HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-02 - Orange Coast Pilot~
Pelj~ry clmrn investigated
Bg8in,8t -· Aleala freed ·early
. ., D~~U~J!.ANN . bad b1J probation "terminated"
six montha early apd $5;000 ball ·
exofterated despite Probation
~tlfted' Alcala admitted ~ blm partlcipatlon in the highly prison immediately -bad be not
be 1lap~ Mi11 Sam1oe un· publicized Alcala case ii ooce testifiedintheAlcalacaae. · A ll:eY. p~ution wi~esa in
convicted child killer. Rodney J .
Alacala's murder trial -whole
testimony is now alleged to ·be
perjured -was taken off proba·
tion for armed. robbery OD the
same day that Alcala was sen··
tenced to die lut June.
~ Department recommendatiooa
be 10 'to ·state prllOD for petty
theft mated violations.
conscious Alter a~ucting. ber in a&ain the focus of ·attentlon now Perrera was back in court
June, 1979. that the California 'Supreme againootheflcbargea by January
Herrera. and anotbe·r man, Court baa ordered a bearing be 1980 (his probation period bad
One of the attomeys who ti.cl
represented the wltn"ess sald
there was an · unspoken agree·
ment hilt-client would receive a
break bi exchange for testifying
against Alcala.
· ·The result waa that Hernra, a
heroin addict, walked out of the
Orance County Courtbouae on
June 20, 1980, a free man .wbile
Alcala, 36, was condemned to
death for tbe 1979 kidnap·
murder of 12-year-Qld Robin
Samsc>e of Huntington Beach:
Robert Frank Dove, were in· held ln Oranae County. Superior been extended'·by Judge Rlck.l•
mates tocetar at Orange Coun-Court on allegations by Dove toDecember,1980).
ty Jail wheo Alcala alle1edly. that be and Herrera Ued on the Jones s.td it waa iJ:l the belt
made bb atatemeota to them. witness stand. . int~rests of bOth bis client and the
However, ·one of Herrera's ,nethenre-admlttedheviolated prosecution to delay that' cue.
several. pubUc defenders at the , p 1' o b a ti on and w bat was while the Alcala trial got under
time of Alcala's trial says there originally a one-year sentence to wa)t..
was "an implieclunde~tandlng" Orange County Jail handed down Twoseparateproceedinpwere
betw~efense lawyen and in July, 1979 was changed to a pending against Herrera -a The Orange County District
Attorney's Office ia denying that
Herrera was given a break in're-
tur~ for his .testimony. Herrera
prose that Herrt'ra would · 145-daysentence, deemedserve:d. probation violation hearing in.
. rec.eive me consideration for "He knew the r.opes," said Superior Court and lbe form.i Court records show that
Michael Eugene Herrera, 28, his Ale a testimony. . · Jones, who stated flatly that theft charges in North Orange
The issu e of ff err er a ' s Herrera would have ione to state Courity Municipal Court.
I Sanity exams Ordered
• Acid test
Les Lawson, a workman for the Southern Pacific
railroad, puts finishing touches on the seals of a tank car
that was leaking chlorosolfuric acid today. · Pressures
built up inside the car. causing it to blow a gasket.
Sex ch~es aimed ...._,.. . .
At Irvine. teacher
~::::: . . ~~ Irvine schoolteacher has . aft~ reeeiving information pro-·~ ·arrested on · 1s counts of vided by a parent o~ one of the
~my, child molest and oral ·boys.·
~aUon involving fi ve boys, Cann, who taught science and
~~said today. • computer classes· in sirth :::~:..~ • ..i-8 Cann 26 of 18051 ttirough eighth grades at t~e · ···~wm yron . • • · school at 5144 Michelson Road, Ean St., Irvine, a teacher 8' was blred by the Irvine Unified
ta;Verde Y~ar Round School. School District in 1975, district Jj . m1 held .1D Orange Co\qaty officials said. ;t~U· in lieu of $50,000 bail, 11a.td Nov, of the boys suffered ~~e Police 1'. Bob LeDDert. serio«s physical injuries, Lt. i:rui, who ls to be arr~gned Lennert said.
y on the sex charges wu · The 11 criminal counts against ~ted . Tuesday night ~t bis him. are comprised of 15 felonies ~e. Lt. Lennert said. . and 3 mlldemeanors, Lenn~rt
-::..< rt ti said. ~ e alSP. renta an apa men ~ PolJce said the ~rimes were
. una Beech and. may h1tve. allegedly committed on Cann's
r residtnces, pohct said. off·dOty hours. ~t . Leobert a-aid/ the boys
e frolJl 11 to 14 y"an, old.
DC fl ey case
• to ·gran 1ury
* * * * * *
'A.1nazing'reeovery
·Reagan. bitllet
seen glancing -
WASHINGTON (AP> -Preli-
den t Reagan, bis recovery
called "really amaxlng" from a
wou9d that doctors s~ might. have killed him, probably was
struck by a ricocheting bulla.
rather than a direct shot,
sources say. .
Waah.inct.On University Hospl(af
next week. And Speakes said the
president still plans to travel to
San Diego on April 27·28 to meet
Mexican President Jose 1...opez.
Portillo.
Sources r evealed that in· ·
vestigators believe the president
was wounded by a .22-callber
bullet that careened off the door
of his limo1JSine rather than by a
. (See REAGAN, Pase A%)
* * *
Brady, ui/e
play catch_
WASHINGTON <AP)
White House pres.s
secretary James Brady is
-talking, breathing without
assistance .and p_laying
catch with bis ~ife aa he
makes ·•truly excep-
tional" progress in bis re·
covery from a .gunshot
wound to the brain,, the
White House says.
Brady, injured in Mon·
day's assassination al-
te m Rl on President R~agln , remained in
critical condi\.lon at
George Washington
University Hospital, but
doctors expressed
cautious optimism.
Now in his third day of con-
valescence. the president "ls ln
extremely good &pirita after ex-
periencing the best night's sleep
since be has been in the
hos pit.al," his physician said to-
day. Dr: Danitl Ruge said the
president slept from 9 p.m.·until
6 a.m. apd "he looks fine." Stuntman killetJ, . . "He is awake, alert and talk:
ing with hospttal personnel, ...
Ruge said in a .sta.tement ·re-
layed by assistant White House
press secretary David Porsperi.
"His vital · signs are normal,
although he is still complainln1
of soreness in his left side, which
is quite normal."
·The president, 'Yea ring yellow
pajamas and a white robe and
slippers, later walked about 5C
yards in the hospital corridor,
said Larry Speakes, deputy
Whi'te House press se~relary.
Reacan planned to diacuas
le1i1laUve issues ~ith Senate
Republican leader Howard
Baker and meet with Vice Presi·
dent Georce Bush, Speakea said,
addinc that the president had
also slped . .a routine proclama·
tlon. .
White tlouse counselor Edwin
Meese ·UI said Reagan may be
re I ea 1 e·d tr om ·Geo r I e
in aircraft fall
HONOLULU <AP ) -A stunt
being filined for possible sale to
television shows such as "That's
Incredible'! bas resulted in the
death of stuntman Jim "Bullet"
Bailey, police report. •
Bailey, 31, of El Creek, Va .,
was killed Wednesday in a 150-
foot fall from an airplane on the
island of Maul. .
. Bailey was killed when a book
be was holding pulled loose from
the bottom of the atn.cle-engine
plane, according to M~ui Police
·Sgt. James Evans.
Evans aald a safety harness
holdlq Balley in place wu at·
tached only to the specially·
mounted hood and not to the rest
of thepl~e.
Balley fell about 150 feet into ..
sugarcane field a~d was pro-.
nounced dead at the scene.
The stunt was being filmed by
a private Maui firm for possible
sale later to television shows .
such as ABC's "That's Incredl·.
· ble," Evans said.
The Australian-born Bailey
bad been on Maui for several
weeks filming stunts, includlnl
one in which be was hurled from
a spee4in& car into a wall of fire
and one ln which be was
dragged fl:om behind a c.ar at
200 mph.
Gas station ,. . •.
robbed.at
·Probable
cause
waived
WASHINGTON,.<AP) -A
federal magistrate sent tbe cue
of John W. Hinckley Jr. to a
federal grand jury today to de-
cide whether the 25-year-old
lober should be indicted in the
attempted asaaaainatlon of
President Reagan.
hinckley, .wearing a white,
bulletproof vest under bis dark
blue sport coat, sat sUently u
bis l•wyer, Vincent Fuller,
waived the requiremeon.b.1t the
government show prob,ble
cause that a crime wu com·
milted.
M acistrate Lawrence
Margolis then sent bis cue
directly to a grand jury. · Aft~ the 18-minute bearinc,
U.S": Attorney Charles F .C. Ruff
told repcirters the magistrate's
order commits Hinckley under
federal law to an institution "for
a mental examination to de-
termine bis sa~ty." Tbe idendJy
of the· institution was J)ot dis·
closed. •
li'uller told Mar1olis ·that
Hlnck.ley's lawyers bad not de·
cided whether to use· insanity u
a defense. .
Hinckley was broucht to U.e
U .s. District Court buildJ.na in
an annored limousine from the
Quantico, Va., Marine base,
where he 1a be1Jl1 · held wttbaUt
bond. He arrived 80 mlnut11
<W HINCK.LEY, Pa1e AJ)
111111 Clllt'IWlll
Fair tonllbt end Ff4ftf.
e alle,ed sex climes dc;>n't
t O!lJ campus, Lt. Lennert , r.,,_inl to say where they
:atledd~y take place. ~ne 'lo:ved ·life · but IOsf .knifepomt
Winds h1ena1l•1 over·
nl ... t ....... u tq10 .,..
tbrou1b Frldat. Lo••
toilsht 45 on the cout, 52
tnlaild. Jllpa Friday 85 to
70.
-. Leanert aisb wouldn't aay
loiti the ~lle1ed crimes e bMn tak1n place. He said ,
otberteacbie were-Involved. .
Be added t6at police be1an in-•'
~~ Caiut lut Saturd&J
~r:takea life of l:oata Meaan . . ., AllTIRJ& •• \l'INllD, .......... ii{T
OnlJ five .week• a10 ,
handsome and 1untanned, but
for 'a dark. little mole OD bis
btoa"d chest, Frank Dean II Panther'•
al·d~nied
· water-skied beblnd hls boat,
Hard KnocU, hll laqbw IOet
in the roar ot lta eo11M.
• s,turday IDOl"alq, frieadl ud
relative• will ::~er for memorial fUDeral e.. tar
lllr. DMD, OI Ccleta 11 .. a,. wbo
dlect a W.-qo ~ ,aneer et UM
Clty ot Hope m Duarte. Ile .. 31. .
··ooc1 . : . Jusi fl .. wiftl
a10,'' m•um_JUI llat'J Paternoeter-DND, •, wbO r.
manied Mr fwm• bUI~ ln
\~
i
·I
. f
I
f
t
..
. . .........
lleJee••l .. llfl
A1J1nesia victim. Cheryl Ann
Tomiczek has decided that
for now she doesn't want to
see the f amlly she was re-
united with last week, or
any~e else she can't recall.
Sbe's be'en at a Florida
hosplta) smce Septem~r.
Fre• P.,,e AJ
filTES ....
cancer, his swift decline and bla
death, hoping to learn and help
others.
Saturday morning they will
bury the cannister or cremated
ashes that were Frank Dean JI
in the same grave with his
mother, who died when he was
10 years old.
Father John Chris O'Conner, a
City of Hope staff member who
married them and gave Frank
the Last Rites will offic~ate at
his 10 a.m. funeral at St. )ohn
the Baptist Catholic Church,
1015 Baker St., Costa Mesa.
. Mary says she doesn't cry
much.
She does it in the shower.
where, with all the spray and
water droplets, it isn't so
noticeable.
''I stand in the shower and re·
member him saying: 'Mary,
don't forget me . . . ' and I jmt
stand there and cry."
She and a friend. Diane Lynn,
of Lake Elsinore. who has been
staying with her, have noticed
little Frank has seemed silent
and withdrawn since losing his
father.
He likes to fold paper
airplanes and Tuesday they·
found one be had fashioned.
The small boy will probably
hurl It as bard and as high as
humanly possible, hoping it
lands where it should, carrying
his handwritten m essage :
"fl.ear God, Please tell Dad I lo~ him and miss him. Ji'rank
Dean.··
Besides his wife and son, Mr.
Dean le'aves his father, Edward,
of Buena Park; a brother, John,
of Newport Beach, and sisters,
Mary L\Jciano of Buena Park,
Diane Dean of Florida and Cora
Mc Kown, o( Virginia.
i1ii ..UBLBS (AP) -Tbe
autlior of the 1erMtlpla1 for "Tau DriNr" .. ,, 6e DOted
llmUUW. betnen tb• ftlm'•.
dl1turbed prota1oallt and tbe mu accused of 1bo0t*n1 Prell·
dent Reacan even before learn· tAs Jobn W. Hinckley Jr. wrote .. ne ... to UM movie'• l•adinl ae· treaa. ·
"I wu in New Orleana when
Reagan waa wounded Monday,
and when we beard It on tbe
new1, I just turned to aomebody
and said, 'It's .anotber one ol
tho•• "Taxi Driver" kldl, "'
Paul Schrader said Wedne9day.
In one par.t ol "Taxi..Drtver,"
the main character, Travis
Bickle, writes .a letter to a 12·
year-old proetitute -played b)'
Jodie Foster -just belore leav·
ins bis bome witb the intention
of assasainatlna a political can·
dldate. He doesn't commit the
crime.
Body found
. /I m c oset
MOUNT RAINIER, Md. (AP )
-An estate lawyer searching for
documents opened a closet door in
an empty home last week to flDd
the remains of a mummified
woman, according to Prince
Georges County police.
··We suspect foul play,•' county •
\ police spokesman Arthur DiGen-
naro Jr. said Wednesday.
In vestirators believe the
woman's son, now dead, bad been
collecting and cashing her Social
Security checks for 18 years, be
added. The spokesman aaiH the
lawyer, Michael Chapdelaine,
was searching the house for docu-
ments that would lead him to the
whereabouts of AJma Ella Coff·
man.
Jobs sought
by 15,000
BALTIMORE (AP>
· There are no jobs available
·at the U.S Postal Service
here, but lS,000 people lined
up anyway for a Iona-shot
chance at future openings.
The post office an-
nounced Friday a teat
would be held and said ap-
pli cations could be ob-
tained Wednesday. It post-
ed the announcement but
did not advertise, and of.
ficials were "a bit sur-
prised" by the turnout, said
spokeswoman Megarea M.
Ausman.
She said there might be 20
open1ngs at the post office
in the next year.
Miu l'olter, a atudellt at Yale.
University, received 1everal let·
tera and notea 1i1ned "John
Hinckley" lut fall and durt.q
the put month. The Juattce
Department reportedly found an
unmaUed let~r addre11ed to
Miu Foster ln Hlnckle1'1
W aabiqt.ae bot.el rooiu after J11L
ureat lloada1. It reportedly in·
dicated be wanted to impreu
her by an attempt to •'set
Re.,an."·
•'The connection la pretty UD·
ml1takable," Schrader said.
"You can't talk your way
around that.
"It'• not that I have created
this character or tbat·by any re-
sult therefore created Hinckley.
. I think the movie la just a very
accurate portrayal of tbia kind
of men~l aberration ...
because the~ are a type."
Schrader, 34, wrote the ICJ'ipt
for "Taxi Driver" in 1172, abort·
ly alter the aasa11inatlon at·
tempt-by Arthur Bremer that
left former Alabama Gov.
George Wallace paralyzed.
Schrader said be was in a
• · v,ry depressed state at the
Ume and the shooting coalesced
some of my feelings, and I wrote
the script in a very abort time
after that. It was about Bremer
or Hinckley or 500 other poten-
tial kids walking around trying
lo resolve incredible contradic-
tions in their minds.
"The character in 'Taxi
Driver' was doing things that
tot.ally contradicted his beliefs,"
Schrader said, "He was in a
very puritanical frame of mind,
yet be wu going to porno films
every day. He was anti·drugs,
yet speeding like crazy. He was
living a desperate contradiction.
"In other cultures, older
cultures, people resolve these
conflicts by killing themselves.
We seem to resolve them by kill·
Ing others. You create a at.ate
where you force others to kill
you rather than killing
yourself."
Schrader, who also wrote and
directed "Hard Core," "Blue
Collar" and "American Gigolo"
and collaborated with Mardik
Martin oo the screenpla.Y for
"Raging Bull," said be did not
believe movies and television
shows should be censored to
avoid inspiring crimes.
"Where do you atop? I think
'Charlie's Angela' is more incit-
ing to crime than anything in
'Taxi Driver,"' be said.
Music Cemer
tops awards
of Disneylqnd
The Orange County Music
Center was the big winner
among the Dis neyland Com-
munity Service Awards Wednea·
day at the Disneyland Hotel in
Anaheim.
Described by Lt. General
Frank Tharin, chairman of the
1980 awards committee, as hav-
ing carried out "the moat excep-
tit>nal and productive communi-
ty service program during
1980," the Music Center received
$25,000 toward the building of a
3,200-seal auditorium near South
Coast Plaza In Costa Mesa. • Elaine Red.field, chairman of
the board of the Music Center,
accepted the award, aakin&
Georgia Spooner to join her on-
stage because of her work in or-
ganizing the women's support
guilds throughout the county.
The awardl, given for the 24th
year, honor organisations in
Orange County for outatandlng
community service.
Ten awardl carry cub prises
of $5,000 and another'50 awards
are for $1,000 each, for a total ol
$125,000 in prbes. ·
Among the $5,000 awardl wa1
Interval Hbase of Seal Beach,
winnins in the Special Health
Servicee category. Tbe asency
provides temporary emer1ency
shelter to victims of domestic
violence.
Winners from the Oranse
Coast ol $1,000 awardl include
Ballet Paclfica of Lasuna
Beach; tbe Oran1e County
Philharmonic Soclet1, bead·
quartered ln Coeta Meaa: the
A11e11ment and Treatment
Service Center of Coaatal
~r-~---r""'":"-~~--~-....;....;.,o~....,.~.-.~-.;.;;..-ii~ Oranse County from Newport
Beach; Crouroada Al~
of Capl1trano Unlfted SGbool
Dl1trtct; ff off'ce of Oran1e CoUDty, Inc. from IAfUDa BWa~
.... Our Selftl (808) ol Cmta
Meaa: Amip de Ser B..an..a
and ~ Board 1-lrilne; VoluntaTy Action Center of
Soulia Or-.. OouDl)' la Newport
a.acb; t.bl .South eo.t JmtM•
of~ 0..-..,ila Celta ............ u.. g., ~Club from
ro..ua va11., Hllll 8ebOol.
wbleb worked at more than 100
Df'OJMa. from ne1e11U to tlllt Barch' al Dlme1 Rauaticf ...._.
Money for tbe awarda l•
doDNd bi. IMUejlliDd, .... '., plle...._ wen reetJ+ld Udl
year trom 441 ~Iii M
tom• ....
Tornad.o scene
• REi\G~N ;. •
direct lbat. rwo bu!Jeta bit ...
car -OM ol UMiil ~ulllaa 1$
the not ,.ar wtodOw' da ...
other blttlnc the rrir aoor. ~
Mlc~lc trace1 of pal.at have .,.. found OD the "rulb
mulled bullet" removed from
the .,,.......t, IOUrffm ..... ..
tbt eatrf wound ... mdlit
ra11ed than if be been 1truial directly. • o I •
K.lm floClard, a Wbite·~ 1
1POke1...-, •ll.ned com:t on tbe au.. WbJ:, olft.clala IC>Ubt
keep tbe btic focut on the-.,,..._
ldent'a o.erJ and the ap.
pearance oc i1N8laeu u 111\IW
tbre tbt 1cwernment. :
Bush 1 In for the= dent W 1 at a prevl ICb~ ctare-takiq
wltb a 'f(ouie employ•
marklnl 40 )eatt of 1overnmett
service. '
_,. nnouncementa blo11omdd-· fro~ White House preaa cl· flee an executive order aisned
by t president, appointm~
decld befOl"e the president was
shot aDd an ~OUbcement that
Reasan had tapped U.N. Am-
bassador Jeane Kirkpatrick td
replace Bush u head of a U.S.
dele1ation at a conference cm
Sheets of lumber are scattered like toothpicks over the
town of Hurtsboro, Ala., which was hit early this morning
by a tornado which killed two people and injured several
others. The wreckage at upper right is that of a sawmill.
refugee problems in Africa. :
Bush canceled a nteht out at
the theater, aayin1 his atten-
dance would be inappropriate. ·
Reagan has been spendiQ&
most of his time rea~I. readiqg
and watching a wall~mounldd
television in his US4-a-da.y
room. The president's· hospital
compound, including fo1.tt
private rooms and four semj-
private rooms ranging in price
up to $271 a day, has space for
his staff, Secret Service agents,
a communlcatioos center and 11
sitting room for his wife, Nancy.
f'r .. P.,.eAI
IDNCKLEY HEARING • • •
before the hearing was to begin,
and entered the heavily guarded
courtroom shortly after 10 a.m.
local time.
During the hearing, Hinckley
frequently conferred with one of
his lawyers from the firm of
famed criminal defense attorney Edward Bennett Williams. He
sat sµll in bis seat, occasionally
with bis hand partially covering
his mouth.
The 9fl.}y time Hinckley spoke
was when Margolis asked him
whether he agreed to waive the
government's presentation of
evidence.
"Yes, sir," Hinckley replied.
Fuller read into the court
..record a brief report by a
psychiatrist who examined the
suspect Wednesday and stated
that Hinckley "is presently men·
tally competent to stand trial."
Fuller asked that psychiatrists
hired by th e defense be
permitted "immediate access"
to Hinckley "to consider
whether or not the defenae of in·
sanity will be raised."
Hinckley's lawyer asked that
the examination take place at
Quantico. Ruff said the suspect
should be examined at a
psychiatric institution .
Margolis, siding with the gov·
emment, specified an institution,
but said the medical specialists
for the defense would be allowed
access to Hinckley.
Margolis, al the defense at-
torney's request, postponed the
effect of bis order for one day.
Fuller said he needed more lime
to study the matter.
The hearing was held under t stringent seeurily. Each pel"SOn
attending the hearing had to
pass through two metal detec·
tors and be frisked by guards.
red er a 1 in v es ti g at 0 r s .•
meanwhile, sought further links
between the attempt on
Dispute stalled
LOS ANGELES (AP-> -A dis·
pute over attempts to paint over
a wall mural at a Venice market
was stalled today while a lawyer
for the owner tried to sort things
out.
Reagan's life and Hinck:ley's in·
fatuation with 18-year-old ac-
tress Jodie Foster.
Miss Foster acknowledged
Wednesday she received letters
signed "JWH'" and "John
Hinckley." although she said
nooe mentioned violent acta or
the president .
Published r e ports today,
however, quoted the unmalled
letter found at the downtown
Wa shington hotel where
Hinckley stayed the night before
Monday's assassination attempt
as saying: "Jody, I would aban·
don tbla idea of getting Reagan
in a second if I could only win
your heart. . . . I will admit to
you tbat the reason I'm going
ahead with this attempt now is
because I just cannot wait any
longer to impress you .... I am
doing all of.this for your sake."
At the top of the letter was
written the ·date "3·30·81" and
the time "12:45 p.m.," about two
hours before the shooting that
felled Ruaan, White House
press secretary James S. Brady
and twQ law officers outside the
Washington Hilton Hotel.
Hlncldey, 25, who has been
<ieacribed by his family and ac-
quaintances in Evergreen, Colo.,
as a drifter and loner. is charged
with attempting to assassinate
the president, which carries a
maximum life sentence. He also •
has been chareed with assault-
ing a Secret Service agent.
* * * Moore raps
R~agan attack
CHARLF.STON, W.Va. <AP>-
W ould·be presidential assassin
Sara Jane Moore says her 1~5 at-
tack on Gerald Ford was an "ap·
propriate political tool," but has
criticized this week's attempt to
kill President Reagan as mere
"random violence."
"I don't think it's appropriate
now at all," Ms. Moore said Wed-
nesday in a telephone interview
from the federal women's prison
in Alderson, W.Va., where she is
serving a life term. •'This is a dif·
ferent time."·
The president is eating food
prepared by the hospital under
tight security, he added. Wh1~
House assistant press secretacy
Mark Weinberg and Reagan
dined Wednesday night on
shrimp cocktail, met mignol),
broccoli, string beans, tossed
salad and custard.
White House aides insisted
that Reagan remained in charge
and that no presidential dt·
cisions were being deferred
because or his condition. Any
matters requiring his attention
will be summarized and' sent to
the hospital for action by
Reagan, but none have gone
over since he was shot Monday,
Speakes said.
* * * PopUlariiy·up
for president·
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
attempt on President Reagan's
life was followed by a sharp
jump in popular approval of the
way he is handling his job and a
small er increase in support _!jc
tougher handgun contr:ola, ~
cording to a new poll published
today. ·
The president's approval ratine
climbed 11 points from Suncta;,
the day before the sbootiq, to
Tuesday, the day after tbe aS·
sassination attempt, the
W ashingt.on Post-ABC News poll
said. ·
The nationwide telepbon~ sur-
vey of 505 adults showed that 73
percent or those contacted now
approve of the way the pre8ident
is handling bis job.
Kitty Hawk sails
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The · ..
aircraft carrier Kitty Haw·k and· ·
seven escort ships have left San
Diego for a seven-month routlne
deployment in the Western.
Pacific. More than 7,400 sallors .
are part of the group. which de-
parted 9/ednesday.
I
The lovely light of Waterford crystal.
' From Ireland,
Waterford's
band~tlead
crystal lamp
with a
handmade silk
shade. $235.
~-
. . .. -~
. .· .
,. ,,.
...
..
. .. , . . . ..
'
. ,
Holme. TwtUe. the wealthy
car dealer credited wlth con·
• vinclng &oeal4 ..... a to
1et lnto politics; was re·
leased fTora a knta Barbara
boapltal and returned to h1t
1tately home 1D Montecito
where bl1 wife reporteO u
waa "t.rribly weak."
, Tuttle. 75, bad been
bospltall&ed March 14 aftier
f alllnc ill wltb the flu ln
Dec•mber. He underwent u
operaUon to relDOve an bi·
testinal bl~ka1e and wu
permitted visits only from
close family members.
Tuttle bas remained a
friend and ·adviser to the pres-
ident aioce they met ln 19'6,
when Tuttle sold Reagan a
Ford coupe.
Pre.Iden& Reagan's 11 ·
room hillside home in Pacific
Palisades remains unsold
after nine weeks on the
n\arket, and a real·estate
seller says it may be "overly
optimistic to \hink someone
would pay Sl.9 million for a
celebrity association."
• A ..........
The a ssociation with
Reagan helps, but it "truly
wi II not be the reason., a
sophisticated buyer will ac·
quire this property," said
James Retz, vice president
of Previews, Inc.. which is
listing the Reagans' ranch·
st yle home in association
with Coldwell B a nk e r
Re s idential Rea l Estate
Services.
Ch ipago Ma~or Jane M .,Byrne, escorted by JaJJ
McMullen, nght, her husband and political ad-
. vi&er, and a security guard, left, leaves her
apartment in the high-crime Cabrini-Green hous-
ing project. Just hours after the mayor moved
in, police raided an aJnrtment three blocks
away, arrested 11 people and seized seven guns
officers said. · '
FJx Film
buy eyed
'
Denver oilman Marvin
Davis and 20th Century.Fox
:.' Film Corp. were talking
again less than a week an.er
• • Davis stunned Fox officials
by announcing he was pulling
out of a $730 million ofrer to
-· buy the firm.
. F ox Film s po'kesman
• ¥ Philip Meyer confirmed that
"exploratory discussions"
were under way in New
J York.
Davis made a surprise of·
·: rer Feb. 20 to acquire Fox
Film for $60 a share. Last
:, week, FoJt FiJm officials said
'.. ·. Davis had completed his
· · study of the firm and was
ready to proceed with his of·
fer.
~-----------
c
Former hostage Rick
Kupke, tan and relaxed after
a Hawaiian vacation. says be
plans to answer a few more
welcome-home letters and
then travel overseas. ·~~ "I've gotten thousands" of
letters. said Kupke, 34 . a
State Department com -
munications specialist who
s pent 444 days as a captive in
:: Iran. "I'd like to answer
them all. But I'm trying to
answer the ones that ask
questions, at least ." •
Actor Richard Harris with wife Ann Turkely
spent an evening recently at Xenon disco in New
York City. Harris is negotiating to replace
Richard Burton in ''Camelot" at the Pantages
Theater in Hollywood. Burton has not played
King Arthur since March 17 and is preparing for
neurosurgery on his spine. •
To.·rnado claimS two
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hours a da~. Hven days a wffk. 842•8088
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"BE'S DOING lncredibly well
-providinl comic relief for the
whole boepltal," she said u she
drifted through the crowd in
front of the Newporter Inn.
Ms. Reagan was honored by
the Arthritis Foundation of
Orange County during the
luncheon for l\er support of the
foundatioo. A crowd of 400 was
OD hand.
Appearing tired and sounding
hoarse, she reported that her
father got off some dandy one-
liners during her visit.
"BE SAID BE wu most con·
cerned because be was wearing
a brand new suit that day," she
~aid , quoting her father's reac-
tion to Monday's assaasinatioo
attempt in W~hington.
She said President Reagan
bad soup and lime sherbet for
luncti Tuesday, followed by a
cup of Sanka.
"And he's concerned about
......, .......... ~
'DOING INCREDIBLY WEU'
Reagan'• d•ughter M•u'""
whether he'll be able to throw
out the fl.J'St ball or the bueball
season in Cincinnati next week,"
she sail, adding tblll doctors
told the President hia left side
may be too weak for that, to
which the president reportedly
replied, "But I'm right-handed."
MS. BEAGAN SAID her
father even joked when the con·
versation turned to John
Hinckley Jr., the man accused of
t rying to assassinate the presi·
fient.
''I undentand tbat tl•i•
caa.raeter'• f atber le IOIM rtdl ol1'9u,•• Ma. a.uu ....
fatber, "'Well, cfo JOU )!~!I be •1 1otn1 to buy me
•uit?"
lb• said 1be vllit.eld
SerYlce a1ent t'lm•tl•
McCarthy and Waabln•ton
policeman Tbomu Delabaal7 u
well u friendl and relaUv. of
Jam ea Brady, the aerlouly
wounded Wb'ite f{ouae pre11
secretary.
Sbe said McCarthy bu a pool -
goln1 in bl• section at tbe
hospital on which of the four will
be releued ftnt. 1
OF DEIAllAN'l'Y, she said,
"There's something very mov-
lng and Vf!CY clilficult to deal.
with ia talkinc with a man wbo
bas done b1a job and ta btnc
there with a bullet ln biJ neck." ·
The president'• daqbter 1ald'.
that, during her visit, McCarthy·
called her over and wblepered,
"Tell the president I dld Oie beat
I could."
"I'm proud of him," she said,
"I'm proud of all of them.''
Asked by one reporter
whether the shooting epJaode in
W asbingt.on might cbange her
mind on gun control, the preai-
den t 's daughter said, "I've
always thought there should be
some kind of control.
"THERE'S A LOT of facts out
there." she went on, "and it will
take some sifting, bul I believe
there's an answer somewhere."
Diedrich settlement?
Judge dismisses Om! felony conspiracy charge
"I sWI think you should settle
the case, gentlemen," said
Superior Court Judge James
P~rez Wednesday at a pre-trial
bearing in which one of four
felony charges against former
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich was dismissed.
Pere%' statement appeared to
indicate that some negotiations
have been held for a possible
plea bargain settlement. But
state Deputy Attorney General
Richard Haden refmed to dis·
cuss whether such matters have
been discussed.
DIED.RICH IS accused or COO·
spiring with others to conceal
the true source of about f70 000
used in several 1976 J)ollttcal
campaigns.
Dismissed by Perez was a
felony charge that Diedrich coo-
spired with a former attorney,
Michael Remington, to commit
perjury before the pand jury
that lhitially investigated the
case.
Perez said testimony tlid not
support the allegation. "I don't
lblnk you've proved perjury ...
I don't think you've proved an
attempt at perjury." Perez told
Haden during the hearing.
Needs of elderly
discussion topic
Psychological needs of the
elderly wiU be discussed at a
four·hour workshop beginning al
9 a .m. Saturday in Administra-
tion 209 ll.l Golden West CoUege.
AdW,sion to t.tte workshop de-
signed for educators and
therapists who work with the
elderly is free.
It was alleged by pros·
ecutors that the two men con·
spired to offer testimony that
money that went to candidates
was Remington's, when, in fact,
it was Diedrich's.
After issuing his ruling and
making the comment about
reaching a negotiated settlement,
Perez scheduled April 30 for
another pre·trial heamg. A trial
date of May 26 also was
scheduled.
Prosecutor Haden said be was
"disappointed" Uiat the Judie
rejected the one conspiracy
count. But be said the case is
"alive and well" on the remain-
ing three felony charges of coo·
spiracy to violate the Political
Reform Act.
Defense attorney M arsball
Morgan said be wa.s "pleased"
with the judge's decision. A1I for
bis unsuccessful effort to win
dismissal or the other three
counts, Morgan quipped, "No
judge is perfect.··
ORIGINALLY, Diedrich was
charged with various violations
of the state Political Reform Act
by the Orange County Grand
Jury in 1977.
Diedrich and three others
were re-indicted In connection
with the case by the grand jury
in December 1979 after pros·
ecutors became concerned that
the three-year statute of limita·
tiona might run out before the
case came to trial.
Hundreds. escape
Vegas hotel blaze
LAS VEGAS CAP) -A fire
confined to a luxury suite on the
fifth floor of Caesars Palace
Hote l·Casino injured 16 and
forced hundreds to flee the
hotel's 12-story central tower,
authorities said.
It was the third sizable hotel
fire at the gambling resort city
in less than five months.
Smoke poured from fifth floor
windows, and breaking glass
showered the ground as people ,
raced out to the parking lot
behind the luxury hotel.
Fleeing gues ts and hotel
employees made their way past
gamblers who continued to play
blackjack, roll dice and pull slot
machine handles in the casino,
despite a strong smell of smoke,
after the fire erupted at 10:05 •
a.m .
Ironically, a convention of
burglar and fire alarm ·com· l
panjes is being held at Caesars
Palace thls week. •
"You'd never think you'd find f
yourself in the middle 61 a :
casino with a nightgown on,"
said hotel guest Helen Ginsburg
of Denver .
She and her husband Morris,
who were on the sixth floor just
~bove the room that caught fire,
said they reperted the blaze to
the hotel operator. then ·looked
into the hallway and saw hotel J'
m aids pounding on doors to
evacuate guests .
'
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -
Secret Se1 +lee acentl protectiD1 ·
President Reaean durlq lbe
assaalloation attempt Monday
used an liraeJi s ubmachine 1un
that ls ltalldard issue for many
secucity forces around the
world.
Millions of television viewe"
saw a Secret Service man
menacingly waving a Uzi
submachine gun as Reagan was
hustle,ct into bis limousine and
other security men wresUed the
president's alleged assailant to
the ground.
:J
Reagan security /orCe .
begins s.ouJ.searcking
WASHINGTON <AP> -The Seeret Service II off on the in·
evitable soul search, teyin1 to find out 9'ow President Rea1an
could have been ahot on home turf, barely • mile from the White
Houpe • ,
••'Jbese guys were competin1with1bullet,"11id Jack Warner
of the Secret Service, tbe a1ency char1ed wlU. protectlnl presl· 1
dents. •
Warner said Tuesday the service la conducUn1 an in·boule in~···
vestlgation, llkely to take several weeks, to see ,rbether the a.cents
with Reagan . .made any wron1 moves or could bave prevented the
1unman from firing ab shots at the president ,_,<>nday as be left
the W aablntton Hilton Hotel. ·
•• AMEa &EVIEWING the videotapes a do1en times, we
believe the preaidential protection wu u eff~ve u It eou.14
possibly be," Warner said. "These guys were competing with a
bullet. They moved as quickly as they could."
. Warner said the inquiry, by the agency's office of inspection, is
similar to those conducted after John F. Kennedy was assassinat-
ed in Dallas and Gerald R. Ford escaped injury In two California
assaults. It will include interviews with agents and law officers
who were at the scene, as well as ~yewltnesses.
"The reason ls to see whether we did everything that we •
should have," be said. "We have no answers yet." WHEN· THE TV film of the
shooting was played on Israeli
television, viewers easily
recognized the locally made
weapon, which has been used by
the lsraell army and security
forces for nearly 25 years.
SIGN EXPRESSES FEELINGS OF CAPIT* NEIGHBORS
Apartment bulklng near hoapttal where 9'1eldent 11 patfent ON MOST OCCASIONS when Reagan leaves the White H9use,
he is accompanied by at least a dozen Secret Service agents, all
arm ed with handguns. Some carry small, light, Uzi submachine..
guns. In situations like the one he was in Monday, Reagan is pre.·
ceded from the hotel by one agent. Several others walk on elthe
side of him. A military spokesman said the
U z i , a 1 i ~h t we i g h t ,
easy-to-handle y.et powerful
weapon, was first developed in
the 1950s and was first used in
action in the 1956 Sin ai
campaign. The gun, which
s hoots 9 mm bullets , was
designe d for s hort-range
warfare, with a maximum range
of 350 yards and a magazine
carrying 25 rounds.
Hinckley called loner As the president leaves a b"lding, the agents form a human
shield between him and everyone else. While he walks to his car, a
time agents consider particularly vulnerable, the armored door is
opened to provide another shield. The more learned, the less known about him
Agents follow Reagan's car in a vehicle of their own , a vehicle
carr ying Uzi submachine guns, M-16 rifles and hand grenades.
Weighing less than eight
pounds and consisting of only six
parts, the Uzi is simple to
operate, dismantle and repair•
and has a high s urvival rate
under harsh battle conditions.
J ane·s, the authoritative
British military journal, credits
the efficient performance and
light weight of the Uzi to an
"advanced primer ignition"
system.
"THIS PRODUCES less
impulse to the bolt, and as a
result this component can be
designed to weigh less than half
the amount that would be
required for a s tatic firing
breecb·block," Jane's writes.
The Uzi has been the mainstay
of Israel's booming arms export
industry, recently estimated as
the world's seventh largest. But
along with other information on
arms exports, figures on Uzi
sales and countries to which it is
sold are kept secret. However,
the weapon is known to be used
rn South Africa and throughout
Latin America as well as by the
U.S. Secret Service.
Shots delay trial
MARTINEZ (AP) -The al·
tempted assassination of Rresi·
dent Reagan led to the postpone·
menl .of a murder trial in
Ma rlinez when th e defense
claimed that the assassination
attempt would make it difficult
to obtain objective jurors
because of the defendant·s his-
tory of mental illness.
WASHINGTON (AP> -In the
agonUed search for explanations,
the clues that John W. Hinckley
Jr. scattered about his life still
don't add up. The more!that is
learned about him, the more he
remains a mystery.
He was a loner. He couldn't get
a Job. He blended into the back-
ground. He went to Texas Tech
University in Lubbock for seven
years without finishing. He wrote
love letters to an 18-year-old mov·
ie actress he never met. He once
voiced an idea about politicians:
·'They should all be eliminated.'·
But also: A former teacher
calls him a t ical kid. A former
high school
classmate re-
members "as
Dice a guy as
you 'd ever
want to meet,
a pretty easy-
g o i n g
person." A
woman who
worked in a
Mu1c1tLSY Denver motel
where he lived recalls, "He was
the all-American kid, lo look at
him.·•
HE WAS SUCH a nice kid to his
· parents and neighbors that when
the news of his arrest fl ashed
across the country Monday, they
all thought someone else was us-
ing his l. D.
One thing is clear: Hinckley is
one of those people few people
ever pay much attention to. Now
that he stands accused of shooting
President Reagan, they do.
He came from a well-to-do
family. The Hinckleys live in
Evergreen, Colo., a Denver
bedroom co mmunity. in a
$300,000cedar-and-moss, lri-level
home. ''They are just a quiet
American family, a very good
class family. Any mother would
want their daughters to marry
their sons," says a woman who
knows them well.
The senior H i nckley la
chairman and president of the
Vanderbilt Ener1y Corp .. a
Denver oil and 1aa exploratioll
company with 20 employees and
sales of $4.5 million last year. He
is described as a devout Christian
who belongs to a weekly Bible
reading club.
BUT BE&E, TOO, i.a another
oddity. Hinckley Jr., when be was
in Denver, stayed not with tus
family, but in a modest motel
nestled among used car lots.
The picture painted in court by
U.S. Attorney Charles F.C. Ruff
comes out in unflattering tones.
He said Hinckley'a own parents
describe him as "wandering,
aimless and irresponsible," with
a history of psychiatric care. He
said Hinckley had never held a
job, had "no fixed address,
anywhere," had enrolled and
dropped out several times from
Texas Tech.
A maintenance man in the Lub-
bock apartment where Hinckley
lived recalled a conversation with
him during last year 's presiden-
tial campaign.
·'The main gist of the conversa-
tion was about political leaden,''
said Calvin Wynne. "And what he
thought should be done was that
they should all be eliminated."
But Hinckley. be said, nenr ex-
pressed violent intentions.
As far as is known publicly.
Hinckley came in coot.act with
law enforcement only once and
then the authorities seemed lndi!·
ferent.
He was arrested at the
.~ashville airport last Oct. 9 with
Waiting ta Hear?
•
tt.ve you sent for merchan-
dise and not received tt?
•l Are you having • dlugree-
m•~ with a bllllng computer?
n I• City Hall giving you the run-
a·round?
... Your Service" ofter8 help In aH the ..
maatera and more. You can oount on Pat Dunn
and Mi' "Al Your Set'Vlce0 celumn to help eotve piotll.... ' . · .
. N you MM IMtlp, 1111111 your ilUfftlont to Pet
Dunn, At Your Service, Orenge CoasfDalty Piiot,
P.O. Box 1580, Coata MeA0CA 12121. h 1u,. to
Include your telephOne number.
'8t Dunn iet• action and fight• red tape In
.. At Yow lervlce," publlehed enry daJ except
lat._., In The °'!llr Piiot.
three pistols and 50 bullets in his
luggage. That wu the same day
then-President Carter was cam-
paigning in Nash ville.
Hinckley waa charged with a
misdemeanor and put up a $62.SO
bond. He forfeited it and disap-
peared between the cracks.
THE ASSAULT ON Reagan was the fint in the nation's upital
since Puerto Rican naUonala tried to storm Blair House, acroea the
street from the White llou.se, t.Qkill Harry S Truman in 1152.
Warner said the inquiry continues to indicate that the gunman
acted alone. "Everything at this time points to the one-gunman
theory," he said.
Easter baskets grass mache
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Jk,ard's performance, security eyed .
SACRAMENTO (AP> ~ A
member or the Little Hoover
Cotnmission says a preliminary
lnveatlgation raises d oubts
about the performance of the
state Hone Raclq Board and
the seeurity of mone)' at tracts.
Manning Post, who heada an
ln\.estigating subcommtttee,
said Tuesday be discovered that
the board forgives about 90 per-
c$t of the penalties it imposes
od licensees who break the
ru1es.
Post told a commission meet-lnt about the pari-mutuel opera-
tion at Santa Anita: The door to
the money room, where millions
of dollars are bandied each day,
was left open with a rubber band
on the lock ...
"AT LEAST in Water1ate they
used tape on the door locks,'' be
. said.
Post, a retired auto dealer and
~rmer chairman of the com-
ission, aaid it appeared that
l e physical setup at Santa
Anita wu out of date and in·
secure , with the cashiers
crowded into narrow booths and
their money in open racks.
He said the subcommittee is
lookine into complaints that
there bas been "skimming" .of
Tardy coastal_
plans pondered
SACRAMENTO <AP) -The
Assembly Energy and Natural
Resources Committee is to vote
next Tuesday on whether local
agi!ncies or the state should issue
coastal building permits after
July 1.
·The committee debated this
~ek whether cities and counties
that are tardy with their coastal
pl.ans should be allowed to issue
the 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 commissions 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 bu1Hling permits until
those local plans are approved.
Then the cities and counties take
over the issuing of permits.
Those local plan s we r e
supposed lo be finished this
year. and the six regional com·
missions cease to exist July 1.
However, 64 of the 106 cities will
not have their plans approved by
July 1, and only 30 percent will
have their total local plans, in·
eluding ordinances and zoning,
certified. Only one coastal 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 have
not finished their plans. Or the
state commission could take
over the permit process.
The three bills before the com-
mittee take two different ap-
proaches.
A8385 by Assemblyman Tom
Hannigan. D-Fairfield , is
sponsored by the state com-
mission. It would require the
com mission to set new deadlines
for local coastal plans, with a
final deadline of Jan. 1. 1983.
The bill would have tfte
state commission issue permits
for cities and counties that
haven't finished their plans, but
would allow a speedy process for
small building projecl.s.
parl-mutuel receipts.
He said tie bad been aasured
that the tracks' computers had
fail·safe cbecka, but be wuits to
be sure the state 1a getttnc its
fair abare ol the $1.8 billion an-
nual band.le. He said the state
revenue laat year waa $142
million.
POST SAID he was concerned
that board chairman Nathaniel
Colley told him be didn't want to
bear complaints filed with the
executive secretary, Leonard
Foote, unUl they bad been in-
vestigated and verified.
llea,..e •• ....
.. ,..~
Lee Clearwater, foreman of
P resident Reagan's Santa
Barbara ranch, plans to tell
his wounded boss, "Come
out here. We love you. We're
not going to shoot you .''
!Freeway threatened
SACRAMENTO <AP> Los Angeles lnte rna-
.. ,..,....,....
SH~NC'
Assembly Speaker 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.
Fire puts
motel guests
in cafeteria
FURNACE CREEK , Calif.
(AP> -Guests in a two-story
motel building at the Furnace
Creek Ranch Resort in Death
Valley spent a night in the re-
sort's cafeteria after fire gutted
the top floor of the fully occupied
motel.
A resort spokesman said most
guests were eating dinner
elsewhere at the desert resort
when the fire, which apparently
started in a guest room. swept
through the top floor of the
motel this week. There we re no
injuriescin the blaze.
"We were very lucky In that
regard," said Sandra Zenpel, an
assistant to the resort's general
manager. "OnJy a few guests
were in their rooms and they
were able to get out easily.·'
LOS ANGELJ!!S CAP) -An al·
torney for a televhlon
newscaster and his -flancee wu
maklng arrangements for tbe
cou pl e to s ur render to
a uthorlties after they were
charged with grand theft and 29
counts of lssuing bad cbeckl. the
district attorney's office saya.
The char1es against
ne wscaster Ken J onea and
Shirlene K. Cardenas were filed
this week and involve their al-legedly writing more than
$215,000 in bad checks at Securi-
ty Pacific National Bank in a
check-kiting scheme, district at-
tor ney 's spokes m an Al
. Albergate said.
He said the couple's attorney,
Robert Michaels, "is making ar-
rangements for them to sur-
render at Municipal Court for
arraignment, so they will not be
arrested." ·
Jones and Miss Cardenas, who
live in San Dimas in the San
Gabriel Valley, face up to 10
years in prison if convicted on
all counts. Albergate said.
J o nes works for the CBS·
owned TV station KNXT here.
He has been on an extended
vacation at his request since
,.,..,....,.. .. I
SURRENDER DUE '
New.ceeter Ken JonH
news of the check-kiting in-
vestigation surfaced earlier this
month, a spokeswoman at the
station general manager's office
said.
Exercise building
disease fighters?
SAN FJlANCISCO CAP> -Ex-
ercise not only strengthens the
heart and circulatory system, it
boosts the bloodstream with sub-
stance believed to ward off dis-
ease, according to cardiologists.
The finding Isn't new. but
heart specialists attending a
convention here say scientific
evidence continues to build that
joggers, swimmers, racquetball
players and other active people
have enriched levels of HDL -
high-density lipoproteins -in
their bloodstreams.
It was tough to find a harsh
word for joggin g among the
estimated 7,000 heart specialists
at the American College of
Cardiologists. But many cau-
tioned that would-be joggers
should see a doctor before start·
ing if they're over 35 or if they
have a family history of heart
trouble.
A dose of brisk exercise was
credited with everything frog)
clear skin to a cheery outlook to
improved heart and lung func-
tion by Dr. Samuel M. Fox of
• Bethesda. Md ., a former presi-
dent of the college.
Todays
Maximum r F..ederal budget cut-tional Airport for 17.3
*cks raise "serious miles to the San Gabriel
q_uestions" about financ-R i v er Freeway in
iog construction of the Norwalk, would have a
Cltntury Freeway in Los transitway in the me-
fli •n g e I e s . s t a l e dian for buses, vans and
T;ransportation Director carpools or rail cars,
~ariana Gianturco said. with 10 transit stations
::"The state is raising and park-and-ride lots.
t* funding issue at this It is slated to be bum
time because of serious over the next nine years
qpestions about obtain· at a total cost of $2. 77
iM the nearly $2 billion billion.
funding the rema1010g
cost of the project with
additional federal in-
terstate discretionary
funds, but the availabili·
ty of these funds now ap-
pears very uncertain,"
Ms. Gianturco said.
She said the problem
is compounded by re-
quir ements in state law
that funds be spread ac-
cording to a formula
over the north and south
sections of the state. ig additional f_qnds Ms . Glanturco said
n:iteded for the pro~ct," that under the current ----------;
l'fs. Gianturco .said pattern of funding, less
\fednesday. than a third of that
~"We hope to w.ork with amount. $791 million.
l~ Legislature and the will be available, with
I.B>s Angeles communi-a n additional $1.98
tf in addressing this billion required to meet
f~nding problem." t h e c o n s t r u c t i o n
The Century Freeway. schedule.
Use the Dai ly Pilot
"Fast Result" service
directory Your
service is our
spttaalty
Call 642-5678 ext. 322
eight lanes running from "We had anticipated --=------"-------~"----.L-----------1
" ,;; .. ..
~ K.l.D.S. FASHION SI-OW -~ :: . ... Saturday, April 4 .. :
~ . !:
. Interest
Guaranteed
for 30 months
with no minimum
balanoein
Home Federal ·countiv. A spring look at bri,ght and fun i
i Easter fashions for boys and girls . t I modeled by Orange County K.1.0.S.
11 :00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m.
Refreshments wi II be served.
Appearance by Surprise guest.
I "ART IN',.
1 ,Every Saturday in April from
1 :00 to 3:00 p. m .
. Bring your child to draw their
favorite pictures. It may be chosen to
become a finished Greeting cord.
Every child' wilt recave a handsome
certificate.
'
Earn Home Federal's maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Market Certificates -Paying 14 % more interest than
any bank. Effective through April 13.
Check the Yf:llow Pqe1 fot the o«b nearest you.
Ji
l
Parents ~escue .
· :scfi.oQ programs
~ M..wn dlMGtu'Y !khool parenta \n Newport
• Beaell"'Mh..,lauliebed tbe tblnt saaion of • succestM
.. prolJ"Ul to oll• tiiarldlmeaHype protr•m• cut from the
pu bUc .ICbool cutllciilum.
: StiMleota freiD th~ the Newport-Mesa Diatrtct,
a nd from ~arochl&l aDd prlnte 1cb00Js, are attendln1 the
31 c;lapes offered at Martnen S<:hool to any child who
li vea in the district.
The cla11e1 include mush~. ornithology. art.
languages, blology, drama and others. They are offered
before and alter normal school houn.
PG't!IU-paid fees range between $15 and '30 per class,
but Mar\tters' supporters say they'll pick up the tab for
studeritewhosep$rent&can'taffordtopay.
Most of the 200 enrollees are from Mariners, about 15
are driven by parents from homes in Costa Mesa and the
rest come from other Newport schools. ,
Fee money mostly goes. for ~eacbers wi\,o recetve
stipends larger than offered by'tlle community colleges.
says Mrs. Marion Robboy who spearheaded the Extra
Time Classes program.
Mariners School parents who have worked hard to
make the program a success are to be congratulated.
Other schools ' parent organizations might well use the
Mariners effort as a model in their own neighborhoods.
Even though no academic credit is offered for work
done in the classes, these programs offer fine educational
opportunities in a district whose money woes will mean ad·
ditional class cuts in the future.
College boundary shift
Saddleback Community College District trustees
have unanimously approved a reapportionment plan
shifting the boundaries of the seven areas making up the
college district that are represented by each of the
trustees.
The realignment will provide for a more equal
number of residents in each of the seven districts. The·
boundary s hift was prompted by rapid increases in
population in the Irvine and Tustin districts since the last
reapportionment in 1975. .
The number of registered voters in each area who
were counted in the last presidential election was used in
drawing the new boundaries. Each of the s.even districts
is now within 5 percent of 29.680 votes.
Despite being up for re-election in November.
Trustees William Watts. Eugene McKnight and Robert
.Pnce joined their fellow board members in approving the
plan.
The district trustees were not required by law to
redraw the boundaries. In the interest of fair and more
effective representation. they decided to do so. They are
to be commeRded for correcting the imbalance on their
own initiative.
Conservation plan
During the past four years. Golden West College in Hun-
tington Beach has achieved a remarkable record of energy
conservation.
The community college has cut its ele.ctrical consump-
tion by about 58 percent during this period -even whiJe the
cam pus was growing 20 percent in physical size.
The all-electric 122-acre, 28-building campus used only
12.9 million kilowatt-hours of energy in 1980, its lowest con·
sum pt ion rate since campus energy records have been kept.
The college says most of its savings can be attributed to
an energy management computer installed in 1977 ..
This unit controls heating and air conditioning systems.
assuring that they are shut down entirely on weekends.
Previously. these systems ran continuously.
The coUege has adopted other energy-saving measures
involving little or no expense. These included lowering
wa ter heater temperatures, removing unnecessary light·
i ng and installing more efficient lighting tubes .
Because of the rapid increase in energy CWits. the col-
lege's electric bills have not dropped with the reduced con-
sumption. The college currently is spending about $800,000
annually for energy. '
But Golden West officials estimate that if the campus
had continued at 1977's usage rate. last year's bill would
have been $1.2 to $1.5 million.
As funds for education continue totiwindle, it's comfort-
ing to see a community college attain such success in keep·
ing a lid on costly energy consumption.
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. AddreM The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1S60. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/ ReuxJTtls
By L.M. BOYD
One fact more than any
other explains why rewards
... offered for information lead·
ing to the capture and con·
vict1on of criminals have
been so successful. Lawmen
claim that there's almost in-
variably at. least one person
other than the criminal who
can name the guilty party.
Q. What's the difference
between "laconic" and
"sardonii:"?
A. Laconic alludes to t.be
old Spartans -more
specifically, the Laconia
Greeka -who were knQwn to
talk u little as possible. ri
means terse. Sardonic comes
from the Greek sardonios. It
means skeptically humorous.
Example: The observation
was sardonic when the father
said, "I 've s pent two
fortunes on my kids. One.for
their teeth and one for their
education. They use their
teeth."
It was not the mother or an
ugly baby who said : "You
can't love a butterfly until
you hav e lov ed a
c a t e r pi l1 a r . " It w'la ~ a
Benedictine nun. About 500
years ago.
Biblical scholars \hlnk that
the people who knew the
mother of Jesus Chrtst 2,000 -.. ~ears ago pronounced her
name more Uke MJriam than
Mary.
Wtvat a lot of people don't
realize t. that more tha n half
the drowning vlcUm1 In th.11
country were ao loaded wtth
liquor al the t)mes of tbe\r
deathl that they could have
been de1lpaled as leaally
drunk, Medleal eumlnen'
atatlatica prove that.
Althou1h Adolf Killer
smoked ctsareUH u a
7outh, be quit al ••• 2St and after be 1ot the Joo ••
FuluW, DO German aad fn font .... ever dared al'IMlh
a c:l1arttw m h1I ...-aff.
WASHINGTON ....; Tht
dialogue between tl1e United
States and the Soviet Unl09 oc·
curs at two levels. There ii a
dlreet llne of cooimunication by
diplomatic note, oral excha.np
and, on occasion, the hot line.
But there is also a covert com·
munications network, whJch car·
rles unspoken messages.
Diplomats are tn some re-
spect Uke rare tropical birds.
They ha ve
learned to
communicate
with one
another
through near·
inaudi bl e
sounds, poses
and gestures.
If there is to
be an accom-
modation
between them, they may prefer
that it be implicit rather than
explicit.
An arrangement may be
reached through a process of
a I most imperceptible move-
Mailbox
..menu, ~o1ncidencH, discreet
whlapen, railed eyebrows and
knowin1 smiles. Throu1b this
delicate process, an undentand·
in1 appears to be jellln1
between the Ronald Reagan
White House and the Leonjd
Breihnev KremUn.
llESE 18 THE tacit, tentative,
tenuous arrangement as lt is un·
derstood by my sources at the
highest levels:
-Reagan will bold down U.S.
intervention in El Salvador and
seek lo cool the crisis. Brezhnev.
in return, will restrain Soviet
forces in Poland and try to keep
a lid on that crisis.
-~ Soviet move against
Poland, it is a lso understood
would be countered by U.S. ac-
tion against Cuba. The United
States may not be able to stop a
Soviet invasion or Poland, but
the So~et Union is in an equally
weak poeitioo to prevent a U.S.
military move against Cuba.
-Brezhnev will halt, or at
l east restrict. the flow of
mllttary supplies to the in-
au rgents in El Salvador
Otherwise, Reagan wlU start
aupplyine the iuerrillas who are
battUng Soviet troops in
Afghanistan.
-REAGAN ALSO want& the
Kremlin to stop encouraging and
supporting anti-American move-
ments in Central America, or
else he Will stir up anti-Soviet
activity in Eastern Europe.
-Reagan Is most concerned
about a possible Soviet thrust In·
to Iran, which would threaten
the Western World's oil supply
in the Persian Gulf. Hints have
been relayed to Brezhnev.
therefore, that the United States
would resist any overt attack
and respond to a covert move by
sending mass arms shipments to
Communist China.
Reagan has also se nt dis·
creel signals to Brezhnev that
the United States will no longer
remain passive while the Kremlin
sets up pro-Soviet governments in
Africa. If Brezhnev sends his
Cuban allies into another African
country, Reatan might eri·
courage the Egyptians to move
aealnstLlbya.
Of course, these arrangements
are precarious at best and Could
be upset by new development.a.
But It would_ be accurate fo re-
port that Reagan and Btethnev
are beginning lo understand one
another.
WATCH ON WAST£:1 While
funds for school lunches are be-
ing cul back. the administration
has managed to Increase federal
funding ror the nation's CUD afi·
cionados. The Army's Depart·
ment of Civilian Marksmanship,
with its customary support from
National Rine Association lob-
byists, will be given $444,000 thts
y ear The money will go for
··trophies and classification
badges .. won by private gun
club members. who are pr('
s um ably pros pective Arrfly
recruits. Jncredibly,. the NRA
, had talked Congress into near!~
doubling last year's target
s hooting largesse , but th e
,budget cutlers were able to hold
the increase to "only" $19,000
Energy Departml'nt
poohbahs have three methodi. of
getting cars lo use on govern
menl business The cheapest op
tion is to requisition a· car from
a General Services Admirn~tra
lion motor pool. The second,
s lightly more expensive wti~ 1s
to have the GSA lease a car
from a private firm The third
and far more costly method l'-
for the bureaucrat to lease thl•
car himself and send the bill 10
the government Under Option
No 3. the official gets to use the
car for private business, as long
as he pays the modest milet11H'
?'9st Predictably. investigator~
found that three out of every
four DOE bure aucraLc; entitlt-d
to cars choose the third method
Some den•lopers have bel'n
t a king ad \'antage of rederjl
hous ing subsidies for the poor 111 add unnecessary luxury item!>
that in efrect incre ase the suh
sid1es they get In Santee. Caltf
ror e xample. a government
:.ubs idized pro1ert included J
),\\ 1m m i ng pool. r ecreat wn
rooms and paved parkinJI.
What do economists know about workers?
To the Editor:
Regarding Nicholas von Hoff
man's March 24 artic le o n
.. Promise to Older Americans:·
we wonder if George Will, who
voices the opinion t hat the elder-
ly are America·s biggest prob·
lem. has ever known a blue col-
1 a r worker ? One who does
physical labor all his life?. One
who at the age of 62, has to force
himself out the door every morn·
ing, wondering if he can make it
to 65?
IS TIUS what he has lo look
forward to? So some nut that
has it made, and never had to
work or pay into Social Security
can tell him that he has lo work
until he is 70 or 75? Thal he is
lazy . selfish and socially ir·
res ponsible? How about the
children he has raised, who are
now working and paying taxes?
Are they a drag on the economy
too?
Wtiat are thes e so-called
economists trying l~ do lo
America? Give our country
away to a foreign power? H the
American worker does not have
a voice in these matters, what is
the use of working, paying tax·
es , raising children (5) to
become good Americans?
Mr. von Hoffman really laJd it
on the line in his article . .I wish
this letter could be forwarded to
so·called economist Norman
Macrae and George Will. And to
our President. Do you think it
would make a difference in their
way of thinking? Even a little?
• MRS. L. SANDERS
lltlelc 8a9.e••••
To the Editor:
"The present cost of cleaning
up the Back Bay with the City of
Newport Beach required to pay
S«0,000, u reported in your
paper March 20, should ~ borne
by tbe iealous e nvlronmen·
~•lilt.a. They're the ones that
caused it lo get so dirty.
Between SPON, the .Friend.I of
the Earth and the Coastal Com·
mission they stopped its dredc·
in1 for enough years to reall)'
cauae this unfortunate condition.
Now cl course the ~ti have
srow11 to borrendou1 amount.a.
Parlnt thoH costs aboald not be
die '""1len or the populace. bUl
of the 1ealoul h1lou that caUMd
them.
THE COST or paylna for lh•
pr11erv1Uon of envlronmentaJ
u1Un.., baa already wel1bed
too heavily on the poeulaff. And
U.e1 are 1ett1n• Ured ot lt. Why
1hould the cllltent of Newport
Beach have to pay s.40,000 lot
this unnecenarr expenditure
when tbere are IO man~ ··"'~ that .... not lulfltl fmtclld1 A8d why ahoWd
"' otW part.I ol lite eouatry t;
required Lo pay the other S3.5
million out of funds they need
for other purposes when most or
them don't even know where
Newport Beach is?
It's lime to look at the poten-
tial results of all our acts before
we a ct on just the emotional
view of the moment. It could
save us a lot of future troubles.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
T~lterte•••
To the Editor:
I agree that a competency test
for teachers would be grea t
. but just what can be done
with a t eacher proved
incom~nt?
I propose that both the
pr.eviously mentioned lest and
the removal of tenure for
teachers would be lhe ideal
system. A mere test alone will
not suffice in the effort to rid our
schools of incompetent teachers.
T H E NOW ·OBSOLETE
system of tenure was. evoked to
prevent ne farious employers
from firing teachers for such
ridiculous reasons as smoking
·cigarettes or dating
.. undesirable .. members of the
opposite sex.
As anyone can see, we no
longer need this, mainly due to
the presence of strong unlons
and errective upholding or the
Jaw. Only incompetent teachers
need be afraid for their jobs, and
onfy they will have you beUeve
tenure i s necessary, not
obsolete. EILEEN DORN
A.,e11t•l•• ... ~fl
To the Edltor:
I must register a vigorous ob·
jection to the ael)tlm ents ex·
pressed by Ms . Trui~( in b~ arti·
cle in the Thursday Marcb 19,
1981, special section called "I
Am Woman."
Her 1tatement that: "There's
really not much dlfference in
buylna an insurance policy by
mail or from an aaent" does a
tremendous disaervlce to the
bu)'in1 public u wen as bein1 a
direct insult to the tbou•anda ot
lnsuraQCe agents around the
country.
If' MY memory serve. me
correc:t.ly t.broQ&b re•clill• your piper over a number ot years,
1ome of tbe 1reateat acams
perpetrated up0n the publlc
have blee throUCb the malls.
Ttlb ti not co IQ that burial ln-
IW'a8Ce throuP the mall la-not often._ and ln fact then b u
lDdUIU'J ll'GUI> WboM tuDCUGD II to 9" that nwJOM ti Oil tM ~
and up. 1'ld9 II aJlo not!~· •8.1
tbal JaulAI ---~ tanNlb UM..U.~liotM._-
...., tt li OH method OI dll·
tribution that should be looked
al and utilized as the article
points out.
Ms. Truitt·s itatement -
while obviously totally incorrect
-is undoubtedly made from a
lack of knowledge rather than
any attempt to demean a wholP.
profession.
JAMES C. KREDER
Scapegoat
To the Editor
The Baglin Administration is
desperate ly in nee d of a
s capegoat The cos metic race
lift given lo the Ame rican
Legion Building was disastrous.
The onJy certainties are that the
$218.000 budget is depleted. the
noise factor will not go away.
and the senior citizens will not
use the American Legion Build·
ing until the noise factor is re-
duced to acceptable levels so
that they may run their classes
normally (And this m ay not be
possible. I
Now for the first lime the
Baglin Administration says it is
going to have qualified consult·
ants check the nois e factor.
Why wasn·t this done before our
hard-earned tax dollars were
wasted'?
WE HAVE documented
evidence that the American
Legion Building project never
really had a chance. A letter re-
ceived by the Department of
Planning dated Sept. 4, 1980 tells
it all. The Baglin Administration
authorized onJy $5,000, or about
2lh percent of the total outlay,
on the' most serious problem fac-
ing the Legion Building: the
noise factor.
The scapegoat the Baglin Ad·
ministration is looking for ls our
own City Council and our c ur-
rent City Manager, Ken Frank,
who was our City Manaaer on
Sept. 4. 1980 and thus is an equal
scapegoat with our City Council.
ALAN E. ADAMS
S11•da11• ..... ••~r
To the Editor:
I can only echo the feelings of
Laurie Swain that Frederick
Sc:boemehJ '1 Ma,rch 18 article
entitled ''Wipe Out the Burro
Menace.. was ilh•dvlsed and
was based on his chlldtlood
tr1um11. lf the Ptlot'a edltoriaJ
poUc:1 lJ to refiect furs stem· mine rrom a r e porte r 's
childhQOd dislikes, then secret
Quotes
·'The alricl• most de•truct.J•e
societal diieil• OI qur tlme a1'd
the •lncl• blpeat rea1on tor the
decline of public mor.Ut.y and
ethlc1 ie American ludenhip'a
fixation with What hH become
known aa tbe bottom llne."
NenaaaLMi'.
Sund~y slaughters by the Navy
are acceptable and by the same
rationale. goats. hogs. deer. rab·
bits , even p eople, could be
.. shot eliminated once and for
all ." in this manner
Schoemehl's ins ens iti ve a p
proach has offended thousands
or people who approve or the
Bureau of Land Management's
capture and adoption plan or the
Fund for Animals Contribulors'
humane rescue program of the
burros by helicopter rrom the
fl oor of the Grand Canyon The
lauding of the burros· slaughter.
when in fact the Navy's action
might be totally illegal. shows
tot~l lack of research by your re· •
porter.
WILLIAM HARNEVIOUS
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
AU slaaff' bftaeolff•
To the Editor:
While reading the lette r
regarding the proposed Newport
C enter e xpans ion , it is
interesting lo note how the
.. in conveniences .. of a few
people are always named. but
the benefits to all ar e ne.ver
mentioned.
How about the fact 'that the
expanson of Newport Center by
lhe Irvine Company will bring to
the City of Newport Beach
additional annual revenues of $1
million for au to benefit from?
How about the fact that the
Irvine Company is spending $8.2
million of its own money to
improve the roads to help
alleviate co ngestion for
everyone's benefit?
How a bout the fac t t h e
expansion wfll provide more
goods and services for t he
residents or Newport 8eacll so
all can main~ain a"d enhance
their standards or living? lsn't-
lhat what it's all about anyway?
It t• J.lway1 too easy t o
pinpoint 'ineonveniences'' ol a
few. Possibly these few abould
take a broader look and see the
benefits for all to shar~. After au, they are • part of the ''all" -
\00!
HOWARD DERMAN •
l'J wu alttlna In a bar, q u.leUy
a pplna QlY beer and decidinC
how to best 'invest my money ln
the Juke box, when a companion pointed out a man who was
standing across the room.
"He's the one,•• my compan·
ton said. "ffe spends $30 a
niCht in this place. On that one
machine." 1 looked across the room. The
man was standing in front of a
big electronic •
machine that,
according to
the name
printed
acros s Its
fron t , was
'ca 'lled
"GORF."
t walked
over to the
· mJacbin e .
'
Across its screen, the following
message was crawling, like the
credits on a television show:
careers wbo are reverttnc to the.
aame fantasies they had when
they wel"e seven years old and
watchln1 "Captain Video" on
their families' first black·and·
white television sets.
BUT T HERE IS somethin1
even more lntJigulng going on
here . . . a phenomenon which,
tor want of a better name, we
shall refer to as Ute Revenge or
the Ner~.
When you and l were in col-
lege, carousing and neglecting
our better instincts and letting
our inhibitions disappear, there
was a subclass of students with
whom we seldom came into con·
tact. Usually these students
were majoring in engineering or
computer sciences; we would
see them walking around cam·
pus with slide rules attached to
their belts, spending midnights
in the lab, developing 12-month
pallors ftom all those hours
quarten and driv you craay
when you go out at nl1ht.
TB08E BOYS, ln effect, are in
charge of your recreatioll houri.
And if you don't think they un·
d~rstand precisely the victory
tbey have won, you u"·
dftesUmated their intelligence
in the first place. Do you think
they didn't notice the disdain
with which you glanced at them
back on campU!?
A beautiful, successful woman
said to me, "My stster·in·law
once dated the guy who invented
the new version of 'Asteroids,"
It was clearly meant to be an
impressive statement; she said
it In the way women or a pre-
vious generation would have
said, "My sister-in-law went out
with Joe Namath.·•
So take heed: there are many
lessons to be learned at the feet
of these games.
spent under fluorescent lights. .
On Saturday nights; while you -Andy Rooney
and r were endangering our
••Insert Coin . . . The evil
Gorifan robot empire has at-
tacked. Your assignlJ')ent is to
repel the invasion and launch a
counter-attack. Ypu will en-
counter various hostile
s pacecraft as you journey
toward the dran'latic confronta-
tion with the enemy flagship ..
health. these students -at my
college they were called "Tech
Weenies" -were working on
their mathematical formulas
and computer programs. They
were the guys who never had
any fun -and we knew in-
stinctively that they would never
have any as long as they lived.
Career changes offer new lease on life
I should have known. The
electronic space games have
become the drug of the ·sos. It is
what grown adults are s pending
their recreational money on; it
is addictive and mind-numbing,
and there seems to be no stop·
ping the phenomenon.
T HE ELECTRONIC' space
games have a variety o r
names · "Space Invaders."
"As teroids," and now this
"GORF." The idea is bas ically
the same Wlth each game. If you
put a quapter in the slot. you get
to be a space captam for a few
minutes and try to make enemy
spaceships explode.
There is undoubtedly an 1m·
portant psychological reason for
the p<»pularity of these games.
We live in a time during which
laywers. b;rnkers. teache rs.
medical s tudents and accoun-
tants are des perately unhappy
with what life has dealt them -
and who combat this unhappi-
ness by pretending that they are
space commanders.
That in itself 1s probably
worthy of some thought. Here
are people at the peak of their
Chic
BUT IRONY has brought the
world full circle. Now those stu·
dents who were dancing and
celebrating and ha ving wild
times in college are stuck in
careers that, for some reason,
bring them no fulfillment and no
happiness
And the Revenge of the
Nerds -the one area of recrea-
tion that brings joy to young
American adults 1s being con-
trolled by those boys with the
slide ruJes hanging from their
belts.
In labs at computer-game
companies such as Atari. the
former Tech Weenies are mak·
mg fabulous livings and ha ving
fun all day. designing the space
games that wiJI soon torment
and delight men and women all
around the world. While you sit
in your office looking at legal
briefs or accounting sheets all
afternoon, those fellows are out
in California, getting paid lo
make blips dart around on game
screens. the better lo steal vour
President Reagan made a liv-
ing as an actor most of his life -
or if it wasn't most of it he's go-
ing to have to live to be 110 -
but he seems to be adjusting to
the career change. /
I mention this because t){ere's
a lot of it going around. Last
week I read
where David
McLaugh -
lin . c hair -
man and
c h ie r ex -
ecutive of·
fice r of the
Toro Com -
pany of Min·
neapolis , a
leading
maker of lawn-mower and
s no wblower equipment, had
been made president or
Dartmouth College. Leonard
Woodcock, who used to be presi-.
dent of the United Auto Workers.
just came home after spending
two years as America's rirst am-
bassador to the People 's
Republic of China. Bobby
Brown, the great third baseman
for the New York Yankees. is a
physician.
These abrupt career chan~es
s.
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Good for lhree p11!Ces ot 1u1cy, golden brown Kentucky
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mashed potatoes and gravy. and a roll L1m11 two otters
per purchase Coupon gOOd only for combination white/
derll Ol'ders Customer pays all applicable seles tu.
Oller expires Ao111 12 1981 1 Prices may very 11
p1rt1clp1ting loca· I ___ ttons.Goodonlyln
.-tAat Sou•"=~.;·~:':: I
GOOd for nine pieces of 1u1cy, golden brown Kentucky
Fried Chicken, with tour rolls. 1 t11ge cote slew. • l11ge
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per purchue Coupon good only IOI' combination whit.,
dlrll orders Customer peys 111 1ppllcable ulea tax.
Otter exo11es
Aonl 12 1981 838
Prices may very 11 Pll·
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only In Southern
Calllornl1 where yOY see
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Prime and top choice beef aged at least 30 days to the
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offer a lot of hope to anyone
stuck in a job he or she doesn't
like. Going from being a
Hollywood actor to president is
probably a harder and more
dramatic change than getting to
be president after being born in
a log cabin, and if someone can
move from a lawn mower com-
pany to a great educational in-
stitution, any job change ought
to be possible.
TOO MANY people stay in a
job they hate all their Ii ves. It
wouldn't be a bad idea if we
played musical chairs with iobs;
every five years we'd all have to
get up, start moving to the
music and sit down m another
job when the music stopped.
I have a sneaking suspicion
that if the person running a suc·
cessfuJ business grabbed a chair
in a production line or another
factory for his next job, he'd
probably be running that COfJ'\·
pany too within five years. Peo-
ple have more Impact on jobs
than jobs have on people.
Change in our lives is a funn y
thing. We look forward to it but
we're aJso afraid of it. There's a
delicate balance between rear or
what it will bring and hope for
what it will bring. A lot of people
don 'l seem to dare take the
chance. It's too bad, because
there's a great relief in change
of any kind, even it it's just turn-
ing over in bed so the other arm
can go to sleep.
PEOPLE WHO have been
working in the same job for 25
years put a lot of emphasis on
experienc~t's my experience
that anyone learns about 90 per·
cent of what he'll ever learn on a
job in the first six months. After
that, it's mostly repetition.
There's nothing magic about
longevity on the job. Mo~ often
than not you just stop looking for
new ways to do things after
you've worked at something for
a few years
A few years ago there was a
great story· about a college pres-
ident who took the summer ·off
every ye~r and worked on a
garbage truck collecting trash
for two months. That's a little
dramatic. but he must have
come back to college every year
a better president than he'd
been when he lert. It's obvious
that people are looking for
change and for fresh things to
do, but too many of us do it the
easy way; we take a trip •
somewhere.
The travel people are all after
us now to join one of their
package tdurs to some foreign
country or to someplace in the
United States. The trouble with
the tours, as far as change goes,
is that they offer very little
change at all. If they take you to
Italy or Japan. you're in a plane
filled with the same kind of peo·
pie you see every day. You stay
in Americanized hotels and see
the same things everyone else
sees.
TRAVEL JUST isn't a very
good way to get much of a
change anymore. The world is
becoming homogenized. You can
gel Coca-Cola anywhere and
there's a McDonald's in Paris.
1 used to laugh at Ronald
Reagan. the movie actor want-
ing to be president but I'm not
laughing at him any longer. He
has made the kind of change
we'd all like lo make in our lives
once in a while.
WEST
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~ 4tli gr.ader's sPiging amazes TV audie nce
GIRL. 10, HAS 000.QIVEN SINGING TALENT
''When I alng I fffl Hk• I'm ftytng, .. aayt Eve lhaholan
Welfare found adequate
louxi lawmakers test public aid system
DES MOINES. Iowa <AP> -
Three state lawmakers who spent
the month of March pretending
they were on welfare and food
stamps said their experiment
proved to them that benefits are
adequate in Iowa.
The three, who represent the
town of Ottumwa , were
challenged to put themselves a.nd
their families on make-believe
welfare by Theresa Cole, a con-
stituent whose family is on Aid lo
Families with Dependent
Children, a welfare category.
Mrs. Cole said the experiment
proved "we can survive on what
we have. but not if they really cut.
cut, cul" benefits.
"I ALWAYS FELT like l was
under a restriction or a guideline
when I was shopping or entertain-
ing," said Rep. Don Gettings, a
Democra 'lt put a leash on my
way of living. ll made me recall
when I was younger and we were ·
always restricted to trying to
make ends meet."
Rep. Charles Poncy, a
Democrat, said be feels "that my
wife and I could live on the
amount that two people are al·
lolled. I could also state that I
wquld not want to do so.'' He said
the experiment recalled his
boyhood days during the
Depression. •
Sen. Sue Yenger, a Republican,
had fewer reservations about the
system and said, "it really wasn't
all that hard." She said her family
has "always had a pretty con·
ser vative lifestyle anyway."
However, she said her family
relied on gar~en produce and
meat from the freezer to make it
through the month. and said she
finished with from $50 to $100 left
over
PONCV AND GETrl NGS, who
are married and have no children
at home, put their "welfare
budget·· at $361 for the month.
Mrs Yenger. who as married and
has two children, had a $573
budget.
Poncy ended the month with
$4.84 left over, but said frozen
roods, restaurant meals ,
newspapers and cable television
would be among the first things to
go if welfare was his way of lire.
Mrs. Yenger put "frilly foods,"
new clothing and entertainment
in the "do-without•· category.
Gettings had $35.16 lert.
Gettings said the experiment
s howed him Iowa 's wetrare
benefits are generous compared
with those of some other states. A
family of two in Iowa receives
about as much as a family of six or
seven in Georgia. he said.
MA RIAN MICH AELS, a
VISTA worker in Ottumwa, said
the experiment taught the public
and lawmakers that welfare life is
not easy.
·'The point was to educate them
that people on welfare are not
freeloaders ; that it is not an easy
way oflife." she said.
·sAN LEAND.RO (AP> -Some
crbild..., lbould be 1een and not
beird . Eve Marte Shaholan isn't
oneoft.bem.
When th.la blue-eyed product of
an Armenian-Norwecian mar-
riage opens her mouth, everyone
listens: here's o~ 10-year-old
blessed with a voice as golden as
her hair.
The incredibly pure, sweet
tone• ol an operatic coloratura
soprano would be no surprise issu·
ing fro~ the lungs of an adult. But
Eve, all pink cheeks and white
frills as she ails on a couch and
watches a videotape of herself
perform.int on NBC's "Toniebt"
show, must be seen -and beard,
-to be believed.
"EVER YTHING THAT she
does, the tone, the ,.quality, the
beauty, that's aU God-given,"
said Eve'• mother, Kitty, who
sang too, like her mother before
her, and her mother before her.
"My mother was acclaimed in
the 1930s for her voice, and she
sang professionally. I sang in
church choirs, but never pro-
fessionally . I was never motiva-
ed like Eve is. She really loves to
sing for people," Mrs. Shahoian
said.
So Eve sings ·'Sempre
Libera" from "La Traviata,"
"Caro Nome" from ·•Rigoletto,"
all in the original Italian, which
she doesn't understand -for an
audience at the Oakland Sym-
phony, or the millions watching
the "Mike Douglas Show" or
Johnny Carson's "Tonight."
An ger , sex
lecture t o pic
Anger and how it relates to
sex will be dii;cussed April 3,
from 7-10 p.m ., in Chemistry
Building Room 214, Orange
Coast College in Costa Mesa.
More information about the
free lecture is available at
556-588>.
lo the 1tare of televlllon Upu
1be'a a star, tranaformed. by the
ma1tc of her voice and the
burst.a of applause. But ln the dlf.
fused 1unli1ht of a San Leandro
afternoon, she's just another
fourth-trader recovering from
chickenpox.
"When l 1ing, 1 feel like I'm fly-
ing," said Eve, who stunned her
parents with her talent before her
third birthday.
"When we first heard her sing,
when she was about 21!.t, we were
bowled over. We used to sing to
her, and she'd copy my mother."
Mrs. Shahoian said. ··she seems
to have aJJ the cood things of au of
us. I had the very delicate voice,
. where my mother had more of a
range. So she (Eve) got the range
and the delicacy."
AND SHE'S GOT something
more.
.. Eve is motivated. She wants to
do it. She's got all the guts.
Whenever she can find a stage,
that's where she wants to be," her
mother said. (
"I Uke tbe feelinc. I like beinc
nervous. It's exciUnc." said Eve,
who said she wantl to be an ac·
treu, singer and mother in
another 10 or 15 years .
Meanwhile, sbe roller skates aad
plays the piano like the other little
1irla atber pubUcschool.
·'I try to keep her life as normal
as POJSible because she's an
average cblld in every other
respect," Mrs. Sbahoian said. "A
lot of peopJe think that because
she's uslnc her voice at such a
young age, sbe'a going to ruin k. I
don't think that you can ever h.urt
anything by using it. As Ions as it
comes out freely and naturally, I
think it can't be wrong."
EVE DOESN'T need any
pushing, but her mother wouldn't
give ittoherifshedid.
"The whole thing's lost then ,"
Mrs. Shahoian said. "If sht tells
me tomorrow she's through sing-
ing, then fine. The beauty tHat's
coming through her singing is
because it's in her heart and her
soul. If that's not there. then
what's the point?"
School cuts mount
in wake of Prop.13
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Class size has been increased in
one out of four school systems and reading, math and science
programs have been cut back.since Proposition 13 passed, the
California Teachers Association says.
A survey of 137 of the state's 1,000·plus school districts
showed not just ' 'frills '· have been cut since 1978, when most of
the burden for financing school programs was shifted from
local property taxes to state funds.
Del Weber, CT A secretary-treasurer, said more than a
quarter of the district had reduced reading programs. while
one of 10 cut math programs and almost one of five had re·
duced science programs.
The survey was done in an attempt to get support for a bill
by Assemblyman Leroy F. Greene, D-Sacramento, to add
more than $331 million to Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s pro-posed school budget.
The association is the state's largest teachers' union.
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C,_.rlet L S""rwooo Hun11~9ton BNell, CA '2•41>
Preiident Th1\ Du1ine11 t• conducted by •
Tiiis •••t•l'l'Wnl wu hied wotn I"" hmtttcl P¥1nerst11p Count r Cieri< ol Or.,,oe County on Slepl>en M And""' M•rc" 25 .... Tn•• st•te..-1 WH rtlld wllh llW ' l'IMMS County Clerk ol OrW1ge County on
PuDhstwcl Or•nge Co.st D•oly P•IOI, Maren 1'. 1911
Maren,., April 1, '· ••• tttl ISIO .. I p ,.._ "~ -uDli'11ed..., W19f Co.•t O••ly P1101.
P VBUC NOTICE
)ICTI TIOUS 8USINl!SS
NAME STATEMENT
Merell u. Alltol 2 9 i.. 1'1t1 U~·ll -...----------
PUBLIC NOTICE
~--~~-------
Tne IOllOWlng person IS doing l>u•I FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
neu.. NAME STATEMENT
A88A ANTIQUES, Su•t• Ct. lJO tne lot1owl119 119<M>n h clc .. ng bus.
Harl)Or 81..0 , CO\ta Meu , CA t16U nus U
Mr. MtCha•I WOOCI, Apt 411. 0401 SHANGHAI PINE GARDEN, JOO
W.,nor A.,., HUl'ltlngton Steen. C Mar ine A•enwe, 8•11>o• l•l•nd
'1641 Newpon lloKll, CA n .. 2
Tn11 l>Us•ntss Is conduct.a Dy.,. In L•rn Cheong KwDnQ, 111 Ametnyst
G•••dual: A•tnue, Ball>Oa 1s1and. Newporl M. WOOcl 8HCl1, CA ., .. 2
Tn1• ltatement was hied wltn t,.. Tn .. t>uslneu ,, Conducted"' ... In
County Citric 01 OrWlge County on d1•1d11a1
M•rcn 14. 1911 V0119 fsun Lee
l'ISIJ AllOC'ney •• Uw
Pu1>11S11ec1 Or•"99 Co.st Dally Piiot, TM• statement w•s tiled wltn t""
M•rell 26, Aprlt 2, 9, 16, 1911 14 .. lt County Clerk or Or..,ge Cownty on
PVBUC NOTICE
Maren 24, 1"1
1'1JU44
Pul>liShed 0rWIQI C:O.SI D••IY Pilot,
M41rcll 26, "41<•12, 9, tl, t"t 1..,1 .. 1
STAT•M•HTOl'A8ANOONMaNT -~~~~~~--~-
Ol'US• 01' PVBUC NOTICE l'tCTtTtOUS •USINl!SS HAM•
T.,. lottow1119 --'1 ha .... -..
cloned tho UM Of Ill• llctlllout l>Usln•H P'ICTITIOUS I USIHl!IS
n.me NAM• STllt•MaNT
HUNTINGTQN BEACH TILE, Tha IOI._.,,.,._ 11 doing l>USI·
llSU Gotllard Street, Hul\,llngton "°" H .. 8H ch,C.llfMnl•UU1. MOUTl'IN IMPllU! FIHAN-Tllo FIUHIOYs auslnoss N•mo ,.. CIA•, ••• Rue CNl\4111'1'. Hawpott
lerrod IO -.... Iii.cl Ill Or-IHCh, C.llloml• •JWO.
County on Jllftt 1•, 1•. S•mue• Chis.I, •• 1t11• Chanlllly,
Aero Trace CMp , • c.atlfw111e <or• HewPOrt llM<ti, c.tllOMi. ,...._
poretlorl, 11"2 Gothard Street, HIHll· Thi• ..... , ...... ,, <onclli<ltd by M In·
lnglOft S..Cll, C.lllornl• f3'4'. dlvhluel. Mn> frKt CMP-• 51!1-i 0.. • ROlltrt M. lllM, This at.ti-I WH Ill .. Will! U-.
Pf'nlllent CelHllJ' o.n ol OfM9t C9\Hl1, CN1
Tiiie 1tetemont w•• 111111 wllll tn. Merell to, '"'·
County Cltrll ot ~M-County Ofl '111ftt
M41•<11 24, '"I Puou ..... °'elllf C-M O.tl't Piiot, 111n•11 Merell 12, 19, 2'. Aprll t . 19'1 12,...1
Put>llllwcl O'MIQe CMst 0.11• Pitot. ··----------Merell 16,.Aprll 1. 9, t ... Het 11 .. Mt PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
lllCflT'IOUI lut .... 11
' . ~y D;t ~ w emer private pradice ·
• Wben Paul Me)'er 1ra4uated ward.lq than be bad lma1inecl. Amoni the moet cballenatn1.
trOm the UCLA kbool of Law "I tot ln here and somet.blDI waa his rnoet NCeQt, Monday's
11 )'ears aao, be went to work happened," be said. "I started convlctJon ot Lelabd Roy Dell·
for •the Oran1• County District aettl.ni Jnteretthal cuea." lnaer tot flrat-cle11• murder in
Attorney's Offtee .nth tbe lctea the death of bis 2-year-old step.
he would atay only two or thtee dau1hter, a death orialnaUy J,ist· yean for the uperlence. · D ed as accidental.
T•o hundred cues aod nearly rtlre1"8 · · · M EY•a BUI.LT bla ca1e nine years later, Meyer saya be c.
11 flnally ready to follow hll •nftte .. And a1aln1t Dellln1er usln1 a orl1lnal plan. He wlll 10 into ~· •M;~ speciallzedselencefteldtnownu
private law practice beginning biomecbanlcal en1lneerln1.
in May. , FREDE RJ>C K, Md. Speclallltl ln this field apparent.
Meyer, who handled and won <AP> -District Judie ly had never testified in a
between 30 and 35 homicide Stanley Bennett bu sen-criminal court proceedibg. ,
.casea as a deputy district at-tenced two couples to 18 Meyer used an expert witness
torney, submitted his letter of months auperviled proba-lo show that the youngster could
rdfgnation Tuesday to District tion because their children not have died ln an accidental Atto~ey Cecil Hicks. were oft.en truant. fall as claimed by Dellinger.
Placed on probation lo The jury was out only 90
A HUNTINGTON Beach resi· hopes of deterrlq truancy minutes after bearing three
dent, Meyer aaid that although he by their cblldren were weeks or evidence.
never planned it that way, b1Ji Robert and Shirley Fritz Meyer, who will be joining the
stay with ~e District Attorney's and James and Mary Ruth Orange County office or the Los
office proved to be far more re-Seabolt, said Shirley Angeles firm or Katz, Hoyt and
Brandt, chief clerk or Bell, credfted much or his· trial
.. n supported criminal court. success Ito good police and in-
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The
state Senate's Judiciary Com-
mittee wants to ban the
"diminished capacity" defense
used by Conner San Francisco
Supervisor Dan White in his
murder trial. On a 5-1 vote Tues-
day. the committee advanced
the proposed ban to the Senate
floor.
Testimony indicated vestigalive work.
.
that by early March, the
Seabolt children, age 11
and 9, had missed about 30
days or school each. The
9-year-old Fritz c.hild miss-
ed 55 days, accf:ding to
court testimony. and the
14-year-old missed 88
days.
Mob leaders
dwindling
By The Auodated Preu
THe ranks or the Old Guard of organized crime
a re being depleted by gang wars, death and diligent
government prosecutors, but mob-watchers say it's
only a'' minor disruption."
Law enforcement officers compare it . to a
change in political administrations or a shake· up in
the executive offices of a large corporation.
Two reputed underworld bosses were hauled in-
to court this week in Louisiana and Massachusetts.
while in New York City they held the funeral or Frank
"Funzi" Tieri. 76, the first person convicted of head-
ing an organized crime family in America.
TIERI, ONCE DESCRIBED BY the FBI as the
MA•caU.O
the Philadelphia
Testa,56.
nation's most powerful crime
boss and successor to the late
"boss of bosses," Carlo "Don
Carlo" Gambino, died Sunday. A
hospital spokesman said Tieri
had gallbladder trouble and had
undergone surgery for cancer or
the colon. •
Tieri"sdeath came about two
weeks alter a bomb loaded with
inch·long finishing nails and
shotgun pellets ripped through
home of Philip "Chicken Man"
The bulbous-nosed Testa, who one officer said
looked like "he went through a paper shredder,'' was
the seventh reputed mobster to meet a violent death
since the Philadelphia godfather. Angelo Bruno, 69,
was felled by a shotgun blast as he sat in a parked car
March 21, 1980.
FOU..OWING SIMILAR PROSECUTIONS OF
alleged crime figures recently in California and New
Jersey. 73-year-old Raymond L.S. Patriarca was
wheeled into a courtroom on a stretcher Monday in
New Bedford. Mass., where he pleaded innocent to
charges or ordering the 1968 slaying of Robert .. Bob·
by" Candos. It is the second murder in which he has
been charged.
Prosecutors asked bail be set at $1 million. but
defense attorneys argued that was a "ransom
figure" and Superior Court Judge Robert S. Prince
agreed to.,,000, Patriarca made bail.
At about the same time, in New Orleans, 71-year·
old Carlos Marcello. long described by federal
authorities as the leader or organize4 crime on the
Gulf Coast, went on trial with four other men in U.S.
District Court on charges of racketeering, con-
spiracy and mail fraud. Marcello, who was ~rdered
deported in 1953 but managed to evade eviction from
this country, ~ charged with being involved in a
scheme to obtain state insurance contracts by brib·
ing public officials.
THE LATEST ORGANIZED CRIME TRIAL in
New Jersey involved labor leaders Salvatore and
Nunzio Provenzano, whose older brother, Anthony
"Tony Pro" Provenzano, was conv:icted in June 1978
of murdering a Teamste rs union rival.
Salvatore and Nunzio Provenzano are on trial in
federal court on charges they too~ $187 ,000 in return
for allowing four interstate trucking companies to
hire non-union drivers .
BE SAID THAT his colleagues
and the police investigators with
whom he worked over the years
were dedicated.
Meyer said he will handle civil
and criminal work in his new
job, which he said will provide
more financial opportunities for
him.
. '
Proud citizen
Ma ry Teresa Ventitelli, 96, shows her citizenship papers
to gt'andson Tommy in her Detroit home. The native of
Italy took the citizenship oath this week after living in the
U.S . for 72 years.
DENVER (AP) -Tbe Denver '
zonln• board hal taken t.be 1tiq
out of a city orcter that
threatened to separate a man
from bi• bees.
TM9 board granted Steven
Gumbay a five-year variance to
keep bla beehive. The approval
could be revoked' lf the board de-
termines the bees are a nuisance
or a bua.rd, said Jack Simmt.
board secretary.
The vote overturned a city •
zoning administration's ceue·
and-desist order issued in
January after some of' Gum-
bay's neighbors complained the
bees didn't belong in the city.
At the urging of neighbors. '
Gumbay agreed to build a fence
to keep children and animals
away from the hive.
"We're a very anti-insect
culture." Gum bay said. ··A lot
or people are scared or bees,
especially when you put them in
a cluster . But the bees just want
to work continuously. Unless
they are interrupted, they won't
bother you.··
Shown: the new 1981 Silver Spirit
Chappaqulddick
auction pus~
EDGARTOWN, Mass. <AP> -The
Chappaquiddick Island bridge, site of Sen. Edward
Kennedy's 1968 car accident that claimed the life
of a young woman paaaenger, should be auctioned
to save repair coata. a local official says.
Roy Carv~r Rolls-Royce is proud to announce the
arrival of ~e new Silver Spirit and Silver Spll!' J!lOdel~.
Selectwoman Edith Potter proposed the sale of
Dike Bridge, saying lt needs $20,000 worth of
repair1l. Ah. Potter 1aid gqartown cannot afford
the work becauae of tax·cuttlnl Proposition 2,
wblcb limlta property tax itlcome.
Mary Jo Kopecbne died when the car driven ,
by the MU1achuaetta Democrat went into the
water at the brtqe.
Both of these new 1981 automobiles mark the introduc-
tion of the first new Rolls -:-Royce series in fifteen years.
I
Arriving Friday, April 3, 1981.
Signs of times
Vendors brave blustery cold in Highland
Park , outside Detroit, to peddle
newspapers from Dallas and Houston
Estate fight
gets hotter
AUSTIN. Texas <AP> -The Texas Supreme
Court has ordered a trial of a $15 million dispute
between the daughters of the late Wimbledon tennis
champion Maureen "Little M1>" Connolly Brinker
and her husband's children by a later marriage.
Wit.bout writinl a new opinion, the hi&b court
upheld Wednesday a decision -0f the Texarkana
Court of Civil Appeals that there were issues of fact
in the case that required a trial.
"Super, super, super!'.' said Donald Swanson of
Dallas. lawyer for "Little Mo's" daughters, Cynthi~
Anne Brinker, 24, and Brenda Lee Brinker, 21.
MRS. BRINKER WAS WIMBLEDON champion
three consecutive years -1951, 1952 and 1953 -but
her career was cut short by a ridinl accident. She
died of cancer June 21, 1969.
Her husband, Norman Brinker, is board
chairman of the Steak & Ale restaurant chain, which
he helped found, and a vice president of Pillsbury
Inc., its parent company.
Case records show the Brinkers created a family
trust in the 1960s, and Mrs. Drinker's will created two
additional trusts. The main one received the bulk of
her estate, then worth about $700,000.
