und : Cruiser on
Trinidad Island, Hunt
inglon Beac h Call
84~1441. Rick
Lost· med. n F do11. ap
prox 2 yrs old. vie
Adams & Magnolia. thin
chaio collar. no lir' blk &
wht 964-2MS
CLERK . ~7-
MaJor Oil company has
11n ex.cellent opportunity
for an accountrng cl~rk
with 2 years experience.
Two years or college ac-
r o u ntin g prererred.
Must ha~ iibillty to
operate 10.key by touch.
Good salary and
benefits. Please call in
conrldence to. Ev a
Taylor. Employee Rela
t ion.' I 71~) 54~ 1111
DOUGLAS OIL
COMPANY OF
CALIFORMIA
3160Airway Ave
Cost.a Mesa. CA 92626
AffirmatlYe Action
Employer
Banking
LocaJ Newport Beach
S&L needs loan servke
SUJ1t!rvisor. Minimum
3yrs. exper. Must know
all aspel'ts of lo11n
servicing. Must be 1n
dependent self-sta rter
Salary commensurate
with exper. Contact Ms
Denny•Parisia: 645 6505
Newport Balboa Sa\
ings. E O.E.
Banking Lost: Miniature Colhe
"Sultan" Sable white
Please help fend rny
family Rij( rewurd l•-111!~11!!~~!!!~~1 New Accounts
Counselor 847-1051
Lost: Siamese Cal, mall',
9 tyr.; old V1r of lflth St
C. M. 642-40:\.'l
Lost. Fem loni.tha1rerl
w h t C a I 1 l' o l' 11 t
Bays hores Heward
646-8280 or 675· 32ii 1
Found F' Alaskan
M alamul<'.
Westminst<'r 893·3077
FOUND Small Slark
Cal Femalt" Newport
Beach 673-:J:J!6
FOUND Man'-; <:olcl
Wedding Rtnf.l w in
scrept1on Sunset Bl'ac·h
842-2045 --P•nonals 5350 .........•.............
PR 1-: LAW 'tudent nt-t•ih
S25,IXXI Will Ito an\ th1111>;!
l.ei:at ('1111f1drnl1al
OVM f> 0 Kox :1242 '
N B 9261>3
COVER GIRL
• OUTCALL *
953·0'T78 M<.: VIS/\
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models
Party Dancers. * 972-1345 * MC & VISA An·rptc•d
Gnat Company
Escorts
24 Hr; 1;.11 01111'
Cash/Checks
Am bp /MC /Visa
Advertising
HELPWAHTa>
Sales representative lo
<;all on Reader Ad busi
ness arcts for. advertis ·
1ng. Mon Fri . 9AM ·
5PM Rase + comm. Co
h<'ncfits Will train. Neat
arJpearance & ~d spell·
inf.! essential Apply
Pennysavl'r. 1660
Plac·cntia Ave., CM
AEltOllC
INSTRUCTOR
1-:xp 1Jnly Ne wport
Beach area 760 0461
1\n'lwt•rmf!. St-rv1re
PlPa!tant of<' N R l':x I
rwr or will tram. SAM
ll'M c;h1ft M fo' 631 551 I
ASSE:MILEltS I
I rvrnc· electrone<·s d1o;·
tnbtltor.; nd!t Cable A:.
st•mbler!t Solclermi.t
exper net· Excell
workini.: l'Ond!> & ro
benefit:; Contact Rob
Tral'y, Mon F'ra . II S
549.0954
----
ASSEMBLERS
I .ol' Mission Viejo ro
n<•eds Asscmhlrrs w 12
yrs exp C'aodidalt•s
must ha\f'C' ~d manual
rlt·xh'relv. nd eyesight.
nc•al m iiPl><'<Jranc:e & '1<'
penclablt• Work is an lire
'upport med1rnl rlec
t rnnin <;ct henl'f1ts
l>nly re o;ron .,1hlt'
pt!rsnoc; 'leekann rerm;1
nent f'mplvmt nf'Pd ap
plv Call t.fr' l'an·lh.
58t :t\30
Experience Prcrcrred
Also part time pos1twns
available in our South
Coast Plaza offic-e C:.ill
Kathy Ambur~t·y
540A006
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
ScrYings & Loan
!>$Town Center Dr
Costa Mesa. ('a 92626
F.qual Op port unity
F:mploycr
Rank1n1?
C~Chechr
Part Time. flex hr'
Irvine Top Pa\'•
I rvenr Pcrsunnl'I Ag.\
488 F 17th Ct'ISla Ml'~a
Suite 224 642 1470
~I
IARTENDet-days
HOST /HOSTESS
Inquire C11m1no Mex
1can Restaurant. 201 t I S
Brookhun.t II unl lll'h
RF.AUT l l'IAN
llAIRDRfo:SSfo:US, w11f1
followina::. as-;1sta111·l· &•
m anin1ri<;ts A ppli <':l
lions no" h<·1nl! a1•1·<·pl
ed for husy ..:rowing N fl
Salon TOI' f'A V Mari·
S42 6164
llF:Al1TJC'l 1\"J S &
M ANICl' RIST'". folf.,,.
1 n J! prer To work 111
"'J rm frll'ntlh ,,11011
llr. flt•'l lhk Th•· 11.ur
IJ(•111>t r,57 22:M
Bodyabop E_.~r1C'nced
metal-man Meded for
non production body
1hop Metal finl1hln1 t
lud wort dulrtd nat
rate ll comcnluton.
MOft.·Frt 1-5. 131--4939
.!_ora_ppt~~~~~~~
Bookkeeper/Sotretary,
p rr. JU.·.:. devC'lopmC'nt
/ conatruttlon back-
1rwnd helpful. Send r(t.
sume to P.O. Box 8209.
Newport Bea~~
Bookkeeper. construe·
CllllCAL
~wpm . fllln1 • t~ , run eN'and11
Clerical
Varied General OHIC'e
dutlet tncl aupport (or
Preeldent o( leading
stC'reo manufacturer ln
Irvine area Type
SOw pM from
t ranscrlb vr Good
secretarial expoeuro llt
growth opp ortunit y .
(714)55$-8193.
Uon/developement firm 1---------ln Jl.B. Req. mature
person to work with mln.
11 upervislon .
Responsibilities Ind all
bookkeeping /account
ing functions Both
manual & F.OP sytem".
2 /yr!l exp nee SOOO/mo
to start. Call Sally
5an&12.
IOOlkHPH
Permanent. 30 to 40 hrs
wk Prestl1tlous Newport
Beach insurance agen-
cy Good co benerlts.
non smoker Call Twyla
ot 644-4242
IOOICKHPEl/F.C.
for realty mg mt co P It.
nr Coast Hwy & Dover
955-z:llt
loolckfftNn9 Clert.
Full time. exper. helpful
but not nee Many com
pany benefits Apply at·
1660 Plat•entiu Ave.,
Costa Mesa
Rooks
PART TIME
SALES
CLERK
Clerical
50
IMVENTOltY
COUHTBS
No exper . nee. Special 2
day inventory Job.
Sat .. Mar. 28th
Sun .. Mar 29th
7:45AM toS:OOPM
Call for appointment
557 -0045 en-Lin:
lllo.9'CIWIY PUISONNH SUMClS
3723 llrch 5trHt
.._~roe"
Clerical
PAIT TIME
DOCUMEHT
CONTROL CLEAi<
Laguna Reac h mfgr
needs part time help in
engineering print room
Cleriral duties. opera\·
1ng blueprint mach .
Xerox equipmt. No ex
per ne<'. Typing helpful
15 to 20 hrs . per wk .
mominRs or afternoons
Call for appt Personn<'I
Dept . Telon1c: Berkeley
W• ha•• on iflll!M'diat• 714·494-940t . La gun a o~ for a part-Beach. F. 0 E
time sai.t clerit. I -----
CLERICAL Clerk Cor re
w.~aMwchalinof l tail store. Must be f'X
discount booll stores Pe r C a 11 R a I b o a
on the Wnt Coast of· Manne. 549·9671. F: 0 E f~ ~t sehn at MIF_'.IH
substanHol saYinfJs. CLERK/TYPIST
If you °" out-90in9
and lo•• ft.. worid of
books, w~ in•it• you
to ClflPly in person and
s~e the ~rat:
CROWN
BOOKS WEST
2700We1t
Pacific Coast
Hk)llway, # 145
..Wwport leach
An f.qual Opportunity
fo:mployer
l'crmanent & t<'m
porary Newport Beach
mortgal?t' hank1nJ! c·nm
pan\ has r1ren1nc-. for
l'lenral rx1s1tions . holh
permanent & ll'm
µor<1'Y Some pn•v101"
offtc·c· ex~r Typ1n1• &.
IO kev bv tou1·h de'ini
hie ·For appl . <·all
fl40·4SRO 1·xt 11202
E O.fo:
COCICT AIL LOUMGE
Bartender I Bar171a1d.
Cocktail Waitress
W a1ter + Food 675· 1094
f11•11 11t~ l 'n n ,u lt .1111 -------•-•I COMM'L. cleaners ror
ofr bldRS Dependable
rlex hrs. F..quipmt &
training provided Pay
by job. Min. ~ hr Lag
*FOXY LADY•
AIOUTCALL OHL Y
VISA Ml'
* 972·1I38 •
&otkEscorh
558 J941i
24 llr Servin•
Serving Or ('lv
ATLANTIS MASSAGE
SPA
Be µampl•rc<I
Reaul l.irl..,
10/\M 41'M 7
Phone 645 :Jil:l:I
••
h ~ I Ii
Op1•n
d a\~
SPIRITlli\I.
RP:ADINCS
\Oam IOpm Fullv l.11"'1
492-7296 or 492 903-t lli 15
S. Camino Rf'al S;1n
Clem
THE
GirHriends
•ESCORTS•
HOtM /Offic• jHotel
• 759-1216 *
24Hrs
MC
NowHirenf,l
V1~a
AM BER rormerly "1th
COVF:R GIRL 1s no"
with T ll 1-;
GIRLF'RJENOS'
ASSIST MANAGER
Aulo rental No ('XP.£•r
nN·es.c;ary Call !179 j$2S
or772 6550
AUTO REH'T AL AGT
No C'Xpt'r net'C'>'>ary <·a II !179 8826 or 772 6550
A!'TOMO'flVE
EXPERIEHC£D
AUTO CASHIER
F.xrellenl work1n£ run
,11L 1ort., & frtn 1n· lwrwf 1h
1nl'lud1ng rrt1rc·m1,nl
plan 40 houri-rier ,. <·tk
Sularv nimmc•n.,ural"
with vxpl'ril'n<·t• t'.tll
Shin al
J o · H ..
11avf' ""mPthinl! to selP
\las.,1f1ed ad~ do 1t well
l'lt"Nlt'il In a •a1·h makr-1111
\\ 111 tr;11n ('<111 ;ift c•r
Spm )!;II fi.Ti7
RE YOl 'H OW"' llOSS
~ f''. T V < > I ' H I I W N
tlOl'llS S:tlt•' & flt·
llv<'rV Fullc•r Hru'h
Phonf'li42 JHi!l 5 f!l'"v1
•oat Mointfttonce
M F nel'dccl for hual
c:lean1111?. Nt·wport
Reac·h Part L1m1• i11\'I
w<'ekrn<li. s:l 50 hr N11
c·x 1w•r11•n1•f• ,..,,. fi4!l 7 lt/11
BOAT
SHOW
llousewive~. -;t1uh·nt'
P 1' temp hl·lp
Cashiers. tlrket takn-.
1
parkml! lot atlrnd t•h'
('all Maureen &111 3'163
mm BANKING
~ WE HAYE A JOB
YOU CAN COUNT ON.
Rus1nl'ss l'x pand1ni:. Hills area Call Lo.
nrrd amb1t1ous itoal 831-68S6eves
oril'nl<•d pf'ople. op
p11rtunitv to t•arn un Companion l1vc 1n
hm1t1·d. ta'l lwnehls \ hsework, must havf' a
fo'or app't 1.,111 4!11H4Jl;I car
t•\ Pl. 6 >l(.lm 548 336li
•CAI DRIVERS• 1 ·ook 1.'h<'rker('ah Quality rcs taurant
770 O'l22 La1?una Rt•ach I" T
CAR WASH
(' /\Siii ERS p1t1me. N II
&. Oran!le 1)114 44fiO
CASHIBS
IOXPERSOHS
Now al·rept1n~ appllra
t11in-i Ptt1mf' Will train
'-' r Airport 11311 9570
CASHIER
F'ull time. good pay
<:mwth 1•ompany S lora
t1on<, Co benefits Wr
train
METRO CAR WASH
~II arbor Blvd
Coc;ta Me11a
CASHIF:H
110 SF.WARF:SALf:S
Apply m person Crown
Hardware. l<r.?4 Irvine.
I Westchff Plaza > NB
CASHlERS
UTUTEM
rook . morn1n1?'i
494 9011
CUSTOMER
REUTIOHS
lnslallalion dt'$k, h(•avv
phones, r<.>ports & hill
inf.!
901 West 16th St.
Newport Hea<'h
642-3260
DB.IVERY
Freeway Auto Supply.
Mission Viejo. 831 -1666
Del men over 18 for L A
Times to homes 1n N 8
& C M $4001$450 +
bonus 646-0637. 646-5844
DEHTAL ASSIST.
F /time c hairside F:x
per pref GP orfl<'e
545-4553.
DeMal As51sfaftt
Chair side. RDA & X·ray
lie. req. H \I day wk ,
benefits. salary open
N.B. area 642 6880,
673-3403 wkns & eves.
J>entJll Rec ep
tlon isl/)\sslsta nt. exp,
Orange Cout OAJlY PfLOT/Thurtday, March 19, 1981
HelpW..W 71 W....., 71ot HetpWmlM JIM ....................... ....................... ....................... .. .
.-~===;-;,j 0..,...1 om~ Full UmC' Jultoraa1 route· reap ..... TIAlt• 111111• oHlu help oHded bone1t couple HB/FV Learn F\lm Pwtei DIAJITll W/IOJM bookeepln• ... TO(>pty, ,.uabl• peopl•. SUIOO/mo. IUlt'anteed
La1una B .. c h e lec-per heJptul. OutJes Ind own phone Ii trans Notxptt. rwc. wtlltrain.
tronlc• manlll1cturer le •rnlnte property 511·2'710 ----Call'7J..t201 (Lou). ~::-':pert.need per1on mn1mt office & com LMA&. SICll1' AaY Models. Shlrp, rem. only
to be respontlble for PU\« lntt. Rn l :30-S La1una Beach, full tlmt Ma1ulne Non-faahlon.
drlll'tlnf at mtthanlcll w /POUlb e overtJme. 1 w /minimum 4 yrs tX· IM.2-G112 Bob
d .. l&n flmctlonl. Must wit vac•Uotl •ft 8 rno. perienC9 for solt1 pra(·tl· -....!... - - -
h • v t th oro u gh S900/mo to st.art. Call tioner Emphasla on Mot~
knowted1e of dratting Deni 64$.7681 trlmlnal. Pl, It (amlly
proced\jres. PC board GEN ER AL front ofc 1 • w . s a I a r y c 0 m Housr11EEPING layout, digital, analog. mensuntt w /exper U\
microwave circuit de· 2·8PM. Must ty pt.1 & 714/497-1789 SUPERVISOR •lgn, & some knowledge s Pel I . I de a l f o r -_
of e lectro-m echanical homemake r or s tudent. U9UOlt MITE Blllnl\lal exper'd pref'd,
packa;lna. 97_9-_1'7_11__ MAMAGIR but w\I\ ~rain thl' right
Opportunity for adv an-GB411AL OfftCE Exp neceuary $8 /hr per.wn.
t em en t ~ c are er rnust haveJ~ . .t ref''1. Lo 1'11• .. JJo
wth W ,f I t Looking for a very in· .,.,... ~ gro e o er x n teresting part time job wine know! ie. ucctlJ.1 Motor IM
pay&benerlts + In pleasant office~ table drivin1t re<'ord ap l51SS. Coast Or. CM 4DAYWOIUCWlllC Clerical, for mature ply In person eves 2937 1406atHa r borBl.I
FaclUty Is in beautiful pen.on. Location pc H.. Jo: Coast Hwy CdM 957 5841
Laguna Canyon near NpL Bch. Exper a
Beach & Resort areas must. Accurate lypini. Machine shop Sk1lleJ &
Cattrorappt Personnel no shorthand. 20 hr unskilled trainet''
Dept. Telonlc Berkeley · week includes Sat & Sun Supreme F.ni:1neerinJ(
714-49-4-9401. Laguna Call : 646-7431 849 W 18th SL. Bid.: <'.
Beach. E 0 . E. CM 646-0036
Donut s hop Early AM
shift. No exper nee Ap
ply Oipp1ty Donut-..
1854 Newport Rlvrl
C M
•DRAFTY
STRUCTURAL
675-6110
Drapery Manufadurt>r
needs exp hemmer
I blind stitch 01>er<1lor I
F /T. Mon Thurs .
7-5.30pm or l'f l'. <.: M
area. 642-1843
DIA'lbcrs R~staurClftt
Exp'd Host ess 1Book
keeper Wed Sun days
apply 3 4 JOPM at 16360
P:mfic Coast Hwy EOE
Earn to Sii hr S<-t your
own hrs. car & phf>nC
nee· 1146-2172
•ENGINEER
STRUCTURAL
675-6110
Exp'd enthu411ai.lll' a'>s1 s
tant to <'Omphmcnt our
Tedo staff xlnt :.alurv &.
henerits t•> thl' ra~ht
IX'™"' 548 55A()
fo:xp Medll'al Ass1st;int
frnnl & bac·k . hr.. &
sa lary opl'n Non
smoker ~o 4:m;
AME JEWELRY
Broadway. fo'ash1011 l1,I
Newport neat•h
M :1ture person Call
Mary Me1znt•r 644 1212.
ext 231
FRF.F. TRAININf; Xlnl
mc·ome Convf'n1cnt hr'
V A N 0 A R fo: I\ lJ T V
C'OUNSF.l.O R nl't'd-.
you 496 3227, 994 6456
FULL TIMF: Graveyard
Ans 'lerv No exp nee
Call 892 1212 !-:OF.
GEHEAAL OFRCE
TvpmR & 10-kev addmg
mach1ne 12722 We!;tern
Ave C:ar<ll'n 1;r1ive.
898 9721
r.eneral Offlrt• Workl'r
Mw\l tyfX' 40wpm
Costa Mt'sa 549 :lH4:!
GENERAL OFFfCE
Immediate orwninR 1n
our pur<·hainng dept ror
an expr 'd penmn with
x Int typml! skills & a
p I C' u s 1 n .i I' h o n ,.
pt>rsooahly l)ut1c' will
<Jlso mrludC' filinn. order taking and other iirn1•ral
of(1re work Xlnt
henefits & wr1rk an l! <'on
1ll\1on'I Wllh a i:rnwmg
company Apph 1n
person al
T iff: JOI.LY HOC: ER
INC
17042G11lrllc Ave
Irvine
714 546 0331
General
FULL-PART TIME
STUDENTS
OK
Excitmi: pay. rompan y
benefits. hard workers
only
NO EXPERIENCE
Cal I Oam to lpm
714-847-2422
GUARDS
Full & part time All
areas Umrorms furn'd
Al!es 21 or o\•er. retired
welcome No exper nee
Apply Uni\ers;il
Protection Service. 1226
W 5th St.. Santa Ana
Interview hrs· 9 12 & 1-4,
Mon-Fn.
HOSTF.SStHOST
I Mature I
Waitress Waiter Short
hour.; !No t1psl Good
hourly wages. private
rluh Ask for Shirlev
r.73 7730.
HOUSEi< HP' ER
~rfor2
i-:xcr family, lovenl!
s11 Jl('rvision for 2 boys, I 0
& 12. rleanm)(. eve mcal.
Nrando; & shop(.lmR <.:ar
provided. 11wn room and
• bath or h \ e out and "urk
noon Lo 8. 5 da v "e<'k
1-:ni:tbh ~JJ('akrn·I! drl\
mR rl'Q Newport Aeac·h
MACHIMIST
tor toohng & prototype
work Some (.lrodurteon
work on vert1e·;il null &
lathe Rl'arl blue1mnl!t
own tools i-: () f,
3-DINSTRUMENTS
15542Chem1c·ul Ln
Huntm~on Rl·urh
MANAGER/ Assist.
Women ·, i.pt'f'iult ,\
1'lor e l"ull l1111t•
<' lol hmi.: ex (.lr Nu"'"~ l'ra11:. In<' 556 14!15
M anai:er. Off1rl' work.
1•ountc•r help for fon(I
~•·rv1rc• Sf'asnnal, I ll
mo I 11.B area <.'all ...
Soni:rath. 171<1 1544 53711
or write 14581 A1·tu·1;1 Dr
Tustin Ca 92AAO
M.AHAGER
Sl'rv1rf' Station xlnt 1111
pt\ profit ~h;1rin.e 1111 \
out r1lan off ere<! 673 3320
Ref:. requ1rl'<l Satan ·---------I open M8 5~ 10 5 pm
llouske<'PE'r Companion
l.1ve·m Must ha\\' f':Jt
No sn1ok 1nl! C • .i I ;1 fl
JPM 6400099
llousekel'l)t•r., w..in11·d
St•adiff Mull'! lti(jl S11
Coast llwv 1.al-(una
H1•ac·h. 4!l1 4AA2
llouc;ekcl'J><'r CompHr111111
for eltlcrly (>('r~on 1.1\1·
m or out 1133 ZOO!l
11 1111•<.t•k t'l'IH'r ",1 ntc·rt
w •' .. kl' n 1h r" r 11lII1• r
woman to 11·11Ja1·1· 11·
i.:ular ht•lai·, 11~1\ .. rr
-199 5562
HOUSEtCEEPER S
We havl' 11n 1m mt>d1al<'
1J (.lt'n1ng for <!
hou.wkt'<'f1N'S Full t1m1·
po'>1t1on!> IOPM GAM
c;h1fls f:xt•cll frin).!t'
benefits parkaKt' A11ply
m person al · Advanc·ed
Health Cenll'r. !JOO
Rri,lol St ~orth. Ste
• 100. Newport fi<";u·h 1-: 0 ~; M f
IM PORT Manal!t'r fnr
Perc;1an & Orienta l
rul!~ 5 .vrs ex f>('r r<'
q 'd Must have the com
pr<'h<'n.c;1vc· busmes' e~
Pl'r of l'cr !'.1an
handmade 1-.1rpeb. 1n
Iran Must s peak. rearl &
writ1• F<irsJ & Ench~h
Must havC' t·~per 10
Japant•Sf" export bu .. 1
OP'iS SI ,JOO mo S<'nd
rt·~ume lo Oriental Hug
c;allt..•n'. ;,;17 f: C'n11sl
llwy . 'corona dd '1ar
Ca 92625
IN~l l flANCE
Cart'<'r Opportun1L11·-.
haw• nt•ver tw1·n sn
<'lose to llomP
Mail Cieri&
Dato &ttry O~.
lntereslln.I! diver!>1flf'd
work with an estahhshed
insurance co lnsuranrl'
expenenre not requerC'<l
We will train. Pleasant
workin!l conditions. xlnt
emplovee benefits in
eluding profit sharing
bonus. savinJ!S, plan,
medical 'dental Appl~·
in person. Mon thru Fri
d~1:v8:30to2
M ANAG F.M F.N'l'
A GAEA T CAREER
MAYIE
YOURS.AT
THRIFTY
Df'U9 & Discount
Stans
1' II R I I" T y 0 r f I' r '
Chttlll•nc1• Cont inuou-.
A d \ a n 1· t• m " 11 I c I p
portun1t .v :11111 l 111·otr1
parahle E11rnanc1' 1n t h1•
Rctail f''wlc1
M anagemcnl 'l'ra1111•1•-.
ht'Rln at $1.11!1~ IHI p1·r
month with :t<lcl1111111.1I
rons1clerat ion c 1 Vl'n to
1•ollf'ge graduall'" Earn '"I!" C'<mlmtlt' to 1n1·n •.1 .. 1•
t<• more than $15 000 .in
nualh 111 lt'''I than l<i
month..,
Advann•ment to· St(Jri•
M ana,ller b;esP1I 1111
ment and ~rform11n1 ,.
with annual t•arnanc' "'
$21 CXXI or m nrt•
Qualif1t•cl l'andarlati''
shoulrl Ix· 21 H':1r' or
nldrr Sumr 1·ollt•j!1' µr1 ·
ferred 01'11·m t•r ho"
profitable ;m 1ntnv1t'"
('<In be
St'c Our nepr1•.,,·ntal I\ I'
FRIDAY. MARCH 20
9AM · 12 HOON
ONLY
3325 S. Bristol St.
Santa Ana,
CA 92704
Op•nin9s in Costa
I Mna, fowttcM.t Vall•y
and La Mirodct.
An Equal Opp11rtun1t \ I Employer -----Ml'Clc:ol FrOftt offlu.
646 3903
MEDICAL COURIER
Must havC' nwn trans &
be fam1har w Cahfnrn1a
Frwy system No suit'
pleasant position for 10
dividual who enJo~ ..
drivin!l M-F9·57f.R B500
MUISES AIDES
Needed lo l(ive TLC to
elderly patient:. Well
tram qualified l>('rson
net Earn while yuu
learn Appl\ 1445
SuJ'Cnor
Orfu·e Ass1..,lanl ,.,.,"'
5 0 w pm " u m r c• x
J.l{'m:m·e nN·e:.~ary Will
tram Non Smoker Send
n•,ume to P 0 Box 82G.
Sun~et Reac·h. 90742
OfACE CLERIC
I-' 1' a<·<·ount m l( cc1wr a I
11 f f 1 l' l' d u I 1 t' .. x I n t
IH•nt'fits , c•all Uoh
770 lfi77
l'AINTl-:H Nt•al rc•lla
I.ill'. exp'd. cu::.tom work,
f11llt1me ti:ll 44111
P:irt time <;;ill'~ Earn up
to !JOO "l'<·kh lo "tan
<'ar. 1Jh1rnt· nl't:1li•tl
l'htint' li42 31(;9 5 91'M
l'ART TIME •1 Shr'
cenl'ra l 11ff11·1· for C: \I
Suh nmlrartor 6<12 •1•1:17
PAHTTIMf':
1'11·k "" n hr-. & m1·11m1·
\rnb1l1ou_,, hke 1wopl1•
I "ii I for a ppt 557 f>fm.1
PART''TIME
•wm1 rt'l1rt·1\ OK San
I\ nlon1n Win1•n 1;,is 119111
1',1rt llffi(' S.1 ~II hr +
h11n11-. ( 'hwi.,e hour'
Ill :w wk Ea,..v work
li11i '1741
Part Time
Couns~lin9 Youth
Coni~rs
Aflull' with outsl a11<1111c
:cttral't1vt• rx•r!tt>n:.il1t1e..,
t11 'IM'ncl t5 hr~ p<>r week
1·011n~1·hn£ vouth al!e'
I u t s ~: \ ,. n In JI,' &
Wt~·kc·nd!> l\va1lahlt• ~5
11 1• r " k c· a I I
~ :io 'I ~vm \fon thru
...,. hi:.! 1:121 ,.,, 3.\:J
\ 'k ror I.lira On1ncJe Coast
DailY Pilot
J:tJ W ~a.\ Strt'et
('1.l'>ta \1 e!>:i Ca
F 11 u ii I 0 p p o r t
1-:mpf<nt•r
P /\HT Tll\1E Pl'r ~1111
n1•1'fft'(I an Book pa1>te11p
'1c1n & Tll{"' 'l/o 1•x11
111•1· Appl) lli6U l'l,11•1•n
ltaAw (' ~
Part Time &
Temporary Jobs
Available
Clerks. Secretaries
Receptionists all
O ffi c e Skills
Needed''
lv1cK1 HESTON I
& Associate1
1Spec·1ahtmJ.! an
Tern pnra ry Clt•n1· a I
Personnel 1
540-0400
l'IHYr<>C'l .EHK SI OOpt•r
hr !Iii Wed. 116 Thur &
!I I l•'n 645 0404
Pool Mamtenam'l'.
Laituna Beach
497 5111!:1
Pr<' st·hnol Teat·hcr "':mt
t•d . <·rerlcnllals or exp
f IT ('1111 f>40·8820
PRESSMAN M/F WAN'l'F.D Raldani.: mrn
& women. For infor Toll
F'ree · ftOO. 772 3S45 opt.•r
208
MARKF.TS
1-'or 2nd & 3rd Shirts
w~ promote to manage-
ment & supervision from
w1th1n
needed for new office in ••••••••••I SofKo lnsuranc•
Company
MEOICAL
Phlehotomisl I ll<'Ct•fl tione~t. F.xper'd. for Npt
Bch lab This is a hill
lime. l)('rmanent po!.
Phoneo .• Ian Hillyn
640.0l•O
t\ R D I C K & 3M
('amera. multillth. 2 /C
lla madn. 25" Harris We
are lookin,ll for people
w /exp who can do quali-
ty work. Salary-open for
c a1,able per!>on
fn!tu ranrl' & other
~nefils Irvine lor ('all
I' at I! 30 5 PM M · F
979 18.14
PHONE f'UN
8AM-12PM MC VISA
171-41636 6853
F o r A I h e r a p e a u t I <·
massaRe h) :1 hr'1l
therapist S20 to all N F:W
clients M 1 1-· \071'M
548-2817
Starvini< F.nt reprcneu r
needs to raise monev '
Will do anythlnR !cot.
conndential 641 S9R9
Paychic reader & :.ti
•lsor. Past. prellent.
ruture. Love marrlai.te.
health. character, busl
nes11. Readings In oil
areu. For Info & a ppt
675-7046.
,,..... 5450
•••••••••••••••••••••••
"Viv e Le sacre '
mercenalrc" Lookln~
ror overseas w o rk
873-2128
·~:;=:. .......................
~ 7001 .......................
thlt1r. Be1lnnet1
• ClllldrH or Adullt.
L11un• •re•. S .
S.rlftlnt-...m ,
.
WANT/\ CAREF.R?
Costa Me~a
111 Del Mar
631 9421
l.<11(una Beach
4$4·923.1
Huntington Beach
962·9116
Cleaning person needed.
2 daY-' a week, 183. In-
terview req. 546-0037.
CLIAMIMG PaSOM
for pvt home nr Coast
Hwy /Dover. Npt Rl'h. I
dy /wk. 548-WZLS
CLERICAi"
Sales Dept. lookin11 for
an energetic person to
Joi~ our sales sta rt
Ability to work
w lfl1ures, phones.
heavy typlng·55:Nm. Ir
organtu tlonat 11 11 rt'·
quired. Ma1 c11 txptr. tielptul. Please call for
an Interview. Wells
Verso Alarm Services,
division of Baker In·
d1.11lri•. lTC ~w•n.
Jrv. ,wt.~ EOE/MF ••
WAN'l'ACl'IONT
CJllNfed Adi 8'2-5178
Mission Viejo. X -R ay
lic:..!:_eq. <3132.~3091
Dental X-Ray Tech. New
office Santa Maria, or
tho & JM'r i. exp. Call
( 2131540-4101. ----DENT AL OFF f CE
MANAGER. Busy of
fice. You name it. We'll
pay It. ~ 7580 ..,.... ........
MCg. co. in Mission Viejo
area needs exper. in
electrlcal <'onnectors,
h e rm e t ic 11ea l s .
transducer design, com-
ponents materials &
methods.
Dutles Include design,
draf\.lna"'ma.terials test·
In« & H&D pro/ecta.
Me cbanlcal Eng neer ·
in tr degree prof'd .
Qualltled candidates
aend resume to: Mra.
Jans , 23891 Via
FabrielJ"lte, S ulte Ma, Minion Viejo, C1. 92811
MCmCI
how Dally Piiot CIUI·
llled tell dttoJa1 tbelr m....-wttfl Jel)btlit.y and tm,.n? Our ...
.. .,. proud to '1bo: ally set NIGttl.
MJ.MI.
GEHERAL
Courier /Clerk, part lime
neede<J for Npl Rrh
medical lab. Perm po!I
Prefer matur<' person
Phone Jan lhllvrr.
640-0140
GB4ERAL OfftCE
Local leading pest con
trot com pany needs
l[eneral office personnel
Entry-level po111tion
Typing & orrice exper
h e lpful. Cal l Tim :
Thursday. 3-19 btwn 9 &
3. 9'7M021.
G8BA.LOfflCI
Lite bkkpa. recep't & l~ptng rult.p /t , nex hrg,
r.leaaant working cond
n engineers o re. Sal
open ca II for a ppt.
844 8880 Dale arjala &
A11soc:.
USITHI
DAILY PILOT
"'AST
lllULT"
SllYICI
I:'. DIUCTOIY
For Result Service Call
6•2·1671
I tat.HI
17570 Aroo~hurst. FV
Ph · 962· 7711
I NS\IRANCF. ARen<':V
s <.'rv1re rep: eomm'I
linl'll ac<'l handling. 75eo;
oCr • 25'~ fielrl lln
derwritmg. service sales
pos Car expense.
salary, comm Man 3
yrs comm'I. underwr1t-
in!l exper. Must have F
& C lie Oran1te & L.A.
Cou.nlies Call:
Dione Bullock 833-~ E.O.E.
~------
1"'810ll Pl.AMT
Medical
FRONT OFFICE
FULL T IME
Receptionist Sec'y &
Bookkeeper F.xp
necei1~ary Sun
Clemente Write Ad 11823
c /o Dairy Pilot PO BOX
1S60CM CA 92626.
Medical. Office Manaizer
for pediatric practice
Experience required
Write ad no. 794. Dally
Pilot. P.O. Bo1t #1560,
Costa Mesa, CA 92626.
Medical back om c .. for
NB urology office. E1t·
per. req'd.1144-8722
P T Counter Office
person. for equipment
rental store Typing req.
approx 25 hrs
Saturdays req Salary
open · United Rent All of
Costa Mesa. MS-0760
P rr In a 4 izi rt office at
s mall manufat'turinll
Co nr S .C . Pia za .
Phone. t yping. ntlng.
figures, etc. Gd benefits .
Jack Crout 545-7101.
CAM TICHHICIAH
St•rtlng po1itlon avail
with Tustin based plant
Co. Will train-health In·
s urance, Arboretum In-
terior Plants. Ask for
Wendy. (714)730-6'80. Messenger-Office Hel per ---------
ror N,8 . law tym. Must Real flltateSales ... ....... .,cCMlfrol OHie•,..._ .....
For vitamin m11 com· ran1 . Operate small
BM 5110 office com -
puter. Data entry. Oood
bave rell1ble tar. F rr. l!:XPC'rtenced agents are
8:»5:30. S41l\r ... 20f a needed to work with ex-
mlle. Ca ll J01~ 640-5850 ccutlve level clients .
for Interview. MUllt have proven track
record. You wlll b e
math s kills . Fringe MOWllTMITIMI t>.Mftt.s. E xJ)f'rlence de-for Job ..tiers lo check
1lr•ble. the Dally Piiot Help
Llnw\lco Laboratorlet Ti anted elMSU\ea\lon. IC
8Dt'TOO the Job 1°" ••flt la not ---------1 there you ml1ht con· ~ ,,.,. old eteff ror alder ofterln1 1our
I I ... Mt:Yket wtt.b an 1d Di • •• • lo • \la • J 0 b w • n t • d
C ed.to.5171 I catel'OC')'. PboneM2·5f'71
workloa with pro·
ftuklnal auo<:lates. Our
otrlceotte,..:
• Btst beach ICW'atlon
•Uberal commlaslon
Procram
•Nat'l merral procnrn
Cell nft ror appt.
Walt Hemph\U, ffl.'300
1
----= ' 'O i ca• ~~ d OrMpODIM DM.:v eeaerm.:-••r· Mens" 11, 1111 -... w..... "" Alt'"'u ..... _.__. ~,. ... , , .. ,. ~,...... ..
<" :.a!Jf . .J ,. ' ' _j -,,f _;-:=,;c7c ·--".. --tei•M•-•-•••••••••••• ... -•-•••••-NM••••••-•-••••••-•••••••--••-•••• .. ••• ' •• !L ' ... !:l!t!'.-*.~ .... ?!~;;:r~--!!~~~~.!. .... ?!!!~~ .. ~ ..... !!.~ __ ., ":::-:.~.~":: -?""-~~=-i=~ ;·;_:-;;.'.;;:·;.";;,'.: . , IA'• ·~· ,_ ·••l •MY -":·-"!"!~.,. OPll coad P IP Hl·Uff, ~ _ _: -:-:-:::-~lft:jm ~ Alo. lad retun. 1 aec cll.aln W'iiOMIT ... rt ...__:r •--·u-.... ._..-~ ftrm la ror CP A rtrm. P/U!1'•1 de71, wkodt, ..... I' Iola + m ...... 1... , ..... 1 n--~._ .... ~· ..._or..._lllOO lbdtllilr ,_... .. our n••IM --.. ft ,, b U -'U ._ ... I l WUJwaa. IG•lnJ -·-... . u.. ~~· s....-. clul i twltol IH Jeweltf'I .... u., fu ....,_ Ma lln· u • ""' •-ne · _ 00 .-.. Homier ellop. love ... , n90, 1Mala1 Pwt..perty.~.fftl. TypewrM« table m. Of.
pbo::1. TYPING Z time S•plotH ••ti •••·,•~••J•l._for MIM'*kN,..,_ I AN 4....._, ~'1.:loeh •more. Tbl•,....,+4cilnaso. 1 neutwrm.utJnt1 ta. I
F.I LINO. Near John Ytl'Md la ...... • olftft HCU 1~!• bH••Utp 'am1 •fAM Bu1 public cC>ahtt .... '?Mt ...,_, Dlamoad Ud. Wht f.old bt .. •.frWtn
Wayne41rpott .... UIOl ~ a daJ ..-,_..,.,_ .. ~. Pr-• i ...,. • v.. ,_....,. ea"-rienced - -wlltdl •/IJ sapll. Kebe
· • 1aeludlol s.tun1e1, oo K ra •·•:H. on tu ML TIMI · openeor. P\alM boa.rd. ••e-1• 1111 New~ Hbiotta, roU n Jewl. Appnlt. moo. °'""' filnltture, ,desk• • ...... IWIT ev.nlftp.OatllTJ.113'. Helen MtGla • ., for SU.•Ol'moreuhr. Callll1llt,T51.aM7. ... _ ............... top bar ubloeta for Wfll tredt ror ear t7pln1 6 aide ehaln,
Corporate ofrlu .,,,_....__ Call._ HAJllORAREA vw, hcdshelvea, nn 14f.l• I truhcwlraomtmJae
Pl u t r1onallt SALDPERSOH, buldt, TIAC.. APPl.JANCESEJWICI JO" p11tove (Almond>. tt.rm.. Can be Hen at u:. t~1pln':. Newpo~ mutt bt uper'd In SICllrAIY lll:IVICB ITATtON AT· Sal. qnly. Elsper'd. ECJ: 1Vtbuy~an.c-a ., • r Io 111 b I e b Id Jnelry: Privjte Puty Oru1e Cout D•llY a..ts..~. plurnbln1 field. 1umr for ':1 .. ~n°!~aci::· TIJllDANT. IAM to ,.. ... ·d. Oudu Orove ..... ..n ;::•r. fumJture. t•WT& aft wm tacrtnee tlO 1old Plklt, aao w. Bay St,
17 5 0 mo . Co m sn • r::-1-., -1 H..-.a · arll. A.ay SheU Sta · .,... m4533 •Plllw9. JOTT IPM plec:. ( 1127) rfn•ecl with Costa Meu. Atk tor
19C9'110MIST benelltt, tralniof for I.Jan, l'f'tA -lr rrvint. NB 1 .. _ .......... ...,.11 2 ·---......,_ th dlamaad <necl!ace> alto Gtorl• Araus or Ken f'uU time Moa·P'rl. Must mtmt. Pottntial llaGO + " -tolB Tak1• 1 I We.... _, ~ ".._ .,..,.. Wt ~v· 2 buutiful lamond Codda.rd
be penonable Ir well permo.Pltueappl.vtlle llCllTAllll Ret_llondslble youn1 Lea •7.-1ss trleu1.Sl.50. rtno retail a value ----· -----
1ro0mect. 6 et\JOY meet· Earl'• Plumblnl 281%2 °*.:pc1CC:.llff..o!,* Service Station Atten· women to work evH Sean R«frtleratqr T~p Call181-3781. Sl4.000 will aacrtflce for ,... 1017
In• l.M public. Requl,..1 Camino Capistrano at-1 ire t1I 800 dant, P I T. eves Ir 5 :IO·tPJpt S u n-Thuu of the uu.. 1'1 cu ft'. Xlnt Oak ~te set, parquet l8000 cau (7 tO?se.0912 ...................... .
&Ood tpellln1 Ir pfln· 4116-0Cl. Acet!"'Pa fria6siuoo wktnd1. Neat •P· Hm S:S.50-95.50/hrtoap. cond GOO o E Porta· t' U1ly, loving, devoted,
man1tilp. No ty plrJf. Sety<~lolAnler> pearaace It hand writ· P~>' call Kehy 540-4088 aft ble Dlah~Hhe.r SUO. top, 1 yr old, must aell. Gold It 1llver, top dollars. famlly·type yg M Shep
Phone e1'JJerlence pre· Sal•pel"IOftnHded.Part DJ,IOO lnJ. Apply at uto 5.IOSun-'nlun. Sear1 Room Air cond. S380.848-'7Z9'7. Cluann:.,~ mlx.15.te8-tS28
re rred. l"ull eom pany time. "'•lble bour1. lb R.lnderl Afency NeWport Blvd, C.M. Telephone Sollcltor1. SllO. 545-9223. Couch. end tables, corree r•--& ~ 1090 benefit.. Apply: Pen· Over 11 . Phone : """"'Blrdl ......... •o• table. -._... ,,_..
nysaver. 1880 Placentia '1St·ff51. 10AM·5PM. -._ .. "" "" s.r.tc. PerlCNll Neededlmmedlately, Tu Montsomery Ward 18 cu Mhc•••-1010 ...................... .
Ave .. C.M. P'uhlonbland NewportJm.allO/P"ree needed for our Hunt-work 3-9, Mon.·P'rl. No f\ fn.t lrM re/rl1. Wied 64C).2347alter6pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• SpiMt piano. unW1ually
lnfton Bch location. In· experience nee. No tell t mo t325 nrm. 7S1·3294 Maho(any Trestle dining 8' port.able tpa, pwr pack, small + bench, antique Ch~=i"r!~cp~ced Exj~~f::~:~ly . Semwy . :~:rt:.i::~:::t:, ~e~!:. ~~II arter lPM UP~GHTFRE EZER ~~~1!:ves, 6 cbrs. ::.·~~~:~\¥ $2200 finis~~~~:· -
position open in one or F · . I P · T · W a It• b IXICUTIVI tall operations. Duties Like new,~. John WayM Tennis Club Sunday 3 /22. 8·5.pm ~:~~~~~f" e~::! ~~:~~~·~o~~~ C:::! SICllYAIY will include t:Hhlerln1, ,.....OMI "5-2297 Hide-a -way bed. SSO fa m . membersh ip . Hammond Organ w/2
brokerage and develop-751·7500. to Mar ketln1 Dir in stockln1. pricing and CAUBlS Whirlpool 2 speed W M Comb. love.eat le couch, St 100. incl. transrer apkrs. S2000/0BO. Story. W .. 1 ftnanclal services firm. various other retail $135. Misc for sell. ~·~ Clark Spinet piano. ment co. e are see ... ng ---------i R ha"-..... duties. ~pr. prer. lo-From home, part tlme, Xlnt cond. SlSO. Call S»a!i29 a reliable congenl1l s•• --s-... ... a esp., c ue-ne .. •I pos. r U '---'-h •t .. .,..., l.,.,"' · tlOOO 2339 Rutgers Dr -.r-SR """ involving area or te~ appUcants app-or we ·1U1UWo c an Y "Yes ..... ,. v•... WANTED. Stroller & c M.979-8'T76 diplomatic person able need ed for cootem-securities, Insurance, ly In person. See Mer. fund-raisin1 campaign. Medallion garden furn. highchair also misc
to juggle bust. busy porary women's wear. rul e)tate. Xlnl . M s Schwamberger. CaU :n•·~37U Maytag washer & gas Driftwoodw/camel.48" babyitems.7518967 TV,...._
phones, typing, SO sales Mim be exper'd. Salary shrthd/tYJlinl slrllls re-Moskatel's Int:. 6862 Ed· dryer. Ahooet new. 9600 round lbl, umbrella. 4 -Hlfl Stereo 1091
& adminlstrali~e stbalrr plus comm. Please app-q 'd. n4~W inger Av, HB. T E L E P H 0 N E' 760-1212 chrs. Also: 3 Chaise. 2 John Wayne Te.nnis Club ••••••;•••••••••••••••• efficiently, com1orta Y ly or call : Apropo, "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I EOE/M/F h · ott 1 ... _ hi s & with a sense or humor ~-21162 or #29 Fashion -:: SOLICITORS SAC R J F J C E ! Se a rs c airs. om an. g ass reg. memuo:rs p, 1000 Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr
Excellent typing skills a Island. Npt Bch SICllTAIY SH I PPI NG /Receiving Home, contract, no sell-portable dishwuher. tbl. 760-1212. ind. transfer. S'1S·54~ wrnty. Free dell very
must. Real estate & pre-IOOICK98 F/C Cle rk. Prog ressive Ing, non·profit org, P/1' xlntcond S7S842-4314 Brown Jordan, 4club IEOWooo'2 X 6 '1 Sl_48_.646-_1_7_86_. __ _
v ious receptionist & Sd.ool DINctor Wide variety of d'ulles medical device co. 3194 714 638-3122 Elec. Dryer. ch rs. w /2 tbls. Camel S 4 S. Xlnt. decking. !OK' Horrman Console Early phone experience de-Exp'd.-<tynamlc . ECE "C" Airport Loop Dr.. w /beige c us hion s in from mill 55•/rt American Radio. sirable. Paid holidays &Elem.Ed.unitsre<1'd forsm.business.lnclud· C M. (Reedhill btwn THERAPIST-lnrant nea;~e.,:1.8S.1SO. 760-1212. 645.9137 ex t
1127
....,,
6313474 Major medl·,.a1 pension "•"·0411 ing customer serv., bill· D I l p • ...,.v, ..,., ' . ~ Baker&40i5) eve opm . rogram. -----anytime ---~afP:.'::c~:;,:.1~~:1~~11 SECRETARY !::~p\:~~f4tz'::1sant ---------p /time. Member o f Refrigerator. frost-free, Red velvet hi gh back ----loah & Marilw
Restaurant
McDONALD'S Now hiring rull & part
time. Days, eves. Great
career oppor tunities
On-the-job training. For
m o re in ro .. call
754-9943, or inquire at
3141 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa.
SMp/Rec9i•llMJ transdiscipUnary team. excellent, S200. chair good condition. Reasonable' John Wayne EqllipM..t
L.ight bookkeeping. SICID'AIY e..~cierli NIYI' & reeding bkgrnd. 548-8513.548-4485 S4S 631·3474 Tennis Club f'amlly ••••••••n••••o••••••• Plumbing knowledge ..... ~ J important. Call: Jackie _ _ --------Membership. 644-1613 or lo~ MAlw;{ h I r I F 11 t · Healthcare mgmt. co. in Fulltime. Contact Garry --.. ----.... e p u · u •me . Irvine has an lmmed Gagne,549-7S22.S.A. Popp,546-5760 Brownrefrigerator, l..argeHide-a -bed !_59-9471 1Judy_I_ Senk e 020
848-3636. opening for ind iv to -SlOO Good Condition •••••••••••••••••••••••
SECRETARY
P/1' pos. in l girl ore.
Typing. rommunication
skills essential. Lots or
vanety & some travel.
Hrs flex. Call H.P.!,
964.SJZS --·---
SECRETARY
perform secretaria I SHIPPING Clerk part TC>rl.ESS MODB.5 646--8086 S8S 631·3474 ANGEL TICKETS Call Marine Electrician
duties for Sor our lime. Must have exper. S75 DAY,PAIDDAILY ---- --------Dr.Meaft8pm Limitt'd Oes1gn /mstall/repair
Medi I De r h C II Balbo M . No exp. nee. 826-2583 lie-'-1 020 MovinJ( Sale-Sofa S90, dbl supply••' 613-7795 Qual work 549·2520 eve ·i:a pt. sla r. T e a : a arane. ---••• !::::••••••••••••••• bed SlOO, Frige S75. ---• ideal candidate will 549-9671,EO.E.M/F/H T•uva•Gb..ICY Butcher Blk Tbl w r4 Amer Oak dresser S250 work well under pre --. --, ""' "' ..., Peugeot IOspd, Blk & G rd . d ssure have the ability to Sitter need~ occasional-Newport Center needs Beautifol xtras x Int chrs SlOO. will take orrs 3x3 a en win ow new estab~h priorities be ly S20/day. m our Wood I deliver y person w l it cond. l20010B0645·5663 831·5925 S150. Paintings & pnnts
dependable & have. selr bridge home Avail on 1 typing. can take instr uc· -Stai.Md glass 646 3478 lion Own Vehl.cle M "' "-h··-'-n c s......-i Tandem 2 "" "L" sha.....A sofa. ----initiative. Shorthand or short notice Laurie· · r = wm " """" "" ~
BOAT MAINTENANCF:
Specialize in Teak
Waxmg & Restoring
979·2728
USTAUR.AMT
Sandwit:h Maker hrs I
7A M-3PM Mon f'r1 .
646-81JJ3
Small busy ad agency.
e xp a +. lite bk pg.
642-5251
S.O tl•u;Chwc:h
8 30-3 ·30. Hrl v + Bike S175 2725 Gannet xlntcond.xlntbuy.SISO S600 Gloria Marshall speedwriling prer'd 7525111 days. 551·1506 mil~age Dol o 're s Dr C.M.545-t373 646-<m>af't 5 :.i. M embershjp~IOBO Medical bkgrnd & eves. 644 1663 -------- -673-8213
credentialing exper. --· __ . __ --2blackSchwinnt:ruisers Kin~SizeBedreallygood
prefd. Gd. salary & fr. South Laguna Village TRUCK DRIVER St:.> & 1140 xtras-mint shapeSlOO IRVINE COAST COtJN inge benefits pkg For Animal Hospital is look· cond646-7275.646-7060 6317383 TRY CLU B fo'amily
loots. Mcrt.w
EqailpR14wt 90)0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Inn Tender. 8'4" hyp
New in box Sells S849.
sac S399. 1714175'4· 1732 dys Restaurant
SGT. rEPrEllOMl'S
f'IZ1A STORE
Now hiring for full &
part lime openings at
loca t ion s at 0 .C
Airport. Varying days &
hours: Ideal supplemen·
tat i ncome f or
homemakers & stu
dents. Our prol'{ressive,
growing t:ompany offers
oppartunities ror advan
cement basec1 on your
JOb p e rformance
Pleasant work1nji! i:ond1
t1ons Must be 18 & over
Apply m person btwn l
&6PM
2.'llOS. E. Bristol
Santa Ana Heights
CNext to McDonald's >
E.O.E.
Retail Sales'
Women 's f'IT r e tail.
fl ays. exp prererred.
)(Int bener1ts C a II
77().16TI ask for Larry
R.taitS•s lmmed opening
pleasant working i:ondi
tions apply in person
Ripple's Office Supply
El Adobo Plaza S.J .C.
RN 11-7 Charge nurse 80
bed ECF. Full & part
time, gd. salary. Mesa
Verde Conv. Hospt . 661
Center St., CM S-48-~
SALES Clerk for retail
marine hardware store
P /time, ex per. nee
Call : Balboa Marine.
549"9671. E.O.E. M/F tH
ScMs Dflil Ca.rt&
Inside sales duties & heavy typing in friendly
atmosphere or s mall
t:ompany near ocean
Good benefits Call Oon-na :~3632.
SALES in discount dress
shop. mature, 2 dys wk
Thur & Fri. 645.1665
SALES
lmmed. part time open.
Ing for Reade r Ad
representative for inside
, sales position, Gd. com-
pany benefits. Apply in
person: Pennysaver,
1660 Plai:entia Ave ..
C.M Mon-Fri., 1-5PM
Saleslady, experieni:ed.
full time or P /1'. High
pay 548-1007 1803
Weatcurr Dr. NB.
25 hrs/wk On·Fri, typ-
1n g. gen ofc , exper
Mature. CdM 644-0745
Mon·f'ri
Secretary
interview . contact · ing r or p i t exp'd Exper'd .. with current ----membership 6448036.
S h a r on R a s i n s . groomer-can lead to f ft OMV Report, for Irv me USED lllCES 6' couch :dnt cond SlOO. 10am·5pm wkdays. 714-641-1616.EOEM/F work, profit s h aring furniture mfr 17672 woodbarw/J stools SIOO --
499--5378 Armstrong. Irvine. 642_-2173 840.5874 Beaut mahog 31., .. !!late
SECIETAIY
to hotel reser vations.
50wpm typing, riling &
phone exper. 80wpm
shorthand & will train on
reservations. S900 mo.
Send resume to : #703,
Daily Pilot. P.O Box
1560, Costa Mesa, Ca
92626
540.8894 Women's bicyi:le. xlnt ---pool tabl e L eat h STAT10HERY ----t:ond SIOO/bst ofr Need Old dresser with claw pockets. Must ~ee S800.
------
Slorein Cd M needs sales TYPESETTER to sell. 752.7511 d ys, reel. SJ:.>. burret. sliding 646-ml.645·7848 person (/time, 5 days. With pas t e up ex glass doors. Sl30, old
X Int working conds. perience. Positions open 751·1<175 eves __ plow. $30, canning jars,
EsJ)f'Cially rine cUentt!le in Qista Mesa & Dana luHclRc) Mahrial11025 lots. S15. 545·5'402 aner
phone 644·7482for appl. P t . The Compos in~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6pm Room. 979-35'41 __:. _ ---STOCK Clerk part time -- -REDWOOD 2 I 6 '1
for marine hardware TYPIST S4S.Xlnt decking lOK'
Camper shell, 6'-"1' long,
5' wide, 2'7' hi~h. $75
P hilco refrai:. S300
548-0130.
ENTRY LEVEL
H untingto n B c h
Insurance Co. seeks a
take charge individual
w /gd secretarial skills &
le lerhone voice. The idea i:andidate will be
one who enjoys a quiet
working atmosphere. &
working a lone. Appli-1~~~~~~~~~~1
cants must type at least
55 /wpm Salary t:om -
mensurate with skills &
store Call : Balboa For dynamic invest In from mill 55•1rt
M "'"9671 E o E m e n t ri r m . u p t 0 6 45 · 9 l 3 7 e x t I 1 2 7 anne. ,,.~ · · an"'ime M/F/H Sl 200 /mo. to sta rt :,.
MOVING SALE. Beds.
dinette. desk. t ables,
lamps. chairs, book
cases Misc. 751·8328
Wedd in~s O ff ' fr
Bullocks vault. mus t
sell. never work Cana
d ian Red Fox . Cu II
lenJ(lh, lar~e collar,
med size Appraised at
S8500. S5500 or or r 968-6042 A M's
experieni:e.
We orrer competitive
s alaries & an Xlnt
benefits package. For
appt call C h a r les
Palomino in Orange.
1714) 937-4446
THE Tl.A VEUIS
Equal Oppor employer
M/F/H
inS:-e~~i~e ·s
most luxu rious ex
ecutive office suites
Sec/Rec for diversified
proles.sional people. Co.
benefits. Good typing
s k il l s Outgoing
personality a mlBl Call
731-18118
Security officer , P IT.
wkends for lrg apt. com
plex in N.B. SJ.SO/hr
For info contact J im
Lupis at 644-1900.
STOCKROOM
ASST. TRAINEE
Pull electronic parts &
fill le-its for production in
sm .. rrlendly nnn over-
looking ocean Work in
t:lean, quiet environ·
ment. Llte lifting & at-
tentioo to detail needed.
S650 per mo. to start. r1ise:.>days . 64S-J693
Secretary needed for1 .................... I
busy Newport Bch law
orri ce. Speed & skills a
must. Legal exper. not
required. Conta c t
Security
STUDENTS PART TIME
tr sales & mgmt with
high i:ommissions &
si:holarsh ip benefits
sound good. call aft.
4PM. 833-1974
Dolores. 644-9450
Secretary /Typist, p rr. 4
hrs pr day. HB nr
Beach I Adams. 963·0!516
Sec r etary . Bu sy
Secretarial svce. needs
competent secretary .
Fast. accur ate t ypist.
9S7-9331.
TI.14Aoa lay Ch:lt
Is ROW hirincJ:
~G..-d
Tues .. Thurs .. Fri .
12PM-8AM. Sat. 5PM·
lAM. Must have own
transportation .
telephone, CPR training
&someexper. pref'd.
Please call for appt
6 45-73S8 Mon· F ri ,
8:JG.5PM
SUIDtYISION
~IHllRS&
DESIGHHS
Secretary. Fashion Is I ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
Good typing & record
keeping s kills impor·
tant. P/J'or FIT Salary
DRAFTWBSOM
Ca r eer o ppo rtuni ty
avail. for talented & ex·
per'd. individual with
well established & grow·
ing Civil Engineering
rirm nr. O.C. Airport.
Apply in person with re·
sume t.o: Mr. Fuentes at
Robert Bein. William
Frost & Associates. 1401
Quail St.. Newport
Beach open. 545-ISSS.
SECRETARY
Need xlnt. telephone
voice & manners for
Huntington Beach or-
Oce. Work includes
set:retarial. billing. &
some Insurance work.
Xlnt. benefits . Respond
with resume & salary re·
quirements to: ad no.
793, Dally Pilot. P .O.
Box 111560. Costa Mesa.
Ca. 92626.
SEC'YP/T Typing, s/h & general or.
rice duties. Flex hrs. nr
John Wayne Airpart call
Barbara 556-3838 ---------Have something to sell ?
Classired Ads 642-5018 Classified ads do 1t well.
.•••••• Daily Pilat
I Special Feabns :
: Editor .:
• Immediate opening In our Marketing .
Out s tandin g J(rowth
potential for bright in
dividual. Collins Assoc .
501 San Nit:olas, N. B
Typist
Varied office duties mr l
support for President or
leading stereo manurac
turer in Irvine area
Type 50wpm rrom
transc riber Goo d
secretarial exposure &
~rowth opportunity
1714 )556-6193.
TYPIST
Part lime. 2-3 days per
wk. Vacation relier. Ap·
ply al: 1660 Plat:t'nt ia.
Costa Mesa
D04J1 1040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
KEFSHOND Pups AKC.
Champ SU"e. M /F. Pet &
s how . Pvt pt y
_ 213 /697-1345 at\ 6 pm ,
German Shepherd 1n
telligent pups , 6/wks.
AKC. white. Sl 75
968-0331
Golden Retnever pups,
AKC. It golden. champ
lines See Dame & sire
Set or trundle beds.
romplete S50
536-3645
Chair. upholstered in An·
tique gold velvet. 6 mo
old. like new S125. 2137
Mi ramar. Balboa
Penin~ula 613-6456
8055 •••••••••••••••••••••••
New purses SIO /ea .,
Drafting Tbl S50 . old
dining rm t:hrs (6l S150.
Oriental rug Sl75 1488 979.7:112. eves -Dorothea Place, La
Habra 1213> 691-3185 AKC Gold Ret pups. see
parents. rem. S250. male ------
S200. 831·5389 MOVING SALE ·
• W asher /Drver .
YELLOW Lab/Golden 1--.. -.. -..... -Rel. pups. S20. Call btwn Typists
Refrigerator. Beds.
Chrs, other misc items .
2542 Santa Ana Ave. CM
631-718> all week long. Typists 50WPM
Dicta Sec'ys
Exec Sec'ys
Ch• !flrt9 CWHr7 Loold!-J for 0
Chai 11..jl:.g
Opp IW fwity7
Use temporary jobs as
your shopping tool We
have long & short term
jobs available in the
O.C. Airport area. Week
ly paychecks. quarterly
bonus trips. Never a fee
Ca ll for appt. today:
557-0045
CJ\-Llr\:.
