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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-01 - Orange Coast PilotAP W ........ BEST ACTOR AND ACTRESS GET TOGETHER AFTER ACADEMY AWARDS CEREMONIES Robert De Niro won for "Raging Bull," stHy Specek for "Co•I Miner'• Deughter" Spacek, DeNiro OsCared 'People' called ext,nwrdinary film By PETER J. BOYER HOLLYWOOD <AP> -On an evening i.n which Oscar spread his favor around, four awards went to the riveting melodrama "Ordinary People," including Best Picture and lop honors for two of the mm·s novices - director Robert Redford and ac· tor Timonthy Hulton, who won in the supporting actor category. A day late and relatively sub- dued because of the attempt on President Reagan's life Monday, the 53rd Academy Awards pre- sentation was not as electric as some Oscar shows past, but was streamlined and moved along at a brisk pac.e. a rarely achieved ambition. The four awards to "Ordinary People" was ae elose as . this year's Oscar giveaway came to a sweep. The film also picked up an Oscar for screenplay adapta· lion (Alvin Sargent>. Down·home country girl Sissy Spacek won a best actress Oscar for her portrayal of down·home country girl Loretta Lynn in ''Coal Miner's Daughter." Robert De Niro was named best * * * actor for his far·ranging portrayal of troubled boxing champ Jake LaMotta in "Rag. ing Bull." De Niro and Miss Spacek of- fered the standard onstage ora· lions. thanking parents, pro· ducen, directors and the like, but the evening's closest brush with spontaneous combustion came backstage, when De Niro was being interviewed by re· porters. One reporter repeatedly asked the actor about a report that a movie he starred in, "Taxi Driver," in some way·prompted the aUempt on Reagan's life. De Niro, who In his accept- ance speech decried "the lerri· ble things that are happening," said he didn't know of the report and told the reporter he didn't want to discuss it. When the re- porter pressed, De Niro became angry, curtly thanked everyone, and left the interview room. John Hinckley, accused of shooting the president, reported· ly addressed a letter to actress Jodie Foster saying that be in· tended to kill Reagan. Miss * * * 'Not aathorl7Rd' Stranger accepts awanl of Oscar · Foster co-starred with De Niro in "'l'axi Driver," in which there is a plot to assassinate a political figure. The other major actini award of the Oscar cerem<fny, best sup- po rlibg actress, went to yet another movie -"Melvin and Howard." Mary Steenburgen picked up the Oscar there, one or two earned by "Melvin and Howard," which would have to be considefed the dark horse winner of the S3rd Academy Awards. The movie won in two or the three categories in which it was nominated -supporting actress and original screenplay (Bo Goldman). After accepting her Oscar, Miss Steenburgen offered that "Everybody loves this mov· ie -maybe now more people will get the opportunity to see it." Two morbents stirred the crowd of movie people gathered at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion: A minute-tong greet· ing from Reaean, taped 10 days ago, and a tribute to Henry Fon· da, the venerable film actor who never won an -Osca,r. The crowd came to its feet to greet Fonda, who slowly walked on stage with the help of a cane. "This has been a very reward· ine 46 years for me," Fonda ••id, "and this bas got to be the cllQ\ax.1 ' Reagan's videotaped segn\ffllt was introduced by -solemn· voiced Jobnny Carson, the eve- nln1's host, who explained the 24·hour delay in the Oscar pre- sentation. ' (See OSCAU, Pace AJ) 't' I\"~ I • t (, 0 l JN : ' Id H u H N I A '}'i c ENT ~ wal WASHINGTON <AP> -A high·splrited President Reagan, out of the intensive care unit, is walking around and conducting "business as usual" in a suite at George Washington University Hospital, his doctor and aides said today. They said the president stayed up until 11 p.m. with his wife Nancy Tuesday to watch the first hour of the televised Academy Awards presentation,. slept for four or five hours and Clymore delay rapped By JOHN NEEDHAM Of tlle Delly ...... ,...., The attorney for former hijack hostage CraiJ Clymore says ap- parent behind·lhe·scenes deal· ing by U.S. Stale Department of- ficials in Damascus, Syria, pre- vented his client's scheduled return home Tuesday. Reached by telephone today, Laguna Beach attorney Ron Kreber said he is upset over w.hat he called "deception and questionable ethics" on the part of State Department officials In dealing with Clymore. Clymore, a former Lake Forest res ident , reportedly signed a waiver of surrender Saturday in Damascus with the condition that be be aJloJNed to return to Los Angeles, where he would turn himself over to federal drug enforcement authorities. Kreber charges that two hours after Clymore signed the waiver, U.S. Stale Department . officials visited the Syrian court where the signing took place and made arrangements to renege on the negotiated terms of his client's surrender. Clymore Is being held at the Citadel prison in Damascus pending his return to this coun· try where he faces federal drug smuggling charges. The Laguna Beach High ~chool graduate was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner hijacked by three opponents of the Pakistan government March 2 and even· tually flown to Damascus, where the hostages were released. Hours after his release, news of A grand jury Indictment ac· cusing Clymore of being the ringleader of a hashish and heroin smuggling ring was re· <See CLYMORE, Page AZ) ·uuntington man kille d in c ar crash A2l·year--0ldHuntington Beach man was killed In Westminster when the auto in ~hich be was rid· ing struck another car, leaped a curb and crashed through a brick wall, police said. Four others were reported In· ju red in the incident. Police said Randy Mendosa Martines, a passenger In the 1972 Chevrolet that struck the wall, was pronounced dead at the scene. The driver of that auto, Albert Martinea (no-relation), 18, of Midway City, was reported ln critical condition today at F~· tain Valley Community Hospital. Two other puaenaen fn the Chev;:aet, Adrian Bravo, 19, ol Weatmlnster, and Rocky Barton, 11, of Midway City1.both were re- ported ln fair concut.lon today at Fountain Valley. W eatmiuter police officer Earle Graham uld Martinea wu weatbound oa Bolaa Avenue ap- proaebina Bn>okbunt Street at lO :M p.m. Tllff4ay •beta be atruu u. nar ol • w .. tbolmd Volk1waa.n clrlv• by t'arbad Bokla, ZI, OI rulle.rtola. Flremeo Ultd heavy eq&il~t to fr" t.M '°"" DeGPle w.-.... la. •Ide UM auto, tlMt ome.r.aia:,,;. Roekla, tta• drlver of tbe ~olk1wa1en. was take• to We1tmln1ter Comm.anlty Hoapltal for an.tmnt OI ~ IQjurt•. Oralaam l&ld tbat all ln"testil•· Uoiala~. began a busy morning t'acklln& White House affairs. ·•Although he is somewhat un· comfortable, the president slept quite well," said Or. Daniel Ruee. Reagan's personal physi- cian. ''He has been out of bed and walked." The move to the suite was ac· complished Tuesday night, one day after the. president and three other persons were wounded in a gunman's as· Brady can speak, see WASHJNGTON <AP> White House press secretary James S. Brady, once given litlle chance of surviving a bullet wound to the brain, can speak and see and may be able to sit up in bed within a few days, doctors s aid lo· day. A morning report on his condition said the 40·year· old Brady can now move all four limbs and "con- tinues to improve" but "remains in critical condi· tion." Physicians say Brady. shot during Monday's as· sassination atte mpt on President Reagan, may recover without severe permanent mental or physical impairment. Jobless ,. decline • ID county Orange County's unemploy· ment rate declined slightly to 4.6 percent in February as about 1,400 new jobs were added, ac· cording to the state Employ· ment Development Department. The jobless rate was 5.1 per· cent in January based on the loss of 1,400 jobs from the month before. However, 3,600 new service· related jobs in amusements, hotels and hospitals were added in February. The opening of the Anaheim Marriott Hotel pro· duced about 700 new jobs, of. ficials said. Meanwhile, jobs decreased somewhat in retail trade, gov· ernmenl, construction and non· defense related manufacturin1 fields. The county's 4.6 percent job· less rate was the lowest in Southern California, according to ~DD sources. Los Angeles County's rate was 7 .4 percent and San Diego County's was 7.3 percent. Women, boy a1TeSted in ~esa the/ta Two women and a 15·year--0ld . boy have been arrested for sus· plclon o f bur1lary and posswion of stolen goods by a Costa Mesa officer iservin• a warrant alleging parole viola· lion. Being held in Oranie County Jail are Jamie Marie Oropeaa, ~. and Uaa E. Bordus, 11, both of 556 Hamilton St. sasslnation attempt outside a W asblngton hotel. Wblte House chief of staff James A. Baker Ill said on the CBS-T\! "Morning" show that Reagan siened some nomination papers Tu~sday evening and an unspecified executive order this morning. . , When Baker and other aides finished a meeting with Reagan this morning, he was eating breakfast silting in a chair. <See REAGAN, Page AZ) * * * Hinckley parents 'crushed' EVERGREEN. Colo. (AP> - The parents of John W. Hinckley Jr., · · ju:st destroyed·· by their son's alleged assassination at· tempt on President Reagan, hope to see him "as soon as possible" but have no definite travel plans, their attorney says. John Hinckley Sr. and his wife, Joanne. stayed at their next-door neighbors' house all day Tuesday as 70 reporters as- sembled on the front lawn and gawkers drove slowly past. A statement released by counsel for Vanderbilt Energy Corp. said the elder Hinckley had ·'temporarily relinquished his duties" as chairman of the Denver-based firm "because of a tragedy involving a member of his family." John Hinckley Jr., 25, who was arrested seconds after Reagan was shot in Washington, is being held at a M_arine b&!le in Quantico, Va . The corporate staternent did not mention any change for Scott B. Hinckley, vice president of operations for Vanderbilt and brother of John Jr. The father's move came amid confirmation that the Depart· ment of Energy was reviewing Vanderbilt's books. Jack Van· denberg, a DOE spokesman in Washington, said auditors met with Scott Hinckley in Denver on Monday. The Washington Star quoted an unnamed "While House of- ficial" as confirming that DOE auditors asked for an explana· lion of an overcharge when oil price controls were in effect between 1973 and 1981. The Star said DOE auditors told Scott Hinckley there was a possible penally of $2 million for the overcharge. The Hinckleys, through at· torney James Robinson, issued a brief statement Tuesday ex· pressing their "deep concern" for President Reag'ln and all those Involved in Monday's shooting, including thelr son, John. It was confirmed in ~ashington that the Hinckleys ,had retained the law firm of millionaire defense attorney Edward Bennett Williams. T he Hlnckleys reiterated through Rohl.moo that they have provided psychiatric care for their son in the past. lllRI CIAll IUDll Mostly cloudy toni1ht with 30 percent cllance of s h owers, dlm lni1h ln 1 Thursday to 10· percent .. Clearin g with gust y northwest wlnda later Thursday. Lows tontabf.a alona the cout, 53 Ulland. The boy, l'tllldlnl at the same address, la held la OraAI • Coun· ty Juvealle Hall. Inveati1aton aatd officer Paul 1•11 TlllY · Alexander served the parole T~ o/ properew ._ vlol atlon warrant to }h. bo6mh•l1 "' · s011 tlatrll Oropeaa at about S a.m. TueSday CoHl°"*1. Bid~ oltfdtlla and alleaed ly reeo1nlaed tir.,. ,,_,,, to .... CGldtolt _ a.r:tiCJ• la 1ber home that bad ad common .,..... a.. ,._. ~~ :0~ ~!:t~ea lllA71.I abo'lt GOOD trom fbe ~ of J:Jya SeblMafelder on Bolae Wq ... ,._.._ • ,....... • waa reeonred, ln•••tt1atori =" ... ~ ~·-~ Hid. m _... M i!r&r-:: .... Scboenfelder told -~ fif:°'=. abe lCllt about '1.• wortll of :: ~ .. .,.1oncmas m tbe burst.,, bl· .. E .... elucllnc a televtatoft Mt. Je•*7 a.n ,...:-= .-;-"'ae...... .. ....... ...,... ----~ .... l•••U•atOra Hid bure:a a.: _... M forced tWr way Imo the t p tllroup J rear door. ---------. .... •-• . ' . , ... HURTSBORO, Ala. (AP) -A toraaclo •truck downtown Hurtlllaro today. lllWnt at leut two people, lnjurtnf aa many u 30 and leavinl u many. as 500 o1 tbe 750 resfdenta bomeleu, authoritlea said. r kills? 2 . . ~ Alabama hamlet. 'ftelr et were not avalla· the Phenix Cit)' and CoJumbul, b~::11ately. .Qa .• area, about 30 mun from tee ol the number °'H· H rtlboro. Jured ran&ed from 10 to m euue unit• and cleanup than 30, and their aeriouan s crews were on the scene, and 16 waa not immediately known. Alabama N allonaJ Guard State police H1d some of tht in-mflltary policemen were ban-· jured were tuen to boteltala ln dllng traffic. Cartwri1ht said. Civil Defenae offlcia11 said the tw11ter, which bit about 3' a.m., deatroyed three block• of -r------------------------------------------------. downtown Hurtsboro, a rural '· Supporting cast Britain's Prince Charles <center) has selected the two young men flanking him as supporters when be marries Lady Diana Spencer July 29. They happen to be his brothers -Prince Andrew (left) and Prince Edward. Andrew will carry the wedding ring and Edward will "assist." soutbeaat Alabama hamlet of malnb' shanty-style homes. Tbe destruttion left the town without a water system, elec- trlclt)' or telei\hones, satd Civil Defense duty officer IUcbard Cartwright. Some 300 people sought shelter at a church where the Red CroM set up an aid station, and Mayor John Williams predicted that as many as 500 residents would be left homeless. The twister demoli*bed walls, ~ tore off roofs and smashed out windows of wood-frame homes and other buildings alona a half· mUe strip on either side of the main downtown thoroughfare, witnesses said. ·.··county tO r~vise ·welfare program Fr~• P.,,e Al REAGAN.' .• ·'It's really business as usual," said Wh ite House counselor Edwin Meese Ill, who "It would tear apart three or four homes in the shanty-town, skip a few, then tear up three or four more," said Jim Taylor a reporter /or WPNX in PheniJ( Ci- ty who went to the scene. • The twister also overturned railroad cars at a local lumber mill that is one of the area's By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of tlle o.llJ P'ltet Suff The Orange County Board of Su pervisors has taken steps toward overhauling the county's general relief welfare program. In action J'uesday, the board: -Called for studies of the legality or applying a one-year residency requirement for red· pients; use·of vouchers to third parties instead of direct cash pa_yments, and of a proposed Fr••P .. eAJ CLYMORE • • leased by the U.S. Attorney·s of- fi ce in New York. The 24-year-old Orange Coun· ty resident was later arrested at his Damascus hotel by Syrian authorities and taken to prison. Initially he refused to sign waivers for his surrender. but after a visit by Kreber last week, he agreed lo sign. Kreber said as h e and Clymore were preparing to leave for the United States Sun· day, he was told that hi s client would not be released and would remain in Syrian custody for the time being. Kteber said he had no idea when Clymore would be re· leased. He said he suspects U.S.' law enforcement officials intend to fl y his client directly to New York where he faces the smug- gl~ng charges. "We gave the State Depart· ment all the information on our flight schedules and arranged for Clymore tO' be arrested upon his arrival in Los Angeles," Kreber said. Cl$ore was to have been m~t at t"-airport Tuesday by his pare•ts, Thelma and Glen Clymore of San Juan Capistrano, along with his civil attorney, fljarold Davidson of Newp0rt~. Kreber said Clymore wants to return to the United· States. but is being prevented from doing so ·by the State Department. ~ Kreber, who returned to Los ·Angeles Tuesday from spending ::a wee~ with bis clien t in ;•.J>a mascus, s~d Syrian officials ~would probably release Clymore • when State Department officials .: request them to do so. i . ·~Policy halted ;~ LOS ANGELES MP> -A -S new policy that would have de- ' tened Ulegal aliens in Los : Angeles CQunty 'from se~king Medi-Cal aid has been tem- •,. porarily baited pending a hear- •• lng so a judge can get evidence ! about the poltcy's ima:t on : medical services. The llcy. :~ adopted in orc\er to e . the :'-county between $4 millllo'1 and : $7.4 million a year, was to take effect Tuesday. ORANGE COAST lilly Pilat ThorMa P. Haley PIMIM' AoOtf't N. Weed ,........ L ThomU KNYll rule to prevent people who have said the president had set up a quit or been fired from a job "full -time office" in his hospital suite. from applying for assistance for a three-month period. ·'The president is fully capa- Ordered a one-year freeze ble of taking actions," Baker on the maximum general relief said. ''We've had to cancel very payment of $240 per month. few activities.·· Said a work-for-welfare pro-Meese indicated on NBC-TV's gram for able-bodied recipients "Today" show that because of Reagan's "remarkable re-should be expanded and stiffer covery, .. he might be discharged sanctions imposed for those who from the hospital early next ~e~~:. show up for work assign-week, sooner than originally ex- Directed county social peeled. . services officials to implement . The ~hite House said Reagan new eligibility requirements to-..., !S ~~-arbng to eat .s~Ud f<><><l:> and apply to general relief appli-•s !" iO?d condition, b~t is ex-cants. pe~1enc.1ng some pain. a!"d The general relief program, ~atlg~e m response to ~1s i~- under which "last resort" as-J~ry .. Ruge sal~ the presidents sistance is provided to -persons vital signs remalDed normal., who either do not qualify or are Reaga~ had trouble breathing. waiting for state of federal chest pa1D, falli'.'g. blood pres- welfare assistance, has been in sure and was sp1tt~ng up blood financial trouble since early when. he walk~d 1~to Geo~ge March. when it was disclosed Washm~n Umvers1ty Hospital its budget bad been exhausted. a~ter be1~g shot, the New York Since then, the board has ap-Tt~es s11d l?day. . proved $200,000 in budget He de~trutel~ was. ID .~ Ufe- transfers to keep the account threatenrng s1tuat1on , .. the solvent. An estimated SL7 n~wspaper qu?ted .?r. WLlliam million more will be required to 0 Neill ~ saylD~.. Bu.~ he was s uppQrt the program through ver~ lap1dl.Y stab1hz~. . June30,countyofficiaJssaid. 0 Neill 1s a surgical . mtem Though Richard Ruiz, acting who treated Reagan in the social ser(tices director, had rec-e~er_gency room. the new~paper om mended the immediate ap· said.'" a story from Washmgton plication of a one-year residency by its medical writer, Dr. requirement, s upervisors de-La~rel'!ce K. Altm_an. cided the suggestion warranted . 0 Neill also .~atd nearly two more study. pm ts of ~!ood came out s~n- N ancy Kaufman, a staff at· laneo~ly when .a tu~e was 1n- torney with the Orange County serted 1~ the pre~dent s chest. to Legal Aid Society, said such re· drain atr, blood and other flwds quirements have been struck from the chest cavity, a stand- down by the courts and predict· ard procedure for a c hest ed the county would be sued if w~~nd. . . such standards were applied. . He wa~' derymM:IY ID .acute Use of vouchers, through d1stre~s. 0 Ne!ll sa1.d in which payments would be made describing. Reagan 1m~ed1ately directly by the county to afterentenngthe hosp1tal. lan(ilords, grocers and utility .1 "The first thing the president c·ompanies, has helped in other" mentioned to me was that be counties attempting to cut had been coughing up blood welfare costs. officials said. since the event. He bad com- Supervisor Bruce Nestande plained of chest pain ad sbort- proposed the three-month wait-ness of breath. He denied having ing period for people who have lost consciousness. quit or been fired from a job. He said a similar rule has been sue-"There was blood staintna of cessfully applied in San Diego his lips and teeth and there was County. blood in the back of ~s throat." Supervisors declared they will continue to monitor the general relief program on a month-to- month basis. Gay-rights bill falters SACRAMENTO CAP) -A bit- terly contested bU1 to outlaw job dlscrimination against homosex- uals seems stymied for the third yearin arow. The bill, ABt t.y Assemblyman Art Agnos, D-San Francisco, got only a 5-S vote late Tuesday or the Assembly Labor and Employ- ment Committee, with one member absent. It needs six votes to advance. "'\.. The bill would make it unlawful to discriminate in employment on the basis of sexual orientation. • \ Fre• Pflflf! AJ OSCARS ••• Reagan, a former· film actor, extended best wishes to fellow movie people and drew a joke from the show's theme. "Film is Forever": "I've been trapped in some films forever myself." Taking his cue from the Presi- dent, Carson slipped into his lighter mode and even took a few shdt.s at Reagan, suggesUng that the President's recom- mended budget cuts represe~~ his biggest attack on the an "since be signed with Warner Bros." There was a moment ol senti· ment when young Tim Hutton, son of the late actor, Jim Hut· ton, cloe~ his acceptance with, "Finally, I'd like to thank my father. I wish be was here." Hutton, In his third year <:A al!Un1, had to beat out, amona others, his "Ordinary People"· co·star, Judd Hinch. Polanski's "Teas," drawn from the Thomas Hardy novel, won three Oscars to ffni1h second in the 1rand tally. "Teu" earned statues for cinematography (Geoffr ey Unsworth, Ghlllaln Cloquet), art dlrectloo (Pien:e Outfroy, Jack Stevena) and coetumea (Antbc)oy Powell). ··a .. ln• Bull," wblcb hid been a bHY)' favorite with "Ordlnary People," won On11 two Olean -TMlma SeboOD- maker'• e.uai award and De Niro'• belt. aetor award. main industries. Taylor said a woman was 1',llled when her trailer home was ripped off the ground and •'thrown about a quarter of a mile." A man was found dead on th~ roa<Uide in downtowa Hurtsboro, he said. Nickel reapB $22,661.31 RENO, Nev .. (AP> -Another world record jackpot payoff bas fallen, this one bringing a return of $22,661.31 on a five-cent invest- ment. Colleen Chance Buck, a 52- year-old school teacher from Vancouver, Wash .. had been playing the nickel progressive slot machine at Harolds Club for about ro minutes when she hit the winning combination. She said the money would go to help her son complete graduate school. TULSA, Okla. (AP) -· EnaU.h 1.vu the last class of the day f~ 16 seventh graders at Tuba Central Academy. J\J•t bef~ dismissal, the principal came on the intercom and told them Pr.-ideat Reagan had been shot. About 10 Of the students cheered. "I was dumbfounded. I didn't know what to do.~· said John Zannini their teacher. "Here were these kids cheer- ing tha~e president bad been shot. ·J didn't know what to say.' . He checked around and found that some students m the eighth grade reacted the same way. BB man's wounded father hnproving B:r PATalCK KENNEDY Of .. o.61'1"-llUlf Karl Schneider, shot by hi· jackers of an Indoneaian jeUiner in Bangkok, Thailand Sunday while tryin& to escape, bas re- gained consciousness and is in satisfactory condition. "He's doin& well and could be moved to a hospital in Singapore this week," said his so~. Karl Schnelder Jr., 26, of Huntington Beach. The elder Schneider, 44, ls a manager of Milcb'e'm Inc., a Houston-based oil firm . Originally from Texas, he has Jived outside the U.S. for 15 years. ./ His son, an accountant in Costa Mesa, said bis stepmother contacted him Tuesday with news that his father was "con· scious and alert." He said his father was shot in Ute side and the bullet pi~rced . his lung and traveled to his ab- domen. The slug was removed Sunday. Immediately following the shooting it was believed that Schneider had been hit in the spine. Just moment s berore Schneider made. his escape try, a Briton successfully ran to freedQID. Earty Tuesday morning, four of the five hijackers were killed a nd the fifth wounded as In· donesian commandos stormed the grounded jetliner and freed the re mal.ni.ng 55 hostages. Two other Americans, Ralph D. Hunt, 28, of Houston, and Thomas Heischman, about 45, of Carm~l. Calif., also were among the hostages_ The plane had been comman- deered by members of the Holy War Command, a right.wing ter- rorist grqup dedicated to turning mostly Moslem Indonesia into a fundamentalist Islamic state, The plane was hijacked over Indonesia, refueled in M alays1a. where an ill woman passenger was let off. then flown t o Bangkok. The hijackers kept increasing their ransom demands. finally asking that 84 imprisoned mem· bers of their movement be freed from ln~nesian jails. 10 addi· tion to a $1.5 million payment ... Vice President George Bush , standing in for President Reagan , who is recovering from gunshot wounds, waves goodbye to Netherlands Prime Minister Andreas A. M . Van Agt after m eeting wi'th hi m at the#White House. Sehlafly heckled PbylUs Scblafly. a leader of the fight against ratjflca· tion or the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, ran into a group or loud heckle rs whe n s he s t a rted talking about the role of women and the draft. At a speech at the University of Illinois. she brought up a s uit filed by the American C i v i I L i b ert i es Union , with funding from the National Organization for Wo m e n.( w h ich con - te nds t h at SCHLAl'LY limiting draft registration to men is discnmmalory. "That s hou ld b lo w fo r ever the f~minist movement 's claim that it is in favor of wo m en's rights. because I can't 1m agme a greater takeaway of women's rights than an in· vo luntary draft," she said. - Newpo rt Beac h Mayor Jackie Heather told a crowd In Anaheim that she's ready ·lo seek help from above lo fight e xpa nsion o f J ohn Wayne Airport. In concluding her speech du ri ng a lunc h e on with Ora nge County Chamber of Co mm e r ce me mb e r s. Heather joked : .. If all else fails. I plan to bring back John Wayne and. pilgrim, he'll tell you where to put that airport .. Singer Frank Sinatra, who produced President Reagan's in a ugura l cele bration in J anuary, cancele·d the final three shows of his week·long e n gag e ment a t Caes ars Palace. Sinatra did not issue a st atement about the as- sass in a ti o n a tte mpt on Reagan, but his publicist, Lee Sollers, said the s inger was "too shocked and over- com e by this situation to talk about it. Sinatra. who opened at the resort Thursday. cancelled all shows through tonight. Windy .. day • m lo ...,... of Sliver Sprtn1, Md .• Aed ber team to the 1981 N•rtti Amerlean wqrnen•s biida• team c~amplonahtp ln • the sprtq tournament or the American Conlracl Bridie Leasue. Tht champion team m~m· bera are Morse : £vel~• LHltt of Wilmlnrton, Del.; Hele• ·vte1•arcl or .. Carmichael, Calif; .luae Oeu&tdt of Chica10; Pal Lapldn of San Dle90, and Saadl Leavitt of Lin· colnwood, JU . More than 4,000 players competed In M contestt over 10 days in the 1981 spring bridee championships. "Do you kpow I've been in love with the samt woman 45 years? U my wile finds out she'll kill me," quips Heuy Youn1man as Dlal·A·Joke celebrates its seventh birth· day. • The popular s tand-up com· ic also was the first to record his joke when New 'YoTk Telephone Co. startM. Dial· A-Joke in 1974. Since then. about 61 million callers have dialed the service In New York City; Buffalo, N. Y.; Detroit, and Philadelphia to hear a dif· ferent comedian in the week· l y joke rot a ti o n . th e te lephone company said. Youngman's first Dial-A· J oke : "Fella walks into a doctor. Doctor says. 'You're gonna li ve to be 60. · He says, ·I am 60.' Doctor says, ·s ee. what did I tell you .... .. ,..,,.,,... .. Henny ~oungman West Winter making way for sjfting iooather Cocutal 1eea1Jaer Light v•rl•l>I• win<J> •outhwesl 10 lo 20 ltl'IOI• with 1to4 tool wind ••vu lhl\ •ltlt'noon 1 to 4 ,_ wnterly swells. Moslly cloudy lod•y •nCI IOf'lgl\I with • Ch«l<e ol \/>owtrs lhlS .11 • ..._. 1/.8. .... •a.,, A lotw Pr•Jture center ove r southwHI Mlniwsol• spretd rt ln over the Wftlern O•~otes on Tueso.y end bt°"9f'I \C.•ttered ~wer~ •M lhundtrslorm• lo lhe upotr Mh · SIUlptll \lelltY .... ' (illIJ ... ~ (~. - J•cUnvlle ,. .Junea" n IU nl City .. LH V-11 Lllllt Ro<k ., Louisville .. Memphis 14 Mleml ,. MllW ... kH 11 Mpls·St.P ., ":'y'"• •• N OrlH ns IO N"' Yorll .. NOf'IOlk I/ Okla Clly n OmaM tA Orlanoo '° Phllaelphlt IJ PllOenla n Pltlsl>\lrQlll IJ Piiand, /Wt •• .. 29 SI ., )I ., ., n )4 " 47 u )I SJ SJ .. .. •• SJ 44 SI Strong, gusty ••n<l• were reportea , over lht Color-Rockie• •nd from tM centr•I PialM 10 Ille mlddle and u1»1Mr Mou.uoppi V•lley Ram lell and wincts blew along lhe northorn Peclll< Cou t Snow wu Scttltred oYtr tne ,,,_nlaoM ol lh• nortrlern Pl•t•au and weste..-n Mon. ten•. w~1ft r•in •t lower 1fe¥•lion\ si..~ .... Pllancl, Ore S2-4S Cloud• •nd wldelr H •lltred 'llow•r• -• repc>rled alo1>9 t"• Gull Coe st, whh '"""' skoes lhe rule from Southern C•ltlornla tllrough lhe Carolinas, '"" Vorg1n1as •no lhe lower 01110 VtlltY There -s-119111 ,,,.,.. over northern Mlint, but Cortdll10n\ w•r• more Wfrl"llllk• over the rest of New Eng1ano Ttmptr•lurn at midday T uesoo ranged lrwn • low of 33 •t Rock Sor· 1no1, Wyo, 10 • high of " •I Fort Myers, Fl• For todlly, 1<attertc1 shOWers an<J tlWndtr-.0-n -re tor.ce.1 over th• All..,llc CN SI and the Great Lekos, with rain over Iha P•cllic "ortllwHI aNI Northffn Ct llfornfa Sca ttere d rein •nd 1now were forec111 acrou ldtl\O Into -'d ltrn Mont..,• Tem,...,..tures warml1>9 into llw /OS tnd tos _,, prtcll<i.d 1cr111s IM lo<lthwHle<n -rts. the southern ftKkrtS. the '°""''"n Plalns, tht lower MlstbJlppi Vt lley •nd lrom Florlda to West Vlr91n1.-and Marrlanct Hlvfls In Ille 40i tnd 50s were pred icted from the Paclllc NorthweM to U-r Mklllven and Mal,,. R ... nes trwn ,,,. mkl 50t to Ult low l'Os wut P<edruea tor m<KI lllimID ---=== CaUtond• Cou 1e1 end mo11nttln •rtH of Soutflern C.lllornl• •Ill De mMllY cloudy today with • cht nc• ol showers thh after.-n •nd tonight There wlll l>e vu tablt clOUO• with gusty winos Tl!UoOay. Showe"••• likely In Orenve Coun ty th ls ttw,_,, -toftl9flt, with the outloo-c•lli"!l lor pertly clOUOy skies tnd windy -•lr•tr ThursO•y Highs tod•r and 'OwrlOay In •-to mid tOS Low1 tonlgN 0 to SO. O\tnce of r•ln •O perctt1t l>y Oils •ll•rnoon •nCI tonlglll Prob•blllty of showers will l>t lower In Loi Al\veltS, 40 percent, boil other lnl-vtllen will hevt • .0 percent cllenu lllltr t-y Hlvt>s In ot""r SoulhlenCI valley• tod•Y In the tOS. lows In thlt 1119'140i and SO.. Showen are llktfy In ~lhltnCI mountain trMS toaar ..,d tonight, wltn the s.-level to lllt S,000 IHI \lt roal>I• d OUOs with 9usty "'1nds Thunday, Hip today and Thur.O.y 3e to 44. l,.OWS to lo as There 'wlll lie • stltllhl ch~• or rain In the l'IOrlr.rn desert• t0fll9fll. OlherwlM, dtterts will llave hl911 cloudl,,.ss -Y -lonl!lhl Weit to li>vthwttt wlndS 20 lO JO m9h !Odey encl Thvrldly. Hlgfll In nort/ltrn ck ,._ __________ Mrts St IO ... -" deMrtl .. to 14, '4ort..,,. deMrt IOwl 40 to ... soutllern ~ 42 to 50. S11•• end wind 111 forecast tor nor11MNI -taint and llW Sltffe NeveM. "'°'""' wltll 11411•1.td t1111n-ctersheww<& kldeJ In Ne~ end CeMral CalllWfll•, wl\f\ rein t•perlnv off tonlQlllt Pt rtlal cletrl1>9 •Ith • few showers fingering Thursd•Y mtl,.ly In tht mounlelns. Snow level lowering to ,,..r 2,SOO 1 .. 1 '" tlw north, 4,SOO l•I In the south l>y lhlS tllernoon. lncrMsln9 wlnm. Albeny AllMiqut Amer II lo Anch0rtll9 Ashtvllla Atlante Allan\c Cty 8tlllm0f'• 8 lrm ll'IOIW'" e11m.,o BolM Boston Brownsvllt Bulltlo Ch•rlslll SC Ch•r'islnWV Cheyenne Chk999 Cln<ln,...I ' Cl• ... l•nd Columbus ~l·FtWth Otnver OuMolN s O.troll Ouluth Felrballas HtrtforO He lane HOllOl!llu HOllStoft 1nc1n-.it11 NATION Rtpld Cllr Sl JI Rt no "° H Riehm-IO " S.11 L•ke so 31 Seallle ., 4J St Louis ., S4 St p.re.._ n ., St Ste Marie 44 JS SPOk•nt 4J l9 TulH 7S tA WHhonvtn lS )/ n JO 70 0 1' 0 IS JI Sf ,, .. , . .. S-4 .. 47 " 41 ~ 44 ., 40 It JO It 44 IS SS .. " to 0 " 4t SI 41 )I 40 '° 4' ., 41 ft so ,, 0 .. " 1S 4S .. )4 ,. 4S u • 6f 0 60 2S . , • r. l~ ... 11 u ;I " • 62 42 h .. ,. 44 .. 4l '5 '1 •1 .. .. 11 .. tt ., $1 .. ,. . State Junds seen for new depot •1 RICHARD GaEEN Of .. o.Hy,....IWt An Irvine city ollicial ii ex· preHlng optimum that atate f\8\ditw will be available IOOn for an 18.4 million railroad sta- tion ln the city's eastern ln· dustrlal complex. The Callfomia Trans portation Commission could decide to al: locate money for the project durine an April 22 meeting in Sacramento . s ay s cit y transportation engineer John Ha.rrts. . HE SAID HIS optimism is )>aaed on the train station's number two position on a fund- ing list for transportation proj- ects 1hroughout the state and on his belief that a previous funding constraint may be 1.ifted in time for the commission meetin~. The constraint centers on the fact that Amtrak officials haven't yet promised to stop trains al the proposed Irvine de· pol on the south side or the Santa Fe railroad tracks nea r the In· tersection of the Santa Ana and Laguna freeways. Harris said that the missing promise Is the only reason the sla te commission has been hesi· tant to fund the Irvine project. "WE CAN'T MAKE a ny meaningful commitment to stop at the proposed Irvine station oau, ~lltt N•""',..... WILL TRAIN STOP HERE? lrvtne otflclal hope• ao until President Re agan's 1982 budget proposal <calling fo r large cuts in Amtrak's opdra· tions) is resolved in mid·June," said Arthur L. Lloyd, Amtrak director of publi c affairs The California Transportation Depa rtment. at the urging of lrvme city offi cia ls. 1s consider· ing recommending that the slate T ransportation Commission at. locate money without lhe Am· tr ak com m itment, said Cal· trans spokesman Frank Lenza. Irvine city e ngineer Harris said he's anxious that the com- mlaalon aUocete money to tbe r•ilroad atatloo before the com- miasion run.a out o! money tor the fiscal year. . ~ HAaRIS SAID th•t ttJo com· mission might 4eclde to all<>c:#te some dealgn money for tbe pfbJ· ect and delay the allQCaUon ol tlie construction money until Amtrak promises to 1top lts trains at the station. The City or Irvloe ls seeking a total of J4..8 mUUon from iite state for the project and expects to get another $3.6 million from the Irvine Company. "Tbe train station is needed," Harris said ..... "A lot of people wouldliketotakethetrain but feel the Santa Ana train station is in- adequate and insecure . .i "THE DEVELOPMENT OF an ultra -modern well · maintained, secure facility in Irvine would encourage a large ridership flnd take some of the traffic burden off the freeway system." . Harris added that the station could draw passengers from tbe ·'Super Regio n a l S h opping Center" the Irvine Company wa nts to build on the "Golden Triangle" formed by the Santa Ana. San Diego and Santa Ana Freeway. 'Deranged' tape OK'd· Will be used in priest-slaying trial A taped telephone conversa· tion described as "deranged and illogi c al " be tween Rona ld Spring. accused of killing a Seal Be ach Catholic priest, and a Chicago Archdiocese offi cial will be a llowed into evidence during Spring's murder trial. Orange County Superior Court Judge James K Turner on Tues· day overruled defense objections that the obscenity-laden tape was irrelevant and said he would permit its use by prosecutors d u ring S pring's tri al. Jury selection was to begin today. THE CALL WAS allegedly made by Sprin\t on Feb. 5, 1980, only four days before F ather Fe lix Doherty of St Anne's Church was s truck in the head with a fist. allegedly d elivered by Spring. Fa th er Do herty. 64 . die d severaJ weeks later from com- plications associated with that blow. which witnesses said was unprovoked. Deputy District Altorney Dave Carter said the tape was "ex- tre mely important" to his case because 1t del'non s tra tes Spring's hatred toward the church. THE CALL WAS received by church official Peter Foote. who had also received two previous calls from Spring in the late night hours of Feb. 5 and early hours of Feb. 6. In the rambling, almost in· coherent monologue by a man who identified himself as-Ronald Spring, the caller told Foote he was seeking "his woman" and to "clean out them convents" until s he was found. Carter argued that the call, Gem Talk By J .C. H UM PHRIES Cut1{1rd G<"mOloRist. AGS taped by Foote. demonstrated that Spring "was the purveyor of a warped fantasy " Chief Deputy Public Defender Rona Pd Buller. who is r epresent· Airport lease ing the 33·year old defendant, said that while the conversation was "deranged" and m ade little sense. it contained no threats against priests. County suit eyed on rent hike fight Feisty fi xed base operator Cliff ord Fraizer a nd Orange County government may soon lock horns in the courtroom over his refusal to pay a recent rent in crease on property he leases at John Wayne Airport. Th e coun t y B oard o f Supervisors. over Fraizer 's pro- test . gave authorization Tuesday fo r the county Counsel's office to s u e, if necessary, lo force Fra izer to pay the difference between his forme r rent of $542 per month and the rent of $629. FRAIZER IS among several fi xed based ope ra tors who pro· vide ser vices t o owners o f private aircraft. He is the only operator. county officials said. who has refused lo pay a 16 per- cent rent increase. e ffective last October. "You signed a contract and you· re not Ii ving up to it." said Ra lph Clark. board chairman, after Fraizer launched into an a ng r y address in whi ch he claimed he was the victim of a conpiracy by county officials to harass an efraud him . He clai ed he was forced by \ \ •• "hired public hands" to sign the le ase calling for the rent in· creases "under duress and coer- cion.·· "I HAVE NEVER refused lo pay the rent." Fraizer declared "But I do refu se to be intimidated by a gro,µp ot col'_lspirators ." Fraizer is well known by most members of the board. He is a frequent speaker during annual h ea r ings on county gove rn- ment's budget. The fixed base operator pre - sented the board with a "petition for a redress of grie vances" but failed to win s uppor t for a special hearing to investigate his claims. GEORGE CORMACK of the county General Services Agen cy said Fraizer ·has made pay· ments under two earli er adjus t- . me nts to the 1977 lease, but not the third increase which took ef· feet fi ve months ago. County offi cia ls have been drawing the $87 a month Fraizer is a lleged to not be paying out of a $2,000 security deposit m ade on the lease. 01amontts In Color Oiomonds ('Qf'I ~OS b@out1ful treot~ In colors such OS Qrftn Of brown a1 a. whl,. d!Omonds. and ot o frocr1on of rtw cost. • For example: come In ond toke o look or these: A. '"Tlc·Toc·T~rw.m rwo brown diamonds totaling .32 corots ond rwo white dlOmonds totollng .36 carots. 0. "Goldfl_, .. pendant With o 21 point ~.-o 13 point brown dlomond ond 0 10 point wh" diamond. S.· "SnowftoM'' pendant wtrh gtffn. ~ ond wh0 lte diamonds fOfOllng .&6 caors. I BANGKOK, '.J'hallaod <AP> -The biJ1ckln1 of an Jadoae•lan airliner baa ended with a commando attack in which four of the In· donesian hijackers were killed, the fifth captured and their SS hostages freed. Two Americans were among the hosta1e11. One ot the commandos and the chief pilot or the plane were wounded during the three-minut~ attack.'f'uesdar on the Garuda Airlines DC-9. Hospital officials said both were m serious condi· • tlon. ! Thai aove.rnment spokesman Trairong Suwankirl said the other 54 passeneers and crew members were "saved" but would not say if any were injured. Howevv. officials said th~ four non-Indonesian bost.,es rescued -Americans Ralph D. •Hurtt, 28. of Houston, and Thomv Helschman, about 45, of Carmel, Cali~ a J apanese and a Dutchman -were unharmed. They were taken care or by their embassies. Mountbatt.en saidfaulllea in spy ccue LONDON <AP> -The journalist whose exposes prompted the c urrent r eview of Britain's spy agencies said the late · soldier-statesman Earl Mountbatten of Burma was in "no way" in· volved in a plot to overthrow the government in 1968. Chapman Pincher, author of "Their Trade is Treachery" which was pu'blished last week, said Tuesday iµ a letter to the Times of London that he s upported former Prime Minister Sir Harold Wilson's contention that Mountbatten was blameless. Iran shedding no tears for Reagan BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -Ayatollah RuholJah Khomeini said in a talk to Islamic students Iran will shed no tears for President Reagan because the Islamic revolutionary regime is no longer dependent on the U.S. government as it was when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Vwlenl U.S. crime up 13 pereenl WASHJNGTON <AP> -Preliminary FBI figures show that violent crime soareG by 13 percent during 1980, the biggest jump in a dozen years. The overall crime index, combining violent crimes with the more-frequent property crimes, rose by 10 percent in 1980 com- pared with 1979, according to the preliminary 1980 FBI Uniform Crime Index. Vatican reaf/irTnJ oolibacy doctfi,M VATICAN CITY <AP > -The Vatican said that the admittance of some married Episcopal priests in the United States to the Roman Catholic clergy does not imply any change in the church's mandatory celibacy doctrine for priests. • The Congreg!ltion for the Doctrine of the Faith issued the statement regard,ing the admittance of about 1,000 Episcopalians to full communion with the Catholic Church, making clear the Vatican's position for the married priests in the group was an ex- ception. Kfun seeks ACLU aid in library flap VIRGI NIA BEACH, Va. 1APl -The Ku Klux Klan l)lans to ask the American Civil Liberties Union for help in getting the Klan's national newspaper on the s helves of the library here. Army Spec 4 Mi chael Gulino, who heads the Hampton Roads KKK . said the group would write to the ACf...U about overturning a library staff decision barring The Klansman . Commune children back to parenta LAS VEGAS <AP> -All of the 25 children placed in pr6tective custody after they were taken from an a ll eged polygamist com- mune have been returned to their parents, a county official said. The remaining four children were ordered returned this week during a Juvenile Court hearing, said Robert March, director of Juvenile Court services. Everything you've· always wanted in a Seafood Platter ••• ............... THEY AU. TRIED -Presidential assassins and would-be assassins over the years included (top row, from left>. John Wilkes Booth, who killed Lincoln; Leon Czolgosz, the slayer of McKinley; Giuseppe-Zangara, who missed FDR; (bottom row). Lee Harvey Oswald, who killed'Jobn F. Kennedy, Lynette Fromrfle and· Sarajane Moore, both of whom tried to shooi Gerald Ford. ua ~•e beard tt apln with tM d••• ol Martin Lutb• Kins. ADCI ..-with the murder ol Ro:Cedy. And .. aln with th• a ol Georae Wallace. And qMll with the two attempta on tbe llft of Gerald Ford, the 31tb president of tbe UDited Statet. And now, yet a1ain, in tbe ca~ltal ol the world's oldest de· mocracy, a nation beset with con....a but. we thoutht, stable, the same profoundly, personal ... visceral shock. "Somebody shot the presi· dent!" "What the hell i& this, a banana republic?•• "My God, you can't even be pr.esident any n:lore. '~ ACllOSS THE land, the same total 8'DSe of national <lisarray, this ti.me involving the 4oth presl4ent, ijonal<l Reagan. 1 Atain, right in our living JOOm. across our coffee tables, arfot.ber president shot before our eyes: Again, on an Amencan street. surrounded by Americans -can a nything be more American than a Hilton? -the same un- thinkable trauma. Republican or Democrat, conservative or l i beral , n o rtherner' or southerner , eastern e r o r westerner, can we elect anybody president and keep him safe? "Wh~n will it stop?" asked Ed Koch, the mayor of New York. "What a country!" AND AGAIN, yet again, the same emerging picture of a faceless face in the crowd. Eigh- teen years ago we heard it from a teacher of Lee Harvey Oswald . "He wasn't for anything. He wasn't against anything. He just wasn't anything." And Monday, we heard it about another suspect. John Warnock Hinckley Jr., from a high school classmate in Dallas * * * Dallu, acaln .' Said tbe clasamate: "He Ju1t sort or blended tato the crowd." He blended Into ~he crowd Monday, 1tand101, somehow un· noticed, unopposed , un· challen&ed, wjth a 1roup o1 re- porters, 10 feet or let• from the commander ln chief ol a bat.ion of aweeome power. Over the years , these etranaers ln our midst seem to have blended easily into the crowd, in a school book de· poaltory build.in& ln DaUu. ln. a hotel kitchen lo Los Angeles, m a crowa outside a San Francisco hotel. · ' Over the years, th~Y have come out of the shadows, these faceless creatures of violence, from different places and dlf· ferent backgrounds bQt always somehow on the periphery of society, psychologically adrift. THEIR backgrounds differ. their profound motives differ, but one senses an appalling sameness to minds driven to force their way into history with one quick burst of gunfire. Now again, we probably will hear theories of conspiracy as we heard them 18 years ago, and still hear them . Sure ly the motive, if not the obscure sus· pect himself, must match the size or the victim. Surely, there must be a plot relative to the world of the leader of a superpower. A gnat simply does not wound a lion. Maybe, yes. Maybe, no. If no, should we then absorb the prob- a bi Ii ty that the sick of the world, thoµgh unknown to each other, ma9 form a conspiracy as dangerous as any from the left or the right? * * * Clear n·ow, president in charge " WASHINGTON CAP) -For a few hours, a.s Ronald Reagan lay under the surgeon's knife, there appeared lo be confusion. · Who's running the country? Reagan, because no effort was made to suspend his authority. Vice President George Bush, because Reagan, after all, was unconscious in the operating room and hardly able to exercise the presidency. SECRETAJl'Y OF STATE Alexander Haig Jr., se veral heartbeats from authority, but actually at the White Hol,lSe , presid· ing -as senior Cabinet officer -over the Cabinet meeting con- vened during the crisis of attempted assassination. In any event, Bush said later: "The American ~ovemment is functioning fully and erfectively." There was no confusion Tuesday. Bush was standing in for Reagan at meetings with the Cabinet and congressional leaders and at a worldn& Jurich with the prime minister of the Netherlands, but White House aides made it clear he is not "acting president.' . Doctors said Reagan, listed in "stable and good" condition after surgery t.o remove a bullet from his left lung, has resumed command of the nation from his hospital bed. As ked Monday night who was commander in chief, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes replied : "The presi· dent is. the commander in chief.'' That didn't see~ so clear in the harried hours after the shoot· ing Monday. Bush was in Texas, trying to sell Reagan's economic program. Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and most of the other · senior government officials ·were in Washington. Haig went quickly to the White House and told reporters: .. As of now. I am in control in the White House pending t he return of the vice president." Speakes and David Gergen, the White House staff director, re- fused to be drawn into a discussion of whether Haig was over- reaching his authority in appearing to take charge at the White House. Asked whether t here was any discussion among top ad· ministration officials after the shooting about whether to invoke the presidential disability provisions of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, Speakes answered: "There was really no need for it. The information we were get· ling was optimistic almost from the first." HE ADDED THERE HAD been "no cause" for the president to turn over any of his authonty to Bush. He said there was a non-statutory arrangement for Bush and after him, the secretary of defense -to assume "command authority" should the need arise. A White House source, who re- fused to be identified, said Speakes referred to military emergen- cies. Sears H11ntinJ!t•t11 Bl•a ... h PLUS STORE fAOI M TI«ae fnMS MAOIL Y AVAILAllLE FOii SALE AS AovtATISEO • We seH firs t quality and discontinued m erchandise from· Scars Retail and Catalog Dis tribution. "Was" prices quokd urt• lhc..• n ·gular pric..·c..•s al ~h i<·h the..· items were formc..•rl>' offc..•rc..•d hy C;.italol-! or in rnan-y Sears Retail slorc..•s around the..• t•ountry . BLADELESS WEED & GRA'S TRIMMER 9f1Kt1Ye 4/1 /11 • 25.0 cc two cycle engine • semi automatic line feed • 14" wide cut • Gas Powered was 11695 MENS' LONG SLEEVE were. 49". DRESS SHIRTS were 15" NOW 8.49 ELECTRIC POWER BLOWER was 6999 I . ' .... : I SACRAMENTO tA P ) -Pl)?Sident Reacan's shooting won't stampede the ~gislature toward gun control, say proponents or such le.clslation. One proponent, Sen. Nicholas Petris, D· Oakland, told a reporter that handgun control "is going to have to come from an enormous outcry or public rage. The legislators have tried time and time again. People have the impression that the an~i·~un control people are enormously 'itrong." Added Sen. Al an Sieroty, D·Los Angeles. "The Legislature will not pass meaningful gun control legislation. It has to be done through 'the initiative process." Several gun control bills have been killed in re~ent years, despite a series of assassination incl· dents. One control measure was dropped last week by its author , Sen. James Mills. D·San Diego. who sa id t he bi ll was broader than he wanted it and had been introduced by mistake. Senate Republican Leader William Campbell or Hacienda Heights said the shooting would not change his reeling about gun control laws. "I real· ly do not want to get into that issue other than to say we are a free society One or the hazards of a free society is t here are a lot or kooks out there that can do this if they do not want to obey the rules:· he said I MIWPOIT HARBOR CRUISE & SUMOAY~H ATTHICAHMllY 714 675-7522 trans national funding announces a new program 2nd TRUST •DS .-$10,000 TO $500,000 . • FAST FUNDING • • NO PREPAY I ASSUMABLE • 30 YEAR AMORTIZED I UP TO 15 Y~R REPAY • OWNER I NON-OWNER OCCUPIED • PURCHASE MONEY I SWING LOANS C"M.I. 111111.\ HIH JI (JI l>TE: AT \0 IJBUCATf(I\ (714) 975-1128 CALL WILLIAM B. MITCHELL 4000 MAC AATHUA ILVD. NEWl'ORT BU.C.. BROKERS WELCOM ED Time is running out! To get in on this great FREE offer from KQ(jak. Stoo 1n IOI complete deto1ts Hurry tree oHef ends Mov 13 COLOR ~ PROCESSING ~ Kod1l SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK! 9 " AM TO 9 3Hll MOii THRU SAT 9 00 AM TO 1 00 PM SUNDAY ·~-~ AGENTS GUARD PRESIDENT'S GRANDSON C•meron R••a•n pl•J• tn Sherm•n O•k• $1 million award set SAN DIEGO <AP) -A $1 million award bas been approved by the San Diego Cit~ Council rQr an Indiana sailor left a quadnpleg1c. Steve Mason, now 24, was awarded $1.2 million by a Superior Court jury in late 1979, but agreed to a Sl million settlement. - From fint shat, nation saw action · 8r P£TSa 1. IOYE& • , "Th.e president waa not hit.'' CBS' Dan Rather LOS ANGELES <AP) -fl took hours to aet said at one point, "but at that ranae, you have to the 1tory etraiiht, wtth the rumon and the ln•c· claselfy It as a miracle.·• curacies and the 1carc~ il'lforlftaUon. But through A mom ent later , ABC's Frank Reynolds It all, televlslon had the essence of the story, re· dramatically set t}linell stralaht. · corded live and ln color "My God," )le said, "all we've bee.n tellln& you It wu 1tUMln1 footaae. Is incorrec~. The president was hit, in the left Pretident Reagan, wavln1 and smilina broad· chest. ... But we're told he Is all right." ly, leaves the Wuhinaton Hilton Hotel. Then pop! All three networ ks passed on a report pop ~ pop! ~p! pop! pop! His circle suddenly scat-that Brady was dead rrom gunshot wounds sur- ters. The emile vanishes. The president Is shoved rered In the assassination attempt. when in fact lnto his limousine. A Brady was still struggling for his life. , Secret Se rvice agent Reynolds solemnly euloelzed the 40·yea1'-old rails , shot! The assailant NEWS ANALYSIS press secretary even as presidential aide Lyn is s urrounded and sub· Nofzigef\old others that Brady was still alive. dued. A policeman Is on "And so, a murder has been committed now, .. the sidewalk. shot. White . Reynolds said. Then. "Oh, my goo<hiess, I must House Prffs Secretary J ames Br~dy 1s face-down apologize_. r hope.t hat what I've been repPrting is on the pavement, a gun next to h1s bloodied head. a ll wrong . . I'm told Jim m ay be alive ... Let's Other guns -a pistol, a submachine gun -bristle ' get it nailed down. people'" everywhere. Throughout, the story coming from the TV It was a dark, evocative piece of television. re-screen seemed tinged with uncertainty. The.-e was calling other mome~t~ of national shock that talk of surgery. Open-heart tas some TV reports played out over.televmon -the shooting of Lee In sisted) o r open -c hest surgery? Why was Harvey 0$wald m 1963, Robert Kennedy's 1968 as-Seeretary of State Alexander M. Haig J r . talking aassinatJon. the two attempts on the life of Presi-aboµt .. being in control at the White House?" dent Gerald Ford in 1975 .. , Even as a wounded Reagan made his way to surgery, videotaped replays or the sudden, shock· ing attempt on his life played over the nation's television ~creens. AS THE STORY UNFOLDED over the next several hours. network television struggled. It was nearly an hour after the shooting was shown on na- tionwide television before any network reported that the p{esident himself had been shot THIS UNCERTAI NTY is the inevitable pro· duct of a developing s tory being report~d ri ght now. with the reporters· work of separating facts from conjecture being done on li ve television . In this circumstance. the viewer becomes editor And so. another dark American day was splashed instantly into history by television. It's a s.ort or incomplete. un satjsfying history. without benefit or perspective. Bul it's history t h<t,t an en- tire nation witnessed. at once and unforgettably ' ;GRAND o ·PENING CELEBRATION ROY & DALE INVITE YOU TO ••• . "STOP IN TODAY FOR YOUR FREE GIFT" "THE FAR WEST" -- A beautiful full-color . book of photos of the western states! REFRESHMENTS • • • BALLOONS •• PRIZES • DON'T MISS THE FUN! OPEN AN ACCOUNT AND ENJOY MANY FREE SERVICES The welcome mat is out at our new Far West Savings office. 1n your neighborhood Step' inside. today. ·~There's a FREE copy of the fabulous. full-color. photograph book. "The Far West" waiting for you And. our staff has lots of other FREE IFTS pnzes artd surprtses 1n store for you too. But hurry -supplies are limited' And while you're there be sure to open a savings account and checking account with interest. Far West account holders qualify for many FREE SERVICES Our staff will be happy to explain how your account can be the key to FREE PREPARATION OF YOUR WILL. FREE PHOTO COPYING. FREE CHECKING, NOTE COLLECJ'ION ANO MORE' Be sure to register for one of our three Grand Opening prizes You might be the h.~cky winner of a lovely set of luggage. a unique desk , clock with a $20 gold piece motif. or' a S 100 savings account Stop in during our Grand Opening celebration and find out why so many of our savers say "Far Wesl is by far the best'" FSLIC .,-... ~-­·--··- ... m HUNTINGTON BEACH 19114 Magnolia At GOffleld . Across from K-Mort OPBN: 8 a.m. to '!'·"'· Mon. ttwu Th••· ••·•· to .. (714) eea-aeoo .. MEE~ YOUR BRANCH MANAGER Far West is pleased to introduce Joe Lucostic. Joe is a veteran savings and loan professiQnal. He joined the Far West Savings team last year e>eptessl y to servelthe Huntington Beach rea as man•ger of our new branch Joe brings toth•ftllk •,Wealth of experience gained in service to thrti other Nvlngs and loans. 11 well as a background as a teacher and in bu11n .. 1 Acttve lh civic endeawoura. Uoe•l•o•njoya the wojJd of sports In hit off duty hours. G:r Ullolll!MllC LENDER I ., ,,, ·: ., .. ... \.II> ... ., ... ' ., ) If statistics are correct, Oran1e County government is on the verse or yet another problem directly related to the county's sp~tacular 1rowt.h. To some extent, it's also related to get-tough policies on tbe part of judges well aware of the public's sentiments about criminals. The c:ounty is running out of beds for inmates at Orange County Jail in Senta Ana. and branch facutties in Orange and El Toro. -- By 1985. it is predicted, tbe county will be about 283 beds short of demand -a figure that will climb to 757 by 1990. . At first glance, it might seem the problem is a long way off. But it shoQld be remembered that it takes .. several years to plan, design and construct a building on the order of a county jail. Efforts are currently under way by the county Sheriff's Department ctnd other agencies to plan for adding j~il capacity. At some point, information developed by the agencies will be turned over to the county Board of Supervisors, which will have to grapple with the attendant problems of where new jail facilities will be built and bow they will be financed. Those costs are-expected to be significant in the millions of dollars. ' Yet , supervisors will have to confront the issue. The demand for jail beds is increasing. lt must be met. Good plaCe to save President Reagan·s first major economic victory. an overwhelming vote in Congress to bar the next scheduled increase in the dairy price s upport program, was singularly lacking in fireworks. The .powerful dairy lobby, which contributed more than $1 mi llio n to last year's Senat~ and House campaigns. won only five votes in the Senate's 88-5 roll call vote. An unrecorded voice vote pushed the ban through the House without oppositjon. ' As a res ult. the government will s ave $147 million in its contributions to the dairy industry this year and consumers will be spared an increase of 7 cents a gallon in the price of milk and 9 lo 10 cents a pound for butter and cheese But the dairy price support program still will cost mon' than $1 billion this year. plus SS00.000 a day just to s t on• the 355 mi Ilion pounds of butter. 253 pounds of \ cheese and 575 million pounds of dry milk alread y in I. go\'t•rnment warehouses . The prit·c s upport program. which has boosted the income of dairy farmers by 46 percent as a result of · infl;,itio n. seemed sens ible enou gh when it was l inaugurated in 1949. The idea was to ensure s ufficient • produt tion b~· guaranteeing dairy farmers an adequate t income through government purchase of surplus products. Rut inc:r cases in the rate of support and tw1ce-)early adjustment~ for inflation have skyrocketed the cost of s upport while for.cing consumer prices steadil·y upward. Instead of h<1ving to be urged to produce milk. ~ butter and cheese. the dairy farmers. guaranteed top prices. produced enough to fill the government stores to o,·erfl owing Cancellation of the April 1 increase will be of some help The next step s hould> be realistic revision of the . entire program There ~i s n o way to justify the expenditun• of a billion dollar s-plus each year to s tore more food than b needed for domestic o r foreign use at the expense of the tax payers . Airborne firearms The proltferauon of handguns has focused attention r on a new problem for the airlines the risk that a loaded weapon carried in baggage will accidentally go off In fact. the Federal Aviafion Administration has re- corded 21 such incidents in the past six year s, resulting • im one death and several injuries to airline employees handling baggage. ~ And last year alone. the FAA checked out 48 reports · of loaded weapons in airline baggage. with the result that 33 passengers were fined . Travelers who c hoose to carry guns would be well ad- vised to note that FAA safe ty regulations now are backed 1 by a federal law. passed by Congress last year. making the carrying of loaded weapons in checked luggage a c riminal offense. Violators can get up to a vear in prison and a fine Qf up to $1.000. · The rules do permit transporting unloaded weapons in baggage. but only if the airline 1s notified. the piece of luggage is locked and the passenger has the only key. It seems little e nough to ask that gun-toting travelers take the obvious precaution of unloading their weapons when the safety of airline worke rs. and perhaps fellow passeng_ers. may be at stake. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their a uthors and artists. Reader commenl is 1nv1ted. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd I Staying smart By L. M. BOVD Retired women generally seem to retain their lively in· telUgence longer than do re· tired m en. Or so contend three New Yo~k researchers whO followed the lives of 54 men and wome~ through t be Ir six t I es into th e.i r eighties. Maybe so, don't know. To stay smart, you've I .. lllllY• got to s tart out smart. naturally . And these re- searchers didn't explain how t~ey picked the swift folk from the not-so-swift at the • outset. I have foµnd that numeroUI reaearchers1 Ilk~ numerous s~ announcers, are handJcapptd by the sad ract.oftentimes they're not as bright as those they in- terview. In Hartscombe, Enaland, stands a gravestone on which It'& writ: •·on the 22nd of June, Jonathan Fiddle wenl out of tune.•· Remember, you can'l le1ally take a hummlneblrd ' tb Hawaii. • • \ ·'I 1 \\~ DIA tven cr~lt.s the omnipoltnl Kremlln sehtntlsll with sue cessfully d monstrating ESP't ~eadly potential on insects. a possibility thai s hould bring joy to fafmers ana baward gardenen1 and s trike terror in the Insecticide industry. The CIA, though historically less alarmist about the Red Menace than the Pentagon s pooks are. h as also been monttoriog Soviet ESP research and pondering the possibility of less bizarre psychic weapons. A top.secret report on the subject by a CIA scientific exper\ has been examined by my associate Dale Van Atta THE ANALYSTS fst\mated that · "lhe Soviet military and KGB )lave had a covert applied parapsychology program s ince the mld-1960s " This was the period wtlen the CIA wal> ex pe rimenting with hallucinogenic drug s on "un suspecl in g Americans and with foot powder lhat would make Fidel Castro's beard fall out. The CIA warns that the So- viets may be "ahead of the L. S. in parapsycholog~ " Evidence of Soviet progress 1s s kf'tc hy be~ause the Kremlin ':. voodoo scien tists. the CIA suspect!>. Nicholas von Hoffman have gone 1.1ndercovf'r. In· telllaence source~ estimate that at feast 200 Soviet experts in vario\,JS disciplines are working on ESP weapons development. The. area of Soviet ESP 1•e· aearch that really has the ClA's mouth wate rlnic is the possibility of "remote viewln&" by telepathy Crom lhousandJ oC miles away. Who'd need a mole THE CIA REPO~T 1denlifieQ.!..in the Kremhn iJ a psychic sit- several specific areas of sus ling at a desk in Was hington peeled Soviet study · could zoom in m entally on a ··EI e ctr o s tati cs o ( super secret Soviet missile site telekinesis," or lhe ability to or a Politbur:o meet in~? move ObJects by m ental c·oncen tration. ··Extremel) lo" frequen c1es of elecl1;omugnet1c radia ti on for inf orma ti on transmission." Th as m;n have been what the KG H "'a~ up Lo when it bombar<.i<.'d the l ' .S Em bas sy in M o s cow with microwave radiation for nearh 20 ~·ears · Application of theorll's 1n v~lving links behH•cn the wav the humctn brain and elN'troml' computers operal<.'. Rt•motto• m o n itors and st1mulators lo dl'lt•rm1nt· · or influence Jnolht·r person s physical rondilwn by tclt·path~. like a lliltti;rn \\itch doelor m 1~hl lr" High frt1Qlll'nt'~ analysis nf an electroem•t.•phalogram a sort of "irNapping of :;om con<'., brain v.aves l 'NDER THE DOME : House M inorit' Leader Robert Michel. R·lll . appears to be cracking under the strain of hls job. He has laken to composing such hteran gems as · L'ncle Bob's Pnmcr for Big Spenders." Ex C't>rpts ··see Big Spenders run in 1980 See Ai~ SpendC'rs lo~'-' in 1980 See Big Spendt•rs forg('llmg lht• lesson of 1980. Sec Rig Spender-. run in 1982. Lose. Big Spender., lo~e. · Another ef fort. ms pi rNl by th<' old !>Ong. ··Js You Is or Is You Ain't M\ Bab'···· go<'s hke this ... Is the O<•moeral!'> or ai n ·t lh t• Oemoc-r<.1ts backing lh<• mand<.1t1· 't h \' pl' op It' g a \' c R l' a g a n " · · ~I t'r<'tfull). :\11 chel d1dn 't tn to '>tnl! ll The parl1t'11wt111n of St•n Uan Quayle. R Incl . in lht· "Paula Park1n:.on Open " goll out in~ last ·' l'ar in Florida ha:. caust·<I a c·t•rtuin d1~grunllcmt•nt on lht· part of his l'apitol 11111 :-.ta ff Tht•.' ""'h thl'tr \\orking eorHJttwn:.. \H'I l' an\\\ here nc11r a:.. l'llJO.' <1blt• ln:.t~·;uf. Qu:J.' ll· p a .' ., an e '< pt' r 1 t• n ct• d con gn.":--.111n<.1I 1•mplm 1•1• a '>l<Jrllng salar~ of aho11l Sll.000 a \l'ar \\Ith JUSt t•1gh t da~:.. l)f \a(-;1110n uncl lht• ... 1.11f 1:-lold lo l"l.pt•el to \\ ork m 1•rl lllll' .11111 "1·1·lo.1·1Hb for nothinl! -OR\'IOt~I.\ (11\(;Rl'\EU at lll'mg th1· 1n1nc1111 \ f111 th1· fin.I 11mt• 111 :!Ii '1·,11 -.. ~1·nal1· Dt•mo<Tah hJ\ 1· :-111111 h r .. -.1-.ll·cl lh1· dt•m1•,1n1ng 111111011t \ l:JIH"I St'n HohNl I lh rd I> \\' \' J ha-. had ht" colltl'l:il ..,la ttC1l1!'1'\ 1011Jr111ll'cl (>fl H'I' of lht· lh ·m oc l'Jl1<· l.l·.111t 1 ,111d "wn .\Ian Cr ;111 ... t11n . I>< .iii! 1-.i1 1 ... him "t·lf l>1·nHH'I .1111· II h111 E ' t' n t h 1· n ,1 m 1· p I ,, t 1 ... "n lh'm111·1 al11 -.1;iff 111111·1·' r c•,11t l>1•m11c·r al11· 'l ;ilf l tw part\ lhal d1.1111111on ... m 111o nlt•'" I""' liol"'fl t hlo.1 111 admit th.it 11 -. .1 rpmont~ 1l:..l111 New energy technology close at hand One way to offset the h1gh cost of e nergy 1s to guess right on the office gasoline pool. The winner is the person who names the date that an agrei!d upon Tex- aco station first sells regular gas at $2 a gallon. The losers get to send thank you cards to Bob <Texaco> Hope. . But is ther9 any hope besides Bob? This administration hopes free market economies will bring back lS-cents a ga ll on gasoline. The last ad - ministration put all our money into research and developme nt. Time, ln c .'s, Discover y magazine wants the government to spend $200 billion dollars- perfecting fusion-generated elec- trlcity. Two hundr~ billion is a lot of money Qr. as President Reagan would put it, two hun· dred billion gasoline tanks would, if lined up al Rochester. Minn., swoop over the North Pole and keep on going until they stopped in Jiddah. Saudi Arabia, where gasoline is 15· cents a gallon. AJI the big s tuff is years down the road: nevertheless there is hope now. not from the exotic tech nologies , but from the perfection or the more in- te 11 i gent application of tec hno lol(ies that are old, familiar and, bless 'em , proven. One such Is a heat pump for oil and electric powered hot water beaters. A heat pump eould be described as a r~erse refrigerator. It takes the heat out or lhe air and uses it to warm up hot w~ter or anything else whose temperature you'd like railed. Put the thing, which Is not much larger than your·TV set, next to the inefficient furnace that is wasting as much beat as It'• puttin1 in lbe Uvina room. The heat pump will vamp oft the wasted energy and cut your water beallng bill• by about hJlf. VOLKSWAGEN has also done It a1ain. The aulomobllt manufacture.r bu colnblned the • beat pwnp wttla Ute dl .. 1 enalnt to prodUCe a new U.." wtdtb ua• Cllil1 ball• mueb •tlal oU u )"OU're u1tn1 now. The VOik••.,... people haven'l de- cldN!S!t••Y 're 1oln1 to muta tiut U.., ~••>'. ll •IMM&li ........ et ......... ... th• tonveiltk>naJ f\irntce Wtal~ m ea ns t h at your ne w VW furnace should pay for itself in two or three years or less de- pending upon how grouchy or greedy OPEC intends to be. The new furnace comes all as- sembled in a big metal case and is so simple to install any heat- ing man can do it in an hour or s o m e r e ly by reading the manual. It requires one routine annual servicing. Otherwise you leave it alone and confine yourself to feeling good about the money you've saved. T.he Volks wagen people are also in the final stages of testing a new, three·cylinder car that they say gets 80 or more miles to the gallon. And that's not a sub· sub-s ub-compact miniature but an ordinary. smaU car that can carry four passengers. THERE ARE ALSO rumors that the J apanese have got a machine that will go 120 miles to Sydney Harris the gallon Jr the entire American passenger car fleet were composed of cars of such efficiency. it might come very close to ending our need for foreign 011. And there are other energy s avers. Fiat is looking to build a di s tribut ion network for TOTEM. as it calls its "total energy module," a small, quiet package. also employing a heal pump, that will heat a hous e and s upply much of your electricity The Fiat people s ay they will soon have an adapter t hat will enable TOTEM to power an air- conditioning system. TOTEM use s ·natural gas. m ethane 'or biogas interchangeably and can d e l iver heat and light f ar cheaper tha n your public utility Not that the local electric .company couldn't get its costs down by e mploying presently available technology, as some few of the more ag~ressively cost conscwu!-firms are Th~ big 1mmed1ale sa,·ing can come from ··1oad management." Ol'R ELECTRIC companies are engineered to provide all the power demanded of them re gardless of how high that peak may be. In t<'rms of dollars and oil, peak power is the most ex· pensive power there 1s . The phone company avoids the burden of peak expenses by of- fering Jower rates during off- ho u rs. That 's ca lled load m a n agem e nt. Countries like West Germany have been us111g load management in electrical power distribution systems for 30 years. ll doesn't lower the standard of living, only the t:ost. Two dollar gasoline and Sl 60 heating oil concentrate the mind, not on dis tant imprac- ticalities. but on what we can do now lntel)igence can be dangerous Even in the academic area, where Intelligence pla ys such a 1 preponderant part, the men who become dans and administrators and heads of colleges have used t heir brains fpr ambitious puri>oses moi:~ than for the ac- q u i s it 1 o n o f objective knowledge: they become politi- cians of a sort, and like all politi- cians soon begin to place their reputation and influence above that of -the comtnUJ¥h' they are • supposed to serve. Not all, or course. but many, If not most. UNFORTVNATELV for the human race. the most intelligent people are not necessarily the best people, in any field. Character seems to be a quality that is independent e>t mind, and genlusea have not been notable for their aenere>1tty, lhelr sweet- ness, their self-sacrifice, or their public leadenhlp. Nor ls .there any record t hat smart men make better husbands or fathers of-friends than their duller: brtthten. i have no wistt to disv.alue in- telligence; obviously it is. in itself, as much a virtue as physical skill or moral probity. and as much to be desited, But to bend genetics to the purpose of creating a race of more in· telligent beings is as one·a.lded as trying to produce people with large muscles. A muscular man Cal'\ be a hero or a bully; nothing in 'the brd predisposes him to the one y more than to the other. WJIA!f 'WE want in pe<>ple, to mike a better world, Is more com passion, a kei!ner sense of justice, a willingnes lo sub- ordina\e one's ego to the com· mon aood, J lively sense of hamor, "811d vitality. These are moral and temperam ental qualities. and there is no known way to produce such a fe)Jcltous combination ln the tesi-t~be or. throulh the DrtA chain. We can, by HlectJve breedln1. ral5e ln-teUl1ence; but we ha9' no idea ho" to Gd bioJ~al ~ '°' 1111.b people wtlf AN ~r tO one aDotMr. · Wbe OM IOClo~ ftnd a •'11'4·11r-. fonnUla rct tW; I .nu alt up and tue 8otlct. u11t11 t11a, " ean~t • Ytb~WN ~ui o-.rbrilnicM~~~l!-~ cacy to be rov..'fi enn ta tbe dumb.' ,. ' I t t , L f s b v 0 P90BLB•I FOR CONSV•EU ABOUND ln tbe Uane-1ha.,1na offertn11, ptomoted vla new1paper, radio and TV adl and dinct anail. Some mallen announce that the eomumer bu won an apparenUy ~aluable prise. All be muat do i1 •IJJt a tlme--1barlD1 project and lillen to the •ales pitch before collectina It. But the prl1es almost Invariably turn out to be worth less than. tbey seem. · Hlp-preuure tactics are another problem. Some projeeta run u many u three, 25-penon eroupe ~ proepecta through their sales presenta· tion dally, atressing the rlslnl cost of hotel rooms CAUFORtlA· FOCUS and the.advantages or• a li'f etime reservation. In some developments, anyone who refuses to buy 'within two hours loses the chance. 'J'lme-sbare purchases also lack the c~ling-off periods provided in every other real estate transaction. The buyer who makes a· down pay- ment after hearing the sales pitch usually has no chance to change his mind. "You can be committed before you even know Popeye's. claitn called untrue ATLANTA (AP) -At last, there's good news for spinach haters . A scientist says it isn't responsible for the iron in Popeye's muscles. Dr. Ken Lee of the University of Wisconsin says 99 percent of the iron in spinach -long thought to be a prime source of iron in the diet - is unusable. He reported his fmdings in a paper presented to the American Chemical Society's 18lst national meeting. Lee says many foods with plenty of iron conta.in the essential mineral in forms the body can't use. Iron gives blood its capacity to carry oxygen. Food processing can change the iron content in food, sometimes rendering it useless for human nutrition, he said. In iron-fortified baking products, for example. the nutritional value of Iron is often lost in baking, he said . But iron in baby formulas is found to be more available after healing. But f'n IJ convtnc.d tbe rulel are Heeled . ... Other tules protect Ume-sbare owners In de- velopments lbat an ~artly time·sb~ and part,ly owned "by either h•tel operallona or permanent residents. 0 90•B OP TRUE . Pao.JECl'S IU VE ln· volved ouU1lbt fraud, with a developer bWklJ.nc one or two modell aad •elllnl ttme-•lwes on the ba1l1 ~that, wtth no lnlent to build the.rest of the proJe«." be aald. "Otben Juat make wareuonable clafma; for lnatance, that 10U HD alway1 tX· cban1e you.r own time for tomeone else's time ln , another resort anytime you want. That may be true II you have bieb·aeaaon w..U in a tood re- sort, but there aren't that muy tood weeb.' I THE REGULATIONS APPLY BOTH to 'Califomla projects •nd to in-state sal~s of time- shares louted elaewbere-. . Unde~ndably, developers who have pperat- ed in an almost totally ftte environmeot are...chal· inl at the pfwpect of re1waUoo. "The 1afe1t thiaa If to demand to ~ad our de-partment'' public report on the project before buy-tna anythln •. If they don't have ttL don't buy." ~ ,_..,_,..,... .. ..,.._ ..... ''These rules seem to me to inhibit and stUle (Elm u a~ baaed m Santa Monico). "Hen comet our Afril·Fooll' pranbtec. Tbe r9t tA U. year be'• a stuffr jerk." · Auto & Homeowners *•· Ouotea By Phone FMmSmllllll ... 14a.IH4 w IJ .. J4J7 1914...._.·C0th!MeM (?c:::x::>c::JOOc:J c:::rc::::Jc:::>c::x::lr 0 . Q Traditions ••• H start at your dinner tabk. ~ \ Ord y f-"-•Baked 30 hours! • Honey ·n spice Glaze If • '-AUJI •Spiral sliced for easy lef'vlng H ..__. •Whole or half hama 0 am IWW! • Nationwide ahlpplng aervlc:e W Slip ·Coast • Full aerv~ Oellcateasen 8 8 • Old World Cheeae Shop O'L ooe... • Sandwich•• to oO 0 To Coast • Party tray• a a _ ~~~ed Ha ... o ~ J700 IE. COAST HWY .. c._ .. ..._. 'HOHi 671·9000 0 · 2460 I IA YMOHD-'{A Y .. B. TOIO ID., B. TOIO, flttOMI IJ7.JIH 0 19069 HACH lt.YD.M •Al"8.D, ~TOM llACH.l'HOMI 841-1171 0 a A!so Anaheim. Orange: Rancho Mirage. La Habra, San Dteoo. l.Mlewood a n Westlake VIiiage, North Holtvwood, Woodl~nd Hnls:Santa Monica, Pasadena r ~C>C:Joc::x::x:Jocoo~coccccc~ I Ju.st the way 14 Profitable American Companies with pretax. worldwide earnings of over 3.5 billion dottars Paid No Federal Income Taxes At All! On the list of no tax companies, are U.S. St~el , General Dynamics, American Airlines, Occidental Petroleum, Boeing and J .P. Morgan & Co. (Report Changing Times, October 1980). · DON'T WAIT UNTIL THE END OF THE YEAR. CALL NOW AND LEARN HOW TO PUT YOUR TAX DOLLARS TO WORK FOR MORE INCOME FOR YOU! PHONE: 644-2507 <Ask for Seminar Director) Complimentary 90 Min. Seminars Available Seminar Speaker Mr. Gerald L. Kozak, Tax Planner Newport Center 359 San Miguel Dr., Suite 110 Newport Beach, CA . 92660 Reservations Limited. '----------------------------------------------------- LADIES' PANTS · &TOPS II LIGHTNING IOLT, OFF SHORE, HANG TEN, SUNSHINE, CHEENO'S, LA MACHINE, ITC. MEN'S LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS %OFF SHORTS ALSO I .JOGGING ·sulTSFOR MEN AND WOMEN %OFF MEN AND LADIES VELOURTOPs KENNINGTON, PURITAN, BRENTWOOD, ETC. %OFF WESTERN & DRESS KINNINGTON, LEVI'S, LEE'S, WRANGLER, CAREEI ClUI. PURITAN %OFF 'AND WALKING SHORTS POR MIN ANO IOYS ~ • GOLDENWAVE, CJW HANG TIN, CATOtfT John J. Louis Jr., has been nominated by President Ret1gan to be ambassador to the Court of St. James. Louis, 55, of Win· netka, UL, would suc- ceed Kingman Brewster in the diplomatic post. Garbage in honie 'unreal' SAN LEANDRO CAP > A local health official has called a famil y home found with 20 tons or garbage and excre- m e nt a n "un beli~vable ... hellhole." "I 'v e neve r seen anything hke this in my life, .. s aid Alam e d a ·s a Murrun .. Siipervfsor Robert Lawrence. "It's the wors t thing I've seen in 30 years in the busi· ness" he added, saying he believed there was an a ccumulation of "eight o r nine yea r s" o r garbage in the house. SANITATION workers wearing surgical masks to bloc k the s tenc h s hoveled the refu se into plastic bags all day Sun· d ay, and eight workers returned to finish the job Monday at the s m a ll , ranch-style house in a quiet, comfortable res- idential neighborhood east and across the bay '1 from San Francisco. 1 The refuse included l enough hum a n and animal feces, piled in the rooms and smeared , on the walls. to fill four I 9<J.gallon steel drums. We literally had to dig our way into the place," said Lawrence THE HOUSE'S former oc cupatrts, Emilia Hudgins and he r 14· year-old son, rep0rtedly moved out recently after living there for some 15 years. Officials said the case ' came lo light several weeks ago when Charles Hudgins, 56, suffered a stroke on the front porch of the home. An ambulanc e responded and took him to a hospital where he later died. A police of· ficer who also responded looked inside, sew the garbage and alerte d health officials. "I LOOKED down the hall and the garbage was piled as far as I could see, .. wrote patrolman Mike Mur· rl:ly. "The odor was so offensive it made me nauseous. Words cannot explain the condition of the home." ll took about three weeks to do t h e oece~sary l>aperwork to allow city workers into the house to clean it, ac- cording to Police Sgt. Art Jones. N~ighbors said they never suspected what was going on at the house and described the family who lived there aa remote and quiet but seemingly normal, and that they stayed in the houtemuchoftbe time. 118 ensign given wings RENO <AP) -The future of Nevada•a embattled eay rodeo 11 in Ole hand~ of the state •ttorney general. Washoe County commiaaloner Be lle Wllllams, an outspoken oPpo- oent ol what has become u annual summertime event, said he S0"'8ht the attorney general's opinion to learn "lf there ls any legal problem 12'' Jl 25' In denyina continuance of tbe cay rodeo." WlWam.. aaid th~· county believed tbe oolnlon wu aecnaaty because \he date owns the falraroundl and tease• them to the county. The coun- ty, which bas a long.term leue with the state, bas subleased the lair· grounds to the Nevada State Fair Board. . WlWaJUS said respoose to bls op- 2al1 SAVE59e ~~~ALMOND e ALMOND ROCA: ROCA Almond-tiuped. choc· olate dipped. butter· crunch on the inside ·SPECIAL! MOTHER'S ' Old Fashioned j poslUoo to the rodeo bfcauae ol the potential "dama1e thal I• projected to our commwilty" ls runnln1 about 10.1 ln bl.I fayor. He contends that barrina e i•Y rodeo would no_t encroach on the civil rights ot homosexuals, while allow- ing It to continue in Reno ls to legitimize their activities. However. he said be wished Lt. Gov. Myron Leavitt had been "more aelecUve ln the use of bla words to describe his position." Luvttt stirred a controversy last week when h e contended that "queers" should not be allowed to uae pubUc property. , "I think Myron Leavitt and I are trying to a~k the same goal but tbe last thing I want ls for this thine to become ugly and nasty," Williams said. .. Tbe Blue An1ela will blthll1bt the Marine Corps Air Statton, &l Toro, unuaJ open house and air •how with a pc-ecllloa flt1ht demonstraUon May 2•1. Ttie air atatlon wlU open at 9:30 a .m . both days and dlaptay Marine aircraft and around com bat equipment. ~sPECIALI 22 ez. ·1.aa WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT! Ma \ter Cord • ANCHOR HOCKllllO 11" PWTIC Seafqod ·PLATTERS SAVE93e ARMOR ALL ~ PROTECTANT & CLEANER Protecls & Beau1ol1es v1riy1 plastic rubber & teathe• - 1.00 .... COOKIES AD PRICES PREVAIL! • ·-:101L •Olt!Mal (12Y, tr.) • Mica,_ (13 N..) •CMc. CW, (11 .... IL) • Tn,ltt Au't. ( 12 u .) SPECIAL! SKllfY HAVEN Munchies • llQ •Ollitll • ..... a..... •t.-1 BUY 5 & SAVE 35e TOP RA MEN ORIENlAL NOODLl:S CMll• .. J •1-tftl Ass't Flavors BUY 5 & SAVE 45~ CUP O' 1 NOODLES ORll:NTAL NOODlES Ass"I Flavors WEDNESDAY. APRIL 1st THRU SATURDAY. APRIL 4th ........ (•Jilt) ASSORTED COLORS ~ER-THE· CUTTING SINK BOARD 3 o~ 0 For home, campers etc. •1tH11 • IEGIRCY Notes 10 ShHls & 10 Envelopls letters !Ckl w/10Gold StiCkeu Stationery 1 JO. 2r>Sheets& 10Envetopes All in usorted designs. a. """"-... -(ll4&ll) '°"'' '""" ....... C•lUSI 32 Qt.art •li'~=-~· Tip· Top Wastebin llM7J YOUI CHOICE! 