One trust provision said that if Mrs. Brinker
were to die first, money from the trust could eo to
the "issue of' her husband as well as their two
daughters.
BRINKER MARRIED MAG&IT FENDT in
1971. They had two children, Mark and Cristina, and
Brinker transferted for them some of "Little Mo's"
estate to a Bahamian trust. the Wobaco Trust.
Meanwhile, the size of "Llttle Mo's" estate,
most of it Steak & Ale stock, ballooned to more than
$15 million.
After Brinker and his second wife were divorced
in 1977, be told his daughters by "Llttle Mo" of the
Wobaco Trust. He aided them in a suit to establish
that Cynthia and Brenda were the only beneficiaries
of the Brinker Family Trust and the two trusts creat-
ed by "Llttle Mo's" will. State District Judge Owen Giles of Dallas threw
out the suit after refusing to hear evidenc~'that when
··Little Mo'' and Brinker created the Brinker Family
Trust they intended it to benefit only their
children, not those of either party by a future mar-
riage.
THE LA WYE& WHO WR<n'E THE trust sald
that was his understanding and anything written
down to the contrary was a mistake.
The C"ourt of clvU appeals said the true lnlent of
Brinker and "Llttle Mo" was a legiUmate question
that should be tried. .
"lf by mistake an instrument as written faila to
express the true intention or agreement of the
parties, equity will grant reformation of the instru;
ment so as to make it correctly express the agree-
ment actually made," the court said.
Navy pay parade
ends in England
DEVONPORT, England (AP) -A Royal
Navy tradition dating more than a century eo~ed
when Stephen Wllson held out bis cap and a
paymaster placed the equivalent of $312 on top of
lt, hls salary for two week's worth. ,
· Wilson, a 23-year-old engineering mechanic,
became the last Royal Navy sailor to receive hla
salary in cash at a ceremoniaJ pay parade at this
west England harbor town.
UnW then, all seamen attended parade every
two weeu to have their pay placed on top of·thelr
capa, which they bad to bold out publicly in front
of them. From now on, salaries will be paid
direcUy into the sailor's bank accounts.
Saudis warn 1mO~n
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) -Saudi Arabia ·
hAI Introduced warnine label• on· tt1antt1
pack•.-and all odaer tobeceo ,..odaetl, a fll·
flclal ltatemmt Hid.,
Tbe ConaumeT Proteetlon A1eacy of the
lllatatrJ ol Commeree and hMl9ttJ, ••id U.. w....-. would relMt "am...._• a m.tor e•aae ol
hm1 cucer, Pulmonary dlltuea ..t beart db· .......
· · · V acc'ine te1ted ·
PHOENIX, Ar11. (AP) -Volunteen .,. beta• ~ the Tuetoa area to t.tt 1 vaccine a1a.lnlt
" feirtr. • condlUon common ••on1 delm dw • •
• II
•
New policies on wlthdrawin1
land from a1ricultural pre-
Hrves ln Oranae County may
result from the prolonged
negoUatiou that ended this week
oe development of the Anaheim
Kll11. ~
The Oranae County Board of
Superviaora ratified a final
open apace agreement Tuesday
with Texaco-Anaheim Hills, Inc.
The agreement gives the county . .
Program set
on finances
Financial planning for single
persons, a four-part program,
will be held at Irvine Higti
School, 4321 Walnut Ave., Irvine,
from 7 to 9 p.m. April 28 and
May 5, 12 and 19.
504 acres of land in return for
development rigbtl for much of
the hUls.
THE SUPERVISORS claimed
they didn't like the agreement
reached in 1974. But they ap.
pro~ed the contract on the legal
advice of County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper, wbO'said the county had
no alternative.
The action put to rest efforts
by the Orange County Grand
Jury and several environmental
groups, which had been seeking
a new open space agreement to
further protect Weir Canyon and
gain more accessible recrea-
tional lands.
EmU..... l ~
Cardinar' Timothy Ma~g
of Los Angeles has been
named by Pope John PaµJ II
as the pontiff's personal
representative to July 7
celebration in Ireland of
third century of martyrdom
for Archbishop Oliver
Plunkett. ~
areas. Unemployed autoworkers and job-
less from related induetriea have begun to
look to ~e Sun Belt for work opportunities,
The series ls sponsored by the
Saddleback College Office or
Community Services, and a $25
fee per person is cbaried.
Information is available at
831-4646 and 497-4385.
Board Chairman Ralph Clark,
who claimed more specifi c
policies on agricultural pre·
serves could prevent such prob·
terns in the future, persuaded
other members to soli cit recom-
mendations from the county En·
vironment Management Agency
and Planning Commission.
Those reports are due in three
months.
C•ll 642-5678.
Put • few words f
lo work for ou.
I
Roger's Special1 Easter Baskets
Delight that special someone with a Roger's Easter Basket. Spring is
in full bloom at Roger's Gardens and that means the best selection
ever of our bright and colorful hanging baskets and pots. An easter
basket from Roger's will be a la?ting gift throughout the spring.
)
FOR YOUR PATIO
Roger's Gallery offers a variety of
theJinest patio and garden
furniture: Tropitone, Brown
Jordan, Triconfort, Allibert
and more are on display
now and are available for
immediate delivery.
Roger's features a
unique assortment of
candles, umbrellas and
Easter gifts. That
special gift is right
here at Roger's.
Enjoy colorful Ranunculus,
Daffodils, Tulips and Roses.
Fresh-cut flowers from Roger's
wlll brighten any room.
f1 ~. ir~. ·t~ • \
A living centerpiece or ,a unique gift,
Miniature Afric~ Violet.
With Oxygen-Plus care, this
perennial will produce color
year-round. Special 92..50
a 1 CY Roger•s color pot
designett for that someone ,
special. '11.95
PIANT PROFESSOR
GORDON BAKER LLOYD, noted
garden expert, '1£ill be. at Roger's
Gardens every Friday, beginning
April 3rd, from 10:30 -2:30 to
answer all plant questions.
")
He will also be presenting
special seminars:
April 9th, 11:00 A.M.
" "How to Water".
April 23rd, 11 :00 A.M.
"Pest Control".·
FOR YOUR GARDEN
MARTHA WASHINGTON
GERANIUMS, 1 gal. In a
sunny spot this beautiful plant
provid~s consistent color.
reg. S3. 75 Special '2.75
Hibiscus, 5 gal. This showy
star of the flower world, alive
with color, indoor or out.
reg. s11.00 Special '8.99
The Easter Bunny WILL
be at Roger's Gardena .•.
Easter Sunday, 2-4 P.M.t
Prlcea tflectlve lhru
Aprll 22, '81 ;snd subject
to quantltles on hand
~nClered W.AS~TON (AP>
-A MW milltary bue
m•J ecl9t more tban lt'1
wortb to tbe host 1 commwaity, accordln•
tD a Wbite Houae study.
Jn tbe ftnt place1 a
military bue mJVff letS
of a klcl to U., loeal
ffoaomy than would a
·Pr l v ate activity or
stmllar sile because
military pay ii
1enera1Jy lower.
la the second place,
.. the near-term local
economic benefita of a
major new military base
may not be sufflclept to
offset the cost of
required additional
community facilities
. and 1ervices, and . . .
Q.-•·-I 1peclal federal ~..wt ....... eontro assistance to affected
Nelson T. Shields, chairman of Handlun states and localities
C"" t l I t h d t I m JY sometimes be un ro • nc., expec s an gun con ro Justified,'' President lepslation to again die ill Congress despite Reagan said ln a letter
the ususination attempt on President submitUng the report to
___ R_e_a~g~an--·------~--------------------Congress.
Death of hiker tied
to .Mt. Tam murders
SANTACRUZ (A_P)-Investigaton
have linkectthe .. Mo.unt Tam" ldlleror
at least five lJkel'I to the fatal shooting
Sunday or a young colle1e student and
the woundl ... ofher blkinf companion.
"We strongly believe that the
homicides dubbed the Mount Tam
murden and our case were eommitted
by the same person," Al Noren, sheriff
of Santa Cnrz County. said Wednes-
day.
That link was not denied by Marin
County authorities investi1ating a
series of slayin1s near llount
Tamalpais State Park, about 100 uiiles
north of Santa Cr\it.
THE LATESr slaying occurred in
Henry Cowell State Park on a popular
redwood grove trail. Ellen Marie
Hansen, a 20-year-old student at UC
Davis, died ililmediately when a man
opened ftre with a .SS-caliber handgun,
officials said.
Steve Russell Haertle, 20, a fellow
student of Ms. Hansen's, was shot
several times, but was recovering in a
Santa Cru&hotlpital.
Noren said the killer 's method in the
Santa CnMI shootings resembled how
police believe the ·Mount Tam
murderer attacked bis victims in
Marin County, where. over a course of
16 rbooths, seven bodies were dis-
covered.
Noren refused to give details of the
similarities.
FOUR BODIES, ALL victims of gun-
fire, were found in Point Reyes Na-
tional Seashore in November 19>.
The bodies of three women, one of
whom was slabbed to death, were
found on Mount Tarnalpais, beginning
in August 1979.
Originally. Marin County Sheriff Al
Howenstein said one man was
responsible for all seven Marin kill-
in gs. Later. some in veatlgators
theorized that only five of the victims J
were slain by the same person.
"Sheriff Howenstein is ~I
and going along" with Noren's state-
ment, s aid Candy Maniano, a
spokesman for the Marin County
Sheriff's office.
THE DESCRIPTION of the kmer
provided by witnesses to tbe Santa
Cruz shootings says the attacker was
possibly in his mld....O., but composites
drawn after the Marin allacks ·
portrayed the slayer as being in his 20s
or30s.
"We feel there is a link," between
the Marin and Santa Cruz murdet's,
Noren said, despite discrepancies in
description.
Noren said be believes witnesses to
the Santa Cruz shootings, including
Haertle, have provided the best
physical description yet of th~trallside
killer.
Haertle and Miss Hansen conversed
briefly with their assailant mom~ts
before the gunfire erupted, in-
vestigators said.
NO&EN SAID authorities are belq
notified in all state parks and patrols
will be increased along some biting
areas .
The Santa Cruz shootings occurred
about a mile from Graham Hill Road, a
well-traveled thorou1bfare. Cowell
State Part ls just north of the Santa
Cruz campus of ttie University of
California.
In November 1979, the body of a UC
Santa Cruz female student who had
been stransled was found near the site
of the moat recent klllln1. Tbe
strangler bu not been caulbt. oftlda.la
said, and no link baa been made
between that slaying and lls.
Hansen's.
38 years of darkness
Man may regain sig"1
OROVILLE <AP) -After 38 years
or living in darkness with the sounds
around him the only reminder that
h e's still alive. 95-ye ar-old Jess
Law900 hopes to regain his sight.
Lawson, who lost. his sight ln a
machine shop mishap in 1943, is
scheduled to be operated on next
month foF cataract removal and
possibly a cornea transplant. He
hopes to waJte up seeing for the first
time since World War II.
Dr. Keith Wedin, an Oroville eye
surgeon who will p e rform the·
operatioo, said it could restore 40
percent of !Vision in Lawson's rlgbt
eye.
"I'll ALL EXCITED about it. But
it's been ao long I sort or got adjusted
to it. When I lost my eyea I was livin'
in a different world. I think my kids
are more excited than I am,"
Lawson said, his wrinkled face
breaking into a broad grin.
Lawson lives in an apartment with
bis IOll and daughter-in-law. He sat
for an interview in his favorite chair,
his thin hands wrapped around a
battered white cane.
Lawson tell.a ant.mated stories of a
past he says includes work as a
cowboy, circus clown, Texas Rao1er, mln~r. store ow'ner, farmer ,
machinist, deputy U.S. M'arabal.
1un1lln1er and "shotgun" on a
1ta1ecoacb. In bit youn1 maverick
days, the Oklahoma-born Lawson
aaya1 be traveled the country from
l'londa to California.
back, and has made some plans.
•'I Just 'Want to •et a piece of tbe
land, a few bogs, raise some cropil
and l 'U be happy for the rest of my
fife," he said wistfully, his voice
cracking aligbUy. "Just enough to
make me comfortable."
Bedroom, Living R~om,
Dining Room, Occasional,
Desks, Bookcases, Lamps
and Accessories, Mirrors,
Paintings, Mattresses Clfld
Boxsprings.
s
. I
A•S nternallooal · ~-~~['H " .... "ll ~ tamUlel ........ •ta ,~ ...... baqe ltudenU dwine the com·
tcbool~nr.
Tile llarlQI IU•b Scbool dla.,.... .. 1hi holl famlUf!S for
'®r ~tudenta. Each vlattln• •tu· llent LI between aces 16 and 19 ~nd lives u a m6m,ber of tho
01t family while attendina
uses at Marina. Heet families
•ltb youncer children or no
chUdren may apply, aa well as
those with high s~hoor aae ~blldren. ~ :
I Host families are eUltible for a
monthly federal income tax de-
duction ol $50. AFS provides
P1edical coverage for its stu·
Uents, along with a monthly aJ.
Jowance.
Interested families can con-
l,act Madeleine Caton, 846-2233.
•
SllfljterCaelletfa
Gary ~. wonbip. f\11 m..-ol Seal_,
11,1onlc Lod1e, Newport Beach, di•·
plays retoluUom pre·
seated by cities of
Coata 11.eaa and
Newport Beach for
lod1e's effort ln 1ap.
porting California
Publle Schools Month.
Proclamation• were
presented by Coun-
cilmen Philip Ma1}1'er (center) of Newport
and Doon Hail ol Costa
Mesa.
r
DAu.AS (AP) -It will be a
while yet before ordinary earth·
Un1s can bop abo•rd a 11,.ce shuttle for a qulck jaunt to the
stars. But for $500 right now,
they can reserve room on ~e
craft for their dreams.
John Jenkins, who owns a
publishing company in Austin,
pJans to send up a miniature
printing press as a first step
toward ensuring that the printed
word survives in computer·a1e
space colonies.
Businessman Craig Johnson of
Quadra Systems in San Antonio
Is developing a mini~omputer
for a shuttle experinrent.
Vanilla extract maker John
Adams of Austin wanu to
pollinate a vanilla plant in space
in an effort to change its genes
to make it stronger and less sus-
ceptible to disease.
. They've aJI made a $500 de-
posit with the National
Aeronau~ea and Sf.act Ad·
mlnlatratlon for a ••et•.-•>'
apeclal" -a amalJ cocqpart.
ment on a .,a~ abuttle when
the er.it belina maklnf replu
m1bta aeveral years from !MWI.
The apace shuttle fl a reusable
vehicle that ulUma~y could be
uAed to ferry people and equip-
ment to space station.a.
The flnt space 1butUe Oilbt.
on the Columbia, la scbeduJed to
take off from Cape CdAveraJ,
Fl a .. April 10 wltb two
astronauts aboard. 11tey '1fon't
be carrying any getaway
specials. In the rave years alnce the
specials were fmt offered, 139
companies, 78 schools, 49
priv'ate individuals· and 27
federal agencies have reserved
space.
No commercial gimmicks or
dangerous experimenta are al·
lowed, but just about anything
else is "go."
JOIN US FOR. THE GRA-. D .OPENING OF OUR
FURNITUR~··FLOO , A~PRIL 3, 4 and 5.
SOUTH C·OAST PLAZA
We're very proud of our great new look So.
we cordially invite you to be with us this
weekend as we celebrate Come be
surrounded by beauty. Be entertained.
Gather fascinatmg mformat1on. And get
ideas for your home It's a "house·warmmg"
party. Wrth lots to see and do!
Browse through our environments,
featuring the finest m f urn1ture and
accessones. for every taste and ldestyle
Consult with the experts. Ta lented
mtenor decorators. skilled rn the use of
color. texture. proportion and design will
be here Fnday, all day
Jackie Olden, CBS Cooking Cc,nsultant,
Fflday, 2 to 4 pm
Cooking demonstrations. Experts from.
Alfredo's, Fflday. 2 to 3 p.m.
Antone/Io's, Saturday. 1 to 2 p.m
Salmagundl, Saturday. 2 to 3 p.m.
Flower arranging demonstrations.
Saturday. 12 to 4 pm
Enjoy Informal fashion modeling.
Saturday and Sunday. 2 to 4 p.m
WBterford lamp seminar. Meet Rune
Englund. Waterford's expert, who'll conouct
an informal seminar on decorating with
Waterford lamps. Sunday. 1 to 4 p.m.
And lots more. We luok forward to seerng
you. on our new Furrnture Floor. Please call ..,
for further details and rnformatron.
556-0611. ext 371
Century "Clandge" dmrng room set
E xqws1te furniture msp1red by 18th
Century Georgian design Banquet
extension table with 2 20 ' .. leaves.
Extends table to 103" 44 " x 62"
x 29 .. $1395
Chrna cabmet. 79· .. x 19 .. x 85 ". $3125
Queen Anne style cane back srde
chalf. $380 upholstered arm charr. $495
Tradll1onal roll·arm 88" sofa Back
cushions and muftr throw pillows fr/fed
with 90% grey duck featfler and 10%
grey duck down. Oversized d1mensrons.
Eight way hand tied base. Cover 1s
shell color acrylic/ cotton damask.
$1999 or $78 monthly•.
Furmture. 624. 625
1.
. '
Wltb operat.ln& expense• pilln&
~ almo1t u fut u the trash,
Orance County oftlctJla are ex-
amlain1 ways ot lettin1 private
b......._ rub county landftlls
Qd trlnlfer •~lions. The CoYnty Board or
SupervilOrs bas ..-.Cided to aeek
private blds to run tbe county's
three solid waste transfer sta·
lions in Huntington Beach, Stan·
landfills ls expected to be made
by the supervisors in about 45
days. They postponed that de--
clsion Tuesday, untU a lease
with the Irvine Com1'anY ii com·
pleted for ~ ol the Coyote Gan·
yon landfill.
County officials don't know yet
how rriuch they mifht save tax· payen by shifting rom a coun-
ty-run t.o a privately-run opera-
tion. Ron Bates, assistant direc·
tor for the county General
Services Agency, said the sav·
logs will be better known once
bids are submitted. i
If a private operation appears
more expeeslve, be 'explained,
the cCl\lnt)' will eootinue runninc
tl\e Olinda, Santiaeo Canyon,
Coyote Can10D and Prima
Desbecba landfills.
ton and Anaheim. . A similar request ror pro·
pouts to operate Ure four
Prima Desbecha is on the
Ortega Hlghwiu-near San Juan
Capistrano.
Second District Supervisor
Harriett Wieder .said Tuesday
o.lly ............. ~ hlrkll O'O-•
COSTA MESA'S ROUSHAN WITH LATEST SCULPTURE HE CALLS VOLCANO
lmmlgr•nt vow• to r•IM monument over objection• of city 1nd court
'Volcano' to erupt?
Mesa bristles over lat.est sculpt,ures
Peppery Iranian imml~ant Ali Roushan
is preparing to raise a thir~ meW sculpture
in front of his Costa Mes'a welding shop
despite a court order prohibiting the move.
He says the only question now is whether
the 40.root-high monument, dubbed Volcano,
will be in place before the Orange County
Superior Court rules on the city's lawsuit
riled against him for allegedly ignoring or·
dinances.
CITY ATTORNEY TOM Wood is seeking
a summary (pre-trial) court ruling M>.ril 10
before Judge Robert Fitzgerald to hNerec·
tion of the big red sculpture without building
permits once and for all.
Roushan and his American Civil
Liberties Union lawyer, Meir Westreich,
argue that works of art require no permits
under rights granted by the First Amendment
to the U."S. Constutution.
It's on that basis that Westreich already
has filed an appeal on the Superior Court's
preliminary injunction issued last year that
temporarily halts the erection or such work
as "Volcano" until the ~ity's suit is settled.
Roushan ran afoul or city officials last
year in erecting his first sculpture, a 32-foot·
tall prayer tower and cascading water rau.
CITY ORDINANCES require specia'I
permits for structures taller than 30 feet.
'they also require plans detailing safety
features and landscapin« surrounding new
structures.
Rouaban soueht approval for months,
1ave up in disgust and· put up the tower and
,.installed a rose garden without final city ap-
1>roval. · ~ '
But even as the Superior Court was con·
sidering that issue, Rousban raised his
second red-colored sculpture, ''Butterfly
Wings," even taller than the first.
BUT NOW, CITY Attorney Wood con·
tends, should Roushan raise his newest
sculpture he could be found in contempt of
court for possible violation of the preliminary
injunction ruling of last year.
Roushan poured the base for his newest
creation a week ago. "ll takes about 28 days
to set up," he said of the concrete.
In all, Rousban plans five towering
sculptures In 0-ont ·or his shop al 1550
Superior Ave.
The works, he says, represent the growth
of a man.
I
THE ROSE GARDEN signifies birth, ~e
says, and the p_rayei:.tower the emergence of
the childlike spirit.
"Butterfly wings," he says, represents
the child learning to walk, leaving the crawl-
ing position and becoming mobile.
"Volcano" will represent youth in all Its
energy, he reports. The next piece, a tornado,
is to port.ray the turbulence of man's life
before be finally gains wisdom and "light,"
the topic of the last sculpture.
Roushan, '\\Ibo bnmigrated to the Uqited
States in 1963, says his life is now dedicated
to his sculptures and the constitutional issues
involved.
He says he once earned up t.o $20,000 a
month in his welding shop but that the cur-
rent legal hassles have ended his will to-work
com merclally.
• -JERRY CLAUSEN f
\
!Tllstice Council rebom • •
Tuesday, the County' Board of tywide planning a1ency could
Superviaon 1ave lti endorse· play a critical role in 'boldint
ment to dilaolving \be council. down projected coet increases ln
JCtltb Concannoa, director of tbe crf mfiaal JuaUce 111tem.
the council, aaid two more meet· Cone-said he bopes tbe
tn11 are tcbeduled tn June and new or..ia.uon cu~ 1n place
Septemb«. The council ll ex· when die eouncl1 d1tMada in Oc:·
peeled toolftetally dllben4 etfec· tober.
tin Oct.1. •
Concannon, however, sald
formatloa of the ~e" advisory
1roup alreact, 18 udder way. Tht
new ll'ODP nu.Id be under the
ull'bre&la of the county l~Y • meat but 'Would ln • t
reprlllfttatlwa of varloua •. ... ,~----··· ln1 U. ~ ot Ute new bOdJ,
CoUaty ~.· AdaalalatraUff Oftle«
Robert ,..._ .. aatd a COU·
thtt • board subcommittee con·
cl"bded last year that new
methods for ftnancin1 the
landfifla are needed to counter
1rowina experuses.
Bates sald operating coats at
county landfills have inc~ased
by 50 percent in the paat. three
years, moetly because of costly
state mandates and infl~ted
coats for fuel and heavy
m acblnery parta. . ""
llatet said salvage and 1as re-
gam.e·.
covery tlgJ\ts wlll be another is·
sue ln any ruture neeotiationa.
He said, for example, the county
might aeree to let a private
company run the landfills. but
retain rights to sell metal,
cardboard and newspl'iot to
salvage companies and valuable
methane 1aa to synthetic fuel
flrma.
The county formed an agree·
01enl last year to sell gas
trapped under the Olinda landfill
to Getty Synthetic Fuels, lnc.f
Signal Hill. Company •
searchers still are testin1
site, Bates said.
One probable result of n~w
financing is an eventual iln·
plementation or 1ate fees at
dumps. The county superVisors
have indicated they will a1ree to
the charees.
Almost all other Southern
California counties already have
gate rees at their dumps.
Irvine landmark
Old store ~oving?
The 92-year-old Irvine Country
Store may have to be moved to a
new location to accommodate
city road-widening plans, an
engineering consultant says.
"We've moved historic struc·
lures before, it's not that bard.
They built those old wood-frame
structures good in those days,"
said Ron Wolford. vice president
of the Berryman and Stephenson
·consulting firm.
The firm, working under a
$30,000 Irvine city contract, is
trying to fina a way to turn two·
lane Sand Canyon Avenue into a
six-lane divided throughway
without harming the old trees
and historic structures that line
the old road.
City officials say the road
must be widened to me.et future
traffic demands in the East
Irvine area.
W ollord said be boJ)('s to pro-
duce three potential alignments
for the six-lane road in time for
a city Transportation Com-
mission meeting later this
month.
The saving of some or all of
the trees poses an easier task
than saving the historic struc·
tures, Wolford said.
Some of the trees, which line
the road from the San Diego to
the Santa Ana freeways, can
possibly be used as the center
median for the new roadway, be
explained.
The structures between the
Santa Fe railroad tracks and the
Santa Ana freeway are on the
east and west sides of Sand
Canyon Avenue and t.be street
couldn't be widened along its
present alignment without af·
feeling those buildings.
Of most concern to local his·
lory buffs is the Irvine Country
Store at 14951 Sand Canyon Ave.,
said to be the oldest building in
Asian Week
sclwduled
al UC lroine
the city. But also listed on the
city's general plan as historic
buildings are the old East Irvine
Garage, the blacksmith shop
and the bean warehouse, all of
which are directly across Sand
Canyon Avenue from the Irvine
Country St.ore.
History buffs were dismayed
several years ago when the old
railroad station on Sand Canyon
was destroyed.
An old bench from the station
now is in front of the Irvine
·Country Store.
Just t.o the north of the st.ore is
the site of a stagecoach stop
from which people used to take
stagecoaches to Laguna Beach.
-Richard Grem
State hill advo~es
Sheriff, marshal
merger smoOthed?
CTrange County 5th District
Supervisor Thomas Riley says it
is too early to tell if suggested
state legislation amendments will
resolve the proposed consolida·
lion of the court functions or the
Orange County Sheriff's Depart·
mentandtheMarshal'sOffice.
The Senate Judiciary Commit·
tee. in a unanimous vote Tuesday,
sent to the Senate floor an
amended bill authored by Sen.
Paul Carpenter. D-Cypress. The
amendments would permit the
board of supervisors in any of the
state's 58 counties to consolidate
such services, ir il could be dem·
onstrated such a movie would
save money. Under the amendments, the
county's judges would decide the
mechanicsortheconsolidation.
The bill, as amended, differs
from legislation backed by the
county Board or Supervisors in
which supervisors and judges
would prepare any consolidation
plan. The bill was authored by As·
semblywoman Marian Bergeson.
R-NewpbrtBeach. '
Riley said he believed the
judidiary committee was on the
right track in approving the
amended version of Carpenter's
bill. but cautioned that ex~ct
wording must be studied locally
before "we move on it like the
White Knight."
Orange County voters last
June. by alto 1 margin, approved
in concept consolidation of the
court functions.
The sheriff's department PfO·
vides bailiff and related services
in the superior courts ; the
mar shal 's office performs
slmilarfunctions in the municipal
courts.
State legislation must be e~t
ed to permit a merger since exfat·
ing law provides that both mfiy
provide court services.
Bills to permit consolidation
consistently have been subject t.o
infighting among lobbies for the
s heriff's deputies and marshals.
In the meantime, Riley said,
with some exasperation, "few
seem to bear in mind that the
county voters have given a ·•man-
date" for consolidation. It has
been estimated consolidation of
the two functions would s&>"e
about $1 million per year."
I
'I
I I
I _,
'·
•··.
.,
.,
·''
,,
.~
• j . "
·l .,
SO YOU BA VE TO shrug off. history ·anct lore of
the heroes these days. Just consider the damsel ln
distress sighted the other night, stranded at the traf·
fie signal at the comer of Dover and Westcliff drives
in Newport Beach.
Ther.e she was, huddled behind the wheel of her
dead-engined car in the left turn pocket, windows
rolled up for security and the hood flopped up in the
, , air as a signal of distre5s. She clutched a little poo..
die dog to her lap. The car's emergency ligblinJ
system blinked out signals of her plight.
IT WAS RUSH HOUR at this intersection; one of
the buaiest in the Newport Beaeb-Cbsta Mesa area.
Cars wheeled and squealed to avoid her and get past
~ the stranded vehicle. Some even pulled up behind,
then backed off to get around the ~tricken auto.
t•
Finally. a man walked •over and asked if be
could be of assistance. Yes, she'd tried to restart the
. Heroes o/ ytattf'ytar racing to the re~ • ... _._
car'. Yes, her husband was on the way somewhere.
No, she didn't want to abandon the car and wait on
the curb in the dark.
Yes, she had called the auto club for a tow truck.
When?
An hour and one-half earlier, that was when.
SHE'D BEEN SITTING there, ~one and
frightened in that dead car for an hour and a •balf,
while commuters merrily rolled on by.
At that moment, five husky young men in an old
Chevy screeched up behind her. They noted the trou-
ble, hit reverse and wheeled away in a roar of ex-
haust and screeched tires.
One leaned out the window and shouted, "Sorry!
We'vebadabadday ... "
A LADY APPROACHED to offer help to the
woman in distress. She was more at ease with the
lady. They exchanged information. More phone calls
went in to the auto club and the Newport cops.
Yes, the car was blocking traffic lanes. Yes,
she'd been stranded there for an hour and a half.
Yes, she was frighten~
. The Newport patrol unit arrived in less than five
minutes. He got the lady in distress out of her car
a nd into the police unit. He was the first thing to
come aJong that even resembled the knight in
armor, the beach hero or the cavalry coming over
the hili.
WE DON'T HA VE any of those heroes in real lift
any more. We had a bad day. We are too busy.
Too busy thinking only of ourselves.
Jersey beachgoers
have new problem
new problem this season -
beacl)es strewn with plastic
tatnpon appUcators.
Dr. Susan D. Halaey, 1enior
coastal geoloeist for tbe state
Department of Envlro•mentaJ
Protection, says "hundreds.
perbape thousands" of Playtex
"Gentle Glide" tampon ap-
plicators are beinf found on
beaches from Sandy Hook, an
island p.ark Off Central Jersey to
AUanticCityinthesou\tl. 1
TRE BEACHED applicators,
she says, "pose an unpleasant Ut·
terproblem tothe,bbtic. ''
Ms. Halsey. I» • March M let-
ter lo lnternatloaal Playtez
'Corp. or Stamford, Coon., Aid
nearly all tbe appUcaton found
by state offleiall and dU.-
are Playtex's "OeDtle Glide"
brand.
When Allen J. Parker takes of·
lice next week u the new city
m1na1er ot SeaJ Beach, he'll
find hhnaell at the helm of a city
that anticipates a S'750,000 fund·
in1 1horta1e in the comlng fiscal
year.
Parker, 39, said that he's ready
for the challenae.
"I tJ:dnk there's a difference
between being a caretaker and
an active ci&,.y manager," be
said. "I prefer situations that re·
qqire aome creative problem
solvlna."
MANY OF THE city's fman·
cial problema have resulted from
redevelopment projects. and
Parker said he haua strong back-
eround In that area. Parker's
starting salary wm be $45,000 per year.
A Lon g Beach r esident,
Parker hu been working most
recently for POD. Inc., a Santa
Ana landscape architectural
firm . .
He served as city manager of
Comptoo from 1975 through 1979.
Earlier. he served in the same'
post in South El Monte. ·
A GRADUATE of Chapman
College in Orange, Parker earned
his master's degree in public ad-
ministration al the University of l
Kansas. Kegarding his Seal Beach job,
Parker said ... I'm looking
forward to it, partly because of
its environment as an attractive
beach city."
He added. "My biggest con-
cern now is to get a handle on
the budget. which is due before
the council in 90 days."
Parker. who takes office Mon·
day , will s ucceed Dennis
Courtemarche. who resigned
last DeceQlber in a dispute with
the City Council over finance
problems.
Group raps
Newport Beach
~,
airport suit
A pro.John Wayne Airport
business group bas charged that
Newport Beach is standing in
the way of progress by attempt·
ing to invalidate the airport's
master plan through legal ac-
tion.
Joseph lrvjne. director of the
Community Airport Council -
which supports the $75 million
airport plan, said it is "ironic"
that city tax dollars wiJl be used
to "op~e progress."
HE SAID TRIS is "in spite of
the fact that studies have sb,Qwn
Newport Beach residents m
very heavy users of the airport
and not one single Newport
family residence will be in the
noise impacted area. as defined
,by state law.'·
Newport filed a lawsuit
against the county last week
c harging that county
s upervisors overlooked vital en·
vironmental issues when they
adopted the plan on Feb. 18.
J'he master plan. which pro-
jects a reduction in jet noise.
calls for an increase in daily de·
partures rrom 41 lo 55 by 1995.
lltVINE SAID, "We trust a
judge, or jury. will not let 15ro-
vi n c i al interests continue to
hamper progress for all of the '
people of Orange County."
He, said his group will urge .
county officials lo move ahead
with its airport plans despite the
pending lawsuit.
The Community Airport Coun-
cil has a membership that in·
, eludes prominent Oranae
County businessmen and officials
from several airUnes.
Saddleback~
sets summe~
co ors es
The Emeritus Institute at Sad·
dleback College ln Misaion Viejo
will offer summer classes
tbroulhout Orange County
be1lnnln1 May 28.
starts Friday, 9:30 a.m.
many limited quantlties ... nol all sizes may be available
in each grouping ... colors andStyles limited to stock
on hand, so shop early for best selectio.n!
• 1n our
Huntington Beach
store
women's sportswear NOw
161MISSES'TEESHIRTS 98c
35 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 98c
171JUNIORCOWLS .. 1.98
31JUNIOATEESHIRTS . . .. t.98
111JUNIORSKIRTS . . ~ 3.98
38 JUNIOR PANTS . . . . . . . 3.98
47 JUNIOR SWEATERS . .. . . . . . 3.98
155JUNIORTlESHIRTS .•.•....... ·-. 3.98
33 llSSES' PANTS , .. .. .. . .. . .. . . . . 3.98
buys for boys
Jr STAR WARS"' POSTERS
79SPOATTUBESOCKS
27COTION·POL YESTEATEE SHtRTS
17 FOOTBAU TEE SHIRTS
S3 POL YESTEA-COTTON l.Sl V. SHIRTS
35 SUNGLASSES . . . .
58 um.E BOYS' SMATISWEATEA SETS
33UTIU BOYS'SW£ATEAS .
NOW
2lc
Sic sac
1.98
1.98
1.98
3.98
3.91
4.98
53 llSSES' SHIRTS .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. 3.98
29 LITTLE BOYS' FOOTED SLEEPERS
55 S.st.. V. KNIT 8"'ATS . . . . . . . . ...... 4.98
33 FUU F1GURE PANTS .. .. . . .. . . . 3.98
7UISSES'PAHTTOPS . . . . 4.98
103JUNIOR PANT TOPS . . 4.98
MFULlRGURETOPS 4.98
59JUNIORT£ESHtATS 4.98
79 JUNIOR SKIRTS . 8.98
53 JUNIOflt PANTS 6.98
34 FAMOUS MAKER PANTS 6.98
21 JUNIOR PANTS 11.98
121 FAllOUSMAKER PANTS 11.98
39 lllSSES' PANTS 11.98
dresses and coats
11 HALFSIZEPANTSVfTS
41JUNIOA,MeSSES'DRESSES
47 JUNIOR, MISSES' DRESSES
21 JUNIOR, IMSES' DRESSES
15VINYLPANTCOATS . . .
11 NYLONQUflTEDPANTCOATS
23 SWEATER COATS .
13 PANTCOATS
lingerie, loungewear
25 SOFT CUP BRAS
27 BABY DOLLS
'NOW
5.98
9.98
14.98
19.18
. 9.98
10.98
14.98
39.98
32 COLORED SOFT CUP BAAS .
90 FAMOUS MAKER STRAPLESS BRAS . . .
24FAMOUSMAKER8AAS
NOW
1.98
1.98
2.98
3.98
5.88
43 OOIL TED LONG ROBES . . . . . . . . 10.98
women's accessories
NOW
45 KNIT soacs . . . . . . . . . . . 98c
111 DfCIOES . . • ........ 1.48
21 WALLETS . .. . . . . . . ....... 1.48
1218ELTS .. ~ ............... , ..... 1.98
17TRAVELPURSE KfTS . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 2.48
32SHAWLS .. . .. . . . . .. .. .. .. .... -:-2.8
22 SUP-ON SCUFFS (HOSIERY DEPT) 2.48
51 CHINA DOLL SHOES (HOSIERY DEPT) 2.98
81 NYLON HANDBAGS . . . .. .. .. .. ...... 3.48
105CANVAIBAGS .. .. .................. 3.48
11 CNNASClUTCtiES ,, ............... 3.98
38KNITCOVEA.UPS ...................... 4.98
451"'UO HANDBAGS . . .. . . . , .......... 8.91
31 EVENING BAGS .. .. . .. . . . .. .. . .. .•. ~ .. 8.91
12VINYLBA08 ........................ .'8.98
infants and toddlers
NOW
311NFANTS'KNITHATi .................... 1.91
31 TOOOLERS' DMSSES. . . .. . . . • . . . . . . . . . 2.91
27TOOOLER 80Y8' IOITTOPS ............. 2.91
13 FAMOUS MAKER UNED VESTS
25S.SLV.SWEATSHIRTS .....
27 LITTLE BOYS' TifREE·PC. SUITS ..
15 FAMOUS MAKER S.SLV. KNIT SHIRTS
buys for men
7.98
7.98
7.98
8.98
NOW
9lc
1.98
3.98
3.98
3.98
3.98
3.98
5.98
6.98
6.98
6.98
8.98
12.98
9.98
NOW 1.•
2.98
.. " 2.98
2.91
3.98
. 3.98
.3.98
4.91
5.98
9.98
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9.91
12.98
12.-
13.91
14.91
15.98
25.91
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By tM AtMdaled Prut
True or false: The tests your
children take tell you how well
they're doina in achool.
J\Dlwtr: True. And false. It a:Jt
depends O(l the kind of test, the
way il is gl"aded and its purpe>ae.
The recent announcement of
grading errors on two stan·
dardized tests taken by
thousands or hleh school stu·
dents demonstrate the im-
portance of paying attention to
the quesUorus and answers and
what they mean.
CRITICS SAY many exams
are unfair. They say the tests
are designed for middle-class
students and argue that poor
children, partic ularly from
minority groups, are penalized
by their backgrounds and. in
some cases. by discriminati6n.
Erforts are under way to re-
quire testing companies to give
students the results of the exams
they lake. The Educational Test·
ing Service, which administers
many exams for the College En-
trance Examination Board, has
started providing that kind of in·
form a lion for some test takers
and the disclosure policy led to
the discovery of errors in mark·
ing ~•thematics ]>roblems on
two separate examJ,
To help parents understand
the different tests, the Oepart-
ment or Education· has Jssued a
36·page guide, ''Your Child and
Testing,'' available, at no
charge, from the Consumer In·
formation Center, Dept. 520J.
Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
THERE ARE TWO basic
kinds of tests -those prepared
by teachers to find out how
much students are learning
about specific subjects and stan-
dardized ones designed to show
how students in a particular
class, school or district are do-
ing in relation to other students.
Standardized tests ~are the
most confusing. There are two
categories -achievement te"sts,
lo measure what a student has
learned already, and aptitude
exams. to measure the ability to
learn in the future.
Standardized tests are scored
several ways. The raw number
indicates how many questions
were answered correctly. It
Owning business
can be tranrna
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joy«: I'm a mature woman aniious for
the independence of opening my own health food
store. Advice?
-T.M .. Fairview, N.J.
Beneath the sugar coated notion of owning
one's own business lies a bitter pill for many, a
hearty meal for a few
Starting a business requires not only adequate
financing to carry you through the opening days,
but also a knowledge of management techniques
that include buying. selling and advertising.
With scant background in these fields. a
Bethesda. Md . h11-(h school counselor and a friend
opened a health food store four years ago on a
$30.000 shoestring 1n an area offering little foot
traffic
THE EX-COl1NSELOR SA vs IT'S been
impossible to compete with supermarkets that seU
eggs and milk for what she pays wholesale. The
only parking lot near the store has closed and
sales have taken a nosedive Her business won't
s urvive another month, she says
That's the down. here's the up .
During the De pression. Virgil Grorr of
Tacoma. Wash . studied busmess administration
in college and acquired a hackground in retail ad-
CAREERS
v c rt 1s 1 n g In 1940,
"Vitamin Virg, as he's
known today, and bis
wire Viola borrowed
$7 .500 from his rather to
buy a health food store.
As the population shirted. Groff closed his original
s tore and o~ned two others in large suburban
malls and today enjoys a thriving business.
Groff's success factors have been consistent
for 40 years: lie hires people who know about and
believe in the products, and he s~nds 3 percent of
hi s gross sales on advertising.
"IF VOU DON'T WANT TO advertise your
bus iness. then advl'rt1 se it for sale," advises
Vitamin V1rg
A mix or media newspapers, television and
radio keeps his business booming. .
More Groff tips. Bend with the trends -for
instance. relocate if necessary Remodel. Com-
puterize He gives trading s tamps to ~ll,stomers on
request and always distributes free nutrition
magazmes with each purchase
OTHER TIPS ON RUNNING TIDS business
are found in a 1976 edition of "Health Food
Stores ... a business profile published by the Small
Business Reporter, Bank of Arnerica, P .O. Box
37000. Dept. 3401. San Francisco 94137. By mail, a
copy costs $2.
If you proceed. heed the words of a poor poet
but a savvy promoter , Vitamin Virg: "He who
whispers down the well about the goods he has to
sell. never will make the dollars as he who gets up-
on the roor and hollers."
'means relatively little by itself;
it ls usvally compared with the
raw scores or others who have
taken the same test and the
comparison ls expressed as a
percentile, a etanln~ or a grade
equivalent.
A STUDENT'S percentile ranJt
shows what proportton or stu-
dents scored hi1her and what
proportion scored lower. The
percentiles range from 1 to 99. A
rank of 70 means a student did
better than 70 percent of all
youngsters taking the test. It
does NOT mean the student had
the right answers to 70 percent
oflbe questiom.
A stanine is a more general
measure. Stanine scores run
from 1 to 9 and each stanift'e-in-
c I udes many percentiles. A
stanine of 6, for example, in-
cludes all students who scored
between the 60th and 77th
percentiles.
A grade·equivalent score
shows whether a child's
performance is better or worse
than that of other students in the
same grade. It should NOT be
used to tell what grade a child
s hould be in or what level of
work he should be given.
OEOilAM, Mau.
CAP ) -The eieht wild
turkeys that caused a •
four-mile., ru1b-hout •
traftlc anarl on Route
128 -the major
highway arbund
s uburban Boston -are
part of a menagerie
roaming William
Chick's 135-acre farm.
·'Some people like to
plant nowers or 1hrubs
to beautify their
property," Chick said.
"J Ii ke wildlife and
enjoy walking through
the woods and seeing all •
the birds."
Besides 30 turkeys, •
Chick has wild geese, :I•
pheasants , ducks, J
guinea hens, and several I
pigs and goat.a, and all I
of lb em run free. l
A n d C-h i c k , e v e n l
though he 's an 1
1
accountant by trade, ~
said he didn't know how --many wild animals are
on his land. Homeward hound
Curious young Amish boy pokes his head around windshield of
buggy as he and family drive home from church near Madison-
burg, Pa.
"I purchased about 30
turkeys a couple of
years ago, but I'm sure
they have reproduEed
over the 9ears," he said.
A. BOGART CEILING FAN
Antique brass. copper Of
pohshed brass plated motor 52 ..
fan sweep diameter. Oak/Teak
wood blades with cane inserts
Fan motor reverses to create UP·
ward now di air. light kit included
with hanging hardware.
Model f$M252
""· f49."
188.88
I . 808ART CEILING FAJI
Antique brass plated motor.
52" tan sweep diameter. Oak/Teak wood blades wfth cane Inserts.
Complete with school house globe
light kit Ind hanging hardware.
Modtl ISM152 . .... ,, ...
168.88
[}
C.806ART
CEILING FAN
Polished brass plated motOf
52 .. fan sweep diameter Pe-
can wood blades. Hanging
equipment tor light kit at·
tached Two speed poll chain
on motor.
Model ISM352 Ille. MUI
248.88
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6 . indicted
GALVESl'ON, Texas <AP> _:_ A &rand Jury,
citing a "bol'l'Or story" of neglect and abuse, hu
indicted a Houlton-baaed nursina home company
and six employees for murder ln the deat!ta of
et1bt patient.a.
Sealed indictments accused them of murder
by "knowing omission" at an Autumn Hilla nun-
inl home in Texas City, prosecutors Mid Wednes-
d~.
The home, near Galveston, is one of 17
facilities owned by Autumn Hills Convalescent
Center Inc. The idenUtles of thole named in the in-
dictments were not revealed, peadin1 their ar-
reats.
THE BLDEU. Y VICl'IJl.8. A •AN and seven
~q,nen. died in 1918 and 1979. r
• ~ indictments capped a 17-month invesU1a-
tion of the nUJ'IU.. home by the Galveston County
district attorney, the Texas attorney 1eneral'1 of-
fice and tbe state Department of health.
Documents obtained by The Houston Post re-
vealed that health ottlciats fomid ununitary condi-
.tiona at tbe nursin& boote. Some residents were
' soaked in urine and others had infection-prone bed
sores, tbe paper revealed.
The &rand jurors recommended "that doctors
involved in abuse or neglect be investigated and
severely penalized for their actions in this
horror story_."
THE PANEL, WRICH WOUED late into the
ni1ht Tuesday to complete the indictments
because its term expired at midnight, also was
critical of Galveston District Attorney James
Hury.
"Mr. Hury should have been more cooperative
with our lnvest.i11tlon, freeing up bia usistanta
from other duties instead of throwing up obstacles
along the way," the panel's report said.
l.n aJJ: the grand jurors returned 23 indict-
ments just before midnight Tuesday.
District Judge Ed Harris said be would extend
the panel's term to allow paperwork to be complet-
ed on an additional 21 indictments in connection
with the eiebt deaths.
AtJTtJMN BILLS LAWYER CAROL Vance,
formerly Harris County district attorney, said the
allegations a1ainst the nursing home were the re·
suit of lies told by a disgrunUedJormer employee
who wu angry because she bad not bee1> pro-
moted.
Vance identified the employee as Betty
Komdorffer, who later went to work for the state
health department as a consultant. She denied
Vance's allegation, saying she was offered a pro-
motion when ahe left her job at Autumn Hills.
Bolton of Maul. Hawaii. Lin·
IDJH NOTICES da Furusho of Kallua, Oahu.
Hawaii and Peggy Rosa of
Anaheim. Ca ., 3 great·
1randchlldren and a brother
Glacier 1
age to
retum1
NEW YORK (AP)
The grut ilaclen that
once puabed as far south
as Pennsylvania apd
Miasou.ri m•y return for
another 114,000 years,
acconlinl to a model of
the Earth's climate
baaed on utrooomy.
The Belgian and
Amerlcaa aclentlats who
developed tbe model do
not view it as cause for
alarm. The next cold
spell may not arrive for
thousands of years.
BUT THE model,
,ubllabed in the British
Journal Nature, gives
support to the idea that
the march of the
glJlciers is guided by
conditions of the Earth's
orbit around tbe sun.
Ice has been the rule
rather than the
exception for the last
million years of Earth
history. Glaciers up to
several thousand feet
t b i c t h a v e
intermittently covered
as much as a third of the
land area.
Relief has come only
from a few, brief warm
spells. Studies of ancient
pollen, sea -level
changes and ocean
sediments show there
have been four of these
in the la.st 350,000 years,
lasting about 10,000
years each.
THE MOST recent
one, which began 11,000
years ago, bas seen the
flowering or human
ci v illution.
The new climate
model was developed by
George Kukla, Ramona
Lotti and Jeffrey Brown
at Columbia
University 's
Lamont -Doherty
Geological .Observatory,
and by B e lgian
astronomer and
mathematician Andre
Berger of the Catholic
University of Louvain.
Cell I 2-171.
ht a few word•
toWOt'k for ou.
PENNEY Leo Farwell of Huntln(lon ..------------1
ELEANOR S. PENNEY. Beach. Ca. Memorial
age 87, resident of Hunt· services will be conducted
in1ton Beach. Ca. Pa9'ed on Thursday, ~prU 2, Ulll at
away on Tuesday March 31 6:30PM at Pierce Brothen
1911 ,at Huntington .Beach Smiths' Mortuary with Rev.
Con valescent Hospital. Rick Ertel of~clat1n1. Inter·
Beloved mother of Loretta ment will be 10 Angeles Ab·
Pittman of Hunt1n1ton bey Cemetery. Pierce
B e a c b C a . , s Brothen Smiths' Mortuary
1r1ndcblldren Sunn directors. 536-6539. ~::;::::;;;::::::;;;::'=::::;;;;:i ROBEIL80N ~ MARK ALAN
ROBERSON, resident of
Irvine, Ca. Passed away on
March 29, 1981. Survived by
his parents Mr. and Mn.
Bruce Robenon of Irvine.
Ca., 1randparenta Bob and·
Audrey Roberaon of Temple
City, Ca. and Art and Paula Aitelrod of Newport Beach,
Ca. aiao 1reat-grandparents
Herman and Ida Axelrod of
Newport Beach, Ca .
Services are 1cheduled for
Tburtday, April 2, Ulll at
lO:OOAM In the Harbor Lawn
Slumber Room with Rabbi Frank Stern wttb Temple
Beth Sholom of Oran1e, ~ty omctaUn1. Service•
under the dlrectloo of
Harbor Lawn-llount OUve
llortury of Ca11ta Meta. a.... .
WILTM)N
HARAY WILT&ON, a retl·
-cf._. llQDJca, Ca.
fW 20 Jetn. PUied away oa
llattb JO, dll. Marrlecl JUlt
Under., )'eart. A member ot
tbe lnteraallollal Typo.
lf'apllkal Uldoe. He ii tW·
wtved by * wlfe Oela of Saau Monlc~ _ca ., c.-lld,_ Hat..ue nonman ot
lliNlcm VleJo, C•., t:vel19
Brown cf OM-.o. utmoe., WllllelliofMnYn,
:r
HOLLOWAY
Goltlp la when you mutt
hurry and tell someone
somethlnJ before you find out it isn'l true. • • P1ychlatrlll to patient:
"When did you di.cover
that you enjoy payln1
your lncome taxes?" • • s11n outalde warehoue patrolled by suarct do&•:
"Treapaaaen will wiab
the'Y bad been
Pl'Ollecutecl .. • • You'r. blVer ale~ than
when you're alclt OD 10'lf'
day off. • • WMD a temapr'• at a lo .. for wordt, be'a
probablJ tlolo« a et'OMWCIN ..... • • 'ftn QO, 119 Newport,
Coata Meaa, for Top
.., ... dl"ila -,..,.
1" e., NlJ • ta all weatW.
concer'Dina how we l•l the word to our cutomen and the news medJa ln a real
emer1eocy."
Word ol the "contamination" spread
qwtkly titer Brian JltCrey, a utility
apok .. mu, went on KCBS at 7 :~ a.m.
to wam that • peaUclde truck bad ac·
cldentally betin booked to the city's
drlnt.ina wateJ"lntate system.
He didn't mention that lt was all a
t~t -elUler because be didn't know a
teat wu ln procrtt• or forgot about it.
"ApparenUy, I blew it. We had a apUI
drill and I took It to be a fact," wu all
McCrey would say Wednesday after the
mlxup wu brought to light.
Tbe trouble beaan after McCrey was
alerted to the "contamination" by the ..
dlatrtct operation center. He "followed
1tandard procedure and began inform·
log the media of a contamination
emerfency," Voss brink said.
Live on KCBS, McCrey began bis
•
warnln1 by aaylng: "Unfortunately,
this l• not an April Fools' Day joke. We
have a report that a peaticide truck bu
been inadvertently hooked to the drlnk·
lnl water 1y1tem ... We unfortunately
don't mow what that material 11. We
are warn1.A1 residents of the area not to
drtJlk the" water."
The mistake was compounftd when
Alameda police conrirmed they bad
been notlfted of a contamlnatlon
emer1ency. It was at least 30 minutes
before police reallied the utillty district
bad written them about a test.
Then police quickly retraced their
wanting.
KCBS reporters, responding to what
they were told was a reaJ emergency,
issued repeated warnings for AJameda
residents not to drink water. At oae
point, the station advised listeners to
begin a "buddy system" and urged resi-
dents to call neighbors.
ssoo,ooo,LIQUIDATION
PRECIOUS GEMS & METALS Nationwide
Buyers ·of Gold, Silver and Estate Jewelry
is in town ll()w to off er you our selection of
merchandise at below retail prices. We are
simply over-stocked and must liquidate.
14 k Serr.~entine
& ~~Ea
18 k RBo eL. k ox m
All sizes and lengths
ESTATE JEWELRY
We are offering rare and antique
estate jewelry -many one of a
kind pieces at drastic reductions
-such as fine diamond jewelry,
broaches , earrings, rings,
bracelets.
GOLD COINS
If gold coins are your fancy ,
come see our selection of
custom made gold coin
jewelry -and we also have
authentic gold coins for
investment purposes.
We hav~ yea~s of experience in grading
and selling diamonds. We sell all sizes and qualities. · ·
Small Chip Diamonds ............ •• ap &o $5 eacb
1/• Carat Diamonds ....... l ....•....•. $1f Gp &o tzeo ~ Carat. Diamonds ................ Slot ap &o '8t
ne Carat Diamonds ........... : ....... S4te ud ap
Two Carat & over diamonds . '. . . . . . . . . $1,• Ir ap
·11NGS &
See our selec tion of diamond
clusters, solitares. cocktail rings,
ruby, sapphire, & birthstone rings
of a ll styles. For men & women.
WATCHES -
Authentic Rolex Watches and many
14K a nd go l d -p l ated p ocket
watches, hunting cases, 15 , 17, 23
j ewel movements. Original Mickey
Mouse. Roy R ogers , Hopa long
Cassidy wrist wat ches. Men 's &
ladies dress watches also!
SELLING NOW
~: 3 DAYS ONLY :::
FRIDAY,
SATURDAY,
SUNDAY
APRIL 3, 4, 5
10AM-8PM
MARRIOTT HOTEL
Room 603
900 Newport Center Dr.
Newport Beach
640-4000
-------MEMBER OF-------
• Retail Jewelers of America • lndiona Sc.ate Poli<'f Allionce • lndiono .Jeweler11 Al!Hociation •Wabash Chamhero!Commerce.
ARMED SECURITY ON DUTY
llOA-IEEDED
l'ru•t•i; llu1·tuafo cl;i1I~· cluc• to tnarkt•l l'tlnditlcmg,
,·
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"I didn't think you people would have the .-velo show
your faces until '114."
DEAR PAT DUNN : 1 know it's against
the la w for a landlord to try to get a tenant to
move out by shutting off utilities, but I want
to find out if a tenant has any other protec-
tion in this situation.
F.S., Cos\a Mesa
Slate law <AB Z2l) 1pecUkaJJy prolllWU
landlords llOt only from cautag off Ute In·
ant's uWlty service, bwt aJao from: pren•t·
lag a teaut'a acttaa to tlle dwetuai (so-
called "locll•ta"); removtac the clwelllag'1
outside doors or windows; removl•I faralsblnp or teaut ,ropen, wt&Mat ta.e
tenant's prtor written penalsdoa, ex~ wllea
"one punuant to apedlled lecaJ prettdnea.
Tills law aJao revlaea tlte civil pe11aJUes fer a
landlord's vlolaU• to laclade aetaal damaie1,
a reaSGDable at&or8ey'a fees el •P te SIM per
day of vtolatloll, aad al&ewa t.eeaata to Mell la·
juactlve relief.
Peider keeps sheen
DEAR PAT DUNN : I've heard you
should not wash old pewter because this can
damage the "patina." True or false?
M. J ., Newport Beach
Dirt la not part of tile patlaa alld yoa caa
clean pewter by washing It la mlld soap a8CI
water, &.Ilea rabbtac llclltJy lo a Mft alteea.
Moat ·pewter collectors take pride la Cite
amount of trae patfaa acqldl'M lily tile metaJ
over tbe years. ne "true colleder" ••okla
the hlgbJy polls .. ed look ancl prt11H tlte aoft
shine ud silvery 1ray colorta1 of a1e. Owe
pewter collector coataeted by AYS 41itagrees.
Sile felt her old pewter was •PY, regarcUeu
of what the experts say, aACl acldeff4 a Mft
velnty appearance by uta1 .... eleaalag
com poead.
Canned gooda emmined
DEAR PAT DUNN : My aunl is moving
to another state and she gave me a lot of
canned goods. She told me she'd had most of
them for severa l years. Are thHe foods still
safe to eat?
T.H .. Newport Beach
'
Caaeed goods stored for maay jean
have beetl &eated ancl foaad safe, bllt ea1Ja&
quality -navor, textare, color ••d ••trl·
tJoaal value -deellae wlUa a1e. Tlae wanner:
tbe storage temperatare, the faster the
deellae. Caued feods Ir~ best Im eeol &em·
peratlll'eS of M to 7t de11""9 FOreUett. A
1ood nde Is to try to ased caned food wlUala
a year; wttllla 18 lo 14 moatlls mul•••· Examine tlaese elder caaae• &e.d•
carefally. Lida should be 1Uptty comeave
and not RJp •P ud dowa If preuei. Tiie CH
1hoald aot allow any sip of baJ&btl er leak-
ing, nor slaoaJd the food span out of tbe caa,
as If ucler preaaare, wllet1 opeaed. U aay of
the above happens, dllcard the prodttct. Do
&lie same when any opeaed ca~ food 11
moldy, babbly or .... an aapleuut ellor.
Depositors get bank JU11h
DEAll READEllS: Bub a .. taYtlll•
aacl loaa a11eclaUea1 are vJI•• fer
caatomen to ope11 tlletr MW la~•Jbtl (NOW> accoaa&a. Tiie top l•terest rate
permlUed ls S.U ,erttat, '*SM a.&81 Wlan
1oar a~ CD Hl'll clepe9lla -.... aa.e ...
ter,Jat paymee& ls calnlated.
TM ~ cleab: ••J•ell& flf· l*ne& •
depoalta fro• ••1 ef ~ t. ••1 el
wltlldrawal or • averaae dallJ •atute dat·
la• u.e ....._.Wont deaJ:....,,.. hlM •
tlle lowest balamee dart•& die ...._
....... balueee ""1llred raaa• f ..... 1er• te lnftal ll•dre4 ...._,. tie aneral
........ deltan ... lllteTelt •a1antt ... If , .... Mluee ...... below ........... .
S.•e ._.... .. 11 .. ••M lite ........ • die
anra•e •.-MJ ulaaee, • ... lewelt
bala11ee fll tile .. u..
Aalllleld-.. J1111cMellle~ila1 ..tbe ....... , ...... .....,.,..k ...
a ••all....._. la 7•r ew" .. Mullltw
11 , .. Wille a •arae •••'-., dletu ...
lli1n • aenm& wltll lew • • aenlee fees.
Allie, ...-... _.-wtlff ..,.. .. NOW M· __....,c· ..,.,._._,...,_ ... ...............
LONDON CAP) -&Omt 100 -m· lten ol &be Jritilb ParHameat llave
ealW far an hnmidlate end to tbe
UnlfteaUon Chureb'• tax-free 1tatus
after a ceu:rt ruled a1aln1t the teel ln a
Sl. t mlllloD libel action. Tbe IDD~. beaded by the Rev. sun MJUDI Koon et South K•ea.
be1an in the United States ln the 1950I.
CoftMl"VaUve Party le1lllator David
Mellor lntfoduced the tax-atatui mo-
tioJI Wednelday in the m.memMI'
Home ol Commona deplorinc • 'tbe ac-
UvlUt1 ol tMe Moonies sect u alle&ed
b1 t.b• Dail)' Kall and round proved by
aHl&hCaurtJury." i
He said aboUt 100 te,lalaton bad
1iped tbe motion and t was belJ>I
circulated to attract more support.
Tbe court T\ieldaJ ruled acalnlt tbe
Brttllb UnlllUUOD Church ID Ill S.: month~d libel •ult acaiDat tlae maaa·
clrculaUoo Daily Mall. The ca.e cen·
tered on a May 1971, article chaqlng
the uct, known u Moonles.
bralnwuhed young people and broke
upfamllles.
In its verdict, on the lOOth day ot the
caae, the jury said it found no evidence
of libel in the article.
It ordered British Moonie leader
Denni• Orme to pay the esUma~ $1.6
mUUon coets of the case, the lon1est
and most expensive of its kind ln
En1lish court history. A total oh17 wit·
nesaestesUfied.
The court also urged a government
investigation of the sect's tax-free
charitable status. Justice James
Comyn said there were 500. members
worktnc full·thne tor the UnlfieatJon.
Church in Britain. He aald new••·
bera were required to amaaa "ata11er·
In& amounllofmooey" forthechurcb.
Orme, 42, sued the Dally Mall over
an article about two slaters, Judy and
Jane Salter of Coulson, 10 miles IQUth
of London, who Joined the Unification
Church ln San Francisco. He called the
article Inaccurate, distorted and de·
famatory.
The sisters testified for the Moon1ea,
but their father, Robert, testified for
the Dally Mail. Ttte judge~~~d one of
the saddest aspects of the cue was the
way In which the Salter family had
been split.
Orme took the verdict wttb
equanimity and dllmlaHd the eaU fM
abin9ettiaaUanu ··~uat ...
"A• a human betna, ll'• dlaappolnt-
in&, but It'• nplb1nl we un't bUdfe,'•
heaald. ~. he r.tuaed to Jay whether tbe churcbj
ptannedtoappea.J.
OMV names woman :; . . .
S~CRAM TO (AP) -The
California Dtpartment of Motor
Vehicles hu umounced the appolat·!
meot of Nancy L . Bohaty of
Sacramento aa deputy dlr'ector. Kn.
Bobaty, 36, is assistant executive of.
fleer of the state Air Resources
Board. ii
I
I
J
...
...
I . )
l j
; I
.,
!i
•
•'• a IJird ••• or u i t1
Plastic kites shaped like hawks are being ~sed for the first time by growers in
~alinas to replace shotguns and chemical
t-epellants that didn't work in the battle
against flocks of. birds that destroy crops.
Vic Lanini releases a kite over a lettuce
field.
Jleart attacks th warted
Drug sought for U.S. medical market,s
;BOSTON (AP> -A medicine Produced by Merck Sharp & produced to our satisfaction,"
t~ted in Europe helps protect Dohne, the drug has been used Pines said. ''The latest study
hbrt attack victims from suf-for six years in Europe for treat-w i 11 be r e v i e w e d very
fdring a second, fatal seizure, ment of angina chest pain and carefully."
r~searchers say, and the drug's high blood pressure. But it has He said Merck Jgain sought
fllanufacturer Is seeking ap-not been cleared by the Food approval for the drug's use in
pf oval to market it in the United and Drug Administration for dis-cardiac patients Feb. 20. The ap-
S ates. tribution in the U.S. · plicaliofil will be reviewed by an
tThe drug, called timolol, re-FDA expert advisory committee
duced the death rate among FDA spokesman Wayne Pines in early May and then the agen·
htart attack victims by 39 per-said timolol was approved cy will make a decision. he said.
ctnt in a 33-month experiment. several years ago for use in the Recurring heart trouble is a
:"We are very enthusiastic eyes by glaucoma patients, but major cause of death in people
about these results," Dr. Terje bas not been approved for heart who survive a heart attack. In
&;. Pedersen said. patients. the U.S .. about 400,000 people
Merck submitted it in June are discharged from hospitals
:flE PREDICTED timolol or a 1977 as an anti-hypertension each year alter suffering heart
sf:milar drug may someday be medicine, but the "data that de-attacks. Ten percent die during
tjken routinely by as many as 80 monstrate that this drug is safe their first year of recovery, and
p~rcent of the people who have and effective for use as a the death rate is s percent a
survived heart attacks. hypertensive have not yet been year after that.
By O.C. HUSTINGS ................
The cali:fomla Republfcan Al·
aembly opens lta aMual conven·
lion Friday at Irvine's Registry
Hotel.
Amon1 the speakers will be
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb and As·
sembly Minority Leader Carol
HalleU. ,
Curb will speak at a conven-
tion luncheon Saturday. Mrs.
Hallett is scheduled to talk that
night. Her topic will be reappor·
tlonment and the 1982 elections.
Curb's topic hasn't been an-
nounced. However, he has an·
nounced that be is a candidate
for the GOP aubernatorlal
nomination ln 1982. •
Another speaker at the CRA
confab will be 1'ssemblyman
Nolan Frittelle, R-Costa Mesa.
He'll address the convention
Saturday morning.
* * *
ATTO&NEY GENER AL
George Deukmejian can't make
this weekend's CRA convention
in I rvine because of a commit-
ment in Washington, O.C., but
he will be swinging through
Orange County this evening,
pausing long enough to address
the Federation of Republican
Women at the Saddleback Inn in
Santa Ana.
* * *
ALSO SCHEDULED this even·
lng is the tint in a series of fund.
raisers for Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson. R-Newport
Beach, who is looking ahead to
1982.
A "wine and cheese party for
Marian" is scheduled to start at
7 p.m. at the Newport Beach
home of Debbie Gray. Ellen
Ward ts co-hostess.
County Supervisor Tom Riley
and Newport Mayor Jackie
Heather are expected.
The price is $15 per person, or
$25 per couple . About 300
persons are expected to attend.
* * •
THE 73RD Assembly District
Committee meets for br~akfast
TO SPEAK IN IAVINE
Lt. Oov. Mike Curb
Sunday in Huntington Beach.
Guest speaker will be Larry
Peterson, political reporter for
the Register. He 'll talk about
Orange County politics.
All Democrats are invited
The no-host breakfast starts at 9
a .m . Peterson will speak at
10:30 a.m. The gathering will be
at Manny's Restaurant at
Gothard Street and Edinger
Avenue. • * * .
T H E I RVINE Coast
Republican Women's Club will
hear a talk by public relations
man Gilbert Ferguson during its
luncheon meeting Tuesday at
the Newport Sheraton Hotel. * • •
NEWPORT BEACH MAYOR
Jackie Heathe r will be the
speaker next Wednesday when
the Balboa Bay Republican
Women, Federated. gather for
lunch at the Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club.
Off:s hOre
oil fight
vowed
SAN FRANCISCO <AP)
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. bas •
told a congressional subcommit-
tee that he would fl1bt ••all the
way to the Supreme Court if
n ecessary" a Reagan ad·
ministration proposal to open
Northern California to offshore
oil drilling. '
The governor Wednesday ~
urged the House subcommittee
on Environment, Energy and
Natural Resources to do every-
thing in its power to eet In-
terior Secretary James Watt lo :
exclude four Northern Californi~ •
basins from Oil Lease Sale 53.
"WE'RE TALKING about one
of the most beautiful coastal
areas on the whole planet," said
Brown, adding that oil explora·
lion in the Eel R1 ver. Point
Arena, Bodega and Santa Cruz
basins would "permanently
change the character of
Northern California "
If the will of the people is not
hstened to. said Brown, "I can
assure Secretary Wall that
vigorous legal action will be
taken all the way up to th~
Supreme Court if necessary. ana
those tracts will not be exploited
an his tenure."
Watt's proposal. an f'ehruary.
reversed a decis ion by former
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus
to exclude the four bas ins from
the lease sale Andrus concluded
there wasn't enough oil in the
basins to override en vi ronmen·
t at concerns
BROWN LEO OFF a parade
of witnesses at a hearing to re
view Wall's proposal prior to a
decision on whether lo open bid
dang for exploration for oil and
natural gas.
Noting that the tracts contain
only enough otl to supply the na
lion for 10 days. Brown said.
··w e cannot allow short-term
gain to override the cconomac
we ll -being of the thousands of
Americans who make their lav
ang along the coast, or the 1n
terests of the millions who come
to swim. to view. lo contemplate
or just to enjoy ..
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ;:i=' ==========~~~~~~~~~~~~--
MERCURY SAVINGS \ ....... oJ::i-----'4 D~D~~DLJlo~~i21D~ ~1.,-."'-"'ocy
"Purveyors of
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MIWPOIT
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4140 Long Beach Blvd., Long Besch, CA 90807 • 22939 Hawthorne Blvd .. Torrance, CA 90605
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"MtHCury Room" •v•//•bl• on• rH•rv~ bHll
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Newport Beach
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a.3 ....... ''·"
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ass ....... 1s.n
2s6 ....... 17.97
a.a ...... , l&."7
w ....... u.n
w ........ 97
3s6 ......• n.n
Keep. the w.n out
and m.a.. it
oooler. aJ..o
prot.cta 70UJ'
carpet &Ni
furnitUN from
fading.
WATER BEATERS
5 YEAR WARRANTY NoboCly
eftl' buys one of th ... unHl
tlley; have no hot water, then
there'• panic. Be d i fferent,
replact youn r:'ow.
30 GALLON 114•• ~~c .....
40 GALLON. ~~~-~12488
50 GALLON ~~~. ~: 15988
FIVE INCH CUSTOM
INSTALLED SEAMLESS
RAIN GUTTER
IP PORTABLE
. TRANSFER
PUMP
5'~-5660
Siphon pump great for transferring oil. gas.
cleaning fluids, or liquid agricultural
products to wherever you want.
UllTRON 1/• " OVAL VINYL
. ROLL· UP BLINDS ~ 4,'x6' ........... 3.97
::~' 6'a6' ........... 5. 97
I·. 8'x6' ........... 7.97
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These come in white, multi '9old or
wood.grain to match your decor or clash
with your decor whichever. (Only
ldddin . ) •
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1578~1XW
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M& ~ own mortar. Hahd1-3 cu. feet of
c:lry material or a qi. ft. of w.t. <I wonder
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Really neat exterior
siding you can use
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over stucco. Has the,.·
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t ... center. Come and
talc• a look and
you'll want the
whole house done.
IEW! IUCll
DICIBSIAIP
'I SAID
17!~95
Use to sharpen. sand, shape and finish.
Powered by most 14 ", 3 a" or 1 2" drills.
Sharpens lawnmower bladu, scissors.
knives, etc. Drill eatra. •
· mw. SECUllft
APPLIAICE
CASTEii
4~!
Set of four cut.en that hold up to 1800
U.. Gr.at for moftJ\g refrigeraton, .tow..
wuh•n, etc.
LUTIOI DDUIDS
2~ ...... .' .. 1.77
FULLRANOE 2 ROTARY ••••....• 77
PUSHON/OfT ... 3.77
Automatic c:limmen to Nlp JOU COl\8el'ft
~ •.cnate a ftioe•atmo.phere
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2 GALLON
TREE FERN
OR
DATE PALM
·~~ Grow your own dates (and
you'll never have to sit home
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IELLOCG'S
DECORATm IARI
297 2cu.~.
KMp1 WMda out and lo0lu good. Wh•t more
can ,... offer? Cown approzimat•ly 12 sq. ft.
2 inch• d .. p and 24 eq. ft. 1 inch d .. p .
IUllEIJWD
;'v..:~ cE1AJ11c ~a1c1
~ PLAIT&..d
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SHEET :: .. :
Buy fi.-quarta of Castrol oil and
any autmnotift itnn over $3, fill
out the Clean-Up form available in
the atoN and mail in with cuh ·
ngiat.r ncelpt and Caatrol can ·
logo to Cutl'Ol for • sa.oo ~ ' '
ld west camp scho<:Jl ·
!trains fuJ,ure ranchers
·ll ~
". AONSALL (APJ -Clarence
• t\owa built Rawhide Ranch to
•mble a sort of Old Dodie City.
••the Cbriatian OOD-denominational
~ revolves not around cum. but . ~l'tee. cows, 1oat.1 aDd rabbits.
1:. -'Jt'• an esperience that every kid
&Yea -ud be learns while bavln& ~ .. ~said ol b1a 47-acre Old ""'1fll caJQp.
; ·~flawhlde Ranch provides
atioDs on the same theme for
~,_., ...... wbo raqe in aie from
Wood traders to sophomores in l
Ue1e. About 200 younesters a week ...
;,, '"' Jlip Wilson
~· ~raignedon
Brog charges
:; ·~bOS ANGELES CAP) -Comedian rtlp Wilson bu been arraigned in West 1-os Angeles Municipal Court on drug
pDallesaioo cbarees stemming from an
arrest at Los Angeles International
Ain>ort lut month. .. ' ~.Willem. 4'1,ia scheduled for an April
iireliminary hearing in West Los
· elet llulddpal c.rt on a district
mey'a com]>laint of two felony
EO\anta -possessing cocaine and
~1eull11 hashish oil.
UCE SAID THEY found the
•on him at the airport March 10 as
arrived from·
ida, where he
ceived a
er-city letter
the mayor of
· oya, Fla., to
I to Mayor
Bradley.
, he arrest
lminated
eral days'
watigation by
Lo&AJlleles police and Los AQgeles tt aberiff'a deputies. I
llbtDOW this ia beiDC band.led like other cue, but we're tblMinc ol
19Jamtil1a1 a special deputy, became
~ are matini such a IQ deal
1of it," Deputy l>Utrict AttorneJ
Berault el the Santa Monica
cb office told The .uaoctated
~ ILSON WAS SCBEDULED to be · =~llMd Tuesday but appeared in .lut Friday, app~tly to avotd
I Ucity. He was freed on $2,500 ball
r beln1 booked for · allegedly eutni 2.5 erams of cocaine and
eralaramaofbubisboil.
~ eaides hia "Flip Wilson Show" on ·"IN ID Cbe early 1970I, Wllloa
es nisbtclub ap_pearances in Las
and ellewhere, and has made
ralcomedy record albums.
participate in the summer PfOlr'10
wtille others come for camps at other
times of the year.
TBE8E IS ALSO day school for
grades two tbrouth 12 and a two-year
vocational school for college-age
students.
The boy campers live in
dormitories shaped like covered
waeons while the girls share log
cabins clustered ln Fort Rawhide.
The youngsters awaken early and
apead two hours on boneback, study
veterinary science, livestock produc·
tion and rodeo .
Despite its Western motif, Chown
in,iats, "It's not a dude ranch." ~·we train the horses and children
the same way," said Chown, a
53-year-old former livestock dealer
who opened the school as a boys and
girls camp 17 years ago and
expanded it eight years ago. "It's not
in their ability to be champions all
the time and it's important not to
break their spirit."
IN FACT, CHOWN, whose four
sons were junior rodeo champions,
believes "the livestock industry is a
tremendous opportunity for young
people -a multimillion dollar
industry."
He pdinted out that former
Rawhide students easily "fmd jobs as
horse trainen and ranchen and in a
range of related fields such as
camping and recreation.
There are from 30 to 50 teachers or
paid ranch hands, who watch over a
student body wbicb baa included
sons of a British diplomat, a Mexican
governor and Japanese businessmen,
Canadians and Australians.
A class in Bible is taught, but
Chown's students range in belief
from Anglicans to Roinan Catholics.·
TBEKE ARE lZS horses in corrals
at his spread three miles east of
Bonsall in .rural northern San Diego
County, and the kids get 30,000 riding
lessons every year ...
After learning to raise farm
animals they sell them to help
support the school, where tuition is
$750 including room and board. That
income ls supplemented by sales
from the Western store and livestock
:stud fees from area ranchers.
A rodeo buck-out i• staged on
Fridays, with a charge to the public.
Both teachers and campers seem
to love the program that Chown has
to offer.
TEEN·AGEa PAUL Blais called it
a "treat school -l thank the. Lord
I'm here."
Bob Johnston, who teaches drama,
noted the maln ingredient which
seems to make Rawhide a success.
"There's something about God's
country and the earth that is
wholesome," he said.
BOMOU u located north of Vtata on
Highwai118.
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Aut y gets needs filled by checkb()ok or trade
EDZINTBL .. DIA., ..........
In their hit single .of tbe lat. 'toe, the
Beatles 1an1 t 1omethin1 we knew an
aJong: ''Mon can't buy me love!"
So it goes. ut to Gene Autry, money,
up or whatever you will, Wednesday'•
trade ot po,ret bitter Juoa Thompson to
the Pittaburp Piratet for cateber Ed Ott
and young pitcher Mickey Mahler, un-
doubtedly will, if it hun't already, create
the aarne kind of controveny the Camey
You have to be qu.ick to play tb1a same
and no one's quicker than Autry and hla
right-band man, Buuie Bavul.
The sJeamiD1 question ol the day la,
who's on first, or more appropriately,
lots of it, a serve one very useful
purpose. It s baseball playen.
who' a in left? •
Every tim the Chairman ot the Board
of the Ange bas made a transactloo witb
players in~ent years -and be'• made a ranchful o them -another favorite
phrase surf ces: ':There foes tbe Cowboy,
dipping in the ol' saddJebags aeain." .
COMMENTARY
• Other que$liona will arise, like who's the
DHf Or who's the catcher? But it all com-
es down to one thing: Autry wants a win-
ner.
Lansford, Mark Clear, Rick MiUer for
Hobson IDd Burleson trade .created.
Wait just a minute. Wasn't it April Fools
Day? Is this some kind of ·btg joke?
Hardly.
The par llel ls striking. Autry loves
baseball.
So whe Gene dipped into the sad-
dlebags l t winter and bouaht the taJenta
of Fred ynn, Rick Burleson, Butch
Hobson a host of others, it came u llt-'
tie surp se to those who knew of bis
spending wer.
One thibg you cu 't accuse Autry of is
euuessness. It takes 1ut.s to trade away your previous year's most vaJuabJe pJayer
as iD the cue of Thompson.
Forcet that Thompson, before he could
phone wile Bemedette in Mission Viejo to
tell of the news, bad already been traded
by the Pirates to the Yankees for ex-Angel
Jim Spencer, plus two other players and
cash.
Bavaai, Manager Jim Fregosi and even
Autry himself could be found on more than
one occasion thia spring standing by the
batting cage at the Little A in Palm
Springs, watching and admiring, the ex-
traordinary talents of Dickie Thon, the kid
from Bayamon, Puerto Rico.
Yet it almost hurt the bosses to talk
Eve has a purpose. Call it a set-• <See 111881NG, Pa1e CZ)
Hold on there, KJ
Commissioner wants some answers
From AP dlapatebes
There are a lot of ways to get
from California to New York
quickly. For Jason Thompson,
the turnpike through Pittsburgh
is not one or them -not when
Bowie Kuhn's putting up
roadblocks.
Thompson, the left-banded
first baseman who hit .288 with
21 home runs for the Angela iD
1980, was dealt to the Pittsburgh
Pirates Wednesday -and then
on to the New York Yankees.
In a three-way deal, the
Angels ended up with catcher
Ed Ott and pitcher Mickey
Mahler from Pittsbur1b and the
Pirates wound up with flnt
baseman Jim Spencer, minor
lea1ue pitchers Greg Coelara.n
and FreddJe Tolliver and some
of Yankee owner George Stein-
brenner's cash.
ing to New York and Ruppert
Jones heading west.
THE DEALS with Tbomeson
as the linchpin were Wed-
nesday's biggest before the mid·
night interleague trading
deadJine passed.
The Angels al so added
pitching strength by acquiring
34-year-old Ken Forsch from
Houston, where he was 12-13
with a 3.20 earned-run average
in 1980. After the season, he
asked to be traded. Tbe Aatros
first tried to ship him to San
Francisco, but Forsch vetoed
that deal. Then they worked the
deal with the Angels, getUng
22-year-old utility infielder
Dickie Thon inu"eturn.
or the nation. "I'll be there
again. You watch," he vowed.
DETROIT PICKED up in-
fielder Mick Kelleher from the
Cubs in exchange for cash or a
player to be named later.
Kelleher batted .146 for Chicago
in 1980, playing 31 games at
third base, 17 at shortstop and 57
al second. In another deal,
Baltimore traded shortstop Kiko
Garcia to the Astros for minor
league outfielder Chris Bourjos.
A few ''name" players were
waived Wednesday, among
. them pitchers Jim Barr and
Dave LaRocbe by the Angels,
pitcher Fred Norman by the
Montreal Expos and outf1elder
Willie Horton by the Texas
Rangers, who also sent pitchers
Ed Figueroa and Dave Rajslch
to their Wichita farm club.
Over AIA
KEN FORSCH
says
BOWIE KUHN
HOW MVCB? That's what
Kuhn would like to know. That's
one of the reasons he 1ave for
temporarily holdine up the two
trades. Since 1976, Kuhn baa in-
sisted on a $400,000 ceiling in all
trades involving money.
The other reason for holding
up the deal. according to Bob
Win, major league baseball's
director of information, was that
Kuhn wants to know whether the
two trades, "having been made
back-to-back . . . are inter-
related." Wirz acknowledged
that there ls no s~ilic rule ban-
ning such interlocking deals.
''But in this case, until we know
all the facts, it's being .. held up
overnight," he said.
Like the Ptrhtes and An1ela,
the Chicago White Sox made two
trades Wednesday. They sent
outfielder Thad Bosley to
Milwaukee for minor league out·
fielder John Poff and relief
pitcher Mike Proly to
Pbj)adelphia for reserve second
baseman Jay Loviglio.
BOSLEY, WHO hit .224 last
year for the White Sox, didn't
figure to make the team this
year. Proly, 5-10 with a 3.06
ERA and eight saves last year,
became expendable when the
White Sox got reliever Dennis
Lamp from the Chicago Cube
last week.
All-stars survive
witlwut 50-f ooter
It was the second bi( deal in
24 hours involving the Yankees.
On Tuesday night, they complet-
ed a six-player trade with San
... ..,...... Diego. The keys were the center
'1AMAAL WILKES (52) HAS UTILE ROOM TO MANEUVER. fielders, J erry Mumphrey com-
Leads Houston win over Lakers
We're no puslwver -Malone
INGLEWOOD CAP> -If Kareem Abdul-
Jabbar m the greatest center in National Basket·
ball Association history, whJlt does that make ~Malone? ~··:-~J:..M~ Ute second-lead.in& scorer and the top ttbdunder lD the NBA tb.t./aeuon. poured in 38
oolat.a and irabbed 23 rebounds Wednesday nitbt
11 the Houston Rockets ,Opset the Lot' Anielet
Labn 111-10'1 in the ope91ng game of theil"fint·
round playoff leriea.
against Moses, that's not good enou1b. Hl5 second
and third effort does tbe damage."
ELEVEN Oli' MALONE'S reboundl came at
the offensive end. The Laken made an even 50
percent of their field goal attempe to 45.5 percent
for Houston, but the Rockett woo the batUe of the
backboards ~.
·'To win we had to play our hardest and beat
game of the year -a maximum effort," said
Houston Coach Del Harri.I. "Our OClly letups were ,ft"r ... ~ ..... ...., ••eee,._,., • .._.
(IHpegeC2>
Nobody, it seems, wanted one-
tl me Detroit phenom Mark
Fidrycb. The pitcher cleared
waivers, then was sent down to
the Tigen' Evansville farm
team, subject to U -bour recall.
The 26-year-old "Bird," as he
is affectionately known, pro-
mised he'd be back in the ma-
jors once again, tatting to
baseballs and doing bis own
groundskeeping on the mound
the way be did in 19'16, when he
went 19-9 and captured the fancy
Pries, Spinn,
three others
-earn All-CIF
By aoGEa CAaLSON Ot ... IMllJ,.......,
Five Orange Coast area
basketball stars from the prep
rank.a, includins three from CIF
3-A champion Coron, del Mar,
have been cboHn for All.ctF
honors by tbe Citilena Savtnes
Athletic Foundation board.
The Sea Klngs' Jeff Pries and
Mark Spinn, the front court
combination which led Corona
del Mar to five convincln1
1 victories in tile eliminaUoils1
each landed flnt tealb boDon
without a vote -both voiced'
onto tbe team ~Y •cclamatloo
from tbe board.
Abo ll'•W>inl a third. team
berth wu Steve lloore of Corona del lhr. ,
Second team boDOl-I weot to
l!ltaacla lllO's Jett Gard••". who led the Eq.lee to tM aP.
1emtflaal1, wbU• l·I T\m
plus-ones from tbe free throw
line. Given the reprieve, Hall
took charge and scored seven
straight points to give AJA a
73-72 lead with 12 seconds left.
It was then, however, on a•
pass from Bradshaw, that Cl-*
hit an 18-footer from the
baseline over the outstretched
eUorts of Hall with thre~
seconds left to play.
"I think the kids bad a good
time and enjoyed themselves;··
said Maryland Coach Left)'
Driesell, who was in cbar1e ol
the All-Americans. "I thous.bl it,
was a good chance for aome of
the kids to get some exposure."
"I HAD A LOT of fun. I 'm
glad I came," added Bradshaw,
who scored ·Only six points ''b\lt
handed off for nine usilfs in
playine half tne game. '
McCloskey, the Orange Cout
College product who rewrott!I the
record books at ~la, and
Dill.,-d ftniahed as 'tbe'\team's
leading scorers with 12 poi.Dts.
"I like comi1'& home. It wu
really fun," 18.lcf McCloskey. "I
think It's great when you can
play witb some df the top ·
playen tn the coantry."
Hall, who fiaiabed tbt \tame
with 22 point. and wu at.,....
the MVP tropb)' acco"91\a)y,
said be enjoyed bil ftDal .....
"It was a great way • ao out," ... Hid, "eX)*t f• tflat
18-footer at the end... L. Wed, at-least lt. wun't •• ,.,..
footer bJ Reed at tM ~1.1
1.
I ,,
f.
I
~
I ' ..
I I
I
I
r.
' .
, ...
Ralftl General Mauler Don Kloeterman 'Ell hat thrown in the towel. He'a offlc,ally ctven up in • 9 •
b11 attempt to alp quarterback Vince Ferra1amq.
.... In a ·_tfepared 1tatement released by tbe
ftam1• publleitJ otnce Wednesday, Klosterman .wu quoted
u aaytna, "We have been informed by Dick Flabof -Fer·
ra1amo'1 qent -that J'erraaamo intends to alp a contra~
with Montre.i ot the Canadian Football Leaeue. · "Duri.ni the last year we have worked
dllicently to effect a contract with Fer·
raeamo. In fact, we bad an agreement
with. h1a previous agent but it was called
off by the player hours later subetantlally
"Only yesterday we increased our offer
again
Ferragamo, who was reached at
home, again cautioned that h1a sientna
wasn't acad~mlc.
"Evei'ythlng ls still a bit premaiure," '"RAeAMO be said. "I still haven't signed my name to
8 Contract." I
But things look pretty good, don't they?
"Yes," he admitted, "things tool pretty good."
Ferragamo said be was scheduled to fly to Florida today,
for two days of shooting for an upcoming television show. He
then must fly back to Orange County in time to help preside
over a tennis tournament he is co-sponsoring with the Antels'
Rod Carew in Anaheim.
Tb::ll leaves the middle of next week for Ferragamo's
possible announcement to Montreal. •
"I can't see bow I'd be able to sign any sooner," he says.
Montreal owner Nelson Skalbania reported early Wed-
nesday that be bu already come to terms with Ferragamo
on a four.year contract reportedly worth an estimated Sl.6
million plus a percentage of the gate. •
Plus, the road was, paved for such a signing when the
Alouettes acquired Ferragamo's rights from Hamilton for a
running back and ~ide receiver. ·
"The Rams made their final offer and now I have to
weigh the options," said Ferragamo, adding the Rama' offer
wasn't much higher that their previous one.
When told that KJoeterman announced it was substantial-
ly more, Ferragamo retorted, "Six fi1ures is what I call sub-
stantially more. What th~y offered was nowhere near that."
------llMOtr al dw dafl ------
Eddie s.u-. Arkansas basketball coach, describinl
the 50-foot shot by U.S. Reed that beat Louisville in the second round of the Midwest Regional toUJ"DaQlent :
"That's what you call throwing up a prayer and having
it answered."
~tzlc9 •et• NB~ ...Ut. l"ef!erd
Edmonton's Waymt GreCl.ky, who earlier in ~
tbe day was named the NHL's Player of the '
Month, posted two assists to break the aingle-
aeuon aasilt record Wednesclay nig .... r, but a third·
period goaf by Lauy Mco.uJd gave the Colorado Rockies a
4...C tie with the Oilers. The assist for Gretzky was bis 103rd of
the season, one more than ~Y Orr'a record set in lt70-71
with Boston. Elsewhere around the league . . . Set &err'•
second goal of the game, with 9:20 remaining, gave chica10 a
2-2 tie with Toronto . . . Blalae Stoa.gltto.'1 second goal of
the ni~t, with less than 12 minutes remaining, gave Hartford
a 5-4 'ctofl over Quebec. The loss snapped an it-game un-
beaten treu for Quebec. There was more bad news for lbe
Nordiques as Jacqan Klchrd, who earlier scored b.iJ 52nd
goal of the season, was carried from the ice on a stretcher
after he was injured when checked by Hartford's 8"'art
Smltb ... Six of the game's eight goall were scored in the
third period as Vancouver and Winnipeg skated to a 4-4 tie.
Angels survive
Indians' rally
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Don
Bayk>r led off the eighth ionlng
with a triple and Dan Ford
singled him home to break a 3-3
tie and then Ford scored oo a
double by Bobby Grieb as the
Angels beat the Cleveland In·
d••ns $-4 In an exhibition aame Wednesday. ........ .. .....
c ... ....,. .......... l'Wllli' ..... .
wm c...-~V:J! four ol llJADMOta'• nn II !WIS wlll a iw.nm bl tbe atxtb iDDioJ and a
w over *I Pttllblqb Plratee ta eU.lbl· tw•=-:.;r in UM lotb tlaat Ufted the Twlnl to a
UGD WedDMda1. CllltlDo'1 llaCI• Ued the 1ame, dn-Ill'-...,... Ucl llleUJ Retcw. His extra·lnnhia, bom• came after,. MaeK•• b8d alqled . . . Gwmu
ft1•11 drove ID four MIDI wltb a pair ol bome l'\IDI and a-.. Y...t and Bea Olllfte added IOJo
homen to lead MUwau.kff to a 12.a victory
over San Dleso .. , . •arte ...... .
scored on rtaht fte.Lder 8rtaa A1 ........ •1
error in the lOtW lnniDI u Texu edced
Atlanta, IJ.12 . . . l&eve Dlllanl'a three·
rua hemtr in the ei1bth lDn1nl brOk• a 4-4 .;, u, •od propelled the Chieaao cui. to a 7-4
victory over Seattle . . . lack Monti
pitched seven hitless innlnp and Barbere
Garbej•a 1lxt.b·lnninl sinale knocked in
c:um•o the winninl run durin1 a three-nm out-
burst u Detroit beat Montreal, 4·1 . . . Rookie CUrlel
"C.W .. DaYlt rapped four blta in five at-bats, railing bis
sprln1 tralnina average to .415, u Sao Francisco beat
Oakland. 7·2 .•. Mae 8eGU hurled seven abutout inn.lnp to
pace tbe New York Meta to a 2.0 victory.over Toronto ... Dne Omcepeloa rapDed two bome nma and drove in ·four runa to pace a J.3.blt Cincinnati attack u the Reda pounded
Philadelphia, 7·2 .
~ A .. tl• • ..-.. -.. ee.e•
Tracy Austin baa been eued by her coach, Robert , ·
LOS ANGELES -Women's tennis standout m
Landsdorp, who claims be hasn't been paid for his
services.
Lansdorp aaid be signed a contract in March of last year
which stipulated be would be compensated for helping
Austin, a senior at Rolling Hills lllgb ln nearby Palos Verdes, •\·
with endorsements, clinics, tennis camps and apeaklng
en1agements.
L8Jlldorp charged in Loe Angeles Superior Court Wednes-
day that he baa not been compensated and demanded that a
court order Tracy Austin Enterprises, Inc., to see that be gets
. bis money.
·•After working together for 11 years, I would have
thought that Robert would speak to me personally or to my
mother if he had any problems," said Austin through her at-torney.
Merl.,e•tlaer, IC .... nuprbe P•rd•rtd
PORTLAND -Backup center Joe C . m
Meriweather scored four polnta in the overtime,
including the winning basket with 57 seconds re-
maining, as the Kansas City Kings surprised the
Portland Trail Blazers 98-97 in a National Ba~etball As-
aoclation playoff game Wednesday night.
........ ,. ss.• ................. rneleedtded
The start of a multi-million-dollar lawsuit by •
former Portland Trailblazers BW Wal&oa against
team doctor Robert Cook and others has been
rescheduled. Walton's suit asks $5.6 million in
damages on grounds he received negligent medical treat-
ment while with the NBA club in 1978 . . . If the Soviet
Union intervenes in the labor dispute in Poland, Canada will
withdraw from the world hockey tournament, says AIH
Ea&lesGD, chief international negotiator for Canada . . .
Ohio State athletic director High Hindman says there'tt no
substance to reports that Eldon MWer, the Buckeyes· basket-
ball coach, will be fired. An Omaha television station report-
ed that Miller would be dismissed and replaced by Tom
Apke. the current Creighton University coach .
T~...._
Followlno are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: / 1 1 1 excellent; I 1 1 worth watch I no; 1 1 fair; 1 forget
It.
~ 5:50 p.m .• Ch•nnel I ./ ./ ./ -v1
NHL HOCKEY: Kings at St. Louis.
Announcers: 6ob Miller and Pete Weber.
With two games remalnlno, the Kings are a point behind Montreal In the Wales Conference Norris Division and In fourth
place overall. The Kings, without Charlie Simmer, have been
playing well with Marcel Dionne and Dave Taylor functionlno
on the high scoring line. St. Louis has also assured Itself of a playoff berth, but is battling for the top spot for the playoffs with
the New York Islanders.
RADIO Hockey -Kings at St. Louis, 6:0S p.m., KOGO (600).
r....Pfl,,eCJ
8,1..~N
aw may beOM
en to don the
'helmet frw
8aturday'1 '#I QI, but tbe
-1x·1ear vet. ot tbe Fountain
Valley Polle Department
couldn't think o a ~tter way to
apeod bis day. "I love foot 11. When tbe
aeries was ftnt garuaed, there
was the chance play so I took
it. When you e oy somethlna
like that, it's h to pass up,"
&rokaw admlta.
&E•U.SPEND
and 1uard for
Valley-Cocsta Mes squad when
it meets the BuenaJ>ark-Ga.rden
Grove police depar\menta aq"ad
at Orange Coast Co.e1e. Kickoff
ls 1 p.m.
The father of two former San-
ta Ana Va11ey Hl~h football players, Brokaw c racterizes
himself as a football, anatic who
has been actively invtlved in the
sport from high scb~I k> recent
Pop Warner coaches' James. ,
"Thi.a game can be compared
to a high school game1' • Brokaw
says. "Everybody's been bust-.
ine their tails to get «eaky old
bones back into shape."
Winless, and, in fact, scorless
in the prevjous two Co~ Bowls,
the Cocsta Mesa-Fountaih Valley
squad enters the game with re-
newed optimism.
"OUR QUAILTEBBACK
<Clyde Foreman from Costa
Mesa) bas an arp:i like a rifle
and our offensive line conslsta of
good, dedicated people,"
Brokaw says.'
"All football players, especial-
ly old ones, are fierce com-
petitors," Brokaw continues.
"That's why we play even when
we're over the hill. We play to
win and we owe them a couple."
Costa Mesa-Fountain Valley
lost, 9-0 last year, and batUed
Garden Grove-Buena Park to a
scoreless tie in Cop Bowl I.
With Fountain Valley High
head coach Mike Milner and his
staff guiding the team, Brokaw
feels bis squad is ready to break
the modest slump.
JIM BROKAW
)
:J ·'They're (Fountain Valley
coaching staff) just super. Th•y
give us the consideration and
courtesy of our experience, but
they're driving us bard out
there," he says. • .,
DO 11IE TllllEE practices a
week bother Brokaw and Ule
others.? ·;
"We're out there because we
want to be out there. That's ~
indication that we're out there~
do our best," he says.
·But more important than win-
ning, Brokaw points out, is ~e
reason behind the game. '.
"I think this is an incredible
opportunity to raise some money
for the high school athletic de·
partment~.' · Brokaw 1ay1.
(High schools in the cities of the
f o u r po Ii c e d e p a r t m e n.i a
represented in tbe game will be
the recipients of money raised •t
the game.)
"We should get a good crowd.