1£MPOflARV PUISONNh SUMCES
3723 l lrch Sfrfft
I & 5PM. 556-3610. ext.
281. ask for J im
10 mo. AKC reg. Cocker
Spaniel. all shots. Sl75.
552·5266 Thurs o r
831-7102 Fri
1045 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Free t o you
Chow /Shepherd Pup-
pies.
Free Lovable Dalmatian
mix 8mo. 631·3813 or
613-6833 ask for Richard
Ugliest dog in the world
free to you., M.ale
615-1727
---------
Household sale; 22 c u·
Amana refrigerator-
rreezer. dillhwshr. lawn
care items. baby items.
etc Fri. 3/20 6962 Paula
Circle H.B. 848-6094
MOVING SALE
Lot.' or goodies. Fri-Sat·
Sun. 22Q30thSt, NB.
HTATISALE
Sunday 3/22. 8-5pm
Hammond Organ w /2
s pkrs. S2000/0BO. Stor y-
C I a rk Spinet piano.
SlOOO. Dining table. 6
chairs & burret, S295.
Washer. SlOO. Magnavox
1050 console radio. $50. Color
TV. 125. Black & white ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV, SlO. C hes t or
**I BUY ** Good used Furniture &
Appliances-OR I will sell or SEU..for You
Sora bed S175 Bed $75
Honda 50 S350/ofrer
645-7879
' New dinette & V berth
i:ush10ns. for 32' Luhrs.
tweed earthlone Never
used. 546-2341 .645·2905
COOKWARE
20 pi: Waterless Set I W K>90. ~7 5675
7pc Ludwig drums S450. 4
mag rims w /tires $45.
desks·mirrors 893-6909
Lo•• lalloofts Helium Bouquets de
livered . Perfel't for
every occasion. 673·4419
Private Party wishes lo
sell beautiful natural
Russian Sable full
length coat. At:tual
value up to $2.5,000 will
sacrifice for Sl2,500 only
if genuinely intt'rested
call 640-2816
Hydr. pallet Jruc k. 8
pallets . SISO 1760
Monrovia, A·J, C M
548-3414
Taylor· Dunn golr ca rt,
n e w controller. bat
teries, S9S0/0BO 1760
Monrovia, A.a. C M
548-3414
GAS KILN. 2tt r u ft..
WEST COAST . very
good cond. w J,shelvmg,
$2400. See at :m F.. 19th,
A-3, C.M. 642-7726
Services De partment ror a Special SECIETAIY • Features Editor. Candidate must have a • ... ~~h MASTBS AUCTIOM
64'-8616, lll-9625
d r awers . S25 & up.
Chairs, SS up. Lamps SS
up. Dbl bed. SSO. Ma t-
tresses, SS up. Coffee ta·
bl e, SSO . Sewing
machine, ~. Refrtg,
S35. Many other items
Mtsc ...... II Wmhd 1011
9040 ......•................
LIVE Aboard boat 1n
Live.aboard s lip 40'
Owens ready lo move
onlo NB 642·4644
18' Electric Durrield boat,
like new. yellow & blue
Must sell S8500 673-6111.
631·7777
'60 Hunter Tri cabin. 44 ·.
j ust hauled & painted,
new canvas, everythini:
but radar 631·4221 dys.
675-11766 eves
19' Deep v 10 Lots or
Xtras. Very clean J eff
963-8412 aft 6
26' Cabint:ruiser rbll eni:.
VHF, full canvas in aft
area. many xtras $4500
1213)343 947R . f805 >
4116.8319
26 ' Chriscr aft C abin
C:ruL~er. xlnt cond. SS500
846-7522
·79 2.16' Penn Yan. 200 hp
turbo dies el . full v
equipped. immat:. cond
Barl(ain prit:ed. Pvt p<ir
ty. TIS-7125. 673-3729
Will trade Bi~ Bear Lak<'
or ocnfronl Mobil e
Home or trlrs for -.port
fis hing boat·3!_' 499-3816
Glassply 17' I 10 120 hp
Mere. V hull w/trailer
Very c lean S2900.
546-1330 or 645-0775
PACIRCA44
..JJQUIDATIOM
'79 must be sold. 250 hrs.
Also 41' avail. under dis-
tress condit aon
D.¥kl fnlMt" l:te.
714/673-5252
BAYLINER
1973, 27 Feet
Twilt t 30 Vof•o's
Ftylridl)e
Cablll wlttl iofffd
& G9hy. Sltept 6. o..t,...,..
P /T afternoons good • Colle1e Dearee, wr iting It editing .
s k i 11 • • t y p i n g It • expertlle, and some experience preferred .•
shorthand call for an Cballen1ln1 poalUon with IJ"OWt.h ~nUal.
appt. 644-4492 e Excellent frln1e beneflta. Send resume to: •
2339 Rutgers Dr, C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST SELL l2' Cltm made i:ouch, 11' 979-8'T76. Wanted : Display space ~ofa table Inlaid Tapa ---------for hand carved de-
shell, 11' cstm made cor-Jewtfry 1070 corator bird decoys. 30~ SI J,500 Find what you want iri • Dally Pilot", P.O. Box 15«1, Cotta Meta, Ca .• feetable, m1Btseetoap-••••••••••••••••••••••• com . paid. Bruce ar ..... offer Dally Pilot Clauiliedl. • 9211126. Alt.n : Personnel. •
~ ... ;;;;;~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii~:l e Editor's •
s.•ea : Secretary :
W ....... /Waltnt1
Apply blwn 9AM II
12PM. CharUe's Ch ili.
3001 Redhill, BldJC. 1'2.
Ste. t226. CM. 92626
Wan~ed-Handyman (re-
tired /semi-retired) for
apt. maintenani:e In ex·
change for rent-free sgl.
furn. apt. 642·8670
preclat.e. 760-8239 Heavy 14KO Heart Shape C714)54S-7876. Pricecanntl•I•
Pill box w/2 Rubles M..ac..I ,._::.!:"fr Medit. Bdrm set. 6 pcs
!no bed) $200. Tradl·
tional Dlnlng Rm set, 6
chain, 2 leaves, solid
wood. beaut. fin ish '250.
Corner Bdrm group
$150. S&S-9223
$3SO/OBO -..........-759.1643 hut: , .. , 1 013 '75-Ut ---------······················· ---------HERE'S A GEM • A chaUen11ln1 opportunity is beln1 orrer-ed • by the Daily Pilot for someone with the
• intelll1ence. wit and sldll1 requ.lred to be • Me: di• ilM
2 lfdies cocktail rings. < l)
14KT , I delux e
diamonds. ~ ct. total
we ight. C2 ) 14KT, 9
brllUant cut diamonds,
\4 ct. total weJ1ht. Ap.
CONN Dlrector1trombone READY FOi ASHING
with case. t:xcellenl Trojan 25 ' Express
condition. 1100 67S-8052 Cruiser, fully equipped,
after8PM. r1tho, live bait tank.
Slavick's Jewelers· has an opening
for a Jewelry Salesperson to work
closely with customers in selecting
fine jewelry and custom designs.
The Job requires a high degree of responsibiUty and go00 knowledge
of jewelry merchancliae. Excellent
Company Benefit Package.
CONTACT Ml. McDmMOrT
17141644-IJIO
SLA.VICK'S
Fine Jeweferw Since 1917
I .I
--.,... ....
• secretary to the editor. ft'• an interat.1n1 • •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• poslUon ~ulrin1 the tools or the trade -• ........ 1005 Dlninl Rm Tbl + 4
• 10 wpm dictation, 70 wpm typlnf, • •• ••••••••••••••••••• Canebai:k chrs S200, An· • dlctaphone -and the ability lo shin • • tlque Green Striped Chr
• mental 1ean on short notice. The benetltt • W AMTID TO IUY .io. Spanish Dresser-2
are generoU1, the pay reuonable I bu 1 o Id I u n • • tbla SlOO, Coffee Tbl + 2
• Applications beln1 accepted only throu1h • dlunondl, Ivory. Jade " end 1blt 1225 Xlnt Cond. • appointment by catun1 642·4321. ext. e colledlbles. Cail ('114) tM-cms
8 STRING ACOUSTIC
GUITAR pru. by Joe~pha. P.O. 1225 875-1171 Boa 8403 N . B. 92660 ,
_846-__ ao&s ______ Want Ad Resullf 642·S6'78
O/R, VHF, & much
more. Less than 200 hrs.
8GPH at 20 knots. 3 boat
owner. Sacrifice llS,000.
~~40-1633, Eves
• 277. • ~lsasklorDane. --------cam a Couch • Love Seat '300, • er • tno Olippendale dining Gius top din. rm \able You CID ...... a room Ht. Table It 6 11': • Operator • chains. Server , china. wllh6chalrwD00.1Sofa WINNER
i I l I
• • tS3-08 Bed *300. C•ll 913-25IO
• Experienced at leall 5 years, Mull be • ....:..:;..:.....;..~------_•_ft_e ______ _
able to UH ne\u paper camera and • Baby Grand Plano, Burt Ro c It er, 1 w Ive I , Just by le~dlDI US your Dame and
• platemaldn1 1ystem1. Excellent wa1es walnut. Fr Dread•~· UpllOiltettd tn antique address and by watching for your e and beoeflll. Apply In peraon w/Nawme e Ger. P /P 548·820 · sold velvet' •125.· s
• to Oran1e Cout Dilly Piiot. • 112.ooet mOllth'a old, Uh nt•. Dame In the Classl0ed ldl of the 1 • oii. C...t • Telliftt the mast people 2117 Mlramar, Balbo• Dally Pl.lo&. : . : .
'
,.., • .....,.. 11 lmpocWit to Pen.1mu1an~ w~ =ta to th~lrc\11, •rJ• •mui•ment • • : : , .. •. 380 . ar· Street • ti•• 1uec:ea1 _l!_r_J a a1 ........... _,_ 0 .... ~ C•tm •w• _..or t&>Ort event.a. JUBt n I out lhla : : : :
Cotta ...... CA ,.,.... .......... aun r,;.~im ;;, Dbl· fOUPOD -INAJ It ay '°the: 1,· z; i·· ei I
•. EqualOpportunlty,Emplo)w .• t1:!!1U.J~'',',';!: ~-;.i,..~.:,:i.·~.::! t1llialfted Departmetll, ~ PllO& i ~·~·~··~~·. ~ .~ ~-~-=·~i~-~·~~~~~~~·=·=~~~='~"=t~1 C~·~:~~~·~~~A~-~·~~~~~
~
I
i
..... ....................... . ..................... .
l&l'iebill 17, uothu. dal, ........... .
....... 0300•
tri~ ••. '1S loaded.
<811..Al
$10,500
DllECT!
IMCH IMPOITS
•Dov.Stnet N'!WPoRT BEACH
•11 nozx "1+2. sapd.
1raD11 ct.lllU. t tone.
21K ml, -m . ._ •v•
?J240Z
Mint.Ma.m.1518 BriMdeond. Offer, R.E .
or tum• 80·'7903 , .....,, ·-~-~--~~-~
., ...... __ ._.
~-~ .......... ··~ ............ -, ___ J_l_J..ot __ oo ___ , '14 Datsun 2tOZ 1llver
"D 9pJdtr: Pelf eel eond. oria owner RIV A /C elm
THtOOORf
ROBINS lt1I VW CAlavert. Cb&m·
pafM Edlt. 1,000 mi.
Michelin tlre1, chrome
wheela, AM ,,... CHa.
17850. Call Dean,
875-.eooo
New top, low mUe1. P.f. 'T14·S5l-4774 AL LEN FOWO
• ' ti" WI' I •I I l , (J N...,rt lkb moortna.
w/32ftyawl. 1955
115,000. 6"·9806
'IJ Ram61er-All or
H\hloc tzzs. Or. ll
home. Apt 820I 425 M~r·
rimacC.11.
_. , , ,:, GML ·u~HL (. ()' 1 A M t •, #\ ( I ~ I I' '11 I ~ ~--'9'5.._500_.;.;.•.;.;.•~-;;;.;;..---1 .... t121
~ a:n• AINI f 707 ·-••••••••••••••••••••• , ____ ...;.;....-'----••••••• .. •••••••••••••• '174 Fiat X19, am lfm '7& 911S. S1pd, ma11. O'da)' 12. x1nt cond, with
trailer, MOO.
5'1-4288.
CHEAP!!
Sllahtly ued turbo kit 1977 Doocal
"f0."14 Dibun Z can ~ .. VAH
FIJCer u pper older •5837 Automatic lrans .. pwr.
saUboatw/sUp. Newport 1---------.-1 el., AM/fM lape, rull
Beach. 751-8967 Great deal. Scl~co alloy proresslonal Int. inc.
wheeb. Used l yr aoe> icebox, wide wheels &
25' C-Clasa Catamaran bstoffer.164-1318 really cute! (1J88453).
with trailer. Lst 1975. Limited offer (up to 2
&:D-7381dys. A .... fwS. Yrs.) service contract on molt late model used
••••••••••••••••••••••• cars backed by major '81 model 22' Wlndro1e.
w /trlr. Sacrirlce Call
Don or Earl bel. 8·4
wk"d_ys. SM-6132
t070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
26' Sailboat. sound &
seaworthy. 56' mooring,
NB 116,000. 675-7138
eves.
Slips available, Newport
Beach. 25 '·35'. Avail
now. 642-4644.
NEED end tie ror 25'
Trimaran w /18' beam
Call: 548-6432 or 552· 1660
art5PM
55' SUP. Balboa Marine
#~.Avail now lil June
l. Call btwn 9·5. 644-9730
30' dock, power boat or
Taberncale Mast No
overnighte rs $160/mo
752·2!184.
A'M'N: PVT DOCK
OWNERS-NWPT BAY
Beautirul 30' sailboat
needs slip in Newport
Bay. Business exec &
wife are sole owners No
kids, nodogs 964-2080
Tr..., ortafioft ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9110
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1969 Betlch Musketeer,
midtime. 15p Lycoming
eng, 2 Comm -n av 's
transponder 840-41 09
eves/wknds.
9120 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 COLEM AN TENT
TRLR. Sleeps 6 <Used 4
Times l Stove. Sink. Ex·
tra Canva s
( 714 )99.5-8989
Parkway 101n' cab-0ver.
good cond. w lltft Jacks
Set! at 365 E 19th. C M
642.7726
IMPORTANT · N011CETO uu.co.
READERS AND -~i]irt ADVERnSERS .-
The price or items USID S
advertised by vehic le 1425 Baker Street
dealers ln the vehicle COSTA MESA
classlrled advertising 545-3334
columns does nol in· 1-------
'61 Corvalr Van, runs
good, needs paint. Sl200.
494-0648.
clude any applicable
taxes. u~nse. transfer
rees, finance charges.
fees ror air pollution con-
trol device certlrications '77 Chevy Beauville. lo
or dealer documentary mtg, loaded, Xlnt Cond.
preparation c harges Un· Best orrer 494.4000
less otherwise s pecified .. ---
by the advertiser. A.to L.eatilMj 9510 ---...................... .
AnC~c/s '81 Mercedff Ina _ _. 9520 Best lease price around
••••••••••••••••••• •••• Bro«er 963-0221
'46 Ford W oodie ,
restored. $13.000. ALSO Autos W..ted 9590
'29 Model A Town Sedan, •••••••••••••••••••••••
4 dr. restored. Ideal for WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
s tudent Sl0 .000 for lop used c ars ·
675·6161 foreign, domestics or
---classics If your car is
Mustang '65 Conv p is. extra clean. see us
disc brks. pwr top. auto. FIRST'
pony intr 289 4.v eng. ~ s traight body. xlnt
mech. wire whl cvrs. k tonneau, boot Orig pvt
ply (714 1968 2042
1963 Volvo Sedan. good
eng, body needs some
repair $1100 Owner
548 7249
'48 Lmcon Cont Mark I.
Cpe SS7SO Olds Engine
< 192'J'PL) 661·6210
'28 FORD Model 'A'
Rumble Seal, fine car,
best offer 640-8526
'79SEVILLE
new. loaded.
631·2244 or 966-1055
'64 Thunderbird con.vert ..
68.400 ori2. mt . swing·
a wav steering whl. auto
-;pd rontrol. A C. full
power. Kelsey Hayes T ·
bard wire whls, Sl2,000.
D ys 752-2552, eves
955·3263 Mr Phillips. ----
#I 111 Or_,. C._ty
2925 Ha rbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
979-2500
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
COMHELL
CHEVROLET
2K!l< 11 • .rhor fll, d
I I is·J \ \! t S \
546-1200
HIGHIUYER Top dollars for Sports
Cars, Bugs. Campers.
914's, Audi's
Motoriled l illff 9140 2 Corva1r Pickup Trucks.
••••••••••••••••••••••• w /side ramp, s pare eng
Ask for U IC MGR
JIMMARIHO
VOUCSWAGEH
18711 Beac h Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEAC H
842-2000 ----
TOPDOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAM
USED CARS!
Peugeot 103 S2500all 548·9617
OJOor best offe r
Call Debbie 536· 169'2 Rec reaffoftal
Vehict.s 9530 •••••••••••••••••••••••
9150 '78 Ood.ie RV Van. Self·
••••••••••••••••••••••• contained Xtras. low
H.D. '78"'1 Low rider. miles 842·5241
black w/extras . Runs
great. $4 .000 080.
Charles. 960-3192
miracle
mazda
'78 5000, loaded, lo ml, no aten!IOcaas, $2.$00/0BO stereo cua, sntf. sliver,
down & I ea a e . ~ immac. $12,950. p'p,
1231.74/mo. 673-6510 H-.. t7JJ 640-19'8eves/wkends.
IMW t7 I l :••••••••••• .. ••••••••• '&4 Porsthe, superb cond, ••••••••••••••••••••••• VISIT YOUI no rustl sio.ooo. sss.1966 Bu~0& "r;!:'~eal OIAMctl COA'.ST dys OC' 544-8822 eves.
In Orange County... HOMD A '77 911.S Porsche. black on
Come See Us Today!. black. lthr seats, elec HIADqUAITHS window. anrf, telephone,
TOD A Y! ! ! ·~~4~s!sl~~ a d e d
SAOOUIAC«
IMW
28402 Marfuerite Pkwy
Mis11on Viejo
Avery Pkwy. exit (5
Fwy.) u 1·2040 4tS.4t4t
Closed Sundays
CREVIER
&I SI 6 llOAOWAY
SAHIA AHA
835·3171
!HE UlTIMATt ORtVt"O MACHI"[
•UHDIMW1•
'762W!S/R (4268)
'765.:lliAS/R (2419>
'77 6.30 csi auto (0040 )
'79 J20i 17560)
UMIVRSITY
SALE>• SERVICE
OLDSMOllLI
HONDA
GMCftUCICS
2850Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
540.9640
'73 Honda Civic. 4Spd.
xlnt running cond. $1950.
842·9946 after 6pm
848-7276.
'76 Cvcc 8SK m Is.
13400. Good Cond.
644-9904
''79 Prelude, loaded.
am /fm stereo, eler snrf,
a le, lo mi. re~ ~as
Mint. B e s t o ff er
(714 1559-7056.
'80 S28iA sunrf 11625 > Jaguar 9710 c:lot.eds...days •••••••••••••••••••••••
----•;;7 Jaguar 3.8 MK llS all
Sri*Mack IMW I or ig very well main· Used Cor tained Must Sacrifice
.ct 840-~70
DeMO Sale!!! '69 J a~uar XKE 2+2, gd
All CARS cond. $7000.
631·5189
0...tlcally Kanncnt Ghia 9734
ll~ecl!! •••••••••••••••••••••••
Thlt Fri. Sat. 73 COMYERTllLE KARM.AMM GHIA ONLY!!! Hard lo find model 4
Come ift Today! speed trans .. AM tFM
And S.A YE!!! cassette & this one Is ex lra sha11>! C820XKA > 28402 Mar9uri t• OHLY $4995
Pllwy. IAKER STREET
Mission Viejo USED CARS
13 l ·2040 1425 Baker Street
Closed Sundays <;OSTA MESA
545-3334 TM Most bcltilHJ
Part Of Yow
IMWhrchoMOr
LAas. CCMlld h
Md.antllMW!!
lllyOrlHH ly°'1r',._., ... ,
(7 I 4J 522-5333
ORAMGE COUMTY'S
OLDEST
Sales-Serv1re-Leas1ng
Roy CarYer,lnc.
'67 GHIA ctn. new pnt, 1
owner S2. 795 /offe r
770..<li21
9740
•••••••••••••••••••••••
SELLING YOUR MB?
WE PAY
TOP DOU.Al SS
Call Jack Bacon
JIMSLEMOMS
IMPORTS
1!170 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
631-1276 833-9300
'&s Porsche 912, xlnl
cond, reblt eni. new
paint. beautirul classic
w /many xtras. $4,900/
best orr 559-8664 or
559-8963
'70 911S Coupe. beaut blk
w /new tires & a lloy
rims. 20k mi on rblt eng.
new trans/clutch, this Is
a h s l ca r & runs
beautirully. S9500 ask ror
Nick 497· 1357 or 951 ·0200
'72 914. clean, rblt eng,
cover, am/fm cass. bra.
man y xtras S4200
645-6418
'75 914 Porsche 2 o
S pe cia l whl s, C B.
AM /PM cass & radar.
M us l see 646 3037.
645-7848
'66 911 Porsche Classic.
Newly painted, rebuilt
engine. SS,000 or best of
rer. Days : 768-0150,
Eves: 951 1008. -----.!
'73 914 Porsche Mags.
FM cass. good cond
$3700, 675-7067 -----1
Rois Roye:.. 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •t DEA LER IN U:S A-· ...
ROY -..
CARVER ~ ROLLS·ROYCE
IMOJatmborH ..... .,...., .... ,,,
~ ' CLOSlO SUNDAYS,
Saab t760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 SAAi TURIO.
IEACH IM,OITS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
ORANGE COUMTY
Sill
BUY or LEASF.
DIRECT
OVERSEAS
DELIVERIES
Rolls k oyce BMW
l540 Jamboree
Newport Beach 640..6444 -------
'72 BMW 2002. 4spd, looks
•*:~~:_ l!J!J
'79 300SD. lik e new.
7 tYW8"
Super clean, 'T pe.r .. 4
speed. Ori1tnal brown • beige. (1871022)
""' JIMMAltKO
VOUSWA ...
t.8711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
7tYWRAllrT
Custom 2 door 4 speed,
low mllea, ract. air. It's
squeaky clean. (832
XIH)
$4tt5
JIMMiltMO
VOUSWA•BI
18'711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
7tYWIAllrT
Dynamite low mileage,
c u s tom 2 d oo r ,
automatic, air, original
s ha11> car. (792507 )
$4tt5
JIMMARIHO
VOUSWAGEH
18'711 Beach Blvd.
842-2000
'79 VW Rabbit 'L' Blue
auto. a /c. amtrm, new
tires, best offer Ken
Donahue 979-4200
'66 Bug. Good condition.
radio. new clutch /plate
$1500 /0BO 675-51~ must
sell -----
'66 VW Bug Beige good
cond Sl.800631-4836 days,
642-8019 eves
'78 VW VAN Blaupunkt
a mtrm 8trk, Unled win·
dows. xlnt cond must
sell S5990951·7982
• • '73 VW Beetle xlnt in &
out, new pnt, stereo.
radials. runs like new
$2750 pp 846-4395
'78 VW Rabbit "L "
Deluxe , s nrf. 4 dr.
AM /PM /Cass. A IC. Xlnt
cond. SSOOO or make ofr
675-11994
'70 VW Bug, factory s nrl,
lots of xtras, call eves:
7~1128.
'78 VW Con vl. a /c ,
am/fm cass. all chrome,
car cvr. bra. xtras' 9K
mi. 191008»8910
'79 VW BUS A/C. stereo
cass. tinted windows.
xlnt cond. 551·9331 eves
'68 Bug. auto.S950
49'2·0610, after 6pm
496-6508
'72 VW convert .. nu
motor. AM /FM cass ..
needs some body work
Asking $2750. 645·2297 -
H.D. '61 Sportster cust ..
Corva1r 110 Dune Bu.i~y
Rail big tires. s po ke
rims. steering brakes.
mu.'lt see lo appreriale
SlSOO. 631 2239
2150 H&llw ll•cl great. 13400
Cott. Mesa 645-5700 494·•475.
6000mi, slvr /blk, snrr. '0 1 :?O Garden Grove Bl
$29,000. 955-2699 Garderi Grnvf' 530·9190
'79 VW Westralia Camper
Poptop. xlnl cond. lo
mileage, s ips S. refrig.
sink. stereo tape deck. Weber ca rb. M UST
SELL. Dennis. 96().3192
'78 KZI 000 LTD
W /Xlras. Black & Red
XlntCond. 7300 miles
$3400. After SP M
(714)586-2766
'75 XR75 Bassani ex-
ha~t. mudder renders.
plastic endoro tank. runs
strong, good cond. $295
559-6901 Charlie. 644-1805
'80 650 Special with far·
ing. as is S900 after Spm
Chris 642-9768
'77 Kawasaki KD100-M3.
$390. Xlnt cond. New
lire, orig fin. Starts fast.
Not loud. 548-6859
'771~ Maico 250. hardly
ridden, fast. S700 /0BO
968-7978
'79 Suzuki RM125. neve r
raced. like new, best of-
rer. 831-6876 an. 5.
'78 Kawasaki KZ S R 650,
like nu. 4000 mi. S1600
Finn. Eves 64C>-4959
9550
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 Chevy Luv 4X4
w /shell. fact. air. fact
AM r adio . alarm
system. radar detector.
$6700 /0BO. 631-6306
eves
-'78 320i. blk, BBS whls.
WANTED!
Late model Toyolas and
Volvos . C all u s
ODAY!!!
Alpina suspension. perf
cond s12 .soo10 BO
645·2281or497.43113
Dahm 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1910DATSUM
Tnds 9560 t---,~ .. ~6;;;,H.;.;lerti-._.;..-..,,;..&;;,..-f 200SX UFTIACK
5 speed trans .. AM /FM
stereo cass. & only 6,700
miles! <'72ZUEl. Limit·
ed ofrer <up to 2 Yrs.>
service contract on most
late model used cars
backed by major ins. co.
··········~············ Speclol
'wchaM!!
LowMMMge!
1910 4 spd. .d 5 spd.
Datt. Pldl up·s r ...... -..
Savlncp!!!
MaMdoWll
• wwwtMr paywMnt•
BARWICK DATSUN
\on Juo" C op"trano
831-3311
'72 ~ton P.U .. xlnt cond.
c ......... .
"" •4'·tl0l er S40·'4'7
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us the opportunit.y
to consider the purchase
or trade-in of your r lean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today!
13631 ~'"°' 8t•cl G••den G•ove •M 131·2"3
OHLY S76tt
IAKllt STREET
USIDCAIS
1425 Baker Street
COSTA MESA
545-3334
T ..-.... 9765 am/fm radio. elec. hook-'69 23> absolutely mint' o,-.... Always garaged 54990 ••••••••••••••••••••••• up, storage rompart·
Gordon 675-9137 '79 Toyota Supra, 24.000 m e n l s . l a b l e ------mi. Ss pd, rully equip. St l.000/0 BO. 631 ·5350
'79 M. IEHZ with snrr. $7200/(irm afterSpm. Bill or Claire.
Showroom new 2400. on· 497-~. __ Vol•;---9772
ly 22.000 miles. still in '78 Celi Liftb k pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• warTanty, 4 speed, air, ca ac . Ss .
s t eering , c rui se . Air, pwr steering & VOLVO
SALIS. SBVICE
ANDLEASIM4
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
EXPERTS
o r iginal ! Like New' brakes. AM /FM /cass.
(12200) 50.000 rrwy miles. Im-
1
,.
SIS,995 mac $4850. 499--4128.
JIM MARINO '69 Corona, 4dr. 1600. nds
VOUCSWAGDI e ng. body perf <nds
18'711 Beach Blvd. pntl. MSO. 642·6099
842-2000 -'75 Toyota pick-up new
'77 450SEL Metallic Blue. e ng-shell, Ila kit-sun·
I owner Sl6,000 751-1641 roofS2900oboS48·1477
arter lOPM
'57 Mercedes 190SL. xlnt
cond. Both lops. S8.900
Must sell. 557 ·0118.
'72 Toyota Corolla, 4spd,
new paint. radial tires.
Xlnt cond. S1650/orfer.
D ys: (714 )645·8706 :
eves: (213)598-3653.
'71 ~EL. ~lk , auto, air,
a lloys, cass .. snrr. PIS, ! 74 Corolla , 54M, orig
P /W, 2nd ownr. S6SOO. owner. AM /FM 4s pd
EAILEIKE
VOLVO
1966 Har bor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
646-9303 540-9467
01.AMGE COUMTY
VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
in Orange County!
BUY or LE.ASE
DIRECT
646-'578 x I n t c o n d . S 2 1 S 0
MG t7 42 C053M FY> pp 552-7409 ~1~•=--~-•[""'~"""-·f,..fJi! ... ~'-'l ... s-•••••••••••••••••• ••••• T,..... t767 ~ • f
S2000/0BO.
Moler "-s. s-. J SG45311.
.... /ShN.,. f 160 w
Top Dollar
Paid
MG Midget '73. Runs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~~~~~~~~~I looks xlnt. Lo mileage. '79 Spitfire xltit cond 17K . -: $2000.5216-216'72. mi, radials. stereo, 10 l20GardenGrove81 .
••••••••••••••••••••••• Je el -'72 Dodge PU . .,,
WI C _. ... SIU Lon, 6 cyl, auto, traction,
,.." yellow. 642-4610 •
YOUIR.V.
559-13CM '68 Ranchero, mint cond,
compl. restored, map,
RENT: 22' lux. mlr 95400.645-4132
home. Sips 6, aelr-cont.
S275/wk. + 8• m I.
&40«lil5.
Buy OC' trade "TO GMC ft4
ton P.U. Good cond. Call
~.
Jc:.M~i8s!OH CHEAP!! U.C• Uerc.,y Slightly uaed turbo tit
2JS2IS Harbor Blvd". "ro-"14 Datsun Z cars
Costa Mesa 540-5630 ___ 7_68-_583'7_. __ _
We,_ '71 BZ 2+2, >rlnt cond, •w Am/I'm caaa. ale, 1ruf. OVER S7450. PP. 840-1948
.. leoll evft/wkenda.
FOC'VourGood
'78 Tio1a Motorhome. '76 Toyota Lonsbed. 5 VW, Poncheor Audl
complete roor air, sasoo ipd. AM /F'M radio, good "
'74 JIOZ, new paint. air,
polished mus. xlnt
Me00/080. 645-8171.
or t.t otter, Al.o296. 1h1pe. $2750. Burl . ~ w.ma. -. 15111
... ...
• ' I \ • I'\ "TO Dataun J)llckup. •~ 1---------Renl motr bm, alps 6, '78 Ford F-100, lo ml, e
self.ronl., nn-amkrs cyl. a m /fm radio, xlnt
::::... P . P . 14 0 d Y . cond. 548-• aft. s.
T---T.....e tlJO '11 4WD Dodie. power, ~ dependable 11875. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 41:1~1
8x24 Arlatrocat , tllle new 1---------1
Sl,800, <KPIMI>. 'T1 Doqe pickup~ ton, 4"-ate 4WD, lllnt cond, t&OOO.
"71-25' Alrstream, 1ood ,_Ul_·'MZI ______ _
cOftd.. 11 .. 2. rum. l5000.
MMADbef.5.
VW·POB.IC'HE·.AUD1 or '-l otfer. CaU aft.
445 E. Coat Rlway SPM: I0-2011.
at Ba11lde Drive Newport Beach '7,_C.00 '72 JC MW pnt/uphol,
71 fC orl1 mt ,
Pnmlampricn Orey /maroon Int ,
paid for a-.1 uttd car 55'1·2'1112 (fontpordomtttlc > 1--_.;_ ____ _
lnJOOdcondttion. . '78 2IOZ 2+2, looks new.
SeeUa '1rstl 1lvr, only 5'JK ml, auto,
•••lll.-.J A/C, nt, '5300. Call aft f :IONt-.ae
.... """ oc...u -Garden Grove 530-9190 ,...,._ t7 41 ................ """" .
••••••••••••••••• •••••• '77 Spitfire new hard top, t I! •SE catm steering whl/atlck '73 1IOO ES: ao.ooo miles.
t..limA sbllU31500/0B0673-5041 Xlnt cond. 16SOO. Call
DIRECTI eves & wknds 556-3961, . v........ t770 dlays 213/648-5562.
, ,. , ,...IOT
TUllO.
,llACHIMPOITS
•Doff9treet
NEWPORT BEACH
712-0900
7'PIUMOT
504 clluel 1u.nroo f ,
automatic •nd Ju.i t like new. Cl.2210)
11ff I
JIMMAllMO
VOLISWA•IM
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
···············~····· .. --"---------'7t YW '72 145 Stat. W1n .. gd
SCllOCCO mecb. 4·apd. 20+ mpr.
Dynamite p latinum Sl745.41f.Slll
Sport Cour., 4 1peed, A ..... UM4 f! r, map 1t.reol only ••••••••••••••••••••••• 01,000mlleeonthla oeau-••••.. ttOI
ty. (!:Z c:i,. . ..................... .
.-.MAllM<> •CAISWAMTm•
VOU(IWA•.. R~O ORNOT
mu Beach Blvd . C~ l~Z-2000 FREE TOWING
I
7'WIDllS&
YOUl ll
CAMl•C: ..,.u ...
OM:Mll COUMTYI
SALDJSDVJCZ
AND a.EASING
0...., ttJI •••••••••••••••••••••••
'f'T Dodi• Cbaraer 3Z5 hp.
3Peu. •Int cond orl1.
l1IOO ID-7218
~~~~~~~~~ '19 Charier. ass cu In en1.
SeVltle Ele1ante 'Sl. xlnt cond. Original.
diesel, every option< 88K SIOOO, 988-2588
ml, •1·1591aft5PM Pont tf 40
'Tl Seville, alnt cond., •••••••••••••••••••••••
loaded. all extras. 1645(). '71 Ford Station Wagon,
Eve• 499.3745, dy1 gdshape,
151-9500 548-5998.
'80 Eldo, bill on blk,
loaded. take over leue.
Ml3/mo. 544-0333
'80 Fairmont Waso n .
A /C, AM /FM stereo,
2 1mpg , 848-1990 .
841-5538. 995.
"15Coupe DeVille. White. 76 Granada Ghia 50 000 Best orrer • ' &5l-90t9 ml, 6 cyl, air. xlnt. Good
mpC. $2,850. 67s-6906
Pr iv ate Party '7 8 , . Cadillac Eldorado Biar· 77 Granada 4dr, nice ml,
rits beautiful Casa Blan-great for real .estate or a
ca Yellow, all extras: family BOK m1. make of-
S7•i5. 640-2816 r _e_r_~_7_G _____ _
c__,, 9tl 1978 Ford Fai rm o nt
•••••••••••••••••••••• Wagon Squire. Ex· cellent condition. clean. '78Camaro
Air, automatic, power
steering, 27,961 miles.
C882VEJ)
$4911
Barwick Imports
131-3311
'70CAMARO
$1800/0BO
759-1130 alt 6PM
air, power steering .
power brakes, all new
Mlchelins . !897UOY )
SJSSO. 559.M9o1. --------
Lincoln 9t45 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'75 Lincoln Continental, '
a ll power. immaculate
cond Call 979. 7079
Mff'C.llr'Y 9950 Ch.Yrolet 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 1971CHEVY
CHE'fti it 4-DR.
Auto. trans .. air cond .
etc Cute ltttle car '
1193UZV).
OHLY $2995
HOWARD Ch.•rolet
Dove & Quail Sts
NEWPORT BEACH
133-0555
197' CHEVROLET
C..vlTTE 4 DI.
4 speed trans . air cond ,
AM /FM stereo cass &
27,000 miles. !364977 )
Limited offer !up to 2
ORANGE COUNTY'S
AM EST
LINCOLN-MERCURY
OEALERSHlP
~?ltatlJ.e L
LINCOLN-MERCURY •
16-18 Auto Center Or.
SD Fwy-Lake Forest
exit JRVINE
830.7000
'78 Marquis wagon, 9
pass load e d . New
M1 chelins. Xlnt cond.
SSOOO Owner. 675-6161
Yrs.) service contract 78 Mercury Zepher Z7, lo
on most late model used mt. PS, PB. auto. vin
~ar.i backed by major top. m>O. 979.5099 PP
ins.co. -
OHL Y $3995 Mushllcj 9952
IAICIEll SftEET ••••••••••••••••••••••• uir-CARS '65 Must. Conv Rare op-__, lions Set! ad under 9520 1425 Ba.ker Street Antiques/Classics.
COSTA MESA ----
545-3334
SH US FIRST!
We have a good selection
or NEW & USED
Chevrolet.s 1
COMMELL .
CHEVROLET
.'\.,. 11..r I• r II ' 1
I I~ I \ \1 ~ :-.. \
546-1200
19 Monza. good cond. air
+ x'tras. Call art 6 or
wknd, 556.()724.
'76MOHU
2+2. 4 cy l , iiood
mileage. a IC:, radio.
tr ansrerrable warranty.
557 ·3527 or 759·0060
1973 4 Or Impala with air
Good c ond O wne r
$1350.
548-7249
'65 Chevy Impala. needs
work. $100 or best orfer
Call Harry 642 7063.
'77 Nova Concourse 4dr,
power. air, S2600.
494·2569.
tUO •••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 Mark V Collector 's
Series . 28.000 actua l
m iles. 1 owner Fully
equipped. Must see to
appreciate. Call Resco ·
842-6679 Glen
CorY.th 9'32 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I t79 CHEVROLET
COIVErTET-TOP
Auto. trans., pwr. steer-ing, lilt, air c ond ..
cruise, AM /FM stereo
tape, Vetle mags &
22,000 miles. (305WXD>.
Limited offer (up to 2
Yrs.) service contract
on most late model used
cars backed by major
lns. co .
OMLY SI l ,ttS
IAIBSftHT
US.CARS
1425 Baker Stteet
COSTA MESA
545-3334
'80 Veu. tit m l. otended
warrant1. aU o ptloaa
Ill.GOO m• ..n ..... 10
'70 Mustang orig own.
evenmgs
960-1874
MUSTANG II
Auto, AIC. lo mi. S2500
or bat ofr 968-1830
9t55 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'64 F-35. l owner, runs
good. S37S or best orrer.
557.2824
'70 Olds 98, guaranteed
transmission & drive
train. Runs well w /all
xtras. St.000 mi. 2112
W a lla ce S t. C .M .
631-4243. 675-1308. ---Pinto 9957 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
*SALE*
1979-1980
PINTOS
• 30.
to choose
from $2895
(817XKS>
ALL-Low Mileage
ALL-Automatic Trans
A LI, Power Steering
ALL-Runabouts. 3 dr.
SOME-Air Conditioning
SOME-Station Wagons
A Ll.,Guaranteed
OIAMGE COAST
TRANSPORT A TIOM
CLOSE TO FREEWA VS
2167 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
Call (714 1631-6"41
tf 60
'80 Horizon 4 dr 4 spd
22,000 mi, high mpg, xlnl
cond. 842-4379 ...... 'tt65 , ..•..•.•.•.•....••.....
1965CWTO
Thls one's in good condi-
tion. 11295.00. Please
call 675-1763 after 6 p.m.
lt7t POMTIAC
SAFARI WA•OM
AutomaUc trans., pwr.
sl., air cond .. roor rack.
radio & only 15,000
n1ll•. C915WZS). Limit-
ed offer (UP to 2 Yl'll.)
senice contract on most
late model uted ca,.,
baclled by major b).a. co .
OMLY•ttl ..-SlUIT
Ul9C:A.IS
1425 aabr Street
can'A llESA
141-H34
1981 GRAND PRIX·'S 1981 FIREBIRDS .
INCLUDING DIESELS &M's X BODY INCLUDING TURBO
CASll SAYINGS DIR•CT PROM GM
INCLUDES:
•AM radio
•Heater
• 4 speed trans
• Tinted glass
• Whitewall tires
• Power steering
• Power disc brakes
• 18.5 gal. fuel capacity
•Tilt wheel
1978 CORVETTE
350 V-8 ~g1ne. factory air, arn'fm atereo tiip9,
automatic, power steering & br-M•. helter, &
much more (401 189).
.59795
1979 OLDS 98
lEGIHCY
V-8, automatic, factory air, amlfm at•eo tape,
white walls. full power. vinyl roof & more.
(519WZE).
~995
HURRY WHILE SELECTION IS GOOD ........ ..,... ..._ ......
NEW 1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
5995 OR HWN AND
1978 BUICK
SKYHAWI A&Jtometi~. v~ engine. radio with i.pe, power
lteenng, air condittonlrlQ (408668)
53495
1979 BUICK
UGAL UMl1B>
Automatic, air conditioning, Power wlndowt. vinyl
tap, crui ... tilt & more (937 XMN)
56395
1978 HONDA cvcc
4 cylinder. 5 speed trantmielion. amlfm stereo
i.pe. (768URX).
53695
(
4 Cyt.
4 Speed
UM"'""~ 10< ._,..,..
YOllf m1ieego ,.,,., ...., ~"'9
.... "'""" ~ mp '-9'• .,,., ... ,,.,., -Act..., "'9,..., ...... _ ... ~be-
IMPALA
Automatic, power windows, vinyl top. ai r
conditioning. tilt. cruise & more (049Xl\AM).
55395
1979 OLDS clnUss
Power ateerinQ, Power windows. air oonditioniriQ, P9dded top, rally wheel•. tilt & more. (174WRB).
56195
..
•
· ) s more wom.;!n take over
roles as head of the hoµsehold, they
find an increaSing need to provide
their families with adequate 1
~ecurity and financial protectio~.
~ee story on page 2. ·
Prolific novelist Barb~ra G.artland
expresses tier ... views o~ w)iat it is to
be a successful woman -love and
affection from family . See story on
page 4. '
I
Women concerned with putting their
best face forward receive tips from
specialist --stay away from sun and
moisturize . See story on page 22 ,
. .
-
2 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAIL y PILOT, Mar. 19. 1981
He ads of households
New responsibilities for women include f omily security
By SHERREE TRUITf
Pfl'IK-tt.lff writer
Never before have so many
women bee n burde ned with the
responsibilities. concerns, worries.
decisions and obligations that face
the head or a household.
But. as more and more women
find themselves becoming heads or
households a 50 percent increase
since 1970 their ne w-found
economic and pe r sona l status
forces them into a n expanding
con cern for the protection of
families , including providing
insur ance coverage.
FOR TWO -THI RDS OF all
American househo lds, however.
buying through the mail may be the
only means or contact offered them
to obtain insurance protection.
And. so many Americans are
taking advantage of this means or
buying the ir ins urance that a n
estimated $2.75 billion in premiums
were paid in 1978 for all kin~ of in·
surance bought through the mail.
Many policies that can be bought
by m ail are specifically designed
to supplement other cover ages.
And . with costs rising all the
time, most people can use extra
protection so that they don't have to
e m ply their pockets lo pay for
things their ex isting insurance
doesn't cover.
M illions don 't have group
insurance and miJlions more either
can 't afford or can't qualify for
other private insurance plans.
Women's spirit of accomplishment
saluted in special magazine
Women on the Orange Coast face
myriad challenges, which most tum
into opportunities for success.
The Daily Pilot salutes this spirit
of accomplishment with "I Am
Woman," a special magazine focus-
ing on today's woman, her goals,
needs and challenges.
I nsisde this special edition of
"Periscope" magazine are stories
and pictures detailing women's
growing responsibilities, h er
greatest accomplish ments and her
day-to-day needs .
Also in the section are stories and
pic tures or the products and
services of local merchants and
how they cater to the woman on the
Orange Coast.
Don't miss next m onth's edition or
"Periscope" magazine, "Spring
Home and Garden," which will be a
guide to home improvement and
gardening for spring.
MARCH 1981
11 o~r new membership month for the Fountain
Valley Charter C~• of the American Butineu Women'• AllOClation (ABWA). Give UI • call If you .a a woman In bulineea. Hou .. kMper to Executive Secretary. Cash In on the benefit• you can derive
from joining ABWA. .
MANY WOULD HAVE no
protect ion at a ll without the
insurance they buy by mail.
T1l e re's reall y n o t much
difference in buying an insurance
policy by ma il or from a n agent.
Once tbe policy has been bought,
the mails bring premium notices to
be paid by mail. Claims are often
sent to the ins urance company
through the m ail. and benefit
checks are received by m ail.
So, no matter how the policy is
purchased, most contact with any
insurance company is by mail.
Buying insurance by mail has
m a n y advantages , e xpeci a lly
convenience and reliability.
Because all of the sales
informatio n is co mmitte d to
writing, in clear, simple language,
it can be r e ad and re-read at
leisure
All of the written m aterial
explains exactly what the policies
cover and what they don't-cover.
A rainbow
of fashion for:
every mood .
Sizes 3/.t to 1 3/1~
M67 Via U., ... .,.,, 8Mcl
(parking lot entrance) '7MS1e
------
Purchase of a policy is based
soley on what is written, not what
the consumer thinks she heard.
THERE IS NO risk or obligation
even after the policy arrives,
because the buyer can read it and
the first premium is refundable if
what the buye r sees is not
satisfactory.
In addition to t his kind of
protect ion from the ins urance
com pan y itself. in s urance
companies that sell by mail must be
licensed and are regulated by state
insurance departments.
These same companies provide
further protection through t he
Direct Marketing Insurance Council.
(DMIC).
TH IS I S AN association or
insurance companies that offer
consumers insurance products by
mail as well as support insurance
agent s ales thro ugh direct
marketing
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mal 18. 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar. 19, 1981 -1 AM Vt<>MAN 3
Classics redefined
Fashions shed man-tailored emphasis
The world of fashion has finally
shed the man-tailored emphasis
that has been so prominent in re-
cent seasons.
While today's working woman
won 't give up lbe well-tailored, prac·
tical look.s that American designers
have become famous for, those
classic silhouettes have been re·
defined.
For day or evening, the suit re·
mains a favorite.
It's no longer the "engineered"
dressing or the '70's, however.
This season's best suiting look is
likely to be a full, feminine skirt,
paired with a jacket in a com-
plimentary, but different fabrica-
tion.
Women who loved the Oex.ibility
of sportswear separates can mix
pieces in their career wardrobes as
well.
Women make
notable
progress
It wasn't long ago the only female
figures in major symphony or-
chestras were likely to be found
plucking harps.
But times are changing. Women
are joining orchestras and in un-
precedented numbers, according to
the American Music Conference.
Even the age-old barriers between
"male" and "female" instruments
are at last beginning to break down.
For today's musically inclined
woman, shouJdering a tuba is just as
much a possibility as blowing into a
flute.
One reason for the trend is that
more women than ever before are
participating in amateur music.
According to AMC, 57 percent of
the estimated 50 million amateur
musicians in this country are women.
For symphony conductors and
band directors the result is a growing
pool of talent that cannot be ignored.
It wasn't until the mid·lMle that
the first woman musician wu put UD·
der contract with the Chicago Sym·
phony Orchestra.
Today, that orchestra features 11
women-out of 106 musicians.
And the New York Philharmonic
has 15female musicians.
AMC says that 26 percent of all
musicians with major American or·
cbestras are women.
Women are also becoming more in-
fluential in the area of music educa-
tion, according to J aclde Hunt, preai·
dent of the Women Band Dlrecton
Association.
She says there are about 3,000
female band directors In American
schools. the majority of whom have
started teaching the past decade.
·'Traditionally, t.be elementary.
level music teacher baa been a
woman, while the junior bilb and
hi1h school band director bu been
male.
There is no one right accessory
for spring/summer '81 -there are
many.
The neo-Romantic influence cries
out for modem keepsakes.
Now is the time to start collecting
"heirlooms ," such as strings of
pearls and cameos.
Accessories are also bigger and
bolder than ever.
The renewed emphasis on ethnic
dressing demands accessories that
can stand up to these dramatic
clothes.
Chokers are chunky, earrings are bold and the one-of-a-kind hand-
crafted pieces will be most popuJar.
Debby Sturgill-Smith, Fashion
Coordinator for Sarah Coventry,
Inc .. one of the country's leading
manufacturers of Cine and fashion
jewelry, calls spring/summer '81 a
·'season of options."
"Whatever your choices, and
there are so many next year, it's
thoroughbred dressing," said
Sturgill-Smith:
SPRING FASHIONS
0 ARE
BLOOMING
m1111on
11110 mall
... At Mission Viejo Mall ... where
you'll rind everything form designer
labels to denim and just about any·
thing In between. Including super
charged sportswear, smart career
apperel, lecey lingerie, also f ashlons
for the mother·to·be. Our stores will
suit 'you from head to toe.
So, come see what's In store for
you et ·Bullock's, Mey Compeny,
Robinson's, Montgomery Ward and
120 specialty shops just "blooming"
with Spring values.
for c::on'(enlence, courteous ser·
vice and friendly atmosphere. It's
M1 .. 1on Viejo Matt for ell your Spring
shoppfng.
''That la no lon1er the caH," ahe
aaya. "And women are becominl
more involved lo musLc hwt.rudion
and lldmJ.U.traUoo 1t ~lele 1Dd Ublv~flity leTet." Orvtto~IOwMd/erid ()pl>rei.d by IM Edwerd J DcO.rtolo Corpotehon •
Women also are maktnc tbelr Milt Houts: Mon ·Fl"f 10 /\ M.·9 P.M.; S.t. 10 l\.M.-6 RM •• Vl\ay Co. -tUI g P.M.);Sun.12 Noon·' P.M. marks Ila avch t.radUioaall)' male-Conven~ntly ~ted at the San Diego Freeway (lntersta~ '>end Crown Valley P1rkw1y.
do ml.~,... ~~~Ii............................... •!iiiiijjjii~jjj!ji
4 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar 19. 1981 *
Love, affection most lasting success At Ease known
for up-to-date
fashions Barbara Cartla nd, when asked
what her proudest ach ievement is,
replied "My proudest achievement
is being a wife and mother."
The 78-year old a uthor of more
than 150 books has just started a
monthly magazine in the U.S.,
"Barbara Cartland's World or
Romance."
She believes the love and
affection or husband and children
are a woman's mos t lasting
success.
"MANY WOM EN TODAV think
that a career is more important
than the home'" she said
"Actually. from a woman's point
of view. a happy marriage and a
home filled with love create a
kingdom over which she reigns as
Queen," explains Cartland.
The glamorous grandm other
believes that families come first in
everything and to gain love, you
must give love.
"Mothers can help their sons to
be good husbands." s he said
·'When familie!> grow apart from
their homes and do not write or
telephone, I really blame the
mother." added Cartland
"IT MEANS SH E has not given
her children what they needed,
which quite simply 1s love."
sh e writes in an issue of h er
magazine.
''The love you expend on your
c hildren when they are young
becomes a very big dividend when
they grow older.
"If they still rely on you, still
need your help and the feeling of
belonging, then you are a very suc-
cessful woman."
Miss Cartland has equally strong
views on marriage.
"A woman brings into a man's
Barbara Cartland
Catch I t i f you can : Capezlo 's
life everything that 1s beautiful and
spiritual.
.. A man loves passionately and
compellingly, but it is a woman's
job to make that love romantic and
bring into the marriage the
s piritual side," she says.
"Even while purs uing a career , I
think it is essentia l that a wife
s hould never forget that he r
husband a nd her children must
come first.
''All my life, I have said lo
everyone who works for me 'The
most important person in my house
is my husband, and after him. my
children. J want everything perfect
for them."' 1
MISS CARTL AND, A widow. has
two grown sons, and lives outside of
London in a home built by the
grandfather of Beatrix Potter of
"Peter Rabbit" fame
S he published her first novel at
age 23. and still kee ps four
secretaries busy, dictating her his
torical romance stories.
A complete novel appears every
month in her World of Romance
magazine
Summing up her busy years. she
says: "When you look back at your
life. you will remember not the
difficulties, obstacles and troubles.
but the happiness. love and
affection you receive from your
husband and children "
"This, as a woma n . 1s your
gre atest, finest and most enduring
achievement."
\
\
I
At-Ease is we ll-known locally for contemporary men s and women's
clothing.
For women, lots or bright colors
and pastels line the racks
Shorts or all lengths. from short
shorts to bermudas can be found.
Cotton sweaters in rainbow color s
can be mixed and matched with
Madras blazers and jeans
Skirts, oxford cloth s hirL4', khaki
pants, and belts in an assortment of
colors can all be found al At· Ease in
Fashion Island
Brand n<1mcs suc h as hod, Calvin
Klein. Cacharcl and J G Hook as
well as man) others are
represented.
Wicker and
more offered
The WiC'ker Warehouse in Foun
tatn Valle~ maintains a huge stock
or baskets and furniture, all at dis· t'ount price~. at 10541 Eilts Street
Trained ~a lt>s per~onnel gladly
help customers with wall arrange-
ments. silk arrangements and idea::.
for de<.'orating
Stlk flower:-., drtt·d flowers and
decorator item:-.. "ht th t'<.IO be used
to acccntuak thl· wil'kt·r. are also
available
··We carry excellent quality
merchandise, and many unique
items,'' said a s pokesperson.
g:Us· country
a must tOr 5pring
and SUffiJTl(Zr: ..
our OJU.on c.a~ v-rnzck
hand fraJJ}(Z.d fbu.r p.y
yarns al low it to bz.
comfOrtablcz. anytimcz.
you n<IJld. a 8\W.aUzr.
\ avai1ablcz. in a rainl::uw
of colora
fleet-foo t ed es padrill e ! In cool, \
see-through mesh and canva& fabric on
' a fast-moving cushioned bottom.
In black, beige, navy, red , white.
pink. y~Uow. lavender -•2400
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Costa Mesa (71 4) 540-2575 44 Foahlon Island• N ewport. Beach • 714/644-5070
JOOJ Weatwood Blud. • Weatwood VIiiage • 213/208..J273
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mat. 18, 198\ & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19. 1981 -I AM WOMAN 5
The Timeless Elegance That Is
. . . Ferragamo!
1h6 fact is, the very name Salvatore Ferragamo
1mpt1es something rare: the petfect coupling of flt end
form ..• tor shoes that are simply unsurpassed in
qua/tty. The richest leathers 8Jff eKquisite/y crafted,
~cably stitched ... so that each and evwrry shoe
1s a masterpiece The u/009tfl in refinement and
comfott. And above all else. Femgamo means
fashion{ Here. a marvelous u"""6 d ~Y the name
Ferragamo is renouned the world over their new
Puriten buckle pump, tesMg on a new shped low
heel. Welt-appointed glamcu . . . in black pafwtrtt
leather wlfh white pipmg, Of bone calf with beige
piping. •168. In tn. Designer Show SalOn -where
we are ell the things you ant.
South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol Street, Costa M11a.
-----
'
'
6 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar. 19. 1981
YOUR FULL SERVICE FLORIST
FLOWERS FOR
'
ALL OCCASIONS
LARGE SELECTION
OF ROSES, ORCHIDS
AND CARNATIONS
ORDER EARLY!
2 FOR 1 BASKETS
LIMITED SUPPLY
AND CHECK OUR
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIALS
$~9 £. UP
OUR SPECIALTIES
• Heritage Antiques
• Dish Gardens & Terrariums
•Custom Made Macrames
•Custom Dry & Silk Arrangements
• Quality Selection of Pottery & Baskets
• Exotic Plants
•Original Gift Items
• Wood Plant Stands
•Magic L ight Planters
•Custom Made Water Fountains
WE SPECIALIZE IN :
•Weddings
•Funerals
•Banquets
• Parties
•Grand Openings
~ Discounts for Commercial
• Interior Designer Accounts
•Student Specials
•OR "Just Because
HERITAGE FLORIST
"WHERE THE FINEST IN FLOWERS
AR E ALWAYS REASONABLE"
14474 CULVER DRIVE • IRVINE •
(Corner of Walnut & Culver>
857-1111 WE DELIVER
WORLD WIDE WIRE SERVICE
Houra: 10 a.m. to I p.m. o.lty; 10 a .m. to 7 p.m.
let., 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. 8unday
. ..-L loyd & ~!~.~ M arschall
IASP trains personal security
The International Association of The course costs $45, and is of.
Security Professionals is a non-fered to children ages twelve to
profit organization which trains etahteen as well, according to
people in self defense and proper markeUngdirectorRickHolton.
tear gas usage. It is a six hour class.
The organization is staffed by Tear gas classes cost S19.70.
police o(ficers who train law en-Included in the fee is certifica-forcement and security personnel as well as private citizens. lion, a lifetime permit and Depart·
The courses are ideal for women m .ml of Justice fees.
since the selr·defense method re-Both CN and CS gas is available
quires minimal skill and atrergth, fr>r purchase following the comple-
but Is safe and is a highly effeetive tlon of the class, which lasts two
crime deterrent. hours.
The self-defense course (or IASP has locations throughout
women teaches bow lo get out of (en California, locally In Santa Ana.
baslc..holds wlthovi th..«UJ!\CLOf~L -t:_ctr 'lua~r~,ervat!o!l!.i.J all
,... ----:af34Ml.. ------_1
Charisse Winter, left, and Tracy Miller model safari IOOk fHhiOfts
matched with walking shorts for spring CHAI or dNSs ~r avalla-ble at The Place, at 7 Fasllion Island, Newport Beadt. C.114 Ha.
Maternity fashions with flair
At Lady Madonna, the whole
philosophy abo1.1t maternity clothing
has changed.
Because expectant mothers are
no longer hibernating, sitting at
home wailing ror the baby, but con-
tinuing their busy lifestyles, there is
more need for career clothes as
we ll as sportawear.
Women conJinue to swim, jog,
play tennis, and take dancerclze
classes throuahout their pregnancy.
Lady Madonna bas a full line of
swimsuJta, jogging and tennis
clothes for the active mother,to-be.
The spring and summer collection
features Jeans, evening towns and
. pantsuits, jumpers, shorts, pants
and ski rts in linen, twill, seersucker
and more, in a wide color selection.
Lady Madonna offers designs for
the contemporary woman who does
not want lo change her style of
dress when she ls expecting.
Lady Madonna begins with
fashion and then makes room
for Baby!
Orange County Lady Madonna is
located ln the Mission Viejo Mall and-
is open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
weekdays, 10 a .m . to 6 p.m .
Saturd~s and 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on
Sundays. Call 495-2$23.
classified help you If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Da'ilY Pilot
ad. Call turn your
-642-5678 and a wheels into
friendly ad-'cash.
viser will
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 7
Mix Ups by
L ~~a1~~a11rira1~~
V-Plunge
Diaper-Wrap
1 Piece Solid.
~Tone Sweelheort Bro ond Gathered Bo:~. \' ~~-
Westminster Moll. South Coast Plaza.
The Moll of Oronge. The Moi<et Aoce. t-U'lttngton Cenfer.
Bueno Po11t. Tbe Oty Shopping Center. Laguna Hiiis Moll.
Bteo Molt. '711'\ Stree!Cosk> Mesa. 8olboo Island
'""
8 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19, 1981
Hair salon
opens shop
in Laguna
Toppy's by Steiner is a unique
beauty salon, a ne w addition to
Laguna Hills.
The inte rnati onally famous
Steiner salons serve most major
centers of Britain, Europe, Africa,
Australia, three exotic islands, and
aboard six luxury liners, including
the Queen Elizabeth II.
Toppy's has brought it 's in·
novative beauty service to Tustin,
Huntington Beach, Santa Ana and
Laguna Hills , and soon will open a
salon in the Disneyland Hotel.
Beautifully colorfuJ , plush salons
with tiffany lamps welcome
customers with h e lpful pro-
fes s ionals trained to give fine
service. .
Every woman, before being
worked on, has a consultation with
her operator to discuss the hair cut
or style she desires.
This consultation is free of
charge.
Operators consider face and bead
shape and hair texture as it applies
to each individual and her chosen
hair style.
"Our primary concern is to give
each person what is right for her,"
said Julie Masterman, Interna·
tional Creative Director.
"We add special touches such as
giving each person their own
sterilized tray with comb, brush,
gown -everything used is
sterilized just for h er ," she ex-
plained.
