HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-03-26 - Orange Coast Pilot\
THUHSDAY MAHC H .'•• 1'JH1 OHANC,f ( OlJN I Y l Al I~ lJH N tl\ ~5 CENTS
"l'LL llE there wJth my sbovel ud .buekel.'' Ntl
Mrs. Heather, "takinC tbe meuaaeto Ule_peopte:•
The limmict, whlcb tbe mayor predietl lbeWd draw
40 or so leUow allt scoopers, la dfti.-ct to help the dty
raise money for a bay cleanup prOjeet.
Newport Beach bas been etven two ween to com• "P
wltb $446,000 in caah or risk l<>einl ,nearly $1.$ million in state
money needed for the cleanup proj~t, •
MAYOR HEATJU;a says she plans to start ratsin1 the
$«6,000 the bard way -selling bucket& of tenuJM Upper
Newport Bay sill at $5 each.
Sbe admits the 11 a .m . siltatbon likely wlU draw more
gawkerstbanharddollars. Buttt•uatart,abesays.
Mayor Ht!ather says she's after lartertbh too.
She convinced her council coU~ this week to al·
locate $148.000 in city money toward tbe needed S-S,000.
2 nabbed in kickback
Feds snare suspects in Newport
By GLENN SCOTT
Ol 1111 OM tr ~ .... Sutt
, Newport Beach businessman
Jack Torre's refusal to pay
kickbacks for a multi-million
dollar account led FBI agents to
arrest two out-of.state men out·
side Torre's construction office,
according to FBI officials.
Torre worked with FBI agents
as they set up a clandestine
video-taping Wednesday of Torre
offering the two men $10,000 in
cash as kickbacks, according lo
the FBI.
Immediately after that. agents
arrested Harold Russell of
Scottsdale, Ariz .• and Jerry
Petersen of Denver Colo .• on sus-
picion of one count or conspiracy
and three counts of wire, or
telephone, fraud.
The two men were arraigned
late Wednesday at the Tustin law
office of U.S. Magistrate Ronald
Rose. They were booked into
Orange County Jail and then re·
leased on their own recognizance.
Petersen is president and
Russell vice president of Mexican
Foods of America Inc .. which was
acquired two years a10 as a sub·
sidiaryofGeneral Foods Corp.
According to documents filed
with the federal court, the two
men had approached Torre and
his vice president, Gerald Crum,
offering contracts for construe·
lion of up to 50 GuadalaHarry's
restaurants during the next five
years if lhe construction firm
would kick back about $50,000 for
eacbjob.
Russell al one point told Crum:
"It can be done. !Torre Construc-
tion Company> will be making a
lot of money, possibly $10 to $12
millionperyear,'' accordingtoan
affidavit from FBI agent Drew
Maconachy.
But Torre and Crum, who had
helped build a restaurant in 1978
•
for the two men, refused the deal
and instead worked with the FBI
lo gather evidence against the two
men, according to FBI sources.
The GuadalaHarry's chain is
owned by Mexican Foods of
America. Russell and Petersen
were planning to solicit 3th to 5
percent more than needed from
parent General Foods to finance
the kickbacks, according lo the
FBI affidavits.
General Foods Senior Vice
President and General Counsel
Peter OeLuca released a short
statement Wednesday saying the
corporation was cooperating in
the investigation.
Russell and Petersen became
part of the corporation when their
restaurant busi n ess was
purchased two years ago for what
sources said was "several million
dollars "
Torre, whose construction busi-
ness Is at 1101 Dove St. in Newport
Beach, said late Wednesday he
has been instructed by authorities
not to discuss the case pending a
trial. A hearing for the two SUS·
peels is scheduled for April 20 in
U .S District Court in Los
An~eles.
DA clears mother
in death of kids
LOS ANGELES <AP> A
woman arrested after her two
young ch.ildren died in a house
Cire has been cleared in their
deaths by the district attorney's
office even though she recently
had taken out an insurance
policy on the children.
District Attorney John Van De
Kamp said Wednesday that no
charges will be filed against
J eannette Williams. 21 .
Car rammed on freeway
• unt1ngton nurse slai:n
Oeeaaslde teen
Bal Isle
~ld • in
A brown-haired 13-year-old
toy. who told Newport Beach
police this week that he had no
memory of his past. reportedly
was kidnapped more than a year
ago after running away from his
Oceanside foster home.
Police, who s p otted the
youngster wandering down
Newport Boulevard Tuesday
evening, have arrested 53-year·
old Balboa Island res ident
Leonard Gagliard on kidnap
charges.
Investigators claim G agliard,
who also uses the name Jack
Randal. nabbed the young boy
more than a year ago and had
kept the boy concealed.
Police claim the boy, who uses
the name Jason. and the 53-year·
old man have lived in various
apartments and motel rooms in
Newport, Huntington Beach and
Garden Grove during the past
year.
The boy's real name has not
been released. But police claim
they have tracked down the
5 indicted
FRESNO <AP> Five men
were indicted by a federal grand
jury here for aUegedly embez-
s llng sensitive military equip-
ment from the China Lake Naval
Weapons Center.
111111 CIAIT lllTHIR
West to northwest winds
20 to 30 mph otherwise
fair. Lows toni1ht 50 at
beaches, 55 inland. Highs
Friday 64 along coast, es
Inland.
t•llTIDAY
Jart Sl~ u known
/tfl' lwr f~ charm•, bid *'• auo a cop gol/n. s.-,,. cJ.
11111
kidnap
youth's father, who lives in San
Diego but no longer has custody
ofthe boy.
The boy is being lodged in
Albert Sitton home in Orange
County.
Remains
may be those
of NB man
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ille o.ltr ~l .. l Sufi
Tests were being conducted lo·
day on the charred remains of a
man believed from Newport
Beach after his small plane
slammed into a rugged ridge in
heavy rain in Santa Barbara
County and exploded in a ball of fire. ·
The 11 : 30 a . m . c ras h on
Buckhorn Ridge Wednesday was
witnessed by a U.S. Forestry
Service ranger and rescuers Im·
mediately set out for the site.
finding plane and pilot con·
sumed by the blaze.
He was tentatively identified by
authorities as self-employed busi·
ness executive Robert C. Coals,
60. Mn. Joan Coats said today she
has no doubt it was her husband
who perished.
"They found his business cards
at the scene," said Mrs . Coats,
who noted her husband new that
route from John Wayne Airport to
Oakland on a business trip at lea.st
once a week.
"There's no doubt it was him,"
she added.
· Thecouplehadlivedil)Newport
Beach for eight yean and their
current address is 2A Encore Cir·
cle in the Newport Crest con·
dominiums ov"'erlooldn1 Weit
Newport. l
She said slie and her bUlband
own J .C.£oterpriHI, a ftrm that
diatribut.el plutlc cupa.
Their com.puJ-owaed Ceuna
340 went don about 10 Dill•
IOUlbeut ol m,b1'aJ 1• and
el1bt mllet IOU&b ot Poso Junetlon
in San 1Adl Obispo County.
Contact wttb a Dpt plane Oylq
ln U.ttaru wul01tJustabouttM
Ume the raqer from' PIM C.
DJ08 9tadoa wttwlfd tbe e1'8lfa
into tbe nqe, Loe .U,el• a.
tematblal Altportoftlda.lalMd;
POl"elt.lenke penoanel llllid a
Santa Barbara c.c.u.tJ ...ura Offtn necue tum reaeW *' ~ .... 4S mblm. after ...
crult. audlorttiel•ald. · TbeJ reported W9atber ln t.M
(9" PLANE, Pase Al> .
0 .. lr "11 .. SI.ii P'llOIO llr LH P'aYflt
Internal combustion
A Costa Mesa fireman douses fire in a
Norco Delivery of Anaheim van Wednes-
day after driver Kip Damrow of Los
Angeles s melled s moke and bailed out at
the corner of 19th Street and Harbor
Boulevard. The blaze started at about 3
p.m . near a leaky carburetor and spread to
the interior, firemen said. Damage costs
were estimated at $3,000.
Convicted rapist
• nearing recapture
By DAVID KUTZMANN
OI -. o.llr ~lle4 Steff
Orange County Sheriff's
Department investigators said to-
day they are close to recapturing
a Los Aneeles teen·ager convict-
ed of rape in a violent south county
crime spree who was mistakenly released from a Los Angeles jail
cell earlier this months because of
a clerical error.
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hatt said of·
flcen believed they knew where
Darryl Bernard Watt.s, 17, was
hldln1 and had been keeplne an
out·of ·State home under sur-
veillance alnce Wednesday nipt.
Hart said that Walts w~ er·
roneously freed from tbe Los
An1etes CQunty Jail on M~ 8,
after •ervinl a ·14l·day eentenee
thereon unrelated cbar1es.
Watt.I wu releued, be aald,
Padent improvee
STANFORD (AP) -Mary
Golt.Ike baa re1um.t breatblq
oe II• own and appean to be
onrcocn.iq Mr bOdt!a atwmpU
to reject ber trantpluted burt
and lun11, Stanford Medical
Center reported Wednuday.
• ,
because Orange County sheriff's
officials did not send the proper
paperwork indicating he was to be
held for incarceration in state
prison.
"We dropped the ball." the
sberi!rs lieutenant said. "It was
our responsibility to have the
paperwork there."
Watts and two companions,
Michael Simmons, 18, and Ben-
jamin Montaomery, 18, were con-
victed in Orange County Superior
Court in September on mull.lple
felony counts, including rape,
robbery. burglary, false lm·
prlaonmeot and auto theft.
The charges involved a March,
1880, crime spree In south Oran1e
County that included the rape ol a
H ·year-old El Toro girl in her
parenU' home.
Judie Kenneth E. Lae sen·
tenced Mont1omery and Sim·
mona to"27yeanln1tate prlaon.
Watta, althouah a minor, waa
pven a JS.year state prtaon tMm.
Tbtl'e w• a poulblllty be could
han been Hftl to the California
Y ouU. Authority but proMCUtor
Dave Carter offered eYldence
that Walla bad aodomlaed a <See SPaEE, Pait Al)
•
Mechanic kills
self because
of crash?
TULSA. Okla. <AP> -An
American Airlines mechanic who
apparently blamed himself for
the 1979 crash in Chicago of a
DC-10 Jetµner, which killed 273
people. took bis own life, in·
vestigators here said.
But airline officials said Wed-
nesday the man bad not bad any
contact with the crashed aircraft.
Earl Russell Marshall. 47, a
supervisor at American's main·
tenance facility here, attached a
hose to the exbauat of bls vehicle
and to a ut1Uty room of his house
where his body wu found
Wednesday, Wa1oner County
Sheriff Clyde Watkins said.
Marshall waa one of nearly 150
American employees notified by
McDopnell Dou1las Corp. at·
torneya that they would be ull:ed
for depotltlons concemln1 the
craab, 11td Art Jackson,
Amertean1pok .. man in Dallu.
Jacbon aaJd he wu "really
dumbfounded" by reports
Manball blemed himaell ln eon.
nectlon wtth the cruh.
"I've been involved ln UM ac·
Uoo ·~ the da1 t.b• crash hap. pened. That name never ap·
<&te DC·lt, Pace Al)
&
Public's
help
sought
By PHIL SNEIDER MAN
Of -OMly ,. ... Sufi I ___ ... .
Long Beach police are ~mg
the pubuc·s help in solving the
grisly execution-style murder of
a Huntington Beach nurse whose
body was found near a San
Diego Freeway off-ramp.
Long Beach police officer
Fred Millemann sald in·
vestigators believe 11 Suk Choi ,
34, was rammed by another
vehicle while driving home
Tuesday night from St. Francis
Medical Center in Lynwood,
where she worked.
He said detectives believe the
woman was forced out of her
auto. taken to the next exit and
compelled to lie on the pave·
ment. where s he was s hot
several times in the head
Millemann said poli ce are
looking for witnesses who may
have seen Mrs. Choi's red Audi
struck alon~ the southbound
transition road from the Long
Beach Freeway to the south·
bound San Diego Freeway at
about 11 p.m. Tuesday.
He said people with informa·
lion on the incident should con·
tact Long Beach detectives at '
1213) 590-7244.
Ac cording t o Millemann.
California Highway Patrol of·
ficers res ponded to an 11 : 15 p.m.
accident report and found Mrs. ,
Choi's Audi abandoned on the
transition road with fresh
. <See SLAIN, Page A%)
Tar, feai~r I
I
I
attack· cited I
I
MOULTON, Ala. <AP>
Two sisters have been
charged In connection
with the tarring and I
feathering of a woman
who plaMed to marry the
ex-husband of one of them.
M arlta McElwey, 53, of
Vinemont, and Robbie
Jean McCorkle, 49, of
Town Creek, were held un-
d er $15,500 bonds on
charge. of bur1lary, kid·
nappin1 and assatdt, said
Lawrence County Sheriff
Gradri Rose. · Po ice Hid £llubeth
Jameson, 40, of Green
Valley, Arla., told tb•m
ahe wu tarred and ,,
feathered by the women
after they forced tbelr I
way at runpolnt leto U.e
Town Creek home ol Kn.
McElwey'a ex·huaband,
Dr. Jobn ll~••J, •ho
waa natal ho e . .•
-"
I '
(
Clymore due
,.
deport hearing
BJ JOHN NEEDHAM
0111110•11• ......... ..
Fr~ Pald1tan1 bJjack hoetqe
· ·Crai1 Clymore of Oranae County
• will face a deportaUon hearin1 ln ~. Damascus, Syria, within the next
few weeb, accordint to one of his
• two attorneys, Harold Davidson
: , of Newport Beach. ,
··r-------------
S E C p robe s
· options buy
LOS ANGELES <AP) -
The Securities and Ex-
c hange Commission is
pro bing a substantial
purchase of Kennecott
Corp. options through a
Beverly Hills office of
Merrill Lynch, Pierce.
Fenner &: Smith Inc., the
Los Angeles Times report·
ed today.
The SEC is investigating
possible illegal insider
trading of Kennecott op·
lions prior to a $1 77 ·
billion bid for Kennecott
by Standard Oil Co. <Ohio)
two weeks ago.
Merrill Lynch is the na·
lion's largest brokerage
firm.
A s ubstantial purchase
of Kennecott options by
two Los Angeles brothers
also is being probed by the
SEC.
F ..... r .,,eAJ
SPREE ...
cellmate at Orange Coun ty Jail
the night before his sentencing
After his proceedings In Orange
County ended. Watts was sent to
Los Angeles to face unrelated
weapons charges pending against
him there.
On December 17, he was given
the 14l·day s entence in Los
Angeles County J all.
After completing that term, he
eventually should have been re·
turned to the men's prison at
Chino to begin serving his state
prison sentence.
Libel sui t
may produce
hung jury
LOS ANGELES (AP ) The
judge in Carol Burnett's libel
suit against the National En·
quirer has decided to let the
jurors deliberate one more day
today, then he'll bring up the
possibility of a hung jury, the
tabloid's lawyer says.
Superior Court Judge Peter
Smith summoned lawyers for
both sides to his c hambers
Wednesday as the 11 jurors spent
a second full day deliberating.
William Masterson, who ls de·
fending the Enquirer. said the
prin c ipals discussed the
possibility of a deadlock. He said
th~ judge was inclined to let the
jorors deliberate again today.
then qestion them on their prog·
ress. I( they have not reached a
verdict by late in the day.
The jurors are trying to de·
termine whether Miss Burnett
was defamed by a 1976 gossip
column item ·accusing her of
boisterous behavior at a
Washington restaurant. The En·
qulrer fater retracted the Item
as false.
Student dead
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
Nigerian student has been found
dead nearly 20 hours after she re·
Porledly was attacked by a knife·
wielding man, and police and
nearby residents are exchan1ln1
blame for the late discovery.
Gloria Aina, 34, who was studyln1
television production at the
Loyola·Marymount University
graduate school of communica·
tion, was found in her Hollywood
apartment by police Tuesday
nlgbt.
Clymore. who 11 wanted In tbe
United States oo drul 1mu"11D1
cher1t1, wu visited by b1I OllMr
attorney. Ronald Kreber of
La1una Beach, In bJ1 Damuc•
JaU cell Tuesday, Davldaonaald.
Davld.aon said Krebtr bad
telepboned him from Damucua
and 1aJd .he had retained a local
attorney for their client.
"Ron aald It wH hi• un-
deratand.lni that Clymore would
be held unt1J there ii a Jleartn1 ot
the bar uaoclatlon ln Damucu.a
to decide whether he sboul~ be de·
portedornot,'' Davidson said.
Clymore, 2', a former Lake
Forest resident, was arrested by
Syrian authorities Saturday and
ls In jaJJ pending efforts to return
him totheU.S. toanswerthedru1
smuggling char1es, U.S. Em·
bassy officials say.
Kreber said Clymore has not
been charged with any crime In
Syria.
Clymore was one of the more
than 100 hostages aboard a
Pakistani jet that was hijacked
March 2 on a flight from Karachi
to Peshawar.
He was accused in the grand
jury indictment of being the
ringleader of a $12 million hashbh
and heroin smuggling operation.
Clymore's passport was re·
voked and he was issued one.way
travel papers to the United States.
However, the Laguna Beach
High School graduate remained
in Damascus while Kreber at·
tempted to have the drug smug.
gling charges dismissed. Syria
and the United States have no
extradition t reaty.
According to his attorneys,
Clymore has refused to sign a
waiver of surrender that would al·
low him to be taken into custody
by U.S. law enfor cement
authorities.
In earlier statements. Kreber
said the "battleground" for air·
ing of the charges against his
client would be in Syria.
However. upon Clymore's ar·
rest Saturday. Krebe r said
"thi.ngs are getting out of hand,"
adding that for his own safety, his
client shouJd return to the United
States.
Clymore, whose parents,
Thelma and Glen Clymore, live in
San Juan Capistrano, had aareed
to sign a waiver for bis extradi·
lion, according to Kreber, and.
was only waiting for his at·
torney's arrival in Damascus to
do so.
In a phone call from Damaacu.
Wednesday, Davidson said
Kreber told him the U.S. State
Department had contacted In·
terpol, the international police
agency. in an effort to gain
Clymore's release from jail and
expedite his return to the United
Stales.
"My understanding from talk·
ing to Ron (Kreber> is that
Cly more is willing to return to the
United States and face the
charges against him," Davidson
said.
Anaheim man
$274,000
slot winner
LAS VEGAS <AP > -An
Anaheim man is $274,000 richer
after spending about 15 minutes
pumping dollars into a slot
machine at the Flamingo HUton
hotel.
Alan Flink, 43, a public rela·
lions consultant, said he had put
about $40 into the machine
Wednesday when he lined up five
7s on the bottom line for the big
win. "I often come to Las Vegas
and take a shot at the brass ring,
but I never expected this,·· said
Flink, who was in Las Vegas on
business.
Hotel spokesman Paul Burt
said Flink's jackpot brought to
$2.3 million the amount paid lo
eight "Pot of Gold" winners al
the Flamingo and Laa Vegas
Hiltons in the past two months.
He said the two Hilton hoteb
have paid out nearly $7.l million
to 33 ·'Pol of Gold'' winners
since the machines were In·
stalled three years a•9·
ORANGE COAIT Dilly Piiat CIHllfted 9CIMftlelnt 7141142·1171
All othef d9Pe""*"9 142-4121
. . .
I , . .
"
&
Brit••" double agents
A.mong Britons ~uspected of Soviet es·
ptonage actlvittes, after information
brought to light this week, are (from left),
Anthony Blunt, Queen Elizabeth's art hi~-
torian; Sir Roger Hollis, now dead ; Guy
Burgess, who defected in 1951 and fied to
Moscow, and Harold "Kim" Philby who
had worked closely with U.S. intelligence.
Talks postponed;
Polish strike set
WARSAW, Poland (AP> -
The Polish government
postponed talks today aimed at
averting nationwide strikes, and
Solidarity union leaders said a
four·hour warning s trike would
go ahead as planned Friday.
The union-government con·
frontation caused a crisis at·
mosphere in Poland.
Panicky food shoppers formed
the biggest lines in memory as
they tried to prepare for a four·
hour warning strike Friday and
a general strike Tuesday that
the government said could only
be averted if Solidarity officials
compromised and curbed their
lust for "holy war."
The lines outside Warsaw food
shops snaked for blocks . Signs In
liquor store windows said no
spirits, wine and beer would be
sold for the fourth consecutive
day so that the already ex·
plosive atmosphere sur rounding
the unio n .government talks
would not be further charged.
After 90 minutes of in ·
conc lusive talks Wednesday
with Solidarity leader Lech
Walesa, the 1overnment's chief
Boy abdueted
negotiator, Deputy Premier
Miecyslaw Rakowski said ele·
ments of the union want "holy
war," and that "without com.
promise we shall sink into chaos
o r even perhaps fratricidal
fighting."
He said union agitation may
"open a new, this time really
tragic period in the history of
postwar Poland," apparently a
veiled warning that Soviet.fed
Warsaw Pact forces maneuvers
might have to step in to end nine
months of sporadic labor
turmoil.
Solidarity wanL'I the govern·
ment to fire officials responsible
for the police beating of union
activists In Byd~oszcz last
Thursday. One of the officials
quit today and was replaced by
a general, but Solidarity wants
at least three more people dis
missed, and is demanding other
concessions
Solidarity's angry response to
the reported police brutality
plunged Poland into its worst
crisis since the nationwide strike
wave last s ummer
Man questioned
Atlanta killings • ID
BEACON , N.Y. <AP > A
New York City man arrested in
tht alleged abduction of a 9·
year-old boy wilJ be questioned
by FBI agents about the killings
of 20 black youths in AUanta,
police say.
W he n arrested Sunday,
F rankie Edmonds, who lives in
Queens. was driving a yellow
van rented In Geor gia with
Georgia license plates, accord·
Ing to Eut Fishkill Town Police
Chief Andrew Criscolo.
Edmonds was ordered held in
lieu of $25,000 ball on charges of
unlawful Imprisonment and en-
dan1erln1 the welfare of a child,
Crlscolo said.
Edmonds and the child. who
was not identified, are both
black.
Officers said Edmonds had
served time In prison, but they
did not know for what offense.
The New York Daily News today
quoted police sources who said
EdmondA served time for rob·
bery and gun possession in
"prisons and psychiatric wards
all over the state.·'
fi'r .. P..,e AJ
PLANE ...
wooded, mountainous area as ex-
tremely turbulent with heavy
rain.
The wreckage was so badly
burned that the plane's tall num-
bers were scarcely readable, they
sa14.
Tentative Identification was
made from the credJt cards and
other personal papers scattered
about the brushy crash slie.
Authorities said they are cer-
tain the victim la Coats but that
the fonnaUtles involved such as
checkin1 dental records wllJ take
several weeks to conclude.
Hl1 wife aald today they have a
aon, Bob Coat.I of Fresno, and a
dau•hter, Mrs. Bonnie Adams of
Chat.lworth.
Shfi also aald the last any
airport tower heard from him wu
a request to drop lower than his
a11i1ned ~,~·foot altitude for
better viaiDWtY .
Law •truck down
ALBUQUERQUE, N .II. <AP>
-A federal Juqe baa barred Alb\M&~ lroai enferclq lta
law a1aln1t tb• aal• aad poe1..ionotdru(para pMnalla ,
•
The task force investigating
the AUanta deaths and dlsap·
pearances and the FBI were
notified of the arrest by town
police. The FBI In New York Ci·
ty called to say that agents
would Interview Edmonds about
the Atlanta cases, Criscolo said.
Atlanta Police Commissioner
Lee Brown said today t he task
force wouJd leave the Edmonds
inquiry to Lhe FBI. adding, "At
this point we're Just following up
another lead."
Crlscolo said police are trying
to account for Edmonds'
whereabouts for the past year
and a half. According to the
News, Edmonds refused to tell
police what he has been doing
for 18 months.
Family says
Jane Doe is
really Cheryl
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
<AP) -The family of amnesia
victim Jane Doe positively Iden·
tified her today as 34-year-old
Cheryl Ann Tomiczek. a sub-
urban C hicago woman who
dropped out of sight seven years
ago, officials said.
Irene and Andrew Tomiczek,
of Roselle, two other children
and a Chicago disc jockey met
with Miss Tomlczek at South
Florida State Hospital in Pem·
broke Pines for about an hour
this morning.
"I 'm very happy," Mrs
Tomiczek said after the private
meeting . "I assured her we
loved her."
Hospital spokeswoman Jackie
Dale said Jane Doe responded
by saying, "I'm very happy that
you came. I'm pleased to meel you."
"She was very cool ." Mrs
Dale said. "That 's normal
we expected that."
"It's just like a dream ... said
Mi s s Tomiczek 's brother
Robert. 32.
The polite young woman. who
became known nationwide as
"Jane Doe," had been at the
hospital since Deeember when a
park ran«er found her naked
and near death in Fort
Lauderdale's Birch State Park
The Tomiczeks were accom
panied by Chicago disc Jockey
Wally Phillips, whose slalion.
WG N. arranged and paid for the
trip.
He r case was reported na
tionwide and on Feb. 10 she ap·
pea red on ABC· TV's "Good
Morning America" hoping to be
r ecognized. The news stories
and the television appearance
prompted hundreds of telephone
calls.
Kore a landslide
SEOUL, <AP > -President
Chun Doo Hwan's Democratic
Justice Party racked up a hefty
majority in South Korea's new
276·seat National Assembly,
fulfilling most pre·electlon pre·
dictions. Today's official tally of
the popular vote put the DJ P in
first place, with Its candidates
taking 90 seats in Wednesday's
balloting.
DC-IO •••
peared In any part ot lt," J acbon
aald.
r "He certainly has no 1u1lt In·
volved becauae be was not in·
volved with the accident aircraft.
That much we know,·· J acltson
Hld.
'' M l.>'be to percent of theae peo.
pie ( aaked tor depositions > had no
connection at all with the accident
aircraft," he said. "He may have
had some peripheral things that
had to do with It.
"l don't know what the man's
condition was. That kind or
haraHment could do anything to
someone who hadn't had that klnd
of experience before.'·
"He didn't have any real
responsibility," Marshall's wife
Marilyn, told the Musk oge~
Phoen1x. "He had very bad guilt
feelings and the accident gave
him something to attach his feel-
ings to.
"He was a casualty of that
c ras h." she said ... It says
something about the pressure an
aircralt mechanic work~ under."
Mrs. Marshall said her husband
told her he had been s ummoned to
meet with attorneys Wednesday
and was reluctant tQ go to his
swing sh.ift job Tuesday night.
When he left his rura l Wagoner
County home for work about 11
p.m . Tuesday, Mrs. Marshall said
she went to bed. She found hia
body at 7 a.m ., Watkins said.
A medical examiner said
Marshall had been dead about six
hours.
A federal report on the crash
called into question maintenance
procedures at American's Tulsa
plant. The procedure. in which a
forklift was used to support an
aircraft engine and the pylon
which attached it to the wing, ap-
parently caused a crack in a sup.
porting bulkhead flange, lhe re·
port said
The engine fell off as the DC-10
took off from Chicago's O'Hare
Airport and the plane rolled and
dove into the gro und , in·
vestigators said
Mechanics testified they had
received little training in the re-
mov a I procedure before the
crash, according to the report 1s
sued by John Cyrock1 . a consult·
ant to the Federal Aviation Ad
ministration and coordinator of
the crash invci,ligation.
McDonnell Oougl<1 s, wh1 eh
m<1nufacturcd the <11rcn1ft , <1nd
American are involved in de·
term1mng the degree of liability
for the crash Some I 18 laws uits
brought by fa mi hes of the victims
are pending in a fed eral court in
Chicago.
"I'm personally saddened. The
company ls saddened by the death
of a man over this kind of thJng,"
Jackson said "I'm sure McDon·
nell Douglas didn't know this was
the way the man would react
··It t!-1 a fr1ghtening part of the
le~al process. He was apparent·
ly on the verge of something and
this happened to trigger it,"
Jac kson said
fi'r•• P_,,e Al
SLAIN •..
damage on the driver's s ide.
lie said Long Beach officers
responded 15 minutes later to re·
ports of s hots fired. Officers
found Mrs . Choi's body face
down on the pavement at the
southbound Pacific Avenue exit,
he said
Because her purse was miss·
ing, police theorize that robbery
was a motive in the incident.
Millemann said.
Mrs Choi lived on Palermo
Ori ve in Huntington Beach with
her husband and a 9·year-old
son
I
Rita Jenrette, estranged wife of former South
Carolina Congressman John Jenrette, returned
to South Carolina for the first time since posing
for Playboy magazine. She displays a copy of
her 'book, "My Capitol Secrets," at a news con-
ference in Columbia.
•
New York Governor
Hugh Carey and
Chicago businesswoman
Evangeline Gouletas
disclaimed romance
rumors this week, say-
ing they are only
friends.
Newport Beach Mayor
Jackie Heather, fresh Crom
the tip of Ba}a California
where she presented a trophy
to the winner in the 790 mile
Newport-to-Cabo San Lucas
race, wants to make that re·
sort town Newport's sister
city.
Mrs. Heather reports that
Hector Palado, the mayor of
Cabo San Lucas, is also big on
the idea.
·'We've never had a sister
c ity before," said Mayor
Heather. "Anyway, they want
us to help them build a hospital
down there.·'
A S4.6 million suit filed by
two cousins of executed killer
Gary Gilmore against People
magazine has been dismissed
by a federal judge in Salt Lake
City.
Brenda Nicol and her
daughter Cristie filed suit in
1977 against Time Magazine
Inc .. which owns People,
claiming senior editor Cheryl
McCall and photographer
Jobn W. TeUord trespassed
when they entered the Nicol
hou1e in Pleasant Grove In
December 1'16.
A picture of Mrs. Nicol in a
nightgown appeared in People
in January 1977, after
Gilmore's firing-squad execu·
t.ionJan.17, 1976.
Bank e laief
getsf:IS0,880
"In reeoaiUoa ti It.la maay
ye a ra ol ••l•p tlonal
performance." .. Buk ol
6meriea ~ p.. ~ president ~ W. a. .. a
eaab botu11 ol tal0,000 aDd a
llfeUm• annuity of _.1,815
atartlna ln ta.
The ~-away ;:eftt la in addfUon -to the ,000 a
year the s&oyear-old execuUve
will receive tbroulb tbt bank
retirement plan.
The payments were dia·
cloaed in the bank' a proxy
atatemeot for lta April 21
abareboJden meeUn,.
Clauaen wu named presi-
dent of the bank, the nation's
lar,est, In 1970. He eamed
$109,095 last year in caab and
equivalenta. He will officially
leave the Bank ol America on
July 1 to aaaume a $75,000-a·
year post as prealdent of the
World Bank.
Bobla Moore, author of
"The Green Berets" and "The
French Connection'' is pre·
pa ring to announce bis
candidacy for the Republican
nomination in Connecticut for
U.S. Senate, his chief backer
says.
Allen F. Lyon1, who heads
the Draft Moore for the Senate
committee, said he and Moore
feel the author will be able to
raise enough money for his
campaign.
Sen. Lowell Welcker, R·
Conn., has not announced re·
election plans.
Actor Jim Davis, 66 ,
who plays the cnuty
patriarch of the Ewing
clan on the television
series "Dallas," suc-
cess fully underwent sur-
gery for a perforated ul-
cer.
R ainy day in Northwest
Cool re adings due on north Pacific coa,st
Coutal teeatlaer
Wt\I to nortl'lwn1 winch 20 lo H
k not• ••'" f> to 10 foot \e4't E •\e•nert .irt1ncts t>e c om1nQ
nortnw•\ttrly 10 to JO knots w1lh ~ to
t 1001 , .. , 100.y Otllerwose l lo l
loot •t\t1111 t ••H C111rtnq •Od•r
F•1r ton19hl
11.S.•--· ...
Shower' ftlf WeodnHcMY ov•r tne
P•c1f1< Northwett •nd from M••,. to
"'4tw Jt tM''( •lonQ lf\« All1nt1c (~\t
T ntrt were \now•r\ •nd tnun
Otnno..,ers frO"n 1ne soutnetn Plains
into tM middle •nd northern M 1\
''''1pp1 V•ller
E l\twtwtrt, '"'•' w•te 9•nier•ll• sunny
Ttmptr•turt' pu\l'lf!O into lM IO'
o•t• trw Soulnwnl <Inert\. •"" 1n10
lht ··•rm 60\ •"d 70\ 1n tht
Soulne•''· •ttO\S tne lo•er M•' ''"'PP• V•U•Y. ioutMrn Ttus and
on Ille Souln-•1 Tr-.. tOOlttt ., .. , wert nw , .. ,,~mt
l\Orthern Pl•1n\ and N•w En;t•nd ••th• tew t•.01nqs .,, the lOs.
remper•tur•' •t midday r•no-o
trom )4 •I L•-\IOM. ~.... .,,.,
Worce,ttr, M•n to •• al Palm
~ring\
Por t~Y. tnunoer,Mw•" were
torte H I ove r Ille Hor111wtt1, wlln
-· •t ,.,,_.., ete••llOM. -•lonu the Wul Cou l t rom Hortl'ltrn
C•lllornot 10 Wufltnulon •rwl onl•rwl
to int norll'lt rn Ao<~•"· A hw
sf\o#tr\ ••rt fort c•1I ov•r the
nortl'lt rn Gr .. 1 uus.
Tem~r•lurtt In Ille IO\ wert P<•·
diet.a on 1n. Sou111-11 desen1 end
•tonu 1,.. Alo Gr•nd• Valley. The
c ool sooo will bt tn. nonnern t-
1111r<11 of tht P•cotl' Coast, lhl Inter•
mownlt ln reulon. Ult nortntrn
R0<kin , .ocrou Ille ~tNrn Pta1n1.
, ... Grut ukn e<\d Ille Hoflh Au.,,.
lie 1l•lt•, wllll rffdl"9S In l/M 40I
•nd SOI
t:.Ulert1 ..
Partly clolldy -•tl'ler ii upec i.o
in $0wlhl-coo1 .. 1 and moWfllaln
., ••• IM ef~-. wllll CIN•lnu
f\M ,.,lci.y. H«1,,,,,..lt rly wlnda wlll
91111 In lht $0Ullll-11111 alt.er,_n.
Ceoltr t-r•llWtl .,. forec•1I.
Soulnl•nd mount••n' wtll h•vf'
••nO\ ftom 20 10 )0 mpn w11ti cloud\
0.C rtHl"9 lonogl'lt Hltn\ 1000 U 10
)4 1n '°' Fruiey •owo ton191'\t 10\ to
]1
~1ron9 w1na' •r~ ltktly 1n •H Otwrt
•rta \ IOO•Y •nd F"r 10•y fnt
nort"ern ct.wrts <•n ••~I 9usl\
belwttn U lo 0 mpn "''11'1 •rtH ol
OIOw tn9 OV\t •nO \•nO Sou1httn
dtMrt QU\t' <Nttl bl ,,,gnu., •••Iler.
U lo lO mPl'I Hrllfl\ 100•y '" norli..rn
"""" •O IO 10. tow• ]I lo .. Southern Otwrtt can ••PKI 1110111 1n
lllt 70\, wrlh IO W\ •S lo so
Ttmptrtluru will drest S 10 I <ltorM\
Fr1<1ty
Tr••tlttl .O•o.ory ,,., betr1 "1•1t<I •or ll'lt Sltrr• Ne•adt •nd nor 111trn
mount•lna tor anow a nd wind
Sllowera will 'onunut over Northtrn
•n<I Central Callfo.nt• tanl911t wllll
\llOW In Ille mount.Ina Cl••flnt o ...
by Frld•Y Snow 1..,.1 l ,SOO Itel In tn.
11ortll, ~ l•t In IP• 50<.ltn.
Temperat•rn
NATION
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Tbe OaUy Pilot wants to bear obHrvaUona from lta relldtn
-particularly comments about UM P&J*' llnll. It'• eu1 to tell
us [our viewt. Just call t.be number btiow and four mtua,.
wU be recorded. MMllf .. will be truacribed aevera.I time.
daily amt deUvered to U.. ct.It ot Lbt appropriate editor. No
dre"1Mkln.caJla,p&eue.
Tell U1 wbal'• on your m1Dd. Tbe owuber iii lD ....W. If
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Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT/Thureday, March 29, 1981
Space shuttle chutes A~Wlreplloolo
A Martin Marietta worker puts finishing
touches on a 1,6()()-pound parachute which ~
will be used to retrieve the Space Shuttle's
solid rocket boosters minutes after the
launch of the shuttle. Three parachutes
each will be utilized to bring down the re-
usable boosters a fter the sc heduled
launching.
Road widening closer
Controversial plans to widen
University Drive in Irvine are
getting closer to reality despite
the objections of res idents near
the two-lane roadway.
The council decided by a 4 1
Cycle ride r
perishes
A Hacienda Heights man rid·
ing on the back of a motorcycle
was killed and his companion
seriously injured in a collision
with a car at a Garden Grove in·
tersection, police said.
Pronounced dead at the scene
was Eugene A. Yates. 24 , the
passenge r on a motorcycle
driven by Terrill Lee Wright, 23,
of Garden Grove, who was taken
to UC Irvine Medical Center.
Wright was reported in serious
condition in the hospital's in·
tensive care unit.
Police Set. Bruce Beauchamp
said the motorcycle apparently
rear-ended a car driven by
Raymond L . Hoffman, which
wa1 w ... tbound on Chapman
Avenue and about to make a left
turn onto Loma Avenue.
Hoffman, 42, of Garden Grove,
was not injured.
Cause of the Tuesday accident
Is under inve-'1gation.
vote (Mary Ann G aido dissented )
to tell the Federal Highway
Administration, which is to fund
the major portion of the $1.3
million project. that it would have
no significant environmental
impact.
Co uncilw o man Gaido
contended that the project might
increase traffic noise.
The 4 -1 coun cil decision
Tuesday came after council
m e mbers encouraged the city
staff to place weight restrictions
on the road in an attempt to
discourage heavy trucks. And the
council told the city staff to ask
the Irvine Compa ny if it would be
willing to fund landscaping for the
road.
The road is to be widened from
two to four lanes between Culver
Drive and the Sa n Diego
Freeway.
The Federal Highwa y
Administration has tentatively
Cele bration set
I
The Polish National Alllance
lO·year annlvenary celebration
will be held April 4, from 9 p.m .
to 1 a.m. in the Embassy Room
of the Disneyland Hotel, 1150
Weat Cerritos Ave., Anaheim.
For more inform a lion call
Carl Kotnl at <714) !f74·l18'.
agreed to fund the majority of t~e
construction costs if it determines
the road widening wouldn't lead
to environmental problems
Residents a long University
Drive packed the council meeting
to complain that the road is noisy
and bothersome now and that its
widening would just lead to more
problems. .
City traffic engineers say thpt
the road must be widened to meet
the growing traffic needs of the
Universit y Town Center and
Turtle Rock areas or the city
Assistant Irvine City Manager
Paul Brady Jr said that the
action does not approve tht>
road-widening It will probably be
one year before the City Council
actually conducts a final vote on
whether the road should be
widened.
By RICHAR D GREEN
DaHy Piiot DtAHry
ll Go ..... ..tffd Mond1y·Frid1y II you do not have
your pa~r by 5 30 o m c;all before 7 o m ano yQUr cooy 'Mii t>e dehY9f90
1 Saturday and, Sunoay If You dO not receive ~ur copy by 1 ~m.. call
before 10 • m and Your copy will be dehvereo
Clreulaffot1 Tetepl!Oflft Most Orange County Areas '42·4JJ I
Northweal Hunllngton Beac.h
and Westminster S*IUO
Laguna Niguel ffMMO
on Drexel and Heritage
Upholstered Floor Samples
Discontinued
Wood Furniture
Your Favorite O.Slgner Wiii a. Happy To Au111 YO\I.
H.J.GAR~ETf fUR~IF.J~E
HOURa: MM. tin """'9. it.,.._, t. I ,.,.. J Z II HAUOa l&.YO,
,fi.101,• ... 1 ......... 1oa,a .teli•'·"'· COSTA MISA 646°02711
PAOHSSIONAI.
INTIAIC>fl' DfSIONERS
,
.,
r
'
s
faces anol
BRIOOl:TOWN, BarbMol (AP ) -Great Trala ft4*btr
Robert mw. abducted ~u.b e1M:omm...-an...11 r•an ot uylum ln Brull and J bere, fMed aotMr blow. Hit a-mlttnlt ... reported planninl to n1 tMir ,..... .... from 8ruil
to a new boml 1n Swltaerland.
The 51-year-old 81111 b1recl aa Amertcan lawyer a.Del a former
Barbados attomey ieneral to flpt Bntilb a"'m.._ to pu& ._..
back 1n priaon. Britilb extradWoa procMdlnp awatt.d oely UM
formal matchin1 of Bt111' flnaerprlnu nown btre from Scotland
Yard. In Wlotertbur, Switzerland h1J ex·mlatre11 was reported plu-
ninl to fly to Rio de Janeiro thla weekend to pick up their t -year·
old son, Michael. I
WOME N I N DRAFT DEIUTED
WASHINGTON <AP> -The government'• defenae of a
military draft that exempts women Is entwined with the related is-
s ue of whether women draftees would be sent into combat.
In an hour of Supreme Court debate Tuesday. neither the 1ov-
ern ment nor the challengers to a male-only draft Q9ld avoid the
overall question of women in combat. Zeroin1 in on the bl1ue,
Justice John Paul Stevens challenged Solicit.or Genenl Wade H.
Mccree Jr., who was trying to defend the exclusion of women
from draft registration.
DOMESTIC CAR SALES VP
DETROIT <AP> -Buoyed by rebate offers, combined domestic
sales by the five major U.S. automakers rose sharply in mid-March.
Company reports issued Tuesday showed a 28.S percent overall
increase in aulosaJes for the second 10 days of March compared with
the same period a year ago. General Mot.ors Corp. led with a S2 per-
cent rise and Chrysler Corp. sales were up 18 percent wbUe U.S. -built
Volkswagens dropped 17 percent and American Motors Corp.
decreased an estimated 32 percent.
END SO VGHT TO CHARGE
WASHINGTON< AP I -A special prosecutorhassaidhecanfind
no evidence to support allegations that Tim Kraft, one-time cam-
paign manager to former President Carter. used cocaine on two OC·
casions. The prosecutor said Tuesday he will recommend the in-
vestigation be ended.
6 14 POVNDS OF COCAINE HELD
SEVIERVILLE, Tenn. CAP> -After seizing 814 pounds of uncut
cocaine -reportedly the second-biggest haul in U.S. history -Ten-
nessee authorities were searchin11: today for the four people who are
believed to have brought it into the country. The cocaine was taken
from an unattended airplane.
OREGO N SOLONS PROBED
SALEM. Ore. <AP\ -All 110 lawmakers from the 1979 and 1981
sessions of the Oregon Legislature will be questioned by state officials
investigating allegations of official misconduct, says Attorney
General Dave Frohnmayer. The attorney general's staff is in·
vesligating alleged ties between state Sen. Dick Groener and Robert
Harris, a former lobbyist who operates a messenger service.
REA GAN'S TAX CALL 'DEAD'
WASHINGTON <AP > -The chairman of the Hou.se Ways and
Means Committee declared that President Reagan's caU for a
three-year, 30-percent cut in income tu rates is all but dead, and
challenged the panel's Republicans to lie.Ip draft a "conHnsua"
alternative tax cut measure. ·
Rep. Daniel Rostenkowst).. D-111., made bis ai.tement a 20
Senate Republicans sent Reagan a letter aslrln1 him to "promJse
now to veto any tax bill" that doeln't inclbde the multiyear,
across·the·board income tax cuts he is u kinc for.
Gay British lea~er
said double agent
LONDON <AP> -The journalist who accused the 1'74 Labor gov·
ernment of covering up unresolved spy charges against Britain's
former counter-intelligence chief reported that a prominent
homosexual Labonte was a double agent.
The new target of Chapman Pincher. veteran defense correspon-
dent of the Daily Mail, was the late Tom Dribert. an admitted
homosexual and onetime gossip cohunnlst who was chairman of the
Labor Party in 1957 ·58, a membeJ of\ ts national executive eomlnrttee
for 23 years and a memberof\heffouaeofCommoo1from 1942to 1'74.
Driberg, who died in 1976 at the a1e of 71, "reported on the
personal and political activities of his friends and collea1ues in
Parliament" to both M l-5, the British counter-espionage a1ency, alMI
the Soviet KGB, Pincher wrote In the third installment of a aerie•
taken from a book he is publishing later this week.
"Both Ml-Sand the KGB had no illusions about the fact that be
was working for the other side," Pincher wrote. "Both aou1bt to uae
him fortheirown purposes."
Tom MurphiM'• column hom't W.OPi>eared; it'• limpl11 mooed tcJ
Pope 82 Ulhtte Ju.at CtXUUnp 1DiU conttnu. ro oppeor.
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Cold comfort
Bizarre facemaak protects U.S. Marine armored person-
nel carrier driver from below zero temperatures during
exerctae "Cold Winter ," about five miles north of the
Arctic Circle. The temperatures ln the area drop to well
below those commonly found ln domestic deep freer.ers
Royal love match
to get f o,-mal nod
LONDON (AP) -The engace-
ment of Prince Charles and
Lady Diana Spencer will get the
formal approval of Queen
Elizabeth II at a meeting of the
Privy Council on Friday, Buck·
in«ham Palace announced.
The royal love match already
has the queen's informal nod or
approval -plans for the
couple's July 29 wedding in St.
Paul's Cathedral were an-
nounced by the palace on Feb.
24.
But a 200·year-old law re·
quires a state occasion to ap-
prove the nuptials officially.
The palace announcement
said:
"A MEETING OF the Pnvy
Council will be held at Buck-
i n gb am Parace on Friday.
March 27, at which Her Majesty
proposes formally to give her
consent to the marriage of the
Prlnce cl WaJea, as required by
t.he Royal Marriates Act l'n2."
The set requires descendants
of King George II. and Charles
is one, to gain the official con·
sent of the sovereign before they
wed. This la to be s ignified by
t he Great Seal of s tate and
declared before the Privy Coun·
ell.
tend since he waa 18, his first ap-
pearance was ln urn.
LADY DIANA, 19, is not re-
quired to be present.
Until the 18th century, the
Privy Council was the chief
source of executive power in
Britain. It was stripped of moat
of its functions as government
departments took over.
It has some 360 memben in-
cluding all of the current
Cabinet, who do moat of its
work. Tbb includes approving
Orders in Council as the
monarch's prerogative or as re·
quired by statute.
Amona Privy Councillors ex-
pected for Friday's session will
be Commonwealth represent·
atlves from Auatralia, Barbados
Fiji, Mauritius, New Zealand, St.
Vincent and the Grenadines.
NATION .
'31 •llll••
Inventor. wins
big judgment
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
Norw•tlan-born ioveDtor who
HYI bll 1arterleaa 1trdle ,.. ..
pirated by Munaintwe~r Inc. bu
beea awarded a $11 mUlton
federal court Judtment a1a1.oat
lbemanufacturer.
"It '1 f antuUc ! " aatd 51-year-
old Knut L. Bjorn-Larsen of
Ca11>interia alter a federal jury
made theJudlment.
Munalnpear promptly flied a
notice of appeal with U.S. Dlatrict
Jud1eJeaeCurtla.
"TJll8 llA8 TAKEN a very loo&
time," said Bjorn-Lanen, who
came to the United States after
World War 11, in which he served
with Norwegian intelligence. He
added: "f believe in t.he American
system, and I believe In the
American people."
Hls daughter·in-law, Lois
Bjorn·Lanen, saJd Wednesday
she hoped the money would allow
her father·Ln-law to spend more
time with the family in Carpin-
teria and less lime working in Los
Angeles.
"I feel real good about it," she
said of the award. "We would like
to be able to live closer and be
together. Wejuatwanttohaveour
families closer."
I N MINNEAPOLIS, Mun·
slngwear Vice President Dwight
Oglesby, who is also the garment
manufacturer's general counsel
and secretary. said the com·
pany's notice of appeal was made
in court Tuesday.
"Tbeonly comment I can make
is that we'reoftbeopinion that the
evidence does not substantiate a
verdict of that scope," Oglesby
said. "We believe our defemes
are merit.orioua in this case and
we believe the judgment will be
overturned in our appeal."
Bjorn-Larsen said he perfected
a c hemical process whereby
polyvinyl chloride "friction pro-
tuberances" are cured from a
liquid to solid state and Im bedded
in the fabric of the panty 1irdJe.
Stockings or pantyhose slide un·
derneath and are held in place by
the friction of the plastic .
aJOllN-LAllSEN contended in
his s uit that he bad a contract with
Munsingwear for two years
before the manufacturer hired Its
own inventor. Now, he aaid, "the
whole industry has picked it up.
"We named John Does as co·
con1plraton, but that wlll be
pursued later.'' he uld In a
telephone interview. ·'They're all
onnoticenow.·•
Marine, 29,
guilty of
desertion
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. <AP>
-A 2'-year-olcl MusacbU1etu
man wbo walked away from the
Marine Corps ift lt"ll and said he
thouiht be bad bee• 1ranted
amneaty by President Ford hu
pleaded ,Wily to desertion.
A jury of seven Marine of-
ficers Monday sentenced Lance
Cpl. Francis i:. Teanire of
Woburn, Mus .. to a dishonora-
ble dischar1e. forfeiture of pey,
reduction in rank to private and
a 13,000 ftne.
Tesnire was arrested Jan. 31
after being stopped for speeding
in Massachusetts. In a routine
check, state police learned he
was sought by the Marines.
Teani~ said be thought be wu
covered by a generaJ amnesty
proclaimed by former President
Gerald Ford for draft dodgers
and others In 1975. '
Fewer farm
rules due?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state Senate's committee oo the
en vironment appean to favor
relaxation of development
restrictiOM on farm land in the
coastal wne.
The Natural Resources and
Wildlife Committee voted 6-1
Tuesday on a bill that one critic
said could lead tn the develop·
ment of "virtually all" of
California's coastal agricultural
land.
The measure. SB 217 by Sen.
William Craven, R-Oceanside,
went to the Finance Committee.
Backed by developers and the
Farm Bureau Federation, the
bill would sub8titute a narrower
standard for determining if
coastal property shouJd be re·
tained as agricultural la.ad.
MUSic. '
EC>UCBTION
CeNT&R Charlet, 32-year-old heir to the
throne, will be making only his
second appearance at a Privy
Council meeting. Eligible to at·
Barricaded
man dead
NOW ENROLLING FOR
APRIL CLASSES
Primary Ages 4-6
OflfaRiNO •••
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
man who held hil ex-clrUriend
and her two children hostage,
then barricaded himself in their
a p artment after the trio
escaped, was found dead when
police stormed the building.
Henry Green, 32, died of an
apparent sell-Inflicted 1unshot
wound some ti me T uesday.
police sald.
"He was apparently mad over
personal problems he was hav-
in1." with Doris ¥orrlaon, his .
former 1irlfriend, said Capt.
Rick Bataon of the 17th Street
J;>I vision.
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(Thul'ldey, March 29, 1981 s
SUier •lain ·. ~illU~
Defendant freed·
in 'Mason' trial
Murder suspect:~
devil disciple?
L06 ANGELES <AP> -la a caae one Jurot 1akt wu "Juat Ut4'
Perry Muon," ao-year-old Sb.lreUe er-. walked out ol ber' murder
trial a free woman after her lawyer produced evidence that cad
Hrioua doubt on testimony fiven by the proMCutlan'a lley wttn .... lln. Crane wu cbaraed Jut Novembe1' wtth the Jan. 2, tm,
murder ol Jack Mahone, a loo,Ume member of tbe Aryan
Brotherhood priM>n 1an1. Her buband wu alle&ed to be a member of
the 1an,. Police bad UTeated the
woman bued on information ~BRIEFS supplied by Frank RuopoU, ~n-1 the key proeecution wllneu
and a convicted armed robber
andbur&Jar.
~ ..... sea M•ds ..ce ~-·
LOS ANGELES <AP) -J.>eapite aidea' advice to moderate bit'
free-•winlina style, former mayor Sam Yorty bu returned to an old
campai&n theme by sayln1 blacks "are really racial. They vote for
black people bee a use they are black."
Yorty's remar ks this week, which stunned bit aldea, were a
blunt restatement of a peraiateot messa1e of bi1 t• and tm cam·
patgna aga.inJt Mayor Tom Bradley, who ia black and run.nln& for
re-elec:Uoo.
lleeeleer ••mH ,_ flelrfllltt ew
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former bank president bu been ap-
pointed receiver for the tru.st deed empire of W ayae Burton, accused
of defrauding more than 6 ,000 public investors out oUlOO million.
U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer appointed Walter M.
Sharp, 65, as receiver for San Bernardino-based Universal Financial
Corp.
This week's court order stripped Burton of further control over
the business, which includes some of the highest priced develop-
ments in downtown San Bernardino.
•w ..,....., .... w •••••• • .ie
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Senate's former leader has
introduced a bill that would ban the sale of new hand1una in
California starting in 1982.
The measure, SB882 by Sen. James Mills, D-San Dle10. would
also require the registration of existing handguns by March 1, 11182,
and make handgun owners liable for up to $40,000 in dama1es U
their gun cauaed injury to persons or property.
No new guns could be registered after next Jan. 1, under the
measure. Mills' proposal is modeled after a 1un control law in
Washington, D.C.
Oll·•r~lc htd• ,.,.. ..... p-..e.I
SACRAMENTO-CAP) -A backer of off-track bettinl on
California horse racing has launched bl1 15th attempt in the put
seven years to put the issue on th~ ballot, Secretary of State March
Fone Eu announced.
The initiative by Robert Wilson of Sherman Oaks need
signatures from 553,790 registered voters by Au1. 14 to win a place
on the June 11182 ballot. Wilson's last attempt to place bl.a lnltlatlve
on the ballot failed when he did not meet a March 11 deadline for
filine petitiom.
The proJ)OISal would amend the state cenatitutioo to allow up to
500 off-track pari-mutuel 1asublln1 licenaea. It would allo Jermlt
casino-style gamblin1 in the San Bemardtno County desert com-munity ol Adelanto.
~ MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan auociation
E~ecutfv• Office•: 7812 Edinger Ave.,
Huntington Beach, CA 92M7
South•m C•lllomla R-,,IOll•I Offlc.1:
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ACTOR JOINS O"OUPI SEEKING STAT! ARTS AID
Richard Chambertaln greeted 8t Sacramento rally
W oIDen, children shot
in 'IDurder-sirlcide'
BALDWIN PARK <AP> ~A San Francisco man shot hia two
children, his estranged wife and her sister to death and then took
bis own lite, police said.
"So far we're handling it as a murder·suicide and all the vie·
tims were shot by a suspect relative, followin1 an apparent family
argument," said Baldwin Part Police Lt. Joe Ensminger.
Investigators said Maria de J esua Ma1ana, 20, and her two
children, Ricardo, 9 moothl, and Karina, 20, months, had moved
lnto a BaJdwtn Hilla apartment about a month ago. They were liv·
ine there police said, with the mother's sister, Angelena Vela.a·
quea, 23, 'who was also 1laln, and with the two women'• coualn,
Maria Macana, wbo dlacovered t.be traaedy tb.1a week.
Pol.lee, called by the coua&a. arrived to find the inlant Karina
aad her father, wbo wu not W..Ufted, 1Wl alive. The cblld an4I
faU.er died later at local 1HwpM1••.
I I Penne·preee ...,......Long
sleeves and legs in
popular coat style.
Assorted patterns
ln S-M·L·XL
Reg 1s.so 11.eo.
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
pro1eeutor ol a 13-year-old lirl
cbarsed with murderin1 her
11-year-old slater aaya 1he bas
dres1ed up in black and
Actors bid
for atate
arts funds
• SACRAMENTO <AP) -Ac·
tors Richard Chamberlain and
Eddie Albert joined a coalition
of arts groups at the Capitol
seeking $13.4 million in the
state's budaet for the arts.
A raJly on the Capitol lawn
and visit.a to state lawmakers this week were sponsored by the
California Confederation of the
Arts, a statewide non-profit arts
activist group.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has
proposed a $12.1 million budget
for the CaWomia Arts Council
for the 1981-82 fiscal year, with
an additional $1 million In
federal money.
The council wants to boost the
total $13.1 million figure by
$300,000 to provide more money
for local artists and special proj-
ects, administers state-funded
arts programs throughout
California.
"This $13 million is not bad,"
Albert told an audience of some
350 people. "If we handle It prop·
erly, we can move it around."
The actor's wife, Mario
Albert, said public finance and
private business have combined
lo produce "a veritable ex·
plosion in the arts . . . The arts
have been saved from oblivion
by public funding."
Mrs. Albert, an actress, is a
mem ber of the National Council
on the AIU.
Among those attending the
rally were television producer
Bud Yorkln, state AFL·CIO
leader John Hennina. and
Arthur Holton, musical director
of the Stockton Chorale.
worahlpped the devil 1ince see·
in& the-tllm, "The Omen."
Sacramento County Deeut)'
District Attorner Steve Seereat
11id in a pretria document filed tbll week that Kimberly Goytia
bas oumeroua copies of "The
Omen" and "Damien" book.a,
and has worshipped the devil
since 1978.
The central character In both
books, Damien Thome, Is a son
of Satan who killed family mem-
bers as they discovered hll iden·
lily. Secrest said th4! 1irl had
used severaJ maJe aliates,· ·in·
cludine Damien Thorne, and
took photographs of her sister
the day of the shootin1. as Da-
mien Thome had done of his vie·
tims.
SEC&EST SAID Kimberly
told her mother, Carol Som·.
mera. that she "prays to Satan
becatue she tried praying to
God. but nothing happened."
The document said Kimberly
told Mrs. Sommers that "she
s hould have killed her and
Stephanie when the devil told
her to."
But at a hearing this week,
Mrs . Sommers denied that. She
quoted Kimberly as telling her
in 1979 "that Satan said that if I kill you and Stephanie, every-
thing would be all right."
Questioned by Secrest, Mrs.
Sommers added, "She didn't say
she wanted to kill us. She was
angry at me because 1 didn't let
her go to her grandmother 's. It
wasn't a threat. It was rebellion,
that's all."
KIMBE&LY'S defense al·
torney. Betty Rocker, opposes
such evidence as irrelevant and
an effort to prejudice the court.
Judge Mamoru Sakuma said
Secres t 's document is not
evidence and will have no bear·
ing on the case unless cor-
roborated by testimony.
Kimberly ii accused of shoot·
ing her sister, Stephanie, in the
chest and rt1ht arm out.side the
famlly apartment on Feb. 3 with
her 1tepfatber's .32·caliber
automatic platA>l.
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I r
Oil dump clean p
sets safety model
Some iood may come out ol a smelly, aba"""Md Oil
dump left over from Huntinstoo Beach's old daye u a
derrick town. A plan to excavate the dump contalninl toxic
chemicalt has been approved by Huntinston Beaeb of·
flciala and state health authorities. It wasn't eaay
reaching this point.
The project was month.a in plannin1. with thousands
of dollars spent on tests and more to be a pent on 11! ety
precautions such as air monltarinl equipment, durinl ex·
cavatlon. The so·called Boucher landfill, located 700 feet
southeast of the lnteraection of Warner Avenue and Bolaa
Chica Street, is estimated to contain up to 100,000 cubic
yardsof contaminatedsoil.
In the 1940s, the three·acre dump was uted for oil re·
finery wastes. In the 1980s, a developer wants to build con·
dominiums on it. However, the developer had to a1ree to atrin1ent
safety requirements by local and state experts before dll·
turbing the abandoned chemical dump.
The excavation, planned to begir) next month, will be
costly to the developer, but state heatth officials bell eve it
will be sale. In fact, state health experts recommend digging up
the toxic material to prevent future hazards such as con·
lamination of underground water or underground buildup
of explosive gases. In the county and across the nation, forgotten
chemical dumps are being rediscov~red as potential
health hazards. The excavation project in Huntington Beach is one of
the rirst in the state and could very well become a model
for others to follow. .
~Hope for housing
There's hope for housing the less-tban·rich in
:southern Orange County. Some hope. ~ The state Coastal Commission bas unanimously ap-
• proved plans by the Broadmoor Development Co. ol
Laguna Hills to subdivide a 212·acre tract southeast of
the Aliso Creek Golf Course in South Laguna.
In making their decision, commissioners upheld a
previous South Coast Regional Coastal Commission rul·
ing that approved the development. It took in 28 single·
. family lots on about 15 acres, another 354 condominium
sites on 55 acres, and 100 affordable housing sites.
Approval of the development on the hills above the
seaside village was bitterly contested by the South
Laguna Civic Association. That led to an appeal of the re·
gional commission's endorsement.
Association members said the project would deface
the Aliso Peak ridgeline and inundate the 142-acre open
space portion of the development with water runoff.
However, the state commissioners included a number
of conditions on development of the area to meet the local
residents' concerns.
Construction of the project would provide much·
nee~ed afforda~le housing i~ an area sorely lacking in
available dwellings for medium and low income wage
earners.
ft Though the building of the 100 affordable units would
,not solve the shortage of this type ol housing, it i!t clearly
an optimistic turn for senior ctthem and young people in
need of moderately priced places to live.
Bay dredging games
It's been a week of good news and bad news for the
parties interested in cleaning up the silt-clogged Upper
Newport Bay.
Those parties. which include Newport Beach, the
county and Irvine , had reason to celebrate when the state
Water Resources Board agreed to put up Sl million for
the project.
But that's where the good news stopped.
According to a so.called early action plan, the
cleanup project will cost $4 million and calls for dredging
and a deepening of the San Diego Creek to slow the now
of silt into the bay.
Local officials fell short of the $4 million mark when
the water board set $446,000 aside for the project saying
the money would rematn off limits until Newport can
raise an equal amount in matching funds.
At about the same moment, the state LegialaUve
Analyst sliced a request for $2 million down to $1.1
million, adding that this money also will remain off.limits
until Newport meets the water board's request for
$446,000 in matching funds.
: The bottom line is that Newport must raise nearly
: half a million in cash. State officials have given the city
two weeks to accomplish this.
Are state officials playing games with Orange Coun·
ty? More than a few local observers think so.
It's fair to wonder why Newport or any other local
: agency would have to help pick up the bill on the cleanup
: project when the area is under state jurisdiction. The
: state department of Fish and Game is in charge of
·watching over the area.
: .
1 ; Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
~Other views expressed on this page are thote of their authors and
: artists. Reader comment ls invited. Address The Daily Piiot. P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92826. Phone (714) M2·4321 .
. . ' t. I . Boyd/Safety light
ByLll. llOYD
Your chances ot 1ett1D1 hit
.. in a rear ·e~d collision
• evidenUy COCl.ld be cut ln half
~just by ln1tallln1 a third
' ~ ;
111111•
We have abed OW' 1uUt
complex with our
morall. Now lf we err
the culprit 11 society,
environment. alcobOl or even demoDI that bave
taken po11•1lae of our
bocly. . ~ .. ~ .. ----. . ,....,, ..... --.. ,~ .. ............... -....... .......... Deify~
brake light under the middle
of your car'• back window.
Studie1 ebow cars 10
equipped lut year were ln·
volved in 64 percent fewer
rear-enders than cars without
IUCb btlb lithls. No bi& H ·
peDM, that. You could do it foe
afewdollan.
Q. You know that clown
with the Harlem Globetrot· tera .called Meadowlark
Lemon? What waa hl1 name
ori1tnally? A .... adow I.Amon. But be
chan1ed It le1ally to
Meadowlark about 10 years
.. 0.
lntolar • J kDoW tbe wortd
bu not 1et beat a patb to the
door ol two Mldla,a IDlll
•ho recently wen 11aa\ed
Patat No. •.Jll,D tor UMAr
ID venUoo of a better ~oUHlHp.
W ASRINGTON -Pntldttll ....... ,=to Mel up t.bl natloa'• •f•aH forcn bave onn tbl Uon'1 1Un ol P•·
fa1oa budtet lDCTeaHI to tbl
N1VJ. But t.bl IDCIDIY ma7 be
almed at tbe wroos tarpt -tlatdware imtnd ol penouel.
Two tO,OOO·ton-ouclear
powered aircraft earrten an
propo1ed In
the preal·
dent'• budpt, and the 12·
carrier fleet
11 to M ex·
pallded \even· tually to 15.
But the
trouble I.I, the
Navy la ftnd·
lnl it touch to bani oato enou1h pilots to man
Its present. carrier stren1~b1 mucb leu t.bo8e who'll be neeaea
to fly the planes from an
lncreuedfiattopfieet.
The rea1on ii strictly
economic: An experienced pilot
can earn up to four times hil
mlUtary pay by becominl a
commercial airline pilot. Al a
result, the Navy's pilots are
Mailbox
Thurlday. March 29, 1981
Thom.s P .... ltv/PubUahtr T,_,,.. Kewltlldftot
S.rtNra KreltMch/Edttonal Paet !,dltor
PMlial off at u alannla, rate to punaae lbe more lucrative
Hteen olfeNd by commwet.J
a'fiaUon.
NAVY AND 41& poacs
pllota .,.. nqu.lred to Hrve ahc
)'Hfl aft.er they tet thelr wiop. Tbia ta .t.o 1'laure that the tu·
payen wtU a•t at leut tome
qwd pro q,uo tOf' the ~.OOO.pha1
lt COlta t.o train each pilot -plua
an addlUon&l SM0,000 to quallty
him for carrier duty.
But aeveo out of every 10
mWtary pllota quit the . .,,-vice
at the eed of tbeil" 1hc·year ob-
U1aUoo. The temptation to rake
ln bis buck.a u an airline pllot la Juat too IJ'tat.
There's another factor ln·
volved: The alr1lne1 won't hire a
pilot who's over 30, so the
1ervice pllot1 can't afford to
atay on much put 28. R4!1ult :
One bitch and they're tone,
leavtn.s the ta.xpayen stuck wtth
their lralnln1 bill and the
recntlten trylnl to hire replace·
ments -who wtll presumably
1tart the whole cycle over
asain.
Last year, 418 Navy pllota
quit. The Navy wound up 25 per-
cent abort In ptlota of com·
mander rank and ~low -the
ooe1 who would be moat ~mpted
by commercial alrltne Jobi. The
Navy needed almo1t 13,000
ptloll; it had only 9,000. And
this, of course, la before any new
carriers are built.
The Navy has tried to dia·
coura1e the attrition of its
Oyboy r"11k.I with the carrot of
pay railea. Laat year, the ad·
mlral1 asked Congress for a 50
percent ulary lncrease for ita
pUoll, the first change in baalc
pay scale in 20 years. Consreas
OK 'd a raise -or 25 percent.
CONGRESS, ALSO approved a
bonus of SS,000 lo Sll,000 for
pilots with "critical skills" for
each year they agree to stay on
past their legal obligation. But
not a single pilot has yet re·
ceived a bonus, because Pen·
tagon bureaucrats are still try.
ing to figure out which pilots
qualUy for it.
One admiral, sources told my
reporter Sharon Geitner. got so
frustrated wttb the loH ol Navy
pllota t.o private industry that he
IUHett.ecl a monetary aticll ln·
stead of a carrot; Make the com-
mercial alrllnff reimburse the
1overnment for the trained
pUota they hJre. A• a pr•ctlcal
matter, thou1h, the Navy would
,not be able to force the airlines to
pay.
MEANWHILE, the Navy le
trying to lure back pilots wbo
have left the service for com·
mercial aviation but have been
furloughed by the recession. The
Irony ol thls aituaUon ia that LI
Prealdent Reagan succeeds ln
1etting the nation's economy
booming again, it will make it
that much harder for the Navy
to recruit the pilots it will need
for the president's expanded
carrier neet.
To make matters worse, the
pilots the Navy Is losing are
almost by defmiUon those with
experience -six years' ex·
perience. A deput)' chief of
naval operations, Lando Zeeb,
told the Senate Armed Services
Committee recently that the
balance of the Navy's flight
personnel has already shirted
a larmingly to inexperienced
flyers .
FIGHTING THE BLACKOUT:
Dave Stockman's attempt to
jam the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting with a 25 percent
budget cut has run into
bipartisan protest on Capitol
Hill. Sens. Harrison Schmitt, R·
N. M .. and Ted Stevens, ;R ·
Alaska, and Rep. Tim Wirth, D ·
Colo., have all sent letters of
protest to the Office of Manage·
ment and Budget.
Although the threatened fund
cut is worrisome enougb to CPB
officials, what really bothers
them is the loss or independence
the cut will implicitly cost them.
CPB's funding has been on a
unique two-year schedule, to
lessen the chance of pressure
from a member of Congress who
didn 't like the agency's
programming. Then ·R ep.
Stockman voted to renew this
advance funding system two
years ago.
But now . as budget director,
Stockman is trying to engineer a
retroactive budget cut for CPB.
'Affordable' housing was only a dream
To the Editor:
A year ago I naively believed
the advertisements stating that
mobile homes were, indeed. the
only "affordable" housing in
Orange County, the "answer" to
the potential "home owners'"
prayer. I succumbed and invested
in a mobile home, which has
proved to be a horrendous mis·
take on my part.
My experience has shown it is
virtually Impossible to finance a
mobile home, and pay the rapidly
escalating rent on the space it oc·
cuples. I've found tbat when a
person's mobile home ls once
situated oo "rental'' space in a
mobile home park, one no lon1er
has any control over how much
one pays to keep one's home ln a
"stationary" position. <Unless of
course, the mobile home owner
owns the land on which his "in·
vestment" sits. This Is highly un·
usual.)
By the time I pay $t28 oo the
mort1age plus 1248 on the down
payment, I have paid $612. Then, I
have a $245 space rental fee plus
gas and electricity that adds
another $80-170 per month. Add to
this a telephone and my "invest·
ment'' comes to $950 per month.
This is hardly "affordable" liv·
Ing. My space rent has jumped
from S215to$2-45 (including SS per
month for my small dog) in one
year. Unless I could afford to pay
at least '3,000 to move my
"home" and find land for it, I am
literalll')at the mercy of the park
land owner and whatever he
deems "falr" to charge in rental
fees. There is no limit on what he
can charge.
MY PITY 1oea out to those
countless souls around me who
are on fixed incomes. Many or
them are leaving their lights off
and heat almost totally off to meet
added raises in space rentala. I
am 1rateful that my mother, a
widow on a fixed income, baa a
home on land 1he and my father
paid for u we were 1rowing up.
When I moved into this mobile
park lut year, after havln1 spent
most or my adult years in apart·
menu, I felt that I had some
security, and a potential "invest·
ment. '' I did not know that the sale
of my "Investment" could be held
up becauae the park ownen could
make the rental chars• to exorbl·
tant daal SIUrelted people would
be uuble to afford to buy tt. Tile
park ownen alao "appme"
whoever bu¥s It and Uve1 ID It
here.
Life bu DO SUVa.DilM-but
auretf u.r. mUlt be~
and (ainMll IOIDewbeH, IO tbet
f
people could live out their retire·
ment years in dignity, with ade·
quate food and other essentials
for a decent quality or life.
Somewhere in our dem~racy
there must be some prote<:tion
from excessive greed.
B. E . WALTERS
~,, ....
To the Editor:
In your front page article on
science entitled, "Science, prey
to mlafill and fools" I was about
to a1ree with the headline unW I
found that the author was refer·
rin1 to those who did not asree
with the unproven theory or
evolution, as the misfits and
fools.
The author equated the theory
of evolution to the law of sravt·
ty. If thia la so, why la it not re-
f erred to u the law of evolution?
Tbe to-called 1clenU1t doesn't
even know the difference
between a theory and a law.
This article causes me to agee
with the headline -science cer·
talnl)' baa fallen prey to mlsftll
and fools.
Before the Scopes trial, evolu-
tion could not even be tau1ht ln
public schools. Due to recent ruJ.
m111 by misfits and fools, the
name of God can't even be men·
tioned ln school, although there
la m e ntion of God In the
Declaration of Independence
and lt wu written by the same
men who wrote the Constitution.
How could the mentiom of God
in school then be unconstltu·
tlonal?
JAMES BOLDING
••lr•• .. ••••llr
To the Editor:
I flnd it fascinating that the men
on the board or the new Music
Center are, for the most part, the
same men in the forefront of the
bll bu1lne11 auault on the
Or an1e County envlronmenl.
These men have 1upported ln
many lnteretUn1 way1 uncon·
trolled land development and
airport exp1111lon in O\lr area.
Now they are •olDI to help,
Oran1e County to a hl1her
cultural level Instead or jUlt a
hither nolae level.
Good bu1lnea1 practice or
aullt1 M.C.SUMNER ............
To tbe Sditor: Re Da Lown of the Cocoe
... acb, Pl.a. bJfb school and tbl
PIA T a.am.
A model dolt not need to be.
constructed. The problem can be
visualized. The answer 1s seven
(7 ) planes or s urfaces or which
two (2) are bases or the original
pyramids. Hence either (7) or
(5) is correct, depending on
semantics.
In short, the question is am·
biguous and a multiple·choice
answer does not allow the stu·
dent to define his terms. So I do
believe the reporter missed the
point a bit.
Anyway, hooray for young
Lowen! FRANK G. CASSERLY
'De real ••r~••
To the Editor;
Once again the TV news
brings us an interview with
another of Washington's big guns,
thls Ume Secretar)' of Defense
Caspar Weinberger.
Now I know that my hearing
l1n't wbal it used to be and
perhaps this i1 nature's way of
protecting our minds. but I'm
reasonably sure that I heard the
m Ind· boggll n g sum or one
trillion 200 million (I can't han·
die that> budget. much or which
Is programmed for defense.
WELL, <as Reagan would
say) we're worth it and I sup·
pose that by defense the good
Secretary means from out·
elders, principally the Sovlet
Union. Okay. But he and the rest
in W ashtngton better get tbeir
act together for reason that the
Soviets have said they'll take us
without firing a shot.
If all thia dope pushing, racial
arguing, dumb bualng, Abscam,
Laa Vegas f.ires, Santa Monica
rent control fiascos etc. etc.
doesn't stop, and quickly, then
that's exactly what's going to
happen.
WARRENG.ALTHOFF
,,.., ..... ~ ......
To the Editor:
A recent meeting of the
Newport Beach Planning Com·
mlaalon 1how1 that aood old
American self ·interest motivates
u1 all. The heated topic under dls·
cu11lon w11 the Irvine Com·
p1ny'1 planned expanalon of
NewportCeter.
thS.veral people •PGk• ... lut
e proximity of the propoMd bUI
depot to their bom•; tbel.r 1.Ulab
teuam: •Uke of dl ... I fUID•
and the qlfDMa of clepota. One
man want.I the Newport vu1a1e
moved &om tu propc>Md 1lte '°
lb• c:ookln1 odora from lt1
'
re staurant s w ou ld waft
elsewhere; his selfish reason: a
desire for clean-smelling air One
lady ranted and raved about the
coming increase of crime as the
cit y is urbanized . her selfish
reason: wanting to walk the
streets safely.
THE IRVINE Com pany"s
representatives enthused about
the benefits of the expansion:
their selfish reasons: pav. One
man fumed about the extra time
he would have to spend driving to
work in Costa Mesa; his selfish
reason: an appreciation or his
time. Several people expressed
concern about their views being
blocked by the Irvine Center ex -
pansion; their selfish reason:
love of pretty scenery. One person
worried about the increased traf-
fic on Pacific Coast Highway and
the likelihood of the prohibition or
on-1treet parking; her selfish
reason: concern a bout Corona del
Marbuslneu.
One lady praised plans for ex·
pan1lon; her selfish reason : more
shoppers for her store. Several
people bemoaned the fact that
stalled. heavy traffic would in·
crease smog; their selllsh rea·
son: a need for clean air to
breathe. Several people ex-
pressedfears that the Irvine Com·
pany expansion would Increase airport uaage: their selfish rea·
aone: a desire for peace and
quiet. One lady worried about
runoff ln the bay and its siltation:
her selfish reason: a fondness for
nature.
I could 1oon, but the' reader gets
the picture.
JACKWHITGIFT
N•e•elder
To the Editor:
If what I read in the paper is cor·
reel, the "acceptable" noise level
of an aircraft over a residential
area le 64 decibels. The variance
allowance granted to the com·
mercial carriers using John
Wayne Airport is an Increase to 70
decibel1. Do I have news for you!
Qualified sound englneers have
recorded 101 decibels over my
home on Harbor lslarJl and l am
five mlles from the airport.
Somethtna atlnkl, beside• the
jet fumes .
WINIFRED VOEGELIN •
""-'..,. lf'Wll m -.. ~. a.'! .. (~ .. ~····~·" "'"'' ... '"9r'ft41, .. n ..,. • ., .. 1 •
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MORE OPINJON Orange Cout DAILY ptLOT/T'huraday, March 26, 1981
Nicholae von Roff~n
Real estate picture changing
You know It's a sucker'• play
when the Reader'• Dl1e1t start.a
plu11lnJ an investment OD 1ta
cover. By the Ume news ol a
good deal r eaches that maH
readership it'a 1heep-fl eecln1
time, IO be warned a1alnlt the
story in the March IHue tellln&
you that you can "Beat lnfiatJon
-With Real Estate."
For a long time you could, but
now the chances are that it's not
inflation but
you who will
take the beat·
l n g . Buy a
ho u se now,
a nd you 'r e
barbecue pit about bow much the
family but could fetch ii you put It
on the market. Which abou.ld not
be taken u a wamln1 a&alntt
buyln1 a bouae to live In, to enjoy
u one'• home, a far ttiflerent un·
derta.ldn1 than buylnl a• an ln·
vestment. Renten, alter all, ac·
cept the notion that they pay part
of tbelr income to put a roof over
their beada and not so many yean
a10 home ownen thou1ht ot their
houses ln pretty much the same
U1ht . U they 1ot a bit more than
they paid for lt, so much to the
good, but they certainly didn't ex·
peel to make a kUUn1.
buying at the The senaatlonal real estate
t o p o f t h e profits of the '708 came ln lar1e
m a r k e t , meaaure at the expense of the
which is the people and lmtitutiona lendiDJ
classic way m oney for the mort1a1ea.
the fi sh lose Insurance companies, penalon
their money. funds and savin11 and loan U ·
There is no reason to believe soclations have been very badly
that real estate is going lo con· creamed. Anybody who put up
tioue to leap upwards in price the dough for an 8 percent
faster than inflation, which ll mort1a1e some years ago and
cert ainly did during the last now has to pay 10 percent plus to
decade. Actuall y the median borrow money is in an unhappy
price of an already existing house fix .
declined in December, the last Consequently the fixed-rate
month for which figures a re cur· mortgage is dying a quick
rently available. death. Even bankers, who are
The fun has gone out of house often not the swiftest people in
buying. No more bragging at the the business world, know that
MIWPOIT
HARBOR CRUISE ..
SUMDAY laUMCH
AT THI CAHHmY
714 67S-751J
l·:uro-.~rlcan
Kit c~n a Hat h1'J
they cu.not rely oa the prtc. ol
moety rema1ninc the same for ao or 40 yean, tbe lenltb of moet
mort....-. ODe way or another mort1aae leonden are cbarllna
more but house buyers only
bave IO mucb to apend per
month on abelter, which meana
that ii the mortca•e COits more,
the price muat 10 down or lt'a no
sale.
THE PAJNFt.IL fact that the
new mort1a1e policies depress
house prices or kill off aales bu
led the real estate induatry to ex·
perlment with what ls bein1
called "creative flnancin1."
What that uaually boil• down to
la the seller II induced to live a
aecond mort1a1e or second truat
OD tbe bouae. That means the
seller doesn't 1et b1a money out
tmmedlatelf. He 1ets a monthly
payment from the buyers, but
actually 1etting b11 handa on
tbat much talked about profit
may be delayed a considerable
period of time.
The cost of fuel to beat and-or
cool will a1ao help cbeck the fut
movement of prices upward.
Eneray II no looter a negligible
coat of home ownership, so that
potential purchuers must figure
it Into their total monthly coets
when calculating what they can
or cannot atf ord. Evea ii ftve
yeare a10 would-be buyera
aeldom uked to see the beatiat
bllla, aow aucb request• are
routine ln t.be fl'Olt belt.
It ll rrobable that the 1reatelt
of al tax loopholes , de·
ductlon of mort1a1e interest
payment., wiU be narrowed in
the next few yean. The loophole
la lmpoaalble to defend In a
society that wants to make more
money available for froducUve investme nt. Doub leu t he
poUUca of the situation will de-
mand that present owners be
grandfather-clauaed agalmt the
chan1e which will only be applied
to new house purchases. Even so,
the net effect will be to push
down prices. Downward price
pressure will also be 1enerated
if the interest deducUon la not al·
lowed for second houses or vaca-
tion homes.
What's beln& predicted here II
not a real estate crash but a
slow slump, a sag. Only a small
percentage of recent bouae
buyen are 1oing to 1et badly
hurt. Mos t will simply be
bruised when they find out that
the house they had come to t.bink
of as t.belr nest e11. the replace-
ment for their lnflaUon-rava1ed
savines account, bas been nib-
bled and diminished Itself.
PLUMBING
Rttlnga, Sinka, Tube
KOHLER ......,..._...,_T .. llhMt
C_l._"7W .. -~ -c.. C_l.Mowy_f_ -·---~ "'-Clilor Rechelle, on• piece (Kohler) .. _,.,,......_ -c-. -~ l!L KAY STAINLE .. anlL .... ". at Kar ..... tCM•·JaUI ...... -.... wt-lltt ....
(I Iler H C--, - -•Cll' t-.C 11I11 --...
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ow,....
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tn.•
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Get organized
with
Space Mates
•
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If you have a
Daily Pilot Want Ad
appearing tomorrow,
please cut out this
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. . . You may not
have time to cook.
Th is Soup 'n Crackers Duo ·
makes a nice welcome after a
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t easpoon curry powder In 1
tablespoon butter or maroarlne
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with ham soup; gradually stir In
1 soup can water. Add 'h cup
chopped apple. Heat; stir now
and then. Meanwhile, spreed 1
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... ready to assemble and finish. Natural birch.
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Model IW3030
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thur•d•Y· March 28, 1
QUEENIE
"You ... -eomethlnc'• deflnlt.ely wrql"
Nevada flap
'Queer' crack
angers gays
LAS VEGAS (AP) Lt. Gov. Myron Leavitt,
who called backers of a gay rodeo in Reno
"queers" and said they should take the event to
California. was termed a "maJe Anita Bryant" by
the head of Nevadans for Human Rights.
"The use of the word 'queer' has outraged a
tremendous number of gay political supporters of
Lt. Gov. Leavitt, not to mention his straight
political supporters who consider a statement such
as that one of bigotry.·· Steve Hlnkson said
Wednesday. "What the gay community within the
state doesn't need is a male Anita Bryant."
ON TUESDA V, LEA Vl1T jumped into a dis-
pute over the annual gay rodeo in Reno, saying he
opposed renting the state fairgrounds to "queers"
and that they ·'sho uld go somewhere like
California."
"I'm strongly opposed to queers using public
property," said Leavitt, a Democrat who has said
he will run for governor in 1982. "If you give them
the fairgrounds. you're condoning their lifestyle.
and I don't think we should do that ..
He added, "They call them queers because
they've got a screw loose."
HINKSON SA ID THE 1980 gay r odeo
took in $7,000, most o( which went to the Muscular
Dystrophy Foundation. Nevada Services to the
Blind, a senior citizen center and to donate
television sets to a Veterans Administration
hospital. "The gay rodeo in Reno is not held to brin~ shame upon the city tr state," Hinkson said.
·'It's an all -around money making affair which
benefits not only the city of Reno but the state as
well."
Hinkson said the gay communit:,. could not
condone "the overtones of McCarthyism" in
Leavitt's statement and that "one would be in-
terested in bearing Mr Leavitt's comments on
blacks. Mexican-Americans and other minorities."
Sunbelt areas
lead growth
WASHINGTON 1AP1
All the metropolitan
areas with population
gains of 300,000 or more
during the 1970s and all
25 of the fastest-growing
areas -are located In
southern and western
states, according to a
Census Bureau study.
The report forcefully ii·
lustrates the s leady
movemenl of people out
of older indu strial
Northeast and North Cen-
tral stat es that has
become apparent as re·
s uits of the 1980 head
count are made public.
Nearly doubling over
the last decade. Fort
Myers-Cape Coral, Fla ..
'
PtHCl .. OTHHS
SMITHS' MOITUAAY
627 Main St
Huntington Beach
536-6539
'ACIAC vtlW
MIMOll.Al 'AH
Cerretltf'Y Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pac:1f1c: View O nve
Newport Beach
644·2700
McCOllMICll MOITUAl•S
Laguna Beac:h
4!M-9'15
Laguna Hilts
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
H#aotl UWM-WT. OUYI
Mortuaty • Cametety
CratNtory
1925 G1ater Ave
Cotta Mesa
540-55S4
'111Cl•OT ... I
l&LIM>AOW.U MOttTUAIT
t10Bro~way
Colt•~ ..
642·9150
topped the growth list
with a 94 .2 p e r ce nt
population increase. Six-
teen other metropolitan
areas increased by at
least 50 percent during
the 1970s.
DEATH NOTICES
alarm tested
PO)IONA, N.J. <AP> -l:lnen thousand feet
over Delaware Bay, two ~ were oo .•
deadly collilklo COW'M -baNtJ three mllel apart
and a.lnl 1n at ~ than 500 mpb.
But JO teemidl ftom col""°°· ID upertmental
"back·te.al driver" went lDto acUoo, Htt1q oa a
wboelplq alum ln tbe coekptt ot lbt Boeiq m
tbat •amed the pilot to take evulve actJon. He
sent the jet don 1•nUy. A twin-enitne Convalr 580, lnvlalble in the
di1tanc:e only 1econd1 earlier. aoorped put, flOO
feet overhead.
I Bant PLANES WEaE PA&TICJPATING in a
teat of a new electronic 1y1tem, lbe ActJve Beacon
Colllaion Avoidance System, whJcb la detiped to
prevent colli1lona like one that took place over San
Dleeo in 1.978. Jn that crub, 1'4 were killed when a
descenc:U.na Pacific Southwest ~rlines Boeing 727 was bit by a climbing Ught plane.
Officials al the Federal Aviation
Administration Technical Center say the new
electronic system could be instaJ.Jed ln the nation's 2,500 airliners by 1983 and could be used in all
but the busiest air-traffic areas
FAA officials say about 20 mid-air collisions -
most involving small planes -kill an average of
about 60 each year.
The FAA says the new equipment. expected to
cost about $25,000 per airliner, could have
prevented lhe lasl 15 major mid-air collisions
involving passenger jets. Eventually, they say a
similar device will become available for sm'au
planes, at a cost of about $5,000.
PILOTS NOW DEPEND ON their own eyes
and air traffic controllers to warn them of
impending danger from approaching aircraft.
''We're working to build a back-seat driver
into the system," said FAA official Dr. Clyde
Miller during an airborne demonstration over New
Jersey and Delaware.
The system sends out radio signals for 20
mile• ln each direction. aearchine for electronic
answen from transpooders now standard aboard
moat aircraft.
An oo·board computer constantly analyzes the
electronic responses and warns the pilot -with a
loud aJarm and cockpit lights -to either climb or
dive if the aircraft is within 30 seconds of a
collisiOI\.
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATIMINT 011' WITHDllAWAL
fllllOM l'AltTNlltSHI,.
Ol'EltATING UNOElt
flllCTITIOUS •USINIH NAMI
r "" touow1no °'''°" n•' .-1t~cu ••n 4\ • Qtntr4tt o•rtnttr trOM thtt
P•ttnet\t\tp C>Ot"r•t•no unOtr "'' lie fil•Ou~ bu\•n'"' n•mt of 14 '°' U
)PEC1Al I 1ES •I J/q E ll•d SI
Nu•POrl llutn (.A •l?b<oO
Tn• '•(.lll10U\ OV\1n1•\' ''-'"'" , •• ,.
nwttt tOf ttw P•flnrr\htP "NA\ hlf'd on
J I 11 1n thl County ut Of tll'l~
~ult "'f•me •nO AdOr~,,,, ot tnl!
Pt r\O"' W1INSr.-w1nQ
R•lph A fP,,l fd, Yrnd ,.,,rdr41t Jllf
l IJ•O ~t•wOOr1 6to4t.h (A
~9'\e ~,,,.,.
fll1U•ll
PuOll\tw-G C.~~ CO•\I O•d v Pi101
M<11tn 16 Aprtl 1 •. t•. 1 ... 1 14.t 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8U$1N&U
NAMa STAT&MllNT
f llt .... -.... ,.,_ ••• dOln9
OV\1nt\\ •\
I STARBRIGHT llEALTORS.
I N C 11 BRI GHT EST S fAR
INTERNATIONAL .IOIOI 10 .. n Cent•• o,-,,,'" i lOO UOUl\4 N1Quttl (A 'fl•ll
S••'O'•ont RtdltOr) In< ~
(.41h forn14 lOfpQt•l•OO )U101 fo•n
C•nlu Or • .,. ~I~ L•Qul\4t N 1Quf'f
C.A •1•11
Tru,, OU\l"f\\ l\ condut tftd by • l.Ot
POf•tM>n ~t•rbr1Qnl R•••to, \
(..r"1f"1' AO.tm'• (t\.•1rmttn
Tn•' ''•'•mt'f'lt ""'•' '""° •Un U'• County C.lttk of Oreno• County on
M•tell '4, l'itl fllUQH
M:~<o~'f.:"!Pri,•1.\~ f;.~~~10a•ly1fi1~0~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
flC.TITIOUS •u,INIH
HAMIE UATIEM&NT
fnt f0Ho<N1n9 P"'''°n' •rt ooinQ
bU\tr-•H •io R c. A!>!>OC.•AIE,, H SO Von
K•rm•n, Su1I• 100 Nt•tot1 It•'"· C•1ttorni• ~WO
R otll•rd J R•llQ<'" l.0. W••t<rHI
Ot1vt, Coro-'\• O•• M•r. C•llfornt•
O•U C<1"1ero" V•ll•o•. 11 1101 Soutll
Gr•nO. A"'""' S..11• It !Mnl• Ana,
C•llforn1• '110S
Tnh bW$Jf"''' " cotwhu.ted Oy •
o• .... r•l p.t•l-p
ll•C,..rOJ R-r
Thi\ it,.tenwnt Wt\ f tltd w11n '"-
Counlr Cltri. 01 Oreno. Counl~ on
Mer(h J•. 1 .. 1
Rl<ll•_. J. It•""'· A l'r .. "t ..... 1
C•r••••ll..,, 4111 v ... ICermMI, Sullo 100, New,.r1 .. .Kii, Celllwllle ti*.
flUH11
PuDll•IW<I O.•noe C.o.t•I Oa11y PllOI,
March lt, ,t\Orol l , '· •• t<itl 1St1·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
flll,TITIOUS •U"N£SS
NAME STATEMENT
t r1t rouowin9 P•rW>n\ •rt do•no
b1o1\1~•\\ .,.
TRAMMEL CROW COM PANY
IJ~qi F tltn. lnt•M. C<1lolorllf<1 •711'
')0UU'4trn (Altfornt• P•rttter\, nq.q'
f •h.n, '' v1rw, C...l19orrl1•. '21 t• D~n•IO A Sutro 11 .. 0<••11
a out.-w•rcJ 6.tlOOd C•l1tornu1 '11061
l.Jundld Ru\Self, lll1l E•\t 8•¥
UdlOO• L •hto1n1• ,,...
C.loll<H• K Cl>•nQ, JI llo..•1 ICnoll.
fr vmt-l.•fllOrn•• 921 t\
Olil"•d M•l•er. loJ.S Pio Pu.o, ~.n
<>••ov <..•11•orn1d "1'°' \t•pnt'n 8 Wdll•m\ \JJ trY1n~
Avem•• NV*l>O'' Ut•<n. l.•t1fntto• •i•.v Tn1\ bv\1nc\>' 1\ COf\dt.t( t~tJ 0• .f
'""'ltd o.-rtrt4r \l\1P
s.oi..unern C..lltOf'nt• P•""''~
d i.rn1ted JMrtntr~•P
Oon••d A ~110
11• Gent'• •I P••lc>e•
ffll' \&.1"'"'9t'\l Wih 111.0 #tin IM
Co11nly ''"" of Or.,,~ Coul'llY on Mere11 l4. 111t1
• .,.._,, 11.eMell 6 H.,.rn'9••11. • ~teftUI•" Lew , .. ,....u .... Ott
MU"''""' .... 1.urd, s ..... IOt,
New,.rt .... 11. C•hlor"'• •-1' UtH•
Pu011'htd 0rMlQit' (o.t\,l 0•111 f'ilOt
M•tl M I• AOfll I 'I •• 1'41 Ut I ltl
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •uSINEU
NAME STATEMENT r n1: IOllOw1n9 p~r >Ons 4 r #> QOtnQ
bu\•Ot\\ .,
PLAIN WllA,p MUSIC.. l~I M•nn
Or1we. lrv•ne. C.l•f ; 9111•
John H owerd Simon JS•t M•r1n
Oro•t, lr•1M. C•l•I .,, ..
C•rot Ann Simon, JM1 M11nn Onvtt,
Irvin•. C•ltf 'l'l/U
rn1\ OU\t~\\ ,, COt\dV( led by .n '"
d1¥1du•f
John How•,.O S•mon
1 "'" '\l•1•men1 ••\. t11_.d with ltw (ounh Cler• ol Or_,oe County on
M<1rcll H, I'll 1'1Ml41
Publ"IWCI Oranoe Coast 0 •11• P1101.
M••<" '6, Aprll 2, t , 1•. "'' 1"'6• II
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUt aUSINIU
NAMI $TATllMllNT
lh• IOll-~ pertOft h dO"'O bU\o
MU•\
NEWPORT 8EACH M ISStO"'
VAl.l EJO DERMATOLOGY GROUP.
lJO Sup•r1or. !>vii• ,.0, Hewpor I
8H cn. CA ., .. l
0011 J 01ll)efl. M 0 . U O I Emply
~cldll, '"-Hill\, CA 916Sl
f l\ll l>VMnttS IS c.onckKled by -In
OiWlduel
Coro J G110or1, M 0
f l\lt \l•lemlfll wt\ lolfd .. 1111 11\o
Co11n1y Cit" of Oronoe County on
Merell U . 1"1
fll1M4U
PuD11tlwd Or•nQ<t Coas1 Oally P1101,
M<1r<" 16, APrll l , q, 1•. 1'111 ISOI II
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NO'l'ICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI 8UllNIH
NAMl ITATIMINT
Tne 10410..1119 "'''°" It oolng bu" "''' .. NIJ... MOU TAIN E MPIRE fl HAN
NOTICI Of' OIHOLUTIOH C IA1. • •, AllO Ch<1nllllY. Newport
ANO U.CK 011' AUTHOlllT'I' 8UCI\, Ullll0,,11• t2MO
• L ... L COM PANY (Lyonu. • S•m11tl Oltu .•• AU• Ch•nlllly
Oenor el Partner\ hip con•l•lln9 01 Newport IHtell. C..lllonrt• n..o
1109•• M Alison, lt .. d 8•u""'n r 111, llws•nen '' conoutt.o DY en 1n
11-rl N '"•Y.,. Jemt• c. flrace'. dlvidu•I
Cllllton E Smllll, Jr , """"' J Hiii. s.rn ... 1 C""" l(tnntlh c Aldrl(ll, Aoy OOUm•n•. rn •• , .. ,_, ..... llllld Wiii\ lh•
OBITUARIES'
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •USIN&H
NAMa STATIMllNT LewreftCI H C ~11n -J..,,H A County Cl•rk 01 Orenoe C.ounly on
Mercer, Jr ll ~•I PertMfl. ef\CI M<lr<ll 10. ""
wlllCI\ ""' ,.,, .. ,., on Ill b<itlMU 1n F U/tfl Or<1ft1>9 eo.itll1. C..Hfornle, "" di\ P .. 011"11d Ol'M\90 c .... O••ly Polot
fM l4Mlow1r19 --" d01"9 i..,., ,.. .... It 0 (. 0 N S T R U (. T I 0 N~
MANAGEMENT CO . l/Otl CDwAn
lf•ll'le. Ce111or1111 t111'
\Olvod elle<ll••'" of cloM or°"""'" Marci\ tl. tt. i.. Aprll 1 '"' IJS. ti
PUBLIC NOTICE on Oeco-ll, 1'90 ----
PUBLIC NOTICE
o Ali.I 11\et dele, no Pa11ner 1n 1""
P••l,..rtifllp ,,., eulllOllly 10 1>1110 ltlc
Parlnerwp ... <tell le wlf\CI up 1111
PUBLIC NOTICE
Parlner ... 1p<1lletr• flllCTITIOUt •U"N&H
ROGER M ALISON, N,IUq tTATIMIHT
G9tltr<11 Pert"t' Tiit 101'-1"9 ca.r'°" '' clolnQ ou>• AEEO BAUMAN non ••
Gener ... P.erlnu 81tlTAIN SUMMER TltlP JU
Publo\IW<I 0...-Q<t Coe>I D••1Y P olOI. W•k• For .. 1 Roed CO> le Mou
Marc II l•, '"' ls<M 11 Celllor111e tt•» ' '
-------Mr' June Mith. Fe nner. JU W•k• PUBLIC NOTICE For .. 1 RO..S, c ... 1. MIH, Ce1t1orn1•
tnn
l'IC:TITIOUS •U"NESS
NAMI STATIM£Nf 'n• IOllowlnQ por\On •S OOlng ou ..
M\,,.\,
TIU\ buMft4t\\ I\ t.ondu<.t•d by an In
dlvldual
JUM Mllll FeM t r
This \l•l-1 was lllllO wllll II•
Counly Cieri! ol Oran~ County 011
RICllMd M.. Callon, Jr , SOOS R,..,1 AYlnU~ Newpor1 8 .. (1\, C.•1tlorn1•! tJ.., •
Tiii\ °"''"'" it<.,,_,.., or i1n '" t d1v1dval
A1ch,,rG M O•llotl, Jt
TfU\o tt.tlifMf1t ..,., tiled tWIO\ tn•·
(OUM';' Cftrtc of Or•"9rl! County on
Mut " l 1'111 ~
FUIHI'
Puoflu.ct Or~OI (0..\t 0•11~ Pilot
Mtrtl\ S, ll, "· 26, 1'191 IOH 11!
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITl°'-IS •USIN£SS
NAMI nATEMENT SHANGHAI PINE G,t.ROEN. 100
M•flnt Av•"""· 8•100• J\IAnd,
M•rc.hl, 1 .. 1 ,.,., .. 1 Tne following per\On\ ,,.,. ooino
Publlsl\llO OrenQ<t Co.t•I Oelfy Piiot, bu\lntu "' NewPOrt B11<n, , .. rn .. 1
L•m Clwono ltwonQ, 111 Am•'""1
~¥tnu•, B•l bo• hl•nd, Newpufl
Mef<llS,U,1',U,1 .. 1 1010.11 L I. M P RODUCTIONS. I ll • A•iwitr\ldt A"'"""'· Suite F. Mewpor1
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS llH<h. CA., .. , HAM£ STATIMINT Tno> Dll'lln••S ,, <ondu< .. d Dy <1n 1n PUBLIC NOTICE
BH<I>. Calllornoe •Ml
M••' I.Ou Pronooroe••. ttSO 16111
S l,.tl, MlOI, N•wpOt l Buth
C•llfornl• ., .. , l "• to11ow1no per,OfH •r• doing 01v1ch1•I
Oll••neu .. 111 HIW CAR PENT RV YonQ hun L.t• flllCTITIOUS •USIN&SS
NAME STAT&MeHT 111 H W SILL REPLACEMENT 1001i Attornoy al Law
Bl\m<1tk HunllnQlon Be.Cl\ CA fi... Thi\ Siii-i was lllod wlll\ lllO o ... CxM. 10021 Bl\m.tro., Hul'll· Covnty Cler~ o• Ortnoe county on
Tiit IOllOWlnQ pertOft I> dol"t llutl
M-\\ .,
•""Ion 9tec/1 CA.,_ '-Urch H , , .. , ·•9 • flllsas.4
LA 11181.IOfECA CULINARY
INFORMATION SEllVICE. P 0 B<IA
11 .. 7. 1S1S f lOOn A•eftue CO\Lo MtW
Catuor111e rn21
Step111" AllOrl<I\. 100'2 1 1,merk, Put1fl\lltd Or .-~ "•I p Hunttnoton h•<ll CA.,_ eft99 ..-SI ...,1 'I 1101. fl\•\ ou11111u ·,. con011<110 •t • March U,Apr111, t, 16, 1"1 1461,.t Horbtrl I( Al\n. HIS E IClttl
A•tnuo. Coll• M<tu, C.1tlornl<1 •t•11
Th•\ ~n.·n 1, conov<.ttt4 t>Y •n 1n
d lwtduel
htn11eo ~"lf\h•O
St~M Andrt<I\
l "'' \l•lHMnl 'llf•t l1ltd •tlft ,,,.
Counh C.•tri. 01 OrenQ<t County on
Marti\ 2• 1 .. 1 ./ ,, .....
PuDhSl\Od Or1n99 c .... 1 0 ••1• Piiot.
Mtrtll 1•. "-'•12. t. It, 1 .. 1 I Of II --------
PUBLIC NOTICE
UAT£MINT 011' A•ANDONMINT
OFUHOfl
FICTITIOUS IUSINlH llAMI
Tl\e lollow1t19 por\Oft l\es •ba-,,.. uw of ll\O ll<llllou• Ou\lneu ,..,.,.
A ANOE ELECTRIC, 11• •1'1
SHHI. Newport Ilea<,., C.A ., .. l
Al 11\ur EdmuncJ Wo11. 4104 River
A•t • "'"'"'"°'' Boac:n. CA ,~ .. l f "'' OV\.IMU WA\ t ondu<.ttO 0¥' •n
1nd1v1du.el
Ar'""' E Wo1'
f ht\ \l•le,,,.nt ••\ filed w1U't the
Coun•w Cllf• 01 O•MIQO County on
M.,tn lt. 11111
flll4"6e0
Puoh•l\Od Or•no<t CO••I O••ly Pilot
M•r<ll 16 Aprol 1, '· 1• 1 .. 1 1•n II
PUBLIC NOTICE
flllCTITIOUI •USINIU
NAM& UAT&M&NT
f"t fOllOWl"O Mt.of\\ •tP d Ol"9
C>v\IM\\ .,
KRAEMER PLACE A!>~IAfES.
•HO von It er men Aw1n111 • JSO
Nt#l>Or'I k«ll, CA '2..0
,.ow<11d. -•rd & 8•rN•d. Int C.•"''"' l'•rtner. • C•l1lorn1• C.orpor111on 4UO \Ion K•'"''" Awt n"9
.:: lSO "'t•oorl 9Ut " (A .,..0
PVBLIC NO'nCE
.. ,_, Hero.rt K Alln
NOTIC& Off DlllOLUTION '"" sl•l-1 ••• fol eO "'''" "" ANO LACtt 01' AUTHOlll TY County Cler' 01 Or•nQI County on
• f'ULLEltTON APAltTMENT Merell l, , .. ,
LTO , PHASE 11 . e Limited fllU1tte Port ... r""" ContltllnQ of TM All\On Publl"'9CI Or-coe" Oa1ly PtlOI
C.ompelly, I C..lllor!lle <orvorellon •• Marci\ 5. 11. If. l•, 1 .. 1 IOU 11
G eneral PertMr eN:I Ouerlr LIM,
L 1d . • Celllornl• 1.1m1ted P•rlne,.hlP
•• l.l"11llld Perl-<Incl wl\otl\ ""
<•rrloo tn 1110llMM\I1n Of-Coun
PUBLIC NOTICE
If, Celllofflle. ••• dl-l""d tlhrcltvo l'ICTIT!OUS •USINEH .... CIOM al ........... on O...omoer l•. NAM£ 'TATEMENT
l ttO. rnt tolfow1nQ pttr\Of"I\ •r• 001n~
b. Af .. r tn•t O.tt, no P•'''"'' 1n trw bu\lntt\\ •\ PertMrllftlp N• eull\orlly lo bond 11\1 l11E Rl(,C:.ING CO . )llOI W t o.t\I
Ptrtn•t\l'UP, •• ,.,,, to Wl,..0 uo tnlf H•Ql"l••t'. Nt llJlfpOtt Otacn c.t11fO,n••
P•r tner\ft1p •ff••'' 91kl LI Ml TEO PAR I NER I •wrMX• Al•n MOIQ<ln ••I• 1 t91n
QUAR I l LA NE I. I 0 , • Sire••. C°"'" M,.,. Cehlorn1~ 9l•ll>
C...llforn•A \.1m11tcJ P•rn.tr\hiP '>•n Vd(.(41t0. 1CMM.1 Hunt•' l .tnff
Ldw,en(_. ._. (.. $m1tn t-junt1noeon Bt•t h, C.•hto,n1• QJ'O
Citnttttl PArtnt"r r fH\ bu\H~ti\\ 1\ <unovt hrO O't' o
PuOlt\IWO C>~OI" (O.\I O A•l't' Piiot Qll'n•tel pdrlMt\h10 M~r<ll 16 1'191 tS03 t 1 u wr.-.tt A Mo•Q<1n
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS •UllNllSS
NA.Ml STATIMINT
T"• loll-lnQ ,,.,_, " "°"'' °"" rwu .,
T n., )l•tem.-.nt ••\ t11fd w ith '""'
C.ounty (Irr-. ot UtMIQt' C.oun1, on
M<11tll 10 11111
FU/SU
PuOl•\,J\f(J °'.,..9' Co.l'\i D•••• Pilot
M<1rcll 11, It U Ap•'OI ) 1 .. 1 tl\9 ••
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS auSINIU
NAMI UATIMINT
A8 8A ANTIQUE~. !>vol• (.I JJOJ
Heroor 81.0 C.~t• Mou, CA ttU• •
Mr Mt< .... I Wood API •II. uOI
Yt•rrwtr A-'t ,..untinQlon 8 t .Kh, CA ., .. , l "' followtn.o per'°" 1\ do.no bu\• nn-,, •\ T nn bw\1N \\ '' lO'lO\l(.lf13 o, .,. •n
01•10Yel.
M WOOCI
COMMf R(IAL I NYE!. T ME~ IS
1U l Co1umDI• Ot1vt (O)I• Mt\•
Celllorn1<1 91•11>
l t Onero 8 He•Ull. USO 161n
Str eet M lOl N•wpof1 B••Ch
C.a111orn1• ., .. l
Tru\ OU\ln.tti t• t onch.Kte<I tJ'f •" 1n
Ol~1du•I ,,._,, LOW Prtnotof'e.t\f
Tn6\ \l•l~t w•\ ftled w ith tn,.
Counh Cl•'"-ot Or•rtQC Covrih on
M•r<h l ttll
FUl .. J
Publl\"4-0 Or-"91' (O.\t O•llv Pt1G1
Mer(ll ~ ll If 1• l'itl IOSO 61
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU' •USINESS
NAMI 'TATEMENT
fnf' lotlow•no perwn' •'• oo.no
OU\int \\ .,
111 AUOIO LTD 171 l •00 C.AR
Lf;A$1 NG. 1)1 AUIO AUOt(I It~
A1"1r\1dlt AWn\lle, S\il•1• E. N~.wpO• t
81•c f'I , C.ehtorn•• 9MJ
f LC lnOu\"•"\ lnr a
Ct lllorn•• corpor•t1ori uq R1vf't'>•df'
A•tnu•. Suit~ E NfwPotl ~t•• n (.ehforno• ., .. ,
fF\I\ OV\.I~\ I\ tondu<. t•d cv .. ~ ,,,
oor•t1on
f l. ( lnOV\lfif'\ h'M
M Brookti C,vnn1f\Q,
~crtt•rv frr•\urt'r
t f\1\ \t•temient •A\ hl«J ••lt'I Ir••
C.ouf'tti; (l•tll ot 0 fitnQf' Counh '"
M11r<ll I 1 .. 1
"S/011
Pubh\nt<I Oran~ (CM\t OA1lv t'il01
M<1r(n S. ll I~. l•, l'itl IOQc Al
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSI NEU
HAMii STATEMINT
T ht •olfow1no otr 'on~ •r• do•no
I 1N\1ne \\ .,
R ONSfAOT S 11• \l\lf\I '~'"
Sltu l C.O\le _ _. C•h•orn•t '1?611
W H .-Kt R A • In( • C•lilorn1A
<.oroor•l10f"t. 1t• W t\t '~'" Str~,1
Co\t• M t\• C•1ifof"n1• 91'11
WH -RR INC
R•n<Mll J Ru•"""
T t\1\ Cki\•IW\\ I\ CO"dVtltd b t •
itm1ltO ~rt~"-l'UO
"40W1Ud How•rd ~ 8•rn•r0
In<
fn•• \1•ttirnenl *•\ f1lf'd wit" tnt-(..0""'" C•tr!ll ot Or.,Qf' County on
M<1r(I\ l•. t•t
JOf>n M ""'-•• )~I ColumD••
O•••t. C°"t• M.~• C<1lltorn1t ~t.1•
T "'' \t•t~n1 ••' t1lf'O ..,,,,, trw
C.ou"t'f (.le r" ol Or•nQf" <.ounh on
M•r<nl '"' 1'1MS.. r111, .,.,.,,...,is t onouc•td DY "" 1n F1SIOIO Roor•1 "N
l ti•\ .. t•t•.,,..nt
l aunty (1er111. of
Mar<n 1l , .. ,
HO••rd PuOh\he<I Or•~ Cot\l D•1•v Plfot, dtvtdu•I Pu(,)11\""3 <>.,.or (O.\,I o •.•• P1101
#f\ fltlf(J •ill\ "'* 0• en~ County on
M<1r(n)•.A.1>'•12 '·"I'll ·-•1 JonnM !>ol!M~• M•rtll S tl. 19 16. 1 .. 1 10 .. 11
l'Ul4JI
llub"'""" Or ""QI CCM\I 04•1y POIOI.
M•1<.ll 16 Apt1l I.'· 16. 1tt1 1~ 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
$TAT EM£NT Of A8ANDONMllNT
OfllUHOI'
fllCTITIOUS 8USINISS HAMii
f fl\• IOlfO#tnQ per"°"' f'\•Vt •Mn
GOntd l"'t UM Of "'' f1<.t1llOU\ bu\tftCl'U
FICTITIOUS •U51NIH 1'•"1• NAMI $TATIMINT HUNfl .. GTON BEACH f l LE,
Tiit t0t1ow1no por'°" It Oolno Out1 I 11'2 Go11>erd !>lreel. Hunt1nQton
,..._ es 8 H< II, CehlMnl<1 tllM/
Sl11NC:. HU'° CONSTRUCTION CO . Tl\e Fotlllio..s Bul'neu N•mt rt-
HI W 1 .. 1\ SI . C.0•1• MH e, CA 91611 l•rred 10 -· Wti flied on OtM\Qfl
I U I Tnt Sl\lllQ, IO•O M•P•• SI • Cou,.ly on JUM ••• lttO
Co••• Mew, CA 'l'JUI Aero Tract Co<P .• • C•l•lorno• cor
T"I' butjf\M\ '' conduct.d by _.. 1n por•hon* 115"1 Goin.rd StrHt, Hunt dlY1d11•I •noton a..c11, c.111or,.1• •i.•1
f nt !ttl"'O IWI ACto rrec.e CMp.
'"'' st.alemenl wu 11111c1 .. 11,. 11\1 R.-n M Bh""· Count• C••'' 01 Orenoe County on ~IOOnl M<1rtl\ H, '"' fhit sw1emen1 ••• llllld w1111 11\1 flll,..7 Countt Cit,. 01 OrtnQ<t C.ounty on
PubhSIWd 0r ... oe C:0.•1 0 .11, PllOI, M•r<h 1•, ..... flll)Mll
Publl11Wd Or-Co••I 0 <1lly Piiot, Mardi u . Aprll 2. • ••. 1 .. 1 , .. , t i
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI 01'
NON-ltlS"°""•ILI TT
NOloO •• l\lret>y 91...i'I lllel I,,_ un
O.r1•ontd ..nu !IOI 111 r•aponwbl• for
•ny dtbh or llebllllln contr•<llO t>y
tnyone oti..t ,_, my~ll. on or el1tr
lhl\ d elt
Oeteo 111•1 1111> def 01 M•r<n, 1..0 Gt•• It Aou1rre MOO W W•r<w1r Avenue,
11\iflllnQIC>fl Buen. CA t?•41
Publlsl\ld Or•nQe c-sl Cally Pllol,
Mir< II U , 11, AOl1I 2, 1 .. 1 14'1 11
M~I\ 2', """11 l. '· I•. , .. , 1 .. W l
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10U$ aU51NIU IUMa ITATSMUIT
TIM loll-Int --• ere doln9 ..,.i,,.ua.
lMlllALO LAii.£, ... 0 . 8oa UOt,
1'1 .. klcll ..,.. .... .,.d. SW41e Ut. H .....
11"910fl IMcll, C.lllorfti• '21M1 .
c.fvln M. L.eunt 6 11.•lll""" II
Lev"9. 6M1 RIO GN<ll Orlve, """'" lnelon hecfl, c.111om1e tMI. Cl.-l(.M. L._,. Mid CIO""r
M V. 1....._ ..St RMI CM<ll Ori.,.,
Hunllnol*l &ekll, C.lllornl• tM1. PUBLIC NOTICE Golden Oak 111vu1men1, A ----~---------1 Celllor11le Urnlt9d PertMrlfllp, 1'16e
NOT ICE 011' Al'l'LICA TION ll'Olt
CHANOl IN OWNlllllHll' Oft
ALCOHOLIC ••v•••o• LICINH To Whom 11 Mey Concern
&ee<ll lovloerd, S11ll• UI, Hu11I·
lnolon ~II, C.lllOr11la tlMI.
CeMnM.U-
Thl1 ''°'-' .... lllod wlln IM Cow1111 Cl•rll ol Or•llQO Counh on
Merell J, '"'·.
Th•\ \l•t•fY'lil'nl w~u fllf"d w1tn tht
Covnt., Cltrk ot O,.•nOf (ounty on
Mtrcll 3. 1'91 ,.,, .. ,
Publl•Md Oran~ '""'' o .... POIOI, Maren s. 17, ••. 1•, 1tt1 1~ 11
PUBLIC NOTICE .
llDNO. l H I
COHTltACT NO. 11 .. 1
LIGAL NOTICI
NIWPOtlT·M&SA UNlll'llD
SCHOOL OISTltlCT
NMlcl 1-111,.. lld•
NOflCE IS HEllEB'I' GIVEN lh<ll
Ill• BotrO 01 Eouca1 1on 01 11\f
Nt wport M&S• Un1f .. d S<.hOOI 01tlr 1( t
ot Or•n~ County ••II '•<•Iv• ~•l@IG Did\ up 10 1 00 P M °" IM 1011\ oo or
April, ..... •I 1 ... olfl(I of •••0 Stl\001
0 1 .. ri<t. IO<•ted •I tlH Pl•<tnl"
Sttf'lt, CO\I• M.,., C•tifO"H•, ••
whtC,, 0,,,. \_.0 O•O\ •Ill b4' pubhc ty
oo-neo af'id r..O tor
CONTINUOOS FOAMS
Aft blc8 •'• 10 bl 1n e<t«d•n<t with
Cond~lton\ f n,truCllon\ •n et
SO•<. •••c•l•OI'\ •tuc" ''' now on ttlt 1n ,,.. olll(e Ill lhe Purtll<1slno 0110<1or
ol •••d SCN»I Otllfo(I. 1I H P•.ctnllt
SI•"'·,.,.,. Mew. C<1hlorn1• tlUI
8 10 P•••fllllH •nd ~•mOI•• m •y tM
P•< ked ""•I .... Pur(,,~lnQ SIM•• 01 •oe•. , .. 1 IN•• SlfNI. C~I• Mew C.A
•U1• l1om Mr\ Bnt•ltt 9<1tO.tr
8 uytr
A PtrfO,.m•nt• Bond m•v ex '"
Quired •I IM dhc:rollon Ol 11•• 01\lfl(I
No 8100tr m•y w1thdr•w "'' Bid for e P«fl00 ol torly 11¥• IO I Cla y• •lltr
lne d•I• wt lor 1111 ope111n9 1,,.r.ol
TlltBoero 01 Edu<•llon 01 tne
N•wporl Mew Un1lieO SClloOI D1\lllCI
•Hervn llw rlQlll lo r•t•<I •nY or •II
Bid> •nd nol ntuner11y accept 11\w
IOwt't 8•0, •nd to w•h" ""V In
•orm•IUY or lrrtQul•rtlY In •f"V 810 rt
c.••v•d NEWPORT MBA UNIFIED
!>CHOOl OISrlllCT
PUBLIC NOTICE
ORANGICDVNTYSUPE ltlOll
COUltT
IN Civic C-W Orin Wul s-. AM. C.11 ....... a U70I
PlAINTIFF MAAIA OE LOS AN GELE~
OllNEl AS
OEl'ENOANf LAUllO P RUIZ EL VIA 9LAN
CO FEOEAAL NA llO NA ~
MOR TG.l'GE ASSOCIATI O N, e
Corpor•llon CH ICAGO flTlE
INSURAN CE COMAPANY • Ml\M>un
CorPor•llon. •no OOES I IP\rouQh 10
ft\(fUilVf'
C..N-:UtlM
SU'"""°" S
NOTICEI Yov Mw• bffn ""'d '""
(0Ufl m•• dO<lde 4190iMI '°" wlll\O\JI your belnQ heard unl•n you rf'SPCH'K'
w1U•1n JO .S.y\ Ae.o ....,.. 1ntorm•l•Ot\
balOW
II you _,.,. IO -~ Ille IOdVI<• of •n
enorney tn tNt metter, you '"°".a oo
so promoUt to 1n•c you,. w r•fl•n r•s,pont.e, It.,,.,, mer bt flted on lime
AVISO' YUN oe -I--·· Et lrloun•I PUedo dtclcllr contra Ud "n
•..Olene I• • .,,.,_ Que Ud ••"""""9
ftfllro Of lO di•• '-•• •• inlMm•clOn
Q ... s19.,.
SI U11.o oewe >Olltoter ti conw jo oe
un .ab09id0 en ettt IOunlo de~t1•
nacerto 1mm10,•t•mente. dt •'ti•
m•ner•, '\.u rflOUttl• fl,Crit•. '' "•Y •lvun•. puedt ,., raol•lr.O.. llempo
1 TO THE OEfE .. OAHT A CIYll
comp1<11111 ,.., -111..0 Dy ,,,. p1e1n
1111 •o••n•I yov II you wl\I\ to del•llO
1n11 ••wWll, you ml1>I. •lll\ln JO O.•I
•"•' lhl1 wmmon.t 11 1-erved on yov. Ill• wllll lhl1 <ourl t written resPon•e to
lllt complelnl u111ess you do so, 1our
Oeleull wlll I:. eftlered on ePC>li<etion
ol lhe pl•lllllll. e nd 11\11 covrl "'"'
enter • J..oonw111 eoalnsl you lor I,,.
rtll•I OtmencJ•d 111 Int tomp1eln1,
wlll< h tould rewll In Q.lrni\l\menl of
w•~•. leklng of money or prOl)er1V o•
otntr rtlitl •-•led In,,,. <otnPleln of O••noe Count•. C.•1tlornl1 Oorotny Harve1 Fl\lltt.
C P.M I DATID: A-11 ll, , ..
JemH A l!HOSLEV °"d 1..t>ll• H
SHIPMAN.,, -'Ylnt lo Ille O.perl m•n• 01 Al<Ol>Oll< e. ... ,_ Control
lor ff. ON SALE 8EER & WINE
!P U 8 PREM I 10 H ll <1ltOllOll<
llt ••r•oet •• 1121 Hewpor1 a 1vo.,
CO$le Mes-. CA '2•11
fl1S71M
Pu1111"'9cl Or-tN•I 0.lly PllOI, ~"" s. 12 .... ,., 1•• 1202 .. 1 I PurtMtlnQ Dlret•or
"'" l.0.J1tl
L.te A. •reMll, Cleft! ly ..._, 0'"'9, ~y
a..-.. ll. str101 ... d
PuDllsMO Or.noe coast Delly Pilot,
Maren 1•. '"' uoo.11
PUBUC NOTICE D•lfd M<lrth 11. 1 .. 1
PuDll\l\Od In Ille o .. nCjt COHI l)eoly
P1IOI M<lf(h tt. l•. lttl
PUBLIC NOTICE
1111N-• ..... •Y
._AM, ca. tm1
PuDllSIWd Or-Coesl Oelly Pllol.
Merell$. I). lf.1'. 1•1 1?01 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
Lll'I ANO A<C108NTAN0 HIALTH
S'l'N01'11101' THll ANNUAL tTA T&MINT
011' '!'&All INOIO OICEMllR Jl, 1•
•HT UI'& AHUllANC& COMl'ANT 0' CAUfllO•NtA
••1 alrtll MrMI, New,.n 9HCll. C<ll-• tu.t
,., •• •dmlli.cl ., .... C P-2,ll~HI
Total llellillllt l '"'"),fine Jtl
C..Pll•I peld uo C Pe~), fin• 11AI
••,tM.llt
'2.S)A.0•
1'1t1M llM 21AI ,,,000 000
c" l'ulllltlM 0r.,.. ,, .. , oa11, l'llOI, Rovl\CllllQ CP-J. une 118 1
Mer<ll 11 ....... ..., .. 2, "" lt»-11' G•O\J paid In allO contrl111119d ••HPl\11 I P•9'
PUBUC NOTICE
1.llfttH) sPfC Ill Sl;rplu1 Funch I Pacie J, hne 1'AI
Uneut...,0 IUl'ld\ h ur11luU I P•Clt 1. 11,,.
2f8 mlnut J'CI
0 •111 I LOH) lrom oPl••llon•
( Peoe 4, llnt 111
lnt rteM (OK, .... , 111 C•Pll•l •1141 S11ro1u1
Ourfne lt/t t Peoe 1, llllt >O.
tttO ml,... It/ti
lnwrenc• 111 flOH• Nellonw14' I P•11 ''· 11.w U Col. 10 WllOI• OOllers)
ACCIO.nl .,., -1111 preMlunt• kll•Oul• H Col
I, 1.1111 II 111611r•n« In f<trte Celll9r'll• avalMn ,...,. IL•neUTet .. I 0
AtelcltnUllll llNllll _,tfnluntt Ollttl Call~nt•
Owtllle\.l , ... (LIMU, Cel. ti P l ,110
Wt -•1 cenJIY 11\111 11'9 INVI ll•M• .,. In «<orNnc:• •1111 , ... AMI>••
$1e1eme111 for IM ¥.., .....-()eum-)1, '* rnedt lo ll>e tnwrefttt Cl"'
min i-el the ~t•., telltornle, ,..__m to 1ew
T-J.CAll\111 .........,..
J4M C. V 111\dtf Kiit NI
S«rwttirT ""'""'"'° Oreftlll c ... t 0.111 1'1181, ~" n. ,., u . >• 21 '"' 1411 •1
.. ·-~ -
CONSUMER Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thut9dey, Maroh 26. 1981
r--------------'llle .. •~le••JHNl.-rfd .. ••11eese--------------
This Toyota pickup truck was seen parked
in a parking space for the handicapped at
Ralphs Market, 380 E. 17th St., Costa
DEAR PAT DUNN: Somebody told me
at a St. Patrick's Day party that the song,
"I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen," is not
an Irish song. He said it was written by an
American and has nothing to do with Ireland.
I bet him $10 that he's wrong. J hope you can
back me up on this.
K.E .. Costa Mesa
Sorry, you lose. Thia soag la not aa lrlall
ballad, alld no reference la made &e lrelaad
ill Its lyrics. It was written by a Vtr1laJaa
named Tbomas Pahte Wel&etldorf (not yoar
typical lriu aame>. wlao lived at t.he time ill
bdlua.
Nor -as sometimes said -was Weatea· •rt &rya.1 co clteer ap ltJa wife bffaue alte
was ill and unhappy over the dutb of a son.
As eatabUahed by the reaearcll of Richard
S. RIU ol the Library of Congress, Weateadorf
waa le111eMme for his wlfe -t.ltey were
aewlyweda -who waa vl1lt1a1 her laome la
Ogdensburg, N.Y., wlllle Tltomaa was stack
la Plalalleld, where he lllad a teaclllag job.
Evidently be coaaldered Katbleea a more
romantic name than Ills wUe's, whlcll was
Jennie.
Accorclln1 to the late St1mud Spaeth,
aatl1ority oa popular maslc, Weateadorf'a
direct lllsplratloe was aaodter aon1 called
"Barney, Take Me Home A1atn," by Arthur
W. French and Geor1e W. Persley, whose
real name was Geor1e W. Brown.
,.,,... ha• •tereo r91'ft"
DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm having a real
problem locating a plastic dust cover for my
daughter's Emerson stereo, which I acciden·
tally broke. Can you help? I've looked every·
where and none of the stereo dealers in this
area have any idea how or where I can get
this part.
D.M .. Costa Mesa
Brooklyn West Coast Televialon Co., a
Loa Angeles Emerson service firm, referred
AYS to the Emerson dt.tribator. All you have
to do to 1et the replacement cover la wrtte to
Emerson Radio, 10415 Armlnta St., Sua
Valley, Calif. 9135%. Provide tbe model
number ol the stereo, llat the part you want
and enclose a check for SH.ZS. ft wlll be
shipped to you Immediately via UPS.
DIU •~• aat•ral drhlk
DEAR PAT DUNN : A recent Mitzie
Keller column in the Daily Pilot featured a
dill tea recipe that is supposed to help reduce
appetite. How much tea should be drunk and
when is the best time to drink it for cutting
one's appetite? I've also heard that equal
parts of honey and apple cider vinegar is a
good health drink and that it can even help
arthritis. Have you heard about this?
N.M .. Costa Mesa
Mltde &eUer advises drlaktng Ne or two
nps ol dlll tea -po11lbly tUee c9P1 -with
a teaapooe ol lloaey for qalck eaer1y aboat 15
mlaates before eacb meal ud at bedtime.
Sile adda that dlll tea la 1 aahlral dlaretlc
and It eo11ta1D1 many vltamlu aad mlHraJs.
A VS ltu never heard ol Ute lloeey aad
cider vtae1ar mhtare. Healtlt aatllorUles do aot reeopbe all)" food or drtllk aa belal
beaeftdaJ la die treatmeat ol a..U.rttll.
A "Gol a problem? Then wnlt lo Pat W Dvnn. Pol will cut rtd lope, ~Uing "1 IM an•~n and act'°11 JIOU nud to
•
aolw irwqidt~• in gowmfM111 and
buliMH. Moil .,our qu«&lioftl to Pat
Dvnn, At Your Sttvkt, Orongt Coo.st
DollJI Pilot, P 0 . Bo% 1560, Co&ta Meeo. CA nl~. Al
mon11 !nten as pouible will be ~ed, biit phoMd
traqulrie• err lettn• not including the rtotUr'I /ull
name. addreu and buliMu hourt' phoM numbtt
cannot be conlidertd. Thi& column appeort doUW tz·
cept SundaJI•." '
•
Mesa. No handicapped sticker could be
seen.
· · MARKET
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
Frella Fl.let ol Sole ................ 3.11 lb.
Fresh Frozea Local Sw.-dftala ...... 4.11 lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and lop choice beer aged at least 30 days to the
peak or perfection.
Fresh Zacky Farms LocaJ Turkeys
( 12· 14 lb. avg.> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lk lb.
Pork Loin Back &Iba . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Z.41 lb.
S&atfed Pon Qope, Staffed wtua
Delaney's Famou Apple Dreula• 2.41 lb.
CANDEUTE HEAT AND EAT FOODS
Prepared Fresh Daily From Delaney·a Own
Kitchen.
Stuffed Baked Potaeoea .......... tk ea.
Encbtladas wtUt Sauce .......... 1.41 ea.
Sbrlmp CUrry .................... Z.41 ea.
FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVICE
<SSO minimum>
Thls ad errectlve Wed., 3/25 thru Tuea .. 3/31
DELANEY'S
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Laree Jumbo Artlcbokea <no limit> .. ffe ea.
So. American Baaaaat ...... 3 Iba. for t ...
Ripe Sweet Juicy Via
Hawaiian Pineapples ............ 8k ea.
FROM DELANEY'S BAKERY
Carrot Cake .................... 1.98 ea.
Apricot AJmond Cake ............ 1.98 ea.
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
Delaney'a Prl¥a&e Label Chablis or
Vin Rose' Wine c 750,mil 1.
Beringer Cllenln Blanc C7SO m1l 1
Weate Bro9.
Le Blanc De Blann < 750 mil 1
All liquor and v. ane plu!> tax
1.69 ea.
3.75 ea.
3.SOu.
Pepsi 1? oz. six pack, Diet or Regul11r 1.19
SU>re Hours 9·6, Closed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
673-5520
A _New Department!
There's some real excitement at Wild West Stores this
Saturday, March 28th. \Ve're having a Grand Opening &
Sale in our new department. It's COO'BOV, a place of
authentic western fashion. It's got to have the biggest
selection in Southern CaRfomia. Featuring the style and
flt they invented here In the West. Easy-going. Built to
wear a\\.flle and give you the money's wonh.