The game's at Orange Coast, it's
easy to get to and it's all for the
kids," Brokaw adds.
l"r .. Pflfle CJ
MISSING LINK •..
about him, kno,.-ing that if there
was a trade to be made, and
there obviously was, that Thon
would be likely bait.
"He's dedicated to the game
of baseball, l wish I had 25 like · him," Bavasi once said of Thon.
Well now he has none like him.
But that's OK. The Angels
have apparently at least come
close to what they wanted-a
potential starting pitcher in
Forsch and a potential starting
catcher in Ott.
respectable. Just ask Chris
Knapp, another potential starter
who's been 5-5 and 2-11 durllig
the last two years in Anaheim.
Bavasi is sympathetic toward
Autry's needs. "While we were
extremely sorry to see Thon go,
we had to do somethin1 for our
future, and our future is now,"
he said.
In looking at the Thom peon
deal, a bit more studtlng of the
facts have to be considered.
Thompson. 28, shared first bue
and the designated hitter role
with Rod Carew las• season and
finished the season with a .. all
batting average along with a
team leading 21 home runs and
90 RBI. He had been penciled.jn
as the designated hitter for 1.ri.
The Forsch for Thon deal, at
first glance, appears to be a real
snatch for the Angels. In analyz.
ing the Angels' divisional title
chances for 1981 , one writer
made this observation: "If the
Angels bad one respectable ma-
jor league pitcher, they milht
make up 31 games in the stand-THE ANGELS, in return, ac-
ing11 on Kansas City -a Cin· quired Ott, a six-year veter..
derella team so corny they'd with the Pirates, who milMld
embarrass Disneyland." some of last season and auffm
· Is Forsch the misaing link from a chronic sore arm. To Ida
between the Angeh and another credit. however, Ott, 29, bu a
season like 1979? .267 lifetime batting average. ;. ·
Probably not. but it's certainly The Angela also acqutr.i The Indians rallied for a run
ln the top of the ninth at the ex·
pense of left-hander Andy
Hassler but after pinch hitter
Larry Littleton singled for the
run, Hassler got Chris Bando to
around out with men on first ud
FIVE AREA PLAYERS EA,RN AL L-CIF. • •
a step in the right direction as Mahler, 28, who bas a maJor
the club looks for a hint of COO· league record of 10-24 and 'Im
si!ltency within its staff. ERA ol 5.49 in stints with AllM·
Forsch, 34, is an 11-year ta and Pittsburgh. He spent !Ail
veteran with a career ERA of season with Pittsburgh's
3.19 -sparkling ID compariaoo PorUand club in tbl PacUdc
· second to elld the game.
The IDdiana bad J"'IPped on t lell starter Mike Wilt for two uq iD the tint lnniJal, driven in
singles by Rick Mannint and
.Joe Charboneaux. l The An1el1, held hiUea by
JoQ, Denny unW Brian Down· tnc·• two-out •inll• in the fourth,
tied it in th4' tltth. Rod Carew'•
1tn1Je scored one run. Carew
tffatully ICOl'ed OD balk by
~1e An.1eh, 13·6, and ~v ud, J.3.12, met today.
Quinta in the semillnala.
Rogen, altboup he averaged
32.4 points a game, was held to
six polnta by Spinn .
Nevertheless, Rogers' efforts
for the .eason were more than
enough to gain him the respect
required for unanimous
selection as player of the year.
He fin1ahed with 912 points for
the season, seven pointa leu
than Ocean View Hilb senaaUon
Wayne Carlander in the 4·A
division.
Rogen bad nine games with
40 points or more, bit S0.6
'
percent from the field and 78.0 McLaughlin's 18.l s coring to all of tbe current An1el Coast League, flnlsbiDI lU ~
percent from the line and bad average led University to its pitchers. 8 circuit-leading HO atttkeouts'.: 334 rebounds. first CIF playoff berth in several .
Pries was the Sea View years , while Moore, an AND CONSISTENCY has Some will cry rouJ, that tfte .
League's Player of the Year and all-tournament selection at1the become a trademark with Angela were taken. But .aa -t
averaged 21.• points a game, CIF finals as a junior, gave Forsch. The last three seuons Bavasi will be the fint to t.911
while Spinn, deepite only a 13.• Corona del Mar the fine edge have ~ marked by records of you, you have to give up qua1J..ly
scorint average, wu -the heart with his play. 10-6. 11-6 and 12·13. That's to 1et quality. , .~ and soul of the champions with ~~~~___::..__:_~~~~~~~~~~~....::.::r--=:...::.::.:._..=.:::.=..:.-r-~~-:--~~~~,........;:...-:-:----:;~
hia total game.
Gardner wu another with a
scorin1 avera1e less than
customary for All·CIF playen,
but bia 12.0 scoring averaee waa
more than camouflated by his
floor 1ame.
I
I ~I
: Laguila Beach
c: -· : remains No. 1
By aOGEa C.ut..10N Ot • ...., .......
Thef are ranked No. 1 bl Oran&e Coutlty and
o. 1 tn the CIF Southern &ectlon and Wed·
sday ni'ht's display of abUity at Huntington
each Hlgb allowed no ~riumeata.
Laguna Beach Higb's Artiats atru11led against
Irvine in the quarterflnal1, disposed of San
Clem·ente in two games in the semis, then strug·
gled for a while against Estaneia before exploding
!for another two-aet triutnph to claim the Orange
·~Qounty Invitational volleyball championship,
bn
·11c "WE DON'T REALLY start playing until we
:eel mad or in trouble," said Laeuna Beach Coach
BiH Ashen. "We're just now gettin& our 5-1 offense
going effect!vely.
1 "We've been 'Slow start.en, but I think we're
·:finally beginnini to realize everyone is out Y> beat
us."
. To emphasize Ashen's concern with the slow
•1ltart, the Artists trailed lryine in the second game,
•1j .o and 13·9, before pulling it out and going on tff"a
"three-set triumph
And in the championship duel, Estancia en·
,;,>yed leads or 9-3 and 12-6 before the roof caved in
:"s Nell Riddell and Eric Clark, along with the
tournament's most valuable player, Lance
:;tewart, sparked a comeback.
1•: The Artists rallied to tie it at 12 and 13, then
t(ook the lead for the first time on Rody Dvorak's
'block on the way to a 15·13 victory. "
"1 THE SECOND GAME was easy, made easier
··by an Estancia unit which went nat after taking a ~~-1 lead. The Artista scored seven straicbt with
·Riddell serving, then eased to a a 15-3 conquest.
"The first game was pivotal," said Estancia
tCoach Mike Pomeroy ... We lost lh'at one and just
.save up. They were better than us . All the streaks
went the wrong way ...
It was a bitter loss for the Ea.ales, who fought
from behind tthemselves for a lhree-game victory
over Capistrano Valley in the semifinals in their
quest for revenge against the.unbeaten Artists.
Estancia, 8·1 overall, suffered its only regular
season loss of Ute year to the Artista, a five-game
verdict decided by a 15-13 ~ount in the ftfth game.
4:· . AND FOR A WBJLE, it appeared it was going
.... to be j~t as close. But once lbe Artists got the UP·
~per hand in the se~ond game it was an over.
Stewart, Riddell and Clark were keys to the
:'lopsided victory. but also lending soltd play were
~pvorak, Doug Parson•and Leif Hanson.
" Estancia's game was paced by aJl-tournament
't;elections Doug Hartung and Brad Elligood, along
·with Bill Mattias and Jeff CuUer, but in the end,
Pomeroy's comments on Laguna Beach prior to
. ~he game reflected the story. =-• Said Pomeroy after Laguna's come-from·
pehind victory over Irvine: "Stewart holds them
~iogHher -he simply refuses to lose."
I Occ cre w awaits ~ .
~·· ' S an Die go race
·1; SAN DIEGO .-Orange Coast Collete will
i61lngle with some of the top collegiate rowing
~wers Saturday when the Pirates participate in
.tile eighth annual San Die10 CTew Classic on Mis·
:sion Bay.
!. . More than 15,000 persons are expected to turn
out for the regatta which will attract some SO
i.,.y:hools an~ national organization~._
"'1 ·'This 1s, one of the most exc1t1q and colorful -~egatt.as to be found anywhere," sap OCC crew
* fpach Dave Grant. "The best collegiate crews in ~e nation will be found there this year."
, : Amon& the participants are UC Irvine,
·*tarv ard. Brown, Navy, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin,
: icbita State, Calilomia, UCLA, Stanford, USC, ~n Diego State, Orecon State, Washington, Yale
~nd Santa Clara. ·~ · OCC's varsity eight will be competing against "~ajor colleae junior varsity boats due to OCC's :~o-year status, but Grant feels lbe competition
·~11 be just as tou1h. "Th• crew programs at
sch ools like Berkeley, Harvard, Penn and
--asbin&twi aF,e so 1tr091 that tbe difference
tween ~e v.nity and JV boats la insignificant.
ract, so mucb sbittiol' 1oes oil durin& tbe coune
the yeQ q.,at a varalty oaranian may row half
raca ln ~ JV boat," the OCC coach explaim.
OCC's JV ud frosh eiabts enter tbe San Dteao
ent .,tth ~.o reco.-.,. comine off easy victories
er UCU, lut w~
I Pirates~ llusders hot
Bolb Orana• .CO•t u4 Golden West colle1ea
ept their ~tor a confer.ice volle7ball Utle
Jive Wednetc1a7 q bt wttb caavtadnl rictoriea
the road. ' r ,
oc. c\ one 1 ... eop.raftked U!am1 in tbe state, bounded fro ifl flrtt South Cout Conference
efeat of the e• to Santa Ana P'rtda)' with a
trailbt.Ht triuml>.t over bolt Grmemont. •-while, CJiC _... tour aames eo diJ.
e ot hollt s&ntl Barbar• CC1ln •Southern Cal
ferenee lt'attlel
At o.-.moet, the Plratee i mproved tbelr
acue mn to/l-1 .. ~lt--~ ~ ud
b Wbeeloct orHPOWerecl the OrtfftM (M ). Mid· ~Toe GNIOtY .._ tcnect la a ltroal
ortfcrOCC.
Led by the bat and arm of Kevin• Clarke,
La1una Beech ffiih pulled a major ullfft u tbe
Arti1t1 Mr•ted San Clemente, 7·1, to bi1hliaht
prep baleball action Wedneeday. ln other action, Irvine abut out Unlvenlty,
Coron• del Mar had an eu1 Ume with Estancia,
Coa\a Mesa beat El Toro under the li&hts, Foun·
1-in Val•ey edged Marida, Mater Dei toppled St.
Paul and Ocean View beat Paclllca in tbe Troy
Tournament.
Leoun• leKh 7, S.n CletMnte 1 Scorinc six Umea In Ule third tnnlne, Laguna
Beach surprised San Clemente. The Tritons en·
tered the game tied for the South Coast League
Jead wlth Capo Valley and Miaaion Viejo.
Clarke was the hitting and pitching atar fot' the Artists. The senior lefthander threw a lwo-hitter at
Su Clemepte, walking three and striking out four.
in nmnln• his record to 3-1, Clark was also 2-for-3
at the plate. /
The big blow ln the Artists' six-run outburst in
the third inn.in& was a bases-loaded double by
David Padgbam which scored three runs.
Corona del Mar e, Eatllnda 1
Behind lbe three-hit pitching of Jeff Pries, the
Sea Kings remained unbeaten ln Sea View League
play.
Pries walked three and struck out five to run
his record to 2·0. Pries also had an RBI single in
· the sixth inning when CdM scored four times to
break the game open.
The key hit in that Inning was a bases-loaded
single by Brent Melbon which scored two runs.
The Sea Kings added two more runs in the
seventh 1JUiln1 wben Marlo Ybarra w,a credited thankl to 1lx VUdn1 erron, plektd U.P tM klll~ Keo
wlt.b • trip&• and tbeD •co.red without a play at • Bodle bad a •t.ron• nllht at t.be plate. rt•1 •
relay throw was bobbled. double and a triple.
CoN Meu I , El Toro 2
Costa Meaa stayed a ••me back of Corona del
Mar wlth it.a win over El Toro. Jeff Goe,ttaeh and
Steve WiWamson combined on• three-hitter. For
Goettsch l't WH hi• t blrd wio of tbe year.
William.son picked up hi• 1lxtb save. Wllllamaon
has now pitched ln all of Coeta Mesa'• Sea Yi•w
League games and ln 12 of its 13 1amn overall.
Dennis Jones Jed the Mustangs wttb three hits,
including a two-run stngle ln Coeta Meta's live-run
third inning, while hot-hitting Joe Cruz was 2·for·3.
lrvlne 3, UnfMNlty O
Senior right-bander Steve Westbrook Uirew a
three-hitter as the Vaquel'08 shut out their arch·
rivals. Westbrook struck out seven and walked OD·
ly four in picking up hla first league Win.
Manny Gaudier led lhe offensive attack for
Irvine with two hlta while Mike Tierney knocked id
the only t'UM needed, sin&llng two home in th~
first inning.
Irvine's Al Brownlee came up with a couple of
defensive gems In centerfield. Brownlee made a
diving catch in the fourth inning and snared a line
drive over hls head in the seventh.
Fountain Velley 7, Martna 8
Pat CoMor had two hits and three RBI to lead
Fountain Valley to a slim victory. Howard Noack
also had two hit.a. . The loss spoiled two strong performances for
Marina. Pitcher Brian Olson struck oat 13, but
Mnlr Del I , a. Paul 2
John Ecclea and Amin David eaeb home.red to
support another fine pltehiq performance, th1I
one by. Mater Del's St~Yt MeQ(Soia. ·
Mendoza picked &lp his Wrd wta ot'the year
against one loss. Mendosa allowed two runs, both
on St. Paul home runs, and seven hlts, but struck
out ntne.
OC.an View I, Padftce 3
The Seahawka won the third place game of the
Troy Tournament with only four &itl.
Trailing 3-1, Ocean View scored four timea in
the ruth lnnlng on two wa.lb, a hit batter, two
sinales and a fielders choice. Kevin Stanley had a
two-run single which proved to be the winnlnS bit.
Kroyer , Rowell lead Buc8
Kri! Kroyer pumped home 20 polntl and
former Corona del Mar High star Kristle Rowell
added 17 as Orange Coast Colleee nipped Santa
Ana, 54-53 Wednesday night 1n women's buket~all .
action at OCC. l
The Pirates, 6·1 in South Coast Conference l
play, let a 10-point lead get away from them, only l
to battle back for the narrow verdict. l
Kroyer, the conference's No. 1 scorer and No.
2 rebounder, added 20 caroms, well above her 13.2 :
average. •
The defeat dropped Santa Ana to 2·5 in con· !
ference-play. I -... --------------11-=======~==========='
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' -COAST GENERAL TIRE .~ 2855 HARBOR BLVD.
--COSTAMESA
Sltll lffl 540-5710
BFG STEEL RADIALS I SUPER IMPORT SPECIALS
WHITE '>IDtWAU S Blaclc well Steel Radial~
8R78x 13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43.00
OR78x 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 .00
ER78x14 ................ 49.95
FR78x14 ................ 51.95
GR78x 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53. 95
HR78x14 .... , ........... 55.95
FR78x15 ................ 52.95
GR78x15 ................ 56.95
· HR78x15 ................ 51.95
LR78x15 ................ 61.9~
175fl OR13 .............. $39.50
185n OR13 .............. $45.80
185flOR1 4 .............• $47 .50
205flOR14 .............. $57.76
.
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9UALITY s21•s ;
RETREADS
f Am
SJl.50
$32.50
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$41.50
SJ7.50
H -71 S.-. w.... ,.... ..
mn .
SJJ.tS
$35.fl
SJt.tS
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PRESSUR
REGULATOR
$8.69 ·--::·:.;:-__ ....
bdy .... All -us• ....,_ •53. $4 55
INLINE
-.-GAS FILTER :::..: . =11=$39 == • ......
INDUCTIVE ffllwk
TIMING LIGHT ~
$24.95
ri.,.....,..:J1,. .... ,..i..; .,. .. ....... . ,..........., ..
~r:;n •.
CYll* .... 1117
• NOW
$1.69
""' ..., 13 oz. ""'""" .. --...... ... .... ,,. ......... 1.
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Cllk •M New YOt'll Ill M<_,l NOTE: ._Ofl, Mllw-... SOii ..........
and Pl!oeftl• recolw fl"'_,._,. 11.,_.
Rocllen 111, U.llers 107
HOUl'TOM -P.,IU ts, llelcl t>, Me-», Dlllliell"Y t , ..... ,_, '· ~y lt, Wiii~ •• l.Mwll '· Getrttt 0. Tttol1 .. lt.24 111.
LOI ._ILlll -CIMrlK U, Wll ... 16.
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c:.....10. ~~·· Hollollclt, ·-0, JtnlMO. ToU114U>» 107.
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24, LM ........ 1t. TtdWlkol -~
HCMlllOll ---· A -ts.S17. EXHllmON
Alt-Amertuna 74, AIA 73
COL.I.AH AU--AMl•ICAQ -MM-
nlr19 t, Dillard 12, ~.isMw •. llMd '
McCl01hy 12, lroolllnl •• WllllaM• ••
Corne11111 •. Cla'11 a, L.lltaf 7.
ATNl.ATH IN ACTION -JOllllMft 7, Clarll 2, JacUOfl 1J, ~ 2, Scl\all •. F..a
•.Sima t. ~ 11, H-*' n. Half11nw: AIA, .,.,.,
Tatel leul1: COi .... All.._rl<MS 16, AIA
It; FCM11N•:-.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN
Or•nae Co•st 54, Sent• Aft• 53
IAMTl AJIA --S, llarllaf S, l'llNI t , J-t, Yll'fl/W 10, L.ytle IS, CallaMft L o•,.,... ClOAll' -..... 1, "....,_ a.
11-•ll 17, ~ t, W.JMr 0, o.At__.. 4. T orrt1 0, Mertl a, CorrOll 0, l(tNWdy 0.
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Otyden, Tones (Of_,..caastl.
AIM:lf >-A
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Pi.rw, 8idl9lt Ht. 0. A•
JoM ll09ff'l, l.e Qwiflta ... 51'. 12.A
Tony NMI, sam.. AM VallO'( ... $r. MA
lllly IC-,S&. .... _.d M Sr • .U
Htt Prle. C:..-..... M Ir. tu
Mar11 .... C--...... H Ir. lU
GorTY _..,...Saft Gar..,... H Jr. !2.11
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ltoct a-. t.iwrllclt Ny .. 1 Sr. tt.7 Cr•l1Jacu.t,~va11.., M Sr. n.J
Te<ryC-,~ ~II Jr. IU
Mark H.....::f~c!."i:!" t-1 Sr. 11.7
Paul 1-., •~ M Jr. a.A MadLawis. TldUL .. s 1'. 174
Corer Oalftn. St. ll9nlord .-J So. 12.0
Mlcheel J.cll_,, S. Gorgonio .. J Sr 17,t
JoM t(lllllan, o.....ian w Sr ....
GIJlllort V.,...e, lolco Tecfl W Jr. 1Lt
Jeff CMr9w, •1-.Cla M Jr. 11.0
Pa11I L.Mnlle. Warf'W\ w Sr "'° MllleJ~~o ~II Sr. 11.J
TMllDHA.1111
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Troy KMCl!lal, Hemel M Sr. 19.1
JOllft Mdi.1M11, L.,,...... .-s Sr. '·1
Al Mar.,.tti, L.,......, .-1 51'. tu
Ga..,l•I ~.Al........, .. I lr. 21.0 ............ c... ... -.. w Ir. l:U Miiie~.~ .-i 5'. te.•
ltkller• lhll&. ao.a> T.O .. 2 Se. IL4
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too ~.relay -1. Newport HM11or,
t:U.t. 200 ,,_ -t • .'-s INI, 1:44.0.; 2. IElclor
(Pl, 1: .... 12; l. Woolfolk IN), l:St.JI.
:IOI .... -I. Mofttt (NI, 1:!6.•; 2. Kar·
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AltflldMO -II, 13'
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~ • • • ., "
Women'a llOftball
CIOMMUMITY COLL•OI ~110, M6rac.to. ' Mlro<:otla 000 ooo--t 0 I S......_. OM 002-10 t t Neriu, .,.,,....., l>I Mel Torrea, Macltid
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CALIFORNIA ANGELS -Tredecl Dickie
T'-, lnllolcler, lo IN .._on A,JtrM for
Ken FOOOI, Plkllet. Allted ••I...,• on Jim
l•rr -Otw L.-ltocl'llt, Pile...,., lor u.
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Arnork011 "-lotloft.
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• ............ ~AMClatMft.
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l.l~::rf'OflD WHAUEH -i'IM J•ll
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• BYEDZINTEL .. .................
It at flrtt you don't succeed
Team Tenoia 11 trylna lt
a1aln. After falllne to l•ln the
neceaaary s upport for survival,
World Team Tennis folded ln
1978 after a five-year existence.
And existence was about all lt
was, too.
But Dr. J erry Busa didn't
after spending his first dollar in
life and the or1anbers of this
tennil re-birth belive that they
can make a go of it thia time.
They bave a couple of itenu in
their favor.
Item No. 1: Travelling ex·
penaes will be cut dramatically
since the teams aren't spread
out acrosa the country from Los
Angeles to Boston like they were
in the old WTT. In fact, Team
Tennis ls an all·California
league with franchises in
Orange County, Los Angeles,
Oakland and San Diego.
Item No. 2: There won't be
any player contract problems
since all of the some 74 who
showed interest in competing
were required to sign an agree-
ment that they would be eligible
to play on any team prior to last
Monday's re-entry draft.
That's fine. But what may
work out to become Team Ten-
nis' largest advantage this time
around are the influences of cer-
tain people.
Llke Buss. Buss was owner of
the Los Angeles Strings before
he went on a binge and bought
the Forum from Jack Kent
Cooke. Now, Buss' 19-year-old
daughter, Jeanie, is working in
much the same capacity as her
dad did as chief operating of-
fi cer of Team Tennis · LA
Strings.
"Team tennis is how my dad
l~arned," Jeanie said Monday
after snatching the two lop
prizes in the six-round draft -
Martina Navratilova (ranked
third in the world in women's)
and Vijay Amritraj (ranked 18th
in the world in men's ). "If my
dad can learn about pro sports
through team tennis, it's good
enough for me.''
The Oakland Bay Gaters, to no
one's s urprise, picked Billie
J e an King in the first round.
Larry King, Billie Jean's
husband, is owner of the Gaters.
Owner of Orange County's
California Oranges is Dick Ben·
nett a real estate investor. ln the
first round of the draft, Bennett
chose former USC star Cynthia
Potter, currently ranked 17th in
the world.
Next, Bennett picked
doubles team of Marty Rl
and Sherwood Stewart, tb
world's second-ranked team,
the second and third round.
The Oraosea also aelecte
Sharon Walsh, the 46th-r
player in the world and Po.tier"
reeular doubles partner OD
women's tour .
R ounding out Bennett'
choices we~ alternates AD
Amrltraj and Stacy Margolin.
The Oranges will play th
six home matches at the
Caballeros Racquet ~nd
1ENNIS
Club in Fountain ValleY.. wh
the season begins July S. It
run until July 26.
Ross Case. a res ident
Newport Beach, was selected
San Diego in the first ro
drart along with Leslie Aile •
one of the top young womj
players in the world. • • • • Tracy Austin, still trying tb
work out the inflamation of ll
ner ve in her lower back, will
have to skip this weekendis
Clairol Crown women's tourna-
ment at La Costa, making Ch""
Evert-Uoyd the favorite to cat-
ture the first place prize qf
$100,000. !
It'll be a clash of four of the
leading Pam Shriver pro-
fessional women players inclu<t·
ing Evert-Lloyd, . Andrea Jag~
and Hana Mandlikova ... Good
seats are still remaining for both
Saturday and Sunday and
may be purchased by telephone
by calling 438-7784 or at all
Ttcketron outlets.
* • * The No. 2 ranked player in the
world, John McEnroe, and the
No. 4 ranke d player. Gene
Mayer, are expected to be the
top contenders in the Jack
Kramer 6ven. which returns to
the Los Angeles Tennis Club this
year after a six-year absence,
April 11·19.
Mayer. who won this tourna
ment last year when it was helt
at Los Caballeros Racquet alic.
Sports Club, currently ranks in
the top 10 in both singles and
doubles, a feat matched by only
McEnroe.
Formerl y the Pa c ific
Southwest Tournament. the
Kramer will be held at the LA
Tennis Club for the first time
since 1974
One-design regatta
planned by NHYC
Newport Harbor Yacht Club
beads the yacht racing calendar
this weekend with a One-design
regatta scheduled Saturday and
Sunday, the small boats racing
inside the bay Saturday and the
larger keel boats racing outside
courses Sunday.
In other local action, South
Shore Yacht Club will in·
augurate its 1981 Hi·Point Series
for Performance Handicap Rae-
BOA.TING
ing Fleet and ocean racing
catamarans Sunday. and Dana
Point Yacht Club will staee the
second race of its Dana Point
Series for PHRF yachts Sunday.
Long Beach Yacht Club Ls in·
vitlng offshore recera to
participate in its popular Island
Series which starts this weekeftd
with a race to Catalina's Long
Point Saturday, and a race
home Sunday after a ni1bt's
LBYC 's Island Sertea·
throughout the season feature
Race entries
~urpass 600
overnight layove r races to
various coves on Cat a lina
Island.
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club
will also launch it:s 1981 Cabrillo
Series for all classes with a race
a round the buoys off Loa
Angeles Harbor Saturday.
Sabot sailors will find plentt
of competition Saturday an~
Sunday in Seal Beach Yacht
Club's Spring Regatta for the
class. :
In other Southern Cali!orni•
Yachting Association areas: '
Santa Monica Bay
King Harbor Yacht Club ~
Sabol Seminar, Saturday; one·
design races, Saturday. 1
Del Rey Yacht Club -Sunday
Skippers race (Tannenberg
Series ) Sunday .
Saa Diego
Mission Bay Yacht Club
Spring Invitational <Snipe)
Saturday, Sunday. ,
Coronado Cays Yacht Club ~
Spring Classic, Saturday. i ·
Santa Clara Racing A.saodat
lion -Commodore's Reeatt-
(all clasaa) Saturday, Sl&Dd~y Sprlne Serles <all clanes
Saturday, Sunday.
Coronado Yacht Club -We
tn1ton Series ( handieap) Sa
day, • I J -Oceanside Yacht Club
Yearley Series (PHRF) Sunday
San Die10 Navy Salllnl Clu -Bill Bunce Re1atta 8atw"clavt
Sunday.
Southwettem Yacht Club
Sprlq Series (band.leap) Satur
day .
ow elated
Mon thaD IOO boata valaecl a
OVtr $10 mUUon wW be • dia;
play at U.. tillbtb· annual In·~
Water BOlt·:.SlaiMf DOW ID
! I . I
· 1
. ' "W'ny do. tangerines have such baggy ski"s'>·
AR'IADl:KE by Brad Anderson
G
i
I @ ,_
"How'd you know he's an only dog?"
"You WHAT? Oh. you hate cheap tools.''
DE:\~IS THE Mt:NACE
1
i
' ' . • '
c
........ -.........
You must have done
SOMETHING IO
frighten the boy'
Hank Ketchum ' ~Ho, ~ ~':,
aC'e':! g ac ·o see .., .,,
; Jl"DGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux
LOOI\ I WA!> 'Ef;'.RtN Y ~!Ui:Y TO l.EAAN
AOl."tll N.'!'"!-C1fA1H .. <\ND I 1HOVOMT
AN)~•· ~1'.'Mf .:'f 1~1: C•~EM TI ME~ 1HE 4
OF L'5 HAD. 'OU ~M~Y DtDN'f Hf AR I
•=:----:--lJIHiiilioif.:ii.'Rl!!ijl MA6(JI? MAOOI BEN5QN?WHEllE'VE
lOU Offill ? lT5 SllRE 000() TO
HE.AR FF:OM '0l' '
. f.'tllT JOAN ANO I DECIDED TO CALL
IT 0ll11~'
GAR t'I t:l,D
WMEN 1 WAS VOOR AGE 1 W/\5
MAR.RIED ANll HAQ A KIO
by Jim Davis e 1•1 ~fMl\ltSyncl!Calt In(,..,.-----------GOOD ARWMENT, SON.
UNI TEO Feature Syndate
Wednesday s P\lule Solved
57 8tbble sa Bargain
tvtl11S
St Seaweed
60 Prie lrull ••GaM 63 e.octt··
0 UT I ST ILL THINK
VOO SMOOLP <=sET
MARRIEP
SHOE
The~swill
le a lot like t~
seventie~ ...
l1M ~ .. ~.BROWN I~
t()T IN ... IF '((XI'[' CAAf Tu
LEAVE ~ NVMSER, Mf'Ll
T~ TO 6ET SACK TO l/00
SOMETIME Nl?XT '(E~ ...
by Tom K. Ryan
~
l
i t . i ~
~
by Jett MacNelly
onlyoHer.
by Ernie Bushm1ller
---AND NOW
FOR THE
BRIGHT SIOE OF
THE NEWS
"THIS PUPPY WON F IRST PRIZE AT
GORDO
I~ FACTf
SAME ~ MAe,ic
THAT
MAICE
TUE 6C.OW1 '4.IMe 1J«D~ el.~ r:o::rr
!Ol.Ef
4-Z
Fl'NKl' "INKERB Ei\1\
1 ~T WANT AN<J BAND
CAN{)Q, lHANK~ !
DRi\BBLE
fa1RICK, I MA\16-A vE.R.'{
1Mf01l'fA~f nt~Nl.i t.~AM
1C>MORRDW
'1-1
DR.SMOCK
HeY .1 &o1'H
MY P IL..t..OWS HA V IS e>eeN ~t PPeP O FF/
THE DOG SHOW TODAY
TREE ~w~
~I .
~D FU.LL. OF ~'If
ITcAN
~ OW~T JUMPUKE "'"!
~
!
l
j
I r
:! SHAt..t.. PR.I N K
NO WI NE! &eFoR.e
l"f"S "f"I M ff!. !
by Tom Batiuk
by George Lemont
Hff!.t..L.O, FU N N Y FARM ~ w e
HAve A P ICKUP
FOR YA.' ~
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"1 llAaY IANS llCAaCllU.e l .......... liiiiii-~-
JuUa Child would have bMn proud ot tM
,.Learned Ladies'' chapter ot tbt Orua• CoWI· t~ MUlk Center
• The ll'OUP Uved up to ita ''learMd" name
by arrantfnl for ex"rt demoutraU.. durip1
each ~ of a "5-a·plate 1our11Mt 41Aner,
fro• \&e toup <oztail couom••> to nuts
( baaana1 and strawberries flam be over
haselnut ice cream>.
Several hundred peraooa 1atbered at the
Plaza hllroom ot the Soutb Cout Plua hotel
last week for the five-course dinner with ttro
wlne• and cbampqne. .
Youna mimes from South Coast Re"rtory
and a harplat eatertained durinl the cocktail
HAPPENINGS
hour, wbicb Included a sUent auction for cases
of wine, table linens and meals al local
restaurants.
Vince Paris, teacher in the hotel manaae·
ment division at Cypress Collete. was master of
cenmonies for the proaram accompanyinlt the
dinner.
He introduced Robert Lawrence Balzer, a
wine expert ~hose family bas been in the food
busin~ for generations.
WHILE GUESTS sipped the consomme,
Balzer told them, "Tbis is the Golden Age of
California wine making.
"The sons and daughters or European wine
dynasties now come here lo learn," he added.
A well-known teacher of the intricacies in
the wine world, Balzer said, "Wine is swirled to
release the bouquet. not simply as an affecla·
lion."
While recommending that each person find
his own taste in wine and buy what pleases him,
Balzer dc?scribed Chardonnay as ''the best
California white wine."
The Intermezzo. Jambon de Parme, accom-
panied a demonstration by John Pohl, banquet
manager at the South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Closed-circuit color television cameras
.transmitted the sophisticated show-and-tell
events to two over-size screens at either end or
the room.
After arranging the melon slices and paper-
lhin prosciutto ham on a plate, Pohl foUowed
with a napkin-folding demonstration.
NAPKINS HA VE been popular only within
the past 150 years, according lo Pohl, because
early diners simply used the edges of long
tablecloths to wipe messy hands and faces.
He returned with Christian Rassinoux, ex-
ecutive chef at the hotel, for a description of in-
gredients in the entree, a chicken breast ac-
cented with stuffed prawns in a tarragon sauce.
The prawn was stuffed with a mousse made
from scallops and sole. and it was accompanied
by Tomato Florentine, carrots and fresh
asparagus.
The master of ceremonies encouraged
diners to pick up the asparagus in their fingers
to eat it, which many didA
Sebastiani's Pinol Noir Blanc accompanied
the entree.
While guests were biting oH the last
asparagus lip, George Risko created an ice
sculpture. beginning with a large rectangle of
ice and ending with a frosty clamshell ap-
propriate for display of seafood hors d'oeuvres.
AS MJGtrr be expected, waiters passed
glas~es or ice water during bls presentation. . La Salade Mimosa, butler lettuce w1tb
chopped eggs and a light vinaigrette. refreshed
palates.
Pete Henderson, usually the serious hall or
the Skiles and Henderson comedy team, was
equally refreshing with his light-hearted ap-
proach to salad-making.
When a hardboiled egg proved more than a
....,, ......... ~
match for bis knife. be used an electric s~w to
finish off the job.
Finale to the dinner was created by Elliot
Bicacl of Ambrosia Restaurant who flamed
bananas and strawberries with Grand Marnier
and banana liqueur to pour over hazelnut ice
cream.
Asti Spumante champagne from Orsolani
accompanied the sweet treat, and waiters
passed copies or entree recipes from the elegant
meal.
Guests returned lo their cars, parked near
the l<><!aUon of the new Orange County Music
Center, which will reap the financial benefits
from the dinner.
Among the well-fed and well-entertained
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Mike Manahan, Dave
and Susan Sills (he's an· Irvine city coun·
cilman), Mr. and Mrs. Art Lucero, Polly
Johnson, Pal Cameron, Jane Otlke, Jim and
Beckie Splittgerber and Richard and Anita
Larsen.
Animation cartoomst honored
Golden roadrunrter necklaces were the
favorite jewelry of the evening last Friday when
Jerry Muller hosted a preview of the animated
art or Chuck Jones at The Museum Shop ln
Corona del Mar.
Jones, who has decided lo make the harbor
area his home, bas won three Academy Awards
for work on such characters as Bugs Bunny.
Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, the Roadrunner and
his pursuer Wile E . Coyote.
Jones greeted guests with hia wife Marian
Dern, who writes for the cartoon strip "Rick
O'Shay,'' and daughter Linda Clugh.
Among those enjoying the wine, cheese and
artwork were Mr. and Mrs. Rex Brandt (his
watercolon were also on display>. Mr. and Mrs.
Keilly Rbodea (he's from the Bowers Museum>.
Bob and Shirlee Guggenheim, Thomas Wilek,
Mr. and Mn. Benjamin Nysewander, James
and Marian Bybee 3:11d Dr. Ronald Silverstein.
Others were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Meylor.
John Tient, Virginia Donough, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Speights, Mr. and Mrs. Don Fosler (he
worked with Jones al W amer Bros.>, Ed and
Peggy Nofziger, Sarah MacLepd. Marvin
Myers, Sheryl Dalven and Mr. and Mrs . Tod
Ridgeway.
CartoonUt ChuckJOM1
ii framed by Rdlly
Rhode• (left fore-
ground) and Thomal
Wilek during a reception
heldin honor of the
Acadenly Award-win-
ning artilt. '
Sculptor Harold Pcutoriu& r~J and C. Stanton
Herbert, who works in fine glms. discuu
artwork.
Shou:boaJ production i8 fun
Two sleek "getaway· cars" .at the entrance
to the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club in Corona
del Mar indicated a slight change in manage-
ment.
For three nights last week, the club became
"Gentleman Lew's Speakeasy" for the ninth
edition of the club's production, Showboat '81.
Guests enjoyed a buffet dinner before this
year's "Jazzy Chicago" bounced onstage with
red hot mamas, tin horn gamblers. Salvation
Army reformers and a political boss or two.
The show was produced and performed by
club members whose slagefright was forgotten
in the run or dancing and singing for their
friends.
"IT'S NOT ..the same as singing in the
shower al home," said Terry Mulligan, the
show's producer.
His wife Barbara was chairman of the
event. and Tom Gleason. one or the few "pros"
connected with the show. directed the proceed·
ings with help from his wife June.
Arlee Higbee was choreographer, and cast
members included Charlene Weiss". Charlene
Johnson. Marcia and Carl Last. Julie and Al
Smith, Mary and Milt Harvey, Ida Mae
Wentzell, Sabina and J erry Anderson, Mike
Braun. Willie Williamson, Morley Davis and
Roberta Smith.
Other talented performers were Joyce
Hosteller, Nancy Jo Price, Diane and Mel Gra-
ble. Kathy and Patrick Dougan. Joan D'Angelo.
Anita Catalano. Syd Seddon, Larry McSperren.
Sherlean Duke, Jeannie McComb. Carol Arnold,
Carol De Haven, .Mary Longpre, Stacey
Johnson, Vickie Carr, and Commodore Lew
Spruance <for whom the "speakeasy" was
named> and his wife Kim.
The BCYC crew just might bring back the
Charleston. feather boas and bathtub gin.
Artists lwrwred al. rece~i.on
The Newport Beach City Arts Commission
proved there's more to art than a we t
paintbrush when they honored sculptor Harold
Pastorius and C. Stanton Herbert, who works in
glass. at a reception at City Hall.
Pastorius, whose controver sial work
"Vestige" graced Laguna's beach-front park,
works in steel and copper.
.. Most of my work is sea-oriented," he says,
"inspired, perhaps, by m y long-time interest in
scuba diving."
Noting that .. Vestige" was accepted by the
state's Coastal Commission in a decisioq writ-
ten but never presented, he said, "If there's no
controversy with a new piece or art, then it's not
original: it's blase or just 'pretty' rather than a
major work. It usually takes about two years
for something new to be accepted by the public."
Adults refuse to see certain things but kids don't
I sat next lo a really neat lady al a luncheon
the other week who got to talking about braces on
the teeth . . . hers.
She said, "How come you never mentioned
my braces?"
I stared awkwardly Into her fruit cocktail and
said. "I don't know ... I guess I didn't want to
make you self-conscious."
IRIA IDlllCI !~--
"I'm not," s he said. "You are. It's funny, kids
are great about it. They'll come right up and say,
'When do they come off?' or 'Wouidn'tyou kill for
a caramel?' But not adults. They act like they
don 'tseethem."
It pccurred to me that adults are that way
about a lot of things. People make sucJi a flap
about face and body llfta. I personally considered
Eleanor Roosevelt the most beauUful woman I
ever met, but if eometlilnt bothers you and you
can sUllgettheparts, Iuy go for It! 1 Or, as a wise friend of mine once said, "To
heck with my Ironing board, let's put the silicone
right upfront where everyone can see it."
Thereiuomethlngadmirable about a woman
(or man) who works on perpetual maintenance.
My mother-in-law went through extensive and ex ·
pensiye bridgework at the age of 74. Another
woman ln her 60s got a race Lift and it made such a
difference to her. Too often, we're· intimidated by
age. Everything becomes predictable. Al age 20
the teeth start lo go, at 30 the skin dries up, at 40 the
eyes dim, at 50 all the muscles relax and bag
around your knees, and at 60 you fall asleep during
a lax audit.
I defy you to gather together a group of
women (or men) and find one who is totally happy
Hawv.d Fo.K.
with the way she looks. One friend or mine con-
fessed she hated her nose.
"What's wrong with it.?" I-asked. "ll-works,
doesn'tlt?"
''That's not the point.'' she said. ·'It looks like
GeorgeC. Scott's."
"So?''
•'So, I can't act."
She had the nose altered and I swear I never
saw the difference, buts he did.
The mind is also not exempt from the self-
im rovemenl route. People who are college
Classic Bow Pump
The tradtlon of great
poise and elegance.
11 ...
MM ... t .. 10
MA. ... ~ .. 10
M. .. lte 10
A. .. I\.\ ten\
1. .. 1~ te 10
c: .... \'IJI .. '
The finest leather
and craftsmanstilp.
Black Patef')t
with grosgralnbow.
graduates are the first to admit it's overrated. I
knew people who graduated with honors who
couldn't operate a pay totlet. But anl>thef' friend of\
mine lived for the day when she could enroll in lhe1
university and unlock the doors or ignorance....
Whatever stands in the way or your self-
confidence . . . whether it's an overbite, toeing in-
ward, a 30-pound honker, hips like saddlebags,1
weak eyes, a quest for Thoreau, wrinJtle city,
hamster hair or a concave chest. fix it.
I know I never started to Live unlit I lost 10
pounds ... five off each u r arm.
Friday, April 3, 1981
Miiia It here from Honolulu with her
ecluetve printa, •MY ~
dreaMe •nd Me*ltft. The ric:helt cotora. th• boldHt print•. the cooe..t. moat com~ --. 1111
are being ahown at thl• tPedal ~. Come vltlt llW!th MIMa 111 our
ChafnP118M eno.fng. 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Second;.himd sffw.1'e does kill
.
. •
him several of yow-columns. Re aays. "Don't
ahow me any more 1arba1e bt Ann Landers. She ls a nut on the subject."
Please tell me lf t&e danaen ol .eeood-band
smoke are anti-tobacco industry propa1anda, aa ,
Georae says, or is there something to it? -
MARY lN WINSTON-SALEM
Dear Mary: Tell GMf'le .._. ·~ NII&"
read u latelftUq ec!Kortal la tile New Y•
Times receady ud ahe'd Uke to allare It wl~
bJm. Here la an escerp&:
"A • ..,_ •t•dy· la Japan llaa fMJld &Ila&
aoa·amottaa wives of lleavy amollen denlelled
laa1 eucer at a •lll'Pri•lnC rate. Tiley ~ad
be~•me 'passive amokers' wllo re1•la~ly
breatlMld amolle In &lie air. TH a&ady, 1paaala1
14 1ean ucl zt.5,... people, foaad ~at ....
sm6kl.Qg women married to lleavy smokers ..
DEAR ANN LANDERS: It b a well-known fact
that· we all Joee millions of brain cells every day .
What I want to know la, doel tbe ueeulve use of
alcohol make us lose tbem any f uttr? When a penon
1eta older does tbe Ion of braiJl cells contribute to
senility? -WORRIED AND WANT TO KNOW IN
FT. SC01T,KAN.
DBU WO&&lll:D: Tllleeueui•e ue of al.W doe1, ..._.. ,,, .. ee a loU el iN'alll ceUa, ... W.
eu1Mre8M&lleebaeeeof...-,.
0a11rie...aun1We:Bea9drtdenwMl&op t ~ ..... • laereue la Wala upaeU7. Tile tame~ a,.U. .. lleaYJ .. ak'll'I WM kick ~e ......... X-ray1 •• &WI' Mack luC• tua a lleal"1plM....._sb .. elJM .. tU.
Planning o ~dding? Whal'• rlghl? Whot'a
wrong? AM I..attdef-1' compld~IJI MW .. 'TM B~'a
Guide" wUl rtliew your On.detJI. To recftt>e o COPJI,
1end o doUGr, plUI o long, ulf~r~ued. 1tomped
envelope (lB cents poatogeJ to Ama IAttdtts, P.O. Boz
11995, Chkogo, IU. 60611 .
i ; Aries: New proj ect succeeds
FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): New project is
destined to succeed. Timing, judgment will be
on target. You'll be at right place at crucial mo-
ment. Take initiative, make inquiries and
clarify views. Important message will contain
"green light."
TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20): Obtain valid
hint from Aries message. Clandestine con-
ference results in favorable decision. Someone
HOROSCOPE
behind scenes will support your efforts. You
may be asked to appear before the media. Focus
on club, organization or hospital.
GEMINI c May 21-June 20): Intuitive in-
~ tellect serves as reliable guide. Accent on
: friends, hopes, wishes and investment which
pays dividends. Member of opposite sex booS't.s
morale. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius persons
figure prominently. Decide!
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Emphasis on
diversification, versatility and improved sense
, of fitness. Focus also on humor, social activity,
com munication and travel opportunity .
Horizons expand, lethargy is replaced by op-
tjmism. Promotion is due.
LEO <July 23-Aug . 22): Emphasis on selec-
tivity, attention to details and a rebuilding pro·
gram. Creativity, romance. significant changes
and adventure of speculation dominate exciting
scenario. Aquarius, Scorpio, another Leo and the
num ber4 figure prominently.
dilemma in~olvin member of opposite sex will
be resolv . mini, Sagittarius and another
Virgo figu e prominently. Gain indicated
through written word.
LJBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent modera-
tion, diplomacy and willingness to make in-
telligent concessions to family member.
Domestic adjustment is on agenda. Financial
agreement or contract can be renegotiated.
Marital status also is spotlighted.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Work routine
needs close scrutiny. Element of deception ex-
ists; define meanings, see people in realistic
li ght. Pisces, Cancer and another Scorpio play
important roles. You get chance to view operat-
ing techniques. .
SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Em·
phasis on "power play;" position is strong; as-
sociates could be envious and some will be re-
sentful. Rise above petty annoyances. You'll be
s uccessful in making money and love. Rela-
tionships are intensified.
CAPRICORN <Dec . 22-Jan. 19): Transac:
lion will be completed. Don't .hang on lo past.
Now you can successfully take "cold plunge"
into future. Property settlement will be favor-
able. Aries, Leo, Sagittarius persons figure
prom inenUy. Confidence!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Original
mode of expression aids in achieving objective.
Highlight independence, take initiative, be
versatile and ready for trip on short notice. Leo,
a nother Aquarian and an Aries dominate your
personal scenario.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Puule pieces
fall into place; you can now consolidate recent
gains. Emphasis on locatvn lost articles, taking
inventory and initiating avings program.
Follow through on hunc ancer native can
become valuable ally.
Cart M. llNdletoa bu tieen appolnted
sales and leuln1 manaier by Tbe lrvine
Company commerclal/induatrlal division.
......_ .. K~ eam.&er, exeeutlve vtce pres-
ident ol 'l'be Meister Co. of Newport Beach,
announced he will be leaving the home build·
lnt firm to !orm his own company, the
Callister Group.
Boben H. Boatman has Jolljed King Ad-
vertising o! Newport Beach as senior vice
president, director of creative services.
Boben L. Cante• has been promoted to
general m•nager for the Georita-Pacific
Corp. chemical packaging division based in
~ewport Beach.
Ronald M.S. Park of Costa Mesa ranked
second in February s ales amons the 4,200
agents nationally of the Northwestern Mutual
Life Insurance Co .. Milwaukee. Park is as-
sociated with the Tim N. Templin general
agency, Santa Ana.
· WUllam E. Nelson bas been promoted to
vice president corporate security and Gerald
B. Slnyld.n to vice president medical services
at Fluor Corp. They are based at corporate
headquarters io Irvine.
8el'llard L. Lann bu been e ~ ,,.....
tdent ol Oectde11tal Enstneerlnt Co., t1M
Irvine·baaecl aubsldlary of Occidental
Petroleum Corp.
Ma•cte Natael has joined Baaso and Al·
soclatet Inc., a Newport Beacb·bued ad·
vertlaing, marketing and public relalion.a
firm, as media director.
Alu Subo has been appointed 111tstant
vice president by Bank of America. He lives
in Irvine.
Ralpll Suter hu beenJ1amed director ol
.operations at Orange-based Meuurement
SystemJ and Controls, a leadJ.nc manufacturer ·
of computer memory boardl.
Michael D. Blood bas been promoted to
trust administrator at the Newport Beach of-
fice of Title Insurance and Trust Co.
Jacqueline Day has advanced to escrow
officer at Lloyds Bank California's Santa Ana
corporate office.
Gregory N. White bas been appointed
vice president of operations and treasurer,
and Debi Wright assistant customer service
manager of Panel· Concepts Inc. of Santa
Ana.
Fluor stock plummets
By KEITH TUBER
Dell' ~I ............. R•tw
Fluor Corp. of Irvine and St. Joe Minerals
Corp. of New York City have reached definitive
agreement whereby Fluor would acquire the na-
tion's largest produc~r of lead and zinc for $2. 7
billion.
That gesture a white knight attempt to pre·
vent an unwanted suitor. Joseph E. Seagram &
Sons Inc., from gaining control of St. Joe for $2. l
billion -reflected itself on Wall Street. The agree-
ment announcement was made on Tuesday.
Fluor closed Wednesday's session at 46, down
4 ~ from the previous day's close. Volume was a
hefty 603,300 shares despite a temporary halt in
tr ading. That figure represents a record volume
for the company, surpassing the mark of 468,000
recorded March 10 of this year after its annual
meeting.
"IT'S NOT UNCOMMON to see one company
thai acquires another one show some weakness,'·
said Kenneth Clark, vice president of the Newport
Beach branch of Paine Webber.
David McNatt, an account executive tor
Bateman Eichler Hill Richards Inc., Newport
Beach, said in a buyout situation, the stock of the
firm doing the purchasing invariably goes down
while that of• the company being bought often ad·
vances. <Trading in St. Joe has been suspended
pending an NYSE investigation into insiders trad-
ing.)
"That's what happens 90 percent to 95 percent
of the time," be sajd.
"IN THIS CASE, FLUOR shareholders were
probably wondering if the acquisition would
dilute eanrlngs, whether Fluor overp~id for the company and whether the two companies can as-
similate into a workable relationship. These ·are
all psychological factors, and in this case -as in
most -probably isn't justlfied."
St. Joe received some additional good news
when U.S. District Judge Milton Pollack lifted an
order he had issued against selling off its Cana-
dian oil subsidiary, Can Del Oil Ltd., or any other·
assets. St. Joe expects lo sell it.J interest in the
company to Sulpetro Ltd. for $460 million before
being acquired by Fluor.
Later Wednesday, Fluor announced that after
the merger St. Joe's headquarters will remain at
250 Park Ave. in New York where it bas been located for many years.
IN A PREPARED STATEMENT, J . Robert
Fluor. chairman and president of Fluor, said John
C. Duncan bad agreed to continue to be St. Jpe's
chief executive officer. Duncan is St. Joe's
chairman and president.
Fluor said its intention is to let the St. Joe or-
ganization and operation COJ\linue with a high
degree of autonomy.
Duncan will become a member of the Fluor
board of directors and the executive committee of
the board. Consideration will be given to the elec-
tion of other members of St. Joe management to
the Fluor board I
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You recoup re-
cent 1055. If analytical, answers ar e found -
~~~~~~~~~jiiiimlllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'1~~~~~~~~1
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DT.7U
This is not an offer to sell nor a solicitation of
an offer co bu)' these securities.1l\r off~~
only by the Offering Circular.
150,000 to 210,000 Shares
H eritagie Bank
Common Stock
PRICE: $10.00 per aha.re
fur an Offering Circular and a Subscription
Agreement, please contoct the &ink by mail or
Mrs. Helen Wilson, AssistantO:lrporate Secrrtary,
by telephone:
ANAHEIM MAIN OFF1CE
721 North Euclid Strttt
Anaheim, California 92801
(714) 991-3860
THE BUSINESS BANKERS
erit~e ank
Mm*rFDIC
Check out CHEK/DI:
More wns to earn on yDUf dlecklilg. /
Cheek Q......._ c:.rd.
Check-ReMrve Credit
Protection .
on 'f04Jr approved good credit.
e.rnsv.~ ......... ..._
~ dely on~ 0£.K/tt•
blllnce.
lngs uaoclatlona aay they l01t 1$1 mUUon of de·
posits. MeanwbUe. MMMF aNeta have •urged to
SllO billion from $7S bllllon lut December and $10
billlon Jn 1978.
Hl1h ratea paid by funds also adda to the de·
mand for short-term money, aatd Willlam B.
O'Connell, exe~uUve vice ptesi·
dent ot the U.S. Leaaue of Sav·
ln1s Aaaoclatlo11•1 and th1.t1
helps "accelerate infiatlon and
impede the Federal Reaerve's
efforts to contain it."
IN A LIST OF ACCUSATIONS, the thrifts
claim MMMFs worsen inflation, underm~e bous-
lng, threaten homeowner equities, deprive-local
businesses of funds and make long-range planning
In fact , he said ln a""'t'ecent
interview, "by cre at.in1 so
many fmanciaJ problems, the
lunds threaten to underm1ne the
new administration's entire
anll·inllation strategy.'' cuNN'""
He and otheni say withdrawals from thrifts as
a r esult of higher rates offered by MMMFs are
depriving the housing market of mortgage money
at a time of potentially great need, since members
of the post-World War II baby boom are now
reaching the prime home-buying ages.
almost impossible. .,
Ttte thrift industry claims the MMMF threat
to local economies results from their draining hun·
dreds of millions of dollars from small com-
munities to big-city and overseas banks.
In the seven weeks ended March 18, the sav·
WANTED
·'Every homeowner has a stake in money be·
ing available for housing," he said, warning that
continued shortages of mortgage money could
destroy the housing market and cause existing
equities to shrink.
DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewell by Joseph purchases diamonds.
gemstones, gold and sliver lrom private indivi-
duals and estates Careful examinatoo and
evaluatlOC'I by our experts Highest pnees paid.
1()..9 daily. Sal 10-6 Cloeed Sunday. Phone
loday. Alk tor Betty Grace or Erle Zaias«us.
He and Paul A.. Schosberg, president of the
Savings Association League of New York State,
conceded that the basic problems were inflation
and economic uncertainty, and said that until
these are reduced the thrift industry wouldn't be
able to meet demand. For the next few months at
least , said O'Connell, mortgage money will be
"very, very tight."
A llV.04llOll Of Ill.Inf r04'. 011(11. (I() YlAJU
J[W[LS by JOStPH
9ool\ Cont Plaza, Costa Meu • 5'0.9066
ASKED WHY THRIFTS don't seek higher
rates for depositors, O'Connell replied that such a
course "would only make matters worse by
pushing mortgage rates higher and aggravating
8U)lncl»~am'la.-~~--,
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~
At Creative we have the m_oney you need
Loans from $25.000.oo· for any business or
investment purpose
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker.
•All loans secured by a comb1na11on ol
real and personal pro perty
4425 JAMBOREE ROAD . SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH CAllFOANIA 92660 (71 4) 752 792~
~ft. ff.JJ ,SfJrf!'~~~~E~~
1st in Features, Performance, Price!
TRS-80 COLOR COMPUT~
Froml389
• Spectacular Color
Graphic• and Exciting
Sound
• Plug-In Program Paka for
Entertainment, Personal
Use
• Write Your Own Programs
And Save Them on
Cassettes
• Easy for Beginners to Use.
Expandable for Experts
Us" you• own color TV and
C3S5eltl' <f'COrdet or buy Ollt~
RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS
TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000.
AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS
AND DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR USTINGS.
.. . ·. . .... . ... ... ·. . ·.· .. ·. .
National Mortgage Exchange Educational Foundation
• , A Non-Profit Corporation
Presents a Seminar On
THE OVERLOOKED ULTIMATE
TAX SHELTER
LI.ARM lHI AMSWBS TO 1'HISI 9UISTIOMS:
1. How to contribute tax sheltered dollars.
2. Maximize tax favored growth
a. Retain use of tax sheltered dollars
b. Trust deeds, T-Bllls, C.D. ·s
3. How to recei~e tax favored pay out.
SEMINAR BEGINS AT 7:00 PM
POUMTAttVAWY
Thurtdey, Apt I 2
NallOf'l&I Mortgage E1u:ll&nge
10101 Staler Ave., Suite ; 13
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Rare C:O.na & St•mpe
GOLD & SIL VER
Prices for 4·1·81
0•1-CleM Ul'-M Slfy.,. Cl. llJ.IJ
Krug99r-
M•Pl•L••f IOOOCor-s
SOPnoo 90,. Sllnr B•
.... • Sell uv.• uaa.• uu.oe ~-• .... , .. ~ ...
$6)4 .......... .,,... ltlS'!j, ,,_" ___ ... Cal..,c-..-.
(714) Ss&-a50
South CoHI Plan Vlllege ----IAcr ___ c_ ...... ,
WE BELIEVE IN
B~~GOlb.~LE
R. Ph. '· ~-JI
We tn rt-al hard t
m a k e ~· o ti r ,. 1 s 1 t s a plea~ure' All or us Will
sincerelv do our best to
plt>ase ;ou Pharmacy s
('ode or Ethics d1re<'lS us
to consider ~our better
health to be more 1mpor
tant than greater profits
WP \\11lin.!!l~ obey
If 'ou "1sh our pro·
fesi\1onal opinion about
any product "e ~upply .
"'e are glad to gl\'c ~·ou
11n 1 nformNl. unt;11ased
~111:-.wer
This pharmac~ bt•lh·es
1n the "Golden Rule '
You deser\'e and will get
rrom u s the sa me
eo urt es~ a nd dt>pe n
dabilitv "e e xpect
ours el \'E'S "hen we make
u purchase
YOL'R DOCTOR CAN
PHONE L:S when you
need a medicine Pick up
vour prescription if shop·
ping nearby. or v.e will
deliver promptly without
e'ltra charge A great
'man) people entrust us
with their prescriptions
May "e co mpound
yours~
PAaL LIDO f'MAIMACY
Ft...D•.wy JltHo .........
"".rertlHcll ' 2.asao
' '\ /·) ;~,
St•"fng
•New
BuatneH
Ac c cordlnt to
C•llfornl• .....,.. .. •nd ''°'..... CoG9 (lee. 11tf0 to 17UO) •II
,.r.-ne dllllfll ~
"" .. ' • flc:eltiow ....... llllllt fl .. • Mat-nt wttll tlle C:.Unty ei.,i. ........... "pu ....... d
lour tlm•• In • MW~ Mf""'t tM
•r•• In wfllch 1110 IMtolnooe 11 loCMo4.
Tho 11ttlt110ftl It "~"''" ., ·-llftd ,, nlCOHatY In ~Ill rour ltutlnoH name.
Matt -inllt r14111ho ~of fllllll .. lpen ~"'"' ............... Tito OAIL Y Pf LOT ~---.and ,., ............... w.
llave ••Ille Met-.Y '*'"'' and......._.• dally Hrwlee to Utt
Oro1110 Cov11tr Ce••·-·,_..., ., ...... 0111 ................. ,
•11&.llO Ille LIGAL DIN~.._,,
lat. HI tor ••r• ..,., .............. .
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
aystem and provlde treater atabUity and aafety
for sbareowners."
FinaJly, they would requJre the tundJ to invest
a portion of asset.a ln short-term U ,S. covernment
securities, ''to help fight inflation and reduce the
cost of federal borrowlnt."
Suc h a portfolio, O'Connell claimed,
would reduce MMMF yields and reduce also the
potential for major eavings loases at thrifts, as
well u lowerint Treasury bill rates by increasin1
demand for them.
"That in ttum would reduce the institutions'
"Cost ol money market certificates and also have a
modest benefit in helpln1 efforts to bring the
federal budget into balance."
NASDAQ SUMMARY
N•nw GtrWHh h1l~~Pt TuEn WI
AMedSv L.om.ic un
Htl•l\Try
'*ol•n<MI BiotcllA Oa1c0Pt1 or .. lrl S<rlPC>H CIL.•V \ JllnEI \
Kno0vL.k CrwnAm
Hemerelrl o P•nClr
P•lnlMQ P•lln<I
Un•Eno M•1rAI 8MpCm
TeaEn "'" 0<elol8 9
N•me Fl•Gll
W\tl•r W1 0KNY \
Goldld un ::~~·;
G•nlAtt W\lhr un MrllrO' un Gr.,,, lnlmlE• SunMtl CnP.cMn
E•<•llb W\IT•t
F•bWlll MnrR> CHNJ W1 ~~;:~J Fr•QCtt ~~·~·:: UnCtyG\ ICCA h ell VIWIEI
UP$ U~ll'o '"C'li. Pct Up SS.O
UP 4H Up U .O
l)p u.o
Up 1.J.J Up 22.1
UP no Up 191
UP 11.S Up 112 UP 11 2 Up ...
Up 1)9 Up IS-' Up IS.O Up 1' I
Up 1' J Up I• J Up 14 l
Up 14 J
UP 140 UP ll I
Up 13• Up 116 Uo 110
,.,, .. \it
•• ,... • 111 ..
JV. ..
131;. lltJ ., • • Ir.
1-. • 1'-l<• .. ..._
17 l'• . ., . \
11•. • " S9 .,. l 1l 10 • 2\. 11 • 2 ,,. . ~ l'• • .,
1 I • .. 1 ..
11 • 21 t •• • ... l
• • 1' I I
l • .. '1., • '"' )I) 1 + )I 1
DOWNS
Ul\I tOl.. 1 .,
l'-8
c,~ 01r"soo
.. 011 IS i I'> 0 11 IS 1 ,, 011 118
I 0 11 11 I
'>Ott 11t • 011 111
1S Off 11 I •, 0 11 10s
•• 0tr •.s "-Oii 9.1
'• Off q 1
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.. 011 u ... 011 1.9
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\o 011 /I
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" 0 11 • 9 ••Off ._,
NEW YORK (API CalYln 11<11100 C " 2 NL. IDS NO 9 • 10 11 'Mtd AM , 40 , "I Pru SIP ll 1S IS OJ Am Incl J '1 NL -TIM fot!owlllv -lutlcll "IO II lt c:fa 1)~ NL. Mull 9 ~ 10 11 MMllOpl 1'.. Puln•m i:-. I Anoe: 9'1 NL
IAlllOl\S, 1441Pled by C•ncln 9 41 10 1f EQ Inc 21" NL Pr09 I OS s" MONY F 11 '14 .. " Con• "0. I! J/ lnYt\I I .s NL'
IN N•liof\11 As-· 0 1•1d l 03 l 11 E.cll JS... NL T .. E• J,. J ,, MSB Fd It°' NL. lnl EQ 11 1' .. .. OcHn I ~ NL •tlon of Se<.IUlllH Ht Inc II 14 1101 M•gel lO OS NL. SICKll 11 n 2l •1 Mui B.., II 14 11 II c,..,.9 ll » 14 .0 Slt in Rw Fd\
0.•l•n, Inc• •re Month 9 IS 10 W Mun 8d •.SJ NL Selecl 6 • 11' Ml F Fllno\ ~ Grwlh 11 JO I]•• B•l•n 22 01 NL Ille "'''" •• wl'tl<ll NI ws 9 SS 10" F1.,.1 "·" NL V•r Py 10 01 10 " Fund I. 9 .., Ht Yid IS Ql ,, ll C•P Op n II NL ~':.~ ,..:u•= Cn~•:;,-.,, .. ~:. 9 M GH"ii'n,Seco 91·°'• NL1n•A•S11 sn •.1' Gr•lll •O. 6SS tncom Sii 62J'l «-·• .,..., .,, sold (N•I •»I '~·rt FO 1' t7 JI "'I NL. 'Sl•I l3.ot NL. N•IBd 111 9 lnve\I IO OI 11 01 U ~gel ll 69 14 9' ..,_ -HI YIO 10 14 NL. '"Y Fd 10 • NL. Mutual 01 ~ Op\n I• )9 I! IJ Tmpl Gt &.QQ 1.14 u l1>el °' "°"91'1 ChP Olr 21 11 NL LI MUI\ 1 71 NL JP Gr Ill ll Ill 14 1• Am•r 9 71 NL Tu E• 11 U 19 04 Tmpl W 11.13 10 11 lv•lu. plus MIH Cf\Hlnul JI. NL. Purltn 11 90 NL. IP Into I •1 1 71 Grwlll S 2• ~ 12 V1\I• 1111 II II Trn\ Cai:> 10 21 II II
<haro-1 '#ltd Colonl•I FUl\ds S.ltm t.• NL l•nus '• NL. lncom I 16 I II Voy•9 '' 11 11 •I Tr"• Inv 110 I 91
Abl• ~~ ... ~L ~~:"Ill ': ~ 1~ ~ Thrill 9.10 NL lolln H...c:oc:k Ta Frt 9" 10 .. A•rnbw ) .. NL. Ir .. E~ 1118 19 4) Acorn F 11 It NL. H• Yl•IG 1 00 I .U .Tr•no JI.TS NL. Bond ll Of 14 1J I Mui Slit O 9' NL Atvtr• I 19 NL Tudt F II Ila NL AO\I IS 26 NL ln<om 'lO • It Fln•n<l•I Prog Grwlll 1112 12 ~ N .. u T ~ U NL. S•leco S.cur TwnC: GI 1) 01 NL Afutur• IS n NL. Opln lt Oii IJ.ot Oyna 1.119 NL B•l.n 11• 9 S2 N•1 "v•• 10 60 NL. Equll 1111 NL Twr>C S.1y1! 1J NL. AIM Fund\ T .. Mo IS .. II.~ lnd11st '·" NL. Tu E• 9 » 10 11 N•llnd 16 2) NL. Gr•tll 111~ NL USAA GI 11 se NL. CY Yid IS 15 .. 42 C:olu Giii l1 OS NL lncom 1.54 NL <•ulmn 1.12 NL. Nat S.curttlH lnco 11 44 NL USAA Inc 9 n NL
EdSOI\ 14'29 II 11 Cwllll A8 1.13 I l3 F sBt 2~"!!'°",, ~. IS" <emper Futids B•l•n 10.tt II 44 SIP•ul ln•nl Uni A«u un.1v•rl
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Amcp 12 26 13 40 co;:~' <"J4~l· ~ Sloe-1:61 •·•1 STum11m 11•3.ls's 21,•.8ST1 SIOCk 11 76 12 u Oevtl SJ 91 NL. Con Ir>< 10.0 11 44 ' · •·-T •a Ex LJO I .. tc . T •• E• 8 01 1 SJ I n<om 10 11 NL F 1dut 1'.JS 30.'lt A Mull l2'5 Ul3 lncom •JO ····~WIEQ 915 10.21 Tot RI IJ.tl 143} NEL.lle Func:t lnll Fd "" NL Hi Inc 1]001411 An Gin 10.11 II.OS Mun 8d l.OI 1Uj14 W•ll Jill NL. <•rstoM Funos EQull 10,41 12 ,1 MM8 1 ;» NL. lncom 913 10 I•• Bond 11 . .IO 12 "7 CO<'l lr>v U.11 ll 11 Fl\d Giii s'21 S /1 Cu\ 81 13.'9 14.SI Gr•lll 1141 19 "9 Spec I SO It NL. Muni 6.29 6.SSI
Fd Inv 1.90 9.13 COl\Sl•I c. 10 n NLIFoun.,.r """-'· . Cu• 82 1'.5' 1110 lncom 10.lt 10.ff hFr• " NL UISct 919 10101
G•wlll 12.lt "·°' COl\Ullv un41v•ll G '" s LtCI NL. Cu• 84 l.ll I.ts A•I EQ 10 °' 11 II *u•llV Fund\ V•no 12 JI 13 '5 lnc:om I l9 l .tt COl\I Mu\ 1.20 NL. 1n'c':m IS 43 NL. Cus KI 1.18 1.21 TnE• '04 6 J2 Bonet I 43 I IS Uld Svu 6 c9 NL ~C~ US I0 01J Ctrv C.c> '"" ti.II Mul•I t9' 10 41 Cu• Kl 6.91 7.•3 N•v~ro-r a.<-m Equiv I~ I J4 .,.,. L.1rw Fa •rs l.24 f 1 O.l•wue GrOUI> s 1 · • Cus SI II 93 20 6' E t• ~ u L. I t tO ~· \0 91 Fund IS IS 16 IS A Wsll Mt • )4 'II 0•<•1 u OI 1• .. Fr:.:lln ~· NLI Cu• SJ 10.•5 11'0 G:~'~ J3;; NL. Uni~:: • ii 10'901 lnc:om /:JO 13'
m•r 0-., 0 •1•• 1'.2' 1111 AGE 3.4> J 74 Cu> SA 10 SJ II SO L.tbly J.IO NL. S.l~ted Fl.nds ~ L•v GI 1111 11.llt C•P 8d 'J.! • '4 O•l<h 1 Ol I .. Bt-n S:tJ .::311 lnt.,nl. i'1 S.10 Mani\\ & SS NL Am 5'1• I ti NL Spl Sit 12 19 11.SO, Enlrp IS 21 16 10 T • Fr• • 41 •. IS ONTC 14 Oii IS "I ,,,, .. , 12.99 14.10 Perin 16 '4 NL Spl Sii• 11 00 NL. Mt<• Sander\ HI Yid • " 10.03 OelU 'u 9... Grwth 1'20 .... L.Hl"!llon Grp S<llus II OS NL S.ll9mM1 G<OUI) lncom 10 IS 11.0'I,
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Eull 41 J9 NL. OodCa St 11 C2 NL C•pll 9 ~ 10 . I RU.h 11 00 NL. NOrU\I 10 5' NL. Un In< 11 J9 12 :rt OtB\11 I ~~c!"' ~= 11,l~ g~:",!s"' IS... NL EQull s:9S 6:41 hFOI I 01 NL. NY \l•nl 9 '1 10 4' Sent1,..1 G.--JA 12 NL.' H•rlK It .0 I) 11 A··~ C..,,J -F•Hl<IS Inc L.11• Ins 10 • II " N1111ffn I 14 I 41 Apea ..,..,,.II I 0Ytrs I •
P -I ... _ I ·-NL. Cmrc• _V.,I L.lndn• 12.7' NL. Om•o-""' NL. B•IM I so 110 SI l2 NL 1 •<e -9 JI.. Otol IS SS ,.... Ind Tr •Ml L-..tS S.vlH 0... Wm II.. NL. Com s ,, " IS 41 E•B• I 6'.90 NL A ~1~':!~ ~= : : ~·~r ... ~i~\ ~ -Piiot :..11 £.·~" ::·-NHL Oinhelnwt Fd Grwtll 13..12 14 u EaFd I as I• NL I A H•rllg J.ot NL SOI Ill< I U NL ;,f P•c 16.31 NL. L;;: Abllllt IO L. pen 10 36 11 l2 Se<lvol• H 16 NL FtdE I 4061 NL
A •n~ln<I s 'lJ s 1• r .. E• 10 '° NL. fee'·~~ !!-.ll ~NL. I Alfllld 9 n 9 '4 H Yid 11 l2 "u Sen(ry 23., zs.tt t:~f I s.: 1r2~ A ln~I 142' tL.I Tllrd C L'1 NL!E'4S -I &nddb 9 '4 IO S4 Inc ~ I OI l .7s SMar-.F-
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1t1111L7.s70
7 1$1 Gr-~ · ~CFOO 12•.0l39 H! I ••l.n 9.01 9.IS•S8 Eqtr 16.'3 11.SI Tn1co l0.22 NL. HIYIO 'II 10 ~ • T' ' Grwll\ '-l2 ··" ... . i..-Grwtll 9,SS 10 44 $8 II.Gt ',. , .. W•ll•I 11.2• NL.
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BNC Hiii 13' II NL Am Ldr •• , 10 °' •Cao Ind IU7 13.~ •••lit 12.'1 1).11 Pioneer i:unc:t. Com St .. 21 •• 1 Ww•1 Ill EQ 30.~ NL ••t99f G ' II. h 12'JO • L. IC._T. 'JO 9.51 C•P I 1' ... 21.113 Bond L ,, .... 0 1 ... rs S.9' '.s K lllC J.... NL. 100 Fd ~io NL. .. r~cm 11 • .. 11N14 11t lnvst 11:44 1uo Eci1 u 8d '·'° 10.00 Fund 2uo u so Proon 1.00 1,74 WOOd su .. 11en: 101 Fd 10,, NL 0 I . . ... lndlC UI..... H Inc 1.ti •. " II Inc 13.U 14.ff ti: rm GI 10,21 N '"\ltg SJ.07 NL BostOI\ Co • Ppn'tF ~~·fo::·~ n.OU.I -v•ll HI 011 •.ts 10.)6 Plan Inv 11.41 NL SIFrm Bl 12.a NL. ,Neuw IUI NL IPI Inc 't2.t1 tl.1' r' F .:41 NL. ""a... 1"'4 14.AO lnlTrm t ,IS IO.CK,p119rtf\ 1140 19,02 &tS1r .. 11nv l'I,.. 13M NL
Jiii\ Cap 2101 NL u~ G~ 7 .. NL ftYHIOf'I a.-: LtM•I 9,IO 9,90 Plllrn<I 14.97 1'.36 11.•Ch 11.02 N NL -No ·-• I Fnd 10'29 ti lJ "" 10$ 8d 4.ff '·~ MunHY .... t .00 Prlc• Funcl~ F•dl ~.IS N , .. ,es cll«Otl .: ... llNr Go . Firi11r G~ NL. IOS Grt 1UI u:u Munlin ..,, '·" Gtwlll 14... NL. ll\llUI 64.'7 64 I -PreviOuS 4111'' c..,.. II.SJ' Nd "= ~ NL. IOS HIV 17• J.to !"•cFd 11.52 ~2.32 lncom l.14 NL. SlaHman F\#11b• llUOI•
l $50.,000 to $500.,000
,INa)ME PROPERTY SE<X>ND8
• l•te.nn ~ ,.tllM'K ··---eC.-wcW ............
• I
T·
~~
•• Boles t r ades
fo r big profits
. It'• not eveq one who aoes around sayln1 he'• lo
the futest-IJ"QWln1 bmlAeaa I.here lJ. John M'. Boles
saya lt -and lH= H)'1 It with a lot of confidence.
Jo 1979, Boles • Co .. based in Menlo Park bad
11ale1 of $200,000. '
In 1980, the comp~d about S5 miWon.
Thia year Jaek belleYet be bu a..._ at
reacbiACSZSm.WlCID lD 1aJe1.
That's rapid arowth, all n•ht, but lt'a no~
compared to what Boles sees ahead. lo 10 years he loo~s to ~ doing an annual volume or $18 blWon
whic h would '
put him ln the
league of cor-
porate iiants.
How many U.S.
companies. did
$18 billion last
year? Fifteen.
There are a
f !'J -.,-u.-.-•• -, .. -,n-;c-· j.
~ouple or .a~ai.iog aspects to Boles' predictions. One
1s that h~ s in a business most people never heard of.
~nother is that it involves absolutely no manufactur-
ing. Boles doesh 't make anything.
. So what does he do? Jack Boles is an interna·
tional tra~er, moving goods out of the United States
and b~nging o~er products into the country. He buys
goods m a foreign country and sells thvi In another
foreign country.
~l's an ope~ation modeled on the international
~rada~g co.mf.!an1es Qf J apan. the biggest one of which
is_ !'rhtsub1s~1. whose annual turnover is now $60
b~ll!on. But Just 10 years ago Mitsubishi was doing $18
b1lhon, Jack Boles' target for 1990.
. . BOLES REASONS THAT the American economy
1s r~pe for t~e large-scale entry or trading companies.
We re. running a huge defi cit in our balance or trade.
m~anrng we pay more for our imports than we gel for
our .e.xpo~. And the vast majority of American com·
pan1es d~n t do any exporting. The trading company
can step _rnt<! that breach. One Japanese trading com·
pany_. N1tsui, aJreadr does so much business here
that 1t ranks as our sixth largest exporter. according
to Boles.
A trading company should not be mistaken for an
3:gent. The difference is that·a trader actually takes
title to the goods. It buys them from the manufac-
~urer -and its job then is to resell them <anywhere
in the world I.
. THE FLEXIBILITY OF a trading company is a
little breatbla1ting. ll 's a deal maker on a world
scale. Bol~. for example, has marketed U S.-made
computers m Europe and China.
This C?ncept has excited a lot of people who see
trade bar:ners between countries coming down. Boles
has on his desk right now a stack of resumes from
people w~o. buy his gospel, that the United States
needs a bag international trader
Not being in the manufactunng end of the busi-
ness, Boles does not require a lot of people. Although
he ex~cts to tr~nsact more than S20 million in busi-
ness this year , his total staff numbers only 45.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HEW YORK(API FIMI 00..·J°"es ••IP
N EW YOltK (AP) -S.IH, w..ii. prtce lor Wed., • 1.
•"4 net <'*'\Je o1 IM llllla"" mo•I ectlve STOCKS Hew YOfl< S1oc1' E•<,,.noe 1u.,.s lO Ind ~ HIQll Low Clow ChQ
lndln;_ N lion.lly al more !Nn St ' Amer CM 1, 114,SOO 4.Jllt • 4'11 IOOl.2' 1cno.u 1001 .. IOI• 14. 10 l1
IBM "2,CIOO '2~ , 'I> 2.9 Trn -11 '41.111 4l' 11 ~ •• 1 °' SNrsRoM> 7n.100 1•~ • "' u Ull IOt ... 110.J7 lot /0 10',.. 0 11
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unOltCel ' 4tf.4GO l"l6 • -. Ten4yCp • 4U,IOO to t \Co Te.H CO In< •1,400 JI~ Gulf 011 •1.100 :r.\. ~ >,
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW VOAK (API -S.lea, W9CI P'IU
encl Ml <l\lnalt of the ten mo•I •< tlvt ~IClll\ Stock E•<Nn9t ••WH tr.ciln9 ...tl-lly •l ...-e u..n \I · Gta .. P9i lSJ,700 12"' • \I AangerOll I 271,IOO IS +I~
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Wernrcom wt 132 400 "'"" CrystelOll • 129:200 JS._. • . h lnslfllm Sy1 124,IOO 1 HouOllM 124.«IO SI
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW YORI( (AP) -The IOllowlng 1111 "'°"' Ow H .. vol-. Stoc:M E•<Mn99 110<111 Mid WMrMU ll•t lleve 00,. "I> Ille most -dewn in. most o..ci 011 r::u~:: .. ',..,... ,.._.rdl"' of volume
No secwrltltt trecll"9 below a ere Ind-
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11 lndplPLJ Jlf 15 • l¥t Up 1.t U OnOate n 17 + 1'-Up t t
ll OKC Coro 40t 124 + 10 Up 1:1 14 Purealnd JO + 1.,. Up e.e
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16 1..ITCO 00::. + 2\Ao Up U
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MtUC. tO ,. .. U ~ w , "41M .... ~-....
..... 100 '""""'· ,.., tl'O'I' .... ·-·· 1111 11.00.
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORIC (API APf I
AdYenud O.cll-Unchano-o Tolel l""" New hlgltl New towt
WHAT Al.Alli CoO
NEW 'l"OAK , .. ,...,
'-.;;
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Apr
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IS4 •
I Prw
Attv•n<..i
Oe<ti-Unc.M,...ci
Total••-• New llltflt
N•• 10~
,_JI, cW.
2)4 no 171 20l
IOt ...
Ml SI
4 1
METALS ~•cNMUY
C .... r ., ... ., Un1$ •-Cl. U S O~llM
h Of\S
LAU :M·lt cenl• •pound.
IJllC 41..,·<iJV. cenue pouncl, Oellv•red
Tllo ST.OS» Melell Weeli. <-lie lb
Al1tlftl-1• cen11 a pouno, H. v
Merciwy 1420,00 per flHk.
1"1•11111111'1 '522.00 troy 01 , H y
SILVER
Hendy I Herm.,,, sn 10 per lrov ounce.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
WeclolaOay
L-: mornl"!l ll•lnt "'·IS, UD Sl.00 L...._: altet""°" ll•lnt 1514.ll, up SO.SO
l"•rtl: •119,,_, ll•int U J7 '1, "D ll 1S
,.,.,._., llatne 1511 "· up 13 o .
l:uicll: l•le afternoon ti.lne U14.00, un
:l>en9"; U17.00esJ<ed
M .. 11fr A M.,ll'la11: only oally quot•
UIUS,-. I0.!4 .
........... , only clelly qvol• """ .... I0.50. . ....
• .......,.., only delly -l•brlC.tef UM.a, llPIU.2.
SYMBOLS
THE l&VINE SHOW IS the only opening on
the Orange Coast this weekend, while three other
productions will be drawing their final curtains.
They are:
-"The Merchant of Venice" at Soutb Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center Dpve, Costa Mesa
(957-4033). Closi111 performances tonight through
Sunday at 8 p.m. with weekend matinees at 2:30.
-"Murder at the Howard Johnson's" at
• FRENCH-
PORl WITH SUB-TITLES
c.:.:::1::.~ ... ';: ~;; .. ~...,., ·1 NOW PlA YING tm ~
THE FINAL
&CONFLICT
THE LAST CHAPTER
-• ''Tbe Aa-ence of a cello'' at tM Colta
Ilea• Ch1e Playhc;>utt, on UM Ofaqe COWl\1
F alr1round11 Coat• Meu <1N·5UI), playte1
Fridayt and SatunSay1 at a:ao tbrou1b April 11.
-"Relatively Speakln1" at lb• Laru•a
Moulton Playhouse, 806 Laiuna Canyon Road,
La1una Beach (494-070), playlnf Tuesday1
throuab 8aturday1at8 p.m. until Aprl 11. ·
Al.80 ON TB& BOAaD8 and continuing their
respective n.au are: •
-"Chapter Two" at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, l50J S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana
(9'79-5511), playtn11nlfbUy except Mondays at
varytna times throush May 3.
* FOR TR~E OF YOU looking ahead to ·nnt
aeaeon at the local theaters, thre:e community
playhouses have unveiled their plans for 1981-1982
on the Orange Coast.
-"God's Favorite" at the Newport Theater
Atta Center, 2$01 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
(6'1$·31'3), playlna Fridaya apd Saturdays at 8,
Sundays at 2, tbrou1h April 18.
-"Everythlnc ln the Gardea" at the Newport
Harbor Actors Tlieater, S90 Moote Vista St., Costa
Mesa (tickets available at the box office), playing
Thursdays tb.roult> Saturdays at 8 p.m. and this
Sunday at 2:30, until April 18.
The Huntington Beach playhouse wiU open
with a musical, "Gu'a and Dolls," in September
and follow with a new comedy, "Love, Sex and the
IRS," Alter the new years rolls in, tbe Huntineto•
players will offer "Angel Street," "Ring Around
the M6on," "Visit to a Small Plant," "A Man for
All Seasons" and "The Gazebo."
Waite plays priest
Al the Westminster Community Theater, these
shows have been scheduled, not necessarUy in or-
(fer: "Green Grow the Lilacs" (the non-musical
version of "Oklahoma"), "'l'he Front Page," "The
-. Haunting of Hill House," "The Seven Year Itch,"
"Middle of the Night ... and "The Pajama Game."
.HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Ralph Waite stars as a
Catholic priest mist.akenly arrested for armed rob-
bery ln the CBS movte •'The Gentleman Bandit.''
The movie, filmed in Yonkers, N.Y" also stars
Julie Bovasso, Jerry Zaks, Joe Grifasi and Estelle
Parsons. It is based on an actual event.
The Newport Theater Arts Center will in·
augurate its new season in October with a musical.
as yet unselected, followed by a thildren's show in
December. Then will follow "Bleacher Bums."
"On Golden Pond" .1nd a revival of "The Bad
Seed.''
•
/ [fti)~==
SNEAK
PREVIEW
TOMORROW AT 8:00 P.M.
OFAN
IMPORTANT NEW
FILM
I Rl~4:.cl
C•Ht f W(Nfl(fH (.(NfU•Y JO•
CINEDOME 22
WEST CHAPMAN AVENUE
ORANGE • 634-2553
"THE FINAL CONFLICT" WILL BE SHOWN BEFORE AND AFTER PREVIEW.
Crack into a plate of hot. steaming crap legs. Or pop ~ generous
serving of delicious Popcorn~ shrimp. And then do it again!
· It's all you can eat. Every day of the week.
Each special is served with your choice of a crisp tossed salad or cole
slaw, baked potato or rice pilaf. and another favo rite, rourdough bread .
All }'Oll can eat. All week long.
.
Alaskan Snow Crab ~egs
All you can eat ................... $10.95
Popcord Shri_mp
All you can eat ................ -.... $6.95
Veteran emcee Bert Parks rehearses for the
upcoming Mrs. America pageant at the Las
Vegas Hilton Hotel along with Judith Pullen,
Mrs. Kentucky , and Wendy Kae Womble.,
Mrs. North Carolina.
• ~ ,. ,.
(!
·'
lluat'• .,, .... .,
It is to Gunther Gebel·Wllllam1 and bis son Buffy, 10, featured ~ PrbJect
Peacock special "My Father the Circus
, King'' tonight at 8 on NBC, Qwmel '·
CHANtll. LISTINGS
Ing ............
dn1-... "Y 10 c.ed\ a
-,nan ..-int ,...,..,._ =r= MIC ....
twirt Ol\vt MMI
Poallt .... Aid* up..,,.
........ Maryleu ......
~---·----··~ .. ··
•MCMIW'I ......... "
Wtian '18 .... It.-
alcohol .. ~ •
,,.,.. to .. 407'71tl, M
~total proNbltlol1.
.ITNUIOf~
MtMCllCO St-lahald~bya
1•no ol Y°"'"• wtlo ~tha ...... ot
ttlalrlaadlr.
• CN9'1M\'
0.-.: linger Muina au..
,,.,. (A) :.:--ILBNR
(J) "nC TAC DOUGH o.-.v ......
Ouaata: AoMr1 ao.... Pta
z..dar-. Johnny Dartt, Flfttl
Olmana6cwl.
I KNXT 1CBS) Los Angeles
KNBC 1NBC1 LOS Angeles
l(TlA tlnd I Los Angeles 8 KABC· TV tABCI Los Angeles
(() !(FMB (CBSI San Diego 8 Kttj· TV (Ind 1 Los Angeles
I KCST (ABCI San Diego
l(TTV (Ind I Los Angeles
KCOP· TV (Ina 1 Los Angeles
KCET· TV I PBSI Los Angeles
KOCE·TV 1PBSI Huntinglon Be;ich
N1e10NTHITOWN ~ ............. .......,....,..uw..._
°'**" ...... of .. '°"' ~ ................ .. ....... ~,,_, _.__ ............ ........ ~ °' .... ~· Loa Angalae ll••lllllOI• ""' ~ "°"' I Ml&Y,_,.,
IHAMAMA
~ JoftlWtr '-· •~1•1&.ae " ... .... "* .......... ,.,, ,.,., tat. • loclll 8'
the Mure of .. ....,.,.,.,;
'"-' -c:MdNn ot ...... ~. ''Wtlala
OIAT•"
• AU. .. THl,NA.Y
Alfltt/le .,.,._ ....,.. "°"'
..-In NQll ••~ ot
..ino .. * buddy, Joe Tidier, after a ...,_tlon
otmoretllall 18~
• liWl9ml / l.8tfWI
MllORT I ='.:' MNWINI
A TaHllan pear\ larmar.-a
wtelt ""'" Iha ....... of Atari video oarr-. e:eo• (J) THIWALTOMI
~tttaato~ • ~ daparb-·· •. tM unNenlty.
-~~ "My Father Tllll Clrcue
, King" The ra4atlonlhlp
--Clfc:ue ..,....., Gunthar Gebet·Wl*-
Md Illa -. .,.. MC*1no
cir cue performer. 11 ....,...,. . .,.
·~ "a..lr'acll" ,,...,
..... lrend. Jan.-ON-
ry. A cowboy )oumey9 to
Mallloo to tMly • _,..,..
wecm .......... .,.a.
A~~wflollwa
In • ... Cl.... Olollk·
..... ~world
baaomel ...... '°' --... • ""••ONW> Aaldll'8 ..... to -tM. Waktclna .,_ lltlancllt
IW!lrlad1811glb•
dl¥of'08 "°"' Conet.anoa. •• INllm'( .....
~--1111·.., came to*" Yori! tor
• 0011'41ilkln low yws
_.. and r11W1r i.lt, (Al
I JOaR'9 WILD .-v .....
Ouwta: Aobatt GouMt, Pia
Zadora. Johnny Dart&, Fifth
Olrnenllon, Hewoda 0.-
n-er.. --Gr08I and ;saNIM
l'MYlr#I
Aogei-Ebert and 0..
~ I-' an lrllormat1¥8
lodl at wllld'I -at the
ITIOlllla.
f':IO•lllTAXI
A* and TOf!Y lbl EWi'9 up
toradate.-amanwflo
dac6dal he ._ TOf!Y bat· w tNn Elaine. (A)
I T1C TAC DOUGH
T-..OlDHOUM
Bob \Ille ...... ~
tough •hlngllno foba,
~ e ·~·hook• '41> • toleC and .... abo&.11 nt• ....vlCe tor tr..
howe.
G TOMOMOW/ TOOAY
Aloollattftele1-tlncorn-
munlcat1on 1atallltH;
---~ In the e6eo-trora lrMlialry; • ltar1llng
~~In
tt.&ilyAr-. -·(1)---(~).A ~ M6-
KOOP • 8:00 -"Dead Rineer.,,
Bette Davia playa idenUcaJ twin alaten
in thia movie drama with KarJ llaJden.
. CBS , 10 :00 -Nune. The
premiere o a dramatic sertea ttatrlnJ
Michael Learned ud Robert Reed caee
story, photo below). ·
owed motti« (Mlcfteel
l.-..d) wM Nlufnl '° wortl at a New Yori! City
hOllplltll """ Into proO-
talM with l'#O 'OYCliy
petMnta and Mr-· -~..aAD ~ ... "'*' •Git-,,.,. ....,, Conetanoa and
pultlel lier Into ..... and
Eudora' Wtlldon and Elmo
Ty1on are 1tranded
~.r-~ .a.,.,
In In ~-4ong report,
CMraldO ,.._. eumlMl
,_ tM .., In the Mick*
'£ut 19 being lougll1.
explorlno ti. ....,.. .. of
aallotaOA. • ...... ..tlofl,
tem>rllm and In ....... and
,..,orte on the~
of ,_,.... and tM United
St.st• In the oonfllct.
• MMl&#EOI
ntlATM
"OllnQlr UX8" Brian'• ...
hangl In IN ballnce wtler1
e mlM explodM on • boo-
by-trapped pier. (Part 12)
l ~i: ... ,
NETWIOM N1W1
• lilY8Tav
''The Aaclng a-.....
die" A MM>Ue liorM train-
• call ucion Sid Halley to
~an eye on hit hone.•
bMlred oonten6er In an
UCJCIOfT*'O ,_(Part 1)
0•111~--
TN Ei•PI 1111 le "'9d fw
pelt ...... any otf!S Eanh
--~toan apparently devHtated
ple!IM.
I NIWl.VWIDGAMI M•A•t•H
~Upl·~-
.,,.,.. •• lO ..,,.,.
Frank tMt he "'°°'8 8.J.
whlle~to-d\
the jungle tor the ~
nur-.
l lAMTTA
OQCCAVITT au.: Judlttl Somogl.
11:IO e (I} THI Ai o OWOW1 o-ge II IOt'Ced to wait
hand~ loot on 1111 malcl
• OOOrman In order to
NW e big buelni8' CINI.
(R)
8 THI.sf~
CAMON
•Ill MCNIWI
MIGHTUNI ·~ 8NCTACU.AA
Holt: Wry Hlylot. A trib-
ute to the AdY9rtleing
lndu1try'1 Emergency
Fund.
•• CAPTIONED A11C
MEWi
-MIJflGHT-
tl:GO B (J) MCMIUAN &
WR --..
A con1r1e1 le put out on
JOHN DARLING
........ -... ... ....
.... up ......... . .......... ., ...... ,,
r~ ..... ''(1N1) T,...,.,_,._..._. ............... ~ ,... ..... ~ ...... ...................
l'a'~ ~ Tiie Allflllt ,...,. ..,... wtlfl
• llfJllli .. """ .-M ..... '° ... ~· beliClrtlNllrMIA~
I ,,.,,.,,..,
MCITHI a.a.: 'UP Oft
lllNllT.
Tiie ---OOfMnoe the • ,,...... of • llNll ~
ety ... NtcitMfofMCnt
pollla ..... to ---ow N l)OWtMIMt .
• OMl8TIP 9SVOND I
"The 0., Tiit Wotld w.,i
-.,... Llnooln ltOt)"' The
..,..and~~
eurroundl1111 Llncoln • ·
·=I I I latldn. 1t:IO. 1'0lllOMOW
Guelai: Anttlony CM-In;
OOfNC w..,. ~
and Mtderne; Mlateur
rocllet IMlllclet c.pt. Rob-
ert TNU: The eom.te;
~Duvall. (A)
I WT"I ~ADIAL
ONa.,.. MY9NO
"Tiie Haunting" A )'OUllG...,
man le~., by• l weird pNnoma!IOI\ alter
he mer= 11111)' let• I* belt Maftddra. ,
~t:GOG DONLAHE
~ Pr~ Jl.ik'8
Sumner-Miiier. Lene•
~. Mary JIM Boyd •
Hofrnle ADM.
• MOVIE **~ "fut And Sexy"
( 1 IMIO) Gina l.ollobriglda.
Vtttorio 0. Sica. An ettrae-
tr.. young wtdow 1'91urN
to Mr ttalan Yllage to looll
tor a hulllend.
• tmlPlllOEIT
NETWON< NIW8
1:10• MOVtE ••'h "Aoer 01 Th•
Crowd.. (1e53) Howatd eun. .....,. S1JW11ey A
,_ wanll to get '* big
chanc:e In the I~
500, but Illa flanoM hat
other plill'le tor him.
9~MMNmTT ,..,,.......
GuH1•: Tim Conwey,
Chan>.
f'rfda11'• Da11tJ•~ Mo.,1_.. •
'-MORtetG-
1
I 11:00. *'h "Frontier Horiion"
(1938) John W1yne, Jen. I n11er Jon..
11:ao D * * * "Gloty Alley" I · (1952) lelh Cal"on. Ralph
Meeker. ·-AFTERNOON-
12:00• ***"Mr. And Mre.
Smlth" (1941) Carole Lom-
bard, Gene Raymond. • * * * "Deer...., .. (1986) G*1n FOfd, 0.....
dlr>e P-oe .
I*> 9 * * "The T rlfllUra Of
Pancho W." ( 1966) Rory
c.lhoun. Shelley Winter•. s:ao Iii * ~ "e-y Llltle .
Croc* And Nanny' (1972)
l)'M Aedgrew, Vlc:t0t
M•tur..
by Armstrong & Batluk
..,..~~~~~~~~~--~
Froln 'Defenders' through 'Bradys' to 'Nurse'
ByTOMJO&Y
NEW YORK <AP) -Beginnin& auspiciously
with "The Defenders" in 1961, Robert Reed hu built
a rather successful career ln television as an actor
capableofplayinga wide variety of parts.
Re was Teddy Boylan to the 1976 ABC miAI.series
.. Rich Maa. Poor Man," William Reynolds in ABC'•
"Root.a," the recorc1:aettin1 mini.series broadcast
the next year -be reffl ved Emfny nominations for
both -and spent five years, 1968-74, as Mite Brady,
the father 1in ABC's ''The Brady Bunch.''
"l would think since I left 'The Defenden' there
have been only five or six shows I've really enjoyed,"
Reed says. ··I think the important thing is that you
get a message across, like 'The Defenders' did week
afteT week, and there
aren't many shows like
that."
"The Defenders:"
with E.G. ManbaU as
attorney Lawrence
Preston and Reed as his
son Kenneth, often was
as controversial as it
was acclaimed. The
series, in four seasons on
CBS, deaJt. with issues
like abortion, blackllJt-
ing and civil disobe·
dience 1001 before they
were common television
fare.
...__ _ __,. REGlNALD ROSE
ROBERT REID created •'The Defen·
ders" as a two-part production for CBS' "Studio
One" In 1967, and wrote many ol the scripts for the
subsequent series. The prototype. by the way,
a tarred Ralph Bellamy and William Shatner.
"YoucloaHriealikethat," Reedaays, "wlththis
parade ol wonderful people, atartlnt with ReginaJd
Rose and the other wrlten, and when it's over,
you're spoiled. You don't run into that quality of
script often, ii ever, and webaditweet after week."
Reed returns to CBS tonitht at 1000 Channel 2 in
the premiere episode of "Nurse," a six-week series
baaed on the made-for-TV movie of the same name,
broadcast last year.