A brochure entitled 24 Top Op·
lions for Service and Styling ex·
hibits 24 hairstyles (photo5 ) with
variations such as perm, shampoo
and blow dry. cut and Henna, ends
cut and tint.
Prices are included, so the
customer can select a hairstyle and
know what she will pay for lt
beforehand. ·
Steiner success bas been bwJt
upon a time-honored tradition of
customer satisfaction ~ both ln
personalized service and quality
products.
The granting of the Royal War-
rant by two Britiab Queens is an
honor in all the world.
It is this rich heritage that the
rSteiner group brings lo America
with Toppy's.
Toppy's in Laguna is adjacent to
the Laguna Hills MaU, ~epbone
855-1911.
No boring tunafish
Weight Watchers food plan spices up luncheons
Today's woman of the 80'1,
whether abe ls workin1 at the olftce or involved in community actlviilea,
ls on a demand.in.I schedule.
PIUm.in& lunches that are both
simple and allmmina can be dlf.
ftcd _. ..._ wom• ....t •
small plMtic eoata&Mn ol ....,.
cheese or tUDaflah.
TIWI ratlMr borina reutlM lea••
UttJe tlme for f!IUoyment of tbe mid·
day meal and dl1lllualom may
women from watdllna thm welabt.
The new 1911 Wel&bt Watcben Food Plan amwen &be aeeda for
the woman-oa·tbe-10 bJ adclq ez.
dtlq ~ t.oU.. hmcMml w. .. ,.
raisins, sweet potatoes, peanut but·
ter.and crtapbreadi.
Other foods that wlU dress up a
lunch that mt11t be prepared in a
hurry have allo been Included.
Tbe new food procram, developed
ta aew4aau with llltest tnfonna·
Uoa ila tM' aatrltlon lleld cited by
the United States Senate Select
Commltlee on Nutdtlon and Humu
Need1, puts heaT}' empha1i1 oe
nutriUoD.
The add&Uon ol toodl 1ueb 11 wine
and ••• cooklDI methods <•Ur·
frJlnl and aauteeiq) 71vea women
1reater fle~bUlt7 or tod1 'a
UfMtJle, nue alao eUmlaa
with loatq welght.
Another new addition to the
Wel&ht Watchera Plan is a
Ve1etar1an Program fqr those who
would like to omit poultry, meat
and ftlh from their diet.
Under the Food Plan, food cbQice
lt the tey In COQjunctJoa wtth por-
tion-control and behavior modillca·
tiOD tedmiQ.a tauibt ln tile Weiabt Watchers elauroom.
Learn.In& bow to make correct
food daeel ls \be COl'Del.-e to
aucceuful welpt Ion. and 1•11 t.be
foundation to matntalntni tldl lou. ror fu.rtber lDformaUeo on the
OCC presents
program on
women in '80s
Orange Coast College Community
Service presents "Women in the
80's ," a program which includes
lectures, seminars, retreats and
workshops.
Wom en of aJI ages. backgrounds,
interests, lifestyles and professions
are encouraged to take part.
The program is designed to build
self-esteem in women, strengthen
the common bonds of s upport
among all women, and strengthen
the female voice and the female
principles within our society.
The 80's is the decade of women on the move ... fulfilling their poten-
tial~· I areas of their lives.
Th rogram Is dedicated to help·
ing omen reach their potential.
D y nami c w o m e n s uc h as
Maureen Reag an and Ire ne
Kassorla, author of the books "Nice Girls Do" and "Putting it All
Together," speak at workshops.
Upcoming lectures include
Female Sexuality; The New Busi·
ness Woman, Creating Your Own
Opportunities; Developing PersonaJ
Power in Women, power and in-
timacy and Communicating Non-
def ensi vely.
Workshops cover subjects such as
overcoming stage fright and build·
ing credibility, physical and mental
health, career planning, time
management, and creating the look
that spells success.
Asilomar: A creative retreat to
evaluate and re-create your life is
offered to women on Saturday to
Monday, June 6, 7 and 8.
The retreat is composed of a
small group of women desiring to
center and refuel themselves away
from the business and pressures of
life.
This three-day retreat is designed
to strengthen oneself, as well as to
explore new ways to wln as a
woman.
Physical, mental and emotional
qualiUes will be explored.
Participants will experience
alone time, group time, role·
playing, films, lecture, discussion
and play time.
The $245 fee includes airfare,
lodging, meals and materials.
The "Women in the 80's" pro·
gram is not only for women, but
,also for any men who deal with
women.
For information or reservations,
telephone Orange Coast College at
556-5880.
--
THE WICXER WAREHOUSE
VISA'
Rattan -Baskets ,
Furniture
Decorator Items
(we have layaways)
• TALBERT
I-Cl) Mc&-Sef.1~5 a: 0 Clolecf S•cliryt ::::> r a:
~ ~ 8 10541 Ells a: I FcullalftV•y m
ELLIS
963-7729
AC1 ;h .. 11111111 ..... , ... ... , ................ .
OU1 .... ,.,WU._, YOU CIM11
AM •'9011 •Ir .. YOUI NOMI Ga OllRCI .,..., llfLIC1'S YOll eooe TAITI ... l•IOMAI m
ORANGE COUNTY'S FIRST MEMBERSHIP DESIGN STUDIO
~ I e&a-0021 .1 :.:
• MIOWA ...... AV mtVLf w...-Yl.LAQI IMOf f.,G CTII •
0 :J ()
::::> w
.. . Elegant Easter --7
: Bonnets ...
·<.:~ / lots of lace. ribbons
/ T1 and silks.
The Unique •..
Antiques and Gifts
Each seasonisspeci~I
Lota of Easter goodies . . , dolls
18" tall. dressed bunnies. fabric
baskets. potpourrii. eggs and
much, much morel Featuring:
Jelly Bell i es .
Home-made Dolly
Parton suckers
and aaaorted
Easter characters.
~hurat
LATEST SENSATION!!
now at -
Samantha
........ ~i-d•••'
9430 WAIM•Aft. (at Bushard-next to Wiid West)
'°'-'NTAIM YM.LIY • PHOMI 961-1111
10 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Co.at LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAIL 'I PILOT, Ma.r. 19, 1981
For Help
Without
Time Off
From Work ...
CALL NOW.
(714) 975-0700
Advanced Mealth Center
1300 Bristol Strut North • Newport Beach, CA 92660
Institute offers quality
education in many fields
The Institute of Applied Design
was founded on the premise that a
quality education consists of not on-
ly academic study of high quality,
but also study that is practical to
its related field.
Upon completed study. a student
should feel confident in pursuing
employment in his chosen field and
also have the information necessary
to be as totally viable to the
employer and client as possible.
The Institute of Applied Design Is
dedicated to the precedin~ prin·
ciples and to ens uring lo the design
community a qualified interior de-
signer capable of assuming any or
the tasks related to this design field.
The Institute philosophy on
educating the interior designer is to
train them with individuals already
engaged in the fields tha t best re-
late the information they are pursu-
ing.
Students have the full advantage
of training with successful interior
designers, architects, art his-
torians, museum curators, contrac-
tors and a rull range of people in re-
lated rields.
·'It is our belief that education
not only be informative, but also
enjoyable," said a spokesperson.
The faculty and staff are dedicat-
ed lo th.is purpose and wilJ do all
that is necessary not only to
educate, but also to assist each stu-
dent in personal pursuit of the in-
teriordesign profession.
Accessories galore offered
at South Coast Plaza store
Pappagallo, fine womens specialty
store in South Coast Plaza, an-
nounced the arrival of ready to wear.
Ms. Sero skirts, blazers, pants and
shirt dresses find a welcome au-
dience at the store.
PappagaJlo is fill ed to the brim
with any and aH types of accessories.
Customers can expect to ··one-stop.
shop" when it comes to watchbands,
headbands. belts, shoe bags, um·
brellas, jewelry boxes, picture
framesandnumerousother items.
A popular. useful and versatile
item is the strip and buckle belt.
More than 40 styles of buckles can
be purchased , then mixed and
matched to the strips (more than 30
colors to choose from ).
The end product is a belt. made
especially to suit your tastes.
In this way. one can coordinate the
perfect belt for any outfit, no matter
how unwual the color, or design.
Women are invited to visit Pap.
pagallo and see for themselves the
extensive accessory stock available.
Free
Hair Dryer
An Introductory Offer for H•w Customers
We'd like to introduce you to the world of Toppy'a with
this special offer-: have your hair cut and styled at a
Toppy'a near youJ pay your bill (118.00 minimum). and we
will give you a beauti ful hand held hair dryer -a S15.00
value!
,.
Laurie Blood, left, N•ncy Nkhol, P•t •.cl Swede JeMOft MM1 Jedi Bell
are rffdy to traMform you. M9tamorptaoli1, at 421 31st St., Newpen
Beach often facials, m•lleup, ull art, eyetwow w•Jlift9 .-more to mall• a bNutlful you. Swede and Pat • .,.. recently married. He
owns a boat operators llceMe Khool af"OUftd tM conMr.
"Two ce11 tire dt••P•• '"•" 011e··
., ........ ,,.... ..
• Al alellh Kl'ffMCI wftlt
rw.&lefetet1eff
• 6 OHien ........ So. c.t .
The Oldest & Largest Agency in So. Calif, As featured:
CosmoPolitan, Tomorrow Show, Eye Witness L.A .. Good
Morning America. Phil Donahue, etc.
.... .,.... 114;n1-1111
.,...... 714/'41·1"'
Sett.... JIJ/lta.2241
..._ ... _, ZIJ/41J.1161
s-... Ma*• 213/41J.1161
S' I t • 09 Z tJ/t90-IOJ7
20% Off with this Ad
_....,..._. &.lpplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18. 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 11
SPRING
IS FASHION
by Joyce Shelby
Ascot
Bone, White
and Navy Blue
$3900
You 'll take a shine to Selby's n~west version
of the wedge: woven straw matched with
co-ordinating trim ... exceptionally
comfortable with a plush, padded insole .
. . where you'll find siz•. Mrvice and Mlection
joyce·selby shoes
Santa Monica Place Wntwood Vil!lge Minion Viejo Mall
2nd Level, N•• Robinlona 1031Wettwood8Mi. Low Level. C.nwOourt
Sante Monica l.09 Angetee Mltek>n Vi.to
(213) 394-3432 (213) 477-8884 (714) 495-8381
South Cout Plaza Upper Lewi, N .. May Co.
Costa Mesa
(714) 754-1319
--.......... -.. .. __ . ------·----~---------12 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar 19. 1981 *
VetaS
1036 Irvine Avenue
Newport Beach.CA
642-1197
d-..........
In aqua or j ade
57 .00
Zelda inspects baskets of aill types at Heritage Florists, at 14474
Culver Drive, Irvine. The shop has baskets for plants, waill baskets,
novelty baskets and Chinese, portuguese aind Mexican baskets.
COMING
MARCH 31' AND APRIL 1
IN THE
DAILY PILOT AND
COAST LIFE
CALL
642-4321
-----
Powers has
plan for
total woman
John Robert Powers presents
career training for the total woman.
Speaking for the firm at a recent
interview, Ingrid Adams noted the
various areas of self-improvement
Powers is concerned with. including ·
Personality development.
Goal setting.
Relationship development.
Plotting career path.
Assertion training.
Resume writing.
Interview personality.
How to open a bus iness.
Developing a powerful voice.
Dressing for success.
Works hops, s e minars and
personal tutoring are directed
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 13
toward making the woman -and
even the m an more successrul in
business and in tire in general, said
Ms . Adams. an employee of John
Robert Powers for 16 years.
Powers desi~ns programs to suit
the individual. Programs can be de-
s i.g n ed for the deaf , blind,
handicapped and even the terminally
i II.
Ms . Adams s ays she receives
great gratification from seeing the
results that her program can have
on someone who is terminally ill.
"We give them an interest in life
again show them that they have
something lo live ror." she said.
She re lated the s tory of one
woman who didn't buy her family
holiday gifts becaus e she didn't
think she'd be around lo see them
opened.
"Aller the progam . she went on a
buying spree. We show them that
it's not the end."
"What we do is a little like magic.
We're both psychologists and ad-
visors. We provide physical help,
mental help and the 'care' all in
one, she said.
Powers also has lecture programs
that can be tailored lo the a udience
for high schools or any community
organization.
"We have 400 students here a
week laking advantage of our
modeling programs, teachers train-
ing programs -we even have a
course specifically teaching cos-
meti<:s," she said.
For more information, call
547-8228 for the Orange office.
Pleased to find just the right wardrobe for all occasions at Muriel's
for M'L.ady In the Monarch Bay Plau, ugutM Niguel, Mn. Elllckson
wears her two-piece channel jacket.d sundreu.
PROTECT YOURSELF;!
Do ~ou work late? Home alone? Is your home or apartment secure?
How about when you're shopping, carrying money? Are you a nurse.
teacher, studint, taxi, bus, or truck driver? What If your car breaks
down at night??
NOW YOU CAN PROTECT YOURSELF
• Ngw you may legally carry TEAR GAS fonelf-defense
• Us'td by police departments
•Easy to use, aim and carry
•Strongest legal chemical s~lf-defense we.apon
•Course price Is only $19.7 O·
•This lncludn required 2 hr course. permit to carry and Dept of Justice
registration fee.
•Upon completion tear gas (CN & CSI will-be available for purchase
TEAR GAS TRAINING FOR CITIZENS 2 HOUR COURSE
Penal Code Section 12403. 7 requires every person desiring to possess and use tear gas as a self·
defense weapon to utilize only that lype approved by the Oepar1ment of Justice. It also requires
the person to successfully complete a two hour course of training certified by the Department and
to obtain a permit from a licensed tear gas vendor
Classa can be held at your faclllty for groups of 20 or more
CALL FOR CL ASSES
1580 E. Edinger Ste. Q
Santa Ana. California 92705
(714) 973-8661
(714) 973 ~8661
.
Conducted by
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION
Of "SECURITY PROFESSONALS
,
..._. --~ -----.... ----·-- -----~ ----.-.. --
14 I AM WOMAN-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. t8, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19, 1981
Pappagallo' s keen attention to
details keep you looking
fabulously feninine.
A P~: bow pump gone sunmertime sandal wth ankle strop
B. Skinny leather befts wth inferchongeQble gold buckles
C. Skinny headbands to rrotch eYeryOutift
0. linen bermudo bog aHer
E. <:otton eyelet benriudo bog <XM!r'
D.
. i....:;._ . --. ~-......
A.
$54.00
$16.00
$3.50
$10.00
Sl0.00
South CQaat Plaza
Upper Level, Near Bullocks
Q>staMeaa
Santa Monica Place
Lower Level-Center Court
Santa Monica
(714) 558-7287 (213) 395-2234
BulNra Blunt, a.tt, takes .ctvantage of complimentary makeup done
by Margaret Duncan ait North Drugs, 1170 B•ker Strfft, near Fairview Ra.d, Costa Mew. Customers receive complimentary makeups done by a cosmetician. Call 546-2121.
Treat yourself. Your spirits
deserve a raise as much as you do
Nothing else feels llce real gold ....... ..,_
KARAT GOLD .EWEl.RY
1841 Reynolds, Irvine -10-2 p.m. or call tor an appointment
957-1291
For fine jewelry see yoor professional jeweler.
__ ..._ __
Robin Wiiiis, just returned from two weells of diving •nd buying in
th• Philippines, holds • PteuretorMrt• R•mtltll shell from the South China SH. Spend a few moments to refresh your sews wlttt tllls fine
collection of naturally bNuttful tltlngs, •t 5ff TrNSures, 341' Via
Oporto, Lido Marina VIiiage, Newpan Beach.
Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar. 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 15
RESffiED MY MOM'S
OLD MINK STOLE
WE BOTH WE.AR. IT NOWI.. ·
BRING YCXJR STOLE IN FOR A
FREE CONSULTATION AND EST I MA TE
r
. ' I
'I ,,
-
\
16 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19, 1981
CHAll.OTI'l.COOH
Betty L )'di hos been wirh the
8aboo ldand office of Wot.<lror1
Home\ for 15 yeots. wm Top
~smon" f0t 1980 She ii o
native So. Col.lomion. whe•e both
she ond her ~ Cec~ speni
many )'900'\ "' community seMc:e.
They ore long time rel0den1, of
8aboo hlond. When nor blny '"'"' teal eslOte. they enjoy rime wirh
.... family f;v.,q ond boor...q.
Wiiia ft ..e Hwt. t.c.
~ .. wport Bch 831-1400
Betboe llland 873-6900 .
R.E. S.oler ond co-owner df
Watetft()fll Homes, Inc. Reolt~
Acf;..e in monoqement of r-..o
offices in Newpotl Beach. Former
Clr. of FroncMinq f0< o major
cosmetic film. offer completing
~ in Plblic Relorioni with J.
Wdliet Thompw:in. EnioY\ beW>q o
molher of 2 olonq wilh on octl¥9
buiiness co-.
Wah1f1CN1t HCHMt, twc.
Ne$tport Bch 631-1400
Balboa Island 67:H900
C<>Me«ATULATIOMS
JOYCI D.AIOLT
'For recenlly receivinq the 1980
Sciiwnan Of The Year Awad.
You dlqence ond WI in motc.hin9
a.,, and prcpetTy hos been 'JOll.
pWTuy c.oncem. ond hos enabled
'Pl IO successfuly mc>Ber oY«
foil m.15on debt WOtth 0 f teal
estote in Ne--pon Beoch ond
(DllO Meso this poll yeor. ........... eo.
t2 CorPC>r•• Plaza Dr. Newport Beach, CA
SITTHS UMUMITID
NEWPORT 11.ACH . DtUCTOI
645-9512
Oaiotte Coder slarted OS 0 boby
titter 10 ~ her itlcome os
o teod., ·' become the Newport ~ectar of Sitt•s Unlimited. So.
Ca. fnt & foremost educotionaly
oriented House & Child Sitting
ServiGe. Sitters Unlimited is o
unique serYice staffed by
e ducators who lno'W rhe
~of"'°""coreof"'°"
•
... AMACIUM
LUCY HOWES
IAU.OOMS
FOi HIGHER Ton s ~ beqon ""'"' rhe odeo o f molinq ~ople hoppy with
lloloons. He< costi.med couroen
cleliYer beouriful bouquets of
~flied boHooni fO< ony & ol
occo,ions. Soys Ton• .. My
C\6~ & my bolloon\ hove
qiYe~ me rh~ .. 0P.pcrhot1un1ry 10
e.penence o htqh. 1 -
coJd hove been pcm.ble wirhour
-...of rt.em ··
541-6755
hndo il o formet fliqil ottendonr
for Uw..d Anne\ for 7 yecn. She be9cri in I.al esrote !i ~ 090
with Worerfronl H omes .
~ 0 winner in the mt1ion
dab Pi-cU.. Brenda ;. monied and Ml in Newpotl &.ocli. She ;.
octi.. in ~ oHon ond o "*'*-of the 8otioo Boy o.b
and t+. Clpped Winqt.
W .. a ft oat Hwa. e.c..
N9wport Sch 631 ·1400
&llboa Island 673-6900
"°"'9 in I.al estote 11 years. 4 ~ wilh WQ!etfronr Homes. Inc.
R--. on Udo Ille, OChve "' Lido
Ill. Woman's Club. lido Isle
P.s. Newport Harbor Arr
~ ond 8olboo Boy Cll.b.
SJ>9<io4ize1 in residentool ond
io1COfl'le hrinQI ond soles ond " in ~U.WEx~
W .. •rfrOllf Hws, htc.
Newport Bch 631-1400
Balboa Island 673~900
SYLVIA PAOLI
Attomey ot Low
Personal lnj")'. Aviation,
Wills & Probote
17141671-1110
Afr., ro"'n9 fiYe children in
Newport Beach Ann joined w~ Homei fo.6 yeors 090>
~ Md Ofl the woter ond ~ boil Soil ond p-boot\, it. • boil .,~ ond
~ with doch and ~
pq.ty.
• KAIEH V. IROWH
MARGURITE
KAM.AG.A
L YMMI V ALIMTIMI
'DONA CHICHUTll
ACTIOMLIGAL
SB VICES
A leQi:il ~ Serv.ce. Our ·i.cp
~, .. ore 1toined to type &
process doc~ f0t i.ncon1es1ed
cf...orces. also. bc:Wruptcy pe11tions.
srepporenl odop• ions, no me
~ & many other leqol lonns
T wenry yeo" Oronqe County
~ OS 0 leqol sec'y &
~· 17873 Beach Blvd.
Hontington Beach, CA
(714) 842-5100
l(a., V. Br°""" il o corporore Yice
Pl"· & branch c00tdino10< l0t
Horne F-ederol ~ & Loon
Asin of Son O..qo. oveneeinq
bronch offices rlwo ughout Los
AnQele\ & Q onqe c 'Y. She jo.t-.ed
Heme F.derol "' 1975 & is octr..
in seYerol civic & commuftily
o qcractions, Home ~ecletol '' the
7rh b-qml SCJYinqs & loon oun "'
the narion wirh m0te 1hon $4 4
billion ., osseh & 83 btonches on
CA ..._...,...,_. ....
&a.-.. s-D ....
1701 M. .... st.
S....AM IJMJU
HAUOI ACADEMY
NE-SCHOOL
&
KIMDHGAITEH
Mor~e l<onoqo. D.rec10< for
-r-n. belieYttS 0 program she.Ad combine Ac.oclemics & o
lov1nq home atmosphere. Mrs
Konogo hos lwo children, S
qondchado-en and '' wile 10 o
coleQe &qisll profesSOt Hoibor
Acodemy is locored or 740
Joome. CM 548 1m .
Lynne Volentine hos b e en
assoOoted "'rh .... Harbor v-
c.nr. offke of Mocnob-tr.ine
Redly ~ for -Ma yec>'L
She receiYed MY•ol owords for
I 'Ill> F*formonce OI the rec.nt
Newporr Horbor·Co110 Mesa
8oad of Realtors ~'·
Dono Chichester of Mocnob-INine' s
DoYer Drive Office wos honored OI
rhe company' 1 1980 Awards
8rdfos1 for beinQ Runner.up in
,... ldOI Dab voi.-company
.Ide. Dono hell~ been Q
,,,.,,...., of t+. ~ Dolor
<lb.
llUIAHOIL
Elie was bom in Detroit, Michi9on.
iN come to Colif. I b 'I"-090. She
? ~ ~-i::·~ .. t
Eslate fot 2 ~. & core1 obclll
people & enjoy1 helpin9 in
refiiloilcir'9-5mited ~ &
K o VII loon e.perf. 1111 •llJ*fiM " 6Yc1Ke CCMft. She is ()di,le on
~ offOO. o member of
1'BW 11 ond t+.e Catholic Douctiten
of l\merico. lvry help col BM OI
TIOdewindl Real Estate Cent\.fy 21
0t Mcnoch lnvei.tment5.
tw&-1885 847-3663
Kothy Alls rou from on
""f>O"e rished bod9round to
become o world·renowned "**•· author & pre' of ) CLWpO!alicu. II formet TV model.
" lo been !Wed by Fomine 500 ~ ;.cl. ISM._ StOl'dord .Oil. C~lins Rodio, Union Corb1de.
c.m,y 21 Reallots & mot• Her
proqO'T'& & speeches deol ...ith
"How 10 Ge r Anything You
Wor1-l\t¥irrte." . ...., ... .. .,.,,. ...
JO)~lil.., s. L9tllM 4tt-1 I 70
* Supplement to Cout LIFE. Maw. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar. 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 17
COMMATULATIOMSI
Jodie "'°' oworded 2nd rUMIW-up
on rhe ~ ht"'9S sold coreqory on
198:> occetdnq tQ t+.e Newpori
Beod1-Couo Meso Boord of
Reolrors I\ 1eol esrore br~et.
Joc•ie ho\ wved ~ denn fot the
po\I 8 yecn '"'"' 'rocjt reqord lot
pt of• u1onol1sm. Coll Joe Le or
o)I 12b0.
WAW
REALTORS•
631-1266
btob'd. t+.e oqy. ot O.C. oitpotl
11 yo oqo & " proud to OllnO<llCe
the co con1inuoM to 8ApOtld &
bteok all ptev!On recon:!s: Lu
Oltnb.Aft rh.s klCCel' ro rt.. people
on het .raff, conln.led eciicoton ~
on "f>"lodoy 1981 • ottllude. Eoch
yr. 1t' s more OJlPO'en• rhot t+.e
'ucceulul 'up co. hrres the
wcceulJ .. I.fl .. condidote. be it o
Rec pi.. bee. Sec· y.. Ooef F.nonce
Ofo. or Pies. Peep. ore the key.
~ need people.
Lii ft t 0 II A.9•-•l:!WJ
Eatllb. 181M
4020 Bln:ti. N.B. 833-8190
SOMDltA OSTBHOUOT
SQaA K o lltOli• & Portner " t+.e Ycdf ~ of Newpor1
Ycdf Eachonc}8. Sord-o " o qad.ae of C'*'4 ~ School.
ottended OC C ond UCI. She hos been selriq )'Od'l'S f0t l yeas
ond opened het ,_ office on Udo ViaQI in llpN. Her partner,
Ron Richardton. hos bff., in t+.e ~ ~ industry for 7
yeai. She oko hos o Real E1to1e lie.-and owned a ~
in l..oquno for 3 years w1!h her parents. The "lady yodit broil•"
hos wed in t+.e 1-bt>of Neo for IS~ lfioys boatinQ ond ort
coledinq ond is quoted: "I fMI W11Y ~ IO l'ICMt ~ up
in an creo such os Newport 8eodl and _., more fortunoM f'O, °""' 0 bulineu located in ,... foo.t1 ~ ~ in ....
U.S.
......... , ..... 111t :t 341~"90,•te 671-llM .........
•LOANS-SIOK llwu Slf.U Hies . ht, 2nd. 3fds
~
' •R.E. llltOCER-1""'""*"' l'lop. ..loft Vfll'llltft
*'ltOPERTY MGMT-Hltet. ~ '°""' lfld.Offbc
M4t833
llEHE LE FIVRE
A liiied perlOIYlel consJlonl from
o c.orporote level bkq-nd. in N. Y.
?~ t: :°'d~ i ~
Reinder' '· II top level c0<eer
wornon. lhe olso help\ w /civic
offdn a.di OS .... United Woy.
Her knowl.dqe of bu~u &
wd.11~ of employet & job
cordcbe' need5 quolifoes her as o
place ment specialist par
eorcelence.
8'ondl Mi,. lot "Kely Girt" oh in
Irv.. loq. Niq.. ho1 been in
i.mpotay help aerv. for I I 11"-
Her ''l(ely Con Do" oN\de makes
her 0 ~ in rt.is incblry. 918 is
deckoted to ~ appicom
client Gms w Penonol ...... &
inteqily. He rnolto is "s.Mce is
our only bu1iness & your
SOiis f oction is °"' <}'9Qle1t ouet."
lelf~•lcw
2102 Buslness Ctr. Dr .
1208
Irvine 833-1441
Koilherine is o bookieeper """' on
cDnl company ond is alto o
uudent wor•in9 with word
poc.NnQ and fcnhion desq.. She
mted here in ~ Courtly by
worlilnQ fat "Clfiou1 temporary
C)(Jencie• doin9 H cretorlol &
boolii91Pn9 WOfi. She hos -hobbies such CH ~ ikotir1Q.
bicyclin9. dancin9, reodin9,
1wimmin~, writin9 l 1oilin9.
ICaiierine • a .,.,., Of*1 minded & ~,,.,_.is rdy 0
ITIOti¥aled 'fOU"9 woman f'O 90
AllT pac.. 876-7026
Law Off"* of
Pa~i Karger, Inc.
•
·"
•
•
18 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mer. 19, 1981
Elegance, luxury. and chic.
Master
Craftsmen
in furs
These are just a few words used
to describe the exquisite tun availa·
ble to you at Bal boa Fur Company
in the Mission Viejo Mall.
Tbe tradition al Balboa Furs goes
back three generations or the
Portnoff Family.
Owner Monty Portnoff has been a
fur designer, ret.ailer, wholesaler
and skin dealer in the fur trade for
more than 45 years.
He ranks among the best master
craftsmen in the country.
CAROLE GARY
AU furs at Balboa Fur Company
are handcrafted and custom styled
and tailored for each individual.
Assemblyline production is not
Carol. is o Ii< Clinocol Soctd
W o rler w1tft 8 yr\ e•pe• ·"
ert-~ .. ''f>M:lr .. n & ..,...
fomifn Sl>e hen o Mo,,,.., "'
J)\y<hotric \OC.,1 ....,,~ & 0 BA "'
,.Jem~ edv<o•.,.. & ,,,UQl.1
spec()! e<L:o•Of'I & I" q.<Jti<. He·
pvt IJIO('lu corc:entrote\ on th.-
latency oqa child & ""/...,, forr,,ly
ProvidM odtJt tlieropy ,.1.,mp1.o.,,
on W01ne<1°\ '''ue' Ako childr"",
qrOuJ>\. ~ & C""iO"'' 1fteropy for
diildren & 1he" own poren•'
"'°"1ol c~.nq lom1lv theropv
f0t Caole \ \erVoCes p-ovded on o
\lidinq Kole call % I .oq 77
CAREER WOMEN
· Don't leave Your lfnl09 to chance ...
Leave it to Powe,...
~lvnJ(oteftJf Yll ~,tJ
I or-. C:.ustr 547-1221
the way it works at Balboa Fur
Company.
The cus tomer is s pecially
measured. filled and styled to his
or her satisfaction.
Wife Anne Portnoff does all lin·
ings by hand with help from son
Arthur, who is also a master
craftsman in his own right.
Daughter Jackie also helps out in
the family business with sales and
modeling.
Balboa Furs has been localed in
Orange County for the past seven
years in Newport Beach and Irvine,
and bas recently moved to the
spacious Mission Viejo Mall.
Monty Portnoff and his family in·
vile the public to Ins pect their new
f5e il the ._..... & YICe-ptelodenr
of .0-Realty. Inc., ...f.och ""°' ~robW.d ., 1946. 9.. 1-os been
o mi5on dolor ~ yeorly
con\i\tenlly for ~ yecn wit+.
her 'Pec1ol1t1e' '" wo•e1fron1
propertoes ord r~ income.
A res.dent of Ne..pott Beocft f0t
I 0 yeors ond is o notive
Colifo1n1on be1nq on I 1 tft
CJ91•0ficw1 of Oonqe (o.6'1ty Her
hobbies CJ'CI boatviq & lroveWlq
store, try on a fur coat and feel the
essence of luxury.
All furs are made on the prem·
ises.
Balboa Furs features an unusua l·
Jy large selection of fur pelts to
choose from including fox, sable,
lynx a nd mink.
"You choose the pelt. and we
will put it together exactly the way
you want," said Monty Portnoff.
Though the fur making business
may be a dying trade, Balboa Furs
epitomius the fine family tradition
that has been carried on for three
generations of the Portnoff family.
The Portnoffs are not just retail
merchants, but master craftsmen.
SUIHMIUB
f0t •tie 2nd VftOJ .n o •o... S...1ee
rr.e No I \Olesperson n •fie ''" ce
oll ce of Rema. ReoU0ts She ., ~'
No I n ·••onq' \Ole> :>nd :io 01
•olvme A real es101e b<o~e• Suzee
., o leoder n •he .ndusrry :>nj rr,,.
t omm"""y F0t "'wl•s. coll ""' 1•
~9.9400
JC*IS ltlAL n
2001 West Balboa Blvd.
Newport Beach 67U210 SUZEE MILLER
Orange Coast College presents
WOMEN
INTHE
80's ~
->-
FEMALE SEXUALITY
FRIDAY, April 3 -SCIENCE HALL -?:30 -9:30 p m.
Admi~~'°" Fru -1'1.tK•~lrr nl thr Door
THE NEW BUSINESS WOMAN
Cruttng Your Own Opportunities
IBURSDA YS. April q and 23 -CHEM 20? -7 -10 p.m
A1lm1Hion Fru -Rrgt•lrr nl thr Door
WOMEN AND SEXUAL ASSAULT
MONDAYS, Aprl. 2?, May 4 & 11 -SCIENCE LECTURE 2 -7:30 • <>:30 p.m "''"ISStOrt Frtt -Rttisltr nl ,,,, o.oar
I
DEVELOPING PERSONAL POWER IN WOMEN:
Power and Intimacy -Men and Women
T H URSOX\', M AY 1 -CH EM 207 -7:30 -9.JO p.m.
AJmtmon Frr•t -Rrg1-'rr 11/ /hf Door
ASILOMAR: A CREATIVE RETREAT
TO EVALUATE&: RECREATE YOUR LIFE
·u11mAlly for W11mt11
~A TllRDAY MONDAY /1m" If
Mil OMl\R CONFER.ENC£ GROUNDS. Pn"f" C:rorv, C.1.
~H . .S.!' '\, '"c/11Jts nirfnr,, loliRlllR, 111rnls t.. mnltrfnl'
To '"I""'' br11rh11ri', t11// ~5t>·5tfll0
I •
Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18. 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar. 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 19
The fashion mood for Spring 1981
is one of eternal femininity.
P ulled together and refined,
seductive b\Jt soft.
A far more feminine way of dress-
ing is in store for day and night.
Everything is treated with a
softer hand.
Innocent white lace for day and
alluring ruffles at night add up to
blatant, self-assured femininity
throughout.
Diamond jewelry, always the ul ·
timate feminine touch, abounds!
Perhaps it is a desire to return to
an easier, far less complicated time.
CITY SANDALS
GO EVERYWHERE I
rtll''4Jfl"'l"t'l("fll''' \>~It,.,
\.dl"C.l.!O ol w.,.., l..tw• {VI"
<l.ri \C~ .Y"tk1 ffli -' Witj
'"'"'· t
In any case, the whole fast-
developing trend to soft, romantic
underdressings -camisoles, led·
dys, bows and lace -has now been
transposed into its own fashion look.
It is a look of innocence and
beguilement, from soft tousled hair
to patent leather pumps.
Fabrics and colors are very im·
portant -lace, eyelet and em·
broidery in white or the palest
pastels help make the statement.
It's playful, young and un-
abashedly feminine.
When evening comes. the lacy in-
f~/
\
r""" tr•1vw<J Hal~· 8.>\l<#'f
lNf•.Y. J'--itft'<l ""'''n"' J.-• ,
tircrom '""' !<JOI<\ i.•t> '""'tr Ill.
C1.rril0<1ANV CU\hlcY1<'d '"'" 13500
N M W
6-10, l1 ~10, lJ 6-10
• CAMEO SHOES
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA
Lower wvel-Near May Co.
the
knowing
look ...
T
546-5210
PANT·HER KNOWS YOUR ACTIVE
LIFESTYLE DEMANDS CLOTHES TO
FIT All OCCASIONS . . . Here Is a
trio that will travel from work to
weekend In style. The lined blazer
offers patch pockets. Matching penta
have a plaid belt and quarter top
pockets. Both are In easy wash and
weer 85% TODAY'S DACRON
Polyeater/35% Com~ed Cotton. A
colorful addition· la made with this
large plaid short sleeved shirt. All ere
In sizes 5/8 to 13/14.
JACKET · 170
PANTS · 133
SHIRT · 12tl
Navy or Tan
7 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
844-8982
MS.4'
nocence of day blossoms into
elegant, ruffled sophistication.
Ruffles and tiers flow as freely as
champagne this season, evoking a
sumptuously romantic mood.
These most feminine of all details
are seen framing everything from
shoulders to necklines and circling waists and legs.
The color spectrum of these rul·
fled extravaganzas ranges from
elegant, basic black to bot pink to
milk whites.
From lace to ruffles, femininity reigns supreme this spring.
Spring style
turns to
lace look
Young Women 16 to 21
JOB CORPS CAN HELP YOU
II you left school or gr•duatad end need asslatenoe on
• RHDIHG THE RIGHT WOU FOR YOU
• GETTING TRAIN ING • GETTING STARTED
Job Corps is a U S. Government program to help you build
Skills that employees want . . . become self-supporting and
proud of your abilities ... have money in your pocket and In
the bank. At a Job Corps Center you can get-
IOOM AM» IOAID. FUii
n•1•1&. IOOIS, SUf'ftm. l'Ull
t llDtCAL DIMTAL CAii. l'Ull
ftAMSPOnATIOM ....
Even some spending money, too .. Help t.o get your HS
diploma . . or learn to drive. Choice of careers you can train
forl If you really want to be a capeble~employed person. call:
JOI CORPS 143·3676
I
ULTIMA 11 -~
Charles Revson
COME IN FOR YOUR
COMPLIMENT ARY
MAKE-UP
By
MARGARET DUNCAN
No nh Drug Cosmetician
FREE GIFT
WITH TREA TMENT ruRCHASE Of UL TIMA II
..
20 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar.18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar 19. 1981 *
Hers and his Omega wrist watches are of the finest quality 14k gold
with diamonds at Koven's Jewelen, on the upper level near May
company in South Coast Plau.
Good-Luck Ch•IM
May Work For Leprech ... s
lut-
Toclay's Womcm Cmt le
In Control Using
Natural l•er SlrefiCJlhS .. ,
964-3553
Call us for complimentary consultation to discover how
the Gold-Silva method of self-improvement through
hypnosis can benefit you.
9550 Warner Ave., Fountain Valley
Hypnosis Facti on Tape
Please request tape bJ.. ...wber ...
C1 . What is hypnosis? C5. Anxiety & Depression
C2. Stress & Tension C6. Breast Enhancement
C3. Welhjt Control C7. Sexuality
C4. Smoking C8. Self-hypnosis
963-9ll6
Saks shows Bay area designs
Shitley Hyatt. San Francisco Bay
area designer will be at Saks Firth
A venue m South Coast Plaza along
with her r e presentative Jan
Kno wlton lo s how her unique
collection of hand painted designer
fashions
The collection will consist of
se parates, dresses . kimono
ensembles, a hand painted wedding
gown and other fashions created
exclusively for Saks.
Ms. Hyatt has created quite a stir
on t he fashion scene within the past
~1x months with her gift for both
~arment and fabric des ign.
Perhap~ her most enthusiastic
rhent 1s Mrs Pilar Wayne, who has
purcha!>ed several outfits.
Fabrics include silk crepe de
ch in e, ltne n ·look raw si lk ,
handke rchie f linen and textured
s ilks.
Many pieces are accessorized
with necklaces and bells by Heidi
Lucas. From noon to 3 p.m . on
Friday, March 27 in the Designer
Salon.
'Breaking Free' a motivator
Breaking Free is a theatre show·
ing produced especially for women.
Over a two year period of ex
tensive in-depth interviewing with
women was needed to compile in·
formation about their true feelings.
desires and fears.
Breaking Free 1s an inspira
lion, "showing women how they can
learn to be s uccessful without
trying."
Women today need to believe in
themsel\'es to become s uccessful
The program analyzes and ex-
amines the anatomy of success, and
then applies t hese findings and pnn
ciples to a system called "A Diet
For Success."
The "Diel" actually instructs
women in the self-improvement and
self-awareness needed to become
ever ything they wish to be.
All goals can be met.
The show is done with flair.
It is experienced.
Women's Internat ional Success
Systems has invested hupdreds of
thousands of dollars to develop this
4 1 :i hour women's motivational
~how
The audience 1s led through the
program by a d ynamic woman
moderator
The show's basic philosophy 1s
rooted in the principle that there 1s
only one thing powerful enough to
tra nsform the quality of your life
and that's you
"Diet For Success " is based on
the works of leading behavioral
scientists who believe that within
each of us lies an infinite capacity
to experience happiness and suc-
cess.
Original music is used, and the
$45 admission fee includes a tape
of the music and a workbook.
CHARLES INTRODUCES:
THE LATEST IN INNOVATIVE HAIR PIECES
Custom Styling to get the Look,
That Gets the Looks!
CHARLES' WIGS
tAUI AND ITYLINQ 11tllo.C....~.
* Supplemen110CoastLIFE,Mar 18,1981&DAILYPtLOT,Mar 19.1981 -IAM'NOMAN 21
New ankle--strap wedgies are just In at Cllandler's on the upper level
near the carousel court in South Coast Plaza.
Auston students &
graduates can be seen in:
* VOGUE
*GLAMOUR * SEVENTEEN * COSMOPOLITAN * MADEMOISELLE
-,,_ ,!fllll' I .
._;))
I nternat1onal Agency and Model Management Op-
portunities available Your New York-Toronto-Paris
Modeli ng Connection .. New Faces Wanted for
Fashion. Print & Commercial.
CALL MOW 556-7900 FREE EVALUATION
Brown-Hart Interiors has
all decor at 30% off
Brown llart Interiors offers a full
range of decorating services
Several unique services are
avai lable as well as 30 percent off
the retail price on all wall paper ,
fabrics, draperies, levelors. wood
blinds, carpet and furniture
A II decorating needs can be sup-
plied at 30 percent off
Cu:.tomers are ser viced free of
charge both al the shop and in their
own homes
Home service includes measur-
ing, showing of samples and a job
quote.
All of this 1s done within an hour's
time
Those looking for a particular
t~pe of wallpaper, for example,
need onJy describe it and Brown-
Hart professionals will locate selec·
lions to choose from
"W ,. want to help. customers find
exactly what they re looking for,"
said a spokesperson ·we are happy to do all the work
for selec tive c ustomers," s he
added
Brown·Hart welcomes projects of
any size, and stresses that the
prices offered are very competiti ve.
Brown-Hart is located at 600-B,
W<'st 19th Street , Costa Mesa.
telephone 645-7901
Auston's modeling creates
successful good looks
Auston's professional modeling
a nd fi nishing school produces
models seen in magazines such as
Vog u e. Cos m opo li ta n ,
Mademoiselle and Gla mour.
It has been awarded ··school or
lhe year'' by the largest model
agency rn the world Wilhelmina
Models, Inc.
G r a dua tes are accepted by
prom incnt model agencies world
wide.
T he fi nest models, actors and
fashion photographers nationally
and internationally have assembled
at Auston 's as instru<'tors
Auston's presents a professional
environment which provides not on-
ly instruction but workshops m
photographic modeling, runway
mod eling, video taping, make-up,
composition and presentation, stage
craft narration and television.
Successful graduates have the op·
portunity to be represented by the
Aust on International Modeling
Agency. Call 556-7900.
Students receive on the job train·
in g, and thus have a chance to
"earn while they learn."
1····················· I ~~ I
I o/ I
I (JZ)eadt I I u~· I
I I
II Wfl90'll Wheel rr .. School I
is pleased to announce fhe '' I I school facility has expanded to I
I meet our growth enrollment I
ILIMINATIY SCHOOL IC911.-6 ..
I Carde n Curriculum I I Emphasizing Academics I
I Summer School
Care before and I I after school . I
I PU.SCHOOL I I Carden Curriculum I
I Qualified Staff I Full·Part Time Programs I Junior Kindergarten I
••. TUTOIJM• I All ages including adults · I I tailored to meet individual needs
I ..OU.NOW I I •:30.6:00 v..._ I I :ri~ ... , • i '1
I tkl1Dlf••••cll . 116-~·· •111111••••···········~"'~ .
-.
•
22 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar 19, 1981
Gold and Silva
Hypnosis enables women to deal successfully vvith life
Today's woman can be in control
of her behavior and ber outlook on
life by utilizing her inner strengths
in positive, constructive ways.
Dr. Frederica Gold and Dr. Vic·
toria Silva or Gold, SiJva and As·
sociates in Fountain Valley, are
hypnosis consultants who speclaliie
in helping the contemporary woman
to s uccessfully deal with life's
challenges.
According to Ors. Gold and Silva,
hypnosis and self-hypnosis are
powerful, effective tools which ena-
ble the individual to tap lnto her
natural resources and direct them
efficiently toward the goal.a that are
important to ber.
One of the biigest difficulties coa-
fronting the woman of our lbdety ii
the balancing of her many roles,
such as wife, mother, lover, stu-
dent, and business person, wit.bout
losing sight of her own individual
identity.
Oftentimes the stress and tension
created by this juggling act
becomes overwhelming.
AdditiooalJy, many women pres-
sure themselves to be the "perfect" wife, mother, pro·
fessionaJ, so that the results of this
intense desire to please coupled
with the stress of performing
various roles can be physical com-
plaints, anxiety, depression, com-
pulsive eating and continual
fatigue.
As wives, mothers and business
persons. Ors. Gold and Silva have a
unique and practical understanding
of the needs of contemporary
women.
The special understanding of the
Gold, Silva team, combined with
their experience and education. bas
contributed to the rapid develop·
menl of their business and services
provided.
"Hypnosis t 'acts on Tape" is a
concept developed to encourage the
availability of accurate Information
on the use of hypnosis.
To receive this service the in-
dividual merely dials 963-9116 a.nd
requests the tape number of the
topic of Interest.
A complete list or topics and tape
numbers is included in their ad in
this section.
Information regarding the many
services offered by Gold and Silva
can be obtained by calling 964-3553.
Women concerned with putting
their best face forward
Putting your best face forward is
wbat many women of today are pre·
occupied with doing.
Yet many women, in their effort
to obtain a young and healthy look·
ing complexion. often do more
harm than good to their skin.
Dermatologists contend that the
key lo skin care is not an expensive
beauty program or exotic creams
and lotions, but common sense. and
above aU , moderation.
While doctors don't always agree
on the causes or treatment of skin
ailments, they do agree on one
thin&: overexpoeure to the sun is
the main cause of premature
wrinkles and aging.
Many try various treatments and
moisturizers to combat this condi-
tion.
But in their efforts, women often
overuse moisturizers.
Creams and lotions often clog the
pores and this can give the skin a
waxy feeling or lead to acne, a com·
mon skin ailment that sends women
over 21 to a dermatologist.
Some determatologisls feel that
women in their twenties and thirties
shouldn't use moisturizers on their
faces at all:
The solution for dry skin, they
feel, Is not to use creams and lotions
which only relieve the signs and
symptoms of dry skin but not the
cause, but to hydrate the skin. Although many people believe
that having a dark sun tan makes
them look more attractive or
healthier, it does so only tem-
porarily.
Over the years, excessive ex-
posure to the sun can cause dry,
leathery skin, premature wrinkles
and can also lead to choasma (Uver
spots) and even skin cancer.
Jewelry echoes soft hues in
nature -fresh and delicate
Tbe best cover-up available
again.st the sun's dama1in1 rays la
a chemical one.
Any of the popular brand name
sunscreens that contain PABA
( para-amino-benzoic -acid) are
good.
These preparations abaorb ul·
travlolet rays and allow 1radual
tanniJll. 1
Another type of chemical protec·
tion ls the sunblock.
It deflects the ultraviolet ra}'I
totally and allows no tannins at all.
Besides excessive e•posure to the
sun , other environmental condilicllla
such as overheated rooma and OYer
drying air condJUon.er1, can tob
sklll of water and cause dry 1khl.
BJ their thirties and forties molt
women a\Affer from dry 11dn, the
ca;;, ol which a. aot yet etlltlrelx
kn 'w1oo'n
Taking a cue from spring's del-
lc ate hues, new jewelry echoes
nature In soft, high-key colors and
freab, delicate designs, reports the
Jewelry Industry Council.
Ll1bt pink tourmalines, pale
aquamariae, baby pink coral, and
lllht amber glow in spring'a newest
necklaeet and bracelets.
Pearla continue their romance
with fuhion, with tiny Heel pearls
and rite-adze fresh-water pearfa lffD
in aborter length, multlatrand
necklaces, often twisted for added
eye appeal.
Bound to be a fashion favorite la
. t.he several 1trand, twisted pearl
choker.
Tbls 11 often worn wllb other
necklaces, such as a plal.n cbaln
necldace1 wttb or wlthout=-dant. ano perbaps a lonter I ol
baroque peuia, or chaln nee ace .wltbPWJ~~ , ,, Ardn!D' e< 0·w w·t
------
and amber are seen in new bead
necklaces, also worn several at a
time In varyln1 lengths, and often
with color gradations rrom very
hl•h key to warmer tones.
Tiny &old station beads appear
wltb the colored beads, also.
Another upect of the li.Cht tone
trend in jewelry Is the new shell
jewelry, which is either jewelry cop-
yln1 nature, or the delicately hued
shells themaeJves, laminated and
with their natural colors preserved·
for pendaata, plns and eaninp.
Even fOld jewelry has a ltlhler
look, u many of lhe new peadaata
teature ~utout detlp1, and new
bracelet.a a.M rinl• are mon del·
icately1culpted.
Sure to be a hit ln tbe aeuon
ahead are monoaram iJUt4al• In told. aa n.. HU cbaiu.
FHbloe'a metHt• for •JJriDI • ~;t:~W,!t Ucht~-
Florals
blossom
in fabrics
Home sewers will find inspiration
aplenty among the fabrics that are
now in season.
Prints abound, with florals pre-
dictably leading the way.
They range from tiny flowers to
big blossoms, splashed across
fabrics in bold fashion.
Whether sort and romantic, flat
and stylized or exotic, floral prints
will be a decorative feature of the Spring '81 scene .
The ethnic prints are also in
vogue this season, with batiks,
African motifs and South American
folk art among the favorites.
The Preppy look is another
popular way to get Into print: pin
dots, plaids, checks and stripes are
classically right once again for
spring, as are geometrics.
Conversation prints will also be in
the spotlight for spring: stars,
fruits, animals, palm trees, nags
and other whimsical motifs are sure
to liven up the season.
Color adds excitement lo the
season as well: in addition to
pastels, spring brings soft brights
and neutrals.
Coral looks to be a favorite, with
peach, turquoise, jade, teal, pur-
ple, cobalt blue, geranium red,
cocoa brown, banana, khaki,
mother·ot-pearl 1ray and roty beige
among those shades sharing lhe col-
or spotlight. •
Fabrics ar, youn1er-tban-
1prin,ume u benta the season.
Rayoa cbaJlls, voile, 1eor1ette,
seersucker, il11ue faille, cotton
lawn, and mouueUne are amoa1
the fabric Ml.et1ou, some ol whieh
are embo•ed.
After aeveral H&IGOI of palnt-box bn.bta. colon bave awtetened &o
flower pnttlnela and dusty OHf·
toaa, /f atcaa ll'htrinlnt• .... , •. "' ...
lcwoln •• nr pl Wt. • '·
~-------
BEST
tlJRSES
REGISTRY
J ... &cJedal
RH,DoH
RN's LVN1s
CRITICAL CARE*
JOlli G_,-r
Area Rep.
We need your professional skills row to staff our new office in the South Coast oreo.
We off er the following inducements:
• Shift dlfferH+lal
• PtMion Plan
• Ullllprocffc:• IH.
• loM11 ref..,-ral plCNI
• Tuit10tt rel"'bu"e for CIU's
• H•alth h11arC11tCe
·usT CRITICAL CARE SERVICES
~sul:xday of Best Nurses Registry)
hos been established to service the specialized needs of the critical core
P'ofessioool
Best Nurses Req1s1ry hos been des.C}'ed exclusively for the discriminot1ng Nurse who
v.ishes to utilize her profession v.11h pride We give every consideration to meet your
needs as to preference of shift. locotton & type of assignment. W e place the
emphasis on YOU'
"So be choosy! Go with the Be~
8"t HirHs R.cjlstry
754-6791
1500 Adams, II 307
Cosio Me~
And a Jade T to
inatchl Jumper In soft
Jade "Baby Cord" stripes,
sizes 5-14. T-Shlrt alao
come• In black, white, ·navy,
•nd red, alzea 4-16.
LADY MADONNA ~VIEJOMM.L U>perl....t
Next lo The May CA>.
495-2623 . '-• .. ' -•' . .. .
956-3430
2572 W. Woodland Dr.
Anaheim
Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 23
---r:::================~~\M.t..~================:::::::::;:t-11
Enjoy Eas-er
Hallmark paper party ware in
Remember friends
and family with
beautiful Hallmark
cards for Sunday.
April 19.
r 1980 Hallmark Car<IS Irie
Doily Hcus: 10.7 Fri. 1().8
Sot. 10.5 ond Sun. I 2·5
MacArthur Bllld
8'1Stol
Town and ~ Country i
South Cont Plaza
5Yllflow9f Alie.
San DiegoFwi
pretty spring
designs make
Ea ster entertaining
easy.
We hove one of
the largest
selections of
custom printed
wedding invitations
in the
Orange Coo~t area
and we give you
24 hour service!
Fame Hallmark Cards
and Gifts Shoppe
3648 S. Bristol'
'f/9-6661
~imply Elegant.
...;;r,;,m Kovert1s, diamond elegance styled for the woman of today,
and tomorrow. Shown abo'+'t: o. S525, b. S9SO, c. SS95, d. S360.
!Coven/Credit, Mo•t•r Cord, Vlso, American Eicpress.
-
..
24 I AM WOMAN-Supplement to Co..i LIFE, Mllf. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mer. 19. 1981
J\
t \ t<. .,.
\1
J
\I..
\I .
\}
'.\ l
\1
CH
CH
lbe pendant
$255
•
•
'tr---....... ~~~ ..... -'M..oll~ ............................. ~(
HAMCMI CINT'lft --ooer.-......
-----·-----
Nutritional,
balanced diet
recommended
Diet Center meets the dietary
needs of today's busy woman.
The simple, natural and nutri·
tionally balanced diet is the basis
for Diet Center's program of weight
control and lifetime maintenance.
The nutritional lessons learned at
the Center can benefit the heaJth of
the whole family.
"Many women are surprised by
how well lhey look and feel while on
the reducing program," said a
spokesperson.
''The well -balanced diet of
natural foods is refl ected in their
skin, hair, nails and in the high
level of energy and vitality they ex·
perience," s he added. The pro·
grams are Individualized for each
woman.
Because women have more fat
cells than men as well as a different
hormonal make-up, weight gain is
easier and weight loss is more dif-
ficult.
Diet Center counselors address
this with private help and e n·
couragement on a daily basis.
Clients lose 17 to 25 pounds during
a six-week period.
In addition to quick weight-loss, a
good inch loss can be expected
(usually one inch per pound).
Diet Centers are in F-Ountain
Valley. Costa Mesa, Newport Beach,
Huntington Beach, Irvine and Corona
delMar.
ODNA.
LOW AS $2599
FROM CWB UNIVERSE
Discover legendary C hina!
We feature a ll 17 exciting C lub Universe O rient with
C hina, plus India a nd Nepal vacations for 1Q8J.
Because they've been where you're going, they strive
to offer you the best vac.:i tions dt the lowest prices.
17 days --CHINA EXPRESS. Roundtrip air, Standard
and First Class hote l accommodations, m ost med ls,
including all meals in Chi nd with d special Peking
Duck dinner, tours in each city, services of a
professiondl Club Universe To ur Manage r dnd muc h
more are included in o ne surpri singly low
price -$2599
PLUS EXCLUSIVE T RIPLE GUARANTEE
Onfy Club Universe offers you: G uaranteed
departures, guaranteed prices, and a $10 million
security guarantee on dll mo ni es paid.
Call o r visit us at the dddress be low for details dnd d
free ORIENT WITH C HINA broch~ d b
Prices based on double occupancy ·-·-U
Membership in C lub ......
Universe is Ss per year. Unl\lerSe
Wt'ft a... wlttN' ,_•re ...... 9
BEST IRA¥EL SERVICES~ .·~;:;;~i::'
...
Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1961 & DAILY PILOT. Mar 19. 1981 -I AM WO MAN 25
Best Travel
opens new
Europe unit
Best Travel Services is owned by
Shirley Johnson, travel agent with
20 years experience in r etail travel.
The agency handles all types of
travel and specializes in leisure
vacations.
Commercial accounts are
welcome, and receive free delivery
of tickets.
A new division of Best Travel has
been added in Europe.
This division handles extensions
to travel arrangements and places
customers in private country homes
in Enaland.
The arrangeme nts include
transfers from either the airport.
or hotel in London to the private
country residence, sightseeing in
local vWacea and the countryside,
all meals and lodging.
Customers live with an English
family and are taken by private car
lo many beautiful spots in the coun-
tryside -places whkh are usually
missed by travelers.
These extensions can be arranged
for either before or after touring,
and can be for short or long periods
of time.
TM UH el Klrtl Jewlen IR tt.rfMr CHter, Cesta Meu, •re IMlll .. fww•nl • ...._. .. yw tM hltHt
• fl• Jewelry alMI watcll tlelill•· ~ are CMryl Heisler, left, EU.I H•l1m•, sa... McGnttla Md
Dorrie O.ve... Klrll Jew11 ..... tw • yan.
Best Travel is open from 9 a.m. lo
5: 30 p. m. Monday through Friday
and 10 a.m. lo 2 p.m. every Satur-.
day (and later by appointment).
The agency is located at 19038
Magnolia in the Garfield Plaza,
Huntington Beach.
YOU A"E INVITED TO AN
OP•M HOUS•
COME TOA
we•GHTWATCHERS MEETING
O•LIGA ........ • ~
'Sf Ashion Works!
presented by
A lunch-hour series featuring career fashions .
Tllwlclcly, Aprll 9 12: 11 p.&
How to extend your wardrobe with accessories.
~ .. ., ..... 21 12:15p.M.
ersonalizing your wardrobe for your figure propar-
1 tion.
Location: Jewel Court in the Mall
Petite lunch will be served for a nominal fee or vou
are welcome to bring your own. CompHmentary
beverages.
We promise to be punctual so y0u can get back to
the office on time
R.S.V.P. with the Fashion Office. I
540-3233, Ext. 2~ 7, 218.
s....c ......... JJJJ ...... ser..t,c-.w...
-26 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19. 1981
Th• Ascot in bone, white ilnd ftilYY hils ii comfort41bl• polyurethane
bottom at Joyce-Selby, on the upper level neu May ComNnY, South
Coast Plata.
Heavenl y H·band at an earthy price. White
or tan strips on cork wedge. 18. 99
MasterCard • Visa
SOUTH COAST PLAzA
3.133 Bristol, QJeta Mesa
Phone 75'-9CM7
_,__ _____ _
,
Best Nurses Registry tries
to improve registry inlage
Improving the image of nursing
registries is a major concern of
Best Nurses Registry.
'The state has had lax laws reg·
ulating nurses regis tries," said
Thomas Myan of 8es t Nurses
Registry. "It has a llowed operation
of a registry with or without a
license."
That policy has a llowed many
less scrupulous registries to prac·
lice less than adequate screening of
their nurses.
.. The result has been that many or
these unqualified nurses have been
s howing up in c riti cal care
hospitaJs.
··And with nurses· growing
r esponsibilities because of the com-
plexity 01 modern medicine, tnese
nurses have been found wanting in
the proper sltills -and this causes
problems." Myan said.
Recently, the Public Health
Department has come out with a
body of regulations for. nurses
registries. These are the Joint Com-
mission for Accreditation of
Hospitals CJ CAH ) andTitle22.
"We fully subscribe to these rules.
We feel that compliance with them is
part of our total commit·
menttoprofessionals m ," My an said.
To ensure that these regulations
are upheld, Best Nurses has placed
Jean Engedal RN in charge oC their
implementation.
She has had 15 years experience
in nursing administration in acute
care facrnties and has been nursing
director of Best Nurses Registry in
Anaheim for one and one-half
years.
"We feel that J ean 's experience
will be very helpful in allowing us to
implement these r egulations."
Myan said.
Best Nurses. which also has an of·
!ice in Costa Mesa co-operated by
Jean and Kelly McCleary RN. is at·
tempting to establish a professional
level of rapport with client hospitals
by s upplying qualified, professional
help with expertise in all specialty
areas.
Nursing personnel are thoroughly
screened by testing , skills jnventory
and personal interviews.
For the professional. the registry
offers freedom of choice for hours
worked, location of work, reim·
bursement for continuing education
classes and sem inars. holiday pay,
rate dirferenlial for various shifts
worked, group ins urance and a
bonus referrral plan.
All practices at Best Nurses are
aimed lo improve the public image
of nursing registries, lo provide
ac ute care facilities with full y
qualified professional help when
needed and to bring many more
professional nursing personnel back
inlo the active working force where
there is an acute nursing shortage.
Call the Anaheim office a l
956·34~.
<!}VeW ~flectiori~.