I
I
WESTERN JEANS SALE
These styles are winning the West.
Selected styles. Regularly men's $28·$37,
juniors $37-$39.
$
I
WESTERN SHIRT SALE
Tops in western fashion. Selected styles.
Regularly men's $22 · $26. ladies $18· $23.
Sale prices good thru 3129 while supplies last.
CILllllTIDll
V1s11 a Wild IJ.kst Siore
this Sarurday. March 28
Have a 50da pop. gel a fancy
COWBOY decal. and helium
balloons for the 1'11varmints100
You can e-ven 1ak2 home a free
cO\.llbo,t hat with a purchase
from the COWBOY
department. 1A.h1le the '>upply
lasts
llLUllLI CDUPDll
Save Sl.00 on Donle West's new
album 'Wild West." We sure like lhal
name. so IMC'0re giving away a coupon that
will save you a dollar h's redeemable
at any Tower record Slore.
NOTICE!
This Grand Opening and Sale will
not be at rhe \Wd West Outlet
StOt'e In Anaheim. on La Palma
near Magnolia
OJllMO lOO EsplfnMlt Onw 0POOJ11f Tttt fJpll/IMle ctn/ff MIS14'5 ·'606 ,....,,.. ~ ( lootlldl ,,.,, RottrntMI' FOOlfllll }131511 16'1 ,.,,,,,, l#LU '7151 ( Col1m1 NJI OI Putfllt Ill/IS "''" }13196,·61}1 tWrttllOf JW Trlf1 nt•I 000110 lltf lrusurr /1"16'1 1322 ,,,,,,,,. OAll 'm VIII Nuys 8"'1 nt•I 10 HllQMs M11te1 }IJI 1'3 }SI I
M/(TA AN 3430 S 8nstOI A .. I '-milf llOt/11 of South Co.Ill P1111 /l'l"Sl·llOO
UllrA IA~IMA BlO Slllt Sr "'oowmown S1n11 '"°'" fOStHJ•JJ46
department
STORE HOURS
Mon·Frl 10-9:30.
S.t 10-7. Sun 10·6
Sii ,,,,,,,, OPfll '1/.IHF 10 g JO flJ"W·SM 10-1 5"" l/r6 rolfltAllCI nm HH111101~ 81..:1 1 '·""~ sou111 01 Ott Amo 21J1JTJ 73'.f
Wfl,.,,.,rJll 1!>41} G°"1tll•tsl SI "f•l 10 Golrlen Wul Co#eqe """' 5$41
Your Calilomia Clothing Store! •• l
...
r
I
I
'
F•He1
The Sl billion spent
on the 1980 census
was "an exercise in
futility" and could
have been done for a
fraction of the cost, says Philip M .
Klutznick , census
c hief and forme r
secretary of com·
mer ce.
Contest
has bull
• a ·winne
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Ther e were the
serious stories and the funny and the bad, and
the six men who Jud1ed
the stories drank the
wine a nd mulled the
words and gave the 1981
Jmitatlon Hemingway
award to "Bull In the
Night."
Harry DuPuy, 58, of
Pitts ford. N.Y .. s ub·
milled the winning en·
try. which was selec~ed
from 2,319 stor ies from
as far as Saudi Arabia,
Belgium and Chile, and
which was selected at
Harr y 's B a r a nd
American Grill in Cen·
tury City. DuPuy wins
dinne r at Harry's bar in
Venice, Italy, and the
round-trip pl ane tickets
to get him there and
back.
'
"OUTSIDE IN th e
snow they Jay together
in the sleeping bag. He
kiued her." DuPuy's I e ntry says , echoing
... For Wh om the Bell
Tolls."
1 But there the similari·
ty ends.
• I "His tongue darted in-
t
to her left nostril and
right ear. Simull.aneous·
ly ... it says. "He was
proud of this skill he had
s h arpened with t h e
bu ll s . He liked h e r
though she was not a
bull.''
Digby Diehl, the con-
t Judge who is the
k editor of the Los
,.Angeles Herald Ex·
aminer, said the bull al·
lu1ion1 gave "a good
sense of Hemingway's
overly muculine spirit
and his obsession with
bullfi&btinl and Spanish
motifs."
"ONE LINE re -sounded in my mind,"
Diehl said. "It read.
'Why can't a woman be
more Uke a bull'?"
Judge Ray Bradbury
said he saw the Norman
Mailer influence cr eep-
ing into some entries,
and another Judge ex·
claimed: "Is this an
Ambrose Bierce con-
test ? I'm now on my
second dead ser ious
·one."
' As usual some losers
were funnier in spots
than the winner though I maybe not bad enough "9 wln. "Hls one good eye
followed the botUe to his
1llps," 1aid one.
"THE aAIN was cold
apd wet and came in
rops on the pavement
low. The rain always
me ln drops," said
, other.
.-,
, • I , I .
Orenge Coat DAIL vl,P,LOT/Thur8day, March 2e. 1981 NATION .
I ,. ........ ,, ....
Woman says instrument left iD ~omen after surgery
'fAMPA, na:-(AP> -Vlrlinla For three day1, Mra. Heniqton tbe 1ur1ery -Dr. Thomu Tbe Timpa Tribune 1ald 1taff tGld ber u IMVamm bad
Herriqtoa 1ay1 ~in followln& aaJd lbe complained of excruclat· McDonald -ordered X-ray1, WedMlday that tbe woman bad been found ''and It bM to t0me
bu fairly routine abdominal '1n1 'Paln f0Uowln1 a March 11 wbleh lbowed a t"·lncb wtdt ln· 11reed to releue ber medical,... out, and wa.atd I alp thespen
1ur1ery wu so aevere It felt like o~eration at Tampa General atrament called a "retractor" ln cord• to tbe new1paper, but for lbe operatloa. Tbey t
aomeooe bad 1awed me la two." Hospital to remove an ovarian her abdomen, Mra. Herrinston cban1ed ber mind followtnc a con· they 1ot to ft i• time, an It \
Then X-rays revealed that docton cyst and bowel 1dheslon1. Hid. A r.uactor ta uted to pull ferencewtthbolpltalofftclaJs. 1houldn't have caUMd any more
had left • foot·.lonl suritcal tool She could not alt up and cried back tluue to 1Uow a Hr1eon to She Hid •he dld so °" the advlce damaae." lnslde her body. t when •be wu bathed, said an better tee or maaipulai. or1ana of her attorney
"I •uttered, I mean I suite~:· aide, who told nurses about the durin1 anoperatlon. · Mn. Herrln1ton'• husband,
. 11ld Mn. Herrlftllon, 45. "I-was woman'• constant paln and McDonald rel\ased comment, u Mra. Herrin1ton sald she un· Robert, saJd he and the couple's
1ettin1 hot and cold chills. They swollen abdomen. did the bolpltal. Neither denied derwent a se<:ond operation Fri· two sona saw • Ht ol X·rays abow· r
were livlnl me pain shots every Friday, the Tampa ot>.t.etrtcian the instrument waa left in the day to remove the instrument in& a lon1 ·•foret1n object" lying
three hours." and 1ynttologlat who performed woman by mlatake, however. alter a member of the hosp\tal vertically ln hls wife's stomach.
;
on '81 F.ord Granadas, Falrmonts and Mustangs.
Choose from 16 Get a check for $610 to $715.
' I
I
GRANADA
MODEL BASE PRICE
L 2-Door Sedan $ 6,474
L 4-Door Sedan 6,633
QL 2-Door Sedan 6,875
• QL 4-Door Sedan 7,035
QLX 2-0oor"Sedan 6,988
QLX 4-Door Sedan 7,148
FAIRMONT
MODEL BASE PRICE
2-Door Sedan $ 6091
4-Door Sedan 6,210
Futura 2-Door 6,407
Futura 4-Door 6421
Wagon , 6,503
Futura Wagon 6,735
MODEL. BASE PRICE
2-Door $ 6230
3-Door 6,467
Ghia2-Door 6,674
Ghia3-Door 6789
10%CASH
ASSISTANCE
$ 648.00
664.00
688.oo
704.00
699.00
715.00
10%CASH
ASSISTANCE
$ 610.00
621.00
641.00
643.00
651.00
674.00
10%CASH
ASSISTANCE
$ 623.00
647.00
668.oo
679.00
Ford extends its 10°/o Cash Assistance Program on these models. Make ~our best deal on.any of the new 1981
Fords listed above. Take delivery, or order now through April 5, 1981, and Ford will send you a check worth 100/o of
the sticker price for the base vehicle. If you wish, you may apply the equivalent amount toward your down payment.
Otf,.r limited to~one vehicle per customer. Dealer contributes part of cash assistance.
;1·
Actbf 5,1981.
FORD
FORD DIVISION .. "
-----f • •
1 ..
1•
f •
. .. • '
I'
When man talks Daily Pilat ...,
to dog, that's not D u
THURSDAY, but when MARCH 26, 1911 news,
D dog talks to man I
. FEATURES 86 ... See B6 , t
Threatening Calls to church on tape .\j
A Loc\1 Beach man charted
with the slaylna of a popular
Seal Beach Catholic priest lB al·
leaed to have enaated ln an
"almost demented" taped
telephone conversation with a
Chtcato church official only
daya before the killint occurred
ln February 1980.
In that conven1ation. Deputy
District Attorney Dave Carter
said Wednesday murder defen·
dant R.ooald "Bud" Spring made
variou.a threats wbicb indicated
be was "furious" with the
church.
Carter asked Orange County
Superior Court Judge James K .
Sclwol
closures
• neanng
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of 1• o.11, ,.,._.Stall
Closure or five or six more
Newport-Mesa School District
schools has moved a step closer
after three board members were
named to study formation of a
new citizens committee.
TrU1tees Rod MacMillian, Bet-
ty Jo Bailey and Barbara Skill·
ing will report back to the full
board next month with plans for
a citizens group to recommend
policy for closing the schools
and revamping district educa·
tional goaJs.
Their task was set after
Superintendent John Nicoll out·
lined proposals for a citizens
committee to establish long.
range plans for school closure.
He suggested a committee of
25 to 35 advisers to study district
cu r ricul a, educationa l prin-
ciples and school facilities. He
and Deput-1 S•ped,.1eadent
Norm Loats would be aclvilen.
The committee, he suggested,
should come up with a new dis·
trict program, school closure
criteria and a rewritten state·
ment of educational principles.
Nicoll urged immediate com-
mittee formation as student
enrollment continues to decline
and district income fails to keep
pace with inflation.
He also urged quick commit·
tee action in forming reports
useful in making teacher and
other employee layoffs next
March for the 1982-83 school
year.
The board took initial steps
this month to lay off about 90
teachers and administrators at
the end of the current school
year and is proposing cuts that
would eliminate educational pro·
grams at all grade levels.
School administrators are pre-
paring to reduce next school
year's budget by as much as $S
million.
"We have endeavored to be all
things to all children and all peo-
ple. · · Nicoll told the board Tues-
day. "But those days are gone."
Earlier this year, the board
ordered two schools closed next
June. Rea Middle School in
Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar
Elementary in Newport Beach.
Those schools bring to 10 the
number that will have closed
since 1972 as the result or declin·
ing student enrollment in the
once.tax-rich district.
Trustees have been studying
future school closures for
several months, including the
possibility of shutting down one
or more of the district's four
high schools.
Newport man
guilty of
• tax evasion
Newport Beach resident and
Orange County auto broker John
F . W arye pleaded 1W1ty tbi1 week
in Los An1eles to two counts ol
faUlng to file federal Income t.ax
returns. The 46-year-old auto broker,
accordini to a 1DOkeaman from the United Stales Attoniey'a
office, dld not fUe tax retuma ln
1174 and 1978 even thouch hla
1ro11 income for thoee yean1 was
reported to be $145, 120 and
$841 ,878rwpec:tlYely.
W 1rye, the ,~ .. man aald,
does bullMU ln Orance County
ullder tbe nam• of Jack Wary•
Auto Brolrefaae IUld Jack Warye
Eatuprl1e1, botb located In
Garden Grove.
Tbe Newport man could face
two 1ean lmprtlcMament ..S a
... 000 "-· S.t.Minf ha been
1etfor1 .. 1.
Made days be/ ore slaying of county priest
Turner to hea.r arguments QO the
admisajbillty of the taped con·
verution, which Turner blmaelf
characterized as beln1
"strange, almost demented ..
Turner scheduled a pre-trial
hearing oo the matter for Mon·
day, poatponinJ jury selection
that was to begin in Sprint'• fre-
quently delayed murder trial in
Santa Ana.
Chief Deputy Public Defender
Ronald Butler, representina the
33·year·old defendant, sald be
would ob,jeet to introduction ol
the coaversatlon as belnt irrele·
vant and also would seek a
closed-door bearing on Monday.
Spring is accused of the one-
punch slaying of Father Felix
Doherty of St. Anne's Catholic
Church. The 64-year-old priest,
who was struck ln the he.d by a
fist on Feb~9, 1980, died several
weeks late from complicaliona
a11oct1ted th that blow.
Police said the assault by a
man who drove his chopper·
style motorcycle to the church
rectory was unprovoked.
At Wednesday's court bearin1.
Cart er claimed that Sprlna
placed a call on Feb. S -four
days before the assault on
Father Doherty -to a church
olficial at the Cblc1go Diocese.
The official. identified as
Peter Foot, hid said he received
several earlier threatenln1 calls
and tape recorded the Feb. ~
call.
The call, the prosecutor said.
included various threats and ob·
acenlties.
Ill ldrnisslbility was relevant,
he araued. because it showed a
deflllite intent on Sprin1's part
to do harm to the church.
Butler, however, claimed t.he
caU was irrelevant and in•d·
miasible and contained no
threats against priests.
The defense lawyer said in a
Book finds life in Cdlff
Hy MICHAEL DOUGAN
Of Ille o.llf l"llet SIMI It's pbortunale that Phreddy's name is spelled phunny,
lest the little pbellow be stricken by pheu and coni>busion
in the Land of Phocolate. In phacl, he's ri1ht at home .
Phreddy Is the pivotal character in "The Adventures
of Phreddy in the Land of Pbocolate," a self-published
children's book by Costa Mesa's Frederick Welch. In the
Land of Phocolate. all words that start ~with "f" are
spelled with a "ph" instead.
WHY! WHO KNOWS! AND never mind that chocolate
doesn't start with ··r." It's got to be phocolate, because the
name of the store would lose its alliteration otherwise.
The store? That's The Pbocolate Phactory Ltd ..
Welch's Corona del Mar coruectionary. The book (first in a
series of seven>. the candy shop and related spinoff items
are all based on Phreddy's adventures.
Welch. a "God, don't ask"·years-old former corporate
executive. said the entire package sprang from his affec·
lion for the English language.
"(love words and when you play with words concepts
are formulated," he explained. "I came upon the concept
of ph's."
Thus. the book.
••r WROTE IT FOR a specific purpose, that being that
kids are our most important assets, but kids are not the
only ones with childlike qualities -a lot of adults have
them," he explained. ·
Among those are a Ufe·lon1 love for chocolate.
"I decided, here's a 1uy in the Land of Pbocolate," be
said. "That's fun concept. I th.I.Dk I'll atart a aert• al .,. tlaops. •' • ~ • 1 , • .
So lut aummer be iDcorporated bl.a ~p"*'ecl
business venture: a publishing company, a candy st.ore
chain and an outfit to manufacture items baaed on nearly
90 characters in Uie boob.
WELCH SAID HIS Phocolate Phactory wlll aell
gourmet candies, "pbocolate phip" cookiea, "bot
pbocolate" mix, Imported mocha-navored "phocolate"
beans and several varietal coffees as well as yo1urt and
pastries in a Country French atmosphere.
Some of the "phocolates" will come in the shape of bia
storybook characters. In lime, ao will dolla and act;1001
figures. Their likenesses will be reproduced on T-shirts
and greeting cards.
"In all candor." he said, "it's a blockbuster. "I'm
very clear on the fact that it's a constructive. wholesome
concept." Welch said most of his chocolates would contain no ad·
ditives. He hopes to carry special chocolates for diabetics
and people on diets.
HE SAID HE HAS done most of the work himself,
from publishing the book lo laying the oak floor In the can·
dy shop.
"It sounds egocentric. but I've done everything -
Dell, .......... _
PHAST PHREODY'I PHUNNY PHOCOLATE
Coaat •uthor hoping to whet aotM • .,.,._ ••
financed it, packaged It, created it," be claimed.
Welch refused to discuss his background, stating only
'Tve done a ·lot of things."
"I was vice president of a corporate entity which I'd
·rather not go back to," he added. Welch said corporate life
meant "your ideas are rationalized into being somebody
else's . Personally. I prefer to do my own thing.··
In addition to the Corona del Mar outlet, Welch said he
has entered joint ventures lo set up Phocolate Phactories
on Maul, Hawaii; Scottsdale. Ariz.; Sun Valley. Idaho and
Portland. Ore.
Nurses push
for jobs at
school meet
Proficiency exams Cable firm
package wins
Newport OK
School nurses have turned out
to urge the Newport-Mesa School
District board to soften plans for
trimming five more nursin& posi·
tions nextschool year.
Head district nurse Deidre
Deauville urged trustees to con·
sider cutting onJy one position so
that the district could maintain a
health program she described as
"functional." She added, "I'm
not saying (it would be) excellent ..
Earlier this month the board or·
dered layoff notices sent to about
125 teachers, administrators.
psychologists, nurses and other
personnel in a move to live witbJn
a budget expected to be trimmed
by as much as $5 million next
school year .
Trustees cut seven nurses from
the payroll th.ls school year, leav-
lna 13 of the staff, each charted
wlth about 1,850studenta.
Next year's cut.I, 1111. Deauvtlle
said, would 1.ncre ... eacb nune's
load to •bout 2.• ltUMata and
drastically att9et .._. bealth
services, child abule and nqled
action, and commaalcable dia·
eaae coatrol. .
M1. Deauvllle, wbonpc>tlUonla
one of thoae scheduled for
eUmlnaUoa. pined IUP,POl't for
UI• nuntnc propam 1'lMl4la1
nl1bt fl"OID Salvador Alvarado, 1pokeaaum for Spanlab ,,........
pareata n WblUMr Elementary
Sebool.
Speaklnt tbroutb aa In ·
t.ecpretet, Alnrado aalcl I.be
sp...._~trt .. communKJ n-u.. beaOa tM DUIHI WMol•
fer healtla pldADH u well u
medical akt to tbelr ch!ldren..
16o/o of HB seniors
lack test scores Community Cablevision.
holder of cable te levision
franchises in Irvine, part of
Newport Beach and a ll of
Tustin, is offering a new 26·
channel package and a higher
monthly fee to go along with it.
With two months left in the
semester, 15.6 percent of Hunt-
ington Beach Union High School
District seniors haven 'l passed
state·mandated tests required to
graduate. This is the first year that
California seniors must pass the
exams in reading, writing ,
mathematics and language to
earn a diploma.
Of 4,157 seniors in the West
Orange County district, 647
haven't passed all four tests.
District omcials say that
normally about 10 percent of the
seniors don't graduate because
they lack adequate class credits.
There are no eatim1tet on bow
many ol the students who have
p111ed the proficiency exams
this year still don't have enough
cl11s credits to araduate, ac·
cording to dlatrtct omctala.
Keith Hartwt1. director ol te·
search and evaluaUon for the
district, aaid it ll too early to
predict If an unutualfy larce
number ol aetllon will fail to'
1raduate tbla year because ol
the proftdenc1 exam•. "We .u.tl have two montbl to
10." H1rtwt1 1ald. "And the
number ol llUdent.I who bawa't c=.'*:/:'.t== da)'.''
Kart.ti aald tlurt 1lnee tbe
dl1trtet'1 tests wen nnt de· ••lofed low' yean 1101 mmt 1tudelrta ban.a trouble Wit.ta
MmllM tiilll fail ID tM wrldq
eatglrfr .......... ICMol .....
to11ffl'llld." ~mented board
preatdlat n.i.a Dttte. "We bave
to identify where the lapses are
in education, but it seems we
especially need to target In on
our writing program."
The state-mandated tests were
ordered by the state Legislature
in 1976, but each district was al·
lowed to set its own standards.
"We established our tests at a
difficult level 10 that a student
bad to do more than breathe to
pass," commented district
Superintendent Frank (Jake)
Abbott.
By PATalCK KENNEDY
Vietnamese
culture talk
set in Mesa
The new rate schedule was ap·
proved this week by the Newport
City CounciJ, although questions
surfaced whether cities still
have the right to regulate such
rate structures. Irvine and
Tustin no longer vote on rate
changes.
Cablevision currently offers vle~era a 12-cbannel selection.
lncludJn1 broadcasts of city
councU sessions In Irvine and
Newport. The monthly fee Is
$6.70 with an installation charge
of tlO.
The new optional 26-channel
selection, to betln May 1. will
coat $10.15 a month with a $34.95
..) lnstallatloa char,.. Viewers can
continue wtth tbe 12-~hannel
The dl((erencea In Vietnamese setup.
and Alnerle1n cultures wW be N e w p r o I r a m a , a a y s
dlacu.ued next Wednesday at the Cabltvlalon President Tom
Mesa Verde branch of Or1n1e Lal'ourcade, wUl ln~hade 13
County lJbtary in eo.ta Meta. boun a day ol chUdren ahowa, a
Vu Due ((bani of the Oranse U ·bour 1port.1 station and aavel·
County De~rtment of Educ•· to·cavel -conra1e of the U.S.
Uoo will 14<1r ... the Frlenda d HouH ol RepreMntatlvt1. ·
Ute COlfa -· Llbr•rt• at l :IO Also. aa)'I LaFourcaae, aub-a .m.' ilcrlben wlll .,. ablt to pick
Tbe pubUe lt lnvlt.t to attAlftcl between two movie services, One
Ula dlaeuaalon at tbe library, t.bat often motion plctuNI M
119111 .. Verde Drive &alt. hours a day. Viewers would pay
Tb• Friend• of the Library no.ts for each of the movle
poap, wldeb ii 1cbedu.lecl to In· services.
Aal1 aftle1r1 at th• ....... •• C1blevialon serves the are1 ol
port• Men'• two llbrariH Newport Beach east of ~ ._ • .., ol 1udl .._. .Jamboree Boed Md nortb d 5'b
u projed.on, boob and sup· Avenue. 1'M remalnJnf area lJ
pUea. Hrved by Teleprompter.
later hallway Interview that be
would seek a closed-door Ke.,..
ing Monday because tbe pro-
c e e din gs would deal with
evidence which could be dia-
allowed before jury selection
be1lns.
He said it was a discretionary
matter with the court on
whether the hearing would be
closed to press and public.
Butler had originally request-
ed proceedings to determine
whether Spring was mentally flt
to stand trial. That request was
later withdrawn, however.
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Nesland~.
hits • air
overlaps
What are described as "over·
lapping and conflicting jurisdic-
tions in air quality enforce·
ment" are now under criticism
by Orange County 3rd District
Supervisor Bruce Nestande.
Nestande, who took office in
January. is on his second trip to
Washington D.C. to meet wit.b top officials in the Reagan ad-
ministration on a wide range or
topics.
Nestande is protestin" that the
federal Environmental Prot.ec·
lion Agency, the s t ate Air
Resources Board and the South
Coast Air Quality Management
District each have jurisdiction
over air q uality .matters ip
Southern California.
Nestande is an AQMD direc-
tor.
•'The confused lines of
reaponslbillty lead to confll~
re 1ul ations or ju at p lain
waateful duplicallona,"
Neatande said. "A lot of t.bia
overlap creates unnecessary
bureaucracy and should be
eliminated."
Nestande will remain in the
nation's capital through the
weekend, aides said, and will meet with the president.
Nestande once served as an aide
when Reagan was governor at
California. -·
In other meetings, Nestande
s poke with Michael Deaver,
Reagan's deputy chief of staff,
Richard Williams, White House
intergovernmental relatJona of.
fleer, and David Gibbons. head
of environmental program•
funding for the Offi ce of.
Management and Budget.
Nestande complained that
sewage treatment agencies
through the c,ountry , including
the Sanitation District s of
Orange Couiity, "have been ad·
versely affected by inconsistent
federal policies and the almost
capri'cious dictates of the federal
Environmental Protection
Agency."
The supervisor, a sanitation
district director. criticized the
EPA for denying the district
$39 million to refine sewage
sludge to make it more accepta-
ble for land disposal. He urged
the funding be restored and not
trim med from the Reagan
budget.
He also expressed concern
over administration proposals to
trim $1 billion from the $3.4
billion that President Carter had
proposed for waste water treat·
ment projects.
He also called for full federal
aid for the costs of resettlemetft·
of Indochinese refugees. ~
After testltying before tM
House Judiciary Subcommittee
I on Immigration, Nestande said
he was not optimistic tb1t U..
federal aovemmeot can be COil· . vlnced to pay the full COit.i ot·
refu1ee resettlement.
By FllEDl!RICK 8CROBMEllL
Fair open
for writers,
illustrators
I ...
Yount writers and llhastraton.
up to 17 yean old have been ll·
vlted to enteT tbe Youtb Literary .•
CompetlUon at the 1881 Or1n1e
County Falr.
Pein Kinerson, fine artit;
au_penltar for t.bl.I )'ear•a fair ·
aald cateiories are open ,;;t.
writers. writer·Wuatrators ..,.:
wrlter-W.trator two-member
tea ma.
Entriel mull be r.eel...t ~
the f...,..._.. ln Cotta Meat;
by Mil'/ 11, .... HJd. Ent";
forms may be MCund bJ •allinl
71l•llff,
Tb• fair II •et ror JUI)' 10-• lhl• year.
----
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT!Thur1day, March 2e, 1981 NEWS FEATURES ........ ______ ............
and trash
T&A.lllY POLITICS DSPT. -Great u·
1ue1 a~ for Ora.n•• County 1ovemment
thtH da11. l'uad• are runnin1 dry for
welfare. Crime ii on the rise. Tbe county
airport debate conunut• overheated.
Few 111ues, bo)Vever, could raise the
level of calamity Ute the one our ausust ~ aoard of Su,pervtaon tackled just this week. ~ Why, repercussions trom this one could
>!• rattle the (;ount)' Hall of AdministraUon.
~ And heaven only knows, you rattle that
~ ~ ~ ~ .. ,. . l'c' I TOM MURPHINE.~1
~
. .
~ ~
edifice and you may have another lar1e pro·
blem.
-The lasue, however .. where county gov-~ crnmenl may have heated its own environ·
-; ment involves the family trash can. i! ~ .,
~ ~
THUS IT WAS that the county board in-
creased trash collection fees in our non-city
areas lOce Dana Point, South Laguna, Laguna
Niguel and Santa Ana Heights. This could be
trouble.
:>-For most of these places, the trash hike r will amount to less than four bits; about 46
:• cents per month as of April Fool's Day. Some
:-; residents on rural private roads will get
nicked about $1 . from $8 to $8.96.
News dispatches out of the County Seat
strongly su11ested that in the trash biz, the
county gives people about the same break as
Tra&h proberi &earching /OT illegal re/we
!'
most cities. Comparative figures indicated .~ the cities were just a few cents lower in mos t
instances.
ALAS, HOWEVER, when you start mess-
ing with peoples' trash collection fees. you
sometimes can be in deep refuse yourself.
~ Sometimes, folks can get more steamed
• up over the trash situation than the county
• airport, welfare funds or rising crime all put
toaether.
You have to auapect lbat this is because
trash collection ls a highly vislble art that is
closely aligned with the individual citizen's
happiness
YOU MISS YOUR TRASH collection day
and believe me. you are abruptly knee deep
.~·in old frozen food packages and plas tic wrap.
:-: pers. It's no laughing matter.
... Further. if you come home the day after
... : trash collection and find rubbish strewn all
, ·over at your place, whom do you blame?
You blame the trashman, that's who.
: You never blame the real culprit. likely to be
· the Fido who lives just down the street and
. couldn't resist your discarded hamburger
,,,-wrappers. He tore things up to ~et to them.
..:. It is true, however. that the refuse collec·
tor can do a couple of things lo you that cause
your elevated blood pressure. Like nesting
the plastic containers one inside the other so
they're all permanently s tuck together.
Instead of having three containers, now you
only have a solo.
OR, THE TRASHMAN leaves your tras h
and politely red tags the container because
you dropped a wooden block in one and they
don't pick up used lumber.
All these frustrations often get remem-
bered by the trash customer when he's nicely
informed the pickup rate was just elevated.
Thus, irritation of the citizenry
sometimes becomes all out of context with
• the real costs or disposing of old wrappers or
cans.
It becomes more vexing than the national
debt.
Thief b ilks clerk ! 1 TOK YO (AP ) A thief disguised as a
tonductor tricked a clerk at a railway station in
•orthem Japan Into giving him $242,000 worth or
ten being transferred to a bank in a money sack,
~lice said.
t The theft was discovered five minutes later
en the real conductor showed up at the station
.){akodate, 420 miles north of Tokyo, but by then
man had disappeared, leaving no clues.
nch
,,..,..u,1
"YNh my okt men IOld hot Cheltnuta, bUt y<>u'w
' got to mow wtth the tlmee."
W aterbe ds aid
• preem ie to t s
CHICAGO (AP ) Infants who emerge pre·
maturely from the womb have fewer problems if
placed on Uny waterbeds, doctors say, and 24 area
hos pitals will be outfitting their incubators accord-
ingly in an effort to make such babies more at
home in their new environments.
Incubator waterbeds help simulate the floating
environment of the womb. High-risk babies placed
on the gently rocking mattresses grow faster and
have fewer breathing problems than those placed
on conventional beds, says Or. Henry Mangurten,
director or the newborn intensive-care unit at
Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge.
"WATERBEDS ALSO KEEP PRESSURE orr
critical joints that stick out in inlanta born eight to
12 weeks prematurely,'' he said.
BEGINS AT
ROGER'S
GARDENS!
Welcome spring with splashes o f 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
NURSERY
For that colorful Roger's look
4 " Marigolds reg 1 09
.a·· Begonias reg 1 OQ
5 gal Cametios reg 15 00
INDOOR PLANTS
NOW $ .89
NOW $ .89
NOW '11.99
Enioy special savings on two popular fovontes 8 oz
of Oxygen-Plus with a 10" Ficus Beniamino s2 9. 99
PATIO &
GALLERY
Comfortable outdoor liv-
ing and entertaining is
the best way to en1oy
your spring garden :::--
Roger's offers o great
selection of styles 1n patio ·~~r
furniture and accessories.
mediate delivery
FLORIST
for 1m·
A Chicago company, Peppers Waterbeds. is
making 200 or the incubator waterbeds and donat-
ing them to the Chicago-a rea hospitals.
Mangurten said he has been experimenting
with a dozen waterbeds in his 30-lncubator unit for
two months and plans to do a more detailed study.
Fresh cut flowers brighten any room we re offering
spring savings on assorted flowers 1nclud1ng our
special Roger's-grown snap dragons i
"We've found that the beds help premature
babies with irregular breathing and heartbeats,"
said Mangurten. "The incidence of these episodes
goes down significa ntly they are fewer and less
severe."
NURSERY SCHOOL
Gordon Boker Lloyd. noted west coast horticulturist.
will be presenting o how to seminar on vegetable
gardening . Morch 26. 11 A M 1f I• I t ,.t
I l If ' I ( •te • I I
A STUDY AT GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
Medical School indicated premature infants
gained as much as 25 percent more weight and had
greater head growth when cared for on waterbeds
"They seem to grow as if they were still back
in the womb," said Dr. Lloyd I. Kramer, who con·
ducted the study. "We also found they could be
handled a lot easier and rolled from side to side.
And they often curl up in the fetal position. which
was different from those on firm mattresses."
;J
Skinny
b e t ter
for hea rt
WASHINGTON <AP >
Next to giving up
cigarettes. losing weight
is probably the best step
Americans can take to
reduce the chances of
heart disease, according
to an adviser on nutri·
lion to the s urgeon
gener al.
Speaking al a National
Nutrition Month sym -
posium sponsored by the
H P.altb and Human
Services Department,
Dr. Theodore 8 . Van
Hallie estimated that
Americans would suffer
25 perce·nt fewer heart
attacks and 35 percent
fewer strokes if every-
body was at optimal
weight.
At the time of the <.;1v1l
War. the average weight
of a man between 30 and
34 who was S feet. 8
inches tall was 137
pounds, ltallie said.
Today, the same man
likely would weigh 170
pounds.
Reappointed
WASHINGTON CAP)
-Agriculture Secretary
John Block reappointed
a Turlock man to the
American Egg Board.
The term for Antonio
Cobarrubia will expire
Dec. 31, 1982.
r;.-..e
NOW
-
• -
0 0
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dealer your Toyota is cheaper to keep
than before. We've lowered the prices of the most basic services
and parts: tune ups, oil changes, air and oil filters, spark plugs, even
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Offer 1ood throuab 3·31-81 at clOH or busloea1.
SALU OOAlffW"l -· _ .. _
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Hll'llK& t , .. ,.,.
Df'MITM&llf
Huntington Beach
hdk COMt So.of,..,
lS Con~nl•nt Location•
Newport Beach
1400 PKtfk CoMt Hwy
-· ........ , ....... .. _
,
NATION
Wi ld life
head
named
1,_~--.IP'om---------
"-~· ... ATlllO ...... _ .......
•• lit ,,,.., k_,_,._.,.""'0-
ICalt • ..,. -............. ,
COITA_,,141·12" ...............
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Marc:h 26, 1981 *
-llCM~5-0401 .... c..i.c..--CI•• Ol9ee "'wt .i ,._, l>twy I
WASHINGTON <AP 1tiliiiiiiilliiliiiiil
Jay Hair. a professor
of ioology and forestry
at North Carolina State
Univers ity, has been
picked as the head of the
4.6 million-member Na·
tional Wildlife Federa· .-
Rare twins
lion.
Hair, 35, will succeed
Tho mas L Kimball, 63.
who is retiring after 21
years as chief executive
officer of the country's
largest conservation or·
ganization.
Hair s aid h e looke d
upon the position "as the
top job in the conserva·
lion movement. It pre
sents an opportunity to
help s hape the nation's
• con servatio n a g e nda -,.-P -w.-.. -P" ...... ~ a nd I we le o m e l h at
cha llenge ...
Twin colts were born on a ranch in rural
Oahu. The m other is a nine-year·old
quarter horse owned by a Ha waiian fami·
l y . Horse twin s ar e un co mm o n .
veterinarians say
The federation, which
has an annual operating
budget of $30 millio n ,
conducted a two.year
s earch in which 161 can
didat es w e r e in ·
tervil'wed for the pos t.
Sex counseling urged
for cancer patients
DAYTONA BEAC H. Fla I AP>
No one d enies that cancer patients
need love. but doctor~ too often ig-
nore the importance of sex dunn~
cancer treatme nt. a s pecialist say!>
0 r . Leon a rd R De rogal1!>. a
p syc ho logist a t J o hns Ho pkin!>
University Medical School. said that
sexual problems a mong cancer pa
lie nts are wi despread ant.I far from
trivial
"The magnitude of the problem 1!>
cons ide ra ble." l>ero~at1~ told the
Ame rican Cancer Socil'ty·~ annual
scie nce writers· sem ina r .. Myths
and convenient rat1onalizal1ons about
illness and sexuality abound "
BUT "SEX IS im portant whether
you a re sick or not." he said
Derogatis said doctors, family
m embers and even patients often
give the patient's sexua l functioning
a low priority during cancer treat-
m e nt. Doctors . he said, frequently
are not trained to d iscuss sex with
their patients and concentrate in·
stead on fighting the disease.
But. Derogatis s aid. sex c.-ounseling
during the treatment period 1s c·sscn
t 1a I because patie nts often a re
depressed and lose the tr sex drive
He said s urgical treatments can be
mutilating a nd other therapy can
Mayor
removed
INDIO t A Pl The mayor or this
desert community was ordt•rcd re
m oved from office a fter he was sen
tenced on mileage fraud charges
In addition . 44 year-old Phil Reed
was ordered to repay n early St.200 in
mileage reimbursement t hat he had
fra udulently obt ained ovn a fiv e·
year period
Se n te n ce w as im p osed h y
Riverside County Superior Court
Judge Warren Slaughte r. who plact•d
Reed on threP ye<irs' probation
cause loss of weight and hair. giving
patients a negative im age of their
bodies.
"If the patient feels repulsive or
unattractive physicall y, there is little
c hance he or she will bl.' e ffectively
fu nction;.il tn sex u al rt·la tions,"
Derogatis s aid
He also said lovers ma) be wary or
"inflic ting " sex on t he pa tient.
although the patient is interested in
sex. In a ddi tion. partners sometimes
have to contend with the myth that
cancer is contagious. which it is not ,
and fear sex with a "d iseased"
person. he said.
Non-druggist
heads board
SACRAMENTO CAP> Appoint·
ment of the first woman and first
non -pharmacist to head the state
Board of Pharmacy. which regulates
t he pharmacy profession . was an·
nounced.
She is Claudia Klingens mith. 35. of
Sacramento, former assis tant chief
of the slate Bure au of E lectronic and
Appliance Repair.
Board President Ma rs ha Cohen
said Ms. Klingensmith "possesses a
unique combination of experience in
enforc ing consumer protection laws
a nd s kill in developing efficient ad·
ministrative systems "
You are cordia lly invited
to meet
XAVIER HERMES
Director of the House of
Hermes in the South Coast
Pl~za store .
Saturday, March 28, 1981
12:00 Noon to l :30 p.m .
Refreshments vvi II be served
and a complimentary gift
provided to all attending.
Cosmetic Collections
Middle Level
Saks Fifth Avenue. South Coast P1aza
3333 Bristol Street. Costa M aa. Ca. 92628
THREE DAYS ONLY
MARCH 27, 28 and 29
We know some folks who,
1f there was a nip an the
air, would drink 1t
Y ou've reached middle
age when kicking up your
heels no longer seems to
get you off the ground. . .
The only pt-ople who
lt!>len IO both 1>1des of
an ari.:uml'OI an· the
neiehbor-, . .
Humility 1s the art ot
looking properly shy
while you tell people how
wonderful you are.
OME-4iMJAITIR OFF ALL CHICA«iO CUTLllY
Opett Stock. llockt & llock s.ta
• •
If it were true that we
profit from our mistak e:s.
most of us would be pret-
ty wealthy by now . .
"\o nw.takt•!> al Tar£' Cit\
1950 ~t• .. qrnrt. Costa
\l e1>:i, f>.t~• :1.'1S4. illld µmftt
lrom "''n1ng :.t urd \.
l'llt:rg~ 1·ff11.'ll'nl 111 l'~
T he man worth v.h1le is
the one who w11l smile
REE-~
KNIFE
··SHARPENING
Old dog:. children and
water mrlon wine
Brake ~nice ~ew and
Recap Tir es
CLINIC ,
THIS WEEKEND
¥aSTCU~DAY
COIOMA DB. MAI SAT.
HdlOI VIEW-SUM.
10-2
s.n-, ................ ,.w....,
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Or1ng9 Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, March 26, 1981 YtORLO
Ell:ahet• II
Churchill sWeet
AP
DAZZLED
Churchlll QUEENAT25
Ellubeth It
( Pilot L book J Calndid :olmme,nta~lles, ,
eac:~vely In the II J I DI
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
on queen -from ~ distance
LONDON <AP > -Aa an old
man, Sir Wlntton Churchill fell in
lovt, at a respecttul dlttance,
with newly crowned Queen
Elisabeth U, according to a book
by one ol his aides.
The claim is made by Sir John
Colville, wartime assis tant
private secretary to Churchill, in
his book, "The Churchllllans,"
publis hed today.
In a chapter on ChurchlU 's rela·
tlons with "the ladie11," Sir John
write11:
"THERE WAS ONE lady by
whom, from 1952 o nw ards ,
Churchill was dazzled. That was
the new queen."
He first met Princess Elizabeth
at BalmoraJ, the royal residence
in Scotland, when she was 2. Al the
time ChurchiJl wrote: "She has an
air of authority and reflect! veness
astonishing in an infant."
Sir John continues : "In 1962,
however. at the age of 77, he found
himself prime minister to a young
womanof25."
Elizabeth had succeeded to the
throne on the death of her father,
Klnt George VI, on Feb. 8, 19$3.
Jt wu aoon noticeable that
Churchill's weekly audlencea
wlth the monarch lasted un·
usually long, ColvUJe notes.
''A photoeraph or the queen,
smiling radiantly on her way to
open her first Parliament, was
framed and bung on the wall
above his bed at Chart well,"
Churcbill'sruralhome.
"He was an old man whose
passions were spent, but there is
no doubt that, at a respectful dis·
tance, he feU in love with the
queen," ColviUesays.
Colville, 66, joint principal
private secretary to Churchill
during his last term a s prime
minister. 1951·55, said that after
( 1952) ChurchilJ nearly always re·
(erred to women appr~ciati vely.
"I DO NOT think he was a man
with strong sexual desires and
those he had were, in due course,
concentrated in his love for his
wife,·· Clementine.
Women, on the other hand,
often "found his attentions ir·
resistible."
l
Cbutdilll, wbo died In lMS aged
90, b.eamo aomethlnc of a
feminist, HY• Col ville.
He ln1l1ted that Churchill
CoUece1 Cambridge Unlvenity. ~which ne founded, should have
women students on equal terms
with men.
t1
"I AS.KEO HIM afterward ii
this had been Clementine's idea.
'Yes,' he replied, 'and I support
It. When 1 think what women dJd
In the war I feel sure they deserve
to be treated equally·.•·
"The C hurch illlans" is
published by Weidenfeld and
Nicolson at (8.95 pounds) $20.
Career Day set
PUBUC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUI •UllNeU NAMe ITAHMeNT Tiie 101towln1 "''°"' ere doing IMitlnus oa: COSTA CARPET CARE COM· PANV. 101• °"°" Ploo, C:O.IO "'°'°·
PU7UI Publltlltcl Orenee C:0.11 0111y Piiot, Morell n. 1t, 36. Aprll J, 1991 l310.a1
PUBUC NOTICE
Celtlornl• '2627 NOT•c• OP Tl'USTI 1 '1 IALI Leater o. llenton, IOlt Grove ~No., ... Plo<e, C.to ""''°• Celltorllle UU7 T.L .... S14D-4 Alllerlla Co"'pbell, 101' Gro•• AMERICAN STATE BANK H 0111, Piece. Cotto Mou. C.allforlll• •»27 eppolnled Tn$ee °"""' t,,. tOllow"'9 Tiii• 11<11lno11 It conducted b' • 0.Krl--OI ,, .. , WILL Sl!LL Career Day, sponsored by the e-nere1.--n11ip. AT PuBL1c AucnoN To Tiu
C inal U l.fft ... o ll•nlO<'I HIG HEST BIOOEll FOii CASH rim Jua ce Student.a' M · Tiii• •tol-1 ... llled wltll Ille IP•Y•blt •I time ol .. 1. In ••wful sociatlon at Cal Stale Long Count, Ciera of Oren911 Co11nty on "'onoy "',,. unnec1 Stet••> ell r'9111.
Beach. wiJl be held lo the uni. llWrcll >. 1•1 1111• eno lnternt cOt1••Yed to et'4 now ""' ... lleld by II_, u lo OMd of Tr11at in verslty's Student Union Build· Publllhed Orente eoe11 0.11, Piiot, ,.,. property .,..._.no,t•• ottcrlbed
I A rij 8 f 9 Morell S, 12, It, H , ltll H ... 1 TllUSTOll llOHALO S BENNETT ng p • rom a .m .lo4p.m. ----end IETTV SUE BENNETT . More Information about the ·-------Tru""' of a.. e.nnen F•m11, rru>1
free event can be obtained by PUBUC NOTICE 01eo December u . ""· •no
0 RONALD S BENNETT •nd BETTV phoning Maureen 'Connell at ·--P-1-CT-,-T-,ou-,-.-u-,, .. 111 suE BENNETT. Huso.no.,,., w11e
(213) 498-4738. NAMalTATIMINT BENEFICI AR Y AMER ICAN Tllel0Uowlngperaon11001no1>11•I· STATE BAN K,. Ce11forn••
n•11 ••: co1po1•t_,, ORANGE COAST LANDSCAPE, Recor-A11gu1t U, 1971 H ln>lr 20102 l lrcll, • ». S...te Ane, C•llto•nle No. 2ll .. In -12U.. IMI09 130 Of '2707 Ofllcl•I llKO<OI In , ... office OI Ille Weyno Loula Knperek , 20102 Recorder OI Orer199 C011nty, Hid deed Blrc11. •».5onl0Ano.Celllornlet2707. ol l•u•I ducrlbet Ill• lollowlno Tiii• bullnou I• conducled by •n In· pro"rty Olvlduel. Loi :n OI frect NO lllll. '"Ille Clly weyne L. ICHIN••k ol Co•t• Mew, Covnty of Oronge, Stet• Tiii• sto~I wes lllOd wllll Ille of C•llt0<nl•, •• per mep r•,orde<I In County Clerk ol Oren911 COllnl' on looll JSO, P~a U lo 11 lnch11I•• ol Merell a. ltll. Mlitell•-Mept, In Ille Olllu of PU1tff tne Count' Rec0<oer 01 .. 10 C011nly. Publlih9cl Or911911 Coe•I Delly Piiot, J114 ''IC" Alrwey A .. n.,e, Coll• Merell s. 12, 1•. 26, 1"1 10""' Mew, Celllo•nl•
PUBUC NOTICE
'ltf • ,,, ... eddreu fK (Of'l"UT'IO"
designation I• '"own •bov•~ no
w•rranty 11 o •v en •• to It' complet-.1 O< CO..,KIMUI l'ICTITIOUI IUSINlll Tiie ...... 11<;1er, .,,,4., Hid O..o "'
NAM• ITATIM•NT Tr11U. o, , .. ..., OI • b< .. Cll °' IHl ... 11 Tiie fal-lng --11 dOfng 111111· on Ill• -leellOf'I• -.<11red llle••b•. ,..,. ... neretof0<a eae<llYO end o.11 .. ,ec1 to SE RGIO'S MARICE TINO COM· tne unoe<tl.,..., •written Oecl•,.llan PANY. IU\I> Op.I SlrH1, NewPofl of 0.1•1141 -o.n...o lot Sal•. -1-.cll, COlltor"'• tMI ••lllen -IU ol llt"ee<ll -OI •IKl-Serglo O Koll•n. US..., Opel to c•11M ,,. ..,...... .. ONHI to .. 11 '°'o SlrHI, N••Porl Bee<ll, Ce1110,,1le pr-rty to "4111' Miid -leellon>. .,.., eno 1,,.reelter uw -.ogneo '9uM<I Tllla --.. I• COftdll<IH "' on Ill· WIO notice OI breach -OI tlKtl .... lo dl•lcluel be rec0<-on-· n. '"° •• lnllr Seree K-NO ))t>t on -1•1. -••. of Tiii• ''°'-' ••• 111.0 w1111 tlle w10 OlllCl•I Rec0<4' C.011n1, Clerk OI o .. _ COllnl, on Seid wl• Wiii ... ....-. 11111 Wllllout
M.rcf'I J, 1911 to••n•nt or ••rrentt. e.1ore11 o,
AT 2724 N. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA
PU'"' implied, r-Oll>Q 1111•. l>O\Wllton, O< Pul>llMled Or-Coell Dell, Piiot, en<wmbroncH, lo pooy IM ••m•ln•"'I AMrell s. 12. 1t, 2a, '"' 1049-11 prlnc1pe1 "'"' OI lM no4•1•l \eCureo
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUPUll0411cou•T01' THIE STATE OP CALIPO•NIA "0" THIE COUNTY 0" D•ANOI! c ....... Att7 .. J
by Uld Deed o< l ru1t, •1111 lnte•UI •1
in '4tld note prov10.CS, .c:tvet1cn . If •n•.
unoer ,,... 1erm1 04 W •O o.aa of Try\t
•••'· <h•rge\ •nd t •o•n1t1 of l"r
Tr"''t•• eno the ''"''" cre•1ff bv .. 10 0Hd Ol l•11il
18 ,,
PLAYER PIANOS
FROM sass
14
USED AS IS
SPINET PIANOS
FROM s444
PICTURE FOii ILLUSmA TION ONLY
WE'VE LOST OUR LEASE
I WE'RE CLOSllS THE DOORS
AT 2724 N. MAIN ST.
FORl!Vl!R
ON APRIL 29thl
FINANCING AVAILABLE OAC
OR
MASTERCARD
VISA
DINERS CLUB
AMER. EXPRESS
OUR NEW
PIANOS & ORGANS
UP
TO V2 OFF
FROM
7
USED
AS IS
27
USED
ASIS
ORGANS
$99
GRAND PIANOS
FRo•s1499
ORO&i. TO SHOW CAUH In Re PETER THOMPSON • Minor. o, FLORA THOMP~~J.. Hll Moll'er, •ncl Oll THOMP>UH HI\ Fellle•. lor Cllen .. 01 N•mo Ptt•liontr\ WH EREAS, FLOR A •nd OTl ~'!?~~S~.:"ci r::~i;~n:~l,p~\ ~":
[1~?~:~~ ~~e ~::::·. ·;.:~,1,-:~
•1111 , ... Cle•k of 1111• COll•I IO< .,, O•
'f!E_ tr:Olt~C:ft:.1~"~ 11~7-"E ~·:; SHELDON TH()MP$0N. • ::.::.,or:.0~~..!:,1M:r:,::; ~:~.~~.r.·1~C:V.: t~·~.~ 71 CHJNrlmenl l el Ille C011rlP10ulf 10<•1 eo •I 700 C••I< Center On•• Weil. Sen ta An• C•llf0tn••. •"4 '"'°.., <•u•t tf •n,. •llY Ille po11110ft IO< Chen .. OI neme 11\0ulo no4 De Qr en led IT IS FURTHER ORDE RE D 1"41 • COPY OI "'" otO.r 10 '"°'" C•uH .,. PMblt \hed In ,,,, 0 •• 1, P 1tot •
ntw\p•per Of Qtn•t•I CltCul•Uon :~·t~·~ •:,::._-ro, ~~~ly<o~~·;~o;~·:.
wtt k.' or•Of to the O.t• wt fof' ht•r•no on tll• t llhon O•l•O
q ON +d H PrPntltr
Jlldge Ol I~
CUMMl~ra:Hf~•I , ... Deft S1"'91, Stille JU New,.,-t -cto. C•llf-1• •-1110 U 1.tllJ
S•IO >•It ,.,II De llelO an TIH'\041' AP"' 1. 19'1 •I 11 00 • m •I Ille 01110 of l O i..rv•ct Comp•ny, B•nk 01
Am111c1 rowtr, Suitt '1t0, °"' (1h 8outtv•rd Wt\I, OrenQit, C•ilforn11
At tnt um. of"'* 1nH1•I put>Uc•ttor'I of tn1\ r.oiic.e. IPW tot•I •mount of tnr
uno••O b•••nc• of thf' ob••Q•l•on
w cureo l>Y Int •l>O"f' O«Mr1bltd dt'"e<J of
lfU\I •ncl H llm•t.O C.O\fs, t•i>e"lei. •no •O•encH If S111.SJ7 19
To O.lerm1ne ,,_ ooenlng 1>1d, yow m•r c•ll fl "1 n1~ 0•1• ~II'· ltl1 AMIRICAN STATE BANK ..wlOTr-. ., T.o. se,.v•ca co . -By Ll...U "'41'91.
ASJ.1\C.nt Se<r•••ry
Orw C1ly B••d Wot. O..tn90CA.-i..a 1110 ll5-11tl PuOh"'9<1 ()r.tn90 Coe\I O•oly Polol
M•rc~ 11 19 10 1911 UJ1 II
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
STEPHEN A . JEF·
FERIES, AKA STEPHEN
ANDREW JEFFERIES
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE M:~~~1~9 <>;,""1;,~~~~·11'1~~;, NO. A·10l140. ___ ·_· _·_ · _ To a II heirs ,
PUBLIC NOTICE beneficiaries, creditors
and contlgent creditors of
Stephen A. Jefferies, aka "~~~':;!:~!1::r Stephen Andrew Jefferies
r111 1011ow1ne pe,.on ,. ooono 111111 and persons who may be nou •• otherwise interested In the JAY T HOME SERI/ICE. ,,. w will and/or estate: ~;.~or~~.':,;:,1•· S•n ci omenl •, A petition has been filed
J•,._ Georoo Turpen,,,. w A .. by Michael Rock in the 11e1enc1e, San Clemente, C•llfornl• Superior Court of Orange .,~~11 ow,_,,, con<111eiu 11, •n 111. County requestin g that dlv1011•1 Mlchael Rock be appoint· J-•G-ee Turpen ed as personal represen· '"'' 11a1ernent ••• 111ec1 '"'111 111• tatlve to administer the Count, Clerk of Oren911 Counlr on M•"" 10. 1"1 estate of Stephen A. Jef-
11m11n feries, aka Stephen An· Pubhilled er-co.11 oeuy Puo1, drew Jefferies (under the
""'"" 11• "·,. -'Pr" 2· '"1 un-ei 1 ndependent Administra·
PUBLIC NOTICE lion of Estates Act>. The __ petition Is set for hearlf!g
PICT•T•ou• •usiNns In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic NAM• ITATIMINT Center Drive, West, In the T11e t011ow1ne ... ...,., 1a tlOlnQ IMi•I· C I t y of Sa n t a A n a ,
""',.::~s TRACEY seciu:u.-iAL Call.fornla on April 22, 1981 sE.-111cE, m Boat cen,on Ori••. at 9. 30 a .m. L.aQun• e.oc11. ce111orn1a ••st. IF YOU OBJECT to the Gree• L. -·r11010, 2•1 C•ton granting of the petition Str"I L.09UN llOOcll. Colllornle. I i ' Tiii; blalneu I• con<111t1eo b' en 1n. you shou d e ther appear 01v1oue1. at the hearing and state G.L Moscer11o10 your objections or the (dbtlMluTrocoy I obj ti 'th th Tiii• ••etement ... 111.0 '""" ,.,. wr tten ec ons w1 e county c1er11 of orenee count, on court before the hearing.
MorcllJ, "'' Pmeu Your appearance may be
Publlllled 0ronee co .. 1 oeuy P1101, in person or by your at· "'°"" s. n. 1•, u , '"' 1m"1 torney. ---------. I F Y 0 U A R E A
PUBUC NOTICE CREDITOR or a cont· lngent creditor of the de· ,.,cr1T1ou11u11 ... 11 ceased you must flle your
NAM• •TATIMIMT clalm with the court or Tiie io11ow1111 P9'ton• .,. oo1no present It to the personal boiSlllOll H A·t c11owN LEASI NG. 11111.0 representative appointed lroollllur•t Strwt, F-tol11 llelley, by the COUrt Within four ceu~~Z!:'~~•"'•bll•, uu h•• months from the date of co1oredo 10.,1ev•rd, Pu•d•n•. first Issuance of letters as ca11iorn1a mot. provided In Section 700 of Tlll1buslneu 1tconducleclt1yen un· the Prob•te Code of lnc0<POr.ied •-letlon otller tllon • '" 1M1ttner1111p California. The time for ~3,LT=i:~Le flllng clalms wlll not •x· Tiiis Ito .......... WOI IO.O with IN plre prior tO four months County Cl•ri o1 Orenee County on from the date of the hear.
Morell '0· 1 1· Pm Ing noticed above. ,..:,~c11~1~,t-:,1~;~•11Y1:~~11 YOU MA Y EXAMINE
• ' • · the flle kept by the court.
PUBUC NOTICE If you are Interested In the estate, you may file a re· P1amou11u11NHt quest with the court to re·
NAMllSTAHM9NT celve special notice of the
Tll• ''""'1"' "''°"' •r• dolne Inventory of estate ISHts lllltl11ew .. : NINA'S ._.co.-o lltOP, 121 Ht. and of the petitions, AC • Anatio1i"'.::S"1oerd, Ana1101'", counts and reports C•11~17:c-i«,.,. ~11 0911_ cir· described In S«tlon 1200
cl•. Hu11tl"f'011 i eec11, co111.,n1e of the CAllfornla Probate ,.._, Code. Nino ci.--. ~II 0.yWNI Cir
:.._Hulltlllf'o11 1 .. c11, C•lller111a Joltn W. Downer, At·
Tiit• .,...._, 11 t9Hvtt .. by • tttnty at uw, 401 0'4ft· .,__.==• neyn Str11t, Sul•• H,
Tiiie .......,_. -Ill• wltfl -LatUM leac", C.11 ...... la
C.-IY C'°'11 If ~Ol\tll c-IY f26J11 (714) 4f7•MQ • ._.,a.,... Pubf llhtd Orange C,st
NM..,.. 0r-. a..e o.i~'"i.t. Dally Piiot, Mar. 2~t. 'i llMrcll s, u. "·-. 1•1 ,..,., Apr. 1, 1'81 1 nM
..
"You learn that In a famlly-run bu81MN tome
prC>Qeduree are handled dtff9rentJy."
ll.S. group
Frisbee tour
set for China
OAKLAND CAP ) -The era of "Frisbee
Diplomacy" will begin in June when a group de·
voted to the nylng plastic disks tours five cities in
lhe People's Republic of China.
The group is headed by Laney College cooking
instructor Al Finkelstein, who proposed the
offbeat cultural exchange more than one year ago
using one of the college's Mandarin instructors as
a go.between.
The Chinese liked the idea, says Finkelstein.
but asked if the group could wait until 1981.
Finally, with the help of the China Youth
Federation and the city of Shanghai. the tour was
set for June 18·29.
"THEY'R E VE R Y, VERY EXCITED,"
Finkelstein said of his future hosu. "They're
absolutely performing miracles in terms of getting
us set up for s tadtums and putting on
demonstrations.'·
Among the 25 people on the tour will be
two-time women's world champion Monika Lou,
long distance champion Tim Carmel, freestyle
champion Steve Gottlieb and the Bay Area Flying
Cir cus, the top team in California.
Finkelstein, who helped create the World Disk
Association to boost Frisbee world wide, says the
Chinese have already accepted Frisbee as a toy
and want to learn Frisbee spe>rts such as Ultimate
Frisbee and Frisbee Golf.
ULTIMATE FRISBEE IS A NON-CONTACT
field game similar to soccer or football. Frisbee
Golf is similar to traditional golf, bf.it is usually
played on a "course" of telephone pe>les and trees.
"It's not just playing catch In the park," says
Finkelstein.
He said the Chinese are interested in Frisbee
because It ls a relatively inexpensive sport, it is
good exercise and the aesthetic beauty of a
Frisbee in flight.
"It has a pleasing, satisfying flight," says
Finkelstein, "and the aesthetics of Frisbee are
very much what t hey like , as well as the
practicality."
Finkelstein said the cities on the tour are
Shanghai. Suzhou. Wuxi, Nanjing and Beijing.
Elephant boot
sellers fined
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Two firms that made
boots of African elephant ears and python skins
selling for hundreds of dollars a pair have been
fined in Municipal Court.
Because the elephants are an endangered
species, the owners or Howard and Phil's Western
Wear were ordered by Commissioner Harold
Crowder to forfeit 16 pairs of elephant ear boots it
had been selling for $450 apiece and pay a $2,500
fine for violating the California Endangered
Species Act.
AS AN UNUSUAL CONDITION of sentencing,
Howard and Phil's was also ordered to start a six·
month advertising campaign showing support of
the act.
"The African elephant is quickly becoming ex·
tinct," siad Deputy City Attorney Barry Groveman.
. who prosecuted the store under the state act and cit·
' ed a need for zealous prosecution of endangered
~ species cases.
~ The law prohibits the impe>rtation, sale or
··. possession for sale of any part or certain en-
dangered species.
THE BOOTS WER E SEIZED NOV. lt by state
Fish and Game Warden John Dawson.
Crowder also fined Gilslm Inc. $2,500 for sell-
ing python skin boOts at its Richard's stores in
Westwood and Century City.
Game Wardens Dawson and Ronald Presley
posed a.a customers to buy the boots. then obtained
search warrants and went back to seize a total of
29 pain of the boots at the two locations . The boots
were 1elllng for $204 a pair.
Signups invited
for study skills
Re1l1tratlon i• under way for a study
1kU11-speed readln1 course for colle1e·bound
students, offered by the Huntln1ton Beach
Community Services Department and Readwrtte
Educational ProlJ'ams.
Claue9 will be from 7 to 9 p.m . each Monday
bellnninl March 30 at the Murdy Community
Center, 7000 Norma Drive. Re,UtraUon for the
eltbt·week proaram la betoi conducted at the
center, and late reatatratlon will be .,.rmltted at
the flnt clu1.
The courae fee. wblcb includes tettlnt and all
materials, la S125.
The PfOll'•m lt de1t1ned to teach 1tudenta in
1rad11 I tbrouab 12 how to study more tffectlvtly.
to improve their note-tak1n11kllll and how to pr•·
pare for coll.,e entrance exama.
The protram al10 will train 1tudentt to
lncreue their readlnf •Pffd.
I
WlllDAD I TO I Al IOOD
UT.-IUI. I TO I TDV API. I
TWI ·LIGHT OIL LAMPS
"' 90'1 3••
4••
Nice conyersation piec• and can
be practical if the electricity goee
off. You n ... r know when it could
happen.
CLOll-OUfl
CID.D'S
FOLDllC DDI
1297
A cl.u made to fit the litti. OIW9. Can be
folclecl and .toncl when -.hool la done.
YOU -.-m.bla and fbdeh.
•VLTIPLI
OUTLIT
ITllPI
tomn 11"
IHTLIT tn.
I OUTLIT
13•7
21•7
Anoth.r add.ltift to mcr.u. J'OW' 11\l-... Thi8 one can inCNUe mn....e up to 19% and 8hou1d ~
. acld.d 9"17 1000 m.U..
SMALL CAR
8-15 GAL. TANK
I LAROE CAR
l!S • 24 GAL. TANK
VALVOLllE •OTOI 00.
Ill VllVIUAL
COCO rLOOl lllTI
TWllWI 4M
ml rllllT 7"
• d.ie .W mata..,. weulfttr out. in...t in
... -----atop~ J'OUI' Mt to
••
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 28, 1981
DA'f-o !
DAl4-o~
'DA'1 Ute
ClJME
ANDftif .. · -.,.:
BANANA CHAIR
OR CHAISE
It'• relmdn' thne with aummer on the
way. Maybe you han a few parti•
planned and you'll need eitttn' ~ce. Pull
up a banana and enjoy. Brown or yellow.
YOUR
CHOICE EA.
s
lllCO CBAICOAL
IADICUI CllLLS lllGSFOID CBAICOAL , ....,i-.--.
aw ... a 2977
(Mown) H400 P A emoker grill with
i8~~8~ and made
of .tee! 90 JOU know it wt.11 lut.
• .... ,SP~
CEDAR
WOOD SHINGLES
DllfPAll
14!!
APPROX aoao. rr.
10. I 111111.11
15!!
APPROX as so. rr.
Th.-can be uMCl for roofing or
for a decoratin (and insulating)
effect for the front of your home.
N .. t looking.
JODI -llAIVILLE FOO. IACI
INSULATION
u JOU mimed lnaWatll\9 for the
winter to et&y
warmer, how about
forthe~to
et&y cooler? '"'1nk
about it.
lllQUETS I
Would we plan a party for you I
and i... .. out the briquete? Naw. ~
Th... are the qood on• th.at 1
li9ht f..t and...,. and et&y hot .••
l!!s.
IWllGLllE
ILICTllC
llD.IUI
22!!1
PACmc AIPIWT
DllVIWAY
IDUIFACD
8 77
5GAL.
We don't haft the problem of f~
and thawi!VJ here but .till the driftW•J'
ca.n get tacky and n..d ~acing. Do it.
IUIAL IWLIOl llT
TM whole kit and k•boddle
includ.il\9 the double -=roll
poft, black m.ail.boa and cgn.
You 9Upply the elbow gre&N.
••. ,
:· ..
)
·~
:·
.·
;· .
'
-Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 26, 1981 -
fEAIUREI
..
When a dog
•
talks ...
'We looked al each other,
no one wanting to believe
uliat they'd just heard ... '
By J EFF PAR.KER
Of II>• O•llY Piiot it•ll
Jean Thornton of Laguna
Beach claims her dog speaks in
full sentences, yet considers her
sanity unblemished.
''She started talking about a
year ago." Mrs Thornton re-
members. "We cou ldn't really
beJieve it when she said her first
sentence."
Neither could we. s o an ex-
clusive interview with the talk·
ing dog, Chiquita. was set up at
the Udder Place in Laguna
Beach. her master's cafe
Perched on Mrs Thornton's
lap. 10-year old Chiquita. a
Chihuahua/terrier mix. seemed
nervous. With a little prodding
from Jean. she howled an inspired
ifsomewhatobscure hello
While Chiquita gathered her
thoughts, Jean Thornton filled
us in on the history of her dog's
linguistic development.
"About a year ago she started
s aying hello. which evolved
from the simple howl she went
into when the fire trucks went
by. We were proud of her , but
on e word is n ot unus ual
Xavier Cugat had a Chihuahua
tll8l said hello too.
··But not long after that, my
hus band and I took her with us
to meet som e r e latives who
cam e in from out of town We
were driving in t he car, and
asked Chiquita lo say hello to
them, which she did. But we
were aston ished when she
followed it with 'how are you?'
"We looked at each other. no
o ne wanting to believe what
they'd just heard. Someone
answered her. then asked her
ho w s he was Chiquita said
·All right.· We we re totally
amazed," T hor nton r emem-
bered.
Chiquita 's mouthings resem·
ble English, if you stretch your
definition of language. and your
imagination. She gets the right
amount of syllables for each
word. straining for pronuncia-
tion that does not come easily to
her.
Somewhat reconstructed. and
s ubtitle d for quick com -
prehension. here is the text of
the interview:
Daily Pilot. Hello Chiquita.
Jean Thornton encourages Chiquita to say ·Hello!· ... and she does
Chiquita:
DP-
Chiquita:
DP:
Chiquita
Rooroo. c Hello >
How are you?
Rooree. <All right>
That's nice.
Rooreeroo?
<How are you?>
DP: Fine . I'll ask the questions
here
Chiquita · Roorooree (Hello,
Ray )
DP· There's no Ray here . What
are you talkjng about.,
Chiquita: Reerooroo <I love you)
DP: What's wrong with this dog?
It's incoherent
Chiquita: Rooreeroo? (How are
you?>
DP: I told you I'm fine .
Chiquita : Rooree. c All right>
Chiquita soon grew bored with
the interview and wandered off
to the back room or the Udder
Place for a nap_
"She won't s peak to Just
a nyon e ," Jean s aid "The
humane omcers wer e in the
other day, and she wouldn't say
a word. Most people love it when
she talks. The funniest people
are t he ones who try lo act like
O•Ht Polot St<llf Plloto
they haven't heard a nything
after she talks to them ..
A customer who witnessed the
interview ordered a jumbo chili
dog. a nd said that Chiquita
would probably get <t long well
with her cal.
"My cal lakes <t nap every af-
ternoon on my bed . and turns on
the electric blanket first ... s he
said
We asked 1f w e migh t 1n
terview the cal.
"Don't be s illy ," :,he ~<1 1d
"Cats can't talk "
'Breaking Free' shows risk has its rewards
• • ..
·You've got to go
from poor-mouth to
success-mouth. lhe11
you unll get what
you wa nt ·
-Szour liar/an
·Want is a four let-
ter word and
women w ere not
supposed to use
dirty language.'
-Pat Allen
Vibrations were high enough to raise the ceiling to the South
Coast Plaza Hotel Ba llroom Monday evening during a preview
showing of Women's International Success Systems· "Breaking Free ...
Four highly motivated women, all s uccessful in their
respective fields, explained there are certain risks en route
to success, but "risk is the catalyst to achievement."
SIOUX HARLAN, a therapist and career li fe planner with
offices in Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. explained that
women everywhere should reprogram their negative thoughts
with positives.
"There is a diet for s uccess," she said "It means putting
yourself up and not down. You've got to go from poormouth to
s uccess-mouth. then you will get what you want."
Continuing along the same line. Rita Uniman. head of the
Irvine Holistic Center. noted that the presentation was based on
the left brain/right brain theory of excelled learning
··Seated in our right brain are our desires a nd dreams." she
said ... You are risking something to believe in that dream . but
you can make it come true.
"THE MESSAGES and visions we give ourselves affect us,"
Uniman continued. "But we can do it. We can make that dream
come true. Just visuali ze it and it 'll happen. The magic
ingredient is believing in yourself and taking the responsibility.
Mixing humor with her quick presentation. Pat Allen, a
licensed marriage, family and child counselor with offi ces in
Newport Beach and Tustin, told the gathering of about 200 she
had been raised to be a woman in Iowa.
"And being a woman in Iowa," she explained, "meant
never saying WANT. We were taught to say 'may I,· but never
'f want.' Want is a four letter word and women were not suppose
to use dirty language."
ALLEN POINTED OUT that women should continue to
raise their awareness and self esteem. "You can do it by
changing your vocabulary." s he said. "Learn to say 'I want'
and ·1 will' and you'll get what you wantJ' Dr. Laura
Schlessinger, a radio personality a nd writer or a nationally
syndicated column on human behavior. asked the question
.. Wh at aboutfailure?." explaining thatfailure could bea
learning process.·· Even in your.failures," she said , "look for a
positive foundation."
The 4 'h·hour presentation of "Breaking Free" will be held
Sunday at 1 p. m. at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. The show
skillfull y mixes theater with motivation to fill you with positive
thought.
Registration begins at 12:30 o'clock. Tickets cost $45 .
·The magic ingre-
dient is believing in
yourself and taking
the responsibility.·
-Rita Uniman
·Even in y o ur
failures look for a
positive foundation
-Laura Schlessinger
. . .. .. . .. : • . She's on march against trendy little sayings . .. .
~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: A lot of people who
"wouldn't listen to anyone else listen to you. You
~could perform a wonde rful ser vice to millions if
:You would ask your readers to do the following:
;S 1. Stop saying "Have a nice day" to every-
:One you come in contact with. You have no
J.dea the number of people who have just been
,.ired. attempted suicide, gone through a divorce
:or a re having terrible financial problems.
: 2. Stop saying "You're kidding" to every-
::thlng you hear . This standard remark can be
:tiighly inappropriate, especially if a person has
lost all his possessions in a fire, been mugged on
:the street, just learned that his rental Is going
:Condo or been in a car accident. People do not ~id about these things.
: Thank you, Ann, for joining me in my
t):ruude to reverse these senseless speech
abita. -ENGLISH TEACHER
., Dear Teach: Don't tbaAk me. I haven't
fioae . any&hlng. Trendy pbraaea are ually
lelled ap, and &bey 1tan1 anMUtd for a toac
lme. Tha.U for wr1tlDC aad laave a alee • • • I
eaa, lel me laear from yoa aialll 10me lime .
• DEAR ANN LANDERS: Joe and I stayed in l he old home town where we were born and
:ralaed. Our alsten a nd brolhen are scattered
from coast to coast. Ou!' children are arown and hey a.re scattered, too. The only OMS left In
two are Joe's mother and mine.
We are be1lnntna to resent every holiday
cause It is expected that we enterttln both
----------~~~------_M_l lA_l_D 1_11_. ·----
mothers here. What we would love to do is be
with our chlldren. J have hinted to my sisters
and to Joe's that it would be nice if they would
invite mom for Easter or Mother's Day or .
Cbrtatmu or Thanksgiving or the Fourth of Ju.
ly or anythlna. but there are no takers.
Our brothers and sisters send cards and
they telephone our home to wish mom a happy
thit or a merry that. The conversations are
lovely, but no invitations.
I know your atUtude is that no one can be
imposed on unwillingly, but in this case there is
also "Honor thy father and thy mother." How
does one get sisters and brothers to take
responaiblUty? I want to write and tell them
we've been dolng It year after year and now it's
their tum. But my husband says, "No -they
don't care enouah to help, and they don't want
to be bothered." My an1er hepa bulldlnc. What
should I do? -CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE
Dear Ml4dle: l'lra& ree•t•l•• &tie fac&
&Illa& ,_, U.baad 11 part el &Ille pnblea. Be
WH&a .. be ............... ( ... -·la·laW) IO
aie kee,. qale& ... art• 1" a. niter bl
IUHce,alle.
....... -..
You have eatned the r11bt to spead some
holidays the way you want to. Wrt&e to both bis
slaters and brothers and to yoan. Tell them you
are plUllln& to spend Easter or Christmas or
whatever wtdl your children a.ad &i.ey altollld de-
cide amoa1 diem wbo Is lolal to take Ute
mamas. The Bible doesn't say Jut 011e of Ute
cblldro aboaJd "Honor thy father aad mo&laer."
Give somebody else a cbance.
DEAR ANN : I read somewhere that a poll
of college freshmen was taken. Question: What
career do you wish to pursue? Some anawen
were, "Bisness," "Flnnance," "Sailaman,"
"Senestry," "Physist," "Alrnotics," "Sec-
teral," and "Undeslded." Do you believe it? -
FLABBERGASTED IN FLATBUSH
Dear Bub: Yea. I do. If yoa coekl eee •1
maU, yoa•d1tanaodollb&a.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have written tblJ
letter tour time• and never malled lt. It aeem1
so childish. But I am particularly bothered by
my problem tonight, ao I am puttlnl this One in
the mall box -come l\ell or hl&b water.
I'm not a ru.rhty teen-a1er. I'm a crown
woman ol 218. The problem : My loot•. l am not
overwel1bt -ln fact, I'm on tbe 1klnny aide.
But my hair ll awful, my DOH haa a bump and
11 much too lon1. My eye1 are too cloat
t.o1etber, and mJ llpe are too tbba. I bate t.o look
ill the mlrror because I am ao ui.b.
Snr 1lnce I wa• a 1mall cbild &*>Pl• bave
made fun ol me becauH l look like I wttcb.
When I was 14, l went crying to my favorite
teacher. (Kids can be so cruel.) She told me not
to pay any attention to them because I was
beautiful on the inside and that is what counts.
I have only had three dates in my entire 1
life. None or the fellows asked me out a second
time. (Apparently they weren't interested in my
beautiful insides.) Am I going to be miserable
aJI my life because 1 was cursed with this ugly
fa ce? Please te ll me what to do. -
DEPRESSED AND LONELY lN DALLAS
Dear FrtelHI: If l oecll '°'*' wett die key to
aiapplMN. all Ute beHur.J people woe.Id be
ect&ade. We kltow &lab IH'& &ne. b fact, some
of tile best·looldllg people are Ute mo.t misera-
ble.
Y oar low oplaioa of YCMUSelf la roo&ed la
early ctdldllood. I recommettd &Mrapy a& .. tt.
Wt.ea yw feel bet&er abotl& youaelf, plaaUc H r·
1er1 for ,_.. aoee •l•ait 11.e '" a Wt. A laalr 1tyU1& ... a make·ap 1 ..... or &wo twld do
wo•den to ralH 1eu •orate-. Wlilea Y" de·
nlop a mea1ue of telf·et&eem, 1• will be able
to readl ..t to odten aH ~Y wW res,..cl.
Year •We .... 1d wlll caiuse. Hd 1••'11 w .. w "'1,.. clidll't .. It IOOMr. G90d l•cll.
CONFIDENTIAL to Unfairly Evaluated By
One Who Spted: Sorry, dear Cirl, hemlines may
rise and governments may fall, but one thing
remainl constant -you are what you are when
nobody I• looking.
\
Still dancing at 8 7
8YMNDISIOY lf•Deltt ..........
Remember th•Jrima ballerina in Lon
Cbaney•a "Phantom the <>Pera!"
Perbape not. The movfe wu r.leued in
1915.
The prlma ballerina la atlll dancln1
altboueh these days she confines htr acUvtues to tap.
At 87, Pe11Y Gene Evans takes claaaes
several days a week, danclnc up a storm at
Dorothy Jo Swanaoo'1 Corona del Mar studio.
Yesterday, she celebrated her birthday with
a luncheon at Irvine Coast Country Club -after
tap class, of course.
Sutton receives honor
Honored by the City of Hope's Newport
Harbor Chapter last S aturday was third·
gene ration Callfo rnian Herbert Sutton.
chairman or Sutton Industries.
He was presented the "Spirit of Life"
award by the chapter durlna a SUS-per.person
testimonial dinner at the Dianeyland Hotel.
Pro ceeds from the affair will be "aed to
establish a research lellowship at the City of
Hope Medical Center •nd Rese arch In.atltute ln
Duarte. •
Sutton was cited by dinner chairman Maury
J . DeWald, ot Peat, Marwick, MitcbtJl • Co.,
Newport •acb, for bit "maay contrtbuUona to
elvl~al ud national endeav°"'." aervtt on the board of tbe Newport
Harbor Art Museum, 11 • director of the
Oran1e County Chapter of the American Red
Cro11, u a dlrector·at-larce of the Brallle
InaUtute of Oranae CoHt and u • member or
the board ol 1ovemor1 of the Balboa Bay Club.·
Helpln1 plan the dinner were Sylvia
MackllJ ol Costa Mesa, preaident ol the City of
Hope Newport Harbor Chapter, and ber vice
preaJdenta Isaac Weiagal of La1una Hilla,
Marvin Milla of Costa Mesa, Lyn Rose Smith or
Oran1e and Harry Resnick d Costa Mesa.
The City of Hope Medical Center makes
free care available to patients with cancer or
leukemia ; heart, blood and lun1 diseases ; diabetes, and other dlaorders of heredity and
meta boll.am.
Mary and her llt"e lamb
Entrepreneur Todd llon"OTt' came up with
a novel way to acquaint bi.I Corona del Mar
neighborhood merchanta·wtth tu. new shop, the
Linen Store.
He tent Mary and her Uttle Lamb out
escorted by Uttle Boy Blue to deliver iovita·
A.Z. Taft and Beryl Melinkofl dvdtl l'tudent 100rlc.
career searching Stages • in
From a&e 13 to 19, your teeo·agers will go
through the seven stages of Career Searching.
Why , do you ask, does he or she vacillate between
one profession and another? Because it is the first
time he has faced the realities of how to make a
living.
Stage l I age 13 l He has learned to sign his
na me and can sign it just as well as Bill Walton.
Bill Walton gets a million dollars a year for sign·
llll IDMllCI ""------~~~-~,........_ __ __
ing his name. Besides, coach says if he keeps
growing this summer he might "start" in the fall.
Stage II <age 14 l Has not grown enough to
dunk higher than Walton's knees. Decides sports
is for jocks who don't want to grow up. Did an arti·
cle for school paper and discovered Katharine
Graham. publisher of the Washington Poat,
ea rned in excess of $375,000 in one year. Getting
out the paper is all work after school, but It's worth
it. Journalism gets in your blood.
Stage Ill (age 15> New girl with nice·
s m elling hai r called Shelly wanted to be walked
home every night after school. He let someone
else get the stupid paper out. Bes ides. stupid
mzars
CUSTOM FRAMING Open 6 Days A Week
Mon.·Frl. U sait. 10..~ 1803 Newport Blvd ..
Costa Mesa
Easter
Bunny Photo
faculty cemored everything. Shelly thinks ·he
should go into law like her father. Chief Justice
Warren Burger makes $84,700 a year. Besides. all
those yean in law school would rive them a
chance to mature.
Stage IV (age 16) Shelly took shorter time
to mature than he thought. He decided after she
dumped him that girls are overrated. He said
s he'd be surprised when she hears he's 1oing to
become a priest. They don't make a lot of
money.but you get a lot of people loollin1 at you
and saying, "Wonder why he never got married .
He has such charis ma and can reach people."
Stage V Cage 17 > -Son decided he dldn 't need
religious life when he discovered the hours . He
said if he wanted to work Sundays he'd be a re·
a ltor . With all the charis ma people said he had, he
figur ed he'd go Into politics. After all, the mayor
or New York City makes $80,000 a year.
Stage VI <age 18) -Charis ma bombed out at
student council level. Is undecided about career,
but seems to have narrowed it down to either
game show contestant who won $132,000 by know·
ing Butterfly McQueen was the maid in "Gone
with the Wind ," or a plumber who took 27 pounds
of his hair out of the hall d rain and makes $53,000 a
year.
Stage VII (age 19) -Enrolled in li beral arts
al local college. Works summers fo r minimum
wage scale atfirm selling roofing over the phone.
ls open to suggestion s.
zestilink
unokedu.,.. • ISOD
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Havetheldddi.s
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MOH TNUlll ·"'II IO·I
Dorothy Emerson & Don Nolan present
~i~ITIQUES EXPO & SALE
! IN THE COMMERCE BUILDING
ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
88 FAIR DRIVE • COSTA MESA, CA
MARC~ 26, 27, 28 & 29,..1'81
THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY, 1-10 P.M. SUNDAY, NOON ·8 P.M.
A giant panorama of the collections of leading dealers
In antiques. All Items priced and avalleblefor purchase.
General AdmlH lon S2.50. Children under 12 frH,
Orange Coaat DAILY ptLOT /Thuraday. March 28. 1881 .,
HAPPENINGS
·Lambing it up'
are Penny and
Larry Seick
a& Mary and
Little Boy Blue
with Todd Morrow
(right ).
tions for tea, sherry and cakes at his shop when
he opened two weeks ago.
The lamb was borrowed from the Santa Ana
Zoo. Prentice Park
Newport's finest art
Coming up tonight is a reception sponsored
by the Friends of the Newport Beach City Arts
Commission and Western Federal Savings and
Loan to view "Newport's Finest Art."
The reception , from 6 to 8 p.m. at Number 4
Corporate Plaza, Newport Beach, will feature
catering by the Villa Nova Restaurant. Newport
Beach, wine from Western Federal and music.
Marking the opening or the Friends' mem·
bership drive. the party's theme is "Be a friend .
and bring a friend," t he invitations say .
The Arts Commission is getting warmed up
for its annual arts festival to be held at Fashion
Isla nd May 16 and 17
O•llY l'llM St.If,,_.,
Meanwhile, comm ission members just
finished selecting a post er done by Steve Coyne,
a s ixth·grader al Mariners School , Newport
Beach, to appear on the fes tival program cover.
Second place in the poster competition was
won by Allison Mertz, third place went to Al·
Uson Taylor and honor able mention to Alida
Ba lzano . All t hree st ude nts a ls o attend
Mariners.
Oops! Our face is red
A coupl e identified m Tuesday's Happen·
ing!. as Mr. and Mrs Harry Rinker were incor·
rectly named
The persons identified in a photograph as
the Rinkers were Mr and Mrs. Jack Robbins of
Pasadena. who were guests of the Clement
Hirsches at the House Ear Institute fu nd-raiser.
Scorpio: Good money news
FRIDAY, MARCHZ7, 1981
By SIDNEY OMARR
A&JES (Mar. 21·Apr . 19): Review material.
you'll be asked for explanations, delineations , in-terpretaUoru1 and plan for future. Gem ini, Virgo,
Sa1lttartua persona rl1ure in scenario. Member of
oppoeltes•x lends moral support. You'll travel.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May"20): Focus on home
appliances, special services. repair~. safety
measures and security. Libra, Scorpio and
another Taurus ficure prominently. Caah Oow
will resume. Family member is on your side
and proves it. Be gracious.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Patience Is an
ally -go slow, lie low, obtain definition of
terms . Focus on partnership. marital status and
public relations. One who holds opposite view
will pay meaningful complime nt. Pisces,
Cancer, Scorpio natives play key roles.
CANCER <June 21-JuJy 22>: You lift or·
dinar y into creative heights -accolades come
from co-workers , others who share ba sic in-
terests and concerns. You'll be engaged in
power play . Don 't under-estimate your own
strength. Capricorn is Involved.
LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22 ): Reach beyond cur·
rent expectations. Potential comes into s harp,
clear focus. Emphasis on speculation, children,
ad venture o f di scovery a nd romanc e .
Roadblock is removed and you are rid of un·
necessary burden. Success beckons !
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Restrictions are
removed. You gain greater independence and
outlet for creative expression. Emphasis on
security, property and favorable legal decision.
Leo. Aquarius pe rsons figure prominently.
Avoid lifting heavy objects.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 22 ): What starts as a
long journe¥ will be shortened. Call or special
message provides needed information. Accent
on r e lat i ves, visits a nd hunch that pays
dividends. Cancer, Capricorn. Aquarius persons
play important roles
SCORPIO <Oct . 23-Nov. 21): Good money
news dominates exciting scenario. Invitation re·
ceived in connection with colorful social event.
Important contacts result from artistic en-
de a vor. Gemini. Libra, Aquarius natives fi gure
in scenario. Diversify!
SAGITl'ARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 2n· Judg·
ment, Urning will be on target. You can safely
HOROSCOPE
revise, tear down for purpose of rebuilding on a
more solid strqclure. Frank discussion with
close aasociat.e clears air. Strive for 1reater in·
dependence, creative freedom.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Discern
motives. Refuse to be s atisfied that something
merely happened -discover reasons, check de·
tails, confer with m e mber of opposite sex.
Ge m ini. Virgo. Sagitta rius natives fi gure
prominently. Visithospita l
AQUARIUS CJ an 20· Feb. 18): Surprise gift
highlights agenda . Emphasis on successful busi·
ness enterprise, romantic interlude and wish
t hat is fulfilled. F amily member makes major
concession. Be a gracious winner . Taurus,
Li bra. Scorpio persons figure prominently.
PISCES (Fe b. 19-Ma r. 20): One in authority
could make assertions· which are not backed by
fact Know it. be sel!·reliant and have viable
a lternatives at hand. Define terms and be a
comparison shopper. Scorpio, Cancer and
another Pisces fi gure prominently.
A Private Health Oub
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I
3 Orange County locatlon1 to serve you
Newport Beach
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Above all in refreshment.
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:rHURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1981
COMICS
STOCKS
TELEVISION
cs
CJ
C9
Sex sy
7 bits of business
wisdom may prove
it$ undoing ... C6
I takes • issue
LPGA needs exposure, says Stephenson
By HOWARD HANDY
Of ... o.ily ~ ... ....,,
It may shatter some dreams of her male followers who
regatd her as the sex aymbol of the Ladles Professional
Golf Association tour, but Jan Stephenson is also very
family-oriented and looks forward each year to her
parents' visit.
A happy and excitable person off the coif course, she
exud~ charm and a winnina smile that attract au people
to her. But on the course, it's another matter.
"WHEN l'M PLAYING, I fight it and go into a shell all
the ti.me," she says. "I'd like to be myself all the time but
I'm too emotional and can't be free and easy when I'm
playing.
It is11't that she bas changed.
Not at all.
"I hear that some of the other players are saying we
don't need any femininity in women's sports any longer,"
s he says. "But that's simply not true.
"It doesn't bother me to play with those who have been
crilicaJ of the feminine image I have portrayed. I do very
"I only know what I've heard from
others, but they felt we needed the ex-
posure· in 1975 and 1976. Now they say we
have grown to the point where we don't
need it any longer and I say that's not
true. At that time, they condoned it, they
say, but not any more.
"We need every bit of exposure we
can get. Look at the m en in sports. They
do it too, and it pays off for them as well."
STEPHENSON MADE her remarks
while awaiting her tee-ore time for the
Women's Kemper Open at Mesa Verde
Country Club Wednesday in the pro-am.
While Stephenson's feminine charms
have been extoll ed as much as her golf,
she is also one of the top players on the
LPGA lour and says she hasn't reached
her peak yet.
She is the winner or four tour events,
the last being the Sun City Classic in 1980.
In the fi rst Kemper Open, Stephenson was
one of five players who tied for first but
lost in a playoff to JoAnne Carner.
Last year she was having back prob-
lems about this time that listed for most
or the year and her game suCCered.
JAN STEPHENSON
little talking with anyone when I am on the
golf course.
"Yes, it's flattering to have the men
follow me and I've noticed the galleries
have changed some since this aJI came up
But they will still be watching the leaders
and I have to be there to keep the m with
me ."
The thing s he is refer ring to is a pie·
lure in the LPGA magazine Fairway that
showed her in a negligee with her legs ex
posed. She is not the only one pictured in
the article but being the free and easy
personality that s he is and one who has
been on the tour since 1974, she is usually
the one the media turns to for comments
"Winning tourname nts 1s the thing
that counts and even if you beat the girls
you are playing with , it could be very
depressing except for the few times you
win. Thal makes it all worth while "
HER PARENTS SPEND three months
each summer traveling with her. coming
lo this country Crom Australia.
Bo(o)ning up on golf
Pat Boone tees off at Mesa Verde Country Club. Boone
was competing in the pro-am event in Wednesday's pre·
liminary play to the third a nnual Kemper Open. Myra
Van Hoose. the LPGA's Rookie of the Year in 1980, led
her five-some to the Pro-Am title with a combined net
score of 54 . For r esults. see C4 .
"MY BACK IS DOING real well this year and it taught
m e one thing," Stephenson s ays. "I round out Just how
much I appreciate my life and golf.
"l know I haven't devoted enough time to golf with all
of the other things I have been involved in such as promo-
tions and things of that nature.
·· 1 love it when they are with me," she
says. "My mother spoils me rotten by lay.
ing out m y clothes and taking care of such household
things and my dad does other little things to help.
"They both play golf and drive between tournaments
and we have a lot of run and a real good visit together My
brother Greg has never been to this country. He prefers
the beach in Australia and he thinks I'm crazy.
''But I plan on mor e concentration on my game this year because I know I haven't reached my peak yet."
"But I'll tell you one thing. I have lived in Palm
Springs and now in Fort Worth , Texas and I will make this
<See JAN, Page C2)
Gallle pl~ ~~elude handcuffs
Costa Mesa cop needs all the help he can get
ByCURTSEEDEN
01 -Daily ,.ilet SIMI
Last year, Clyde Foreman learned as
much as he could about quarterbacking
a football team, and he had a pretty
good tutor Fountain Valley High QB
Coa ch Dave Penhall.
him <Penhall> and keep in jall until
game time." jokes Foreman who will
lead his team against Garden Grove-
Buena Park in Cop Bowl Ill April 4 at
Orange Coast College.
A former NCAA All-American javelin
thrower, Foreman is a far better athlete
than his performance in Cop Bowl II
would indicate .
Penhall, the former University of
California signal caller, had a tall order
to fill. Foreman had never played QB
J:>efore, and someone had to run the
Costa Mesa-Fountain. Valley police de·
partments' entry in the annual Cop
Bowl.
The past three years he has won the
gold medal in the California Police
Oly mpics, and last year captured the
same honor at the International Police
Olympics in New York.
"Dave's a terrific coach,.. admits
Foreman, a detective fo r the Costa
Mesa PO. "But last year, the day
before the game, he went to Palm
Springs to be in his best friend's wed·
ding."
His rather was the head track and
field coach for the U.S. women's Olym-
pic team which never made it to the
Soviet Union because of the U.S. boycott
of the Games. Kenneth Foreman is also
the former Olympic gold medalist in the
rope climb, an event which was voted
out of the Games because the U.S. con-
sistently s wept all three medals .
Fore man fumbled the first snap of the
game last year, was intercepted three
limes, and the Costa Mesa-Fountain
Valley squad dropped a 9·0 decision to
Garden Grove-Buena Park on a rainy
day at Garden Grove High.
So, what's a javelin thrower with a
heavy track and field background doing
dodging defensive linemen in a football
game? "This year, we're going to handcuff
Mustangs upended
CdM shows it's
king of the sea
BJ ROGER CARLSON
Ol lllf 0.-11, ,., ........
Defending Sea· View League
baseball champion Corona del
Mar ffilh served notice not to
expect too many changes Wed·
netday u the Sea Kings swept
to their fourth straight victory.
The victim was Costa Mesa
Hich'• Muat.angs, who entered
with a challenging 3.0 leacue rec·
ord , but who wound up with
their flnt loss in league play as
the Se• Kings posted a 5·2 vie·
tory.
IT DIDN'T TA.KE Corona del
Mar lOftl to establis h the trend,
but in retrospect, Corona del
Mar Coach Tom Trager wun't
ready to order champ11ne. Ncit
yet, anyway.
"I feel Sood about belnl 4-0 "
satd Trqer, "but I 1m not ready
to• 1Uek my chest out about lt.
We're a far better baaeb1U team
tban weahowed today.
"I tbouSb we both played pret.
t7tntatlvely." •
WbUe Corona del Mat didn't
euctty 1wffp Meaa into tbe
oeeu die Sea Kini• dW ebow
an abWty to set tbe moet out ~
a couple of walu, a •insle and
double -parlaying those four
I
items into four runs in the first
frame. In fact, Corona del Mar's
first four batters scored.
THE SEA KINGS picked on
Mesa sophomore pi\A:her Austin
Smith with free p-.ses to Chris
White and Mario Ybarra and
alter the two were in scorlnc
poaitlon because ol a passed ball
and wild pitch, wlnalnl pitcher
Jeff Pries s lapped a sla,ie to
left. ·
Clay. Tuck.er followed with a
two•.run double and· before the
MustlllP'bad recol'ded an out,
they were down bf a ''° count. Men bad roll.t to lta S-0 rec·
ord with a eomblDed 1core of
38·10, but tbOH npres were
quickly for1otten.
"We hadn't played a team like
Corona del Mar' ln tbat span,''
explained Meu Coach Kirk
Bauenneilter.
M ~ bad lta cbancea, but
Clever ea.-ie up wlt'h the
knockout pm1eh a1atn1t PrtM,
OD lbt mound for tbe flnt tlme
Utta 1,nn,.
Prlea atnaek out lhrH and
walked t.brM ln a five·lnn1n1
stint, allowlnl alnlle markers ln
(8ee Cdll, Pa1e CU
"I was too smaJI to play football In
high school." Foreman explains. When
the Cop Bowl idea originated, For'eman
decided to fulfill a life.tong ambition by
signing up to play -as a linebacker .
··But o u r starting quarterback
graduated to the FBI and I was ap-
proached and asked to play. Like a fool,
I said yes."
Foreman is looking forward to this
year's battle despite the problems last
season. He broke the thumb on his pass-
ing hand two weeks before the game
last year . Combined with the dismal
weather, he found holding on to the foot-
ball was a full-time job alone.
Still, he s ays he completed 11 passes
las t season, but was disappointed by the
team's inability to put points on the board.
"We were defeated by our in ·
consistency a nd the number or
turnovers. This year , we've got some
very skilled people. We expect a much
better game." he says.
Foreman says teammates Keith Bell.
Tom Winters and Gary Nickens are
capable receivers. and the team will
also benefit from tailback Gary Walsh.
"Walsh is the fastest and one of the
s trongest guys on the t eam . The
coaches <Fountain Valley High staff)
s ay be would have started at fullback on
their team and they were No. 2 in CJF
last year," Foreman says.
"While the rest of us are just going
through the motions. he's a legitim ate
star."
But the key to the game just might be
Foreman who admits there's a big dif·
ference between what he'll be doing
April 4 and the smooth drop blfcks by
QBs on television.
·'This experience has given me a new
appreciation of what it's like to play
quarterback. It's a whole new ball
game when you're being chased all over
the field."
Why doen't Foreman just return to
his linebacker position and leave the
signal calling to someone else?
.. I didn't graduate to the FBI and no
one else came along. I wasn't asked to
come back. I was it," Foreman says.
Cl YD£ FOREMAN
Dotterer's
HR sparks
Cardinals
Spedal te tlae Dally Pilot
Former Edison High standout
Mike Dotterer's leadoff home
run ignited a 20-hit Stanford al·
tack as the fifth .ranked
Cardinals {>Owered past UC
Irvine. 10-2, m a non-conference
baseball game al UCl's Anteater
Stadium Wednesday.
Dotterer's towering drive
over the 380 sign in left-center
field came off UCI starter Dave
Woodhead's second pitch and ex-
tended the sophomore's hitting
streak to 23 games. Dotterer
also had two singles and finished
with three RBI.
Mike Toothman and John
Elway a dded three singles
apiece while f o ur o the r
Cardinals had two hits.
"Stanford is the most physical
team I've seen this year," said
UC Irvine Coach Mike Gerakos.
"They can really swing the
bat."
But that'• just what the Ant·
e aters haven't been dolng
lately.
As a team UCI had been hit·
tine over .300 in running its rec-
ord to 18-4. But after a 10-day
layoff, the Allteaten were abut
out on a six-hitter by Pepperdine
Tuesday and could muster only
• four bits acainat Stanford,
"I th.lnk our tlmln1 is a llWe
off," aaJd Gerakoa. "But th.al'•
not an exeuae for tbe way we've I
played the lut hto daya. We
IWUftC the bat betW loda1 than
1•1terday but we're 1Ull not
wt.ere we should be and we save '
up I0°b1tl. I just hope •• can set I
back In the 1roove 11alnlt San
Dletar" I
,,.. Antelten Wlll pa., at &be I
UDlvenlt¥ ~ Sin Dleto ..,._, •
It 2:30 befon returnlJl• ~
for a double-~ader 1s1lut the
Torecoa Saturday.
r
I
........ -.. .......... -·--·· ·-·-· .
(2 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March 29, 1881 SPORTS BREAK I HOCKEY I GOLF , .......... ______________________ .,,
From AP dlapa&d1et
BRADENTON. Fla. -Players from the Ill
Detroit Tigert and Pltt1bur1h Pirates were ln·
volved ln a bench-clearina mel~Wedne.sday after
a pitch from Detroit rookie·pitcher Howard Bailey
struck Bill Robinson on the helmet. ·
When the dust had cleared, Pirates' Mana1er Chuck Tan·
ner and pttcber John Candelaria had been ejected from t.be
ame. and Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson had voluntarily r -P 1
~.,~
I
pulled his starter Bailey.
Wtth \he Pirates leadln1 1·0, Can·
delaria, the Pittsburgh starter, knocked
down Detroit catcher John Wocltenfuss
with a pitch in the fourth, but there was no
trouble.
On the first oltch in the bottom of the
inning, however, Bail~y hit Pirates' first
baseman Bill Robinson in the mouth with
a pitch and Robinson headed for the
mound.
1to•1NSON Robinson, who suffered a cut lip, a
chipped tooth and a loose tooth, was restrained by plate um·
pi re John McSherry.
But Pittsburgh Infielder Kurt Bevacqua -who was not in
the lineup at the time -ran out to the mound, shouting at
Bailey.
"He said, 'Are you crazy, hitting a guy in the face "'
Bailey recalled. "I told him I didn't mean to hit him. The
pitch got away."
Then, Detroit third baseman Tom Brookens ran up and
s houted something and Bevacqua took a roundhouse swing
that missed. Both benches erupted.
"I told him lo get the hell out or there , that nobody meant
to bit anybody and. besides. it was none or bis ( Bevacqua's)
business." Brookens said. "Then he swung and the fight was
on."
-----q..ie •I tlte tl•s-----.
Dave Hersh, general manager of the Portland
Beavers, alter the Pacific Coast League club signed
veLeran pitcher Lah Tlaat to a six-figure contract:
1·Luis spent the morning undergoing a medical ex·
amination and the doctor told me Luis was in excellent
financial condition."
Mattltfte• trad~d io PlaiW~• fer tt'•Uc
Outfielder Gary Matthews of Atlanta was ac· Iii
quired by Philadelphia Wednesday in a trade for
pitcher Bob Walk. Financial terms of the agree·
ment were not disclosed. In announcing the deal.
Phillies personnel director Paa.I Oweas cited "a little give
and take on both sides" . . Righthander SUvlo Martins
pitched five scoreless innings and St. Louis erupted for three
runs in the fifth inning to beat the New York Yankees, 3·1 in
exhibition action Wednesday. In other
games . . . Mlke Tyson and Steve Hen·
derson collected three hits each and com·
bined for three RBI in a 6·5 victory over
San Diego . . . Rick Muatn1 and Voe
Hayes drove in three runs apiece to pace a
24-hit attack and lead Cleveland to a 14·5
win over Seattle . . . Two-run singles by
Harold BalDea and Jim E .. laa in a •ix·run
third innin g and homers by &uty K•a
and J ob.n Hanley carried the Chicago
MATTHEws White Sox past Toronto. 10.7 ... Tim
Corcoran's tie-breaking home run in the ninth inning powered
Detroit past Pittsburgh, 4·2 in a game punctuated by bean·
balls and a bench-clearing melee . . Four Milwaukee
pitchers combined on a six -hit~er and Doll Money drove in the
game's only run with a triple, giving the Brewers a 1-0 win
over Oakland ... Ken Griffey and German Barranca rapped
two hits apiece, and Mario Soto pitched six no-hit innings,
leading Cincinnati to a 3·2 victory over Baltimore ...
Dwight Evans and Carney Lansford keyed a five-run third in·
ning with long homers off Montreal's ~ott SanderlOll as
Boston snapped a three-game losing streak with an 8·4 win
over the Expos ... PllU Nlekro and Gene Garber combined
for a seven-hitter as Atlanta blanked Philadelphia. 3·0 ...
Minnesota got five runs in the sixth inning to defeat the New
York Mets. S.3 .
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
~Y•W..+ .........
IUJ~ll•d.
Coat• M.M -541· I I H
SINCE 1957
ICt.p •HJt L••ets .........
Forward 8eeti Wedmaa poured ln 8' point.I m and 1\W'd Enie Grufeld added 21 u Kantaa City
held otl a Phoenix ratty to win, 110.101, to hl1hU1ht
NBA action Wednesday. The victory lnereaHCI the
1tin11' record to -..1 and kept t.bem alive IA 1 battle wltb
Ho1a1ton and Golden State for a pla)'olf •pot ln lb• Weatern
Conference. Phoenix, meanwblle, feU to »-2S. The Suns are
still aeell1nC that one victory or Laker lots that wlll enable
tbe Sun.a to win thelr first Paclnc Divl1lon
title ln lbe ll·year hlatoa.:!
1
t.be franchue
. . . Darryl .Oa wll.la1 HoWa1 and
Aad,._• TeMy acor;I 18 pointa apiece as
Philadelphia routed DetroU, 114· 75. Tbe
win enabled the Men to remain tied with
Boston at 81-19 ln the AUanUc DlviJlon
. . . The CelUc1, meanwhile, thanks to a
three-point play by Na&e Areltlbald with 33
seconds left. defeated N.ew Jeraey, 111-105
... Elsewhere, Moae1 MaJcme scored 32 ••DllWI points and grabbed 17 rebounds to lead
Houston to a 117·111 triumph over San Antonio ... Br ad
Davia directed Dallas' deliberate attack and acored 2S points
H the Mavericks stunned Denver. 128·115 ... Kevla Porter
handed out 17 assists and MUcll Kwpcllall scored 28 points as
Washington routed the New York Knicks, 105·84 ... BUly
Ray Bates, Kelvla Rauey and Mycbel ThomptOn had 24
points each as Portland banded Seattle its sixth straight loss,
112·103 ... Uoyd Free, Puvll Sbort and Bernard KID« com·
bined for 78 points as Golden State raced past San Diego,
120·114.
Gretz k9 etlp• el••er te NBL .. ,.,,.
Glean AndenoD scored three goals and Wayne ~ Gre&&.ky had a goal and three assists as Edmon· ~
ton easily defeated Hartford, 7·2, to highlight ac·
lion in the NHL Wednesday. Gretzky's goal and
two assists came with less than a minute left ln the game
after Hartford pulled its goalie. He now has 98 assists this
season. four short of Bobby Orr'• slnite-season record or 102,
and 151 points. one short of Pllll Eapo1Ho'1 single-season rec·
ord of 152 ... Elsewhere, BW HaJ&'a SO-fool shot was tipped
in by Aadre Savard with 41 seconds to play. then Ille SeW.1
scored into an empty net as Buffalo whipped the New York
Rangers. 4·2 . . . Defenseman Randy Carlyle scored two
power-play goals and a oa Stackboue scored once, all within
the rirst 4Y.i minutes of the third period, to give Pittsburgh a
5·2 triumph over Toronto . . . Dale Hu&er scored an un·
assisted goal on a slap shot at 12: 52 of the third period to
break a tie and help Quebec edge Calgary, 4·2 . . . Bobby
Sclamaata scored from the point with 46 seconds remaining to
give Vancouver a 4-4 tie with Colorado.
'l'tlb• ..,era el'ft'Clme l•r NIT dtle
Gre1 Stewart'• twlstine layup with 30 seconds m left in overtime gave Tulsa an 86·84 victory over
Syracuse and the championship of the NIT touma·
ment Wednesday night. Only six points were
scored in the five-minute overtime period, forced when Ertcb
Saattrer of Syracuse scored at .the buzzer to end regulation
time at 82-all ... In the third place contest, Purdue's Dralle
Morrta scored 18 points, including two clinching free throws in
overtime. as the Boilermakers defeated West Virginia, 75-72.
Five dUferent Purdue players scored a basket apiece in the
extra period after the game was tied at 6S at the end or
regulation.
8•k• .. ll I• •d• .. NCAA aata.a•b '
Former Golden West College swim standout Bill
Babasboff, now swimming for Long Beach State,
will compete in three individual events at the
NCAA national finals today-thru·Saturday at • Austin. Texas. Babashoff will compete in the 200, 500 and
1,650 freestyles. At G WC last year he set national marks in
those three events. He also set new PCAA standards in those
three categories at the conferenct finals earlier this month
. . . Coach Ted Oweaa, wbo countered alumni criticism by
1uldlng tbe Ka nsas basketball team to the semifinals of the
NCAA Midwest Regional tournament this season, has been
offered a new three·year contract ... Oakland Raider
quarterback Jim Planllett was to enter the Stanford Medical
Center Wednesday for surgery to repair muscle damage to
his left shoulder. PlunkeU said the injury. to his non-throwing
shoulder . occurred during a 10·7 loss to Philadelphia in No·
vember ... Rutgers University football defensive lineman
Douglas A. Smltb died of head injuries Tuesday night sur.
fered during a s pring training camp workout .
T~nMlt.
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: No events scheduled.
F RIDAY RADIO
Baseball -Minnesota vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach. 10: 10
a.m .. KABC C790): Chicago vs. Angels at Palm Springs, 12:55
p.m ., KMPC (710).
CJUCAOO <AP > -Marcel
Dlonne aaya the Lot An1elea
Kln11 are a great road tea.m .
And lately the Kln1s have been
provln1 It.
Wednesday night in Chicago,
the Kln1s scored three goals in
the third period to beat the
stru1ilin1 Chicago Black Hawks
4·2 in National Hockey League
action.
The victory, Los Angeles' 21st
on the road, put the Kinas within
one point of idle Montreal for
first place in the Norris Division
with a record of 41·23·12.
"THIS 18 A G R EAT road
team," Dionne said following
the Kings' latest victory.
And Jim Rutherford, who
played Wednesday night in only
his second game for the Kings
since being picked up by Toron·
to. thinks he knows why.
"What makes this team so
good on the road is that we eat
together, do our fooling around
at lunch and then when we come
t.o the rink we're all business."
The Kings conducted business
best Wednesday night in the
third period when rookies Jim
Fox and Greg Terrion and
veteran Andre St. Laurent
scored.
After a scoreless rirst period,
Chicago defenseman Doug
Wilson connected on a five-
footer from just outside the slot
for his 12th goal of the season on
a pass from-Bob Murray.
BUT LESS THAN five minutes
later, veteran winger Mike
Murphy tied the score at l ·l with
his 16th goal of the season after
skating in unmolested along the
right boards.
Fox put the Kings ahead 2· l at
the 2:05 mark of the third period
after Terrion broke away at his
own blue line and fed his team·
mate, who scored for the 17th
time this season.
F,....P~CJ
CdM •.•
the second and third innin~s on
RBI singles from Steve An·
derson and Ribby Sink.
Mesa. however. left nine
stranded through the first six in·
nings, including three in the firth
inning after Joe Cruz and Jeff
Field s ingled with on e out.
followed by a free pass lo Sink.
Corona del Mar a dded an in·
surance marker in the fifth in·
ning when Bob Shollin drew a
two-out walk and scored on
Dave Rohde's double to center
field.
Chris While mopped up the
final two innings for Corona del
Mar. retiring the last four bat·
ters after Mike Dawe and Greg
Teregis got on the basepaths
with a walk and single in the
sixth iMing.
Q What does a marathon
runner have in common
with a Volkswagen?
The same combination gave
Lo• An1eles a 3· l lead a short
time later when Fox went
behind the Hawk net and passed
in front to Terrion, who fired at
point-blank range for his 11th
score of the season.
Chicago rookie Denis Savard
brought the Hawks back to
within one with his 26th goal, but
the Kings went up by two with
less than five minutes to play
when St. Laurent scored his
ninth goal of the year
KINGS GOALIE Rutherford
noted that "The Hawks were
shooting mostly from the wings,
which gave me very good angles
to stop their shots."
Chicago's record dropped to
29·31·15. In their last 11 games.
they have won three, lost rour
and lied four. Their loss Wednes·
day night lifted Vancouver into a
tie with Chicago for second
place In the Smythe Division.
Hawks Coach Keith Magnuson
felt "the team had too many
good chances close in and spent
too much time passing the puck
around instead or going for the
rebound shot .
"We sure tacked that killer in·
stinct tonight," Magnuson said.
"When we lose," said Hawk
Tom Lysiak. "l feel like I'm 80
years old. The adrenaline just
isn't lhere. And with just five
games left for us. I hope we can
get going."
F ro• Pap C l
JAN • • •
country my permanent home
It· s the greatest pl ace in the
world.''
She played a practice round on
Tuesday a nd predic ted that
scores would be lower this year
if 1t doesn't rain.
·· 1 thought the course played a
lot easier than it did before ...
she said. "It is drier and the
balls roll farther than they did
the last two years. I'm sure that
if it stays this way, someone will
break par for the tournament ..
To date. in two vear l>. no
player has ever been ·below par
for 72 holes of tournament play
Nancy Lopez-Melton, the winner
last year. was even par and in
1979, the five-way tie was at two·
over par
While she isn 't looking to re-
tirement from the golf course as
yet, Stephenson says l>he will not
continue beyond 10 years as a
full·ttme player She has written
magazine a nd n e ws p aper
articles in the past. but s ays she
doesn't do it now
"I ha ve been approached
several times recently to write a
book," she says. "But it's much
ni cer to be on the other side of
the fence. H I make enough
money playing golf and with my
endorsements. perhaps I won't
have to do any writin~ when I'm
through."
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....
BOATING I BASEBALL I VOL.LEYBALL
Angehnan
Series set
Saturday \
Bahia Corinthian V acht Club
wlll klck off lu 1981 Anaelman
Serles for Perform•nce Han-
dlcap Racina Fleet yachts
Saturday with a race around lhe
buoys on out.aide courses.
Only other yachting acUvity
along the Oran1e Coast ls Dana
Point Yacht Club 's Spring
Re1atta with small boats racing
over inside courses Saturday
and PHRF yachts sailing out-
side courses Sunday.
The hardier offshore sailors
will gamble with the
weatherman Saturday and Sun-
BOATING
day when Los Angeles Yacht
Club sends the International Of-
fshore Rule (10Rl ratings seek·
ing the Whitney Trophy, and the
PHRF yachts in quest of the Los
Angeles Times Trophy on an
87-mlle circuit of Santa Barbara
Island.
The small boats in LA YC's
Little Whitney Series and Todd
Pacific Series will sail a course
around Catalina Island's Eagle
Rock and return Saturday.
Santa Barbara Island will also
be the weather mark for the first
race of California Yacht Club's
Overton Series starting Satur
day
In other Southern California
Yachting Association areas.
s.~o ....
Coron.too c..,\ Y•Chf (IUD , ••• ,. F•rt' ~outnt"rn S.119'\ S.r1e\ S•twrd•y
Coron•OO Vi chi (tub t-t~rMon t"Qlt r•t r •~nO•teQJ S..lurO.'t'
M•U1on S..y Y•cn1 (luO Buller Oce..-.s.10t-
Owern19M t «.1 (P\ln<ttt l O S•tur<l•Y !wnGAy
L•SH C1rcun S.tMr0.10
Ot t •n\lde v •cn1 Cluo Co•,.••I Sr' 1e .. PtHUI CO .. l•t S.roh S.turO•y Sunoo
S•n 01190 V'4(nt CluO TreQtf Trophy r.c:e
llOA1 S.•turO•y Encmo L19nt ,.,. tSOHF-J S•lurd•1
SoutrtwtSt•rn Y•ct\t (h.10 Steoo1n' Tropn.,. r•ce t PHRF I ~11.trO.lf
Mt\"On B•r Po..,er SQu•c:tron I n•1l4ll1on•• ored 1cted IOQ r.c..-. Sund•y
Hot111 •11• llll""d Si•n•• B•rlMt• Y•cnl Club ~PrtnQ S.r,•)
•Ont dt\•Qn. "•t'ld•<•PI S.turd•1. ~uno•v
An•'-•C>• Y•cnt Club Sor•no Co.,t•I S.rit\
No l IPHRf'I S.1uroo
INt>ll••• Y•<hl CluD Sprong Rog•ll•, S.llur o•y, Suncwy
Pomorw "•"•r S•1t1no A\\OC:1•1ton C1•\" r•cong S.lurdAY. SvnO•y
Football tryoul8 8el
A tryout camp for the British
Columbia Lfons of the Canadian
Football League wilJ be held
Saturday and Sunday al Golden
West College. beginning at 9
a.m .
REY GUBEANICK
FV posts
volleyball
e surprise
Fountain Valley High pulled
off one of the biggest upsets of
the season with its thrilling
volleyball victory over Marina
Wednesday night in the Sunset
League opener for both teams.
The Barons won the first two
games of the match by Identical
15-7 scores, only to see Marina
take the next two games, 15-6
and 15-9.
ln the fifth and deciding game,
Fountain Valley trailed 11·8 only
to come back and win it, 15·12.
"It was the best match we've
played all year ," said an excited
Fountain Valley Coach Rick
Evans. "It was a great team
win. We followed our strategy to
perfection and everything went
our way."
Outside hitters Dave Thomas,
19 kills, and Todd Story, 16 kills,
keyed the Baron victory. Foun-
tain VaJley also got some out-
standing play from seller Rey
Gubernick.
.. A lot of people don't give this
league enough credit for the
talent it has,"' said Marina
Coach Tim Reed. "But I 'II tell
you one thing, Fountain Valley
is as tough a team as anybody
we've played this year."
In another Sunset League
opener, Newport Harbor defeat·
ed Edison in four games. 15-8,
15-5, 11 ·15, 15-9.
The Sailors got good play from
outside hitter Mark Barrett, a
senior, and back row defensive
specialist Andy Craine, only a
sophomore.
It was the first win of the year
for Newport Harbor
Hurdle's
'Hot Dogs'
are. • •
FORT MYERS. Fla. <AP) -
Renie Jackson la a cbarter
member. So are Jim Palmer
and Tu1 McGraw. And who
could possibly Ignore feisty Earl
Weaver?
They're all part of the 1881 All·
Hot Dog Team compiled by
Kansas City Royals outfielder
Clint Hurdle, a tongue·in-cheek
of baseball players for whom the
whole field's a stage.
Here Is Hurdle's team -with
the outfielder's disclaimer that
many or the members also are
quality players:
First base -Willie Montanez,
Montreal. "The Oscar Mayer of
the bunch. He must practice at
night to pull off some of the
stunts . . Montanez is above
Pete Rose. Rose wishes he was a
wide receiver so he could spike
It.''
Second bas Julio Cruz, Seat-
tle. "Pretty good defensive
player, but also the only player
to lose twice at salary arbitra-tion."
Shortstop -Garry Templeton,
St. Louis. "Known to bounce the
ball on the Astroturf before
throwing to first
Third base -Bob Horner,
Atlanta. "He's been 'in the big
leagues three years and still
hasn't been to spring training."
Left field George Hendrick,
St. Louis. "This man won't even
talk to his own wife. He won't
talk to anybody."
Center field Rick Peters,
Detroit "He's the best young
hot dog going right now. Lf he
practices he can be as good as
Montanez."
Right field Clint Hurdle,
Kansas City. "It's my team so I
can be on it Once you get
called a hot dog, that's it. I'm
there, I'm buried. I'm a hot dog
forever."
Designated hitter -Reggie
Jackson, New York Yankees.
"He's a crowd-pleaser from the
word jump. Yankee Stadium is a
stage, his stage ... He ought to
be on Broadway."
Catcher Rick Dempsey,
Baltimore. "He's ridiculous.
This is the guy who hit the phan·
tom home run during a rain de-
lay at Fenway Park, ran the
bases and s tarted jumping
around on the tarp."
Pitche r s · Jim Palmer,
Baltimore ; T ug McGraw,
Philadelphia ; Bob Lacey,
Oakland. "Palmer deserves It
because he'a a v-'leran. Now
Lacey Is the only guy who ever
wanted to filthl Darrell Porter. ·spacey Lacey ' is bis
nickname Need I say more?"
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Orange Coast OA1LY PILOT/Thurtday, March 28, 1981
A day for comebacks
Eaglea, A.rtiata, Charger• rebound J
El Toro HJab 1cored once in the fourth lnnln1
and five times In the flltb for ll come·from·behind
6-4 victory over Jrvloe to h11hlight area prep
baseball action Wednttday.
In other sames, E1tancla scored two nms ln
the seventh to edl" University, Laguna Beach held
on to defeat Dana Hilla and Mater Del had an easy
lime with arch-rival Servile.
Et Toro 8, Irvine 4
Eric Bryant and Dave Heilengthal each had
two-run singles to spartc a five-run Charger rally
in the filth. Bryant •lngled In the tying runs and
HeilengthaJ followed with a base hit to right field
which scored the winning runs.
Irvine jumped out to a 3·0 lead off Heilengthal,
who started on the mound for El Toro. But
Heilengthal settled down and got some help from
PREP IUSEl14LL
relief pitcher Conrad Giacomazzi, who came on
in the sixth inning, enabling the Chargers to up
their record to 6-5 overall and 2-2 in Sea View
League play.
Irvine drops to 1·3 in league action.
Eatancla 4, Unlveratty 3
Estancia's Lou Dleley kept University winless
in the league with two clutch doubles.
Trailing 3·0 entering the sixth inning, Dieley
doubled home Mike Deutsch and then scored on a
Jeff Gardner single to cut the lead to one.
Then in the ninth it was Dieley again. This
time it was a bases·loaded double that scored two
runs lo give Estancia the win.
Don Mitroff, a senior, went the distance for the
Eagles. He allowed three runs (only two were
earned) on five hits, walked two and struck out
fou r .
Estancia is now 4·2 overall and 2·2 in Sea View
league play while the Trojans dropped to 0-4 in
league.
Laguna Beach 5, Dana Hiiia 3
A bases-loaded double by David Padgem
helped Laguna Beach score three runs in the first
innin~. The Artists added another run in the
A's Lacey told not to report
SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. 1AP1 Relief pitcher
Bob Lacey is as good as traded from the Oakland
A ·s, according to Mana~er Billy Martin
Lacey, who conducted a running feud with
Martin last season, was told not to report to the
ball park Wednesday, when the A's lost a 1-0 Cac-
tus League decision to the Milwaukee Brewers .
The left-hander's locker was cleaned out. and
Martin said. "He'll be ~one soon ...
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Lubricate• all expoHd 1urface1 -preventa 1queak1, wear 1nd ruat,
lt<>Pt atlcklng. Works under
aecond but then had to hold on to defeat the stub-
born Dolphlna.
Senlor lefthander Kevin Clark started an~ picked up his second win o( the yur. He did need
htlp from Brandt Vroman In the seventh inning.
Vrosnan was credited with the uve.
The victory gave Laguna Beach its first South
Coast Leall.le triumph. The Artists are now 1 3 in '
league and 4-7 overall. Dana Hills Is also 1·3. ~
Mater Del I, S.rvtt• 4 i
The two Orange County Catholic schools bat·•
tied it out and the Monarchs came out with an up·:
set win. . ~
Servile entered tbe game 2·0 in Angelus '
League play only to see Mater Dei score six runs !
in the fourth inning to blow the game open. ;
The game highlighted the return of Amin!
David to the Monarch lineup. David hasn't played ~
since the second game of the season because of a \
muscle pull. In Ms first ume back. David was:
2-for -4 with a home run and three RBU
David's home run was.a solo shot in the second in-'
ning.
Steve Mendoza had a big day at the plate and •
on the mound Mendoza was 2·for·4 with an:
RBI but more importantly picked up his first save;
of the year in relief of starter Dan Sottosanti.
Mendoza took over the pitching duties in the!
sixth inning and shut out the Friars by striking out
six batters the last two innings :
In the last four games he has appeared, Men-•
doza has struck out 40 hitters
Other hitting stars for the Monarchs included t
Rick Moore, three hits. and Frank Spates. two '
hits. •
Mater Dei is now 5-6 overall and 1-3 in the : An~elus League. ~ t
D' Acquisto is shelled, t
but Angels win, I 0-6 (
I PALM SPRINGS (AP 1 Jeff Berton1's two~
run homer in the seventh inning gave the Angels a~
10·6 victory over Cal State Fullerton Wednesday i~
exhibition baseball ;
The Angels had to fight back from a 5-2 deflcit4
after the Titans struck for five runs 10 the second1
inning off right· hander John D' Acquisto. ~
Fred Lynn's two-run homer had given the:
Angels a 2·0 lead in the bottom of the first innin~
and the Angels tied 1l with three runs in the bottom~
of the second. ~
After Bertoni's homer off left.hander Mikez
Digiacomo gave the Halos a 7·6 lead. the Angel s~
put the game away with three unearned runs irY,
the eighth inning. i
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Otlnge Coat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March 26, 1981
'
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Na A
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P'MlticOhW. . '-""'· .. •·P-llla U U ... •-Lt•.,. SI 2• .'71 11'1 l ·PWllOnG 4J )7 sat 12
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!Carew, Ferragamo conihine efforts
By EDZINTEL
DI Ule DtllJ P'iltll Sleff
Rod Carew is not new to this sort of thto1. Vince Ferragamo is.
' But Ferragamo, who, one would thlnt, bas
enough to worry about these days -what, with his
qontract dispute with the Rams ln mid ruebt -
~nts to do something for his community.
So, taking Car ew's and other top sports
names' lead. Ferragamo is lendlne his services as
~hairman for a charity tennis tournament.
FERllAGAMO, WHO SOME wlll tell you has
the best arm In the NFL today, will team with
Carew, who some will tell you has the best bat ln
major leaeue baseball . The duo wlll co-chair a
celebrity tournament April 4 al the Anaheim Hllls
Racquet Club.
Proceeds from the event wiU benefit ban·
dicapped children at Canyon HUis Hleh School In
Anaheim and underprivlleeed chtldren of the
~nahthaSalvaUon Army.
Tb• tournament, attracU111 entertainment
-tars u wen •• several bit name pro athletes, will be held from 10·2 p.m . Ferraaamo hopes It's the
first ln what will become an annual event.
• Ferratamo Is so 1enulnel7 involved tn the
Journament that he even 8l'reed to Ul;)de"'rite It
tecenUy when there wu IOfDe doubt 1bout lta
future. : "Lut July, I approached the club and we all
Ju1t s~rted klcldn& around some Ideas," Fer·
ra1amo said. "It took off from I.be launchlnt pad
and really started fiytn1."
Carew then became involved and the two
'oined forces to brine out what appears will be a
Jtellu lineup of 1ueata.
CAaSW BA8 BEEN actively Involved for
..1everal yeera wltb charity beneftta, puUn.lartJ
Jor muJUpte 1clero1l1.
The list of athletes confirmed fOf' Ute LcMarn•·
f'Jlent lncbade Rama Carl Dem. Rich Saw, .l•t
leynolcla Pr•ton Denne rd and lv0f'1 WIJ. OUMt
:past llld P,..\ pro loodNl11 pl•,.. tMlu•• a.
Var y, Brad Budde, John Cappelletti, Rod
Sherman, Marlin McKeever and Tom Mack.
Baseball players who will be on hand include
Carew's Angel teammates Fred Lynn, Brian
Downing and Don Baylor, plus Dodgers Jay
Johnstone and Steve Yeager.
Admission to the tournament is $6. The cost to
play against a celebrity i11 SlSO, which Includes a
reception dinner and awards.
For information, call 998-SOOO. * • •
Chris-Evert Lloyd, Tracy Austin, Andrea
Jaeger and Martina Navratilova wlll meet ln a
TENNIS
singles abowdown April 4-S at La Costa for a total
purse of $200,000 and a top first place prt1e of
$100 000.
Two matches are scheduled each d•y startln1
at 11 a.m. Tickets may be reserved by phone by
calling 438-17M and are on sale at all Tlcketron
outleta. All four players will compete both daya. • • • A 11-part aeries tbat comblnea the lively wit
and hJChJy re1arded tennis instruction of Vic
Braden will premiere April 5 at 7 p.m . on KCET,
Channel 28.
Entitled "Vic Braden'• Tenn ii for the
Future," after hJ1 be1t·1eWn1 book by the same
name, Braden will stve lecturet and on·court de-
monatraUooa on all f acetl ol the 11me.
TM J)l'Olram wUJ be clOM captioned for the
hearlnt·lmpaired.
It will be repeated April e et 11:30 a.m. wllb
open captions and Aprtl Tat 10:30 p.m. with cloted
capUcm.
On April I , at J p.m., KOCE, ChaMel 50 wlU
besln telecut ol t.bt propam. . . " .
Autotrralb bounds wW want to be •' tbt .r• Wape T-11 Club Aprtl JO.lJ wbea a eellbrtt,
'
tournament, featuring names such as Cheryl
Ladd, John Davidson, Wayne Rogers and Cindy
Garvey will be held.
Tickets can be obtained by calling 898·9523 or at the club the day of the event.
Proceeds from the tournament wlll benefit
Children's Village, USA, which helps battered an41 abused children.
• • • Nearly 200 disabled children will have the op-
portunity to parUclpate in a variety of sport.a at
Saddleback College, Aprtl 13·16 as the National
Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis and the Mlaslon
Viejo Company host a sport.a camp for han-
dicapped children.
Dues lose,
GWC wins
Shandra Anderson
scored 28 pointa to lead
Fullerton Colle•e to a
convlnctn1, 77-ta, vie·
tory over Oran1e CoHt
In women'• community
colle1e buketball actJon
Wednesday nJ1ht.
The win f ivu the
Hornet.a sol• po11enlon
o/ Jrat place ln th• ~uth Coat Conlerence
at 5-0. OCC dropa to 4·1.
Kri1 Jtroyer HOred 22
polnu and trabbed U
rebound• to lead tbe pjratea.
In other action ,
Golden Welt beld oa tbe
beat Eut IM Anret ...
71 .....
FOR THE RECORD I TENNIS
100 llt<K -t. fUrt 111, t;N t, J, tqwth,.,_ 111. •·au; a. Htl""" 1~1. 1:111,1.
100 IWU ll -t. •lau Ct>. tiOU; f,
Jee .. • le.MAJ, 1:•11 •· tc.111c•1, 11ou.
400 ''" ,,...,. -I . c:er-*'MM, J M,1 ......
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rel IOWI. I 14 ... ; 100 .,._, IOWI, WMd
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''" I. lil.04ltf'U (0WJ, IUO; 100 11, -I, lloild .. k IOWI, I.Of.ts, tO MO I lwrell
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I oe. IS, iOO ,, .. -'· l(lm IGWI •• II ... JO
l>ttt tl I .i-. IOWI,,. 11
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200 mtdll'fl rtlt ; I IEllllM, 2 04 OJ, JOO
lrH -I l(t . L*'9 (NHI, 1.04.0, 200 lllOO
I lurntll Il l, J;Jt.•, JO frto I, '111 .. 111 ce1. a..u. DMno -1. c;11r1"°""'''°" <E>. 101 IJ, 100 fir -I, $rll .. d1 11!1, 1.04.1, 100
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Lone INHI, J. lt.1. 100 o.o I l(oro.n1al
IE I, I OhJ: t00br•U I. OuMI~ INHI,
I 14 J, G ltW , .. ., -I HtWPOr1 H•feof,
• IO tt
MtrlM "· ,.-..,, v.u..,. 200 mtdlt Y rtlty -I F-l•ln llt ll..,,
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Alletl (FVI, no PO•"''· 100 fir I. 8tttell
!Ml, 1.01 J, 100 lrt• -I. Tl\t ul ll'Vt, St.tt,
SOO ltH I. Armslrang tf'Vl, • 41 SI; 100
ll•O I Wllllrer IMI. I 11 ••• 100 01 .. ,1 -
I RH M IMI, I 12.0, tOO lrtt ttlt • -I
Mtt1n• •• It 2
~
" "
WotMn'• IOftball
COMMUNITY COUIOI 0-W.• II, I.et A"tOllt CC t
CiOICltft Wttl 101 101 J 10 t 0
LOI Anoe•n cc 000 000 0 0 0 I
DllP tnCI H10m.,,, Gr1Q01 •nd MOione
W Otlp L -Or1911a. 18-JolvlM>n (Ciolotn
Wull HR -BotCI. H•c•men ICioleltn w .. 11
Or-C..11 I, lotfl D .... Me .. O
Or•noe Cotti 110 100 l > • S•n Olo(IO MH• 000 000 0 0 •
H11m 11 C"•motr1 (•t enct ''"'' M<Grtoer. Bowman t•I and H•nu" JI H•n..,, ISOMI
Misc.