Michael Learned, a three-time EmmyYinner as
Olivia Walton in "The Waltons," stan u Mary Ben-'
jamin, a recently widowed mother who returns to
worlt as a nurse. Reed is Dr. Rose, a staff physician
at the New York City hospital where.he works.
"THE IDEA 01' DOING another series appeals
to me," Reed says, "but maybe that's because I suf-
fer from the actor'• syndrome-a fear of being out of
work.Atlea.stl'mmotivatedtosomede1reeb>:that.''
Vaughan
is replaced
Grammy Award winner Joe Williams wlll
replace Sarah Vauaban u the beadllner at the 8
p.m. Oranie Cout Collese concert on Friday.
Vaupan was torced to cancel her date due
to acbedule confllcll, Oran1e Coast College re-ported. .
Williams, who baa recorded more than a
dozen albums, bu won 10 Downbeat Poll
Awards, and in tllO won hia first Grammy
Award.
Tickets for tti' concert -at ·s10 -are
available in the OCC ticket office in the Ad·
mlnlltraUoo Builtllna.
Remalntnc tickets wtll be aold for SU at the
door.
For information call "6-55.27.
In fact, Ree<t recenUy completed a six-month
run in "Death Trap," on Broadway, and not long ago
rejoined other members of "The Brady Bunch" for a
pilot for NBC called "The Brady Brides." To the ac.
tor's dismay, the two-hour movie was chopped into
four episodes, and NBC now intends to continue the
series, without Reed.
The creative drive that characterized much or
television when "The Defenders'' was a hit has, for
the most part, disappeared, Reed says. "You've got
people running the networks today who are basically
accountants," the actor says.
'''fHIEF" <R>
'
"ALL NIGHT LONG"
"XANADU" 1-i
I "F1NAL
CONFLICT" (A)
I "THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS
RINGS TWICE" (A) · 1 "THE JA7.Z. SINGER" (PG)
Like many p r ominent television actors,
Reed tries to spend some lime on Ute stage each year.
"I don't think it's fair to do a show for less than
six months,·' he says. · · 1 don't get tired or the play.
usually, but I do get tired of the repetition. I do enjoy
the creative license that the stage allows," says
Reed, whose Broadway credits include "Barefoot in
the Park" and "Av anti!" ·
"I've done shows where I've played my part
down to the bat of an eyelash the same way every
night. I don't do that anymore. I try to improve my
char acter every performance."
/,
a1•na1.aoYaa ~ LOSANG&LEl<AP>-JnlbJOlDI from tM ta&ertahim•t to aewa "* follon1 u.. uaa111Dat1on et· *9pt aaalnlt a.aid Rea1an, ABC
IJ Hld to bave Jolt St million ln ad-
.vertlslnt .-.. Tti• switch ol the
tOsear telec:ut from J(onday to Tues·
day cott the network a full nitht of
evemae earntna prhn• time pl'O·
1rammln1.
marblilJ t.borOuAi: If ,\merlca lD·
deed tUl'M to lh•:tube wbeo tt wuu
to lrlH* now, ABC WH'the network to ch009e.
bulleUD 01 tJli l!lootint, tbe ftnt clip
of the 1bootln1, the first word Ula
Reaaan bad been shot. A Vle'ffer:
1wltchiftf ehuneh soon lot tbe idea
that CBS"lmd NBC w.oul bave been
weU·terved by keeping an eye on the
AJIC monitor. "The last with the
least" had come of age,
Nobocly at the network i• complain·
ln1, of eourse (the caU to pubUc duty
takin1 precedepit and au that), But
ABC's covera1e of Monday's tra1edY
tl1uree to pay off in the long run.
ABC's cover11e of that long, ltim
Monday wn quality gtuff, fast, as ac·
curate as could be e~pected -4Jld re-
J'rank Reyrtolds oeualooa1Jy
seemed a bit more shaken by events
than some may prefer of an
anchorman in times ol crisis, bull un·
flappable Ted Koppel eventually
showed up to lend some calm to the scene. Besides, there's something to
be sald for Ute aochorman·aa-human
being aspect of Reynolds' occasional
shakes. It was a scary story.
A BC was there with t.he first
The bolom to which the natiOA
traditionally has cleaved in atreestul times belongs to CBS, whlcb la to
say, Walter Crpnkite. Cronkite was
good for many things, but he was
absolutely Indispensable as a 1uide
through frightening woods on dark nights. I
That's ~ot to disparage the work of
Dan Rather, whose performance was
c omple tely professional and
cem WSA •& ll(IU M U Tiit
Bristol UA Movies Lincoln 011ve· In Saddteback
(7 14) 5.-0·74U (71 4) 990 m2 (714) 821 ·4070 11141 581 5880
... mm111 aucM ltlll etAllCE wm11111sn1
£ dwa1d~ hM Woodbrod&e I Cooedome Cinema West
Pl4l 848 0188 \114) '>'>I 06!>!> 111 4) 634 2553 (7 U) 891 ·3935
NO PAS&a6 ACCEPTED FOR THt9 ENGAGEM£NT
WMcll 11111 Ac-.., Aiw•• lt11c" 30 °"ABC
uMlr ... ) __ r..,,n•-~ .,. lleWotr.,, "EVES OF A STRAM~" (Al l2 991·2:!00 ........ , ...... ,_ ____ ... , ...... p .... -
lA Mir.a. at Ao_r.,1
994-2400
Faculty
··~ 11)/Sll·~
.IACll N411C:MOLION A*' A.a•c A L..ANOa
THE PO~TMAN
ALWAYS AINGS TWICE flit
tJtl•,.tl•ltl •t Jl•H •
"ORDINARY PEOPLE"' 1•1
Continuous From 12:30
~ CAA.M • N._I04Y WIUI
~ "THIEF" (R) ,,....J.;. ............. ,,.
M ... c:AMf • fW.aOAY "1J)
"THIEF" (A) ••>-• ....... , .•
( f llW~I-~ ·~·. J •• ·~.I ...... · Ill c.ndl-TH£ FINAL CONFLICT 1•1 ~ Facvlty 1-.,.., CM~•· .. '"" OW• ·-oo·
---... _ ,,., ... , ....... p ..
ORDINARY P£0PLE t•t
Continuous From 12:30
I. ILMMOlf fNMl'1tj Tlll•'M 1Af~ JILi•
lit»•Y Y~ l'M-n ta Ol:AO
"EYES OF A STRANGER" (A) • ... ...,", , .... ,
I.At IUlil 2• JU,l.M 1 a .f'U
Solt ,,.,.. GMd
Thrv April I, 1911
All Sele Item• ar• Subject to
S1oc1< on H&nd. All
Photogrephle. Typogrephleel.
~lcal and Pnntlno Errora ere
Sub)41Ct to Cor~lon
If tf\e old heater
can't get It
any hotter
Time for a new one?
Energy-saving ges water
heater with glass-lined
tank, and temperature
shutoff 30 gallon.
114~5gollon .
40 gallon ..•....•..... 124.95
SO gollon ......•.•.... 164.95
all going
down the drain?
If not. pour in Rooto
to clean out hair and
grease 1 quart.
Reg. 4.49
... :..--::.-211 1:--· ~ -=-::. --.
~ t".-~ :. ,
trusty rose &
garden dust
D
D
1lqularlY. eool·bl.w'.
Over a NBC. WMri llama ....,
and Edwin Newmu ran t11ta11
ABC'1 dual wu 1waU0Wed ID Ml
1ulp1.
Kalb waa ateadj u a roet, u
usual, and dld a ftDe Job.qi anchortn1 th' lneqmlq reports, but when wu
John Chanc4'ilor?
Such evaluationJ may seem te> be
makint too rnueb of one dark day ln
the news, but the network• know bet-
ter. If there is such a UUD1 u a loyaJ-1 ty pact between news viewers and a
network, it is sealed on sucb a day as
Monday, when a new ornnilatlon'a
most valuable commodities -speed
and accuracy -are out on the
marketplace for all to consider.
I
'ORDINARY PEOPLE'" 1111 , ......
Choose Vlgoro's 10
oz rose or garden
dust 'o protect
against Inse cts.
fungus and disease.
Reg. 2 99 plastic bonanza
lmm i[~· J ·;~L M:.::~~«:ER"~
f No AM CM ltadlo Wltll 1en111on Aec_, .,,,. y-Own AM Pof\9
' •JWM :.r~n::t. \ "EruC:: Ef Ai:.: .. (A)
\ 3 ~.~~ 879:~ "Ir SAUVE" (PO)
f N9 AM CM ltadM Wllll lt nltiOIO ACCft_.T 8ri"9 .,.,.,, Own AM Pot1-
n.. i.a•~"' r .. -1"""' THE FINAL CONFLICT 11'1 -THE VISITOR 1•1
1ta1h the
trash
1''
Heavy duty 32-gatton trash can.
Won't warp. rust or c11tterl
Reg. 9.98
extend
the power"""
Assorted plastlcware at unbelievable savings.
e 20·qt. round WHt• baaket
• 22-qt. rectangular wHte bHket
• ,,, .. bu. round laundry bHket
• 2-pc. alnk' Mt
• 1-iial. decanter, 3 tumblert
• 15-qt. apout pall
• 4-pc. kitchenware aet
• 8-pc. covered bowl ••t
your choice
\
NCl.,11:"9
fllft ... WIU.ft ........ FOllllllln Valley 962-2•81
.. lA .............
la Mirada 623·.9310 .......... ,. ..,.. •.
Mclane 2h p edger/lrl mmer
g1ve1 you proteas1onal resutta
.ivothoul effort Rugged design.
#t00-2R
Sl(IL.
drill 'n
drive
2-speed ~·· cordless drllll
screwdriver from SkU 100 or 300
RPM. #2003 Reg. 49.99 3911
Conllnental 40 piece socket with '!."
and ~" Sae & Metric sizes. Comes In
handy tool kit. Reg. 19.95
1488
keep things t
Intact
Mut8f' Mechanic provides you with
thlt Swlngllne staple gun with safety
guard. #147314. Reg. 11.99 a••
,... ....... Motte.:
All real eatate ad·
vertised in thls
newspaper la 1ubject to
the Federal Falr Hous·
inf Act cl 1961 whicb
makes It llle1al to ad·
um vertlse "any preference. 1• limitation, or di1-tf: crlmlnatlon baaed op l: race, color, religion, t: aex. or national origin, 1• or an intention to make
: any such preference,
: limitation, or dis-= crlmlnation " --1M --....... ,..,......... ,. ..
This newspaper will not
ltnowin4ly accept ant
advertising for real
estate which is in viola·
lion of the law.
THE ~EAL ESTATERS
WILSON PAii CIBlllUMS . .
CllCI & COMPARE TIISE FUTURES
90% ANAtCDI 12%% INTER.
f HARBOR AREA LOCA,,O
I SJZE-.lllO r.m FT. I MICRO OVEN I ALL SHOPP G ~ BLOCK I COMPACTOR
./ AU\ CONDJ ONING I DISHWASHER
I CEMENT DRIVES I DBL GARAGE c~T.':".:n., Ba 1.._{_W_AL_K_IN_C_LO_s_;us;;__ __ _J..._w_1o_P_EN_E_R__J
Eastslde witll hu1e bri~k
fireplace. Situated on a
comer lot with 2 car
1ara1e and covered
patio. Try ~ down.
Full price 1112,.500.
TR,\DI T 10\,\I.
Rb\l.TY
HOMES & iNVfSTMf"4b
631-7370
WAID INVESTMINT INC.
SALIS OMCI C7141 611 ... I -w. _.._ ... 642-JIM
C.... ..... Cllf.
==~~ -C~11•• l'loro = 1._ ___________ .=._......._..;._ __
C..-...>nl•-V•I Sat t•
ORANGE COUNTfS Ill. 1 BROKER
OFFERS MOTIYAllON PLUS =~· lW o..M•• ""'" = EllOltS: .Acf.......a1--o.a. ... o.1 -~ = i'!f:.. = ....... ct.di their ads
A,.. "''"or lol J100 dally and report fl'o :::·.-.d : I • !Well.N•ot. 41Qil "°""""' aftly. Tl-. f.':"'-":::.:.... = DAILY PILOT .. ,_. ~::!:"1oRi:!:~.. = laibllty for .... first ~':.::'ajR••I :: h1correct l11H rfio11
~"::::!i = CMlfy. =......... = ·--------.. _~·--MlllSS. INVEST· HcMnes for Sale
MfN1,f1NAJfC[ ••••••••••••••••••••••• =~: :: Getteral I 00 :::::::: ~' = .... ·············-···· .... ylo....... -.._,,,...,..... -OLDIE ~acnrn, 5a$
AMCNINCEMEJITS, I BUT GOODIE
1'£1SONALS & Older home in Laguna. I
LOST & FOUND Bdrm. centrally located.
~-"" c. ..... LAcal l'i<ltoc .. .._ ...........
~~;,.. """"'' SERVICES
Slink'• Otrf't"lor-t
EMrt.OYMENT &
$1• $\llO ~ Ult s.\lO ....,.,
W» -
Walking distance t o
beach and shopping.
New copper pi~ roof
and wood fence. Owner
ver y m otivated. will
carry financing. Call
752·1700
$108,500
REMODELED
Coi.ta Mesa 3 Bdrm,
pride or ownership beau-
ty on tree-lined street.
Compl w/hot tub! Total·
ly remodeled; vaulted
open beamed clgs,
skylights, lots of glass.
Huge covered patio
w/builtin BBQ. A rare
find -call to see'
646-7171
THE REAL ESTATERS
.......... COfldos
QUAIL MEADOWS
TUSTIN
90tyo COMMISSIO..
MO DISK fllS ,
MO PHONE FIES
MO .ADVERTISIMC9 FHS
5 MULTIPLE IO.AllDS
FREE SECRETARY
Whelan Real Estate s4o-l666
Terms, Ttnfts! LANO
Only 15",'r down fo r this
outstanding nearly new
condo. 2 Br + den, lama-Prime M·l . approx.
ly room , vie w ten-60,000sqft.
nls/pool. A great buy at
1210,000. SI O.SS Pr Ft
,.EHHJION
~11\.\lr'UC'tte>ft J.,O w .,,,irft. ~p'll>oAl..,, M6 t•
MEatHANDfSE ""'"'-
1000 flll) nou
llOGO
5% Doww. 5% Comm.
to selling agt or will pa)I
all buyers closing costs .
Very lrg, frplc, gourmet
kitchen, pool, whirlpool,
tennis crts, spacious
grounds. f tfi@, __ A_~_~,_;(_2J_!_~_y-;_-;_-;, Seller will carry financ·
Ing at below market
rates. Call
"Pl'h"""'• tolO
"~ IOU ::u.:: M•teneh. --CM'MraJ. 6 £4'\a•Pm•M -C.l• ICI» llGt» -"'"'-'°" -t'VrNtwe -G1t1•Sak ~ ---c--_,.,. -u-~ •a llK-f') .. 11
Mtlft'tla"'"""' -M•M'94l........,.. '-aMf'Cl M l
.M'9:1ff'eJ ''"'"'""'"'~ -Olfttt f"Vtft • ~•••UP -P.U a: c::~~~=~ --....... c;..,,i. -St ... lilntMT•ftit lar -~.,. ..... "'''St • ..-.. --BOATS & MAllNE
EDUtPMUll Cfftfll'al .a1• &o.b M1UM ~r~~ -....... ,. .......... -............ -Boeu.l"-M ltti.r\tt --..!ioil -...... llllpo Doth --~·~· --..Slouco -THNSPOITA TIOM
AIN'f'eft 1110 C•Mper~.s~~ Rf'nt ... Dt-fthC'C•n Vl)I) ==~s... .... · !0140
ti.le MOUr Um' S.\t-lltn• .. .,
Treit.n Tnvtl ¥110 l::!.~~·~~'!"~•rh tl!O) -
liot•'•' ~TOMOllLE
'6lU
Anhq..,.. l:'l».ttc'• -~4,MMV.,IUC' ... »» ~.~~~.~..,, --frwka -v-!61"
A..tvl.4-.. ••c -A.._Wo1Mt"d -AUTOS, IMPORTED
Uflwf'•I ''"" A.114 llW,...o 111.6 " .... lfM A.c.a11 tW•I;_> ,,,,,.
llltW tll2 i:.,., '11U Ott.. "" eel\ V111 o~ ... t'rAI ,. . .,.,.,. 'llQ t'w ~ ......... "'" J,.g..., ,,, ..
J-'111:1
l(., ....... t1 ..... '17»
IAIM!or ...... ,,.
lhM. 'fl)l
·~ ....... ~., 71411 Ill) wtu 11011 "' .. ..... "'" ,.,,.., .. ll7fl """"-t'llli POl'Klw 'lllAJ -II '1114 flGll•kO)H • '11,.
""'"' t'l)l =: .. '11111 ,..., .. ....,.. rfQ TOfe'• ,,,.
Tnw•plt t'1Cl VMb••I•• ""' v .... tm
Alli$, MEW c ........ -
COST.AM~A
S IR-$125,500
OWNER SAYS SELL
Nol an add-on or con-
version. A reaJ 5 Bdrm
family home in one of
Coeta Mesa's nicest
areas. Handymans de·
hght C@nd"'''
SEA COVE
INVESlllS
11CUT
is now in Costa Mesa amt
offering residential pro-
perty with: No Negative
Cash Flow
No Tenant Problems
Capital Gams Only
High Returns
<not 2nd Trust Deeds 1
Call for lnformalton
711-Jlfl
GllATOWle
FINANCING
Beauti(uJly maintained ... NEW cftalftM lhree bedroom home on , u~
large lot 1n Newport XLNT TERMS Beach . French doors,
custom cabmetry. spa, Edinger & Harbor
gazebo. shaded patios. 64~·1991, agent
$285,000 fee. 1---"-----=---
PROPERTIES Ill RED CARPET
_7_1_4_·6_3 __ ,_·6_9_90 __ , 754-1202
D.M. Manhal Rltr
644-9990 Co.do S,.dahh
Call the experts at the
c ondo information
center.
,
PRIDE OF
MESA VERDE
Thia beautiful home ex·
emplifys Mesa Verde.
The quiet cul de sac
IQCation and the family
oriented floor plan allow
the home owner the
maximum enjoyment of
this best of all Costa
Mesa communities .
There's even a play
house. Call 752-1700
THE REAL ESTATE RS
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
7 14-63 1 ~990
2 UMITS
$94,900
Super Investment! Two
2·Bdrm uni\S, one with
fireplace! Current In·
come-$'140 mo. Financ·
lnl ! 1 yr home protec·
lion plan Included.
Hurry, this won't last.
Ne-7171
1 THE ~EAL
IESTATERS
FANTASTIC
SILICTIOM OF
OCIANPIOMTS
. ' .
. ' . . ' . ... : ;'·
llfAj, flrAff EIC:fl.Ll#Cf SINC:f ~·
Touchstone Realty
~'*7
We have 10 as a matter SOUTH CO.AST
or fa ct. We will take PL.AZ.A, C.M. TURTLElOCK
trades, exchanges or Two bedroom condo. Hl~HLAMDS
just sell with tremen· Single s tory . Ne w The very nicest Irvine
dous terms . From carpet. Shake roof. Near community you could
'599.000 on up. We even pool & club. S57,000 loan choose for your family. have a few of gorgeous at 121."a%. $96,SOO. A spacious 4 Bdrm
oceanfront bluff lots in 611-7300 M.I . Edinborough plan.
Encinitas from $225,000 --------• p r 0 r e s s i 0 n a I I y on up with terms incl. decorated Jn.. ,warm
10% int. A letter Wfl!f Of Ufe earthtones. Twb large
JACOBS REALTY Hard lo find smgle story assumable Joana far
condo &lowing with below current rate.
675-6670 warmth and comfort Owner will consider a
OCEAMNOH'T
2 Bdr ms, 2 ba, \Ulfum.
New. S850 ply.
1.ATFIOMT
3 Bdrni. 1 ba, unfum.
Mint coftd. li50 yrly.
CHA..._FIOMT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. unfum.
$750 yrly.
associated
•'.. .. ' U ' '\ -I
Endowed with features .smaller Turllerock
you always wanted: 2 home in trade. $389,000.
Br. den, & dlning room. Only $128,SOO in great ., ... __..,....,. ... ,..~
Irvine community.
556-2660.
C:. •,(\I ( l
~f'H!>Pf 11111 ,
CURB APPEAL-8ALBOA ISL
Terrtflc locotlOtl, ••• tllt M-. St.
~2-shwyl..._ .........
....., dlM.g ra Mahr..._ w/frr«..
Hewty painted. c..,.tecl • di ..... 1wo
...... Loh of wood. .... iltd ,.._.
c:MrM. IH9cecl to $430.000.
WATERFRONT HOMES. tNC
REAL ESTATE
s.,.i,., H...,,..r, "'"''"'' M~"'"I"""'"'
316 Marine Ave
Balt>Oa Island
UDO ISU
Newly rell)odeled traditional 3 bdrm,
2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2
patios. Beam celllngs. Best In price at
$420,000.
P8flMSULA POINT llACHFIOMT
Panoramic view at wedge, from
prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom
home. 3700 sq. ft . featwing marine
room, entry, living room, dining
room, built-in.s. etc. Sl.~.ooo .
IAYNOMI'
We have several fine homes with pier
& slip, starting at $1,500,000.
•AJ4CHO MllMI
Springs Condo, 9th fairway, 3000 sq.ft.
3 Bdrm, 3 bath. furn. Golf clb.
mbrshp .• Trade for beach invest. prop.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J 11 fJ •y•.,cf• IJr•v• N fS 6/') 6161
DUPLEX
' 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace, built-ins. Ex·
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay. $285,000.
642-2253 eves.
associated
BROKE II'> Rf AL TORS
l1Jl' 'V+t 8oltJuob' t.tt
LOOKING FOR A
GROWTH POSITION?
If JfOU want to do your
residential business with a
firm offering:
• 12 YRS OF CO MMUNITY
SERVICE
• Offices in every coastal
c ity -N e wp o rt to San
Clemente
• Fas hion Island Office
s taffed with top
professionals
• Specialization in
marketing prime property
• In house advertising
agency
• Accelerated commission
schedule
Ir you want to ad to your
already s ucces s ful
residential business:
• The ability to create and
market limited partnerships
• Involvement with a strong
in vestment department
• Individual investment
training
• Personal investing through
individual & group investing
Call Gene Trowbridge.
C.C.I.M.. Vice President &
sales manager.
644-7020
fill.AT FIH.AMCIMCi IASTSIDE
Eastside charmer completely
refurbished .. Quiet street.
Large yard with covered patio.
3 bdrms, 2 baths, f amity rm
w I ftreplace, dining rm, with
heavy shake roof. Owner may
consider carrying 1st T.D. or
lge 2nd T . D. Won 't last
$159,500!
,..
CHARMING COM DUPl.D. Wll9' to
Nec:hn, Khoole •nd •llape"'-' IQ
lmn'leculate duplex. 3 8df with '·'· and 2 ldr rental ynk. -COi.i OF MIWPOIT IWTOIS
21 15 l: Coatt Hwy •• C:.... .. M.-
67J.ll II
WLSl.l"Y '\;
TAYLOR CO.
Hl-:Al.TOHS ·,11w1· l!MH
"LOVR Y TO LOOK AT"
Call us now and make an appointment
to see this beautifully-landscaped 2
bedroom, 2 bath, family room home.
Outstanding landscaping front and 1 rear. Large lot, works hop, lots of
large closets -and aJl for $183,000.
Definitely today's best buy.
WESLEY M. TAYLOR co .. U.ALToas
2 I I I S• J~ Hiii Road
NEWPORT CENTER, M.&. 644-49 I 0
MEWPO«T HGHTS
D eluxe townhouse
duplex. 3 bdrm + raml
ly, 21 2 bath each umt
Frplcs. all bu1ll·1n s.
decks & patios Park
lake landscaping
SELLER WILL HELP
FINANCE! $295,000!
lotboa loy Prop.
RMlton
•67S.7060•
COMMEltCIAL
PIOPBTY Tired of selling houses 7
days a week? We need
one licensee to learn the
skills to manage &
broker commercial real
estate. Income from
mgmt while you learn.
Super benefits; life in·
s urance ; health in·
surance & dental plan.
Contact Ken. 675·6700.
HI '>ll>I NI A, l'I 1\1 I'> IA II '>I H'llC.I S
EHJOY l.ALIO.A URSTYU
Terrific location on the LITTLE
ISLAND . Steps to the bay. 3 BR. 2
BA . New carpet s, paint &
plumbing. Radiates Island charm.
Flexible financing. Motivated
sellers. $360,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060 '
CE
110111 ILlllS CD .
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
SUPER E.ASTILUFF CONDO
Best Value ln The Area. Li~ted
Under $200,000. Former Model.
With View. Three Bedroo~. 2~
Bath s. Wet Bar . Lovely
App oi ntm e nts Throughout.
Community Pool. A Listing Of "Joy
Of Newport.
LIDO ISLE
Easy Financing. Near Community
Beaches, Clubhouse & Tennis.
Large Quiet Co rner Lot With
Traditional Three Bedrooms, Plus
Great Guest Quarters With Bath &
Bar; Or Billiard Size Recreation
Room. Beautifully Landscaped Lanai & Patio. Expandable Lot .
$425,000.
(5) ·--......... ,,,
...
I '
,,,. .........
INTERSTATE 10 PASSES YAN HORN
ThOM ~ want great city muet be patient
Dreams skirt
Texas town
VAN HORN, Texas <AP) -If this town's
dreams had come true, motorists crossing West
't;exas on Interstate 10 would be startled by a giant
agricultural-industrial metropolis rising from the
arid Trans-Pecos prajries.
Instead of a dusty town that looks like little
more than a good place to stop for a chiclten·fried
steak. they would see wine vineyards, reed Jots,
factories, a.nd one of the busiest airports in the
W'>rld, with huge jetliners taking off and landing
as fast as air controllers could clear the skyways.
·. A few residents still believe-this will someday
be one or the world's great cities: New York,
~aris, Rome, Tokyo -and Van Horn. •
t ..I.. -r, "TIUS IS ALL GulNG TO BE in the garden
One day," says M.J. Mitchell, a retired Ford
clealer, past president of the Van Horn Chamber of
Commerce. and one of the town's foremost
dreamers.
"This is going to be Imperial Valley No. 2."
1. Ot~er. citizens share Mitchell's hopes, but not
his opt1m1sm. His dreams seem to have bypassed
Van Hom, much as the interstate, forsaking the
old m ain highway's route through the center or the
town. skirted around its southern edge.
Only drivers who take the Broadway Street
exi.t ever seen Durham's Barber Shop, Han!ey's
Paint Store, the Sage Theater. or Van Horn's 17
motels.
MOST RESIDENTS MAKE NO BONES about
the fact that Van Horn is a small town where the
main attraction on Saturday nights is the church
social. a high school dance. or a pitcher of beer
and a game of pool at the Highway Bar.
They don't pretend that the town has so many
motels because it is a tourist attraction. They
know most guests are just passing through.
All that changes in Mitchell's vision. Arter all,
he is the man who tried to gel operators of the
Concorde supersonic jetliner to land in Van Horn
instead of Washington or New York. Mitchell is
still bitter that the Concorde snubbed Van Horn.
"We're centrally locat ed on the North
American continent. and we were going to give
them 1,000 acres rent-free for 50 years for a
hangar and a terminal," Mitchell says.
He wrote the Concorde people three letters in
all, and they still turned him down flat.
Other dreams were not as farfetctled.
VAN HORN SITS NEAR THE WORLD'S
largest non-asbestos talc deposit, and since it was
discovered in 1949, 12 mines have been established
to dig up the soft, flaky gray rocks that are
crµshed. baked and turned into talcum powder,
ceramic tile, plastics and other items.
Why ship the talc out of West Texas Co be
made into those things. 9an Horn asked itself.
Why not set up facilities to process it and
manufacture it right here?
So Mitchell and others laid out a 370·acre
industrial park and publicized plans for a
talc -processing factory , a ceramic tile
manufacturing plant, a gasohol refinery, an
a lfalfa-cubing operation and other industriaJ
e nterprises.
"All t~s used lo be nothing but weeds,"
Mitchell says, sweeping his arm over the area set
aside for the new businesses, a large pasture near
the airport.
The problem is most of it still is weeds, except
for a cotton gin and a few fireplugs. •
So what went wrong?
IT CERTAINLY WASN'T FOR LACK of
water. Van Horn sits on an underground water
supply so vut that the city allows unlimited use
for irrigation, supplies its 3,400 citizens and those
of Sierra Blanca, 30 miles to the west, witb
dnnkilll water "and we have enough left over to
drown EJ Puo," 120 mile. to the west.
Mitchell says, "Someday we'll sell El Paso our
water.''
Banker Mike Hensley says there were several
reuons the indQltriaJ park Is still just a pasture.
Some ol the out~f-towners who propQSed ne~
il\dustT)' for V"1 Horn "wet'e not 1ubatantial e>eop&e -111e bad meo come ln here with financial
statement.I u.arwere pathetic." ·
JWlk dealer James Thomas says MUcbell's
ideas overwhelm some reaidenta.
"We're a small town. We can't vbuallze it,"
Ray Shotnell, who owns the town's runu.i
ho"1e: says., "We need to be OptlfiltUc, but we
need to be reallaUc, too. We're 1otnc to have to
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
8121' SVNOrllS 01' THI ANNUAl. ITATIEMeNT
PUBUC NOTICE
0, 1 N78J7 ln\ .. rance Company ol P•t1lic FICTITIOUS 8USINEU Coast. 19131 Von Karmen A••nue. N.&ME STATEMENT lrvlne, Celllornla '111S rne 1011-1ng perSOI\ I• dPlflg """'
Veer ...... Dec-JI,,.. ne~\ t' W OIL INVESTORS LTD. 2.0 Tol•l •dtnlttedasw11 ,n,.u.•M HewPorl CM>ler Ort .. • 200. HtwPorl Totel lleOlllU.S •••• ,.,JO.I BH<ll. CA 91660 Stoec1A1t1uoytllfteb O· O•rol K Paulsen, "'•• Cat1l>o1i. Cepltalpel......,/c;...,ran1r Fount•ln V•H•r. CA 9270I. Caplt.tl/Statutory O-lt 1,000,000 fll•\ b"slneo I\ conductea by • Gron patod-ln MMI llmllecl P¥1,.•ti>;J:.
•OARD Of' TllUSTtEtES contrlbutecHurpl"' l,500.000 Tnl\ ~!{:.!n1 :'!:-';,,.., wotn tne
It I S 0 LU T li~tf.: CL A It ING UnaHlgnecl lundt (1urp1u11 t,133,•S• County Ciera ol or ... oe County on
l'ICTITIOUS 8UllNllS DISTRICT PROf'EltTY SUlt,.LUS S11rptu1 H reterclt March ll. 1911. MAMI STATIMINT WHEREAS Ille !49<1tlll•d tit• ,, POllCr .. lclers },7J3,aj4 FU ... 1l TM IOll-lng perSOI\ It doln9 t>utl· In tne oplnoc1n oi ll•ll aNrd, not~ 1ntome lor the yMr U, IU,7J.5 Publlnd 0ra"9t C:O.\I Diiiy P••ol
neu as. tor ~m·R~~~.1c,\~~~t!~ lnttn· Olll>llrHft'lel\t.1 10, Maren 2•. Apr11 2. l , 16, "" ISll·ti
PETTINGILL MAAINE. 111 llontocelllCHl);d510eitllersellsucll tl'layHr 1J,11l,7S. -
A I vars Ide AYel\ue, • F. Newport ,,1• or enter Into• IOft9·1e<m ••-tor we l'lereDY urmr l/Wll Ille ebov• PVBUC NOTICE e .. cn, CelifOfVle •M.J. ..Id slle end lterns are In acc•dence wit.I\ Ille All
._,Ev-.... un9111, nos Oaa WHEREAS, Section 11"2.S of 11'11 n11al St•t-nl tor IM rnr •IWM<I ----------....... n. Manelm, C.Wlor,.,e. Educallon C4de requlrH nollflcellon December at lffO rnade to Ille MIBW Tiii\ ~t\ h <wollu<tecl by ... In· or Ill• pou•bl• sale or ..... ol u ld pro-lntll••"'9 ~.~. 01 11\e St.t• l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS d' le! I perly -MAM£ STATIM£NT '" ue · WH ER£AS INS District lurtl\er Is 01 Celllomla, --10 law Tne IOll<>wlng per.on 11 OOin9 ou11· Rob Petllnoill requ ired lo ..,.,1 .. 's.E.,,.'"' .,..ncr O.W. a.nnlster, Pr~I Tnii stat-I "" tiled wlln Ille '" IM OIY o1 """II lleacll o1 111 R.C. F~. Sacre4err ,.H., Covnly Clerll ol Oreno-Counly on tllltnllonlodlm Wd'-!'-IY; PllbllslwdOr ..... Coes\Oaily Pllo\ NEWPORT BEACH ·MISSIOH
Marc II 10, 1"1 "D* RE~~V~OTllla~ RE FORE. IE IT Marci\ JO, Jl, A,lrill, 2,), 1 .. 1 i»Mi ~2~L~~~,~~.R~,~~Ll~,y ~•~P~~
Put>ll"*I Orenot Coe\I Dally Piiot, S9'l1on 1 Pursuant to Section lleacl\, CA '*1 Merell 12. "· 26, AIWll 2. 1•1 1u ... 1 ~'!:as~ t!_'!~,'!....cwc..!~1~. ~ ftJBLIC NOTICE Oort J G•lbert, Mo . iso1 ErnP11
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU5 au51115U NAMIE STAT•MINT
...... -r --"' ~ -Saddle, ~ Hills. CA '26SJ =~::;~-:: ;,~· o}I~-=':,:: ::1------------Tl\lt ti..iness "..-UC Md DY ... •n· ~:~l:'rn1~·~~1.':.e""~'::,"0..=:'. NOT.ICE OF DEATH OF dl•••u•1
0or. J G••11e<t, M.o.
ly 1 72 usaolt acrH, 11 no 101199r ESTELLE SIEGEL, AKA Tn,. st•t...,_1 ·~ ltled w11n Ille l\ffCI~:~ ~~,.!'·~~.!::l:::O:Se •. E ST E L L E l O U I S E Covnly C•erll DI Ortl\QI Coul\t' on
,ICTITIOUI •USl .. elS
.. AMS ITATIMa .. T
,ICTITIOUI ....... ..... ITAn.flf
The ............... ~ ..... -.. ~ . CAL lltlt0tt$, tt• OtWlw-••, HUllt~....._CA ....
·~IC. f'wA. 21• ~ ••• Hw\C~ liMdl, CA..._ Tlllt ...,_It~--Illy• !ft
""~· .._...K_,..,,.
Tlllt ~ -tl.lell wtttl n• c-ty C,IHti of OrMtlf o.witr • Marc II Jl, 1"1. ... ..... Pullll.,_ Or._ c:-ta O.lly l"llot,
Atwll 2. •· 1•. n. 1•1 15'M1
PUBUC NOTICE
Tiie IOI~ pe.-11 clOint 1>1111 11eu H : ''CT1nou1 ..,......
(II P.11.1., <21 PEIUONAL •&Ma ITAT•MaWT VOLUME INTIRNATIONAL, UOI Tiie lollewl/le ,.,_I• Oolng llUll·
Woodlend PIKe, S..la Al\a, C.llforl\le -et: 92707 AXIS INTERNATIOHAL METAL CllerlH $. Cllamberlaln, S 1'91>-COMPANY, 11907 O..wooel Ave., Dlewood Ofl,.., lrvlne, C:.lllornla t2714 l'ountaln Veller. CA 921tl. Tl'lll l>USlneu" c.-lltcl br .,. In· Te °"" v-.. n• OollWood Ave., dlvlduel. fl'ouni.111 Vall..,, CA 927tl.
O\Mles S. Cl'lemllelialn Tiiis ~ Is c.ond1Ktt4 W ., II\· Tiiis si.1-1 was llled with lhe dlvldwel. Countr Clerk ol Orel\ge co..nty °" Teo-.,....,.
~rcll JI, 1•1. 1'1 Tlll1 **-was llled wltll h PubllsMd Or-Coell Oelly Pllol, CO•il•lr C .... 11 of 0. .... C-., WI Aprll 2, t, 1611, 1'11 ls.I-II Marcll JI, 1'11. ,,...,
PUBUC NOTICE Puo11.-0r.,... Coe•• 1>e11r Pli.t, APf'll2,t, lt,U, ltll 1~·
PUBLIC NOTICE--. ... ,...
l'ICTITIOUS 8UllNllS MAMI STATl!MlllT Tne tollowlno perlOfts are dolnO l'ICTITIOUl8UM1t.SS DUsl,,_.s as: Tl1e I~= ITATIUIYllT I COTO RESEARCt4 CE NTER , !Mnlnenoes "9 --.,. doftt
22000 Pl-Tr.tiuco Road, Tr•bu<o SH 0 REL I HE 0 A A p E II y Cat1y~,l~~f~:~1~neloprnenl SERVICE. llJS '#Nttlar •D-11. CMt. Meu, CallfWftl• .. 27 CorpcwellOI\, a Celllornle corporation. 8ruite Herrll -. 1414 J1Mneno
2:2000 Pl-Tr~ Ro.cl, Trabu<o Or., Mlaloft VlejO, Caltlorftla ,_,, . Canyon, C.lllomla t2'7t Laurie Ellubetl\ Jol'lc\Mn tat .. Corn puterlr•d lllorn•tllanlcel J ~ Ml .., VlejO Ctil11or"'a AMlysls, inc., a N-Harnptlllre tor· ~ ·• • •
pOrellon, 22000 Pl-Tralluto R-. Tiii~ _,_It CAMducttd by en ln-Traouco CM\yon, Celll0<nla t2'11 Ol'lldval. Tftos DU"neu Is conducted Dy • l..-wle E ,,_
9enora1 ~':,~~. Tiiis si.i-i ,.., llled with tl\e Oewl_.,I Corpo<ellon C°"nty Clarll OI Orer199 County Oft ,,...._ Mertll ll. 1•t.
P11t>ll"*I o..,,.. Coal! Dally Piiot, p "'""' Aprlf 2, '· "· u , 1991 ,.1 ... 1 ut>lllNd 0r.,. Coest Dallr Piiot, "91'11 2, •• "· 2'. 1•1 1 SM-el
P\}BUC NOTICE
l'ICTtTIOUS 8USINllS NAMI STAT•M•MT Tne tollowlnq penont are dolnq w,.,..,,.,. ( 11 BEHGFIT PLAN AO · MIHISTRATORS, Ill 8 P A, 1011 E •In Strut, Suite tOt, Sant• Ana, Calllorl\le 9170S Ronald W•rna Mallers, tt Wnlstl
•"9 Sw•n, lrvllle, C:.1llorl\la tJ11• Harold H Oanieh, IMU Acac l• Drive. CYIWffl, C•lllorni• to.JO Tiii• DUSiMU It condUCl..S b'I' • oeneral partnership.
R-.ld W MeSltrs TnlS ltatenwnt was lllecl Wltll ~ co .. nty Clerll ol Oran9f County on
~"" l1, 19t1 f'U""4 Publi"'9CI OrM\9P Ccw•t Oelly Piiot,
Charlie
Brown
~
~
fne to11ow1no .,...,..,.. 1, Ooit>11 D\lt1
nns•r TARGETMAHAGEMEHT CO I~\ WnlwerCI W•Y. Colla -u. CA ne26 W1Ulam P Putney, 11.01 'f•rmoutn, Hu1111ng1on 8eacl\, CA nu.
acut•Y• VICI Cl'lencelTor/llu\lnHS Al· SlEGEL, AKA ESTELLE Merell 1l. 1 .. 1
::·~::,~:! ~.;.'1~1~s,:r,~~~~~~ LOUISE NOVAK AND OF ''°"' P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D · ,,,. G! .. ,!"~t"t.!:.~1,':"~~,...~: MINISTER ESTATE NO.
FISM41 Apr111. '· 1•. 1>. ,,., 1sn at -::~,.--·~ .-.. ~ ,,,, "' -
Tnls ous.,,...s 11 <c>ftclvti.cl ov •n on
dl,..du•I. William P Putner Tll" lie-I .... lllOCI Wiii\ Ille Counlr Clw-ol Oranoe County on
~.;':\"H1!n~~::'~"!~:"1f:'dl'.~ A·101235. , lrl(I s '"'"'' lo d•\POSe of Wld ....... T 0 a I I h e t r s • party 0 Purw.on• 10 Stcroon s•no ., benefici.aries, c reditors
.. Q. o• 1ne Go .. '"'"'"'~. 1ne s•••• and contingent creditors oft . Reso .. rc•s A9tfl<r ..... or ... go Co..nly Estelle Sl....,el aka Estelle H•rbors, S.ttehel •nd P•rtu Oi,tri< f, • ""lf ' ,.1,..1 ,,,. co .. n1y of Orar199, and tne Par-Louise Sle.;;iel. akt. Estelle
1>11011\!WCI o...,. co .. , D•llY Pt101. ~~d 0~·~=~~·.~,,~":i'i~\0~;~ ~·~ Louise Novak and persons
Maren 2•, 1'11
M•rc" 16, Aprll J, '· ••• '"' IOHI nollll"' 11\al ""' pr-rty "olltrtd tor who may be .otherwise In·
PUBUC NOTIC£
per" °:.'~~a~r.t: ::r~~'"'•· 11111 terested In the will and/or ~:1~r:,•:,.~' .~~·T~11n,•,~:~·~~' .~! estate: . · ce1do•nl• s1e1t co11egu ano A petltlon has been filed
Publt"'9CI 0..,,9t Coast O•llv Polol,
M•rcfl n . "9<" 1. ~. "· 1~1 ISOl·ill
PUBUC NOTICE
812» SVNOl"SIS Of' TNI ANNUAL STATl!MINT
01' Gull 11\\Urance Company, HIO Belle view. I<•~• City, MISICH'rl ... I 11
.,. .. , .-D«•mlier 11, ... Total •dmltt.d asMlt s1e2.Mt.09I Tol•I llabUltles 10S,'°7 ,S7S Special •urptut 1unc1s ·O· C•Pl1'1 palcl"'!>IGuar1nly C.t1>il•ll St.atulory OePOs•I s.000.000 Gross palo-ln eno "-'8UC NOT1c1 g~~··;t~8:n/~9f:'"ls'e:~~"!'.l':· :::: by Paul Nova~. Mickey contrlDuted \urplus 34,099.IJO unaulll"'d luncts hurplu\) 3S.131.a91
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS NAME STATIMINT Tiie IOI-Ing oert0n Is OOln9 Dlltl· neues: CAMEL SIGHT AHO SOU ND,
UOS-11 Melne SlrHI, Hunt11191on 8Hcl\, C.lllornl• •1IMI Semuel Weyne ~wey, 1 ... 2 Al)Olewood Clrcle, Huntln9lon 8eetl'I, Celllornle ,,.... Tiiis ti.Wnes.s Is toncluct..i oy an ln-dlvldllel. Samuel GenM_, Tiii\ st.t,......nt w H lllecl wllll Ille Countr Clerll ol Oranoe Countr OI\ Merell JI, 1•1. 11,!,"~ ~ :.,~1':c.~"f,..:: Orang: county ~ou,1ng Au11101111. Novak and Gloria GOOdlng
-t---....,. eawed 1 ... 1, 11oa11 on r.:~~ '°"~~ec1or'~~:' .:n=·::;~:.i In the Superior Court. of Ille~,.,. ....... -.Cll dlH'l"9 , .... 1 ... pur\uent 10 S«llon ll~l.SOI Illa Orange county requesting SurplUI •• reoerd.S pOht .,,,.,.,. lntome tor llw year Ol\DUr-..1110<
iru•• Publl.,,.., Or...ge Coell Oally Piiot,
7',•ll,SU Aprll 2, t, 18, JJ, 1•1 1511 .. 1 u .ua.s.1 .,...., 1'11.. m•..,. m1. Renl•l In ea-Ed11uuon ~ that Paul Novak Mickey ceM Of S5D per .,.., tor a1,,.1..i.o1c1 Secloon J. Tiie Ctwinc.ellor or E•· • . boat•..,. w -,.., '°' mllltt.Mlcl •cuttve vice CNnc:e11or1llusineu At· Novak and Gloria Gooding •• ,,. of ll>il Olslrlct It dlrttl•d lo be a pol ted as perso I b••h wfll be rtlun .. d •POii •P· pul>ltSll e nohce In I/WI Delly Pll~• p n na proprlat• proof ol ,...,..,._, ,.,....,, new\pa~r ol gen•••• <•r<lll•llon representative to ad· y-prooltoMlrnl ~,ts6JWever· wllnln I 'Olprlct, .at leul once a minister the estate Of Ir Ori,.., .......,, .. Kl\ c.lllorftle wua IO< lllre• t\KUU•~• w••a•. '2t6l 111.i .. SOI. ""'°' ltlovld -wnic~ PllllllUlion Sll•ll conslllul• Estelle Siegel, aka Estelle ~--•,..illft. INl>lk nat1c.e '° anr pu1111< <11~r1c1. Loulse Slegel aka Estelle ""'".-ar-. C..'4 Detty ,...,., PllDlfc •utllorlty, pu1>1tc evener. puo11< . N ' ( March .. ,. .. JI.,..,., 2,J "" corporatlon,oranyOUle<POlltlcalwt>-Louise ovak under the · · · 'mwi •Mt1"' ot 11111 State. to,,. Ftc1er•• Independent Admlnlstra· Gewl'll-. Md to non-cwotlt cMrl\a· t iol"I' of Estates Act). The Ill• cor-•tion1 or..,,ired Pll""''"' 10 · · I f I 01v1s1on2o1T111e1otu.eeot-•t1.,, pet1t1on s set or hear ng .:ode ccarnrner.ctng w1111 s.<1oon sooo1. in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
l'ICTtTIOUSaUllNHI s1a11no ,,.,., 11.is proPfrtr is mecte Center Drive West in the
PuBUC NOTICE
11\e yur 1J,S.1,7" we neret>y <•rtlly tl'lal 11\e at>On il•mt •re In accorclanc• will\ Ille An-"u•I Stete,.,...I tor IM r••r ended Oecembcr lt, ttto. made lo 11•• lnsurenc<e Gomotlul-ol Ille Sl•lt ot C•lllornla, P'l'-nl to•••· 0. W. Bannister, Prttlcltnt A.C J'el.Nfllon. Sttret..r Pubhsl'lad Orenve Coast Dally PllOI, Mar ell 30. Jl, 1'prll 1, 2, l. lffl ISU-11
PUBUC NOTICE
MAMIE STATUU.•T avall•l>I• to •II P\lbll< dltttkll. llUllll&. ·c j t y 0 f S a n t a , A n a· Tiit fell-Int persolla era delng autllorlllH, PllDll< eQen<IH, public Calif I A ii 29 1981, 'UPafUCJaCOUllTOl'TMI lNllnellM' corporal!-. or otNr pOfltlcel tut>-Of'n a on pr , ITATIO,CAUl"OltNIA
A·I c•OWN LEASING, 17117·0 dlYIStons OI '""Slat•. •ncl 10 otfler at 9:30a.m. . ,DltTMml•«N.:..T:,'/~A•GI eroo1<1111f'lt $ltWI, .......iell\ V•lley, nonprofit cMrltelllt COf'JIOr•tlonl. IF YOU OBJECT to the Oil TO SHOW CAUSIE C.lllornl• f270I. Section • II it Ille lntenl of '"'' . ln,lte PE TH~PS0~1 crew11 Otclsmobllt IUJ f.etl Olatrott, In tM event that no pu1>1k en· granting of the\ petition, Minor, IWl"l.OltA THOM..,.,N • lllr or put>llc corPOratlon Ml ( ... la<I· hOUld. Ith r pp Hit Motlltr lllldOTT THOMPSON Colorado lloultvercl, Puadene, ed thll Oillroct with r..-ra to"" K · YOU S e 8 8 ear Nil l"•t ..... :forCNngeOI ' cf1111tpn11e.t11.., _........__......., b 111111111011 o1 se1c1 pr-r1r. 10 oecl•rt at th& hearing and state N•me. Ii Mlnesfl1 ._..__ ran un· lhe property 1urph11 e<ld receive CO'!I· bj ti f 11 Petlll-,.,. or,orllWeno<lelllon Giiier !flan a petlll•• bldS tor sale Of lease ot Will your 0 ec ons or e WHRREAS. l'LORA ertcl OTT ~ll\llL •• 1>•oPe•1v1•or-nt to Section "* et written objections w ith the THOMf'SON, P•t1t1one11, ea 11\e ~~.f\c:=>~~\.• MQ. g'~'fo~~·J~~O:h1eR, tn•t court befbre the t\earlng. m~tlltr ha reth•r ot PITE A
n1, :;;· w• .~. w1t11 Ille c11ence11or Norrnen e. wet'°" or &x· Your appearance may be [,.~~:~:} ~~. m:r ... .,f.'f.4',= C..ntr Cltrll' Of Orentt County on tcullv• Vice C11.tnollor/8uslnen Al· I pt b t will\ the Cierti .. 11111 c..un tor en 0,. ~cll 10 "" lalrt Corrtll91 J, Tllomptoll De el\d n (50n Or Y YOUr a • der Cl!anolntl eaeik4ftl'I na"" lrPm . . ''11* ... ,.by iSavtl'IO<ltl!IUllCldtrtCleclloclO torney Pl!.Tl!.A THOMPSON to PIETER Publl'"91 OrMOO c..i 0•11'1' Piiot or uuw lo be -•nr -au tU<n I F · y O U A R E 5Hl!LOOH THOMPSON1 Merell 12 " 2' APrll 2 "" ns ... 1 fllrlll•r "'" -t~. and 10 HtClll• A IT 1$ OAOIREO 11\11 All persons In· • • • • ~":.,~1::; 1:rl'vmtftt!'.' :".l't1:::'•;, C R E DI TOR or a con· 1arn1tct 1n 111e at>oYe-eflttt1.o m•tt•r
1111m mer -rn lltcal.,.,..o, •an• tingent creditor of the de· 41Pf19ar Ottore "'1' court &J!:>O •.m. PUBLIC NOTICE !!!.1;..ordW, end'fnf!:Jr.}"1!! •,N.,ece!..11~ ceased, you must flle your &::.~::,:il~h~~'=~~ ,.... .. _ .. "' •• ...... ..,. MM 100 Clllk c.nwr Drive we.-. :.Jf reso1 .. 1-. claim with the court or t• A111, c.i11or,.,e, .,.. •llD• ceuse, 1 STAT:=:~:;;:."::..~:••L Kett?:'r.":~ ,~'"..:1~~~.!· present It to the personal .,.,~ "'"' u.,.r.:111on .., CMf19t 0
o,.HATI .. UNDH ~::: fcr.o':i'-'vo':!~ wu MD!Med •111' repre~ntatlve a~nted n•i'r'·1r'J'C?nH::_ir:,'rieo .. t •
"CTIT10UUUllN8U ....... AYU~ol J. G-"t, Ro0ert L by the court within four ~'1."11:'11!'::'1~e '°o~ ~fr:t ": Tl'la IOll-"9 ll9nOI\ llet Wlllldr-n Hurnpllrey!t_ Wllllem £, Ktl ller, months front the date Of 11t•l,8Hr el .. ntrel clrc11lel~Oft •1 a general pertner lrorn Ille Al<Mro E. UUCI<', &/Ml Gftfoe AoelcM, • lllflll .... 111 Or-c:o...tr CltllfoMle .,..rt,,.,.,., _ .. 1,.. .,_ 111e 11<-Jr first Issuance of letters as .,_0 • """ ror ~· ~onse<11t1ve
11110"• 1>11 .. neu '*'1• •' • • 11 :~fl;.~~ provided In Section 700 of _.., '"9r • 111e •'-•t1or M•r1no SPECIALnES et l7' a. ure1 st.. 1 Hor,,..;.e.~.s.tret.trro• the Probate Code Of 911otM•~llOft. Newport~ C4' .,...,. , .... '°''° of Tr'\19 .... 114 tlll CM" 1.-. •IN-... t,.. 11e111-.. .,._. -, ..... C-llMl!tr c:411 .. 0111r1etot O\'M .. California. The tm,e tor ~· ""-
_, '• • .....-"""' ""' 111eo11 ~'° gi1.__,,_111Y cerutv 1"9t flllng clalm$ will not ex· t~,.~ 2'~!11'11"~~~ .. A~~i 01 tM w•• '•111": :J ,':r:;,r;o J:.-:'':; plre prior to four months f~":w~~ ... Pen ....... _,,_. Hid loercl •I. ,~Ill., rnttllne from the date of the Mar-....,..,. ..... ~ .... .,. • ..., A.,..,.,., v-,..rr•r•. aJt \~re' 119141 •"" 111 ""r Of Met'<ll• lnQ t'IOtl'ed above. cmr •..-a ·
E.1Jrd.lt•••••Utecll.CA. Oe1tc1t111•ttt11,~ ... Me«:ll. 19'1. YOU MAY EXAMINE ~l,,_O!'..,.. c..tt o,lty .ilM, y-l"en'IWa 1'1""'1 ., ~le g'i~:-. tfte file kept by tl\e '°"'" "'-'tll 11• It, 3'. ,.,.,It t. t"1 ,_.,
, ,..,, .. .,.. 0r.,. CM•t D•llr ,.,,... ,.111111, .... ~.,.r eout 0•11 If you are Int.rested In the •
Met"c11a...-11t.•,1.,t,.1 1~1 f'l10t,Mef'<1121 • .-11 ,1,1,.1 1,0.·•~ est•te, y~ may flit• rt· ----------t Quest with the court to ft·-:-.---',...._ _____ _
PUBUC NOTICE ------------...,,...
'ICTITIOUI 8USINU.S NAMll STAT•MUtT Tiie 1011-1111 perlOflt •re dolnt
OuMMSS•; WALNUT JOINT VENTURE, J07t llltlness Center Drive, lrvfne. Calltorftlamu Del•• Hq_ust CorPO••llon of c.111 .. 111, a G'el)fO'"I• car,....ttlol\,
ioio ll~C..&r Drive, Irvine. celltorllla 92 s Tode ce Inc d/b/a Toes. COl\IW<tlol\"' Amarl<.e, ....... Yon corporellon, 2010 ll111lneu Center Ori .... INIM, C.lllwnl• mu Tiiis IMISIMU •• conclucttcl l>r • geMrel per1rltnl\lp. Oelwe Houte Corp.
ol C:.lltornl• TIUlomu FlllCIHlll,,,.,
~· Todt CofltlNCllOll
ol Amef'lca
SetosH Metwmura, Vkt Pr9lk19M Tiiis stet_. wea llled wltll !tie County Clerll ot Ore1199 COlll\tr on Marc II t, 1"1.
I.MA. eranc11 c:ountyClerll ........ P11t>llstwcl OrWl9t Coast Delly 'llot, Aprll 1, t, 16, U. 1•1 t61MI
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI IUSll .. 1$ MAMe ITAftM8MT Tiii IOllOWlftt pettont ere doing
blillMU81: lt41LLV'S MIEAT SHO~E. 2'IO ICewtort lloule\'erc!, CMta Mua, ce111eni1e nw. ,
111 .. 4"1\ o. Klrllt•trld., ot lrNney, Coal• Maw, C•lllorlll• ..,,,
HeftKl~f61 ....... ftY, C-'t• ~tet~~-Tllla ...._. It c.tl!WCtM llr e11 Ill· ltlvl"81.
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Snoopy
C 1t§t Un+lf'O 'tt.iu.1.-SvM•f" "'"' In<
Woodstock
~
Unus
lake a 1k>w approach." 1
RENBLEY AGalttS TftA,~ ROaN t0uld ·
become a o;eat ctty, but HYI are Juat CoinC
PUa• -NOftc• celve speclal nottu of tl\e ,...,,,..ou. 111 .. •1u
... " D I UMelYAH••T ---....,.-=-...------1 nventory o( est1te asMts Tiie fe11-..1111 ,.,..,.. ••• •inv
and of the petltlor\s, K• ......... •· tO U ft ts and rt pOf t ltft Ast.OCIAT'IS , 4.HO V•n 11-----------...-·ll to have to be patient. "I think tile •torp0r1Uon rannen are _...., to
.. m. ill here. And •I' cu fOI• .. -hHIBI •
plHt'le• ladu1to. We co•ld Ila•• • tO•· aiflinifaeturmc plot, We _... ~ wtDe IJ'lpel ..,. liCJIDJHrdallf-tbe uld..-, "of T•a hi ~ pf••1•1 ezparlmeMa&lf far SM ... ftM , . .,., ... ., ..... ~ ... ,.., ..... ....
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of the C•llfomla P,.te t.e:::!:~;,,...,, _. w.vee ... 1 "lflmMfl:tll'
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I
SAIPAN, Northem M1ri1nu
(AP> A hot.·1e1Un1 line of T·
shirts here bears the boldly
printed question: "Wher~ the bell la Salpan?•t
•'A lot of p~ple don't know If
lt 's a place or a condition,'' aays
Rlch Hoyt, of lhe local radio sta·
lion, KSAI.
For those in doubt. the
C hinese·owne d , American·
managed Hyatt-Regency hotel
has a milepost in the front
garden which locates the tiny
Western Pacific island precise·
ly: Tokyo 1,513 miles, Taipei
1,639, ManlJa 1,600, Los Angeles
7 ,620. New York 9,100, Honolulu
3,300.
THOUSANDS OF American
Gls and their J apanese oppo-
nents who fought here in World
War II don't need signposts to
Saipan.
This island was one or the
bloodiest battlegrounds or the
Pacific war Mo re than 3,000
American Marines were killed
and 11, 000 wounded storming
over the ree f a nd onto the
beaches in June 1944.
Only 600 of the 30,000 Japanese
defenders survived Hundreds of
J apanese soldiers and civilians
leaped to their deaths from a
1.000-foot cliff rathe r than face
capture. It is now known as
Suicide Cliff or Banzai Point.
Today, bus loads or Japanese
tourists visit a viewing point at
the top of Suicide Cliff, and
s t a nd silently, obser ving the
jungle below The~ h ave their
photographs taken beside rust-
ing J apanese guns
THE SAIPANESE welcome
them Tht-y see J apan ese
tourism a s the kev to t heir
economt<' future ·
··This place b going to be the
Caribbean of Japan." s ays
Erwin Canham, form£>r editor of
the Chris tian Science Monitor
a nd the last American assistant
commissioner in the Northern
Marianas
He helped draft the constitu
lion and organize the first elec-
tions for a local governor in 1975.
He retired ht-re lo a house over-
looking the lagoon and reef
wh e re the rusttng turrets or
American tanks s till appear at
low tide.
"Before tht• "ar. th as \\as a
J a panese colon)," Canham
says ··ThNc were 50.000 to
70.000 Japanese laving here ll
was a big town. even had a cable
t'a r running down the main
street ··
THE ~AR BLEW a\\a\ every
structur t' on the 47 5-squa.re male
island The is land was almost
denuded of vegetation It had lo
be re -seeded fro m the air
Today lht' Jung lt' a nd the
Japanese are bat'k ..
Saipan's first bath house since
World War II opened recently
More than 100,000 J apanese vis·
itors. mostly young honey·
mooners. visited the island last
year. bringing in S52 million.
All four m ajor hotels have
Japanese restaurants . Half a
dozen more are scattered along
the road that s kirts the lagoon
All signs are an Englis h and
.Japanese
"We are w1lh1n the Ament'an
family, but we are looking
e lsewher e if the Americans
don't come We don't have the
option to refuse the Japanese."
says Gov Carlos S Camat'ho.
.i4. now in the fin al year of his
term as the first governor of the
Commonwealth of the Northern
Marianas
"THESE ISLANDS were oc
cu pied' by the Japanese for 30
years. Saipan has all the attrac-
tions for the J apanese. rt 's free
of pollution. it's got beaches.
it's underpopulated and has lots
of s un the year round
"The older generation of 50
and over like the Japanese. No
ques tion. They still converse in
Japanese. T he younger o nes
Ptlltlppln• S..
J
AMERICAN MEMORIAL ON SAIPAN IN THE PACIFIC
Graphic testimony to the l1land'1 role In World War II
lean lo America or are un·
det'ided."
Extensions to the airport at
Saipan will soon a llow jumbo
jets to la nd. This will greatly in·
crease the flow of Japanese
touris ts. who are only three
hours fl ying time away.
While the Japanese <'Orne for
fun. the 15,000 inhabitants of the
tiny group of 16 islands, or which
eight are inhabited. are facing
· · T llese islands were oc-
cupied by the Japanese for
30 years. Saipan has all
the attractrnns for the
Japanese··
the problems of a newly emerg
rng territory with no natural re·
sources But they have a firm
d esire to run their a ff1urs
DISCOVERED BY Ferdinand
Magellan in 1521, colonized by
S pain until 1899. so ld lo
Germany, t'aptured by Japan in
1914, the Marianas we re gov
erned by the U S. Navy from
World War II until 1951.
Then they became part of the
lJ .S . Trust T e rrito r y of the
Pat'ifit' Islands along with the
Mars halls and the Carolines,
kn o wn co ll et'tive l y a s
Micronesia.
The United Stales pr omoted
the idea of a M1nonesian
federation. But the Northern
Marianas people. who had lost
their cultural identity in the 400
years of colonization. dashked
the idea and pulled out.
They wrote their cons tttul1on
a nd became a commonwealth of
the United States in 1976 with a
status similar to that of Puerto
Rico.
ALL IS NOT fin alized,
however . d es pite se lf ·
governm ent on Saipan. The
other three states of Mic ronesia
are working out their separate
free association status with the
United States.
·t. '\:· .••• :./·' ..._,.:·. ·:~. ~-'·:: · •. :u·t·/)'.'!.,\:: .. ,.;;
' ::
Pacifi c
·.
J ••••
,. .. :., I t ~....,.;..
•('. ·'
. .......
........ ....,...
• • •••
: 'l ~ .. ,
When that is completed, the
United Nations must approve
the arrangemen ts before agree·
rng to the end of the trusteeship,
the last of 11 established after
World War II.
In the m eantime. they are
grappling with the proble ms of
government and worrying about
money.
Under the conve ntion with the
United States which established
the commonwe alth, the U.S.
government agreed to provide
$14 million a year, indexed to in·
flation, for seven years s tarting
inJanuary 1978.
THE COMMONWEALTH also
has act'ess to a variet y o f
f e d e ral program s It
participates in 26 of them. worth
$12 million a year.
Almost no food is grown in the
Northern Marianas.
"They don't like to work too
hard," says Canham. "They've
los t the traditio nal farming
skills and they feel it 's not worth
it because the typhoons blown
the crops down."
As a result. almost 60 pert'ent
of the population gets food sur-
plus handouts, dried milk , eggs,
and peanut butler from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Gov Camacho is hoping food
stamps will replace the food
handouts late r this year . A max-
imum income or $5,500 a year
prov ides eligibility for ..food
stamps under fe deral regula-
tions . Most of the population will
be eligible .
THE AVERAGE per-<'apita in·
come is about $4,000. Most of
those e mployed work for the
government.
Ca macho is concerned that
Pres ident Reagan may toughen
up on financial assistance and
possibly refuse to wind up the
trust territory because of the
island's strategic position.
·'There is uncertainty at the
moment. The whole thing de-
pends on the ne w U .S. ad-
ministration's policies, and the
United Nations." he sa.vs.
Camacho is also anxious for
the United States to take up its
option to lease land on Tinian,
an is land three miles off Saipan
wher e the first atom bomb raid
on Hiroshim a was launched
Aug. 6, 1945.
THE UNl1'ED STATES bas
the option of a 100-year lease for
$28 million. Camacho says the
commonwealth could use the
money.
•'T he United States didn't
leave us ln very good shape," he
says. ''.They could have done a
better Job putting in the in·
frastructure and resources. But
they did a r emarkable job in
social services.•·
Visitors get the governor's
point quicklY. The phone system
was put In by the Navy after
World II and doesn't work when
it rains, which ht Q.fteo. Wat~r
has to be bolled from time to
time, dock CacWtlet art poor.
•
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6
7
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•
IT AleOUI' w Alfi! Otrr I ~e-r~= Acl•inl 'i' ralaa boilte. ,,_ ,.lnt lMtdt wetwr'nNd bOmt.
ud CMat. ,,_ lwcuriout dock. Prtcecl rl,b new earpet. A apecio,. 4 vacaot open all bu•
Nrm l la beaiaty wttb week. Ownet-flnucla
eanDal difthll, bnakfa1t Bob DellienMZ·taa
room aod more. Super rtaanclnf by owner. : . HERITnG£ PINIMSULA POINT Alktns '*•* Th ii aophlatlcat.ed COO· ..... ....._. .....
temporary J Bdrm home 67M700 _..,
la all wood and 1laa1 •------------------
f-(f Al 111R ....
with hllb ~llln1s and on LOW DOWN
laree lot. Easy care LIASIOPTIOM owe leu than int. 2 br,
yard, double eara1e dLou.'uri700om~,, l\ci.. 2tomfr-a~~; _1_"'_b_rt._es_1_.l53f __ a_1_t __ plus bo,t storage leaves .1 .,...., ,.
yot.1 tree for beach and bdrm, 2 bat.ha. SBOa LAMDM.AIK 52
bay fun. mo. $165,000. 642~. Very cu.atom home-too
64J.U00 JUST LISTED FOR THIS many xtru t.o lilt. New crpt, drapes & paint.
A PETE BARRE TT
WEEKEND! 199,SOO VA. •t•" 000 _.. ._18 Darlin1 3 BR t~ ba _._...,_. __ ._. ______ _
.. REALTY
houte. H\lie yard with
lovely patio. earden "
fruit trees. Devin & Co.
642-63611
C__, ..____.~ .. IOll OPEN HOUSE unlit .,...arr--...-Sold ! Weekdays •••••••=;:;.:;:,·•••••• 2:30·6pm , Sat /Sun Duva~ 10·6pm. 4br, 1 \.iba,
forces sale of 2br, lba, hardwood floors. new
den home. Assum Lit. paint, cpts. drapes,
Capistrano PaliBades on plumbing $115,000. 683
Portola. $117,000/0BO Senate St. CM MB-1731 or
496-4822__ 831·9878
Corona cW Mer I 022 ---E-A-ST_S_l_D_E __
••••••••••••••••••••••• Jasmine Creek decorator lBdrm 75x150 lot, S9SOO
h I 1 g down, $933 mo. $125,000. ome, Pan on reen· Drive by 201 Monte Vis-belt immac. $305,500 ta, 631·5476 640-8145
IACH PARADISE LEASE OPTION
Beaut 2br, 2ba Irvine
Terr Pool Home. Spa, 2
car gar, room to build.
$6000 dwn $2700/mo.
$285 ,000 FP Bryan
640-5681
Good Duplex on best
street, pool, tu income
Owner. $320,000 Prine
only 640-4999
SPYGLASS
HEWIEOFORD
4 Bdrm 3 Bath, highly
upgraded Pool, Jacuzz i,
s pec tacular ocean &
night hght views!
'•
RCTaylorCo
(>40 <)900
View ! Location. Ocean &
hills Prime Hrbr Vu
area. $380,000. Bev Cov-
ington. Bkr 770·8887 , --•M•E•S•A•V•ERD-•E--
768-6663 4-PLEX
BUYING,
SELLING ?
If someone told you that
yo u woul d save
thousands of DOLLARS when buying or selling your property & still
ha ve the total and quah ty serv1C'e of a pro
feas1onal reallor. would
you lake the lime lo
ca ll ....
IESTPRICE
IHTOWH 4br. remodeled kitchen,
plush carpets, custom drapes. freshly paint~.
seller bought another & has priced thousands
below market value for
quick sale. Cr eat ive
terms ok-better hurry.
~60LDENWEST ·~. EALTORS '>i..,,<f" J!ASSDCIATES
141-1511 The Sunruesl Home in. Existing low interest
JASMIMECRHJ< fin ancing. Pride or 1~~~~~~~~~ 2bdrm & den, cheeery owne rship. Large 3
k1lchen .. plantat1on s hut Bdrm + family room
ters. pvt comm. with owners urut and lhree 2
pool , Jae & tennis Bdrm 2 bath units All
$285,000. By Owner i n c lu de builtin s. 759·1176. fireplaces and enclosed
garages. Excellent con·
Costa Mna I 024 dition. For more in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• formation. call 540-1151
MESAVHDE ., $~ HERITAGE
$15,518
2 Bdrm , l 'it bat.h; tlre_place. Cto.e w beach and 1hoppln1. Hurry I
&U-9161 •
~ I tPf N HUU~E '~ c~HAtTY /
• 104J
.......... H_._.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
&.W..West&tatn
Beautiful S&S Exec. 4
bdrm home. Elegant wet
bar, blt·in bbq inside 4
many other amenities
incl. a huge yard that
backs to a beautiful
park . .t\lSt 2 yrs old•
Broker . "§63.8182
*STARTER HOME Flexiple financing on
this 2 Bdrm Greentree
fixer Owner will help
with cost. CaJI ror de·
tails. e--F1/\NCH
nEAllY
~)~) 1 7000
Broadmoor Townhome.
He ritage Park. 3Br.
2Ba, l ·story end uml
w/lrg. patio. Many up-
grades Assumable loan
al 9.25~ Pvl. party.
$129,500. 559.9077
CHilMH . • REALTORS For°" Ad In WGlllM's Wartd Beautifully decorated 4 , ________ _
Bdrm home with atrium ... PoW I 026
a nd separate master •••••••••••••••••••••••
suite. Private comer lot. ~-------lovely carpets and wa ll
coverings thruout. For
an appointment to see,
call 540· 11.51
·' $-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
•~IN.A
YllW• Co-Op Spectacular view
of Marina + Wh ite Waler. 2br, 2ba, lge liv·
ing rm, frplc, stained glass. prof. decor. lge
covered deck, priv. gar.
$400,000 PP Reply P.O
Box 5125, Orange. CA
92667 MESA VERDE BEST BUY· Charming -t I~~~~~~~~~
bdrm 3 ba home with BToro 1032
family rm Comer lot •••••••••••••••••••••••
VERY PRlVATE yards. CreaffY• Finclftc!R«J
lmmaculat.e and ready Spacious 2-st.ory home
to move In Close lo with upstairs bonus rm
schools and shopping. & bath. 3 bdrms. den/
$175.900 dining rm, oversize Jiv.
* Cote Realty ing rm downst~irs with
I Palos Verdes farerlace. & Investment Features centra air
640-5777 1 Outstanding pool (solar
heated ). spa, much
more! Best buy in Sad-dle back Valley $144,500. r· ................... :········ ................. l Seller will help you buy.
' ,.. ' SUNWFSI'REALTORS
768-0922
\ FomtalltVcAty 1034
~ .......... ·-············ \ .. } ~ .
Businessmen !
I / .11ou art> doing ~
b us1 neu under a!
f'1ctrl1ous Business i
i!~(~~~~ar
Westmont homes. 3 lrg
Bd + Bonus rm. Below market price. $127,000.
Call Anne Mccasland
631·1266 . I 'Vame you are required !
, by law r BUStness and l I Pro/esston.s Code. Sec ; ! 17!JOO ro 179301 to ftle a ! i f'1ct1t 1ous Bu11neu 1
i 'Vame Stotemerit and I ---------~ have 11 published /or ; Hwllatt• leacJI I 040 I tour coni«uUvc Wf!flu j" •••••••••••••••••••••••
j WE at t he DAflY !l••-------
jPIL.Of can help with I IMt .........
Ii both Call tM LEGAL II Clean • tbarp Trl·Plex
DEPARTMENT a t in beat H.B. location. I s•2·0:ZJ Erf. 332 for I Seller ls willinl t.o carry
i further lllfonnatlon. I paper Ir \lie a sraduat.ed
i .............................. -........ -.... 1 payment plafl with a ---------i minimum down pay· cnent. Call n0w (or more
tnro.
2... Sl7.IOO Great starter'or rental
hom e . Qu iet neJahborhood. 50XlSO'
JU lot has plenty of room
for ~Ida to play. Seller
bat a1reed t.o carry a
2nd anct~ can usume
Cal S..• 642-5671, Ext. 330
Easy Play Pieces
I
9389
SIZ£S ~11
But Salpan boasts cable TV,
with three-day·old prosr1m1
rlown ln from Lot An,-eles, acts
and all, two radio ataUoaa, a
weekly n ewspaper u1d
supermarkets stocked witat !~~:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .;;:..~.;._...,.;.ii....._-=.._~;;;-.;;.:.;;:;:.;....;;;;_~;;.;..;:.~~.;_,...::......_;,~-.;--=::;;::,,;.~~~A~m~e~n~tan;;;.;..;fi~Ood.;;.;;.;.-..~:.,..---~
t •
,•
c ............
Call the ~ at the
condo Information
center.
Touchstone Realty ....,
IJJii
UMIYIUITTPU
OPEN SAT/SVN l ·S at
!J7S32 Cottonwood.
1'1)RAMATIC4 Bdrm 3ba
Deane home. New cpt,
central air, p-eat lOCa·
Uon. SS2·1311
RELAXIM
THE SPA
or enjoy out.tide living
8t•ALDIAY Spectacular NEW de·
alaner custom home
avail, mld·aummer.
780-0715
CHARJflNG MEADOWLARK
MODEL
This Kite Hill residence
boasts 4 bedrooms and 3
baths. The deli1htlul
floorplan includes 3
nreplaces, a patio, s,a,
lots of brick, two 8tories
and bollua room. Good terms loo. $339,500.
495-1720
Lingo
... & ....
o,,.~ JJolU•
Sltil1lly and s.m,
APlll 41 .MI 5tll
FDR SALE ~ MME OFFER
Possible Lease Option .
OWNER· BROKER on Premises! Boat
Slip for 65• Yacht. 5 Bdrm, security
Gate, + Communit¥-Tennis Courts
and Clubhouse. 6
CALL
17141121-1211w121JJlf9.IJ6J
IT APPOIMTM9ff OML Y
tAM-IPM
llilyPlal
Any classlficatlon. No cancellation Rebate.
PllMILA.uMA OCIMROMT .
Prime Laguna Beach oceanfro~t ·
fixer-upper. Unobstructed panoramic
.view. Steps to beautiful sandy beach. -owe at 10% down. $975,000.
'
9UAIL PLACI
~PIOPHTllS
712-1920
IOll
Westcliff 3bdrm, den,
3ba, nr schools. park, -8-r-an_d_n_e_w_c_o_n_d_os__.f.__or
comp lete ly fu rn . Water /gardener pd. r ent, S650, dbl gar
S975/mo.64&-863S. w /opener . Close to
ocean. 641·1991, agt
Villa Balboa Condo. Beaut vu, ocean & lites. 4 Br. 2 Ba. Rec. rm. frplc.
Prof dee. comp!. furn. 2 enclsd backyard. Mesa
Br, 2ba, den, d/r, fir. del Mar area. S7SO.
$1500 per mo. lse. 540·3666. Marguerite
IBfrA.LS
2br l h ba $550
$775
1825 furn.
3br2ba
3br2ba
3br 2ba
3br 21,;ba
Sl.250fum.
t800
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Brand New Surfside
Beachlront home. 2600 sq ft. 3sty, low dwn,
owner financing . Bob
Demers 842-9393
APPLE VAU.EY 547·4156 Condo, 3Br 2\l'z ba, encl
Near new •·Plex, 2 patio, frplc, bltn kitch. ~ bdrm 2 bath each unit HCM1Ms U..._..shecl dbl gar w opnr S7SO
with fireplace, enclosed •••••••• ••••••••••••••• Ron Say 979-5370 ~ ~
patio, double garage.' Corotta del M.-3222 ---'i/.'J;
$165,000. Bill Grundy, •••••••••••••••••••••••Dana Point 3226 ~~i9' .... I
Rltr, 675-6161. Shoreclifrs 2 br & den, lge ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833·8600 ---------1 yard. Mini view. S1100. VACANT, DUPLEX 2br. fOUIPLIX Agent, 673-5354 2ba, frplc, built·ins,
carport S.75 1st/last + -.52' C "-I Westaide Cost• Mesa. 2Br pvt beach Adults $300. 542-~. 731-5125 ~ AMPV,.1111.: RVttfE Needs som e work. · · · ---------___ _
Ott.et-IHI....._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~tt... 1100
••••••••••••••••••••••• $22,000 yr income . Full only. Garden. H...tln-'-leach 3240 Twnhse. 3 Br, 211:1 ba,
Prl. ce S225,000. Owner 64<>-0128 .,,_,
New Modular type home,
Ocean view· El Moro
-•••••··~··••••••••••••• pool . Jae, secluded will carry 10% interest RUSTIC SETI'IMG Brand new house for dis neighborhood S750/mo.
w/$60,000dn. 3Bdrm.2ba.frplc. crimanating Camily. 3 Dys 642 9909 . eves
Charming upper unat blks to ocean. 3 Br 3 559.9020 Beach Park, sp 70. 2Br, ~ PR€'TIG€
$850/mo Own Agt Ba .. Cam rm Totally
645-0295 upgraded & customized
space rent Sl75 mo. 20 _ _ >
yrs lse. $69,900. 499-3816 ---+-I -HOM€\
$1200 mo 833 014 5
AM /PM !Trailer at bch $14 ,900. R.E. lnve5tments lmmac. 3 br, lrvine Ter-
i Terms,OWCortrade 3333 W.CoastHwy.NB race, lge yd. pool. jac.
499-3816 645-6646 Sl680.640.9900agt 4Br, p ... ea, liv rm. frplc .
lg encl yd. 2 car gar,
$33,000 Assumable Loan, ---------Costa Mesa 3224 grdnr incl $650 mo 1 yr 2bdrm +den,2ba.24X60 OCEANVIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• l se pp 968·125:.
Viking. New crpt. all ap· DUPLEX Beaut. 2Br adult only 962·8672 '
pliances an cl. Really Drast ic reduction on townh se. 2 c ar gar.
sharp.F/P.$48.SOO.P vt. brand new Balboa Laundry. pulling
Party . Prine. Only . duplex. lst oWTlers 2oor,;. course, ve ry quiet.
960-3029. depreciation. Great ren· S600/mo. Ask for Bob
tal area. 100 feet from 962·8891.or 531-4750
3 BR.2 Ba house, $650 mo
N e wly redecorated
557-8247 aft SPM
Villa Pac 3 Br Condo, 2 Open Hse Sat S• CM Pk beach. Large 3 bdrm. 3
2Br, 2Ba. sun porch lge bath plus 2 bdrm. 2 bath. KIDS/PETS OK Ba Atrium. frplc. ten
2br, de n patio home
Frpl c , c us tom bk
s helves , lo vely
landscaping. Adj to prk,
pool, & JaC. 559· 1420 aft 7
& wk end.s
LUXURY I.USES Home with 2 car garage,
frplc, 2 ba, etc.
2 BRS650
3 BR S750
Call Woodbridge Rily,
551·3000 or 559 5981 Ed
Woodbridge Nice 4 Br 3ba
bn the paUo. Lovely Plan On the Oraqe Coesl·
I In Turtle Rock. 2bdnn, look to L.incofint! and den, 2ba, covered 1---------
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 .
rued grdn, adJts645-1862 Owner will ,assis t In
CeMtlffJ Loh/ financing. $425,000.
Crypti 1500
E -Side ~ Bdrm. S495 nis. pools, spa I m1
W /Garage. 642 25 10, ocean, $675.962·7469 646·4848. --- ---- - -Huntington
3 BR. 2 sty. Back Bay Harbc>ur
super family home.
S950/mo.
Waterfront Homes, Inc ..
Realtors 631-1400 patlo. Close lo Turtle
Rock Part and tennis
courts. Move in condi·
tion only S17UOO.
•523 c.u.,.,, ·~ '~.....
.... ,.... .... 106' •••••••••••••••••••••••
llO,IMDOWM
Utt ..... IJ.7• .......... '
Larae comer ~
house 4 Br. 2~ Ba. RV
space behind lo-eked
1ates. All tbis in
Westclilf. No &oan quali·
fying.
YICTOllAM
We are developers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner Jim
Thompson.
11141121-1211 12131 ltl-IUJ
CHOI JIJ.3718
B'EACHHOMJ!. M~Mo-.
New 3 BR 31,Aa Ba. Q1111li-IMYUTOIS/IUYBlS Waterfront townhouse
1600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SHOPPING CEHTR
21,500 sq ft, Glendora.
New, ptly leased. Scbed.
income Sl97 ,000 on triple
net leases. Owner must
s ell. Sl,600,000. Agt,
(213)553·9552 days, or
(714 )846-3278 eves.
ty handcrarted oak LOWDOWM co-op. 3Br 2.,., ba. Dock 1---------THI SHA.klS thruout. Stained glass, Veraaillea lbdr111 4': '=pool. SH0"9MG CMTI.
W e a t here d c e d a r spa. !~'!'!~a::t'.,:t~r! Roger Brown R. E. MISSION VIEJO
shakes, that ls. Custom -.llOO. Jim Scb"mann __ 61_s._1_m_or_61_3-_2_18_1_ Excel. location. Spenda· designed 3 bdrm, fam ••"" " ble income. Will trade
Redh1ll~~ReJ!ty
I;-;-;) 7:{1111
LIVIRA&I rm, 2 baths. Extensive m-R7n--uy _a_st_.tn-__ 5370 __ .____ ,,.. ... Ca ltv for condo in Palm Spr·
Use of wood glass & !["...._AI IW.a~ Spectacular 3br. 2ba, 1·n1s As .. m· g SI 250 ooo ceramic tile. Beam ceil-7~ -IT OWte. SAVI amen.lties <spa, etc). Blk A .. ."644.9s13 . . . Pride of Ownership
SBr 2Ba ---~ tt 2 b b s 95 000 I I •• rour~lex localed within ing, frplc. $165,000. s B 3 Ba Harbo . • • ......_. · to eac . 1 • . . 1---------1 , d" t Mission Realty r. . r view frplcs, Ill•· Financing Rieb, 75~4408.µ&-9530. W Propetiy 2000 wa ang is a nee lo
(7l4)"94-073l. ' Hom e . S 3 4 9 . 5 0 0 . avail. Sll6.SOO, or trade. ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange Mall. 3 Bdrm. 2
3242
=·o 63~~~~ ~:~u~~ir ~:·;·~:·n·~~·~~··~:~::·; Orange. Tree 2 br. 2 ba.
Ruth or Steve 2Br. 212Ba, 2 frplcs. lg den .. ~in rm. gar. Am·
gar. $850 mo. 840-5502. menit1e~ $.550 !57·2598
3br: 2ba house, dble gar,
nice yrd . S650/mo.
642·9772
4 br. 3 ba condo, 1900 sq ft ,
tennis. pool. sauna. etc.
next lo Back Bay, $850.
675·4277. Bob or Sharon.
675-7694.
846-3039 _ LOCJUfta leach 3241
l"hte 3244 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanfrnt lBr. trlr +
WOODBRIDGE 3 Br I'• cabana. deck. p,·t bch.
Ba. Condo $600 imo furn unfum. adlts only
Wrk (7 14 1833·6029 S750mo.499-38_1_6 __ _ Rama H ome ________ _
(213 )498·6090
W OODB RID GE
"'CR EEKSIDE00 Willow Plan Professionally
landscaped Model home
on the park. 4 Br. 3 Ba. 2
Story Fam rm.. Om .
frplc, dshwsr, micro
wa,·e. S850 mo. No pets
964-2566 Agent, no fee
WOOOSCOVE
l70Rorw Outrageous lbdnn. Iba.
s k y light s, antiqu e
doors twindows, beamed
c eilings. frplc, new
kitchen fbath. $675/mo.
Days 833-8847 eves
497-2278 Trish
Laguna Hlls 3250 Woodbridge Townhome, •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 story. 2bdrm. l''!lba, Attractive 3 Br. 2 Ba. in
pool , lennas & lake Laguna Village No pets.
$625/mo. 759·0ll5. $625 mo. 497.4072 ---------Owner/Agt. Comm . Call Answer Ad #3'7 atl•--------l~OMEN--TIES Ba owner's unit & three
2Br cabana &c trlr, sublet· pool 67• Tl... '42 4300" ... -n.rday 801 UDO "'" _..sa 2 Br 2 Ba units. all have Woodbridge Estates Ung allowed, 3 pvt bells, . r '"' -~ ..-· . Looking for income UD· garages. Assume 12'•% 3 Bdrm 2 ba, frplc. yard. New Lincoln J br. 23.4 ba.
pool &c fishiftg pier. l .. CAICYOM BLUFFS BARGAIN 3 Southern Californi1's Its?! We hlVe 5 pro· loan and owner will qult!t neighborhood ram. rm. Jndry rm. 2
Cozy 3 br home. new
crptg, drapes. frplc,
gardener, S650. No pets. $29,900. cn4 )499-31116 •OL•CouttslLOT premier bigb rise con· perties in C.M. Priced c arry 2nd with 20% S700/mo. frplcs. 2 car gar, small Call eves, 586-8897 O~~·--t Bdrm twnhme Sls.5,000. domlnlum. Exceptional r ight at less than down. Fullprice$250,000 WaterfrontHomes yd.SSOO /mo.833-2614 .... _ --Walk to everythin1 · view of Newport Bay. llXGross. No bank Inc. Rltrs. 673-6900 LCICJUlta MlcJiltf 3Z52
DUPLD .,,at Agent. DaM Bibb' paol, tennis; schools, Total 24 hr security. financing required. In· ---- -Northwood, over looking •••••••••••••••••••••••
---
OCIAM... 67S-23ll 14&-7~ part ft abopptq. Agt. Higbly upgraded . terested?Then callus. Newport Hts. 3Br. 2Ba park. 4 Br. 2'2 Ba. 2000 BICYCLE TO BEACH.
Bringyourp&inlbruab&c TMllUt•I f75-SU>,14Nl4t $708,000.Princ.only. • NEI·,J~ Frpl c. p vt. yard sq ft. FR., frpl, form TENNIS , PARKS &
broom toaave$$1oa thls l R~Le.et * ,. I S62S /m o. + security din. immac. Avail Sil. SHOPPING d lrty•daw11 ! Prime r1 t i i I POOL~ Cote Rea ty M2·5722. $850. 857·0461 2000 sq ft.. 4br, view,
.. HS or na area. JUST Ufn'ED, lovely 4 & Investment coon~m.n 11x:. . patio home, fam rm. Laguna Beach duplex Massive greenbelt vista. BR 31,Aa t>. + den with 't Newport Hts. Unique 3Br Northwood Racquet di · 2 f 1 t w/attached gara1e. Sub-S111artly decorated in F d 6'0-S777 714 1641·0763 18a. Huge yard. Pets ok. Club, 4bdrm. Jba, ai·r, ning rm, rp cs, we f'lt offer! 79-1501 C)r wetbar + am rm, an bar, dbl gar, a/c, comm·
15 popular tones, n~by dell&llttul kitchen over· ---------2787 Bristol St. , $44S/mo.642-5722. gardener, xlnt cond . 'ty pool. no pets
52·7373. pool. Offered at a GOO loolliq pool and jacuui Newport Heights, 3br Costa Mesa. CA , _________ 01 •Br. 2 Ba. S8SO mo $850/mo 975-0732. S750 /m o. 497·2864 or ~•LE• I•-(with auumable hi baJ. Oii cul de sac street. 2ba, new kitchen, frplc, ---------h for 5* 220 lst/last S300 s~uraty. 497.3723 -._ loan-try ta,000 down). Scparatemuter&c1aest private master suit. EJt. ....................... I f I di Woodbridge Twnhse 2 ----
REAL ESTATE Agt, 640-S580. or mother·ln·law bdrm cell ell t f Ina nci n1 . INVESTOR'S Extraordinary 1,.2 acre fnegw 2c~pnsqtft_0;:;'!1.~ n sty, 3br, ll'!lba. pool, ten-4Br, 2Ba. lg secluded lot.
•Oceanfront dpht, alnt with own baths. 3 car S189,SOO. Jeanne Agt. Laguna Bch c ustom · · nis, lake. $650/mo. gar, refrig, $800 mo.
AIA .. Ola loc, fin, It prieel Prln. 1ara1e + xtra parking. 611-1266 D......., home view site, S700K. LGE 2br home. cpls, stv, 551-5526. Avail immed. 4~0967.
MU. " Call now, llll-~. ---------z ... IW c---"'OS Owner /agt. 760-8507. ---497.4279 • UDO,-JS oaJy.17~7'7T.f'D-'71'13 . otl4J .... 1forappt. C ... S.CW.h " ~ refrig, fn cd yd. gar, Have something to sell?
'°"•DOWN Call the Jperts at the OM LOT PRESTIGIOUS VIEW adults.S360/mo.644·9806 Classifiedadsdoitwell Newport.._,. 326t
NO QUALIFYING. •'.lt.A41111•y •••-111111.-••--I condo Information Llveinooe. LOT. Mooarch BayTer-••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful ' BR. 4 ba -~llA H•llCMt ... · ceater. Reotorsell race, Laguna Nig ue l. & ... NI J20Z GeMral l202 3 Br. 2 Ba. large yard, 2
-ate ~ to private 3br, %ba bolae plus ideal " T .. _ __..Re It the other ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• car oarage. S74S rno. ·~n · mother·U..law ~en. 3 Bdrm witb loft, S oucua........ a Y $330,000. 962·1632, • beach bay· Open -b l J be tl( II ..._., 641 • lttl ogt. 536-0966 eves. 675·0562. beamed vaulted cell· Compl. w/batb. ,vvv. a con ea, au u11y ---------
1 lnp. llajatk muter• a.,~Mw landscaped, up1raded. Bayfront, leMe or leue l•-------•IC:WofStah
; 1ue!l suites. S505,0001 '!!~!!1~-.:~1'~2t!!!!!!I ~~ ~~~-col::m~ option. Lovely 4bdna, ,,... lllYelhacala Property 2600 '·FPSH.-ORE''~"·~. 1: la,..e.loan. Sba, ar Linda Ille. MIWPOltTllACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... .,,.:. ~ Private allp ror 50' boat. A scenic Oregon Coast.
IMt-2282 YBYPllYAn -,._.__ SaOoo/mo. "75,000 firm COl,......•DB.a..11•a Electricity. fenced, out· Secluded-Weatctlff ft vv _..__ 1112 .,.. N t -.--di · · 8eautlfuJ Backbay 3br, Dover 4 Mnn, lam nn, ..CT AC• •I YUS . vv on ewpor 2 Triplexes ln a Row atan ng view. access1-
I Iba bome, Great uaum. courtyard. 2 tr~lu . lfre-atbtakiDI ocHn, Bay. 875-1851• Prine. On· on Oceanaldeof PCH ble, owner492-2499
j ftnanctn1. Sl70,000 ()pell <>Den Sat/Sa 1·5 at 1.SH lllllt 6 mta. 'l'iewl trOm _lY_P_le_ue_. -----BUY ONE OR ALL Florence, Oregon rec pro-
1 HOUM l/21, 2300 Heatber lfl&bland Dr. Ast Uita.fle.oneofak:lad, ... n perty, lot S3'x93', or-
1 Lanee11.-11 SU-0880 qualltJ home on Galaxy ..,.LIA IAUOA PIMN. ganbed campground.
Drive. BeaatlfuJly de· !'! TJl IAJEI Tw,p duplexes and one 23' Terry lrlr w /full corated, landetaped trit»le• [n a row. 1 lot hook-ups must sell with _..., .. , ..:..... • -' "'-.. • -ft ..... _t from sand and surf. ' nt r a"7iar1e'lo'l. ' Ab.oa; •:.;_ ,;::; • BUY ONE OR ALL Sl8,000. Rutter 552· 78S6
ldrlnt,' Ba, many · out· •.1Ir1 llcfrb. Ideal for partnerships
s tan• h~ I qua I Hy C /I I =rt ClllP. or syndlcatJona.
featllftl .... Cllt. 6 n 7 MPTIS&JeAllA
DuJ>lex with dodt ror so ft boat.
MIWPOUt•lm. fripta with Pool
Pountaln Valle1 FOUl'Plfx and
many many more I I I
macnab I Irvine
realty
A SUBSIDIARY OF
THE IRVINE COMPANY
WXURIOUS IA YfltOMT! 2BR, 2 bath
residence w/large deck on the
water . Availabl e now at
SZSOO/rno./yrly. Larry Dyer. C-80. &ti·823S.
HAllOI VllW HOMIS W /POOLl
Somerset Plan -5BRS, f amity rm,
formal dinin' rm. Pool and spa.
Perfect condition. $1650/mo./yrly.
Larry Dyer. C·81. 642-8235.
MIAT VllW IN TUnu IOQ YISTAt
3BR, 21rl bath residence w /large
entertainment center, upgraded
cpts and drps in 1 neutral tones.
Communiiy poo and tennis.
$105 /mo. incl. gardener. Jeanne
Barnett. C-82, 644·8200.
!MUI l .. OOM HOMI -StlO/MOI
2-story home ln old Corona del Mar
wlth many custom features. Paula
Balley. C·83. 642·8235.
-----~--'--711-1414
c~v-.;c....,
MMlll
NEWPORT HACH
1.,., blocks to the ocean
beach. Three bedroom
two bath home. Yearly
lease. First and last,
SlOOO per m onth .
631·7300, BKR.
Steps to the beach, tie 4
br dplx, 2..., ba, paUo. 2
sly, immac. SlOOO yrly.
673·'M{
3 Br 2 Ba, Incl. refri1.
fenced yrd. '750/mo yr.
ly. Agt. 67S.E
Walk to beach. Beaut.
Newport er.t 4 br con-
do, fam. nn, din. rm,
pool, tennis, JUOO.
646.-0888
Npt Creat condo, ' Br 2"11
Ba, spilt level, dbl
1ara1e. Lease SBOO/mo lit, laeUtdep.151·9303
Harbor View llomee,
abdrm, Iba, nice street,
nrdener Incl. HSO.
840-4129. aftet8pm.
BeauUfuUy decorated 4
Bd 2ba, 2 frplca .
Baycreat area. Avau
4/1. 1185.CallMi-7•
, IUllllS . a l>clrms, ram rm, $1100.
· I bdrm, ,J beth •· Pools. IUtr, IM-0116.
·'
!
I
I
1724 .......................
SUSCASlrAS
Npt Sh •DA I I Furn 1 br. •pl, ms . up.
· 0"' .._.rm, rp~c. Encl. far. Adultt, no walk to beach, pool, ten-pet.a, 2 le> Newport Bl.
nll. tfOO, Alt. 1-.1271 MB-4• btwnUs5PM
2Br, 281. Adult complex. . CASA DI OIO
No pets. Pool, pvt. p1llo. ALL tJTll.l'MP.S PAID
Spit lvl. ~75/mo. lmo. J lrToWThllt security, SlOO cleanln1 ... _~ d 7~ Comp1re uerore you Newly decor. 1aa pd.,
3 Br condo. SJC. Fem
pref, P~. Jaund rm.
$186+ ~ utll. 493-~
Mature/F to •hr beaut
fUm\ 2br 2\-iba twnhse
Npt Hats, $250/mo.
S46·7Weve.
WIU share 2Bd 2Ba Park
Newport l300 mo. furn.
w/femaleref's640.8693
CusU>m, executive omce,
400 sq. ft. Pvt bath with
shower. Balboa Penln. DOGHOOMING
SALON
Plunp-Poker-•
Force-Member -
BROKEN ll wu a perfettday. The
•p. 7833. rent. Custom de1i1n en c I 1 a r . • So o I • I futures: Pool, BBQ, d /waaher. A ulla.1 __________
1
---------
I •CANYON cov 'rd 1ara1e, new M2•50'73 1 Br. Ye•rly, garage Eirclutlve, flill aecur1ty, furnUure, surrounded ---------1Sh1rp Bach Unit. Stove & parking, steps lo beach.
N.B. prof. man t.() shr his
beaut. 3br, 2ba home
w /independent lady
30-45, S325 comp l
760-0802
S285 mo. 642-4623. ,
HEWPOITCENTH
Prestigious ocean view
full service suite.