SPECIALIZING IN PAINLESS HAIR REMOVAL WITHOUT NEEDLES
FCC APPROVED
THE EXCLUSIVE ELECTROH
PROCESS OF HAIR REMOVAL
Remember --•
It no tonger hurts to be beutiful
GET READY FOR
SUMMER-
FOA REGISTERED
HAVE YOUR BIKINI LINES
REMOVED NOW!
FOR FREE CONSlA.TATION &
OEMONSTRA TION, CALL:
67S..23&1
'
Antique fairs
scheduled for
Newporter Inn
Fradkin Antique Fairs, monthly
antique shows to be held al the.
Newporter Inn, will begin March 27
and continue one Supday per
month.
A full range or antiques will be
s hown; Americana, Primitives
(such as wagon wheels and but-
ter churns). and Orientatia (oriental
art objects).
All kinds or glass. such as art·
glass, cut glass and carnival glass
will be represented.
Antique shoppers can expect to
find ceramics, porcelains, bronzes,
paintings, sculpture, jewelry and
more.
The Victorian era will be well
represented at the Fairs with
popular furniture, jewelry and or-
nately carved pieces.
Al so, unusual items such as a 15th
century Japanese samurai complete
set or armor can be seen.
Many desirable items will be
made available.
''Antiques are an excellent invest-
ment," said Howard Fradkin, or·
ganizer.
"There is a constant demand for
antiques so one can purchase them
and sell in, say, five years, and
make a profit of up lo 5000 per-
cent."
Collectables (items less than 100
years old ) will also be exhibited.
Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mer. 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 27
Write to Box 1662, Huntington
Beach, 92647 to be put on the mail-
ing List. B•ndollno sMes •re Just OM of .. nta•Y styles IMI uve •rrlftd fer .... •I c.pua., .. u.......,. level ftNr Bullock's In S... CMst Plau.
So was I! ...
But that was before
I heard about
Diet Center!
IT WORKED
FOR ME!
Mary Hatcher
lost 85 pounds!
"I couldn't heheve how fa~t I
lost weight. and I did 11
without feeling hungry or
nervous
YOU CAN DO IT TOO!
Sound nutrition and private, daily counseling will help
you loM that excess weight quickly and naturally. Call
today for a tree introductory consultation.
NO SHOtS NO DRUGS NO CONTRACTS
CALL TODAY!
Foutain Valley •
llC·ISIJ
COit• Meaa . S4t·zzt8
Cotta Meta·
NewportllC-4'71 ~ .............
fflln&lftlt4'111 Beacb •
M2·7lll
ornt·UIO
lrvlne • 551· ISSS
Newport.
Col'OlladelMar
t71.flll
"°'' ... AT THE t~ ~~ DIET ~ ~1 CENTERe ~
+~
t7t-lllJ
ZJOO HAllOl aYD ... IMllOI CIMTll
Open 'tll 9 p.m. Monday thN Frid•v. Sat io 'tll e. Sun. 12 'tll s
"LARGEST CARD SELECTION IN
QWi9~ggµJffY."
-
--
I _...
·--------------
28 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar 18. 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar 19. 1981
• nti ue
ONE DAY SHOW AND SALE
SUNDAY, MARCH 22nd
I 0:30 fl.llL -4:00 P."" .
NeWDorter Inn
Monte Corfo Room• 11&7 Janibotff Rd.• Newport a.och
(N ear Pacific Coast Hwy & Jamboree)
Admission $2.00, $1.50 with this ad
The World of Antiques:
Fine Jewelry, Americana,
Orientolio, Bronzes,
Porcelains, Art Gloss,
Cut Glo ss, Silver, ··~
Furniture, etc.
35 dealers with 1 OOO's
of Antique & Collectible
treasures.
MIA ROSE PRODUCTS
presents
the UL Tl MATE BODY WRAP
CELLULITE CONTROL CREAM ..
. easy to apply SELF-WRAP ... a
proven method to lose inches •
immediately and dissolve away
;-ugly cellulite wh ile it firms, con·
tours, and tones.
NO Dim -NO PILLS -NO EXERCISE!
Non-allergenic and for All AGES
SEND TODAY FOR INCHES AWAY
Meil Check or Mo"•Y Order $21 .50 (l"cludeS tu & shipping) ,
MIA ROSI PRODUCTS
177-#-Rlv.,.... A••·
Mewpori hoch, CA '2661
Name ......................................... .
Address ....................................... .
City .............................. Zip ......... .
Profeutonal wraps available by epoolntment. 714-642-6339 , ............................ .........
Chilrles of ugunil, SPKl•lllina In Meft's custom h•lr replM:ements,
is •t 1116 S. CNst Highw•y, Laguna Be.ch. Call 4M-1775.
Mia Rose ends
the 'climple
dilemma'
1VJ ia Rose Products presents
Body Wrap Cellulite Control Creme
for slim lines Cellulite 1s. accordin g to Mia
Rose, an unfortunate side effect of
being fem ale
It results from a combination of
inClu ences Crom sex hormones and
the spedal structure of the skin and
subcutaneous tissue in women.
As explained by Mia Rose. lhe
adipose. or fat cells in the body. are
egg shaped with a n amino acid
shell
In side these s h el l s a r c
carbohydrates, saturated and un·
saturated oils. toxins. and other
debris.
These proJect into the upper
layers of the skin and are responsi-
ble for the lumpy appear ance of the
skin surface.
The compression and bulging of
these upright fat cell chambers
causes what Mia Rose refers to as
the "Dimple Dile mma."
"Although cellulite is usually
found in association with obesity,
it's also a £igure problem for
otherwise slim women," said Rose ..
Mia Rose Cellulite Dissolver ap·
plied to the trouble areas penetrates
the skin and raises the level of .body
heat.
A plastic wrap around the area
will prevent the heat from escaping.
At 107.8 degrees, the amino acid
shell of the fat cell breaks up.
The fat and toxins are excreted
by the body
This is not a fluid loss. but an ac·
tual loss in Inches.
••With continued home treat·
m enls, women will not only notice
continued loss or inches, but also in·
creased firmness and smooth skin," she added.
Complete instructions are ln·
eluded with orders~
. For mor•JA&Qc~LDP. ~fRJOrder the product: eilll"•.4Df.
* Suppler'f\8nl to Coast LIFE. Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT. Mar 19, 1981 -I AM WOMAN 29
Z'ea 'D'lh, S~ea1&
/I for ladies
Coat• MeH • 390 E. 17th Street
;"~ . 541 te01 (Corner of Tuatln next 10 R•lpha)
"~~
MOft..-Sat.
I 0-5:30
Bea Dyke Swimwear, a 25 year tradition with women of all
ages, is now offering one of the largest selections of
SWIMWEAR •nd
RESORTWEAA FASHIONS
(Sizes 3 thru 18 -also D cups)
Come in and get acquainted with the newes t styles in
sundresses, veloor or terrycloth dresses, cover-ups, robes
and casual sportswear.
NAME BRANDS ONLY -YOU'LL SAVE
WHEN YOU SHOP WITH US. I 'h PRICE SALE RACK All YEAR I I.. •I ENCINO WOODLANOHILLS-NORTHRIDGE
MARINA DEL REY -RANCHO MIRAGE V/SA'
Spend a few moments to
refresh your senses.
This fine collection of naturally
beautifuJ things is a delight to
both the collector of specimen
s h ells and the interes ted
a mateur. Shells also make
unique gifts and decorator
items for your home or boat.
t, Come see the exciting new
shells we brought back after
our recent Philippines and
South Africa trips, whe re we
enjoyed several weekends of
diving.
The safari look is a new trend in women's tuhions thilt finds ex-
pression at The Wet Seal, on the upper level nHr Mt1y Company In
South Coast Pl~H.
Removal of employees' personal
problems improves productivity
Many businesses benefit from the
Employees Assistance Program.
which helps problem employees
The program is offered by the Ad·
vanced Health Center in lrvine.
About 10 percent of the employees
in any bus iness have personal
problems which affect their work.
Grief, financial worries, marital
problems, etc .. keep a worker's mind
off of his job.
With personal problems left un-
s o I v ed, worker producti vity
d•minishes : tardiness and absen-
teeism iin creases, as do accident
levels and job performance drops.
The Employees Assistance Pro·
gram teaches s upervisors to
monitor an employee's work
After verbal warnings and a dis-
ciplinary lette r . the employee is
asked to conlacl the Advanced
, Health Center, lest his unacceptable
work level continue to the point of
termination.
At the Center, the person's prob-
lem is treated by pro'fessionals
who speciali1e in dealing with a
number of different problems.
··Al the Center, we work on the
problem. not the con'lplalnt," said
Walt Giles, administrator.
"Al multiple points in our lives,
we suffer from stress which has ac·
cumulated.
"Thia stress leads to psychological
and perhaps phy1iolo1ical ramlfica-
UOn•. "1• nnlatMd. .::. , _. ·~Jtflfej•f~•..,"1 ml
"To tum a depressed, low produc·
tiv~mployee into a happy produc-
tive one, we must get at the root of
the problem. This is done at the
Center." he said.
Response from individuals who
are sent to the Center is excellent
Often they self-refer themselves
or e ncourage fellow workers or
friends to join.
In addition to this. increased pro·
ductivity is experienced.
For more information. telephone
975-0700.
McCabe offers
fashionable shoes
A warm . personable shop
furntshed in antiques offers a wide
variety of women's shoes.
McCabes, a fine women's shoe
store in Fountain Valley, has been
open for more than a year .
Names such as Cherokee. 9 West
and Bear Traps are stocked.
A large selection oC handbags is
available to finish an outfit or
match a pair or shoes.
Women joln the Ten Pair Club,
which enUUes them to the 11th pair
of sh'oea at. no charae. McCabes la located at 9'80
Warner Avenue.
Open 7 Daya a Week for your
shopping or'browalng pleuure
3416 Via Oporto • Lido Marfn• Vlll•a• • Newport Beach • 673-0605
Fashions For M'Lady
.. We go to all lengths to please"
Sportswear ... Blouses
Career ... Casual
Daytime ... Date Time
Fotmal . . . Funtime
Suits ... Coats
Accessories
A few Grut Names of Many:
Sebastian International
Sebastian Knits <Wool-Others)
Rhodes of California
Alladin, Jeremy, L.A.T.C. B.louses
Dalani I, JI, Rona. Susan Howard
Lili Diamond, Dan Leslie
Route One, Route One Petite
Sizes 3·10
Junior. Missy, Womens, Missy Petite
VI SA, MasterCharge Cards
gladly accepted
Crown Valley Parkway ud Co•t& Hllll••Y
L•paa, NIIMI
•.
·~.
)
)
!
..
30 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coast LIFE, Maf 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar 19, 1981
Carden private school
develops rounded child
Carden private school of Hunt·
ington Beach is co-owned and
directed by Carol Van Asten and
Shirley Flanery.
The existing pre-school was
purchased ln 1918.
It was then upgraded and re·
furbished, u well as incorporated.
"We saw a need for a private
school for chiJdren in the Hunt·
ington Beach area," said Flanery
and Van Allen. "So we bought the
facility and watched it grow."
"We movect into the new two
story building in late February,"
said Flanery.
The Carden Curriculum provides
children with a quality educadon.
The method consists of an all-
encompulng program, concerned
with development of the whole
child.
It provides a strong academic
basic training for children, yet it is
highly lndividuali~ed to meet the
needs of each child.
The method was developed by
Mae Carden. and ill used widely in
private schools nationwide.
Carden of Huntington Beach is
open from 6:30 a.m . until 6 p.m.
year round.
The pre·school accomodates
children age two through pre-
kindergarden with fulJ or part-lime
programs.
Klndergarden through sixth
graden enjoy planned after-school
activities including optional ac-
tivities such as Brownies. a club for
boys, a Bible story study and tutor-
ing.
Summer school sessions in ·
corporate transitional programs for
entering students and enrichment
programs for returning studenta.
Hot lunches are included, with op.
tional breakfasts.
For more information, call 536-3588.
New hair removal
method introduced
With summer comes bikinis, bare
legs and the eternal problem of
what lo do with unwanted hair.
"We have introduced a painless,
effective new method of hair re·
moval with a device called the elec·
lroh depilator," says Vera
Thompson, owner of New Reflec-
tions.
Tbe eledroh uses radio frequency
waves t.o dehydrate the hair root ef-
fectively and remove unwanted hair
from the face or body.
The electroh touches only the
hair. never the skin.
The electroh depilator method is
approved by the Federal Com·
munications Commission and is reg·
istered with the Food & Drug Ad·
ministration.
New Refiections is located in Lide
Marina Village In Newport Beach
Call 67~2363.
Customers browse thro• card sectfoft at Fem• H•llmartl, at 36515, BrlstDI Street. Fame MS OM
of Orange county's widest selections In wedding
---Invitations. C.11 t7t""'61.
/ Where
11 The
Gowns
Are ...
-~ -. .. _
...
Supplement to Coast LIFE, Mar. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mar. 19, 1981 -1 AM WOMAN 31
. ,f
A 40-toot-'°"9 salad bar .,..a dlnen at tlM Lettuce Patclt, co owned Illy Mary AM Terry, left, Md
Sandi aruueau. Salacls of •II kinds, clllll, burritos, omelets and 4111lc1N are •moltl tM delicacies at .. Is
shop In the Mission Viejo ~ti, a IMPPl"I experiMK• for all wom• • tM Oranee Cout.
30% OFF
ACCESSORIES FOR THE HOME
• Wallp.aper
• Fabric
• Drapes
• Levolors
• Wood Blinds by Custom Bilt
Consultation by Appoint ment
600-1 WHt 19th St.
Costa Mesa
645-790 I
Correcti ve
Skin Treatments
Waxing
Suntan
Lounges
~
Open the door
to finding the
right roommate
Joy Rippeth, president of Room-
M ate Finders, Incorporated, is
h elping southlanders solve the
rent/house payment crunch.
Roommates from 18 to 80 are
spreading the word about her near-
1 y painl ess way to gain a
house mate.
If you have extra living space or
if you need a living space, call or
-
walk into RoomMate Finders. ..
For $24 to $45, Room Mate Finders
will do all o( the preliminary
screening for the age, area, amount
of rent and sex preferred.
The fee is usually good for two or
three months of referrals.
If a perso ... doesn't find a compati-
ble roommate, the money wilJ be
returned.
The agency requires five ref·
erences and a personal interview
with both the person offering a
place and the person who is looking.
RoomMale Finders accom-
modates all types and ages of peo-
ple.
A roommate satisifes the financial
and solitude problems at the same
time.
Young singles are amenable to
the roommate system as well as the
elderly and divorced.
RoomMate Finders has two
Orange County locations ; Garden
Grove, (714 )891-1773 and Irvine,
641-1899.
Sculptured
Nails
Manicures
Pedicures
I
•
32 I AM WOMAN -Supplement to Coat LIFE. Mer. 18, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, Mer. 19, 1981. *
STARRWGI
Or. Laura Schleuinger
Heard daily .. on KMPC
radio. Dr. Laura is one of
America's premiere wornen
psychologists. .
Pat Allen
A psychologist extraordi-
naire, Pat has patented
a system that gu,rantees
success. called "Want
Training."
Dr. Sioux Hartan.
A dynamo of eleetric
energy, Sioux pl~ys the lead
role" of the mind puide. ~
I ·-Rfta Unlman -... ~' -
A recognized authority
on psycho-therapy, Rita
tlas helped women
to find success
through internal
harmony.
0 Visa 0 Master Charge Exp. Date ---
Account Number ~--
0 Check encloted S amt._....;._~--
..,..~-----~-~-~-
'
·-· c'"' z9 " t+A~~ "'01~\.
& ,~,c-'\"~' •ft~~i.~ ft .... sv,,"" -~s1~. -oo~~, u1"' co ..... 9 6.
sO ~l+A· l .... -'·00 • . \• Breaking Free is the world's most
innovative leaming.experienc~. It combines
theater with motivation. It takes the theory of the left
brain and right brain and makes it an unprecedented
experience for learning. With the u~e of original music
that sings with inspiration C\nd audio visuals that sparkle
· with color; the
right brain
powerftows
into the
analytical
organized left side
of the brain tor a lasting
impression. If you want to be
t really successful, you must see
• "Breaking Free:· ,
, This show has been designed
exclu~MifY .. (or women. Jt's the kind of ~
show YOU .WQCl't want to end ... and the best
part Is ftlat it doesn't; it goes home with
you. Houae~es and career women
equally sfng the show's praises. There's
something me changing for everyone.
1nc1uae.workb00k & music ta~
"'
-
111111 ClllT Ylll 11111111 llllY ""'
I ~il!H'1(JJ\ '1 MAH< H I 11 1 th 1 OHAN C1E:.COUN TY L A L If on NIA :I~ C EN15
Legend hard to smallote in' San .Jua"
By PAMELA HALLAN
l'er t• o.ilf I'll ..
It's swallow season in San Juan Caplstrano.
Reporters run around looking for new ways to tell
about today's annual return. Local merchants breathe a
sigh of relief as they see buses line up alongside the Mls-
sioDi s pilling tourists. And local residents prime their
garden hoses to wash away mud nests as fast as they are
built.
SWALLOWS GET lots of attention from people who
don't li ve in San J uan But those of us who do live here see
them from a slightly less glamorous point or view. We
have to live with them until October.
T he le~end of the swallows, first printed in a very fan-
ciful book called '"Capistrano Nights" in 1930, tells how the
faithfu l swallows return to the Mission each year on St.
J oseph's Day
Actually. the bards spend very liltle time al the Mis-
sion.
The Lrecs have grown too large, inhibiting their nest·
building by cre<l;ling loo many obstacles . So the birds look
for other places to build their nf'sts. A favorite spot is the
freeway bridge over San Juan Creek. New developments
with equally new landscapin"' also are popular. Any un-
obstructed place near open fields and mud will do. Except
for the city's official s wall ow shelters.
Several years ago stories be gan appear ing that
Pomelo Hollon ia a forntn Doi111·
P"ot reporter. SM ia a life wng rtli·
dent of San Juan Copbtrono and ii
wtll ocqua•nttd with tht com ·
munlt]/'1 lriltory and ~gtnda. CUr ·
rtntll/, •M ilonodmini.ttrative <lUU-
tant to tMcft11 manogn. • '
the swaUows were no longer coming back to Capistrano. Jn
a n effort to squelch those rumors and encourage the birds,
the City Council built swallow shelters and put them ln
public parks. They also declared San Juah a bird
sanctuary, maldng it a misdemeanor lo tamper with birds
or nests.
THE SWALLOWS IGNORED the shelters and most local
residents ignored the new ordinance . An occasional cons-
cientious citizen will call City Hall asking for a permit to re-
move a swallow's next, bl.Ii most just wash them away or put
up shiny objects where they don't want a nest.
Whal as wrong with having a few nests under the eaves
or your house? Unfortunately, swallows nests arc lined
with tiny bedbug-like creatures which the birds eat. These
bugs can infest a house if the nest is built near a window.
There is a lso a problem with droppings. Some fastidious
'Life's being ruined,'
MacDonald declares
HE ROUTED RAPIST
John Palladino
CAPTURED 3 GUNMEN
Officer Larry May
Oally Piiot Sutt Phol0t
LONG-DISTANCE RESCUE
Fireman Steve Rothert
·Murder
ruling
asked
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of IN Oallf Poot SI.all
Or. Jefrrey MacDonald
cla1med today that his life ls be-
ing ruined after government at-
torneys a!ked the U S Supreme
Cour t to reinstate his 1979 con-
viction for the murders of his
wife and two children at Fort
Bragg, N.C., in 1970
"It wrecks my life again," ,
said MacDon ald, a Hunlin(lon
Harbour bachelor. "But I'm not
surprised. The government at-
torneys will do anythinl( to prove
they haven't been wrong in pros ·
ecuting me for the l as t 11
years ."
Humble heroes heralded
Justice Department lawyers
filed a writ of certiorari today
asking the Supreme Court to re-
verse the decision of the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals that
overturned MacDona ld's 1979
conviction.
Huntington chamber notes trio's deeds
The appeals court ruled last
J uly that MacDonald was denied
a speedy trial He then was re
leased from Te rminal Island
fed eral prison after ser ving
almost a year.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
0111\e Oa1ly Pilot Sti ll
A more humble trro nf heroes
would be hard lo find
One rescued a wom an from a
r azor blade-w1eld1ng ~trcct al
tacker
Another out~ues~ed and cup
lured three gunmen wanted for
m ore than a dozc•n hank rob-
beries
The third talk ed a wo man and
her husband through rcsuscita·
l ion treat ment by tele phone ,
s aving the life of u heart attack
victim.
,,, Yet the men, John Pulladino.
La rry May and Steve Rothert.
honored Wednesday by the Hun
tington Beach Chamber of Com-
merce, insisted to a man that
their deeds were more routine
than heroic
Mayor R uth Rai l ey d is -
agreeed.
"These are people who went
just a Jillie bit further than what
their duty is." she said.
Recipient of an Award for
Valor . Palladino came to the aid
one night last Augu st of a
woman whose car had broken
down outside his liquor store.
The woman said she would
wait for auto club assistance,
PILOT SALUTES
C!!~Y~~ail~~ ~~~he
Orange Cout woman and her
spirit or accomplis hment.
Look for "I Am Woman," 1
32·paae Perlacope maaaztne
featurina stories and pictures
about the Orange Co11t woman,
her •rowtt11 responalbillUu, htr
accompllahmenta and her day.
to-da >' Medi.
I •
and Palladino locked his store
and drove off. Recalling a sus -
p 1 c 1 ous m a n at th e s cene .
Palladino r e turned m inutes
later and round the man accost-
ing the young woman, holding
her down with a razor blade al
her throat.
The store owner confronted
the attacker, chased him on foot
Space shuttle
worker dies
after mishap
BULLETIN
One of six space abuttle
Columbia workeu overcome
when they entered a compart-
ment puraed of oxyaea llaa clJed.
C APE CANAVERAL, Fla .
c AP l Several space workers
passed out from lack or oxygen
today as they used nitrogen ln
testing safety procedures on the
s pace shuttle Columbia two
hours alter a succeuful dress
rehearsal of pre-launch ac-
ti vttles, officials Hld.
NASA official1 at Kennedy
Space Center said five or aix
employees of Rockwell Interna·
llonal, the private contractor for
the shuttle project, were usina
pure nitrogen to purge shuttle
systems after the pre-launch re·
hearsal.
The workers lingered too long
In an area In which there wu no
oxygen and four pasaed out,
apace o(flcla11 said.
Spokesman Rocky Rabb of the
National AeronauUcs and Space
Administration uld there are no aas leaks, but that the workers
had stayed In an area that wu
all-nltroien too lon1. "
and subdued ham until police ar-
rived
Al We dnes da y 's awards
lu nc heon , t h e s o ft -s po ke n
Pallad ino $&id he ha d acted
spontaneously, without consider-
ing the risks .
Asked if he felt li ke a hero, he
replied, "Nol really. I'm still
j u s t 5-f ool 5 a nd n i n e -
sixteenths."
Another Award for Valor recip-
ient, Huntington Beach police
officer May had studied the pat-
tern behind a s tring of Orange
and Los Angeles County bank
robberies.
While checking out a vehicle
of the type stolen for use in the
r o bbe ri4:.s. 'l'tfay s p otte d a
Cad illac carrying the three
holdup suspects.
By himself, May arrested the
three men, whose car was later
found to contain three revolvers,
1lovea and ski masks .
"l was just doing my job," the
officer said after receiving his
award. "I didn't think I was do-
ing anything heroic. I was jual ln
the rlaht place at the right
time."
Recipient or an Award for
<See HEROES, Pa1e A%)
T he former Army Green Beret
c apt ain ma intains t h at four
dr ug-crazed "hippies" burst into
his Fort Bragg home Feb. 17,
1970, and beat and stabbed to
death his wife Collette, 26, and
the daughters . Kimberly 5 and
Kristen. 2.
The police, called by Mac
Donald, found him suffer ing
from a knife wound to the chest
Afte r a lengthy army in·
vesligation. ch a rges again s t
MacDonald were dropped. But
in 1975, a federal grand jury in
Raleigh, N.C., indicted him on
murder charges . In 1979, the
U.S. District Court In Raleigh
convicted him.
"It seems like it's never going
lo end," MacDonald s aid. "It's
absolutely beyond belief."
MacDonald says he's spent
mor e than $600,000 defending
himselJ against the charges and
c alls the governm ent "Ir·
responsible" for spending more
than that prosecutina h.lm .
"I 'm working again, but every
cent I make goes to lawyers. I'm
broke," said MacDonald. who is
<See DOCTOR, Pa•e AZ>
Matching up the naedics
ICltlll
•
Along wUh hft clol1molf1, UC
''"'"' medical 1tud1nt ftobfrt
Schlfr ·~ "match doi1''
WednudaJI. An hnportont
mfZ.ICoflf In tM Ill• of a m«kal
1tudnl, U u a dolf of ont~
Oftd of JOJI for 1om1. potn for
othn•. Hu account 0/ hoto UCI'• f0tinll ~fMCkolttudnU rtadtd
to tlw IWWof W,. U..,'U t. ~ for thftr .-..Cfd ,,....,., oppear1
OflP•ll
r esidents prefer not to have nests in their patios or over
their front door.
THERE JS ONE group of inhabitants who look
forwar d to the return of the swallows each year. Call. J'm
reminded or the old Tom and Jer ry cartoon in which Tom
runs off to Capistrano for the return or the swallows for ob-
vious reasons. But don't worry., swallows are plentiful,
d es pite the reports or alarmists.
It seems to me that the return of the swallows was a
lot more fun when people first heard about them. They
we re romantic. Leon Renee wriite a song a bout them.
They made headlines in ncwspai.ers as far away as New
York. They provided· something constant In the lives of
folks who were surviving the Great Depression.
Imagine that, Mable , birds that actua lly return lo the
sa me place on the sa me day each year '
IN MV GRANDMOTHER'S tame , local children
gathered in front of t he M iss1on to a wail the return of the
birds and they were usually not dlsappoinlf'd . Great flocks
of them fl ew in to the then-treeless Mission, nesting in the
ruins of the Great Stone Church. Swallows were a local
tradition. Everyone else ignored them
r
Today touri'Sts gather in front of the Mission waiting
for t he swallows to return. expecting the sky to be
blackened with bir ds Most leave town disappointed. It
CSee SWALLOWS, Page A2 l
Oal ly Pllec Si.fl ,,_.
HENRY AND HELEN CHILDS SCAN SKIES FOR SWALLOWS
Ornlthologlst tries to debunk 'C•pl1tr•no C•per'
Eyes skyward
Prof debunks swallows tale
By STEVE MITC'H ELL
OI ti,. 0 11ly Pllol S~ll
The return of the swallows lo
Mass ion San Juan Capist rano
was heralded this morning by
the ringing of church bells at
9 05 a.m
The event was witnessed by
thousands of visitors, some of
whom were craning their necks
skyward as early as 6 a .m .
But one of those birdwatchers
crowded onto the plaza in front
of the ruins of the Old Slone
Church isn 't swallowing the tale
of the birds' prompt arrival on
St. J oseph's Day.
He nry E. Childs Jr .. who
teaches biology al Chaffey Com -
munity College in Alla Loma.
arrived al the mission early this
morning, accompanied by his
wife, Helen.
They were equipped with
powerful binoculars , cameras
and a bird book that Childs car-
r ied in a pouch hanging from his
bell.
The ornithologist wasn't shar-
ing the enthusiasm of others in
the crowd.
Yo u s ee , he v i e w s the
s wallows legend as nothing short
of poppycock.
Child• baa had a running
verbal battle with a Los Angeles
newspaper columnist the past
few weeks over what the
bloloalat terms ·'the Capistrano
Caper."
He aald he once counted more
than 500 swallows above the mis-
sion a week and a half before
their expected arrival date on
Lhc overcast s kies.
Hv 7 30 a m . many swallows
couid be seen circling high above
the rums oflheOld Stone Church.
Church
"T hey re feeding on insects,"
Childs said
"An d . co n t rary t o this
brochure." he said, pulling a
g reen mission pamphlet from
his pocket, "these are cliff
swallows. not barn swall ows."
Ba rn swallows. the professor
says, have the distinctive fork
tail-, which was absent from the
cliff swallows that cir cled the
mission this morning.
··We've been seeing them
(See TALE, Page A2)
ORANGI COAST WllTHIR'
Rain today with chance
or thunderstorms tonight.
taperln1 off Friday. Guaty
winds 15 to 20 mph tonlthl
and Friday. Highs today
57 to 62. Lows toniaht SO to
55. Chance or rain 90 per·
cent today and 70 percent
Friday.
118101 TIDAY
GofMn WflH• tM onllf local ,
corr•tr. to match lh• no·
tlonlDMU cut• fn ofr far••· SH
PogeB14.
INDll
St. Joseph's Day. •• v .. , ..,.,,iu Att AML•'*" •1
''There's four more of them,'' 1"111 •em11K• •1 ~.!.':,_.•t~l!
C L.M.et~ A• --hll wife exclaimed, as hlldt ''"'..... .,.,.. .. ........ .._ ..
d t I k d h •1 Ctlllfftllt Al , .. IC Nttk" utl ul y mar e t e ~ me -c1 .. 111,... c .. u M:•4.t•
7: 15 a.m. -ln a small rumpled c-•u •11 =....,. !,~
notebook. i.~.:.-:.:C.. ·~; ~ . ...._.. .,
ChJlct. llken11 the arrival of t:~=--... , =.::-:::
awallows b1 San Juan to the ml· 111-11 ,....._ ''"''
•ration of lemmlng1 to the aea. ::=;. ~~ :=w.._ :
"It's all bunk," he arumbled, l•IH'llll..-•u ..... turning f'l• binoculars toward ,,, ________ ... __
I
11
I I q
!I
1.
lj
I.
i1 I. I
I
I
I' '•
't I
I
AP' Wlrephoto
'J'hree Mile jog
Bill Gondran' a foreman at the damaged Three Mile
Island nuclea~ reactor, jogs around the ledge of a cooling
tower. The Unit 2 reactor containment building and
another cooling tower are in the background.
E'ro• Pap Al
SW ALLOWS RETURN • • •
isn't that there aren't the same number or swallows They
seem to come in small groups and most or them avoid the
downtown altogether because of the crowds .
Yet for one week locals and tourists alike have run
with the annual event.
During Fiesta Week everyone goes .. cowboy" and has
for the last 23 years. They enjoy the beard growing con-
test. the various activities for children. the Mission
Pageant. and the Parade on Saturday.
B UT COME Monday, the parade is over. the crowds
have thinned and it's business as usual in San Juan
Capistrano.
Swallows Day has come a nd gone.
And for me, so has the mystique.
Car injures
boy; police
seek witness
The Ca l ifornia H ig hway
Patrol says it is seeking wit-
nesses who saw a 13 -year-old
Weatminster boy struck by a hit-
and-run vehicle as he was walk·
ing across Magnolia Street near
the San Diego Freeway in Foun-
tain Valley.
The youth. J ames Alan Reed.
was seriously injured and is be-
ing treated at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital.
Officers said the youth was in·
jured at about 6:25 p.m . Tues -
day. Reed was dragged 50 feet
by the vehicle.
A CHP s pokesm a n s aid
several descriptions have been
provided or the car. He said
anyone who witnessed the acci·
dent should call t he Santa Ana
office or the Highway Patrol
Rapist says
he's 'sick'
• • in warning
PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio (APJ
-Police in the Cleveland area
are searching for a rapist who
warned the public that he is
"slck" and will continue raping
women and children until his wife
r eturns to him.
A Parma Heights woman told
police the man raped her Tues-
day night, the n made her write a
note containing his threat and an
order that It b e read on
lelevlslon. Jn the note, the man
described himsell as sick and in
need or help.
The note, held as evidence by
police, says:
"I will keep raping women
and childre n until my wife
comes back to me. I will not hurt
, her. I love her. This woman ls only
the first. I will keep hurting these
women. I am sick. I need heJp. I
am out of work. Put this messaae
on TV so my wife will hear It. Her
nameisAnnette "
* * *
E'ro• Page A I
TALE .•.
<cliff swallowsJ up north for two
weeks,"' wife Helen huffed.
·"The re's a white throate d
swift .·· Childs s aid. s cribbling
down the name and the time
7: 42 a.m . -in his notebook
A woman holding a green
brochure approached Childs and
said . "I thought they a ll ar'rived
here in a flock ...
Putting down his brnoculars.
Childs glared at the wo man and
said. "Don't believe everything
you read."
The story that the small birds
black out the sun with their ar
rival is whal irks the or
nithologist the most.
"It's a g radual migration
northward (from Argentina),"
he explained.
And it's all governed by the
weather.
•·Now back east you get
trem endous waves or migrating
birds t hat might have been held
back by a cold front," his wife
s aid.
But in mild temperatures. the
birds fly north at the ir own pace
"It was a warm year and the
insects were here earlier The
s wallows are insect eaters . so
they're here earlier. too "
It's a s simple as that.
Fund u ses topic
for FV citizens
Fountain Valley's new citizens
committee focusing on the city's
budget problems will hold its
first public meeting tonight at
the Greenbrook Homeowners
Association clubho use, 18222
Santa J oanana St.
The session will begin at 7:30
p.m .
Ayatollah rapped
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)
Iran's prosecutor general said
tod ay that Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini is not above the law
and challenged h is d ecree
silencing Moslem fund amen -
talist foes of President
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr.
MAIN OFFICE
Thoma P. Haley ~
Robert N. WHd ...........
M. ThomU Keevll ...
~Murphlne
~ocr .. f:Z" lohulman
~=:en
~J'· Goddard Jr.
DD Wnt a.ty St., C.i. Mtw. CA.
Mell ...._: loa INO, C•i. Mou, (A • ...,.
narcs
Two men one a former
member of the Laguna Beach
bated Brotherhood of Eternal
Love drug-smugglin1 e mpire
and the other an American once
held captive ln Cuba for three
years have been arrested by
Orange County Sheriff's Depart·
ment narcotics Investigators.
James LeRoy Crittenden, 38, a
transient, who investigators say
was once a ranking operative lo
the Brotherhood, and J erry Al-
len Weaver, 37. of Long Beach.
s eized by Cuban officials in 1972
while aboard a boat that drifted
into Cuban waters, were a mong
six people taken into custody
Tuesday night follo wing a month
long 1Dvesttgation into rocaint·
sales act1v1ty
A bout 9 5 ounces of 93 percent
pure cocaine valued at S24,000
was seized by undercover agenLc.,
during a raid at a Long Bea ch
a ddress Long Beach Polict'
Department assisted in the in
vestigation
Crittende n. who has a lengthy
arrest record and has used
nume rous aliases, was IDdicted
ID the early 1970s by the Orange
County Gra nd Jury in eonnee
lion with its inves tigation int(>
the Brotherhood.
At its peak. the Brotherhood
was responsible for importing
mullim11lion dollar quantities of
mariJuana and has hish into the
United Stat<.•s It abo distributed
large amounts of LSD and other
µsychedclil· drugs
Crittenden was con \ acted but
dad not serve tam<.• an state pnson
ba!>ed on n•sults of d1agnost1e
s tudies by prison offle1als. said
his formt•r al lorm·~-. ~latthe"'
Kura heh
Cr ittenden \\o<J!:> <,cht•duled to
be tra nsferred Loda} to Orange
Countv Jail rrom Long Beach Ci-
ty Ja·il. l[(.o as b(·tng he ld on
s4so.ooo bail. anC'lud1ng a S4oo.ooo
urrt.•s l w<irrant issued following
his 111dictment rn Con<·or d in
.January. 19RU. 1n connection
with <i drug consp1rucy e<ise
Or a ng<.• County Sheriff's Lt
Wvatt llart said Weaver was re lc~1sed from C'uban <:ustody 1r1
1975 after bl•ing held on the
island for thrct• years following
his ee1µturl'. Hart said othe r de
tall!". s urrounding the capture
\\o t?ren't 1mmed1akly available
f'rone Pag~ Al
HEROES ...
ller ois m . Huntington BcaC'h Fire
Department dispatcher Hothert
ans wered a t•all l<i!:>I October
from a woman "'host· motht'r
h a d JU:-.t sufft•red a m<isst\'e
heu rt att<tek "hilt• w <it r hing tt
bascb<tll gam<'
Roth<•rt keµl the \'om an ralm
<tn d ga"e 1ns truet111ns fur
c ardiopulmonary resuse1latwn.
which wt•r<· rl'l a}t'll to the
caller 's husband
This treatmt'nt atrlt•d th<' vie
t1m until paraml'dlc!:> arrivl'd.
ThC' heart atlack v1ct 1 m today 1s
r e porl ecl al i ve a nd i n good
health
"!l's part of my JOb. and I'm
JUSl thankful I was able to help,"
Rothcrt said Wednesday "It's
som cth1ng all dispatc:hers e1l the
fire department are tra1Ded to
do ··
T he chamber of co mmerce rec-
ognized o ther public s <1rety 1
em 1>loyees for their sen ·1ce.
F ire department C aptatn
R oger llosmcr rcct•1 \ ed an
Award for ~ent. \\-Ith a special
com mendat1on for developing a
ft re inc ident rc•por t 1ng and
eva luation system that has re
ce1 ved nat1onw1de praise
Lifeguard Raymond F' Bra)
received an Award of Ment .
with special recognition for his
work with the Junior lifeguard
program.
An Award for Merit a lso went
to a Hunt ington Beach policr
team thal investigated the kid·
nap and murder of 12·year-old
Robin Samsoe
About 10,000 hours or in·
vestigation were involved in the
case, which led to the arrest and
con viction or Rodney J a mes
Alcala.
Among the lluntington Beach
police deteclives praised for
their work on the case were
Bruce Young, Ron Jenkins, Luis
Ochoa, Carl Vidano and Craig
Robison.
A special award also was pre-
sented to police dog Pasha .
Chief Earle Robitaille called the
canine "a very aggress ive law
enforcement tool," invaluable in
building searches.
Valley rnarket hit
by three bandits
A conve nience market in Foun-
tain Valley was robbed by three
men armed with a handgun who
ordered a clerk and customer to
Ue on the floor, police reported.
The Warner Jr. Market, on
Warner Avenue near 8rookhurst
Street, was held up at 8:30 p.m.
Wednesday police said.
Th~ lc-.t was not known early to-
day, J>oUce Hid. No one wu ln· Jured. ..
0 .. 1, Polot Sl•ll Pholo
DEATH 'NO ACCIDENT'
LA Coroner Noguchi
LA coroner
says blows
caused death
8 ) DAVID Kl'TZMAN!\
• 01 ltw O•••r Polol ~1•11
Los Angele~ Count:-. Coroner
Thomas Noguchi says fatal head
injuries suffered by a 2 )N1r old
Orange Count~ girl w 1°rc.' more
hkeh c·aust•d hv blow!:> from a
fist 011r ·paddt;d tn!:>trunwnt"
th11n in an a<'t'ldt.•ntal fall down <1
stair .... av
Noguchi. le~ttf'y1ng Wcdncs
dav 1n tht• Ora ngl' C ounty
Supcnor Court murdt•r trial of
Leland Rov l>c lltngt•r . !".aid the
i nj u rit•.., lw-ol>sC"rvNI in :.i utopsy
photos of J <il'i) n Ztllt•!:> along
with his o\ltn fir'ol hand inspec
tion of the dc•ath st•t•nro led him to
believe the youngslt·r tl1d not die
ID a fall at home as cle11med by
De llinger. hn '>tt•pf<Jthcr
T h t• m c• d 1 c· a I <' x u m 1 n e r .
brought into the t·asc h} Orange
County patholog1'.'.t:o.. said he1rdly
any of Jaelyn's 1n111r1t•!:> were
cons 1 stcnt \\1th a r a II
Thl' prost•t·utlon .., 1·ast.· deals
p r 1 m a r 1 I \ .,., 1 I h .., c 1 1· n l 1 f 1 c
e ' 1 d e n t' t· e· u m p 1 I t' d b y
patholog1..,1s and a h111 medical
t•ng1ne1 r . "ho u..,t'll u t htld likt•
dumrn\ 1n ~1mula1ed falls
Thl' youngstc·r·s death 1n May.
1979 from ht·ad tllJUrie!> was
originally lalwlc•d Uh CJl'<'1dc nte1I
h.v the Orangt• County Sheriff
Coroner's offlcr
Rut loC'al 1n1tholog1sls had her
bud v ex hum ed when lox
1colo.g1cal reports inditutcd the
presC'n cc of ('(ll'aine in her
svstem
'·Noguchi sutd Orange County
patholog i s t Or Ri c h a rd
Fukumoto called hi m into the
ease to renew autopsy informa-
tion
100 guerrillas ~ . .I
I
reported slain . ..
By JODI CADENHEAD
Of t lle 0.11, ""°' •t•ll Nearly 100 guerrllllu1 reported
ly responsible for the killing or
American Bible transl ator Ch~ster Bitterman Ill March 7
in Colombia have been killed or
captured by Colombian and
Ecuadorean soldiers.
Colombian Minister oC Gov·
e rnment German Zea
He rnandez said Wednesday that
soldiers killed 19 g ue rrillas
belonging to M-19 a nd captured
74 , including Carlos T oledo
Plata. a former congr essman
who was second in command
a nd Rosemberg Pabon, a former
sc h oo lteac h e r known as
"Com andante Uno."
A s pokeswoma n for WycLHre
Bible Translators in Huntington
Beach. a siste r organization or
the Su mmer I n s titute of
L1n gu1stics, where Bitterman
worked when he was kidnapped
J an. 19, said that M-19 denied
any part in the kidn<tpping and
killing.
Following the execution killing
of lhe father of two, the g uerrilla
group M·l9 d enied any part in
lhe kidnapping or killing, said
spokes woman Betty Blair.
Ins tead the guerrilla group
blamed the killing a nd kidnap
prng on a splinter group called
·Coronado National Bl!se ... Ms
Alair said.
Photographs printed in South
American newspl!pers following
the kidnapping showed the kid
nappers posed with a flag bear
ing the naml' "Coronado N a
t1onal Base ... s he se11d
'This is a bit nebulous now,"
said Ms. Bl air "Right now we
don 't know 1r these really are the
people I think we have to wait
for more 1nvestigC1tion "
Last January guerrill as ktd
napped Bttt erml!n and
threatrned tn kill him unless
ubout 100 Americans working
for the R1ble Trans lating group
left lhl' country
Since the kidnapping and kill
Man eludes
SWAT team
in Huntington
Poltce SW AT officers we re
called rnto action when a SUS·
peel . believed to be armed. bar-
ricaded himself inside a north
Huntington Beach apartment
Officers surrounded the flunl·
1ngton Village complex Wednes
day a nd evacuated some resi
dents before gaining entry to the
apartment where the s us pect a p-
parently had been staying
Lt J ohn Foster said the 42
year.old man police were seek
ing appar ently had slipped away
by jumping rrom a second fl oor
be1lcony before the complex was
s urrounded.
Inside the apartment. police
found a semi-automatic rifle. re·
volver a nd ammunition. roste r
said
He said the officers were try·
ing to serve a drunk driving
warrant on the suspect. whose
name was withheld by police.
Ing none or the families has I
•<1ked to leave Colo mbia, said
Ma Blair. The Colombian gov·
ernment has offered added pro-:' f
tectlon to the workers. f
Bitterman 's wife Brenda left 1 the country with the couple's
two s mall children following the
kidnapping. A memorial service
will be held fo r Bitterman
March 29 at his home town in
Lanc aster. Pa.
U.S. eyes
deterrent
to arm,s
WASHINGTON CAP l
Secretary of State Alexander M.
H a ig Jr. said today the ad·
ministration is con sidering a
rang e of step s to take if
necessar y to stop Cuban supply
of arms to Lalin American r eb·
els, but said It has no specific
plan for military action against
Cuba .
"With respect to a s pecifi c
plan, why no . The president has
not had a n opportunity to ap-
prove or to cons ider in detail
any courses of action for the
period a he ad." Haig said.
Haig gave that r eply when
pressed at a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing on
an administration o fficial's
tes timony We dnesday that
s pecific administration plans do
n o t exclude military action
against Cuba
"It 1s the r esponsibility of the
executive branch to consider a
whole range of options. then pre-
pare a full range or options to
deal with this serious prob lem ...
lla1g said "And I can assure
\'OU that process is under way.
· ··But in no s ense does it
represent an approved game
plan, if you will ." he said.
U nders e cre tary of State
Walter J Stoessel told the com·
mittee under questioning that
the administration does have
specific contingency plans and
"I would s a y they do not e xclude
anything "
f'ro• Pagr Al
DOCTOR. • •
a doctor at St Mary Emergency
Center an Lon g Beach
In its appea l. the Jus t ice
Department contends that any
delay in bringing MacDonald to
trial "docs no t constitute a
speedy trial violation" under
s tandards establis hed by the
Supreme Court in a 1972 de-
<'ision.
The Supreme Court is not ex-
pected to :rel on the governm ent
appeal for at least a month.
Even if it agrees to fully study
the government's a rguments, its
decision after s uch considera-
t 1 o n likely wouldn 't be an-
nounced until sometime next
year.
OUR TIME IS MONEY.
SLAVICK'S
Fi~ l•w•l•l'l Slntt 1•17
And our ltnw
i 1ncred1ble
Now the<>e gold
coin watch<.•c;
from Corum
feature
electronic
quartz
movement-..
accurate to
within 60
seconds a year,
and they're
completely
water-resistant.
No windin~.
no worrying .
Handcraftea in
Switzerland
from 18 karat
yello w gold
and a 520 gold
piece for men,
a $5 gold piece
for women .
A . Man's, $5,990.
B. Woman's,
$4.600. Beautif"I jewelry says,
"I love yoi1."
Fuhion l•l•nd. Ntwport Ctnttr, Ntwport BH('h, 7141644·1380
Wtstmlntter I L.tgune 1lm1 I MIW<>n V~ I Nor1h Ot1n11 I Th4r City
Lot Cerri'°'• llr.• M•lla Al~ C r.ai.r W.. An~i.t / S.n ~go I Lu Vrp1
Uw -ol ~""11" ronwni.111 fl\l'lt ,.."' °' AINftH11 r.,...... VljA, M<I-CN,...
Mrmbt• '"" Jtwtltrt Ciil/4
"
J
,
Band leader Cab Calloway finds himself with
some backup tooters in rehearsing for April 2 TV
swing through .. Sesame Street." The show,
featuring Muppets and others, helps Cab
introduce his music to a new generation.
M exico City officials
wer e stunned at the
sudden appearance this
week of Kathy Sweet.
15 . who disappeared
there a year ago last
Feb rua r y w hile on
vaca tion wi th her
parents from Ontano.
Canada. No explanation
was given.
Gov. Edmuad Brown Jr.
took time during a recent
Newport Beach reception to
direct this remark to Orange
County Supervisor Thomas
Riley:
"And here's the supervisor
I appointed th at was re-
elected."
Brown's other appointment
to the county boar d was .
Edison Miller, who was
soundly defeated last year.
For mer Vice President
Walte r Mondale says
"m odesty" prevents him
from predicting who the
Democratic Party will tum
to as its standard-bearer in
1984.
Mondale, who served in the
Carter administration, has
not s aid whether he wi ll seek
the Democratic presidential
nomination in 1984 and try to
oust the Reagan administra-
tion.
Arter a speech at De Anza
College, Cupertino, be was
asked whether he could pre·
diet who the next Democratic
presidential nominee would
be.
"No. I can 'l." he replied
"I 'm overwh e lmed by
modesty."
Beroleau
d•pleUfe
l'rau s.,.,ace •hook b1a
head ln diaat.Uef, ttudytnc
the inlredienta on~ 11ltme
cracker petkace. "It'• 1ucb a simple thln1.'' ·
he Hid, rattllnt off the
label'• Uat of preservaUvea.
· 'Thll can be made with nour
and water."
Serpico, ahot during bis ef·
forts a decade a10 to expose
corrupUon within the New
York City poUce department,
became a hero thanks to a
motion picture baaed on
those efforts -but doesn't
much ertjoy the status.
"People want to make
heroes so they don't have to
d o a nyth i ng about it
themselves," he said during
a stopover in Oklahoma City
to visit a friend.
Now 44, Serpico bas sold
a 11 his possessions . He
travels on the college lecture
circ uit ·and appears on
television programs.
Slate S upre m e Court
Justice Frank' Rltbardson
says he has
been a n
h o n o rar y
m e mbe r of
Sacra mento's
Sutter Club
six years, but
isn't sure he
knew it ad-
mits only
men as mem·
be rs.
"I never ·thought about it,"
Richard&on said when as!d about a report of his me ·
be rs hip.
Richardson said when t ~
court meets in Sacramento
he takes meals at the club,
about a block from the court
building, because it's handy
and the food is good.
He said his wife often ac·
companies him and other
wom en are in the dining
room.
Scientist-author C arl
Sagan, who said he wa nts to
m a r ry longtime co-writer
Ann Druyan, has been grant·
• ed a divorce from his wife of
nine years.
Sagan, 45, is perhaps best
known as the host and chi ef
writer for the "Cosmos"
series on public television.
He earlier won a court battle
with his wife. Linda, to hold
the divorce hearing in
California. Mrs. Sagan filed
the suit in New York.
Theater to be studied
Proposal for outdoor facility due
The Airport Land Use Com·
mission of Orange County is lo
meet tonight to make a recom-
mendation on a proposal to build
a 10,000·s pectator a mphi·
theater at Llon Country Safari .
That recommendation will be
passed alonli( lo the Irvine City
Council , which is to consider
the proposal Tuesday night.
The commission staff is urg.
ing denial of the proposal on
grounds the amphitheater would
be subjected to excessive noise
from military Jets operating
from El Toro Marine Corps Air
Fluor forms pipe
distribution unit
The l''luor Corp has an
nounced the formation of Fluor
Pipe & Piling Co. to distribute
pipe and piling to the central,
southern and southwestern U.S.
The company, to be head·,
quar tered in St. Louis, is to
begin operation April l.
"I think we'll be another leg in
the Fluor distribution group that
h•a grown dramatically," said
Robert R. Witt, president.
"We'd like to break even in
the first fiscal year which ends
in October. Actually, I think
we'll do better than that, and
look forward to addin1 substan·
tlally to Floor's bottom line as
far as profits are concerned.''
P illne iJ used as a structural
support ln the construction of
hl1bway bridles, office and in·
duatrtal buildin1s, power ata·
lions, water and aewa1e treat-
ment plants and docks. Fluor
Pipe & Plllnl will distribute ff.
pUlnt and pipe pWn1.
Will previously was manager
for U.S. Steel in the St. Paul·
Minneapolis area. He has 30
years experience in steel prod·
ucts saJes and marketing.
Fluor's initial Investment In
thP. company will depend largely
on inventory.
"We'd like to buy $S million to
S6 m lllion in inventory. but that
may be difficult," Witt said. The
company's facility In St. Louis
cost about $400,000.
Also named as officers were
Don C. Tobey, vice presldent-
tubular products and John van
Nort. vice prealdent·pillng pro-
ducts. Witt reporu to H. Leon
Shackelford, senior vice presl·
dent or Fluor Dlatrt bu lion Com·
panlea lnc.
Fluor Distribution, throup its
operaUnt companies, provides
U.S. industry With specialty tub-
in1. pipe, oil field tubular eoodl.
industrial products and full·
aerviee truck dealerships and
truck leasing.
The Dally Pilot wants to hear observations from ill readers
-particularly comments about the paper itself. It's eaay to tell
ua your views. Ju.st call the number below and your metaa1e
will be recorded. Me11a1es wlU :be tranacrtbed several tlmea
daily and delivered to the desk of the appropriate editor. No
circulation calla, please.
TelJ us what's on yowr mind. The num~r la In service 24
hours a day, seven days a weetc'. 842•8088
..... __
Station, about one mile north of
the proposed site.
The Irvi ne Meadows Am·
phitheater Partnership, or-
ganizers of the project, have
thu s far failed to r each a
scheduling agreement with
Marine oCCicials that would
guarantee that no jets would fly
over the amphitheater while it's
in use.
While declining to predict
what the commission recom-
mendation will be, chief com-
mission staff planner Alfred
Brady said the commission
members usually go along with
his recommendations .
He added t hat representatives
from various homeowner as-
sociations and the Orange Coun-
ty Environmental Management
Agency are also against the proj-
.ect.
The Marines also oppose the
project.
Irvine City Councilman Larry
Agran has said he is extremely
concerned with the implications
of jets flying over the am-
phitheater while It is in use.
The Airport Land Use Com·
mission of Orange County, a
state-mandate body established
to review projects near airfields,
meets at 7:30 p.m. tonight in
Room 208 of the County Opera·
lions Center, 1300 South Grand
Avenue, Santa Ana.
While the Irvine City Council
has flnaJ say on whether the am·
phitheater should be built, the
com mission bas the power to
force a so-called showdown vote.
Under state law, local gov·
ernmenLa.1 agencies such as the
Irvine City Council mu.st be able
to muster a four-fifths vote in or-
der to overTule a fipdint of the
Airport Land Use Commission.
Commlaalon members were
unavailable for comment this af.
ternoon.
Japan tribute
"F..Uwal JQan," a tribute to
JapaaeH nlture featurln1
mutlc, art and daacln1, wW be
beld llareb a.a at Dtlneyland.
DllDeJlad wW M opm from
t a.m. to 1 p.m. OD llarda a,
and unW 10 p.m. • llattb •. bat tbe a.ldllffl will • .,,.., OD11
until l :IOeacb da1. -
-...... -... .............. -_,.,.._.. _____ """"" ______ _
Otange Cout DAILY ptLOT/ThUl'lday, March 18, 1881
Hospjtiil shift mulled
Me1a unit ~uld become nur1ing hOme -
Cotta lleaa Memorial
Hoapltal eventually would be
turned into a nuralq bome un·
der a pl'OpOlal beUll considered
by lta OWDel'I.
t.y ll "ov~rbedded" and are re·
lucta.nt to crant ne~ licenses for
addiUonal hotP.ltal beda.
county authoriUa and after tbe
f aclllty ii built, Ab. Corday aa4d.
She added the Irvine bolpttal
iJ planned to open ln Ju11 or
198'.
But she admitted the various
levels ol review of boapltal pro-
Hotpltal Afflllatet Intern•·
Uonal ••YI it lntenda to make
the cbaqeover tn the medical
facility at 901 Victoria St. ln or·
der to f acilltate the development
of a hospital lt plans to build ln
Irvine.
Therefore, the owners of ea.ta
Men llemorta1 Kotpltal plan to
merely tranafer the Ucenaed-bed
capacity ol that faclllt1 to the
hospital they plan to build in
Irvine. • posals are demandina. •
"We have a aayln1 in thla j I
buaineu,'' abe said. "When we ..; I
break ground on a project we
figure it hu a 50 percent chance Nancy Corday, spokeswoman
for the Tennessee-baaed hospital
chain, explained there la a limit·
ed number of licensed acute
care hospital beds in the county.
Health authorities feel the coun-
Presumably, they would be
able to obtain Ucena .. for nurs·
lnl home bed.a at (fosta Mesa Memorial lbpltal.
The chanseover from an acute
care bOlpital to a nunln1 home
would only lake place after the
Irvine bolpltal projeet has been
a pproved by local, state and
•
Organizations eye
Irvine for hospital
many as a "h a ir-d ozen"
hospitals on and around campus.
of development."
Criminals
hit young
most often
LOS ANGELES IAP) The
young are Car more likely than
the elderly to be victims of
violent crimes and thefts, a
Un iversi t y of Southern
California sociology researcher
.
J ,
A number of competing or·
ganizations are trying to build
hospitals in Irvine, which of·
ficials say is one of the largest
cities in California without a
hospital. Here is a list of those
organ izations and their pro·
posals.
Hoag Memorial Hospital in
Newport Beach, which plans to
officially notify state officials
later this month of its intentions
o f establish ing a hospital in
Irvine.
says 1
Hospital Affiliates Interna-
tional, a hospital chain which
has filed a "Notice of Intent"
with state health officials to
build a 172-bed hospital in
Irvine.
UC Irvine, which is propos·
ing to build an outpatient clinic
which Chancellor Daniel Aldrich
said might some day be turned into a major inpatient hospital.
In fact, he says he'd like to see
the eventual establishment of as
-Santa Ana-Tustin Com·
munity Hospital, which has in·
dicated a willingn ess to
participate along with other
local hospitals in establishing a
community hospital In Irvine.
People for an lrviJle Com ·
munity Hospital, a citi~en group
urging the establishment of a
centrally located community
hospital for the city.
Time doting machine
The findings of LeMar Empey
run counter to a widely held
public view that the elderly are
the most frequent target.
Empey rele ased his na-
tionwide study this week show-
ing that persons aged 16 to 19
were eight times more likely to I be victims of violent crime than
those 65 and older.
·'The most Likely scenario for
a victim is not a little old lady
hobbling a l ong Wil s hire
Boulevard, but a kid being
pushed up against the lavatory
wall and having his or her lunch
money stolen," Empey said.
·~-· ..........
A page from the 525-year-old Gutenberg Bi·
ble was analyzed with a new cyclotron ac-
celerator time dating machine at the
University of California at Davis, and pro-
ved to be authentic. Studying the page are
Donald Kunitz, left. and Thomas Cahill of
the university.
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EASY TO SWA.UA>W: Ab, ll WU uodaer an•t day
tor tradltioa alon1 thll • belt ol all PoUlbl• c:ouu todQ
wbeo the swallows retu.med to the Jewel ol tbe Callfonaia
Mlaslou at Su Juan Caplltruo.
As they have done ev.-y year that Ulfbody eaNt to
remember, the dartin1 UtUe tort·taUM blrdl sWOOl*I
down on our 204·>-ear-old mlaloQ rl1ht on time, on St.
about racing
Joseph's Day. How, you mlgbt
ask, would I know that
the flock was ri1ht on
time when I'm here in
the office, slumped
b e h i nd a hot
typewriter?
I know becaUAe the
swallows are always right on schedule, leaving Goya,
Argentina, about the first of February for the 6,000-mile
night to San Juan.
WELL OKAY there were a couple of years when it
was publicly ad.;,itted that the little birds blew their
timetable.
• Jn 1935, the swallows were allegedly three days late ar·
riving at the mission. Tardiness was blamed on storms
over the Pacific Ocean.
Again in 1947 certain Wrong Thinkers said that so
many "scouts" r~r the flock bad arrived at the historic
adobe founded by'°l"ather Junipero Serra that it should be
admitted that the birds were four days early.
BUT NOBODY REALLY admitted that. You have to
understand the rules. Any swallows that arrive early are
"scouts for the flock." Any birds that show up late are
"stragglers." • . All the rest arrive on St. Josephs Day and are on tame.
In 1969, a heavy blanket of March fog totally enveloped
Early San Juan bird? No, ;wt anothn Capo pig~on
Mission San Juan and no birds could be sighted anywhere.
But the late Bill Smith, public relations man and voice of
the mission for maoy years, solved that vexation by an·
nouncing:
"THE SWALLOWS ARE here. They are flying in h
holding pattern, just like jets at a fog-bound airport.
"We can hear them up there above the fog ; flying and
twittering."
In 1974, a ghastly goof was committed by Lion Country
Safari, at Laguna Hills, when officials there put out the
word that the swallows had bypassed the old mission and
landed amid the safari's lions and other beasts.
This was promptly denounced as ''nothing more than a
cheap publicity stunt. Lion Country hasn't been heard
from since on the Question of swallows. Admittedly, some myths have been perpetrated about
the timely return of the birds to Mission San Juan. One
year a county newspaper trumpeted that the swallows had retu~ned to San Juan ''for the 199th year.''
You 're left to wonder where the swallows flew lo
before then?
THE LATE MR. SMITH is going to be sorely missed
around the mission in the years ahead because be always
recorded the swallows' arrival so precisely-by hour,
minute and seconds. So the time might go into the books at
9:57 :25 a.m. today.
Mission bells pee l out the glad udings when the
swallows return to Capistrano. Once the bell-ringer was
asked how he knew the swallows had returned and it was
lime to ring the bells?
r HE PONDERED that weighty question for a moment ·
and then cast his eyes lo the sky, as if demonstrating, and
replied:
"You look around."