4.00u. ~~~·NaiDWooo ~~ -KITCHEN TOOLS a lool for every Job 5i s1 WIL·HOLD PUSTIC SHOE BOX I lllOu BUY 2 & SAVE .lie BUY 2 & SAVE 74e 11..z~ ALUMINUM PltY'R llAICa PAN CLEAR OVENWARE ·2~. LNf DWI • llo> QT. W i.1 Ollll • 10 et ..... rN Ditti (4 Pak) •32-.•-"t1a., ·1~T.~Caa...e. SPECIAL! ASSORTED Cleaning Pads • T ... A-Bo.t. .. 4~ I 3 I %" •Cle .... PMl ••• 4~ I 3 I %" • Silwntoee s.r. ... 6 1 6'' • 5coetrifll S.-e ... 6 I 6'' 1.00 u . SAVE99e SAVE99e ABCO Cl.Ult CANDLE BULBS ·Fl-TI' 15 WATl 120 VOLT •To ...... Style 25WATTI 130 VOLT BUYS&SAVE1.15 . QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL • For long lasting engine prolechon JOWT. 5 ~ S4QT.saE SAV_E2ee BUY 2 & SAVE 31e WINOEX OLA"9 10•••• ... ......, ...... _ ..... .,.,..., ' -~~ .... t -... -. - ,. .. •• ·. r ,. ,. tJ! hi ] I • :. ' . '• • • t h v 0 .. .b .... Orange Coa1t DAILY PfLOf/Wedne.day, Aprll 1, 19&1 College .test erro.r.S lead to question access p.(Jlicy NEW YORK <AP) -Start_1na Dex& fall; coll•I• ·applicant• ~ tbe country wbo take tbe Scbo&utlc AptJtude i'•t wW 1>e able to obt&ln a eopy ol tbelr teat queatlou u ••U u tbelr answer tbHta and the correct an•wert. ·The service will cost more for those of the 1.3 m11Uon teat-taken . who opt for tt, and it will be otter.ct ae Only five ot tbe 1J detea tbe SAT will be adm1A11tend ln tbe llll-82KhooJ year. TruateH of tit• C0He1e • Eatrance EaamJD8Uoe 80Ard. u HtoelaUoo ot bl1h •cboola and colle•es J.hat aponaon the teats, approved the move at a meeUn1 here. E11entlally, lt maku nati9nal policy of New York State's year-old ''trutl\-ln·teslln1 2 & SAVE 2.5- law," whtcb r~uiru accesa to <eau and .. wen. Tbe dedlAon folloWJ two r.cent taeld-.. In wbicb atudfttj wbo bad to t4lltl fou.Nl more than oae cortect ana11ter to a matbemaUca problem. The developer of the teats, ttr'e Educational Testing Service of Princeton, N.J., was then forced to raise thousands of test scores . One error, lo •n SAT math test, wu discovered by a New York State student taklnf adnntat4t of the new l•w. The other, ln a math section o f tb• Prellmt,ary ScholH le Aptitude Tea~ was discovered by a Florida youth who WH part Of a aroup liven the answers on a trial baala. While aroufll 1pon.sorin1 other . SAVEISllc "llONZE" nationwide atandardlzed teats, 1ucb u the Law School ~tude Test Md Graduate Mana ment Admltllonl Teat, respond to the New York la• by releufnl their teatt nationwide, the Colle1e Board had been glvlne New York State applicants specia l ex amlnattons for whic h the questions and answen could be obtained. 12 oz. 1:00.u 1.00 SAVE4.99 "TIMEX" KEY WOUND ALARM CLOCK ,., Tr.,., Brown case w11h gold tone dial _.JO.OD SAVE!S9e SHAMROCK TOTE BAG c...~ Made of rugged polyethylene in a gr acelul lace design ..... 1.00 BUY 3 &SAVE47e ASSOlrT(D Children's BOOKS Animal s101es Wall Disney tavorotes e<lucallonal books & many others lo crioose from SAVE 49e 2 CELL PUSTIC ~~!!Jht Heavy duty emergency flashlight h1-1mpacl plastic & salety~lo lens ring Provides all purpose Oependable hghl FlasldlPt.utes 2 "D" • Flasltll&llt·U... Z AA _1.00 SAVE95c Ma \ter Card BIG SPECIALS! FlEIJIL£ AD PRICES PREVAIL: WEDNESDAY APRIL 1st THRU SATURDAY APRIL 4th "Q-TIPS" COTTON SWABS ~(-100 17011 • JIM BEAM EXTRA mtNGTM SAVE•t .t 9 SHUlTON OLD SPICE MOISTUIHZING SHAVE CRUM Ass't Formulas ·YOUR 1.00 CHOICE! u. l l OL SAVE53e "-bldiy Strllsflt Bourbon WHISKl!Y VASELINE ----........ 10 "ltOCW 1.75 LT. s10 Kamchatka VODKA '°"°°' Blue Nun UElfltAUMILCM WINI! 750 ML s3 Mr. & Mrs~ 'T" BLOODY MARY MIX Scoresbv SCOTCf't llHOOf " ••• 750 ML s5 Kahlua LIQUl!UA ll~ 750 ML SB BUDWEISER BEER 12 PAK NO LIOUOft AT1 2AH I . L.AKEIHOAI OAl\11!. L'91Cl l!L81HOAE • ..... a Wltil• CNILY BUY 3 & SAVE 77e TWS TUMBLERS Stack without dri· lock Ing. unbreakable Ass'! Colors l LT. Sill SPECIAL! -"TWIST-TOP" ICE CUBE TRAY SET Trays stack without sticking, unbreakable ... Of2 1.00 SAVE38e Our ph1rmtc:l11t lit PfOfealonel• who c•n flit 111 6f your pr"crlptlon need•, q111Clc1y •nd upertly. Juat bring In your pr11c:rlpllM vltl or Olvt UI 'call BUY 2 & BAVE38~ CUTICURA AJm.UClHIAL MtDtCA1£D SOAP 3.25 oz. 2 i 1.00 BUY2ASAVE 1 ae ~ra~c; Butane LIGHTERS •DI ......... • TilellNMI .t Upta 2i1.00 BIG SPECIALS! WHIT£ ENVELOPES • 100 l£TTU Silt • 50 LEGAL SllE RfVUMI FLEX NET AU.WU11U ....... , 2.00u:. ~-1•1 ..... w..-~ lllWIMI-C.,.._ Dr. 6 w.Mwt , .... 1.00 SAVE•t.09 SHULTON Desert Flower ..............__,...___ HAND l BODY MOISTURIZING LOTION . .,.1.00 BUY 3 & SAVE 1.37 PfPSODENT TOOTHBRUSHES Adull Nylon c:!~11.00 .. BUY 3&SAVE 17c . -~·.,....i'~-Ser111• •ra . ,, . Spencer W: Kimball,' 0 : 86, head of 4.S million •. , : Morm ons, says .... young women should , . · fall in love with the, . ; scriptures before · they fall in love with men. Game · ·· •. !I ·-. has sam.e ,.,-~. '~ ~ old pain .: WHITEFISH. Mont.'· (AP) Instead of col- lecting when you pass "Go," you have to pay $200. And instead of try- ing to get rich, the point of Gary Tallman's and Wa yne Shanahan's new boa rd game is to go· broke Then you qualify for welfare. •· The two contractors- plan to market the game entitled SOB for Save Ou r Bureaucrats - the mselves at a ch~rge or $15 per game. Some 20,000 copies are being made at a fa ctory in Wisconsm PLAYERS SHA-K E ' t heir dice in a "pork barrel." and advance tokens miniature replicas of Susan B. An· thony dollars around a Pentagon-s h a p .?d board. Each square carries the name of a real gov- ernment agency and its budget. If you land on the Environmental Prot e ction Agency square. for instance, you have to pay a tax of SSO. H ERE'S THE kind of thing that might befall a player: The Law En- for cement Assistance Adminis tration s pends S2 million to design a patrol car t hat n o municipal government could afford. Pey your share. $20. Tbe National Science F o undati on spe nd s $46.100 studying whether sex , humor a nd e m - p a th y w o uld d e t e r drivers from hor n · hon king in traffic j ams. Pay you r share, $50 . But the last laugh is o n Tallman a nd S h an ah an . T l\e y got their idea started with an SSS,000 Small Busi- ness Administration loan . Poverty · Wool raised WASHINGTON (AP>",. Th e offic ial · gove rnment m eas ur e ment to determine whether an urban family of four is . " poor has been raised by Sl.000. Th e Labor Department says that under the new official poverty level, such a . '·' family may earn $8,450 '· and still be considered , ; poor. ..·: Th•poverty level for a ~ farm family of four bas ,. , been raised by $850, to . ..7 ,190. • • .. ,~ The raising of~ the '. c ~ poverty line reflects. 1 : increases in co.aaumer . prices of the past year,, :,j1 t h e de p art m en t • s 1 1',111 Employment and Training Administration said. ,-~ The revised poverty 1 level guidelines are • based on recom -!'"t mendatlona of tbe ' ~~f~ce8~fd~ea:,a1ement,{1,1 h . ' )I ' . ( ~., • . 'ti ... . r ~· .. ; '• .. ~' ... . · .. ,,. \• . ' . . r • - • 0 : ~: ·Now the MERIT ifl,ea has been introduced at only 4 mg tar- : ~i New MERIT Ultra Lights. A milder MERIT for those who prefer · ~an ultra low tar cig_arette. · - : :'. · New MERIT Ultra Lights. Jt:S going to set a whole new taste · l ~;standard for ultra low tar smoking ,-t .M . ~--------------------------~ ------------------------, ~~ " ~· Jj •• l 1 .. . ~ ' 'I JI l •. n 4; !I> "! tti .. <. l~ .H ~ ~ .. tii 1• , (t t' ~ ' "".; l ' ·R . Only 4mgtar Regular& rvtenthol MERIT MERIT -Ultra Ughts .:. Ultra Lights .· '- I f:ILTE ~ .. MENTHOL UL.t"A f\ low ,.A" --ULfA->' LOW f Af' I . I j I I I c ( I ) l ' f) i I rt .1 c di VI .A sa fir sh -of co m~ It' th CU, 1 sa rel vi din ex1 s t mi1 tha SU eco wh libe· '. tha im~ soc inst the thiU fa d, saif II h at va4) of d ran dl1t tb .... que 1, 7 It u edu •ll •ed an __ .. ____ _ . Daffy Piiat WEDNESDAY. APRIL 1, 1981 COMICS TELEVISION STOCKS 88 811 813 I Westgate approves $34.8 million bid for AirCal. . .B 12 Cigarette blaDied for big-Mesa blaze A smolderln1 ci1arette, ap-the corporation's Mesa facility, is The wastebasket, Richey said, said Tuesday. The renective material bUrns because fire that fiubed acl'Off parently dumped into a plastic estimated at $100,000 by flre of-was located In a library-like Finally, when oxuen was sup-rapidly, Richey said. the root Insulation •te don wastebasket by a secretary, is ficials, with content losses listed secretarial cubicle in the middle-piled somehow, he said the fire Firemen originally thoupt tbe throulh the false celllnga cover- blamed for the fire that swept at morethan$500,000. south portion of the concrete-slab took off. The rapid spread was blaze that resulted lo minor ln-in1 interlorcubiclea. . through a 6,600-s quare-foot Jim Richey, Fire Department building. blamed by the chief on refiective jury to one firefighter, bad start-General Monitors Inc. ~~= General Monlton Inc. bulldin1 in administrative chief, said a "It took all night for smoke to insulation under the building's ed in the reception area near th• electronic devices in tbe bull · Costa Mesa. cigarette apparently smoldered become visible. By then the whole roof and above false ceillngs con-building'afront. 1 to monitor flammable and to c Damage to the building at 3019 in the basket after an ashtray was interior of the building was cook· structed throughout the concrete The point of origin. Richey not· 1aa fumes. EnterpriseSt.,oneoffourhouslng dumpedlateFridayaftemooo. lng.(l was super heated," Richey shell . ed. was difficult to determlri~1 -JnT11ciau.ra • OMI'( f'llel IUff ,_ HONORED FOR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS IN NEWPORT Edgar 'Ned' Hiii wfth wffe, onetime meyor Dore Ned Hill honored for Newport service Edgar "Ned" Hill, a 42-year resident of Newport Beach and a major influence in civic circles. was presented with the Volun- tar~tion Center's first "Giv- ing I s Living " awa r d in ceremonies at the South Coast Plaza Hotel T he 87 year-old Hi I I was honored by 14 groups and gov- ernment agencies at the dinner. which drew more than 200 peo- ple, with proceeds going toward expanding the action center . Hill r eceived proclamations and resolutions from the City of Newport Beach, the California Assembly, the U.S. House ot Representatives. the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and the Orange Coast YMCA . Hill's wife Dor a. who was Newport's first woman m ayor. a lso was honored, receiving a necklace from the Voluntary Ac- tion Center "Uncle Ned ... as Hill 1s known to friends. came to Newport in State fonding the early 1940s and helped found a s hipbuilding company near Lido Isle. where he lives. Later. Hill helped . begin Mariner's Bank. which later merged with United California Bank. Along with J9hn Wa yne, Hill helped form the 552 Club, a sup- port group for Hoag Memorial Hospital. He was pres ident of the Newport Harbor Area Ch amber of Commerce and re· mains a charter member of the chamber 's Commodores Club. ln 1970. Hill was named the ch amber's "Man of the Year." He is a charter member of the YMCA's Or ange County Ex· ecutive Club and a fou nder of Newport's colorfvl "Goofoff. ~rs ." a group that still meets daily to discuss city affairs. In honoring Hill , the Voluntary Action Center said "this man has made his corner of the world a better place for us all .. Crystal Cove Park wins high priority By STEVE MITCHELL Of tlW o.lly f'lleC S'8ff Acquisition or abOut 400 acres of Irvine Company land for ex- pansion of the Crystal Cove State Park has received high NewpOrt aete Dodger game tripe Summer mWll be near. The Newport Beach recreation de- partment is plannine two trips to Los Angeles to take in Dodger baseball games. The first Uip will be April 12 when the Dodgers take op leaeue rival1 the Houston A•troe. On ~ay 20, the depart- ment will a1aln bead to Loa Anaeles when the Dodeers meet the world champion Philadelphia PbUUel. Tickets are $9.50, which in- clude• transportation and re- served aeaUnt. Deadline for the A1trot aame la April 3 and May • 11 for the Phillie• same. For further information call 6'0-2211. TUCIOH, Ada. (Al» -Tbe Pima County Board of Supervilon bu deeldecl to cut tottl by crtmaUn1 dea" poor people lnltaad of ...,,1n1 lhem. priority for state parks funding next year. Me mbers of the Ca lifornia State Park and Recreation Com· mission have approved more than 100 projects for funding un· der the $130 million state park bond approved by voters in No- vember. Among those projects are five from Orange County. and state parks officials say purchase of 397 acres just west of Muddy Canyon and south of Laurel Canyon will have priority for f undlnJt next year. Purchase of lhe $3.S million 'parcel would expand the new stitte park to'Tlearly 2,400 aores. And, since lhe state's option to purchase the extra land expires at the end of September, state parka .commlasioners suggest that land be given the bi&hest i)riority for purchase. In subsequent years, the parka commission intend1t to aeek funds for parking, picnic areas and restroomt at Crystal ~ove. The comm(aslon '• J.our·year procram must now 10 before tbe 1tate legislature for budaetary approval..!. wh ich 1tale parka director reter Dantermond Jr. said be will seek as rapidly u po11lble. Other Oru,~ County proJed.I f'ecoa111lended for eventual fwMS. iDI bteJude aequllitioG of a ltale park In ,Clllno Hlt111· new reatrooma and addlUbna park· Lnc at Hunllnlton State Beach, and rehabilitation of ump· 1rouncb at DolMny State Beac~. b ), Wolllan held: Non-suppori 'Rare case' ends up in Orange County Jail I In a case one official called "blue · moon rare." a 29-year-old divorcee was sent lo jail for failure to pay child support to her ex-husband. Bonny J ohnson of Diamond Bar began her lour-aay sentence in Orange CoUnty Jail Tuesday for being $3,450 in arrears in child-support payments for their only child, Kari, n9w 6. "ll is blue-moon rare for a woman to go to jail for not pay- ing child support," s aid HaITy State help in NB oil fight urged Reluctant to gamble on odds it cons iders to be only 50-50, Newport Beach likely will join forces with the stale to gain con- trol of 16disputed oil wells outside ci ty limits. Operated fot 12 years by Newport oi lm an R obe rt Armstrong the wells were shut more than two months ago when his contract with the city ran out The city, hoping to multiply its profi ts. wants complete control of tbe wells and the oil. which is pumped from city·controlled slate tidelands. But Armstrong has refused to turn over the rigs City officials, after negotiations with A<mstrong broke off. tried to annex the property where the wells are situated. When that move failed, the city decided to go to court to condemn the property. That's when the 50-50 prediction was made. City Manager Bob Wynn said there was a question whether the city could condemn oil facilities outside city limits. "There was the chance that the ci ty might be unsuccessf~f ... ex · plained Wynn. "but there's no question the state can condemn the land." • A joint-powers agreement had been approved in concept by the state Legislature for budgetary Newport council members will vole on the JOtnt agreement next Monday "Thestatewould be sort of lend- ing us its power ... said Wynn. "Its interest comes in t he fact that this is the public's oil." The wells. locatecfoutside West Newport, are rooted off the coast. City o(ficials, who say they'll go out to bid to find an oper ator if control is gained, contend annual oil profits .to the city can l:>e in· cr eased from $1 20,000 to Sl million a year. Armstrong, who protested the joint-powers agreement at the state Lands Commission hearing, wasn't available for comment on the latest developments. Wynn predicts the wells wiU be pumpingagaln by July 1. Mash of the Ora.nge-County Probation Department. Ms. Jo~nson said she couldn't pay the required sums and con- tends .she was never told about the custody hearing at which the s upport payments were ordered. "If I had known of the hearing I would have hitchhiked back to fight for my daughter." she said. She claims she has lived since last l'tt>Vember on $3, 700 in sav- ings. The couple were divorced in to Texas in an attempt to save 1977 after three years or mar-her new marriage. riage, and the wife was initlally Prouty went to court and _L _ awarded custody or ' Kari. The woo S P custody la,,t June after his ex-h us band, t even routy, a wifefailedtoshowupatahei.r-welder eamirig $4.50 an hour, was ordered to pay his wife $29 a ing. She was in Texas at the week in child support. · time and claimed she did not know of the court date. But Prouty claims his wife, At that hearing, she was or- who had since remarried, would dered to pay $375 a month in block him from visiting his c b i ld s upport to Prout'y , daughter for montM at a time although the figure was later te· and suddenly took off with Kari duced to $300 a month. 1 ----------------------------------------------------~- Temporary quarters These Ora nge County employees have been relocated to the first floor of the Hall of Administration while repairs are being made to the $8.9 million building in Santa · Ana. \. Mesans rap heliports . c I I l Ex-mayor caU. ia•e 6igmt dU JUI A handfu l of Costa Mesans plagued by low-flting helicopter noise turned out to protest addi- tional heliports and take a few verbal pt>t shots at helicopters in general before the City Council. Douglas Toohey of 1149 El Camino Drive told council mem· bers meeting in a special study session Monday: "The issue is do we want these things in our laps or don't we? I think the answer Is we do not." "We don't like these things and want as little to do with them as possible . Yo ur responsibility is to keep .them out. Don't look fOr excuses to put up with this." 'New heliports are sought by the Los Angeles Times for its Orange County facility on Sunflower Avenue near Harbor Boulev¥d a~d. by Downey Sav- ings anq Loap Association for its parking~tructure in the Town Center omplex at Bristol Street and An Avenue. In addition to those proposed ports sch eduled for formal publi c hearings April 10, the council announced Monday night that it wiU study helicopter and heliport pol.icy in general. Helicopter noise issues were brought to a head in February when former Mayor Robert Wilson called for a public bear· ing on the Times and Downey Savings proposals. The matters had been carried on ·a council consent calendar to be approved without discussion. Wilson objected to helicopters flying over the north Costa Mesa al'ea. He called the whirlybird issue the biggest facing the council in 1981. Wilson charged in February that about 40 helicopters fly daily o'ver his home in the Greenbrook tract, some of them rlttling plates and windows and knocking pictures off the walls. for copter pilots by the FAA con- trollers at John Wayne Airport. The helicopters, he said, a.re guided at levels below 500 feet - to avoid fixed-wing aircraft - down a corridor between Mile Square Park ln Fountain Valley and South Coast Plaza in north Costa Mesa. Wilson suggested Monday night that the City Council follow city staff members' and helicopter proponents' advi~e urging the FAA to lift the ceiling above north Mesa to 1, feet, a level at which pilot A .. said. he would feel safe: Wllson also suggested that tibe council contact area corpo!i._~ lions using helicopters and me Professional Helicopter PiloU Association for help in reduc~ flight noise. Teacher sue :1 I t Irvine board1(' 1 ji Stadi11m bus , runs scheduled hX OCTD Monday nigbt, the councu re· viewed a 42-page city planning staff study that includ ed acoustical monitoring data re· corded at Wilson's home and anoth« home just south of the San Diego Freeway. Tbe highest noise recorded at Wilson's Plumeria Place home waa registered by low·fiyin1 hellcopten. • The 75 ftxed-wtna aircraft that new over the home regi1tel'ed ter le11 noise, the report analysed by Hilliard and Brkken, acoustical enpneen, indicated. over ouster A former teacher in the lrvi9e Unified School Dlatrict bas flied ·a $1 million law1uit a1=t -the Board of EducaU , alleafni be wu wronatuilt from hll job u mUlic teaeber 41& VL1ta Verde Year Round School. The Orange County Transit District wants to take you out to the .ball game, and home agai~, for $2.SO. The distric t 's so-called "Stadium Speclal".ruo will begin in Ume to transport baseball fans lo Anaheim Stadium Saturday for an exhibition game between the Angela and the Dodgers. Once the resular baseball se11on be&ins, the buses will run on weekendl from two separate parta of the county. One bu1 will start at the Ro11naoor ~opptn1 Center in Seal Beach 80 minutes before same time, atop at Leisun World 1ate no. 1 five minute1 later and Golden West Colle1e at Gothard I and Ceoter streeta an hour before gameUme. The qt.her run origlnales at the Mi11ie>11 Viejo Mall at Marauerlte ParkYt1ay and Mall Way 85 minu~before the flrat pitch. It stops the park'·and·ride lot at the La a Hilla Mall 15 mla\MI later. · Both b\&I runs are s cheduled to arrive .-t the 1tadlum 30 minutea · before the aame. They leave a1aln from tbe lot'• charter bua parkln& lot 15 qalnu._ after the lutout. · One· way tare f orthe trip la fl.JS and eo cent.I for ridere wbo an aaed lJorleu. More lnfonnaUon can be ob- tained by calllnc th• tranall dll- trictatp&-7433 (IUDE>. Reba Touw, city· planner, Hid the hilheat helicopter noise level • was about equal to thal ol a dlnel locomotive ao yardt from tbe lilteaer. Helicopter proponent.I Brad· ford Abom, a Downey Savtnca pilot, and Loretta Foy. a Mall bu 'bellcODter COMWtalat, called the exee.ilve-earrylnc lDaebJne1 n~ penal" and aafe, nottq that ln- 1ur uee ratH ba •• 1teadll1 decUned becauH of provH performance. · Aborn aatd lb• problem in north Calta 111•• retulta from the tu,a.l patte.ru maPS*l out t Robert Spra1Ue was flred S.: Marcb.ol lllO. " H la attorney, Mlcbait Klr1cbbaum, aaid that be tJtf. tend• to 1how that Sprape ~­ pru1und and barUMcl bJ bfi1i auperton belore belnc ftred. .,, · Tbelawsult wuft&id ln ..... COuntys.artorOourl 4 Delaine Ricbardl, penoMlil cllreetGr fOI' tbe lrvlDe Selaool Dl•t~c_t1 1ald Ua Sprque ... nna ..,_. , ..... : ........... , .... at a PlllNHll .._.,_.....,. admlal1trau .. lew ....... repr•mtatl.-ol...,.... NS>r--*ath• "' ti9 eebool trlct, I • APalL FOOUNG A.aOVND; Why Lorratne Up. pold ~ the Or.-ige Count)' Mualc Center aaw realGD to invite me to yesterday's fubJon show ii que.· tionable but I abowed up 1.Q1way. '11111 particular tribute to what milady will p herself in this spring was sponsored by the LadJea and Lords of Camelot ~ ~ down at the Newport • P Harbor Yacht Club. . • ':9 r-\ The Camelot people ~('. a r e a ct u a 11 y a JUI MURPHINf ,}& 1 f~:~t!hoo:u:~~! Music Center. Anyway, they certainly filled up the yacht club, mOsUy with ladies that could have been the models themselves, so somebody there must have known what they were doing. As for your correspondent, I can report to you that the fashions presented came from Gimones of Lido Village. They were lovely. · 1N OAIER MATTERS, I did recognize ''The Girl from Ipanema" when played by gwtarist Carl Verheyan and ''Seranade in Blue" as nicely ren- dered by organist Jonathan B >wn. Beyond that, the whole s ow was a new world. There were no political speeches. There was no jet airport protest. No council members were present to pass a law that nobody could understand. It was re- ally .a nice affair. As to the fashions, however, some of them are rather puzzling. This season they.'ve designed pants that look like~ skirts and skirts that ·are actually pants. It sure complicates girl-watching. You are viewing what isn't. And I thought today was April Fool's Day ... * * * • SO ON TO A QUESTION more down to earth. Or under the ocean. Some outfit has just s.erit in a ques-0 ~~ ' "Just µw zip digit.! so away it goes!'' lion-and-answer sheet on oil drilling off our coastline. It goes like this: First Question: Wby should we clutter up our beautiful beaches and shorelines with oil-drilling ri~s? Answer: We shouldn't. Second Question: Well, isn't that what will hap- pen if the government sells oil exploration and de- velopment leases off Northern and Central California shores? Answer: No. The closest drilling or exploration would be at least three miles at sea. Now what might have been expected to be the next logical question didn't get as)ced. It might have been this one: Question: Well, if we're not going to clutter up our beautiful beaches and shorelines with oil-drilling rigs, why should we clutter up our beautiful ocean three miles at sea? ' -·- ,.,..~ • Sell·laelp Feminist Betty * Friedan has called for return to volun- teerism, since the public cannot rely on government to pro· vide social programs such as health and child care and old age assistance. DEAR PAT DUNN: I bou&ht a set of Castleton china in 1969. I was very upset to learn that this company had ceased opera- tions entirely in 1970. Do you have any idea where I could get some replacement pieces for the china I've broken? J .T., Irvine China Chasers Inc., P.O. Bos 8tzH, Duawoody, Ga. 31338, carries replaeemeat pleeea for Castleton clllaa. Wilen you laqulre alloat tbe ~et you need, laelude tbe pat- tern and a self-addressed, stamped envelope for a prompt reply. China Chasers reports that dllrbag the lWJta, more tban 1,4M cbJna pattens went out of production aad are no longer "generally available. ln addition to CaaUe&oa, tkls ftrm maintains stocks of out-of-production and bard.to-find patterns from tbe. followln1 manufacturers: Flintridge, Francltcaa,- Franconla, Gorbam , Leno•, Mlaton, Norltake, Oxford, Pickard, Royal Doalton, Royal Worcester, Spode, Syraeuae and Wedgwood. One of the greatest appeals of the C ity of Irvine is the wide choice of hous ing. Residential areas have been planned for single-family homes, townhornes, apart- ments and condomin- iums. At many different price levels. effici ent, economically- balanced city. Growth guided by two impor- tant factors . The City's farsighted, living General Plan. And concerned residents from the community, City government and The Irvine Company who work togethe r to make it happen. A variety of housing choices near City em- ployment centers is an excellent exa mple of Irvine's continued growth toward the goal of becoming an energy- We may not always see eye-to-eye on every detail, but the result ha s been, and will con- tinue to be, a city that gets 'better to live o c c a wt rid o/ 1taim DEAR PAT DUNN: Would you pleue provide me wlth the name of a book that tells how to remove all kinds of stains from cloth? ' J .G., Irvine Tbe best bar1ala arouad • ddl sabjed la a ti-page booklet ealled "lle•n•1 Stalu From Fabrtea UMJ>," avaUaMe for $1.1t from tile Coaaamer laformatloa Ceater, Pueblo, Colo. 81 .... You'U find Mt r.ow &ore- move t• eommoe atalna -alld tbat'a a lot of information for St.ze. · • ··Got o problem? Tllm wnte to Paf '"'i Dunn. Pat wiU cut red tape, ~tting • the on.!1«1'• and achon you need to 1ol~ iruquit~· m gooemnwnt and btuineu. Mail your questkml to Pat n • Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Cocut Dolly Pilot , P.O. Bo~ 156(), Costa Me.a, CA 920$. Al many letters ai pouible will be o~ed. in every day. Housing plans like ours give assurance that there will always be a wide var~ty of \YelJ-de- signed reside ntial areas in Irvine. To fit different lifestyle needs and·in- comes. For information on this growing new city, please visit or call The Irvine Company Information Center. Culver Drive exit off San Diego Fwy. (1-405). To corn er of Barranca. (714) 551-1500. Silence prevails. * * * COMES NOW CONGRESSMAN Jerry Patterson from our ver'y owv Orange County, who 'ti as challenged the U.S. Postal Service's proposed nine- digit zip code. Good pWtning you a better choice housing. How did he challenge it? Why, by co-sponsoring a new law, that's how. The law would say if you don't like nine-digit zip codes, well, you can just go ahead and use the old five-digit zip codes and the postal people can't penalize you for it. Of course they won't penalize you. They'll just send all your credit card payments to Dayton, Ohio. IF YOU WANT TO write Rep. Patterson about his new law, he may be reached at 137 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, D.C .. zip 205150000. Okay. okay, forget the last four zeros on the zip code."That was just April Fool. For now, anyway. Douses closed ·Ex-madam denies guilt RAPID CITY, S.D. <AP) - Former madam Pam Holliday, who bas a~ared on network televis~on to discuss the house of prostitution abe says she ran in .Oeadwood, wUl be tried in federal court May 12 on five proetiwtioo charges. Ma. Holliday pleaded innocent March 11. She h8I said she r¥ Pam's Purple Door. one of foUr bous.u o f prostitution that operated ln the Black Hills town until they were abut ·in raids last May. In October, a judge Issued an order permanently closin1 the houses. Before bis rulln1, prosecutors Introduced into c.vtdence a videotape of 111. Holllda}''s appearance on NBC'111J'Tomarrow" 1bow, in wlllch ·ahe wu intet'Yiewed by Tom Snyder · about tM boule. ()a J'eb. 17, She WU lndlci.cl by a fedtr8',......, Jury, ud cbarpd with OH .,.. Of transportln1 a woman acNll lta&e .... , ............ and tour ...., of eoenlq or ..Udnl _. .. .....,~ .. tl' .... poftatkln tor. pNllM••- Ms . Holliday, who is free on S2,500 bail, could face a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5.000 fine on each of the five charges ..8galnst her ii found guiJty. Her attorney, John Fitzgerald of Rapid City, said Tuetday be would seek a Jury trial and Ulat be may file a motion to delay Ule openln1 of the trial. He refused comment when asked how his cue wl1I be afffftecl by Mt: Holliday'• telemloo appearances and the b6ok ab• ,bat said "she's writinl about ber eareer. Prostltutlon wat a 100-year tradition in Delldnocf, 101ni back to the days when Wild Blll Hickock and Calamity Jane lived tn the W•tern town that now h., about 2,400 realdenta. New jiiiJ pl: llAllTINEZ <AP> inoau.. an., .......... of Co1ta·1 la IDll&a Jail, o•e lau forced aome lama ... to deep on tbe floor Ind four m.n bave •8P'd· " ( :,. , . .. t · l .,; t-: . ·: .. '• '•' -= . ... : .. • ;t. ... .. .. : . . ,. .J•' t' Stanley Mark Rifkin, convicted mastermind of com- puterized $10.2 million robbery of Security Pa~ific Bank in 1978, is suing Esquire magazine for $200,000 f()r a st.ory he claims was slanderous and an in- vasion of privacy. R e ligion • unpact • • ns111g NEW YORK <AP) - ' American leaders are out of step with the U.S. public, which is more religious and more concerned about moral values than top peop~in mos t fields such as scien ce, politics, the new s media and education , a study concludes. ''It is clear there is a dramatic gap," John C. Pollock, the project's research director, said i n a n i n t e r v i.e w . "Overall, leaders a re different from t h e public. They don't represent the public " THE STUDY, involving 3,780 respondents, was made by Research and Forecasts, Inc. It was com missioned by the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. to explore American values of the 1980s and the extent to which they are shared by leaders. Although there was no intent to focus on religion. it emerged as "the one factor that consistently and dramaticall y affects the values and behavior or Americans." the report said . "We had no idea we'd find this," Pollock said "But there it was, showing up in every sort of S.,}'stematic analysis, a common th read. It's more than a movement~ It's something running through the whole culture." THE 337-PAGE report said the influence or religion "has . penetrated virtually eve r y dimension of American experience" and "as a stronger d e ter · • minant of Our values" than any other factor s u c h as age , sex; economic status, race or whether a person is liberal or conservative. "Our findings suggest that the increasing impact of religion on our social and political institutions may be only t he beg:iMing of a trend that could change the I face of America," it l aaid. MORAL ISSUES have. "via reli&ion , vaulted lo the forefront of the political dialogue . . . " the report said. "Something unusual is happening." ·'American leaders are out of tune With the public which they are presumed to represent," the report added, sayin1 tbe leaders are rnore nexit)Je on moral issues and less religiously com mittell. The study involved 1,018 h our•long lntervlews with a random, nationally I dlatrlbuted sample of t h e publlc, and_ reapomes to eigbt-pafe queattonnalrea from 1,712 leaders to AQUA-FRESH FlUOllDI TOOTHPASTE FOi FIESH BIEAYH· SAUPllCI 134 5'1P9f' ala 8-2110-oz. tvM. PHILLIPS r.:..11 OI Mllll " II.I Of MAGIBIA ll0.1.6t 129 l2·oi.. loxotive-antoctd. ....... °' 200 ....... YOUlatOta: •llGUUI •UNSCDfTUI •MAIO· TO-MOUi VOS NA1UW·llOUNNG HAllSPIAY llG.2.1' 149_. GILLEnE llGllJ IUAID SPUY DIODOUllT . 118.1.St 1'19 3-oa. oll fomlly ~t. IT'S THE NEWEST CRAZE IN STEIEO LISTENINS. YOU MUST HEAR IT TO APPRECIATE ITS SOUND SAVE $2 ON EACH 3-PACI · Hanes~ MEN'Sa>nON UNDERWEAR · REG. 6.69 69 ~ WICKER BASKET & DECQR COLLECTION YOU'D IXPKT I'' TO PAY$$$ ' , MOii fOI THISI - Wllilt Stecka le11 • EACH All n-telection, monr stylH and 1lre1. Includes wal decor. White cbttO(l: waist sires 28·40 HANES T-SHIRTS CREW OR V-NECK REG. 5'' ~ 7. 99 lA. . PACK OF 3 LADIES' RIPPLE WEDGE SANDALS SUPEI 999 PllCE - No•urol 1010• pc.,lorolc-d hul •er fly uPI><''' S•t<'' !I lo Q FAMOUS ARTIST RECORDINGS • HP 4tt I KOIDS ... l·TIACl 2'' TAPE ...... LOS HERMANOS ~ABLE WINES WHAT A VARIETY! RIG. 2 ·59 3 49 EACH •ROD STEWART '"Blondes Hove More Fun LP or 8· Trock Tope. •BEE GEES "Spirits Hoving Flown·· LP, Cosselle or 8· T rock •PLUS I .IC>tMfT llATIUS, WIUll •lUON, JOMlt OIWYU, OOllT "ITOll, l.l.O .. WATU* JlllNIGS a.o MA•Y MOlll '-''S' •·THCI um. YOUR 2'' I CHOICE l P or UPI • ~ ............ - ~ahh~ ly J.l •• Wlllle•1 Yl1Aft'~,~~IU01Jifl1 i~7:'69c ,..., ..... '*'· . TheH or• the some fine products seen odvertls•d In nationol pvbllcotlom. PACI OF 3 60 MINUTE CASSEnE TAPES. t NALLEY DlllaGUS TASTING CHIU WITH IWIS SUPllNIQ 59·c. l!-<tz. c:an. Whil• 1tod1 last . GORTON'$ MINCED OI CHOPPED . UlllllD CLAMS SUPll PllCI 69~ 6'~·0&. con. White 1tock.a lint. u.i!•hrC~. MARUCHAN . UMIN SUPIEME tHllENTAL NOOIKIS SUPllPllCI !.99c S-01. pocka. While 1tock• la1t. O.lktou. cNKolot• ,,...,.. GUNDMl'S fAYOllTI PUii FUYOlfUL HOIE SUPll PllCI 3'9 S-lb. con. Whit• atodta lalt. u.it. ,. c.t... SUNSHIN.E HI HOSNACI CUCIUS .. SUPll PllCI 99c l'-a. box. While 1todl9 lo.t. u.lt ',., <.-...-. H~RB TEA ASSORTED FLAYOIS BY MAGIC .MOUNTAIN SUPll PllCI 69c 80• of 16 WhilE> s10<ks lost WORlO'S TOP Pl.A YCRS • JOHN McENROE •GENE MAYER • BRIAN TEACHER •STAN SMITH • RAUL RAMIREZ ' • JOHN SADRI • Bill SCANLON ,• VINCE VAlf PATI!N fllal 'u 1lne11 , law ,--=:;:::::::::::;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;::=::;:::::::::;:=:;::;:::;:::;::::=:;:;:::::::::::::::,::::::::::;::::;:::!::::=t::~==~~~;:~:!:::::::;;::::;:,::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::;;::::=: lidueation, iovernment, • •llltary, the new1 COSTAMISA •edla, reliliOa, 1clence 2111. 17th St. •nd voluntary ulOdat:lona . .. 1 I' The Treasury_ is · going .out of business, and from · now until the da we finally close our doors, yo·u'll find fabu ous bargains at all ·eight LOs Angeles area stores! -- Shop early, and don't fo~ et our special hours during cill c earance events:· .. . ' \ - . MONDAY I THROUGH FffilDAY ' . < • · 11 /:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. • I ' SATUR.DAY:t · 9:-00. a.rn.1to 5:00 p.m. S·UNDAY: . ,I ! ' I I I -· I · · . CtOSEID . I . ~ r . , . ' . t . . . . . eas~ ... .. . ---,--··--· ,.. - ' .. I I .I .. • • • er 1 e 1·n · s -oc • , I ' ). . ! I • I :11 &_ . aturday! I ' ' ,I Al . sales-f ina ! . -· . , ~ 1 _o exchang_es pr_. refun .. s!. - ' . • l , • • . I -' ' " 1 • , • .. . . . PricH eftectfve f Aptff' 2 ... 1111 . defies • !f-:,j ~ i\ dra~atization (~. I/ I By HUGH A. MULLIGAN ' I \ £ Al" '"'lalC.11111111•1 I · NEW YORK -The reviews for Edward \. • es. sir. rm his son by his first broken home.' ATHENS, Ga. l ~PI The world's longest· nning o\I spill, from Mexico's lxtoc 1 oil well, s caused no serious e nvironmental d amage cause of the tvoe of 011 involved and climatic nditions. researchers say. Oil on the surface broke into smaller and aller pieces and eventually dissipated, accord·,. lo Or. J ohn S. Patton and Mark W. Rigler of University of Georgia and Dr. Paul D. Boehm Energy Resources Co. Inc . of Cambridge. ass. Their find ings were reported in Nature agazine. The leaking well was capped a year ago The spill occurred under ideal environmental nditions. Patton said ... The subtropical e nviron· nt of the Gulf of Mexico haste ns degradation of terials:· i.ATH NOTICES . ~. f \U>Rl<'ll ~::-.r El'llfo:' \llC"ll\fo:I. ,11111t·11 II·'''''" ,1\\.1\ 11n "'11·'1 2X t•l!(t 11 .. l" -,111 I\ ,. d 11 \ h I ... ",1,. I' II t ... 1,l'h ·"ti ,11111 (;t'lllJ.!1'11 ,. d111hot'lt1-,llll (·,1 "l"h·I uhn l1111lht•t l'hthp .11HI a1 •1 .l.tl'~W \ld1'11'h ,di 111 ~ t 111 ( .. , ,111111 \l.11 t.!fllt ... I I. I 11 I 11 I !-'I ,1 II I I rl\ \''Hit· ,,.,'in·., \\ tll h1 • •Id 1111 I UI'""''' .\1.11 t·h JI. I .11 11 IMI \\I ,11 ll ,1rho1 In :\lount Oh\ I' \lt-~11ri .1I 1 I. 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C.1 llt• .., ,1 \t'fl'l'iln or lht• l' S 1 \ w1 1 tilt.! in \\'nrlcl \\'ar tnd "·'' .11 ..... a mt•mht•r of l' :'\ l' \I p fl I l H l' ,1 (' h 1•1·1('an l.1·i.:1110 ancl th1· '\\ 1n S11·rra \l ucln• Im t•d hu-,hand nl Ht•rn11·1• (; ud .. tn lit•l11\\•ct "'' h1·r or l' \nn H.1rn hurt of San 'J.!CI. ( ... abo 'ill 1 I\ mi.: hh mutht•r :\l.1tt.!1tt•nt1• <lm•l.m ,1 ... 1 ... 11•1 \l;.1nun hlwl,., .11111 ,1 111t•t•t• :\I a l'j.!11 hht•b all 111 Ho«'11•,.,tt•r \ .. PAC..C YllW MINORIAl. PMI Cematerv Mortuarv Chapel .. h:IVI Pac1llc View Drive Newpart Beach S.W-2700 LAWN-MT. OLIYI Mortuarv • Cemeterv c,.,,,. tory 162!. Gisler Ave . Cost•M-. S40-5554 WlmDWS ....,.. . ....,,.., 827Mein8t .._,ntlnQton l91rCh liatal \ltnm•,.,111 a l .. rwnil!< mu\ l';tll .11 l'1l·n·1· Hrn1h1·r ... sm11h-, \1 11rl11 •J11 from I OOP:\1 to !I tHI P~I toda\ :\la!." nf Chn:-.t1:1n Hul·wl v.111 hl· 1·t·lt•ltr.1tl·<I on \\"(•dnl'"<la1 \pnl I 19RI ;.it II l:'i.UI ul St S1m11 n anti .Jutl1• Cuth11l11· l'hurth lntt•rml·nt "ill ht· >it II 1 ' 1· 1 ., 1 cl 1• '\ .1 1 1 o n a I C1•mt•IN1 l'u•n ·1· llr11t h1•r ... ~mllhs \lortu.11 .1 1hn·1·tnr ... .i:lli li5:l9 st:Mo~st:~ IHIHERT :\t Sfo:\IO~S f.' .•J.!l' 511 rl''tdent of ~""port llt·at•h. Ca l'<t: .. M'!I ;rn .11 nn \I ardt 2H 19111 Sun I\ t·it h' hi.. "1lt• Jn Sl'mon ... t•n or 'i•v. port H1•J1·h. (.';.i . ""n' Roht'rt :\I or :\form Hu~ . l' ,, and Paul and Danni holh of '""port H1•.1<h ~ t'.i d.111~hll·r ... su ... ;in \\'aclt· or l'osta :\ll·,.,a. Ca . .\I an S\ltlik of :\lisston \'tt'jo. <:a'. Salh Hurt holoml'" o f \nahetm lltlb.. Ca Jn<I I.aura und :\ilet'n Scm•m>-t·n hoth nf :'\l'l\port Bt••H·h. (.'a . R ~ranclrh1ldn•n and hi' moth1•r .\tll•en St·mom.en of Claklantl. ('a a hrother Dr Cha ril'!. S1•m11 n s t•n of lla1v.arct (.';.1 .ind a '>1!.lt•r Patnc1.1 Rapp of Pomona. (.',1 D1 St•ntt•n ... on 11as a nwm hl'I' 111' our l.;.trl,\ l)Ul't'n 11( \ni.:t•I' Pan,h. :'\1•11 port ll1•ach. (.';.i llt• h.u1 prac-ttn·d <IL•n11,.,1r~ tn Tu ... tm . t'u for 31 1·l'arK anct "iJ" a m1•mb1·r of iht• Orun~t· t'ount~ D1•ntal ,\,soci.t1111n. RN·1t11lwn of t ht• llol~ Rosar~ v. 111 he h1•ld un Ttw!'oday. :'olurc-h 31. 19~1 at II :JOP:\I :\la"" of (.'hn' I tan Hunal on \\'t'<lnt·~cla\ \pnl I. 19fll ut ltl 110.\:\1 hoih 111 ht• ht·lcl al Our l.;.l!h l)Ul't•n of :\nl!l'b (.'atholl~· Church lnlt•rnH•nl \\111 fol lo\\ .it llol~ St•pul r ht•r Ct•mett•n l"nencls whu \\ 1Kh m:J\ cali at Hro\\n Colonial :\t 11rIu1.1 r' 11 n Tu l'.., cl a' :\larch :it. 0 1981 until fi OOP~l · Tht· ram1h ask..., thut in lil'u II ( fl 11\\t' r s cf1tn U I IOn' h l' ma<11· to SI .IO!.l'llh .... I los p1tal Founclatmn llt•art Fune!. PO Bo.\ 5n2i. Oranftt' Ca !l2Mi Bnmn Colonial \lortuur~ clin•cl111-, Appointed SACRAMENTO (AP> -Douglas McAvoy of Camarill o, president o f a development firm, was a ppointed to the stale Horse Racing Board by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Neobme Society CMJl4T.a.i--1IUlllALAT- 648-7431 I T••r ..... , ... .,.., eM ,, ... , • ._ ······--.. -... , _. ----Cell __ ___ M..... C!!ML ..... Slnca.1910 Albee's "Lolita," the moat scathing in many a season, read Uke obituary notices. And sure enough the play was dead and gone betore anyone had a chance to offer it decent burial. Once again ft'ladl m lr Nabokov's sly masterpiece, airy and gossamer as the butterflies he now chases through the Elysian Fields, has defied dramat)ution. STANLEY KUBRICK A1TEMPTED A FILM version of "Lolita" in 1962, with Ja mes Mason and Sue Lyon cast as the infatuated professor and the nau1hty nymphet. and brought forth a wet lolly pop. Alan Jay. Lerner concocted a musical in 1971, ··Lolita, My Love.'' It closed out of town. After auditioning hundreds of nymphetic s ub-teen thespians . with loud fanfares of tasteless publicity, Albee settled on 24·year·old Blanche Baker for h is disastrously dirtied up s tage versio n of literature's clean est tlJWGAN'S STEW dl rty novel. unique for the passions portrayed in the most chaste prose, and wound up hearing words like "boring," "incompetent" a nd "mean s pirited" from the New York critics. By comparison. the closing notices were the kindest cut of all. UP THERE IN LEPIOOPTERIST'S heaven, a be nevolent smile must be breaking acr oss the noble rugged features of the word magician who discovered Lolita's glHYl ·Chewing charm s while hitchhiking rides on the school buses in Ithaca. N . Y It was here Nabokov taught lite rature, at Cornell. in between field trips around the world to chase butterrues. Once again his erring nymphet has been saved from the garbage can . This time, Edward Albee's ~ garbage can. The fi rst time it was his own. out behind the house he rented on Cornell's faculty row. Despairing of ever finding a publishe r, Nabokov had tossed the nove l out, but faithful wife and fervent fan Vera rescued it from the trash collectors. who fortunately bad failed to call that morning. The s uccess or 1..vo" .. Lolita" enabled Nabokov to retire to Monlreux, S witzerland, where it 'fas my good fortune to inter view him in 1976. ~ Vera. it is said. was angered by the four letter words and scenes o( simulated sex that Albee had written into his stage version, both ot which blatantly contradicted the novelist's expressed warning to porn brokers seeing any cheap thrills from his demoniacal maiden AS NABOKOV SPELLED IT OUT IN his foreword lo the novel, one of t'be most s hocking things about "Lolita" is its absence of s hocking language: .. . . . Not a single obscene term is to be found in the whole work; indeed the robust philistine who is conditioned b y modern conventions into accepting without qualms a lavish array of fou r-letter words in a banal novel. will be quite s hocked by their absence here ... Albee's descent into dreary obscenity and pprnographic explicitness would have been thund erously dis m issed by the master as a "copulation of Aun cliches." These rape the novel of its "tendresse," which as he points out in the opening pages was Humbert Humbert's only redeeming alibi. R E J ECTING FOUR·LETTER WORDS, Nabokov invented new ones to describe the obsession of his sex-addled academic. m ost m em orable "ny mphet ." which he defined with Proustian elegeance and ·wit: "Between the age limits of 9 and 14 there occur maidens who to certain bewitched travelers, twice or many m'ore limes older than they . reveal their true nature w hich . is not human. but nymphic t h at is. demoniac. a nd these c reatures I propose to designate as ·nymphets.... . Hardly a subject for a morality play, but that in essence is what ·;Lolita" is, if ever any playwright can pm down her butterfly wiles and whims as novelist-lepidopterist Nabokov did so brilli anlly. Fort Lauderdale fas test growing WASHINGTON <AP) -The New York metropolitan area remains the nation's laraeat concentration of people, but the fastest 1rowtn1 area is Fort Lauderdale·Hollywood, Fla., accord· ing to census figures. Tbe figures tend to confirm reports of popula· tion shifts to the Sun Belt, ud little or no srowtb 1n Northeast and North Central areas. The Cemua Bureau has not formally Issued lts list of the nation's lar1eet "standard metropolitan statistical ams," but the top 50 were complied froan bureau figuret by American Demosraplllca magazine. PETE&K. FIANCESEtPVBLISRB&oflbe ma1a11ne, noted tbat all the meuopolttan areu that are decllnina or 1rowt.ng only 1U1bt11 are tn the Nortbeatt and North Central areu, wlille all of those lfOWinl taater thu the 11.• percent naUoeal avera1e are ln the South and West. · •'The metro90Utan decline, not Just the central citiea, in the Northeast and North Central are. la really quite maulve, and the metropolitan srowth In the South and West in incred.lble," commented Francts.e. -'f'bere are 211 standard metropolltan 1taU1Ucal a.reu ln the country, widely u1.cl for 1tatl1Ucal purpo1 .. and the 1tudy ol people aDd the econo1n7. Generally 1ucb u aru ccimiltl ol a dtJ of 50,000 or mON l.Dd tlae 8djaffllt eouata.. tbM are atftllated with the central city tod&lb and economlcJJly. For Every. Room c. r- ;~ = see, t9UCh and · rtivon. R04"'0 OAK BALL ~CLAW TABLE WITH ~F ANO •5291s FOUR PRESSED nun • BACKED CHAIRS AT 10°/o Discount Off Future Sak:'> With Purcha~ of Table and Che:ms ~ I .__ Over 20 Differett Styles DESIS: Carved . Roi-Top, Flats . Various Sizes ti/ ·;;· I • ~ ' e 1HI $YHOl'SIS 0,. THll ANNUAL STATIMINT 0,. Att•11Uc 1Mt¥..W:• ComlMtlly, JOO Cedar Sprlf\9S, Dena.. h•H IStlt Yur ..... O.C...w.r JI, 1• Ttlel eelmolltd-ll 11•.111,111 t To1e111~1ttle1 •.llS.Sll ~ Spec ••I turp1u1 f11Nh ·O C'-ltel pe!cl..,., ~renly PUBUC NOTICE -T .. " NOTlCI' Of' TllUITIE'f Ul..E ~ileltSlelllllAO 0.-11 2,000,000 T.L .,_.SW Gron pe1d ...o 011 A11t1l 2'. U•t, •I to A.M . c .. 1r11>v1ed..,rplu• 10 4'1 !:!'EST'MOllEL.ANOSE"VICE. INC., t U11•nlgntd 1111101 llurplu•I •.oo, 11'J t~ttlor11lt torp«•llon, ti the now dll1Y S11rphn •I reoerO. ppo11111<1 Trull" uno.r •nCI purs~I pollcyll61Clerl , llS Sh o OHO of Trutl u.culed bY SAMEUL Jl'<om• IO<,,.,. yHr ) '1l· .. , GI.. 0 0 I c H AH 0 w AN d A Ol~r .. rNl'llSIOr • l..ODICH, HV58AN0 ANO WIFE, •t IM yHr ~.Sll,OI r"$10r. re<oteleO Ftltf'uary H. l'IO, W• IWtrtHly ur111y rfi.i 11141 al>Ov• ' IMI. No. 11s.JI, In 8oOlo IJSI 1. P ... Hems •rt 11'1 •cc0<cunu ,,,,1,, Illa An 1101 ol Otflclal Re<ord1 rn lht ollru al nual St•t•,,,_1 for 1,,. yur t1!4aO ,,. CoulllY lle<0<C1er of ~-Colin Oecember JI, 1'10. made to 111t •;:,1~L·~e~~r~n~•UBLK AUCTION lnt.,r•n<• Comm1uloMr of Ille $1alt TO THE t<tGHEST BIOOER FOR or Celllorl'lle, pur5Uen1 to ••w. 0 W BMllllller PrHldenl CASH ll>•Y•blt •t t1mt ol >•It 1n A c Felht>ft.I~. S.cretary ••wf\11 motwy Of tM Vn1t10 St•lttl •• Pvolisned Orat\91' Co•s• D•ity Pilot. tnt •01•0•1nQ \lrtet •dore'' #IU\ M •r<ll JO, JI, ... pntl J J l~l l)Jlill >Pto<•"C OIKt 11\<'fUl nolt<I ... I IM __ __ ___ _ N orlh lront ttf\tr~ct 10 ln.tt County PUBLIC NOTICE Cov1 lhou\t •I /00 ''"'' (tinier Orlvf' W•\t. '" tn" (d~ 01 S•nl• AC)• _ C.•l•lornta •II '•Qt\l. llllf' •nO 1nlt,...>I MU,.ICl,.AI.. COUllT 01' con•t¥td to •n0 "°"' nt>IO 0• ot unOt'• OllANOl"'COUHJ.!IWESTOllANGE •••0 Ott<I ol lru>I on In• P•oPerly JUDICUl~\DISTlllCT >•lu•1tO on >••d Counlt •nO Si..I• II .. Utll 51'"1 d"<riDtd "' LOI I 01 Trotti NO t ftf Wn""'MI~. CA t1Ml on Int C.oly ot Co•t• M<-w County o• .. ll lttllll: INSUllANCE COM,.ANY O••Oll• '>l•lt ol C.•••IOrno• h p~r DI' NDllTH AMllllCA M•o rotO<dftl '" 5.,.,.. Ill P•Q<t• lO Del•-: D4V10 w. SUMMERS; •nd JI ot Mo><tllantou• Moo• '" \l\e ..ATlllCK H. Fl..ESMl'll -DOES 1 olloce ol Int> C.oun1y Rt-<ordtr 01 >l•O lllr•lllll 11, l!Klllsl••· C.ounl• SUM.MOHS r nt >lfttl dOO,~\~ dnd OU"•' <am C...H.....,; 611U mon dt\1Qni1t1an 11 t.1n, o• uw ,...., NOTICE! y.., M.v• -"'"· T"9 P••P••t• <lt'><robo'G aoo-. • ou•por~o , ... rt .... , .. , ... ~ ..... , .......... , to b• lOCIJ P14111• Dr••• (.O>I• Me>•. f 911r -.i"I _... -••» y.., re-"4 C.•101orn1• 'l'I•~ wlllrla • MYL ll•M tlM iafermau... Int u.-r>19"<1<1 lru.i••> d•"'''''"' Mtew. •nv t1•0.hty tor •n., 1n<ortt'<ln•~~ ot AVISOI Ulted M 11W ..,,,.,,_El '"' >I•••• «!Or"' and 01rwr commoo lrU~wnat ~· de<kljr <Mtr• Ud ''" Oc-\1Qn•1ton, •t •ny \rlown ntrtt1n Sa1u ••MUencia a mettot qW9 Ud. r...,.ftida S.tl• will t>r m•oe. bul w1tnout cO¥f' Mfttro • JO ffla'-L.•• e.. '"*"'•u ott n•nt or .w•H.tnlY f'aortu or 1moltW'Cf '" ....... ft!'9•f01"Q M 'r Po\\*UIOf\ OI fl\( Um tf you w•~ to loeek Uw .O••<• ot •n Of•ntP>. 10 O•Y tnr rtm•1n.n9 Pf"tn auorney 1n tn1s m•tt•r yOY 'r.outo oo c1p•t \um ot tnt notrlU .. f<.utt-0 Oy so promptly so tn•t your wtttttn -.410 Ot:t'O ut Ttu'lt. w11n rntert \l rtu.pon\t, tf Any, mey be ftlfd o., t1mf tntrton. 6\ l,Jt0¥10ed in \t\.f'O note(\1 Si U\tad OH•• M>h<•l•r •I con,,.1o de do ... •nlt: .. 1t .tl!A'1 un0t'1 1~ ttfm\ 01 un ·~ tn 111e •wn1o Of'bert• "\•id Oft'O Of I ru\I ltt\ "•'9f'~ •no net t rto 1mme.d1•1•ment1. Of' f't.1• tt•o~nu·\ ot tn• ftu"'t•• lh• of IM m•ntra, \u rtt\pue\ta ew:nte. \1 n•y lru\U "'tfdh.-0 oy \did Ot:'O Of ''v\t. •IQuna. pueoe Sl'r r•911trac:N ii l1eme>0 f nt< tot•• •mOunl ot I hr unpa10 1. TO THE OEl'END ... NT " cov11 W l•nu or t"" Obl•Q•••un >«urt<I b• c.omo•••nt PW\ blMft t1teo by tht pte 1n-thf' Qrooi.r•y 10 br \.OIO ono rt•\.On.tbtt hit •Q•U't\t you It you w•~ 10 Otteno t\t1m111e-0 O\h t'~s>•n~t\ ~no •O U'U\ 1awou1t, wiou must, w1th1n JO a • ., .. 1 v•nct .. •\ ot M it'<" JI) lill '" after tn15 ',ummons IS Strvrd on yOU, )t ti ¥J9 b8 -Ntt\ln •mOvt'!I will •"IC rff\t' tile "'-llh lht1i court ., wr1th~n , .. ,oon~•I vnti1 ooti:' o• .. ..,., to the como••nl Uni~\\ 'fOV oo \O t neo ~~··"-••'" U4'\0~, '410 Otto o• YOUf del•utt #Ill be entt'ff'd on •O-fty"f t'\t"rtlOIOtc-fAl"luftd dnd d .. s>hcallon of Ow p•••nltU •nO "''' <.OYrtl 11..,tr.:O to IM unorr\19f\tO • WflllPn m•y tnter • tUOGmrn1 •Od•n\t you tor D.:ot. Id' 4t1on ot. O.t•u11 dnd Oe.m~d the r•Htt OtmM\Otd 1n the comol•inl, tor )dh:. dnCI • w'dtt:n Not1U! 01 wht<.h C°'-110 rt~U in ,....'"''"m•nt or L>f',tluH c1no E1ir<ttil')n to >Ill '"~ un ••Oe\, •••ni;ol montyor Pf"O«Mrtf o'" J~''i•one-o t •u\t:'O \..t•O Not•Cf 01 other r•l1et r~quf\tto ,,, tnt com I CJr••1.t•I 3nd E•ttlton 10 ~II 10 Of' rt pl•1nt t.OfCl~O 1n lM counly w"~rt' '"" rt•• Dated July II llHIO U'00ft11( f\ IOC41e0 I.aw 0111c.e1 •I O•l~d Moren lu 1o;e1 •C.....-"•· '"""°" & MOodf YY~\tmoret.no !Mor "''t inc A Protff.MMlil C•P ''"'f'W M.10r10 1P.O. 101 J1M A~"•\tant \/•Ct' Ptr't•df'nl Co•I• Mn•. CA t2U• T II u STE E WE s TMO ll E L ... NO I SS.·•110 SEllVICE, INC., ,,,, "'''~ Torr•r lllCHARO J HACOC P1oe1 Cewt. '-'Joli•, Gahl°'"'• tJN7 Cl•rk Tt••P-tno 01.1110 rr"''" "' SUSAN LY NCH llOft Deputy J'uOfl\hed Or•nQt' C.od~I U<1ity Pttot Pu()ll~necl Or•n~ Co.t\l o •••• Polo! Ap .. r I 8. 1) "~I 1101 •• M.,<h II, ?I. Ap<1I I 8 1'81 1•01 II PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE N·718S9 NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OF DEATH OF STEPHEN A . JEF -FREDA GAMBELL ANO FERIES, AKA Sl'EPHEN OF PETITION TO AO· ANDREW JEFFERIES MINISTER ESTATE NO. ANO OF PETITION TO A·108192. ADMINISTER ESTATE T o a I I h e 1 r s , NO. A·10l140. benef1ciar1es, cred1ton T o a I I h e i r s , and contingent creditors of beneficiaries, c reditors Freda Gambell a nd and contigent creditors of per s ons wh o may be 1-Stephen A. Jefferies, aka otherwise in terested 1n the •Stephen Andrew Jeffe ries will and1or estate. and persons who may be A petition has been flied otherwise interested in the by Josephine DeWitt 1n the wlll and/or estate : Superior Court of Orange A petition has been filed Coun t y requesting that by Michael Rock in the Josephine DeWitt be ap· Superior Court of Orange pointed as personal County reques ting that representative to ad· Michael Rock be appoint· minister the estate ot ed as personal represen· Freda Gambell, Costa tative to administer the Mesa, Cal1forn1a tunder estate of Stephen A. Jef· the Independ e nt Ad· ferles, aka Stephen An· m 1n1 s trat1on of Estates drew Jefferies (under the Actl. The petition is set for Independent Admlnlstra-hearing in Dept. No. J a t lion of Estates Act). The 700 C1v1c tenter Drive petition is set for hearing w e s t , Sa n ta A n a , in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Cal1 lorn1a 92701 on April Center Drive, West, 1n the 22, 1981 at 9 30 a .m. City o f S anta Ana , IF YOU OBJECT to the California on April 22, 1981 granting of the petition, at 9:30a.m. you should either appea' IF YOU OBJECT to the at the hearing and state grantino of the petition, your objections o r file . ._-. .. 'you should either appear written objections with the \ at the hearing and st~te court before the hearing. your objections or the Your appearance may be written objections with the in person or by your at· court before the hearing. torney. Your appearance may be 1 F Y o U A R E A in person or by your at· CREDITOR or a cont- torney. 1ngent creditor of the de· I F Y 0 U A R E A ceased, you must file your CREDITOR o r a cont· claim with the court or lngent creditor of the de· present it to the personal ceased you must file your representative appo1ntta cla im with the c9urt or by the court within tour present· It to the glersonal months from the date of representative appointed first Issuance of letters 19s by the court within four pro'l,ded in Section 700 of months from the ·date of the Probate Cod e of first Issuance of letters as California. The time for provided In Section 700 of filing .clalms will not P · the Probate Code of p1re prior to four monfhs California. The time for from the date of the he.Ir· filing claims will not ex· Ing noticed above. ' plre prior to four months YOU MAY EXAMINE from the ct.te of the hear· ltle file kept by the court, Ing noticed above. If you ere Interested In tne YOU MAY EXAMINE estat•r you may fite a foe· the fllt kept by the court. quest with the court to ;,. If you are Interested In the ce ive special notice of the esto\t#, you may file a re-Inventory of estate aswts qut1\ with the court to re-and -of tht petitions, le· celve special notice qt the counts and re pQ '' s Inventory of estate assets described In Section IJOO and of the petitions, ac· of the Callfornla Prob4f• counts and repof'tS COde. described In S.ctlon 1200 Of the C.llfOrnla Probate Anderson, Adami & ode. larnff, a Law CWP6fe· tJon, by: Jacll I . Adan;•, John W. Down.r, At· Attorneys at Law, ft. o. WMY at Law, 401 G*'· aH ut, 4100 N. Aoetl"ft4Mld •rr• StrHt, Swire H, • Iv d .. R 0 I. m ••• , M .._, Cellfwnla Callfernta tn10, (211> 1, (714) ft1·"41. 211·2'91 PublllNICI Orenge COHt Pubtlshtcl Orange c•t elly Ptlot, Mar. 2St._ff, Dally Pf1ot, Mar. 11, ~r. pr. 1, 1911 14q .. \ I. 7, 1,1 1511 1 \ ' " l E ver,one appreciates a Winn,.er, and Daijy PilC?t rea~erS a re no exception. --· --- 1980 .Orange County Press Club Gary Page Layout First Place winner Ambrose : Best Inside and Sports Photo. Its the . MUD OLYMPICS .. .. , . .. Gary Ambrose Award winning ' photo coverage of your community comes· to you every day in the . . laill:·Pllai f 642~4321 . . ' ' . I . 1· l I I "Mommy! Wdt.t upl Wt missed the bust" 1'1ARMADUKE . "APRIL FOOL!" by Brad.Anderson "-' 1f. "PG JOU expect me to teke you for 1 w1Jk In thl1 .. athet?" DENNIS THE'MENACE Hank Ketchum i~ ~ C• __ .,._...,. 'f·I "Get your paw off the scale ... l'm not giving "Ya know what 1 just discovered, Joey? That pork an' you MY dessert tonight!" beans with ketchup is almost as good as peanut butter!" roN'T ~RY AeOUT ME. I'LL .JO!>T &l'T HERE IN °™E OARK GOt~eLINP SHOE C.HffiLENE.'e, NERT, MA-RN' ~ ~LMEA!'\. I i I l~ by Jeff MacNelly BRENDA MAKES USG01bBeD ON1iME\ -------- ; t I . Ho won't do it. He keeps accusin1 me of wan\· in1 him to die so I can have everylblnlf. Please help me. J would reel disloyal if I tal);ed to sny friends or family about Uiis. -TOO OLD FOR SUCH PROBLEMS _. Pear Problem•: A maa lD his '1ts wlao llal aertmped ucl aaved all Illa Ufe ud MW waata to 1,e.d ttll.• oa a large lilome aeud.a Hite be baa '-t to.ell WW. reality. · Q9"rioualy, Harry does not listen to you. EdaUbe belp of a clergymu, a ct.etor or a lawyer -a penoa your baabaad ftlpeeta. U aomeone doesn't get tllroagb to......_ man. he u beaded for dlaaater -aad you'll &•over tile cUff wttb him. Moreov•r, If be dies wttboat a wlU, yoe .. Y go over the cun ALONE. Wllat a ·capricorn: Expect special call THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Mar. 2l·Apr. 19): Be a war«: of possible "squeeze play." Means don't get caught in middle of controversy. Secret maneu· vers dominate -look beyond the immediate, broaden ho.rizons. Maintain personal freedom. Accent ver5atility, willingness to go with tide. TAURUS (Apr. 20·May 20): Fulfillment, pleasant surprises highlight scenario. Cash now HOROSCOPE resumes. You're nd or unnecessary burden. Aries, Leo, Libra persons figure prominently Business associate does have valid concept. Respond accordingly. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You are in line for "a very attractive" offer. Focus on career. power, prestige, ability to communicate with superiors. Capricorn, Virgo, Taurus persons figure in exciting scen ario. You make valuable contact. CANCER (JUJ\e 21.July 22> Philosophical discussion with family m ember aids in focusing o n pers pective, prospects and pote~tial. Aquarius, Scorpio and another ~ancer ft~':'re prominently. Plans for journey will be specified and clarified. LEO (July 23-Aug '22l: Check facts, figures -applies especially to budget, contracts. partnerships, credit cards and ratings. Gemini, Libra, Aquarius persons figure prominently You are due to m eet a .. very exciting" member of opposite sex. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22>. Lo w key approach brings desired results, especially in dealing with family. Accent of publicity, partnerstiip, legal rights, marital status. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio persons play significant roles LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Dig beneath surface indications -you are going to make important discoveries. ·Focus on co·workers, unique services, nutrition and health. Individual who responds to you in "sensual manner" will help you get needed material. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Complicated process is eliminated; smooth sailing replaces delays, consternation. Family me,mber makes major concession. Domestic adjustment helps clear air. Taurus. Libra and another Scorpio figure prominently. SAGl'M'ARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Define legal terms, especially where property or home are concerned. Avoid seeing only wha\ you wish to see -be practical enough to build on a solid s tructure. Pisces. Cancer , Scorpio persons play important roles. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 191: Special cal l. message or ver bal communication strengthens confidence. You'll be given au~~or­ ity commensurate with added responslb1hty Cancer and anoth e r Capri corn figur e prominently. Short trip is on agenda. • AQUARIUS (J an . 20·Feb. 18 ): Missing item is r ecovered you gain needed financial s upport. Burden is removed, added recognition is due and one who aided you in past is back on scene. Aries. Leo. Libra persons figure prominently. Accept promotion • PISCES (Feb. 19·Mar. 20): Spotlight on initiative, fresh starts, sensuality and correct judgment, timing. Leo, Aquarius persons figure prominently. Exciting contact arouses romantic nature. Popularity increases, people comment on your improved appearance. Ebell Club schedules luau Building of Heritage Park. 4601 Walnut Ave .. Irvine. For more information call 552·0688. 8"el1·•....-~r.r..a 111et1 .. pan.er •lllD • ratH4 9"etl •114 wwe Me*ld·• ... cl~ GeM l11tk t.o 708, 4eat. Y• are a.eas to ... It. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I would like to offer the following advice to the parents of Ute 13· year-old boy who enjoys weartn1 ladies' UD· der1arment.s. The_ bo)' bu a fetish that ls firm~ establlabed. He wW not "get over it.' Fortunal!, tbt1 proclivity is harmless, unless be ls fore to steal feminine underwear. My a vice ls to have a frank talk wltb hlm. Ir he •dmits a need for tbb kind of appareJ, buy him what he wants and forget it. A few more p,irs or panties in the ..wash won't make that much difference, but beinl arrested for petty theft can create a lifelong fear.of embarrass· ment. Believe me, I know what I'm talking about. I've bad the problem for over 30 years. I also have a beautiful family and an understanding • wife. My Ule would have been a lot •uMr ti lll1 parentl Ucl W\deratood. Even a Ju...U• Jrrat record ls bard to erase. -IN THW MOCCASINS AND KNOW THE PATH W!!LL Dear Moe : You ieUef ••1 lte ceuide1'M altocldq &e ••e, Ht 1'e affke ,.. Uft el· fered II IOlhl. I ndene It. CONFIDENTIAL to ....... Y• lee &lie Problem la ScandaJe: I aee k deartJ. la J few yean,.... .butd II,..., .............. . too. He'Uaeeddl4lre9 ••< Jlflf llhl a ltraeaer ud tile)' wtll waai..., ~ • .. wltla blm. • Dcm't flunk your chmiiltrr test. Low ii mor• lhan one aet of gloncU collmo to onotlwr. If lfOU laooe troub~ ma1dno a dUtindfon J10U t*ed Ann'• boc>kld, ·• Looe or Su and Haut to TeU tlw Dlffnnce." Send a long, 1elf-addresud, atamPfd nweio,,. IDMll JIOU' re· queat and 50 cents lo Ann Landers, P.O. Boz 11•s. Chicago, /U. 60611. An ·E arly .California Fiesta' will be the theme for a fund-raiser co· hosted by the Showboat and Music in the Air chapter s of the Newport Harbor Guild of the Orange County Music Center of Corona del Mar. Working on the gala event , which will be held Sunday, May 3, a~ La Casa Pacifica in San Clemente, are BeGe Yahn . leftJ. chairman of invita- tions, and Cherrie Lightburne . co· chairman of the silent auction~ · Slmc:ba Chapter, B'nai B'rilh Women, meets at noon Sunday in the Huntington Inn, 211 12 Coast Highway, Huntington Beach. For more information call 540·2319. Clipped Wlngs or Orange County meets at 11 a.m . Thursday, in the Newport Harbor Art Museum. For more information call 846·0516 Retired Persons of Capistrano Valley meets at 2 ·30 p.m . Wednesday in the Hot Springs Dance Hall, 32506 Paseo Adelanto, San Juan Capistrano. For more information call 661-69,7. Tustin hospital s~eks ·help . j· ·:I ·:I .. ·: , ' I , CLUB CALENDAR Ebell Club of Newport Beach meets for an· nual luau at 11.30 a .m . Thursday, in the clubhouse. For more information ca~l·8978. University Women of Laguna Beach meets al 9:30 a.m. Saturday in the Laguna Hills Bap· list Church, 24521 Moulton Parkway. For more informatjon call 830·3797. Costa Mesa Women's Club meets al 11 :30 a.m. Friday in the clubhouse, 610 W. 18th St.. Costa Mesa. For more information call 545-2215. / ./ Bridge Group of the Newport Beach Senio.r Citizens Center meets at 10:30 a .m . Fridays for contract bridge, at the center, 2101 15th St., Newport Beach. For more information, call 548·7534. . Creative Arts Guild of Irvine meets at 7: 30 p . m . Thursday. in the Arts and Crafts Mozart Chapter of the Orange County Music Center meets at 11 a.m . Wednesday, April 8, at Sherman Gardens in Corona del Mar. For more information call 499·1050. Toastmistress Club of Newport Harbor meets at 11 :30 a .m . Monday in the Marriott Hotel of Newport 'Beach. For more information call 494-3651. Huntington Beach Newc:o-nters Club meets at 10:30 a.m. T hursday in Rogers Gardens. For more information call 963-7015 or 960·7107 for more information. Orange County Council of Women in Cham- bers of Commerce meets noon Tuesday in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. For more information call 535.2334 or 536·4357. American Handwriting Analysts Found&· lion meets at 4:30 pm Saturday in Beverly Hills Savings and Loan of Tustin. For more in· formation call 646-5667. UC Irvine Panbellen1c: Association meets Thursday, at 8 p.m in the Gold Room of UCl's Mesa ·court. For more information call 8B0·8311. "Who Need8 You?" is a ~ekly Li.stmg o/ volunteer opportunities in Orange County. The Tustin Community Hospital is in need of male and female volunteers over the age of 15 to help in the gift shop, informatior\desk or to deliver mail to patients or escort discharged patients out of the hospital. Anyone interested in givitlg four hours at least twice a month should call Kay Hollon at 586-4106 or the hospital at 838-9600, ext. 478. South Coast Repertory theaters need volunteers to usher patron.s and help out where necessary. Productions are evenings, Tuesday through Sunday, with weekend matinees. A Head Start program is looking for classroom assistants to supervise and play with four.year olds. Two classes, morning and early afternooo, are held for about 15 children. A community ser vice agency that covers areas such as veteran and senior services, consumer problems and youth activities, is hol~g orientations in April. For information about any of the above opportunities, call the Voluntary Action Center at 675·9210 or 833-9285. The following volunteers received service awards during the Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian March Board or Directors meeting: Singles set gourmet dinner 100 HO URS: Camilla Edwards, Marlene Class of '61 sets relJllion ORANGE COAST SINGLES will sponsor .a gourmet dinner at 7 p.m . Saturday in Costa Mesa. For information, call Ann at 751·0291. PEOPLE SAMPLER social, led by Emily Coleman, will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday tn SINGLES CALENDAR Ann Martin at 5 p.m . Sunday in Newport Beach. For information, call 97S-0700. .. BALBOA SIU CLUB will have a general meet- ing Tuesday in Newport Beach. For inform•· tion, caJI 752·0128. Marina class t.o holil reunion The Newport Harbor High School Class of • 1961 will hold a 20·year reunion at 6 p.m. on June 20 at the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach. Class members needint more information can call Barbara Lilly Sinascek at 979-0084 or Carol Williams at 646-4410. Marina High School Class of 1971 will )told Q' \~\ Anaheim. For information, call <2µ> 828..sttt. its 10-year reunion Aug. 8 In the Lona Beach Elks ~ t:. CJ ~V , Lodge. For more lnformation call Dean Mancina C.l()~\..\.. ~ \) f\.~ - C_B_N_n __ ._~ __ ~_s_™_G_L_~~-~--·-~--o•r•a-d•b··--·90a•t~!.7n•~ .• ~ __ o•r•~--h-P•.0•._&5x~~~4,•~-a•J•B•e•a•~•'~~\,.1 ~~~'~ .. CUHlOll titled "Spring and a Freth Start" led by 'IV Tl"''""~" o"1"'~-" ~s~\J\~ ./C~?O ~S .. ./ ~\.~t $i ~'f":, ~""':, ~ ~ Ji \-rifo. ~~r\J ~\l ./ p.D~~1~ 1 t),._'('E>,.. . t\'UO'<tli-~ ""' ~tp.D'\'\G." \"9 .., t) c,?.' ~~~ ,,, ~ ... -. Hester , Rd!emary Hitzel. 500 HOURS: Gretchen Flsh~r. *Bdythe · ' Kemper. ,,,r 1,500 HOURS: Raymond Zambito WHO NEEDS YOU? 2,00() HOURS: Virginia Eddy, Jan MiUett, Marietta Warren. 2,500 HOURS: Gwen Pattison. 4,000 HOURS: Bette South 4,500 HOURS: 'Louise Muderbach. Candystripers receivin1 awards wen: 50 HOURS: Monique Huebel, Carolyn McDonald, Kathleen O'Brien. 100 HOURS: Ann Farrow, Jenny Glen,:: Christine Maimone, Staclf Soow. 150 HOURS: Lisa Boling. 250 HOURS: Debbie Stewart. 300 HOURS: Stephenie Marxer, Aaron Dowdy. SOO"'HOURS: Lisa Dahill. BUSY BEE: Day Bis hop (31 hours). WHILE SUPPLY LAST$ FASHION ISlAND -== . ~ I I I I ' I i l I . I I I I I I - By aOB TROlllAS HOLLYWOOD <AP) -For the past two eeks, the lobby of the Westwood Marquis Hotel aa sounded like the United Nations. Except that n1tead 61 intetoeUonal reJatJom, tbe multUingual alk WU aU deafs, deals, deala. The hotel w11 .beadquartere for \he ru-st an· ual American film Marke~ a unique venture in ;trganized Wbe~ling·deallng. TM statJsUcs : · : -1,000 film buyers representine almost 600 · istributors and theater owners fl-om mor: than 80 · ountries. · -34filmsellers, rangtngfrom Avco Embassy to erendipity Productions, with more than 150 movies lo market. _ • l THE AMERICAN FILM Market is suet a sim· ~le concept that you wonder why it hadn't been at· empted before. For years, film buyers and sellers ave been making t.be annual trek to the Cannes Film Festival and the MIFED convention in Milan. The trips were costly, the dealings were pften chaotic. • Why not bring the marketplace to the scene of lhe action Hollywood? That thought occurred to ~ober:t Meyers and Buddy Goldberg, veteran film· promoters. Both had participated in t.orimar Productions' junkets at the La Costa resort, wh~re International buyers were invited for a few days or fun and viewing of Lorimar movies. '· I dropped in at the Westwood Marquis during the height of the American Film Market action people asking each other in several languages: "What did you think of that movie?" People fl ow· 1'> Denver bilrglary focus of movie DENVER <AP1 Frank Hohimer. an ex convict who once mad(• the FBl's .. Ten Most Want ed" list after robbing Denver millionaire Templt• Buell, has been immortalized by Hollywood 1n a new film starring James Caan. T he movie. "Thier." portrays Hohimer as a prof ession al burglar who uses the latest technology to break into houses thought impregna l)le by their wealthy owners. The screenplay is based on Hohimer's own ac count of his criminal career, "The Home In •Jade rs," which was published in 1975 while b~ was still behind bars. The book only sold a few thousand copies when it first came out, but it is to be reissued as a paperback this spring by Playboy ~ress. . Hohimer. 52, apparently has been a free man since 1978. after being releas ed from the Colorado State Penitentiary 1n Canon Cit~ and placed on parole. Colorado prison authont1es were unable to provide information as to his current wherea bouts. In the Denver heist. Hohimer and another masked gunman broke into the Buell residence at 4 a .m . Aug 17. 1968, locked Buell and two family members in a linen closet and fled in Buell's car with an estimated $57,000 in cash. money orders and jewelry ing in and out of the va}ious Westwood Vlllaee theaters, where m ovies unreeled from 9 a.m . to ~ p.m . Hawkers distributing free copies of Dally Variety. A.FTER B EING ACCREDITED -security was tight; private officers checked badges at ever y floor I was admitted ~o·tbe seUing areas. Each of ttie 34 companies had a suite, where eager salesmen showed you a videocassette of their prime 11ttractions. The product reflected a heavy emphasis on horror ("Hell of the Livina Dead," ''Terror Eyes"> and acUon <"Road Games," •·sauae Hunt"), plus a modicum of sex ("The Alternative Miss World," "Priv a t e Lessons") and "chopsocky" (''Kill and Kill Again," "An Eye for an Eye"). Also Hollywood names in roreign made films· William Holden, Ricky Schroeder, "The Earth· ling"; Rod Steiger, Louise Fletcher. "The Lucky Star ... :-Glenn Ferd, Chuck Connors, "Virus"; An· thon~ Qainn, "Bon Appetit." THE MAJOR AMERICAN film companies were not ofricial partici~ants in the market, since all have their own foreign distribution. But they report-edly sent scouts to hunt for possible "pickups" to release here or a broad. Buddy Goldberg, veteran s tager of film junkets, is executiv«: director of the American Film Market. He cited the major reasons for the event~ "l. The great rise of independent film m ak· ing. 2. The fact that Hollywood is the home of the film industry so why go elsewhere to sell the product? 3 T he excessive charges at the Cannes Film Festival." Major companies can easil y spend a half million dollars to display their wares at Cannes Sponsors of the IO·day American f il m Marke.t were charged S25.000. s maller distributors $12 .500 The film buv<.'rS r egistered-for $150 and paid their own transp<)rtation 'a nd li ving expenses P RESIOE~T OF THE non profit i\rne ri n tl' f''il m ~larkl'llQJ! ,\ssO('llJlmn 1s Robert )I<.') c rs. who 1s also president of Filmways Pictures. He a lso cited the "explos ion of independent film pro· duct1on" which has resulted in films costing as much as $20 million For instance. F1lmways' "Blowout" with John Travolta and Nancy-Allen, directed by Brian de Palma. Will A. F M hurt Cannes? "Some of the Asian buyers here have said they won 't go this year ." said Meyers. "We m ay cause a little wrinkle in the sideshow selling aspects of Cannes. that's a ll." ~ UritedE~tl TOGETHER! in 70MM WtH Af CVERVIHIN(, t NOS ~;; BJlOOKHCRST, mr~~Ti\I~ \'i\L~L£\',,CA_!!~' .. ,i/?2-66~5.. \ ,. KING CRAB COCKTAIL. . . 5.95 \I SH&IMP COCKTAIL 5.95 '1\-'--·--~~---L ~ FRIED ZlJCCHJNI . . . . . . . . 2.54> ·..z.rimKT ~~ ' SAlJTEED ~lJSHROOMS .... J.oct ~ CU P ....... . .. . .. . .90 BOWL ...................... I.SO' ' ~ TOSSDGREEN SALAD . . 3.00 c-. ...... FRESH SPINACH SALAD .... 4.00 .. ~ ...... c,.,.,. c.,.,. ._...., __ ' ~~. ~~ ..... ~s;.,. tk ,. "'10l.t GIW I .u•a..r.-..o... .... cwi..~ , ... on-. n..0w ~ , C... .... Y .. Mr-~-f-11..l .,_....,....,..., "80-A""' _.,...., ..... Soup or Green Salad. Bread and Spread French •"rles or Rice Pilar or Bakrd Potato TIDBITS OF BEEF . . . .. . . .. . .. . . . 6.95 .~l1u1 of ""1--' WA MNlt•-• aod /WU ,.._., PRIME RIB OF BEEF, aj Jus .......... 7.95 p,.pe,_,,. ,,.. r<od«-' - CHICKEN CORDON BLEU .............. 6.95 Sl•ll'4-H-MdC-T-4 ....... ,,., ,,,..,,,._ _ CHICKEN COq de'VIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.95 r.....,~Oldnlflllll-Md O•-~ HAWAUAN CHICKEN .................. 6.95 TERIYAKI CHICKEN . . . • ............ 6.95 veal cordoo bleu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 6.95 StvlfM dll ,._ ...,C_ 1-4 -~ •-,,,_ ,._, ~·5" ALASKAN CRAB LEGS . . ............. 8.95 _ .. JI a.-....... 1...-• SHRIMP SCAMPI ...................... 7.95 ,.lllHll ,..~a..,,_, r.-. ..,_ SCALLOPS ...............•............ 7.ts ,...._,....,. ...... v- STlJFPED MEDITERRANEAN .., SHRIMP ............ 7 .ts .,.,,,,,_ .-,,........... -· FILET OF ENGLISH SOLE ............ 5.ts '·'7j;+·u,, . NEW YOIK.&TEAK .... , ............. , .. 1.ts top 11rw. .wu ...... : .................. 1 .ts P f;PPEa STEA& . . .. , ................ LtS ........... a.-.,.,,.....fllJ...._ TE&IY AIU STEAK ........ , ...•......... 1 .ts GROUND BEEF STEAK ....•........... 6.ts GBOVND BltBF STEAK ......•......... 5.ts ,,,,.. .. ,...,,.._ ,_. SBllH IUBA.8 , .......... •· .•........... 5.ts . . ,.....,_,..,_,,...a..-,,_ -- }a BA•PLATE ... ···•· ... , ......... 1 .. •••• s.n ~OCfff: Cllltek •&111.., ••ltrna ae.o.& the ~l•I flf &k NtP'- NO DINE OUT OR -- CAlllUAGE TaADE ACCEPTED II Musicians get together Anita Gillette (left> chats with <from left> singers Chuck .Berry, Tony Bennett and jazz great Lionel Hampton during the Songwriters Hall of Fame dinner at New Ntill ·~fr~·) "E~¥flj~;~2~~ (R) •AlllOAJ• '11llC'I IM:>N fMAU IA f TN. I .. P llt , h .. JAOR N.C...OLIOH AHO JllltieA U.HOI THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE 1•1 11&t.J11 •' ......... .. ORDINARY PEOPLE 1•1 Conllnuous Foom 12 30 J ... a CAA.Ill• fUllOA'f wt.LO "THIEF" (R) u• 1• ••.t.41,tu tt • JA•I CAMI• TW..to.a• WI.LO THIEF"' (R) t10J•.••.••1t• r.,.-\.Alf CKAPU._• ... lttt. 0 1111:• r.LOOY THE FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 ,, ... , .. , ...... , .. I OllHl'f' 't<>UI' •AA n IS DC AO 'EYES OF A STRANGER" (RJ -.:>..., .. , ... .. &Al ........ , .... , •• ,. ORDINARY PEOP\.E 1•1 , ..... Mon.ff! •·11 ........... ......,. 1:00 .,,_ ..... 1:45 IMPORTAN T NOTICE! CHILOREN UNDER 12 fRU! n. .... , ...................... .._. FEAR NO EVIL 1•1 ..... ALLIGATOR 1•1 11 No AM CM R41dlo W•lll Ignition '°"C .. \Or'f' 8'1"9 YOW Own AM PvrU _.__..._._ Fr-•'1''1 "COAL MINER'S OAUGKTEll" lt:r.1mm1L·1'r1.e~.._~~s·~1 (PQ) .we 79-9850 "XANADU" (PG) II No AM CM Rilelio With lgnillon Acceuory Bring v,,.., oWn AM Pv '1";' :i·=-..:. ;: I ·Emo':': !f:A-:.co;;. .. <"' 3 ~~~!~ 879-9850 "ITS ALIVE" (PO) I No AM CM RilCliO Wolll Ignition '°"'"''°'Y &ting 't'OI" Own AM Poru ... ~­.. OIO.-Gt•""~ .... .., .... ,, ......... ~ .. , .. °"'"",_ THE FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 -T"fE VISITOR 1•1 -•-•MTY•-.• "EYll Of' A ITllANOUI" (II) -"ltAOINO IUU" t111 ltMllo Wltll lt nlllan Aitc.11_.r ••i-. ,_,°""AM M191-·TVDNY ... ''TH~''"' "LC>n ANO aul.Lnl" (PG) York's Waldorf·Astoria. The group pre- sented its J ohnny Mercer Award to the late E. Y "Yip" Harburg. · Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/wedMeday, Aprll 1, 1111 -IVBING-. -... I L-:.W. A ct .. ctly p .. tlclde _,...... the humell rllOe end • .,.,. Mt _.,, ...,........ • blllloftelt• ~. I TIO TAO DOUGH M•A•t•N Hot Lipe Ollllbflt• '* ~clworOe. eeooo~ WlloM, tlw lllllM fwnlty end '"-'di pul on • lhaw to ,... mon.y lor • o.y Clre~. •• B.8CTNC eotl'Nt't"' (I) celNIWI 0 MCNIWI l:IO I .uuM'ft Wl1COMI Ma<. KOTTWIJ ~ Ctlengee ·~ dull 9dlool Pec>er Into a tenM- 1~1 .cend81 "-'· • ~HIU. Benny pll)'9 • talevtelon planMf 'WM .. • ,_ ~-~Wiiiiam $Mk~. • l'ROPU8"' Pow.A &.I: 11'91\op H.H 8'00-I kl"•· Blehop ot AME I Chufdl. • IT\DOll! "Sc:uba. Too"' !RI I~~ e.rn.y IOC:tla home wtth Iha Slala Oepl(lma111 ....,, Wojo grwtla polltk:81 ~ IO a defactlflg Ru• ...,, muetc:lln. 7:00. C8I MEWi D teeNEWI • HAPPY DAY9 AGAIN Lo1'erivab Nancy ltlcKeon Cleft) and Lisa Whelchel compete for the attention of a young man from a well-to-do family on "Tbe Facts of Life" tonight at 9:30 on NBC , Channel 4. A m8falhorl d-at Arnold'• beco~ Ille ~ttlaground tor JOMle and har 11c:tMtval JUI HIQ- f =-r WLD Tha 4077111 prapar• lor a vl8lt from Gener.r MK· At1hut. • • 8TN!ET8 IW 8AH FIW0900 Two llahermen -too much wt-. thlly c:ome upo,, a pleaiwr• boal tranatamne lmmlgf911ta to allOth« c:ralt. • OV!REA4Y ··~" Gu.ls: Flor-I enc:e Handaraon. Or. Ed Johnaol\. (RI C!) MACNBL I l1HAEA AEPORT ()) TIC TAC OOUQH 9 MERYGNmN Gu•I•. Debby Boone. Dean Conn. 8"6d)' Gnloo. Paul Adlat & Co., l om ~. Nldt Lucu. 7:11> 8 2 OH THE TOWN ~ta: Stelle Ed.arda. ~ Roget-a. Hlgerl Smtttl. '°"""' actor. pr~ du09f and f1111wftahr. l8lla &bout hla datermlnetlon lo rllYNI I.lie .. .,._eel Trvc:ll Orw.'' ... Mtlonal pop cult\A entity. pr~ ~*' lell lhelr aide of "gey"IN. I rNA.Y flllJD IMANANA Gu.ta: The St\1f91111. -~YWOOO ~w I 'Aea nm IM'8IC AU. .. THI J/.Jlt/L y II"• Ardlllt't blrtllday and he'• more eutPfiMd by wflat It aaya on hla bll1h c.rtlllc:a1• \h.,, by hi• aurpriM petty. • MACNEL / LIHAPI AEPOf'T -.. ~---­....... Oft .~'*°"" ; .. ··-~~" Cttl'Ot ~ .NIMeeft, ,,.....,..,,._ .......... ....., .. .................... ... ,.... .. .,......., ................ .. '"' .. ""' ~..., Hl11lllay ~ ..... , _. tw a •u cte u ................ -a-~,,.,--- ••• ''Tiie "" ...... Of eow.p· (117•) Alatw-ct Tilolnle, ...... "8ndor\. a..d on IM NWlt by S. pMrl Crane. A CMI W111 IOldllr OMlonllr ... true .,,....,..,.."'Gin .. ..,..~~. ., .... ~ ~ hOIW wtth klrllet 1M ~ ol a ...... 0'*900.-1111•. • MOVll ··~ "Almpaoe" (1MS) AoOer1 ~.SM MM· lln8ll. After ll'9Y rtltUm IO ~from•l8hri.• big .,,,. llurltw ,,..,,. the detCtl ol IN 1r1iPC* to wtlOfl'I ... loet the Olli Ilia lcNed. ·AM~WtTH THI ..OVAL MU.ET The ,,.,. ol Scott Joplltl .. hlgtllloh'-d In ••Elfte ~ OQ\:18ttonl" j)li IOiiilild by ~~a...ln.My 1871 .. ~ a.rd811'• ~ ()per9 Houle. l:IO. CWQ.9'JN.,,. ;o=.,...ON 900Y lllAGIR'f A feat-PM*! video O<*ega ex~ the aod8I and hlatork:81 11g111nc.nc-.. .... u IM .-tr.t.lc ... menta ot tMttlon and bOdy omeme11tatlon. (R) t:OO. (I) COUNTRY OOMUHOMI Counlry mualc: atara lnCludlng Glwl Cwnpbell. JohM)' Ceiah, Roy CIMll, Cryat81 ~ and Lor"etl• Lynn pey trtbuta to the Gr WM! Ole ()pry. 0 Dff'MNT~ When Arnold'• lavOflta taac,,., qulla to take a,,ot"-r lob, II• quite ec:r.ool. TUBE TOPPERS KHJ e 8:00 -"The Red Sadee of Courqe." Richard Thomas stars in the TV movie baaed on the famed Civil War novel about a aoJdler wbd panic• In bis first taste of battJe. CBS e 9 :00 -Country Comes Home. A tribute to \he Grand Old Opry by country·weatern atan Johnny Cash, Crystal Galle, Roy Clark, Loretta Lynn and Glenn Campbell. I KQCE g ~nd KCt'r 9 9:00 -Ken· nedy Center · Tonight. Composer Aaron Copland's 80th birthday la celebrated in this s~ial concert (see photo ~low ). Copend uiped et Kennady c.Mt'• ~Hall.,, ~ 1MO _,. Oocumelllltly. --and lftOoM ...... OVougfl tha _.....,.conoar1. .,_ 9 THI P:ACTS~ I.ft ....,..~c1a1e~• a P8M at Jo and ttlee 10 181te 8CMlntlQI of '*· ....~ Oulnc;y .. auad tor llbel --atettnQ 11181 • youno wo111•n 'a daalh waa C8l.-d by. doctor'•~ I ac:ntl8ddl9t. 11::. 08" ...,.,,. Iha woman ha hM ,...,, In love with la Lee Vegea'a moat eapen- .iv. c:ell gilt. (R) • THI llX C»ffHOeM I rwa ..,.aai , ... • 1()()1( •t the 1-atfec:11ng M• ~and Iha c:l\angea pending 1,, oor 1yatam I dellllrlg with tnelr 1«1tanc;.. I Ing. ,,...trnant Md ,...._ I 1()-.JO·~ NE1WON( MEWi • MA..ECTtONI OH BOOY ~ A IMl-1**! YIOlo c:oltage p~ Iha IOOllll and 11191onc.i llgrll~ .. ...... M Iha .-thetlc: .... "*'"' of teaHon and bOdy omamentetlon. (A) ·AN~Wt'TH THI ..aY AL IALLD The """* ol 8oo11 Joplin le~ In "alte Syn- ooe>atlooe" ~ by the Aoy8I 881191 !IVJuly 1971 It C-t Oarderl"a Royal~.._. tuaa1e•Cl)O HIWS IT~TNK While on ... ,... on tha plan- et Atgaila. Cept. Klrlt and two c;raw mambara b«Ol'lle lnvo!Y9d In mur. d8r I ..wl.YWID GAME M•A•1•H Hewll..,_ la plc;ked lo be I Iha per80nlll phyalc:lan for I Cor~ Comtna.11d« U,,tll he gl-Illa ~al a pt1yllc8I. ., aAAnl'A Ualng on.ly lnallnct Tony atalk• aomaone he eutpeeta hu committed c:old-blooded murder. • DCI< CAVETT • Gua.t: Oonelc! Jotian90n 11:*>8 (I) NIA 8A8KETIALl Playoff~ D THE IE8T Of' CAMON Gue.ts. Jac:k Lammon, Rodney Oengerlleld. Rob· by 8«lson IAI JOHN DARLING ~,...,.,- tt:GO • MCMI * * ~ "King Of The KllytMtt Rrtl•1·• I tH•) Tyrone '"-· Mic:Mel Alnnle. A MWI olftoar j)l'41\f'Mtt • nattw ~ In lndl8. • 0 LOW lo.AT "Ooo. .. Patient" a-.. fklllhlen; "Otinoe WHfl ..... Carol Lawrence, Jofln ~: "Going My w.., .. .,.,,. Oolonk•. 8ud-H8c*Mt. (~) • Cklmeot<a Mett Ir* to ttop wtiit. Mw ttedat Fltzpet~ from ~ Into MexlOO with ,,,. pot.,,,.., -.-. (Plr121 •• na-wciua 1 TM IMF aate 0111 lo dlltroy • ........ ., ,,,... Thur•d••'• wtllctlhu~ttw~ot l1 D I -I hundteda o4 r-... In .,,, ~ ,~ •• ., ~· 9er11n·, e..t Zone I e ~-..