200-5000 sq. fl. 644-7180.
Neat, plus central loca.
tlon , parking,
established 19 yrs, terms
available, out of town
owner says Sell! Only
$17,500.
IUD WU •hinin1 ••
breeie WU blowin&, tbe
blrds were 1in1io1 1Dd
the lawn mower ...
BROKEN. •
beautiful 3 Br. a Ba. wttb phab landsCaDtnr. refrl1e. Adults, nope\:'. $HO mo. s.4 .6899• private yard, wet bar• Adult liviq at its bat.
1
_*300 __ . sc_a._1m __ . ____ ,
67
3-3958 fireplace, many other N ipet.a APAl"b9n1 D--r-1...& 3126 --------a.,m1~nltlea in1~} •. '!dlng
0
sach
0
fum1abecU3'10 BeauUfWJy landauped .. -=::.:::: •• •t••••••• Ocean View-spacious, a "' room. ~....., mo. 2 Bdrm f··-'-"'-" --I rd ... ~at'--~ I I 2 b /2 b Call A th kd ... lWNIOIU_ a en 1,..... r1 ..,. or 2 br, bi'lcon • O.W ., uxur ous r a n ony w ys -"w.wa--~ ....... l d .. Poo16 H t V ·11 d 84.2·5'157 eves & wknds _,, ...,....._....,, ecaa. spa. ea clean coin laundry & ersaa es con o, all
6'4·8889. $335 Mo. Deluxe Mobile paid, covered parking. wahr: 1ar. nr ocean. amenities, $750. SS7-1997
---------Adulta, no pet.I. 1 or 2 493-5953 aft 5PM Cute 3br, 2ba in Newport Home. Mature Adults. peraona OK. · Ocean View! Lge 2br
Heidhts ...,""/m J No peta. Quiet, secure. 1 Bdrm = fo•t• ..,.._. 3134 Condo, sec bldg. Adults • · ~ 0 · ean-1991 Newport Blvd. 2 Bd 2Ba -r 1 $795/lse "-5 rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• on y . ,,_. 111 nne Agt. 631-1 . .266 "~"-8373. 2250 y .. R ... on...d w
Female to share lg. furn.
hom e by ocean .
Wash/dryer. garage
S300. Call 493-9604
•Free Room /Board•
Fem OOO·smkr prefers
same in exchange for
hskpg & babysitting.
752-2093, 837-3952
1200 sq fl, ocean vu,
Laguna Bch, $1000/mo.
lease. 494-0066
H. B. Garden Type Suite
605 sq. ft. at 70:-/sq rt. 2•35 E. CoHt "*Y·· CdM
A /C, Ba . 536-3043 ---
(ffouma <kl Jl(m
-~.lw'~t/ie.; ~ 673-8194
968·6762 tn .. atnuttlt -Opporiunlty 5015
Lott&F..-
...., -........ ay Beaut Condo, bright &
S40-96216or 548-2408 cheery, 2br, 2ba, lrg BLUFFS Plaza condo. 4 H•llMJI• lwll 3740
br, 21/a ba No pets. SSSO •••••••••••••••••••••••
mo . Ca II a ft 3 PM. $375/up l·2 bdrm. pool,
760-1573 jac, adlt, 1899'l Florida,
patio w /attach 2~ car
gar. le25mo. Off 751-8910
USO. 2 br, Iba dplx, frplc.
gar, patio. lndry, adults
642-9918
WILL S WAP, o rfice ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~ ---------•I space for ans serv & LOAN S500 or more. Dbl. light Secretarial help. your money. Loan as Lo5t, Santa Ana & Monte
Vista, CM. Male c~t
grey w /blk stripea.
REWARD64S-7604
2 Bdrm 1 Ba 1485 2.Bdrm 2 Ba $48G.485
398 W. Wilson, 631·5583
,Westfield
FAMILY UT'i.
or (ff) 675-2336 Versailles lwc. jr. I br,
refrig , sec, $445.
.. iltghlet INdl 3140 760-8390, 994-6860 (Mike l ..... .. ...... ........ .. ___ ..;..__ __ ..;..__ __
••• Responsible, employed
fem to shr lux BACK
BAY CONDO w/prof
woman & daughter .
Prlv. furn rm, bath, gar.
Also 2 nice offices SlSO secured by unprecedenl·
ea. OC Airport 966-0044. ed 1st in film financing
history. 714-957 ·4086 NEWPORT IEACH
1 or 2 Offices w /reC'ep &
storage. Prime loc .
Furn. or Wllum. 752-6.550
SOUD SICUlrTY
XLNTllTUIN
Lost. Cream fem. cat
w /darker markings .
White paws. Shorecllf(s
v icinity , Cd M .
REWARD. 760-6057
Bayfront, lease or lease h .B. 1142·ll834or1M2-!172
option. Lovely 4bdrm. wportlMldt 3769
5ba. nr Linda Isle. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Private slip for 50' boat. •Dix Oceanfront. Wkly;
S3000/mo. $875,000 rirm Easter, Smr. Now. 2-4
in 1982. 60' on Newport Br. XJnt loc. 673-SURF Bay. 675-9956. Prine. On·
ly please. Lu ir u r y Oc ea nf ron t
--'---------Weekly. 2 or 3 Br. Comp. 2Br, den, 2Ba, wlk to bch, furn . inc Id linens.
tennis & pool priv. $750 64G-4784.
Brand new beauurul lrg
apt, for families with 1
or 2 children. Near park.
Heat paid. No pets.
2Br, 1 Ba. 1470
THEWHIFf:LETalE l & 2bdrm apts, from cooking/lndry lac All
Luxury Adull units at af-$370. Adults. no pets. amen. $300/mo in<'I utal.
ford1ble living. 1,2 & 3 1409Superior. 645·8684. No deposit, but ref's are
Br. Well decorated. 3176 req.PhoneS48-0963eves Oedlylmpi~ s~!°°JI , ligh~· ~~I~.~!'!= .......... •&-w•k•n•d•s _____ _ ennts ... v..u., acuz.z1,
park like landscaping. Nr S.C. General Hosp
Most beautiful bldg. m 3br, frplc, ~ba. stove,
H.B. I c rpts. avaal Apr 4.
1600 sq ft in lge busy H.B.
s hopping center. Golden
West I Warner Ave
SJt/sq. n. Bob Demers
842-9393
Fully managed invest-
ment program dealing
m single family homes
an So Calaf. Earn sub·
stantaal returns on your
capital. with strong lax
shelterang benefits You
Lost: Short-haired wltitt
Cat. altered, declaw~
"AJax ". Collar. blahd ~
Oceanrront, Balboll
Penin REWARD Dys ·
645·8600 ext 2584 : eves
675-5939.
mo.64~5272 1~--------
-----FanlasUcally furnished BLUFFS new 3br. 2ba, townhouse, with ocean
Bonita Plan, l story. view. Tennis court. pool.
11150/mo. 644·2300. S925Jmo. 1ro.9117
VILLA BALBOA 2 Bdrm
1''1 ba. OC'ean view.
Avail on sho rt term
$850/mo.
H. V. Homes custom 3
Bdrm, 5 ba with pool.
Prof. dee. Compl. ocean-
tbay vaew. S2500.
LIDO ISLE 2 Bdrm. 13•
ba home. Yearly Sl200 mo.
2 Bdrm 2 bath LUXURY
condo S850tmo
Waterfront Homes. Inc
Realtors 631· 1400
SHORT TERM Rentals
Weekly&moothly
Agent, 675-8170
YEAA·ROUND FUN:
Social Act1v1t1es 01·
rectnr •Free Sunday
Brunch• BBQ s •Par
hes• Plus much more
GREAT RECREATION:
Tenno~ •Free lessons
• (pro & pro shop)• 2
Health Clubs• Sauna•
Hydromassage•Swm·
mong • Ori.onglUnge
391 W. Wilson, 631 ·SS83
WALLACE ST. APTS.
Newly decorated 2 Br. 1
Ba. ~25. Small child
OK, no p ets. 2049
Wallace '1, ~2
2 Bd 1 Ba, S37S. Clean &
quiet, no kids/pets. Call
Cra..ig. 631-12166
R&"M~
k ~ \I 1 c ·ff·,
38r, 28a, 4-plex. gar,
adults, no pets. $480. 1040
From $395. IM6-06l9 l $450/mo_. 891-1644.
,~a ADULT ~~. LIVING
• t & 2 8fl Pa1oo AOls
• Ooshw•s~h & 880 \
• Poo1 & Ate Aoom
• G••otn l 1nosc1p1n9
• JOQ IO 8eKh & Sr.ops
SL A E NVIRONME NT
'4~ I, l•llMll l ON ti A
~-' 10.,0't
S-J ...
Capls"'-'o 3171 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2br, 2ba penthouse, 1
level, very neat. .1490.
496·MS8 alt 6PM Gloria Agt.
3890 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Security apts, lbdrm &
2bdrm. util pd, adults,
· no pets. From $375. 836·5506.
C, Valencia~7983 Best"Tustin location,
close to everything. New
StunningLge1&2br,2ba 2 & 3 Bedrooms . 1 Br. formal dining,
garden apt, pool/rec 1400-S450. Kids OK. no frplc, patio, tennis/pool.
area.710W.18thSt. pets please. Water/ Adult.sonly.S475.Lo1sor
1 Br 1 ba, patio. Laund Trash Paid. Carport. Carol 675-5930
facil, encl garages, new-964-2566 or 9'73-2971. Agt. · ~..ts ,_,.shed
ly dee. Walk to shop-~fee. or U• ... Msh.d ltOO
ping. Min. from bch. 2 Br 2 Ba. Townhouse. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~dX,~or~~~·~~~i ~~~~ lbeerac~.K ?as:f~: S E A W I H D
or 545 ·6155 . 1970 96C).1279or831~ VILLAGE
WaUace, C.M. N 1 .... bd I MEAlt THE IEACH ew ~ nn uxury Townhouse East.side 2Br. 2 br, 2 ba, blHns, pvt adult apt.s in 1• plans 1,,_ b 2 St 3 Id from $440, 2 bdrm from ~ a. Y· yrs. o • n.ata·o gar Adults •~0~ N 1465/ ,... • · · _..... SS05 + pools. tennis,
S.J ...
BEAUTIFUL APA AT·
MENTS· Singles 1 &
"1 Bet:l•ooms • Fur
noshed & Unfurnished
• Adult L1111ng •No Pets
• Models Open daily
9 to 6
ear. o pets. mo. 4922 Edinger. 840-3808, waterfalls, ponds! Gas
1_67_5-_8_133 _______ 1 846·~2~ for cooking & heating
BEAUTIFUL 2 Br. 2 Ba. Large 3 BR 212 ba, with paid. From San Diego
Mesa Verde, UOO sq fl garaee. Kids & pets Frwy drive North on Capis"'-1278 •••••••••••••••••••••••
4bdrm. 2ba house w/gar.
1 mi from bea<"h .
$700/mo. 673-5716.
SClfttaAna 3HO •••••••••••••••••••••••
$475. 1st, last + Sl50.
2bdrm, lba, drive by.
2006 S . Garnsey .
644·5069.
SOtlth L..,_. 3216 •••••••••••••••••••••••
OCEANFRONT HOME
Oakwood
G.rden Apartments
NewPott leectl/So.
1100 16th St
10ove1 ,i 161111
( 71•) 642-5113
Newport leleh/No.
880 Irvine
tdl t61111
17141 MS-HCM
O'looks pvt beach. 2 br,
2~ ba, den, din. rm, lge LA.I_._ .. ,.
deck, Sl200/mo 499·2253, 499-5021
f I I d ti di Beach lo McFadden pc, n ry, pa o, S· welcome. 1 mile to then West 00 McFadden hwshr, encl gar, Adults, ocean S600 mo ""'" 2937 · · ""'"' to Sea wind Village no peta. $500. 3107 Mace. I (71 )893-Sl""' 54CH400. •LOOI<• 4 .,.,.
lmmac. 2 Bdnn 1"2 bth OOMI 4000
$355. E /Slde, 1 BR, gar, condo avail 4-3 $450 mo. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1st + last + $100. No Call Mike. 646-9911 guna Beach Motor Inn,
pets. 2 BR also avl, 985 No. Pacific Coast
541-5331;9'6-232:5 Duplex : Large Bach. 4 Hwy, Laguna Beach.
---..;._-----1 blocks to the Pier. Daily, Weekly, Kitchen
Near new 2Br,2Ba, frplc, Everything new. All available. Low winter
laundry fac, new crpts. utils. S39S. 417 Alabama. rates. 494-5294. drps 6 paint. Encl gar, 960-8263&96().0277 ~50. Adults, no pets. ---------R o o m w I k i t c h e n
673-2113 & 76(Hi782. New paint. xtra clean. Pr iv i 1 e g es . p h 0 n e -----..,..----1 spaci ous 3br . 2ba, 96 o f PM Xtra lg 3Br 3ba. Cpt.s. owner's un1'l has ever· 2·752 rom 6 to 9:JOPM or weekends drpe, range, nr new. 2660 ythin& 538-8610
Elden. Open Sat/Sun. LOVELY room. nr DP
SISO, 54Mll91 l,..M 3144 Harbor .....,,/mo, pvt ba. •. . •..• •.....••••••.••• ---------1 .•.•.••. ...••.•..•.. ..• . t ~ 32'8 •••••••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT SHORES
$250. 1st & Last
645-9549
Chrmng, Anlq Hse s hr
wl fem avaal now S200 +
util Call Ad lt440
642·4300 24 hrs
VW Mechanic 2!I seeking
apt or hse to sh11re.
645 9407 aft 5PM
Rmmte wanted to s hr
beaut City Terrace apt
2br. 2ba $250/mo. all am.
men. 634·4796 10am-4pm
Shr new home in Wood·
bridge all amenit ies.
$300/mo 641· 1130 Greg
Male rmmte Luxury con·
do Costa Mesa. Master
bdrm w /b;i . S225 .
545-2068
Beaut ocean view. de
signer furn share home
in So Laguna S550 mo
499 3922, 549 1186
Fem lo shr 2 Br lux apt.
ocean vu, Nwpt Bch
673·5425 eve or Sunday
M/F to shr 2 bdrm apt a j
cross Fashion Is land
$330/mo incl ulils Call
Paul, 640 8937
F 121·30 to shr 3bd on 8ch.
Bal Penn. S275 mo Avaal
4/15 673 6438 Bnan
Male to shr w tsame.
2bdrm house m CdM
64()..6479.
Professional Male wishes
to s hare Your Costa
Mesa. Newport Beach
House or Condo. 631 1276
Mark.
Fem to shr 2br. 2ba hme
pool{jac. Irvine S250 mo + utn 646-3.179
300 sq rt w/bath. new cpl, a r e seC'ured by 100"(
$225 mo ownership of property,
642-1944 yet completely Cree or
-------manager burdens call
Beautiful private orrices Mr Doyle<213)2774661 TOP REWARD Lost
in Irvine (Orange Co. & M t Loan-5025 re male Himalayan Fr ee w~y a ccess l •• ~! .. ~•••••••••••••• Persian w/blue collar.
Re ce pt1on1sl. con We have money 10 loan V1c.OakwoodApts.N.B
feren ce r oom , pax for 2nd & 3rd TD 's. 642-4505
library, space for staH SlO,OOO to S25,000 & up. ------
available. and free park: No credit requirements. Lost· black/gray Poodle.
1ng . 714 ·752·8995. For fa s t rr iendly l front tooth m issing .
833·8990 serviC'es <"all Old Ranch Vic of 3rd & Begonia,
Mgmt & Investment Cd M . No tags . San Clemente s pace 1 714 > 826 .594 0 o r '"Charlie'" REWARD.
avail. less than 60' a eves/wknds <"all agl 675-6082. foot. Private baths & air 975 0063 --------
conditioning. 673-3022 or · Lost 2 Fem Keeshound.
492-4121 MorlCJGCJ". Trust Vic, EdwardstEdinget,
MEWPOIT DHds 5035 HB Mandy , Pepper.
••••••••••••••••••••••• REWARD892-4978 Exec. ore on Dove. am
pie pkgn. furn. or un
furn. Mo. to Mo Full
service, other tenants
CPA 's 714 752· 1678
l usiness llentd ·4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
For store & office space
at reasonable rates
500 to 2700 Sa Ft.
MESAVERDEbR
PLAZA
1525 Mesa Verde E. C M
545-4123
Sattter~Co.
All types of real estate
m vestments since 1949
SpecJc:Mdncj in
2ndTDs
642-2 17 1 545-06 11
Widow has money for
2ND T D 's an) :.aze
above SI0.000 No credll
~, no pnlty. For a<'laon
cal l AGT 673 73 11
anytime
Mackeref Rats MhJ.
Newport Bea<"h. Sl.25 SINCE 1981
sq ft. New dlx orriC'e or lst&2nd TDs. S50K-Sl M +
retail w /pvt bath, Owner /Non Owner
SFRs&Condos security, a /<". 600·2400 Commercial & Industrial sq. ft. S09 31st St. <next PETER DOBBS
to Bank of Newport, 640.6016 673-9043 Lido Cannery area ). -----
675·3236, (213>641·9700 Want investor for Npt
• bayfront home. Give
Prune Location well secured 1st or 2nd
1270 Sq ft on busy Beach • T.D Agt, 675-6161 . Boulev ard-Huntangton
Beach. Ideal for real
estate office, store or
other suitable business
2 Private baths. avaala·
ble 1m mediately. 10
Year lease. Allracllvely
priced
642-4ll• ~•xt 216
Weekdays
Secured Short Term R. E.
loans.fast decisions on
complex sit uat1ons be
pleasa nt!)' surprised .
ca II 760·07 l.5
Want 21-22% Yleld?
On your T.D. 's Notes
SSRa1sers·lnvestorsSS
LOST. REWARD• Male
Blk w1wht paws Cat. Vt<"
D. P yellow collar.
661·9099 eves. 759.9393
days --------
FOUND· 1 Rabbit. vac{
Kent St. & Sussex Ln ..
N.B 548-1746
Found Samoyed female~
Border Collie-blac k.
brown & white male:
Yellow Lab mix female.
Newport Beach Ammal
Shelter. 644-3616
Found: Golden Ret. M.
Huntingt.cn Beach area.
536-6871
Found a Siamese Cat.
Downtown. Hunt. Bch
536-7432.
Found: Schnauzer, male,
vie Highland Dr .. N.B.
548-2476 ---
Found: Pet bird. Costa
Mesa
54G-1275
Found . White dog ,
Samoyed? Del Obispo,
SJC Sun eve. 493-7546
4 Br. H. Ba. Family
room._ frpk, large yard.
Kids OK. 1645. Call
213/431-2836.
Westside Duplex Apt. ORANG ETREE 1 BR P8:l10 & lelep~e Incl
8 B utils & hse pnv. Mature Upst~lrs. 2 r. 1 a . condo, AIC. pool. S425 nonsmoker '9J..3ll.5
Rmmte Wanted to shr
2br. 2ba hse in Irvine,
own bdrm, ba + use of
all rec fac S250 mo +
util. 552·9794 <home> or
640·0770 (Ben>
PRIME H ARIOR ILVD. Call DeMison Assoc
673-7314
F 0 UN D . Y ng Fem
Shepherd Max? vie
Harbor Shopping Cnlr.
646-6905
Cedueltlmu
U•f•lllaMd 3425
J\efr1ge, stove, enc lad mo. Agt. 64(Mit61 i-----·-----
gar. No peta or small Mohh 4 100
children. S390. 77~5629 ~I__. 3141 ••••••;••••••••••••••••
••••••••••.••••••••••••• Balboa Inn oceanfront 2 B!· 2 Ba. Newer Apt. Large Studio A~. Wal~ to Low winter rates. Daily
Bua It-Ins, air, garage. beach & shopping. Su1la· or weekly. Kitchenette.
Adults, no pets. 1435. ble for One employed $90 & up 67s.8740 845-4837. adult. S350. 768-6471. · ·
Roommate to share Lag
Bch home. Very private.
Canyon & Ocean Views.
$325/mo. Incl ut1l. Ask
for Frank 54~3666 dys,
497·2956 eves.
Office R..td 4400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
C.M. Location. 2000 sq. ft.
$1500/mo. 548-1156, eves
675-2213.
W ESTCUFF DR., M.I.
53</ft for 7,SOO sq ft.
Ideal for antique rurn ..
has storage & oHice
space.nexible. 646-3679.
4475
MESA ·
INDUSTRIAL
PAR"
711W.t7111.St.
Coste MtM. C•f.
641-44'3
IS yrs to pay 2nd. 3rd
TD's. Low rates. fast
personal all Any amt.
EM<r, Norman. 962·4681
Id T.D-$17% Yield
in 3 yrs. or 29~ per yr.
Sl25.000 needed. Well
secur ed. Prine only.
760· 1368 Owner
Found black doe, M, in-
jured leg, in Corona del
Mar. 644·9672 Jeff
FOUND : Long haired
Doxie Fem (older) vie.
Driftwood Seal Beach
598-8215
WANT ACTION?
Clasalfed AdA 84.2·56'78
-Make your sboppin1
easier by usin& the Daily
Pilot Classified Ads.
Use -..., It/ service
when ptacing your ad ... a
Dally Pilot ad number witt
appear In your classified ad
... we take your messages
24 hours a day . . . you call
Jn at your convenience
during office hour.s and get·
the responses to your ad .••
this service Is only $7 .so
week. For more lnforma·
tlon and to place your act ·
ca 11 642-5678.
~~S!I!:!~. kola ..... H1•asla t , .... ,...._ T .. ...... ................ ....................... ....................... . .......... i........... .... ..... ...... "' ....... !111!1 ................... ~ p u ind can UNO WOOD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;;;: •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • -c.aor ~111r1,~•lli ~.:-.~=,.Ra• 1utau.d1;;.;;\Nd Lie DUlllPJOBI ~J:~tUT~r£twlll Movin1! The Stantna EXPERT PlANO tunina CuatomCeramkTUe
,111, crp&, 10 -1Q. baucb. uc•d.t ... l.--' ·-· -CJiq•.U CSaallalMl~Jobl pe~•e7k :.~u:,x· ColltatStudtnta1MovlU frNp&1r Membtr.PTC. New·Rtmodel-Repa1r
SI...... Ha1J, Uv.48. nM '11> a ~Allf-1•1 · ' Co. baa 1rown. naurea ..au Free eat. Cbuclt, 4lM·*7
r:Ama avarmtUO;DcllllO; c.. •=• k1 Tree/'-b ti Prol coup&. to houl•lt um• 1ood urvlu ---1•-..a.. -cbi •· o-r. elm.,_ ••••••• .. •••••••••••• ••••••••-•••••••••••• • ru r m,lcon· •ll ·o art J e A 1Tl24·4H Llcenu ,._~ .....,_. H•ff;t•IMdl "l!JJ a.. ~ odor CrJ1t -1r 15 vn SJ I ff~ •Vl:RY LOW PRICES• crete remoYaJ, c ean-r P UA • u1. &0·1427 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co ~ r.91 . Do ...:.:!:" . # • ' __ ,.__ ._ In u-......... 157-Ull Exp'd, NII. MHL81 N••t pa'""--•-t•xt\.l"'e" • ': a~'•Al.Lyou y~ 0~· ...,.. myaelf. Hot haoeh II Cbril· -.....-as-mawt·e UPI ---ABC MOV!WG , Exper ... ,,,_,."" ' • Ceramic. New-remod .
• 10 b-a Re 1· $31-0lOl Uan Pr..cbooi. Ms.5UI Georta, W.JOl5 HAULING/CLEANING Ille ... T• pro(, low rat ea, quick frff •st. ~).I ~ r-01. rates 675-2284
let •• ,... WeCantCarpetC1eanen MIKE'SLAWNCARE Treetrlm•Pabltin1 ....................... carefUlaervlce.552·0410 TILE INSTAL_L_A_T_J_O_iN_
id, .... SWem ci.. ' upbols. Cl111k1 s.r.kel Monthly auvice. Trees or?? Ray,5S7-0el4 INTVA!J!...A2..,. p..&.&.1o....Ja ha ED'S PLASTERING Floora. Kitchen, Balb a.a.•~ Wd Ir T ~ .. ••••••••••••·••• .. •••• •-I ~-r.o.o•-~&Q --..,~ .. •....,. AllT l t /E t :i:., r tJ:~n1;ue . Newport Clelll.lnl Serv. .e e1.12u ... _._ H1ulln1frDu.mplobe. Tax prep, 1htlten, TOs. ••••••••••••••••••••~·· ypes n x Reliable Craftsmen ~· mouo Carpel, Uphol, Yard maintenance. Tree AaldorRandy. Mr.Ltooard,181-9~. Jl'lne ext/lnt ptdnUn& by 6'5·l2S8 FREEF.ST. Ro&ers Ti ie Phone :.~.~ D=:Y BUYWHOLESALE ffouHclunln1. Win· trim & removal. 641.M.27 U.0.fM..... Richard SinOr. I.le, Int. lNT./EXT.pluler 631·0458
• Tbru Carpet lnataller. dows HardwoOd Ora, Cleanups. Free est. HAULING It ••••••••••••••••••••••• Try me. 631-4410 (24 hrs> patchlfli,30yn exp. fy.a..a SerYice
i:; · oo.:,NOW! Free eat. Al*> carpeta Ul·m7 752-1349 QUICKCLEAN-UP 'llCadStretchLlmo DAVE'SPAINTJNG Nul545-29'77 (Paull •• :-;;-•"••••••••••••••••• ~r Dall'= tald ll rt pa~. Jay• C....._tw CLEAN-UPS/LAWN Free eit. 631.()8153 f rl,nt ru••·tv-1tereo-Servln1area9yeart ,._..IHJ Pror. Qll)' typing. Caa.1. • . e-"a--~--75'·t550. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M 1 0 ten an c ar-phone. $30/hr + Moslreasonable ••••••••••••••••••••••• tran1cr1pllons. phone ~ ••ano-.-w.# a e · HOllMC....._ 20%. 4Jl8..8384,831·3048 In.sured lic'd. 78().7301 diet. lettera, reports. Qr.I Rt,.......U.Uve NoSteam/NoShampoo Coutructloo-AJltypes Landacape •••••••••e.-;;r••••••••• . HolJemanPlumbmg form•. resumes. term ·~•42-1671,nt JI I S~~~~ ~r:~~~J;r u:.'/:J:l.· ~ir,3 Free est. 642·9907 Want a REALLY CLEAN ~!:':7 ............... Palntlna: comm'I, In· F~!~e;~~i:~:R:fz~~~ f.apers . envelopu. IP: Tim HOUSE? Call Gin1ham BRICKWORK· Small dustrlef, Reaideritlal. ____ abels, disc volume 4lflt• UPHOL·DR.AP!S.CRPT Carpentry&Additioos Topped/removed; clean Girl. Freeeat.8'5-5123 Joba. Newport, Costa Free Est. Low rates f'ool Stnlce, Repaln Work guar Mariah
••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleanlnt1tyourhome. u~:::sm .. all~00:,19 ups,lawnrenov.751·3'76 Expertlsehousekeeflnl, Mesa·, Irvine. Reh. 673·0737 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 63G·0756
I>Nnwaya, parldnf lot TIP-TOP CARPET le e q u Ip It 1 up p I ea 675-3175 QUALITY PAlNTERS Swimming Pool Service Video RKorclncJ
;alra, sealeoa ln1 .. F1oorCare. SS0.11266 Dryw.. fiAIDIMMG furniahed,lruslworthy& FRPLCS built. refaced. Bargalnratesthru4/8 ~~l~~~!eRe~~P~~~i,~id ..................... ..
d.A•pbalt. 846-'8'1 C ..... Aca..tlc ....................... Mowln~=raking, dep64l·49'10 brick/atone veneers, 30 Freeest. 848-5684 -----1f~r~1ic,~~cltn:~~~ac,.i:~:
••••••••••••••••••••••• Drywall Specialist 1 F MRS. CL"'"•"' MAK"'" IT yrs exp. 893-3'7'3 17 y rs exper. working l pltHllg AcouaticCeillnl• Qual. & prod. New ai re-s wee P n I . re e """'" .,..., WINTER RATES w/all makes of equip. wedding or any special •••••••••••••··~··• +custom band texturing mod. #3899'4. 532.5549 ~~~;,tea. 646-0944 or G~EAM I Homh,~, EX p ER T BRICK & lnl./ext. Painting State contractor's lie. & event bn video tape. En
YSl'M'ING my home I.le. 389944. 532·~9 Ta P 1n 1 , Tex lure ai o(ftce. Carpet.~ Masonry. Small jobs & Clean outs-fast service ins. Pbrch Construction }~ii 1~0~:rai~ ~o~~:m ~~
-Mon-Fri, days, ates 3 & C / Acouatk Ceilln Free H...,,,..• ROBIN'S CLEANING repaira. Frplc facmgs. s:JS-9801 Co 673·3316 can also tape ) our . Hot hmcbes provided ....t Cu uefe . II· ....................... Se ic a tho ugbly Refs S514MS 760-7074 c - - -I h ~· area.M<M109 ••••••••.••••••••••••••• eal. Kevin. 875-9088, HOME IMPROVEMENT rv e-< ro · · · ollege Studenl-Exp'd. P.O. lox Rentals persona property. ome
...... .;..:... _______ Foundations Retalnlni 173-1503 R . clean house. M0-0857 VERY REASONABLE int/ex. any job for less! ••••••••••••••••••••••• or buslnes:. for an at•
De'\'elopmental activities Walla, Hillside Restora-...__....... emodelin1-0ddJobs HOUSECLEANING Brick, block, stone. tile. Call Alex 8.Sl-9371 trvine/Newpart post of· c·urate inventory. Heas
4'11ot lunches incl. Ages lion, Slabs, Patios, ~meal 28 yrs exper. 979·2265 Ll d bonded -----rice boxes unavailable? rates Call642 2325 _.~. e: 30 am . 6 pm . Block ft Brick. l.lc'd. • ....................... Carpentry, cabinets, roof IS OUR BUSINESS! c· • · Painting. int/ext. Rentals Rent a _ B 0 x r r 0 m ~1903 (lie BHC18093) 842·8387 eves~3835 E~ECTRJCIA~-priced repairs, plumbin1. Free Janice's Raggedy Ann. Bob 548-2753. 536.9906 our specialty. Prompt privately-owned pasta I W indow Cfe.aniftCJ ~ REMOVAL: concrete, r.ight, free es~mate on est. Call Answer Ad 675-2:514 Masonry & Cement Seaside Pamling Greg. service. THE MAIL •••••••••••••••••••••••
fliit\.ire licensed babysit-largeorsmallJobs. #.461 642·4300 Uhrs Work. Brick. Block , 536·4806 SUITE. 549.4733 for "LetTheSunshrneln" ru tor day working asph, gradi.nl. lot. clean-Lie. #396621 673-0359 • • . General Housecleaning Stone. Tile, Cone. of all •STEVENS PAINTING-rates/services. Call Sunshine W1ndo\\ th rt onl Mon Fri up, saw, break & re-Handyman r epairs, Reliable. refs., trans. Cleaning.Ltd 548-88..53 ' . ~M.:.2.072[' · ' move. H~~~ld. Ej:;!rr~i~~~~~~!~i carpentry. plumbing. 962·~10 ~6~~~i Lie "378955· ~~:/~xetat.~~~Jt~~~~~ed Post Box OCA1rport
.,..,..... outlets. remodels. electrical.etc 675-3014 HOUSECLEANING 546-4561 H•wpori 549-2287
•••••••••••••••••••••••Pool decks. patios , 548-9881 . 646-3854 HordwoodAoon Womanhasexp.&refs Small jobs wanted Brick
Wind o w Experl
windows. bhmb ... ereens
& mirrors Hcas Dciwn
dable f'rl't' l'SI Gt"ne 545 0225
darpentry, plumbing & masonry, f!1Ulli -use WheelerEleclric,lnc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call97&-97S6 and Block. Low hourly f'.stControa Roofin9 ~l.ectrkal. Lie. contrac-courts, tenms courts . HARDWOOD FLOORS rate. 499-1226 aft. 6pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
\l)r,Gene,64.2-8537. Lic.374067.8.Sl-1966 • D.G.ELECTRIC Cleaned&Waxed HOUSECLEANINGby ----LLOYO'SNURSERY& QUALITYROOFING lndus./Resid./Comm. Anytime.832-4881S.A Id E 'd MoYllHJ LANOSCAPECO.INC Alltypes.freeel>t Whether you're buying or
selling. Class1r1ed ad
vertismg will get your
message to the right
people Catt Today•
6425678
From the ground up: THOMPSON'S Quality work. free est. Japanese a y. xp · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expert pest <'ontrol for· Visa. MC ~II 5930
homes; docks. boats, CONCRE'TECONSTR. Llc. 400143. (2131867-3857 H_,.IM) dependable. S49-l029 THE "MOVlN-MAN " is tree. shrub, turf & in-HARBOR HOOFING
~1Jl>lnels . Remod/ re-Lie. 393383. 642·8482 L "d . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• . t 0 Careful, courteous & door service. Free Est. ~~· 675.6294 . SEL 1 le items with a Haul, cleanup. concrete House c I ea n 1 n g Lie. 9457 . 646.7443 New & recovers Hepa1r ~~..1.--------Have something to sell? Dally Pilot Classified removal. Dumptruck. I s.alisfactioo. Exper, re-•Cheap Please call spec1al1s t :-.ta ) bus,>
Want Ad Help? 642·5678 Claaaified ads do It well. Ad. Quick serv. 64.2· 7638 1 hable. refs. 645-8394 642· l329 Class1f1ed Ads 642·5678 pr1<'ei. Reha bit' 54H us 12
~~.~-~ ...... ??~~ Elnfr:::'c::! ~-~!.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~·!.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~'!'.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~·!.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~.~'!'.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~'!'.~~ ..... ~.!.~~ ~~'!'.~:'.~~ ..... !!.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTOMOTIVE FbUNO· White Samoyed Help WClllhd 7100 Bartender. exp. F rr. 6
w/blk collar vie. Dover ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'ARTS days week, pvt country
SheresN.B 642-5498 A C C 0 U H T S COU~f H. club. C.M. Call after
f'AYAILE Dealership or o~e1gn lOam Francisco
REAL W'ATE ~~rer~::sc:1~~r~~~~~ 549.on~ I.Ast: Sm brwn Terrier.
IOOKKHPEA F/C
Fashion Island invest
ment firm Excell op
porlunity. Exper. &
maturity req'd. Call .
714·640-0123 Vic of Euclid & Talbert
CalJ aft 5 963-3656 The R-Obert P. Warm· an appointment B e a u t 1 c 1 a n s &
in gt on Co. needs ROY CARVER manicurists with chen· ~~~~~~~~~
·LOST : Jmos Keeshond energetic person Ul ac· ROUS ROYCE tele . be self.employed,
puppy male. Red collar. co~ntln g d~pt . Ex· AND IMW pick your own hours ;~~i~ar~;. "A\\.1XReg ~~~et~c:~~~~~~: :~~~ 640.6444 Firs t class salon
tsl.1-8S87,67S-8145 salary, benefits. & work-S57 2234 .
ing conditions in Irvine AUTO M~HAHIC Beauty
FOUND Young male office. Call Sally for General repair Must be llla.HTc••lll Siamese cat. vie Hunt· appt. 549-8867. E.O.E. full y experienced. w AA
iagton Beach963-1662 M/F. salary + commission. MINDID NOPLI ,'.1.~-ols ----51"' dys per wk Call Needed to teach skin
irn..... 5350 AC C 0 UM TIM G Ernie 6pm to 9pm care foroneofTopScos·
••••••••••••••••••••••• CLl:Rk 661 ·9196. mellc companies No ex
COVER GIRL En.try·level po5illon .for AUTOMOTIVE per nee. just teachable
bright. hard-working Call for appt. Mr * OUTCAU. * person. To work with . LOTMAM Purcell Sl&-3894 953·0778 MC/VISA p 1 ea s ant group in FulJ time. Respans1ble.
Newparl Center. 10-key mature i>t:rs<>n needed Beauty
bytouch&litetypingde-ror s pec1a1 duties •JOJOIA•
Ci,..at COMpOllJ
llcerts
24Hrs. 641-0180
'Cnh/CMcb
s,ired. G<>Od entry-levei References required Nonsurgical contour
training inw accounting. Must have 2 years ex· facelift. Will tram five
Xlnt. benefits. Ask for perience. Call Steve career.oriented people
Accounting Manager. Harvey for an appaint· to become make-up
640-5111 ment artists & teachers Only
-.... bp/MC/Vlta ACCTSREC.
ROY CARVER serious·minded need ap·
Person to work w /com· ROLLS ROYCE ply Comm1ss1on. with & IMW management potential
•FOXY LADY• OUTCALL ONLY
pulor. Adept at A/R bk·
kpg. Collection exper
helpful Gd orrice mach
64"6444 Call for appt. Mrs
• Tharp. 956-4360
VISA MC
• 972-1131.
skills req. XJnt Co. ben. Babysitter wanted Your
w /grow1ng NB firm. home or mine Cd M
Room for advancement area Hours . 12noon
•• & personal growth. CalJ 5PM Mon.-Fr1. Call
.. , SPIRITUAL for appl. 644-4684 644-1027 art 5PM
READINGS Commercial Financing --
lOam-lOpm. Fully Lic'd Services Babysitter needed '" my
BEAUTY SUPPLY
SALESPERSON
Mature. Frr. $4 .75/hr.
Gas allowance. addi·
lion a I benefits Regal
Beauty Supply. 263 E
17thSt.C M.
492.7296 or 492.9034 1815 . H.B. home. hrs vary ·s. Camino Real. San AIDE for: female 1n Callaft.6,842-5129. BOAThauUng<.main·
Clem wheelchair, Mon.-Sat. ---------tenance. 2703 W. Coast •i Driver's lie. & It hskpg Hwy. N. B. 548-3641
I ~IRST .LADY req. lrvine.~5109 Banking lookb1per/F
Escort Models Ana. Serv. -Pleasant orrc. New Acctunts All phases o( record • N.B. Exper .. but will keeping thru general
· f'ortyO..C..-s. train. J...llPM. & nPM· COlllS81or ledger. Computer exp. : * fTJ. I Ml * 7AM s hifts. 6.1l·SS11. Experience Preferred helpful. G<>Od benefits.
MC & VISA Accepted Also part time positions N. B. area. Call Kathy
Apartment Manager As-available in our South Kamm al <714)675-7071
, ··; PHONE FUN sistant. Experienced. Coast Plaza office. Call·
. ~M-12PM M.C./VISA Mature Couple for 100 Kathy Amburgey ~·· · (714l 636-68SJ Units. Coeta Meaa. Work ~4066 Sunday + 1 weekday.
~.r a therapeuttt On call Eveninp. Free
massage by a lic'd apartment. No salary.
therapist 125 t-0 all NEW Beautiful Adult com·
.p4eols M/F 10-7PM plex . 642-4907, call
~-2817 wkdaya. ·-----------
••-------Applications being ac. •r-· A TLAMnC cepted for full time parts
'41SSAM Sf'A driver/shop helper.
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
So•IRgt&&.o.
695 Town Center Dr.
Costa Mesa. Ca 92626
Equal Opportunity .
Employer Be pampered by 16 Background In pressure
k•ut. Girls. Open cleaning equipment!~~~~~~~~~
lO·AM·4AM 7 days . helpful. Calif. drlver's1·--------
Plione M5-3'33 license & good driving BANKING
record a must. S3.SO per
BOOKKEEPER
P IT late PM/Eves. AIR.
A/P. Exp. nee. Non-
smkr. Tustin.832.7300
USE THE
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
IESULT"
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642·5671
bf. JJZ
IOOt<KHPER
FULL CHARGE
Outstanding oppartun1ty
for experienced con
slruction development.
real estate· full charge
bookkeeper, for rapidly
expanding mult i
corporate NB firm
Light typing req
Congenial environment,
benefits. profit sharing.
major medical & op
portunity for advance
ment. Send resume incl
Salary Hut & dates to
Pat Parkinson VP. Quail
Place Company 1400
Quail St Swle 135. NB
92660 o r ca ll
1714 )752-1920
•IOOKKE:EPERS!
AUTOMOTIVE!
Pleasant working cond1 ·
tions in exciting Airport
complex Experienced
only. Some typing Flex
1ble hours Oppartunity
for advancement. See
Office Mgr.
HOW ARD Che•f'OMt
Dove & Quall Sts.
NEW PORT BEACH
llJ..0555
IREAKFAST COOK
Full lime permanent.
5day week Experienced
only. Good starting
salary & benefits. Apply
3-5PM. Jolly ROger . 400
So. Coasl Hwy, Laguna
Beach.
IUSrasoMS
EVENINGS. Dillman·s
Restaurpnt Apply In
person. 801 E. Balboa
Blvd. Balboa
•CAI DRIVERS•
Checker Cab
77().0Z!'l
CAR WASH
Cashiers wanted. Full or
part lime. Newport. San
ta Ana. Fountam Vallef,
Costa Mesa. Ca I
644·4460.
CASHIER
HOUSEWARESALES
Apply in penlOO: Crown
Hardware, 1024 Irvine.
<Weatcliff Plaza) NB ' Attractive lady desires to
meet aenUeman over 40.
PO Box •u. Fountain
Valley 9Z108.
hour to start. Apply
17777 Main Street, Suite
A, Irvlne. 54S-&t07
ARCH11'1CTUUL
lntermed. Dral\aperaon
Newport Beach Office
W. RyleeAIA640-2912.
·•••••• Daily Pilat I · Camera : THE
·¥''Girlfriends ~··= .. * ..,.,.:*
~ :~t.12~
. -. llt.IUJ * Win. NowHlrtn1
llCC VlSA
PRING Sid partner
u nt1d. Fem .• 11·30.
ARTISTS to ~re studio
It exhibition apace.
771-3411al\.6pm.
An outataodlnl growth
opportunity II avaJlable
with Fidelity Federal, a
Cellfornla lender. Our
beauUCul Sant.a Ana oC·
fice la aeeklng an ex·
perlenced New Account•
Repreaent.aUve with ex·
pertence in a bank or
S.L. In addition to a top
atartin1 nlary, •elected
appllcant wlll receive
excellent benefit• ln-
cludln1:
P'w ful'Uler lnformatloft
pl•••• contact our
Breneb llan11er at (714)147.-0S
• Operator • e Experienced at least 5 years. Must be able.
e to use newspaper camera and platemaltina •
•systems. Excellent wa4es and benefits .•
Apply 1n peraon w/rt sume to Oran•e Coast .
e oally Pl.lot . • • • Preef Read•r •
e Part·tlme Wlth at. leaat l year experience, e
•preftrably newspaper. Excellent c:ompany •
•
be6efil.I. PM altlft. Apply between tam & •
6pm. Monday throuab Frtday. • • • Pirt Tine EYlllilll~ • • c ...... , ... c;;.i;. •
•Adult• with outat1ndlna atlnctlu •
.peraonaUlles who enjoy worklnl with 10.lS .
•
year old youths. Start at $4.001hour. 2·30 PM.
•nd S:*> PM. 6'2·4321, ext U:S.
• oc.-. FIDB.ITY
FIDllAL
t.:i.t.:'
• ;;:r,... .•
1
• 330 W. Bay SU. • e Costa Mesa, CA .•
Ai~'I e Equal Opportunity Employer •• •••••••••••••••
CASHIERS
UTDTEM
MARKETS
For 2nd & 3rd Shifts
We promote to manage-
ment & supervision from
within
WANTACAREER"
Costa Mesa
111 Del Mar
631 ·9421
Laguna Bea<'h
494 9233
Huntington Beach
962·9116
CHAUFFIUR
!LIMOUSINE>
Energetic. mature
person who enjoys drav
ing & knows Los Angeles
& Orange Counties
CLERJ<
Part-tinw
Part tame pos1t1on •vaal
to merchandise & dis· play women's ready to
wear clothing & cashier
Mon Fri from 9 3PM
Call Mgr for mterv1e"'
appt
THE GUILD DRUGS
I ~ I 0 San Mi«J-t, HI
644-7330
Clerks
Two desk clerks wanted
for Costa Mesa Motel
Day & Eve stun avail
Will train as nee Call 12
noon to 8pm. 646 7445
Co unt er help . f' T
Kuster's Cleaners. 186
E. 16th 548-4243
COUNT ER Help. dry
cleaners. 5 day week
646-688.1
COUNTER or COOK
FT PT Gary :. Ch•lt.
CdM. 675·2193 for appt
Delivery Dnvers & Sales
Trainees 1-'ull or part
time Xlnt.uppl~ foreol
lege s tud ents &
moonlighters Eas ily
earn SIO-SJS/hr Call art
lPM 638 4605 o r
951 2642
DIUVEIY
Full lime for lnC'al de
h veraes X Int d n ~mg
record required Phone
for appt 557 9212 Mr
Emmons Newport St<J
t1oners Inc.
Del men O\er Ill tor I. A
Time!. to home-. 1n :-: B
& C M S400 $450 +
bonu:-. 646-0037. 646·!>844
DESIGN
EMGIHEER
Mfg c·o in M1l-,,1on \'1t'JO
arl'a need:. t''IH'r an
elc'l'trtcal c·onnt•ttor"
h t' r m e t 1 t· s e a I ~
lran:.duter dl'.,1gn c·om
ponents mall'nal-. &
method:.
Duties antludc• dl's1i:n.
draflln~. matt'rial:-. tl'st
1ng & H&U proJl'rts
';l1:c·han1c;.il Eni:ant•l'r
1ng rlt'~rl't' prl'f d <,)uald1ed c•and1datt•:-.
.,end rl'!>Uml' to Mrs
J a n s , 2 3 II !l I \' 1 a
1-'abracantc Suite· 603.
\1...,saon \'1e10. <:a 92691
DESK CLERK
DEHT AL ASSIST. NCR 4200 exp dei;i red. r time cha1rs1dc r-:x AM & PM shirts Appl}
per prcr GI' 11ff1ee in pc·rson. Ah,,o Crt'l'k
545 4553 Nr So l'nast Inn. 31100 t'oa't llw~
Plata South Lagunu
Dental Ass1 i.1ant Dlf.TITIA~ HD for 82
Ne" p or t Ii c• J r h I bed ps~chialrH· ho:-.p
4dyl> wk EXJX'rlt>m·e or Kc•:-.pon:-.1b1ht1es ant'!
Profc-s:.1on .i l Sehool total mt>nu J.llannini;:.
!(rad 646·353.5 d1ctar) eon!-11ltat1on Must have professional
appearance . o wn
transporalion, bondable
& a clean driving record
Driving exper. & re
ferences req'd.
COUNTER HELP
Wanted no exp. needed $174 .24fora48hrwk ap· Dental Front Off1n•
ply in person Anthony·s
1
Rec-ept1 on1:.t. bc•ac:h
Shoe Service 3401 E area Very pleasant at
Co a s t Hw y <.: d M mo!>phere Salar) rnm
673-4640 mcns urate with t•xp
645 7580 ask for Darl<'ne
w dottors & patient!. &
'>Upen ISIOn or d1etar)
-;1Jrr Pre,1 uu!>
ll o~p -;upen a..or) l''<
p e r 1 e n t' t' n c r
Capi!ttrano by the Sl'll
Hosp 49&571Yl As a permanent
employee you will enJOY
co. benefits. including
insurance. vacation &
holidays Salary comm
with exper Apply in
person 9·11. 1·3daily.
P.-.AJr
1571 W.
MacArthur 81
Costa Mesa
CLERICAL
Insurance co. offers an
entry level pos. as Bill·
ing Clerk. Typing
40·45wpm. Gd. company
benefits. $US an hour.
CUSTOMER
SERVICE REP
Large consumer finance
company seeks sales-
orienled person with
cleric a I skills to serve
the public. Must have
40wpm . aceept
respons 1biltly & be
aareer-minded. Xlnt.
employee benefits., At·
•tractive salary while
training See or call Mr.
Tucker Benef1c1al
Finance Co. 1888 So.
Harbor Blvd. Costa
Mesa. 646-1638
Call: Laura. 833·8450. ---------1401 Dove St .. N 8
E.O.E
CLERK Part time to
work in photo drive·
thru. morning s hirt.
Photo or retail exp pre-
fd. but not. req'd. Apply
at: 2188 Newport Blvd ..
Costa Mesa. Mar. 30th
thruApr_il_2n~d_. -~
Clerical
FILE CLERK
Insurance co . needs
person lo be respanslble
for the File Room.
Duties also Include
awltchboard relief. Gd.
Cato..r Senlu
Thrift & Loe.
l__,.S&L
Newport-based com-
puter service bureau.
serving finan c ial
customers state-wide,
requires customer
service representatives
with min. of5yn bank or
savings & loan opera-
tions or thrift & loan ex·
perience Excellent fr·
inge benefits. great op-
portun lty for growth.
Call Norm dePlanque.
ON ·LINE CO MPUTER
SYSTEMS. 644-1801.
company benefits. $4.15 ~~~~~~~~
an hour. Call : Laura, Trade your old stuff for
833·8450, 1401 Dove St.. new goodies with a
N.8 . E.O.E. ClassilledcSd. 642-5678
Cuhler
OFACE CASllER
Enjoy working as Of lice Cashier
in Slavick1s Jewelers. Duties
include verifying sales balances,
doina daily banklng transactions,·
disbursing funds and other
related duties . Excellent
Company Benefits Package.
DENTAL ASS"f Sat on
ly Modem rtt'\\. famll)
practice in C.: M Call
. Emily 545·5885
DENTAL Front ofhee
H B Desirable pos in
busy . qual1l) of('
Friendly atmosphere
awaits experienee.
Salary neg. Call : Joanne
at 962-3310
D1:.play
DISPLAY/
SIGH MAKER
Exc·ell c•o benefits in
elude medical. dental
health insurance. profit
sharing. pension plan.
<'O discount Apply in
person :
J .C.PENHEY
24 Fashion Is land
EOE MF DEHT AJ./ Assist
CHAIRSIDE'. Min. 2 yrs --------• expr. 4 '•days week. So.
Laguna. Salary negotia-Donut Shop Early AM
sh irt Donut maker & ble. 499·1355
DHtal Assistant -sales person No exper
nee Apply · 01pp1ty
Donuts. 1854 Newport
Blvd, CM.
21, day /week Must be
exp 'd. able & en ·
thusiastic T op pay
6.11·3380 Drapery workroom needs _________ , exp or will train heavy.
duty sewing ma('hine
operator. Mon Thurs.
7-5 .30. F IT or P 1T
642-1843.
DESIGNER
DRAFTER
Laguna Beach e lec·
tron1cs manufarturer
needs. •an experien«d person Ori\ ers needed Part
to be responsible for lime positions ev111lable.
drafting & mechanical Call for appt. SJ0.61~1~
design functions. Must .Drivers-Small car re-
h a v e t h o r o u g h ed s c II knowledge of dra(tlng quir · Earn big a
procedures. PC board between 10 & I, Mon.
layout, digilal. analog. Fri. 581-1017
microwave circuit de·
sign, & some knowledge
of electro·mechanical
eackaglng.
Opportunity for advan·
ce m ent & career
growth. We offer xlnt.
pay & benefits+
4 DAY won Wiii(
Facility is ln beautiful
DRIVERS Cross Coun·
try. No special lie req'd
MacGregor Yachts, 1631
Placentia. Costa Mesa
Earn big $$$700 wk possi-
ble. 30% ccanmission.
Call btwn fOAM ·lPM.
Mon.-Fri. 581·1017.
La1un• Canyon neat .. ___ ...... __
Be.ach fc Resort areas.
Call for appt: Personnel
Dept. Tf'loi\.lc Berkeley:
714·04·9401. Laauna
Beach. E.O.E.
ILICTIOMIC
ASSIMIL Y LEAD
Faal f rowlnJ lnlerna· tlona Co, an stable
enera>' rleld bas need for
a lead electronic at·
1et0b l y person .
Quallrlc:atlona incl. 7Yt•
eJtpet, in eltctro
mechanical •aaembly, PCB assembly, CQil wlr-
li11. harneuln1, • mtcbant~al ape-mbJy ;
be eble to train aa.
1tmbl•r1; orCanlH
manpowtr 6 materiel
r11ourcff; ~ dltplay ~oocl leadenlaip 111.ua..
allfltd appllunae • o\1149 coota ~t Ray
Gilman at S~IHUflc
DrllllDI lnl.re1Uonal •·•l,llOt,
r~:~~~ Ad J'~ rella·
W~1WAnll M atllff Private Club. lD,tt•l•wa Ttuaraday, 11·4Pll. 1801 Bay1lde
Dr.CdM.
Ea•~U pups. AKC'
Blchon Frlse pupe.
645-4877.
1...;..~~--'------:--rsprtn1er Spaniels, 18 mo.e
WAKUOUSE old, M " F. SPl)'ed • llUI neut, 1hota, super Crtend· •
HOUSl)CLJtANERS
To 95/br, car. MS-lUS
ble, ::J d. pralmwal
W/I ,,a~ar••••· ab&e ~bandit front "-k
• b~ lllbaNI· Xlnl typ-
lnl 11dtls recawrect J>•ld t.ollday1, medlcaltCS.n·
tal • protlt •harlna. Sa lea 'Loolllnl tor alert In· ly , love kids, love to play H .. ill.W_... M6I
---------lilvidual WWlnl to le~l'I\ Fmbee & swim, tto ca. •••••••••N•• ......... ..
HousebQld. 4J peraon•l --••1!111-~~-I care of arthritic person ~~~~~~!!!~~ .. ~ , Sat/Sun, Uooon·7-IPM.
The fin-ath.letlc MM>e Permanent po81Uon, at·
4 clothln& at.ore Int t he tractive loe. oo Balboa
count1 i. l«*in& or • llle. 875-05H lot fn·
turllworklna . en· tervlew. llua •• tlc, en er a etl c1..:.;;.;._;..;... ________ ..;..__,;;;..._ ___ __,
person for a fun Ume as· Housekeeper/Companion. OFFtCICURll
siataot ,m.an~aer posl· lJve tn or out. F1dl time days. Account· tloa. 833-2009. Ina . seneral office
Pat
A Plyinr-rsonat· dutle"J. Call Bob : F~N'I'ftl!NNERS. Ho us ek eeper, retl red 77~1677. ..:::..;..:..::..;.:...;., _____ _
Newport Beach person, 8· 1.2/hrs day. RIC.nOMIST
UIOOJl. BriatolSt. 2/days week. H.B. area. ---,• ... •c• ... -----t full time Moa·Fri. Must 955-0185, *for Jody 972·4SOO. "' "5K be personable & well Small mra. co. Exper. groomed, Ii enjoy meet·
Housekeeper, Enallsh not nee. Gd. company lng the public. Requltts
Furn. Movers/Driven speaking, Uve-in. must benefita. CaJI: S!M-5351 good spelling & pen·
needed. Must be over 23, be good with children, manshlp. No typing.
good drivinJ record. for ages 9 & 5. Lovely home Phone experience pre·
The Starving College on beach with pvt room PAIT•n... rerred. Full company
Student• Movina Co. & bath. Salary neg. Call In a 4 girl office at small. benerlts. Apply: Pen·
641-8427. wkdays: (714 )760-1686 or friendly mfg co near So. nysaver, 1660 Placentia
962 ·2041 ; ,S at/Sun : Coast Plaza. Phone. typ-Ave .. C.M. ••HAL <213>592-21624. ing, filing. figures. etc. REST"'•••,....,.. Coorier/Clertt, part tlme1....:..__;_______ Good benefits. 545-7101. "'_.....,
oeeded ror Npt. Bch. HOUSEKEEPER · live Sandwich Maker hrs
medical lab. Perm. pos. in, for elderly woman on Part Jinle 7 AM · 3 PM Mon · F ri.
Prder 11\ature ~rson. wknds. 499-5562 •n 646-8883 Phone : Jan Hillyer.---------COURMIRgYCMlfft
640.0140 HSKPR/CaMP.-'°" C....W-S
Refined-over SO for older Adults with outstanding
Restaurant.
.. EMEIAL OFACE writer . Small home on attractive personalities ~ting for a very In· Bay. own room & bath. lo spend is hrs per week
teresOng part lime Job UJhl work, live lo, must counseling youth ages In pleas ant office ? drive, no smoking. Send 10.15. Evenings &
Clerical, for mature resume to P.O. Box 403, Weekends Available. $75
person. Location P.C.H .. Corona Del Mar, 92625 p e r w k . c a I 1
Npt. Bch. Exper. a M th must. Accurate typing. INSURANCE Clerk ror 2:30·5:30pm. on ru
no shorthand. 20 hr Dr's office. must be ex· Fri. 642-4321 exl. 343· w~k includes Sat & Sun. p e r . t y p e w e I I . Ask for Lori.
Call: 646-7431 shorthand helpful. xlnt Or-.Coo1t
w k g c on d . f r i n g e Daltv PHot --------•1 benefits. gd salary, xlot 330W. Say Street General career opport. 556-6922 Costa Mesa. Ca. Tllelol9oahy0tub Equal Opport .
ls mowNrtlM): INSURANCE. property· Employer
casualty clerk /
S .. secretary. Personal PART TIME P erson
ecr "Y lines. Established agen· needed in Book pasteup.
R..-n ..-Deot. c d I Mar Mon & Tues. No exp. Type 5owpm. filing. cy, orona e . 673·8650 nee. Apply: 1660 Placen· phoneexper. ....:...--------tiaAve .. C.M.
INSURAHCE SCMlhCook
3-llPM. Full Time.
Please call Jor appt.
645 -7358 Mo n -Fri..
8:»SP'M
Personal tines & lite --------• commercial lines assis-Part-Time
tant needed for Npt. STUDENTS
Bel\. Ins. agency. salary HOMEMAKEl.S
commensuratew/exper Earn extra money ,
Pis. call ror appt. working p/lime in your ~~~~~~~~~I 644·552,;! own home, introducing
-----. -the New Daily Pilot to General Office
*Worts T•eu•,.a-"rc•rvy•
PBX Recepliomsts.
Secretaries. Clerks
lvtCll .HESTON.f
INSU RANCE Agency The Orange Coast Area!
service rep; comm 'I. Set your own hours! CaU
lines acct. handling, 75% Weekdays between 4pm
ofc .. 25'' field . Un· &6pm, 96CHS27.
derwriting. service sales ~~~~~~~~~' pos . Car expense.
JOHtiNE'S
RESTAURANT
Now exceptin$ appllca-
t.ion.s for full ume book·
keeper, PM hostesses &
bus persons. Apply in I
person bet ween 3 & 5
mon thru Fri 22SO E
17th St, Santa Ana
Restaurant
Coak&Waltrns
Full & part time posi·
tlons avail. Ideal
schedule. Excell. co.
benefits which include
discount privile1es.
medical/ dental. life Ins.
prclit shariog & pension
plan. Apply ln person :
J .C ..... Y
24 FaahJOn Island
E.0 .E. M/F
Sales
Auto C..... Sales ,.... ..... ...,
C......eks
MatweW°"""'s
THllUCI STAnllllllf Service-Un Shop). Xlnt.
T.N Lot Aneel" Times oppty Al &enefit1 for dla'culaUoo Department mecbanlcally·lncllned
la looking for well· lndlvtdual with basic
aroomed, ent.bus1astlc electrical khowltd&e .
pe_ople to earn up to 540.6300. '40-$.W per day ror a few ~_..:.. ________ _
houn work .. part time SHIPPING & Recelvi.n&
Sales RepraeotaUves. Dept. worker needed to
Hours are rrom 4 to nu orders, load & unload
9PM. Ii lraininl will be trucks. Will train. Apply
provided. in p e rs on : l. 7 1 5 2
Your earnings as a ArmstroniAve .• lrvlne Times Sales Represen· ..:..::.:.:::;.;;;.:..;...:--=..;_-_.... __
talive will be based on a STATIOMEIY
auaranteed hourly waae Store ln CdM needs sates
or $3.SO + generous com· peraon I /time. 5 days.
missions. Since this is ir Xlnt working conds.
new pro gr am • o P · Es.peel ally n.ne cUentele.
portunitles for advance· Phone 67~ 1010 for appl.
ment are excellent. Call now for more in· Supervisor. noon duty.
formation about this AndersenSchool.NBTs.
great opportunity. Ask Thurs. 11 ·15 -1 :15.
for ext. #-J,204. S3.95/hr. 760-3490 Orange County.
7 I 4-957·2J6 I
SICllTAIY
To youn1 business ex-
ecutives, speed & skills a
mus t ( 60 + wpm l
Fashion Isle locat1on,
Top salary! 644-571.!_ _
Teacher wanted. Art.
school. Sdays/Wk. lPM·
6PM o r 3PM -6PM
Certificate or expe r
Call S~san. 640-~ _
TEACHEl.S
GROUP REP And ESL being hired
now for employment for
summer 1981 with stu dent exchange program
Ca ll between 8am·6Pm
Mon-Sat 966· 1709 or
551 3480
SIClll'AIY
Requires good typing &
phone personality
Duties include: lite die talion, processing or-
ders & general ofhce Teacher. Pre School,
Juice T.ree: 891 4425. some exp. Benefits. F tT
• 548-2550
SECRETARY ·-----
.
To assist Pres. & V Teacher DirectOll
Pres. of R.E. Dev.elop Exp'd dynamic ~CE
ment Co. Exc~pt~onal & Elem Ed units req·d typing & organuat1onal 642.0411 skills. required . Call -----
A.nn <714>851-9150. • TEUl'HONE
SECRETARY PIX OP~TOR! .
Fast growing Orange Pleasant w~r~ng ~ond1·
Co M amt Consulting ttons IO exciting Attport
firm seeks skilled secy. com plex Some 11 ght
capable or handli ng bookkeeping. typing
wide variety of office Flexi~le hours . Op
functions. We offer xlnt portunity for. advance
oppty for growth. along ment See Office Mgr
with comprehensive HOWARDChenoa.t
compensation & benefits Dove & Quail Sts packages. 2-3 yrs ex per; NEW PORT BEACH
typing at60wpm.; some 8 3 3-0555
dictation or dictaphone
ex per helpful. TOPLiSS MODB.S
$75 DAY. PAJDDAJLV.
PR 0 D UCT I 0 N Noexp nec.826·2583
DYNAMICS
CORPORATION Trainee
&c accept ret~lbl ~ or bit ofr. Ken Smith-, UxlO crpt1, aew. tan
loBe ~ab,,~he;d Noleewpoln 851-500$ aft. s. plush, S1¥ or._. qffer. ac.. u u• II\~ lved • 862·497• aft. 5. supplying ~xules uae4 Salukl do&. free • yra.
ln yachtll\&. backpack· old/needs aood/loving .lflittlry I07W.
Ina & ski wear. Secure home. AKC Should be •••••••••••••••••••-t•" 'ulure for riaht person. run everyday 546-8935 Wanted: Gqld, 1uv.-..
filling of orders &c diamonds """'PP'P._lO~ general warehouse Basenjl pupt for sale: 3 pick up.cUh~~:.,,. .. · duties. Fulltlme daya, trls , 1 red & wht · • •
37¥l hr week. Xlnt com· $175/0BO. (114)1163-1758 For Sa le-S.ilro dLv~'
r.any-paid benefits. Pay watch, cood to ~
ncreases baled on abill· Frff to YO. 1045 meters, In xlnL co
ty. 645·1066. ·············~·······:· 751·8967 ., ... _.;.. ________ BuUdina matenals-2X4 s,
Warehouse & Delivery, chicken wire, cori'gated Genuine Colombi •
F I T 1 r e I axe d a t · sheet metal. U-HAUL. EMERALDS. only ~:
mosphere. Call Bob: 730-5205. eachf 1 -~
957-0536. . . M0-8681. .. ••• ----Terrier Pup, rem 7 mos. ~ WAREH OUS~ Clerk/ Benjie type. Housebrkn. Machlltery ..,.
Driver Must ha.ve ex· 1 o v es ever Yb o d Y. •••••••••••••••••••••-,0
per .. valid Calif. 9S7·5743afl5 DeWalt 9" Ublea~•t··
driver's lie. & excell. ood h ed d r s teel cabinet. moun •
dr1v1ng rec. Call. G po.meBnlle Fre ~r radlalarmS175.67
Balboa Manne. 549·9671. male it u . ee o . ,.
E o E M /F/H goodhome.641-5958. Mlsulla1-I~
. ---------·····················~ X·IA y TICH Gold carpeting ll'X23'. Lo•• ••ao• " ;Jt,
Part time 30hrs/wk . ___ 6_!l-0_!_9~-_ Helium Bouquet~ de·· · ·
M·· F For orfice in Golden Ret. mix. M, 9 livered . Perfect fO""J .
Newport Beach. ARRG mos. free lo good home every occasion. 91M4)? ";-~
& C R T r e q u I red 642-6572, 645-9528 John Wayne Tennis Cl~.
631 4422. --------Family membersh.tj.
Male Springer Spaniel 2 SlOOO incl tra11sler Merchondise y r s o I d , g r e a t
••••••••••••••••••••••• w/children all shots 675-5455 ,
Antiques 8005 860·8054 p a u I . B 1 a i ~ '
••••••••••••••••••••••• Furniture ---8050 H_enrl -~~48" frame~
WAM'TB TO IUY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 011-Tah1tl Cove. SSOC>~
1 buy o Id guns . I BUY * * 673-6223. · diamonds, ivory. jade & * * . _ ~-collectibles. Call (714) Good used Furniture & CHIN OOK F1r.epla~
972·4926 & ask for Dane. Appliances-OR J will sell wood burning, nevert)
or SELL for You used. New 1582. sell~ .. ~
J920's walnut burl double MASTEl.S AUCTION 536·3100 an &PM. Sat;~
bed (no mattress>. very 646-1686, 13~ 9625 wknds. • nice. $245. 962-1961 r
Applinces 10 t 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HARBOR AREA
APPLIANCE SERVICE
We buy used appliances
.. we sell recond, guar.
apphances. 549.3077
1 IUY A.PPLIA.NCES
Les 957-8l33 ----2 refrig, S75 ea. run good.
323 E. 1.8lh St, Apl F,
C.M. 645·1S73
O'Keere & Merril gas
stove w /center griddle &
adj broiler. good cond.
$75 831 ·2429 -------
Refrig, Sears. 14 cu ft .
frostfree. nearly new.
almond color. S310.
I IUY RIRNITURE Les 957-8133
Corfee table (Walnut
form1ca) $25, Couch S50
unique . good cond
962~97~ aft 5 _____ _
REDWOOD b6's
S4S. xlnt decking. .
New load -18,000' tit'
from mill. s:;r /ft. C.M' ..
645·9137 Xl27 anytime~ ·
-P~M <Baby Buggy>• .t'
Like New $125 ,,. H
New Spring Air King St 631-0335 '.:
Bed 5400 -. ~-631·2423 Schwinn Varsity 10.s ,
--------bike. xlnt cood, $95. A o~
New 6 sectional earth girl's banana seat bOtt!,.
tone luxury sora set. SJO. Golf clubs, cooapt:
Cost Sl.800, Best offer. set. Wilson woods &c Uai-:
559·5981 que irons. w/bag, $17~"1
--------968-5923. r ., Beige & Gold 90" Da ven·
port Gd cond 311yrs Surfboard, brand ~ ..
old. SlSO. 631-3849 Schrorr. 6'3.. P8 WllV.
-------asking s~. 58H669 aft Beaut. solid oak bdrm Spm. :. .:,...
set. 2 nitestnds. dresser. -
mirror . SS00.581·4669 Rancho San JpaqlMaP
Ii A.uocillhs 18004 Skypartt Bl
salary. comm. Min . 3 rllMTIM&
yrs. comm'I. underwril· Experienced counter
mg exper. Must have F person for printshop.
& C lie. Orange & L.A Full lime. O.C. Airport
Full & p~~me open·
\ngs avail. in the above
Depts. We orfer the best
benefits program of any
r etail co. Apply in
person:
18008 Skypark Bl. Ste 100 P /T. 20·28 hrs per week
Irvine, W114 Harbor Lites Lighting &
714-754-6388 Lamps. No exp nee 1807
851· 1944. 644-~ ----------. -Athletic Club couplis
Washer & gas dryer, S95 Sofa. ch~s. tbles. dinette M em be r s hi .P ~o rte r
ea or best offer. Kirby set, bt;Jc-a-brac. Call 752-0254 Ask <Ask for Susan > Newport Blvd. Call first Ste 235 Irvine
Counties. Call: area. Appointment.
Diane Bullock 557 ·9212. Ask for Mrs.
540-0400
J .C.PB*4EY
24 Fashion Island
EOE M/F for interview 645-7301. btwn 8am ·llpm. --------r---
Secretary. PIT, student vac.S60.960--8994 _____ 640-9608.673-4655 FAMIJ..Y memberahip
ok.odtyping.someS/H. TRAVELAGENTS G.E. Upright Freezer, --------John Wayne Te.t• GEN OFFICE -Exciting E o E Kuusk. Newport Sta· d 833·95SO . · · fin . Co. nee s eaaer tiooers Inc. SALES
person wtall around or-Janitorial COORDIHATOR
flee skills. Some bllkpt. AAA A.ARDMAH Printing Direct phone contact &typingreq.Chanc~ror The floor s hining Offset~ wilh distributor &
advancement for nght specialists needs relia· E x P e r ' d · 2 n d customer. Involves or·
person. Call for appl. ble persons to work P IT. Pressperson. G<lss Com· der placement.. entry. &
644·•684. 1 a m · l o a m . mun1ty 4 unil. AXply : rollow-up for standard
Commercial Financing wkdays/wkends clean· 1660 Placentia ve.. catalog items. Va!uable
Services ing & polishing tile noors _c:..._M_._______ tr a in i n g prov 1 de d .
in the Westminster area. Pleasant working en· Governess/Nanny. Ex·
perlenced. Live in my
home. Care for 18mo. old
boy. Lile housework.
Refs. Call 497·1"89. Gary
Bobe I.
Must have car. great for PRODUCTION vlronment ia Irvine.
students or retired In-TlA.IMH Contact Jeanette Hall
dlviduals. (714)529-6506 Rubber hose products. Belden Corp. Electronic
E.O.E. must pass co. phyaical Division. 833--1438. Start· including back X-ray. lng $1 """ .. ,·00/mo KENNEL/GROOMING Taking applications : ,.,.,....,.. .
Full time reliable help betwn 8 & 10am only. SALES cLBK.aetall
needed Npt Bch area St r a tor I ex , 1767 1 Oflice Supply Company ~UARDS Full & par\ time. All
ateaa. Unlfontl$ rum'd .
Ages 21 or over, retired
welcome. No exper. nee.
Apply : Universal
Protection ~ce. 1226 W., 6th St., Sanla Ana.
I•terview ~: 9-12 & 1·4,
Mon· Fri.
759·1911. Armstrong Ave., Irv. has full um.e positions
1 ....... DSC"•E EOE. A Kendllvis lod. available. Will train.
-" ~ Co. Newport Stationers Inc.
CiARD84Sl ...._...__. .... .__..11111-..i 557-9212. Mr. Emmona. Person needed p /time ,.
for lawn maint. In CdM . Ptr Sales
Musl haveexper. Tues & CR EDIT CHECKER CiRIATHOUllS
Thurs. 8AM-Noon. Call: Credit experience pref .
Terry. Mon-Fri. 673-2268 nexible hrs, Irv. 9AM-2PM
l'rvlne Personnel Agy HAllSTYUST LEGALSF£RETARY 488 E. mh. Costa Mesa or
Wll(nted for Bayfront 2 man Laguna Bch Law Suite224 642-1470 4PM-9PM
S.loo.173-7438 or e looking ror
secretary w/legal exper.
HARDWAllESALES Pl & Criminal. Salary P /time, 7days. 2h.rs /dai·
FultUme/partllme. Ap-negotiable.497·1729 ly, AM delivery, L.A. ply In person: Crown ...:.:...:..::...-------1 Times. $100 per week.
Hardware, 1024 Irvine, UFEGUAlDS Laguna Beach. 49441496.
(Westcllff Plual NB Easter week & summer
vacations. Irvine. PUii.iC Help needed. take & de· 968-0311 . RELATIOHS
Uye( orders. High earn· ---------1 PIT AM for resort con·
I n I p o t e n t I a I · LIFIGU~D dos. GOOD phone voice.
Weatmtnater/Pounl. P /time. 13.75 per hour. Santa Ana ofc. M.00 hr.
Veile)' area. Mf.3086. 644·5404 ~3-8137
RIGH Fashlob atore nds. MAIMTIMAMCI ftUAiJTY
betp . Salary +comm. Interior plant malnt, flt c"" --OL
F /tlme. Sales or ore. /b n must have dd ""'9' w e • • lmmed. openlnl in rinal u p. deal.reel. 760-0872 drivln& record. 545-6252. inspection. boee & rlt·
Join the Los Angeles
Times Circulation Team
& adapt your work
schedule to your
lifestyle.. Wortt Shrs/day
In a Times Circulatfon
sales oUice Mar your
home &c have more lime
for y~ family. studies,
or leisurely periods. We
pay hourly wages &
commlsaiom.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
1375 Sunflower Ave.
C.al. MO-OaOt
• Sofa 3· Yellow xlnt cond. b Sl600 1'' ~-" dictaphone. Salary per Exper·d, sabre training good cond. Best offer. SlOO Clu · · .-_...
exp.2:JG.6pm.673-748Q. preferred. xlnl salary & ~0010 833-3246 WAMTID __... /,.~t benefits. N.B. 754-1555 ._.._,, SecNhry ~ ask ror mgr. 17 c u rt frost free KING-SIZE BDRM set. Baby;;x.ivueT
LOCJIM!l leoch Frigidaire refrlg Sl85. xlnt cond. 5 pc. $295. 751·8967
Fast growing develop· TYPIST, must take S/H Maytag washer 195· 548-8569evenmgs Fines-; collectipn'1o'f menl Co. needs motivat· or speed·writlllg. 4 hrs. Maytag gas dryer SliS . ....::......:.....;.. ___ _;:;_ ___ , Turkis h Hand Ma~
ed. self-starter. to han· 2 . 3 d a y s wee k . Frigidaire washer $75. King bed w/frame. SlOO. ~
d I e a varie t y o f (714)64.4-0983. GuaranteedS4&-8672 Dinette, $35. Sect. hide· Carpel. P.P eve559-
responsiblllties Duties --TYPIST---d-K l sz a·bed. $75. 6 twin beds Brunswick Pool Table include bkkpg. con· . La Y enmore ap w/Crames & bedding. S200orbestoffer. tracts. typing. ( 50· 1 n voice offi ce needs washer/dryer. HOV· 1 yr S2.5-SO. 631.s:.>Q 642.ms. M5-634i' .. 60wpm ) & marketing person accurate with old. S400. G.E. Port. Dis· ------1
coordination Xlnt figures & 10-key add hwshr SlSO. Sears room OAK ANT IQ U E 4 place settings of Roy-1
growth potential & good C.M.979-8600 a 1cS2554S-9223 __. DRESSERS, assorted Dynasty ~Y Steiff Db•
salary. 30·40 hrs /wk. --.,_.ST Apt size frig Sl25 Sm nuorescent llgtits. misc. Kirk SleifC appraiVd
Send resl,\me to 1278 ',..... d freezer Sl()().Washer & stools, etc Call Dean. at S2500 will sell StlOO otenneyre PO BOX 48 Part time, 2-3 ays per 675 6000
Laguna Beach CA 92651 wk . Vacation relief. ~P· dryer $12Sea Port dis· --·-------549·2888 •::;
ply at: 1660 Placentia. hwsher SlOO. 646·5848 King·si1e walerbed. com· Manufacturer .,Goes ---------1 _c_o_sl_a_M_esa_____ 1020 pl. w/wood headboard, Retail ! 50-70~ off Secretary llcycl.s xtra th1'ck roam pads. I t prl es O·"
TITUSICRETAIY ---·TY-Pl•S•T ___ ••••••·;~~;•••••••• heater & 2 5 I y r 'E0t~~r5e~allc udli. 1y~':.fni:1:x'pe~~~d~ Gen. insurance agy. nds. SlOO reward. ($50 each). guarantee on matt. Sll9·$169, Oak en\ertain·
company benerlts. Call: fast. accurate policy Blue & yellow Diamond WO/ODO. 646-8382. ment centers ~-$~
Jerry Miller, MS-1114 to typist. Gd. salary & paiCl Back racing bike & b_lue OFFICE DESK, ~~:~ ~~-~~:2 La
set up an appointment. co. benefits. Call Lind . & white XR-7 racing w/flling drawer. l yr Loma Clrcle, An~
STEWARTTtn.E at714·549-8161 bike. 494-0167 eves ; old,$9S.6'73-T578 900N. Broadway, 557·05Sldys. ~-8272 . ,.
Sant.a Ana
E.O.E. M/F Typists ~sE~c~RE~T~A~RY!!!P!!!1t!!!1m~e~. 20~1 Stat Typists
hr. wk. Gen. ofc. duties
Call: Christ Church By
the Sea. 673-3805
SECRETARY or
paralegal wtth heavy ex·
per. In estate planning.
Airport area, Npt. Bch.
Call : Jackie art .
1: 30P M. 833-99&1
Secretary, FIT. Tues·
Sat. General office
duUet, pvt country club.
Call 644·5t04. HOME AIDE to care for Maaager, Office work,
,.,_.., ••m•o le .our counter help for food
ham• 4 ms-per d~ tm t•nlce. Seaaonal. (I
All. 14$--or MZ.2A34 mo.l. Jl.B. area. Call E.
Uni. must pass co.
.phyalcal iocJudini back x·r ay. Tlkinl appUc•· ----.::......:.;~---1
lk>nl btwn I • 10..m on· ly , Straloflex. 17671
Arm1tron1 Av~. I rv.,
EOE A Kanaa.tl Ind ..
cUys,·~ 9on1rath, (714"4 .. 5378
tioMDtAK.&RS or.write t4511Acacl• Dr,
Loollhll for at·"om e Tutti.D,Ca.taO.
~ la~r. Ue ,rrindcbimet, MAMA .. / ASST ..._...,rt&.-... For fabric store. Fab.
Co.
ffOllele/HOlt: i.-1 days, ::Ztofo'*'· Call Gerl: .... n.uaa.. •to to ....:...;..;...,_.._· -----1 ...:..:..;~----:-::~';7 ttan. ~ Bftder.
MM91
•• ' I i\ I \ I
I
I
xi:: 100 21" color. . Quasar 19" color, '76 COLEMAN TENT
551J..1075 TRLR. Sleeps 6, used 4
times, atove. sink, xtra
canvas. (714)995-8989
BARWI CK DATSUN
'>on Ju on C OP""m>O
831-3311
* ClwY.MU'80
LUV l/~Stab ---------1 with dual rears' Ideal J,. L150 Spkrs .
/pair never used; ~~.~'!'!' ... !!.~~ ~ui GXl() component 1978 Honda Hobbit, only jl¥net. $130?S2-5l20 600 mi, xlnt cood. Asking
...... ......_ $385. Call after 4pm T'laii1, • .., _64_6·_3_11_5_. ______ , =·~ ....... ~;(;io Motorcwdn/
for landscapers, etc.
<Ser. 6056).
ONLY$5991
HOWARD ClwY,...
Dove & Qua.ii Sts.
NEWPORT BEACH
l'll-0555
•••••••,..•••••••••• •••• Scoot.rs 91 50 . ·· •"' boarcl fibe ( & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 CHEVY LUV. chrome ~. S200' k1~f7:~s '75 Honda 750, full dress. wheels, white tires, -..l.2o5 · or A-lcond.Only12K.Mu.st am/fm stereo cass.
sell. 548-6250 aJ\ 6pm. 12975 ~0010
,. ~ISWUC\{,20 1979 Hond~ Express like • C._.-Y-.-NU--•• -,--
•• ••••••••••• •••• new 650 nu. 1-tCMI I 2ft. Stake arine Electrician $250 964-4-413 Liftgate. duals, air
1.i1Q/iDatall/repair .78 ITl75 Good Condition cond .. springs, pwr. st.,
J. ork._ S49-2S20 eve 1100 ml S400 9'79-S173 or a u x . t a n k . more ! s.36-02'73 Workhorse complete.
Honda Express II
170miles, mintcond.
$400 551-1149
90~0 •79 CllSOHOHDA ~ With new top end. Very
Tender, 8,4 .. hyp. very ean.891-4919Glen
in box. Sella 18C9, COMPACT TRAILER
.-. (714)75'-1732 1973 Calafla Luggage
Rack 360 Hitch $425.
9040 495--0048
<Ser. 3961 ).
OHLY $9998
• '•~H•tl 1
r4 t r J;. I 't ~
,•.
', 4 ( I JI)(•
H._..IUYB
Top dollatl for Sports
1 c._,.., Bup. Campers,
9l4't, Audi'• Aak forUIC MGR
JIMMAllMO
VOLKSWAGIM
187il Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH
1,4J.-2000
TOP.DOLL.Al
PAID.oa
6000 fr CLIAM
USIDCAISI
WANTED!
Late model Toyota.s and
Vo l vos . Ca ll us
ODAY! 'I
1 ............. ... C••••MH• ""'4 .. t J w UO·t07
POISCllS
WAlllEI
'13 *C, Xlnt«Jnd. lluat ---sms
aetl. fl~toeo 7$2-2404 'L' I~ a=.upee<1 JIM MAllHO
_cty ___ a._W_·S4_77_e_vea_. __ ,•1th' fac:tor~ ifr. VOWWA ...
11 . B . • 1 9 4 5 o s L, Bnuntw dedltlon'! 18711 Beach Blvd.
Maple/Yellow Tan lthr (911.ZSM) ~ 142·2000
19K mi, 2 tops, cass, PP M..-..
M0-1.218, au-2w S.11,750 . JIM MAIU .. o w Sdky1~"ooo· 2midr •• V8, top
HJJ .......................
. •C••••7t Auto. ll'8DI., air toad.,
and more! Neat urr (Ser. 8251).
OM&.YS6HI
V""UCSWMIN eon , .... , owner,
·11 ~so, 4dr sedan iEueeaeiiiiVCl: fully equipped, best of· SHOWIOOMCOND.
Brwrt/tan, blaup. radio, •4J..JOOO . fer. 644-4'701 ·, '?ST·TOP
clean $5,000. 551-7733; ~--------Cedlloc 99 t 5 Power brakes, power
55e-00'10 '~ '85 VW left & rlaht •• ••• ••. •• •• ••• ••. •••.. windows. power 1teerin1 ~--.-----9-7_4_4 door, '73 left door. $50 CO..,T~ •fl..,G with tllt/tele1coptn1
..,_ each. w-~m style •hl " ~-" steerlng wheel, air, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 .. ~.. ... ti CA.Ofll.AC7 AM /FM stereo. rear 79 ~ (UBS ior ._per uce e We spec!-"--in leases I -S20 548-1'144 IUUoC w Ind ow defogger, Sa a -S4'rvie9-Leu:ing Sharp '8' roadster with 1 __ e_a_. __ _._ ___ 1 for the business ex-automaUc trans. Snow low Ca ,.,... air. Great buy! (483222) 'fiVW IUS ecutlve & professional. whlte with Burg1111dy in·
Rolla 'koyce BMW $4995 oYna e 1rie4 apeed Large $etectkMt terlor . 21,000 miles. lm·
l.S40Jamboree JIMMAllHO in or 1h1a brown " Of Hew 1911 mac ulate thruout!
NewportBeach 64C>-6444 VOLICSWAG!M belfe. Ua a ah4rpie! Cocllocs $8,100. 754-6790 or
18711 Beach Blvd. US lt'p. ~ ....... S How le Stocki _A!,1,.Shwrser. Ad #209, 642-4300 '72 BMW 2002, 4spd, air, W!T"Y .,.
xlnt all around. $3400. 142-2000 ._,,, u&-~"'-~~ 494-1475. "'"' -...u '68 T-top, 427.390 hp, upd, --------1'79 MGB overdrive, 19K VOL.ISWA~ LL lowner,96000.
BMW 530l, '78, mint cond. ml. stereo. road bar, 18711 Beach Bnici. 2600 u •• L. .. BN<1 (714)673-3635. o 8 y s : 9 5 1 . so o 6 ; am/fm, $6000543-5892 1 ..._2000 ,-..,,......,
Wkends/eves: ~146. 4• CO!><~~ S40-<>IOO Doct,. 9935 '-.o' 9741 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'75 2002, Sunroof, am/rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• .69 Squareb.ack.: New --
7
-
7
-C-... -ft
1
-•• -... -C--1 '69 Charger :113, Gd body
stereo. SM9S (92BMVH ) LEASE engine, tr1lns. brakes. --.A & motor. Orig nds some
?S2-Sl20 radials. $2780. Call SmW work $900.968-2586 -----DIRECT! 848 49,000 mjles. Original D..._ 97ZO ·8058 medium blue. Loaded' '77 Dodge Van LlC • ••••••••••••••••••••••
76DATSUH280Z 1911....aJ '75 VWCAMPER Sharp! 093SAJ) # 1 H 8 5 9 4 4 I . D . ~ $6995 #B11AE7X2077072 Lien Pop-top, sharp,~ Sale on 4/13/81 lOAM at Dyna mile bronze 4 ~ TUllO.
speed Air, stereo,
wheels. shadow. Very ll"'CHl~OITS clean! (670UI) ,.. .,.....
$5695
JIMMAllNO
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
960-2133 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 2014 Harbor Blvd. CM.
'6? VW VAN am/fm cass., 18711 Beach Blvd.
runs g~~2 142-2000
Ford ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9940
'72 SUPER BEETI..E '78 Seville, yellow. lthr, VOLKSWAGEN Allow ws the opportunity 18711 Beach Blvd. Good body & interior sunroof. loaded. 37K ml.
9750 $2200. 545-0147 $10,500. 76()..9278
'71 LTD Ford
$700/0BO
675-3949 aft 3PM
to consid~r the purchase 142-2000 or trade·in of your clean I
Porsche. Check with Us 1 Today! <.~
-~~ 13631 Hwt>o-81•0
<;.1-. Grow "' QI.DU
Tap Dollar
Paid
For Your Car!
JOHNSON & SON
U..coa.~
2626 Harbor Blvd'.
Costa Mesa 540..5630
w.P.,
OVER
.... looll
For Your Good
VW, Porsche oc: Audi
VW-PORSCHE-AUDJ
78 DATSUN 2102
Dynamite sport coupe. 4
speed, air, ster eo.
wheels & shadow Very
sharp! <265UPZ)
$7295
JIMMAllNO
VOLKSWA~HH
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
CHEAP!!
Sli1bt1y used turbo kit
'70. '74 Datsun Z cars
7S.Sl37.
445 E . Coast HI way at Bayside Drive '76 280Z 2+2, silver, auto.
Newport Beach 873-0900 fm, a /c, 1d ccnd, ~100.
Premium pnces
paid for any used car
<foreign or domestic)
in good condition ..
See Us First!
543-9908.
'74 Datsun 8210, 4spd,
rebll eng & trans,
radials , c lean
$2000/0BO. 76()..21691 or
760-1936.
~~••rJiillll• '78 280Z, $6,280. 35.000 mi, i:.:.; blue. xlnt cond. new
~888 llJrbor Hl\d
l'«!StJ ~h·!'U 540 0330
•CARSWAHTBh
R--or..ot
$25-SJOO
CASH
Free TowiMJ o,...w.-...
Calld,
C714tltl-0517
tires, air, 4spd, am/fm
tape. Call675-ti082.
'74 B210 H-Back Clean.
Low males. 30+ mpg.
New tires . $1 595.
492-4281.
9727 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VISITYOUI
OIAMCllCOAST
HONDA ·
HIAD9UA11115
• TODAY!!!
UMIVllSITY
SALES&SERVJCE
OLDSMOllLE
HONDA
GMCTIUCKS
2850 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
540.9640
....................... ---------
PORSCHE 1979
928. Fully loaded. 15,400 orig. mi . xlnt cond. in-
side & out. Blue book
wholesale is $216,375; our
sale price Is $26.775.
(2003681 Ask for Duke
or Mike .
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
1060 HllAP.Ofl Bl VO
CO">TA Ml SA <141 00'')
75 PORSCHE 2.0 Litre. Jet black beau·
~! Dynamit~ 5 speed.
Stereo. O!JTLVSJ
$6495
JIMMARINO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd.
14Z..2000
Pors·c h e 1969 912 ,
tangerine, good cond.
1»~
'11 Ponche 924, black,
xlnl cond. $7,300.
~
'76 PORSCHE 912E
Mint. air, sunrl. lo ml.
great mpg. 499-1642
'76 912E, xlnt cond.
brn/tan. s nrf , air ,
am/fm cass. S14 ,000
(714 )493-8369.
'60 356 $4000
___ 6 75-6970 ,
'11 TARGA Mint Cond!
Xlnt stereo system. new
'80 Porsche col or,
alarm. P7 alloys, lo mi,
many xtras, must see to
appreciate. $17.SOO/OBO
494.9927. 497.3750
Rois loyu 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #1 DEALER IN [.S.A~·
·79 VW Diesel Rabbit. '79 Se Ville brand new'
40mpg & 5lmpg hwy. Loaded. 966-1055
Mist green, 4dr. 20K ___ 63_1-_2244
miles. Casaettt stereo. Transportation special.
air. $spd, snrf. Extra 1970 Coupe deV1lle, full
tank. l,OOOmile range. pwr, runs great. gd tires
Xlnt. cond. Take over all around. $695 638-4762
low in tersest 48mo lease or 636-6384
al 1218. 78/mo. Lease & ------
o b<l i g a ti on : $3,646. '72 Cadillac Coupe de
Wkdys: 1511-8952. wknds · Ville eng & body xlnt.
752-6087 . very clean $1800646-9872
'75 VW bOG &ood cond, '75 Coupe DeVilJe. It. blue
new tires runs great. w/whl Landau top
am /fm s'lereo 960-3470 68,000 ma. Sl800 496-4179 -----_e_v_es ____ ----Cad/'78Seville.41M. Fi e·
'72 BUG xtra clean, rblt quipped. New tires
eng. am/fm ca.ss, MUST Sacrifice for $8 ,699
SELL ' $2500 0 B 0 754·3630 dys, 552-9742
851-914.l days, S-48-8196 eves/wkends.
..... ~_v_es ________ A c I a ss i c art dec o
'61 Coovert. lmmac. See
to appreciate. '4800.
120~ 38lb6t, NB 675--4.233
Eldorado Ro mmel
would've lo~ed 1t. Run:..
$600 642-52.S 1 -----
'71 Super beatJe C'Onvl, C ... aro 9917
mint co'nd, nu eng ' •••••••••••••••••••••••
chrome rims.-nu tires. '78Camaro
4m /fm cass f4500 Air .. automatic. power 642-0846 steering, 27.961 males.
(882VEI )
$4918
Barwick Imports
lll-3JI I
lt78 VW Convert. Oiam-
pagne Edit. 8,000 mi,
MicheKn tires, ~hrome
wheels . AM /FM cass
$7500 . Call Dean,
675-6000
'77 Camaro. Red Black
vinyl top. New paint.
AM /FM /8trk Xlnt '84 Baja Bug. Run:s good cond 631 ·7889
$900/0BO. Need to sell ------
fast. Ron631·9069.
'63 VW Bm to PU ron-
ve N1ion, 12K on 1600.
needs wortl, but driven
daily, $'TOO. ~4321
'80 Rabbit dsl. 2 dr. wht,
air. burg aJarm. 14K m1.
$'T9SQ. 534-3556
VW Super Beetle '74
Sunroof, radials. 4 spd,
sacrifice. $2500/bst ofr.
673·7262, 551.3200
'78 Lt. Camaro new tires.
low miles. $4495 /080
546-3614. 998-3333
ChHroMf 9920 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
•Che•. HU '80 •
Caprice SpcM'.'f Cpe. Auto trans, air cond.
loaded 1 Gorgeous! (Ser
1068)
IOY '72 Bug new Ures, good
CARVER condition S2700 or best
•Che•. NU '10
MaffbuCloulc
4-door Sedan Auto
trans. air cond, loaded! Beautiful! (Ser. 0545). ROLLS-ROYCE offer. 751-0'l38 ONLY $7898 1$40 JarnMrff
,.__ __ ... :.:1a.acto Vol•o 9772 • HOWAIDCt.•,...
CLOSED SUNDAY~ ........................ Dove &Quall Sls.
9760 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VOLfO NEWPORT BEACH
SALIS. SllVICE
AMOLEASIHG OVERSE~DEl.IVERY
EXPERTS
'IAILlll!
VOi.YO 1986 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
646-930J 540.9467
OUHGI COUNTY
VOLVO
Lar•esl l'Olvo Dealer
in OraJileOowM.Y ! BUY or LEA.SE
DUlECf
tJ).0555
'11 CHEVROLET
MALllU CLASSIC
COUPE 42,000 miles and loaded.
A real jewel. (367TXE>
$3295
JIM MARINO
VOLICSWAG!M
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
SHUSMSTI
We have a good selection
of NE W & USED
lets' ,
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
.• I'' •
r I ' \, I
~4b-1100 ~,, __ _
10 t 20 <Jerden Grove 8 1.
Garde!' Grove 580-t f 90
'78 Ford Fiesta Sport. 25
mpg custom wheels 4
s pd $3 .sso. 5464480
UttcoM 9945 •••••••••••••••••••••••
77 LINCOLN
Jet black town sedan
Every option! 42.000
miles So sharp. 1t 's
scary • (468RSX >
$49'5
JIM MA.IUMO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd
14Z..2000
'63 Lincoln. good cond
Many new parts Best of
fer 548-4955
Mercwy 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S
RNEST
LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALERSHIP
~?&.-'J.•
LINCOLN-MERCURY .
16-18 Auto Center Dr.
SD Fwy-Lake Forest
exit
IRVJNE
I) 83G-7000
'12 Mercury Montego MX
Great C-Ond1t100 ! Fully
equipped with power
seals and windows, air,
power stee r i n g
(921 EOJ J Srnn Johnson
and Son Lincoln
Mercury ~5630
'78 Marquis wagon, 9
pass . loaded. New
Michelins. Xlnt cond.
$4000 Owner. 675-6161
'79 Mercury Marquis 4
door . Don't wait on lhla
one! Air. power steering
and more! (627YBO)
Johnson and Son Lincoln
Mercury ~5630
78 Mercury Zepher Z7, lo
mi. PS, PB, auto, vin
top. $3300. 1179-5099 PP
MustCMCJ 9952 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'65 Must 2+2 289, P IS,
PB, new tires. reas.
494-4533
1968 Ford tduatang. V·8 .
Red exterior, black
vinyl Interior. New steel
belted tires, runs good.
$1495. 642-4321, ext 210 or
evenings 640-1049.
'65 M UST ANG 6 cyl,
4spd, gd . mileage.
$1400/0BO. 644-SS85
~ 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '16 Cutlass Salon. T-top.
New Mic:heUn radials.
FM ster«>. Everythin&
works. $2000. 540-4190
'ext. 112 wkdys; 661-1175
art. 5PM .tswknda.
DIESEL '78 Delta 88
Royal. Sbownn ~ond.
PS/PB, A/C, AM/FM
at.er, cruise control. luJt
intr. Xlnt mpp. 98000. n•neo-tMt
'66 Delta 88, 4dr, nds
Ure.I, $800/0BO S5Ml2'7
aft3pm. ......... ,,, .
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'• Pl.Ymoutb Vallaat, 4
apd, "'· 2 dr, hrcl top. Xhrt mecb • bod1. 1 am car. 900. Mt-1111 •v•.
• Bt DAVID 1nm•ANN .................
k key proseeutlon )Vitnesa ln
convicted child killer Rodney J .
Alacala's murder trial -whole
teaUmony lb now alleg~ to be
perjured 1 was taken otf proba·
tioSl fpr armed tobbery on the
nme day ·that Alcala was sen·
tented to dle. laat June.