LONDON <AP) -Prince
Charlet, who has twice fallen
from b1a new racehorse in five
days, WU UfCed to Stop risklnJ
bte neck ao be can walk down
tbe aisle ill one piece when be
1et1 married Ju1y 29.
Newspapers called on Charles
to qult and the British Safety
Council warned that the 32·year-
old helr to the throne is pushing
bis luck at a time or too many big
changes in his life.
Council Director-General
James Tye said the warning was
based on a new U.S. Navy techni·
que of assessing a person's risk
potential from the number of life.
disturbing changes he or she faces.
Charles, he concluded, is in for
a tough time unless he takes it easy.
HE CITED the emotional strain
of becoming engaged to Lady
Diana Spencer, planning the
royal wedding, undergoing
heightened public scrutiny and
now throwing himself into the new
and haz ardous s port of
steeplechasing.
The warning by the Safety
Council, a privately funded
agency invol ved in improving in-
dustrial salety, came amid ques-
tions about whether tbe future
king s hould take so many
chances with his wedding only
four months away.
His great uncle, the late Duke of
Windsor who reigned briefly as
Edward VIII bef<ire abdicating in
1936, was forced by family and
political pressure to give up the
sport of kings after a bad fall in
1924.
CHARLES IS not the only
member of the royal family to
have had riding accidents. His sis-
ter, Princess Anne, has come a
cropper several times and suf-
fered a concussion when she fell
while riding with the British
equestrian team in the 1976 Mon-
treal Olympics.
Her husband, ex-army Capt.
Mark PhiJlips. who has also rid·
den for Britain. has broken an
arm twi ce and has had several
4 copters
shipped to
El Salvador
CO RPUS CHRISTI (AP)
Four "Huey" helicopters were
shipped to El Salvador this week
from the Corpus Christi Naval
Air Station as part of a $25
mnlion aid package to the war-
torn country.
The helicopters were loaded
aboard Air Force C-130 transport
planes for the four-hour flight to
the tiny nation.
An Army test pilot and five
civilian mechanics left will re·
assemble and test the recondi-
tioned choppers in El Salvador.
The helicopters cost $900,000
each when sold to foreign gov·
ernments, but the four choppers
are being given to El Salvador.
Local rain possible
Showers also /oreca1t on East Coast
LIOPll var tabte winds Hulll 10
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noon wllll J to S loot wtnd waws
Wut lo IOUlh-.st 1-111 J 10 J IHI.
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day wltll cllano ol sr•owers In alllr· noon.
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through Alabama and G.argla on
W•-•Clay, 1>r11191no soma r•ll•I to
crews lle"llno lorest flrH, bul In
otller perts of Ille SoulhH1t high
winds llalped ten I.he flames. •
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to Montana arid snow also tell In
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GrHI Plains to Ille lower Mlu lu lppl
Valley.
There were fair tklH over the
Sovtllwtst and Ille lntermountaln r .. 1lofl, and lllW1IY Cl-y skies OVff Ille
Wnt c .. sc. wttll • low rain "'°'"" lfl Nori,.,,, c.lllomla,
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from 14 al s.ult Ste. Marie, Mich .. to
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across tM Nonllfftt wltll rain 111 Ille
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concussions. Charles• lather,
Prince Philip, 59, has bad a couple
ot minor scrapes driving hls
horses In carriage competitions.
Queen Elizabeth ll, SS next
month, rarely rides these days ex-
cept for ceremonial occasions
such as the annual Trooping of the
Color when she lnsp~cts Guards
regiments.
BUCKINGHAM Palace of·
licials declined comment on
whether Charles will do likewise.
But the prince a qualified
parachutist, fighter pilot, deep-
sea diver and Ufelong horseman
-is apparently determined to
qualify to ride as an amateur in
the prestigious Grand National
next· year by competing in 15
races. He has ridden in four so far.
The Safety Council said It
calculated that the prince has
notched 220 ''life change units"
enough to give him a n even
chance of having an accident or
falling sick.
First lady falls APWI...,.,...
Nancy Reagan was unhurt when s he fell over backward
as a boy at a children's home jumped toward her in an at-
tempt to hug her. Mrs. Reagan was visiting the St. Ann's
Infa nt llome, in Hyattsville, Md .
Colorado base chosen
Peterson to seroe as space control site
COLORADO SPRINGS (AP > Peterson Air
Force Base east of here has been selected by the
U.S. Air Force as site of a proposed $400-m ill ion
control center for American military spacecraft.
including military missions of the manned space
shuttle.
Civilian shuttle missions will continue under
control of the National Aeronautics and Space Ad ~
ministration's J ohnson Space Center in Houston
For security purposes. the Air Force has been
seeking a separate control facility .
The choice of a site for a Consolidated Space
Operations Center was prompted by Peterson's
prox1m1ty to the North Am erican Aerospace
Odens<' Command. Air Force SecretaFy Verne
Orr said in a letter Tuesday to Sen J ohn To wer, R·
Texas. chairman o( the Senate Armed Services
Com mittee
Orr said the Spa ce Operations Center . to begin
operations tn mid-1985, wou ld be able to share
µersonnel and services with NO RAD . the com-
puterized defense systems control center located
unde r Cheyenne Mountain west of Colorado Springs
Mone~ lo estabhsh the military sp:.ce center
has not yet been approved by Co ngress ----
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··Fire destroys
park landmark ~!
SAN DJEGO <AP) -A spectacular fire
destroyed a larie section of the historic Belmont
Park RoUer Coaster, fire officials said.
Fire Department spokesman Bill Pitts said a
, fire "of suspicious origin" Tuesday damaced 10
percent of the landmark wooden alructure and
destroyed one of the 56-year-old amusement park's
original roller coaster cars.
There were no injuries, Pitts said, althou1h
the roller coaster and s urrounding area bas
, become a haven for derelicts.
College• •eelc •lale aid
SACRAMENTO (AP) California's private
colleges are seeking more state scholarship aid lo
cushion the impact of soaring costs.
Representatives of Pototiaac sinks
Orange Coast DAIL V PILOTfThuraday, March 19, 1981 H/F Al
AP Wlr9tlll0to
Enquirer rebnff'ed
Judge rule1 it'1 a magazine
LOS AJ'IJGELES <AP> -The Na·
Uonal Enquir er, under attack by
Johnny Carson on television and
Carol Burnett in court, bu lost a ma-
jor legal round with a jud1e's ruling
that the publication is a magazine,
not a newspaper.
The ruling by Superior Court Judge
Peter Smith -who said the En-
quirer 's argument "fell flat on its
face" -denied the paper any protec-
tion from damages under California
retraction statutes.
Miss Burnett is suing th& Enquirer
for $10 million over a gossip column
item she claims libeled her. A ruling
that the Enquirer was a newspaper
could have reduced its liability to as
little as $250, her attorneys said.
"I've evidently caught you by s ur·
prise," Smith told Enquirer attorney
William Masterson as he issued the
I ate afternoon ruling Wednesday.
page Enquirer article stating that his
third marriage was about .to break
up. ''I'm going lo call the National
Enquirer and the people who wrote
this 'liars'," Carson said. "This is
absolutely, completely, 100 percent
falsehoods." Then he dared tbe En·
qulrer to sue him for slander.
Masterson demanded a mistrial,
claiming Carson 's attack was prej.
udicial and damaged the Enquirer's
chance at a fair trial. The judge re·
fused .
T HE EXIT OF two jurors and
replacement of one· by an alternate
left only 11 members on the panel.' A
civil case in California can be heard
by fewer than 12 jurors, and the
judge said he would press for a
verdict even if ~he panel s hrank to
eight.
the colleges descended NEWS
upon the Legis lature
Wednesday. BRI [fS Among them. Stan-
ford Univers ity Vice ----
The former presidential yacht Potomac sank at its Treasure Island
Navy dock in San Francisco Wednesday, possibly due to a puncture
from a mooring. The yacht, down in 35 feet of water, had ~een
.seized following a ma rijuana raid.
"I HAVE LOOKED at th e
qualifications for a newspaper under
the statute," he said. "I'm sorry. I
don't think it's even close."
Miss Burnett's lawyers called the
r uling on the magazine versus
news paper issue a major victory
"I think it removes some serious
legal obstacles we no longer have to
overcome,'' said Paul Sanner. who
argued the issue President Robert Rosenzweig told a news con·
ference, "We have asked only that able students
be given the chance to choose the education that is
best for them and that they not be barred from
that choice solely for financial reasons."
Dollflla• deH.,•n taftlcno
Bus end fought
He cited efforts by the Enquirer to
show its similarity to the New York
Daily News, the nation's largest
newspaper.
'·I have no problem distingujshing
the New York Dally News from the
National Enquirer ," Smith said.
"Sure, they're both tabloids. But that
goes to form , not substance "
Masterson insisted the impact on
the case would be minimal. "I'm go·
ing to win this case anyway on the
lack of actual malice." he said
The JUdge predicted his ruling
might turn out not to be momentous
if the jury determines that the En·
quirer's retraction was not p4blis hed
within the legal tame ~mit.
LONG BEACH (AP> The Air Force has
taken delivery of the rirst of a new type of tanker-
cargo aircraft designed to increase the global
mobility of U.S. and allied aircraft.
Teachers claim halt disruptive His ruling came only hours after
the trial was thrown into turmoil by
Carson's televised blast at the En-
quirer. an attack which led to dis-
missal of two jurors and a motion for
mistrial. which was denied
The McDonnell Douglas KC-10 took off from
Long Beach airport with Lt. Gen. Edgar Harris.
commander or the Strategic Air Command's 8th
Air Force, at the controls, heading for Barksdale
Air Force Base in Louis iana.
'Coyote plan•' rej~cftf
SAN FRANCISCO (AP I -A controversial
plan to use coyotes to thin the herd of deer on
Angel Island in San Francisco Bay has been
vetoed by the state Department of Fish & Game, it
was announced today.
Informa.tion offi cer J oe Sheehan said the plan
had been rejected and the department was looking
at "other alternatives."
"Among them are moving, which we don't
want to do, a euthanizing and culling program,
shooting them and using steroids lo hold down
reproduction," said Sheehan, who emphasized that
plans for the herd were in the very early stages.
.Strike pr•.,ntC• hrfah
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Managers of San
Francisco area funeral homes say they ha1'e
enough room at least for now to store bodi~s
that can't be buried because or a strike by workers
at 11 major cemeteries.
Burials were halted Wednesday when some 130
members of Cemetery Workers and Green At·
tendants Local 265 struck over wages and benefits.
John Cantwell, attorney for the Associated
Cemeteries, said the union rejected a last.minute
QlleT of a 95 cents-per·hour raise t hat would have bl!ought the daily rate to $83.60.
'1refaseto
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-Teachers in the Los
Angeles Unified School
District went to court to-
day to keep the school
board from ending man-
datory busing before the
end of the school year.
But since Superior Court
Jud ge Paul E g l y
withdrew from the case,
t he fi rst thing to be de·
cided was which judge
would hear the argu·
men ts.
T H E UN I TED
Teachers of Los Angeles
have as ke d for t e m -
porary restraining order
against a mid-semester
halt to bus in g , as
planned by the school
board. The teachers said
changing the system on
April 10 would be ex -
tremely dis ruptive to
the educational process.
The school board vote
to end mandatory bus -
ing after the s tate
Supreme Court let stand
a lower court ruling t hat
uphe ld the constitu -
tionality of the anti-
use credit cards.
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bu sing a m e ndme n t ,
Proposit ion 1. and said it
ap pl ied to t h e Los
Angeles integration
case
SU PERIOR Court
Presiding Judge David
Eagleson had the JOb of
deciding who would take
Egly's place. One name
that was mentioned was
th at of Judge Leon
Savitch, who is the son
in -law of the late Judge
Alfred Gitelson, who
first ordered dese~rega
tion in Los Angeles
schools .
Attorneys for both
sides said that Savitch 's
relations hJp to Gitelson
was not discussed in
their closed·door meet-
ing wit h the j udges
Wednesday and neither
side had any objections to
Savitch's involvement.
THE AME RI CAN
Cavil Liberties Union, a
plaintiff in the 18-year-
old case. will also ask
'
that the busing deadline
be extended as part of
HS petition to the state
Supreme Court to re·
consider its Proposition
1 dec1s1on , an ACLU
spokesman said.
It was not known when
the action would be
taken. he said
T HE TWO OUSTED Ju rors ad·
milted io the judge's chambers that
they had seen Carson railing against
the Enquirer on his Tuesday night
show
THE RETRACTION s tatute pro-
tects n ewspapers but not
magazines on ly if a retraction is
published promptly a nd with the
sam e prominence given the onginal
a rticle.
"There 1s a very high probability,"
the judge said. ·'that the Enquirer
did not compl) with the retraction
statute in a timely fashion." Carson was angry about a front-
Airport battle flares
SANTA MONICA (APJ The battle to close
the municipal airport a target both of city coun-
cil members who want low-income housing on the
site and those who want an industrial park or of·
fi ce-shopping complex · heated up as airport
tenants fumed over eviction notices.
"The latest ploy is to evict all operators, leav-
ing only a runway and a tower," steamed Mark
Morrow, operator of Wings West Inc.
"We're supposed to cease and desist in the
operations of the airline withfo 30 days or they will
close down the whole facility," he said . "Wings West
carries about 2.000 people a month to Mam moth and
Bishop ski areas."
The airline will continue to operate but ~ill
move to Los Angeles International Airport May 1,
\ I . •
, , '
Morrow said, to ensure that ser vice won't be dis-
rupted and that its 62 employees won 't be thrown
out or work.
Other tenants were told to be out by Feb. 1,
1982. Morrow said. Morrow said the city has an
agreement with the Federal Aviation Administra-
tion to use the area as an a irport "at least through
the year 2000" but that the counci l thinks it can get
out of the agreement. ·
Calls to City Manager Kent McClain went un-
answered Wednesday, but Morrow said the city
manager and city attorney had advised the council
it could not break the agreement with the FAA,
a nd that an independent study commissioned by
the council had reached the same condusion.
Past council actions aimed at discouraging use
or the airport include a noise limit or 85 decibels.
~ \ ' .
~
I i
I ,
I .
I ! I
I
I
I I
t
I
I 'I
I
~· ·"''
Closure delay
' . 1 will cost money
Months of emotional deJlberatlon over 1obool cloeuree
reached an anUcllmacUc non~clualon wben Fountain
Valley School District trustees decided oot to clOH any
sites for at least one more year.
The vote was close, with Cheryl Norton, Carol Mohan
and Betty Mignanelll favorin1 the delay, wbUe Shella
Meyers and Roger Belgen araued for closure of at least
one school.
Even the trustees in the majority conceded they are
only postponing the inevitable. But these three claimed
additionaJ time is needed to develop a five-year plan that
will outline an orderly progression of school closures and
1 development of new programming alternatives, perhaps
including additional middle schools.
But the postponement i5 a costly move. The district
had hoped to save about $143,000 annually by closing
either Bushard or Wardlow School, two sites with low
enrollments.
School officials already predict they wUI have to dig
into reserve funds in order to balance the coming year's
budget.
More planning is a worthwhile goal. In fact, if the dis-
trict had done additional planning at an earlier date, the
one-year delay might not have been necessary.
In the meantime, the school board must confront
some hard facts: The state is unlikely to grow any more
generous with education money. in .coming ~ears, and
Fountain Valley's enrollment. which is the basis for state
funding, will continue to drop.
At the same time, teachers and other district
employee groups are becoming more militant and will
continue to de mand regular pay raises to keep up with in-
flation.
In view of these prospects, trustees would have been
wiser -and braver -to close at least one school now to
avoid spending some of the reserve funds that un-
doubtedly will be needed for future financial crises.
Dog law tricky
Huntington Beach city officials are considering an or-
dinance that would require registration of all guard dogs
so their locations could be listed in a computer.
The propos al has some problems.
The idea is to let emergency personnel, such as
firefighters, know where the guard dogs are so they can
be prepared to defend themselves against attacks while
on private property.
It is easy to sympathize with firefighters, paramedics
and police. It's no fun being chased by a vicious dog.
The proposal seeks to force citizens to sign a state-
ment if they believe their pet is a guard dog.
The problem here is that some dogs' bark may be
worse than their bite. And who decides?
The definition of a •·guard dog" most likely would
become a confusing issue of interpretation. making the
ordinance difficult to enforce.
Most of the problem seems to center around busi·
nesses that lease guard dogs. [f that is the case, the com-
panies that train and lease them should provide the city
with a list of their customers.
This would serve as protection for emergency person-
nel and bypass the need for still another ordinance in a
city that already has too many laws to enforce.
Cooperative neighbor
Fountain Valley residents and business leaders reg-
iste red loud protes ts last summer when the Pacific
Mutual Life Insurance Company sought permission to
build a 14-story office building at Brookhurst Street and
La Alameda Avenue.
The protesters said the city should stand by its cur-
rent height limit of 50 feet (about three stories). The City
Co uncil later supported thjs view.
Though it had a lot of lime and money invested in the
14-story design, Pacific Mutual decided not to press for a
high-rise the community did not want. The company
withdrew its proposal and promised to reconsider the proj-
ect according to the community's wishes.
This month, the company kept its promise and re-
turned to the city Planning Commission with a revised
design that includes three three-story structures.
All three buildings would be within the city's 50-foot
height limit. The recent meeting was solely lo disc4ss the revised
design with city officials and community representatives.
No major objections were voiced, and a formal applica-
tion to build the project is anticipated.
Pacific Mutual should be commended for standing by
its promise to consult with the community on a new de-
sign and for altering jts project with local standards in
mind. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Food tastes
By L.M. BOYD
Q. What sort or commonly
known food is least liked by the
most people?
A. Buttermilk. The surveys
repeatedly sbow that. Second
on lhe least liked list is brain.a,
it's said, possibly because of
availability. You see a lot
more buttermilk than brains.
Other least liked items, ln
descending order. are oysters,
111111•
Flrat they take ol1arett~ away from
ua and J'(ow tbey are
propo1ln1 to t.ke coffu
-tor our own IOOd, of
course. Someday
tclence La 1otn1 to 10 too far. F.K.
eggplant, turnips, clams and
parsnips.
How do you account for the
fact that the suicide rate
among women bas gone up '5
percent in lhe last 15 years?
Somewhere on earth, the
raln ia falling, always. Never
lets up, say the weather folk.
They calculate there are about
1,800 thunderstorms an bour.
Also this aae of satellites
proves that 10 times u maay
U1htninf storms occur onr
land uoveraea.
Q. If the buck deer loM tbelr
antlers every sprtn1, bow
come the forest floor lln't cov·
ered with them?
A. Porcuplne1 eat them. So
d9rabblta, mlce, too.
lf a jury tn Seotland doen't
want to pronounce a defendant sutJty °" Innocent, It can re-
tum 1 nrdlctot"notpronn."
• Wby dld Mr. Sbak...,..,.
call It "A IOdlummer Nlpt•a
Dream" when tbe action, ID
fact, oc:curnd In the 1pr\a1 ol
theyur?
Thurlday, Marc h 19, 1981
Jack Anderson
Thomas P. H1l1y/Publl1her Thomas KH¥11/Efltor 1
S.rblra K,..lblch/l!c:lltorl1I PIQI !dltor
High-flying drug Smugglers
WASHINGTON -Ma.jor drug
1mu1fll"' orsanhadons are def· lnlle y bit bualoesa, even
thou1h they're not in the
Fortune 500 U.t of lead1ng cor·
poraUona. ln 1978 alone. for ex·
ample. lWclt dru1 traffk ln the
United States generated an
eallmated SM bUHon in retaU
sales.
Not aurprtslngly. the dope ped-
dlers have aped the corporate
structure or
legitimate
busine ss fl r m s . "A s ructured or·
ganlzation,
comrrised of
bo h l e -
gitimate
and ill icit
businesses,
e nables the
trafficke rs t~ s us t ain losses
without havlng\to halt all of their
operations," a classified Drug
Enforcement Adminis tration
s tudy reports. The masquerade
of respectability a lso makes 1t
tougher for Jaw enforcement
people lo separate the legal
Mailbox
from the lllejtaJ activity.
The classJricd DEA s tudy save
a d etailed descrlptlon or one
large-scale marijuana and co-
caine smuggllnf operation that
was based ln llinois, Georgia
and Flo rida . Inte l ligence
sources told my Hsociate Dale
Van Alta the Information was
developed on the outfit ·s at·
tlvltles in 1977 and 1978 from
both surveilla nce and Inform
a nt11.
llERF.'S THE ''typi cal
acenarlo" for the 11mugglers'
hlah fl ying illicit operation,
toke n from the DEA report
"1'h.-ui rc rnft wou Id depart
th•• llnlled Stut<1s, u.,ually from
a controlkd u1rsx1rt, and either
fly directly to ('olurnhla or vi<t
Ont• o f l\t'Vcrul ('u rttlhl'<HI
1sland11 The plant· would lant1 rn
Colomhw afll'r d ... rk , where ai.
11or1<th.'!'l loutl1•d <•nd rt'fuelcd the
ulr<·ruft for th1· n·lUrn to lht•
United Stalt''
'Th'· 1<rc1up hud :JC'C't·~!> to
st•vt·ral t ' S Jlf'IH>rli. a nd
a1riHn1>' t'IJ llUhlt of hJndlang
lar1(1• ;11rnaft ~frvt•ral hours
prior to the arr iv al o r an
aircraft, a team or group sup
port p e r sonnel, ranglng ln
number from 8 to 20, would ar·
rive at the airstrip with multi·
wheeled vehicles, including trac-
tor-trallers and 2 ton dump
trucks.
"Electron ic equipme nt, In·
e luding scanners, air-to.ground
radios and CBs, would be used to
monitor law enforcement activi
ty in the area and to permit
communications between the air
and grola.nd cr ews. Upon arrival
or the plane, the ground crew
would use flas hlights t o ii
luminate the strip
"THE PLANES us ually
landed in the early m orning
hours a nd were orctoaded by
means of a human conveyor
system. typically. a plane was
completely offloaded in less than
one hour. The drugs were loaded
onto the large vehicles a nd
transported lo several storage
facilities and distribution points
1n M1 ssour1 , I llinois and
Georgia."
The smuggling orgamzallon's
corporate structure was Lbat or •
any ltocitimate conglomerate. Ju .,
various companies served es r
fro nts to buy. sell and register
the veh.lcles and aircraft needed. ti
Senior management set budgets 1
for the various a(tivities, includ· •
ing acquisition of r emote farms, It
warehouses and airports to ac-~
commodate the shipment and
storage or the dope.
··Each em ployee had a l
s pecific job title and function, f
and a definite place in the cha.in •
of command,'' the DEA report
said The highest salaries went
as m any legitimate corpora·
lion to top executives. But
th ose employees "d irectly
engaged in s muggling ac· ~
livities" also m ade top dollar
P ilots of the large a ircraft, for
example DC-4s, DC-6s and
DC-7s reportedly were paid
$100,000 per tri p , while the
ground crews got Sl0.000 apiece
per m1ss1on
NO SALE: Ray Sena was an
employee of Rockwell lnterna·
tional for more tha n 20 years. He
was fired a fte r he blew the whis ·
tie on massive waste and mis ·
handling of government fonds in
the company's s pace s huttle
contract
Sena has brought s uit for $300
m illion against the company.
and reports that Rockwell has
made him a number of interest j
mg settlement offers. I
First. he says, h<• was offered
Sl2.000. then $18.000, then $25,000
and a Job with another company I
Finally. he said , Rockwell j
emissaries offered him his old I
JOb bark. plus back pay and re·
1mburseme nt for an) financial I
damages he had incurred All he
had 10 do m return .,... as drop his ,
la\\ SUll
S<'na refused /\ Rock\\ell
s pokesman i.CJ1d no body had
been aut horized to make any or
ft:'rs on the compan.> 's behalf
Meanwhile , Sena ~
whistlehlu\\ m~ has had results
Thr s pace C'Onglomcrale ha~
bcc·o nw lhc subJed uf thret:
fcdt•rnl mvt·stigutwns Scna sus·
J>t•!'ls lht•rr's a connection
bl'l ween lhl' investigations and
lh t• C<1mpany·.., effort!> lo gel hirr
to drop tht:> suit
Federal airport funds mean federal rules
To the Editor
You and your news paper and
others have recently printed
several misleading "letters to
the editor" that claim users of
the John Wayne Airport. and not
the federal government. will pay
for its expansion.
The fact is the federal govern·
m e nt will pay for most of it.
These letters mislead Newport
Beach citizens who are aware of
the consequences of federal con·
tro t of the airport. Ne wport's ap-
pre hension is not misplaced.
Indeed, the com promise
worked out be tween the FAA
and the county already looms
ominously over us. T he com ·
promise wa6 that the FAA would
fund the purchase of additional
land for the airport if the county
agreed to open up the facility to
more airlines.
THE CAB says the county's
noise abatement plan is illegal
and cou nt y o ff ic ial s
acknowledge the FAA will
probably be the agency c haJleng·
ing the legality of county restric·
lions.
The coun ty plans to gel
federal grants for most of the
terminal expansion and runway
expansion from the funds made
available by the Airport and
Airway Sys\ems De velopment
Act of 1980. This act states
specifically that the recipients of
funds must foster competition
and prevent unfair methods of
competition in air transportation.
The federal government will
not fund a fancy. big termlnaJ and
an elllended. stronger runway
without enforcing airline "com·
petition." Which m eans in -
creased use of the a irport.
If the terminal is increased
ninefold, will nine times as
many jets take off o ver our
homes? Yes is probably the
rlght answer.
PAT LEWIS
llettt r•pe
To the Editor:
I believe It Is time to declare
war on rape. The rapist is an
arsonist; with him he carries the
fires ol torment and destruction.
Re iJ a l\untet. we are the hunted. Small children or grown
women, It makes no difference to
these deransecl individuals. I see
no reuoo to be merciful to a
person who 1bow1 no mercy. Wh1
tbould anybodf be aubJect to the
ln41vldual who Jove• death and
deatruction? Enoush la enoup.
117 tuHHtlon la t.o make
rapllta pbylicaJly unable to have
HXUal lnt«COW'M by medlcally
alterlq thelr 1enitaa. 1 feel
Uilt act of Jud1ment will be
beaeftdal to all.
\ .. __ _
It will eltm1nat1· "°'tly pnson
terms for the taxpaycri.. but will
do little. I am sorry to say. for the
victim, other than the knowlc.'<ig<·
that this 1nd1\'ldual Y.111 never he
able to mn1rt th" violent rnmc.·
again
l>Ol'G K HEM I I.LEH
Clark •al~
To lhc Editor·
A recent Daily Pilot article
descri~d Supcrv1~or Rtll'Y a s
"piqued " bec aus e FrontiPr
Airlines chose to announce its in
tentions lo buy quiet er jets
through Supervisor Clark's offi<'t'
rather than his Really. it isn't
pique. it's an affront
But everybody knows Clark is
the point m an for unresln ctetl
airport growth and flights, which
endears him lo the corporate af
fl uence of the Fluors. Smith In·
dustnes. Irvine Company, Koll,
etr
Clark does n't n sk a single vote
because it 1s Riley's constituency
that 1s being immediately raped
Oth ers may follow. but not
Clark's
MORE t•Ol.ITICS at the ex
pense of a misguided public whCJ
made the area desirable as a
Sydney Harris
plaC'e to live Th<.• entire Newport
Beach-Costa Mesa area and its
elcctl'd offu:iab had better be
mobilized to hl!hl airpor1 t:x·
pa ns1on all th(• way'
No1sc variant'eS arc an ir.sult ·
3 .. 1. 8· 10. how many in lht> next 10
yea rs'.' Jn the prot'ess, Clark SN?<;
the area as a gigantic airport with
many hotels and an airplane take·
off every 30 seconds, if need be
After all, F luor. Smith Industries
might not stay, or would not have
c·oml' here so they would like us
to believe After all, Clurk's
altruis m in this a rea doesn't cost
him a sm~le vote.
This isn't progress because it is
u patchwork expedient for an
a1 rport facility that was not sup·
posed to be The s upervisors have
mocked and misled the public as
to their intentions over the years.
It 1s taxpayers' money whether it
1s s tate. county or fe deral
Relocate a regional facility now'
CG SIEGLE
Park•lt~?
To Lhe Editor·
Recent newspape r photo ·
~raphs of the severe erosion or
the graded site north of Ford
Road and between Jamboree
Round-the-world quiz
We're going to lake a fast tnp
around the world in tod ay's quiz.
and see how many countries and
a reas you can ide ntify from the
or igins of their names I haven't
chosen any obscure or dubious
ones <like "Canada." whic h
etymologists still argue about>.
so one-quarter correct docs not
seem to be askin~ too much
l . Name al least three coun
tries that are named after direc·
lions. or points or the compass
2. What country Is n amed
after a m etal 1
3. Which countries are named
after foreigners who conquered
them?
(. Whal large area of the
world Is named after an a nimal?
5. What country's name means
"land of the 1un-bumt people"?
8. What country is named f-0r
the man who liberated ll from
rorelan rule? 7. What people's name means
"rawfisbeaten"?
8. Wbat counlry is named after
afamUy?
9. What country's naane
literally moana "land of lbt
free"?
ANSWERS:
I. Austria (East): Norway
1North); Viet Nam (South).
2. Argentina, after the silver
<"a rgent") that was thou~hllo be
huried there.
3. The Philippines. after King
Philip II of Spain, and Rhodesia,
after Cecil Rhodes.
4. The Arctic, whose name
comes from the Greek word
meaning "bear." CUrsa Major,
or the "Great Bear" constella·
lion, was seen in the North.>
5. Ethiopia, formerly known
by its Arabic name of Abyssinia .
6 . Bolivia. a fte r Simon
Bolivar, the great liberator of
much of South America.
7. The Eskimos, which is what
the name signifies in native In·
dlan tongues. <Althouah, like
most primitive peoples, Includ-
ing Amorlcan Indians, their
name for themse lves m eant
simply "man'' or "p~ople," as
di stinguis he d from other
cr eatures.)
8. Saudi Arabia, after the long-
ruUnac Saudi family.
. 9. Thailand. (Siam, its former
name. wu a pplied to it by it.a
neighbon":)
.-...... --... ---....... -...... ·-
and MacArthur rt•mmded me of
thr Grand Can) on
I propose that Congressman
Hobert Badham v.ho failed to
get us a nallonal park between
Ne wport and Laguna might try
to gt•t this ran)'on area '>Cl aside
as a national park It t·ould tx•
named the Great Abyss NaLional
Park
Simultaneously, h e might
work to incorporate into his na
tional park the Upper Bay which
could be rallt:>d the "Upper Bay
Meadow .. Such a name would
appeal to the nos talg i cally
minded who would remember
that al Ont' time the m eadow had
been a bay
G L de CARDENAS
•oi.e,..~' •pream
To I he Editor
The voters of Or ange County
have witnessed delays at almost
every election in the length of
time tl has taken county govern·
ment to tabulate the votes. Ap·
parently, this "disease" has
spread lo the office of t he Coun·
ty Tax Collector.
In looking al my bank records.
I find that the tax collector took
six weeks to clear my check for
the payment or my first install·
m ent of laxes on Dec. 8 last
year. and further compounded
the matter by railing to clear the
check for my second installment
which was mailed on Dec. 30 -
the check has still not cleared as
of mid-Mar ch.
IN THIS DAY and age when
the country is f acing budget
crises al all levels. I find it dif·
firult to believe that Orange
County is so wealthy that it can
a fford the luxury or dragging its
feet in pick.log up money sent in
by property owners and railing
to invest it for the benefit of the
com munily; and this in an e ra
when de pos its ar e capable or
ea rni'ng interest i n come al
astroriOmically high interest
rates.
Perhaps this is a matter that
should be referred to the Grand
Jury In order lo determine Just
who is responsible for this state
of affairs and how far it impedes
the flow of funds to the ex·
chequer oflhc County of Oranae.
DAVID A. W. YOUNG
The office o/ the County Tcu
Co llector blomtd a computer
breokdown for tM delay In pn>ceu·
tng properfJI taz check:I.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, March 19, 1981 H/F
Tax benefits
for the deaf
fTIW a. th.I /ourlh o/ a llbw·porl 1ttie• on hmD to «Wt
money on 11our lNO tmomf tu J
Fa~orable tall new• wu luued by the I RS lor
deaf penom lo 1990 ln the lorm of a rulina on the cott •
ol 1pedal equipment enabllna the deaf to understand
the audio part of TV proirama.
This equipment displays the audio portion u 11ub-
tltles on the screen of the TV set. The equipment
comes in two forms One ls u iself·contained unit that
can be attached ~ any conven
tional color TV
set. Toe other is
a conventional
color TV set In·
lo which the
s pecial equip-
ment is in ·
-~
I
'j
IYlVIA PORTER ~ ,
rorporated when the set is manufactured und which
costs more than the same model without th~ special
equipment.
The IRS ruled that qualifyanj! :ls deductible
medical expenses are · I 11 the cost ,,( the ~el(
contained unit; and < 21 the a mount by which the cost
of the specially equipped color TV set exceed!> the
cost of the same model conventional color TV set
Another favorable I RS ruling came in the form of
a 1980 IRS private letter dealing with a woman who
had become dependent on prescription drugs and
medication. She ente red a detoxification program
which required a hospital s tay followed by a self help
home program . During the second phase of the pro·
gram, there were to be weekly counseling sessions
with the program 's psychologi!'f
BECAUSE o•· THE considerable dli.tance
betweel'l the woman's home and the psycholo~1st'i. or
rice. the psychologist recommended t hat the woman
phone each week for thf' counseling ses51on Thr
woman's husband asked I RS whether lh(' long dis
tance phone charges for the counseling !>t•ssi1mi.
qualified as deductible medical expenses
IRS ans wered that they were deductible med1ral
expenses because ··1t appears that the long distance
telephone calls made by your wife to her psychologist
for counseling are for the purpose or all~v1at1ng and
treating her illness ··
Tip! E ach or the and1 v1dual cases and rulln~s m
this column may b<• applied in a relatively wide
range of your real-life experiences. H you on your
own cannot see a tonnect1on or direct apphcat1on,
ask for an mformc•d professional opin ion It 1s m
these wider appllcatwns that your hidden tax savani:s
may lie.
As a n rnustrat1on or how you may or may not
benefit from a tax ruling depending on how YOO
handle 1t in another 1980 private lette r ruling, the
IRS held that the cost of havi ng facial hair removed
by electrolysis and thermolysis did not qualify as a
deductible medical ex pense
.
·,
,.
. .~
'===================:;==================-==· STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
H-I HIM 4 IOlll
7 L-8P l MutllflyOU'
' 8ormM< S Pion.rep•
6 OOECO' 7 ltTE Cori> a S.OCOI nc: s
' P:laSMI I 10 PHBMIO 11 Emp()E ptA
n mtpfA ,. tt lie
!4 U Ir 1,f7pf ISC~ It 0n I
COLO COINS
c~i, ,,,,
1"-v. ,.,, , ... .,,
J'l!o ,,,.. ..
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I 4 ..
P(I
OH t• 7 Off 7 ~ 011 , ,
OH '' Off 6 .. gH 67
II • t
011 6 t 011 60 Off 6 0
011 s• Ott H Off s s Off S4 Off S1 0!1 S.J
HEW YORK IAP1 Ptl<O lelo W4'0"4!'°
dAy Of qOIO COin•, <om~r.-1 with I uoWIO \
prlct
ll,....,,.,.., 1 troy 01 U.U 00, up 11 00
Mapl• ... f. I lfOy 01 • U tt 00, up " 00
Me•l<ett )() ~'°· 1.2 tror 01 .• '6•J 00. vn
Ch•ftQod.
A011lrlaft tOO trown, '1901 lroy 01 , SSC. 00,
\IP '1 00
Souro Oull·Perer•
H EW VO~Kl .... P I f 11\•I Oow '"""' •"Q '°" -~· " \TOCKS
lO 1..0 10 l rn IS Ull ~S SI• lndu, r,.,,
Ulll\
\S Slk
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•08 8' IO'I ... 108 04 IOI 114 0 H
1t4 ,. • 10 •• " -.. ~s ... o.: II>
, us'°° r ~~, 000 -,, lfl'I 100 ~
WHAT STOCKS DID
H EW VOll'IC IAP I M•r ti
rooo '61 "'"'" on
WHAi AM(• DO
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Nflw IDW"
Z1"(. 41 .. t ••f1f\ ,, '"''''"' ,,. ••W•,. '
T tn \I 1tt&~ M• tAI\ VY••~ Jtnpo\elr U
Aluminum I• fl"nh • LWJ .. 1rt•t "' Y
M•rtvry l"'<IJ JIJ u-, • 1•H
Pl•hftvtn \AU llfltt,,~ / " f
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
1:1~ tol •• ,,,.
'"° 1
LO'ldon morn100 f11nno ~\IJ I', vu 'b ,.,
LondOtl ctfh•tncx;.n ''""Y \1tu Cln ••O \A 111°
P •rt\ t1flt'f"fJOi' ,,,..,Q \\''I "11 .,;p \'4 4\
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Zurt<" t•t• •ft•rn.W)n """" \\OI UO us U 00. \~II c..o .. ,~etl
H•ncfy & ~•rm•n H•OOO upMOO
£11t9tirwrd on•y a,..,., ,;,ntfll' \l 111 l,1J
"00
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H)O •O up M '• l•llrn•I""]
d.._. .,..,,, '°* u·H•w tH •ly '"9" Un._ CMherw•M not.a , • ._, ot d•~~ .,~ ~ ~ntt btlMd on lhe IMI ~''
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By PAMELA HALLAN
~WUlllDeitfNll
allow 1eaaon In San Juan Capistrano. . ra run around lookinl for new way1 to tell
I y'a annual return. Local merchants breathe a
•ilh :of relief u they see buses line up alon1slde the Mia·
alon, spilling tourists. And local residents prime thelr
tarden hoses to wuh away mud nuts as fast as they are built.
Swallows aet lots of attention from people wbo
don't live in San Juan. But those of us who do Jive here see
them from a slightly less gJ,morous point of view. We
have to ljve with them unW October.
The legend of the swallows, first printed in a very fan·
ciful boot called "Capistrano Nights" in 1930. tells how the
Pa?Mlo Hallaa u o /01'1'Mr Daill/ Pilot ~·SM ti o H/tfong ,_.
Mat of ,... Juan Copitrao and u
w•ll acquahaud tOfth the com-
m1.1,.U11'• IUforw and legnda. CUr·
rntl11,wilanadmW.trotiwcwi8·
fOllt tothtcitJI~.
faithful awaJlowa return to the Mission each year on St.
Joseph's Day.
Actually, the birds spend very lltUe time at the Mis·
sion. .
Shelter feels squeeze
Laguna facility's allotment cut
By GLENN SCOTT
Of tlle D.tly ~I ... Stall
The Laguna Beach Youth
Shelter may close if Orange
County officials don't give it a
larger portion of state funds
than recommended. a shelter
leader warned Wednesday.
Julie Pozietta, program direc·
tor for the year-old shelter at 508
St. Ann's Drive, told the Col41ltY
Board of Supervisors that the
shelter's 16-me m ber board of
directors doesn't believe that the
funding suggestions for state AB
90 funds are fair.
She said her board met Mon·
day and discussed closing the
Space shuttle
worker dies;
5 ·overcome
· CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
lAP) -A worker on the space
shuttle Columbia died today and
five other employees were over-
come when they entered a com·
partment that had been purged of
oxygen after a successful dress
rehearsal of pre-launch ac·
tivities, space center spokesmen
said.
The worker, who was not iden·
tified, died en route to a hospital in
Titusville, officials said.
Another of the Rockwell In·
ternational Corp. employees was
flown by helicopter to Shands
Teaching Hos pital in Gainesville.
He was said to be in critical condi·
lion.
Identities of the others were
withheld pending notification of
rel•tites.
OtfieiaJs said a third man was
hospitalized, but didn't appear to
be in Erious condition. The other
tht~e · ere released after treat·
mnt. fficialssaid.
the employees of Rockwell In·
tefaational, private contractor
lot the shuttle project, were
checking the engines after the
f>rerlaunch rehearsal when they
"fiat walked lnto" an area of pure
nitro.en, aaid Kennedy Space Ctn~tpokesman Rocky Raab. lRel photo, PageA4.) !"!I' e aft portion of orbiter , bOr lY is filled with nitrogen to
1~ lithe oxygen out," Raab
aaid. ''l'bls is don~ to prevent fires
in t~t area and to prevent Hll · explosive from seeping u;tt. e .. 'I 1'h orkers, unaware they
• moving into a "nitrogen J "'r1 '' area, were felled by a lack
.'<>I oxnen, Raab said. Five of the
ttehniclans passed out while one
oUler was overcome and was .,belped from the area by other w rkera. ,4 ere is no way you can see or 'I that you're movtn1 into an I, that Jacka oxy1en," Raab
"1be whole compartment ia
d of oxy1en. We Insert 'II ., to lfel rid of the ox11en r 1uses. ll la normally a
area and you can only aet
l It by ioln1 throu1h access
pan•li."
The incident came shortly an.er
<See SHV1TLE, Pase A2>
ST WOMEN
'I DaU1 Pilot 1alutes tbe
Cout woman and btr
accompUabment.
for "I Am Woman," a
• Perlacop• m11aalnt
~11111 •tori• ud pJctuNI
Ol'Mll Cout WOIDID,
........... tbWU., ber
t ............ and ..... da1· ......
shelter unless a more equitable
portion of funds is offered.
The state funds are part of
about SS million provided the
county to help reduce commit·
ment rates to state prisons.
An Orange Co unty advisory
committee has r ecommended
that the six-bed Laguna Beach
shelter should get $92,000. or 75
percent of its request for next
, fiscal year.
Two other six·bed shelters in the county, however. were rec·
ommended for more funding.
The Family Crisis Center in Costa
Mesa was recommended for
$125,800, or 90 percent, and the
Murder case
Chrysalis shelter in Anaheim
was suggested for $119,700, or 98
percent.
The supervisors heard Ms.
Pozietta's remarks Wedof'Sday
during a briefing on the commit·
tee's recommendations.
The supervisors are scheduled
to make final decisions on the
funding next week.
Ms. Pozzetta said members of
the non-profit shelter board are
planning to meet with 5th Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley
and 3rd District Supervisor
Bruce Nestande soon to object to
what they s ay appears to be
'Life being ruined,'
MacDonald claims
"WRECKS MY LIFE"
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald
Lower NB
Bay opened
• to swimmers
Most of the Lower Newport
Bay, Including Bal boa Island
and Lido Isle, has been reopened
to bathers after Or.an1e County
health officials Wednesday
judged sewage contamination
had dropped to an acceptable
level.
But the quarantine. on the Up·
per Bay, inctudina the Newport
Dunes aquaUc park and tbe
waters off Unda Ille, will re-
main In effect at leut until Fri· day.
\ The off·Umlta line runs from
tbe aouth Up of Linda lale to the
moat southerly point lo the
Bay1hore commilnlty.
1'be ban on 11rimmlng and div·
Ina in tbe Newport Bay wu lm·
poted 11 days a10 when a sewer
line beneath P acific Cout
R1tbway ruptured and poured
1lx million 1allOn1 of 1ewa1e in·
to the bay.
The quaranllne ort•fnallt in·
eluded I ftve·mlle l lrtteb of
beacbel from tbt Balboa PMr to
kotcbman '• Cove. That quaran·
tine wu llfted lut Wffk.
Monica Masur , a county
bt1ltb lpteillllt, Hid t .. Un.
earUer tldl ,...k revealed that
~· fl'om tbt ..,. ••• •.W bad dropped to an acceptable
ltHI ror two conaecullv• daJS.
By PATRICK KENNEDY
DI U. o.lly ~I ... Slaff
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald
claimed today that his life is be·
in& ruined after government at·
torneys asked the U.S. Supreme
Court to reinstate his 1979 con·
viction for the murders of bis
wife and two children at Fort
Bragg, N.C., in 1970.
"It wrecks my life again,"
said MacDonald, a Huntington
Harbour bachelor. "But I'm not
surprised. The government at·
lorneys will do anythin~ to prove
they haven't been wrong in pros·
ec uting me for the last 11
years."
Jus tice Department lawyers
filed a writ of certiorari today
asking the Supreme Court to re·
verse the decision of the 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals t.hal
overturned MacDonald's 1979
conviction.
The appeals court ruled last
July that MacDonald was denied
a speedy trial. He then was re-
leased from Terminal Island
federal prison after serving
almost a year.
The former °i.rmy Green Beret
captain maintains that four
drug-crazed "hippies" burst into
his Fort Bragg home Feb. 17,
1970, and beat and stabbed to
death his wile Collette, 26, and
lthe dau1hters, Kimberly S and
Kristen, 2.
The police, called by Mac-
Donald, found him suffering
from a knife wound to the chest.
After a ten1thy army in·
veatliauon, ~bargea against
MacDonald were dropped. But
in 1975, a federal grand Jury in
Raleilh, N.C., Indicted hJm on
murder charges. In 1979, tbe
U.S. District Court in Ra1ei1b
convicted him.
''It seems Ute lt'a never 1oing
to end," MacDonald sald. "It's
abaolutely beyond belief."
MacDonald aaya he's spent
more. than ~1000 defending
t\imself aiaLDal ine char1u and
(See DOCl'Oa, Pase Al>
political decision-making by the
committee.
She said a comparison of
operations of the three shelters
shows that the Laguna facility Is
as efficient and as busy as the
other two.
"We serve the most clients at
the lowest per capita cost of the
three, yet we're funded at the
lowest of the three," she said.
If the supervisors were to ap-
prove the funding rec6mmenda·
lions. the shelter would have lo
raise about $40,000 to meet its
budget. She said shelter board
<See SHELTER, Page A.%)
Two arres'ted
• on cocaine
sales charge
Two men -one a former
membtt of the Laguna Beach
based Brotherhood of Eternal
Love drug-smuggling empire
and the other an American once
held captive in Cuba for three
years -have been arrested by
Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
ment narcotics investi1ators.
James LeRoy Cnttenden, 38, a
transient, who investigators say
was once a ranking operative in
the Brotherhood, and J erry Al·
Jen Weaver, 37, of Long Beach,
seized by Cuban officials In 1972
while aboard a boat that drifted
into Cuban waters, were among
six people taken into custody
Tuesday night following a month
long investigation into cocaine
sales activity.
About 9.5 ounces of 93 percent
pure cocaine valued at $24,000
was seized by undercover agents
during a raid at a Long Beach
address. Long Beac h Police
Department assisted in the in·
vestigation.
Crittenden, who has a lenlthy
arrest record and has used
numerous aliases, was indicted
in the early 19708 by the Orange
County Grand Jury in connec·
lion with its inv~stigation into
the Brotherhood.
At its peak, the Brotherhood
was responsible for Importing
multimillion dollar quantities of
marijuana and hashish into lhe
United States. It also distributed
large amounts of LSD and other
psychedelic drugs. ~ . Crittenden was convicted but
did not serve time in slate prison
based on results of diagnostic
studies by prison officials, said
his former attorney, Matthew
Kurillch.
Crittenden was scheduled to
be transferred today to Oranae
County JaJl from Loni Beach Ci·
ty Jail. He la beln1t held on
(See LOVE, Pase AZ)
Othe r coverage
Other south Oranie County
cover••• appears t.oday on Pa1e
89.
The trees hAve arowo too larse, ln~ltJn1 their neat·
building by creatine too many obltaclet. So the birdl loot
for other places to build their nest.. A favorite 1pot l• the
freeway brtd1e over San Juan Creek. New development.a
with equally new landscapin1 aJao are popular. ~y Wl·
obstructed place near open fields and mud will do. !xeept
for tbe city's official swallow shelters. .
Several years ago stories beian appearin• that ~dllows were no longer eomiq back to Capistrano. Jn
aa~ to squelch those rumon and encourage the birds,
tbe Cit)' C.OU.Ocil built swallow abelten and put them in
-p9blic parks. They also declared San Juan a bird
sanctuary, maldne it a misdemeanor to tamper with birdl
or nests.
The swallows ignored the shelters and most local
(See SWALLOWS, Page A.%>
hltyl"llelMMI~
HENRY AND HELEN CHIL08 SCAN SKIES 'OR SWALLOWS
Omtthologlet ttte1 to debunll 'Capl1trano Caper'
Eyes skyward
Pr.of · debunks swallows tale
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of IM Delly ~IMC Stall
The return of the swallows to
Mission San Juan Capistrano
was heralded this morning by
the r·inging of church bells at
9:05 a.m .
The event was witnessed by
thousands of visitors, some of
whom were craning their necks
skyward as early as 6 a.m.
But one of those birdwatchers
crowded onto the plua in front
of the ruins of the Old Stone
Church isn't swallowing the tale
of the birds' prompt arrival on
St. Joseph's Day.
Henry E . Childs Jr., who
teaches biology. at Chaffey Com·
munity College in Alta Loma.
arrived al the mission early this
morning, accompanied by his
wife, Helen.
They were equipped with
powerful binoculars, cameras
and a bird book that Childs car·
ried in a pouch hanging from his
belt. .
The ornithologist wasn't shar·
ing the enthusiasm of others In
the crowd.
You see, he views the
swallows legend as nothing short
ol poppycock.
Childs bas bad a runnin1
verbal batUe with a Los Anteles
newspaper columnist the put
few weeks over what the
biolo,Ul terms "the Caplstrano
Caper."
He said he once counted more
than 500 swallows abo'v-e the mis· I
sion a week and a half before
their expected arrival date on
St. Joeepb'1 Day.
"There's four more of them,"
b11 wile exclaimed, as Cblldl
dutifully marked the Ume -
7: 15 a.m. -In a small rumpled
notebook.
Childs likens the arrival of
1w11lowa ln San Juan lo the ml·
1raUon ot lemm1n8• to Uae sea.
''It'• all bunk," be •rumbled
turniu bis blncKlul1r1 tawaid
tbe overeut •kt•. ·
By '7 :10 a.m., ~any 1wallowt
couJd bt aeea cll'cUDa b18b aboYe
tbe ndDlalt.beOlisa..Cburcb.
Ch•rdl. ·i "'TIMJ're 'tMdina oe lDHCtl. '' CbUdl..W.
'•And, contrary to U1t1
broebm..t' M Mid, ,.._ •
lfMD ·~MiM ,pampMtt b'Om
"' pocket, "Ui•H are cu n a wallows, not ban awallowl."
Barn swallows, the professor
says, have the distinctive fork
tail, which was absent from the
cliff swallows that circled lhe
mission this morning.
"We've been seeing them
(cliff swallows) up north for two
weeks." wife Helen huffed.
•'There's a white throated
swift." Childs said. scribbling
down the name and the time -
7:42 a.m. in his notebook.
A woman holding a green
broc hure approached Childs and.
said. "l thought they all arrived
here in a flock."
Putting down his binoculars,
Childs glared at the woman and
said, "Don't believe everything
you read.··
The story that the small birds
black out the sun with their ar·
r ival Is what irks the or·
nithologist the most.
"It's a gradual mig(ation
northward (from Argentina),"
he explained.
And It's all governed by the
weather.
"Now back east you get
(See TA.LE, P•le AZ>
Dllllil CUil IUTlll
Raln today with chance
of thunderstorm.a tonl•hl,
tapertq olf Friday. Gusty
winds 115 to 20 mpb tonit tal
and Friday. Hi.... today
57 to a . Lows tomsbt 50 to
55. Chance of rain to per·
cent today and 70 percent
'Friday.
~
lllllf Jllll
Goldal Welt u tM Olllf local
carrier to naoac~ IM llG·
U0ttto6de eta• ftt cdr /orft. I#
Po.ge 814. •
11111
I
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jl
I
I
11
ii I
I
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•
'I I I I
Delly ..... IWf
PARTICIPANTS THROW CAUTION TO WIND
Suaen Cummings (left), end VlckJ Lugo In buff•lo chip event
Chip chD.ckers
Kids snub birda' return
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Ol Ille O.lly ltllet Stall
What competitive buffalo chip
throwing has to do with the re-
turn of the swallows to San Juan
Capistrano isn't exactly clear.
But that didn't seem to bother
the 15 or so youngsters who
showed up at the city's mini-
pa rk on Camino Capistrano
Wednesday to compete in the
event.
Susan Cumming. vice presi-
dent or the Fiesta Association.
which sponsored the throw as
part of the week-long celebra·
tion leading up to the a rrival of
the swallows today, said the
competition was meant to in·
volve younger people in the
festivities.
But were the throwing-quality
pasture patties really buffalo in
origin? Nope. They were de-
in some or the flattened discs,
scattering shards over the
bystanders as the contestants let
loose with their throw.
The athletes then bravely
stepped back to the line and look
another throw.
The winning' heave, measured
at 54 feet, was made by 10-year·
old Robbie Wilson, a fifth grader
al Crown Valley Elementary
Scbool.
With a brand new electronic
football game tucked under his
arm, the modest winner said the
competition had been tough, but
he'd been lucky.
Second place went to Pat
Oliver, 17, whose throw was
measured at 52 feet. A commend-
• ble effort, but not quite good
enough to win.
li cidedly steer or milk cow pro-
duced, according to Mrs. Cum-
mings, gathered locally in the
Representing the women was
10 -year-old Diane Sibbing, a
fourth grader at San Juan
Elementary School. Her 51-foot
throw won her a third place
finish.
lush meadows of San Juan. •
Demonstrating true com-~ petitive form. the e ntrants
. shunned gloves and gingerly
chose their chips. Most opted to
use Frisbee -style throwing
.-techniques, while others pre·
Oliver, a junior at Dana Hills
High School, said be would have
to buy a cowboy hat for the
feathered hatband he won for
placing second. Miss Sibbing
will be dining at a local pizza
parlor with the gift certificate
she won. l ferred the full windup and de·
livery of major league baseball.
Alas. the quality was wanting
i , '
Fr .. P8flPAI
SW ALLOWS RETURN • • •
residents ignored the new ordinance. An occasional cons-
cientious citizen will call City Hall asking for a permit lo re-
move a swallow's next, but most just wash tbem away or put
up s hiny objects where they don't want a nest. .
What 1s wrong with having a few nests under the eaves
of your house? Unfortunately. sw.allows ~ests are lined
with tiny bedbug-like creatures which the birds eat. These
bugs can infest a house if the nest Is built near a window.
There is also a problem with droppings. Some fastidious
residents prefer not to have nests in their patios or over
their front door.
THERE .IS ONE group of inhabitants who look
forward to the return of the swallows each year. Cats. I'm
reminded of the old Tom and Jerry cartoon in which Tom
runs off to Capistrano for the return of the sw~llows for ob-
vious reasons. But don't worry, swallows are plentiful.
despite the reports of alarmists.
It seems to me that the return of the swallows was a
lot more fun when people first heard about them. They
were romantic. Leon Renee wrtlte a song about them.
They made headlines in newspaJ.ers as far away as New
York. They provided something constant in the lives of
folks who were surviving the Great Depression.
Imagine that, Mable, birds tbat actually return to the
same place on the same day each year !
IN MY GRANDMOTHER'S lime, local children
gathered in front of the Mission lo await the return of the
birds and they were usually not disappolnted. Great flocks
of them new in to the then-treeless Mission, nesting in the
ruins of the Great Stone Church. Swallows were a local
tradition. Everyone else ignored them.
Today tourists gather in front of the Mission waiting
for the swallows to return, expecting the sky to be
blackened with birds. Most leave town disappointed. It
isn't that there aren't the same number of swallows. They
seem to come in s mall groups and most of them avoid the
downtown altogether because of the crowds .
Yet for on• week locals and tourista alike have fun
with the annual event.
During Fiesta Week everyone goes "cowboy" and bu
for the lut 23 ye.,.s. Tb~y enjoy the beard 1rowlng con-
test. the various activities for children, tbe Ml11lon
Pageant, and the Parade on Saturday.
BUT COME Monday, the parade la over. the crowds
have thiMed and it's business as usual ln San Juan
Capistrano.
Swallows Day has come and 1one.
And for me, so has the mystique.
OAANGa COAIT Dilly Piiat
Thonw P. Haley
~
RObett N. WNd .........,.
M. Thomu l<MYll ...
ThofMa A. Murphlnt ...............
Chari. H. I.~~ A-. ......... _
~Schulman
~~
~J:'\"a!°lld•rd Jt.
...... ~
DWett91¥• ,C..UMeN, CA. Mell ...,_r ._!IM,C.UMeM,CA. ~
Fr .. r.,,.AJ
LOVE ...
$450,000 bail, including a $400,000
arrest warrant issued following
his indictment in Concord in
January, 1980, in connection
with a drug conspiracy case.
Orange County Sheriff's Lt.
Wyatt Hart said Weaver was re·
leased from Cuban custody in
1975 after being held on the
island for three years following
his capture. Hart said other de·
tails surrounding the capture
weren't immediately available.
Fro• Pagr Al
TALE ...
tremendous waves of migrating
birds that might have been held
back by a cold front," his wife
said.
But in mild temperatures. the
birds fly north at their own pace.
"It was a warm year and the
insects were here earlier. The
swallows are insect eaters. so
they're here earlier. too."
It's as simple as that.
Rapist says
he's 'sick'
• • in warning
PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio CAP>
Police in the Cleveland area
are searching for a rapist who
warned the public that he is
"sick" and will continue raping
women and children until his wife
returns to him.
A Parma Heights woman told
police the man raped her Tues-
day night, then made her write a
note containing his threat and an
o rder that it be read on
television. In the note, the man
described himself as sick and in
need of help.
The note, held as evidence by
police, says:
·'I will keep raping women
and children until my wire
comes back to me. 1 will not hurt
her . I loveher. This woman is only
the first. I will keep hurting these
women. I am sick. I need help. I
am out of work. Put this message
on TV so my wife will hear it. Her
nameisAMette"
The message was read on the
11 p.m. Wednesday news broad-
cast of WKYC-TV, an NBC af-
filiate.
Battle rages
in Salvador
EL SALVADOR, El Salvador
<AP) -Planes and ground
troops batUed leftist guerrillas
in the third week of a "cleanup"
operation near tt\e Honduran
border as El Salvador's armed
forces awalted the arrival later
this week of 12 more U.S. ad-
v ls e rs an d four transport
hellcopt.ers.
M llitary sources reported at
least one government soldier
killed in the fighting Wednesday
120 mUes east of San Salvador.
Residents said 10 other soldiers
were kllled when guerrillas am-
bushed a milltary convoy in the
viJlage of Aceituno, 25 miles
north oft.be capital.
Court nixes
medic's plea
. SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -The Callfo~a Supreme Court bat
refuted to block re~ocauon of a
Frttno n•uro-p1ychlatrl1t'a
medical Ucenae because be al-
leatdlY sexually abused several
women paUentl.
It l•nled without comment
· W tdneeda.Y a petition for bear-
ln1 from l>r. Charlee 0 . WUll1
ur1ln1 the tribunal to review Of· '
dere by ltat. a1en~1 ... Wtllit IMt w.-alto filed a re·
lated r ... lnvolvln1 revoca-
tion ID lledl·Cal provider'• ~rmlt wh.leb allow.cl bbn to
trHt l;:iJent petleall wboM. ~u• II tor bJ the 1tat.e. . •
. f I
O•ll• ltlle4 SUlf ,,_.
DEATH 'NO ACCIDENT'
LA Coroner Noguchi
LA coroner
says blows
caused death
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of, ... oe11, ltll .. Sl•ll
Los Angeles County Coroner
Thomas Noguchi says fatal head
iniuries suffered by a 2-year -old
Orange County girl were more
likely caused by blows from a
fist or "padded instrument "
than in an ac<.'identalJall down a
stairway.
Noguchi, testifying Wednes-
da y in the Orange County
Superior Court murder trial of
Leland Roy Dellinger. said the
injuries he observed in autopsy
photos of Jaclyn Zilles along
with his own first-hand inspec·
lion of the death scene led him to
believe the youngster did not die
in a fall at home as claimed by
Dellinger, her stepfather
Th e medi cal examiner,
brought into the case by Orange
County pathologists, said hardly
any of Jaclyn's injuries were
consistent with a fall
The prosecution's case deals
primarily with sc ientific
eviden('e compiled by
pathologists and a b10-medical
engineer, who used a child-like
dummy in simulated falls .