·~f/tOMO -MORl•IG- ··v~~ A 6--lcto. **"'Git Along Unle per•t· ml(I~ I ""-..... (1837) o-c:ally atan. 10 t..J hie ""'VW ~ apart ell• hie ...... Aut.ty, JudMI Allen. ~ llwlde It. t t:GO • • * '"Wyofnll\g Out· t2:I00 TOMOMOW ._.. (1838) JoM W.,ne. Gu.I&: autllor 8'uce Clay-Rily Hutton. ton: Rick Ne19on; Row 11:t0 D * * ~ "Mall Order Rlc:hard Zone. hMCI of.,, Bride" (1884) Buddy anl~ groop; l\of'l\OMJlu-Ebeef'I. Keir Dulle&. 11 apok11man David Rothenberg, Marlett• -AFTERNOON ~ Hartley. (R) ID OHi 1TEP IE'tOHO "Tiii Captaln·a GUMla" A ~ vouno c;oup1e mow "''o .,, Old New England -· houM of llrenge memo- rial 1r1<1 .,, -•••anoer painting. t:OO iJ DOH lAHE Gua.ta· n,. VIiiage Peo- ple ., MOVIE * * * "'Slnc:e You Went A_y.. (1944) Claudetta Colbett. Shirley T ample 12:00 . • * * '.4 ··TM Poetman Alwaya Ainge Twice·· (194e) Lena Turner, John G8ffleld. • ••• "BoOyAnd Soul" (le.7) John Gar· lleld, Ulll Palmer. a:OOQJl ••' .. "J8"9tt"'(1873) Gian" Ford, A,,lhony ~. S=*> fll * * * "'The Trojan w_. .. (t8121 KattMwtne Hepburn. Ganevlava &j<*S • by Armstrong & Batiuk • THI JUULOUI ~:FROM OMIAHOY TO MUT1 ""Aacordlng Seulon"" Ari lnllOe IOOlt la 1aken at tlow a r-dlllQ la put to09ti- wlth Ricc:ardo MutJ c:on· dueling Iha Phll8delphle Orcheetra In Prollol'leY·a Sulla No. 1 and Sutt• No 2 tr om Ille ballet ··Romeo And Jullat." (J)P.M.~ Oanlollahlng hOu-wllll k81ate: Iha c:ac>laln of a pleuora c:NIM-"'- e lll Al..OHA p~ Cw'lla'• ,._ 1.-. In low wltll Sidney. two old paAa are lntatualad with Iha ,...,.~~~~~~~~~~~ CHANNE\. LISTINGS I) KNK T 1C8~1 LU'> Anq<'lt''> D KNBC 1NBC1 Lo' Ange••·-,, 0 KTLA ilmJ I Lo~ A"4<''"' D l<ABC TV 1 ABCI Lo' Anqt:'ll''> Cl "FMB 1CBS1 S.1n 01eoo Ci) Ii.HJ T\/ tlnO I LOl> Anqell:'S @' KCST 1ABC1 San O•cqo m Knv 1tna, LOl> AnQf'lt'' Cl) KCOP fV 1 t•lll I L •h AnqPit>'> fll) KCE T 1 V 1 P6 $) L 0'> An ~"le•!> '1i) KOCE TV 1PBS> Hunl n1.11on Beach Music, !ti aestro I Aaron Copland, known as the "dean of American music," conducts a rehearsal of the National Symphony Orchestra at Was hington's Ke nn edy Center for "A Copland Celebration," airing tonight at 9 on both KOCE, Channel 50, and KCET. Channel ' 28. The concert marks the composer's 80th birthday. U\CAIE AUIFOL LIS Bl Now / edwards LIDO CINEMA ...WPOllT k VO. AT VIA U00 PLAYING MEWPOllT HACH '7l -IJ50 m ... ,. nr• UA Mo¥1n •t11Koln Onvt•IP Saddltbat~ {714)S40-7t44 (114)990·40ZZ (714) 821 ·4070 <714) S8Md0 ..._ aaa --wm.na ldwardt Tw111 WoMl>nw I CiciHemc Ci~ Wal 1114t&U OJ81 (7") 51t•06'~ (7"l6~·2S$3 (714) 8'1 ·3935 ,..,~....,....IMJ~n-4111~ .......................... ( PHot J C.nilid -:menl•rlH , Loglb~ 11i•1v ... ••C'-'"'' '" ti\• ~ J· Flllf~ • 8:00 • (I) EN08 Enoe and Turtt tall• on a Q8l'O ol ~· wtlO have moY9d lhelf CC*'• tloo to Loa Angtl!M. D NM.P£OPLE FM1urect: a w•l•·akMng aqulff .. : lemala llf9guerda: • hOrW that dflYw : • -widow and • ~ -NCriflcea har lluabMd tor her~. • ~GNmN GUMtl: Debby Boorla. Dean Conn. Buddy 0-:0, Paul Fldlar a Co.. Tom sn.rp, Nb Luc:aoa, Jedele ~· •• ICINill!DV C8fT8'TOMGHT "A Copland Caliabratlon" An eoth birthday tribute to A"*1c8n c:omci-AMoo l'M OOING OUT F~ 50ME PIZZA, eRENDA! WHAi ~NO WOL)U:) YOU LIKE~ Networks gear up for neWseason By JERRY BUCK -Heavy action in the form of motorcyclists, LOS ANGELES (AP> Faced with filling at firemen, stock·car drivers and spies. The spies least 15 hours next fall, the networv are looting range in character from a la.id· back. surler who's toward all'assortment of heavy action, bigb adven· an undercover agent <ABC's "Bulba"> to a charm· ture, gimmick comedy and teen appeal. ing and dangerous mercenary. The latter is NBC's ABC, CBS and NBC are considering about 85 "The Seal." played by former TV "Tarzan" and pilots. a majority of them comedies. for the fall current Miss America Pageant host Ron Ely, Lee season. NBC has the most pilots -and the most Majors plays a "Hooper"·type stuntman who weak spots that need to be strengthened. _..moonlights as a bounty hunter in ABC's proposed ' "The Fall Guys.·• THERE'S NO CLEAR picture on what course -High adventure in such proposed shows as ~tworks will take when the tall schedules are CBS' "Key Tortuga" (an ex-smuuler and soldier announced in a month or so. Equally uncertain is of fortune runs a charter service 'in the Florida whether they will make the projected Sept. 14 Keys l and NBC's "The Archer" Ca fantasy-drama ~tarting date for the fall season. Strikes by writers of swords and sorcery l. and directors could disrupt the season in the man- ner of last summer 's walkout by actors. ''Trends in pilot development are not necessarily indicative of the programs we'll see in the fall ." said Phil Burrell. a vice president of the New York advertising agency of Dancer· Fitzgerald Sample, and author or its annual sur- vey, "Network Television Program Develop· ment." "The networks ultimately may select only a few of the many comedy pilots they're looking at in favor of md(e drama -or vice·versa," Burrell wrote. .. But the pilot categories do reflect the networks' current prioritfes.'' . BURRELL NOTED'TRAT not one of the com· edy pilots is in the risque mold of ABC's "Three's Company." "Ratings for comedies revolving around cleavage and coy naughtiness have been steadily slipping," he said. I. Among the possible trends spotlighted in the Dancer Fitzgerald survey were: The family that stays together, plays together ... among other things. FRENCK- PUA 1 ' WITH I U8-TlTLU ·HO~ E co ... ··wv 1 NOW -... Y,NG tm • ColOl\ol d•I ... ., • 8'l l:MO r-1 -GIMMICK COMED Y IN such pilots as ABC's ··Mr. and Mrs. Dracula'' <the Transylva- nian ships his coffin to the South Bronx ). ABC's "Nuts and Bolts" <a generation gap story -with robots as stars). CBS' "Mr. Merlin" <famous sorcerer from King Arthur's court runs a garage in San Francisco>. and CBS' "Quick and Quiet" (a ghostly detective guides his son from beyond the .. pale>. -Teen interest shows including two comedies and a drama from ABC "Homeroom," "In Trouble" and "High School Confidential." Burrell also noted that the country-western influence con· tinues lo grow. Among the offerings are an ABC variety show, "Nashville Palace." and two dramas, "One Night Band" for CBS and "The Hoyt Axton Show" for NBC. One show that was bound to come along is the first parody of "Dallas." CBS' "Filthy Rich" is a sendup of the No. l show, built around video messages to his greedy family taped by a Ten· nessee land baron tSltm Pickinsl before his death. A handful of pilots are strictly off the wall. The ABC comedy "Bulba," with a "Mouse That Roared" quality. 1s about a tiny island paradise courted by the big powers. Our undercover man there is masqueradin' as a surler. CBS' "Fog" tells of a crazy captain and the weary'crew and passengers aboard his tramp steamer. "'Pen ·n· Inc ... is a CBS comedy about a small town newspape r cartoonist whose drawings come to life in "Walter Mitty" style. A similar concept won critical raves but no ratings for the NBC com- edy "My World flnd Welcome To It" a few year~ back. ; Another offbeat comedy for NBC is "Sidney Shorr," in which Tony Randall plays a middle·· aged homosexual who takes in a wacky young ac· tress and her 7-year-old illegitimate daughter. NOWPUYING ..U. MUf'UlA Bru 529·5339 ~I f.DWAllOl'l9fWHl'T rfewport Buch 644·0760 CfllDOlll Orange 634·i553 EDWDll ' f ll.JO TWll M1ssi0n Vteto 830·6990 UA1W11C .... AI Westminster 893· 1305 ".AGl,llCS FOUITAll fAlUY Ollltl ·lll foun1a1n Valley 962 2481 HO lA MIRADA °"IU·lll La Mtrada 523·9310 IO PUlll ICCIPTll FOi Tiii UIAllMllT MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUMG·PEOPLE AU.DID "'° IS'"''*'"'~"'' ™-llAL OI nit MO'OOfl f'ICTUM CQOI Qll .. U 1110"'-ATIOH UH the Dally Pilot "Fut Retlllt" atrvlce d.lrectOt"J. Your ,wvlce l1 our apecialty. Call '42·1811 ••'· m "THIEF" <R> l"AU. NIGHT LONG" "XANADU" 1111 I "FINAL CONFLICT" (R) I "THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE" (A) I a I a ·a I L' I "THE JAZZ SINGER" (PG) ···~ I HNNICINCI WOMAN" I "DEVIL a MAX DeYUH .. '. • . estgate trustees accept Lyon's 34.8 million hid for 'AirCal By KEITH TUBER Oally ... i.t811"-*••w It's starting to sound like a soap opera. Call it 'As the Airline Flies .. .'' ~ Just last week, the Civ~l Aero~autics Boa~d ~ave final approval to -Air Florida System s tilttempt Lo gain control or Air California, nee tAirCal after a corporate facetirt, as pari or its $45 ~illion bid for the bankrupt Westgate-California forp. . · Now word com es from the trustees of ,Westgate, whose major asset is AirCal. that they thave ag'reed to sell the regional carrier for 1$34,850,000 to Air Cal In vestments Inc., a company ~orincipally owned by Orange County developer William Lyon and George Agyros. Target date for losing the deal is April 30, although that date ,~ou1d be extended. ~' LVON AND A IR FLOftl DA have been ~nvoived in a kind of high-stake poker game for the rairline since last year . eac,h raising the kitty, each ~tilizing a separate strategy ~. Air Florida's been shooting ror a flush, bidding ~1or the whole ball or wax -the right to control • ., 'I ThLc; •~ noc :in oHl·r tu .., .. ,.11 nl1r :i -..1l11.:1t:10on of an off~-r rn huy rhl~ x'l'\Hltll..., Tht> ofti:nn~ L' made only hy thl· OfflTlnl-! l1rd1lar 150,000 to 2 I 0,000 Sha rci. Heritage Bank Common Stock PRICE: $I 0.00 per ,hart.' For an(. )ffrnng ( '1ru1l:ir :m .. I a ....,uNnpnon • Agn.'\.1nl'nt. rk•\.'•1..' ~nnt:11.1 thl· Bank 1'v m.-ul 11r Mr~. Hek·n W1l•.on, A-..."L"t.1nt C.1rror:'lrl· S..,Tt"tal'). 1--ytdl'['hmw ANAHElM MArN OFFICE 721 Nonh Fud1J Srrt.,•t Anaheim, C1liturn1.1 9z.~~1 (714) ql}J. 3861."' HAROLD. KENT GARY RANDY MILLIONS TO LOAN NEW RA11S! $10,000 to $1,000,000 2NO • 3RO TRUST DEED LOANS Prompt Funding 90 Days to 15 Years • SWING LOANS • 2Nl>3RD T.D. 'LOANS • Resldentlol Speclolisls- • Apartments • Commercial • Wt IUY DISCOUNTED T.D.'s • We help structure notes for maximum soleobllltv • it>~rtorl ~a(/r~." /i111t!t~19 ·Iii<". ldNSfO MOllTQAGE l OAN llllOl<fR CALL 714/955·1055 4000 MocAllMJR 9CXA.EVAllO KOU FlNAHCIAl IQWerS • ~Tl 410 NlWf'Olll llACH CAllfOllNIA '1'2660 Daily Pilat · Westgate when it emerges Crom reorganization in a San Diego federal bankruptcy court, according to a spokesman for Air Florida. Lyon bas set his sights a little less lofty, seeking to acquire only the profitable subsidiary and not the parent company, which also controls some tuna operations. THE ·ULTIMATE WINNER will depend on who's ofCering the bigges t jackpot. Right now it looks like Lyon. - Trustees project the proceeds from this new proposed sale, when added to other cash exs>pcted to be available in Westgate <after' the disposition of its tuna holdings) would provide Westgate with a total between $S5 million and $58 million. These funds. if Westgate were liquidated, could be distributed to holders of the company's new preferred and common stock, to be issued upon consummation of Westgate's reorganization plan. Distribution of these funds would represent $25 a share for the new preferred stock and between $19 and $21 a s hare of the dew common to be issued. • Construction loans $500,000 minimum y; l"Tth l',, ).~~o /UN°.1/ y; ri.$A/lMhl'n Koll Centre Newport, West Tower Suite 6800 4000 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach CONSTRUCTION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • Residential • Commercial Buildin~: Takeout Commitment required along with leases. • land loans up to one year 50% appraisal. CONTACT: •Tom Wilcher- Anaheim Offic.e (714) 991-3860 •Jeff Johnspn- lrvine Office (714) 833-3700 THE BUSINESS BANKERS Herit~e B a nk Membe• FDIC @r mm ~--:--~nlClltNG~5ill'l~!m-~~-, In Bualneaa To Make Bualne11 Happen At Creative we have the money you need. Loans from $25.000.00• for any business or investment purpose. Where you deal directly wtth the Lender and not a tO.n broker. •AU toana 1ecuted by a combination of real and peraonar property. ' A'.veo profits d~ci-ease , First quarter eamiMB drop $16.3 million Avco Flnanclal Service. Inc. of Newport Bead> bu ~port.d 1981 lint-quarter eamina• of $13.3 m1Won, • suu mlUloo drop from the n .e mllllon reJorted In the 1980 ftnt quarter. Group Vice Pl'esldent and Treasurer Roi'\ Bukow taid part of the dlfference was due to foreign excbanae losses. Thoac loaaea of U .9 mJllion poeted In the 1981 nnt quarter compared with a foAlgn exchange 1atn of $4.3 million ln the first quarter of 1980. " Net earnJn11 from the Paul Revt'\"e Llfe Insurance Group, wblch wrllea Individual group life, accident and health anauuy insurance busibea , were ts.7 mUUon, down from $8.2 million a year earlier. Other factors In the decline, Bukow said, included the increase ln the cost of money and higher credit losses in the Financial Services Group. PBEMJVM VOLUME FOR the PauJ Revere Life lnsurance Group advanced to sea.• million In the tint. quarter of 1981 compared with u2,1 mUUon'in 1980, and investment income rose to $20.4 millionfrom$17.4mlllion. TOTAL RECEIVABLES out.standing were $3.1 billion at Feb. 28, 1981, up from '3 billion in the previous year. Receivable volume during tbe first quarter of 1981 reached $371 million, compared with SG>.8 million in the lirst quarter of 1980 . "The company's s hort term cost for commercial paper in the first part of lhe year was at 17.5 percent," said Bukow. "Tbat really burt'us, espedally when the prime climbed to N!Cord highs. .. "Since the prime hats come back down, we should do better. The company's two iQsurance 1roupa aho reported lower earnings. The Avco Financial Insurance Group, a major writer oC specialty insurance products 1n the. area!I,. of credit life, disability and casualty insurance coverages, reported first-quarter net earnings of $8.4 million, down Crom $11 .2 million in the first 1980 quarter. 'IWE ALSO HAD A HIGH loss ratio in the first 1981 quarter compared with the one last year," Bukow continued. ··Part or that was due to tbe change in the bankruptcy laws." Premium volume for the Avco Financial Insurance Group increased to $52.3 million from $49.6 million in the previous year's first quarter and investment income increased from $7 million to $7 4 mlWon. BuJtow said the company's loss ratio for the quarter just past was 2.74 percent, compared with 1.83 percent the year before. Roughly speaking, the difference represents about $3.S million. The network of AFS branch offices, which operates in five countries Australia, Canada, J apan, the United Kingdom and the United Statt'!\ - totals 1.651. Allergan files suit against Alcon Allergan Pharmaceuticals of Irvine has Cited a civil complaint in the U.S. Federal District Court in Fort Worth, Texas, against one of its major • competitors, Alcon Laboratories Inc. ' In its complaint Allergan, a corporation specializing in eye and skin care produ1°:ts, accuses Alcon. a unit of Nestle S.A., of patent infringement The company is seeking an injunction enjoining Alcon from further infrjngement and unfair competition and for an unspecified reward for damages. and unfair competition. The board of directors •f SmithKline met at its Irvi ne subsidiary last week, but a SPokesman for Allergan said the meeting had nothing to do with the complaint and the timing was coincidental. Allergan, which became a subsidiary of the eastern-based SmithKline Corp. in December 1979, alleges that Alcon has begun the production and distribution of an enzymatic cleaner for soft contact lenses in violation of Allergan's patent U.S. eyes_ Europe rights. NEW YORK (AP> Western Europe con- Allergan has manufactured and distributed Softens enzymatic contact lens cleaner in the United States since 1975. tinues to be the focus of American manufacturing investments, with the United Klngdom, Ireland and Japan attracting 'the most U.S. business last year. a new report on foreign investment says. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW YORK CAP) Clrllco • '''• HelmRM: ,..,. >'lllHwslPS 1~. I< S.n•or \ NASDAQ QUCIC•llolll CIUSoG• 1'211. ..!~, l ~·on1o'o"mF • ll"• 2).\' No><•ll lO'n JO .. 'Svc Mor lllOWlllO PllQIW$1 blcll IUUIA ,.. n 71;. 2> Nucorp 1Jli 23~1 Svcm\I end I-Ml Glleo b' Cil1Ul8 ,.,,., ~'" Hoo,.er U'ta 14'• OgllvyM lt 21~ St.Mod m•r-et -" H 04 Cler-Jl lO lo-1<. Horl1R1 6 '' ,Oh1<>Ca1 40'-401u Slnom l \ 141,, :}41 1 17li. 12•1 ll~ "' • llli. )2 1]•,, 1J ... 101, IOI. NASDAQ SUMMARY Tue" Prices do nol ClowCp 81/4 ·~ HV•ll Int 131h 15' Oh Ferro 1314 "'• SC•IWtr lncl..O. ~llNrllUCI ColrTle 17'1\ 11v. IMS lnl 1'1/• 19\ Ollerl P 11~'• 18 SwE15v m•r-do"'" °'comm· ColG•l>OI "" h lnlrelnd 5'1> 6 PCA lnl 14 14''9 SwnEnr IS ISi. NEW YORK CAP> The followmg llsl 11'1• 381 > ows ft. Over trw Counter lulon la< T_., CC>f'QCIH J.iV> 34.., lnlel > .34,V. ~',,I PacbsGat!! 18'• 1' Stendyn Stock Bid AO Cm°rSllr ·~ ... ' lnlrcEnr • p " 27\', 13'1• SldMlcrO AEL Ind l4'1't 15.,.. c m·,.r.1 16'11. II lntmlGs llV. 11~ IPeul•yP 11•1, 18\'• SldRe9s ""'· 3 .. •1• IOCk\ •nd WMrMh lt'Yt hievt QOn• UC) 10~ 10'1 lhe mo\I ""° -n lhe mHt bu.a on JJ\4 l•'' runt ol clle119t revero1u1 ot ~04ume AFAProl I •Yi ConPep \ 3-t't. n lnB-Wsh 1l 13•1 Peyl>C\ 171 .. II'• Sl•nHP AVM Cp 4"'1 '"' Cordh ni,, 21 lweSoUI 101;. 10~ PurMI 13 14 SterlSI Accurey )I ""' Cro•Tre • :12'11. JJ Jem>bY 21)~. 10•1 P•n•Enl 13"-131,. Slr•wCI XI J• or Tu...cley 4 ... No suurilfH lriOCll"ll Delow P err •ntl· 1• 75 ;Gtd N•I -perun•-Cll•"9t• ere lhe 11 ~. 11 1tt1rentt be\weefl ttie pr.-"l10U\ d Mm9 1~"' 1~~ D1dpnt••nd f-•v SIUIO•dPrlct. AddhnW lfV. """ C\lllrFd • 2'"4 2"-Jtrl~o • 2l'ta 2J• Pentair ll"• ll'" S..beru AOVRou 4~ S"' Cycllron ~ 11i,, JlllyFd S.16 \ PelrOl1l 82' t 83 SuPtrEI Allll'11 34\lo ~ D•nlyM 'S'l7 3' Jo>lynM l3 llv f Pelrll w• " ""' TIME DC Aleln<p U'll. 14V. ou.o .. • 11'1> ,,.,, kel•SI pt WI• 11•, P•lt•bon 11 11 ' l •mp., AluAlt• U:W. 3' D•YIMel 16\f) 111't l(elvar 2'• 1 SI • Ph1l•Nel J3 :131. J_.n<IU'\. S Alltolnc 1' «I OB Hr t J-16 t S 16 K•m•n l1 n • P1erc•SS ''" ,.._ 1'r rlcoPd Allyne , .. I"" 0.l<IDA' 0 .,, 4111.l l(mpAm 15 15• 1P•n•rtn so SO>o Ty•onFd AllH 1 , .... 0.ICen 11 11"' t<ey~m • S P>onH1B J61t> l6~ UnMcG1I Amero s ""' ~ O.weyEI l 3\o. t<ellyS• • '°'" 41 PIUllM "" ""' US Enr AFln • 11'1/o ,. .... 01.Crys 21 21 K•ufl•I • 1•~ .. u POU•S • ..,, us Sur • AFurn S\lo Slit Ol•nCru 21 JO I ICim0.11 1111. 11> PrHGM Q"-03,, US Trek AGrHI 12~ lJ Oo<utel """ 21 1Clft91nl l' 1 l PnSteyn 40' > -UVe B>n AllllGp '°"" ~ OoUrGn 171,. 111'11 ICloolG ll .. J2 Pr09rp 1''11 1 .. UpPeoP 4Mkr01 t"-lff\ Ooyl08 • 161'1 17 icnao-v 16 16 1 Pt>S•NC 11'1< 11\'t V••IR AN•lln> 141'> "'-OV<lklnD ~ 10'ta Krelo• 11•,, 11 PurtBen 2• 1411> ValBO.Ar 40ve•• • 21'-21 Ourlr"" IS'° 16 Kulick• 1 2• 1•' PulOC•P 1s•~ 1~ Venous ARnM11 27"" 2J E1Dr>el V 11'• Lenceln 1''1> 2•"'10u•••Ctl 16'• II'• Vrcoln \ AWeldft9 11 11V. EelnVn<e '"' 10 LenoAtt 6'"' 6~. R•~nPr 10"> I~ V•ICro 0 Anadlle 100.. 1~ EconleD '"'JI"' L•neCo lot•. 34• Reychm H 1t. V1Clr•SI AnvSA u IS~ EIP .. EI ....... Lllnvs 2,~~ 1131··1 ~!!~c"m" • 2!;.• ~~· vv.·dltNoCBcp AnoAGd " 'll'n E1det8e •'4 ~ LlclSIOr ..-. "H• --Ill 4n£aCp 17\to 17~ El•Nucl IS''o ...... l•n8ol ' J.i 3'·~ R•PNlle U'• ll'· jW•hEn• A~dMll 2.J\<. JlV. :1MOC1ul 1'\lo 11 Lottelrn 1• I~ RC>..iE• 46' > 4"~ WtlGlrn "'*nGp • •'"O :,.,o.. ,,.,, 11 MCIC IJ" ll\< RoDCIMy 46'·• 49 IW•llGe • AMICol• l1 J1"' :OnrMelhd ~ 5'1> MGF 0 • •s·~ IS-. Rowlon l J \<o Wendy • AllG•lt IS~> IS.I\ E11R1v 1~ U MacUGE 1~ 14 Rou\t •-19>n WilOrtl All•nR1 I~ 17•,. Entwl\11 I'• I Ma~IPI 11~ 12 Ru\.Stov IS"1 U\11 WD"P BelrdC~ 111'> 12'WI EaulSL 12'w 1J1111 M•r:mP sn. Sl'1. Sadlier ~ J~ WMold BellyP IOIJ. 10 .. £qt011 • 11'h """ M• rRI J~ .~!" s.S1H'e..<10Gd ~ •• ~ ~·· Wwtmn~tg B•nQHE 10'') IC>loi ~sc ,..... l"-Ma lkrl _,, --< • ~· -c llHICRI 0 .... ""~.brlTk 31,.. J.\\ M•rlon • 11'1\ 11 I SIPeul ~ 40!• WoodLOI BeutFr 11 11'1• l'ermGp ll'ta ll" MeullP lS l6\, SunO l'I> 2\11 WrlghlW Beyl1M-11" 11"° Fldlc0< 1•v. 1••• M•yPI • l6V. l6,,., S<"ooH SO"> s. ZlonUla )J ... 33'- IS'> 16 29 JI u"' IS' ... l II', 19 2 ll'I. .... J 11'' 1t • 14 U\, S m:m: ~ •• n1. • ~ »•n ' ,, ... .,~. 10 JOI .. 30;,'J 11 ''• 10 11 ''• ''• 1) IS I~ 1' "'• 11 u "'• u~. i• ... ,.. .... 11 '° 11.,, II II\, 17 .. 19 , •• , 15"'< 20 .,.,, .. 21 ,,.,, 1. 12 l'• .... u 2s• .. u•, , .. u·~ 2• u s•.c. sv. 2• JS u• .. u BMllM 7.. I :181tSy1 •2"' 43 MaynOol II .. lllr, ' 8entPll l"-2 ll-1 "tBOlln 27 211'1 McCorm 20 20!" 1 UPS ANO DOWNS Bentlyl 3' 3414 FtEmpS U'I> 1S%o McF•rl 191-o 20'-' BtUleb 411'> -FIWllFln S .. S"° MCOuey 1514 1 5°~ BtYMgt 15* U"" Fl~8k1 20\\ ~ MeyerF JI~ ll I 81bbCo I~ """ Fllclcgr 1~ ""' MiduW "'" 11•; I 1 BlrdSon 16 16VI FloetPnt JI .... Jl.\I, MdldC.ep 12~ 1J•41 ! Blrtchr •"" 61'o FleNFle 2011. 20'/t Midi Rei 1~ I II 161 NEW YORI( (AP) -Molt il<llW ov~ s 81yYOOr 14~ U IAI Flurocb I l:lv. IJ\I, ~ ~ Bonana ! S-16 S\\ FO<UIO l>" ll"' Mld18k\ 331;., ~ llle -coun1..-JIOOI .....,,led by NASO • BrwTom , "'"' 4111> Forrnlgli )\lo •V. Miiiie• 17..., 29 • N•m• Voturn. ·&Id A•-ed c119. 1 Buckbee 10 10\i. Fr•nkCp IO ll'h Miu IG lS%o l•V. Henry En J91,IOO I 11·16 ll't .. .. I e .. tteli •2~ 43''-Frank El 1• 1•'1:• MOit• ' 40"" 40'Jt NIRlly . . :161,700 lf\ J..... + V. ' BurnuoS 14.,.. 14'.4 Fr .. SG .. 41.,, MonlCol s ... S"-hlelMu S IOO J t-1• 7 21-l1 -1 ~ 10 CHL l'ln JV. l Fremnt • 1~ ,, Mon .. c p 11" 11~ Air Fl• . . -.soo 111111 12+1 -, v. 11 CPT Cp 45"" 46 l'ullrHB l911\ 19y, -rePd JO'I> JO>I. US MnE• 117,.00 1116 l'h .... 12 C.IWISY · JIV> 33 Ge luyO IJ'"O 131,. Mo•llRH • •4" PremEnr Zl0,400 2'h 1 •·16 + 1-1• u C.enre<IH l"' l-GnAutrn 17 ... 17'h Mor"'ln 11\0 11'\ t.ocr.Exp 12•.100 J 1·16 1'• • l,"O "' C.epE11g l'h l'-Gn0.YCI ·~ S MOIClub )'II. 4' hurOll 2\1,lOO l''l 1 ,_.. IS C•pSwC lS 1' GnRIEsl U U \4 Mueller t9 JO"> MnrR• .. 20i,SOO 16'• 1~ +II.. 1• CplnAlr 21'> Jw ~vEFn 1v, a NerroCP , 'llV. lO CheynR>< 200,400 >'• 1 11 C.••m ....... 11 oreenM 11Yt .. ,., ND•• • 1..,.. "~ 11 Co C I'!. I\\ GreyAdv ...... 6l NJNGes 11'~ ti'" ~~~= m ~ CnVt I•~ U V. Glllnllt 1 """ ••V> Nl<lo,OG I ts"' ~, Unche"ll9d 1 716 1I ChrmSI\ 1•-U\'t Gyrodyn • 61'1 Nicolet '""' "'" Tole! is....s 1'"1 n CllertHo ~.,.. l2"' HemlPI 2,~'a, ~~ N"!•.!~ ~ :~~New nip . '115 n ~~"!b~: 11 m:1 ~arpr:-o!• I~ 10°"' N;,c-•G 1~'j4 NtW IO'#\. .. • • 11 JO ClllNwTr SIYt ff MerllGp , ,. ~ Noe!~o', 2,"" u I Tot•• ••I.. . M,094,tOOl H ClluDb ~ ....... HertlNI 23,_ , .... NWtNG• 1114 .. .,, - . I N•-4~1 onum v1 ... 1E1 C111naTr 8"'°"' Oyelrn ~l:l~"" Cumolb 11 NwPI\ Cvwl "I Crn&ICm Delllfnd lnlTe<R EMMethCI F•lllell FremtEn 01"1nF Gr•Scen Hel.,Try Chl1Pn4 s S08nc.p Bronco NoAlllnd C COR e .. PCm O.nloM Oh Ferro s .. nw1 Name Pllrrncet> JMEI l T.urR s =~~: ~ Sltioney SIYMlnH o EnC.0 CeMor Geoctyne IYle"" CXn~SE.Q Welkr'S AdVHI GnMa9 KeMI WI CdBer• 11 Geoclyn "" Br•• 0 t<elller VerwTc V-En NewpEI Tutone F•bWhl Ul'S le1t Cl>Q '~ .. , Jllll • ... ' . ... ]Yl ,. "' ll..t • I -, to•., .. Hii 3'• .. "" 6 ... ' 1700 • 125 J'• .. ~ l '.. .. 1" 11-. • '. s.. .. , ...... ,, ) .. ,.., ... J • .., .. ~ . .,, .v. "' 1S-W .. ,,., 2'9 • ., .. 1 • l·•• s.... ... • , ........ .. .. ,.. 2~ .. 11. 2'11. • '4 ,, .... ''"' 2lleo • v. DOWN$ le~'.i. _c~ ... 13 -, l~ 'h 2 "" 11'> -S-16 21.4 -'"' )'~ "' l I 16 l-16 ,.,, ~ siw. -•n l -IW 3 v. 6 -y, ,,,. ~ ll -l ,,,, -... l'J· '"-, -..., .,, -2 -' -... -~ -'• 'h l"cl. Up 21 Ao Up :It.I Up n.1 Up 111 Up 20..7 Up 10.• UD 19.2 Up 17.1 Up IS.J Up IS.O Up 13,• UD ll.) Up 112 Up 13.0 Up 11 S Up IU Up 11 2 Up I I.I Up 10.S Up 10.S Up 10.3 Up 10,l Up 10.2 Up 10.0 Up 100 Up 10.0 Up 100 ~t. Oft 19.1 011 1U Ofl 12.9 Oft 11.1 011 11.1 Ofl 10.0 011 u Ofl u 011 I.I Ofl 1.0 011 1./ Off lJ Ofl 1.1 011 1..S Otl 7.l Oft l.l Oii 7.1 Oft •. , Ofl .. s Ofl 6.S 011 6.S Oii ... Ott u Off 6.J Ofl 6.0 I f I J l . ,... ' • • HERE IS A LIST of basic questions relating both to your job and to the corporation for which you work · that, when honestly answered, will reveaJ the t raps (if any I around you. -To whom do you report? Are .they well re·· garded in your company and slated to rnove up? How much time do they spend with you in developing your skills? -H~ long have .you be~n in your pr~sent posi· tion? Are you still really learning? Or have your responsibilities expanded so that you're making a, significant contribution to the profitability of your company? ·-HAVE YOU BEEN passed over for promotion at least ·once or even more times lha~ you ca'! iden· tify? How long have you been in lhts. same job in comparison with other persons in similar jobs? How does your age coffi}>are with the ages of other people with the same job title in your company and in other companies? What is your pay level? How ·does your ·pay level compare with others in your profession and ·in relation to others within your company in your age and experience range? · Are you listened to? Do your superiors or workers in yt>ur category seek you out tQ ask· your opinion? Ever? -ARE YOU BEING MOVED around into other functional areas? In simple words. is your job nar· row and specifically defined, perhaps too much so? Or do you have real leeway for creativity in both your own area and in other ar,eas, a·nexibility which allows you to demonstrate your individual approach to achieving your own goals and advancing the objec· tives of your company as a whole? Are you challenged by problems presented to you and by these challenges are your abilities being used? Are the goa(s measurable? Are you stretched to capacity? . -How do you feel about yourself in relation to your job and employer? Do you have self-esteern and self-confidence? How strong are your aspirations, how determined is your drive? In all honesty, do you really want to advanc~? ·. ·: STOCKS· IN THE SPOTLIGHT ~q! viq~<~~, ~!~!!§!i .J - New YORK I AP) -Sales Tues price ~oc~r-'•Y. -· JI. • ~ •nd net chanoe ol'"!IW llflMn """"' •ctlve o.,.., Hl9'1 Low CloM ~ New YOflL Slock Elltl\ange IUUtt, Ind f• tradln~ natloNolly at more·thln $1 -· 1002,701011.~ ,__. 1oo:am+11'.T,. Texeco Inc: 666,100 11v. • 1 ao Trn 0..6' .._,,., u1.,. Q7.62+ I Softy COf"P ldl.100 It~ • V. IS Ul1 101.51 109.G IOI.GO tot.a+· 1 I.TV C«~ YM,acJO 2•~ • 1~ 6S Stll ll9.44 Jt.I ... 317.U JtOA:I+ ~day nn m•: ~V. ~I~ Indus •... . ........•. ..•• J ..... T nd C 477'200 S9-ll 3 Tran . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1,tlO, . rit JrP s 403'.JOI) U~ : 1~ Ulll& .................. ·: •. "'-.."" GtWnFfn JI$;• 17"'-' '41 WHAT STOCKS DfO ·;! PlllllpsPet 176,800 4611) .• Gen Motors "6.800 S2!'t .. -. Exxon )61,300 .. ~ ··~ NEW YOllK (AP) Mar. 11 1 ",I: Norton Sim JM,200 t~ • "' ~n~';,l~ ~::: l:~ : ~ o\dvenc;ed T~JJ Welter Jim 123.100 2f>lll I/• Oecllned '19 UnchanQ8<1 · ,.. Talat l&Slles 1911 1 AMERICAN LEADERS ~:: t~· ,, NEW YORK CAPI -Salts. Tu.s. prlct -net cllang11 of u. ten most active Amerlc•n Slode Exchange 11sutt, lradlno nat\onally at more than $1. Unit.Astle st~ lM,'00 t +I~ +1~ + ~ -',\ . ,~ +3~ -I,\' +1~ -v. + l'I\ warnrCom wt 114,.00 tl't. NalCnv Sir • 137,.00 131/ot P41trlckP1 wt s 129,400 t~ HouOllM 111:6,000 ~ CrystalOll s 116,IOO S4V• 1n1tr11m Sys 109,'00 1 P¥adyne a 103,'00 •v. "-'°" ' 93,lOO 13~ Wano 8 s v.J, 100 3'11/t WHAT AMOOO MEW YORK IAPl -·· 31 Advanced Declined Unchanged Total I.sues New !llOhs Nnt lows • T~ 227 201 .,, S1 7 METALS fund•Y. pdijf m m • • C:-..« 87'9-tl c.ftU a -d. U.S. deStl- tlot1s. • L•..,. ~cents• pound. ll•c '1 \lo..U"' cat1ts a pound;dellveted. Tiii $7 JM IS M9tall w .. lt c-lt• ltr. Ahlml-l~cents• ...,-, M.Y. M•t<IWY $411.00 per 11•111. ,.latl-$.SU.OOtrov ..... M.Y. GOLD QUOTATIONS · l•""": morni"ll = U14.U,,.. "l.2S. · · I.•••••: alltrn-. n•lng un.1s. ~ $12.15. • .. l'arll: after,_ fixing U3'.l1, oft u ... l'rHlrfW1: ll•lng U1'.SJ, off $U.4'. . ''"'''" lat• •ll~t'MOf'I 'll•lnv ssu.oo~ 11tt $11.00. U17.00a1Qd. Ma11ff & 1tarifta11: only d•IJY l!ltMf U13.1S. oft $1l.1S. . • .......,.., ontr dellr qU011t tsius. 4ilt $IVS. ·· ..... _.., ...,,.,, dellr _.. !Wk.Miii ' .U..30, oll t U.26. ~ . . . • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednffday, Aprll 1, 1981· .. .. ... High country taste. Light and mild. Above all in refreshment . . • .. . A sticky problelll , ~Ore peanut butter at grocery soon By JEFF PARKER Of ... Oall'f l"llet IUtff That sticky problem of peanut butter being hard to f~d will be smoothed out in the next few weeks, and we have the Chinese peanut to thank. With import quotas on that elusive legume (peanuts aren't nuts) recently raised, local supermarket managers are predicting that more peanut butter will find its way to the shelves. Shelves that only a month ago contained more apologetic signs than jars of peanut butter have begun to return to their usual well-stocked selves. "Our supplies are starting to pick up now," reports Dean Gallo, assistant grocery manager at Albertson's in Corona del Mar. "But they're still not what they used to be. Through most of the shortage we had at least some peanut butter stocked. Safeway came down and bought us out one week to supply their shelves," he said. Gallo estimated that his peanut butter prices have "damn near doubled" in the last few months, and said that people are 'now buying more peanut butter than usual, stockpiling in ca§e the supply dwindles egain. Bonnie Lewis, a corporate spokesperson for Safeway. said that their buyers are now getting 100 percent of their orders filled, using the Chinese peanuts. "But the supplies are selling twice as fast," she pointed out. "Customers must be overbuying in order to protect themselves against another shortage." Lewis reported that the Chinese peanuts are of ''excellent quality,·· and says that prices are likely to be raised to compensate for the increased cost of importation. Safeway manager Edith LaBerge said that their Irvine market now has nearly a full supplY. of peanut butter. "But it's just about doubled in price. The shortage was worst just about the time Jimmy left the White House. We've found that people don't care what they pay, as long as they get the stuff,'· she said. Balboa Market Basket manager Frank Madden reported that peanut butter is "very eX'pensive, but we have it. Our selection isn't full yet, but we have some brands and sizes in stock!h While retail grocery stores appear to have the peanut butter crunch under control, baseball fans at Anaheim Stadium can expect to get their peanuts too -but not for peanuts. "We don't anticipate any depletion in our sources." said Carmen Torzon, a vice president for Szabo Food Service, which provides concessions at the stadium. "But we do anticipate higher prices, and Artichokes are easy to turn into elegant entrees ... C5 consequently, a decrease in usage. I can't give a figure yet, but peanuts will cost substantially more than last season." peanuts each year in one form or another, according to a recent Wall Street Journal report. The scarcity of peanuts and peanut products was brought on by the severe droughts in the Southeastern and Southwestern farming belts of There are over 200 uses for the peanut, according to George Washington Carver. the United States last summer, reducing the nation's l~ crop to 42 percent of predicted levels. Americans eat about four billion pounds of And peanut butter was a highly popular item long before the shortage, according to Albertson•s·Gallo. "People around here love it. No one's griped about the price. For a while they were desperate, but at least now they can get it,'• he said. Pean,.ut. butter. inspires 90 years of .creatiVity Americans continue to set new records for \be use of peanut butter. In the lut year, it took more than 660 million pounds of shelled peanuts to satisfy the demand -and not just for the traditional sandwich. PEANUT BVTl'ER SURPRISES start with a dough that is made moist with both peanut oil and peanut butter. It is shaped into a two-inch roll, then cut into thin slices. Each cookie takes two •nces. On half of the slices goes a dot of peanut butwr. 'lbose are covered with the remaininl alicfi\I and the edges sealed with a forlt . It is the. peanµt butter in the middle that melts in the mouth and draws "mmms" of aurprhe. The versatility of peanut butter in bakinl isn't limited to desserts. This la demonstrated ln a r~lpe for PEANUT BUTTl:a ONION aa AD. The peanut butter la u convenient to use the buttermilk biscuit mis and the lna· taut tninted onions. The resultlnc savory bread, sen~ warm, ls as delicloul as its aroma alpp when it arrtvea at tbe table. I PEANUT BUTl'Ba OONl'BCl'ION • 'r1t cupoldfuhionedcreamyora~per cltunk peanut butter '4 cup noal•t dJ'1 milk powder 'A cup what term I I '4 cup honey 2 tableapoom 1eaame pe.d9 I 2 teupoom ratalnl ~ teaspoon aalt Carob powder bl amaJl bowl •tlr tot ... peuut beatter, milk powder. wbeat t•rm. booe1. Hnme aeMI, ralllal ud salt UDdl ftll llUUcl. Roll miz\un loto ~-lDea. b&UI. JtoU ln carob powder ..... w wen coeWd. Mak• a ...... ~ cup nonfat dry milk powder y, cup wheat germ 1 teaspoon salt 1 "" cups water ~ cupbooey 'r1t cupoldfaabionedcreamyorsuper chunk peanut butter In large mixer bowl stir to1etber 1 'r1t cups ol the fiour, yst, milk powder, wheat 1erm and salt. Heat water, hooey and peanut butter until very wearm (1259 to 130"F ). Pour into now mix· ture. Beat 2 minutes at medium speed, 1craplnc sides al bowl and beaters several times. St1t ln 'r1t cup of the Dour and beat at high s.,.S 2 minutes. Stir in remainin1 fiour with a wooden spoon. Turn doulb lo onto a llpUy floured board or pastry cloth. Knead until smoo41a and elastic. Place ln an oiled bowl. Turn doup oiled side up. Cover and let rise lo a warm place 1lllW doubled bl bulk. Punch down and 1bape lalo a loal. Place ln an oiled t x 5 x S.lnc:h lcMd pan. Cover and let rlae ln warm place until daabled in bulk. Bate ln SJrF oven 45 mlnutes or utJ.1 bread IOUDda hollow when tapped on bott.Qm. If bread browns too fast, cover looaely with alumlaum foil. Remove from pan and cool on wlr• rack. Makes l loaf. Peanut Butter Surpriaea hove peanut butter stu/ftng for taste. . .. J What,• gour retundlng •tatus1 By MARTIN SLOANE "Are you a professional refunder!" someone aa~~ me recenUy. ''Or are you just an avtdamateur!" I thought about that question for a mo- ment. _"I used to be a professional refunder," I finally answered. "But my newspaper col- umn and my other activities take up so much time that I have been forced to drop down to amateur status ... Are there really such leveb In the world of coupons and rtfunds? Certainly! On the lowest rung of the ladder are the casual coupon cllppers who suffer from perpetual coupon mess. These are the people who throw all of their coupons into a kitchen . drawer and remember them only aft~r they have expired. Up a step from the casual ·ctippers are the'b~nners. They are trying In earnest to 1 lake up the organized couponing and refund· ing that they have heard about from•friends and relatives. When beginners see all of our refund forms and realize how much money we are saving, they walk around with dollar signs in their eyes and scissors In their hand ready to clip out anything or anyone who wan'- ders intOtheirpalh. Beginners can move up to full-fledged re· funder status. Once they get the hang or it and star1 receiving refunds in their mailbox- es regularly. their files grow to contain a few hundred refund forms. They trade forms by mail and join a local coupon club. Soon they 1ate saving $50 a month. In respectful tones, their children tell their friends that "my mom (or dad) is a re- funder." Most refUnden are content to at.ay at that level, but some 1et tbe fever and achieve the status of avid ref\lnder. They have half of the nelghborhood saving box tops and labels lor them. Seemingly immune to ridicule. they do not hesitate to work thelr way through the trash bllt at the local laundromat. At the drop of a bat. they will drive 100 miles to shop at a store offering double coupons or 300 miles to attend a refunders' convention. No avid refunder would admit to sending out I ewer than 20 -refund requests a week. Theee people command respect because they know t6e score -and have bank accounts to prove it. A few avid refunders conclude that couponinl and relunding can be handled just like a business. They begin buying, selling and trading coupons, relund forms and proofs of purchase-in quantity. They purchase "complete deals" (the re- fund form and the required prools) at half their face value from other refunders who have already sent for these offers. They go t.o conventions with cartons full or complete deals to sell to other refunders. Refunding is a business that earns them many thousands or dollars each year. The world of couponers and refunders does have its pecklng order, but it is a very flexible one. Shoppers can go right to the top if they have the desire and the energy to del so. REFUND OF THE DAY Wrile to the following address to obtain ll;le form required by this Betty Crocker Noodles offer: Buy Two, Get One Free Offer, Box 1039, Minneapolis, Minn. 55400. Send for this refund form by May 14, 1981. -------------------------------------· CUP 'N' FIJ..E llEFUNDS • BAKED GOODS, DESSERTS tuncl torm. lwo l>Ur<n• .. <onllrm•llon ... ,, ttom Clip oul ""' Ill• •ncl llHp n will\ fimitllr c•Sh-<>ff •ny Or•o Cnocot•l• S.nclw1cl\ Coollt.• •Nl the proof· ' coupon• ~••r•91 refuncl otters •1th be•et"9• of purc1141w w•t tram -1-90\HIO un ot Nettle , coupons, f0< •1t•mpto. St•rl co11ec11n9 the n-Ouoll Thi\ ollor " YOIO In M•oM -W.,,l\1t>Qton prool• ot l>Uf'C-white lootun9 for llM! roquorecl ro-E•PorH June JO. "" fund forms •t Uw superm•r•et. 1n news.paper' •nd maearnM>, •ncl w,,.., tracllnQ will\ '"""°'· 011.,. PILLSBURY Fru Brownlu Retuncl Oller. m•y not be •v•il•blt In •II arH• 01 llM! t0"'1try Al· Receive • IMOO•Ql' ot Pill•t>ury Brownie Mo• Send low 10 w""' 10 r•c.eive t•cn r•tuno th• rtqufrtd r•funo rorm •net bO• to0t from Jwo ..,. FLAVOR KIST Buy Four Gel One FrM Olltr Hof any PlllsOury Oeiu .. FUOQe B•o•"'e Moa E• Receive• ~k•!I" of FlaYOr K1•t T°"'tor P•>tnn. pores M•y 30, 19'1. Send 111e requoreo refund torm •'Id universal PILLSBURY G1n91rbr•ollcl·C•cler $1 Refuno Ofter. Product ~ from fo"r P•O•Qu ol Ftnor Kist Receive• '1 refund. Sena 11\e required refuncl form, Toaster Pasfr••• E•pores May JI 1'111 the top ...,,_, from two PlllSD<iry Gln9erbreoll0 Ml• JOHNSTON S·EAGLE REALE MON $1 Aef-01· l>OH\ •nO I/le label from •nr 11411111.iion Dottle ot •P- ier Sona 11\e r~uorecl torm, one l•bel from ~le pie Cider E•Plrl\ ~Y JI, 1911 Br •ncl Swutoned ConclenHO ""'"'· Ille n•m• TASTYl(AKE Refund Offer. Receive a refund ot 'Re•Lemon from one tat>el tront p•nel •ndoneem up 10 '"SO Send ttw requir~d refund form •no. l>OU•cl Jonn\lon s "•mt from 11\e pl••t1c 110 ol Unlverwl PrOOUC1 Coci.t trom up to 12 T .. ,,..,.u JOl1n$lon s Granam Cr•cUr Reollcly Cru>t Pl• Crust F•mlly Pao products At IHsl "" UPC$ mu•t be Eapor.sJuM30 19'1 lor 011teren1 prOOUCh Vou .. 111receive1oc..,ts fOf' MOTHER s •ncl the M•rs1111 Receive. $1 refuno HCll UPC -• lO<ellt llO<>uS if •II u UPCs •re fl)f' St'IO lht roquorocl rfluncl 1orm, purcll .. t · <111feren1 P<OclUCIS. The prooucti •re cnocot•te l(,•n· <ontormat1on ~•Is from •nr two pocll•11es of Oy KOH. All Butter COOlllH, ChO<olate ere.min, Moll>t!r s c.OOO<oes Incl ll>e UnoverHI Produ<.1 Code Creme Fiiied ButtercrNm Cup C•kH, Cr..,.. Fiiied trom ot1e P«k.tQe ol _,.,..,Mallow Hot Coco. Mo• l(olltt K•llt. Creme Filled ChO<ol•I• l(rlmc»t" or tr om •nr C•rn.11on Hot Coco. Mia E aportt J..w CIWICOl•l• CuP c:.att. Jelly l(rlmpeh, 0-cMate JO. 1911 Jo;n1or Layet C.H, ButterKotcll l(rlmpell, Apple I NABISCO-NESTLE Free H•lf G•llon Miik Ofl•r F11tecl l(n.tmO K•lles and Creme Filled CllcKol•I• R.ce1•e • nat111•1ton of milk S.ncl llM roquorecl re· CUii CUH Eaplres JUfle 30 1911 ' ' _____________________________________ J Save IO¢ on flavor you ear an taste. See the nuts on the flakes. Hear the c runch . Taste the great combination of.h oney, nuts and . corn toge ther in one delicious flake. And save 10¢ on your next purchase.---B~ ~p· FOOD Sobp illld si.Iad· J.opular duo Soup and ealad are a ~puJar hmcbMa com· btnaUon. They 're a nutrltioul and dellclou duo. Peacb Salad Vtnatrrette teams up with 60memade Cream of Broeeoll Soup lor a U1btmeal. CaMed clln1 peaches are the special surprise In the salad. Their sweet fruit Oavor and aoW.en color are a refrnbtn.1 contrast to the tansy 1reen1alad. Canned ellna peach slices can add a new loot to many dlahea, fcom salads to entrees to deaserts. Tbere,are many cans or standard vade cllna peach alien ~eked tn Ucbt yrup on. the supermarket abelf. Tbete 1Uce1 uaually are 1old H an ,.economy r.ack" and are avaUable n both the 18-0Wlce and 29·ounce cana. Standard lf&de. cllDJ peacb slices are a tood buyrlptnow. t-EACBSALAD VINAIG&B'ITE 1 can (29ounce) cllnl peace slices ln llaht syrup (economy pack) l red onion, thinly sliced Salad greens VlaaiareUe Dreamt: ~cupveaetableoll a tabl•poqiu elder vln11ar 3 tabl•PoOOI IYl'\lP r•ervedfrom peacba ~ teupoon cn11bed dill Dub1altandpepper Drain peaches; re· serve 3tableapoom syrup for dreuln1. Separate onion slices lnt.o rln1s. Af'ranae salad 1reens on each of 4 salad plates. Ar· ranae onion rinp and peach slices on top or let- tuce. Relrlgerate until ser_!ln&time. Vt.atpeUe Dreulnr. in dresaing cruet or jar with a lid, combine all dressing inarec1ients, cover. Shake; pour on ln- dlvldual salada. Makes 4 aervln ... C&EAM OF BROCCOLI -SOUP 1 Lablespoon vegeta- ble oil 1h onion, chopped • 1 bead broccoli ( ap- proximately l lt'J pounds) 2cupswater 2 chicken bouillon cubes 2 tablespoon• mar1artne ' 2tablelpoamftour ~ teaspoon white pepper Duhnutme1 I l~eup1milk In bottom of 4-quart saucepan, beat oil u.ntil bot. Stlr in onion. Cook, stirring constantly until ol\ion ls transparent. Cut broccoli intv small pieces. Place broccoli in pan with water and bouillon cubes. Heat to boiling; reduce t4 sim- mer. Simmer until tender, about 5 minutes. fJ>-»or Into blender con· laTuer; cover. Blend until smooth. In sauce pan, melt margarine. St.\t' In flour, pepper and nutmeg. Cook. stirring constantly 1 1 minute. Gradually stir in milk. Cook, stirring co nstantly , unt i l thickened. Stir in broc· coli ; beat until hot. Makes 4servings . •Tip: 2 packages (10 ounces each) frozen broc- coli m11y be substituted for fresh. • Joild. savin -------AIOUT --------· AIOUT .11 s1.99GRtAT n • DINNER $5 ftft SUPERI e77DINNERI z 0 c "O 0 z Good for three pieces of Juicy, golelen brown Kentucky Frred Chicken. plus single se"'lngs of cole stew, masheCI potatoes anCI g•avy, anCI a roll Limit two otters per PYrCh•se Coupon good only tor comt>tnatron while/ dark orClers. Customer pays alt appltcebte r.alea tax Gooo 101 nine pieces ol 1u1cy. golden brown Kentucky 0 Fried Chicken, with lour rolls, 1 large cole slaw, a large §:i mashed po111oes and a medium gravy Limit two otters 0 per purchase. Coupon good only tor c0mbtnat1on white/ u I I darll oroera Cus1omer pays 111 appltcable sates tax ... J. ' Otter exp11es Aprol 12 1981 Otter eap1tes I AQIJl1'A2 1981 Prices may vary 11 par· 838 I t1c1p11tng locations Good onty In Southern I Calttomla whllfl you see America's Fl1vorlle Window Bannef I Save40Conct enjoy the Sunrise Surprise! ., If yotfve never tried Sunrise* Instant Coffee. you're in for a delic ious surprise! You see. Sunrise is real full-bodied coffee. blended from choice coffee beans and just enough chicory to get rid of any bitterness. And right now. you c an save 40¢ on any size jar. So go ahead ... try Sunrise Instant Coffee. And surprise yourself! O The Nestt6 ~y. lnc.1981 t ' ., ) "It's rich, and It's not bitter." David Brown \ .. Loottn1 for a you~ hundred yean. tiealthy amounts of rar. E must be'° combined. aaparaau1 Ued In a A d d m i n c e d fo,,d '! Tbed try aa· They did not know, u aaparaitne, an amino Aaparap alto la a bunch with 1trina-Stand aapar-._p to omelette•, •para1ua. . --------We do Wb)' upara1ua IUCClnlc acid whJcb COD• diuretic contatnln& 00 end, with tlpe pqlnt• crepe fl1Uoi1, IOUpa r nd We clutlty uparaiut madetbemfMJyoutblul. tributes to youthful fiber, which can help re· int up, out ol tbe w.ter, ca11eme1. H a ve1etable today AlthoUJb the 1boot1 vlfor. move morbid matter to steam but not~ boll. in· UJOO, French~X· because only 1euonin1 .,.. ..... ....., __ _,_..__ are 9' percent water, t. la an acid aetive to from the system. Serve 4 aaparafu1, rt.a clalmed over k· P J a n t a ( P a r a I e Y , the remainilul e percent b 1 o Io 1 le a I en er I y · · Some expert.a ldvlled weU draiood, on a folded f:1 destroyed deal ed Roaemary, Sa1e> are W be n be •en t A.O., Jtolllab) who in· contains Vftamln A, yieldl.nf reactions. eaUn1 it every day dur-<linen) napkin; top with b flt Tb 41Jd U.ted as herbs. caravans of its roots listed, "Dame Nature Vttamlna B·l and B-2. We cfertve no benefits in1theseuon. 1 tablespoon butter beat· ene 1 ' ey 1 11 ' However, prior to back to bis people, ordained that ••para1ua Vitamin C, Vitamin E. from certain chemicals Cook asparagus as ed with 14 teupoon tar· ~·:i::~~~.• should: be 1800, plants containing aaparqua became a re-1hould srow wild so that carbon. calcium , unJesa they are nat\lral, early Romana dld to raeon; half bard-cooked 1 curaUve or beautifying gal food reserved for every man mt1bt 1ather chloride, chlorophyll, and are combl,ned with prevent tough stems e I I , s l e v e d ; 2 Try asparagus rai in properties were uaed by royaltx. ' th • m to e a t , • • iron, niacin, oxalic acid, another a1ent which re-with niusby tips: crlucrosaed .strips pl-salads. • doctors ln medicines or Despite the pleas or aristocrats controlled phosphorus, protein, leases their benefits. Have salted waler miento; twist ot black Feel youthful otce beauty aids. All such Pliny the Elder (c23-78 the market for several silicon, sulphur and Vitamin A and Vitamin boiling before adding pepper. again. plants were listed as .------------------------------------'---------_;_--~----------------------------.._ __ __;:;_ __________ -=-~..:...::~--------------~:._ .............................. ...._~ herbs. They included even flowers (roses) and trees (slippe ry elm> which had beneficial qualities. Asparagus, an ancient plant, was one. Wild asparagus was believed to have grown in s alt marshes of Asia l housands of years before recorded history. But it was unknown in Europe prior to ~the 4th century B.C. Europeans had heard only rumors of an Asia when Euripides (480?-406 B.C., Greek I wrote of Medea's giving Jas on the sec r e t o r perpetual youth. An expert on herbs, Medea lived in the mythical Asian counlry o f Col c hi s in th e Caucasus between the Black Sea and the Cas· pian. One hundred years later, Alexander the Great (356-323 B.C.I heard her story, and de· cided to visit the area to ask if natives knew Medea 's secrets. He did not find the legendary Colchis. but he did nnd the ancient country or Bactria H e also found the plant believed to be a food for youthfulness asparagus. Food facts in booklets APRICOTS are focus of fr ee 36 page recipe book lel. "California Apri co t Gro w e r s' Favorite Recipes. a leaflet. .. All Abo ut Apricots. and a nulrition ca l c ulator that HOT OFF THE PRESS ca lc ul ates a nd com · pares nutritive valu~ or apricots with other canned fruit For all three. wnte to Canned Apricots , Califo rnia Apricot Advisory Board, 1295 Boulevard Way , Walnut Creek. 95595 FOOD Safety for the Family is topic of a free booklet by the Informa- tion Division. Western Region, U.S. Department of Ag riculture . 630 Sansome St.. Room 702, San Francisco 94111 . STEAM cooking pud dings is topic of pam· phlet offered for 25 cents by J.M Smucker Co. Strawberry Lane, Orr· ville, Ohio f4667 . Ad· dre ss envelo p e to Naturally Good Recipes a nd send along a legal- s i ze, se-lf-ad dressed, stamped envelope. STEAK THICKNESS When selecting a beef steak to broil, be sure that it is at least 1-inch thick, says the National Live Stock and Meat Board. Thinner steaks are apt to be done before they are brown and therefore are usually best pan· broiled. FREEZING GROUND POU When £tee"ting ground pork for serving on a bun, shape it first into patties, then separate each with a double thickness of wrap and stack before wrapping, 1u11esta the National Live Stock and Meat Board. , tf loaves and other dishes will be planned for the future packa1e in portloqs ;/ suitable size. FroatA 1round pork should not be 1eaaoned before h'Milnl since tbe flavor ol moat 1euon· in11 lnten.alflea durin1 freeier 1tora1e. a . VONS PROMISES LOWER OVER ALL PRldSS (j{JllL\Ntl~~) • DOUBLE THE DIFFERENCE OUR Ci<.1ARANlH OF VONS LOW PRICES. BEST FOOD ]3 9 ~J2NNAISE U'\IT 2 (~ °""' lim• 'f1I pn<~ I ~)I SASSOON PRODUCE ,._ 50I 0 H[""6 Fresh Cabbage ~!NfO.J/JICV Honeydew Melons WM) f l\Y()llfT[-f'1!ESH Cucumbws ~"Oii" 5"l\OI D Anjou Pears l'llDHCllT ~eatlc Daisies le .39 U1 et2 LI .19 UI .49 (A .25 IA .49 1111 }49 111'4111:181:!94!1111- 70l..c21UK Colgate Toothpaste 129 ,,.-OIJP<I: Vlslne Eye Drops 188 •Ol.-PWOTU<-~ 24J Saaaoon H•lr Cream JQ2 ->G!CAT'f.D~ 39 Eaoterka F•de re.m HOT BAKf:RY DELICATESSEN 16-0U'<f,l"O ~!"l!AT Vona tseef Wieners ~ ,l\OWl( -(ljt DE.U ,AO\ Leo s Sllced Buf 16-0IK[ °""°"-6 f\J\\IOllS Swiss ft\la• Puddings }19 .79 .89 olOL •ACllllOl-l&'O.LS ~ 149 Borden Sliced Cheese Food ~-~~.85 ~-6-0U'<Cf.,~-OllOl.J\lt:V>V 89 Plckle·Plmento Loaf • IKll Cl" -Otll\oCN'IOlL =tfOT Oii NJ) Vona Avocado Dips .55 FROZEN FOODS 1~~ Welch• rape Juice .99 ~~ried Chicken 2!5 l2-0Ur<CZ~ Celeate Sau••ae Plua 2J'9 ~~~Oltll» .38 . VONS BAKERY &<Xl1CE-~Oll Rtl'ISE .. LIMIT 2 EA (~ owr lime f"ll ~ 22'1 GROCERIES 120l..cz""Cl-f'K.~-­Amer. Beauty Noodles .55 MEATS ,_,_ llroC 8U1' -l!OfOQLM Top Round Steak 46-0U'<[JM Seneca Applenuc:e 127 TAllU':tlnOllCU-~ Slrloln Tip Stuks UI 238 UI 248 l8 248 11 Ot..a: CN1 -CllE.NY D Oreen Giant Com 06<Xl<:C IOTTU:-C..l~ Lemonade Lime 21 OU<E CNl-11£1> S & W Kidney Beans ~[CNI PrinceU. Cut Yams . 211~~-~fl.'ilt!> Cup-0-noodlea 6-0ll'<E80'n\L-IT-Seveo Sua Drualng DfnW~re Bed Stew .43 .95 .69 119 .49 .73 253 .25 .59 ~"1\CllMa 89 Ronzoni l.aN9n. • ~~~etw 139 Cho:ctt~p • 79 f"8.£ llnl -IV'DU l!!N< Beef Cube Steaks IAl!lL Q«l-KUOIUCll C\1l 2 09 Boneless F•mlly Steaks lll T AlllL Q1G l!UI' -IT" llOUP'I> lfSS E'Wl Oii 18 8 Boneless Rump RoHt Lii 'l>b.f.""°-~&l'\Jl\o.P"IA. 1aa Bonelua Stewing Beef U1 184 amuan• Poft( Loin Chopa ~"ii:='&kr'°"' 115 &'::&rrrooid •• 7 3 r.r.1~Tc:nea 6 i119 ~Cab .92J L;:r~aowtct .. ner .69 1fOIN>LO/# J49 tl...oi · 49 un<llratNt 44 Clnn•mon Chunk,y 1.otf ~ Fruit c...,. • zeet Bath So.p • LIQUOR 1.HlflQ ...ow!ll'I l10V .,_ Taylor C.Ufornla Wines HJTU · C>Wll.6 ""AOl5C lltJI' Cribari Mt. Wines 1 1' UTf.11 -l'IPQlrl!: D Scoresby Scotch I 1'VTtJl-STIIAICHT llmTUOl'r Jim Beam Bourbon ~ l!lOf-Uebfraumllch 1 1)<.l1"fll-«l l'llCXW PopOY Vodka 279 299 329 1099 1199 349 799 SERVI CE SEAFOOD 129 UI 169 fA 159 ,._IW0-11-..!. WT 121..K ISA>t: Rainbow Trout Ho U11 ui ~-'M:J'lC Red Snapper Fillets ~~JNI wutem Oyster• S::~Crc-. 2i.89 11wsreCoeeWtteet .89 ~~,~°k'=PoU.h 219 ~~CllOCDAn 4i.99 lttcrouBuna 129 p;e;·~~~ 159 1 THEStJPERMARKETTHATGCJAAANTEES .. . P11CD ~ Tltlm, -..... ~ 2 TO~ S. 1•1. CM.I. C21$1 ,,,.,_ rOll t.Oe\"llllll 01 m:. ~ N8. ~ -,_ .. '9,. "°'~AT ..... ,,,_ W. fnl IT. l,ol ,_,_._ ·-·· ...::0 llcllO.. LOe---tfll W. lm4l'f. l.oe ~ 1111111 ~AM IM.,.,.._ Hynttntton ••Kh Hun-...on IHch H.......,...,. htoh '""'" FCHlntaltl Veller '~ Vetter 22 ldlnger a Spftft9d•le .,.. • 210l2 h•~ atM. ..,-Atl•nl• 47M ••nanca Rd. • 11201 HarbOr • ldln.-r OHO ....... a Te-.n Cott• MeH l•n Juan Capftltreno l,vtM C.,.tltrtM heM L..-U ... 1111. 17th ltreet •net Oreftte Aw•. st011 C•mlno C•pt.,UaM a Dete>ttle,o 4800 lrwtne alvd MOl1 DohenJ fllara Of'. A Vlctona NM1 Affol•hrttway I Holl . ~ Since ancient timea, ll'OUp. TH whole 1-ar. 1ubtle, yet lafllY, na•or· Freneta onion eoup l• a ttr and deep fry until 1ea1onecMttead crumbl. dry place. However, tbe onion hu been canbeuaedincooatne. int in many eletant wonderf ul treat and aoldenbrown. Se11oned chopped 11tora1e c an be heralded u a strength· Tbey add a unique dlahta. 9Uil• eaa~ to mah. Hone1·1l11ed onion• spinach or navored rtce· I en Ith e o e d w It b rub wlt.b aaJl, vtne1ar or lemon Juice. bulldln1 food purported flavor to aoupa and Altbouah they're often Simply. uute Ualaly are a l)frfect and euy· allo make exceltent rerrt1eratioo. lo have he a I l n I stews ud can alao be bypauecl by shoppers, sliced ClPlona and add to to·rlx atcompaniment to onion 11tutftn1. Green onions, chivet Onlona are 1rown ~round the world, buf tome ol the rln•t are produced in CaUromia, Idaho and Oreeon. The 1 l ant sweet Spanish onions are at their best from September through March. quallUes. lfrved 11 a variety o n I on 1 a r e a n conden1ed beef broth, beef rout.a. Simply boil and leeks· s hould be lt'a said that tons or ve1etable dlah. Try alic· ecooomlcai vesetable aeaaon to tute, and beat small white .Uona until TO MAKE canned or washed and refrigerated these flavorful bulbs tn, them Into stripe ror dish. They can be baked weU. Top with a &<>'5ted lender then •drain and packaaed loupt seem ln pluUc b•i• an4 used were fed to the pyrami · serving raw u a relish. lr> a eovered cauerok! touad pr FTench bread tum in butter and honey homemade, simply add within three to five days builders of ancient with Just a s mall and a liberal spnnkllng or moluses until well aauteed, chop.ped o r · for best quality. EI Y Pt , which adds SHALLOTS are a del· a mount of water until of Parmesan cbee$e. atazed. sliced rresh onloDB. The There's no need to cry another dimension to lca ~e-tasting cousin of tender. Seuoo with salt, Try 1turfed onions, flavor ¥d aroma will when prepartng onions. our perception of this the onion and 1arlic. pepper and butter.· Orz Fa ENC ff.Fa IE D too. Just remove some really whetthe appetite. Try peeUnc them under feat. Like the garlic. the red· a d d u n d i I u t e a onion tines are popular. or the cent.er from large All varieties or dry running water or chop· Con s idering their economy. nutrition, ease i n preparation and versatility, why not try some new onion dishes Today we know that dish-brown skinned. bulb mushroom or cheese To prepare,. dip sliced Spanish onions and rm onions can be kept for ping In a special closed onions citn contribute is divided into cloves. soup and bake untiJ the rin1s of a large .sweet with chopped cooked several weeks at room c hopper. To eliminate mu ch to a balanced, Shallots are used ror a onions are tender. onion into pancake bat· mu 1 hr o o m s and temperature in a cool, onion odor on the hands. nutritious diet. ,-------------------t-------.;;-------------------------------------------this week? ONE CUP or chopped onions provides 20 per· cent of the adult need for Vitamin C, with few calories. One medium onion has 38 calories and contains s mall amou nt s o f calcium, iron, protein. thiamin and riboflavin. Green onions, tasty co u sins of the dry onions. have 14 calories per lwo medium onions : ·they provide 10 percent of the daily need for Vitamin C. There are many kinds j of dry onions . T he Bermutfa is a I mild. sweet-tasting bulb. These onions are large, flat·shaped and usua Uy golden in color . They are tasty raw or cooked whole S PANISH onions a re jl j umbo. globular and fawn.colored. They're sweet. juicy, and good raw , fo'rench fried, or bak<'d : they're the onion most commonly found in the market. Yt:llow onions a r e great for cooking. As the name indicates they are a golden·yellow color and have a ru11. pungent flavor They are also round. and can be t•hopped, sliced, diced. or fried Red or Italian onions are a rich red·to·purple color and add zest to salads and sandwiches. WHITE onions are s1lvf.'r skinned. They're bes t cooked in s tews. soups. or creamed for ">•de dis he s . Green onions are wonderful as a ppet1zers or in salpds They a lso aJfd color and va ri ety when chopped as a topping for bland cheeses and egg dis hes. Try them in stir· fry dishes, too. for a taste treat. Chi vcs are the finest· topped member of the onion family: these add a dainty and colorful topping to a variety of d ish('S Leeks are also m ild· I tasting members of the j Save time I a nd m oney! Modem cooks are in· terested in saving two thi n gs time a nd money . Helping them out on both counts is Cheddar Beer Strips Microwave-Style. One pound of beef top round steak for 4 to 5 servings makes this entree a budget stretcher. while I cooking by microwaves means it 1s ready m minut<'s This reci pe was developed by the National Live Stock and Meat Board. Cheddar Beer Strips · ( Mlcrowave·Style) Parti a ll y freeze 1 pound beef round steak, cut 3 4 ~ch thick. Slice steak info strips 111 inch thick and about 2 lo 2"'2 1n<'hes long. Place tablespoon cooking at and 1 medium onion, finely chopped, in 11~ x 71'2-inch micro-safe dish. Cover with wax paper and cook in microwave oveQ. at 50 percent power (approximately 325 watts> 2 minutes. Com· bine 2 tablespoons flour. 1 teaspoon inttant beef bouillon, 1~ teaspoon salt and ·~ teaspoon celery seed ; dredge steak stripe. Add strips to bakint dish, sUrrinc to coat slrtps. Cover arid coc:'Jt at 50 percent power + minutes: stir. COnUoue cooktne, co~ered , 8 D\loutea, 1Urrin1 after 3 ml11utes. Stir in l can (8 ou n cea > mu•hroom stems and pJecea On· cludln1 Uquld). Cook, covered, 2 minutes; aUr and contlruM cooking 2 minutes. Stir in ~ cup (2 ounces) shredded Ched· d•r cbeele and c~. un· covered, 1 rnlnule. Open~ 8 a .m. tO 10 p.111. limit rieht\ ,. .. f'ltd. No Sole. to 0.ot.n. fhll, od only ~ ... at H~ fl Ran'ho arid H119Mt Udo · WI WILCOMI ... ITAlllt ......... Fruh leon for K·&obs lo'" BONELESS PORK CU BES El Roncho Style THICK SLICED BACON l8 2 .89 ta 1.09 El Ronc"o Sweel & Hot •9 ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE Lii I . I FRESH-I PORK LOIN CHOPS AllMOUR"S VERI BEST CENTER CUT La.1.89 fresh Armour's Ve ribest Center Cut fresh T"ick Cut for Bok• or 8&0 PORK LOIN ROAST .... . .... LI I. 79 PORK LOIN CHOPS fresh Armour'• Verib .. 1 &oneleu 3 •• Armour's Vtribest C""""Cut PORK LOIN ROAST .... ... . LI . • S:ROWN PORK ROAST Swffl & Sour. Chow Mein, Chop Suey Fresh El Roncho LEAN CUBES OF PORK . L& 2 .89 PORK SAU SAGE 09 LB. l8. 1.99 l8 2 .89 LB. El Roncho w/R1bcoge & G1ble11 El Roncho TURKE Y BREAST " 2:1LRKEY HINDQUARTERS " ClEARSPRINGS ~-!" ta I .29 .59 FRllH IDAHO . AVG. 12·22-0Z. I 5 9 _RAINBOW TROUT.............. ............ 1.11. • Ato .. on F'tOH"• o.ftOlt.0 KUIG CllA8 UGI ll 3.H ''"" f,jlof, 9 ltAClflC -MAltHa ll t.6 Col Ro,. 10 lb *' t BOTAN RICE W t"i '01 •A 01 MACKEREL FlllETS DRIED KELP .•.19 .19 1.21 cH.iiitvl10N1 CLAMI tt 1.29 c_.n.., Cvt ,,Offtt-Otfrou~ IWOltDRIH,lllAKI . Lt •• 99 NABISCO GRAHAMS. CORN MUFFIN MIX (]li!iW~~ LONI IMflOITID flllOM TIXASI STAR 179 BIER 1:1-oz~~:~ W .... 7S()-I GREEN HUNGARIA~ ..............•...• l.8f HONIYMAID 16-0Z. ~ JIFFY I~ ·OZ. ~J1Ffl' 2 30-oz. Orville Redenbacher I 79 GOURMET POPCORN . . . . .. .. . . . . . • 12·oz OMlle Redenbocher POPPING Oil .......... . h tl 8rond Natural. 6-oz. NO SALT POTATO CHIPS . Seneca .a.oz. GRAPE JUICE 1.25 ...• 89 1.59 7-oz. Real Creom Topping 5 REOOI WHIP.............................. I . I H_L!z~!!!l!o~, riri 1.65 ~ 5c ;, r.~~ If~. ..:,,;,-- I 6-01. Sprini .lield SPAGHETTI.. .............• 59 &ell Brand 7-oz. NO SALT CORN CtilPS ..• 89 25·ol. Glou 83 S & W APPLESAUCE ................• ...... 1.49 Welch's 32·oz GRAPE JELLY . 0.1 Monte 12·oz. 69 SEAFOOD COCKTAIL SAUCE ...... c LB. WHOLE &COY CHICKENS LIMIT 4 PLEASE leon, Doe• Not Eaceed 22% fol 2 El RANCHO GROUND BEEF Le • I El lloncho. Do•• Not hcttd 15% fot LEANEST GROUND BEEF l& 2.49 Froren O..fro•ted. Frying CHICKEN LIVERS)lb bo· 11q lB .59 DIAMOND JIM BONELESS ROAST LOIN CUT Of &Hf La. 2.89 L?i ii!ilM1 !i':i!~ CRIST 6li~:· I. 15 leo ............................... 2.09 I S.01 109 C--"9 HUD fl lllOUl.Dlltl ... 2. M I .... l....,W HI c ..... -... ltllll.LIHAMNO ........ 1.69 CONVENIENT FROZEN FOODS ~ KOSHERFOR " DELICATESSEN TREATS TRIE TOP APPU JUla· ~N,· 45c, 10-01. ""'9mllli~ --.... . 69• AUllT --·· WA~r ....................... .. 11 ~ .. &. T11rll9', I0-.1. Me9t lNf •• t•oa. loQ ., SWANSON DINNERS..... • • ~ & W PETITE PEAS...... • sen, i.. l 1 1.!o -oi. '"°"·Strtvwl • I Aut. fie~ Sl1• I ., COFF~E CAKES..... ..... 1.8 TOTINO'S PIZZA ....... • ~ • PASSOVER 1.25 VLAllC KOSHER PICKLES •WHOLE •SLICED 32-0 Z. a.oz."flKo. 78• Kl .... C.IAMCHllll ................. . ka. ~ 4 ., 12-01 ..... Kosher 4 19 GALLO SAi.AME ...... •• l<NOCKS or FRANKS ... •• '-o&. Stllll·Soft 3 Var. I 4 9 10·01. ~!Lies 0.-"-cl. RONDELE CHEESE .. •• WEIGHT WATCHERS ... l .•t .. •I .. .. Calllol'D1a arUe.._ · -beaatlfull1 frHb ...... ;........__.,. tbe ideal cbolce for 1pedal meau1. Oae ... ~ What ll the dltterence between rlb and loin pork ebopl? , · Both 1n cut from th• loin' tec:Uon and contain the back bone and loin eye muacle, explains the National Live Stock and Meat Board. Loin cbopa also contain the ten· derloln muscle that ls separated from the eye muscle by a T·sbaped bone. Rib and loin chops can be uaed lnterchangeably in moat recipe s, however rib chops ar~ uled for atUffma. OrHtfor Lunch • rBOAT 'O' FISH Slaw. Fries and Beverage s22s apechl recipe la ArtlcbokH Oriental Style, a refreablntlY MW dinMr ldea. Ele1ant artlcboke1 are '° 1lmple to .pr•· ))are. 11.,..y ~ them in salted water ud add a bit ol Jemon Juice to preserve tbelr 1reen color. The art of eatln1 artlc!M*es ii delltbUul· ly almple. J>luck a leaf, dip it into a sauce or melted butter and scrape off the bottom portion with ihe teeth. After the. leaves are flnish«l you will come to tbe choke or thistle por· lion, which should be dla· carded. Below the choke is the heart -the beat part ol all! Tfits. i. eaten Broiled OT Fried Hours: Mon-Thurs 11·8 pm Fri-11·9 pm Sat 12·9 pm ·Camino Plaza T ak e Out -559·9111 Jeffrey Rd & Walnut al the Santa Ana Fwy wJth knife ud fed. An adclM bonu1 tor dteten II tbe tact that tacb articbob bu OD.ly 58 ctalorles. Eatlnf. artieboke1, leaf by lea , belps tb• dl\ter eat more alowly, too. Hot or cold _: u an appetiser, salad aoup or entree -cahtornla artichokes wl.. be the atarrlnt attraction of your menu no matter bow you terVe them. A&TICllO&l:8 O&IEN· TAL8TYLE (MakealMnlqa) 2 tablespoons butter or mar1artne 2 tablespoons salad oU 1 1mall 1arlic clove, cnasbed Fish Chicken Lunches Dinners Irvine 2 cupe .Uc«t boneless eblckm. Stir CCJmtut11 raw cblekea (about 2~ until cbicken or port pounds broller·fryer turna Uabt in color; COY· cblcten plectt) or port er and steam meat tor cubel about five mlnutH. 3 cuPf cbJcken or Blend broth into c6ra· beef bro&b or bouWoD starch: add broth mis· " \4 cup corutarcb. ture, aoy aauce, salt, 1 tablespoon IQY celery, bam~ 1booh 1auce and water cbeltnuta to 2 teupoom aalt atulet. Brina mixture to 1 cup thinly (dl· a boU, IUrriBI coastant· a1onally) sliced celery ly; cover and 1l11lmer 1 cu (~ ounces) about 18 mi nu tea bamboo aboota, drained lon1er or unW meat ii a m e d i u m tender. Fill artlcbok\1 articbolta, prepared aa wltb mainly the meat directed and vetetable pieces of Blanched 11ivered mixture; serve the toasted almonds saucy part of mbture in Hot cooked rice, to a diah aa a dip for serve 8 a r t i c ho k e I e a v e s . Melt butter in lar•• G a r n l 1 b f 111 e d skillet over medium artlcboltee with almonds beat; add oil, 1arllc and and serve with rice. AATICHOKl!S ORIENTAL STYLE 18 0000 AS APPETIZER OA ENTAEE. o-P our 'PROOUCE t>EPT- \M, fOU~TAlN VALLEY/ J\JM90 "Ru~ lted/' /I • 1~ R~ or ~o\de~ ~uc:u$4 ~ ,~ GMPEFllUIT .. •tot ... APPLES .. ~!~~.. lbs. - LOt'~, ~r~M\I · 6 tl(O ?1'l.Utl loo~. 6 •1'°~ ~-CUWM8ERS.... ~ -CARROTS..... tbs. - • • -~ .=------ ----. - coof<ed., Sliced, .},.f/1'19 Mild, C ... EDDAR ~)69 ROAST BEEF ..... ~~. CM EE SE .... ··" r-s. ~M..IBUT ~TUl'.~.S! 'TiAl L MIX ... ~J ~ Mmmm! Natural margarine. Only Autumn is natural-no artifldal flavors,oolors or preservatives. on soft or stick Autumn~ N~turar Margarine. I I I I I I . I I I OM EOLGER's~· CRYSTALS. > '. .. 'I f I I I Artichoke, Month c Apt plenty of their favorite m ea I ·in· o ne · d Is h All a lies or artichokes 15 throuah May 15 ) ve1etable ln super presentation&! the aremature. area, where almost all commercial artichokes are arown, th e consumer can expect a bonus. Sliiht chilling prOduces bronze·touc)led · · winter ·klssed ·' artichokes, with enhanced n avor caused by buch maturing more .slowly. approaches. markets everywhere. mediums are perfect for , The smallest simply grow on lower parts of the plant, with me<Hvms in the, center and laraest nearest the top. This la tbe perlod when, traditionally. artichoke lovers look forward to tlpdlnc Sties wtll vary: The lar1e ones make edible containers and truly dramat ic servtna. one per diner; the smallest are especially prized for stews, marinating and deep frying. · Here's how to eat them. • • The special artichoke flavor is the same in all sizes, but the smaJI ones have the additiona't bonus of being so tender that nearl every bite is edible. P I ace 41 who I e fork, dip eatb piece into that the artichoke heart artichoke oo a plate sauce, eat as a "saved Is tender, nutllk,e, a b efor e each family the b.est for last" veretabte "fillet" or member, supply melted favorite pure flavor and taste butter or a favorite · Everyone will marvel appeal. dipping sauce in a side ·------------'--------- bowl. watch everyone cet into the spirit of a new dining adventure. Pick off each leaf, dip I into sauce. then scrape the delic:ate pulp off the leaves between your I teeth.' K. eep a plate handy for 1 f used leaves. As you get down to the -.,. s mall . ce ntral . s ometim es purple-tinged cone. remove and eat it . 1f desired. Ju~l below it is I an inedible, fuzzy choke. Simply scrape off this tl)orny fiber with a s poon ; then the arti choke h(.•art will ' be ~xposed . r eady for enJoying. Cut •the hea rt in to bile s~zed pieces with a I Artichoke bonuses You can look to the a rt 1ch oke a~ a good 'l'getable s ource of t·alC'ium. phos phorus and iron ArtichokPs arc rich in 1o d1ne. a outrie nt d1ff1 c ult l o find. Onl' lilllP known fa ct 1s the potassium richness of lhl' artichoke On e mt'd1um art1chokc contains about 2JO mg of pota!'isium Jn addition. th(' artichokl• 1s a good source of '11 amm A . '1Lamin H a nd v1l'tmin l' II 0 W E \' t: R , t h t• a rtichok e·., nulnt1onal boooses are not ltmitt•d l o miner a l s and '1tamins. This uniqut' \t•g et a blc 1s al so particularly s uited to special diets. s uch as a low caloric t) pc A medium art1chokl· t·ontams onh about 50 t•alories · I BONELESS ROUND STEAK ~u11 cur B()(IOfO Bett T-BONE STEAK Bonoeo Bt'f'f Loin GROUND BEEF 11s lo LO .97 t LC Pk(j Or Morp 00~ NOi f •Ctf'O 50' Far lo TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Boni"~\ Bonneo Beet 10.n 247 10 Other interchangeable terms for artichoke he art s · Bottoms. crowns. rounds. fonds <French > When there i s lrost in the Castroville It's mce to know that the part you eat tastes better when the part you see Is frttkled by frost These "Winter·k1ssed" artichokes may appear pLADY LEE 6 APPLE JUICE J:DEL MONTE ~n2~~1 U01 811 .39 ,, 01 Can L ~~~.~~~ .. ~~PEACHES ... , ... 5 3 ! ~E~ MONTE GREEN BEA.~~ ... 4 9 ! ~~O~~~~GS pTOMATO 6JUICE l1oov·~ .{ MAZOLA CORN OIL L ~~.~.TEA TEA b ~~~.~E.~.RHl!-~.UICE .; ~~N.c~~e ... ~.1.x .69 18 01 BO• .63 M 01 <~n 2.49 .. 2.39 ".89 ... 99 L c~~~ A·ROOS COOKIES ., 1. 29 )• G• "r" N111s c .. rt> 1 I I J • •; Ii• • 1 ~' A [J1 .. ;im Whop T upn1nq ' ,' 111 • 1 ·' • in man f produce departmenta during th~ winter and early 1prln1. Look for artichokes to be well formed. Leaves a.hould appur compact. A void any which have 10010 or 1preadtn1 leaves and appear to be dry. ' Shop ahead Artichokes happily have a very lone life . . . extra nice when one desires to shop ahead; An artichoke will look and taste fresh for up to three weeks. Do not wash before storing . To keep longer thirn a few days, j ust drizzle a few drops of water on each artichoke. pop into a plas tic bag, seal airtight and refrigerate \ .. • . ... • ' • .. ... \A' Produce WHOLE WATERMELON PPO & Pipe •(\JI 1' l 0 NAVEL ORANGES .. D'ANJOU PEARS l! 4 ,·t1 FRESH MUSHROOMS • .rur1 ''"" .19 .69 .39 .69 People who :.ir e on Im\ ·Sodium d1C'ls w1 II hl' interested to learn that ont' medium art1chok<' t•ontains onl~ about 30 m11ligr~ms of sodium BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST .97 .,. ~~,. •01 • , .. 1.99 .,1.29 .,.45 ... 69 t R •yilf GPl,\!Hl\, "' ._AM•• t f I / , a \9 RUSSET PO TATOES .29 Finallv. with current research pointing to the harmful effects of a high -fat diet , it 's I encouraging to note that something as tasty and s ati s fying as the ar t ichoke ha s practically no rat A Rf)CUOK ES contain J approx im atel y O 2 percent fat The artichoke 1s reall} t.Jt e j m m11l u re flow f'r bud of a thistle · like I plant. a distantly related m e mber of th e sunflower family It you s tudy the ! artichoke. ii is easy to see the small thorns on outer leaves These are us ually trammed with sc i ssor s prior to coo~. Artichokes are °'tfij(. "finger food ... Once you master the 1 nr~ simple technique of eating one. you 'll wonder why it took you 1 so long to add artichokes to your regular menus. If artichokes a re not picked, the bud will open int o a glo riou s blue ·purple t o n e d flower. much prized by fl oris ts in fresh and dried form THIAMIN FOR PEP As a part of a . well· balanced diet. pork con· tributes many important vitamins. One of the most out· sta nding, according to the National Live Stock and Meal> Board. is the 8 -vltamin thla mtn.. Thiamin is called the "pep" vitamin for it is nee ded for a healthy nervous system. Pork is the leading source ol thiamin , containing three µmes as m uch as any other food. • • • Cling peach slices in U1ht syrup (economy pack) are an economical way to enjoy bright, Ca l ifornia cling p ttbet. Try them with a dollop of plain ,..drt a nd a spoonrut of honey for a healthf'61 aaod de· Ucloua dessert. I' eono~d Bttf 7-BONE CHUCK ROAST Bonde<! Bttt PORTERHOUSE STEAi< CROSS RIB ROAST E·Z CUT CUBE STEAK LARGE END RIB ROAST ,, PORK LOIN ROAST •.o--.r,, '''' ••l••r;( «f,,.->"' PORK LOIN CHOPS PORK SHOULDER ROAST ••t "" ..... '( \lt~f * ~ED BEEF LIVER FRYING CHICKEN ~o'"(lll IOO" CA'ACI 4 ~fMlHI CUT·UP CHICKEN Chicken Orumstrcks or Tn19ns FAYING <..1RAOC A 1-,n T,...fUN t f\ lO LC .2.38 .1.88 .. 2.48 .1.8.8 .. 1.48 .. 1.78 .1.08 , .. 98 .. 58 ... 69 108 L'ICJy LP{' Streed Bacon 1 1 B 1>11,, I 18 Stiank Portion of Ham 90NE ll·J rul~' COOKED LB 98 Rib Eye F 1lt>t 'iPEl\ICfll Ht•••f f'-<.fl01110H1 RfEf LB 3 28 Ground Beel Patties FROZEN DOES NO• n c EEO 10-. rAT l L8 B .. G 4 28 Ground Beel Pa111es rROlEN 8 OZ O!Nl\I(" C\1ZE OOEC. NflT £~CHO 30.,, rAT l LB BAG 4 28 Pork. Sparrnbs FRES" Mf01111y1 C\IZE l B 1 48 Pork Loin Chops L01111 cur LB t 98 Farmer John Pork Sausaoe :)KINLEC.<; l INI<'> B OZ PKO 48 Grade A Turkey ARMOUR GOLOEN Sl"R 8Ul TER 9ASlEO FROZEN 18 22 lBS L8 7sJ .. /.e11tl'11 \l e11t1 /fe1n\ Cdoked and PHled Stlrnnp. -rROZEN 11 OZ Pl(Q I 28 Pungeness Crab -OLE COOl<EO FROZEN l 8 1 48 Snow Ctab Ctuslers, FROZEN 18 <' 18 Sole Fillet, FROZEN LB 1 09 True Cod F111e1 rROZElll LB 1 48 Hahbvl Steak. FROztN LB 3 88 Fre$h ~1llet of Pac1f1c Red Snapper AVAILABLE THURS ~RI 54 T 0"-1. V l 9 1 48 Freeh A l111kan Salmon Steaks CENT6R CUT AV..\ll.A8l E THURS FA1 SAT ONL V LB 2 59 Fresh Rainbow lroul. CLEAR SPRINGS 8 10 OZ AV..\flAlll E THURS FRI SAT 0 Nl v l ll 1 58 AllAMlt• '" W l A PAUIA Aft- OUlllA PAA~ L LIBBY 'S PEAS ~ S & W KIDNEY BEANS "' r Daddy Crisp Pota10 Chips 6 J 11AAI[ I 1( '> 4 Ol CA.. 9q r Jonnston ~ Reaoy Cru~1 6 CHOCOL-'1E ,RP.><A•.1 fr:..,~, 81 L Pet Mil~ rv"POAArro "oz CA•~ .n r Noodles Romanotl ~8ETTV (':Rflt:'~ER ~ ()/ 9r,, 71 r Anlhony Noodles 6 • VAl"lf f '> •F. JZ I o<<, '6 r C & H Sugar 6 GRA .. UL AIEO 5L8 BM, 1 99 L c & H Suoa~. POWDERED LIGHT OR O~RK BROWN ·~oz BOl< 59 b Hunl s Chilo Beans Ju 11 f"A"' 77 b Appian Way Pizza Pie M1:11 THl(I( CRUST 21 OZ BOX 1 49 Dairy & Frozen £SAFFOlA MARGARINE, •• , ... 79 b~"AN~~ET CHICKEN .. , •. 2. 97 b ~.~.~ARONI & CHEE SE ,, •· .89 L L 1'dy Lei' Peas 1.-111 1111r. 65 L Ore·lda Cob Corn ~ ' l'~G I 05 r Chicken Enchilada b CRf<;U q •~o/ Pl(r, 179 r Pizza For One 6 CELE<\ TE OE LUX[ 901 l'K(, 1 39 r BanQuel Gookin Bags 6 ~ VARt[ Tt[" •OZ Pt<(, 45 r Sara Lee Cheese Cake 6 AfGULAR t • ()l Pl\C1 1 89 Deli Key Buys .39 1 01 Pkq p AMERICAN . 189 6 CHEESE SPREAD uov Le!' S1n(jlt' Wr~p Sl1C!'<I 16 01 Pk9 b~~~~~~E.N ~l~~LE'S ..• :1.09 b ~~f~J.~.~H.T 'N LIVE~; •. 1.89 L ~?.~Z ... ~!~LLA CHEES~, .. 1. 99 b ~is_~TTA CHEESE ., , .... 1. 29 L -Marco Po to Salami Chub 3 89 rp. ••"Inn• •Ii nz r•l(c; I Gallo Pepperoni Stic-i.s • : 1 • 1 .ig r Summer Sausage b LAOYLCE lOOZ Pi<G 1 89 r Sunset Avocado Dips 6 l llAR1[Ti£S 8 OZ CTNR Liquor b ~.~,L.0,~.~~~ES r-.. ..... _,.. fw•lltt~C'•I J~• •• t' 63 2.99 3.39 DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS 111¥1111 t•t WALM/T Attl!Ul 411AKllM l tt •o 9'A1' CIOl.LIGC llOUl.IVAAO \ • '\IU.lllTOtf -TlllOTON•- II Household & Pet pPAPER 59 6 TOWELS • t.JCh lf'fl wn fP ":.''*f''' ')I .111 r·w P1w> O'J ~~ Oou L ~.E.F,~.~ TRASH BAGS b ~E .. ~.~~.NCH BAGS b ~.c.~!T,N.~~KINS L ~~.~ BA TH SOAP ~ PutP• O••lt•19,.....,: l •.•r • : ~ t A•po Ooq f,,, 1j c HFEf ·~· , __ ,. ~ • .' A', .2.39 .69 .59 ... 45 r Be FrPSh Fr~shenf"S 6 f ll l r He .. ~ i 1Af.! t; • b Glamour Puss Cai Foon • ... , Ilea/th& Beauty A ids !DIETAC CAPSULES L DIET AC CAPSULES L~E~! ~9.!!.?N .{ ALKA SELTZER L ~? .. ~~"!~ ~~J~ON L ~;? .. NP.~ .~~.TH BEADS A~~.~~ ~~f ! .. ~ERM 2.39 3.29 3.99 1.67 ,1.99 .. ,1.59 4.29 L~~:~~:?t~,.~AIR SPR~~ 1.19 A Rave Soll Hair Spray PUMP '-ff',q1 AA E 't PA H. il () 0" 1JN'-O"'lf[1 i o/ 1 19 L Close Up Too1hpas1e • •• •ll 97 r Pepsooent Toolhbrus.h HARO 6 MEO•• ~~ ... I' I ·~· A 1)1t'r: .. 1L[~(.. 49 • OAaotllGl!OVf: lafft IU91JO AVlllUI MUllflljQ TOii MAC:ll , ... LA PAI.MA AVlllUI COtTA MUA ,, .. MAlllOll 90U\.CVAllO Ul llO IUSl.iO AvtllUI OAllOINOllO'I« ,, • .,, .... ~IAA-... , AT\NfTA AvtllUI ,_ -. ... CMCA AVlltUl MllM JtNO TO. MACM ,.,.. ll'OOll•1Uall ITMtt UIOUtlA~& run CMOl llOAO "'LA PAZ tAllUAllA Un IO -OI. ITilllt lA-o\Ojl UI Miii~ ...... flCI Cllltt.a '., OHllCH ""' c..-NAffll\lt' STORES OPEN OAIL.V t A.M. ''""'Ofo twtU'tLU•VI .. It • ~:'rt ........ AftllUI -"'"' 'i .. 11 tfl\ll,llf.Ml'tO-IYI i I I · I M dMa wOtlt l>Y eut· t t• _. .... .... UDI c"•....,,.~ .... 1 ....... ~ r• •• •-••1-a.-u: -----100 to 150 calorle1 JOU Mid to stay tet. 1t•1 ........... ...._.__..._~-..• Hl1h ln vttamln A, .. •llDple u tbat. Fadl theae lnclude apricots, tbat fGnl oe ~Uni b 11 car_..~._ or Umlt· --. .............. -..-.. ..... .-aapara1u•, rocco • _,,.... -~---------c antaloupe, collard ln1 your Intake to un· 1reen1, carrots, creen Umlted amounts of only so choose them more Other substitutes: add.l· beana, kale, lettuce, certain toodl are actw· d 1 f d d ly low-ealol'le dlet4, too. often, tlonal a ry oo s ; man10, ,nustar greens, Tb• bottom llne Js a For those without befna and peas, which spinach, turnips , redaced c·•-..1e •-take. cholesterol problems. are ve1etab&.e protein squash. Two.,.. cup serv- alUO 111 e111 ean occ:aaionally (oods. inga a day or their Whlle it's true there a.-e substitute for meat. i . Ga EEN or yeUow calorie equivalent eaten raw, ce>e*ed, comblned WbOI• fruits are hilh tn wlth other foods, Ot ~ fit..r ADd a better choice u a ..,.a. than fruit Julee. '· lllGH·C fnlU •IMI I . OTliE• raUITS n1etaMee: 100 to 150 ... ..-11••"•: 150 to calorfea. lnetude at 200 calorlea. least two ~·cup Hrv· TboN preeedln1, plua lnre : or1a1ea , apple1 , bananas , erapetri,&lt, lemon, Ume, blueberrle1, blackber· tan1erlne, strawberry, riea and other berries, papaya, tomato, broc· beets, com, oaullnower, coll, biu9aels 1prouta, pears, potatoes, pineap- c ab baae. peppere. plea. other salad vefetablea. For the moet ftber, doa't discard edible lklna . t. aaEADS, eereal, •r ala : 200 to 250 calories. IWeetad). 7. r ATI. OILI, ..... fat ,......_..: 160 to llO calorl•. • Thia cate1ory lnchacMI not only butte r , marurine, abortenln1 and.....iad oil, but allo high -fat food• llke mayonnaiH, peanut but· ter. salad dreastn11. Vat ia prevalent in many foods . metabolic differences -• ao'me people nay fat on .----------.-,-..----------=---------------.....-------------------------------:-- fewer calories tbaq Also Includes : spa1hetU, noodles, rice, bul1ar, barley, oata, cornmeal, flour, un. sweetened breakfaal cereal (preferably whole grain, uo · others. If you are fat, it's because you are con- 1umin1 more calories· worth ot food than your body can use US> in ac- tl vity. 1'be excess food is being stor ed as fat. You can lose weitht by lowering your dally food intake to match the caloric needs of the slim person you want to be. Let's put it another way : YQU cannot remain at 180 or 200 pounds if you eat only enough calories to support 120 or 10. CONSEQUENTLY. to los-e weight. it's not necessar y to s tarve yourself. How many calories? Most overweights will lose h fely, without hunger, on an intake of 1,200 to 1,600 calories_' a day. Those who have large amounts of weight to lose are better off al· tempting to diet at 1,500 c alories si nce that amount is easier to live with. While it m ay b e theoretically possible lo lose weight on any com· bination of foods that total 1,200 o r 1 ,500 calories -six or seven candy bars. for example the body demands certain nutrients every day. A diet that fails to pro- vide them will soon be abandoned. Weakness, depression and hunger will insure that the diet is stopped, because the I body will make its needs known in the form of 1 food cravings. Persons with poor eat- ing habits generally wind up meeting their body's needs by overeat- ing : con suming too 1 many calories' worth of I the wrong foods in order to provide the needed nutrients. That's why all diets that work are well· balanced. However. a diet you ca n lave with rpust htatch your likes and dislikes and fit the way you live. It's not im- perative that you eat fish. liver or spinach if "' you provide the same nutrients from othe r foods. .. It's not even impor- t ant that you eat breakfast, lunc h and dinner :· s nac ks and mini-meals can add up to the same number or calories and nutrients <and may even .n.ake it easier to lose weight). D ESIGN YOUR OWN DIET Think of diet planning as calorie bookkeeping: a certain number to spend each day, but you m usl pay your nutrition bills. Decide on your daily calorie budget - somewhere between 1,200 and 1,500 calories a day. Use a reliable calorie guide lo choose foods from each or these 10 categories every day, keeping within the minimum and max - imum calories allowed for each category. Prepare and combine foods any way you like, but be sure to account for additional calories from cooking ingre· dients selected from other categories. I. LOW-FAT milk aad dairy foedl: 200 to 2SO calories. You need 16 ounces 1kln mllk (180 calories) each day, or approx- i m ately t h e 1ame calories' worth of low- f at cotta1e cheese, un- sweetened l o w-fat yo1ur t, buttermilk, fresb farmer cbeeae, ricotta or other low-tat cbeete. UHd plain or Jn 1alada or cooked dllbea. 2. L E AN pr otel a •eah: aoo to uo calorim. Four to e ounca lean, fat -t rimm e d m eat, ~. ftlb or , .. food t rimmed of fat and ~Id etli JttUe OI' DO fat lddllll. Pleb. chicken . ua lwkeJ .... leaner, • Present 011111 coupon elOng with 1ny one M•nulac1urett centa-olf' coupon and get dout>M tne n•lllQI w!\4111 you Puf'h•se 11\e ''"" Nol lo 1"Cluoe retailer lrM · Of groc.y i>u•C"'" coupans 0< .. , .. d lh• value ol 1ne 1lem EACludel llQUOf IObecc;o and llu1d milk prodUC:ll -. . UlllllOM.._,_,...,, t •rlC...,. ... Umll I Double~ ,. c ....... ' Coupon .......... tlhru •• 1,1"1 PLAINWRAP. Approx. 5 lb. Chub Ground Beef •' . . • Aalpha-C hllled-100°/o Pure Apple Juice &:~~~gal. -"" ctn. 9 oz. pkg. ·sl~DDD~DDD ~rmtW~~ JIJ~ rnnr ~~m~. Over 350,000 Prizes available to win! ....... llliM1• .. - ~ . . -··-_ .. .... . .... . . - ----'"" J I .... - USDACholce · BHfChuck Pre1en1 ""' coupon aool\g will\ 1ny one Manurac1ur1r1 c..,11-011 couPO" 1no ge1 oouDle Ille lllli"!I' wllen you PUrChHe 11\e •lem NOi lo .nclude relalier.. ·free' Qt grocery PIHClleH couPQns o• eaceed 1111 value of the ~em E>.cludts l•QuOt 1ob1cco 1no llu•d milk p1oduc:11 -_&JmM One ...,;p;..~ctw••~...;... end UmM a Double c91 ... ,., c• t • C..-~•-lhru .... 1M1 Aalpha-FrHh Hot or SwHt 7-Bone Roast USDA •.. CHOICE -I ~ Italian Sausa e 29 69 'I per lb: Peak of the Seaaon-Tender Fresh Green - Asparagus • Eaatern Grain Fed.-Shoulder Cut Pork Blade Steak per lb. Laundrr Aid Ajax ~~ De~ergent 42oz.139 box Red ROH, Hearty;llurgundy or Gallo Chablis Blanc 1.S ltr. 27 7 btl. Prices effective Apr. 2 thru Apr. 8, 1981 \OS ~ears of Value~ ~ Ralphs the offlclal .. su,.nnarket ot Ille lo1 Angeles Blcentennlal LA200 " ,. .. 1•. '. •'I '· I • " Hl•ta ••rum trill1eeride leYell An a dep.Ddabht Wlf'DlDM aitDal that IOIO~ la j 1ml11 ln the Upld metabolllm ot th• bod1. U' 1 wlae to take lt HriO.ly and to try to -brlDI the count 'down wlt9'in normal ran1e, because tbl• c:ooditton can lead to many de· sen~rative diseases if left unchecked. Jn a ~ent dlscuasion with Dr . Muiuel Taasournis of the Ohio State University Hospitals ln Columbus, Ohio, be cautioned, "Sometimes , high trialyceride levels are caused by poor dietary habits, such aa too muc;h fat and too much refined suear in the caloric in· take." Tzagoumis has made many studies of this sub· ject and is well-known for his interest in calling attention to the dangers of ignoring a medical re- port showing elevated II triglycerides In the blood. H e explained .th'at sometimes this condl· tion is asymptomatic, meaning that you might not know about it unless you had your doctor do a medicaJ test. such as is done lo find out the serum cholesterol levels in the blood. Other times , hy pertriglyceridemia (as it is called in medicaJ circles) might be the cause of unex- p I a i o ed abdominal pains, pancreatitis, or skin eruptions called xanthomata. Hy pertri glyceride mi a is often related t o diabetes, renal disease. and vascular disease. The American di et which Is at a 40 percent to 45 percent intake of daily calories in fat, is considered to be a con- tributing factor for some high triglyceride serum level reports. Related to the high fat intake is the current 24 percent sugar intake. Tzagournis says, "In most circumstances, s imple sugar and sucrose ingestion causes a rise in se rum triglycerides, and sugar restriction results 10 J noticeable fall s In 1 Aegeans 'tohl tale According to an Aegean legend, the first artichoke was a lovely young maiden who lived on the Island of Zinari. An angry god was envious of her beauty and changed her into an artichoke. As a close relative of the common thistle plant, the artichoke spread slowly through Mid-Eastern cultures from its discovery paint along the Nile River in Egypt iolo Italy and mid-Europe. In 1885. French immigrant farmer s brought it firs t to Louisiana and then to Florida. SOON AFTER, Italian farmers planted it in the rich soil of the Monterey Bay areas of California. Castroville is the second lo oldest town in Monterey Coun t y. found e d by Ju an Bautista Castro in 1863. Born in Monterey, Castro inherited almost 40,000 acres. His family was truly among the first families of California, with Juan himself one of the last of the California Dons. His father, Simeon Castro, became the first alcalde (mayor ) or Mont erey under, !.