Department reeommendaUoa.s
be 10 to atate prtaon for petty
theft related vlolaUom. ·
mates tosetber at Oran1e Coun·
ty JaU Wbin Alcala alle1ed.ly
made hi.a statements to them.
Herrera teatlfled acalnat
Alcala ln April l.llO. Only three
montba earlier, a petitlon wu
meet again.at Herrera allecina
violation of probatlon ln
conneetim with petty t.beft.t at
an Anaheim IQPennarket.
Tbe deputy district attorney
also aald be told fellow
prosecutors involved with
Herrera'• cue to make no deals
of any ldnd.
•'I purposely tried to stay
away from him," Farnell said.
One of t.41e attorneys who bad
represented the witness said
there •u1 an unspoken agree-
ment bla <!llent would r~etve a
break ln eltcbaoge for tesWying
against Al~a.ta.
The result wu that Herrera, a
heroin addict, walked out ot tbe
Oran1e County Court.bouae oo Jone 20, 119>, a (ree man whlle
Alcala, 38, wu condemned to
death-for the 1979 kidnap·
murder of 12-year-old Robin
Samsoe ot Hunthlat.on 'Beach.
The Orange County Dlatrlct
Attorney's Office la denyinl that
Herrert was etven a break ln"re·
turn for his testimony. Herrera
testified Alcala admitted to him
be slapped Mias Samsoe un·
conscious after abducting her ln
June, 1979.
However, one of Herrera's
several public defenden at tbe
time ol Alcala's trial aa71 the.re
wu "an implied underatuMMn1"
between defense lawyers and
prosecutors that Herrera would
reeelve some consideration ror
his Alcala testimony.
The issue of Herrera 's
participation in the bitbly
publlcl&ed Ale.ala cue is once
again the focus of attention now
that the California Supnme
Court bas ordered a hearin1 be
held in Orange County Superior.
Court on allegations by Dove
that be and Herrera lied on the
witness stand.
Herrera bad been placed on
probation tollowln1 an armed
robbery conviction in 1975 for
which be wu sentenced to two
years ln Los An1eles County
Jail. Four additional yean of
probation were added to the sen·
Lenee.
Says Alcala pro_Jecutor
Richard Farnell:
However, attorney Grecory
Jones, once Herrera'• public
defender and who ls now in
private practice, aatd hta
experience indicated that the
Distric;t Attorney's Office avoids
making "e~pliclt promises" in
return for t estimony bf
informants, but there ls an
unspoken understandlnl that
some consideration will be
given.
Court records show that
Michael &1gene Herrera, 28,
had his p~allon "terminated"
six months early and $5,000 bail
exonera~d despite Probation tf errer• and another IJ)an,
Robert Frank Dove, were ln·
''We were making no deals in
tbls case <a1ainst Alcala> with
any of the snitches, except for
their protection.·'
This was so in the Herrera
(See ALCALA, Page A!)
Wetlands d~velopment planOK'd
Mental exana
. Hinckley case
to grand j11ry
WASHINGTON CAP > -A
federal magistrate sent the case
of John W. Hiackley Jr. to a
federal grand jury today to de·
cide whether ihe 25-year-old
loner should be indicted ln the
attempted assassination of
President Reagan.
* * *
Reagan's
r-ecovery
'amazing'
WASHINGTON CAP > -Presi·
dent Reagan, hls r ecovery
called "really amazing" from a
wound that doctors say mlgbt
have killed him, probably was
struck by a ricocheting bullet
rather than a direc t shot,
sources say.
Now in his third day of con·
valescence, the president "is in
extremely good spirits after ex·
periencing the best night's sleep
since he bas been in the
hospital," hls physician said to-
day. Dr. Daniel Ruge said the
swesident slept from 9 p.m. until
.6 a .m . and "be looks fine."
"He is awake, alert and talk· Jut with hosp1tal personnel,"
Auge said in a statement re·
layed by assistant Wbite House
}>ress secretary David Porsperi.
"'His vital.rs1en• are normal,
fltbough be is still complaWng
. Jif soreness in his ten side, which
Iii quite normal."
The president, wearing yello•
Jtajamu and a white robe and
.slippers, later walked about 50
=tards in the hospital corridor,
laid Larry Speakes, deput)'
')Vhite House press secretary.
,. Reagan planned to discuss
legislative issues with Senate
&epublican· leader Howard
Baker and meet with Vice Presl·
dent Geor1e Bush, Speake! said,
addlnJt that the president bad
.•: .. .. .. ..
(See BEAGAN, Pace A.%)
* * *
Brady, uife
play catch
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -
White Ho.use pre11·
secretary James Brad111
talklna, 11nath1n1 without
aaalatance aad playin1
catch wtth b.ia wUe u be
make• "truly excep·
tJonal" PJ'OINU in b.ia N·
· covery from a 1uiaabot
wound to tbe brain, t.be
White ffouM Uyt.
Brady, lQJllNd ill MOD·
day's a11a1•laatloa at·
tempt oa re.Sd•nt
Re a1aa, rtmataed la
erltleal eondltloa at •
Geor• .. W 1blactoa
Ualrinit1 ~pita!, bat
•ottor• espr••••d eeUUO.opU..._, •
Hinckley, wearing a white,
bulletproof vest under his dark
blue sport coat, sat silenUy as
his lawyer, Vincent Fuller,
waived the requirement lbat the
government show probable
cause that a crime was com·
milted.
Magistrate Lawrence
Mar1olis then sent his caae
direcUy to a grand jury.
After the 18-minllte hearinl
U.S. Attorney Charles F .C. R~
OTHER COVERAQE-A3, A4
told reporters the magistrate's
order commits Hinckley under
federal law to an lhstitution "for
a mental examination to de·
termine his saqjty." The identity
of the institution was not dh·
closed.
Fuller told Margolis that
Hinckley's lawyers bad not de·
cided whether to use insanity as
a defense.
Hinckley was brought to the
U.S. District Court buUding in
an armored limousine from the
Quantico, Va., Marine base,
where be is being held without
bond. He arrived 90 minutes
before the hearing was to begin,
and entered the heavily guarded
courtroom shortly after 10 a.m.
local time.
During the bearing, Hinckley
frequenUy conferred with one or
bis lawyers from the rtrm of
famed criminal defense attorney
Edward Bennett Williams. He
sat still. in his seat, occuiooally
with bis band partially covering
his mouth.
The only time Hinckley spoke
was when Margolis asked him
whether he agreed to waive the
(See IDNCK.LEY, Page A!)
Music Center
spotlighted
in awards .• The Oran1e Count)' Mualc
Cente.r was tbe bit winner
amon1 Ile I1l1neylaad Com·
munlty Service Awardl WedDea·
day at tlle Dlaneyland Hotel la
Anaheim.
0 llllll'DUlt O.mY MHIVfTIIU. ~ 11AAASH EXNH5IOlo
0 HIQtf OUt9fT'Y lllMIDlnU.
0 HltAYY ~ llllllbl'TIAL
~ NlOe°""°°° COMMeRCIAL
8 ""0lt~
ORANGE COUNTY SUPERVISORS APPROVE BOLSA CHICA DEVELOPMENT PLAN
M•rah •re•, ahown In crou hetched ere•, ••P•nded to IOO •er••
&hools bracing
"'-I or fund cutbacks
By PWL SNEIDEBMAN
Of .. o.tly Niil Meft
West Orange County school
di,tricts, already preparing for
a state money squeeze, now are
bracing for the serious federal
funding c ut anti cipated by
Wil son Rile s . state
s uperintende nt or public
instruction.
Riles, who visited Orange
County Wednesday has warned
that the Reagan
Administration's current budget
proposals will reduce most
federal assistance to California
schools by 25 percent.
Federal school lunch and
nutrition aid, Riles said, could
be cut as much as 35 pe•cent.
"The impact of s u c h
reductions," the state official
said , "will be extremely
disruptive and severe upon
services delivered to children
with special needs and upon
teachers and aides providing
these services.·'
West county school officials
admitted they had not
anticipated the federal cuts in
planning for the coming school
year. ,
The major cost in education
programs ls paying employees.
But the stale-imposed deadline
for dismissing teachers and
other professionals was March
15.
(See FUNDS, Pace AZ)
Riles points
to chaos in
state schools
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of .. Dlllty rt•H'"'
Stale Superintendent of Public
Instruction Wilson Riles bas
forecast chaos and massive
program cutbacks in California
public schools if state and federal
budget proposals are adopted.
Speaking to an audience of
about 500 teachers and school
administrators Wednesday in a
packed banquet room at the
Stferaton-Newport, Riles said
public education is headed for
serious trouble if more money is
not allocated.
"We have not been able to
recoup our losses since paa1a1e of
Proposition 13," the school chief
said. "Public education simply
can't take any more cuts and
remain a viable school system.''
Riles, who recently announced
be will seek re-election aa
Decision
has many
mthappjr
By PATRICK .KENNEDY . OI .. DllllJ,.... ,...,
The major landowner of the
Boise Chica marsh sald today
that development may not be
possible because the Orange
County Board of Supervisors aet
aside too much acreage for
wetland preservation.
On the other side, environmen·
tallsta also were unhappy with
the boat marina and housing
plan because the 600 acres set
aside for weUands preservation
comprises only half of the 1,200
acres in the marsh.
Officials of Signal Landmark
Co. said the board's expanaioo ol
proposed marsh from 400 acres
to 600 acres would wlpe out con-
struction of eJtpeoaive
waterfront houses and would
jeopardize their ability to make.
money on the proposed 5,700
home residential area.
''The additional acreage may
jeopardize the financing
capability or the entire plan,"
said Robert McNatt, vice preai·
dent of Signal.
McNall said the additional 200
acres must be purchased at a
cost "between $100,000 and
$300,000 an acre."
Peter Green, president ol the
Amigos de Bolsa Chica group,
said he appreciated compromise
attempts. "However, I'm not
happy. I still believe the plan en·
visioned is contrary to the
Coastal Act which seeks to pro-
tect the few remaining wetlands
in the state."
Tl1e proposal unanimously ap.
proved by the supervisors in·
eludes a 1,800-slip boat marina
and 530-foot-wlde navieable
channel connectinJt to acijacent
Huntington Harbour and
reaching the ocean through
Bolaa Chica State Beach.
The plan includes a linear
park on the southern bluffs u
well as 5,700 homes and 800
acres of marsh.
The Supervisors stipulated
<See llOLSA, Pace Al)
California school chief ln 1982, ··-----------said tbe state stands to lose $338
(See JULES, Pa1e AZ>
Libe.-ia gets
aid from U.S.
. . -
111111 CUil IUTlll
\ Fair tonicbt and Friday.
Wind• iAcrea•lAJ over-
nt•llt, 1\11t111115 to 30 mph
tbrou1h Friday. Lowa
toal.lbt 45 oo the eout. sz
lnland. Hilb& t'rlda1 15 to
fO.
I
I
1
: Pr ... P.,,. AJ I . . . .·RILES ••.
million in federal aaslltaJ1ee fer
the 1981-tl acbool yeat )lader
President Reai•n•a budiet
proposals.
Riles said tbe proposed 25
percent cut in federal funds would
mean about 10,000 CaUfornia
teachers would lose their Jobe in
September.
He also decried Gov. Jerry
Brown proposed S petcent in·
crease for public education,
which be said was "totally in·
adequate" in the face of 12 per-
.cent inflation.
Riles said lawmakers in
Sacramento face a difficult
problem in deciding where state
money will be spent because the
$7 billion state budget surplus will
run out this year.
"The governor is involved in a
balancing act and is being forced
to make tradeoffs," Riles said.
''But we can't afford to have the
attitude that the economy will
reastert Ltaelf and things will let
better in l}\e future.•·
Riles urged the school
administrators and teachers to
lobby bard for passage of
Assembb' Bill m , lntnduced latt
month by Auemblyiqan Leroy
Green otSacratpento.
He said the bill provlde.s for a 10
percent increase in state
s pending for schools over the
1981-82,year, enough to keep vital
programs afloat.
He added that still more funds
are needed, but the legislative
package would provide a stable
financinJt system for next year.
"We must put to1etber a
coalition to try and impress upon
our national and state leaden
what the impact of these
reductions will mean," Rllea
said. "We simply cannot deal
with this without utter chaos.''
Riles said reductions proposed
by President Reagan's tu
cutter& would bit proframs for
mentally and physically
handicapped school children
especially bard. He aald nutrition
programs would be crippled, if
not totally wiped out.
''What Congress la conslderlnc
is mournf\llly inadequate for the
1981-82acbool year," Riles said.
. Moore raps • .
~~agan attack
CHARLESTON, W.Va. <AP)-
Would·be-pneWenUal auuain
Sara Jane Moon,.,. ber 19'75 at;
tack on Gerald Ford wu an "ap-
propriatePIAIUcal tool," fNl bu
crillcl&ed tbll •eek'• attempt to
kt,11 4Pnlkfmt JleaHD U mere "randomviolence.-,r •
"I dca't Wnk lt'1 aP01"0Pl'tate now at all," lb. Moweaald 'fed·
nnday ln a tetepbone Interview from tbe ,...,.. women•a ,,__
IA Aldenoa, 'fl. Va., wlwe lbe b HniDC a Ufe term. "Tlds t. a dlf.
ferentttme."
Torttado •tt11e
Sbffts ol lumber are scattered like toothpicks over the
town ol Hurtsboro, Ala., which was bit early Wednesday
by a tornado which killed two people and injured several
etbets. 'lbe wreckage at upper right is that of a sa~.
· Fr•• P.,,e AJ
ALCAL~ WITNESS . • •
case, Jones a.aid,
According lo Herrera's
c:rimiilaJ records, .his probation
violation bearing on charges of
petty theft was postponed about
six times, from early February,
1980 to June 20, 1980.
During this same period,
Alcala's trial was in progress
before Superior Court Judge
Philip E. Schwab.
Jones said tbat on some
occasions, be would ask the
Judie for a delay and at other
times, the prosecutor would do
so.
Though be says be kept a
distance from the cue, Farnell
explained that Herrera's
probation proceedings probably
were kept alive dur10g that
four-month period to keep a bold
on the witness.
If he disappeared (Herrera
was free on bail), a wanant
could have been issued tor bis
arrest, Farnell aaid.
According to court records,
Herrera was no stranger to
cooperating with police.
Durina bil incarceration on an
earlier probation violation, be
eooperated with Oranie County
Sheriff's Department
in•estigaton in breaking up a
ring which was receiving stolen
property, according to records.
He acted as a so-called "coo·
fidential informant."
Court records show that a
short time later, in December. 1979, H'errera went before
SuperiorlCour{ Judge Roliert E.
Rickles and was allowed to
withdraw his previous ad·
mtasion of a probation v'platiop.
He then re-admltted be violated
probation and what was ·
originally a one-year sentence to
Orange County Jail handed down
in July, 1979 wu changed to a
145-day sentence, deemed served.
"He knew the ropes," said
Jones, who stated fiatly that
Herrera would have 1one to state
prison immediately bad be not
testifledlntheAlcalacaae.
Herrera was back in court
aealnontbeftcbarges by January
1980 (bis probation period had
been extended by Judce Rickles
to December, Ul80).
,Jones said it wu in the belt
interests of both bb client and the
prosecution to delay that cue
while the Alcala trial cot under
way.
Two separate proceed.lngs were
pendlnl against Herrera -a ·
probation violation bearlq in
Superlcr Court and the formal
theft cbar1es in North Oran1e
County llunlclpal Court.
Attorne11 ramlllar with the
can'Uphdned that by havinc bb
probation .. terminated" in
Superior Court, Herrera could not
face a lt•te prison term for
probation vlolatioa.
tmtead, be went to North Court
In Jaly, 1110, to face tbe
mlldemeaaor ~ alone, ao
wblch be pleaded 1wlty liDd
recetftd local Jail time at i..
Habra Qty Jail.
Durial bll •J!Pt&l'anoa on tbe
atand llt the Akala trial, Remera
said it ~as a jailhouse "code of
ethic•" which motivated him to
testify acainstAlcala.
•·People in Lnstitutions feel a
certain hostility toward child
molesters,'' he said at the time.
Herrera testified that Alcala
told him during jailbouse
conversations how be lured Miss
· Samsoe into his car at the
seashore in Huntington Beach in
Juoe, 1979.
The youngster's remains were
found several weeks later in the
foothills near Sierra Madre.
Alcala, of Monterey Park, was
convicted of first degree murder
and sentenced to death after a
lengthy trial in Judge Schwab's
court.
He is presenUy on San Quentin's
Death Row.
Fr ... Pflffe AJ
WINNERS •.
of SS,000 and another ~ awards
are for $1,000 each, for a total of
$125,000 in prizes.
Among the $5,000 awards was
Interval House of Seal Beach,
winning in the Special Health
Services category. The agency
provides temporary emer~ency
shelter to victims of domestic
violence.
' Winners from the Orange
Coast of $1,000 awards include
Ballet Pacifica of Laguna
Beach ; the Orange Cougty
Philharmonic Society. head-
quartered in Costa Mesa; the
Assessment and Treatment
Service Center of Coastal
Orange County from Newport
Beach; Crossroads Alternative
of Capistrano Unified School
District; Hospice of Orange
County, Inc. from-Laguna Hills;
Share Our Selves <SOS) of Costa
Mesa; Amigos de Ser Business
and Advisory Board in Irvine;
Voluntary Action Center of
South Orange County in Newport
Beach; the South Coast Institute
of Applied Gerontology in Costa
Mesa; and the Key Club from
Fountain Valley High School,
whlcb worked at more than 100
projecta1 from recycling to the
Barch or Dimes Haunted House .
Money for the awards is
donated by Disneyland, and ap
plicatlons were received this
year from 4'1 organhations in 32
communities.
Valley eyes
remedial
el&ss plan
ne ...... board meets at 1
p.m . in tbe dlatrict
. • beadqqarten, 1 Llcbtbou1e
Lane.
Current plau 'Call tot the •
aumm• lc.bool prosr1m1 ao bt
offered Jmt 1'1 t.br'CM&lb' luly 11
1t ......... V.0.1 .Ucl Plava IC~
.......... c ey . m~ a eamHlsD appei.r111ce WASlllNGTON CAP) -Tiie FBI kiMtw ,,_...t ....... ,
alleled ..-iat.~laad be.a ar·
r..e.d • weQODI obar1• lat fall, but never reported tttat to
tbe Secret Service, Treuury
Secretary Donald ae1an 1aid to-
day.
TetWJinl Wore • ~OUM tub-
eommlttee, Reid aaiCJ the FBI
bad been informed that lobn W.
Hlnckley Jr. wu arrested carry·
ln1 ~" platola tbrouib an
alrpori security check p01.Dt in .
Nashville, Ten.n., in October,
when then-President Carter wu
F,....P9treAJ
FUNDS •••
As a result, tbe newly unveiled
cutbacks place local school
officials "on the horns of a
dilemma," according to Frank
"J alte" Abbott, tuperintendeot
of tbe Huntington Beach Union
High School District. .
Abbott said bis district miabt
losi' nearly $250,000 in federal
funds, forcing r reductions in
vocational education and
programa for billncual students
and pupils who need remedial
instruction.
''The dile~a is that we must
reduce prouams across the
board, but the state deadline for
layiof'Off teachers bu passed,"
the superintendent said.
Duane Dishno, director of
s pecial services for the
Huntington Beach C ity
(elementary) School District,
said his district may be forced to
lay off instructional aides, whl
are not covered by the March lS
deadline.
The federal cutbacks will
affect the Tille I programs
currenUy offered at three city
district schools, Dishoo said.
Title I provide.s special help for
educationally disadvantaged
pupils who at-e working below
their grade level.
"If we lose a substantial
amount of money, we may have
to eliminate a Title I program at
one of these schools,•' he said.
The city district currently
receives $190,000 annually in
federal TiUe I aid, Disbno said.
He said other areas that may
be affected by the proposed
federal cuts Lnclude llbtary
resource aid and "innovative
projects," which now include
career planning programs and
those designed to present new
instructional techniques to teachers.
"It really makes it difficult to
plan and to staff these programs
for next year when we don't
know what we're going to gel,"
Dishno said.
la the_,., ,.
1'0D blndallbt, it loOb Uke
tbl1 balormailoa 1i.ould bave
J:Uled to the Seertt ~.·•
Re1aa aald. ''The FBI apparent-
ly felt !t wun•t n,ces1ary ...
Re1an appeared before a HOQM ADPrc>Prlatlou aukom·
mlU.. wfth JW'ildlcUon ewer the
Tre .. u.ry Department, parent
agency ol the Secret Sen1ce.
Secret Service Director H.
Stuart Kn11bt was called to
tesWy before a similar Senate
panel later today. .
Under questioning, Re1an
said, "Ar. far u I know," there
was no direct indication that
Hinckley wu a threat to either
Carter or then-candldite Ronald
Reagan when J bL2.5-year·old
drifter was pi~ked up.
As a resultf Hinckley'a name
did not appear on lists of people
who miabt poae a threat to the
president when be allegedly shot
and wounded Reagan and three
others outside a Washineton
hotel Monday.
There was no i01mediale
response from the FBI as to why
it did not report Rinckley's ar-
rest in Nashville to the Secret
Service. .
Regan said that while he bas
ordered a review of how U\e
Secret Service and other
Treasury Department agencies
performed before, durl.ng and
after Monday's attack, "I am
confident that during what hap-
pened at the Washington Hilton,
the Secret Service was doing
everything necessary lo protect
the president."
Regan declined to make any
specific analysis of bow the
Secret Service performed during
the attack on Reagan.
Congress is asking the Secret
Service to explain what the sub·
committee chairman, Edward
Roybal, D-Calif .. called an ap-
parent "breakdown ib lecurity"
that may have enabled the
would-be usassin to open fire on
Reagan.
·'Why is it that an un·
authorized person could get so
close to the president?" Roybal
asked during an interview Wed·
nesday.
The alleged assailant was
standing with a group of re-
porters 10 feet from Reagan
when he fired six shots outside a
Washington hotel. Three people
besides the president, including
White House press secretary
James S. Brady, were wounded
in the assassination attempt.
Hinckley, 25, of Evergreen,
Colo .• was arrested at the scene
and charged with s bootin1
Reagan and assaulting a Secret
Service agent.
Roybal has uid he wUI sug-
gest that presidents wear bullet·
proof vests during their public
appearances. •
. ............
SOLD OUN -Rqcky Gold·
stein. owner of Rocky's Pawn
Shop in Dallas, displays a
r ev olver Qf the type
purchased ~Y John W.
Hinckley Jr. last October in
his shop. • \
I Fre• Pege AJ
filNCKLEY
government's presentation of
evidence.
"Yes, sir," Hinckley replied.
Fuller read into the court
r ecord a brief report by a
psychiatrist who examined the
suspect Wednesday and stated
that Hinckley "is presently men-
tally competent to stand trial." ·.
Fuller asked that psychiatrists
hired by the defense be
permitted "immediate access"
to Hi nckley "t o consider
whether or not the defense of in·
sanity will be raised.•·
Hinckley's lawyer asked that
the examinatipn take place at
Quantico. Ruff said the suspect
s h o uld be e~a min e d at a
psychiatri c in sti tution .
Margolis, siding with the gov-
ernment, specifi~d an institution,
but said the medical specialists
for the defense would be allowed
access to Hinckley.
M argoHs, at the defense at-
torney's request, P<>stponed the
effect of his order for one day.
Fuller said he needed more time
to stud¥ the matter.
The hearing was held ~der
stringent security. Each pef!;on
attending the bearing had to
pass through two metal detec·
tors and be frisked by guards.
Federal in vestigator s ,
meanwhile, sought further links
betwee n the attempt o n
Reagan's life and Hinckley's in-
fatuation with 18-year-old ac-
tress Jodie Foster.
* * Fr•• P11p AJ *
Mi ss P'oster acknowledged
Wednesda~ she received letters
signed "JWH" a nd "John
Hinckley," although she said
none mentioned violent acts or
the president.
..
REAGAN PROGRESS . • •
also signed a routine ptoclama-lloo.
White House counselor Edwin
Meese III said Reagan may be
released from George
Washiniton University Hospital
next week. And S~akes said the
president still plir& to travel to
San Diego on April 27·28 to meet
Mexican President Jose Lopez.
Portillo.
Sources revealed that in·
vestigators belleve'the president
was wounded by a .22·caliber
bullet that careened off the door
of his limousine rather than by a
direct shot. Two bullets hit the
car -one of them smashing into
the right rear window and the
other hitting the rear door.
Microscopic traces of paint
have been found on the •'really
mangled bullet" removed from
the president, sources sald, and
the entry wound was more
ragged than if be been struck
directly.
Published r eports today,
however, quoted the unmailed
letter found at the downtown
Wa s hington hotel where
Hinckley stayed the night before
Monday's assassination attempt
as saying: "Jocfy, I would aban-
don this Idea of getting Reagan
in a second if I could only win
your -heart. . . . I wiU admit to
you that the reason rm going
ahead with this attempt now i&..
because I just cannot wait any
longer to impress you. . . . J am
doing all of this for your sake."
The lovely light of Waterford crystal.
From Ireland,
Waterford's
hand-cut lead
crystal lamp
with a
handmade silk
shade. $235.
............
Chicago Mayor LJarie M. Byrne, escorted by Ja11
McMullen, righi, her husband and political ad-
viser, and a security guard, left, leaves her
apartment in the high-crime Cabrini-Green hous-
ing project. Just hours after the maYe>r moved
in, police raided an apartment three blocks
away, arrested 11 people and seized seven guns,
officers said.
Fox Film
~eyed
Denver oil_~an Marvin
Davia and ~ Century.Fox
Film Corp. were talking
again less Y,an a week after
Davis stun#jud Fox officials
by announcing he was pulling
out of a $730 million offer to
buy the firm.
Fox Film spokes man
Philip Meyer confirmed that
"exploratory discussions"
were under way in New
York.
Davis made a surprise of-
fer Feb. 20 to acquire Fox
Film for $60 a share. Last
week, Fox Film official$ said
Davis had completea his
study of the firm and was
ready to proceed with his or-
rer. •
... _,__~.....,
car dMltr credited ~ ·.ec.~
vtaclq •••It aea1a• to
1•t lnto poHUea, ••• ,._ lea1ed from a knta Barbara
bo.pltal and r~ed to bll
1tatel7 home lo Mont~clto
when bll wUe rel)C>IUd M
wu ·~weak.''
Tuttle, ,s, b•d bMD
bOl;ttalbitd llardl 'U en.tr
falltq m wltb tbe nu ••
December. He unct.rw• an
•ration to remove ap JD·
tHtlDal bloeka1e and wu
permitted vlllta only ftom
cloH fa1nlly members. Tutu, haa remained l
friend ancradvlaer to the Pl'll·
ldeat tlDce UMY met ID lMI,
when Tuttle told Rea1an a
Ford coupe .
. Former hostage &tell
&•tile, tan and relaxed after
a dawallan vacation, says be
plant to answer a few more
welcome-home letters and
then travel oveneas.
"I've got~ thousands" of
letters, aald Kupke, 34, a
State Department com·
munlcatlona specialist who
spent 444 days u a captive in
Iran. "l!d like to answer
them all. But I'm tryin1 to
answer the ones that ask
questions, at least."
President Reagan's 11-
room hillside home in Pacific
Palisades remains unsold
arter nine weeks on the
market, and a real·estate
seller says it may be "overly
optimistic to \.hink someone
would pay St.9 million for a
celebrity association."
Actor Richard Harris with wife Ann Turkely
spent an evening recently at Xenon disco in New
York City. Harris is negotiating to replace
Richard Burton in "Camelot" at the Pantages
Theater in Hollywood. Burton has not played
King Arthur since March 17 and is preparing for
neurosurgery on his spine.
One killed in storm
Tornado-like uinds damage buil,dings
Folr 111rou11' l'rl .. y ""' •111'
11udlly 1nc,_1n9 wlncls rN<1'1nt U
lo JO ......, tllrw01' Fr~y. Cooltol
low tOfllthl U, lnl-S1 HIQM Fri·
O.y U to 10. Wele< 51.
EllOWllet'e, Mrt!IWHt winch U "° 1S llflOtt lflroul1' F rlOO\I -Ner
woi.r1 wl11' s lo I•-con,l>IMO -•· Wlncl WO'tfl l IO S IMf. Weilerly
1we11 2 lo J feel.
. 11.S •..... .,,
A Mvere olOrm 11'1111 Cklfnl)H Ult ID
llw Iner.et OI roln In ~rb 01 O.Orvla
resull.., In -dNltl end spowned
torft•do-lllle w inds INI domo .. d
nverol llulldln11,. •ccordlng lo
olllct.I~
In 11'111 W.11. roln ond snow ....
1cat1ered from C.lllorfllo Into lhe
northern RoclllH. A wl11ter •lorm
walc1' wn -ted loOoy lor Ulo1',
-•• of "''-•net -Color-,,,_,., ...
Sllewers aftd t1'11nde"1'ower1
•t'91<llecl olont the Att .. uc Cooll Into New Jersey 10 Maine, on<I
scollered t1'11ftder11orm• were
loreu1t.., ~r• Ftorldll
TM ~· ~· Polr91 Wld •n AHllnt m an. 21-yeer old Lovone
l>tHMI, wM llillM -.O.y ...,.., ...
lOll control OI 1'11 COi" In o roln•lorm
on a.wvi• ... in CohA'l"IOIO C-y
Tiie patrol seld Ille weoll1er
<efltrlbu1od ID IN occident
Flote moc>lle _, Oncl MWrol
0111er llulldln91 were reported dom•tecl llY • wllldStlml In IN NSI
Ge«glo community flf ~°""'• Em ... wl c-ty Sllerlfl J-8.
Mooonseld.
Tiie Notlonol weotllor Service
wo11ld nol coll tllo wlndllorm o
lornoclo, but Mot.i oold II llod a
"pelll UO feet wide In o 1tralQllt llne. 11 wos mflllltely o lor,....:·
A .......... -wos blown otf llt
IOllndollOfl and c.,.rled 70 lo 100 l•t
owoy, Miiton told. He Mid lie hod '-1• of lwo minor Injuries.
In tlle NortP/ Sc'9ftfl COuftlY lOWfl
ol Hlllonlo, lllOfl wlnclt domo .. d
....,.,., ........ llomH Olld uPf"OOtecl
~. 11<11 "° -llMA lnjurlot were '°9portecl.
In Sumter C-ty Ill southwest
O.Wglo, twMdl>-llll•wlncla 40moeecl
o corm Mewl 10 ml•~ of P10lns. 1'emetown ol lormor ~r .. lldenl
J14'1my Cof1«. c.1IW ollCI Ns wife,
"-''""· -re _., on • ,_,.., 1'1, .. Tuos. T•m-olwea ._. .. notlOfl ot
It •·"'· l"ST W..•ideY •oneM ,,..., 2t If! HI ....... Ml-, .. 74 lft Key
west, Flo.
, "'" ~ ~ ...:::_
\........ \111• ., ..... 0 .. 1 ...........
aIIIIIIJ - --
tlle Los AllOtln Civic Cenler by I
o m • brlntlnt llW .__, reonloll
lotol lo 1-11 lnc1'n N°"""I relnfell
tor 111e dol•" 12.n lnc:M~ TM S..vlco sold chonce1 of rain
would dlmlnlsl> to iero t.,,i9fll.
Folr 11lln -· lore<Hl lw IOfllllftl on<I l'rld•Y wllll oullv nortllwul
wlncll from U lo JO mph In mool ......
The cooUal end lntermedlote
Olleys will .. 0 INI cooler lonlOfll
with low' In Ille •O• w1'11t lhe
mercury ""-Into tlle low 50s In Lot
,.,...,_. HtQ111 Friday w111 ronoe
from llle-rtol 10 10
Tiie mounla1n1 •111 d op below
lrH1l111 IOftlQllt -lhe snow level
Wiii -OI S,000 '"1. Ille Se"'lce sold.
Hlgl!S wHI lie In Ille mld-40l -SOs.
Tr.. -wlll 1'ow • c1'once of l1'undersllower1 lllh ovenl119 will!
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SF whites
minority
SAN FRANCISCO
CAP> -For the first
ti m e , non -w hiles
outnumber white!i in San
Francisco, census ·
figures show.
The percentage of
-whites in San Francisco
declined from 52 . 7
percent in 1970 to 45.8
percent in 111110.
The U.S . Census
Bureau said lbere was a
sll1ht decline in the
population of lbe city's
blacks, a sharp increase
lo the number of Aslana,
and approximately the
sarne percenta1e of
Hispanics.
..0'8 DOING incredibly ftlJ
-providlq eomlc relief for tbe
whole hospital.'' lbe aald as IM
drifted throulb the crow• ill
front of the Newporter Inn.
111. Reacan wu bonored by
tbe Arthrltla FouDdatlon 'Of
Orange County during tbe
luncheon for ber support ol the
foundation. A crowd of 400 wu
OD band. "'
Appearlq tired and aoundint
hoarse, sbe reported tbat ber
father got off some dandy one-
linen durlnt her vialt.
"BE SAID BE wu most con-
cerned because be was wearing
a brand new suit that day," she
said, quoting her father's reac-
tion to Monday's assassination
attempt in Waablngtoo.
Sbe aald President Rea1an
had soup and lime sherbet for
lunch Tuesday, followed by a
cup of Sanka.
"And he's concerned about
................
'DOING INCREDIBLY WELL'
Reagan'• daughter Meureen .
whether he'll be able to throw
out the first ball of the baseball
season in Cincinnati next week,''
sbe said, addiAI tbat doctors
told the President his left· aide
may be too weak for that, to
which the president reportedly
replied, "But I'm right-banded."
MS. &EAGAN SAID her
father even joked wben the con·
versation turned to Jahn
Hinckley Jr .. the man accused of
trying to assassinate the preai-
!fent.
1
OJ' D~. tile aald.1
"Tbere'a IClaMt.b1nl ve11 moY·
lnl and Yer)' difffcuJi to deal ,
with in talkinc with·• man wtw>
bu done bis Job &Qd ii l7bll 1 tbere wltb a bullet in his neek."
The president'• claupter ukl
that, cturtnc her vilit, MeCartbJ
called her over and whilpered.
"Tell the president I did the bat
I could."
"I'm proud of him," sbe said,
"I'm proud <J! all ol tbem."
Asked by one reporter ,
whether the shooting e-piaode in
W ashineton mitht cban1e ber
mind on gun control, the presi-
dent's da\flhter safd, "I've
always thought the.re thou1d be :
·some kind of cootro&.. • • .
"THERE'S A LOT of facts out
there," she wenJ. on, "and it will
take some sifting, but J believe
there's an amwer somewhere."
Diedrich settlement?
Judge dismisses one f elo-,iy consp~racy charge
"I still t.b.ink you should settle
the case, gentlemen," aaid
Superior Court Judge James
Perez Wednesday at a pre-trial
hearing in which one of four
felony charges against former·
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich was dismissed.
Perez' statement appeared to
indicate that some negotialiona
bave been held for a pouible
plea bargain settlement. But
state Deputy Attorney General
Richard Haden retu.aed to dia-
cuaa whether such matt.era bave
been diacuaaed.
DIED&ICB 18 accused of COD·
apirln& with otben to cooceal
the true source ol about $70,000
used in several 1J78 political
campaigns. •
Dismissed by Perez wu a
felony char1e that Dledrlcb con-
spired with a former attorney,
Michael Remington, to commit
perjury before the grand jury
that initially investigated the
case.
Perez said testimony did not
support the allegation. "I don't
t.hlnk you've proved perjury ...
I don't t.b.ink you've proved an
attempt at perjury," Perez told
Haden during the hearin1.
Needs of elderly
discussion topic
Psychological needs of the
elderly will be discussed at a
four-hour workshop begi.nninl at
9 a.m. Saturday in Adminiatra·
lion 209 at Golden West Collese.
Ado)i.ssioo to the workshop de-
signed for educators and
therapists who work with the
elderly I.a free.
It was alleged by pros·
ecutors that the two men con-
spired to offer testimony that
money that went to candidatea
was Remington's, when, lb fact,
it was Diedrich''°· · After issuing bis rullnt and
making the comment about
reaching a negotiated settlement,
Perez scheduled April 30 for
another pre.trial hearng. A trial
date of May 26 also was
scheduled.
Prosecutbr Hade'll aaid'belwu
"disappoinf,ed'' that tbe Judie
rejected the one conspiracy
count. But be said tbe case ls
"alive aod well" on the remain-
ing three felony cbar1ea of con-
spiracy to violate t.be Polltieal
Reform Act.
Defense attorney Manhall
Morgan said be was "pleued"
with the judge's decision. Alt for
hla unsuccessful effort to win
dlsmlsaal of the other three ·
counts, Morean quipped, "No
judge is perfect."
ORIGINALLY, Diedrich wu
charged with various violations ,
of the state Political Reform Act
by the Orange County Grand
Jur.y in 1971.
·Diedrich and tlree ot•era
were re-indicted in connedloo
with the cue by the gTand jury
in December 1979 after pros-
ecutors became concerned thal
the three-year statute of limita-
tions mig.bl run out before the
case came to trial.
Hundreds escape
Vegas hotel blaze
LAS VEGAS CAP> -A fire
confined to a luxury suite on the
fifth floor of Caesars Palace .
Hotel·Casino injured 16 and
forced hundreds to flee the
hotel's 12·story central tower,
authorities said.
It was the third sizable hotel
fire at the gambling resort city
in less than five months.
Smoke poured from fifth floor
windows, and breaking glass
showered the ground as people
raced out to the parking I~
behind the luxury hotel.
Fleeing guests and hotel
employees made lbeir way put
gamblers who continued to play
blackjack, roll dice and ptlll slot
machine bandies in the casino,
despite a strong smell or smoke,
after the fire erupted al 10:05
a.m .
Ironically, a convention of
burglar and fire alarm com·
panies is being held at Caesars
Palace this week.
"You'd never think you'd find
yourself in the middle or a
casino with a nightgown on,"
said hotel guest Helen Ginsburg
of Denver. .
She and her husband Morris,
who were on the sixth floor just
above the room that caugat lire,
said they reported the blaze to
the hotel operator, then looted
into the hallway 1tnd saw hotel
maids pounding on doors to
evacuate guests.
.
'
• WHEN THE TV film of the
shooting was played on Israeli
television, viewers easily
recognized tbe locally made
weapon, which has been used by
the Israeli ai;my and security
forces for nearly 25 years.
A military spokesman said t™i
Uzi, a lightweight ,
easy.to·handle yet powerful
. weapon, was first developed in
the 19508 and was fl~~ used in
action in the 1956 Sinai
campaign. The gun, which
s hoots 9 mm bullets, was
designed for s hort-range
>"arfare, with a maximum range
pf 350 yards and a magazine
tarrying 25 rounds.
Weighing less than eight
pounds and consisting of only six
parts, the Uzi is simple lo
operate, dismantle and repair
and has a high survival rate
under harsh battle conditions.
Jane's, the authoritative
British military journal, credits
the efficient performance and
Jjght weight of the Uzi to an
:·advanced primer ignition"
system.
"THIS PRODVCES less
impulse to the bolt, and as a
result this component can be
designed to weigh less than half
the a mount that would be
required for a static firing
breech·block," Jane's writes.
The Uzi has been the mainstay
of Israel's booming arms export
industry, recently estimated as
the world's seventh largest. But
along with other information on
arms exports , figures on Uzi
sales and countries to which it is
sold are kept secret. However.
the weapon is known to be used
in South Africa and throughout
Lalin America as well as by the
U.S. Secret Service.
Shots delay trial
MARTINEZ <APJ The at·
tempted assassination of Presi·
dent Reagan led to the postpone·
ment of a murder trial in
Martinez wh en the de(ense
claimed that the assassination
attempt would make it difficult
lo obtain objective jurors
because of the defendant's his·
tory of mental illness.
f1'911!"WS Cl ....
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Secret Service ii otf on the ln·
nltable IOUl March, trylnt to CJlid out bow Pneidnt aea1u
could have been abot on boaM turf, baffly a mije from tbe W1Utt
HOUH
"Tbele 1\1)'1 were oompet.ina wltb •bullet," aald Jack Warner
ol U.• Seeret Service;-tbe qency cbarpd with fJ"Olfdlnt preal·
~~. . ~r Hid Tuesday tbe 1ervtce II conductlnl an in-~ ln·
ve1tt1at1on, likely to take ae"eraJ week.I, to aee whether the aceota
with Reaaan made any ~l'Wll moves or could have prevented the
aunmp from· flriQI •lx •hoe.I at the president Monflay •• 2" left
the W aabinltOfl Hilton Hotel.
"Ann aEVIEWING the videotapes a do1en Umes, we
believe the Pl'fJlidential protectioa wu u effectin u lt could
possibly be," Warner said. "These auys were competlne with a
bullet. '11tey moved as qwck..ly u they could."
Warner said the inquiry, by tbe a1ency's office of inspection, is
similar to those conducted alter John F. Kennedy waa aasuainat·
ed in Dallas and Gerald R. Ford escaped injury in two·Califomia
uaauJts. It will ioclude interviews with •tents and law officen
who were at the scene, as well as eyewitnesses.
"The reason is to see whether we did everything that we
should have," be said. "We have no answers yet."
SION EXPRESSES FEELINOI OF CAPITAL NEIGHBORS
Apertment buHdlng ne•r hospttal .where pre81dent It pettent ON MOST OCCASIONS when Reagan leaves Hie White House,
he is accompanied by at least a dozen Secret Service agents, all
armed with handguns. Some carry small, li&bt, Uli submachine
guns. l.n situations like the one he was in Monday, Reagan is pre·
ceded from the hotel by one agent. Several others walk on either --Hinckley called loner side of him. •
As the president leaves a building, the agents form a human
shield between him and everyone else. While he w"lks to his car, a
time agents consider particularly vulnerable, the atmored door is
opened to provide another shield. The nwre l,eamed, tM less known about him
Agents follow Reagan's car in a vehicle of their own, a vehicle
carrying Uzi submachine gurus , M -16 rifles and hand grenades. WASmNGTON <AP) -In the
agonized search for explanations,
the dues that John W. Hinckley
Jr. scattered about his life still ·
don't add up. The more that is
learned about him, the more he
remains a mystery.
He was a loner. He couldn't get
a job. He blended into the back·
ground. He went to Texas Tech
University in Lubbock for seven
years wit.bout finishing. He wrote
love letters to an lS..year·old mov-
ie actress he never met. He once
voiced an idea about politicians:
"They should all be eliminated."
But also: A former teacher
calls him at ical kid. A former
high sc hool
classmate re-
members "as
nice a guy as
you'd ever
want to meet,
a pretty easy·
g o i n g
person.·' A
woman who
worked in a
M1111c1tLaY Denver motel
where he lived recalls, "He was
the all.American kid, to look al
him."
HE WAS SUCH a nice kid to his
parents and neighbors that when
the news of bis arrest flashed
across the country Monday, they
all tbou&bt someone else was US·
ing his l.D.
One thing is clear: Hinckley is
one of those people few people
ever pay much attention to. Now
that be stands accused of shooting
President Reagan, they do.
He came fl-om a well·to·do
family. The Hinckleys live in
Evergreen, Colo.. a Denver
bedroom community , in a
$300,000cedar-and·moss, tri·level
home. "They are j~st a quiet
American family, a very good
class family. Any mother would
want their daughterJI lo marry
their sOOB," says a woman who
knowsthemweU. -
Tbe aenior Hinckley is
chairman and president of the
Vanderbilt Enercy Corp., a
Denver oil and gas exploraticm
company with 20 employees and
sales ol '4.5 million last year. He
la described aa a devout Chrbtian
who belongs to a weekly Bible
reading club.
I
BUT BEaE, TOO, la another
oddity. Hincldey Jr., when be wu
in Denver, stayed not with tus
family, but in a modest motel
nestled among use9 car lots.
The picture painted in court by
U.S. Attorney Charles F.C. Ruff
com es outin unflattering tones.
He said Hiockley's own parents
describe him as "wandering,
aimless and irresponsible," with
a his tory of psychiatric care. He
said Hinckley had never held a
job, bad "no fixed address,
anywhere," had enrolled and
dropped out several times from
Texas Tech.
A maintenance man in the Lub-
bock apartment wbere lliDckleJ
lived recalled a conversation with
him during last year's presiden·
tial campaign.
•'The main gist of the conversa-
tion was about political leaders,"
s aid Calvin Wynne. "And wbat he
thought should be done was that
they shoul6 all be eliminated."
But Hlnck..ley, be said, never ex·
pressed violent intentions.
As far as is known publicly,
Hinckley came in contact With
law enforcement only once and
then the authorities seemed indif.
ferent. .
He was arrested at the
.!Jashville airport last Oct. 9 with
Have you sent tor merchan-
dl•• and no\ received It?
. ---·-~ ...... ···
three pistols and 50 bullets in bis
luggage. That was the same day
then·President Carter was cam·
paignina in Nash ville.
Hinckley was charged with a
misdemeanor and put up a $62.50
bond. He forfeited it and disap-
peared between the cracks.
THE ASSAULT ON Rea1an was the flnt in the nation'• capital
aiJlce Puerto Rican nationals tried to atorm Blair House, acroa tbe
street from the White Houae, to kill Harry S Truman in 1952.
Warner said the inquiry continues to indicate that the gunman
acted alone. "Everything at this time points to the one-gunman
theory," he said.
~aster baskets grass. mache
and plastic eggs decorative
cutouts & novell1~s along with
paper goods are now 1n stock
Shop early for best selection
5' rl. CELLOPHANE "~~:; •59c
FUZZY·WUZZY
BUNNY
BANK
reg 1 29 66t
(1 / Easter Candy Jar
FREE 1nstruct1on
sneets avadable 0 ~ TAPE~
LIBBEY GLASS EGGS CANDLES
tUi-.ed to make C.tndv Jar aoo11c1
6 1,,"reg 1 79 1.22
7 3 ," reg 2 79 1.88
g·· reg 3 49 2.33
ARTIFICIAL
6' POTTED TREE
lrtP.tl tor hon11• or otlrce
BESUAE TO
SEEOUA
WEEKLY
MANAGERS
SPECIAL
'~ 29 99
reg 49 99
LOI ANOELH • TO""ANCE
C2Ull2Mt3i C21'1 11MSH (213)t2H1U (213tl7H747
WEST COVINA OA"DEN OAO~E L) Ml"AOA
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SA"4 01100 l.A MHA ESCOHOIOO HU,.TINOTON IEACH
(71tl 21M121 (7Ut•fl·5111 (714) 74Wt11 j714) 142·U45
Sate ends
Sun . Apr115
p~ct' eharge ..
SAN FR.\NtJSCO (AP) -A publlc-relatlou ftrm'1 alletatlon
that another 8toup sot a lucraijve state contract because ol lta
poli\lcal ties ~ beeu Tebu.ffed by the 1tate De'artment of Health
Services. . .
The dep•rtmenl on Wednesday den.led a protest Ruaaom 6
Leeper ol Sa.Ji Francisco, wblcb bld-unaucceuf\llly for a '1 mJWoa,
15-montb prosram to set Ca111ornla parents to taJt with their cbUdren
about sex. .
Donald Solem. president of Solem and Asaoclatel of San Fran-
cisco, which was awarded the contract, is a former executive
secretary ofthe California Democratic Party.
Broun /onm ~ OOmpaiBft group
SACRAMENTO <AY) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. bu formally
created a U.S. Senate campaign comtnitlee and filed papen wblcb al-
low him to raise funds, a top aide confirms.
The action, learned Wednesday. stops jUJt short of a formal
declaration for the Senate seat now held by Republican S.I.
Hayakawa.
Hell's Ange/,s oonviction overturned
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A former Hells Aneels leader bas won
a new trial becau$e a federal appeals court says the prosecution may
have lied in efforts to obtain a search warrant against him.
The 9lh U .SJ Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesday the iovern-
ment may have'been guilty or "deliberate falsification or reckless
disregard for Ule truth" in the case of Lawrence "Moose" Chesher.
former bead or\he San Francisco Hells Angels chapter. He is serving
a five-year s~ntence at a federal prison in Missouri ror possessing a melhamph~(amine laboratory.
1,300 Mar Atlanta mothers
OAKLAND (AP) -More than 1.300 peoi)le jammed the Allen
Temple Baptist Church in Oaldand Wednesday night to listen to
speeches by two mothers of slain Atlanta children.
The two women. Venus Taylor and Willie Mae Mathis, are
traveling around the country to raise money to send black Atlanta
children to summer camp.
Telethon set,s reoonl.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -This year's Easter Seal telethon com·
pleted its 20-hour broadcast earning a record $17 million in casb1 checks and pledges for the rehabilitation of disabled children ana
adults, telethon offi cials say.
The toth aQJtual telethon originated here but was carried on 130
television stations nationwide. The program ended Sunday.
The Daily Pilot reported an incorrect figure Monday.
LOSANO&LD <AP) -W1111t
Burton, aeeUMd of a variety of
ml1repraentaUou and traUd
eoenected wt\b tn< deed&. ~
been restrained from u.t1na hil
real estate and morta••• loan
broker UcenHI pencHq a bearint
next month ln Superior Court
The reetra1n1na order wu .qi>.
tabled Wednetday in a 1ult by.the
. California Department of Real
Estate that aeekl an lnjunctioo
a1ainlt Burton and bla companlea
and "other , . . ·relief," said
Deputy Attorney General
Richard Bakke.
Burton ls accused of biltinc
$100 mllllon from 6,000 lnveston
in what has been called the
lareest trust deed fraud ln atale
history.
BURTON'S companiea fal.llq
under 'the restraining order are
Universal Financial, California
Equities Rome Loan, Unlvenai
Home Loan and Universal Home,
said David II. Fox, director of the
Department or Real Estate.
Superior Court Judge Leon
Sa vltch set May 14 for Bakke's of-,
fice as the attorney for the
Department of Real Estate. he
said.
Burton is specifically accused
of putting falsely infiated values
nn real estate bought with ln-~~stor funds ; co-mingling funds;
telling investors they were get-
ting first or second-trust deeds -
loans on real estate -when they
allegedly got lower priorit y liens;
and concealing that he borrowed
more than $25 million of the in·
vestors ·money.
LAST WEEK, U.S. District
Judge Mariana Pfaelzer appoint-
ed former bank president Walter
M. Sharp as receiver of Burton's
San Bernardino-based Universal
Financial Corp. The federal order
stripped Burton of control over
the business, which includes
some of the highest priced de·
velopments in downtown San
Bernardino.
Carol gets requests
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Carol
Burnett has been deluged with mail
from peopl e asking her to donate
some of the $1.6 million she won in
her s uit against the National
EQq uirer to charity.
Miss Burnett had announced she
would give the winnings away at a
tel evise d
post-victory press
conference. But a
spokesman for the
a ct re ss said
Wednesday that
people apparently
did not ·hear her
an nou nce that
s he 'd alre ady
c h osen three
charities. /
could be months or years before she
gets any money."
T h e National Enquirer has
announced plans to appeal the jury
verdict.
Enquirer attorney William
Masterson said Wednesday be will
file a motion and brief next week
asking for a new triaJ on grounds
there was insulficlent evidence lo
support the verdict and the damages
awarded were "excessive."
A Tl'ORNEYS for both sides have
said appeals in the case could take
two years.
..
Klan rallies in Saeranaento
Robed members of Ku Klux Klan return
shouts at demonstrators in onlooking
crowd as they hold rally Wednesday near
Capitol in Sacramento. The k.Jan is raising
"racism" charges against a black state
parole officer for revoking a klan mem-
ber's parole for carrying a weapon.
Coastal plan approved
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -San Mateo County has
become the first California coun-
ty to win slate approval of its
coastal development program,
according .to a state Coastal
Com mission official.
The county can start issuing
building permill in the coastal
zone Thursday , said Peter
Douglas. commission deputy ex-
•ecutlve director. It w\ll be the
first time the county bas bad
that right since state voters ap-
proved a coastal protection ln-
itiatl vein 1972.
The city of.San Francisco aJao
•
won approval of its coastal plan
a nd ordinances, subject to ap-
proval of its su~rvisors. and
Marin County won approval of
its plan, but not the ordinances
to carry it out.
THE APPROVALS will allow
the local governments to regain
authority to issue building
permits in the ribbon of land
along the California shore,
which has been regulated by re-
gional boards under supervision
or the state board.
Meanwhile, coqimissioners
complained that a lobbyist for
Todays
slate cities ~as premature in an-
nouncing a tentative agreement
that would r educe the com·
mission's regulation of th~
sprawling coast.
"There was no tentative
agreement, no agreement at
all," Douglas asserted. "Th~
commission was. to put it mild·
ly, upset."
A MEMO announcing a tent
tative pact on several crucia(
coastal issues was distributed to
a state Assembly committee this
week by League of Cities lob·
byist Russell Selix.
..
I
:
•, "SHE'S BEEN getting an awful lot
of mail from people asking her to
donate som e or he r winnings,··
Ingersoll said. "The letters are going
to her, her attorneys, her business
manager. I've even received some."
He said the money has been prom1sea to tnree pre-chosen
charities and added, "Besides, it
Miss Burnett sued the Enquirer
over a 1976 gossip column item which
accused her of boisterous behavior in
a Washington D.C. restaurant and
claimed she had argued with then
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The tabloid ultimately retracted the
item as incorrect.
Miss Burnett. who missed Tuesday
night·s Academy Award ceremonies
because she had the flu. left Los
Angeles on We dnesday for her
second home on the island or Maui
where Ingersoll said she planned to
rest and spend lime with her family.
• K.l.D.S. FASHION s~w
Saturday, April 4
Maximum
Interest
Guaranteed
-for 30 months
with no minimum
balance in
Hm11e Federal
Coun A spring look at bright and fun
Easter fashions for boys and girls .
modeled by Orange C.Ounty K.l.D.S.
11 :00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. ,
Refreshments will be served.
Appearance by Surprise guest.
"ART IN"
Every Saturday in April from
. l :00 to 3:00 p.m.
1 Bring your child to draw their
favorite pictures. It may be chosen to
become a finished Greeting card.
~ child will receive o hOndsome
certificate.
Earn Home Federal's maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Market' Certificates -Paying % % more interest than
any bank. Effective through April 13.
Cbed the V.dow hlel f« the~._.. J011
I
i ,
'l'NltHI al iE •1aeb UniaG:!iP 8":ool Dllttlct are trim flOm tbe ,,.._ 1 atWeUe
budjet u part of ft ifJliadioh bl ........_ant
year.
The nsure La • comilnlmlH naCiild by • committee Of athletic dirffton, coac&el·.~lddalnlltraton and commUitlty
memben.
The savlnf come• larceJy throuah couervau.i
meaaures. These tnelude cuWn1 annual electric eott aboUt
W,000 by reetrlct.lnl recreaU.at ba1lcetbd, tenaia alM1
ttse of 1yms and 1tadlum1 at !lialit ror reeanala and prac·
tlces.
About •.ooo in beaUnt COit la beln1 aaved by coverin1
the five diltrictlWimmlnc pooi. when they are noun uae.
The district alto plans to aave $190,000 by clelil'il ~ pools for2\.l months In winter and three moatb1in1u11tmer.
Other cutbacks include elimlnatµig gymnastica, tlrll'
/junior varsity field hockey, surfmg and golf -a total 11vin1
ofS27,000.
Two previous cutback recommendations weTe reje~ '
by the board.
' The first, proposed by school administrators, wu
dropped 'because it would have seriously crippled the
athletic program by cutting many coaches and sports. The
second, suggested by athletic directors, would have cloeed
the pools for eight months, severely restricttn1 aquatic
sports.
Neither of the previous proposals considered energy
conservation as a cost-saving measure. · ·
lt appears the right balance of people was on the com-
mittee and that the board's basic acceptance of the reco.,_. & ,
mendation was made with the greatest number ot ~") ,z
athJetesin mind.
New closure tea111
Fountain Valley School District trustees think it's
time for new blood in the 11-member school closure
advisory committee they created in 1978.
This committee is charged with conducting hearings
and making recommendations regarding the closure ol
schools and the use of surplus property.
The committee was willing to continue its work
during the coming school year, but trustees felt it was
time to give others a chance to serve on the advisory
body.
A drawback to this decision is that a new committee
will be required to digest the complex enrollment figures,
state laws and other background material that was
already familiar to the original group.
But the trustees argued convincingly that a fresh
start is needed. The composition of the original group -
·which was selected to include a balance of parents,
school personnel and business leaders -has changed
because of resignations and new appointments.
The group was out of balance geographkaJly (three
members came from one school area), and it included a
husband and wife (both picked in a random drawing).
Participating on a school closure committee is
difficult and thankless work, and this group has
performed well.
With some revised selection procedures. it is hoped ·
that the trustees can develop a new, more fairly balaneed
committee. to continue this work.
Conservati~n plan
During the past four years. Golden West College in Hun-
tington Beach has achieved a remarkable record of ener1y
conservation.
The community college has cut its electrical consump-
tion by about 58 percent during this period -even while the
campus was growing 20 percent in physical size.
The all-electric 122-acre, 28-building campus used only
12.9 million kilowatt-hours of energy ln 1980, its lowest con-
s umption rate since campu.senergy records have been kept.
The college says most of its savings can be attributed to
an energy management computer installed in 1977.
This unit controls heating and air conditioning systems,
assuring that they are shut down entirely on weekends.
Previously. these systems ran continuously.
The college has adopted other energy-saving measures
involving little or no expense. These included lowering
water heater temperatures, removing unnecessary light-
ing and installing more efficient lighting tubes.
Because of the rapid increase in energy costs, the col-
lege's electric bills have not dropped with the reduced con·
sumption. The college currently is spending about SM0,000
annually for energy.
But Golden West officials estimate that if the campll$
had continued at 1977's usage rate, last year's bill would
have been $1.2 to $1.5 million.
As funds for education continue to dwindle, it's comfort·
ing to see a community college attain such success in keep-
ing a lid on costly energy consumption. • Opinions expressed in the space aboye ere those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on th is page are tho~f their authore and
artists. Reader comment is invited . .Addres "Th• Dally Pilot, P.Q.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 ) 642-4321.
Boyd/Reuurds
By L.M. BOYD
One fact more tharr any
other explains why rewards
oftered for information lead-
ing to lhe captlire and coo-
victi on of criminals have
been so successful. Lawmen
claim that there's almost •n·
variably at least one person
other than the criminal who
We never really 1row
up, upecially when we
have tank•, run• and
aoldien to &lay •llh.
The only cUhl .ee S.
that u adultl we play
wtth tbe ,.. •• ~ -
notto11.
can name the guilty party.
It wa! not the mother or an
ugly baby who sajd: "You
can't love a butterfly until
y.ou have loved a
caterpillar .·• It w11 a
Benedictine nun. About 5GI
years ago.
Blblical scholars tblM: U.at
tbe people who knew tte
"10tbei-" Jesus Chriat J,oeo years ago proaoune.. btr
name more like Miriam tbu
Mary.
What a lot of people don't .
realize.ts that more tll•o half
the drowning vicUmt ln WI
country were so loaded with
liquor at \he Umes of their
dnthl that they could bave
been cleslpatM II lepMf
dnnll. Medleal uaml.netW'
1tatl1tle1 prove that.
Althou1h Adolf e1t11r
smoked cl1aretles aa a
youth, be quit at •t• 25, and
after he 1ot tb• Job •• hbrer, ao O.rman and few
foreJpen ever dand amOlte
a cltantte ln b1I ~·
Thu,..day. Aprll 2, 1~ -
Jadt Andereon .
Tile_ covert U .~.-SOviet dialogue
WASHINGTON -Tbe
dtalo1u• tMtween Ute llalted
Stat• end UM Soviet Unloa oe-
eura at two levels. There la a
dirfft llne ol eommunlcaUon by
dlptomatJc note, oral ••cbante
and, an occulon, the bot Une.
But t.MN II alao a c:overt com-muatatloDI network, whlcb cu-
rl" uaapoten me11a1es.
Dtplomat1 are lo some' re-
1pec\ Uke rare lroplul birds.
They have
learned to
communicate
wlth one
1ttotber
throuch near-
1 n audible
1ou.adJ, poses
and gestures.
If there ls to
be an accom-
m o d a lion
between them, they may prefer
th-.t it be implicit rather than
explicit.
An arrangement may be
reached through a process of
atmost imperceptible move-
Mailbox
mentt, eo aeldencea, dl1C?rtet
whltpen, raised 1yebrow1 ud
knowint amilea. Throuah thl•
dtllcate procns, an undentand-
i n' appear• to b• jelline
between th• Ronald Reacan
Wblte House and the Leonid
Breimi.v Kreltllin.
HEaE 18 TUE tacit, tentative,
tenuOUI arran1ement as It is un-
deratood by my sour~e• at the
highest levels:
-Rea1an will hold down U.S.
intervenUon in El Salvador and
seek to cool the crt1iJ. BrezhneV',
in return, will restrain Soviet
forces la Poland and try to keep
a Ud on that crisis.
-Any Soviet move against
Poland, It is also understood
would be countered by U .S ac·
tion against Cuba. The United
States may not be able ~stop a
Soviet invasion of Pol d, but
the Soviet Union is in an ually
weak position to prevent a U.S.
military move against Cuba.
-Brezhnev will halt, or at
least restrict, the flow of
military aupphea to the in·
,suraents in El Salvador .
Otherwia~. Reagan will start
supplying.the auerrillas who are
battfine Soviet troops ln Atghanigtan.
-REAGAN ALSO wants the
Kremlin to stop .;ncouraglng and
supportJni anti-American move·
menls in Central America, or
else he will stir up anli·Soviet
activity in Eastern Europe.
Reagan is most concerned
about a possible Soviet thrlbt in·
to Iran. which would threaten
tbe Western World's oil supply
in the Persian Gulf. Hints have
been relayed to Brezhnev .
therefore, that the United States
would resist any overt attack
and respond to a covert move by
sending mass arms s hipments to
Com murust Chio a.
Reagan has also sen( dis·
creel slgnaJs to Brezhnev that
the United Slates will no longer
remain passive while the Kremlin
sets up pro-Soviet govern menL~ in
Africa. H Brezhnev sends his
Cuban allies into another African
'
country, Rea11n mtcht en·
couraee the Eayptlana to move
aaatnat Llbya.
0( course, then arraniement.s
are precarious at best and cou.ld
be upset by new ~evelopments.
But It would be accurate to re·
port that Reacan and Brezhnev
are be1innlng t.o understand one
another.
WATCH ON WASTE: Whtie
funds for achooJ luQches are be·
ing cut back, the odminlstration
has managed to increase federal
runding for the nation's gun afi·
cionados. The Army's Depart-
ment of Civilian Marksmanshit>.
with its customary support from
National Rifle Association lob-
byists, will be given $444,000 this ·
year The money will go for
"trophies and classification
badges" won by private gun
club members. who are pre-
s umably pros pective Army
recruits . Incredibly, the NRA
. had talked Congress Into nearly
d oubling las t year's target-
s hooting largesse. but the
budget cutters were able to hold
the increase lo "only " $19,000.
Energy Departme nt
poohbahs have three methods of
getting cars to use on govern·
ment business: The cheapest op·
lion is to requisition a car from
a General Services Administra·
lion motor pool. The second,
slightly more expensive way is
to havt• the GSA lease a car
from u private fitJll. The third
and far more costly method is
for tht• bureaucrat to lease the
car himself and !>end the bill lo
the government. Under Option
No 3. the official gets to use the
car for private business, as long
u~ he pays lh<.' modest mileage
cost Pred1clabl). investigators
found that" three out of even·
four OOE bureaucrats entitled
to cars choost.-the third method
Some developers have been
taking advantage o f federC1l
housing subsidies for the poor to
add unnecessary luxury items
that in effect increase the sub~
s1d1 cs they get. In Santee. Calif .
for 1•x~mple. a government·
subs 1d1u•d project i'f)cluded a
s wimming puo!'. recreation
room:-. and pcived parking
What do economists know about workers?
To the Editor:
Re&arding Nicholas von Hoff.
man 's March 24 artic le on
"Promise to Older Amencans,"
we wonder if George Will, who
voices the opinion that the elder·
ly are America's biggest prob-
lem. has ever known a blue col-
lar wor\e r ? On e who does
physical labor all his life? One
who at the age of 62. has to force
himself out the door every morn·
ing, wondering if he can make it
to 65?
IS THIS what he has to look
forward to? So some nut that
has it made, and never had to
work or pay into Social Security
can tell him that he has to work
until he is 70 or 75? Thal he is
lazy, selfish a nd s ocially ir·
responsible? How about the
children he has raised, who are
now working and paying taxes?
Are they a drag on the economy
too?
What are these so-called
economists trying to do to
America? Give our country
away to a foreign power? If the
American worker does not have
• voice in these matters. what is
the use of working, paying tax-
es, raising children CS> lo
become good Americans?
Mr. von HoHman really laid it
on the line in his article. I wish
this letter could be forwarded to
so-called economist Norman
Macrae and George Will. And to
our PTesidenl. Do you think it
would make a difference in their
way of thinkinJC ? Even a little?
MRS. L. SANDERS
8-ek•••r•••• To the Editor:
Tbe preseot cos{ of cleaning
up the Back Bay with the City of
Newport Beach required to pa.y
$440,000, as reported in your
paper March 20, 1boutd be borne
by tbe sealous envaronmen-
taltsta. Tbey're the ones tbat • ea '-led It to 1et so dirt1. lktwfeft SPON, the Friendtl ot
· tbe Earth and the Coastal Com-
ml11ion they stopped its dredg-tnc for enouah years co really
caU1e tM.I unfortun1te condition.
Now of coune the coa\I bave
1rown to borrendoua amowatl.
Pa1lnf lbote cosu should not be tbe ""'1"dell of the populace, but
ol the aealout ldlou th~t callffd
them. . '
THE COST of paylns for the
Pf"•rvauon of envitonment.al
u1ttb•11 bu -.lread.1 wet11led '°° tteavlly oe the poJulace. And
they are lftlinl tlred of it. WhY lhouJd UM citizens of Newport
BHch have to pay '440,000 for
tbl1 unnece11ary expenditure
when there an ao man)' vital
HrYiC9 that aN DOl 1ufndently
fuatded7 And wQ llteald dtbm9
Of ou..r paru: ol th• couat.rJ be
required to pay the other $3.5
million out of funds they need
for other purposes when most of
them don't even know where
Newport Beach 1s?
It's time to look at the poten
tial results of all our acts before
we act on just the emotional
view of the moment fl could
save us a lot of future troubles
GOLDIE JOSEPH
T~Mrf~sts
To the Editor:
I agree that a competency test
for teachers would be great
.... but just what can be done
with a t eac h er prov e d
incompetent?
I propose that both the
previously mentioned test and
the removal of tenure fo r
teachers would be the ideal
system. A mere test alone will
not suffice in the effort to nd our
schools of incompetent teachers
THE NOW ·OBSOLETE
system or tenure was evoked to
prevent nefarious employer:.
from firing teachers for such
ridiculous reasons as smoking
cigarettes o r datin g
··undesirable" members or the
opposite sex.
As anyone can see. we no
longer need this, mainly due to
the presence of strong unions
and effective upholding of the
law. Only incompetent teachers
need be afraid for their jobs, and
only they will have you believe
tenure fs necessary . not
obsolete.
EILEEN DORN
A.,etet• 111•.it~tl
To the Edltor:
'I must register a vigorous ob-
jection to the sentiments ex· pressed by Ms. Truitt in her arti-
cle in the Thursday March 19,
1911, specla) section called "I
Am Woman."
Her statement that: "There's
really not much difference in
buyin1 an insurance poUcy by
mall or from an agent .. does a
tremendous dl11ervlce lo the
buying public u well as belnt a
dlrect insult to the thous.mt ot
insurance ••ents around tbe
country.
IF .MY memory serves me
correctly tbrou1h readlna your
paper over a number Of yean,
aome of the •reateal scams
perpet.ui.d upo11 lbe public
laave bem t.brouab tb• m.U..
T'aJt la not to ••1 that buyln1 ln-
1uranee throu&b t.be mall II not
often done and ID fact tMn la an
lDdUl\ty ~ WMH f\ultUcft ll
to '" that ...-YOH 11 oa tbe UP ud \IP· 1'tdl la &blO not. to 1U
\ht '-iDI lDluranee ~ lltll malll .tl»ould DOt M ._ -
ob¥....., lt la OM m.u.ocl Of et·
tribution that should be looked
al and utiliied as the article
• points out.
Ms. Truitt's s tatement
while obviously totally incorrect
is undoubtedly made from a
lack of knowledge rather than
any attempt to demean a wholP.
profession .
.JAMES C KREDER
Late not Ignored
To the Editor:
While the Ocean View School
District deeply appreciates the
understanding and editorial sup·
port of the Daily Pilot regarding
recent board action on bilingual
education issues. there is a mis
conception we wish to correct
for the record.
Your editorial of March 26. cit
1ng the difficulty school districts
face meeting the current law
covering limited English speak
ing pupils. recognizes the fact
that the Ocean Vie~ schools
face situations where the lack of
materials and qualified bilingual
personnel in exotic languages
makes compliance impossible
Your editorial stated that the
board has taken action to dis
regard the law. That is not the
case In classrooms where 10 or
more limited English s peaking
pupils from the same language
background are enrolled, tile·
dis trict is in full compliance
with biHnguaJ regulations. In
fact. at our Oak View School. 15
of the' 2Q classes are full bi·
lingual classrooms.
THE ACTION taken by our
board on bilingual education
was the adoption of a philosophy
statement developed by a ded·
icated and law-abiding group of
community representatives.
This committee drafted a state-
ment and submitted it for board
approval, which was unanimous-
ly given. The statement does in-
deed place a priority on the
le2m1ng of English for all limit·
ecr' EogUsh pupils. It afso rec-
o g n i 2es the need for com·
pllance witb the law, to which
the following excerpt attests:
" ... full bilingual programs
are otrered wb~re enrollment
dictates and operate according
to law with opportunities for bi-
ll nsual instruction for both
English only students an4 limit·
ed English spealters. . . ''
Wllh the continued attention of
Quote8
"The slngle cnost destrucUve
1ocletal dlsease of our time and
the al.Diie bieeest ?'Uson !or \he
decline ot pubUc morality and
ethics lJ American lt1denhJp'a
flsaUon with what b&1 become
known 11 the bottom line."
M•r•u Lear.
\
the media. the legislature. and
even the Orange Count y Grand
Jur} on b1ltngue1l issues. "c feel
1l 1s cntlcall~ important to cor·
reel the m1s<.'onception that the
Ocean Vie" School District
Boarct of Trustees is ignoring a
IC'gal mandate
MAHI ANNE BLANK,
President .
OC'ean \'H'" School District
Board of Trustees
The t>d1tonal should not have stat·
ed that the board voted to ""dts·
regard" the law Tf1e distnct 1s
making every reasonnble effort to
comply with btlmgua/ requiremenfs.
but gn>en the number of students
speaking Southea s t Asian
languages. 11 ·s rio easy task Edtlor.
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
All •ltar~ b~~llt•
To the Editor
While reading th e letter
reg a rdmg the proposed Newport
Ce nt er l'xpa n s ion . it is
1ntcrest1ng to note how the_
"inconveniences " of a few
people are always named, but
the benefits lo all are never
mentioned "'
flow about the fact that the
expanson of Newport Center by
the Irvine Company will bring to
the City of Newport Beach
additional annual revenues of Sl
million for all to benefit from?
How about the fact that the
Irvine Company is spending $8.2
million of its own money to
improve the roads to help
a lleviate co ng estion for
everyone's benerit?
How about the fact the
expansion will provide more
goods and services for the
residents of Newport Beach so
all can mafotain and enhance
their standarda of livlng? Is n't
that what it's al\ about anyway?
It Is always too easy lo
pinpoint "inconveniences'' of a
few . Possibly these few should
take a broader look and see the
benefit$ for all to share. After
all, they are a part of the ... all"
·too!
HOWARD DERMAN • '
lAlfera /rom nodfr..! ore welcome
Tht. rig/It to COlldente lttttr• to /I(
1pa.ce or eliminate llbtl It rt•rwd.
Letter& of JOO worda or WH w.U bt
given prtfermct .4H ltrt1ri m&&St
11u:ludt aignolttt arad maduag ad·
drtH bW .,,.ff MCIJI bit wtthhofld
on r1qwd If 111//'citrU nuon 1.t op.
parnt. Pottr., waU ftot be
pu blt1h1d. Ltlltr• mor bt
ttltpltoMd. to M;aoN No1ftc .,.,
phorte nannllirr Of fM collfributor ' "'"*' be Tl•utn for ver•l'cottofl ~
im several of your cotumna. He says. "Don 't
how me any more garbace by Ann Landers.
be is a nut on the subject."
Please teU me if the dancers of second·tland
moke are antl-tobacc:o industry propaganda, a11
eoree says, or is t.here something to lt? -
ARY JN WINSTON-SALEM
Dear Mary: Tell Georie tllat "TIM N•C" ad u laterestlag eclKortal la Ur.e New York
mes rettntly and she'd Uke to 1bare It wlUa blm. Heni baa excerpt: ,.
"A major atad): la Japan b~• foud tllat
noa-smokmg wives of beavy 11mokers developed
laag uacer at a surprisl.Jli rate. Tttey bad
become 'passive smokers' wbo re1ularly
breathed smoke In tbe air. The study, spanalal
14 years and zt5,90t people, found tllat DOP·
smoking women married to beavy , smokers
'
I
D&A.R ANN LANDERS: It la a well-known fact
that we' '1J loee mllllooa ol braln cell• every day.
Wbat I want to know t., does tbe excessive use of
alcohol maJce us lOff them any luter? When a person
1et1 older doel the loss ol brain cells contribute to
1enillty? -WORRIED AND WANT TO KNOW IN
FT. SCOTT.KAN.
DEA& WOaaJED: fte eseaalff ue ol alcoHI
cloe• • .....,_., PIWl•ee a Mu ol ltra.la ttlla, ... ~
c .. 1aenuetieeb.aee1of ..W&y.
0. &lie .-W•e aide: Heavy drtaken wllo a&op
drtllkllle ....., aa lacreaae ID bralll capacity. Tlae
H•e prkdple applle1 to laeavy 1moten wlao Idell
UM llaM&. S·ray1 llriow IJlel.r black laa11 tan a
lleattlly pink wit.Illa 11:1; &oel•lat mODUla.
Planning o wedding? What's right~ What's
wrong? Ann l.ondMa' compldel11 new "The Bride's
Cui<U" will relieve your onziety. To receive o copy,
1md a dollar, pliu o long, sel/-addreued, atamped
envelope (18 cent1 poltage) to A.nn Landff1, P.O. Box
11995, Chicago. Ill. 60611. -
Aries: New projeCt succeedJ;
FRIDA V, APRIL 3, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJ ES (Mar 21 -Apr. 19 >: New project is
destined to succeed. Timing, judgment will be
on target. You'll be al right place al crucial mo-
ment. Take initiative. make inquiries and
clarify views . Important message will contain
"green light."
TAURUS I Apr. 20-May 20): Obtain valid
hint from Aries message. Clandestine con-
ference results in favorable decision. Someone
HOROSCOPE
behind scenes will support your efforts . You
may be asked to appear before the media. Focus
l on c lub, organization or hospital. -
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Intuitive 1n.
tellect serves as reliable guide. Accent on
I friends. hopes, wishes and investment which
pays dividends. Member or opposite sex boosts
m orale. Cancer, Capncom . Aquarius persons
figure prominently. Decide~
"CANCER (June 21·July 22» Emphasis on
diversification, versatility and improved sense
of fitness. Focus also on humor, social activity.
" com municalion a nd travel opportunity.
Horizons expand, lethargy 1s replaced by op·
timism. Promotion is due.
LEO <July 23·Aug 22) · Emphasis on selec-
tivity. attention to details and a rebuilding pro·
gram. Creativity, romance. significant changes
and adventure or speculation dominate exciting
scenario. Aquarius, Scorpio, another Leo and the
number4 figure prominently.
VIRGO f Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: You recoup re·
cent loss. If analytical, answers are found
r 0mars tl-
c usTOM ~MING Specl•llzlng In
SHADOW BOXES
l 1803 l',lewport Blvd.
Costa Mesa
" 548-4511
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
S.•• fr-" ... IHJlllll
1922 HAUOa ILVO.
COSTA MESA -S41-1 IS6
Baldwin
Pianos
and Organs
lE~~nNc INSlAVMENTS
t APES RECOROS
dilemma involving member of opposite sex will
be. resolved. Gemini, Sagittarius and another
Virgo figure prorpinently. Gain indicated
through written word.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accent modera·
tion, diplomacy and willingness to make in·
te lligent concessions to family member.
Domestic adjustment is on agenda. Financial
agreement or contract can be renegotiated.
Marital status also is spotlighted.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 > · Work routine
needs close scrutiny. Element of deception ex·
ists; define meanings, see people in realistic
light. Pisces. Cancer and another Scorpio play
important roles. You get chance to view operat·
ing techniques.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22-Dec. 211 : Em·
phasis on "power play ;" posit,ion is s trong; as-
sociates could be envious and some will be re·
sentfuJ. Rise above petty annoyances. You'll be
s uccessful in making money and love. Rela·
tionships are intensified.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Transac-
tion will be completed. Don't hang on to past.
Now you can successfully \a.ke "cold plunge"
into future. Property settlement will be favor-
able. Aries, Leo, Sagittarius persons figure
prominently. Confidence!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) · Original
mode of expression aids in achieving objective.
Highlight independence, take initiative. be
versatile and ready for trip on short notice. Leo,
another' Aquarian and a n Aries dominate your
personal scenario.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Puzile pieces
fall into place ; you can now consolidate recent
gains. Emphasis on locating lost articles, taking
inventory and initiating savings program.
Follow through on hunch. Cancer native can
become valuable ally.
Y•~.:~~R
"'"-'""" Ntl-MIN'Clll F•1hlon l•l•nd 840-f020
Li(lht Camel and White or Royal Blue and White with Solid Color
Skirts or Pants.
OAllf 10 t ~It 17 ~ llt()H fHUllll .,1111 10 t
I
GOing Into
Business?
A• teqult'9d by law,
n•w buie ln•••••
ualn1 • flotltlo-.t
*u•ln•u MINN mu1t
re9iater that .-am•
... the County O.tk.
Call tM DAtLY PfLOT LIUL DO.,.TMIHT
tot fonM and fufther
infomt11tlcH'I.
"'2-4321 bl.m
JACKET s4000 Pleated Skirt s24oo Pants s2000
IN C'E 1949
C'rl M. Mlddleteil h•• been appointed
aalet and leaatns manager by The Irvine
Company commercial/lJ\dWllrial dlvl1lon
'l'ltomu K. Caob&er. exeeutlv• vice pres·
ldeat ol The Melater Co. of Newport Beach,
announced he wnt be Jeavlng the home butld·
ing firm to form his own company, the
Callister Group. . ).
Robert ff. Bo•tman bas joined King Ad·
vertising of Newport Beach as senior vice
president, director of creative services.
Robert L. Carsten has been promoted to
general manager for the Geor&la-Paclfic
Corp. chemical packaging division bued in
Newport. Beach.
Ronald M.S. Park of Costa Mesa ranked
second In February sales amona the 4,200
agents nationally of the Northwestern Mutual
Life Insurance Co., Milwaukee. Park is as-
sociated with the Tim N. Te mplin general
·agency. Santa Ana '
· WUIJam E. Nelson has been promoted to
vice president corporate security and Gt'rald
8 . Slnykln t.o vice president medical services
at Fluor Corp. They ure based a l corporate
headquarters in Irvine
BeruN L Lann haa beeo Ukt.d prw·
ldent or Occidental EetlneeriQS Co.. t'9
lrvlne-bued subsidiary of OccldHtal
Petroleum Corp.
Ma1cJe Nauel has Joined Bauo and~·
soclates Inc., a Newport Beach·ba4t!CI lid·
vertlsing. marketing and public relation•
firm. as media director.
Alan S1abo has been appointed aasiltant
vice president by Bank of America. He llvea
In Irvine.
RaJpb Sasser has been named director of
.operations at Orange·bHed .Measurement
Systems and Controls, a leadin1 manufacturer
of computer memory boards.
Mlch•el D. Blood bas been pl"Omoled to
trust administrator at the Newport Beach of·
fice of Title Insur ance and Trust Co.
J uqueline Day has advanced lo escrow
officer at Lloyds Bank California's Santa Ana
corporate ofCice.
Gregory N. While has been appointed
vice president of operations and treasurer,
and Debi Wright ass istant customer service
manager of Panel Concepts Inc. of Santa
Ana
Fluor stock plummets
By KEITH TUBER
D•Hf ~1101 lwlllle'H E41ter
Fluor Corp. of lrvme and St. J oe Minerals
Cor p . of New York Cil~ have reached definitive
agreement whereby r luor would acquire the na
tion·s largest producer of lead and imc fo r $2 7
billion.
That gesture a white knight atl<'mpt to pre
vent a n unwanted suitor. Joseph E SeCJgram &
Sons Inc., from gaming control or St Jne for S2 1
bi Ilion reflected itself on Wall Street The agree
ment announcC'menl was mCJde on Tuesday
Fluor closed Wednesdav's session at 46 down
4!'.i! from the pre\'ious day's close Volume .... as a
hefty 603,300 shares despite a temporary halt in
trading That fiJ?urc represents a record 'oluml'
for lhe company, surpassing the mark of 468,000
recorded March HI of lh1s. year afkr its annual
meeting.
"IT'S NOT UNCOMMON to see one rompan)
that acquires another one show 1.oome weakrll'SS,"
said Kenneth Clark, vice preside nt of tht> N(•wport
Beach branr h of Paine Webber
David McNatt. a n account executive ror
Bateman Eichler Hill Richards Inc . Newport
Beach, said in a buyout s1tuallon, the stock of t"he
firm doing the purchasing invariably goes down
while that or the compan~ being bought often ad
vances. tTrading in St. Joe has been suspended
pendin~ an NYSE investigation into insiders trad
ing.J
.. That's what happens 90 perrent to 95 percent
of the time." he said
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"IN THIS CASE, FLUOR shareholders were •
probably wondering if the acquisition would :
dilute earnings, whether Fluor overpaid for the
company and whether the two companies can as·
sim i late into a workable relationship .. These are • ,
all psychological factors, and in this case -as in I
mo~t probably isn't justified." I
St. J oe received some additionaJ good news
when U S. District Judge Milton Pollack lifted an
order he had issued against selling off its Cana· •
di an oil subsidiary. Can Del Oil Ltd .. or any other
assets. SL Joe expects to sell its interest in the
company to Sulpetro Ltd. Cor $460 million before
being acquired by Fluor.
Later Wednesday. Fluor announced that after
the merger St. J oe·s headquarters will remain at
250 Park Ave. in New York where it has . I been located for many years.
IN A PREPARED STATE MENT, J . Robert
Fluor . chairman and president of Fluor, said John
C. Duncan had agreed to continue \p be St. Joe's
c hief e xecutive offi cer. Duncan is St. Joe's
chairman and president.
Fluor said its intention is to let the St. Joe or·
ganizatior\ and operation continue with a high
degree of a utonom y .
Duncan will become a member of the Fluor
hoard of directors and the executive committee of
the hoard Consideration will be given lo the elec-
uon of other members of St. Joe management to
thC' Fluor board
11w, 1 .. n1 it an , iff~.,. to ~11 nOf a solicitation of
,in off~-r to hu~ th~ "CC\JnDes. The offmns: I.'> mad.:
only hy thl' Offl:'nng Cm:ubr
1 c;o,ooo to 21 o.ooo Shares
Heritage Bank
Common Stock
PRICE: $10.00 per share
r, ir an L)ffonni: { :1r.:ular anJ J Su~ripcion
A._rr~~·ml'nt, rl..-.ISC omtact thl:' Bank hy mail or
Mr-.. Hdl'n Wibon. Ass1srant Corporate St.~Tet.ary.
h rd~·rhonc:.
ANAHEIM MAJN OFRCE
72 1 N<~rth Euclid Street
Anah~·1m, C::aliliimia 92801
<714) Q<)\. 3860
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CHEK/IN'!
)bur dollar's best
friend today.
inc• aMOClaUona Hy they loet '511 milUoll of dt·
poslta. Neanwhlle, ¥MMt uaeta bave aurced to
SllO blU!Oll from '7S bUUon laat December and $10
billion 1n 1'78.
Hi.lb ra_tea paid by tundl abo adda to the de·
mand for abort-term money, sald William B.
O'Cosmell, executive vice rreal-
dent of ti.e U.S. Leaaue o S.v-
lnis Aasqclatlons, and lhua
helps "accelerate inflation and
impede the Federal Reserve'•
efforts to contain it.''
IN A LIST OF ACCUSATIONS, the thrifts
claim MMMFs worsen In.nation, undermine hous-
ing, threaten homeowner equities, deprive local
businesses ol fundt and make lon1·range planning
almost Jmposaible.
In ract, be said In a recent
interview, "by creatina so
many financial problems, the
funds threaten to undermine the
new adminiatratlon'a entire
antl-lnflatioo strategy... CUNN"''
He and others say withdrawals from thrif\s as
a result of higher rates offered by MMMFs are
depriving the housin1 market of mort1a1e money
at a time of potentially great need, since members
of the post·World War II baby boom are now
reaching the prime home· buyin1 a a es.
Ttie thrift Industry claims the MMMF threat
to local economies results from their draining hun-
dreds or mlllions of dollars from small com-
mu1Uties to big-city and overaeaa banks. '•Every homeowner bas a stake in money be·
ing available ror housing," he aaid, warning that
continued shortages of mortgage money could
destroy the housing market and cause existing
equities to shrink.
In the seven weeks ended March 18, the sav·
Jewels by J oseph purchases diamonds.
gemstones, gold and eilver trorn private lndM-
duals and estates Careful examination and
evaluation by our experts Highest pnces paid.
10·9 dally, 5-t. to-6 CloSed Sunday Phone
today. kW.. tor Betty Grace 0< Eric Z81askus.
A IMOl110ff Of 11111\1 1°'-Ollt~ 60 YCAM
He and Paul A. Schosbera. president of the
Savings Association League of New York State,
conceded that the basic probleQls were inflation
and economic uncertainty, and said that untiJ
these are reduced the thrift industry wouldn 't be
able to meet demand. For the next few months at
least, said O'Connell, mortgage money will be
"very, very tjjht."
Jf:WtLS by JOStPH ASKED WHY THRIFTS don't seek bigher
rates for depositors. O'Connell replied that such a
course "would only make matters worse by
pushing mortgage rates higher and aggravating 5°'11\ Coast Plua, Costa Mesa • 540-90&6
r---<nlatlVCI 8&l)lna» Al'!.,..~----,
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r\
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Loans from $25.000.00* tor any business or
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•All loans secured by a combina\lon of
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4425 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE I 80 • NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 (7141 752 792~
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:.. •• • .~ •• ... • • -4. •• • • • • .. •
I
ME
National Mortgage Exch~nge Educational Foundation
A Non -P rofit Corpora tion
Presents a Seminar On
THE OVERLOOKED ULTIMATE
TAX SHELTER
LIA.RH THI AHSWlllS TO THISI quHTIONS:
1. How to contribute tax sheltered dollars.
2. Maximize tax favored growth
a. Retain use of tax sheltered dollars
b . Trust deeds. T·Bills. C.0.'s
3. How to receive tax favored pay out.
SEMINAR BEGINS AT 7:00 PM
.ouMTAIM V AWY·
Thur&d•Y· Apnl 2
Natfon•I Mortgage Exchange
1010t SleteJ Ave .• Sutte 113
COLLECTORS
CORNER
Aer• C:O.ne & Stampe
GOl.O & SILVER
Prices for 4·1-81
GeN CleM Utt.M Sil•• Cl. $11.tS
KfUQger-
Mapte LH f
IOOOCor-•
SO P .. os
90"' Sliver Beos
• .., $ell
UVM ua.• UU.• UUM Mtl ... UM.• w.>4 ... ~, ..
f7S'll. 1125'11. ,,_.,,....__ ... c.9---(714) 556-aSO
South Coeet Plue VIiiage ...-.. ......... (A•---c-~1
WE BELIEVE IN
B~~GOln
R. Ph. "' • ~
Wr tr~ real hard to
make "our \.tstts a
pleasure All or us will
s1ncereh do our besl to
please ;ou Pharmacy·s
Code or Ethics directs us
lo consider ~our bell er
health lo Ix> more 1mpor
tanl than greater profits
W l' "1lhngl~ olx>~
If ~ ou "'1sh our pro
ft.>ssional opinion about
an~ product "'e suppl~.
IH' are ~lad to gl\·e ~ou
an informed. unbiased
un~"er
Thi:. pharmacy bel1ves
in thr 'Golden Rule
You drserl'P and will ~el
from u s the same
cou r tesy and depen
dabtl 1 t~· wt• exp ect
oursehes when we make
u purchai.e.
YOt;R DOCTOR CAN
P HONE vS when you
need a medicine. Pick up
vour prescription if shop-
ping nearby. or we will
deliver promptly without
t''<l ra charge A great
m any people entrust us
with their prescriptions
M uy we compoun d
yours"
rARL UDO f'HAl.MACY
frMOta"'Y JllH. .......... ...............
641·1UO
' I . . t·' t~L
Starting
a New
BuelneH
Acccordlfll to
Callforftle Buellw .. and ,,o•••elofte Code (he. , noo 10 11uo1 •" pereon• d0f119 IMMIM9• IHl .. r e lldMioue Miiie
lllUll Ille • lll•t•f'Mnt ..... ..,. C04Hlty Clefll
•t1cl 11..... It ~atted
lour 11111•1 1111 •
IMIW•llP8f ........ \tie •<•• 111 wlllell tll• w.1..-.... loeeMd.
Tiie 1tete111ent I•
'"'" .... ~ ... •lld .. _ . ..,.,""' ,....."" , ... , , .... 11... "•"'•·
•••• tle111t• t••ulre ,,... ...... to°"" COflllMfdlll .......... .
Tiie DAILY "LOT
,.."._. ............. fld "' ............... ... M"• d IN nMeeMfY
lor111• •114' Nlfttllln •
41ellr aervlce to Ill•
Ore1111 Co11111r
Co¥ ...... """' ..,
'' 0110 •I our
"""•"""' eftlcee or flllOtU lllt LIOAL
DlftA"TllllNT 14Mn1, r' lat. 'u ,., ,..,.
lllferlllMlell ... fOnM,
the current heavy pruaur• oo thrift U.Ututiou'
earo.lnp."
syal.em and provide 1reater 1tabillly and aafet
for shareownen."
Inatead, be, Scbosber1 and otber thrttt of·
ficials seek to reattain the MMMF acUvlty throu1b
1 three·pbint pro1ram they hope ~U be eonaldered
by the Houte Banldn1 Subcommlttff on Domntlc
Monetary Polley, which be1lne hearln&a on
Finally, they would require the funda to Inv
a portion of aeaeta tn 1hort·term U.S. •overnme
securiUes, "to help fltht lnfiatlon and reduce
cost of federal borrow Ina.'· {
MMMF11 .\l>riJ 8. '
TheY'leek to aubject the MMMFt to the ume
interest-rate limlt1tion1 that now covern money
market savlnp certlfiutes at all depository In·
ititutions, such u savlnp auoclatJona and banks.
Such a portfolto, O'Connell claime
would reduce MMM F yields and reduce also t
potential tor major uvlnas losses at thrtfta,
well as lowering Treasury blll rates by increaa
demand for them. !
''That in turn would reduce the institutlo~
cost of money market certifltates and also have'
modest benefit in helping efforta to bring I Next, they would extend 1enera) reserve re-
quirementa to the funds which, said O'Connell,
•'would make them part of the monetary policy federal budget into balance." :
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS . I
. ! N~W YOIU( ,,,, .. ,,ClarkJL JO J0'6ll11trcE"' Ill' t P•11larP 1111'> •-SIOMl'ro I~ IOh ,1 =r~\;:1=: c~~~: ,m ,,t: :~~~w~ \~ := ::::if,' :~~ ::~ ~:::~r t .... t~ MASO AO SUMMARY I
and lowftl 011w1 II'{ olOt'IQI '6 "'lwaSoUl ao\li 2CM P-EllC ~ !!t' !t1ara'lwSCI 1 .~ 1!-. I mar•el mMien ••.. Oft\CIH JS"-~ Jetntlly JO\lo _., Pentalr .....,. 61-• ~· , WM. Prim. tlo 1* Cml5N IM4 16\'t Jerko s 2Sllo ~ Petrolil 12\to IJV. S...,_ru 2~ """ l
•M l-rttal1ma..-,.·c mwT11 !~~ !!~ JJllfy.'',.t S-1• ~ Pelrlt •I ~~\lo ~}: S...ErEI t~ I~ NEW YORK IAPI -The 101-1,,. ,., I merlo--or ,_ Cot1P•p I ..... _.,. °"~ -JJ JJ\o'I Petlill<lft D l4 J.Jlll ~·M, oc .:..,. --= -· I... Owf • the . c-wr ...
1111oft tor w.cs.. COf'dla 21 11'-K•l~t p1 ''"" 17""1Pllll•N•I _ ~. T"•m~m• 1 -,s"" ... ,s::" •loo,..,.. •• ,,.,,,'""' N•• -·-1 Stock aid AM Crostre 1 SW. ~ lt•l••r J S-16 J" Pltrc•SS .,.... .-..0.1 ... ....---
'EL Ind IJ.'t I"" C11llr ffd I 2\llo 2'6 •man Jl\ll l2 P,.11o"'11H1111,.. so ~ Tt<umP ... UV. ~ mott -down IN moot .,...., .. AFAPN!t I ..... ,.,,Itron I~ 17\'i KmpAm IS Ult< Plasll..: ~ ~ TelcmA • ,.., ,, r:.'Cef\t of Cl\jln9t •eoa<dln• of vOlume I
A.VM Cp 4'-S D•lll'fM J1\0J Jtl'a K•ri .. "' • s P-·•, ~ llof. fon,..,,1 II 11\<o °'u0 -Wed.i'J , ~1 ~-•• ~ II '•cura~ 11 ... 11 ... 0'-0 1~ 11 v•-I •'n Tl~ary -~ -" "'• n .r-~ .. ••• · ~ .. " .. •• • I ... K• ir,s v • 40 o PfetG.. ' ~ H•• -~d N ' --h -A.cld'~ P lof. IOI 0• , ... 1 17 11•• -4Jlto .. ~omlO I I • 9•~ .. _ • --·Plf'(M c .... oe •• ,. !'!"' •~· • Y -••Kew tel 1 J4 14\ff PrtSteyn ·• dill ~~ 1~ 1 ........ I AdvAou S Slit 0 8Hr 11,l/ftball llV. '""° ~ 4111. rlcoPd 2'I 31 erenu -·-•.,, •~ 11rev O<ll c..._ A.1118"' ~llo u:w. I s.1• I IS-32 l(fnoln t Jlo'I 3 Proerp 1Vt J"-T"onFd 14-11. IS"" l>ld price --r·1 1u 1 l>fd prk 11 l
"•Bn<p ~ 2414 0.klllA' '1\lo •2Vt l(loolG 31'.lt 11\lo P1>SvNC 11\lo 11\lr UnMcGll 11•.r. It Al .. AleJI »II'>~ o.1ca11 11 11~ Kt1apev " """ Put18en 2' J4\.'J us Enr 14 1411'> ""Coln< ,. 40 Oe••rt:I 3 JV. Kr•IOI 17"" ll!M P11IOC. ISl4 U\lo 'us Sur ' 21 2'1'1° un • AUy118 1v. ,.._ 0 1acrv1 J1 n l(ullck• 1 2314 JJ\l Q<HilorCh w ... 11v. lus Trell 1• 14•.-Name l.A•I chci Pct. All.. 1 1'1\ OlanCru JI 2'V. Lenceln 261/a 1Wt RtoenPr 10"" I~ UV•B•h 32~ UV, GlfWHh lt-w • I~ Up S?IO !