The youngster's death in May,
1979 from head injuries was
originally labeled as accidental
by the Orange County Sheriff.
Coroner 's office.
But local pathologists had her
body exhumed when tox·
icological reports indicated the
presence o f cocaine in her
system.
Noguchi said Orange County
pathologist Dr . Richard
Fukumoto called him into the
case to review autopsy informa-
tion.
I
By .JODI CADENHEAD °' * Ott•• ...... lletf Nearly 1001uerrUlaa reported·
ly reepoaalble tor the kllllns of
American Bible tonslalor
CHester Bitterman Ill March 7
ln Colombia have been killed or
captured by Colombian and
Ecuadorean soldiers.
Colombian Minister of Gov-
er nment German Zea
Hernandez said Wednesday that
soldiers killed 19 ,guerrillas
belonging to M-19 and captured
74, Including Carlos Toledo
Plata, a former congressman
who was second in command
and Rosemberg Pabon, a former
sc h oolteacher known as "Comandante Uno."
A spokeswoman for Wycliffe
Bible Translators in Huntington
Beach, a sister organization of
the Summer Ins titute of
Linguistics. where Bitterman
worked when he was kidnapped
Jan. 19, said that M-19 denied
any part in the kidnapping and
killing.
Following the execution killing
of the father of two. the guerrilla
group M-19 denied any part In
the kidnapping or killing, said
spokeswoman Betty Blair.
Instead the guerrilla group
blamed the killing and kidnap·
ping on a splinter group called
"Coronado National Base," Ms.
Blair said .
Photographs printed in South
American newspapers following
the kidnapping showed the kid·
nappers posed with a flag bear·
1ng the name "Coronado Na·
lion al Base." she said.
"This is a bit nebulous now,"
said Ms. Blair. "Right now we
don 't know if these really are the
people I think we have to wait
for more investigation."
Last January guerrillas k1d-
n a pp e d Bitter man and
threatened to kill him unless
about 100 Americans working
for the Bible Translating group
left the country.
Since the kidnapping and kill·
Fro• Pagr A I
SHELTER ...
members aren't s ure that much
can be raised.
S he explained that about
$14,000 has been earned through
client fees, aid from cities and
private donations.
The shelter. she said, gives
temporary sanctuary to troubled
youths who need s eparation
from their families. Counseling
is conducted during the stays
with the aim of reunification,
she said.
Average stay at the shelter is
12 days, although youths are al·
lo'."'ed to stay up to 90 days.
Seminar scheduled
LOS ANGELES <AP) Gov.
Edmund G. Brown Jr. told a
meeting of J ewish leaders
Wednesday that he can 't do
anything to stop an alleged snti·
Semitic group from holding a
seminar in a state-owned build·
ing, no matter how distasteful the
group's views.
ln1 none of the famlllea bas
·"ked to leave Colombia, aaitj
Ma. Blair. The Colombian 1ov-
ernment hu offered added pro-
tection to the workers.
.1
Bitterman'• wife Brenda left
the country wlth the couple's •
two small children following the
ktdnappin1. A memorial service
will be held for Bitterman
March 29 at his home town in
Lancaster, Pa.
U.S. eyes
deterrent
to arms
WASHINGTON !AP >
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. said today the ad-
ministration is considering a
rang e of s t eps to lake if
necessary to stop Cuban supply
of arms to Latin American reb-
els, but said it has no specific
plan for military action against
Cuba.
"With respect to a specific
plan, why no. The president has
not had an opportunity to ap-
prove or to consider in detail
any courses of action for the
period ahead," Haig said.
Haig gave that reply when
pressed at a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing on
an administration official's
tes timony Wednesday that
specific administration plans do
not exclude military action
against Cuba.
"It is the responsibility or the
executive branch to consider a
whole range or options. then pre·
pare a full range or options to
deal with this serious problem,··
Haig said. .. And I can assure
you that process is under way.
··But in no sense does it
represent an approved game
plan, if you will ," he said.
Unde rsecretary of State
Walter J . Stoessel told the com·
mittee under questioning that
the administration does have
s pecific contingency plans and
·'I would say they do not exclude
anything."
Sen. Christopher J Dodd. D·
Conn .. asked Stoessel the ques-
tion and pressed Haig today on
whether there in fact are such
plans.
Stoessel . a s ked by Sen.
Charles H Percy. R·lll., if Cen-
tral America could turn into
another "quagmire" like Viet·
nam , replied, "We are de·
termined that this situation will
not develop into another Viet·
nam the situation is con·
tainable."
Fro• Pap A I
SHUTTLE ..•
NASA officials proclaimed that
the rehearsal "went super." A
simulated ignition at 4:25 a .m.
PST, marked the end of the test
r un, NASA spokesman Mark Hess
said
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Handcmrtea in
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from 18 karat
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and a 520 gold
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a $5 gold piece
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A. Man's, $5,990.
B. Woman's,
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Fire destroys ,
I
park landma_rk .......
SAN DIEGO <AP> -A spectacul-ar fire
destroyed a lante section of the historic Belmont
Park Roller Coast~r. fire olflclals said. Fire Department spokesman BUI Pitta said a
fire "of suspicious origin" Tuesday dama1ed 10
percent of the landmark wooden structure and
destl'oyed one of the 56-year-old amusement park's
original roller coaster cars.
There were no injuries, Pitts said, although
the roller coaster and surrounding area has
become a haven for derelicts.
<'Atl~ •eelc .,.,. md
' #••• ... ·-·····---..... -.............. ..
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 19, 1981 H/F
APWlr ... IAI
Judge rules it'• a magasine
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Na· pate Enquirer article stating that hh
tlooal Enquirer, under attack by third marriage was about to break
Johnny Carson on televl1lon and up. "I'm going to call the National
Carol Burnett tn court, haa loet a ma· Enquirer and the people who wrote
jor legal round with a jud1e'1 ruling this 'liars'," Carson said. "Thia Is
that the publlcaUon ls a magazine, absolutely, completely, 100 percent
not a newspaper. falsehoods." Then he dared the En·
The ruling by Superior C.ourt Judie qu.irer to 1ue him for slander.
Peter Smith -who sajd the En· ' Masterson demanded a mistrial, ,
quirer's argument "fell nat on its claiming Carson's attack was prej· I
face" -denied the paper any protec-uhdicial and damaged the Enquirer's I I
lion from damages under California c ance at a fair trial. The judge re-l
retracUonstatutes. fused.
Miss Burnett Is suing the 1Enquirer '
for $10 million over a gossip column
item she claims libeled her. A rulint
that the Enquirer was a newspaper
could have reduced its liability to as
little as $250. her attorneys said.
SACRAMENTO <AP> -California's private
colleges are seeking more state scholarship aid to
cushion the impact of soaring costs.
Representatives of----
the colleges descended NEWS
upon the Legis lature
Potomac sinks
"I've evidently caught you by sur·
prise," Smith•told Enquirer attorney
William Ma~terson as he issued the
late afternoon ruling Wednesday.
THE EXIT OF two juro'rs and
replacement of one by an alternate
left only 11 members on the panel. A
civil case in California can be heard
by fewer than 12 jurors, a nd the
judge said he would press for a
verdict even if the panel shrank to
eight.
Miss Burnett's lawyers called the
ruling on the magazine ver s us
newspaper Issue a major victory. Wednesday. BRI [fS Among them, Stan-
ford University Vi ce ----
The former presidential yacht Potomac sank at its Treasure Island
Navy dock in San Francisco Wednesday, possibly due to a puncture
from a mooring. The yacht, down in 35 feet or water, had been
.seized following a marijuana raid.
"I HAVE LOOK ED at the
qualifications for a newspaper under
the statute." he said. "I'm sorry. I
don't think it's even close."
• · 1 think it removes some serious
legal obstacles we no longer have to
over come." said Paul Sanner. who
a rgued the issue. President Robert Rosenzweig told a news con·
ference, ··we have asked only that able students
be given the chance to choose the education that is
best for them and that they not be barred from
that choice solely for financial reasons ."
Dot19la• deH.,ers Cattlwr
Bµs end fought
He cited efforts by the Enquirer to
show its similarity to the New York
Daily News. the · nation's ·largest
newspaper.
"I have no problem distinguishing
the New York Daily News from the
National Enquir er ," Smith s aid.
"Sure. they're both tabloids. But that
goes to form. not substance."
Masterson insisted the impact on
the case would be minimal. "I'm go-
ing to win this case anyway on the
lack of actual malice," he said
The judge predicted hi s ruling
might turn out not to be momentous
if the jury determines that the En-
quirer's retraction was not published
within the legal time limit.
LONG BEACH <AP) -The Air Force has
taken delivery of the first of a new type of tanker-
cargo aircraft designed to increase the global
mobility or U.S. and allied aircraft.
Teachers claim halt disruptive His ruling came only hours after
the trial was thrown into turmoil by
Carson's televised blas t at the En·
quirer , an attack which led to dis·
missal of two jurors and a motion for
mistrial, which was denied.
The McDonnell Douglas KC-10 took off from
Long Beach airport with Lt. Gen. Edgar Harris,
commander of the Strategic Air Command's 8th
Air Force, at the controls, heading for Barksdale
Air Force Base in Louisiana.
'€o11oce pla1H' reJ~•ed
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A controversial
'..plan to use coyotes to thin the herd of deer on rAngel Island in San Francisco Bay has been
vetoed by the s tate Department of Fish & Game. it
was announced today.
• Information officer Joe Sheehan said the plan
had been rejected and the department was looking at ··other alternatives... ·
\ '"Among them are moving, which we don't
want. to do, a euthanizing and culling program,
s hootmg them and using steroids to hold down
reproduction." said Sheehan, who emphasized that
plans for the herd were in the very early stages.
.$trflce pr..,ent• hriab
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Managers of San
Francisco area funeral homes say they ha1'e
enough room at least for now -to store bodies
that can't be buried because of a s trike by workers
at JI major cemeteries.
Burials were halted Wednesday when some 130
members of Cemetery Workers and Green At-
tendants Local 26.Sstruck over wages and benefits.
John Cantwell , attorney for the Associated
Cemeteries, said the union rejected a last-minute
offer of a 95 cents-per-hour raise that would have
brought the daily rate to $83.60
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-Teachers in the Los
Angeles Unified School
District went to court to-
day to keep the school
board from ending man·
datory busing before the
end of the school year.
But since Superior Court
Judge Paul Egl y
withdrew from the case,
the first thing to be de·
cided was which judge
would hear the a rgu.
men ts.
THE UN IT ED
Teachers of Los Angeles
have asked for tem-
porary restraining order
against a mid-semester
halt to busing , as
planned by the school
board. The teachers said
changing the system on
April 10 would be ex-
tremely disruptive to
the educational process.
The school board vote
to end mandatory bus·
ing a fte r the s tate
Supreme Court let stand
a lower court ruling that
uphe ld the con s titu -
tionality of the anti -
bus ing amendme nt .
Proposition 1, and said it
applied to the Lo s
Angeles integration
case
SUPE RI OR Court
Presiding Judge David
Eagleson had the job of
deciding who would take
Egly's place. One name
that was mentioned was
th al of Judge Leon
Savitch, who is the son·
in-law of the late Judge
Alfred Gitelson . who
first ordered desegrega·
lion in Los Angeles
schools.
Attorneys for both
sides said that Savitch's
relationship to Gitelson
was not discussed in
their closed-door meet·
ing with the j udges
Wednesday and neither
side had any objections to
Savitch's involvement.
that the busing deadline
be extended as part of
its petition to the state
Supreme Court to re-
consider its Proposition
l decision, an ACLU
spokesman said.
It was not known when
the action would be
taken. he said
THE TWO OUSTED jurors ad·
milted in the judge's chambers that
·they had seen Carson railing against
the Enquirer on his Tuesday night
show
Carson was angry about a front-
THE RETRACTION statute pro·
tec t s ne w s papers but no t
magazines only if a retraction is
published promptly and with the
s ame prominence given the original
article.
"'There is a very hi gh probability,"
the judge said. '"that the Enquirer
did not comply with the retraction
statute in a timely fashion."
Airport battle flares
SANTA MONICA <AP > -The battle to close Morrow said. to ensure that service won't be dis·
the municipal airport a target both of city coun-rupted and that its 62 employees won't be thrown
cil members who want low-income housing on the out of work.
site and those who want an industrial park or of-Other tenants were told to be out by Feb. 1,
!ice-shopping complex -healed up as airport 1982. Morrow said. Morrow said the city has an
tenantsfumedoverevictionnotices. agreement with the Federal Aviation Administra ·
Th 1 ~• · lion to use the area as an airport ··at least through " e atest .,.oy is to evict all operators, leav· the year 2000" but that the council thinks it can get
ing only a runway and a tower," steamed Mark out of the agreement.
Morrow, ope'rator of Wings West Inc. CaUs to City Manager Kent McClain went un-
··we're supposed to cease and desist in the answered Wednesday. but Morrow said the city
operations of the airline within JO days or they will manager and city attorney had advised the council
closedownthewhole facility,"hesaid.""Wings West it could not break the agreement with the FAA,
T ff E AM E R I CAN carries about 2,000 people a month to Mammoth and and that an independent study commissioned by
Civil Liberties Union, a Bishop ski areas.'' the council had reached the same conclusion.
plaintiff in the 18-year -The airline will continue to operate but ~m Past council a ctions aimed at discouragin g use
old case, will also ask move to Los Angeles lntern.ational Airport May 1, of the airport include a noise limit of 85 decibels
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ML
City bus ro~te
faces fund loss
Lquna Beach's moat popular bus route, which runs
between the Broadway depot and th• Monarch Bay Plaza in
J..aauna Niauel, ls threatened with ertlnctloo.
The City Council wu told thla month that tbe Oran1e
County Transit District ls conalderlna endlna a S30,000 a
year contract with the city for th• route.
Transit ofticlala say they're con1lderln1 a Dial·•·
Ride program ln Laauna Beach in conjunction with a
county bus route. Instead of ustna the city's blue and
white buses for the Monarch Bay stretch.
Last year. city buses carrled..about 76,000 passen1en
ltlong the route. That's about'° percent of the city transit
total ridership.
Now it appears the J!Ounty wants the additional
revenue that the route generates -especially with the re·
cent county·approved fare increase to 75 cents.
But if the county drops funding for the route, the city
would either have to pick up the tab for delivering
passengers to the south county plaza, or eliminate the route.
The resultant loss of county funds could also en-
danger the entire city transit system -the only
municipality in Orange County with its own bus system.
Considering the OCTO budget is nearly SM million,
it's hard to conclude that a $30,000 contract with La1una
Beach. and a little competition from city buses, would
terminaJly affect the county transit district.
The ones who would be hurt by such a move would be
the riders who depend on the city bus route for their
transportation
Teachers face facts
Laguna Beach teachers aren't exactly doing
handstands over a retroactive pay hike equalling 4.5 per-
cent. but they are expressing relief that the months of
bickering and bitter negotiations are at an end.
The Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Association last
week narrowly agreed to accept the pay offer, which is
retroactive to last July.
The agreement also includes a one·time·only. one·
half percent cash settlement to all district employees.
Under the two.year contract agreement. teachers
will receive an 8 percent pay hike next year -if expected
s tate funds materialize.
The agreement falls far short of teachers' demands
for an 8 percent hike this year and a raise next year tied
lo the Consumer Price Index.
Even djstrict administrators say the modest increase
is not sufficient for a te aching staff they consider top
notch.
But gi ven the financial realities of t he post·
Proposition 13 er a. school equalizing court decisions and
declining stude nt enrollment. teachers had little choice
but to accept the district offer.
Lawsuit preIDature
The City of San Clemente has been slapped with a
$203 million lawsuit by a development firm that claims
the city is unnecessarily delaying its project.
Estrella Properties. Ltd., a Santa Ana·based develop·
ment firm, claims in its Orange County Superior Court
s uit that the delays. and what it terms excessive city fees
have hindered its development.
The company wants to build 2,775 dwelling units on
about 1,770 acres of the Forster Ranch in the hilly back
country inland of the San Diego Freeway.
Fueling the company's ire is a four-month
moratorium on new construction imposed in January by
the San Clemente City Council.
The laws uit comes in the midst of that moratorium,
which was endorsed Jan. 7 by all of the council with the
exception of Pa trick Lane.
The moratorium was intended to give city planners
some breathing room in efforts to plan for a city that
could grow by more than 8.000 additional dwelling units
in the next few years.
How the city intends to cope with additional services.
s uch as fire. police. sewer and water. must be outlined
before further deve lopment is permit\ed.
The four·month building ban is reasonable. consider·
ing the planning that has to be done for San Clemente's
future.
And while the moratorium should not exte nd more
than four months without good cause. it appears the
Es trella lawsuit was a bit premature. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.0
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321
Boyd/Food tastes
ByL.M.BOVD
Q. What sort of commonly
known food is least liked by the
most people?
A. Buttermilk. The surveys
repeatedly JJhow that. Second
on the least liked list is brains,
it's said, possibly because of
availability. You see a lot
more buttermilk than br ains.
Other least liked items. in
descending order. are oysters,
eggplant. turnips. clams and
parsnips.
What, you've never heard of
French Wine Cola? T.hat's
what Co<:a-Cola was called
First they take
c11arettea away from
u1 and now they are
prol)09lo1 to t.ak• coffee
(or OW' own 1ood, of
courae . Someday
1clence ii soln• to IO
loo far. V.k.
GiMlllY-~.,.,......_. .. ,...,. ...... ~ ....... .. ......... =, ............ .... .. o~o.. 11'1' .. _ •
when it rirst came out in 1885.
Then, it contained cocaine and
wine. But that didn't last lon1.
The wine was tossed out, later
the cocaine, caffeine was
added along with extract of
the cola nut for flavor, and the
nameCoca·Cola wal\ adapted.
How do you account for the
fact that the s uicide rate
among women has tone up 45
percent in the last 15 years?
Somewhere on earth, the
rain is fallln1. always. Never
lets up, say the weather folk.
They calculate there are about
1.800 thunderstorms an lilour.
Alao thla ate of Ht•Uitel
proves that 10 limes u muy
U1htntn1 storms oeeur OYer
land as oversea.
Q . If the buck deer a.. u.etr
antlers every 1pria1, llow
come the forett ftoer lm't ~
ered with them'?
A. Pof'W.pJJMI tit th•m. So do rabblca. mle!e, too.
If •J..,., 18 lcotlMd clOeln't
w11ttopnieounc•adef..s.t
put, W llnoe• lt Hll re-
turn a ftrdtetof ''not"'"'•·••
Jaek Alidenon
"i
Thomas KH~ll ll•ltor
~ra K~blctt IEdltorlll P~ Editor
HigH-flyin.g dnlg smugglers
WASHINGTON -Major drul
1mu1fllnl Ol'l&nl1aUons are def· lnlte y b i1 bu1tnn1, even
thouch t hey're not In the
Fortune SOO lilt of ltadlnJ cor·
poraUona. In 1978 atone for ex·
ample. UUcit drug trartlc In the
United Stales generated an
estimated SM billion In ~tall sales.
Not surprisingly, the dope ped·
dlen have aped the corporate
structure of
letitimate
bu sine s s/"
firms . "A
structured or-
1 a nJ za ti on,
comrrised or b o h I e ·
gitlmat e
and illicit
businesses,
enables the
traffickers to sustain losses
without having to halt all of their
operations." a classified Drug
En forcement Adminis tration
study reports. The masquerade
or respe<:tabiUty also makes it
tougher for Jaw enforce me nt
people to separate the legal
Mailbox
from the i.lleaat activity.
The du11fled DEA study gave
a detailed description Qf one
tar1e·1cale marijuana and co-
calne amuullnf operation that
was bued in IUnois. Georgia
and f'lorlda . Intelligence
sources told my associate Dale
Van Atta the information was
develo~ on the outfit's ac·
ttvitles ln 1977 and 1978 from
both surveillance a nd inform·
ants.
HERE'S THE "t y p ical
scenario" for the smugglers'
high-flying illicit operation.
taken from the DEA report.
"The aircraft would depart
the Urtited Slates, usually from
a controlled airport, and either
fly directly to Colombia or via
one or seve r a l <.:a r1 bbea n
islands. The plane would land in
Colombia after dark, where as·
sociates loaded and refueled the
aircraft for Uie return to the
United States.
''The group had access to
sev eral US. airpo rts and
airstrips capable of handling
large aircraft. Several hours
prlor to the arrival of 11n
aircraft, a team of group sup·
port per sonnel. nnglng In
num~r from 8 to 20, would 81'·
rive at the airstrip wltb muJU.
wheeled vehicles. including trac·
tor·trallers and 2 ton dump
trucks.
··Electronic e<1t.1lpm ent. In·
eluding scanners. air-to-ground
radios and CBs, would be used to
monitor law enforcement activl
ty in the area and to permit
communications between the air
and ground crews. Upon arrival
ol the plane, the ground crew
would use fla shli~hl ll to 11
lumlnale the strip
"THE PLANE S us uall y
landed in the early morning
hours and wer e offlr>aded by
means of a human conveyor
system; typically, u plane wai.
completely offloaded in less than
o ne hour. The drugs were loaded
o nto the lar ge vehicles and
transported to several storage
facilities and distribution points
i n Mi ssouri. ll l1no1 s and
Georgia."
The sm u~J(hng organ1zallon"•
corporate structure was that o1
any le1iUmate con1lomerat1. Its
various companies served as
fronts to buy. sell and reaister
the vehkles and aircraft needed.
Senior management set budaets
lor the various activities. lnclud·
Ing acquisition of remote farms.
warehouses and airports to ac·
commodate the s hipment and
storage of the dope.
··E ach e mployee h"ad a
apec1fic job title and function,
and a definite place in the chain
of command," the DEA report
su1d The highest salaries went
as in any legitimate corpora·
lion to to p executives. But
t ho11e e mployees "dire ctly
enga.ced in s mu gg lin g ac-
tivities" also made lop dollar~
Pilots of the large airc raft. for
example DC 4s, OC-6s and
DC 7s reportedly were paid
SI 00,000 pe r trip. while the
grounl1 <:rews got SI0.000 apiece
per m1si.1on
NO SALE: Ray Sena was an
t!mployee or Rockv.ell lnterna·
t1onal for more tha n 20 years He
was fired after h(' hlt-w the whis
lie un mass1 ve wa!'>te and mis·
handling or govcrnmt·nt funds Jn
th e tompany's ~vacc ~huttle
t·tmtract
Sena ha~ hrought \Ult for $300
million agatn!»l tht· company.
anti report_., that H"ckv.ell ha:.
made him a num~r of interest
ing \ettlement oflc:r\
F1r:st. he say\ hf' v. a., offen~d
SI 2 '"">. then SH~.'">'1. then $25.000 and a JOb v.1th anoth1·r 1·11mp11ny
f-'ln&Jf ) hf.o \&1'1 f{(J ('kWt'll
t-ml\\&nl~ offerf•d him his old
JOI> IJ&rk plu'> h<1c-k pa) and re
1mbu~emt-nt f,1r dn' finanr1<tl
dam<tgh h(" had rn<-urn-d All ht·
had to 1fo rn rt-turn "'J'> drop h1"
lav. '-Ull
St-na refu\t·d \ ffoc kY.ell
\poke<>man '>dtd n•lt>,,c!\ had
bC'cn authorizt-d li1 m&kt' an) of
fer\ on the-compan~ ., ht-half
~1 t.':Jn v.h1lt.' Se na ~
"'h1<,tleblov. 1nR hC1~ hC1d resul~
Th{' space <:Onl?lumt-rate ha!'
become tht-<,ubJt-tt of thre(
federal inq:.,t1g<.1twn-. Sena sus
p<.'cts therf'·., a c·on n ection
hel ween the 1m e-.t1gationi. and
thl' company·~ effort~ llJ ~et hin"
to drop the -.u1t
Federal airport funds mean federal rules
e Editor ·
u and your news paper and
s have recently printed
several misleading "letters to
the editor" that claim users of
the John Wayne Airport, and not
the federal government, will pay
for its expansion.
The fact is the federal govern·
ment will pay for most of it
These letters m islead Newport
Beach citizens who ar e aware of
the consequences or federal con·
trol of the airport. Newport's a p-
prehension is not misplaced.
Indeed, the com promise
worked out between the FAA
a nd the county already looms
ominous ly over us The com·
promise was that the FAA would
fund the purchase of additional
land for the airport if the county
agreed to open up the facility to
more airlines.
THE CAB says the county's
noise abatement plan is illegal
and count y o ff ic ial s
acknowledge the FAA will
probably be the agency challeng·
int the legality of county restric·
lions.
T h e county plans lo get
federal grants for most of the
terminaJ expansion and runway
expansion from the funds made
available by the Airport a nd
Airway Systems Development
Act of 1980. This act states
s pecifically that the recipients of
funds must foster competition
and prevent unfair methods of
competition in air tr ansportation.
The federal government will
not fund a fancy, big terminal and
an extended, stronger runway
without enforcing airline "~m·
petition." Whic h means in-
creased use of the airport.
It the terminal is increased
ninefold, will nine times as
many jets take off over our
homes? Yes Is probably the
right answer . ,
PAT LEWIS
lletltr•JN
To the Editor:
1 believe it ls time to declare
war on rape. The rapist ls an
anonltt; with bJm he carries tbe
nrt1 ol torment and destrucUon.
He ta a hunter. we are the hunted.
Small children or a r own
women, it malttt no dlff erence to
theae cMl'an•td lndivtdual1. I see no reuon to be merciful to a
,.,... wbo shows no mer~y. Why ~ aybod1 M 1ubJ•ct to the
IMSYldul wbo lov .. c) .. th and
d•t.nlcticm? 1:nou1h l• IDOUftt. 11 J HHHtlOn lt to make
raplltl Ph.nleall7 un1ble to hH•
HXUU ~ by medically •lt•rinl t.betr 1nitali. J feel 1Jat1 Mt of Jucllment will M
bfteflclal to ab •
It wHI eliminate costly prison
terms for the taxpayers, but will
do little, I am sorry to say, for the
victim. other than the knowledge
that this individual will never be
able to inflict this violent crime
again.
DO UG KR EM ILLER
Clarlc ••I•
To the Editor:
A recent Daily Pilot article
descr ibed Supe rvisor Riley as
"piqued" because Frontie r
Airlines chose to announce its in·
tenlions to buy quie te r jets
through Supervisor Clark's office
rather than his. Really. it isn't
pique. it's an affront.
But everybody knows Clark is
the point man for unrestricted
a irport growth and flights. which
endears him to the corporate af·
fluence of the Fluors, Smith In·
dustries, Irvine Company. Koll.
etc .•
Clark doesn't risk a single vote
because it is Riley's constituency
that is being immediately raped.
Others may follow, but not
Clark's.
MORE POLITICS at the ex·
pense of a misguided public who
made the area desirable as a
Sydney Harris
place to live. The entire Newport
Beach-Costa Mei.a area and its
elected offic1ab had better be
mobili zed to hr.!hl airport ex·
pansion a ll the way!
Noise variances are an ir.:;ult:
3·4. 8· 10. how many in lhf' next 10
years'! In the process. Clark sees
the area as a gigantic airport with
many hotels and an airplane lake·
off every 30 seconds. if need be.
After all. Fluor. Smith Industries
might not stay, or would not have
come here so they would like us
to believe. After all, Clark's
altruism in this a rea doesn't cost
him a single vote
This isn't progres~ because it is
a patchwork expedient for an
airport facility that was not sup·
posed to be The s upervisors have
moc ked and misled the public as
to thei r intentions over the years.
It is taxpayers' money whether it
1s state, county o r federal
Relocate a regional facility now!
C G.SIEGLF.
Parle ••t•'!
To the Editor :
Recent news p a pt.•r photo·
gra phs of the severe erosion or
the graded site north of Ford
Road and between Jamboree
Round-the-world quiz
We're going to take a fast trip
around the world in today's quiz,
and see how many countries and
areas you can identify from the
origins or their names. I haven't
chosen any obscure or dubious
ones <like "Canada ," which
etymologists still argue about).
so one.quarter correct does not
seem to be askJn.c too much.
1. Name at least three coun·
tries that are named after dirtt·
Uons. or polnta of the compass.
2 . What country is named
after 11 metal?
3. Which countries are named
after foreigner& wbo conquered
them? r
'· What lar1e area of the
world ls named alter aJl animal?
$. What country'• name muns
.. land of the 1un·bumt people"? e. What country l• named for
the man who liberated lt from
foreip rule? ,7. What people' a name means
•·rawfltbeaten"?
8. What eountry ll n.med after
a f1mUy!
t . Wha t count.ry'1 na1nt
Ut•rlll.1 mHM "IJnd of uu.
fr•e"T
ANSWERS:
1. Austria (East); Norway
<North); Viel Nam (South).
2. Argentina, after the silver
(··argent'') that was thought to be
hurled there.
3. The Philippines, after King
Philip II of Spain. and Rhodesia,
after Cecil Rhodes.
4. The Arctic, whose name
comes from the Greek word
meanint "bear." (Ursa Major,
or the "Great Bear'' constella·
lion, waa aeen in the North.>
5. Ethiopia, formerly known
by it.a Arabic name of Abyssinia.
6. Bolivia, after Simon
BoUvar, the 1real liberator of
much ot South America.
7. The Eskimos, which Is what
the name 1iantftes in native In·
dlan tongues. <Although, like
most primitive peoples, lnclud·
Ing American Indians. their
name for themselves meant
1lmply "man" or "people," as
dl1tinguls h e d from other
c reatures.>
8. S1udl Arabia, after the 1001·
rulln1 SaudJ ramlly.
9. ThaJland. <Slam. lta former
name. wu applied to It by itl
nel1bbors.)
and MacArthur reminded me of
the Grand Canyon
I propose that Congressman
Robert Badham who failed to
get us a national park between
Newport and Laguna might try
to get this canyon area set aside
as a national park ll could be
named the Great Abyss National
Park
Si m ultaneous ly. h e might
work to incorporate into his na
tiona l park the Upper Bay which
could be called the "Upper Bay
Meadow." Such a na m e would
a ppeal to the nostalgically
minded who would reme mber
th;i t at one time the meadow had
h(•en a bay.
G.L. de CA RDENAS
'DU•a•~' •pr•ada
To the Editor:
T he voters of Orange County
have witnessed delays al almost
ever y election ih the length of
time 1t has taken county govern·
ment to tabulate the votes. Ap-
parently, this "disease" has
s pread to the office of the Coun·
t y Tax Collector.
In looking at my bank records.
I find that the tax collector took
six weeks to clear my check for
the payment of my firs t install·
ment of taxes on Dec. 8 last
year. and further compolllkfed
the matter by failing to clear the
check for my second installment
which was mailed on Dec. 30
the check has still not cleared as
of m id-March.
IN THIS DAY and age when
the country is facing budget
crises at au levels, I find it dif·
fi cult to believe that Orange
County is so wealthy that it can
afford the luxury of draggin1 its
feet in picking 14> money s ent in
by property owners and failing
to invest it for tbe benefit of the
community; and this in an era
when deposits are capable of
earning interest Income at
a stronomically high Interest
rates.
Perhaps this Is a matter that
should be referred to the Grand
Jury ln orde.r to determine Just
who is responsible for this slate
of affairs and how far It impedes
the flow of funds to the ex·
chequeroftheCou.ntyofOran«e.
DA VlD A. W. YOUNG
The olfice o/ the Count11 Taz
Coll1ctor blamed o comju.Uer
"11akdot.m for the dtto11 '" proct.,. •no proptt'f'J/ toz ch.clef.
t
i·
Orange Cout DAILY Ptl.OT'/Thuredtw.Uwch 11, 1981
She's fed Hp with ]. R. and the l1e~us ·k>.a.h
' A feYI montbl a10. I auneated that
'televlalon ease up a Uttle on sex ln Texas and ~ive the other 49 states a chance to be
un1cnll)Uloua and lmmora&. So far, no one bas ~den the bait. '< "J.R.'' and the Ewing clan have made sex
the bluest group sport since water volleybaJI.
'They've also succeeded in setUnl a style the
"entire country la t.ryiiie to emulate.
To be perfectly honest, I've had it wltb the
'iWestem look. If I never see another fanny in a ~IJr of t11ht Jeans It will be too soon for me. If I ~ever'See another chase between a plck.·UP
truck and a sports car. it' 11 be just fine. If I
"Dever see a man in a ten.gallon hat arguing
about his Inheritance, I can live.
' No wonder we don't have any oil in this P.
1111 llllRI !......__.._
country. We can't 1et tbe oillhen out of the
bedroom and back on the oU rill where they
beloni. .
I'm not exaggerating when I talk about tile
impact Texas bas had on tbe country. 111 on•
week alone, I received bookleta and ads that
offered: Western plUows, boots with matcblnc
bags, a doormat that says, "Hi Y'all,"
horn·sbaped beer steins, a stuffed Clydesdale
for the wall, a tie clas., in the shape of a
Conestoga Wagon, a bolo tie, a belt made out of
Ir
· Cosmetic surgery is legal
All lAJJDIRS
d(dn't marry her for her shape, and she looks
j~t fine to me. She said she always felt as if she
w s built like a duck. Last year she went on a
d ~t and lost 65 pounds. Now she says she can't
stand all that loose flesh hanging here and t~ere.
What do you think about all this un·
n~cessary surgery? I have heard or !ace-IHts,
but a tummy-tuck and inserting silicone bags to
make the rear end more round are so far-out
th.ill J can't believe a woman in her right mind
would go through the pain and inconvenience to
have it done.
Please talk lo your experts and let me know
if t hese operations are legal, leg1t1male and do
they h el p . NEED TO K NOW I N
BAKERSFIELD
Dear Bake: Tbe operatloas you deacribe
are l.Ddeed lecal -and Uley do belp. BUT, HY
woman wbo would coaalder sacb sar1ery alHMIJd
cbeck the credeatlala of Lbe doctor aad speak
wltb bis paUent.s wbo have bad tbeae p~edurea
and find out bow tbey like tbe resuJts -and
wbetber It was worth It.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I didn't care for
your advice to the woman whose husband
divides the newspaper with her and then falls
asleep under his half
You have an eye for business, all right. You
told her to buy TWO papers. I say, why waste
the money? If the big oar is going to sleep, be
can s leep just as well under yesterday's paper. I
wish you would correct that answer. It bothered
m e. -MINNIE IN DA VIS, CAL.
DEAR MINNIE: Sorry, dear, yo. dlda't
read the whole letter, and I did. It seems SIMp-
lng Beauty likes w fall asleep wltb tbe paper
over his race. When sbe tries to Ult It off, alle
wakes him up and be gels mad. He waat.s &o
sleep under tbe current paper, so wbea lae
wakes up be can start In where be left off.
Tbe man is • light sleeper and bas a bot
temp~r. Once when sbe tried to remove dae
paper and substitute It for tbe half sbe bad read,
be belted her. So I suggested two papen, and I
stand by my advice. It's wortb Lbe extra money.
A fat Up can be a nuisance, and dental work ls
expensive.
She suffers anxiety attack
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN My problem
began about four months ago. It happened while
I )¥as driving to work after a night out dancing
wjth friends.
I felt as if I was going to faint. My hands
w"'re sweaty and my breathing was fast. Ter·
rifled. I pulled over to the side of the road.
Finally, I managed to drive to work After a few
hours I felt much better.
The next time it hit me again was when I
was driving. I went to a doctor who said I was
probably having anxiety attacks He gave me
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
"nerve" pills and told me not to worry about 1t.
I took one each morning before work I was
afraid to get into my car without it.
Dissatisfied with my family doctor's opin·
ion, I went to another doctor. He thought it
might be due to h y poth yroidism or
hy poglycemia. It proved to be neither
But the attacks continued. Whenever I went
out to lunch with my fellow workers I felt faint
and nervous. How I envied their composure and
apparent freedom from "nerves."
When the attacks do come on 1l's la feeling
of being spaced out as if J"m 80 percent here
and 20 percent not. I start to sweat. My hands
are clammy. l feel that everyone can tell I'm
going through some kind of attack. Especially
when my heart starts running away with itself
and I think I'm going to die right there.
I've never been a loser. Always conquered
any obstacles that came my way. I try not to
think of it. but the anxiety will not go away. l'm
a female, 23 years old. Is there any hope I'll get
better? -MISS H.
RUFFELL'S
Dear Miss H.: Yours Is a typical history of
a patient suffering from chronic anxiety stat~.
As you've described, It can cause lnteDBe dis·
comfort and interfere with normal soclaJ and
business activity.
I'm tempted to call It a psychoneurosis. But
that can be a vague diagnosis. I suggest con·
sultation with a psychiatrist. I think be wUI as-
sure you that chronic anxiety can be helped.
But improvement may not come im·
m ediately. You say you've "never been a
loser." That state or mind will help you recover.
DEAR OR. STEINC ROHN : I woke up one
night a couple or days back. sat straight up in
bed and was gasping for breath. It was 4 a.m. I
a wakened my son who immediately he lped me
by wrapping his arms around me and pressing
so I could breathe.
I was terrified. My heart was r acing, but
has shown no trouble since. I'm afraid to go to
s leep for fear I'll gasp for breath again.
I know r don't suffer from hyperventilation
or any other nervous disorder. I happen to be
what my family and friends call a ··nerveless"
person.
I'd appreciate any suggestions. Do you
think it makes any sense to see a doctor for this
silly upset? MR. H.
Dear Mr. H.: What may seem sUly to you Is
reason enough to have a heart checkup. Oc·
caslonaJly, an attack of shortness of breath suf.
flclent to wake a person, Is often the first
m antrestation that the heart muscle Is not up to
Its normal work.
Have your family doctor or a cardiologist
order X rays, ECGs and wbatever other ex·
aminations seem necessary to prove that the
heart Is not involved.
UPHOLSTERY
W.....Yow'W..t
""'a.tt I '22 Har~ ll•d. SPECIAL PRICE
Cotta MHo -541-1156
0mnrs .,
_CUJtOM Ff'AJii'lf(O_ · Sp9CTallz1ng 1n
1 SHAOOW BOXES
1803 IWwport Blvd.
C a Mesa
Baldwin
Pianos
and Organs
c ssbNs. INSTRUMENTS •
TAPES · RECOl'OS
..... MUllC l ... CINTEA
At.U•"t\ ''""" ~itto ...... 11,
,.,.... 11141M .. O·IOlO
DAILY fM au.. IM
... TlllHta•Ht It t
REDUCTION
LADIES VB.OUR
TOPS ... PANTS
REDUCED
%to40%
Good Selection
But Broken Sizes
J91~-...... And O>lors.
8TO"a
COITAMISA
a dlamood-back ratUesnah hide, ma 1aoae
called "Go to Texat" wlth the objective MIDI to
be the rtchett player.
There's alto a allver boot matclll·bol•r,
packet. ot Texu cblU wiUa enamelware to llM've
it ln, belt buckl•, a pound ot Taaa l~ to
carry aJ'OWMl becaute lt loob and aDMUa peat,
ao oil can with J .a.'• offidal emblem oo lt, an
el1tat-lnch ~ramie armadillo ftlled wttla
Jalapeno lolllpopt, barMd·wfre awlnle 1Ucb
and napkin })olden and <set ready> for• 1ou
can buy a square foot of J .R.'s rancb.
Southfork. <Vou can bet If J ,R.'a letUna lt 10, lt
died.)
I don't deny Texas ls easy to fall in love
with ... th~ warmth of ill people1 the out1oing
honesty. the extremes and the lala-back
Hteatyle, but let'a not 1et Umlted b)' our
lma1tnaUoo. What'• the Mldwat city you tblnk ot when you tla1nk ot tln? Cleve.la.ad!
Try thll plot on ror al1e. An envelope bal'OD ., ta bu.ylQi up -11 the atatlonery manufaetuNrt tn l
tbe Midwest to create a monopoly and brtn1
corporations to their knees. He bu a wile wbo
winters in Akron and a mlatresa ln Cba(rin
Falla. He la t.rylne to marry h1a only dauthtel'>
off to a aloe mapate and la upset because h1i
only son wants to clerk ln a maternity abop. One ,
night the C\Jyano1a River catches fire and one i
of his envelopes is seen on the banks, near the
crime.
I'm telling you. Give It a chance and ln
three months tbe whole country will be talking
with a Cleveland accent and wearing loafua. 11
,If
Leo: Pieces .fall together '.'.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Timing, Judg· 116
ment will be on target. Lunar cycle hlgb-t.alte 1 initiative, make new starts in new directions, '
get rid of superfluous material. ;--
FRIDAY, MARCH It
By SYDNEY OMAaa
ARIES <Mar. 21 -Apr. 19): Review pro·
cedures, become familiar with le1al rights,
permissions. Obtain definition of terms. See
people as they are, not merely as you wish they
might be.
TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 2A>): Emphasis on
responsibi.lity. basic task11, ability to handle
added pressure and responsibility. Co· worker
aids in making long-range decision.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Focus on emo-
tional responses, finishing tasks at band and
universal appeal. Barrier to progress is removed.
Love dominates scenario. You are able now to
bridge culture gap. Aries, Libra natives aid in
clarifying message.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Define ter·
ritorial rights . Emphasize inde pendence,
originality, willingness to get to heart of mat·
ters. Member or opposite sex inspires, offers en·
couragement.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22>: Puzzle pieces fall
into place; you gel on more solid emotional and
financial fooling. Learn by teaching -family
member becomes valuable ally. Discuss past
~rievances. Air will be cleared.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Good news
dominates in connection with personal
possessions, basic values and income. You
locate "missing link." Money picture takes on
brighter hue.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You tain "ln·H
limate glimpse" behind scenes. You'll have ac·:_
cess to confidential material. Clandestine meet·
ing could top agenda. •"'
SAGITl'ARIVS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): lmpor-''
tant change, adjustment occurs in domestic ·n
t i
HOROSCOPE ,,_
1IJ
' area. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio persons figure 1
prominently. Rare opportunity exists to fulfill
hopes and wishes. 1'
CAPRJCORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): One who is··'
s ues instructions may be sincere but confused. ·1
Know it and prepare accordingly. Request
cla rification. Pierce clouds of deception.
Prestige rises if you are vigilant.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Solidify '1 plans regarding journey, publishing, long-range '.
aspirations. Your position is more secure than
might be apparent on s~rface. Capricorn,'
Taurus, Virgo persons figure prominently.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Ma r . 20): You gain
clarification of financial status. Emphasis is on
money as related to one close to you, including
partner or male. Initia l complication will be
clarified.
Animal center seeking help
"Who Need& You?" is a weekly lutmg of volunteeT
opportunities in Orange County.
The lrvine Animal Care C~nter needs
volunteers to help in exercising, bathing and
grooming homeless animals. Help with office
duties, lost and found and adoptions is also
needed. For information. call Teresa at 754.3734
or Lynn at 855·4236.
The Women's Division of the Jewish
Federation of Orange County Is seeking people
to fill its slate of officers and directors for
1981-82. The division serves Jewish residents in
26 communities as sponsor of the Shalom Wagon
for newcomers, the Jewish Community Forum
and the United Jewish Welfare Fund annual
fundraising campaign. Potential board mem·
bers must have made individual gifts to that
campaign. Call Helen Pines at 730-1638 before 10
a .m .
The Orange County Red Cross Chapter
needs a volunteer typist with record·keeping ex·
perience to work part-time weekdays typing let-
WHO NEEDS YOU?
ters, keeping records and compiling lists. Call
835·5381. ext. 242.
A health agency needs people to help with a ,
speaker's bureau, pre-natal clinics and other
projects. Training is provided when needed.
For information about this and other op-
portunities, call 675 -9210 or 833-9285.
We're going )'9Ur wa~
,,,, -ms 11-e • tfUICMr Is •lw•'fS
tr•Pf»d with pe,,., won So/ ,,,.ae
the most ol my time by orMl/no
pepers ,.hlht the OCTD bus drives
me to sclloOI. And ,,,. bus ldted-
ules ere so frequent •nd flHlble It~
simple to •tt•nd mHtlno• •lter
iu:llool end tt/11 oet 110me without
eny ruu IN tJother. Now ltn etlC'OUf·
egtno ell my students to ride
the~,,
Mohl peop4e .,. rid/no the buf to wort. school end Jhopplnf
~ .. w m«M It., Nq
wltlt ,,. .. bl-. ,,... ~
end """"'""~-
OM1 _,. '10"' mOt19Y Ill !fie
OM fWl'IP. S.W lllOlteY Md ride
,,,. •. 5°' ,. .. " ---"'9Y on,...,,,,,,.,.,.._
Our~~...,._ wlH,,.., Yoll t*tl ,_,,. Ofl
Me OCTO bus. "10C1 nNd Kited-
.. lnfllf"INHol~ --" Mitd It IO you-FMEI
Call
636-RIDE s.,. &i»/tol. .
....
b
?t
.,
•• f'I
')•
•'
Classified ads
wOl'k foT you I
' Daily Pilot classified ads work,
They work -whether they se l.1 a $10
tool or a $1,000,000 home -by reaching a
known audience and eliciting responses
from that audience.
' The Daily Pilot r eader audience is
young, educated and affluent. Sixty-four
percent of them consult the classif ied
pages regularly. And , combined with the
Coast Life audience, they number more
than 340,000.
Ways you can put that audience to
work for you through the Dai I y Pi lot
classified section include:
·t -Dime-A-Line ads, where ·you
can turn your clutter into quick
cash with 10-cent-per-line ads on
......... ~items priced up to $50.
-Penny Pinche~ ads, where you can
sell up to $100 worth of items for $2 for
three lines runnin~ twice'. ~
-Piiot Power ads, where you get
four Ii nes any Wednesday for $2 . The ad
appears in both the Daily Pilot and
Coast Life, reaching more than 340 ,000
r eaders.
-The 11.:-:1-g-;-\!J-c-3-,.-.,-1-;1-g-IJf-i• .... l ;-\•-•, where you
can find reasonably priced help or
advertise your service, from babysitting
to window washing. r----------1 -•COIFCXI IDS 1 ,where you can save L----------' valuable time and gasoline shopping
locally advertised varues.
-You can even put Daily Pilot
classified ads to work in your absence
with Answer lltl telephone answering
service, which takes. messages from
people responding to your ad for only
$7.50 per week.
-Put the Daily Pilot classified
section to work for you. Call 642-5678
today.
Daily Pilat
.
642-5678
'
..
.~-------= -~ ·--
__ eet set
tbe Lacuna Beach Recreation
&>~rtment will bold Its annual 1 track and field meet Satur-,y for boys and girls born 1n or
I i•r 1968, who ll ve in the.
L IUna Beach Uniried School
D 1ltict.
n~ forms with the $2 fee
s uld be completed and turned · lrlf to the recreation department ot lee at City Hall, 515 Forest
A;e: by Friday.
Late entries will be accepted
at Laiuna Beac h High School's
Gtiyer Field on the day or the
m~et, but an additional Sl will
be charged.
The meet will begin at 9 a.m.
Events include sprints. middle
distances and long distances.
long jump, high jump, shot put
and softball throw. Awards will
be presented to first through six·
th place finishers.
Sell••• falr•el
The Parent-Faculty Guild of
Moulton Elementary School in
Laguna Niguel will sponsor a
country wes tern fair Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m . at the
school, 29851 Highlands Ave.
Events will include a dunk
t~nk, pony rides, bake sales,
face painting and a one-mile
family run beginning at 10:30
a.m.
Soda and hot dogs will also be
on sale. Money raised will be
used to purchase classroom sup-
plies for the school. The public is
encouraged to attend.
For information call Marjorie
Mc Kernan at 661 -0205.
llUEFS
Alpha Gamma Della a lumnae
are invited to a wine tasting and
luncheon Friday at 11 a .m. at
the home of Mrs . James Van
Rensselaer. 31142 Flying Cloud
Drive, Laguna Niguel.
Any alumnae of the Alpha
Gamma Delta sorority ls invited
to call Mrs. Van Rensselaer at
493-7496 for directions .
~in-t o opete
• South Orange County resi-
·dents are invited to attend the
opening of the Red Cross South
County Service Center on Sun-
day from 3 to 5 p.m.
The center is located in the
Crown Valley Business Park,
27234 Camino Capistrano, Suites
205 and 'JJY1. in La~una Niguel.
The 1,800-square-foot building
wlll allow for expansion of
services in the area. These in-
clude first aid, cardiopulmonary
reaus'citation and disaster relief
courses.
For information, call Pat
Lewis al 831·6582.
Toi .......
Registration will be takeri
beginning Tuesday for s tory
r eading sessions for pre-
school children at the Dana
Niguel Library in Dana Point.
The sessions are 10 a .m .
:rhursdays a nd Fridays and in-
.zl ude stories. puppet s hows.
games, finger plays, songs and
crafts.
Interested parents may reg-
ister their c hildre n at the
library, 33840 Niguel Road. or by
calling 496-5517.
Art ..embera•tp
Semi-annual jurying for artist
membership in the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art is
scheduled March 29.
l>ersons interested s hould
brlnt three entries in the same
medium to the museum from
11:30 a .m. to 4 :30 p.m. from
Mirch 26 to March 28.
The cost is $1 per entry. Work
may be picked up at the
m\lseum, 307 Cliff Drive, on
March 30 or 31. Me mbership is
o~n to any California resident.
tor information call 494-6.531.
'*-t•lle•e t
't'b~ April 7 meeting of the Pa-
~d~e Wright chapter of the
IUkbters of the American
YoluUon In Laguna Beach will
a ture Winslow Metcalf ilUter, who will speak on the
C Able& in the American fiag.
Tbe meeUn1 will be held at aioll lo the Capri Room of the H~tel Laiuna, 42S South Coast
H11bway.
Wilker formerly was state
bittortan of the California Socie-
\1 of the Sona of .the American
Rt•olut.ion.
fy&»ewriter e taken
fkm Irvine finn
Two IBM eJectrlc typewrllen
¥-1utd at a total of $1,800 have a 1tolen from an Irvine
..... firm, pollce••ld today. t• Sax, 1polleamaa tor ••••a. Developinent Co. 1'1711 ... .U AH., reported tbe k* to
T\lelday.
This helitopter \.\a!' IH'nugl1t 111 1
Newport Harbor 'r ac·ht l 'l11h "tl ,
The copter was supJH>"1'd to Id
>-i ----....
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thureday, March 19. 1981
·Bond • issue
Mesa OK• indwirial complex funding
The City Council has moved to
make Costa Mesa liable for a S'1
million bond Issue to provide
streets, sewerage and water for,
privately-owned industrial com·
plexes In north Costa Mesa.
Approved 4·1 this week were
documents establishing an as-
sessment district ror about 115
acres of proposed industrial and
office development owned by
C.J Seger strom & Sons ,
J ackbllt, Inc. a nd Cadillac
Fairview.
The Scgerstrom firm owns
most of the property, about 78
acres proposed a s the $100
million Harbor Gateway proje<:t
lo be developed on property west
of Harbor Boulevard between
Sunflower a nd MacArthur
buult•\ards
COUNC ILMA N ED
Mr Farland voted against the
pl;.in lie obJected to the tax-free
"' .ll us on 1 n t ere s t pa id to
bond buyers
Tlw assessment district bonds
"111 he 1ssut'd under the state's
llll5 Act through which the city
guarantees payment in the event
nf <l<.>fault
('11) officials note that Prop.
I :l ru l<>d out use of ge neral ob-
l1 j:! a t1on bonding for such assess·
m1•nt rlistncts because it does
.rn .1y with lht.• city's ability to
11•\ ~ a tax to pay for bonds.
Joined by a pedestrian bridle
Unkln& the top two noora ot the
buUdlngs.
The bridge, said Ray Watton
of Newport Development Co.,
will span a new entrance street
called Scenic Ave.
In addition to the office
towers, the development Is to in·
elude one and two-story mlxed-
use business structures, he said.
Structures will vary in sizes
and designs, Wats~n added, and
are planned to house lndepeo·
dent small buslnesae1 and
branches or headquarters of
lar1er flrms.
THE PROH!cr is expected
be completed in about fiv
years.
The City Council will call fo
bids on construction of water
sewerage, street, curbina
sidewalk, landscaping and tra
fie signal projects for the de
velopment at Ill May 4 session.
its mission when 1l v. ,., di" ' . 1 • the pole had hrc·n 1·0\, 1' I \\ t • ,
r1 .1 1111·
t.: ti :l/.!J'ule
I ·11li·d in
I I t • .... tll
Hut Holl Oman, city finance
tlll l't'lor sa1rl the \915 act does
grJnl !he r1 ty the right lo
fon·dn-.1.· on property in the as-
... , ....... 1111.·nt dis trict and sell 1t
... h11uld a bonding default occur
T ruck ct,.
• st ill I D
One of l wo Nev."''"' 11 ... 11 r
municipal workers inJur•·d \•h1·11
their trash truck tumlill'f'I 1n111 1
ravine. landing ups1<ll' 11111 .. n
after a colliswn v.1th .1noth•·1 111·
on narrow Bonita Cun~ 1111 1111.11
Co
NB libraries
offer
Storytime
Mother Goose !'ltnn 1111 11 1 I•
ing offered al two ~1v.11'
Beach Public l.1br,1r, I 1 .1.11 •
and 3-to fi 'ear ol;ls 1 .11• ,,,.
enrolled to heip d1•H•f.1p 1 t .. 1 11
terest m books anil n arl11n,
Storytime j-, hl'lcl I h111 ,,,
from 1.30 to 2 1~1 p 111 1t 111
Newport Center Br .• n1 Ii .ind .. 11
run through Apnl :!:1 at 1 •r 1
to library aide!'>
The schedull' ctl th1 t or.111 I•
Mar Rranc:h 1~ Tui·sd"' ... f1 • 1 1
tO · 30 a .m. to 11 : If> a rn • 1111111 11
through April 28 and ->.1 'I r .... 11.11
other activitics !'111 h a" riHJ•" •
puppetry
Library aufr.., sa' I h1· I''"' r 11 1
instills an ea riv intt•rt·st 111'1'.11 1
ing, intellel'lual cleH·l•ipm1•r1•
culture and so< 1;11!1111: v.11\,
others
Information m;.i, It•· .. i.t.111 •·
by calling 640-2241~ 111 1;111 ··1•11
Application.
for beauty
pageant du J
Miss Newport Efr:1<·h .1•lt·1·l1u11
time will soon lw lu·n• .111d 1111
community JayC'Pt'~ an· ;.1•1 1 t
ing contestant applll'at1n11., fo•
lhe pageant .Jun•• HJ at tl11•
Newporter Inn
Qualifications are ~llllf'l'
con testants mus t 11 \r 111
Newport Beach, he sing It arid I 1
through 25. a crorrl1ng 111
spokesman Jim DalP Tho~,, t
must be graduating high -,1·hn •I
seniors.
The winner will r<!prc•sent llll'
city at such function:-ai; tht· t1n
nu al Sandcastle Con I rst a111I
Character Boat Parad<', not to
mention a S500 s tipend
Many have used their $500 to
help pay college expenses. a<'
cording to Dr. Mi chael Heaslet
who may be reached al 752 0044
for information
Burglar lo~ts
/n)ine home
A crude burglar who m ay
have obtained a key from a real
ty lockbox broke Into an lrvint'
home and stole more than Sl , 100
in valuables, police said.
Lonnie Hall said the loss m
eluded assorted Jewelry, some
wlne and a supply of beer from
the refrigerator.
He said the incident mlghl
have 1ooe unnoticed tor awhile.
except for the fact the burslar
shattered a bottle of ce>Joane and
left a mesa in the bathroom.
rt
I•
'111-tlltS
('I II "
I II I I , ... 1
I I I II .111.
I I 1.J .ind
I . 1.1 ... h
\ r <"r
I !..' !Glh
K ., trtl
1 \1 I 111
1 I• I 11
b..i1-•·
••UJ(h 'I
11 n• tlo~ 11
es
( ag
,, I' t I ......
}'1414 I
f t1 £ '1AJOR PROJECT pro-
1111..,l'd for Lhe north Mesa proper-
1' most of 1l agncultural land
1s lh1.. llarbor Gateway com-
pl1' propo!>c•d by N e wport
l>t' 1·1!1p m <'nt Co and C J
~l'l;!t•r ... t rum & Sons
Thi' 1·omplt•x will encompass.
1 hn·1· t'\ISttng industrial build-
ing:-. hut lht• focal point is to be
'" 111 "'" '>lt>r~ glass raced towers
'Enerjazz'
class set
in. Irvine
lr"1ne Rus1ne ss a nd
Proft•-,s1on.il Women's Club 1s
sponsoring an · Ener1azz" class
Wt'dnc!>da) 6 p m , at the
L 111 \ crs1ty Park Community As-
i; 11r1at1 on Hu1ld1ng , 4530
-.;an<lhurg Way, an l rvme
1'.nerJaZI" combines Jazz.
h<Jlll•t. modern dan ce and
.1l'rOh1<· te<·hnique:.
Tian· I'> a $Hl char ge a nd din
lll'I \\ 111 IH ... 1·rvt•d Re!>cr valtons
-.in b1• ma1h· hy 1.·;.ilhng 833-5461
11 nt 11 'llonda,\
Classes set
i11 Newport
Jt,.~1slra t11m for tuition classes
ofll•n·d through the Mariners
fo,11 rn1·11t.1n School Parent-
F.i• ult' 1 >rg;iniwtion in Newport
lk.1t·h tk·gin~ today
C'las ... l'I\, v.hach r ange in price
fn1m SIS to $25. include music,
"' l•'lll't' lan~uage and drama
~1i:nup' .1t the Ma riners campus
v.111 hl· hdd 1l11s afternoon from
.I 111 t• Jnrl again 1-'nday between
X .111tl 10 a m
f111 further information re-
garding th1• classes beginnin.z
\I 1>11.ta). c·ont act M urion Rob boy
a I h Vi 5~l5X
Ce11ter gets workout
Thanks Santa
Jackie Don Jones of Marion Parsons School offers Costa '
Mesa policeman Jim Taylor a carton of milk as about 30
trainable retarded youngsters serve lunch to officers l
Tuesday noon. Boys and girls of the Costa Mesa school
spent days preparing the meal of lasagna, salad, jello
and bread to show Police Officers Association members
appreciation for Christmas presents delivered to the
school by a helicopter-borne Santa over the past five
years.
Laguna hears down
on law flouters
Laguna Beach City Council
members say they want lo put
teeth into the city's enforcement
of minor violations to s top fl a-
grant lawbreakers who provide il-
legal rental units, or construct
home additions without city
permits.
They voted unanimously to
te rm s uch offe nses misde-
meanors in the future, instead of
infractions. which usually mean
only a fine for the property owner.
Cu rrenlly, when a property
owner is cited for building code
violations, a letter is sent request-
ing correction of the problem
IF THERE IS no response, the
Cit y Attorney sends a second
warning. which, if not resolved, is
followed by a third, final cor -
respondence.
That is followed by the filing of a
civil action in the courts. which
might mean a two or three-year
·'
wait for a court date.
Meanwhile, the offense con-i
linues. or is settled between lhell
city and property owner after
great expense and lime.
By making such offenses mis-
demeanors, violators would face{
criminal prosecution instead of.
civil action thus insuringJ
priority on court calendars.
AND WARNINGS issued by the!
city would probably be taken
more seriously by violators. th]
council was told t his week.
Violation of the city's li tte
laws. leash ordinance and beac
fires ban, would also becom~
misdemeanor offenses under th81
ordinance approved Tuesday. l
Council members said the
hope that by making such of
fenses criminal . frequen
violators might halt their prac
tices.
But Councilwoman Sa ll ~
Bellerue had some concerns. •
"IFWEACTUALLYarrestan~ jail someone for Uttering or walk
ing theirdogorrteash, I think we'
be the laughing stock of Orange
County."
Acting police chief Neil Purcell
said that is not the intent or the or·
dinance.
"We don't propose putting peo-
ple in jail (for such offenses)," b
said.
"It puts teeth into the law by
making people realize it is a
criminal offense and might mean
jail. It mlght mean more volun-
tary compliance with the law," be
said.
2 Meaa ban
get permita
for dancing
Permits for dancing have been
laaued to two Costa Mesa ban,
one 1ood for a year and the
other for slx month•.
Clty Council voted unanimous·
ly to atve UM year-lon1 permit
for danc1n1 to tapea or' r ece>rda
'to the Round Up Corp .• 8'3 W.