~.: ..... __ .1 rule and his mother ~.:s the sister of California's last Mexican governor. t Ct'ST&OVILLE was the southernmost town in the United S~tes at that time, add Juan proudly donated land for a town square and a cemetery, both of which are still located in tbe area. RecOIDidnl thal new aeUlen were necessary for frowtb, be built the fint hotel. The Southern Pacific bad a depot tJi the city, ln•"'1.DI lta IMtla; the flrat Ro•acf. Houae to aene the ralJro841 was part of the earllest Caatroville. trf•lycerlde levels.'' Therefore, a reduced su1ar lntake ls also rec· om mended for those who show abnormal trl1lycerlde levels. It would be wise to dlscuaa this with your own doc· 'tor it you are concerned. Here are some low fat recipes that will appeal to thote who afe con· cerned wlth lowednl total daily fat lntak•: TOllATO .IUICE SALAD D&ESSING 1 cup tomato Julee ~ cup lemon Juice 2 tableapoona finely grated celery l clove 1arlic, minced ~ teaspoon salt Dash pepper Combine all Inge· dient.a in a jar. Shake vl1orously and re(rl1erate several hours before ustn1. Makes 1~ cups. YOOU.T Ct&UIEDSPIHACH 1 packa1e frosen chopped spinach ~ teaapoon salt ~ teaspoon powdered onion "4 teaspoon nutmeg "4 cup skim milk yogurt Place aplnach In a aaucepan and add 1 tncb of water. Add salt, onion powder and nutme1: took until tender. Drain. Stir In yoprt. Makes 4 servlnaa. SPAGllE'ITI WITH • CIDCKEN UVEa SAUCE 1 cup bouillon, fat- free l onion chopped fine "" pound chicken livers, chopped into chunks minutes, 1tlrrln1 oc; "4 pound fresh culonally. Add ':!.!I mushJ"OOms. sliced pepper a'.nd tbyme, "4 teaapQOO salt mix throuth. Combtne "4 teaspoon thyme tomato sauce and nour; ~ teupoon pepper sur into liver mixture. 1 can (8-ounce) Cook for 6 mi.Gut• over tomato sauce • low heat, •tlrri.nl until 1 tablespoon flour thickened. Meanwhile, 12 ounces spa1hetti cook apa&bett.l ln boillo1 Pour bouillon into a water and cook for 12 laree skillet: add minutes or untll al chopped onion, livers, dente. Drain, and serve and mushrooms. Cook wltb sauce. hkea ' over moderate heat for 5 servings. Lower Prices Overall Nobody offers more ~ssuran_ce or stronger total guarantee of _Lower Overall"Pric~es than ·Market Basket "ttU lrfl(fl'i( wtl U'll t 11111U IUU V1t 1 tMI Triple-The-Difference--- Guarantee! BUY 26 OlffEllENf ITE MS WOAfH $20 OR MORE Al MARICH BASKET COMPAllE "ICES lHIS WEEIC ON 1H£ SAME ITEMS Al ANY OTH(ll CONVENTIONAL SUPfRMAllKEI • (ONl Y ONE Of EACH ITEM PURCHASED MAY 8E USED IN THE COMPARISON) If !HEIR TOTAL IS LOWEii. IRING YOUll ITEMIZEO MAllKH BASICH llEGIS!ER 1AP£ ANO lHE 01HER SIOllE'S ,,_ICES TO MAllKU BASKET ANO WE Will PAY YOU llllPU !HE OlfHllENCE l•CASH. 'OClUOltol MIMtl•I•" SIO•ll All 04.Jh hJf tte .. r1 •nt..,ro -o u.d rv 14,l(•S Ofll fOA •U••t oa COMMUCl&I Ulf ~~;;CHOKESu•39 ~-ms-.. :-<2fa5* ~=;ENINGl~~ tw~;WEOSLICED ~.89 Splttlft mApples C111p ffi Romaine Lettuce ""-' m Smirnoff Vodka 1 75 Ill. Ii .49 ti .35 9.99 · Oii Mtftlt B! Fruit Cocktail ~ii~'Q-Food M•o1a.1-tt H! Sweet Relish t l ft 15-112 .. , Uft .59 .21 1.19 to11 tunr• lllAMt 1.39 .29 .45 1.59 11.., .. P'Wlk ~Salmon IS·lll .. f 1 99 C•ft • Au"11d fl1v0<1 J1111y"'1•d ~Ice Cream 112911 1 59 ctn • ,_,. -OtSff•1t1l.\1.. 11·3/l -OZ ~Totino 's Party Pizza ,_, 1. 59 FAMILY MEAT PACKS REDUCED 5c PER LB. OR MOREi ~ C~b~PSte~"lt"·~" ~FAMILY PACK. CtftltrCul ~ Rib Pork ChQps . ' . ~ FAMILY PACK lltt Eu ~Pork Chops lb 2. 43 lb 1 . 93 Ii 1 . 54 ~FAMILY PACK. c-,,...,,.,..,c .. o.. 1 19 re" Drumsticks Or Thighs .. . Frtrtft AIUklft ~Halibut Steak Wolitft'I Ctrtlloed 5-t·l• Avg tfi Whole Boneless Ham 8t1I Rib 9· 12·lb Avg Boneless ~Whole Spencer lb 3 .59 .1.79 • 3.09 .. ' I '1 II Several lfattlmei popular yean qo bave co•• a.e. ln .._,Mela .......... n.alftl ud romeace. 'l1U rotnanUc revlval c•U• tor some extra special ceJebra· lions, ot which intimate dlnnen will certalnJy be a part. Wh en preparing a romantic dinner pay special attention to the dessert, for perhaps no other counse can capture the heart so well. And many de sserts made with luscious fresh fruits have a memorable past to recommend them as tried and true -like Heart-Of-My -H eart Pavlova arid Matrimony Pie. Heart-Of-My·He art Pavlova is a spectacular fresh fruit dessert from Austr a li a a nd N e w Zealand. It was named a ft e r th e 'fam o u s Russian bal~rina, Anna Pavlova, who captured the hearts of so many in th e So u t h e rn He misphere. Coconut whi pp ed cr e am fills a hea rt- shaped meringue shell that's garnished with a colorful assortme nt of fresh tropical f~its - g r a p es, o range s, bananas and pineapple. A n d al tho.ug h t hi s dessert is a feast for the eyes as well as th e heart, it's deceptively easy to prepare. M a tr i mo ny Pie is a nothe r desser t tha t bespeaks of rOIJlance. It t}eralds from ttle Penn- s y 1 van i a Dut ch and was so-named because the fresh fruits are so fl avorfully combined un- der one crust that they PORK CAR VI NG CUES To make it easier to carve a pork loin roast. the National Live Stock and Meat Board recom- mends having the meat retai l e r saw th e backbone free trom the rib bones. The backbone should not be removed but s hould rema in at· tached. Before the roast is brought to the ta ble, the backbonr should be re· moved Ly cutting close along the bone, leaving as much meat on the roast as possible. With the side includ· ing the rib bones facing the carver, inser t the fork in the top of the roast and make slices by cutting close along each side of the rib bones. One slice will contain ·the rib, the next will be boneless. Orange Coa1t OAJLY PILOT/WedMiday, Aprll 1, 1981 I bl1b. »lnches long) to chunks over co~onut nt outline or heart. cream. Ftoet ouuide or SP"ad balf the mer· meringue shell with re. ln,ue mixture evenly m in l DI w h 1 pp e d over heart. Flll putry c~am. Chill 1 bour. Add b a& with remain! baaana a Uces befor e rnertniue mixture; p ac!rvtng. Makes: 8 serv- alone lnlide eds• of • lngs. romance. lar. Pipe la)'e~. m • The freshness of all ln1ue ln.slde co11ar, until MATllDIONY PIE the Lngredients is what a wall la formed 2-incbtts l ~ c ups cor ed , mak• these dessetta so high. Bake In a 250 P•fed , allu d cookin1 memorably marvelous. degrees F. oven 1 hour . apples ' The key is selecting top Turn off beat and let 111\ c ups c ored . quality fruJts just burst· meringue set in oven pa red, slJced firm pears Ing with juicy goodness. overnight. Remove from 11.AJ cups seedless Fresh coconut and oven and gently peel off grapes pineapple, {or example, aluminum collar. Gently 1 teaspoon fresbly are uns urpass ed In lift menncue from wax squeezed lemon juice flavor. paper, and place on ~ cup light brown According lo the Unit-serving plate. sugar, firmly packed ed Fresh Fr uit and To assemble dessert, 3 t a bl es poons Ve getable Association, wh,ip cream until stiff; granulated su1ar co c onuts s ho uld be divide in half. Fold 3 tablespoons flour neavy for their size with coconut into b,alf t he v. teaspoon gr ated no soft spots . La rge cream; spread 6ver bot-fresh lemon rind plump plneapples, with tom of meringue shell. ~ teaspoon ground a disUncUy s weet fra· Arrange grapes, orange cinna mon ' grance and bright green sections and pineapple ~ teaspoon ground nutmeg 14 teaspoon aaJt · Pu try for a aln•le· crust pie 1 ece white, 1U1htly beaten Sugar In large bowl comblne app le~. pears, grapes and le mon j uice . In s m a ll bowl combine brown sugar, 1ranulated sugar, nour, lemon rind, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt. Toes lightly with fruit. Turn Into a l·quart baking dish. Roll pastry out to ~-lnch thickneas. Arrance pastry over fruit and crimp edges. Brush pastry with e11 white. Sprinkle lightly with sugar. Bake in a 425-degree ove n 30 minutes or until pastry Is weel·browned. Serve warm, plain or with ice cream. Makes: 4 to 6 servings. HEART.Of..MY·HEART PAVLOVA GARNISHED WITH FRUIT. leaves are best. But,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- contr ary t o pop ular lllt~,_.~.llfrtlftl~nl"fTn"llrt belie f, pulling out the leaveiJ doesn't help you judge sweetness. Well-formed bunches of red and white seed· Jess grapes are availa· ble year round; good color is the best in· die a tor for this fruit. For out-of·hand eating, fully ripened pears are most delecta ble, but when baking use Bose or D'anjou varieties, which ar e a bit firmer. HEt\R T ·OF -MY · HEART PAVLOVA 3 egg whites I :1/4 cup s uperfi ne sugar 1 • teaspoon salt I ""' 1 teaspoon distilled white vi negar 2 teaspoons freshly I grated orange rind 1 tea spoon corn· I star ch ' 1 pint heavy cream 1 cup freshl y grated 1 coconut 112 cups seedless gr apes • 3 oranges, peeled, sectioned < Jl..'l cups) 1 ~'2 c ups fr esh pineapple chunks 3 bananas, sliced Prepare meringue one day ahead. B~at egg whites in small bowl of e lectric mixer unt il I frothy. Gradually bea,t in sugar: add salt. Add vi nega r and or an ge rind ; beat until stiff pe aks form . Re move from mixer and fold in cornstarch. Pia~ sheet or wax paper on b aking sheet a draw a heart 8- inc hes wide on paper ; turn paper over so lead or ink is face down. M a k e a co llar o f alum in um foil (2-inches • Ram Came Tickets • Side of Beef • Ram Team Autographed Footballs c~ ~~.A-Get your entry blaala at ~~•I California Baacb Marlet ~o~ NOW OPEN TO SERVE YOU More Traditional Ameri~p Lamb RecipeS · . . \ ' ~ \ )f ·:I . '--/·" .... ,;.I '~/'. 1;. ~:/ "·\ ~. . . yl.(.t\. ""-1 \ " .~ J 'ht '\.'\' ......., ~ . ·."!.' . . •• f \ ' . ,;' . I . ' • I ·' . ...----(' ~ . .... ~?.. .., # "\ SEAFOOD • \ .. f • ... ·~. '• ~· 7 • . r l ~. -• " -'t •. •' I J . .,.,..... • I '--...·•.. ..._ . . :\'IARK ET .. ,~. ,, ......... ·. / 'I/ /t 1\\ /' ~-/.. '-.... ~--"\ r .. -'\;;- .Jr Jf }·· ":'-\':' I'-'\ I'\ SEAFOOD SP ECIALS HOCSE SPECI ALS Halibut Steaks ,\mild flak,1 11h1tl' ft~h .i:n ·al fnr b11kinn or n RB<> •399 ***'******** * Shell On Jumbo Shrimp lt ""'-\ ,l(ourml•I se<lfood ciehl(hl • ...._ .....-I )lOund hm1t onh ...... Jt "1th this roupon lt * ·~99 * * * * * •'4 * * * * * WI NE CELLAR SP ECI ALS Ne w England style Clam Chowder ,\ (u\·oritt' "ilb an~ M'Ufood rnl•al Fresh French Bread H<tk1•c1 Oath from l'.iltsst>rtl' Oe Franre > ·1~ 16 oz. 8~~a IMPORTED CH EESE S P ECIAL 1oar •299 Imported J arlsbers 1b. Nor way's finest. excellent with seafood and ~me. Fetzer Chenin Blanc I 9 ?9_ Stoned Wh eat Thins 99c ea. ~. Great with cheese /Y~ <JI)~ fjJ~ ~ 14450 "D'•C.tver-Opent:30,,.:30 Mon.·Frl. Sau , sun 10·5:30 Al lhf' ~oratr of C'ulvu and W1l1t•t ol( tJW ~ F•y. la &\t. Httttaa• Plu1 JR VINE -552·3«2 . YOUR TOTAL SATISFACTION IS ALWAYS GUA RANTEED n UHaEA..-000 AV,UUBLE WREN IN 8£,UON . t\e\pvou turn your whee\s \n\o cash. ~~ - -.. -J • hf'. I • I ~f , O L D MILL .. ~ Lamb Chops The old American mill. It stands for a time when early Americans were establishing their fine cooking reputations by setting tables loaded with bread made from fresh milled flour. homegrown fresh fruits and vegetables-and lamb done to a fare thee Write for more free lamb recipes american llli cOullCil Dept. L·980. 200 Clayton Street Denver. CO 802C>e Oller oOOd on u S A onlv whll• 1upp11 .. IHI PIHH allow. to ....... -.'°' O .. IV•IY .. well" Now you can set your table with a touch of the early American by serving a meal starring this traditional dish. 6 serving.s 6 lamb shoulder chops cul l,.1nch th1clt 1 medium on10t'I ltnely chopped 2 tablespoons butter Sall Pepper •,., teaspoon dried 0111 weed 1 cupwacer 1 slalk celery. each rib peeled and cul 1nlo 2-inch pieces 2 eggs 3 tablespoons lemon 1u1ce ~ cup boiling ch1ct1en broth or bOUtllon In heavy skillet with cover. cook lamb and onion 111 butter until browned. Season w1tl'I salt, pepper and dill weed Add water, acrap1no pan well Cover and cook over tow heat for 1 '-S hours. or unit I meat 11 tender Add celo(y and cook 1~ minutes Beat eggs until light Add a dash ot $alt and beat In lemon Juice Slowly add hot broth Of bou llon stirring constantly Remove lamb from ~lllet to warm olatt•c Add egg mixture lo pen or pplngs and mix well Cook until thickened, but do not bOll SttVe 1&uce over lamb . .. '•'I ' ~ '• ~. . ,, . • . .... , .. , h!· h ' 'i .;s. II ••••• .. .. I ' , · "IWEBT acldopbilus" lllilk limply ii low-fat pasteurized milk wblcb bas been lnoculated with a special bacterial culture, Lactobacillus acldopbilus. llaay penooa claim tbat tbe acidopbilus Microwave cooking ' A nine-week course in Jftlcrowan oven cookin' 11 to belin Aprll 6 at pranceCoutCoUece. Tau1bt by Lynn Jaramillo, who ls a 1peclall1t "i n latenuitiooal looda, the milt .promot• 9"Utr 4'1nU.. ltr pro= ............. ............. ,..,. .. tow-tat mUt aad tb• same number of calories, about 150 per t-ounee ,i .... It should be kept very cold, however, or the Lac· tobaclll\&I will caUH tbe m Ilk t o a our v ery rapldl)'. What about tbe keep- bMaUMdaoMUMbMD killed cturtaa paatMartu- tlOD (a _ 9ulck beatla1 tbn rapid dd1J1nc proe· ell ). ANOT&sa question often utecl: Wbat l• homo,.usatioo 1 Tbll ii a proceu in whleb whole milk la puaed, under pressure, tbroucb a very fine 1talnle11 stee l meab. Tb• fat or cream 1lobule1 are broken dowa lato very, v.,.1 amaU partJcln wblcb wUl not separate out •laln~the mUk IDOUI, or all ~same, . Bealdea coatalalnc valuable amounta of caJelum, all varieties of milk are aJao a 1ood source of protein. In fact, milk ranks amonc ev~ry~ne · tbe least espea1Jve for ma ot prcUta. There are nume!'0\19 vltamlnl and mlnerala lo mUk, HP•olall1 Vltamlna A, D, and Ri boflavin in whole milk. TBE LEA.ST e s · penalve form of milk la non-fat dry milk. When it la reconstituted prop- ~r I y, few can discern th dllfll9ff, llak• It u9 a -aMed ... clll.ll tbcwCNlblJ for tbe belt ftavor. Non·f~t dry milk eaa allo be la IO'tir·eaet aubltltute for fr.b mill in puddlac and uucea. Milk la the pert.et lnack food, inupemlve, dellclous, with vital nutrlenta for tb.e daily diet. Anytime la a Sood time for tJl1a wholesome bevera1e. rou *""' Mwt · ' r-_-._ .. _.--. """,,,,, -·==· 1-Ml ,,,,, C:O llOllO IULLT ~ ._. ~ YO llUAM ~ .-., YCU Oii 'l'OUll _., ~ ,,,, -~'--· IA1R llOI. .,,.WAT II ~YlllllllM/18 101UAIE*1 • GENEML IUUS 91 C WIEAnES .............. 1~ • HTTYC~REGIUTIQlllU< 98C PAllCAKE MIX ... 12-0Z. • ROYAL•VAIUETIES • •9C -~~-··· .........•.... ,,,1-()Z. • WHITE IUNG D LAUNDRY • 1 •7 DETEIR-1 ............ n-OZ. • LAUNDRY uaueo • 1 •7 DYllAllO ................ 12~ I iAR SOAP ............. uoz.46• • AllOllTED COLORS 99• 11.1. nssu1 ........ : .4-ROLL I DIAPEM-»CT DAmllE OR 24-CT X·ABSORB. •3n PAllPEllS ............... EACH -I TMDWEEI FROZEN • 117 OllAlllE JllCE .... 1H>Z. .~ow Jf/FfY BAKING MIX IOU.• 111• -•~as· BAR SOAP •HJZ.ss· a.EACH I SNOWY .ar.'2" l'IOYAl IMSTAHT •vom; I PU NO AEG~2a· 0RAJE7u1ce •~'I~ BUAOUNOY CHA8U8 RHINE WINi OR fi5il mm ••• .., •••••••• ......... UM. 11UI -----................ ·--"· -----., .. ml IK SftAll ..... La ---.,,. ................. La .......... : ...... 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W•a .._.. llAlnllPllCI FROZBI FOODS •• PIJAlE ~ °"""""" f •ll llWll u-· CHUM <IOI IHAT.MAHICOTTI -EAT • _.,. ,_, tAUCfOOILASA(Jfj .. -.OlaAUCl CB1S1t ftlB ==~ t RSI fl1lTS =:!.."-• . •mm Pl ~r.'-1 ,.. --·AffUS -•• amt llSSlS ~~~~ mmYllSSIS lllSENCU 111-01.99' Mll NiG,,_ ·1,. llEO"" ,, .. ti-01. ,,. ~szn '1" ·~ t I I I .... ) I' •• : I . I . CLASSI Fl ED 07 \ The Fir.ates are primed for a showdown with the Falcons . . . D3. i,l ~ \ . ,t Ocean View will jOin Sunset League:' "_{., / Finally, and only because Ocean View Hieh Prlnclpal John Viculln has decided it's in the ,best interest of the Seabawks, Ocean View Hi&b moves to the Sunset League and Cypress High stays where It belongs, in the Empire League. That prospect will become reality this spriDI and Is effective in September following the official 8PPl'OVal by all Of the principaJ5 involved in both leagues and a final OK from CJF Commissioner Ray Plutko. "Our historic reasons for objecting to joining the Sunset League remain," says Viculin. "We're smaller in enrollment and the level of competi· Uoo la steep, especially in football. But we can no longer afford not to be in the Sunset, because ol revenue and decreased costs of transportation. "It has become clear lo us that we'll collapse in athletics unless we can•tower the costs and in· crease our revenue." Indications are that the 100 percent approval from 14 principals is assured and PluUco verifies his backing. So, the switch appears imminent. You can bet your bottom dollar Cypress won't object to staying within its own district and league, thus overturn· ing the ridiculous idea of sending Cypress to the "I've been informed of the situation and any time you get 14 principals -to agree you' re on the right track," says PluUco. "I see no problem and expect to automatically approve it! I've en· couraged them to get it to my office as soon as possible." Sunset League. It would be nice if it could be said this was something the Orange County releaguing commit· tee, chaired by Corona de! Mar High Principal Dennis Evans, determined. Such is not the case and if the current proposal Follow the boun·ring ball Newport Harbor High's Rich Holmes (8) appears to have missed a return to Marina's Tom Plane (4) in above photo. Below, Marina's Scott Filipek and Andy Klussm ann get set for a block. For de· tails , see story on page 0 2. It's final countdown /or Knapp, other$ By EDZINTEL oi ... o.lly ~llet Staff PALM SPRINGS -Chris Knapp isn't necessarily carrying a chip on his shoulder these days. No, actually he doesn't know where the chips are right now. One thing for sure though. By late tonight, Knapp should know whether he'll be wearing an Angels uniform in 1981. He and about five others, inc•udlng Jason Thompson,_ Dickie Thon, Bob Clark, John Harris, Dave· LaRoche and perhaps Don Baylor, have been mentioned u possible ball in the lnterleague trades. The Cseadline for trading i1 midnight toaipt. Ancela Vice President Bunte Bavul say1 that be'• IOC>ld.q for a reliable 1tarlin1 pitcher. Several namet bave been tolled around such ., Hou.ton'• Ken Foneh, the Cblca10 Cubt' Rlc- Beutebel and Pltubur1b'1 John Caadalerla, Jim Bibby and Snrtque Romo, MOUit.oil, In particular, la in· &e,.... In Tbon, a promllln1 1"11/.':!'elder. But t.o set Tbon for I ll miabt Aqulre more ~ao _.. tM 9)'9; Fonda ba ta.. rlt'bt of ftna1 approval °"*" •1 b'9de ln~Ylftl JdmMlf. Plttlburp la belie-wed to be atOlt .........._. ln Tbompean, a · tolld·blUIDI llrat bueman, Howenr, ~ Pirate• an ,.. port.dl~~een on 1lvlri; up lither rt, or Blbby. Al • s idelight, to gel Romo, the Angels )Vould necessitate acqulr- ing another player, someone like catcher Ed Ott. All of which leaves Knapp quite uncomfortable. A 14-game winner in 19781 Knapp baan't been the same since rupturing a disc on May 13, 1979. His following two seasons were marked by records of 5-5 and 2·11 and ERAs or 5.51 and 6.14. And he hasn't shown that be's ready for a successful 1981 this spring either with an ERA of 6.43. Knapp bas to fleure that his chances ol stayina u an Anael are about one in four. Manager Jim Fre101l ls plan- ning °" kff Pllll 10 pltc~era, 1even of which an pretty mud> Ht.: Geoff Zalua..L ~!U Trayen Andy HauJer, l'1'eG lhl'UMI, &.ve Renko, Dem AUe and U he'• bealtby, O.•e rro.t., If t.be Ancel• do ID fact acquire another pitcher tlmMalh a tnde, lbal l.eavea two-poalUoM to lae foucht for by Knapp, Joba D' A· equlato, Jease JeffenN, Jim BUI', Luis Sancbea, Mike W'ltt at\d LaRocbe. ~ "I'm deftnl&elJ 1om1 to trJ u herd u I can to make Ud1 team,0 Knapp .... earU• ta tPHnl tJ'ainlnt wMn hie tuaure waaa'tlCAmlun. "l'or eome rwao aoa, I feel Uk• I've been a little unlucky. l.Jke tbe cbtr. llaveo't (lee <X>V~WN, •I• DI) for 1982·83 is an indication, Orange County sorely ds new leadership with some respooaibillty to yone. l's difficuJt to Oelieve, but the 1982·83 proposal ds lrvine-l)ased Woodbridge Into the So:uth Coast League and leaves out-of-place El Toro in the Sea View League. Caplatraoo Valley Hip Principal John Sm*1. la a member of the three-man com~ttee, but fda input was largely ignored on the m ter. El Toro Principal Don Walker bas been req 1 1uci. a move for a long time. Why? "Woodbridge asked to go to the South Coast League," explai.rul Evans. Neither, however, would respond for the rec- ord on the situation ..:.... seekina t)e'low proftle .,..S hoping things may get better some time in t)e future. • Low proflles won't solve it -what wiU solve il What about El Toro's request to rejoin the South Coast League from where the Chargers were plucked out of a few years aco to satisfy the need of the Sea View League? Evans is confident the proposal will pass, of course, since it only takes a majority of votes from Orange County's principals. And that's too bad, because one (El Toro>. school gets the shaft simp· ly because of a lack of consideration for what is right. is new leadership w!tb a ~es~ive outlook. :i: Fears that the sport of water polo wo become a thing of the past within the HuntiD Beach Unified School District have been put aslde following an approved alternative to some earlier proposals to keep the district within lta bud1et. , What was at first feared to be the loss of (See CARLSON, Pase DJ) Lister's had dream r It is ASU's staggering loss , By JOHN SEVANO as we should have. Whenever'" ot 1111 Dally ~I ... Staff l d d Although Indiana's victory Paye un er pressure or we over North Carolina officially were fighting for our lives, we sealed the end to the 1981 NCAA played good." 1 basketball season, many experts • Maybe Ulat answer, more than are still speculating as to what any other, summed up ASU's happened to some of the coun· tragic plight -the proper effort try's premiere teams in the ear-just wasn't there. ly rounds of the post-season And for that reason -plus ~e tournament bitter taste that wa·s left in lib The fatality list was stagger-mouth -Lister decided to play ing. DePaul, Kentucky, Oregon in tonight's all-star game. Ke State, UCLA, defending cham· didn't want the public--or the pion Louisville, Arizona Stale-pro scouts for that matter -to they aU fell by the wayside. r e m e m b e r h i s f i n •1 performance, or tack of one, 1 THE LOS.SES WERE not only a shock. but dis believing to NCA A o ffi cials and college basketball fans who never in their wildest dreams thought so many quality caliber teams would be eliminated so soon. The players themselves were just as bewildered. Was It over- confidence? A let-down? The first round byes? There were as many answers as there were questions . Aiton Li ster, the big seven-foot center of Arizona State Universi· ty just shakes his head when asked t he obvious question, "What went wrong?" Lister admitted that the dev- asta ling defeat took some of the gtisten off of what was a re· markable year Cor the Sun Devils, who finished second in the Pac· 10 to Oregon State while compiling a 24·4 record. "RIGtrr AT TOE beginning <of the Kansas game> you could . feel something wasn't right," said Lister of his teammates. "During warmups you got the feeling that we weren't ready to play. "But I had felt like that before in other games and we always won so I didn't think much or it. .• AL TON LISTER What Lister did think about, however, was of all the prior NCAA tournament upsets of the previous day. Despite .the ominous warning, it didn't. 'help the Sun Devils. "We heard all about the upsets and said 'Oh wow,"' remem· bered Lister, who averaged 15.4 points and 9.8 rebounds for the Sun Devils while leading the Pac-10 in blocked shots (49). "We were all worried it was so m e ty pe of a trend or something, and then we went out and let the game get away from us. "Right. after we lost 1 flashed back to the Sugar Bowl tourna- ment (at New Orleans). It was early in the season and we were the top seed there, too and we lost to Tennessee i" the first round. The same type of thing happened at Wichita. "WE WERE ONE of the top seeds and we didn't play as hard Fiftla straight against Kansas. . "I wasn't too enthused about playing uiis game at the outset(' said Lister. "because it c*tl either help you or hurt you. •·But I decided to play because AJA is well-known nationally and they are organized. Plus it's a chance to show what I can do." LISTER WILL BE joined oo the conventton floor by Ron Cornelius of the University ol Pacific, Sid Williams of San Jose State, Jim Mccloskey ol Loyola, Vince Brookins of Iowa.. Mickey Dillard of Florida State, Greg Manning of Maryland, Clyde Bradshaw of DePaul and U.S. Reed of Arkansas. It was Reed's shot, ln~identaJJ ly, from just behind the midJ court stripe, that beat Louisville in the final seconds. ASU w~ never fortunate to be that clos~ as a Kanisas forward namecl Tony Guy scored a career-bi~ 37 points to lead the J aybawk embarrassment. "I never will forget him," said Lister of Guy. "He will be in the back of my mind for a long time. "It's so hard to figure it all out. I just don't know." Again Lister was shaking bia head. The moment, the memor'y, the game . . . it was as if it was all a bad dream. . ~ • Kibgs rip Jets, 7 -3 JNGLEWOOD CAP) -Coach Bob Berry wasn't particularly happy when bis Los Angeles Kines had a "letdown" against the Winnipeg Jets, but he could understand it. "We bad a lapse there and lost our concentration and t.bey got some goals," oald Berry. "But with a lead like that, that tends to happen." -• _ ........ l·------..-..' ''THIS HAS BEEN a lone yt for this team," he added. " lost two of our last four In last minute." , The defeat ran the Jeta' rec· ord to 0-ll·l in thelr last 12 roM I. . ,I fr001 Los ~eles tag From AP dbpatdn SACRAMENTO -The Oran1e County-hued Los Angeles Rams footbaU team would have to leave Loi ADaeles out of their name, under a bill Uiat baa reached the floor of the state Assembly. EiJ But they could still call themselves the Rams, or the Anaheim Rams, or the Orange County Rams. or whatever. Supporters of tbe bill told \he Assembly's Finance, Insurance and Commerce Committee on Tuesday that lbey want to preserve "dignity" for the Rams' former home town. Tbe committee advanced the bill on a 10-4 vote, after lit- tle oppositon. ·"They stole away the hearts of the fans. They should leave the name." said proponent Bruce Young, D-Cypress, referring to the National Football League team's move from Los Angeles to Orange County. Said Bill Roberts'on, member of the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission1 "We think the name belonp with the team that will be playing in the Coliseum. We don t want the Rams to have the name." .. The bill, SB502 by Ac;semblyman Michael Roos , D-Los Angeles, would prevent a professional sports team from us- ing the name of a city or county without. permission, if tbe team played its home games outside that city or county. In the case of a city or county with the same name, as in Los Angeles. the team would have to have permission of both the city and county. The bill would also allow a city or county to charge a fee for the use of its name by a team from outside Its boundaries. Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana, pointed out that other football teams including the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants, do not play in their namesake cities. "We don't care what happens In the rest or tbe country," said Robertson. "We in Los Angeles care about our football team and want to have another one," a reference to Los Angeles' efforts to get the Oakland Raiders. -------ft1111t 1• 111 t lw da,, -------. Wisconsin students, chantine when it became ap- parent that the Badgers would beat Northwestern in tbe schools' battle to escape the Big Ten cellar in basket- ball: "We're Number Nine." Lal,._..,,.,.,,,, •-•rnal l'Wcerw Guy Lafleur, in his first game since a near· fatal auto accident. assisted on two goals and Bob Gainey drilled in the second-period game-winner as Montreal beat the New York Islanders, 3·1, in &i.1 National Hockey League action Tuesday night. It marked the first Canadien victory over the Islanders in 10 games, dating back to 1978 . . Bobby Smitb scored two goals and Neal Broten, playing in his first NHL game, added one to lead Minnesota to a 6-3 win over St. Louis ... Aatoa Staabiy col- lected his 37th and 38th goals or the season to power Quebec to a 5-1 win over Pittsburgh ... The Los Angeles Kings and Buffalo Sabres have renegotiated their March 20 deal that gave the Sabres a top draft pick in exchange for veterans Rick Martin and Don Luce. - ..... ,. ............. ,.,, I I l1111s1'1J TM LtQI A.aaelea Laken, batllbll to become m the flrll ..._ in a dozen yean to win back·to-baclt NBA d1Uip6onlhtp1, open defense of tbetr title toal•bt acatast tbe Houston Rocaeu at lbe Forum in Tn•l•woOd. The Lakera will send Earvta .. ,hale" John'°" and Kareem Abd•l·l1bbar to the Po•l tonJabt ... Deni Greeewood, UmJt.ed to two pol-nta in the tint haU, 1cored 11 lb the first five mlnut" of the third quarter to apart Chtcago 1.o a 80·80 win over New York in thelr NBA playolf opener Tuesday night . . . ltlltu Ervla1'1 game-high S2 point.a and 20 each by Duryl Dawkiu and Bobby JOllft triggered Philadelphia to a 12'&-108 win over lndiana l.n their playoff same. Billy K.ata .. t had 25 points to spark the Pacers . . . New Jersey forward MaaJice Lana says he will appeal a $2,000 NBA fine stemming from an a1tercatlon in Detroit two weeks ago. ... ,,..,,,.~,.,,, ,.,. _ .......... . Wlllle Randolph scored both New York runs Ill and rook.le riibt·hander GeDe Nea.oa pllc'bed six innings of three-bit ball as the Yankees beat Tex- as, 2·1, in exhibition baseball Tu'esday night . .. Elsewhere around the grapefruit circuit:-.,8ruee Bocbte hit a two-run homer in the first inning, then dou~ied to ignite a two.run rally in the sixth as Seattle defeated the Chicago Cubs. 5-4 . . . Rookie Marshall Edwards' eighth·i(lning single drove in Ben Ogllvte with the winning run as Milwaukee rallied for an 11·10 victory over Oakland . . . Lloyd Moaeby's three- run homer capped an eight-run eighth in· ning that carried Toronto to an 11·7 win over PhiJadelphia . . . Joe Borgen drove in three runs with a pair or homers and the streaking San Francisco Giants posted their filh win. 5-1, over San Diego ... A sacrifi'ce fly by Rusty Torres after. Vtnce Law doubled and moved to third on a balk, 11uoov.. lifted Pittsburgh to a 6·5 win over Detroit ... Lamar Johnson and Harold Baines had two run singles in a five-run seventh inning that carried the Chicago White Sox to a 6·2 win over Kansas City . . . Mike Torrez and Mark Clear combined for a five-hitter as Boston posted its fourth consecutive victory . 3·1 over Minnesota ... Warren Cromartie's grounder to short scored Ellis Valentine in the seventh inning with the game's only run as Montr~al beat Baltimore. l·O ... Dan Norman's two-out home run in the 10th inning lifted the New York Mets lo a 4-3 win over St. Louis ... Cesar Cedeno slammed a two-run homer and three Houston pitchers combined to shut out Atlanta, 4-0 .. The Montreal Expos are seeking more relief pitching and have invited former Dodger Mike Marshall, to their training camp as a non-roster J>layer ... · The Seattle Mariners re- leased veteran catc he~ave Skaggs. ff-••"-elllft•I .... ,. l .. A c-• m11IUft' • The president of the Loe Angeles OJympi~. Organizing Committee says that a Huncarian sports official who denounced the city's 1914 Olym- pic plans as commercialized wu complimentary during a recent visit ... Swimmer Tracy Caulkins and speed· skating sensation Erle Heid"n were among six named as can- didates for the inaugural Jesse Owens International amateur athlete award . . Indiana's NCAA basketball champions were welcomed home Tuesday by thousands of cheering stu· dents and fans already looking forward to the Hoosiers' title defense next year . . . The New England Patriots, saying they want lo improve conditions al their home field, offered $4.6 million to purchase. Shaefer Stadium ... An Omaha television sportscaster reported that Creighton University basketball Coach Tom A.pile may be moving to Ohio State or Notre Dame . T~....,~ TV: Basketbalf -Houston at Lakers, 11 :30 p.m .. Chan· nei2. (taped). RADIO: Houston at Lakers,8:30p.m ., KLAC (570). THURSDAY RADIO ~--o Baseball -Cleveland vs. Angels at Palm Springs, ll:SS a .m .. KMPC (710). SPORTS BREAK I BASEBALL I VOLLEYBA~L fallen uJ ._,bt "9)r ftald." Knw •• he bt• not to,_ down neo u.>uo · be l'Mll .. that he very welF-eould 1• Mat down -to-tbe •lilort. "rn never bteo down tb.•re alnce I cam e here· (in 1978) and it bothers me to tb1nk ot it. "I don't know what it is. One time I'll lose my control, 1 wa.Uc people. t"ext time, it's home runs. I've tried-everything I can think of." Everything he could think of has included changing his mechanics altogether and changing his grip. Nothing hu worked. "At Um~. I feel like I'm back where l want to be and then I slip back again. l have a real hArd game and it seems like I struggle for several games after that." Ir Knapp sounds a little dis· satisfied, it's because he is. But he can't blame the Angels. They've given him the chances to prove himself. He simply hasn't delivered. "I developed some bad habitS after the injury like not throwing across my body," he said. "But l thought I felt pretty good now. The main thing is tha t I'm not getting hitters out." And if that's the case, Knapp may find himself out by mid· night tonight. * • * AMOeL MOTES " IOl•f of 10 Afl·SIA< .,.r1ormor\ will PMtlc1,..10 In thll ••-• Fr .. ••1 S.rlet be•-n ttw AAvelt and Ooclgert. ... Canw,. IHI-Wle<llcn. lead~ II ""9111l whO haw ... n All·Stor compolltlon whllo ''"" Dodgen top Cincinnati VERO BEACH, Fla. <AP> The Los Angeles Dodgers rallied for four runs in the eighlh in- ning. the winner on Cincinnati pitcher Geoff Combe's wild pitch. then held on to edge the Reds 6·5 Tuesday in exhibition baseball. Singles b y P e pe Frias, newcomer Ken Landreaux and Steve Garvey produced one run and, after a walk to Ron Cey, Pedro Guerrero's infield single sent Landreaux home with the run that tied it 4-4. Loser Jeff Lahti's wild throw to first al· lowed the tie-breaking run to score, then reliever Combe wild pitched home the Dodgers· fourth run of the inning. In the ninth. Mike O'Berry doubled and Sam Mejias singled for the Reds' final run. The Dodgers collected 10 hits. Dusty Baker had a double and has 12 hits in his last 25 times al bat. 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Angele lose to Indian• TUCSON, <AP) -Bert Blyleven pitched seven innings of t wo-hlt basebalJ and Mite Hargrove drove in four runs to give the Cleveland Indiana an 8-1 exhibition victory over the Angeles Tuesday. I ' Blyleven struck out seven and walked two in his most im· preslsive game of the spring. Hargrove singled in a run in the •• third and doubled three more in :·~ the sixth. The only Angel run came on Dave Rader's RBI single in the firth. ·~ Angel starter Fred Martinez > gave up two runs in 4 2·3 innings /. to absorb the loss. Reliever Luis Sanchez allowed four runs in 1 l ·3 innings, and Dave La Roche gave up two runs in his two- inning stint. Right-fielder Jorge Orta col· lected four hits in five at bat for· Cleveland. Bike races set for CM The eighth Annual Sports Spectacular, featuring Euro- pean·style bicycle races, run· ning races, various races for children and other attractions will be held in Costa Mesa, May 24. The event, which includes Na· tional Classic bicycle races, open only to licensed U.S. Cycl- ing Federation competitors, S and lOK distance runs open to the public and a pre-school Big Wheel race. will be held on Placentia Avenue near Estancia High. For the spectators, live music, food, drink and an auto show will be held. For information and entry forms, contact Rip Ribble at 754-5300. .. ... . . .. . ·: Prep volleyball Tars nip Vikes in shoot-out They had a shoot-out at the Tar corral Tuesday night and it took five games before a winner was decided in the feature high school volleyball match of the night. The host Newport Harbor Hjgh Tars came from behind with victories in the second, third and fifth games to post a 3-2 decision over Marina's scrappy Vikings who played without the services of a key player. The Laguna Beach Artists had some problems getting sl'arted in their South Coast League outing with host Capistrano Valley but were able to pull in out, 15-9. 16-14. 15·8. Lance Stewart. a senior setter for the Artists. along with middle blockers Neil Riddell and Doug Parsons, played well for the winners. Riddell and Parsons did particularly well in blocking and hit· ting in the center position. MICHELIN COSTLESST .YOU THINK. The Tars posted an 11-15. 16-14, 15·8. 7-15. 15·8 decision over the Vikings who didn't use their starting setter because he missea the bus ride to the Newport gym. ln other matches, Laguna Beach's highly re- garded Artists toppled Capistrano Valley, 3-0; Fountain Valley tripped Westminster, 3·0; Estan· cia won over El Toro. 3·0; ·Costa Mesa was a victor .over University, 3-0 ; and Irvine defeated La Quin- ta. 3·1 • Going into Tuesday night's Sunset League showdown at Newport, the Vikings were primed for an upset and were ranked sixth in Orange County in a tie with Newport. "We used a brand new offense tonight and when our setter didn't make the bus, he didn't plav," Coach Tim Reed said. "I thought our kids did a great job going five games with those guys tonight." Andy Klussmann, a junior hitter for Marina, and Tom Plane, a senior hitter, did an outstanding job for the Vikings. Plane was particularly effec- tive on defense but Reed termed the outing a very good team effort. Kirk Harty, Jim Speth and Rey Gubernick were tbe keys to success for Fountain Valley in a 15·7, ~2. 15-8 romp over Westminster. Harty is a middle blocker and also played well in the back court on deferlJe along with Speth and Gubemick. The Artists returned to a S-1 offense during the game to cause the early problems with a few lapses in the earlv going. Estancia improved its Sea View League re- cord to 7-0 with an easy 15·2. 15-1, 15-6 win over El Toro with outside hitters Bill Mattias and Jeff Cutler playin.c well for the winners. Costa Mesa posted a 15·5, 15·9, 15-10 wtn over University with P. J . Kiley, Mark Arnold and Paul Knipp playing well for the victors. Kiley is an outside hitter, Arnold a middle blocker and Knipp a setter-bitter for the Mustangs. For University, Chris Miller at middle blocker and Eric Hallmanier played well. ,,. . V oUeyball teams. seek title The Orange County Invitational volleyball tournament championship is on the line tonight with the title game set for 8 o'clock at Huntington Beach lngh. Entering tbis evt!'b.ing's action were slx conten- ders, including Estancia and San Clemente, who were seeded into tbe semlflnals (8:30) followina successlW ventures Saturday in pool play. In 4:30 quarterfinal aamea are Newport Harbor against Capistrano Valley and Laguna Beach vs. Irvine. -· _.,...., Price a. set today. MICHELIN 'X' RADIALS •.. For American cars For Imports For Pickups, Vans and RV's ~ Whatever you drive , perlorma~proven ~c.hef in ''I: rOOiots are competitively ?"iced. And they're surprisingly affordable. Compare quality, value, price and perfornaice. If you price Michelin ... ~ cttw Michelin! MICHEUli We put America on radials. SAYE 18Sx14 19Sx1.4 195x15 205xl5 22Sx15 230xl5 235x15 30% ''·" 72.tt 71.H ''·" "·" "·" ... ... . I -~. f A U.OF i.aguna Beach J.figh's Lance Stewart bas been chosen to the All-CIF 2-A basket- ball UUrd team by the Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation board . Stewart averaged 13.4 points a game in leading Laguna Beach to a 17-7 record and into the second round or the CIF playoffs . BJ IOlllll D VANO ... ...,..,..... SlumPt are not uncommon bi tho world ot sports. People and teama 10 *ouiti them all the time -witb no one betn1 lmm"9C1 to the ailment. Jloet of tbe tlme a1umpa lut only a ftw day1.1n eome ca.set, however, tbey 10 on for weeb and months. It's the tatter UC Irvine baseball eoacb M.lke Gerakoa ls bop1il& to avoid. Hi• Anteaters, in a alump 1lnce the bealnnlng of Southern 'California Baseball Aasociat.ion play a week '°a10. ean•t afford to 1tay In tbeira much longer. UCI went into acUon Tuesday witb a 1-3 SCBA record. two games behind front-running Cal State Fullerton. Granted, ·it' a -too earty to panic yet - but Gerakos ls concerned nonetheless.• "WE'RE STRUGGLING and we're not playing very well right oow," ad· milted Gerakos, the first year coach from UCLA . "We've lost our edge and we're trying to regroup." Gerakos is perplexed because the things that were winning ball games earlier in the year -like clutch hitting and defense -aren't materializing as they once were. "Baseball is a funny game," he said. Neuport tops Edison; Seahawb triumph Newport Harbor posted its firs t victory of the Sunset L e ague sea son as J o hn Kirshberger drove in the only run of the game in the bottom of the sixth iMing Tuesday as the Sailors defeated Edison. Only a limited num ber of games were played on the high s c h ool front i n this a r ea Tuesday. Here's how 1t went· Newport 1, Edlaon O Bob Nettles and Clark Smith ope ned t he sixth inning with singles for Newport to set the stage for Kirshberger 's drive that got the only run across. Tom La Ci(andeur went the route for the Sailors on the mound, allowing the Chargers only rive hits while striking out three batters Rich Sorenson wa s the loser for Edison as he gave up six hits. Kevin Seeberg was 2-for-3 for the Tars as was Smith while Joe Kwolek was 2-for-3 for the losing Chargers. __ Weatmlna1er 2, Hunt. Beach O Westminster kept its Sunset League record unble mished in downing the Oilers with senior right-hander Rich Castle going the distance for the victors and Baseball t rade allowing only three hits . All of the hits were singles. Westmi ns ter has posted a pe rfect 10.0 season to dale and has won six straight in league pl ay. Both runs came in the first inning as Dave Har ris drove in Gerado Llamas and Dave Cox with a double. Ca stle improved hi s season record to 4 0. Ocean View 4, Cypresa 2 B i ll S ma ll , a se ni or left hander, pitched a s trong game as the Seahawks improved their record to 4·3 in Empire League a ction. Small had a no-hitter going for 61~ innings before allowing a pair of runs in the fi nal frame. Ocean View scored two runs in the third on a single by Kevin Stanley and in the fourth, Bobby Hernandez drove in the final t wo markers that proved to be the winning margin. The Seahawks hosted PaciLJ.ca this afternoon in the fin als of1he Troy tournament while in Sunset Lea g ue p lay, Mari na and Fountain Valley will battle at Bl air Field in Long Beach with third pl ace in the standings at stake. d ,I Mumphi-ey to Yanks F ORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. <AP > -The New York Yankees tra ded outfielde r s R uppert Jones and Joe Lefebvre and two young pitchers to the San Diego Padres Monday night for center fielde r Jerry Mumphrey and rig ht-ha nde d pitche r Jo hn Pacella. .,,,. Bill gergesch , the Yankees' vice president for baseball operations. said the switch- hitting Mumphrey would bat -second, taking Jones' spot both in the field and in the batting or- der. Besides Jones and Lefebvre, the Yankees sent left-ha nded pitchers Chris Welsh and Tim 1• Lollar to the Padres. T he 28-year-old Mum phrey batted .298 for the Padres last season, his first year with San Diego after four with the St. Louis Cardinals. He hit only four home runs and drove in 59 runs but stole 52 bases. His career batting aver age is .282. ··We got very good reports on Mum phrey," Ber ges ch said. "'Wh en you're the Yankees, you ha ve to give up a lot to get someone you want. Other teams know all about our pro5pects." The hard-throwing Pacella, 24 , was acquired by the Padres last December in a trade with the New York Mets. "Somiltimea l.Mre'1 ao rhyme OJ' reuon •hY~:m:n· Unlvenlt.Y. Of San Dle10. "We'N two 1amee out of flnt place, lbat'1 the way l look at lt," said Gerato.. "Tb.la i1 an experienced ball club. They're a bunch of wlnnen who bate t.o loee. Tbey'll bounce back." lhe On1ventt1 of San Fl'ancilco. "Vl•'re I people up at Ut.:/Jate wltb nMD in HOl"ln1 poslUoo UM: people who we.re eomtn1 throuab wttb th• clutch blta aren't now. The t1nlver1lty of Waablntton, Dartmouth, Nortbwettern and Cal State Fullerton were Just .ome of the ~..,.. _who participated ln the tournament. • • • "We were winn.in1 early ln the MUOO because we were takinr advant.,e of our opponent. 'lni1tue1 -both pyalcal UCIREPO'la Yes, but when? The Anteaters .know they can't afford to get loo far behlnd the defendina conference cbampiQO Cal State Fullerton. Plus, with their slump co min& u wtUmely as it did (the belln- ning of \be season), the Anteaters almost can't afford another one. THE VCI TA.ACK l'EAM cootiapet to c:han1e the school record boc*1. At the Martin Luther Kint Jr. Game. at Stan- ford over the weekend the ~ relay team ol Eddle Carey, Carlyle K!dd,-BUl Dorvall and Tony Wells set a standard of 3:08.11. T he quart~t also estabUsbed a school record in the 400-meter relay at 40.53, which also is the fastest Ume in the PCAA this season. and mental. And pow the role ls re- versed, they're takj.ng advantage of our mistakes.'' ''I don't know if we can't afford it, but it certainly wouldn't help our chances any." said Gerakos. TUE ANTEATE&S surprised a lot of p eople, including the m selves, by finishing with a 16-4 record durin1 pre- conference play. Many experts figured the 1981 campaign would be a rebuild- ing year for Gerakos and the UCJ pro- gram. ''Things have been eotn1 so well for us that I knew sooner or l~ter things would start turning the other way. That's what happened when the con· ference started. We haven't been a ble to put lt all toge\,ber ." In all, the track squad has broken six school records and tied a seventh. Baker , Whit e sparkle • • • DURING THE SLUMP, shortstop Tblngs pleasanUy haven't worked out that way, however, and because of the surpris ing s uccess expectations ran high when conference ga mes started. Mike Nagel has seen his ..average dip be low the .400 mark for the first time this season. His current average of .394 ranks third in the SCBA. • Lisa Baker of Edison and Pam White of Ocean View each hurled ooe-hltters to give their teams victories i.n girls softball action Tuesday afternoon and Fo untain Valley edged Marina in a nother Sunset outing. Edison's Chargers stopped Newport Ha r bor. 8-0 as Baker had a perfect game going into the final inning. Wh ite had 11 strikeouts in limiting Cypress to one hit ID a 2-0 triumph. But UCI was shut out ln its first two outings and didn't get into the win col- umn until last Saturday when the An- teaters split a double-header with the THE UCI TENNIS TEAM capped a weekend of play by winning their own Anteater Classic with a 5-4 victory over JACK ERRION CdM's Errion select ed South c oac h Jack Errion, who last month coached Corona del Mar High to its second CI F 3-A championship in five years, has been chosen to guide the South in the Orange County All-s t a r bas ketball gam e, lo be held June 13 at F ountain VaJley High. Opposing Errion will be Servile 1-Ugh's Larry Walker , a longtime adversary of Errion's when the Cd M coach guided St. Anthony High in the Angelus League. The ga m e is billed for 8 o'clock. A girl's all-star game will precede the issue at 5:30 a nd the South all-star eame will be guided by Foothill High's Sheila Adams. The site is a change from the normal pace -Orange Coast College was unable t°'iuarantee its availability be~ause or its bleachers whlch will be un· dergoing a facelift. Errion's teams have posted a 104-28 record in five years at Corona del Mar, Including three league championships . His cur· rent squad boasts three AU -CIF players and the 1981 conquest of the 3-A marked his 31s t year as a head coach. IC hcuehall Pirates defeat Santa Ana, 3-1 .,,,--- Orange Coast College pnmed 1tseu tor a showdown battle with Cerritos Thursday afternoon with a victory over Santa Ana while Golden West and Saddleback Colleges also posted victories Tuesday on the community college baseball front. Here's how it went: Orange Coaat 3, Santa Ana 1 'Kevin Sliwinski belted a towering home run ove r the center fi eld fence in the eighth inning with Reggie Montgomery on base to break open a tight game and give the Pirates a victory. Montgomery had walked to open the iMing and Sliwinski's homer was his second of the year. After the Dons had scored their only run of the gam e in the first inn ing, the Pirates came back to tie in the third as Dan Dix singled, s tole second, _went to third on a passed ball and scored on Mike ~anderburg's single. Mike Hogan. now 5·1 for the year and 2· l in South Coast Conference play, hurled his second complete game of the campaign a nd the ninth for the OCC staff in 19 outings. Sliwinski was 2-for -3 while Ed F arrell was 2· for-4 for the Pirates. Montgomery had a double in the sixth inning to stretch his consecutive ga me hitting streak to 19, six s hort or the school record. His double was the 13th of the year and leaves him fo ur short of the record. ' Golden Weat 5, Eaat LA 2 It was a n uphill battle for Coach Fred Hoover 's Rustlers who scored single markers ID five of the final six fra mes. East LA took a 2-0 edge in the third on a two-run homer by Rick Arzola with the Rustlers scoring in the fourth and fifth frames to tie. Wes Collins hit in his 12th straight game to bring Steve Springer home for the first run and Robe rt Villarrela scored on a fielder's choice after s ingling. Ybarra leads UCI Troy Ybarra belted a two-out double to right centerfield with Carlos Rivera on base to drive in the wiMing run in the bottom of the ninth inning Tuesday as UC Irvine defeated visiting Cal State (Los Angeles l . 12-11 , in Southern California Baseball Association play. Ybarra, taking over at catcher in the fourth in· ning, was 3-for-4 including a double and the win- ning RBI. He is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School. Larry Hicks took over in the ninth inning and was credited with his fifth victory against no de- fe ats after CSLA tied the count in the top of the in- ning at 11 . UCI was in front, 11-9 when he took over . Mark Stowell had a big day with a triple and home nm in fi ve trips to the plate . He drove in six runs including three with his blast over the fence in the sixth inning. Dave Glick was also 3-for -5 and scored three runs The Rustlers went in front to stay in the sixth when DaM y Larson singled home Curt Grevaic;, then the sa me duo put the lid on the victory with a repeat in the eighth. Bob Grogan's first homer of the year brought the final run across ID the ninth Larson was 3-for 4 with two RBI. Saddleback 4 , Chaffey 1 J ohn Vela perfo r med well for the Gauchos. scattering nme hits (all singles) dr.:.i giving up three walks while striking out six battPrs. He worked his way out of trouble in the eighth "'ith runners at rirst and third and one away. A squeeze attempt fai led and the runner was out at the plate, then the second runner was nipped at second for a double play. Bill Houlihan drove Bob Gray across with the go-a head run on an infield grounder in the seventh. then Ben Amaya belted a single with the bases loaded In the ninth to bring in two more markers and put the decision away Fro•P~DI CARLS O N ... athletic trainers for schools, followed by a s witch to keep the trainers and do away with water polo. ha s been switched again and approved by the board. - What is lost in order to save $300,000 annually are boys golf, gymnastics and surfing and girls Junior varsity fi eld hockey, with girls varsity field hockey to be eventua ll y phased out. The pools wi ll be s hut down at certain ti mes of the year, but swimming and water polo will con· tinue. Athletic trainers stay. but the district is asking for a study to see what areas of responsibility are in order . "' "' NOTES AND THINGS -Edison High football coach Bill Workman leaves Thursday for Lawrence. Kan., where he'll be one of the featured s peakers at the University of Kansas football c lini c His topi c Edison football (w h ~t else?> . . . Founta in Valley High swim coach Ray Bray pulled off a rare double at the ClF swim relays his gir ls tea m and boys team each claimed the title : . J im Jeaner is no longer the former Estancia High tennis coach. Apparently 25 years of coaching was too much to loss away and he's back after a very short absence . . . If you're wondering what happened to Mike ~er at Stanford after being named Player of the ame in t he Cardinals· victory over Oklahoma I t fall, he's being switched to fullback. It's tough o shove Darrin Nelson out of the tailback slot . . . Tickets for the North-South Or ange County football luncheon at the Saddleback Inn April 10 a re available by contacting Les J ones at 529-9402. NOW OPEN! m[ fOR[I~ WORkS •• ' r .. ·' " I . ·' •' ,. • .. .. II VERN REED, with office machlM experience In Orang9 County since 1135, Join• with hi• son, MICHAEL. In announcing the opening of their MW family-owned 1tore: ACTION OFFICE MACHINES "THE 1861 SPECIAUSTS" 11171 .. ..,.._It. ~lte 11, HuntlllgtOn hedl l*llttol< .. •11) IMQll2 • Com1H1t1Ure Prk•• on E,•rytltlng fo Safl1fy Your Mechln• NHdel IM.U • All 19' ~ w.ctrto. fliecuthe. •M llafMleltd ICM~ &.o4rk T,,...neen • a.etronlo Calcut .... • ...... ,._.,..,ICd tn1••rtten anc1 calolllaklrl llJMCl • .... ..,.. ,..,... etaffed Dr -Ql*t _.... ... .._ • 'ac10rt lnllMcl on 1a•. ICll, OLYlll'IA, 9'0VAL. "DWNGTON • <:......-....... °" wt ....,., llnndl of 11pcw1iten, oalNa'*" .--.--•••· ~ and chlll"Ca*-. ,,.. ... ,.,, .,....,... .'-......... ........ .~ ........................ ,..., .......... ......, we:• ... ~ wwtitll .,.. "' i-ewt D4T5UN & TOYOTA S~Cl4LIST 1855-9220 1 I 0 YEARS EXPERIENCE Z-CAR SERVICE t£ Mwley ... Fri.., M ,_... Sat_..,, alal 1 nt Olllr 51 .wtO COIRR ... r: M • -.r. 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CS...__....,.. 11 CS Los ,.,.!es OJO 120 lo:l-11 I• UC lrvllle JOO 105 001-12 U Holrnes, 811rwe11 l•I onO C:o1to11; Wletstock. c-(SI. Hick&'" Md Ellloet, Y•orr• (4). W-Hk U (S.01. L-8-tl IHI. 28-Gollofl, McGee, J-.ml!\, Oel\Uilel ccs Los ,.,.IHI; Yben• cue lrvlnel. Je- Jo1111111 CCSUll; S.,,_11 IUC lrvlnel. Hll- Trernet, HerNndet tCSUll, St-•11 <UC lrvl11el. SC8A etandlnQe ' W LT 08 Col State Fiii-4 I 0 U. of Soft Oieell > 2 I 1 l.oyol• l 2 0 1 UClrvlfte 2 J 0 2 LOftQ 8oocll State 2 I 0 2 ....,.rd!,,. 2 > 0 2 UC So/II.a a.-o 0 1 1 4 CAI State Los Anee+ff t I 0 4 T..-.Yalc- UC I,,,.. 11. t.i Slollt l.os ,.,,.. ... I I Col StaU Fllllwt!M 22, l.Oflt a.ocll St-. s Lo ........ .,....,, .... 5 .......,. . ._. Lorol• .C UC I,.,,,,,. u . of S.. Dloloet Cel State P'11t1 ... w. Col Stete L..-A191es at Loflt 8Ncll SWI• ,.._..,.et UC Sent.a ..,_. Community college ..-.... s.aML.At Golden West -Ill 011-S 12 0 EHi I.A OllQ 000 000-2 I 0 H....Wlclls, Gorlln (7) -kMll, llAlllli., L.Ofl9$Uff <ti, ..._ (t) -....... w- l'teftdrkkt IJ-41. L-Mll'ltet 1..JJ. s-o-a. 28-c.11"-IGol-Wesll, VM1°"1ef' llEott LA). HR-Anol• IEHI LAI, Grooon IGolden Wlntl. Or-. CNet ,, ....... t Sonia -100 000 000-1 1 2 Or•noe c:oeaa 001 ooo 02a-., t 1 fAplre Md Hood; H..-n oNI 01•. 28- Moftlll'M'*'Y IOr ... Coesll. HR-SUwlllM:I 10ronee Cont>. ~· •• Cll9ftey t $0dcll.-.C• 100 000 102-4 • 0 Clwlttey 001 000 000-1 t • Velo Md Amero; Troortwlne and l(oltler. 28-Arnont• ICM Irey I; Hovllllo11, Ore., tSodd1-.1. ' l11l1011 e11d 5111rley ; Cottle end Coddl111ton. w -Cutte. L -8111ton, H -H.mt lwettmlnster). ......... Mer-.rl ...... Ii••-000 000 0--0 s l H-por1 ...,_ 000 001 x-1 6 0 SorefttOI\ C:-y 1•1 Md Morel lo; L.I Gr•ftdevr U\4 c..-. W-L• Or•1Wt•11r. L-Sor-. ~,, .... ,~. CYP'"i 000 OOI 2-2 2 I <><-V1-Ol2 -a-4 • I Elll'-Sclwfteden W ... u.nd.,; Sft*I elld Mo ........ W-Smoll. L-IEllla. HIGH ICHOOl. STANDINGS 8'H\Mt &Aaou• .... ,,., ..... ""'-ll!UrlM P'OllllUlll v .. ..., H1111ll,,..... IMCll .... port-T......,.•lc-Ne11fpor1 Horbof' I, EcllMI' 0 WL .. ' 0 • 2 2 1 J ,.,.. 2 J,..., 2 • • I S S w .. ,,,.,.. .... 2, -""" .. llHcll 0 T_. .... ,._ Fov11loln Votley va. Morin• et 81elr Fletd "' Empfre leegue Kelelle LNre Oceonv ... Loe Al ........ KenMCtr Cy~eu T....,-11c- OcN11 v1ew 4, cnw-2 K•l-416 It, K_.., • Loore 6, LM Al-llOI S ~ . ._. w L GI • I • I • > 2 2 s • 2 s • I • s ()(-View n.. 1(-.fy .. La P91ine (7) Loor• n.. ~•10 et BoYton (7) Cypr-.. l.M Al-ltoe .... 9CMot MCCef AUAltVtN• LUGUI f'lnlT- 0 .. lk•per. SMwl'I Cofdl11 !El Ton»; F11llMckt: Sc.otl AllOll 11!1 ToroJ, 51#'9 .._, II rvl11e); Die k Kr•11•• (U11lverslty); H•lf•ocu: 111c111e e1099 <Coste llMMl, Mike J""-' llrvlM), Setvodor• v,.._z ( Esto11clo); Forwards: Nell 5cllro..S.r (lrvlnel, Jottn U'1lftl (81t.-.c:lol. T'*'O Do (f!llOllClo), .... ,, K•rnoflon (Corono del ""9r). S.C...T- Oool•Mper: A11d., 1.eldloll 11 rvl11e); F11llM<kt: Kl .... Hem tlNIMI. Dow Tori ... IEI T-l. JOft 811tcMr 1<:«-def Merl. C•rson l'lc11011 tCoste M•HI; HelllNl«t: Dew Hordltr CC«eM •I Mori, Gr .. ...,_ llrvtMI, Mille Atlell ClrvlM); For••"": DOii 0-CEI Toro), S<ett PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI BUS.NUS M-""ll tT ATtM8MT TM toll..tflo P9'SOft It *!no Dlltl· llftSH: HAIVllOH a. A$SOCIAT•'· Jtt0 wn1.,.1r Place, S..lte 100, HowllOrt hOcll, ca. t2M0 J•lftff Chrlstooi-er HermOft, 10 CoclOr Tree Lane, lrvlne, eo, t271J Tiiis blltl-IE ,_ltd by Oii Ill· dlvlduol. J-Cllrlttop>er HorlftOll Tlllt tUllomenl Wet tlled WIUI lllO Ce11ntr Clerti of 0r .. oe Couftty °" Mor<llt, ttll. .. ,.,. ,.utllw..d ar.,,.. Coast Dolly l'llot Mor.11, tl,U,"Pf, I, 1•1 12'4.-t PUBUC NOTICE 81111 SY*"'SO .. TN• '"'NUAL STAT .... NT Of' Select ln..,ro11<• Cernpo11y, JOU Coder Spr"'91. oar.-., T•u• 7S21' v-•--o......S1,1• Tot.ti • ......,n.o -'S 5'2,Ut,ftS Total llolllllllet 11,?0t, 1 .. S.OClol wrplvS ,....., .... - Coplt.I ~GuerMtY C.11•11~ Depoall 1,SCI0,000 Groll ~kJ.111 Md c.ontrl!Mlted -.tvs 4,IOS.llt Uno•'9Ndlllillds l--s>t1111 s,1.s,.., s .. rphH •• ,...,_ poll< rl\oldfn 11,Jio,ne lllCOf"4 lor u..,.., 24.tn.ta 01...,rtOIMfttl lot llleyHr U,ut-'54 We ~ certl,., 11\ot Ille ...... llllf'lll ... "' o«or'\1911te •ltll ... ""' 11u•I Ste~t ICK' Ille y-t~ O•c•mller at. ltto, m•dt to Ille •11--~0lel&ele ef Cell~. pWWMt lo lew, o.w ........... ,,President AC. f'MIW~ SKrotMy flulMI .. Or .. C::..-Dolly Piiot llAor<ll JO. JI, ""'111, 2, J, t•t 1~1 PUBUC NOTICE NYR ....... s • u 14 .. 114 70 WMlll1191on 2• JS II 27S .. .. ~Dt ...... •·St. l.CMils .. 11 1• Ml ,., ICM ClllC ... . ,, u m .. 7S VNIC-21. It Ut .. 7S ·Edmot1ton J7 JS u )10 ,,, .. Colorado 22 .. II , .. uo SS WIMlpOQ • M 12 us .. JO •<ll11elled cllvlsloll tKJe ,.......,..~ K .... 7, Wlmlfel J Qwe.< s. Pllbllllrfll I Moftt,..., l, NY 1-s 1 Ml_,. 6, SC. l.Ollk J Deirolt s. CM9etY s. , .. T---·~ Ou.lie< .. ~ O.ko90•T ...... o C.lor-ol £..- WIM .... etV~ KJnge7,hta3 lca"e..,,..... t 2 0-J s 2 0 -7 .. ,,... ........ I. Los,.,,...... Taylor .. (~I. :ll. 2. Loe Af!Gtlet. Kelly 2 (Hoptll111, St. u11rw >. S:OI. a. L.oe Afte919'. Wells s (DI-), •:sa. •· Los ..,,..,.., Chttr1r-1. 10:-. s. w~ nlpe9, 1.-leh JI ca..rc11. CNllllMI, 12:l2. 6, Loi ""9110\, Hol*IM I (ICetly, ll L.ovrentl, 14:C2. Penoltln -l(orMI, LA. 'l•:St 8e1Ptd\, WIM, 17:2•; l>Ke. LA, 11:2A Soc ... ,...... 7, LOl ,.,.. ... St. tAllrtM 10 ,...,.. ..... l(elly). '.JS .•. WIMIP99. Oeottrl .. " (Molll"-1, t :21. t. WIM!pe& L .... _ldl J2 I 8obJ<ll, OW'lstlOlll, 11: JO, 10. I.AK A...-.... hrrlOft 11 IJeftMfl, I.. M11rpl\fl, 11.20. Penally -Hcll*IN. I.A, 10:21 . ftlrd ....... No .... Penollles -Wellt, I.A, rnojor, U :J2; .--.ca. Wl.1111, -•minor, 2:'2. Sl>ots .. ..., -WWllPltl •10-2--21. Loe Alleelft II-IMO -U. Goell• -~ ....... Dion, --· La ,.. ........ ~ ...... , ... ~ ., . . .. Women'• eoftball Ml ... SCMOCk, Oc.-'ttew l. c.,.,.... Cy,,eH 000 000 o-4 I J Ocean V-000 JOO •-2 I • Agvlrre and Sto11etil111 ; Wllll• •lld Sot our. ..,........ V .. le\I I, Mof* I Morl11• 000 IOI 0-1 • 2 F011nt.tln Volley 000 • 1-l • O Kyler •NI Morc.otte; Volen1 ... ll• •M Wycl11owtkl. W-volen111e1te. 1.-Krler. 28-Ar ... ,,._...,,Volley), HellellOlllfl <MorlllOI. 18-FICttCller IMllrlfMI). ....................... NewpOtt Hor"9r .. 0t0 ~ I 0 Edison 002 b2 •-t I I o,.,,,., •11d MOllOlll•; ··-·· onO Mollono. w-aaer.1.~.....,.. " ........ ~, ...... , ....... aornonl IHI •· llet.....,., 7·J; *'· Hem, ... 1; oel. Jonft, 64; dtf. KoMI. "4; Gtilln• IHl ..,, , .. , W, W, 7·S; Cerroll IHI IMt M , 2 ... -H.-M;~lHl lOS* .... ........ 2.., ea..... 80AM·.__ IHI def. £•-Hal-, •·O. •·O; dtl. Pope·l.Uer, •·O, •·O; Lolo~L.ocoftdt IHI ..,, ... 1 ... 2; ........ .,.._1s..._....v....,u ....... Plk11lln (F) lciet to "-'· M . I• .. CllOHlll, ._.; I.a to HeU•y, U , IHI to Cree-, 64; S.OO-r tFI -W ..... lell H , .... ; ~ IF) ..,, 6-4. M. M • ._. \ H ; 5edri <Fl loll 1 .. , -... 2. Iott u ,..,, .... Demles 811cll•F1•11·Cet11lo111 lfl l .1,111 with S••to11-1t1c11esaon >·•· •·2; del. Agllo...0-t-J, ... I ; R-'Mlllef CP'I tPlll 74,S-1; lo.t .. J.)..6. Women COMMUNITY c:ou.a•• ~c:..t• ....... . ....... Goetlldl IOC.CI def. a.e11, W, M ; ltoN IOCCI I• .. St.Md!M, ~7. -. M , 7-4; S<Mettlel' tOC.CI clef. llllcCArtlly, ... 2. M ; G•rfletd COCCI d9f. Mon.In, •t .... I; So••Yo COCCI -· Solies, M , e.•; KllOrey IOCCl del. H...,,, ... 2,'4. ~ SclloeHler·Gutleld IOCCI det. 8eolS·SIM>dlM, ... J, .. 2; lteed·Ooetbdl COCCI clel. M<Corllly·Sellu, t ,z, .. ,; ue.or..,.s-.,e tOCCI ..... rtll'-H~ ......... 'rMrtTEt 7, atrwl ..... kll....., ICJ det. GeNk-.... 2. W ; Alll«'S (SJ -· Arllljo. ... I, 7_.; ,._ ICl det. LifMrl, ~~I; Ulmllerl (SI eet. AlrM. '"4, ... ,, W ; Wlflllk IS) def. S.twn, ... 2. M ; TrlllOlet <SJ -·"-'"',...._ ...... 7-4. ~ Alllert~sld,.n lSI del. kllroeder· lt_, .. 2.W; ~-ISi .... ""'1i· l•H"""'"'-M , U , J.J; Trl ..... ·Welllk ISi *'· S.lvwt·llrOC---...W. ... . ..... ecbODI vohybell Co.to MltM def. Uftlwnlty, IS.I, IM, IJ.10. EslM<IO dff. Et Two, lS.2, IJ.t, IW. lrvlM dltf. La QlllllU, IJ..f, IS.., IMS, IS.10. \.•9-9oo<ll eet. C.ltllMO Veil..,, lS.t, 1 ... 14, 154 ........ Harllor 110 IMS, t ... lt, 154, MS, ls.I. FOIHIUlll v IS.J,IK T~~· ~w..-CHICAGO WHlff SOJC -~ ..,_ TwtKll ... H«W ._.,., ~ tt EdfNftttll ef 1M "•Ilk Olest ~· ~ dltloMti., .... Certes ,.,.,.,.., ,.td!W, ..... l"tlll...._. f'Mtl .... OUolWRo Cit\' 1- ... ,,._. -~ 4-.1.c .... C\.avU.ANO INOIANS -Tr-J-........ _... ..._.., '° -s. 0..,. .. ........... Lacrt.~. S£ATTli MAltlMl!lltS -........ 08w ........ utcNr. ....... u..-NEW YORK 11AeTS -Traded J ... 11 Berent_.. pjt,~. te tM Koaaea Oty ltoyelS IOr aMwwl1 ...,,..., Olltfletd!W, Mii JeM Sil-• ..--.......... .,,., __ Slll-to~ef.,. Teu• ~. POOTMLL c...... ...... a..a.- fDMOHTOH ESKIMOS -Sl9Md J• Rl<llorC. llneMdlor • HAMii.TOH r1oe11-CAn -~ StM JoflnlOft, ..,..,...,. IO<llle, •lld ..... II Y-e oM ""'' ,.,..._.._ otfel>llW Ucklft. SASKATCHEWAN ltOVGHltlDElt5 - S4ptd .... Wllkl,,., """" .. .US; ,.,... J-t,.....,... llodt, .... Doll MeJIW9fl, ... loMlwl...._. ~ .. VILLAHOVA -......... Jock Pyroll ~ 1erlm ...,. tr•O cMCh. Men'• gylftftaadce Nt ... lcMOOI. ...a......, ... ......, .... ..,_ e .. ~--1. -1 .... ISi. S.S; P<lotllMI ._,.. ,_... -1. L.,Oll CHI, u ; lllftss -I. ~ IN),•.•; v .. 111ne -1. s.m ...... tNI, 7.J; Pwollet•n-1.~ (SI, U ; Hltfl bor -1 . ....-..-. IN), 4.4; All_...., -I. s.rr-CHI. 26.7. .... ~ ....... ming ,._,.,,..., .. , .... J 2tO,,....., relay -I. n-. 1:~. * l rM -I. Ea.tr tl'I, l :A-"; 2. ~­(W), 1 :Sl.4; J. M<OOlld CWl, l ;SJ.'7, SO Ir• -1. ~ CF). 21.U, 2 ..... tWl ,tU;l: ...... (l'l,JU. 100 lly -I. aorrttls CWI. ""2. 2. St..-.. 1r:1. se..s: 1, o.... "'·tu . 100 lrM -I. JoflnlOn <Fl, 41.7•; !. Mc:CfOlld CWl • .t.I; J. J-tWl. U.1. SOD free -I. Eldw <Fl. 4:54.•; 2. Crlllt IWl , S:OU; I: ~~.1 . 100 .. u -1. Mc I CW), 1:11.t; 2. IE Icier IWI, I :04.11; I. !>....,.i (l'I. I :M.J. 100 bree1t -I. WM !Fl, l:Ol.24; 1. Mer* NomiHe CF), 1:05.t; J. llAllee "-• If'), 1:0..1. • 400 lrM relay -1. F-\0111 "•II.-,, l :U .OJ. women·• ewtmmtng ........ ,,....., .... ,.,, ........ ,,..., .. JOO ,,.....,. retoy -I. ,._._.., Volley, 2:0l.t ; JOO lroe -t, SWW11(WI,2:'5.1; - IM -l. weed (W), t :IU; JO"" -1, l'l•I•-(W), 1':.12; "'fly -1. s.r-.. tWI t:Cll.I; tO 0 ll'M -I. FlelalNnM CW), ,.,lS; Ml trw -I. Tilells IP'I, S:J4,1t; - bock -t.c:al11C-CWJ, l:IUI; 100tnllllll -t, CIOf1l (I'), l :t.S.2A; • lrM .... ., -I. .. ._ .. , ...... PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PlJ'ISUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE .... ,., f'ICTITIOUI IW .. llHS l'tCTITIOUS B~llUI II.AMII STATaJMllT ..,.,. ITATal81n "" ...... "" ..,_ ••• "'"' t11e ... ,... ........ -••• ~"' OlltlMM •: lllnlM• •; ST. 1ves CATEltEaS, P.O. ... SIX M co .. ltln """ Cr.U Or- 2211. ~ a..ot, Gellfot'ftl• '*S; le, SoftU ,..,,._ Cellfor"'° t27IS 811sl11en Olllu: cl• hit A<et<r Mkll9et " ........, 1111'1 Ht1f1 • 191 t . INI Slr9't. 1111'-Ill, rut Circle 'Sent• AM CAllfWlll• •'-Mes4 Calllwlll• fa27 Tt5 • ' 80,....e ,.,,.,,,,, » Storflsll Cl.. . ""9ry £ 1'9i1Ne'(=ltlll c....a 11--1 eMcll, Collfonlle ~ I le ...... :.. a.-· ' o 92105 Mor.Ill IC ..... I Tllft, m72 Moft. ~~-=-is _,, 11>-t.tl.,. ltd,, 1A111oWt Nl9"9f, C.lllon>I• dh'NuAlt ,........., w Wife). n.n Mldleel "· ......., Tllll lllltfllitll la COftducled lly • Tlllt ......... -fltOI wttt1 tM lt9Mf •I~. CIMlnty f'Of'tl ef ..... c:-ty .,, ~ IC. T.n .... •II t ttl\ Tllla ..........,. WOI lllod wlltl Die ..,.r~ ' "''"" Cwftt., c.-of Or .... ee-ty Oft l'ubll ... Or .... <:Mtt o.11., .. llot, Morell 1•. t"1. "'""' ~~. ll, u, •· 1. 1,"" 11911.fl ........... Or .. GOo&I Dolly ....... llAor. It. U, /!¥. I, I, llll 1.it.ft PtJBUC NOTICE I ( • i. I 11 .· ,. .. .. . I• " .. PEP BOYS $TILL GIVES A LIMITED 19AD HAZARD WARRANTY* AT NO EXTRA COST THE PEP &OYS GIVES A LIMITED WARRANTY ON CORNEll TIRES FOR A SPECIFIED NUM8Elt OF MONTHS AGAINST AU ROAD HAZARDS IN NOR · MAL PASSENGER CAR USE. DAMAGED TIRES Will BE REPLACED WITH PRORATED MO NTHLY ADJUSTMENT CHARGE BASED ON REGULAR Sf ll· ING PRICE AT TIME Of PURCHASE. , $ PLU5 $1 53 f E.T 1S5SR12 llACICWAll TUlllUS CORNELL"300" . DOUBLE BELTED SIZE WHIJf TUHlESS 878-1 J C78-l-' E78· 1-' F78-1 4 G78-1" G78-1 5 H78-l-' H78-15 FREE l IRE MOUNTING 99 NO '11ADl·IN llOUlllO AU. 'ltcH "UI NOllAllXCrSllAX VAN SPARE TIRE CARRIER EASY 1~-~SJ~fL SA VIS ROOM INSl>I & STAYS HANDY OUTSl>E -~ "Ill.I-A_,,..._,..,. ACCWArl 1'llSSlllf SETTMiS .. THE ULTIMATE " SHOCK FOR RADIAL, BIASED & BELTED TIRES 'OOT l'IOAL AIR PUMP A Ml/ST IOI MATA.JU IAm. Sl'<»TS .......... ~ lql'/11111 • Acclor-& <'.-, ... • .....,...._1.12011L IAIY TO UA u. ''••9nh •utt, lubrico~•· penetrot•t, dhplo ., MOhhi1r• Won·1 h M r:~. plo•ti<. "'2 it°' t OL CM 'f ' I a..J• ' REMANUFACTUREDWATER i PUMPS ' 25%: FOR OFFI AMll:ICAN ORIMPOR'f<ARS 1 OUR REGllAR LOW PRICIS : WITH OLD RHUllDA8LE PAllT IN TRADE TOP QUALITY .. SIOPTOOLS I • ' ; . .. I PlJBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUl!NaH NAMl ITATIMaNT Tiit IOll°""lntl perwn IS do1"9 l>U$l l\tll•t THE SIGNIFICAN T OTH Ell COMPANY. ••O• Warner Avenue. ~ jSI. HU11l1"910r\ Be.ell, C•hlorn1• u .. 1 E st11•• Ooros Frledm•n. UOI Warfter A"enue, : S.SI, Hun\,no\on •Hen Celllorno• t21MI T "'' ous1ness " conauc l•O by •" 1n dlvlctu•I -~ E\11\ff l'roe~n flllS .... _I .... Ill.cl Wiii\ 11\e Caunly Clerk 01 Or.,.oe County on Maren U, 1911 PU .. 1' Pu1>11uwo Or.,,Ot Co.t\l Dolly Polot M••· 25, "P'll t, a, 1~. 1911 1•0 ·11 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINl$1 NAME $TATl!Ml!NT ~-• fnt tollowonl) 1>er>on> •re dO•"Q •• ._,,tneu ., PUIUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI aUllNllS "AMI ITATIMIMT I ht to1tqwlng "'"°" It tolng IKIM· llH\H. PEHLE HACH VENTURE JOO, u~• e 111tn Ave .. c•ll IMw. c·~~n Fri nk AM• Sl~r, US. Elden Ave , Cest• Motto, Ca, m11 TlllJ Ousl ... H ,, COflGUCltO Oy • 11 ... 11..s pertn9nhip Fr-Na Sl119'r Tnos tt•~t w•• Ill.cl wltfl Int counly Clerk of Oronoe Ceunly on Merell t, "" fll(TtnOUI aUllNIH MAM& HATIM .. IT Tll• '°''°""'"' "''°" It dolno bulll· ~···: ' JO'S l(HIT WIT, 3't E. 11111 SlrNt. • 29, Ctlte MIM, Cllll0<11l1 9»27 Dorl• JOennt C-r. ttl Avocedo, •at. C0t1A1 MKa. Ceillor,.11 t21ti7 Tiiis Miiiea It C-Cled Oy ... In· Glvlelutl. p . .i--c-· Tlllt l lAlt-WM lllMI With Ille Cou111r C11r11 of Oronoe Co11nty on Merell U, ltlt Ptstut Publl.._, Clronet Cout 0.lly Piiot, PU1Ut Moir . U.-., 1, 1. u. lttt l44MI PvOll.,,.., Or-C.O.sl O•lly PolOI Mer 11. 11, U, Apr 1, 1911 1m.a1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBJJC NOTICE PICTITIOUS a UllNUS NAMa STATllMIMT PICTITIOUS aUSIMISS Tiit lollow1n9 per\Ofl\ ••• 00111g MAMI STATIMaNT 1>us.neu ti. Th• lollowlno P•nons .,. Goino tofETWORIC MARK ETING COM butl,..u M. PArlY, t•U Kffl Orovt. CorOl\a 0.1 CROWN POTTE RY, 2101 S. Yet• M•r, C• 91eU Str .. 1, s.tlt• ""'"· Ct llfO""I• 92704 Oenn1s M SchOll, 101 K .. I Drove, ll-rt L C••. 20391 B•yvlew, Coron• del Mer, C• '2~1S S.nl• Ant, Colllornle 92707 T no m • • 0 H • r p tr. 2 '712 M•rlt ~··· JQl2 YeU-"OM L•••w-. El roro, C• ttUO Orl•e. COii.a MtM. Colflornlo 92'1'" Tn•s l>usontu " conduc ltd l>y • This business i. conau,te<I ov • oener•I P••lnt• "'IP oener el p0r1n1<S111p. Oennl> M Scnoll ~rll Spln69le Tllo\ \tai.ment wn Hied wllll Ille Thi• llll-t .wes lllect with 1n. Counly Clerk or Oreno-County on Cou,.ty Clerk OI or ... oe Counly on M•r<ll ~. '"'' M•rch JO,,.... · 1'111471 l'U'lttl PubllllleO Or•nOt C.,.~I 0 •11¥ Pllol Publlt-Or.noe COllSt O•lly Piiot, M ... 11, II, u, Apr 1, 1'161 11~1 ,, Apr II 1, •. IS, n. "'' aon-11 PUBLIC NOTICE I I PUBLIC NOTICE \•.• NEWHOPE INVESTMENT~. JfJO •:-f Foratwm St , Sent• An•. Ct tl10• •' <.ero Aocn•rd L.ew1> U99 ----WOTICEOl'INTIHTIONTO :·~ro1•1ew, .. or,o. C• 917.cl • • SELL AT PUILIC AUCTION • • L 11. p ENTERPll15ES JdO w FICTITIOIJ$ IU51NE5~ C:o1on1el, wood null, powe r t>o•I. • "f.ordl'l•m St s ... 1. An•. C• t2/0. NAME STATEMENT 1en11111 ll , ve\>el rtQ•>lr•l•On nurnt>er ~lt•tn lH P•nk•rlon. IH fnt IOllowonQ person\ •re·oo1n11 (F'8l1FE C•a•OO•Ae. \..°"9 8e•tn, C• '°')Q OuS•Mlo~ti. J:t~Q•\te,.eo o~n•r H•nOy Htnry • • N llh•m J~r EounQOOt ttAOI SHORTCUT ENTERPRISE. 111 1..1rn•n T-.. .. .,.. Gt"• Oenn•• 1121 : c IO••• cou. 1 !. .. ,.,.An• c. •2io) IE .. t lhl. Costa AMW, C•htorno• 92U1 M••n• Av• 1..0"9 B•.-:1\. CA~ PVBUC NOTICE PICTIT10UI aUllMUS NAM9 ITAHMINT Th• 101tow•no 1>trton1 ere d<llno DuarlltH .. ; MOATOAGi MAS TERS, JU7 llrcll SlrHI. S11llt US, Nt ..,POrl llHcll, Colltornlt tMO Vind.tr J. 81tooa111011. UOt S. •••r SlrMI, S.tfltt An.t. C•llfor11le tl7~ Je,,,.1 E. a.tOMll\Qlt, 1090 Tu111n Avenue, HeW1>0rl at.ell. Ct hfO<nl• tJttO Tllo• bullMS\ Ii conducte<I Oy • 99ner11 ,..nnenlllp. l/1-•-11111111 Tiii> st•t-1 •ft hleo •1111 Uw County Clerk ot Oronoe Co\lnty °" M•"ll ll, ltll .... •v•uc NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICB ·------------ PICTITIOUI IUllNHI f'ICTl'flOUl aUl1•l1I i.AMl ITAT•MINT NAM8 ITAHMl•T Tiie foflOWfne .,.,_~lno bull• Tllo IOI-Ing Pt•-· ore dol1191 ntst II: O\ltll\IH OS; ECOHO LUie! ANO TUNE, SIO N I & ,. OISIGHS, 1141 CllArf-.1 Har!MW, serco Ana, Colll0f11ia t tl'OI Hulllll\9l0ft lleoch, Collfornl• ,__ 4'ollerl ,., 4 ort, 1U4 Cynthia, llllfl C:. Woffonl, W I Cll111'f0<lll co1u ......_ Colllo<nl• t,.11 Str .. t, H\11\llne\Ofl .. oth, Cellfornl1\ This ~ It c..-.. o Oy 1n tt~ dlVICl\111. Pe• J _.., 1111' $0!\d Ovnell R-1 P. E•rt Ct •• ,_tll,, ll'•lley, Callfornl• WCI lll" tlel-' we• Hied wl\h t.,. f'ttll J ~ Co11nty c 1er11 ol Or.,.,ve Covnty on Tl\11 ltet..,,.,t •• fllltl wltll Ille More.II JD, 1tl1 Counly Cler1l of ~ C-Wy Ofl MMdl • Pl ..... JO,ltll PuOfllflltl DrlnOt C-st DAiiy Piiot, April I, I . U, 12, 1tll 1~11 PuOlosnecl Or .... Co.all O.Hy Piiot, ---------_ April I, I, U. Jt, ltll PUBLIC NOTICE PUMll • Puollsnect °'-COllll O••IY Pilot, __ , 11411 .. PICTITIOUI 8UllNllS MAMI STATIMllNT PlJBLIC NOTICE M., U , Apr 1, I, IS, "II 14'2 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tne lollowln9 per>Onl •rt Go•no Ousln•u ••· NEWPORT CLEAN I NG SERVICES, 111-F, Riverside Orlvt, Ntwport 8.ta<h. C•IHornl• 92663 BerNrd "'-llllHOft. •3' H•mlllon Sl•ttt. API A, CMI• Men, C•llforn•• 92621 R •nav '1..ouh Mel niuon. 2 SJ H•novtr Orivt. Coste Me .. , C•lltorni• 92U6 T "" ou.,ntu os conducteo bY • Qtntr•l IM'rtnt•SlllP B. M.ttl\1eSO<\ Tl•.. ...,_, ..... 111.0 .... ,. ,,.. Co .. nty Cterk ot Orenoe county on "''"''" u. '"'· l'ISkll PuD"~ ~noe co .. r D•llY P1lo1. M•r 1S. Al>< 1, I. I~. ltll 1440-11 Tl\t lollowln11 persons •rt dolnQ l>uSIMU es FOATUHA ENTERPRISES, 101 ScllOtt Pl•,. PH •I•, Newl)Ofl BHCh, c •. ,,~ 'oZ•<lltrV T Pedoc lni, 101 ScllOlr Pl•u PH•to. N'""°" 6ucn, C• •2.., Sidney Flthller, 102 S<hOlt PIH• PH a U, Newport ha<ll, C• t2 .. 3 Tnl1 ouslnen h conducted Oy • Qtnor•I portnerslllp Zo<llerv T Pedlcllll Sidney Flelthtr Tiii• s1Atteman1 wu llltd will\ 11\e Counl y Cltr-ol Or •n119 County on M•rcll •. 1911. PUIMI PuOllsnecl OrenQit Ca.tSI O•ICY Pilot M.tr 11, 11. U , Apr I, 1'11 11'2-11 PlJBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU• IUSINES$ NAMa STAT.MINT Tiie IOll-•ng person is doing bUS• ,,.,, ., MONEY UNLIMITED, •OOO MecArlllur Blvd , Suitt JOOO. Nt wp0rt 8uc11, C•lllO<nla 92'b60 Jolln L•wrtnce Anderson, 211 Atl•n1• Avt,.ue, "1. H\lnlin111on 6ulll. Ceuforn•• 'lMt Tl\I\ l>u••n.H IS CondUC led by •n on. Olv1d.,•I Jonn L Artderson This •taltmtnt w•s l•led "'''" Ille Cou"'y Clerk of Or..,ge Counly on Mtrt ll 2l, 1'111 l'UMJO PuDlo>IWd ClrMll)e Co.st O•oly Piiot, M.or H, AP< I, I. IS, 1'1'1 Ull·ll P lJBLIC NOTICt "CTITIOUS aUSIMIU l'ICTITIOU$ IUSIHESS NAME STATIMUIT NAME STATEMENT '"• 1ouow1no p•ra.on\. are oo•no tne totlOWH\Q per\O«' '' do1nQ bu" t>uS.•neS\ •t n~\\ •s COLOR IT lllGHT TV, \Sii W llUSTY HOOO, ~ Coi>hnenl.tl P lJBLIC NOTICE ' rn.,. Du)tM\'t •• \OOd~<l•d Oy • Euv•ne •no Jo.1n• M•1slrr, J11 L.•9•• ownitr. B•nA of Arntr1c• 41·0 I •'.1~nrr41 pertner<nop . EHi 11\I. C0\11 Mew. EtlllOCOl• 91'21 V•k•nll W•y 1..0"9 6ea<h, CA 'l'*ll L A•<f\lra l..HW1\ '"'' °"''IMH ., t.onduct.o D't.,,. tn V••u• of v.,,.. •... CH0$ ,,00 Tn1\ \l•tr-lnfll'nl '111111•\ filed with t~ O•-w•d~•' O•tt ot w~e Ai&>r11 U '~' I 1mt ot (,,..,,,,.,. ,,.,, ot Jr.n~ Covnh on I EUQ1PntG Meister u•t JO A M Moren 9 1'191 Tl\" •1•1-t ••• 111.0 wotn lne Loutoon ol Wit. 2'10l EdonQtr Hun\ F 1S14'( Cou,.ly Cltrk ol OrM'IQt County on on111on BNCh, CA P"o11stwd Or•nOf" (O.)I 0 •11, Pilot ""•'<" ••. ltl1 t certt1., lill"CMr oitn•ttt Of per1ury ,.,.., II II./). AP< I l'ltl 1111 ., FI STtlO In•• ,,.. ... If,.,..,. .. ,..,..,,. .,. l•u• P U BLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINUS NAM£ STATEMENT Tiit lollovw1ng .,.,..,,, " ooonQ 1>ut1 nest •s COWBOY MAYNAllO 8 AN 0 . \)77 G4rl1nglord .. Co>1• Meu. C•lllorno• .,,,. Tnom.s O Kutn1, 1112 G•r• ·'"Qloro, Casi• MH•. C•lolor"•• 9161• · • nus bu\IMn 1s <.ondu<t•d b~ •n 1n <ilv1du•I ff'IOm•• I( uenl T,.,1~ St•t•rnent w«U llltd W'1ln IM l;ounlv Coe,. of Or•nQt Countt on Pubh'r.d OrM\~ C.N ll D•llly P1io1 •n<> (O,,e<t M~rch 11 21 .. Ao"' 1 .. I .. 1911 1~11 L••nnoldf'f Hun11ngton H•roor PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF ESTELLE SIEGEL, AKA ESTELLE LOUISE SIEGEL, AKA ESTELLE LOUISE NOVAK AND OF PETITION TO AD · Ml'NISTER ESTATE NO. M•rone Ctr 1'l01 Ed•nQer P 0 Bo• 1J1•. Hwnll,.Qlon llU<ll CA •2•41 pnone no a ... ,.,, L,, nnold•r Agf'nt .,.von A Mur<.n1\on. ?iOI Ec:J1n9t'r. P 0 Bo• 1Jh, ~unhnQIO" Buen. (/A '1•11 . pnon• no IA0-1'11 O•l•Cl, M•rcn U. l'ltl Publo>ne<I O••noe CO.t'1 Otlly P•IOI, Aprol 1, 1'111 1$)4 11 PUBLIC NOTICE A-1082JS. PICTITIOIJS aUSINUS Matlll 19, t'ltl T o a I I h e i r s • NAMI STATEMaNT "Ull•J b enefi ciaries, c redi tors Th• following pusons •o ooong bu\,MH a\ Puo"'""' Or.,,Q<t c ... ,, D••ly Po101. and contingent c reditors of p v c w EST. 11 w ooo w 111a, M•r IS. '\pr '1.1s, 1991 U9011 Estelle Siegel, aka Estelle lrv1ne,c.i11orno•t11l• PUBLIC NOTICE Louise Siegel, a ka E stelle JoM Allreo woron, >1 w ooc1 Wind. Irvin.. Cohtorn1• 9211• Louise Novak a nd persons Herbert 111<11.tra w"'""· Jr., J1 I who may be otherw ise In· wooa Wind. lr••ne. c.111or,.•• ,,, .. F1C T1T1ous 1us1NUS terested 1n the w ill and ior T111s ouslnen •• co,..u<t•d by • NAME $TATEMl!NT t t . llf,,.,., _.ll>e<Sll1p r ,.. lollOw•nQ P~• '°"' •. t do•n9 I es a e. JoNt A w .. 1tw1 1>u .. M\~ •\ A petition has been f 1 led Tr10s <taterwwnt w•• 1o1ee1 """" ,,,. DAISY PATCH OISCOUNl by Paul Novak, Mickey County Cltrll ol 0r ... ~ Co11nly on S"TORE 20S' llockl1e1a Btva E Novak and Gloria Gooding M•rcl\ lO l~I Toro C:•Jo•orn•• 9:Z.JO . I' IHl'J lO•\ -·~·.i l•mmerm4n lSll In the Superior Court o f Pu1111.-0r..._ c o ... Oelly Pllol. An1 .11u• W•Y. Newport Buen Orange Cou n ty requesting Apro11.1,u.22.1t11 un-11 C•l•torn.•91..0 that Paul N o vak M ickey 1..1ncu Boyd 1~11 CO"\lell•l•on . ' PlJBUC NOTICE Hun1on91tw1 8#.cn. C•••lornl• 92... Novak and Glorra Gooding T•"•' J•me< z,m,.,..rm.,., n11 be appointed as personal AntoQ~• W•v, Ntwporl Buen r epresentati ve t-O ad -"'18UCMOTIC• C••••orno.o '1..0 · t t f Tiie e.~n CAlmmunlty A..-•• Fr•"•T•rn1BoyOl'!tltConU•ll• minister he eS ate 0 htw11\rti..-l"9tnOMyCOll1Cltdlrom loon ..... nlonQtOr\ Buen C•hlorn1• Este lle Siegel, aka Estelle 0...1 OWNO -storeo lhtlr _,,on 91••• Louise Siege, aka Estelle 11w lier~ .. • Pl•r llH<h c1ur1119 ,.,. '"" ou,,,. .. , ,, '°"ou< 1to DY • Lou ise Novak (under the Yte" ms. .. ,. -"" Rent•l In ... 9tnrr•• JW'1ntf\l\•P <•n of $.SO per yMr lo. slngl•·hOkl 1.0 •• z.mme•rn•n Independent Administra-11oe11 .,., v s per ,..,, 10. rnulll·nokl rn" >1•remen1 ••• '""" ...,,,,. ,.,. t1on o f E states A ct). The bo•ts •Ill oe retundt d 11pon •P Counly (ltr~ ol Or""o;it Co.,nty on p e t ition is set f Or hearing pr°"rl•tt p<OOf of peymenl PrtHnt M••cn ••. 1~1 . . your proof lo Mimi Gl•n . JS.2 W•v•• """' '" Dept. N_o . 3 at 700 _CIVIC ly Orlve, ,.._pOrl BHC:ll, C.lllotnl• Puo1ojl\tHI Orange °'"" o.,,~ P1101 Center Drive, W est, m the 9161l I'"' Mt-S4JO. Proot should bt Mart1,H AP<111 .81''' 1N111 Ci ty of Santa Ana Pn••ntt<1••oonu poul1M•. PlJBUC NOTICE FtCTITIOU5 IUStN•H NAME STATIMINT The lollowong person I> doOllQ but• ne\\ ., , SPECTRUM PAINTEllS. t•U M ot1.t t\ana. Hunt1n9ton 8••<". C:•lllornl• n.-Stev•n Oon l•"9. , .. , Mo .. ,,..N, HUnt1n9ton Beech, C .. llor,.I• •2'411 l h1\ buStr•\' I\ Conck.t<\ed bY el' fn 01v1du•I Ste•en Ut>Q Tho< st"1...-I w•• Ill.cl w1tll IM Co""' y Cltrk or Or .,.goo Co~nty o" M•"" JO. 1 .. 1 l'U .... PuOll•-Or.,.oe ""'" O•llY Pilot, April 1,1, IS, ll, ltll 1~1 P U BLIC NOTICE "OT1(9 IMVITINO a10S FOUNTAIN VALLIY SCHOOL OISTltlCT •t Ll~TNOUH LANI P.O. 80Jt •ll l'OUNTAIM VALLIY, CA '77M PROJECT IDENTI FICAT ION. P l•ln oono or, p•per cop ier, leHt/Pjl•Gllote ~ion , . . ' Pub11s,.., DrM\99 COl>I O•lly Piiot Ca l1 fo rnia on April 29, 1981 M••c" 11. tt. JO, 11. Aprll 1.1.1. '"' at9:30a.m. uss-11 IF YOU OBJECT to the - granting of the petition, PUBLIC NOTICE you s hould either appear a t the hearing and state NOTICll TOCONTllACTOllS y our o b jections or file CALuNol'o1t11os . . . . Sc l\ool Dhtrlc I COAST COM· written ObJect1ons With the MUNITY COL.LEGE OISTRICT court before the hearing. a 10 C>Hallne > oo o'<l«k pm o1 Your appearance may be t ... 21st d.tro1 A11<11. 1t11 b Pike ol llld ReuiPI Office Of 1,,. in person or Y your at-Purc11.slr19 Avent, M••l•n Perrin. torney. CoHt CommunJty co11999 Ot<trl<t, I F Y 0 U A R E A 1170 AOM\ Avenue, Co\lt Moe, C R E 0 I T 0 R Ce1Jlornle f2Ut. 0 r a c 0 n · ProtKt ldont1ttc1lltw1 Name Golden tingent cred itor of the de-w est co11•o• En•ro suing cea sed , you must file your '"'-'"'""' 814 •t7s claim w ith the court or Piece Pl.,., er•"" 111• 0111ce of D1rec:tor ol ""'""°' FKllll!fl l>Mft-present it to the personal nlll9, JOlln Potter, Olitrlcl Treller representative appointe d F•ci11Ues. mo....,.,,., Avenue. Cott• b th t ·th' f Moe. (114) SS..SIOI. y e cour WI '" our NOTICE I\ HERE8Y GIVEN tllolt months from the date of int •1>av•·r>emed Scnoo1 0111rtc1 of first issuance of letters a s oren0t County, C•I"°'"''"· •ct1nt1 tir pro111ded in Sect loo 700 of ~:d, ;7~~~~ ;:s .~~·:;~•;: ~:·~a~ the Probate Co d e of "DISTRICT" .. 111 receive up to out California. The time for not •••• ,,,..;. .... •llove-ttalMI i1 ..... filing c laims will not ex-s .. 1eao1mfor111e•wudol•con1r1ct j . · f0< Ille ellove project P re prror to fo ur months Bids s11111 t1e received lll "" p1•c• &10 11·'2, 110 OEAOllliE: 20, '"'· 1.00 p,IY\ from the date of the hear· lden1111ec1 •Dove, .and 111•11 t1t openeo Apru mg noticed abo'lte. and pu11t1e1v reed ••DUO••,.,. .OO•• YOU MAY EXAMINE st~ti:r~":1:r°.:1:'~00 etPOSll re· the file k ept by the court. quired for eecl\ Mt of lllcl d0cumen1110 If you are inte rest ed in the g1>e1•n'" 11>11 re1urn In OOocl c°"c11t1on estate, you may file a re· ;~::'." " a.~ •tter 111e okl _,l\Q ques t with the cou r t to r~· e ac11 01c1 muu conrorm '"° O• For Oovernlno ao.rd ll•ry P\llllam Aulstont s...-rlnlendeilt &vslneH S.ntlCH Pu011"'9d Ot8f1911 C.O.st D•llv Piiot, Aprn t, I, 1t11 1'°"'1 ·-------celve $Pecial notice of the r11pon11veio1.,.