Wedne9dey'1 tranHctlont
IASIULL
~-Lt-BOS JON RED ~X Opl1onoo Jim
OOr\.t Y, Mi._• Ho..,•ra, Brv<t H"''' Jt rry
1t1no . lltllll MtcWllott.,. •nd Boo 01t<M.
PllClltrl. to lllOlr minor IH9 ... <emp lor
,,.,,10~•
OAltLANO AS '>enl Jell C.oa, 1nl10ICltr.
1te11n A1ner1on. P•lt lltt. •nd loD Ortnela" oulht td.,, to T•coma ot tM P1c1tlt Coat.t
Luout S.nl Boll Moo,., pllCMt, end Scoll
M~ytr. <•ttn~r to Wt'l H•vtn ot th•
E .... ,,. u eoue
ro RONfO 8LVE JAVS ""'"O"•d Ci<lft•
Pe tr•lll ~ 8fl•n Milner cite.M r\ Pedro
Htrl'\•no.•. 1nh1totr •nG Cn1rhf' Pvlfl> O••t"''. to '"''' minor •••9~ <•mo tor ftlUIQtV"nent
N•l..,..ILt .....
"'Ew 'fOR< METS Sent Ju>t O•oKo.
Scotl HOIM•n. Tom '""'°"''9· o .... Von
Qn1m1n •nO M1kt M•n.GOI•. p1tt ner '· to
tn•n minor INQ~ <•mp tot t••'"onmlf\l
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES Atquiroo
C•r'I M•ttr.tw\, ou1t1•k:lilr, •rom '~' At•.,,t• 8, •• ,, 1n P•Cl'Wn91 tor 600 W•I~ P•1'M'
!t1;nt o Mtllht•\ 10 • h"'e Vt•' totur.c t
~ T LOUI~ CAR DINALS Oi>honod M1kt
t •h M lf\ttd CN\;•m•n. •ncl O•Yt Prnn1•H
•nd Gent' AOOf. outt1 .. o.t" to f"-•' minor
lt•Qwe <•ml) '°' '••U•vitmtnt Cwt crv.,
O•"''· fom Cf\•motrl•1n •nd 8udd1
S.C,,ulU, p.tctwr\
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Sen1 -· VtneDle, ... 111ele1tt, •nd Jell A•ntom, IOI> Cumm1net ~John A•ttt>, c•tcM r,, to their
1t•1n1n9 c-lor t tffl<Cl""'tnt
POOTMLL
C-•ll•l'eetMllLt ....
l:OMONTON ESttlM05 S111neo HOweld
Field\ drttn\tv~ baC~
HOCl(IY
NalllMI Hooey LeettH
W IHNIPEC. JEIS S1 9n •O Senay
8f'•dle. 1•9' w ino. •nd 8 1t1 Wh•tlon
Oefenwm.n to mufti ve•r <ontr•< h
Women·• gymnHtlc•
COMMUNITY COLLI Gt!
Ot•n .. CNll IH.I, L_ .. KllCC IU.f
V•1ii1U 1 Man•tt., 1.1, UM¥t n -.,.,, t
ll1t1 TruDI IOCCI, G•ll•llt IL8CC1, I )
Be ltnct Detm I ACl"D IOCCI, I J, F1-
o .. tt1\4' I O•lletl• ILBCCI t l All
trOUftCI I HOllmtt1 tOCCI, )()I
HIGH SCHOOL
Muntl ......... oc .. IU.1, Wnlml111I•• I ...
Veull l MoCllHh CHI), I 1. Un .. an
D•fl I Moentela IHll, t.I, B•l•net ,,..,,,
I llOl\let CW). t I, P:loor t•ttelM I
MoC llU I\ (HBI, 9.t, All·•round
Motllttl• (HBI, JS •
C..te ~ 12'.I, lr•IM IJl.1
V•ull I F•tltr Ill, I 1. Une.,en l>tr\
I Finn ICMJ, 1 1, B•let><t Diam I Fonn
ICM I, I I Floor HttC•.. I Oercte Ill
I s All ••ouna ' Finn ICMI. J1 0
Pro bowtlnf
PeA TOUlllNAM HT
(ltMltll'll u...,... .... ,.
I 8111 Block
I Boo HAnelltY
J Jell Mt11•no1r I Mer-flOll\lnQIY
J M•r\1>•11 Hol....,,
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J
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II
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'
T•E
FAMILY
ClaClJI
"The top part of this mirror doesn't get much
wear 1eept when mommy and daddy
or• looking In it."
MABMADU8'E by Brad Anderson
1~J.·Z(t.
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
Hank Ketchum
0 : ~
"YOU teU him he hal to buy one burger to
get one free with that coupon!" "We had to get rid of our sandbox . . . too many
arguments about who was gonna use it."
llJDGE PARKEa
C\ll~---l""1fiTHOUC-MT~~:"j"1HiHEEAARcRD'1 A&MY. l'M 00 tJOMYTHAT I DIDN'T
YC>Vtt CAil PVU .. VP. Mlbb OPENCER ! 6 ET A CHANCE TO !'HONE UNTii.. MOW
1H£n'fl A. LON(; DIOTANCf ... OVT l WA.!J IN AN AUfO ACCIDENT
CALL. FOft YOU! "MU~T el ON MY WAY TO THE Al~IU ! ,,,__ .......
MAOOI!
GAR FIELD
MOON MULLINS
i;:: ~ l 1LL BE
GO HOME, BOUNCE·· WE i~f" JLJ~f
oNL.Y N!Et> You WHEN OF lAAi·' "--~
SOMEONE15 CRE,ATING A
-~,prs TlJR9,ANCE'.
ACROSS
1 Sllent
6 "fOl'ewf
11 Mo!OI' ,.,,
14 Poplar
15Gr.-or
T1'ofMl-te "IWll": Sp.
17 fl¥lll
11 ClmtlttOge
llftlv.
208Np'•.,.
21 A-8 lett«I
22CMtl
241WtM
'8 Ewopeen
49 Slat•
50 Portico
52 Oilco<d deity
st P.I. native
57 Embody eo -Bravo
e 1 Inclined ""· 12 Flower
83 Longtime
84Cototldo
pet1I
15 Peettr
DOWN
2tfWI 1fllt9Mr
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®
UNITED Feature Syndicate
Wedne161y'a Pume Solved
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37 IWICld 7 lnelet 2t OUtwd trek 47 ~
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4 Melllld ti COlllDM • CoelMI 51.,.,. a Olla IS o...ur.d 41 Dirt M r.,t .eUie.... tt• .QHIC.... • ........
by Harold Le Doux
I
' I
I
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
--~ . -
Orange Collt DAILY ALOT/Thurtday, March 21. 1111
PrANIJTI
SHOE by Jeff MacNelly --------------..... l~~'''· ,,.
NANCl' by Ernie Bushm iller
INAND CAFE LET'SG~ /#I CORNFLAKES
'WOW---I
WONDER
WHAT THEY
SERVE
SEE -Ii #~# 4
~I ALL YOU ~
/"}, CAN ~T J ~ 50'-
c ... -,_.__.:_/
ftJN8'l' •INKEa•EAN
~,50 I CAU.£0 IN~ ~ MD l'M ~ RE.AU.«
5'(.J( !
81& DEAL.! nw\ NOT" OOIN6
10 HIDE ~ lH€ 8EO
ALL.. DNJ !
DftABBLE
OIL SMOCK
' r
l
! •
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
'
. ' ' ' . .
' .
I •
Orange CoMt OAtLV ptLOT/Thuraday1 March H, 1811
rn~~m~~~
7 hits of 6Usiness wisdom 7 deadly mistakes
a JOHN CUNNIYF By thil reuonln&. Mi saJd, you can'" that OeneraJ Moton One ot t.be oldeat muinu ln American mana1ement, be said,
{,......_ ........ 1,u and ATH are lo the tame butine11, that of brln1ln1 people aa that you cannot hire a pair or handa. "Andrew Carne1le
NEW YORK -Eu•eae Jennins• w11 lament1.n1 the wuUned lofetJler. TbeJr 1oall, be pointed O\lt, are the same, tbou1h t.be in· observed that a man alto hu a mind and a heart, and tbat be
world poellloo of American bualneaa. "Competitors ln the intern•· atrumenta differ. thlnks and feels. But mana1ement abandoned the mind and heart,
llonal marketplace are beatinc u.a at our own 2. TeebDolOIY and marttt.lna muat bt married. •·America was and tM union.a eagerly aoucht them."
aame," the prole11or aa1d. seldom nrst In technolon, but we were flf1t to marry It to market.a 7 . A butlneas needs a sense or purpose. The greats of Amencan I The 1ame and techniques for pl1yln1 ln 8 timely, orderly fashion," he aaid. "Out aaaet waa reaponalve-industry knew lt. "A company Is too abstract to give loyalty to,"
were eatabllahed by U.S . firms years a10, be neaa." the professor asserted. "We must turn an organization to a
said. But aa competitors learned, Americana 3. Other companies caMot be bou1ht blindly. "To acquire the purpose. It must have meaning and justification. This is the art of
for1ot. ' . other tuY11 products you shoU..ld know either the technolo1Y or the leadership."
"The Japanese are merely applyin1 a market. Without either you cfc:il't know what you're buylne." The And so, said Jennings. author of many books on corporate life,
wlnnlo1 formuJa that once made us the pre· mesu1e ls proved daily as companies divest holdings acquired a th~e seven bits of wisdom have become the seven deadly mis· mier economic force in the world," said Jeo· few years earlier. takes.
nln11. a Mkhi1an State University professor, '· Quality besets customer loyalty. "We Invented the prlnci-
corporate scholar and adviser to top ex· pie " wtth Model T Ford.a and other product.a, aald a cha1rined
ecutlves. cu""'"' Je~nlnaa. "We shouldn't have Lo have Sony reteach It to ua." They He forecast that "President Rea1an's attempt to tum America know, he said, what Henry Ford learned: Quantity doesn 't offset
HOW DID WE GO WRONG? Among other things. through the
arrogance of t~e affluent 1960s and the ignorance of the 1970s, be said. around by investment incenUvea will surely fail ii corporate chlefs poor quality, because people buy products one at a time. don't return to wise mana1ement." America, be contenda, "•u!; The latter was produced largely by "business schools turning
to the mechanics of business from the philosophy and history of
business." School management departments. he said, "became
overrun by behavioral scientists whose affinity to management
was that they could spell the word. They never knew the lessons of management _and business history "
fera more from a ahortfaU of wtadom than a ahortfall of capital., 5. STUTEGY P&ECEDES STRUCTURE. "We know that
The bitter pill. he said, "is that today'• mistake• were yesterday 1 once a business organization was functioning the manaeement
lessons." . style had Lo defer to it.
On bis hit list are arrogance and iporance, behavioral sclen· Tbe best corporations, including General Motors and IBM he
tists bad teachin1 and a dulled sense of purpose. He hopes the said ln illustration, don't reorganize every time a new chief ris~s to
lessons will be relearned. He se~ they will the top. Less successful, more erratic ones, he pointed out, often 1 Know your business. ''It isn't determined by products or Consumer prices up
for Orange County
profits," he said, citing an observation by Harvard's Theodore. do. 6. People are a company's most important asset. We knew
Levitt that drill makers sell boles, not drills, and another by the in· that too, be said. '•But then companies abandoned their ventor of the reaper, Cyrus McCormick, that b1a product was employees."
economics, not reapers. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiil
CALL TOM MARSTON
FORA
FULLYASSUMABLELOAN-
INTEREST ONLY!
" !MOlllOH Of IJ.U11 fe>k oYl" 00 Yl.AM
J[W[LS by JOS[PH
Soult Coat Plau, Coeta M9ea • 540-90H
llus is noc an offer tO sdl nor a sohcicmon of
an offn-ro buy thCSt.• St'C\Jrmes. The offering~ made
only by the Offenng Circular.
Newport Equify~unds ·lnc ~1
Licensed Broker Since 197l •
150,000 to 210,000 Shares
Heritage Bank
Common Stock
714 760·6060 -!I
PRICE: $10.00 per share
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
For an Offt:nn~ Cm:ular and a Subscription
Aweemc:nt, please com.act the Bank by mail or
Mrs. Helen Walson, As.slStam Corporate Secretary,
by tdephone·
• •••--• o.lv ,...,..._._ ··--•C-.ftdal • •-w •• t1.1
• W..taly c-•I• •ta· • •-ddw ....... . .,_ ..... ,,,.....
• s..a. ... c.Jlfora&.
ANAHEIM MAIN OFF1CE
7Z I North Euclid Strt.'t't
Anaheim. Cal1foml3 92801
(714)991·3860
,.
( 1nt._u. I ••Uf
loea lafo,...ttoa aenrkc
'"' ltOf ltntHU UU.:f n.,~d,
(714) 759-1515
AMEllll<:A~ HOME MOllTQAOE 130 Newpo •t Ce nte r Ot1•e
Oes19n Plue
Newport Beach
C1hlorn1a
92660
30%
.. 12 MONTH TllMS
ALL SICUAID T .D.
Sl.000 MIM.
S.C.P.M.
17141 640.7ttJ
;..----C..r9GING 8U)lncl» 1::111"1~~----,
In Business To Make Business Happen
At Creative we have the money you need.
Loans from $25,000.00• tor any business or
investment purpose.
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker.
•All loans secured by a combination of
real and personal property.
41425 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 92660 (714) 762·7923
@ ~TRS BO" 4u. 1 t.1; & IJ ~t:oMP~TeRs
1 •t In Features, Performance, Price!
TRS-80 COLOR COMPUTER
,,..,.
•Spectacular Color
01'8phlc1 •nd Exciting
Sound
• Plug-In Progrwn Pllk1 for
Entenalnment. Pet'9onal u ..
• Writ• Your Own Progr1m1
And lev• Them on ca ......
• E••Y for leglnne,. to UN,
Expend8bl• for Expert•
UM your own colOr TV ancl
c••MI• recorder or buy our•
RADIO IHACK HAI OTHER TRa.aG COM..UTl!RI
TO FIT IVl! .. YONl!'S HEIDI FROM Uitl TO t10,000.
""vi~CTOAS CORNEA
R•r• Coln• • Stampe
GOLD & SILVER
Prices for 3·25·11
Ge" ci ... UJt.fO Sliver Cl. llL&s ... , S.11
Kru9"r-U4Llt UU.lt Meplt LtM Ull .00 "41.00
100 Corone\ U07 .JO Uit.M JO Ptt01 WSl.lt s.tt,lt
90 • s11 .. r B~ 1011% """' ·-----· c.. .. c_.,....
(714)~
South Coeet Pteu Ylll•g• ___ .. , .. _____ ,
WE CAN COMPOUND
COSMETIC
PREIC"l~I
8~ '
R. Ph.' -~
It may surprise you to'
know ancient record11 menti o n e d that
pharmacists, then called apothecaries, prepared
the heaUng. and beautify.
In& lotions and unquents.
Even n o w Der · matologl sts prescribe
some for problem skins. When directed by physl·
clans. we can color them
for different complex·
Ions
A pharmacy Is a ufe
place to get cosmetics. Of
course we carry your ravorite producta and we
know about their lngre·
dlents. If you u k for sue-
geaUons. we can 1ive you Informed professional
answers: Our cosmetic
In \fentory la controlled
llkeourdru1s.
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
.need a medicine. Pick up your prescription If shop·
pln a nearby. or we wlll deliver promptly without
.extra char1e. A great ,ma ny people entrust us
with their prescrlpUona.
May we compound
y9ur'? .
PAIL UDO PMAIMACY ...... "!Y ···~ .... ... , .... .... ' ..... .
can •u-H1'1.
"'' • , .. word• to work for
'Wraparound'
mortgages slated
WASHINGTON (AP> The
Federal National Mortgage As·
socialion will offer its own
"wraparound" mortgages after
Monday in an effort to increase
earnings FNMA. a private cor·
poration. holds mortgages it has
been sold by retail lenders.
President David 0 . Maxwell
said Wednesday the agency now
will o ffer h omeowners
mortgages to replace old
mortgages lo permit them to
cash in on the increased market
value or their homes.
OVER THE COUNTER
MUTUAL FUND
LOS ANGELES <AP)
Consumer prices in Los Angeles
and Orange counties rose slight-
1 y faster during the past 12
months than they did statewide,
officials say.
Figures released this week by
the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics showed the Consumer
Price Index rose by 0.8 percent
during February in Los Angeles
and Orange counties. pushing
the index to 10.1 percent for the
preceding 12 months
Meantime, the California
Department of Industrial Rela-
tions said the statewide price in·
NASO LISTINGS
ll • 1• • \,en\or \ Jtl•• lO•• S"tM~r n • ll , Sv< m>1 II'• lr 1 S'1Mto •1 , 4' .-. SnNmt )
f1 • 11 .,C••Wtr 17 , 18 SwE•S•
14 U t 5tNMff'H
I) I 11-. ~l •nOfn
11 • a , s10M1«0
19 I~ / ~:~~~i· 11'* 18 • Slff'ISI 1J If 'l>H.,w(.• j1 • }~ : \YOdfu
81 81 " ~wl'e' EI ~} • ~~ I : ~~~.?~ JJ , JJ .. , r dndtm \ c-,.. Q • T r1t0Po
SO 11 I 1•onFo
JI,: 1:--: ,~~~~~ol
• •'• VSSvr, o • 441 • fUS Trc-.
4l '1 ' UVa8"" 7 • 2 .. UP~MP
tl • t1 J 'l/UHt
/4 It 1 VAf8kAr
I• , 1) V•nOu\
1••• 11 1 Yf(Otn \
10 •I I • Y'•ICtO Q IS , II IV1c11 aS1
11 , 1"' V1oe0Cp
4U I .tt • Y•NU\l'I
0 .. 1> •l"'•nEnr o .. t& Weldlrn
•I .. >INtllGt ' 1 • )1 • Ntl'Wh ' \
IV ... '" , N i10rf'f 1) .. 11 o N0e•p ) .. J • NHOIO ~. ~: z:;:~~
•t • 11 N OudLot l 1j 1• l """OnlW 41 1 11 l tOnU••
c r ease was 1.6 percent for
January and February and 9.9
percent from February 1980 to
February 1981 . Statewid e
figures are computed bimonthly.
SF hotels 'hurt'
SAN FRANCISCO <AP ) -Ex-
ecutives of San Fr ancisco's ma·
jor hotels s ay sagging tourism is
hurting business. It's the second
year in a row that the hotels and
other businesses that depend on
tourism, such as restaurants
and retail stores, have reported
a slump in business.
J4 .. l• ...
I) " 1J i j~ J~ •
)1 • ll •
lJ ' ll • 10« 11
NASDAQ SUMMARY
I~ 1~1• NEW l'ORJC. fAPI Trw lollowiru~ lt\I
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.. -·------.---
BUSINESS I STOCKS Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thureday, March 26, 1981 s -----------------------------------------------------------.. NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOTATION' llf<'-UOI T•AOU ON'"' NIW YO•IC. llllOWln, l"ACir1c ...... 1000•. OlflOIT ANO Clllj(INIUTI UOC• • •C .. Alllh AllO IHl'O•TIO I Y TMI NAtO ANO INITINIT
• . I
·•" ~,~
... ,~ Reagan tax
plans detailed
f Lort of ldfw·part ufi•• on aovtng on ~' JMO income
IOZ rttum.)
How macb would your federal lncome taxes 10
down If Contreas were to a pprove P resident
Reaaan'a c&JI for a seric1 of cut.I to trim lndlvldual
tax rat.et by ao percent, 1urtin1 ln July and conclud·
in11 in 1984? ..
Whal does all tbe massive mumbo·Jumbo about
tax reduction tele1r aph to you?
Here's a
run d own of
facts n o t
headlined:
Q. Will your
taxes reaJJy go
down tr the ad·
min istr ation's
tax -reduction
I -Y--lVl--1 --,0--RT--IR-!'?
program is enacted into law?
A. Not nece11ariJy. Yoar to&al federal Income tu
bill woald dec:Uae ll your earala11 remal•ed ua·
dtanaed la the nen few year1; then yoDr lttM tu
debt •ou.ld be about 31 percent smaller than your
'8t blU.
But it your paycheck rises, your tax bill would in·
crease, too, for the simple reason that you then would
join the tax creep -and your higher paycheck would
put you into a higher tax bracket which automatical·
ly would pull more tax money out of your earnings
For instance, say you're unmarried, wor king as
an admissions officer at a private secondary s chool ,
earning $15,000 a year and paying about $2,000 in tax·
es . H. over the next two years, your salary stayed the
same. the Reagan plan would cut your federal taxes
by $316
But s ay you move to a higher-paying job and
start earning $20,000 a year. Your 1982 feder al taxes
are estimated by Matthew Bender experts at roughly
S2,600. Even under the Re agan tax cuts, you
personally would owe $600 more to the fede ral gov-
ernment.
Q. Who really benefits the most from the tax cut
proposals?
A. Tbe arpmen&s about thll IJ'OW more abusive
and bewUderlnc by Ute hoar. A nnt fact Is that
potentially, everyone would benent -bat ln dllferent
way1 and to sharply different dearees.
In total dolla rs, a senior p artner at a leading
Cleveland law firm earning $100,000 a year <with a
wife and t wo children) would pay nearly $7,000 less in
taxes In 1984 then he now pays
A computer programmer earning $25,000 a year
and with the same type of family would have his tax-
es reduced about $800. A $50,000·a-year , four-person
family would be about $2,500 better off in the tax
computations .
I
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES N&W YOi.l(IAPI Fll\el Oow·J-•v11•
AMERICAN LEADERS
Pel Up 20 7 Up II I
Up IJ 1 Up IJ.1 Up U t Up !1 4 Up 11 1
Up It I Up It 4 Up 11 2
Up 111 Up II 0
Up 11.0 Up 10.1
UP IOt Up 10.•
Up 10.• Up 10 I Up 10 4
Up 10 J Up 10 2
Up •t Up •l Up '2 Up •7
~'!foc:r'-· -· u 0..1\ HI_, Low Clo.. O'll JO ,,... .-cw 101, .. ..,,, 1011n.tt01t
to Tm <11• • .i u.t.•1 o i 1t ..,, ,.. • •1 15 Ull 107 '1 10l.17 10. '4 IOI U • 0 tt u Sii• .. n Jn JO ., I I Jltl ., • •.•s
lndu• S.156.000 T'•" 1, ... ,100 Ullh SU.100 ..S SI• 1 W ,IOO
WHAT STOCKS DID
Prtv ,..,.._
0.CllNCI Ul\C l\encll'd Tol•l I_. N•w llleN N•w Iowa
WH"f llMf X OIO
N !W YORI( CAP)
MEJ ALS W•Onrni.,
o:x.
9JS »I
IU S IJ1
4
Cop~r U'9·'1 conh •pound, U S 0 .. 1.na
··~' Lu ll 14 » ccnlu PoUl\O Zinc o • 4)1• cents• poynd dtfhtrro
Tin \7 OJn Mt1•1, Wtt• comoo,,,,.. •D
Aluml-,.,..,, .. p0vno N 'f
M•r<•,., ~ 00 per lte\k
1'1•11"""' UU 00 lroy 01 N 'I'
We<JntiO•~
lly TMA•-l•ltd Pren
H•ndy" H•,.m•n, "'IMO Qief troy OUl'Kt'
GOLD QUOTATIONS
w ..inttclo
L•M... morn.no twno UJJ 2S 011 n 00
L•""..,; •lier,_,, 11.1n11 U21 00 off la 2S
l'erlt. •lte,,_n ICaono UH II, 011 Ml SO
"""-'""· ••••no Ull H. vo 'o H lurlc~ l•lt •lltrnoon '" '"0 U)l 00, un
cn•noed ~00 .. ktd IU n•t & H•rmen. only O•lly quol~
U H 00. oll '8 7S l llt•ll\Md only d••IY quo•~ Ull 00, o•f .. is l 1tt•llWN'f only cully auolt ,,.,,,,.,..., u o 1). oll .. 2S
SYMBOLS
t
Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT(l"huraday, March 28, 1981 MOVIES I INTERMISSION •
1
I 'Tess' beautiful movie but resorts to cliches
Sbe returns home to do back-I
breakina farm labor only to beJ
rediscovered by Alec.
I
')
r 1'ourtll UI a Nrie• o/ ,.,._ °"
m<>tM• nondftalecf /or bed pkftn
O•car at the Acod•mw A100rcb
c~ MOftdarJ.
Impact ot 01 movie oomlnated
for best pictlll'e 01ear.
Roman Polanski, the picture ••
vytn1 for six Oscars lncludin1
director and clnemato1raphy.
It'• moet Ukely to wln ln the lat.
ter cate1ory.
87 IEal Y REaTt:NSTEIN
Cit .. Delly ll'itee , .. "
The story of a lra1lc heroine.
baaed oo lhe 1bomaa Hardy DOV·
el, "Teti of the d'UrbervWee"
Isn't bad. But It 's doubtful the film can
stand up to "Ordinary People" "Tess" baa lbe most vlsual Dirtded by American fuittlve
Simon saying it twice
ByTOMTJTVS
of1 .. DMIJ ... IMtlaff
Three new stage productions; two of them by
Neil Simon, arrive on t he Orange Cout theater scene
thbweek. ·
Slmoo's "Chapter Two" opened atthe Har lequin
Dinner Playhouse Wednesday night, while his =-. "God's Favorite" bows at the
~, Newport Theater Arts Center on
Friday. Sharlng a Friday open-
ing will be Edward Albee's
drama or suburban avarice,
"Everything in the C arden." at
the Newport Harbor Actors
• Theater.
At the Harlequin, H.M. Wy-
nant stars in a thinly disguised
portrait of Simon himself in
wYHANT "Chapter Two,·· a play based on
the author's experiences in dealing with his first
wlfr's death and the s train of his early relationship
with his nrw wife, Marsha Mason. Lisa Robinson
plays the romantic interest. while Patti Colombo and
Art Koustik complete the cast.
Directed by Harvey Levine, "Chapter Two" will
play nightly except Mondays at varying curtain
times through May 3 al the Harlequin, 3503$. Harbor
Blvd.,justnorthofCosta Mesa. Reservations and in-
formation979-5511.
KENT JOHNSON IS directing "God's Favorite"
at the Newport Theater Arts Center. 2501 Cliff Drive,
Newport Beach, where Paul Teschke enacts a
modem J ob encountering a series of miJfortunes .
Sorrell Wayne is cast as his wife with John Szura
playing a heavenJy messenger who brings him the
bad news.
Rounding out the Newport cast are J oe
Brockman, Scott Clevenger. Paula Kay P erry, Dolly
Ross and William Buckley. Performances are
scheduled Fridays and Saturdavs at 8 o'clock with
Sunday matinees at 2 through April 18. Reservations
67S-3143or642-8119.
AJbee's "Everything in the Garden" has been
transformed from Long Island to Southern
California for its production at the Newport Har bor
Actors Theater. 309 Monte Vista St .. Costa Mesa.
Don Latroon directs the drama. which features Ben
Miles, Rochelle Savitt. Bill Urban and Valerie
Mc ilroy in leading roles.
r'
r-u cae~ ~
AUlilOll~S
~ ~
~
~
R llNtedAlbata,,;
r edwards LIDO CINEMA
HfWl'OltT llYO. AT VIA LIDO I NOW PLAYING
'-MEWf'ORT IEACH 673-1350
,.._C.J n,.,~.,...,. • ~ .. ,...... .. u ....__ '~ t•~"'·
PUBLIC NOTICE
flCTITIOUS •U"NIU
NANll STATIMINT
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIC:Ma •USINISS
NAMI STATIMINT
~
TP\t fol•OW'•l'lQ 0trton '' 001no bu\ct Th• foltow1n; per'°"' .,., dolno
nt '\\ ., OU\lftH\ •\
411P R 08E ,OI PROFESSt0 N BEST MARKE TING A S
RESEARC!i ORGANIZATION FO .. SOCIA TES. 1306 L-n A•.n.-C0>ta
BUSINESS EtHREPRENEUllS, Ill. MtH. (At1fe>fCn•a t»•. VNtTEO·-EAICA CORPORATION, Arlllur C Peacock, Sr , 1901
SU An9"11fe 0.-1 ... (MOO>.t del Mar, Waktllam Pl•<•, Se n ta Ana .
Celltornle tlf>U C•lllornl• '270ol
Wltllem W Barr•<k, 20 Gr•ncl Ntt~ G. l<M,.,.,.y, S12 Anoe Illa A •tt>llt, Apt a S, 1.0nQ Btacll,
Drive. Corona <Ml Mar. C•ltlornt• Cellforn•• 9QI03
•2ns Jam•• H Clla tk. OS2 Juan11a,
Tiit' Du>!~•" cOtlducleO by •n un Cypren, C.lilMnla '°'311.
ln<Mporateo "'°"'latton otntr tll•n • Tiii\ Duttneu h conOu<l•O by •
partner\hlp oentral p.,-tne~lp
,..,...,. G Mamey A c. Peacoo. 5' Tiii' \I __ , ••> llltel wltll Ille Tiii\ \IMement wt> tlltel •1111 Ille
Counly Clerk of Orenoe '°""''' on County Cler• ot Or•-C041ntv on
,M•r<ll J, 1'11 ,Ult•t Marcll l, 1 .. 1 '1l1 ...
Publl>lled Or-CN >I Dally Piiot, Publl"'941 Or.._ Coe>f Dally Piiot.
ltllarcll s. 12. 19, 2'. l"I IOSS t i Marc" s. IJ, 19, 2•, 19'1 10ol7 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
1.IOAI.. NOTICI
ro ALL 1Nf ER£STEO AGENCIES, GROUPS ANO PERSONS
On Of' emul July 1. 1'11 Ille Clly OI Cool• Mew will r.,q.,.>f Ille U S
Otpartmtnl 01 "°"""' -Ur-0.•-1 IHUOI lo ,_._ Fe .. r•I Ful>O\,.,., Tille I of Ille H041\1n11 -C..,.,,._,Hy 0.vttl~I Acl of 1'74 al
·--•n 1'71 (Pl.•> 2131 lor ,,.,. IOllO#lnQPt'Olecl•
I Project T•CI• Wall«• Htlllllbo-Slr•ffllY Arff ,...,,_ To .cqulrt Pf'-r•v .,., o<ovldt relocelton benellC1 lo occu·
panh 1n orelef 10 clo•I® ftO~lne '"" '°'" -mooerate Income ,..,.Ill••. 10 up vraoe pllbfl< 1mpr.,,..,.,..nh eno rtl\aDtlllale pro•••• 11<-·•v ""''"•mull•
o a r pr09<em ••f"<" ,.. .. be9un In FY 1'7• IOI
LOCahOI\ Area bo-eO Dy Pte<tnlt• A•-. Hamlllon Str .. f. Pomona
"•tnue -19111 St reel Elllmal.O Coll UIS.000
2 PrOjt<I r111t CtnCtr SlrHI NSA
Pur-tor .... ., ....... Prt••ll Pf'-11•••· 10 Otv•I09 M• or 1m1><0¥•
Other cast members include Tom Early, Ro·
bert Knapp, Denise Dale, Gaey Bartick, J eanne
Chrlatiamen, Tom Emmanuel and Jeanne <;lark.
Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
INTERttlSSION
p. m . through April 18
with Sunday matinees at
2 : 30 scheduled for the
firs t two week e nds .
Tickets are available at
the box office or by mail
to Box 2417. Newpart Beach 92663.
Two college productions, "Tom Jones" at
Golden West College and "The Matchmaker" at
Southern California College, complete their
scheduled engagements this wee It end.
Final performances of "Tom Jones" wilJ be
given tonight through Saturday at 8: 30 and Sunday at
2::l0 in the main GWC theater on the Huntington
Beach campus (894·9885). "Matchmaker" plays
tonight and Saturday at 8 o'clock in the courtyard or
the SCC administration complex, 55 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa (556-3610>
ALSOONSTAGE alongthecoastare:
"The Merchant of Venice" at South Coast
Repertory. 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957-4038). playing nightly except Mondays at 8
o'clock, with weekend matinees at 2 :30, through
Apri1 5.
"Murder at the Howard Johnson 's" at Sebas-
tian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San
Clemente (492-9950>. playing nightly except Mon-
days at varying curtain times through April 5.
.. Relatively Speaking" at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach
( 494·0743), playing Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m . throughApril 11.
. -"VICl'ORIA'S HOUSE" at the Westminster
Commwtity Theater. 7272 Maple St., Westmins ter
(995·4113). playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8: 30
through Aprll 4.
-"Absence of a Cello" at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Costa
Mesa (7S4-51591. playing Fridays and Saturdays at
8 :30throughApril 11.
''A Bad Year for Tomatoes'' at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue,
.H untington Beach (847-4465), giving fi nal
pe rformances tonight and Saturday at 8: 30.
FANTASIA
1:1~3:30-6:46
1:-.10:11
SUNDAY LOVERS
12:1S-2:30-4:U
7:1S-9:30 l'1
1~ ,,. ·-..... '
~
R ··
.. ,. ,,,.
t:•
NOW PLAYING -
MH• IRU ,LAZA
B•H !>29·5339
I DWAROI' llW,OflT Newporl Bearh 6"44·0760
Ctll.DOMl 01~119t 634 1!>!>3
UIWAROI' flUO TW .. Mission Vit10 830 6990
ua TW• Cltl(•U
Wn1m1nster 893·1305
••C-1t<.
-
fOUUAI• H UU DIUH·I•
Founta•n viuey 962 2481
~•U"llC\ MllllOll Dtllfl ·I•
Sin Ju•n CIP•Wano 493 4S45
llD ,Allll Acet..rtD
fDtl T•ll UIAal .. T
l Watcll !tit Ac.adt111r
Aw1fds °" lhrcll 30
It... ...
"ALL NIGHT LONQ"
"XANADU" Cit)
~. ,...... .
I "FINAL
CONFLICT" (A) ..-. ---.. .,
I "THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS
RINGS TW1CE" (R)
,--. 1 • ')gt il'•
I "THE JAZZ
SINGER" (PG)
"INCREDIBLE
SHRINKING WOMAN"
"DEVIL A MAX DEVLIN"
I "FUN HOUSE"
"THE ISLAND" c,.1
\; -I "RAOINQ BULL" 1111
"FORT APACHE"
t • • ... _..::::::> I "TRIBUTE"
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"
(Ill)
eaot1no ~rv1ce-. fOf cn110 car• •dult d•v c.•r• •nd ftner9eft< y nov11no fK1ht,. ...!::===~1!!!!::!!!!!!!!!9--m!!L
Locallon: Aru l>ounoeo by Pornon• A .. nut, 1'lll Strtel. Harbor T I "STI; CR~"
Boule••rO, Ne•POr'I B0411oarO ancl llln Str ... E\tlmatt<I (O\f '110.000 • urn your
J Pr01t<C Tolle l.•nO A(QUlllllOll •or H<>utlf\11 bles PurPOMt fo •<Quire prOf)<trfy MIO pr°"IOt relOC•flon IMnelll' lo O<(U· • unusa
PtllO tn order 10 Ot•tlOP l>OU>lnQ for low""' -rafa '"'ome Mnior Clftltn' 1• nto
or ftmlllas
locehon Soe<lllc >lie> lla•t nol yet t>etn ldef\l•lieO, Dul wlll be In Illa • usable
oeneral trH of ,,.,. C•IY • R•Ot•tlOPf'Mlll Project • 1 E•llmatt<I CDil UH~OO::;.ojt<f T11it Atll•b•lltatlon l.o•nuncl Gr•nlt • ca sh. Ca II
Pur-To "'1•1 1-encl modtr•l• lntOme _ ... ,.lo rtr>•btllf•l• l ... lr • Daily Pilot
11011>1"9 -to"'°"'°" tow co•C loan• 10 1n•HIPt o•....-• to rellablhl•I• rtt'lfal
un•C\ • classified 1.oullon Hou•l"CI Co be rtllal>lllfaltel wttl t>e locttod wlfr>ln Ille City
"USED CARS" 11111
"FINAL CONFLICT"
"THE FURY" (R)
&1.4 1 .. .__
• ,. .... .....-T'l• c-..-., ... ·-ou•••o-
ltmlh Of Golla-.. AthabOll•llon OI rental un.lt Wiii ....... ,,, ... oulun•l•O 642-5671. .. , ••• ,, ........ CTill\ ... mulll·YHr Pl'09ram •lllCll ••• borQun In FY l'7t•to1.1---__:~:.:.....:.;::.:;...:.:; ______________ _
Etllmetea Cott U7 l/l10
S Prole<I Tiiie Removel of 8 arrton lo Hancll<-0
Pur-To remove er<1111ec1ura1 -•ieo fllat llmll Ille ...-111y of ine natwll<•~ lo a<ctH IO City·-park' 11U110lnet encl la<lllllas (Tiii• It•
mulfl·vur P'Oll'ent """k l! •H 1>e11un In FY 197' tol
l..Oeetlon; varlo.n CHY·°'""" P•os -publl< l«1llllH •lttlln lfte Clly
Of Cotte -E.i-eo Coif •7S,000 Envl<Otl<'IWnltl 111 .. 1 ... Re<orot ooc ...... n11no ltwtt ""' tn•ironmenl•I re
•I•• OI ti.w Pf'Olt<I\ ,. ... -m-11y '"" CHY ol Cotta Mes.t encl that Ille propottcl proJt<Cl wlll llavt NO SIGNll'ICANT EFFECT ON THE EN·
VIRONMVIT l\a\ -fftedt •Y Ille City OI C:O.C• Mts.t. TM El'lvlr°""'efllaC
Review Rt<orctl M• on Ill• t i me Clly 01 Co\ta -·· PfeflnlftO Deparlmenl, Room 100, 11 l"elr O<•vt . Co.le Mtu. C..llfolnla. -••• avall•lll• tor ,..1111,
eu m lnallon -COllYl"CI on r.,que•I TM City Of Colla MaH wtll unoerlakt Ille pro1eclt oncrl--a 11\1111
810<11 ()uni Fund• from Ille V S Oepart...-l OI HovllftQ -Vr!Nn 0.•"911
mtnf (HUDI ~ Tlllt I of IM HtullftCI -C--Wty °'""-' "'t of
""· '"' City ,, certlfylnQ lo HUO Chai .,,. CltJ Of Costa -....... ~"" Sor .. H I, 1n Ill• ollkltl c-ltv u CHY Mef\eOlf, conteflt to ac~ .,..
11ir lldltlton 01 CM l'•d•rel COurl\ II at'I atflOtl h brou9111 10 ellletU
rnpon•llllllll1n 111 rtlellon lo'"" en•lr~l•I rtv~. de<lttofl mekll'IO ..a
acuon, -IN! ClltM retl*t'lblt111 .. 11a .. i. ... N4'"'•o., f,.,. , ... , elle<I Of
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Block Ora111 ,..,...,, .... HUD •Ill ..... Wlltl ... lh '""°"'lblllll9' IA'IHf .,..
NallOfl•I l11vl-C•I l'Ollcy A<I of ..... HUD .. 111 a<t•~ .... objt<llon Co II•
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A, f11M lllt <ar11flct1IOll wa• Ml 11'1 I.Cl Htclll• by tlll Ctllef l•Klitlve
Oll lCtr Of' 0411ef affl<er ol ajlpfl<.,.,t .,.,.,,Id lly HU D; a. n..i ttlt -11cent•• l!11vlronmen1e1 Revlt• llecoro for t,.,. profKI In·
01ce1u omt•tl-of• r..,irecl dKltlon, 11n411,.., CH' •t•P •111111<••• le Ille fll'O·
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prou-• IU Cl"A Perltl'• YI alld mey llt _,_ te:
OtN1'1ntefll of Hauttn1 tnd VrlNn O.ve1t11mt111. UOO w11antre
loul•••f. ~"' 400, Ult Antei.'-Cellf4Wl'll• ta0J7
O.ltctlon lit r ...... of I~ on Mtl• .,., •-lllOW •lei.ct •llO••, wlll not tie '°"" ..... .., HVD ...... ,.tt_ rcllWO ••r Apf'CI ........ wlll .. '°'"'*'".., HVO. Tiit Ollef a-vu ... Ol'fl(er eC tflt CllYOlc..t.Mne ltl ,., .. ~.
O"'MMlelr ,, ,elf Dl'lw
c.Mt ..... CAmM ~1""41 ~--(.teel OeCIJ l"llM, ~11a,1'11 1....-1
COMING SAT., MAR. 28
7 P.M. ONLY!
• l ..... -
or ''The Elephant Man."
Despite att.eot.loo to detaU Ct.ht mov•• wu fllmed In France)
and focua Oft personality studia,
the pltture la overworked.
Collin> It's obvious drabness wut
prevail.
PoorTeu.
She la sent to validate news
her family ls related t.o the
arlatocratit d'UrbervllJe f•mJly
llvln1 ln a country man1lon
miles away fr o m th e
Durbeyfleld.8' small homeat.ead .
There are too many cllches -
"beauty bas lts price" .•.
"llfe's a punle" . "all Is
vanity" . . . "once a victim
always a victim ." But she la falsely won by the
son of Mrs. d 'Urbervllle (the
family boucht the n•me). Alec
d'Urbervllle, the son, played by
Leigh t..wson. Is Immediately
attracted to Tes11' beauty and
one nl8hl carries her on his
horse to the mldd1_, or a ronist
where he rapes her.
Typically, Polanski lor1et1
creatJvity to speak down to the
audience.
WHI LE HA&DY fans are
familiar with the story, suspense
fades early In the film when
Tess· hus band An1e l Clare
learns she would "kill for him."
EarHer than that, a book In
Clare's room Is on capital
punishment. Polans ki makes
sure the camera focuses on the
book title.
She flees the estate and bears
Alec's baby which dies shortly
after birth.
When she leaves home again
to hire on as milkmaid she rails
in love and eventually weds
Angel Clare, a clergyman's son
learning to be a farm er Tess. played by Berlin native
and relatively unknown actress
Nastassia Kinski. lives up to
publicity advances comparing
her to a young Ingrid Bergman.
She tries to tell Angel before
their marriage o r her ii
legitimate baby but fa ils when a
letter she leaves is never found
Confession time on wedding
night is too late. Young Clare,
despite a liberal attitude, can't
accept the story. He leaves .
But Just mlnutes into the film
wher the viewer meets Tess'
drunk e n fath e r J o hn
Durberyfleld (played by John Poor Tess.
cllll ;Tr~·) "-~~~~~';~~~· ____ ... , .... -......
~a<wtty .,c;...ca_
JIJ/s.11-
l"a<wtty
.. c.w11.-1u1Sll·t illl
..... ............. P' ......... ......
,EA" NO EVIL ca1 ,, .. , ................. _.
...... __ ........ ._.._
THE ~STMAH
ALWAYS "IHOS TWICf "'' ti: .... ,. ............ .
....... .,_o
1t-•· .. -······· •••• .,,_,,, ... eo..-
WAU DtSNIY'I :.=
'ANT.ASIA , .. u•·••·••·••·u •
ne LAU CMAP'TW.A .. , .. O•• q,a..oot
THE l"IHAL COH,LICT 1111 n•· >•· ••· ••· •••
tAU. t "9.LD I f~ LAil ~
BACK AOAOS '"' ....... , •...... ,,.... , .. •• • t• •I II• ti ti
.._..,._O HMI TWO ACAOUt't 4WllAOli
THE COMP6TITION ,..,
MC)ll.ftH , ......... , ....... , • .•. , .... .
--~ .. ,., ......... ......,. .. --..... ,.
IM,ORUIU NOTICl ' CMllDRH UlfOfR 12 fRU !
"'-.... , ....... ~ .... ---.__..... \ft,~-~[;· J '::~l~::L,~1~1
If No ANI C¥ Aad•O Wtlll 19n1flon Aec•u•v ...... y-Own AM .... ,.,.bf.
I ,, ... ..,;1 N .................... ,l'.'WU.. mm ·j];.;· .. ~::::;:::~·;:'
If No AMC¥ R-Wllll lfftillon AC<"''°'1 ...... Y-Own AM .... '1.a
3111 ~=-I .. ~:~::::
I No AMC¥ ........ Witt! 1.,..1_ At<a'°'Y ...... l'W' Own AM
.. -. ......
"' .. Gil'~ G••w ,,.._ ••
·--""·""-QUE VlVA TEll'ITO
CON
IOY n ttl.IO Oil. GAUDIO
----·-"ALL HIGHT LONO" ("I ...... "' ... , MANIAC ,.. - -,, -· If No AM CM A ... Witt\ l9"1llC111 Aec•-Y ltl Y-0-AM Po
I
... ,. a1.. ca.aa.ow um.a•••.....,.
, w .. _._ --• ILAzlHO IAOOL~I o ..... , ,..... ..... t•• ( C ,., , .. , UI' THI ACAOUIY .. I
I No AM CM lladlo Wiit! lfftltl4n tcc.ee...,y ltl .. Y-Own AM
..
... " .. "" M .. 0-_ G,...,.,,.._., "' .. )
(JACK ANOtlRltON )
REVEALS In the
"'" .... °'"""'.,... -._ ntr "HAL COH~LICT .. , -MANIAC"'°°""_,,_ -....--·--THR P'\IN HOUH fll1 -THll"-AHO 1•1 ... -... -....... MANIAC•--,,_._
MIAT CUAVI" •1 MAllACM '411!-• ,_ ..... _
•ACK ROAOI !RI -IRONCO 11&.LY '"' _ .... __ ._
TlOUllRO
Catt IL llUICANO --·-"-T .. '°ITIMN ALWAYI
•IMOITWICI -a••AM~l'lt
llllJPillt
a re i a·m s•••em···-n
--~----·----.,.
He onte again tries to win her.
She kttps her distance this
time. fl eeing with he r no"(
widowed mother (Rosemary
Martln) and brothers and sis-
ters.
WE NEXT see Tess In the
second half after an overly·
long intermission living with·
Alec in a boarding home .
Poor Tess.
Now It's Clare's turn to at-
tempt a win back.
Tess, beautiful and still inno·
cent looking, reruses a reunion
but has difficulty justirying her:
existence with Alec ahd stabs
the latter to death
Poor Tess.
She is on the run again. This
time it's with Clare. But the
authorities arrest her after the1 pair spend a mght sleeping on
the granite at Stonehenge
Stonehenge is an arrangement
or prehis to ric monoliths in
Salis bury. England. The word
~an also mean hanging.
The viewer learns a t film 's
close Tess was hanged.
Poor Tess
"'IA9' NO
EVIL" IRJ lllOll·f-· r II, •II
"BACK AOAOS" ...... 1•1
"COAL MINER'S
DAUGHTER"
. '
1111 1<-..11,,
~EVENIG
•:00 ID. Niwa WOtaft WOMAN
wono.r Woman 11\attera a
lld9nllll'• Pl9n 10 pr-
• corporal• magnate'•
brain 1n the body or an ath·
1411• I TIC TAC DOUGH
M•A•s•H
F11her Mulcahy takH
being P••Md over for a
promotlOn pllllOlopl\lc:ally
until he nears or tne r •P•d
aovancement made by a
herOI<: hellc:opt., pllOI
All in family
• OOOOTIMES
Wlllona must make an
agonlllng decision 11111
could chano-the rest ol
hef Ille 1P11t 31
Danny DeVito's real-life mother, Julia
DeVito, guests as his character's mother
tonight on "Taxi," airing at 9:30 on
ABC. Channel 7.
•G ELECTRIC
COMPANY(R)
()) CBSNEWS
\1)) .ABC NEWS
8:30 D BULLSEYE
ti) WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
Barbar1no ii convinced
that he has lost his "mag·
le" wtth women
• 8ENNYHILL
Benny plays a court 1ester
and soon loses his head 9 PROFILES OF
POWER
Guest Congressman John
ROUS$8IOI ~ STUOIOSEE
"Cop Show" E1tplorer
Scouts assist the Glendele.
A11zona Police Dept New
Y0<k City kids make A'11n
disco d1nc1ng (RI
())NEWS
®J BARNEY MILLER
Barney and woio ba111e a
squad room ltre while a
church robber wants out ol
his cell and a young couple
cons1<1e1s staying 1n the
stahon house to complete
lhetr 'SU1C1de pact
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8:55 8 EDITORIAL
7:00 1J CBS HEWS
D N8CNEW8 8 HAPPY DAYS AOAIH
Richie and Arlene split up
only 10 dllCOvtr that 11'1
too 1111e 10 tine up othef
dates IOI lhe prom
G A8CNEWS 0 JOKER'S WILD ga M•A•s•H
Hawkeye and Trappe< are
left to enliven the camp
when the nu11e1 are evac·
uated
Q) STREETS OF SA.N
FRANCISCO
A conviet ou1 ol San Ouen·
Un hnds himself accused or
mu•dM and turns to Stone
for help
fJl) OVER EASY
Guest w111er Jessamyn
West (RI ~ MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
Cf) TIC TAC DOUGH
@) MERV GRIFFIN
Guests 01Son Welles. Kel·
ly Mon1e11h
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosts Sieve Edwards.
Melody Rogers V•a•I
p1aces a1ound Los Angeles
1J KNXT CBS1 LO\o Angett>.,
0 KNBC 1NBC LO'> Ange•e'> II "TLA tlnO 1 LU'> Ang,..te!o
0 KABC rv 1ABC1 Los Anqeit''-
([' "FMB 1 CBSJ $.in Diego 0 KHJ· TV 11no 1 Los An·~e1,....,
1]' KCST 1ABC1 San 01 .. qo
Q) KTTV 1 Ind 1 LO'o Anqett>..,
Cl> KCOP TV 1 hhl 1 L I'> Ang"'"' fD KCE T T\, 1 PB~t LO!> Angt<IP'i
'1l> KOCE TV 1PBS1 ~iun1°no1on Beacn
where laurel and H11dy
made lhetr hims, a tall.
with 10ng11me producer Hal
Roach. an 1nte1v1ew wtth
Mrs Ottver Hardy, a IOOk
at the luneral industry In
Los Angeles
D FAMILY FEUD 8 8HANANA
Guest Bo Olddley
G ~EWITNESS LOS
ANOELE8
Hos11 Inez Pedroza and
Paul Moye• visit wit~ some
high 111e window washers.
a talk with some ol the kid
actors of IO<lay a took al
some MGM memo1rs
0 FACE THE MUSIC
Q) ALL IN THE FAMILY
Glo11a wears a black Wlg
and Mike t>ecomes unusu.
ally amorou1
fl) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'1l) NEWS
Cf) P.M. MAGAZINE
A profile ol recording s1ar
Stevie wonde1. the 1001h·
less. lhrtHHegge<I town ca1
of Natchez Mlss1ss1pp1
8:00 8 Cf) MAGNUM, P.I.
A wealthy bhnd woman
asks for Magnum's help
when trouble arises con·
ce1n1ng her granddaugn-
ter
Cl BUCK ROOERS
B<;ck Wilma and Hawk
return to the ship alter a
routine m1ss1on 10 d1scovM
that the ship is a dupllcate
of the Searcher and the
crew are clones
8 MOVIE *•'it · The Kentucltlen'
( 1955) Burl Le!lCaale<. Dia-
na Lynn A man and hi•
son hght their way 11eroH
Ille KentUGll y T lt'l'ltory Into r, ... 8 9 MON<AHO
MIHOY
MOlk hilt In 11 Ille IMO
linger or a mu~ O'OUi> •ner ~ llr• tllt lemPl
tnttMe.IMI.
e y~ OHOICI '°" TH£ot0AM
P•t Ind Debbie 800M
hOtt • pr9lude 10 Ille
Ac~ Award• In .tlldl
Ille publlc Choolff Wlnnetl
from tilt Acedemy'1 llOflll· n-.
• PM, MAGAZINE
A proflle ot r.co<dlng t1a1
St1Yle wono.r. tne tooth· 1-. thr-teogect town cat
ol NllCfleJ, MIHIMlppl,
Chef Tell makea stuffed
peppera, Judi Ml1Htt
takea jailerclM• to the
zoo. Jo~ Kulhewlk haa
uerctM gadget•
• MOVIE • * 'h "Chr111tan Th11
Lion" ( 111711) Biii Travera.
Virginia McKenn1 A tame
llon II forced lo aurvwe In
th• wtld• of Atrice
• QI!) THE PAPER
CHASE
"A Maller 01 Anger" A
black lludent with 1
miaconce1ved notion ol her
worth a1moat ruins het law
career
8:30 G <II BOSOM BUDDIES
Isabelle gets en opPQf1un1-
1y 10 Slrul her talent H a
SlnQM
Q) CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIENDS
t :OO 8 Cl) KNOTS LAHDtNO
J R' Ewing sett out to pat-
ent and markel Sid's radl·
cally new car engine
despite Sid s reluael to
dealw1thh1m
0 MOVIE
fhr t.•u.nor• (rou1ng
8u,.I L•n<•U•r Sophi• Loren A1tl'l•rd H•rr 1~
Pl•QUC tnft,ttO tr••n ~:,i~.~ n£~;~ ~,·~:.,:~~~' •c r OS\ f uropt
D ®J BARNEY MILLER
An anttque doll 11 kid·
napped, a con man sells
reservauons on a space
shuttle and Inspector
Luger tells Barney he's
leaving him $250,000
Q) MERV ORIFFIN
Guests Orson Welles. Ket
ly Mon1e11 h P11sc111a
Bernes Re• Allen Jr end
Maroo Smith Donald
Jotlanson
fEJ~ SNEAK
PREVIEWS
Roger Ebert and Gene
S1Sllet revoew All Nlgnt
Long Back Roads .. and
lhree other movies
11:30 D (!]) TAXI
Louie's mother moves out
and leaves her lecherous
son on hi• own with hla
new-found lreecjom and
bllCMlor pad
• THIS OLD HOUSE
Bot> VII• chooMS the bllh
CBS repeats ho( stuff
Network grabs the brass ring again
NEW YO RK IAP > CBS. means man average pri me-time
minute during the week, 19.6
pe r cent of the nation's TV-
equipped homes were tuned to
CBS.
"Le gends of the West" and
"NBC Magazine." with six of the week's 10 highest·
rated shows. including "60
Minutes" in first place, won the
networks' ratings race for the
fifth straight week. fi gures from
the A.C. Nielsen Co s howed.
A sure sign of CBS' dominance
this season was t he remarkable
success of four repeats offered
by the network in the week end·
ing March 22.
PART I OF a two-part reprise
of the film c lassic "Gone with
the Wind" finishe d i n third
place, with "Carnival of Thrills,"
pre-empting the season's top.
rated show. "Da llas," tied for
s ixth.
In addition . a p r evious ly
broadcast made -for -T V movie.
"K e nn y R oge r s as Th e
Gambler." finished 12th, with an
anim ated special, "Bugs Bunny
Bus tin' Out," a lso broadcast
before. in 19th place.
CBS' heavy representation in
the Top 20 nine shows con-
tributed to a rating for the week
or 19.6 to 17.5 for ABC and 15.5
for NBC The networks say that
THE RATING FOR "60
Minutes" was 28.9 Nielsen says
that means of all the nation's
hom es with television. 28.9 per·
cent saw at leas t part of the pro·
gram.
ABC scored with the pilot or a
ne w serie s. "The G reatest
American Hero," which finished.
in fo urth place after weathering
a challenge in court from the
p eo ple who mark e t
"Superman ... A judge refused to
block the ABC show.
NBC's highes t-rated program
fo r the week, "Real People,"
finished in a tie for 14th place
with "Happy Days" on ABC.
CBS AND NBC each had two
shows a mong the week's five
lowest-rated. CBS' "Concrete
Cowboys" was No. 59. followed
by an "ABC News Closeup"
ca ll e d "Soldie r s or th e
T wilight," "The Gangs ter
Chronicles" on NBC. ABC's
THEPOWEROFEVIL
ISNOWNGER
INTHEHANDSOFACHIID
(
THE FINAL
CONFLICT
THELASfCHAPTERIN .
THE~TRILOGY
W•tch Th• Academy Award•
March 30, on A,BC
L. at. llOYD )
INFORMS In th• .... •
1rn.1r1•tt111• I
~
H ere a r e the week 's 10
highest-rated programs :
"60 Minutes " with a rating of
28.9 representing 22.5 million
homes. "M·A·S·H," 27.5 or 21.4
million, and "Gone with the
Wind," P ar t I. 26. 7 o r 20.8
million, a ll CBS ; "G reatest
American Hero." 23.8 or 18.5
million. ABC; "House Calls,"
23.2 or 18.1 mil lion , CBS ;
"Carnival of Thrills," CBS. and
"Three's Company , .. ABC, both
23 .1 or 18 million ; "Love Boat,"
22 .2 or 17.3 million, and "That's
Incredible," 22. l or 17 .2 million.
both ABC, and "Magnum. P.I .. "
21.3 or 16.6 million. CBS.
THE NEXT 10 shows .
"Too Close for Comfort,"
AB C. and movie "Kenny Rogers
as the Gambler ," CBS. tie ;
"Laverne and Shirley," ABC:
"Happy Days," ABC. a nd "Real
People," NBC. tie: "Fantasy
Island," ABC: "CHiPs," NBC;
''Hart to Ha rt,'' A B C, and
''Bugs Bunny Bustin' Out" and
"Knot's Landing," both CBS.
•
. -----~--
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, Marc h 26, 1981
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA e 8:00 -"The Kentuckian."
Burt Lancaster and Diana Lynn star In
this frontier adventure movie .
KHJ IJ 8:00 -Your Choice for tbe
Oscars. VTewers pick their favorites in
this 16th annual popularity awards pro-
gram hosted by Pat and Debby Boone.
NBC e 9:00 -··The Cassandra
Crossing." A thousand plague.infested
passengers on a train traveling across
Europe face a near-certain date with
death in this movie with Sophia Loren,
Burl Lancaster and Martin Sheen (see
photo below>.
lllu and the kitchen cabi-
nets and dlecu11e1 the
progress of the electrlc:el
work G TOMORROW /
TODAY
A report whtCfl tocu1es on
the war against the the
Mediterranean Fruit Fly; •
look 11 NASA'• reuseable
key apace shuttle, an
examinauon ol the F•n·
~kl Otel
10:00 II Cl) KNOTS LANOINO
Sid and Gary lear tor their
lives alt., lhey 111s111 an
FBI tnves11gat1on of the
underworld 90•~ NEWS
l o 20 120
MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
Country Mallet& Breeze
Anstey· Two young wom·
en are awakened to the
elemental and passionate
side ol their natures when
they leeve a JoblHs com-
munity
10.30 '8 NEWS
Q) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS ~MYSTERY
"Rumpole 0 1 The Ba11ey
Rumpole And The Age For
Retiremen1 Rumpole's
best c1ten1s the Timson
1am1ly. seek his help when
the aging Percy Timson is
caughl w11h a stolen rehg·
1ous work ol art (Part 6)
11:00BDG(l)®J NEWS 8 STAR TREK
Two ol th• Enterpr11e·s
crew member• are kitted In
outer space and Kirk la
determined to deelroy the
creature rH j)Ofllll>le . D NEWLYWED GAME
• M•A•S•H
When Hot Lips phonea
from Tokyo 10 say there's
"big n•w•,'' Frank
aasumea lt'a hit e1tpecled
promotion
Cl) BARETTA
Fru111ated In his 11H0<ts to
na11 a crOOked n1rco1tcs
agent, Tony resigns to be
tree to •telk him
• DICK CAVETT
Guest Toni Morrison
(Part 1or21
11:30 8 Cl) THE JEFFERSOHS
The Jett1..on1 and w 11-
1tses light a Ch11stmu Eve
battle ovM L1one1 and Jen.
~s wedding (R)
U TONIGHT
Host Johnny Carson
Guests N11111s11 K1nskl
Pete Barbulll 0 ®J ABC NEWS
NIOHTLINE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL
CD HOO.AM'S HEROES
Hogan's plan to dynamite
a 1ra1n 1s interrupted by the
Inspector General
fl) ~ CAPTtOHEO ABC
NEWS
-Ml>NIGtfT-
12:00 IJ ([) MCMILLAN &
WIFE
Mac returns 101 his annual
JOHN DARLING
Presents
MARCH 30th ...... 111!!!111~ ......... .....
Gentlemen Wetcome
After 10:30 ,.M.
COME AND
QET 'EMI
Llvt Entertainment
8 Hites AWHk
111w.1•a
Coeta-
naval ,...,..,. d\lty wttll Ille
Judge Advocal• a-..
Corpe Md 11 eNlOMCI to
d.itnd • y~ '*''tntnl
ICCUMd Of rnufdtt
• MOVll
t * * "OMdKne US A "
( 19&2) 11umol\r•v Bogart,
l(lm 11unter A big-city
,_...,.,,., edllOI bent on
09lll"O Ill l •POM locka
ltornt with a l)Ow..,lul
~=.,.·a
ANGIL.8
The Ange41 go undercover
lnllde the dll'l<ll studio of
• hlndlOme. blackm111tng
~(R) D OUNIM<>t<E
An OU111W. young brOthet
It -•oualy Injured 1n 1111
accident end Doc 11 held
capU11e to 1r111 him
tD MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE
Jim Phelpa becomes e
partne< 1n atave trade when
he OHM• Cinnamon 101 an
upeom1ng aucuon tPart 2>
Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND '
"The Hand' A nightclub
piano ptayM '' plagued by
a lrighlemng phenomenom
alter he 1110s • g111
12:30 0 TOMORROW
Guests Newsweek s Me••·
co City bureau ch1e1 Beth
Niesen, Jerry Lee Lewis.
Joan Baaz. character actor
Jan Le•ohton. a Hlf·
11ppo1nted South CarOlina
vOOdoo king (Pl
.i> ONE STEP BEYOND
Make Me Not A WtlCh A
voung girl tells ~r parents
ol things that she • hH
Sl!ln and 1hey accuse ner
01 be•ng a sorcereu
1·00 0 OOH LANE
Gue$15 Juliet Pro,,..~e D•
HordM Phllltp Gould
Q) MOVIE • * • The Heroes 01
Te1emark 11965) Kirk
Oouqlas Richard l111r11s A
water plant is destroye<J 1n
World War II to stave 011
German development ol
an a1om1c bomb
Q) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
1 10 8 MOVIE * * , The Trackers
f 19711 Sammy Davis Jr
Ernest Borgnine A COCkt
man 1akes charge ot a
1rack1n9 opera11on endan
ge11ng the hves of t htl men
m the posse
O]) CAROL BURNETT
AMO FRIENDS
t1uta "fne '•mllv," ·The
Wllllf119 W ... "
1:30• MOVlf * • "0..111 SMllM On A
Murderer.. ( 1973) l••
Autin Klau1 Klnlllll A
VOUllG m•n ttmpet• wllh
Ille 1upern11u1et end
•11•mpt1 10 ru1ore 1111 to
lhe deed 1:46 1 NEWS
1:eo MOV11 • * I. Mlllf\UOll C141y'
c 1oe&1 C•"*on M11c11e11
=~:1Et1::
2:30 NEWS
t:M IOITONAA.
NO MOVIE * * SOUi Soldi«' pt7 ti
Rater Jo11r11on Ceur
Romero a:oom MOVIE
*'I · TwlSled Br1ln"
t t9H) Pat Cardi JOhn
N1141nd
330CD MOVIE * * * * Tile Gay DlvO<· cee I 193~) FrlJO Allene
Ginger Rogers
3.358 NEWS
3:40 8 MOVIE * , Cahlorn1a P96 1)
Fa1lh Oomerguot Jot~
Mahoney
4·30 .i> NEWS
f 'ridat1'•
Dafll ine«» .ffoa.•i.-•
-MORNtNG-
S 00 0 * * Tw1h()fll On Th"
Rio Granoe 11'1471 ".Jene
Aulry
11'00 Q) * * The M&rt FriJm
Utan 1 t9J4t Joh11 Way11e
G<ibOv Hayt')
1130 0 * • . !tot' !>eventri
Dawn 1Part 21 It%•) W1I
ham Holden Capuc•n"
-AFTERNOON-
12000) * • • Hu· Man From
C.ot<J•ddO t 19•!11 Glenn
fora W1t1t.im Holdtm
(I) * • * YOurtqtJIOOd
HJw•.. 11'1641 Jame'
I 1ooc.1SC.us Suiannt:
PIC$flf•lle
3 00 II~ • • All Mv Darling
U.iu9hle1s .t.11n,.!'1 ~dry
1 t'!7 J1 Ror..irt roun9 Ray
mnnd Masse-)
3 30 0 * * T '" ,.., ) r dmtl) fio1J1n~on I 197SJ
Martin M1ln('r Pal OAl1111y
0d,t'd on lh~ \!Or'( ny
Johunn Wyss
by Armstrong & Batiuk
Train duo
Soph ia Lo r e n
seem s un con -
ce rn e d a bo ut
disaster she and
Ri chard Harris
f ace in "The
Cassa n d r a
Cross in g "
to night at 9 on
N RC. Cha nnel 4.
flVER BERll SiIN ~ot ~
o-test hits-plus Beatles classics!
. ·-············ .... a a a
r
' I
Cle Orange Coast DAIL~ PILqT /Thursday, March 28, 1981 ~TION
Marine Air Reserve Lt . Col. Steven J . Sewell,
Irvine, ducks in vain as squadron members
gleefully douse him with water after his last
flight as commanding offi cer of Marine
Attack Jj!t Squadron 134 at MCAS, El Toro.
The cert!mony is a tradition. Lt. Col. Don
Duffer is new commander.
Loving costs
exceed index
NEW YORK <A P ) -Feeling battered by the
latest boost in the Consumer Price Index? When it
comes to inflation, the government figures don't
even begin to measure the pain, according to a fin an·
cial analyst who has his indexes on everything from
the "Cost of Loving" to the "Cost of Living It Up."
· "Uthe CPI accurately measures inflation for
an average American family, it's purely an acci-
dent," says Raymond F. De Voe Jr.
He says the index doesn't reflect changing
·lifestyles or spending patterns. Nor does it cover a lot
of the products -some of them admittedly frivolous
that people spend money on.
TAKE THE "COST OF LOVING." Devoe
calculated what a first date, courtship and honey·
moon would have cost in terms of 1955 prices and
lifestyles. He included things like dinner, theater
tickets and "tips to circling violinists at a romantic
restaurant."
He added up the cost or the same items today and
found that the median increase in prices was 420 per·
cent. During the same period, the Consumer Price
Index has risen 228 percent. The February increase.
announced Tuesday, was 1 percent.
Among the specifi cs of seduction were : a bottle
or Dom Perignon champagne, Sl2 in 1955 vs. $65 to·
day; a carriage ride through Central Park, SlO vs
$40; lunch al an intimate Italian restaurant. $3.75 vs. $19. 75 per person, and a ticket to the ballet, $3.60 vs
$20. The tip to the violinists. De Voe estimates. would
;have to be $5 today. up from SO cents in 1955.
DEVOE, WHO WRITES A WEEKLY newsletter
on the stock market for Bruns Nordeman Rea & Co.,
said in an interview that the reason for the "Cost of
Loving" index goes beyond proving that romance is
expens ive. ,
"I wanted to show how anachronistic the €Pl
was," he said, noting that the government figutes
a re based on 1972-73 spending habits.
Those habits have changed, he said, j ust a s dat·
ing practices have changed. The reaction of today's
young people to the items on the "Cost of Loving" in-
dex is "how quaint." De Voe said.
"Our typical affectionate consumer may now
only whisper, •Your place or mine?' at a
.neighborhood dating bar · ·
I THE "COST OF LIVING IT UP" index
measures the price of products bought by what
Devoe calls "upwardly mobile" people "trying lo
demonstrate ... thatthey're wealthy."
It too has risen faster than the Consumer Price
Jndex. From 1974 lo 1980, the CPI increased by about
5 percent. DeVoe's "Cost of Living It Up" index rose
133.5percent.
The index includes such non-basics as a Brooks
Brothers suit-Sl65in 1974 and$360today ; dinner for
ne at La Grenouille, one of New York's most ex·
pe nsive restaurants -$40 today compared to $18.75
in 1974, and an hour of tennis at the Wall Street Rac-
~uel Club -then $15, now $40. J Devoe would be the first lo admit that his
calculations aren't scientific and often are based
· · j usl on personal experience."
It was a personal experience that led him to
create his ftrSt index, a "Trivia" index, in 1971. He
had a hangover tlnd went oul to seek relief with a
mllkabake. It cost him 75 cents. He was astonished
and set out to measure lhe Uttle things that "nibble
away" -things like an ice cream cone or a
shoeshine. From 1974 to 1980 alone, Devoe said, lhe
"Trivia" Index has risen by 120percent.
Raid on theater
nets owner and 6·
REDWOOD CITY lAP) -The owner of an adult
theater in Redwood City bas been arrested for the
second lim'e for investigation ol runnin1 a house of
proslltulion. ,
San Mateo County sheriff's deputies raided a 1 show al the Lily Theater at which a 19·year-old
woman dancer allegedly performed sex acts ·With
patrooe. Arrested were theater owner Philip Maita.
·dancer Pauline HUI and five male customers.
TlVO weeks ago, Maita and 21 others were arrest·
ed on similar morals charges following another raid.
City's image fouled
KANSAS CITY (AP> -Local officials here
claim a m.lltake in a naUonal report on alr pollu·
tlon ii e1 roaeously Civinl 1tanau City the reputa· tton u i ctty lD wblcb air quality I• detertorat1n1.
Tbe Air Quallty Forum -a lfOUP cout.Un1
cblefl)' ol elect.e4 otftclail from Kanaaa and 1119·
fC)Uft -caQed for tbe federal Council OD £nriroft.
mental Quality to Hn4 corncUd lDtormatlon to alJ
11.000 Nctpl•ta ot tbe report.
But tbeN ii UW. cbanee tbe report will be cor·
rected a1nee the eomacil'1 adlvltt.. are beln1 ,..enb-cwU1led due to budllt eata.
--1
Penaltg •lap
Court rejects White's plea ~
tbe trial court failed to conalder
mltJ1atln1 clrcumata.ncea before
1entencln1. The def ente arsued
that White had no prior criminal
record, WH 1ulferln1 from a
mental or phyalcal condltlon
that reduced hla culpabUlty1 and vol untarlly took respoulblllty for
the deaths.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)~ The
state Cowt of APRe•I b81 re-
futed to reduce the prison HD·
tence ol Dan White, the former
city offtcial coovlcted of the ctty
Hall sfayin11 of Mayor Geor1e
Moacooe and Supervisor Harvey
Milk.
The decision Wedne1day
mean. th.at lt maximum credit
it applied for «ood behavior, the
earliest White could be paroled is
July Ul83.
A jury decided that White was
mentally unbalanced at the time
of the Nov. 27, 1978, shootings
.... ,,... .... nn .,,.,,,.,
All Sale Item• are Subject to
Stoc:k on Hand. All
PhOtographlc. Typographical.
Ct«leal and Printing Errors are
Subject to Correction
to
stay In hot
water
30-gallon water heater
with e nergy saving
temperature shut-off.
11415
40-til ....... 124.15 lecli
50-te ....... 114.19 ... ~
bag up your
troubles
... and your 1e1v ... lawn debris, trash
and morel Pac«age or 25 32-iJallon alze
llners. • 341
singularly
super
10"x10" single grill hibachi Cast rron
body. wooden base and handle
#1315 Reg. 5.99
88
...
one good tum
deserves another
for safe
stepping
and found White 1ullty ol volWl·
tary manslau1hter.
He wu tentenced to 7~ yeara
in prison in July 1979.
·'The f acta and circum1tance1
of tbi• cue virtually mandate
the lmpitlon of the maximum
penalty allowed by la w." the
court said.
White bad reslened from the
Board of Supervisors but had
gone to City Hall to ask Moscone
to reappoint him when the aboot-
ines occurred.
The court said there wu no
merit In White's contention that
Delta kitchen faucet 'fl/Ith 8' center
swivels for water control. #400WF
Reg. 49.95 3411
Derby '4' wooden step ladder features
palnt/utlllty shell with popular aide
spreader locking device. Sturdy con·
structlon. wobble real1tant. #390. Reg.
19.95
household
...... truck
All metal hand truck
for hauling around
heavy trash cana. Reg.
5.88.
time to go
fishing . .... . ...
MUk, 48, and Moscone. f9,
were aunned down In their City
Hall offices alter the mayor re·
Jected White's plea for reinstate·
ment. White nec1 the scene, but
surrendered at a nearby police
elation a abort time later.
Ar•~· KILLED 2
Den Whit•
I \
88
spredH
on the house
Goes on e1111y. dries quickly to a
durable flat finish that resists peellng
Water clean-up Reg 16 59. 1149 ~
roll on the color
Deep well PllStJC tray with ladder
hooks. made to Kerm's rigid specs
Reg. 1.89
111
professional
touch and cut
7'!.'' circular saw from Skill Gives extra
cutting capacity combined with super
comfort and handling ablllty 1v. H P
motor #574
EJif.Jfi+
341 Vlgoro'a fish baN compi.te plant food
promot.. hMlthy grMn growth. Fine
10-~5 formula wtth organic flah. Reg.
4.29
Redwood tub with drainage holes Is a
great place to houM your growing
friends. #PS·HT12. Reg. 7.99
Mclaine 2 H.P. edger/trimmer gives
you profe111onal r"ults wl1hout effort
Rugged deelgn. #100·2R
SANTA ANA
Son 01e90 Frwy
. --
241 ' ·15985
[)
~ .
r
'
• •
-·· -.·
Nearly half of aU Daily Pilot readers '
have tued the cla.nified 1ection to buy
or sell a product.
INDEX .....••••..........•..................................•...••....•....•.....••...••....••.•....................•.......•...............•..•.••........................•............... ,~
T1ftllllf•M.Cll 1002 1002 ••••• IOOJ .. , .. ,.. 1002 •••r• 1002 .... ,.. IMZ ., .. ,.. IOtJ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-5671
.USFllSAU
0-ol ~·-rn!::t:!t =:.· ... o.. ....... ~..:v""-1 ~ .. -=~..:-t.1-.1111w1 11-v .. ,.. ~--=· ~ J~a C.fltMtMW ~AM llMI•--~~ ·---.s..a. umm
~ ........ s.Jt ~ftlt lO#Sak .... llPT'!'Jlfrty -...-..rr_..y
Ct-l<'Y Loot> CrPllU ~~!'mo"' .,...., .. l:alU~~
-loMllov ... ,..._p,_"' IAllhtMtH• ,,..,.,,,.
LoUlwSak llobtlo 11..,. Trlr ~rh .. ...._•~Dt:Mn~M.-.,-, ~'Tr~'~ ..
o.i .i 5"1• ~ ... •••Mt.Fatm• Cr-o•o llul IAlou t atllu11 llHI f.tuttY._,,I ... • IENTALS -... .............. ~u .. r·..,··~ ~ "''"or e~r C....aoim1auun_. f'vtA
CMdcilM11WWJft.) "'•' T...,Mow.t.H Twtn ThNMiuHt l..ftf ~•nJ'\ltn °"'PMO~ Unf A,.. Pur•
ApU l fllhttft
~ •"'111 or Lftl -· "-• llo6td Ho«lt llOlrit Cun«llomu ~"'"""' ft•M•I> VMalNWI ltt1"l•lt
lttM•h lo S..tr•• Gw•c•• for ""'" Otntt R•nl•I ... ~ .... .._ .. ••.wna.t Mt nhJ ::::.1~ V. •Ried
M1.K R•"••t•
•• ... ·-.... ·--ltll :: EQUAL HOU81NO
:: OPPOATUMl4r~ ·-·~· ·-..• :~ '-" ..... Motlc•: :~.All real eatate ad·
::: vertlaed in this ,.. newspaper la aubject to
:: 'the Federal Falr Hout·
1100 ina Act ol 1981 which
maka It llle1al to ad·
:: vert.lae ·•any preference.
1))0 limitation. or dh·
:: crimlnatlon baaed on 1: race, color. religion,
,.., aex, or national origin.
: or an intention to make : any such preference,
uoe limitation, or dis·
: crimlnation." :a»
Can you afford home pa)'· inem. rA S~llOO per
month. but don't have a
down payment? Call
Gene at 955·3395 after
3pm.
SPY.USS
Thia unique Portamouth
bouts a secluded
cuatom pool, spa and
private courtyard. In
addition lo the three
b 'ldrooma and two
batba, there is a de·
tacbed in-law quarters.
Extended living room -J'llt -1ICIO
This newspaper will not and cuatom features not
knowingly accept any afforded any other bome advertising for rl!\81 in the area. Offered for
mo estate which is in viota· $459,500
: tlondlhelaw. i D.M.~4.,WRltr
l4DO 644-9990 = , ________ .. , ________ _
Im
WO -J'lQo -BIO --4100 m• ·-~ uoo
·~ --tXlll 43.» --i--------.. --1 IOSINESS, INVEST· HCMIMI for~ •
IAYCRIST
Spacious custom built
home just listed. Many
quality features such as
cedar lined storage
cloeet, compl.ete inaula·
lion and central station
alarm. Lots of room with
4 bdrms., family rm.
formal dl!Ung rm. and
extra large paneled
game room. Excellent
value at $449,500. M£JtT, FINANCE • • • •••••••• • ••• • • ••• • • •
t:::!! :."'::::,-::: G....-al 1002 11141 '7l-44oo·
IJIJJ 621-2121 ::::::::::: ~· = ..................... .
HARBOR 5~J.:.~: : HEATED SPA
ANNOUNCEMENTS, I Beautiful single story Executive home ln Mesa PUSDNALS & Verde with 4 Bdrm ..
LOST & FOUND Fam. Rm., Formal Din. A Dlv1s1on or ~~.:;·-·" ~:: Rm. 2 Baths. 3 car
1A1•• Not1t•• )llllO garage, imported tile, II arbor Investment Co
:::'.!.~ ~ burglar alarm, central ""'!'.!~!!!!~!!!!~!!!!~ ~.~~"'•" : air, air purifier, soft =
SEJYICES
~"H'~ Lhrwtot)
£MrtOfMENT &
mrAIATION
'w'"GOt• lrulrwl~
JMW••tftl• H«l.P,.•"'"' M 4 I'
MERCHANDISE
c ...... ,
8a.ah M11nt ~'"''o Boau tihnM Eqv1'
8oM• P'o-att Bolb k•"" O\at'\tt
-•.Sall ...... !>! .... Dock• -·~· .... ~•!lior•a• THNSPOIU TION
A.ttfteh
(. •rnPf'rt ~· RHH t'Jtic1rH' (er' =~~s.-.n· Motor Um.t "9.J• R•M Tra•tftt Tr1'tt1 !:..~"s:~~~!"i.,b
AUTOMOBILE t;.Mral •
~w•C.:lu•tn ll«r••ltoCM' \'dhtln ~;.l':,~~~~ltd' ,,.,.. .. v ....
A"4UlAH lftC Auw.W1ntff
AUTOS, IMrGITED
t..""ft•I AM·R~o ~"'°' Au.ua th·•lt > llllW c • .,.. er.-o.uw.n .. ,,,.,, .... , ........ '•tlU' '~""" K•rnwnn OPt1• i--..... M•tdo1i1 11 .. ,, ...... tt.tu
JI(;
llClt
Upol 'MM.••. ............ ,, ... .-.
AtftAWlt Rott• M<f1n ltO\tr s. •• te. T.,.u
Tmu1111ph v ...... , •• VAih·O
water. loft storage area. _ Nicely landscaped. All
for $242,900. Will COD·
sider lease , m aybe
7fm lease/opt.ion. Call :
lu1) Clyde Johnson Rltr
'l<lV 549-21644 -... 2UNITS llllJ = $94,900
5IORM
SI 0,000 doWll
Owner wants out! Huge
family room, formal
dining room, huge cor-
ner lot. Bring all orrers.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
114-63 ·-~990
: Super investment! Two
: 2·Bdrm unit.a, one with
-fireplace! Current in· : come-1740 mo. f'inanc· : Ing! I yr home protec· .,, lion plan inc luded . ..._ ________ ,
:: Hurry, this won't last. ,. = 648-7171 ... ....
tllllO .., ----THE REAL
ESTATERS
EASTSIDE .010
: SI 12.000
OC ..... OMT
2 Bdnm. 2 ba, unfum. New. Sll5o yrly .
IAYROMT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum.
Mintcood. S850yrly.
CHAl*IB. NOMT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum
S7SOyrly.
associated
811()~[11<, »ffl,')115
J' • </iw bf) I • • ' ~,
: Lovely 2 Bdrm, 1'% bath
:: condo in East.aide Costa ...,. Mesa with double car
-garage. Owner anx·
"'" ious-will help finance ! ~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~I ... Take advantage! Call
::: 646-7171
ti• tllO ••JO• tHIO -WATEIFIONT
ClllOS
Hl.Dlting\on Harbour
THE REAL
ESTATERS '°'v Purchase or lease/opt
~ STU ...... I ... '-on fantasti c terms ~ "" "w Br and new. c pt' d , = Old W ld Ch d draped. ON WATER. '57U or arm an guarded oate entr y, -cualom design have .. _, been united In an in· views. 2 car gar. Pool It
.,., credibly beautiful and tennis. 2 & 3 BDRM
m. unique property. The 3rd AV AIL IMM ED. From = story muter suites and S 3 2 9 • 0 0 0 . C a I I :m the expans ive II vi n g 1_7_1_41_556-_9600 __ . ___ _
1111 room take full advan· ti---------~:.: tage of the views of the
~ !~C:.Wc:r~.~~un!~~~
~ tac ular home with
•1» modern conveniences
:: and traditional charm.
~~ Offered at $475,000.
~~ Wboal.a-dltty
~~ 67J.1700 'llw
ASSUME 91/JO/o IMT
~S7U/Mo Earthtone decor, step
down family rm w/frplc.
Tiered fishpond. As·
sume 2nd, owner will
carry 3rd. C/21 Starbird,
H B. 962--44.50
E~ 1·-c·OM-· .. • •• -c-1A·L--1·--------= l'llOfBTY t1G = I SPICIAUSTS .,,. Leam brokeraae " pro-
tm pert)' msmt. akllla by
joinlnl a leading local
-firm.Call Kenat: IAYClllST
""' 675-6700 Ele1ant three bedroom :: l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I home. Cathedral cell·
M.I.
::~ lnp lo Uvinl and dining -llW ClllS rooms. OU plank noor· : I na . Atrium type : xoo IEllS ~!:~·~&.'Poor~i~:
: 12U21A111r yard. Owner hu other
,_ E . of Harbor Blvd. plam .. wlll conaldeT re·
: .... 1 ·-1 ... uonable rAfer. Price re· : '"'._. a... duced Sl0,000. Now = SJl0,000. = -611·7100 ~ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SIBlll.
UHTHI
DAILY PILOT
"•AST
llSULT" lllYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
!t'!~!ly
fora .ao~d
DA&Y
PILOf SllVICI ~~r
WALK TO
MWn
BEACH
Your beach place thla
IUIDIDWGr tJI Ytat loDI.
hOI.• PWatf of room for U. w9'ole family
wD 4 1arle bdnna and
famll;y "*"· LoHly r•·
U ~and paUo COY• er. OwHr will bel p ,.__Cell.,... 642-1671
MJH
Alll ... , ...
Your D1i111 PUot lrftolDinctor1 ........ .u •• u,...,.......,,..... .....n. .. 111
.. jab. ,... .. , .... '° ... .._ -~ Bn• ..,,...hlnl to HllT <..,_la ClMllned. Clulifted Adi do It well.
'
THE RE A L
ESTATE RS
WILSON .ift1 CMDlllUMS
CllCK & COMPAi£ TllSE FEATURES
90% ANAIClll 1N% INTER.
~HARBOR AREA LOCA110N
I SIZE-1650 SQ. FT. I MICRO OVEN
./ALL SHOPPING ~ BLOCK I COMPACTOR .
I AIR CONDITIONING I DISHWASHER
I CEMENT DRIVES t DBL GARAGE
(WALK IN CLOSE:J'S W/OPENER
WAID IMVISTMIHT _IMC.
SALIS OflflCll714t6Jl.aell
-w. w.. St. '4J.nlO C.-W....Ctlf.
THE WOMDlll OF WISTCLIFF!
For years folks have wondered: How
can one house receive so much
talented development and loving
care? Now the answer is out! and the
price is right! 3 bedrooms, 2 beautiful
baths, a pool, spa and so many fine
details and excellent features that
words would be wasted. You've got to
see it! At just $297 ,500.
U~l()UI: ti()MI:'
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Eut Coaat Hl9hw•y. Coron• del Mar
WE HAVE 43 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOW~
BEACH & TENNIS OOllJSIASTS
Hr-act_. tlM IN ... IWw -... .. ,d
....,21/Jk..._c..W._,.... ...... ._for s-••r. Clow to....._ pool
...t ......_ htc-4 te Ml .t SIH,SOO.
0--wfl •alaf W /ffa •I ..
CUSTOM PfNINSll.A PllNT
YOC911 -IM•e ritM a.I ToWy ..,.
.......... l ..... l ...........
t-, ..... +cw.graS..,.tot..y
-~ $465,000.
GRANDEUR ON UtllA ISLE
A reslde1tee of ,,..... ,....a1tfoe •
prestlglo• U.. I• . .._. tin lllalt
9m1 ••• o•.,. brick w• ..., & dip pool/ .. to total 1119.a. Two story I.om .... wtlMlllg CMlk ....... ., • .....,
fo.t•l11. For••I ll•llMJ roo• wltlt
lfNICICMtl f..wty ,_ ~ ...
...... bor. Fonwal dw.g,. + ~· ldtclMtl. hxllrio.a IMltw _... + 4
91"t ~-Lwge oeddur patio,._
boat dock & 1llp for j boah.
Sl,HS,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES. tNC
Rt.AL ESTl\Tl
~di.-, f.C, ,.,,,,, Pttit>f'fl" M•f'lt4fl'"""'''
2436 W Coast Hwy
Newport Beach 631 -1400
RfSIOfN II.A, RE Al I S !All '>l HVICfS
CHARM, CHARM. CHARM
All the right ingredients are here in
this utterly charming 3 BR. home.
Hard wood floors . Used brick
fireplace. Beam ceilings. All for
$235,000 in Newport's Back Bay.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
-~':' ~i4llA-4~~s· =
~"' CIAJ & fOMM -----· ........ .__.,, .. ............... _. ... ...................
r°i 1wtl·"1 I
.......... w .... o_,. ___ c .... ",.....I :
1 1 r 1 . •
...__l_L..,1_1_,E..-tl J • ...... -• --I I I r . : : ... ~ .. ~
--------....... ...., __ at a
LOl,EL I ......
I I I r r•~!-.. ":=.~ ,.. i:....-i..:. ...... , ....
•
UMDA ISLI
You must see long water view from 6
bdrm, 4 bath lagoon home.• Remodeled
traditional home. Priced to sell
quickly at $1,300,000. By ap ...
UDO ISi.i
Newly remodeled traditional 3 bdrm,
2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2
patios. Beam ceilings. Best in price at
$420,000.
PENINSULA POINT llACHFllOMT
Panoramic view at wedge. from
prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom
home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine
room, e!1t~y , living room, dining
room, built-ms, etc. $1,385,000.
RAMCHO MIRAGE
Springs Conoo, 9th fairway, 3000aq.ft. 3
Bdrm, 3 bath, furn. Golf clb. mbrshp .
Trade for beach invest. prop.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J·l 1 A11y•.1d" Dr1v• !',, h b/) 6161
COSTA MESA
Sla-$125,500
OWMEI SAYS SELL
Not an add-on or con·
version. A real 5 Bdrm
ramlJy home in one or
Cos la Mesa's nicest
areas. Handymans de·
light. Call now and save!
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
s 108,500
REMODELED
Costa Mesa 3 Bdrm ,
pride of ownerstlip beau·
ty on t.ree·lined street. Compi w/bot tub! Total·
ly remodeled ; vaulted
open beamed clgs,
skylight.a, Iota of glaas.
Huge covered patio
w/bullUn BBQ. A rare
find-ca 11 to aee !
641-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
WISTCUff
VACANT
Reduced $25,000 .
Duperale owner aaya
brine all offers. No
quallfytna. Low down. 4
Bdrm ainl)e story home.
totally up1raded. Call
ror ~ det.a.ila.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631·6990
LEASEOl'TIOM
Luxurious. custom con·
do. 1700 sq. ft. 2 rrplcs. 3
bdrm. 2Y, baths. S800
mo. &42·4623.
OWMB W /FtHAMCE
12°/o DOWN
Buys this 2 plus den
home. 56 months new.
double iron gated entry,
cathedral ceilings, brick
firepla ce, gourmet
kitchen. French doors to
patio. S179 ,000 Call
673-8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
MEWre>nHTS.
Comfy home in desira·
ble area. Amenities
galore! Priced nght'
675-1771
CAMIC HIGHLANDS
OCIAMYU
$lJt.OOO
OHL Y I rlo DOWH
Reduced thousands !
Spacious living room
features glo wing
fireplace, J larae bdrms
plm den. Great assuma·
ble l5t and owner will
carry a second. Call
67~
THE REAL
ESTATERS
MEWrottT H'9HTS
Deluxe town house
------1 duplex. 3 bdrm + fami·
e>a.frowt D .... x
3 " 2 Br. compl. fum.
Blt·ins. 4+ car garage.
Offer down payment and
take over $428,000 loan
at only 12'%% for 30
years. ~.ooo
Jacms IULTY
675-6670
ly. 2'1'! bath, each unit.
Frplcs. all built-ins ,
deck.a & patios. Park·
like landscaping
SEu.ER WILL HELP
FINANCE! S295,000!
lc6oa lay ,rop.
R~
•675-7060•
tlE
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
ILUFfS IEST IUY
Rare "Q " Plan With Spac ious
Living/Dining Room Area & Cozy
Conversation Pit. Ideal Location
With Large Enclosed Patio On Lush
Greenbelt Near Pool & Tennis Club.
Tastefully Decorated & In
Immaculate Condition. Perfect
Home For Entertaining. Owner Will
Carry Second Trust Deed. $229,500 .
® ·--....... _ ..
allNES
C T N S I E A U l S It T E A T H M A It
$ D I E l I S T & I E N T H 0 U Y A
RLHLU NTDSIETVLSY I A T A 1 V I U E A l M J l O J
I 1 A L E 0 M A M ' 0 It L V N A H I S A I A A N I M M I M E I I
l IMAHXAUOAAUORV' A K M I 0 D I U £ I L Y H S t S M E E S W I U E M A M I C al C C I H E M T I
C l T I £ E S M D I C A A l M L A I I
L H A W D A £ N If M T 0 It N £ l T H I
t A I A U M I l A E I A T N A I 0 " M IM 0 SAT I K L·E YD MU I I U I I
ElltMMEMlalETlHWYYll
MMMlCIT,ASA~EEIOIDC
= -... ...
\\ I '--1 I '1 '\
TAYLOR CO.
lil .\I 1c 11::, .. :,. 1·111;
OH llG CANYON GOll COUISI
Spectacular Deane Home s
".Versailles" located on huge corner
site. Beaut. golf course view looking
thr:>ugh the tall trees of huge ..
landscaped yard. Large secluded pooll.
& spa + a most attractive gazebo.
Gated front courtyard entry
w/fountain. Marble floor in foyer
w/glittering chandelier. 4 Bedrms,1 den. formal DR & 41h baths.
WlSUY M. TAYLOI CO .. ltW.TOIS
2111 S-Jo ....... ._. ·
NIWPORT CIMTa ~. ..,,d ,i ~ M~
RL\LTORS
675-5511
"
MEW IM MESA VERDE
Spectoculor 4 •• for l + .. I 2l/• laftls,
F.lt, Cllld fOf'tltd D.l. ,.._ -wfr n.adele~
hotM is .......atct..d la tt. ..... CALL
QUICK! Thi• OM WOft't lad! $249,500.
COLE OF MEWPOIT REALTORS
251 5 E. Coast Hwy., Coroad dtt M•
675-5511
~AGUNA
OLDIE f S 110,000
$5,• puts you into your owo 4
Bdrm. A/C home. 12
7/8% financing. Call for
detail s on our
.. TICK.ET" program.
.RED CARPET
-754-1202
Oldie but goodie 1 Bdrm.
centrally located. Walk·
Ing distance to beach and ahopping. New cop.
per pipes, roof and wood
fence. Owne r very motivated, will carry ~~~~~~~~
financing. Call 7~· 1700
THE REAL
ESTATERS
OWMr R...ciftcl
Channin1 3 Bdrm 1 Ba
East.aide with huge brick
fireplace. Situated or. a
comer lot with 2 car
garage and covered
patio. Try 20% down.
Full priceS162.500
MESA VERDE
BEAUT!
This beautiful home ex·
empUfys Mesa Verde.
The quiet cul de sac
location and the family
oriented noor plan allow
the home owner the
maximum enjoyment or
this best of all Costa
Mesa communities .
There's even 11 play
house. Call 752-7100
THEREAL
ESTATE RS
v. H ... s220.soo
This remodeled backbay
home has a great view of
the mountains and
backbay area. 3 Bdrms,
den. family room. pool &
spa are some of the
features . The master
suite bas vaulted ceil·
Inga cuatom tile work in
the beth and a balcony.
Owner will consider
large 2nd T.D. with 30%
down.
AnEMTION
INVESTORS
Thia beautiful vtew pro-
pert y In Newport 11
priced below market
value and be~ ap·
praluJ. Sp a1• ldtcbm with breakfut
area. Huse llvlnl room,
lanai wtth vie•. fluplact aacl open
beamed catbeclrel cell·
iap.fttide.•·••:rmuwr a.ab, ..,.,.. .. ellkl,..• ...... .,.... '° ..... pool. Calf~~ de\&UI. OWMr motlvat.d ud wU1 · with ver7
cnatl" ftnaneln&. Call
'7D11GO
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Want Adi
. .
INVESTORS'
SPECIAL
168.1100. If you have liltle ca.ti and are k>oklnl for
a golden opportunity to
own your own home,
don 'l wait. this is it ! TbiJJ
lovely condominium is a
2 Bdnn. very clean and
neat, and located in a
quiet area. Approx·
lmalely s2.~ down and
owner will carry 2nd
with small paymenla.
Call now for all the ch·
talla. 7S2·1700
THE REAL
ESTATERS
TtnM,TerMS!
Only 15% down for this
outstanding nearly new
condo. 2 Br + den. Cami·
ly room. view t e n-
nis/pool. A great buy at
s210.ooo.
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
Pay closing coata only!
Buy your own home !
Must qualify for mon-
thly payments. Exciting
new coocept. Call today
for full details. 673-~
THE ~EAL
ESTATE RS
OCIAM & Y AUil YllW
Cozy 3br, 2ba home. den,
frplc,etc.
+
3 men separate bo*'
oa la kit. Call now ftlr appt. "'5,000. Owner
will ftnance.
RoyMcC .... Dr
141-771'
tum.llOCI
H•HlAMDS
ni. ve17, nk•t lrvme community you could
dM>Ole for your famtl)'.
A 1paclou1 4 BdtPi
Edinborourh pin
Pr o fe11lonally
decorated In ~u~m
tartbtoa•. Two l•lll• auumabl• Joana ijr
below current ra~•·
OwDer wtll coulde • ~ma11er Turtleroeli
home ln trade . .-.~
. ,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, March 28 1981
Cash in on 7 or,11 HoN· .. ---~---·N~-• J
There are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad
•
Run 7 days for $7. 77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes I ·1 p·1at
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 II J I
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classlflcation. No cancellation Rebate.
ttcMtwt Pers. ._..s For W. ......._For S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••o••••t••••••• Co•Mltte 1024~Volty 1034 ~-I OOJ c~ .. M9r' I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• • •• , .. ••• · •• · ••• •• ..... ••••••••••••••••• •••••• --------•1 TIUI V ALUI ""' .... , .... UAL PIOPLI 6 PUX/IASTSIDI
Must-see to appreciate llD. to $325,000 In the evt!r popular
Westmont homes. 3 lrR
Bd + Bonus rm. Below
market price. Sl27,000
Call Anne Mccasland
631-l.266
1751,_.delSw
J Bdrm, 2 bath. rrplc
Fl'ee It clear. Owner wi 11
carry 1st. Priced at
J310,000.
associated ALLSTATE
Lge 3 Br. 3ba, 2 frpk With 1152,000 ln assuma·
custom borne with many ble loaM ranglnf from
extras. Assume lsl TD 9~'7. to ll?t. 27 ,450
and owner will carry grou Income annually.
2nd. Only l~.000. Cull Well kept single story
now97&-S370 units with 4 gara1ts
PLUS off·ltl'fft parklna. R&"M~ tlUC>,..fU~ Rfl\tfOU'.1
,, : • ...... fl J•t-" ' ,. t !
REALTORS
On 60'x!l>O' k)t
64~7211 10-1\1 TOHS
Lovely 2 sty Award ---------1---------•I s , home. featuring 3 BR. 'C 2~'1 Ba, den, dining rm. AXIMl,,Elt
Brinl your paint brush
: pd aave. 4 Bdrm plus
r a m ily room . nice
nel&hborhood. 1st & 2nd
TD assumable. Approx·
l;knately $19,000 down
'99,900. For an appoint
ment to see, call S-40-1151
· , 4-. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS ..
~~--~ Tlt-1111
OHLY $53,500
Super sharp mobile
C1iome in 5 Star Park
Dou~e coach -2 bdr m
2 bat.h plus family room
Take over subject to ex·
istll\g lsl T.D & note
DOH"T CALL ME
ADUftLIX
l 'm a perfect home for
owner occupant or
maybe 2 as a
partnership Two nearly
equal 2 Bdrm 2 ba units
with master s uites.
stone rrplcs & wood
beam ceilings on an
oversi lot w 1 pvt patios
and deck. New on the
market at $320,000
c.164~7211
eta
IACH PARADISE
LEASE OPTION
Beaut 2br, 2ba Irvine
Terrace Pool Ho me
Spa. lge lot, 2 car gar.
room to bwld. kOOO dwn
$2700 mo Bryan
640-5681
759-1616 Good Duplex on best
~~~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!'-' street. pool, h1 Income.
Owner. $320,000 Print•
only 640-4999
View' Location ' Ocean &
WATEIFIONT
CONDOS hills Prime Harbor Vu
an Huntington Harbour area. Ask for Bev Cov
Lease option on fan 1ngton. Brk 770 8887.
tasuc terms Brand new 768·6663
DUPLEX
$191,000
• .Carpeted. draped. On -
the water. guarded gate
entry Views 2 car
garage. Pool & tennis 2 I Br each with shake
roof Can convert to 2
Br house & add on Call
for details Bernita
Eilertsen . Br oker.
675·2373or 770-8598
& 3 bdrm. Avail ammed
From S329.000 o ptwn
money $2000 per mo
Call 714 556·9600
91/40/o LOA.H
Thas 3 Bdrm home ha~
been completel} re
docorated. Many extra~
Assume 9'• r; loan
Price. S\08,000 Call lo
day 979-5370
DUPLEX
-pool&jac .. onover siied
lot Fplc in hge m str
HOUSE on buildable R-2 sulte&fam rm. Pror. de
lot. Westaide Bluff area. cor. 968·8435
Act. M7·5150 -------Hwt ........ hoch 1040
MESAdel Mar, lg 5 br. 3 •••••
ba, remdld. kltch. choice illiiliMlillllllVlliliiElllSlliliTillll0•111
1Mill5 or cpt Under mkt at 5_,_1 ... 1 1 $155.000. Agt M7·51SO r-"°"" -..
Desirable Eastside·Abbie
Way 2 Br Big 601'120'
lot Fruit trees, alt
garage. cQvered patio.
wine cellar. remodeled
bath SL30,000 Flexible
finan ci n g Owner
642.8663
E . Side C .M . 3 Br .
S117.~ Recent 500 sq.
Ct. add1t1on New kitch.
den, restucco 60x 125, 291
Monte Vista Offer .
Own1 Brk 646-4289.
Immaculate 2bdrm
townhouse. many xtras·
owner will ran a n ce.
Broker participation
S114,950 646·2142 or
759·41.81.
LRGASSUM.
LOAH
Executive Duplex for
discriminating taste .
3br. 3bu, each. central
air, woodbuming frplcs.
custom drapes/ carpets.
heavy shake roor. 11' • <'{
loan is assumable. no
qualifying necessary .
S I OIC Dowt1 Or LH1
MOVESYOUIH
No qualif y 1 ng l
necessary. Your mon I
thly payment can be ad·
justed to meet your mon·
thly budget. We have
many 3 & 4bdrm borne an
best Orange County
locations w/these terms
Call our speciahst for
more information.
~60LDENWEST ~ EALTORS
t, ·~ !ASSOCIATES
84M588
Assume $95,000 al 9' •'' 1~~~~~~~~~-1 OWC 2nd Beaut 5 Br 1 · -
pool ho m e in Mesa l•--------•1
Verde Only S215,000. IRIHG AMY OFFER
Jo h n & Sal 1 y C.: ox Lovely 3br. cstm home
631 ·1266 or 641 8458 near beach & park .
Agts formal d1n1ng. heavy
UMDER MKT VA.LUE
New 3Br 3ba condo with
frplc Sl38,500 Facan~
beautiful park Pool.
jac. Own/ Agt 642-2643
shake·roof Call no~ for
information regarding
the 9-'.r~ assum. loun
Seller wlcarry part or
the buyers down pay
ment & says br ing any
offer
IUILDH HELPS IEST PRICE
YOU IUY IH TOWH
HEW CONDOS 4br. remodeled kitchen.
XLMT THMS plush carpets. custom
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1........ t 04• L~ tHCh 104 Me..,.. IHch a 06' Mewpart .._.. 1 o6t s. ci .... ,. 1016 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••S15M!
Try $15,000 down and as·
sume this brand new 2
Bdrm attached home in
super Woodbrldae. A•k·
Ing only Sll7,500 and
av al la ble right now.
~brldg~
Rutru
551·3000
lt20 Barn nu Pkw)', l rvt•"
WOODlllDGI
2 Bdrm Warmlnaton
"B" end unit. Great
location. Open house Sat
& Sun 12·4 a t #10
Windwood. Agt 552-086()
11/JO/o
2Br cabana & ltlr, sublet·
till.I allowed, 3 pvt bchs,
pool & fishing pier.
129,900. ('114) 499-3818
Whitewater view or main
beach-deckang·li ving
r m-Vic torian frplc ·
dining rm.family rm-
wet bar-3Br·2~.Ba ·l50fl.
lot frontage.extra park·
Ing-Temple Hills area·
existing loan plus owner
finan cing to
80%-S39S, 000· courtesy
paid to realtors ·a ppt
only-731-6585.
VIEW : VIEW '
Exclu1ive Portafina
home with view. Master
suite with fireplace.
Huge decks. Den with
YOU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH
Enjoy "The Good Life" of Newport
Beach including swimming in either
of 2 pools + many other amenities such as walking to the bay or many of
our famous restaurants & shops.
OPIH NIDAY I 0-l SUMDA Y I ·S
FULL PllCI $39,500
CALL673·7~
FOR FURTHER DETAILS
REDHILL REALEY-UDO OFFICE
CONDO NWPRT BEACH
$2,SOODOWM
Bachelor Oat. 500 ~q. rt
CONTEMP O RARY
HOME IN GOOD AREA
This i.s one or the best 4
Bdrm 2 Bath homes for
you r dollar value
Featur111g 2 fireplaces
•nd peek vaew of the
ocean. Excellent rinanc·
1ng with only 10'% down.
$129,000. 498·4950
Lingo
At.thhft
YICTotllAM
BEACH HOME
New 3 BR 3\.'J Ba. Quall
t y handcrafted oak
thruout. Stained glass.
spa.
Co mm uni t y po o I . On the Orange Coast·
jacun1. total security look to LUlgo rarst
condb. No qualifying s-.__
Sl07 .500. Owner/ Prin· ... -cipalaonly. !n8·0423 C .. trano I 071 - -...................... .
BOAT PEOPLE lMMe.PrMoriH
Wmt OCIAH YllW
is what you get when
taking over exislin& 1st
T.D. or S65,800. Fan-
tastic family home with pool featuring a depen·
dable home warranty
for buyer's peace of
mind. As k ing o nly
1110,000. 759·1501 or
752· 73'13.
wet ba r Exclusive ---------neigbbOrhood. S345,000.
PENTHOUSE CONDO
with boat dock 280 dea
forever view. Fee land
Assumable loan.
•~s-J-&t ....
~Walker I lae
L....-Vlllep l .l.
497-1761
BIG OCEAN VIEW
REAL ESTATE L g auuma ble loan . Custom wood & glass.
ASSUM.AILI LOAMS 4Br. 2"'8a home. close
Fantastic auumable lO bch. '322,500. J oseph
loans available with this _D_r_e..;.y_Co_. _499-_5_38_1 __ _
delightful 4 Bdrm home In desirable Woodbridge SPICT ACULAR
area. Back yard adjoins ESTATE SID LOT
lovely park. Convenient on private road In center
to community pool and of Laauna. Magnificent
tennis courts. Sunny and view of town & Catalina.
spacious rooms thruout Price includes plans ror
SUll.000. 7500 s/f Spanish Villa
don osen
n·.ilt11r ..
lmf AT PROSPECT
TUSTIN, 731·3111
RELAX IM
THE SPA
or el'\J(ly outside hvang
on the pauo. Lovely Plan
$275.000. Seller will ar·
ranae financing for
qualified buyers Gum·
biner & Associates
4'~9421
Exclusive I rvane Cove.
White water view. huge
living rm & formal din·
ang rm, 5bdrm .. 3""1ba.
U-sluiped house around
pool. Sl,500.000 494-S430
673-0280.
8 in Turtle Rock 2 LcHJ-DM..,_.
bdr ms. plus d e n , 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1052
baths, covered patio. ,._ ________ _
IRYl .. TBUCE
POOL AHO VIEW
A cozy 3 bdrm home
with formal dlning rm and pool. Highly expan·
dable view or harbor a nd
ocean. A great listing at
only $330,000.
644-711 I
/Jn NIGEL
(}AILEY fl.
ASSUCI AT[S
5 Br. 3 Ba. Harbor view
H o me S34 9 ,SOO .
O wner/ Agt. Comm
pool. 673-7761
llGCAMYOM
GOU COURSE LOT
OwMt-Mnt S-41 !
Agent. Dann Btbb
675· 2311 640. 7665
n4EILUFFS
640-5357
C /21 M•w'!'"'1 C'!tr.
OCEANFRNTDUPLEX
3+ 2 Bdrm. Sharp. Sell
or trade down for condo
or house or ? SSS0,000
Ed Leonelh Own Agt
642·9801 or res 644·4720
IMVESTotlS/IUYERS
LOWDOWN
Ver sailles lbdr m &
studio condos with lrg
assumable loans From
Sl09.900 Jim Schumann
agt 979-5370
HBR View Homes "Mon
tego" 4 br. 2 ba. fee lancJ
Xlnt fan 675·2139
IY OWNER, SAVE
3Br. 2Ba. 2300sq ft 2
frplcs. spa Financ1 nl(
avail $196.500. or trod~
Call Answer Ad •397 at
642·UX>24h rs per day
3 IR-SpUt b••I
Finest original area
Massive greenbelt vast a
Smartly decorated an
popular tones, near by l•--------pool. Offered at s212.ooo IEACHAtONT HME
<with assumable hi bal OPPORTUMITYI
loun ry $43,000 down ) O wne r bas bough!
Agt, ~5560 another & Is ready to • .,,..Groc.....t'' Close to Turtle Rork ••
Park and tennis courts.
Move 1n cond1t1on Model •Oceanfront dplx. xlnt
I 4br.2~ba,prof decoral· 1 loc, r111. & price' Pran
ed & landscaped Shows only 673-7677, 673-7873 1174,900.
Over 3,000 sq ft of
elegance. Exclualve new
homes. rrom ISU.000
14~% financinc avail.
Chart.er Rily & Inv.est. . 496-8122 831·8811
1010 .•.........•.•........
s12.soo DN
3 Br 1 Ba custom home.
tree tined st. Assumable
FHA loan. OWC will
c arry balance Total
sales price S85.000
S-40-3666
Whelan
Real Estate
us-tin 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••HISTOllC
445 Pac1r1c -Tus t1n
Owner's anxious Bring
all o ffer!> Restored
beauty on 1 • acre For
more Info call Ranch . .
-,,i\f'J~:tf ~Iii /\I IY ~ ~>~, 1 :moo
hcmtfM CCMdos
QUAIL MEADOWS
·ALLSTATE
OLDE CdM
Good income on best
street . near beac h
$320.000 Shown by
appt
OML y 3 LEFT drapes. freshly painted, 'I
Lge private decks & seller bought another & ~Ritt-_
like a model Lge. as·
sumable loan
Owner/ Agt $359,500 IACKIAY
move~ Immaculate and
beautifully maintained 3
bed home with separate
laundry rm . 2 car
garage Room to expand
& go 2nd story A J(reat
value m a quiet section
or the OCEAN 1'~RONT
Owner will assist with
financing. Property •~
free & ch•ar Submit
$598.000
TUSTI ...
5°/o Down, 5°/o Cotftft'I.
to sel.1.mg agt or will pay
all buyers closing costs
Very lrg. frplc. gourmet
kitchen. pool. whirlpool.
tennis c rts. s pacious
REALTORS
CUL DESA.C
BACK BAY AREA Tidy
3 Bdrm 2 bath home wath
remodeled kitchen In
excellent cond1t1on Just
S 116.500 present your
terms.
642-5200
PETE BARRETT ··· REALTY
lolboa tllmld 1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IAYFIOMT
30 x 101 lot.
Older Duplex. Custom
home site on the water
$695.000. Will exchange • 768-06S4
lolboe r.-w1o I 007 •••••••••••••••••••••••
CostaM.so 1024
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Open Sunday. 2·5pm. 1641
Orchard Or 5bdrm. 3ba.
freshly painted colonial
beauty Family room.
separate dining room.
frplc. new roof Priced
at $160.000. ror quick
s ale. Xlnt fin ancing
T H E Wl EO EMA NS
494-0006 or 751 -4293.
MOVIUPTO
MESAVHDI
patiOIS has pril'ed thousands /i~ 1~r
For45day escrow below market value ror '1'-,i.Y 831·8638
Bldrprovades drapes. quirk s ale. Creative
2000 M EV ER PLACE terms ok-better hurry 833·8600
'° ,:~::'.:;:~'.,., ~ 6~~~t~~T ~523 CAMPUsDl·IRVtME
DA RUNG HOME on a
quiet court Huge lot
with panorama views.
Vacan t S h ort ter m
lse/opt 3 Br 2ba. $145.0 three bedroom home .,..,,,~ G-ASSOCIATES • leocll I 041
About 2100 square reel 3 841-1518 ~~•••••••••••••••• LOIJlmMI Vlllop R.E
497-1761 baths. d1n1nl( room. --~~~~~!!!~
family room. brick
fireplace Brick and
wrought aron accents
outdoors POOL! Owner
will help finance. as
su m e 10 75''. loan
W ALIC TO IEACH
3 + 2 + guest quarters?
Owner has bought
another. Submit low
down . OWC Won't last.
Sl54.090 TARBELL. !_gt646-_l544_ -
BK R 540-1720 H..e~°"
Harbiw 1042 4·SALE
FURNISHED
Sl42,000TERMS
3br Mesa Verde 545-1270
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Goldeft West htotH
Beautiful S&S Exec. 4
bdrm home Elegant wet
MES "" VERDE bar, bit-an bbq inside &
A many other amenities
Spacious 2-story on tree incl a huge yard that
llnedst. backs to a beautiful 5 IR·llA park Just 2 yrs old '
Priced to sell now. Broker. ~-8182_ _
$192.500 OHnfEWATER
--------nfESHAKES
W e a t he red c e d a r MlslklR Vlefo I 067
shakes. that is. Custom ••••••••••••••••••• ••••
designed 3 bdrm, ram 2 STORY 4br. 2\ltba. 2+
rm, 2 baths. Extensive yrs. old. C11trl air. frml
use of wood glass & din. $143,900. Assum.
ceramic tile. Beam cell· !n/8% ol $67.000. owe
ang, Crplc. 1165,000. 2nd. 77~4380 Mission Realty ---------
1714)494-0731 .... ..,.. leach I 069 -------...................... .
DU"-0 FtXH!
OCIANVIEW
Bring your paintbrush &
broom to save SSS oo Ulla
di rty dawg! ! Prime
Laguna Beach duplex
w/attached garage. Sub·
mil olfer! 759·1501 or
752-7373.
SI0,000 DOWN
s200,ooo. 12.11
to..for21yHn.
Large comer lol. Large
house 4 Br. 2\.'J Ba. RV
space behind locked
gates. Al l this In
Westcllrf. No loan quali
fylng .
3br, 2ba home plus ideal
mother·in·law quarters
Compl w/bath. 1220.000
Roy McCcrcle, Riter
54t.77l9 grounds
WATtHfRONT 132-2300 VBY NIV A TE HOMr ~ Ask for Sandy
Secluded Westclirf & REALESTATE OtherRHillbtoh
Dover48drm,famrm, 631·1400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
courtyard. 2 lrplcs .lii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~ Open Sat/Sun 1·5 al 1514 11 1100 H l11 hland Dr . Agl
552-0860
12 >/4°/o New FiltancMCJ
Prime location . 300"0
s l f +. Super kitchen.
sep. breakfast rm. Mstr
suite w/3 closets and
deck. Oak nrs & plush
cpt.s thn.a-out. Frml din·
Ing nn, garden window,
2 cov'd patios, trlr ac-
cea1. Xlnt terms. or.
fered at 1269,900. Mis ·
sion Viejo Realty
581-1000.
House & 2 car gar nr high
sc hool. F ee land
SlS0.000. Agt841·0783.
Hart.cw lldge Estot.1
Commanding vit'W &
value Under 5tated
elegance with u n ·
surpasaed upgrades. 4
Br Devonshiretruntastlc
Un in ~000
RCTaylorCo
I ,.11 \ o\o)(I\)
••••••••••••••••••••••• New Modular type home.
Oceanv1ew· El Moro
Buch Park. sp 70 2Br.
space rent $175 m o. 20
yrs lse. $69,900.~!_9·3816
$33,000 Assumable Loan,
2bdnn +de n, 2ba. 24X60
Viking. New crpt, all ap·
pllances incl. Really OWNH sharp. F/P '48,!SOO Pvt
ANXIOUS ~~ Prine Only.
Cute 3 8d 2 Ba w/room
to expand. Cozy frplc. nu Acreop for S• 1200
kitchen. Lowest price an ••••••••••••••• ••••••••
the Hgts. $189,500. As· W 0 RS T C 0 UL D· B E
sume $112.000. Jeanne BEST FOR YOU 1 lBr. Apu. Compl'etely
refurbished inside
Stove & refrigerators.
This spacious 4 8d 2·sty
home has an outstand·
in& comer Location and a
91111% fully assumable
loan. The price is right
at $219.000 Call Anne
Mccasland 631 1266 For appointment Chateau + Adj lot with
751-3191 boat slip 5br. 4ba W lk 1 1-2 h<>Ulell on a lrg lot. All ~«B 411' .._ Classified Ads. your one· sorts o r p otent ia I
Salter. 631-1266. If you have $164,000 and
RVM~ want 35% yield annual·
ly. purchase S200.000two
year deed or lrUlll bear·
Ing ~ 111terest on 25
acre avocado grove in
Inactive development
area near Vista. Com·
bined 8~ lsl. + this in·
vestment represents less than 50% or the ap-
praised value ol land.
MAI appraisal on adJa·
cent 2'AI acre parcel al
S 150,000 each . C alJ
714/751-4826; 493-1153 or
756-~.
• $319,000. 675-093S
CUSTOM HOME
lalMMIP ...... la
Steps to bay and beach.
This beautiful new home
features: 3 Bdrms. rami
ly room and library, 21~
bathll , ceramic tale
thruout. 4 fire places.
Oak c abinet s. 2
skylights. stained glass
windows, French doors.
2 patios and xtra large
garaae and beautiful
spa olf the maat.er bdrm.
Offered at k77 ,000. For
•n appointment to see.
caUMO-U11
~ . HERITAGE
. Htl\llO f.lS
c.,, ... _ ..... 1011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ll'ICTACUUI
OCIAMYtlW
W alll to be•cb, cuatom a Br b . ~ acre. Plnn Is ;i· vt drive. SU0,000.
each Ro•d Rily . ·~
'Cor.edel..... '022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•
S ELECT · 964-1611 agt, 963-4606
John
__ _P~OPE_RTl~S 1r~1ne -1044
SH WORTHY •••••••••••••••••••••••
ESTATE SALE
Colle11e Park 4 Br. P•
ba s120.ooo c ash
805 1524 1590 or
8()5/644-5360
* VA-41dS IOIK •
VA appraised 4 Br 2ba
Nodn pmnt to vets
Prine only 751 ·6836
9.5
lllTEIEST
MSume 138K down. Lov·
Priced below market
Owner anxious to move
Best buy In entire area'
Submit all offers -be
creatl ve 545-9491
~Walker I laa
REAL ESTATE
n41SHOUSE
ISFIH
or d~t & dirt & a super
buy at $78.500 T ry
VA/ FHA. Owner has
bou11ht another Anx·
ious!' 545-9491
~Walker I lie
ely 3 Bdrm, 2 bath. fa mi· REAL ESTATE
ly room. fireplace, open ---
beamed ceilings, new 8 Toro I 032
copper plu.nbln1. lar1e ••••••••••• ••••••••••••
yard, doublt fara1e. CrwetfH ""-c11t4)
akylllht. Only 112,500. Spacloua 2·story home
Call "5-91'1 with u}Jttal1'1 bonus rm
/'\! I 11>1 N H• It I \I
, _ '\.__:111111 I 1
/
••IEllED!
Must sell super 3 Br
townhome w/great brick
patio. +special custom
features Excellent as
sumable loan & owner
will assist. Reduced to
$126.990
W ALMUT SCj>UAllE
• llSTIUY * Nice 2 at.ory "C" plan 2
bdrm condo. Freshly
painted, central air.
Priced below eompara·
ble aales ror immediate
action. 198.SOO
CAUMOW
'4~721 I
)ASlllNE CREEK New I!!!~!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!! ~odet home • J bedrma: . •,a~ baW; built In ap-
,. ollanca; 1u~rb carpet· Ina 11 drapH; complete·
• bath. 3 bdrnu den/·
dlnlill rm, oversbe Uv-
tn1 rm downltalre with
PaJoe V•rdn nrert•ce. r .. ture• centra air.
Outltandlnl pool (IOlat
huted >. a_pa , much
mONI a.t buy ln Sad· 1---------
i,J.'( tandac•ped· Owner ~Ul carry fl..eaolo1. .-own by aDOOlntmtnt 'only. L~U(!RT CO
(ZIJ) ... l
T•llt.01 tM moat .,.ople dleback Val.My Sl44,SOO .
poulble " Important to SeU. wtll help you buy.
tile IUCCHI Of a DJ SUNWDT REALTORS ,., ........ Kua ,..,.. T-..U yo•r• II 11•.tl'd II
Cla1•1fltcl. piton• HH• ....O!DI to .. 1n ea..,._ c1 .. uw •do u wen.
HteHASSUMAIU
4br home w/1pa, alnl
cond. •1•.000. 552..-.0
Have 1om4itbl1tt j ou
wa:nl to tell? CIMlifted
ldl dolt wen. eo#Jt.
REAL ESTATE slopshoppinti ~nter _ _ $140,000. Agt 841·0763
l"IM I 044 lniM I 044 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo on
• •••••••••• ••• •• • •••• •• • • •••••••••• • ••• • • • •• • • Newport Bay. Prestige
macnab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
WOODIRIDGE LAICIFIOMT I
Outstanding end-unit "Glenwood"
on the la k e . 4BRS. 21h ba ths.
Upgraded carpeti ng ,
air-conditioning, built-in vacuum.
Assumable 1st. Owner will carry
second. Security gated community.
Panoramic views of lake and
mountai n s . $319,000. J e r r y
Thompson 551 -8700. ~
JIWIL OM THI LAICI! Th.ls is the one
you've been waiting fo~! Fabulous
location on Woodbridge Lake
w ;gorgeous views or lake ·and
sunsets. 2 maste r BRS. courtyard
entry w /fountain, mirrored dining
wall, top of the line appliances,
outdoor balcony, garage cabinets
and many extra custom features.
$275,000. Gail Kingsley 551-8700. 870
712-1414 .....
C<J11'41U' Vr:Art Cen1er w~ c.nter
•4MIH MWIH ~I Dover OrWt Ho!bor V1f'., C:.W.
-
location. Lease/or Op.
lion l o purch ase .
675·1570, 780-1933.
548-MtEves.
VILLA IALIOA
PresUlioua Adult Con
dos on the Bluffs above
Newport Bay are now
available for re-sale
with attractive assuma·
ble loans. Some with
ocean & mounta in
views. Priced from
Sl84,000. For details.
pleuecaU
JIL NOPBTllS
MS~ 84S>M59
AM for Dee
H ..... Vi.wH.-.
3 Br 11:21,000 loW•t price
In Harbor View. Owner
llnveat.or) may conalder
100% FINANCING or
trade for?
RCT(1ylor Co
: 1 1t I ... ~
Help YGUtMlf to a '*~~.~ ln die DAIL 'rniUr
HELP WANTED ADS
H ~ \I TllHS
,,...,. c-ttr
Speotacular 3br, 2ba.
amenities (spa. etc>. Blk
to beach. Sl95,000''
Rich, 7~·4408. 646 9530
AIAHDONED
LIDO ISLE 2 STY
100/oDOWM
NO QUALIFYING .
Beautiful 4 BR. 4 ba
estate. Steps to private
beach and bay. Open
beamed vaulted cell·
inp. Majestic master &
guest auites. SS25,00 FP.
SHOREUNE ASSOC.
M2·2262
Coii&Mrclel Properly 1600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IALIOA ISLAMD
4,000aq. ft comm'! bldg.
$550,000. Leasehold
Beat co'mm ·1. corner.
HGTS.OISPllATI Ground nr. ahops., 2nd
Only 125,000 down lakes Or. l " 2 BR apta. Ask
it! Hllh balance 81· _f_o_r_J_enn_y_._752_·020Z ___ _
sumable rtnanclnr. No llST•U• •~
qualifying. sraclous 2 "' """"' Br 2 Ba, enc . 1ara1e. Cu rcW ....
Hurry! Gre1 Aatle. LpL.et-1~
MMrOa91~ ..
RVM~
Ii I \I I "Ii
•loo-Y ...........
1.2.5%. 3 ~I Sha.I. 250G 1/f,
Ownr mouv. asaycr•1t.
Prlnconly. 8kr. T5l·ea8
.. , .... cer9H
..... ... 1447,000 o....••--·
BURR W H ITE
REAL TOR. IN C
ti7~4l>JO
AT1"111ACH C•••••kl":~Towe-
Nlce J Bdrm ""9• In Mmel tw 1110
•US*' coodlUoo. Ttf'riflc • • ••••••• ••••• • • • • •• • • • flna.t11W .... 000. FNlllO isl,tlO. IBr• fta
IUMSlfl.I. new cmdo. 11~~ •"m
14J.UOI 14MIH ln. D /25MM
I ~
) •
6
r
I
••
>r
U1
l
e.
•• ~s e ! ae
lly ;te
r
,_.LAeuMAOCIWROMT
Prh:pe La1una Beach oeeanf ront
flxer·upper.-lTnobetrucled panoramic
view. Steps to beautlluJ sandy beach. owe at 10% down. $975,000.
9UAIL PLACI
rlOPllTIU
1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2·2 BR, lba. 10% VA loan
at $79 ,000. Pri ce
1130,000. Agt. M7·SlSO
IK-,,...,.., 2000
•••••••••••••••••••••••
712·1'20
Whelan
RealEstate
TAX SHELTER!!
16 UNITS • North or Dis C...tury 21
neyland. Over S55,000 Newport C...ter
gross Income· S58,50<l 640.5357
May lat! Assume 11"2'7. ~~~~~~~~~~ S2SO,OOO 1st. Owner will r:
help ftnance a bundle~
1649.500. 2100 4br. 2ba, $850/mo lst/lasl
••••••••••••••••• S300 security n ew
OP RENTING cpllpnl. formal dining
Rf'{Mft}(
IH'.1\1.TOH<;
3210 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Newp0rt Beach/So .
1100 16th SI
O•ivrr ~j •61•
(?141 '42·511 3
Newf)Ort Beach/No.
860 lrvone
"'' 'b•" ,,., 64S-1104
Fantastically furnished
townhouse, with ocean
view. Tennis court. pool
S92Slmo 700-9117
3Br, 2Ba, 4·plu. gar,
adulta, no peta. $480. 1040
C, V aJencla $45-7983
IMSTAMT IH
3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Xtra lrg
Apt. 2 story, 2 car
garage, rrplc, yard, w/d
hook up. Small child,
small pet OK. A must lo
L&e 3 bt, 2 ba. rrplc, lndry
book up~ patio. Ed·
Inger / Bolu C h ica
Avail. 4/1. $MO. 840-3129
L& 3 br 2ba, frplc, encl
aar. New plush cpta. 2
kids ok. $495 Mual 1ee.
7921 Holt. Call 3 to 7 pm
wkdy.. Sat/SUD 847-4803
unt. Landmark lbdrm
condo. 40/yr age min.,
aec. &i many other
amenities. $400. 9&0-1347.
Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse.
Near beach Garage
Toddler O K . $465
116().1279 or 83MI065
see.
TSLMGMT
I;', block lo beach. !bdrm, ~2·1603 adults. S37S. 122 9th St
..
Lease or Leate Option
Spac. 3br condo 2.,...ba
Quiet loc S8U l mo
631 -1759, 631 4744
75&-9100
2bdrm, lba, lrg deck,
cloeed gar. drps, c~
rrplc Adulu. no ~
Avail 4/21. 845·6506: ~
642·9133 --2
2 Br. lift Ba Adults, no
pets S»5
548-21682
E1tstbturr. Spar Br,
pool, sundeck Qul~t
pleasant area Adlu. no
pets $490/mo. 644-4767 ------SCNlfaAna 3110
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'*Cote Realty
& lnvestmt·nt
640·5777
Buy your own indwstr1al 754-Ul86 ____ _
unit. 100<> 5000 sq ft 2bdrm w/gar, S38:1. new
Avail. tn HB or FV Call crpts, fncd yrd. water
S47S Isl, lasl + Sl50.
2bdrm, Iba, drive by
2006 S . Garnsey
644-5009. " b 2 b · I r Stunning Lge !bdrm, .. r, a nice y urn d Adults 6,.15 . 911 s535 gar en apt , pool/rec
536-8149. 96().4416
pacious cathedral pen·
lhouse 3 Br 2 ba. sky
l ites . dbl balcony
Singles delight or family
retreat. $625/ mo Agt
Greg. 957-6507
1 + coovt. den , 2ba. u tm
decor . S525 < 2 U l
476-7449, (714) S40·7s&;
Lve. mess ;
4'flt.E VALLEY
Near new 4·Plex, 2
bdnn, 2 bath each unit
with fireplace, enclosed
patio, double garage
Sl6S,OOO Bill Grundy.
Rllr, 675·6161
Paul~60S7 pd. 2228 "D" Placentia
oh for s• 2200 636-4l20. ---
••••••••••••••••••••••• New Condo For Rent NEWPORT IEACH S&so, lge astro turfed
BIG C AMY ON deck. 641 1991. agt
Goff Co.an~ Lot Eastside Condo lge 2 br Owner Must Sell' ' '
Spac &i redec Lg 2br 2ba
condo w/country k1tch, -.523 CAMPUSJ>a·IRVl,.E wld, patio, garage Pool
--------Xlnt loc nr Mi Sq Park
oodbridge area lrg 3 SS45, 631· 1098. 979·5370
Br. 2~ Ba 2 car garage, S _....._ L ·
fam rm, dm area, frplr. OllR'n CICJW'CI 3286
Ref N l areaS3SS.710W.18thSt. mo l>. o pe s ----
631·7874. Spacious 2 BR, S36S.
SllORTT~RM Rentals
Weekly & monthly
Agent. 1!7!>-8170
Pool & laundry fac11.
548.9556
bdrm condo. ftp le. pool.
nr B~hurst & Adams
S440.~26ll
~
Tustin 31to •••••••••••••••••••••••
Security apts, I bdrm •• 2bdrm. uhl pd. adultt
no pets . f'rom S37 8JS.~. ' ...
Agent. Dan H1bb 1 i., ba. pvt pallo, encl.
FOURPLEX 675 2311 640-7665 I gar, pool. Adults, no
Westside Costa Mes a -pets. $495. 548-2990
Need s s~me wurk =,Desert, 2 .. 00 Bea ~B-;-adult-~nly
crpts, drps, window cov 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••I S36S Yrly Clean I Br
ers Comm pool Avail I OCEANFRONT HOM!!: Partly furn wl garagt>
aft 3-25 S82S per mo + O'looks pvt beach, 2 br. s pat·e 12 block to beach
depogit.752·12829·4
1
212 ba,den,d1n rm. lge 1111 •, 36th St One deck. s12001 mo 499 2253, Adult 213/798 4356
ice 4bdrm. 212ba house. 499-5021
I Br 1 ba, patio. l.aund
facil, encl garages. new·
ly dee. Walk to shop
pinl(. Mm from bch.