Alfltre .. 1 lSll'> U\lo Ooculel U"i 2'~ L•ndRH I'/\ •'"' Roehm H ·· 71Vt UpPenP """ 121,, lntTho<' 1~> • "" Up ft9 I
AFln 1 27~ 21\'i OOllrGn 17°"' 11o;, L•MCo »Vt :wot. Rnmno 29 2'1\IJ VtelR """ 10 Ol1CtyPI ''" • ''• UP U0 , AFurn ~ I l)OylOO ~ I~ 17 Llln•• 10fl 21~ R .. vc m s 3t'IO 4011. VelBkAr :w.•.r. :i.ol\ foEn wt J'I\ • '> Up 2~ AGrHI 12h IJ li:llnVnc;e t V. tO LldSlor 1~ !31/r RepNLte J7°"' 11'h V•nOul 17V. 17V, AMICIS• 131/• + J'•> UP ~ : AlnlOp 10Yt ~ RoadEx .. ,... .. \t< v"oln l JO•~ JO'lot Lomek un 41'• • ~ UUPp !!? 1' AMlcro1 1m :ZO'I\ EcOl\LIO 1W• 2w. Lln8ut s ~~ ~~ Rolll>MY ~ 47\'t ... I •i-. 0 HtlenTry '" • ·~ ·-
AN•llns 141<'1 14"-~:::::~ :~ :~ ~?,•r 13l'e 14 =::~on I~~ 1l~ vrcf::sf 1:~ 11!~, t ;::~R 1f • • I~ ~~ l~'ll I
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AnoAGd .II'> 90"" Ent-1•11 70"' I M• lkrl .... 49 ~~P.•nuol 40h 4 Wendy ' 17\lt 17~ 14 JMEI ' u • 1 Up 1!4 Anf•C 17'41 ""' -... .... J"" '"' .vuoret ,. II 1S KnOOyLk J'• • ... Up l~O : A~ld~I EqutSL 11'" ,,.,. Marlon • ~"" ~ ScrlppH St '3 INOMp •I •1'11 ,. CrwnAm >'• • 1 UP 1•1
M.,.nGp ~~ 1:.,.. ~~~Ool ' ~~\1'>3 ~~ ::~~~p. """ ~ ~n•or • )4¥. u~. WHolcl 74\'t IS 17 H•-•dn 0 7 • •• Up l•J AIM:ICOI• 37 '7\1'> FebrlTk JV. JV. M•ynOU 17~ 11"-SvcMer 12"' 11l'e .VlnMlg l''" 4• .. II PanClr S • " Vp 1'3 , AtlGsll '"" IS" FermGp JIV. JI" McCorm 20 ~ Svcmst lt¥I ,.,,. WmorC 24"" 1S 19 Pe tntMQ J • Up 10 8111'"' 9 ~ l h Fldltor !I'll 16\t M<Ferl ltl'o lOV. ShMtt<I ll"' )l '#oodl.OI ll"" )41,, tO Petlnd 11 21• Up l(J 8aU tFr 11 21\lo Ftll•Swl •1•L ·1~ il•Que'I 1u• 1s~ Sl\wml s 24V. 24 > l.Vrl~tW S•, S• > 11 Un•Eng 16.. 1 Up IC> ' • • • ~ • ., ..... ..,., -s w 10"" ,ft,, z1on ta JS''" 1' • 111l Ma"•1!J!... 4' • • '' Up i:.e • &ayl~-""' """ Fl8otln 17V. JI Meper l7Yr JI 01 tr -~ -,_ ,_, •. g:~·~ n~11s111 ~:~~nn i~ '~ =~~~~ \~'Z. :~:=I S•!O•S• is U\\o "• N01 •PP'ou1>1e 14 T .. En un .~.~ ; ,!: ~~ :?: a 11 1. ,..,,, l'l't I U Ocelol8 o :io•, • )•-, uo 1:.0 • a!:'z~11 411'> 4t ~l~\~' = m! MldtR.. n•' tf.161 '
80M9I ISl't IS-FtoalJnl Jl'1o )l ~ldllh :13 .... U-!io ::~ :~ :;II'> =:~~.!~· • ~ ~ M:~~e~G ~~~ ~~--UPS AND DOWNS lllrlcl\r .... I FOIHIO ll"' l4 Mo••· • 40 40\.. I 81yvoot IS'I. IS'll Form1gh ~ 4"' MonlCol Siio SY, 1 llonan,. "-SI.'> Fr•n•CP 10 llV. MonuCp .... 114. J 8 rwTom ' 47..., 41"' Fr•n•EI 1' 1101> Moor•Pd »-.. 31'. • 8U<kl>M 10 10• .. FrM SG 47h ...... MoroR•• • '"' s
llulf•h 4J 43¥ Fremnl • " '"" Mor~ln "~ IH• NEW YORK IAPI "'°" e<I••• O•t< •
C8Nurl.nupiSn U IS'ilo FullrH8 '"' ...... MolClul> Jf't 4 lheN<•OUm!°'" 'v'~u-~ ~00••d .~!~ NAC~ I Fi 1\lo l G•lu pO u .,.,.. Muel••r 19 lOV. • -.. _ Bo< ~··~ • .,,, I CPT Cp O\oo .. Go•EFn 7'11 I NarrgCp ' ..... lO Tel .. Mu IM,000, "'» 1 11 I• • ')1 • C•IWIS• ll"" lJ GrHnM llV. 11~, NOi• , 19\.'J 19¥. O.nvrWSI S73,400 I I I J1 .s J1 10
Canraa H 3''" J11> GroAdv ., .., HJ NG.. 17'1\ 11•;. H•11ryEn ~,ooo.900 ,'.":. 1•:• • 111111 CaoEn9 Glllntll • 11'11 lfVt Nl<llOG \ U Ullo MnrR1 ..,. , 10'-11
1 I ,. 7 '·" Gyroclyn • • .... N1toi.t """ ,.,.. H•lmo l it.JOO I I .. I > J7 ' .... I) C•pSwC U 1' H•mlPI u .... 1•~ Nleltn A 40V. ~ AlrFI• . . JOS,100 IJ ll' • • •• 14 CplnAlr 1 .... , .. H••d•h 10 I~ Nl•••n 8 J9V. J'lh M•xmP 260,M>O SI'• S1 • •·10 IS
C•r•Cp ...... 11 HrpRow IOV. •«»-NoC••G• ·~ 14 En IV , .J.10,,L~. 13,SJ~ I i's,~.. ' ••• C••nohC IV. '" H•roGp i ll Jt\lo MoEurO s JS 1• US MnEx •v ..., , I J1 17 CnVIPS 14"° 14 .... H•rllNI J>+'ll J4V. NwlNGs ""' "" Glol)HA• 100,MJO 1S"• 1• • 1'-II ChrmSh 14" 1401> HetmRK s~ •• ,., NwstPS 1)\1, 14'1\ 19
ChtrlHo llV. 11'41 H•nrdF • 7so4 2~ Nou ll 301/t JO't. Advanced 11'1 20 Cl>ml.H U nv. Holobm 1v. 1"-Nucorp u 2s•.-Oecllne<J 4JO 11 ChetUU 11 110,1 Hoover 14 1401o Ooll•'fM J9 ~o;, U"'l\enged 1,111 21 Cl\INwTr 6SV. .. HO<fJR• ..... • .... Oflloc.. 41•,. 41~ Tol•I o•-· J,001 13
Cl\ul>O ·~ 44\lll Hyalllnl 1Jo;, UI/• 01\Fcrro ll 13~ New l\IQM 111 14
Clrlko • t1", IMS Int 19y, '"' OllerTP 11"° llV. Hew loM JSIU CIUSoG• l.\to H 1 lnlr•lnd S•I\ 4 PCA Int U"-140t. Total salft JO.OJI SOO 1'
CHrlllA l2\I. n o,i, lnl•I • )tV, -PalKIB IP!! "'"'
MUTUAL FUND
N•me Fl•Glf
W\t T•t •1 0.c:NY > Golclfd un AmPvr•m Anc~l>l o G•ntA1r
W>lht"" Mokr0> un Gr•m lntmlE• SunMI
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•. Ott 71
'• Off 71
I 1 Off 6'9
'• Off 68
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latlons "411111ed b'( c ' 01f Confld ,,_.. NL M\111 9 '3 10 47 MM-0111 "" Putn•m "-· "''""' 91 H thlNa\i_,Ai>OCI oT:':' l~IJJI Eqlnc 11.l) NL Prog SOS S_, MONYF 11 94 UI( (.onv UO.ISll ln•ot 1 4S oL
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!nMi:]. :~-~~ n·~ lntom • lO 4 II 14 WIEq 9.lS 10,Jl Tot RI IJ,IJ 14 H NELole Fund inti Fd 19 14 NL HI Int IJ 00 14 JI 8 SO 2 S'1 Mun 80 7.ol l,ISl14 Wall J•.11 NLJ<eysloM Funds EQull 20.41 11 11 MMB 7 36 NL lntom qu 10 <'f F~"1'11v 'ho ',·72 CCoM lnvG ll JI IJ.11 Fnd Gth S.ZJ S.171 Cus 8 1 ll,9' 1'.SI Grwll\ 11 ~1 II "1 Specl SO~ NL Mvn1 • ~ •Jr>' G z'" on•l•I 2011 NL Founders~ Cus BJ 14.S. 11.10 1ncom 10 11 10 9' TwFr~ "1 NL UISco q 1q 10,1.) 1..'.:~ '1·19 ':rs~on~t~u,""{";t"N Grwth a.90 .NL <:ut B• 7.ll 7,9S Rt1E1110'0.111esern11t¥Funos ll•n11 111113.6 1
ICA tlS 10·22 on u L 1ncom U,'3 NLI Cus Kt 7 . .SI 1.21 TH E• 104 4J1 Bond l•J 1asu10 S•cs •O Nl I N P•" 1:.,4 ,01 ~~l Cap 1•.11 ll.11 Mul•I 9,,, 10.•1 Cu• K2 1.98 7 4J Neu1>er91r lle•m Equiv 7 ll I J4 •Ive Llrw Fd
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HI Yid t lS 10 OJ oh Fr. • 0 • 7S ONTC 14.0. IS.·· 1 M... ,, '19 u 70 p.,,.. .. 94 NL 5'>1 Sh• II 00 NL ll•nc• .......,." I · ••ta 'U .... Grwtll 1,20 114 L..u lngton Grp Schul 17 os NL S.•lom.,. Gr-lncom 10 IS 11 Iii ~u~rB ;rn ;~·: 0 o'~"'f II 22. • • Ullls 4,17 .:so Cp Ldr 14.H ,, "IN•wl GI 1111 NI. Bro.d l).IS 14 II lnVHI In I.~ C~Stk 1iso U IS o::cicaolll 1!·;~ =t tncom l.f7 1.111 GNMA. l.'3 NL NtWI 111( 711 NL N•I llW l.U .... Cape I 1111 ~ £ h •I Jt HL a US Gov '-SI 7.01 I Grow 11 .. NL N1tl'IOla 19 111 NI. U CM> 10 :W. 11 171 Comm 9 SA 10.~ F:cAm 11 · I 4 OodC• SI 11 41 NL catlll t.'3 10 JI Reali 17 00 NL. Nort .. I 10 S. NI. Un Inc I I Jt 11 21' OeBsl I Grow 21: 7N7L gr .. I Bur~.. NL Eq11fl s.u 4.42 ,Ta FOi ' 02 NL NY Ven I q SI 10 .. S.nlln•I Gr-,. 11 NI. H.,l>r 11·ao ,, 17 ~Ya: fJ SI NL Funds Inc L•I• tn• 10.• II" Nu•een I•• 7., Apu urwt••ll I OYOrs I s -N' I Pa<.e z.:,1 ll ~ Cmrc• -••II L..u>dnr 12.1' NL. Omt9" "" NL B•l•n 7 SO I 20 I N ..
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Fnd II t 10 '" I rwtll JO ..! .. ~ Grwtll , ... 10,. lncom , .... I J7 OTC §« li 28 27 41 Sherm 0 • .. NL Moro "" NL
1 .:21 te I ncom • -·-lncom 7 lJ NL """nl I II 1.11 Per a m M 10 00 10 93 Sl11m• F-s Mu ... Y ' 10 ML s1~ 'ti ,:·13 ~f':il IJ.;, I~ O~ '4art GOI 12.n NI. US Gov 7.f7 1.11 PuWld t '2 NL C•pll 11.16 II.IS MuSl>I 14.'1 NL ,
8 1.C Gt 11 ts 19:.2 I OCll II. I ·4 rtert Le-I 2'1.D HL ,,,.,. Fl'*"I P-Sq 1 ., HI. 1nco •" 111 Mulnt 10" H I. •
8LC Inc ICS1 IS• Eirr•ladlFGO-'4erold 1 .. .lll NL MIT IJ • IJ.19 Penn Mu S Jt NL Invest IJ .. 14 71 Mu LO 9 J2 st 1' &alK Inc ,·,. NL hem 0.43 I 40 ti<>• Man 23.41 U.31 MIG IJ.<14 14.4t Phll• 10 ... 11 .. Tru \I •.40 10 27 OOov I 12.7S 8 I> I u".o NL 1 1 · INA HIV UI tJ 4 MIO IS.3' 1U9 P-1• 0... Ve111 IS 4J 1••1 OOlv II 1,n L • "~~ ~itr EnoR• 1t.• l7.S7 1s1 Gr-. MCD 90I '·" B•••n •.OI 9lS SB Eqty ••'3 II.SI TrstCo l0.?1 NL HI Yid t.tl 10 n t:l~urv;y M·l1 1'-~ Grw111 l..lZ 6.tl MFO 12.Jt ll,,. Grwlh t SS 10 U • SB l&Gr 'l9 9.MI Wtllll II J• NI.. HIMun IJ U tiot IHI r • •. .... ln<om J..56 3.tt MF8 IU2 11 S3 Stock .... t 12 SoGen In "ao 11 m Wellln 10.Sl NL NwQK ' t~llun Ta ~~···N· Trtt Sii lo.ll 11.09 ~M8 7.11 t.10 Piigrim Grp. Sw lnvs 1111 12 01 IG&ncl 7 JS NI..
IS n "J3 "t'n ' L TrP• $h .-v•ll MFH t .19 6.41 Pllo Fd 14 tl 11.10 Swlnlnc 4.40 •.14 HIY8d l.U NI.
T .. Ex 1'00 NL ~~::. ·:G !~~ i:·r, ltldu,try 1.S1 NL Melllers u.u NL M•o c Hl S.JS Sovtr In 10 3 1s.l _""',""1s lrG 1,1.!.! ,HLI 8Ht Glh 11·.. NL ,...,. ,. . lcep HY IJ.72 1l ... Mtrrlll Lynch; M•o In , ., 1" 51•1• eono Grp ~· I -,.,
Beac Hiii 11: II NL ... r~ .~~ °' IC• Ind 12.$7 13~ Beslc 12 91 U.11 PIOnMr Fund Com SI 1.11 '" Wtln Ea 30,4S NI. Beroer GrouP Em h .,.·_ N. L IC.Ph t.20 9 . .SI C~ll It ... Jl.03 Bond 1.ll 119 Diver\ S." t .S INl\C Int 1.0 NL
100 Fd 14 io NL ac ... -111 1nvsl llM 12,j() £q11, 8d 9 • .0 t0.00 Fund 11.SO U.SO Progf\ 1.00 I 74 Wood SlrUl .. rs: I
101 Fd 10'7' NL ~ll~m n·= l?·ri llV lndk 1,61 •• ., HI Ill< 7.lS 1.11 11 Inc IUS t• H tFrm GI ID.21 NL deVeo S3.07 NL 8otlon Co· ' "" • •· 11vQual -well HI 011 9.tS IO.i. Pl•n Inv 11 41 NL SIFrm 81 12.• NL Neuw U,4.1 NL
IPI Inc ·n .. 11 ",. ~·":" 't.!? 11;:~ fly •os IU4 IUO lnlTrm u.s 10.os,p11or1h 11 40 "o~ StSlrt•I lr1Y Pine 11 .... Hl. Jhn CIP 21.01 NI. u~ G~ 1.u HL ,...,.llors ~: 1.IM•I 9.111 9.90 Plllrnd 14.'7 t• JI Each 7102 N NL No load J llCKI Fnd 10.2'1 "u Fldelll y "-' 10s 8d 4.1' '·" NllinHY ..... t.00 Pritt Funoa. Ftdl 14.IS NI. ru in Ch«gtl • llull & llffr Gp• . A ( u,ri NL OS Gt1 IUI IS.~ Munlin 6.17 7.lt Grwtll IUI NL lnvnl •t.47 .. I PrtvlOU1 Oty S CAt>m 11.SJ NL 111= t..» NL IOS HIV U 4 UO PacFd II.SJ ~1.U lncom I 14 NL St .. llm.., Funas. QUOlt ,
$50,000 to $500,000
11NCOME PROP£RTYSECONDS
• later-• o.ly .. ymeee.
•I-.-. •Co-nc:W
·•-W..dol
C•'lflloKI our
kMI• ............. ...-wlc•
Im \olOut llMncln!I Mech
(714) 751-1515
AMPICAtl HOflll! MOfllTOMll 230 Nflwport Centtr 01'1••
0••'911 PIN• ~ ... c11. Cotllomla t2MO
...
. I
' ..
•'
lt'a oot eveq~ wbo..,.. .rOUDd 1aytqlae'1 lo
th• fuwt·sro...., buta.a u..n It. JOIUi'll. BOa•
HYI It -and be .. ,. It wltll • &ot of COGfldetlce.
In tm. Boles~ Co., baMd ln M6nlo Park, bad
1ale1 ~ ..,,000.
ln 1*, UM compl.G)' cl.Id about S5 mJIDon. 1'ldl , .... Jut ... ~ be bU ... al
reacbbll•mWMmblNJ81. Tha''' rapid 1rowth, aJJ rllbt, but It'• ootblnc compared to wbat BoJea uea ahead. Jn 10 yean h•
loou to be doln1 an annual volume of Sll bUUon.
wblcb would
put hlm ln the
lea1ue of cor·
porate 1lant1.
How many U.S.
companies did
$18 bUUon last
year? Fifteen.
There are a
~~ ------------------"'"'l~ /~' llllll ••lllRZ ~'it
couple of arnazJng aspects to Boles' predictions. One
ls that he's in a business most people never heard or.
Another is that il involves absolutely no manulactur-
ing. Boles doesn't make anything.
• So what does he do? Jack Boles ia an interna·
lion al trader. moving aoods out of the United Statt9S
,and brtnglna other products into the country. He buys
goods in a foreign country and sells them in another
foreign country.
lt's an operation modeled on the International
trading companies of Japan, the biggest one of which
is Mitsubishi, whose annuaJ turnover is now $60
billion. But just 10 years ago Mitsubishi was doing $18
billion, Jack Boles' target for 1990.
BOLES REASONS THAT the American economy
is ripe for the large-scale entry of trading companies.
We're running a huge deficit in our balance of trade,
meaning we pay more for our imports than we eet for
our exports. And the vast majority of Americ$n com-
panies don't do any exporting. The trading company
can step into that breach. One Japanese trading com-
pany. Nitsui, already does so much business here •
that it ranks as our sixth largest exporter, according
to Boles.
A trading company should not be mistaken for an
agent. The difference is that a trader actually takes
tiUe to the goods. It buys them from the manufac-
turer -and its job then is to resell them <anywhere
in the world). "
THE FLEXIBILITY OF a trading company is a
little breathtaking. It's a deal maker on a world
scale. Boles, for example, has marketed U.S.-made
computers in Europe and China.
This concept has excited a lot of people who see
trade barriers between countries coming down . Boles
has on hls desk right now a stack of resumes from
people who buy bis gospel, that the United States
needs a big international trader.
Not being in the manufacturing end of the busi-
ness, Boles does not require a lot of people. Although
he expects to transact more than .$20 million in busi-
ness this year, his total staff numbers only 45.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW YORK IAPI -Tlw IOl-lfte list ~ I,. IMw Yori! Slocll 6"~
1\otll1 and wer.-a lllet NO 911N "It
IM ll'IOSI end -W>e most N9H Ofl percent of cheft9e ,.__, of otol.,,... '°' w..s .. ...:::. -:.r= :..~..,.:=:.:'~.~ difference i.twMn the 1Wevlou1 ctot.1118
1Wl<••lld.,.,.....r::rr1c ..
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NEW YORK(API Flnal 00.-J-• ·~ lw WM., AfK, I STOCKS
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WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YOl'tl( (API f<4H. I Prev.
Ad'<•IK9'1 T-.A f.I.
0.Cll-615 "' UIKMngecl ,,, ™ Tote! I-"2' ,.,.
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Tolel la-a '°' '" N•W l11ghl SI SJ
Hew tows 4 .,
METALS
C.,....11""2 ~•pound, U.S. deMJ-
llOftt.
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llK 4114.0llt CMh a poojftd, .... tw r..S.
Ti.Sl.-~tW...-ltelll. A9-...,.76untu---.N.Y. Mercwy SGO.• per 1i-. rieu-pn.•1ro,or .. H.Y.
SILVER
Helld'( & H-, '12.1 fO ,_, t,.y -·
GOLD QUOTATIONS
SYMBOLS
TU !&VINE SHOW IS the only opening on
the Orange Cout th.ia weekend, while three other
productions will be drawing their fmaJ curtains.
They are:
-"The Merchant of Venice" at South Coast
Repertory, 655 Towrfll Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957-4033). Closing performances tonight through
Sunday at 8 p.m. with weekend matinees at 2:30.
I I
-"Murder at the Howard Johnson's" at
The family that stays together, plays together
... among other things.
FRENCK-
POn I I WITH SUB-TITUS
• zgo~ t ')•"' "'4•~ • 1 NOW 'n. ... YING Im ~ C<>'O"• 01'1 MM • 613 6200 r--
U\CAIE
AUIFOllES
R II
Now / edwards LIDO CINEMA '1 PLAYING ..ifWP'OIT llVO. AT VIA uoo
,. MEWPORT IEACH 673-1350,.
THE FINAL
CONFLICT
THE LAST CHAPTER
. ~··Welt Dbmer PlaJboUff, ltO Avemda
Pleo. lea Cl•meale ( ••·teeo>. Plaal 1taaln11 toolaJiil ~ SWday at vuytq curtain U1Dt1,
wttla a noon bnmcb oa Sunday. •
-"Victoria'• Hou1e" at the We1tmLnater
Community 'l'beat.et, 7272 afaple St., Weatmluter
(tt5·4lll). The drama winds up triday and
Saturday at 8:30.
Al.80 ON THE 80UD8 and contlnuln1 thelr
respective runs ar4':
-"Chapter Two" at the Harlequbl Dinner
Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana
(979-55µ), playin1 ni1hUy except Mondays at
varying times tbrou1h May 3.
-"God's Favorite" a\ the Newport Theater
Arta Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach
(675-3143), playln1 Friday• and Saturdays at 8,
Sunday1 at 2, throulh April 18.
-"Ev•rylhing in the Garden" at tbe Newport
Harbor1Actors Theater, 390 Monte Via~ St., Costa
Mesa (fickets avaUable at the box office), playing
Thursday• tbrou1h Saturdays at 8 p.m. and this
Sunday at 2:30, until April 18.
Waite plays priest
HOLLYWOOD <AP) RaJpb Waite stars as a
Catholic priest mistakenly arrested for armed rob·
bery in the CBS movie "The Gentleman Bandit."
The movie, fiJmed in Yonkers, N.Y., also stars
Julie Bovasso, Jerry Zaks, Joe Grifasi and Estelle
Parsons. It is based on an actual event.
. '
"
' FOR TH08E OF YOU loottlna ahead to nettt
season at tbe local theaterl, tbree eommun.i\y
playhouses have unveiled their plana for ltlMIU
on the Orange Coast.
The Huntington Beach ptaybouae will open
with · a musJcaJ, "Guys and Doll.a," ln September
ind follow with a new comedy, "Love, Se~ ud Ute
IRS," After the new years rolla in, the HuntiD,ton
players will offer ''An1el Street," "Rine Around
th~ Moon," "Viall to a Small Plant," "A Man fot
All Seasons" and "The Gazebo."
At the Westminster Community Theater, these
shows have been scheduled, not necessarily in or-
der: "Green Grow the Lilacs" (the 1100-muatcaJ
version of "Oklahoma"), "The Front Pa1e." "The
Haunting of HiU House." "The Seven Year Itch,"
"Middle of the Night" and "The Pajama Game."
The Newport Theater Arts Center wlU in·
augj.lrate its new season in October with a musical,
as yet unselected, followed by a children's show in
December. Then will follow "Bleacher Bums,"
"On Golden Pond" and a revival of ''The Bad
Seed."
SNEAK .
PREVIEW
TOMORROW AT 8:00 P.M.
OFAN
IMPORTANT NEW
FILM
R MST1'1Cft0
111•• ., • ..,... ~All*
PAllll M AIU\ I CUAINI
CINEDOME 22
WEST CHAPMAN AVENUE
ORANGE• 634·2553
"THE FINAL CONFLICT" WILL BE SHOWN BEFORE ANO AFTER PREVIEW.
C rack into a plate of hot, steaming crab legs. O r pop a generous
serving of delicious Popcorn"' shrimp. And then do it agai n!
.. ·~
It's.311 you can ear. Every day of the week.
each special is served with your choice of a crisp tossed salad or cole
sla\V, baked potato or ri ce pilaf, and another favorite, sourdough bread.
All you can eat All week long,
Alaskan Snow Crab Legs
All you can ear . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.95
Popcorn• Shrimp
All you can eat .................... $6.95
Tlaere Jae is •••
Veteran emcee Bert Parks rehearses for the
upcoming Mrs. America pageant at the Las
Vegas Hilton Hotel along with Judith Pullen,
Mrs. Kentucky, and Wendy Kae Womble,
Mrs. North Carolina.
l J ' l ~ ~
By DA VIO Ktrl'ZMANN °' .. ...,,.. .....
A key proeecutloa witness ln
convicted child klller Rodney J .
AlacaJa •a murder trial A.. whole
tettimony ls now alleted to be
perjured -was taken off proba·
tlon for armed robbery on the
same day that Alcala was sen·
tenced to die lut June.
One of Qie attorneys who bad
represented the wltneaa said
there wu an unspoken agree-
ment bis client would receive a
break 1n achanae for tesWyiq
a1aimt Alcala.
Court records show that
Michael Eu1ene Herrera, 28,
bad his probation "terminated''
six months early and $5,000 bail
exonerated despite Probation
Department recommendaUom
be co to 1tate Pl'ilOD for petty
theft Nlated violationa.
Tbe result wu that Herrera, a
heroin addict, walked out al the
Orance County Courthouse on
June 20, 1980, a fl'ff man wbUe
Alcala, 38, was condemned to
death for the 1979 kidnap·
murder of 12-year-old Robin
Samaoe of Huntinston Beacb.
The Orange County Diltrict
Attorpey's Office ls denyina that Herrera was ttven a break in're·
turn for bis testimony. Herrera
testified Alcala admitted to blm
be slapped Miss Samsoe un·
conscious after abducting her in
June, 1979.
Herrera and another man,
Robert Frank Dove, were in-
mates to&etber at Oran1e Copa.
ty J all wben Alcala all.,..Uy
made bb 1tatementa ~ them. However, one of Herrera's
several public def enden at the
time ol AlcaJa's trial 1111 tbere
was "an Implied undentandiq"
between defenae lawyers and
prosecuton that Herrera would
recelve some consideration for
his Alcala testimony.
The luue of Herrera's p.artlclpaUon in the blfbly
publicised Alcala case ls once
again the focus of attention now
that the California Supreme
Court bu ordered a bearln& be
held in Orange County Superior.
Court oo allegations by Dove
that he and Herrera lied on the
witness stand.
Herrera, teatlfled •••lat&
Alcala ln April tm. Oal1 Une
months earlier, a petitiaa wu
filed aaainst Herrera allealns
violation of probation In
connection witb petty thefts at
an Anabelm supermarket.
Herrera had beeo placed on
probation followln1 an armed
robbery coovictloo I.a 1975 for
which he was sentenced to two
years in Los An•elet County
Jall. P'our additional years of
probation were added to the sen·
tence.
Says Ale ala proaecutor
Richard Farnell:
"We were maldng no deals in
this case ca1ainst Alcala> with
any of the snitches, exceet for
their protection."
TJae deputy c111trtct •ttcmeJ
alto aald he told fellow
proaecutoH involved with
Herrera'• cue to make no deala
.t any kind.
''I purposely tried to atay
away from blm," Farnell aaid. However, attorney Gre1ory
lonea, once Herrera's public
4ef ender and who la now in
private practice, said bis
experience indicated that the
District Attorney's Office avoida
making "explicit promises" tn
return for testimony by
informants, but there is an
unspoken underatandin1 tbat
some consideration will be
given.
This was so in the Herrera
<See ALCALA, Pate M>
Grand jury gets Ilinckley case
-. * * *
Progress super
* * *
Reagan 'wolfs
.
down breakfast'
WASHINGTON (AP > -Presi-
dent Reagan, clad in pajamas,
robe and slippers, took a SO-yard
w~l~ down a hospital corridor to-
day, and "his progress is super,"
said a medical expert who reject-
ed reJ>Orts Reagan might have
been near death in the first
minutes after he was shot.
* * * I!rownpays
inbute
.··
ioReagan
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. paid tribute
to President Reagan and led a
prayer for bis recovery today in
a session of the state Legislature
wl)ich was boycotted by most
slate senators.
1!The events are tragic, but
they should in no way un-
dermine our sense of unity and confidence," Brown said in bis
Jr,rief speech on the assusina·
ti_op attempt Monday against the
fOi'mer California governor.
. The Democratic governor
t.Ued for the setting aside of
pifrtisan differences with the
Republican president.
•'They all are standing for us
Wb:en they are . . . atlacke by an
•W.aasin's bullet," Brown said of
fl\a1an, press secretary James
'Brady and two wounded security
oltlcers.
L Brown requested permission
rrom tfte Senate and Assembly '9 address a joint session today,
ad the invitation was formally
._,ued Wednesday to deliver the
-'dress in the Assembly cham· bera .
However, Senate Republicans
®ndemned the speech as ~'frandstandln&'' and refused to
~OH the walkway from their
dlambera to the Assembly for
lbf addres5.
i·· .... ,i.#• *
Dr. Dennis O'Leary said he
believed the 70-year-old Reagan
could have waited 20 to 30 minutes
more bef~re rec~viog ~edical attention and "WQUJd bave beeft
OK ." He acknowJedeed tbat the
president collapsed as he walked
into the hospital ..!!. '·went down oo
one knee" -and was picked up
and carried inside for treatment.
Authoritati ve s ources,
meanwhile, said Rea1an pro-bably was bit by a ricocheting
bullet and not in a direct line of
fire.
o.ltyNlllUlt .....
In a medical briefing at the
White House. O'Leary, dean of clinical affairs at George
Was hington University Hospital,
wberetbepresidentis being treat·
ed, said Reagan's blood loss was
not enough to have caused him to
go into s hock. But O'Leary
acknowledged that his judgment
was "quite speculative."
His assessment was also atodda
with sburces who said doctors in
the emergency room had trouble
finding the wound that was caus·
ing internal hemorrhaging and
''thought they might lose him."
AWARD WINNERS -Holding Disneyland
Community Service awards won by their
organizations are representatives (from
left) Carol Michel, La~a Beach Free
Clinic; Paula Cariker,'Hospice Oranae
County, Inc.; Marllyn Lynch, Ballet
Pacifica; and Jeannette Langelaar,
Crossroads Alternative.
O'Leary said, "I ar;n denying
thatCJaUy."
The president, in his third day
of convalescence, "wolfed down
his breakfast" and ls receiving
regular food, 0 ' Leary reported.
Riles sees chaos
in state's sclwols
Asked when Reagan might re-
turn lo a full workday in the Oval
Office, O'Leary said it normally
would be less than two weeks for
<See REAGAN, Pate M>
By JOHN NEEDHAM Ol•o.itt ..... s-.. State Superintendent of Public
Instruction Wilson Riles bas
forecast chaos and massive
program cutbacks in California
public schools if state and federal
budget proposals are adopted.
Speaking to an audience of
about 500 teachers and school
administrators Wednesday lo a
1t· * *
packed banquet room at the
Sheraton-Newport, Riles said
public education ls beaded for
serious trouble if more money ii
not allocated.
"We have not been able to
recoup our losses since passa1e ol
Proposition 13,'' the school chief
said. "Public education simply
(See RILES, Pa1e A2)
* * *
Stunt man
dies in fall
from plane
HONOLULU <AP> -A stunt
beinl rume4 for possible sale to
television shows such as "That's
Incredible" bu result.eel in' the death of stunt man Jim ''Bullet"
Balley,policereport.
Laguna sees little
fuss off ederal aid
Bailey, 31, of El Creek, Va., For once. it appears tbe
waa killed Wednesday in a 150-L••una Beach Unified School
foot fall from an airplane on the District will not be seriously af.
island ol Maul. • fected by an action it cannot COD·
Bailey WU killed when. book trot.
be WM boldins pulled loote from That .,rd comes from d.iltriet
the bottom ol the •llllle-eaclne 1uperiateadent Robert Sanchl.a, plan~ accordln• to Maui PoUce foDowiDI an announcement that
Sat. James Evam., · President Reaaan'• federal
Evans aald a safet1 bamen bud1et cuts will reduce most
holdlna Balley in place wu ai· school pri>pam anlstance by
tacbecJ only to tb• apectaUy-aboutJSpereeat.
mounted hood and not to &be rett And wbli. the 25 percent cuta
of the Diane. are expected to affect other
Balley fell about 150 feet Into a school dlatrlcta la Oran•• CountJ,
1u1arcane fi•ld U WU pro--LaCaula Beach otflclalt H)' U..re
nounced dead at the 1ceae. willbenom~elfeetoaU..tbly,
The ltuat wu WM 8lm.ed bf ftve«boolcbltrtet.
a prtnteJlaut ftrm 'lor pcmtble La,.. Buel Utldpeejd fe-
sale later to television .,... eeivlq aboUt .,,000 bl ,...._.
1ucb u ABC'• "That's lna'edl· educatkm pr'Olft.ID fWidi ~
ble," Slam ..Sd. 1 .. r.
Tb• Autrall•D·bori Ball•1' Tb• 1111 .. lcMal ..... ealll
bad .... • •• fGr -...i fotaboutR'J.•bat.dlralapeetal WMU ftlmlaS mmta, bleldlti educ..._,.. . .,, ... ,_,_..
ooe ID·wtdcb be wu bvled lrOilll lal •ss G•••• ud •Mii pro;
a •P n 1''11 car Into a wall Qf fire •ram•· tu.• lD •ocatloaal and one In which be waa ' •d•eatloe motaer.·.aad about *•,.... from behiDd a ar at .. .-II flilli'.a fUildl for atu·
IOO mPla. , ..... ,.... prtmarr •~
la not Engllah:
By •Heinl 25 perceni al tbat
amount frQm the budJ9't, Laruna
Beach stands to lose about
ta0,000, Sancbl.l say1.
And wb.Ue any money cut from
Music Cente .. ·
spotlighted
in awards
Sanity
\ exam
ordered
WASHINGTON <AP> -A
federal magistrate sent the cue
of John W. Hinckley Jr. to a
federal grand jury tod•Y lo de-
cide whether the 25-year-old
loner should J>e indlc~ ln th~
attempted aUflSSination of
President Reagad.
Hinckley, wearing a white,
bulletproof vest under bis <dark
blue sport coat, sat silently as
his lawyer, Vincent Fuller,
waived the requirement that the
1overnment show probable
cause that a crime was com-mit~.
Magistrate Lawrence
Margolis then sent his cue
dJrectJy to a erand jury, and or·
dtred a thorough unity ex-
amination for Hinckley. Tbe
m•gistrate's order for a second
sanity examination was upheld
by U.S. Dhslrict Judge Wtlllam·
B. Bryant over Fuller's objec-
tions. After the 18-m.inute bearing,
U.S. Attorney Charles F.C. Ruff
t.old reporters the magistrate's
order commits Hinckley under
federal law to an institution "for
a mental examination to de·
termine bis sanity." The identity
of tbe institution wu not dis-
closed..1 Fuller told Mareolia that
Hinck1ey's lawyers had not .de-,.
cided whether to use inlaniti-*
a defense.
Hinckley was brought to the
U.S. District Court buildinl in
an armored limousine from the
Quantico, Va., Marine base,
where he is belnc held without
bond. He arrived 90 mlnutea
before the bearing was t.o becin. .
and entered the heavily IUarded
courtroom shortly after 10 a.m.
local time .
Du.rinl the bearina. Hinckley
frequenUy confetted with oee of
bi• lawyen from the firm of
famed crlminaJ defense·~
(See IDNCKLEY, Pa1e AJ) . ..
1illc1 aw IUTlli
Pair tonlcht and Prida7.
Winds lnereasin1 ove.r·
niaht, su-tlnt 15 to ao mph tbrou1b Friday. Lowa tontpt .s oa t.be co.t, a
lnland. Hlpa Frida7 t5 to
TO.
I
I I
Published reports today,
however, quoted the unmailed
letter found at the downtown
Washington hotel where
Hinckley stayed the night before
Monday's assassin'ation attempt
as saying: "Jody, I would aban-
don this idea of getting Reagan
in a second if I could only win
your heart. . . . r wilJ admit to
you that the reason I'm going
ahead with this attempt now is
because l just cannot wait any
longer to impress you. . . . I am
ddlng aJI of this for your sake."
Teacher
arrested on
sex counts
An Irvine schoolteacher bu
beea, arrested on 18 count.a of
sodomy, child molest and oral
copulation involving five boys,
police said today.
Lewis Byron Cann, 26, of 18051
Gilman St.., Irvine, a ·teacher at
Vista Verde Year Round School,
is belng held in Orange County
Jail in lieu of $50,000 bail, said
Irvine pblice Lt. Bob Lennert.
Cann, who is to be arraigned
today on the sex char1es, wu
arreated Tuesday night at his
home, U . Lennert said.
He also rent.a an apartment in
Laguna Beach and may have ·
other residences, police said.
Ll. Lennert said the boys
range from 11 to 14 yean old.
The alleged sex crimes don't
occur oo campus, Lt. Lennert
said, refusing to say where they
did allegedly take place.
Lt. Lennert also wouldn't aay
ti'ow long the alleged criJIM!a
have been taking place. He 1ald
no other teachers were iavolwd.
He added that police llle&ID LD-
vesUgaUnc Cann Jaat Satanlay
after receiving lnformatldn pfo.
vided by a parent of one al tM
boys. .
Cann, who taught scleace aJMl
computer classes in sixtb
through eithth grades at the
school at 5H4 Michelson ao.d:
was hired by the Irvine Uoifleci
School District in 19151 diltrlct
officials said.
None of tbe boys suffered
serious physical lnjurlea, Lt.
Lennert said.
The 18 criminal couata a'81mt
him are comprised of 15 felonle9
and 8 mildemeaaon, Lem:tert
said.
Police aakl the crim• were
allegedly committed OD cam.•1
off ·duty hours.
..........
IOLD OUN -Rocky Gold·
stein, owner of Rocky's Pawn
Shop in Dallas, displays a
r'ivolver of the type purchased by John W. Hinckley Jr. last October in
his shop.
,.,.... Pt19C!AI
REAGAN •••
someone with a deSk job, and sue·
gested the president might want
toworkpart time.
The president still bas two tubes
in his chest for respiration and
drainaae. O'Leary said.
The president was described to-
day by bis physician as being "in
extremely good spirits after ex-
periencing the best night's sleep
since be has been in the hospital.''
Dr. Daniel Ruge said the presi·
dentslepUrom9p.m. until6a.m.
and "helooksfme."
"He is awake, alert and talking
with hospital personnel," Ruge
said in a statement relayed by as-
sistant. White House press
secretary David Prosperi. "His
vital signs are normal, although
he is still complaining of soreness
in bis left side, which is quite
normal."
Reagan met Senate Majority
Leader Howard Baker of Ten·
nessee and Sen. Paul Laxalt, R·
Nev., for a little over 15 minutes
this morning. He will meet later
with Vice President George Buth.
Baker later told reporters that
the prc!sidenl "looked alert,
amazingly well. His color ls good.
He's fully aJert and conversa-
tional." ~
Rites Friday
for Niguel
crash victim
Rosary will be recited Friday
for Kim Anne Courtney, 18, of
Laguna Niguel, wbodied Wednes-
day as a result of an automobile
accident in Laguna Niguel.
Miss Courtney WU fatally in·
jured Tuesday when another
motorist slammed into her car on
Stonehill Drive near lntera Way
early Tuesday morning.
California Highway Patrol of.
ficers said Miss Courtney was
backing her car OD Stonehill when
the vehicle was struck from
behind by a sport.a car driven by ...
17-year-old Laguna Niguel girl
who suffered minor injuries.
Miss Courtney died at Mlaalon
Community Hospital as a result of
head injuries she sustained in the
crub.
CHP deputies are investigating
the crash.
Rosary will be said at8 p.m. and
mass will be celebrated Sabmlay
at 10 un .. both at St. Catherine'•
CatboUc Church ln Laguna
Beach.
Burial will be in Ascension
Cemetery.
MlJs Courtney is survived by
her parents Kye and Joan
Courtney of Laguna Niguel, slater
Kara, and grandparents Mn.
Anne Candy, Mt. and Mn. Robert
Neiman and Cress Courtney.
Tile family 1u11esta donations
be mede to the KJm Courtney
Scholanbip l"wld, Dana H1lll
BlghScbool.
c:l•H••• ........,. n~Ma-1111 ....... , ...... ~
MAIN~ ---.., a ,c-a ..... CA. Mefl..,_: .. 1!!,C-.Mllu,CA .....
Manya•••P~
leerill .. nice Dtreetor JI • ~~ ......... .. ..... • •lmtlai' .... ............
N';, .... U..ta1 ......
U&d;; •• ,.,_ M I bow.'' tbln
WM• ...... illd&eatlcill ~ ......, ....... to ... canw or tbm-cad&date ao.aJd
Reacaa wtaea ttae 25-year-old
drifter ... plcUd Up. •
M • neult, Hlnckl•Y'I Dame.
dld not appear oo.lllta ol peopl•
who miibt pole a threit to the
Wetlands plans OK'd
Sy PAftlCIC KENNEDY ....... -... The major landowner of the
Bolla Chica manh aald Wday
that development may not be
posalble because ibe Orange
County Board of Supervisors sel
aside too much acreage for
weUand preservatJon.
On the other side, eqvlronmea·
tallats allo were unhappy with
the boat marina and housing
plan because the 600 acres set
aside for wetlancb preservation
comprises only half of the 1,200
acres in the marsh.
Officials of Signal Landmark
Co. said the board's expansion of
proposed marsh from 400 acres
lo 600 acres would wipe out con-
struct i O' n of expensive
w,_terfron-. houses and would
jeopardile their ability to make
money on the proposed 5, 700
home residential area.
''The additional acreage may
jeopardize the financing
capability of the entire plan,"
said Robert llcNatt, vice preai·
dent ol Slpal.
McNatt said the additional 200
acrea muat be purchased at a
~ost "between $100,000 and
$300,000 an acre."
Peter Green, president of the
Amigos de Bolsa Chica sroup,
said be appreciated compromise
attempts. "However, 1im not
happy. I sWJ believe the plan en-
vi sloned is contrary to the
Coastal Act which seeks to pro-
tect the few remaining wetlands
in the state."
Tbe proposal unanimously ap-
proved by the supervisors in-
cludes a 1,800-slip boat, m~na
and 530-foot-wide navigable
channel connectinR to adjacent
Huntington Harbour and
reachin1 the ocean through
Bolaa Chica State Beach.
Tbe plan Includes a linear
park on the southern bluffs as
well as 5,700 homes and 600
ALCALA WITNESS • • •
case, Jones said.
According to Herre·ra's
criminal records, his probation
violation hearing on charges of
petty theft was postponed about
six times, Crom early February,
1980 to June 20, 1980.
During this same period,
Alcala's trial was in progress
before Superior Court Judge
Philip E. Schwab.
Jones said th~t on some
occasions, he w9uld ask the
judge for a delay and at other
times, the prosecutor would do
so.
Though be says be kept a
distance Crom the case, Farnell
explained that Herrera's
probation rroceedinas probably were llep alive during that
four-month period to keep a bold
on the witness.
If be disappeared <Herrera
was free on bail), a warrant
could have been issued for his
arrest, Farnell said.
According to court records,
Herrera was no stranger to
cooperating with police.
During his incarceration on an
earUer probation violation, he
cooperated with Orange County
S h erlH 's Department
investigators in breaking up a
ring which was receiving stolen
property, according to records.
He acted as a so-called "con· ridential informant."
Court records show that a
short time later. in December.
1979, Herrera went before
Superior Court Judge Robert E.
Rickles and was allowed to
withdraw his previous ad·
mission of a probation vU>lati()Jl.
He then re-admitted be violated
probation and what was
originally a one-year sentence to
Orange County Jail banded down
in July, 1979 was changed to a
145-day sentence, deemed served.
been extended by Judge Rickles
to December, 1980).
Jones said it was ln the beat
interests of both his client and the
prosecution to delay that case
while the Alcala trial got under
way.
Two separate proceedings were
pending against Herrera -a
probation violation hearing in
Superior Court and the formal
theft charges in North Orange
County MunicipaJ Court.
Attorneys familiar with the
case explained that by having his
probation ... terminated" in
Superior Court, Herrera could not
face a state prison term for
probation violation.
Instead, be went to North Court
in July, 1980, to faee the
misdemeanor counts alone, to
which be pleaded guilty and
received local jail time at La
Habra City Jail.
During his appearance on the
stand at the AlcaJa trtal, Herrera
said it was a jailhouse ''code of
ethics" which motivated him to
testify against Alcala.
''People in institutions feel a
certain hostility toward child
molesters," he said at the time.
Herrera testified that Alcala
told hif!l during jailb ouse
conver&afions how he lured Miss
Samsoe into bis car at the
seashore in Huntington Beach in
June,1979.
The youngster's remains were
found several weeb later in the
foothills near Sierra Madre.
Alcala, of Monterey Park, was
convicted of first degree murder
and sentenced to death after a
lengthy .lriaJ in Judge Schwab's
court.
He is presently on San Quentin's
Death Row.
acresof marsb.
The supervisors stipulated that
no county lunct. will be spent for
construction of the public marina,
bridges, or Oood control channel
serving the privated~".e.lopment.
A county analysis of Signal's
potential state and federal fund·
ing sources for the marina
showed a $6 million deficit, plus
a $31 million deficit for roa<b
and bridges.
"They must balance out the
balance sheet," said Supervisor
Bruce Nestande of the Signal de-
velopers.
The four-hour public hearing
before 300 people al the Santa
Ana culminated a series of bear·
ings on the land-use portion of
the state-mandated Local
Coastal Plan ( LCP > for Bolsa
Chica.
The pr9posal was recom-
mended by the Orange County
Planning C(ommlssion and ul-
timately must be approved by
tt)e California Coastal Com-
mission.
Last year, the Coastal Com-
mission recommended that the
entire 1,200-acre lowland marsh
be protected from development.
But last September. the Board
of Supervisors rejected the pre-
Ii m inary determination and
passed a resolution stating that
much of the Bolsa Chica was en-
vironmentally degraded and
could be developed.
Fre•PageAI
WINNERS .•
winning in the Special Health
Services category. The agency
provides temporary emergency
shelter to victims of domestic
violence.
Winners from the Orange
Coast of $1,000 awards include
Ballet Pacifica of Laguna
Beach; the Orange County
Philharmonic Society, head·
quartered in Costa Mesa; lhe
Assessment and Treatment
Service Center of Coastal
Orange County from Newport
Beach; Crossroads Alternative
of. Capistrano Unified School
District; Hospice or Orange
County, Inc. from Laguna Hills;
Share Our Selves (SOS> of Costa
Mesa· Amigos de Ser Business
and Advisory Board in Irvine;
Voluntary Action Center of
South Orange County in Newport
Beach; the South Coast Institute .r Applied Gerontology in Costa
Mesa; and the Key Club from
Fountain Valley High School,
which worked at more than 100
projects, from recycling to the
Barch of Dimes Haunted House.
Money for the awards is
donated by Disneyland, and ap
plications were received this
year from 441 organisations in 32
communities.
PfflidlM ..... M1U .... .... .. ... ..... " ...
otben outllde a Wa.la
hotel llaadaJ.
Tiler• wae ao lam-4tate ,...,._from UM rBl u to
It did. -,...... .fllllekl9J'• reet .. JllUbYIUit to the
Servlc.. R•can 1atd that wbUe be
ordered • Nvlew of bo•
Secret Servlce and otbe .
Treasury Department •Cenci
performed befon, durtn1
after llonday'• attack, "I a
coqfldeftt that cWrlng what ha
pened at the Wubinitoa Hilton
the Secret Service was do
everything necessary to p
the presldeni.''
Re1an declined to make an
apecmc analysis ol bow th
Secret Service performed durln
tbe attack on Reagan.
Coniresa la aakin1 the Sec
Service to explain what the
committee chairman, Edwar
Roybal, D·Callf., called an a 1 parent "breakdown in security~"'. that may have enabled th
woeld·be assassin to open ftre
Reagan.
'•Why is it that an un -
authorized person could get
close to the president?" Roybal
asked during an interview Wed-
nesday.
The alleged assailant was
standing with a group of re-
porters 10 feet from Reagan
when he fired six shots outside a
Washington hotel. Three people
besides the president, including
White House press secretary
James S. Brady, were wounded
in the assassination attempt. !
Hinckley. 25, of Evergreen, I
Colo., was arrested at the scene!
and charged with sbootingt
Reagan and assaulting a ~ret !
Service agent. j
Roybal has said he wiJJ sug-'!
gest that presidents wear bullet-
proof vests during their public
1
:
appearances. •
:
RILES ...
can't taJce any more cuts and ~
remain a viable school system.":
Riles, who recently announced:
he will s eek re-election as;
California school chief in 1982 ..
said the state stands to lose S336l
million in federal assistance ror:
the 1981 -82 school year under·
Pres ident Reagan 's budget
proposals.
Riles said the proposed 25
percent cut in federal funds would
mean about 10,000 California
teachers would lose their jobs in
September. '
He also decried Gov. Jerry
Brown proposed 5 percent in-
crease for public education,
which he said was ·'totally in·
adequate" in the fa ce of 12 per,
cent inflation.
Riles s aid lawmakers in
Sac ramento face a difficult
problem in deciding where state
money will be spent because the
$7 bi Ilion state budget surplus will
run out this year.
"The governor is involved in a
balancing act and is being forced
to make tradeoffs," Riles said.
"But we can't afford to have th~
attitude that the economy will
reassert itself and things will get
better In the future.··
Riles urged the school
administrators and teachers le
lobby hard for passage of
Assembly Bill 777, introduced last
month by Assemblyman Leroy
Green of Sacramento.
He said the bill provides for a 10
percent increase in sta(~
spending for schools over the
1981·82 year, enough to.keep vital
programs afloat.
.....
"He knew the ropes," said
Jones, who stated flatly that
Herrera would have gone to state
prison immediately had be not
testified in the Alcala case.
The lovely light of Waterford crystal.
Herrera was back iJl court
again on theft charges by January
1980 (his probation period had
Nicaraguans
await c~op?
NEW YORK (AP) -Right·
wina Nlcaraiuan exiles iJl Hon·
duras, confident of support from
some portiooa of tbe Honduran
army and awaiting a "lftell
Usht" from, the United States,
plan to be ready to tnvade tbetr
homeland In about two montbl,
The New York Times reported to-
day .
Nlcaraauan exile leaden aa·
aerted that a 800-memb•r
"freedom force" stationed in
Honduru near the Nicar~.
border soon will be joined by
thousands of -eympathlaen from
Guatemala and Miamt.
The rebel~ are sambUDI that thelr an to overthl'O'f' tM 20-m~ Sudlntat sovn·
ment will tolte a popular IDlur· recUoo aimilar to the on• tbat top. I!: the restm• ol Aautalo
OI& tn 1ul1 11'11. TbeJ allo • bODe to bav. cUnet or covst mfllW7~rromttM ... •• m•tt ot ~u. SI Salnl!IDr Ddaat..-.aa.
From Ireland,
W alerford's
hand-cut lead
crystal lamp
with a
handmade silk
shade. $235.
\
...
-. .. ,.. .
I• ,,
I•
.~
" ~·
........
Chicago Mayor Jane M . Byrne, eacorted by Ja11
McMullen, right, her husband and 'Political ad-
viser, and a security guard, left, leaves her
apartment in the high-crime Cabrini-Green hous·
ing project. Just hours after the mayor moved
•I
ll•
in, police raided an apartment three blocks .
away, arrested 11 people and seized seven gum,
officers said.
~Fox Film
~.~~eved
0 1 Denver oilman Mania
n Davia and 20th Century-Fox
··l·Film Corp. were talkln1
{I' again less than a week after
1 Davis stunned Fox officials
r.• by announcing he was pulllDI
out of a $'730 million offer to
• buy the f\rm.
-11 Fox Film s pokes man
· Philip ¥eyer confirmed that
H "exploratory discussions"
were under way in New
·York.
· Davis made a surprise of.
fer Feb. 20 to acquire Fox
Film for $60 a share. Last
week, Fox Film officials said
Davis had completed his
study of the firm and was
ready to proceed with his of-
fer.
Former hosta1~ al~k
ll•pke, tan and relaxed after a Hawallan vacation, says be
J)lana to anawer a few more
welcome-home letters and
then travel overseas.
"I've 1otteQ tbousanda" of
letters, said Kupke, 3', a
State Department com·
munlcatlom specialist. wbo
spent 44' days as a captive in
Iran. "I'd like to answer
tbem all. But l'm tl")'lol to
answer die ones that ask
qutaUona, at least.''
President Re agan's 11·
room hillside home in Pacific
Palisades remains unsold
•, a£ter nine weeks on the
market, and a real-estate
seller says it may be "overly
' -Optimistic to \hink someone
would pay $1.9 million for a
celebrity association .''
Actor Richard Harris with wife Ann Turkely
spent an evening recently at Xenon disco in New
York City. Harris is negotiating to replace
Richard Burton in "Camelot" at the Pantages
Theater in Hollywood. Burton has not played
King Arthur since.March 17 and is preparing for
neurosurgery on his spine.
One killed • • • m storm
Tornado-like uinds damage buildings
F•lr 111ro..9h Friday IMll •1111 ~I"(-~ •I-rNClll .. IS
.. JO ............ Friday. CMJl.tl
low 10fliltl' U, 11>-S2. H.,._ Fri·
cf., '5 lo 10. Wat.,. JAi..
-£1'""*'9. Mt1l>wnl wlncts IS ..
U ~nob tllnluOll Frl<Nr owr -•r watat's wtltl S to I loo4 combined .....
Wind ••"" J to S feet. Weilerlr , •• 111 10Jlaat.
~-IJ.S. ..... .,,
A MWre ltlwa'I thet clumped up to
flw tnci.. of rtln In par1s of 0.0•9'•
re1ullecl In OfW -th and ~ 1ornaclo-llb wlllcls 11\81 cMirn•tecl
,.~.,•I b"llcll1>•'· ateorol119 to
otfl(lala.
In tile W.11, rain .,.., ,,_ •at
tc.otll•recl lrom CAlllOnll• Into llW
n«lh.,n Rockies. A winter storm
·-1c1> -poMeCI ,.,.Y tor VI.ah. ,..,t. of Ari-•ncl ,,. C-Mo -···-Sllo•erl ano 11111noer111owert
•Irate-•IGfte the Alleml( Cout
Into N•w Jerse' to Maine, a ncl
H e tte red 11111nclersterrn1 wer e
forK .. I t• CMl!rel Flwkla.
( vld -,.._._., .. a.rmm \•u• ... n~·. o .......... d __ .. ===
11>e Lo. AllgeloS Ch1k CMlt.,./:J. a a.m., ll<inllftl the MHof(s r 1>fall tot•I to a..• lftclln. -.....i refnfall
for tM -•s 12.n lncl'IH. Tiie Swvke NNI cN<KH of rain
"'°"Id dlmlllitll to rero tonl9"t.
Fair alllea _. torecat "" tol>ltM end '•lcMly •1111 ..,uv nortllwut
wll>d1 ,,.,,., IS lo JO rn!lfl In ~t .,.. ...
Tht c.,.stal and lntarmecll•I•
vall•Y' wlll t. • IMI ~ tonleht
.-.O AA US D• t •' (•••••••
Clnc:IM.111 •• 1"
C:lrttfancl .. • Colum-n 40
Oal-Ftwth G ..
Denver 12 • O.s Mol"" .. 4.S
Detroit ., )4
°"""" •1 ,,
Hartfon:I '4 '° _,.
... 1 .... 4t JO .04
H-lwlu .. 10 01
Hovllon " ..
)J
C:AUPOaNIA a ... ,.,....,
Blrllle
Eurelte
Fre\no
l.e nc.e1tet
Merv•ville
Monterey
HHcll ..
Oak I encl
PHO Rc>W ..
Reel Bluff
Re--City
Aeno
Secr•mento Sall no
Sant• Barbar•
Stoc"ton Thermal u .. 1.11
Bars lo•
&le a •• ,
lls/lot>
Cataline
El Centro
Lone lea<ll
He..,oort !IMC"
OnleriO
PaM<Mna
San B•rNrdlno
Sa11Jow
Sanl• Crw
Tal\oeValley
u SI
t2 u
S3 42
7' ..
" ..,
'5 4S
S6 so
IS
SI ., .,
" 41 ., 4"
S3 J3
40 0
SI 0
40 4.S
lS ., sa
5' 37
11 50
S4 11 .. l6 .. 41
14 S2 •1 4t .. sa .. 46 .. 4" .. ...
40 • 40 so u 1'
14
.01
02
·°'
.04
03
Tfle a--t!a ~ "'81rol .. Id an Apt1lln9 "'•n. Jt.year .. fcl Uvone
0..-, was klllecl W~y -lie io.t (ontrol of 1111 ,.,. In • rainstorm wllll Iowa In 1118 401 wlllle Ille
merturv *---1-sos In LCK
lnc!Nlplls
J acllS11"lle s ... a .. dtltla .. .. 5' It
0 BS'8 DOING IJlcredlbly well
-provldinJ comic relief for the
whole boepltal." 1be said M she
-drifted throu1b Ute crowd in
front ol the Newporter lnn.
Ms. ae.,aa ... honored by
the Artbrltl• Foundation of
Otanse County durtns the
luncheon for her 1upPQrt ol UM
fou.ndatiom. A crowd of 400 wu
OD band.
Appeariq tired and aoundiq
boane, she reported that ber
father Col off some dandy one·
liJlers during ber visit.
uez SAID BE wu most COD·
cerned because he waa wearln1
a brand new suit that day," she
said, quotioc her father's reac·
lion to Monday's aaaaaslnat.ion
attempt in Waahinaton.
She sald President Reaaan
bad soup and lime sherbet for
lunch Tuesday, followed by a
cup of Sanka.
•'And he's concerned about
................
'DOING INCREDIBL V W£U.'
Aeeg11n'• deughter MeurHn
whether he'll be able to throw
out the first ball of the baseball
season in Cincinnati next week,"
she said, adding that docton
told the President bis left aide
may be too weak for that, to
which the president reportedly
replied, "But I'm right-banded."
MS. 8EAGAN SAID h er
father even joked when the COD·
versation turned to John
Hinckley Jr., the. man accused of
trying to assassinate the presi-
!fent.
' · • 1 uadel'lt•••· t•at tlal• daU~., ............ lida ........................
father, '0 W.U. dO ,YOU Gped
he'• tolJlt to buy me a new
&ult?"
She aaSd ._ vtllted Secret
Service a1•nt Tl•otby
McCarthy and Wublntitoo
policeman T!aoGlu Delahant>'¥ u wal u lrieDc1I and relatlt• ol
Jam ea Budy, tbe aerlou1ly
wounded White Hou•e pre11 aeeretary .
Sbe u.id McCarthy ,baa a pool
•olat la bl1 aectio' •t the
hoepltal on which of the four will
be releaud nm .
OP DELA.BANTY, abe uid,
"There'• IOIQ.ethin1 very mov·
lnl and nry dltllcalt to deal
with in ta1kina with a man wbo
baa done bla Job and la lytq tber~ with a bu.Uet lo his neck.''
The president's daughter 1aid
that, durinl ber visit, McCarthy
called her over and whispered,
"Tell the president I did lbe best
I could."
"I'm proud of him," she said,
"I'm pr'oud of all of them."
Asked by one reporter
whether the shooting episode in
Washington might change her
mind on gun control, the presi-
dent's daughter said, 1'I've
always thought there should be
some kind of control.
"THERE'S A LOT of facts out
there," she went on, ''and it will
take some sifting, but I believe
there's an answer somewhere ."
Diedrich settlement?
Judge dismisses one f ewny conspiracy charge
''I still think you should sett.le
tbe case, gentlemen," said
Superior Court Judge James
Pe.res Wednesday at a pre-trial
bearina ln which one of four
felony charges against former
Orange County Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich was diaml.saed.
Peres' statement appeared to
indicate that some negotlatiom
have been held for a possible
plea bargain settlement. But
state Deputy Attorney General
llicbard Haden refused to dia·
cuu Wbether aucb matt.en have
been di.scusaed.
DIEDRICH IS accused ol con·
1pirin1 with otben to conceal
the true source of about '10,000
uaed lo aeveraJ 191• political
campaiJns.
Dismissed by Perea waa a
felony charge that Diedrich COO·
spired with a former attorney,
Kicbael Remington, to commit
perjury before the grand jury
that lnilially investigated the
case.
Perez said testimony did not
support the allegation. "I don't
think you've proved perjury ...
I don't think you've proved an
attempt at perjury," Perez told
Haden during the bearing.
It was alleged by pros-
ecutors that the two men con-
spired to offer testimony that
money that went to candidates
was Remington's, when, in fact,
it was Diedrich's .
After issuing his ruling and
m aking the comment about
reaching a negotiated settlement,
Perez scheduled April 30 for
another pre-trial hearng. A trial
date of May 26 also was
scheduled.
Prosecutor Haden said be waa
"diaappointed" that the Judge
rej~cted the one conspiracy
cowtt. But be said the cue la
''alive and well" on the remain-
in8 three felony char1e1 of coo·
splracy to violate the Political
ReformA~t.
Defense attorney Marshall
Morgan said he was "pleased"
with the judge's decision. AI> for
bis unsuccessful effort to win
dismissal of the other three
counts, Morgan quipped, ''No
judge is perfect.··
ORIGINALLY, Diedrich was
charged with various violations
of the state PoUtical Reform Act
by the Orange County Grand
Jury in 1977.
Diedrich and three others
were re-indicted in connection
with the case by the grand jury
in December 1979 after pros-
ecutors became concerned that
the three-year statute of lim!ta·
lions might run out before the
case came to t,.al. '
Hundreds escape
Vegas hotel blaze
LAS VEGAS <AP > -A fire despite a strong smell of smoke,
confined to a luxury suite on the a fter the fi re erupted at 10:05
fift h floor of Caesars Palace a.m.
Hotel-Casino injured 16 and Ironically, a convention of
forced hundreds to flee the burglar and fire alarm com-
hotel's 12-story central tower, panies is being held at Caesars
N _J_ r Id I authorities s aid. Palace this week. eeU8 0 e e r y It was the third sizable hotel "You'd never think you'd find
fire at the gambling resort city yourself in the middle of a di8CU88ion topic in less than five months. casino with a nightgown on." Smoke poured from filth floor said hotel guest Helen Ginsburg
•Psychological needs of tbe windows, and breaking glass of Denver.
elderly will be discussed at a s howered the ground as people She and her husband Morris ,
four·bour workshop beginnln1 at raced out to the parking lot who were on the sixth floor just
9 a.m. Saturday in Admlolatra· behind the luxury hotel. above the room that caught fire.
lion 208 at Golden Welt Collece. Fleeing guests and hotel said they reported the blaze to
Admission to the worlrabop de-employees made their way paat the hotel operator. then looked
signed for educators and gamblers who continued to play into the hallway and saw hotel
°" ~· 10. In Cal""'ble County. flle palrol 1•ld Ille weatller
contributed ID Ille .c.c:ldeflt.
Anetln. HleM Frldey will ran99
fl'Oft\t,. .... r .... 70.
Kans City 72
usv .... ., therapists who work with the blackjack, roll dice and pull slot maids pounding on doors to
rooav elderly is free. machine handles in the casino, evat'Uate guesl3.
SecOl>Clhieh t :Ol p.rn. s.o .------------------------------------------
11
S4
Five maOlle "-I -several
olll•r build ings were ••ported
ci.arneoect 1'Y • •lndl-In IM ... ,
Ge«91e cornmwnlty 04 SummaftOWI>.
£manwl ~ $flerl" Ja"'" a. ._ .... cl.
Tiie Nallonel weatller Serwlc•
woultl 1>ot <•II Ille wlnd1 .. rrn •
torn.tclo, \Mii Melan N ICI II IMld • ""path uo lwt wi. In • 11'9'9M line.
II WH defl"""Y • tCIFftMo." A molllla llOIM WM tllOWft 9't Ila
IOUnclallon encl cwrl .. 10 lo tDO feet
_.,.~ ........... cl ... -
~·--m!Mr lftfurln. In the_..,. tc-~ llN!"
.. Hlllenla, ltlth wllldl ..,, .... _, .. ,,,,.. ............. ..,.....
t~, W NI t«IDlll ln!>Wla -· ~ '" Slimtoff c:..tllty In Milt-It 0.-11 .. ~ ......... ...,,...,. a f.,m ...... MIN ... _.WI.,,.........
ll•m•'-1L. ef former f'raslllflll
Jlfllmy c.wr. c:arWr aiw ........
..... IYIWI, wore~ en• ~
trlf'WT-To,,.........,..•_..IM ... *'lll
11 •·"'· li"ST ___..Y rMtM trwi 21 lfl ......._ lllllM., W 1' In IC..,
.... ,la. .
c.u1 .......
Llllle Roell ., SI Tiie mountains will .ctlp below LM Al\091• ., S2 ~ f,..Li"I ......... and U. .,_ level LO<llavllle " 40 wlll lie at S.000 feat, tM Sotnr~ Mid. Mempflll 7t so HllM wfll lie 11> Ille m....--5111.. Miami 12 .. Tiie OeMrts Wiii M¥O a tbaftt8 ot Mllw-.a S1 • '""""'-· lllh •venl1>9 ..... Mpl .. St.P » l6 Cl .. rlttt '""'-" -FrlNy. HICIM HHftvllle 7S 1' Wiii ... In llW t0s _,. 70S. "'-Or-,. '° OS
New Y°"' 42 S2 •2
Te ........ •t.,._ Notfolk 11 SS
Ottla City ., 50
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SF whites
minority
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -For the first
tlme , n o n -white s
outnumber whites in Sao
Fra ncisco , cen s u s
figures show.
The percentage of
·whites in San Francisco
d ecl ined from 52 .7
percent in 1970 to 45.8
percent in 1980.
The U .S . Cen sus
Bureau said there was a
slight decline in lhe
population of the city's
blacks, a sharp jncreue
ln the pumber of Asians,
and approximately tbe
same percentage o f
Hl•panics.
.• . I
lJlack ""''" ~ illArlu!illt ATLAMTA (AP>-TM••ot aa.,.-~. mataUJ ntarded
black .mu, who wu founct ta a rt.., dllll-, tn UDCllrlborts, li ao
similar to aome ol tbe cblld ~la tM AU.ta area u.attbe cue ha• been turried over to the ,peet .. CJallcl_...tba tuk force, pollceaay.
The deatb of Eddie L. Duncu, lr. -beln• treat.Mu a bomldde
by police-II the lint adult eaM ud lllrii death oHrall to be budled
by the tuk force, wblcb a1lo ll looklq blto t1'0 dllappearancet. Tbe
deatbaanddlaappearancesbaveoccurred1blceJu\11t'1t.
pearances. 1be deaths and dlaappearaneee have occurred atnce July
19'79.
Evacuees return to home.
FLAGSTAFF, Aris. (AP) -More than 2,000 realdenta picked up
their dally activities today two days after they were evacuated from
their homes when four railroad tank can carrying 126,000 1allou of
potentially explosive butane der,ailed.
The last of the four dama&ed tanken wu put back on the tracks
by giant cranes shortly alter sundown Wednesday and an en1ine
towed it to an isolated siding 18 miles eut ef here for ualoadina.
<:olumbi.a laundring OK'd
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP) -The space shuttle Columbia
poised on the launchpad and virtually ready to fly, was given ruial ap:
prov al Wednesday to make its maiden voyage shortly alter sunrise
April 10.
wrnrnarn
Thailand rebels
seek to meet king
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP> -Rebel commanders requested
an audience with King Bhumipol Adulyadej today to explain why
thev revolted against Prime Minhter Prem Ti.muJanonda Radio
Thailand said. They said they hoped Prem wou0ld not
''monopolize" the monarch, whose support ii crucial for control.
The king and the entire royal family are with Prem to
northeastern Korat, where the local radio announced that former
Prime Minister Kriangaak Chomanan was appointed to mediate
between Prem and the coup leaden because Krin&sak "is respect·
ed by both sides."
The radio said Kringsak traveled to Korat, 1SO miles northeut
of Bangkok, for an audience ~th the klna then returned to
Bangkok lo talk with coup leader Gen. Sant ChiipaUma.
Polnnd strike al81. off
W~RSA~. P~land <~P> -The Solidarity labor federation can-
c.eled its nationWJde strike alert in preparation for new negotia·
tlons wtth the Polish government.
But Moscow leve~ed a new charge of anti-Soviet activity in ~arsaw, and there still was no word of when mllltary maneuvers m and around Poland would end.
Shots fired at errixmy
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador <AP> -Half a dozen shot.a
were .fired a~ the front ~f the U.S. Embassy Wednesday night,
break'!'i. a wmdow but inJurinl no one, a Marine 1uard on duty at
the building reported.
The attack, the fourth oo the embassy within a month, oc-
curred after the start of the .olptly curfew to San Salvador and ~here were no eyewiti;ies• report.a. But lt wu assumed that th'e fir.
mg came from a passing car or truck.
Heavy fighting in BeUut
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -Heavy artiJJery and rocket fire
broke out today along the so-called "Green Line" dlvidtnl the
Moslem ~d: ~hristian sectors of Bel.rut, and one re1>0rt raid at
least six civilians were killed. Beirut's airport was shut down and
the Mediterranean harbor reported enl\llfed to black smoke
A spokesman for President Ellu Sarkis said the fi1btbig wu
between the Lebanese arm7 and Syria peaceteepin1 forces. He or-
dered a ce~fire three houn lnto the flibting, but there was no
immediate response f~om either aide.
.
W ASHIN~ tA.P> -Prtm·
. cleatll ............ llalt .... blood ............. ... .............. .c-----1ald ....., •'fMu ..... , mlPt
... ldm'' at nnt ....... "' problema ftadi1aa tM wOWNI,
~--.uw medieal IOUl'eel .., • TM~oltM ftnt UX·
lo~u •ome1au at Geora• w~ UnlvenltJ R':tetal 11.-ecdlicttd wlUa m al re~ tbat Reacu "waa at no
tlme lDuyaerlouldAJller. ••
The MW'ffl •bo recouated the
eveata to The A.uoelau.d Preu
aatd doctorl eumta.lq Reqan
COPCl~ shortly after be U'·
rived at tbe boultal tbat be wu tn
dan1erol 1llppln1 into fatal shock
duetoloPottdood. / •
WHITE BOUSE offlclall, who
ordered boepltal authorities not to
dlacuas the incident, aald they
could neither confirm nor deoy
the account, itven on condition
the sources not be ldenUfled.
The sources said doctors
described Reaaan as "pretty
ashen lookin1," aa tho\llh be
could be in shock, after be col-
lapsed at the emeraency room
door and was ca~bt by Secret
Service agents and medics.
Reagan was tiolsted quickly on-
to a stretcher, where docton
noticed that bis blood pressure
was low and fallln1 rapidly. The
New York Times quoted an in·
tern, Dr. William O'Neill. as say-
ing that the president's blood
pressure was 78, lower than
usual, but that it returned to
normal after he lay down.
DR. SOLOMAN Edelstein, an
anesthesiologist and director of
the hospital's emergency
services, said he arrived to the
emergency room at least several
minutes after Reagan. He gave
the president's blood pressure aa
80 -still low-but discounted re-
ports that Reagan's llfe was in ex-
treme danger.
The figures given by O'Neill
Writer hoped
president
would die
PHILADELPHJA <AP) -A
writer for the University of Penn-
syly ania 's student newspaper
says in his weekly column be
hoped President Reagan would
die from the gunshot wound the
president suffered in an atSempt
onblslife.
The column by Dominic Manno,
a senior from south Philadelphia,
~lso suggested frustration with
the political system could be suffi-
cient motive for an individual to
use "a bullet to cancel out the
ballot."
.Tb~ comments in the weekly
C1tys1de column, published in
Wednesday 's Daily Penn-
sylvanian, outraged readers and
brought a flood of angry
telephone calls and letters, said
Executive Editor Andrew
Kirtzman. On the advice of
counsel, be delined further com-
ment.
KEVIN TUCKEB, special
a~ent in charge of the Secret
Service office here, said an in-
vestigation was being conducted
into the column.
But Tucker declined to provide
any details or to say whether
Manno, a former city editor of the
Daily Pennsylvanian, bad been
charged ln connection with the
comments.
"Obviously, we are interested
in whether those comment.a are
his beliefs, whether he has a pro-
pensity to carry them out or
whether be bas a propensity for
violence,'' Tucker sald.
Sefffeda~
necessitated
the retnOWal of
• large lllnOUnt
of bf a In t6ssue.
_;;:~1!""!9'-Bullet was lodg9d 6n the
right aide of the bfain.
•bowt the ear.
,,,. ..........
DIAGRAM DETAILS JIM BRADY WOUND
Secretary'• recovery •exceptional'
and Edelstein were for the
systolic, or upper, component of
blood-pressure measurement.
Docton were unable to obtain the
lower, or diastolic, readin1
because of background noise -a
common occurrence.
Edelstein confirmed that
Reagan almost fainted but at-
tributed that to standing up for the
first time after losing a slgnlfi·
cant amountofblood.
Other sources, however, said
Reagan's blood pressure fell
rapidly, suggesting he was bleed·
ing heavily, but the doctors saw
no immediate sign that be bad
been shot, and the president, who
remained conscious throu1hout
the crisis, didn't realise it
himself.
HOSPITAL AND White House
authorities have said the 70·year-
old Reagan complained of pain in
hia left aide and said be wu hav-
ing difficulty breathing.
The sources said physicians ex-
amining Reagan with a
stethoscope heard no breathing
sounds on Reagan's left slde,
le,ading them to believe a lung had
collapsed and that his cheat cavi·
ty wa.s filling with either air or
blood. The doctors concluded, the
sources said, that Reagan wu in
danger of slipping into f alal shock
due lo the loss of blood. but they
Predleted In January
*ITB llOVNTING eYl41enceol
internal bleedtn1. tbe docton
carefully searched for a wound
and found the bullet bole. At tbat
point, a dratnaae tube was tnaert·
ed lnto Rea1an'1 chest cavity and
substa.nUal quantiUe. of blood
began nowtng out, the IOUl'cet
said.
Convinced then that the presi-
dent was hemorrha1in1, the
medical team be1an 1ivtn1 the
president five pint.a of blood by
transfusion and were relieved
that it could keep up with the rate
of bleedin&.
The president bad loet nearly
half his blood supply already, and
if he bad continued to bleed faster
than doctors could transfuse fresh
blood into bis circulatory system,
he could not have survived long,
thesources said.
A.fter Reagan's condition
stabilized, the decision was made
lo perform exploratory sureery to
remove the bullet and repair the
damage to Reagan's lune. the
sources said.
A senior physician who reached
the emergency room five to seven
minutes afteitlhe president said
Reagan was saved by immediate
blood transfusions.
"My feeling is at no time in the
emerge.ncy room was the presi·
dent in danger, mainly because be
was resuscitated immediately,"
said the doctor, who asked oot be
to be identified.
Psychic 'saw' shooting
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
psychic who two months a«o pre-
dicted on a1elevision show many
of the de'lails of President
Reagan's bl"U5h with death says
she was shocked that her forecast
came true, but not really sur-
prised. Tamara Rand, 32, predicted on
a show taped in January that
President Reagan would ex·
perience "a thud" in "the chest
area•' during "the la!t few days ol
March," and that "someone fair·
haired" would be involved.
SHE SAID there would be
''sbotaallovertheplace."
On March 30, President Reagan
was shot in the chest. Three other
men were wounded. A sandy·
haired man, John W. Hinckley
Jr., was charged with the aa·
sassination attempt.
"It was even .shocking to me,
although I must tell you . . . I just
sort of knew," she said Wednes-
day. •
The prediction was made on the
No regrets
aho~ut film,
says Jodie
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)'-
Jodle FOiler, the younc actress
suddenly thrust into a real-life
suspense 1tory, says she was
"very scared" by the reallaUon
that a man who wrote her love
letten la the alleged wouJd·be
killer of President Reaaan.
''I want to get back to a
normal life," she said.
But she says she baa no
regret.a about her role as a 12·
year-old proetitute in the movie
"Taxi Driver." In that rum, the
prota1onl1t, Travis Bickle,
writee a letter to tbe proeUtute
just before leaving home wltb
the intention of sboottn1 a
political candidate .. He doeln't
succeed. .
''In no way have I evetl been
sorry about any mm that J bave
doae," abe said Wednesclaf.
"I'm not really clear ii there
are uy connectiom" between
the mone mad tM uauataatioa
attempt. abe taid. "Al far u I
am cwenaecl, lt'a a plee• ol ftc·
tion."
JobD W. H1Dckle7 Jr., tbe Z.
'1•ar·olcl maa wllo bH been
cbar1ed wttb tr.rln1 to klll Rea1a on Moaday, apparently
.. ftt • Mrt• ol ''lov•tne let· ten" to Jnll ro.ter 11. at her
Yale UDh'•ralty dormltor1, autboriU• takt. ·
AD'd '#bea RlacUe1 '1
W ••:.!:.ftoD botel room WH ... ,. ..,.. -Dl'tilldiDt .....
1b0t, amc1a11 bmd u 'iiimaUN
l.U. to 11111 J'oater Vldlc..,
IM wllllted to lmprta bll' bJ ..................
Dick Maurice show, a talk show
originating in Los Angeles that is
aired on Atlanta stallon WTBS. A
tape of the program was shown
late Wednesday on Cable News
Network in Atlanta. CNN
spokesman Chip Waller said the
program wa.s videotaped Jan. 6 in
Las Vegas and broadcast in mid-
March.
On the tape, Ms. Rand, of Los
Angeles, said, "the last few days
of March or early April" would be
"a crisis time" for Reagan.
She also said there wouJd be a
"crisis time" for Rea1an in July,
although she did not specify what
would happen.
ON THE JAN. t show she said
that when she thought about late
March, he fell a "thud" in the
chest area. She said it could mean
a heart attack or a stroke, "but
there; are gunshots all over the
'place and it could be an asaasslna·
tion."
"I hope I'm wrong," she added.
She said Reagan "wiU stay
strong for a period ofti~e."
Ms. Rand said, "I don't feel a
conspiracy. It bas to do with
somebody young. The only thing I
can attach to it ls H\.fmley, and
maybe a Jack or something lite
that," she said, suggesting a
name that would be involved in
the event.
Ms. Rand said Wednesday
night that a friend had gone to
Washington, D.C. to try to warn
the White House of impending
danger.
"She came back frustrated,"
said Ms . Rand.
Held in rape
LOS (AP> -A 37-year-old
man has been arrested in con-
nection Witt\ the rape of an 11·
year-old girl who Yo'.aS waiting to
take a bus to school.
J.. •
lit • SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A publlc·relatlou flrJll't alletadon
-nlhat another IJ'OUP IOt a l~craijve state eontratt because of it.a
b J)dlitical Ue1 ~··been rebuffed by the state Department of Health
1..Jiervices. ' «:> The deputm~nt on Wednesday denied a pro&ett Ruaaom le Lffper of San Francisco, wblcb blcl umuccesafully for a Sl milUon,
lS-month pro1ram to aet California parents~ talk with their children
lo•boutsex.
n. Donald Solem, president ol Solem and Aaaociates of San Fran-bi~lsco.._ which was awarded tbe contract, la a former executive
ti. secretary of the California Democratic Party.
-:'JJ;otm /omu Senat.e oampai.gn group
h SACRAMENTO <AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. hat formally
"3 created a U.S. Senate campaign committee and filed papers which al·
low him to raise funds, a top aide confirms.
•1• Ttie action, learned Wednesday, stops just short of a formal
Jr declaration for the Senate seat now heid by Republican S.I.
tir Hayakawa. vcl ~;Hell's Angela oonvicti.on overturned
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A former Hells Angels leader hu won
xi a new trial because a federal appeals court says the prosecution may
fJr ba ve lied in efforts to obtain a search wan ant against him. ...
,~ The9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesdaytbe1ovem·
11, ment may have been gullty of "deliberate falsification or reckless
,11 disregard for the truth'' in the case of Lawrence ''Moose" Chesher,
~i· for.mer head of the San Francisco Hells ~gels chapter. He is serving
a ftve·year sentence at a federal prison m Missouri for possessing a
1111 methampbetamine laboratory.
~~ 1,300 #war A.danla mothers :lri OAKLAND CAP> -More than 1.300 people jammed the Allen
H Temple Baptist Church in Oakland Wednesday night ~ listen to
1 speeches by two mothers of slain Atlanta children.
'" The two women, Venus Taylor and Willie Mae Mat.bis, are ~· traveling around the country to raise money to send black Atlanta 1
1 children to summer camp. ') .
•11 Tel.ethon sets rerotd
1. LOS ANGELES (AP> -This year's Easter Seal telethon com·
•· pleted its 20-hour broadcast earning a record $17 million in cash,
· checks and pledges for the rehabilitation of disabled children ano
'"' adults, telethon officials say.
• .. :.
The loth annual telethon originated here but was carried on 130
television stations nationwide. The program ended Sunday.
The Daily Pilot reported an incorrect figure Monday.
Carol gets re que s ts
LOS ANG&Ll'.S (AP> -WQDt 8~ Mriled of a van.&)' OI mlarepl'nentatiou aad frau4
con.neeted witb trut dMCll, bu ·
*n natralHd from utlnc h1a
real estate and mortaaa• 1oaa broker UceaHI pendilif a heart.n1
next month In Superior Court.
The restra.lnlna order wu ob-
tained Wednesday in a 1ult by the
California Department of Real
Estate that seeks au lnjunction
asalnst Burton and his companies
and "other ... reUef," said
Deputy Attorney General
Richard Bakke.
Burton It accused of bilkinl
$100 million from 6,000 ln\'eston
In what bas beeb called the
larsest trust deed fraud ln state
history,
BURTON'S companies fallins
under the restraining order are
Universal Financial, Callfornla
Equities Home Loan, Unlv~al
Home Loan and Universal Home,
said David H. Fox, director of the
Department of Real Estate.
Superior Court Judge Leon
Savitch set May 14 for Bakke's of·
fice as the attorney for the
Department of Real Estate, he -
said.
Burton is specifically accused
of putting falsely inflated values
nn real estate bought with in·
yestor funds ; co·mingllng funds;
telling investors they were get·
ting first or second-trust deeds -
loans ori real estate -when they
allegedly got lower priority liens;
and concealing that be borrowed
more than $25 million of the in-
vestors' money.
LAST WEEK, U.S. District
Judge Mariana Pfaelzer appoint-
ed former bank president Walter
M. Sharp as receiver of Burton's
San Bernardino-based Universal
Financial Corp. The federal order
str ipped Burton of control over
the business. which includes
some of the highest priced de-
velopments in downtown San
Bernardino.
Kla n r a l l ies in Scaeramento
Robed members of Ku Klux Klan return
shouts at demonstrators in onlooking
crowd as they hold rally Wednesday near
Capitol in Sacramento. The klan is raising
"racism" charges against a black state
parole officer for revoking a klan mem-
ber's parole for carrying a weapon.
•
Coastal plan approved
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
(AP> -San Mateo County bas
become the ftrst Calilomia coun-
ty to win state approval of its
coastal development program,
according to a state Coastal
Commission official.
The county can start issuing
building permits in the coastal
zone Thursday, said Peter
Douglas, commission deputy ex-
·ecutive director. It will be the
first time the county has bad
that right since state voters 'ap·
proved a coastal protection in·
itiative in 1972.
The city of San Francisco aha
won approval of its coastal plan
and ordinances, subject to ap.
provaJ or its supervisors, and
Marin County won approval of
its plan, but not the ordinances
to carry it out.
THE APPROVALS will allow
the local governments to tegain
authority to issue building
permits in the ribbon of land
along the California shor e.
which has been regulated by re-
gional boards under supervision
or the state board.
Meanwhile, commissioners
complained that a lobbyist for
state cities was premature in an-
nouncin' a tentative agreement
that would reduce the com·
mission's regulation of the
sprawling coast.
"There was no tentative
agreement, no agreement at
all," Douglas asserted. "The
commission was, to put it mild-
ly, upset."
A MEMO announcing a ten·
tative pact on several crucial
coastal issues was distributed to
a state Assembly committee this
week by League or Cities lob·
byist Russell Selix .
LOS ANGELES (APl -Carol
Burnett has been deluged with mail
from people asking her lo donate
some of the $1.6 million she won in
her suit against the National
Enquirer to charity.
Miss Burnett had announced she
would give the winnings away at a
>~ e 1 e v i s e d
post-victory press
tonference. But a
spokesman for the
actress sa id
Wednesday that
·people apparently
·did not · hear her
an n ounce that
s h e 'd already
chosen three
charities. 8UaNETT
"SHE'S BEEN getting an awful lot
I Of mail from people asking her tO
aonate some of her winnings,.'
'Ingersoll said. "The letters are going
to her , her attorneys, her business
manager. I've even received some."
He said the money has been prom1se a to tnree pre·cnosen
charities and added, "Besides, it
could be months or years before sne
gets any money."
The National Enquirer has
announced plans to appeal the jury
verdict.
Enquirer attorney William
Masterson said Wednesday he wiU
file a motion and brief next week
asking for a new trial on grounds
there was insufficient evidence to
support the \lerdict and the damages
awarded were "excessive."
ATTORNEYS for both sides have
s aid appeals in the case could take
two years.
Miss Burnett sued the Enquirer
over a 1976 gossip column item which
accused her of boisterous behavior lo
a Washington D.C. restaurant and
claimed she had argued with then
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The tabloid ultimately retracted the
item as incorrect.
Miss Burnett, who missed Tuesday
night's Academy Award ceremonies
because she had the flu. left Los
Angeles on Wednesday for her
second home on the Island of Maui
where Ingersoll said she planned to
rest and spend time with her family.
K.l.D.S. FASHION srow
,.
Saturday, April 4
A spring look at bright and fun
Easter fashions for boys and girls ..
modeled by Orange U>unty K.l.D .S.
' Todays
Maximum
Interest
Guaranteed
for 30 months
withnominimllm
balance in
Home Federal
Countl\'--11 :00 a.m . and 2:00 p.m.
Refreshments will be served.
Appearance by Surprise guest.
"ART IN'·'
Every Saturday in April from
. 1 :00 to 3:00 p.m.
Earn Home Federal's maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Market' Certificates -Paying % % more interest than
any bank. Effective through April 13.
I
·Wllege boun&ry shift
Saddleback Community College District trustees
have unanimously approved a reapportionment plan
shifting tbe boundaries of the seven areas making up the
college district that are represented by each of the
trustees.
The realignment will provide for a more equal
number of residents in each of the seven districts. The
boundary shift was prompted by rapid incr eases in
population in the Irvine and Tustin districts since the last
reapportionment in 1975.
The number of registered voters in each area who
were counted in the last·presidential election was used in
drawing the new boundaries. Each of the seven districts
is now within 5 percent of 29,680 votes.
Despite being up for re-election in November,
Trustees William Watts, Eugene McKnight and Robert
Price joined their fellow board members in approving the
plan.
The district trustees we re not required by law to
redraw the boundaries. In the interest of fair and more
effecti ve representation, they decided to do so. They are
to be commended for correcting the imbalance on their
own initiative.
School ltulCh cuts
It appears school childr en in the Capistrano Unified
School District enrolled in the free and reduced-price
meal program will t>e some of the first to feel the pinch of
the budget cutting in Washington.
District administrators say laws enacted by Congress
in December have forced them to tighten the eligibility
requirements for receiving free or lower-priced meals in
school cafeterias.
Effective immediately, eligibility will be based only
on family size and income. Previously, other hardship
conditions were taken into consideration in deciding on a
child's eli gibility for assistance.
These included unusually high medical costs, rent or
mortgage payments in excess of 30 percent of the family
income, special education expenses due to a child's men-
tal or physical condition. and disaster or casualty losses.
These can no longer be considered in a parent's a p-
plication for free or reduced-cost hot meals and free
milk, according to district administrators.
The Capistrano district has been given 60 days to
process the applications of the children involved. Reported·
ly there are now 1,800 youngsters enrolled in the assistance
p"rogram.
Conservative paUticians in Washington have pledged
to cut the "fat" from government. In this case, the fat in·
eludes food for school children. • Opinions expressed m lhe space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their .authors and
artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Reuxuds
By L.M. BOYD
One fact more than any
other explains why rewards
offered for information lead·
ing to the capture and con·
viction of criminals have
been so succ~sful. Lawmen
claim that there's all'J\OSt in-
variably al least one person
other than the criminal who
can name the guilty party.
Q. What's the difference
between "lacon i c" and
"sardonic"?
A. Laconic alludes to the
old S p artan s -more
. specifically. the Laconia
Greeks -who were known to
talk as little as posslble. Jt
means terse, Sardonic comes
from the Greek sardonlos. It
means skeptically humorous.
Example: The observation
was sardonic when the father
said, "I've spent t wo
fortunes on my kids. One for
their teeth and one for their
education . They use their
teeth.''
It was not the mother of an
ugly baby who said: "You
can't love a butterfly unt.n
you h ave l oved a
caterpillar.'' It was a
Benedictine nun. Ab6ut 500
yeanqo.
Biblical scholars think that
the people wbo knew tbe
mother ol Jesus Cbrlat 2,000
years a10 pronounced her
name more like Miriam than
Mary.
What a lot of l>'OJ>lfl doe't
realize ii tt\at more than bait
the dl'OW'llinS vlctiml ln tlda
country were so loaded wttb
ltquor at the Umes o( their
deaths that they could have
been desl111ated a• le•ally
drunll. Medical examtnert'
atatiJUca prove that.
I
Attbou1h Adolf Hitler
smoked cl1arettea aa, a
youUt. be qWt al •P 2&, Mel
after la• 80t tb• Job H
P'Ubrw, DO G.-mAn and In
fore.,..,.. ever farid 1mote
a c.,....te ln hla praence.
L..,; W ASBJN070N -!'ht .alaJ~ betweil ~· l1Dite4
lta&el -~ ~ Uaba Of!· eun U No le¥tll . .,,... II I
difen.~ Of eollUINDtea• by
dlploa:ietie .-.. oral nclwtae
uct .............. DCi .... .
But a-. II alio a eo.ert eom· -~ nettrodl. wlilCb Cir• ~ ...... mtU .....
DIDlomau •rt ta ••ine r~· .,.d .. Jlke ran t.ropiclll blrda.
Tb•Y haye
learned to
com mun'lcate
wlth one
a bother
throuth near-
1 n au d Ible
IOUnda, poses
and 1estures.
If there ii lo
be an accom·
modation
between U\em, they may prefer
that it be implicit rather than
explicit.
An arran1ement may be
reached throuih a process of
a lmost imperceptible move-
Mailbox
m•ata. ~ldeDce1, di1c1'Mt wtata,.., rldMd ,,.browt llMI
knowlnc 111\Uet, Tbrouab till.I
cleUtN lltOHts, aa unde,..&and·
•• •PP .. tt t.!' be Je1Un1 betwen ti•• Ronald lttaC•h
Wbll• Houu and tbto t.onld
B"1biie¥ Krniltn.
8B8Stl THE tacit, tentatJve.
tMuoua arran•ement as It ls un·
• deratood by my sources at the
hi1hett level•:
-RM•an wm bold down U.S.
tnterven&n in El Salvador and
seek to cool the crisis. Brezhnev,
ln recu.rn. will restrain Soviet
lotcea in Poland and try to keep
a lid on that crtsle-;
-AlSY Soviet move aealnat
Poland, it la al10 understood
would be countered by U.S. ac·
lion against Cuba. The United
States may not be able to stop a
Soviet invqion of 'Poland, but
the Soviet Union 15 in an equally
weak 1poeitlon to prevent a U.S.
military move against Cuba.
-Brei.bnev wlll halt, or at
least restrict, the flow of
military auppUe1 to tile I•·
""l•DU Jn ICI Sahador.
Otberwtae, Rea1an wlll start
1upplyt.q the auerrutu wbo are
battllac Soviet troops ln
A11h&niltM.
-aBAGAN Al..80 w1nta the
Kremlin to 1top encoure1ln1 and
aYpportlna antl·America.n move-
ments ln Centr1I America, or
else he will atlr \lP anU•Soviet
activity in E,astem Europe.
-Reacan Is most toncerned
about a poaible Soviet tbruat in·
to Iran, which .-ould threaten
the Western World's oil supply
in the Persjan Gulf. Hints have
been relayed to Brezhnev,
therefore. that the UnJted States
would resist any overt attack
and respond to a covert move by
sending mass arms shipments to
Communist China.
-Reagan has also sent dis·
creel signals to Brezhnev that
the United States will no longer
remain passive whJle the ltremJin
sets up pro-Soviet governments in
Africa. If Brezhnev sends his
Cuban allies into another African
cou•Ur)'. •••I•• •l,..t ~ .eovra,. tM ICYPUDI to ....,.
•1almtlJbJa. ,
OI course. tlMtie an ..........
ar precirioUI mt belt net eolW IM upliet by mw dev.ao,•111•
But It would be accurate eio ,.
port that Reacan and Breahnev
art beetnninc tO underttend one
another. 1
WATCH ON WASTE : Mal~
fund• for 1chool lunches are~bt~
Jni cut back, tbe admlni•tra
has mana1ed to increase teder
fundina for the nation's gun aft.
clonadoe. The Army's Depart.
ment of Civillan Marksmanshl~
with Its customary support from
N atlonal Rine Association lob-
byists, will be given $444.000 thl$.
year. The money will go fqr
"trophies a nd c lassification
badges" won by private gup
club members. who are pre·
sum ably prospective, Army
recruits. Incredibly, the NRA
. had talked Congress into nearly
doubling last year's target·
s hooting largesse, but the
budget cutters were able to hold
the increase to "only" $19,000.
E n ergy Department
poohbahs have three methods of
getting cars to use on govel1)-
ment business: The cheapest oP.
lion is to requisition a car from
a General Services Administra·
lion motor pool. The second.
slightly more expensive way is
to have the GSA lease a car
from a private firm. The third
and far more costly method is
for the bureaucrat to lease the
car himself and send the bill t.O
the government. Under Option
No. 3. the official gets to use the
car for private business. as long
as he pays the modest mileage
cost. Predictably, investigators
found that three out o( every
four DOE bureaucrats entitle(!
to cars choose the third method.
Some developers have been
taking advantage of federal
housing subsidies for the poor to
add unnecessary luxury items
that in effect increase the sub·
sidies they get. In Santee. Calif ..
for exampl,.-. a government ·
subsidized project included a
s wimming pool . recreation
rooms and paved parking
What do economists know about workers?