<°"''ectaocument1 PUBUC NOTICE inventory of estate assets h <11 * 111.tti 11e "''om.,...,.., 111 PICTITIOUS 8USINUS MAME ITAT .. o\a Nl ~ flle IOllOWllll ~ftonS •rt doone l>U\•,..n •• WOAD MASTER O A Tf!I SYSTEMS, 117S A·IOI, MHa Ver• Or E , Cotti Nlew. Ce .,.,. Lou Jo l..oret\f, l71S A·101, """Ml 1terde Dr E., CO.to M.W, Co. tka Jo._ ~Jo. rm 'l•ttt. NleM Verde 0... E,, Gotto MtM. c;o, f2•:Z. 11111 l>u\lnest I• (fllltu<led 111 a ~r·I ~. ' .U.lllfl...,._. 'tlllt sltl.t_..I •M 111• wllll tllt C~11ty Cllrll of Or~ CIUl'lty Oii ) ~fcllt, 1•1. '1SI ... 1'1jOll-.CI OrOfttt (Mtt 0.lly .. 110\ ("'::::~:.c~- t. lne tet ur11y ,.,.,.,....to In thll comr11<t and of the peti tons. a c· c1o<11men1s ona oy 1rw 11s1 of P•09DMO c o u n t s a n d r e p o r I s suD<ontr.c:ton. described in Section 1200 .{lie OISlltlCT re-vn IM •It'll It f th C l'f . p b t rtfect M Y or •II OIClt or 10 ••Iv• ony o e a 1 orn1a r o a e 1rr...,1oro'"., 1n10,.,,..1111tt 111 11111 Code. llld•orlll1N~-T11e OISTltlCT ........ ,.. ff'MI II.I It A M ,.,. Olroctor ot Ille Ott\llrll'ntfll ff 111-.-, UrW I, •M•r, IC• duttrl•I "t4.Cleftsttw .,._, .. orev•ll· 0 t n I Id & M e 1dt1 I '"' rei. 11 .., diem w09f'I 111 111t Pmetalonat COrporatton, t.contv 1n 'll"'dl '"'' wo.-'' to 111e 660 N:wrsr: Center Orlve ""'°'"'" for ~ erolt or tnie O'f S I S f -'"""' ........ lo taotllU tM ~ u te S S, ,...wpor1 "tc'· """° , ..... ,. .-. , ... _..,. 9eaclt, C.llfOrftla 92660, OitnlC:'T tfikt lketed •t Ofllte .. 7Sf•07" .. llyfl,ol P.Clllllet .. l1111nltlf, JOM Publls....,. Or•nge Coast ,.oti.r, 011u1tt Trtll« l'ocM>tlff u1t '"""" "" All•l'!lt Awt1111e, Coste M•••· Dally Piiot, April 1, :l, 8, c:.11ttm10 .,,.._ ~ ,..., • -. 1981 UHnH on ,....... A tott\' Of tllf .. 1607.8f rotes t11o11t11,...tdot tllf 14*111•. Tiii ,.,.....,_ ld!Mllle 9' ,_, Iliff!' w .... le --. _.. • wor'lllf!t ., Of PUBUC Nal'ICB •1911• (SI .....,._ n. rM• ,., ...,..,, ---------·---loM -nrnw wor11 1111111 111 111 '"'' .,. tlf'lloM-..Mlf, l'rllfOPtllOIJTM• A••UA.L"ATaM•lfTO' It""" .. ......_' .... Ille COff· 1 CAVAL1a.-INIUllANC8 COltll'O.-ATIOfol, -It. """" ,....,. .... "'*". TRACT'O" .. ~ -c.eMtoct ,. I MO au•. •••NM, .,. 4""" ""I' 1119CtMrtK•r . .,_ ..... ...-JI,... ~' NI!\, .... , MC ... ._, "-, ............ _.. .,.,,,.., ... .., aaectfle9 ..-.. •Oft~ f.W 1...il... •Ut.MJ. ..,_.,..., ttefl\ If! "" Hotllt\111 11 ~lei......... tllf Ulflll'e<( .~I ~OllfY (.OOl .. 11 Nt M_,,...., ....... Iii. 1N4t fir ~-o .,.,i.. 9' •l~t' C .. I 4nt tftot V-..,..._,c~ Clttf"•Nlrttto~atltNlt. A _.W91111t ........ I .,_..,.,...,,..,..1'191,,._,.,.. I Ml*(_... ... , .......... ,....,., ........ ,.. .... ,....._..~, !Mflflf .. wttrect.Tl'9~ ...... --.. '"' ~II W i.. flt *"' ... ttrtfl 111 flt ._ .. ~ .. ,t,tte.m ,.,.., .. u~ .. --CIWWt 11114 ................ -... ..,.,.,... .,.. .... ..._, ~ .... i•~'l--1111 tw .. .,._.-.OK ..... "· 19, 11'11111 • -IMW-• C-lft ...,_I. w.-~--....... ~ • ..-..it•,_, .. ,._,.,, I ----'f~ • ~-~ CIMI o.1,.,,~ *'.., ~1. - B•k•r, C..ta AMw. C.tllfor"I• t~U Or Hunl11>9IOr\ 8e.-:I\, C• 91 ... Ke.-th Orew Froe .. -. Ul1' G Sl•nlo llu•>e" HOOO, '!kl Con· l'ICTfTIOUS aUSIMISS E S.nl• CIM•, !.Mii• Ari•, C•lllornl• l•M"l•I Or . HunlfflQIOI\ Buen C• . NAME S"TATIMENT ttlOS tn .. Tne fol-"'9 ,,,..son Is d>lnQ bu$l Tiu' llu$lnen •• ,onaucltd oy.,. on Tn•• Ou••"•"•> conduc1td Dy an '" MU •1· dtvtdv•I. O•w1d11•I PARKCOURT SIX, 1101 w. L• Ktnnetll 0 Froedl-SIM11fY R ... ~ .. HOOO Vel• • J07, OrM19t, C.lllornie 92'61 Tllos >tatement •es llltd with t,,. Tn" >l•lm><PrH w•• l•l.O .,,,,. tn. John G. Wint. M.D., t lt1 VIII.• Cau,.ty Clerk or OrM'IQoO County on Cou,.ly Cler' 01 Oran"" Cou"'~ on Prt .. O•, SAnl• An.I, C,•lllornl• 9110S M•rcn 1, 1911 M•rtn 9 1'111 This~,...." <onduclol<I ov ... Of\• ,,...,, l'U147J dlvldU•I PuO ... -Or-Co .. 1 O•llY Piiot, Publo\'-" °''""°"' Co.t>I O•ooy PolOI Jof'tt\G West. M.O. Aprll 1,I , U, 11, 1'11 Ult 11 M•r 11, 1'. IS. Apr 1. 1'111 o?iS-11 Tllos ,,_._, ••• l1IM1 "'"" 11>4 Cou"IY c11ri. 01 Or.,,oe C-nly on M.,cll 2', ltl1 JACKS.OM, IUOOllt & SUCK LIMO, Artor.,.~ _.I.Aw p.,.rf_.Plew, Wtli.Pe .... a4f1Nj,., .., N •...-1 """""' Ot'l ve • Ne•,.n -· CA t2t60 1'15117J PuOll,_ Or-Ca.tll D•lly PllOI, April 1, I, tS, 22. 1'91 16ll?-41 PlJBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS a USI MES$ NAME STATEMENT T lie lotlowonQ pe<SGn " do\n9 bu" n•1t. •s W ESTERN SIE RRA LANDSCAPE, IUt S 0..-Or1vo, S."I• A,.., Colll0<n1e tV04 A1t"8rd C ll.,,.i,..1, 111' S G.tnoe Orove. Soni• M t . Olllornl• 9171M This -1neu Is "'"duc:t..i or .,. 1n-01vlctu•I Al<ntrd llem1,..1 Tftti \\al.,,...,..l tiW•.s hl.O ••th tl"lil> County Clerk of O•M'IQO C.Ounty on M••cn JO, 1t11 PuDll\htd Or-Ca.t\l O•••v P110I, Aprol I, I, IS, J1, 1 .. 1 IS,. .. , P lJBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMI! STATEMENT The tollowl"ll p.or\Ofls ••• dolnQ busl,,.ne<. U N IFl.ITE YACHTS - NEWPOllT BEACH, 2001 W Coast HllJll••Y. Newp0rl Bea<ll. C.lllornl• ,,..., UNIFLITE YACHTS, INC , • Nevad.t GO<POf'•llon, -S. E•ttern. Suitt 200, I.Ai V~s. NevelU M 109 Tiii> DUiln<Kt Is Cor>dUCad by • COf'· POr•llon. Uniflite Yacht\, Inc TllcWNls E 1'11111.,,., PrMidtnl Thi\ Stal-I WIS Ill.., will\ Ille Counly Clerk 01 O•lfl9t C.....nlv on Merch JO, 1t11. Fl"'97 P11DllS!led Or-c,a.11 O•lly Piiot. Aprll t. •. n. n . '"' u10 .. 1 PlJBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUSINESS MAMI STAT•MIMT Tiie lollo#lf\9 p.orsons ••• dolno bu"neuM 1..AO-HMOHG SECURITY AGEN· CY, 1304 •A Ute" Strett. CHll Mn•. Colltornle ta• Jolln Honfs. JtS2 Bermude, CMt• Mui, COlllO"nle .. u c .. 01 Herrl1, l tSI Bermude, Co9te M.t••· C.•lllOrnl• ••• CHllord H1rrl1, JIU 11.trmudl. Cci<I• -· Colll0<11le t»~ Tiiis o..11nen Is conducte<t or • 9•"41•11 pel'\IM<il\lp. John H•<rtS Tiii• \lAltmanl WH llltd Wiii\ Ille Ceunty Clerk of Or.,99 COUnty on M•Hl'I )(), 1'11, "" ... PuOllllh90 <lf-'91 CANst Dally Piiot, Apr111. 1. IS, n, tt11 uu .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUfSINESS l'ICTITIOIJ$ I U51HES5 llAME STATEMENT MAMll STATEMENT Th• lollowlnQ per.an\ ert Oo1ng fn• loll-l"g P••sont ert Going bu!uneu as '-' buslne•u •-' JANE ANGEi. & DEBBIE COUNTRY c:1..va 1NOVSTlllAL A N G E I.. d D • A N G E l S PARK, 1111 Center OrtYt, Hunllngton 5 E c RE l A 111 "L .. BIL I.. I NG B .. cn, CoUfa<nl• 9_.7 SERVICES, JtS' S1t1ly Avenue, C:Otl• Gtr•kl Kit•"· lJl32 V•ll• Ro.cl, Meu. Ct hlO<n•• titlt. S.n Juen Coptitreno. C.lll0<ni• JI"< Angel, JtS' S1co11 Avenue. E•rl W•lk, tte SkYllnt Ortv<, Co•I• Mn•, C•lltor111• 9lt.2• 1..tQune 8eocll. Ct Htornl• Otl>Clot Al>Qll, ml 8ro .. ol Avenue, Thi•_,,...,,, condu<~ by.,."' Apl c. S...t• M•, C•11torn1• tllO• dlvodu•I Tl\1l bv11nt'4 '' condu<ltd Oy • Jone&.~"°""'"' Q•n•••l i>er1ner\111p Br-vlon J-""9fl Alto<nty> •• u w Tn" swt"""'"' "'"'toled w11n II>• 6ySltptwnC J.,.,., Counly Cltrk or Or9'\Qe County on Tiii\ sl.tl.,,,.,,t •M 111.0 ••tn 11\e Merci\ •• , .. , Cou"ty Ciera ol OrM'lgt Counly "" l'IS7'71 M•r<ll JO. 1911 PuOlo\ned Or-C°"il O•oly Pilot JONIS, M.U40MIY & lllAYTOH •• 11.U,At>r 1 1 ttll 1~1 11 An.~•"etlaw PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOIJS IUSINU5 NAME STATEMENT Avce Pl-'91 T- •lt Ne__, c-tar C>rive, 5'Ml• 1" New,... .. .u.. Collfenol• -"'""" PuOllSht<I Or-C:Ollst O•lly PllOI Tnt IOllowong person " OO•nQ bus• Aprll 1. 1, IS, n. , .. , IS.._.1 n4f\\ I\ AL.CHEM¥ INTERIOR DESIGN ASSOCIATES, 111 We\t tllh !ilr .. 1 Suoto O•. C<KI• Mow, C•lllorn1a •1•21 Tr•<vW•ll••. 11t We\I 10111 SlrHt Cost• Mt .. , C•lolo•n•• 92021 l "'' bU\•nen '' conouc to b• an 1n Oh11Gu•I Trao W•llor Tfll\ il•l-1 w .. llleO wotll lllt Cou"1y Clerk ol Or 91\llt County on M.,CPI I/, 1911 "MD42 PubloJIWd °''""Ot CD.t\I O•lly Piiot. Mtrcn 11, n, At1r11 1, 1. 1'1t1 tll9 fl PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOIJS 8USINISS NAM• STATIMaNT Th• to11ow1no per-.• ••• dol"CI 011\1,,.H eJ COllPOllATE DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATES, 20451 B•yvlew Avenw, S•nl• 4ne Htf9"1S, C•lllornle t21U Cll•"tY·Hell lncorPOrtled. • C•lllornl• corpor•llon, 20411 8•yv1tw Avenue S...ta AM H•IOlllS, C.lil0<n1a t111S This IMNn<Kl I> CondlKllN Oy I CO< Por•l•M. o..nty·Helt Inc: Ch.tries O -•ton Presiotnt This .U._t w•s lllMI '""" Ill• County Cttni ol Or.,.ve Cou"lY on Much JO 1tll PIS..S PullltSllH Dr~ CDllSI O•oly PllOt, Ai><ll I,•• IS. ll, 1 .. 1 15'4-tl PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS a USIMllH NAM. STATI MINT Tne 1011owln\I pe~'°" Is 001no ous1 ne11 •1. COAST SOLAR SYSTEMS, H11 Shirr• Viti.a. NtwPClrt Bt•ch, Ce. '2..0 C••I Troy-. 2Jl2 Slt rr• Viste, Newp0n BN<ll, C•. tt..0 Tiii• b\ls.l,,.u II conduc .. d by Ml In· PlJBLIC NOTICE STATEMl!NTOI' A8ANDONMENT 0' USIO,. l'ICTITIOU$ IUSINIU MAME Tiie toflowlnQ """"" ll•v• eo ... dOr\ed lht uw Of tne llctlllous b\ls.lneu nemt EMEllALO &AV ASSOCIATES, LT 0 , ti 1.00 Oove St,..11, Suitt 331. He•porl BH<:ll. Ct lllornla '2'60 Tiie llclltlou> buslnets neme re· terrtd to •l>DY• wes Ill.cl In OrlflQt Counly on M.ty 13, ttlO WOODVIEW PllOPE RT IES, INC. ''°° Dove SlrHI. Suite "'· Newport Bff<:ll, C•lllornl• t2'60 Thi> ouilness ••• ctw1ducttd Dy • llmtted pertner\lllp. W-vlow Pr-rtltt, Inc. Lyle 0 $91nktllnt.. llJl'f .. icMnt 1tOa1ar M04'1tlSOW L.ewOffke& , ...... .,.,,CoM .. °""· $191\e .. Ntw"'1 IMdl, CA -FIJ7114 P"Ollilleel Or-CDllSI Deily Piiot. April I. I. IS, ll, 1 .. 1 1~7-11 PlJBUC NOTICE .... ,.. PICTITIOUI 8U51NllU llAMI STATaMINT Tiie lotlowlnQ per-.s ••• oolno ...,Jlness ts; THE IV.CK ROSE. 1n1 Newpor\ 91"4 • Cotto Mew, Colllorlll• t»l7 L•slle H. SlllpmM, SIS 11th Street, H11nt111-on 8to<ll. Co11t0<nl•,.... J elllft A. IEndlley, SIS llllt StrMI, H"nlll\9l0n 8eocll, C•lllorlll• t1MI Tllh IMIJllllHS rs <Orldu<led Oy • llmlted -""''"'•· \..eslle H. Slllpmon T "" >lal9f\'ltnl was rn..s wrtn Ille Count, Cieri ot Or.,.oe Co1H1ty on ""'""" ll. '"'· • -Ptto414 PuOlltlwd Ofonge COllst O•llY PllOI, PICTITIOUI aUSINISS Olvldu•I. NAMI ITATIMINT CMI TtoY- Aj>rll 1, I, U , H, 1tll Utt-II Tllt 1ollowl119 perSOfls •rt dOlng T111s SIAltmenl ••s lllecl #Ill\ 11\e DUJIMUe6: cou111y Clerk ol °''""" County on R E T I A E M EN T I H N 0 F Merci\'· , .. , PUl•U ---,.-ICT_l_T-IOU_l_l_U_llNllS-- FU LLE RTON, RETIAt:MENT INN P\1011\MO 0r-. (ANSI D•Hr Piiot MAMllTATaMIMT OF OALY CITY, RETIREMENT INN Mtr "· "· u. AP' I,"" 1uo•1 Tiie followlftO PffSOllS .,. Oolng OF CAMPIELL. RETIREMENT INN b\lllnetus. 01' SU NNYVALIE, RETIRt:MEIH _, _____________ • GEORGrs OELIGHT ANO AS. INN OF l'REMONT, RETIREMENT PUBLIC NOTICE SOCIATES, JI All99t1eny, lrvlne, I H N 0 I' I U It L I N G A M E , C.lllorft .. f21" ltl!TtREMINT INN OF ~H JOSE, -PICTIT'IOUl aUllMllS 0-.. Mert111 Hlortl\, JI Al :::.~~~-:.»Si.le. UI, C.Ste TM tot"':.!'!:,!!~~::._ l>Ull· l~:i1';'~1~:":.7::::~,, Al· lteltr.,,,..,. IMS of .t,inerlu, fftC. ~.,, letlleft,, lfYIM, c.tlforftle '2714 • '#•"'4~ corpw•lteft, !'10 .... ~ MU.~, Plt0~EU10NAL$ TFS. ,., Tlllt llJUllMH Is t~ .,, If\ 111 ~!l~I~:= 211' Collo Muo, PROPISSIONALS CREATIV•E .,wlW.t Tllll llvSlfteta ls <*"'°"< ... lly 0 <or· flNANCE, UOJ Soulll CMS! Orlve, ::".,.~~;::::" peratlM. Sllllt JIS, c.tt Mew, Colltonllo t2'l4 it.tlr91MMIMS Reel Scott Hormtll, l•UI ,'111,• •• _.-:...•Ill• Wlltl ,,,. w_,t_ ~ .... -lifttltll .._._, -r Cltf'll 01 .,..., .. COuMy on -' """""°' lllC, • Co1l1W11lo tlMI ,,._rcll •, "81. ~lc~·::'.=t 1Thlt ~s Is ctndve'90 •Y "" In· t::;.,. ...,..U.111 A OILAKA•T'r Tiiis aco'9,..fll wot llled wftll tile O vlct1101 ;# "'" MocN1W .,.,.., C.Vftt't' Clef• Of Orlflte ColllltY .., 1'00 l'Mll ..... M. .. Mord1a , 1,.1. flllt \IAI I ... J lllM #llll Ille ~· OI Ilk ... ,.,_ C0\1111, Clerk 01 Or.noe Co11111Y Oii I • cal......... .,, ..... PWlllMlll Q'Ofltlt C.Otl Oallr l'llot, Mol'"t h I•, ltotl, Ptttt71 1'111111 ..... Or .... C:...t 06lly Pl .... A~ll l,e, IS, tt, 1"1 160Ml PUOlltllH ~•llOt Coot! 0.llr ltllot, APrll I, I. 1', 12, t•I 1f"41 PUBUC NOTICE 11t1arct1 ''· u , ~11 '• '· 1"1 m i.et PUBUC NOTICE • PtJBUC NOTICE She's mine Quarta is a 13·year·old gorilla at the Basie, Switzerland zoo and she makes it clear her week·old baby is hers. The baby clings to her mother and it's a safe bet there were no attempts by zoo keepers or others to take the infant away. 'Desexing' of Bible hit By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP lt•ll•-.,, .... NEW YORK S tories have c irc ula ted saying the National Counc il o f C hurc h es plans a ··feminis t " version o f the Bible. Not so. Directions to a translation committee are to stick to original terminology. The interde nomina tio nal c ouncil does plan t o produce a leclion ary a coliection of Scripture readings freque ntly used in wor sh ip -in language "in c lusive'' of w o m e n and men whe n it can be d o n e w h ile a lso preserving the m eanings of the texts. Specific ways for doing that h ave yet to be c onsidered a nd d e veloped, des pite numerous r e - ports speculating about c h a n ges. In fact, t h e task force of scholars t o d o the job s till is being formed, with preliminary r esults n ot expected until 1983. NEVERTHELESS, THERE HAS BEEN a r'asti of c laims, in cir c ulars and e lsewh ere, that the council plans to "desex .. the Bible , e liminating masculine refe r e nces to God as .. Father" and to J esu s as "Son of Cfod ... A res ulting flood o f m ostly n egative mail has hit the council , a cooperative o rganization o f most major Protes tant and Eas t e rn Orthodox d e - n ominations. O ne report. circulat- e d in a direct -mail c am -RWGION paign letter by Edward E . M c A t eer. founder- p r es iden t of a con · se rvati ve g r o up , R e ligious R o undtable. was challeng e d by a U nite d M e thodist editor. s purring an indkated correctio n . "I'm redoing the letter , .. s ays M cAteer o f M e mphis, adding that a coming ~vision would of- fer a "fulle r expla n ation ... H e al so says a footnote included in a curr e n t letter notes ques tions raised about his earlier le tter . THE ORIGINAL LETTER, HEADED "Stop the Liberals from Removing the W ords 'Son o f God' from the Bible, says the counc il a lso intends to r e m ove s u c h words as .. Heavenly Father" in producing a "very anti·C h ristian Bible ." "This attack o n our sacred Scripture is the same as attackin g God himself," the letter says, calling for support in a campaign to s top ··NCC forces from tearing apart our H oly Scriptures." The R ev. Spurgeon Dunnam, editor of the na- tion 's biggest r eligious wee kly. the U nited M ethodist Reporter. editorially called the letter "unfair ..• dis honest" a nd a "spurious attack.'' The editorial, and a story about it, also was in· eluded in Dunnam 's newly launched in- terdenomin ational·n e w s paper, the National Chris· tian Reporter. At his Dallas offiei!, Dunnam met with M cAteer, reporting he agreed t o correct any errors of fact. SlJBSEQUENTLV, REAC HED BY telephone, M c Ateer ~ald h e was ~bec king with the council and redrafting the letter to make clear, once he v~rifies it. that only a leclionary of readings is involved, n ot the Bible. ' ·•To m e it's semantics, whether it's a lee· tionar~r the Bible," he said, adding tbat he still thinks the real aim is a sexless Bible. "It's a possibility . Let's atop them." Tbe council's education division voted at a m eetine Nov. 25 lo continue the Revis ed Standard Version of the Bi ble as a literal translaUon of the o riginal H ebrew and Gre ek manuscripts. But the division a lso decided to form a task group lo prepare an lncluslve-lanpa1e lecUonary, a cycle of Scripture portions commonly read on Sundays and other festiva ls. 1be first of three on~ year series ls to be ready ln 1983. I I. ! GJVowlVuCan Sell More ... with Daily Pilot PENNY PINCHER ADS Only $3 3 lines for 2 days only $1 .50 a day Advertise one or more items valued up to $100. Each additional line is only 66c for the two days. Sorry. no commercial ads allowed. Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your BankAmericard or Master Card §VoW...§VeW... More value for your DIMES in the famous Daily Pilot DIMES-A-LINE ADS Advertise items up t o $50 in value rn Dimes·A·Line ads every Saturday ln the Daily Pilot. Bring your ad with cash to any ol our three convenient offices or mail your copy with a check or money order for the correct amount. 20c per line. Sl.00 minimum. Sorry. "o livestock. produce or plants and no commercial ads are allowed. Each item must be priced with no item over S50. Dimea·A·Llne ads may be placed at the Costa Mesa office until J p.m. Friday. until noon Friday at the Laguna Beach or Huntington Beach offices. THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D • The mark~tplace on the Orange Coa~t INDEX . l• Place Yur Ad, CIN 642-5678 HOUSES FOR SALE General .. , ..... .i.Mt lolboo , .......... CaPtJlrooo hotb Cor-OtlMor C'CM"t1 Mn a 0....Poiot DToto '°""'"'" Vllt.y ll•nti"ll._, &or h fr¥1nc l..ac\u\a Bead\ , .... ,.. 1ti1i. l.&au.N N11ucl MIUWft V1tJO ~:~.,..~:;" "S.tn Juan <"•pt:o.Ua,.o Sant. Ana Su l s .. rh South L•l\IRI "'••tmuuur Mob1lr tlOfllfll \&It' rut mm Arr•u t fO' S•J• Ap.lftmt'Ah• f0t S.lt-llnrU~r-1~ . 8u>1 .... Pr0!><1'1.; Cemtltr> L°'.-Cryiiol~ f.:':,r,~~~~:~~:l) ()upl"&e• I "'h ...,,.," H~ .. ~ tu~ ~'t1.n«d IMUmt Propul) aM~""°1a.t ''rup.. rh l.<it~ fot Sall' EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTU~ITY Publf1het-'1Motin: 100% G....... 1002 ...•....•.•••......•...• , ....•.......•........ FIXBWITHMS Large s Bdrm 3 Bath home located in Meaa del Mar. Two fireplaces, pool, add-on family room and RV parking ne some of the f~atu.rea. The owner will sell on e contract with low down. Full price $164,900. WESTCLIFF WHAT'S UH19UE AIOUT UMl9UE LIGHT AND AIRY--4 Bdrm, 2~ ba pool home, pvt baeach. $324,500 fee. BIG BEAUTIFUL- Spanish 5 Bdrm. charm· ing patio, prestige of Lido Isle, $650,000, fee. LIGHT AND AIRY -5 Hout•tForS. 1McMtMIF#S. ''t • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G..,... 1002 Ge ... r• 1002 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••fte•te•aeeJA .. . HARIOR VIEW HIUs-$475,000 L o v e 1 y 5 B d r m • 2 -·s t o r y ''Hillsborough " h-0me for large family. Pvt rear yard w/pool, huge patiQ & tall trees. Inviting 2-sty lge entrance hall w /vaulted ceiling, spacious liv. rm .. formal din. rm & fam. rm. Sundeck off master bdrm, 2 fireplcs, 3-car garage. Includes land. WESLEY M. TAYLOR co .. REA&.Toas 2 I I t Son JoaquM tt• lload ME~PORT CENTER, H.I. 644-491p Mubll .. Hmr frtt ..,,., llf~l'!t,. (h...,rrl H.f' .. Ofl Or•nr f'u Pti.ip ~ ~, ~':;\i,~~'" All real es tate ad· vertls e d in th is newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Hous· ing Act or 1968 which makes it illegal to ad· vertise "any preference, limitation, or dis· criminalion based on race, color , rell gion. sex, or national or igin, or an intent.Jon to m1tke any such prefer ence, limitation, o r d is· criminalton ... VACANT R e du ce d $2 5 .000 Desperate owner says bring all orfe rs . No qualifying. Low down. 4 Bdrm single story home, totally upgraded Call for more details. Bdrm . fa m rm. ex· ....................................... ... R•f'tfH'" .... •rtt1' r • .-u'"" Roi f~l•I• luh•nll' lhal f-Al•tl' ".,,,.t"d RENTALS Hbullt'' 1-·urn .. ht"'() II~ l nfurn1,ht"d 14®\c" furn or l nf (ondc.lmrn'un" _.,urn rondorn1ntum' l "' To•nhO,hH t-\irn Tow.t\twuu•' I nf Wvlhe:-. t\un IJupltnl. t nf AJ)U fo\trn A..,... .. l nfu11• 4pt11 furn or I f\I killUlll\ H:11('m14 H't•ril Uut~h \lutt"h Guttl llunwa ""'OM"' R .. nt..I This newspaper will not knowin~ly accept any advertis ing fo r real estate which lS in viola· lion ofthe law. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 panded Carmel model, c lose lo ever ythin g, $289,500 ree. DELI G HT FU L DUPLEX Two, 2 Bdrm units with skylights and b ay views. Walk to beach. $450,000. assume $290.000 at 13'~'; E X C I T ING CITIHOME J Bdrm. den, 21 z ba. looks out on quiet greenbelt. $169.500. ANYTIME VIEWS 4 SIORM SI 0,000 da""9 Owner Wllnl.S oul ! Huge famil y room, formal dining room. huge cor· ner lot. Bring all offers. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 OCEANHONT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unfllrn. New. $850yrly. IAYFIONT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba. unfurn. Mint cond. $85() yrly. CHANMB. FflONT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfurn $750yrly. associated BR OKE RS-REALTORS l OH W 8otboo b 11 l•6, \ •ut..,,, H "'"' fh httnt ... h to 'fl ..rt'• Cl.•c .a.&t'\ h.w--K .. l'\I tHltrto lhntAI hu<im .. ,, Rt•n1 .. 1 ltKS0~111 .. 1 H .. nhf ERRORS: Actnr+iHrs should chKk hir ads dally and repori ~ rors Immediately. The DAILY PILOT assumes liablHty for the first incorrect insertion only. REAL PEOPLE Must see lo appreC"iate. Lgc 3 Br, Jba, 2 frplc custom home Wlth roany extras Assume !st TD a nd owner will carry Bdrm. 21'2. ba home on Classified Ads 642·5678 ~;::,.,~II. •nh.,, large lot in Harbor View ....... -.-.-. -. -.. -...................... .. Hills. Views of ocean. bay and night lights~ Just $425.000. \11 .. t Hf'nlati. BUSINESS, INVEST· MDH. FINANCC l 2nd Onlv $350.000 Call Houses for Sale I now 979-5370 hw .. 1r1t,,, ""'"''" • bu,1Un> ~ •n\f'd ln\ol,,...nl ltpphtl ) ln\o .. ~lrnt'nl """"'...d ~h.n'l') tu u, .. n '"'LI '······················· .A g~ ,~~~~~~! .......... !?.~~ LLSTATE THAT'S WHAT'S UHlc;>UE .ABOUT t.!1.,, .. ~ °" .1Hllrd• '40f\J(a~r, 11> "' ~~ REALTORS U,_.IC)Uf ti()Mti AHNOUNCEMCNTS. PERSONALS & LOST & fOUNO \"('W•U"t '°'"!'°'"' ( ., p,.,.., l.t"K•i ''""" 1-.. L1~l 4-f 1,ynd l)rt,ttn•h• "v.-1 .. ltluf-.• Tt•\P'I• SERVICES ~,.,, .. ,,,, .. ,1nt\ EMPLOYMENT & PR£PARA Tf ON "~l,. 1ti"ll\rUf\IUf1 Joh W .. nlt"•I • ft"'flt \\,.,itt'O \1 Ai ,. MERCHANDISE An11t1ur .. 4J)pt1"'™'""' Au.liUfl ti,.,.~ .. K~ld1n~ \1 .. 11•r1,.\ I .. ni«'I ... \· t YUIJ>OWfll 4..ih I Jute"' htt lo )ou f\UflllU'f' (,., .. ~,. '4tlf' Hoc-'~' 'tw\.f'OOld C1Qoi'J•.h Jl'Ytf'lr\ ,_.., .... ,.,,' \fat tunf't\ '41'11 f'H•n~M.I"' .\11..-f't-ll•nf'OV-. \4 .. ntr(J 'h"1,.•J Jn .. lrunu•"l"' Ofht .. > U(O " .. 1au1t.i p,.t..., .. ,.~ ... & fh ••""' '-".,.IMaf \4~1 fUt\1'\ ~lfittmM t.nnrt .. "'w' t<t"•l•ur111nl tt•H ..... ,,,; .. Wll!t Ntl'.. ... ...... 110 _:, )llt~)• ~hl'I ...... llOU .. ~ ~ ,.,.., ~ 1'tl1il l'lttil Jlil1;'fi\ .. ,., """ ....... ~ ~il'li ..... .. ,,. =~ 1 ... 91/40/o LOAN This J Bdrm home has been completely r e· docoraled. Many exlras Ass um e 9'•" loan Price St~.000 Call to- day 979·5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS $3 ~~;r.d1u lt1 ft Mf'tt'11 BOATS & MARINE £QUI PM EMT ''''" I ,.,,.. , con ~t you $100 '·"""'•' a..,.1 .. \l,um "wor u.-e "'°''"' \l•rlnr t•qw1p f~1at' 1-'tt ... -;r ~,.h R~m t t.1U\f'T f:kJah "41t 0.1•h~IV"' IH11a .. Ro•l"i ,_,,.,.,J .. ,,, fto.ah ~cw~4 .. TRANSPORTATION AHq-,.(1 • •mr..-r.. "'•t"" """' t ff', ltH" ( .,, ~~~~ d~~~' Sc'oott". ~'"'ot Um' !W\.P He·n~ ft~1lrn Tt•\.til Jr .. tl.f'n I l1llh Auto """''"•ft-f',.n, AUTOMOBILE hrfK't•I A.nU~Wl!'~ t I•"'""' f(l,.,. .... t~1ft'\rth1l1 " '•~·fl• 111 u .... , 1\i\in, .... , Jq\, J f .. "~ '·~h i\otul,,•,h1n._: \ulu'\ \4 o1ntr1• AUTOS, IMPORTED l,t•n+-t•I \U .. k·u~,, '"'' '""''" ..... 1 ... , llMW l .. 6-111 OlNl<f\ l'uh u,,.h tin t rrr1Ht ...... Ht10il .. Jo1 .. u .. r Jt•fl .. l'll lrl..1tfl\.1Ufl (1h'" Lambof1h1n1 \4 .. ,,1. "t'lf•··'''~'tll \ "'· ""lt ··~I .,.,nt<-14 fltt'4 ~'"'' Pun4"" Rff41ut\ tWllt Hu)n· Rm .. r ~ •• o Stu&• ~b•ru fo)uU rnumoh Vt•Ul>.,..,tlt"n \.'oho tttn"r"'I A~l IN to c..·-d•ll•~ l'•m•rn AUTOS, HEW AUtOS,USto C"ll•"'°'~ l:ht)""l". Comet ~llMAl.el Cotu lte c::o..,., ~r lm1>'"-t1•f L1nre1n ,..,.,," IOrrwy I i':t:~:~;,. t lh 1 ., •thlrct •Pr•hld Adi For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot . AD-VISOR 642·5&71 all it t~~t it a PENNY PINCHER AD :1 lin1·-.. for '.! d,1,, 0111\ SI ::.11 " da·, i\ ti ~· t· r I 1 ... t• on l ' or morl· 1t..r11-. '.du rd up Jn SlllO E.11 h .1 dl\1l 11•n,il l111t· ,, •111h 1;1;4' f11r lhl• l\\o d ;"' S11rr). no ('ii Ill Ill l' I ("I •• I •• d ... .1 11 n '' l' rl l" h (l r I! 1· \our 1'1·nn\ l'mch1·r \ti 111' ll 'I' 1·0 111 H;111k \ment•ard \'1,a '" \l ;J'>ll'I' ('h.trj.!l' Coil today and 'tt your ad in print tomorrow! Coll MotM6sy thru friday l :OOaM to S:lOl'M for 1tut day'1 popw or call by "°°" °" S..Wday for S1111day',,..._. 642-5678 Daily Pilat • tr YoU're not rea4lnc \ht u~ edit 1n ci ... med. you re m.illJol • lot o.t newt)' lnformaUoJi u l'!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!I ••II• aome 11·Ht btl)'s. Claulfttd A.» LIKE MEW Mobile home in q uiet adult park. Ft n Vly Good buy at $39,900. 675-117' SELl.: idle items with a Realtors. 675·6000 o·c EAM & VALLEY VIEW Cozy 3br, 2ba home. den. fr pie. etc + J more separate homes on lg lot. Call now for appl $485.000 Owner will finance. Roy Mccardle, Rltr 548-7729 Daily Pilot Classified --------- Ad Want Ad Help·~ mac nab I irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY EQUESTRIAN ESTATE! 642-5678 Custom Spanish style home on zi 2 acres in Norco, Calif. Gorgeous poo l, s pa. cus tom brick work. stables. pastures, g reenhouse all behind electric gates. Room for tennis ct & more. $495.000 Jerry Thompson. C·78. 551-8700. 752-i 414 551 -8700 - 1ml''"' V'l<ley ("""" w.,..xJbdqe ('°"'e< 642-8235 644-6200 <l(ll DovN D"'" HOfbot Voew (enle< LOCATION! EARLY ILUFFS In the most desirable area on a quiet street. This 3 BR. 2 bath home affords gracious livability. The large kitchen with skylight opens to the dining area with views of the garden patio & the privacy of tree lined greenbelt. $239,500. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 GoQo AHf> BAD LUCK C 8 H R S T l A S G H I l l l P S 0 E S R 0 C 0 0 L A P Z R 8 8 L A S K H 0 U R E 0 H P E X I A R L I 8 T l A S R R S V 0 P E C L T 0 A V A E Y S 8 'T E T D K M A S K t E R L V Q U R I T A £ R S G E K H C U 0 C T E E R S 0 H A 8 E N N C 0 A M 0 H A M P C I G80DSIMAR8ADACAR-8AP N I T S R E 0 R R S 8 L A C S t T P l R C E S V 0 M 8 € M E T K £ .L L 0 A • R S T 1 F S W S E S 0 G R Y l L F 0 0 Ht L £ 0.0 HJ EM l S £ S V ARAOR{TIOEOUPRODYAE F T E I Y l I A P f ! T l S H S S M t 1Ttt1NOOMNENMMUILRT SUPER SALES $TAFF AT S SELLS OVER 5 MILLION IN MOCH CALL US AT 645-9161 LOOKING FOR A GROWTH POSITION? ff you want to do your residential business with a firm offering: • 12 YRS OF COMMUNITY SERVICE • Offices in every coastal cit y -Newport to San Clemente • Fashion Is land Office s taffed wit h top professionals • Spec ialization in marketing prime property •In house advertisi n g agency · • Accelerated commission schedule If you want to ad to your already successful residential business: • The ability to create and market limited partnerships • Involvement with a strong investment department • Individual investment training • Personal investing through individual & .group in ves$ing Call Gen e Trowbridge, C.C.l.M., Vice President & sales rqanager. .644·102f • I . I, ; I ·-COLI OF MIV(POIT HAL TOIS , 2115 I. Co•tHwy .. eor-. .. .....- 671-1511 LIASIOf'TION Luxurt0ut, custom con· 19081.1 Newly remodeled traditional 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus l1e recreation room ft 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Best ln price at SQ),000. PIMIMSULA POtt« llAc:HROMT Panoramic view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. rt. featuring marine room, entry, living room, dining room, bullHo&, etc. $1.~,000. IAYFIOMr We have s•veral fine homes with pler & slip, starthuf at $1,500,000. RANCHO MllMI Springs Condo, 9th fairway, ~sq.ft . 3 BdTm, 3 bath, furn. Golt clb. mbrshp. Trade tor be•ch invest. prop. Bill GRUNDY . REALTOR J.11 ~r1y •t1• [J1 .,.., I~ t4, •, 1 ') t,1(11 'I •COSTAMISA 111-SIZl,500 OWNa SAYS S&J. Not an add-<111 or coo· venJon. A reaJ 5 Bdrm family home in one or Costa Meu 's nicest areu. Handymans de- light. Call now and save! do. 1700 IQ. ft. 2 frplcs, 3 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! bdrm. 2'i'J baths. S800 @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114·631-6990 mo. 642·4623. hwllMCudu QU41L MEADOWS TUSTtM. 5% DoWll. 5'1o C--. to selling agt. or wUI pay all buyers cloeing costs. Very lrg, frplc, gourmet kitchen, pool. whirlpool. tennis crls. spacious grounds. llZ·ZlOO Ask for Sandy GREAT AMAHCING~STSIOI Eastside charmer completely refurbished. Quiet street. Large yard with covered patio. 3 bdrms, 2 baths. family rm w/ftreplace, dining rm, with heavy shake roof. Owner·may consider carrying 1st T.D. or Jge 2nd T .D . Won't last $159.500! ON WATER-VIEW-SLIP St..t ....... *s i I 1•1 ta rewl Al ..... .I ,_.Mita ...,.... ti.J tt. dty. 0--wil .... wflll h•t~ -~ Feat•loH Mtw,ort locetlom wlte. tu111 1111 new of M• 1t9r ..... .., ........ ,..... .............. ..... 2-stwy .._ W ,._. -,_ .... , _.. -.... ~ ..... ,nc ...... prtc9d -..,.,._.. SHS,000. GRANDEUR OH LINDA ISLE A NtHaicl-I of .,..... pr••• iloa-• ,,... .......................... ... 9erdH1 o••r t.rlcll welk ••r & dJpl,._I.. to tohll •11.-ce. Two ....., .._ ................. .,. ...,.., ·-·· ,.,..., .......... wMI .,. .................. , ...... H•llH t.•r. Per••I di .... ra + ................................. + 4 c$ ._ ... ,., '-9t ..... r ,.... ..... ~, ... -J .... Sl.lt ooo. _ • ORANGE COUNTfS NO. 1 BROKER OFFERS MOTIVATION Pl.US 90% COMMISSIOH HO DESKFllS MO PHONE FIES MO ADVERTISING FHS 5 MULTIPLE IOAllDS FREE SEC UT AllY Whelan s4o.J666 '-al Estate ClasSi!ied Ads, your one-Have aometruna to sell'? stop shopping center. ClassUied ads do it well. CE IBDB81 BLlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE LUXURY CONDO Convenie nt Location . Two Bedrooms, Two Baths . Plush Carpets. Plantation Shutters. Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up & Leave When You Wish. Only $255 ,000, Plus As sumable First Trust Deed. AFFORDABLE AREA NEAR 17th 3 ldra, Zbe, cOltdo, ,.tfo, ...... doMh. C: a •ltr pool ...t rec. ,..... •• to shops and schools. S I 14.000. ~ WATERFRONT HOMES. IN( Rt /\I b 1-/\ TF 315 Manne Ave Balboa Island 673-6900 IA YFROHT COMDO SUIMIT Fantastic value with excellent owner financing. This 2 bedroom adult condo has a beautiful main bay view on fee land with boat slip availability. This is the best priced main-bay waterfront condo in Newport Beach. SUBMIT ON TERMS. $335,000. 6·t 1 gg~n 6 73 1020 '::~=a' S@\\c41~-~t,~s· .... •••• --., "r CLAY .. POUAN ----- ·~~mbt.,---~ :: '°"' '<> ·-,_ tloftplt -" . 90% FINAIClll 12%% lllltl. , f HARBOR ABEA LOCATIO ./ SlZE-1850 SQ. FT. I MICRO OVEN ./ALL SlmPPINO ~ BJ.OCJC I OOKPACOOR I ~R CONDmONJNG l DISHWASHER I CEMENT DRIVES I DBJ.. GARAGE (WALK IN CLOS~ W/OPENER WAD INVISTMIMT IMC. SALIS OMCI (7141 611.WI .......... ..u. ... c.... ...... c.. PRIME RATE: 110 VIEW Portsmouth model plus added 4th bedroom. lots of potential, incredible ocean view. Catch it all on top of Spyglass. Unbeatable owner financing $650,000. U~IVU~ ti()MI:' REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 Ea•t Coast Hlghw•y. Coron• del Mu WE HA VE 43 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOW{'J (' ASSUME 11/t>/o LM. Only Slll,500 for lhil 3 Bdrm charmer with heated pool and fruit trees. Call now979-S370. ALLSTATE CUTE HOUSE ON A LARGE LOI' - Great starter bome wlth Oondo 2 Br. 1\; Ba. LeMe a bedrooms in the optloo or low down.11th. Pallaadea area. Near • r-tm, Colla ll•a. 1cboolJ·perfect for flnt· Le0Haynes940-MM. Ume 1buyerl Sua,ooo. 1 _________ , .a.•12 blQ.gO c_... dll Mar IOZ2 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Jasmine Creek decorator home, plan 1 oo areen· belt immac. '3>5.500 M).81~ NIWUS'ftNG One atory adult condo, 2 Bdrm, 2 bath ln park· like aettln1. Move·lo condition. Sl.38,500. 64H200 A PETE BARRETI .. REALTY IACH PAIADISI LEASEOPI'ION 0.. P9W IOH Beaut 2br, 2ba Irvine ••••••••••••~•••••••••• Terr Pool Home. Spa, 2 car 1ar, room to build. $6000 dwn $2700 /mo. 1215,000 FP. Bryan 640-5681 Good Duplex on best street, pool, hi income. Owner, S320,000. Prine. ~nly . 64(H999. •MADilA Yr6W• Co-Op Spectacular view of Marina + White Water. 2br, 2ba, lge liv· ing rm, frplc, stained glasa, prof. decor, lge covered deck, priv. gar $400,000 PP Reply P.O. Box 5125. Orange, CA 92667 ESTATE SALE 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. frplc. i---------South of Coast Hwy. 10 FoillitalllVGl.y 1034 minute walk to beach. ••••••••••••••••••••••• By owner. Inviting bids. Y .._(-.. .._ ..-~ Cash only. For informa· ~ m~ ,..,... lion contact Pat int e ever popular B u r 1 es o n . A d , Westmont homes. 3 lrg m i n i s t r a t o r . 4 2 6 Bd + Bonus rm Below Armsley Square, On· market pnce. $127,000. tario, Calif. 91762 or call Call Anne Mccasland *ST AITEI HOME Flexible Cloancinl oo tbia z Bdrm Greentree fixer. Owner will hell> with con, Call for de- tall1. DISCOUIAGIO? DIPllSSID7 DIS~? Think you will never find that 3bdrm home you really want at • price you can afford? Don't dispare. we have ju.st what you have b~n lookmg for at 1159,000. It's 1n a convenient loca· tion Highly upgraded. Ow n er is o ffering generous terms to help you purchase. 714/98'-8120 6lH2S6 ~513 CAMPU5Dl:IRVINE H~y=D lii.;:f• •UllV.PARK 4 Bdrm 3 Bath, highly -------·--Lrg 4 Bdrm 21.; Bath upgraded. Pool. jacuzzi, H•t'--t-•~ .. 1040 home 1n prestigious t I o ean & ~ -..,_.. University Park. steps spec acu ar c ••••••••••••••••••••••• bel night light views! rrom pool and green t. $795,000 IRl .... G •o..1¥ ~ Assumableilsrinancing. " """' ~ ,Caltrordeta . Lovely 3br, cstm home RCTaylorCo 0 40 C)C)OQ S IEIMlOOMS • Spacious Somerset Model in Harbor View Homes. Large family room. 3 car garage. all on extra large lot. S329,7SO owner wdl help fiance. ___ R_E_A_L T_O_R_S __ View! Location. Ocean & ft.WI va••'OLD hills. Prime Hrbr Vu vn J..,..,.. area. 1380.000. Bev Cov· e--RANCH HEA L TY c,s 1 2000 * •DEERAElD Best location, steps lo ington, Bkr 770-8887, 768-6663 pool & voUeyball -------- near beach & park. formal dining. heavy shake roof. Call now for information regarding the 9~«7. assum. loan. Seller w/carry part of the buyers down pay ment & says bring any offer. Larges t model in Deerfield. The Plan 5 done as never before! Pool. s pa. magnificent decor and landscaping. All this and assume a high loan balance . Call now ! A Division or II arbor Investment Co •LOWDOWN• 161,toO. 2 Br condo. Assume !We loan. Great (or investor or starter home. Owner UMDB II 00,000 Perfect starter home w/great assumable loan. Call now. 711-Jlt I C::::. C,f I f ( f ~Pl~CJPf J01f '1 desperate! 641 ·8833 1 ____ _ Agent. COMMEICIAL PROfRrY Tired of selling bouses 7 days a week? We need one licensee to le1tm the skills lo manage & broker commercial real 6 DELUXI UMfTS OCEA.MROMT Small down payment and the balance is financed Asking only $1.3 million. JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 estate. Income from --------- mgmt while you learn. 1m---------Super benefits; life in· loyfroilt Fixer The Sunniest Home m: JASMINE CRHk 2bdrm & den, cheeery kitchen. plantation shut· ters. pvt comm with pool. jac & tennis. $285,000. By Owner : 759-1176. Cotta MftCI 1024 IESTPRJCE IHTOWM 4br. remodeled kitchen. plush carpets, custom drapes, freshly painted, seller bought another & has priced thousands below market value for quick sale. Creative ••••••••••••••••••••••• terms ok -better hurry Shu!'~O:.!'!°,~rn<' ~ 6~m!!~l la!l""a heh I 041 lot . Featuring 2 '-. .. ,.;-~ASSOCIATES ••••••••••••••••••••••• \\bod bridge Re.illy 551·3000 4ntBarnnu P\c•). trvia• • fireplaces. new roof. 14a.aSll THE SH .. .,ES copper plumbing and '-.---------much more. Owner wilJ 1• W e al h e re d c e d a r carry a large 2nd TD --------~! shakes, that is. Custom and will also sell VA & designed 3 bdrm. fam BUYING? SELLING? fllA. Priced at 1136,000. rm. 2 baths Extens ive For more details, call use of wood glass & ~ll.51 ceramic tale. Beam ceil· ing. frplc . $165,000. M issioo Realty ( 714)494-0731 . ,, s ~HERITAGE -s urance; health in· Beautiful bayvtew loca· surance & dental plan. lion with dock 4 Bdrm liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Contact Ken, 6'75·6700. w /plans for remodel. . • REALTORS If someone told you that yo u would s a ve thousands of DOLLARS when buying or selhnj{ your properly & still have the total and quail t y service or a pro fess1onal realtor. would you take the lime to call .... 2Br cabana & trlr. sublet· ting allowed, 3 pvt bchs. pool & fi shing pier. $29,900. (714 ) 499·3816 . OLDMIWPOn VIEW! VIEW! VIEW! New coodo. Convenient to bay, Lido, Hoa1 Ho1pit•l and re1taoranu. Two bedrooms . Trade poaalbJUU... $llt,0001 '31·7300 M.I. $995,000. -------- f ,\ IH 848-1466 DUPWFtXH! OC E.At4 VIEW Bring your paintbrush & broom to save SSS on this dirty dawg ! ! Prime Laguna Beach duplex w I attached garage. Sub- m It offer! 759-1501 or 752-7373 ~ ........ REAL ESTATE IMHAl.DIAY Spectacular NEW de- signer custom home avail. mid-summer. 760-0715 RETIREMENT BOUND! Spacious 2 Bdrm condo · near everything! Walk to beach . L.,_. V-...1.£. -497.17,, Lltm•H• 1010 ....................... ........ "LEISURE WORLD'' RESALE IN · FOR II ATlON. For Retired. RetbiQI, aae 52, over. Cc>ops, Ccmdoa, Price Range. 24. hour Securl~, Clubhoua ... ::~ ... ·;::·ii:r. buaea. N*"' map . C.llorWrtte: H. lclOft 11uJ1.ano JtCM /La.uaa RUla Reial• (AdmU. llkla.) P.O. itox 114&, Lapna HUia, CA. ... \. 'f • P.rivate Parties only -no c:ommerclal businesses please. ·11111 Piii: Any classification. No cancellation Rebate~. Ha•tfffor5* .._.. Fors. ~ ...... Fors. Ott.rletU•.... OllMwlffll...._ OttterlHI.... Hwetu ..... .-. HwnU ........ d .... u•1A1••• . I '•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••,••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••· ...•.••••.......•••.... ,..................... . ..._,.,..._. 10.t Me--',._. 106fMe.,....leodl 10691acwPropel'ty ZOOO 1Kwrr.p11'ty zooo._ ... ,...,,,.., JOOOCero .. cWM.r JZZ21"... 3244 h1••...... UA .................. ...~. •·····•···•·····•····•· ......................................................................................................................................... . ... .. ~ .. ;;:;;_:;;.··~ .. .:_:o.::_• -----• UMITSl! 1_11 Sboreellffa 2 br & den, lie Larae 3 Br. Coodo2~ Ba. tB.r, 2Ba, le MCl&aded lot. · , WV"'f"'IJ" 9-. -MZ44'~..a.x.a.> _...,. yard. Mini view. suoo. Din area, ramUy rm. l•r refril tlOO mci fllUll.12.71 ''LINDA ISLE'' PllMILA.uMAOC....aOMT 7UnitaLoogBeacbXlnt Aaent,873-5354. frplc', crpt, 2 atory, Avail hnmed '9Mlft. . cond. No vacancies. comm pool. Avall. 3-16. • .._,... • ...._ Prime Laguna Beach oceanfro1;lt . 18 Unit.a Len.no•. Cash 2Br, pvt. beach. Adult.a $86S mo. +deposit. Call G7"'2'7t .,.,, Lar1e comer Jol L.Uie fixer-upper. Unobstructed panoramic paying tenanta. only. Garden. 75%-1.282 9to4. ......,. .._. J2ff" bouae • Br. 2~ Ba. RV view. Steps to beautiful sandy beach. 6 Unita L.A. Like new. ~0129 ••••I•••••••••••••••• .. apaCJJ behJnd locked a _JJ. OWC t 1~ d $97S 000 No~ntcontrol. WOODBRIDGE 3 Br. 11/• 1ates. All this in a v7 o own. • . • 4 Unit• Anaheim . IUSTICSITTING Ba. Condo. $600/mo. 3 er.2Ba.larpJard,I Weatcliff.Noloa.oquali· 'f''1n OWtl J (l)UAIL PLACI Owners unit. Pride of 3Bdrm.2ba.frplc... Wrk (714)833·6029 · ~:~u1e. $7'5 mo .. ~ fyin1. PIOPMTllS , Ownenblp. Cbannl.niupperunlt. R a m tll . H o m e "' -· .v: 7418-()6M Saturday and t1...dow Broker714/M7·8S16 $850/mo Own/Agt. (213)498-6090. MIWPa.TllACH . YICTOllAN ~IUGIJ 712 lt20 JO UfllTS CM. 64S-029S Woodbridee area lrg 3 l~ bloc:u to the oceao •'· BEACH ROME APRIL 4th Alll 5th • Beautiful 1 year old Jmmac. 3 br, lrvlne Ter· Br. 2'h Ba. 2caraarage, ~ac: . .r=.e ~ New 3 BR 3~ Ba~Quali· Town house Unit s . race, lee yd, pool, Jae, fam rm, din area, frplc, i::u.• Flnt aftd ~ .. {. ,ti ty handcrafted oak FOR SALE _ Miit( OFFER Frplca. Nice area. Sl680. 64().9900agt crpta, cirJia, window cov· Sl 000 per month. lhruout. Stained glass, RI\ Mewpoti.._. IOH C••••ra.l TSL INVSTMTS642·1603 ~Otta MeM 3224 ers. Comm. pool. Avail 631.7300, BKR. spa. ••••••••• ...... •••••••• PNparty 1600 LAGUNA DUP'LU ....................... aft. J.25. 1825 per mo + Plan lll Realty 752·6499 5 Br. 3 Ba. Harbor view Hom e . $349,500. Owner/Agt. Comm . pool. 673-7761 ·llGCAMYON GOLF COURSE LOT OWMrMmts.I ! Agent. Dann Bibb 675-2311 64(). 7665 THEILUFFS J 11-5"' Le•ef Finest original area. Massive greenbelt vista. Smartly decorated in popular tones, nearby I pool. Offered at $212,000 (with assumable hi bal loan-try $43,000 down I Agt, 64().5560. • IO~oA.c.cMG• 12.5%. 3 Br, 3ba, 2SOl'J sl f. Ownr motiv. Baycrest. Prine only. Bkr. 751·6836 Beautiful Backbay 3br, Jba home. Great assum. ftnancing. S27o.ooo Open House 3/29, 2300 Heather Lane63{-~17 Oceawtr-.10% Dn Open Hse Sal/Sun l ·5. 21610 W. Oceanfront 3 Br. 3 Ba. comer OWC A1TD. Lease option Owner I Agt CIR Rllrs. 631-3199 or 675·8307 $475,000 VILLA BALBOA RESALES p 0 S 5 i b ) e L e a 5 e 0 pt i 0 n . HARBOR VJEW HOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely duplex in prime Beaut. 2Br adult only deposit. 752·12829-4. s:=s:p~.~ i::.c~~~: 4br, 2ba, Sealanet, good Sa.ct....-.ac..tw North Laguna area. Two townhse . 2 car ~ar . W O 0 D BR I D G E OWN ER· BROK ER on Premises! Boat financing. 675-2139 Great foeauon, great re· as 5 u m ab 1 e 10 a n 5 . Laundry . putt ~ n g "CREEKSIDE'' Willow aty · Im mac. $1000 yrly · Slip for 65' Yacht. S Bdrm, security turn on investment. $225,000. course, very quiet. Plan. 'Professionally _67_3-_2507 ______ _ Gate, + Community Tennis Courts &Ol UDO l6,229 aq fl of leueable $600 /mo. Ask for Bob landscaped Model home 3 Br 2 Ba, incl. rd'ril. and Clubhouse. ~ c e . Fu II price 962·8891,orS31·4750 on the park. 4 Br. 3 Ba. 2 fenced )'1'4, $750/mo yr. Southern California's ,000. Principles only . . KIDS~,_ Story. Fam rm., Din., ly. Agt. 873-3355 .:: Aak ror Mike. "'"' frplc. dshwsr. micro· •• C .& •L premier high rise con· E·Slde Bdrm. S495. • .. .,,. N H ... bor Hlabland 3br, :·.·: ~ dominlum. Exceptional. W /Garage. 642·2510, wave . ......, mo.· 0 pets. 1714)121·1210 or tJIJ)59S.136J view of Newport Bay. 1213 N.COASTHWY 646-484S. 964·2566Acent,noree. 2ba, frplc, $700, thru :·: .y ..... 01...,TM-......,., Total 24 hr security. LAGUNA BEACH Au1 . 979-39t,622·7305 ::: 114Tr-" Cll"'I• --H . h I d d 497-4848 3 BR 2 t n -k B Woodbridge Estates ·:· ' "u.5-....a ig Y upgra e · ' sy, .... c ay NewLincoln3br,2%ba, IUffS ··: ""'"' n"' $700,000. Pnnc only Lob for S-. 2200 condo. Pool 41 jacuzzi. • -. ------•ocn 631 ,,""" k f fam. rm, lndry rm, 2 New 3br, 2ba, Bonita ·.•, ...._. --M.4~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '""""· ~. as or Pl • *Cote Realty . RuthorSleve Crplcs. 2 car gar, small an, l story, etc. :~ HEWPORT IEA.CH yd, $800/mo. 833-21614 SI150/me. 6"·2300 '·! & l n\•estment I llG CAMYOM NPT. Hgt.s Spac .. new 3 Northwood, overlooking Harbor View Homea, :;; __ 640-5777 1 ~•r. llOO ~~e~Se'tt1 ~;~_2 "!,~:,.~~~ 1~:'. park, 4 Br. 21,; Ba, 2000 3bdrm, 2ba, Dice street,:•: Newport Heights. 3br ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agent. Dan Bibb lauo. rm. attached gar. S;9 ft, FR., Crpl, form. aardener incl. $850. ::: 2ba, new kitchen. frplc, 675·2311 640-7665 1725 mo. ~0329 dm, immac. Avail 5/1 64().4829. afterSpm. ;;: private master s uit Ex· HEAR THE SAND $850. 857·0461 Beautifully decorated ' ··: ce llent financing . ICllMHIP-.~x. Extr aordinary '"' acre 3br;2bahouse,dblegar, Bd 2 ba, 2 frplca .··: $169,500 Jeanne Agt. Seconds to the water. Laguna Bch custom nice yrd . $650/mo . Northwood Racquet Baycreat area. Avail :! 631 1266 Excellent 3 BR owner's home view site. S700K. •w>.9772 Club, 4bdrm. 3ba, air, · "home·like" unit & . 2 Ownertagt, 7so.8507. ~ gardener, xlnt cond. 4/1. S895,CaJJ6'5-7Q S• J11tClft BR. 2 ba. rental unit. ~ lBr. quiet, yard. mg. f.p S8SO/mo. 975--0732 Capistrano I 078 Ideal for home & in 0vt of C__... Adults. No dogs . Util. Spectacular view of lake Ocean :J.ronl ••••••••••••••••••••••• c?me. Close lo Newport p--Z''' 2550 pd . lst + d eposit. .. 3 Ml.__.,,_....,__.__ pier & shops. $289,950. • •• :::':':::~•••••••••••• S4lO/mo. 640-95&6 Crom this 2000 sq ft J .M. ~,,..--W U. H. TaytorC Peters townhome. 2 This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55 '·70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. We are developers so submit land or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. 17141 821-1210 <ZIJI 591-1363 18001 352-3710 WITH OCEAN VIEW R-~.!.. 64._49 f0 Office Bldg. l7000sq ft. 1 Lrg. 4Br 31hBa. children ms tr bdrms. den, 2\.'a ba. Rancho S.. J-~ + acre grnd Just oH ok. Pets? Avail. aft. Frplc , from dining, Estat.s l11ew Property 2000 ~Yooo5 ~Ueh~~J1~~~: April 6th. S750/mo. vaulted ceil. A/C, com· Over 3,000 s q .ft of ••••••••••••••••••••••• •J3.il23 Bkr 631·64llor546-3208. munity pool and tennis , elegance. Exclusive new n o p e t s . S l 1 5 0 homes, from $515,000. I•........ Beautiful San Diego. 48 2 Br. 1 Ba. Living room 714/965-06Tor75115813 . We-st_N_w_pt-.-nr--bc-h-.-2-b-r-. :~; den, 2ba, dble 1ar. •• $600/ mo ar partly furn, • S? Avail April 13-Sept 1. (213)927-21915 14 ~3 financing avail. 10 units in great rental 3br units. All amenities. with beam ceiling & •---------Blurra condo, 3bdrm, Charter Rlty&lnvest. area near Civic Center. Subject to 1031 exc. Prin· stone fireplace, large 28r Single family, 5625 2Vtba, split level, up. , 496-8122 831·8811 Perfectly maintained ciples please. $550,000 de n opens to fenced mo + util. 966-1353 dys, graded, very pvt end WI· -----and owner will help will handle. 1·433·1723 patio, separate dining 8J4·0277eves it . Avail Ma y 15 . 5-set leact. I 011 financing. An excep-room & kitchen. carpets, S 000/ 759-0U.5 •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• tlonal value at only Bkr. drapes. built-in gaa Woodbridge Twnhse 2 1 mo. · Brand New S urfside Sl60.000.S66-21660. o.tofState stove.waterpald. lchlld sty,3br, l"'2baS,pool,ten· EXEC. house, avl. April Beach front home. 2600 Property 2600 OK. Couples only . $475 n is. I a k e . 650 Imo 12. 4 br. fabulous matr sq ft. 3f~ty, low dBwnb. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 545-6169 551·5526. suite. 3 ba, tg ram. rm, owner inancing. o Demers 842•9393 40 A scenic Oregon Coast. 4 br. 3 ba condo. l900sq ft. REMTALS full liv. nn .. frml. din Electricity, fenced, out· 2br 1~ ba $550 rm, cozy ldtch, laun. rm standing view. accessi-tennis. pool, sauna, etc, 3br 2ba 1775 6 many, many extras. """"--r R--M £..........._ bl A"" .,A99 next to Baclt Bay, S8SO. ~ ....... _ e.owner..., .... _ 3br2ba $82!ifum. 759-8974 •Oceanfront dpl•. xlnt HGTs.oESr&ATE ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLE VALLEY ---------• 675-4277. Bob or Sharon, 3b 2b Sl250f -----'-----Only $25,000down takes MobileHORWS Near new 4·Ple•. 2 norence,Oregonrec:pro-67S-7694. 3b~2\o'Jaba -Waterfront Newport loc, fin, & price! Prin. 1t! High balance as-ForSat. 1100 bdrm, 2 bath each unit perty. lot 53'x93', or· ---------Island 2 Br. lower _o_n_lY_67_3-_7_677_·_673-_7_87_3 __ 1 sumable financing No ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'with fireplace, enclosed ganlzed campground. 3 Bdrm 2 ba. frpk, yard. duplex. NO PE'I'S. $585. 2 B d r m · 3 b a · i---------1 qualifying. Spacious 2 New MQdular type home, patio, double garage. 23' Terry trlr w/full quiet neighborhood 3803 Marcus. microwave, huge deck. IACICIAY Br 2 Ba. encl. garage. Oceanview·EI Moro Sl65,000. Bill Grundy, hook -ups, must sell S700/mo. security, pool. jacuzzi, 3br, 2ba borne plus ideal Hurry ! Greg Astle. Beach Park, sp 70. 2Br. Rltr, 675-6161. $18,000. RutterSSZ-7856 lncw. Ralttersrf.ront Ho67m:s6900 Npt. Sbors 3Bdrm, frplc. BBQ. Vacant. Owner mother·in·law quarters. 559-9400 space rent Sl75 mo. 20 ..,,. walk to beach, pool, ten· anxious. $290,000. Com pl. w/bath. $220,000. lie i• ~J ~· -yrs. lse. S69.900. 499-3816 Wes~Mesa . IT~~...... 2700 EAST SIDE New 2br. nu. $700, Act . .,._9278 Completely furnished RoyMce-6,IUhr ,_._ Trailer at bch Sl4.900. Needs some work .••••••••••••••~•••••••• bullt·ins, laundry 2Br,2Ba.Adultcomplex. ' with antiques, china, 541-7729 i • ; Terms, OWCortrade $22,000 yr income. Full 19 Acres. leveled. irrigat· hookup, fireplace, patio. No pet.a. Pool, pvt. patio. silver. crystal and a 499-3816 price 1225,000. Owner ed farm land. Xlnt for yrd. Very private. clean. S7' C I Spit lvl. $575/mo. Imo. "world of mirrors" & l:-H::-ou-se_&_2_c_a_r_g_a-:::r°':;-r-hi-g-:--h·)lll-H•-... 1•1•_-•Rl•DG-•"'--iS33 bl. Lo will carry l<l'k interest mobile homes or re· save neigbo~. $500, If ;, AMPU5Da: RVttlE. security, $'100 cleanint elegant decor Security "" "'"' s ,000 Assuma e an. w/l60,000dn. sidential Iota. Adj to city first, last, .200 sec. dep. 768-7m. bldg. Large patio sc hool. Fee l and 3 Bdrm with loft. 3 2bdrm + den,2ba.24X60 ~ water/gas. 3'h mi west Mary.857·2040 Twnhse. 3 Br. 2l;; ba, Spacious and coordinat· $130,000. Ag\641·0763. balconies. beautifully V1kinK. New Cfl>l, all ap-fR€HIG€ of "b ave on 8th St. pool, jac. secluded Ila CAMYON ed. 2 Bdrm. Reduced to 2 houses 00 a lrg lot. AJI landscaped, upgraded. pltances incl Really ---?---,_~_HOM€~ Y um a . Ari x on a . Newport Hts. 3Br. 2Ba. neighborhood. S7SO/mo. Exclusive, full security, $398,000. sort s of potential. Near tennis courts & sharp. F/P.$48,500. Pvt. $250,000.714/<&97·1982 Frpl c, pvt yar d . Oya 642.9909, eves beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba. pool. $4~.ooo. Assume Party. Prine. Only . R.E. lnvestmenta ----------1 S625 /ino. + security. cU>.9020 private yard, wet bar• WATERFRONT Sl40,000. Agt 641-<l763 large loan. 960-3029. 3333 W. Coast Hwy. NB IHI Est• 642-5722. -~--------fireplace, many other RE~~~S~TE INVESTORS/IUYERS -------645-6646 &c"-9t 2100 --------2br, den patio home. amenitiea includin1 631•1400 DOVERSHORES Cetnete~Loh/ --------•••••••••••••••••••••••.NewportHts.Unique 3Br Frplt, custom bk Maids room. $14.50 mo. LOWDOWH SPECTACULARVUS Cryph 1500 IHCOMEPltOPERTIES Mobile Homes·Lalteside lBa.Hugeyard.Petsok. s h elves . lovely Call Anthony wkdya M~Mo.a Waterfront townhouse co-op. 3Br 2~ ba. Dock & pool. Roger Brown R.E. 675· 1483 or 67J.218t BLUFFS BARGAlN 3 Bdrm twnhrne SW.000. Walk to everything · pool. tennis, schools. park & shopping. Agt. 87$-5930, IM0-8146 PARTY IH HAl80I VIEW Smashing family room with wet bar. Un· beUevabJ.y beauutul En· tertalner'1 petio. 5 Bdrm Sommeraet on ree land. Ablolu~Jy lmmaculate move-in condition. Creat.lve financin g H&Uable. -• RED CARPET .. 754-1202 rOOLHOMI JUST LlSTED, lovely 4 8Jl •~ ba + den with ~ wetbu + l'am nn .. &Ad de~tl\&J ~cben over· lool pool ·and Jacuul OD cu de he atr eet. Separate~• iuat OI' motbef·ln-law bclnn wtdl OWD beiM. J Cit ,.,.,. + m. ....-an,. Ca.II DOW, "'-...... -~-·-· Ver sailles lbdrm & Breathtaking ocean,••••••••••••••••••••••• Looking for income un-Big Bear Laite or $44S/mo.642-5722. landscaping. Adjtoprk, M2·5751 eoves tr wknds studio condos wilh lrg tight & mtn views from Pacific View Memorial its?! We have 5 pro· Ocnfront Laguna Bch, pool," Jae. 559-1420 aft 7 &M-llBt. assumable loans. From this large, one or a kind. Pk Grave A&B Lot 5t9 perties in C.M. Priced terms or trade. 499-3816 & wk ends. --------- Sl09,900. Jim Schumann quality home on Galaxy Bayview Terrace. 2 lots right at less than _________ ,cute 3br, Zba in Newport agt.979·5370. Drive Beautifully de· forthepriceofl. / llXGross . No bank Hel1b.tl. tmo/JDO. J ean-' corated. landscaped 836-4563 financing required. ln· nneAat.Gl·lal IY OWNER. SAVI 38r, 2Ba. 23005q. ft. 2 frplcs, spa. Financing avail. $1!16,500. or trade. Call Answer Ad #397 at 642..C300 24hrs per day. with sparltling pool , on COtMHrdal terested!'Then call us. BLUFFS PIM.a coodo. 4 extra a large lot. 4 r ~ 1600 · / br, z~ ba No pet.a. 11$() Bdrms. 4 Ba, many . out· ro,...... •r NBS' atand\ng qualit y ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ~Cl::D mo. Call aft 3PM, ~ 7•1S7J features. $950,000. sura CLIAN C(.lfUJt:UW UM:. Priv.hCc a Ii~ Spectacular 3br. a, amenlties (spa, etc ). Bllt to beach. $195,000! ! Rich, 75!MO. 646-9530. AIA.NDONEO UDOISU2STY lf>"oDOWM · NO QUALIFYING. Beautiful 4 BR. 4 ba estate. Steps to prl vate beach and bay. Open beamed vaulted cell-/ ings. Majestjc master a g uest euitea. 1505,000 i'P. SHOREUNE ASSOC. Ml-22111.2 HARlotl.alDGE SP!CT ACUl.AR VU 4 Brdm (2 mstr ates>. formal dining room. large gameroom, quiet cul-d e -sac Unusual courtyard entry w/foun· lain and running brook. Many upgrades. $950,000 "HAllOI VIEW HOME 3 Br. $223,000, lowest price l.n Harbor View. Assumable loa~. Sub- mit on d9wo or trade. RCTc1ylorCo ,.10 ' I( ~) macnab /Irvine realty PllMI PIMIMSULA DWU1t 38 R. ~ bath duplex 1 ~ block.I from the oc.ean. Fant.aaUc lnvestment for wlnter or summer rental. t:119,000 incl. land. Low down and owner will carry on AITD. Sharoa Smith. C-17. 644'6200. 7141641 ·0763 2787 Bristol St Costa Mesa. CA C·I l'*-DINGS euitable for lifht in· dustry and o fices. Frong bldg. contains 4 carpeted and paneled of· ~ fices + 2 baths. Rear COSTAMISA block bldg has 2·12' 1 Un.its. Bread & Butter. doors, full Oourescent That '1 what these units Ughting. 110/220 power% are referred too. Ap· lge meu, storage space. p~ox. \.; acre, conve· •--------~ Lot ill S0Xl.20. Concrete nten& to all stores. 3 2Br. driveway & lg parklna • 4 lBr. l250,0GO. Good area. Security fe nce. terma. Poatible trade. OWC S21!i 000 or lease M c N a a b R e a I t y , option at '22s,ooo. Sub-8'2·1134, 6'2.es78 eves. mit on tern\&. WATERFROIVT HOME& REAL ESTATE 631-1400 BURR WHITF REALTOR. l~C I;' t,.4# lli I l' !I J~ I II!"\ I \V Al' ·I·· I I \~(""' L\ '' 1 • I II I MESA INDUSTRIA~ PARK Stept to ocean in one ol 'T o;..-.-.-.. -1-.-1-----1 the most charming aec· 3 Br. 1 ea. Steps to beach. UilflW • •d lSJI ~O:'r .of2°Jd8 ~~•Bd:~ 162~. Property House. ---------i--------- 711W.17MLSt. c ........ c ... 642-4463· ~Tnat 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Satttet-Mta.Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti rep I ace. covered 642·38SOore.u.lOlO. •Sa..-.111 a..&-* · 17,,.. STlllT Bellttollveinthialovely ---------1 ---·~ C JtL .}Voodbrldge Twnhme. 1ara1e, ocean view from Lrg 3 e 2 Ba. crpta, Oceanfront. Charuiinc 1 Counselors to peraonally oat a Mesa. l rm suite, All types or rial estate M.870 sq. ft . Unit avaU. Investments •In« tlM9 . tor Im med occupancy. 5.a#......., iR 3br; 2~ba 2 tar l•r the deck. S750. mo. Call drpa, carport. Nr OCC. br lower apt. No view. select your compatible A/C. Pie~ o1 parkina. .f1sO/mo. Do peta. Cali Anthony wtrdys 642-5757, Water incld. $495 No $4QO mo/yrly. One adult, rmm te to suit your S45Reaslqon. f0lmica per.,!115~61· 00 1·2900 sq. ft. & 1-3700 sq. ~:::'· ft. unit(s) avail. April Alm , ,.,. • Maureen 551-6637 or eves & wknd.s 644-8889. peta. 751·3896 no pets. 87~31123 Ufestyle. Shared·Livhlg. v• ,~ 833 DoverDrSuUe31 NB ,. .. r:"1451 AGT~ Cotta M... 3124 1 Br. refrige, stove, c/d, Lease or Lease Option. 631-1801 230 E. l?lb. St 1 • t . 2 S t o r a g e 642-2171 545-0611 W arebouses avail. ror ...... llffu.fwoa 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage. S350 . 240 Spac. 3br condo 2'1'Jba. COSTAMC!iA ' ... EWLY--A d "~" ~.... Quiet loc. $695/mo 3 Br condo. SJC. Fem FROM7S<SQ. FT. r -••••••••••••••••••••• " -~ voca 0·'"""'""" pref. Pool, laund rm. 165·900 sq n. air cond immed. occupancy, 2000 Widow has money for &2800sq.fl. •3):-34•sq. 2ND T.D 's any site fl •Leasing office hrs. above Sl0,000. No credit Mon tbru Fri. S.4. Sat. I, no pnlty. For action 10..2. call AGT 673·7311 ·9n. Attached duplex . 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar, . 63 I 1759. 631·47 44. '$500/mo. water paid d/wuher, pool. Adults. Bach w1lh loft, refnge. 759.9100. Sl85+ "'a util. ~ omce suites for 1mmed , ~ • 642·5973 stove, c/d. pool. $370 up -M---,-F--h--be--I occupancy All ut1ls. an"'ime 1·---------283Avocado.645-6404 2 Br lYJ Ba Adults, no ature to s r aut Jan1tor1al serv . con( HOO sq Ct. 2 octices, front 1-....;...,""--- --pets $395 furn 2br 21t'Jba lwnhse rm . parking Call Terry fr rear entry. Overhead M ll....C Roh~ .,..... .......... d ············~········· ··coata M..a 3724 ,•·········~············ SUSCASITAS 21r.1 loA.t Newly decor. C:as pd, enc l gar. pool , d /wa s her Adults 642-5073 3 Ir ToW"lllhcMlw Newly decor. gas pd., encl gar .. pool , d /washer. Adulls . 1 Br. Easts1de. small but s.6&-2682 Npt Hgts, S250/mo. Cressman. 554·9000. door, 220 power. S32S on oc SINCE 1981 ..... .,. cozy w/lo~s of neat ------1 6'6-7SSSeve. 1----------lease.875-6251. lst&2ndTOs.SSOK·SlM + wood.$~. 642·9450 aft Dix condo2br 2ba2crgar ---------Custom. execut1veofflce, 1----------1 o IN o 5PM. Crplc pool 2131431-4756 Fem. to share w/same. 400 sq ft. Pvt balh with age 4550 wnsVas&o;ond;ner --------act 6 or wltnds. 35-45 .. ~ Br. 2 Ba. All shower Balboa Penin. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Commercial & Industrial Bachelor. newly dee. Pvt amen1hes. M(lSa Verde $285 mo. 642 4623. Storage Warehouses in PETER DOBBS patio. E'side toe. No E. Blulls Condo. 4Br. area . $275. Donna Costa Mesa avail. for 640-6016 573.9043 pets. $325, 543-0'Jal 38a. sundk, pool, $900 557-5367 aft5:30PM. NEWPORT CENTER lmmed. occupancy. 2000 --~ ----mo 645·3474, (213> ---------PreslJglous ocean view & 2800 sq. ft. 33< per sq. Want investor for Npt Furn 1 br. apt.~ & up. ,! Encl gar. Adults. no .. peta. 2110 Newport Bl .' ~-4968 btwn 8 & SPM -642-5073 DanoPoiftt 3826 541·4460 Rmmte wantedtoshr lge full service s uite. Ct. Call 642·4463 Mon. bayfront home Give ••••••••••••••••••••••• condo nr S.C. Plaza 200-5000 sq. ft. 644·7180. thru Fri. M . Sat 10.2. well secured 1st or 2nd ' CASADIORO 1ALL UTILITIES PAID Compare before you £ent. Custom design features : Pool, BBQ, ¢0v'rd garage, new furniture, surrounded with plu!ih landscapmg Adult living at its best. No pets. Bach funushed S370 2 Bdrm furnished~ • 36SW. Wil.son.642·1971 .;fbs Mo.-Deluxe Mobile ,.. Home Mature Adults ':!>lo pets. Quiet, secure • 1991 Newport Blvd 646·8373. 'H_..gtoft ltoch 37 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S375/up 1·2 bdrm. pool. jac, adll, 18992 Florida. · H.B. 842·2834 or 842·3172 .1¥wport hoch 3769 •••••••••••••••••••••••• •pix Ocean.front. Wkly. ~aster. Smr, Now 2·4 Br. Xlnt loc. 673-SUR F "Luxury Oceanf r ont Weekly 2or3Br Comp furn 1n cld linens 640-4784. Fantastically rurn1shed townhouse. with ocean view. TeMIS court. pool $925/mo 760-9117 SHORT TERM Rentals Weekly & monthly Agent, 67$-8170 NO LEASE REQUIRED YEAR·ROUHO FUH· Social A.ct1v1t1e~ D• rec1nr• Free Sunaa~ Brunell• 880 s •Pill tie~ •Plus much more GREAT RECREATION: Tennis • FreP Lesson\ • !pro & pro shop)• 2 Health Cluos •Sauna . Hydroma ssage •Swim ming• 011v ng Range BEAUTIFUL APART· MEHTS $+ngle\ 1 & 2 Be::iroom~ •Fur n,s"ed & Unlurn.snf'd • f..Oull L"t1•ng •No Pet~ 2 br. balcony, D .W . Newport Heights.Duplex Sauna. pool. jacuu.i -TD At 67:>-6161 · me&liB.AU clean, com laundry & 2 Br . 1 Ba. Adults. no Private bath. Available PRIM E CORNER, CdM Retdaf1 W.ted 4600 _._. ~: _. APARTMENTS wshr, gar, nr ocean. pet.a. S.SlS. mo 1st. last& May lsl. $250 + ex· •2,380 sq.ft. avail. Im· •••••••••••••••••••••••2nd Tru st Deed BeautiCuJly landscaped 493·5953aft5PM. deposit. 517 Bolsa. Days penses. Call 5S'1·M21 or med. for lease .• high Need Small Bachelor Apt purchases arran ged garden apts. Patios or Fo.taill Veley 3814 ~~::~: Eves & Wknds '159-bo&o ·identity location on Mj!~tt::.~RM 105 ~~;.details, call 960-l957 decks. Pool & spa. Heat ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------Wlll share 2Bd 2Ba Park PCH. Paid vered ark"ng •Ideal medical, dental. · co P 1 · Beaut Condo bright & l Br Year ly, garage Newport $300 mo. furn Adults no pets 1 or 2 · real estate. commnclal • · cheery, 2br. 2ba. lrg parking,stepstobeach w/(emaleref's640-8693 offices personsOK patio w/attach 2'-'l car SHO mo 544 ·6899. 2 1 BBddrm B ~~ gar. S025mo Off 751-8910 573 3958 N.8 . prof. man to sbr his •$2,380 per mo. (below rm2 a ~ or (H1675-23J6 beaut. 3br. 2ba home market>. Owner will 2250VanguardWay --------Ocean View spacious I w/independent lady negotiate remodel CaU S4G-9626or548-24al H...tiftgtonleodl 3140 luxurious Z br/2 b~I 30·45. S325 compl Tim Sloat Business 2Bdrm 1 ea $465 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Versailles condo. all 760-0802 Properties Brokerage 2 Bdrm 2 Ba $48().485 THE WHlmfTHE amenities. $'750 557-1997 ----------Co 714 752-8011 398 w Wilson 631.5583 Luxury Adult units at af-Female to share lg. furn 1200 sq fl, ocean vu. : · fordable !Jv111g l.2 & 3 Ocean V1ew 1 Lge 2br home by ocean '2 H UGE Bedrooms in Br. Well decorated. Condo, sec bldg Adults Wash/dryer, garage super location Fully Olympic sue pool, light· only $795/~e ~5~ $300. Cal149J..~ carpeted . built-ins. edtenn_isrou.rt,Jacuzzi. $450 2br,lbadplx,frplc. •Free Room /Board• Laguna Bch. $1000 mo lease 494 0066 ground Ooor Adults, no park like landscaping. pets. $3SO mo Apply Apt HMosBt beautiful bldg in ~;2r .. 99p1a8tio. lndry. adults. Fem non-smkr prefers ,,. SG. Ft. 4 W tndow olC1ce Suites + 2 storage areas. '" same in exchange for E S68 W Wil son .F.omS395846-0619 --hskpg & babysitting. 646·4477 r · Versailles lu.x . Jr. l br. 752-2003, 837·3952 All 756 sq ft for $748 44/mo. or 378 sq . (t for S396.90/mo 0 C Alrport/Crwy lo<' 833-2440. FAMILY APTS. Brand new beautiful lrg , apt. for families with l or 2 children. Near park. Heat paid No pets 2Br. 1 Ba' $470 398 W Wilson. 631·5583 WALLACEST APTS. Newly decorated 2 Br 1 Ba S42S Small child OK . no pets 2049 Wallace •t. 64~6452 ,ea . 1 ADULT ~" LIVING • I & ? BR Pil•ll AOI\ • 01v•-. .or1r1' ! 880 • .. •oc ,.\ ~r " • U<t ti~· I •• -: dlJ' .J • Juq •o ~·•r• .S ~·· •P' S I c:,., SEA ENVIRONMENT 9632 HAMIL TON. H 8 962·4SOO r e fr1g , sec. S445 760 8390, 994-6860 IM ike I I•----------S•CIMWfth 3176 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr S.C. General Hosp. Jbr, rrplc, 2ba, stove. crpts. avail Apr 4. $450/mo. 891 1644. - S• J.aon Capistnlno 3171 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••• Responsible, employed ~ 1 •••• Cem lo shr lux BACK rv11 ....,..._ BA y CONDO w /prof Approximately 2000 Sq woman & daughter. f't Prime Space, Ground Priv. furn rm, bath, gar, Floor Fashion Island, coo.king/lndry rac. All Corporate Plaza Area. amen. S~/mo md ulll $3500 Pr Mo 4 Year No deposit, but ref's are Lease + Option Call req Phon~ 548-0963 eves 759-9100 Broker 2br, 2ba penthouse, l l-&•w•k•n•d•s-----• H B Garden Type Suite level, very neat $490. 60S sq fl at 7~ sq ft 496·6458all6PM Gloria FemaletoshrN.B Con· A C. Ba S36 3043 Agt ----d 0 • A v a I I I m m t 968 6162 l br. t ba. frplc, OW.encl Tustin 3190 $230+ Y.suUI 631 ·C815 2 Bd I Ba. $375 Clean & gar Nr Hunt Harbor WILL SWAP. offr ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• after Spm. quiet. no kids pets Call Jan. 846-1186. Se<'urity 8 space for ans serv & Craig 631 ~ ·-pts. !bdrm & NEWPQRTSHORES light Secretanal help. 2 & 3 Bedroom s 2bdrm. uul pd. adults. $"t" 1 & L Also 2 nice orflces S150 R&'Mtte $400-$450 K.rds OK. no no pets From $375. """· st ast 645-9549 ea OC Airport 966-0644 pets please Water1 836 5506 _ _ __ _ ___ _ R~ALTORS Trash Paid Carport. Best Tustin location. Female to shr 2br 2ba. 964-2566 or97J..2971 AJ<tl . close to everything New 1mmed. $212.50 + ulll. no ree. I Br formal dining, ~9·1514 ~ri.s after 5pm 3Br. 2Ba. 4 plex. gar. frplc pat tenn slpool HUNT HARBOUR AR fo:A · io. 1 · Chrmng, Anlq Hse shr adults. no pets. S480 1040 •d 1 1 $4 Lo" NEWPORT IEACH 1 or 2 OCCices w/recep & storage Prime loc f'urn. or unfum 752 6550 1600 sq fl in lge bu.sy H B ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... .. Opporfwlfty 5005 Secured Short Term R E loans-fast decisions on complex situations be pleasantly surpris ed. call 760-CY115 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wont 21-22°/o y;e4c17 START ~O'!V ·Local On your TD 's Notes Amway dislnbulor of· $$Rai~rs-lnvestorsSS fers opply fo~ good earn· Call DeM1son Assoc mgs. You pick the hrs, 613-7314 we assist, call 548·9140 DOG GROOMING SAL.Ot4 Neat, plus central loca· t1on . parking , IS yrs to pay 2nd, 3rd TD's Low rales. fast personal all Any amt. Bkr. Norman. 962 4681 established 19 yrs. terms ht T .0-$87% Yield available. out of town m 3 yrs. or 29··: per yr owner says Sell' Only $125,000 needed Well $17,500 secured Prtnc only f /1 J / ll · 760·13680wner f'l()°Ulll(l af'-l t. llUO -~..l .... <iA~.iw· /i4J.' Real Estatt' agent will ~·"' "7' "" " pay 20"1r 1nlt'rest on (·i{'l-81.91 $25,000 loan from private 2435 E. CoHI Hw ., CdM party serur('() by Z~d TD _____ Y • on local srngle family rt' ---------•! sadencc with large equr· Own your own Jean Shop: god1rect nomad die man. no salesman's fee. Offering all the na llonally known brands such as Jordache. Van derbilt. Calvin Klem. ty Leave mesi.L1ge ;it 646·2821 Sedgefield, Levi & over oppy Ads 51 20 70 other brands ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl4.SOO .OO includes beginning 1n\entory, airfare for l lo our na t1onal warehouse, train ing, fixtures & Grand Opening Promotions Call Gale Santillan at Mademoiselle Fashions (805)'158-5319 C. Valencia 54> 7983 Xtra lge 2br. 2ba $495 i• u ts on Y '15. is or w/fem avail now $200 + -------pooltjac adulls only Carol 675 5930_ u ti I. Ca 11 Ad 114 4 O c A TS w ELCOM .E Apamnetllh fwftillled 642-4300 Z4 hrs shopping center Golden ~~~~~~~~~ Wes t •Warner Ave. SJ< /sq. fl. Bob Demers Stunning Lge 1&2 br. 2 ba garden apt. pool/rec area. 7IOW. 18th St. 16885 Lynn #2 846·3.S41 or Unfwnlthed 3900 - - ••••••••••••••••••••••• V::,tM:~~ec ~ s~~~neg 842-9393 ----2 Br. 2 Ba Townhouse I Br 1 ba, patio Laund Near beach Garage fac1l, encl garages. new· Todd I er 0 K $4 6S Jy dee. Walk lo shop· 96P·l2'l~or831 ·8065 ~sq rt w/bath, new cpl, -$225 mo Rmmte wanted to shr 642·l944 New 1&2 bdrm luxury beaut City Terrace apt s E Aw I N D 645·9407af\SPM. VILLAGE ............. Opportw.ity 50 15 ···················~··· LOAN $500 or more. Dbl. your money. Loan 1s secured by unprecedent· ed 1st in mm rinancing history. 714-957-4086 MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY MAKE SOMEONE SMILE Place a HAPPY AD in thas column for only $3 25 Call 642-5678 ping. Min from bch Ready for occup. April 5. $350 mo to mo 646-0341 or 545·615S . 1970 HEAR 11-IE IUCH adult apt."i in 14 plans 2br. 2ba $250/mo. all am· BeaullCul pnvate ocrices 2 br. 2 ba. bit-ms. pvt from $440, 2 bdrm from men. 634-4796 l0am-4pm in I rvlne (Orange Co. & SOU patio, gar Adults. $485. S505 + pools, tennis, Free w a Y access l D llCmlTY Lady Damron Happy Anniversary We 4922 Edinaer 840-3808. rl 1•-_._ G Shr new home 111 Wood-Receptionist con ILMTlll'UIM .. wale a "" poo""! as b .d 11 . . • · 846-6234 c k' & h r1 ge a amenities ference room pax ___ __ _ or coo mg eating $300/ 641 1130 G · Fully managed invest· Townhouse Eastside 2Br. paid. From San Diego mo. · reg hbrary, s~ for staff ment prnaram dealing Wallace. C.M. love you. \ Lori, Jim and Jason Loll, Saide ADA * Moote Vista. CM. Ila le ut 1r•r w/blk strl pu. lt£W AllO•TeCM Lott. CrHm ftm. cat w/darktr m·arkhiu. Whtt. pew.. Sborecliflt l vlc:IDlt)'_. Cd.M . REW ARD. 79Mo51 Lost ; 3 mos . old Leesbund puppy. Red collar. Vlc : Harbor Hlgh. Loved famUy dog. Reward . 645·15117 or 61$.81(5 LOST: Small rem multi colored T•bby. Loni hair, Oranttree area re- ward 857-0274 eves LOST: 3/27 REW ARD Male Bluepoint Siamese "SlMBA" C.M. 546-9700 ~6730Jt'1t28 TOP REWARD Lost female Himalayan Persian w/blue collar. Vic. Oakwood Apt.s. N.B. 642-4505 Lost· Short-haired white Cat, altered, declawed. "AJax ". Collar. Island & Oceanfront. Balboa Penin. REWARD. Dys. 645·8600 ext 2584; eves 67S·5939 Lost. black/gray Poodle. 1 front tooth missjng Vi c of Jrd & &!goma, Cd M No tag s . "Charlie" REWARD. 675·6082. Lost 2 Fem Keeshound, Vic, Edwards/Edinger, HB Mandy. Pepper. REWARD892-4978 LOST· REWARD' Male Blk w 'whl paws Cat. V 1c D P yellow collar 661 9099 eves. 7S9·9393 day!. FOUND I Rabbit, vl'r Kent St & Sussex Ln . N B 548 1746 Found Samoyed Cemale. Border Colhe·black. brown & white male. Yellow Lab .nux rem a le Newport Beach Animal Shelter, 644 3616 Found. Golden Rel. M. Huntington Beach area. 536 68'11 Found a Sramese Cat Downtown. Hunt. Sch . ~7432. Found. Schnauzer. male. vrr Highland Dr .. N.B 54tl·2476. Found Mesa Pet bird. Costa 54(). lZ75 --- Found White dog. Samoyed., Del Obispo, SJC Sun eve 493-7546 1-'0UNO Yng Fem Sheph erd Mix? v1c Harbor Shopplllg Cntr 646 6905 Found black dog, M. LO ed leg. 10 Corona del Mar 644 9672JeH FOUND Long haired Doxie Fem tolderl v1r Driftwood Seal Beach S98·8215 FOUND. White Samoyed wlblk collar vie. Dover Shores N B. 642-5498 Pertonols 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COVER GIRL * OUTCAL.L * 953-0778 MC/VISA b S 3 Id Large 3 BR 212 ba. with F d · N ·1 bl f k -.. \12 a. 2 ty yrs. o . rwy nve orth on Male rmmte Luxury con· avai a e. a ree par · in single family homes Lost& Fo.d 5300 • Moot>is Open oa·•~ 9 lo 6 Oakwood Garden Apartments gar No pets. $465 /mo ~ae~~~~e~i~s:.1 :e~~ Beach to McFadden do-Costa Mesa.Master ang 714 752-8995 ; in So. Calif. Earn sub- 61S·8133 ocean. S600 mo. 964-2937 then West on McFadden bdrm w I ba $2 2 5. 833·8990 stantial retwns on your ••••••••••••••••••••••• to Sea wind Village. -----r capital: wilh strong tax l•--------•f BEAUTIFUL 2 Br. 2 Ba. (7141893-5198. _545--__ 2068 _______ San Cle mente space sheltering benefits. You FIRST LADY Escort. Models Party Dancers. * t7J.IJ41 * MC & VISA Accepted Newport Beach/So. 1700 16111 SI Oo•e• ,i •61h 7141 642-5113 Mesa Verde. 1100 sq ft •LOOk • -----Be t · d avail. less than 60< a are secured by 100~ Cplc. lndry. patio, dis-Im mac 2 Bdrm l', blh ooms 4000 . au . ocean( . hftewh, e· foot. Private baths & air ownership of property, FOUND ADS h h I d I condo avail ._3 S4SO mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• signer um. s are ome d"t In .,.. .. 3022 ws r, enc gar. A u ts. · So L ssso con 1 ion g vr.... or yet completely free of no Pets. SSOO. 31,.,, Mace. Call Mike. 646-9911 Laguna Beach Motor Jnn. 10 · aguna. mo. '92 4121 ARE fREE u• 985 No Pacific Coast 499·3922. 549-1186 " · · manager burdens-call 540·«00_. ______ ,1"1M 3144 Hwy, Laguna Beach. B 1 MIWPOIT Mr.Doylel2l3)Z77-46Bl Near new 2Br,2Ba. frplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Daily. Weekly, Kitchen Fem to shr 2 r ux apt, Exec. ore on Dove, am· Classified Ads are the Cal~ Newport a .. ch/No 880 ••~one 31 1(,1r ( 714) 645-1104 I d r ORANGETREE 1 BR available. Low w·1nler ocun vu, Nwpt Bch. f I aun ry ac, new crpts, 673-S425eveor Sunday: pie pkgn, rum or un· answer to a success~ 642-5671 drps " paint. Encl gar, condo. A/C, pool, S42S rates. 494·5294. rurn. Mo. to Mo. Full garage or yard sale! It s l~~~~~~~~~!'J ~~~~~~~~~~ S450. AduJls, no pets. _m_o._A....:g:::..L_640-__ 6_16_1 ___ 1•-R--oo_m __ w_/ _k_l_t_c_h_e_n M/F to shr 2 bdrm apt a service, other tenants a better way to tell more 1: 67_3·_2_11_3_&_7_60-_fr1_82_. __ ,L.ogmoh9ch 3141 privileges. Phone cross Fashion Island. CPA's.714/752-1678. ~pie! A~.... Xtra lg 38r 3ba. Cp\s, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962·7520 from 6PM to $330/mo incl. uUls. Call -'--'-------- Want Ad Help? 642-5678 _ U•fw lillllled drps,range,nrnew.268Q Newly decorated 2~r. 9:30PM orweekends. 1_P_a_u....:l,_640-8937 _______ 1'"_"'_........... 4450 '·••••••••••••••••••••••• Elden. Open Sat/Sun. ~B!i, duplex. On Chi! . · Office R...td 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ji ... ral 3102 $650 s.48-4191 Drive. Miles of white Rm for re'nt. kit pr1v., ....................... For store & office space ••••••••••••••••••••••• • water view. Adults. no sen'or citizen pref. shr Elegant prof bldg In H.B. at reasonable rates. AnMTS FOi IENT Lar'e newe,s-1 Br~ patio & pets. $675. 494-7891. utll. 640-7745 85t per eqJ\. lse. Red 500 I'» 2700 Sa Ft. ff N "-garace. Adulta. no pets. ............., u~ 4100 C•"""'t 893-1351 MESAVERDEbR .B .•. 8 .,....,,.u Meaa $3'15 64S-S57'1 Charming 2 lbd rm. 2 vnrt.-~,,,-• PLAZA · Someftiliilfor Everyone · · frplcs, pvt. patio. huge ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1617 Westcuff. N.B. Want LS2S Mesa Verde E. C.M. Bach. to t Br. Unlum. Spic le a... • .: lBr upper. sunning deck , 3/mo. Balboa lM oceanfront. . 1 ....... c--1-I u .,..,.,, l financial mst. 70005. . 5 .. ir .. I 2J 'n.,-. Cl"WUll oca oos Mature adults. No pets. 497-l!KSS. Low winter rates. Daly ~-o ff er : Pool, spa. Kit h bit I Dis oT weekly. KJtcbenette. 1st. floor. Agel'lts.&1·5032. 1-----------1 Clreplace 1 laun. room, c en. · ns. • Lge studio 2 bl ks to $90 at up 675-8740 Newport Beach, $1.2S baa m eo ci•lll•I s, hwasher. Call aft. «Pll. beacb, cl~e lo tow~. · · KO~CIMR:I 141. rt. New dlx om~ or 1arases, all bulll-ins. 842-4044. u oo m o . Darlyne, $£A LAii HIWPOIT retail w /pvt batb , Garden ., Townbooae Westside Duplex Apt. 661·ll61 or497·3q9 Elegant eicecutive suites security, a /c, 600-2400 ·~ MOTB. in prestige location. 141. ft. 509 31at St. (next Tst. lilGllT. 642-1603 Upst~lrs. 2 ,Br. 1 Ba. Larse Studio Apt. Walk to With complete support to Bank of Newport, ... Refr1ge, stove, enclsd beach ar shopping. Sulla· •Weekly rentals now services. Lido Cabnery ar~•). ---•--••• w.d JIN I~· No peU or small 1>1• for Olle empJoyed avail. •S98 a nd up. 7141851-0681 675-3238, (113)Ml·9700 .,_••••••••--.. ••• ... •• children. $390. 77~5629 adult. $3$0. ~7l •Color TV. • Pbooes 111 Adorable lbdnJI apt oo 2 B .. B .. .Mo.. .... rooms. MD's facil, in RB. 2,000 Pn..Loc'"-""the bay. Ba.I* k75mo. r. ~ 1· .... , .. er n., .. Mewporlleodi Jl'9 2274 Newport Blvd. C.M. sq.ft. Red~ to $1200 1Z70 Sq ft on tn.y Beach "'ITJ.ldlm.f79 Bunt-ms, air, garage. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ~7445. mo. be. Red Carpel, Boulevud-HunUDllOn Adulta.. no pets. $435. 1193-1351 'Beach. Ideal for real ml.DI Bayf~t 1 br, 645-4137. Bachelor Room. 230S W. ---------1 estate offlca, s\on or ~·IUl'I~ bearMd cWUa11. 1 ·---------I Oceanfront. Newport MIWPOltT cana other sullablt bualneas. uJt ... 175-~ MIWPOIT Beach . FullS«vkeSl&ltes 2 Private baU>a, avail•· AP.Aln9n'S l(\t.cbmfrBath $CUTCOSTSS bl• l mmedlat•b· 10 1107 2 Bdrm. DOD. Ph• tAlls. t.280 mo+ l«Wity dep. Allyou..Oforoae Year luM. Attractlv•lf moPthlyf•! prtctd. ...,_5'10 6•1-411I,eat216 •DILUD OMCll" Waaluiaya From. 1 room UI\ to 1000 IMI HA90t IL¥D. 1q. fl. •1.0I per sq. I\. s C:M. roomt ud up. '::i... • -•l '""""' rt reqotr.t. nn ont -0 • 0 "· -"· · Dr. Adj.Airport« .... ~.ii'r· -.wa ..... m.ma ... it . ·~ i-_____ _._ _ _;...._, WllTCUflP DI;. M.I. arllt r .. ~._ n. 1-.. for tva .. u It~. olflce ..-ee-....... .. Use ,,,,.., Ad service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your classified ad . we take your messages 24 hours a day .•. you call in at yo'Ur convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service is only $7 .50 week. For more Informa- tion end to place your ad ~a 11 ,,,.2·5678. •FOXYLADY• OUTCALLONLY VlSA MC * 972-1 IJI * •• SPIRITUAL READlNGS lOam·lOpm. Fully Llc'd 492·'1296 or 492-9034 1815 S. Camino Real. San Clem Fo r a thera peutic massage by • llc'd therapist S2S to all NEW clients M/F 10·7PM $48-2817 AlUNT'IC MASSAM SPA Be pampered by 16 Beaut. Girls. Open lOAM ·4AM 7 days . Pbon~~ AttracUve lady 4-ires to meet aenUeman over 40. PO Box 1111, Fountain V allQ GM. c °'1lnge co.at DAIL. Y fltl.OT,-;· , ... 1, 1M\ I -. I 1; .. ·~ 1:'~ ~ ... ~ 1 ·1-, l:~I~~ ~I ' ;· ~. ~ ... I ,~,i I~~~ ~I) ~·:~,·~ :I~~· I f l ,':=t~ ,) -11 ....... g_.... I =-_:__ .. -. tJC_[_ •• " .. a ' ..... T.-u.r .... -n -.-~.-••• r ........ r .,. P1•t•111P II .... ,... .. ~-----1!!1..... . ... it.-... -............... ,:. ................. j ·---·····••ff ..... 1: ............... ·········-·'······· .................................... ¥ ... ~ •••••. ~···-· ············-. -· -·-..-.:-"';'-~; &,_.., • Pool deell:a. paUoa. m.ctriel-.vc..ble cdl, ~. cMAe1t1, roof tlOUlllCl.SA.NING , Muonry • C•ment .. TEVDllPl\Oll"'nHO .._IH.()C~ - , ----~~ .,··cira•'MMiNroaa&nc-, ••::,arr;.;.tiltt·::: "':~· ...,-.. ~ ~ f.'7:*-'· "r:: 1SOUaJRJ1UCm1 Work. Btlcll, Block, JJatftn. l't'M tteaalMd u ~ · -: ::-:-·::7' · • · -~!'* -~ • ,,!!U · ou eu, remo • .~.-~~ ..!'-.... ~ Jaa.lc.'a.....-1Aan. Stone,~. Cone. of all .n.Nnt,qaabt.JWClitl. _ _ o SIBllt I t, f'loocD t.M.,..d \ap: -.... c ..... -.. l·-.,....... ........ -·· -™· -.. r .... 14 klnda. Lie 11111$5, ~ -"" I ... ...... ....... EleCtrit ........ .-.-...... -1 -········-··-········ 1 -•••: -u. boats, 1110¥PSON'$ • -· Haad1mao-repatr1, GeowaJffouMcleUU., .....,,,. 'ettCulel · QUA.LIT'YaOOP'INO ,(1'_11.... HblD•~ Jl-.,od/ re• COMCtlrrECONSTR. ~ D.0 .ELIX:TRIC car,.aur. phunbtac. a.Jlable,rdl.,tram. ._...... ....................... Alltn191.rr...•. Tb ;;Ii palr.11s.tat Uc...... Ma em i..ct•./8-14./Comm. eteetrieal. ll&e.1'7J.I014 -..10 ....................... LLOYD'SNUBSltRY. vu.. MC". . IMl·- t'a 't;-;-y ' :_r--:stlvfef cwwc ... -" QuaUtywoft,free..t .......... ~....... HOUSECL&ANINGl)y Movln1T Tbt Stuvln1 LANDSCA.PECO,INC HABBOBKOOFING ·~1 ad ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Ue. 40010. (hJ)llf.-T •••••••-;••••••••••••••• Coll .. e Students Movlnc Expert. pall OCIDb:'ol for N fr a.pur mtbe :S..ampoo. ltam clean. Ill -m EllOOEUN HARDWOODft.OOBS Jap&HM .lady. ~p'd, Co ..... grown, lnlured u-e.. •bnib. turf .. lo· .. l Tl"i .. , b DAILY Color brightenen, wht Hot '--.. ·b.·~.JI. ............ l!,, _ __. __ ,W G Cle&MdAWuecl deped.ab&e.Nl-lo:PI um• food Hl'vlee. door Hniee. Pree Est. 1pec • .. !t_~.~·~a~ -or crptt 10 min bleach. n1.u.. "-.. R.,J_d~ "'-ortl AD.,.•-• -.-1SA • ._.. tTU4·08 Llceau. Uc.M5T ..... '144 prie•.___... ~ • tlan f'reeebool Ml-54ZS • "vuman«clal 1 -• • · 14l·M21 ._ __ _ smtYICI Hall, Uv.~. ttnt SU; · Ul·JllOt • -ie••••••••••;••••••••••• ,.._ ,..._ lie D..,_ , ave rm SUO: eoucb $10: Cle hi Senkee H.... IEX EC UT IVE w I 11 ABC MOVING Eicper •••••••;:;;;: ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_,_, cbr SS Guar eUm .... --~ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• -•-' c "-ml Tll OOJTNOWI . .:..... • -· .............. , •••••••• ._.. H ••• I ....... A bouttllt, A&Dl ...,,, ell• prof, low raw.. quick EXPERT PIANO tuntftl uatoau;.er,.m c e odor. Crpt re_.r. 15 YJ'I New-port Cleanln1 Serv. ••••••••••••••••••••••• a'"• c emop, coo ... _.., per'd. '9'f-MOT,M'·Ud carefulaervke. W -CMlO it repair. Member PTO. New·Remodel-Repet, Atll ,_, S •• • exp. Do work my1elf. C a r P • t. u P h 0 1 , CRPT, lJNO, WOOD removal. Dwn_p tnac:k. .. .. ..,.la Free est. <lNdf., ..,__, YOQfDail)'Pllot Refa.$31-0101 Houaecleanlnt Wln· Jnatalled/repalred.Uc. Qulckten."2·7al T• 111E MOVIN-MAN la H •----"'-Senleel>lred.oty dowa Hardwood flu t31183110. GreeGt-211152 DUllPJOBS ....................... Careful, courteous "',......,.,..,.... _......,__ Repreaematlve WeCareCarpetCleanen 63l·m1 · S all)( lqJobl TAXESAND •Cheap. Pleue call ••••••••••••••••••••••• TleC:.. · 641·167 .. at .J 11 Steam clean 41 upboU. S• ••'Rt m O'V • INVESOIENTS 14.2.1329 Neat patchel ts t.elllur.t Ceramic. New·remod, • Work 1uar. Truck C....._hw ....................... CalllllKENl-19l Tu prep,abelten, TI>s. ~Ht. HJ..14Jt ttaa.rates.f75.ZZM mount unit. ~3'718 ...................... , •VE-RY LOW PRJC~• Tree/shrub trim, coo-Mt. Leonatd,•1;9343, '~'••·'Rt T-'--•-•~ Aipll• Conatnadlao-All types Landacape mablt-clQupe ....................... ,,....., w '-......... , ... ~........ BUY WHOLESALE 20y:=_. Free eat. Georse.~3015 crele removal, clean· • • • ...._. Fine eat/lnt palntine by ED'S PLASTERING ..................... .. Drlvewaya, pukins lot Tbru Carpet lnataUer. Uc. t: . gu..5973 MIKE'SLAWNc•nE UJ>t. Freee1t.55'1-827l ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• Richard Sinor. Uc, lna. AU Types Int/Ext Prof. Qlty t)'IJln&. Chui. repain, sealcoatin1. Free eat. Alto carpets ~ HAUUNG/CLEANING 'llCadStretchUmo Tryme.6311'10 (24hra) 645-82S8 FREE EST tranacrlpdona; P one S•S Aaphalt. 848·4871 )aid le repaired. Jay, CarpentryctrAdditiona Monthly service. Trees TreetrtmctrPainUnl Orient ru11-tv-1tereo· ---------• · diet, Jetten, repon., Uc'd. 7"'~"'c-....,.., Repaln-SmallJobe lrcleanu111.S..2.04.9 .,.,D. bar-phone. $30/br + RALPH'SPAINTrNG INT /EXT -•uter form•. re:awnes ter.m ---------1-------~----~ Uc.309152 ~2719 or .. ,._y,9N-42'7f ~.O&all4,131·3M6 Lic.lnt/Ext.LowRatea · . .,. papera, envefopea, l•yalll..,. NoSteam/NoSluimpoo Yard maintenance. Tree H lln• ... Dum J .._ Free Eat. 964-5566 patchln&,30yrsexpl. labels. dlac. volume. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stain 1naclalist, fast ..__.. trim & removal . au .... ~':'orn-!..y0.""'· Neal~29'77(Pau > Work guar. Mariah r-.,,.,.... Cl ,...,. nai:aa •••••••1••••••••••••••• BABYSl'M'INGmybome di')'. Freeest.83&-l.S82 ....................... eanup1. Free eat. Ml·M27 DAVE'S PAINTING ~ 836-07~ Moa·Fri, days, ages S & DrywallS_pec:ialiat 752·13'9 BRICKWORK: Small Servingarea9yeara ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,-1..._---.---~----- up. ffotlunches provided UPHOL-DRAPES-CRPT Qual. Ir prod,. New & re-HAULING Ir Joba. Newport, Costa Most reasonable Holleman Plumbing T-_ _,, H.B. area. M0-4108 Cleanl..., at your home. mod. #3811M4. 532·5549 CLEAN-UPS/LAWN QUICK CLEAN-UP Mesa, lrvlne, Refs . Insured, lic'd. 760-7301 Salea-Service-Repalrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... M a l n t e n a n c e F 675-3175 F·ree es•;-·•-....... 7183 Let playback video cap. Developmental activities F'[1P·CTOPCA.RPET& DRYWALL-Our Ex· Landscape · reeeat. 631--08531----NR-Y-TI--E--Painting : Comm 'I. In· ......... ~ ~ ture y9ur next pany, & bot lunches incl. Age& oor are. 960-6266 pertise. We can liandle Free eat. 642.9907 ~ MASO & L dustrlal, Residential. Pool StrYtc., ......... weddin1 or any special 2 ·5 . 6 :30am -6pm . Cellltg ACC*lffc yourproblems.631·2004 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OurSpeci.alty.Wesolve Free Est. Low rates••••••••••••••••••••••• event onvldeotape.En· 540-1903(llcBHC18093) •••••••~•••••••••••••••T aping, Texture •· Tim Want a REALLtCLEAN y.ourproblems.631·2004 _67_3·_0'7_37 _______ , Swimmm,PoolServlce joy it again & again 1n "' HOUSE7 Call Gin b Reliable. Re~/Acld fuU color & IOWld. We 111111,.. Acoustic Ceilings Acoustic Ceilings. Free Toppedfremoved; clean . a am FRPLCS bW.lt, refaced. QUALrTY PAINTERS Washes. Reas. '2783 can also tape yoar ••••••••••••••••••••••• +custom hand texturing est. Kevin, 615-9088, · u Pl• 1 awn r e n o v · Girl. Free est. eu-5123 brick/st.one veneers, 30 Bargain rates thru4/8 personal property, home RIMOORJHG Lie. 38994C. ' S32-SM9 673-IS03 751·3476 Expertise housekeeping, yrs exp. 893-3743 Free est. 848-5684 17 yrs exper. w~rltlne or buaineea for an ac· Reald./comm. No job Cftltetlf/ec.cnte .. __ ..._.al of'!.