Ready for ()('CUP April 5
S350 mo to mo. 646·0341
or 545 6165 . 1970
Wallace,C M
Avail now 2 Br 2 Ba S475.
3 Br. 2 Ba. $625 Both un·
Its · new paint. drapes.
Xtra clean frplc's, bit-
ins, dshwsr. gar's, cath
cei lings, surrounded by
patio decks Drive by
7322 Garfield , II B
SJS.8610.
Apcw l114..t1 Fwwl•d:
or Ultfundta.ed 3900 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SEAWIMD
$22,000 yr income. Full ~ townhse 2 ca r gar
Price 1225 000 0 I""••••••••••••••••••••• I d . 2 frplc. nr :.hopp1n1t
center. pool, Ja~·. tennis
S725. S.Sl-6931after6PM
·~"'*"" VILLAGE , wner • • au n r y , putt 1 n g
will carry to"; interest StweialLandSale course. very quiet Tusttn 3290 U ......... shed Townhouse Easts1de 2Br New 1&2 bdrm luxur)
adult apts in 14 plan~
from S440. 2 bdrm from
S505 + pools. tenn1!>.
waterfalls. ponds' c as
for cooking & heating
paid From San Diego
Frwy drive North on
Beat·h to Mcfadde n
then West on McFadden
to Seawind Vtllaite
(714)893-5198
wl$60,000dn. Ocean view lots. Morro $600/mo Ask for Bob
Bay area. 2 lots St0,990 962·8891 orS31·47SO
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111s ba 2Sty 3yrs old.
ADULTS COURTYARD GeMf'd 3802 gar No pets $465/mo A-PR €HIG€ q_ ___ __,.,,__HOM€~
R.E. Investments
3333W. Coast Hwy, NB
645-6646
INCOME PROPERTIES
Looking for income un·
1ls7' We have 5 pro
pert1es 111 C M Pnced
right at lesi. than
1 lXGross No bank
financing required. In
teresled" Then call us
.J,..
NEISSER
0 Jf I ij UH,\' 11 l'.
E·Z terms Beaut views -'-----
of the Pacific Ocean, KIDS/PETS 01(
OOOBR I DGE
"CR EEKSIDE" Wiiiow
Plan Professionally
landscaped Model home
on the park 4 Br 3 Ba 2
Story Fam rm , Om .
frplc, dshwsr, micro
wave $875 mo. No pets
964·2566 Agent. no rtt
TWNHSE 2bdrm, 1 ''ll bll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675·8133
Eslero Bay & Ca yucc>s E Side 2 Bdrm S4!15
Call <7141675-7239 W I Garage 642·2510.
Mountain Pro perties .
Free List, Homes. Acres.
Mobiles. etc 839·7163
646-4848
East.side I yr old Engh.sh
Tudor. 3 br, 2\AJ ba $795
m o . Ask for Bill.
MAKE ME AH OFFER 546-5880.
Ruy my equity & take -----
over 12'1 int on <iut Nke Townhouse S49.S 2
standing debt so you Br 11/2 Ba. Avail April
can be one of the owners I. Savage Wilde & Co
of Camper World 9 RV 67S-fm& parks in U tah & 90 --- ----
others nationwide. Go Large 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex.
ing lhru divorce & need Kids & Pets OK. S475. +
Ranch &!ally has leases.
many lo choose rrom
S495-S9SO. Call for in
formation.
e-r, ,\i\:\, H
Hf/\lTY
attached gar. rrpl<'. air,
pool Redhill. nr S A
Frwy S550 mo (;ult
731 71.116or752·2827 ---
CondonlMlums
Unfwftishe-d 3425 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Bachelor CONDO vacant,
S500 t m o Newport
Beach 978-0423
Spacious lbr, avail the
1st. Pool. jac, club hse
close lo So Coast Plaza,
Adulls . S400/mo Call
&44-8(M8
m o n e y f a s t $250 deposit. Avail tm·
< 714 )S.Sl -0786 med. ~&W &i 983-7800. ._...._;:;;=======-~)~ 1 2000
Apw l:wwb Fwftl•d
ut of County 3 BR, 2 sty, Back Bay orthwood Model bowie • • ••• ••• •••••••••••••••
2 st.ry, 4 Br, 2t,.; Ba 2SOO loltoo I.a.cl 3706
A~SFORREHT
H.B . NB . Costa Mesa
Something for Everyone
Bach lo 4 Br. Unfum
Apts. Certain locations
ofrer . Pool . i>pa ,
r1replace. laun room,
beamed cell1ngs. garages, all built-ins
Garden & Townhouse
design
TSL MGMT. 642·1603
CorGMcWMcr 3122 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Avail. April lat. 2 Br 2
Ba. with sUDdeck. Close
t.o beach. No peu. 1700
mo 67~01..24 Jackie.
13SS E/Stde, l BR. gar.
Lst + l&.$t + SlOO No
pets 2 BR also avl,
541 5331 : 646-2325
BEAtll'IFUL 3 Br. 2 Ba
Mesa Verde 1600 sq ft. 2
frplc, lndr y hook-up.
patio. dishws hr. dbl e ncl
gar Adults, no pets.
$650.~4400
BEAUTIFUL 2 Br. 2 Ba.
Mesa Verde. HOO sq ft
fplc, lndry, patio, dla
hwshr. encl gar, Adultr.,
no peta. S:SOO. S40-«00.
Large 3 BR 2'• ba, with
garage. Kids & pets
welcome I mi le to
ocean S600 mo. 964 2937 ----
rvlne 3844
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
lrvine/Woodbndge 3 Br
111. Ba. All amenities in
cld S5eO mo 640-7690.
Orangetree condo· \bdrm
+ loft, ale. wash/dry.
inc. water, tennis, pool.
jac. Adults no pets kSO
955·3426. -----
Lra 1 Br. Adult. Near ..,.. leach 3141
h I 11 II pd ••••••••••••••••.••••••• s ope, poo ' a ut t h the r f th• 11184 Monrovia 5'8·0336 a c sur rom is
4000 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lagl.ID8 Beach Motor Inn.
98S No. Pacific Cout
Hwy, Laguna Beach.
Daily, Weekly, Kitchen
available. Low winter
rates. 494-5294.
CdM, nice. P rivate en·
trance. patio. Furn, util
Incl $325/mo 759·1363. 714 641 07fi:I
27117 Br 1~tol St
Costa ~h·,a, {'A
,,..,.., 2550 condo. Pool & ,acurn
••• ••• •• •• ••• • •• • • • • ••• S8SO. 631~99~. ask for s i r. $950/mo. SS1·8731. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Dix oce,an vu. 1 Br. newly
decorated , w /gar
Adults 1675/mo. Ask for
Faye. 840-9990
-------__ beaut. 1 Br Condo S800
2Br, lba fou.rplex. Water mo. lst, last + sec
2 rms. pvt bath Nr. So
Coast Plaza St75tmo
Coupit' or female For
m fo S40-262S COSTA MESA
7 Units. Bread & Butte r
That·s what these units
are referred too Ap
prox ~ acre. conve
nienl lo all stores. 3 2Br
& 4 lBr S2SO,OOO Good
terms Possible trade
M cNas h Realt \'.
642 1334, 642-6578 eves
INVESTOl'S
DIUGHT
2NEWCONDOS
OH LOT
Live ln one.
Renlor sell
the other
641-!_99 I o_qt.
DUPLEX
2 br, 1 ba. 2 car gar,
separate fncd yard.
great cond Sl29,SOO Call
968-~
3 houses o n I lol.
Riverside. SI0,000 dn
Prin. only. OCL Invest
ments 7141851 1723
Duplex, Costa Mesa .
2Bdrm ea Assume Isl owe 2nd Sl53,50o
640-.MSS
San Clemente Duplex. a
yrs old. 1 blk lo pier.
s harp 2Br, 2Ba ea
$50.000 dwn. S230.000
DCL Investments <714 l
851 -1723
I 0% DWH CASH
FlOW
20 un1ta, R>vers1de .
S360K, Owner /Agt.
~or 673-6720.
OCIAMVllW
DUPLEX
Drastic reduction on
brand new Balboa
duplex. lat owners 200%
depreciation. Great ren·
tal area. 100 feet from
beach. Lar1e 3 bdrm. 3
bath phn 2 bdrm, 2 balh.
Owner will aaalst in
flnaoclnl. $425,000.
l{t 'l I I 11II0-~ Rl ·. tlty
I,,.; 1 : ;111 I
Hice Bldg 17000sq ft 1 Ruth or Steve oodbtidge Townhome,
2 story, 2bdrm, 1'1ba,
pool. ten nis &i lake
S62S/mo 759 0115
+ acre ~md . Jus1 on -----Hw y 5 Oceans 1 t1 i: Next t.o backbay-1900 sq
S250.000 will handle 1 ft condo, 4 Br 3 Ba. m1c
433-1723 Bkr wv. xlnt kitch • appl .
Beautiful San Diego 48
3br units All amen1t1e!I
Sub1ect to 1031 exc Prin
r 1ples please S550.000
will handle l 433-1723
Rkr
utof State Properly 2600 ...•.•..•....••........
O A scemc Orelo(on <.:oasl
Eleclnc1ty, fenl'ed. out
standing v 1~w atTeM11
hie. owner 492 2'199
Wt\ldbey Island. Wash
Newer split level homt•
at Useless Ba) with view
or Mt Rainier & Pu1tl'l
Sound Sandy beiH·h .
golf. pool. tennis court &
much more 70' on rresh
waler canal 197 .500
<.:all u:; at c206>321 ·S464
MARINF. l,ANI>
REAL'l'Y
onches, Forms.
Gro•~s 2700 .....•...•.............
l!I Acres . leveled. 1rn11:al
ed farm land Xlnl for
mo bile homes or re
s1dent1al lots AdJ to (·tty
watf'rf gas. 3', m 1 west
of 4th ave on 8th St.
Yuma , A r izona
S2S0,000. 7141497 1982
•al &taff b~ 2800 •••••••••••••••••••••••
oblle Homes-Lakeside
Big B~ar Lake or
Ocnfront Laguna Heh.
terms or trade 499-3816
••••••••••••••••••••••
tenrua, pool, jac., sauna. oodbridge, lovely lake
elc _!850· Bob 675-4277 _ f r o n t . 2 b r , d e n .
2 Br with stove, front ai Sl,000/mo (2131790-7492
back yard. gar .. crpts &
drps. SS50 mo. 675-0935
Easts1de. lge 3 br, 2"'1 ba,
2 sty. dbl gar. 2 patios.
1mmac S700/mo Bent.
agt, 642-8235.
Duplex I bdrm. 1 bath
plus uvm11: area. Private
entrance & patio area
Stove & refng incl SlSO
mo 787'A• Joann S l
963-8182. Do not disturb
tenanl.!'I
Ea11ts1de Redecorated.
28r. ram rm frplc,
garage, fenced yard
646·6813.
3248 ••••••••••••••••••••••
ceanfml 1Br. trlr +
cabana, deck, pvt bch.
fum/unlum, adlt.s on!)'
S7SO mo. ~3816
CEAN SIDE OF
HWY.
3br , 2ba wlpool Year
r o und le~s e S1 200
4~· 7S64 or 497 l ~I
•wporl leach 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••
ewport Shores Canal
front 4bdrm. 3ba, ne wly
decorated. 2 blocks to
ocean. 962·6683
DonaPoi..t 3226 Br 2 Ba large yart1 , 2
••••••••••••••••••••••• car garage S745 mn
1900 sq ft. 3bdrm + den.
2ba, island lutchen. lrg
mast.er suite. dbl gar,
fenced yrd, very clean ,
children ok, no pet.s. 1st
+ last + S500 sec
$700/m o 955 2473
8am-5pm
675-~
SPACIOUS.-..1.
TOW .... OUSE
New 2 br, 2'"' ba. Back
Bay loc Gar , pvt. patio
1895 mo Susan 957-6507.
540-7238
fountain V•y -3234 :i Bdrm. frpk, walk to
••••••••••••••••••••••• bearh, pool & tennis
Giant 2sty 4br. Huge S725 Agl. 760-9278
fenced yrd $850. Ref req. ---
Call Bonnie 963·7881 or
Beth 962-2675 ---•••llMJtoll lffch l2 40 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT CREST 2 Br
+ den. 211• ba. S72S
LUXURY VIEW CON
DO. 2 Br, 2ba. Security
bldg. $1250/mo
HVH cualom 3 Br. 5ba
w/pool. Proreaaionally
decorated. Compl
ocean/bay view. S2SOO
LIDO ISLE. 2 Br. l ~• ba
home. Yearly SJ200/mo
Charming &: private,
Jbdnn, lba. lufh quah
ly. laundry . 57S/ mo
Yearly No p~t s
(213)~1051. ------
3 BR2b1 S7SO/mo.
Property Mart
64G-9019
incl S47S/mo. wk dys 772·nl_._ _
ca II 7S9-4175
I Br I Ba . S320 per mo.
lalboaPeNinsula 3707 -------
Avail 4.7 US9 Elden
ll C 1s t . last & Sl7S
security. Agent 957-0701
by appt.
Newly decorated 2Br.
2Ba, duplex . On Cliff
Drive Miles or white
water view Adults, no
pet.s.1675. 494·7891. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1 Br. Carpets, drapes,
stove, refr1ge Uttls pd
Utensils for 4 S375
675-0035.
One bedroom and den.
Two baths. K ey t o
pr ivate beach. Excellent location. Great ocean Near new 2Br,2Ba. frplc,
view No pets. one adult laundry rac, new crpls.
only. $695 mo. Yearly drpg & painl. Encl gar.
I Bdrm. North End Walk
to beach. lnclds uttls
499-U26
LocpllO Hlla 3150
l $475. Adults, no pets.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l~e~ase~~· ~Ag~en~t~. ~76().~0~1~89~. ~I 673-2U 3 & 76().6782 SUS CASIT AS I· ---_ __ __ 2 br. 2 ba End unit condo .
Fumlbr apt.S325&up 3br, 2"'aba, 2 (rplcs. Leisure World. Furn or
••••••••••••••••••••••• CostaMHo 37 24
Small bachelor apl with u f u 6 I Encl gar Adults. no atrium w/waterfall, dbl n rn. mos. year
2 0 N Bl refng So of PCH. S275 lease 631 1650 a ft 6 pets. 11 ewport incl ult! 760·1813 aft gar. adults/no pets loc Collect 213/332 4233
548 4968 btwn 8 & 5PM 6pm in Npt Hgts area 283 d a y 5 Knox St S850 /m'o
~ASA DE ORO
AU. UTlLITIF.S f'AIU
Compare before ycru
re nt. Custom des11o:n
features Pool. BBQ.
cov 'rd garage new
furniture, surrounded
with plush landscap1nlo(
Adult living at its be!lt
No pets
I Bdrm fum1shed S420
2 Bdrm rumished S480
36SW Wilson.642 1971
Stunn in1t l.ge 1 bdrm
garden apt, pool ret
area $375 710 W 18th St
Bachelor lbr. & unfurn
2br, S385 S485. tennis.
sauna. 1ac. volleyball.
pool, adult!>. sorry no
pet.I SS7-0075
S335 Mo Deluxe Mob1h.'
Home Mature Adults
No pets. Quiet, se('ure
1991 Newport Blvd
646-8373
Spacious I Br w 1 garage. 675-1458 for a ppt. LocpllO M~
laundry fac1I. S57S. Ask -•••••••••••••••• •••••••
3852
for Faye. 640-9900 Xtra lit 3Br Jba Cpts, Lrg !bdrm. Iba, avail,
drpg, range, nr new 2660 April 15. $4 35. Pool
Elden Open Sat Sun Tem 49S-L513. 496·4040 2br, Iba + gar, adults. no
pets Avail April 15,
S6001mo 551 6822 .
~. 548-4391 -------H~wpori hoch 3169
640-1138. 640-7710 Lr g bachelor. good
---locale, pvt patio, adults,
2bdrm, Iba. pool , deck. M9W.19t.hSt. S2SO.
beam ceilings, adults. -------
no pel s Lse $530., SPACIOUS lbdrm. palio.
673-0473 adult/no pets nr bus &
--• StOl'ft S3SO 645· 7836
Costa Mfto 3124 • •• • ••••• •••••• •• •••• •• l.arge newer 1 Br patio & garage. Adults. no pets MEWLY DECOR.
I Br. gas pd, encl gar.
d/waaher, pool. Adults.
642-5073
S375 64S-SS77
NEW BREED APTS.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
PAii NEWPORT
COUHTRY CLUI
LIVltiG
Singles, 1&2 bedroom
apts. & townhouses
From SSlO 644-1900
Ocf'anfront for Winter
Rentals. Furnished &
unfum. Broker. 675-4912.
NO FEE! Apt. &i Condo
rentals. Villa Rentals.
87~912 Broker
2 Ir. I Bo Apt
Newly decor Cf as pd,
en c l gar . pool ,
d /washer. Adults
642·5073
l Ir Townhone
Newly decor. gas pd .
encl gar . pool .
Bach.S31S Frplc, rec
room. pool, jacuu1.
enclosed garage. Gas &
water pd. Adult. no pets
393 Hamilton . C .M
645·4411 2 br. l lAI ba + gar. Hoag
3126 Hosp area. nu decor.
open hM Sat 6: Sun 11-3,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4238 Hilaria Wa y,
2 br , balcony , D.W . SSOO/mo.830-S87S
Gentleman. non-s mo.ker.
employed, over 40
548-7586 ------
Ho ... Mohft 4100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Balboa Inn oceanfront
Low WU'ller rates. Daily
or weekly Kitchenette
S90 & up. 675-8740.
SEA LAii
MOTEl
•Weekly rentals now
avail. •S98 a nd up
•Color TV •Phones in
rooms
2274 Newport Blvd C.M
646-7445
Bachelor Room 2306 W
Oceanfront. Newport
Beach
Kitchen &i Bath
S280 mo + security dep
673-4154 -------
Vocation R...W. 4250 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Large Big Bear Cabin
Pool table, color TV. 2
fr plcs. sips 14. 545-6916 -----On the beach ' 2 Br 2006
W. Oceanfront. CLower
Unit) Wetkly or Mon
thly 759-1677 ----------
NEW PALM SPRINGS
Fully rum coodo. Ten.
ma, pools. Wknda, S~.
Wltly,S300.~171
MAMM<Ylli 1 Br condo
nr Wl8 7-8, avail now.
760-um. 548-B<XM
2Brapt.Adults.nopets. d /wa s her. Adults
Btwn 7am & 6pm Inquire 642·~!_ __
clean. coin laundry le
wshr, gar, nr ocean.
493-51163 aft. SPM. llST V ALUI Bia Bear Sun. -Sum. 3br
17911) Rochester <rear l Spacious 3 Br Duplex
H~~ IHch 3740 S4t0. Pool & laundry fac. 548-9556 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Versa.Illes comer pen· 2ba 21ty. lyr, frplc, walk
VACANT thoule2Br2Ba.comm to aki. US /night
2bdrm duplex, frplc, pool/ Jae., wat room. 675-CXiOO.
carport, bit-Ins. $490. 1700 mo.675-3787 ----------•••••••••••••••••••••• 3106
bllts to ocean. Elegant 2
bdrm, ram rm & den,
<S7SO mo) Plush crpts,
2t,.; ba. cedar &i glass.
Dbl car pvt gar, fully
malnt. yd. Adults, no
pets. lnqulre at 527 18th
St. 714 /960·633 1 o r
116(). 5112. Waterfront Homes. Inc, S37S/up l-2 bdrm, pool,
Brand new house for dis· Realloni 631 ·1400 jac, edit. 18992 }o~lorlde, 9'e8tiB.AU
831·3126or493-2252. ----------•Stepa to bch, lbr, l)ome.
H C ute 2 Br . l B a ., rentwkly/monthly
ute Jbr, avail April 1 c rlminatlns family. 3 ~~~~~~~~~~! H B.842·2834orll42·3172
June 13 S6SO/mo 209 bib to ocean 3 Br. 3 ... IWPORTl••cH Bac~-lo-r a-pt-. util pd, 1
Gamet.1.f61·0893 B f " ..,.. a .. am. rm. Totally 1 ~ bloclla to the ocean blk lo bch/pier. S130 art
9'boa ft•••• JI 07 upgr..s.d • cml.omlzed · beach. Three bedroom Spm (16().2SS1
•••••••••••••••••••••• 11200 mo. 13J-Ol4S two bath home. Ye41rly LCHJW'Cl-..Cll .S/41
BR + garage + patio. 1-A_M_l_Pll __ . ------lease. Flrtt a nd laal. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••
l7SO+ dep. for period Villa he. a Br. Atrium, S tOOO per mon t h Studio. lux. spa, TV,
from Apr 22 thru June WllDll • ..-. apa. 1 ml 831·7~. BKR. maid service, phone.
15. 2U/446-6247 ~trrlmo. 9U-7489. Stepa t.o the beach, lge 4 StOO/wk 499-2227
_,.,..leech l 169 1 Brdrm den J 1 br dplx, 2.,... ba, patio, 2 w aterfront , p rl vat e
ArAITMINTS
Beautifully landacaped
carden apta. Patios o r
decka. Pool A: 1pa. Heal
paid, covered parking.
Adult.a. no peta. 1 or 2
per.onaOK.
l Bdrm S400
2 Bdrm 2 Ba ISOO
2250Vanguard Way
S40-9112JS or 548-2408
.......... hec .. 3140 fireplAlce. 1ara1e In lov-673-1833
••••••••••••••••••••••• ely Newport He l1hts . ----------
THI WHll'R.I TIH SS35. 87M:Mt ...... to S.... 4Jt0
Luina·y Adult iaila at af· ••••••••••••••••••• .... fordab~ IM01. 1.2 • J Crou from bch. Ls brl1ht Movtns? Avoid de~a
Br. Well decorated. 2Brlba,pertfW'ft.D /W, fr~ Uvln1 eapeftl8!
Olympic alle pool, Ulhl· pat.lo. '850/yrly, Ml4283 Profeaalonally al nu
ed tennla cowt, Jacuul. lt71.
park Uk• landacapln1. Newport Ket1hu O\aples HOUSIMATIS
Molt beautll\aJ bld1. In 2 Br . l Ba. Adulta. no 832-413'
H.B. peta. $485. mo. 1st, laat ---------
Prom ... 141-0819 del}Oalt. 517 Bolaa. Days * SMre4 U. ... •
••••••••••••••••••••••• + • ac, qu et sty, lmmac. SlOOO yrl.y. bf>ach. security, pool. 2 ,_....C_.. Flew arbor V. homes. 48r cul.cfe.SK auper loc by 673-2507 Wt have aneral unite In fam rm., 2 al.Ory. xlnt central put with lake ai Br. fully fum. Luxury
the Dallu, Ft. Worth cond. Avail S·l. Tel : boraebaclt rldln&. 3 Br 2 Ba, Incl. rt1frig, Mobile Home. $850 mo.
2 HUGE Bedrooms In
1uper location. Fully
carpete d , bullt·lnl,
1round floor. Adulta. no
peta . ._ mo. Apply Apt
t 5U W. Wll aon .
Ml-647'7.
63l·a20, Evea • Wlrnds CounMlon to penonally
Mf,50U. sel~ your compatJffle rmmte to ault your
Uf•lyle. Sbared·LIVlnl m DoveJ" Dr Sult.St NB aree·a rapidly srowlng 144._,, S750/m o . No peta. fenced yrd, S750fmo yr· M2·1802or'75-054.S
c~~lfy~·· Gr••t
1
l
1
1n· 1-------._~ ___ e_v_a_. ____ ly.Al\.813-336.S ...___.. __ ._ 376t
•-,.: "" " m...i. fum 2 Br 2~ Ba, ·-.. ..:.:....:...;..::::........:._;_.----""r-" • .._.. _., ) .,. -..... ...................... .
ln.., ran~et. n. on Y· ahort term OK. Price lllMYt»SW Walk to beach. Beaut 558-_, ne 0 • $950. 673 1824 or H...._. 1242 Ne....-Crett 4 br con· DI.JI .. Oceanfront. Wkly · .. ...,... • Eutn-, Summer, Now •sELECT • I f'JJ.5311 ••••••••••••••••••••••• do. ram. rm, dlo. rm. 2·4 Br. Prime toe . T' rm. 2ba, alqle •tory pool. \ennll. SI 100. 17s.m 3
-PROPERTIES: ~oZi.~~:th~~~~~:m~ ~i!':.'T..~rto ,:= .... _L_u_•_u_r_y_O_c_e_a _n-fr_o_n_t
Jutt remodeled. $1650 mootb at St'75. Avail SF.LL ldlt Item• with • w-i.t~ 2 "B Co
Wll:STBA Y APTS
New aant.n apta, patlot,
pool, •P• Adulta, no
petl.
2Br,Ula $415
• 01tllwHlltll & 880 S
• Poot & lie< Room
• GarOtft l~nd1CIOl119
• J09 IO hacll & SlloOS . . .
q f\ r NVllH iNMF NT
' I j ' \ '." • • I I I ~
OCIAMNOMT
UHIOl a 8drm.. 2 Ba. Duplu
UPltaira. 2 car 1ara1e
w7a'*> opmw, waaher p f liclrYerlncld. Avail. 4·1. ro . M wlahea to ahr
TSL llGllT. Ma.t.803 YOUR NB/CM houae·b" condo. al.., 131· lZlt
a Br. a Ba. Condo on <Ma1'>
Serl thlnp fut With Dally
PUol Want Ada.
/{/11 Call (1
u ) _.....,. or g r. mp.
mo to mo. Bill Grundy, 4 · .... 840-Ztlf Dally PUot Cla .. lfled furn. locld llaeiu.
'75-tlll. af\Alr 7pm. Ad. llG58TI, ~'7M.
21r,2Ba .., .. ,a
•W. Wlllon, Al·6Sa
~ .
Newport Bay. P,_U,e --------locadaa. LeaM or Op-Funt '°"I wtnler ,..,
lion to purehau. 1/l1·11H , tioo mo, "'s • u, 0 t "'0 • l9 u I OC9Ullde Balboa llvd ...-. E••· In Nwpt. Bob fl'S.UOI.
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~·Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/1'hurlday, Mlioh al; 1111
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' LA WA iiiiiiWt --ton· melli • ,....ui ~· c:1.;.~·~ o-.llbaM«Mula1 llovlqT Tbe St.a"tna Paindal • Papertaa 11 Prol . ..me. to Uff pou SPfall. tton, 111~1. P~Uo1, nmitao...... · tat. Call Au.:~r Ad fl•lable~.10trua. Colllle8tudm&a llovtaa ynuper. ' tJme • mooe1. Newport
S
BlocUr Brlck. Lie d. 1 t4ll MM100 M 1'ra -Co. bM pown, luu.red •1ua P1dtk R.I!. 965-_, . 1J1 Ps "' A • .,o«MS-llJI toa?•v•I•-~..,..._ taU., ' • · HOl111'£LEAHINO u1ne aood urvlce. ..... ---&'•"'' •1ou RlllOV"'L' ....... t• ...,..,, MMlt-'--, lMta.ll QUAUTY Ill.Al COIT. Depend1ble very t1T134·418 Licea••·,..... ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• .,. "-CaJIJtr " • co_.... • outltta, re1Dodell GEN INT/ICX'T fNITL I • / f41-IG'7 ..................... ..
Ta Id ••••••••••••••••••••••• upb, srldift1.1ot clean· 141·Hll, IU· 1154 PL U II BI M 0 8 t 0 :,:",,.;;''· llary Nancy Wood. brick, concrete. QU~;!.~f~:::.o •,_a11 CUSTOlll.NTERIOR up, aaw, bNak 6 re· WheelerlCLadrlc.lnc. SllALLau:t'US4lll ' THE"llOVIN·llAN"ta FrH .. t. 1uu work. Vl.H,llC. $4.l·llt30 D-._ '!-LY CARPENTRY mcwe. Hrly or bld. O EL H......... Careful, courteous • P1ul T8M715. HARBOR ROOFING
._.. B)'Jay M2.a809 541-lill D. • ICl'IUC H••-••...... .. ....... ;;: ........... •Cheap. Pleau call p•-T~ MOT · lodm./Rttld./Comcn. •••••••• .... ••••••••••• Ex•cuT1v• wlll IU·lJZI -New• recovers. Repair Cupeotry. plurnblnl • CWld c... QuU'1 WGrtl I t HARDWOOD "" "" ••••••••••• ••••• • • •• • • SaYICI electrical. Lie. conlnC· ....................... Uc.40014&. (Ji.a;:,~:.s7 QeanedA~RS ~· •int refa, ex· ,........,,.,.,.... EXPERT PIANO tunln1 ipeclallillatay·bUIY DlllCTO.Y lor Gene M2.aN7 UC.CHILDCARE AQyU az,.ga1s perd.M'1'5407,6M·l.241 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'repalr.MembtrPTO. prlca.ReUable.548-CXH2.
DOITJllOW I · ' · MyeoronadeUhr REMODltlJNO me, .A 1.-Ta Fln• ext/lnt paintin1 by Ml-Ml.I Tiie
All'9rS•dra Remod·Rtpalr-Rell1ble botnt 171-2945 t:lectricalWork H... .. ..................... Richard Sinor. Ltc. Ina.
You.rD.allyPllot Fenca, 1atea. docks, SJI f~IC Real~./Commerclal •••••••••••••••h•••••• TAXESAND Tryme.831·4410 C24hral
Service Directory bolMI, etc. Al 875-8294 • UHOCM Haul, cleanup, C!Oacrete lNV!JJTlll!!NTS l\apnMftt.aUve Hot lunch. .M. Chril· ,..__ removal. Dumplrucll. Tax Jnp shelt.en TD lnter/Exter/Refinl1htna.
,.....,./ . .,.., .•.•...................
••••••••••••••••• • ••••• Tiie lnlltalled. all klnd1, Nettptkhes 6 texture• auaranteed, Nlfa. John "-..t. Hl-l 4Jt _•_a._188'7 _____ _ 64Z..U11 ext JI I C.,.,..S.,.la Ua11Preachoo1.""·M23 ~ Qulcluerv.842.7838 llr Leonard Ml·tSU 1' celllnp/wall~per.Lic. "!!!!!!!!!!!!!' !!!!!!!!!!!!~ 1• •. ••• •• •••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • ' ' ' Caln fr Soni. 898-5105 :: Sh1mpoo • atHm clean. C ..... Senolc" CRPI'. UNO. WOOD Tree/1brub trlm. con· Ina ce Acc12 ,... Color brilhtenen, wht ....................... lnatalJed/repaJred. Llc. crete removal, cle•n· ....................... RALPH'S PAINTING ED'S PLASTERING
Cutt.om Ceramic Tile
New· Remodel· Repair
Free eat. Chuck, 494-5887
....................... crpta 10 min. bleach. NewpOlt Cleanlna S.rv #-..0. Gre1'99-2'52 upt. Free eat. 567·12"11 ,.,._lwwwe Lie. Int/Ext. Low Rates
BOOKKEEPING Hall, Uv .-din. rm• '15; C a r P • t • U P h o I • A An ..._ p bl ~ A 1 .. Free Eat. 964·55416
All Types lnt/ Ext ~ FREEEST Hwti;t•leoch
Co. lrTAXS!:RVICE av1nnt7.50; couch StO ; Houaecleanlnc. Win· ••-•-v HAUUNG/CLEANING ro ema . ny r la, Reu.rales. df.0813 chr ~. Ouar. elim. pet dow• Hardwood fin.••••••••••••••••••••••• TreetrlmltPalnUn1 SR·221• low monthly OAVE'SPAINTING INT./EXT.plaater odor. Crpt repair 15 yrs 181·9Z'T7 • V£RY LOW PRICES• or?? Ray, 964--4278 rat.a. Pirkellna 648-3815 Servtna area t ye an pakhlnl. 30 yra exp. Ceramic. New-remod,
reu. rata. 675-2214 At1•• exp. Do worlt myself. Landaupe malnt·clnus>t M Moat reuooable Nut5'5-2t77 (Paul) ....................... R fi 531-0 o C ..... w;tor Georae,549-201.S Hauim.•Du.mpJoba. ..-y lnaured,Uc'd. 780-7301 _____ ......;.. __ --! Drlveway1, parltina lot e •· 1 1 ....................... AlkforRaftdy. ....................... P1w •t I TNe 5-rTke
repairs, aealcoallns We Care Carpet Cleaners Coostruct.ion-AJI types l.andlcapinc·Cleanups IMJ.au7 BRICKWORK: Small Palntln1: Comm 'I, In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
S.S A1phalt 648·4871 Steam clean & uphols. 20ynH~xp. Free est. T1"trlmmln1·Hauling Jobi. Newport, Costa du1lrial. Realdentlal. Holleman Plumbln& Tree/Shrub trim, re·
Uc'd. work cua r . Truck Lie. tD&.W. 645-5973 Main~ance. Free est. Ha..de•h1 Meu. Irvine, Refs. Free Eat. Low ratea Sales·Servlce-Repalrs move, cleanups. haul
••rsl""'9 ·~····················· Llcenaed child care. Nr
So. Cat Plaza. Blrth·4
yrs. Day & swinf shifts.
~7-2140.
BABYSITnNG my home
llon·Frl, d•ys, ages 4 &
up. Hot lunches provided
H.8.area.840-4109
mount unit. 545-3716 Amie. 548-8414 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67$-3175 673-0737 FreeesUmales 562·7183 Concrete dirt, etc Jim ----------i Drywal Want a REALLY CLEAN 831-4530 BUY WHOLESALE ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIKE'S LAWN CARE HOUSE? Call Gin1bam MASONRY" TILE QUALITY PAINTERS Pool 5-rTla, lepeln ---------
Thru Carpet Installer. Drywall SpeclalUt Monthly service. Trees Girl. Free est. Ms-5123 Our Speclatty. We solve Bargain rates thru 4/8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wlftdow C~
Qual. & prod. New & re· Ii cleanu""'. 548-2049 yourproblemi. 63l·2004 Free est. 848-5684 Swimmin& Pool Service ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free est. Also carpets mod. IJ3811&4o4. 532-S549 ,.... Expertite bouaekeepins. FRPLCS Reliable. Repairs/Acid "Let'IbeSunshine ln" laid & repaired. Jay, Yard malntenance. Tree equip & 1uppllea buill, refaced, WINTER RATES Wuhea.Reai.S57·2'783 CallSunshineWindow
754·6.SSO. DRYWALL-Our Ex· trim & removal fumllhed,lruatworthy& brlclt/atone veneers, 30 lnl./ext.Painling Cleaning,Lld.548·8853
NoSteam/NoShampoo pertl.le. We can bandle Cleanups. Free est. dep641·4970 yraexp.893-3743 Cleanout.s·fastservice P.0 .lo•ltwtalt .
Stain specialist. fast yourproblems.63l·2004 752·13'9 EXPERT BRICK & 536-9801 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w:n~owbliEJ'sperl -
d F .... t 839 1 ..... ., MRS. CLEAN MAKES IT M•...,......,. Small jobs •. Irvine/Newport po1l of· w n ws. n . screens ry. r_.es · · "°" S.ctrkat CLEAN-UPS/LAWN GLEAM! Homes, apu, --" • Colleae Studenl·Exp'd. flee boxes unavailable? & mirrors. Reas. Depen·
Ce'._. Acomtk ••••••••••••••••••••••• M a i n t e n a n c e . office. Carpet. 646·2240 rRepal.nf ... ~1 ~lc7,.!a7c1nas. Int/ex. any job for le11 ! Rent . a . Box fr om dable. Free est. Gene ••• :::?•••••••••••••••• ELECTRICIAN-priced Landicape e 1·..., . ..._,, ...,. 074 Call Alex 851·9371 privately-owned poalal 545-022S
••••••••••••••••••••••• AcouaUcCeillngs right, frtie estimate on Freeest. 642.9907 ROBIN'SCLEANlNG Mo-'--service. THE MAIL ----5-T----1---•11t.au100EUMG +customhandtextun·n,, largeorsmallJoba. Service-alborouahly .. ..,. Painllng,lnt/ext.Renlals SUITE. 549.4733 for --: ~ "" ., "' 9 H-...o. ••••••••••••••••••••••• our spec1'alty. Prompt. Take u-to r•lax and Resld./comm No job Lie. Bl944. 532·S549 Lie. #3116621 67.rv35 wwwpRC91 clean house. 540-0857 rata/servlces. ._ " tool II 6312004 ________ __, ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.....,, Student will move you al Seaslde Painting Greg lhopathome. lt'a1lmple georsma · · Classified Ads are the Top Quality, Dependable HOMEIM~ROVEMENT 'tsoof.:u~~! reaa. rates. 752·1493, 536-4806 · 'PoalBoxOCAlrport with Dally Pilot
Remodeling, cabinetry, answer to a successful Service. Reu. Rates. 18 Remodehn1-0ddjoba Janlce'aRanedy Ann 848-3'T1'7orM7·3309 •STEVENS PAINTING Newport 549·2217 Clualfied Ada. And If
carpl!ntry Quality garage or yard sale! It's yrsexperience.531·5055 28ynexper. 979-2265 67"""'1~ • ABC MOVING, Exper Int/ext. Free Itemized youl have somethln1 lo work. ref l.ic. Call a better way to tell more Classified Ads. your one· le J'"""... prof. low ratea, quick Make your shopp1n1t se I, call a friendly
SJ'T-4837. people! stop shopping center lasstlled Ads 64_2-5678 l Classified A~s 642-5678 careful Mrvlce. S52·0410 est Nea~~~Y work. ~~~C::~~:s~~/1~ ~~s~aily ~~ed Ad·Viaor at
lt•ntahtoShore 4300 OffiuRental 44001ndudriallt...tol 45001...-.s Moehp)t1,Tnnt Lott&Fo.d 5100 PenoMk 5l50HelpWWllhd 7100HetpW..ted 7100
•••••••••••••••••······I••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OpipiortwNty 5005 D.ect.i SOJS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Father & son will share Small offi ce : 19 27 $~up. 1640' lndua'ltOf •••••••••••••••••'••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.o9l, Santa Ana & Monte AC C 0 UH TI HG AlllOllC
3br dup nr bch Mor F Weatcbff Or N.8 . Good ~~c~: UllOI Redondo Cr I need8peopletohelp run Secured Short Term R.E Viila. CM. Male cal COVER GIRL CLHK IMSTitUCTOI
dya 642·Q'7, eve673-5191 loe $l50per mo 631·0900 P ~unl_~h _842·2834 my weight control butt· loam·fut dttiAiona on grey wl blk stripu AU. The JoUy Roser Inc. haa Exp. only. Newport
hm to shr 2br 2ba im· Offkerwareho~-; nr OC MESA ~e:s Y ~all ~ 1 ~t~e~~ complex aituallons-be REWAROM5-7804 ~~C MC/~ISA :~.U:~!·l~v:~r '::.~!o~ Beach area. 675-048&.
med. Resp. no pets A1rport.l800 sqftoffices (213)431 ·5751 . ev es pleasantly aurprised. Found . March 20 cash accounting dept AIDIS
$212.SO + utll aft 5, & warehouse Offices INDUS TRIAL 7·9pm (714 )840.5401. call 76(H)7U Female Tabby Kitten. for a person who has 5: 30 to 11 ·30 Varied
549·1514 Chris ruu carpeted & aircond PARK I .. • -$85 ,000 2nd TD. 18%. 67C~M7,.....Call & Identify. • FOXY LADY. limited experience. but days. 11 :30·7 .30 Fri. &
A!l!lume 1'-'lyrs at $750 n•"""'" 3/yrs. 150.000 req ... ""'· Otrl'CALLONLY ia ambitious & willing to Sat. for retirement
3 Br condo SJC. Fem . l 1 0--riwNtly 5015 Own VISA MC learn. lyr. ex per pre· h M h
Pref. Pool. laund rm mo. or negolla e onger r;:::::.. er/ Agt. 54-4-0333 or Found, bUt ai wht. Husky om e . us l av e term w/ownr. M6-9900 711 W. I 7tt.. St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-6720. p u PPY . Ma le. v 1 c . * 972-1131 * rerred. Dul.lea include knowledge working with
Sl85+ l.AJ util. 493·6665 _ Costa Mesa, Calif. LOAN $500 or more. Dbl. toria/Placenlla 642.0724 auditing or sales reports, elderly people 642·5861
Ml30+ looking lo share MWPTl'ENltfSULA 642•4463 your money. Loan is S2'75,0002nd TD 25% int. --ATLAMTISMASSAGE some f iling, mail · -----
Y
our home or apt near E ff' . I secured by unprecedent· Due 18/mo. Secured 12M Found. Male Jnsh Setter, SP"' processing & general Applications being a l' xec o tees 111 eegant ed lllt in film financing equity. Owner /Agt A clerical work. Xlnt ceptedforfulltimeparts beachwitb Fi 96().9236 surroundings Across 1 ·187~ sq rt. Uml avail history. 714.957.4086 5'M-0033or673--8720 vie Newport Hts. area. Be pampered by 16 benefits & working con· driver/s ho p helper
--from City Hall. All sup· for ammed occupancy · 76().Clli99. Beaut. Girls. Open dltlons with a growing e k d
Female shr hse Eaatside port services available 1·2900 ;;q. ft. & 1·3700 sq Moe.y ta Lo.I 5025 TD for sale. 1150,000 at Found: Mixed breed Pup-l 0 AM · 4 PM 7 da y s . co Apply In person c tee a~~': e~ u~~e~s~~~
CM. l2SO + ulil avail From 22S lo 4750 sq.ft fL l.Ulll(sJ avail Apnl ~··•••••••••••••••••••• 173 int. Due 2 yrs. Sec. py,NptHtaarea. Phone&t.5-3'33 ~JollyRogerlnc ~1·81646-2'788afl6p~ 673-:m'.! l s l 2 Sl o ~a&e21Ya%ANNUALYIELO! by 135-0.000. Newport 842.1902 17042G1UetteA ve Irv ~~::::' &C~~dJ:~vet~·=
Roommate. Newport OFf1CR~•a11:11.10USR ~arehouses avail. for Several TD's for sale. Beach home with Sr. •• 714-~0331 ord l 13 ...,..
S I I
SI '"A s;n ii; immed. occupancy, 2000 Up to 21 ~% yield. 1 oUMOOO 768-0U4 Fund Setotk bl SPIRITUAL -rec a mus . ..,., per ho~ 2SO hrsl & asl SUI-LEASE & 2800 sq. fl. •33<-34• sq. Secured by prime Im· oan • . o : ey1 on II READINGS Accounting Clerk, part hour to start. Apply
NoCip ~9M9. 4 office•. reception. ft •Lea.ting office bn. proved properties :~.~~Ide Coal• lOam-1.0pm Fully L1c 'd time, A/P, AIR. PIR & 177n Main Street. Suite
Female rmmle wanted lo war~ w/lrg sliding Mon thru Fn 8·4 Sat M1n1mum investment AW119Cl .. llh/ -----492·72116 or 492-9034 1815 bank recs M ult1ple A. Irvine 545·&407
sbare "'2rent & utll No door, aec system. new 10.2. _ _ SSOOO For details con· P~/ Found: Bm M golden S Cammo Real. San boob for land develop-AROOTECT--
pets, non·smoker CdM paint, new crpt .. Redhill ~sq fl Office with lrg tact Mr Williamson Lott&Fo.d retr. mix, tas "Calta ... Clem ment Co B y O C
6-44-8377 nr Bnstol Avail after worit & storage area + L1c'd bkr Sawmill In· ••••••••••••••••••••••• blu eyes, NB. 7S9-0912 Airport. 957·8451 Protect Archiffct
Fem wanted 12ooimo + ~25~0_1;~_i_rl~~ Call ~~~~.,~rt SJOO t: M vestments ~·1295--~~.':'!!'!~ ... ~!.~~ Found large while -Do-; THE Accoun~ing Clerk Entry ~~~ =· """'".....,., Rates are DOWN ! th V I I .l. f 1., util 21 +. Huntington w1 rust ears 1c eve pos1 ion or cons· Archi ectural degree. eeach ~9147eves 17th STREET 8~ sq-fl wi2 loading Good money for very SCIAM4.£TS Seacllff, Hunt Bch Girlfriends cientJous . hard working exp required, exciting
-------Costa Mesa. 3 rm s uite. doors, 4. tu 28< sq ft. Irv large, medium or small 96().UI06 •ISCOITS• person wt congen1al NB architectural Ir an
Fem non·smkr 26 yrs bch A/C Plenty or parking. area. ~0330 Avaal 4 1 2nd T.D 'S Interest on· AMSWEIS ----group in NB. 10 key by terior design firm. H.O
condouUI pd. 1200 S.Ssq ft. 75<aq fl. -----ly Fut service BKR Found Abandoned. White Ha.e/Offlce/Ho+.I touch accurate typing & Alaoc. 640-82166
771-4550 x 16. 963·8891 Rea~mic_s 67S-6700 8 7 oo sq ft off 1 <: e + 855-9111 Window -Havoc -ma)e Cal. Free to loving * 759· 1216 * desirable. 640-5111. ask
---Bilae -Pollen -ho 173-7<117 l•--------E. Bluff t.ownhae. mature ~ E 17th St warehouse. Irvine In· Mot~•· Tnast ONE BONE me. . 24ffra Now Hiring for Acct1 Mncr -ASSIMILllS
M/F. Pool SZl~l mo . COSTAMEsA dustrial.Call646-IO«or Dftdi 5035 lfyou'reover60youbel· LOST : Small blue MC Visa AdministrativeSec'y I rvlne electronic• dis·
trlbutors nda. Cable As· aemblena. Soldering ex·
per. nee. ExceU. work-
lnl conds. & co. beneflts
Contact : Bob Tracy ,
Mon· Fri .• 8-5. S49·0954
640-43Cr> till noon & after FROM 75< SQ. FT. inquire Maros1 Co 16753 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ler stay out of dan<:e p a r a It e ~ t • V I c . F. V. firm needs well·
6 30 165-900 aq. ft. air cond Noyes. ~57·9266 Bk rs SGHter ~ Co cluba. Al that a1e It isn't Sunflower & Fairview. AMBER f I 'th rounded Individual to
_: ___ . _____ --office suites for immed. C~pi~ited. All types ;,'";:'al e~tale dancing, it'scommlttin& CM.!144-4617 (reward) COVER g~~~r fs :~w handle Gen. office
Fem to shr 2 BR lux ap . occupancy All utlls. N ea r d 0 w n t 0 w n investmetala since UH9. suicide, ONE BONE al a -w 1 t h T H E duUea, P/R, some book·
ocean vu, Nwpt Bch Janitorial serv .. conf. Riverside, lrg air cond SpKlattdlMJ lft time. ~~~~. 8~~~~·1:11,!~~~ GIRLFRIENDS' keepins. Typln& 80, die·
673-5425am/evs rm.,parlting.CallTerry office with 2000 aq ft of 2RdTDa l\.oatlrf...-d 5100 tapbone ; no s/h. Will Cressman: S54-9000. wareho~ space & over whl, very maUed male. PHONE FUN train on WP. Salary P'em. rmmte to share ---64Z..217 I 545·061 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Youna Shepherd mix. SAM 12PM Mc /VISA 4000..,,ftoffenced yard. _ br wn/bllt female. · · · commensuratewlthexp. ASSEMBLERS. We will
train. Appl~ 7A M . MacGregor Yachta, 1631
Pla~Ua. Colla Mesa
furnished condo w /2 Custom, executive offi ce. ""' (714) 636-6853 olhert. By So Cout 400 aq. ft . Pvt bath with Month·mooth or 1 year Moc::kent Fhlh MhJ. Newport Beach Anii'ul Call Mary 983-656().
Pina. No peta Must be shower Balboa Penln. leue S875 684· 1981. SINCE 1981 rftllMlla A1$ SM!t.er 644-as:le For a l her ape u tic ---------
neat" reap. $180/mo S~mo.642-4623 s~ 4550 llt"'2ndTDl,S50K·SlM + r....-masuae by a llc'd Advertillnl M5-25.20orS81-19M ._.._,. Owner/Non Owner AK f1££ Found: tiny black dos. therapistS25toallNEW
-Ofc with baths. shwr & 5••••••••••••••••••••.•• SFRl&Condol l9lL male, while che1t I& client• M/F 10-7PM
Fem. to 1hare w/same kitchen + adj 16x24 CloratgeMWarehou~el 5 fm Commercial &s lndualrial Cil: baclt feet. Somebody's r a -.7
...atADll'T.
AUTOMOTIVE
W AAIAHTT CUIK
· os • esa ava1 . or PETER DOB~ s H --· 35-45. ~ Br. 2 Ba. All 1torage gar. 548-9766 immed. occupancy 2000 pet. .A. ta. 751-0498. ---------
amenities. Mesa Verde 41 2800 ""· fl. 33' per iq 840-8018 673-9043 642 1671 Psychic reader Ir ad·
area. Donna S57·531S7 aft 1·2 Offlcn Ir Recep. I& fl. Call 642·4463 Mon. • LOST 3-24 camel colored vlaor. Put. present. 5:30PM. Storage. ~rime toe. Xlnt thru Fri 8-4. Sal 10.2. Want investor for Npt am/F do1 little while future. Love marriage.
Two entry level pos. Typlos 50wpm . ad .
clerlcal skill.a.
TIAFAC Din. -bldgaerv1ces 752-6550 . bayfront home. Give Lost : Re• a rd red feet. leather collar, vie health, character , busl·
Rmmu wanted to shr lge i...t ae r t well secured lat or 2nd n....____ F E of 19th 6 lrvine. IS31·3113 n•11. Readlnos 1'n all
0 I ff, f '"'orage gara,. or ren T 0 7 ,.1 uuuo:• ..... •· em. ar1 " .. condo nr S. C. Pl ua e Wte °C
1
1ce apac
8
e okr On Balboa P'en. next to · · Agt. 6 s.elv · cropped. • m ...... an1wers areas. For info & appl
Typlnc 50wpm. or-
ganizational skills a
mual. Ability to work
w i th various
perscnalilies.
No experience
neceuary. Muat be iood
with fl&u.res. Ugbt typ-
ln1 &s ten key by touch
Excellent workinl con· dltlont 4' frinse benefits.
40 houra per week.
Salary commensurate
with experience. Call
Brenda for an appolnl·
menl.
S I j · rent tlzens an " ""' Loll. Male cal. Orange" auna. poo • acuzz1 ·. fun zone (10'1'Jflx20'hf'l.1 2nd Tr u It 0 e e d to Kusb . 960-5826 or 675-7CM6.
Private bath. Available Building 301 E. 17th. St. 673-~3 673-3980. purchaae1 arran1ed. 982·*5 f~i~. ~~"!·.::~•Lo~~ ---------~~~·~al~2~·~27e:; ~l~o~t~~n P.;~fs~ Retltah~..t.d 4600 For details, call 96().1957 LOST: elk Cat "CASEY" "Punkln" Vic Mariners N;~~ ~~m=~h;~~in~o~:;
759-0080 (714)979-4200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bkr. F e m a I e ' v I c . & Santiago. Reward. Sl,000. Call 548-8028
ft.&a--11--t....1 4400 I••"'"• Rtfttal 4450 One bedrm apt, needed Find what you want in Macnolia/ AUaota Lthr 642..axl. ~--by professional female. o ii P'lot CI 'fl d collarreward~-9640 LOST M I SI C t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a y 1 ass1 e s. ---------: a e ameae a
Attractive man 38, clean.
safe, works nites. Days
free to enjoy your secret
pleasure. 675-2369 Early.
ACCTS SEttVICH
Exec. Secretarial avail.
Al least 2 yrs. gd.
secretarlalexper. req'd.
Typlnc 65wpm .
shorthand or speedwrll·
1nareq'd.
El I b,.. . H B For at.ore " office apace nice locale & price. ---------------------., quite dark w/whlle flea eganl pro .. g in . 966-0246 .-85< per sq.ft . lse. Red alreasonablerates. ---·-------""".:1'/\a•~-""' collar "Si or Tommy"
l <><XJ H.111 ~ M ljlvl I c. ""' ...,.. .... , '>40 '1100
Carpet.89a-135l 500to2700SqFt. Honest Reliable Fem w/2 (LJ~ :~·'f:J.~ ll..'l \l /,.....~~ 3/23MonllcelloTwnhaea MESA VERDE DR yng children needs lge o1 'f\lt:1'1<l, 10 Reward 557·1580 aft 27 yr old w·male Saglt·
l617Westcllff. N.8. Want PLAZA rm in bie w/yrd Jill 5pm/wlmda larlanwouldliketomeel OPCMISSIHGH/ AlltoS ..
financial in1t. 7000..f. l525 Mesa Verde E. C.M. 8'7S.l74l ,......___._~.,mm Vhll" -ftJ -L-'0-1-t-b_l_a_c_ .. _f_e_m_a-le female companion. I'm ~<>PC. Cerv .....
Mature 1tudent. seeking ··~ ~' 1 Himalayan Iona-hair .w i l h Inters l In drive!''I Uc .. ad. drlvlna I a'• r I e 11 C • d lst.f1oor.A&ent54l·S032. 54S.4123 ---------I ~"'"''~)"~\' """"' ~f;:,1 ,1 : " a self employed artist Requlrea valid Calif.
KOLLCIMTB NewportBeacb,$125 rm In hse /apt non . 0 J\U.~.r ,,..,.11,.7 youn1 cat. yellow eyes. Palmiatry,Numerolocy. rec., co. car provided. 1tr•l9ht ltll
MIWPottT aq . ft. New dlx office or smoker reap. Carla -U l~ t.O\~ 3/yra old. Vic Shore Mualc. Travel & having p BX relief • I lte .~ .__
Elepntexec:utJve1uite1 retail w/pvt bath. 549-3135 .JJ; · Shorecllff. Cd M aaoodllmelooklngfor ClericahkUla. ,...... .. , • .,.....
1 In preat11e location aecurity. a le, 800-2400 ·• Lei-780-11137. sal with a sense of ffl .. 111114 .....
With complete 1upport aq ft . 508 31st St. (next •~'----/.._•"t/ F-··-.o ....u b 1 humor&: aame intereata. Good co. benefita lnclud· Mlf'e Metort serv1cea ... f N l -"' .._ __ ~,,,,J """": •--rac et with Rand t lnl medical. dental. Ufe. 1 ••11 .___... 111....a to Ban .. o ewpor · All•c• ,......,.... '"' h--.... "Colby" 111. Vic y646-70l -__.. ....... 7141151·0881 Lld c l ~ .,.,, ----------1 Excell. career OP· W o annery area . ••••••••••••••••••••••• I yl~ ..hi I I T CdM •ti I 1*= • , • IC/ rv ne errace. · Thank you Saint Jude. portunlty. • '""'"
11D'1 facU. ln HB. 2,000 87&.3231S, (213l64l·t700 l•f11u 1 I ' Tc.a. -ll bt AM Pll lf.AJJ11 _J ---~. You are alway1 there to Ca wn. t ·1.2 or ...
IQ.ft. Redured to Sl200 ----Loc...o.l-O"J.hwity 5005 l 1AOu.f ro 1eemelhrouab tend reawne to: Welll. --------
l mo. l••· Red Carpet. ~ --••••••••••••••••••••••• ...._ -•L , ~ ~I · Pena•• UIO · Rich. Ow/Townaend AUTOMOO'IVlt •Jot.ml 1270Sq ft on bU1y Beach Mountain Bualneuea. -""'-r i..--......................... t ... • AdverUalnl, Cl Blrch llPllllMCIO ~MIW-ITC---=~~~t~af3~~t'i~~ngr~oa~ Free Ll1t. Reaorta. AMWI/' Ad PJt..E,OOOLA.Ww1•11tudedoan!~ln,• 1'.!z:r..... St., Newport Beacb. Ca . AUTOCASH9'1 •r-_..,_ Motela . Oat, Etc . U service -"'"' p ....__Attn· Pe...,..nnel ........ ,_ ..a..tn e1tate otflce, 1tore or Se Leaal. ConfldenUa ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-' ,..., ' Ex.,.._t wo~ .. I tori·
• P\.1Ukvtce8ult• other 1ultable butiae11. ,_•_7163 ______ 1 h I I d DVM. P.O. Bo• 1242. J•W..eM. 7075 955-C8JO dJUom • trin .. btneflta : · S CUT COSTS S 2 Private bat.bl. av1lla· IUSIMISS W en P ac ng your a · · · a N.8. ..es. ••••••u••••••••••••••• lncludln1 retirement
AllroulMtdforone ble Immediately. 10 OPPOlt1'UMrTY Dally Pilot ad number will ltt year Fem MBA Stu-Advertialnl plan.40bounperw .. ll.
moethlyt .. 1 Yearleue. AUractlvely appear In your classified ad FIRST I .. DY dentaeeb1ummerpoel· HILPW".__ Sal•ry commenaurate ~ N).5410 prlctd. Mak.:Jour time worth ~ Uon ln nnance/muket· "'"'-with Hperlence. Call
1-u 64i-4321,.x121, nv hundred dollar• ... we take your messages L.ort. Models 1n1Ma.-m ~:Iron rz::~~·:ua~ Stanat
•D&UX vrrftlo 'Ill Weekday1 per hour. Call Eric 24 hOUrS a day .. · YOU Call s..-~~~ rrom 1roomuplo1000 1-------=----1 (114)5»1708. ,..,.,__._ ltucutlve Secretary. MA ac:ctl. for advertil·
·f4· ft. 11.01per1q. ft. I WANTED: Pvt acbool Own your own Wlnt·O· In at your convenience '*f7J.IJ41 * want.I ~retarial work In" llon-Frl .. tAM· J.~ulnd~ 2~ N8u~!!~ movin1. Nda facuttlea Gram bu1lneH. Na· during Office hours 80d get llJS,•VllAAccepted Ob Sal. at your office. t:....:.;.t:.~N~:t lOOOHMlioi Blv<t
. ~Ad.l.A .. JJ'porterH~I. ~:Nrr·.:~;.~0:.~f. uu°"m.allla:l1nalvm .. td,m. •Onnte. the responses to your ad ... w.moafU. appaaranee1•a•dA. lptll· Cll\c.i /11\c.-..1 ~40 Cll00 __.m). .lJ I $7 50 R em UCR Art Grad inl e11ent • . pply: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ l4M8llt Write: 1 Tiiden Ln. t his service IS on Y . ._.c, ,_, ~full Utne poaltion Pe~a ur , ueo ~ ct:!.,.O::,•!r;:: :S ::i...il:w
4471
~.~~>C,:.~~· tun. week. For more lnforma-•••rtl 1n photoarapby fleld. Pl• A .... c11 ·Tate uim t.o "iu anc1
• c.tllW, 17M800 tlon and to place your ad MHn~ ........ ,c ... :!.OllO WE!Ptrit•*"'.ccedo~orln. ~acDllOD~ Noneedlotra--a.D-r lhopwltbalbomloa1'1~·a ptlll\l polet ~ .. a.u.· ...... 1100 5;;;;·3;:;;·;;;·i:;::~ Help,......,loa call 642-.5678. .,..:;,itC/va.. a1i
1::·r p~oct;11n1 . towa to ... u;~;. c 1 ... 1fled Mb. ~ If
tea.ft. Newport Arcbtt 1500911. ft..• 1J101q. ft. B ....... cUanaf ''!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!~ Tau1bt Dark-room ....... JOtl'U U..m JCN lulve aometbbll lo Bid In B...U.stoe B .. ch. ~......,... ... .... 1: 11lW.. W11 empk>,.S u ftsht '-'Im aa.an.d. 1tll, call a friendly
llartna I · tu teU p 1 ea I b J e t • t rn a • .. tlleDAJLYl'ILOI' ._1 rm1 WANf ACTION? Lab Tectt. 1111 A11tancl1 To pla~ 1"1' taraae ClUllfitd Ad·Vl1or ~l
rtfentM"-""" td·Wll 21J/_,... 811.PWAlftDA.D8 aa.tftdA.datu-51'11 St .• ~.CAta41. .... ... ea0--. _eo._9111 _____ _
'f
• .. , ' ~ ---......-:~--~......_.... _______________ '""" __ ...... ~---.----··ll!!!!!!l!P!~·-················~~
-·--~._
...... w .... ~ 7100 ".., w..w 11oi ...... W..-4 7100 H6'.W..W 11ol M~· w-...... Orange Cout OAJL y Ptl.JOT!n. ~·;;r.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••~••••••••••••• , , -7IOO · rrnul"lday, Ma,ch 26, 1981 •• IMfill&.er ._... for lct...o C:~ H • ••• • • ................. " a w/10 mot.'::....~~-~ CM.•1111111 .._J'ri J p~~,.!'11ANTE~--~.~!!~ ..... !~~~ HelpW...W 7t ~H.fpW...tH 7100 H .. W..t.d 7 100 ~ up pr.r "HJ r-. I ID9d l llb WID9 -very . .._... ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:'~~: r:~a.a.lve~~ ?...:iatt. COUMTll HU =~~· ~~b ••• Al. OfflCI If )'OU DMd atn mOMy • PAllT·TIME ucrrtONfST ~ DMded. my .. Ol/mo. PlHH caU I~ feta;_ qulllfied Dry chwn. bpr. area. M• be ~llab&e • P~. Mn1. Utt typ ud have M bn. ~r Ptck owo bn • &fteome. tor °"°mtVk Oftle•
ltt•e, llOD·Thuu. Mn. ftn .. I U or lln. qp=:· .=:::\ R'I~ ...... '9.ily, I tl.y baV"t dependable lra.n1. ln1. Mon .. Prl. 1 ·5. day,caUa.ua.m. Ambiliow, UM S*)ple. ....,_ Vitjo. ldy1lwk P'tiwet.llMI-. ~llllM•. -•llltubdMaloawork, ...ei.6~J HU+. Call Jeu : "'°'mo.A.lllror8obby aa..u• Callfarappt.561-5f7S Sat, baU day. AP· -.. "*GZIS '15-Gll. lneuraoce A1ency Med• pearance • ptt'IOOalJty
8A.JIYarrTE& IOC*lll M Ca. re11atnUoo pr.I, C:OUMr•HU · competent persoo. llluat PART·Tl.ME lmporta.nt Call tor appt
llelfl WOltinl lloUMlr lrvtm ~tat DMCll 1:.1.T. req. R4iaum• • FIT llr. S.t C&eanen Dr Iver for • • m I . o......a type, wW traln penonal LadN11 or men. Work 7et.ODI ..... retlabte 8ab11lt· part Umt bookk .. per lo wort aamplee required ff$--taandlcappad youna une1. PIT to •tart, :alnl rrom home on new --------
ter, ,.n Ume IA Loni work 11-Mbn/wk. lluat at~. lady. Prefer devoted. r:lal •an Tll( opponunlty. Brennen telephone proar•m lllCll'1'10MIST
Bucta . Call lrn• beabletodobkrta,P R ~Dlafh.,. compauionlt.t person. r-.a.,..•1 CoH.Btasst7 EamS..M. and more Newport Beach
llll•-~":i..t~i::-..::".:: ~Ji"~"::, 0,!.~ , :=. ~,:;!.•~ .,:;;~ STU D E H T S I N~UR~N~ E ~a•n< 1 :.';';.':"' Coll ..,
3111
• ~!=:'':.~,;,!J~ -~c-""--la tormaUoD•appt. ~=..·,~~fe':~ Cballn1la1 o•pt)'. I• toraft.5. OI( Hrvlce rep; comm'!. ~.-HD. It A• --. ... ..-u I ___.. _, r rt h open at SchweMr 'El~· tllutt be 11> Una 1cct. h.andllna. 75% ._. n-1 -
Savl.Dp ~ .!=opewftl or It tronlCI, a leadlnl •l•c· DllYM E1ctt.tn1 paJ, company ore., 25% field . Un· r•L •• Ta&.llr/T .-·-· tronlce dlalrtbutor, for P'em. prer. Pickup/. benelltt. Car needed. derwritlna.aervlceaalea Cw1la9YCMl'tlt
lee.pt/Sec •y
Pr..t. S •Lor comm'! n:!J:d. Floancla l • DIAJITSMAN an lndlv. who 11 self deUvery in O.C ar L.A Hardworkenonly. poi. Cer ex penae. Csrien
H ""nce, wlll tral.n c Hper. nee. Op-2 yn. mlnlmum drallln1 motivated, bu 1d. com· area. F/Ume S.5, M·F. MO imv•a1...ac1 11l1ry, comm. Min. 3 Adulta wllh ou!Jltllndlna
qualllledappUcuta. port\nlly wit.b new, fHt exp req. for QUaltrled mwUc:aUve akllla •one Applicant muat be 18 or CtlmArt"-to..,.J-yrs. romm'I. underwrlt· attractive penonalltles Mew Acc...ts 1rowln1 ~01meUc co. penon. Work umplH wbopay1attenlion to de· over• have clean OMV -r-· lng exper. Mual have F to spend 15 hn per week
P...t.r Nffllt s.i.. H · Callforappt.~. requireclTOPPAY tall. Jr. coUe1e educa· rcnl. k .25 to at.art, Im· 714-847-2422 & C Uc. Orange at J..A. counaelin1 youth agea pertece. lluat be well XLNT BENEli'ITS lion pref'd. but not re· mechdvancement. App-Counties. Call: 1O·15. Evenings &
ll'OolDld A njoy public IOOllCl':....-•a CburchEnilneerina quind. Please contact: ly : S.b~ En1ineerln1 Diane Bullock Weekends Available S75
CGDlad. Accurat.t~plol ·-Inc Barbara Ooldberl at Corp. 714549-9729 G oeralOtfl 833-9(560 p e r w k ) c a l 1 ....... 1..-, aome atur· Experienced A/R-A/P -BircbSt. NB 714-S58-9> e ce E.0 .E. 2·'""5·30pm '•on thru d-~":. Pel"IOD needed in 1mall .-.. ---------Driver Girl or G1.11 Friday to H · . ..-. ' · m
•1--· P'orU..above company near O.C. Cn4)5t0-T3Ti · Meyerhof's, primary slat wtt.b office dutle1. IMTIRIOIDESIGN Fri. 6'2·
4321
ext.
343
poaitlona available In Alrpon. 20·30bra/wk GUta fl Novelties Co. SHOWIOOM Ask for Lori Irvl.M contact for ap. Cleaninc Penon. Apart· Deliver L.A. Times to supplier ol aood food to ~ Coost pointmemt. Contact Berri: ~20a. menl •IA•· ...... Um homes In C.M. • H.B. the Irvine corporate Mbu1'11t have Id lyplna· 1P11~alTdl·~ e ex P . db . Piiot ('714)~ -· ruu e. HAM, $37~ mo. + community needs a a ty. Full or part· . ._. uues must e Cn4)534-llo:2 11 M ••I I Clertt Co1ta lllHa, Newport boom. Dependable car. responsible delivery lime Pleuant worklnl vivacioua Ir energetic n> ay Str~el
EOE Full time, e:aper. helpful Beacb area. ~or964-4912. person to drive our van. cond. Golden's Maile 642·2'21• Qieta Mesa. Ca
---------• but not nee. Many com· _TS_L_M_G_KT ___ 642.:..:....·l::ll0..:..3:.1 __________ , Good drlvlnd record Wand IM8 W. 17th St I _.,_, H I ed E qua I 0 Pp u r l ll!!l!lml!~----•-•I pany benefita. Apply at: c•-n·cat Del. men over 18 for L.A • C.M. Apply 9am llam. nv",_,.,. e P want . Employer Bankiq 1610 Placentia Ave., .. Tlmea to hom•a In N.B. necessary, M·F 8:30.2 March 30th. from 7.30 to ---COit.a Men OIDIRDISICCLlllC "' Start: Min. Call Don or G--"" ~cE 5 $30forlheday, lunch PART TIME Person
... ':Cl•b ---------1 Inside sale• duties ai • C.M. S•oo1S45o + Swiie: 557-6232. --vrrw included. CaU 645-1711 needed In Book pasleup •-•-BOOKKEEPER be bonus. 646-0637, 6'6·SM4. Immediate openlna In uk for Tom Walker. Mon & Tues. No exp
C
avy typing, in friendly Earn bia si.noo wk possi· our purcbulng dept. for lllllllr P/TlatePM/Evea.A/R, atmosphere or small Dent•l -Exp 'd en· ble, 30% commission an expr'd person with K._,.B. nee Apply 1660Placen
£Jtperience Preferred AI P. Exp. nee. Non· c~any near ocun. thU1lutlc assistant lo 661-68 xlnt typlna skills & a HELP NEEDED tia Ave . C.M
Al.lo part Ume po1IUona smkr. TUltin. 132.7300 G .. ~~nefits. Call Don· compliment our Pedo ----------• P I e 1 s I n a p h o n e Part time Mon·& Fri. 6.31---------• available ln our South _n_a_:_-_3832 __ . _____ 1 staff. Xlnl salary & ---------•I personality. Duties will every other Sat. 6·4, Part·lime
Cout Plau office. Call: l•--------1 CLERICAL 20HRS PER benefits to the right ILICTIOMIC: alao Include filing , order every Sun 8-6 no exp
KathyAmbu.r1ey IOOIOC--F/C WKAdvertislna.Alrport _pe_raon __ .548-__ MaO_.___ ASS...LYLIAD takln&andolberaeneral 631·1030 or apply in 5t0-4086 Faabloa ls land invest· I l ' T . •· Fut 1rowinf t'n•-rna· o rt Ice work . X Int Person l.2S Mesa Dr. CM ment firm. Excell. op-o c a ton• Y P 1 n g • DINT AL ASSIST. ..., benefits & working con· aslt for Dawn
CAllf lllU
FOWL
Portunity. Exper. •-phone, gd spellina & F /time chalrslde. Ex· tional Co, n stable ditions with a "rowing • 45wpm st d t Id ener"" field baa need for " maturity req'd. Call : w k · u edn c1ou per. pref. GP omcf'. a 1erd electronic 81. company Apply in LEGAL SECRET 4RY
A.S.A.P. Full Ume. Al
the beach in Laguna ! 2
attys. Variety practice,
Salary generous. Exp.
only. Call 494·7503 today.
714..&40-0123 or aroun c ass 545-4553. Nr So. Coast peraonat. schedule. 752·9'l'77 Plaia. s em b I y per 5 on THE J OLLY ROG ER Qualificaliona incl. 7yrs INC
s..a..p&t.o..
8115Town Center Dr.
CGlta Me.a, Ca 92626
!qua! Opportunit y
Employer
Bank:inl
Proof
O oerotor
EXPtRIENCED
or TRAINEE
lmmediau opening for
an NCR 775 operator
(boun are 9AM to 6PM
Mon-Thur and lOAM to
7PM Fri.).
Brl1ht, mature person
who loves children to
help p/time in Pediatri·
cian.s ofc. No exper nee.
Mrs. Aust.en, 645-4670
DENT AL 4SSIST ANT
Corona del Mar
&«·7162
CLllK
Drapery /mfgr needs
ind to coordinate in·
slallation scheduling
Salary+ ben. will train. Dental Front Offi ce
Beach Drapery ; 16692 Receptionist beach
Milliken, Irv 540-6478 area. Very ple~sant al·
•IUffUMS't / moaphere. Salary com· I F.IW• l.a-d CLIAK TYPIST men1urate with up. I
The follo-'"g pos1·t1·ons For hotel corp. Fullt1me 645-7580 ask for Darlene _.,, CaU851-1325 (Joyce).
are available: DIETITIAN . RD for 82 I •Full time customer 111!1~~------I bed psychiatric hosp. service <days> Clerical •Full & part ume home Reapon111bihlies incl
area sales. CLER" total menu planning,
•Pan time restaurant ft dietary consultation
cashier. wtdoctors & patients &
•Men 's sportswear TYPIST supervision of dietary sales. s t a r r P r e v i o u s
Excellent com pany C.D.I. Corporation Is Hosp/supervisory e:a·
benefits . Generous looting for a versatile per I enc e n e c
Qualified candidate employ~discou.nt.s. individual lD perform a Capistrano by the Sea
should be detail oriented Apply in person. 10·5 variety of personnel of· Hosp. 496-5702
and have some book· Mon .. Sat. E.0 .E. flee duties. Must type -~--------1
keeP'na knowledge and E.O.E. &«·2200 40-50 wpm accurately. ~~~------•I
be abletDoperale Ul-keyl~~~~~~~~~~I Previous office ex· Display by touch. 1-perience helpful. Good DISPLAY/ •CAI DllVBS• benefits, as well as SIGHMAKM We olfer a good starting Checker Cab growth potential. Excell. co. benefllJI In-
salary, excellent com· 770.0222 <:41 1 •.ealy, elude medical. dental. ~~~tr~~~lawo~k ___ C_A_SH--11-.---I 551..,... health insurance, profll
I a.nd I ~··~ shar!J;la. pension plan. appere a p eaaant Wffkdays fl mornings C.DJ COIP co. diacowit. Apply In
workln1 atmosphere o nly. 9 :30AM-1PM . • • penicm: For interview appoint· Mature person wllh 3303Ha.rbor Blvd #D-2 ment please call: PAT cashiering experience a c.o.ta lleH J .C . PB4HIY
0 mu.st. Photo experience Equal Oppty Empt. 11 /F 2'4 Fuhlon laland
1f possible. Photoaraphy 1~~~~~~~~~~~E~O:;E-----~M~/~f'~I
CITIZENS BANK Unlimlt.ed, 16889 Beach --------I Of COSI• MESA Blvd.H.B. ~T ---------~~~~~~--! DaAJIT'SPIRSOH
2970Harbor Blvd. C4SHIHS Hunt. Beac a1ncy ofc. lD draw rloatln& mart.a
Sulte3118 COit.a Mesa IOX P&SOHS for injr. lnaurance co. 1lruc:tW"fJI. Requires e:a·
l714) ~ Now accepting afplica· seea a lake cbara• in· per in wood con1t.ruc·
Equaloppemplm/f/h lions. Pttime. Wil train . dlvidualwtlbaecrelarial lion. Bri&hl. quiel olc. " com municatlon1 p•-
e xper , in electro mechanical assembly, 1700 Gillette Ave. PC Irvine B uaembly, Coil wir· 7141546.0331 i ng, harnessina . &
mechanical assembly ,
be able lo lra in as·
semblera : organize
manpower & material
resources; & display
good leadership skills.
Qualified applicants
should contact Ray
Gilman at Scientific
Drilling International
557-11051, E.O.E.
General
The lc6oa loy Club
11 now hlriftcJ:
Food
WflittH'/Woitrtss
Exp'd 6 30AM·2.30PM •
Hott/Hotten
Sat/Sun. Mon/Tue
s 30PM·llPM. Exp'd
UFEGUARDS
Swt.n Instructors Now being hired by City
of Huntington Beach
Call City Pool. 960·888'
Llle·Mfg. Full or Part
lime. Apply VEFO 785
W. 16th St. Costa Mesa
MAIDS, EXPER.
Immediate hire, apply
Angle, San Clemente
Inn
~------~-E:ap. Medical Assistant.
front " back. hrs & sa la r y o pen . N on . Securtty Guard • M41MTEHAHC E! smolrer. 540-•376. Tues. thru Fn .. 12PM· Permanent position SAM , Sat. 5PM-1AM . ideal for retlree·type
F IT, combo. prep/grill M us l h a v e ow n who likes fi:aln ' things
cook, man or woman. l ran s p ort at ion . around the office. Mam·
Clean kitchen, pleasant telephone, CPR training lain offices and do light
working cond, ad hn. & al least 6 m08. exp Ooor janitorial, five and
P hone tor Interview a half days in pleasant
494-9650. StoA Ct.tic surroundings. Good pay
Fri.,Sat.,Sun and benefits. See
Full • part·lime. Fast Service Mgr.
food. Newport Beach. G• Penoft HOWARD Chtnot.t
Xl nt opportunity . Tues.Wed .. Thurs Dove&QuailSll. ~:mo. 951·0071. M1.11l be n ex Ible. NEWPORT BEACH
GAG• JOKE Pl MAHAGIR/ Aselst. COMPANY eue call for appl. Women's specially 60·7358 Mo n · Fri .. Small Co. ulea na· 8:3<>-SPM store. Full lime
tioa'Wride needs efficient ·~~~~~~-~~! Clothln& expr. Nancy shiPIJinl/receivlna help. Cra.lg, Inc. SS&-1495
P~aaant won.in& cond G88.AL OfffC IE Ge&dm'i Maaic Wand Looting for a very In· Man1ger. Ofhce work.
New 17lb St. C.11. App. terellin& part time job counter help for food
lytun·llam. 1n pleasa nt office ., service Seasonal, (6
Clerical, for mature mo.). H.B. area. Call E
GENERAL OFFICE. penicm. Location P .C.H . Songrath. (714)544·5378
small company, 1ood Npl. Bch. E:aper. a orwrttel'581AcaciaDr,
ben.eflta. Salary open. must Accurate typloa. ,_T_ua_un_· ...:.'_c_a_W._2680 __ . __ _
HOMEMAKERS
Part.time evening pos1
tions oow ava1lablt!
Ho~ 6PM-9PM, Mon day·f-'riday working 1n
our ofhc~ at 1601 E Ed
inger, Santa l\na Good
s t arling i.alar) and
benefits No ex~rience
necessary Paid train
1ng Call Dave after
lOA M for an a ppu1nl
ment al 83S 0300
RCA
Service
Company
Equal Opportunity
Employer M F H
P.-t TIRI &
T ... rary Jobs
Anillllle
Clerks , Secretaries
Recept1on1sts. all
Office Skills
Needed II
lVICKI HESTON I
&Aasocl.te1
<Specializing in
Temporary Clerical
Personnel 1
540..0400
Pa.rt Time
An you too yowi9
fororeqiulcr job1
No expe r ie n ce
necesaary You will be
tulned. Earn big com Nr Airport. 838-9570. skills. Poe. lnvolves ... .. call: 645-Mel, Mon· Fri, 1bompaon Float•·
CASHIER siatina staff Ir aaents tion Co. EOE M4SSEUSE mtsaiona, PLUS altro<' CaU for appt. 5'2·9363. no shorthand 20 hr.' -
aak for Ann week Includes Sat a. Sun
HOUSEW ARE SALES with Ufe fl Health policy Call· ~7431 Part time. Pvt country t1ve bonuses Contact
club. Call for interview. Cir culation Depa n
Neat, front ortke ap·
pearance requlred for
thl.a preetl&ioualy local·
ed flnn. Mmt have good
office experience. Will
be ln direct contact with
top level executives for
mulli·natk>oal organl&a·
tion. Xlnt oppty for right
person lo grow with
company Med.Dental
bene.llt.s
ACqtllS CORr.
11952
MocArtt.r .... d.
l Next to Chanlecla1r>
lrvine CA 9'l'715
Contact Julie aft 8 30AM
752·6003
Rec:~bt Part/Fu.ii Recept1onlsl.
Typmg, llght bookkeep·
1ng & other clerical
work Hasson & Assoc
~1·1651 --·--·---
RECB'TIOMIST I
4cch. Rec.
Reqwres typing. lO·key
1s a mu.at· good phone
s kills Entry level ,
S950/mo. with quarterly
review Medi c al
benefits. Jal'k Carnahan
Inc 754·1371
RECEPTIONIST
P time 9·lpm Typing.
filing, errands. l rv ine
83J.15M Bobbie
RECEPT/SECY
Type 65 wpm. transcnb·
ml( & lO key skills req 'd
Salary based on ex~r
lmm ed o p e ning
~7 S850Rose
RECEPTIONIST
Full hme Mon Fri Must
be personable & well
groomed, & enjoy meet
mg Lhe pubhc Requires
good spelling & pen·
mans hip No typing.
Phone ex.perience pre·
ferred Full company
benefits Apply· Pen·
nysaver , 1660 Placentia
/\ve .C.M
RlCEPTIONIST
Command Performance
Hair Salon In Npl. Bch.
need.a receptionist, 30
hrs. per week. Appli·
cants must be mature,
stylish m appearance ai
have fnendly personall·
ty Some lite bookkeep
Ing req'd Poailion re-
quires car Phone Becky
for appt , &46 7451
Restaurant
McDONALD'S
Now tunng full & pan
time. Days. eves. Great career opportunities.
On·the·Job training For
m o r e info., ca ll
754·9943, or mqwre at· 3141 Harbor Blvd. Costa
Mesa. ** BANKING
Apply In person: Crown sales & maintenance. Drapery manufacturer The Ideal candidate will nffds work room hem· ~~~~~~~·Pl~~) ~;ine. be .one who enjoys a mer. Will train. Mon.· quiet working !it· ThW'!.7·5:30PMorP/T.
GaaAL OfflCI
Immediate f /t po1ilion
dependable Individual to
u1lst marketing &
general office. Good typ-
ing. 4t variety office
sk i lls required i n
dynamic work environ·
mart. Newport Marine
Engineering. 645-3632
GIOCBl 6"·5404 ment. 642·4321 , leave
W e a re 11 eek 1 n i ----------name & phone number. -~~~~~~~~!'
manaaerial type person Mature person to live in You will be contacted I
Wells Fa r go Bank .
Oranae County Airport
office, has an immediate
opening for a :
Teler Part Time
To woril 30 hrs per week
{Mon-Thun 9:3C>-3 '30 &
Fri 9:30-6 :30>.
Six months previous
banklna experience re·
qulrflet
We provide an excellent
salary and benefits
pact.ajle and a friendly
working atmosphere
Please cont.act·
Eble
714-t7J-5040
S1•u@ r11:
W E LLS
FA RGO
BANK
45lllO MacArthur Blvd.
CASHIER/ Clerk for re· mosphere • working C.M. area. 642·18'3.
tail st.ore Must be ex.· alone. Applicants must per Call . Balbo a type al least •Swpm & Drapery Shop in N.B. have a gd. math ap needs mec hanical =~~~· 549·9671, E.O. E. tit~. peraon. Gd driving re-
_________ ...J Tht~. Is a challenging cord. Fut advancement
poattion f~r .ri&hl person for sharp trainee
~ la wtllina to learn 1714>673-0760. about insurance. We of· ----
Find what you want In
Daily Pilot Classifieds. CASlllEIS
UTVTIM
fer competitive salary & -at
an excell. benefits pkg. •••••• ~ D1Hy PH as well as advancement
opportunities. For appl,
call: Cb.arles Palomino • •
MARKETS 1n0ranae.714·937·4445 • Special futlns •
For 2nd &i 3rd Shirts THI TaA VB.EIS • •
We promote to manage· Equal Opp Emply r • £ditlf •
menl & supervision from m/f lb within. ~~~~~~~~~~I • Immediate opening in our Marketlna • WANTACAREER" • Services Department for a Special°
<Asta Mesa Companion. responsible. Features Editor. Candidate must have a •
lllDelMar maturepersonneededto • College Degree. writlna fl edilina .
631·9421 stay nights w /older • expertise. and some experience preferred .• woman. Pleasant sur· Challenalna position with lrowth potential.
Laguna Beach rounds. Lacuna Beach. • Excellent frinae benefit.a. Send resume to· •
494.9233 494-4457 • Daily Piiot. P.O Box lMIO, Costa Mesa, Ca • 92628. Attn: Personnel
Huntlnrt.on Beach COOK/EXP'D • •
with knowledge of Mid· w/same. 2dys pr wk . S35 -- -Restaurant
die Eastern culture. day.67~3023 1---------· Meyerhof's, primary Ability to speak, read & l'SlSOHNEL supplier or good food to
write Arabic a necessi· Mature ~rson !'eeded for COUNSB.OR the Irvine corporate
ty. Knowledge of food F/Tpoeitlon 111 K Mart Mu11t ha ve pleasant communityneedspeople
businesa is an asset home Improvement personality. will train for sandwich.malting &
May require 11o m~ dept.Mu.st~availmost Call Gary, 540 6055, s imple food prep.MF
traveling Salary hra.lnqu1reat2200 CoastalPersonnelAl(en 8 3 No e :aper
negotiable Anaheim Harbor Blvd . Daily cy. 2790 Harbor Bl . necessary Start: Min.
area. FM Wholesale 1·5pm.~7701. Costa Mesa . t::OE Call Don o r Susie .
G r o c er s I n c . . Never a f'ee 557-6232
714-630-8570 Medical Assistant w ex · 1~~~~--~--· -----------------per. 4\.'J Dys. Busy GP I~ -Plumber, min 3 yrs exp
4p hl'l5. S t5 25 hr
493-0739
c;.uAIDS offi« Npt Bch. Salary
Full & part lime. All negotiable. 6"2· 1720 noon
areas. Uniforms fum'd. l o 2P M . 840·5027
Aaes 21 or over. retired pm/wknd.s.
welcome. No e:aper nee. -----App I y . Universal MEDl~AL FRONT Of C·
Protection Service. 1226 part-time. mature. N B.
W 5th St . Santa Ana. 645-7083 Interview hrs. 9-12 & 1·4, -------Mon·Fri Medical
X..UYTICH HARDWARESALES Part time 30hrs/wk .
FuUUme/partUme. Ap. M·F . For office in
ply in person Crown Newport Beach. ARRG
Hardwa~. 102' Irvine, & C RT re qui red .
(We1lcliff Plaza> NB 631·"22.
PR ESSMAN M f /\
growing shop needs a
2/C Hamada operalor
wlexper who r an do
quality work Salary
open for capable person
Ins & other benefits
Irvine loc Call Pel
8 »5 Mon· Fri 979· 1834
P I T Counter /Off1l'e
person. for equipment
rental store. Typing req.
Restaurant
SGT. PEPPSlOMl'S
""""'9116 FullUme 9am-Spm. Im • • ...... • Edi.tor's • mediate openi ng . Newport Beach. Call HB.P MHDED Medical back offi ce for 1~c~H~IL~D11111111M ... on·i·to·r·.·.·5·8·11 _9_33-_38'_J_._____ • Secretary • ~H:.~re:::~~8 ~~ce. Ex per. r!'!q 'd.
appro x 25 /hr s
Saturdays req. Salary
open. United Rent All of
Costa Mesa 6'5·0760.
PfllASTORE
Now tunng for full &
part tame. openings at
l oc at1on 11 at 0 C
Airport Varymg days &
hours, ideal supplemen·
1al income f o r
homemakers & stu·
dents. Our progressive,
growing company offe.rs
opportunities for advan·
cement based on your
Job performance .
Pleasant working condi·
lions. Must be 18 & over.
Apply in perllOfl btwn. 1
&6PM.
mo. Muat have 3 mos. Cook needed for Conv. • A challenging opportunity is beina offere6 • Full/Part time all posi· ----------
exper., complm care of Hosp. FIT. 9:30·6:00 • by the Dally Pilot for someone wllh the . lions. Apply In person MED. Ole, pl /lime, 2 ,Ull. ages 3 le 5, pre· Xlnt salary & benefits • Intelligence, wit and skills required to be • Mon·Fri 3-SPM Rubin E. ma lure woman . llll ____ ._. ... .,-... ,,~ ...... 111
2300S.E. Bristol
Santa Ana Heights
<Next to McDonald's)
E.O.E.
pare mull. do laundry. incl i.lll. vacation & sick • secretary lD the editor. It's an lntere1Un1 • Lees 151 E. Coaat Hwy Pediatrician Npt Hgta. P/T -
discipline children & pay. Apply Beverly position requirina the tools ol the lnde -N.B. area. Umiteod practice. CREDIT CHECKER
b1tbe. Take older child Maner 340 Victoria, CM • 80 wpm dictation. 70 wpm typing .• H-ote-1--------1 Hrs 10.12 & 3-SPM. S6. Credit experience pref .
to school & accompany E.O.E. • dicta phone -and lhe ability lo shift • hr. 642-0335 flexible hrs, Irv. Retail Sales
..... .-... children on outings. C-
00
-K-.-... -__ -_-... -
1
-ho-rt_o_r· • mental aean on short notice. The benefit.a TVaN DOWN Irvine Penonnel Agy dWomen's F IT retail, --........ Take ad lo any State a-~ • are generous, the pay reasonable. • SHIFT M/F 1&-22. Help drive 488 E. 17th, Coeta Mesa ays, exp preferred,
Newport Beach, CA
Equal Opp Empty mtr/h
TIU.a EmploymentServiceOf· der. Mu1l be 11. E:a· • Applications beln& accepted only throulh. Blllnaual. Aprly to Miss new car tD East Coast s .It xlnt benefits . Call
Lout Newport Beach fl ln Or c perience a plus. Mutt • appointment by calUna . 6'2·4321. ext. • M arcl, Sur • Sand Expenses Pd. 831·2108. u eZ24 _
642
'
1470
770-16'1'7 aaklor Larry.
sa vinp •loan bu Im· ce an1e ounty. Lynch'•· 311 Palm . 277. Hotel. La(una Beach. -
d t f
DOO'. 301. 677·010. Ad Balboa Pen . Sid ·.. • ~-~-MUISE... RN/N11r1ln1 Coordlnat r T'eiJ#. 0L~:.• • 01~.! ~;pa;ld~for~b~y~e~m~p~l~o~ye~r~~l 67s.15156. • Camera • ~ ......... ·est.
365
M e d 1 c ; 1 ·~· r c P:~a~~u::;:J~a:~e f ~~ ror adult Psychiatr~c n pet. preferred. We of· ---------1 Housekeeper, mature. Ophthalmology e:apr divldual with aood in· P r o I r a m
fer eseellent salary, rull Cosmetic sales for 11n e Operator e llv&-in aid. for elderly pref. Salary open. Od come potential. S41.9140 Responalbllilie1 Include
lnnun ce benenta le CivU ~ a hop, exp er nee .,. • lady.Wlend.a,Sat/Sun, benefits. Resume supervialonorownnun-
pald career apparel. ~vtStOM mature. No Sal/Sun or • Experienced at leasts years. MUJt be • perm.541--. Newport C enter . PIT I.nick & equipment inaaWf,scbeduling,pa·
Pl .... calJ: ••ttll•I & Holidays.6'4-4861 able to use new1&)1per camera ind 1_751 __ •_1 _______ waaher. ' day1. 20/hra Uent 1tamn1. evalua·
.... ,'::':: ~1• Dlllet•S COUNTER HELP: Ex· •• ~~·Je:~:~r~. 'fp~~;'~n :::.~e~1r':~::i·e •• 1• PllUITAILE Nuralftl L"""' ~~~~ Rent All, !'.~~~n~;.nszrPvPl~iec::t
wi...__IT 1 ,.. 0 Dlt.Al'TSPllSOM pe rlencd. Sandwich 0 llo .,.. ""....,,r_ ~LI A Career opport unity Shop. Over 11. Coat• e loOranaeCoast ally Plot. • • Y•? 11·7 reUef $7.25 per hr. l·~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil must have stron1 com· SAV..S & LOAM avail. for tai.nuct •ex· lie .. area. Call btwn A t.tchakal 1 1 Gd. worklnl conditions. Real EltaleSales munlc•llon • problem·
E.0 .E. per'd. lndlvld ual wlth t-2 .... 18". e ..__, lll'lr I f\ff In ~bo~ 19 bed faclllty. EOE. Experienced agenta are :
0~~ s k 111 a • well lllabllabed • arow· • n'WI ••• • look!ni ror 8 s harp Bayview Convalescent needed to work with tx· u.,... •• ....,.y experience
,,. • ..,. ln1 Civil En1lneerln1 • ._... n-... • penon \0 bavt iood "°' .. pt .... 85Tburtn, CM. ecutlve level clients. In• .. ycblatrlc faclllty.
Rrm nr. O.C. Alrpo.rt. • ,.. l 1•• 1eeretarlal qualtflca· &U-911G5 llaU..a Oranta. MUil have proven track Po•ltlon 11 Mon.·Fri, •JOJOIA• Applylftpencnwlth ff-Toplaeeyourm ... a1e • tl oiu • d 1 record. You will be houn may be nexl~e.
Moan r1lcal contour aumeto: llr. P'uentet at beforellM • With atlea•t l year experience, prefer1bly •0 0 n · Nunlnl work Int with pro Capiltrano J!y The sea
fa"9Mft. Wlll train five Robert S.ln, William ..-dinl pubUc, newapari_r. Excellent comPM.Y benefit.I. e t.ttpll"llOUl •kills. Thla LYM feaalonal UIOClata. Our H01pital, 41111\sroi.
ca ,...,«ieat*9 ,.ople F1'0lt It A.uodatet, 1401 ptMJne •• PM •h rt. Apply between 9AM & 6PM e r:tZ:.t lhouklln mablralnvle a,nn 3-11 full time. ~ bed otnceotten:
to INcome m•ll•·UP Qua ll St.. Ne~ort DallyPUot llondaytbrouah Friday. ' facUtty. EllceU. workln1 •e.tbeach locaUon uUlla •~.Only S.ac:h a-tfted,165171 0 • :.~U:.-r Income. concUUont • benefit•. •UberalcommlNlon
--...mlDdied need •P-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! •• Ff.~' I bl• u t be ~C::: EOE. Bayview Con· -... p I 1. Comm I u Io o -cilia ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Y_. _ _._ ,_._._. 11 va19"•Dl Hoe pt., 2055 N 'l ~,,..am • ... , Mat poqnU.I ':~ }:."9 .;,:-
1
: = 330 W. ay Street -~ :SP . Tb11rtn, CM. H2·3505 * at ...... erral pro1ram
Call or :.U'· Mn. •-· ...._ .. __ ' Cotta Mesa, CA J •cal~--call A re• MallaNOnnta Calloowforappt. --·-= • ed Ill U.. 0•11.. ....,.. ---wtt-. a F.q 1 Oppo ••• W aJUlem-
111
.., • ., ...... ·-r·-·· . -u ua rtunJty C--Joyer --..___ ...__ ....... _ -· .. _, --~! CaD now Da 1 ptlot Cla11lfled • ...,I.Lit' •-,_ u r. .... _..
WutAdl CaUMH .. 71 _....._ Ad.MN171. •••••••••••••• ~~ ... ·~~~._•,:-~In Well •. a DaJb Pilot 'Ptnd what TOV "ant tn _, .... ·-•· ct&lllfted M . to5"71. Dally PUot Cluslneda.
---
Orange Coast 0.Afl Y PILOT/Tl1uraday. Match 29, 1981 11c,-. 1020 ....... IOIO Mltc ll•1w IOI~~,_ ...... & ,...,. f040,' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 1•• 1011 ...... W..tM '7100 M~ W--"'--* 1 00 ........ __.__... la b .... __ bo • --I •••••••••••••••••••••••• --I H•W~ JIH":~T. -11oo~e ...,11111 Y• 10 •-· Lovely Uv rm aet de1k •••••• ........... ., ••• ...... ••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••eT••••••••••••••••••• ••• •••••••• .. ••••••••• 1Uver. like new, tllO. cbett d·rwre, misc: Store fixture.: Oreettni STEA.LJT,MUSTSELL 25' Mako , float 00"
U. Plt.lme, mid wm, S ... MSftHS TYPIST 975-<81 t.ba..l40-UthJUpm. card rad:I, m. Shelv· c.t~ tal>M. Wt. aluminum tr&ller, USbp v•vt•. Wutmlntlar Villttn ,.-Iii. llCtm'TY Patt ua:~~ daya ptr in1. wood 6 1lw h5 IOUd oU 11500 Day· Joboton, VHF radio, ':•d~ Group. Call lo. 1• Part ume.,,..""8 .... ., i~~ mo ~.!'L ~ 8,c~~dn,,~a:b~lyc.1.1 s roomt. a.II new tum.. Dltplay cue uu: Mf.IOtl. Ev•: 111i·2t10.· deptba ~4r· ~'p':;:
1"L er, llS-1121 SumRlw wlt.b Hp oo btt., for a,.r'd. Illa•· ii.a '-•· ta.mi · a d m I r a I t , v I Ne ... a.-.9805. rera. a • er
Ro·"'-W-''"-alt.eradonliD&emen'a c~ ..-wt&y otrlcer. retrlieutor alto. Copy Machine CANON (714)1'2.ooN. ,._ .__ 6 WOllWlft'I at.ore In N.8 . ExC'ell. co. bloett&1. AP. • la Schwtnn I ~ Vinyl P'loorinta Al· no •200u. 5000 plain J)eper copier.
Jouen, Hm while you Gd s.lar1 • beneflta. ply In penon: ,,__ ,_!!,~ tOftd. llult HU r,:~~:.: remna.o . pprox Ca.t over 9tK new. Hat Boat Partner Wanted
Jo11 '4/br + bonua. Pi.u.c.UTallorSbop J.C.NlllY v.•.--aay.nda. Spaa..._, Oakcolf••endtablea, yank. Sac at $4 yd, 7 beeounderp,-.vent.aUve lmmac. 24' S~a Ray ~bra • by. L1quidyne Mana.pr from l :30llm· JU'ubbahlaod IHt, accurate p0Jlcy butcher block dinette dlatt tllec addin1 mach main&. Low mo. rental Sundancer, l!.bln1 or
1r.Derf)'Syatem1Cal1AI. Sprn.6U-50'70. f!OE M/F ty.._Gd.1alary6pa d l1Mf .~ .... f'WllOJI SJ.50. Cont.emp tot• bed ISO, cbffk writer S90. w/100"4 tredlt 11aln1t cnaile. Expcr !Mlptul. U.~ co. benetlta. Call Llnda •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• (never Uled), 19" color Call530-oeetafUpm. purehase at any time It N.B. boat 11lp Sl900 +
,S.. Secretary for medical of· at1U.a.ttn lmWOOO ZJ6"a pOrtable SH5, ele1ant Jo ho Wayne Tennis you want lo own It. Stao/"'!':....557·932'1
nirect Ca• AMlfw Cke, lyplq • some bk· SICY/llC.., 8'8, JdDt dett!Q1. Ntw IOla 6 lovneat, Swedllb lhmberahJp (Family > .551-SIOOMr Johuon ·ao Bayliner lJberty 2o·
I phone contact kp'a exper. reQ.'d . Box Good ofrlct pruence, WAITRESS/WAITER · lo 18,000 ft In from 11 .. dlnettuet Inquire u 1 1 lZOHP I / It I 'f( diatributor customers 10. DJil)' Pilot. PO Bo.x xlntt)'Jllnt akUll with at-eo-. mill, 55i'/ft CM eu,9117 lmmed. S41·90lO • 50 n c tr• n are r Comet" conference tbl ti 4 · · n out w r r .
• ~ovolvee order place lNO, Coe&. Men. Ca . teotlon to dtta 11 re 11-::::r-lluat be ex· X12'1 anytime IM+.l.5d chn, clr1' poU.hed wood. ~ avaU. Sll600 67:Ml'9l9 ~en t ' en tr 'I and 92Gll quired. Sborthand pre-perlence tr mature. Nice Its " waterbed, John w ....... Tenn•-Club hexap 48/72X26 S250. 28, 8ayllner Crul (ollowup Cor standard (erred. Call /or In· Call Answer Ad 058, A I um pat Io room• w/headboard 1225 or ,._ .. Sal alt 9AM 640-1888 aer '!
cat.aloi Items. Valuable SICRITAIY tervlew. 790-lOZS. &42,.Ql02'Jlra. cloeun, 30 .x US. Wlndow, bettCllfer. MS·OU. !,•omoollylnmclemtrbaenrssfheipr Otbertimes 1ei.CXW1e Briltol. fish or '1~>
tf'al nlng prov ided Sm. bualneu bas Im R c• ST ON W t d screena-complete S6oOo • sleep1 4, loaded w "'" Rleuant workln1 en· med:need,forlndlvldual SE VI "' ATI an• : ener1ellc valuerorszooo.997.14~ CedarChestko. Dresaer 117~ New eJec. SCM portable ·tras, low hra. SUf: 4c ltd
vironment ln Irvine w/good typing, phone A1TENDANT. SAM to ~~roav:!p~::!ti:~~ Sas. After 8pm. Strato-lounier recliner typewriter, StSO/OBO financing Jl0$S. 12,000, ~J:tQ!:;n~l~ct~~fa exper, varied aen. otc. 3PM. Apply Shell Sta· Very reUable. To clean Call~~~O:,L!!reln (714)847.Wl bat brwn vinyl s 2so'. .552.ag)(8am·8pm > .£_Vtpty(7l4)G61·0804
Qlv 83J.7700 Starlin~ ::1~:u~ hr week. Call · ~~'7lh fl Irvine, NB. boata in the Newport to. aft l2;30. K ln1-1lze bdrm. aet. Rdoyal uprlaht vacuum, PS-.& OrcJ-t 1090 '62 Owens Tahitian. '40:
sabtrySlOOO-S llOO/mo. Beach area. Call Sara at Ore11er End tables. I cone!. SSC>. Executive ••••••••••••••••••••••• avail N.8 . slip
ir .. D-~L c1....J. SECRITARY • Service Station Allen-The ~d Mate Inc. D091 1040 Near new . Aft. s . dskchrSS0 . .552·7321 Beautiful Roaew ood _ -~·~
., .--~rwa T dant. P /T , eve1 fr 642·08'71. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~3703. Upright Conte mponry 44 PACIFICA.· .791211:0 Inside sales duties & 0 young bu•lness ex· wk end 1. Neu a p . KEESHOND Pups. AKC. CASH 1895. "
heavytypingtnfriendly ecuUves.apeed&skillsa pearance 6 handwrlt· Warehouse /deliver y Champalre.M/F.Pet& Corner Group (2 li'oryouroldcooJtware, 760-1507 hra uae All factory up
atmosphere of small must <60 +wpm ) ina. Apply at 2590 peraon f91" party rental s h ow . Pvt ply . bedacovers, storage potf, pans. 495-2013 t11l -------linni . 11 97 .500 •1
compan.y near ocean. TFoapshsalolarn YI~!~~ ~o7c7altlon. Newpott Blvd, ,.M. atore. PIT, apply 202S 213/89'J.1J4S an 6 pm, bolster comer tbl walnut 8pm P1,anho : Mahl oganyG UP· Np ACI FICAd. deSl1.11'~080o Good benefits Call Don-· .,.....,, Newport Blvd, C.M. finish) SlSOS4S.9223 r I l w/m rror. ood ever use . ·"
" ""11:3632 •·--------·1----'-'-------I German Shepherd In· WIN cond. S8SOOBO. 1ua71v.n Both located Southeast ,.a :....,. · Secretarial 1• t Ill ....,.. """' SHt,,..G W ORD PROCESSOR : e gent pups, 6/wks, AnUqueVaruty,verynace ---f'ruerYachts,6735252 Executive Secretary for N B AK c h I s SlSO 11:11:4 .,...... s....a -H Ya mah ht I t Sales & Engraving. Exp
helpful. will tram. Apply
ID person. 646-3141 -----S"ales Full time person
needed for run summer
job. Please apply 1n
person. Mon .. Fri. btwn
10 4c 6PM The Persim
mon Tree. 229 Marine
Ave. Balboa Island.
FULL&P/Umehelp.ln· .. Law Firm. Call , w le" 175. . ............... or ,....vr a..Proclllch aupng wanu , 1 person R · E office. terviews held 12·1 Mon Nikki· 915.5.2411. 968-0331. 761-2004 Just by sending us your perfect cond. SZ700. loah. Rent/
Xlnt dlctaphone & typ-lhru Sat Lunasea 212 ---name , addre ss & 646·7048 Chartff 9050
ing skills. Must have Main St. HB. · Mt1 cl& .. • AKC Gold. Ret pups, see C 0 RN ER GR OU P . telephone number. -...................... .
front office appearance ••••••••••••••••••••••• f:arent.a, fem $250, male perfect, very comfort•· Name .... . . Conn Organ for s ale, lake •IMMAC28._34. BOATS
& ub1llty lo deal with ........ 1005 200. 831·~17 ble couchea /beds, up· Street. . . . . . . . . . . . . . new. SlSOO. SI l2mo. plaru1 prepaid
clients. Sharp telephone SHIPPING Clerk part ••••••••••••••••••••••• S I S . ---hol. blk/wht, food City ........... Zip 982·fi42 CromS181>/mo including
k·11 t 1' II L I t" M ..... h pr n1er panael Pups st Ph A ---s I s a mus . "a i a ime. ..... ave exper. W ANTID TO IUY AKC chll1lp. blood line orage space, 2SO. . .... , . ge. Estate Sale Hammond s lap, lessons 7141964·5994 833-2900. Call: Balboa Marine. I b Id Sl--PARTY TABLE, 4 chrs, Employed ... Stu O di C 3 h -549-9671, E.0 .E. M/F /H u Y 0 I u n a Ml'lea.5'5-8527 drk polished wood, $250. Send classified ad 1'691, rgan, m · wit loah, Sail 9060
SECRETARY dlamoods. ivory, Jade & Sat aft 9AM 640 9888 Dally P1'lol PO B PR·40 Hammond & 22·H ••••••••••••••••••••••• collectibles. Call (71•) DOG TRAlNING · · ' · · ox Les I 1' e s p e a k e r s , Requires good typing & Sitter needed for 3/yr boy 972-41926 & as" for Dane" Olhertimes call 768-0SlO 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 S phone personality , 1n our Woodbridge • Obedienc&/Proble m ---------2000/0BO Story Clark
Sales duties incl: It dictation, home. Hrs, days, salary, Solving. Simmons twin mattress, Oriental Chest , Brass S Pi n et P 1 a n o .
HICKORY FARMS processing orders & gen neg. Driver pref. Lt DOROTHY EMlltSOH AAA DOG TRAINING box springs, like new trim .. 30"Wxl4"Dx33" SlOOO/OBO. Both in C.M
Wanled older sailboat
w s lip 1n Ne wpo rt
Harbor 751 8967
Opportunity to sell ofc Juice Tree. 15602 bsekpg poss . Dys & ~8344 S75.S46-3274al\er6pm. H i gh New • $395 Sunday l0.5pm 979-8776, ~unnet foods & girts Chemi cal Ln . H B SSS-4716 ; eves: SS9·4816. D 0 H H O L A H 1·492·1.96Saft. 5 < 9 0 5 > 6 4 4 5 3 6 O ,
LIDO 14 Good cond1t1t1n,
Trailer, et c MUST
S ELLl675call 675 3611 Flex hours. Will train. 891-44.25 -------PRESIHT 2 years new western style ---(805)SU.LS90.
WestcUlf Plaza, 642.()972 -South Laguna Village Eas ter pups, AKC. leather couch, chair , ot· Schwinn bikes. mens S6o.
or Fashio n Is land . Secretary AnunalHospitalis look-AHT19UISEXPO BichonFrisepups. toman4c3matching end Boys S30 Craftsman SportiltgGooch 8094 loafs.Slips/ ~ HUNTIHGTOM 1ng for p i t exp 'd &SALE 645.4377 tables+ lamp. $395. Power m ower S80 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dodts 9070
llE.ACH g_roomer-can lead to rtt Antiques of the world in 759·al60. 559-9148 Seiko dive watch, good to ••••••••••• ••••••• ••••• 1 1 .,_ · r the displays of leading Adorable male Pomera· - ---- -----150 meteni. 60' MOORI • ________ _, .ega ""'c Y or 1 atty In work, profit s haring dealers. nian, l year, S2SO with, G-s• 1055 Sears Hearing Aid 751·8967 HG 3·Attomey ofri ce Desire 499-5378 -· "-T" Al 1.8 ' boat $25 000 SALIS 2yrs Cabfom1u ex per. - ----Mtreh 26 27 21 29 papers possible 645-5325 ••••••••••••••••••••••• most new Bargain for -Tony675·0015. 6°31 4286
HOST/HPSTESS 847-6041 STATIONERY Thun.,Fri.',Sat.1-lOPM I eves. Mov!Jlg Mst sell 2-10" cash.Ca111nAM541277 TY.lodio, _
fTEMrOltARYt ---StoremCdM needs sales SundayNoon-6pm 1 -TV 5 • color & B/W • HIA, Shno 1091 Need 3S' slap after the Secretarial. permanent. person (/tJme, 5 days. lo the Commerce Bldg Free to You 1045 Phonemate, boys 5·s pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pav11Jon Will rent il or
Greet & preq u a I 1 r Y CAREER X Int working conds . ORANGE COUHTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc~winn Cruisc;r. used Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr trade for cleaning your
penipective new home I OPPORTUNITY Especially fine clientele FA.IRGROUHDS Eb"r~me:,ionv~s ~~x,;;~ !;.1~1. a 11 I a k e nu St~.·~~~~ delivery house or your ooal Cull
b u Ye r s A e t i v e Exp. bus .......... on to ad phone644·7482 ror appt. Adm $2""' L• k ----Answer Ad 11445, 24 hrs, ~·.. · ·""· r ree par · ASAP. Pls call S36·3266 642·4300. California real estate mm & manage small -------ing. ------N E w po RT J o B s I: 25 " console color TV, _
license r equ ir e d gra""':cs des 1gn ofr. As STRUCTURALDESIGN MI I b b h d DAUGHTERS S225 16" color R''A W .,.u ae a s ep ar mix, . •:1 ::l""I • "' DOCKAVA ll.Alil.F.upto e e k e nd w o r k sast principals m daily DRAFTING Plate Collectors 8wks, Free to gd hm L<YrSOFGOODIES w/stand,$95. 968·52S3 JS' No mai.t.s s175 mu
necessary bus. functions Other Newport Beach office Goebel Hummel plates 857·1718 SAT., MAR28, 9am.4pm •1:•1 ~e 11.: --------575.7:11()
duties tncl: Client con 675-6110 & holders, 1972 & 1974·79. --E 23•• diagonal Zenith solid Complete application
Ms Parsons
The lrvme Co Suite 350
SOO Newport Centr dr
Newport Beac h . C u
92663
(7141644·3215 CJ 1HE ffJINE ClJtlFNlf
E O.E. M f'
Sales If you are high
strung, don't mind work
l.Dg hard, you can make
$40().$500/wk with us
Why not. everybo<ly elsl'
tact. gd sec skills. bk --& Hummel to match. KeesHound9mo,fem, 360 ~-Sl.,C~ stale TV con sol e .
kpg. Bnght self.starting SWrTCHIOARD 49S-l.:m LOVES KIDS Garage Sale March 28 & MY SO Yl-:AH SJ 2 5 b s t 6 4 4 I 4 9 4
mature attitude, or OPTR ------631·1030Annie 29, 8-5pm. 17 Deerwood ACCUMULATION ev/wknds.
ganized w details , &1 P/t1me. days, wknds Oak Round table, roll F=<lt ---105-Cl East, Irvine. Brand new IS FOR SAl.1-: Color TV-l9"Sears.SISO
people oriented Apply Will train 6(2 3013 front file cab. sq cof tble. .. .. -.. & used clothing, toys. Must make room. I
by letter w resume & --2 custom pnnt h1 back ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn,kalchitems &masc moH-d tosm allerhom•· :.~~le Xl nt cond
s alary histo ry lo J Teac h ing ass i s tant -chrs. love seat. odds 4c * * I BUY * * To closest major in * ---ChurC'h. 220 Newport preschool & elementary, ends. Call btwn 10·2. t · I • STERL'() Good USed Furniture • ersectaon rvine Center r. Center Dr N B 92660 experienced , depend a · 675-4954 <> K
l>OCK SIDt-:Tlt-;
Max 18'
Si51 mu 675 7380
Side tie for s ml po'4er or
~ail boat !ISO mo 233
19th St. Apt C:. NII
67S 0236
SECRETARY
Part tame 760· 1507
blem.8333 _ __ ___ Appliances OR J will sel Dr &Culver RARE enwood Receiver. Fis
Amencan oak double bed or SEU. for You ----I eher Cassette. 1''1scher Tramportation -, __ _
Teacher wanted Art
school 5daystwk lPM
6 PM o r 3PM 6PM
Certific ate or exper
Call Susan. 640-882().
M ... STERS ... UCTIO~ March 28 at 777 Domingo AND UNUSUAL T u r n T a b I e 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SECRETARY
Congenial Airport law
firm Top skills Self-
sta rter. nonsmoker
Josie 851-902S. TEACHER
with new mattress. k25 ,.. ,.. " D wv NB 9 5 Lot MS-~ 646-1616, 13J..9625 r . · · · pm. 5 SELECTION j Ultralinear S11eakers Aircrvft 911 O ___ _____ _ _ of furn. & misc. OF Components set 1n a ••••••••••••••••••••
Antique Admiralty desk, 1 IUYRllHrTURE MOVING 5 _.LI Furniture lvorit·~ custom built butcher '79Seneea II, SSOIT. br11
hand tooled leather. Les 957.8133 "" Assorted Screens j block console Ca ll aft & gld ext. dlx c lb !il'at11. light0ak.Sl700.900-5580 Furniture. dis h es, Porcelamed Fagurmt•i. 5.lOPM 646·8013 p P J bid props. full l·olhn~
Twin mattress set.a S25 lampe, linens. wooden Cloisonnes $525. HSI, 195 dme, full cple &
1s Call after Spm 1---------• Sat. only. Exper'd . ECE
req 'd Garden Grove Secretary area 97l·SS33
'White Porcelain statues
from China SSOea . 10
s malle r Porcelain
statues from Chana
s10ea. Japanese Doll an
glaas case ( mlnt cond )
Sl2.5. 3 hand hooked wool
throw rugs S20ea
S36-9439 eve. pl~ase or
all day Sunday.
ea. Set of 8 dining chairs patio gate. Goll clubs, I ----ll:hde slope. lung range SlOO. Childs or sewing clothing, misc. No kids' Pn•at• Porty loah & M4sWw tanks. ht' av v du t ~
desk $25. Dinette & 4 things. f'ri.·SWl. IOAM IY APPT. OMLY ~pnMflt hrake!> s tt•rrcl, sound 96().6ml
SALES lmmed part time open
in g (or Rea d er Ad
representative for ins ide
sales J>051tion Gd com
pany benefits Apply m
person Pennysaver.
1660 Placent1u A"·e
C M Mon.Fri.. I SPM
EXECUTIVE -----
SECRET ARY Teoc!Mr Direct«
to Marketing Dir in ~xp'd. -dynamic. ECE
rmancaal services firm & Elem Ed. units req 'd
Resp . challenging pos 642-<Mll
1nvo l v 1ng area of ~ecurat1es. ins urance, TELEPHONE Solicitor
real estate Xlnt to m a ke appts ro r
shrthd typ10g skills re salesmen or nationally
q'd . 714·640-0123 advertised products
~~~~~~~~~~I 953-8014or631·3700 ·SALES -_ -----
Newport Beach leading - --Tele phone Sohc1tors
Jewelers seekinR rull Secretary Home, contract, no sell·
time Employee we ll PERSON FRIDAY ing. non·prof'lt org. PIT
versed in sales & office To SI 4.000 _17_1_4>638-3122
pr<X'edures. 5 day week New sales ofe for nat'I
including Saturda y, no electronics rrrm No evenings. Call 673-9334. shrthd
SALES
OPPOITUNITY!! Fast growing Southern
California corp needs a
few aggressive salespeo.
pie We oHe r desk ,
phone. expenses. draw &
lfJenty of leads. This ex
cttlng sales opportunity
provides unl i m ited
management potential
Hurry! Call now foT in ·
terview. 714·631 5991
Salesperson for outside
811les. Salary. present a·
• ble & sharp. 714·54~ 1045.
Irvine Personnel Agy
488 E 17th. C06ta Mesa
SuatP 224 642· 1470
~
Secretary
Jr. S.C.retary
Major Newport Beach
farm has an 1mmed.
opening for a Junior
Secreury. 60wpm typ.
1ng & hte s horthand a
must. Excell working
co nditions & c o .
benefits. Please call :
Lynn Stansfield (714) 644.5800
Ext 7549 or 7853
Telephone Solicitors .
Needed lmmedlately. To
work 3-9. Mon ·Fri. No
experience nee No sell-
ing. Call after lPM .
966-01.Sl
TOP\.ESS MOORS
S75DAY, PAID DAILY
No exp. nee. 826-2583 ---------Travel Agency requires
document delivery
person for busy offi ce.
Must be 21 yni or age,
have valid C a lif.
driver's Ucen~ &c good
driving record. Entry
level position w/oppt'y
lo advance. Excell. com-
pany benefits. Call Tom-
mie 833-2977
-------Appimlcft 10 I 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HARBOR AREA
APPUANCESERVJCE
We buy used appliances
·-we sell recond, guar.
appliances. S4S.3077
chairsSIOO 548-82-42 704Jasnune.CdM.Cash CM 751-6473 ••••••••••••••••••••••• proofing. Fin µan 1~ ----Only G~ 9010 only' Never riamauerl &
Dining room table & 4 NO EARLYB I RDSI ••===••••••••••••••• a be aut y $117~500
chairs. Teak wood , S150 _ P~ASE _ Washer, SlOO Paar or BOAT TRAILER for t7 14 l~ll-6911
~95-21626 __ Kids ' & baby's items, French doors. S50t ea DffpKeel Cal·20 $330 Ca~. Sale/
Low M>lid oak table, 44., des k & bookcase. re Dining room table . _ <714>840 4268 Reftt 9120
round . just refin sined hatch cover & 6/chairs, with buffet, Bost.on Whaler S', SIOOO ••••••••••••••••••••
S325trirm. 646·0150 aft spool tables. household Sl95 Color & black & Yachtsteps l51SO"hi11:h. '76 COLEMAN TJ-:NT
5::.i items. large & small white TV. S25/up. Chest S8SO 991.9292 TRLR Sleeps 6, used 4
--------Sat. March 28, 9·5. 1983 or drawers. S3S. Lamps, - --ti m~. stove. ~tnk . ittra
Oak: Rnd tble. roll front Port Se ab o ur n e . $5/up. Dbl bed, S25 S11:l AVON Inflatable Roat 9 '. canvas t714 l~ 898!J
rile cab. sq cof tble. 2 Newport Beach. bed, SlS. Coffee lable, seating & brtH·ket for
c ustom print hi·back ---S2S. Overstuffed chair, outboard xlnt cund ·7s Dodge Club Cab trurk
chrs. love seat, odds & Sat&SunMar28·29 SIS. Stand up stove, $15 s1100997.91292 w !>e lf contained 12
ends. Call bt,,..n 10.2. 1207 Key Wes t CdM & misc. Sunday 10-5pm, ---camper fo'ull equip Xlnt
I IUY Af'PLIAHCES 67S.49.S4 Harbor View Hills cash 979·8776. KAY AK padrllt' & skirt cond askm1< 18900 OBO
Les 957.8133 only ---Fiberttlass. good shape 645·0046 an 4pm
G .E oven·range·hood
s100. Westinghse s .c. dbl
o,ven·stoveSlSO. 549·3510
Sears Elec Dryer, like
new. JJ4iD Elec Lawn
EdgerS19. 548-8242
16 Cubic Foot UPRIGHT
FREEZER S90.
( 714) 840-4268
Washer ti Dryer Sl.25 ~a.
Sm Freezer SlOO. Port.
Dishwsher Sl00646-5848
Re!r. ti uprt freezer,
work good, SlOOea.
548-&13, 548-4485
REFRIGERATOR
Frl&M:lalre, good cond,
S12S. Call 759-<»93.
PATl~POOL Furniture ----Misc.1lmt1CMt1 SIOO S46-2674 M ~-...1 l "k 9140 Beautiful, 10 Yr. Garage Sal e . misc Wmthd 8081 --Orvn-.rv 1 H
Guarantee 8J!l.7239 items. Sat, Ma rch 28 ••• •••••••••••••. ••• ••• lo~. MaNd•fMlftc•/ • • • ••••••••• •• • ••• • • •
-----8-4pm. 21451 Ocean Vista Wanted stroller. high Senk• f020 NEW PUCH ~O P Ei>!)
BED, X-long, X-firm. Dr.South Lag. cbaJr car 11eat misc ••••••••••••••••••••••• S479. Financ~ low ll\
Beautyresl king. like ---Only' in good ' cond Marine Electnc1an S22.85 mo S5U dwn new 1200.962-9645 Garage Sale. uphol 751-8987 Oeslgn/lnstall/repa1r MOPEDLANJ> 631 2504
' chairs, paintings. m1Sc -Qual. work 549.2520 eve 2.2.SS Harbor. CM
Antique rattan table. etc. SI032 Madeline, HB, Wanted· older sailboat ----- - ---Mo~~s/ Sl20.~cor.clubchair& ort Ma1nolia be fore w /sllp in Newport loata.M.W ""
ottoman, like new, S175 Adams. Fri. only Harbor. 751-8967 ~piMnt 9030 Sc 9150 67S...ms& ----• • •••••• ••• • • • • • •• • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••• ----------J•w.., 8070 Mnkd WANTED: Old dinghy. '781CZIOOOLTD
Game table -t leaf. • ....................... l........._11fl 1083 4-6' for planter Cheap W!Xtras, Black & Red
chain. xlnt cond. 1450. Heavy 14KG Heart Shape ••••••••••••••••••••••• please. 631·0174 Xlnl Cond 7300 miles
7»350.5. Pill box w/2 Rubies CONN Director trombone -9040 $2400 Arter5PM -----SlSO/OBO with case. Excellent loeh. Paw•r (7141586-2766
Bedroom set. good cond. 759-1643 condition, S100. 675-8052 •••••••••••••••••••••••
9drwr. dresser. 2 end arter6PM. '79-216' Penn Yan, 200 hp l!r79YAMAJIA 80er
tables, headbo ard. Gold&sllver.topdollars turbo dies el . rully LlkeNewS400
838-3157 Class rings? Gibson acoustic guitar 20 equipped. immac cond 966· 1390
-----957-8053 year old classic Bargain priced Pvt par ---
2 twin Adjust a-beds . S400 548-0905 ty. 775-7125,673-37211 EM +ooW Honda portable
38x.80", Uke new, orig Heavy 14KG Heart Shape generator. like ne w
SALES PERS OH
Expe ri enced only.
F T ./P .T . Wallah
C larke 's So Coa st
620 Newport Center Dr Newport Beach, 92660
Equal Opp Emplyr
Truck Driver with good
pick-up for part time de· llveries673-S340 Gas dryer, eltt. 165/ea.
S700/ea.Sell!orS250/ea, Pill box w/2 Rubles lbanu "Butterly" WilltradeBlgBearLake S275. Call 5571876. or
dryer, w /sheets Incl. C all SlS0/080759-1643 acoustic guitar, new or ocnrront Mobile 7»7Bdys
645-8980 (Hope) w/hardshell case Black Home or trlrs for sport -----
TYPIST. General Office.
Flexib le hour s ,
Waterfront Ya c ht
Brokerage & Real
67~2072. ---------Diamond Earrings: Ex-with pearl lnlay, S375. fiahingboat-31'.499-3816 I.ate '79 RMtOON. xlnt
English oak armoire cepllonally brilliant. Peavey Backltage 30 cond., nu trans, Works Plaza. Costa Mes a I~~~~~~~~~
751·7500. * •SICUTAltllS• • E1tate. Immediate
opening. Sea Propertiee.
Weatin1house dbl oven SJOO, gtrl'a yellow chest 1.05 total weight. Ap· amp new, Stoo. MXR BAYLINER shocks. DG head & pipe,
elec ran1e. 1225760-1516. bed.SI00.1145-7406 praised SS600. Sell "tOO" Phase Shifter, Uke board. other xtras
857·1211 separately Sl400·S1800. new, SSS. Barcus·Berry S8SO/OBO. 759·9529 art • SA.US PERSON
Wanted for attractive
.• Jomen's shoe dept in
' ' aahion Island. Full or ~art-time. Exper iu ce
LTD. 673-2810 .
AdminAaat/CorpSll,000 Lady Kenmore apt sz Recpl/1'65/FunS 16 ,600 WonlPtoc/Brea/Sl3,200 washer & dryer, 110v.
SOF~~s'L~PER 4M-3828. "1330" Pre.amp. like 197127 fNl 7~M -----
t7.S • SelUDj fashion jewelry new, 137·50· Acoustic 150 Tw 1 JO Yot.0'1 SuiuJu TSlOO . 1980
GO/"Doitall"Sl2,000 Typiat lyr old. S400. Sears
Bkpr/gen ledgSl5,600 F V. Clrm needs report ~fri1. Top or the line, 17
980-5580 Cash. Own busine11'own lead amp ~ lOS 4· 12 S700
bosa. Serg ios M kl I cabinet, S275. 5-49,8741 , , Illy....._ 846-3956
necessary. 640-7810. Liz Reinders Agency typi.st. Will train on w p . cu ft. Xlnt cond. S300. Leavina st.le muat sell S7S.U33 751-85l6, 548-0995 c... wltlt ~.... --------
& Chley. S...,. 6. Motor HomH, S•I
Ow t.......... R...r/Storoge t 160 •••••••••••••••••••••••
4020Birch Est '64 EOE Typing so. dictaphone: B E. Portable Dis· entire content.a of my 12 SALISPHSON Newport/833-8190/Free no s/h. Call Mary at bwaaber SlSO. Sears rm home. Example ;
.l••perialced. Exclusive 963-6560. room Air cond. US. Solid oak parquet Inlaid
Office,.,... •• & Mlscel•1_, 1010 ..... wllt 1015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • "8ndba1 boutique. South S4.S-IJZZ3. S ' coffee l b I w I 2
. .Coat Plaza. Full lime. i---------~-------~ matc"''R• end tbls, just
Lo•el•uM STENORETTE Die
Helium Bouquets de· tapbooe. Barely used.
livered. Perfect for Good cood. Only S220,
everyoccaslon. 673-4419 646-3375.
MUST SELL WI CAN SIU
YOUll.V .
s.s9-1304 .c II, ~s 9 SECIETARY ~ New 30" Gu Stove ·-• a 1or appt.'" ·2M . · Ty.,. .. • (Almond) •-/OBO pd '800 tell Cor $400. lo hotel reservations. ...--M bin • Sales SOwpm typing, filing & Staf Tr..lsh ~evea ate I 80' wall unit Prof. s.--...a.. phone ex per. llOwpm ---------1 w/aclj1.mt.1n1 ahelvea pd ~--..-shorthand" will train on Dicta ectys 11 cu ft P'rifld.alre frost •• 0 0 . • e I I • 4 7 s . ~' reservation•. S900 mo. free, white. 175. Thomasville 11 ~ king :~~·lbReCt51!·wi:n~:~ Send rnume to. 1103, Exec. Sectys 1-.10.. alse bdrm emembl•. pd
.,..,.. Daily Pilot, P .O. Box W U to k J h S4e00, MU for -.0. Alao •needed by \'eryone. 560 Cos an "I wor w t Caloric Gu ru1e. Dbl. have brut bdrm a.t, an· iM1Wl1 potential: !-..:, ta Meta, Ca. proleulonal people? oven. Self·clffe Worb tlque re--'uctlon ••" s.o ooo.~ ooo .. .._ Woritina temporary aa-. . , ........ .;.. Ch_, .,..,.. .., • ci,. Tralftlng al1nmenu a1low1 )'OU IJ'Nl •. -· .a .. c . "" ball • claw lbl w/8 dbl
RIDW0002d't
S4S, xlnt decklnf. New load-18,00 t In
from mill, ~/ft. C.M •
MS-913'7 Xl.2'7 anytime
W aterbed-ltg u , incl.
headboard S.zso.
64$.%322 Hllh J Job variety 6 llexlbllily. Ou ,......, 11Dii. oveo, freaeed beck chn, pd * ullf ncome !Security officer. P IT. \'ourakUll a.H valuable. DMda tbennoat.al. ea1y 1100, tell ror '900. AU • * Qa fled Leach wkencb for lr1 apt. com· On Line lnvtt.a you to Ila: tlO. ~.Mike. herculon aota. loveMal Bute Tlffany 'a mem·
.... liq ...... ~ plea: In N.B. 13.50/br. join our winnlnl team! OE fnlltl retri w/matchba1 chr • ot· berahlp. S200. 5J8.1m. s.-.. For info contact J Im Call tor appointment. __ ~ eonJ· ,c;: tomM , Just pd SJ.200 HU luve meeuie .
. · A1 :154-U,545.f7tl LuplutN+llOO. Neveur... m.m'...,.... • · tor atoo. Formal livin1 Se
""S.US NUOMHIL s rn. L'n-rm llOla. 1o .... at.. COf'• an u: ~·r On~
•' Huded ror contem o~~o~Uq~a,~I~ · U \• Ii : Coppertone apartment re1adq wood • 1la11 m~ x t, · Olrlt
porary women'• wear. lndMdua.la. Good a\art· TIMPOltMY'9SOfHl~ alae Nlri1erator, MS. tblt, II oak ctUna buffet. ::0 Nla1kl 5 apd blke,
MUil be eJtper'd. Salary ln1 pay. ~fuodable un--... bl1 claw loot cu riq, .Nolf7t I'·?:• comm. PIHH •PP' llorm depollta. f7 .. 7241 J'l2JlllrdStNet 1---------• 1&actln1 boollcaua. 8eautloftlweddln14rna
• or call : A/irori!. •aa.a111 Muw~rtlMd lie.._ 1020 bld•·•·bed, lampa, •u. Maaaavn TV
0 • ••• 1;;;;............... wa_aber/dr 4l l ,.____. rd _. .. ....-a « t 29 ub n • ·•· Olrl~1 blc1cle. ..UQue fer 00 -• rKO ..-J•r Wand, MptBch Have aomeUlfn1 to ullT lteO Boll·P'ut. 24" P"erf mucb to melllloe. By tmo, Mrlpn_tor •us1
SeJUcDeltetna -&425878 c1w1nectac11doltwe11 WantAdH.Jp? NZ·•• Ollitcoed.s.ao..,... :.'C.:~::,:iu .t.:::..::_.r. Klni•
·1 -
..... -. .