19th St.
Young athletes try out basketball court at
New Balboa Island Community Center that
wtll be offl <'tOlly dedicated at 2 p.m. Satur· day . The center, located on Agate Avenue
n<.>ar the ferry landing, also is equipped
with a volleyball court and a community
meeU.W room. The center la to be named
after CarrolJ Beek, a lonctJme llland retl·
dent who died thll year. The community
meeting room la shown in tbe bacllll'OUftd.
A •lx·montb permit waa ,
autborhed t or Sun1et R•l•~lt'N Newport. Blvd. fb• ti do DOl .. authori• II•• entertainment, councll
mtm bin not.td.
:
I TIJMBLEwtEEDI
HUOt.ES
a.fl'.
S50ft.
. by Tom K. Ryan,'
HUIMNP HUNTl~S HANVl'OOf<
; ~s,Future .Bride?~
" De you're too £UShy. Be shy. ..
n ~ demure. Let Himknowyouw
changed!
6~),l
,, "Jeffy's making ice cream soup." "Y11h, but c1n he 'play dead'?"
tRlllADIJIH
·f•1-.i ......
by Brad Anderson
·' r
:,. "I wish he'd stop bringing them home when
he can't get the lids off!" "Okay. now go stick her doll in the doghouse."
-~~~~~fOO"U)Q:;(UiKE1JC-. THAT'fi Rt(:MT,.. AU. MCAU~f YOV"RE HfADED 00' DOWN AND TEl l ME All
A&OUT TIM AND JEANNIE
WMILE I 6ET YOU !)()ME
r>ACON AND EOO~!
OF fHE CLIENT5 YOU ~ND ME! IN THE RIUHT
l'M HUNu RY ! HOW A&OUT DIRECTION!
OC>ME 0REAKFA!:IT?
" A~THV~1 ~
ADV' GE C.LI tJIC.
.Al"TMIAsr, r T"1tNI(' A 3CN
W IL.L. ~i<.AOIOU~Y 16NOC&'
THe t;ilClL. 1-41''~ MO~i
INTill'l<SiSC' IN . ? F' o R G-tRL. S
Vl•fH P2.08t.elf\S
wmt &o"f~.
W HAT 00 YOU ™INIC .
DOWN
18.,..clunlt
2AGIM
3~
4 Twned .. 5""'*'*' • Neighbor of
u
WEt.~ ... I
ALWAYS .JUST
C,AL~ED IT
"-rHe f:NGINE ... "
Minn. 27 ... PfoduOe 11111
7 "T Ike I-2t Oooulgn 11 COfdl8t -....... 2t Mollldld ,..,.
I""* S10oune ..... .,_ Jae.. ....
a3~ MllMtlton
M!nlloM: ........
2 wordl 11 Mlle do
40 ll'l'Ollldled .. '4lftd
41Tom..-·~ 44 W9lpON t1 ,, • ntron
47Ultn • ta•tt ' ......... ,,...~
• ....
-.11W""T-Y--..,..,.,.-:tl
1i:-THAT'4? Tri.A£,
Tl-1EN VOi.A Arre O!EPLY
AOMllf&O SY EV~
lJOY INTHI~
SCHOOL..
'1 ,
cn:7 .:/ ~~··'
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
SHOE
NANCY
I HEAR
YOU HAVE
A BAD
CASE O F
HICCUPS
GORDO
HIC-THE DOCTO R -HIC-
SAYS I CAN'T-~IC-GO
TO SCHOOL-HIC-T ILL
T HEY STOP
FUNKY ltlNKERBEAN
by Jeff MacNelly
........ , •• p ........... , °""' ......... ,, ..... .
by Ern ie Bushmiller
~l!>~wAs .A LOT~R
70 5 /ESTA I.Al ~FO!t!E THE
ST6RE0f •
by Gus Ar riola
by Tom Batiuk
1Hl5 15 MINNIE
CAME.RON WITH fHE
FIR5T IN A 6E.RJE.5
ON WHAl'.S HAPPENING
r~ 100A£,>'5 ~LS!
WE.'RE AT WE~iVIEW
HIGH sc.HOOL 11\U<IN6
lJJrTH IT 5 PRINC.IPAL,
AL80RCJi ! lllR BURG!,
HOW DO lXXJ HANDLE.
AC.fUAU.4 I MINNIE I
WE JU6T FIX WHAT'b
BE.EN DAMAGED OR
WE. FEEL THAT
IV'CONilNG rf WOOl • .D
ONl Y ENC.OURAGt
IHENl ! THROW IT AWA£) I
BRABBLE
let ters to the Editor.
"THE P~OBL..E.!Vl OF
/YIOUN11N& VANDAll~M
IN SCJ100lS ~
FOB BITTlaOa FOB •OBIE
FARU:{s GOING To
.5:.HOOL '· FRRLE.)''S SUCH
A BIG, BIG et:>Y [
•
HE'S GolN<; TO BE.
DAOOY '& GOOOD
PuppY~ HE'SGolNG
lo 00 EVE.R'{THI~
DADDY ~'fS!
•
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
ANP SAY, "we
WAN"f' YOUR
e>t-00£:' .'"
by Lynn Johnston
WOOLON°T IT se olJSI
AS RE~URING-
lf He CALL.ED M~
8'I MY Flf\Sf
NAME?
--....
By PAMELA BALLAN ,__Deity,_
It's swaUow season In San Juan Capl.ttrano.
•· Reporters run around lookln1 for new ways to tell
about tod•y's annual return. Local merchants breathe a
sigh of relief as they see buses line up aloniflde the Ml.a·
sion, spUlin1 tourists. And local residents prime their
garden hoses to wash away mud nests as fast as they are
built. <See story, drawing page BU.
PafMlo Hollon" a former DaU11 PUot rrporln. SM ii a lifelong rm·
dnt of Ian Juan Capiatrano and t.t
well OC4"0bded with the com·
m111dt11'• ~and ~gendl. Cur·
rntl11,wtaanadmlnutrotiveauil·
tallt to tM cit JI m.cmoge-r.
Swallows gel lots of attention from people who
don't live in San Juan. But those of us who do live here see
them from a slightly less glamorous point of view. We
have to ljve with them until October.
The legend of the swallows, first printed in a very fan·
ciful book called "Capistrano Nights" in 1930, tells how the
faithful swallows return to the Minion each year on St.
Joseph's Day.
Actually, the birds spend very little time at the Mis·
sion.
Shuttle worker dies
Nitrogen fells 5 others at cape
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP > -A worker on the space
shuttle Columbia died today and
five other employees were over-
come when they entered a com·
partment that had been purged of
oxygen after a successful dress
r e hearsal of pre -la uoch ac·
Uvities. space center spokesmen
said.
The worker, who was not iden·
tified, died en route to a hospital in
Titusville, officials said.
Another of the Rockwell In-
ternational Corp. employees was
flown by helicopter to Shands
Teaching Hospital in Gainesville.
Expansion
of center
pushed __/-
By STEVE MARBLE
Ol llW Daily ~tlet SU.II
Irvine Company ofricials.
plugging their expansion plans
for Newport Ce nter at a
breakfast meetiqg today, sug·
gesled that major companies
are pulling out of the center due
tC> lack of office space.
"To do other tha n complete
l'o{ewport Center at this point,"
s~d Richard Cannon, an Irvine
Company vice president, "would
be to invite stagnation ...
Cannon named fi ve firms. in·
e luding Peat, Marwick and
Mitc hell, t hat haa lert the
center .
The morning information
session. hosted by the Newport
Center Merchants Association.
attracted 200 persons at the
Marriott Hotel.
The company's expansion plan
faces its first test tonight when it
is reviewed by Newport Beach
planning commissioners.
The development firm wants
/,0 build a 400-room hotel, add too .ooo square '(eet of new office
and retail space and expand the
.Marriott by 165rooms.
The city planning staff has
recommended that the expansion
1plan. asitnowreads. be denied.
Planners are suggesting the
ine Company cut back on pro-
sed office growth and provide
ore residential units In the
· enter.
And i( planning co m -
lmlssioners recommend ap-
proval of the expansion project,
l~lty officials say they will be
asking that all office and retail
1rowth be held off until the
Corona del Mar Freeway Is ex-
tended to MacArthur Boulevard,
a project that remains In doubt
.due lo lack of state highway
,.ptoney.
Irvine Company officials, dur-
Eg the mornin1 meeting, agreed
· at the expansion project at the
" enter would have negative im-
11 tac ts of traffic in Newport
,•each If mitJgatlon measures
ren't taken.
' To soften concern on traffic,
he company Is proposing SB.2
million worth o f roadwork
around the center.
Also. Cannon said. the de·
(See CENTEa, Pa1e AZ>
PILOT SALVTES
COA.ST WO MEN ·
l'oday'a Dally Pilot salute. &be
Oraase Cout woman and her
apJrtt of accomplllbmnt.
Looll for .. , Am Woman." a
ll·P•le Perlacope ma•aalne
featurtaa 1tort• and plcturet nout the 0r...,. Coat woman.
-..,,.... ....,..1btutJt1, her itff~tlwllMrday· ......
He was said to be in critical condi-
tion.
Identities of the others were
withheld pending notifi cation of
relatives.
Officials said a third man was
hospitalized, but didn't a ppear to
be in serious condition. The other
three were released after treat-
ment. officials said.
The employees of Rockwell In-
ternational, private contractor
for the shuttle project, were
checking the engines after the
pre-launch rehearsal when they
"flat walked into" an area of pure
nitrogen, said Kennedy Space
Center spokesman Rocky Raab.
<Related photo, Page A4 .J
·'The aft portion of orbiter
normally is fill ed with nitrogen to
get all the oxygen out." Raab
said. "This is done to prevent fires
in that area and to prevent
anything explosive from seeping
in there."
The workers. un aware they
were moving lnto a "nitrogen
purge" area. were felled by a lack
of oxygen, Raab said. Five of the
technicians passed out while one
Kidnap rieti1n?
Mesa police hunt 'Big Boy'
By JERRYCLA1JSEN OillleDallJ~l ... SUff
Costa Mesa police are carrying the incident as a 920-J,
Possible 207.
IN LAYMAN'S terms. that's a missingjuveni~whomay
be a kidnapping victim.
Officers aren't sure of the boy's age. But they note he
wore red and white checkered overalls a white T-shirt
with the words "Big Boy" emblazoned across the chest. And
he wore black shoes.
The identification report says he has black hair and eyes
and Is Caucasian.
He's seven feet tall , the report notes, and weighs SOO
pounds.
LISTED UNDER the section dealing with marks, scars
and peculiarities, an officer has listed : "Chubby face. Ham-
burger on plate held in left hand."
Officers say they'll enlis t the aid of Newport Beach police
in their search for " Bob Big Boy (unknown surname)."
Both Corona del Mar and Newport Ha rbor High are in l.he
midst of spirit week. and, in years past, similar strange oc-
currences have been reported during the annual celebra-
tions.
The big fiberglass advertising figure, valued at $1,800,
was discovered missing from its concrete base In front of
Bob's Big Boy restaurant. 154 E. 17th St .. Costa Mesa, at 5:30
this morning .
Murder case
'Life being ruined,'
MacDonald claims
By PATRICK KEN~EDY Of , .. DeilJ .. , ... , ....
Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald
claimed today that bis life ls be-
ing ruined after government at·
torneys asked the U.S. Supreme
Court to rein.state his 1979 con·
viclion for the murders of his
wife and two children at Fort
Bragg, N:C., in 1970.
"It wrecks my life again,"
said r.tacDonald, a Huntington
Harbour bachelor. "But I'm not
surprised. The 1ovemment al·
torneys will do anythtn1 to prove
they haven't beell wrong lo pl"OS·
ecutln1 me for the last 11
years."
Justice Departm•t lawyen
flied a writ of ffl'tllrart t.oQy
asking the Supreme Court to re-
verse the dedlioD of the •t.b U.S.
Clrcult Cow1 ot Appeals that
overturned MacDonald's 1t79
conviction.
The appeals court ruled lpt
July that M.el>onald wu deNed
a speedy trial. He then wu re-
leased from Terminal Island
federal prtaon after Hrvtn1
almOlt a year.
The former Army Green Beret
captain maintains that four
dru•·crased "bt~et" bunt into
his Fort Braa1 home Jl'eb. 17,
lt70, and beat aad stabbed to
dealb ta wife Collette, ». and u.. da..,......., Kimwly s and
Kristen. I. ~.
The poJtc , eauect by Ilic.
Donald, found him suffering
from a knife wound to the chest.
After a lengthy army in-
vestigation. charges against
MacDonald were dropped. But
in 1975, a federal grand jury in
Raleigh, N.Cr, il'ldlcted him on
murder char1es. In 1979, the
U.S. District Court In Raleigh
convicted him.
"It seems like il's never going
to end," MacDonald said. "It's
absolutely beyond belle!."
MacDonald says he's spent
more than $600 000 defendin1
him1elf a1ai1*'t ibe charges and
eall1 the ~overnment "ir-'
reapomlble" for 1pendln1 more
than that prwecutin1 him.
"I'm work'lpl acaln, but every
cent I make eoet to lawyen."
other was overcome and was
he lped from the area by other
workers.
''There is no way you can see or
smell that you're moving into an
area that lacks oxygen," Raab
said. "The whole compartment is
purged of oxygen. We insert
nitrogen to get rid of the oxygen
and other gasses. It is normally a
closed area and you can only get
into it by going through access
panels."
T he incident came shortly after
NASA officials proclaimed 'that
the rehearsal "went super."
Lower Bay
ban lifted
by county
Most or the Lower Newport
Bay. including Bal boa Island
and Lido Isle, has been reopened
to bathers after Orange County
health officials Wednesday
judged sewage contamination
had dropped to an acceptable
level.
But the quarantine on the Up-
per Bay. including the Newport
Dunes aquatic park and the
waters off Linda Isle, will re-
main in effect at least until Fri-
day.
The ofr·limits line runs from
the south tip of Linda Isle to the
m ost southerly point in the
Bayshore community.
The ban on swimming and div·
ing in the Newport Bay was im-
posed 11 days ago when a sewer
lin e be neath P acific Coast
Highway ruptured and poured
six million gallons of sewage in-
to the bay.
The quarantine origmally in-
cluded a five-mile stretch of
beaches from the Balboa Pier to
Scotchman's Cove. That quaran-
tine was lifted last week.
Monica Mazur, a county
health specialist, said testing
earlier this week revealed that
bacteria from the sewage spill
had dropped to an acceptable
level for two consecutive days.
Burglar gets
'Bigfoot'
A burglary team that ap-
parenUy bot-footed it away when
a resident arrived home looted a
Newport Beach podiatrist's res-
idence of •1.000 ln valuables
Wednesday night, Including a
photo of a &luit foot.
The plcture wu among more
than 20 other items of artwork
taken frorq the Alta Vista Drive
home of Dr. Michael Heaslet.
Police sald the other artistic
valuables included numerous
pen and ink 1.ketcbea of Newport
Beach and Sao Franc~co
scenea; lincbcapes: a llon and
mountain lion. plaa two
televla&on set.a.
The trees have 1rown Loo lar1e. lnhibltln1 thelr nest·
buildln& by creating too many oblbclea. So the birds loc*
for other p1acfl to bulld t.beir neats. A favorite spot la the
free.Way brtie over San Juan Creek. New developments
with equall ew landscaping also are popular. Any un·
obstructed p ace near open fields and mud will do. Except
for the city's official s wallow shelters.
Several years a10 stories began appearln1 that
the swallows were no longer coming back to Capistrano. In
an effort to squelch those rumors and encourage the bird.a.
the City Council built swallow shelters and put them In
public parks . They also declared San Juan a bird
sanctuary, m aking it a misdemeanor lo tamper with birds
or nests.
The swallows ignored the shelters and most local
<See SWALLOWS, Page AZ >
Oel~--....
HENAY ANO HELEN CHILDS SCAN SKIES FOR SWALLOWS
Ornfthofogf1t trte1 to debunk 'C•pf•tr•no Ceper'
Eyes skyward·
Prof debunks swallows tale
By STEVE MITCHELL
Ol llM O•ily l'llet Stall
The return of the swallows to
Mi ssion San Juan Capistrano
was heralded this morning by
the ringing of church bells at
9 :05 a.m.
The event was witnessed by
thousands of visitors, some or
whom were craning their necks
skyward as early as 6 a.m.
But one of those birdwatchers
crowded onto the pl aza in front
of the ruins of t he Old Stone
Church isn't swallowing the tale
of the birds' prompt arrival on
St. J oseph's Day.
Henry E. Childs Jr.. who
te aches biology at Chaffey Com-
munity College in Alta Loma,
arrived at the mission early this
morning, accompanied by his
wife, Helen.
They were equipped with
powerful binoculars, cameras
and a bird book that Childs car-
ried in a pouch hanging from his
bell. • I
The ornithologist wasn't shar-
ing the enthusiasm of others in
the crowd.
You see, be views the
swallows legend as nothing short
of poppycock.
Childs has had a runnlng
verbal battle with a Los An1eles
newspaper columnist the past ,
few weeks over what the
blolo1i1t terms "the Capistrano
Caper."
He aald be once counted more
than 5001wallows above the mis-I
alon a week and a half before
their expected arrival dale on .t. JOMPb'• Day.
"Tben':X':'utore of them;• bl• wife ed, aa Cbilda
dutitu.Uy mart the time -
7: 11 a.m. -la a am all rumpled
notebook.
CbUdl Ilk.., the arrival of
1wallowl la Ian Juan to the mi·
irattaa of llmmlna tot.be aea.
"lt11 all bunlr,'.-h 1rumbled
tumlq hi• blnoeutan towani the ovweut lkiea.
BJ 7:• a.m., manr swallows
could 111 IMD elrcUq MO abo¥e
UM ndmof tbeOklStoM Cbureb.
Olam& .. ,,.., • .., feedlal on lnlecU. ..
ClallclllMd.
··And , contrary to this
brochure." he said. pulling a
green mission pamphlet from
his pocket. "these a r e cliff
swallows. not barn swallows."
Barn swallows. the professor
says. have the distinctive fork
tail, which was absent from the
cliff swallows that circled the
mission this morning.
··We 've been seeing them
<cliff swallows) up north for two
weeks." wife Helen huffed.
"There's a white throated
swift." Childs said, scribbling
down the name and the time -
7:42 a.m. -in his notebook.
A woman holding a green
brochure approached Childs and
said. "I thought they all arrived
here in a flock."
Putting down his binocoJars,
Childs glared at the woman and
said. "Don't believe everything
you read."
The story that the small birds
black out the sun with their ar-
rival is what irks the or-
nithologist the most.
(~TALE, Pa1e A!)
DIAlll CllAIT IEATlll
Rain today with chance
of thunderstorms tonl1ht.
taperm, off Friday. GuatJ
winds 15 to 20 mpb tonight
and Friday. Hi•hl today
57 to 62. Lows t.ont1ht 50 to
55. Chance of raln 90 per·
cent today and '10 percent
Friday.
llllllTIUY
Go .... Wtlt u tlw onW locol
corr••r to match th• •· ''°"'*' cut• "' mr foN•. s.. P•,14.
11111
More oove;age
Acldllcmal Harbor Area COY·
era1• aptean today on Pase •. ~~~----.-..--~----
'i
I
CENTER PROPOSALS -Relief map shows
Irvine Company's proposed new hotel (5)
and twin 12-stor y office tower (1). Develop-
ment officials say 400-room luxury hotel
will be similar to Bel Air Hotel, Los
Angeles. Also shown are existing struc-
tures including Pacific Mutual <4), Neiman
Marcus (3), Avco tower <2> and three-level
parking structure (6).
f'ro•P.,,.Al
SW ALLOWS RETURN • •
residents ignored the new ordinance. An occasional cons-
cientious citizen will call City Hall asking for a permit to re-
move a swallow's next, but most just wash them away or put
up shiny objects where they don't want a nest. .
What 1s wrong with having a few nests under the eaves
or your house? Unfortunately, s wallows nests are lined
with tiny bedbug-like creatures which the birds eat. These
bugs can infest a house if the nest is built near a window.
There is a lso a problem with droppings. Some fastidious
residents prefer not to have nests in their patios or over
their front door.
THERE IS ONE group of inhabitants who look
forward to the return of the swallows each year. Cats. I'm
reminded of the old Tom and Jerry cartoon Jil--Whicb Tom
runs off to Capistrano for the return of the swallows for ob-...
vious reasons . But don't worry, swallows are plentiful,
despi~ the reports of alarmists.
It 'seems to me that the return of the swallows was a
lot m~re run when people first beard about them. They
were romantic Leon Renee wrt1te a song about them.
They tnade he~dlines In newspa1-ers as far away as New
York.1They' prbvid~d. ;omething constant l~ the lives of
folks who were surv1v1ng the Great Depression.
Imagine that, Mable, birds that actually return to the
same place on the same day each year!
IN , MY GRANDMOTHER'S lime, local children
gathered in front of the Mission to await the return of the
birds and they were usually not disappointed. Great flocks
of them fl ew in to the then-treeless Mission, nesting in the
ruins ol the Great Stone Church. Swallows were a local
tradition. Everyone elst ignored them.
Today touriSts gat~er in front of tbe Mission waitlni
for the swallows to return, expecting the sky to be
blackened with birds. Most leave town disappointed. It
isn 'l that there a ren't the same number of swallows. They
seem to come in s mall groups and most of them avoid the
dow ntown altogether because of the crowds.
Yet for one week locals and tourists alike have fun
with the annual event.
During Fiesta Week everyone goes "cowboy" and has
for the last 23 years. They enjoy the beard growing con-
test. the various activities for children, the Mission
Pageant, and the Parade on Saturday.
BUT COME Monday, the parade is over. the crowds
have thinned and it's business as usual in San Juan
Capistrano.
Swallows Day has come and gone.
And for me. so has the my:;tique.
* * *
f'ro• Pa~ Al
TALE •.•
· ·tt·s a gradual migration
northward {from Argentina),"
he explained
And it's all governed by the
weather
·'Now back east you get
tremendous waves or migrating
birds that might have been held
back by a cold front," his wife
said.
But in mild temperatures, the
birds Oy north at their own pace.
"It was a warm year and the
insects were here earlier. The
swallows are Insect eaters. so
they're here earlier , t oo."
It's as simple as that.
Suspect ~hot
LAS VEGAS CAP) -A man
alleged to have robbed a Las
Vegas bank was shot to death by
police Wednesday as be ran
from the bank. The unidentified
victim, described as .a Hispanic
i n his mid-20s, allegedly
threatened to kill a teller al the
Valley Bank branch tr she did
not •Ive him money.
Rapist sayB
he's 'sick'
• • in warning
PARMA HEIGHTS, Ohio <AP)
Police in the Cleveland area
are searching for a rapist who
warned the public that be is
"sick'' and will continue raping
women and children until bis wife
returns to him. .
A Parma Heights woman told
police the man raped her Tues·
day night, then made her write a
note containing his threat and an
order that it be read o n
television. In the note, the man
described himself as sick and in
need of help.
"I will keep raping women
and children until my wife
comes back to me. l will not hurt
her. Iloveber. Thiswomanisonly
the first. l will keep hurting these
women. l am sick. I need help. I
am out of wot'k. Put this message
on TV so my wife will bear it. Her
name ts Annette."
The message was read on the
11 p.m ... Wedneaday news broad-
cast oC WXYC-TV, an NBC af.
fut ate.
ORA NOE COAST Daily Piiat Cle_....... .......... 114(1U-M11
U etMr d1partmef"8 142-4121
1 Thomee P. Hiiey
Nlllllllf
~N.WHd .........
M. Thom" Keevll ...
ThomM A. Murphlne ............
o,.tee~ H. Loot ~ ..........
lwrwd Schulman ~
9.:1.S:I::'"
·~"'·
MAIN OfllllCI ,. ........... c-. -... (A ..
llMll.-..1 ........ aete"'9w, CA. n.M
c .. .,,..,.,. "'' Ot-.. c:..tt "'*''"" .. ~ .... n ... t ,..,._,, 1011•r•UoM, eo1tor1e1 metier .,. ••
vertl .. '"'l'lt• M<tln •mey .. rtttroctu<H •111\0vi Nlffltl ..,..IMitottfqpyr...,lowner. •
~ c1-m ,.,. ·" c..tt llMM. c .. ...,,_. •. '"" , .... , "91cr""'*'" urrltr MM,,....,,.; ty MAii u.• """""'": rnllltary wstlMti.M M.• _ .. iv •
CENTER ...
velooment firm has a~reed to
finance a $12 million road proj-
ect that would divert south-
bound traffic around Corona del
Mar.
This would be achieved, Can·
non explained, by constructing
the four-lane Pelican Hill Road
between Pacific Coast Highway
and Bonita Canyon Road. which
winds west a nd intersects
MacArthur Boulevard.
Cannon said this setup would
keep southbound motorists and
drivers coming north toward the
cente r o ff P aci f ic Coast
Highway in Corona del Mar.
Cannon predicted the road
could be finished by late 1984.
The road also would serve a
2,000-unit residential area the
development firm is hoping to
build south of Corona del Mar.
Opponents to the project,
which lndudes the 400-member
SPON <Stop Polluting Our
Newport> group. claim the
center project not only will
create lraffio jams in Newport
but will bring pressure to ex-
pand jet service at John Wayne
Airport.
Two arrested
• on cocaine
saleB charge
Two men one a former
member of the Laguna Beach
based Brotherhood of Eternal
Love drug-smuggling empire
and the other an American once
held captive in Cuba for three
years have been arrested by
Orange County Sheriff's Depart-
ment narcotics investigators.
James LeRoy Crittenden, 38, a
transient, who investigators say
was once a ranking operative in
the Brotherhood, and Jerry AJ.
Jen Weaver, 37, of Long Beach,
seized by Cuban officials in 1972
while aboard a boat that drifted
into Cuban waters, were among
six people taken into custody
Tuesday night following a month
long investigation into cocaine
sales activity.
About 9.S ounces of 93 percent
pure cocaine valued/ at $24,000
was seized by undercover agents
during a raJd at a Long Beach
address. Long Beach Police
Department assisted in the in-
vestigation.
Crittenden, who has a lengthy
arrest record and has used
numerous aliases, was indicted
ln the early 1970s by the Orange
County Grand Jury in connec-
tion with Its investigation into
the Brotherhood.
At its peak, the Brotherhood
was responsible for im~rt.intC
mulUmlllion dollar quutiUes of
marijuana and huhJsb into the
United States. ll also distributed
large amounta of LSD and other
psychedelic druas. _ .
Crltt.eoden was convicted l>ut
dld not serve Ume ln state prison
baaed on result.a of dlapostlc
studies by prison officlal1, said
bls fofmer attorney. Matthew
KurUlch.
Crittenden waa scheduled to
be tranaferrecl today to .OffPle
County Jail from Lona Bo•cb Cl·
ty J all. He 11 beln(C held on
$450,000 ball, includlnt a 9400,000
arreat warrant iQued foUowinf
bl• lndlctment ln Concord ln
.Januar)',, J980, tn connection
with a dnll conapiracy cue.
OrWt ~UD\11. Sberltf's Lt. W1att Hut'Mid Weaver wu re-
leaMd fnlBl C\IN.n custody ln
11'1' after b'etn1 held on tba
llland fGr tbne yeara followtq
· btl c1ptun. Han •aid otMr' -.
· tall• 1un'ouDclillC tM caP'_m'e •eND'tlm~ ·~~·
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Secretary ol State Alexender M.
Hali Jr. uld today the ad·
ministration i1 conslderin1 a ran111? of steps to take lf
nece1aary to stop Cuban aupply
of arms to Lalin/Amertcan reb·
els, but said it has· no specific
plan for military action against
Cuba.
''With respect to a specific
plan, why no. The president bas
not had an opportunity to ap-
prove or to consider in detail
any courses of action for the
period ahead,'' Haig said.
Hai1 gave that reply when
pressed at a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing on
an administration offi?ial's
testimony Wednesday that
specific administration plans do
not exclude military action
agai.nst Cuba.
"It is the responsibility of tOe
executive branch to consider a
whole range of options. then pre-
pare a full range of options to
deal with this serious problem,"
Haig said. "And I can assure
you that process is unde r way.
··But in no sense does it
represent an approved game
plan. if you will," he said.
Undersecr e tary of Stat e
Walter J . Stoessel told the com-
m it tee under questioning that
the administration does have
s pecific contingency plans and
"I would say they do not exclude
anything."
Sen. Christopher J . Dodd, D-
Conn., asked Stoessel the ques-
tion and pressed Haig today on
whether there in fact are such
plans.
St oessel . ask e d by Sen .
Charles H. Percy, R·lll .. if Cen-
tral America could t urn into
another "quagmire" like Viet·
n a m . r eplied, "We are de-
termined that this situation will
not develop into another Viet·
nam . the s ituation is con·
tainable."
Arms from Cuba and other
communist countries into El
Salvador have "s ubstantially
abated" and the administration
hopes they will stop altogether,
be said.
But if they increase instead.
he said under questioning from
Dodd, "we would have to con·
sider what steps to take to stop
that flow."
Haig told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee on Wednes·
day that the guerrilla movement
in El SaJvador is part of a four-
phase communist strategy.
"Phase l has been completed
with the seizure of Nicaragua,"
Haig said. "Next is El Salvador,
to be followed by Honduras and
Guatemala."
Rep. Robert K Dornan, R·
Calif., asked Haig if he believed
in a "Caribbean domino
theory.'· a reference to the
much-discussed proposition of
the mid-1960s that the Vietnam
War had to be fought to prevent
other Southeast Asian nations
from falling to communism like
a row of dominoes when the first
is toppled.
"I wouldn't call it necessarily
a domino theory," Haig replied.
"I would call it a priority target
list -a hit list, if you will, for
the ultimate takeover of Central
America."
BURIED IN TEXAS
·CrMlt Ylctlm Mttchell
Crash
victi01's
burial set
Re mains of a former Irvine
youth fatall y injured in a
rollover auto accident that
hurled h1m into a drainage ditch
have been transferred to Texas
for burial. A memorial service for 1980
Irvine High School graduate
Glenn Wayne Mitchell. 19, a
Texas A&M freshman, will be
held locally within the next two
weeks. friends say.
He was visiting 'the Orange
Coast on a quarter break and
riding as a passenger in a car
driven by a friend, Wendy Sue
Lepper, 16. of 6 Bragg, Irvine.
when the accident occurred
Moncfav
Funeral services will be held
in Austin where his family
moved from Irvine 's College
Park area.
The Mitchell youth was riding
to Irvine High School from lunch
with Miss Lepper, daughter of
Irvine Evangelical Free Church
pastor Ted R. Lepper when the
accident occurred in Irvine near
Trabuco Road and Yale Avenue.
Young Mitchell, a s inger and
guitar player who went by his
middle name, was an electrical
engineering major at the Texas
school.
He leaves his parents. Glenn
and Margaret Mitchell . of
Austin, and an older sister
. .,,. ... .,·--······-
Sli:Jying
re.venge
reported
I ·l
..
Nearly 100 1uerri11 .. l't~-!
ly responsible for the ldllio1 of
American Bible translator
Cheater Bitterman III March 7
in Colombia have been kUled or
captured by Colombian and
Ecuadorean aoldlers.
Colombian Minister of Gov-
ernment German Zea
Hernandez said Wednesday that.
soldiers killed 19 guerrillas 1
belonging to M-19 and captured
74 , including Carlos Toledo
Plata, a former congressman
who was second in command
and Rosemberg Pabon, a former ·
sc hoolteacher known a s · 'Comandante Uno.··
A spokeswoman for Wycliffe
Bible Translators in Huntington
Beach. a sister organization of
th e Su mm er Ins titute of
Linguistics. where Bitterman
worked when he was kidnapped
Jan. 19, said that M-19 denied
any part in the kidnapping and
killing.
Following the execution killing
of the father of two, the &.oerrilla
group M-19 denied any part in
the kidnapping or killing, said
spokeswoman Betty~air. Instead the guer 1lla group
blamed the killing nd kidnap-
ping on a splinter roup called
"Coronado National Base." Ms
Blair said.
Photographs printed in South
American news papers following ·
the kidnapping showed the kid-
nappers posed with a flag bear-
ing the name "Coronado Na·
tion al Base ... she said.
"This is a bit nebulous now,"
said Ms Bl air. "Right now we
don 't know 1f these really are the
people I think we have to wait
fo r more investigation."
Last January guerrillas kid·
napped Bitt er man and
threatened to kill him unless
about 100 Americans working
for the Bible Trans lating group
left the country, .
Since the kidnapping and kHI-·
ing none of the families has
·c;ked to leave Colombia, said ·
Ms . Blair. The Colombian gov·
ernment has offered added pro-
tection to the workers.
Bitterman's wife Brenda left
the country with the couple's
two small children following the
kidnapping A memorial service
will be held for Bitte rman
March 29 at his home town in
Lancaster. Pa
U.S. couple start
Atlantic rowing
CASABLANCA , Morocco <A P >
An American couple hoping to
become the first husband-wife
team to row across the Atlantic
radioed they were 10 miles off
the Moroccan coast today. one
day out from Casablanca in
their 25-foot boat.
·'They were in good spirits.
laughing and joking." said
Ahmed Hadi. an employee of the
U.S . Embassy in Casablanca
who spoke to the pair by ra~io.
Curtis Saville, 34, and his 24·
yea r -old wife Kath y , of
Providence, R I . plan to cross
the Atlantic Ocean in about 100
days and land "somewhere in
Florida," according to Charles
S t e n . o ffi ce r at the U.S .
Consulate here. He said the two
left from the Casablanca yacht
club Wednesday.
"Their boat is a self·righting.
self-bailing craft with enclosed
cabins fore and art," Sten said in
a telephone interview. "It's
equipped with a two-way radio
and batteries powered by solar:·
panels." '
OUR TIME IS MONEY.
SLAVICK'§
And our time
is incredible .
Now these gold
coin watches
from Corum
feature
electronic
quartz
movements,
accurate to
within 60
seconds a year,
and they're
completely
water-resistant.
No winding,
no worrying.
Handcraftea in
Switzerland
from 18 karat
yellow gold
and a $20 gold
piece for men,
a $5 gold piece
for women.
A. Man's, $5,990.
B. Woman's,
$4,800. Beautiful
;ewetry says,
"I love you."
. ' Pine ,._.n Slnm 1917 ,
P•hlon ltland. Ntwport Cen•r, Ntwport lffch, n4/Mt-13IO
W"""6nMtf I Latvnt ~ I Mltelon VltjO f Nol'th 0."'lf I The CltY
Loi c.meo. ...... Mlllll
Alto CfMett 1.0t A ..... I Saft Dlitp I IM v.-U.. _ 9' ._..,......,. dwfo,... .,~ ...... 'MA, .... c,....
~ ''-ltwdm C11IW
•!
·:
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~UffiUa
F;ire destroys ,
park landmark ......_
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A spec\jcular fire
des,royed a larle section of the hist6ric Belmont
Park Roller Coaster, rtre officials said.
, .Fire Department spokesman Bill Pitts said a
tire "of suspicious origin" Tuesday damaged 10
percent of the landmark wooden structure and
destroyed one of the 56·year-old amusement park's
orjcinal roller coaster cars.
There were no injuries, Pitts said, although
the roller coa s ter and s urrounding area has
become a haven for derelicts.
College• aeelc a1·a1e aW
SACRAMENTO CAP> California's private
colleges are seeking more state scholarship aid to
cushion the impact of soaring costs. I Potomac sinks
--
Orange Coaat O~Y PILOT/Thuf'9day, March 19, 1981 H/F
Judge rulea it'• a magazine
LQS ANGELES <AP) -The Na-
tional Enquirer, under attack by
Jobo ny Carson on television and
Carol Burnett ln court, baa lQISt a ma-
jor le&al round with a Judge's ruling
that the publication la a magazJ,ne,
not a ne\fSpaper.
The rulln& by Superior Court Judie
Peter Smith -who said the En-
quirer's argument "fell flat on Its
face" denied the paper any protec-
tion from damages under California
retraclion statutes.
Miss BumeU is suing tlle Enquirer
for $10 million over a gossip column
item she claims Hbeled her. A rulln1
that the Enquirer was a newspaper
could have reduced its liability to as
little as $250, her attorneys said.
.. J 've evidently caught you by sur-
prise," Smith told Enquirer attorney
William Masterson as he issued the
late afternoon ruling Wednesday.
pa1e Enquirer article statina that bil
third marria&e was about to break
up. "I'm 1oln1 to call the National
Enquirer and the people who wrote
lbls 'liars' ... Carson s aid. ''This is
absolutely, completely, 100 percent
falsehoods." Then he dared the En-
quirer to sue him for al~nder.
Masterson demanded a mistrial,
claiming Carson's attack was prej-
udicial and damaged the Enquirer's
chance at a fair trial. The judge re-
fused.
THE EXIT OF two jurors and
replacement of one by an alternate
left only 11 IJTlembers on the panel. A
civil case in California can be heard
by fewer than 12 jurors, and the
judge said he would press for a
verdict even If the panel shrank to
eight.
Representatives of----
the colleges descel'\ded NEWS ·u,pon the Legislature
'Wed~:~~~· them, Stan-BRIEFS
ford University Vice ----
The former presidential yacht Potomac sank at its Treasure Island
Navy dock in San Francisco Wednesday, possibly due to a puncture
from a mooring. The yacht, down in 35 feet of water, had been
.seized following a marijuana raid.
"I HAVE LOOK ED at the
qualifications for a newspaper under
the statute," he said. "I'm sorry. I
don't think it's even close."
Miss Burnett's lawyers called the
ruling on the m agazine versus
newspaper issue a major victory.
"I think it removes some serious
legal obstacles we no longer have to
over come." said Paul Sanner. who
argued the issue. President Robert Rosenzweig told a news con·
ference, "We have asked only that able students
be given the chance to choose the education that is
best for them and that they not be barred from
that choice solely for financial reasons."
Dollfl~• delll'er• Canlwr
Bus end fought
He cited efforts by the Enquirer to
show its similarity to the New York
Daily News. the nation's largest
newspaper.
· · 1 have no problem distinguishing
the New York Daily News from the
National Enquirer," Smith said .
"Sure, they're both tabloids. But that
goes to form. not s ubstance."
Masterson insisted the impact on
the case would be minimal "I'm go-
ing to win this case anyway on the
lack or actual malice," he said.
The judge predicted his ruling
might turn out not to be momentous
if the jury de4ermines that the En·
quirer's retraction was not pt.tblished
within the legal time limit
LON~ BEACH (AP> -The Air Force has
taken delivery of the first of a new type of tanker-
cargo aircraft designed to increase the global
mobility of li .S. and allied aircraft.
Teachers claim halt disruptive His ruling came only hours after
the trial was thrown into turmoil by
Carson's televised blast at the En·
quirer. an attack which led to dis-
missal of two jurors and a motion for
mistrial , which was denied.
The McDonnell Douglas KC·lO took off from
Long Beach airport with Lt. Gen. Edgar Harris,
commander of the Strategic Air Command's 8th
Air Force, at the controls. heading for Barksdale
Air Force Base in Louisiana.
'Co8ol~ platt•' r~«-tftl
SAN FRANCISCO <AP ) A controversial
,!plan to use coyotes to thin the herd of deer on
~Angel Island in San Francisco Bay has been
f vetoed by the state Department of Fish & Game. it
• was announced today.
>-Information officer Joe Sheehan said the plan
had been rejected and the department was looking ~~at "other alternatives."
; "Among them are moving, which we don't
want. lo do. a euthanizing and culling program,
shooting them and using steroids to hold down
reproduction," said Sheehan, who emphasized that
plans for the herd were in the ve ry early stages.
:s trike prel'ettl• burfab
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Managers of San
Francisco area funeral homes say they ha1'e
enough room at least for now to store bodies
that can't be buried because of a strike by workers
at 11 major cemeteries.
Burials were halted Wednesday when some 130
members of Cemetery Workers and Green At-
tendants Local 265 struck over wages and benefits.
John Cantwell, attorney for the Associated
Cemeteries. said the union rejected a last-minute
offer of a 95 cents-per·hour raise that would have
brought the daily rate to S83 60.
LOS ANGELES !AP>
-Teachers in the Los
Ange les Unified School
District went to court to-
day to keep the school
board from ending man-
datory busing before the
end of the school year.
But since Superior Court
Jud ge Paul Egl y
withdrew from the case.
the first thing to be de-
cided was which judge
would hear the argu-
m ents .
T H E UN I TED
Teachers of Los Angeles
have-asked for tem-
porary restraining order
against a mid-semester
halt to bus ing , as
plan ned by the . school
board. The teachers said
changing the system on
April 10 would be ex·
tremely disruptive to
the educational process.
The school board vote
lo end mandatory bus-
ing after th e state
Supreme Court let stand
a lower court ruling that
upheld the con s titu ·
tionality of the anti
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NEWPORT BEACH1 3300 Wut Coelt Hlghdy nur ~ llW.. &31-920!5.
~f It 's got
wheels,
you'll move
it f aster l n a
D ally Piiot
classified
ad.call
~2-5678 and a
fr iendly ad-
viser will
'
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
busing amen dment ,
Proposition l . and said it
applied to the Los
A n geles integration
case.
SUPERIOR Cou rt
Presidmg Judge David
Eagleson had the job of
deciding who would take
Egly's place. One name
that was mentioned was
that of Judge Leon
Savitch. who is the son-
in-law of the lat e Judge
Alfred Gitelson . who
first ordered desegrega·
lion in Los Angeles
schools.
Attorneys for both
sides said that Savitch's
reJation$hip to Gitelson
was not discussed in
their closed-door meet-
i n g with the judges
Wednesday and neither
side had any objections to
Savitch's involvement.
T H E AME R ICAN
Civil Liberties Union, a
plaintiff in the 18-year-
old case, will also ask
that the busing deadline
be extended as part of
ils petition to the state
Supreme Court to re·
consider its Proposition
1 decision, an ACLU
s pokesman said.
It was not known when
the action would be
taken. he said
. THE TWO OUSTED jurors ad-
m itted in the judge's chambers that
they had seen Carson railing against
the Enquirer on his Tuesday night
show
THE RETRACTION s tatute pro·
t ects n ews papers but not
magazines only if a retraction is
publis hed promptly and with the
same prominence given the original
article
"There 1s a very high probability."
the judge said. "that the Enquirer
did not comply with the retraction
statute in a timely fashion." Carson was angry about a front-
SANTA MONICA <AP> -The battle to close
the municipal airport '• a target both of city coun -
cil members who want low-income housing on the
site and those who want an industrial park or of.
fice·shopping complex -heated up as airport
terrants fumed over eviction notices .
"The latest ploy is to evict all operators, leav-
ing onJy a runway and a tower," steamed Mark
Morrow, operator of Wings West Inc.
"We're supposed to cease and desist in the
operations of the airline within 30 days or they will
close down the whole facility," he said. "Wings West
carries about 2,000 people a month to Mammoth and
Bishopsk.i areas." •
The airline will cQnlinue to <h>erate but ... m
move to Los Angeles Intemationaf Airport May 1,
Morrow said. to ensure that service won 't be dis-
rupted and that its 62 employees won't be thrown
out of work.
Other tenants were told to be out by Feb 1,
1982, Morrow said. Morrow said the city has an
agreement with the Federal Aviation Administra-
tion to use the area as an airport " al least through
the year 2000" but that the council thinks it can get
out of the agreement.
Calls to City Manager Kent McClain went un-
answered Wednesday, but Morrow said the city
manager and city attorney had advised the council
it could not break the agreement with the FAA,
and that an independent study commissioned by
the council had reached the saflle conclusion.
Put tOWlcll actions aimed at discoura;lng use
of ttie aifport fpclµde a noise limi~ of & decibels.
' ' ' J
~· I
!u -ea._..._lth ~enice
I
needs ittci-ea1dng
Irvine police department plaMer Howard Miller re·
ported to the City Councll last week that tbe city fteeda an
additional ambulance. At present, the city contract' with the Orance Couatf.
Fire Department for paramedic aervlce out ofthe U1tlven •
ty Fire Station on Campus Drive near UC Irvine.
This is one of the busiest ambula11ces ln OrUilt
County. Between 1975 and 19IO. emer1ency 1ervk:e cane
I jumped 209 percent. At the same thne, lrvift•'• llOf\lla·
lion has increased dramatically alo1tg the eity'a nortMtn
• boundaries. The University Fire Station ls located lR th•
southernmost section of Irvine.
' While Irvine's ambulance service ii beiftl atried i.
the limit, city officials are becomi•I incre•tft ~
cerned about the fact tftat the~ is no hoepit .. 'II n the
city's borders.
According to the Irvine city General Plan. two heepttab
ultimately will be needed.
The Irvine City Council continues to study tile Med
for additional ambulance services and hospitals amid in-
tense lobbying by medicaJ interest groups an,liom to t~
the affluent Irvine market..
The council members should be wary of the .. loltb'1 ·
ing efforts in making timely and objective decisi«JN
relative to Irvine's health care needs.
At the same time, the council should keep in mind
that those health care needs aren't being met. Am·
bulance ser vice. hospitals and emergency centers must
be encouraged and assisted.
Bridge action urgent
Si nce 1976 the Yale Footbridee in Irvine, used
primarily by students attendin1 local erammar schools.
has been t he site of 27 reported crimes.
The rape of a 15-year-old schoolgirl last month has
raised new questions about the desolate bridee spanning
the Santa Fe railroad tracks in the El Camino Real HC·
lion of town
Other crimes such as three assaults, one indecent eJt·
posure and one attempted rape have been reperted on Uw
pedestrian overpass connecting two stretches of Yale
A \'enue where they dead·end at the tracks.
Patrol of the area has been stepped up by ,oUce.
Hours of a crossing guard have been extended to 5 p.m.
The City Council is now wisely considerin1 either COi\·
st ructing a roadway overpass or doing away with the
foot bridge altogether .
It is unfortunate that it has taken a strine of crtmn
to convince city officials that something must be doM.
Plans for a through road have been on the city's master plan
since the footbridge was constructed.
Up to now. the through road project has been con-
sidered too expensive. In light of the major crime the
footbridge has drawn and the continued police work it
has created it is time to reeonsider the c06t factor It
ma~· be one of the city's ~st investments.
Explanation in order
Irvine Ranch Water District directors have "reaf·
firmed" a policy of notify1ng the public of odor problems
emanating from the Michelson Sewaee Treatment Plant.
The water district policy calls for notlfyinc the public
whenever the pl ant causes a general stink. but diltrtct
e mployees have been less than vigorous ln carrying it
out
The board's action last Monday should indicate a new
willingness to quickly notify the press, citizens and city
officials when a smell is caused by the plant, locate4 near
the Fluor Corp. headquarters.
There is a new realization amon~ the public of
various health problems associated with various pol-
lutants . While there is no present evidence any health threat
is associated with the odors periodically caused by tM
plant. the public is understandably troubled when a stranse
s mell is in the air.
A notification procedure should be established for
odor problems at the plant especially in li1ht ol water di•·
trict plans to expand the treatment plant to meet 1rowin1
service needs. • Opinions expressed in the space abOve are thoM of the Deily Pilot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors •I'd
artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Oa1ty Ptlot, P O
Bo>C 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92826 Phone (714) 6'42-·432 1
1> ..
Boyd!F ood tastes
ByL.M.BOYD
Q. What sort of commonly
known food is least liked by the
most people?
A Buttermilk. The surveys
repeatedly show that. Second
on the least liked list is brain•.
it's said, }>OSsibly because of
availability. You see a lot
more butt~rmilk than bralrui.
Other least liked items. in
descending order. are oysters.
eggplant, turnips. clams and
parsnips.
How do you account ror the
fact that the suicide rate
a mong women has gone up~
percent ln the last 15 years?
What, you've never heard of
French Wlne Cola? That's
what Coca-Cola was called
First they take
c\garetttl away from
us and now they are
proposln1 to take ~ffee
-ror our own eood. or
course . Someday 1
t clence ~ •oUll to 10
too far.
P'.K.
when It first came out • 1815.
Then, itcontalMdcocaine Md
wine. But that didn't last~.
The wine was tossed oul, later
the cotaine, caffeine was
added along wtth e11tract fJf
the cola nut for flavor, atMI the
name Coca-Cola was adapte41.
Q . What was the first build· '
Ina owned by the U.S. Govern·
men\?
A. The mint in P!tlladetptil•.
Built In 11112. Ml1t1t have
guessed tt\at. A plau '°
manufacture 1noaey. TIM
priorities of govem•ent hen
always been p~dable.
Somewllete on eart.b dM
rain it falUn1. always. N...-
let1 \I,, HY the weather r.a.
They c•leulate tbere.,.. 1bollt
1,IOO thundef'itonnt an Mui'.
Alto till• ue et HtMltt.a
pNvet &Mt 10 ttma aa fftaay
lllbtllinl Morl'lu ocn.r ewr-
land uoveuea.
• WASHINGTON -Major clnl1
•••lflinl or1anlai1ia.a1 are dd·
latte y bll bushRu,. even
tbou11t they 're not Un the
F«luee JOO Utt ol leadinC cor-,_,.0on9. In 1'78 alone, for ex·
a1•pl•, illicit dru« traffic in the
United States 1enerated an
e1Uma_sed S$4 blUlor,1 in retail
Htea.
Not surprtslnily, the dope ped·
dter1 have aped the corporate
atructure o r
htitimate
b•slne1 s
ftrm s . "A
1Wtlctwed er-
1 a• i u ti on,
comprised of
b o th le -
1itim ate
a ad I lli c it
btts lllesses .
eeables the
trafOellers to sustain losses
without having to halt all of their
operations," a classified Drug
El\forcement Administration
atwdy reports. The masquerade
of respectability also makes it
tougher for law e nfo rcement
people to separate t'he legal
Mailbox
from UM Uleial actJvlly.
The clualfied DEA study 1ave
a detaUed deacrlpUon of one
larce-acalt marUuana and co.
nine 1mu1cUn1 operation that
wat baaed m Ulloola, Geor(ia
and Florida. lntelllcence
soured told my associate Dale
Van Atta the lnformatUon was
developed on the outfit's ac·
Uvlties In 1977 and 1978 from
both surveillance and Inform·
ants.
llt:at:•s THE "t ypical
scenario" for the smu1glers·
hl«b-flyina illicit operation.
taken from the DEA report.
··The aircraft would depart
the United States. usually Crom
a controlled airport. and either
fl y directly to Colombia or via
one or several Caribbean
islands. The plane would land in
Colombia after dark. where as·
sociates loaded and refueled t he
aircraft for the return to the
United States.
·'The group had access to
s everal U.S . airports and
airstrips capable of handling
large aircrart. Several hours
Thomas P. Haley/Publllhtr
prior to the arrival of an
aircraft. a team o( group I UP·
pol't p ersonnel. ran1lng In
number from 8 to 20, would ar·
ri~e at the airstrip with multi-
wheeled vehicles, including trlc·
tor-trailers and 2 ton dump
trucks.
.. Electronic equipment. in·
eluding scanners, air· lo· ground
radios and CBs, would be used to
monitor law enforcement activi-
ty in the area and to permit
communications between the air
and ground crews. Upon a rrival
of the plane, the ground crew
wo uld use flashlights lo ii·
luminate the strip.
"THE PLAN ES usually
landed in the early morning
hours and were offloaded by
means of a human <"onveyor
system; typically. a plane was
completely offloaded in less than
one hour. The drugs were loaded
onto the large vehicles and
transported lo several storage
facilities and distribution points
in M issou ri . Ill inois and
Georgia.··
T he smu.li(.li(ling organ1zat10n's
corporate struc ture was that of
any le1itimate conglomera~. Its
various companies served as
fronts lo buy. sell and retbter
the vehicles and aircraft needed.
Senior management set bud1eu
!or the various activities. includ·
mg acqui sition of remote farms,
warehouses and airports to ac·
commodate the shipment and
storage of the dope.
··Each employee had a
specific job title and function.
and a defin ite place in the chain
of command," the DEA report
said. The highest salaries went
. as in any legitimate corpora-
tion to top executives. But
those employees "directly
e.ngaged 1n s muggling a c -
t1y1t1es" also made top dollar
Pilots of the large air<"raft , for
example DC·4s, DC·6s and
DC 7s reportedly were paid
$100.000 per trap, while t he
ground crews got SI0,000 apiece
per m1 ss1on
NO SALE: Ray Sena was an
t•mployee or Rockw ell lnterna·
l1onal for more than 20 years. He
was fired after he blew the whis-
tle on massive waste and mis-
handling o( government funds in
the company 's space shuttle
contract
Sena has brought Suit for $300
million agains t tl)e company.
and reports that Rockwell has
made ham a number or interest·
ang settlement offers
First. he says. he was offered
$12,000. then $18.000. then S25.000
and a JOb w1lh anoth('r company.
Finall y. h e s aid . Rock well
e missaries offered him his old
Job ba<"k. plus bark pay a nd re·
I Ill bursement for any financial
damages he had incurred All he
had to do in n•turn "as drop his
lawsuit
Sena refu~ed A Rockwell
spokesman said nobodv had
been authonted lo make any Of·
fers on thl' company's behalf
Mean"hil e , Se na 's
whastle blowing has had results
Tht• space conglomerate has
become lhl' s ubJert of three
federal in vestigat ions Sena sus
p eels there's a connection
bet ween the 1nvesl1 gal ions and
the <"ompany's efforts to gel him
lo drop lhl' SUI\.
Federal airport funds mean federal rules
To the Editor·
You and your newspaper and
others have recently printed
several misleading "letters to
the editor" that claim users of
the J ohn Wayne Airport. and not
the federal government. will pay
for Its expansion.
The fact Is the federal govern·
ment will pay for most of it.
These letters mislead Newport
Beach citizens who are aware of
the consequences of federal con·
trot of the airport. Newport's ap-
prehension is not mispla<"ed.
Indee d . the romprom1se
worked out between the FAA
and the county already looms
ominously ovN us. The com-
promise was that the FAA would
hu•d the purchase of add1tlon11I
land for the airport if lhl· rounty
a1reed to open up the fu c1llty to
mor~ airlines
Tiii: CAB saytl lht' {'OUnty's
nol1e abetement plan 111 lllc.-1al
and co unt y o ff lci ala
acknowledge the f'AA wlll
probably be the agency challena
Ina the legality or county r~strk u .. s. the county plans to aet
federal grants for mo11t of tht
term in.t expansion 1.1nd runway
expansion from the funds made
available by the Airport 11nd
Airway Systems Development
Act of tHO. This act state•
apeclllcally that the reclplenta ot
funds must foster competition
and prevent unfair methods of
competiUoo in air transportation.
ing the warm weather months .
the odor was so intense that a
member or my family became
regularly nauseated in the after·
noons
It is my hope that wath the
current con cern over. the
Michelson Plant a nd \he de
'veloping inform ation about
dumps in ~eneral, som ething
can be done a bout the terrible
odor comin~ from Coyote Can-
yon dump.
ANGELA WRIGHT
P•rk•IC~'t
To t hf' FA!ltor:
Re cent ne wspaper photo
1 raph11 of the severe erosion of
the cruded site north of Ford
Roud and between Jamboree
and MacArthur reminded me of
lhl' Grund Canyon
I propo15e that Congressm an
Roht>rt Badham who failed to
1et w1 a national park between
N•wport and Laguna might try
to l(et this canyon area set aside
u11 u national park It could be
n.-mt<t the Great Abyss National
Pnrk
SI m ultan eously. he m ight
work to Incorporate Into his na
tlonul park the Upper Bay which
could be called the "Upper Bay
Meadow." Such a name would
appeal to the nos talgically
minded who would remember
Sydney Harri8
that al one tame tht> meadow had
been a ba~ c; I. de CARDENAS
O•rlc ••I~
To the Editor:
A re<"ent Daily Pilot article
described Super visor Riley as
.. piqued" bec ause Frontier
Airlines chose to announce its in-
tentions to buy quieter jets
through Supervisor Clark's office
rather than his . Really. it isn 't
pique. il ·s a n affront.
But everybody knows Clark is
the point man for unrestricted
airport growth and flights. which
endears him to the corporate af·
fluence of the F'luors, Smith In
dustries. Irvine Company, Koll .
etc
Clark doesn't risk a single vote
because it is Riley's constituency
that is being immediately raped.
Oth ers may follow. bu\ not
Clark's.
MORE POLITICS at the ex·
pense of a misguided public who
made the area desirable as a
place to live. The entire Newport
Beach-Costa Mesa a rea and its
elected officials had better be
mo bilized to fieht a irport ex·
pans ion all the way!
Noise variances are an insult:
3-4. 8·10. how many in the next 10
years'' Jn the process. Clark sees
the area as a g1gantir airport with
many hotels and an airplane take·
off every 30 seconds. if need be
After all. Fluor. Smith Industries
might not stay. or would not have
come here so they would like us
lo believe Arter all. Clark's
altruism in this area doesn't cost
him a s ingle vote .
This isn't progress because it is
a patchwork expedient for an
airport fa cility thcrt was not sup·
posed to be. The super visors have
mocked and misred the public as
lo their intentions over the years.
It is taxpayers' money whether it
is s tate. rounty or federal.
Re locale a regional facility now'
C.G SlEGLE
•Dbe .. e' •pre••
To the Editor:
The voters or Orange County
have witnessed delays at almost
ever y ele<"tion in the length of
tame 1t has taken county govern·
ment to tabulate the votes. Ap-
parently. this "disease" has
spread to the ofCi ce of the Coun·
ty Tax Colle<"tor.
In looking at my bank records.
I fi nd that the lait collector took
six weeks to clear my check for
the payment of my first install-
m ent of taxes on Dec. 8 last
year , and further compounded
the matter by railing to clear the
check for my second installment
which was mailed on Dec. 3b -
the check has still not cleared as
of mid·March.
The federal 1ovemment will
!tot lund a fancy, big terminal and
a• extended, stronger runway
without enfor<:lna airline "com·
petition." Which m e ans in-
creased use of the airport.
Round-the-world quiz IN TIU8 DAY and age w.hen
the country is facing budget
crises at all levels. I find it dlf.
£icult to believe that Oranae
County is so wealthy that It can
afford the luxury of dragglnt Its
feet in plcklng up money sent in
by property owners and failing
to in vest It for the benefit of the
community; and this in an era
when deposits are capable of
earning Interest Income at
astronomically high ioteteat
rates.
If the termlnaJ Is increased
ftlaefold, will nine times as
many jets take off over our ·
he1nt1? Vea ts probably the
rl1ht auwer. PAT LEWIS
A ......... ' Te U.. Editor:
Cone«'N.at your editorial on
the smelly tituaUon at the
lllebtlton Sew11e Treatme1t
... t (llerch I ), would lite 10
lliriat • ~ att.eft\ion another
odoroua problem in Jrvine. On
eertain afternoona, hot or cold
weather. tht brft•• brine• to us • here ID ~e ~t the sicken·
la1 ••II ol ~I 1arbatt and ...... ,..="' .. bat •• ,... .... ..... u..
tlt•t ti•, I •8'tra1HI M UUMd ........ Mllil .......
•' Ute eo,_. caa1oe du•' ......... ....,~ GI • ......_ IAM ... ..,., ..,._
....... . . ..
We're i olng to take a fast trip
around the world ln today's quiz,
and see how many countries and
areas you can Identify from the
ort1lns or lhelr names. t haven't
chosen any obscure or dubious
ones (like "Canada,.. which
etymoloeists still argue about>.
10 one-quarter correct does not
aeem to be ukln• too much.
i . Name at leut three coun·
lr\es \hat are named after dlrec-
tioaa, or polnll of the c~mpaaa.
2. Whit country l• named
alter a metal?
3. Which cguntrt .. are named
alter foreifd'ra who conquered
tb•m? ~ 4. What ar1• •rea of the
world la• •fler an Himel?
5. What coutat.ry'1 name melJlJI
"la1td of the •W'a·butft\ "°pie"? t . What countrJ lt n•mf!d for
the m• wbO liberated lt from
forelp nalet 1. What people'• nun• means
"rawftlbeaten°? a. Wb&t counlry la named after
afamU,1
.....
ANSWERS:
1. Austria (East >; Norway
(North); Viet Nam <South).