---.-ac-t-n eq u i p & supplies EXPERT BRICK •. w/all makes of equip. curate i.nvenlol'y. Reas. t.oo leeorsmaU 83J """• ~me .. ~_.........,.. f •·hed ·-·-t orthy •-"" WINTER RATES State contractor's lie. & ratea.CaUM.2-2325 . '""""" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• um... • ....... w "" Masonry. Small jobs & )nt./ext. Painting ..... ...,_ FWoundati«?ns! Retaining E~ECTRICIA~-priced TILE INSTALLATION dep&tl-4970 repairs. Frplc facing.,. Clean outs-Cast service ins. Porch Construction WllMlow Qu '-9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . alls, Hillside Rest~ra· ngbt, free estimate on Floors, Kitchen, Bath MRS. CLEAN MAKES IT Refs. SSl-'SSS, 760-70'74 ~9801 Co. 673-3316 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion. Sla.bs, ~~tios . laroeorsmalljobs. Reliable Craftsmen GLEAM H PO lox•............_ "LetTbeSWU.hineln" ... ,,_. ..-"""" office Ca-' ,..,. -~" Colleae Studenl·Exp'd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Sunshine Window BURGLAR Block&Bnck.Llcd. u,."'.•~ 67 .. '"'c9 Rogers T1'le Phone ! omea, apt&, VERYREASONABLE • • ~ 642-8387 eves/96C>-383S 63l·n..oc• · • t-•· .._.~ B i k b'~k t t'l ._,., ~~ c • ""' · s one, 1 e. int/ex. any job for less! Irvine/Newport poet of. Cleaning, Ud. S43--8853 Electrician -Sm. jobs, ROBIN'SCLEANlNG LK'd. bonded. Call Alex 851-9371 lice boxes unavailable? REMOVAL: concrete, mainl. & repairs. Lk. H..ctyM• Servic~tboroughly BobS48-27S3.536·9906 Rent -a -Box from Window Expert - Alarma 25%.off 645-5529 !!p, h~agwra.dinbrge'alokt c&learne: #2331118-ClO. 548-5203 •H•O••M•E••l•M••P•R••O:~E·•M••E•N•T .. 11 clean house. 540-0857 Painting, int/exl. Rentals privately-owned postal windows, blinds. screens _.. . ., " ---------Small Jobs wanted. Brick our specialty. Prompt. service. -THE MAlL & mirrors. Reaa. Depen· Have something to sell" move. Hrlyorbid Find what you want in Remodeling--Oddjobs Have something to sell? and Block. Low hourly Seaside Painting. Greg, SUITE, 549.4733 for dable. Free est. Gene ClassiCied ads do it well ~2411 Daily Pilot Classifieds. 28 yn exper. 979-2265 Classified ads do it well. rate. 499·12216 aft. &pm. ~4806 rates/se.rvicea. 545-0225 P.noftals USO Help Wanted 71 OOH•lp Wanhd 7100 H.-p W..tect 7100 H.tp WCMhd 7 I 00 H•lp Wanted 7100 H•lp Welllted 7100 Hetp W..tecl 7100 ~-~~ ••••• !~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . Exp. Medical As11atant, PHONE F1.JN ARTISTS to share studio Babysitter wa1_1ted. Your CASHIER Dato~ DESIC CLHIC front & back. bra. It 8AM·12PM M.C./VISA & exhibition space. home or mane. CdM IOOICK9B F/C HOUSEWARESALES lnsur~~~~~hers an Operator!leeded for nix· NCR 4200 exp desired. 881 ar Y open. Non· (714)636-6853 771.3419 al\.Spm. area. Hours: ~2noon-Fashion Island invest· Apply in person: Crown entry level pos. as Bill· dorl/entru sys~ems for AM & PM shifta. Apply smoker.~&. ------'----• SPM Mon.·Fr1. Call ment firm. Excell op-Hardware, 1,..,. Irvine, . long term assignment. in person, Aliso Creek SPR(NG Sk. I E ...... ing Clerk . Typing Call f . I Tod Coas H 1 partner 1---------•I 644·1027 aft. SPM. t>Ortun ty. xper. & (Westdiff Plaza) NB •O.•Swpm. Gd. company or more tn o. Inn, 3ll06 t wy. FloralT,.... wanted. Fem .. 21 ·30. ASSB•LBS BABYSITI'ER maturity req'd . Call: benefits. Sus an hour. Services,979-8900 South Laguna. wanted f/pt , call 646-0837 Loe .. Mission Viejo co. 714-S.W-0123 CASHI ERi Clerk for re-Call·. Laura. -" .. ·8450. Deli Dri •. s 1 &f.5.0093, ask for Diane - -ff 1 1 w_._. Moth -....., very vers.,. a es DIETITIAN . RD for 82 r needs Assemblers w/2 e p. "'"101 er taiJ store. Must be ex· 140l Dove St., N.B ---------ff'MMlals.rricH 5360 yrs . exp. Candidates needs reliable Babysit· per . C'all : Balboa E.O.E. Trainees. Full or part bed psychiatric hosp.--------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• must have gd. manual ter, part Ume in Long IOOIOCEIPlll M . ~9671 E 0 E time. Xlnt. oppty for col· Reaponsibilitle.s incl FtlOMTIU...S Save time & fuel. Will dexterity, gd. eyesight, Be a ch . Ca 11 Ir ene FULL CHARGE M~~fJ· ' ·, · · le I e students & total menu planning, The finest athletJc shoe service in your home. neatin appearance&de-213/438-28>2. Outstandingopportunity Draper~"f!~r needs moonlighters. Easily dietary consultation & clothing store in the Reasonable. 953-8277 pendable. Work is in life for experienced con· ind to coordinate in· earn $10.Sl.5/hr. Call aft. w/doctors & patients & county is looking for a support medical elec· Babysitter needed in my struction development. stallation scheduling. 1 PM . 6 38 · 4 6 OS or supervision of dietary hard w or It i n g, en· ""fr:::=! tronics. Gd . benefits. H.B. home. hrs vary. real esute full charge CASHIERS Salary+ben.willtrain. 951-2642. staCf . Previous tbuastic, energetic Only res pons 1 b I e _c_a_l_l _af_t_. 8_,_8'2_-5_129_.__ bookkeeper, for rapidly Beach Drapery·, 16692 Hosp/sy_pervisory es:-person for a Cull lime as-d · l t I Del. men over 18 for L.A · · persons seeking perm a-e x Pa n 1 n I mu · Milliken. Irv 540-MTII p e r i e n c e n e c . s1staot manager po11- nent emplymt. need ap-1•B-n1t-. ------• corporate NB firm. u TOTEM Times to homes in N.B Capistrano by the Sea tion. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Joba W-.d. 7075 ply. Call. Mrs. Parelli, a mg Light typing req. Clerks & C.M. S400/S450 + Hosp.496-5702 Applyinpersonat: TRAVELl.NG 581-3830 NIW Acamts Congenial environment. Two desk clerks wanted bonus. 64&-0637,646-5844. FRONTRUNNERS, ••••••••••••••••••••••• GALFRIDAY !~~~~~~~~~~! benefits, profit sharing, MARKETS for Costa Mesa Motel. Donut Shop. Early AM NewPOrtBeach Errands, cleaning, I~ • C .. major medical & op-Sh ft DEMTALASSISTAHT shlCt. Donut-maker & lOOON. BNtol St. lndry, lite typing, hrly-1---------I r rt •t c d For 2nd & 3rd i s . Day & Eve shift avail. Corona del Mar. --'-f Jod daily 546-9312 Assemblers Experience Preferred ::enfS:oct °:'es~!"~~-1 We promote to manage-Will train 8JI nee. Call 12 644-7162 ~~l:~ i:prsonply.: N~tpxp~ry. 1••955-·.0.165_ ....... _.o•r -•y- Also part time positions Salary Hist & dates to ment & supervision from noon to8pm 646-7445. -Donuls. 1854 Newport available in our South Pat Parkinson VP. Quail within. CAREER., DEMT AL ASSIST. Blvd. C.M. Coast Plaza office. Call: Place Company 1400 WAN~ Mesa CLERK Part lime to F /time cbairside. Ex- H.-pWmhd 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4CCOUMTS PAYAl&.E Kathy Amburgey Quail St. Suite 135. NB tll Del Mar work in photo drive-per· pref. GP office. Drapery manufacturer ~ 9 2 S 6 0 o r c a l l 631.MZl thru, morning shift S4S-4SS3. Nr So. Coast needs wortt room hem· REAi.ESTATE (714 )752·1.920 Photo or retail exp. pre-_P_l_a_z_a . _______ , mer. Will train. Mon.· C'd. but not req'd. Apply Dent a I Assistant . Thurs. 7·5:~PM or P /T. at: 2188 Newport Blvd., N ew P 0 rt e each . C.M. area. 642·1843. CAUFODUIA Laguna Beach The Robert P. Warm- 1· n gt on Co. n eeds energetic person in. a c· counting dept EX · perlence required. Real Estate preferable. Xlnt. salary, benefits, & work· in& conditions in Irvine office. Call Sally for appt. 549-8867. E .0 .E. M/F. Previous experience with cabling, harness· ing, soldering and work· ing with small sub as· semblies ""' loolll&eeelila Cllttl 49'-9233 FEDERAL Growing efectfunic dis· -trlbutor seeb highly or· Huntington Beach Costa Mesa, Mar. 30th 4dya/wk. Experience or thru April 2nd. Professional School S a..-& L,o. 962-91 UI o•_,.. ganized, self-motivated l:;;~~i;iiiiiiiii~I Clerical 69S Town Center Dr. person to work in Credit FILE~· -1 Costa Mesa. Ca 921526 O e pt . Ex c e 11 . op . ~ EqualOpportunity portuoities Ir co. CH.....,_ Insurance co. needs We offer a stable work Employer benefits. Call: Amy, (LIMOUSINE> person to be responsible environment with an ex-I•--------• 558·3880 for the file Room. cellent salary package1 ~~~~~~~~~ Eneraetlc, mature Duties also include •cCTS REC. including company paia -person. who enjoys driv· switchboard relief. Gd. A Medical. Life & DentaJ Banking •IOOU91:151 m• & knows Loi Angeles company benefits. $1.15 Person to work w fcom· L 5u-&....n...& ., h C II L Insurances Pension o.. •..,.-, ~· Plea .. nt working condJ-&OrangeCounties. an our. a : aura. putor. Adept at AIR bk· Plan. Savings Plan with fHA/YALOAMS Uons In exciting Airport 833-8450. 1401 Dove St.. kpg. Collection ex per hi~h interest rate. 11 Clerk position available. complex. Experienced Must have professional N.B. E.0.E. helpful. Gd office ma ch paid holidays per year F N M A I G NM A loan only. Some typing. Flex-a pp e a ran c e. own ----------1 skills req. Xlnt Co. ben. and 1 week paid vaca· packaging experience lble hours. Opportunity transporat.l<>n, bondable CLa.IC w /growmg NB firm. lionafter6mont.hs.Thls helpful. Will consider for adv~cement. See &acleandrivingrecord. Room for advancement Pcrt-t..,. & al ...... C II position must be filled training a person with OCfice M . 'I grad. 64&-~. Dent a I Front Office Receptionist, beach area. Very pleasant at· mosphere. Salary com· mensurate with exp. 645· 7580 ask for Darlene. DENTAL Front orfice HB. Dealrable pos. in busy, quality ofc . Friendly atmosphere awaits experience. Salary neg. Call: Joanne at 962·3;110 person "°"'"'· a immediately. Apply in ~ e n e r a I o f f i c e uow • .... C'-.. ~ As h permane nt Part-time position avai forappt.844-4684 1 d c 11 M' '" A--.. .---.-to merchandise & dis·-.---------Commercial Financino person or call: now e ge. a 1ss Dove & Qua.iJ Su. employee yoo will enjoy 1 , d l Servi,._ "' 71 Ll46 nl 1 Bradley NEW PORT BEACH co. benefits, including: P ay women 5 rea Y 0 ... ~ ..., •-I ti •-wear clothing & cashier. COLDW&.LIAHKH IJJ..0555 n~urance, vaca on "' Mon-Fri from 9-3PM. AJDE for female In mi>.-Residential Mortgage holidays. Salary comm. Call Mer for interview wheelchair, Mon.-Sat. I :» Services IUI ~ with exper. Apply In Driver's lie. & It hskpg TR1vex, 1HC Irvine, Ca ~ person 9-ll.1-3dally. aTHpptE. AUILD DIUGS req. Jrvine.559-Sl09 .-o ... •--· (714)97S-Ul80 gvENINGS. DUlman'a w DEMT AL/ Auht CHAIRSIDE'. Mln. 2 yrs expr. 4 '4 days week. So Laguna. Salary negot.Ja. ble. 49'9·1355 3180 RedhlllA EOE Restaurant Apply In p--a .. 1-. ''IOS-....... MI AJRCRAF"I' Dispatcher/ (S.D. Fwy&Paul:lnol · · · person. 801 E. Balboa irnW. 64'4-1310 DISIGtB Receptionist. Heavy Costa Meaa,Ca92626 Blvd. Balboa DlAFTIR phones, lite secretarial Equal OppEmply M/F Be a u t I c i ans & MacArttllrll COOK/EXP'D La1una Beach elec· work. 2 positions avail-manicurist.a with clien· •CAI DllVBS• Costa MHo Fullllme 9am-5pm. Im· tronlcs manufacturer afternoons Ir wltnds. tele; be self-employed, ChedterCab mediate opening . needs: Knowledge of aircraft Assistant Cook : Ex· pick your own hours. 77o.-0222 Cleanina Penan, Apart-Newport Beach. Call •an experienced f:"°n helpful. Parsons' Air. perience or Train~-I First class salon. I CAIWASH ment Bldgs. Full time. 833-3841. to be responslb e for 557-1900 Cooking Italian foods. I 557-2234. Caahlen wanted. Full or Costa Meaa, Newport l-C-00-K-. -P-l·-... -.--s-ho_rt_o_r-1-ddr•ftinef 4r ....._.mecbaruMcatl spaghetti Bender, 'ee ...... .,. e11gn u1l<: ... oo.a. ua .wia. Serv. ·Pleasant offc. 645-0651 . auty part lime. Newport, San-Beach area. der. Must be 18. Ex· h a v e t b or o u eh N.B. Exper., but will I * JOJOIA• tea Ana, FounM la.In Vaclleyl '1 TSL MGMT 642·1603 perience a plus . Mutt knowledge of drafUna train. 3-llPM. & llPM· AUTOM~.!r I Nonsurgical contour ~-~. esa . a Classified Aas. your one· Lynch's . 311 Palm. crocedures, PC board '1AMshlfts.631-SSU. '""''~ 1 faeelilt. WlU traln five ---------atop1...._ .. ,_1center. Balboa Pen. Sid: ayout, dltilal. analo1. ...,,,.,.., mlcrcwave circuit de· COUMTBMAM career-oriented people I 6'75·1SS6. _. Apartment .atanaeer Al.· Dealership or forelan to become make-up • I •1 p•1at alp,• acme knowlcvge i t t E I d t . I J I C t b lp F /T Of •lectro-mecbanical as an . xper ence . auto parts experience artists at l4acbenl. Only 1 oun er e • · Mature Couple fot 100 preferred. Call Olen for serious-minded need ap-' •• • •• • KUJter'a Cleane~. 188 packqlnl. Drivers needed. Part time positions available. Call for appt: 830-6191. DRlVERS Deliver bakery producta to supermarkets. Early morning to mid · afternoon. CaU 77L-47SO. Drivers. Small car re- quired. Earn big $. Call between 10 & l, Mon.· Fri. 581-1017. Earn big $S-S700wk posai· ble, 303 commission. Call btwn lOAM·lPM. Mon.-Fri. 581-1017. lllC'ftOMIC ASSBeL Y LEAD Fast growina intern•· tional Co, fo stable energy field has need for a lead electronic 18· ae mbly person . Qualifications lncl. 7yn exper, in electro mechanical auembly, PCB assembly, Coll wir· lne. barneuina. & · mechanical assembly; be able to train 11· semb len; or1anl'2e manpo•er ctr material res.ources; & dlaplay &ood leadenblp 1kllla. Qualified applicants abould contact Ray Giiman at Sclentlflc Drlllin1 Interoatlonal 557-9051, E.O.E. UnJta. Colt.a Men. Work an app0intment. ply. Comm.lasioo, with 1 • c~era • E. 18th 548 C243 Opportunity for advan-Sunday + l weekda)'. lOY CARVa management potential. •m c e m e n l • c a re e r OD call Evenin11. Free ROU.SlOTCI Call r~ ~t, Mn. • • COUNTER Help, dry erowth. We oiler xlnt. UIC. SICllTAIY Tb : 0 t • cleanera, 5day week. pay & f>enefita + Self-atarter needed for apartment. No salary. AMDIMW arp, · para If Ml-83 4DAYWOllWIB polltlon wlth Iara• BeauUfuJ Adult com· 64°"444 BEAUTYSUPPLY Experieaced at leut 5 years. Must be able• Facility ia in beauWul pacb1inl company at pin· Y2·49o7, call SALESPERSON e to use newspaper camera and platemakin.a . COUNTER or COOK La1una Canyon neat" executive omcea in wkdaya. AUTO..-cHAMIC Mature, Fff, $4.75/br .• systems. Excellent wa1es and benefits.. FT/PT. Gary'• Deli, Beach Is Resort areaa. Ne•port Beach. Xlnt. Appllcatlom being ac· Geaer-1 repsir. MUil bel Gaa allowance, addl· Apply In person w1!'ffume to Orange Cout Cdll,87~21.ISfOl'appt. Call for eppt: Penoa.nel aecr etartal 1kllla ~forlullUmepartl fully eaperlenced, tional benefit.a. Reaal , •Dally Pil-Ot. • co•-~• Dept. Telonic Berkeley: needed, lntelll1ent, General FULL-PAIT TIME STUDENTS OK < Mmt be 18) Excitlne pay, compaoy benefits. Car needed. Hard worken only. MOmm•ICI C• IO-toJ,_ 71 4-847-2422 GBBAL Courier/Clerk, part time needed for Npt. Bcb. medical lab. Perm. pos Prefer mature persoo. Phone: J an Hillyer. 640-0140 GEMEIW. OfftCE . Exp. helpful, ed. typina ability , proficiency w I fieu~ea. lO·keY by touch, alnt. co. beoefita. lnformal de, CM. Call Millie aft 9AM, MS-5800. GEMUAL OfACI Look.ine for a very in· teresUng part Ume job in pJeaunt office? Clerical, for mature person. LocaUoa P.C.H., Npt. Bcb. Eaper. a must. Accunt.e typln1, no shorthand. 20 br. week tncludell Sat 4r Sun. Call: 146-1411 . General ,... ..... --a. ·-..... ~ . S1•1lm~ ........... . Type 50.pm,f IDI. phone e:aper. S...Ceell J.UPll, NI 'nm•, PIHH call rot Ifft .. SU-UH llon-1'11}., l :I0-5Pll .• drlYer/1bop helper. aaa.ry + commlsaionl Beauty Supply, 21113 E. j e e ~•-na.r '71'·4H·N01. La1una ability to wortl on own, Backlf'Cl'*I in preeaure s~ dy1 per wk . (fal 17tbSt.C.ll.-• .__, II-I-• Wanted ao :L needed Beach. B.O.E. typln1· 1'0wpm+. Dtc· e teanhtC -.qulpment Ernie epm to 9pm n•1 ...,, •174.Mloratl wk. •t ta tins machln• n · oinentOftle. :; hielpful. Calli. driver'• 111·9196. • BOATbaulina&lt.maJ.n. •Part.time with at least t year experlenc•.• PlYlnpenoaAnt!Mln1• . 1•rleoce • mu1t. W-'°J--'W•"'•' Uceue a__. drtvlnt t.enaace. 2?m W. Cout .preferably n. ewspaper. EJCceUent company . Slioe Semct 1401 E. borthand, auperb *paxa.ci!Z::z• r.corda-a.SOper AUTOMOTIVE Hwy,N.B.541-8Ml .benefits. PM ahllt. Apply" between 9am "• Coaat Hw7 . C clM ...... ...,. lSeDefltl. Call Lob at ~ailb ,.. ... I i LOTMAM ' 6pm Monday throo1b Friday 17Ml40 . 8 Ill-'11'-'1524711. E.O.S. ' ----, --: uour to start. npp )' ..... t1m•. a..-lble ........... "" • I • • ,_.. • .. ........._V • ...,jo • I 1m"1 lhasu.l,Suite ;.'"ure pel'IOft"n-eiide'd AU pb .. d ol record ~ CUSTOt• :r~a~·:.S.~ ... h, IYICll laTOI A..lrYIM.641-MOT • tot •p•cla1 \duUu. kt•phtl tbru ltl>ttal • ~ Pirt Tllllt E • s•wca• tleetrlul coaoectora, ~ 'a ........ AlcHllicTuaAL ~~~':::·a=~: e~. ~....:: •• c Li u• , ,.. •• !':::.:-= "::i.: ~ .. ~·-.:. •e!:,: ~ . ',, .Ml:A\i. r=:ld·=r;::: periente. Cell St•H ft(, • at ... Call K.tt.b)' AdulU With OUU,andln( attractive orlHled .~noe will ponent.t "alerlals Al 1~ .._ ! .... ln'U'te •. a, ... ~ .. ..__.... Hart~ ,_ • appoint· &amaut<'1M)t7S.ll0'71 e ptreonauue1 wbo •nJol. wotlti.ftl wltb 10-15 e ct.rtcaJ ...,. to Mn• ......... ~·· . " .. "'. , . 141 ltM ---mat .year oJd ~outhl. Start al"f4.00thour. 2:30 PM e tJM ........._, MUil IM••' ·~Dut._ ·bithldlt cMltp,· 1· eu••••INc....,;: ' ··.-·-~ ... . .-... '-: 100.,..____ and 5 -......... ·-1 -·-... 0,, p ID I ... ,. • tt --4 o•v o-.----'-"-· .. •AMJU'i&.--i' IOY-·-llUUlim'i5".''. ·-·-·-·-~-. • .. ~ ~ 4lr•IUats...~ '-'· 1, Ce•t ... M DAILY ,... cu~~~....,. =....... IOUSIOJCI Ptra. .. PM/Erili.AIR,,. R,._.:........a • rt1po1a•illlt1 ........ o .projecta. '9L01·•---••n . 0 • -eaor AIP • .N . -car .. , .... ed. XlDt. llKILHkll ........... ·--.. -....... , .. ..._. ... MC•I* &IMW ·· xp. '*· on· 0 ,.. · .... ,. .. ~At t d 1'4 1 -~• .... ...._._.= ... ••• • ••• • ~. T .... _ .,..., • _,. ar. av C!a--6 . • lratUH aalarYJ t W~J~ DI eane prt ' ' re-~•lre•ellle fer 6 • ..-..... ' _ _ _" , ~ QHllflH uaclld•t••. "''"' • fltett"••• .~ ....... -CJiiaiiet Art '"· ,. ~ U ,_.,.. D1t ~ UM \ Co.ta Meta CA • tn1DID1. Ill• all llr. .-:1 ,... ... t.: llrt. ~ , •••• a1• 1ar = . := ::~ lflM ·"* ..... toc1a1'a lltUt ... Ill Cluaifted, Equal {)ppon\lnlty E1J1Plc"-'" .. Tu.n. 8Heflclal JI. a. Utt l v h Ii au~·· ' ' ....... CJI "' .,. H o_w ~" u aot. ,_1,. ..-.... • '°' o1 • .-~~,·::: :~.~o::'~ rabno .... ;~1.tt• • Ml tll1 ... •L .~ =•~ · .D. c:.:'ith1 0.. .._ M"'Y Wormaliof;I a• , ••••••••••••• -..... -..... ~ lllil*~Ca..m Pf, -OW •IMl"z iii ' ..... , -~·~ ..... IOIM ..... 'bUft: 1 -'-'. ....i --· _.~ _ ,. .-_ '· • _ , t . -, .. ,,. ~ .,...-._· .,,,... ~ -c .t• -.. -" ~ ~ -'- .. Security officer. P /T , wlr•J\dt for lrt ept. com· llC.,./SICY plea I.a N.B. SJ.SO/hr. Type N wpm, ~crib-llC•AIY. For info contact Jim l~~~~~~~~I ms • IOkey Ailla req'd. To YOWll butlnas ex-Lupia ft'"°llOO· TYPISTS Salar)' .,._on exper. ecuUve1,1peed•11dUu ..... ...,5 •lmmediate()penln&s i-----------1 lmmed . ope n lna . must t~O + wpm). SICUlfTY-W.Ut! P/U 11'/tiaM T 17 cu ft frost free 95'7·5&50 ROM Fashion Isle locaUoo, &~~3~!J.~0&!.ua!~ • m:;... P.Y emp. Frlaldajre refria sw. Beaut. aoUd oall: bdrm set. 2 nlteatnds, dre1ter, mirror. $500,581·4669 ---1 El•ctric auitar w/ampUliert3M> ...... Office,_ I u& HAllSTYUST ltce ...... /Twllt Top salary! 6"-5TTl lnl pay. RefWldable un· For more Info. call Tod Mayta. wa1her HS. /.Wanted for Bayfront FHt irowina Newport SECRETARY ilorm depolita. 978-'72'3 S.rvlceutm.8900. Mayte1 las drytr S~. ~ tTJ.7'31 Ad Firm aeekinc rella· Concenlal Airport law '5 631-8191 --------........, Frtsidalre washer S7S. Sofa. ahn, tblea, d.IJ:lette set. brlc-a-brac. Call btwn 8am ·llpm , 640.9608, 873-46M ... ,... 1011 ·······4"9·············· STEAL IT, MUSTSELL ARDWARESALES 1----..-----i ble, exp'd. proleaalooal firm. Top ~kills. Self-Typltll Guarentfed~ ~ ll..-e/partUme. Ap-w /cood appearance-•tarter. nonsmoker. SIU.AYON Lady Kenmore apt u Conference table. '14.tt. solid oak. SlSOO. Day: 648-9048, Eve1 : 6451-2990. ply ln penoo: Crown ableto handlefrontdeak Josie851·902S. llULI, TM T,,tsts SOWPM washer/dryer, llOV. l yr Sofa 8' Yellow xlnt cood. New elec. SCM portable ware, tau Irvine, ~;uaA{i1==· ~t~ SIC ... _..., Eamleormoreanhr 1• ti Sec' old. S400.1G.E. Port. Dl.s· SlOO 3246 typewriter, SlSO/OBO . "'"''" -holi ays, m ca en-Requires good typing & .. .-... lltr Pl•••) NB l/d -·--' Call 8M--06Z2 IC JS h"'shr ~· Sears room 833-552-8530 (8am-8pm) , HIGH Fubion atore nds. ~!~rero~Ta-:di~:pe~ lal & profit shar ln1. ehone person ality. Sell cosmetics avera1e UIC ~-'ys a/c S2S 9223 KING-SIZdE BDRM 529 ae 5 t. s m it h . Coron a tlelp. Salary +comm. alert lady, must have Salary open. Call Pat Duties include: lite die· S60/day. W"lll lrain. For ~ licyclff 1020 ~~:n · ~ pc, typewriter, Model 300. ~time. SaJes or ofc. car to accom. c:oUapsi· _&'4_·_9050 _______ 1 tdaetrsion& P1=~~1'!,'n~~~ intervlew.831-8012 Clt•glll1C_.....? ......... ~............. · everunp Good conditlon.B S~ ·~.desired. 78G-0872 ble wblcbr. 9-S. $4.25 per RECEPTIONIST, Npt. Jut" "'e Tr"""': dl-4425. Service-(ln Shop). Xlnt. Loolmg fw a STOLEN SoUd walnut' bdrm set, Call Dalebout ay hour. NB Loe . Call Bch. law olc., ask for --'"--"""------oppty le benefits for C1t•1aal1tgi SlOO reward. (SSOeach) head le fOO( board, dou-Be~ch. Ask for Janet HOM E AIDE to care for 645-3953 Caryn (114) ~16 SECUTA•v,, mecbanlcally-lncllned Oppart11811tir7 Blue & yellow Diamond ble sx, c~t·on-chest, Smith , 631-7300 . younc wqman in our -•· 8 k ina bike & blue 2 il ho hrs d " · To assist Pres. le V. individual with basic ac rac-... dresser w. rror, n e pa-1 & ~ 1090 me • per a,, im Medical RECErnONIST Pres. ot R.E. Develop-electrical knowledce. Use temporary jobs as "· white XR-7 racin~ stanas, xlnt cond. All ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::'Y~ 6:,5-Q~ or 642-2434 ParXl.at-lmAeJ. TICH30hrs/wk. nEseededolforlll Jrt vbaioe ment Co. Exceptional 540-6300. your shopp.inl tool. We ~:~14!,4;0167 eves. $485. 962-1961 AEOLIAN Winter Spinet • · crow c. UI ve typinc, & organizational have long"' short term · · . ----pian_o/bench. Walnut. • HOMEMAKERS M. F . For oUice in neat appearance a nd skills, required . Call jobs available in the •-11c1a..-..,.rlah 1025 K1~g bed w/frame. hs~doo. New $1500 sell $950. -• N rt Beach ARRG pleasant ..a.-.a manner A (7 )...,1 9'"" SHI~ O C A1·rport a-a Week· -_,, Dinette ~-Sect. 1 e-ft '&PM s •. 'WOOk ing for at-home ewpo . .,......... . nn 14 ..., . ..,.,. .-.--.. . . b--.. :""' • rt 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bed 57' 5 6 tw1'n beds 536-3100 a . at ... ~ ti & CRT required . Hrs: 8-5 Mon lhru Fri,1----------FULLlcP/timebelp.ln· ly payc ~.qua ery a-. · . wknds P~c,!~dJ. ~~mes, &31·«22. Call for appt. 552·4060. SECIET.UY terviews held 12-l Mon bonus trips. Never a fee. IEDWOOO 2x6't w/frames & bedding, ---·------ Toni Fast growinc Orange thru Sat. Lunasea. 212 Call for appt. today: S4S, xlnt decking. New $25-SO. 631-~ -nAM9 "-tesa/Host: 2·3 days, Med' I ..... · tant 1,,,,Ralft_ST Co. Mamt Consulting MalnSt.HB. 557 MJ~ lo~ldl-"'1!·/~CttM ~i~~~ OAK ANT IQ' U E PUMIH -h';urs flexible. S3.SO to '<. ica n.»lS ....,...,.. .. _... firm seeks skilled secy: ~~~~~~~~~I """"' mi • .>.r LVNorCMA Immediate opening in capable of handlin,i -Xl27 anytime DRESSERS. assorted IAIY ~D st ~~pagheltiBender, Small clinic located in beautiful Newport wide variety of office SHIPPING Clerk part r-n..L1n-SAWS&MILLS nuorescentUght.s,misc. New condition Npt. Bcb. bas a unique Beach. Challengi ng functions. We offer xlnl time. Must have exper. U t fl ': stools, etc. Call Dean, at $3000/obo. P.P. Terr ff11tlel San Maarten of opening for an LVN or P o s i ti 0 n · B u s Y opply for growth, along Call: Balboa Marine. TlMPORARV PUl60NNH SUMCfS Call 96()-244S for more in· 67S..6000 New cood. b>OO/obo Laiguna Beach requires: CM A with EKG telephenes, type 45 with ~ompreh ensive 54.9-9671. E.O.E. M/F /H fo. art 12 :30. Gar-· 5...a-105 ppo~~~:~t6 :~I Ass; .. ·-ts working capabilities. Primary wpm. Call for appoint· compensation & benefits 3723 llrchStreet C--01 & -"7'" --------\-t e _..... · function ol this position ment, 549-7971. South Laguna Village NewDOrl leocll .......,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• --ead Housekeeper· will be public relations.•----------tpac.kagest.602·3 ~ ~~~~~ Animal Hospital is look-t .O.E. EqYl,,....t 9o3 o Garage Sale, April 4 & s. "Davenport" Piano, good mature security person· RECEr110NIST typing 8 WP! .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9.4 pm . Misc. furn, cond. Weekends only nel. Fulllcpartlimefor Sales backfround Ooclor'solfice,Newport dictation or dictaphone ing for p /t exp,'d ---------CHINON CE4 3.5mm. 6 Magnavox console TV. 661-8759$400/0BO atl shifts. XJnt. working helpful. Excel . fringe . I experhelp{ul groomer-can lead to /t mos. new, MUST SELL' I th' II t.bles benef1"ts packa•e. For Beach. Some secretana ork pror1·t sharing c o ing, co ec I . Spo~ ~--~ 1094 -Cond. Apply In person more infonnati~ & in-skills. 64G-0760 p R 0 D U C T l 0 N :99-5378 Typist $200/080 494·67~ Under Sl-$'50 231 Opal. ••• :.".":'!.:::::: •••••••• 41t'wn lOAM &noon daily. lerview, contact: Jane DYNAMICS CRT OPBATOR Pentax ME w/normal Balt>oa Island. For Sale-Seiko dive in So. Coast Hwy F I 14 975--0660 EOE RECEr110NIST ST n--y Growing electronics dis· Laguna Beach. oey.7 · · FulltimeMon-Fri.Must CORPORATION I A ~ tributorseeksgd.typist lens, wide angle lens & HCH1s.t.oldGooch8065 watch, good to 150 l~M~/~F~~~~~~~~I be personable & well 18008 Skypark 81, Ste 100 I Store in CdM needs sales to train for on-line com-zoom tel.. auto. winder & ••••••••••••••••••••••• meters, in xlnt cond. •--------1-groomed, & ettjoy meet· lrvine, 92714 person f/time, ~ days. puter systems. Excell. auto. strobe New SS7S. l lxlO crptg. new, tan 751-8967 1~.lffOUSECLEANERS ing the public. Requires 714•754-6388 Xlnt working conds. opportunity & co S40-7023eves plush, Sl45orbesloffer ---------to SS/hr. Car. "~"'5123 · & Ask (Ask for Susan> Especially fine clientele benef1'ts. Catt·. Elsa. 962 4974 aft S ORANGE CMTY '""'" good s pelhng ~en· phone 644·7482 for appt. Dag a 1040 · · · mansh1p. No typing. s-_....../C-t 556-3880 J lry 8070 COLLECTORAMA ..... ··-1 -~~~~~~~~~~1 ·•••••••••••••••••••••• •w• April 4lh, 5th 9-Spm Phone experience pre-L hoc:h ---------1 = KEESHOND Pups AKC •••••••••••••••••••••• ~~r::f~ts.F~~~~m~ae'!:. Fast :Cg develop-SJillflll TYPIST/ Champ sire. M F Pel & Wanted Gold, silver, Fea~:r1~~!~~~~f all OFFICE Cl.SU( nysaver, 1660 Placentia ment Co. needs motival· .... WOID PROCESSOR sh Ow P v l Pl Y diamonds, guns. PP will eras. Swords, coins, war fnu!l.ti~=~=~~.A~crof~t~ _A_v_e_._. C_M______ ~·ese~-s~~~~·e \oy haonf '5 Entry-level position in 213/697-134Saft6 pm. pick up. Cash964-4224 -sou venirs. Indian d t ' c II Bob · Clm well-established firm 1---------•I For Sale -Seiko di ve artifa cts, a ntiques & 77~-l~;7s a . RECEr110NIST resrunsibiUlies. Duties • l;M-Must have strong typin& DOG TRAINlNG watch. good to 1 so thousands of collectible With or without typing inc ude bkkpg, co~· Rapid growth has creat· & gr ammar skills. Full Obedience/Problem meters, in xlnt cond items too numerous to 1!'>,asekeeper /Com pan ion "1.'1\ve in or out. PART-TIME needed. Top pay. Tem· trac ts, tLping.k</ · ed IMMEDIATE open-lime.Applyinpersonto: Solving. 751_8967 mention. OC Fair Receptionist. It typing. porary & full lime Call 60wpm > mar e mg ings in our busy stock Mr. Fuentes at Robert AAA DOG TRAINING grounds. CM. enter gate good on phones, approx TodServicesat979-8900. coordination Xlnt room Will issue and Bein, William Frost & 953-!1344 Genuin e Colombian 3A,offArtingtonSt. ~ 83.1-2000. -- fto~sekeeper to care for 'Qlderly lady , 5/dys 20 hrs per wk. Beautiful growth potential & good stock parts as well as as-Associates, 1401 Quail ~~~~~~~~~ EMERALDS, only S20 TV, Radi .... RESTAURANT salary. 30-4o hrs/wk. semble kits for release St .. Newport Beach --waterfront ofc United Sandw1"ch Maker hrs Send resume to 1278 to production. 0~uires ---------each! ,,.,,8688 Hirr.t, s~ 8098 Yacht Brokers of Ca. GI e PO BOX 48 ·~ Easter pups. AKC, .....,. n week . 4-5 hrs daily 9ran ge area Call w· 7105 morns. only __ 7A M 3PM Mon -Fri, enneyr 1 year stock-room ex-Wolter/Woiltrftt Bichon Fnsepups. -----••••••••••••••••••••••• 63_1_·3_133 _____ 646-8883 Laguna Beach CA 9'2651 perience, preferably in Apply btwn 9AM & &tS-4377. MachiHry 8071 Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr ,_..,. '1,_. · electronics and some ex-l2PM. Charlie's Chili, ••••••••••••••••••••••• wrnty. Free delivery lna4g":'r';':f~ceatsmall, R~i:~~~!~ F/T retail, ~cretary periertnceouldwith~obmplu,t'{ 3001 Redhill, Bldg. #2, SpringerSpaniels,18mos DeWall 9" tablesaw, $148 646-1786. ~\Jsekeeper. English 's'Peaking, Uve-m. must So TITLE SECIET"'IY repo s w """ e Pu . Ste. 1226, CM. 9216216 old. M & F, spayed & stee. I cabinet mounl, RCA XL-lOO 21 .. color, friendly mlg co near days. exp. preferred, "' neut, shots, super friend· d I $175 673 ll619 Coast Plaza. Phone, typ-x Int benefits Ca JI Im med. opening with l THIS IS AN WA.rTIESS/W AJTEI ly. love kids, love to play ra 18 arm · -·--$200. Quasar 19" color. be good with children. ~·es 9 & 5. Lovely home "M beach with pvt room mg, filing, figures, etc. 770-1677 ask for Larry. yr. minimum exper . Gd. EXCELLENT Maturt;. Pnvate Club. Frisbee & swim, s10 ea Misc•Uaneous 1080 $100. S59·UY75 Good benefits.545-7101. company benefits. Call: OPPORTIJNITYTO Interviews Thursd~y. or bsl ofr. Ken Smith. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------ J,.. bath. Salary neg Call Mldays . (714)760-1686 or 96 2 · 2 0 4l ; Sa ti S u n (213)592-2624 ~USEK EEPER live A for elderly woman on >irknds. 499-5562 114s1PR/Co...,.;;.-Refined-over SO for older ..,...riler. Small home on &By. own room & bath ~ght work. live 1n, must ..1R'ive, no smoking. Send ~ume to P.O. Box 403, C"orona Del Mar, 92625 Part Tine C CMMMiftg Y OMfh Ccrrien Adults with outstanding attractive personalities to spend 15 hrs per week counseling youth ages 10-15 Evenings & Weekends Available. $75 pe r wk . Cal l 2 30-S: 30pm. Mon thru Fri 642-4321 ext 343 Ask for Lori. Ore1R1pCoott Daitv rilot 330 W . day Street Costa Mesa. Ca. ~URANCE, property. E q u a I o p p o r t . ~ s u a 1 t y c I e rk I Employer secretary. Personal --- Jerry MiUer,S58-ll14 to 8EGlNACAREERIN 11 ·4PM. 1801 Bayside 8Sl·"'JVW>aft..6. a-~ Panasonic Ster eo Sales s t up an appointment """" .LoYe ~ AM t FM turntable 8 trk e · A GROWTII Dr. CdM. ~el1um Bouquets de-recorder + tapes $200. AH EXCmNG STEWARTTITI.E ORIENTED . Saluki dog, free 4 yrs. 1 d Perfect fo r SALESOPPTY. 900N.Broadway, COMPANY Warehouse /delivery old/needs good lovmg rvere . 675·5653aft.Spm We are entering a SantaAna person for party rental home. AKC Should be eve~yoc~ 6'7~4419 loah&McrN tremendous new field of E O.E. M/F Excellent company paid re . Ptr, apply 2025 run everyday 546-893.5 John Wayne Tennis Club Eqtti,....... entertainment that is ~~~~~~~~~ benefits.~cludi~gdeftal Ne portBlvd,C.M. Family membership ••••••••••••••••••••••• !~:e~k~~f~:t~~a~~ SECRETARY P/time, 20 :·:~:.~.':~~~';P~Y ~~ ~ars~;~i i':se~or ..:al!.h~ !-J5~~~/ncl transfer GeMral 9010 oriented person who has hCra.ll"'!. kc. hGen_snl. °'c~~~~ti~sy person or call: h C 11 B b $175/080. (714)963-1758 ---•••••••••••d•d•1••·.~··k•.•rt•• a desire for above mi>-mosp ere. a o · •---p a u I 8 I a i n e KAYAK pa e "' S I average income. You theSea.673-3805 I :t 957-0536. -fn.etoY• 8045 Henn 24x48" rramed Fiberglass.goodsbape must be ,...........,able & ••••••••••••••••••••••• oil-Tahiti Cove. SSOO S~ 546-2674 ..-.~· Secretary, F IT , Tues-TR•VEX •NC WORD PROCESSOR · d' · I 2X4' confident in your ability .-o .... -..c_ N.B. Law Firm. Call Bual mg matena S· s. 673-6223. lo communicate with Sat. General office 3180Redhil1Ave. chicken wire. corigated others & have dependa· duties. pvt country club. Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 Nikki · 9M-2411. sheet m etal. U·HAUL. ble transportation. We Call 644-5404. (S.D. Fwy& Paularino) 7JG.S205 will train if necessary ~-----(714) 546-7781 Mercltc.clM -------- Excell. fringe benefits. Secretary/Receptionist Equal Opp Emplyr M/F ••••••••••••••••••••••• Terrier Pup, fem 7 mos. Apply al: Teleprompter for growing C.M. firm. ~~~~~~~~~IA.aff•H 1005 Benjie type. Housebrkn. of Newport Beach, 901 Must be gd typist. ••••••••••••••••••••••• loves everybody w lSth St.. Newport Posess good phone STRUCTURALDE.5IGN WAMTmTOIUY 957·5743aft.S 14' outboard, fiberglass & CHI NOOK Fireplace, wood . $200. 631-1710 or wood burning, never _97_4_·_1205_ used. New $582, sell SJOO. . 536-3100 aft 6PM , Sat. & loah, Mm.1tecatc:•/ wknds. S.niu 9020 REDWOOD 2x6't ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach skills Xlnt salary, DRAFTING benefits & growth poten-Newport Beach office I b u Y 0 I d g u n s · Lovable Coyote/Shep M. 675-6110 diamonds, ivory, jade & 18 mos, great w/kids, ttal. (714)54().6955. ---------1 collectibles. Call (714) Obed . trained. 536-1140 ..lites. Established agen-PART TIME Person 'l' . Corona del Mar. needed in Book pasteup. I~~~~~~~~~ • 8650 Mon & Tues. No exp. 1 SALES S4S,XIiit decking. New load-18,000' in from mill. ~/It. C.M. 645-9137 X127 anytime. Marine Electrician Design/install/repair Qual. worlt. 549-2520eve INSURANCE Agency nee. Apply: 1660 Placen· COOIDINATOI service rep; comm'I. tiaAve.,C.M. Direct phone contact J.&9esacct.handling.75% I•--------• with distributor & ~c ., 25 % field. Un-PArt-Time customer. Involves or- ritinC, service sales STUDENTS der placement, entry. & s . Car ~xpense , HOMEMAICEltS follow-up for standard lary, comm. Min . 3 Earn extra money, catalog items. Valuable . c:opam'l. underwril-working p/time in your training provided. esper. Must have F own home, introducing Pleasant working en· C ti Or"""e •·LA v1 ronment in Irvine. c. -"' · · the New Daily Pilot to I ti Call Contact Jeanette Hal es. · • The Orange Coast Area! Diane Bullock Set your own hours! Call Belden Corp. Electronic 0 E Division. ~1438. Start· 9560 E. . . . Weekdays between 4pm $ S / •. '"'"' .c.... mg: 1,()()(). 1100 mo. K m6pm.~~·-~anitorlal I~~~~~~~~~ Sales ~ AilM.IDMAH _........._ GREATHOUIS c:The f loor s hining r.._,.,....., ~ speclallata Deeds relia· Experienced counter ·bleperaonstoworkP/T, person for prinlshop. 9AM-2PM 7 a JD • l 0 a m . Full time. 0 .C. Airport or wltdays/wltends clean-area. Appointment: 4PM-9PM • •SECIET.AIUES• * Sec /T'70/ Acct.Sl8.000 Acct /Deg/MfgS24,oOO GOICustomersS13,200 Exp. Consultants Ours Liz Reinders Agency 4020 Birch F.at '64 EOE Newport 1833-81901 Free SECIETAIY Top professional real estate office now in- terviewing for secretarial position. Must be experienced. able to handle busy phones. Call Redhill Realty, 673-7300, ask for Walt. inaflpoliahmgWenoors 557-9212. Ask for Mrs . in the Westminster area. Kuusk. Newport Sta· • Must have car, great for tioners Inc. J oin the Los Angeles ---------Times Circulation Team SECRE.TARY adenu or retired in-i--------- viduala. (714)529-9506 ting .O.E. OffHt~ ar.11.""---------1 E x p e r ' d . 2 n d J .6. ..._.ITORS Presapersc.. Goss Com· An munity 4 unit. Apply: • ~da71 or eves. Exp or 1860 Placentia Ave., . ~~!~· '3.7~.SON/h)oB. C.M . ...,._.,.,OD .,,.p. . . -------- .m4. PIT truc.k & equipment Jr .... J.,O,_J_N_t_h_e_b_e_s-t --J-0-in-1 washer. 4 daya, 20/hrs uller Brush. Xlnt. week. United Rent All. utnia for p /\i me 1_C_.M_. '4_5-07_60_. ___ _ rls. We1tmlnalerJ • unl. Valley area. PWUC llLATIONS P /T AK r« raort COO· doe. GOOD phone voice. Santa Ana olc. S4.00 hr. 50-8137 .... btateSal• Eaperieniced N•ll .,. needed t.o wortE with e1'· ecullYe level cllent1. llut la.aw Jlf'OT• veck retord. You wm be workinf wHb pro· fatloUI ..eodatet. Our otflce.tt .. : •Bett beeelt--Uoe •Ubir~ .... ,, ........ ~ ean_,_.,,., WaaH.......,,,,...,_ & adapt your ·work sc h edule t o your lifestyle. Work Shrs/day in a Tlmea Circulation sales office near your - home & have more time for your family, studies, or leisurely periods. We pay hourly wages & commissk>ns. LOS ANGELE.5 TIMES 1375 Sunflower Ave. C.M. S4(>.0301 Equal Opportunity EmPloytt SALIS Imm.cl. put tilM open· ln& for Reade r Ad repMMQl.ativefor inside 1a .. 1 podlon. Od. c:om· pany beMntt. Apply In J"flOD~ Peqny1aver , lMO Pleceatla A11e .. C.11. llon-Fri., 1-SPll fMM Newport 8-dl leedlnl Jewelen ........ run time £mplo1•• well vtfMd ID ua. • olftff ~ww.1ta,.- 1Dtlud1D1 lebftaJ. no . eYenlnp. CaU1'7N*M; lellliil ~ wtUa a PEIS~ DIPARTMIMT SECIETAIY GINUAL OfftCI SECUTAllAL O,..NG CAUTODA.Yl 714'Mt·7tl I ~SICFOI TMllMtl AYAILAIU 24"°"*5 70AYSAW• Super visor, noon duty.. 972-4926&askforDane. Andersen School , NB Ts. Thurs. 11 :15·1 :15. $3.95/hr. 76().3490 Good home needed for b B ) 4 White Porcelain statues male Pit Bull. Free to PRAM (Ba Y uggy from China SSOea. 10 Like New $125 s ma II e r Porcelain good home.&'1·5958-631-033.5 Boat Refurbishing, ex pert paint, varnish, re· pairs. Reas. rates 496-8954. eves. Teacher wanted. Aft. school. Sdays/wk. lPM· 6PM or 3PM -6PM . Certificate or exper. Call Susan. 640-8820. statues from China Gold carpeting ll'xi3'. s-c.-hwinn _V_a-rsi-ty_l_O-_s_pd 1'°:'.!:a~:.~ 9030 SlOea. Japanese Doll in 673-0194 ln~ $95 Also •..-glass case (mint c:ond) bike. x t ' . so ••••••••••••••••••••••• $125. 3 band hooked wool hn~ 8050 girl's ba a seat bike. Inn. Tender, 8'4" hyp. throw rugs S20ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• S30. G.ou clubs, comp!. New in box. Sells $849, 536-9439 eve. please or * * I BUY * * set. Wilsoo woods & Uni· sac. $399. (714)754-1732 que irons. w/bag, $175 dys. TEACHEltS all day Sunday. Good used Furniture & 968·5923 __:. _______ _ GIOUP IEP 1920's walnut burl double Appliances-OR I will sell --------loah, Poww 9040 And ESL being hired bed <no mattress). very or SELL for You Surfb<>ard. brand new. ••••••••••••••••••••••• now for employment for . SUS 962-l96l MA.STYS A.UCTIOH Schroff, 6'3". Pd S300, Will trade Big Bear Lake summer 1.1181 with slu· ,_n_ic_e_, __ . -----, asking Sl.50, 581-4669 aft o r ocnfront Mobile dent exchange program. Applla11Ces 10 IO 646· • 133-9625 5pm. Home or trln for sport Call between 8am-6pm ... .!;;................. fishing boat-31'. 499-3816 Mon -Sat 966·1709 or HARBORAREA Corner G r o up (2 Rancho San Joaquin 551-3480 APPLIANCE SERVICE bedscovers, storage Athletic Club couples IEADY FC)a ASHI ... Webuyusedappllances ~1,stercomertblwalnut Membership-o ffer T rojan 25' Expr ess Teacher ··We sell recond, guar. fm1sh ) Sl50545-9223 752·0254 Cruiser, fully equipped, Mature Teacher's Aide appliances. 54&-3077 fatho. live bait tank, wanted for Irvine pre-•---------Antique Vanity, very nice FAMILY membership O/R , VHF, & much school.552-741M. llUY APPLIANCES $350.SS9-63S3or John Wayne Tennis more. Less lhan200hn ... • -957 .,,.,,. 761·2004 Club. $1600. 714-485-8700 8GPH at 20 knots. 3 boat Teacher. Pre·School, &A:S .,......, ------------------1 owner. Sacrifice $1..5,000. some exp. Benelits. F/T. GE rrostrree refrig, cop-Coffee table (Walnut WAMTID Dys S40-l633, Evu ~2550 ood d Sl"" form.lea) t25, Couch SSO BabySlroller 67 ~~ · pert.one. g con • ~... d d 5._., Teoc .... Dlrec._ """-8378 unique, gpo con . 751-81187 -962·4974 aft5 · '62 Owens TahlUan. '40, Exp'd.-dynamic. ECE Coppertone apartment & Elem. F.d. units req'd. sile refriger ator, SIS. M2·041f 495·5638 ·-~-------• T~ 2 refrit, $75 ea, run good. PIX OPaAToal 823 E . 18th St. Apt. F, Pleasant wortdn& condi· C.M. MS-J.S13 Uona in exc.iUq Airport , f •. u ·t 2 years new western style leather couch, cbair, ot· tom an & 3 mat.china end tbls + lamp $295 759-0850 New Spring Air King Si Bed$400. 631·2'23 complex. Some light O Kee e • .. err• J•S booltkeepin1. typin&. stovew/centerpiddlelr New 8 secUooal earth fJulble hours. Op· actJ. broUer, aood cood, tone luxury sofa set. portunlty for advance· ""_'15_.13_l ·_Z"21 ______ , Cost Sl,800, Best offer. ment. Seeomc:e ,..,, MOWAIDQll•r•t CaU MZ-545'18 558-5111 . Dove• Quall SU. NEWPORT BEACH 13Wlll TBAVD.AODITS =-~-::.:.::1 · btt>eltt.. N.8. 75HW uUormtr. anU N .B. slip. 612-4M4. 44 PACIFICA, '79/250 b.ra. u.ae. AU factor)' op- tlou. Slt7.SOO. u PACIFICA, del. lllO. Never used, $177 .soo. 8otb localA!ld SoutMut. Fruer Yacbta, ~- ·77.13• Mako. loect.d tor rt1bh11, •nter cont, '71-215 IQ> J-.. 08, tta,000/olfer, lmmat. t'li.tSJ.O,~ '71 10' W&Lt.CRAP'T w/trlr. 175 HP evlorUdt o~. vhf, • muea. mon. lmmae, $1900 d•1• Ml:.f'I ........ "!' 11· .,....., 'Tl: led,;,.,., an.......,~-111•1, rwc, , . .u~••t .. u. .... / I fTl:IOO'f; .... '78 Dodie Club Cab truck w/self contained 12' camper. Full equip. Xlnt cond. askina $7900/0BO 645-0946 a ft 4pm . wkdays. '76 COLEMAN TENT TRLR. Sleeps 6, us«! 4 times. stove, sink, xtra canvas. (714)995-8989 MotoriMcl.... t I 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW PUCH MOPEDS $479. Finance -low as $22.86 mo. SSO dwn. MOPEDLAND 631-2504. 225S Harbor, CM 1978 Honda Hobbit. only 600 mi, xlnt cood. Asking $385. Call after 4pm 646·3175. BARWICK DATSUN ',on Juan C op"t''1Nl 831-J Jli * C .... MU'IO LUV'/>MSNb with dual rears! Ideal ·ror landscapers, etc. <Ser. 605&). OMLY $6491 Mo'°'o!C-/ Sc ' .................. !!.~~ Hoi:v!~Qucr.~ '15 Honda 750, full dress, NEWPORT BEACH A-1 cond. Only 12K. Must 133-0555 sell. S48-6250aft 6pm. 1--------- '79 Ford F250 Ranier 4x4, '71 DT250 ENDURO AM /FM casa stereo, PS, Recently bored, M X T UI hl AC h e a d , e 1 p a n s i o n PBOOO. A ~ llt l w tnioo' chamber '400. Call after 17· mi. new, · Johnnie 642-1252 5pm, before 7pm . 1---------1 545·250\ Matt. Aluminum Camper shell ---------for sale, short bed '79KAWASAKJKZ-40070 T oyota P .U . s ide mpglikenew&rxlra's. widows, nip window in Sl,050 546-0739 back, $400. Call after 1979 Honda Express like _2_:_30..:.p_m_S44-__ 3300_. __ _ ., .. • -' ,. 1~ . ' -. VW ~ORSCHE·AUDI ~s E. Cout Hlway · at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673-0900 Premium prices paid for any used car < roreiao oc domestic I in aood~tioo .. SeeU First! .!888 I larbrn Hl\d ~.'o:-\a \lt-~a ~111 0:1:10 •CAIS WAllfED• 1...m.gorMt $25-$300 CASH FrNTowlng o,..w ....... C .. Ed. new650mi. S2SO 964-4413 '77 CHEVY LUV. chrome (7141191. "5 17 wheels. white tires, 1----------- am /fm s tereo cass, '78 IT175 Good Condition 1100 mi S400 979-5173 or ~0273 $29'15 646-0010 ......... , c rted ---------1••····················· y_. 9570 Alfa IOMeO 9705 Honda Express II 170 miles, mint cond. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $400 SSl· 1149 '7f C9'250HOMOA With new tOp end. Very very clean.191--4919 Glen COMPACT TRAILER 19'13 Calafia Luggage Rack 360 Hitch $425. 495-0068 '79 Harley dnr Classic 80cu: in. CB FM rad. xtraa lo ml, lUte new Must Sac. t5885495-0048 '77 HONDA 750-K x /cond Ill< ml. New tirell·chain· v ........ UMdC.S!I lt7tFordY• c ....... C.B .. 1tereo, air, power steering, immaculate, low miles. (1M282216) $6395 fa r i n g $1250 ()BO 1 944.0319 IACllM *"1 76 HO HUSKY. $600. -~ &JHD MOO Mi-5008 '71 Dodie Van Con· W.... H-. S./ venlon equip. '2,000 ml, a..t/S..... f 160 ,_k200 __ ._546-_3B37_. ___ , ······················· .._w-.. 9sto WICAMllLI. YOUI&•. 5S-IJIM RENT ; 12' hax. mtr home. Slpl •• Nit-coot. U76/wk. + I• ml. NC).1115. ,.....,..,....,.. ,,,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAMl•t c .......... '~ Cal J .. Hot-er MlleL* c ............. ·~1171 COMMH l • HfVllOl f; ,, ·."" 'J 1l('\ LEASE DIRECT! 599 OV.ER INVOICE SALE ON ALL 21 Os IN STOCK! Sale ends Tuesday, April 7, 1981 at close of business. Copy ol ad must be presented at time of purchase '79YWIUS Dynamite 7 rge 4 speed in origina brown &r bei&e. It's a sharpie! (1571022) $6''5 JIMMAllMO VOLISWAC.IM 18111,Beach Blvd. 142-2000 '71 Squareback. Good transportation. Runs ereat. 631·78'19. _________ '69 Squareback Ne w 9750 engine, trans. brakes . radials. $2780 Ca ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• 148-8058 POISCHEl979 ~------~--- 9'28. Fully loaded. 15,400 orig. mi .. xlnt cood. in· side & out. Blue book wholesale is S216,375; our s a le price is $26,775. (200368). Ask for Duke or Mike. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR Bl VO CO~TA M('>A 642 0010 '77IUICIC LISAlal CUSTOMCOUPI 35,000 ooe owner mUet oo thia lollded beauty. (1%159) 1975 BUICK LE SABRE 4DOOR Automatic . rad io. heater, power steering, power brakes. air. tilt .. cruiee. vmyl top. door locks. (802NJP) _$2395 REASON BUICK '10'1 H . Grond Sonto Ano S4 7-9 I IS 1979' Chevy Malibu Coupe Automatic , radio . heater. power steering. power brakes. air, cruise, tilt, vinyl \op. sport wtteels (548XWO) $4995 SB US NIT! We have •Sood selection or NEW & USED Chevrole~! COMMEll . CHEVROLET ..'.~ lt.1rt.1r llh ol l l i:--1 \ \1 ~" \ 546-1200 '76MOM?.A 2+2, 4 cy l . good m ileage, a /c, radio. transferrable warranty. SS7·3S21 or75&-0060. '78 Impala station wgn, air, pa,. pb, xlnt cond, $2850. S4S-6737 '78 Malibu. silver . lo mileage, good cond. ~3636. 1964 Malibu SS. AM/FM cassette, Sl,200. Good transportation Call An s w er Ad #359, 642·4300, 24 hours '71LTDrcri frOOIOJ() .., .......... 'Tl FOrd ,,._. lfort. JS mPC 'cUltoaa wfNlell 4 apd 91;550, 1• •• u.c• . "·· ..................... -* 77UMCOLM " Jet black tOWli MCladl Ever y1opttonl U ,oo& mlles .. So tbarp , ~t'a a<.\ry! C.-.SX> ., .Mttl JIMM•D40 YOUSWAalM . 1S111 Beadl Blvd. 14Z..JOOO Merc..y ""' ·····················<-ORANGE <*JNTY'S · ,.., .. LINCOLN-MERCURY " DEALERSHIP ·~ "?t.tlJ•- LINCOi..N·MERCUIN .. 16·18 Aut.QCenter Dr. SD Fwy-bake Foret\ ellit IRVINE 13~7000 '78 Marquis waaon, 9 pass . loaded. New Michelina. Xlnt cond. $4000. Owner, 67s-n&l 78 Mercury Zepber Z7, i.: mi, PS, PB, auto, vin top. $3300. ~5089 PP ......... ,,if ......................... MUSTANGJI Auto, A/C, &o mi. S2500 or bst ofr. 8-1630 'SS Must 2+2 219, PIS. PB, ·new tires, reas. 494.4533 1968 Ford Mustana. v-1. R~d exterior. black vtnyl interior. New steel belted tires, rum ,ooc1 .. $1495. 642-UZl, Ht 210 or evenings~ 70'9. '70 Mustan1 Ma~b . 1,· Cleveland 351 eq, oril . owner. Stabliur bar. shaker box. $3500/080. S46· 13S7 we mesa. ----- ***·* 1976 DODG.E ASP~N WAGON Automatic, radio. '-*· pow9r atMrl~, power brllkM, air, tilt, l uggage rackl (275PCP~ . ' Mid -Week ·SP ECIAL 1979· '..-Pontiac Le·Mcins · 4 clOor. .. e Cytthdef. automauq, radio, haattr; pow•r 1Mflft9, ~.,. br&Jc .... , elr. (UZVZN). , · -!· . . . BRAlll NEW . 1980 PLYMOUTH HORIZON $ Equipment incrudes 4 cyl. engine, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio, wsw tires & more! (176470). 12 month. 12,000 mile w~rranty included! 1980 . CHRYSLER CORDOBA $ 1979 DODGE COLT $ Equip~nt includes an economical 4 cylinder engine , automatic transmission , radio,. custom interior, radial tires, rear window defogger & more! (304846). Used. POI FLllT SALIS 6 LI AS I INFOIMA TIOM, CALL ......... 0 ., .· 54 1934 NEED CASH?1?~ -.. ,., ........................ .... _.,..c:.. .......... .__....,..,. ...................... '!9•.-..it SERVICE HOURS: Ma•...; ..... ~ 7:30 ..... to 5:30 ,_ . Sala •1 1:06 && to 1:00 p.a. Sii OUR SlltVICI DIPARTMIMT AIOUT RIMTIHG A •1 I CHaYSLM OI PL YMOUTM. 1980 CHRYSLER LE BARON NOW ONLY 1975 PLYMOOTH VALIANT SEDAN 6 cyl. engine, automatic trans.. power steering, radio & more! (270!.. YJ). 5 1995 1978 FORD FAIRMONT WAGON Automatic trans .. air cond .. power steering & brakes. AM-FM stereo. wsw tires & more! (111UZT). s3295 1978 PLYMOUTH HORIZON smAN 4 spe4Kt trans .• air cond .. pwr. steering & brakes, bucket seats, AM-FM cassette. waw tires & mor•I (105253). 53595 1979 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COOPE -. Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. steering & brakes. radio, split Nat, vinyl top. wsw tires & morel (532WWC). · 53795 1979 DODGE PICK UP W , automat~ transmission, powef stieering & brakes, buck•t Mats, mega & mor.i (1P97893). $ ... 4 DOOR SEDAN 6 cylinder engine , automatic trans., air cond .. power steering , power brakes, power seat. power windows, speed control, AM-FM stereo, vinyl top, wsw tires & m°'-'e! (606ZGT). Used . 1976 FORD PINTO WAGON 6 cyl. engine, air cond., automatic trans .• AM-FM stereo. luggage rack. rnigs & morel ~RLV). 52295 1979 CHRYSLER LE BARON SEDAN Automatic trans .. air cond., pwr. steering & brakes, vinyl top. AM·FM radio. wsw tires & morel (254XVN). s 1979 CllYSLER L.oeded with options Inc. auto. trans., air cond., pwr. stffring·b~plll le8t & windows, tilt, cruise, ~-l=M casMtte, wlr• wtteel covera, wsw tires & morel (964VOZ). ·s.995 1979 MAZDA. RX7 COUPE Equipment lncludff an AM<™ casaette. Extra c .. an earl (628VU~). SAYE \ • A~W ........ BEST ACTOR AND ACTRESS GET TOGETHER AFTER ACADEMY AWARDS CEREMONIES Robert De Niro won for "Aagilng Bull," SIHy Spacek for "Coal Minar'• Daughter" Huntington man killed in car crash A 21-year-old Huntington Beach man was killed in W estmlnster when the auto in which he was rid- ing struck another car, leaped a curb and crashed through ll brick wall, police said. Four others were reported in- jured in the incident. Police said Randy Mendoza Martinez. a passenger in the 1972 Chevrolet that struck the wall, was pronounced dead at the scene. The driver of that auto. Albert Martinez Cno relation), 18, of Midway City, was reported in critical condition today al Foun- tain Valley Community Hospital. Two other passengers an the Chevrolet, Adrian Bravo, 19, of Westminster, and Rocky Barton, 16, of Midway City, both were re- ported in fair condition today at Fountain Valley. Westminster police officer , Earle Graham said Martinez was westbound on Bolsa. Avenue ap- proaching Brookhurst Street al 10 :30 p.m. Tuesday when he r struck tbe rear of a westbound Volkswagen driven by Farhad Roldn, 22, of Fullerton. Flremen usej1 heavy equlpnaent to free the four people trap~ in- side the auto, the officer said. llockio, the driver of the Volkswagen, was taken to Westminster Community Hospital for treatment of minor injuries. · Graham aaid that an invesUga- tlon is conUnuing. • Building blasted · SAN SAIN ADOR, El Salndor (AP) _. A bOmb bu d .. ~ed ClUb•'s otncea ln ~ J.keOry offlce bUUdlng and tnoeklii out = ACl"Oll the street ... the ae.J llotel. ' I Mystery accepter nn Oscar 'tlJ,ief' HO{LYWOOD <AP) -The "mystery man" who accepted the Oscar for Best Animated Short Film was a Hungarian film official who had authoriza· tion from the film's producer - but not the Academy -lo ac- cept the award. For a few hours, it might have appeared an unknown had bounded up on stage to accept the award for "The Fly," pro- duced in Hungary by Ferenc Rofusz. But Regina Gruss, pubUcist for Marble Arch Films, said today there never really was a mystery about it. "I was hostess for Istvan Dosai, head of Hungarofilm, who headed the Hungarian de~ga­ tion to the Osca.rs. He had been cabled by the producer of 'The Fly' to accept the award for him. He told that to Academy of· ficials, but they told him nol to a~ept the award unless his name was announced. "But when the award was an· nounced, Alan Arkin looked out in the audience and Istvan de- cided to go up to the stagef' Ms. Gruss said. "He went back.stage and posed for photographs and attended the ball afterward. He gave me the Oscar: and I'm dropping il by today to get il en· grav~." Sarno said Rofusz was not scheduled to attend the cere· monies at the Music Center. But just as Arkin and co-presenter OTHER OSCAR PHOTOS, STORIE&-810 Margot Kidder were announcing that the Academy would accept for Rofusz, a mustachioed man bounded onto the stage. Dosai made a short accept· ance speech, posed for lhe ob· ligatory photographs and de· parted out the door with the golden statuette. Sarno said Dosai's request to accept the statuette was turned down because Rofusz could not obtain a visa to leave Hungary. "The Fly," a film by Pan· nonia of Budapest, won over "All Nothing," produced by' Frederic Back, and "Hlstory of the World in Three Minutes Flat," produced by Michael Mills. HB man's wounded • fatbe,r impro~ing ' By PAT&IC& &ENNBDY °'*~ ....... Karl Schnelder, "shot"· by bl· Jacken ol an Indonesian jetll.ner ln Baopot, Tbal19.nd $\ulday while trytDI. to escape, bu re- 1atned CCJUCIOUU"8 aad la ln aatilf actcl') eondltioe. "He's~ weU ud coUtbe moved to a bOljtltal lD SlatQOl'e this Week," said bll IOD, Karl SeJanelder Jr., 21, of H~ Beaeh. Schneider made bis tscape tr)', a Briton succeufuUy ran to freedom. I Early '1\lesday monlnl, four of th• five hijacken were ~ and the rutb . wounded u In· donell• eomm..-1tormed tbe lfouDd_ed jttllller and freed the rema•mna 15 boltaau. wal • around WASHINGTON ( AP ) -A beian a busy mornine ta~kllng high-spirit¢ President Reagan, White House affairs. out of the intensive care unit, Is • , walking around and conducting Although be Is so~ewbat un· •·business as usual" in a suite at cor:nfortable:, the _president sl~pt George Washington University quite well, .said Dr. Dam~l Hospital, his doctor and aides Ruge, .~eagan s personal physi· said today. /Ci8n. He h~s been out of bed They said the president stayed .and walked. up until 11 p.m. with his wife The move to the suite was ac· Nancy Tuesday to watch the complished Tuesday night, one first hour of the televised day after the president and Academy Awards presentation,. three other persons were slept for four or five hours and wounded in a gunman's as- School fee ruled legal By STEVE MARBLE OI-o.llJ PllM S'-" School administrators along the Orange Coast agreed today that a Santa Barbara c041rt de- cision may clear the way for schools to begin charging stu- dents for participating in sports and other extracurricular ac- tivities. The ruling by Santa Barbara Superior Court Judge L. Donald Boden stated that charging stu· dent fees in public schools does not violate a state constitutional guarantee of a free education. The ramifications in Orange County. administrators suggest- ed, could be widespread and im- mediate. Dr. Howard Roop, an assistant s uperintendent in the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- t.rict, said bis school colleagues have been following the case and believe the decision "open.a some door11." Roop said the decision Is timely in Huntington Beach because school trustees, faced with lack of money, recently agreed to eliminate some sports, including surfing. and to close down school pools for three months each year. The result, said Roop, was a $322,000 reduction in sport and other extracurricular activities. He said administrators now will analyze the court rulinJ a,!ld pre- sent their findings to trustees. News of the cpurt decision was received warmly in Laguna Beach. where the school district has been charging sport partici- pants for two years. Bill Barnes. director of educa· tional services for the. Laguna Beach Unified School District. said without the court decision "it would have been devastating to • us. tt Laguna now charges students $45 for a single sport activity, $40 for a second sport and $35 for a third. "In districts like Laguna," said Barnes, "it Is essential that the court uphold the legality of the (fee> practice, because of the im· pact it would have had on our limited school finances." Officials from the Newport- <See FEE, P11e A.%> Brady can speak, see WASHINGTON <AP> White Hou s e press secretary James S. Brady. once given little chance of surviving a bullet wound to the brain, can speak and see and may be able lo sit up in bed within a few days, doctors said to· day. A morning report on his condition said the 40-year- old Brady can now move all four limbs and "con- tinues to improve'· but "remains in critical condi- tion." Physicians say Brady, shot during Monday's as- sassination attempt on President Reagan, may recover without severe permanent mental or physical impairment. County's 0 jobless rate dips Orange County's unemploy· ment rate declined sligbllY to 4.6 percent in February as about 1,400 new jobs were added, ac· cording to the state Employ· ment Development ~partment. The jobless rate was 5.1 per· cent in January based on the loss of 1.400 jobs from the month before. However, 3,600 new service- rel a ted jobs.,,_ in amusements, hotels and hospitals were added in February. The opening of the Anaheim Marriott Hotel pro· duced about 700 new jobs, of- ficials said. Meanwhile, jobs decreased somewhat in retail trade, gov· ernment, construction and non- def ense related manufacturing fields. The county's 4.6 percent job· less rate was the lowest in Southern California, according lo EDD sources. Los Angeles County's rate was 7.4 percent and San Diego County's was 7.3 percent. The stale rate was 7 .6 percent, orricials said. Bogus money ~us~ect held in Seal Beaeli A Signal Hill man was arrest- ed by Seal Beach police after be attempted to spend counterf ell $20 bills in the city. police re· ported. Seal Beach police Sit. Ron Lawsoo aald the man was turned over to Seeret Service a1ents, who withheld his identiflcalloo. Lawson said Seal Beach police were Upped oft by a bar owner who believed be bad received a bolus blll. He aald the $20 bills ail hive the same ·serial number: J42351810B. He md anyone re- celvlna a bill with um number should coat.act local pOllce. Six indieted GALVESTON, Texu (AP) - A Homt.cm. nuntn1 home cor-poraU. ad m emplof"' Nve bea 1lda.d IOI' lllunler ... tbl deathl of •Pt pedenta, a ata .. dlltrlct Judie ..,.. PNMiutcri said 1'ullda.1 tM cleadll at 1 Texas Qty ~ _. Oftid by Autumn HUii 0.ftlll<mt ~111t.wweall1....,._ .. "~ect, ......... ...,_ fenaee. sasaination attempt outside a Washington hotel. Whlte House chief of staff James A. Baker Ill said on tbe CBS-TV "Morning" show that Reagan signed some nomination papers Tuesday evening and an unspecified executive order this morning. When Baker and other aides finished a meeting with Reagan this morning, he was eating breakfast sitting in a chair. <See REA.GAN, Page A2) * * * Hinckley parents 'crushed' EVERGREEN, Colo. (AP) - The parents of John W. Hinckley Jr.. "just destroyed" by their son's alleged assassination at- tempt on President Reagan, hope to see him ··as soon as possible" but have no definite travel plans. their attorney says. John Hinckley Sr. and his wife. Joanne, stayed at their OTHER COVERAGE -M next·door neighbors' house all day Tuesday as 70 reporters as- sembled on the front lawn and gawkers drove slowly past. A statement released by counsel for Vanderbilt Energy Corp. said the elder Hinckley had "teQ'lporariJy relinquished his duties" as chairman of the Denver-based furn "because of a tragedy involving a member of his family." John ~inckley Jr., 25, who was arrested seconds a fter Reagan was shot in Washington, is being held at a Marine base in Quantico:--Va. The corporate statement did not mention any change for Scott B. Hinckley, vice president of operations for Vanderbilt and brother of John Jr. The father's move came amid confirmation that the Depart- ment of Energy was reviewing Vanderbilt's books. Jack Van- denberg, a DOE spokesman in Washington, said auditors met with Scott Hinckley in Denver on Monday. The Washington Star quoted an unnamed "White House of- ficial" as confirming that DOE auditors asked for an explana- tion of an overcharge when oil price controls were in effect between 1973 and 1981. The Star said DOE auditors told Scott Hinckley there was a possible penalty of $2 million for the overcharge. The Hlnckleys, through at- torney James Robinson, issued a brief statement Tuesday ex- pressing their "deep concern" for President Reagan and all those involved in Monday's shooting, including their son, John. It was confirmed in W asbington that the Hinckle)'$ had retained the law firm of millionaire defense attorney Edward Bennett Willia~ 811111 CIAIT IUTlll MosUy cloudy tonl1bt with ao percent chaoee of abowers, dimlnlsbln1 Thursday to 10 percent. Clearln1 with 1usty' northwest winds later Thursday. Lowa toa11bt '8 along the coast, 53 lnl.and. 11111111111 ... •• I =tY . Supporting cast Britain's Prince Charles (center) has selected the two young men flanking him · as supporters when he marries Lady Diana Spencer July 29. They happen to be his , brothers -Pf"ince Andrew (left) and Prince Edward. Andrew will carry the wedding ring and Edward will .. assist." Welfare revamping set Counly takes swps toward overhaul By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of -O.lly l"llet Sl.atf The Orange County Board of Supervisors bas taken steps toward overhauling the county's general relief welfare program. In action Tuesday, the board: -Called ror studies of the legality of applying a one-year residency requirement for rec1- pients; use of vouchers to third parties instead of direct cash payments. and of a proposed rule to prevent people who have quit or been fired from a job from applying for assistance for a three-month ptttiod -Ordered a one-Jear freeze on the maximum gE!leral relief payment or S240 per month. Two Bonin murder counts di.smissed At the request of defense at- torneys, a Superior Court judge has dismissed two or 14 murder counts in the Freeway Killer case against William Bonin. Judge William Keene also granted a defense motion to de· lay the start of Bonin's trial on the remaining 12 c ounts of murder. 11 of robbery and one E're• Pe,,e AJ REAGAN ..• ~ ·'It's really bus iness as usual ," said White H9 use counselor Edwin Meese Ill, who said the president had set up a "full-time omce" in his hospital suite. "The president is fully capa- ble of taking actions," Baker said. "We've had to cancel very few activities." Meese indicated on NBC-TV 's "Today" show that because of Reagan 's ''remarkable re· covery," he might be discharged from the hos pital early next week, sooner than originally ex· peeled. The White House said Reagan is starting to eat solid foods and is "in good condition, but is ex- periencing some pain and fatigue in response to his in· jury." Ruge said the president's vital signs remained normal. Reagan had trouble breathing, chest pain, falling blood pres- sure and was spitting yp blood when be walked into 'George Washington University Hospital after being shot, the New York Times said today. "He definitely was in a life- t b re ateni ng situation,'' the newspaper quoted Dr. Williard O'Neill as saying. ·'But he was very rapidly stabilized." O'Neill is a surgical intem who treated Reagan in the emergency room, the newspaper said <ltl a story from Washington by its medical writer, Dr. Lawrence K . Altman. O'NeW also said nearly two pints of blood "came out spoo- taneomly" when a tube wu in- serted in the pTesident's chest to draln air, blood and other fluids from the chest cavity, a st.and- a rd procedure for a chest wound. count ea ch o f sodomy and mayhem. Bonin's trilJI, slated to begin May 4, was rescheduled for Aug. 3. In urging the judge to drop t wo murder counts, defense law yer Earl Hanson argued that the prosecution had no special evidence linking Bonin, a 34- yea r -old truck driver from Downey, to the two killings. The murder counts that were dropped Monday Involved the deaths of Robert Wirostek, 18, of Newport Beach. whose body was found near Palm Spa.i.Sept.12, 1979. and an unidemmed young man whose body was found Nov. 30, 1979. in a Kern County re· servoir. Since 1972, 44 young men and boys, many believed to be hitchhikers. were tortured and killed, and their bodies dumped along or near freeways in the greater Los Angeles area. Authorities have said, however, that all the deaths may not be linked to the Freeway Killer case. Three other defendants re- m a in in the Freeway Killer cas e s after one committed s uicide and charges against another recently were dropped. Others charged are James Munro, 19, who once worked with Bonin; Gregory Miley, 19, and William Ray Pugh, 18, who first led authorities to Bonin. Benefit set J.. for HB baUet A fund-raising reception will be. conducted Saturday to benefit the newly formed Huntington Youth Ballet. The event will begin at 8 p.m. at the Huntington Academy of Dance, 8907 Warner Ave., Suite 259, Huntinpon Beach. A band, hors d'oeuvres, and a brief performance by Youth Ballet members w).11 be featured. Donation for the event ls $10 per couple, $6 per slngle. The Huntington Youth Ballet ls a non-profit organization formed to give student.a the opportunity to dance in public and to preware for pr~fesslonal careers. ' ORANGE COAST l1llyPllat Ctaat*d ...,,_,,. .... 71.,142·1111 '6Sl ot~ .,.rtmente 14Ml21 -Said a work-for-welfare pro· gram for able-bodied recipients should be expanded and stiffer sanctions imposed for those who do not show up for work assign- rrtents. • • ~ -Directed county social services officials to implement new eligibility requirements to apply to general relief appli- cants. The general relief program, under which "last resort" as- sistance is provided to persons who either do not qualify or are waiting for stat• of federal welfare assistance, has been in financial trouble since early March. when it was disclosed its budget had been exhausted. Since then, the board bas ap- proved $200,000 in budget transfers to keep the account solvent. An estimated $1 . 7 million more will be required to support the prograrll through June30,countyofficials said: Mrs. Penney dead at 67; rites slated A funeral service will be con· ducted Thursday for Eleanor S. . Penrtey. 67, of Huntington Beach, who died Tuesday at Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital. The service will begin at 6:30 p.m . al Pierce Brothers Smiths' Mortuary, 627 Main St., Hunt- ington Beach. with the Rev. Rick Ertel officiating. Mrs. Penney was the sister of Leo Farwell, the original owner of Farwell's For Flowers in dowotqwn Huntington Beach. A native of Oregon, she reslied in Long Beach prior to her move to Huntington Beach one year ago. Other survivors include her brother Leo Farwell and daughter Loretta Pittman of Hun- tington Beach. E'r•• Pqe AJ FEE ••• Mesa Unified School were morecautiou.9. Jean Harmon , an ad· ministrative assistant, said dis· trict leaders are pleased with the court decision bul are reluctant to start celebrating. "We wonder if this court de· cision in Santa Barbara would even be applicable (in Orange County?)," shesald. She said administrators will wait to see if the court declaion causes the state Attorney General'• office to chan1e state rules and regulation.a that pro- r hiblt charpg student.I fees IOI' takln1partln scbool activiti•. Ao administrator in the 1niDe Unified School Diltrict 1Ud ll'1 pouib1e that Irvine acbool tl'Ulteel will aak tbe state Board of EdueaUan to cbu1e tboM rules in lllhtaf tbe dec .. lon. Jerry Rail, u Irvine ldlool direct«, •tid cbarlina fees ii "baalcalJJ IOIDethinl we don't waat to do -we'll do it onl7 lt we baveto." He polnted out that du, to tM diltriet'• &meteer ftaaDdal Jle· . • "' lnhM'• .....,. ..... rtcwar Jll'Oll'•• ii mdlll' ...,, • 1tUd1 tiiattnelUdel CODtldwlllliD Off .... The Santa Barbera Clll ID-volvld the · sat& Barbara ..._ Sebool 1*trf«·w u. ,.._....°' cba~I• 1tudent1 Ill for pana ID .-acaniaur ud llon tbaa 1oolclaoOl 4litlldl • UM 1U19 alnadJ 1111,_. _. , ... ---·~· .. ' Offer save11 mineral company •• 81 KEITHTVBE& Of*DliltY~ .... A white knilbt, la the parlance of hilb financiers, ls a company thatsteP1 ln to prevent an unwant· ed takeovel' of one concern over another by offering a sweeter do~-That's essentially what hap-> pened late Tuesday when Irvine· baaed Ji1uor Con>. came to the rescue of New \'ork'a St. Joe Minerals Corp. throu1h a mer1er :fJi:!ment worth about $2. 7 Tbe unwanted 1uitor in tbu case is Jo1eph E. Seagram I. Sona Inc. of New York. a sube.~dlary o.t Laguna atWmey \ mps V.S. ethics By JORN NEEDBAJI Ot .. o.NY ...... ...., Tbe attorney for former hijack hostage Craig Clymore says ap- parent behind-the-scenes deal- ing by U.S. State Department of- ficial! lo Damascus; Syria, pre· vented bis client's scheduled return home Tnesday. Reached by telephone today, Laguna Beach attorney Ron Kreber said he is upset over what he called "decef>Uon and questionable ethics" on the part of State Department officials in dealing with Clymore. Clymore, a former Lat~ Forest resident, ...reportedly signed a waiver of surren'1er Saturday in Damascus with the condition that be be allowed to return to Los Angeles, where be would turn himself over to federal drug enforcement authorities. Kreber ChJll'ges that two hours arter Clymore signed the waiver, U.S. State Departm~t officials visited the Syrian court where the signing took place and made arrangements to renege on the negotiated terms of bis client's surrender. Clymore is being held at the Citadel prison in Damascus pending his return to this coun- try where be faces federal drug smuggling charges. The Laguna Beach High School graduate was one of more than 100 lliostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner hijacked by three opponents of the Pakistan government Marc;h 2 and even- tually flown t-0 Damascus, where the hostages were released. Hours after his release, news or a grand jury indictment ac- cusing Cly moTe of being the ringleader of a hashish and heroin smuggling ring was re· leased by the U.S. Attorney's of· fice in New York. The 24-year-old Orange Coun- ly resident wu later arrested at hl• Damascus hotel by Syrian authorities and taken to prison. InlUaUy he refused to sign waivers for hia surrender, but after a visit by Kreber last week, be agreed to sign. Kreber said as be and Clymore were preparing to leave for the United States Sun- day, be was told that his client would not be released and would remain in Syrian custody for the Ume being. Kreber said he had no idea when Clymore would be re- leased. He said he suspects U.S.· law enforcement officials intend to fly his client directly to New York· where be faces the smug- gling charges. -.. We gave the State Depart· ment all the information on our flight schedules and arranged for Clymore to be arrested upon his arrival in Los Angeles," Kreber said. Counseling chief quits Robert K. Hopson has retired as . director of the West County Counseling Center, a post he has held since the center was founded in 1975. Formerly known as the counseling department of the Huntington Beach Community Clinic, the West County Counsel- ing Center aids indiv iduals, families, couples and children, with fees based on ability to pay. The center, located at 17612 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach, currently is accepting applica- tions for the director's post from licensed professionals. Montreal-based Sea1ram Co. Ltd. Seqram bad offered MS a share IP cub for St. Joe'• 45.1 millton shares out.standing, or about$2.1 billion. Under the agreement an· nounced Tuesday, Fluor would acquire '5 percent of St. Joe's common stock for $60 a share, a transaction valued at around $1.24 bllllon. If successful, Fluor would then acquire the additional stock by provid!Qg St. Joe shareholders with 1.2 shares I)/. Fluor common for each Sl. Joe hare, according to the companit' Fluor stock traded at 46, down 4~. al about 11 a.m. Trading was stOpped, at least tem- porarily. Tom Daly, a spokesman for St. Joe, said the merger of Fluor and St. Joe"justmadesense." "First of all, it (Seagram's takeover bid) was a hostile hit," Daly said. "Management thought $45 a share was grossly inade- quate. "Just compare the companies. If you look.at the annual reports of St . Joe and Fluor, you'll find they're both high growth com- panies involved in heavy in· dustry. "Selling vodka just ain't the samething.·· The announcement came a day after the 2nd U.S. Court of Ap· peals turned down St. Joe's ap· peal of a temporary res training order that has kept it from mount· ' ing a campaign against Seagr am. The order, issued last week by U.S . District Judge Milton PoJlack, denied St. Joe the op- portunity of offering lo buy up to 40 percent of its own stock at $60 a share. It also barred it -the nation's leading lead and zinc producer - from selling any of its assets. Special meetings of the boards of directors of Fluor a nd St. Joe will be held on or before April 5 to approve th e merger and authorize execution of the definitive merger agreement. The agreement has been sub- mitted to the Federal Di strict Court in New York in accordance with the temporar y restraining order which was issued on March 25 in the liti gation between St Joe and Seagram. A release by St. J oe's chairman and chief executive officer. John C. Duncan. said "St. J oe looks forward to our association with Fluor with keen anticipation and confidence. I• Mone of Silver Spflnl', Md .. led her team to the 1911 NorUl American women'• brld,. team cbampionablp in the 1prtni toumamnt of the American Contract Brld1e lAacue. The cba.mpion team mem· be rt are Morse; Enb• Le.Id o1 WUminaton. f>el; Bel•• tJtecaard of Carmlchatl. Calif; 1••• De•t•ell of Chica10; Pat L•tW.. bf San Dte19, and la••• Leavitt of Lia · colnwood, m. More than 4,000 players competed ln 64 contests over 10 days in the 1981 spring bridge championships. "Do you know I've been in love with the same woman '5 years? If my wife finds out she'll kill me," quips Reny Yoancmaa as Dial-A-Joke celebrates its seventh birth· day. The popular stand-up com- ic also was the first to record his joke when New York Telephone Co. started Dial-' A-Joke in l!Y14. Vice President George Bush, standing in for President Reagan, who is recovering from gunshot wounds , waves goodbye to Netherlands Prime Minister Andreas A. M. Van Agt after meeting with him at the White House. Selalaflg heckled Phyllis Schlarly, a leader of the fight against ratifica- tion of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, ran into a group of loud hecklers when s he started talking a bout the role of women and the draft. Al a speech at the Univers ity of lllinois, she brought up a s uit filed by the American C i v i I Liberties Union, with funding from the National Organization for Wom en,( which con tend s thal SCHLAFLY Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather told a crowd in Anaheim that she's ready to seek help from above to fight expansion of John Wayne Airport. In concWing her s peech during a luncheon with Orange County Chamber of Commer ce members , Heather joked: "If all else fails, I plan to bring back Jahn Wayne and. pilgrim, he'll tell you where to put that airport.·· Singer Frank Sinatra, who produced President Reagan's inaugural celebration in January, canceled the final three shows of 'his week-long engagement al Caesars Palace. Sinatra did not issue a s tatement about the as· sass ination attempt on Reagan. but hi s publicist. Lee Solre°rs, s aid the singer was "too shocked and over· come by this situation to talk about it." Since then, about 61 million c allers have dialed the service in New York City; Buffalo, N. Y.; Detroit, and Philadelphia to hear a dif. ferent comedian in the week· l y joke rotation , the telephone company said. Youngman's first Dial-A· Joke: "Fella walks into a doctor. Doctor says, 'You're gonna live to be 60. · He says, 'l am 60.' Doctor says, 'See, what did I tell you.'" limiting draft registration to me n is discriminatory ''That s hould blow fo r ever the feminist movement's claim that it is in favor of women's rights, because I can't im- agine a greater takeaway or wom en's rights than an in- voluntary draft," she said. Sinatra. who opened at the resort Thursday, canceled all shows through toni~ht. A,.WI,..._ Henny Youngman Windy day • m West \ Winter mdking uny for spring weather Coastal 1eeatlaer lnc.r••s.tno cJoudlneu Ch•nc•' of roon lO petet<ll IO<HQlll. 10 ptrt•nl Thur\dey C.learln9 Tllllr\dlY •olll gu•IY wino•. L-• 1onlQkll 'I 11 u-. 1>eec11u. SJ ln1•1'd High\ Tllurtdo U 10 ~1. Wiler SI E l .. wlll!re, nortllWHl wind\ Of 15 to U kno~ o•tr oultr w1ter tonoglll. ~udlng over "'ner wot~r\ Tllurs cl•y Wioicl '*••e\ 2 to " ''•I w u 1er1y \W•lf 2 lo 4 Itel C.~f\U Of light •llOWff\ tonoQlll. tlHrong Thur.cloy 11.S •..... ,,, Torn-. !\all end 111under1tor1n1 strut• ••vor11 communlllu In Aloblm•. MIHIHlpj)I •nd 1..c111l1l•ftl lodey. killlr>Q I t llnl IWO _.,Incl lnlvrln9 .. ...,,., Oltoerf Stat• po4Ke '°'" • torn-tin•O -ntown H .. ru-o. 1n M>UllW••t•rn Al•b•rn... •bOut 4 • m , <•u~in9 •• 1ens1 .. .,.,,_ end 'nocktn9 ovt llw tow,, s -r-_.e •••• ''"" •"" • reported 10 otllers ... ere ""'411ta1lled In nelQl>-•"11 Pl\•nl• Clty, tllet,_-' .. 111 The IOtf'MIO struck Of\ • noghl of "vert t,,......rst°""'s oc:ross cenlrel • .,., SOlilll Al11>em • TIW Nehon•I WHlll•r SM~kf Woll ,,,., ...... llHf\ llood watcf\ on central Al1t1em1 countlH, wllf\ more t-rstorrns and l)OUlbie IW••Y relnlell In tlle lorKHl IQdly. Jn Mlulul1>91, o•ernlQkll storm• downed ~r 11n .. , on1toy.o el IHsl t•o ~ en<I rl-6 UM rool oll another end overti;rMd two J!'Ol>lle "°"'"· • No -was r-rt..i -lousty In , .. ,. . .,, E .. ,,.,,.,., IWa•Y llluncMrstorms IMveloped ,,.., Ille Greet '-"'"· •ncl r•ln, s-ancl str°"9 wlricls re•.ct m11tll of the W.st encl Nortllwest. "•In mind wltll -lell ""'r Ille Upper MIPIU~ Valley I f G::rrl) . . " ~ t>elWH'1 • tr .. 1er ..,d retr1eer•tor for prOIKtlon, .,,,... IN storm tore tr.. roof -~t of lhf ce1lln11 oH Ir.. llOUM It w•s -· Wiiham• W•cl ••1 t •n t •~en cteicribl tt ~, "Tne wlndOws sl1rted t>r .. i.1"11 end •• •II ran onto Ille kite"""·" toe Will "It we~ llorrlbl•" Brief ~ out~\ were rep0r1..i 1n tlle ,,or111em 1N1rt of Poh County •n4 In pet11 of McC.oml>, .. ;o Ennis encl Pike County C.l•ll °''"',.. Dire< ter M_.yn Oki<. The N1tlonel Wt111Wr Servlu selCI the storms or~ tar119 amovnts ol rein ltrOM untr•I MIUIHlppi, ... 1111 floodlne ,_,..,In low·1¥lno 1reu. lleln was upecteo lo tontlnue to· day, wllh '""nd11ts_,. •l(t•n4ln9 lrotn th• Olllo Valley •nd Greet LlkH across Iha nortllern Atlantic Coast, ancl lrom fOlllllHst Lovlsl•n• etrou llW Gull Coast Into ur>tr•I FlorlCI• end nortfl ll1rou1111 Ill• Carolln1J. tlleN•l-1 we-Servlceselcl A lllgtl-'llf\nd wlt'Tllftll WU tSwecl for IOUlllern ,.,,_,County w,,.... QllSll es 111g11 as 60 mptt -· e..,.ci.<t. tlW servlco Yid In IN ,_,.,lelnl end d•wrt•. U lo «> mpll wlllCk ....,., lorecul to dlmlnlsll lllro119fl the "''"' Tiit ..,..".said u..-. •el • JO 119• t•nl t lleft(.• of 11t11t _,..In moun· ~In end cOllllel er"s ton'9flt •Ml• IC percenltlleneef~y. Los A"91tln encl ,,.. n fl•Y' wlfl l\eve l\IQlll In the .OS T""nd•Y Guity ll<lf'tllwest......,. sr.ouMI clear tlllff b' efter,,_, S.,ow wlll IM et II• S,ooe>-taol l•lf•I H m-10111 ~41ur•• drOCI 10 ,,. mlcl-Jbt end «It l!Wmloflt end cllml> only a 1-..,--Tllllrsdey. Tiie tleHrb '#Ill be pertly ct-y tonlQlll, clMrlflll In Ille norlll Hrly r11urSdey encl In tne .ICMl1h by •lier· noo11. Hlohswlll ronoe from Uto 7 S. Teta~raC•rft C.horl1lt1WV c11eyenne Cllltal>O c.1,.clnn.911 Cl•veteno Cofumt>vs Oel·FIWtll D•nver Ot1 Mo1,., Detroit ou1u111 Falrtlenh Hertlord Hel9n1 Honotul11 Houlton lnC1nepll1 Je<kllllvlle Ju,..•u 1Cen1 City LIS Vt98f Llttle ltoO LOYllYIUe "'-Ml>fll• Miami Mllweuk,. Mpls·St.P NHll¥111t New Ori._ Hew York Norlofk Oki• CllY Orn•lle OrlandO Piil 1 IOPflll PllOem• Plttsl>Ur'Ofl Piiand, Mii Ptlend,OA R•pld City Aefto Rlcllmond Seit Lak.t SHtlle SI LOUIS St P·TemcNt $1 Ste Marie SllOlleM TlilH WHlll"9111 CAUF'OaMIA 13 .. 11 ll 1S 12 ,, S6 •• 10 3' J6 JI S• ... 11 IS ,. s~ .. 71 11 .. ... ,. 11 ., to4 IO .. 11 n .... ~ 7l 12 7l .... S2 SJ "° '° 50 ., 11 82 .. 43 1S IS 43 , . 41 « 41 43 Sl JS St 41 30 B SS ,. ., •2 41 .. 2• ST 42 SI ,, ., n 3' " 41 ~ SI S3 S3 4 .. .. S3 « SI 45 l l 1S JI 32 ~ S4 .. lS ,. t4 S1 ()ne IOf1'IOo lOYCMcl -n about two 111llH non"-••• ol McCo,,,11, Mitt .. In Pike eo..nty. ti strucll Ille ~of e.c. a1111er, .mt<• 11 Pf09le _,. ll•'fll'Q. llUl no -was lnlurld. In Ille wett, rain stretched from Wuftln9ton IO central C<elllornla end ac.rou tN ,,.,._,n P4•1...,. Snow .,., torecast IOI' Ille lllQllef' 11..,elfons from west•rn Mo1>l1t1• lllro119ll notll\ern U\atl -..... Mio. All>eny Albll- Am.,.lllo Ancriorave .lllhevllle All9ftle At11t1lt CIY a ettlm- 81 rm I...,,. " ,, •s ii 70 ti .o n HI Le P<• J 1me1 Wlltllmf, Butltr ·s "'t"""'"· said '"' o ro11p ... tr wd•O \11 Ille 1111'hen. ll110Cll•d TtmP9f'attKft w-.<I tlle ,.,uon Ntl'I' lodey renged Ir-2A In Mll'IOI. H.O., to 7t In IC•Y Weit, Fla. I c.u1 .... 1a Gldty ...... ..,.. llltfll cl\alKI of ..,.,. -llM4'f .,..,.. Souttlenl Collfornl• teni.t!t wltfl <INr oftd tooler ......, ·~ Tiw.,....y, ··-·"' Boise aotlOft •r-MV!le Bllftelo Qlarlstn SC . '° )t ., "' ,, u 71 JI .. ., olJ » JI JS ,. ., .. 11 " . .. u ............. A"" MAI OW t , w 2 J w t I W t J w ..... ,.,...., Btylhe Ewrotle l'r- lencH• IMtYs1'11te Moftter.., Netellot 0.-1 .... ,._ Rltllft ... Blllft ....... City ... ,,. SOclof'MMe Sollllff s.f\1A1eoroera SIMltklll TNffl\OI Ulllell U"t-•19 ••• .... Ce\lllM II C:t"'tt LOlll~ Monroylo .... ....,taokt\ Ofltetlo ~ .. ,,..,,..... ,. ........ a.\ ........... S.llJ- lellt4!AM Softy Crul ,....,.., .. .., 10 50 .. $7 Sf •2 ·'' .. " ., Sf SI .S2 SI JO '° jf .. CJ ., n •• . , • .. " ti • ... * 6A ., .. ., .. st " .ea ,, .a u 11 .. .. '4 " ., ,, 71 .. .. ., 67 41 ,, "' .. JI lS d -,. 4A .. 42 " ... .. ., 41 tt It! • b Oraoge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wec:tneeday, Aprll 1, 1981 State 'junds seen f 01:-new depot By aJCllASD GaEEN °' .. .,...., ........... Ao Irvine city offlclal la ex· pre11lo1 optlmlarn that atat. funding will be available soon for an $8.4 miillon railroad sta- tion ln the clty'a easlet'n ln· dustrial complex. The California Transportation Commission could decide to al- locate money for the project durinc an April 22 meeting in Sacramento , s ay s city transportation engineer John Harris. HE SAID HIS optimism is based on the train s tation's number two position on a fund- ing Ust for transportation proj- ects throughout the state and on his belief that a previous funding constraint may be lifted in time for the commission meeting. The constraint centers on the 1act that Amtrak oHlcials h av~n't yet promised lo stop trairl8 at the proposed Irvine de· pot on the south side of the Santa Fe railroad tracks near the in· tersection of the Santa Ana and Laguna freeways. Harris said that the missing promise is the only reason t~ state commission has been hesi· tant to fund the Irvine project. "WE CAN'T MAKE any meaningful commitment to stop at the proposed Irvine station O.lfy f'I• -M-. WILL TRAIN STOP HERE? Irvine otflclal hope• ao until President Reagan's 1982 budget proposal (calling for la rge cuts in Amtrak 's opera· lions > is resolved in mid-June." s aid Arthur L. Lloyd, Amtrak director or public affairs. The California Transportation De partment, at the urging of Irvine eity officials, is consider· ing recommending that the state Transportation Commission al· locate money without the Am trak commitment. said Cal· trans spokes man Frank Lenza. Irvine city engineer Har ris said he's anxious that the com- ml11loa lllocaUI money to the railroad utlOn befcn the com· ml .. lon nana out of mOQeY for the ft1cal year. HAUIS 8.