--~
Custom executive desk
3Jt7teU$100.
646-3167
SIZ.500 ...... .,....
rrtc. .... " .. '' c .. ....,. ....
'71-26''
RENT . 22' lux mtr
home. Sips 6, self-cont.
'275 /wk + 8• m1
64o..8S8S.
,..,
You can be a
WINNER
Just by sending us your name and
address and by watching for your
name In the classified ads of the
Dally Pilot.
Win tl~kets to lb~Jrcua, •~a •mu1ement attracuona or •PO event.. Juat r out this coupon and mall It 11 tot.be:
Clanllled Department, Dally Pilot
330 W. Bay Street, Costa Mesa, CA t212t
i I I I :
1 '
------------·--.-.....
, ........ , ....... tl70 .......................
ll&:J4 Atillrocat, Uk• new la,IDQ. un-.> . ... ll
l:tt la pt. C.M. t1500. Low
•Pet• rent, furn. 'T7
Nomad kll, <N.U>. E.li&e~l
ll1t JS' heel Travel
traller. Xlnt Cond. ~300.
ltTI Wetblke SHOO.
9110
BOX TRAILER
t'd'xl •Small Wh~i.
•100 llM-t390
.-s.mce.rwt. &Accnsort.. 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.,. ....
DatsunZ
motor
+ .............
761-5137
W..nted-dependable,
amall blo~k Chevy
enline 1980or later
548-0995 days.
CHEAP!!
Slightly uaed turbo kit '» '74 Datsun Z cars
768-5837
'71 Pint o Tran s
CompJete. S75. Call Joe
Dys 557 ·2167 , eve
673--1469
Trana Am Wheels : two
UX7, two 15X8, Gold and
Silver, Call 957-0375
New used Web er
carburetorS80 (manual)
under 300 ml 968·1520
Su lie
'74 "'6T Dod&e 4d P.U,
Cood shape. Rblt trana.
Valuable ste reo
w/truck. Upper couole
& dual tanka, cargo box,
new Holly Ecooo-maater
carb. 13 ma per gal.
S2300,557·2W
'71 El C&mino very clean,
good paint, $3000.
41M-501.S
Avtos for SaM '66 GMC i.., ton pickup,
••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond.Sl500
IMPORTANT 498-5916
. ...
• ~ • 1' .. . ' ..
VW-PORSQIE-AUDI
44SE. CoutHiway
at Bayside Drive
Newport Beacb 67J.0800
•••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 ALFA
SPIDllS
75 FIAT Xl9
COMVBTllLE
'-clllah!
Am/Fm Stereo
Must Sell/Best Offer
Call after 5pm S48·5956
LEASE
DIRECT!
1911 SAAi
TUll01
H_. 97271 IEACH IMPORTS
• ••• ••••••• • • •• • • •• • • • • 1 848 Dove Street
'72SUPER BEETLE
amlrm ste~. Michelin
tires, reblt en1. super
clean. 960-6419
'72 VW Convt. Rblt eng.
Am/Fm stereo. ne w
tires. brakes, gen .,
needs little body work
Asking 12495. 645·2297 .
9772 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VOi.VO
SALES, SERVICE
AMDLEASIHG
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
EXPERTS
Cadillac, um Fleetwood,
Brn /wt top , wht.
leather int., moon roof,
new radiab, wire whls,
45M miles, immac.
cond. S6950 (401UPQ)
~o
Cadillac, 1979 Eldorado
Diesel, beige. wire whls,
32M miles, all service
r ecords avail. Sll750
(162XWA > PP
714·~98
'69 Couaar XR7. good
body & motor, needs
some work , S800
842·3255
DoclcJt 9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Oodae Dart 2d r, xlnl.
cond.Ownerdeceased
96J..01218
Ford 9940 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'70 Ranch Wgn, good
family transportation
$700/080 41M·6931
'72 Ford LTD Brougham.
xlnl cond, Sl600 or best
496-7321.
'77 Seville. brick cir. im· '72 Ford Wgn 9 pass runs
mac 30M mi. Moon rf, good S475 contact ad
wire whls, all extras 1 #4~ 642·4300 24 hours
owner. S8200. 846-2315 --------1968 Ford Mustang. v 8
Camero 9917 Re d exterior. blai:k
R~~~ ~~ D Alununum Camper ahell IEACH IMPOITS
ADVERTISERS for sale. short ~ed 8480oveStreet
VISIT YOUR NEWPORT BEACH
OIAMGI COAST 752.09 oo
IEARLEIKE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
646-9303 540.946 7
••• •••••••• ••• •• • • • • • • • vinyl interior New steel
'78 <.:amaro belted ures, runs good.
Air. automatic. Power Sl495. 642-4321, ext 210 or
steermg, 27,961 males. evenlng,s640-7049 The price of items Toy o ta PU . s ad.e NEWPORTBEACH
advertised by vehicle widows, flip window m 752-0900 HONDA
HIAD9UARTIRS
OIAHGE COUMTY 1882VEI) SAAi ORANGE COUHTY
BUY or LEASE VOLVO dealers in the vehicle back, S400. Call after ---------1
classified advertising 2:30pm 544-3309. IMW 9712 $4988
Barwick lmPortS
1979 Ford 4 door sedan.
auto trans, 6 cylinder,
white w I blue interior
Approx. 42,000 males
Priced S400 belo w
wholesale blue book at
S162S. Can be seen 11t
Orange Coast Daily
Pilot. 330 W Bay St.
Costa Mes a. Ask for
garage or fl eet ad
ministrator
columns does not in· v_. 9570 ••••••;0·;~:·Be••s•l••••••
elude ~ny applicable ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,..,
TODAY!!!
UMIVHSITY
SAL~&SERVlCE
DIRECT OVERSEAS Largest Voh·o Dealer
ELIVERIES ln Orange County'
D BUYorLEASE
831-3311
taxes, license, transfer Buy Or Lease Deal
fees, finance charges. v-..111hd lnOrangeCounty ... m!~I DIRECT
'78 Camaro LT, lo mi. buy
o r ass ume lea s e ,
Sl5llmo. 64S-0686 fees for air pollution con· Used c ... 1 ! Come See Us Today! OU>SMOllLI
HONDA
GMCTIUCKS
28.'50 Harbor Blvd.
trot device certifications 1979 Ford VCM or dealer documentary C __ , __
preparation charges un· ORY~ less otherwise specified C.8 , .stereo, air. Power
by the advertiser. sleer1.ng, immaculate, ------___ low males.
9520 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'HI Ford Woodie .
restored, 113,000. ALSO
'29 Model A Town Sedan. 4 dr, restored. Ideal for
student 11 0 . 000.
67~61.
'SS Ford 2dr. hardtop.
original. $5000
751·3965
19155GMC 'hTon Pickup
in parts Make offer
Jeff~9589. aft 3
T.allD. 1957.
(IM28226 >
$6395
Surfer Clean. ·es VW van,
new brakes. just tuned,
must see to believe.
S1600. 54().0737 or 646-51165
lBlgTony)
COSTA MESA
________ ,
'69 Camaro 2nd owner
like new 73,000 ml. V ·8
auto. 14,000 (7 14 J ·,o,20G .. •eoG'°: ••• ~M-~ Garden Grove 530·9 190 _ ___ _ _ __ _ 847·4744 . SADDLBACK 540.9640
IMW 5....., 9762 10120Garden Grove BI
28400MarJuerite Pkwy. '70 Honda 800 Sed 70k mi ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden Grove 530.9190 CtM•roMf 9920 Liftcoln 9945 Mission Viejo 4() mPC p.p ·~Run• ad '78 Subaru 2 dr. xlnt COD· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Avery Pkwy. exit (5 979·38116 eve/751-1680 dltion .. $2860. 1910CHEVROLET '77Ll ... COL ... Fw Volvo Classic , '72 , " "
y.) J..... 9730 494-7296 PllOOES . totall y CITATION VBSAIUES
lll-2040 495--4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 SUBARU w /'81 restored. asking 16700 Automatic trans .. V6, Styled for today! This CloMd Sunday• pwr. •t.eering, tilt wheel, bea· .. "ul 4 door feature• 1------....;.. __ '67 Jaiuar 3.8 MK US aU en'"' ..... new -·•~t job, S (714 )497-31162after5pm. dio •-onl 17 000 l! uu.a
I I • -....... ra • Y • m es full -r. cruise con· or I · very we 1 main· apd, front whl drive. o n t bis hat c b ba ck 1 11':"1 -~ ., __ 1 l 1 CREVIER
&I Sf 6 llOAOWAY
SA141A AMA
835·3171
T~ Ul11MA Tt OlllVIHO lllACltlNI
•USIDIMW1•
'765.:l>IAS/R (2419)
'77 6.:1> csi auto <0040> '79 320i (7560)
talned Mual Sacrifice h000/b9t541-7I09 '69144S4dr, auto, model. (385XMI l. Limit-tro , u t w • ..,... v ny top, 1ttr1$70 B~TOFFER AM /FM stereo lape
lc-w S.-cl•! Xlnt cond '67 Jaguar. .77 Sub&nl 2dr, ·•DL",
~?·~anytime ed offer (up to 2 Yn.> t071SPF > See it a nd service contract on most you'll l>uy It at only SS497
late model used cars at John:soo & Son Lan
backed by major ins. co. coin Mercury . Costa mint cond, Ca. car. S3900 4spd, very clean but
· a real sac. 846-8570 neecb some work. lat
T A K I 0 V I I Stt95takes. 640-9049.
78 Volvo, 2164. 4 dr, loaded
Lo mi, assumable loan
or buy w/good credit
PP. Call 675 6082 or
645-6443 PYMMTS. Toyohl 9765
S477/MO '79 XJ6L. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---
/ II '79 Toyota Supra, 24,000 HwdTo FWWCIC)Oft
OHL Y S6499 Mesa· 54().5630.
IAKHSftHT
USIDCAIS
lt25 Baker Street
COSTA ME::>A
545--3334 ALL ORIGINAL
Xlnt cond. Res : 644· 7777.
Ok 54(). 1111 '76 Dodge Van Camper. 1 '79320iAS/R (7089 )
owner. S3100. Call after '80 SZlliA sunrf. (0013)
Green w beige lnl. a mi, Sepd, fully equip. '73 Volvo l.S, 4 spd.
extras, eves 494 -5057 . with snrf. s7200/firm. Michelins. AM /FM, lo
640-9886wkdays 497-58158. mi, very nice' Asking
'77 Ja1uar XJ6. xlnt
cond,S995()
S2795. 640-900! SH US FIRST!
We have a good selection
of NEW & USED
Chevrolet.s !
71UMCOLH
TOWMSEDAH
The Flagship of Lan
coin 's ! This one as
beautiful ! Featuring
power seats & windows,
till wheel. cruise con·
trol, AM / FM stereo
tape, s tyled s tee l
wheels (233UKH l now
only 16497 at Johnson &
Son Lincoln Mercury
Costa Mesa 540.5630.
'64 Chevy Impala super 5pm642·7063. CloMd S..-ys
sport, rbll :rn. 4spd, U.S. 1--'---------------L---'75 Toyota Corolla .
40,000mi. Xlnt. cond. A..tos.,UHd
847-6296 m aga, exceptionally AllhKW..t.td 9590 TMMottbcltWtc)
clean & solid lhruout ••••••••••••••••••••••• P.t Of y_. $2200. Call aft. 5.30 ; ;;;;.;rn•uuu;;•Oi COHHELL .
Sl200/0B0498-S055 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR IMW rwclMtte Or ---------•for t op used cars ·
Lotw 97 37 _5'8-__ 7005_.______ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 Toyota Coro lla
LICtback. 5spd, xlnt cond
S3100/or assume pymnts
oflU18.24/mo. 644·1150
•CARS WAMTIO• RUNNING OR NOT
125-$300
CHEVROLET
R•cNCltional foreign. domestics or Lw CCMllld I•
V.e.ktn 9530 classics If your car is McWft IMW !!
'78 Esprit, dk. blu/beige
ant. Under 6M ml. Pam·
pered & improved over
new. PP (925X EN )
'l\.~11.orl••r 111,.t
ll lSl\'1~ .... , M•rary 9950 SU-1200
'78 Dodge RV Van Self.
contained. Xtras, low
miles. 842·5241
••••••••••••••••••••••• extra clean. see us Fl RST! Ivy Or Len• lyOw,._., ... !
CASH
FREE TOWING
OPEN WEEK ENDS
Call Ed <714)891·0517
'76M0Hli
•••••••••••••••••••••••
ORANGE COUNTY'S
FINEST
LlNCOLN·MERCURY
DEALERSHIP 4WhHIDrins 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Landcruiaer wen. lo
ml, a/c, 4 spd, $4500.
546-0rn
'77 Plymouth Tra ii
Duster. Ori(inal Owner
Low miles. Xlnt cond
139 00 . H o me
714 /855·9022 . work
49'7·5407.
'89 Jeep Wagoneer
Runs good Rollbar,
lltehts, many xtras,
$20()(). 559-6.541 (ask for
Tom)
Tndm 9560 •••••••••••••••••••••••
·~..!!11
LowMlleoc)e!
I tlO 4 spcL ..Ci 5 apd.
~rld&Up's , ........ .
S.. .... 11! ~dOWll ..... _,_,_ ...
BA RWICK OA lSUN
\ .,,.. Ju,, ( tJpt \t~ (Jf"l<
8 3 I· 3 3 1 I
* Clle•. MU '10
LUV 'IJoMShllle
witb dual rears I Ideal
ror landacapera, etc. <S..ae>.
OM.YS64fl
HOWAIDct.•reltt Dlw• 4'Quall Su.
NllW"9T BEACH
IJJ.Olll
~
#I Ill Or-. C..ty
2925 HarbOr Blvd.
C~AMESA
979-2500
WtlUY
CLIAHCARS
AMO TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
'X..'>4 lt.111.,, H .• ·I
' I ~I\ \11· '· \
SU-1200
~~~~~~~~~
HIGHIUYER
Top dollar• for Sports
Cars, Bup, Campers,
914's, Audi's
Ask for U/C MGR
JIMMAllMO
VOUSWA'ilH
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTl.NGTON BEACH
14J.2o00
TOP.DOI.LAI
PAIOFOI
600D&CLIAM
UIJDCAISI
' m 1 r.""lC h~
nl ,"\Zd Cl
r .. ._ .. 911'"
PmCHES
WANTED
(714t 522-5333 640-1788 Trlunlph 9767 2+2. 4 cyl , good
mileage, ale. radio. Mcnda 9711 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1971 ftlUMP'H ORAM(iE COUMTY'S
OLDIST '73 Mauia RX-3 Statioo SPITFllE Part time Mechanic transferrable warranty
Weekend.a & Eves. Tune _55_7-_3527 __ o_r_759_-0060 __ . __ Waaon. lo mi, gd cond. COHV9TllLE
$1000. 497·5ll6. W bile exterior with Ups, Brake Jobs to Ma· 12 Chevy Kingswood
jor Overhauls. Fair Estate SW. A/C, lug· &
Sai.·Servlce·Leuina
1ovc.-..,.,1H.
Rollakoyce BMW
U40Jamboree
Newport Beach 640.6444
'79 RX·7 GS Model, xlnl
cond, aluminum whl•.
37,000 ml. blue w/camel
Int, sUll under wrnty.
'7800. 644·1833. 857-2383
Mercedtt ha 97 40 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MUST SILL SELLING YOUR MB ?
'78 BMW 733. 675·4821 WI r A y
BMW 320i '78, loaded, TOP DOU.Al SS
new tires Ir clutch, mint Call Jack Bacon
cond ! Best ofter 581-4015 JIM SUMOHS
eves/wknda IMPoaTS
llnOHarbor Blvd. '77 m . Burgundy, 4spd, COSTA MESA
air, casaette, xlnt. 631·1Z78U3-9300
throughout. 17900. !~~~~!!!!!~~~~~ 645·23'75. I:
BMW S30i, '78, mint cond.
Dys 951 ·5006 ,
wknds/evea 499·5146
'73 BMW 2002 clean body,
runs good SJSOO/OBO
M4·S758
MBZ210 · 1973
XLNT COND. $eOOO
CALL 760-9278
MUST SELL '73 280 SEL
4.5, • m!, make offer
640-21M7
__, 9715 '80 3000 Champa1ne.
..,.., Cuaet. sunroof, $21500
••••••••••••••••• •••••• UACNl20) 752·~
black Interior " only
25,000 miles. Extra prices. S48-5282 Ed. gage rack, all elect
AMC 990 doors & windows, Am-8
•••••••••••••••••••••• track stereo & many xtras. Xlnt cood. Sl200
clean! (731.S8C).
OMLYSlt'5
IAKIR SftHT 1971 AMC ft ACER
USED CAIS Dl WAGON
1425 Baker Street Automatic trans.. pwr.
C~A MESA steering, AM /FM stereo
545--3334 cassette. 6 cyl. engine.
----------• wood grain sides & a
'75 TR7 perfect cond. new sharp car! (496WKJ ).
tires. reblt trans. nu Limited offer <up to 2
paint. 968-5165 Yrs.) service contra cl ..:...._--------1 on moet late model used Yol&sWCllJ"I 9770 can backed by major
••••••••••••••••••••••• ins. co.
'60-'66 vw left & n1ht OHLY Slt95
door, '73 left door. S50 S each. Western style whl IAICH TaEET
rims for Super Beetle USED CAIS
or orr 962·535S
·79 Mallbu classic SW ful-
ly loaded Am/Fm cass.
undercoat e d SS .500
551·8903
·79 Chev diesel I.'! ton
pickup. Am/fm cass.
A/C 20K mi. Take over
lease or best offer.
646-1501after5:30pm .
'72 Impala, runs good.
BEST OFFER.
631·2287 $20ea. 548-9744 1425 Baker Street
COSTA MESA '78 Impala station wgn,
'71 VW Bua rbll en&. new 545.3334 air, pe, pb, xtnt cond,
brakes, iood cond, best 1--------12850. 548-6737
offer over 11900. 552-9418 '76 AMC Pacer pis, plb,
aft 5PM f41·8700 days al e, am/fm cua stereo.
X211 ' 1reai 55&-9556
'78 Malibu, silver. lo
mileage, good cond.
545-3636. '72 Convertible, white
w /black top. Many
lltrU. lluat aee. '4950
... 99101---.------....................... c...,... 9925
'74 Capri, &ood milea1e.
Sll00 /080 . Oya
754-4144. <John) eves
obo.&12-IZll
1971 Buick Skylark 2 door •••••••••••••••••••••••
coupe. Silver metallic '70 Chrysler New Yorker
MBZ '71 3000. a/r, cua, ... ......_ with blue cloth Interior. 4dr, nma xln~ kSO Con·
4711, mint. '16,500. -IMurw• V·6, ale, power brakes tact ad "3S uaUy Pilot
730-5S79 752·9200 dys; 844·0547 Problema? Any risk. and 1teerln1, AM /FM _:u_hourl _______ _
9720 _•_v_ee_. _______ 1 ~::.~~l~na~~ atereo, bucket 1eat1. CwtlMRllll 9930
~.?t.~
LINCOLN·MERCURY
16-18 Auto Center Dr
S D Fwy-Lake For est
exit
lRVINE
130.7000
'79 MSlCURY
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540-5630.
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pass . loaded . Ne w
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'7'MMCUIY
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1980 PONT AIC
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' • ' r e • ~
I
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illlll CUii YI. llElll llllY l'IPll
ft--.LJHC,[11\~ MAH( ti .'ti ''IH1 ()H AN(, F: c_ <)UN 1 Y l Al 11 r) H NI A ~' ~ CENTS
'
Freed in error, oc rapist ; recaptured
By DAVID llUTZMANN
Ol U. o.tlr l"llM St.ff
Orange County Sheriff 's
Department investigators said
today a Los Angeles teen-ager
convicted of rape in a south
county crime spr ee had been
reca}>tured by Detroit police
a fte r he was mistakenly
released rrom a Los Angeles jail
earlier this month due to a
clerical error.
Sberifrs Lt. Wyatt Hart said
Detroit police took Darryl
Bernard Watts, 17, into custody
this morning at bis father's
home.
The residence had been under
s urveillance since Wednesday
night. a day after Oranse
County law e nforcement
officials discovered Watts had
been erroneously freed from the
Los Angeles County Jail on
March 8 after serving a 141-day
sentence there on unrelated
cbarees.
Walts was released. be said,
because Oranae County Sheriff's
officials did not send the proper
paperwork indicatina that the
teen-ace felon was to be held for
incarceration in state prison.
Hart said today that Watts
offered no resistance when he
was taken i nto c u stody.
Im m e diate e xtradition
proceedings were planned.
Referring to the error which
led to the convicted rapist's
release. the sheriff's lieutenant
said Wednesday. "We dropped
the ball ... It was our
r esponsibility t o have the
pa perwork there (in Los
Angeles) and we didn't "
Watts and two companions,
Michael Simmons, 18, a nd Ben·
jam in Montgomery. 18, were con·
victed in Orange County Superior
Court in September on multiple
felony counts. including rape,
robbery . burglary, false im·
prisonment and auto theft.
The charges involved a March,
1980, crime spree in south Orange
County that included the rape of a
14-year-old El Toro girl in her
parents' home.
Judge Kenneth E . Lae sen-
tenced Montgomery and Sim·
mons to27 years ln state prison.
Watts. although a minor. wu
given a 23-year state prison term.
There was a possibility he could
have been sent to the California
Youth Authority, but prosecutor
Dave Carter offered evidence
that Watts had sodomized a
cellmate at Orange County Jail
the night before his sentencing.
<See SPREE, Page AZ)
Huntington nurse found slain
County's
• crime
• on rise
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
• Oft"• D•tly Pilot St.tit
Only ·five percent of all people
arrested in Orange County on
felony charges went lo slate
prison.
Nineteen percent of all arrests
involved drunken driving.
An additional 16 percent of all
a rrests were for misdemeanor
drunk in public.
The value or all property
stolen exceeded $101 m illion. On·
ly about $26 million was re-
covered.
One in seven county res idents
was a victim of a crime.
These are among the findings
in a report on crime released
Wednesday by C.e Orar.5~ Coun·
ty Criminal J ustice Council.
According to the report. crime
in Orange County increased 4.9
percent in 1980 over the 1979
level.
The increase in the seven ma·
jor offenses category was 7.3
percent.
That category includes willful
hom icide, forcible rape, rob·
bery, aggravated assault,
burglary. theft or more than $200
and motor vehicle theft.
According to the report. Santa
Ana. among the county·s 26
cities. was ranked first in a com·
parison of the crime index rate,
a broader measure of crime OC·
currence. The r ate is based on
the number of willful hom icides,
forcible rapes, robberies. ag·
gravated assaults, burglaries.
all thefts and motor vehicle
thefts per 100,000 population.
Tustin was ranked second :
Costa Mesa, third; Newport
Beach, fourth: Stanton. fifth:
Garden Grove, sixth: Laguna
Beach . seventh : Anaheim ,
e ighth; Orange, ninth . and
Westminster, tenth.
Huntington Beach was ranked
14th : Fountain Valley. 18th, and
Irvine, 20th.
Wh en the seven major of-
fenses rate is compared the
r ankings change . Stanton
becomes first; Laguna Beach.
second; Santa Ana, third: Costa
Mesa. fourth; Newport Beach,
fifth, Anaheim, sixth ; Tustin,
seventh; Garden Grove. eighth;
Westminster, ninth, and Orange,
tenth.
Huntington Beach was ranked
15th; Fountain Valley. 18th. and
Irvine 21st.
Tar, feather
attack cited
MOULTON, Ala. CAP>
-Two sisters have been
charged in connection
with the tarring a n d
feathering of a woman
who planned to marry the
ex-husband of one of them.
Marita McElwey, 53. of
Vinemont, a nd Robbie
Jean McCorkle, 49, of
Town Creek, were held un·
der SU.500 bonda o n
char1es of burglary. kid·
nappln1 and asaault. sald
Lawrence County Sbertlf
Grad)'RoH.
Pollu said Ellubeth
.Jameson, 40, of Green
Valley, Arla., told them
ab• w11 tarred and
feathtted by the women
after I.bey forced tbelr ••1 • l'lftpolnt into th• Towa er.a boiM ol Mn.
lle&lwtf't tlt·butband,
Dr. lollD llcElwty. who
#al not at honr·
(i.• v
u:lbWWWW
Development near Newland house
Workers prepare land for 190,000-square-foot shopping
center that will be built next to historic Newland house
just off Beach Boulevard and Adams A venue in Hunt-
ington Beach. Newland house and grounds will remain ~n
tact. but open field s~rrounding it will be transformed m·
to two r estaurants. two banks. an offi ce building, several
small stores and parking lots. House. pres~rv~d by Hunt·
ington Beach Historical Society, was built m 1898 by
farmer William Newland.
Remains
may be those
of NB .man
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Ol 1 ... D•llY Piiot Sufi
Tests were being conducted to·
day on the charred remains of a
man believed from Newport
Beach after his s mall plane
slammed Into a rugged ridge in
heavy rain in Santa Barbara
County and exploded in a ball of
fire.
The 11 :30 a .m. crash on
Buckhorn Ridge Wednesday was
witnessed by a U.S. Forestry
Service ranger and rescuers im·
mediately set out for the site,
finding plane and pilot con ·
sumed by the blaze.
He was tentatively identified by
authorities as self-employed busi·
ness executive Robert C. Coata,
60. Mrs. Joan Coats said today she
has no doubt it was her hus band
whoperilbed.
·'They found his buainesa card.II
al the scene," sald Mn. Coata,
who noted her husband new that
route from John Wayne Airport to
Oakland on a bual,nen trip atleut
once a week.
.. There'• no doubt lt waa him,"
the added.
The couple bad lived ln Newport
Beach for eltbt years Jnd their
curreot addril• l• 2' Encore Clr·
cle In ._ Newport Cres\ con·
domlnlum1 OYerlookln1 Well
Newport.
She tald _. and her h'Pbaad
own J.C. -...,..,riln, 1 nm. that
diltrlbutet pluUc CUpt.
Their compaay-owatd Ctiilna
l40 went down about 10 mu.
eoutbtut ot Hlpwa1 1'8 IDd
el1ht d\Ues IOUth of Pozo Junctf"
In San Lui• Obllpo County.
Raid nets$170,000
in jewelry in H B
Huntington Beach detectives
have seized $170,000 in jewelry
allegedly stolen from a Temple
City business several weeks ago,
officers said today.
The loot was found hidden un·
der a bed after a raid at the Un·
derhill Lane home of Willie Ray
Wisely. 28, a police spokesman
said.
Wisely was arrested at the res·
idence by Los Angeles County
Sheriff's officers lnvestieating
the holdup and was jailed on SUS·
pie ion of robbery.
The Huntington Beach police
spokesman said local detel:tives
Nome111of11
obtained information that a sus·
pect in the robbery of a Temple
City antique store might be liv
ing in Huntington Beach.
The spokesman said Wisely
was placed under surveillance,
and officers learned that he
matched the description of one
s uspect in the Temple City
holdup. includjng a cast on his
left arm.
Working with Los Angeles
County authorities, Huntington
Beach detectives obtained a
search warrant a nd entered
(See RAID, Page AZ)
Boy found in NB
kidnap victim?
By STEVE M~&BLE
Ol .... o.ily ""' .....
A brown-haired 13·year-old
boy, wbo told Newport a.acb
police Ulla •Mk that be bad -ao
memory ol la1t put, nported1)' .,u ktdD..,,..S more tha a,..,.
aao after runnlAa •••1 from hll OceamldefGlterfamlly. Pollee, wbo epotted tbt
1oan11tu wanderla1 down N1wpon Bou,.Yard Ta•day n....,wlthamkldae-•••• Ila" a a at.Id 11-Jear-ola Balboa
laland rt11ldent Leonard Gaillard
on kidnap ct•r111.
lnv11U1atora claim GaaUard,
who alao UHt the name J aclt Ran·
dal and 1lx other aliases, arabbed
the YOUlll boy more than a year
a10 tn Oceanside.
Tbe J.S.year<Old, who uea the
name JHon, reportedll told
police be d.ldn't krH># wfto bia
parent.I are or where bt 11 from.
But POHce u1d tM boJ lat.rtold
them iM bad UY..S with Ga1HU'd
for mare than a year ln vartoul
apartmtnta and mGtel l'OOIM la
N"ewport, K.-tlnston Beech and
tlee 1-"°N• Pap Al)
.....
FBI snares
2 men inN.B
'kickbacks'
By GLENN SCOTT
Of tlW Dally Pilot St.II Newport Beach businessman
Jack Torre's r efusal lo pay
kickbacks for a multi-million
dollar account led FBI agents lo
arrest two out-of-state men out·
side Torre's construction office,
according to FBI officials.
Torre worked with FBI agents
as they set up a clandestine
video-taping Wednesday of Torre
offering the two men $10,000 in
cash as kickbacks, according to
the FBI.
Immediately after that, agents
arrested Harold Russell of
Scottsdale. Ariz.. and Jerry
Petersen of Denver Colo .. on sus-
picion of one count of conspiracy
and three counts of wire, or
telephone, fraud. ·
The two men were arraigned
late Wednesday at the Tustin law
office of U.S. Magis trate Ronald
Rose. They were booked into
Oranae County Jail and then re·
leasedonthelrownrecognllance.
Petersen ls president and
Russell vice president of Mex.lean
Foods ol America Ine., which was
acquired two years a10 aa a 1ub-
1ldiaryot Genera1 Foocla Corp.
Accordlnl to document.I flied
with the federal court, the two
men bad approached Torre and
bis vice president, Gerald Crum.
offerlnl contract.a lot COMtruc·
&ion of up to 50 GuadalaHarey's
reatauranu durin1 the next live
yean ll tbe eoutruct.lon ft.rm
.. ould kltk back about SS0,000 for
Heh Job.,
Rullell at ooe pol•& told Cnam:
"It can be dooe, <T01T• Coallnac· tlon Cttnpany) will be ma~lq a ,
(lleT08&&. PaaeAJ)
I
Public's
help
sought
By PfUL SNEIDERMAN
Of 11'9 Dally Pilot Stall
Long Beach police are seeking
the public's help in solving the
gr isly execution-style murder of
a Huntington Beach nurse whose
body was found near a San
Diego Freeway off.ramp
Long Beach police offi cer
Fred Millemann said in·
vestigators believe 11 Suk Choi.
34, was rammed by another
vehicle whi le driving home
Tuesday night from St Francis
Medical Center in Lynwood,
where she worked.
He said detectives belitve the
woman was forced out of her
auto. taken lo the next ex.it and
compelled to lie on the pave·
m e nt. where s he was s hot
several times in the head.
M illemann said police are
looting for witnesses who may
have seen Mrs . Choi'• red Audi
struck a loni the southbound transition road from the Long
Beach Free way to the south·
bound San Diego Freeway at
about 11 p.m. Tuesday.
He said people with inform&·
lion on the incident s hould con-
tact Long Beach detectives at
(213) 590·7244.
Accordin g to Millemann .
California Hi ghway Patrol of.
ficers responded to an 11 : 15 p.m.
accident report and found Mrs.
Choi's Audi abandoned on the
transition r oad with fresh
damage on the driver 's side.
He said Long Beach officers
res ponded 15 minutes later to re·
ports of shots fi red. Officers
found Mrs . Choi's body face
down on the pavement at the
southbound Pacific A venue exit,
he said
Because her purse was miss·
ing. police theorize that robbery
was a motive in the incident,
Millemann said .
Mrs. Choi lived on Palermo
Drive in Huntington Beach with
her husband and a 9-year-old
son.
Burnett wins
BULLETIN
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
Superior Court jury ruled today
that the National Enquirer
libeled entertain er Carol
Burnett in a 1976 gossip item
which claimed s he had a
boisterous run-in with Henry
Kissinger in a W ashington
restaurant.
ORAIGI CUil 1111111
West to northwest winds
20 to 30 mph otherwise ·
fai r. Lows tonight 50 at
beaches, 55 inJand. Ht1ba
Friday 64 aJong coast, 68
inland.
INSIDI TllAY
Jort St~ ta bolllfl
/or MT /~ chorma, btlt •M'• obo o top golfn. Sn P~CJ.
11111
I'
-•• --411r ......
~.,,.Coast DAILY PILOT(ll1ut'9day, March 26, 1981
·I ;welfare ·revaDlped?
•
;.(
British double agent•
Among Britons suspected o.f Soviet .es·
pionage activities, after information
brought to light this week, are <from left),
Anthony B!unt. Queen Elizabeth's art his·
tori an; Sir Roger Hollis, now dead; Guy
Burgess, who defected in 1951 and fled to
Moscow, and Harold "Kim" Phil by. who
had worked closely with U.S. intelligence.
Jane Doe meets family
Chicago woman 'pleased to meet you'
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
<A P > The ramily of amnesia
victim Jane Doe positively iden-
t ified he r today as 34-year-old
Ch er yl Ann Tomiczek. a sub-
urban Chicago wo man who
dropped out of sight seven years
a~o. officials said
Irene and Andrew Tomiczek.
of Roselle. two other children
a nd a Chicago disc Jockey met
with Miss Tomiczek at South
Florida State Hospital in Pem-
broke Pines for about an hour
this morning
"l 'm ver y happy," Mrs
Bandits rob
Harbour man
outside home
P oli ce are searching for two
men who allegedly robbed a 50·
year-old businessman outside his
Huntington H arbour home
Wednesday night
Offi cers believe the incident
may be linked to three similar
holdups that took place in the af-
nuent Huntington Beach com-
munity during the past year.
In Wednesday's incident, the
businessman had e merged from
his car and was about lo enter his
Ma riana Circle home when two
m e n approached him from
behind, saying they were armed
with guns
Thetwosuspects took the man's
wallet. watch and briefcase. for a
total loss estimated atS1 80
The s uspects. who matched
d escriptions from t he earlier
holdups. were described as black
men. aged 18 to 20, both 5 feet 10
inches tall. One man was wear·
ing a dark watch cap, police
s aid
Fro• P•ge A l
SPREE ...
After his proceedings m Orange
County ended. Watt~ was sent to
Los Angeles to face unrelated
weapon!> charges pending against
him there
On December 17. he was given
the 141 -day s entence 1n Los
Angeles County J a1 I
After completing that term, he
eventually should have been re-
turned to the men's prison at
Chino to begin serving his state
prison sentence
However. Hart said that
because Orange County Sheriff's
Department clerks did not send
the proper paperwork indicating
there was a hold on the convicted
rapist. Los Angeles jailers re-
leased him.
The mistake was discovered
earlier this week by another .
Orange County sheriff's clerk
who was routinely checking up on
the status of Watts in Los Angeles.
Hart s aid the paperwork in·
for ming Los Angeles offi cials to
keep Watts In custody has not
been located.
He said sheriff's offi cials in
Orange County assume the docu·
men ts were never sent.
Tomiczek said after the private
meeting. "I assured her we
loved her."
HospitaJ spokeswoman Jackie
Dale said Jane Doe responded
by saying, "I'm very happy that
you came. I'm pleased to meet
you."
"She was very cool," Mrs
Dale said. "That's normal
we expected that."
"It's just like a dream," said
Miss Tomiczek 's b r other
Robert. 32.
The polite young woman. who
became known nationwide as
.. Jane Doe." had been at the
hos pital since December when a
park ranger found her naked
and n e ar death in Fort
Lauderdale's Birch State Park.
The Tomiczeks were accom-
panied by Chicago disc jockey
Wally Phillips. whose station.
WGN. arranged and paid for the
trip.
He r case was r eported na-
tionwide and on Feb. 10 she ap-
peared on ABC-Tv·s "Good
Morning America" hoping to be
recognized. The news stories
and the television appearance
prompted hundreds of telephone
calls
Dig_ that silt
Mayor plans to Friday
Determined to draw attention to the s ilt-clogged Upper
Newport Bay. Mayor Jackie Heather says she'll wade
knee-deep into the bay's muddy waters Friday morning
and start shoveling.
l'l.L BE TB E&E IWTB my shovel and bucket," says
Mrs . Heather, "takinl the messa1e to the people:·
The gimmick, which the mayor. predicts should dr~w
40 or so fellow silt scoopers, is des1gned to help the c1ty
raise money for a bay cleanup project.
Newport Beach has been given two week~ ~o c?me up
with $446,000 in cash or risk losing nearly $1.S million m state
money needed for the cleanup proje~t,
MAYOR H EATH ER says she plans to start raising the
$446,000 the hard way -selling buckets of genuine Upper
Newport Bay sill at $5 each.
She admits the 11 a.m . siltathon likely will draw more
gawkers than hard dollars. Butit's a start. she says.
Mayor Heather says she's after larger fish too.
She convinced her council colleagues this week to al-
locate $148.000 in city money toward the needed $446,000.
The mayor says she's asked the Irvine Company an~ coun·
ty officials to put up similar amounts, but has received no
assurances yet. .. "If we don't get the money we'll be in trouble. _Mrs.
Heather cautions. "The bay, right now. is on the bnnk of
destruction.··
Man questioned
in Atlanta killings
BEACON. N.Y. <AP> -A
New York City man arrested in
the alleged abduction or a 9-
year-old boy will be questioned
by FBI agents about the killings
of 20 black youths in Atlanta,
police say.
When arrested s_unday.
Frankie Edmonds, 32, who llves
in Queens, was driving a yell?w
van rented in Georgia wit h
Georgia l icens.e ~t ales ,
according to East Fash~U Town
Police Chief Andrew Cnscolo.
Edmonds was ordered held in
lieu of $25,000 bail on charges or
unlawful imprisonment and ~n·
dangering the welfare of a child.
Criscolo said.
Edmonds and the child. who
was not identified, are both
black. . In Washington. FBI Director
William Webster said today that
police were running "lines of
coincidence" on the movements
of Edmonds. , "I can't tell you whether bes
been named by us as a suspect.,"
Webster said during a briefing
on an unrelated matter at the
White House.
Officers said Edmonds had
served time in prison. but they
did not know for what offense.
The New York Daily News today
quoted police sources who said
Edmonds served time for rob-
b ery and gun possession in
"prisons and psychiatric wards
a ll over the state ."
The task force investigating
the Atlanta deaths and disap·
pea rances and the FBI were
notified of the arrest by loW!'
police. The FBI in New York Ca-
ty called to say that agents
would interview Edmonds about
the Atlanta cases. Criscolo said.
Atlanta Police Commissioner
Lee Brown said today the task
force would leave the Edmonds
Inquiry to the FBI, adding, "At
this point we're just following up
another lead."
f',....P~.4J
OAANOE COAIT Daily Pilat C1Hatfted ed¥9'ttalng 114/Ma-1111
All Olher ...,..,IMntl ~ RAID. • •
. .....:.•
Thoma P. Haley
~
Robert N. Weed -~. Thomas Keevll ...
Thoma A. Murphine .......,.. ....
Qlarlea H. LOOI ---~Ull0<
Bernard Schulman ~
Cert C&rstenNn ~ow..r
~~datdJr
MAIN OfflCE
UO Wttl ...,St .. CoM41 Mfta,CA.
M1ll....._; .... IMO.C-taMetll,(A.f»M
·-----
Wisely's home Wednesday ar.
ternooon.
T he confiscated loot, which
has ~n tentaUvely Identified aa property ol the Temple City
store, Included Jewelry, 1old
pieces, watches and an $8,000
bronze statue .
Police also 1elsed an
autom,uc piltol retembllnl tbe
weapoh used ln the bo)dvp, \be
police 1pob1man aaid.
Huntlnl\Oft Beach detecUvet1
wbo partlclpated ln lb• robbery
probt lncludtd Jerry Evam,
Richard Hooper, Terry McCWl-
Uon and Bob RUIMIJ •
County changes to reduce de~ands
Applicanta for 1eneral relief
•elfare aa1l1tance soon may
have to prove they have lived ln
Oran1e County for at least one
year and be willing to accept
vouchers lo.stead of direct cash
payments under pollcles
recommended for adoption by
the county Board of Supervisors.
The proposed changes are
outlined in a report delivered lo
s upervisor s Wednesday by
In Donaasrus
Richard Ruiz, county social
aervlcea director. Supervl.on
will con.sider the recommend•·
tion1 Tuesday.
If approved, officials said, the
new policies would help reduce
the increasing demand for
general relief welfare a11istance
-demand that has caused the
program account to run out of
money twice this month.
General relief assistance is
Clymore deport
hearing scheduled
By JOHN NEEDHAM
OflM 041ily .. OetS"811
Freed Pakistani hijack host.age
Craig Clymore of Orange County
will face a deportation hearing in
Damascus. Syria, within the next
few weeks, according to one of his
two attorneys, Harold Davidson
of Newport Beach.
Clymore. who is wanted in the
United States on drug smuggling
cha rges, was visited by his other
attorney. Ronald Kreber of
Laguna Beach, in his Damascus
jail cell Tuesday. Davidson said.
Davidson said Kreber had
telephoned him from Damascus
and said he had retained a local
attorney for their client
··Ron s aid it was his un-
de rstanding that Clymore would
be held until there is a hearing of
the bar association in Damascus
to decide whether he should be de·
ported or not." Davidson said.
TORRE •..
lot of money. possibly $10 to $12
million per year," according to an
affidavit from FBI agent Drew
Maconachy.
But Torre and Crum, who had
helped build a resta urant in 1978
for the two men, refused the deal
and instead worked with the FBI
lo gather evidence against the two
men. according to FBI sources.
The GuadalaHarry's chain is
owned by Me xican Foods of
America. Russell and Petersen
were planning to solicit 3'"'.i to 5
percent more than needed from
parent General Foods to rinance
the kickbacks. according to the
FBI affidavits
General Foods Senior Vice
President and Gener al Counsel
Peter Deluca rele ased a short
statement Wednesday saying the
corporation was cooperating in
the investigation.
Russell and Petersen became
part of the corporation when their
restaura nt bu si n ess was
purchased two years ago for what
sources said was · 'several million
dollars."
Torre, whose construction busi·
ness is at 1101 Dove St. in Newport
Bea ch, said late Wednesday he
has been instructed by authorities
not to discuss the case pending a
trial. A hearing for the two SUS·
peels is scheduled for April 20 in
U .S . Distr ict Court in Los
Angeles.
Clymore, 24, a former Lake
Forest resident, was arrested by
Syrian authorities Saturday and
Is in jail pending efforts lo return
him totheU.S. to answer the drug
smuggling charges, U.S . Em-
bassyofficiaJs say.
Kreber said Clymore has not
been charged with any crime in
Syria.
Clymore was one of the more
than 100 hostages aboard a
Pakistani jet that was hijacked
March 2 on a flight from Karachi
to Peshawar.
He was accused in the grand
jury indictment of being the
ringleader or a $12 million hashish
and heroin smuggling operation.
Cly more 's passport was re·
voked and he was issued one-way
travel papers to the United States.
However. the Laguna Beach
High School graduate remained
in Damascus while Kreber al·
tempted to ha ve the drug smug-
gling charges dismissed. Syria
and the United States have no
extradition treaty.
According to his a ttorneys,
Clymore has refused to sign a
wa iverofsurrenderthat would al-
low him to be taken into custody
b y U .S . law enforceme nt
authorities .
In earlier state ments. Kreber
said the "battleground" for air·
ing of the charges against his
client would be in Syria.
However . upon Clymore 's ar-
rest Sa turday. Kreber said
"things are getting out of hand,"
adding that for his own safety. his
client s hould return lo the United
States .
C ly more, whose p~rents ,
Thelma and Glen Clymore, li ve in
San Juan Capistrano. had agreed
to sign a waiver for his exlradi·
lion. according to Kreber, and
was only waiting for his at·
torney's arrival in Damascus to
do so.
In a phone call from Damascus
Wednesday, Davidso n s a id
Kreber told him the U.S. State
Department had contacted In·
terpol. the international police
agency. in an effort to gain
Clymore's release from jail and
expedite his return to the United
States.
.. My understanding from taJk·
ing to Ron <Kreber ) is that
Clymore is willing to return to the
U nited States and face the
charges against him," Davidson
said.
---_,...._
provided to lndl&ent persons
who do not qualify for or are
waiting to recelve other forms
or wertare from the state or
federal governments. The
general relier program is funded
exclusively with county funds.
Because of con ce rn that
persons from other counties are
being attracted to the local
program , Ru iz has
re commended a one ·yea r
residency requirement.
Such a requirement i s
permitted under the st ate
Welfare and Institutions Code,
the body of law which requires
counties to provide general
relief to indigents.
Courts. however, have struck
down residency requirements
a nd Ruiz said t he county
Counsel's Office has cautioned
that "adoption of s uch a
provi sion i s lik ely to be
challenged" by a lawsuit.
Ruiz has proposed that the
county improve its screening of
applicants, bring pro perty•
possessi o n st a ndards into
co nforman ce with s tate
standards, and issue vouchers
"lo third parties for payment of
necessities whenever possible."
The social services director
a lso re commended that ·a
work·for -welfare program fo r
ab le -bodied rec ipients be
expanded and penalties stiffened
for persons who do not show up
for work assignments
Persons who fail to show up
for work assignments should be
denied assistance for six months
instead of the 30-day sanction
now applied, Ruiz said
Fro• P•ge AJ
JASON ...
G 1:1 rd en Grove
The boy also suhsequC'ntly said
that his real name 1s Crn1g W<id('
Robinson ··
Investigators !-.<11d l ht'} ~ere
able to track down the boy':-.
father eurly today The father.
poli ce said, Ji ves in San Diego but
no longer has legal custody of the
child.
Police claim the youth was
placed with lht• Oc<'ans1de foster
family after running away from
his father's home on three O<'
cas1ons
The boy'~ mother. police said.
reportedly lives in Georgia but
has not been contacted
The boy. current!:. lodi:ed at tht>
Albert Sitton Home in Orange.
s howed no \'!Sible s ign~ of mis
treatment. police said
Newport inve:.tigators said
they are at a loss to explain the al
leged kidnap in Oceanside. Thev
s aid t h ey ha ve no c lear-cul
motive.
.. We can do a lot of guessing but
that's about all so far." s uggested
Sgt. Mike McEveny. who has
headed up the investigation lo
solve the boy's mysterious oast.
Mc Eveny said it appears the
13-year-old has not attended
school nor seen a doctor since hjs
abduction in Oceanside.
Gagliard. who police claim has
been unwilling to comment on the
case. remains in custody at the
Newport city jail on kidnap
char ges. fie is being held on
S2S.000 bail
... -.. -
I
f
\' . I
r ............ ....... -
Rita Jenrette . estranged wife of former South
Carolina Congressman John Jenrette, returned
to South Carolina for the first time since posing
for Playboy magazine. She displays a copy of
her book, .. My Capitol Secrets." at a news con·
ference in Columbia.
New York Governor
Hugh Carey and
Chicago businesswoman
Evangeline Gouletas
disclaimed romance
rumors this week. say·
ing they are only
friends.
Chris Dickerson of Santa
Monica won the Californja
Grand Prix of Body Building
competition at the Santa
Monica Civic AudUorium.
Dickerson. 41, defeated 20
contestants. He was the
champion of body building
competition last year in
California. Louisiana and
New York
Newport Beach Mayor
J ackie Heather, fresh from
the lip of Baja California
where she presented a trophy
to the winner in the 790 mile
Newport-to-Cab<> San Lucas
race. wants to make that re·
sort town Newport 's sister
city
Mrs. Heather reports that
Hector Palacio, the mayor of
Cabo San Lucas. is also big on
theidea
"'We've never had a sister
city before ... said Mayor
Heather ... Anyway, they want
us to help them bu ild a hospital
downthere ..
A $4.6 million s uit filed by
two cousins of executed killer
Gary Gilmore against People
magazine has been dismissed
by a federal judge in Salt Lake
City.
Brenda Nicol a nd her
daughter Cristie filed s uit in
1977 against Time Magazine
Inc .. which owns People,
claiming senior editor Cheryl
McCall and photographer
John W. Telford trespassed
when they entered the Nicol
house in Pleasant Grove in
December 1976.
A picture of Mrs. Nicol in a
nightgown appeared in People
in January 1977. after
Gilmore's firing-squad e xecu·
tionJan 17 , 1976.
.. ...... -
Bank e h ief
get• $350,000
"ln recoplUon of bl1 many
years of exceptional
performance," the Bao of
America will tive out1oiq
prealdent Aldea W. ClaaHB 1
cash bonus of ~.ooo and a
lifetime annuity of $41,815
starting in 1998.
The 1oin1-away present is
In addition to the $200,000 a
year the 58-year-old executive
will receive through the bank
retirement plan.
The payments were dis-
closed in the bank's proxy
statement for its April 21
shareholders meeting.
Cla\asen was named presl·
dent or the bank, the nation's
largest. in 1970. He earned
$709,095 last year in cash and
equivalents. He will officially
leave the Bank of America on
July 1 to assume a $75,000·•·
year post as president of the
World Bank.
Robin Moore, author of
"The Green Berets" and "The
French Connection" is pre·
paring to announce his
candidacy for the Republican
nomination in Connecticut for
U.S. Senate. his chief backer
says.
Allen F. Lyons, who heads
the Draft Moore for the Senate
committee. said he and Moore
feel the author will be able to
raise enough money for his
campaign.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, R·
Conn., has not announced re·
election plans.
Actor Jim Davis, 66,
who plays the crusty
patriarch of the Ewing
clan on the television
series" Dallas," suc-
cessfully underwent sur-
gery for a perforated ul·
cer.
• rams scattered Spring
Srww in mountains . reminder of winter
v.4t\l to northwe't wind~ 10toJOrnor,
otn•r w.wt•1r fhrouon F r1d•v
C.o•\t•f lo;w so. 1ni•no H Co•'tl•t
'"9"•• 1nlM\Clbl Wctltr •' E l\fwtwrf, \rr'l•lt tr c1t1 iilOV1\0r¥ dur
lo w•U 'o norlf'\w~'' winch ot U to H
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IJ.S •...... ,,,
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t ndtdon1v Li\t wHk
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M10•tsi. •nd fh«rf '#•\ r .Jin '" I~
P•<•ftc NortnWf"\1
In tnr R0<.11i.1t\ •no ~•t"•s \now
mutO w1tn r•1n 1tnd wtntf r )torm
••tCl''e' wfr't 00\ft'd tckJ•'f tor U ldh
~nd northern Ar' t Of\d
~"ow w•\ al\o rtported o"'' o•rh or
M 1nn1sot•
remper•h.1r1\ •round tlW n•t1on
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M11ne, •nd Concoro. N H 10 11 In
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mph. "'"tn .SO mpf1 ousu In tM O.'
trU. were e•oe<tf'd to rNr throuQn
Soutnern C.tttforn•• ton1ont and Ft1
d•Y under fair i !lli1es. tM N•1tona1
Wt•thtr ~rv•<t s••d
Lo• A~ln shOulO Of! \WtPI bY
ou\tY •HI to north•t'1 winos ol JO to
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10 be 1n IM m•O .0..
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mount••n P•,ie\ ftmper1tur1'
thtre snould ,,,,,, trw upper "°' w1tn
the tows rMtQ•"'O from•• to~
Strong nor1n 10 norlhwHI w1nO> ot
JO to 40 mon ,.,,,. ror•c•st to blow 1n
th• mountain\ Tne Jnow ltwtl wa\
upected 10 Dt 11 o,SOO IHI wndt n1qn
temPtr•luf4" sllOuld ••"9• trom l • lo '1 •nd 10"" 1on1gn1 inlo ll>e mlo 10\
8 low•nQ clU•I ..,o ••nO wore ta pe<ttO to be •f'ttOOtcJ wp Dy ..,.,, to
northwest •'ncl• 01 JS 10 .0 mpl\ w11n
gusts rNClltnQ UC> 10 SO mon '" 1111
dHHrU Frld•v Hight '"°"10 ~ In
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ton Ion I 1n ,,,. m10.JOt to JO\.
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TODAY
S.condlow S.JOp m 7J
,,UDAY
LOW 8 Jh m 11
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Alt>uque •7 JJ ---------------------------------1Praye r
tf41'ttl /iJttlnin9
The DaJly Pilot wanls to hear obtervationa from lts read.en
-partlcu.Jarly comments about the paper itHJf. It'• easy to tell
ua your views. Just call the number belo• and your meu11e
wlll be recorded. Me11a1es will be lraaacribed .. veral Um•
daily and dellvered to the desk ol the appropriate editor. No
clrcullt.ion calls, pleaae. .
Tell ua what's on your mlnd, TH n-.nber lt ln aemce 2'
-hours a day, seven days a week. 642•fJ08fJ •
!hill loses
I BOISEz Idaho <AP > -
The Idano Senate baa
!defeated a bllt requirln1
teachers to bold a
minute of allent medlta·
tlon or prayer at the
start ol eacb school day.
Tia• bill pa11ed the
Idaho Houle with aeven
dltaeatiq YOt•• but ran
Into trouble ln the·
Senate, wH amended
ht•vily, and llA&lly WU
voted down, lf.14.
Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT /Thursday: March 2e. 1981
AP WtrepMto
Spa~e shuttle c hute s
A Martin Marietta worker puts finishing
touches on a 1,600-pound parachute which
will be used to retrieve the Space Shuttle's
solid rocket boosters minutes after the
launch of lhe shuttle. Three parachutes
each will be utilized to bring down the re-
usa ble boos ters after the scheduled
launching. ;.
Road widening closer
Controversial plans to widen
University Drive in Irvine are
getting closer to reali ty despite
the objedions of residents near
the two-lane roadway
The council decided by a 4·1
Cycle ride r
pe rish es
vote< Mary Ann Gaido dissented>
to tell the Federal Highway
Administration, which is to fund
the major portion of the $1 3
mt Ilion project. that it would have
no s1gnihcanl environmental
impact.
Co uncilwoman Gai d o
contended that the projc<'l might
increase traffic noise.
agreed to fund the maJortty of the
construction costs if it determines
the road widening wouldn't lead
to environmental problems
Residents along n1vers1t,y
Drive packed the council meetinl(
~o complain that the road 1s noisy
and bothl'rsume now and that its
widening would jus t IC'ad lo more
problem:-.
City traffic engineer.., say that
the road must be widened to meet
the growing traffic' needs of the
University TQwn Center and
Turtle Rock areas of the city A Hacienda Heights man rid·
ing on the back of a motorcycle
was killed and his companion
seriously inj ured in a collision
with a car at a Garden Grove in·
tersection. police said.
P ronounced dead al the scene
was Eugene A. Yates. 24. the
passenger on a motorcycle
driven by Terrill Lee Wright. 23.
of Garden Grove. who was taken
to UC Irvine Medical Center
The 4 I council d ecision
Tuesday came aft er council
members encouraged the city
!>taff to plan• weight restrictions
on the road in an attempt to
discourage heavy trucks And the
council told the city staff lo ask
the Irvine Company if it would be
willing to fund landscaping for the
road
The road 1s to be widened from
two lo four lanes between Culver
Drive and t he San Diego
Freeway
Assistant Irvin(• City Manager
Paul Brad~ J r :.aid that th&
action docs not approve the
road-widening It will probably be
one year before the City Counc1t
actually conducts a final vote ort
whether the road should be
widened
Wright was reported in senous
condition in the hospital's in·
tens ive care unit.
Police Sgt. Bruce Beauchamp
said the motorcycle apparently
rear-ended a car driven by
Raymond L . Hoffman. which
was westbound on Chapman
Avenue and about to make a left
turn onto Lorna A venue
Hoffman. 42. of Garden Grove.
was not injured
Cause of the Tuesday accident
is under investigation .
The F edera l H 1ghwa}
Adminis tration has tentatively
Cele bra tion set
The Polish National Alliance
lO·year anniversary celebration
will be held April 4. from 9 p.m
to 1 a .m. in the Embassy Room
of the Disneyland Hotel, 1150
West Cerritos Ave .. Anaheim.
For more information call
Carl Kobzi at (714) 974 -1184.
Daily f'llot DeU•""Y
11 Gvar..+el'd
MoMay-Friday II you do not have
your oaper by 5 30 o m c all t>ef()(e 7
D m and your cooy wott be deh11ere<1
Saturday and Sunday II you Clo not
receive your cooy by 7 a m call
before 10 a m an d your cooy """ be
dehvered
Clr-cwatio11 TeteohOMt Most Orange County Areas 64Z-4l21
Noohwest H un11ng1on Beach
and Westm1ns1er 5~1220
Laguna Nigue l OWIOO
on Drexel and Heritage
Upholstered Floor Samples
Discontinued
Wood Furniture
Your Favont9 O.S19Mr Will Be H9')py To -'&11tt You
DrexSb.
H.J.GARRETT fURNITU
PROFESSIONAL HOURI : Mon.""" Thura. 10 a.m. IO I p.m. 221 5 HAHOI I LVD.
1.-.TEA10R OESIGNEAS r:rt. 10 e.m. tot p.m. lat. to •·"'· to 1:30 p.m. COST A. MISA '46-0275r
..
11
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H/F Orange Cout OAJLV PtlOT/fhur.day. March 29, 1981
~mu~rnm
Ex:Nixon aide Once
•
spy for Soviets?
WASHINGTON <AP> -Novelist Mlcbael Whitney Stra11ht,
deputy chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts ln the
Nixon administration. says be was recruited to •PY for t he Soviet
Union in the 1930s but was dropped by the Russians after be pro·
vided useless essays. Straight, who says the episode began when be was a student ln
England, went public with his story Wednesday after the London
Dally Mail began a series of articles on Soviet infiltration of
British intelUgence. It was bis information, Strai&ht savs, provided to Attorney
General Robert F. Kennedy in October 1963, that exposed Slr An·
t hony Blunt, keeper of Britain's royal art collection, as a lon1Ume
Soviet agent.
CONTRIBUTIONS EXPLAINED
WASHINGTON (AP) Some or the oilmen who agreed to con·
tribute thousands of dollars for refurbishing the White House ~ay
they were showing appreciation for President Reagan's policies,
particularly his favorable attitude toward th& oil industry.
But they say the money was not intended to gain Reagan's
favor. And the top aide to first lady Nanc~ Reagan says lb~ don~·
t ions were soli<.'ited independently wllhout the presidents
knowledge.
MOTIVE SOUGHT IN MURDER
MOBILE , Ala. <AP> Police have charged three men w~th
murder. The s tate pathologist has detailed t~e grisly death. Racial
tensions. inflamed by the murder of a well·hke~ young black man,
have cooled. But still, nobody knows why Michael Donald was
killed. M b'l · "The investigation is still open," Capt. ~am McLa.rty, o le s
chief of detectives, said Wednesday. He said no motive had ~en
established. Donald. 19, was found dead Saturday morning,
dangling in a noose from a camphor tree.
SHUTTLE PROBE POSITIVE
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP) -Preliminary inspections in·
dicate the first part of a critical fueling test on the space shuttle
Columbia's external tank was a success, and technicians were pre·
paring for a similar operation Friday. A!' inspec~ion team reported
on Wednesday no sign of any damage lo mstallat1on panels.
WHITE HOUSE CONTACTS TOLD
PHILADELPHIA C APJ -Sen. Harrison Williams Jr., facing
trial next week on Abscam charges, allegedly told an undercover
FBI agent while discussing a mine deal that "contracts" would be
"no problem" because he had contacts reaching into the White
House. according to court records made available Wednesday .
WWUJ[ffi
V.S. Embassy hit
in El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador <AP> -Three squads of suer·
rillas staged a rocket grenade attack on the U.S . Embassy, doin1
considerable damage but causing no casualties, American officials
said lt was the third strike at the embassy this mooth -and lbe
biggest.
Telephone call ers claiming to be spokesmen for the Popular
Liberation i''orces, one or several leftist groups baltlina El
Salvador's U.S.-backed junta, told local radio stations Wednesday
their organization was responsible. The claim could not be con·
firmed.
The other two attacks on the embassy this month were blamed
on right·wing terrorists.
NEW SPY CASE CHARG~S TOLD
LONDON (AP) Britain's scandal-plagued intelligence
services were hit by a new charge or top-level treachery today
hours before Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was to report to
the House of Commons on a bombshell allegation that a former
counterintelligence chief was suspected or spying for the Kremlin
and never cleared.
The late Charles Howard "Dick" Ellis, Britain's No. 3 in-
telligence officer al the end of World War II, was the third dead
man named by Chapman Pincher. veteran.defense corresp<>nden,t
of the Daily Express. in daily excerpts pubhshed by the Daily Mail
from a book he is bringing out at the end or the week.
llUQ OIL EXPORTS HIKED
DAMASCUS. Syria (AP> Iraq's crude oil exports, d~rupted
when the 6-month-long war with Iran broke out, have nsen to
about 800.000 barrels a day , industry sources said today.
Tom Murphine's column hom't'di.!appeared; it's rimpl11 moved to
Page 82 where Jwt Coa!ting wiU continue to aWNr.
trans national funding
announces a new program
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Haig hacks Reagan stand
WAIH.JNGTON (AP) -Seeretary of State Alnander M. Hail
Ji". Hid today "the tJme bu now come to 1et on" wtth the conduct·
ln1 of ADMtteu foreip policy, apparenUy putUn1 uide bil dlf·
f erence1 wttb t.be Rea1u Wblte HOUM ove.r mana1ement of foretcn policy crtae..
"I have alwaya been ud remain ln full al""mtnt with Preti·
dent Reaian'a aubltantJve approach to forel1n poUey." Hal1 told a
con1NISlonal aubcommlttee.
He tMWled amid u.ncertainty whether he wou.ld remain ln of·
flee fo.Uowt.nc Rea1an'1 declalon to put Vice President Geor1e
Buab ln char1e of a new crills mana1ement team, a poaltlon Kala
wanted.
Memben of hi• own staff were understood Wednesday nl1bt to be unaw-e whether the 1tron1·wtlled Haig, described as "very up·
set," would stay on tbe Job despite Rea1an'1 111urances of aup·
port.
But Haig told the aubcommltte~ it la "Important that we all
recosntu It ls the substance of American foreten policy that must be the focus of our attention."
He said that "sometimes form, organJzatlon and structure af·
reel that substance."
"Wllb respect to the so-called cruis-management aituatlon,
that form bu been established and the time has now come to 1et
on witb the substance, the formulation of American forel1n
policy."
~ .
Al' WlrejlMto
Railroad tor sale ·
The Mount Washington Cog Railway, the world's oldest
mountain railroad, has reportedly been ofered for sale
for $3 million to New Hampshire, which operates a state
park atop the 6,288-foot peak. The railroad is owned by
the Teague family of Philadelphia.
Living cost
hike due
• pensioners
He Hid, "My ener1le1 wU1 be dedicated ln the period 1bud to
the subltanee ot American foretp poUcy.''
Hal•'• leatll09f\Y before tbe Senate Approprtat1001 aubeommlt·
tee on forelp osteratlona teemed to lndlcate aome raervaUOnl
about the atructure of tbe c:ril1l·mana1ement team. Nevertheless,
he said the substance of forelp r:Ucy la what count.I and declared
he would back Reagan complu y In hJa forel•n policy actlona. D~ hJa teatlmonv oo lbe admlnlatrattoo'a forelin ald oro-
1ram, Haig called for support ror the $4.3 billion the president lJ
asking for security a .. lstance to friendly nation•. and also ror $1.9
billion lo development aasiltance and SU billion in contributions
to lntenJational forelan-ald lnlUtutlona.
Nothing Illegal?
FBI agents to hear
lobbyist's affairs
WASHINGTON (AP> -Paula
Parkinson, the congressional
lobbyist whose nude photo ap-
peared in Playboy magazine last
year, says she has had affairs
wlth several congressmen and
will meet with FBI agents to dis·
cuss the relationships.
But NBC News quoted Mrs.
Parkinson today as saylng she
would tell the agents she had not
expected to garner any votes for
the legislation she was promol·
ing.
And CBS News said Wednes·
day night she will tell the
Justice Department that none of
the congressmen, numbering
fewer lhan a dozen and all
Snuff dipping
cancer cause
BOSTON (AP> -"Dipping"
snuff, which has been proposed
as a ~afer substitute for smok·
ing. itself poses a "substantial"
risk of cancer, especially for
life-long users. according to a
federal study.
The study. conducted by the
National Cancer Institute, found
the powdery tobacco quadruples
the risk of developing cancer of
the mouth.
Doctors studied people who
use snurr. or smokeless tobacco,
by plac ing the s ubs tance
between their cheek and gums,
or "dipping." Snurr can also be
taken up into the nose by sniff.
ing. Although snuff has long been
s uspected as a cause or cancer,
the researchers say their study is
the first to s how a definite link.
Republican. did anything illegal.
Department officials em-
phasized again Wednesday night
that they are "looking into" the
matter, a step short of a formal
investigation. -
T h ree House members -
Reps. Tom Railsback, R-111.;
Tom Evans, R·Del., and Dan
Quayle , R -lnd . -have
acknowledged sharing a Florida
cottage with Mrs. Parkinson in
January 19M.
RAILSBACK and Quayle have
said they had no relations with
her. Evans, who also is Presi·
dent Reagan's chief spokesman
in the House. has expressed
"deep regret" about his rela·
tionship with the woman.
Mrs. Parkinson was a reg-
istered lobbyist on behalf of an
insurance-industry group op·
posed lo a bill setting up a na·
tional crop insurance program.
The bill passed by a 235-150
margin last September with
Rails back, Evans and Quayle all
voting against it.
Mrs. Parkinson would not
comment to either network on
reports she has videotapes of
sexual encounters with at least
one congressman.
THE REPORTS of videotapes
surfaced three weeks ago after
Rita J enrette. the estranged
wife of former R e p . John
J enre tt e , D·S .C .. told in·
terviewers that a lobbyist had
tapes of intimacies with mem
bers or Congress.
Hank Parkinson, the lobbyist's
estranged husband". has said he
believes h.ia wife is the woman
Mrs J enrette referred to.
MUSic.
EDbC&JION c TeR ' WASHINGTON (AP> -The
nation's 36 million Social Securi·
ly recipients will get a cost-of·
living increase in July, probably
of 11 .2 percent but possibly a bit
more.
The increase, s maller than the
12.3 percent boost predicted by
the Carter administration two
months ago, would push the
average monthly check up by al
least $37 to $371.
NOW ENROLLING FOR
APRIL CLASSES
Primary Ages 4-6
~r~iNO ...
The exact increase will not be
known until the Consumer Price
Index for March is released on
April 23, but could be 11.3 per·
cent or 11.4 percent if the index
climbs at a double-digit pace as
it did in February.
Payments increase each July
if the increase in the index ex·
ceeds ~ percent from the first
quarter of one year to the first
quarter or the next. Last July,
benefits went up 14.3 percent,
the biggest jump since Social
Security was tied to the index in
1975.
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Gianttirco ~apped
on 'fiscal abyss'
SACRAMENTO (AP> -State TranaPorlatlon Director
Adriana Gianturco has received another tonsu•·luhins. this Ume
ln the Senate Rules Committee.
It happened at a bearing Wedneaday. But Illa. Gianturco, often
criticized in transportation committees, wasn't there.
Sen. Barry Keene, D-Mendocino, called her tyrannical and
said transportation policy under Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. "has
been an absolute disaster ."
Keene said the transportation program la ln a "fiscal a byss,"
the highways are being destroyed, and nothln• 11 bein1 done about
mass transit.
-.......... e911t•-••U!ll
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Relatively hilh traces of metal contamina-
tion have been found in mussels along the San Dle10 coast and marine
biologists are searching for the source.
A mussel-monitoring program turned up traces of sUver, zinc,
manganese, copper and.lead·, as well as such toxic chemicals as PCB
and the insecticides DDT and lindane, health officials said Wednes-
day.
Studies are under way to determine Uthe culprit might be sewaee
outfall and sludge beds. The levels of PCB compounds found ln Mis-
sion Bay, San Diego and Oceanside were up to 1~ times higher than
those inhabiting cleaner waters away from the andustrial areas, of-
ficials said.
-LOS ANGELES CAP> -The death of the only'son of Academy
Award-winning actor Ray Milland has been ruled a suicide by cor·
oner's officials. .
Daniel Milland, 41 , was found in his West Los Angeles apart-
ment with a gunshot wound in the head. No suicide note was found .
Nfte l'erle ••• fld• Oare•••••,,..,
CLAREMONT CAP> -John D. Maquire, president of New
York State's College at Old Westbury, has been named president of
Claremont Graduate School and Claremont University Center -
the coordinating institution of the six Claremont Colleges.
• ...., • .,••'C .,et• •rf• .pe11tli••
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Describing the arts as "perhaps more
important than some of the basic industries." Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. said he will not veto any spending which may be added
to his California Arts Council budget. The Democratic governor
Wednesday made that promise in a speech at a California Con-
federation of the Arts dinner.
KIG11 leader terr. •I '~tat'
FALLBROOK CAP> -Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Metzger says
he is "press director of the White American Political Association,"
which is trying to find which California city is most "anti-white."
A contest will be held to find out, Metzger said in a news re-
lease. ·
"The mayor of the winning city will receive a certificate officially
signifying that his or her city bas become uninhabitable by decent
middle and low-income whites," Metzger pledged.
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Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/T'hul'lday, March 26, 1981 H/F
'Bello there'
.,.w.,....
Tony Wood, a veterinary surgeon from Austr alia, unloads
one of seven rare koalas after its arrival at Los Angeles
International Airport. The koalas, the first to be exported
by Australia in over 60 years, will join rive others at the San Diego 7.oo.
S29a1ear
State college
fee boost set
SACRAMENTO <AP> -
There'll be a S29 annual increase
in student fees ln the California
State University and Colleges,
says the board of tr ustees.
The trustees. meeting Wednes·
day, also discussed a legislative
bill to require that the correct
anawen to such examinations as
the Scbolutlc Aptitude Test be
sent later to the high school
seniora who took it. But they de·
clded ·••inst taking an i m-
mediate po11Uon.
CSUC Chancell o r Glenn
Dumke opposes the bill, SBlOl
by Sen. Milton Marks, R-San
Francisco. It is sponsored by
student groups.
PaOPONENT8 of the bill said
disclosure would make the test·
ing process more open and ac·
countable.
Opponents said it would
destroy the tests.
The fee increase won approval
without debate.
The 314,000 students on the 19
campuses now pay about $210 a
year in fees n ot tuition
because fees do n ot pay
teachers' salaries.
THE VOTE means that the
student services fee will rise
from $160 to $189 a year this fall.
The fee for students taking no
more than two classes will rise
from $130 to $159.
The money will provide raises
to employees of such student
services as counseling and
clinics.
In o ther a cti on . the
trustees -who have already
asked the Leeislature for unlike-
ly 17.7 percent ralses for CSUC
e mployees -voted to seek addi-
tional raises of from 1.5 to 5 per-
cent for c lerical and other
employees they consider un-
derpaid.
Oil drilling
on preserve ..
areas due?
WASHlNGTON <AP> Two
ocean sanctuaries created by
the Carter administration oCC
California to protect the last sur-
viving gray whales and the
breeding grounds of sea otters
may be opened for oil and gas
drilling by the Reagan ad -
ministration.
Dallas Miner. director of the
government's Sanctuaries Pro·
gram OfCice, s aid Wednesday
the new administration is pro-
posing to remove the drilling
r estrict ion in t he Ch annel
Is lands Sanctuar y off Santa
Barbara and the Point Reyes-
Farrallon Islands Sanctuary off
San Francisco and would ask for
public comment over the next
six months.
Auto workers rehired
Miner said the proposal result·
ed from guidelines issued by
President Reagan to assess the
economic impact of each gov-
ernment regulation.
The Sanctuaries Program
comes under the Commerce
Department. but Miner said ~he
decision came after cons ulting
other agencies, including the In·
terior Department. which con·
tended it should decide wh.ich
tracts to offer for leasing.
By Tbe Aaaocla&ed Preu
The bard-hit automobile in-
dustry ln California has some
good news for the first time in
t he past year -hundreds of
laid-off autoworkers are being
rehired because of the growing
number of new cars being sold.
In the Los Angeles suburb of
Va n Nuya , unemployed
autoworkers lined up for bloc:b
Wedllesday as General Moton
announced it was rehiring 2,300
employees there.
GM -the nation's No. 1
automaker -also announced
1,600 workers were being re ·
called to its assembly plant In
Fremont in the San Francisco
Bay Area and that more than a
third of 2,300 persons had been
blred for its modernized South
Gate plant to tum out the firm's
economical new J -cars .
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Assorted patterns
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Night s hifts that were sus-
pended last year at the Van
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the deepest point of the slump in
car sales will be reinstituted
April 6 in Fremont and May 4 in
Van Nuys.
Most of the laid-off workers
were still receiving supplemen-
tal benefits paid from a com·
pany f und . sai d GM
s okeswoman Judy Anderson.
Interior Secretary James Watt
wrote Commerce Secretary
Malcolm Balridge expressing
support for the policy change.
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Orange Coast Dally PMot
Oil dump, cleanµp
sets safety model
Some good may come out ol a smelll • abandOQed oU
dump left over from Huntington Beach s old days u a
derrick town. '
A plan to excavate the dump c(>ntalnlng t oxic
chemicals has been approved by Huntington Beach of·
ficials and state health authorities. It wasn't easy
reaching this point.
The project was months ln planning, wlth th()Ufands
of dollars spent on tests and more to be spent on 1alety
precautions such as air monitoring equipment, durin1 ex-
cavation.
The so-called Boucher landfill, located 700 feet
southeast of the intersection of Warner Avenue and Bolsa
Chica Street, is estimated to contain up to 100,000 cubic
yards of contaminated soil.
In the 1940s, the three-acre dump was used for oil re-
finery wastes. In the 1980s, a developer wants to build cod·
dominiumsonit.
However, the developer had to agree to stringent
safety requirements by local and state experts before dis·
turbing the abandoned chemical dump.
The excavation, planned to begin next month, will be
costly to the developer. but state health officials believe it
will be safe.
In fact, state health experts recommend digging up
the toxic material to prevent future hazards such as con·
lamination of underground water or underground buildup
of explosive gases.
In the county and across the nation, forgotten
chemical dumps are being rediscovered as potential
health hazards.
The excavation project in Huntington Beach is one of
the first in the state and could very well become a model
for others to follow.
• After much study, state. county and city officials-say
: it is a good blueprint to guide future cleanups of
: dangerous dumps.
In the end, everyone gains. Precious land is again
marketable. An eyesore is removed. A dangerous situa-
: lion is corrected. And it will be easier to clean up the next
: dump.
.Bilingual dilemma
Ocean View School District trustees unanimously
have agreed to disregard state requirements regarding
bilingual education.
The 23-school elementary district in west Orange
County simply cannot comply with the state's mandate
that any public school housing more than 10 foreign.
speaking students in a grade level must off er instruction
in both English and the students' native language.
Most of the Ocean View students are Indochinese.
Te aching credentials and instructional materials simply
a re not available in these languages.
The district should not be penalized for its actions.
How can it comply with the bilingual mandate in these
circumstances ?
State officials should recognize the recent easing or
federal requirements covering bilingual education.
Ocean View's dilemma illustrates another well·
intended but impractical government regulation.
Though the trustees did vote to disregard the s tate
law. the board adopted a commendable goal or continued
teacher training aimed at improving communication with
immigrant pupils with emphasis on teaching them
English.
That's the language they will need to cope in the
country they have chosen.
Maneuver lacked tact
Huntington Beach Councilman Jo~n Th_o~as showed
a lack or sensitivity last week by publicly fmng the man
he'd appointed as planning commissioner in Octobe~ 1~9.
Thomas fired Bruce Greer from the commission
because Thomas s aid Greer missed too many meetings
by leaving town on business.
Greer. in fact, was in Korea and prob~bly was the
las t one to know he'd been removed from omce.
Councilman Thomas may be right that Greer is too
busy to be a responsible planning commissioner. But why
didn't Thomas find time to let his appointee know he was
to be fired?
Less than one year ago, Thomas put more than S2,000
into Greer's candidacy for the City Council. At that time,
Thomas apparently felt Greer was adequate for public of·
fice. d' · 1 · Greer's wife read about her husband's ismissa m
the newspaper. She was good-humored and s aid Thomas
did her a favor because her husband would be able to
spend more time with hi~ f ~mily. . . The planning commissioner position pays $15 a meet·
ing. That's no great financial loss.
But she added, the manner in which Thomas public·
' ly fired' Greer at a Council meeting probably hurt her
husband's reputation. . . .
Whatever Thomas had the prerogative on his side.
What he needed was a bit more tact and sensitivity. • Opinions expressed 1n 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 (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Safety light
By L.M. BOYD
Your chances of •ett1n1 tut
I n a r ear-e nd colllaton
evidently could be cut in half
lllllY•
We have shed our 1ullt
complex with our
mor ala. Now if we en
the culprit la society.
environment. alcohol or
even demons that have
taken po1M11ion of our
body . F.K.
just by installing a third
brake light under the middle
of your car's back window.
Studies show cars so
equJpped last year were in·
volved in 5' percent fewer
rear-enders than cars without
such high lights. No big ex·
penae, that. You could do it for
a few dollars.
Q. You satd you can only
see a rainbow with your back
l~ the sun. That's wron1. I
HW OM hitb ln the ally ripl
under the aun.
A. Tb.al w• 'a aolar balo,
evldntb, aat a raba•. A
aolu ..-make. a eompllt.9
rln1 around the sun when
Uaht ll reflected tbroulb le. cryatal douda hllb up. and
aomeUmet you can't •M all
of lt. Such la the explanation
of the attywatcbers.
Jack Anderson
Thomas P. HaJey/Publllher Thomtt Keevlf/Edltor
8ertwlr• Krelblch/EdltOf'lll Pa.Qt Editor
Military lo~µig trained pil.ots
WASHINGTON -Pre1Jdeot
Rea1an'1 plan.a to beet up the
natlon'a defense foreea b•••
1lven the Uon'a abare of Pen·
ta1on bud1ei tncre.a'" IA> the
Navy. But the money may be
almed at the wronc taraet -
bardwue lmtead ot penonnel.
Two 10,000·toa-auclear powe~ aircraft carriers are
proposed in
tbe presl ·
dent'• bud1et,
and the 12·
carrier fleet
la to be ex·
paaded even·
tuaJly IA> 15.
But the
trouble lt, the
Navy la find·
inc ll toul.h to
bani onto enough pilots to man
JU present carrier strength,
much Ina those who'll be needed
to fly the planes from an
increased flattop fleet.
The reason Is strictly
economic: An experienced pilot
can earn up to four times bis
military pay by becoming a
com mercial airline pilot. As a
reault, the Navy's pilots are
Mailbox
peellnt otf al an alarmlna rate
to punwe UM more lucraUve
careers offerM by commercial
aviation.
N AVY A ND Ala li"OaCE
pllot1 are requlred to' serve slx
years after ihe.y eel their wings.
Thia la to lnaure that the tax-
payers wUJ 1et at least some
quld pro quo for the $500,000.plua
It coata to train each pilot -plua
an additional $340,000 to qualify
him for carrier duty.
But 1even out of every 10
military pilota quit the service
4t the end of their six-year ob.
U1atioo. The temptation to rake ln big bucks as an airline pilot is
juat too great.
There's another factor In·
volved: The airlines won't hire a
pilot who's over 30, so the
service pilots can't afford to
stay on much past 28. Result:
One bitch and they're gone,
leaving the taxpayers stuck with
their training bill and the
recruiters trying to hire replace·
menta -who will presumably
star t the whole cycle over
again.
Last year, 438 Navy pUota
quit. The Navy wound up 25 per.
cent short in pllota of com·
mander rank and below -the
ones who would be moat tempted
by commercial airUne jobs. The
Navy ne.eded alm?st 13,000
pilots; it bad only 9,000. And
this, of course, la before any new
carriers are built.
The Navy has tried to dis·
courage the attrition of its
rtyboy ranks with the carrot of
pay raises. Last year, the ad·
mirals asked Congress for a ~
percent salary increase for Its
pilots, the fU'St change in basic
pay scale in 20 years. Congress
OK 'd a raise -of 2S percent.
CONGRESS, ALSO approved a
bonus or $5,000 lo $11,000 tor
pilots with "critical skills" for
each year they agree Lo stay on
past their legal obligation. But
not a single pilot has yet re·
ceived a bonus. because Pen-
tagon bureaucrats are still try-
ing to figure out which pilots
qualify for it.
One admiral. sources told my
reporter Sharon Geitner. got so
'Aff ordahle' housing was only
To the Editor ·
A year ago I naively believed
the advertisements staling that
mobile homes were. indeed, the
only "affordable" housing in
Orange County, the •·answer" to
the potential "home owners"
prayer. 1 succumbed and invested
In a mobile home, which has
proved to be a horrendous mis·
t ake on my part.
My experience has shown it is
vi rtually impossible to finance a
mobile home, and pay the rapidJy
escalating rent on the s pace it oc-
cupies. I've found that when a
person's mobile home is once
situated on "rental'' space in a
mobile home park, one no longer
has any control over how much
one pays t.o keep one's home in a
"stationary" position. <Unless of
course, the mobile home owner
owns the land on which his "in·
vestment" sits This is highly un-
usual.)
By the time I pay S428. on the
mortgage plus $248 on the down
payment, I have paid $612. Then, I
have a $245 space rental fee plus
gas and electricity that adds
another $60-$70 per month. Add to
this a telephone and my "invest·
ment" comes lo $950 per month.
This is hardly "affordable" liv·
ing. ·My space rent has jumped
from $215 to $245 (including $5 per
month for my small dog) in one
ye ar. Unless I could afford to pay
at least $3,000 to move my
"home" and find land for it. I am
lite rally at the mercy or the park
land owner and whatever he
deems "fair" to charge in rental
fees. There is no limit on what he
can charge.
MY PITY goes out to th0&e
countless souls around me who
are on fixed incomes. Many or
them are leaving their lights off
and heat almosttotally off to meet
added raises in space rentals. I
am grateful that my mother, a
wldow on a fixed Income. has a
home on land she and my father
paid for as we were growing up.
When I moved Into this mobile
park tut year, after having spent
most of my adult years in apart·
ments. I felt that I had some
security, t nd a potential "invest·
ment. ··I did not know that the sale
of my "invest ment" could be held
up because tM rark owners could
make t.M renta char1e ao exorbl·
t..,l \bat lnterated people woWd
be unable to afford to buy It. The
park owners also "approve"
whoever buys it and Uvet In It
btre. Life haa no 1uarantee1, but
aure.ly there muat be decency
ind falmea aomewbere, so that
people could live out their retire
ment years in dignity. with ade·
quate food and other essentials
for a decent quality of life
Somewhere in our de mocracy
there must be some protection
from excessive greed.
B.E. WALTERS
Sriftlee 6 l••b
To the Editor:
In your front page article on
science entitled, "Science, prey
t.o misfits and fools" I was about
to agree with the headline unW I
found that the author was refer·
ring to those who did not agree
with the unproven theory or
evolution, as the misfits and
fools.
The author equated the theory
of e\•olulion to the law of gravi-
ty. If this is so, why le it not re·
rerred t.o as the law of evolution?
The so-called scientist doesn't
even know the difference
between a theory and a law.
This article causes me to agree
with the headline -science cer-
tainly has fallen prey to misfit&
and fools.
Before the Scopes trial, evolu·
lion could not even be taught In
public schools. Due lo recent rul-
ings by misfits and fools, the
name of God can't even be men-
tioned in school, although there
is mention of God in the
Declaration of Independence
and it was written by the same
men who wrote lbe Constitution.
How could the mentlom of God
in school then be unconstilu·
lion al?
JAMESBOLDlNG
••lr•• .. •••--Tothe Editor:
I find It fascinating that the men
on the board of the new Music
Center are, for the most part, the
same men ln the forefront of the
big business assault on the
Orange County environment.
These men have •upported In
many lnteresUna waya uncon·
trolled land development and
airport expansion In our area.
Now they are golng to help,
Orange County to a higher
cultural level instead of just a
higher noise level.
Good buslne11 practice or
,uUt?
M.C.SUltNER ........ ., .....
To tbe Editor:
Re Dan Lowen of the ~
Beach, Fla. b11h achoo! and lbe
PSATuam.
A model dott not need to be
constructed The problem can be
vis ualized. The answer 1s seven
< 7 l planes or surfaces or which
two < 21 are bases of the onginal
pyramids. Hence either (7) or
(5) is correct, depending on
semantics.
In short, the question is am
biguous and a. multiple -choice
answer does not allow the stu·
dent t.o define his terms . So I do
believe the reporter missed the
point a bit.
Anyway. hooray for young
Lowen•
FRANK G. CASSERLY
~ re•l ••r~••
To the Editor:
Once again the TV news
brings us an i nte r view with
another of Was hington's big guns,
this lime Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger.
Now I know that my hearing
isn't what it used to be and
perhaps this is nature's way of
protecting our minds , but I'm
reasonably sure that I heard the
mind-boggling s um o r one
trillion 200 million CI can't han·
die that> budget, much of which
is progTammed for defense.
WELL, <as Reagan would
say) we're worth it and I sup-
pose that by defense the good
Secretary means from out·
s iders. principally the Soviet
Union. Okay. But he and the rest
in Washington better get their
act together for reason that !J'e
Soviets have said they'll take us
without firing a shot.
If all this dope pushing, racial
arguing, dumb busing, Absca.m,
Las Vegas fires, Santa Moruca
rent control fiascos etc. etc.
doesn't stop, and quickly, then
that's exactly what's going to
tlappen.
WARRENG.ALTHOFF
8ettu• latere•••
To the Editor:
A recent meeting of the
Newport Beach Planning Com·
mission shows that good old
American self·interest mo\lvales
us all. The heated topic under dis·
cuulon was the Irvine Com·
y'a planned expansion of
wportCenter.
veraJ people 1poke a1alnlt
tli'e p~mlty or tbe proposed bUI
~pot to tbelr boma; Uaelr self1Jb
TeHont: dlalUte fll dhMI fu.met
add the ucUaea or depoq. ODt
man wanted tJae Newport vw.,.
moved from ltl ptopoted altt so
UH coollne odors from lh
frustrated wi\b lbe loH of Navy
pilots to private industry that he
suggested a monetary stick in·
stead of a carrot: Make the com-
mercial airUne11 reimburse the
government for tbe trained
pilots they hire. As a practical
matter, though, the Navy would
.not be able to force the airlines to
pay.
M EANWHIL£, lhe Navy is
trying to lure back pilots who
have left the service for com·
mercial aviation but have been
furloughed by the recession. The
irony of this situation is that if
President Reagan succeeds in
getting the nation ·s economy
booming again, it will make it
that much harder for the Navy
to recruit the pilots it will need
for the president's expanded
carrier fleet.
To make matte rs worse, the
pilots the Navy is losing are
almost by definition those with
e xperience six years ' ex-
perience. A deputy chief of
naval operations, Lando Zech,
told the Senate Armed Services
Committee recently that the
balance of the Navy's flight
personnel has already shifted
alarmingly to inexperienced
flyers .
FIGHTING TH E BLACKOUT:
Dave Stockman's atte mpt to
jam the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting with a 25 percent
budge t c ut has run into
bipartis an protest on Capitol
Hill Sens. Harrison Schmitt. ft.
N M , and T ed Stevens , R·
Alaska. and Rep. Tim Wirth, D·
Colo., have all sent letters of
protest t.o the Office of Man age·
ment and Budget.
Although the threatened fund
cut 1s worrisome enough to CPB
officials, what really bothers
them is the loss of independence
the cut will 1mplic1lly cost them
CPB's funding has been on a
unique two-year schedule, to
lessen the chance of pressure
from a me mber or Co ngress who
d i dn 't lik e t h e age n cy's
programm in g Th e n Re p
Stockman voted to renew this
ad vance funding system two
years ago.
But now, as budget director ,
Stockman is trying to engineer a
retroactive budget cut for CPB.
a dream
re s t auran t s would w aft
e lsewhere , his selfish reason: a
desire for clean-smell in~ air. One
lady ranted a nd raved a bout the
com ing increase of cn me as the
c ity 1s urbanized ; he r selfish
rea son want1n~ to wa lk the
streets safely.
THE I R VINE Compa ny 's
representatives enthused about
the benefits of the ex pans ion :
their selfis h reasons : pay. One
man fumed about the extra time
he would have to spend driving to
work in Costa Mesa ; his selfis h
reason: an appreciation or his
time. Several people expressed
concern about their views being
blocked by the Irvine Center ex·
pans ion ; their selfish reason:
love of pretty scenery. One person
worried about the increased traf-
fic on Pacific Coast Highway and
the likelihood or the prohibition of
on-street parking; her selfish
rea son: concern a bout Corona del
Mar business.
One lady praised plans for ex·
pans ion; her selfish reason: more
shoppers for her store. Several
people bemoaned the fa ct that
stalled, heavy traffic would in·
crease smog; their selfis h rea-
son: a need for cle an air to
bre athe . Several people ex·
pressed fears that the Irvine Com·
pany expansion would increase
airport usage: their selfish rea· sons ~ a desire for peace and
quiet. One lady worried about
runoff in the bay and its siltation:
her selfish reason: a fondness for
nature.
I could go on, but the reader gets
the picture.
JACK WHITGlFT
N ... e 11.Uler
To the Editor:
If what I read in the paper is cor·
reel. the "acceptable" noise level
of an aircraft over a resldentiaJ
area is 64 decibels. The variance
allowance granted to the com·
mercial carriers using John
Wayne Airport is an increase to 70
decibels.
Do I have news for you!
Qualified sound engineers have
recorded 101 decibels over my
home on Harbor Island and I am
five miles from the airport.
Something stinks, besides the
Jet fumes.
WINIFRED VOEGELIN
• ":~~ ,...,, ......,. ete ... ICelN Tfte r~I lo ~ lftlt itttwt t. fll .-<• flf •tll'l\l~e I I II ,..,., ............ ff IGID ..,_, Of Int II .. t l•ol! llfff-o, All l•U.,t llllltl IM l-
tieMtwl .... INlllllt ~-NI"'" /NY .. wl\MloMI Oii'...,... I leflt tMJ9'1 It • M~I. "'-""' w~lllll n Mt ,....._ L'"'" MIW ... l el........ ..._ .. ..-. ... 11 • .,. ....
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MORE OPINION I Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOT/Thureday, March 26, 1981 AT
Nicholu von Hoffman
Real estate pi~11re changing
• You know it's a 1ucietl'1 play
wben the Reader's Dl1esi start.a
plu1rin1 an blveatment on lta
cover. By the time ne• ol a good deal reaches that mass
readership lt'a sheep-f\eecln1
Ume, 10 be warned a1atnat lbe
story ln the March issue t.elllD•
you that you can "Beat Ianatlon
-With Real EsUlte."
For a 1001 time you could, but
now the chances are that.it's not
inflation but
you who will
take the beat-
ing. Buy a
house now ,
and you 're
bart>ecue pit about how much tbt
famlly hut could fetch If )'OU put lt
on th~ market. Which should not
be taken u a warnint atalnlt buyi~ a bou.ae to Uve in, to ~Y
as one 1 home, a far different un-
dertakin1 than buyin1 as an in-
vestment. Renters, after all, ac-
cept the notion that they pay part
of thelr income to put a roof over
their beada and not 10 many yean
ago home owners tbou1bt of lbelr
houses in pretty much the same
light. If they got a bit more than
they paid for it, so much to the
good. but they certainly didn't ex-
pect to make a killing.
buying at the The sensational real estate
t o P o r t h e ' profit.a of the '708 came in lar1e
m a r k e t • measure at the expense of the
which is the people and institutions lendln1
classic way money for the mort1a1ea.
the fish lose Insurance companies, penalon
their money. funds.i,and savln1s and loan U · There is no reason to believe sociauons have been very badly
that real estate is going to con-creaf\led. Anybody who put up
tinue to leap upwards in price the qough for an 8 percent
faster than inflation, which lt mortcare some years a10 and
certainly did during the last now bas to pay 10 percent plus to
decade. Actuall y the median borrow money ls in an unhappy
price or an already existing house fix.
dedined in December, the last Consequently the fixed-rate
month for which figures are cur-mortgage is dying a quick
rently available. death. Even bankers, who are
The run has gone out of house often not the swiftest people in
buying. No more bragging at the the business world, know that
MIWPOaT
HARBOR CRUISE ..
SUteA Y laUMCH
AT THI CAHtmY
714 '75-7522
' ~)' c .... rely on Ute price of
money remalDlnt the Hme for
., or 40 yean, tbe Jenstb ot ma1t 1Dort•aa•. On• way or another
mon,.,e leaden are cbaratn1
more b•t bouH buyera only
bave 10 much to spend per
month oo •belt.er, which meana ~at If the mort•ace Cotta more,
the price must 10 down or lt's no
tale.
THE PAINFUL fact that the
new mort1a1e policies depress
house prices or kiU off sales baa
led the real estate indU!try to ex-
periment with wbat 11 bein1
called "creative financin1."
What that usually boils down to
is the seller la induced to &Ive a
second mort1a1e or second trust
on the house. That means the
seller doesn't 1et his money out
Immediately. He geta a monthly
payment from the buyen, but
actually 1ettln1 hls handa on
that much talked about profit
may be delayed a considerable
period of lime.
The 001l of fuel to beat and-or
cool will also help check the fa.st
movement of prices upward.
Enerl)' is no longer a negligible
coat of bome ownership, so that
potential purchasers must fiiure
it into their total monthly costs
when calc.ulating what they can
or cannot afford. Even ii nve
years a•o would-be buyers
aeldom uked to see the heatint
bllla, now au ch requeala are
routine in the f.-O.t belt.
It la probable that the 1reateet
or all tax loopholes, de-
duction of mort1a•e interest
paymenta, will be nal'1'0wed in
the next few yean. The loophole
is Impossible to defend In a
society that wanta to make more
money available for rrodurtlve Investment. Doub leas the
polltica of the situation wlll de-
mand that present owners be
grandfather-claused against the
change which will only be applied
to new house purchases. Even so,
the net effect will be to puah
down prices. Downward price
preaaure wUJ also be 1enerat.ed
if the interest deduction ls not al-
lowed for second houses or vaca-
tion bomes.
What's being predicted here is
not a real estate crash but a
slow slump, a sag. Only a small
percentaee of recent house
buyers are going to get badly
hurt. Mo st will simply be
bruised when they find out that
the house they had come to t.b.inlc
of as tbelr nest egg, the replace-
ment for their lnflation-rava1ed
savings account, has been nib·
bled and diminished itself.
PLUMBING
Fitting•, Sin •• Tube
KOHLER .__............, _ , ... l .. dtl
c .. 11-iow .. -~ -~ C_..,l..-y_T ... -·· .. --~
-0-
Rachelle, one piece (Kohler) ............ ~··· -~
-~ EL KAY STAINLESS STEEL SINKI
1!1 Kay SI'* ICMlll·ll221
willlllllifl9t wil....,t llttlft9•
Ell•Jll~..,-
ICllY I flO.C It I It --.. --..
_,_ .. ...... -... r
,... .. ,.,,. .. ·-
1n.M ..... -.....
-· -· -·
-· ,.,,. , .....
114.M 1n.•
n.» •.n
Get organized
with
Space Mates
f l ltlJ C.-.., .... ( ... 41 r T I ,,
Cllll-»22 C --. --.. AMERICAN STANDARD , ... o, __ ...,... .... --,,__ "-·"---,,__
SPECTRA BATH TUB "--.-.-_____ ... -
1nM •••• -.. .t1 .... .... ...... •11.n
-•.n ...--C•ll lor OIM• plumDH>qQUOle\ ,-. ..
OTHER SPECIALS
WATER CLOSETS
1. ........... "'-' -"it• ·-pt"Wmlwnc.oaor
Tlltlle wl .. Mal
.mitt .....
premiwm cetor eta\ not tnc•uos Ytft t••
KITCHENS
sn.n "1• lnt.U
IS1S1 m.• Ut.11
..... " ....
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'"·" 174.11
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l., ....... ,_ _______ _,_.,....._ . .. _ .. _.,...., __ _,_
Low•• t2111
'741 W11lclH Dr .. tit.~1rt IHcll
6Jl·70J2
ff-ff &tit••· Co ....... FIR..c"'9 A Ht..._
If you have a
Daily Pilot Want Ad
appearing tomorrow,
please cut out this
recipe . . . •
... You mat not
have time to cook.
This Soup 'n Crackers Duo -
makes a nice welcome aftu a
hectic day : In saucepan, cook 1/4
cup chOpped onion with 1/4 to 'h
teaspoon curry powder In 1
tablespoon butter or margarine
until tender. Add 1 can <11'/' ounces) condensed spilt pea
with ham soup; gradually stir In
1 soup can water. Add 'h cup
chopped apple. Heat; stir now
and then. Meanwhile, spread 1
package (3 ounces) cream
cheese <softened) on 9 round
crackers. Sprinkle with chOPPeCI
toasted almonds. Makes 2 to 3
servings.
... ready to assemble and finish. Natural birch.
WALL CABINET
Model IW3030
30" wide x 30' high
.... 70.1111
51.88
DRAWER BASE
CAllMET
Model IOB15. 15" wide.
..... 7 .•
69.88
WALL CABINET
Model IW3615
36" wide x 15" high
""· •. 1111
39.88
301 ~. State College 17MOIO
Open: Mon. thru Fri. 9 ~ 9
S.t. I 10 f Sun. t to I
WAU CABINET
Model IW3018
30" wide • 18" high
.... 55.•
39.88
WORKSHOP
350.88
'CAlflETI Al ...
LAUNDRY ROOM
212.52
••
COITAMllA
1275 Brtetot
'111-1800
Opw1: Mott. lhlu Fri. 9 to 9
Set. I to e Sun. t to e
. ------
~
71.88
BASE
CABINET
Model 1818 18 Wide "'9. H.00
48.88
WE CAIUtET (MC UIWIJ
Model 1815
""· 13.00 46.88
BASE CABINET
Model #830 30" wide
....... 00
72.88
BASE CABINET
Model f836 36" wide.
""· 103.1111
72.88
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thunday, March 28, 1981
QUEENIE
"You tee -aomethina'• definitely WTOf\I!"
Nevada flap
'Queer' crack
angers gays
LAS VEGAS I AP) Lt. Gov. Myron Leavitt.
who called backer s of a gay rodeo in Reno
"queers" and said they should take the event to
California. was termed a "male Anita Bryant" by
the head of Nevadans for Human Rights .
"The use of the word 'queer' has outraged a
tremendous number of gay political supporters of
Lt. Gov. Leavitt, not to mention his straight
political supporters who consider a statement such
as that one of bigotry," Steve Hinkson said
Wednesday. "What the gay community within the
state doesn't need is a male Anita Bryant."
ON TUESDA V, L EA Vl'M' jumped into a dis-
pute over the annual gay rodeo in Reno. saying be
opposed renting the state fairgrounds to "queers"
and that they "should go somewhere like
California."
"I'm strongly opposed to queers using public
property," said Leavitt, a Democrat who has said
he will run for governor in 1982. "If you give them
the fairgrounds. you're condoning their lifestyle,
and I don't th.ink we s hould do that."
He added, "T hey call them queers because
they've got a screw loose."
HIN KSON SAID THE 1980 gay rod eo
took in $7,000, most of which went to the Muscular
Dystrophy Foundation. Nevada Ser vices to the
Blind , a senior citizen center and to donate
television sets to a Veterans Administration
hospital. "The gay rod eo in Reno is not held to
brinli? shame upon the city or state," Hinkson said.
"ft 's an a ll·around money making affair Which
benefits not only the city or Reno but the state as
well."
Hinkson said the gay community could not
condone "the overtones of McCarthyism " in
Leavitt's statement and that "one would be in·
terested in hearing Mr Leavitt's comments on
blacks. Mexican.Americans and other minorities."
Sunbelt areas
lead growth
WAS HINGTON (APJ
All the metropolitan
areas with population
gains of 300,000 or more
during the 1970s and a ll
teen other metropolitan
areas increased by at
least 50 percent during
the 1970s.
DEATH NOTICES 25 or the fastest-growing
areas are located in
southe rn and western
st ates, according to a
Census Bureau study. FOX
The report forcefully al . .I~> s F. PH I:-.: 1-: c; HA c: 1-:
lustrates the s tea d y I-OX . age 81;. ~t''lt~~nt. of movement of people out lluntml'(ton !hath. (a anct . . former o" ner an<! operator o f older 1ndustr 1al or thr !'mes Jlotcl Pa!>!>ed
Northeast and North Cen a" a~ •m March 24. 1981 at
tral s la tes that has Fountain \'allr\ Communit'l become appare'l1 as re· llospttal ~I rs !''ox "as a
suits of the llfflb head nall\'e of Caltforn1a horn in
count are made public Placentia. Ca . 11n Jul\ 25.
Nearly doubling over 11!99 and was a roember o
th I l d d F t the Natl\e Daughters or th1• e as eca e , or Ci old en Wes t Rt•ln' ed
Myers.Cape Coral, Fla , mother of Yvonne Gallaghf'r
lopped the growth list of Lo:. Angeles. Ca . C) nl
w ath a 94 2 p e r cen t James f ox of lluntantglon
. population increase. Six Beach. Ca and Joseph l.l'e
fo'ox or Ridgewood. :-.ie"
r NICl .. OTMHS
SMfTHS' MOITUAIY
627 Main St
Hun11ng1on Beach
536-6539
rAClltC YllW
MIMOllAL rAIK
Cemetery Monuary Ch1pel
3500 Pac1f1c View Drive
Newport Beach 644-2700
J rrse). also surv1,·1n~ arl' 13
-, i:randrhildren and l grl'at·
grandchild Mass of Chris
11an Burial will he celC'brat
C'd on Thursday. March 26.
1981 at 7 :JOPM at Christ the
Km1t Catholic Church. Los Angeles, Ca Graveside
~<'rvH·1·s will be on Friday.
Man·h 27. 1961at 11 ·00AM at
ll o ly Cross Cemetery .
Pierce Brothers Smiths'
Mortuary directors. 536·6539.
PIPER
EA RL PIPER. resident of
McCOltMK:ll MOITUAllH
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Costa Mesa, Ca. Passed
away on March 24. 1981 at
the age of 81 He is survived by his wife Vera of Costa
Mes a. Ca., 2 sons Robert
Piper of Costa Mesa. Ca
and Will iam H Piper of
Lake Elsinore, 4 daughters
Dorothy Morris of Michigan.
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan C.p1strano
49S-tn6
HAUOtl LAW~MT. OUYI
Mortuary• Cemetery
Cremetory
t625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
5-4(}5554
....aNOTHlll
-.&.•O.ADW•Y
MOllTUAl'f
110 Broadway
Coste Mt"
6'2·9150
IA.Ln ... °"
SMrTH & ""'"""' WISTCLJflP CHANl
Erma Beebe ot Indiana. Bel· ty Oeorae or Costa Mesa,
Ca and Beverly Edminster
o f O klah oma City,
Okl11homa. 1 brother Bob
Piper of Santa Ana, Ca., 2
alsters Mina Wolfe and Ethel Wiiton both or Florida, 19
1randchlldren and to great·
grandchildren. Funeral
services wUI be held on Fri·
day . March 27. 1981 at
tO : OO AM at the Pierce
Brothera Bell Broadway
Chapel with Interment at
Harbor Lawn Memorl1l
Park. P'rtendl ma,y calJ at
'b• mortuary on Tbunda1.
March • lllt from t :OOPM
to t :OOPM. In lieu or nowen donalloos may be made to
the American Cancer Socte·
l)' Pierce Brothers Bell
.. ' • Broadway Mortuary dlrec·
'---------" tors
427 E 1711'1 St
eo.11Maa 849371
IDTHS
ELSEWHERE
Fit Id LONDON tAP>
M ira bal Slr Cl a •d t
Aad1l-'etil, 96, who com·
mandtd BritJ1h lorcea Ir\ In
dla and the MJddle taat dur·
ln1 World Wn II. died Mon-day In Marraketh. Morocco.
MOSCOW IAP I O"n
Yev•eltJD E. Maltaev, 70,
the Red Army's top political
~ommJaur durt n~ World
War ll. dltd Friday •nt•r 11
lon1 lllnt'11e.
LONG BEACH IAPI
Miidred Aleaander, 1111·
aociate director or th«-N•
tlon1l H igh St·hool
Journuli•m Society. 11nd
director of the Calltornl11
Scbolaatle Press Assoch1 lion. died Sund11y
C HI CAGO 1Af'1 H•dlOll WbUtacker, 77, u
blues mus1c1un whu
performed under the name
"Tampa Red,' dlt.'d Thuri.
day. Amon~ ht!> bl'lter
known sonl(s "''re "l,mt>
Her with 11 Fl'dtn~. It
Hurts Me 1 oo." C:r' 1n1t
Won 't llt•lp You ' &nd
"Uon 'tYouL~to Mr •
NF.W \'ORK 1 AP 1 Or
Edward Laker, !i.'>. f1vt• t1m<•
winner of tht> l'n1tt•d Stall':.
Oµen l'ht'ss t•hu mp1onsh1p
and author ur severul l)uok!t
on l'ht•s:. 1ht•d Wt•d11t•sd ay at h1:.h11mt•
TEL ,\\'IV, IH:wl t1\l'r
\'onathan Hatosh. 73. 1mt• 1Jr
I snu•I " fnn•mo:.t poets und 11
fo11tt1ll'I' or thl' l'llnlrovt•r"1al
Canaanite Mm·cnwnl that
~uui:hl lo M'paralc Israel
from fo11!1J:n Jt•\HY. cited Wednl'!tda~ of 11 heurt allat•k
~oscow 1Ar1 Sov1e1
film dlrl'Ctor Mark S .
Oonskol. ~. whose· patriotic
produrtions twice "on htm
the Ordl'r or Lenin. the na
tion·~ highest c1v11ian award,
has died. R11d10 Moscow s aid
Tuesda}
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEMENT OF WITHDRAWAL
FROM ,.AltTHEltSIO P
OPEltATIHG UHOElt
FICTITIOUS BUllHIU NAME
l nr IOllOl#IJ1,.0 Ofl'r~ fl4U W11f\Or•wn
.-.. • Qt:n•r•I P•''""' t'o m Int
Pdr tnfr~h1p OOPr a;ti"Q Vndt'' tn.t I 1(
I 1t 1ou .. Du\1nt1\\ nd mtl' of R & ij
>PECIALr1Es •• J/Q l llrd ~·
N t"WPO'I Sca<..h (A "IJW)
T n .. ftlf1t1ou~ thJ\1ntH thtrnf' ''"''-"
m .. nf hn ttW-Pd"~''"'P wd ... r11t.-o vn
I "' ttl 1n trw Couut.,. ot Orttno•
f-~tl N(trtlt-dncJ Ad.Orf\ .. UI th.-
Pt!,\Un ~•thortt••no
kdlOh A ~f'''•fd YM• ,.,.,,4'Ht• )/'I
E • JrO, Nt."t11tpOr1 e. .. cn CA
"f P'W r-~rt•r•
FISS041
P"Ol•\"00 (>oanqe CO.\I 0 •11¥ P•IOI,
M•r<n 2• AP,,11,' I• 1~11 l •ol 11
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI 8 UllHUS
HAM•HATU H HT
Tnt IOllOWl"9 --· .,. do1no
ou,1n•U·~\
111 HARBRIGH T REALTOR S
I N C Ill BR1GHf ES f STAR
INTERNATIONA L. JOIOI lo •n C•nltr
D,, .. ::100 UQUl\4 NoQuf'I CA 9/•11
~t •rbttQhf RP•tlor \ In d
C•1t •orn., curoor•t•on J\)101 luwn
Ct!'nttr Ou'-'· z iuu L•oun• N•Q""'
CA''°" 1 n ... OU\1f'W~\ 1\ conducted by • tor
P0f8ftOn
~1•rbt1Qnt Aec11tor\
C.nrt\ Ao•m \ t n.ttirm•n rn.,, \t"'tem~t w• .. ftlt"d ~uh int
C..ount1 C.it!rk 1u Or.,-.ot toutUy on
M41«'1 /4 1~11 FU~U
Publl\""d Or•nqe COa\I Oa11v Pllol M•r<ll 1~ "1>'•17 ~ I• 1~81 141• 9j
PUBLIC NOTICE
FIC Tl TIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
T n" 1011ow1oq 1>ttr \Vn\ •' ... dOHlQ
bu\1n~\'\ d\
R ( A~!>OCI A1E S '1~0 l(on
,;_,,m4n Su•tt IW Ntwoon o.,.,,,
t •11fo,n1a 11«*}
~t<.h111Hd J R•mJt'f 1.ot. Wa¥t< r•\.I
1.Jr.vt Coron• ChH ~•r C•ltlornt• llolS
l•m•ron \ltll•Qe 11 1H>I Soulh
Gr•noe Awl"tut Su1le K S..nf• ~n•
(•l1torn•• 9110S
ftu\ bu~1n .. u 1\ tondut t'"o oy •
~~n•r•t CMrfMr\f'llO
A•lrwtrd J A-.n0t1
r n1~ \t•1emen1 ••\. f1twt w1tn ,,,,,.
County Cieri! ot OrM1Q1t C.ounl'f on
M•r<n I• 1"¥1
A ., ... rd J A•"99' •• Prefe\twtft•I
Corpor•t1en, OJO Ven K•rm•n. Su•t•
tot, Htw-1 B .. <11. C•lll.,nll •?• ..
FUt Sll
PuDf1\nt'd Or•n9'" C.o•\t O•ily P11ot
M•rtn /o Ap.,t 1 ' •• l'/81 1111 II
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
HAMI 5TATEMENT
fnr lollOWl"1! PU\On\ a re doonQ
t>U~tOlt\ 4i'
CALIFORNIA RAINBOW, UH
Bu en St , Su11t u, Nt woor t B••cn, CA nuo
C l S ... rwood lnltrHh, In< , A
Ca ll lornla torporaloon, .. ,, Porl
BrhlOI Clttlf, HtwlH>rt Betelt. CA n660.
f I\" ll<IMMU " <ONlll< i.o bJ I <Or
oort"on
C L S""'"'°°° 1n1trH1t
Cl\erlu L Sn.r*OO<I
Pru1denl
flm lltl-1 •H Ill~ •lln '""
Counly Cltr~ ot °'..,°' Counh °"
'lllaHllU, 1 .. 1
(' H A f ' J" II A l ' S to; N ,
S"ltHrland IAP1 W1ltt'r
Brln&oU. ts. formrr prl'11ldtnt ot th• Swlaa Sodal Demo~ratlc Party and a
member of Pullamt'nl for 411
)'Hn,dledTuc· da)
WA lllNC.l'rON 1AP 1
John C'llfford t•ohlt'r, 84. an
lnvc111m1•n 1 bu 11k1•r 11nd
forow1 ll S. 11mb11111111l11r tu
fl•lalum, dh·d 1'ut<11day 11t
Gl'or11dow11 l lnl Yl!r11 lt v l l1111plt11I .
~ACKAMF.NTO 1AP1
J•ck Wt'lter, 69, 111t1t 1· Co111t11I
burt•11u rhil'rtorthf'Su11 fo'ron rl~eo fo~xum1n(lr J8year11. dlt•d
'l'lll'lldJ\ or u h«-oirt oil ~rk
FV course
• s1gnups
slated
Registration for more
than 95 spring classes
offered by the Fountain
Vall ey Park s a n d
Recreation Department
wi 11 begin Saturday.
with a s ing.up session
from 10 a.m . to noon at
the Recreation Center .
16400 Br ookhurst St.
This session will be for
Fountain Valley resi-
de nts only. Open r e-
gistration will take
place Monday through
Friday, Crom 9 a .m. to 5
p.m .• also at the Center.
Classes will be offered
an various interest
areas, including aerobic
dancing, calligraphy .
gym nasties and pre-
natal fitness.
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSI HESS
NAME STATEMENT
fht folfowfnQ ptr W>t't't ., ~ OornQ
OtJt.1neu •> TRAMMEL CROW C.OM PANY
119~1 Fllth1 l~tt"*, (•f1fOt"1••l11<4
Souc~rl'I C•11tofn1• PArtn•t s ll~"'
F11cn. 1r"11W C•t1fo'"'•· ~n11•
Oun.e1ld A Sutro, 71't• OttAn
UoulttwcHO 6al004, Cctllft1rn1• ~lfl.6l
uo~ooo Ru>\~11. n11 E ut 8df
tidlDOd, l-al1101n10 C)2bf>I
tltllon K C""ng, JI Roo1 Knoll,
h v•nt" C•titorn•d 9110 o • .,,.o M•llt,, JO]) Pio P1~0. 5.•n
01eQo C•1t•orn1d "1t0o ~lrpn~n 8 W1U1am~ Sll ""'"" Avtn'-1~ Nt w"°rt 8,.•<n. C•11forn16
~IUO
Tl'U\ DU\lnt'-~ 1~ CQnOuU•d Dy •
l1m1tl'd s,Mtln«~1p
Soutrwm C•l1forn.e P•r tne,'
.t l1m1ttd p.9rfMl\11•P
Oor>•ld A S..Olfl)
lh Gfo~t•I P•rfntt
f ru\ \Wlen'M'nl W4t\ tiled #1th I,.
Cownty Cl•'" ol 01.n0<-County on .. .,<cn t• l'fli1
RhD6 ... Ktn<l•ll & H~rr11t9iOA, ~
'r•leU19"•I L.•w CMpor•hOft, 41't
M•<Ar Utwr lowl••lrd. Sw•'• 10l. ..... "r1 .... C". C•lllOlft•• •u..o
FUIS/O
Publ1\,.,__.0 OrMlQt (Od\ol 0111ly P1101
M•'t n /0 AUt•f J 1 10 1qe1 1 )1 t ¥1
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •uSIHESS
NAME STATEMENT
J nt-toltow1nQ pu \On\ • r ... <J01nQ
ous1nc\\ .,
P"AIN WRAP MUSIC JS.1 Md"n
Or1w" '''""'· C•ld 1 *11111 John How.,CI Simon. Jht Marin
Drive ffv1rw,t•l1f 'llJ14
C.•fOI A"n S1t'f'10f'. J.)..-1 M•r•n Q,.-,v~.
lrvrnt , C.tl1f 9'11 IA p,., bu\IM'S\ ·~ c.onduc ted b'r' .tn 1n
C.h"'10u•I
JoM Howi•ro Simon
fh1\ \t,Urt"TWnl W.t\ l1lrC1 w1tn th«'
C.ounly Clrrk 01 OrM'l~ Courlly on
Md'( n l•, 1'1tl
l'UU•I
Puolo\ned O.•nQO CN•I D•oly Polol
M•rtn l~. APfol 1, q• ••. 19111 10• 81
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
HI.ME STATEMENT
Tnt t0How1rw;a ptrwn t\ dON"IQ bu\1
l'l•U .,,
NEWPORT BEACH MISSION
VALLEJO DERMATOLOGY GROUP
JJO St.te>er,or Sutt• 1•0. Newport
8 U tn CA 91 .. J
Dore J C.olbert M 0 H •SI EmPI•
S.Odle L<IQun, '1•11\, (A 91oSl
T ftl\ bv~n~u '' tonauc ttd ov •n 1n
01vtCJu•I
Oo<t J Golti.11 M 0 T"'" .. ,,,~,,, Wd) t1lf'd #II,, \l'W
(.ouM; Ctt f9'. o• Or•noe-C:ou'1l'f on
M•r<h 1J, lfft
F1SMO
PuOl•Sned Or-.n0t Co1nl Oa11.,. P1tot
M•r<l'l I•, Aprill,~ lb, IYil IS08 81
PUBLIC NOTICE
TAR GAZEK~ .. .,_;..;,.;........_:..:...., ___ e, Cl.A y A. PO
M. Y-O..t, A<IMfr °""'" M. y Ac<•r'l•f I• I~• Sltn Y
To d••t lop meuog1 for Fridoy,
r-1 WOtch (Orrnponcllng lo .......i... of yell# Zodlot b111h algn.
P VBUC NOTICE
.,..
PlJBLI( NOTICE
1'1SUI•
PYOl"necl 0.•nge COHI 041oly PolOI M•r<n ,., APrll 1, 9 ••• .... 1•1Jll
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMAHT
,,,.,,.
Pwoll!Nd ~~9' co .. 1 Otol' Pllo1. Mar~I\ lt . .-,,111, t , 1', tttl UU·ll
N il ... HOT~OI' OlllOLUTIOtt
AHO I( 01' AUTHOa1TY
a L, Y L. COMPANY ILJOMI. •
Otntrel 1'4'1n• .. ~•P COft•hllr111 OI
llt ttr M ~llHn, and 8t uMen,
R•rt H fMYt<, J.,., .. C Br.ct,
Cllllton E *'"Ill\ Jr., Arlllllr J Hiii,
l(t M etn c. Aldtl(I\, lto1 O...m•n•,
Lewrence H c. $mill\ end Je.mtt A Mttur, Jr a 0.Mt•I .-.r111er11, •n<I
•lllcll ,,.. U#rl.0 on I() OUllllHI '"
Oren" Qunly, C.1110<111•, w•• di•·
\Ohtd effttal e M Of CIOW OI OU>IMU onOt<~ 1,1 ...
D Allef Clollf, rlO PtrtMr 1n llW
Ptr1nert11111 ... , Mllorlty 10 OINI ,,, •
Pt rlnHoNll, '"-' lo wino "" int
P•rlMtlhlll tll•ltt
RO<;ER M A.LISOH,
G.n•r•I P•rtn•r
REED BAUMAN
G-r.i P•t1ner
PuDlllNO Or""flt C:O.~I O•oly Pllol
Mtrcn l•, '"' I~•¥•
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSIHUS
NAME STATEMENT
f nt tOllOwfnQ pirr )Gn '' dOinQ OU\t
"-U 41\
SHANGHAI PINE GARDEN. 300
M•r1ne Avt'nue, B•IOoa l\l•no.
NtwPOrl Bu<n. CA 911161
L•m Chtono Kwono. 111 •mutny>I
Av1nue1 B•lbo• I stanu, Ntwovn
But n, CA '1'1 .. 2
rn1' 0t.;'1ntt' '' tonouc &eo ov 411 "'
01._1du•I
P\JBUC r«rriCE
~
P UBUC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUI IVllHIU
HAMI ifAflMIHT
rne 11111 .... 1•9 per-•• 1101n11 ou••
"'"!toulAIH l!M PlllE f IHAN
CIAo, • •. llwt C1Ynl1lly N•wporl
Btacn, c.111orr11a t»MI
$•m11t• (MM, •• 1111• cn.ntlll'l'.l
Htwl)Ott a .. cn, (411110nrla 91..0
I nit Dotttrw" II (enOU<l•O bY ..,, 1n,
lll•ldvtl Se"""'''""' ""' •l.et-1 w•\ 11100 woln 1.,. C•<1l'llJ C::1er• o• o. ... oe C.ounty on
Mtr<lt 10 1tt1 J '•tl11tC
1'<1Dll•NO 0rMl9f Cm" O•ilt P11011 JMrcl\ 1/, •• 1•. APfll 1 '"' llta t
P UBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI aus•HESS
NAME ITAf.MEHT
Tiie IOll-•no ..,..'°" " doono """> n•'' •• BRITAIN SUMMER fRIP II. w .... Foreu ROtd CO\I• M•••
Ct lllor111e 92t1'
Mr> J.,,.. Miii• Ft /IMr JU Wok•
FC)(t\I Ro.ed, C01i•• '-""~•. C11th.un1•
•1U•
1no, bv"'ne\\ •• conouc.led by .tn 1n
diY1du•I
Jl.lt\f MlllJ F•nno1
lh1\ 't•t.mtnl w•• flll!'<J w.11n 1'1f
Counly Clorl ol OronQf' (ounl r on
OBJTUARIES
PllBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI au11 .....
llllAMI IT,&JIMC•T
fl\t lellewlllf --· art d01no .............
TalHT, l"AIUCI AHO $CHAii'
,.ITZ LTO. ,_,, Nellie G .. I llo•,
UlllAI Hlll1, Cellltrftlt flt}J
lle .. ,I t. Wlteeler, Mt"•9"'0
Oentrel P•rln., DI Tre nl, L16 •
C•lllernle """'"' _.,IMnNp, Ulll
flltlllt G•ll lto•d L•Qwn• Hiii•
Cellfttrlla t7-)J
J •mh 0 Or••iie O t rttrt l l'eflntt ol T'ettl. Lid a CAllllO•nlf
41trlera 1 INflnar•l'llP Z.Ul ilrot.en llol
LU••. L~ Holl\ C•l•IOfl\141 U.SJ.
Gl•nn W llr•k••. 11i •r•<lloro
Sltetl, ~. CalllOtnl• tll ..
M•nnew F S<htlnlu , l/t11 f 11<1'
Av•nll'I ''"'"'· t ahlot ntf 9111• r"u bM\lnt\\ I~ C.OOdUl ltd b<y • otnttt1 ~r1ner.-i10
TRl!HT, LTO
IOIY RODetl E wi.. .. ltr.
MMiitQJl\Q C,en•r•I P•ffn-.r
J "'' 11•1tn\ftnl ••\ hle<I ••It\ lt\ft t..ounty fltt• of 0'4ll'Oit (ou11ty o"
Martn 10 1<191
l'UIMI P~Oh•ll9<l Or•ng. L~>I O•oly PolOI Mtr~n 11 •Y It April) '"'' I Jo4I .,
PU81.1(' NOTICE
"CTI TIOUS BUSI HESS
H-1 STATEMENT
f M tolle>w1nQi a.r-M>in " dolf\9 OU\J rt.en .,
~ 0 (0 N S1 R U(.110N
M ANAGEMEN r CO 11'"1 Cow•n
Ir vtne. C•liforn1• •11 I•
At<M rd M O•lfon Jt )()()) Jf1vtf
Avtrui1• NewPOrl B••<" (1l1torn14'
., .. l
fhn bU\lf'lfl\\ 1\ <c>nOv< l•d bY •n 1n
Olv1<kl•I
R•tf\•rO M O•tton, Jr
""' ,,.,~, ••\. ltlt'd ""''" th41' Cc>unty C.l.,k ot Or•nQe" (.Ou"'• Oil
Mtr<n) 1<1111
rUIHI
Publt\N<S Or.-noe ,~ .... o •• ,, P•IOI
Mtrln ~ 11, 1' l• 1'1111 IOS• 91
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSIHE SS
NAME nATEMEHT M•rcll J, 1'111 ,. Ul•t I ht fotlo•1nQ pttr \On~ •'" aa.no
Pubh\hed Of.nge C.O.'tl 0111, P11ot Dv\inr\\ •\ M•rt~s.12,1•.n.l'<tl 101011 L . M PRODUCflONS ti/ RiVt!r\ICW A11enul!, Su1lf' J NtwC><1'1
PUBLIC NOTICE B••t.h C•hf~rH41 ,,...l
Int 1011ow1no 114"'"" •rt aoonQ YorlQ T>un i...e
DU"''"" •• ll/ H w CJIRPENTAV, AllOl'no•t l•w FICTltlDUI BUSI HESS
HANIE STATEMENT
Mory lOU PrenotrQ.d\t l~W h;th
Sl rwt• M)OI. Nrw oo,, Hf'•H''
C•i1tQtn1• ,,.,.l
Lt"Ondrd 8 H,t\t4ll 11\0 l•U•
111 H W SILL RE PLACEMEN f, IOOll Jn" >1•1-nl wa \ ltle<I ••In Ill<'
Bo\m41<k. Hun111191on Bt41tn, CA '2t4t cownt1 Cltrk ol Or.,,oe Counly on D••• O<n•. 10011 81\M•••. H~nl M•rtn , •• l'ltl
\lie~• M JOI N pw pu" 8f'tllh r h• 1011ow1no pet \On I\ OO•no Ov'• I l •htor ni .. 'IJOi&l
neul•! 8•ttilt0TE(A CULINARY ft\i\ l>\.l\•nt"\\ l\ft>nOuClf'd ny ,..,,, '"
1n111on Bff<h, CA on... FUUM
S1tpntn Anorocn 10011 8"m•r... Pu011'1leel 0...,,Qe Co.11•1 041•1y Pilot INFORMATION SfRl/ICE PO llo• O"•Ou•IM.trfLOUPr~nou1U\t
Hun11no1on BHtn CA 91.... • """" h . ~ol 2, 9, ... 1911 14•1 9j Tn1, bu\fntU I\ (Ond ... Ctld t>t
t H41. UIS EIOtf'\ Aven~ (O\f• Mt\4 lhl\ \t4ttetnf"nl '!Nd\ l1lfl0 with lh•
C•h for-n••91t)I ~ (u..,nh (ltr~ ut Ot-tn~• (.uunl'I 11
hlY\tff'O O.r'lNnhtp
SttOf'M'nM anor1(~
tttrO•r1 K Ann J\I\ (IOI~ Martn) l\f8t
Avenue Co\ta Me~ C•11torn14 •7•7' F' U>O. 1
fht\ \l•le-mt'f'lt W•\ ftl«S 1#111\ IN'
(.Oun•• Cler~ of o'"""" (ounly °" M•r<n h 19'1
PUBLIC NOTICE '"" bu'Mr..-" t\ condu<l~d o-; •n •n
d1111due1
N 7ttt1 HtfDl",-t .C. Ahn
HOTICI 011' DISM>LVTIC)tt '"'' \l<tlfn...,nl W•\ "1~ wolf• lnr l
Pu Oh\~ Or •nCJt (o~\1 tia , P ''
M •r(n) 11 llf 7f> 1qe1 1"1)(.1 01
''~soo PvOll\l'leO 0.•n9e Ccw\I Oaoly PrlOI, AHO LACK 01' AUTMOltlTY Counly Cl•H ol Or•l>Q~ Counh on
41 FULLERTON APARTMENT M••<n'l 1,..1
PUBLIC NOTICE
M•rcn 1•. Apr.1 l. • •••. l'lt1 1•1' II
P UBLIC NOTICE
STATEMENT OF ABAHDOHllllEHT
OFUSI OF
FICTITIOUS BUSI HESS NAME
TM IOllOwong l)et\Ot\ nt\ •IMl..OOMCI
tne ""•of 1nie ••O•••out. buSifW'~\ rwme
A ANO E ELECTRIC. ti• •t\I
S1r .. 1, H•wpon Be<M:i'I, CA 910.J
Artnur Edmund w oir • .f10.t Ahef
A•• N•woon 8t6tn. CA 91 .. J
T n1~ bu\.n•\\ ••\ conduc: tt"O oy .,.
""'•vtdu•I
Mtnur E Wolf
r "•' ,t•temt"I ... , 111tc1 w1tn tf'\f'
Counly Clerk 01 Or.,,941 Counly on
Mt rt n 24, '°"'' '10.00
Publt\l\e<I Or4ng., CCM•• D••IY Pt101.
M•rtn l•. Aprtl l, 9, II> 19111 141S 11
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUi IUSIHISS
HAME 5TATEMEHT
'"'• tollowlf'\9 c>•'~' •'• OO*no Ch.U•M~\•\
KRAEMER PV.CE ASSOCIAfES
•HO Von Ka rman Av•nu• ;;; JIO
N••OO•I lk«n CA •l..O
HO••rO HO""'•tel &, B•rt,•rO In<
C,tt'n~r •I P•r1n•r d C••dorn1tt
Core>ot•flon . .USO Von .C.arm•n Av•nuf'
.: J~. N•woor I B••<n CA 91Mo0
r n • ., Ou\1M\\ '' utnduc. tf'd ov •
1tm1lt!d P4''"*""•0
H0#61'd HO'#•fO & 8 .. tn~tro
In<
i,,oDforl IN HO#ctfO
f n1, ,.,.,•""-·n• ••\ l•tMJ _.,," cnt
C.ounty Clerk of OtM'Qt' (O\ll''llY on
Mtrrn IJ l~dl
l'ueo1
Publl\""" 0rM'ltl" (O.\I Oa11, P•IOI
M•«n2o, Ap,.11 9, •• 19111 IS09 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATIEMEHT
f he 'OllOWH'IQ Pl"'\Ol"1 ,, OOtnQ Du''
nt'\\ .,
Sl41NG HUA CONSTRUCTION CO,
IH W l~n SI , CO\I• M•••· CA t1UI h •• fnp Sn1n11, l01>0 M•Plt SI
Co•l a Mrw, (A 9'1•11
f "'' Du\•nt'"\\ 1\ conduc tfd by an 1n
d1w1du•f rrw-Sl'l•nq r, ••
Tn1\ \l4ll•~n1 .,, fllecJ ,,.,,.,, t"'t
(Ounly Cl.,k of OrM111'! County on
M•rcn )4, 19tt
''ltJ1 PuDlt~d Or•r'IQll (O•\l o ..... P1tot
Ma'<" l•. Ap,,11. 9 •• 1'191 14ol II
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF
HOH ltlESPOHSIBILITY
NOl•t,.. •\ f'litrtbv 01.,.., th•t ttw! un
Mr\1Qntd ww no1 ot rt\00"\lblf' tor
•ny oeoh ot h•tHht1t\ contr•<t.O C>y
•nyonf ot,._.r Uwl'\·my\4tf on or •ll•r
lhl\.d•t•
O•ltd 1n1• 111n d•t ot M••<n. 1990
G411I R A!IYllrt
b600 W W•rrtttr Avf'nue.
t1unlongton 8e.<n. CA~,..,
PuDlo\"00 0.•n~ CO.\I O•oly PllOI,
Mutn 2•. ll, Aprol 1, ,._, 149311
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTICIE OF APPLICATl()fj l'Olt
CHANGE IHOWHEltSHIPOI'
ALCOHOLIC BIVlllAOI LICEHll
To Whom 11 ~, Conctrn
J•mn A ENOSLEV •nd Lt>llt H
SHIPMAN are -lylng to ll'lt O.~rl
mtnl 01 AltOl\Oltt 8"•tr4'Qt Control
lor 01 OH SALE BEER & W INE
!PUB PREM I lo "" •ltonoll<
bt .. r•on •I 1111 NewPOrl Blvd ,
Co>I• Me ... CA "lU I
Publl•l'leO 0. ... 111 Coe•• O•llY Pllol,
M•rcn 1•. 1tt1 UOO II
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS •V$1NISS
lfAllll• STAT•M•NT
Tno loll°""'"" per!oOfl I• OOWIQ 11<111· n•s' .,
WATER90URNE SERI/ICU CO.