2. Argentina. arter the silver
("argent''> that was thought to be
buried there.
3. The Philippines, after King
Philip ll of Spain, and Rhodesia,
after Cecil Rhodes.
4. Tbe Arctic, whose name
comes from the Greek word
rpeanlng "bear." <Ursa Major,
or the "Great Bear" constella·
Uon, was seen in the North.)
5. Ethiopia, formertr known
by ltt Arabic name of AbyHlnla. a. Bolivia, after Simon
Bolivar, the great Ubento-r of
much ol South America,
7. The EtldmOll, whlch la ~at
the naO'le a!plllea In naUv•O•
dlan tongues. (Althou1h.' Uke
moat primitive peoplt1, lMlbd·
ln1 American 'lndlana, their
name for t"emaelvet me1nt
almply "man" or "people," u
dhtln1uished from otbtr
creatures.> •
t . Saudi Arabial after tbt lone·
rulln,1 Saudi f aml y.
'
Perhaps this Is a matter ibat
should be referred to the Grand
Jury in order to determine Just
who la reapon1ible for this slate
of affairs and ~o'w lar lt lmptdes
the flow of funda to the ex·
chequeroft.beCountyofOranae.
DAVID A. W. YOONG
Th• olffct of tr.. Co..11r, Tu
CoUtctor blamtd o comp~tn
f)r•olcdowft for thf df low "' prooeu· f11g prop.riv rcz clwcb. tliitor • ~': ,_ ,.... •• ,. w.ic-. i ( .. ,...,. .. flt ..... •11111. ,..., ..... ~·---:.~ .. .,~ •• All tetten 111111 I ~r.-•lllllllfltr=• llllMI :-.~ . ...::., ';:~~~. .... ,~~·5\. :,~,ir:;. ... ..,.....
'
.._...__,,.._., .. -,..,_.
~umua
~ire aestroys
Park landmark ~
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A spectacular tire
d_,1},,oyed a lar•e section of the hlatortc Belmont
Park Roller Coaster. fire offtclala aald.
, Flre Department spokesman BUI Pitta aaid a
flre "of suspicious origin" TUesday dama1ed 10
percept of the landmark wooden structure and
destroyed one or the 56-year-old amusement park's
or~lnal roller coaster cars.
1 There were no lnJ~rtes, Pitta said. although
th~, roller coaster and surrounding area has
become a haven for derelicts.
(7olfefre• aeelc •t•t• "'4
SACRAMENTO <AP> -California's private
colleges are seeking more state scholarship aid to
cushion the impact of soaring costs. Potomac sinks
. ,,
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Tl\urtday, March 19, 1981 H/F
"''WI .......
Judge rule• it'• a magazine
LOS ANGELES (AP) -~Na·
tlonal E nquirer, under attack by
Johnny Carson on televlalon and
Carol Burnett ln cous;t, haa loet a ma-
jor le1al ;round with a Jud1e'1 ruUn1
that. the publlcaUon ls a ma1ar.ine,
not a newspaper.
The ruijng by Superior Court Judge
Peter Smith -who said the En-
quirer's argument "fell flat on ita
face" denied the paper any protec-
tion from damages under California
retraction statutes.
Mias Burnett ls suing the Enctu1rer
ror $10 milllon over a gossip column
Item she claims libeled her. A ruling
that the Enquirer was a newspaper
could have reduced its liability to as
little as $250, her attorneys said.
"I 've evidently caught you by sur-
prise," Smith told Enquirer attorney
William Masterson as he issued the
late afternoon ruUng Wednesday.
page Enquirer article 1tat1n1 that hia
third marrla1e waa about to break
up. "I 'm 1oln1 to call the NatJooal
Enquirer and the people who wrote
thls 'Uara'," Carson said. "Thia ls
absolutely, completely. 1QO percent
rat,sehoods." Then he dared the En·
qulrer to sue him for s lander.
Masterson d~manded a mistrial,
claiming Carson 's attack was preJ·
udlclal and dama1ed the Enquirer's
chance at a fair trial. The judge re·
fused. '
THE EX IT OF two jurors and
replacement of one by an alternate
left only 11 members on the panel. A
civil case in California can be beard
by fewer than 12 jurors. and the
judge said he would press for a
verdict even if the pane l s hrank to
eight. •R epresentatives of----
the colleges descended NEWS upon the Legislature
Wednesday. BRIEFS I Among them. Stan-
ford University Vice ----
The former presidential yacht Potomac sank at its Treasure Island
Navy dock ln San Francisco Wednesday, possibly due to a puncture
from a mooring. The yacht, down in 35 feet of water, had been
.seized following a marijuana raid.
"I HAVE LOOKED at the
qualifications for a newspaper under
the statute," he said. ·Tm sorry. I
don't think it's even close."
Miss Burnett's lawyers called the
ru Ii ng on the magazine versus
newspaper issue a major victory.
"I think it removes some serious
legal obstacles we no longer have to
overcome." said Paul Sanner. who
argued the issue . President Robert Rosenzweig told a news con·
ference, "We have asked only that able students
be given the chance to choose the education that is
best for them and that they not be barred from
that choice solely for financial reasons."
Da..,,la• delf "•r• tanlu!r
Bus end fought
He cited efforts by the Enquirer to
show its similarity to the New York
Daily News, the nation's largest
newspaper.
"I have no problem distinguishing
the New York Daily News from the
National Enquirer." Smith said.
"Sure, they're both tabloids. But that
goes lo form, not substance."
Masterson insisted the impact on
the case would be minimal. "l'm go·
ing lo win this case anyway on the
lack of actual malice." he said.
The judge predicted his ruling
might turn out not to be momentous
if the jury determines that the En·
quirer's retraction w<1s not published
within the legal time limit
LONG BEACH <AP) -The Air Force has
taken delivery of the first of a new type or tanker-
cargo aircraft designed to increase the global
mobility of U.S. and allied aircraft.
Teachers claim halt disruptive His ruling came only hours after
the trial was' thrown into turmoil by
Carson's televised blast at the En-
quirer. an attack which led to dis-
missal of two jurors and a motion for
mistrial. which was denied.
The McDonnell Douglas KC-10 took off from
Long Beach airport with Lt. Gen. Edgar Harris.
commander or the Strategic Air Command's 8th
Air Force. at the controls, heading for Barksdale
Air Force Base in Louisiana.
: 'Coflot• plaM•' re}ft"lftl
, ' SAN FRANCISCO CAP) A controversial
fPlan to use coyotes to thin the herd of deer on lt~ngel Island in San Francisco Bay has been
fjvetoed by the state Department of Fish & Game, it
~was aMounced today
Information officer Joe Sheehan said the plan
,had been rejected and the departme nt was looking ~at "other alternatives."
:,. i "Among them are moving, which ~ don't
· want. to do. a e uthanizi ng and culling program,
s hooting them <1nd using steroids to hold down
reproduction." said Sheehan. who emphasized that
plans for the herd were in the very early stages.
' ·'.Strike prev•nt• burfala
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Managers of San
Francisco area funeral homes say they ha1'e
enough room at least for now to store bodi~s
that can't be buried because of a strike by workers
at l I major cemeteries.
Burials were halted Wednesday when some 130
members or Cemetery Workers and Green Al·
tend ants Local 265 struck over wages and benefits.
John Cantwell. attorney for the Associated
Cemeteries. said the union rejected a last-minute
offer of a 95 cents per hour raise that would have
brought the daily rate to $83 60
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Teachers in the Los
Angeles Unified School
District went to court to·
day to keep the school
board from ending man-
datory busing before the
end or the school year
But since Superior Court
Judge Paul Egl y
withdrew from the case.
the first thing to be de·
cided was which judge
would hear the argu.
men ts.
THE UN I TED
Teachers of Los Angeles
have asked for tem-
porary restraining order
against a mld·semester
h alt lo busin g, as
planned by the school
board. The teachers said
changing the system on
April 10 would be ex·
tremely disruptive to
the educational process.
The school board vote
to end mandatory bus·
ing after t h e state
Supreme Court let stand
a lower court ruling that
upheld the conslitu·
tionality of the anti
busi ng amendment ,
Proposition l , and said it
applied to th e Los
Angeles integration
case.
SU PERIOR Court
Presiding Judge David
E agleson had the job of
deciding who would take
Egly's place. One name
that was mentioned was
that of Judge Leon
Savitch, who is the son-
in law of the late Judge
Alfred Gitelson, who
first ordered desegrega.
lion in Los Angeles
schools.
Attorneys fof' both
sides said that Savitch's
relationship to Gitelson
was not discussed in
their closed-door meet·
Ing with the judges
Wednesday and neither
side had any obJections to
Sa vitch's involvement
THE AMER I CAN
Civil Liberties Union, a
plaintiff in the lS.year-
old case. wUI aJso ask
piiiii.iiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
''I refuse to
,
"
' ,
···ii
use credit cards.
So I use this~
AvoMI 1he Credi1 Card Trap. Now you can
purchase the thing.s you want without worry·
ing ahou1 the fees. interest charges and
mounting debts often associated with credit
cards. When you buy something with
Check Card~ the purchase price is de<luc100
direc tly from your interest-checking
account-just as if you'd written a check.
EnJoy Visa Card C'.onve.nlence. Check Card"
is accepted wherever Visa is ... nationwide
and worldwide. Which means you can
use your interest-checking
account almost anywhere-
even in places that don't
take checks!
Citizens Visa
Check Card~ One
beautiful way
to use your
interest-checking
account. See
your nearest
Citizens office today for details.
NEWPORT BEACH: 3300 Wut Coast HlehWIY nut rtewpOft IW.. '31 ·9205.
I
If It's got
wheels,
you'tt move
it faster In a
Dally Piiot
classified
ad.Call
642·5678 and a
f rlendly ad·
vlserwlll
, ,
help you
turn your
wheels Into
. cash.'
that the busing deadline
be extended as part or
its petition to the state
Supreme Court to re·
consider its Proposition
l decision. an ACLU
spokesman said.
It was not known when
the action would be
taken. he said.
T HE TWO OUSTED jurors ad·
milted in the judge's chambers that
they had seen Carson railing against
the Enquirer on his Tuesday night
show
THE RETRACTION statute pro·
lects n ewspapers but not
magazines only if a retrncuon is
published promptly and with the
same prominence given the onginal
article.
"There is a very high probability."
the judge said, "that the Enquirer
did not comply with the ret.(action
statute 1n a timely fashion " Carson was angry about a front
Airport battle flares
SANTA MONICA CAP> The battle to close
the municipal airport a target both or city coun-
cil members who want low-income housing on the
site and those who want <1n industrial park or of-
fice-shopping complex heated up as airport
tenants fumed over evi('tion notices
I "The latest ploy 1s lo evict alloperators, leav-
ing only a runway and a lower." steamed Mark
Morrow, operator of Wings West Inc.
"We're supposed to cease and desist in the
operations of the airline within 30 days or they will
close down the whole facility," he said. "Wings West
carries about 2,000 people a month to Mammoth and
Biahopsld a.reas."
The airline will continue to ~ra\e but v.lll
move lo Los Angeles Inte rnational Airport May l ,
)
Morrow said, to ens ure that !lerv1cc won't be dis -
rupted and that its 62 employees won't be thrown
out of work.
Other tenants were told to ht> out by l<'eb 1,
1982, Morrow said. Morrow said the city has an
agreement with the Federal Av1at1on Administra-
tion to use the area as an airport "at le•st through
the year 2000" but that the council thinks it can get
out of the agreement.
Calls lo City Manager Kent McCl<1m went un-
answered Wednesday. but Morrow said the city
manager and city attorney had advised the council
it could not break the agreement with the FAA,
and that an independent study commissioned by
the council had reached the same conclusion.
Paat council actions aimed at discouraging use
of the alrf>ort include a noise limit or 85 decibels
\ ' ..
,
I· I I ..
I I
J., .. ,,. ,...J~1 ........ ._, _____________ •T•t1•om•1•1 •P.•H•••lt•Y•l•P•ub•l•ls•ht•r•T•hom•llil••t •t<•tt•v•U•11•••1llto•r ~.. ~ .r-:_~ Thuraday, March 19, 1981 8'rblra Krtlblchl l!dltorl•I Page Editor
Heights annex
I
problems renlain
Newport Beach Councilman Paul Hummel hu pro-
posed that hla council coUearues start the proce11 to an·
nex at least a portion of Santa Ana Hel1~ta lnto Newport
Beach. " The idea ls hardly new. It 1hould be remembered,
however. that the same old drawbacks to the propoaal ex-
ist. Hummel's reasoning for annexation ia that resldentl
in Santa Ana Heights have no rt-presentation beyond county
supervisors. He claims the issue of airport 1rowth has
underscored the need for Heights residents to have more
immediate representation.
The Height.s area is located on t-0p of Newport Bay
and just short of John Wayne Airport. Half of the unin·
corporated area is in Newport's sphere of influence and
lhe other half falls in Costa Mesa's.
Any action toward annexation would take decl1ion·
making on the part of councilmen in both cities. Althouah
both Newport and Costa Mesa have made passes at an-
nexing the Heights area in the past, none has ever
reached the serious stage.
Santa Ana Heights is a semi-rural area where horses
and other animals are frequently kept. It hu no
sidewalks. some fiercely independent-minded residents
and is served by its own water company. All of these ele-
m ents would make annexation by either city difficult.
It is also questionable that property taxes from the
a rea would even come close to paying for fire and police
services now supplied by the county.
Even if these problems can be worked out. the ques -
tion remains : Is it worth it?
Hummel sa ys Heights residents need closer represen-
tation to assisl in their airport fight. Citizens in Newport
have that representation yet have fared no better on that
score.
School lunch costs
As Newport-Mesa School District trustee~ get sel to
wrestle with a 1981 -82 budget bloated by inflation. the
price of food for thought definitely is rising.
But so is the cost of food for the stomach.
rood services officials note that the district is charg-
inl? about 10 cents a meal less than what it costs this
spring to ser ve break fast and lunch.
Next September, they predict, t hings will get even
worse as President Reagan's budget ax is sharpened to
trim federal agricultural support for school lunch pro-
grams.
Student meals could go up 50 cents next fall, combin-
ing the current lO·cent shortage a nd the 40 cents expected
to b~ trimmed in federal and state supports.
This year, elementary schools charge 40 cents for
breakfasts and 70 cents for lunches.
Middle schoolers pay 50 and 75 cents. and high school
students 60 and 85 cents.
While the well-balanced meals still will be a great
d eal less expensive than restaurant fare, the anticipated
cxlra char~e to parents is reminiscent of the district's
s tudent-paid bus plan instituted this year.
Parents who have ~ained tax relief from Proposition
13 and other anti-tax attitudes had better face up to the
fact that there's no such thing as a free lunch.
The m oney will just come from another pocket.
Law niust be equal
Costa Mesan Bessie Mae Hill ls irate.
She's seeking a city permit to display mannequin&,
dressed in period attire, on the sidewalk in front of her
Hill House Costume Shop on Newport Boulevard.
Other shops display merchandise out front, she con-
tends, but city planning officials are trying to make her
an example. ·
City officials, she says, keep dredging up her prob·
lems of the past, alleged broken promises to clean up her
property and rem ove display items out front.
Those conditions were part of a city permit granted
nearly 10 years ago when she fought to finally gain
permission to both li ve and do business in the old house at
1914 Newport Blvd.
She's so tired of fighting City Hall. she says, that she
may end up selling he r business, mannequins and all.
Bessie's latest bout with the city came in January
when s he was cited for displaying the mannequins in
violation of city ordinances.
Although her wrath is understandable, it s hould be
remembered that city officials are c harged with enforc-
ing the laws set by the vote~· representatives, the City
Council.
Let's hope that the law is enforced equitably and that
dis plays throughout the city gain the same attention
~iven Mrs . Hill's. • Opinions expressed tn the space above are those of the D•ily Pilot.
Other views upressed on this page are those of their authors •nd
artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boyd/Food tastes
ByL.M. BOVD
Q. What sort of commonly
known food Is le.at liked by the
most people?
A. Buttermilk. The surveys
repeatedly ahow that. Second
on the leut liked Uat la bralns,
It's saJd, poeslbly beuuae of
availability. You see a Jot
more but~rmllk than br•lM.
Other le-.t liked Items. In
deacendln1 order. are oysters.
Ca1lruw qul1: Name a
Iara• body at water that
1ppfart rl.lbt ln Un
mlddle ot blcbwey IS
1 betwten Del Jiu and ..... °""-"-9"f'Y rain. Anawer: La••
0 lanturtcey.
euplant. turnips. clams •nd
parsnips.
How do you account for the
fact that the suicide rate
among women has gone up 4!5
percent ln the last 15 years?
Somewhere on earth, lhe
rain la falllni. always. Never.
let• up, IJY O\e weather folk.
They caJcul•te there are about
1,800 t.hWMlerttorma an hour.
Alao th.it a1t of utelllt.1
provff that 10 tlmea la many
lllhtnlnt 1torm1 Oc!cur over
land uoveraea.
High-flying drug smugglers
WASHINGTON -Major dru.c
1mu1dln1 orsanlaaUam are def.
lal\ely bl1 bu1lnt11, even
Uaoufh tbe)''rt not lt1 the
Fortune SOC> U1t of leadtn1 cor· poratlON. lo 1&78 a'Ol'le, tor ex·
ample. UUclt drue traffic In the
United Slates aen•nled an
etllmated $5' billion in retail ......
Not aurprisln1ty, the dope ped.
dler1 have aped the corporate
structure or
leg i timat e
bu alnesa
firm s . "A
structured or·
1•ni ullon.
comprised of
both Je -
1 i t\m a t e
•nd Illicit
buainesses,
enables the
tr.Crtckera to sustain losses
without having to hall all of their
operations,·• a classified Drug
Enforcement Adminis tration
study reports . The masquerade
oC respectability also makes it
tougher for law enforcement
people to separate the legal
Mailbox
from the llletcal actJvUy.
The cJualfled D£A 1tudy fave
a detailed dt1crlptlon of one
laree·acaJe marijuana •nd co.
calne smu1,Un1 operation that
waa baaed n lltinolt, Georgia
and Florida. lnUIJlgence
•ourcea told my associate Pale
Van Atta the tnrormallon was
developed on the outfit's ac-
tivities ln Lm and 1978 from
both aurvelllance and lnform-
anta.
HE,llE'S THE "t ypical
scenario" for the smugglers '
hlgh-fl yina illicit operation.
taken from the DEA report.
"The aircraft would depart
the United States, usually from
a C'ontrolled a\rport. and either
fly d irectly lo Colombia or via
o ne or severa l Carib bean
islands. The plane would land in
Colombia alter dark, where as·
sociates loaded and refu eled the
aircraft for the return to the
United Slates.
·'The group had access to
several U.S . airports and
airstrips capable or handling
l arge aircraft. Several hours
prtor to the arrival or an
aircraft. a team of group 1up·
potl personnel, ran1tn1 In
number rrom 8 to 20, would ar-
rive at the alrslrlp with multi-
wheeled vehicles, Including trac·
tor-tnllers and 2 ton dump
trucks.
"Electronic equipme nt. In-
cluding scanl)ers . air-to-ground
radios and CBs, would be used lo
monitor law enforcement activi-
ty in the area and to permit
communications between the air
and ground crews. Upon arrival
or the plane, the ground crew
would use rlas hlights to ii ·
luminate the strip
"THE PLANES us ually
landed in the early morning
hours and were offloaded by
means or a human conveyor
system: typically. a plane was
completely oCfloaded in less than
one hour The drugs were loaded
onto the large veh icle s and
transported to several storage
facilities and distribution poinls
in Miss ouri , Illino is a n d
Georgia."
The smuggling orga1117.allon's
corporate structure waa lhlt ·ot
8J'IY leJjllm•te conalomeraa . It.a varloua companiea sen • 11
frontt to buy, sell and rt ter
the vehicles and aircraft nffded.
Senior m•na1emenl set budteta
for the various activities, lnelud·
ing acquisition of remote farms,
warehouses and airports to ac-
commodate the s hipment and
storage or the dope.
''Eac h e mploy ee had a
specific job title and function.
a nd a definite place in the chain
or command," the DEA report
said The highest salaries went
as in any legitimate corpora-
tion to top executives. But
t hose employees "directly
engaged in s muggl ing ac-
tivities" also made top dollar
Pilots or the large air craft , for
exam ple DC·4s. OC-6s and
DC 7s reportedly were paid
Sl00,000 per trip. while the
ground crewi. got $10,000 apiece
per mission.
NO SALE: Ray Sena was an
employee or Rockwell lnterna
Uonal for more than 20 years. He
was fired after ht• blew the whis
lit' on m<issivc wai.le and mis
handling of government funds in
th e company's s pace shuttle
(•on tract.
Sena has brought suit for U>O
million ag<iinst tht.-company,
and reports that Hoekwell has
made him a number of interest·
mg settlement offeri.
F1r~t. he says. he was offered
$12.000. then $18.000, then $25,000
and a JOb with anothl•r t•ompany
Finally. he i.<iid . Roc kwell
t•m1si.art('l> offered him his old
JOb back, plul-1 bal'k 1>ay and re-
tmbursem<•nt for anv financial
damages he h<id 1neurrcd All he
had to do 1n return wa~ drop his
la wi.u1t
Sena r efu!>ed A Hoc kwell
:.pokc.•i.man l>&11d nobody had
bt.•l·n aulhonzed lo makl' any of
fc·r:. on the comp;my's behalf.
M 1• a n w h 1 I c.o • S e n a · i.
whii.tlc.·blowing has hue! rt-suits
Thl' "P:JC'l' conglomerate ha!'
bl·<·omc.· tht• s ubJed of three
f1•<l1•ral 1nvl'st11~allons Sena sus
p1·1·t s th11 rc>'s a connel'tion
ht•twc.•t•n lh1• 1nvest1g{Jlions an1l
the.· ('1)mp::in} 's t•fforts to ~et him
to drop lht• ..,u1t
Federal airport funds mean federal rules
To the Editor·
You und your newspaper and
others have recently printed
aeveraJ mis leading "letters to
the editor'' that claim users or
the John Wayne Airport, and not
the federaJ government, will pay
for Its expansion.
The fact is the federal govern·
ment will pay for most of it.
These letters mislead Newport
Beach citizens who are aware or
the consequences or federal con-
trol of the airport. Newport's ap·
prehension is not misplaced.
Indeed. the compro mise
worked out between the FAA
and the county already looms
ominously over us. The com·
promise was that the FAA wouJd
fund the purchase of additional
land for the airport if the county
aereed to open up the fa cility to
more airlines
THE CAB says the county's
noise •batement plan is illegaJ
and co unt y o ffi cia l s
acknowle dge the FAA will
probably be the agency challeng·
Ing the legality of county restric·
tlons.
The county pl a ns to get
federal grants for most of \he
terminal expansion and runway
expansion from the funds made
available by the Airport and
Airway Systems Development
Act of 1980. This act states
specifically that the recipients of
funds must foster competition
and prevent unfair method.a of
competition ln air transportation.
The federal government will
not fund a Caney, big terminal and
an extended. stronger runway
without enforcing airline "com·
petltton." Which means in-
creased use or lhe airport.
If the termlnal is increased
ninefold. will nine limes as
m•nY Jets take off over our
homea? Yea Is probably the
rl1ht answer. PA'l' LEWIS
._, r•fle
To the Eclltor:
I tMlleve it ta time to declare
)Hr on rape. The raplsl I• an
1r1onltt; wttb hlm b• carriea the
fire• of torment aJld destruction.
HetJ a'-W\tAl', we are the hunted.
Sm•tl chUdren or 1rown
wo.ntn, it makes no difference to
tllete deran1ed lndivlduals. l aee
no re..oo to be merctful to a ~r'°" wbO thowino mercy. Wby ibcMald UJbod)' be l\l~Ct lo the
lAcll•idual who lovft aeatb and
d•&ruelJon? &noliabJI ......
lllJ au11•tton t1 ~ 9ak•
rapltta llUlleall~ uaabfe to b\ft 1Uul ~by madlcaU;
al ........ tMlr•l•Hala. I tMI We act of Jadamnt wUI be ...,.... .. ill.
It will eliminate costly pnson
terms for the taxpayers. but will
do little, I am sorry to say. for the
victim. other than the knowledge
that this individual will never be
able to lnnict this violent crime
again.
DOUG KREMILLER
aarll ••le
To the Editor:
A recent Daily Pilot article
described Supervisor Riley as
"p iqued" because Frontier
Airlines chose to announre its In·
tenlions to buy quie ter Jets
through Supervisor Clark's offi ce
rather than his. Really. il 1sn 't
pique. it's an affront.
But everybody knows Clark is
the point man for unrestnctcd
airport growth and nights, which
endears him lo the corporate af
Cluence of the Fluors. Smith In
dustries. Irvine Company . Koll .
etc
Clark doesn't n sk a single vote
because it 1s Riley's constituency
that is being immediately raped.
Others may follow, but not
Clark's.
MORE POLITICS at the ex
pense of a misguided public w~o
made the area desirable as a
place to live. The entire Newport
8each·Cotlla Mesa area and .its
e lected officials had ootter be
mobilized to light airport ex-
pansion all the way!
Noise variances are an insult:
3-4, 8-10, how many In the next 10
years? In the process, Clark sees
the area as a glg•nlic airport with
many hotels and an airplane take-
off every 30 seconds, lt need be.
Arter all, Fluor, Smith Industries
might not slay, or would not have
come here -so they would like us
lo believe. Arter alt, Clark's
altruism in t.hls area doesn't c~t
him aslnJlevote.
Thia lsn'tprocresa beuuse It is a patchwork expedient for ,..n
airport faclltty th8t wH not sup·
posed to be. The supervisors have
mocked and mlaled the public as
to their lntenUooa over th~ years.
It ta taxpayer•' money whether It
la state, county or federal.
Relocate a re•k>nal faclllty now!
C.G.SJEGLE ..................
To the Editor:
SometJmtt, bureaucratic red
tape 11 not only truatr1Un1 -It
l 1 d an1erous. Twice e•ch day, on my w•y to
and trom the bul thal lakes m•
to work and beets. I have to pall
bJ a C9l'tain ~eel car. Thi•
ear bu.,._ par~ ln ~ 11m•
1pot for montba -to my
lrao"IMI• l\ bu never bffn mo•ed: -ll coven th• entire
spuce from 1ti. CJ\\nl'r'i, ~arage
door to the str<'t't
Thl' car. in the 2000 block or
Wallace in Costa Mesa. 1s ap·
parenUy parked legally on its
owner's private property , but 1t
forees dozens of school children.
every day. to step out into the
heavy traffi c on Victor ia lo gel
pas t It.
I CALLEO thP Police Depart·
mcnt aboul this matter . and
they asked me if the car were
parked on lh e 1 s 1dcwalk
I ron1cally. the sidrwalk stops a
f<•w feet short of this drivt•way,
and lhen resumes a f<.'w feet
further on Because of u fc>w feet
of m1 s!'l 1nl( cem e nt and a
te c hn i cality , a potent1all:.
dan~erous s 1tuatwn has d e·
veloped
I have seen that some of lhe
chi ldren are not as prudent a~
they should be when they fmd
that they have lo unexpectedly
!.lep out into the :.tref't. Is there
anythin~ that r an be done about
this"
JACQUIE SMITll
Parle ••t•'!
To the Editor·
Recent newsp1q1er photo
graphs of the severe erosion of
the graded site north of Ford
Road and between Jamboree
and MacArthur re minded me of
the Grand Canyon.
1 propose that Congressman
Robert Badham who Called to
get us a national park between
Newport and Laguna might Lry
to get this cnnyon area set aside
as a national park. It could be
named the Great Abyss National
Park.
Simultaneous ly. he might
work to inC'orporale into his na-
tional park the Upper Bay which
could be called the "Upper Bay
"I found a taJC loophole to·
my. I quit my lob.''
Meadow · Suth a name would
appl'al to lh(' no~talg1cally
minded who would remember
that al one time the meadow had
been a bay
G L de CAR DENAS
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
'Dbea•e' •preaa
To the Editor
The voters of Orange County
ha vc· witnessed delays al almost
ever y election in the lc•ngth or
lime 1t ha~ taken county govern
ment to tabulate the votes. Ap-
pu r ently. this "disease" has
spread to the offi ce of the Coun·
ly Tax Collector
In looking al my bank records.
I ftnd that the tax coll ector took
six weeks to clear my check for
the payment of my first install-
ment of taxes on Dec. 8 last
yeur, and further comPQunded
the matter by failing to clear the
check for my second lnstallment
which was mailed on Dec. 30
the check has still not cleared as
of mid-March.
IN TJUS DAY and age when
the country is facing budget
crises al all levels. I find It dlC·
flcult to believe that Orange
County is so wea1thy that It can
afford the luxury of dragglnt its
feet \n picking up money sent In
by property owners and falling
lo Invest it for the benem or the
community: and this in an era
when deposits are capable of
e arnlna \nterest income at
astronomlC'ally high interest
rales.
Perhaps thls is a matter that
should be referred to the Grand
Jury in order to determine Just
who Is re,sponalble for this alate
of altaiAl and how ru It lmptdes
lhe Clow or funds to the ex·
chequeroftheCountyofOraa••·
DAVID A. W. YOUNG
The dNlc• of lh• Counc11 Tu
Colltclor blamtd o compltt11
brtokdown /or IM del.a11 in proetu·
Ing proptrlJI l<U CMCk•
• l.1t1era /rom read'tra art wtlcOl'M.
The right to co~• lettera to /tr
1pact or elimiMtt U~l ff reatrwd.
Lefler• o/ 300 wordt or ltH will ~
f,lufn prt/IP'f'l'ICI All ,,.,,,. "'"'' ncludt tfgnat~rt and moilirlf. ad·
drfH but nam11 ma11 ~ wilMtld
oil rrquclf tf av/f icwnc rtGaorl U ap-
par u t Po.Ir~ wfll 1tof bf
publlahd. L•Ucra mo) bf
ltltpltorwd to ta..., Nomi Ofld
plloH 1111mbfr of tlw ce>tUHllWor
mt&lf ~ O'"'rt for utriftt9tlon
purpo11f.
. ~ .. -• _, • -• L W ... t... ktJ • . •
~ffiTI~
Eire aesrroys
park landmark ..........
'SAN DIEGO CAP> -A s pectacular fire
dealroyed a larie section of Ute historic Belmont
Park Roller Coaster. fire officials said.
Fire Department spokesman BUI Pitta said a
flre "of suspiclou.s origin" Tuesday damaged 10
percent Gf the landmark wooden structure and
destroyed one of the S6-year-old amusement park's
orieioaJ roller coaster cars. ·
There were no injuries, Pitts said, although
the roller coaster and surrounding are a bas
become a haven for derelicts.
atu.e• •e8 •t•te _...
SACRAMENTO CAP) -California's private
colleges are seeking more state scholarship aid to
cushion the impact of soaring costs. Potomaf! sinks
_... _ _.. ....
0ra;,o. Coat DAILY F'tl.OT/Thur'lday, March 19, 1981 H/F ~·
#.f' Wt,..,...te
Judge rulea it'' a magazine
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Na·
tional Enquirer, under attack by
Johnny Carson on television and
Carol Burnett ln court, has lost a ma-
jor legal round with a judge'is rulin1
that the publication is a ma1aune,
not a newspaper.
The ruling by Superior Court Judge
Peter Smith -who said the En·
quirer's argument "feU flat on its
face" -denied the paper any protec-
tion from damages under California
r etraction statutes.
Miss Burnett ls suing the Enquirer
for $10 mUlion over a gossip column
item she claims libeled her. A ruling
that the Enquirer was a newspaper
could have reduced its liability to as
little as $250, her attorneys said.
"I've evidently caught you by sur·
prise," SmHh told Enquirer attorney
William Masterson as he issued the
late afternoon ruling Wednesday.
paee Enquirer article staUn1 that hi.JI
third marriage was about to break
up. ''I'm golne to call the National
Enquirer and the people who wrote
this 'ltars' ," Carson said. "This is
absolutely, completely, 100 percent
falsehoods." Then he dared the En·
quirer to sue him for slander .
Masterson demanded a mistrial,
claiming Carson's attack was prej·
udiclal and damaged the Enquirer's
chance at a fair trial. The judge re·
fused.
TH E EXIT OF two jurors and
replacement of one by an alternate
lert only 11 members on the panel. A
civil case in California can be heard
by fewer than 12 j urors , and the
judge said he would press for a
verdict even if the pa nel shrank to
eight. Representatives of ----
the colleges descended NEWS
upon the Legislature
Wed~~~~~· them. Stan· BRIEFS
ford Un iver s ity Vice ----
The former presidential yacht Potomac sank at its Treasure Island
Navy dock in San Francisco Wednesday, possibly due to a puncture
from a mooring. The yacht, down in 35 feet or water. had been
seized following a marijuana raid.
"I HAVE LOOK ED at the
qualifications for a newspaper under
the statute," he said. "I'm sorry. I
don 't think it's even close."
Miss Burnett's lawyers called the
ru ling on the magazine ver s us
newspaper issue a major victory.
"I think it removes some serious
legal obstacles we no longer have to
overcome," said Paul Sanner , who
argued the issue. President Robert Rosenzweig told a news con·
ference, "We have asked only that able students
be given the chance to choose the education that is
best for them and that they not be barred from
that choice solely for financial reasons ."
DotffJI•• deH1'era ca...,. Bus end fought
He cited efforts by the Enquirer to
show its similarity to the New York
Daily News, the nat ion's largest
news paper.
"I have no problem distinguishing
the New York Daily News from the
National Enquire r ," Smitn s·aid.
''Sure, they're both tabl oids. But that
goes to form, not substance."
Masterson insisted the impact on
the case would be minimal. ··rm go·
ing to win this case anyway on the
lack of actual malice," he said.
The judge predi cted his ruling
might turn out not to be momentous
if the jury determines that the En·
quirer's retraction was not published
within the legal time limit.
LONG BEAC H <AP) -•The Air Force has
taken delivery of the first of a new type of lanker·
cargo aircraft designed to increase the global
mobility of U.S. and allied aircraft.
Teachers claim halt disruptive His ruling came onl y hours after
the trial was thrown into turmoil by
Carson's televised blast at the En·
qulrer, an attack which led to dis-
missal of two Jurors and a motion for
mistrial, which was denied.
The McDonnell Douglas KC·lO took off from
Long Beach airport with Lt. Gen. Edgar Harris,
commander of the Strategic Air Command's 8th
Air Force, at the controls, heading for Barksdale
Air Force Base in Louisiana.
'€o11ote pla"•' rejfttH
SAN FRANCISCO <AP J -A controversial
IP.Ian to use coyotes to thin the herd of deer on
i\ngel Island in San Francisco Bay bas been
*vetoed by the s late Department of Fish & Game, it
was announced today.
Informa.tion officer Joe Sheehan said the plan
• had been reJected and the department was looking
:at "other alternatives "
f "Among them are moving, which we don't
want . to do, a euthanizing and culling program,
shooting them and using steroids to hold down
reproduction,'' said Sheehan, who emphasized that
plans for the herd were in the very early stages.
.StrHce pre1'ent• ,,.,,..,.,.
SAN FRA NC ISCO CAP) Managers of San
Francisco area funeral homes say they ha~e
enough room at least for now -to store bodi~s
that can't be buried because of a strike by workers
at 11 major cemeteries
Burials were halted Wednesday when some 130
members of Cemetery Workers and Green Al·
tend ants Local 265 struck over wages and benefits.
John Cantwell, attorney for the Associated
Cemeteries, said the union rejected a last-minute
offer of a 95 cents-per·hour raise that would have
brought the daily rate to $83.60.
'1refueto
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-Teachers in the Los
Angeles Unified School
District went to court to·
day to keep the school
board from ending man·
datory busing before the
end of the school year.
But since Superior Court
Judg e Paul Egl y
withdrew from the case,
the first thing to be de·
cided was which judge
would hear the argu·
men ts.
TH E UN I TEl>
Teachers of Los Angeles
have asked for tern·
porary restraining order
against a mid-semester
halt t o busi n i:, as
planned by the school
board. The teachers said
changing the system on
April 10 would be ex·
trem ely disruptive to
the educational process.
The school board vote
to end mandatory bus·
i ng after the s t ate
Supreme Court let stand
a lower court ruling that
uphe ld the cons titu ·
tionality of the anti·
use credit cards.
Sol use th~
Citizens VIS.ft
CHECK CARD~.
Avoid the Credit Card Trap. Now you can
purchase the things you want without worry·
ing about the fees. interest charges and
mounting debts often associated with credit
cards. When you buy something whh
Check Card~ the purchase price is deducted
directly from your interest-checking
account-just as if you'd written a check.
Enjoy Vu Card Convenience. Check Card~
is accepted wherever Visa is ... nationwide
and worldwide. Which means you can
use your interest-checking
account almos1 anywh~re
even in places that don't
take checks!
Citiuns Visa
Check Card~ One
beautiful way
to use your
interest-<:hecking
account. See
your nearest
Citizens office today for details.
NEWPORT BEACH: 3300 Wut Cout H19hway ~ ~..,...., 631·9205.
'
If it 'sgot
wheels,
you'll move
It f aster in a
Daily Piiot
c tassit led '
ad.catt
642·5678 and a
friendly ad·
viser will
,
help you
turn your
wheels Into
cash.
..
busin$! amendment,
Proposition 1. and said it
applied to the Los
Angeles integration
case.
SU PER I OR Court
Presiding Judge David
Eagleson had the job of
deciding who would take
Egly's place. One name
that was mentioned was
that of Judge Leon
Savitch, who is the son·
in-law of the late Judge
Alfred Gitelson, who
first ordered desegrega-
tion in Los An geles
schools.
Attorneys for both
sides said that Savitch's
relationship to Gitelson
was not discussed in
their closed-door meet·
ing with the judges
Wednesday and neither
s ide had any objections to
Savitch's involvement.
T H E A M E RI CAN
Civil Liberties Union, a
plaintiff in the 18-year-
old case. will also ask
t hat the busing deadli ne
be extended as part of
its petition to the state
Supreme Court to re·
consider its Proposition
1 decision, an ACLU
spokesman said.
lt was not known when
the action would be
taken. he said.
THE T WO OUSTED jurors ad·
m1tted in the judge's chambers that
they had seen Carson railing against
the Enquirer on his Tuesday night
show.
THE RETRACTION statute pro.
tects newspa pers but not
magazines only if a retraction is
published promptly and with the
same prominence given the original
article
"There is a very high probability,"
the Judge said ... that the Enquirer
did not comply with the retraction
statute in a timely fashion." Carson was angry about a front·
Airport battle flares
SANTA MON ICA (AP) The battle to close
the municipal airport a target both of city coun ·
cil members who want low-income housing on the
site and those who want an industrial park or of·
rice-shopping complex heated up as airport
tenants fumed over eviction notices
.. The latest ploy is lo evict all operators. leav·
ing onJy a runway and a tower," steamed Mark
Morrow, operator of Wings West In c.
··we're supposed to cease and desist in the
operations or the airline within 30 days or they will
close down the whole fac ility." he safd. ··Wings West
carries about 2,000 people a month to Mammoth and
Bishopsk.i areas." • 1 The airline will continue to operate but '4-ill
move to Los Angeles International Airport May l ,
Morrow said , to ensure that service won't be dis·
rupted and that ils 62 employees won't be thrown
out of work.
Other tenants were told to be out by Feb. 1,
1982. Morrow said. Morrow said the city has an
agreement with the Fede ral Aviation Administra ·
lion to use the area as an airport .. at least through
the year 2000" but that the council thinks it can get
out of the agreement.
Calls to City Manager Kent McClain went un·
answered Wednesday, but Morrow said the city
manager and city attorney had advised the council
it could not break the agreement with the FAA.
and that an Independent study commissioned by
tbe cowicil bad reached the same conclusion.
Past council actions aimed at discouraging use
of the airport include a noise limit of 85 decibels.
demandS solution.
A sewer line rupt~re which poured aix million 1allona
of raw sewage lnto Newport Harbor laat week opened
some eyes as well as some DOHI.
When county sanitation ottlclals bef an explalnin• the
breakage, which occurred in front o . the Balboa Bay
Club, it became clear that the condiUon o( aome sewer
lines in Newport ls dangerously bad.
For starters, officials noted the stretch from Dover
Drive to the pumphouse in front ot the club is served by
only one sewer line. In m<M1t areas the~ are two lines -
one serving as a backup in case of a break. ·
Even more startling, though, was the revelation that
this stretch of sewer line in Newport is "about as thin as
a s heet of paper." That.'s how one sanitation boss
described the sewer pipe.
Sanitation officials agreed last week's break could be
repeated a ny day unless major work is done on the entire
pipeline. which stretches from NewPort to a treatment
plant in Huntington Beach.
As partial correction, sanitation directors decided to
bankroll a n engineering study for installing a second
sewer line betwe en Dover Drive and the Bay Club. Total
cost for the project would be around $1 .6 million.
But the cost to repair the entire Newport-Huntington
Be ach pipeline would be more than S5 million.
Sanitation officials warn that they don't have that
kind of money . They say they'll have trouble even finding
funds for the $1.6 million job.
If future sewage s pills are to be averted , somethin1
must be done and done quickly. Ther:e would be little
wis dom in putting off the work and the unavoidable
sear ch for money to pay for il.
Heights annexation
Newport Beach Councilman Paul Hummel ha! pro·
posed tha t his council colleagues s tart the process to an·
nex a t lea st a Portion of Santa Ana Heights into NewPort
Be ach.
The idea is hardly new. It should be remembered,
ho we ver. that the s ame old drawbacks to the propQsal ex·
is t.
Hummel's reasoning for annexation is that residents
in Santa Ana Heights have no representation beyond county
s upe rvisors . He claims the iss ue of airport growth has
underscored the need for Heights residents to have more
i m m edfate representation.
The Heights area is located on top of Newport Bay
and just s hort of John Wayne Airport. Half of the unin·
corporated a rea is in Newport's sphere of influence a nd
the other half falls in Costa Mesa's.
Any action toward annexation would take decision.
making on the pa rt of councilmen in both cities . Although
bo th Newport and Cos ta Mesa have made passes at an-
nexing the Heig hts area in the past. none has ever
reached the serious s tage .
Santa Ana Heights is a s emi-rural area where horses
a n d othe r a nim a ls are frequently kept. It has no
s ide walks. some fiercely independent-minded residents
and is serve d by its own water company . AH of these ele·
ments would make annexation by either city difficult.
It is also questionable that property taxes from the
a re<t would e ven come close to paying for lire and police
ser vices now s upplied by the county.
Even if these problems can be worked out. the ques-
tion re mains : Is it worth it?
Hummel s a ys Heights residents need closer represen-
tation to assis t in their airport fight. Citizens in Newport
have that representation yet have fared no better o n that
score.
School lunch costs
As NewPort-Mesa School District trustee~ J(et set to
wres tle with a 1981·82 bu~get bloated by inflation, the
price of food for thought definitely is rising.
But so is the cost or food for the stomach.
Food services officials note that the district is charg-
in5! a bout 10 cents a meal less than what it costs this
spring to serve breakfast and lunch.
Next September. they predict, things will get even
worse as President Reagan's budget ax is sharpened to
trim federal a gricultural support for school lunch pro-
grams.
Student m e als could go up 50 cents next fall . combin·
ing the current 10-cent shortage and the 40 cents expected
to be trimmed in federal and state supports.
This year. elementary schools charge 40 cents for
breakfasts and 70 cents for lunches.
MiddJe schoolers pay 50 and 75 cents. and high school
students 60 a nd 85 cents .
While the well-balanced meals still will be a sreat
deal less expens ive t han restaurant fare, the anticipated
e xtra charge to parents is reminiscent of the district's
student-paid bus plan instituted this year.
Parents who have gained tax relief from Proposition
13 and other anti·tax attitudes had better face up to the
fact tbat there's no such thing as a free lunch.
The money will just come from another pocket.
• Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pl .. t
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) S.2·4321 .
Boyd/Food tastes
ByL.M.BOYD
Q. What sort of commonly
known food Is least liked by the
most people?
A. Buttermilk. The surveya
repeatedly show that. Secoad
on the least liked list it bralnt,
it's said, possibly becHse ol
availability. You see a lot
more buttermilk thtn brains.
Other leut liked lt•m•. ln
deacendin1 order. are oy1t.en,
euplant, turnipl. clam• and
paranipe.
Q. IC tbe buck deer IOH their
antlers every 1prin1, how
come the forest floor i•'t COY·
erf(I wtUttbem? >.. ~ eat them. So
do rabllMI, mle!9, too.
U a Jury la 8cotland doela't ,,, .. , &opnmoUDC• a .,_ant
luiltr OI' llmoffnl, lt CH re-
turn a verdictot• •not provn. • •
WlaJ dlill llr. lllu•r;:: alllt"AM ..... _.N '1
Dnamn .,.. l111a·j= •
f.et,w•aidWU. •
lb•yearT
Jam Anderson
· Higll-flying drug smugglers
WASHINGTON -Matjor druf
1mu1fllnl or1aolzatlon1 are de . lnltt y bif busifteH, even
thou•b they're not In the
Fortune 500 U.t or leacllq cor·
poratlona. ln 1978 alone, for ex·
ample, llUclt drug traffic in the
United States 1enerated an
estimated S5' billion in retail
sates.
Not surprisingly. the dope ped·
dlers have aped the corporate
structure of
Je1itimate
business
Clrm s . "A
structured or·
ganizalion .
comprised of both le ·
gitimate
and ill i cit
bus iftesses.
enables the
traffickers to s ustain losses
without having to halt all of their
operations," a classified Drug
Enforcement ·Administration
study reports. The masquerade
or respectability also makes it
tougher for law enforcement
pe ople to separate the legal
'·~ ' '\1
from the llle«al aetJvJt.v.
The elusirled DEA 1tudy 11ve
a dettlled description of one
lar1e·1cale marijuana and co-
calne smug,Unc operation that was based n IJlinols, Georgia
and Florida . lntelli&ence
sources told my associate Dale
Van Atta the Information was
developed on the outfit's ac·
tlvlUes In 1977 and 1978 from
both surveillance und inform·
ants.
HEllE'S T H E "'typi c al
scenario" for the smugglers'
high-flying illicit oper at ion.
taken from the DEA report.
"The aircraft would depart
the United States. usually from
a controUed airport, and either
fly diredly to Colombia or via
o ne of seve ral Cari bbean
islands. The plane would land in
Colombia after dark, where as·
sociates loaded a nd refu eled the
aircraft for the return to the
United States.
·'T he group had access to
s everal U.S . ai r po rts and
airstrips c apable of handling
large aircraft. Sever al hours
prlor to the arrlval of an
aircraft. a Learn of rroup sup·
port personne l . ran1tng in
number Crom 8 to 20, would ~
rive at the airstrip with muJU·
wheeled vehicles, including trac·
tor-trailers and 2 ton dump
trucks.
··Electronic equipment, in
eluding scanners. air-to·ground
radios and CBs, would be used to
monitor law enforcem ent activ1·
ty in the area and to permit
communications between the air
and ground crews. Upon arrival
or the plane, the ground crew
would use fl ashlights t o ii
luminate the strip.
"TH E PLA NES us ually
landed in the early morning
hours and were offl oaded by
means or a human conveyor
syste m: typi cally, a plane was
completely offloaded in less than
one hour. The drugs were loaded
onto the la rge vehicles and
transported lo several storage
facilities and distribution point:.
i n Missour i , fllin o1s and
Georgia:·
The smul(J{ling organization's
'~ CcME -rnE MmcAL txMS ARE ALWAYS !Hf. L.4ST ro K~? 1
Mailbox
corporate structure was U'l•t of
any teciUmate con1lomera~. Its
various companJes served as
Iron ta to buy, sell and re,S.ster
t~e vehicles and aircraft n*ed·
Senior management set b"dget.s
for the various activities, lnclud·
1ng acqwsitlon of remote farms.
warehouses and airports to ac·
commodate the shipment and
storage of the dope.
"Each e mployee had a
specific job title and function,
and a definite place in the chain
o( command," the DEA report
said . The highest salaries went
. as in any legitimate corpora-
tion to top executives. But
those employees · 'dire<.'tly
en ga ged in s muggling at'·
tivities"" also made top dollar
Pilots of the large aircraft, for
example OC·4s, DC-6s and
DC-7s reportedly were paid
$1 00,000 per trip, while the
ground crews got SI0.000 apiece per mission ·
~O SALE: Ray Sena was an
t>rnployee or Rockwell lnterna
tional for more than 20 years He
was fired afl er he blew the whls
lie on massive waste and mis·
handling of government fund s 1n
the company's space shuttle
contract.
Sena has brought suit fo r $300
milhon against the company,
and reports that Rock well has
made him a number or tnteresl
ing settlement offers
First, he says, he was offered
$12,000. then $18,000, then ru.ooo
and a job with another company
F in a lly. he said. Rockwe ll
em issaries offerl'd him his old
job back. plus back pay and re
imbursement for an} fin ancial
damages h(• had incurred All he
had to do in return was drop his
lawsuit
Sena refused A Rockwell
spokesma n said nobody had
be<:n authorized to make any or
fcrs on the company's beha)(
M ea nwhil e. Se na 's
wh1stleblo~ ing has h<1d results
The spat·e con~l o m erate has
be<"ome the subject or thre('
rt.·deral inV<'Stigat1ons Sena SUS
peels lher e"s a connection
hetween the· investigations and
the rompany·s efforts to gel him
lo drop the '\u1t
Federal airport funds mean federal rules
To the Editor :
You and your newspaper and
others have recently printed
several misleading "letters to
the editor" that claim users or
t he John Wayne Airport. and not
the federal government, will pay
for its expansion.
The fact is the federal govern·
menl will pay for most of it.
These letters mislead Newport
Beach citizens who are aware of
the consequences or federal con·
trol of lhe airport. Newport's ap·
prehension is not misplaced.
Indeed, the comprom is e
worked out between the FAA
and the count y a lready looms
ominously over us . The com·
promise was that the FAA would
fund the purchase or additional
land for the airport if the county
agreed lo open up the facility Lo
more airlines.
THE CAB says the county's
noise abatement plan is illegal
and co unt y o ff ic ials
acknowle dge the FAA will
probably be the agency challeng·
Ing the legality of county r estric·
lions.
The co unty plans to get
(ederaJ grants for most or the
terminal expansion and runway
expansion from the funds made
available by the Airport and
Airway Systems Development
Act of 1980. This act states
specifically that the recipients of
funds must roster competition
and prevent unfair methods of
competition in air transportation.
The federal government will
not fund a fancy, big terminal and
an extended, stronger runway
wtU\out enforcing airline "com·
petition." Which means in·
creased use of the airport.
If Ute terminal is increased
ninefold, will nine limes as
many Jets take off over our
homes? Yes is probably the
right answer.
PAT LEWIS
•••-••rrt•1 '
To the Editor:
Re1ardln& your edltori&J en·
Utled "Honeymoon Over," I
belltve It could have been more
aptly called, "Shot1un Mar·
rlaae."
Ttte Koll and Jrvlne Com·
pant .. tftClneered U\e wedd.ln1
lty •MMlnl over $12,000 on a
public reladona campal1n which
... to tt that UM CltlHM of
Newport 8Hcb perutved of
theit thin City CouocU aa quar·
rtlln1, do-nothlnp.
YCMI tomeboW Hem to IHI
that rw ean equat. callDMll
u4 .-..MJ .... effffU•• and ~--"~'· .. .,. ,. ..... '°" "8t, lt ..........
tM ·~·· ti•• al Ute
previous council . at the r('(1uest
o f SPON . th a t t he s um of
$250,000 was put aside as a war
chest to fight the airport battle.
The former council was able lo
allocate such s ums because it
had maintained th e c ity"s
strength financially
AS I RECALL, also at that
time. newspapers were blasting
the City Council ror involving
the city in too much litigation
I two Koll laws uits. a nd two
others.) Nowhere do I read in
your newspaper or the 10-plus
lawsuits that the city is present
ly involved in, nor the more
than $100,000 !pent to pursue
them D~s this difference in
your treatment Of lhe two COUn·
cits s uggest that once again
someone is mounting a public
relations campaign to plant
negativ e ideas in the minds of
the voters looking forward to
1982?
, Perhaps it Is time lo look at
the real issues. yet that too
see ms impossible when you im·
ply tha t there is somehow
something wrong with SPUN <or
any other group> c riticizing
council policies. or taking out
ads to present their beliefs in the
public press. We thought hear·
ing both sides of the issue is
what a democracy is all about!
I would like to add , that
although many times we would
have liked to. SPON ha! never
personalized a n issue, and your
implication that we have. is in·
correct.
Maybe the honeymoon is over
because marriages between big,
out-of-town development in·
terests and home town people
seldom work.
BOBBY LOVELL
Vice President, SPON
T,....e••tnt1
To the Editor:
Wh y la Corona del Mar so lit·
lered with broken bottles, candy
wrappers, paper cups, etc.? It's
only mict·March ! We don't
usually see this much trash until
1ummer lime. People aro reatly
1tartln1 early this year. Are we
In a race~ 11 there a trash con·
test 1otng °" U\is year? Small
cllle• va. lar1• c,ltJet?
Runnera, walkers, bikers,
etrollera, drlYert a re all
th reatened by the quantity of
broken f:;: on loeaJ atreet.s. Our olfJ wt.ndl blow truh
acrou our yards, our alleys are
real clump altel.
t he allt-y? Wi th on e day
··service .. the trash left behind
for residents Lo n'-can 1s start
ling
21 I suggest more public lrcish
cans or more trash pick ups,
which ever is least expensive,
alo ng both s ides of Coas t
Highway. At 11 a .m. today the
one receptacle at the corner of
E as t Coast Hi g hway and
Margurite was over -filled. I
know l"m not the only one who is
aggravated by this proble m .
ANN DUNCAN
O.rlc ••I•
To the Editor·
A recent Daily Pilot article
described Supervisor Riley as
·"piqued '' becaus e Frontier
Airlines chose lo announce its in
tentions to buy quiet er jets
through Supervisor Clark ·s office
rather than his. Reall y. it isn"t
pique, it's an affront
But everybody knows Clark is
the point man for unrestricted
airport growth and fli ghts. whic h
endears him to the corporate af·
fluence of the Fluors, Smith In·
dustries. Irvine Company. Koll,
etc.
Clark doesn't risk a single vote
because it is Riley's constituency
that is being immed iately raped.
Others may follow. but not
Clark's.
MORE POLITICS al the ex·
pense or a misguided public who
made the a rea desirable as a
place to live. The entire Newport
Beach-Costa Mesa area and its
elected officials had better be
mobilized to fight airport ex·
pans ion all the way!
Noise, variances are an insult:
3-.t, 8-10, how many in the next 10
years? Jn the process. Clark sees
the area as a gigantic airport with
many hotels and an airplane take·
off every 30 seconds, if need be.
After all, Fluor, Smith Industries
mieht not stay, or would not have
come here-so they would like u.s
to believe. After all. Clark's
altruism in this area doesn't coet
him asinglevote.
This isn't progress because it la
a patchwork expedient tor an
airport facility that was not sup·
posed to be. The supervisonr have
mocked and misled the pubUc u
to their Intentions over the yean.
It ta tnpayera' money whether It
la state. county or federal.
Reloc•te• reclonal faeiUt1 nowt
<:.G.SIEGLE
• . ......... ,, .....
To tbe Editor:
Tbt voten of Oraqe ·County
have "fttnetHd delays al almott
•vft'J eltctloo In tbe lfDltb ot
Um• Jt bas taken count;y •oven.
•'
me nt lo tabulate the votes Ap·
parenlly. this '"disease'" has
spread lo the offi ce of the Coun
t y Tax Collector.
Jn looking at my bank records,
I find that the tax collector took
six weeks to clear my check for
the payment or my first install-
ment of taxes on Dec. 8 last
year. and further compounded
the matter by failing to clear the
check for my second installment
which was mailed on Dee. 30
the check has still not cleared as
of mid-March.
IN THJS DAV and age wh en
the country is facing budget
cr ises at all levels. I find It dif
fi cult to believe that Orange
County is so wealthy that it can
affo rd the luxury of dragging its
feet in picking up money sent in
by property owners and failing
to in vest it for the benefit of the
community: and this in an era
when depos its are capable of
earning interest income at
astronomically high interest
rates.
Perhaps this is a matter that
should be referred to the Grpnd
Jury in order to determine Just
who is responsible for this state
of affairs and how far it impedes
the flow of funds to the ex·
chequerorthe County of Orange.
OAVlD A. W. YOUNG
The office of the County To.r
Collector blamed a compJter
breakdown for the delay in protH!·
fng property to.r check.s.
P•rlc•l•e1
To the Editor:
EdUor
Recent newspaper photo·
graphs of the severe erosiod of
the graded site north of Ford
Road and between Jamboree
and MacArthur reminded m.e or
the Grand Canyon.
1 propose that Congressman
Robert Badham who failed to
get us a national park between
Newport and Laguna might try
to get thJs canyon area set aalde
as a national park. It could be
named the Great Abyss NaUonal
Park.
Simultaneously. he ml•ht
work to incorporate into hit na·
tional park the Upper Bay wlltth
could be called the "Uppet b~
Meadow." Such • name WGUid
appeal to the no1tal1tcally
minded who would remen\ber
that at one Ume the m•ado• had
been a bay.
G.L. de CAR DENAS
Clo1lng IH.51
for the deaf
fTIW .., the fourth of a nine-part ienea o" llow to save
money on your IMO mcome tar.J
Favorable tax news was issued by the IRS ror
deaf persons in 1980 ln the form or a ruling on the cost
of apeclat equipment enabling the deaf to understand
the audio part of TV programs.
Thi.s equipment displays the audio portion as sub·
titles oo the screen of the TV set. The equipment
comes in two forms. One is a self·contalned unit that
can be attached
to any conven·
tional color TV
set. The other is
a conventional
color TV set in·
to which the
s pecial equip-
ment i s in ·
S-Yl-Vl-1 P-0-RT-IR-~ .
corporated when the set is manufactured and which
costs more than the saml! model without the special
equipment.
The IRS ruled that qualifying as deductible
medical expenses are: (1 ) the cost of the self·
contained unit; and 12> the amopnl by which the cost
of the speciaJly equipped color TV set exceeds the
cost of the same model conventional color TV set.
Another fa vorable IRS ruling came in the form of
a 1980 IRS private letter dealing with a woman who
had beeome dependent on prescription drugs and
medicati()n. She entered a detox.iflcation program
which required a hospital stay followed by a self·help
home program. During the second phase of the pro-
gram. there were to be weekly counseling sessions
with the program's psychologist.
BECAUSE OF THE considerable distance
between the woman's home and the psychologist's of·
fice, the psychologist recommended that the woman
phone each week for the counseling session. The
woman's husband asked lRS whether the long dis·
lance phone charges for the counseling sessions
qualified as deductible medical expenses.
IRS answered that they were deductible medical
expenses because "it appears that the long.distance
telephone calls made by your wife to t)er psychologist
for counseling are for the purpose of alleviating and
treating her lllness."
Tip! Each of the individual cases a nd rulings in
this column may be applied in a relatively wide
ran ge of your real-life experiences If you on your
own cannot see a connection or direc t application.
ask for an informed professional opinion. ll is in
these wider applications that your hidden tax savings
may lie.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
Ttu co Inc
Cltl(Otp ,.,I C"Nlr1 Sonr ("orp
Sci.Au , Sclllilr Rrw Fl~lw Ent
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Uo 't Uo • S Up 91
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M••k• so -· 1 2 lroy 0( • ~J.oe, 11'1 tllafltH.
A•1•r1at1 100 (fOWn, • ..,, lroy ••·· i-.oo, 1100.00.
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GllCan Cl • 157 100 "'' '"" e ..... ,..,. 133 600 1 MU'I·~ 'I 10 .. 100 IJ•~ •
Warnr<orr w1 •• soo IJ • • U,,hrl>tvC\ < 8'I S00 ~"' • I l!rftd Nall 87.600 101 ... 1-'tll"'~lo I 13 100 3 ~rffllf J. 119 OC)O JOI
METALS
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GOLD QUOTATIONS
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SYMBOLS
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