\ID tbat the comt ml11lon ml1ht decide to allocate some deslp money for the proJ· ect a nd delay the alloc•Uon of the construction money until Amtrak promises to stop its trains at the station. The City &f Irvine ls seeking a total of $4.8 million from the state for the project and expects to get another $3.6 million from the Irvine Company. "The train atailon is needed," Harris said. "A lot of people would like to take the train butreel the Santa Ana train station is in~ adequate and insecure. "THE DEVELOPMENT of an ultra -mod e rn well - m alntained, secure facility in Irvine would encourage a large ridership and take some of the traffic burden off the freeway system." Harris added that the station could draw passengers from the ·'Supe r Regional S hopping Center" the Irvine Company wants to build on the "Golden Triangle" formed by the Santa Ana. San Diego and Santa Ana Freeway. 'Derftnged' tape. OK'd Will be used in priest-slaying trial A taped telephone conversa tion descnbed as "deranged and il logical" between Ronald Spring, accused of killing a Seal Beach Catholic priest. and a Chicago Archdiocese official will be allowed into evidence during Spring's murder trial. Orange County Superior Court Judge James K. Turner on Tues· day overruled defense objections that the obscenity·laden tape was irrelevant and said he would permit its use br prosecutors during Spring's trial. Jury selection was to begin today. THE CALL WAS allegedly made by Spring on Feb 5, 1980, only £our days before Father Felix Doherty of St Anne's Church was struck in the head with a fist. allecedly delivered by Spring Father Doherty. 64 , d ied several weeks later from com· plications associated with that blow, which witnesses said was unprovoked. Deputy Dis trict Attorney Dave Carter said the tape was "ex- tremely important" to his case b ecause 1l demon s trate s Spring's hatred toward the church. THE CALL WAS received by church official Peter Foote, who had also received two previous calls from Spring in the late night hours of Feb. 5 and early hours of Feb. 6 In the rambling, almost in· coherent monologue by a man who identified hims~lf as RoDald Spring, the caller told Foote he was seeking "his woman" and to "clean out them convents" until she was found. Carter argued that the call. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHR/t'S Certified GPmo/011i111. AGS 8fTI OF COLOR '°"" ~ bemltr Colored 1ematones are becomiq -very popular, and the ranee of color• that mother nature createt lD 1em1i.es of. ten plarty ol cbClicea to chooee from. llOlt ol ua are familiar wltb the bale UDeup ol colored atones: ruble• are red, aap.. pbjr• are blue, emeralda are creen. etc. But tbere II• wbole rainbow ol colon anllable lD i ... er-known atones. and tbme atones cu be cut to Nlled lllbt m the brilliant atar pattern that dlttlquilbea fine MIDltooel. l\OH ~. for uample, ii a clelleot'Jlilk. TM ,.,.et 11 nd, and fllfw a .Upu; cWfenat ..... from Ult.., nd ol u. ruby. Tbl •arnet all9 eom~ lD a YloJHt hue. BHlcle1 tbe emerald, ••wearer• ,0f the .,.." e• doole ..,.,. or a .,..._ 1appbin. TIM bet'11 ll anlnwllarw..et.TMnll• ....,..=~. brmlllb-~ -t.a:~un: ~ ......... tend· .... ADdU.Wlde ranceotprtces. PY'! nf!r1 eolorwllhlD reach. taped by Foote, demonstrated that Spring "was the purveyor of a warped fantasy." Chief Deputy Publi<' Defender Ronald Butler, who is represent· Airport lease ing the 33-year·old defendant, said that while the conversation was "deranged'' and m ade little sense, it contained no threats against priests. County suit eyed on rent hike fight Feisty fixed base operator Clifford Fraizer and Orange County government may soon lock horns in the courtroom over his refusal to pay a recent rent increase on property he leases at John Wayne Airport. The co unty Board of Supervisors, over Fraizer's pro- test. gave authorization Tuesday for the county Counsel's office to sue. i f necessary, to force Fraizer to pay the difference between his former rent of $542 per month and the rent of $629. FRAIZER IS among several fixed based operators who pro- vide services lo owners of private aircraft. He is the only operator, county officials said, who bas refused to pay a 16 per- cent rent increase. effective last October. '·You signed a contract and you're not living up to it." said Ralph Clark, board chairman, ~fte~r Fr~ launched into an a~add'us6 in which he claimed he was the victim of a conpiracy by county offi cials to harass and defraud f\im . He claimed he was forced by \ "hired public hands" to sign the lease calling for the rent in· creases "under duress and coer- cion.'' "I HAVE NEVER refused to pay the rent." Fraizer declared. "But I do refuse to be intimidated by a group ot COl)Spirators." F raizer is well known by most members Of the board. He is a frequent speaker during annuaJ hearings on county govern- ment's budget. The fixed base operator pre- sented the board with a ··petition ror a redress of grievances" but failed t o win support for a s pecial hearing to investigate his claims. GEORGE CORMACK of the county General Services Agency said Fraizer has made pay- ments under two earlier adjust- ments to the 1977 lease, but not the third increase which took ef- fect five months ago. County officials have been drawing the $87 a month Fraizer is alleged to not be paying out of a $2,000 se<:urity deposit made on the lease. c. Olomondscon ~ os beouttful rreored In colon such os~ or bn:7oNn os a• wtil~ dlamOnds. and oro frodlon of in. cosr. For •xompl•. c~ In and rake a look or these: '\ A '1lc· Toe-To." pendontwlm two brown diamonds rorollng .32 con>!'S ond rwo ~te diamonds rotOllng .36 cam . o. "Goldftsh'' pendant wtm o 21 point grHn. o 13 point brown d\omcnd ond 0 10 ~wtllte ~. c. ''Snowflof4e" ~ w\rti gtffn. brown and ..,.,,,~ dlomonds tOfOllnc} .&6 CQ"OfS, • J. dµ!_,,,J;;u,6 ~-I.rd .. @. MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIET"t' 1823 NEwPbRT BLVD, COSTA MESA 33 YEARS IN THE SAMElOCATION tinkAINiic•rd-M•W C'*91 PW0NS ~i l I BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -Deposed Prime .Minister Prem Tlnsulanonda tried to launch a countercoup today. He told mWtary comma.nden who ousted him in a bloodless revolt to lay down their weapons, and troops loyal to Pre01 were re1>0rted about SS miles from Bangkok, the capital .. Prem; who fled to an army base al Koral, in northeast Thailand, after the early morning coup, spoke to tbe leaders of the revolt in an announcement on the regional radio station in Korat. Prem also claimed the support of Kin& Bhumipbol Adulyadej, Thailand's popular monarch. Military sources said at least 10 trucks full of troops of the 2nd army, based in Koral, 140 miles northeast or Bangkok, bad reached Saraburi, about 55 miles northeast of Bangkok. There was no independent confirmation of the report. · Poluh irorkers on al,ert WARSAW, Polahd <AP> -The other leaders or the Solidarity labor federaUon reluctantly approved Lech Walesa's decision to call off a nationwide general strike but kept a 12-day-old strike alert in effect while they continued debate on Walesa's newest agreement with the government. Warsaw Pact armies were reported still holding maneuvers in and around Poland. And a Soviet television commentator said Poland was "very tense" despite the suspension of the strike call in exchange for the government's promise to punish those responsible for the beatmg of umon activists in Bydgoszcz on March 19. Wal, mitWrs spurn pact WASHING TON (AP) -The specter of a lonll? strike looms over the nation's soft-coal industry after miners scorned a proposed contract that would have paid them up to Slll a day and ended one of their shortest walkouts in years. Union officials, who had supported the agreement with the ,Bi,tuminous Coal Operators Associataon, s aid rank-and-file mem- bers voted against the offer Tuesday by a 2-to·l margin. "It certainly is going to mean a fairly long strike to say the least." said Cecil Roberts, vice president pf UMW District 17, one of the union 's largest. Leaking tankers drained FLAGSTAFF, Ariz (A P l -Emergency crews gingerly were draining explosive liquid butane from a derailed, overturned tank car today as 2,000 people stayed away from their homes and busi- nesses for a second day. The car was among 13 that derailed late Monday after a wheel on a Santa l'e frei{ht tram broke into pieces Four of the cars car· ried butane, and two of those overturned. The butane was beini shipped by Mobil Oil Co. of Torrance. Calif., to markets an Texas. Allanla body not child ATLANTA <AP> The umdent1f1ed body of a young black man was pulled from the muddy Chattahoochee River early today, downstream from where Atlanta 's 21st slam child was found Mon- day. But the latest case was not considered part of the series of child slayings. ' l sraeli.s hit &banese . TULlN, South Lebanon CAP> Israeli troops burst into th.ls •southern Lebanese vi llage before dawn today, blew up tbree :houses and exchanged fire with Lebanese army and U.N. .peacekeeping troops, villagers and a U.N. spokesman said. They . said a Lebanese soldier died and one was wounded 10 the raid. 'Be[gi,um i n fUl71W)il . BRUSSELS, Belgium !AP> The seventh Belgian govern· menl tn seven years resigned Tuesday, spar_lcing a rare public comment from King Baudouin, who called on lJelgium's political, ·labor and business leaders to end their continual disagreement and pull the country out or its worst economic slump since World War I l. ' . , I ) . . . , . . ' ~ ' • . c • • f t > • • ~ Everything you've always wanted in a Seafood Platter ••• ••• and it's Only $349 · • Crispy Fish • 2 Taaty Shrimp • 2 Tender Scallops • Fresh Cole Slaw • Crunol\y Hushpupplf'' • Golden Fry•• cGig~~~* SEAFOOD SHOPPES· Bs lo-Ve-sick. Unmail,ed kiters by gunman to actre88 /ound l WASHINGTON (AP) -An in· fatuat.ed John W. Hinckley Jr .• accuaed of sbootln• Ronald Rea1an, described his deaperat• plan• and said "I'm 1otn1 to do it for you" in a letter to a teen· age actress who starred in a movie about a plot to k.ill a pollUcal candidate, sources say. The letter, written to 18-year- old Jodie Foster but never malled, waa «1_uite specific about Rinckley's plans anCt reflected an "I-don't -care-what-happens· lo-me" frame of mind , th~ sources said. THE LE'JTEJl was described by four congressional and Justice Department sources, who refused to be identified. Congressional leaders ~ere briefed about facts ln the case by Attorney General William French Smith. Miss Fosler played a pre-teen prostitute in ''Taxi Driver," a film about a New York cab driver who is fascinated by guns, revolted by rampant pornography in the city and bas plans to assassinate a Senate candidate. Two sources said authQrities were aware or a second Hinckley letter. and one source said that letter had been mailed but declined to say to whom. NBC News, however, quo~ federal agents in Connecticut as ~aying that Miss Foster told t hem she had received sever' al love letters from Hinckley in re· cent months. The network also said pictuces of the actress were found in Hinckley 's wallet. SIGN EXPRESSES FEELINGS OF CAPITAL NEIGHBORS Apartment bulldlng near ho1ptt~I where pretldent 11 patient Federal authorities in Connec· lieut and Washington declined to comment on the report. The sources said Tuesday that investigators had found the let- ter in Hinckley's quarters, ap· parently at the downtown Park Central Hotel where he stayed the nitht before Monday's al· tempted assassination. They said Hinckley. a 25-year- old drifter. obviously was "in· fatuated" with Miss Foster and wanted to get her attention. One source described the unmailed letter as expressing his desire to "go out and do something t'o get himself killed." Harbor in shambles after ship hijack MISS FOSTER as a freshman at Yale University. and Hinckley, in an employment ap- plication filed with the Rocky Mountain News last Oct6ber. said he was a student at the Ivy League school ftom September 1980 to October 1980 Yale of· fic1als said they have no such records. Al Yale. Miss Foster said an a brief slalement : "I have never met. spoken to, or associated with him (Hinckley) " She said the FBI and the U S allorne) 's offi ce had asked her to sa~ not.hing about him · LAHAINA. Hawaii (AP> -A Lahaina man has ~en charged with 53 crimes including at· tempted murder and kidnapping following the takeover of a 90· foot cruise s hip tbal was used to ram other vessels moored at Lahaina Harbor on the island of Maui, police said. ''You name it, he's charged with it," a police spokesman said concerning the char ges filed Tuesday against Benjamin • W. Ko, 49. wbo was taken into custody after being subdued earlier in the day by police who bad boarded the Spirit of Adven· ture. Maui authorities believed the hijacking stemmed from Ko's failure to obtain a crew position on a nother vessel -t h e Trimaran Oz, which was to have sailed for Tahiti today. Fifteen of the 23 passengers on the commandeered shi p jumped overboard along with its six crew members late Monday night after a man boarded the vessel and "went berserk, .. wielding knives and meat cleavers taken from the vessel's galley, police Capt. Howard Tagomori said. The man then took control of the helm and sailed around the harbor for three hou rs, ram· ming and sinking -one vessel and damaging at least three other pleasure craft. There were no reports of in· juries. Lt. Beverly Kelley of the Coast Guard said the Spint of Adventure Is owned by Pacific Diving Co. of Long Beach. Calif .. and is operated by "Ad· ventures to Paradise Cruises" of Gardena, Calif. Hinckley, meanwhile, retained the firm of millionaire Washang ton defense attorney Edward Bennett Williams. a former treasurer ol the l>emocral1c· National Committee and o~ner of the B altimore Or1ult•s baseball team. A member of the firm con firmed that two lawyers spent more than two hours Tuesdav an terv1ewing Hinckley in · th<.' prison at the l ' .S Marine bas(' at Quantico. Va The firm wa~ first contacled by Hinckley's wealthy and con servative parents in Colorado Hinckley's father. J W. "J ack Hinckley, is president of Van derbilt Energy Corp .. ;.in oil and gas exploration company. Two court-appointed attorneys were assigned lo Hinckley's case Monday after he said he ,.,.wlre.,....os 'NEVER MET HIM' Actress Jodie Foater rould not afford to pay a lawyer Meanwhile, Vice President George Rus h 's office said H inckley's brother, Scott, was a casual :.it•quaintance of Bush's ~on. ~t·il. and had planned to al· ! encl a dinner at the younger Bush 's homt• in Denver Tuesday naghl The dinner was canceled following John Hinckley's ar· resl. said Hush spokes woman Shirlev <;rcl'n llJNCKLE\' WAS placed un· der 24-hour watch at the Quan· tico. Va .. base~where he was be· mg held as a security precau· ti on. Quantities and assortments are limited, so hurry in! ,. We sett first quality and disronlinut•d merchandise from Sears Retail and ratalog Distribution. "Was" prit•t•s quo\l•<I an• tlw n·g11l:ir pnt"'" ;.1l "'hit·h l ht• items wcrt• formt•rly offt•red I>) Cat;dog nr 111 man~ Sears Retail ston•s around lhl' 1·m111tr~ BLADELESS WEED & GRASS TRIMMER .tfectlve 4/1(11 • 25.0 cc two cycle engine • semi automatic line feed • 14" wide cut • Gas Powered was 116" NOW79.99 MENS' LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS were 15" NOW 8.49 ELECTRIC POWER BLOWER was 6999 I i I _j . I . • SACR.AM&NTO <AP) -The A.aaembl}' Energy and Natural R~,ources Committee la to vote nex.t Tuesday on whether locaJ a1encies or u.e state should Is- sue building permits after July 1. The committee debated Tues- day whether cities and counties that are tardy with their coastal plans ~d be allowed to issue tbe permits, or whether the state Coastal Commission should have that power. California's landmark coastal protection act set up a state Coastal Commission and six re- gional commissionJ to protect California's 1,100-mile coastline from overdevelopment. The regional bodies oversee the drafting of land-use plans by local coastal governments and issue building permits until those local plans are approved. Then the cities and counties take over the issuin~ of permits. Those local plans were supposed to be finished this year, and the six regional com- mlaalcma cease to exist July 1. However, M ol the J06 cities will not have their PlatiS approved by July l, and only ~ ~rcent will have their total local plans, in- cluding ordinances and zoning, certified. Only one coutal coun- ty has an approved plan. Under current law, the com- mission could, after July 1, Im- pose -a moratorium on any build- ing in coastal areas that ha.ve not finished their plana. Or the state· commisslQP could take over the permit proce11. The three bills before the C<>m- m i ttee take two different ap- proaches. AB385 by Assemblyman Tom Hannigan, D-Fairfield, is sponsored by the state com- mission . ·It would require the commission to set new deadlines for local coastal plans, with a final deadline of Jan. 1, 1983. Th.a-bill would have the state commission issue permits for cities and counties that haven't finished their plans, but would allow a speedy process for small building projects. NIWP(MT. HARBOR CRUISE • SUMOAY MtlMCH ATTHICAMNmY Al'_.,.....,. ......... Assembly Sveaker Willie Brown said he would like to see California voters asked on a state ballot whether they want the legislature to enact strong hand gun con- trols. Buildins burned OAKLAND CAP) -Army Maj. Charles Zabieski was in- jured in a fast-spreading fire that destroyed a Navy classroom building valued at $400,000 or more, officials said of the Tuesday incident. in caf eleria FURNACE CREEK, Callf. (AP) -Questa ln a two-story motel build.in& .at the Furnace Creek Ranch Resort ln Death Valley spent a l\llht in the re- sort's cafeteria after fire gutted the top floor of the fully occupied moteJ. , A resort spokesman &ald most 1ue1ta were eating dinner elsewhere at the desert resort when the fire, which apparently started in a guest room, awept throqh the top floor of the motel this week. There were no injuries in the blaze. "We were very lucky in that reeard," said Sandra Zenpel, an asalatant to the resort's eeneral manager. "Only a few guests were in their rooms and they were able to get out easily.'' Firefighters from the National Park Service, the Beatty, Nev. Fire Department and the Furnace Creek Volunteer Fire Departm~nt brought the fire un- der control in about an hour. The Q)Otel building is one of eight slmilar units ·at the resort and Ma. Zempel said the edtire complex was fully occupied. Spring, with its relatively moderate temperatures, Is the primary tourism season in the Death Valley area. H/F NeJOJma~ fian£ee J surrender expecJet!- LOS ANGELES (AP) -AD a\. torney for a televlaloo newae,uter and hla flancee was m akin& arraneementa for the couple to surrender to authorltlea aftei: tbey were chareed with grand theft and 29 counts of lssuin• bad checks, the district attorney's office saya. The cbaraes aaainst newscaster Ken Jones and Shirlene K. Cardenas were filed Tuesday and involve their al-legedly writing more tbao $215,000 ln bad checks at Securi- ty Pacific National Bank in a check-kiting scheme, district at- torney's spokesman Al Albergate said. He said the couple's attorney, Robert Michaels, "is making ar- rangements for them to sur- render today at Municipal Court for arraignment. so they will not be arrested." Neither Jones nor bis at- torney could be reached for im- ~· mediate comment. Jones and Misa Cardenas, who live in San Dimas in the San Gabriel Valley, face up to 10 years in prison if convicted on all counts, Albergale said. Jones works for the CBS· owned TV station KNXT here. lll'WI..._...,. $\,!ARENDER DUE? NeWKaater Ken Jone• He has been on an extended vacatioo at his request since news o( the check-kiting in- vestigation surfaced earlier this month, a spokeswoman at the station general manager's office said 714 675-71U GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION trans national funding announces a new program 2ncl IRUSI •DS • $10,000 TO $500,000 • FAST FUNDING • NO' PREPAY I ASSUMABLE • 30 YEAR AMORTIZED I UP TO 15 YEAR REPAY • OWNER I NON-OWNER OCCUPIED • PURCHASE MONEY I SWING LOANS CAL.I. TODAY f'OR A Qt10'TE: AT NO OBUCATION (714) 97~1128 CALL WILLIAM B. MITCHELL 4000 MAC ARTHUR •LVD. NEWPORT •EAeti BROKERS WELCOMED Time is running out! To get in on this great FREE offer from Kodak. LIN'>MI!~ Four KODAK Color Reprints for the price of three. Stop 1n IOI complete deto11s Hurry ftee offer ends Moy 13 SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK! 9 00 AM TO UHM MOit mu SAT 9 00 AM TO 1'00 PM SUMOU , ROY & DALE INVITE YOU TO ••. "STOP IN TODAY FOR YOUR FREE GIFT• ..-:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir "THE FAR WEST" A beautiful full-color book of photos of the western states! REFRESHMENTS • • • BALLOONS •• PRIZES • DON'T MISS THE FUNt OPEN AN ACCOUNT AND ENJOY MANY FREE SERVICES The welcome mat is out at our new Far West Savings office. in your neighborhood. Step inside. today. There's a FREE copy of the fabulous. full-color, photograph book, "'The Far West" waiting for you. And, our staff has lots of other FREE GIFTS, prizes and surprises in store for you too. But hurry -supplies are limited! And while you're there be sure to open a savings account and checking account with interest. Far West account holders qualify for many FREE SERVICES. Our staff will be happy to explain how your account can be the key to FREE PR~ARATION OF YOUR WILL. FREE PHOTO COPYING. FREE CHE~KING , NOTE COLLECTION ANO MORE' Be sure to register for one of our three Grand Opening P,rizes You might be the lucky winner of a lovely set of luggage. a unique desk clock with a $20 gold piece motif. or a $100 sa.vings account. Stop in during our Grand Opening celebration and find out why so many of our savers say "Far West is by far the best1" ... ... 1==== FAR WEST SAVINGS HUNTINGTON BEACH 19114 Magnolia f AtGarfletd Across from K-Mort 01t•N1 t ..... to 4 p.M. Mon. ttWu Thur•. ta.m. to ~ (714) .. a-2800 . MEET OUR·BRlNCH MANAGER Far West Is pleased to introduce Joe Lucostlc. Joe is a veteran savings and loan profeuionat, He joined the Far West Savings team last year 8)(pfessly to serve the Huntington Beach area as manager of our new branch. Joe bring• tC> this t•ak a wealth of e)(perience gained in service to three other savln91 and loans, as well u a background as a teacher and in business. Active in civic endeavours. Joe also en1oys the world of sporJs in hi• off duty hout1. • ------------------------~--------------·---- . tl«Jcs are co~. Oranae County covernment JS en Yerge of yel •oOther pY'oblem directly related to the r~·$ spectacular crowth. To soma extent, it's also related to get-tough poJJclea on the part of judges well aware of ttle public's sentirnenb about criminals. The county is running out of beds tbr inmates at Orange County Jait in Santa Ana , and branch facilities in Orange and El Toro. . By 1985, lt ts predicted, tbe county will be about 283 beds short of demand -a figure thar will climb to 757 by \1990. At first glance, it might seem the problem is a long way off. But it s hould be remembered that it takes ~several years to plan, design and construct a building on ~the order of a county jail. Efforts are currently under way by the county --Sheriff's Department and other agencies to plan for adding jail capacity. At some point. information developed by the agencies will be turned over to the county Board of Supervisors, which will have to grapple with the attendant problems of where new jail facilities will be built ahd how they will be financ.ed. Those costs are expected to be significant -in the millions of dollars. Yet, supervisors will have to confront the issue. The demand for jail beds is increasing. It must be met. Good place to save Presi~ent Reagan 's first major economic victory, an d'\'erwhelming vote in Congress to bar the next scheduled increase in i\iE! dairy price s upport program, was s ingularly lacking in fireworks. The powerful dairy lobby, which contributed more than $1 million loo las t year 's Senate and House campaigns. won only five votes in the Senate's 88-5 roll call vote. An unrecorded voice vote pushed the ban through the House without opposition . As a result , the government. will save $147 million in its contributions to the dairy industry this year and consumers will be spar ed an increase of 7 cents a gallon in the price of milk and 9 to 10 cents a pound for butter and cheese. But the dairy price s upport program still will cost more than Sl billion this year . plus $500.000 a day just lo ~tore the 355 million pounds of butter. 253 pounds of c·heese and 575 million pounds of dry milk already in go\'ernment \.\a rehouses. The priCl' s upport program. which has boosted the in come of dairy farmers by 46 percent as a result of inflation. seem ed sensible e n ough when it was inaugurated in 1949 The idea was to ensure s ufficient production by guaranteeing dairy farmers an adequate in come throug h go\'ernment purchase of s urplus produ<'ts. But incrC'ases tn the rate of s upport and twice-yearly adjustments for inflation have skyrocketed the cost of support while forcing consumer prices steadily upward. f nstead of having to be urged to produce milk, butter and cheese. the dairy farmers, guara nteed top prices, produced enough to fill the government s tores to overflowing Cancellation of the April I increase will be of some elp The next step should be realistic revision of the c•nt 1re program There is no way to justify the x penditure of a billion dollars.plus each year to store more food than is needed for domestic or foreign use at ,the expense of the taxpayers · rborne firearms The proliferation of handguns has focused attention n a new problem for the airlines the risk that a loaded ·papon carried in baggage will accidentally go off. In fact. the Federal Aviation Administration has re- orded 21 such incidents in the past six years. resulting m one death and several ipjuries to airline employees andling baggage'. And last year alone. the FAA c hecked out 48 reports f loaded .weapons in airline baggage. with the result that 33 assengers were fined. Travelers who· choose lo carry guns wo uld be well ad- ised to note that FAA safety regulations now are backed y a federal law. passed by Congress last year. making he carr ying of loaded weapons in checked luggage a riminal offense. Violators can get up to a ~·ea r in prison nd a fine of up to Sl.000. The rules do permit transporting unloaded weapons n baggage, but only if the airhne is notified . the pie~e of uggage ls locked and the passenger has the onl y key. It seems little enough t o ask that gun-toting travelers ake the obvious preeaution of unloading their weapons ·he n the safety of airline workers. and perhaps fellow assengers. may be at stake • pinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pirot. ther vie~ expressed on this page are those of their authors and rtists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. x 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9262fi. Phone (714) 642-43~1 Boyd I Staying smart ByL. M. BOYD Retired women eenerally eem to retain their lively in· lligence tonger than do re· ired men. Or so contend ree New York researchers bo followed the lives of 54 en and women through he ir sjxlles i nto their lghties. Maybe so .•. don't now. To stay smart, you've got to start out s mart, naturally .. And these re· searchers didn't explain how t~ey picked the swift folk from the not-so-swift at the outset. I have round that numerous researchers, like numerous sports announcers, are handicapped by the aad fact oftentimes they're l\Ot as bright as those they in· tervlew. fn Hart.scombe, E111laod, stands a gravestone on which It's wiit; "On the 22nd of June, Jonathan FtddJe went out of tune." Remember. you can't legaJly ...._... bumm&ntMN to Hawaii. W ASHINGTQN In James Bond circles. nothing is too farretched to be dismissed. The Central lnteUigence Agen~y. for example, has been toying for years with the Idea of using ex· trasensory perception in its work spurred on by the suspi· cion that tbe Russians have somehow succeeded in opening an ESP-gap. I've already repor ted on the Pentagon's $6-million-a.year re· search t,o de· ve lop ESP weapons that can brain wash or in- c a p acha t e e n e m y l ea d ers by thought transfer. de· liver nuclear bombs instan- taneousl_y thousands of miles away by psychic energy, or even create a protective .. time warp" to make incoming Soviet mis· siles expl«¥l.e harmlessly in the past. These wacky projects have s upport from the Defense In- telli gence Agency, which reports that the Russians have been do· 1ng intensive rest.>e1rch in the field for nearly SO yee1rs. The I,, \ I I DIA even credits the omnipotent Kremlin scientists with suc· cessfully demons trating ESP's deadly potential on Insects, a possibility that should bring joy to farmers a nd backyard gardeners -and strike terror in the insecticide indus try. The ClA, though historically less alarmist about the Red Menace than the Pentagon s pooks are . has also been monitoring Soviet ESP research and pondering the pos!iibility of less bizarre psychic weapons. A top·secret report on the subject by a CIA scientific expert has been examined by m~ associate Dale Van Atta THE ANALY TS estimated that .. the Soviet military and KG B have had a covert applied parapsychology pro~ram s.ince the mid-1960s." This was the penod when the CIA was ex perimenting with hallucinogenic drugs on unsuspecting ARlericans and with foot powder that woutd make Fidel Castro·s beard fall out. The ClA warns that the So· v1ets may be ··aht!ad of the L".S. in parapsychology ·· Evidence or Soviet progres.., 1s skelrh~ because the Kn•mhn ·!> voodoo scientists. the ('IA i>uspecb. Nicholas von Hoffman Thom•S P. Haftyl Pubtllf'l•r fl°'Omll KffVlllEditor . . a.r~.r• Krtlblct,/Ed1tor111 PIQt Editor have gone undercover . In· telligence sources estimate lhOL at least 200 Soviet experts m var ious disciplines »re working on ESP weapons devf'lopment. THE CIA R1EPORT identified several specific areas of sus peeled Soviet study .. Elec trostat ic s of telekinesis," or the ab1tity to move objects by mental concen tration "Extremely low frequen cies of electromagnetic radia tion for information transmission .. This may ha\'{' been what the KC B "'as up lo "'hen tt bombarded the l" S Em baSS\' 1n M OSCO\.\ \.\llh m1cro~ave radiation for nearh 20 years. · Application of lhl•ones in· volving links betw<.•en the way the human brain and electronic computers operate Remote monitors and st1mulalors to det<.·rm1ne or 1nrtuence anolht>r pC'rson·:-. physical condition hy IC'lepath~. like a Haitian witch doctor m1J?ht Irv H1gh-lrequen1·~ analysis of .rn ell•ctrol•ntl'phalogram a ... ort of"' trl'lapptnJ! of ... oml•on(.-, brain wavl's The area or Soviet ESP re- search that really has the CIA ·s mouth watering is the possibllily o f "reroot e viewing" by telepathy from thousands or m.iles away. Who'd need a mo(e in the Kremlin if a psychic sit· ting at a desk in Washington could zoom in mentally on a s uper-secret Soviet missile site or a Politburo mee\mJf1 l 'NDER THE DOME: Houst· Minority Leader Robert Michel. R Ill., appears to be cracking under the strain of hi~ job. He has taken to compo:-.1ng such hterury gems as ··cncle Bob·l> Primer for Big Spcndt-ri. ·· Ex l·erpts ··See Big Spl•ndt'rs run in 1980 See Big Spend(•r::. lose in 1980 Sec Rig Spt.>nders forgetting the lesson of 1980. SN· Big Spt:'ndt•rs run In 1982 Lose, Big Spenders. lose · · Another cf fort. m:-.pin•d b) lhl' old song. ·b, \'ou Is or ls \'ou Ain't ~' Hab) ·• i.:u<·:-. hkt· 1h1., · 1:-. the D t· m o c-r ;_i t :-. o r " 1 n I t h I' lh·munals baeking till' m;.1nd<.1lt• lhl· JH'OJ)lt.• g;_i\t' He..i gan·•· ~ll'rl•ifull~. M1dwl 1lldn·l tr~ to !>IOI-{ ti Tht> parl1t·1pJl11111 of Sen Dan ~ua' II· I< Ind in tht• l'aul;.1 Parl-.tnwn Open goll outing last H •;ir tn f111r1ela ha:-. c-.1u~l'cl a el'rla1n dhgrunlll'ml·nl on thl' parl nf ht~ < 'up1tol 11111 -.ta ff Thl·~ \\ "h th1·11 \\orkin)! eond1l1on:-. \H•n· an\"' ht•n• nc•;;lf' a~ l'llJO\ ahll' ln:-.11·ad (}uiJ~ ll· p a \ .., ;_i n t' x fH' r 11· n t l' <I con )!n· ... ~1onal t•mplm 1··· ;1 'l;.1rt1nµ .... JI.Jn of ;_ibout ~11 IHlll a \l•;Jr "tlh IU"l l'l~hl <I.I\'> nf \ jc·at1on ,1nd lht• -.1afl " told to t'Xf.Jl'C-1 ln "'nrk ,,, l'rl1m1• .inti \\ l't·lu.·ncb for nolhin~ OB\'IOl"SI. Y Cll.\(i KI~ 1-:H at hl·ing lht· n1111c111I\ Jor th1· l1r ... 1 tinw 1n :!Ii \t'JI ' Si-na\1• l>1•111111·r..il., ha\, . .,11111\h rt·'1'>ll'cl lht• 1h•m1•;111111)! m1nont~ l,cht•I S1.•n Hoht·rl C lh rd () W \ .i . ha., l,acl h1 .., 11ff1e·1.Jl :-.t.i 11on1·r~ 1mpnntl'cl ()If tl·t· nf lht· f)pn10c•r;1t1t· l.l'.1dc•r JIHI St·n \Ian ('1 ..in.,lun. I> I ·.1111 calh h1m .... l'll ··1>1•1111>1 r.1111· \\hip E' l' n I h 1· n a m 1· p I ;_i l c•., on 1>1·m11c-r;.itu ... 1.1H or'r1c·1·., n ·.id Dt·mocraltl· .. t.1ff 'I ht· p;1rt' 1h.11 d1:1mp11111:-. rntnnnll<'" 1u.-.1 doe:-.n·1 hkl' to admit th,11 11 -. <1 m1nont.' itself New energy technOlogY"close at hand One way to offset the high cost of energy is to guess right on the office gasoline pool The winner is the person who names the date that an agreed upon Tex· aco station first sells regular gas at $2 a gallon. The losers get to send thank you cards to Bob <Texaco) Hope. But is there any hope besides aob? This administration hopes tree market eco nomi cs will bring back 15-cents a gallon gasoline . The la s t ad - mlnistratio n put all our mon ey into research and de velopment. Time. lnc.'s, Discovery m agazlne wants the government to spend $200 billion dollars perfecting ruslon-generate<f ele<:- tricity. Two hundred billion is a lot of money or, as President Reagan would put it. two hun- dred billion gasoline tanks would, if lined up at Rochester, Mino .• swoop over the North Pole and keep on gofog until they stopped in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia. where gasoline is l~· cents a gallon. All the big stuff is years down the road; nevertheless there is hope now, not from the exotic technologies, but from the perfection or the more in- t el ti gent app l ication of techoolo.iies that are old, familiar and, bless 'em, proven. One such is a beat pump for oil and electric powered hot water heaters. A heat pump could be described as a reverse refrigerator. It tak4'8 the he.t out of lhe air and uses it to warm up hot water or anything else whose temperature you'd like raised. Put the thing, which Is not mud\ larger than your 'tV set, next to the inefficient furnace tbat is wasting as much he•t as h 's puttin1 i!' the livin.8 room. The heat pump will vamp oft the 'fll•ted ener.gy and cut your water heating bills by about halt ' m ean s that your n ew VW furnace s hould pay for itself in two or three years or less de- pending upon how grouchy or greedy OPEC intends to be. The new furnace comes all as- sembled in a big metal case and is so simple to install any heal· ing mari can do it in an hour or so merely by rea ding the manual. It requires one routine annual servicing. Otherwise you leave it alone a nd confine yourself to feel.ing good about the money you·ve'Saved. The Volkswagen people are also in the final stages of testing a new. three-cylinder car that they say (ets 80 or more miles to the gallon. And that's not a sub- sub-sub-compact miniature but an ordinary. small car that can carry four passengers. THERE. ARE ALSO rumors that the ;Japanese have got a machine that will go 120 miles to Sydney Harris the gallon . If the entire American p assenger car fleet were composed of cars of such efficiency. it might come very close to ending our need for foreign oil. And there are other energy savers. Fiat is looking to build a distribution n e two rk for TOTEM. as it calls its .. tot~l energy module." a s mall. quiet package. also employing a heat pump. that will heat a house a nd s upply much of your electricity. The Fiat people say they will soon have an adapter that will enable TOTEM to power an air· conditioning system . TOTEM uses natural gas, methane or biogas interchangeably and can deliver he at and light rar cheaper than your public utility Not that the local electric company couldn"t get its costs down by employing presently av a Hable technology. as some few of the more aggr essively cost conscious firm!> e1re The big immediate s<1vin~ c·<in come from .. load management ·· OUR ELECTRIC' compames are engineered to provide all the powe r demanded or them re gardless of how high that peak ma)' be. In terms of dollars and oil, peak power 1s the most ex pensive power there 1s The phon"e company avoids the burden of peak expenses by of rering lower rates during off- h o urs . That 's ca ll ed load management. Countries like West Germany have been using load management in electrical power dis lribution systems for 30 yt>an.. It d<>es n 't lower the standard of living. only t he \'OSI T wo dollar gasoline and $1.60 heatrng oil concentrate the mind. not on distant imprac· ticalities. but on what we can do now. Intelligence can be dangerous Even if the "sociobiology .. ex· perts are right. and genetics is the basis of hu"\.an intelligence, I have never unders tood ~hat compelling reason would prompt us to breed people for the quality of intelligence as such. There seem s to be no persuasive evideoce that Intelligence is the most important or the most beneficial attribute of mankind. Jn fact. t.he more intelllgent a person is, the more harm he can do . If his character and feelings are not com - mensurate with his men- tal powers. Fools may do prival~ harm to themselves and a few around them, but it ls the clever men with crooked p.rincipJes who-create moat of the mlacblef in the bil world. lnteWgence ls a tool, not a product; ln \tlelf, lt la neutral ln charteter. Oood and bad men have It in equal amout.U; but moat· bad men have power drtveie, whlle 'ood men do not, anct IO tl'e formtt ltnd to domlnate ln the field of aclion. A ~~&.laMlarari~~ ~~ Mid a lM •IDCllll Even in the acade m ic area. where intelligence plays such a preponderant part, the men who become dans and administrators and heads of colleges have used their brains for .a mbitious purposes more Ulan for the ac- q u i s 1 ti on of objective knowledge; t.hey become politi· c\ans of a sort, and lllte all politi· cians soon begitt to place their reputation and Influence above that of the community they are supposed to serve. Nol all, of course, but man:M if not most. UNFORTUNATELY for the 0 human race, the most intelligent people are not necessarily t.he best people. in any field . Character seems to be a quality that is independent or mind, and geniuses have not been notable l have no wish to disvalue in telligence: obviously it is. in itse lf, as muc h a virtue as physical skill or moral probity. and as much to be desired. But to bend genetics to lhe .pu~se or cr eattng. a race of J)lOre in· telUgent beings is as one·slded as hying to produce people with larae muscles. A muscular man can be a hero or a bully~ nothing in lhe build predisposes hlm to the ooe any more than to the other. I t 'I ' I ' i I ' i I l I I . l I ' • ' . ' I . ' ' l ' ' ' ! ' I ' I • .. • i I j ' I I ' ' ' I . ' I I I I ' I . . OrMglt COMt DAILY PtLOT/Wedfteiay, April 1, 1111 s, sir, I'm his S()n by his first broken home.' arnage nlinimal ODl oil spill ATHENS, Ga. CAP> -The world's longest· ning oil spill, from Mexico's Ixtoc 1 oil well, caused no serious environmental damage ause of the tvoe of oil involved and climauc editions. researchers say. ~ Oil on the surface broke in\o smaller and fa Iler pieces and eventually dissipated, accord- to Dr. John S. Patton and Mark W. Rigler of e University of Georgii-and Dr. Paul D. Boehm Energy Resources Co., Inc., of Cambridge, ass. Their Cindings were reported ln Nature. r)lagazine. The leaking well was capped a year ago. • The s pill occurred under ideaJ environmental ~ditions. Patton said. "The subtropicaJ environ· ipent of the Gulf or Mexico hastens degradation ol rh•terials." ~TH NOTICES PENNEY ,ELEANOR S PENNEY. a•• 67, resident or Hunt- i1tllon Beach, Ca Passed altay on Tuesday, March 31. llll at H14.ntington Beach Con valescent Hos pita I Beloved mother or Loretta Pittman of Huntington B. e a c h . C a . 3 grandch1dldren, Susan ~llon of Maui, Hawaii, Lin· !;Furusho of Kailua. Oahu. waii and Peggy Ross of aheim. Ca . 3 great g)-andchildren and a brother Brown or Chicago, Illinois. Daniel W1ltson of New York , New York. 4 grandchildren. Private services were held. Services under the direction or Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive Mortuary or Costa Mesa. 540-5554 llATHS ELSEWHERE Leo Farwell of Huntington -------9..,, a c h, Ca Memorial s&vices will be conducted i hursday, April 2, 1981 at PM at Pierce Brothers ths' Mortuary with Rev It Ertel oUi<:lallng lnter- r9.nt "111 be in Angeles Ab· Cemetery Pierce . hers Smiths' Mortuary CHICAGO tAP I -Edith WUIOft, 84. a singer. actress and vaudevi lle performer f or more than 60 years. died Monday. Miss Wilson portrayed Aunt Jemima for the QuaJter Oats Co. for 18 years. ctors 536-~ LONDON IAP> -Enid _. ROBERSON , 8 a g a old • 91 • B r i t 1 s h M A R K A L A N playwright and author or .BERSON. r esident of six novels, including .. Na· tne. Ca Passed a.way on t1onal Velvet .. died T . r<:h 29. 1981 Survived by day · ues parents Mr. and Mrs. uce Roberson or Irvine. ---------- • grandparents Bob and C'HE drey Roberson of Temple CK A.JDS y. Ca and Art and Pa ula I rod or Newport Beach. I'" ... BOfJlr "1U~ also great·grandparents lll.....tl.lf'.I /U .,.:J &i~~~~~d~~a~xhe'.rog:r UN ITED NATIONS vices are scheduled for (AP) -The producers drsday, April 2. 1981 at of the rock al bum OOAM in the Harbor Lawn "Concerts for the People mber Room _with Rabbi of Kampuchea " have ank Stern with Temple presented the United . th Sholom of Orange Nat' ·th h k f nty omc1ating. Services ions Wl a c ec .or ~er the direction of $ 4 0 0 • 0 0 0 to al d t bor Lawn Mount Olive Cambodians suffering rtuary or Costa Mesa from years of war and 555'1 famine. i!L WILTSON The money represents ~AR RY WJLTSON. a rest· an advance agains t or Santa Monica. Ca proceeds from sale of 20 years Passed awa~ on t h e a I bu m w h i c h ch :Kl, 1981. Marned Just f th 1• h . er 60 years A member or eatures e C as , Elvts International Typo· Cos t e llo and the ph1cal Union He is sur· B I o ck heads , P au I ed by his wife Celia of McCartney and Wings, nta Monica, Ca . 3 the Pretenders, Queen, fd ren Natalle Hort man of Roc kpile, the Specials ~sion Viejo. Ca.. Evelyn and the Who. The groups ":j;:t;::::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:::;:::;;::::::;;;;;::-i w e r e rec o rd e d Dec . 26·29, 1979, In London concerts that earned about $50,000 . PACIRC Y•W ....OllALPAlll CemetetV Mortuary Chapel .. f6oo Pecillc View Drive ~ NewP<>rt Beach ti 644·2700 OlbCllClr MOITU.U.S laQuna Be9Ch •94-9415 LaQUNHilla 76&-4»33 5an Juan C.ptstrano •~1ne '9C1 llOTHal 1&1.•0ADWAT MOllTUAaY 110~ CoetaM99a "84ff150 .... niiiii•OM lMITM I TUIMU ~~ ec..a ..... 84&-*'71 ~ CM~~-?~~~ 141-7431 ., ... _ _,_ .............. .._. _, ------0. ... -.-.. ·-~· Rowen ~ins you '2:1''1. -·1'1G Edward STANLEY &UBalt"S A'M'EMPTED A FILll versioo of "Lolita" in 1982, with James Mason and Sue Lyon cut a1 the infatuated professor and the nau1hty nymphet, and brought forth a wet lollypop. Alan Jay Lemer concocted a musical in 1911, "Lolita, My Love." It closed out of town. After auditioning hundreds of nympbetic sub-teen thespians, with loud fanfares of tasteless publicity, Albee settled aa•wGAN'S on 24~ar-old Blanc.be nlU Baker for bis STEW disutroU5ly dirtied up stage version of literature's cleanest dirty novel, unique for the passions portrayed in the most chaste prose, and wound up bearing words Ulte "boring," "incompetent" and "mean spirited" from the New York critics. . ·ay comparison, the closina notices were the kindest cut of all. UP THERE IN LEPIDOPTERIST'S heaven, a benevolent smile must be breaking across the noble rugged features of the word magician who discovered Lolita's gum-chewing charms while hitchhiking rides on t he school buses in Ithaca, N. Y . It was here Nabokov taught literature, at Cornell, in between field trips around the world to chase butterflies. Once again his erring nymphet bu been saved from the garbage can. This time, Edward Albee's garbage can. The first time it was his own, out behind tbe house he rented on ComelJ 's faculty row. .. Despairing of ever finding a publisher, Nabokov bad tossed the novel out, but faithful wife and fervent ran Vera rescued it from the trash colledors, who fortunately had failed to call that morning. The success or LYOM "Lolita" enabled Nabokov to retire to Montreux. Switzerland, where it was my good fortune to interview him ln 1976. Vera, it is s aid, was angered by the four letter words and scenes of simulated sex that Albee had written into his s tage version, both of which blatantly contradicted the novelist's expressed warning to porn brokers seeing any cheap thrills from his demoniacal maJden. AS NABOKOV SPELLED IT OUT IN his foreword to the novel, one of lbe most abocting things about "LoUta" is Its absence of shocking language: ". . . Not a single obscene term is to be found in the whole work; indeed the robust philistine who is conditioned by modern conventions into a ccepting without qualms a lavish anay of four-letter words in a banal novel, will be quite s hocked by their absence here." Albee's descent into dreary obscenity and pornographic explicitness would have been thunderously dismissed by the master as a "copulation of AL•H cliches." These rape the novel of its "tendresse,'' which as he points out in the opening pages was Humbe rt Humbert's only redeeming alibi. • REJECTING FOUR-LETTER WORDS, Nabokov invented new ones to describe the. obsession of bis sex-addled academic, most memorable "nymphet," which be defined with Prouatian elegeance and wit: "Between the age limits of 9 and H there occur maidens who, to certain bewitched travelers, twice or many more times older than they, reveaJ their true nature which is not human , but nymphic that is. demoniac, and these creatures I propose to designate as 'nymphets."· Hardly a subject for a morality play, but that in essence is what "Lolita" is, if ever any playwright can pin down her butterfly wiles and whims as novelisl·lepidopterist Nabokov did so brilliantly. Fort Lauderdale . fastest growing WAShINGTON CAP) -Tbe New York metropolitan area remains the natioo'a Jar1est concentration ot pe0ple, but the futest ll'Ow1nt area la Fort LauderdaJe.ffollywood, Fla., accord· ln• to census naures. Tbe ftpi"el tend to conllrm reports of pGp91a- tion ahU'la to tbe Sun Belt, and little or no .rowth lD Northeast and North Central areu. Tbe Cemua Bunau bu not formally 1uued tta llat of tbe natloo'a lar1•t ''ltadard metrapollta.D 1tatlltiea1 VMI," bot the~ 50 were compiled from bureau fll\U'W by American Democrapblca m•••line: PrrD &. nANCUt:, PUBUlllSa ot t.be mqutM DOt..s that all tbe mtl&roPolita.D ueu tbat are d.e~ or pow1D1 oelJ alStMll ate In tbe NorUMutliicf JforUI Central UUI, tt*ll• aU of lb-. IJ"OtlPlni futer t.haa tM 11.4 l*'HDt uU...al averaie are lD tb• Soutb aad WMt. · "Tbe metropolitan 6tdne, nqt just tbe ceVa1 , eiU•, ln the Non.bed ud Nortl C.Ual Jr.ta la · reaUJ qalte musive, and tbe meb'OllOli\U ~ . tD the SOUtb and W..t tn \nc,.ctlbl•~" commeaWd P'raucwe. · There are HI ltandard metro~'olltan atatllttcal anu lD t.be COUDUJ, 'WtdelJ' med for' atau.tlcal =• ucl t.be "Ud1 al people ud UM economy. .Ut nela an ... eclMAlla of a dlJ of 50,• or more ud U.. eidlaolll& ea1•U. tltat are alllliaWd wttb UM ..mal dtJ toeJalb' aM ecoaomlca1.ly. For Every· Room· = see, t90Ch and ! rely on. ROUND OAK BALL & c~w TABLE WfTH LEAF ANO s5291s FOUR PRESSED STlll'S BACKED CHAIRS AT . 10°10 Discount Off F u!ure Sale<; With Purcha~ of T 3ble anO Chairs Over 20 Oifferelt Styles DUIS: Carved . Roi-Top, Flats . Various ~es PtJBUC N&l'ICE 11141 IY~llO,THI AIO•U~ITATIMINT 0, ,,.,,.. p.,11111hed Or-.. CMSI o.ily 1"1194 •• Mar. ll,U,"411. l,I , ltll 1-.e1 All•l\ll< INUr-"9 c:tmpenr. •u Cff•r SIH'llltl. Delta, TtQt1S21t 1..----------- Y_l ..... ~ll, I.. PtJBUCNOTICE T~I Nml\ttd....U $1',171,117 L--· -------T.C.I 11.ollltlM •,7U,M2 I -Stltcltl~IW!dl -0· •-C•lt.1 ......... GIMIMly HOTICI Of' T•UITll"l IALI epfl•llStf!MWl' o.pa.11 2 000 000 T.S. ........ ...... ~..... • • 0& Aerll H . ""· •l 10 A.M.. trlb;itedtuf'lllut ltS,C ESTM09ELANOIERVICE, INC...• _l.,...,f\#Nb(wt'Pf"ll •,4'0,112 lllO•Ne ~•llOfl, .. IM now dolly 111t• ,,.... ........ ...-.,..,,_, ~~~".:O:....r.,dt t ,JIS.5" e o.H ol Tn.tt •uc.,'9d 11¥ SAME UL &<om• for the .... ., s. t1J,4'1 G L 0 0 I c H A ... 0 w A .. 0 A lsbll,_,_1$ lor LODI CH, HUS&ANO ANO'WI FE, .. ,.. , • ., s,s.1... ''"'°'· recordt4 F~r JS, 1•· W• lier..,,. unify lll•f t~ •Do... ' 11\\t No. 11sa1. II\ lloot. USll, .P ... ~~"" .,.. Ill ec<.or<Ml\C• will\ 1,..· AA· 701 ol Olflci.1 A«Of'lh In Ille ofli<.e ol 1111•1 St•••-nl lor Ille yHr ·~ lie County A«Of'cM• of <>reno-c--~ 11 • tto r. St•t• of <Alttorn1e. •ctm ., 41• I • m•CI• IO 111• WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION l\Slll'en<e Commfffloner of th• St•• 0 THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR I C•llfornl•, __ ,,.to lew. o.w. a.nrtlller, PrnlcMnl CASH, llMIY•bl• •t lime ol ••le fft A.C. F•llltrJlon, S.c nt•ry l•,.ful money Of Ille Unlled St•IH) el P11bllllled OriNIQe Co•st D•lly Pllol, Ill• 1011ow1ng Ur••I octctreu w•tl\ IMarcll 30, 31 Allrll t 2 l I'll\ \Ut-tt •~<Ille f)le<.• 111«ru1 nol.O Al '"" ,... ' ' ' · ___ ._ Nortn front lf'ltrance lo the Count, , PUBLIC NOTICE CO"rlftOUH, et 700 C1v1< center Ori•• Wot. on Ille C11r ol S•l\tl Ane, __ C•IHor1111. all right, 1111• and lnltrHI MUNICIPAL COUttT 01' conveyfCI lo ..00 "°'" Nlld by II under OAANGI. COUNTY/WI.ST OltANOI. H id Deed ol Trust "' tne prcperly JUDICIAL DllTttlCT \llu•lfO II\ H td Couf\ly and Sl•lt 11 .. •• 5-1 de\Crlbeo <I\ Loi S or fr.ct No •tt•, w,.tmiMlw, CA tlNJ 1n Ille CllY or COii• M<!W, Counl y Of Plel•tltt: IMSUAAMCI£ COMPtoMY Or•nQt. St•te ol ~hlornia, u per 01' NOlt'fN AMl£AICA M•P recoro.ct 1n Boo• •12 P1ges JO O.t•-= DAVID w. SUMM•its; 1no )I of M1Ktll•neo..s Ml~. 1n - ;PATRICK M. l'LaM41£R -001£1 I oflt<t ol Ille C:O..l\ly lh<or~r of s110 tlw ..... 1', IMlmlff. (Ollnly SllMMOfn Tiie \lrMI .od11•u ano otner com C:... M~: UIU mon deS1-l1C1n 1f any, of I~ rHI lfOTIC•I Yw ................ Tiit prooerly dH(ftbtel 11>0ve •• "'"PD'~ lc,ewt _, 1f1K* ...... , ,._wt ..... lo 1M1 lOl3 Pl11te Oro•e. C~t• Mtsa, ,_ ...... "-" ...._ l'MI ,._.. <:•11rorn11 '2•» wltllla ............. , .... ~ Th• -rslQNCI r ........ O•K•••nb ...... 1ny llab1l1ly for .,.,, lncorrectntn ol AVISOI u...-.. .,..-...... , Ille llrMI -•HS ..... o_, common ,1vl._.I ............ <tftlr• U"-ala eleSIQ,,.hon. It Al\Y, >llown "''"" Said .-...Cl.a • -,_ U•. ,....,... Wit Wiii 119 ....0., but Wllf>Oul COVe l ... tn * • .ies. ~ "' l1tlermec .... 1\11\I or ,..,,..,ty, upr"s or 1mpht0 .-ue-. ••Ql•d•l\Q 11111, po\\ff"°"· O< tl\Cum 1 II you .,..,. 1o --Ille ectv1C1 ol •" oranc ... lo IMIY Ille rem••n•no oron •tlorn•Y In this mailer, you '"°"'O dO c1p1I wm of Ille l\OllUJ P!'U't<l by l\o promplly >O lh•I your •rltt•n \Itel OHO of Tru\I, wltlt' lnlerut frtSPClllM, 114Wty, may 119 llltd on time tl\lreon, •• l>"OV•deel in wld nottl\I, SI Ulled -IOlkller ti cons.Jo o. •O••nc ... 11 MIY, unOtr tr.. term\ of "" •b09lllG •n llll •wl\lo, Cl-rl• Wtd o..a of Tru•I, ..... cnaroH • .,., h•<•flo lmmeell•l•m•l\lt, Cl• ul• ••i>enM• Ill Ille rr .. •llH Ind of '"'* m•n•r•. w •9-•ll eK•lll, '' Ill y trusl> cruteo Oy uoo Ono of Trull. •l1Ju111, putde ,., rtQlstr..S. a ll•ml>O. The lol•I 1mounl ol th• "nP••d I. TO THE DEFENDANT A CIVIi bal•nt• ol 1111 obli9<1!10n s..::ured by compl•lnl ~ -lllecl by ,.,. pl•ln tilt proe>er1y to bt >old and rNson.tblt 1111 egalnst "°"'· II you wlSh to cMler'ld ullm•l•O cosl•, uponH• 1no •d this lewsull, Y"" muil. wfll•ll\ JO d.tys v1nces H ol MArch lO, 1'81, " •ll•r this '41mrnGM I• Mr••d on YO", \112.809., which amount will 1ncrHst Ille with INS court • written re5')0nH until d•I• of ule. to 1'1• compl•nt Ul\leu yo" dO so, Tl>• btnaficiAry ..,,.,., sa•d DffO of YO"• cMflUll wlll IHI enlertd on ao-Tru\I l\lrtlolore utc.,11d •nd d~ plicetlon Ol troe plAOl\1111. and 11>11 co..rt hvored to Ille unoer\IQMCI • ,.,,,,.,, mo t l\llt • )uoomtnt •ga•n•t yOll tor O.clarollon ol O.taull ano O.mond tM relief "'manded In lilt compl•tnl, 1or Sa le, 1no 1 wrilten Nollet or which COllld rtwll '" garnlsl!mtnl ol 011•"" 4lnCI Eteclt011 lo Sell The un· ••IJ9•, llkll\Q OI "'°"''or property or Otrl•Qntd <•.,sod u oo Nollet ol Olll•r relief r1ouu1td on 11\t c om Otllull -Elocllon 10 Sell to oe ,. Pl•lnl. corOtCI 1n tlll county wlw•• Ill• rH I Oal.O July 11. l'llO Propertf" •oc•l•d w Ofllul of D•ltd Merell 20, 19'1 , ...,..... & ~1 Wt•tmorolenct Sc•••<•. Inc .,,......,..1ew-, TerewMeClroCI .o. a •• JIM AU•l~I Vtu PrH..,.,,I nllliMM,.CAnt» 'fltUSTl.E: Wl.S'fMOltEl..AND 16411' SEltYICa, INC., 1311 ,._ Ter,..., AICHAAOJ HACK, l'iltH C-1. ~ J•ll•, C..lltenli• t:ze>7. Clef'll r.1..-· 111•1 UJ.711t 'fr11t .. S.C· SUSAN L VNCH, lleft Oel>ul'I' Put>ll\ht<I Oranoe Cw•t D•••Y p,101. Publ•~ 0r-. COHI D••ly Pl~I Apnl I •• IS,, .. , IS01-tl Mircll 11, U, Aorll I. I,'"' U02-tl PUBLIC NOTICE ---------PUBLIC NOTICE ----N·711S9 NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OF DEATH OF STEPHEN A . JEF ·FREDA GAMBELL ANO FERIES, AKA STEPHEN OF PETITION TO AD· ANDREW JEFFERIES MINISTER ESTATE NO. ANO OF PETITION TO A·101192. ADMINISTER ESTATE T o a I I h e i r s , NO. A·10l140. benefi ciaries, creditors T o a l I h e i r s • and contingent c reditors of ~~~i(5;~1:beneflciarles, creditors Freda Gambell and and contlgent creditors of persons who may be Stephen A. Jefferies, aka otherwise interested in the Stephen Andrew Jefferies will and/or estate : and persons who may be A petition has been filed otherwise Interested In the by Josephine DeWitt in the will and/or estate: Superior Court of Orange A petition has been filed County ·r equesting that by Michael Rock In the J osephine DeWitt be ap· Superior Court of Orange p ointed as pe r son a l County requesting that representative to ad· Mlchael Rock be appoint· minister the estate of ed as personal represen· Freda Gambell , Costa tatlve to administer the Mesa, California (under estate of Stephen A. Jef· the Independ en t Ad· ferles, aka Stephen An-ministration of Estates drew Jefferies (under the Act). The petition is set for Independent Admlnlstra· hearing in Dept. No. 3 at tlon of Estates Act). The 700 Civtc Center Drive petition Is set for hearing w e s t • S a n t a A n a • In Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic California 92701 on April Center Drive. West. in the 22, 1981at9:30 a .m. City of Santa Ana , IF YOU OBJECT to the California on April 22, 1981 granting of the petition, at 9:30 a .m. · you should either appear IF YOU QB.J ECT to the at the hearing and state -...:.--""'lllllgral')tlno of the petition, your objections or file you should either appear written objections with the at the hearing and state court before the hearing . your objections or the Your appearance may be wrltlen objections with the In person or by your at· c.ourt bef«e the h•arlng. torney. Complete line of Fine Oak ~ .... .....__ Furnishings DlnlftOrOOrR • LM19oom ~ Oftlo9 fUrnMuf9. .......... W"OOm ..... ltM lllltWOom ....... Pul ~ Tollel and C.-flt-. CNnM. Hutctm, ....... Huuue. ~ ~ Mtmn. l.Mnp9, HelT,.._-. Your appearance may be I F Y O u A R E A In person or by your at· CREDITOR or a cont· torney. ingent creditor of the de· I F Y 0 U A R E A ceased, you must file your RE 01 TQR or a cont· claim with the court or lngent creditor of Ute de· present It to the person1I ceased you r1'ust file your representative appoint~ .claim with tht court or by the court within four present It to the personal months from the date of representative aOPOtnted first Issuance of letters as by the court wtthln four provlcMcl In Section 700 Clf months from the <Nt• of the Probate Code of first Issuance of letters as California. The time for provldld Th Section 700 of flllng clalms wlll not •>e· \tte Probate Code of plre prior to tour montm Colltomla. The tlm• fOf from the ate of the heer· flllnQ cl*ms wlll not ••· Ing noticed above. lrt prior to four months YOU MAY EXAMINE rom tM dlte of the bMr· the file ktt:>t by the court, no notlc.cl ebo'A. It tOU tre Interested In t-.e ! YOU MAY •XAMINI ntate, you may flit a,.._ Che fll• kept by the c:.urt. quest with tht·court to..._ f you art Interested In tt.-ctlv• special notice of the tatt, you rnav Ill• • r• tnvtntor'Y Of estate asseb ueat with ttie court to re-tnd of ihe petitions, ac· tlvt -.Ciel notice Of the c;ounts and report$ vtntory ol ntatt Htet1 tSucrlbed In section tlOO nd Of tht petltton1, ac-of the C.llfornle Probate unu and report• Code. rlbtd In Section 1200 the C.llfoml• Problt. AlttletaH, Ad•m• & . aarRts. • uw C=· -.~: ,.. •. ~ '" ... w .... =~ -·-ot &.aw, "· 9 , .. LN. 411 .. at, 41• N. R .. mtef lt'"t, hlte , • t t • • t , R 6 I 6 fft t 8 f I ...._, Call..,.le 91171, U111 n.)..... 11W1ft llMd °"9ftll Coelt • P'ubtl.._ Of•nge CoM.f lly ,.... MM. 25.1....~ 0.llY Piiot, MM. 31, •· • 1, t911 1'""4 1, 7, 1'11 1S1' .. 1 I t .. , NYSE C MPOSJTE TRJ{NSACTIONS oucrUTtcMdtltClUO• T••oH ON'"' .... YO••,MtD.Wllf, l'ACl,.C, ..... •Oirott OU•Olf AND ClllC•••All t"TOC• I •CM .. lt AND H NeTID t'I TNI NASO AltO Otlft•IT ' Have you reached a dead end ln your Jo~ - without reaJJll.nf ft? Are you ~g the euly warn- ing st,na.la that are telJlns you have advanced about as far H you are llkely to 10 in this firm and in your arear Are you s till counting on your seniority and your un- tapped abilities --~ IYlVIA PllTEI ~ !!._ to take you to the hel•hta you won't reach? The time to search for and flnd the objective answers to the fundamental forces shaping your future career is when you retain control of your f future and can shift tr rrom a negative bias to a new, • productive outlook. What are the early warning signals? HERE IS A LIST of basic questions relating both lo your job and to the corporation for which you work l; that, when honestly answered; will reveal ttie traps (ii any> around you. -To whom do you report? Are they well re·· garded in your company and slated lo move up? How much time do they spend with you in developing your skills? How long have you been in your present posi· tion? Are you still really learning? Or have your responsibilities expanded so that you're making a significant contribution to the profitabilit.Y of your company? -HAVE YOU BEEN passed over for promotion al least once or even more times than you can 1den· tif)\? How long have you been in this same JOb in comparison with other persons in similar jobs? How does your age compare with the ages of other peoplE! with the same job title in your company and in other companies? What is your pay level" How does your pay level compare with others in your profession and an relation to others within your comµany in your age and experience range? Are you listened to? Do your superiors or workers in your category seek you out to ask vour ~n~?~H? . -ARE YO U BEING MOVED around into other functional areas? In simple words, is your job nar " row and s~cirically defined, perhaps too much so'1 Or do you have real leeway for creativity in both • your own area and in other areas, a flexibility which allows you to demonstrate your individual approach to achieving your own goals and advancing the ohJec tives of your company as a whole? -Are you challenged by problems presented to you and by these challenges are your ab1lit1el> being used"! Are the goals meas urable? Are you stretched to capacity? How do you fe el about yourself in relation to your job and employer? Do you have selr·esteem and self-confidence? How strong are your asp1rat1ons, how determined is your drive? In all honesty. do you really want to advance? STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES &g1g .,~PJ~\, -Pf~• l•t• Tuetmy ti tel• c.IM, C-ff •1111 MOMey't 111tlce. • ............ 111'9',.lw ~-. tff ...... ......... 1 tnlyet.,t.1&00, _......,.. • .... .,_ tD '"9. I.! t,..., N .. tM100, eff u.oo . ....,._ lOOc,_, ·"°* '"°' oi .. .-oo, .,, .•. ~:0..·f'fftn NEW VORK(AP> "'""' Do,. JOI'~• •vg&. tor Tuuc:t•y. Mar 31. STOCKS Oo.n HIQh L..ow Clow C'19 Ind :ZO Tm U Utl '5 SUI lndu• Tre11 Vtlls 1002 10 1011 ..i 'IM . .sl IOQ:J 17 t 11.11 u.t ~ ..,,~ U I ... U7 '1 • •.'1 1()1 SI lllt,'3 10I 00 I°' 02 • I ..... )93 .. Jel ll '"° 13• s WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK (APl ~r 31 METALS TO«Uy llSl 419 3'6 "" 130 8 l ..... 1,900, •"· C-..er 11~'1 <""b a POUf>d u S 0.11,,,. "°"'· L.eM ~ <OlllS •pound Zl.c 4114·4314 cents a ~. c:tellverecl Tl• '1 .QS.11 Mete•• w ... k compo•lle lb. '"'""'-1• C_.,11 • po..n<I, N. V M•t<IWJ .... 20.00 per flask . .... u_ U2:2 00 troy Ot • N v SILVER Handy & Harm.o. \12 10 per lrov ounc_t , GOLD QUOTATIONS L ..... : tnOf'l\lllO lhllno U I• H. uo S3 o4 L ..... : elter-llal"ll U1' U. up SIMO .,.,,,, ., .. ,._, llalng \SJI n , up \I .SS, ,., • ..,..,., tlalno ""·"·up S3 4S ltlfld1: l•lt •lte-1111119 U1'.00, r. tf\an11..i, lSll 00 •Jl<9d. M•••Y & 14••"'•": only dally qu le U14.2$, up Ml.SO • ........,.., only CS.lly OUOI• UH.1J. \4P JO.SO. : • .......,.., only O.ily -t• l•btlc..., LU4.ll, .. t0.52 I .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, April 1, 1981· 1 • - High country taste. Light and mild . Above all in refreshment . \ I • I I j ~ I 07 The Pirates are primed ·for a showdown with the Falcons . . . D3. 'I -·' .. Ocean View will join S~set League· Finally, and only because Ocean View High Principal John Viculin has decidect it's in the best interest of the Seahawks, Ocean View High moves to the Sunset1 League and Cypress High stays where it belonlSs, in the Emplre League. Thal prospect will become reality this spring and is effective in September following the official approval by all of the principals involved in both leagues and a final OK from CIF Commissioner Ray Plutko. Indications are that the 100 percent approval from 14 principals is assured and Plutko verifies his backing. · "I've been informed of the situation and any time you get 14 principals to agree you're on the right track," says J>lutko. "I see no problem and expect to automatically approve it. I've en- couraged them to get it to my orrice as soon as possible." "Our historic reasons for objecting to joinin" the Sunset League remain," says VicuJin. "We're smaller in enrollment and the level of competi- tion ls steep, especially in football. But we can no Joncer afford not to be in the Sunset, because ot revenue and decreased costs of transportation. "It bas become clear to us that we'U coUapse in athletics unle&s we can lower the costs and in- crease our revenue." So, the switch appears-imminent. You can bet your bottom dollar Cypress won't object to staying within ita own district and league, thus overturn- ing the ridiculous idea of sending Cypress to the Sunset League. It would be nice if it could be said this was something the Orange County releaguing commit- tee, chaired by Corona del Mar High Principal Dennis Evans, determined. Such is not the case and if the current proposal . ~~ Follow the bouncing ball M LI sh m Newport Harbor High's Rich Holmes (8) appears to have missed a return to Marina's Tom Plane (4) in above photo. Below, Marina's Scott Filipek and Andy Klussmann get set for a block. For de.: tails, see story on page 02. a•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ no ~Angels trade Thon h - :i f or Astros' For.sch WI fo1 By ED ZINTEL to I Of ... o.ilf ,., ... Staff J T he Angels today traded in- •4f fielder Dickie Thon to Houston w for veteran pitcher Ken Forsch. Forsch, 34, a 6-4, 215-pound right-h a nder, comes to the Angels after compiling a 12-13 record and a 3.20 earned run average lut seuon. He pitched 222 innings in 1980, allowing just 41 walks and tossing three shutouts. Lifetime, Forsch la 78-81 with a 3.19 earned run average and u 33·22 the lut thrff years. ·'We were lookln1 for an ·established, experienced pitcher " said Aneela Vlee Prealden Buzzle Bavaai today. ''ft'hlle we were extremely SOITY to see Thon '°' we bad to do somethina tor Our future and our future ii now.•• Thon, 22, elaxed moaU~ IA a utillty role for the Ansell the last two yean. His major lea1Ue total• tnelude a .• avera1e. In 40 ,..,_ wtt.b the Antel•' Salt Lalle<.1t1 club last Muoe, 1hoD batted'.194. Tlle Anlell uve also med wal•en • pltcben Jim Barr and D••• Laaoebe for th• ,..,,.. ol siW., \hem their un- eond.ldoul , ........ Wttll an out.1tandlD1 offeewln lineup, tbe ~ were 1n need oL plteblD• lielp and Portell eo.ald ... i:Q \0 IOl Yinl part of tJtM poblem. Fertell tbrew a y against Atlanta on opening day in lm. He enjoyed his fines , season in 1979, posting an 11-6 record witt\ a 3.03 ERA and , completed 10 of 24 st.arts. Meanwhile, Chris Knapp should know by late tonight it he'll be w~ng an Angels un- iform. He and about four ot.ben, lncludinJ Jason Thompson, Bob- by Clark, John Harris and pe_rhaps Don Baylor, have been mentioned u posaible bait in the inter-lea1ue, trades. The . de- adline fOt' tndins is mld.ni1ht. Angels Vice President Bullie Bavasi says that he's lookinJ fo~ a reliable starttna pitcher. Several names have been toued · around such u Houatoa'• &. Forsch, the CbJc.,o Cubl' Rick ReUJcbel and Plttlbutlb'a J9'-l Candalerla, Jim Bibby and Enrique Romo. Pittlf1ur&b ti believed to bit most interested iD ThomPtOn. a . 1olld-bltt1n1 flrat baHmaa. However, the Piratea are re- portedly' not keea oo llftal .., eltber Canclalerta or Bibbf. Al• 1tdeJlpt, to 1et lte>mo", tb• An11.la wou.ld n~epltate acqulr-. tn1 ootta.t player, tollllCIGe KU catcher Sd 0t4. All ot wblcb leaves Ka.pp ·quite ~bl1. A 14-1ame wlaner ID ltTI, K9app bND't beeD tbl aame ltftft ruptwtnc • dlte Oii lla1 J.I, tm. 'ffll foltowtn1 two HHon• Clet ANGSU, p._ DI> for 1982-83 la an indication, Orange Coi.anty sorely needs new leadership with some responsibility to evet)one. [l's difficult to believe, but the 1982-83 proposal sends Irvine-based Woodbridge into the South CDast League and leaves out-of-place El Toro in the Sea View League. · Capistrano Valley Higb Principal Jobn Smart 1 is a member of the three-man committee, but b1a input was largely ignored on the matter. El Toro Principal Don Walker has been requesting aucb a move for a long time. Why? "Woodbridge asked to go to the South Coast League," explains Evans. NeJtber, however , would respond for the rec- ord on the situation -seeking the low profile and hoping things may gel better some time in the fu ture. Low profiles won't solve it -what will solve it is new leadership with a responsive ouUook. '* '* '* What about El Toro's request to rejoin tbe South Coast League from where the Chargers were plucked out or a few years a10 to satisfy the need of the Sea View League? 1 Fears that the sport of water polo woul4 Evans is confident the proposal will pass, of course, since it only takes a majority of votes from Orange County's principals. And that's too bad, because one (El Toro), school gets the shaft simp- ly because of a lack of consideration for what is right. become a thing of the past within the Huntin,ioo Beach Unified School District have been put aside following an appro-ved alternative to some earlier proposals to keep the district within its budget. What was at first feared to be the loss of CSee CARLSON, Page 03) Lister's had drerun It is ASU's staggering loss By JOHN SEVANO as we should have. Whenever we Of Ult o.111 ,.. ... Staff I d d Although Indiana's victory P aye un er pressure or we over North Carolina officially were fighting for our lives, we sealed the end to the 1981 NCAA played good." basketball season, many experts Maybe-that answer, more than are still speculating as to what any other , summed up ASU's happened to some of the coun-tragic plight -the..,proper effort· try's premiere teams in the ear-just wasn't there. ly rounds of the post·season And for that reason -plus tbe tournament. bitter taste that was left in his The fatality list was stagger· mouth -Lister decided to play ing. DePaul, Kentucky, Oregon in tonight's all-star game. He State, UCLA, defending cham· didn't want the public -or the pion Louisville, Arizona State-pro scouts for that matter -to they all fell by the wayside. r e m e m b e r h i s f i n a 1 ~ performance, or lack or one, THE LOSSES WERE not only against Kansas. a shock, but disbelieving to NCAA offi cials and college basketball fans who never in their wildest dreams thought so many quality calibe r teams would be eliminated so soon. The players themselves were just as bewildered. Was it over· confidence? A let-down? Tbe first round byes? There were as many answers as there were questions. Alton Lister, th~ big seven· foot.. center of Arizona State Universi- ty just shakes his head when asked the obvious question. "What went wrong?'' Lister admitted that the dev- astating defeat took some of the glisten off of what was a re- markable year for the Sun Devils, who finished second in the Pac·IO to Oregon State while compiling a 24·4 record. "RIGIIT AT THE beginning (of the Kansas game) you could feel something wasn't right," said Lister of his teammates. "During warmups you got the feeling that we weren't ready to play. "But l had felt like that before in other games and we always won so I didn't think much or il. .. Al TON LISTER What Lister did think about. however. -was of all the prior NCAA tournament upsets of the previous day . Despite the om inous warning, it didn't help the Sun Devils. "We heard all about the upsets and said 'Oh wow."' remem- bered Lister, who averaged 15.4 points and 9.8 rebounds for the Sun Devils while leading the P ac-10 in blocked shots (49). ··We were all worried it was so m e type of a trend or something. and then we went out and let the game get away from us. ••Right after we lost l flashed back to the Sugar Bowl tourna- ment (at New Orleans>. It was early in tbe season and we were the top seed there, too and we lost to Tennessee in the first round. The same type of thing happened at Wichita. "l wasn't too ·enthused about playing this game at the outset," said Lister. "because it can either help you or hurt-you. "But I decided to play because AlA is well.known nationaJly and they are organized. Plus it's a ch ance to show what I can do." LISTER WILL BE joined on the convention floor by Ron Cornelius of the Uruvenity of Pacific, Sid Williams of San Jose State, Jim McClostey of Loyola, Vince Brookins of Iowa, Mickey Dillard of Florida Slate, Greg Manning of Maryland, Clyde Bradshaw of DePaul and U. S. Reed of Arkansas. It was Reed's shot, incidental- ly. from just behind the mid- court stripe, that beat Louisville in the final seconds. ASU was never fortunate to be that close as a Kansas forward named Tony Guy scored a career-high 37 points to lead the J aybawk embarrassment. "I never will forget hlm," said Lister of Guy. "He will be in tbe back of my mind for a long time. "It's so tiard to figu~ it all ~ut. I just don't know." Again Lister was shaking bis head. The moment, the memory, the game . . . it was as if it was "WE WERE ONE or the top seeds and we didn't play as hard all a.bad dream. ..; Fifth straight Kings rip Jets, 7 -3 INGLEWOOD (AP> -. Coach Bob .Berry wasn't particularly happy when his Los Angeles Kings bad a "letdown" against the Winnipeg J ets, but he could understand it. "We bad a lapse there and Jost our concentration and they got some goals," said Berry. "But with a lead like that, that lends to happen." THE KINGS jumped out to a quick .t-0 lead then ended the first period with a S-1 advantage en route to a 7-3 National Hockey League victory over the J els Tuesday night. "I was aenerally happy with the way we played," said Berry. "The Andre St. Laurent line save ua a lift." . Tile ~ ~·bound Kina•, win· a.ra of five •&l'allbt and un- beaten in seyen outlnp, posted a cl11b retord bJ wlnnln1 their 48rd ~t of the llUOD. Tbly iot a '°'9flnd two Uliltl ... from the line ot St. Laurent. Dean Hopkinl and Jean Paul Kell)'. Oave Taylor taUeW olf &be flilt·pertod outbtarit w1*a M 1torecl bla caner.-..a aoaJ IS MOODdl m&o th ..._t. "WlaateMJOUiOwWJW'N five aMll doWll • t1Mt flrli.9'0t ,....,..._ .... , .. MIU.._ ulotlate aoaell:if t•• 1-. Mil.ct IMt.OrtcallJ. ·'TM= • .. ow.. After tMt •• • U1f.0MWCUUMft.. , ~ .. "THIS HAS BEEN a long y= for this team," he added. " . lost two of our last f'Olar in last minute." The defeaf ran the Jets' rec- ord to 0·11·1 in their last 12 roact r I ) tag From AP dlapalcbet SACRAMENTO -The Oranfe County-baaed [iJ Los Angeles Rams footbaU team would have to t • • leave Los Angeles out of their name, under a bUl • that has reached the ftooJ' of the state Assembly. But they could still cill themselves the Rama, or the Anaheim Rams, or the Orange County R,ms, or whatever. Supporters of the bill told the Assembl! Finance, Insurance and Commerce Committee on Tuesd that they want to preserve""'dJ1nity" for the Rams' former ome town. The committee advanced the bill ori a 10-4 vote, after lit· tie opposlton. / "They stole away the hearts of lhe fans. They abouJd leave the name," said . prop0nenl Bruce Young, D-Cypress, referring lo the National Football League team's move. from Los Angeles to Orange County. Said Bill Robertson, member of the Los Angeles Coliseum Cpmmission, "We think the name belon's with the team that will be playing in the Coliseum. We don t want the Rams to have the name.'' The bill, SB502 by Assemblyman Michael Roos, D·Los Angeles, would prevent a professional sports team from US· ' ing the name of a city or county without permission, if the , team played its home games outside that city or county. In the case of a city or county with the same name, as in Los Angeles, the team would have to have permission of both the city and county. The bill would also allow a city or county to charge a fee for the use of its name by a team from outside its boundaries. · Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D-Santa. Ana, pointed out that other football teams including the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants. do not play in their namesake cities. "We don't care what happen; in the rest of the country," said Robertson ... We in Los AJlleles care about our football team and want to have another one,"-a reference to Los Angeles' e(forts to get the Oakland Raiders. -------'''"'',. 111 t lw da" -----~ Wisconsin students, chan~ when il became ap· parent Chat the Badgers would beat Northwestern in the schools' battle to escape the Big Ten cellar in basket· ball: "We're Number Nine." utw.r ,,,..,.,,. ,,_,,..., .,...,.,., fatal auto accident. assisted on two goals and Bob ' . Guy Lafleur, in hi s first game since a near-~ Gainey drilled in the second-period game-winner as Montreal beat the New York islanders, 3·1, in National Hockey League action Tuesday night. It marked the first Canadien victory over the Islanders in 10 games, dating back lo 1978 ... Bobby Smith scored two goals and Neal Broten, playing in his first NHL game, added OM-to lead Minnesota to a 6·3 win over St. Louis . . . Antoa Stastay col· lected his 37th and 38th goals o( the season to power Quebec to a 5·1 win over· Pittsburgh ... The Los Angeles Kings and Buffalo Sabres have renegotiated their March 20 deal tbat gave the Sabres a top draft pick in exchange for ·veterans Rick Martin and Don Luce. ._.._, .. ,.,., 1J'bl:~i.. A .. ete. Laken, tNittttii• to become Ill ..._ fllWtMm la a dOaea yean to win back·to·back NBA. eMmpiaDlldPI, open defenae ol t.belr tl\le tonlabt ac~ ~Houston Rocllets at t.be Forum in fn ... wood. The Laktn wlll sod Eanl• .. ••1ie" .lobnldD JaM llarff• AWU.labbar to the peat tonl1ht . . . 0.wtd °'"9•"4~ limited to two pol·ot& lo the flra half, •coted ti lm the flrst ftve mlnutet of the lbird quarter to 1park Cblc:e10 to a 80·80 wtn over New York tn theJr NBA playo(f opea,er Tuesday nl1ht . . . .1.Uu Enloe'• game-high 32 point& and 20 each by Darryl Pa•._ and Bobby Joan triggered PhUadelphla lo a 124·108 win over Indiana in their playoff tame. 8Wy 1Ul1lat bad 25 points to spark the Pacers . . . New Jersey forward Maartce L•cas says be will appeaJ a $2,000 NBA fine stemmin1 from an altercation in Detroit two weekl ago. '119en •eat Ji'ltl,,,ell t• -...,.. Mark '"l'be Btrd" Fldrydt, the Detroit Tigers' ...... flamboyant pltcber,"WH sent t-Oday to the team's minor l~ague farm club at Evansville, Ind., after compillht a dismal 11.40 earned run average in spring training and being shelled by Pittsburgh in his lates outing. The Tige" announced they had obtained waivers on Fidrych, wbo was the American League Rookie of the Year in 1976 after p05ting a 19-9 record with a 2.34 ERA. But since · then, Fidrych has ~en plagued bv in· juries, including arm trouble ... Wiiiie 81Ddolpl9 scored both New York runs and rookie right-hander Gene Nelson pitched six innings of three-hit ball as the Yankees beat Texas, 2·1, in exhibition baseball Tuesday . . . Elsewhere around the circuit: Bruce Boehle hit a two-run homer in the first inning, then doubled to ignite a two-run rally in \he sixth as Seattle defeat- ed the Chicago Cubs, 5·4 . . . Rookie l'toncM MarsbaU Edwards' eighth-inning single drove in Ben Ogilvie with the winning run as Milwaukee rallied for an 11-10 victory over Oakland ... Lloyd Moseby's three-run homer capped an eight-run eighth inning that"car- ried Toronto to an 11-7 win over Philadelphia ... Joe Morgan drove in three runs with a pair of homers and Saµ Francisco posted a 3-1 over San Diego ... A sacrifice fly by Rusty Torres after Vaqce Law doubled and moved to third on a balk, lifted Pittsbur8' to a 6-5 win over Detroit ... Lamar John.son and Harold Baines bad two-run singles in a five-run seventh inning that carried the Chicago White Sox to a 6-2 win over Kansas City ... Mlke Torrez and Mark Clear combined for a five-hitter as Boston posted its fourth strai~ht win. 3· 1 over Minnesota. ... ••11d •eac /tlu.u.ippl St.. roa~lt ; Bob Boyd the former use basketball coach • for 13 years, is returning to the game as the head man at Mississippi State. Boyd , who coached at use from 1967-79, replaces Jim flatfieJd, who was fired after the Bulldogs' 8-19 record this past season Boyd's best season was 1970-71 when his Tf'IOjans fini shed 24-2 losing twice to UCLA. Boyd also coached at Santa Ana Coll~ge and Seattle Unjversi(y ... the Los Angeles Olympics are under fire in the state-run Soviet press for alleged commercialism • and substandard housing for teams. The 1984 Games are more than three years away. but Soviet publications already are sniping at Los Angeles organiters' plans to finance the Olympics primarily from American corporate donations rather than government funds ... Harlan FengJer, 78 the chief steward of the Indy 500 from 1958-1974. was found dead today at his home in New Lebanon. Ohio. He apparently died of natural causes. . T~...,,....,_ TV: Basketball -Houston at Lakers. 11 :30 p.m .. Chan-nel 2. ltaped). . RADIO: Houston at Lakers, 8: 30 p. m .• K LAC < 570 I THURSDAY RADIO Baseball -Cleveland vs. Angels at Palm Springs, 11 :55 a .m~. KMPC (710). SPORT~ BR EAK I BASEBALL I VOLLEYBA~L ES~E • were mUiiid by NOOrd1 al R and 2·11 d ERAI of 5.51 Md 6.1.A. And -.:;ou.•t 1bown thet t..'1 ready tar • 1uccentul llll um sprint ettber witb an IRA ol 8.43. Knapp hws to tieure that bla chances of staying as an An1el are about one in four. Manager Jim Fregosi ls plan· ning on keep\na 10 pitchers, eight of which are pretty much set: Geoff Zahn, Bill Travers Andy Hassler. Fred Martinez, Steve Renko. Don Aase. if he's healthy, Dave Frost and now, Forsch. That leaves two positions to be fought for by Knapp, John D'A· quisto. Jesse J efferson , Luis Sanchez and Mike Witt. "I'm definitely going to try as hard as I can to make this team." Knapp s aid earlier in sprinR training when his future wasn't so unsure. ··For some rea- son. I feel like l 've been a little unlucky. Like the chips haven't fallen as I thought they would." Knapp says he tries not to get down even. though he realizes that he very well could get sent down to · the minors . "I've never been down there since I cam e here <in 1978> and it bothers me lo think of it. "I don't know what it is. One time l'll lose my control, walk 2~opl.e. Next time. it's home r"uns . I've tried everything I can think or:· Everything he could think of Dodgen top Cincinnati VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP> - The Los Angeles Dodgers r allied for four runs in the eighth in· ning, the winner on Cinctnnati pitcher Geoff Combe 's wild pitch. then held on to edge the Reds 6·5 Tuesday in exhibition basebaU. Singl es b y Pepe Fri as, new comer Ken Landreaux and Steve Garvey produced one run and. after a walk to Ron Cey, Pedro Guerrero's infield single sent Landreaux home with the run that -tied it 4-4. Loser Jeff Lahti's wild throw to first al- lowed the tie-breaking run to score, then reliever Combe wild pitc hed home the Dodgers' fourth run of the inning. In the ninth, Mike O'Berry doubled and Sam Mws singled for the Reds· final run. The Dodgers collected 10 hits. Dusty Baker had a double and has 12 hits in his last 25 times at bat. Dave Lopes had a single, running his spnng hitting streak to 18 games !"bH lacl•Cled e~•n•Uil 1111 mecbaalu •J&oa•tll•r and ~bansiDI tu. ptp. Natrtl.C w Wort9Cl "At times, J fMI Uk• I'm bec1t •bere I want to be Md &Mil I slip tMlck a1a1n. I have • real hard 1ame and it seems like I struggle for several game• after that." I Ir Knapp sounds a UtUe dis- satisfied, it's because he la. But be can't blame the An1els. They've given him tbe chances ~ to prove himself. He simply '.; hasn't delivered. i. • 'J developed some bad babtta after tbe injury like not throwing across my body," be said. "But J thought I felt pretty 1ood now. The main thing is that I'm not gelling hitters out.'' And if that's the case, Knapp may find himself out by mid- night tonight. • * • ANGIL NOTIS A tol•I ot JO All·Slar 1N•lerm•rs will peroc'"t• In INI ......,., Fr .. w•y wi.s ._._ tlw ""9111 end °""'rs .. •Ml C.,..., • 1 .. 