J10 WHlllnQ10lt, CHI• Mtu, CA
'2•10
J •mtl r 8wclla n a n . Jt •
Wul\tt191on, Coott -. CA '2••
TIU• lM.81,,..., ll (~Itel D' ell lft
Olvldu•I
Jt-• T. 8..tl\eMn Tn" ,..,,_, ..,., 111.0 wll~ ,,,.
Co<1nl1 CltrlL ol Or.,111 Co\lnly tn
Mtr<I\ 7•. Itel .. ,
PuDll"""' Or•noe '°"'' DIMiy Piiot
""•"" ,., Aorll t •. 1•, lttt 141• ..
PUBLIC NOTICE
LTD , PH ASE II , a Lomoltd FUIHI FICTITIOUS8USIHE$\
PtrlMr .... p (-l•llno ol Tnt A•·~n Pub'"""° °'""9' (,.041\l L> .. ·•v P•IOI NAME STATEMENT
Comp•nY. • Cllllforn•• corpor•l•on ., M•tt" ~ n '" 1•_ '"' 10\l l t Tl'lt-tvHO••no pt-r'to"' 11,., "..,'""'
Gener•I P•rtne-t •nd Ou.rt1 L•n.. bu\1nt\\ 4\
LIO ,• Cehfomla Llmrlro P•rln~r•nop PUBLIC NOTICE 111 AUUIO L 1 U ) ll(IU l AI< 41\ L1m11~ Pannt<, •no wn1tfl l\U LEASING IJI Alll(J AUCHu 14'
< •rrltd on tll bUStnHS 1n Or•nve Coun I ~ 1 "•'\•OP Avfnt>C' ~u•t"' E ,.. .. woo,. I
ty, C•l1tof'n1•, w•\ d1sWtlv_.d t'tfectlvtt FICTfflOUS 8USIMESS th·•<" C•11ft.11n1• Q/eiioJ •tof CIOWOfbul1ne\~onOfotf'rntM't 11 NAME.STATEMiE,_T f l ( lndu\lr1t' 11 ,...
1tl0 1 hr '0110 .. 1no p .. rion o'r •IOinr t ••••orn1t11 <orooral•O'• 41.1 Ahf'\•CJ•
9 Atter th•t d•te, M P•rtn~' 1n l'W bu;int"\'t d\ •·~nvf" ~•ft ( '"'•·o1111w11 Kt"ffl •·
P•tlMrSih1p hil\ aull'M>rtly 10 01no trw THE ~1(,,Vf,..G c.u /l>J' w 0_. .. , C.•l1torn1•9?f*l
P•rlft•r"'IP, t ACti>I lo wind vo '"'' H•on•ttY N .. wl.JOt t h,..t" ("'"'"''"• fn•\ QY\1nt'\~ 1\ tonautlf'O th"' P•rtn,, ..nip •U•H \ rt1bttJ c;or•11Cin
LfMtfEUPARTNER l..llW'Mltl A••n Morc.tdn t.•8 .11un 1 1 LC. lndu\tt·t'\ Int
tJUAR rz LANE L f 0 .. Str•tl C.O">lt' Mt1t•. C.•hh:1•n•,. "'"'b M k•OO• .. '"V""''''J
\..4hlorn•o L1m11'd Pttrnf'r\rt1 ~dn <111t, ~'0. 1<>8bi Mvnt"• t .1ntt '>t'crtl•fv -ir .. d'u'e'
W wttont(' ..-. C. Smit ~luntrnotun ij~1tc.h l -'litO'"'" q;Jt.u I h1\ ~t•fe1rwnt Nd\ 1 IP(J wdh tto•
GtnercJI µdrlnt'' '"'' bu'tuttt\\ 1· tunuuctra h., "
P\AbllV'f!'CJ 0rdOIJ'!' (Od\I 0 .. 11., P1IO o•n.-rtu p~rtn<'''"•"' (.ounr;i C '"'" lJf 0'6rh~•· tvvtit..,
M•rcn 1 1~1
MMti'I 1~ l'ltl 1SOJ 81 LAwr•nt~"' M11r~Jn F UIO/t
Put.l•)'....0 °'"'"QI' l~'' li.tilli' P 1 it
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIDUS IUSIHESS
NAME STATEMENT
T nt f9'low1n.o Pl"f'tof'I .,. Oo1no Du\>•
'"-"•' A88A ANTIQUES. Su11> (1 ]JO)
Har00< BIVd , C0\141 -••.CA 91•i.
M• Moc .... el WOOO Apl •II, 6401
W•rnfltr A\l'f , H"""Unoton 8•.c", CA . ,..,
f n., C>t./\•Mi" ·~ c~uct•O bY Mt 1n
01~1du•I
M WOOO
fn,, \ld'l~nt w6\ t1I~ ""''" '"'°' <.ounty Clrr' 01 Or M\Qt' (O\.tnty on
M•r<n 1• ttll
F1SIU. Puo11~ Or•nve-c.o~n\ o •• ,., Pilot
M•rtll l • AP<ol l 9 It l'llt 14116·11
PUBLIC NOTICE
ST ATEMEHT OF ABANDONMENT
OF USE OF
FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS NAME
T f'M fOllOW•nQ Pt"r )On\ hdYt 41bdn
OOntO I~ uwi Of the l1ct1l10U\ bu\1nt\~ n•m•
HUNTINGTO N BEACH TILE
l/)q1 (,ollt•rd Slr .. 1, l1un11ng1on
Bt<1cn, C•1o1orn1• 92'0
f n1 F1COtlOU\ 8u'J.'"H\ Ndmf" tt
ferr•d to abo~ w•s hlt'CJ 1n Or.,.~
Coun11 on Jo.In• 1•, 1990
Ac ro fr~• torp , d C.4ll1forn1• cor
u<lr•IM)n, llftl Go!l\4iro S•r••I t1unl
1f'\CJfon 8~•<,,, C•hforn•• '2&41 A<ro 1rau C.orP
R-rlM 81oM
Pre'\tOl'nl
rn,, ''•uemenl wfts f1lfld wuh 1~
C.ounl y Cit rt. ot Or ..,Of' Count "I on
M•rtl\ l• 1 .. 1
FIJf .. 7
PYOlo\fle<I °'""Qt' Cool D••IY Piiot,
M•r<n 16 "°'•11, •. It 19111 10) II
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10US BUSINESS
NAME STATDllEHT
ff\t •ouowl"g "''°"' •r• do•nv OU•IMU ti
EME"ALD LAKE, P 0 8 0• l~.
HI .. lltetl\ loulev•rd, S..Olt• UI , Hun~
11no1on llHcl\, c.111orn1e ,,._.,
Cel•ln M. LAunQ & llel,,leen R
Ll\/119, MS2 RM C:O.CI\ Orivt, Hunl
I no ton llN<n, c.mom•• •~1
Cttt'nf<\4 I( M. Leung -Cto,,.r
M y LtunQ. ~1 R~ CNtn Ori••. Hur111no1on 8o9dl, C•lllornl• ,,._.,
Geldtn Oa• ln•••lmenl, A
Celllornle Limited ParlMr>nlp, , ....
Bu ch Boul••erd, Suite He, Munl·
1no10tt 8MCn, C.lllOl'nl• 91'47
C411vln 1111. LtunQ
Tiiis ,_, WH Iii~ wlll\ 11W
Co11nty Cltr• ol Orenee c ountJ on
M•rcl\ J, '"' "'""" Put>llllWCI Or ..... Co4111 Oelly Pllol, MU<~ s. u. It. u ... ., 1102·11 I
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USIHESS
NAME STAT•MIHT
Tnt 1e>11-1no _._. 11 -no bu11 M,_..,
OE LUXE FURNITU R E
HOSPITAL, 117 A--Slrffl, COlll
I
fn1\ \lttlt'ml"nt w•\ hlt"O ""ii" itw
l!Jvttlv tl~r .. 1..11 tJr•11Qr tuvnh u" Mitrt" \ l1 •• 1• llil' JU• 111
M~" n 10 •"91 I Ft\/~
PuOllUWd CJt.nor ,.,O.e\I u ... ,, p IOI
Moren If II,; ,,., Aptll 1 llfl)I ll"H .,
P UBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
f ht IOllOW1nq pt t'°'1 \ do,nq DY\I
ne\' .,
COMMERCIAL INVE'>IM(Nf~
1S'1 (.Ofum01• Ortvt (O\ti.t Mt-\•
C•llfofn1• ~·h
FICTITIOUS BUSI HESS
HAM£ STATEMENT
J nt-tollow1no Oft' \On\ ,.,.t' do1no
bU\tnf'\\ 4t't
RO NSTAOI S /IO Wol 1•1t
S,1, .... , (O\t• ~,. ( e hfOf'n•• n11:'1
w H ~ A R ..... • C•l•IOtnt ..
oroor•t1on I IQ Wf"'f 1cHn Strt-rl
Co\\• M l'\• C.llfo1n1• '11&'1
OW M <Ind R ll IN(
R•ncMll J Au\\4'~
IOhn M ~t •• 1\41 C.C>tumb1•
Ot 1¥• CO\I• ~\. ,. 1lotn1., "'1'1~
Tn1\ bu\I~\\ •• onou• '"0 o., tin '" 01v1du•I
1 n1\ \t•ltn'IC>nt ••" ' l"CI ••tn 1~
Cou"IY C.lttk ot Ot•nOC' (.ouM. t
M•«n) 1991
l'l)IQ/t
Publ•\""° <>•nQlt' to.\t DA•it P,1 JOM M Son•< .. I
Th1\ \t•ltmtnl ••l hl1·C1 w 1lh thf'
Courtly C••r• of or.not (.Ounty un
M••cn l 1141
M•r< h \ I) \'I If> 1"91 M u
PUBLIC NOTICE FUIO.I
Pubh\""" 0.illlQP Coa•I D••I• P1101
Mtr<I' S 11, I~. U , 11181 IO<I~ •1
PUBLIC NOTICE
BIO HO U 11
C()fjTllACT HO, 1/.11
LIGAL NOTICE
HEWPOltT·MESA UNIFIED
SCHOOL OISTRICT
HOCl<o l..,111"'1 Bodt
NOllCE I~ HEREBV C.IVLN "''"' tn~ 8oc,trd OI Edu\ttl1on uf lhr
Newpgrl MIJ\d Un1f•t'O S,..f'IOUI 0•\1; 1\f
o• Or•nQ"' Cou•uy "''II rt(f'Plf' \t~ltO
Did\ uO IO I U0 P M on fhl 10th dllt'f of
Aori1 1991 at '"'° v"•' t u• ht•d '>\ noo1
01\lfl<I ICKll!ltro •• IOI P1~H~n1 ••
S.trt-"t. Co'\ta M• .,,. (ctllf1;rn1.t c11
Wf'ht n lllN" '\.6•0 O•d~ WIH b" 1>ubl11 ty
o~nt"d M\O rt'tid 10,
CONTINUOUS FORMS
Au D•d\ ort> to 0t-1n •«'>,ddf1 .. w1lh
Cond1ttOn\ lf\\1ru\t1un' At\O
SPl't ••1<•1ton\ •h• n d'• no• on''''"'"
fP\f' o•t•C.t" ot ttw Purth•\1nQ D·r•t tor
01 ..... a S<noo• 01\lri\.f f¥ll Pt~n•n1t,.
Str~tt C.O\t.t Mtow C.a11torn"t q;1011
81d PMk•9P' and '\dtf\Oh•\ mA'; bf'
Pl(llt"d uo •• '"'" PuH hd\lf'\Q SI Oft'\ 01 l1t~ 198~ llor SI•,,..! CO\I• M O\d CA
"t162• Hom Mr, 0,.wf'rlt"t" O"r'ftt,
8uy@r
A P.-nu'm"nt.t" uond m"" bi ,,,
QUlffO 11t tM 01~rt'h0'"! 01 lf\1 01,1'1~ l
No 81dder m•y w11ndrAwi n+\ Hid tor
f Pt' 100 ot Jo,ty flv•• '°' c.tay •lltr
tht' o.t1r \et for 1rw oo~n1n9 1"'*' 1•01
rn~Bo,erd 01 Eoucanon n1 lhf'
N~wPort MP't• Un11 •t"'d S< nool t>l\h .c-t
rt\trVt1' ltlt riflhl to rt>lt"(\ t"tnv l)r "'
B•d• •no no1 "f'tt\\d' .,., 4t' "P' the
IOW~\I Old and fQ -N-11\fW nny In
'orrru1111v or 1rrtQYJM1ty '" nn't U•<I rt
(\11¥~0
OllAHGECOUNTY SUPElllOll
COUllT
, .. Cl•I< C....IH Orio Wu!
hftta Arie, Cahlorr11a •1101
PLAINTIFF
MA RIA OE LO~ •NG~ L> ~
ORNE LAS
DEFENDANT
LAURO P RUil ELI/IA llLAI•
lco F'EOE RA L NA TIO N •
M OR IC.AGE ASSOC I A rt ON •
Corpor•l•on C t1 1CAGO 111 t
t NSU ~ANCE COMAPANV A M1\,..,1·'•
Corpor•flon, ~n<J DOES J t,..rout,at
fn( lu\1V_.
C-HwmAMr ltt79t
SUMMONS
NOTICE ' You ....... bHn ""'o "p
'ourl m •y Ot<.lde ~'n't you w 1tt "'
your t»1no ne•ro uni~'' y«HJ f f''\P""•"°
w1th1n JO O.y\ Rf'Mt In.to 1nrorni 111 '"
o~•ow
ft ';'OU •iV\ to we ... '""' MtYICf" 1 ""
•ttorn•y 1n 11'1•~ m•lt•' you \nGu1d 10
\o promptty $0 ln•t Your ..,, u, n
re,oon'•· •f •ny. m•~ bl> t.lf'<I on''""' Al/ISO• Y\1.0 ~ •udl MnebO•~ EI
tr1bun•I puedll Oie<."'11r contr• lJO '\tn
•ud••"<•• • f'neno\ qu. UO '"''"·no.
dtntro Ot lO O••' Lf'• I• 1ntor""_. .on
QUf \IQU4t
S1 U\lf'd df'W• \Oht1t•r ~· <°"'Y't• Ott
un •boQ.Mio en t \I• •Ounto, drt>f"tt•
n•cer 10 imm•d••••mente df' r't•
m •l"tl d, 'u tf'\pUlt\t• f''-<.flf• h\fly
•U;aun•, ~ ,., r•Q''''~ •,.,moo
NEWPORI ME~A UNll 1£0
\Ct100L 01\l~I( I
01 Or~ C.ou~f\y t.dhlOff11it
Dorothy Harvey Fttn,r,
CP M
I 10 THE DEFENDANT ~ r•vol
comp1•1r11 ,,., i..n foteo by 1~ o•••n
Jiii •ll•ln\I you II you .,,,n 10 O•t.n(I
lh1& l•wwit. you mu,1. within JO d•Y'\
•fl•r tnls summon~ '' wrve-o g,, •O".
'"' wUP\ lhh c.ourt • wntten ,.,pon)I" to the compf•lnt Unteu you do ~o your
dtt•ult wm be enttrtd on •POtit•t•on
ol int Plllnllll, an<1 '"" courr "'•Y tntt r • t"°9f'ntnt •qelnst you fo, fh,.
rtlU!f dem•noeo In the comp1 .. 1nt
wn1cn could rewtt tn g•rnlshmf'nt of
f ••Ot\, t•~lnQ ot mone'I' or or()C)t'rh o•
othtr r•H•f rl'Q\M\led In ow compl~1n I DATIO: A....,., n. '"°
Pur(f\t\tnQ Oir••cto• '"" ''° 111/ Oolr6 M4"<n I/ 14111
PuDll\n.d 1n '"" Or •nQ.-(.08\1 D•ll•
Polol, Mar<n 1' ,, '"'
141/t ••
PUBLIC NOTICE
L .. A. Br-II, Cltrla ay -., O!Ma, ~O
1--.r• I(, Slrlcla..,nol 1111 .. _ .,_ .... ,
Setll.a AM,~. tllt1
Publllf'le<I Orenve Coe.I Ot •IY Pilot,
Mtrcn s. 12. It,>•. 19'1 1101 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
-Ml, Cellloml• '111ol7. L"I AHO 4CCIDIHT AHO MIALTH
WllllMt G. F.,_ell, 1111 Ore1199 SYNOPSIS 0, THI ANNUAL STATEMENT
A .. flllt, Cate Mew,Cetllltmla t1'17. 01' YEAlt I NOIO DlCEM•l1t SI,'"'
Tllh llutlM'IJ '' ,~ .. o tty an In BEST L"I ASJUltAHCl COMPANY 011' CAlll'OltH1A
dlvkl••I ••1 Blrcll Slrffl, Nt•"'1 llH<I\ Ct lltH'ltl• ,,...
Wllllem G. l'll' ... 11 Tott! 1omllltd •'"''' Tlllt IWl-1 ... fll~ wltl\ lllt I Pag41 1, lint 111
Ceun1y Cl••la cH °' ..... counly on Tol•l llMlil1I~ IP~ J, ..... ,.,
lilllet<ll 10, 1•1. Ce p1111Pt•dwo1P•<1t ). lln• l?At
1'111... lint 21AI
PwllllllWCI 0r""9t to.lt Oelly l'llot. Rown<11no IP9Qt J """ llB1
M•rtl\ u .... ~-""""\ 2, , .. , 12~1· Gron ~id •n eno (onlrlb<lltd •ufl>IUI I P•QO
PUBUC NOTICE
1,une m • Sptc••• S.WPIUI Fun1n I P•Q41 J, line MAI
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"You IMrn that In a famHy-Nn ~ eome
prooec:IUNI are handled dtfferently.''
U.S. group
Frisbee tour
set for China
OAKLAND CAP> -The era of "Frisbee
Diplomacy" will begin in June when a group de-
voted to the flying plastic disks tours five cities in
the People's Republic of China.
The group is headed by Laney College cooking
instructor Al Finkelstein, who proposed the
offbeat cultural exchange more than one year ago
using one of the college's Mandarin instructors as
a go-between.
The Chinese liked the idea. says Finkelstein,
but asked if the group could wait until 1981.
Finally, with the help of the China Youth
Federation and the city of Shanghai, the tour was
set for June 18-29
"THEY'RE VE&Y, VE&Y EXCITED,"
Finkelstein said of his future hosts. "They're
absolutely performing miracles in terms of getting
us set up for s tadiums and putting on
demonstrations.··
Among the 25 people on the tour will be
two-l ime women's world champion Monika Lou,
long distance champion Tim Carmel, freestyle
champion Steve Gottlieb and the Bay Area Flying
Circus, the top team in California .
Finkelstein, who helped create the World Disk
Association lo boost Frisbee worldwide, says the
Chinese have already accepted Frisbee as a toy
and want to learn Frisbee sports such as Ultimate
Frisbee and Frisbee Golf.
VLTIMATE FRISBEE IS A NON-CONTACT
field game similar to soccer or football. Frisbee
Golf is similar to traditional golf. but is usually
played on a "course" of telephone poles and trees.
"It's not just playing catch in the park," says
Finkelstein.
He said the Chinese are interested in Frisbee
because it is a relatively inexpensive sport, it is
good exercise and the aesthetic beauty of a
Frisbee in flight.
"It has a pleasing , satisfying flight," says
Finkelstein. "and the aesthetics of Frisbee are
very much what they like, as well as the
practicality.·'
Finkelstein said the cities on the tour a re
Shanghai, Suzhou, Wuxi, Nanjing and Beijing.
Elephant boot
sellers fined
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Two firms that made
boots of African elephant ears and python skins
selling for hundreds of dollars a pair have been
fined in Municipal Court.
Because the elephants are an endangered
species, the owners of Howard and Phil's Western
Wear were ordered by Commissioner Harold
Crowder to forfeit 16 pairs of elephant ear boots it
had been selling for $450 apiece and pay a $2,500
fine for violating the California Endangered
Species Act.
AS AN VNVSVAL CONDITION of sentencing.
Howard and Phil's was also ordered to start a six·
month advertising campaign showing support of
t he act.
"The African elephant is quickly becoming ex-
tinct,•· siad Deputy Ci ty Attorney Barry Groveman.
who prosecuted the store under the state act and cit·
ed a need for zealous prosecution of endangered
, ~ species cases.
l ; The law prohibits the importation, sale or
· possession for sale of any part of certain en-
dangered species.
THE BOOTS WERE SEIZED NOV. lt by state
Fish and Game Warden John Dawson.
Crowder also fined Gilslm Inc. $2,500 for sell-
ing python skin boots at its Richard's stores In
Westwood and Century City.
Game Wardens Dawson and Ronald Presley
posed as customers to buy the boots, then obtained
search warrants and went back to seize a total of
29 pairs of the boots at the two locations. The boots
were selling for S204 a pair.
Signups invited
for study skills
Re1i1tratlon 11 under way for a st udy
11tih1-apeed readinS course for colle1e-bound
students, offered by the Hunt1n1ton Beach
Commw\lty Services Department and Readwrtte
EdUcaUonal Pro1ram1.
ClWe. will be from 1 to 9 p.m. each Monday
belln.nlnS March 30 at the Murdy Community
Center, 7000 Norma Drive. ReliatraUon for the
el1bt·week prol!'am la betnc conducted at th•
center, and late restatraUon wUJ be permitted at
the fint clua.
The coune f", which includes testln1 and all
materta.la, ta t125.
TM Pl"Oll'•m la dealsned to teach atud.ntt lD
1r•d• 8 tbrouP 12 how f.o ltudy more effectlftly,
to Jmprove tbeir note-ta.kl.DC akfill and bow to Pt'•·
pare for coll•I• entrance uama.
The procram alao will traln atudeAt.a to
lnere ... tbetr readlnc apeed.
---··---
I
WllJllD • TO • 1 u ••• I _ UT.-111. I TO I _ TDI 1P1. I .
TWI ·LIGHT OIL LAMPS
CAY
IO'a
..9
·-·---· .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, M1roh 26. 1981
DA'f-o ~
OA4-o ~
°[)q't UTF
C,DM E
AND tt1f .. · -.,:
BANANA CHAIR
OR CHAISE
It•• reJ•xtn• time with 11\1.mmer on the
way. Maybe yoµ haft a few parti•
planned and you•n need ntttn• 8J)ac.. Pull
u p a banana and enjoy. Brown or yellow.
Nie. con•e~tion piec. and can
be practical if t h e electricity goee
off. You n ner know when it could
happen.
YOUR
CHOICE EA.
s
CLOll-OUf!
CmD'I
FOLDllC DDI
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IAUICUIClll.U \\..,...i,-.-'"I -2977
lllCIFOID CBAICOAL I
lllQUETS ( ··~\ I
1297
A cl..a made to flt the Utti. ..,._ Can ._
fold.d and .toncl when Khool la dona.
You -..mble and f1nlah..
JIULmLI ounrr
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II"
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2197
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Anetlu.r addltl .. to ........ 70U1"
mJl ..... Thi9 one CU\ lnCNUe
~up to 19% alMI ahouW b.
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SMALL CAR
8 -19 GAL. TANK
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19-24 GAL. TANK
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A mnoll. grill with
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of .t.el 110 JOU know lt will 1-t.
··-· 598.!. CEDAR
WOOD SHINGLES
IO. I 111111.D
15!!
APPROX. 28 80. FT.
'nl ... can be u.-d for roofing or
for a decoratift (and inaulating)
effect for the front of yc>W' home.
N .. t looking.
JODl-Jl&IYD.LI FOIL IACI
INSULATION
Now in a new 12 quart ca. 110 JOU cl.on 't -=----=-
ha .. to buy a quart at a tbne. ·--• -= -.:c==-'
U,.ou ~
bwWatlft9 for the
winter to lltay
warmer, how about
f• the Nft\11\S to
.tay oooler? 'l'h1nk
aho\at it. 1--------------4 ~L· .,.·. !' .. ; ,_,::
ILUE POLY 011-ITIP
POLY IULAIT
Why do llOl1\ething tN.
time9 when one~ CU\ clean, ahine and Ha ..
to COn..l'ft el\ervY· E.peciall,.
LIOUID
OR
PASTE 5 99
18 oz.
IUDltidlL coco rLOOl lllft
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7"
4" l'Ul.-Tlll 1 -11
18"•40 LIN. FT. (80 80. PT.> 6tt.
23"•40 LIN. FT. ( 18.1 80. PT., I Ott.
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2rd0 LIM. rr. (&I 80. PT.) 8tt.
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Would ... plan a party for you I
and i.. .. out the briqueb? N aw. ~
Th.. .... the good 01\M th.at
119ht fut and ..., and lltay hot.
l!?s.
IWlllLllE
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IAD.IVI
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PACIFIC AIPIALT
DllVIWAY
IDUIFACD
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w. don't ha .. the prob1-m of ~
and th.awll\9 h.re but .ull the clri..way
can get tacky and need ~. Do it.
IUIAJ. IWLIOl llT
DOOi IOLT 0
10110 UIACE )I;
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Wl'TI PAILOCI 13881
I
HJF Orang4t Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, March 29. 1881 ....
flATIRll ~
When a dog
talks •••
'We looked at each other,
no one wanting to believe
tdiat they'd just Mard ... '
By J EF F PARKER
Ol llM D•tly l'llot St•ll
J e an Tho rnto n of Laguna
Bea ch claims her dog speaks in
full sentences. yet considers her
sanity unblemished.
us in on the history of hu dotfs
linguistic development.
·'She started talk ing a bout a
year ago." Mrs. Thornton re·
members "We couldn't really
believe it when she said her first
sentence ··
"About a year ago she started
sa y ing hello. which e volved
from the simple howl s he went
into when the fire trucks went
by . We were proud of her . but
on e word is not unusual
Xavier Cugat had a Chihuahua
that said hello too.
Jean Thornton encourages Chiquita to !lay · 11e1Lo' · and she does
"But not long afte r that. my
hus band and I took her with us
t o m eet some rela tives who
cam e in from out of town. We
wer e dr iving in the car. and
asked Chiquita to say hello to
the m , which she dad. But we
w e r e ast onishe d w he n s he
followed it with 'how are you'!'
'All right .· We were tota ll y
amazed,·· Mrs Thornton re·
membered.
Dally Pilot ·
Chiquita· Hello Chiquita. Hooroo. I Hello I Chiquita Hoorccr<H)" I How are
vou?1
a ct lik1.• they h<.1vt•n 't heard
a n ything a ftl'r !>he tal k!> to them " Neither coul d we. so an ex
elusive interview with the talk
in g dog, Chiquita, was set up al
the Udder Place in Laguna
Beach. her master's cafe
OP How a re you?
Chiq uita.
DP
Rooree. <All right>
Thal 's nice.
Rooreeroo? Chiquita :
<How are you?)
DP Fine. I' II ask the questions
here.
DP . l toldyou1 ·m r1ne
Chiquita Roorec r All ri ght 1.
Chiquita soon gn:w bored with
the interview and wandered orr
lo the back room or the Udder
Place for a nap
A customer who witnessed the
interview ordered a Jumbo ch11t
dog . a nd said that Chiquita
would probably .1.wt <t long well
with her C'at Perched on Mrs. Thornton's
lap, 10-year-old Chiquit a, a
Chihuahua/terrier mix, seemed
nervous. With a little prodding
from Jean. she howled an inspired
if somewhat obscure hello
While Chiquita gathered her
thoughts, Jean Thornton fill ed
"We looked at each other. no
one wanting to be lieve what
th ey'd JUSt heard Someone
answered her, then asked her
how she was . Chiq ui ta said
Chiquita's mouthings resem·
ble English . if you stretch your
defi nition of language. and your
imagination. She gets the right
a mount of syllables fo r each
word, straining for pronuncia·
lion that does not come easily to
her
Somewhat reconstructed, and
subtitle d for quac k com ·
pre hens1on, here is the text or
the interview·
Chiquita . Roorooree (Hello,
Ray>
DP , There 's no Ray here What
are you talking about?
Chiquita: Reerooroo. <I love you/
OP · What's wrong with this dog?
It's incoherent.
"S he won't !>pe ak to just
anyone." Mrs . Thornton said
"The humane orficers were an
the other day. a nd she wouldn 't
say a word Most people love 1t
when s he talks. The funniest
people are the ones who try to
"My cat lakes '-' nap every af
ternoon on my bNl. ;rnd turns on
the electric hlankl't first," !>ht•
said
W e asked 1r \H' might an
ter v1ew the cat.
"Don't be s il l\' · o.;hc !><.1 1<1
"Cats can't talk .. ·
'Breaking Free' shows risk has its rewards
·Y ou've got to go
from poor-mouth to
success-mouth. then
you w1/l get wha t
you want.·
-Szoux Harlan
·Want is a four let·
ter word and
women we r e not
supposed t o u se
dirty language.'
-Pat Allen
Vibration~ were high enough to raise the ceiling to the South
Coast Pl aza Hotel Ballroom Monday evening during a preview
showing of Wom en's International Success Systems' "Breaking
Free."
Four highly mol1 vated women, all successful in their
respective fi elds. expta inea there are certain risks en route
to success. but "risk is the catalyst to achi evement."
SIOUX HARLAN, a therapist and career life planner with
offi ces in Laguna Beach and Newport Beach, explained tha t
women everywhere should reprol(ram their negative thoughts
with positives
"There 1s a diet for s uccess." she said "It means putting
yourself up and not down . You've got to go from poor -mouth to
sucC'ess-mouth. then you will get what you want.
Continuing along the same hne. Rita Unim an, head or the
Irvine Holistic Center . noted that the presentation was based on
the left brain/ r ight brain theory or excelled learning
"Seated in our right brain are our desires a nd dreams," s he
said. "You are ris king som et hing lo believe in that dream. but
you can make it come true.
"THE MESSAGES and visions we gave ourselves arfect us,"
Ms. Unjman continued .. But we can do it . We can make that
dream come true. J ust visualize it and it'll ha ppen. The magic
ingredi ent is believing an yoursell and taking the respons1b1hty
Mixing humor with her quick presentation. Pat Allen, a
licensed m ar riage, fa mily a nd child counselor with offi ces in
Newport Beach and Tustin. told the gathering or about 200 she
had been raised to be a woman in Iowa
"And being a woman in Iowa," she explained. "meant
never saying WANT . We were taught to say ·may 1.' but never
·1 want.' Want 1s a fo ur letter word and women were not supposed
to use dirty language."
MS. ALLEN POINTE D OUT that women should continue to
raise their awareness and self esteem. "You can do it by
changing your vocabulary," she said .. Learn to say · 1 want·
and 'I will' and you'll get what you want."
Dr. Laura Schlessinger. a radio personality and writer of a
nationally syndicated colu mn on human behavior. asked
the question "Whal about failure'1.'' explaining that
failure could be a learning
process." "Even in your failures." she
said, "look for a positive fo undation."
The 4 1 \!·hour presentation of " Breaking Free" will be held
Sunday at 1 p.m. al the South Coast Plaza Hotel. The show
skillfully mixes theater with motivation to fill you with positive
thought.
Registration begi ns at 12:30 p m Tickets cost $45.
'Th e magic i ngr e-
dient is believzng in
yourself and taking
the responsibility.·
-Rita L'11iman
.I
J
I
·E v en zn your
failures look for a
positive fou ndat ion
-Laura Schlessinger
.. ' • . She's on march against trendy little sayings
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: A lot of people who AS
wouldn't li sten to anyone else listen to you. You { ' could perform a wonderful service to millions if :!
:you would ask your readers to do the following: Alll lAlllRI _ "-------
• 1. Stop saying "Have a nice day" to every-II L ~
:{)ne you come in contact with. You have no W ••-1'-------.1dea the number of people who have just been
1 1red , attempted suicide, gone through a divorce
:»r are having tenible financial problems .
2. Stop saying "You're kidding" to every·
thing you hear. This standard remark can be
~ighly inappropriate, es pecially if a person has
lost all his possessions In a fire, been mugged on
t he street. just learned that his rental Is going
condo or been in a car accident. People do not
.J<ld about these things.
Thank you , Ann, for joining me In my
;.crusade to reverse these senseless speech
"habits. -ENGLISH TEACHER
; Dear Teach: Don't Utuk me. I llavea't
~one Hythl•I· Tready pllrHea are ea1ll1
•'olclled ap, and Utey ltHI al'Mlld for • l•I .\I••· ftaalla for wrttl•I and lane a •Ice . . . I
• eaa, le& me llear from )'Otl •I• ••• be.
, DEAR ANN LANDERS: Joe and I atayed In
~be old home town where we were born and
tilted. Our 1l11ters and brothera are ac:altered ~rom coast to coast. Our children are 1rown and
they are scattered, too. The only onea left ln
:town are Joe's mother and m1ne.
.. We are be1lnnlng to resent every holida y
O.cau.ae lt ls expected that we entertain both
...
mothers here. What we would love lo do Is be
with our children . I have hinl.,d to my sisters
and to Joe's that It would be nJce If they would
Invite mom for Easter or Mother's Day or
Chrlstmu or Thankaeivlng or the Fourth of Ju.
ly or anything, but there are no taken.
Our brothers and sisters send cards and
they telephone our home to wish mom • happy
thl• or a merry that. The converu ttona are
lovely, butnolnvitaUona.
I know your attitude la that no one can be
Imposed on unwUllngly, but In thla case there Is
alJo "Honor thy father and thy mother ." How
doet one 1et slater• and brothers to take
reaponalbllity7 I want to writt and tell them
we've been doina it year a~r year end now It's
their tum. But my husband ,.ya, "No -they
don't care enou1h to help, and they don't w•nt
to be bothered." My an1er teepa bWldina. What
should I do? -CAUGHT JN THE MIDDLE
Dear Mld4Jt: .rtrt& reeeplH tile fact
&111& you .._ud l• part el U. pl-.blem. He
WHUt.be udle lood ,_,. (ud--·la•llW) IO /
lie ,..,. qlllet aad •r1tt 1• a. Htter la
•lleaee, llM.
You have earned the rtpt to spead some
hollday1 I.be way you want \0. Write to both bis
al1ters and brothers and to yoa.rs. Tell Utem you
are plannJn1 to spend EHter or Chrl1tma1 or
whatever with your children and they alaoald de-
cide amon1 tlltem who la 1o1.n1 to take tile
mamas. The Blble doesn't say J•st oae of the
children alloald "Honor thy faU.er and moU.er."
Give somebody else a chance.
DEAR ANN : I read somewhere that a poll
of college freshmen was taken. Question: Whal
career do you wish to pursue? Some answers
were , "Blsness," "Flnnance," "Sails man."
"Senestry," "Physlsl ," "Alrnollcs," "Sec-
teral," and "Undesided." Do you believe It? -
FLABllERGASTED IN FLATBUSH
Dear Buh: Yes, I do. U you coeld see my
mall Y•'dllaveaodMbta. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have written this
letter four Umea and never malled lt. It 1eem1
10 <'hildlab. But I am partlcularly bothered b1
m y problem t.onilbt. so I am putUna t.bb one In
the mailbox -come hell or blab water •
I'm not a ntghty teen·a1er. I'm a rrown
woman of. as. The problem: My lookl. I am not
overwel&bt -In fact, I'm on the aid.nay alele.
But my llalr la 1wtul, m y noae bu • bump end
11 much too Ions. My eyes are too cloH
to1etber, and my Upe a,. too thin. I bat. to loot
ln the mlnw beeauae I 1 m ao UllY.
Ever since I WH a amaU child people bave
made tun ol me becauae I look Uke a witch.
When I was 14 , I went crying to my favorite
teacher . (Kids can be so cruel.) She told me not
to pay any attention to them because I was
beautiful on the inside and that is what counts.
I have only had three dates in my entire
life. None of the fellows asked me out a second
time. <Apparently they weren't interested in my
beautiful insides.) Am I going to be miserable
all my life because I was cursed with this ugly
fa ce? Pleas e tell m e wha t to do. -
DE PRESSED ANO LONELY IN DALLAS
Dear Frtead: If 1oed leolll were Ute lley to
llappllleN, all the beaatlhal people wCH1Jd be
ecstatic. We kDOw tlt11 lan't tne. I.a fact, some
of &lite betlt·loolrla1 people are Ute mHt alien·
ble.
Y oar lew oplaloll of you.ell II roote4 ..
early cldldlaoocl. I recommeDCI Uaenpy at •ee.
Wllea you feel better abotlt you.ell, plaaUc Hr·
aery fw 1"J' DOM ml11tt pve ,_ a lift. A llalr
1t1Ust ... a malle·•P ae ... er two e4Mll4 • •-•n to ralee , .. , •era.le. WM• JM ...
'" ... I .... ue ol Mlf·ea&ee•, ,_ wW M aMe a. readl • to 9'Mn aDd &My wW ,...,..._
YHr w._.e ••rid wlll cllaa1e, H41 1••'11
••WwllJ JM cUda'& de It aotMr. 0.-Jadl.
CONFIDENTIAL to Unfairly Evaluated By
One Who Spied: Sorry, dear Cirl, hemlines mey
riae and 1ovem ments m ay fall, but one thlnl
remains constant -you art what you are when
nobody is looking .
Daily Pilat
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1981 HJF
COMICS
STOCKS
TELEVISION
cs
C7
C9
( . sex sy
7 bits of business
wisdom may prove
its undoing ... C6
I takes • issue
LPGA needs exposure, says Stephenson
By HOWA&D BANDY
Of ... Delly ...... ...,.
It may shatter some dreams of ber male fotlowers who
regard her as 1be sex symbol of tbe Ladies Professional
Golf Association tour, but Jan Stephenson is also very
famlly·orlented and looks forward each year to her
parents' visit.
A happy and excitable person off the golf course, she
exudes charm and a winning s mile that attract all people
to her. But on the course, it's another matter.
"WHEN l'M PLAYING, I fight it and go into a shell all
the time," she says. "I'd like to be myself all the time but
I'm too emotional and can't be free and easy when I'm
playing. It isn't that s he has chanced.
Not at all.
"1 hear that some of the other players are saying we
don't need any femininity in women's sports any longer."
"It doesn't bother me to play with those who have been
cr itical of the feminine image I have portrayed. I do very
she says. "But that's simply not true.
"I only know what I've heard from
others, but they felt we needed the ex·
posure ln 1975 and 1976. Now they say we
haye grown to the point where we don't
need it any longer and I say that's not
true. At that time. they condoned it, they
say. but not any m<>fe.
"We need every bit of exposure we
can get. Look at the men in sports. They
do it too. and it pays off for them as well."
STEPHENSON MADE her remarks
while awaiting her tee·off time for the
Women's Kemper Open at Mesa Verde
Country Club Wednesday in the pro·am
While Stephenson's feminine charms
have been extolled as much as her golf ,
she is also one of the top players on the
LPGA tour and says she hasn't reached
her peak yet.
She is the winner of four tour events,
the last being the Sun Cil9 Classic in 1980.
In the first Kemper Open, Stephenson was
one or five players who lied for first but
los t in a playoff to JoAnne Carner
Last year she was having back prob
lems about this time that listed for most
o( the year and her game suffered.
JAN STEPHENSON
little talking with anyone when I am on the
golf course.
"Yes, it's flattering to have the men
follow me and I've noticed the galleries
have changed some since this all came up.
But they will s till be watching the leaders
and I have to be there to keep them with
m~ ,.
The thing she is referring to is a pie·
lure in the LPGA magazine Fairway that
showed her in a negligee with her legs ex·
posed She is not the only one pictured in
the article but being the free and easy
personali ty that she is and one who has
been qn the tour since 1974, she is usually
the one the media turns to for comments .
"Wannang tournaments 1s the thing
that counts and even if you beat the girls
you are playing with, it could be very
depressing except for the few limes you
win That makes it all worth while."
H ER PARENTS SPEND three months
each summer traveling with her. coming
to this country from Australia.
Bo(o)ning up on golf
Pat Boone tees off at Mesa Verde Country Club. Boone
was competing in the pro-am event in Wednesday's pre·
liminary play to the Women's Kemper Open. Myra
Van Hoose. the LPGA's. Rookie of the Year in 1980, led
her five·some to the Pro·Am title with a combined net
scor e of 54. For results, see C4.
"MY BACK IS DOING real well this year and it taught
me one thing." Stephenson says. "I found out just how
much I appreciate my life and goU.
"I know I haven't devoted enough time to golf with all
of the other things I have been involved in such as promo·
tions and things of that nature.
· · 1 love at when they are with me.·· she
says ··My mother spoils me rotten by lay·
ang out my clothes and taking care or such household
things and my dad does other little things to help.
"They both play golf and drive between tournaments
and we have a lot or run and a real good visit together . My
brother Greg has never been to this country. He prefers
the beach in Australia and he thinks I'm crazy.
"But I plan on more concentration on my game thi:;
year because I know I haven't reached my peak yet."
.. But I'll tell you one thing. I have lived in Palm
Springs and now in Fort Worth. Texas and I will make this
CSee JAN, Page C?>
Ga1ne plan to include handcuffs
Costa Mesa cop needs all the help he can get
By CURT SEEDEN O! a.• 0 •1ly Pli.t SUH
Last year, Clyde Foreman learned as
m uch as he could about quarterbacking
a football team, and he had a pretty
good tutor Fountain Valley High QB
Coach Dave Penhall.
Penhall, the fo rmer University or
California signal caller. had a tall order
to rill. Foreman had never played QB
before. and someone had to run the
Cos ta Mesa· Fountain Valley police de·
partments' entry in the annual Cop
Bowl.
.. Dave's a terrific coach." admits
Foreman, a detective for the Costa
Mesa PD ... But last year. the day
before the game. he went to Palm
Springs to be in his best friend 's wed·
ding."
Foreman fumbled the first snap of the
game last year, was intercepted three
times. and the Costa Mesa·Fountain
Valley squad dropped a 9·0 decision to
Garden Grove-Buena Park on a rainy
day at Garden Grove High.
"This year. we're going to handcuff
Mustangs upended
him (Penhall> and keep in jail until
game time." jokes Foreman who will
lead his team against Garden Grove·
Buena Park in Cop Bowl Ill April 4 at
Orange Coast College.
A former NCAA All-American javelin
thrower, Foreman is a far better athlete
than his performance in Cop Bowl II
would indicate.
The past three years he has won the
gold medal in the California Police
Olympics, and last year captured the
s ame honor at the Inte rnational Police
Olympics in New York.
His father was the head track and
field coach for the U.S. women's Olym·
pie team which never made it lo the
Soviet Union because of the U.S. boycott
or the Games. Kenneth Foreman is also
the former Olympic gold medalist in the
rope climb. an event which was voted
out of the Games because the U.S. con·
sistently swept all three medals.
So, what's a javelin thrower with a
heavy track and field background doing
dodging defensive linemen in a football
game?
CdM shows it's
king of the sea
By ROGER CARLSON OI ,,. o.i1, ~llet Hall
Defending Sea View League
baseball champion Corona del
Mar High served notice not to
expect too many changes Wed-
nesday as the Sea Kings swept
to their fourth straight victory.
items into four runs in the first
frame. In fact, Corona del Mar's
first four batters scored.
"I was loo s mall to play football in
high school," Foreman explains. When
the Cop Bowl idea originated, Foreman
decided to fulfill a life·long ambition by
signing up lo play -as a linebacker .
·'But our startin g quarterback
graduated to the FBI and I was ap-
proached and asked to play. Like a fool .
I said yes."
Foreman is looking forward to this
year's battle despite the problems last
season. He broke the thumb on his pass·
ing hand two weeks before the game
last year. Combined with the dismal
weather. he found holding on to the foot·
ball was a fuJl -time job alone.
Still. he says he completed 11 passes
last season. but was disappointed by the
team's inability lo put points on the
board.
··We were defeated by our in·
con sisten cy and the number or
turnovers. Thi s year, we've got some
very skilled people . We expect a much
better game," he says.
Foreman says teammates Keith Bell ,
Tom Winters and Gary Nickens are
capable receivers. and the team will
also benefit from tailback Gary Walsh.
"Walsh 1s the fastest and one of the
s tronges t guys on t he team The
coaches (Fountain Valley High staff)
s ay he would have started at fullback on
their team and they were No. 2 in CIF
last year ... Foreman says.
"Whale the rest or us are just "oing
through the motions. he's a legitimate
star ··
But the key to the game JUSl might be
Foreman who admits there's a big dif·
ference between what he'll be doing
April 4 and the s mooth drop backs by
QBs on television.
·'This experience has given me a new
appreciation of what it's like to play
quarterback. It's a whole new ball
game when you're being chased all over
the field."
Why doen't Foreman just return to
his linebacker position and leave the
sign al calling to someone else'!
"l didn't graduate lo the FBI and no
one else came along. I wasn't asked to
come back. I was it." Foreman says
The victim was Costa Mesa
Hilh's Mustangs, who entered
with a challenging 3-0 league rec·
ord, but who wound up with
their lint loss In league play as
the Sea Kings posted a 5·2 vie·
tory.
THE SEA KINGS picked on
Mesa sophomore pitcher Austin
Smith with free passes to Chris
White and Mario Ybarra and
after the two were in scoring
position because of a passed ball
and wild pitch. winning pitcher
Jeff Pries slapped a single to
left.
Clay Tucker followed with a
two·run double and before the
Mus tangs had recorded an out,
they were down by a 4.0 count.
COM'S CHRIS WHITE II SAR AT •COND Dl9PITE TOM IULUVAN'l l!f'fORTI.
IT DIDN'T TA.KE Corona del
Mar IOl\I to establish the trend,
but in retrospect, Corona del
Mar Coach Tom Tra1er wasn't
ready to order champagne. Not
yet, anyway.
"I feel 1ood about belna 4-0,"
said Tra1er. "but I'm not ready
to.1tlck my ~beat out about lt.
We're a far better ~ball team
thu we ahowed today.
''I tbouCb we both played pret-
tyteatative.ly. '' While Corona del Mar didn't
exactly 1weep llffa Into tb4'
ocean, UM Sea Ktnca did lhow
an abUltJ to 1~ UM moet out ol
a couple of walk.I, a 1ln1le and
double -parlayln1 those four
'
Mesa had rolled to lll 3-0 rec·
ord with a combined score of
38·10, but those ll1ures were
quickly for1otten.
"We hadn't played a team llke
Corona del Mar ln tbat span,"
explained Kesa Coach Kirk
Bauermeister.
II ESA had lta cbances, but
oever came up with lite
knockout puncb a1alnst Pries,
on the mound for the flnt time
tbl1 sprt.na.
Prtes 1trutk out three and
walked three tn a rlve·lnnlnl
stint, allowlnl sln•le markers ln
<See CdM, P•1e C2)
' .I J
--=---~~~~~~~~~~~--~...._--~~~~__,_.. __ __.,._.,,__.A.~ ....... IUW---.;.;.;....,_. .......... ~ ...... ~~-......... _...,...._
Cl YOE FOREMAN
Dotterer's .
HR sparks
Cardinals
Special to tbe Dally Pllot
Former Edison High standout
Mike Dolterer's leadoff home
run ignited a 20·hit Stanford at-
tack a s the fiflh ·ra nked
Ca rdinals J!Owered past UC Irvine. 10·2. an a non.conference
basebaJJ game at UCJ's Anteater
Stadium Wednesday.
Dotter e r's towering drive
over the 380 sign In left-center
fi eld came off UCI starter Dave
Woodhead 's second pitch and ex-
tended the sophomore's hitting
streak to 23 games. Dotterer
also had two singles and finished
with three RBI.
Mike Toothman and J ohn
EI way a dded three singles
apiece while f our other
Cardinals had two hits.
"Stanford is the most physical
team I've seen thi.s year," said
UC Irvine Coach Mike Gerakos.
"They can really s wing the
bat."
But that's just what the Ant·
eaters have n 't been doln1 lately.
As a team UCI bad been hit-
ting over .300 ln runnin1 ILi rec·
ord to lM. But aft.er a lo.day
layoff, the Anteatera we,_ abut
out on a slx·hltter by Pepperdine
Tuesday and could mu1ter only
four bits a1alnat Stanford.
"I think our tlmln1 ls a UtUe
off," 1ald Geliakoe. "But tbat '•
not an excuse for the war we've
played t.be lut two cla19. We
1wun1 the bat better toda.r tban
ye1terday IMlt we're aUIJ not
where we abou.ld be and ft 1ave
up 20·blu. I Juat hope ••cu,_
back In tbe 1roove ....... tr.
Di•10."
The Ant.eaten will p1aJ at UM
Unlvenlty ol San ~,._, at 1:» before ret ..._.
for a doubl•header •I tM
Toreeot Saturday.
-
IS
·e
IS
1r
e
d
1l
e
d
s
r
s
e
" s
I
-·-...-. ..... -----
• Orange Cout DAILY PILOTf'll'ul'9day, March 29, 1981
..,:;..-----------------"'""""!·
From AP .U.pa&ekl
BRADENTON , Fla. -Players from the •
Detroit TI1ers and Pltt.sburlh Pirates were ln·
volved in a bencb-clearln1 melee Wednesday after
a pilch from Detroit r ookle·pitcher Howard Bailey
istruck Bill Robinson on the helmet. ·
When the dust had cleared, Pirates' Mana1er Chuck Tan-
ner a nd pitcher J ohn Candelaria had been ejected from the
ame. and Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson bad voluntarily
pulled his starter Bailey.
With ~he P irates leading 1-0, Can-
delaria, the Pittsburgh starter, knocked
down Detroit catcher J ohn Wockenfuss
with a pitch in the fourth. but there was no
trouble.
On the first oitch in the bottom of the
inning. however , Bailft:V hit Pirates' first
baseman Bill Robinson in the mouth with
a pitch and Robinson headed for the
mound.
11011"'°" Robinson, who suffe red a cul lip, a
chipped tooth and a loose tooth, was restrained by plate um-
pire John McSherry
But Pittsburgh infielder Kurt Bevacqua -who was not in
the lineup at the tim e r an out to the m ound, shouting at
Bailey
··He said. 'Are you crazy, hitting a guy in lhe face '"
Bailey r ecalled. "I told him I didn't mean to hit him . The
pitch got away "
Then. Detroit third baseman Tom Brookens r an up and
shouted something and Bevacqua took a roundhouse swing
that missed. Both benc hes erupted.
· · 1 told him to get the hell out of there, that no body meant
to hit anybody and, besides, it was none of his ( Bevacq ua 's)
business, .. Brookens said. "Then he swung and t he fight was
on · ..--------quot~ of tlte daw ------.
Dave Hersh, general manager of the Portland
Bea \'ers, after the Pacific Coast League club signed
veteran pitcher Luis Tlant lo a six-figure contract:
1·Luis Sp('nl the m orning undergoing a med ical ex-
amination and the doctor told me Luis was in excellent
financial condition "
tlaufu>ws fradrd lo Pltilli~• tor lt'alk
Outfielder Gary Matthews of Atlanta was ac· Ii
quired by Philadelphia Wednesday in a tr ade for
pitcher Bob Walk Financial terms of the agree·
ment were not disclosed In announcing the deal.
Ph1 ll1es personnel director Paul Owens c ited "a little give
a nd take on both sides " ... Ri ghthander Silvio Martinez
pitched five scoreless innings and St Louis erupted for three
runs m the ftflh inning to beat the New York Yankees. 3·1 in
f exh1b1t1on action Wednesday. In other
games .. Mlke Tyson and Steve Hen·
derson collected three hits each and com -
bined for thr ee RBI in a 6·5 victory over
San Otego . Rick Manning and Von
H ayes drove in three runs apiece to pace a
24-hil attack and lead Cleveland to a 14·5
win over Seattle . . . Two-run singles by
Harold Baines and Jim E11laa in a six-run
lh1 rd inning and homers by Rusty Kuta
and John Hanley carried the Chicago
MaTTHEw s Wh ile Sox past Toronto, 10-7 ... Tim
Corcoran's tie-breaking home run tn the ninth inning powered
Detroit past Pitts burgh, 4·2 in a game punctuated by ·bean·
balls and a bench-clearing melee . . Four Milwaukee
pitc hers combined on a six-hitter and Don Money drove in the
game's only run with a tnple. givmg the Brewers a 1-0 win
over Oakland .. Ken Grifre y and German Barranca rapped
two hits apiece, and Mario Soto pitched six no-hit Innings.
leading Cincinnati lo a 3-2 victor y over Baltimore
Owlghl Evans and Carney Lansford keyed a five-run third in-
ning with long homers off Montreal's Scott Sanderson as
Boston snapped a three-game losing streak with an 8·4 win
over the Expas ... Phil Nlekro a nd Gene Garber combined
for a seven-hitter as Atla nta blanked Philadelphia. 3-0 .
Minnesota got five runs in the sixth inning to defeat the New
York Mets. 5-3.
Forward Se«t Wedmu poured tn 3' point.I m
and pard In.le Gruleld added 25 as KIAlu City
held off• Phoenix rally lo win, 110-101. to bl1bU1bt
NBA ac:tion Wednesday. Ttae victory incre ased the
Kln11· record to 39·41 and kept them aUve In a battlt with
Houston and Golden Stale ror a playoff apot ln the Western
Conferen~. Phoenix, meanwhile, fell lo 55·25. Tbe Suns are
aUU teekin• that one victory or 1.aker loss that will e nable
tbt Suns to wJn their first Pacific Division
title lo the 13·year history of the franchise
. . . Darryl Dawklee, LIOftl HoWa1 and
A•drew Toaey scored 18 points apiece as
PhUadelph.ia routed Detroit, 114·75. T he
win enabled the 78ers to remain tied with
Boston at 61-19 ln the Atlantic Dlvlslon
... Tbe Celtics, meanwhile, thanks to a
three·point play by Nate Arc:lalbald with 33
iseconds left, defeated New Jersey, 111-lOS
. . . Elsewhere, Mose• MaloH scored 32
••OMAN points and grabbed 17 re bounds to lead
Houston to a 117-111 triumph over San Antonio ... Brad
Davie directed Da llas' delibera te attack a nd scored 2S points
as the Mavericks stunned Denver, 126·115 ... Kevla Porter
handed out 17 assist.s a nd Mltd1 kapclaak scored 28 points as
Wa shington routed the New York Knicks. 105·.W ... ISUly R~y Bates, Kelvtn Raaeey and Myc:bal TbOIDptlOD had 24
points each as Portland banded Seattle its sixth slral1ht loss.
112-103 . . Uoyd Free, Parvis Sllort and Beraard Illa& com ·
bined for 78 points as Golden Stale raced past San Diego 120-114. .
Gretzlcw ecl,,e• el•no t• NB L .. ,..,.
Glenn Andenoa scored three goals and Wayne ~
Gretzky had a goal and three assists as Edmon-,
ton easily defeated Hartford, 7·2, to hlghli11ht ac·
lion in the NHL Wednesday. Gretzky's goal and
two assists came with less than a minu te left in the same
after Hartford pulled its goalie. He now has 98 assists ttm
season, four short or Bobby On'a single-season record of 102.
a nd 151 points, one short of PllU E1po1l&o'1 single-season rec·
ord of 152 ... Elsewhere, BUJ Hajt'a SO-foot shot was tipped
in by Andre Savard with 41 seconds to pliil y, then Ric Selling
scor ed into an empty net as Buffalo wh(pped the New York
Rangers, 4-2 . . . Defensem an Raady Carlyle scored two
power-play goals and Ron Stac:kbouae scored once , a ll within
the firs t 4""-i minutes of the t hird period, to give Pittsburgh a
5·2 triumph over Toronto . . . Dale Hunter scored an un-
assisted goal on a slap s hot at 12: 52 of the third period to
br eak a tie and help Quebec edge Calga ry, 4·2 ... Bobby
Schmautz scored from the point with 46 seconds rem aining to
give Vancouver a 4·4 tie with Colorado.
Tllba ..,erlu o.,en~ for NIT tltr.
Greg Stewart's t wisting layup with 30 seconds m
left in ove rtime gave Tulsa an 86-84 victory over
Syracuse and the cha mpionship of the NIT tourna·
m ent Wednesd ay night. Only six points wer e
scored in the fi ve·minute overtime period, forced when Erich
Sa ntlfer of Syracuse scored at !he buzzer to e nd regulation
tim e at 82-aJI . In the third place contest, Purdue 's Drake
Morris scored 18 points, including two clinching free throws in
overtime, as the Boil ermakers defeated West Virginia, 75. 72.
Five different Purdue players scored a basket apiece in the
extra period arter the game was tied at 65 at the end of
regulation
BalJa.holl to•-"• la NCAA aatleaaa. '
Former Golden West College swim st andout Bill
Babasboff, now swimming for Long Beach State,
will compete in three individual events at the
NCAA na tional fina ls loday-thru-Saturday at
Austin, Texas. Babashoff will compete in the 200. 500 and
1,650 freestyles. At G WC last year he set national ma rks in
those three events. He also set new PCAA st andards in those
three categories at the conferenc~ finals earlier this month
. . . Coach Ted Owens, who countered a lumni criticism by
guiding the Kansas basketball team to the semifinals of the
NCA A Midwest Regional tournament t his s eason. has been
offered a new three year contract . . Oakla nd Raider
quarterback Jim Plunkett was to enter the Stanford Medical
Center Wednesday for surgery to repa ir muscle dama ge to
his left shoulder. Plunkett said the injur y. to his non-throwing
shoulder . occurred d uring a 10·7 loss to Philadelphia in No-
vember. Rutgers University footba ll defensive lineman
Douglas A. Smith died of head injuries Tuesday night suf·
fered during a spring tra ining camp workout .
T~~ratlio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: No e vents scheduled.
F RIDAV RADIO
Baseball Minnesota vs. Dodgers at Vero Beach, 10: 10
a .m .. KABC <7901: Chicago vs Angels al Palm Springs, 12:55
p.m .. KM PC (7101.
SPORTS BREAK I HOCKEY I GOLF
CHICAGO <API -Marcel
Dionne says the Los Angeles
Kin11 are a great road team.
And lately the Kines have been
proving it.
Wednesday night in Chicago,
the Kings scored three goals in
the third period t o beat the
strunling Chicago Black Hawks
4·2 in National Hockey League
action.
The victory, Los Angeles' 21st
on the road, put the Kings within
one polnt of idle Montreal for
first place in the Nor ris Division
with a record of 41 ·23·12.
"THIS IS A GREAT road
team ." Dionne sa id following
the Kings' latest victor y.
And Jim Rut he rford, who
played Wednesday night in only
his second game for the Kings
since being picked up by Toron-
to. thinks he knows why.
"Whal ma kes this team 50
good on the road Is that we eat
together, do our fooling around
at lunch and then when we come
to the rink we're all bus iness "
The Kings conducted business
best Wednesday night in the
third period when rookies Jim
F ox and Greg Terrio n a nd
vet e ran Andre St. L a ure nt
scored .
After a scoreless firs t period,
C hi cago defe n s e man Dou g
Wilson connected on a fi ve-
foole r from just outside the slot
for his 12th goal of the season on
a pass from -Bob Murray.
BUT LESS THAN five minutes
la t er. veter an w i nger Mike
Murphy tied the score at 1 1 wit h
his 16th goal of the season afler
skating 1n unmolested a long the
r ight boards .
Fox put the Kings a head 2·1 at
the 2·05 mar k of the third period
after Terrion broke away at his
own blue line and fed h is team ~
mal e. who scored fo r the 17th
lime this season.
f'r991 Pap Cl
CdM ••.
The same com bination gave
Los Angeles a 3· l lead a short
tlm e later when Fox went
behind the Hawk net and passed
1n front to Terrion, who fired at
point ·blank range for his 11th
score of the tJeason
Chicago rookie Denis Savard
br ought the Hawks back lo
within one with his 26th goal, but
the Kings went up by two with
less than five minutes to play
when SL Laurent scored hi s
ninth goal of the year.
KINGS GOALIE R uthe rford
noted that ·"The Hawks were
shooting mostly from the wmgs,
which gave me very good angles
to stop their shots."
Chicago's record dropped to
29·31 ·15. In their las t 11 games.
they have won three, lost four
and tied four. Their loss Wednes·
day night lirted Vancouver into a
l te wi th Chicago for setond
place in the Sm ythe Oiv1 s1on
Hawks Coach Keith ~agnuson
felt ··the team had too me1ny
good chances close in anrt !>pent
too much time passing the puck
around instead or J(oing for the
rebQund s hot
"We sure lacked that k1lln in
shnct tonight.·· Magnuson <,aid
··when we lose." said Hawk
Tom Lvs1ak. ··1 feel ltkt' l"m 80
years old. The adrenaline JUSL
isn't there. And with JU<,l five
ga mes left for us. I hope· 14(' c-an
get going.··
f'ro• Pa.-(;I
JAN • • •
country m y permanent home
Jt's the greatest place 10 the
world."'
She played a pract1te rQu nd on
Tu esday a nd predicted that
scores would he lo"er th1::. \ear
1f tl doesn't rain ·
.. I thought the cou rM' played a
lot t'asier than 1t did hefore. ·
:.he• -.aid ··11 1:-drier and thl·
balb roll farther than thl•v did
thl' la:.t l"O }l'ar:. l"m SUr~ thal
1f tl slay:; lh1 :. way, somc·om• will
brl•ak par for lht• tournam(•nt ··
To dall'. 1n two \'l'ar::.. no
player has <.•\·er been ·be low par
the second and third inninJ(s on for 72 holes of tournament play
RBI s ing les fro m S teve An· Nancy Lopez-Melton . the winner
ders on and Ribby Sink. last year . was even par a nd in
Me s a . ho wever, left nine 1979. the five way tie wa:. at two
str anded through the first six in 1l\ t•r par
nings, including three in the fifth While• shl' 1-.n l looking to re
inning after Joe Cruz and Jeff t1rc•ment from lhl· golf cour:-.e a:.
Field singled with on e out , yet, Stephenl>on say:. s he will not
followed by a fre<.' pass to Sink. continue b<.·vond 10 'l'an. as a
Corona del Ma r added an in· full time pl.;yn Sht· ha:. wntten
surance marker in the fifth in· ma~aztnl' and nc'""l'aPl'r
ning when Bob Shollin drew a articles in the past. hut !'>a.\" -.he·
two·out wa lk a nd s cored on doc:.n'l do it now
Dave Rohde's double to center ·'I ha w• b<'en approached
field several timt's rt.>cenllv lo wrilt· a
Chris White mopped up the book,"" s he say:. .. But 1t s much
fina l two innings for Corona del nicer lo he on the oth(•r side· of
Mar. retiring the last four bat-t hl' fence. If I make· l'nough
ters after Mike Da we and Greg money playing golf and "1th ffi.\'
Ter egis got on the base paths e ndorsements. perhaps I won ·1
with a walk and s ingle tn the have to do any writing wh<'n 1·m
~==::::::::::::::;:~;j';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~F7===~~~==~===========~~~....:..:_si~x~th:..:...:..inn:=:i~n~g~.~~~~~~~~__:t:..:.:.hrough '"
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
Wh9'1 Yov W ....
• .,.. le ..
1922 Herhor ll•d.
Coste MHe -541-11 U
r---·-·--
' G ' I I '-. ,~ ... ~ I •• . ·~l • ~ "·• ...... .... \
Starting
a New
Business
A cccor d l ng 10
C•llfornle 8uelneu •nd
Prolullon• Code (Sec.
17900 10 17930) ...
per!Mln• dDlftll bualMH
11nder • flctltlou• n•me
mu•I 111• • 1t•lemen1
with Ill• County Clerk
•nd heve It publlehed
1011 r ti m e • I n •
ne .. peper M rvlng the •t•• In which Ill•
ltvalrte .... ioc.ttd.
The •lelemenl l e
reciulred br ltw .nd 11
n1cH .. 'Y In pmecOnt
your 1tu1lne11 n•me.
Moll 11•11111 reciulr•
preol of lllfll lo °"" COlftlfterelel eceounft .
The DAILY 11'11.0T
llf9wtde• '°'" llllflt encl ~llltcetlofl -*-•· We hne elf tfle -•MfY lor1111 end ,...i11teln • ..... .. ........ '"' O r •nt • Cou 11 tr
Court"-· lMtltf "°' llr •n• of eur
eonwtnlent offlcu or
pllene tlle LIOAL
DlllUTmNT "'2..utt.
lat. JH fer Mere ,,,.., .... ..,. ..,__
Slt«l 1957
"ALL SPECIALS"
1 .sH.9~.1s ·s7000.
IHST AL.LA TfOH IHCLUDID
SUPIRIMPOITSPICIALS
lleclw•Ste.tl .....
175/70113 .......•.......• $39.50
115/70113 •..........•..•• $45.IO
115/70Rl4 ................ $47.50
205 70114 ................ $57.7'
GUAIAMTEID 2. ALIGNMENTS OO · 9 UALITY s'L~~i:~~ 518 RETREADS
3 SMALL CAI • STRUT CAITllMIS
le4J. Slllt.70 P'alr SALE19 5oo
4.
FOUR COMPUTEA
IALAHCE W /ROTATION
51750 ·
5. LUBE & OILSJ95
•I ... JO wt.
•
------.. --
WHITI WAL~ UNIROYAL BLEMS
P195/75R14 (ER78x14) '49.95
P'l05/75R15 (FR71x15) 145.95
15/75115 (GR78x15) 156.9
Q
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What does a marathon
runner have in common
with a Volkswagen?
LONG ~~~
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BOATING /BASEBALL /VOLLEYBALL
~ehnan
·s e ries se t
Saturday
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club
will kick off its 1981 Angelman
Series for Performance Han-
dicap Racing Fleet yachts
Saturday with a race around the
buoys on outside courses.
Only other yacbUng activity
along the Orange Coast is Dana
Point Yacht C lub's Spring
Regatta with small boats racing
over inside courses Saturday
and PHRF yachts sailing out·
side courses Sunday.
T he hardjer offshore s ailors
will gamble with th e
weatherman Saturday and Sun-
BOATING ·CJ
day when Los Angeles Yacht
Club sends the International Of·
fshore Rule (JOR> ratings seek·
ing the Whitney Trophy. and the
PHRF yachts in quest of the Los
Angeles Times Trophy on an
87-mile circuit of Santa Barbara
Island.
The small boats in LA YC's
Little Whitney Series and Todd
Pacific Series will sail a course
around Catalina Island's Eagle
Rock and return Saturday
Santa Barbara Island will also
be the weather mark for the firs t
race of California Yacht Club's
Overton Series starting Satur
day
In other Southern Californiu
Yachting Association areas
~ .. 0if90
Coron•OO C4Y\ Y•cnt Club c1.,, .. Foti\ '>OYlnft n 8«11~ ~rir\ S411urd a y
Coron,.» Y•t nt Club Harmon tnolt r•<.~
Ow nd1t.tPI ~lurCUJ'
M 1\\1on 8•t V'•cM CtuC> Suiter O<e...-t.•Ot" Ovtrn1on1 '•• tn.tn0 1<•0. SdlurO•v Sulld•y L•\t r Cir<u1l S.t1.1rCW'(J
Oc. t •n\td• Y •cnt C1uo CO•U•t 'lt:r .....
Ptoi RF I Co.1\1•1 Sertf \ S.1urOd, SwncJ•f
~•n 01~ f'd tht Club Tr e-p1r l•OOF'l r r«.w-
10A1 S•turo•v Encino L•Q"I r •t f' tSOHf ~
41.•lurO•v Soutnw~\lern Y•cht C•uo Stt'001n\ fropn.,
t 4(t \PMAF1 ~h.trd4ly
M 1\\10n 8•v Po'lll!i~r SQu1tdron lnY1ltition•I
orto•<t•O 1o0 r~t.t Suno•v
Hort~ •nd lnl•nd
'litnt1 8•rtwrtt V'ac'1t Club '>Pr•nQ ~r1f'\ ant' d f\IQn, hanU•C•P) S4turd•Y Sunday
AnlttOPd Y•Chl (tub Spnng (Od\tal ~II•\
NO l tPHR~I S.0tu<04 Y
WPU•••t Y•cnt C1uo ':)or•no ReQ•tt• S4Mu1
o•y SunO•y
PonH>n• 'l•lf•y S•11tno A .... <A.1•IU,lf1 \.Ii \\
r•c111; \.dh,;rcu., \ur.d•Y
F o o tba ll tryouts set
A tryout camp for the Britis h
Columbia Lions or the Canadian
Football League will be he ld
Saturday and Sunday at Golden
West Coll ege. beginning at 9
a.m
REY OUBERNICK
FV posts
volleyball
• surprise
Fountain Valley High pulled
off one of the biggest upsets of
the season with its thrilling
volleyball victory over Marina
Wednesday night in the Sunset
League opener for both teams.
The Ba rons won the first two
games of the match by identical
15-7 scores . only to s ee Marina
t ake the next two games, 15-6
and 15-9.
In the fifth and deciding game.
Fountain Valley trailed 11 ·8 only
to come bac k and win it. 15·12.
"It was the best m atch we've
played all year," said an excited
Fountain Valley Coach Rick
Evans. "It was a great team
win. We followed our strategy to
perfection and everything went
our way "
Outside hitters Dave Thomas,
19 kills. and Todd Story, 16 kills.
keyed the Baron victory f'oun·
lain Valley also got some out·
s tanding play from setter Rey
Gubernick.
"A lot of people don't give thjs
league enough cr edit for the
ta lent it has,'" said Marina
Coach Tim Reed. "But I'll tell
you one thing, Fountain Valley
is as tough a team as anybody
we· ve played this year.·'
In another Sunset League
ope ner, Newport Ha rbor dereal·
ed Edison in four games. 15·8.
15-5. 11-15, 15-9.
The Sailors got good play from
outside hiller Mark Barrett, a
senior. and back row defensive
s pecialist Andy Craine. only a
sophomore.
It was the first win of the year
for Newport Harbor
Hurdle's
'Hot Dogs''
are. • •
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP>
Reggie Jacllaon is a charter
member. So are Jim Palmer
and Tu1 McGraw. And who
could possibly ignore feisty Earl
Weaver?
They're all part of the 1981 All·
Hot Dog Team complied by
Kansas City Royals outfielder
Clint Hurdle, a tongue-in·cheek
of baseball players for whom the
whole field's a stage.
Here is Hurdle's team -with
the outfielder's disclaimer that
m any of the m embers also are
quality players:
First base -Willie Montanez,
Montreal. "The Oscar Mayer of
the bunch. He must practice at
night to pull off some of the
stunts . . . Montanez is above
Pete Rose. Rose wishes he was a
wide receiver so he could spike it. ..
Second bas Julio Cruz, Seat-
tle. "Pretty good defensive
player. but also the only player
to lose twice at salary arbitra-
tion."
Shortstop Garry Templeton,
St. Louis. "Known to bounce the
ball on the Astroturr before
throwing to first.
Third base Bob Horner .
Atlanta. "He's been in the big
leagues three years and s till
hasn't been to spring tr aining."
Left field George Hendrick,
St. Louis. "This man won't even
talk lo his own wife He won't
talk to anybody."
Center field Rick Peters.
Detroit. "He's the best young
hot dog going right now. If he
practices he can be as good as
Montanez."
Right field Clint Hurdle ,
Kansas City. "It's my team so I
can be on it . Once you get
ca lled a hot dog, that's it. I'm
the re. I'm buried I'm a hot dog
forever "
Designated hitter Reggie
Jackson, New York Yankees.
"He's a crowd-pleaser from the
word jump. Yankee Stadium is a
stage, his stage .. He ought to
be on Broadway."
Catcher Rick Dempsey.
Baltimore. "He's ridiculous.
This is the guy who hit the phan·
tom home run during a rain de·
lay at Fenway Park, ran the
bases and st a rted jumping
around on the tarp."
Pitchers · Jim Palme r .
Baltimore : Tug McG r aw ,
Philadelphia : Bob Lacey ,
Oakland. "Palme r deserves it
because he's a veter an. Now
Lacey is the only guy who ever
wanted to fight Darrell Porter.
'Spacey La cey ' i s hi s
nickname Need I say more?"
MICHELIN IALS
COSTLESST
YOU THINK.
Price a set today.
MICHELIN 'X' RADIALS ...
For American cars
For Imports
For Pickups,
Vans and RV's
Whatever you drive,
perlormonce-proven Michelin ·x·
radials ore competitively pria!d.
A nd they 're surprisingly
affordable. Compare quality.
value, price and perforrrmce. If
you price Michelin . . . you'll
aive Michelini
MICHELIN
We put America on radials.
SAYE
30%
185x1 4
19Sx14
19Sx15
205x15
225x15
2'30x15
· 235x1S
6t.t0
72.tO
71.tO
7t.to
It.to
tt.to
104.fO
FET
2.2 ..
2.51
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2.62
321
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138
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. March 28. 1981
A day for comebacks
Eagles, Artuts, Charger' rebound .
El Toro High scored once in the rourth Inning
and five times in the fifth for a come·from·behind
6·4 victory over Irvine to ttlghllght area prep
baseball action Wednesday.
In other games, Estancia scored two runs In
the seventh to ed&P. University, Laguna Bei&ch held
on to defeat Dana Hilla and Mater Dei had an easy
time with arch-rival Servile.
Et Toro 8, lrvlne 4
Eric Bryant and D11ve Hellengthal each had
lwo-run singles to spark a five -run Charger rally
in the fifth. Bryant singled in the tying runs and
Hellengthal followed with a base hit to right field
which scored the winning runs.
Irvine jumped out lo a 3-0 lead off Heilengthal,
who started on the mound for El Toro. But
Heilengthal settled down and got some help from
PREP BASEBALL
relief pitcher Conrad Giacom azzi, who came on
in the sixth inning, enabling the Chargers to up
their record lo 6·5 overall and 2·2 In Sea View
League play
Irvine drops to 1·3 in league action
E•tancla 4, Unlve r•lty 3
Estancla's Lou Dieley kept University winless
in the league with two clutch doubles
Trailing 3-0 entering the sixth inning, Dieley
doubled home Mike Deutsch and then scored on a
Jetr Gardner single to cut the lead lo one.
Then in the ninth it .was Dieley again. This
time it was a bases-loaded double that scored two
runs to give Estancia the win.
Don Mitroff, a senior, went the distance for the
Eagles. He a llowed three runs <only two were
earned> on fi ve hits, walked two and struck out
four.
Estancia is now 4·2 overall and 2-2 in Sea View
league play while the Trojans dropped to 0·4 in
league
Laguna Beech 5, Da n a Hlll• 3
A bases-loaded double by David Padgem
helped Laguna Beach score three runs in the first
in n inst. The Artist s added anothe r run in the
A's Lacey told n o t to r e port
SCOTTS DA LE. Ariz t AP> Relief pitcher
Bob Lacey 1s a s good as traded from the Oakland
A's. according to Manager Bill v Martin
Lacey. who conducted a running feud with
Martin last ~eason. was told not to report to the
ball park Wednesday, when the A's lost a 1-0 Cac-
tus Le ague decision to the Milwaukee Brewers .
The left-hander's locker was cleaned out , a nd
Martin said. "He 'll be ~one soon."
FLUORESCENT
SUPERLIGHT'
Rugged. impact resistant
design 15· cord. hanging
hook. easi ly re placed
15-watt bulb II 160· 15
I 8 11 PLASTIC TOOL BOX
Waterproof. lloatable. double hinge
design -hit out tool tray Tote
handle Ideal for car. boat. or home
IS K1
s3•s
~
PROFISSIOHAL.
TIRE GAUGES
YOUR CHOICE
DOOR EASE
Lub ricate• 111 exposed
1urf 1 c e1 ·-prev ents
1Que1ka, wear and rust,
atape aticking. Works under
II weather conditions
thout drying or waahlng
second but then had to hold on to defeat the stub
born Oolphlns.
Senior lefthander Kevin Clark s tarted and.
picked up hls second win of the year. He did need1
help from Bra ndt Vroman in the seventh inning.
Vroman was credited with the save.
The victory gave Laguna Beach Its !irst South
Coast League triumph. The Artists are now 1-3 in !
league and 4·7 overall. Dana Hills is also 1·3.
Mater Del I , S.rvtte 4 •
The two Orange County Catholic schools bat-·
lied it out and the Monarchs camt.' out with an up-
set win •
Servile entered the game 2-0 in Angelus
League play only to see Mater Dei score s ix r uns;
In the fourth inning to blow the game open. t
The game highlighted the return or Amin '
David to the Monarch lineup. David hasn't played
since the second game of the season because or a :
muscle pull. In his first aame back . David was 1
2·for ·4 with a h ome run a nd three RBI .'
David's home run was a solo shot in the second in '
ning.
Steve Mendoza had a big day at the plate and
on the mound Mendoza was 2-for 4 with an:
R Bl but more importantly picked up his first save
of the year in r elief or star te r Dan Sottosanti
Mendoza took over the p1tch1ng duties in the
s ixth inning and s hut out the Frrnrs by striking out
s ix batters the last two innings
In the last four games he ha~ a ppeared, Men
doza has struck out 40 hitters
Other hitting stars for the Monarchs included
Rick Moore, three hits, and f''rank Sputes . two
hits.
Mater Dc1 1s now 5·fl overall and I 3 1n the '
Angelus League.
D ' Acquis to is sh e lle d ,.
but Angels win, I 0-6
PALM SPRINGS c AP > Jeff Bertoni's two·;
run homer in the seventh inning gave the Angels a.
10-6 victory over Cal State Fullerton Wednesday i~
e xhibition baseball . •
The Angels had to fight back from a 5·2 deficit:
a fte r the Titans struck for five runs tn the second:
inning off right-hander John D'Acquisto
Fred Lynn's two-run home r had given the1
Ange ls a 2-0 lead in the bottom of the first inmngj
a nd the Angels tied it wilh three run!> in the bottom(
of the second
After Bertoni 's homer off left-hander Mike:
Digiacomo gave the Halos a 7-6 lead, the Angeb •
put the game away with three unearned runs in.
the eighth inning.
1112 ton portable hydraulic floor jack.
Pro fessional quality design and
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#2030
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WEATHERSTRIP
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Features sQuare
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Good Thru April 9, 1981
BEACON
AUTO PARTS
'410M.Mlwp.t .. 4. ... ., .......
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•
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60 x \4
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2 FOR
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AUTO PARTS
21, ....... .,
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HIP'' Ottnoe Coatt DAILY ptLOT/Thur9day, Maroh 29, 1881 FOR THE RECORD / TENNIS .-.----------------------------~~ -,.,,-----------· ..... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------...,
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COMMU•tTY eoua•• .......... ., ........... Cerrittta.
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COMMUNITY COl.LIOI
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p11c.n1r to tneu m1no,· le•qu• camp tor
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Onlm•n •nO M1•~ Menocu•. 01tc1"1e''· to
tneu m1n0t •t•OV• <•mo tor rt•\~gnm1nt PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES 4'<Q••r•CI
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COMMUNITY COLl.IGE
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Pfo~lng
PeA TOUltNAMENT
ltlMl-11
1f11tn1••UI•
8 111 Block
&ob H•ndle,
J•ll Mtlfll'Qlf
• Mera Rotrwnolf
I Mtr\11•11 Holman
Carew, Ferragamo combine efforts L
DIRECT By ED ZINTEL
01 Ille O•lly Pllel Stall
Rod Carew is not new to this sort of thing.
Vince Ferragamo is
But Ferragamo, who, one would think, has
enough to worry about these days -what, with his
contract dispute with the Rams in mid flight -
w-ants to do something for his community.
So, taking Carew's and other top sports ~mes' lead. Ferragamo is lending his services as
chairman for a charity tennis tournament.
FERRAGAMO, WHO SOME will tell you has
the best arm In the NFL today, will team with
Carew, who some will tell you has the best bat in
major league baseball. The duo will co-chair a
celebrity tournament April 4 at the Anaheim Hills
iacquet Club.
Proceeds from the event will benefit han-
dicapped children at Canyon mus High School in
Anaheim and underprivileged children of the
Anaheim Salvation Army.
• Tbe tournament, 1llracUn1 entertainment
stars as well as several bll name pro athletes. will
l)e held from 10-2 p.m. Ferragamo hopes it's the
first in what will become an annual event.
Ferragamo ia 110 1enuinely involved In the
tournament that he even a1reed to underwrite it
recently when there was some doubt about lta
future.
"Last July, J approached the club and we all
Jus t started klcklng around aome \deaa,'' Fer·
ra1amo aald. "It took off from the launchlnl pad
and really started Oyln1."
Carew then became involved and the two
Joined forcea to brina out what appears wUJ be a
1tellar lineup ol gueata. .
CA•BW BA.8 BEEN actively involved for
aeveral yHl'I witb cbality benlfttl, pa.rUalartr
for multiple 1cleto1la.
The Ult ol athletea conllrmed for Ute tovna·
ment mclude Ram• Carl Dern, RJcla Saul, J.O
Reynoldl, Pr•lon Dennard ud JVOl'J' Sull1. OtMI'
past and """"t oro football p1.,.,. IDetwle ...
Va ry, Brad Budde. John Cappelletti. Rod
Sherman, Marlin McKeever and Tom Mack.
Baseball players who will be on hand include
Carew's Angel teammates Fred Lynn, Bri an
Downing and Don Baylor, plus Dodgers Jay
Johnstone and Steve Yeager.
Admission to the tournament is $6. The cost to
play against a celebrity Is $150, which includes a
reception dinner and awards.
For information. call 998-5000. • • • Chris-Evert Lloyd, Tracy Austin, Andrea
J aeger and Martina Navratilova will meet In a
TENNIS
singles showdown April 4-5 at La Costa for a total
purse of $200,000 and a top tint place prize of
SlOOJK>O. Two matches are scheduled each day i tartin1
at 11 a.m. Tickets may be reserved by phone by
calling 438-1784 and are on sale at all Ticketron
outlets. All four players will compete both days. • • • A 13-part serlea that combines the lively wit
and hllhly regarded tennis Instruction of Vlc
Braden will premiere April 5 at 7 p.m. on KCET,
Chennel 28.
Entitled "Vic Braden'• Tennis for the
Future," alter his best-aeUlnt book by the same
name, Braden will slve lectures and on-court de-
monstratJona on all facet.I of the came.
The prolJ'am wtll be close captJoned for the
heartn1·impalred.
It will be repeated April e at 11: 30 •· m . wltb
open uptlonl and April '7 al 10:30 p.m. with closed
c•~· On April I, at I p.m.1 KOCI:, Channel 50 wlll belht telecut ol tb• prosram. • • • Au&ol:raO ~ wUI want to bt at the lobn
W•JM ~ <hb April 10.12 wbte a celebrity
tournament, featuring names s uch as Cheryl
Ladd, John Davidson, Wayne Rogers and Cindy
Garvey will be held.
Tickets can be obtained by calling 898-9523 or
at the club the day or the event.
Proceeds from the tournament will benefit
Children's Village, USA , which helpe battered and
abused chJldren.
• • • Nearly 200 dJaabled children will have the op·
portunlty to participate in • variety of sports at
Saddleback College, April 13·16 as the National
Foundation of Wheelchair Tennis and the Minion
Viejo Company host a sports camp for han-
dicapped chUdren.
Boes lose,
GWC wins
Shandra Anderson
scored 26 points to lead
Fullerton College to a
convlncln1, 77-65, vic-
tory over Oran1e Coast
In women's community
colle1e basketball action
Wednesday nJ1ht.
The win 1lves the
Hornet.a eole pe>1ae11lon
of first place In the
South Coast Conference at~. OCC drope to 4·1.
Krla Kroyer sewed U
polntl and crabbed II
rebound• to l•ad the
Pirates.
In dtber action,
Golden \fest held on the
beat Eut Loe An1eln.
71-M.
!\
e
lS
·r
e
d
I l
e
11
s
r
s
e -· •s
11
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s
y
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Orang• Coast OAJLY PILOT/Thureday, March 26, 1981 ,---------~--~--..... --~ ____________________ ....; ______ _ H/F
·•' :(, ....
...... ~ Reagan tax
plans detailed
r lAlt of niM·porl uric• on 10l/ing on JIOUr 1980 tncom•
14% return J
How much would your federal lncome taxes 10
down If Congress were to approve President
Rea1an's call tor a series of cuts to trlm Individual
tax rates by 30 percent, starting In July and conclud·
ing in L984?
What does all the massive mumbo-Jumbo about
tax reduction telegraph t.o you?
Here 's a ~ rund own or
facts n ot
headlined: ~ I'°
Q. Will your -------~-, ~~~~ i~e~~ a~~ IYlVIA PIRTf R ,
mtnis tration'!I
tax.,. reduction
program is enacted into law?
A. Not necesHrlJy. Your total federal Income tu
blll wouJd clffUne lf your eanti.Dts remained un ·
cllan1ed lD t.he next few yean; then your 1184 tu
debt would be about 30 percent smaller than your
'80 blll.
But if your paycheck rises, your tax bill would in
crease, too. for the simple reason that you then would
join the'tax creep -and your higher paycheck would
put you into a higher tax bracket which automatical
ly would pull more tax money out of your earnings
For instance . say you're unmarried. working a!>
an admissions officer at a private s econdary school,
earning $15,00() a year and paying about $2,000 in tax
es. H. over the next two years, your salary stayed the
same. the Reagan plan would cut your federal taxes
by $316
But say you move to a higher-paying job and
start earning $20,000 a year. Your 1982 federal taxes
are estimated by Matthew Bender experts at roughly
S2 .600 Eve n under the Reagan t;u c uts. you
personally would owe $600 more to the federal gov
ernm enL
Q. Who really benefits the most from the tax cut
proposals'!
A. Tbe arguments about this &row more abusive
and bewildering by the hour. A nrst fact ls that
potentially, everyone would benefit -but 1n different
ways and to s harply different degrees.
ln total dollars, a senior partner at a leading
Cleveland law firm earning Sl00,000 a year <with a
wife and two c hildren) would pay nearly $7,000 less in
taxes in 1984 then he now pays.
A computer programmer earning $25,000 a year
and with the same type of family would have hi s tax
es reduced about $800 A $50,000·a-year, four-person
family would be about $2,500 better off in the tax
computations .
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YORKCA~I Flnat Dow.Jon~ .,.QS
AMERICAN LEADERS
HEW YORK CAP S.le>. W<'J pron r:..ir~ ... 'T. ... ~' 1~.~~:·1 .!~;~
tradl"O ,..1.,.11v ti rnort lht n '1 ln1trum S'f'I llS,400 IV.
Cll•mp Ho U• . .oo 7"" GllCtn g ' 161,.COO llJ,;, • '•
Aptd0ot11<t t46, 100 s~. . "' °"'-""' ns.ooo JI'" • 1"" #lftl 8 1 101,IOO JI'> • 7''>
wamrCom wt ts soo 11' • • '' • Ra-otl \ '3,000 U • • W. Oorc"M!Go ' 16.:IOO It~ 'It
PelrlckPI WI' tl,.ac> •~ • 1•
PCI
'°' ..,.., . """'' n ITOCltS Ol»n Hogll I.OW c1.... O•Q >0 Ind ... Ool 1016 '4 '"1.11 101S 22 t 1' O'I 10 Tm •2• •1 o.c •• en n o> S•• a 61 IS UU 101 •I IOI /1 106 •• IOI SS• 0 •S 6S Slk 'll4 SI J'l7 >O ll7 11 l'I U • & H
lndu• S, 2S6 000 Tre11 1ai..100 U1ll1 SIS,IOCi
U Slk 11>.11.eoo
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW voR'I( tAPI ,.,..., 1)
AdVancad Otcllned Unchanotd
Tolel 116°'" New hlQll•
Ntw lo..
WHA J A"'EX DID
roo1~s
SI I l3I
l'M• 171 J
NEW YORI( IAPI Mar H
AdvanctO
O.Cllned Unthangod
Total l51u"' Htw ltlglls
Htw ~
To<ltY * nt IU
811
Prf'v
O•y )11
111 211
&II
METALS
t1onS
LHd l• l6cen1u pouno
SJ 1
l ine ft•, 41' • t..tnt'• poun<t.df'IPtf't rd
Tl" \I 0.S/ l'Hlll> WM H ompO\oltlD
Ah1ml_.1'<enl\e!XIV"O NY
Mtrory\420 OO~r lliSlo ,,.u-.,un ooeroyot N v
SILVER
8y Tht A•...:lottd Prtu
H•ndy& Herm.n. 'tl tbOpPr lror OUn(.e"
GOLD QUOTATIONS
.,
J
Up 20 I
Up 11 S Up I] l Up 13.1 Up 17 t
Up 11 4 Up 11 1 Up II S
Up ti • Up II 1
Up 11 I Up 11.0
Up 11.0 UP 10 1 Up 10.6
Up IO.•
L•-:rnom•nv••••nvUl4 00.uP .. 00
L•-: •Htrnoonl .. •"9UJ'I so upi 11 so
~lrh •H•r,_.,llain•H S-1 ,. up\7 JI
l"r1111CllH'I: llalnvUl4.03.uPMl II
hrl<~ • .-11 afternoon I l•lnQ U J• 00 ·~
U 00 UJJ .00 fl•eo
lhftdf & HermM: only°"''' quole \.SJ'I IO uP ll t SO
Eft .. ll•Nd. Ollly Ol lly QUOI~ U)'I SO, \IO
Sii SO
E,. .. ,...,., only d••ly quot• lt Orout""
'561 °'·""' ....
SYMBOLS
~-----' -----
OrangeCoatt OAJLV PILOT/fhurlday, March 28, 1981 MOVIES / INTERMISSION
'Tess' beautiful movie but esorts io O.liC hes
( "'*"" a. • ant.• o/ '"""'°' °" ""°*' ......... ,., ..... ...,.,.. impact ol U>¥ movle nominated
ror bat picture Otcar.
Roman Polanski, the picture la
vyl111 '°" alx Oacarl lncJu41n1 direct.or and clnem1to1raphy.
It'• mott likely to wln ln the lal·
ter c1t.e1ory.
Otcor al OM Acod•tnW A100rdl
c~""°"' ltl°"**'tJJ.
By l&U Y ll<T&N&TEIN °' ...................
The •t«>' ol a t.raalc berUnie,
bHed on the Thomu Ha'rdy DOV·
el, "THI or t.he d'UrbervUles"
l1n't bad. But It'• doubtful the film can
etand up to "Ordinary People'' ·"'fat" baa the mOlt visual Dlrected by Am~rlcan tu1lllve
Simon saying it twice
lbTOMTITl18 o1Ule 04llly _,..,.
Three new stage productions; two or them by
Neil Si moo, arrive on the Orange Coast theater scene
thllweek.
Other cast members include Tom Early, Ro·
bert Knapp, Denise Dale, Gary Bartlck, Jeanne
Cbri1Uansen, Tom Emmanuel and Jeanne Clark.
Performances are Thursdays t.hrou1h Saturdays at 8
SilDClft 's ·'Chapter Two·· opened at the Harlequin
Dinner Playhouse Wednesday night, wbiJe his
~ "God's Favorite" bows at the ~1 Newport Theater Arts Center on Friday. Sharing a Friday open·
ln« wlll be Edward Albee's
drama of suburban avarice,
"Everything in the Garden," at
the Newport Harbor Actors
Theater.
p.m . through April 18
with SUnday matinees at
INTERUISSIQN 2: 30 scheduled for the lftl first two weekends .
Tickets are available at
At the Harlequin, H.M. Wy·
nant stars in a thialy disguised
portrait of Simon himself in
wYNANT "Chapter Two," a play based on
the author's experiences in dealing with his first
wlfe'a death and the strain of his early relationship
with his new wife, Marsha Mason. Lisa Robinson
plays the romantic interest, while Patti Colombo and
Art Koustik complete the cast.
Directed by Harvey Levine, "Chapter Two" wllJ
play nightly except Mondays at varying curtain
times through May 3 at the Harlequin, 3503S. Harbor
Blvd., just north of Costa Mesa. Reserv a lions and in·
formation 979-5511 .
KENT J OHNSON IS directing ''God's Favorite"
at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive,
Newport Beach, where PauJ Teschke enacts a
modem Job encountering a series of misfortunes.
Sorrell Wayne is cast as his wife with John Szura
playing a heavenly messenger who brings him the
bad news.
Rounding out the Newport cast are Joe
Brockman. Scott Clevenger. Paula Kay Perry. Dolly
Ross and William Buckley. Performances are
scheduled Fridays and Saturdavs at 8 o'clock with
Sunday matinees at 2 lhrougb April 18. Reservations
675·3143or&42·8119.
Albee's "Everything in the Garden" has been
transformed from Long Island to Southern
California for its production at the Newport Harbor
Actors Theater, 309 Monte Vista St., Costa Mesa.
Doa Laffoon directs the drama, which features Ben
Miles, Rochelle Savitt. Bill Urban and Valerie
Mcilroy In leading roles.
R
NOW
PLAY I NCI
PUBLIC NOTICE
INEMA
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'l(TITIOUS aUSINlltl l'ICTITIOUS IUSINI! U
N-1 ITATIMINT NAMI STATIMl!NT
Th• f9ll-IA9 perMll\ '' 0011>9 IN\! Tht follow1no ptr•on• ert doln9
neu ., bu\tn•'' ., l llP R OBE .lllPROFESSION BEST M ARt<ET t N G A'>
RESEARCH ORGANIZATION FOR SOCIAT ES. IJ()t L099n Annue, C~t•
BUSINESS ENTREPRENEURS, IJI. MtH. Callfornte t:i.21>
UNITED-AMERICA CORPORATION. Arthyr C Pucock. Sr . 1901
SU A-Ill• O<l•t. Cor.,... clel Mar, Wakeham P l•<•. Sa n ta Ana.
Call .. rftle nus, Ca11lornle 91111' Wtll1•m W. 8•rr•t •. ,0 Gr•nd
P4t1Mlt'I G Nlemo. Sl2 An99llt• A •• n .... Apt. D S, Long 8••<h,
Ort••. (or~ 0.1 Mer, Ca lllornle Ce lllornla tOC>
'1US. Jemt\ H Ch•lk, '1S1 JY•n•t•,
Thi• 11.nlMU I• c-llC-t>y ""1>n Cyprtu, C.ltlornta fOtJO
•M.,POf'.ted enoti•Uot\ otNr tNn • Thit bu\1n•'' " condl.ltted by a
.,.,,,,.,.,,.p. oener•I .,.,.,,,.,.hip
Nel-. G. Mamey A C PwKo<k, Sf
Tiii\ tt•-1 w~ Ill.., wltll IM Thi• >1.ioment .,., 11100 •ttf\ lne
C-ty Cler~ of Or.n99 COl>nly on C°"nty Cltrk ot Orange C°"nty on
, Me<th ), 1 .. 1 Mer< II l. 1•1
'1S1 .. 1 l'tSI ...
Pyt>lllho<S Ora1>99 Coe" O••ly ~llot. Pyt>ll•,,.., Or-Coe•I Daily Piiot,
March s. 11. ''· 1•. "'' IOU.ti Merch s. 11. "· n . '"' 111'1·11
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
1.l!OAL NOTICE
the box office or by mail
to Box 2.417, Newport Beach 92663.
Two college productions, "Tom Jones" at
Golden West College and "The Matchmaker" at
Southern California College, complete their
scheduled engagements this weekend.
Final performances of "Tom Jones" will be
given tonight throuah Saturday at8: 30 and Sunday at
2: ~ in the main G WC theater on the Huntington
Beach campus (894-9885). "Matchmaker" plays
tonight and Saturday at 8 o'clock in the courtyard of
the SCC administration complex, 55 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa ( 556-3610 >.
ALSOON STAGE a longtheco.Stare:
"The Merchant of Venice" at South Coast
Repertory, ~ Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957 ·4033), playing nightly except Mondays al 8
o'clock, with weekend matinees at 2:30, through
April5.
-"Murder at the Howard Johnson's'' at Sebas·
lian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San
Clemente (492-995(}), playing nightly except Moo·
days at varying curtain times through April 5.
· · RelaU vely Speaking'' at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach
(494.()743), playing Tuesdays through Saturdays at8
p. m . through April 11.
-"VICTORIA'S HOUSE" at the Westminster
Community Theater. 7272 Maple St., Westminster
(995·4113), playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
through April 4 "Absence of a Cello" at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrounds, Costa
Mesa (754·51S9), playing Fridays and Saturdays at
8: 3-0 through April 11.
-··A Bad Year for Tomatoes" at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue,
.Huntington Beach 1847-4465), giving final
performances tonight and Saturday at8: 30.
FANTASIA
1:1W:.a:46
1:00-10:15
SUNDAY LOVERS
12: 1 S-2: 30-4: "5
7:1S-t:30
CIWN
R ·
NOW PLAYING
MA• HUPWA .
Brea !>29 5339
lDWa .. oa· •EWPCNIT
Ne...,0011 Bearn 6A4 0760
c1...-
0ringe 634 2!>53
lDWAUI' llUO TWIM
Mission VttjO 830·6990
ua TW .. CffllMU
Westmlnsttt 893·1~
·-•••• ..... ..THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS
RINGS TWICE" (A)
..... ,.. ., ; cw ;jo ...
''THE JAZZ.
SINGER'' (PG)
"INCREDIBLE
SHRINKING WOMAN"
"DEVIL & MAX DEVLIN"
fO ALL INTERESTED AGENCIES, GROUPS "NO P ERSONS •.c «,
On or •"""' Jyly '· ""· llW City ol Cott• MHa •Ill rH11H•• tne us Foet•TAlll YAll(T OfllYl·lll I, "fUN HOUSE"
"THE ISLAND" 1R1
Otpertmenl of HO\nlA9 -Ur-°'""-'*'' IHUOI to r.tuu F•c»ral FYnci. ..-Till• 1 of ,.... H-1"9.,... C-""lty Oeniooment Ac t ot n 14 u Founla1n Valley 962 ?48 1
1m•~ tn lt71 I PL tJ-1Sll for tlW IOll-IA9Pf0Jt<I• ••(.;'"'' t Pro)ecl Title Wallau Neo9!1borMOO Strelfily ArN MtlllO• INl11l·I• p.,,_ To acquire 1><099''' .,d P<""'de re1oc.•t1on -•111 to occ .. -~n J~n Cii>'Slrano •93 •54~ "'""" '" .... -IO,. .. ..., "°"''no tor 1--...-.at• 1nco,,... 1.mll1t\. 10 .,p o<-P<*k 1,.,..cwe,,...ntt •n<t rehet11lltete prl••I• pr...,_,,, t Tl•I• "• ""'"' llO PUllJ ACCl,TID
yur .... em ....ic11 .... ""•"" '" FY .. ,.., '°" TIHI u•••••T l.~tlGll ArM bowlded by Pl•ontl1 A•efl\lf, H•mlllon Street. Pomon•
A .. n.,. end ltlh StrMI. E1t1m•tecl <:.ott U0,000 [ W1ltll !tit Audtllly
2 Project Tille Cenler Strfft N$A flt It 30
PYrPoM To ·-t>lllt•I• prl••tt P<-•UH, to ... IQP MW or lmprO•• ~ .. -Ill .,,
.... 11no ter•ICH for cn11d ure, 1dull day car• -tmerq.no ,_.,no fa<lltly. L!~;;;;~~-;;;;9;;.--L
LoUtlOI\, •<11 t>o\llldtd t>y Po-A•tft ... , t'11\ SlrHI, Hert>or
e ..... 1 ...... N•-·• 8oul••ard •fld 11t11 Stret1. E•tlm•led C~I l110,000 • Turn your
) Project TUI• Land AtqYltltlon lor HO\l\lnQ. bl
PYrpoM. TO KQl>lrt property -IM'""ide reloc1t1on l>en•llh to ott\I• • unusa es
penll In or-10 Ot .. IOll l\outln9 for low end_,,.,. IMome Urtlor C•lllefll into
or 11m1tlft LO<etlon $cM<lflt •llH hi•• nol yet -Identified. l>vt Wiii lie In tht • usable etMret .,... of trw City t Rede .. loe>"nt"I Prol«t •I E•llmated C0>t ""'•~roje(ITltlo RthebllllatlonLo.nt-Grentl • cash.call p..,,..,.. To., .. ,, I-and ,,,_, ... IMOfN _,,.,,to rthebllll•t• their • Daily Pilot
llOUllne -lo p;ovlde low cott 1oan• to ln•HWr _,,.,, to rellabillt•I• rtnl•I
1>t1llt. L«ell_,: -lnO It lie rohat>llltet.., woll lie IO<et.., •Ul'tln 11'9 (lty • classified
I "l'IAQINQ BULL" 1111
"FOl'IT APACHI!"
1 .......... ~
I "TRIBUTE''
"ORDtNARY PEOPLE"
1111
I "mACAAZY"
"UK D CAAi" IAI ......
"FINAL CONFUCr'
"THE FURY" (R)
......... .__ ... ,..~.
c~-''"• ·--•••o-
There are too m cllehe8 -
"beauty bu lta rlce" ...
"life's 1t puzzle" . "all la
vanity'' , .. "Ont a victim always a victim."
Typically I Pola kl ror1ets
creativity to speak Jown lo the
audience.
WHILE HAaD fana are
famlllar with the al , suapenee
fades early In th mm when
Tess' husband gel Clare
learns she would " l for him."
Earller than that, a book In
Clar e 's room is on capital
punishment. Polaaski makes
sure the camera focuses on the
book tiUe.
Tess. played by Berlln native
and relatively -unknown actress
N aslassia Klnskl, \hes up to
publicity advances comparinl
her to a youne Ingrid Bergman.
But just minutes Into the film
when the viewer meets Tess'
drunken rather John
D)Jrberyfield (played by John
Collin> lt'a obvious drabness wjU
prevaU.
Poor Teti.
She ll HDt to valldat• news
her family la related to the
arlatocraUc d'UrbervllJ• fam\ly
II vln' ln a country m analon
mlle• away from tb e
Durbeyflelda' small home1t.ea4.
But ahe ls falsely won by the
son or Mrs. d'UrbervUle tt.he
family bought the name). Al,ic
d'UrbervUle, the soo. played by
Lelgh Lawson, is immediately
attracted to Teaa' beauty and
one nt1ht carrie2' her on t,is
herae to t.he middle of a for~l
where he rapes her.
She flees the estate and bears
Alec's baby which dies shortly
after birth. When she leaves home again
to hire on aa milkmaid she faJJs
ln love and eventually weds
Angel Clare, a clergyman's son
learninc to be a farmer.
She tries to tell Angel before
their marriag e of her ii ·
le1ltimate baby but fails when a
letter she leaves is never found.
Confession lime on wedding
nl1ht is too late. Young Clare,
despite a libera~ attitude. can't
accept the story .lie leaves.
Poor Tess.
""' .... , ....... ., ..................
FEAfl NO EVIL 1•1 ,, .. , .............. , ..
....OC~-""°AHC,..
THE~STMAN
ALWAYS .. INOS TWICE fll
..... ltt·• .. ·••·1'• .... --.... Oltne ··· FANT ASIA IOI
,., ... Wf-.0
1f .. •, .. •I•• I•• 11 ll ·--WM.TDtlMY·•
f'ANTASIA 191
,,,_
tTWMO
tf •• , ......... t1 ..
f .. LAii CMAl,..fl.Jll •, ... OW• ra .. oo•
TH( FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 II•· ••·I• ....... ti M
...... n.IWIAI ,,, .. ,.
(&111 .. ,~:r.~1-.. ~.~~·~··-
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...... p .... ,,.,.. .....
Uat.4 f r-•L8 6 f099'f l l• .IOll&I
BACK .. O ADS "'' .,.. .... , .. ·••· ... , ....... ,. .......... , ...
---·--"ALL ~LONG"( .. )
i-..__;..-;;~-J 1MANIAC ·---"-UM Ac~ • lrl .. Y-Owfl AM
tlmltt o4 C.tl Mew R.-11111tlefl Of rtnll t ""''' wtll lie witl'tln dt>ltneled 642-5678,
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f"IAllt NO EVIL f•1 E-•tlme4w Cott. u1..ooo.
'· Proje(t TIUo. Remo••• of Berrlert 10 H•ndl<-4 _.,...: Tt retnO¥t erchilt<t..,al 111"i." ttw11 11m11 ,,,. rnoOlllly ti t"4 hctnlli<~ '° e«eM lo Ctty._-,_ ...... llUllfl-and f.cllltlOI. (Tiii• it e
mYlll·.,_ ,,...,.,.. ... 1<11 wet~ In FY IW. .. I.
Lo<Aoll.., Val'IWt City-owned PMk• -puDlk letitllltt •lttlln IN CllV
of CM .. MIN. &ttlfnelecl CO.I· llS,000
&nvl,__l.e lltvltw At<Ofdl CIO<unwnllnt that Ult •fWlronmeflle l •• •It• of ttw• iwotec:O flew lleeft m-t>y .,. Clly of Coste Mew encl lhctl u.. prOPO ... Pf'•IKlt will he .. HO SIONll'ICAHT ifFECT ON THE EN·
VIAOHMEHT ---llY ,,,. Clly of Cott• Maw TM enlllr-1•1
R .. tt• Recorctt ert on ltlt et ti.. City of Cotta _., 1'1-1119 Ot--t.
ROOl'll 200. '1 l'alr Drive, c;o.te NIH•, Cellloltlle, end art •••llat>lt tor po;etl<
uamlrtelloft .... <•YlnQ Oii rtq\lf\t,
Tiie CJIV of Cot•• MeM wlll llllderllk•.,,. l>t'Olt<b -rlllld ....,. ""'"'
e100 Gnni "'"""'' frOfl'I tllt u S Ooperlnwnt of -..1119 ellCI urtMn Ot•tltl>'
ment (HUO) l/ll'dtf Tille I 0111\t HOV•lno -c-unlly 0.•9'-111 A<I Of
1'74, tltO (lty It ortllylne to HUD lllet tllt City of Cotta Maw elld f'rM
soueNt, 1n "'' ellkl•I c~lty 11 Cltv Menee9•. to-' to ecc.,c Ille IY•hd1cllon of ,,,. Ftdtr•I (011<1• II •n •CtlOll I• btOVfllt •• •llfttet
reMMW\tll1llllle• 111 rett tlell tt ttw tfl•lrOllftlOlllal rt'lltwt, Mltltfl m•lllllt IM
ecJIOll, end NI ,.,... , .. llO'ltlllllllltt llevt lliltn t .. l•flff, TltO 1.,al effKI ti
tlW urtlllc•lltll that 1111*1 lh eppr .. at, I .. City of Golla Mall INY tilt Ille
9 !0Ck Orem FUlllCb .... HUO •Ill h ..... u,, ... Ila ret4*1tl!MlltlM """' ,,,.
H•ll.iill lmrl,_,,.,,1.1 "-"" A<I ol , .... HUD will ace-sit 911 .OjKllOfl lo Ila .,.,.,,,. • ., ... , .. .-of f\jf'IOl, -K<-.....C• ...... (tr1111utton 1W1t7 If 11 11
Of\ -.. tlW ,.. ..... 111 ...... : A. Tilet t1W """tul*t we• "°' 1111~1 •-"'ecl •v Ille Giilet latc11U•e
Off le tr• Olfle' effker ...... kelll __,.....11¥ HUD; a. TMt uw ""4kMll'• &nvlr-tet R..i.w lllKtrd for u.. pro)t<t lfl•
OICOIU OlftlW-el• f"91M dt<I"-'• ,.,,_ ..... er II .. -11< .. lt to llW P ... ,., '" . .,..,,,..,_. ............. ...
()41ject .......... be "-'"' etlll ..,,..,_, HI K CMentt wllh r-lro•
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...... ., .. ,. """ ............... (;tl!Htftl• t00$7. O.jaCUell • ,.._ 9f ~ to\ .... , tllllot t-I-119'94 ...... wlH ,,_. M ~ l't "UD .... ..ie<tlOM rt(.t¥M et•r Alf11 tO, 1•1. "'111 ..
<efl•~'= =--Oft~« ... CJIY 9f Cetta-.. t1
l'r ........... ~~=--= c-N-...CAtata ,.....,.,..Dr .. e-tt Otlll' '11t4,Merdl "· ,.,, , ...... , 1•·--------.. ------------·
....
--------
(JAQ A~OEllMJ"') I
A£Vl!ALS In Ult
-ALLIOATO .. 1111
' •1111 f'llW 0-. -
-·-·--THI '°"" ..OUll 1111 -T .. lkANO 1111 .......... --MANIAC ",.. __ ,, __
1111A T Ct.IA Vlfl 1111 ...... ~~ --•T.-,IM-IACK flOADI 1•1 -llltONCO llU. Y '"' ---·-Tf QUllflO
CON
11.MUICAHO --·-...... T .. ~Al..WAYI ....... TWICC_ 1....ucaN~O .. ,
She returnt home to do back·
brealdna farm labor only to be
~discovered by Alec.
Ht!onceagaintrie towlnher.
She kff PS her distance thi&
tim:e , fleeing with her now
wtdowed mother <Rosemary
Martin) and brothers and sis
ters.
WE NEXT see Tess tn the
second hulf after an overly·
long lntermisslon Ii ving with
Aleo an a boarding home
Poor Tess.
Now it's Clare's turn to al
tempt a win back.
Tess. beautiful and still inno
cent looking. reruses a reunion
but has dirficulty JUStifyi ng her
existence with Alec and stabs
the latter to death
PoorT~s 1 She is on the run again Ttus
time it's with Clare But lhe
authorities arrest her arter the
pair spend a night sleeping on
the granite a t Stonehenge
Stonehenge 1s an arrangement
or prehistor ic monoliths in
Salisbury, England. The word
can also mean hanging
The viewer learns at film 's
close Tess was hanged
Poor Tess
..
J
-~~
e:00 ID e HEWS WONDER WOMAN
Wonder Woman 111111ara a
a<:tenhll s plan to prewve
a eorporatt magnate's
brain 1n the body ol an atn· ••t• 0 TIC TAC OOUOH
G) M"A"S"H
F11ner Mutcany takes
1>e1ng pesseo over for a
promotoon pn11osoonically
unhl ne neats ol the rapid
advaocemen1 made by e
lle<OIC helicopter ptlot
All in f amilg
Cl) GOOOTtMES
W111ona must maJce an
agon111ng dec1S1on that
could chanoe the rest ol
her Ille (Part 31
Danny DeVito's real-life mother. Julia
DeVito. guests as his character's mother
tonight on "Taxi." airing at 9:30 on
ABC, Channel 7.
fD '1!) ELECTRIC
COMPANY(R)
(J) CBSNEWS
®) ABCNEWS
6:30 0 BULLSEYE
G) WELCOME BACK,
KOTTER
Barbarino is convinced
thal ne hab lost nos "mag
oc w1111 women
Cl) BENNY HILL
Benny plays a court Jester
and soon loses hos head fD PROFILES Of
POWER
Guest Conc;iressman Jo1111
Rousi.e101
'1!) STUDIO see
Cop Snow E~plorer
Scouts ass1s1 me Glendale
A111on11 Police Dept New
Vorh Coty ~•ds make As on
disco dancing tRI
NEWS
@ BARNEY MILLER
Barney and wo10 hdllle a
~Quad room r11e wn11e a
churcn robber want~ out 01
his ceo and a younq couplt>
considers staying 1n llH!
s1a11on nous.a 10 comp1 .. 1e
lheor Su1C1de PBCI
CHANNEL LISTINGS
6:55 8 EDITORIAL
7:00 8 CBS NEWS D NBC NEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
R1ch1e and Arlene spilt up
only 10 discover 1na1 it's
loo lale to lone up otner
dates lor the prom
IJ ABCNEWS 0 JOKER'S WILD
G) M 'A'S'H
Hawk8ye and Trapper are
lell 10 enliven tne camp
when tne nurses are evac·
uated
Cl) STREETS OF SAN
FRANCISCO
A convict out ol San Ouen-
l1n hnds n1mse11 accused or
"'urde• and turns to Stone
lot nelp
fla OVEREASY
Guest wnter Jessamyn
West IRI
'1!) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
TIC TAC DOUGH
@) MERV GRIFFIN
CUt>sls O•son Welles Ket
ly Monte•th
7 30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosts Steve Edwards
Ml"lody Rogers V1s11
plJCt'~ around Los Angeles
U KNX I .ca~i L•" An11•·I· D KNBL I N8l I l I.I'• A 11111•l1 .. ,
0 l\TLA ln l 1l11'>All1j•·•"
Q KABC. rv 1 ABL 1 L ti" A11111•11•0,
J -.rMH 1Cfl...,1.., "' (),..q"
0 !\HJ IV 1lrhl 1l11., An ;1•11•
10 KCS l 1 Al1( <;.111 011 q m l\TT\, 1ln<11 I -. An 11• 1•
Cl) K.COP rv 1 I" I l I'. An'I• '• fD KC.f T T\ P8~1 Lu 1\n I""'>
il1) l\OCE IV PB'>1 H1.r1I" ;• " Bt' 1 r
~ere Laurel end Hardy
made 1nerr r11ms. a talk
w1tn longtome prOducer Hal
Roach an interview with
Mrs Ohv;ir Hardy, a look
at the funeral industry on
Los Angel8S
0 FAMILY FEUD 0 SHA NANA
Guest Bo Olddley
IJ EYEWITNESS LOS
ANGELES
HOSIS Inez Pedr018 and
Paul Moyer v1s11 wnn some
nigh rose wmdow washers.
a tall\ with some ot the kid
actors ol today a look at
some MGM memoirs 0 FACE THE MUSIC
G) ALLIN THE FAMILY
G1011a wears a black woo
and Mike t>eeomes unusu
ally amorous
Eli) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'1!) NEWS
PM MAGAZINE
A p1ohle or recording ~ta•
Stevie Wonder the tootn
less lhree-tegQed town cat
ol Natchez M1ss1ss1pp1
8:00 i) IE MAGNUM, PI
A wealthy t>hnd woman
asks lo• Magnum t help
wnen t•Ouble 11r1ses con
cern1ng her granddaugh
ter
0 BUCK ROGERS
Suck Wilma and Hawk
return to tne ship alter a
routine mission to discover
tnat tne ship 1s a duplicate
01 the Searcher and tno
crew are clones
0 MOVIE
• • '> The 1<enluck1an
119551 Burt Lancaster D•a·
na Lynn A man and nos
son right thetr way across
lne KllMIUCky Territory Into
Te~as 8 9 UOAI< AHO
MINOY
MOtlt hlls •n as Ille '"d
ltr\Q4ll ot a musical group
11ttet ,,_mo liTM lhe lemale
tntttllitltllf
1J YOOA CHOICE FOR
THEoe<:AM
P• 1 .,ltl OeDDv Boone
110.1 a p111iude to tne
Academ) Awarda In whlctl
the publk: Ch<>OMS wlM41fl
lrom the J~cademy·a noml· -• P.M. UAOAZINE
fl. profile ot reeoidlng 81ar
Stevie w., nder: th• tootn-
leH. thret•·legged town cat I
ot Natct,,11, Mississippi;
Chel Tell ma1te1 stulled
peppers, Judi Mluett
tall•• ju rerclses to the
zoo. JOyc 11 Kulhewlk has
UtlfCIM g<t dgBIS
a> MOVll!
• • ·~ "C h11a11an The
Lion" (19711) 8111 Tr•ve<S
Voromia M1:1<enne A t11tne
hon 11 tore ed 10 autV1ve on
the wilds o I Alriea
18 '1':> THEPAPEA
CHASE
A Matter 01 Anger' A
black atullent with a
m111conce1v•td notion ol her
worth aJmo II ruins her law
career
a:ao tJ {!I eo~:OM BUOOIES
lsabelHI gelJ en oppOt'luno-
ly to at rut her 1a1en1 as a
singer
G) CAROL UURNETT
AND FRIENDS
9:00 8 Cl) KN01'8 LANDING
JR Ewing S81$ out 10 pat·
ent and "'ar kel S•d s rad•·
colly new car engine.
despite Sid ':1 relusal to
deal with him
0
CO MMAN D
P(llFORMAllCE The
Sl•r' S•lute UM •"rt itO.ftl '
(t1~br•h1 entert#1lflU\ hono'
Pr~'1den1 Rt'c•uan itt hi\
tori< F-otO \ fr..,llt •
8 (!I BAAN FV MILLER
An ont1que :1011 •s kid
ntpped a co• man sells
reservations c•n a spact>
shuttle and inspector
Luger letls El.1rney he's
lea'lmg h1m S2~~) 000
C8 MERV GRll'FIN
Guests Orson Nelles Kel·
ly Monteith. Prosc>tla
Barnes Re> Allen Jr ano
Margo Sm1t11 Donald
• JOhdnSon
Qlil1) SNEAK
PREVIEWS
Roget Ebert .1nd GeM
Siske! t8Vl6W All N1ghl
Long. ·sack Rc·ads" and
lhree other mov1 ! s
9:30 IJ@) TAXI
Louie's mother moves out
and leaves her 1 echerous
son on nos owro with hos
new·lound tr-:lom and
bacnelor pad
ffD THIS OLD HOoUSE
Bob Vila cnoo-s the bath
CBS repeats hot stuff
Network grabs the brass ring again
N EW YORK l AP > CBS. m eansinanaverageprime·time .. Legends of t he West " and
with six of the week's 10 highest· minute during the week, 19.6 ··NBC Magazine ."
rated s hows. in cluding "60 percent of the nation's TV· H e re .ar e the w ee k 's 10
Minutes" in first place. won the equipped homes were tuned to highesl·rated programs :
networks· rat ings r aee for the CBS . "60 Minutes" with a rating or
fifth straight week. fi gures from TH E R ATI NG FO R .. 60 28.9 representing 22.5 m illion
the A.C. Nielsen Co showed. homes. "M·A·S·lf." 27 .5 o r 21.4 A sure sign of CBS' dominance Minutes" was 28·9· Nielsen says million. and "Gone with the
this season was Lhe remarkable that means of all the nation's Wind ." P a rt I . 26 .7 0 1r 20.8
success of four re peats offered hom es with television, 28·9 per mi II ion. all <.:RS. ··Greatest
by the network in t he week end eent saw at least part of the pro· American Hero ... 23.8 or 18.5
ing March 22 gram. million. ARC. "House Calls," ABC scClred with the pilot of a 23 2 or 18 1 millio n . CBS :
P ART I OF a two part repnsc new seri es, "The G reatesl "Carnival of Thrills ... C B~>. and
of the film classic "Gone with Ame rican Hero ... which finished. "Three's Company." ABC. both
the Wind" fin ished in third in fourth place after weathering 23.1 or 18 million : "Love U-0at,"
place. with "Carnival of Thrills." a challenge in court from the 22.2 or 17.3 m illion. and "That's
pre.empting the season's top· Pe 0 P 1 e w h 0 m ark e t lncr edtble." 22.1 or 17.2 m1.llion,
rated show. "Dalla!->." tied for "Superman." A judge refused to both ABC. a nd "Magnum. F'.I "
sixth block the ABC show 21.3 or 16.6 million, CBS.
In addition. a previously Ns c·s highest·rated progr am
broadcast made for TV movie. for the week, "Real Peopl e," T H E NEXT 10 shows
"K enny Rogers as Th e finished in a tie for 14th placr "T oo Close for Comfort."
Gambler ." finished 12th, with an with "Happy Days" on ABC ABC. and movie ··Kenny Roi~ers
animated special. "Rugs Bunny CBS AND NBC each had two as the Gambler," C BS. tie.
Bustin' Out." also broadcast shows among the week's fiv e '·Laverne and Sharley," ABC:
before. m 19th pl ace. lowest·r ated. C BS' "Concrete "Happy Days:· ABC. and "!Real
CBS' heavy representation in Cowboys" was No. 59. followed People." NBC. tie: "f'an~asy
the Top 20 nine shows con· by an "ABC News Closeup" Island,'. ABC: "CHiPs," NBC ,
t ributedtoa ratingfortheweek ca ll ed "Soldiers o f the "Hart to Hart," ABC. ~nd
of 19.6 to 17.5 for ABC and 15.5 Twilight,". "The Gangs t er "Bugs Bunny Bustin' Out" and
for NBC. The networks say that Chronicles" on NBC, ABC's "Knot's Landing," both CBS. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'-~~~~~~~~~~~--=:..;.....~~~~~
THEPOWEROFEVIL
ISNOWNGER
INTHE HANDSOFACHILD
THE FINAL
CONFLICT
THE LAST CHAPTER IN
THE ~TRILOGY
Li)~
81111 fWIHTlllH ClNTIJf!Y-fO(
( L M. BOVO )
INFORMS In the
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Thursday, March 28, 1981 HIP
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA 8 8:00 ''The Kentuckian."
Burt Lancaster and Diana Lynn star ln
this frontier adventure movie.
KHJ ffJ 8: 00 -Your Choice for the
Oscars. Viewers pick their favorites ln
this 16th annual popularity awards pro-
gram hosted by Pat and Debby Boone .
NBC 8 9 :00 "Command
Performance: The Stars Salute the
President." Celebrity entertainers honor
President Reagan in this special at his·
toric Ford's Theater.
ulea and the kllt:hen cell•·
nets and d1scu1Mt the
progress ol the eleetrn:a.I
worl<
'1'i) TOMORROW /
TOOAY
A report wh1en locuses on
the war aga1nsi lhe the
Mt1<Merr•nean Fru11 Fly •
look et NASA s reuseable
key space snuttle, an
examination ol the Fein·
~ldD1e1
10:00 IJ Cl) KNOTS LANDING
Sid and Gary tear lor thetr
ltve$ otter 1ney ass1s1 an
F01 1nveshga11on ol lhe
underworld uome NEWs
IJ@) 20120 fD MASTERPIECE
THEATRE
Country Matters Breeze
Anstey Two young wom-
en are awakened to the
elemental and passionate
side ol tneH natures when
1ney leave a 1ob1ess com·
muno1v 1oso m NEWS
Cl) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
'11) MYSTERY
Rumpole 01 Tne Bailey
Rumpo1e And T ne Age For
Re11remen1 Rumpole s
best clients tne Timson
lamoly seek his help when
the ag1nq Percy Tomson is
caught wotn a stolen relog
1ous wor• 01 an 1Par1 61
11·00 8 0 IJ 'I @, NEWS 0 STAR TREK
Two ol the EntttPflM's
er-memt>ets are lr.illed In
outtt •P-and KIR le
determ"'8d 10 deltroy the
eruture respontitlle. G NEWLYWED BAME
G) M0 A08°H
When Hot Upe phonet
lrom TOltyo lo .ay there's
big naws," Frank
asturnes rt s hll expected
promotion
Cl) 8AR£TTA
Frustrated In hil eHor1s to
na11 a croohed nareottCS
OQ&nt. Tony resigns to be
tree to stalk 111m
&:I DICK CAVETT
Guest Toni Mor11son
!Part I ol 2)
1 t :30 8 Cl) THE JEFFERSONS
The Jellersons and Wtl·
hses l1gnl a Cnrlstmes Eve
battle over Lionel and Jen-
ny's wedding IR) 0 TONIGHT
Host Jonnnv Carson
Guests Nas1ass;a 1<1nsk1
Pele Barbuth
IJ @) ABC NEWS
NIOHTLINE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL
G) HOGAN'S HEROES
Hogan s plan to dynamite
a tram is interrupted by tne
Inspector General m m CAPTIONED ABC
NEWS
-Ml>NIGKT-
t2 00 8 MCMILLAN 4
WIFE
M.ic returns lor his annual
JOHN DARLING
n1val r~ duty WM t"-
~ AO-.oc:M• 0...81 Corps and la ~ to
delend • young w..itenant
~Mdofll'IUfdef 9 MOVIE * * * "Otadllne U I A
( 1952) HlifnPhrll'I' Bogart.
KIM Hunttt A blg~ty
~ editor bent on
oeuinv It\ eJlpoae ioc1t •
ll0tn1 wlln a powertvl
~Ohlel •Ill CHAAU£'8 AHGILI
The Angels go undercover
Inside tne danc:e studio 01
a llandaome, bl11Ckmamno
9!i10IO (R) U OUN8MOt<E
An oullaw'• young brotner
la Hfloully tnjur.O in an
aectdenl and Doc la held
captive to tr"' him GI MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE
Jim Phelps becomes a
partner In llave trade When
he ollera Cinnamon lor an
upcomtng •uct1on IP•rt 21 a> ONE STEP BEYOND
Tne H•nd A n.ghtclub
p.•no player IS Pl119Ued by
a trign1en1ng pn41nomen9m
<l!f he stabs 1 girl
12:30 0 TOMORROW
Guests NewswHI. 1 Mex•
co C.ty bureau cn1el Betn
Nissen Jetty Lee Lewis
Joan Baez eharacter actor
Jan Leighton o sell
appo1n1ed Soutn Carolina
voodoo king (RI
Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND
Make Me Not A Woten A
young girl tells her parents
01 tnongs 1na1 sne "hos
seen' and they accuse ntlr
ot being a sorceress
1:00 Q DON LANE
Gues1s Juliet Prowse 01
Harder Ph1ll1p Gould
G) MOVIE
• • • Tht> Heroes Ot
Telemark ( 1965) l\1rk
Douglas R1cnard ~la"'~ A
water plant 1s <lesiroyed on
World War II lo s1av1> oil
German developmen1 01
an atomic bOmb
(I) INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
t:tOIJ MOVIE **. Thi> TraCktll'>
t 197 IJ Sammy Oav1~ Jr
Ernes1 8 019n1t1e A CO(k~
man laktis charge ot il
11ack1ng operatoon enoaro
ger1ng tl'le loves ol lhf' mPn
1n th& po~s,;
~ CAROL BURNETT
AND FRIENDS
l kltt "Tiit F8n'lly," "'Ole
Wlth1n9 WfM .. t:aoe MOYll * • ' DMIJI SmlWle On A
MurOt<•r" ( 1973) Ewa
Aultn. l(laul Klnalll A
young man !Arllpera with
the auper11atural anO
tt1t1nptt 10 '•tor• ~i. to
1"90..0 1:461 H1W1 1:60 MOVll!
• •1• "Mlnnetote Clay"
(1965) Cameron Mttehell.
~~1"~:E
2:36 . EDITORIAL
2:40 MOVIE * • "Soul Sotdle<" ( 197 t)
Rater Johnton, Cesar
Romero
3:00 «1) MOVIE
• • r "Tw11ted Brain"
( t9H) Pel Cardi. Jonn
Niiand
3:30G) MOVIE
• • • • 'The Gay Otvor
cee f t9J•1 Fred Ast•ire.
Ginger Roger~
3:3'0 NEWS
3408 MOVIE
• , Cal1lorn1a 119611
Faith Do"'e1guw Jock
M1noney
•.30«1) NEWS
f 'riday••
Day• im.-ffot•ie•
-MORNl«J-
5:00 U • • l w1h9ht On The
Rio Grande f 1947! Gene
Auiry
1 t 00 II) • • The M~n From
Ulall 119341 John Wayne
Gabby Hayes
11·300 * * / TMSevenlh
Dawn (Part i1 f t964/ W1I
ham Holdf'n Cnpuc1ne
-AFTERNOON-
12 00 m * * * Tho> Man From
ColorddO I t948J Glf'11n
Ford W1ll1am Holden
Cl) •• * YQUngDlood
Haw~e t 19641 James
f 1 .Jr'ltiS.C.uS. Suzanue
Plest•e""
3 00 HJ • • All My D11r1>n9
DJuqhter~ Ann1vetSdry
11'17 JI Roller t Young R .. v
1uond Masse)
3 30 0 • • rne Swiss
f dnllr> RoDin\On I 197~1
M,11t1n Molner Pat Delany
B.ised on ""' "cry o,
Jonann Wys~
by Armstrong & Batiuk
Pub lie TV collects
TnH•~d
largest donations
NEW YORK IAPI Publi<' TV viewers. apparenUy seeing
"the handwriting on the wall," contributed record amounts recent·
ly to local stations threatened by a loss of government support, of·
fi cials say.
The public TV system reportcc1 that viewer pledges during the
recent Festival '81 fund·ralsing campaign tot<.1led $26.8 million, a
29 percent increase over last year
"We made it clear every night that we are in a time of need,
that federal funding won't #!,O on forever. and I think viewers
responded to that." said Harold Holzer. a spok e~m an for New
York's WNET.
Andrea Marcovicci stars as
a b lackmail victim on
.. Magnum, P. I. .. tonight at 8
on CBS. Channel 2.
"I think people responded more generously than ever before
because they s aw the handwriting on the "all that the federal
government is not going to support pubh e broadcasting much
longer," said Christopher Ridley, a !->pokesman for Boston's
WGBH. a major source of programming for the PBS system
Presents
MARCH 30th
9'111'-"'11!!11111111111! ----------~
Gentlemen Wetcome
After 10:30 P .M.
COME AND
GET 'EMI
Liv• Enttrtalnr"Mnt
8 Nitti AWMk
111w.1•k
CMtll .....
NEYER BERIEs&M~ot-.etr oeatest hits-pluslutlesclassics!
•
.......... ----,_
OrangeCoMt OAILV.PtLOT/Thurld•y, March 28, 1911
.
Marine Air Reserve Lt. Col. Steven J . Sewell,
Irvine, ducks in vain as squadron members
gleefully douse him with water after his last
flight as commanding officer of Marine
Attack Jet Squadron 134 at MCAS, El Toro.
The ceremony is a tradition. Lt. Col. Don
Duffer is new ~ommander.
Loving costs
exceed index
NEW YORK <AP> -Feeling battered by tbe
latest boost in the Consumer Price Index? When it
comes lo inflation. the government n1ures don't
even begin to measure the pain, according to a finan-
cial analyst who has his indexes on everything from
the "Cost of Loving" to the "Cost of Livin1 It Up.•· · ··u the CPI accurately measures inflation for
an average American family, it's purely an acci·
dent,'" says Raymond F. Devoe Jr.
He says the index doesn't reflect changing
lifestyles or spending patterns. Nor does it cover a lot
of the products -some of them admittedly frivolous
that people spend money on.
TAKE THE "COST OF LOVING." DeVoe
calcuJated what a first date, courtship and honey·
moon would have cost In terms of 19~ prices and
lifestyles. He Included things like dinner. theater
tickets and ''tips to circling violinists at a romantic
restaurant. ..
He added up the cost of the same items today and
found that the median increase in prices was 420 per·
cent. During the same period. the Consumer Price
Index has risen 228 percent. The February increase,
announced Tuesday, was 1 percent.
Among the specifics of seduction were : a bottle
of Dom Perignon champagne, $12 in 1955 vs. S65 to·
day ; a carriage nde through Central Park, $10 vs.
$40 ; lunch at an intimate Italian restaurant, SJ.75 vs.
$19.75 per person, and a ticket to the ballet, $3:60 vs.
$20. The lip to the violinists, De Voe estimates. would
have to be $5 today. up from 50 cents in 1955.
DEVOE, WHO WRITES A WEEKLY newsletter
on the stock ma rket for Bruns Nord em an Rea & Co ..
said in an interview that the reason for the "Cost of
Loving" index goes beyond proving that romance is
expensive.
··1 wanted lo show how anachronistic the CPI
was," he said, noting that the government figures
a re based on 1972· 73 spending habits.
Those habits have changed, he said. just as dat·
ing practices have changed. The reaction of today 's
young people lo the items on the ' ·cost of Loving'· in·
dex is "how quaint.·· De Voe said.
"Our typical affectionate consumer may now
only whisper ... Your place or mine?' at a
neighborhood dating bar.''
THE "COST OF LIVING IT UP" index
•measures the price of products bought by what
fDeVoe calls "upwardly mobile" people "trying to
demonstrate. . . thatthey' re wealthy."
It too has risen faster than the Consumer Price
Index. From 1974 to 1980, the CPI increased by about
75percent. DeVoe's "Cost of Living It Up" index rose
133.Spercent.
The index includes such non·basics as a Brooks
Brothers suit -$165 in 1974 and $360 today; dinner for
ne at La Grenouille, one of New York's most ex·
pensive reataurants -$40 today compared to $18. 75
in 1974, and an hour of tennis at the Wall Street Rae·
~quet Club -then $15, now $4-0.
i DeVoe would be the first lo admit that his
calculations aren't scientific and often are based
"just on persona! experience."
It wu a personal experience that led him to
create his first index, a "Trivia" index, in 1971. He
had a hangover ind went out lo seek relief with a
milkshake. It cost him 75 cents. He was astonished
and set out lo measure the little things that "nibble
away" -things like an ice cream cone or a
shoeshine. From 1974 to 1980 alone, De Voe said, the
''Trivia'' index has risen by 120percent.
Raid on theater
nets owner and 6·
REDWOOD CITY CAP}-Tbeownerofan adult
theater in Redwood City has been arrested for the
second time for investlcation of running a house of
prostitution.
, San Mateo County sheriff's deputJes raided a
show at the Lily Theater at which a 19-year-old
woman dancer allegedly perfonned sex acts with
patrons. Arrested were theater owner Ph111p Malta,
dancer Pauline HUI and Ii ve mate cµstomers.
Two weeks ago, Maita and 21 others were arrest-
ed oa limilar morals charges foUowin1 another raid.
City'a image fouled
KANSAS CITY (AP) -Local offtclab here
claim a milt&ke in a aatloaal report on air poUu·
tloe la •rOMOU1l7 liYlnl Jtwu Ctty the reputa·
t.loD u a d'1 ln whlcb alr qda.Uty la deterloratlnf .
. Tbe /Jr Quality Forum -a IJ'OUP eoulltlnl
cbiell7 of elected oftleiala from ltueu and Ml.I· ~ -called for tbil federal COUDdl OD EnvlrOD· mental Quality to MDd ~ lafOl'maUoo to a1J
J 11,000 neifMata of tbe report.
lat UMn la ltule ctauc:. tbe report will be cor-.j reci.d. 1lnce tbe councU'1 8dlYiU" a.re belnl
l HYtNIJ curtalMd chl9 to budfll NII.
PenaltB •tap
Court reje~ts White ~
lht trial court failed to comlder
m1t11aU.1 clrcumatancn before
aentenctq. nae defense arcued
that White bad no prior criminal
rtcord, was 1ufferln1 from a
mental or pby1ical condition
that reduced hla culpability, and voluntarily took responsiblllty for
tbedeatba.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) !.-Tbe and l'CKDI White 1u1lty ot voh&n·
1t1tt Cowt ol Appeal llu re-tary manalauthter.
fu1ed to Nduoe th• prtaon Mn· H~ wu aentenced to 7~ yean
ttace of Dan Wblte, tbe former In pr·llon in July 1'79.
oltr olftdal convicted of the Ctty "1'be facta and clrcumataacea
Hall 1ltytq1 of Mar.or G90r1e of lhla cue virtually mandate Moecone and Superv tor Harvey the lmpoeltJon of the maximum
Mllk. pena lty allowed by law," the The d1cl1lon Wedneaday court said.
mean• that II maximum credft W hlte had reslsned from tbe
11 applied for •ood behavior, the Boa rd of Supervlton but bad
Hrllnt White could be paroled la ion•' to City Hall to uk Moacone
July lm. lo r•eappolnt him when the 1boot-
A {ury decided that White wu tn11-1 occurred. men ally unbalanced at the Ume The court saJd there wu no
of the Nov. 27, 1'78, shootlnp merit in White's contention that . ~~~~~~~---"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. ,,.... .... nn .......... ,
All S-lt«n• are Subject to
Stoot! on Hand All
Ptlot091aphle, Typographical.
Clet'lcal and Ptlntlng Error• i re
Subject to Cotr.ctlon.
to
'
stay In hot
water
30-gillon w1ter helter
with energy 11vlng
1emper1ture 1hu1-ott
11499
40..,."etl .... 124.IS i.,11
SO.,.llet1 •.•. 114.8! 18cll
bag up your
troubles
. 1nd your leaves. 11wn debris. trash
1nd morel Package or 25 32-gallon size
liners '
349
singularly
super
10""x10"" single grill h1bach1 Cast iron
body. wooden base and handle
#1315 Reg 5 99
3••
one good tum
deserves another
Delta kitchen faucet with 8° center
sw1vel1 lor water conlrol #•OOWF
Reg •9.95
3488
household
hand truck
All metal hand truck
tor hauling around
he1vy truh can1. Reg. ue.
•
for safei
stepping
,
Derby 4' wooden 1tep ladder featurff
palntlutlllty ahelf with popular aide
spreader lock Ing device. Sturdy eon-
1tructlon. wobble realatant. #390. Reg.
19.95
time to 10 ......... ..... ......
Milk, 48, and Moacone, 49,
were tunned down in their City
Hall offices after the mayor re-
ject.cl WhJte'a plea for relnatate-
ment. White ned the scene, but
surrendered at a nearby police
station a short time later .
.,..~
KILLED 2
D•n White
I '
88
spred It
on the house
Goe• on easily, drres quickly to a
durable !lat finish that resists peeling
Waler clean-up Reg 16 59
11 49 ... ~ft
roll on the color
Deep well pl1s1jc tray with ladder
hooks. made io Kerm·s rigid specs
Reg 189
111
profnslonal
touch and cut
71/.'' circular saw from Sklll Gives exira
cutting capacity combined wllh super
comlon 1nd handhng ab11tty w. H P
motor #574
make It a hobby
to do It right
Dremel Moto Toot• with over 30 acces-
sories Is your complete hobby kit, #261
Reg 57.95.
3488
•J''·fr•+
•trim up
the •klll
341
Vlgoro't fl1h b ... comp .... plant food
pt~ Mllttly green QrOW1h. Fine
10·&.5 formu,a with organic ll1h. Reg.
4.at
Redwood tub with dralneo-hol" 11 a
great plac. to houae your growing
friends. tPS-HT12. Reg. 7.99
Mclaine 2 H.P edger/trimmer gtve1
you profe11lon11 rnu111 without effort.
Rugged d"lgn. #100.2R.
15911
Son 01e9~ f rwy
' -. . .... -.. -~·......,.
-
I
. I
GENERAL NEWS Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thursday, March 28. 1981 L
Waiiress devotes home to Presley memorabiliQ ~
HOLLYWOOD tAP >-£xeeot for tbe ov .... lae portrait of &Ml
and a atp that 11y1 "Preeleylaod.'' Dora MabriU'a home mllbt be
ju1t IDOther tan bouae with a wbJU plcket fence.
But someday tbe 31.y..,~ld Cuban rel\.tfff bopea to tee a park
dedicated to Prealey and Martlya Monroe at her home<>nthecornerol
Metro.e and Vlne, where tM blow.up of the K.lnf 1lta above a amall tr~IUa. Placards with meuacea about Presley and ot.htr celebrities
adotn the plcket fence.
"It was awful to put that book out when be died," 1he aaya.
"Maybe he tc:w:* dope -I don't Hy the book Ued. But they caJled
themaelves friend.I of Elvis and he fed tbem fof 20 yean. A friend wUI
never do aomethln1 Uke that.•' Ma. Mabritthaa met maayoftheataranamed lntheotberpoeten
on her property In her Job waitinl on tables at Lucy's El Adobe. the
Meidcan restaurant located not too far from her house and frequented
by show bu.llnes1 and polltioaJ rt1urea such 11 Gov. Edmund 0 .
Brown Jr.
M1. Mabritt says she hopes to fund the Presley-Monroe park
wltb prollta from a book 1hei1 wriUn1 "about m y life right here." and
11 acceptJng no donations from other Presley fans bec•uat "l don't
know the laws and I wanttodowhat'arlght."
A superstJUout woman, she doesn't care to diacuu the white El
Dorado Cadillac parked in her front yard (Presley had a habit of
giving luxury cars to casu1tl frhmds and admirers> or her feellna11
about Marilyn Monroe
Ms. Mabritt, who aaya she met Presley wbUe be w11 fllmln1 a
mo•le in Cwver City, describes "Presleyiand" as a mlaalon of
revtnJe a1ain1t the exploitation that followed the late rock star's
death3""'yearaa•o.
"Unda Ronstadt -you wear the beat of all Jewelry, 1lncerily,"
read1oneat1n.
Ma. MabrtU. has met the PoP music diva at Lucy's but doesn't
know lt MIH Ronstadt la aware of her Elvia obae11ion because she
doesn't talk about it at work.
"There is a story behind Marilyn, but l want to finish with Elvis
first ," shesay11.
But she conlldeuhyly her vision oft he park. 1itl
"I want to have music, sot\ ... ,"she says. "You will be able to •.•
pu11h a button In the fence and music will come out, like Disneyland " ~ SM does not attend Presley convenUon1. has never been lo
Graceland, Presley's TennHHe mansion, and partkuJarly reaents
the.bodyguards who described Presley's alleced dru1 habit.! in detail
lntl!ebook"Elvts: What Happened."
··But Gov. Brown told me be read an article about me,·• she aaya·
proudly. "It was a week later, but he wat the llrst one to tell me he'd
seen it."
•' She points at the side of a wall adjoining her property that she •
recently painted blue •nd adds, '·Maybe there wl II be 11 fountain there
APW6"pMi.
PAIR TO BUILD THREE IHIPS LIKE TITANIC AT COIT Of .... 5 MILLION IACH
Jame1 B•Hley, left, and Terry Marler look at Model of llner that Hnk In 1112
Lux11ry to ride waves
Reservations pour inf or new Titanic
SAN DIEGO <AP1 Titanic
ti, a floating palace built by the
same people who gave you
Titanic l. is scheduled to hit the
ways or Southampton in three
years. But already. promoters
say "people everywhere .. are
re.serving space.
·'This Is all happening too fast
we're sorry the story eot
out." says James M. Beasley.
To.ttaandle all the business,
Beasley said he a nd Terry
Marler have decided to build
three and l'lol just one of the $46S
milllon ocean Llners.
The first hurdle, of course, Is
financing , but Beasley satd.
"We're talking to the banks.
"In the old days, you built a
ship and then worried about fill·
ing lt," he said in an interview.
"We're going the other way."
Marler has talked with the
marin e de s ign rirm of
R osenblatt & Son, but
s pokesman David M . Krepchin
Nuke foes
plan events
in Clemente
The Orange County Alliance for
Survival will sponsor two events
this week in San Clemente to
co mme m or ate the s econd
anniversary o f the nuclear
accident at Three Mile Island in
Pennsylvania.
Dr . Go rdon M acleod .
se cretar y o r h ea lth for
Pennsylvania al the lime of the
nuclear acci9ent. will speak
tonight at 7. 30 in the Little
Theater at San Clemente High
School
MacLEOD WILL discuss the
health effect s o f a nuc lear
accident and the problems of
evacuation from a contamination
zone.
San Clemente High School is
located at 700 Ave. Pico.
Admission is free and the public is
invited.
Saturday the alliance is
planning a noon vigil in San
Clemente at the Intersection of
Avtnlda Del Mar and El Camino
Real.
THE VIGIL WILL include
placards and lnformation sheets.
Spokesmen for the alliance say
they are opposed to the San
Onofre nuclear generating
station, located Just south of San
Clemeht.e.
The group ls encoura1in1 the cl()f ure of Unit 1 at the plant,
and the conversion or Unlta 2
and 3 to an alternative fuel.
For information on ellher
event, caU 99'7 ·"22 or 494-0628.
Boy Scouts
fund target
Newport Btach ruldenta Alan
PeW.. RUIHll Und and John Pierce are worktna to earn
.$25.otO for the Sustalnln1 Mem·
ber-hip CampaJp of the Boy
Scolit.I ot America
said "we don't know ir the
project is practical.'·
In another interview, Marler
said "we figure we can gel our
money back in 16 voyages.·· He
said there will be 600 passengers
in double occupany two-room
suites costing $1.000 a day, per
person.
A plan to make it! homepe>rt
San Diego has been sunk by the
city. Beasley, 47. said "they're
afraid of the impact or 1,200
more sailors an town." There
would be that many s hip
employees.
The plan calls for nine 28-dar
cruises including a worldwide
one annually. Beasley said the
first will be built in Belfast by
Harland and Wolff shipyard,
which built Titaia I. Jn that
ship billed as the drost luxurious
a fl o at. a s uite between
Southampton and New York City
cost $4,500 but it hit an iceberg
and went down with 1,500
passenge rs in 11 .000 feet or
water April 15, 1912.
The first ship will be called
Titanic ll because it implies lux-
ury and enjoys "instant name
recognition.·' according to
Marler, who hopes to win a gov·
ernment subsidy by agreeing to
convert Titanic II to a troop
transport for 15,000 soldiers in
event of war.
Marler sells marine Insurance
as president of Transit Risk, a
San Diego-based international
brokerage of which Beasley is
chairman.
In 1972. Marler was campaip
adviser when Beasley, a busi·
ness consultant, ran ror the
Democratic nomination for
president of the United States.
The two reversed their roles
three years later, with Marler
running r o r governor of
California a political unknown
before and after -and Beasley
as his chief adviser They say
their new venture is on firmer
ace.
Film series suspendetl
Newport's library
slates inventory
The Newport Beach Public
library will embark soon on the
first shelf-by·shelr inventory of
books in the past decade.
The task also means cancella-
tion of the library's Tuesday
night film series or the Newport
Beach branch through March
a nd April due to the inventory.
Newport Center and Balboa
library branches will close April
20 through May 2, while the
Mariner's Cor ona del Mar
branches remain open . officials
say
Mariner's and Corona de! Mar
branches will then close May 11
through May 23 for inventory
while the other two branches
open again for the public use.
Library hours Mondays
through Thursdays, 10 a .m . to 9
p .m , and Fridays and
Saturdays 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m.
will remain the same during the
inventory disruption.
S•11lut Rt• a..-l••r
A North Hollywood hair stylist
will address a seminar at Holi-
day Inn In Costa Mesa on Fri-
day, with proceedl Solnl to St.
Jude Childr e n 's Research
Hospital, Mempbl•, Tenn.
Geor1e Carroll'• aemlnar wUJ
include three HMtoM for salon
owners, atyllsta and ltudentl. ...................
Are you expertenclnc a com·
munication1 1ap with your
canine?
Enroll your pet and )'OUrtell ln
the 1prin1 1u1lon of do1 obe·
dlence traintn1 throutb lh•
La1una Beach recrutJon de-
partment. ca ..... mttt. Tuesd.a11frotr\1
to t p.m . ln the LaJuna F..UY11
parklnl lot, ju1t nQl'lb ot the
Boya Club, at ltoo Lacuna Can·
yon.
NEWS BRIEFS
The eight-week course is for
dogs six months of age and older
and will cover commands. cor-
rection of bad habits and off.
leash training.
Cost is S27 and more informa·
lion can be obtained by calling
497-3311
8 Mrfll•r• rill# 11\I
Santa Ana Personnel Director
Donald Bott complained to
Irvine pe>llce that burglars had
rifled hi s recreational vehicle
parked at Laguna Hills Gun
Club.
Bott said the RV Is stored al
the lakeside club near Moulton
Parkway and Irvine Center
Drive when not in use.
He said someone broke into it
and stole more than $2,000 worth
or fishing gear and marine
equipment.
A rtuu tl~--~•ftl
Proof of residence wlll be re-
quired for artist.! wiabin1 to ex-
hibit ln the 1981 Festival of Arts
In Lagwut Beach durtn1 Juryin1
Aprtl 11 at the Irvine Bowl, 650
La1una Canyon Road.
Before leaving works for Jury-
ln1. applicants muat produce a
valid driver's license 1howtn1
their corr~t rHldence. or aome
other valid document.
Qualllytn1 rffict.ncea wtU be
determined by lip codt. &lllible
codea are 9*0, 9*1, ..a, '*'· tr:a82.&, ms1, nsn, .... 12872 and nae, eompri•inl t.be
coastal ar111 from NewJ)Ort
Beacb to San Clemente.
Aloac wttb prool of retldnce,
tbrM worb by UM artllt muet beeubmi~.
Tb• f..Uval will run from JUiy
14 throqb A&&IUlt 30.
I getafeelingorwater."
HB sports funds cut
Budget squeeze fore es $300,000 reduction
Trustees of the Huntin1ton
Beach Union High School Dis-
trict have slashed $299,312 from
athletic pro1rams, including
ellmlnation of boys' gymnastics.
s urfing, 1lrls' junior varsity
field hockey and golf.
The board also decided to
close the district's s wimming
pools in the summer months and
2~ months in the winter and to
purchaae pool covers to reduce
water heating costs.
A policy to reduce the dis·
trict's electric bill also was
adopted by the board. Recrea-
tional night tennis and basket-
ball will be restricted, as will
the use of stadiums and gyms
for night rehearsals and prac-
tices.
The athletic cuts were recom·
mended by a committee or com-
munity members. athletic direc·
tors , principal s and
administrators
The athletic cuts are part of
the district's $3.8 million reduc·
lion from next year's estimated
$42 million operating fund.
Previous cutbacks included
laying off more than 75 teachers.
42 counselors. nine librarians.
and reducing the number of
classes available to juniori. and
seniors.
Consumer
• services
talk topic
Pat Blow. a volunteer
worker for the Irvine
Consumer Lea1ue, will
be the guest speaker at
the April 8 meeting of
the Orange County
Coast division of the
California Retire d
Teachers Association in
La1una HUis.
The board also 1s considering
a price increase to• high school
s porting events to generate
more revenue for the programs.
The board also asked for a
study of the (unctions or the full
time athletic trainers used by
tbe district's six hi gh schools 1l
was suggested by Superlnten
de nt Frank <Jake> Ahbott. that
the trainers be reduced to part·
time employees.
The savin~s from the athletics
cuts include $237,250 hy closing
the distract 's h ve S IA 1mmang
pools during June, July, August.
December. January and hair of
November Covering the pools
when not in use is included in
the savings by reducing h• ating
costs by JO percent
The distri<.·t expect!> lo save
$35,587 by reducing use of lights
a nd $26,775 by cutting the sports
programs and coaching posi·
lions
OCC pair publish
composition text
Two Orange Coast College English professors' book designed
for college freshman composition student!> has been published by
Little, Brown and Company.
Titled "One to One,'' Charles Dawe·s and Edward Dornan's
work 1s the only text available designed s pecifically for students an
conference-centered classrooms. the publisher says.
Such instruction is seJr.pucerl and individualized. The text is
designed so that students may utilize it without the direct as·
sistance or an instructor
Dawe has be~n an OC:C staff member since 1971 He t<1 ught 1n
the Newport-Mesa School Distnct the 10 previous years
Doman has been at OC:C since 1970 a nd previously taught
English in the Huntington Beach Union Hi gh School District.
The meeting will
begin at noon in Leisure
World Clubhouse 2. Mrs
Blow will discuss her
group's ser vices to
Orange Co u~ty con -
sumers .
Reservations for the
luncheon that will pre·
ceed Mrs. Blow's talk
must be made by April
1 A $6 check should be
sent to Miss Ethel G.
Pratt. 2 8132 Via
Bonalde. Mission Viejo,
92692.
SAVE $85.00 on SUNBEAM'S complete Food Preparation
Center with Electronic Speed Control. The M111er includes two
sta1nlees steel muung bowls and dough hooks . The Food
Processor-stainless cutt1n9/processin9 blade and 1nseris
lor shclng and shredding plus all blending accessories (Cal
# 36· 11 ) Save more al Coast Hardware-n·o·w
For information, call
Richard Epp al 837-9094.
Lagunam
get film
The film "Gable and
Lombard" will be shown
free for senior citizens
in Laguna Beac h on
April 17 at South Coast
Theater, 162 South Coast
Hi1hway.
Screening of the film
is sponsored by Laguna
Federal Savings. It will
be shown at 2 p.m.
Tickets are available
at the Senior Citizens
Club in Laguna , 515
Fore11t Ave.
State gas
use down
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-Motorilta drove more
In California but used
leaa gasoline this
January than the same
month laal year, lhe
state report&.
Ernest Dronenbur1,
chairman of the state
Board of Equalisation,
said the n1ur• indicate
a trend toward mor•
economical can.
The board eatlmated
total distance driven
over Callfornla roada ln
January at e.M billJon
mllt1, up 5.1 perctDt
from Jamaary 1*. Tbat
comlMlhd to I.Dereu•
of I percent in ti••
number of llcen11d
cll1vtn ud I. 7 percent
In tbe number ol r•t·
lit.end can and tnacka.
3-TIER
HANGING
BASKETS
3·tler hanging wire bHket
holds vegeteblea fruits.
plants etc. Rust resistant.
299
SALAD
SPINNER
599
REG. $8.99
For perfect salads every time. spin dry
fruit a and leafy vegetables ( # Sal·12)
STEAMER
BASKET
299
REG. $4.49
Stalnleaa steel vegetable steamer
bHket preaervea natural vitamins.
NEW! HELLERMADE
SPACE SAVERS
Grids & Undershelf Baskets
HELLERMADE 9rld1 add more uaeble 1pace
for walle. Anywhere. F11ten to th• wall for
ln1tant contemporery pegboard. No paint·
Ing. Fill any decor. Wall hook• Included.
.·
·. ..
·.
·:
________ '-'II,..., _____ _
1!9 ~~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT {Thuraday, March 26, 1981
fEITURll
\
When a dog
talks ...
'We looked at each other,
no one t.vanting to believe
what they'd just heard ... '
By JEFF PARKER
Ol Ill• 0•1ly Ptlol S"ll
J ean Thornton of Laguna
Bea ch claims her dog speaks in
full sentences, yet considers her
sanity unblemished.
us in on the history of her dog's
linguistic development.
. l . . .
"She started talking about a
year ago," Mrs. Thornton re
members "We couldn't really
believe it when she said her first
sentence "
··A bout a year ago she started
saying hello, whic h evolved
from the simple howl she went
into when the fi re trucks went
by. We were proud of her. but
one word is not unus ual
Xavier Cugat had a Chihuahua
that said hello too.
Jean Thornton encourages Chiquita to say ·Hello!· .. and she does. O~tly P1101 S~tl P-.,
Neither could we. ~o an ex
elusive interview with the talk
mg dog. Ch iquita, was set up at
the Udder Place in Laguna
Beach. her master's cafe.
Perched on Mrs Thornton's
lap. 10-year-old Chiq uita, a
Chihuahua1terrier mix. seemed
nervous With a little prodding
from Jean. she howled an inspired
1f somewhat obscure hello
"But not long after that, my
husband and I took her with us
to meet some re latives who
came in from out of tow~ We
were driving in the-car. and
as ked Chiquita to say hello to
them. which she did. But we
were astonis h e d when s he
fo llowed it with 'how are you?'
'All right.· We were totallv
amazed ." Mrs Thornton re-
membered.
Chiquita 's mouthings resem
ble English, if you stretch your
definition of language, and your
imagination. She gets the right
amount of syllables for each
word. straining for pronuncia·
l ion that does not come easily to
her
Daily Pilot.
Chiquita·
DP:
Chiquita.
DP.
Chiquita ·
Hello Chiquita. Rooroo. i Hello J
How are you?
Rooree. I All right)
That's nice.
Rooreeroo?
I How are you?)
DP Fine I'll ask the questions
here.
Ch14u1ta · Roor ooree (He llo,
Ray)
Chiquita: Rooreeroo., I How are
vou ?>
DP: Itoldyoul 'mfine.
Chiquita: R~ree. (All right>.
Chiquita soon grew bored with
the interview and wandered off
to the back room of the Udder
Place for a nap.
"She won't s p eak to just
anyone," Mrs . Thornton said.
''The humane officers were in
the other d ay, and s he wouldn't
say a word. Most people love it
when she talks The fu nniest
people are the one~ who try to
act like they haven 't heard
a n ything a fter s he talks to
them ."
A customer who witnessed the
interview ordered a Jumbo ctuli
dog, and s aid that Chiquita
would probably get along well
with her cat.
.. My cat takes a nap every :.if
ternoon on my bed. and turns 11n
the e lectric blanket first," sht·
said.
While Chiquita gathered her
thoughts, Jean Thornton filled
"We looked a t each other. no
one wanting to be lieve what
they'd just heard . Someone
answered her. then asked her
how s he was Chiquita said
Somewhat reconstructed . a nd
s ubtitle d for qui c k com ·
prehension. here 1s the text of
thf,' interview
DP The re's no Ray here What
arc you talking about?
Chiquita· Reerooroo. <I love you 1
DP What's wrong with this dog?
ll 's incoherent
We asked 1f we migh t 1n
terview the cat
.. Don't be ~!lh . · 'hl· 'atrl
··cats can 't talk .. ·
'Breaking Free' shows risk has its rewards
· You·ve got tu go
from poor-mouth tu
success-mouth. then
you will get what
you want .·
-Szoia /larla11
Vibrations were high enough to raise the ceiling to the South
Coast Plaza Hotel Ballroom Monday evening during a preview
showing of Women 's International Success Systems' "Breaking
Free."
Four highly motivated women, all successful in their
respective fields. explaine<J there are certain risks en route
to s uccess. but "risk is the catalyst to achievement "
SIOUX HARLAN. a therapist and career hfe planner with
offi ces in Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. explained that
women everywhere should reprogram their negative thoughts
with positives.
"There is a diet for success." she said "It means putting
yourself up and not down. You've got to go lrom poor-mouth to
s uccess·mouth. then you will get what you want.
Continuing along the same line. Rita Uni man. head of the
Irvine Holistic Center. noted that the presentation was based on
the left brain right brain theory of excelled learning.
"Seated in our right br ain are our desires and dreams." she
said "You are risking something to believe in that dream. but
you can make 1t come true.
"THE MESSAGES and visions we give ourselves affect us,"
Ms. Uniman continued. "But we can do 1t We can make that
dream come true. Just visua li ze it and it'll happen. The magic
ingredient is beli eving in yourself and taking the respons1b1hty
Mixing humor with her quick presentation. Pat Allen, a
licensed marriage, family and child counselor with offices in
Newport Beach and Tustin. told the gathering of about 200 she
had been raised to be a woman in Iowa
"And being a woman in Iowa." she explained. "meant
never saying WA NT We were taught to say ·may I.· but never
·I want.· Want is a four-letter word and women were not supposed
to use dirty language "
·The magic ingre-
dient is believmg in
yourself and taking
the responsibility.·
-Rita Uniman
·want is a four let-
ter word and
women wer e not
supposed to use
di rty language.·
MS. ALLEN POINTED OUT that women shOuld contmue to
raise their awareness and self esteem. "You can do it by
changing your vocabulary," she said . "Learn to s ay ·1 want'
and 'I will' and you 'll get what you want."
Dr. Laura Schlessinger, a radio personality and writer of a
nationally syndicated column on human behavior. asked
the question "Whal about failure"." explaining that
·Even in your
failures look for a
positive foundation
-Laura Schlessinger
-Pat Allen failure could be a learning
process." "Even in your failures," she
said. "look for a positive foundation "
The 4 '2-hour presentation of " Breaking Free" will be held
Sunday all p m. attheSouth Coast Plaza Hotel. The show
s killfully mixes theater with motivation to fill you with positive
thought.
Registration begins at 12 :30 p m. Tickets cost $45.
She's on march against trendy little sayings
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A lot or people who
wouldn't listen to anyone else Usten to you. You
could perform a wonderful service to millions if
you would ask your readers to do the following:
1. Stop saying "Have a nice day" to every-
p ne you come in contact with. You have no
1dea the number of people who have just been
,fired. attempted suicide. gone through a divorce
"or are having terrible financial problems.
2. Stop saying "You're kidding" to every-
lhin~ you hear. This standard remark can be
highly inappropriate, especially if a person has
1ost all his possessions In a fire, been mugged on
lhe street, just learned that his rentaJ is going
condo or been in a car accident. People do not
kid about these things.
• Thank you, Ann. for joining me in my
trusade to reverse these senseless speech
habits. ENGLISH TEACHER
Dear Teach : Don 't thank me .• I haven't
done anything. Trendy phrases are easily
picked ap, and they bani aroud for a 1ot11
time. ftaab for wrtthal ud have a alee •.. I
Jnea•, le( me Mar frem 1" a1at. tome d•e.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Joe and I stayed in
lb• old home town where we were born and
ralaed. Our slaters and brothers are acattered
trom ct>alt to coa.t. Our children are 1rown and
they are acattered. too. The only oner left in
<town are Joe's mother and mine.
We are beginning to resent every holiday
because It Is expected that we entertain both
----------~~~~------_AN N_ll_l D_ER_I -1'.-----
mothers here. What we would love to do is be
with our ch.ildren. I have hinted to my sisters
and to Joe's that it would be nice If they would
invite mom for Easter or Mother's Day or
Christmas or Thankaglving or the Fourth of Ju-
ly or anything, but there are no takers.
Our brothe~ and sisters send cards and
they telephone our home lo wish mom a happy
thJe or a merry that. The conversations are
lovely, but no invitations.
I know your attitude is that no one can be
Imposed on unwiUingly. but In this case there is
also "Honor thy father and thy mother.'' How
doea one get sisters and brother s lo take
responsibility? I want to write and tell them
we've been doins it year after year and now it's
their tum. But my husband says, "No -they
don't care enouch to help, and they don't want
lo be bothered." My anger keeps buUdinc. What
should I do? -CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE
Dear Middle: flflt reeo1alae Ute fad
&Ital ,_, lllu-.aM II part of &lie problem. He
WH&I to be "IM lood Hit" (ud --·la-law) ao
Ille keepa qalet Hd .,,ea yea to Hffer ID
•llemee, alao.
You have earned the ript to s pend some
holidays the way you want to. Write to both bis
sisters and brothers and to yours. Tell them yoa
are plann1ag to spend Easter or Christmas or
whatever with your children and they sboaJd de·
cide among them wbo ls going to take tbe
mamas. The Bible doesn't say just one of the
children should "Honor thy father and mother."
Give somebody else a chance .
DEAR ANN : I read somewhere that a poll
of college freshmen was taken. Question: What
career do you wish to pursue? Some answers
were . .. Bls ness,.. "Finnance," "Sailsman."
"Senestry," ·• Physist ," "Airnotlcs." "Sec-
teral," and "Undesided." Do you believe it? -
FLABBERGASTED IN FLATBUSH
Dear halt: Yes, I do. U you coaJd see my
mall, you'dbave nodoabta.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have written this
letter four times and never malled It. It seems
so t'hlldlsh. But I am particularly bothered by
m y problem tonight, so I am putting this one ln
the maJJbox -come hell or high water.
I'm not a fiighty teen-a1er. I'm a grown
woman of 26. The problem: My looks. I am not
overwet1ht -In fact. I'm on the ekinny aide.
But my hair is awful, my OOH bas a hump and '
is much too long. My eyee are too cloee
to1etber. and my Ups are too thin. I bate to loot
In the min'or because I am ao UCly.
Ever since I was a small child people have
made fun of me because I look Uke a witch.
When I was 14 , I went crying to my favorite
teacher. C Kids can be so cruel.> She told me not
to pay any attention to them because I was
beautiful on the inside and that is what counts.
I have only had three dates in my entire
life. None of the fellows asked me out a second
lime. (Apparently they weren't interested in my
beautllu.l in1ides.) Am I going to be m iserable
all my ure because I was cursed with this ugly
fa ce ? Please tell m e what to do . -
DEPR~ED AND LONELY IN DALLAS
Dear Frtnd: U good looks were tbe key to
bappllleM, all Ute beaatUal people woe.Id be
ecataUc. We Inlow thl.I lan't true. hi fad, some
of tlte '1etl&-lookt.llg people are &Jae most misera-
ble.
Y oar low oplaloa of yoanell la rooted la
early cltlldltood. I recommend Uienpy at once.
Wile. Y• feel be&ter abotlt JOUMlf, plastic su-
aery f• ;your DOH mlSlt pve )'H a lift. A laalr
1t7ll1t ... a malle-ap leuoa or two c09ld do
wo•den to ral.le yoar morale. WM• yoa de·
velop a -.euare ol aelf-eateem, '" wW be a•&e
M readt Ml& to otlten Hd &My wW reapo11d.
Year wfltele world will c1taa1e, Hd 7oa'll
woader wta1 yoe dlda't .. h toeMr. GoM lttdl.
CONFIDENTIAL to Unfairly Evaluated By
One Who Spied: Sorry, dear girl, hemlines may
rise and governmen\8 may fall, but one thing
remalnl constant -you are what you are when
nobody Is looking.
-~ . .
ORANGE COAST YOUR HOMETOWN DAILY PAPER
Freed
By OAVIO Kl lTZMANN
Oft"" O,u ly Pilot Sl•ll
Oran~e County Shc-11fr':-.
Department 1nvc~t1gator ... ~atel
tod<iy <t Los /\ngt'lcs lel'n ugN
('onv1t'll'd of rape in a south
county t•rime :-.prN• had bt.•en
rcc:i\)tured by lh·tro1t pol1c:t.•
a f ter hc w ;i:-. mis take nl y
releast'<.1 from J Lo~ /\ngl'lt.•s Jail
earlier tins mr1nth <lut' to a
derir:il t.•rror
County's
• crime
• on rise
R v t'REDE Rll'K S('llOEMt:m .
" Of lht 0.tdy PtlOI \1.tlf
Oril) f1 vt.· J>t·n·t·nt of all Jll'OJJlt.·
arn•:-.lt·d 1n Clrangt· County on
ft•lon) \'ha rg1'' "Pnt lt> :-.t.111•
Jll"lStJll
'\i11H'll'\'n JH•r t.·1·nt of ;ill :irn''h
11n·oh1•d drunkt•n llnv1ng
.\n adc11111111a l Iii Jll'rt't•nt 11f .tll
.1rr1·~1:-. "1•r1· for m1 ... <11·nw;J11or
drunk an puhl11·
Thi· valut• 111 all protJt·rt.\
... tolt·n t.')((•(•t•dt'll Slf>I 1111111011 On
h ahout Slti rnlllton "'a., rl'
t'll Vl'rt'd
Orll' tn 'l'\'1'11 ('OIHll~ f't•:-.1tl1•nh
w ;1:-. a \l<'ltm of a l'f'llllt'
l'h,·:-.1· .1n· among th1· finding~
1n a n·port on 1·nm1· r 1·lt·a:-.t·rl
W1•d rrt·,<lay I)\ 1ht• Or.tngl' ('oun
t_\ ('r1m1n<1I .111~t1<·1· l'11un1·tl
Al·c·ording to rh1· n ·port, t·nnw
1n Orang•· ('1111111 .\ 1111·n·;1-.1·cl •1 !J
Jll'I 1'('111 tn 1!180 II\ l 'I lltt• 11179
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hom 11·1<11., for1•1 hl1· r ,qw r11h
li.•r\. aggra\ .ilt•d a :-...,a ult
hurgl;.1ry, thdl 11f rn11n· than Sl(IO
;a nd motor vP hwl1· lhdt
1\1'{'1trtf1n g to lht• n•port S.1111;1
i\na amonJ,! th•· 1 flunt \ " 21,
<·1111·-.. "·I'-r;111kt·d f1r-,1 111 .1 n1m
p.iri:-.on or tht• t'rlnlt' 1ndt•\ ratl'.
a hr11a1ftor ml·,1-.ur1· of <·11nw rn·
l·urn•nn· Thi· ratl' " hJ..,t•d 011
th1· numh,:r of" ti Hui h11m1nd1·-,
for c·1tilt· rapt''· rohtwr11·-, ,1);(
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all thdt:-. and 11111101· \'l·h1c·lt·
t hl'fh 1wr 100.000populat11111
Tu ... 11n ";i" r.1nk1·1l -.i•t·ontl
c·11...i,1 ~lt''-" 1t11rd . ,,.,,port
B1•ad1. fourth St.ini on . fifth
(;;1rchon C;rm·1•, '-IXlh . J.aJ,!11n;1
Bt·at·h . -,1•\·1·n th 1\n.1h 1·1m
1·1ghth Orang 1· ninth .inti
Wt•,tmin:-.lt•r t1 ·n1h
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frn..,1·-. r.1t1• '" 1·11mpart·d th1•
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ht·<·onw:-. frr'ol 1.agun:i Bt•al'h.
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~1 , . .,,, fourlh. '\i1·y. p11rt lkac·h.
fifth \na h1·1m -..~th Tu ... 11n
'o('\'1•111h Can h-n <: r11\ t'. 1•1);(hth
W<·:-.tm1n:-.lt'r. r11nth. ;incl I )t'.tn);(t•
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I I unt111gt11n lll'at·h ''a' r;mk1·tl
l~lh Fount;11n \',1llt•\ JHlh .md
lnrn1· 21:-.t
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:-.11m1•what mhl<.,1cl1ng
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logi.:1·cl a 12 1wn•1·nl 11wn•a:-.1• 1n
lht· c·nnw 1nrl1·'1( rat1· ht·l"l't•n
197!1 .incl 1980 whtl1· l.:ig una
ttl':tC'h n·corclt'd .1 f1v t• p1•rn·nt
<11•1·11•a-.1· 1\ncl "'hilt• S;inla /\11;1
-.h11" 1·11 a 1'.l p1•n•1·nt 1nt·rc•a-.1• 1n
th1· -.t•\1•n 111a111r 11ff1•n"l'"
l' at1·gor~. Laguna ll1·a1·h :.how1·d
a drop 11f ahout one· JH'rl'!'rl l
Tar, f e ather
attack c ite d
MO\ 'I.TON. 1\la 1I\I'1
Two s1sl1•r:-. h;1v1• h1·e·11
t·har);(t•d 1n 1·11nn1·e·twr1
" 1th th t· I ar r 1 n g :ind
fl' at h (' rl n Jl II f ;( WI) m ~lfl
"'ho pl:rnnc·cl to m.Hry lht·
t'X hu:-.hancl or on1• of lht•m
Marilu MC'f<:lw,·y. 5:1. of
V1nt•mon t. uncl HobhH'
,fr a n Md ' 11 r k "' . 4 9. II r
To" n Crcl•k . wen· held un
dt•r $15 ,SOCJ hon<b. on
t harges of burglary. kid
napping and us:-.a ult. ... :wl
l.awrc•net• Ct>unl\ ShN1ff
Gr;t<l y Host•
1'11l1 r t• s u1tl f:l11.;tlll'lh
J <1mt•son , 40 , of <in·•·n
Vall1•y , /\rt1 , Ht l<I th1•111
s h c• w a ~ t a 1 r •· d a n <I
f <' u the red hv l h<· "om <·n
afll'f thc·v fornd th<·1r
way ut ~unpornt rnto lht·
Town ('rel'k horn(• 11f Mrs
M r f';l"ev·, t•x hus hantl,
l>r John Me·f<:lwl'v. \\ho
"a:-. not al home
• Ill error, OC rapist recaptured
Sheriff':. 1.t Wyalt llart said
Dt.>t roil p o ll <·c· took D arryl
H<'rnard Watt-.. 17, mto custody
this mo rn1ni.i :.it hr:. father's
home
Thl' rcsidt•m·e hacl hl'l'll under
... u rvt•illann• :,1nc·c• W l'dnt.•sday
night a da } after Ora nge
(' o u n l y I a w c n f o r t· t ' rn c n t
offl ('I Uls clt:-.cuvered Watt:-. had
ht'l'll erroncou~ly freed from lhC'
l.<1:-. Angcll•S County J a tl on
Murc·h 8 afll•r s crvtnl! a 141 day
sente Ol'l' then· on unrt·lated
<'harge:-.
Watts wa:-. released, he said,
hecaus l' Orange County Sheriff'-.
ofhl'ials dtd not send the prnper
paperwork 1ndicat1ng tha t tht•
ll'l'n age felon w<is to ht hC'lcl for
inC'ar ccratum rn st<•lt• pn:-.on
llurt s aid today tha t Walts
offered no rc·~1stanc•t· when h1•
w a s t a k c• n 1 n 1 11 1· u ~ t o d y
('uh St·oul Bry<rn ll;rnd. 9. :-how~ off his fivt• o un<:t·
Pint·v.oo<I lkrh~ rac·t• l'<ir he• d esign c·d in the s hai>t' of a
lt•nn1~ "hot· lland tin<I <1 houl 30 o the r Pack 773 ~coub
1·om1.H'll•<I an tht.• g ra v1t~ t·ar race Wednesday night al
:"i 1guel lllll ~ .Junior lh g h SC'ho<>I Tht' Lag una '.'11gut•l com
pt•llt1on 1•ndt•d w1lh Todd Futa plartnJ! firs t for lht.• faslf':-.1
h<ind <':i n t·cl <':.iron thl' LraC'k
near FBI nabs pair
Newport business
Hy (;t.ENN S('OTT
01 llw O•tlY Pilot Si.II
N ('\.\port lka1·h hu:-.1n1·..,..,rn;111
.l ;11•k Tl)rr•·" rl'fu,al lo pa\
k1rkha1·k:-. for .a multi mlll11111
cloll.tr u1·1·e111111 l1·tl Fiii :1g1·nts to
.i 1 rt•:-.1 I wo out of sl al•· mt·n 1>ut
-.1d1• Torri•':-. nm:.t ruf'l1011 offtl'l'.
;t<•t•orrhng to FBI offl!'wb
Torri· "11rk1•rl "1th FBI tJ);(t•nt:-.
a' lhl'\ ..,,., up a l'lan<l1•,lrn1·
\ 1dl'11 t.1p1ng Wt•tlm·:-.tl a\ of'l'orrt•
11ffn111i.: th<• two m{'n $10,000 "'
<':J"h .1:-. kr<'kh.1t·k~. ;11·t·11rcling to
the· ..-m
lmmerl1<1t1·h aflN that. ;igt•nh
.1rr1•s t1•d llan>ld Hu :-.:-.l·ll of
Sc·<> II :-. d a I l' I\ r 11 , a n d .J 1 • r r y
l'<•lt•r:-.l'll of l>t•n vc•r C'olo , on :-.u~
Jll('llHI of om• c·ount of l'tHl'\J)lfaC·)
a nti lhre<' C'OUnt... of "'rt' or
1t•l1•pllor1t'. fraud
Thi• two nwn w1•rf' arn 11g n<•ll
lat« W<•cln<':-.tla) at th1• Tu..,ttn law
offtc·c· of l ' S Mag1:-.tralt· Honald
Ho:-.L' Thl'V Wl'rl' houkt'cl into
Oranf.(l' ('111.m l.\ .Jail and thc•n n •
It• <1s1•d on t ht•1 r own rt·<·og n 1 zan<·t·
\ l'ar:-. rf !ht• <·11n:-.tru<·t111n f11 m
would kll'k htll'k ;ihout S~10.000 for
l'oll' h 111h
H11-,:-.1•1l .111111•· po111t l11ld ('rum
It t·an ltt• rl11111• 1 '1'111 ri· ('on..,tru<·
t1on ('omp.111\ 1 "'II 1>1• mJktng J
lot of mont·\. p11:-.:-.1hl y $10 to Sl 2
11l11l11111 pt·r ·' 1•111· .• 1t·1·t1rtl1ng loan
.1ff1il;iv11 from FBI .1g1·n1 Drt·"
~1 J<·1111adl\
Resta ura nt hit
b y fire in La guna
() perator:-. of t ht• n1•w C; n ·••tt·r ·,.
t'11rn1·r n·:-.t :i11ranl rn Laguna
H t' a c h "' l' rt' g r" 1· t t' d h ;.
ft r l'f1ght1·r.., Wt'<lnt·i-.clay nig ht
wh1•n an tl't' makt•r i.,horll'cl,
s parking :1 :-.mall f1l'1'
l''rrt• 1nv1•s t1gat11r' ..,aid th1·
-.hort <'aU.,t·tl ·1bou1 S:WO damagt•
111 lh1• n ·i.,taJr:inl loc·:1t<•cl <ti lht•
.;11ulh1•nc111f Main lka<'h Park
Kid11ap vieiina?
I m m t• d 1 u t 1· 11 x t r a cl 1 t 1 11 11
prot'l't'ding:-. w<•rt· pl:rnn<•d
H~frrring lo tht· l'rror which
led to lhl' l'OllVH'lc.•d rapist'..,
rt'lt·ai-l'. the sht'rirr·~ llcuknant
s a id Wt•dnc.•sclay, "Wt· druppt'tJ
tht• ball II wa s c1ur
res po n :.1b1 Ir t lo h :.i' l' th l'
p a p c r w u r k l h l' r (' ' 1 n I .11..,
J\ngell'~J and wt• 1hdn t ·
W atts :inti two 1•11 mptJnt1in:-.,
M1d1.1l'I S1inm111l:'> IH and lll'rt
1a min M11nlg11nll'r~ 18 w1•1 t• t·on
\ 1t·t1•d 1n <>r angl' t'ountv !'-tu11t·nur
('our I 1n Sl•ptt·mlwr 1111 rnult1plt·
frlon\ n111nt:-.. 1nc•lutl111i.: rnµt•
ro hhc·1.} hurglary, fah1· 1m
111·1~1111mt•nt anti a11t11 lh1•ft
The.• e·har);(l'" Ill\ oh t•d J M .11 t·h
WHO, t'flllll' :'>Jlrl'I' Ill '-fllllh Orang<·
l 'ounl \that 11w lucl1•tl th1· r<t11t· 11f ;1
l·I yt•ar oltl 1<:1 Toro girl 111 ht·r
pa n·nts hom1·
.Ju<lgt· K<·nnl'lh t-: I.Ji• :-.1•11
11·11e·1·tl M1111l gorn1·q .11HI :0-.1111
111011 .,, to27 'l'ar-. 111 :-.t ;1t1· 1•rhe111
Watt:-.. although ,J 11111111r. ""J'
g1H·ll a 2:1 V1·:1r :-.lat1· pn:-.1111 tt·rm
Tht•rt• wa:-. a po:-.:-.1h1ll lv lw e•oulcl
h.t \ t' lt1·1•n -.1•111 Lo I h1 · ( '.tl1fe1r111<1
Y1111th 1\uth11rit \ hut prr1-,t·e·ut111
l>.1\1· <'artt·r 11fr1•11•tl t·\ 1d1·1w1·
I h .11 W;1t h had :-.t11!11rn111·d J
n ·ll111at1• at Ornng1• ('111Jnh .Jail
t h1· n 1gh1 lll'fon· h1-. M·11t 1•11e·1111:
I S.•t• S PKt:t•:, l'ag•· \21
Laguna dwellings
Growth rate eyed
HySTEVF. M ITl'll t:l.I, Of'"" D•1ly P o lot St..11
The Lagum.1 Beach l'1ty Count'tl
1s s hy rng a way from a tough
propose.t i that w11uld pn•venl
C'ons trurlron of Ol'" road.., a nd
n e w :.uhd1 v 1 ~111n -. until an
est i ma It'd GOO 1• x 1-. l 1 n g I<.· g 11 I
building "((•:-. 111 town <J rt·
develol)(•d
But , l111• <·ount'il majority
agn •1•1l, lhllM' lc·gal butld1ng :-.111·-.
Youth unit
future
LB topic
Still u11sun · of lh<· futurt' of lhl•
La~una Hl'al'h Youlh Sh<.·ltt·r.
ml'mbt•r:. of 11:-. hoarcl o f d1rt'l'tor'
plan lo hold an t·m•·rgcncy mt•(•t
rng Monday to nm:-.11ler how Lo
kccpthc.•i.,(•rv1tt• al1 v1·
Thl' :-.h<'ltt·r wa:-. g ranted $92.200
Wednt·:-icl;n · from ..,t,111' fund:-. b\
the.• Or;in~t· ('11un1' Board of
S up1•rv1:-.t1rs
Thi• gr:.int wa:-. ah11ut 75 1wr<·t•nt
of thl' $122,900 n •qut•S ll'd hy th1·
s hc.•lt1•r hoard J uht· 1'01.iwlla . 1•x
t•tut1v1• <hrec·tor for tht· -..x !It'd
s ht•lt t•r al 508 St /\nn ':-. l>rt vt•. :-..i1d
the board will h<.1v1• lo ra1st• cihou1
S40,000 m1ir1• to ml't•l tht• proJt'C'I
<'<I 19111 H2 f1scal v•·ar hudgt•t
The· grant lo lht• -.helter" a<, 1>01·
of l l macl(• 111 11rg.an1zat1on' d<·
s 1gnt·d to rNltJC't' t•omm1lmt·nt
ratt•s to s tall' pn:-.on:. Thi' $5 l
mill111n an :.late· funds t11vulcd
a mong lht• J.!roup-. w a~ hudg<·tt·d
for that purp<>'ol'
Tht· lurgc.•:-.t p1t•1·1· of the· funding
pit'. Sl 5 m11l111n , wl'nt to the·
Orangt· Cou nt )> l'roh at111n
Oe1>artmc·nt'!> <·rtm<· n·tlut'1111n
a nd ... uµprc.·:-.s1on program, which
I r 1 1• :-. t o e 11 u n .., t' I y o u n g
trouhlt•makt.•r:-. lwforc• lh<'.Y 'Ink
1nt11senousl'nm1nal l>ehav111r
J' r I fl r t 0 t h t' h II a r ti II f
:-.upc•rv1:-.or:-. · a l'l1nn Wt•dnC'..,day
supportt•r-. of lht• 1.aguna Sh<'llt•r
had ohJC·c·t<'CI lo th<· funding rt·c.·
omm l'ndations from a n advisory
comm Ill<.'<.' h<'c·ausi• other sht·ltC'r'
Wt'r<' propo..,l'<l for <i gn ·att•r
pcr('1•ntagt• of funding
Thl' Family Cn :-.1:-. ('1•nlt'r Ill
l'o:-.la Ml'sa rece1vt·d 90 pcn·enl of
tl ~ request, or St 25.MO, Wedn<•-,
da \.' a nd the Chry:-.:tl is ct•ntl'r in
An.ahe1m got 98 pt•rrt·nt of 1l~ rt'
quest ,orSt 19,7011
Thi• advisor v <'Om m 1llt••'.
howt•vN , basl·d rt:-. rN ·om mt.·nd <i
l11>n on th<' far t thal South County
eit1es had helped fund I he L;igun;i
~hc•ltt•r in the 1mst a nd lht•r<·
w<i s n 't C'nou~h mont•y t(1 go
ari1und
M a rgar ('t Thor t'au .
t'ha rrwoma n of lht• 15-m embcr
s he lt1•r Boa rd of 1>1rcctors, s aid
Laguna fleach , San Clemente c.tnd
San .Juan Capistrano each h ad
given about $2,800 lo pay for the
n .·nl oflh<' s helter this fisc:al year
tStt SllF.l.TF.R, Pait~ i\2)
"
:-.hould g1·t priority ('On~1dt·rat1on
from lht• l'1ty wh1·n property
ownt·r:-. :-.t't•k pt•rm1:-.s111n lo huilcl
on th<•m
Counc:il ml'mht·rs mt'I Tm·:-.day
with mt·mtwr:. of tht· 1·1t1zcns
I.and L''t' :md Nmst· f':l t·ml·nts
('o mm1tll'l' lo d1 :-.1·u ...... rutun·
dt.'V l'lopmcnt ill tht• /\rt('olony
Th<' <'om m 1 t I <• l' rt.' c· 1· n t I Y
l'llm µl•·tt.•d a l7 p agl' re· port
oul11n1n g th rc·1·11mml'nda t1on
r t•ga rd111g !ht· rat I' o f llt'\\
dwt•l11ng un1h lh;.il -.hr1uld lw
allowt•d 1ntothe1·1ty
Tht• l ~1 nd u s 1• a nd n111 st•
el4:m1·nb, wh1·n comhtrll'cl with
'-l'\ t•n otht·r pro);(rJm-.. "'"'
l'\ 1•ntuallv lw rd1m·d II\ tht•
t·ount il an·d 1nt'11rp11rat1·d tntll the
t•1t y':-. (;t•n1·ral I' Ian
'l'ht• report :-.how:-. a hallpurk
f1gun· of fiOO l1111lding '-Ile·:-. in
(S 1•1• (;ROWTll, Pa ~c· /\2)
Wii nesses soughi
Execution slaying
of nurse probed
n~ r1111.s~t:mt:RMl\N
O• lf'w 01uly P1lo1 \tt1ft
l.nng B1•al'h pol 1l't' a r t· .,,.,.k 1ng
lht· puhhe :-. h1·lp 11\ -,11lv111g lht·
grr:-.h 1•x1•1•ut11in -.t.\ It· murd1•r of
,1 II uni 111gton Bt·;1d1 nu r-.1 "h11:-.P
h 1111\ \\,1:-. found 111·;1r ;1 :-.an
l>11·go Frt•t•Y.a.\ off r;i111p
I. o 11 g HI' a I' h JI I) I 1 ('I' "ff 11 ·I. r
I" rt' rl M 1 11 r· m ;1 n n ... ,, 1 d 111
\ t•,t1g.1t11r-. lll'ltt•\f' II ~uk t'h111 .
:11 "a' r.1mm1·d h_\ .1n11th1·r
\l·h1tlt· \.\hilt· drt\rng h11m1·
Tu1•:-.da~ ni ght fr11111 St f t :Jtw1-.
M t' d 1 r a I ( 't• 11 1 t · r 111 I .,\ II" 11od
"h I' l'l' -,h1• "Ill k1•1 I
II f' -,;11tl tll'I L't'l I\ t'" lll'llP\ I' I hi·
Woman rape d
in Laguna on
pool table
l.ag11na lll•at·h p11l 1t•t• art·
Sl't•krng ;i man who rl'porlt'dly
rapt•d u l.agunu ll<·ach woman
atop a pool tahlt• a t Mnl hl'r·..,
la v1•rn t•arly Wt•dn(•:-.day morn mg
et flt•r inviting ht•r into thl' h:.i r at
<'10:.1 ngt1m<·
/\nd. poll<·<.' su1d . lht'.Y will ask
lhl' stall' l>epartm{'nt of I\ lroholic·
Rt•\ t'rage Control lo 1nv1•,ltgc.ttt•
o p t' r a t r n g h 11 u r :-. 11 f t h l'
t•s luhhs hmPnt at 570 South Coast
ll1 g hway
Tht·21 y{'ar old woman s;rnJshe ~toppl·d by the· tavtorn at ;about 2
a m Wt•dnesday. and wa:-. invited
1ns1dC' for a drink hy ht'r all<'j.{l·d
ai-.:-.a1 lanl.
Shl• :-.aid sht• J1>111t•d thr<.·c.· or four
olh<'r patron:-. al lhl' h;ir until
ti bout 4 a m . whf'n the :-.us peel
purportedly ll't th<· olh<•rs out ancl
lockt•d the door
J\ ftc•r being u~s ;iult c·d , lht.'
woman told poh<'t'. s ht• flt·d the
hulldtng a nd run down Coast
Highway
S ht• wns spoiled hy a patrolman
who gavt• h<·r a ride home
Th(' woman said s h{' did not
dts{'uss the a:.:.ault with the•
offi cer , hut lall'r <'Ontal'ted f'l(:llr<'l'
after t'Onft.>rrang with her molhl'r
"11111 .111 """ forc·1·d 11111 11( lwr
,1ut11 t.Jk1•n 111 th•· n1·\t •·\II .incl
t'llrlljlt'lkcl ,,, ltt• 1111 lh1• Jl,1\1 '
1111 • 111 . \di t · r,. :-. h t · " . ..., " h 111
'l'\ 1·1al l11111''-111 I h1 · h1·:11!
\1 tllt-rn.11111 -,,t td p11li1·t• art·
l1111k1J1J.! for \.\llllt'""'" "ho m;t\
lt.1\1• -,1·•·11 \t r-, ('h111 " 11·cl J\11tl1
.,t 111ck al1111g tht· ... 011t hlw11ncl
11 :111:-.111011 r11;1d fr11111 lh1• l.1111J.!
l!t '.t<'h f·'n•1•".1\' Ill lh1· ..,011th
lt1111nd San 1)11·~0 1-'11·1·" ,1\ ,11
.11111111 11 Jl m I 111·..,cl.n
I I•· -,,11!1 p1•oplt· \\ 11 h 1nf11rma
111111 11n tht· ir1<·111t·nt :-houlll n111
t ;11·1 Long lk:id1 11folt-l'l I\, • ., ;11
I ~I :11 5911 72 11
1\n·11rd111g 111 ~l tlll·mJnn
c.t11f111n1a ll 1gh"··~ l'atrol ttf
rt('t'I''-rt·~J>•llHlt ·rl 111 :1n I I I.') f) m
,11• 1· 1d1'n l n ·porl :t 1111 I 1111 nd :\1 r.,
( 'ltt1i .., Audi aha11tl11111•tl on th1•
11.1n .. 111on 1•1.1cl \o.t l h fr,.,h
d .11n .1g1· on th1· clr1\1•r "-,11h·
111 • '-<lid l.1111g lk;1<·h 11ffl('('l''-
r 1•-.1111111l1•cl I!°> 1111111111'.., J;1((·r 111 n·
1111r I., of -,hot.. f1rt•d Off1 t'1·r'
f11u11tl \t r... C'h111 .., hmh f;11•e·
cl11\.\ll 1111 lh1• pa\1•m1 •nl .11 th1·
:-.outhhound l';1t·1f1t· ,\\ t·n1w t·x11
ht• :-.a11I
B1·1·a11:-.1• ht•r pur-.i• ",,., m1:-.-.
1ng pohc·1· rh1•11fl71' 1h:1t rohht·r~
".1-. ;1 mot I\ 4' 111 I ht• 11H·1c11•nl.
M1lll•m:11rn ... :1111
MI''-('hill II\ 1·cl on P ult'fm•i
1>11\'1• 111 ll1111t1ngt1111 11•'.Wh w11h
ht•r h11:-.hand .tnd a !I \ 1•:11 oltl
-.on
Robbin wins round
S/\(.'H/\M t-:NTO < 1\ I'> Tht•
µros1•culor of :-.t a11· Sl'n Alan
Hohhtns :-.a\" h1· "on 'I .q >pt·al ~I
JUtlgt• :-. 11;:-.m1 :-.:-..tl 11f a 10th
ft·lon\ si'X <·h.irgt· Tht• l'h<trgt• of
:111t·1nptt'cl unlawful -.1•xuul in
ll•r1·1111rse ~ith a minor wa:-. dis
rn 1:-.:-.1•cl l<•Sl m onl h h~ Su1>t•nor
l'ourl Juclgt• She ldon (; ro-.sfcld
f1>r l:t<'k Of l'Vttknt•t•
ORANGE COAST WEATHER
Wt•);t to northwt·..,t wm<I:-.
20 lo '.lO rn ph l)lhl'rW IS('
fair Low:-. tonight 50 at
lwachc.•s. 55 tnl and llrgh:-.
~·r1ct:1 y 1)4 along l'oa:-.t . fill
ml and
1'1'\('rs1•11 1s prl':.lll(•nt ,rnd
It u:-.:-.1·11 Vll'l' l>rt•s1 de nl of M exi<'un
Fnodsof Amt•nra Inc . "'h1<'h was
at'f1u1retl two yt•ars ago a:-. a suh
.... 11trarvof(:1·nc·nal Foods C'orp
Acl'Ording to do<·unwnts filt•d
"ith thl' fr<kral c:ourt . tht· lwo
mc.•n had approachl'd Torre ;rnd
hrs v rCE• pn'srcknt , (;(•raid Crum.
t>ffortn~ C'Olll racls ror l'OnstrUt'
tw n of up to SO Gu:ulalall arry's
n·:.t.rnranls during lht· nt>xt fiv1·
Boy found • Ill Newport INSIDE TODAY
,/on .'itPpl11m1wn 11; ktruum
/nr h1•r /1•m1mne charms. hut
.~lw'.~ al.~11 n t11p q11l(1•r SeP
l'nye Cl
Burne tt wins
BULLETI N
LOS ANCa:u :s <AP> /\
Supe rior Court Jury rul('c1 today
th a t the National Enquirer
l ib e led cn l1•rtain<•r C arol
Burn<'ll In a t97fi ~ossip item
whi"h claimed s he.• h11d a
boisterous run in with Jt enry
K1 ss1ngt•r in a Wu:-.hrngton
restaurant
Hy STEVE Mi\RllU :
01IM0 •1ly P 1IOf ~l.tfl
1\ hrown hairt•cl 1:1 year old
hoy. who told Nt•wporl Rcarh
polit•t• this WN'k that ht• had no
m t•mory or his ra:.t, reportedly
was kidnapped m ore lhnn a yrur
<•go aft<>r running ;iway from his
0 ('<.•ansrc1t• fos ter ram ll y
l'o l1 cc., who s p o t11•<! I h e
youngs tt'r wun cl<•ring down
Nc•wport Boulevard Tuesday
cvc•nmg with 11 m1<ldlt• aged man.
have arr<'s t<.'d 5.1·yeur old Ralbou
l!<lund r<•!H <lent l.1•onurc1 Gagliard
1111 kidnaprharges
lnv<•st igators r la1m <:aghurd.
who ;i lso uses tht• name• .l ark n an
dal a nd ~rx otht'r a llJ'>i•:-., grabhcd
the· young boy mor<· lhan u y1•a1
a gc1 tn Ore<1ns id1•
The 13·ycar ·old. who USl'S the
nam•• Jason. reporh.·dly told
p11l1re he didn't know who his
pan•nls arc or where he 1s from
Rut polir<>saicl lht• hoy later told
th<•m hl' had li ved wrth Gaghard
for m ore thun a yct1r in van ous
:1partml•nts and mott•I rooms in
Nl•wport. Jlunt1nl(ton lkuch a nd
<:anknC.rovt•
Th<' boy also :-.uhsequc·nlly s aid
that his real n:imt• is (.'ra1g Wade
Robinson.··
lnvt•stigator:-. :-.alcl th1•y wt.•rc•
able 111 track down tht• hoy's
falhcr l'arly loduy Th<' Cuther,
police i.aid. livl'S rn San D1t'S{O but
no lonj.{<'r has l('1WI custody of thl'
{'hild
Po llN• r laim the yo ulh wus
pluc·ed with th<• Oceans ide fos ter
famil y nfl<'r runnin~ away from
his futher's home on thrf'f' O<'
t'USIOnS
(SH J.\SON, P ag.-i\2)
INDEX
At Your S.rv1<• A•
E•m• lombol(k A/
l M 8 0Yf ...
8v·une" C• I C•l1forn•• A' Cl•u•t•ocl Ot t Comor• (I , .......... o c,
Out~ Noh<" Al
Edtltt1•I A• I
C"ttrt•tMn•ftt Cl t
tr••fvr e\ fh 1
Ht•tHo" II
J\nl C..o•'""' I J
tnt•ttnt\\t0n (I
-.nn l..tnd•r\ 8•
Movt•\ Cl t
M~tw.tl ,. ""°\ C• N•hO'l•I ,_.,., A •
Pvbht Hohcn
Al, 04, Cl 01
\yht14t Port•r Cl
\p.,tt CI '
~totlll M•tt111 •\ (1
1'•1••1\laift ,,
Tht.tttr\ Cl '
Wt•lhtr AJ
Wortd ,..,.,, ••
L
-
? •
~Oil!>
are
1rms
• or
The
1ded
'I
hat
arc
>cal
a s
e ar
is
ate
>de.
ire:-.
·ral
uck
nts
1ly
ned
I a
bt•
tht• or
'y
1111
't t•
1·r ...
of
tor
a r rtr
ht•
l(•fl
llf)
up
Ill'
hi-.
on
cl
...
1•
I'
JI
'I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT {Thursday. March 26. 1981
r-,
I ~ ~ ...
AP W1rt'photot British 1fo1dJle age11ts
Among Britons sus pected of So" iet es
p i o n a g l' a t' l i v i l 1 es . a f H· r an for m a t i on
brought lo light this week. are 'from left l.
Anthony Blu!'!t. Queen Elizabeth's art his
torian. Su· Hoger llollis. now dead: Guy
Burgess. who defected in 1951 and fled to
Mos<·o"" and Harold "Kim" Philby, who
had \\Ol'kt'd C'losely with L' .S. intelligence
Jane Doe meets family
Chicago woman 'pleased to meet you'
FOHT l.r\l'l>EIWJ\1.E. Fla
1:\I'1 Ttw fa m tly of a mn1.·~1a
'1c·t1m .Jani· Doi· p1..,1t1vt•h· tdt•n
t tftt•tl ht•r toduy as 34 't•ar old
C'ht•r yl /\nn Tomtt·zt•k . a sub
urban l'h11·ago \\om .in "ho
droppt•d out l)f -.1ght ~t•\'l'O \'t•ar~
J f.!o . offt1·1ab ~.11cl
lrt•nl' and i\ndrt•\\ Tom1nl'k .
of Hosl'llt•. t"o otlwr l'htldren
and u Ch1t·ago cits <· Jn<·kl•\ met
\\ tlh ~li~s l'omil't.ck at South
Florul<t Statt· llo~p1tJI 111 l,('m
br11k1• Pint•:-for ahout an hour
th1~ morning
I m \l'f\' h;ipp~ '.\lr'
Fro• Page Al
GROWTH ...
L<1guna Reaeh that havt' n<>l been
devl'lo~d but havt· met legal
s tandards.
Tho~l' 'al·ant. unde' C'loped
si t e ~. when 1."omb1ne d \\tlh
under·uttlizt•d properties (for
ins tance. a ~·n~lc fam1I~
re s idenct• lorat<.'d on a
multi res1dent1al w ned 101 1 could
mean 2.800 new housing units
And that. the t•ommillN' says.
cou Id mean nearl) 6.00<J new
n•sidcnts in Laguna Rl'arh with
the butldout or JU~l thf' l'XISltng
legal lots
The.• land usc· µa nel i.uggest~ lht•
ell) not <1110" an y ne"
s ubd1vis111ns to t·omc• into the city
until that hu1ldout 1s
ac•rompltshl'd
But toun<'ll membt'r s termed
that proposal unreasonable.
a llhough agreeing l'Xi~ting legal
sites should be first 1n line for
bu tiding µermits
Cnunctlm:m lloward Oawo;on
noted that onlv about 50 new
dwelling units· :.t r<.• constructed
each year 1n Laguna Rea<·h.
adding, al Lhat rate 11 would take a
dozen or so vcars bt•fore new s uh-
d1 v1s1ons could be cons1d«rc•d
cons iderl'd
Other council mem h(•rs said the
committee's proposal might not
be the most fair "'ay to control
g rowlh in Laguna Beach
CounC'ilman Nell 1-'itzpalrtck
s aid any deve lopment should
rl'flect the tumulatin· effect~ or
that construction on the rest of
lO\\ n
Body found
in boat yard
Th <' boch or .1 ;111 \ t•ar olcl
Marini• ~t·at1onl'd at Camp
P e ndleton has het•n found ln~tdC'
.i boat at a -.torag1· are;_1 111
('a p1strano Ht•ac·h. I ht• Or<1ng1•
Cnunty Sht•rirr·., l>l'p<irtment
~aHI tod1H
l.t Wyatt llart ~aid K<'vin
Santoro wa~ found Tt1l·sday b)
the owner of lht• boat. Ha> Pan(•t
of (.';;ip1strano Hc.•ach , wht•n he•
went to th<' o;l11rag1• v<1rd in lht•
2 6000 hlork of V1r tori a
Boulevard Tul'sday morning
llart said the caU~(' or San
toro·s death ha~ not het'n ell'
tcrminecL flt• s~11d an aulOI>!>}
~ind lcsts arC' being condllt'lPd
ll art smd P;,1net told ~ht•nrr~
deptuil's ht' had last workNI on
his i.a 1hng c·raft Sunday
Toni 1c·.wk ~;.11cl arlt•r I ht• prl\ ;.ik
met•lrng ·1 J -.~un·d ht·r "''
IO\ t·d ht•r
I l o~p1lal
l>:ilt· :.aid
"' -.a~ mg ,·ou camt•
\OU
-.pokt·'>\\t>1n<.111 .lal'ktt·
.J .1n1· Dot· n •spondl·d
I m '1·r~ ha pp) that
I'm µ1l-a -.1·d to ffil'l'I
Sht· \\,1~ \l'r\ n>ol . '.\tr-.
!>all' '>:11d --That":-normal
\\ t• l'XJWl'lt•d th.ti
It'~ JU~t llkt• a dr1 .. 1m.· -.:1111
M 1 ..., ~ Tom 1 1"1 t· k ., hr o l h c· r
Hnbt•rt. :12
Thl' pttltit• .\11Ung \\C1man Yohn
h1·1·am1• kno\\ll natwn\\Hh· u~
.J .11w l>rn'. ha<l bt•l•n ;1t th1·
ho~p1lul ~mt•c· l>t•c1·mh1·r \\hl'n a
park rangl•r found ht·r nakt•d
;1 n d n t• ;i r cl t• a t h 1 n F o r t
Laudt•rdalt• ~ BirthStal1• Purk
Thi• Tom11·11•k-. "t·rt· an·om
µun1t•d h) C'lt1t·ago <11-.c· JOt'kl')
Wull~ l'htlltps. "hoM· ~lalmn .
WGN. arrung1·tl and paid''" the·
I ri JI
111·1 r a-.t· \\a., r1•portt•d 11a
ll•in"' 1dt• and on Fd> Ill ~tw JP
Jll'.1rt•d on IH' T\' ~ c;oud
\lorning ,\mer1t·a· hoping to bl'
n·t·ogn11.1·fl Tlw ru•v. ~ -.t11fll'S
and lht' tl•l1•\ 1-.1on ,qipt•arant·t•
µrom pll·tl hund n·d~ of 1 elt·phon1•
t·alb
Dig that silt
Mayor plans to Friday
lh'll'rmin1•d to draw attention to lhl' -;i ll c li)l~gc•d I 'ppc•r
~l'" port Ra~. Ma~or .Jack1t• lle:ither s a y!. ~he II wade
knt•t• rit•t•µ into lht· IJay·~ muddy \\alt'rs Fnduy morning
<ind :.tart sho\ l'ling
l 'U .. R•: T H E R E IWTll my shovC'I and buC'ket. <;ays
Mrs lleatht•r. ·taking the message to the people ·
Thi· gimm1C'k . wh1C'h the• mayor pred1t•ts s hould clra"
to or ~o felloY. ~•It o;c·no1wr~. rs de~1gnNJ to hc.•lp the r1ty
rais e.• mnnl'Y for c1 ha~ c.•lc•anup prnJet'I
:'lic.·\~port Hl'ath has lwl'n givc•n two Y.l't•b to ('omt• up
"1th S44fi.OOO 1n t"1~h or rt~k lo~1ng nearly $1 5 mtlltun m ~tult•
mont·y nt•t•rfrcl fort h1• c·l<·unup prott•tt
~J\\'OR Ht:ATllE R '>'1.\~ ~h!· plans to '>tart ra1.,1ng lht·
S·Hf>.t>OO tht' hard "ii.\ -.el ling llu<·kct:-of gc·nu1n1· l p1wr
:\°l'" 1><>r1 Ra~ silt al$.'> l'al'h
Sht:> admit~ lhl' 11 a m -.1ltJthon l1kl'I) "tll dra\\ more.·
gawkl'rsthanhanld111l;.1r~ But 11 s a start.'\ht•sa'~
.\la\'1>r 111•:.tlht•r ~a'., -.he•:.. aftt•r largt•r f1~h too
She: t•on' in(•ecl hl•r count·tl t•nlkagul'~ th1!> wt'l'k tu al
lol'att· SI tH.000 en l'll~ mont·~ toward tht• needed $44fi.000
The mavor ~avs sht• s a~kl'cl the lr\'1ne Company and toun·
'·' orrie;als tc»p111 up s 1mil<tr u mc111nt~. hut has re<•etvl·d no
a-.s uranCt'S \ l'I
'If \\t' ;Inn t gt'l lht• mom·~ Wl''ll bt• tn trouhle. :'>1r~
llt•alht•r (•au111111... Tht• h.1.\. nJ.,!hl no". I!> on lht• brink nr
dt•-.t ruction
Man questioned
in Atlanta killings
BEl\(.'ON , NY 1/\1'1 A
Ne\\ Ynrk City mun :irr·ps ted in
lhe allegC'd abduc tion of a 9
year·old hoy will bt• flUl'sltont•d
b) FBI agents aoout lht' ktlltng:-.
nf 20 hlat·k )'ouths in t\tlanla.
pohC'l' say
\\' h l' n arr l'., l t• ti Sunda y.
Frankie Edmonds. 32. wh<I lives
in Queens, was driving a yellow
van rented 10 Georgia with
Georgia licen s e plalt>s.
according lo Eas t F1shk11l Town
Police Chier Andrew Cnscolo
Edmonds was onkrt·cl held m
lieu of S25.000 bail on charges or
unlawful imprisonmt·nt ancl l'n
dangering thC' wt•lfart• of a C'hilcl ,
Cn!>C'Olo s aid
Edmonds and tht• t•htld. who
"as not 1d(•nt1f1ed . an• both
hlaC'k
In Washington. FBI Director
Wilham Webster said today that
poiice were running "lines of
co1ncidenre" on the movem ents
of Edmonds
"I can't tell you whether he 's
hl•en named by us as a s us pPcl ...
Webster said during a briefing
on an unrclat('(I mattl'r al th£•
Whlll' l!CIUSl'
Offil't'r'> -.aul F:dmonds had
Sl'n 1'd t•mt• in pno;on. hut they
rl1d not kno" for what offen~e
The:--;<'" York 1>~111) N1·w., today
quoted polirc sourtl'S who ~aid
Edmonds s(•rv"d t1mt· for rob·
hC'r' and gun pos~t'ss ion in
"prisons and p:..ychtalrt<' wards
a 11 over th<' -..tale "
Thl' task forcl' investigating
l ht• Atlanta d Ntt h~ and d1~ap
pC'aranl'es and the FRI wl'rt'
not1r1ed of th<' arrC'st by town
polit'<' The F'HI in Nt•" York Ci
t v calll•d to say th:tl aj!t•nts ~ould mtt•rv1C'w i-:ctmonds about
the Atlant a ca-.rs. Cr1 srolo sain
Atlanta Poh<·e Comm 1ss 1oncr
Lt•e IJrown S(l1d today the task
rorct• would leav~· !ht• Edmtlnd~
inqu1r) to the F'UI . ac1rl111g, .. 1\1
this point wt"n· just following up
another f('ad · ·
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat Cteu lfled advertlalng 71 416•2·5678
All other depertment1 642-4321
C'nscolo said pnltc.·<> arc trying
I o a l' <' o u n t f 11 r l': d m on d s ·
wherrahouts for lh<' past year
ann a half Act·o rd1ng to the
News. Edmonds r<.'fused tn lell
police what h<' h;1:-; been doing
for lR months
"
Thomas P Haley p,.,.,_
Robert N Weed ,,__,,
M Thomas Kee1111
EdltOt
Thomas A Murpnint•
MllNQo"9 [ "''°'
Charles H Loos
l\ .. ""'1 MIW'egl4"t0 ld1tnt
Bernard Schulman
ContrOI•
Carl Carstensen
_,_OotOdOO
Kenneth N Goddard Jr
Ot.....,_OvOdOf
MAIN OFFICE
))0 Wot BA¥ St (O\IA M••• (A
M••l •dOftn flow 1),6.0, (~I• Mf\A, (A '7ti1C'I
C OO'tttQPU '4'1 Or..tnQP Coast Pubtt\runo Corn~ny No
nttw' \tnr1fl'\ •llu\l,Aftftn\ "'d•to""' miUtPr or .. n
vf'rft\"'m"nh ,,,.,,_1n fnAy b• 1~nrtHh11 f'<t .,,. thovl
\0 .. ( tilll "'°'m1\\t0n "' t OOVf•QtH """"'"''
\ft< ont1 , , .. ,, pt)\td~ 0•1d .tt ( ,.,, ... M f>\A ( ,.11tMn1.•
U PC, u• 80CH !tub\U+ohnn n., t ""'"' \A 00 mnntf\ly
by m41! 's SO rnonU1fv '""""'"' ,,,..,,.,1 .. t•Of'I" '' 00 """"'""•
th~ Ot•not (O.\l D•il'f Pilot w 1lf\ wruc h '' (.e>tnb4M'd
'"" NI'•\ PrM\ ,, ovbtt\h~C1 bV '"" O•itnqtt (OA\1
PubflV11no (omNl'l'f Sf'IP-"A'" rc11t1nn, M ii e>u b41\1'_.d
MOf'H1A)' thrOVQl't f rid.-v lnr (O\IA Mll\flt Nl'wl)nft
8 1'4'lh Hunt1nQ1on 9,,un tour'llA1n Vftllf''f ''""'" t 4'Qun.it R,_M P\ SouO' ( 04\1 1' \1nQlt • r g1nM I rf'11tton
,, Oub h\No() SalurcM v\ ttnd \\.lnO•V\ ',,.,. CH In( •P•*
Ovbl!\h1no ,,.~,,, I\ Al no Wf\t f\,.v c;t1r~1 p 0 Ao•
1'60 (O\i• Mtt\.a C Altforn1.t9>&74
VOL. 74, NO. 85
SHELTER. • •
Sh e ~aid the board will try to de
cide Monday how 1t could raise th('
remaining m oney needecl to run
I he ser vice for youths who need
respite from lhe1damilies
"Ohviously . this is a severe
blow," s he said. "Whether the
s helter can survive, I don't
know "
Welfare revaDiped?
County changes to reduce demands
Applicants for general rclte(
we lfare assistance soon may
have to prove they have II v<'<i in
Orang(' County for a t least one
year and be willing to accept
vouchers instead ur direct cash
p aymt•nt~ under pol1c1e s
recomm<•nded for adoption by
the l'OUnty Board or Supervisori..
The proposed th11ngcl> arc
outlined in a report dchvcred LO
~up(•rvisors Wednesday b~
~
111 Domosctas
Richard Ruiz. county s ocial
st•rvaces director Supervisors
wt! I <'OnMdt-r the recommend a
tions Tuesday
If appruvl'd. ofhc1als ~aid . thl'
nt>w poltc1cs would help reduce
the 1ncrea:.ing demand for
general rl'lief Wl'lfare assistance
demand that ha~ caus t'd the
pro~ram account lo run out of
monev twice this month
G ent•ral rt•li('f J~~1stanC'e IS
Clymore deport
hearing scheduled
8)' JOHN NEEl>HAM
• 01 lhe' D~ll'f Pt IOI ~t~ff
Fn•t'fl Pak1~tan1 hiJaCk ho~tagt.'
Craig Clymore of Orangt• County
"ill rac1• a deportat10n hearing 10
l>amasl'us. Svria. within the m•xl
fl'W we1•ks. at·Mrd1ng to onl· ,,f ht~
t"o altornt·v~. llarolr1 lh1v1dson
of N l'Wport R1«1C'h
Clvmore. who 1s w <1ntl'd 1n tht
l 'ntl°Cd States on drug s muggling
t·hargl'~. was v1s itl'd hy his othl'r
Jtlorn('\. Honaltl Krl•ber or
Laguna
0
Hl·ath. in ht~ Oama~<·u~
1:J1l t·ell Tut·~day. l>av1dson ... aid
Davidson ~aid Krl'IH·r hud
telephoned t11m from Dama.,l'U...,
and said ht· had n·t;Hnt'<I a lol'cil
Jttorne\ forlht•ir<'ltc·nt ··Ron ~aid 1t wa., his un
d1·r~tanding th,11 l'lymorl• \\ould
bt• ht•ld untll tlH'rt' IS a ht•artng Of
the bG1r as~or1at1on in Damasc:u~
to d1·c·1c1t• "'hdhl'r he s hould ht• dt·
portt·d or not,· l>a v1d~on ~aid
SPREE •••
,\ fll•r h1~ tll'o1•1.•1•chng-. 1n Orange•
('ountv cndl'd. Watts WJ~ -.t•nt to l.o~ /~ngt·lc.·s to fac·1· unrl'latt·d
"t•apons l'hargt•s 1wncltng a~.nn~I
ham tht.>rc'.
On Oct·C'mlit•r 17. ht• Y..1s J.!tH·n
t ht· 141 da' "l'nlt•111·1· 1n Lo-.
1\ ng1•lt·~ Count' .Jail
Art1'r mmplt•ting that tt·rm. ht•
l'\'t•ntualh '>houlrl ha' t• ht·en rt•
llirnc•d II; ttw ml·n·., prison at
Chino 10 ht'gtn ~1·n 1ng hi:-'tatt•
pn ~111i s1·nt1•11t•t•
II o" c·' t' r . II a r l ., a 111 th a I
hc.•e.ius1• Or.ingt• t'ounl~ Shl'rtff's
l>l'partmt·nt l'lt•rk~ d11I not ~t·nd
tlw prol)(•r papl'rY.1irk tndi<·uting
thC'rt' wa!> a hold on thl' t·onvtt'll'd
raptsl. Lo-. /\ngl'le~ 1a1kr~ rt•
ll'a~1·d him
The m1st~1kt· w;,is d1 ~<'11\'rrc·d
<•arlit•r 1h1~ \\l't'k I>.\ anotht·r
Orangl' Count v -.ht•rtff'i. clt-rk
"h<1 wa-. rout1m•ly c.·hel'k1ng up on
thl'statu,orW:itb 1n Los AngdC's
IJ a rt said l hC' pa pc.'r" ork in
form 1ng Los J\ngt•ll'~ offtc1alo; to
kc•c•p Watb 1n c.·ustod.\ ha~ not
hct'n loratl'CI
5 indict e d
FRESNO 1A P 1 Five nwn
"l'rl' ind1c·kd hy a frderal grand
Jllf\ ht•n• for allt•gt•<Jl) emhe7.
~1t11g s1•ns1t1vt• military equip
m1·nt from tht• China l.akt.• :"'a,al
Weapon~Cl'nll•r
I le ~aid ~hN1ff'~ offtl•tals in
Orange County us~umc· thl' dotu
m t•n t~ "cre ncvt•r '>cnt
Cly mon• 24 . a forml'f La kc
Forl'st rcs tcit•nt. "<i~ arrl·~t••d bv
Svnun authortltl'S Saturda\ anti
I; in J<ttl IJl'rtding t•fforts to rt•turn
ht m to tht• l ' S to ans Y. l'r th<· drug
-.muggling diargt·~. t ' s Em-
ba:,.,) offtC'iab s:i)
K rdwr .,aid ( ·1:. rnon· has not
ht>l'l1 t'haq!l·d with any erirnt· 1n
S\rta 0 l'l\'m11r1· \\a~ orw of the· mon·
Lha1\ IOU host:JIH'S itl1t1<1rd a
Pak1st:.m1 Jet that Y.a~ huac·kt·d
M arl'h 2 on a flight from Karathi
lo Pesh<rn ar
lit• \\as aN·u~t·d in lh1 · grnnd
Jury indtl'lmt•nl of ht•1ng lht·
ringleadt•rof .iSI:! m11lton ha:.h1sh
and hc•ro1n s muggltng opt·rat1on
<.'I) mon• ~ passport w;i., n ·-
vokc·d and h<' Y. a-. •~sut•tl om· "a~
l r a Vt' I pa µt.•rs to the l 'nt ll'cl St a lt•s
llO\\t•vt•r. the l.agun<t Beath
ll1gh School gradualt· rt•matnl'd
1n Dama~t·u~ wh11L-Krl'hc•r al
tl•mpt<·d to han• lht• drug -.mug
gllnJ( <'harJ:!t·s d1 s m1sst·d S,\ r1a
cincl the l'ntll'd Stut1·~ havt• no
exlracl1t111n lrl'al'
/\el·ording lo hi'> al 1orn<·y~
t'lvmorl' h..t'> rt•fu~t·d to ~•gn a
\\ ,;.vl•rohurn•ndt•r that \\Ould al
loY. him to ht· taken into <'USl•Kls
h ' l S I a " e n r o r 1· l' m en l ai1th11ntH·~
In l'arllt•r st;Jll'mt·nls Kr<'lll'r
said thl' h;.1ltlt·ground" for air
111g of tht• t•hurg1·., :.tga1n-.1 h1~
l'IH•nt would hc.· 111 s, ri:.i
l111Y.t'\t'r, upon 'nynwn·" ~1r
rl'....i Saturda'. Krt·bl·r Si.ltd ·1h1ng~ art' gt'lt1ng out of hand.
.idding that for ht ~ II\\ n -.afrl.\. hi~
l'lll'nt ~hould rl'lltrn lo lht· l 'n1ll'Cf
St alt'~
C'l .,·mon" "ho:..1· parl·n1~.
Th<'lm.i and <;lt·n Ch mon'. ltH' tn
San .lu<1n Cap1strnn;1. had agrc·ecJ
to -.1gn :1 wa1\'t•r for his t"Xtradi
lion. ,1ceord1ng to Krd>c.•r , and
wus onl\ "a1t 1ng for hr~ al
tornt•\ .., .trrl\al in l>amaM·u~ In
tlo s o ·
In a phont' l'afl from 1>.1ma~('U~
Wt•dnt·~'1 iJ\ l>a' 1d ~o n ~aid
Krl'ht·r told. hlm thl· l' S Stall'
llt•µartml'nt h:id ('Onl at'll'CI In
ft•rpol . lhl· 1ntNn<1t1onal polt<·1·
aJH'nt·y. in un effort lo g :.11n
<"lymon•, rl•lt•as <· from Jail and
1•xped1tl' his n •turn tu tht• l 'nited
States
' M.\ under'>lunding from talk
1ng to Ron 1Krl'IH•r1 1~ that
Cl~ morl' 1s Y.!lltng tu return to lht•
l 'n1t<'Cl States and fan· the·
<·hargc.•s against him. f)u\ 1d~nn
o;;ud
providt't.l lo 1nd1gc11t pt·rsons
who do not 4ualtf for or are
waiting to n·1·1•1vl' other forms
of wl'lf<1rt• fr<Hll ttw stale or
f e d e r a I g u v c· r n rn <' n u,, Th e
general rell<.'f pro~ram IS (unded
l'Xclusivt'ly with <·ount y funds
Re<'aus t• of 1·onl'crn that
per~on:-. from ''th1•r rount1es are
bt·1ng altractl•d to tht• local
program , Hu11. has
r e e o m m c n d t· d ~· o n " y c a r
rcs1dt·m·y rl•q u1rl'm<·nt
S u c· h a r <• 4 u 1 r £• m e n t 1 s
pt•rm1ltcd under thl' sta t('
Wclfart• and lnstitut111n~ Code,
the• hody of law whu:h rl.'qu1res
t•ount ic~ lo prov1dt• genl·ral
rl'li<•f to tr1d1gt•nts
Court~. howt•vt·r. haH' MruC'k
down n•siclcnt·y rcqu1reml·nts
and Ru11. said lht· c·oun t y
Counsel'.., Offin· has rautwned
that . adopt ion of 1-.Ul'h U
p r o v i s 1 o n 1 ~ I 1 k l' I y l u b e
thalkngl•d" hv a lawsuit
Hu1z ha~ pr<1posed that the
t'OUnty 1mprovt• lb Sf'rl't'ning Of
appl1canh. bring propl'rt}
pos~e s ~1on ~tandard~ i nto
c· 11 n r o r m a n <· l' "' 1 t h ..., t at ,.
standards, and 1ssut' \'OUC'hcr~
· to third part1t·~ for payment of
rH'Ct'l>S1l1c~ "ht•ne\ l'r 1>11...,s1bll· ..
The sol'tal s<'rvttt·~ d1rel'tor
also n·c·omml•ndt•d that a
\\Ork for \\t•lfare program for
a h It• bod H' d re<' 1p1 t' n l ~ bl.'
C'Xpanded and pcnalll t·~ -.t1ffened
for persons "ho do not sho" UIJ
for work assignmenb
Persons who fatl to ... ho" up
for work a~signmcnb s hould be
den1t•d a ss1i.lant'l' for '.tX m<inlhs
instead of lhl' 30 day ~an<'llCJn
no" applied. Hu1z ~au!
Fro• Page Al
JASON. • •
Thl· ho~ ~ niolht•r. pol11·t· -.aid.
rc•portt•dly lt\t'" 111 C:1·111 g1a hut
h .i-. 11111 lll'l'll l'CHllal'll•d
Thi• ho~ rurn•nll~ lodg1•d al lhl·
l\llH·rt Sitton Home 1n Orangl'.
.,hoy. 1·d no '1~1hk sign-. ''' m1~
t n •a l ml•nt. IHll ll·t• ..,a 111
:'\ l'\\ port tn\ t•..,11 g .1tor'> ~aid
lh1·~ an · at .1 lo~s lo 1•\J1l<11n llll' al
legt•c1 kulnap 111 < lc·1•an~11l1· Th1·\ ~;11d lht•\ h.11·1· no C'll•;1r <·u·I
mol1\·1·
-· W1· C'an do a lol of gu1''>'lng liut
I h.tt ';tl)(Jlll ;.t)I ~o r<ir . ~llg~l'St('(f
Sgt '.\likt• ~1d•:\1•n\. Y.h11 ha'>
h<·;Hft·d lip lht• In\~·~• 1ga1111n lo ~"" 1• lht• '"" ~ m~ .,lt•rtou~ na~t
.\1 l'l·:\l'fl.' -;aid ti :ippt·ar-. tht•
I :1 .' l' a r 11 Id h a~ n 11 t ;111 l' nclt' ti
s <•hool nor Sl't•n ti dm·trir s tnl'I' his
abd11l'taon 1n OtTan~1d1•
c;,Jg ltard. Yoho µoltt•t• C'latm h<i~
lll'C'll unwilling lo t·ommt•nt on the•
l'ast• f(•main' 1n c·us tr>ch at tht·
;\;t•" port 1·11.' 1atl on · k1dn<1p
t·h;.1rg('' lie · •~ tw111g h1•ld on
S25.HOO hJll
Check uncashed
LOS/\~(; 1-:Lf•:S 1 \ P 1 Wt•lls
Fargo l'J~htl·r"..., t•h ct'ks toti.lling
SI m1ll1on \\l'rt' mud<• out to
hea\'y\H'tght boxing c·hamp1nns
Muh ammad 1\11 ;rnd Larr~
llolml's la:..t Yt'iff at lht• rl'qut•sl
of I roublt•d fight promotl'r
l l;Jrold Smith. hut •H·1tht•r man
n •<'t'I\ rel thl' munt'' thl' l.o~ 1\ng<•lt·~ llc•rald ~:.x'am1ner n ·
portl'd Wt·dnl·~d<J.\
I ho111ds f' H.11ey Publ1'>ht'r I tlomd'> K1>evil Editor Editorial Page
~--------------------------------
A8 L
Thursday, March 26, 1981 Barbau1 Kre101ch Edllonal Page Editor
Building code
gets new teeth
Laguna lka('h <:1ty Council m(•mbers have• approved
:.in ordinan<.'L' lhat might 1;ersuadt> potential violators of
the t·1t.v 's building rnd(• to Hunk twice before breakrng the
la\.\
Thost· propt•rly owner~ who rent out µort1ons of their
homt·s in an•as not tom•d for mult1·farnilv use. <ind those
who add onto lht•ir homes without the be.nt'fit of bui ldtnl'?
pt>rm1ts. will lw thl'ta rgl't ofthe:.tiffrr 1<1w
Hy th:.inging s u('h v1olallon~ from infrac lmn!. to mis
dt·nH•anor offC'nses, lh<.· nt~ will have mon• clout in c·or
n•c·t1ng illl'gal :-.1t uution:.
Curnmtl.v. whl·n <J vt0latio11 1s brought to the at
ll'nt wn of c·1t~ off1t1ab. a lt•ltt•r of warning 1s :.t•nt to the•
propt•rty ownL•r
If no :1C'twn 1:-. tuken by ttw violator. a Sl'l'Ond notu·e· 1:-.
:O.l'nt Thl'n still annthc.•r
F1nallv. thl· 1:-.s11c· got''> to the civil t'ourt:-.. when• 1t
u:-.uall} tukt•s hl'lwet·n l\\O and three yl'ar-. to gl't on the
l'Ourt call·ndar
By mak111g s ul·h \'10l:Jt1on:-. m1:.dl'mt.•anor tn naturl'.
lht>.' go to tht• ('nmrnal court calendar ml'aning a much
:-.hort l'r hmt• pc.·no<I twfort• the 1~sue is n•solved
.Just lhl' fatl lhal lhL· v10hHion 1s ti n1minal. ins tt•ad
of t'l\'il . maltt.•r :ind poss1!,ly pun1s hablt• by arrest and
l'\'t•11 a jail tt•rm. -.hould hring more• willing ('omplrCJnl't'
'' 1\h the la\\
Th<· c·1t.\ ..., lwlld1ng department sa~ :-. thl' nurnbt>r of
:-.11 <·h \'IOl;.1trons 1:-. 1ntrt•as rng , and lh(' 1:.sumg of c·11<1t10ns
and -.mall rint·:-.1u:.t 1:.n't dningthetrn·k
('ount'rl nwmher!'> :-.aid they 'll tr~· thl' m·w orchn.inc·t•
t11 "t't' 1r 1t ha:-mon• l'fft•<·t
I I tlw~· rt1t•an hus tn<'S!>. ttw~ will push to M'l' 11 t!. t'll
fcirn·d
Developlllent flawed
I >n I ht• s u rfa n.'. 1 t I ookecf It kt' <.t good µI an
ThL· 1h.·vt•l11pt•r!-> \\~1nll'ci to ere<Jtl' 29 builcfable lots on :.i
!17 ;i(·rt• pan·t-1 . with th(• lots 1n s 1u•s ranging from a quarter
il<'I'<' to n<·arl\ Ii <tl'l'l':-.
I >n I op uf L h <1 I. l ht· c·n m pan.' wou I cl lt·J \'t'.58 ii<' r<.':-. :.is OIJl' n
!>p <•<'t' :incl for n•c·n·at1on u:.<' on a h1lls1dt• hl·hmd Laguna !"!
Top oft IH' World t·om m unit~·
Hut the dril\\haC'k:-. to !ht· propo!->al . :.is far :.is Laguna
llt';l(·h t•11uneil 111t•mht•r:. and rl's1clt•nts nf the Top of the
World c·ommun1t \ sa\.\ 1t . \\l'l'l' numerous
For ont• thing. t ht· <ll-n.•lopmt•nl \H1uld 1nerc·aM' \\ att•r
r11n11ff into Wood and t\11:-.o eunyons and <k-.tn1.\ thl' 'll'\.\
I rom I ho!->t' l' an' on:-.
In ttdrl111on. t ruff J<' gt•nt·r;.itl'rl h~· ttw I rn<·t "ou Id h<1 \ l' an
:1(1\ e•r:-.<· 1 mpa<.'l on Park :\' t•nul' and ot ht•r :-.t rt'l'b 1n th<· Tup
of lhl•Worfcl('ommunrt\
C'n1111<·il nwm hl'f'!'> ,\ t•rt· l'onc<•rnt•d :.i houl thrt'l' potL·nt 1al
I 11 nd-;lldl' s it<·s "1th 111 th(• cit•\ l'lopnwnt. and s<.t id lhl' road de.·
... 1gn 1n !ht· ll'<H'I \\ould m:.ikl' 11 d1ff1eult for t>mt•rg1-·nt·~
\'t•h1 c·ll'-. lo 1·nll·r lh1• <trl'U and r<'Sld('n!s to rfrpart in lht·
1•\ l'lll of ,1 fin·
\net \\hil1•1l \.\;1 !.t1l)\10u:-.tht•<lt•\t·loper put a lot ofy.ork
111 to I ht· p1·01w:-.(•d -.u hd I\ t:-.111n . I hr· s<·itlt• ''a.., 111 uc·h loo I a rg1·
t 11r t ht· ;1n·a
lfth1· l·omp:1n.' \\ ;1111!'> U• huil<I :.in~ thini.: on 1h propc·rt~ 1l
\\ tll h.I\ 1•lrJ<·1 mH· ha<'k "11h mu<·h morl' modt•st plan-,
Hope for housing
Tht·n· · !-> h11p1· for housing l h l' I t'S!"i th :.in r 1 ch 1 n
-.out ht·rn Orang•· Count~ Soml' hopt•
Tht· stall' Coastal Commission ha!-> un;.rn1mousl~ ap
pro\·t•d plan:-. h.\ tht• Hro<Jdmoor Dt•\'l'lopmt•nt Co of
I .:.ijc.!una 1 lilb to :-.u hd1\'1dt.• <i 212 <1crt· tral'l southeas t of
the Aliso Crt.•l'k c;otf Cours 1• in South Laguna
In m<Jking lht·11· dt•ci:-.ion . C'nmm1ssionNs upheld a
prn 1ou!'> South C'oa!.l llt.•g10nal ('o;Jstal Comm1ss1on rut
1ng I hat approvt·d the· devt.'lopmenl It took 1n 28 singlt•
famtl\ lob on al>out 15 acrt.·:-.. unoth(•r 354 condominium
'illl'" (in ;,s <H'r<':., and 100 affordahlt• hr>using site:-.
Appro\ al of lht• dt.•\·elopmt•nl on tht.• hills <1bo\'t• tht•
-.p;1 -,id<• v illage v.:i:-. bitt<·rl~ contc>stt'd b~· ttw South
I .. 1guna C'I\ u· J\:-.soc·1at1on Th<Jl led to an appl'al of th<· n •
~ronal 1·omm1s:-.10n·:-. t'ndor!'>t'mt•nt
,\s:-.ociallon mcrnlwrs s<11d tht.• proJl'<'I would ch.•f:it·e·
1111· \li:-.o Pl·ak ndJ.!t•lrnl' and rnundatt• tht• 142 ant• OJH'll
... pa<·c• portion of tht• dl·vl'lopmt•nl with w<1tl'r runoff
Jlrmt•\'l'f. the :-.1<1t(• comm1s!-.10ner~ 1nd11dNI a numlwr
of l'ond1tmns on d1·v<•lr1pment of tht· arl':oi to m1.·e•t the· Joc<JI
n•s1<ll'nts' <·onn·rn:-.
('11n..,tnu·1 ion of lhc.• proJ('l'I \\OU Id prov1ck mu eh
lt't·dt·d ;1ffonfahl<· hou!'>tnj.! tn an areu '-Ol'C'I.\' lacking 1n
1\'ailahlP dwt•lling:-. for m1.·cfium and lo" inrom£• v.agt•
,11·n1.·r:-.
Though !ht• hu1lding of th<• JOO affordablt' unit~ ~\11uld
111t -.01\·1· th<• s hortagt• of this tyiw of hou!.1ng. 1t is <·lt•<trly
111 11pt1m1s11c.· turn for s c•ntor c1t17.ens and ~·oung 1woplt· 111
rH•t•d of rn11der:it1·l~ pnc.·t'cl plarl'S to hv1·
• Opinions F•xprcssed 1n lhl' space above are those 01 the Daily P1lo1
OlhPr views cxprcc;sed on 1h1s page arc those ol then authors and
irtist.., Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot P 0
Uox 1560 Costa Mesa CA 92626 Phone {71 4) 642-4321
Rv l..M . 80\'0
Your l:hant'('S of gl•tt1ng hit
111 ;i rt•ar t'ntl ('oll1ston
t·v1d1·nlly C'O uld be· t·ut 1n hulf
JUS I hy IO!.t:tlltng a th1r<I
hrakl-light unrlf'r th1· m1cldll'
t:f your n•r ., huc·k wtnrl<1w
S I U <f I t• S S h II W C' 1.1 r S S 0
GlDDMY GUS
We have shed our guilt
c·omplcx with our
morals Now if we err
the r ulprit 1s sortcty.
t•nvironmenl, all.'ohol or
C'Vt'n demons th al have
taken possesslt>n of our
body
C.t09,.,, °"' 10"',,,.llh .,. •u1>mt1t•O Ov r••O.'' .we oo "°' "9<•u•rHv tt t•ttt ow .,,,.,or tN fllit.,..pe, S.nd '°"' o.t P""V•
•• (; locu"' 6"' Oolly ~1101
1•<1111pp<•1I last :v1·ar wt·rt· in
volv1•d in ~ 1wr1·1·111 f(•Wt·r
rear ender~ than cars without
sul'11 high h ~hts No lug 1•x
pl'nst'. that You c·oulrl do il for
a frw dollars
<> You know that 1'111wn
wt1 h I ht• l larh'm c: lohl'lr111
t t' r s I' <ii l t• <I M 1 • : 111 o w t a r k
l.t•mon·• What w.is his nam<·
on~ inally .,
A M<'ado"' l.t•mon lh11 he
1· h a n g c• d 1 t l l' g a 11 .Y I 11
M ecitl11wlark ahoul Ill y1•ars
a J!O
4 You "<lld you c•an only
-.t•c a rainhow with ynur hark
to the• sun Th:1t's wronK I
1>aw one ht~h 111 thC' sk v rtKhl
•in<kr the• ...im
A Thul was a solur halo.
t•v 1dt•nlly. not a ra1nhow A
solar halo mak<•s a rompl<.'ll'
rin.: ,Jround lht• sun whl.'n
ltght 1s reflcctt•<I throu~h 1cc-
crystal cloudi; high up, and
somt•llm<'s you cun't sl'e all
of 1t Such 1s tht• explunalion
of the> skywutrht~rs
Military losing trained pilots
W /\Sii i NG TON l'rt.':-.tdcnt
lll'agan's plans lo bt'l'f up th1·
nation's ridt•nst' force:-. ha \It'
i;:1ven tht• lion's share of Pen
tugon budget increase!> to lht•
Nuvy Hut lh1• money may l>c
:.umt•d al tht· wrrmg lar~et
hard wan• mska<l of 1.wrs11nnel
T w o !HI . Cl 0 0 t o n n u 1· I ea r
pow l'rt'd :ii n· raft 1· ;ir n t· r-; a rl'
propost'd 1n
l h l' pr l' :>I
dt.·nt ., budget,
<.I n d 1111• I 2
c·arr1t•r f11·1·t
IS Io bt· l' X
panrfrd 1.·vt•n
lu:.1lly lo 15
H u t t h 1·
lrouhl1.· 1s, lh1.·
Navv 1s fintl
1ng It tough lo
hang unto t•nough p1lols lo man
lls pn•st•nt ('arrit•r s tn·11gth,
much lt•:-.s !hose who'll tw nl'e<kd
t n fl y I ht• I> la n t• s from an
rn<·n·asi·tl flat lop flt•t•t
T h 1• r 1• a son i s s t r 1 <· I I v
t·l'onom11· An 1·xpt·r11•m·1·1I 1nl1;t
c·:in t·arn up to four l1m1•s hi s
mtlit ar.' pay b~ l1t·1.·om1ng a
1·omm1·r('1Ltl a1rl11w pilot As a
r1.·sult. lht• Na\ y s plluls <.1rt·
1>t>1•l1ng off at an t.tlar1111ng rnlt·
to pursut• th1• mon· lul-ralt\l'
rart•ers offrrl'<I by n1mmt•n·1al
a v "' t IOI\
N t\ V \' t\ N 0 t\ I K F 0 K (' t:
ptluts art• rc·4u1n·d to '\t•rv<• six
years ufler lht•y 1wt lhl'1r w111gs
Thi:-IS to 1ns un• lltat lhl· tax
payt•r.., \\tll gt·t at lt·ast s11m1·
q uid pro quo for th<• $500.IXJO µlus
1l t·osts lo train l'ach pilot plus
an :.uM1ttonal $3411,000 to qu:1llfy
h111l for <'arner dulv
llut Sl'\lt•o out of 1•v(.·I'> Ill
military pilots quit lhl' M·rvi<·t•
at tht· t•nd <1f llwir six year oh
hgution Thl· lNnplalion to rukt·
1n h1i.: hucks as an airhn(· pilot 1s
1usl loo grl'at
1'hl.'n"s anolht·r fa1·tor 111
volv1•<1 Thi· :.11rhrws won't t11rt· ii
pilot who's ov!'r :111 . o;o lht•
o;{'rv1r1• pll11ts can I afford lo
slay 011 ITllH'h pa:.t 28 lksult
Ont· h1t1·h and th1•y r<· gon1'.
h·av1ng lht• l;.ixpay1•r; slul'k with
I h l' 1 r l r a 1 n 1 n g h 1 l l a n ti l h l'
rc•1.·rui1t•rs lry1n~ to h1rt• rt•pla<·<·
rnt•nb who will 1ir1·surn11tily
start lh(• \\hol1• t'~l'lt· 11\1•r
again
NOT ICO H~D ~W .
MaHhox
Last yt'ar , 4:11i Navy pilots
quit Tht· Navy wound up 25 ~r
t't•nt o;hort 1n µdot ., of ('om
111anckr rank anti ht·l1>w lht•
on1•s who would lw mo'l tt•1npt1·d
by t•omnWrl'lal Jlr lint• JOlis Tht·
Navv nt.>t•11l'1I <ilmoq 1:1,000
ptlols 11 hml uni} 9,000 Ant.I
this, of n1urM., 1s hl'fon· anv m·w
1·arnt•r-; an· huilt
Thi· "1;1\ \ h~" t111•tl to 111'
t•11uragl' th1• ~•l lrit 11ir1 of 1ls
flyhoy ranks with lht.· t•arrol or
p;1y ra1:-.1•s l.<isl Y<'Jr . lht· acl
m1r;tls as kl'd ('ongn •ss for a 5ll
1wn·1·11l :-.~tlary lllC'rt·ast· for its
pilots. th1.· r1rsl t·han.i.:1· tn hll,11'
pay :-.t·al1· in ;w yl·;.irs l 'ongn•'s
OJ\ 'ti J ra1M· of 25 pt·rt·1•1\l
('O~tatl·.S!'>. Al.SO a11111 ll\'t•d ,I
hon UI> of $:t.llO() 111 $11 ,(J()(t for
1nloh \\Ith · 1•rtt11·al 'k1lb' for
l':it·h y1·ar th1•y ~1grt•1· lo stay 011
JlilSt lhl•1r kg.ii 11hhJ.!<1l111n Bui
11111 a ..... ngll• p1l11t h.1s Vl't r1·
('('I V<·<I a honu:-.. ll1•(•aus1• 1'1·n
tagon hurt.•au1·rats ar1· -;t ill lry
1ng lo ftgun• out ·~ hll'h 1>ilot~
qualify for 11
01w .11lr111r,il '111111·•·' l11ld ""
11·porh'r ~haron 1;1·lt111 •r J.!ol "''
'Affordable' housing was only
I 111 111' Ed1t11r
1\ v1•:ir :1i.:11 I 11:11\ t·h lwlt1·\1•1l
I h1· :11h 1·1 t t'l'llll'OI s st al1ni.: I hat
11111litl1• h11lllt'' V. ('l'I' 1nd1·1·rl. I h1·
0111\ .1rf111 tl:d>ll" hou,1ni.: 1n
l)r;;11gl' <'ounl'. 1111' ,1n:-.w1·r lo
tlw pol1·nl1.tl hom<· ""n1·1.,
pl'ii\ 1•r 1 ... 111·t·umlu•tl and lll\1•,t1 •tl
HI .1 n111l11lt· h11llll'. \\ hwh h.1 ...
11111\ 1·d 111 tw :1 h11rn·111l11u' '""
l.1k1• 1111111 \ p.11 I
M \ 1·-<p1·rwnl'I' ha.., 'ho" n 11 "
\II t \l,tlh llllJll""thlt· I II f1n.1n1·1· .1
11111l11lt· h11rn1• and 11:•'.' 1111• r<1111,ll\
1·...c·;1l.1t1ng 11•111 on the· 'pa1•1· tl •w
t·11p11·' l \'t• to11ntl llial v. h1·n ,1
111·r...i111 " rn11l11l1· hunw ,., 11nc·1·
.... 111 iit!'tl 1111 rt·ntal ... pa1·1• 11) ;i
rn11htl1· horn<· p;1rk . 111w nu l11ng1·r
ha-. all\ <·11111 rol O\ t'I hov. llHH'h
11111' Jl<I~' Ill kt•Pp II!\('" hllrrtl' Ill ii
st a 111111:.rv · · 111,...1111111 t I ' 1111•.,, 11f
tour"" lht· 11111hil1· h11nw 11v.n1·1
11v. n., llw l:111d 1111 wh11·h hts m
\ 1• ... 1 nw11t "" This "h1ghl,\ 110
ll~llal I
lh I h1· I lflW I I'·'~ S1121i 1111 th1·
nwr1g;ig1· pl11' S:NH 11n llw dll\\rl
p,1\ nwnl . I h.1v1• 11a11I Slit:! Th1·11. t
h;1\'1· a $245 sp:1t·1· n•nlal h ·•· plu.,
t.:a' .ind l'l1•1·t111.·11~ that ;1d1b..
an•1I h1•r ~ill $70 1wr m11nt h i\tld 111 I"'°' ,1 t1•Jt•ph11n1• .11111 111~ IO\'l'°'t
m<"nl " 1·11111<·:-. Ill $!l~I pl'r month
Thi:-" hardb affonlcilik' Ii\'
ing M:"o 'Jl:H'l' n·nt hu' Jllmp1•d
I 111m S21[1111S245 t 1nt'lutl1ng S5 p..r
11111111h for rnv '\mall tlogi 1n 0111·
\ 1'.11 t 'nk:-.-. I 1·111ild .1ff11rtl to p.1\
:i t l1•a:-.1 $:1 .llllll to m11v1• m.\
honw· :i11rl find land for tl. I ;1m
l111·rall~ al the nwr1·v of lht• park
Ian<! 0-...111•1 :incl "hat1•vl'r h1·
d1•1•m o; 'f:11r" l11 l·ha1 J.!I' 1n 11•111;11
frr:-. Tht•n• 1' no l1mtl 011 v..h;1! lw
1•:1111·harg1·
M \' l'ITV go1·-. oul Io 11111:-.1•
c·o11n1 It's:-:-.1111ls iffOlllltl m<· v. ho
Hrt' on fixNI i111.'om1·s Man\ of
lhc·m at(' lt•av1ng tht·1r lighl ~ off
and lwat alrnos t tolally offt11mecl
:11l1l1·cl r.11s1·:-. in ... pa1·1· n·ntals I
all'l J.!l'ill<•fu l lh:JI m y moth<·r a
IA 1cl11v. 1m a fuwd 1n<·11ml'. h;is a
honw 1111 land sh<· and m v ft.1thr•r
pu11l fur <•S WI' Wt•rt• grov.. In~ l•P
WhC'n I mm·t•cl tnto this mohilt•
park 1:1:-.I y1•;1r . aft1•r h;iving s pc•nt
m11s l of inv ;11lult y1•ars 1n apart
nwnts. I ft•ll thut I hatl i.om1·
o,;c•t·ur1ly. und a p11lt•nl1al "invc•st
rnc•nl .. I d1tl not km,w that I h1.• i.al<·
Of Ill V "I nv1•-;t mc•nt " ('OU lei ht• helcl
up h(•r:1us1· \ht• p:.irk ownns c·m1ld
rnakt• llw r<•ntul ch.ir~t· s11 c•1wrl11
t ant I h:1t intc-n•s tt•d pl'11J11C' woulcl
h1· un11l1lt• t1> ufforcl to buy it The•
fl ark ownt• rs a 1,11 · u pprovt"
wh1ll'V<'r huy1> 11 :ind liv1•s 10 it
ht•n•
l.1fr has 1111 J(uurunkes, hut
-.un•ly lhc•r1• must ht• 1lerc·nry
111\d fUlrrll'SS .'lllmt•Wh(•rf', <;I) lh/tl
p1 •11pl1· 1·111ilcl Ii\ 1· 1111! t h1·1 r rl'l 11·1·
nw11t \ 1·ar., 111 d1gn11 \ v. rlh .111t•
q11.t11· l1111d ;ind olh1·r '''"'"'""" 1111 :1 d1•11•11t q 11.il11 \ ol l1f1·
Solll•'\\ lw11• 111 11111 tlt>1111wr:in
llH•11· 111u ... 1 lw '1111\1• prot1TI 11111
1111111 ''"''''·'I\ 1· gn ·t·d
111·: \\1\l.'lEI!!'>
.SrM>nrr & loob
To I ht· 1<:1t1l11r
In \llllr front p.JJ.!t' Jrt11'11· on
:o.1·1t•n1·1· 1·nt 1llt·d. "Sr·11•n1·1· 1irt•\'
to m"f1L' anrl fools I "":-. ahoul
to aJ.!rt•t• \\l(h !ht• hl·:idhn1· until I
found that th1· ;1ulhor v.a:-. r1•f<·r
rinJ.! lei tho...i• v. ho did not agn·•·
v.1th lh1· 11npr11\1•n lh<·tJn 11(
t•volut111n a ... !h1· rn...,f1h and
fnols
Tht• ;1ulh111 1•quat 1·d I h1• I ht•111)
of 1•\11lul111n lo lht· la" of gr,1\1
I\ If this 1s -.o \\h\ 1s 11 not rt·
fprn·d lo ;" lht· lav. ·of t•\11lut111n "
Thl' ... o 1·allt-cl s1·11•nlt..,l <lcll's n'l
I' \'I' n k 0 II" l h (' 111 ff(' r 1• 11 ( I•
ht·lwt•t•n a llworv an1t a law
This artwlt· 1·au'<'' llll' 111 agn•1•
with lh1· tw:1cll1n1• '<'lt•n1•1• l't•r
1a1nl~ ha' fallt-n Wt'.' lo m1sfth
anrl f11ob
lkfon· I ht• S<'lllH'' I rt a I. c•v11)\1
twn 1·11ulcl not 1•v1·n Ill' lau~ht 111
puhli1· • 1·hools l>u<· to n·1·1·nt rul
ings hy m1s f1t s and fools. lh<·
11;1m1• 11r <:otl t·Jn't t'H'n ht• ml·n
twnt•d tn s l'l1ool, althc)Ugh thert•
ts m1•nt111n 11( Ciotl 1n lht•
llt•tlaratton of lntl1•p1•ndt·n1·c•
:.incl 11 w:.1:-. wr1!11·n hv th1· -;amt•
ml'O who wroll• th<• ('·onst1t ul1on
!low t·ould lht· m1•nt1om of C:od
1n sd1ool llH'n ht· unc·onst1tu
tumal" .r AM ES 110 I.I >IN<;
-~ ......... ....
To I h<• J•:cl1tor
I find 1l f<...,<·11iating I hut th1• rnl'n
1111 1tw ho;1n l of lh1• n1•w M11s11•
('t•Oll•r an>, for till' most part, lht•
s a nw men in t ht• f1>n·fro111 or th<·
ht).! h11s11w:-.' ass ;iull 1111 !ht·
Cl ran g<'l 'ount y t•n v 1 ron rrw nt
Tht•s1• m1•n h:l\'l' 'llPl>ort1•(I tn
rnany 111t1•n·st1ng w;1y -; unron
t rnllt•cl land dl'\ l'lopn\l'nt ancl
a11 p11rt t•xp;cns11111 111 our un•:i
Now lht·~ arc• going to he:lp
0 r a n gt' (' o II n I y I o :1 t11 g ht• I'
cultural h•vl•I irhl1•111J of Jt•:-.t I.I
h1glwrnmsc· l1•v1•l
(;ootf hu,lnl'SS prtt('tll'I' Ill
guilt "
Mc· Sl1MNEll
Qtw•f&.11 11'ro119
To tht• Editor Rt' l>:in l,owt•n of tht• tncoa
Hearh. Flo h1J(h -;rhool a nd lhl•
PSAT \'Xatn
A nwdl'I do<''I not nf.'1•<1 lo bl'
l'nnstruc tt·<I Thi· prohlt-m 1·;111 ht•
\ 1-.11alttl'tl Tlw an ... v.1·r "...i•\1•11
I 7) 1>lal11•' or .,Urf:tt'I'°' of Whtt·h
t\\o 1 ~· an· hast·' 11f !hi' original
pyr<1rr111b ll1•n1·1· 1•1th1·1 171 or
1 ~1 1 "' 1·orn·1·t. d1·p1·1Hl1ng on
-.1·ma nl1!''
In ... horl. th1· 11u1•sl11H1 1:0. am
h1guo11s :inti a mull1pl1· d101<·1·
ao:-.w1•r rlr•<'!'. 1111( .illo" llw ... tu
tl1•nl t11 <ld1n1• h1~ l<·rm:-. So I tlo
lll'lrt•\1• th1· 11•p11r1t-r m1~...i·1I th1·
p11111I a 111!
1\n, .... :1\. h1111ra\ for \11u 11i.:
I .11v.. (;II'
Flti\~K c; ('ASSEHI.\
Thr real •hreat
l 11 t h1• l•:dtl111
0111·1· :lj.!:1111 ''"' 'I'\' Ill'""'
hrings '" .1n 111\l'I'\ 11·\\ "11 h
a not h1·r of wa ... h1ng11111 "l11g gun'
th1 .., ltnw S1 ·c·n·1 .11 \ 111 lkf1·11.w
(·as p.er W1 •111h1•1'J.!l'I'
:'liov. I koo" that m\ lll':tnni.:
1 ... n·1 "h.11 1t 11 .... ·d 111 Ill' anti
flt•rha p~ th1-. 1~ n:itun•" w.1~ 11f
prol1•1·11r1g 1111r rnuuh. h11! I m
r1':1..,11n:1lil.\ sun· lhul I h4'ard llw
mtnd tiogJ,!l1ng 'urn 111 11n1•
lnllwn 200 m1l1111n 1 I 1·ar1 I han
dl1· lh:il 1 hudgl'I m11d1 of \\hll'h
Is pr11gr;1111nwd f•1r cll'f1·nsi·
WEI.I., 1; .... l<1·a i.:a11 \\IJt1l1I
'"' 1 \11"11· \\orth ti .rncl I "'fl p11s1• I h:1t h~ cll'f Pll!'.I' I h1· gornl
S1•1· rl'l lll"\ ll11':tll~ from 11111
:-.1rlt•rs. prin1·1pally I h1· S11.,.11·t
l '111n11 !lk;I\ 11111 h1• anti lhl' n·'t
111 W;1..,hrnµt11n ht•l!t•r g1•1 lh1·1r
at•l togl'I hl•r tor rt' a son I hat !lu·
Sovrt•ls hav1• saul the) II l:tkt• us
""1lhout f1nni.: a ... hot
If all this 110111· pushing, rat'l.il
:iri.:u1ng rlumh hus 1nJ.!. /\hs<·um.
I.as V1·ga:-. f1rl'S, Santa M11n1l':t
r1•ot c·ontrol ft <"l'll' c·t1· 1•11·
dut•sn t ,.,ltlll. and 11u1ekl\, 1111'11
that 's t''lUt'tl\ wh;11 ·, go1ni.: lo
happ1•n
WJ\HHEN<: 1\l.TllOFF
Srlll•lt lnfrrr•• •
To I ht· Editor
1\ rt•(',. 11 I ,, I('<' 11 n g II r t lw
N1•wport B<•:it•h l'funntng C'om
m1 sswn shows thut good old
/\nH•rwan 't'lf inlc•rt•'it mot1n1tes
11s ull The· ht'llt<'<I topil' undt•r dis
1·us..,ion was tht• I n ·1nt• ('om
p;1ny's 11l11nm•cl 1•x punsion of
N1•wporl <'<•nkr
St•verul 1wopl<• -;poh• al(alnst
lht' prox1m1ty of thl' prnposl'd bus
11<>111lt t11 t ht•• r honit·s, tht•i r selfish
n•asoni. dtshkt• of 'hC'sr•I fumes
and ttw ui.tlincss of de pots Ont•
rn un wantt•d th<' Nt•wport Vlllui.tt'
rnovNl frorn its propnsNi site• so
t hl' rook 1nl( odor:-from its
fruslrnll'll with th<· l11ss 11( Nav}
pilots lo pnvat1• industry lhut ht·
su~i.:t•sll'd a mond~1 ry -.t11•k 1n
sh•t.1<.I of a l'arrot Makt• th1• 1·orn
tnl'1'1·1al airlin1·' r1·1nthl•r•w ltw
go\ 1•r11m(•nl for th<· !ratn1•d
p1l11h lh1·y htn· A' a pral'tu·ul
rn~1lh'I , though, th1• Nav) would
not IH' :.ihl1· lo for,·1· 1 lw :.11rhn1·., to
p.1)
M t:i\NWllll.t:, lh1· Navy 1s
trying to lun· ha1·k pil11ts wh11
h<1 \ t• l1•fl th<• .'t•rv1<'<' for l'lln1
nwre1al av1atwn hul h:.tH' IH·1·n
rurtough1•d h;.-th1• rt'<'l'SSttin Tht·
1ronv of th" s1tuat111n " th:il 1r l'rl'~1dn1l H1•ag<1n s11<·1·1·1·ds in
gt•tting th<· nal ion " <·<·1111urn\
lm11m1ng again, 11 writ mak1· 11
thill mueh hardt·r for ttw N.1v;.
to n•t•ru1t !lw pilot:-. 11 will nt·1·d
for lht• pn· .... 1d1·nt ·, 1•xpan'll·d
<'ilrrtt•r flt-l't
To m<ik1• m.iller., \H1r-.i., th1•
pilots th1· N:iv~ 1s 111-.ing ;ir4'
aln111sl h~ tl1•f1r11t11111 tho.,<· with
1·x p1•ri1·nc·1• .... 1x y1-.1 rs 1·x
p1·111•n<'l' i\ d1.·pul) <·h11•f of
n<.1\ 111 11pt·r:1l11111 .... Lando Z1Th
told tlw St·n,111• i\rnwd S1·r' I<''''
('11rnrn1ll1•1• n·t·t•ntlv !hal lh<•
halaO('(• of lht· :-.ia·\'.\ " flight
11t·rs1111n<·l has alr1•;11I) 'h1flC'd
;1 l ~1 rrn1ngl~ 111 1111•x 111·ri1•rl1Ttl
(lvt·r ...
flGHTIN(; Tiff<: Hf.M 'KOl'T·
lla\t' Stm·km.in s altt•mJI! t11
J:tln ltll' l"orporatum f11r l'uhlll'
Hrua1k1.1 .... 1 ing "1th a 25 p1·n·1·11I
h u d g t' I c· u t h a " r u n 1 n I 11
l11parl.-.an p111l1•st on Capitol
11111 St•ns 11:.i rnson S<·hm111. H
N M .inti T1·<1 SI 1·\ 1·ns ll
/\lilsk;1. :ind H1·p Tim Wirth, I>
f'olo h~I\ I' all °'('Ill l1•l11•r ' or
pr111l·st lo th1· Off11·1· of \1 an a gt·
m1•11t :.inti Butlgt'I
A It hough lht' l11rt•a l 1·n1·d fu11d
1·ut 1:-. v..11rr1:-.11m1 · 1·n•1u~h t11 c 'l•B
o ff1 c·1.ils . what r1·ally holh•·r:-.
th1•111 '' th1• l11~s of 1111l1·p1·n11t•111•(·
tht· l'lll v..1ll 1mpl1<'1llv "o'I lh<•n1
('I' II'., funrl1n).! ha' h1•1•11 110 a
un1qu1· !wo y1·ar -,d11·dul1'. lo
h•s,t·n !h1· 1•han1·1· of pn·s-,un·
fri>m a m<•rntwr of ('ongn•'s who
111 rl n I I 1 k 1• I h 1· a g 1· n ,. ) "
pro t.: r a n1 m 1 11 g Th 1• 11 H 1• p
"'"<·km.111 \11l1·cl 111 r1·n1·\\ lhl'
arh·a111·1· rur11l111).! "''"'Ill ""' \('.If'°' :1g11
l!ul nm~ a s hudgt•I d1r1"1·to1
S!111·krnan 1-. In 1ng lo 1•11g1n1•1-r .1
n·t r11<1l'l1v1• hutli.:1·1 c·ul for ('111!
I' I' ... I :1 II I •• II I ... \\ II II I rl \\ ·' f 1
1•1...,·v. hl'rt'. l11s ..,..lf1 ... 11 rl'ason ;i
tl1·-.Jl'1· f111 1'11·;111 ...r111·ll111J.! :i 11 On1
l ;11t~ r.111t1•d .1111! I :1\ l•tl .tl11111I lh<'
l'OllllllJ.( llll'l l':t'I' ol 1'1'11111' •'°'I th'
1·11' 1' url1an11.1·d lwr .,1•1f1....,lt
n·;· .... 1111 ",1n11ng 111 \\ .ilt.. th1·
... 1 r1·1·h safl'I~
T II t: lit\' I :\ t: ( 11111 ",J II \ '
r1·p11·,1·nt.1l 1\I·' 1•1111111,1·1! ah<1111
I ht• tw1wf11" of I ht· 1•\ pa11~11111 .
I ht•I r 'l'lfl,h 11•.i ,on' ll:I \ I llll'
man f1111ll'd ,1li1111t 1h1· 1·'<lra tinw
lw \\OU Id h;1vP 111 'l'l'lld tin\ 11\J.! to "or k 111 1'11-.1 a ~,,.,,, l11s ,,.lfr...h
n •.1-,1111 .111 .1p111·1·1·1.1111111 of his
t 11111• S1•\ 1·r .d 111•01il1• 1•>. prt''°"'cl
1·11111·1•r11 ahout I h1·1r \II'""' ti.·ini.:
lilo1·k1•tl h\ I ht• I 1\1111· < '1•111t•r t•>.
p.1n ,11111 ·,h .. 11 -.1•lf1!>.h n ·a si1n
Im 1· of 111 t•ll \ '"1·01•1 \ 0111· 1><·r,011
"11rn1•d ah1111t I lw 1111'f'l"i•.,1·d 1 raf
f11 11n l'anftc• C'11.cs! ll1gh"11) and
!lw ltkt•lthood 11flh1• prnh1h1tton11I
on 'lrt•t•I parking, h1·r st•lf1sh
rl'a:-011 ('OIW1•r11 :1 holll ( 'orona tlt•I
M <• r hus 1 nt•ss
I 1111 • 1;111~ 1.ra 1-.i•d pl.111-. lor 1•\
pa11s 111n . h1 ·r ,t'lf1sh 11";1"•11 111111·1·
... t111ppt'I'' lor lwr ... ton• S1•\1•ral
p1•11plt• lw11111an1·rl lh1• fa('I Iha!