11 .... Ml«lkln. l•.-fs II Aftpts who II•,,. _,, All·Sler cornpetrUGfl -"II•...,_ O.rvey, •,....,,.um. cllolce, '-•Cit• 1111 of nln. Dodoer• -..., .. been .otecl 10 All·Sler -.-Fr06t "61 _., com.plalfllng Of •tor• •lllOw l•t•IY •nd R_,..o hes 119., trauCll.O..,. •-Mint on "'' i.fl -· 9otl'\ -1191"9 ~·--.. -,.,,.,.., lnJuriH ... Ti. ""9111 ...ce ....., will nol ., .. , lllelr names on Ille be<lt Of Mr ..,. lforms this lffton. "II c ... 1111 111,000 •-rNn •OO." ield Bevesl, .... ceu1e -h.o to ~ tlMm Ml ollln. The ,..ne1 •<e Jual lor TV enr-r. F..,s el lllt _.k <M 'I reed IN,..,,... un- they're 11t11ne 1n IN front'°""· II Tl/ .. .,ta lo !NY .n. ••'11 wur •-."a.vest edOed llMtl.,..,.,. h """'' ..,.,,_. to Ow World Serlff, lw ""9111 t Ofttlder II• ~ I..., •.• Not41111e -•· AnoelS pU~ ...... ·-· ""'9n ellled -I Ills but Pl•Y w.-s ., -t1•rMCk .. IC•nM•: "Glw ""' ball to (c;.i•> $eyers -901 owt of Ow wey•• •rl• °""'6ae ,,.. ••P"hed U\el ....... , reedy to l'l•Y IJO oernet tllil -flu ow A"ll<th •• llOplftv lie cM. 8111 lleve.i -co••u rlwd ••wit don't -..,. M'll 111114 .. ov•r • kine -· but II I tr .. for • ,......, <el<""' -lll'IM c_, .. IN loll, tMft I'm In IN PO•lllon of l\avlno to k-• re9u1., °" II• ben<i'I." Angels loee . . to Indiana TUCSON . (AP ) Bert Blyleven pitched seven innings of two-bit baseball and Mike ' Hargrove drove in four· runs to give the Cleveland Indians an 8-1 exhibition victory over the Angeles Tuesday. Blyleven struck out seven and walked two in his most im· presisive game of the spring. Hargrove singled in a run in the third and doubled three more in the sixth. . The only Angel run came on Dave Rader's RBI single in the fifth. Angel starter Fred Martinez gave up two runs in 4¥.t innings to a"bsorb the loss. Reliever Luis Sanchez allowed rour runs in l Y.s innings, and Dave La Roche gave up two runs in his two- inning stint. Prep volleyball Tars nip Vikes in shoot-out MICHELI IALS They had a shoot-out at the Tar corral Tuesday night and it took ftve games before a wmner was decided in the feature high school volleyball match of the night. The host Newport Harbor High Tars came# from behind with victories in the second, third and fifth games to post a S·2 decision over Marina's scrappy Vi.kings who played without the services of a key player. The Tars posted an 11-15, 16-14, 15·8, 7-15, 15-8 decision over the Vikings who didn't use their starting setter because he missed the bus ride to the Newport gym. In other matches. Laguna Beach's highly re· garded Artists toppled Capistrato Valley. 3.0; Fountain Valley tripped Westminster, 3-0; Estan· cia won over El Toro. 3-0 ; Costa Mesa was a victor over University, 3-0; and Irvine defeated La Quin· ta, 3-1 Going into Tuesday night's Sunset League sKowdown at Newport. the Vikings were primed for an upset and were ranked sixth in (;)range County in a tie with Newport. ''We used a brand new clffense tonight and when our setter didn't make the bus, he didn't "' plav," Coach Tim Reed said. "l thought our kids did a great job going five games with those guys tonight." · Andy Klussmann, a junior hitter for Martna, and Tom Plane, a senior hitter, did an outstanding job for the Vikings. Plane was particularly effec- tive on defense but Reed termed the outing a very Kirk Harty, m Speth and Rey Gu rnick good team effort. ~ were the keys to fuccess for Fountain Valle in a 15·7, lS-2, 15·8 romp over Westminster. Harty is a middle blocker and also played well in the back court on defense along with Speth and Gubemick. The Laguna Beach Artists had some problems getting start~ in their South Coast League outing with host Capistrano Valley but were able to pull ii out, 15·9, 16-14. 15-8. Lance Stewart. a senior setter for the Artists. along with middle blockers Neil Riddell and Doug Parsons, played well for the winners. Riddell and Parsons did particularly well in blocking and hit· Ung in the center position. The Artists returned lo a S·l offense during the game to cause the early problems with a few lapses in the earlv going. Estancia improved its Sea View League re- cord to 7-0 w1th an easy 15·2, 15-1, 15·6 win over El Toro with outside hit-"rs Bill Mattias and Jeff Cutler playing well for the winners. Costa Mesa posted a 15-5, 15-9, 15-10 win over University with P . J . Kiley, Mark Arnold and Paul Knipp playing well for the victors. Kiley is an outside· b1tter, Arnold a midclle blocker and Knipp a setter-hitter for the Mustanas. For Unjversity, Chris Mlller at middle blocker and Eric Hallmanier played well. Volleyball teams seek title The Orange County Invitational volleyball tournament championship is on the line tonight with the title game set for 8 o'clock at Huntington Beach High. Ente.rtna·s evening'\! action were six conten· ders, incl Estancia and San Clemente, who were seeded to the semifinals (6: 30) following successful ve res Saturday in pool play. In 4:30 quarterfinal sames are Newport Harbor against Capistrano Valley and Laguna Beach n . Irvine. What does a marathon · ,,. runner have In common with a Volk~wagen? - LONG DISTANCE MltEAGEI COST LE ST YOU THINK. Price a set today. MICHELIN 'X' RADIALS ... For American cars For Imports F.or Pickups, ~ Vans and RV's Whatever you drive, perlonnance-~n Midlefin "X redials ore competitively ?"iced And they're surprisinglv affordable. Compare quality, volOe, prie2 and perlorrrmce. If you ~ Michelin . . . you'll dive ~chelinl MICH EUN We put America on raclals. ·SAYE 30% 185x14 · l95x14 195x15 ~x15 225x15 230K15 Z!Sx15 l Olll(i.._... BEST ACTOR AND ACTRESS GETTOGETHEF\AFTEa.ACADUIJ ~WAJIOJS CEllMONl!I Roberf De Niro wot't"lor "Raging Bl.all," s1.ay JIH~f6r ''Coat "Mine~• Daughter" • I Fluor seeks merger with mineral firm By KEITH TUBER ot-DMlyf'l ... 51aff A white knight, in the parlance or h~ frnaoc.i&,c.c;~ is a company that steps in to prevent an unwant· ed takeover of one concern over another by offering a sweeter deal. That's essentially what hap· pened late Tuesday when Irvine· based Fluor Corp. came to the rescue of New York's St~ Joe Minerals Corp. through a merger agreement worth about $2.7 billion. The unwanted suitor m this case is Joseph E. Seagram & Soni Inc of New York. a subsidiary ol Montreat.based Seagram Co. Ltd. Seagram had offered $45 a share in cash for St. Joe's 45.l million shares outstanding. or about$2.l billion. Under the agreement an· oounced Tuesday. Fluor would acquire 45 percent Of St. Joe's common stock for $60 a s hare. a transaction valued at around $1.24 billion. -U successful, Fluor would then acquire the additional stock by pro\fiding St. Joe shareholders with 1.2 shares of Fluor common for each St. Joe shal'e, accoTding to the companies. Fluor stock traded at 46, down 4~. at about 11 a .m . Trading was stopped, at least ~em­ porartly. T<lm Daly, a a pokes man for St. Joe, 1ald the merger or Fluor and ' St. Joe"Justmadesense." "Ftrat, of all, lt <Seagram's takeover bid') wu a boat.lie hit '' DalysaiC). ''Mana1ement thou1ht <See FLUOa, Pa1e AJ) Mystery accepter no Oscar 'thief' HOLLYWOOD IAP> The "mystery man" who accepted the Oscar for Best Animated Short Film was a Hungarian -film official who had authoriza. lion from the film's producer - but not the Academy -to ac· cept the award. For a few hours, it might have ~ppeared an unknown had bounded up on stage to accept the award for "The Fly," pro- duced in Hungary by Ferenc Rofusz. But Regina Gruss, publicist for Marble Arch Films, said today there never really was a mystery about it. ··I was hostess for Istvan Dosai. head of Hungarofilm, who headed the Hungarian delega. tion to the Oscars. He bad been cabled by the producer of 'The Fly· to accept the award for him: He told that ~Academy of- ficials, but the-y told hlm not to accept the award unless his name was announced. "But when the award was an· nounced, Alan Arkin looked out in the audience and Istvan de· cided to go up to the stage," M1. Gruss said. "He went backstage and PQ6ed for photographs and EVERGREEN, Colo. CAP)-. The parents of John W'. Hinckley Jr., "just deat.royetl'' by t.be\f son's alle1ed assuaiDaUoa •t· tempt on Preildent Rea,an, • hope to SH him "• eooa aa possible" but have DO ct.en.»te travel e\ar).&1 their attorM' • .,.. J obn lllndll•)' ar. alltf hi• wife, Joaanei tt.,,ed a\ thejr attended the ball alterward. He gave me the Oscar, and I'm dropping it by today to get it en· graved." Sarno said Rofusz was not scheduled to attend the cere· monies at the Music Center. But just as Arkin and co-presenter OTHER OSCAR PHOTOS, STOAIE$-810 Margot Kidder were announcing that the Academy would accept for Rofusz. a mustachioed man bounded onto the stage. Dosal made a short accept· ance speech, posed~for the ob- Ii ga tory photographs and de· parted out the d'oor with the golden statuette. Sarno said Dosai's request to accept tbe statuette was turned down because Rofusz could not obtain a visa to leave Hungary "The Fly," a film by Pan· nonia or Budapest, won over ·•All Nothing," produced by Frederic Back, and "History of the World in Three Minutes Flat," produced by Michael Mills. . I 11 11\Nt.t \ UUN I'( (Al If l1 H~IA 25 CENTS President_ Up, wal • School fee ruled legal By STEVE MARBLE ot-0..ly f'te.tl\att School administrators along the Orange Coast ogreed today that a Santa Barbara court de· cision may clear the way for schools to begin charging stu· dents for participating in sports and other extracurricular ac- tivities. The ruling by Santa Barbara Superior Court Judge L Donald Boden stated that charging stu· dent fees in public schools does not violate a state constitutional guarantee of a free education. The ramifications in Orange County, administrators suggest· ed. could be wide.spread and im· mediate. Dr. Howard Roop, an assistant superintendent in the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis· trict. said his school colleagues have been following the case and believe the decision "opens some door~ " Roop sajd the. decision is timely in Huntington Beach because school trustees, faced with lack of money, recently agreed to eliminate some sports, including surfing, and to close down school pools for three months each year. The result. said Roop, was a $322,000 reduction in sport and other extracurricular activities. He said administrators now will analyze the court rulins &!Id pre· sent their findings to trustees. News or the court decision was received warmly in Laguna Beach, where the school district has been charging sport partici· pants for two years. Bill Barnes, director of educa· tional services for the Laguna Beach Unified School District, said without the court decision "it would have been devastating lo us." Laguna now charges students $45 for a single sport activity, $40 for a second sport and $35 for a third. "Jn districts like Laguna," sai(I Barnes. "It is essential that the court uphold the legality of the c fee ) practice, because of the im· pact it would have had' on our limited school finances." Officials from the Newport- M esa Unified School District were more cautious. J ea n Harmon, an ad · mioistrative assistant, said dis- trict lead~rs are pleased with the court decision but are reluctant to start celebrating. "We wonder if this court de· cision in Santa Barbara would even be applicable (in Orange County?>." she said. She said administrators. will wait to see if the court decision causes the slate Attorney General's office to change state rules and regulations that pro· hibit charging student:; fees for taking part in school activities. An administrator in the Irvine Unified School District said it's <See FEE, Page A2> Brady can speak, see WASHINGTON (AP> White Hou se press secret.aey James S. Brady, once ,iven little chance of 1urvivina a bullet wound to the brain, can speak and see and may be able to alt up "' bed within a few clays, dOcton said to· day. ~ mo~J. report on hi• condltlOQ 11ild the 40-year- olcl Jlrady can DOW mo¥• all fOUt' Umbe and "con· Unuu to Improve'' but ''remalu ln crlUcmJ eon4t· Uon.'' P,Jlyalclani say Brady, 1h9t durtft8 MondAY'I U · aaulnatlon atteh'lpt on PrHldent Rea1an, may recotet wlthout severe permanent mental or pby1lcaJ lmpalrment. g around .. ............ BRINGING JELLY BEANS Nancy vla1t1 pre1ldent Design standards rapped By STEVE MITCHELL Dt ... Deity ... ._ ,..,.. So you go to the Design Review Board in Lagtina Beach and say you want to build a com· mercial structure on South Coast Highway. Your plans include placing life-sized concrete animals, such as deer and bear, on the roof. And you want to nail hundreds of stoneware dishes on the exterior walls. "You'd never get it through the city today,·· says Laguna Beach architect Morris Sken· darian. But the Pottery Shack exists in town, as do the Hotel Laguna a nd a dozen other commercial landmarks that apparently do not conform with current stand· ards. The point, Skendarian and several other architects wanted to make before city officials Tuesday, is that municipal gov· erning bodies should look more at individual project proposals, rather than adhere srtrictly to guidelines that some term as subjective and vague. Councilman Kelly Boyd or· ganized the informal confab Tuesday, in which members of the D.esign Review Board, Plan· nlng Commission an8"city Coun· ell attended. His concern, he said, was the frequent bandying about of terms such as "mass," "bulk," "village atmosphere," and "im· mediate vicinity.'' when de· ci1ions about residential and commercial projects are re· viewed by the various city. panels. Boyd said a lot of phrases, such as "Villace Laguna," are emotional i.n natur~. rather than objective. and he charged homeowner groups with ualnt such emotionalism to sway city bOdies to turn down project.I that he says mi&bt fully meet city standards. <See DESIGN, Pa1e A2) Search continuee for busing judge LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge who wu approved by all parties in the Loa An1elea schoola des,'1ea•tion 1ult hu a h•••1 caa'9load already. and can't take the Job, the S~ot Court presldinl Judie ••Id. Judie David Ba1leaoa •aid Tuesday it ltlay be • •eek or more before he appolntt a new Juda• -wbo could tben be ~h•ll.,ed bJ tlttorne)'I for et.ti rt1hta l"MIPI -u.. Jchool .... tritt. Tbe"'•Mrtll for a .Jude• -..an Mareb It •W SaPelior' c·o•r\ Jud1t Paul "'l:ltj .......... Aides say business as usual WASHINGTON (AP) -A high-spirited President Reagan, out of the intensive care unit, is walking around and conducting "business as usual" in a suite at George Washington University Hospital, his doctor and aides said today. They said the president stayed up until 11 p.m. with his wife Nancy Tuesday to watch the firs t hour of the televised Academy Awards presentation, slept for four or five hours and began a busy morning tackling White House affairs. "Although he is somewhat un· comfortable, the president slept quite well," said Dr. Daniel Ruge, Reagan's personal physi· cian. "He has been out or befj and walked." The move to the suite was ac· complished Tuesday night, one day after the president and three other persons were wounded in a gunman's as· sassination attempt outside a Washington hotel. White House chief of staff James A. Baker III said on the CBS-TV "Morning" show that Reagan signed some nomination papers Tuesday evening and an unspecified executive order this morning. When Baker and other aides finished a meeting with Reagan this morning, he was eating breakfast sitting in a chair. ·'It's really business as usual ," said White House counselor Edwin Meese III, who said the president had set up a "full·time office" in his hospital suite. "The president is fully capa· ble of taking actions," Baker said. "We 've had to cancel very few activities.·· Meese indicated on NBC-TV's "Today" show that because of Reagan's "remarkable re· covery,''. he might be discharged from the hospital early next week, sooner than originally ex· peeled. The White House said Reagan is starting to eat solid foods and is "in good condition, but is ex· periencing some pain and fatigue in response to his in- jury." Ruge said the president's vital signs remained normal. Reagan had trouble breathing, chest pain, falling blood pres· sure and was spitting up blood when he walked into George Washington University Hospital after being shot, the New York Times said today. ••He definitely was in a life- t hr ea ten in g situation," the newspaper quoted Dr. William O'Neill as saying. "But he was very rapidly stabilized." O'Neill is a surgical intern who treated Reagan in the emergency room, the newspaper said in a story from Washington by its medical writer, Dr. Lawrence K. Altman. O'Neill also said nearly two (See REAGAN, Pa1e AJ) ORAIGI CUil llATllR Mostly cloudy tonight with 30 percent chance or s howers, dlmlnishln1 Thursday to 10 percent., C learing wltb gusty northwest winds later Thursday. Lows toni&bt 48 aloni the cout, 53 inland. 111111 TlllY , Ti~'1f~~il booming fn Soutlt•rt• I Cotflondo, Bld •tot• o/1fcfab urge blqfcf• to "" coutioft 1ond common """· SH ,,. A7. 11111 -_ [ ...................... , lnade. quate. ~· J\llt compare the ~HDl·· If you loot atU. ....... ,....Uo( m. Joe uct Jl'luol, fall·n~·DM they're both bllh srowtll alMft.. panies lnvolvea In beny lo· duatry. • 'Sellinl ¥odka S.methln1." The announcement came a day after J.he 2nd U.S. Court of A)>- peals turned down St. Joe's ap. &Seal of a temporary r8f lralnlnl( ~der that h• kept it Crom mount· y:i a campaian a1alnatSeaaram. I The order, Issued last week by U .S. District Judge Milton Pollack, denied St. Joe the OP· Portunity of offerin1 to buy up to 40 percent of ita own stock at $60 a share. tt lt also barred it -the nation's leading lead and zinc producer - from selling any of its assets. Special meetings of the boal'ds ol directors of Fluor and St. Joe will be held on or before April 5 to approve the merger and authorize execution of the definitive merger agreement. The agreement has been sub- mitted to the Federal District Court in New York in accordance with the temporary restraining order which was issued on March 25 in the }itigation between St. Joe and Seagram. 1, A release by St. Joe's chairman and chief executive officer, John 0. Duncan, said "St. Joe looks forward to our association with Fluor with keen anticipation and c,onlidence. "The transaction affords St. Joe shareholders the opportunity for continued participation in St. Joe's future. ln addition, St. Joe shareholders will also be able to share in Fluor's future." J . Robert Fluor. chairman and president of Fluor , said in a state· ment that "We are convinced both companies will benefit from the combination of St. J oe's strength in nfltural resources and Fluor's strength in construction and engineering, as well as from the t\nancial capacity of oor joined • companies. "With this merger, we achi eve our strategic goal of a major posi· lion in natural resources with one of the world's leading natural re- sources companies." -Keith Tuber FEE... I DM111'1 ... 1Ulf ..... 6rl9 l•ree .. t Appearing at Edison High School in Huntington Beach today, State Superintendent of Public· Instruction Wilson Riles wamed that proppsed f ederaJ spending cuts could result in the layoff of about 10.000 teachers in the state. Air crash victim shows • unprovement A Mission Viejo man, seriously injured in a weekend crash of a sins(le-engine plane in Riverside County that kilJed his two com- panions, was listed in fair condi· lion tGday at Mission Communi- ty Hospital. A hospital spokesman said Tom Sandell's condition is steadily im· proving. Sandell, 21, is reportedly suffering from multiple frac. lures. According to the Riverside County Coroner's office. the crash of the -Cessna left two other Orange County men dead after the plane went down Sunday in rugged country near Temecula. A coroner's spokesman iden- tified the dead men as Roger Joel Mann, 45, of El Toro. the pilot of the plane; and Steven John Kranz, 20of Laguna Hills. /.fter the crash in the remote mountain area at about J p.m .. , Sandell was treated at Mission Valley Medical Cen~r in Lake Elsinore and then transferred to Mission Community Hospital in possible that Irvine schdol trustees wHI ask the state Board of Education to change those rules in light of the decision. -M isaion Viejo. Jerry Rayl , an Irvine school director, said charging fees is "basically something we don't • want to do -we'll do it only if we ha veto." · He pointed out that due to the district's unclear financial pie·· ture, Irvine's entire extracur· r.icular program is under study. a study that includes consideration of fees. The Santa Barbara case in· volved U1e Santa Barbara High ~hool District and its practice of charging s tude nts $25 for participating In extracurricular activities. More than 100 school districts in the slate already impose such r.es. Gay-rights . bill falters ··SACRAMENTO 1APl -A blt- t.erly contested bill to outlaw job discrimination against homosex- uals seems stymied for the third yearinarow. The bill, ABl by Assemblyman Art Agnos, D·San Francisco, got only a S.S vote late Tuesday of the Assembly Labor and Employ- ment Committee, with one member absent. It needs six votes to advance. The bill would make it unla.wful to discriminate in employment on the basis of sexual orientation. Suspect wounded , SAN fRANClSCO <AP) -A suspect ln the shooting of two undercover San FTSnciaco police ofiflcen was in critical condition foHowlnt sur1ery for bullet wounds In tbe chesl, bead and lees. according to the Mwlon Emer1ency Hospital. Police sa1d the suspect, Richard G. Knecbl, 26, had shot hlmaell ln the bead when cornered by the police officen Tuesday. A spokesman for the Riverside County Sheriffs Departmentsaid it took a rescue team more than <40 minutes.to hike to the crash site fr9m the nearest road. Reportedly IO.foot-high brush hindered efforts to reach the downed plane with the three men on board . The s h e riff's s pokes man said two of the rescuers were hurt -one from an ankle injury and another from ex- ertion. c Fro• P .. e AJ DESIGN ..• Blair Ballard, a member of .• the city's architectural associa- tion, satd. m~y _property own en lose development decisions hued on terms such as mass and rilla-atmosphere. Batterd said the architectural aiisoeietioo would provide a non · ilif<>tin1 etchitedural member to lht bo8N to provide expertise. "I t'etlli:ze the-City Council ls not in favor of an architect on the board due to the possible conflict of Interest .'' Ballard said. But a non-voting member could bring profess ional guidance to the panel. Primary amon1 the architects' concerns is the un· fair nature in which they say de- cisions are baaed upon surround- ing ~evelopmenta. They say they are piqued by examples of structures that represent village charm. saying most of those exisUng units do not now conform to city codes. They do not meet parkinl re· quirements, many sprawl •II over a lot with no le1al setbacks, alt too cloee to the street or con- tain IUecaJ Uvin1 quarters. Council Dtembers a1reed to a1ain discuss the arcbitec;ta' concems at .a later date, and uraed"memben of lbe other two panell to submit their t.bouahta •Tuesday's m~tinJ. We,fare r~vamping set Counly taka steps toward overli:iiul By FREDElllCK SCBOEMEHL Of .. Delly ~-s.-. The Orange County Boa.rd of Supervisors has taken steps toward overhauling the county's general relief welfare program. In action Tuesday, tbe board: -Called for studies of the legality of applying a one-year residency requirement for reci- pients; use of vouchers to third parties instead of direct cash PllYments, and of a proposed ruJe to prevent people who have quit or been fired from a Job from applyina for assistance for a three-month period. · -Ordered a one-year freeze on the maximum general relief payment of $240 per month. -Said a wc>rk-for-welfare pro- gram for able-bodied recipients should be expanded and stilfer sanctions imposed for those who do not show up for work assign· men ts. -Directed county social aen'lee9 aftlcla.ll to implement ne• eu,ibillty requirements to apply to 1e.neral relief appli· cants. The general relief program, under ~ch "lut resort" as- sistance is provided to persons who either do not qualify or are waiting for state of federal welfare assistance, bas been in financial trouble since early March, when it was djsclosed its budget had been exhausted. HB man's wounded SJnce then, the boerd has ap· proved $200 ,000 in budget tranafers to keep the account sohent. An estimated $1.7 million more will be required to support the program through June 30, county officials said. father improving Though Richard Ruiz, acting social services director; had rec· ommended the immediate ap- plication ol a one-year residency requirement, supervisors de- cided the suggestion warrantt;d more Study. By PATRICK KENNEDY OI ltllt D.ity ~ ... Staff Karl Schneider, shot ~Y hi- jackers of an Indonesian jetliner in Bangkok, Thailand Sunday while trying to escape, has re· gained consciousness and is in satisfactory condition. "He's doing well and could be moved to a hospital in Singapore this week,•' said his son, Karl Schneider Jr .. 26, of Huntington Beach. The elder Schneider, 44, is '3 manager of Milchem Inc .. a Hou s ton-based oi l firm . Originally from Texas, he has lived outside the U.S. for 15 years. His son, an accountant in Costa Mesa, said his stepmother contacted him Tuesday with news that his father was "con- scious and alert:• He said his father was shot in' the side and the bullet pierced his lung and traveled to his ab- domen. The slug was removed Sunday. Im mediately following the s hooting it was believed that Schnelder had been hit in the•l spine. J u s t m o m e n ts b e f or el Schneider made his escape try, a Briton successfully ran to, freedom. Early Tuesday morning, four of the five hijackers were killed and the fifth wounded as In-. donesian commandos stormed the grounded jetliner and freed the remaining 55 hostages. Two other Americans, Ralph D. Hunt, 28, of Houston, and Thomas Heischman, about 45, of Carmel, Calif., also were among the hostages . Driver hits trash truck An Inglewood motorist who slammed into the back of a heavy trash truck in Laguna Beach was listed in ~table condition today at South Coast Medical Center. Police said Doris White, 57, of Inglewood, was following a larje trash truck south on Coast Highway near Aster Street at. about 10:30 a.m . Tuesday when \ she slammed into the rear of the vehicle. She was treated at the scene by paramedics and taken to the hospital for treatment of neck in· juries. f're91P_,,e.4I mNCKLEY •• torney lames Robinson, iaaued a brief statement Tuesday ex· pressing their "deep concem" 1 tor President Reagan and all t hose involved in Monday'• shootlng, lncludlne their son.j John. It was confirmed in W aabinctoa that the HiDctleys bad retalned the law flrJD ol miUlonalre d•C•nH att.drney Edward Beonett Williams. The Hinckley• relterated throulh ltoblDIOll that they have provided ps7~blatrlc care for thett aon ln the put, addlnt that "tffftt naluaUona alerted oo one to tbe Hliouln•• of bla con· dltlon.•t The plane had been comman- deered !Jy members of the Roly War Command, a right-wing ter· ror.lst group dedicated to tu.ming mostly Moslem Indonesia into a rundamentalist Islamic state. Nancy Kaufman, a staff al· The plane was hijacked over torney with the Orange County Indonesia, refueled in Malaysia, Legal Aid Sodety, Hid such re· where an UI woman passeneer J quir4!menls have 6een struck was let off, then flown to down by the courts and predict. Bangkok. ed the county would be sued If such standards were applled. The hijackers kept increasing their ransom demands, finally asking that 84 imprisoned mem- bers of their movement be freed from Indonesian jails, in addi- tion to a $1.5 mllllon payment. In Washington, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig praised the military action. "This firm approach is the only effective way lo discour age hostage- taking by terrorist grqups and escalation of terrorist demands. ·'The government of the Unit- ed States commends the Thai and Indonesian governments for the courageous stance they have taken," Hai& said. Use of vouchers, through which payments woul_d be made directly by the · county to landlorcls, grocers and utility companies, has helped in other counties attempting to cut welfare costs, officials said. Supervisor Bruce Nestande proposed the three,month wait- ing period for people who have quit or been fired from a job. He said a similar rule has been suc· cessfully applied in San Diego County. Supervisors decla red they will c_o ntinue to monitor the general relief program on a month·tO· month basis. School 1rad1Jate was one of more than 100 hoeta1es ab<\ard a Pakistani Jetliner hijacked by thrle opponents ol the Pakistan aovemment March 2 and ev~· tually nown to DamascUJ, wbere the hostages were released. HoUJ"I alter bla releue, Dews of a panel jury incUctme.nt ac· cu1ing Clymore of being the ringleader of a hashish and heroin smuggling ring wu re· leased by the U.S. Attorney's or. flee In New York. The M-year-old Orange Coun· ty resident was tater arrested at Ms Damascus hotel by Syrian authorities and taken to prison. Initlall}' he refused to sign waivers for his surrender, but after a visit by Kreber last week, he agreed to sign. ' Kreber s aid ·as he and Clymore were preparing to lea\'e for the United States Sun· day, he was told that his client would not be released and would remain in Syrian custody for the tJme being. Krebel' said be had no idea when Clymore would be re· leased. He said he suspects U.S. law enforceOlent om c ials intend to fly his client directly to New York where he faces the smug· glina charges. .-.We gave th~ State Depart· ment all the information oo our · flight schedules and arranged for Clymore to be arrested upon his arrival· in Los Angeles," Kreber said . C lymore was to have been met at the airport Tuesday by his parents. Thelma and Glen Clymore of San Juan Capistrano, along with his civil attorney, Harold Davidson of NewPOrt Beach. Kreber said Clymore wants to return to the United States, but is being prevented from doing so by the State Department. Kreber. who returned to Los Angeles Tuesday from spencling ll week with bis c lient in Damascus, said Syrian officials would probably release Clymore when Stale Department officials request them to do so. ........ ~ .. , REAGAN ••. pints of blood "came out spon· taneously" when a tube was in- serted in the president's chest to drain air. blood and otfler fluids from the chest cavity, a staqd- a rd procedure for a chest wound. "He was definitely in acute dis tress," O'Neill said in describing Reagan immediately after entering the hospital. • I Daily Pilai WEDNESDAY. APRIL 1, 1911· '\ <;;OMICS TE~EVI SION STOCKS Westgate approves $34.8 million bid for AirCal ... 812 Cigarette 'blallled for big Mes& bl.aze A smoldering cigarette, ap· tbe corporation's Mesa facility, ls The wastebasket, Richey said, said Tuesday. parenUy dumped into a plastic estimated at $100,000 by fire of-was located in a library-like Finally, when oxygen was sup- waatebasket by a secretary, ii ficials, with content losses listed secretarial cubicle In the middle· plied som,ehow. he said the fire blamed for the fire that swept atmorethan$500,000. south portion orthe concrete-slab took off. The rapid spread was through a 6,600-square-foot Jim Richey, Fire Department building. blamed by the chief on reflective General Monitors Inc. building in administrative chief, said a "It took all night for smoke to insulation under the building's Costa Mesa. cigarette apparenUy smoldered become visible. By then the whole roof and above false ceilings con· Dama~e to the building at 3019 In the basket after an ashtray was interior of the building was cook-structed throughout the concrete Ente.rpnseSt.,oneoffourhousing dumpedlateFridayaftemoon. ing.lt was super heated," Richey shell. The refiecUve material buma rapidly, Richey said. Firemen originally thought the blaze that resulted in mlnor ln· jury to one firefighter, had start- ed in the reception area near the buildinc'a front. The polnt of origin, Richey not- ed. was dif(icult to determine because ~ that fiall\ed ac"°" the roof inaulatlon •te down through th~ false celllngs cover- ing interior cubicles. J!. General Monitors Inc. ma'"' electronic devices ln the b~ to monitor flammable and toXJc gas fumes. Wo1nan held: Non-support 'Rare case ' ends up in Orange County Jail DalJy ...... SUff ,,_ HONORED FOR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTIONS IN NEWPORT Edgar 'Ned' Hiii wtth wife, onetime mayor Dora Ned Hill honor ed for N e wport service Edgar "Ned" Hill. a 42·year resident of Newport Beach and a major influence in civic circles, was presented with the Volun- tary Action Center·s first "Giv- i n g Is Living " award in ceremonies at the South Coast Plaza Hotel . The 87 ·year old Hill was honored by 14 groups and gov· ernment agencies at the dinner. which drew more than 200 peo· pie. with proceeds going toward expanding the action center. Hill received proclamations and resolutions from the City of Newport Beach. the California Assembly, the US House of Representatives, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and the Orange Coast YMCA. Hill's wife Dora, who was Newport's first woman mayor, also was honored, receiving a necklace from the Voluntary Ac· tion Center "Uncle Ned." as Hill is known lo friends. came to Newport in State fonding the early 1940s and helped found a s hipbuilding company near Lido Isle. where he lives. Later, Hill helped begin Mariner's Bank, which later merged with United California Bank Along with John Wayne, Hill helped form the 552 Club, a sup- port group for Hoag Memorial Hos pital. He was president of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce a nd re· mains a charter member of the chamber's Commodores Club. In 1970, Hill was named the chamber's .. Man of the Year." He is a charter member of the Y MCA's Orange County Ex· ecutive Club and a founder of Newport's colorful "Goofoff- ers." a group that still meets daily to discuss city a ff airs. In honoring Hill, the Voluntary Action Center said "this man has made his corner of the world a better place foe us all." Crystal Cove Park w im high priority By STEVE MITCHELL Of \lie o.lly .. , ... '"'" Acquisition of about 400 acres of Irvine Company land for ex· pansion of the Crystal Cove State Park bas received high priority for state parks funding next year. Me mbers of the California State Park and Recreation Com· mission have approved more than 100 projects for funding un· der the $130 million state park bond approved by voters in No· vember. In a case one official called "blue-moon rare," a 29.year-old divorcee was sent to jail for failure to pay child support to her ex-husband. Bonny Johnson of Diamond Bar began her four·aay sentence in Orange County Jail Tuesday for being $3,450 in arrears in child-support payments for their only child, Kari, now 6. "It is blue-moon rare for a woman to go to jail for not pay· ing child support,·· said Harry State help in NB oil fig ht urged Reluctant lo gamble on odds 1t considers to be only 50·50' Newport Beach hkely will join forces with the state to gain con- trol of 16disputed oil wells outside city limits. Operated for 12 yea rs by Newport oi lm an Robert Armstrong the wells were shut m ore than two months ago when his contract with the city ran out. The city, hoping to multiply its profits, wants complete control of the wells and the oi l, which is pu mped from city·conlrolled state tidelands. But Armstrong has r efused to turn over the rigs. City officials, after negotiations with Armstrong broke off. tried lo annex the property where the wells are situated. When that move failed. the city decided to go to court to condemn the property. That's when the 50·50 prediction was made. City Manager Bob Wynn said ther e was a question whether the city could condemn oil facilities outside city limits . ·'There was the chance that the city might be unsuccessful, .. ex· plained Wynn, "but there's no question the state can condemn the land ... A joint-powers agreement had been approved in concept by the stale Legislature for budgetary Newport council members will vote on the joint agreemenl next Monday. ·'The state would be sort of lend· ing us its power." said Wynn "Its interest comes in the fact that this is the public's oil." The wells, located outside West Newport, are rooted off the coast. City officials, who say they'll go out to bid to find an operator if control is gained, contend annual oil profits to the city can be in· c reased from $120,000 to $1 million a year . Armstrong. who protested the joint-powers agreement at the state Lands Commission hearing, wasn't available for comment on tbe latest developments. Wynn predicts the welts will be pumping again by July 1. Mas h of the Orange County Probation Department. Ms . Johnson said she couldn't pay the required sums and con· tends she was never told about the custody hearing at which the support payments were ordered. "U I had known of the hearing I would have hitchhiked back to fight for my daughter," she said. She claims she has lived since last November on $3,700 in sav- ings. The couple · were djvorced in lo Texas in an attempt to saye 1977 after three years of mar· her new marriage. riage, and the wife was initlally a warded custody of Kari. The Prouty went lo court and won hus band, Ste ven Prouty. a custody last June after bis ex- welder earning $4.50 an hour , wife failed to show up at a hear· d f $29 ing She was in Texas at the was or ered lo pay his wi e a lime and claimed she did not week in child support. know of the court date. But Prouty claims his wife, At that hearing, she was or- who had since remarried, would dered to pay $375 a month in block him from visiting his child suppo rt to Prouty, daughter for months at a time although the figure was later re- and suddenly took off with Kari duced to S300 a month. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Temporary quarters These Orange County employees have been relocated to the first floor of the Hall of Administration while repairs are being made to the $8.9 million building in Santa Ana. 1\f esans rap heliports Ex-mayor cal& U.ue biged llU )WWW' A handful of Costa Mesans plagued by low-fl ying helicopter noise turned out to protest addi· tionar h~liport.s and take a few verbal pbt s hots at helicopters in general before the City Council. Douglas Toohey of 1149 El Camino :Orive told council mem- bers meeting in a special study session Monday: "The issue is do we want these things in our laps or don't we ? I think the answer is we do not.•' "We don't like these things and want as little to do with them as p-0ssible . Your responsibility is to keep them out. Don't look for excuses to put up with this." New heliports are sought by the Los Angeles Times for its Orange County facility on Sunflower A venue near Harbor Boulev~· d and by Downey Sav-ings an Loan Association for its parking structure in the Town Center mplex at Bristol Street and An Avenue. In addition to those proposed ports scheduled for formal public hearings April 10, the council announced Monday night • tltal it will study ¥licopter and heliport pol~y in general. Helicopter noise issues were brought to a head in February when former Mayor Robert Wilson called for a public hear- ing on the Times and Downey Savings proposals. The matters had been carried on ·a council consent calendar lo be approved without discussion. Wilson objected to helicopters flying over the north Costa Mesa area. He called the whirlybird issue the biggest facing the council in 1981/ Wilson charged in February that about 40 helicopter s fly daily over his home in the Greenbrook tract , some of them rattling plates and windows and knocking pictures off the walls. for copter pilots by the FAA con· trollers at John Wayne Airport. The helicopters, he said, are guided at levels below 500 feet - to avoid fixed-wing aircraft - down a corridor between Mile Squ are Park in Fountain Valley and South Coast Plaza in north Costa Mesa. W i Ison suggested Monday night that the City Council follow c it y s taff members ' and helicopter proponents' advice by urging the FAA to lift the flight ceiling above north Mesa to l,QOO feet, a level at 't'hlch pilot Aboru said he would feel safe. Wilson also suggested that the council contact area corpora· lions using helicopters and the Professional Helicopter Pilots Association for help in reducing flight noise. T e ache r su etil,I frvine board• Newport seta Dodger game tripe Summer must be near. The Newport Beach recreation de- partment is planning two trips to Los Angeles to ·taJte in Dodger baseball games. The fint trip will be April 12 when the Dod1ers take on league rivals the Houston Aattos. On May 20, tbe depart- ment will asain head to Loi Angeles when tbe Dodtera meet t h e w o r I d c·tr a m p l o n Among those projects are five from Orange County. and state parks officials say purchase of 397 acres }ust west of Muddy Canyon and south or Laurel Canyon will have priority for fundin~nexlyear. Purchase of the $3.5 mUUon parcel would expand the new slate/ark to nearly 2,400 acres. An , since the state's opUon to purchue the extra land explres at the end of September, state parka commi11ioners 1u11eat that land be given tbe highest Stadi11m bus . runs scheduled b~ octo Monday night, the council re- viewed a 42-page city planning s taff s tudy that Included acoustical monitoring data re· corded at Wilson's home and another home just south of the San Diego Freeway. The higfist noise recorded at Wilson's Plumeria Place home was re1lstered by low-flylng helicopters. The 75 fixed-wing aircraft that new over the home reeistea ed far leu noise, tbe report analysed by Hilliard and 'Brl'cken, acoustical en1tneera, tndtcated. 1 , over ouster A former teacher in the ~ Unified School Dlstrlct bu ftled a $1 million lawsuit a1altlt the Board of E d ucatidb , alh~ging be was wron1fUUY' ftdil from his job as musk teacher at Vlsta Verde Year Round School. • Phlladelpbia PhllUes. . Tickets are $9.50, which in· eludes transPortatlon and re- served sulln1. Deadline for UM Aatros game is ~prU 3 and May 11 for the PhUllet came .. Fol' turt.her lntormation call M0-2271. priority for pur~haae. In aubeequent yean, the parks com mission inten ds to seek T he Orange County Transit District wants to take you out to thi ball same, and home a1am, for $2.50. funds for parldna, picnic. areu Tbe district's so-called and restrooms at Cryatal Cove. "Stadium Special" run wlll beSln The commlaalon 'a fOW'·year tn time to transport baseball fans pro1ram muat now 10 before the to Anaheim Stadium Saturday for state lelitl•tun for blad.Ptary an exhibttlon 1•me between the approval1 whtcb •t•te parka An1elsandtbeDod1ers. director. Peter Danceririond Jr. ~ aald he will ... It u rapidly u · Once tbe re1ular baseball poaaible •eaaon becinl, the busea wUl nan Othtr.Or!DI• County proJed.a on weekends fro~ two nparate rttom._w tor .,...-ai ,..._ partaoltbeeou.ty. '811Dt11Mle~ I llfiol•aa.ta On bu w!U 1tart t th p a r lr In Ch•• ... -=:'!•; ••• aMllMOf!! ..._,., C.Mer iiia r•troom1 and ......, part. &ea1-Macb .• mln\l\n bttcn ln1 at HWJtlajtoe State Bueb, 1ame Umi, atop at Lelaure World tad rehabllUatlon or camp· . ~~· 1 ftve Ilda..., later Ud aroulldl It DoMnJ State a..-. Welt Col._• at GciUWd and Ceqter sire!tran h~ur before gametitne. Tbe ~r run ori1lnate11 at the Mlaaioq Viejo Mall at Mar1uerite Parkway and Mall Way 85 mlnutei before the first pitch. It 11tops at the park-•nd·ride lot at the Laguna fflJla Mall IS mJnutes later. Both bul runs are 1c:beduled to arrive rt the •tedium ao minutes before the 1ame. They leave a1a!n from Ute lot'• charter bus parld.nc kit 1& mlnlel after UM lH&ou&. .. o...:,.a1hri rort.M trip I• St.• • .,. • Nilll tor ,.._. no an a1td U or 1-. llore lidonUtlaD c:u be ob! talned by c:allal.llae tranatt db· tttctat•'411<RID&>. t Reba Touw, city planner, said the bilhelt helicopter nolae level was about equal to that of a diesel loc:omo\lv• to yara ~m tbelittmer. HeUcopter proponents Bracf. ford Abom, a Downey S8vtnp pilot, and Loretta Foy, a Malibu MUCOIMr ocmult.nt. called the executl .. ·can'11ns machlMI U · penal•• iiDd Hie. aotlnt that a. IUUDU r at•• ... Ye 1teadJl1 •ecllned beeau11 of proven P.trfonnanee. A bore Hid UM pioltle• ln n9rtb COila ..... n1Wtl from UM fUcM. patlarnl mapped out. . Robert Spracue was fired ta Marchot18. • I I l I 1 • .l l AP&IL FOOUNG AltOVND: Why Lorraine Lip. POld (JI tbe Oi'a111• County M .. it Center saw realQD to mVite me to ye1terday'1 fuhion show ls quea- Uonable bUt I ahowed up anyway. This particular tribute µ, what milady will wrap herself in th.ls sprine w¥ sponsored by the Ladiea and Lords of Camelot down at the Newport -Harbor Yacht Club. ~' Tbe Camelot people --------~r. are actually a JOI MUIPlll~ ,futW' / ~:.~~t~0 °:u:~~~~! Music Center. Anyway, they certainly filled up the yacht club, ' . mostly with ladi-"s that could have been the models tbemselves, so ~omebody there must have known what they were doing. As for your correspondent, I can report to you that the fashions presented came .from Gimones of Lido Village. ,They were lovely. IN OTHER MATTERS, I did reco~ze "The Girl from lpanema" when played by gwtarist Carl Yerheyan and "Serenade in Blue" as nicely rendered iby organist Jonathan Brown. Beyond that, the whole show was a new world. There were no political speeches. There was no jet airport protest. No council members were present to pass a law that nobody could understand. It was really a nice affair. As to the fashions, however, some of them .are rather puzzling. This season.they've designed pants that look like skirts and skirts that are actually pants. It sure complicates girl-watching. You are viewing what isn't. And I thought today was April Fool's Day ... * * * SO ON TO A QUESTION more down to earth. Or under the ocean. Solne outfit has just sent in a ques-0 ~ "Juat five zip digits so away it goes!" Won -and-answer sheet on oil ·drilling off our coastline. It goes like this: First Question: Why should we &lutter . up our beautiful beaches and shorelines with oil-drilling rigs? Answer: We shouldn't. Second Question: Well, isn't that what will hap- pen if the government sells oil exploration and de· velopme nt leases ofr Northern and Central California shores? Answer: No. The closest drilling or exploration would be at least three miles at sea. Now what might have been expected to be the next logical question didn't get asked. It might have been this one : Question: Well, if we're not going to clutter up our beautiful beaches and shorelines with oil-drilling rigs, why should we clutter up our beautiful oc·ean three miles at sea? Al"WI ......... Self·klp Feminist Betty Ffiedan has called for return to volun- teerism, since the public cannot rely on government to pro· v)de social programs such as health and child care and old age assistance. DEAR PAT DUNN : I bou1ht a set ol Castleton china ln 1969. 1 wu very upset to learn that this company had ceued opera- tions entirely ln 1970. Do you have any idea where I could get some replacement pieces for the china I've broken? J.T .. Irvine CbJna Chasers Inc., P.O. Box SOU.I, Dunwoody, Ga. 30338, carries replacement pieces for CaaUeton china. When you tnquJre about the pieces you need, include the pat- tern and a aelf-addreased, stamped envelope for a prompt reply. China Cbuers reports that dartac the 19708, more than 1,4M cb.laa pattens weat out of production and are no longer ge11erally available. ID addition to Cattletoa, ..._ firm m alntalns stocks of out·~roductton and bard-to-find pattems from the following manufadurers: Flintridge, Franct1caa, Franconia, Gorham, Lenox, Minton, Norttake, Oxford, Pickard, Royal Doalton, Royal Worcester, Spode, Syracuse and Wedgwood. One of the greatest appeals of the City of Irvine is the wide ch oice of housing. Residential areas have been planned for single-family h omes, townhomes, apart- ments and condomin- iums. ~t ma ny different price levels. efficient, economicall y- balanced city. Growth guided by two impor- tant factors. The City's farsighted, living General Plan. And concerned residents ffom the community, City gove~nment and The Irvine Company w ho work together to make it happen. A variety of h ousing choices near City e m - ployment centers is an excellent example of Irvine's continued growth toward the goal of becoming a n energy- We may not always see eye-to-eye on every detail, but the result has been, and will con- tinue to be, a city that gets better to live Getridofstai,ns DEAR PAT DUNN: Would you please provide me with the name of a book that telJs how to remove all kinds of stains from cloth? J.G., Irvine The beat bargain around Oii this tilbject Is a Z .. page booklet called "Removt.g Sta ... From Fabric• (184.J).'' available for $1.it from tile Consumer lnforma&lon Ceater, Pueblo, Colo. Stott. You'll ft.ad out bow to re- move 180 common stain• -and that's a lot of l.nlormatlon for Sl.ZO. · • · "Got a problem7 Then wnte to Pat 1 Dunn Pat wall cul red ta~. gdting • the aruwers and action you need to • solve 1nequitus an govemme?ll alld bu.nness. Mail your queshov to Pat Dunn. At Your Sennce, Orange Cocut Dally Pilot, P.O Boz 1560. Costa Meaa, CA 92626. As many letters as possible will be answered. in every day. Hous ing plans like ours give assurance that th ere will a lways be a wide variety of well -de- signed reside ntial areas in Irvi ne. To fit different lifestyle needs a nd in- comes. For information on this growing new city, please visit or call The Irvine Company Informati on Cente r. Culver Drive exi t off Sa n Diego Fwy. (1-405). To corner of Barranca. (714) 551-1500. Silence prevails. ••• COMES NOW CONGRF.SSMAN Jerry Patterson from our ver y own Orange County, who has challenged the U.S. Postal Service's proposed nine- digit zip code. Good planning ives you a better choice o hous~ How did he challenge it? Why, by co-sponsoring a new law, that's how. The law would say if you don't like nine-digit zip co4es, well, you can jus\ go ahead and use the old five-digit zi p codes and the postal people can't penalize you for it.· Of course they won't penalize you. They'll just send all your ~redit ca_!'d payments to Dayton, Ohio. IF YOU WANT TO write Rep. Patterson about his new law, be may be reached at 137 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, D.C., zip 205150000. Okay, okay, forget the last four zeroes on the zip code. That was just April Fool. For now, anyway. Houses elosed Ex-madam denies guilt ' Ma. Holliday, who ia free on S2,500 baU, could race a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine on e..:h of the five char1es against her ii found &ullty. Her attorney, John Fitzgerald of Rapid City, said Tuesday he ,wouJd 1eek a jury trial and that be may fll• a motion t.o delay tbe o&*linl of the trial. He refused comment wben asked bow bil cue wtU be affected by M1. Holllday'a television appearaneH and the book she haa said 1be'1 writlnl about her career. ProaU\utlon was a lOO·J•H lradidon ltl Deadwood, solnl back to tbe da19 wbea Wllcl Biil Hlekodc and Calamity Jane lived ta tM W....,. town that now baa abopt 1,•00 ntldellti. • ,, . ~ ' I ~ BEST ACTOR AND ACTRESS GET TOGETHER AFTER ACADEMY AWARDS CEREMONIES Robert De Niro won for "Raging Bull," Sluy Spec,k for "Coel Miner'• Deughter" Fluor seeks rµerger with mineral firm A white knight, in the parlance of high financiers, is a company that steps in to prevent a n unwant- ed takeover of one concern over another by offering a sweeter ~~.al. That's essentially what hap· pened late Tuesday when Irvine- based Fluor Corp. came to the rescue of New York's St. Joe Minerals Corp. through a merger agreeme nt worth about $2.7 billion. The unwanted suitor 10 this case. is Joseph E. Seagram & Sons Inc. of New York. a subsidiary of Montreal-based Seagtam Co. Ltd. Seagram had offered $45 a share in cash for St. Joe's 45.1 million shares outstanding, or a bout $2.1 billion. Under the agr eement an - nounced Tuesday. Fluor would acquire 45 percent o( St. Joe's common stock for S60 a share, a transaction valued at around Sl.24 billion. If successful, Fluor would then acquire the additional stock by providing St. Joe s hareholders with 1.2 shares of Fluor common 'See FLUOR, Pa'e AZ) Trade day Mystery accepter no Oscar 'thief' HOLLYWOOD <AP> The "mystery man" who accepted the Oscar for Best Animated Shor t Film was a Hungarian film official who had authoriza- tion from the film's producer - but not the Academ y -to ac- cept the award. For a few hours, it might have appeared an unknown had bounded up 011 stage to accept the award for "The Fly," pro- duced in Hungary by Ferenc Rofusz. But R egin a Gruss, publicist for Marble Arch Films, said today there never really was a mystery about it. ··I was hostess for Istvan Dosai, head of Hungarofilm, who headed the Hungarian delega- tion to the Oscars. He had been cabled by the producer of 'The Fly' to accept the award for him. He told that to Academy of- ficials, but they told him not lo accept the award unless his name was announced. ''But when the award was an- nounced, Alan Arkin looked out in the audience and Istvan de- cided to go up to the stage," Ms. Gruss said. "He went backstage and posed for photographs and attended the ball afterward. He gave me the Oscar, and I'm dropping it by today lo get it en- graved ." Sarno said Rofusz was not scheduled. to attend the cere- monies at the Music Center. But just as Arkin a nd co-presenter OTHER OSCAR PHOTOS, STORIES-S10 Margot Kidder were announcing that the Academy would accept for Rofusz, a mustachioed man bounded onto the stage. Dosai made a short accept· s peech, posed for the ob· tory photographs and de- ted out the door with the golden statuette. · Sarno said Dosai's request to accept the statuette was turned down because Rofusz could not obtain a visa to leave Hungary "The Fly," a film by Pan- nonia of Budapest, won over "All Nothing," produced by Frederic Back, and ·'History of the World in Three Minutes Flat," produced by Michael Mills. Assasslnati.,a trg ' . ( C~arges 'destroy' Hinclde}r f aniily \ , Ylll lllllln ·llllY NIU OHANGE COUN TY C A LIFORNIA 25 CENTS President up, wal • Sclwol fee ruled legal By STEVE MARBLE Oltlle Dally 1'11.t Slalt School administrators along the Orange Coast agreed today that a Santa Barbara court de- cision may clear the way for schools to begin charging stu- dents for participating in sports and other extracurricular ac- tivities The ruling by Santa Barbara Superior Court Judge L Donald Boden stated that charging stu dent fees in public schools does not violate a state constitutional guarantee of a free education The ramifications 10 Orange County, admM'istrators suggest· ed. could be widespread and im mediate Dr. Howard Roop, an assistant superintendent in the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict. said his school colleagues have been following the case and believe the decision "opens some door11" Roop said the decision is timely in Huntington Beach because school trustees. faced with lack of money, recently agreed to eliminate some sports. including surfing, and to close down school pools for three months each year. The result, saidf Roop, was a $322,000 reduction in sport and other extracurricular activities. He said adminis.trators noW'Will analyze the court ruling a!'ld pre- sent their findings to trustees. News of the court decision was received warmly in Laguna Beach, where the school district ,has been charging sport partici- pants fort wo years. Bill Barnes, director of educa- tional services for the Laguna Beach Unified School District, said without the court decision "it would have been devastating lo us." Laguna now charges students $45 for a single sport activity, $40 for a second sport and $35 for a third. "In districts like L;iguna." said Barnes, "it is essential that the court uphold the legality of the (fee ) practice, because of the im- pact it would have had· on our limited school finances .·· Officials from the Newport- Mesa Unified School District were more cautious. Jean Harmon . an ad - ministrative assistant, said dis· trict leaders are pleased with the court decision but are reluctant to start celebrating. "We wonder if this court de- cision in Santa Barbara would even be applicable ! in Orange County?)," she said. She said administrators will wait to see if the court decision ca u ses the state Attorney General's office to change state• rules and regulations that pro- hibit charging students fees lor taking part in school activities. An administrator in the Irvine Unified School District said it's <See FEE, Page AZ> Brady can speak, see WASHINGTON <AP> W·b i t e Hou s e p r e s s secretary James S. Brady, once given UWe chance of surviving 1 bullet wound to the._ brain, can speak and see •nd may be able to alt. u.p lo bed within a few daya, doctors said to- day. A morninl rePort on hla condltlola 11ld tM. 40-1ear· old Brady can now move all four Umbl and ·'con· tlnuea to improve" but ·•remalna lo crtt1cal condl· Uon." 'Pb71ictana aay Brady, •bet duiiq MOllday'• u - HHlnatlo• attempt oa •PrtilJMnt Jleapa, may reco• ... wt&_. HHH perasaaeat ... atel or pllyll~ ......... t. g ~Omid .... .,..,.._. BRINGING JELLY BEANS Nancy visits president State OK extends su:ap meet By JERRY CLAUSEN Of Ult DAiiy .. i ... Slaff State officiaiS'have s igned a contract renewal with Tel-Phil Enterprises that enables the Newport Beach firm to continue o pe rating its weekend s wap meet at the Orange County Fair- grounds for 11 or more years. Signatures of the directors of t he state's Departments of General Services and Food and Agriculture we re secured early this week, Sacramento officials said. The action. which increases fair board income from the privately operated Costa Mesa swap meet to 33.3 percent from the previous 25 percent , followed a meeting last week between at least one fair board member and Gov. Edmund G. Brown .J,r. in Orange County. Brown-appointed bo.ard member Bobby Burks said to- day that he and board member Burr Williams met personally with the governor Wednesday lo discuss the contract, held up several months for changes re- quested by the two state wa tch- dog departments. · Burks said that he and Robert Seat, chairman of the board's ad hoc Swap Meet Committee, were §till attempting to work out con- fract changes suggested by the General Services Department when they learned th.e contract was approved as it stood Tues· day .... The contract, which also grants the fair board percen- tages of gross food and beverage sales at the lucrative weekend meets, was approved by the co unty fair b oa rd la s t December. Board membe rs bad ex · pressed anger -some of it directed at Fair Manager Ken· netb Fulk -for delays ln gain- ing required departmental ap- provals ln Sacramento for the weekend lease of about 29 acres <See SWAP, Pa1e AJ) Search continues for busing judge LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Judie who was approved by all parUea ln tbe Loa Ancetee 1cbool1 ctesesre1atton ault b., a heavy caseload already, and can't take the JO~ the S~rior Court presldlna Judce said. Judie David Eacleaon tald Tuesday It may be a week or more before be apPolntt a new Judie -who could the" be cbali.,.d by atlcinleya for cl.U rt1bt.t ~Pl Ud the acbaiOI dil· trlct. TM Hareb fOI' • J-... --lllrdt ..... ltJltOf Court .Judae Paul ~111 wttb.-. Aides say business as usual WASHING TON (APJ -A high-spirited President Reagan, out of the intensive care unit, is walking around and conducting "business as usual" in a suite at George Washington University Hospital, his doctor and aides said today. They said the president stayed up until 11 p. m. with his wife Nancy Tuesday to watch the firs t hour of the televised Academy Awards presentation, slept for four or five hours and began a busy morning tackling White House affairs. .. Although he is somewhat un- comfortable, the president slept quite well," said Dr. Daniel Ruge. Reagan's personal physi- cian. "He has been out of bed and walked." The move to the suite was ac- complished Tuesday night, one day after the president and three other person s were w.o unded in a gunm a n 's as· sassination attempt outside a Washington hotel. White Hou&e chief or staff James A. Baker Ill said on the CBS-TV "Morning" show that Reagan signed some nomination papers Tuesd;ly evening and an unspecifi ed executive order this morning. When Baker and other aides finished a meeting with Reagan t his morning, he was eating breakfast sitting in a chair. · · 1t 's r eally business as usual," said Wh ite House counselor Edwin Meese III, who said the president had set up a "full-time office" in his hospital s uite . ''The president is fully capa- ble of taking actions," Baker said. "We've had to cancel very few activities." Meese indicated on NBC-TV's ·'Today" s how that because of Reagan 's "r emarkable re- covery,'· he might be discharged from the hospital early next week, sooner than originally ex- pected. The White House said Reagan is starting to eat solid foods and is "in good condition, but is ex- periencing som e pain and fatigue in response to his in- jury ... Ruge said the president's vital signs remained normal. Reagan had trouble breathing, chest pain. falling blood pres- sure and was spitting up blood when he walked into George Washington University Hospital after being shot, the New York Times said today. ··He definitely was in a life- t h r e a ten i ng situation,'' the newspaper quoted Or. William __ __. O'Neill as saying. "But he was very rapidly stabilized.'' O'Neill is a surgical intern who treated Reagan in the emergency room , the newspaper said in a story from Washington by Its medical writer, Dr. Lawrence K. Allman. O'Neill also said nearly two (Sff REAGAN, Pase ,\2) DRllll CUST 1111111 Mostly cloudy toni1ht with 30 percent chance of showers, diminishing Thursday to 10 percent. Clearing with gusty' northwes t winds late.r Thursday. Lows toni&ht 48 alon• the coast, 53 inland. 111181 TlllY rtme-lhciriftg of propmJI '4 booming hi Soutla•r11 Caltfo""'1. But 1tat1 of/kfoll urge ~· to MN cClllfNM and common"""· SH ~ M . 11111 MY-~:: ..... Ill ..... • E ,£C ~ .I Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, April 1. 1981 87 FUDEaJCk SCHOEMEHL Ot .. Dlll., ......... The Orange County Board of Supervisors has taken 1teps toward overhaulln& t.be. coumy'1 general relief wettare procram. · In acUon Tuesday, the board: -Called for 1tudJes of the legalfb' of applylnl a one-year residency requirement for reel· pients; u.se of vouchers to third parties instead of direct cash payments, and of a pToposed ruie to prevent people who have quit or been fired from a Job trom applying for asslstattce for · -h three-month period. -Ordered a one-year freeze on the maximum general relier payment or f!40 per month. -Said a wort-ror-welf..,.. pro- gram ror abJe-bodied reelpleota should be Hpanded and .wrer sanctkm imposed tor thOM wbO do oQt show up for wqrk allisn· menta. -Directed county ,aoclal services olflc:la16 to Implement new eligibility requi~ments to appty to general relief appll· cants. The general relief program, under which "fast resort" as· sistance is provided to peraons who either do not qualify or are waiting for state of federal wdf'are assisfance. has been in financial trouble since early March. when it was disclosed its budget bad been exhausted. &lace tblD, tM board bu ap- proved U00,000 la budtet tran•fen to keep the aec:ount aolvent. Aa Htlmat•d '1.7 mUUon t!Mft,wll& be required to euppori t.be proatam tbrouch June 00. county offlcialuald. Thoup Richard Ruil, actin1 aoc:lal eervic:ea director. bad rec· ornmended lbe immediate ap· plication of a ooe-year residency requirement, supervisors de· cided tbe sugaestion warranted 'more study. Nancy Kaufman, a staff at· torney with the Orange County Legal Aid Society, said such re· quirements have been struck down by the courts and predict· ed th~ county would be sued if •uch:.ltand.vdl were applied. Uae of voucbera, throua wbich payments would be made dlrec:tly by tht' county to landlorcb. 1roc:ers and utllity companies, has helped in otMr counties attemptlni to cut welfare CC?Sll, olflc:lala uld. Superv11or Brue~ Nestande propoeed the thr~month wait· ing ~riod for people wbo have quit or been fired from a Job. He said a similar ruJe has been suc- cessfu]ly applied in San Diego County. Supervisors declared they will continue to monitor the general relief program on a month-to· month basis LB. lawyer raps Clymore deal By JOHN NEEDHAM Of Ille O.ily ...... S~ll The attorney for former hijack hostage Craig Clymore says ap- parent behind-the-scenes deal· ing by U.S. State Department of· ficials in Damascus, Syria, pre vented his client's scheduled return home Tuesday. Reached by telephone today, Laguna Beach attorney Ron Kre ber said he is upset over what he called "deception and questionable ethics" on the part or State Department orficiaJs in dealing with Clymore. C lymo re, a former Lake Forest res ident, reportedly signed a waiver or surrender Saturday in Damascus with the condition that he be allowed to return to Los Angeles, where he would turn himself ovel' to federal drug e nforcement authorities. ' Kreber charges that two hours Count against Diedrich dropped An Orange County Superior Court judge dismissed one of four felony charges facing former Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Ralph Diedrich today in his four-year· old campaign fund laundering case. Judge James Perez ruled that evidence was not sufficient lo show that Diedrich, as alleged by prosecutors. had conspired with a former attorney to com- mit perjury before a 1977 Orange County Grand Jury that initially investi gated the case. . But Perez let stand three other felony counts in which it is al· teged that Diedrich participated Inspectors' trial reset for May 12 A criminal tnal set to begin Tuesday in Harbor Municipal Court for three Irvine building inspectors accused or laking gratuities has been re!>cheduled for May 12. .. The postponement was requested by a defense attorney who said he had to leave town to participate in :mother trial. Manuel S . Linares, 34. or Corona ; Daniel B Bullard. 30, of Costa Mesa ,. and Arthur W. .Peck, 51, of Anaheim. face m i s de m e a n or c h a.r g e s of solicitation or acceptance of gratuities by public officers All three were fired from their jobs after Irvine police alleged they accepted food, liquor or over· •time pay from building contrac- • tors . Bullard and Peck are appealing their firings 1n a personnel hearing set to resume in Irvine City Hall on April 14 f'ro•P•~AJ IDNCKLEY .. torney James Robinson, issued a brief statement Tuesday ex· pressing their "deep concern" for President Reagan and all those involved in Monday's shooting, including their son, John. It was confirmed In Washington that \he Klncldeys had retained the law firm or millionaire defense attorney Edward Bennett Willlams. Tb.e Hinckleys reiterated through Robinson that they have provided psychiatric cal'41 for their son in the put. adding that "recent evaluations alerted no one a.o the seriousness of his con-dition." O"ANQE COAST with others to hide the true source of funds that were divert· ed to several 1976 election cam- paigns. Perez also implored attorneys to settle the Diedrich case before the scheduled start or his trial, May 26. A second pre-trial conference was scheduled for April:.>. Richard Haden. a state deputy attorney general handling the prosecution's case, refused to comment on whether negotiation on settling the case have been held. But the words Perez used ipi· plied that they have. Diedrich is the last remaining defendant in the case. Various other defendants have either en· tered .guilty or no..\:ontest pleas or have had their charges dis· missed. Air crash \... victim shows • unprovement A Mission Viejo man, seriously injured in a weekend crash of a single·engine plane in Riverside County that killed his two com- panions. was listed in fair condi· tion today at Mission $?ommuni· ty Hospital A hospital spokesman said Tom Sandell's condition is steadily im- proving. Sandell. 21 , is reportedly s uffering from multiple frac. lures According to the Riverside County Coroner's office. the crash of the Cessna left two other Orange County men dead after the plane went down Sunday in rugged country near TemecuJa. A coroner's spokesman iden- tified the dead men as Roger Joel Mann, 45, of El Toro. the pilot or the plane; and Steven John Kranz,20ofLaguna Hills . Arter the crash in the remote mountain area at about 3 p.m., Sandell was treated at Mission Valley Medical Center in Lake Elsinore and then transferred to Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. 1.,. A spokestt)an for the Riverside County Sheriff's Departm~nt sai<l lt took a rescue team more than 40 minutes to hike to the crash site from the nearest road. ReJ>OrtedJy lO·foot-high brush hindered efforts to reach the downed plane with the thl'ee men on board. The sheriff's spokesman said two or the rescuers were hurt-one from an ankJe injury and another from ex- ertion. DlllJ Pilat MAINOFFfCl Thomae P. Haley ,._..-...... JJO ~eat a.y SI., e ... -... CA. Mell ..,,..II! ... IJCIO, C.'8 NWM. CA. m2t ~N.WHd a ft er Clymore s igned the waiver, U.S. State Department officials visited the Syrian court where the signing took place and made arrangements to renege on the negotiated terms of his client's surrender. Clymore is being held at the Citadel pri'Son in Damascus pending his return to this coun- try where he races federal drug smuggling charges. The Laguna Beach High Fro• Page AJ SWAP ••• or the state·owned grounds. Fulk had argued publicly that the fair board should receive at least 50 percent of parking and vendor-space income. The new contract allows the fair board to change the location or property leased by Tel-Phil, a move required to construe a hotel on a corner or the sprawling fair· grounds to gain additional fair in- come . Bob Teller, Tel-Phil vice pres· ident and Brown supporter, said today,"l'm thrilled. I feel like a man who is innocent and has been charged with murder and the judge just round me innocent. ··But dammit, I never should have gone througt\,this in the first .Place." T eller earlier had contended ~hat Fulk was hindering state approval of the contract signed by the board more than three months ago in an ego-move to control the s wap meet. Fulk denied the allegations. noting that t\is interest in the contract was to gain as much as possible for the people of California out of a newly negotiated contract. "Actually," Teller said , "we got no plusses lin the new con· tract) that we weren't ofrered originally back in 1972. ··But we were dealing with a political situation and we were scared." Under the new· agreement, · Tel-Phil will build two new restrooms and a new food con- cession structure at the fair- grounds to serve meet patrons but turned over to the state. f'ro• Pe9e AJ FEE •.. possible that Irvine school trustees wilJ ask the state Board of Education to change those rules in light of the decision. Jerry Rayl, an frvine scbool director. said charging fees is "basically something we don't want to do we'll do it only if we have to." He pointed out that due to the district's unclear financial pic- ture, Irvine's entire extracur- ricular program is under study, a study that includes consideration orrees. The Santa Barbara case in· volved the Santa Barbara High School District and its practice of• c h arging s tudents $25 for participating in extracurricular activities. More than 100 school districts in the state aJready impose such. ~u. . I . 'Gwenn Nourse dead at 81; Rites planned Private aervtces 'are belnl planned th.ls week for '5-year Newport Beach reaJdent Gwenn H. Nourse, who dJed March 20 at Saddleback Memorial Hotpital at the ate ol 81 . • Mrs, Noune, who had recently moved ~ Lel1ure World L•l\ID• Hilla, wd born in Kana .. and after altendlna colle•e in Mia- ~ aourl. worked •• a newspaper reporter ln Idaho and San Frm· cl1co. She moved to Balboa ln i• and waa 1et.lve ln Ute Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Her late husband Norman owned aftd opHlted a marlne bardware abop bi Costa 111 .... Mn. NOlll'M ta turvlffd b1 •ooa ....., • ol ear.a del II•. and Nol"llMm, ot TMtln. SM Uo leav• lN'HtraDdthlldr•. School graduate was one or more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner hijacked by three opponents of the Pakistan government March 2' and even· tually flown to.Damascus, where the hostages were released. Hours after his release, news of a grand jury· indictment ac- e using Clymore of being the ringleader or a hashish a nd heroin smuggling ring was re· leased by the U.S. Attorney's of. fice in New York. The 24-year-old Orange Coun- ty resident was later arrested at his Damascus hotel by Syrian authorities and taken to prison. Initially he refused to slgo waivers for his surrender, but after a visit by Kreber last week, he agreed to sign Krebe r s.aid as b e and Clymore were preparing lo leave for lhe United States Sun- day. he was told that his cUent would not be released and would remain in Syrian custody for the time being. Kreber said he had no idea when Clymore would be rP.· leased. He said he suspects U.S. law enforcement officials intend to fly his client directly to New York where he faces the smug- gl!ng charges. "We gave the Stale Depart· ment all the information on our flight schedules and arranged for Clymore to be arrested upon his arrival in Los Angeles," Kreber said. Clymore was to have been met at the airport Tuesday by his pa rents. The I ma a nd Gle n C l ymo r e of Sa n Juan Capistrano. along with his civil attorney, Harold David1on of Newoort Beach. ... , ....... s-. ..... Grt. l•reee.c Appeartn.1 at Edison High School iri Huntington Beach today. St.ate Superintendent of Public Instruction Wilson aues warned that proposed f ederaJ spending cuts could resuJt in the layoff of ~bout 10,000 teachers in the state. F,....P8fleAJ REAGAN ... pints of blood "came out spon· taneously'' wben a tube was in· serted in the president's chest to drain air, blood and other fluids from t~ chest cavity. a stand· ard procedure for a chest wound. •·He was definitely in acute distress," O'Neill said in describing Reagan immediately arter entering the hospital. ·'The first thing the pre$ident mentioned to me was that he had been coughing up blood since the event. He had com· plained or chest pain and short- ness or breath. He denied having Jost consciousness. ·'There was blood staining of his lips and teeth and there was blood in the back or his throat." The doctor said Reagan's breathing rate was in the high 30s, about twice normal, his pulse on the high side at 88 and his blood pressure lower than usual at 78, according to the Times. After Reagan rested briefly on a stretcher, the blood pressure became normal. the report said. O'Neill said that Reagan never went into shock. ·'Throughout. the president was able to communicat~ to us his distress as well as fus dis· comfort and s hortness of breath," O'Neill told the Times. FLUOR ••• for each St. Joe ahare, accordin1 • to ihe companJea. Fluor atoc:k traded et 4614, down, .. , .i about 12:00 volwne WH m~ than 542,000 ahares. Tom Daly, a spokesman for St. Joe, saJd the meraer of Fluor and St. Joe "Just madeaente." "First of all, It CSellgram's takeover bid) was a hostile hit " Dal¥ said. "Management thought $45 a share was groHly inade- quate. "Just compare the companies. lf you look at the annual reports or St. Joe an!;I Fluor, you'll find they're both high growth com- panies involved In heavy in· dustry. "Sellin1 vodj<a just ain't the same thing." The announcement came a day after the 2nd U.S. Court or Ap- peals turned down St. Joe's ap- peal or a temporary restrairung order that has kept it from mount. lng a campaign agajrust Seagram The order, issued last week bv U .S . District Judge Milton Pollack, denied St. J oe the op- portunity of offering to buy up to 40 percent or its own stock at S60 a share. -Keith Tuber Wome~ boy lllTested in Mesa tlw/ts Two women and a 15-year-0ld boy have been arres ted for sus· picio~ or burglary and possession of stolen goods by a Costa Mesa orficer serving a ~arr_,ant alleging, parole viola- hop. Being held U\ Orange Count} Jail are Jamie Marie Oropesa, 20, and Lisa E Bordus, 18. both of 556 Hamilton St The boy, residing at the same address. is held in Orange Coun ty Juvenile Hall lnvestigators said officer Paul Alexander s erved the par<11e violation warrant to Ms Oropesa at about 3 a.m . Tuesdav a nd alleged ly recognized articles in her home that had been reported stolen Monday. About half of the loot stolen about noon from rhe home of Elva Schoenfelder on Boise Way was recovered, investigators s aid. m Ms Schoenfelder told police she' lost about Sl ,600 worth of belongings in the burglary in- cluding a Lelev1s1on set, jewelry and a camera Investigators •aid burglars forced their way into the home through a rear door. Have }'oo reached a dead end in your job - without reaUalnc lt? Are you Ignoring the early warn- ~·• sipala that are telling you have advanced about as f~&: i•s }'OU are Hely to -0 111 Utia firm and in yol.ll' .t•rea 1 Ar~ you :at}Jl counting ~n lJ --11111.....,-,-.-11-18--~ Z your aeniorat~ . ' and your un- tapped abilities to take you to the ~ghts you won't reach? The time to search for and find the objective answers to the fundamental forces shaping your rutuiie career ia When you retain control or your future and can shtrt if from a negative bias to a new, productive Ofltlook. What are tHt early warning signals? HER£ IS A Ll8T of basic questions relating both to ydur job and to the corporation for which you work that, wben honestly answered, wiU reveal ,tthe traps (if any) around you. -To whom do you report? Are they well re· garded in your company and slated to move up'' How· much time do they spend with you in developing your skills? -How lont have you been in your present posi- tion? Are you still really learning? Or have your o responsibilities etlpanded so that you're making a signmcant contribution to the profitability of your company? -HAVE YOU BEEN passed over for promotion at leaat once or even more times than you can iden- tify? How long have you been in this same job in comparison with other persons in similar jobs? How does your qe compare with the ages of other people witb Uae same job title in your company and in other companies? -What is your pay level? How does your pay level compare with ot~rs in your profession and in relation to others within your company in your age and experience rartge? -Are you Liatened to? Do your superiors or workers in your category seek: you out to ask your opinion? Ever? • -A&E YOU BE ING MOVED around into other functional areas? lo simple words. is your 1ob nar row and specifically defined. perhaps too much so'? Or do you have real leeway for creativity in both your own area and in other areas. a flexibility which allows' you to demonstrate your individ~al appro~ch to achieving yodr own goals and advancing the obJec- tives (I your company as a whole? Amer Call ISM Sld0tlln4 S..rslt•b l"hi!>rCP S Stan IJrue TW Corp AmHlnc UnOllCal s •landvCp s •Nloblf 8.anitAme r Tex.co Inc Fstl'a Mtg S«d<>llC_. s UPS AMI IOWNS I NIW~l1-::i' ... .._ ... ==.r:.1i ~== "'\'r,-"' ,,,, :.ir::: ·-.. ======-w~--:=.= _.. ..----·· -pfioe. "" . . ' Ma..-Uilt Cl>e I'd. I 1"1tl'a Mtl 2'11 + .. Up 11.6 2 o.t\nll!IMf 22 + H• Up tu J Amer c... .,._. t ·.. Up IU 4 ICN ,...,.,... Sft _. .. Up 11.t s u~es ~ + ,_ Up lt.J 6 H . .,_., tYt + f\ Up 10.1 1 WofNt(O I ~ , I~ Up t .t I K"'9fllltld Joi + I U.il II t .7 t Sou Pac 'UV. • m U. 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"''«· AMEllCAN LEADERS ... ~IN"l-S.... ---~,,,, ... -.._. oc1 .... -1 ~ -tr..s.no ... .-,., •• ""'"' !'ta.s Pet • 11•.200 .,.. • 0.IAPt'od ln,700 40' I • llffrtlnt A •62,600 1''• 1 U11l1Asbestos 10,400 •• • • !;: 1ta119erOll s 121,300 " + t_, WunrCom wt 119, 100 "" • ._.; CrystalOlt s llS,000 lS • W~ff HoUOllM 109,900 51 • 4i Gultcan v 101.800 ,.,,, • * Unlvltesru s 101,eoo 32''11 • 1-.• METALS ~ ll~t2 cents• pouno u S O•U1- ll0111. ...... Jot..» cents•-"" ZllK 41~.cl\to Ceflts • PWM, Cleltvered Titl 17.0SV Metals WM-composoto 11> ~16c..,tsapound H Y Mattwy $420.00 .,., "•" Pia"-un oo troy 01., N v SILVER COLO QUOTATIONS ~: momlnv ll.111119 U16 75. up '3 00. ......_, otw-llxlnv U14 ts,..,, so.so ,,.,.., .,.,,_ lllllno W7.t2, """·"· Pt_._.: lhdng$511 .... yp'-J,U ., 1-'0: late •"-ll•lno U14.00, -:1tM9M;$517.000IMO. MA•lr & Nar ... a111: only delly QllOlt taw.u.~1uo. ...1. .......... , Oltl'f dolly ql'Ote Ul4.2S, ,. IO.SO • .......... : OlllY dally qllOte labrtut.d aJM,U, 119 to.st. SYMBOLS • High .country taste. • Light and mild . Above al~ in refreshment.