... 1all1•d h1•a\\ lr:.tff11· \\11111<1 In
<-r1·as1• smog lh<·tr "·lfro;h n•:1
son :t nt•1.·d for l'lt•an air to
hr1·;ith1• S<·\ 1•1 al ll\'O l!lt• ,.,.,
Jll l''st•lf f l':tr., I fl,1! I ht• In 111('( 'om
pan~ l'X)':tllSIOrl Y.(1111!1 IO('rt·:c:--1•
at rporl u'ai.:1· t h1•1r 't·lf!sh rt•a
S1111' ;1 tl1·:-.1rt· fo1 111·111.·1· :incl
qllll'l Om• I.HI\ w111 n1•d ahmtt
r11r11>ff In lh1· 1111\ .tnd ,,., '1lt:i1111n
lwr ,t•H 1sh n·:·~·nn a fo11<1n1·'' f111
11al ttrt·
I 1·0111<1 ).!111111 . hut I h1• 1 P.1d1•1 J.!<'I'
lh1• 1111·111n·
.I /\C 'I\ V. II ITC 11-·r
Nobr "oblrr
Tot lw l·:d itor
If"" hat l rt•<Hl tn I ht• p:1per I' n>r
t'\'t'I . th11 ":tt'l'1•pta hh"' norst• lt•v1·I
of an a1n-r;1ft 11v1•r a n • ... 11lt•nt1al
a rt• a 1s (i4 <11•t 1 hds Th<• \'a ri am•1•
allo" anC'l' granlt•tl lo t ht• c·11m
m1·rr1at 1·arr1t•r ... 11s 111i.: .lnhn
Wa~m· Airport t~.11\ 1nc•rQus<•to70
tl1•nhl'ls
Do I h:t\t• nt•w' for \1111 '
(Nal1flt•d o;ountl t·n~im•1•rs 'havt•
r<'C'lff(fcod IOI dt•f't hi'!:-ov1•r m;.
h1lllll' on ll:1rh11r 1-;lunrl 11n<l I am
ftvC' milt•:-from th1• airport
Soml'lhlnJ,l s tinks, lwsidc., th1· wt fum1•s WINI I'll Ell VO i-:<; J.:t.I N
• l '9tfftr\ lforf'I r••Of''\ •f t iNttl<omt r~t right to
t Undf f\\• 1•\tft\ to ftl \OMt or •lfm 1na1, 11t.1 '' ,.,,,~•d l tltt r \ Of JOO •0'0' or t•\\ ••" C..
Q••t f\ Ortl•rtn(t a.11 l•Htr \ m u\1 1nc1uot
~P.~~~~~· :n~,;'~~7°.1"!';.~~:.:~: ~~':~~ ~:v.~ g:'~~~.:::~'.'d -:~' ~~'2 ~or:01:::~. --:~·' ~.:: num~tr Of 'fW cOf\tltlt)ivtO• n\u\t bf 01vfll'\ tor "'' •••t•t•an swtOOW\
..
r
j
1111111 CUil ·
·FBI nabs pair· in _Newport 'kickbacks'
By GLENN scon
Ot • o.llf l'ileC Staff Newport Beach busineasman
Jack Torre's refusal to pay
kickbacks for a multi-tnlUioo
dollar account led FBI a1ents lo
arrest two out-of-state men out·
side Torre's construction office,
according lo FBI officials.
Torre worked wit!) FBI agents
as they set up a clandestine
video-taping Wednesday of Torre
offering the two men $10,000 in
cash as lcickbacks , according to
the FBI.
Immediately after that, a1ent.a
arrested Harold Russell of
Scottsdale, Arb., and Jerry
Pel~rsen of Denver Colo., on 6us·
picion of ~e count or conspiracy
and three counts or wire. or
telephone. fraud.
The two men were arraigned
late Wednesday at the Tustin law
office of U.S. Magistrate Ronald
Rose. They were booked into
Orange County Jail and then re-
leased on their own recognizance.
P etersen is president and
Russell vice president of Mexican
Foods of America Inc., which was
acquired two years aeo as a sub·
sldiaryofOeneral Foods Corp.
According to d~uments filed
with the federal court. lhe two
men had approached Torre and
bis vice president, Gerald Crum,
offering contracts for construc-
tion ol up to SO GuadalaHarry's
restaurant. during the nut five
years ii the construction firm
would kick back about $50,000 for
eacbjob.
Russell at one point told Crum:
''It can be done, <Torre Construe-
tlon Company) will be making a
tot of money, possibly $10 to $12
million per year,'' according to an
affidavit from FBI agent Drew
Maconachy.
But Torre and Crum, wbo had
helped bulld a restaurant in 1978
for the two men. refused the deal
and instead worked with the FBI
to g a tber evidence against the two
men, according to FBI sources.
The GuadalaHarry's chain is
owned by Mexican Foods of
America. Russell and Petersen
were planning to solicit 31t2 to 5
percent more than needed from
parent General Foods to finance
the kickbacks, according to the
FBI alfidavits.
General Foods Senior Vice
Pres ident and General Counsel
Peter OeLuca released a short
statem(lllt Wednesday sayina the
corporation was cooperating in
the Investigation.
Russell and Petersen became
part of the corporation when their
restaurant business was
purcbued two years ago for wh.at
sources said was · 'several million
dollars."
Torre, whose construction busi-
ness is at 1101 Dove St. in Newport
Beach, said late Wednesday he
has been instructed by authorities
not to discuss the case pending a
trial. A hearing for the two sus-
pects ls scheduled for April 20 In
U.S . Distric t Court in Los
Angeles.
Carol Burnett wins libel verdict
Oceanside teen
Bal Isle man
held • ID
By STEVE MARBLE
Ot Ille D••IJ Pilot Si.tt
A brown-ha ired 13·year -old
boy . who told Newport Beach
police this week that he had no
me mory of his past. reportedly
was kidnapped more than a year
ago after running away from his
Oceanside foster family.
Police . wh o s p otte d the youngs ter wande ring down
Newport Boulevard Tuesday
evenin• with a middle-aged man,
have arrested SJ.year-old BaJboa
Is land resident Leonard Gagliard
on kidnap charges .
kidnap
Investigators claim Gagliard,
whoalsousesthename Jack Ran·
dal and six other aliases, grabbed
the youn~ boy more than a year
a go in Oceanside .
The l3-year-0ld. who uses the
name J ason, reportedly told
police he didn't know who his
par ents are or where he is from.
Butpollcesald the boy later told
them be had lived with Gagliard
for more than a year in various
apartments and motel rooma in
Newport, Huntington Beach and
Garden Grove.
The boy also s ubsequently S8ld
that his real name is Craig Wade
Robinson."
Million
in aw-ard
ordered
LOS ANG ELES (APJ -A
Superior Court jury ruled today
that the Nat ional Enquirer
libeled entertaine r Carol
Burnett in a 1976 gossip item
which claimed s he had a
boisterous run-in with Henry
Kissinger in a Was hington
restaurant.
The 11-member jury ordered
the tabloid to pay Miss Burnett
$1 .6 million in damages. Her
original suit sought $10 million.
The actress gasped, claaped
her bands to her face and began
to cry as the verdict was an-
nounced.
Her husband, Joe Hamilton.
seated behind her , kissed her on
the cheek.
There was a gas p an the
packed courtroom as the verdict
was announced.
The figure of damages -
$300,000 In generaJ damages and
Sl.3 miUion in punitive damages
Convi cted
rapist
recaptured
Investigators said they were
able lo track down the boy's
father early today. The father,
police said, lives in San Diego but
no longer ha.s legal custody of the
child.
Police claim the youth was
placed with the Oceanside foster
family after running away from
his father 's home on three OC·
casions.
Develop•ent near Newland laouse was almost precisely the
amount Mi ss Burne tt's at·
torneys asked the jurors to
award.
By DA \/ID KUTZMANN
CW, ... Dally P'il•I \Ufl
O range County She riff's
De partment investigators said
today a Los Angeles teen.ager
convicted of rape in a south
county crime spree had been
rec a}>tured by Detro it police
after he wa s mis take nly
released from a Los Angeles jail
earlier this month due to a
clerical error.
The boy's mother, police said,
reportedly lives in Georgia but
has not been contacted
The boy. currently lodged at the
Albert Sitton Home in Orange,
showed no visible signs of mis
treatment, police said.
Workers prepare land for 190,000-square-
foot shopping center that wilJ be built next
to historic Newland house just off Beach
Boulevard and Adams Avenue in Hunt-
ington Beach. Newland house and grounds
w ill remain intact. but open field s urround·
ing lt will be trans formed into two
restaurants, two banks, an office building,
several s mall stores and parking lots.
House. preserved by Huntington Beach
Historical Society, was built in 1898 by
farmer William Ne wl and.
The jurors were asked to de·
termine three basic issues in
the case whethe r the En·
quirer item accusing Mias
Burnett of boisterous behavior
was false and defamatory ;
whether it was published with
"actual malice" on the part of
the Enquirer , and whether Miss
Burne tt was e ntitle d to a
monetary damage award.
-------
Newport investigators said
they are al a loss lo expl ain the al·
leged kidnap in Oceanside. They
said they ha ve no clear cut
motive.
Theater contract due The verdict came shortly after
lawyers expressed concern the
panel might be deadlocked. Sheriffs Lt Wyatt Hart said
De troit po lice took Darry l
Bernard Watts, 17, into custody
this morning at his father's
home.
··We can do a lot of guessing but
that's about all so far," s uggested
Sgt . Mike McEveny, who has
headed up the investigation to
solve the boy's mysterious oast.
Signing expected for OC outdoor facility The jury filed into the
courtroom today at 11 :30 a.m
after 13 hours or deliberation
s pre ad over three days . The
foreman. Richard Pettit, his
ha nds s haking, handed the
verdict forms to the court clerk,
who read them aloud.
The residence had been under
surveillance since Wednesday
night, a day a fter O range
C ounty law e nfor ce ment
officials discovered Walls had
been erroneously freed from the
Los Angeles County Jail on
March 8 after serving a 141-day
s entence there on unrelated
charges.
Watts was released. he said,
because Orange County Sheriff's
omclala did not send the proper
paperwork indicating that the
teen-a1te felon was to be held (or
<Sff SPREE, Page AZ)
McEveny said it appears the
13· year-old h as not attended
school nor seen a doctor since his
abduction in Oceanside
P a tient improves
STANFORD <AP> -Mary
Gohlke has r esumed breathing
on her own and appears lo be
overcoming her body's attempts
to reject her transplanted heart
a nd lungs, Stanford Medical
Center reported Wednesday.
Dig that silt
Mayor plans to Friday
Determined lo draw attention to the 1Ut-cto11ed Upper
Newport Bay, Mayor Jackie Heather uya she'll wade
knee-deep into the bay's muddy wa\en Friday mornl111
and at.art shoveling.
By JERRY CLAVSEN °' , .. D•llY Ptlol Slaff
A 4-0·year contract for con-
strurtion and operation of the
long ·sought $JO million am-
phitheater at the Orange County
Faiqcrounds in Costa Mesa will
be signed tonight. fair officials
report.
The contract enables Ned
West Inc .. a Nederlander West
entertainment group subsidiary.
to build the 7 ,000 fixed-seat
theater just west of the fair·
grounds' administration build·
ing.
State officials, who are to
ratify the contract Friday
when it is hand delivered in
Sacramento. finally approved
contract compositlon after
months of negotiation with the
Nederlander oraantiatlon.
Those talks followed approval
of a »year cpntrac\ \ate last
year by the fair board.
Dlvilion of Fairs and Exposl·
lions officials In Sacramento
who watch over all state-owned
fair1round transactions, sut a
bait to that document an sue·
teated that the amphitheater
l 'U. BB nn:at: IWTH my ahovel and bucket," 11)'1 plan would have to go to bid
Mrs. Heather. "taldn1 lhe mesaa1e to the people." · again.
The gimmick, which the mayor predicts 1hcM&ld draw State officials noted that the
40 or so fellow sill 1coopen, it deslped to help the elt1 18'0 contract actually was only
ralH money for a bay cleanup projeet. an amended venlon of a 40-year
Newport Beach ha• been JiYea two weeks to come '1IP contract approved lo tm for
with "48,000 in uah or rtak I~ nearly SI.I milllon la state ::1:l':. ~~1~m1 P!~~eal: moaeynrsedforlbecleanupproJ~tt • IOCllW.
11.'YO& HBATR&a II.YI lhe'plam to start raltt.ns the · Perlormine Art• 1ubmltted
'44t,000 \be hard way -1tlUn1 bucltta ot 1enulD1 Upper lbt winnln1 bld to bulld •
Newport Ba.y 1ut at• each. •mailer arophltbHter on the
Sbe edml .. the 11 a.m . .utat.bon Uk•l1 wlU draw more falr,..... ln J'1'7. aawk ... than bani dollan. Batlt'1altal't,1hH171. le~:'=:i ~ r;:.::::u:
M81W Heather HY• •be'• after IV1er ftlb too. pack• tocetber, fair olftdall &be convinced ber eouncU eoaa...,... UM• wMk to al· aaid, wben u. pro,= wu Mid
lout. hAl,000 ta dty •OMJ toward the fteHM $441,000. .. I .ap o-• lawe\llt fl ..... u. a. n. .. .,.. ..,. llM'• uted UM lmne Comr.:1 and c:omt• .... wq tJ omet< to put up 1IG"Uar amount.a, but u r•cel•ed no ty of Cotta II•• n1a.ri1aa •P-et. pro•Al ~ plaDI and bJ tile dMila ..... ~ La~t 1et the 1110M1 n'U M la tivabM1" Mn. o1 one ~ two PerfonnlDI Art1
HHtber CHtJona. '11'he bay, rtsbt now, ii on UM brtnt OI partnen. dHttuctlon." 11 Tb• re1111laln1 partHr U · ----------------------L-1l1ned riptl ol con1tructJon and • • I
I • -• • ...... • • • • 79 __ ......._..,._._..__.........
operation over to Nederlander.
State officials , however. said
the a mended contract constitut·
ed major changes including a
larger a mphitheater and a 50·
year operation agreement.
Fair board members coun·
tered by approving a "sole·
source" contract naming the
Nederlander group as the only
organization currently in a posi-
tion to both build and operate
the theater profitably.
It is that document, reduced to
a 40 -yea r span , that will be
signed during the fair board
meeting that begins at 7 p.m. in
the Memorial Gardens building
on the fairgrounds at 88 Fair
Drive .
Asked for his reartion follow·
mg lengthy negotiation leading
to the final docum ent, Ri ck
Witte . Nederlander attorney,
started out with, "Wheew ...
.. Anything worth doing takes a
hell of a lot of effort. I'm glad
it's gotten this far, and I'm look ·
ing forward, as I am sure ev
eryone is, to a first class enter·
<See THEATER, Pa1e A2>
"We, the jury in the above en·
tilled action find for the plain-
tiff. Carol Burnett. and against
the National Enquirer, and we
further assess damages in the
a mount of $.300,000," the first
verdict said.
Secondly, the jury said. "We
further find for the plaintiff
Carol Burnett, and against the
National Enquirer and assess
punitive damages In the amount
of $1,300,000."
Charred remains
believed NB man
The judge polled each juror
and, although only a vote oC 9-2
was required. the verdict was
unanimous.
ORllCI COAST lllTllR
By ARTHUR B . VI NSEL
OI tlle OallY .. 11.C Si.ti
Tests were being conducted to·
day on tM cparred remains of a
man believed from Newport
Beach after bis small plane
1lammed into a rui«ed ridge ln
heavy rain In Santa Barbara
County al'ld exploded In a ball or
fire.
The 11:30 a.m. crash on
Buckhorn Rldae Wedneada,y was
witnessed by 1 U .S. Forestry
Service ran1er and reecuera im·
mediately Ht out for the site.
flndln1 plane and pilot con·
,umed by the blue.
W eat to northwest winds
20 to 30 mph otherwise
fair. Lowa toni1ht 50 at
beaches, 55 inland. Hi1h1
Friday 64 along ·coast, 68
inland.
111111 THAY
Jon St~ u knOIOll
for hfT /n'nWM cltonnl, bltt
tilt'• alM> o top golfer. SH
Page CJ.
11111 He wu tentatively tdentlfiM b(.
IUtborit.let U te1f .. mplo)'M bus • At""' lenk a At tatwfllll.-Cl
nest necutlve Robert C. Coatl, ,, ... ~· 11 ~ ... LA...., er. eo. Mn.Jot.nCoa .. 1a.tdtod111be ~:;_e.r c!: ;;....,... ca
has no doubt it wat her buaMnd cei...,,.. •• ......... ..... ,.. c....i1... 01.. l'WllC ..._ .. who perilbed. c.1e1 u At; M ; a ; "
·'They found h1I bultn ... Cardi ~.. f: ::=....,. c8
at the acene," 1ald Mn. Colli, • ,.., ~!::-' g
who noted her husband new a.bat ~=--~: , ... ...,. a.• routefromJohnWayneAlrportto ...-. ., ....., ••
01klanclon1W.lnu1tripaUeut .,...~ •• ...,. ..... llCM ·cSee PLANg, Pa,1e AJ) \, ______ _..__._._
t
l/C/N OnngeCout DAILY PflOT/Thuradey, March 26, 1981
...
..
IP •1 FaEOeaac& 8CBO£•EHL Of ... o.llf (llllltt Ii.fl
.. · Only five percent of all peopJe
:.rre1ted in Oranae County on
felony chargtS went to a tale prison.
Nineteen percent of all arrefit.s
lnvolved drunken driving.
An addltlonaJ 16 percent of all
arrests were for misdemeanor
drunk in pubJtc.
The value of a ll property
stolen exceeded $101 1DIWoG. Oe-
1 y about $26 mUlion Wll N ·
covered.
One in seven county realdenu
waa a vict.lm ot a erlae.
These are amonc the ftndln11
In a report on crime releued
Wednesday by the Oran1e Coun-
ty Criminal J uatJce CouncU.
According lo the report, crime
In Oranie County increased •.9
perea&. Ui 1'80 over th• 1979 .. ~ ...
1'be lncl'UH In the seven ma·
Jor offenses category wu 7.3
per~t,
That cate1ory incJudet willfuJ
homicide, forclble rape, rob-
bery, ag1ravated assault,
burtilary, theft ot more than $200 and motor vehicle theft.
Aecordin1 to the report, Santa
Ana. among the countv's 26
cltin, wu ranked f!Nt ln ia com·
parll«l of the crime Index rate,
a broader meuure of crime c)c.
currence. The rate Is based on
the number of t.rtlttul homicides,
forcible rapes, robberies, ag-
gravated usaults, burglaries,
all thefts and motor vehicle
thefts per 100,000 population.
Tustin was ranked second.
Costa Mesa, third; Ne wport
Beach. fourth: Stanton. fifth;
Garden Grove, sixth, L11una
Beach , seventh ; Anaheim,
eighth; Oran1e. ninth, and
WeBtmJnster, tenth.
Huntington Beach was ranked
14th: Fountain Valley. 18th, and
Irvine. 20th.
When the seven major of·
fenses rate is compared the
rankings change . Stanton
becomes fi rst : Laguna Beach,
second; Santa Ana. third; Costa
County to tighten welfare?
Applicants for 1eneral relief
welfare assistance soon may
have lo prove lbey have lived in
Orange County for al least one
year and be willing to accept
vouchers instead of direct cuh
payments under policies
recommended for adoption by
the county Board or Suoervison.
The proposed cha-nges are
outlined in a report delivered lo
s upervisor s Wednesday by
Richard Ruiz. county social
services director. Supervisors
wlll consider the recommenda·
lions Tuesday.
lf approved, officials said, lbe
new policies would help reduce
the increasing demand for
general relief welfare assistance
demand that has caused lbe
program account to run out of
money twice this month.
General relief assistance is
provided to Indigent persons
who do not qualify for or are
wailing to receive other forms
of welfare from t he state or
federal governments. The
general relief program is funded
exclusively with county funds.
Because of con cern that
persons from other counties are
being attracted to the local
program , Ruiz ha s
r ecommended a one-year
residency requirement.
Bigger campaign panel?
SEA BURIAL SET
Newport'• Chip Cle•ry
Grand jury urges expanded OC commission
Rites set
for NB's
Chip Cleary
Long-time Newport Beach
resident and yachtsman Frederic
"'Chip'" Cleary. who died Tuesday
al the age or 71. will be buried at
sea this week in a private
ceremony
A native of Massachusetts.
Cleary came lo Hollywood 1n the
1930s and he lped to form a
public relations firm that
handled film s tars such as
Clark Gable l!nd Humphrey
Bogart
He also was editor of the
Hollywood Reporter
Cleary later becllme a district
representative f o r former
Newport Beach congressman
Andrew J Hinshaw
Before coming west, Cleary
worked for the Standard Times
Newspaper in New Bedford,
Mass
During the war years, Cleary
was named editor of the military
publication "Man o· War " He
la ter went to work for Unive rsal
Studios as a screen writer and at
one time was president of the
Screen Writers Guild.
The Orange County Fair Cam·
paign Practices Commission
s hould be enlarged and the
method by which its members
are appointed changed, the
Orange County Grand Jury said
today.
lo a 10-page analysis of lbe
county's campaign watchdog
panel, the jury said the county
Grand Jurors Association, not
the Co unty Bo a rd of
Supervisors, should select those
who serve on the commission.
Expansion of the panel to nine
members would reduce the
likelihood that a quorum would
not be present when crucial de·
cisions on election practices
must be made, the jury said.
Under the jury's proposed
selection process. com ·
missioners would be nominated
by members of various other
Witnesses sought
Execution slaying
of nurse probed
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
01 Ow Dally ,.llot Si.II
Long Beach police are seeking
the public's help in solvine lbe
grisly execution·style murder or
a Huntington Beach nurse whoff
body was found near a San
Diego Freeway off-ramp.
Long Beach police officer
Fred Millemann said in ·
vest1gators believe II Suk Choi,
34 . was rammed by another
\'Ch ic le while driving home
Tuesday night from St. Francis
Medical Center in Lynwood,
where she worked.
Choi's Audi abandoned on the
transition road with fresh
damage on the driver's side.
He said Long Beach officers
responded 15 minutes later lo re·
ports of shots fired. Officers
found Mrs . Choi's body face
down on the pavement at the
southbound Pacific Ave nue exit,
he said
Because her purse was miss·
ing. police theorize that robbery
was a motive in the incident.
Millemann said.
Mrs. Choi Ii ved on Palermo
Drive in Huntington Beach with
her husband and a 9-year·old
son.
county commissions, such as the
county Planning Commission or
the county Human Relations
Commission and/or citizens
groups such as the League of
Women Voters or the Orange
County Chamber of Commerce.
Nominees would be screened
by the county District Attorney's
Office and selection made by lbe
iurors association.
Removing appointment of
com missioners from the board
or supervisors. the jury said,
would reduce com plaint of
.. cronyism and the charge of un-
due influence on the commission
by nominating board mem-
bers."
··Although specific instances
of undue in fluence have not been
found, as the commission ap-
pointees have not always voted
in favor or their appointing
supervisor, it should be noted
that the commission as a whole
votes much more often in favor
or the incumbents than against, ..
the jury said.
The commission was formed
in 1978 under lbe Time is Now.
Clean Up Politics <TINCUP> or·
dinance, adopted by county
s upervisors.
The intent of the ordinance
was to promote ways to keep
special interest groups from
controlling county elections
The commission is permitted
to review candidates' campaign
materials and make determina·
lions as to the veracity of the
claims made in those materials
In 1958, Cleary sold his in-
terest in the Hollywood public
relations firm and moved to
Newport Beach. He formed the
Chip Cleary Co., a public rel a·
lions firm, which he late r gave
up when he went to work for
Hins haw.
Ile said detectives believe the
woman was forced out or her
a uto, taken to the next exit and
compelled to lie on the pave-
m ent, where s he was shot
several times in the head.
F,...P.,,e.41
Millemann said police are
looking for witnesses who may
have seen Mrs. Choi's red Audi
struck alon~ the southbound
transition road from the Long
Beach Freeway to the south·
bound San Diego Freeway at
about 11 p.m. Tuesday
SPREE SOLVED?. • •
He was an avid yachtsman
and participated in numerous
ocean races. He served as the
commodore for the Balboa
Yacht Club for several years
He also was a member of the
Irvine Coast Country Club. the
La Quinta Country Club in Palm
Desert and the San Francisco
Yacht Club
Cleary lived on Balboa Island.
He leaves his widow Patricia,
a son Steven of Newport Beach
and a sister Dorothy Cleary of
Costa Mesa
The family has suggested that
donatio ns be m nde to the
radiology department al Hoag
Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach.
Ch eck s unca shed
LOS ANGELES <AP> Wells
Fargo cashier's checks totaling
$1 million were made out lo
heavyweight boxing champions
Muhammad Ali and Larry
Holmes last year at the request
or troubled fight promoter
Harold Smith. but neither man
received the money. the Los
Angeles Herald Examiner re·
ported Wednesday
He said people with informa·
lion on the incident should con·
tact Long Beach detectives at
( 213) 590·7244.
According to Millemann.
Californfa Highway Patrol of·
ficers responded lo an 11 : 15 p.m
accident report and found Mrs .
Fre•P•9~AJ
THEATER • •
tainment facility in Orange
County."
Witte noted that the theater
will seat 8,000 spectators on
grass berms s urrounding the
stage in addition to the fixed
sea ting. arrangements.
ln all, the fairgrounds theater
will seat 15,000 spectators. about
5,000 more than envisioned for the
Irvine Meadows Anphltheater at
Lion Country Safari proposed by
the Koll Co. .
Approval for that project, ly·
Ing beneath the El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station flight path,
was granted by Irvine's City
Council Tuesday night.
incarceration in state prison.
Hart said today that Watts
offered no resistance when he
wa s taken into custody.
lmm ediate ex tradition
proceedings were planned.
Referring to the error which
led to the convicted rapist's
release. the sheriff's lieutenant
said Wednesday, .. We dropped
the ball . It was our
r esponsibility lo have the
paperwork there C in Los
Angeles) and we didn't "
Walts and two companions,
Michael Simmons, 18, and Ben·
jam in Montgomery. 18, were c?n· ·
victed in Orange County Supenor
Court in September on multiple
felony counts, including rape,
robbery. burglary. false im·
prisonment and auto theft.
The charges involved a March,
1980, crime spree in south Orange
County that included the rape of a
14-year-old El Toro girl in her
parents' home.
Judge Kenneth E. Lae s~n·
tenced Montgo~ery an~ Sim·
m ons lo27 years m stale prison.
Watts although a minor. was
given a 2:3-year state prison term,
There was a possibility he couJd
have been senl to the California
Youth Authority, but pros~utor
Dave Carter offered evidence
that Watts had sodomized ~
cellmate at Orange County Jail
.;.....-------------------------,' tbenlghtbeforehls sentencing. After his proceedings in Orange
tiiif Pilat
ThomM P. Haley
~
Robert N W .. d -M. Thom11 Keevll .....
Thoma• A Murphlne
~·-Ctlerlee H. LOOI A . .-.C--..el,.._ t::d khulman
~~1!=..a-"
KenMth H. Goddard Jr
~0--
CIHatfted ~elng 1141142·M71
All oth9f ctepertmen .. 142-421
COPY•I"" 1',I Qra!!ll c.M•I l'lltllltlllre C-Hq new1 1lorlea, lllull••I""'•· eclllorlel m.ittr or •d
vtrtlH""'"" ,..,.•In mey ~ reprofU<tll wit"°"' •09< 1e111erm101on 01 copyrltflt owner.
•
County ended, Watts was sent to.
Los Ancelet to face unrelated
weapons charges pending against
him there. .
On December 17. he was gMm
the 141-day sentence In Lo•
Angeles County Jail.
After completing that term. he
eventually should have been re·
turned to the men 's prison at •
Cblno lo belln servln1 hl1 state
prl1on Hntence.
However , Hart uld t hat
became Oranc• Count7 Sberttre
Department clerkl dld not lend
U.. prop.r paper work lndlcatlnl
tbere Wiii a bold on tbe conftdecl
raptat, Loa An,ele1 Jallen re-
leueclblm.
•
----------------··----· ..l
-----_. ----... ·-· ------_. ........... ~--
The mistake was discovered
earlier this week' by another
Orange County sheriff's clerk
who was routinely checking up on
the status of Watts In Los Angeles.
Hart said the paperwork in·
forming Los Angeles ofricials to
keep Watts in custody has not
been located.
'_,
Such a r equirement la
per mitted under the state
Welfare and Institutions Code,
the body of law which requires
counties to provide general
relief lo indigents.
Courts. however. have struck
down residency requirements
and Ruiz said the county
Counsel's Office has cautioned·
that "adoption of such a
provision is likely t o be
challenged" by a lawsuit.
Ruiz has proposed that the
county improve its screening of
applicants, bring property
possession standards into
co nformance with state
standards. and issue vouchers
"to third parties for payment of
necessities whenever possible."
The social services director
a l so recommended that a
work-for-welfare program for
able-bodie d reci pi e nts be
expanded and penalties stiffened
for persons who do not show up
for work assignments.
Persons who fail to show up
for work assignments should be
denied assistance for six months
instead of the JO·day sanction
now applied. Ruiz said.
Fre• Pllffe A l
PLANE •..
once a week. ,
"There's no doubt it was him ...
she added. •
The couple had lived in Newporl
Beach for eight years and their
current address is 24 Encore Ctr
cle in the Newport Crest con
dominiums overlooking Wes l
Newport
She said she and her husband
own J .C. Enterprises. a firm that
distributes plastic c ups .
Their company.owned Cessna
340 went down about 10 miles
southeast of Highway 166 and
eight miles south of Pozo Junction
tn San Luis Obispo County
Contact with a light plane flytng
in that area was lost 1ust about the
lime the ranger from Pine Ca·
nyon Station witnessed the crash
into the ridge, Los Angeles In·
ternattonal Airport officials said
Forest Ser vice personnel and a
Santa Barbara County Sheriff's
Office rescue team reached the
scene about 45 minutes after the
crash. authorities said.
They reported weather in the
wooded, mountainous area as ex-
tremely turbulent with heavy
rain.
The wreckage was so badly
burned that the plane's tail num·
bers were scarcely readable, they
saicj.
Tentative identification was
made from the credit cards and
other personal papers scattered
about the brushy crash s ite.
Authorities said they are cer·
tain the victim is Coats but that
the formalities involved such as
checking dental records will take
several weeks to conclude.
----.~....----
.... ________ ,...., __
Mesa, fourth . Newport Reach.
tlfth, Anaheim, sixth : Tustin,
seventh, Garden Crove, eighth,
Westminster. ninth, and Orange.
tenth.
Huntington Beach was ranked
15th: Fountain Valley, 18th, and
Irvine 21st.
The figures, however. may be
somewhat misleading.
For example, Santa Ana
logged a 12 percent increase in
the crime index r ate between
1979 and 1980, while Laguna
Beach recorded a rive percent
decrease. And while Santa Ana
s howed a 13 percent increase in
the seven maJor offenses
category, Laguna Beach showed
a drop or about one percent
Newport man
arrest e d on
drug c harges
A 40 year·old Newport Beach
man has been arrested on drug
selling charges whe n officers
discovered 30 "balloons" of
heroin under a mattress in his
Oakwood Gardens apartment,
police said
Officers said they were in the
process of serving four arrest
warrants on George Sandoval
Reyna Wednesday when the dis·
covery was made in his 1875
Sherington Place apartment
Police said the seized heroin
has a street value or S750
The warrants for Reyna,
police said. were issued out of
Orange County Superior Court
and all allege drug -related
ch a r ges The dollar amount
named in the warrants came Lo
$37,000
Reyna 1s ~1ng held al Orange
County Jail
Midwife con victe d
VF.NTL'RA </\P i /\
•municipal court Jttr:O Ot.'edctl uni}
I wo hours of dd1bt•rat1ons lo con
\'I Ct Dt•e Hurns of H1•s1.'dll of thr('(·
m1sdC'mt•anor t·ount~ of 11ratt1<·
ing mcd1t·int.' \.\1lh11u1 a ltN·ns<· h~
a<·ting as a m1dw1fr 1n thn·e ho11J1•
h1rths
Tar, fe at~r
attac k c ite d
.MOl 'l.TO~ 1\la 1/\P •
Two -.1-.\t•r-. h:J\ t.' lll'l'n
chi.lr~l·d 1n ninnt·c·tion
" 1th I h l ' tar rt n g <• n d
fc•;ithcring of <• "oman
"ho plannt'd to marn th1·
ex husband of rme of lh4•rn
Mant<i Mc·F:l"l'' ~:1. of
\"incmont, <.1 nd Kohh11·
Jei.ln Mt·Cnrkl t>, 1\9 of
Town Crel'k. wen· twlll un
der $15.500 honds on
rharges of hur~lary. kid
napping and ass<.1ult. 1.i.11d
l.awren<.'e <'ounly Sht'nff
Grady Rost•
P oltce ~a id Elizabeth
J ames on. 40. of c;rt·en
Valley, Ariz , told lht!rn
s h e w a s t a r r t• d a n d
feathe:ed by lhe women
after thev forced their
way at gunpoint into the
Town Creek horn t· of Mrs
Mc Elwev·~ ex hus band.
Or John Mc Elwt'y. who
was not at home
I t
~ffiTI~
Giantu.-co rapped
on 'fiscal abyss'
SACRAMENTO <AP> -State Transportation Director
Adriana Glanturco has received anot.ber toogue-lasbin1, thia time
ln the Senate Rules Commlttee.
1l happened at a bearing Wednesday. But Ms. Glantu.rco, onen
crltlclzed in transportation committees, wasn't there.
Sen. Barry Keene, D-Mendocino, caJJed her tyrannical and
said transportation policy under Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. "has
been an absolute disaster."
Keene said the transportation program ls in a "fiscal abyss,"
the highways are being destroyed, and nothing is being done about
mass transit.
-•le9e ...... ee11t••-iet1
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Relatively hleh traces of metal coatamlna·
ti on have been found in mussels aJong the San Diego coast and marine
biologists are searching for the source.
A mussel-monitoring program turned up traces of silver, zinc.
manganese, copper andlead", as weff as such toxic cbemicaJs as PCB
and the Insecticides DDT and lindane. health officials said Wednes-
day. .
Studies are under way to determine if the culprit might be sewage
outfall and sludge beds. The levels of PCB compounds found in Mis-
sion Bay, San Diego and Oceanside were up to 140 times higher than
those inhabiting cleaner waters away from the industrial areas, of·
ficialssaid.
..,,. ... ••• tleatla ,..,ftf •llllld4e
LOS ANGELES (AP > The death of the only son of Academy
Award-winning actor Ray Milland has been ruled a suicide by cor-
oner's officiaJs.
Daniel Milland, 41 , was found in his West Los Angeles apart·
ment with a gunshot wound in the head. No suicide note was found.
N~ Y erk ••• tlft• a.rem ••t ,,..,
CLAREMONT (AP) John D. Maquire, president of New
York State's College at Old Westbury, has been named president of
Claremont Graduate School and Claremont University Center -
the coordinating institution of the six Claremont Colleges.
a,..., • .,••'t 1'et• •rt• spntfli••
SACRAMENTO <AP> Describing the arts as "perhaps more
Important than some of the. basic industries," Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. said he will not veto any spending which may be added
to his California Arts Council budget. The Democratic governor
Wednesday made that promise in a speech at a California Con-
federation of the Arts dinner
Kia• leafier tel& •I 'eo11te•t'
FALLBROOK <AP> -Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Metzger says
he is "press director of the White American Political Association."
which is trying to find which California city is most .. anti-white."
A contest will be held to find out, Metzger said in a news re-
lease.
·'The mayor of the winning city will receive a certificate officially
signifying that his or he r city has become uninhabitable by decent
middle and low·iocome whites,·· Metzger pledged
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 26. 1981 H/F
\
829 a gear
State college
• • • • • • • fee boost set
• • •
• • •
'Bello there'
Tony Wood, a veterinary surgeon from Australia, unloads
one of seven rare koalas after its arrival at Los Angeles
International Airport. The koalas, the first to be exported
by Australia in over 60 years, wiJI join five others at the
San Diego Zoo.
SACRAMENTO <AP > -
There'll be a S29 annual increase
in student fees in the California
State University and Colleges.
says the board or trustees.
The trustees, meeting Wednes-
day. also discussed a legislative
bill to require that the correct
answers to such examinations as
the Scholastic Aptitude Test be
sent later to the high school
seniors who look it. But they de-
cided against taking an 1m·
mediate position.
CSUC Chancello r Glenn
Dumke opposes the bill, SBIOl
by Sen. Milton Marks, R-San
Francisco. It is sponsor ed by
student groups.
PllOPONENTS of the bill s aid
disclosure wouJd make the test·
tng process more open and ac-
countable.
Oppone nts sa id 1l would
destroy the tests.
The fee increase won approval
without debate.
The 314,000 students on the 19
campuses now pay about $210 a
yea r i n fees not tuition
because f ees d o n ot pay
teachers' salaries.
THE VOTE means that the
student services fee will rise
from $160 to $189 a year this fall.
The fee for students taking no
more than two classes will n sc
from $130 to $159.
The money will provide raises
lo employees of such s tudent
services a s counseling and
clinics.
Auto workers rehired
By Tbe Associated Press announced it was rehiring 2,300 Night shirts that were s us
The hard·hit automobile in· employees there. pended last year a t the Van
dustry in California has some GM the nation's No. 1 Nuys and Fre mont plants during
good news for the firs t time in automaker -also announced the deepest point or the slump in
the past year -hundreds of 1,600 workers were being re· car sales will be reinstituted
laid-off autoworkers are being called to its assembly plant In April 6 in Fremont and May 4 in
rehired because of the growing Fremont in the San Franc~co Van Nuys.
number of new cars being sold. Bay Area and that more than a Most · of the la1d·off workers
In the Los Angeles suburb of third of 2,300 ·persons had been were still receiving :-.upplemen·
Van Nu y s . u n em p Io ye d hired for its modernized South tal benefits pciid from a com-
autaworkers lined up for blocks Gate plant to turn out the firm's p a n y r u n d . s a i d G M
In other ac ti on, th e
trustees who hav~ already
asked the Legislature for unlike·
ly 17. 7 percent raises for CSUC
employees voted to seek addi-
tional raises of from 1 5 to 5 per-
cent for c le rical and other
~mployees they consider un·
derpaid
Oil drilling
on preseroe
areas due?
WASHI NGTON <AP ! Two
ocean sanctuaries created by
the Carter administration off
California to protect the last sur
viving gr ay whales and the
breeding grounds or sea otters
may be opened for otl and gas
drilling by the Reagan ad ·
minisln.ition
Dallas Miner. director of the
government's Sanctuaries Pro-
gram Office. !.aid Wednesday
the ne"' administration is pro-
posing to remove the drilling
restriction 1n the Channe l
l s landi. Sanl'luary o rr Santa
Barbara and the Point Reyes·
f'arrallon Islands Sanctuary off
San Francisco and would ask for
public comment over the next
six months
Miner said the proposal res ull-
l'd from guidl.'ltnei. issued by
President Reagan lo assess the
economic impact or each gov
l.'rnmcnt regulation
Th<' Sanctuarie!'. P rogram
com es undt•r the Commerce
Department, but Miner said the
decision came• after consulting
other agenc1e:-.. including the In·
tenor Ocpartment, "'h1ch con·
tended 1t should decide which
l racti. to offer for leai.1ng
Interior Secrclar\' James Walt
wrote Commt•rc{• S(•c retary
Malcolm Bal ridge expressing
support ror llw policy c·hangl' Wednesday as General Moton economical new J -cars. spokeswoma n Judy Anderson. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..::..=::::.::::::=~:::........:::..:=.:.~:_:=:.:._:_:_:_~~~~~~~~~~~-'-'-~~~
REGISTER NOW FOR JUST $21.00 I
And be ...,,.., of o'" tow '"'••"'4"• c.oth
BURIALS ANY CEMETERY $360 ~!~~ .. ~I;~~~.............. . .. m~ ,.. .... ~ """' of '"• C-Ol't ""' ~ f
Mfteho ... bv ,.,. CeM Oeipc ot c.,,...,.,.,.., Atte.,.. .~
Executive Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave.,
Hunllngton Beach, CA 9~7
Sourn•m C•llloml• R~lon•I OfllcH:
5677 E. La PelrN Ave., An•helm, CA 92807
~ V•lley View St., Buena Par~.1.PA 90820 165e Amelll Ad , Cemarltlo. CA vaulO
20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Carson CA 90748 23021 Lake Center Or., (Lake ~orest). El Toro, CA 92630
1001 E lmperlel Hwy., La Hebfe. CA 90631 Gl
41'() Long Beach Blvd .• Long Beach, CA 90807 •
229311 Hewtl'lorne Blvd., Torrance, CA 90505
1095 lrvlne Blvd .• Tustin, CA 92680 235 N Citrus Ave., Weal Covina, CA 91793
"ltl.-cury Room" •~•lf•blt on• r•Hrved bUI$
CALL LINDA BLUE
FORA
(()UAL
HOUSIHC llNO(t
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN-
INTEREST ONLY.
~.~~~'!!!;,·~c
(71• 7eo-eoe<> ®
• ..... ..,,... ......
U1h1W ...... ltlnoonl,......
Machine washable polyester/cotton
blend. KlmonO styling-one size
fits all. Blue or ten. Includes free
monogramming. Reg. 32.50 ... •a.eo.
Allow 3 weeks for monogrMtmlno.
,, -
Perme-preu
P$mae.Long
sleeves and legs m
p<lpl.llar coat style
Assorted patterns
tnS·M·l ·XL
Reg 18 50 13.80.
Stow•w•r ... ther bq. Genuine
leather collapsable bag has multitude of
uses Convenient size 16. x 9• 1n a
variety of colors Some suede.
Reg 5000 .. 28.90.
.
~~);~ ~. i ;....,. ' Short el .. ••
., ~ ' dr•H ahlrte.
/ Easy care 65 %
polyester/35t
/ colton Select I pin SlllPf' 1n blue
or t>urgundy or
tone on lone in
while blue natural
Req 18 50 20 00 13.90.
Attach• c••• br Pebrfnl. Features
removable portloho case Brass corners
and comb1na11on tocks Extra sturdy
consiruchon. cushioned grip Mahogany
or black Reg 85.00 59.10.
silYerwoods
I
4S FASHfON llt..AND
NEWPORT BEACH
I
I I
.-. . Orange Coast Oallv Pltot
Project rai~es
traffic doubts
Anyone who has er.' er taken lhe San Die10 F"-9W•Y
lhrauah lrvlne around 5:30 p .m . knows tbat trafftc ean
s low to a snail's pace around lhe Jamboree Road cutctf
near the Fluor Corp. headquarters.
The Irvine City Council this week approved zoning
for a masslve Koll Co. commercial center near Jambo1'ee
Road and the free way.
Called Koll Center·lrvlne, the project calls for the
construction of six buildings with a total of more than one
million square feet of office s pace, a 500-room hotel and a
restaurant.
The Koll Co. has devised a "traffic management
plan" that company officials say goes a long way toward
alleviating traffic problems which could be created by
the commercial center.
The plan calls for the Koll Co., as landlord, to en·
courage the employees at the center to use buses and car·
pooling in order to avoid traffic jams on the already over·
burdened streets and freeways in the area of the project.
While no concerns were raised this week by City
Council members who approved the project. one must
wonder what the rush-hour traffic picture on the San
Diego Freeway will look like once the center is built.
Koll Center-Irvine has all the earmarks of a quality
project that could be a good addition to Irvine.
However, the traffic problems on the San Diego
Freeway can 't be ignored. The so-called San Joaquin
Hills Transportation Corridor. a highway proposed to run
parallel to the San Diego Freeway, is seen by many as a
way of alleviating bumper-to-bumper freeway traffic.
What's baffling is the fact that some Irvine C ity
Council members can oppose that needed highway and still
support continued development along the San Diego
Fr~eway
Worth a vote
Irvine City Councilman Larry Agran, frustrated that
the council majority wouldn't support reforms he wanted to
make in the city's campaign finance law. says he'll take his
proposal to the people .
The councilman, whose term expires in June of 1982.
vows to circulate petitions aimed at placing his proposed re-
forms on the Nov. 3 ballot. He needs to obtain about 3,500
signatures in order to do so.
His goal is to reduce the limit on single-source contribu·
lions to council manic election campaigns from $481. 78 to
$100. which would be increased yearly based on inflation.
The limit is currently adjusted by a formula based on infla·
lion and gains in the number of registered voters in Irvine.
The s ignature-gathering campaign is worth support-
ing.
The cost of local governmental campaigns is getting out
or hand. Witness. for example, the unsuccessful $30,000
campaign of Dave Baker in t he June 3, 1980, City Council
election.
Agran's proposed reforms might have the effect of
lowering the expense of running for office. Secondly. the re·
forms might help to limit the influence of large special in·
terest contributors.
I lowever. it can't be overlooked that the reforms might
also serve to increase the re-election chances of a widely
known inc umbent such as Larry Agran. while limiting the
election chances of n e wcomers who must collect and spend
large sums to get their messages across.
While Agran ·s ptoposal could be viewed as self -serving.
in the long run it has more benefits t han liabilities.
Bay dredging games
It 's been a week of good news and bad news for the
parties interested in cleaning up the sill-clogged Upper
Newport Bay.
Those parties. which include Newport Beach. the
county and Irvine . h ad reason to celebrate when the state
Water Resources Board agreed to put up $1 million for
the project.
But that's where the good news s topped.
According to a so-called early action plan . the
cleanup project will cost $4 m illion and calls for dredging
and a deepening of the San Diego Creek to slow the now
of silt into the bay.
Local officials fell short of the S4 million mark when
the water board set $446.000 aside for the project saying
the money would remain off limits until Newport can
r aise an equal amount in matching funds.
At about the same moment. the state Legislative
Ana lyst sliced a request for $2 million down to $1.1
million, adding that t his money a lso will remain o ff-limits
until Newport m eets the water board's request for
~46 ,000 in matching funds.
The bottom line is that Newport must raise nearly
half a million in cash. State officials have given the c ity
two weeks to accomplish this.
Are state orricials playing games with Orange Coun·
ty? More than a few local obser vers think so.
It's fair to wonder why Newport or any other local
a gency would have to help pick up the bill on the cleanup
project when the area is under state jurisdiction. T he
state department of Fish and Game is in charge of
~atching over the area. • 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) 6-42·4321 .
Bo)·d/Safety light
By L.M. BOYD
Your chances of cetUn1 hit ln a rear-e nd collision
evidently could be cut ln hall
lllllY•
We have 1hed our 1 um
com plex with our
moralt. Now lf we err
the culprtt la society.
,, envlromnent, alcobol or
• even demoM that have ~ takea poaesalon of our body.
•
Juat by lnatalllng a third
bnke Ucbt under the middle
of your car's back window.
Studies 1 b ow cars s o
equipped lut year were in·
volved in 54 percent fewer
rear-enders than can wttbout
such high Uabt.1. No btt ex·
penM, that. You could do It fOf'
a few dollan.
Q. You know that clown
with the Harlem Globetrot·
tera called Meadowlark
Lemon? What wH b!a name
ort1lnally?
A. Meadow Lemon. But he
cbaft1td It le1ally to
Meadowlan 1bout 10 Ytlrl
aio.
Al IOI' blueberriH. 1ome
Amertcan lndlan1 doubled
tbelr plea1ure: At e them
freab and smoked them
cbied.
-_ ........
Thureday. March 28, 1881
Jack Anderson
Thomas P. H1l1y/Publl1"'-r ThOmas l<HvlltEdltor
S.rtNra Krtlblch /Edll~lal p._ Editor
Military losing trained pilots
WASHINGTON -Pruldent
RH1an'1 ~am lO beef up the
nation'• defenH forces have
elven tbe Uoo'a aba.re of Pen-
tafon bud.aet lncreaaes to the
Nevy. But the money may be
aimed at the wroo1 t1r1et -
ha rdware lnatead of penonnel.
Two 90,000·tOn·nuclear
powered aircraft carriel'1 are
proposed ln
t he preal
dent's budget,
and the 12·
carrier fleet
la to be ex·
panded even·
tuaUy to 15.
But the
trouble ls, lhe
Navy ll find·
lng lt tough to
hang onto enough pilots to man
its preeent carrier s trength,
much less those who'll be needed
to fly t he planes from an
increased flattop fleet.
The reason ls strictly
economic: An experienced pilot
can earn up to four times hb
m ilitary pay by becomine a
commercial airline pilot. AJI a
result, the Navy's pilots are
Mailbox
peelln& ott at an alarmlnt rate
to pur1ue U\e more lucrative
ureen offered by commercial
a via lion.
NAVY ANO Ala FORCE
pllota are requJred to serve six
years after they 1et their winp.
Thia la to l_naure that the tax·
payen will aet at least some
quid pro quo ror the $500,000·plm
It coat.I to traJn eacb pilot -plm
an additional $340,000 lo qualify
him for carrier duly.
But seven out of every 10
milltary pilots quit the service
at tbe end of their six-year ob-
llgatioo. The temptation to rake
in big bucks as an airline pilot Is
Just too great.
T here's another factor in·
volved: The alrlinet won't hire a
pilot who's over 30, so the
service pilots can't afford to
atay on much past 28. Result:
One bitch and they're gone.
leaving the taxpayers stuck with
their training bill and the
recruiters trying to hire replace·
ments who will presumably
start the whole cycle over
acain.
Laat year. 438 Navy plloll
quit. The Navy wound up 25 per
cent ahort In pilots of com·
mander rank and below -the
ones who would oo most tempted
by commercial airline Jobs The
Navy needed almost 13,000
pllota; It had only 9,000. And
thle, of course, is before any new
carriers are built.
The Navy has lried to dis·
courage the attrition of Its
rlyboy raots with the carrot or
pay raises. LaJSl year, the ad·
mirals asked Congress for a 50
percent salary increase for its
pilots, the first change in basic
pay scale in 20 years Congress
OK 0d a raise of 25 percent.
CONGRESS, ALSO approved a
bonus of $5,000 to Sll,000 for
pilots with "critical skills" for
each year they agree to stay on
past their legal obligation. But
not a single pilot has yet re-
ceived a bonus, because Pen·
tagon bureaucrats are s till try
ing to figure out which pilots
qualify for it.
One admiral. sources told my
reporter Sha ron Geitner, got so
frustrated with the Jou of Navy
pllota to private induatry that he
auuested a monetary stJck in·
stead of a carrot: Make the com-
merciaJ alrUnes reimburse the
government for the trained
pilots they hire. As a practical
matter, though. the Navy would
,not be able lo force the airlines lo pay
MEANWHILE, the Navy ls
trying to lure back pilots who
have lert the service for com·
merciaJ aviation but have been
furloughed by the recession. The
irony of this situation Is that if
President Reagan succeeds In
getting the nation's economy
booming again, it will make it
that much harder for the Navy
to recruit the pilots It will need
for the presid ent's expanded
carrier fl eet.
To make matters worse. lhe
pilots the Navy Is losing are
almost by definition those with
experience s ix years' ex
perience A deputy chief of
naval operations. Lando Zech,
told the Senate Armed Services
Com mittee recently that the
balance of the Navy's flight
personnel has already shifted
alarmi ngly to inexperienced
flyers
FIGHTING THE BLACKOUT:
Dave Stockm a n ·s attempt to
jam the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting with a 25 percent
budget c ut has run into
bipartisan protes t on Capitol
Hill Sens. Harrison Schmitt. R
N M .. and Ted S teve ns . R
Al aska, and Rep. Tim Wirth, D
Colo . have all sent letters of
protest to the Office of Manage
ment and Budget
Although the threatened fund
cut 1s worrisome enough to CPB
officials. what really bothers
the m is the loss or independence
the cut will implicitly cost them
CPB's fonding has been on a
unique two year schedule, to
lessen the chance of pressure
from a member of Congress who
didn 't like the age n cy's
pro~ramming Then R e p
Stockman voted to renew this
advance funding system two
years ago.
But now, as budget director,
Stockman is trying to engineer a
retroactive budget cut for CPB.
'Affordable' housing was only a dream
To the Editor:
A year ago I naively believed
lhe advertisements slating that
mobile homes were. indeed, the
only "affordable" housing In
Orange County, the "answer" to
the potential "home owners"
prayer. l succumbed and invested
in a mobile home. which has
proved lo be a horrendous mis·
take on my part.
My experience has shown 1t is
virtually impossible to finance a
mobile home, and pay the rapidly
escalating rent on the space it oc·
cupies. I've fou nd that when a
person's mobile home is once
situated on "rental" space in a
mobile home park. one no longer
has any control over how much
one pays to keep one's home in a
"stationary" position. <Unless of
course, the mobile home owner
owns the land on which his "in·
vestment" sits. This Is highly un·
usual >
By the lime I pay 1428 on the
mortgage plus $248 on the down
payment, I have paid $612. Then. I
have a $245 space rental fee plus
gas and electricity that adds
another S60-S70 per month. Add to
this a telephone and my "invest·
ment" comes to S950 per month.
This is hardly "affordable" liv·
ing. My space rent has jumped
Crom $215 to $245 (including $5 per
month for my s mall dog> in one
year. Unless I could afford to pay
at least $3,000 to move my
"home" and find land for it, I am
literally at the mercy of the park
land owner and whatever he
deems "fair" to charge in rental
fees. There is no limit on what he
can charge.
M \' PITY goes out to those
countless souls around me who
are on flJCed Incomes. Many of
them are leaving their lights off
and heat almost totally off to meet
added raises in space rentals. I
am grateful that my mother, a
widow oo a fixed income. has a
home on land she and m y father
paid for as we were growing up.
When I moved Into thlt mobUe
park last year1 after having spent
most ()( my aault years In apart·
menls, I felt that I had some
security, and a polentlal "Invest·
ment. • • l did not know that the sale
or m y "lnveitmenl" could be held
up becauae the park owners could
make the rental charae 10 exorbl·
tlllt lbet lnteresled people would
be unallle to afford to buy lt. The
park ownert also "approve"
wbotver bup lt and llve1 ln It
here.
Lile bu no 1uaranlfft, but
aunty 1Mrt muat be CS.Cacy
and falmeet somewhere, ao that
people could ltve out their retire·
ment years in dignity, with ade·
quate rood and other essentials
ror a decent quality or life.
Some where in our democracy
there must be some protection
from excessive greed.
BE WALTERS
Srinaee A loob
To the Editor:
In your front page article on
science entitled, "Science. prey
to misfits and fools" I was about
to agree with the headline until I
found that the author was refer·
ring to those who did not agree
with the unproven theory or
evolution, as the m isfits and
fools.
The author equated the theory
of e,·olution to the law of gravi-
ty. Ir th1s is so, why is it not re-
ferred to as the law of evolution?
The so-called scientist doesn't
even kno w th e difference
between a theory and a law.
This article causes me to agree
with the headline science cer·
tainly has fallen prey to misfits
and fools.
Before the Scopes trial, evolu·
lion could not even be taught in
public schools Due to recent rul·
iogs by misfits and fools. the
name of God can't even be men·
tioned in school. although there
is m e ntion of God In the
Declaration of Indepe ndence
and lt was written by the same
men who wrote the Constitution.
How could the mentiom of God
in tchool then be unconslltu
llonal?
JAMES BOLDING
•mle• ... •••.._
To the Editor:
I find ltfasclnatlng thatth~men
on the board of Ule new Music
Center are, ror tho most part1 the
same men ln the forefront 01 the
big business assault on the
Orange County environment.
These men have supported \n
many interesting ways uncon·
trolled land develop'dlent and
airport expansion tn our area.
Now they are going to help1 Orange County lo a higher
cultural level Instead ot juat a
higher nol!'le level.
Good business practice ot
1uUU
M.C.SUMNER ........ .., .....
To the l'.d.ltor:
Re D~n Lowen of the Cocoa
8Hch. P1a. bl ... achool and t.he
PSATeum. A model does not need to be
•
constructed. The problem can be
visua lized The answer 1s seven
17) planes or surfaces of which
two ( 2) are bases of the original
pyramids. Hence either (7 ) or
(5) is correct. de pending on
semantics.
In s hort. the question is am·
biguous and a multiple-choice
ans wer does not a llow the stu·
dent to define his terms. So I do
believe the reporter missed the
point a bit.
Anyway. hooray fo1 young
Lowen !
PRANK G CASSERLY
Th# re•I tltr~at
To the Editor.
Once again the TV news
brings us an inte rview with
anotherofWashington's big guns.
t his time Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger
Now I know that my hearing
isn't what it used to be and
perhaps this is nature's way of
protecting our minds, but I'm
reasonably sure that I heard the
mind-boggling s um o f one
trillion 200 million <I can't han
die that) budget, much of which
1s programmed for defense
WELL, <as Reagan would
say> we ·re worth it and I sup-
po!'le that by defense the good
Secretary means fro m out·
siders, principally the Soviet
Union. Okay. But he and the rest
in W ashlngton better get their
act together for reason that the
Soviets have said they'll take us
without firing a shot.
If all this dope pushing, racial
arguing, dumb busing. Abscam,
·Laa Vegas fires, Santa Monica
rt nt control fiascos etc. etc.
doesn't stop. and quickly, then
that's exactly what's going to
happen.
WARRENG.ALTHOFF
SeU ... l•••re•••
TotheEdllOr:
A recent meeting or the
Newport Beach Planning Com·
mission ahowa that good old
American self-interest motivates
ua all. The heated topic under dla·
cuulon was the Irvine Com·
pany'1 planned expan1lon of
Newport Center.
Several people spoke a1alnat
the proximJty of the propoeed bu.a
depot to tbelr homea; lhetr aelllah
reuona: dlsllke of diesel fumes
and the ulllneas of depot.I. One
man wanted the Newport VlUa1e
moved from lta proposed site ao
the cookln1 odors from It•
•
re s taurants w o uld waft
elsewhere. his selrish reason· a
desire for clean sme lling atr. One
lady ranted and raved about tht>
comm~ increase of cnme as the
cit y is urbanized: her selfish
reason wanting to walk thf'
streets safely
THE IRVINE Company's
representatives enthused about
the benefits of the expansion:
their selfish reasons pav. One man fumed about the extra time
he would have to spend d riving to
work in Costa Mesa . his selfish
reason an appreciation of his
time. Several people expressed
concern about their views being
blocked by the Irvine Center ex·
pansion: their selfish reason.
love of pretty scenery One person
worried about the increased traf-
fic on Pacific Coast Highway and
the likelihood or the prohibition of
on-street parking. her selfish
reason: concern about Corona del
Mar business
One lady praised plans for ex-
pansion: her selfish reason· more
shoppers for her store Several
people bemoaned the fa ct that
stalled, heavy traffic would in·
crease smog: their selfish rea·
son. a need for clean air to
breathe . Several people ex
pressed fears that the Irvine Com-
pany expansion would increase
airport usage· their selfis h rea·
sons: a desire for peace and
quiet. One lady worried about
runoff In the bay and its siltation:
her selfish reason : a fondness for
nature.
I could goon, but t he reader gets
the pictute.
JACK WHITG IF'T
N.Uea ... ler
To the Editor:
H what I read in the paper is cor·
reel. the "acceptable" noise level
of an aircraft over a residential
atea Is 64 decibels. The variance
allowance granted to the com-
mercial carriers using John
Wayne Airport Is an Increase to 70
decibels .
Do I have news for you!
Quallfied sound engineers have
recorded 101 decibels over my
home on Harbor Island and I am
five miles from the airport.
Something sUnkt, besides the
jet fumes.
WINIFRED VOEGELIN
•
1.M .. tt 1....., r..-:r··· ftl<-ni. '"'" ,. cellMf\9' •tttef• • I lllK• • e111111Mte ""' It ,.. ....... ~· .•• .,.. « , ... will .. ,1011 "'''"•110. "" ltll•n """'' l11ct• 111\flllt't .... -lllllf ...,_,,WI M-. "WI•
WlttlMl4. 111 ~t II wtftc~rt-II .. e:~:1.~·.: ':l~:r.m-. ":4,:",.::J "W"'"' I c111trlllll1• rf\1411 • 11-"' .... 111011411,.,,.._,
'
~-··-----------------------
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday. March 26. 1981 H/F
f 28 a9e ar ~illUa
Giantµrco rapped State college
on 'fiscal abyss' • • • • • fee boost set • •
SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Transportation Director
Adriana Gianturco bas received another tonaue-laahln1. this time
in the Senate RuJes Committee.
lt happened at a bearing Wednesday. But Ma. Gianturco, often
criticized lo transportation committees, wasn't there.
Sen. Barry Keene, D-Mendocino, called her tyrannical •nd
said transportation policy under Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. "bas
been an absolute disaster."
• Keene said the transportation program is in a "fiscal abyss,"
the biahways are being destroyed, and nothing is beina done about
mass transit.
-~· ..... ftNIC•-••tetl
SAN DI EGO <AP) -Relatively hlgb traces of metal contamina·
lion have been found in mussels along-the San Diego coast and marine
biologists are searching for the source.
A mussel-monitoring program turned up traces of silver , zinc,
manganese, copper andlead·. as weff as such toxic chemicals as PCB
and the insecticides DOT and llndane, health officials said Wednes-
day.
Studies are under way to determine if the culprit might be sewage
outfaU and sludge beds. The levels of PCB compounds found in Mis·
sion Bay. San Diego and Oceanside were up to 140 times higher than
those inhabiting cleaner waters away from the industrial areas. of·
ficialssaid
ftllhlatl ••• tie••• r•led •llldtle
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The death of the only son of Academy
Award-winning actor Ray Milland has been ruled a sui cide by cor-
oner's officials.
Daniel Milland. 41, was found in his West Los Angeles apart·
menl with a gunshot wound in the head. No suicide note was found.
Neee l'•rk ••• fld• a.re•1••• ,...,
CLAREMONT (AP> -John D. Maquire. president of New
York State's College al Old Westbury. has been named president of
Claremont Graduate School and Claremont University Center -
the coordinating institution of the six Claremont Colleges.
.,..., .. .., ... ,, "~·· .,..,. qlft&flifl9
SACRAMENTO !AP> -Describing the arts as "perhaps more
important than some of the basic industries," Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr said he will not veto any spending which may be added
to his California Arts Council budget. The Democratic governor
Wednesday made that promise in a speech at a California Con·
fede ration of the Arts dinner.
• • •
• • •
'Bello there'
Tony Wood, a veterinary surgeon from Australia, unloads
one of seven rare koalas after its arrival at Los Angeles
International Airport. The koalas, the first to be exported
by Australia in over 60 years. will join five others at the
San Diego Zoo.
SACRAMENTO <AP> -
There'U be a $29 annual increa.se
In student fees in the California
State University and Colleges.
says the board of trustees.
The lrultees, meeting Wednes
day. also discussed a legislative
bill to require that the correct
answers to such examinations as
the Scholastic Aptitude Test be
sent later lo the high school
seniors who took it. But they de·
cided against taking an im·
mediate position.
CSUC Chancell o r Glenn
Dumke opposes the bill, SBlOl
by Sen. Milton Marks, R-San
Francisco. It is sponsored by
s tudent groups.
PROPONENTS of the bill said
disclosure wouJd make the test·
ing process more open and ac·
countable.
Opponents said it would
destroy the tests. I
The fee increase won a pproval
without debate.
The 3\4,000 students on the 19
campuses now pay about S210 a
year in fees not tuition
be cause fees do n o t p ay
teachers' salaries.
THE VOTE means that the
student services fee will rise
from $160 to $189 a year this fall
The fee for students taking no
more than two classes will rise
from $130 to $159.
The money will provide raise~
to employees of such student
~e r vices a s counseling a nd
clinics.
Auto workers rehired
By Tbe Associated Press announced it was rehiring 2,300 N ighl shifts that were sus
The hard-hit automobile in · employees there. pended las t year al the Van l(laa le•d~r •~Ii. of '~te•f' dustry in California has some GM the nation's No. l Nuys and Fremont plants during
good news for the first time in automaker -also announced the deepest point of the slump m FALLBROOK <AP> Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Metzger says the past year -hundreds of 1,600 workers were being re-car sales will be reinstituted
he is "press director or the White American Political Association." laid-off autoworkers are being called to its assembly plant in April 6 in Fremont a net May 4 in
which is trying to find which California city is most "anti-white '' rehired because of the growing Fremont in the San Francisco Van Nuys.
A contest will be held lo find out. Meuger said in a news re· number of new cars being sold. Bay Area and that more than a Most of the laid off workers
lease. . In the Los Angeles suburb of third of 2,300 persons had been were still receiving supplemen· "The mayor ofthe winning city will receive a certificate officially v an Nu y s, u n em p I 0 ye d hired for its modernized South tal benefits paid rrom a com·
signifying that his or her city has become uninhabitable by decent autoworkers lined up for blocks Gate plant to turn out the firm 's p a n y r u n d , ~ a 1 d G M ~m~id_d_l_e_a_n_d_lo_w_·_in_c_o_m~e-w_h_i_te_s_:_·_M_e_t_zg_e_r_p_l_ed_g_ed~.~..-~·~~~~~-....:.W~e~d=n~esd:..:.::=a~y-=as=-G~e~n~er~a~l_...:.M~oto_...:._rs:__~e-c_o_n_o_rru_·_ca_l_n_e_w~J-·c_a_r_s_.~~~~-'-s•p-o_k_e~sw-'-o~ma_n Judy Anderson
Executive Of/Ices: 7812 Edinger Ave ..
Huntington Beach, CA 92M7
Southern Cel1lorn1• Region•/ 0/11ces:
'!;1!,71 E. Le Pal"'3 Ave., Anaheim, CA 92807 ~Valley View St., Buena Park, CA 90620
16'!;/S Arnelll Ad., Camarillo. CA 93010
20715 S. Avalon Blvd. Carson CA 90746 23021 Lake Center Or. (Lake Forest). Et Toro, CA 92630
IOCH E tmperlal Hwy . La Habra. CA 90631 Gl
4 140 Long Beach Bl\Od., Lollg Beach, CA 90807 • 22939 Hawthorne Blvd., Torraoce, CA 90505
1095 Irvine Btvd./Tustln, CA 92680 , ~~~~~c 235 N. Citrus Ave., West Covina, CA 91793 ~•~or•
"Metcury Room" aralf1bl• on • reserv9d bu/a ' ~.p,...
...._ma.Long
sleeves and legs 1n
popular coal style
Assorted patlerns
1nS·M·L·XL
Reg 18.50 13.90.
In othe r action , the
trustees who have already
asked the Legislature for unJlke
ly 17 .7 percent raises for CSUC
employees voted to seek addi
tional raises of from 1.5 lo 5 per·
cent for cleri C'al and other
e mployees they consider un·
derpaid
Oil drilling
on preserve
areas due?
WASHINGTON (AP1 Two
ocean sanctuaries created by
the Carter administration off
California lo protect the last sur-
v 1 ving gray whales and the
breeding ground!:> of sea otters
may be opened for oil and gas
drilling by the Reagan ad
minis tration
Da llas Miner, director of the
government':. Sanctuaries Pro-
gram Office. s aid Wednesday
the new administration is pro-
posing lo remove the drilling
restriction in the C hannel
Isla nds Sanctuary off Santa
Barbara and the Point Reyes-
l"arrallon Isla nds Sanctuary off
San Francisco and would ask for
public comment over the next
six months.
Miner said the proposal result
ed from guideline~ i!.sued by
President Reagan to assess the
economic impact of each gov
ernmenl regulation
The Sanctuarie:. Progr am
comes under the Commerce
Department. but Miner said the
decision came after consulting
other agencies. including the In
tcrior Depart ment. which con
tended 1t should decide which
tracts to offer for leasing.
Interior Secretarv J ames Watt
wrote Commerce Secretar y
Ma lcolm Bal ridge expressing
bupport for the policy change.
-.;
Shortalffv•
dr•H•hlrts .
Easy ca•e 65 "
ootyester/35
co1ton Select
pin stripe in blue
or burgundy or
lone on tone 1n
while blue na1ura1
Reg 18 50 20 00 13.90.
Stowew•r 1 .. ~ ..... Genuine
leather collapsable bag has mulhlude of
uses Convenient size 16" x 9" 1n a
variety of colors Some suede
Reg. 50 00 29.90.
Attac he ce .. b y Pe brlnl. Fealures
removable portfolio case Brass corners
and combination locks Exira sturdy
conslructron. cushioned grip Mahogany
or black Reg 85 00 19.90.
CALL LINDA BLUE
FORA
FULLY ASSUMABLE LOAN-
INTEREST ONLY ~~~
'.Newport,~!,":.';!;,!,~' !& I
(714) 7eo-eoe<J • ®
Daily Pilllt I
-,
~ ..... _ _.,,,, ..... ,..,,
\
Utlhtw ...... ltfnoonl robe.
Machine washable polyester/cotton
. blend. Kimono styling-one size
fits all. Blue or tan. Includes free
monogramming. Reg. 32.50 ... 11.eo.
Allow 3 ..-. tor monoort1mml"9.
' -I
• • silverwoods
4& FASHtON ISlAND HEWP0RT BEACH
---.. .............. ____ , .. ___ ...... ,--•,ft,• a .................... ..
Orange Cont Oalfy Pillof t1~~1i~-...t .. , ., .. -..... ~--.. ~~-----T·h·om··-J.P .. H.•l.•Y.IP·u-bl.t&ht~r _TborMt_ ..... l(ew ... ".'E·d·ltot. 11?1.. ~.-... ~·~ Thuraday, March 28, 1981 8.1'1w• l(relbl(h/EdltOrlll Page Editor I Plaza expansion
• • raises questions
Costa Me.a 's City Council, .-hJcb turned down a pair
of blgh·rlAe office buUclin'8 on Brt1tol Street near the
Monts<>mery Ward store Just south of tbe San Ote10
Freeway, has gone In another direction In approvtn1
another tower just two blocks to the north.
Only Mayor Arlene Schaf er vol~ aaainlt the 15-atory
Broadway department store and omce buildin1 proposed
by C.J . Segerstrom and Sons for its South Cout Plaza
shopping complex.
Mayor Schaf er indicated ·a fear there would be no
housing in the area for the 800 moderately paid clerka
and office workers employed and questioned what the ad·
dltion would do to tratflc in the Sunflower Avenue·Bristol
Street area.
Some city officials believe Segerstrom 's proposal
won 't add much stress to the tramc area impacted and
note the firm has fed thousands of dollars into a special
three-city pool to improve streets and signals in the area.
This logic argues that the high·rise proposals for
south of the freeway would have glutted the signalized
area fronting Montgomery Ward and raised havoc along
Paularino Avenue, another feeder street.
Perhaps city traffic engineers, planning com·
missioners and council members are correct.
And despite protests from May Co. officials (who
claim the tower addition will create congestion and pll{k·
ing problems at the Plaza itself> the Segerstroms must
come up with an adequate parking plan before final ap.
provaJ is granted .
In time, such a plan may be produced.
Meanwhile. residents have ample reason to wonder
why a traffic-producing project south of the San Diego
Freeway was discarded -and another, less than a mile
north, given a r ecommendation for approval.
All this in an area where traffic already is a burden
:and where still other massive commercial projects are
:well along in planning stages. .
~s hospital nee ded?
Former Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett raised the
roof last week because the owners of Costa Mesa
·Memorial Hospital want to move their acute care
facilities to Irvine.
lf Costa Mesans agree. they'd better s a y so or give up
on a full-service hospital in their city.
Hammett charged that the owners, the Tennessee-
based Hospital Affiliates International, has no roots in
Costa Mesa and has no community spirit for this city.
HAI is seeking state permission to move its li cense
for 99 beds to Irvine and add 73 more to build a new
hos pital there.
According to county officials, Costa Mesa Memorial
made only about $70,000 in 1979, the last figures available.
HAI reports it would like to make the Mesa hospital a
nursing home, a use that state and county officials agree
is badly needed in the a rea.
Except for Hammett. administrator for Bristol Park
Medical Group, the re has been no outcry to either sup-
port or save Costa Mesa's only acute care fa cility.
City officials note that most serious injury cases are
ro uted to the Fountain Va lley Communit y Hospital
tra uma care center.
And sources cJose to the medical scene indicate that
attempts to gain support for the hospital among area doc-
tors have not been entirely successful.
Most of their patients continue lo be sent lo Hoag
Memorial, Fountain Valley or Mercy H~pital over in
Santa Ana.
A Costa Mesa hospital is a convenience. but if sup-
port for its services aren't forthcoming, HAi's plan to
move lo Irvine will be understandable.
Bay dredging gallles
It's been a week of good news and bad news for the
parties interested in cleaning up the silt-clogged Upper
Newport Bay.
Those parties, which include Newport Beach, the
county and Irvine. had reason to celebrate when the stale
Water Resources Board agreed to put up $1 million for
the project.
But that's where the good news stopped.
According to a so-called early action plan, the
cleanup project will cost $4 million and calls for dredging
and a deepening of the San Diego Creek to slow the Oow
of silt into the bay.
Local officials fell short or the S4 million mark when
the water board set $446,000 aside for the project saying
the money would r e main off limits until Newport can
raise an equal amount in matching funds.
At about the same moment. the state Legislative
Analyst s liced a r equest for $2 million down to Sl.1
million. adding that this money also will remain off-limits
until Newport meets the water board's request for
$446,000 in matching f und.s.
Are state officials playing games with Orange Coun-
ty'? More than a few local observers think so.
It's fair to wonder why Newport or any other local
agency would have to help pick up the bill on the cleanup
·project when the area is under state jurisdiction. • Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Piiot
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 .
Boy d/Safety light
ByL.11. BOYD
Your chances o( getting hit
in a tear ·end colllalon
evldenUy could be cut In half
lllllY•
We have abed our 1ullt
complex with our
morals. Now lf we err
the culprit la aoclety,
en vlrasment, aJcofaoJ or
even demoaa that bave takta potMPfon of our
body.
juat by installing a third
brake light under the middle
of your car's back window.
Studlea show cara 10
eq uipped laat year were in·
vol ved in 54 percent fewer
rear·enden t.han can wttbout
such hJp lishtl. No btC es·
pense, that. Youcoulddoltfor
afewdoUan.
Q. You know tbat clown
wttb the Harlem Globetrot·
ters called Meadowlark
Lemon? Wba\ wu b1I name
ori1inaJly?
A. Meadow Lemon. But he
chanaed tt l•f•llr to Me.._..,.t abou 11 1ean -.co.
A9 for bl&let.rrlu, aome
American Indian• doubled
their pJH1ure: Ate them
fre1b •ad 1cnoked lbem
dried.
··;; ..
Jack Anderson
Military losing trained pilots
W ASHlNGTON -Pre1ldtnl
Reatan'a pJana &o beef up the
natlon'I deftnlt forces have
1lven the lion'• share of Pen·
ta1on bud1et Increases t.o the
Navy. But the money may be
aimed al the wron1 tar1et -
hardware lnatead of penonnel.
Two 90,000·ton·nuclear
power.ct aircraft carrier• are
propoaed lo
the presl·
dent'a budget,
and the 12·
carrier fleet
la to be ex·
pended even·
tually to 16.
But the
trouble ls, the
Navy Is find.
log it tough lo
hang onto enough pilots lo man
its present carrier strength,
much less thoae who'll be needed
to fly the planes from an
increased flattop fleet.
The reason is s tr ictly
economic: An experienced pilot
can earn up to four limes bis
military pay by becoming a
commercial airline pilot. A.a •
result, the Navy's pilots are
Mailbox
peelln1 ott al ao aJarmln1 rate
to purtue the more lucrative
careers ottered hy commerciaJ
avlaUon.
NAVY AND Ala FO&CE
pllotJ are ,.quired to serve six
yeara after they 1et their wlnp.
Thia II to lnaure that the tu· payer1 will get at least aome
quid pro quo lor tbe $500,000-ptu.a
It coatJ to train each pilot -plus
an additional $340,000 to qualify
him for carrier duty.
Bul seven out of every 10
mllitary pilots quit the service
at the end of their six-year ob-
llgatlon. Tbe temptation lo rake ln bil buclca aa an airline piJot la
Just too great.
There's another factor in·
volved: The airlines won't hire a
pilot who'a over 30, so the
aervice pilots can't afford to
stay on much past 28. ResuJt:
One hltch and they're gone,
leavlng the taxpayers stuck with
their training blJJ and the
recruiters trying &o hire replace-
mentJ -who will presumably
start the whole cycle over
agaln.
Laat year, 43& Navy pllotJ
quit. The Navy wou.nd up 25 per-
cent abort ln pilots of com·
mander rank and below the
ones who would be moat tempted
by commercial airline Jobt. The
Navy needed almost 13,000
pUotJ; lt had only 9,000. And
thle, of courte, 1a before any new
carriers are built.
The Na''Y has tried to dis·
courage the a,ttritJon of Its
flyboy ranks with the carrot of
pay raises. Last year, the ad·
mirals asked Congress for a :iC>
percent salary increase for Its
plJots, the first change In basic
pay scale in 20 years. Congre11s
OK'd a raise of 25 percent.
CONGRESS, ALSO approved a
bonus of $5,000 to Sl J ,000 for
pilots with "critical skill&" for
each year they agree lo stay on
past their legal obligation. But
not a single pilot has yet re·
ceived a bonus. because Pen-
tagon bureaucrats are still try-
ing lo figure out which pilots
qualify for it.
One admiral, sources told my
reporter Sharon Geitner , got so
fruatnc.d wtt.b the lo.a of Navy
pUota t.o private lnduatry that be
1ua1atec1 a monetery •Uck in·
atead ot a carrot: Malle the Cle>m·
mercial alrUnea reimburse the
government for the trained
pilot.a they bire. Aa a pracUcal
matter, thou1h, the Navy would
pot be able to force the alrUne11 to
pay • MEANWHILE, the Navy is
trying to lure back pllotJ who
have left the service for com·
mercial aviation but have been
furloughed by the recession. The
Irony of this situation la that if
President Rea1an succeeds in
getting the nation's economy
boomlng again, It will make it 1
that much harder for the Navy
to recruit the pilots it will need
for the preside nt's expanded
carrier fleet.
To make matters worse, the
pilots the Navy is losing are
almost by definition those with
experience six years ' ex-
perience. A deputy chief of
naval operations. Lando Zech,
told the Senate Armed Services
Committee recently that the
balance or the Navy's flight
per sonnel has alread y shifted
a la rmingly to inexperienced
fl yers.
FIGHTING THE BLACKOUT:
Dave Stockman's attempt to
jam the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting with a 25 percent
budget cut h as run in t o
bipartisan protest on Capitol
Hill Sens Harrison Schmitt, R-
N M . and Ted Stevens. R-
Alaska. and Rep. Tim Wirth, D
Colo., ha ve all sent letters of
protest to the Office of Man age
ment and Budget
A I though the threatened fund
cut is worri11ome enough to CPB
officials. what really bothers
them Is the loss of tndependence
the cut wall imphc1tly cost them.
CPB's funding has been on a
unique two-year schedule, to
lessen the chance of pressure
from a member of Congress who
d i d n 't l ike the agency 's
p rogram ming Then R ep
Stockman voted to renew this
advance funding system two
years ago
But now, as budget director,
Stockman is trying to engineer a
retroactive budget cut for CPB
'Affordable' housing was only a dream
To the Editor·
A year ago I naive ly believed
the advertisements stating that
mobile homes were, indeed, the
only "affordable" hous ing in
Orange County, the "answer " to
the potential "home owners"
prayer. ls uccumbed and invested
in a mobile home, which has
proved to be a horrendous mis-
take on my part.
My experience has s hown it is
virtually impossible to finance a
mobile home. and pay the rapidly
escalating rent on the space it oc-
cupies I've found that when a
person's mobile home is once
situated on "rental" space in a
mobile home park. one no longer
has any control over how much
one pays lo keep one's home in a
"stationary" position. (Unless of
course, the mobile home owner
owns the land on which his "in-
vestment" sits. This is highly un-
usual >
By the time I pay $428 on the
mortgage plus $248 on the down
pay ment. J have paid $612. Then, I
have a $245 space rental fee plus
gas and electricity that adds
another S60-S70 per month. Add to
this a telephone and m y "invest·
ment" comes to S9SO per month
This is hardly "affordable" li v·
ing. My space rent has jumped
from $215 to $245 <including SS per
month for my small dog) in one
year. Unless I could afford to pay
at least sa,ooo lo move my
"home" and find Jand for It', I am
literally at the mercy of the park
land owner and whatever he
dee ms "fair" lo charge in rental
fees. There is no limit on what he
can charge.
MY PITY goes out to those
countless aoula around me who
are on fixed Incomes. Many of
them are leaving their llghta off
and heat almost totally off to meet
added raises in 1pace rentals. I
am grateful t.hat my mother, a
widow on a fixed income, has a
home on land s he and my father
paid for as we were growing up.
When I moved into thl1 mobtJe
park Jut year, after havtn1 spent
most of my adult years In apart·
menla, I felt that I had aome
security, and a potentJal "invnt·
ment." I did not know that theaale
of my "Investment" could beheld
up because the park owners could m alee t.be rental c:har1e t0 exorbl·
tut Ulat 1nt.ereat49d people would
be unable to afford to buy It. The
park ,ownel'a also "approve"
wboewr buya It and Uvea ln ll
here.
Lite bu no 1uarut... but
aurelJ tbln muat be dittecy
and falmea t0mewbere. ao that
people could live out their retire·
ment years in dignity, with ade·
quate food and other essentials
for a decent quality of life
Somewhere m our democracy
there must be some protection
from excessive greed.
8 .E WALTERS
Srietlee le l••b
To the Editor:
In your front page article on
science entiUed. ·'Science, prey
to misfits and foots" l was about
to agree with the headline until I
found that the author was refer-
ring to those who did not agree
with the unproven theory of
evolution. as the misfits and
(ools
The author equated the theory
of e\'olution to the law of gravl·
ty. If this is so. why is it not re-
ferred to as the law of evolution?
The so-called scientist doesn't
even know the diffe r en ce
between a theory and a law.
This article causes me to agree
with lhe headline -science cer-
tainly has fallen prey to misfits
and fools.
Before the Scopes trial. evolu-
tion could not even be taught in
public schools . Due lo recent ruJ
ings by misfits and fools, the
name of God can't even be men-
tioned in school, although there
is menti on o f God In the
Declaration of Independence
and it was written by the same
men who wrote the Constitution.
How couJd the mentiom of God
in achoo! then be unconstitu-
tional?
JAMES BOLDING
••lre• .. ••••br
To the EdJtor:
J liod It fasclnaUnf that the men
on the board of the new Music
Center are, for the most part, the
same men In the forefront of the
big business a11ault on the
Orange County environment.
These men have supported ln
many lntereatlng way1 uncon·
trolled land development and
airport expanalon in our area.
Now they are going to help1 Orange County to a hl1her
cultural level Instead of just a
higher noise level.
Good business practice or
gutJt?
M.C.SUMNER ,,_.c1 ........
To the Editor:
'Ile Dan Lowen of the Coeoa
Beach, na. htah school and the
PSATuam.
A model don not need lO be
··-·-_______ _... _______ . .-.... ··
constructed. The problem can be
visu alized The answer as seven
< 71 planes or surfaces of which
two (2) are bases of the original
pyramids. Hence either <7> or
(5 ) is correct, depending on
semantics.
In short, the question is am-
biguous and a mulliple·choice
answer does not allow the slu·
dent to define his terms. So I do
believe the reporter missed the
point a bit
Anyway, hooray fo, young
Lowen!
fRANK G CASSERLY
'JJw r'•' tltre •t
To the Editor:
Once again the TV news
brings us a n interview with
another of Washington's big guns,
this time Secretary of Defense
Caspar Weinberger
Now l know that my hearing
isn't what it used to be and
perhaps this is nature's way of
protecting our minds. but I'm
reasonably sure that I heard the
m i nd· bogglin g s um o f one
trillion 200 million <r can't han-
dle that ) budget, much of which
is programmed for defense
WELL, <as Reagan would
say> we're worth it and l sup·
pose that by defense the good
Secr etary m eans from out·
siders. principally the Soviet
Union. Okay. But he and the rest
in Washington better get their
act together for reason that the
Soviets have said they'll take us
without firing a shot.
If all this dope pushing, racial
arguing. dumb busing, Abscam.
Las Vegas fires. Santa Monica
rent control fiascos e tc. etc.
doesn't slop, and quickly, then
that's exactly what's going to
happen.
WARRENG.AL't'HOFF
8ellbla l•le~•t•
To the Editor:
A recent meeting o f the
Newport Beach Planning Com·
m ission 1how1 that good old
American self-interest motivates
us all. The heated topic under dis-
cuaaton was the Irvine Com ·
pany'a planned expansion of
Newport Cent.er.
Sevetal people s poke a1aJ.nst
the ptoJtlmJty ol the propoaed bus
depot to tbelr bomea: t.btlr aelf\ah
reaaona: clJalike of dfeael fumea
and t.he u1Untu of depou. One
man wan~ t.b• Newport VUlatt
moved from ltl propoaed site 10
the cooking odou from Its
--===~-.-
res t a u ra nt s would waft
elsewhere. his selfish reason: a
desire for clean-smelling air One
lady ranted and raved about the
coming increase of crime as the
city is urbanized . her selfish
reason wanting to walk the
streets safely.
THE IRVI NE Co mpany's
representatives enthused about
the benefits of the expansion;
their selfish reasons: pav. One ma n fumed about the extra time
he would have to spend driving to
work in Cost a Mesa . his selfish
reason· an appreciation of his
time . Several people expressed
concern about their views being
blocked by the Irvine Center ex-
pansion, their selfish reason:
love of pretty scenery. One person
worried about the increased traf·
fie on Pacific Co~sl Highway and
the likelihood of the prohibition of
on-street parking; he r selfish
reason: concern about Corona del
Mar business.
One lady praised plans for ex·
pansion; her selfish reason· more
shoppers for her store. Several
people bemoaned the ract that
stalled, heavy trarric would in·
crease smog; their selfish rea-
son : a need for clean air lo
breathe. Several people ex-
pressed fears that the Irvine Com-
pany expansion would increase
airport usage: their selfish rea-
sons : a desire (or peace and
quiet. One lady worried about
runoff ln the bay and its siltation;
her selfish reason! a fondness for
nature.
I couJd goon, but the reader gets
the picture ·
JACK WHITGlFT
N.Uellekler
To the Editor:
IC what J read in the paper Is cor-
rect, t.he "acceptable" noise level
of an aircraft over a residential
area is 64 dec:ibela. The variance
allowance granted to the com·
merclal carriers using John
Wayne Airport Is an increase to 70
decibels.
Do l have news for you !
Qualified sound englneera have
recorded 101 decibels over my
home on Harbor Island an<l 1 am
five miles from the airport.
Somethln1 atinlta. be1ides the
Jetfumta.
WlNIF'RED VOEGELIN • l.•t .. n ll"ttn rMWr• •t• -1e-. ni. ~ t• H ,...,. .. I'""' II IJt lll«t # t llfl'llMtt I It , ... ,_, '-"'lln .... ,..,.., .. .... ..
11•111 preftfellct. All ltlltrt rll\lt\ IMI. iltll~Uft f/114 rntlllllt ........ ll\lt MIN• ,,,_, Ill •llfl;.;t\: = If lllftlcleM '"-I• ... en:.~ t! ':'t~:r.:. ~""-= llUfl'lllltf fl4 IN Ceftll"IM9f •1•11t' .. ti-!wr •trllkt'IM"""""
-----·.-------..
---·----___ ...., --·-----, ___ _..... .. ,.... ... -------
~TI ill TI~
Gianturco rapped
on 'fiscal abyss'
SACRAMENTO CAP) -State Tranaportation Director
Adriana Gianturco hu received another toncue·laabing, thla time
In the Senate Rules Committee.
It happened at a bearing Wednesday. But Ma. GJanturco, often
critlclzed in trans portation committees. wasn't t here.
Sen. Barry Keene. D·Mendocino, called her tyrannical and
said transportation policy under Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. "has
been an absolute disast er."
Keene said the transportation program is in a "fiscal abyss,"
the highways are being destroyed, and nothing ls being done about
mass transit.
s.. •le9e ..... e911t••••te4
SAN DIEGO (AP> Relatively high lracesof metal cootamin•·
lion have been round in mussels along the San Diego coast and marine
biologists are searching for the source.
A mussel·monitoring program turned up traces of s ilver, zinc,
manganese, copper and.lead~ as wefl as s uch toxic chemicals as PCB
and the insecticides DDT and lindane, health officials said Wednes·
day.
Studies a re under way to determine if the culprit might be sewage
outfall and s ludge beds . The levels of PCB compounds round in Mis ·
sion Bay, San Diego and Oceanside were up to 140 limes higher than
those inhabiting cleaner waters away from the industrial areas. of·
ficia ls said
,..,,. • ., ••• de••• • ulM •-'fta
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The death or the only son of Academy
Award·winning actor Ray Milland has been ruled a suicide by cor -
oner's officials .
Daniel Milland, 41 . was found in his West Los Angeles apart·
ment with a gunshot wound in the head No s uicide note was found.
Nete ~orlc ••• flft• a.r~as••t po•t
CLAREMONT <AP l -John 0 . Maquire, president or New
York State's College at Old Westbury, has been named president or
Claremont Graduate School and Claremont University Cente r
the coordinating institution or the six Claremont Colleges.
• ...., • ..,oa't .,et• an• ~diJ19
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Describing the arts as "perhaps more
important than some or the basic industries," Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. said he will not veto any spending which may be added
to his Califo rnia Arts Council budget. The Democratic governor
Wednesday made that promise in a speech at a California Con·
federation of the Arts dinner.
Kla11 leader t elb of 'eeate••'
FALLBROOK <AP1 -Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Meuger says
he is "press director of the White American Political Association."
which is t rying to find which California city is most "anti-white."
A contest will be held to find out, Metzger said In a news re·
lease.
"The mayor or the winning city will receive a certificate officially
signifying that his or her city has become uninhabitable by decent
middle and low· income whites," Metzger pledged.
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, March 26, 1981 H/F Al
$28age ar
State college
• • • • • • • fee boost set
• • • •
• • • •
'Bello there' AP'Wortpllole
Tony Wood, a veterinary surgeon from Australia, unloads
one of seven rare koalas after its arrival at Los Angeles
Intemationat Airport. The koalas, the first to be exported
by Australia in over 60 years, wiU join five others at the
San Diego Zoo.
SAC RAMENTO <AP >
The re'll be..:i!._ $29 annual increase
in stud6lt fees In the California
State University and Colleges,
says the board or trustees.
The trustees, meeting Wednes·
day, also discussed a legislative
bill to require that the conect
a nswers to such examinations as
the Scholastic Aptitude Test be
sent later to the high school
seniors who took it. But they de·
c ide d against taking an im
mediate position.
C SUC C hancell or G le nn
Dumke opposes the bill, SBlOl
by Sen. Milton Marks, R·San
Francisco. It is s ponsored by
student groups.
P ROPONENTS of the bill said
disclosure would make the test
ing process more open and ac·
countable.
Oppone nts said it woul d
destroy the tests .
The fee increase won approval
without debate.
The 314,000 students on the 19
campuses now pay about $210 a
yea r in f ees not tuition
becau se fee s d o n ot pa y
teachers· salaries
THE VOTE means that the
s tude nt services fee will rise
from $160 to $189 a year this fall.
The fee for students taking no
more than two classes will rise
from $130 to SlS9
The money will provide raise!>
lo employees of such student
services a s coun!>eling and
clinics .
Auto workers rehired
By The Associated Press announced it was rehiring 2,300 Night shafts that were sus·
The hard·hit automobile in· employees there. pended last year at the Van
dustry in California has some GM the nation 's No. l Nuys and Fremont plants during
good news for the first time in antomaker -a lso announced t he deepest point of the s lump in
the past year -hundreds of 1,600 workers were being re· car sales will be reinstituted
laid.off autoworkers are being called to its assembly plant in April 6 in Fremont and May 4 in
rehired because of the growing Fremont in the San Fran cisco Van Nuys.
number of new cars being sold. Bay Area and that more than a Most of the laid off workers
In the Los Angeles suburb or third of 2,300 persons had been were still rece1v1n~ .upplemen
Va n N u y s . u n e m p Io ye d hired for its modernized South tat benefit:. paict frorn a com
autoworkers lined up for blocks Gate plant to turn out the firm 's p a n y f u n d . !> a 1 d G M
In o th er action, the
trus tees who have already
asked the Legislature for unlike-
ly 17 .7 percent raises for CSUC
employees -voted to seek addi·
tional raises or from l.5 to 5 per·
cent for cleri cal and other
e mployees they con~ider un·
derpaili
Oil drilling
on preseroe
areas due?
WASHINGTON IAP I Two
ocean sanctuaries created by
the Carter administration off
Cahfornia to protect the last s ur·
viving gra) whales and the
breeding grounds or sea otters
may be opened ror oil and gas
drill ing by the R cai{<tn ad
m inistralion
Dallas Miner. director or lht:
government's Sanctuaries Pro·
gram Offi ce, said Wednesday
the new administrntion 1s pro-
posing to remove the drilling
re s tril'laon in th e Channel
Is lands Sanctuary off Santa
Barbara and the Point Reyes-
Farrallon Islands Sanctuary off
San Francisco and would a sk for
public comment over the next
six month~
Miner said the propo~al result·
ed from guidelines 1.ssued by
President Reagan lo assess the
economic impact of each gov
ernment regulation.
The Sanclu a r 1e::. Program
comt>s under the CommercL·
Department. but Maner said the
decis ion c·amc after consultin~
other agencies. including the In
terior Department. which con
tended it should decide which
tracts to offer fo r leas ing
In terior Secretary James Watt
wrote CommercC' Sel'r etaq
Ma lcolm Ralridge c·xpressrng
support for the policy l'hange. Wednesday as General Motors economical new J .cars . spokeswoman J utl) Anderson ~~~~~~....;...::.:..:...:...:..:..:..::...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"-~~~~
REGISTER NOW FOR JUST $21.00 I And be eu.u•M of ou' low 1nttrmen1 COii\
BURIALS ANY CEMETERY $360 ~~K~~t~'!~:.,.. e-l•t> ..
"'..., Pl'f -'' CH mon of th"' cwt GI"' to' f•
Nnct•Oftod bv the Ceht O•PI of CDM4'm., Aft••" !/!~
cAmerican ~amil~ Soclet~
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Huntington Beach, CA 92647
Sout/lern Ce/1/omla R1q1on1/ Oll1c1s:
5677 E La Palrro Ave .. Anaheim, CA 92807
8955 Valley View St .. Buena Park, CA 90620
1656 Arnell! Ad., Camanflo. CA 93010
20715 S Avalon Blvd .. Carson CA 90746
23021 Lake Cente1 Or., (Lake Forest), El Toro, CA 92630
1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 G)
4140 Long Beach Blvd., Loog B .. ch, CA 90807 m
22939 Hawlhorne Blvd .. Torrance. CA~
1095 lrvlne Blvd . Tustin, CA 92680
235 N Citrus Ave . West Covina, CA 91793
"Mercury Room" available on • reserved btlSIS
I
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monogramming. Reg. 32.50 ... 11.eo.
Allow 3.,... for monooremmlng
Penna-pr"•
..-J•maa.Long
sleeves and legs 1n
rx:ipular coat style
Assorted panerns
inS·M·L·XL
Re<] 18 SO 13.90.
Stow•••r ... th« bq. Genuine
leather callapsable bag has multllude of
uses Conven1en1 size 16" >e 9 • 1n a
variety of colors. Some suede.
Reg so.oo. ae.90.
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Ed'>Y care 65
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pin <;tripe 1n blue
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constwctron. cushioned g11p Mahogany
or black. Reg 85.00 59.90.
silverwoods
45 FASHION ISlAHD
NEWPORT BEACH
.-e N
Expansion plan
battle looming
The 1ta1e bas been set ln Newport Beach for a
wallC>Pinl development 1bowdown wtth the lrvlae Com~
pany'1 request to expand Newport Center by nearly 25
percent. ·
But th.la time the two aides are drawn up a lltUe dll·
ferenUy. It's not the clear-cut showdown between pro-
development types and the 1low-growth factlona.
Although the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com·
merce, for instance, ls backing the plan "In concept/' the
Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce is asking for de·
nial. So are city planners.
The chief concern with the expansion plan ls that it
will compound Newport's already-congested traffic now.
Some opponents contend the new buJldin1 will mean new
pressure for more jet service at John Wayne Airport.
The Irvine Company plans call for:
-A new 400-room hotel, envisioned as a luxury job
similar to the Bel Air in Loi Angeles.
-Expansion of the 377-room Marriott Hotel by 165
rooms.
-RoufhlY 800,000 square feet of new office space,
the equal o three new Pacific Mutual buildings.
-A new shopping strip between MacArthur
Boulevard and Avocado Avenue. to consist mostly of
specialty shops.
Irvine Company officials admit the expansion,
estimated to bring 6,500 new employees to the center,
would mean traffic problems if no mitigating measures
are offered. And the company is offering some measures.
The develof ment firm has agreed to more than $8
million worth o road improvements around the center. It
also plans to construct a portion of the east-west San Joa-
quin Hills transportation corridor to keep traffic off
Pacific Coast Highway.
In addition, the Irvine Company says it will foot the
bill on a share-a -ride program for the entire center. It
claims this program could cut employee traffic by so per-
cent.
But opponents of the plan express doubt that the road
improvements will do the trick and the share-a-ride pro-
gram is questioned even by members of the city's pro-
,growth faction.
ln short, the Newport Center package is shaping up
to be a classic development fight with high-noon likely ar·
riving sometime next month when the proposal lands in
the City Council's lap.
It's a hard one to call. The economic considerations
to Newport Beach are tempting <how many cities
wouldn't beg for such an offering?) -but the climate for
more commerce and development is not that bright any
longer. not here at least.
Prove the case, Irvine Company. Show the tramc in·
creases will be met, the airport crush won't be increased,
a nd the housing needs wiU be found.
Do those things and you have a package to sell.
Bay dredging ga01es
It's been a week of good news and bad news for the
parties interested in cleaning up the sill-clogged Upper
Newport Bay.
Those parties, which include Newport Beach, the
county and Irvine. had reason to celebrate when the state
Wa ter Resources Board agreed to put up St million for
the project
But that's where the good news stopped.
According to a so-called early action plan, the
cleanup project will cost S4 million and calls for dredging
and a deepening of the San Diego Creek to s low the flow
of silt into the bay.
Local officials fell short of the S4 million mark when
the water board set $446,000 aside for the project saying
the money would remain off limits until Newport can
r aise an equal amount in matching funds.
At about the same moment, the state Legislative
Analyst sliced a request for $2 million down to $1.1
million, addjng that this money also will rem ain off-limits
until Newport meets the water board's request for
$446,000 in matching funds.
The bottom line is that Newport must raise nearly
half a million in cash. State officials have given the city
two weeks to accomplish this.
Are state officials playing games with Orange Coun-
ty? More than a few local observers think so.
It's fair to wonder why Newport or any other local
agency would have to help pick up the bill on the cleanup
project when the area is under state jurisdiction. The
state department of Fish and Game is in charge of
watching over the area.
It appears that if it weren't for local officials, who have
spent years pushing for the cleanup, that's what the state
wouldprefertodo-watch. • Opinions expressed tn 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 O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71•) ~2-4321
Boyd/Sa/et)· light
By L.M. llOVD
Your chances of getting hit
in a rear -e nd collision
evidenUy could be cut In half
just by installlna a third
brake light under the middle
of your car's back window.
Studies s h o w cars so
equipped Jut year were ln·
volved in 54 percent fewer
rear-enders than cua without
such hiah Ughtl. No bll ex-
penae, that. You could do it for
afewdollan.
Q. You know th1t clown
with the Harlem Olobetl'Ot·
111111•
Now that we have the
new direction sl1n1 on
Dover at Coast
W•b•ay, whit do you
IUpPoee 19 In l4ore for
181 at tbe a1rport T
DOC
ters called Meadowlark
Lemon? What was his name
orlglnaJly?
A. Meadow Lemon. But he
changed it legally to
Meadowlark about 10 years
ago.
Some translations of Ex·
odua .X.XJJ, 18 read: "Thou
shalt not suffer a witch to
live." Thia wu the authority
numeroua European execu·
ttonen cited when they put
witches to death ln bygone
centuries. Cert1in scholars
now, however, claim it waa a
ml•take. The paas1ge should
have been translated: "Thou
shalt not aive a witch sus-
tenance."
Q. What sort of wood is in
bo•lin1 1lley lanes?
A. First lt feet: maple.
Next'-' feet: maple and plne
spliced. The rest, starting a
foot ln front of the head pln:
marle a1aln. Tough wood, tba maple.
lod•. J know ... world b*4 not 1et beat a path to the _, at two Mlchl1an men
who recently were ,1ranted
Patnt No. 4.21t,eoe fo-r their
in•eatloD of a better
~CNHU-8p.
Thul'tday, Maroh 26, 1081
Thom11 P. Hatevt Publlshotr Thomu Kttvll/Edltor
Berber• 1CrtlblCh/Edltorl1t P191 Editor
Jack Anderson
Military losing trained pilots
WASHINGTON -President
Reacan'a olana to beef up the
nation's defense forces have
1iven the Uoo'a share of Pen·
tacon budtet locreaua to the
Navy. But the money may be
aimed 1t the wron1 target -
hardware lnatead of personnel.
Two 90,000-lon-nuclear
powered aircraft carTlers are
proposed in
the p resi -
dent's budaet,
and the 12 ·
carrier fleet
la to be ex-
panded even-
tually to 15.
But the
trouble la, the
Navy la flnd-
ina it tough to
h1ng onto enough pilots to man
its present carrier strength,
much less those who'll be needed
to fly the planes from an
increased flattop fleet.
The reason is s trictly
economic: An experienced pilot
can earn up to four limes bis
military pay by becoming a
commercial airline pilot. A3 a
result, the Navy's pilots are
Pff)ln1 olf al 1n alarmlnf rate
to pursue the more lucr1tlve
c1rett1 offered by commercial
aviaUon
NAVY AND AIR FORCE
pilots are required to serve six
years atler they get their wings.
Thia la to insure that the tax·
payers wtU ge t at least some
quid pro quo for the ~.000-plus
It coatl to train each pilot -plus
an additional '340,000 to qualify
htm for carrier duty.
But seven out of every 10
military pilot.a quit the service
at the end of their six-year ob-
Uaation. The temptation to rake
in bia bucks as an airline pilot is
just too great.
There's a nother factor in·
volved: The airlines won't hire a
pilot who 's over 30, so the
service pilots can't afford to
stay on much past 28. Result:
One hitch and they're gone,
leaving the taxpayers s tuck with
their training bill and the
recruiters trying to hire replace·
ments -who will presumably
start the wh ole cycle over
again.
NOTiOO~ ttJW ...
Mailbox
Last year, 4H Navy pJlou
q uit. The Navy wound up 25 per
cent ahort in pllota of com-
mander rank and below -the
ones who would be most templed
by commercial airline joba. The
Navy needed a lmost 13,000
pilots: it bad only 9,000. And
tbls, of course, is before any new
carriers are built.
The Navy has tried to di!\
courage the attrition of Its
flyboy ranks wlth the carrot of
pay raiaes. Last year, the ad-
mirals asked Conaress for a ~
percent salary increase for Its
pilots, the first change in basic
pay scale in 20 years . Congress
OK'd a raise -of 25 percent.
CONGRESS, ALSO approved a
bonus of SS.000 to $11 .000 for
pilots with "critical skills" for
each year they agree to stay on
past their legal obligation But
not a single pilot has yet re
ceived a bonus. because Pen
tagon bureaucrats are still try
ing to figure out which pilots
qua lify for it.
One admiral. sources told my
reporter Sharon Geitner. got so
frustrated w1tb tbe loea of Navy
pilots to prtv1te lndustry that be
suuested a monetary stick ln·
stead of a carrot: Make the com·
mercial alrUnes reimburse the
government for the tnln~d
pllots they hire. As a practical
matter, though , the Navy would
.not be able to force the airlines to
pay.
MEANWHJLE, the Navy is
trying to lure back pilots who
have left the service Cor com-
mercial aviation but have been
furloughed by the recession. The
irony of this slt1,Aation is that if
P resident Reagan succeeds in
getting the nation's economy
booming again, it will make it
that much harder for lbe Navy
to recruit the pilots it will need
for the president's expanded
carrier fleet.
To make matters worse, the
pilots the Navy is los ing are
almost by definition those with
experience six years ' ex-
perience A deputy c hief of
naval operations. Lando Zech,
told the Senate Armed Ser vices
Committee recently that the
balance of the Navy's flight
pe rsonnel has already shifted
alarmingly to inexp«>rie nced
fl yers.
FIGHTING THE HLACKOUT:
Dave Stockman's attempt to
jam the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting with a 25 percent
budget cut h as run into
bipartisan protest on Capitol
Hill Sens Harrison Schmitt, R·
N M . and Ted Stevens, R·
Alaska, and Rep. Tim Wirth. D·
Colo , have all sent letters of
protest to the Office or Manage
m ent and Budget.
Although the threatened fund
cut is worrisome enough to CPB
officials, what really bothers
the m is the Joss or independence
the cut will implicitly cost them.
CPB's runding has been on a
uniqul' two-year schedule, to
lessen the chance or pressure
from a member of Congress who
didn 't like th e agency's
pr ogr am ming T h en ·Rep.
Stockman vott!d to renew this
a d va nce funding system two
years a1oio
But now. as budget director,
Stockman is trying to engineer a
retroactive budget cut for CPB.
'Affordable' housing was only a dream
To the Editor
A year ago f naively believed
the advertisements stating that
mobile homes were. indeed, the
only "affordable" housing in
Or ange County, the "answer" to
the potential "home owners"
prayer. I succumbed and invested
in a mobile home, which has
proved lo be a horrendous mis·
take on my part.
My experience has shown it is
virtually impossible to finance a
mobile home. and pay the rapidly
escalating rent on the space it oc-
cupies. I've found that when a
person's mobile home is once
situated on "rental" space in a
mobile home park , one no longer
has any control over how much
one pays to keep one's home in a
"stationary" position. c Unless of
course, the mobile home owner
owns the land on which his "in·
vestment" sits This is highly un-
usual >
By the time I pay $428 on the
mortgage plus $248 on the down
payment. J have paid S612. Then, I
have a $245 space rental fee plus
gas and electricity that adds
another $60-$70 per month. Add to
this a telephone and my "invest·
ment" comes to $950 per month.
This is hardly "affordable" liv-
ing. My space rent has jumped
from $215 to $245 (including SS per
month for my sma ll dog> in one
year . Unless f could afford to pay
al least $3 ,000 to move my
"home" and find land for it, I am
literally at the mer cy of the park
la nd owner and what.ever he
deems "falr" to charge in rental
fees. There is no limit on what he
can charge.
MY PITY goes out lo those
countless souls around me who
are on fixed incomes. Many of
them are leaving their lights off
and heat almost totally off to meet
added raises In space rentals. I
am 1rateruJ lhat my mot.her, a
widow on a fixed Income, has a
home on 11nd she and my father
paid for as we were arowtng up.
When I moved Into this mobile
park last year. after having spent
most or my adult ye1rs In apart·
me nu, I felt that I had some
security, and a potential "Invest·
me nt." I dld not know thattheaale
of my "Investment" could be held
up because the rark owner• could
make the renta ch1r1e 10 ex.orbl·
tant that interested people would
bt wuable to afford to buy Lt. The
park owners alao "approve"
whotvtr buys It and Uve1 ln It
here.
Lift hu no 1uarantee1, but
aurelJ then muat be decency
ind falmeu aomewhere. so that
••
_.,.... __ .. -.. -· ... -_._ ....... w..-.~-• --
people could hve out their retire
menl years in dignity, with ade·
quate food and other essentials
for a decent quality or life
Somewhere in our democracy
there must be some protection
from excessive greed
BE WALTERS
&al•ree•r•tl ... ,....
To the Editor:
f was greatly concerned today
as I drove by the eroding silt of
the Ford Aeronutronic Project
along MacArthur Boulevard
The past three storms have seen
silt·laden water s pill over the
pipes and down the creek to the
upper bay Today I saw the dam
was breached and silt was spill·
ing over into the stream channel
and into the bay.
Our mayor is touting a $2
million taxpayer expenditure to
clean up silt. yet the Newport
Beach councll doesn't provide
execuU ve support to prevent our
hillsides from eroding into the
bay. When you think about it, we
have provided a S2 million sub-
sidy to grading projects that
can't keep their silt on site. I
would recommend the city con·
sider some changes In the way
we do business.
1) The J .M. Peters Company
should forfeit its bond on the
Ford project. The $25,000 bond
should be contributed to clean
up the sill In the bay.
2) Grading of projects should
be prohibited duMng the rainy
season.
3) Di1cln1 and yearly soil dls·
turbance should be f.rohiblted to
prevent loadin1 silt nto the bay.
We have a iood city staff and
gradina engineer to enforce our
silt rules. Mayor and City Coun-
cil should give them the needed
support to solve our problem.
HAL THOMAS
..... , ........ 1
To the Editor:
School Board President Ken
Weyman la either grossly misin-
formed (we hope the real of the
boud has It.a fact.a straight> or he
needs a m1th class. He told a
group of Eaalbluff mothers that
he kept their school open because
they "beaged" the board to keep
it ope.n which la the reaaon they
art conct.mned to suffer com-
blnatJonclUMt.
Flnt ot all, be doffn't WU bow
ht ancl hi• board roned hundred.I
of 1tudeota away from Eattblutf
School who abould hlV• aone to
that ICbool. Then ht should look
at the 1taU.Uc1 for 1981·82. Mr.
We1m.u. we would like to lmow
h<>w you planned to fit 1,455
children into l.316 slots in the
Corona del Mar Zone 1f you kept
Harbor View and Andersen as
the only open schools'!
By 1982-83, the squeeze would
again be tight, especially wi th
construction going on around
Eastblurt School and t he
possibility or a population shift
to Eastbluff due to it being the
most affordable area. This does
not include the Educ•ationally
Han(Jicapped and Hard of Hear-
ing Programs which will need
six to eight classrooms normally
used by 30 students apiece
We think Mr. Weyman owes
Eastbluff School an apology or
al least a more in-depth look al
the future of that school. the
handicapped progr ams housed
there. and the outlook for the
whole Corona del Mar Zone
MARCIA HANSON
s~11i.• '"'#re•••
To the Editor:
A recent mee ting or the
Newport Beach Plannin~ Com
mission shows that good old
American self·interest motivates
us all. The heated topic under dis·
cussion was the Irvine Com·
pany·s planned expansion of
New port Center.
Several people spoke against
the proximity of the proposed bus
depot to their homes; their selfis h
reasons : dislike of diesel fumes
and the ugliness of depots. One
man wanted the Newport Village
moved from its proJ>Qsed site so
the cooking odors from it s
restaura nt s wou ld waft
elsewhere: his selfis h reason: a
desire for clean-smelling air. One
lady ranted and raved about the
cominR increase of crime as the
city is urbanized: her selfish
reason : wanting to walk the
streets safely.
THE IRVIN E Company 's
representatives enthused about
the benefits of the expansion;
their selfish reasons : pav. One
man fumed about the extra Ume
he would have to spend driving lo
work In Costa Mesa: his selfish
reason: an appreciation of his
time. SeTI!ral people exprcased
concern about their views belng
blocked by the Irvine Cent.er ex-
pansion ; thelr selfish reason:
love of pretty s.cenery. One person
worried about the lncre11td tra(.
fie on Pacific Coast Kichway a_nd
the Ukdihood ot tbe probJbltJon ol
on·atr"t p1rk:in1; her 1tllla.b
reason: concern ebout Coron• del
Mar buai.nas.
One lad1 praised plans for ea·
pans1on . her selfish reason more
shoppers for her store. Several
people bemoaned the fact that
stalled. heavv trarfi<_· would in·
crease s mog; their selfish rea-
son : a need for clean air to
breathe Sever al people ex-
pressed fears that the Irvine Com-
pany expansion wou ld increase
airport usage. their selfish rea·
sons a desire for peace and
quiet. One lady wornect about
runofr in the bay and its siltation;
her selfish reason· a fondness for
nature.
f could go on, but the reader gels
the picture
JACK WlllTGIFT
•-Wftl ........
To the Editor
I find it fascinatin~ that the men
on the board of tht new Music
Center are. for the most part. the
same men an the forefront of the
big business assau lt on the
Orange County environment
These men have supported in
many interesting ways uncon·
trolled land development and
airport expansion in our area.
Now they are going to help
Orange County to a higher
cultural level instead of just a
higher noise level
Good bus iness prat·tice or
guilt''
M C.SU MNEH
Nobe•.U•er
To the Editor:
ff what I read ln the paper is cor-
rect. the "acceptable" noise level
of an aircraft over a residential
ar ea is 64 decibels. The variance
allowance granted to the com-
mercial carrier s using J ohn
Wayne Airport is an increase to 70
decibels
Do I have news for you!
Qualified sound engineers have
recorded 101 decibels over my
hom e on Harbor Island and 1 am
five miles from the airport.
Something stinks. besides the
jet fumes.
WINIF RED VOEGELI N • l.elttr.~ /rom readtr8 are welcome
The r1ghl 10 conden$e /tilers to /ti
spact or elltnanale bbt'I IS reserved
I.titer& o/ .'JOO word.• or leu wtll be
given preftrtnct. All letter• mutt
Include 1ignotur1 and moiling od·
drtu t1ut 114m.fl ma11 bf wlthlwld
on rtqutat if tt.1fllcl1nt reo1on ii ap-
po r tn t. Poelrfl will not be
publhhed. Letter• ma11 bt
telepholvd to U2·dON. Name and
phone numbrr of tM contributor
rnu1t be g1u1n for vtrlf1cahon
J!UtJ)OIU
BUSINESS I STOCKS
,,
Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Thuredmy, March 26. 1981 -N
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOflTIOHt llllC~\101 TllAOltOlll TMI llllW YO••. MIOWHf, ''Clt't( •••. to\fOll. OITllOIT .... o (IM(IMM&TI noc• Ca(NANOI& AHO llll"'O TIO l'I' TMI MA$0 AHO IHaflHlf
•
Dow Jones Final
Off 9.4~
Cloal~ 1,005. 76
t.•"' 'l(~" .._,~ Rea~an tax
plans detailed
f LA.st of nme·por1 1ene1 on 10vmQ on your 19'0 income
ta.r re tum. J
How much would your federaJ ineome taxes go
down if Congress were to approve President
Reagan's call for a series of cuts to trim individual
tax rates by 30 percent, s tarting in July and conclud
ing In 1984?
What does all the massive mumbo-jumbo aoout
tax reduction telegraph to you?
Here 's a ~ rund ow n of
fact s not
headlined: ---------., ,.. Q Will your
~~x:~ i~e~~~ a~~ IYllll PORTIR ~ ,
m inistration's
tax ·reduction
program is enacted into law"
A.. Not oecessartly. Your c.ota l rederal locome tu
bill would declloe If your earnings remained un·
changed lo the out few years; then your 1984 tu
debt would be about 3f percent s maller than your
'80 bill.
But 1r your paycheck rises, your tax bill would 1n-
erease. too, tor the simple reason that you then would
join the tax creep -and your higher paycheck would
put you into a higher tax bracket which automatical·
ly would pull more tax money oul of your earnings .
For instance. say you're unmarried. working as
an admissions officer at a private secondary school.
earning $15,000 a year and paying about S2,000 1n tax·
es If, over the next two years. your sala ry s tayed the
same. the Reagan plan would cut your federal taxes
by $316.
But say you move to a higher-paying job and
start earning $20,000 a year Your 1982 federal taxes
are estimated by Matthew Bender experts at roughly
S2.600. Eve n unde r the Reagan tax cuts . you
personaJly would owe S600 more to the fed~ral ~ov
ernm enl.
Q. Who really bene fits the most rrom the tax cut
proposals?
A. 11te ar1umenta about this 1row more abHhe
and bewUdertng by the hour. A first fact ls that
potentially, everyone would benefit -but 111 different
ways and to sharply dJfferent degrtts.
In total dollars. a senior partner at a leading
Cleveland law firm earning $100,000 a year I with a
wife and two children) would pay nearly 17,000 less in
taxes In l984 then he now pays.
A computer programmer earning $25,000 a year
and with the same ty~ of family would have his tu-
es reduced about $800_ A $50,000·a-year, Cour-~rson
family would be about $2,500 better off in the tax
computations.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
Pct.
Up •U Up tO' Up t.J Up 'J Up t .0
Up 75 Up 1 J Up 7.2
Up 7.0 Up 7.0 UP 6.1 Up 4.7
Up '·' Up '·' Up • 4
Up '·' Up '4
AMERICAN LEADERS
METALS
<•PH• 17~ 97 <•~h 41 i>ound, U 6 Clhllne
llQI\\
l u ll .IA lt<e<il'e l)OVnd.
l•ft< • i• • "3' •cents• POUnd, deli••'f'd
Tin $1 001 Mel•f> """~ tOMP<htl• lb
Al11m1_,, lo <•M>" -.no N 'f
Mottvfl ~10 00 ,,.., llo~
l'l•Un""' Un 00 lroy 01 N Y
SILVER
ly T"• A.6•«""19'1 Prfll
H •n<ly a. H•1m•r1. \13 lbOPt• HOY OUl><e
GOLD QUOTATIONS
l..o-n: ""'""11<1 ll All">Q •U• 00. llP .. 00
L•nOn. •rtt•noon flwong Ult SO, up
$11 50.
, .. ,., .,.,.....,, li•fnQ •s-1 ••. up n J8
t"ra1t•tw'I: 11•1"9 U~ Ol, up~ II
1 .. r lct.: ••It allttnoon 11<1"9 '':14 00 ~ U 00 UJ7 00 ~,..,
H•ll,.'t & Harm•n only Cl•tfy QuOI• un so.~ 111 so
l~tottllM-9: only 11a11r Q~I• U.l' so. ~ $11 .)0
...... -.. , only 0.1ly QUOI• ••OrlUted
U'1 ot. YI) Ill ..
,.
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT trh uraday, March 26. HNU
'Tess' beautiful movie but ,re"orts to t:liches
( FowQ m o """' of r~ cm
movie• ftOmMoled ffl'f besf J*i"1'f
01cor ol tlae Acodem~ Awot'CU
ceremOf!W MondoJ/J.
Impact ot any movie nominated
for belt plcture Oscar.
Roman Polanal:J, the picture Is or "The EJepba.ot Man.•· Collin) lt'• obvious drabnesa will She returns home to do back·
v lnl for 1ht Olean lnclud.ina Despite atteotlOft to ddall (the prevaU. breaking farm labor only to be
The 1t.ory ot a tragic heroine,
baaed on the Thomas Hardy nov·
el, "Te.IS of the d'UrbervUlts"
l&o't bad.
dfrector and clnemato1rapby. movie was filmed in Fren~> Poor Tess. rediscovered by ~lee. .
lt'I most likely to win tn tbe lat· and focus on penonality au.Del, She ia ~nt to validate news Heonceaaaintnestowinher.
ter cateaory. the picture la overworked. her family 11 related to t~e She keeps her distance this
ariatocratJc d'Urbervllle ram1ly time, fleeing with her now ., JEaay BEaTENSTEIN
CM ... o.11, ...... awt
"Teti" baJ the moet visual Directed by American lutftlve But It's do~btlul the film c~ There are too many cllchn -llvln1 ln a country mansion widowed mother (Rosemary
11tand up to Ordinary People "beauty has its price" · · · m l le a aw a y r r o m the Mart1'n) and brothers and sis-" life's a pu11le'' ... "all l•
Simon saying it twice
By TOM TITUS
oft•0811Jl'lleltMllt
Three new sta1e productions; two or them by
Neil Simon, arrive on the Orange Coast theater scene
thilweek. ·
Simon 'a "Chapter Two" opened at the Harlequin
Diener Playhouse Wednesday night, while his
:. "God's Favorite" bows at the
~,, Newport Theater Arts Center on
Friday. Sharing a Friday open·
Ing wlll be Edward Albee's
drama of suburban avarice,
"Everything in the Garden," at
the Newport Harbor Actors
Theater.
At the Harlequin, H.M. Wy ·
nant stars in a thinly disguised
portrait of Simon himself in
vuHr "Chapter Two,'' a play based on
the author's experiences in dealing with his first
wiff''s death and the strain ot his early relationship
with hiiJ new wife, Marsha Mason. Lisa Robinson
plays the romantic interest, while Patti Colombo and
Art Koustik complete the cast.
Directed by Harvey Levine, "Chapter Two" will
play nightly except Mondays al varying curtain
times through May 3 at the Harlequin, 3503S. Harbor
Blvd., just north of Costa Mesa. Reservations and in·
formation 979-5511.
KENT JOHNSON IS directing "God's Favorite"
at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive.
Newport Beach, where Paul TeschJ<e enacts a
modem Job encountering a series of misfortunes.
Sorrell Wayne ls cast as has wife with John Szura
playing a heavenly messenger who brings him the
bad news.
Rounding out the Newport cast are Joe
Brockman, Scott Clevenger, Paula Kay Perry. Dolly
Rots and William Buckley. Performances are
s~heduled Fridays and Saturdavs at 8 o'clock with
Sunday matinees at 2 through Apnl 18. Reservations
675-3143or642-8119.
Albee's "Everything in the Garden" has been
transformed from Long Island to Southern
California for its product10n at the Newport Harbor
Actors Theat~r. J09 Monte Vista St .. Costa Mesa.
Don Laffoon directs the drama, which features Ben
Miles. Rochelle Savill. Bill Urban and Valerie
Mc t lroy in leading roles.
Other cast members include Tom Early, Ho-
bert Knapp, Denise Dale, Gary Bartick, Jeanne
Christian.ten, Tom Emmanuel and Jeanne Clark.
Performances are Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
INTERt.ISSION
p. m. through April 18
with Sunday matinees at
2: 30 scheduled for the
fir s t two w eek e nds .
Tickets are available al
the box office or by mail
to Box 2U7. Newport Beach~.
Two college productions. "Tom Jones" at
Golden West College and "The Matchmaker" at
Southern California College, complete their
scheduled engagements this weekend.
Final performances of "Tom Jones" will be
given tonight through Saturday at8:30 and Sunday at
2::l0 in the main GWC theater on the Huntington
Beach campus (894·9885). "Matchmaker" plays
tonight and Saturday at 8 o'clock In the courtyard of
the SCC administration complex , 5S Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa C 556-3610 J.
ALSOONSTAGEalongthe coastare:
"The Merchant of Venice" at South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957·4033 ), playing nightly except Mondays at 8
o'clock. with weekend matinees at 2:30, through
Aprils .
"Murder at the Howard Johnson's" at Sebas·
tian's West Dinner Playhouse. 140 Ave. Pico, San
Clemente (492·9950). playing nightly except Mon·
days at varying curtain limes through April 5.
"Relatively Speaking" atthe Laguna Moulton
Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach
<494·07431, playing Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8
p. m. through April 11.
-"VlCl'ORIA'S HOUSE" al the Westminster
Community Theater, 7272 Ma ple St . Westminster
<995·4113 >. playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30
t hrough April4
"Absence of a Cello" at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrounds, Costa
Mesa (754·5159), playing Fridays and Saturdays at
8 : JO through Apri 111.
"A Bad Year for Tomatoes" at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse. M ain Street at Yorktown Avenue.
Huntington Beach <847 ·4465 ), giving final
'performances tonight and Saturday at8: 30.
~~~-~~~~~-~~-~~~~---~------
R
edwards LIDO INEMA
MfW,C>n IUD. AT VIA LIDO NOW PLAYING NfW,.OltT HACH 6 7 l-1350
P UBLIC NOTlCE
"CTITIOUS IUSIMIEU
MAMIE STATIMl .. T
T"t lotl-ir19 .,_,..,,. I\ 001n9 °""
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOU$ IUSIHIEU
HAMI STATIMIHT
1 "t fo1towm9 pt, ~o,,, •"e do•no n•u. •s DU\•n~u •s C 11 PR 0 8 E , Ill PROFESSION 8 E S T M ARICE 11 NC. -, ~
RESEARCH OllGANIZ/\flON FOA SOCIA TE~ 130& L~tt Avett.w. Co\11
BUSINESS ENTAEPllENEUAS, Cl), MtH, C1111cv1t11 ~2'?o
UNITEOAMEAICA CORPORATION, Arlhur C. P .. cock, Sr , 190t
Sl1 AnQlllll• Drive, Corc1n<1 def M•r, W•kth•m Pl•<• S 1nl• Attl,
C.•lllornl• mu. C•lllorn1• 9110o4
Will••m W 8•1ru.I(, 70 C1and
Nel'°" G ""'9,,,.v, \17 AttQ«lll• ,. .. ,.ut. APl 11 s, Lonq 8••,h, O"v•. Coron• oel M•r Ce lllornl• C•lllornla 9C*l3 ~nn J1mo N c~•·~. ''S1 Ju•~·••. Thi\ buw1~\ ,, ( onduc leO ov .... "" c VP'"'· C•l•IO<n•• 'IOll)I)
lntorp0r.ated au.o<l•tton otMr then• Thi\ bu,1nf\\ 1\ tonduclf'd by •
1>arlnerVllp o•n•f•I perlnol\hlp
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Tl'll1 ~•.c...,..ent *•' flied wuh thf' Tnn ,1•t~nt wa' llteo w1tP'I th•
Courtly Cl••~ of Or•ttoe Counh on Counly (lor-ol Or•nClf! Countv on
,M.,cll ), 1'11 l'U> .. I M•r<ll ), 19'1 l'U7M•
Publl•l>td Or-COA\I O•llV Pllol Publl""'° Or.tr19f C.Ool•I O•olv Pllol
M••'ll ~ 12, 1', 1•, 19'1 IOU-I I M•<ch ~ 11, 11. 2', 1'11 1<14/ 11
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
FANTASIA
1 :15-3:»5:45
l :l»-10: 11
SUNDAY LOvtl"S
12:15-2:30-4:45
7:15-t:30
NOW PLAYING
MAH IAll PLAZA Brea '>?9 'ol39
lDWAllDI' •EWP1>1'1
Ntwe>ofl Btarh ~· 0760
CUllDOIU Oldnge 634 ?'>!>3
lDWAllDI' "LIO TWI•
M•ssoon Voe,o 830 6990
UA TWll Gl•IMAI Westminster 893· 130!'> ... . ..
fDUNlllN Ulll'f DAl'ft·lll
foun1a1n Vdl•ev •167 1481
"INCREDIBLE
SHRlfifKING WOMAN"
"0£VIL a MAX DEVLIN"
•:)A,~ I "F\JN HOUS~"
"THE ISLAND" 111> -.,. ~ I "RAGING 9UU." I">
"FORT AftACHE"
, ........ ~ I "TRIBUTE"
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"
1111 ...... ... . .,.,, I "STIR CRAZY"
"USED CARI " 1111
l: .•1:'.<!' e
"FINAL CON,LICT"
"THE FURY" (R)
•"4••· ............ ...... ~, c...--., ... ...... ,.,,. .•. _
COMING SAT., MAR. 28
7 P.M. ONLY!
Dufbeyf\eld.a' small homestead. ters. \•anity" . . . "once a victim But the is falsely won by the
always a victim." son of Mrs. d'Urberville <the
Typically. Polanski ror1ets tam Uy bought the name>. Ale<:
creativity to speak down to lhe d'UrberviJle, the son, played by
audience. Letch Lawson. Is immediately
WHILE HAa DY rans are
familiar with the story. suapente
fades early in the film when
Tess' hu~band Angel Clare
learns she would "klll for him."
Earlier than that, • beolt ia
Clare's room is on capital
punishment. Polanski makes
sure the camera focuses on the
book title.
attracted to Tess' beauty and
one night carries her on his
horse t.o the middle or a forest
where he rapes her.
She flees the estate and bear~
Alec's baby which dies shortly
after blrtb.
When she leaves home again
to hire on as milkmaid she falls
in Jove and eventually weds
Angel Clare, a clergyman's son
learning to be a farmer Tess. played by Berlin native
and relatively unknown actress
N astassla Kinskl, live1 up to
publicity advances comparing
her to a young lngrld Bergman.
She lries to tell Angel before
their marriage of her ti
le1itimate baby but fails when a
letter she leaves is never round
Confession lime on wedding
night is too late Young Clare.
despite a liberal attitude. can't
accept the story. He leaves.
But just minutes into the film
when the viewer meets Tess'
drunken rather John
Durberyfield (played by John Poor Tess.
F~ulty
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IL•JCtet.NO
WE NEXT see Tess in the
second hair after an overly·
long intermission living with
Alec in a boarding home.
Poor Tess.
Now it's Clare's turn to at·
tempt a win back
Tess. beautirul and still inno·
cent looking. refuses a reunion
but has difficulty justifying her
existence with Al ec and stabs
the lallcr to death.
Poor Te~s.
She is on the run again This
time it's with Clare But the
authorities arrest her after the
pair spend a night s leeping on
the granite at Stonehenge .
Stonehenge as an arrangement
or prehi!itonc monoliths in
Salisbury. England The word
can a lso mean hanging
The viewer learns al rilm's
close Tess wa~ hanged
I
Poor Te:.s.
"FEAR NO
EVIL" c111 MON l-1
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'BACK ROADS"111 ~.... I
CO.Al MINER'S
DAUGHTER"
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