To the Editor:
Regarding Nicholas von Hoff-
man's March 24 article on
"Promise to Older Americans,"
we wonder if George Will, who
voices the opinion that the eJder·
ly are America's biggest prob·
lem, has e'fer known a blue col-
lar wortter? One who does
physical labor all his life? One
who at the age of 62, has to force
himself out the door every morn·
ing, wondering if he can make it
to 65 ?
IS TIUS what he has to look
fo rward to? So some nut that
has it made. and never had to
work or pay into Social Security
can tell him that he has to work
until he is 70 or 75? That he is
lazy, selfish. and socially ir·
responsible? How about the
children he has raised, who are
now working and paying taxes?
Are they a drag on the economy
too ?
What are these so-called
economists trying to do to
America? Give our country
away to a k>reign power? If the
American worker does not have
a voice in these matters. what is
the use of working. paying t.ax-
es, raising children (5) to
become good Americans?
Mr. von Hofrman really laid it
on t he line in his article. 1 wish
this letter could be forwa~ded to
so·called economist Norman
Macrae and George Will . And· to
our President. Do you think it
would make a di(ference in their
way of thinkinl{? Even a litUe?
MRS. L. SANDERS
8aelc ••• ~•••• To the Editor:
The present cost of cleaning
up the Back Bay with the City of
Newport Beach required to pay
$440,000, as reported in your
paper March 20, should be borne
by the iealous environmen·
tallsts. They're the OPes that
caused It to..., get so dlrty.
Between Sl>ON, the Frieacl8 of
the Earth aDd the Coastal Com·
mlsaioo they stopped its dMa·
ing for enoush years to realfy
cause tllll unfortW1ate condition.
Now al course tile coats have f~I tO horrddoul amouats.
~ ..... coete lbould DOt be
Ui• lturden of lbe populace, but
of U.e •aloul ldloU ~t eaUled
thtln.
THE 0>8T of paying for the
preaervatlon of envlronmenU.l
u1Uneu baa alread)' wel1hed
too heavily on Uie populace. ADd
Uley are 1ett1n1 tlffd of It. Why
thould the citiaeu of Newport
hach have to pay $4t0,000 (ot
tbl• WJne~eaaary expenditure
when tben are so many vital
Hrvic. that are not 1ulftclllltl1
hinded? And Wb)' abould dtkma
of other partl of the COUD\r7 be
required to pay the other $3.S
million out of funds they need
for other purposes when m~t of
them don't even know where
Newport Beach is?
It's time to look at the poten-
tial results or all our acts before
we act on just the emotional
view of the moment. It could
save us a lot of future troubles.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
T~lwri~••• I To the Editor: r agree that a competency test
for teachers would be great
.... but just what can be done
with a teacher proved
incompetent?
I propose that both the
previously mentioned lest and
the removal of tenure for
teachers would be the ideal
system. A mere test alone will
not suffice in the effort to rid our
schools of incompetent teachers.
THE NO W-OBSOLETE
system of tenure was evoked to
prevent nefarious employers
from firing teachers for such
ridiculous reasons as smoking
cigarettes or dating
.. undesirable" members of the
opposite sex.
As anyone can see, we no
longer need this, ma1nly due to
tbe presence of strong unions
and effective upholding of the
law. OnJy incompetent te'\chers
need be afraid for their jobs, and
only they will have you believe
tenure i s n ecessary . not
obsolete.
EILEEN DORN
A.,e11t• l••.it~d
To the Edltor:
I m\llt regi1ter a vlcorous ob-
jection to tbe 1entlments ex·
pressed by M1. Truitt in her art:i·
cle in the 'Jbunday March 19,
1981, special sedlon called "I
Am Woman."
Her statement that: "There's
really not much d.Werence in
buytna an tnaurance p0llcy by
mail or from an a1ent" does a
tremeoclou dlHenlce to the
buyiq public u well u beinc a
direct imuJt to the tboualDCll ol
insurance •tenta around the eoant11.
IP •Y memory HrvM m•
cC)rrec:tly tbroulh reaillll YoW'
paper OV9r a number of ,..,., 10me of the 1reatut 1uma
perpetrated upon tbe publlc
bave been tbroulb tbe maUI.
Tlllt .. not to .. , t.bat buta1 In·
auraDC!tl thrCMalb tbe mall'il not
often ctcm. ancf In faet tMn II an
tnduttry ~ whole IUlietilli II
to .ee. thlit everyone II•..._ IP
·-up. Tbll .. allO -~ tlt•t....,.. .... ...
tM ............. -•• 11•11---•~•t1•
tribution that should be looked
at and utilized ~s the articl•
poin\.S out.
Ms . Truitt's statement -
while obviously totally incorrect
-is widoubted.Jy made fr'om a
lack of knowledge rather than
any attempt to demean a whole
profession.
JAMES C. KR EDER
~•pegoa•
To the Editor:
The Baglin Administration is
desperately in ne ed of a
scapegoat. The cosmetic face
lift given to the American
Legion Building was disastrous.
The only certainties are that the
$218,000 budget is depleted. the
noise factor will not go away,
and the senior citizens will not
use the American Legion Build-
ing until the noise factor is re-
duced to acceptable levels so
that they may run their classes
normaUy. <And this may not be
possible.>
Now for the first time the
Baglin Administration says it 1s
going to have qualif~ed cons~t·
ants check the noise factor.
Why wasn't this done before our
hard-earned tax dollars were
wasted?
WE HAVE documented
evidence that the American
Legion B'uilding project never
really had a ch ance. A l~ter re-
ceived by the Department of
.Planning dated Sept. 4, 1980 tells
it all. The BagUn Administration
authorized only $5,000, or about
2~ percent of the total '>utlay,
on tbe' most serious problem fac·
ing the Legion Building: the
noise factor.
The scapegoat the Baglln Ad·
ministration is looking for is our
own City Council and our cur-
rent City Manager, Ken Frank,
who was our City Manaaer on
Sept. 4, 1980 and thus Is an equal
scapegoat wilh our City Council.
ALAN E. ADAMS
s_..._.._...,.,~~
To tbe Jtdltor:
I can only echo the feelinfs ol
Laurie Swaln tbat Frederick
Scboemebl'a Marcb 18 artlcle-
enttUed "Wipe Out the Burro
Menace'' wu lU-advlsed and
WH bued on bl• childhood
trauaa•. Uthe Pilot'• edltortal
policy 18 to renfft feaH 1tem-
m I n_f r(rom • rei)ort,r'a chll~ dl1Uk .. , • theft secret
Sunday slaughters by the Navy
are acceptable and by the same
rationale. goats, hogs. deer. rat>.
bits. even people. could be
"shot ehmrnated once and for
a ll ." in this manner.
Schoemehl's insensitive ap-
proach has offended thousands
ol people who approve of the
Bureau of Land Management's
capture and' adoption plan or the
Fund for Animals Contributors'
humane rescue program of the
burros by helicopter from the
floor of the Grand Canyon. The
lauding of the burros· slaughter,
when in fact the Navy's action
might be totally illegal. shows
total la~ of r~search by your re-
porter.
WILLIAM HARNEVIOUS
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR
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AU ... re flntellt•
To the Editor·
·While reading the letter
regarding the proposed Newport
Cent er e xpansion. it ia
interesting to note how tb~
.. inconveniences" of a few
people are always named, but
the benefits lo all are never
mentioned. 1
How about the fact that the
expanson of Newport Center by
the Irvine Company will bring to
. the· City of Newport Beach
additional aMual revenues of $~
million for all to bene(it from?
How about the fact that th'
l.r vine Company is spending $8.J
million of Its own money tq
Improve t he roads to be lj
alleviate cong estion fot
everyone's benefit? t
H ow about the fact the
expansion will provide mor
goods and services for th'
residents of Newport Beach ~
all can maintain and enbanct
thelr standards of living? Isn't
that What it'• au about anyway?.
It is always too ·easy t~
pinpoint •·tnconvenJences" of
few. Possibly these few aboul
take a bl"09der look and aee
benefits for all to share.
all, tbey are a part of the "all
too! HOWAftD J>ERM
,
----=::r"' -·--·
I
Bisi.,.,, la Cite •.Wag . . \
Purchased by the city for $80,000, Ute
three.year-old buildln1 wu moved nearly
three mil• over city streetl recenUy. The
3,000-1quare-foot structure will house his·
torical documents and artif acta.
covered
• SACB.UISNTO <AP>-Pnll· dent l•1u'1 b6lll at Oeai'le Wub..,,. Uai•M'llt1 ~ mar bil p8I by luuruu,..
vlded by the 1tate ol C1llfoml1,1
• apoteawoman f9f the 1t1te re-
tirement system aald.
llartba Nllbl, mana1er ol tbe
State of Calllornta Lelialaton'
ftetlNmeat Syatem, wlileb cov-
ers all retired and elected 1tate
oftlclala, conftrmed Wedoeed.ay
that ftealan le atlll covered by
tbe 1roup health lnaurance •
policy be bad .. 1ovemor.
STNrs ascoaos .. , the
state paya t80 per anonth for
Rea1an'1 Blue Crou and Blue
SbJeld health and boepJtallution
in1uraoee and toward bis
peuian.
Dellr ~ '"",...
BANK OP AMERICA ITUDeNT AWARD WINNERS
Vlctotla Verrtco end CINtntpMr C••ud•r
B·coast students
winners of awards
$500, but are eligl bJe to win $2,000.
Costa Mesa Hlatorlcal Socle~'I bead·
qµarters, formerly the Oranp Coast Sav·
ings and Loan AasociaUoo olflce at MeN
Verde Drive and Adams Avenue, sita oo
blocks awaiting a concrete slab, at its new ·
location at downtown Lions Part. It wun't immediately known
whether tbe president would use
tbat Insurance to pay tbe
medical bllJs from lbe as-
sassination attempt against him
Moow, or bow much those billa
miebt total.
Eight Oruge Cout studenta
were winners in the Bank of
America's 34th annual Achieve-
ment Awards semi-finals in four
categories: vocational, floe and
liberal arts, and science/math.
Second place winners were ..
Newport g~ts new ·
personnel 'chief
The 34-year-old former &Slis·
tant personnel director for the
City of Inglewood has been
named Newport Beach's new
personnel director.
Lorenzo Mota, a resident of
Lakewood, began bis chorea in
the Newport Beach personnel
department Monday. He will
earn $2,287 a month.
Mota, who is married and has
four children, is a graduate of
Cal State Long Beach where he
also earned a master's deg~ in
public administration.
.Sol.ontkath
figure wins
trial delay
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Cit·
tn1 reluctance of some witnesses
to testify, former Peoples Tem-
ple member Larry Layton bas
won a delay in Im federal trial
on cbaraes of conspiring to till
Con1reasman Leo Ryan at a
jun1le airstrip ambush in
Guyana lD 1978.
But deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes cited
Reagan's state-provided
medical insurance when ques-
tioned about the bills Wednes-
day.
"ML aEAG-'N 18 covered by
bealt,b insurance with the State
of California. Mr. Reagan was
eli1ible to continue bis coverage
like any other retired state
employee, and be did exercise
that option. Beyond that, I am
not permitted by law to discuss
any individual's benefits," Ms.
Nishi said.
For most state employees, the
group insurance covers about 80
percent of the cost of most
medical and hospital bills.
First place winners of the
vocatlOf!al arts category, Vic-
tort'a Verrico of Dana Point, and
Fine Arts category Christopher
Cassady, of Irvine, will advance
to the flniUs May 20. They are
assured of cash prizes of at least
League sets
• • art auction
An art auction to raise funds
for the League of Women Voters
of the Orange Coast will be held
Sunday at the Veterans'
Memorial Community Center in
Laguna Beach.
Steven Bein of Newport Beach,
Derek Krueger of Irvine, aocl
Arkady Mak of Dana Point.
Each received $100.
Third place winners receiving
$75 were Lisa Payne of Newport
Beach and Bettina Nicely of
Laguna Beach.
Joseph 'Mader of Newport
Beach received $50 and a fourth
place UUe.
Selection of winners was made
on the basis of the students'
grades, leadership qualities,
community activities and their
performance in a group dis-
cussion of issues.
Cartoon classes
Cartooning classes will be held
beginning next week at the
Laguna Beach School of Art,
with syndicated comic artist
R oger Arms tron g a t the
blackboard.
He replaces Wayne Schwam-
mel, who left Newport Beach
after serving as personnel direc·
tor for two years. Schwammel is
now the personnel director in
Santa Maria, satlsfylng a desire,
friends say, to move closer to
the San Francisco area.
Before chaniing the trial date
Wednesday from May 12 to July
9, U.S. District Judge Robert F .
Peckham criticiud Layton's at-
torneys for faillnl to obtain a
medical expert for a psychiatric
defense and for not providing
the prosecution with a
psychiatric prcll.le of Layton by
Tuetday, aa ordered.
Reagan's pension for hls eight
years as governor, 1967 through
1975, was increased automatical-
ly for inflation from $17,600 last
year to $19<,432 this year, state
records say.
An art preview will be at 2
p.m., with the public auction
beginning at 3. Tickets, at $.1.50,
may be purchased at the cent.er
at the corner of Legion and
Catalina streets.
Armstrong's features include .
Mota, who started his career
working for the state's Employ·
ment Development Department,
likely will be initiated to city
business quickly with contract
negotiations with all city
employee groups set to begin
this month.'
William Brown remains as
Newport Beach's safety and in-
s urance administrator, the
second ranking position in the
personnel .department.
OCC slates
• air cou,i-ses
R e g i'S t r a ti o n f o r a l r
transportation courses "Tbe
Private Co-Pilot," "Air Traffic
Control for PUota" and "Hau
Gliding," is being conducted al
Orange Coast College in eo.ta
Mesa until April 10.
The nine-week counes are tui-
tion-fl'ft. Information ia availa-
ble by calling 556-5772.
................. ,....
TAKES PERSONNEL POST
Newport'• Mote
CIUl,dbirth
claa.es
avtUlab'le
The Capistrano Adult School is
now offering free courses in
childbirth education at
Capistrano Valley Higb School
in Mission Viejo.
Classes are scheduled to be«in April 8 in room C-1 of the schOOI
located at 2130l Via Escolar'.
The classes will run for nine
consecutive weeks from 7 to 10
p.m .
For further information and to
register caH Andrea Ysais,
certified childbirth instructor, at
495-6423, or the .adult school of-
fice at 493--0658.
Anti-violentt biU falters
SACRAMENTO CAP> -At-·
torney General George Deukme-
j ian 's proposal to let • court
forbid a meeting of any group
planning violence, includinc lbe
Ku K&ux KJan, bas run Joto free-
speeeb restltance. n happened Tuesday at a heer-
in1 -its first -before the Sena\e
Judiciary Committee.
Giant foundation
ends charitable saga
PECIDIA• ALSO postponed
until July 7 a bearing on a de-
fense motion to suppress an aJ.
le&ed coofession Layton signed
in Guyma four days after Ryan
was slain at the Port Kaituma aintrip.
The fatal shooting of the con-
1reuman and four otben oc-
curred Nov. 18, lt78, a few boun
before 913 People• Temple
members died In a mau
murder-suicide at their nearby
Jonestown settlement OD orden
from cult leader Jim Jones.
Ryan and tbe others bad been
vi1ltln1 Jonatown on a fact-
fiAdlng mtMiom ltemming from
complaints about tbe cult's operation.
La)1m'1 lawyera wanted a de-
IQ la the May 12 trial date to
enable them to subpoena docu-
ments and tapes from several
covernment a1encles, make an
investigative trip to Guyana,
and tty to round up more wit-
nesses for the defense.
··so•E wrrNESSES simply
do not want to become involved,
attorney Tooy Tam~urello said.
"They want to be left alone. So
we need more time for in-
veaUsation. ''
Federal Public Defender
James Hewitt told Peckham a
psychiatric defenae had not been
formulated becaU1e there are
oaly 10 pqebiatrtata 1n the coun-
try wttJl ~pertbe in mind COD·
trol and most were either un-
available or not interested work-
int with La
Laguna
exhibit
"Laeuna Legacy," an
exhibit ol worts from 30
artists instrumental in
developiq the Lacuna
Beach Art Aaaociatioo ln
1918, will begin Friday
at the Museum oC Art.
The exhibit, drawing
from private and pubpc
collections, will continue
through May 24.
Tbe museum, at 307
Cliff Drive, la open daily
except Tuesdays from
11;30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
3 graduate
Three Laguna Beach
residents have been
guduated from Chap-
man College with
bachelor of s cience
degrees.
Paul Howard
Courtney received bis
degree in business ad-
ministration, Richard
Edward Lockhard re-
ceived his in psychology
and John J. Mondry Jr ..
received a de gree in
biology. '
WALLPAPER SALE
SAVE
CARSON CITY, Nev. CAP) -One
of the nation's biggest fouodaUons
went out of busineaa after &iving
away $192 million in line with wishn
of its founder, gin and yeut maanate
Max C. F1eischmann.
for their handling of the foundation,
and ruled that they bad "fully and
completely " carried out their
responsiblllties. Not preHDt for UM
session were trusteea Walter Orr
l\oberta ud Seasloas Wheeler.
35%
OFFUSTPRD
H.JNDREDS OF CURRENT
POPULAR PATTERNS TO "You're all fired," Jolted Diltrict
Court Judge Frank GrelOl'Y tn lleu-
lng the final order Wednaday dta·
solving the tru1t set up folJowin&
"Major" Flels«!bmaan'• death In
1951.
GaEGOaY, WHO BAS oveneea
the truat for 21 years, adde4 to
trustees TbomH Little, .Julius
Beraen and Fran Breen tbat "wa'W
arown old and whtte·haJred lD U..
service of the fouadatlon. ''
"But to me, at leut, it baa Mia
worthwhile," the Juct1e •aid. bee._.
"you'•• doDe 10 muc:b 1ood ... f•
people who needed It."
Onr the life ot tbe foundau.11,
1,112 ............... Jl t. indlftdula
and ..-uUCIDI -I.be amallelt '°' S&SO ................ ...... to tM 11111.., Of,........ I
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• •IASSCLOT H . .........,.5
Little Lulu, Ella Cinders and
Napoleon and Uncle Elby .
For information, call Becky
Jones at 49'-6687.
For information, call the
school at 494·1520.
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MWHIDe RANCH PROVfOEI SUMMER TRAINING 'OR KIDS
Rohrt Chown, 1•, e"'911111n• fellow atudenta wtth l•aao
.
lJld west camp sclwol
trains ftdure ranchers
BONSALL (AP) -Clarence
Chown built Rawhide Ranch to
resemble a sort of Old Dodae City,
but the Christian non-denominational
school revolves not around guns, but
horses, cows, goats and rabbita.
'll'a an. experience that every kid
lives -'and he learns while having
fun," Chown said of bis 47-acre Old
West camp.
Rawhide Ranch provides
variations on the same theme for
J'OUngsters who range in age from
second graders to sophomores In
college. About 200 youngsters a week
Flip Wilson
arraigned on
drug charges
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Comedian
Flip Wilson has been arraigned in West
Los Angeles Municipal Court on drug
possession charges stemming from an
arrest at Los Angeles International
Airport last month.
Wilson, 47, is scheduled for an April
17 preliminary hearing in West Lo:s
Anieles Municipal Court on a district
attorney's complaint of two felony
coun\s -possessing cocaine and
possessing hashish oil. •
tOLICE SAID TREY found the
drtlgs on him at the airport March 10 as
be·• arrived from
flcSrida, where he
r~ceiv e d a
slt)er-city letter
{rop-i the mayor of
~agoya, Fla., to
prjng to Mayor
Tom BradJey. ,. The arrest
C•"' I m i n a t e d several days '
investigation by · WILSON
(be Los Angeles police and Los Angeles
County sheriff's deputies.
'f Right now this i5 being handled lite
any other case, but we're thinting of
appointing a special deputy, because
you guys are making such a big deal
Qdl of it," Deputy DUtrict Attorney
l ohn Beraull of the Santa Monica
ltra ncb office told The Associated f,nss .
I l\'ILSON WAS SCHEDULED to be
aruigned Tuesday but appeared in
court last Friday, apparently to avoid
.publicity. He was freed on $2,SOO bail
after being booked for allegedly
pe>lisessing 2.5 grams of cocaine and
1 M~eral grams of hashish oil.
.: ~esi~ his "Flip Wilson Show" on
JfBC·TV lo the early 1970s, Wilaon :A1~'kes-nightclub appearances In Las ~~cas and elsewhere, and has made
several comedy record albums.
participate in the summer program
while others come for camps at other
times of the year.
T HEaE IS ALSO day school for
grades two through 12 and a two-year
vocational school for ~olleae-age
studenta.
The boy campers live 1.r·
dor mitories shaped like covered
wagons while the girls share log
cabins clustered in Fort R•whide.
The youngsters awaken early and
spend two hours on horseback, 1tud)'
veterinary science, livestock produc-
tion and rodeo.
Despite its Western motif. Chown
insists, "It's not a dude ranch."
"We train the horses and children
the same way," said Chown, a
53-year-old former livestock dealer
who opened the school as a boys and
girls camp 17 ·years ago and
expanded it eight years ago. "It's not
in their ability to be champions all
the time and it's important not to
break their spirit."
IN FACT, CHOWN, whose four
sons were junior rodeo champions,
believes "the livestock industry is a
tremendous opportunity for youne
people -a multimillion dollar
industry."
He pointed out that former
Rawhide students easily flnd jo~ aa
horse trainers and ranchers and in a
range of related fields such as
camplnJ and recreation.
There are from 30 to 50 teachers or
paid ranch hands, who watch over a
student body which baa included
sons of a British diplomat, a Mexican
governor and Japanese businessmen,
Canadians and Australians.
A class in Bible is taught, but
Chown's students range in belief
from Anglicans to Roman Catholics.
T HERE ARE 1%5 horses in corrals
at his spread three miles east of
Bonsall in rural northern San Diego
County , and the kids get 30,000 riding
lessons every year.
After learning to raise far m
animals they sell them to help
support the school. where tuition is
$750 including room and board. That
Income is supplemented by sales
from the Western store and livestock
stud fees from area ranchers.
A rodeo buck-out ls 1ta1ed on
Fridays, with a charge to the public.
Both teachers and campers seem
to love the program that Chown has
to offer.
TEEN·AGE& PAUL Blais called it
a "great school -r thank the Lord
I'm here."
Bob Johnston, who teaches drama,
noted the main ingredient which
seems to make Rawhide a success.
"There's something about God's
country and t he earth that is
wholesome," be said.
BOMOU i3 l-Ocated north of Vilta °"
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1339.IO
I
., DA!!U~J!.AN,.
A key proHCutioo ,,ttneu In
coavtcted chlld killer Rodney J.
Alacala '• murder trial -wboee
testimony la now alle1ed to be
perJW'ed -wu taken off probe·
Uon for armed robbery on tbe
same. day that Alcala waa sen-
tenced to die lut June. <
One of the _attorneys who bad
represented the wltneH said
there wu an unspoken agree-
ment bis client would receive a
break in exchange for testifying
against Alcala.
Court records show that
Michael };ugene Herrera, 28,
had ~bation "terminated"
six m early and $5,000 bail
exonerated despite Probation
Depan.ent=m ... daU... he co to at.at. for ~
theft relat.d om.
The t-1t WU tut HnTera. a
berolA addlet. walked out ol the
Oran1e Co\IDty Courtbouae OD
June JO, 1-, a free man wbile
Alcala, 31, wu ccmdemJMld to
death for the 197t kidnap·
murder of 12-year-old Robin
Samioe of Huntlnaton Bea~b_:_\',
Tbe Orante County D1SV1et
Attorney's Office la denytq that
Herrera waa liven a break ln"re-
tum for bis testimony. Herrera
testlfled Alcala admitted to blm
he slapped Miis Samaoe un-
conscious after abductln1 her lD
June, 11119.
Her1era and another man,
Robert Frank Dove, were ln·
mates~. Oran&• Cclun·
ty JaU wben Alcala allqedly
made tda ltatemeata to diem.
However, one of Bernra'•
several public delenden at t.be
time al Alcala'• trlal 1111 there wu "an tmpijed undemapcttq"
between defuae lawyen and ,l'OMleUton that Herrer• would
receive IOllle c:omlderaticlll for
bla Alcala testimony.
The tuue of Herrera'•
participation ln tbe hl1bly
publlclzed Alcala cue la ODte
aiain the focUI al attention now
that the California Supreme
Court baa ordered a hearlnl be
held ln 0rall8e Oounty Superior.
Court on alle1atk>nl by Dove
that be and Herrera lied Oil the
witneaa atand.
Herrera teaUfled a1aln.i
Alcalli ln ADril 19>. Oal)' three
IDOlltbl earlier. a peUtJoa WU
flied ....... , e.rnra au.,m,
violation of protiaUon ln
connection ,witb petty tbeftl at
an Anabelm 1upenpuket.
Herrera bad beea placed on
probatioD followin& an armed
robberf conviction lD lt'15 for
which be. WQ sentenced to two
yeara in· Loa An1ele1 County
Jail. Four additional years of
probation were added to the MD·
tence.
Says Alcala proaecutor
Richard Farnell:
"We were maltine no deala ln
thia cue <a1ainst Alcala) with
any of the anltcbea, except for
their protection.''
•
The cleD\dy cn.triet attonaey
alao 1ald he told fellow
proaecutora involved wltJa
Hel'l'el"a'a cue to make no dealt
of any kind.
''I purposely tried to 1tay
away from him," Farnell said.
However, attorney Gre1ory
Jones, onee Herrera '1 public
defender and who 11 now ln
private practice, said bi•
experience indicated that the
Dtatrtct Attorney's Office avoids
making "explicit promilel" lo
return for testimony by
informants, but there la an
uoapolten understanding that
some consideration will be
given.
Tim was so lo the Herrera
<See ALCALA, Pa1e AZ>
Ne .~~!1 Bay cleanup plan gains
,.....,.......
TOY BEAR AWAITS PRESS SECRETARY BRADY
Lett In ahootlng victim'• Whit• HouM ottlce
Reagan walking;
· progress 'super'
WASHINGTON CAP) -Pl'esi·
4e.nt Reagan, clad in pajamas,
mbe and slippers, look a 50-yard
llt'..-lk down a hospital corridor to-ll~, and "his proifeas is super,,.·
a;tid a medical expert who reject· al reports Reagan mi&bt have ~n near death in the firat ilil~utesafterhewaubot.
. vr. Dennis O'Leary said he
)ielieved the 70-year-old Reagan
~ld have waited 20 to 30 'minutes
it~. .•.; •!·
more before receivina medical
attention and "would have been
OK." He acknowledged tbat the
president collapsed as· be walked
into tbe hospital-' 'went down on
one knee" -and was picked up
and carried inalde for treatment..
A utboritative sources,
meanwhJJe, aaid Reagan pro-
bably was hit by a ricocheting
bullet and not ln a direct line of
fire.
In a medical brtefinr at tbe
White House, O'Leary, dean of
clinical aff ain at Geor•e
W a•hlnlton Unlvenlly Ho.pttal,
where the praldent11 belnl tre.t-
ed, said Reqaa'1 blood lou waa
not eQCNlb 10 hHe caused blm to
10 into tboclt. But O'Leary
acknowteqed that hll Judpamt
waa "qulteapeculatl•e."
Hla ..... meat WU a.llOatoddi
with IOW'Ces who aald clocWw bi
the emersency room blld troable
ftndlq the wOUDd tbat w• nua-
ln internal be ........... aid "~oucht t.beJ mllbt loleldlil."
O'Leary Mid, "1 am ~
thatnatly."
State
funds
hiked
By STEVE MAllBLE OI .. o.My ..... ,.,.
Newport Beach city officials
moved a atep closer to Piecina
to,ether a $4 million Upper
Newport Bay cleanup project
thla week when a atate s..te
finance committee recom·
mended living the city add1·
UonaJ funds.
The flnance committee
orlglnalb' trimmed the city's re-
quest for S2 mUJiOD ln the state
budget to Sl.l million. But Wed-
nesday, the committee in-
creased tbe offer to $1.3 mil11C111.
The state committee alao
a1reed to make We a bit easier
for Newport by lowerln1 a re-
quest for $446,000 in matchlng
funds to $25 ,000.
The Newport City Council bu
aareed to put up $1S8,000 in city
money and is woping other
local agencies and land de-
velopers lo help meet the
$250,000 matching fund goal.
The city has been given until
April 29 to raise the money.
Newport Mayor Jackie
Heather predicted today the city
will be able to meet thal goal
although she did not detail from
where all the money ls coming.
Newport Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson, who bu spent
years trying to raise money for
the bay cleanup, said the fmance
committee's decision Wednes-
day "was the biggest hurdle -
we're nmninl downhill now."
She pointed out that the com·
mittee's recommendation now
must be approved by the full
Senate and Auembly.
"The community bas shown
great support for thia project,"
commented Mra. Bergeson,
··and 1 th.ink that message is
finally eettinl through up here
<Sacramento)."
..................
HOLDING DISNEYLAND AWARD'°" MUSIC CENTER WORK
Eafne Redfield (19ft) and Georgia Spooner
' Music Center tops
• • seroice mnners
The Orange County Mu.ate
Center was the blg winner
amon1 the Disneyland Com·
munity Service Awards Wednes·
day at the Disneyland Hotel lo
Anaheim.
Described by Lt. General
Frank 'lbarin, chairman ol the
Frank Dean· die8
Y oting Mesa man
victim of cancer
School
·chaos
forecast
By JOHN NEEDHAM Of .. Olll!J ..... ,...
State Superintendent of Public
Instruction Wilson Rilea bas
forecast chaos and maasive
program cutbacks in California
public schools if state and federal
budge::::posals are adopted. S&>e · g to an audience of
about S>O teachers aJld school
admlnist.raton Wednesday \J> a
pafttd banquet room at tbe
Sheraton-Newport, Rllea said
public education is beaded ror
serious trouble if more mooey is
not allocatf!d.
"We have not been able to
recoup our losses since passage ol
Proposition 13," the school chief
said. "Public educatiOI) simply
can't tate any more cuta and
remain a viable scbool ayatem."
Riles, who recently announced
he will seek re-election as
California school chief in 1982,
said the state stands to lose $336
mlllion in federal assistance for
the 1981-82 school year under
President Reagan's budget
proposals.
Riles said the proposed 25
percent cut in federal funds would
mean about 10,000 California
teachers would lose their jobs 1n
September.
He also decried Gov. Jerry
Brown proposed S percent in·
crease for public education,
which be said was "totally in-
adequate" in the face of 12 per-
1cent inflation.
Riles said lawmakers in
Sacramento face a difficult
problem in deciding where state
money will be spent because the
$7 billion state budget surplus will
run out this year.
"The governor is involved lo a
balancing act and is being forced
to make tradeoffs," Riles aald.
"But we can't afford to have tbe
attitude that the economy will
reassert itself and thlngs will get
better ln tbe future."
(See aJLES, Pa1e A!)
Fair tonilht and Friday.
Winds lncreaaina over-
Dl•bt, l\lltlnl lS to JD mpb
tbrou1b Friday. Lowa
. t.oatlbt 45 Oil the cout. 52
lnland. ~ Friday es to ,'70, I
; I
. ! ..
RITES •••
' fa~~J~ aarti O'Coailr, a
Ctty ot ffoPt 1Wf member wbo
married U..m and f:•" J'i'aM tbe I.Mt · Rittie wu1 ilftna .. at . au. 10 ...... ,....... s .. ,,.
tbe Bapt11t CatlloU Cln1reb,
1015 Baker St.1 Colla na.
Mary says 1be doe an 't cry
much.
Sbe doea lt in th• abower1 where, with all the spray ana
wa\er droplets, It t101t 10
noticeable.
'·I stand 1n the shower and r.
mern ber him aayin•: 'Mary,
den't foreet me .. .' and I Jmt
stand there and cry.''
She and a friend, Diane Lynn,\
of Lake Elsinore, wbo bu been
staying with her. ban aotleed
little Frank bu seemed 1Ueot
and withdrawn since lostnc h1a
father.
He likes lo fold paper
airplanes and Tuesday they
found one he had fashioned.
The small boy wilt probebly
hurl it u hard an8 as hlah u
humanly poaslble, hoping it
lands where it should, carrying
his handwritte n message:
"Dear God, Please tell Dad I
love him and miss him. Frank
Dean."
Besides his wife and son, Mr.
De an leaves bis father, Edward,
llf Buena Park; a brother, John,
of Newport Beach, and li.sten,
Mary Luciano of Buena Park.
Diane Dean of Florida and Cora
McKown, of Virginia.
Friends may make memor1al
contributions in Mr. Dean's
name to the nonprofit City fll
Hope, 1500 E . Duarte Road,
Duarte, Calif.
Teacher
arrested on
sex counts
An lrVine schoolttacher bas
been arrested on 18 counU of
sodomy, child molest and· oral
copulation involving five boys,
·• POiice said today. •
-Lewis Byron Cann, 26, of 18051
Gilman St., Irvine, a teacher al
Vista Verde Yea.r Round School,
is being held in Orange County
Jail in lieu of $50,000 bail, aald
Irvine police Lt. Bob Lennert.,
Cann. who Is to be arraigned
today on the sex charges, wu
arrested Tuesday night at bis
home. Lt. Lennert said.
He also rents an apartment in
Laguna Beach and may bave
other residences, police said.
Lt. Lennert said the boys
range from 11 to 14 years old.
The alleged sex crimes don't
occur on campus, Lt. Lennert
said, refusing to say where they
did allegedly take place.
Lt. Lennert also wouldft't 1ay
how lopg the alleged crimes
have been laking place. He aaid
no other teachers were involved.
He added that police be1an in·
vestigating Cann Jut Saturday
after receiving information pro-
vided by a parent of one of the
boys.
Cann, who taught sc~ence and
computer claues tn sixth
through eighth grades al the
school at 5144 Michelson Road,
was hired by the Irvine Unified
School District in 1975. district
officials said. None of the boys suffered
serious physical injuries, Lt.
Lennert said.
The 18 criminal counts aaaimt
bim are comprised of 15 felonies
and 3 misdemeanors, Lennert
said. Police said the crimes were
allegedly committed on Cann's 1 off.duty hourS.
Blood tests OK'd
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Blood
tests could be uaed 11ainat a
man ln a paternity suJt, under a
bill approved b7 aa Al·
sembly committee We41Delday.
A 9-2 vote of the Judiciary Com·
mittee sent AB121 by Aa·
sem blyman Dan Stlrllna, ~
Haci..cta Heiaht'9 to tbe Al·
sem bly Ooor.
forlrvi~?
By IUCBAaDGRBl!N ... ..., ......
The Irvine Un.tiled School Dis-
trict 1tand8 to lose u much u Sl.6
mUJion 1n fundiq u tbe result of
proposed federal budcet cuts,
said school district administrator
Ron Upton. ~
"The effect will be
catastrophic," Upton said. "But
it's too early to say just what the
specific effect will be on pro-
grams and staffing."
The Irvine Unified School Dis·
trict would be especially hard tilt,
Upton said, since 1,000students-
8 percent of the district's total
edtoHment -are children of
service men and women bued at
El Toto Marine Corps Air Station
and tbe Marine helicopter facility
in Tustin.
Sebool district officials wen
expecting to get between $1.2 and
$1.6 million this year in "Federal
hnpadAid" forlhesestudents.
un•r the proposed federal
bodget, the 'Irvine Unilled School
District wouldn't rtteive any ol
this aid, Uptonsald.
He added that the school dis·
tricl also stands to lose $250,000 in
federal aid to programs ranging
from low-cost lunches to special
education for migrant and ban·
di capped children.
-I ' In addition to proposed federal
budget cuts, Upton said state
budget reductions will create
more problems.
Nearly $'175,000 in state fundin.1
has been cul from the lrvine
Unified School District, be ex-
plained.
However, the scllool clfstrfot
has an advantage inumuch u it
is young -meaning that many of
the employees haven't yet
reached the top of the pay scale,
officials said. Also, the school dis·
trict's growing enrollment belps
because increases in govern~ent.
funding usually accomapny·
enrollment gains. .,.. .,.. .,..
f're• Pqe A.I
IDLES •..
Riles urged the school
administrators and teachers to
lobby hard for passage of
Assembly Bill 777, introduced last
month by Assemblyman Leroy
Green of Sacramento.
He said the bill provides for a 10
pe r cent increase in state
spending for schools over the
1981·82 year, enough to keep vital
programs afloat.
He added that still more fund.a
are needed, but the legjaiattve
package would provide a stable
financint system for next year.
''We -must put together a
coaHUoo to try and impress upon
ou;· national and state leaden
what the impact of these
reductions wUI mean.~· Riles
said. "We simply cannot deal
with this without utter chaos.'.'
Riles said reductions proposed
by President Reagan's tax
cutters would bit progralftl for
mentally and phyalcally
bandJcapped school chlldreb
especialJy bard. Re aald nutridon
proframt would be CrlPPlect. U
not totally wiped out.
"Wbat Coogreu ls coulderinl
la mournfully inadequate foe tbe
1111-aa.aehool year,•• Rlla tald.
meet "°"8ll 111Wwie to tbl
•iaM bJ ataiat•perceat.
kct(ldom. hi ..... u.dude
\tie fMtralfooi.SautrtU.....-
IJ'•m• ~ mlsht be cu& u mue.b u•perem, r,••1 OD ftnal~a .
N ••f!'t· Meaa Dhtrlct Supert~t JGllD NICQIJ aUd
tb• , .......... eoulcl Ntult ill •
JON ol up to SIS3,IOO Jn the local district. ,
ID addition to tM 1ch.o0l luneb
pro1ram cuta, the dlatrtct wW
loee 1"We I f\mdl for edueaUDa
atudeata couldered diaaclvan·
taaed became of lantuap or
sodo-eccnomic problems.
Alao acbeduled for cut.a are in·
come for educau.n, cbll.drem ot
mirrant famlliea and physically
and mentally bandicap)>ed
yOW1pten.
District officials noted tbla
week that cut.a in federal income .
were not even considered in plan-
nina for the layoff of teachers in
June and sm>tram f:Uls that will
eliminate some hilh school
lan1uqe counes, instrumental
music.in elementary schools and
shop courses 1n middle schools.
T"acbera being cut next year
·were notifled of possible layoff
before March ts, a state law re-
quirement.
"lf we are cut $233,900 we will
do whatever we can to fit our pro-
gram to the amoupt received,"
Nicoll said.
"If this means cutting out peo.
ple, wewilltrytofindsomewayto
do this. We are in the position of
beins past the March 15 deadline
for notifying teachers.
"AU we can do is not repJace
those who leave or return
teachers to other parts of the
regular program."
• PLAGWI GATHellED -Awards for com·
...................
Treatment Service Center of Coastal
Orange County; Stephanie Wattm, Volun·
tary Action Center of South Orange Coun-
ty ; JQane Evans, Orange County
Philharmonic Society ; and Gloria
Scbmenk, Share Our Selves.
munlty ..vice WOG by the1t or1anlsati0na
are held-by (from left) Harriet Bemus,
Victim Wltneu Program; Joan Dubiell,
South Coast Institute for Applied Geron-
tology; EIWibeth Toomey, Assessment and
P ..... PflfleAJ Sanitg plea?
WINNERS ••
Bailet Pacific• of La1uQa
-Beach; the Oran1e County
Philharmonic Society, head·
quartered ln Costa Mesa; the
Assessment and Treatment
Service Center of Coaatal
Orange County. from Newport
Beach; Crossroads Alternative
of Capistrano Unified School
District; Hospice of Orange
County, Inc. from Laguna Hilla;
Share Our Selves <SOS> of Costa
Meu; Aml1os de Ser Business and Advisory Board in Irvine;
Voluntary Action Center of
South Orange County in Newport
Beach; the South Coast Institute
of Applied Gerontology in Costa
Mesa; and the Key Club from
Fountain Valley High School,
which worked at more than 100
projects, from recycling to the
March of Dimes Haunted House.
Grand jury gets
Hinckley case
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federal magistrate sent the cue
of John W. HinckJey Jr. to a
federal grand jury today to de·
cide whether tbe 25-year-old
loner should be indicted in the
attempted assassination of
President Reagan.
Hinckley, wearing a white.
bulletproof vest under his dark
OTHER COVERAGE-A3, A4
by U.S. District Judge William ~
B. Bryant over Fuller's objec·:
lions. l
After the 18-minute hearing,;
U.S. Attorney Charles F.C. Ruff:
told reporters the magistrate's:
order commits Hinckley under;
federaJ law to an institution "for:
a mental examination to de·:
termine his sanity." The identity!
of the institution was not dis·:
closed. : .
Fuller told Margolis thad
Hinckley's lawyers had not de·~
cided whether to use insanity as {
a defense. '
fi'r .. r-.Al
blue sport coat. sat silently as
his lawyer, Vincent Fuller.
waived the requirement that the
government show pro babae
cause that a crime was com·
milted.
Hinckley was brought to the i
U.S. District Court building in I
an armored limousine from the I
Quantico. Va., Marine base, 1
where he is being held without •
bond. He arrived 90 minutes I
before the hearing was to begin,
and entered the heavily guarded
courtroom shortly after 10 a.m.
local time.
ALCALA WITNESS • • •
case, Jones said.
According to Herrera's
criminal record.a, bis probaUon
violation hearine on charges of ~tt~ theft, •s post~ about
six times, from earlj February,
1980 to June 20, 1880.
During this same period,
Alcala's trial was in progress
before Superior Court Judge
Philip E. Scbpab.
Jones aakl that on aome
occ•aiom, be would ••k the J9~ b',a delay 8ftd It other Um~. the prosecutor would do
so.
Though he says he kept a
diataoce from the case, Farnell
e"plained that Herrera 's
probaUoo proceedings probably
were kept alive during that
four·month period to keep a bold
on the witness.
If he disappeared (Herrera
was free on bail), a warrant
could have been issued for his
arrest, Farnell said.
Accordin1 to court records,
Herrera was no stranger to
cooperating with police.
During his incarceration on an
earlier probation violation, he
cooperated with Orange County
Sheriff's D e partment
investigators in breaking up a
ring which was receiving stolen
property. according to records.
He acted as a SO·called "con·
fidential informant."
Court records show that a
short Ume later. in December. 1979, Herrera we nt before
Superior Court Judge Robert E.
Rickles and was allowed to
withdraw b is previous ad·
mission of a probation vlolation.
Two separate proceedings were
pending against Herre ra -a
probation violation hearing in
Superior Court and the formal
theft charges in North Orange
County Municipal Court.
Attorneys familiar with the
case explained that by havinJ bis
probation ••terminated" in
Supenor Court. Hen'era couJd not
face a state prison term for
probation violation.
Instead, he went to North Court
in July, 1980, to face the
misdemeanor counts alone, to
wh ich be pleaded guilty and
received local jail time at La
Habra City Jail.
During his appearance bn the
stand at the Alcala trial, Herrera
said it was a jailhouse "code of
ethics" which motivated him to
testify against Alcala.
"People in institutions feel a
certain hostility toward child
molesters,'' he said at the time.
Herrera testified that Alcala
told him during jailhouse
conversations how he lured Miss
Samsoe into his car at the
seashore in Huntington Beach in
June,1979.
The younpter's remains were
found sever"1 weeks later in the
foothills near Sierra Madre.
Alcala, of Monterey Park, was
convicted of first degree murder
and sentenced to death after a
lengthy trial ln Judge Schwab's
·court.
He is presenUy on San Quentin's
Death Row.
Magistrate Lawre n ce
Margolis then sent his case
directly to a grand jury, and or·
dered a thorough s anity ex·
amination for Hinckley . The
magistrate's order for a second
sanity examination was upheld
* * * * * * Hinckley's arrest
wask~byFBI
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
FBI knew President Reagan's
alleged assailant had been ar·
rested on weapons charges last
rau, but never reported that to
the Secret Service, Treasury
Secretary Donald Regan said to-
day.
Testifying before a House sub·
committee, Regan said the FBI
bad been informed that John W.
Hinckley Jr. was arrested carry-
ing three pistols through an
airport security check point in
Nashville, Tenn., in October,
when tben·Presidenl Carter was
making a campaign appearance
in the city.
"On hindsight, it looks like
this information should have
i: assed to the Secret Service,"
Regan said. "The FBI apparent·
ly felt it wasn't necessary."
Regan appeared before a
House Appropriations subcom·
mittee with jurisdiction over the
Treasury Department, parent
agency of the Secret Service.
Secret Service Director H.
Stuart Knight was called to
testify before a similar Senate
panel later today. • ..
Unde r questioning, Regao
said, "As far as I know," there:
was no direct indication that
Hinckley was a threat to eithet'
Carter or then-candidate Ronald
Reagan when the 2S·year·old
drifter was picked up.
As a result. Hinckley's name
did not appear on lists of peopl~
who might pose a threat to the
president when he allegedly sbot
and wounded Reagan and three
others outside a Washington
hotel Monday.
There was no immediate
response from the FBI as to why
it did not report Hinckley's ar·
rest in Nashville to the Secret
Service.
Regan declined lo make any
specifi c ana lysis of how the
Secret Service performed dlll'inJ
ihe attack on Reagan.
He then re.admitted he violated
probation and what was
originally a one-year sentence to
Oranae County Jail banded down
in July, 19'19 was changed to a
145-d ay sentence, deemed served.
The lovely light of Waterford crystal.
"He knew the ropes," said
Jones, who stated flatly that
Herrera would have gone to state
prison immediately bad he not
testlfied in the Alcala case. ·
Herrera . was back in court
a1aln on theft cbarses by January
1980 (bis orobation period bad
been extaidect by Juqe Ricklet
to December, t•>.
Jonee Hid it WU lft the best
lnteresta GI botb bil client and tbe
proeecutkln to delay t.bat cue whta. tbie Alcala trial 1ot uucter
From Ireland,
Waterford's
hand-cut lead
crystal lamp
with a
handmade silk
shade. $235.
.. ..
..
I• .. ..
..
... -----------------------------------------------.~ way. 1
term given
An Ailabe61'Jl woman wbo wu
eoDYldM of teHlYlft• fl2,000 bl
a welfan fraud •ch.me will
t.J*ld Mwn montha In 0r_,. Cout1 :.JaU for w crime. lu'-"10r Court Jud1e W&Wam L. Murnr -..-cled • Iv.,_,
ltaM prllon .... for Barbara A.
Saittll oa UM Coad.lUoa alle Mne M•• ...U. ID county Jail _. n .. ,... • ..,.. ....
lb• ...., ,,.. Ol'der9d tO mah
•PPl"OllliiM rlldtCldGii9.
..... ~SllOltl'I
p..-.., Wwt. NI:• c.Mtr. Newpc>tt lhact\, 7t4~·U90
WOl•I ..., I &Apia t Mlilloft Vtejo (Neri! Ot-.1 T"9 City t.otC.......•"-..... MIO C_.,, lM A ..... / 5111 DtfF I w• Y•• ·--....w.---.. ...... ~ ... VIM:....,~·
Mlwili'r '"",..... Ctil1il t •
•• 1
..
J SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A pubUc·nlatiom flrm't alle1atioa t:Ul t mother aroup 1ot a lucrat,lve state contract because of ttl
,polltlcal ties bu been rebuffed by the state Department of Health
Services. 1 The department on WedDelcl•y denied a protest Ru.ssom le
V'Leeper of 5an Francisco, wbJch bid WllUCCeMfull)' for & $1 mlllion,
15-month prolt'am to 1et Calllomia puentl to talk wttb tbelr children
aboutaex.
lo I>Ooald Solem, president ~Solem and Auoelattt of~ Fran· ~~lsco, which was awarded \he cuitract, ii a former necutive
secretary of the California Democratic Party. Jt ;:Bmtmfonm ~campaign sroup
h SACR.AtifENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. hu formally
·•created a U.S. Senate campaign committee and filed papen which al·
low him to raise funds, a top aide confirms.
1 The action, learned Wednesday, stopt just stiort of a formal
declaration for the Senate seat now held by Republican S.1.
•Hayakawa. \
i.'Hell's Ange& ronvidion avertumsd /
';.' SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A former Hells Ante la leader baa won
a new trial because a federal appeals court says the prosecution may
'< Jlave lied in efforts to obtain a search warrant against him.
b.' The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesday the govern· 1 .ment may have been guilty of "deliberate falsification or reckless
tf disregard for the truth" in the case of Lawrence "Moose" Chesher,
·: Corm er head of the San Francisco Hells Angels chapter. He ls serving
a five-year sentence at a federal prison in Missouri for possessing a
r metbamphelamine laboratory.
~·1,300 hear Atlanta mothers
~. OAKLAND (AP> -More than 1,300 people jammed the Allen
'•Temple Baptist Church in Oakland Wednesday night to listen to
speeches by two mothers of slain AUanta children.
Ii. The two women, Venus Taylor and Willie Mae Mathis, are
ii traveling around the country to raise money to send black Atlanta
I• children to summer camp.
'•
Tekthon set.s reootd · ., ..
: LOS ANGELES <AP) -This year 's Easter Seal telethon com·
.. : pleted its 20-bour broadcast earning a record S17 million in casb1 · checks and pledges for the rehabilitation of disabled children ana
')· adults, telethon officials say.
The 10th annual telethon originated here but was carried on 130
television stations nationwide. The program ended Sunday.
The Daily Pilot rePorted an incorrect figure Monday.
LOS ANGELES <AP) WQM
Burtoa, acc..ed bf a Y&ri.U fJI
mlnepr..entaUOlll and traUd
c:oanected wltll trust deeidl, ta.a been restralDed rrom uatna bb
real estate apd mortca .. toan
broiler JJcenH1e-dJ111 a tieartq
next moatb in SD;erior Court.
The restrainln, orde~ wu ob-
tained Wedneldlb' lo wult by the
Calltomia ~ent of Beal
Estate that lee.kl en "1Juoctlon
aealnatBurton aDd bis companies
and •'other . . . relief," said
Deputy Attorney General
Richard Bakke. ,
· Burton is accused of bi)kinl
$100 million from 6,000 iJlvestors
in what baa been called the
lar1est trust deed fraud In atate
blstory.
BURTON'S companies falllna
Under the reatralntng order ue
Unlvenal Financial, Calllornia
Equities Home Loan, Universal
Home Loan and Unlvenal Home,
said David H. Fox, director of the
DepartmentofReal Estate.
Superior Court Judge Leon
Savitch set May 14 for Bakke's of.
fice as the attorney for the
Department of Real Estate, he
said.
Burton is specifically accused
or putting falsely inflated values
on .real estate bought with In· ~estor funds; co-mingling funds;
telling investors they "'.ere get-
ting first or second·trust deeds -
loans on real estate -when they
allegedlt got lower priority Hens ;
and concealing that he borrowed
more than $25 million of the in·
vestors'money.
l.AST WEEK, U.S. District
Judge Mariana Pfaelzer appoint.
ed former bank president Walter
M. Sharp as receiver of ~urton·s
San Bemardin<>·based Universal
Finan'ciaJ Corp. Tbe federal order
stripped Burtoo of control over
the bus\ness, which includes
some of the highest priced de·
velopments in downtown Sao
Bernardino.
Carol gets requests
\ LOS ANGELES (AP > -Carol
Burnett has been deluged with mail
Crom people asking her. to donate
tome of the Sl.6 million she won in
her s uit against the National
Enquirer to charity.
: Miss Burnett had announced she
:would give the winnings away at a
·t. e l e v i s e d
.post-victory press
i:onference. But a
spokesman for the
.actress s aid
.Wednesday that
rc>eople apparently
·did not ·hear her
a nn oun ce that
·she'd already
chose n three
charities.
could be mont.hs or years before sne
gets any money.''
The National Enquirer has
announced plans to appeal the jury
verdict.
Enquirer attorney William
Masterson said Wednesday be will
file a motion and brief next week
asking for a new trial oo grounds
there was insufficient evidence to
supPort the verdict and the damages
awarded were "excessive."
ATTORNEYS for both sides have
s aid appeals in the case could take
two years. ·
Klan rallfes ln Sat!ranaento
Robed members of Ku Klux Klan return
shouts at demonstrators in onlooking
crowd as they hold rally Wednesday near
Capitol in Sacramento. The klan is raising
"racism" charges against a black state
parol~ officer for revoking a klan mem·
.ber's parole for carrying a weapon.
·coastal plan approved
SOUTH SA'N FRANCISCO
(AP> -San Mateo County hu
become the first California coun·
ty to win state approval of its
coastal development program,
according to· a state Coastal
Commission official.
The county can start issuing
building perm1ta in the coasta.I
zone Thursd•Y. said Peter
Douglaa, commission deputy ex-
.ecutive director. It will be the
first time the county bas had
that right since state voters ap.
proved a coastal protection ln-
lti ati vein um.
The city of S~ Fran~isco also
won approval or Its coastal plan
and ordinances, subject to ap·
proval of its supervisors, and
Marin County won approval of
its plan, but not the ordinances
to carry it out.
THE APPROVALS will allow
the local governments to regain
authority to issue building
permits in the ribbon ~f land
along the California shore,
which has been regulated by re·
gional boards under sllpervision
or the st.ate board.
Meanwhile. commissioners
complained that a lobbyist for
To~yS xunum
state cities was premature in an-
nouncing a tentative agreement
tbat would reduce the com·
mission's regulation of the
sprawling coast.
''There was no tentative
agreement, no agreement at
all," Douglas asserted . ''The
commission was, to put it mild-
ly, upset."
A MEMO announcing a ten·
tative pact on several crucial
coastal issues was distributed to
a state Assembly committee this
week by League of Cities lob-
byist Russell Selix.
"SHE'S BEEN getting an awful lot
, of mail Crom people asking her to 1donate some or her winnings,"
·Ingersoll said. "The letters are going
to her. her attorneys, her business
rnanager. I've even received some."
He said the money has been promueo to tnree pre-chosen
charities and added. ''Besides, it
Miss Burnett sued the Enquirer
over a 1976 gossip column item which
accused her or boisterous behavior in
a Washington D.C. restaurant and
claimed she had argued with then
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The tabloid ultimately retracted the
item as incorrect.
Miss Burnett, who missed Tuesday
night's Academy Award ceremonies
because she had the nu. left Los
Angeles on Wednesday for her
second home on the island of Maui
where Ingersoll said she planned to
rest and spend time with her family.
Interest·
Guaranteed
for 30 months
wlhnominimum
t
' I '
K.l.D .S. FASHION SI-OW
Saturday, April 4
A spring look at bright and fun
Easter fashions for boys and girls .
modeled by Orange County K.l.D.S.
11 :00 o.m . and 2:00 p.m.
Refreshments wi II be served.
Appearance by Surprise guest.
"ART IN"
Every Saturday in April from
. 1 :00 to 3:00 p.m.
; Bring your child to · draw their
favorite pictures. It ~ be chosen to
become a finisheQ Greeting card. Everv child will receive o handsome
<l!ftilicate.
balanoein ·reaeral
ountry.
Earn Hom~ Federal'& maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Markef Certificates -Paying % % more interest than ,
any bank. Effective through April 13 . ..
I
I
I I
College bounCJary shift
Saddleback Comm unity College District trustees
ha ve unanimous ly approved a reapportionment plan
sh ifting the bound aries of the seven areas making up the
college district that a re represented by each of the
tr ustees . .
The realignment will provide for a more equal
number of residents in each of the s even districts. The
boundary s hift was prompted by rapid increases id
po'pulation in the Irvine and Tustin dis tricts since t he last
reapportionme nt in 1975.
The number of register ed voters in each area who
were counted in the last presidential election was used in
drawing the new boundaries. Each of the seven districts
is now within 5 percent of 29,680 votes.
Despite being up for re-e lection in November.
Trustees William Wa tts , Eugene McKnight and Robert
Price joined their fellow board members in approving the
plan.
The district trus tees were not required by law lo
redraw the bounda ries . In t he interest of fair and more
effective representation, they decided to do so. They are
to be commended for correcting the imbalance on their
own in itiative.
Decision overdue
It's about time.
For t he bette r part of two decades. University Drive
has been shown on traffi c master plans in Newport Beach,
Costa Mesa. Irvine and the county.
But the road. which now comes to a halt at either side
of L'pper NewPort Bay. has never been completed . It has
never even beeff\{ully studied.
The road has long been viewed by &ome as a
necessary link between Irvine and Costa Mesa and as an
inland aiternative to frequently congested P acifi c Coast
Highway.
Objection to completing the road or even studyin g t he
m atter has come from t he Department of Fish and Game
and a local conservation group, Friends of Newport Bay.
These groups argue that the road will bring environ·
mental havoc to the sensitive bay a rea. They say an en-
vironmental impact r eport on the road would be a waste
of m oney
And that's how things have stood for years.
Finally. Newport City Manager Robert Wynn decided
it was time to determine if the road really would damage
the en vironment. He is calling for an allocation in the
city's 1981 -82 budget to produce an environmental study
lo see wh at the answer is.
Costa Mesa and l i'vine already have endorsed the
idea of such a s tudy a nd likely will be asked to pick up
pa rt of the cos t since they, too, are affected by the
University Drive exte nsion.
If environmental concerns are sufficient 1o hold up
the project . the study will show that point and other traf·
fi e solutions will have to be s tudied.
But to assume such a conclusion without proper ex·
a m ination of the facts shouldn't be the basi~ fQr rejecting
the project. . • Opinions expressed 1n the space abolt8 are jhose of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their aut hors and
artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) S..2""321.
Boyd/Reunrrh
By L.M. BOYD
One fact more than any
other explains wlty rewards
oHered for inforn'lation lead·
ing to the capture and coo·
vi ction of criminals have
been so successful . Lawme" claim that there.'s almost in·
variably at least Qne persoo '
other tban the criminal who
can name the guilty party.
It was not the mother or an
ugly baby who said : "You
can't love a butterfly until
y o u h a v e 1 o v e·d a
caterpllla r ." It Y{a s a
Benedictine nun. Aboul 500
lfe&rs ago.
?!lore than half th~ driven
mdteft\-arouttd With Ure c:ar oil
at leaat a quart low. En~ey '
reiearchera found that eut.
They a1IO teamed that mort
than balf tbe drivers had
n ever read their owner 's
m&Aual. And ene ln 10.hadn't
-.ven openecl it at the time ~
purch'ue. · .
What a lot of people dOft't
r ealize b that more than-half
the drowning vlctlms in tllil
country were so loaded •lth
liquor at the times of their
deaths that they could bave
been desl1nated u le1ally
drunk. Medical examiners'
atattlelcs prove that.
Altbou11l Adolf H •U•r
1 moktd cl•arettH 11 •
youth, he quilt at a1e ~. and
after hi sot lb Job ••
Fuhrer, no O.rman and few
foreiperf ever dared smoke
a cl•arett. in hit pret•nce.
Mailbo
nMMI. ._ddeacea. d&Hreet wb~t'ailid'teyelwon Md .kaowlq~mllt1. Tbrou1h Ulla deUCm ~eu. an underttand
lnt appeus to be J•lllna
belw .. a the RoHld llea•an
Wlllt• HOUH aod the Leonid
Brnbnilv«remUn.
aras fl THB tacit , tentaUV'e,
teau4'il arrancllJ!lent as tt ls un·
derStood by ml sources at the
hi1hett levels :
-Rea1•n Will hold down U .s.,
lntetveQUOI\ in El Salvador and
seek to cootthe crisis. Brelbnev,
In return, will restrain Soviet
forces tn Poland and try to keep
a lid on that crisis.
· -Any Soviet move a1ainst Pola nd, it ts also understood
would be countered by U.S. ac·
tlon against Cuba. The United
Statea may not be able to stop a
Soviet invasion of Poland, but
the Soviet Union is in an equally
weak position to prevent a U.S.
military move against Cuba.
.. ,
-Brezhnev will halt, or at
least restr ict , the flow of
-REAGAN M.80 want.I the
Kremlin to stop encoura•lna and
1upportln1 antl·Am.erican move-
ment.e in Central ~mertca, or
el.ae he will •Ur up antl·Sovlet activity in Eastern Europe.
-Reagan la moa~ concerned
about a poeaible Soviet thr ust ID·
to Iran, which would threaten
the Western World's oil supply
ht the Persian Gulf. Hints have
been relay e a to Brezhnev,
therefore, that the United Stat.es
would resist any overt attack
and respond to a covert move by
sending mass arms shipments to
Communist China.
-Reagan baa also sent dis·
creet signals to Brezh.D ev that
the United States will no.longer
remain passive while the Kremlin
sets up pro-Soviet governments in
Africa. l r Brezhne v sends his
Cuban aJlies Into another African
eoua&r1. R••••• •l•h\ 91· cour.,. the E1yptlan.1 to IDO¥ll
111lnaUJbya.
Of coune. theM 1rrana•me..ta
are pN1Carloua at bell ud ~ \be upeet by new de•elQPtD~:
But it would be acc.,rate to ,..
port that Reacan and BrelbMv
are besiMJna to understand OQI
another. t
WA.Tee ON WASTE: Whiie
funds for achool lunches are bt·
ini cut back, the 1dmlnlatraUon
has manaaed to Increase 'federal
funding for the nation'• sun ....
cionadoe. The Army's Depart·
me nt of CivlUan Marksmanship,
with its cWltomary support from
National Rifle Association lob-
byists, will be 'given $«4,000 thh
year . The mi ney will 10 for
''t rophies and c lassification
ba dges" won by private aun
club members, who are pre·
sumably prospective Army
recruits. Incredibly, the N~
, had talked Congress into nearly
doubling last yea r 's t araet·
s hooting la rgesse, but t he
budget cutters were able to hokl
the increase to "only" $19,000.
Ene rgy Depa r t m ent
poohbahs have three methods of
getting cars to use on govern-
. ment business: The cheapest Of·
lion is to requisition a car from
a General Services Administra-
tion motor pool. The second,
sli ghtly more expensive way ls
to have the GSA lease a car
from a private firm. The third
and far more costly method is
for the bureaucrat to lease the
car himself and send the bill lo
the government. Under Option
No. 3, the official gets to use the
car for pri vate business. as long
as he pays the modest mileage
cost. Predictably, in vestigators
fou nd that three out or every
four DOE bureaucrats entitled
to cars choose the third method.
Some developers have been
ta)<in g advantage of feder;i l
housing subsidies for the poor to
add unnecessary luxury items
that in effect increase the sub-
sidies they get. Jn Santee, Calif .
ro r example. a gove rnment·
su bsidized project included a
s wi mming pool. r e c r eation
rooms and paved parking.
What do economists know about workers?
To the Editor:
Regarding Nicholas von Hoff-
man ' S Ma rch 24 a r ticle on
"Promise to Older Am eri cans,"
we wonder if George Will. who
v9ices the opinion that the elder-
ly are Ameri ca's biggest prob-
lem, has ever known a blue col ·
Ja r wo r ker " On e who does
physical labor all bis life'' One
who at the age of 62, bas to force
himself oul the door every morn·
ing, wondering if he can make it
to 65?
IS THIS what he has to look
forward to? So some nut that
has it made . and never had to
work or pay into Social Security
can tell him that he has to work
until he is 70 or 75? That he is
lazy . selfish and sociall y ir-
responsible ? 1-low about the
children he has raised, who are
now working and payin&--taxes?
Are they a drag on the economy
too?
Wh at are these s o·called
. e conomist s ta;yin& to do to
America ? Give our country
away to a fc;>reign p<>wer? If the
American worker does not have
a voice in these matters, what is
the use of working, paying tax·
es, raising children (5) to
become good Americans?
Mr. von Hoffman really laid it
op tbe line in his article. J wish
this letter could be for warded to
SO·called. economist Nor man
Macrae Ind George Will. And to
our President. Do you think it
wquld make a dirrerence in their
wl'y of thinkinJt? Even a little?
MRS. L. SANDERS
•~le ••w eo•t•
To the Editor:
T he present cost ol cleaning
up tb'e Back Bay with the City of
Newport Beach requifed to pay
$«&;000, as repolUd in your
C•l"I~ Much 201 ,sa...ald bf: bome y ·tlfe 1ealbua envitollllMn·
t•li1ts. Tlaey're th• ones ~l
caused lt \o get so dlr~)'.
Ba~ween SPON, the Friends of
the Earth ... and the Coaatal Coln·
mlsaion they stopped it.a dredC·
ing for enough years io really
cause this unfortunate cond!tloo.
Now ~ course the COlltl have
1rown .. hortendout amounts.
Pa1tq tboee COit.a should not be tbe burden Gf the populace, but
Ot tlae aea1oua ldlota tb~t caUted
them. • ·
' TBE COST of paylril for the
preservation of envlronmental
u1Uneas baa already welshed
toq heavUy oo tbe populace. And
they are •ettln1 tired ol lt. Wby
abould the ciUsena of Ne wport
Beach have to pay SM0,000 for
Ulla unnece11ary expendlture
When there are 110 many vt\al
MrVices that are not aufftclentlJ
fuaded't ADd Why should cttt_..
ol other peril of the country be
required to pay the other $3.5
million out or funds they need
for other purposes when most of
them don't even know where
Newport Beach is?
It's time to look at the poten-
tial results of all our acts before
we act on JUSt the emotional
view of t.he moment. It could
save us a lot of future troubles.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
T~laer te•t•
To the Editor :
I agree that a compete ncy test
for teachers would be great
.... but just what can be done
w ith a t e a c h e r prove d
incompetent?
I prop ose t h a t bo th t he
previously mentioned test and
t he r em ova I of te nure for
teachers would be the ideal
system. A mere test aloqe will
not.. suffice in the effort to rid our
schools of incompetent teachers.
TH E NOW ·O BS OL E T E
system of tenure was evoked to
prevent nefarious employe rs
from firing teachers for such
ridiculous reasons as smoking
c ig a rett es o r d a tin g
"undesirable" members of the
opposite sex.
As anyone can see, we no
longer need this, mainly due to
the presence or strong unions
and effective upholding of the
law. Only incompetent teachers
need be afraid for their jobs, and
only they will have you believe
tenur e is necess ary , not
obsolete.
EILEEN DORN
A.,et1t• l••llked
To the F.clltor:
I tnust register a vlgoroi.as ob-
jection to the sentlmenta ex-
pressed by Ms. Truitt in her arti·
cl• in the Tbunday March 19,
1981, special aecUon called "I
Am WQmaD."
Her statement that: "There's
rtallf bot much d1U.rence tn
bµJi.D1 an insurance policy by
mail Oil from an agent" does a
tremeDdous disservice to the
b"ytq public as well u being a
direct lnll\llt to the tbo111andl ~
insurance acenta around the couatrr.
.~ 1.1' MY memory aerves me
*.redly ~h rudinc JOU!" paper cww ·a oumbeJ' of 1"1'S.
aome of ti•• create•t 1cam1
P•11>•trated UPoD tbe public
h,ve btm tllrouP tbe ma&la.
Tbil lt DOI t6 NJ that bU.JUll ln·
IUIDee ~lite nlat1'11-ll0t
of'te• done ud in fact UMte ta u lDdu•trY-ll'OUP wbole fUc:tbl II
tq lff tbal everyone ti OD tbil up
Ud ap. TIU II aliO llOt a:.: !!~~~ft~·::..,.._
;;;-.:.; ........... tJl ...
I
tributioo that should be looked
at and utilized as the article
points out.
Ms . T r uitt's s tateme nt -
while obvious ly totally incorrect
-is undoubtedly made from a
lack of knowledge rather than
any attempt to demean a wholP.
profession.
JA MES C. KREDER ............ ~
To the Editor :
It is with rusapp<>intment that I
note the trend of The Pilot's
editorial p<>licy rectected by F.
Schoemehl's article of March 18
entitled "Wipe Out the Burro
Menace," and the Sunday, March
22 contribution, "Legal Battle for
Burro Removal Begins." Both
articles suggest that the con-
troversial p<>ticy of the U.S. Navy
to "solve" their animal problems
which exist, by cruel and in-
hum a ne a e rial s ho ot s, is
somehow justified.
"Fund fo r Animals" has of-
fered to humanely rem ove the
burros from the area in con-
troversy, yet a prefe rence is
forwarded by your paper for a
k ii l. If y o u r c o n c e r n i s·
leglti)1lalely for the protection of
unspdiled federal lands, I sug-
gest you tum your attention to
l be direc tives of ou r new
Secretary of interior, wh o wouJd
open these lands for develop-
ment.
ELLENG. WINTERBOTTOM
Gre_d...,ell
To the Editor :
Super visor Thomas Riley's
latest blast at Newport Beach
for Its decision to sue the county
over proposed airport expansion
is extraordinarily unseemly for
som eone who , s upposedl y ,
represent.a its citizens at the
county level.
Mr. Riley ought to know, and
everyone else does know, that
expanded facilities at the John
Wayne Airport wm brine ex·
pandtd use and all its dreadful
co~11equences for Newparters.
Eve ry thinking person rec·
ognhes that, tf the master plan
is i mpletne nted , Ne wport'•
future is doomed. Dqea Mr.
Riley think the city should sit
back and accept its own an-
oihJlaUon?
In their dectalon to brina a
autt, city offtciats ate merely
'f
Quote8
''The lin814' mo1t deatructlve
aocletal diM149 ol our Ume and
the ,..,._bit•• niuon ror the
decline ol public morality arid
ethlca II American leadenblp'1
n.atlon with wbat h11 bec:orM
known a• the bottom llne.''
N ...... LNr.
reflecting constituent pressure.
A ground swell of public opinjon
is demanding t.o be heard and
none of Mr. Riley's ranting and
raving will quiet it
AMY ROBSART
AU •br~ flnaefft•
To the Editor:
While re ad ing the letter
regarding the proposed Newport
Ce n ter ex p a n s i o n , 1t is
interesting to note how the
.. in conveniences" of a few
peopl e are always named, but
the benefits to a II a re never
mentioned.
How about the fact that the
expanson of Newport Center by
the Irvine Company will bring to
the City of Newport Beach
additional annual revenues of Sl
million for all to benefit from?
How about the fact that the
Irvine Company is spending $8.2
m ill ion of its own money to
improve the roads lo help
a llevi at e co n ges ti on fo r
everyone's benefit?
How a bout the fa ct t he
expansion will provide more
goods and services for the
residents of Newport Beach so
all can maintain and enhance
their standards of living? Isrn
that what it's all about anyway7
It is always too easy to
pin point "inconveniences" or a
few . Possibly these few should
take a broader look and see the
benefits for all lo share. After
all, they are a part or the "alt"
too!
HOWARD DE RM
A~eel•U.
To the Editor:
Your fine article on Frank~ Williams, J r. was apprecia .
by F rank's many lriepds w
will be 'interested to kbow l
a mong bis laurels were t'e
OlatiftlUished Flying Crosa, ~e
Airman's Medal .. and two pW'Jte
hearts which were recelvtd
during hi.a combat service as a
Marlrie pilot in Korea where e
flew ninety-seven comb t
missions. He was so mode.\
almost no one knew of th a~olldes.
DAVIDW-FURNAS, M.
'
tt: SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A publle·tel.UOU ftnn'• allqaUOD
htbat another ll'tM_lf IOt a luera\jve 1tate IODtfact becaute ol itl
·'l»olltlcal Uea has been rebutted by the tiate l>epartmut of Health atervlcta.
· The department on W~y den.led a pl'oteat Runorn Is
'<Leeper ol San Fnncllco, which bld Unluceeuf\llly for a St million,
JS· month proararn to 1et CaJUornla parea'8 to talt wttb their children
aboutaex. • .\
2.... Donald Solem, presideaof Solem and Atsoclatea ol San Fran·
cisco, which was awarded the contract, iJ a former esec:uUve
bncretary of the California De1DOC1'atic Party.
;Brotm/onna Senate oompaign group h ._ SACRAMENTO <AP~ -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. bu formally
created a U.S. Senatecampalp~ommittee andfUedpapen which al·
low him to raise funds, a top aide confirms. ·
•1 The action, learned Wednesday, stops just sbort1ol a formal
'>declaration for the Senate seat now held by Republican S.1.
~-Hayakawa.
6 Hell's Angels oonviction overtunwd
'l SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A former Hells Angels leader has won
a new trial because a federal appeals court says the prosecution may
" have Ued in efforts to obtain a search warrant against him.
1J The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesday the govern-
, ment may have been guilty of "deliberate falsification or reckle1&
•!disregard for the truth" in the case of Lawrence "Moose" Chesher,
11former head of the San Franciseo Hells Angels chapter. He is serving
! a five-year sentence at a federal prison in Missouri for possessing a
methamphetamine laboratory. ·
11•
,, 1,300 hear Atl.anta mothers
,, OAKLAND (AP) -More than 1,300 people jammed the Allen
~· Temple Baptist Church in Oakland Wednesday night to listen to
speeches by two mothers of slain Atlanta children.
1, The two women, Venus Taylor and Willie Mae Mathis, are
11 traveling around the count ry to raise money to send black Atlanta
t children lo summer camp.
Tel.ethon sets reoonl
1 LOS ANGELES <AP> -This year's Easter Seal telethon com·
· 'pleted its 20-hour broadcast earning a record $17 million in cash
.. checks and pledges for the rehabilitation of disabled children and
adults, telethon officials say.
The 10th annual telethon originated here but was carried on 130
television stations nationwide. The program ended Sunday.
The Daily Pilot reported an incorrectfigure Monday.
Carol gets requests
LOS ANOSU:S (AP) -.WQ'IM Burton, HeUMd ol. a Y...W,, ~
mlarepr~ and fraud
toanec:ted wttb tnllt deedt, bu
bffn re1tralned from ua1nf his
real .tate aod IDOl'tl• loan
broker JlcenMt J)eodiftl a beart.n1 next IDCllltb 1ft SuPerior Court.
The restralnine order waa ob-
t•lned Wednelday ln a 1utt by tbe
California DepartJMnt of Real
Estate that seen an lnJUQ.Ction •••inst Burton Jnd bis companies and "other . . . relief,' said
Deputy Attorney General
Richard Bakke.
Burton is accused of bllkint
$100 million from 61000 investors
in what has been called the
lar1est truat deed fraud tn state
hl1tory. auaTON'S companies falling
under the restraining order are
Universal Financial, California
Equities Home Loan, Universal
Home Loan and Universal Home,
said David ff. Fox, director of the
Department of Real E1tate ..
Superior Court Judge Leon
Savitcb set May 14 for Bakke's of·
flee as the attorney for the
Department of Real Estate, he
said.
Burton is specifically accused
of putting fa lsely inflated vaJues
nn r~l estate bought with in·
yestof funds; co-mingling funds;
telling investors they were get·
ting first or second-trust deeds -
loans Oil real estate -when they
allegedly got lower priority liens;
and concealing that he borrowed
more than $25 million of the in·
vestors' money.
LAST WEEI(, U.S. District
Judge Marian~ Pfaelzer appoint·
ed former bank president Wllter
M. Sharp as receiver of Burton's
San Bernardino-based Universal
Financial Corp. The federal order
stripped Burton of control over
the business, which includes
some of the highest priced de·
velopments in downtown San
Bernardino.
•' LOS ANGELES I AP ) -Carol
Burnett has been deluged with mail
from people asking her to donate
s'ome of the $1.6 million she won in
her suit against the National
Enquirer to charity.
could be months or years before she
gets any money."
Miss Burnett had announced she
,would give the winnings away at a
.~ e 1 e v i s e d
post-victory press
~onference. But a
'spokesman for the
actr ess sai d
Wednesday that
. people apparently
<lid not ·hear her
announ ce that
s h e'd already
chosen three
charities.
"SHE'S BEEN getting an awful lot
· of mail from people asking her to
:donate some of her winnings,"
lngersolJ said. "The letters are going
to her, her attorneys, her business
•manager. I've even received some."
The National Enquirer has
announced plans to appeal the jury
verdict.
Enquire r attorney William
Masterson said Wednesday he wtlJ
file a motion and brief next week
asking for a new trial on grounds
there was insufficient evidence to
support the verdict and the damages
awarded were "excessive."
ATTORNEYS for both sides have
said appeals in the case could take
two years .
Miss Burnett sued the Enquirer
over a 1976 gossip column item which
accused her of boisterous behavior in
a Washington D.C. restaurant and
claimed she had argued with then
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The tabloid ultimately retracted the
item as incorrect.
Klan rallies in SfN!ranaento
Robed members of Ku Klux Klan return
shouts at demonstrators in onlooking
crowd as they hold rally Wednesday near
Capitol in Sacramento. The klan is raising
"racism" charges against a black state
parole officer for revoking a klan mem-
ber's parale for carrying a weapon.
Coastal plan ~pproved
SOUTH. SAN FRANCISCO
<AP> -San Mateo County has
become the first California coun·
ty to win state approval of its
coastal development program,
according to a state Coastal
Commission official.
The county can start issuing
building permits in the coastal
zone Thursday, said, Peter
Douglas, commission deputy ex·
·ecutive director. lt will be the
first lime the county has had
that right since slate voters ap-
proved a coastal protection in·
itiative in 1972.
The city of San Francisco also
won approvaJ of its coastal plan
and ordinances, subject to ap.
proval of its supervisors, and
Marin County won approval of
its plan, but not the ordinances
to carry it out.
THE APPROVALS will allow
the local governments to regain
authority to issue building
permits in the ribbon of land
along the California shore,
which bas been regulated by re·
gional boards under super vision
of the state board.
Meanwhile, commissioners
complained that a lobbyist for
state cities was premature in an·
nouncing a tentative agreement
that would reduce the com-
miss ion's regulation of the
sprawling coast.
"There was no tentative
agreement, no agreement at
all," Douglas asserted. "The
commission was, to put it mild·
ly, upset."
A MEMO announcing a ten-
tative pact on several crucial
coastal issues was distributed to
a state Assembly committee this
week by League of Cities Job·
byist Russell Selix.
_To~ayS
Maxunum
Interest
Guaranteed for 30 .. monthS
He said the money has been prom1seo to tnree pre-c nosen
charities and added. "Besides, it
Miss Burnett. who missed Tuesday
night's Academy Award ceremonies
because she had the flu, left Los
Angeles on Wednesday for her
seuond home on the is land of Maui
where Ingersoll said she planned to
rest and spend time with her family . withnominiinum
K.l.D.S. FASHION s~w
Saturday, April 4
A spring look at bright and fun
Easter fashions for boys and girls .
modeled by Oraryge C.Ounty K.l.D.S.
11 :00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m.
Refreshments wi II be served.
Appearance by Surprise guest.
"ART IN"
Every Saturday in April from .
. 1 :00 to 3:00 p.m.
I
. Bring your child to draw their
favorite pictures. It may be chosen to
ba cein
Home Federal -Country.
Earn Home Federal's maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Markef Certificates ~Paying 14 % more interest than
any bank. Effective through April_ 13.
Decision overdue
It's a bout time .
For the better part of two decades, University Drive
has been shown on traffic master plans in Newport Beach,
Costa Mesa, Irvin e and the county.
But the road, which now comes to a halt at either side
of Upper Newport Bay, has never been completed. It has
never even been fully studied.
The road has long been viewed by some as a
necessary link between Irvine and Costa Mesa and as an
inland alternative to frequently congested Pacific Coast
Highway.
Objection to completing the road or even studying the
matter ha~ come from the Department of Fish and Game
and a local conservation group, Friends of Newport Bay.
These groups argue that the road will bring environ·
mental havoc to the sensitive bay area. They say an en·
vironmental impact report on the road would be a waste
of money.
And that's how things have stood for years.
Finally, Newport City Manager Robert Wynn decided
it was time to determine if the road really would damage
the environment. He is calling for an allocation in the
city's 1981·82 budget to produce an environmental study
to see what the answer is.
Costa Mesa and Irvine already have endorsed the
idea of such a study and likely will be asked to pick up
part of the cost since they. too, are affected by the
University Drive extension.
If environmental concerns are sufficient to hold up
the project, the study will show that point and Qther traf ·
fie solutions will have to be studied.
But to assume such a conclusion without proper ex-
amination of the facts shouldn't be the basis for rejecting
the project.
Copter fight loo~·
North Costa Mesans, irate over the 30 to 40 low-flying
helicopters that rattle their houses daily, have called for
a halt to new heliports in the city -especially in their
area.
Their wrath is venting at an inopportune time for two
firms which had what they thought was final approval for
heliports.
The city Planning Commissioh had okayed pads last
year for the Los Angeles Ttmes operation on Sunflower
Boulevard and the Downey Savings and Loan building in
Town Center across from South Coast Plaz$.
But the state, following public utility codes to the let·
ter of the law, won't grant pad approval without an okay
now from the City Council.
At a public stud>' session this week, former Mayor
Robert Wilson suggested the council contact Federal
Aviation Administration officials and the management of
corporations flying whirlybirds from and through Costa
Mesa.
FAA restrictions force helicopters to fly below 500
feet over north Mesa to avoid fixed-wing aircraft to and
from nearby John Wayne Airport.
Wilson. whose home has been bombarded with chop·
per noise, s uggests the city petition for a higher
helicopter flight pattern to ease noise. That's a good idea.
But if the council wants to show muscle to both public
agencies and the private sector regarding noise in the
city, it would be wise to turn thumbs down on the latest
heliport proposals until something is done. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boy~/Reuxuds
8y-LM. BOYD
One tact more than any
other explains why rewards
offered for information lead·
ing to Ule capture and con·
viction of crlminals have
been 50 successful. Lawmen
claim 1'tat there's almost in·
var9bfy « least pne person .
other than the criminal w~.
can name the gwlty party.
ft was not the mother of an
ugly baby wbo said: "You
can't love a butterfly \Ultil
you bave loved a
caterpillar." It was a
8enedlctine nun. About 500
years ago.
' What a lot of people doa't
realise ls that more than half
the drowning victims in tlWI
country were so loaded with
liquor at {he times of their
deatha that they could have
' been dnlgn•ted as le1aUy
drunk. Medical examiners'
1tatt1Uct prove that. . .
Altboucb Adolf HHl•r
amoked ct1arettu •• a
youtb, be quit at a1e ~. alld •
af\tr II• 10\ \be JC>-H
Fubrer. no GftlD.ul aad few
f~ ev.-dared 1molle
a ~••erette hi hit preMnce.
Tile· coy,ert tJ .S.-SOviet dialo~e
' W AIHH!G70N -Tb• meats, colncidenee1, dlac1"l military aup~u., to t•• 111· eouatr1 •. R••l•D aat1• 1
•••IGCM unWffD Ui• Unlted wtmpen, r&lled •1•broW1 ud 1ursent1 ln El Salvador. eour.,• the Eupt.lau to maw. aa\111 _. tM lovltr Ualon OC· knowlq 1mUea. Throu•b Ual• OtherwiH, Re.1u will •tart a1•lnstUbYa. • • eun M tw '"91s. nae ... II a dellcate proceu, an undU'aland· 1upplytn1 the suentlla1 wbO are Of toW"M, tM1e arraft•• ....... •lrMl llait tJI eommunJcaUon by In& appear• to be J•tuaa baUlins Soviet troop• In are p...cariOU1 at. belt.-~
dlplommtk .-.. oral exebaqe b~twe• the ftonakl llea110 Af 1hanlltan. bi .uPMt by uw dev91~
u4, ce oee..-. tbe bot ·Une. WbU• Heuae and the Leonld But It would be •ccurate to liaf o..n 11 alio a cove11 eom· Bre&hnev J<Mmlln. -&£AGAN ALSO wanta the pon that Rea1an and Breihnev mun1UU-networlt, whleb car· Kremlln to stop encou.ra1tn1 and are btainnlnl to understand ~ na ..,.._ me11a1•. HE&£ 181118 tacit, tentatJve, supportlna anU-Amencan move· Hother.
DIMmata are In some re· teauoue arrang.ment aa It ll' un· mtnt1 in Central America. or ••TCH o~ w•sT1111 · Whil Cl:i'Uk 1 1 blraa d ratood th else be will sti~ up adtl·Soviet "'ft .... ft ... • V: •'I b ~ ::n \top ca . hr.rhe•t le~l•~Y aources at e actl vity in Eastern Europe. pinda ~ob ·~OC:: ludch~si ~re~
learned to Reatan wtll hold down U.S. -Reasan ls most concerned ns cu ac . t ea m n s ra n
eomsuaftleate IJlterveotlOD ln El SaJvador and about a possible Soviet thrust in· hae managM to increase federal ~ 1 t b 0 n e aeek to eooa tU crills. Brethntv, to lean, which would th~ten f~ndlna for the natlo~'s gun an.
a n o t h e r In return, will restrain Soviet the Western World's oil suppt1 c1oaad0l'J. Ttte Army s Depart· thtouih near-forces in Poland and try to k~p In tbe Persian Gulf. HJnts hav\ ment of Civilian Marltsmarushfv,
I di bl lid th t rt l been relayed to Brezhnev with its customary support from n • :_ : a on 8 c 11· therefore that the United Sta~ National Rtne Association lob-!°~n ies~! -Any Soviet move against would re5ist any overt attack bylsts, will be given U«,000 Wt ii there ls to Poland, ll 11 also understood and ~espond to a covert move by ~.ear. The money wll.1 .co .for be an accom· would be countered by U.S. ac· sending mass arms shipments to tropfi,t.es a nd clas~1hcat1on m 0 d al i 0 n t1on against Cuba. The United Communist China. badges won by p('1vate gun
belwffn them they may prefer States may not be able to stop a -Reagan has also sent dis· ·club members, wh~ are pre·
that it be implicit rather than Soviet invasion of Poland, but creet ~ignals to Brezhnev that sumably pros~ecllve Army r it the Soviet Union bin an equally the Uruted States wlll no longer recruits. Incredibly. the NRA
exp ic · weak l>OSitton to prevent a U.S. remainpassivewhiletheKremlin , had talked Congress into nearly
Ap arrangemenl may be military move against Cuba. sets up pro-Soviet governments in doubling last year's target.
reached .through a. process of -Brezhnev wUl bait, or at Africa. u Brezhnev sends his shooting largesse, but the
almost imperceptible , mov.e-least restrlct. the flow o f Cuban alJies into another African budget cutters were able to bold
Mailbox
the increase to ··only" $19,000.
Energy Department
poohbahs have three methods of
getting cars to use on govern-
ment business: The cheapest op,
lion is to requisition a car from
a General Services Administra·
lion motor pool. The sect>nd.
slightly more expensive way Is
to have the GSA lease a car
from a private firm The third
and far more costly method is
!or the bureaucrat to lease the
car himself and send the bill to
the government. Under Option
No 3, the official gets to use the
car for private business. as long
as he pays ll'ie modest mileage
cost 4>tedictably. investigators
found that three out of every
four DOE bureaucrats entitled
to cars choose the third method.
Some developers have been
taking advantage of federal
housing subsidies for the poor to
add unnecessary luxury items
that in effect increase the sub·
sidies they get. In Santee. Calif..
for example. a government·
s ubsidized project included a
s wimming pool , rec r eation
rooms and paved parkin~.
What do economists know about workers?·
To the Editor:
Regarding .1'icholas von Hoff·
man's March 24· article on
.. Promise lo Older Americans,"
we wonder if George Will, who
voices the opinion that the elder·
ly are America's biggest prob-
lem, has ever known a blue col-
lar worker? One who does
physical labor all his life? One
who at the age of 62, has to force
himself out the door every morn-
ing. wondering if he can make it
to 65?
IS THIS what he has to look
forward to? So some nut that
has it made, and never had to
work or pay into Social Security
can tell him that be has to work
until he ls 70 or 75? That he is
lazy. selfish and socially ir·
responsible? How about the
children he has raised, who are
now working and paying taxes?
Are they a drag on the economy
too?
What are these so-called
economists trying lo do to
America? Give our country
away to a foreign power? If the
American worker does not have
a volce in these matters, what is
the use of working, paying lax·
es. raising c hildren CS> to
become good Americans?
Mr, von Ho(fmah really laid it
on the line in his article. I wish
this letter could be forwarded to
so-called economist Norman
Macrae and George Will. And to
our Pretident. Do you thlnk it
would make a differeoce in their
way of thinking? Even a little?
MRS:L . SANDERS
•taelc ••• e••t•
To the FAitor:
The present cost of cleaning
up the Back Bay with the City of
Newport Beach required to pay
$4.40,000, as reported in your
paper March 20, should ~ borne
by the 1ealous t!nvironmen·
tall1ts. They're the ones that
caused It to get so dirty.
Be~ween SPON, the 'Friends of
the Eatt.b and the Co"'-1 Com·
minion they stopped ita dreds·
ing f()!' enouab years to l'tally
cause Uda unfortunate condition.
NO'll ol CQW'Se &be coets have
IJ'QWn to borre8dous amounts.
PaJln8 tboee C09U sbould not be th• burden of the PQ1Nlace, but.
of Ute llealoul Idiots UiJt caUMd them.
THE C08T of paying for lhe
preservaUon of cnvlronmental
u1Unea1 b11 already weitbed
too beavlly on the populace. And
they are 1ettm1 tlred ot It. Wby
should lbe citlse~ of Newport
Beacb have to pay $440,000 for
tbl• unnecetsary expenditure
wben tl»re are ao many vttal
Mrvlc. that ar. not aultlclentlY
tunded? And wtij thouJd eWMiill
ol o\W parts ol the eoaatrY bi
required to pay Lbe other $3.5
million out of funds they need
for other purposes when most or
them don't even know where
Newport Beach is?
J It's time to look at the poten·
'tial results of all our acts before
we act on just the emotional
view of the moment. lt could
·save us a Jot or future troubles.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
'l'~lter •~•t•
To the Editor: ·
I agree that a competency test
for teachers would be great
.... but just what can be done
with a teacher proved
incompetent?
I propose that both the
previously mentioned test and
the removal or tenure for
teachers would be the ideal
system. A mere test alone will
not suffice in the effort to rid our
schools or incompetent teachers.
THE NOW·OBSOLETE
system of tenure was evoked to
prevent nefarious employers
from firing teachers ror such
ridiculous reasons as smoking
cigarettes or datin g
"undesirable" members or the
opposite sex.
As anyone can see, we no
longer need this, mainly due lo
the presence of strong unions
and effecU\le upholding of the
law. Only incompetent teachers
need be afraid for their jobs, and
only they will have you believe
tenure Is n ecessar y , not
obsolete.
EILEEN DORN
Selleel•fte•
To the Editor:
I wouJd lite to sollclt your help
in tryin1 to redress wbat I
believe I.a a sreat d.issentce to
thla communlty beln1 perpetual·
ed by the Newport-Mesa Unllied
~bool District. I have made re·
pealed attempts at bringing to
the public's attention the der·
eliction of duty I feel that the
board ol trustees I.a 11howln1 ln
not conaiderine the sale ol the
thr~ vacant and unused school
sltea tt now owns. These prop.
ertlea bave a current apprai&ed
value of approximately *3~
million which would 1enera.te
approxlma~ly tt. 't mllUon ln ln·
tereat income annually ftw the
school diatrtct -aiJ of which
could be UMd by the d11trtct.
David Larun of Rutan &
Tucker, OM ot lbe mOlt prolfti.
nent te.,. ftnuctq 1ttorn111 in tbe eount.1, uneatetorteaJ)J
refut• tbe eoatnttoo of U.-'
Supt. ol lc~t J?i'· Nleoll, tllat, tb• •c:baiol CllSmct .. natralnld from ............... ...,,. .....
bee&• al i'llirSerruo Md:ll••·
Senate Bill No. 90, Assembly Bill
No. 8 as Dr. Nicoll slated at lhe
school board meeting of Jan. 27.
or any other existing California
law.
I WO ULD like to issue a public
challenge to Dr. Nicoll lo defend
the erroneous and misleading
statements that he had made in
reference lo school financing. A
thorouih inquiry into this dis·
trict's holding of these prop·
erties needs lo be made im·
mediately. before itis too late.
The district's ability to sell
these properties has already
been partially encumbered by
the .tJaylor Bill which became
dfective on Jan. 1, two months
after I fi rst addressed the issue.
IC this district procrastinates
another year or two, it just may
be that the state wjll introduce
some new legislation that will
totally restrict a district's right
to retain the funds derived from
the sale of excess property
because of the financial
restraints placed on the state by
Proposition 13.
At a time when the board of
trustees is eliminating a
multitude of courses and
seriously considering the
elimination of junior and senior
high schools to save a mere one
million dollars. it seems to me
they could well afford to pay an
attorney several thousand
dollars to check out the validity
of the claims I have made. This
ls certainly a s m all price to
pay if it means the possibility of
acquiring another $4.1 million
per year in operating funds If 1
am right -and lam right!
TOM WILLIAMS
Coordlnatins Director
Parents for a Responsive
Board of Education
Gre-tl••ell
To the Edttor :
Supervisor T homas Riley's
latest blast at Newport Beach
for lts decision to sue the couutY
over proposed airport expansion.
is extraordinarily unaeemly for
someone wbo , supposedly,
represents its clti1ens at the
county level.
Mr. Riley ou1bt to know, and
everyone else does know, that
e"panded facilittea at the John
Wayne Ai.rport wlU brJn1 ex-
panded uae and •11 lta drtadtul
consequences for Newporten.
Every thinking person rec·
opl1es that, ii t.he master plan
it Implemented\ Newport'•
future la doomea. Dqea Mr.
RUty WDlt the ctty 1b0utd tit
bull ind actepJ its own an·
nlhllaUOn? In tbelr ct.tl1lon to ~ a
1wt. city otttciall are merely ntlectiill eomUtueat pre•ure.
l
A ground swell of public opinion
is demanding lo be heard and
none of Mr. Riley's ranting and
raving will quiet it
AMY ROBSART
AU slaar~ IJf!fl~lit•
To the Editor.
While reading th e letter
regarding the proposed Newport
Cen t er expan s ion , it i s
interesting to note how the
··inconveniences·· of a few
people are always named. but
the benefits to all a re never
mentioned.
How about the fact that the
cxpanson of Newport Center by
the Irvine Company will bring to
the City of Newport Beach
additional annual revenues of $1
million for all to benefit from?
How about the fact that the
Irvine Company is spending $8.2
million of its own money to
improve the roads to help
alleviate congestion for
everyone's benefit?
How about the fact the
expansion will provide more
goods and services for the
residents of Newport Beach so
all can maintain and enhance
lheir standards or living? Isn't
that what it's all about anyway?
It is always too easy to
pinpoint "inconveniences .. or a
few. Possibly these few shoulcl
take a broader look and see the
benefits for all lo share. After
all, they are a part of the ''allj
~0 ! I
HOWARD DERMAN
A~lades
To the Editor: '
Your CJne article on Frank J;.
Wi}liams1 Jr. was appreciat~
by Frank's many friends •bO
wUl be interested to know that
among his laurels were~ t Distinguished Flying Cross,
Airman's Medal, and two purpl
hear ts which were receive
durln1 his combat service as •
Marine pilot in Korea where~ '
flew ninety.seven combat
d\lsalons. He was so modest. thllt
a lmost no one knew ot these
accolades.
DAVID W. FURNAS. M.O.
• l1tt1r1 from rtatkrs art Wflc<> .
Tht filhl to ccmdnff l•tltr1 to
1pocc or cUmarsote IH)el it resfn>e'Cf.
wtt•r• o/ 300 wordl or '-•• wtll ~
glutn pr1/frffk:f. All wtlt,, mMlt
lncludt """°''"' ORd Jnailing '14· d'fll bMf ftGtlWI mGlf bf tliCW ..
• on l"tqwat tf n/ltcfnf rto.tt.>ft 6a Qf-
P. Gr n t PodrJI wW "oc 6iit
publJ•ltd L.1Ufrt "'OJI k
t•I•~ to ea.-. """'' _, PMM !Mlftlbfr of tM GOnt1tbldor
,,...,, bf fCu1n for 01n/acotklfl
ptirpo ...
Btsto.,, t11 t-.e •ald•g \ Costa Mesa Historinl Society•a head-
quarters, formerly the Oranae Cout Sav-
ings and Loan Asaoclatioo office at Mesa
Verde Drive and Adams Avenue, sits on
blocks awaiting a concrete slab, at its new ·
lo cation at downtown Lions Park.
Purchased by tbe city for '80,000, the
tbree-~ar-old bu.lW.lng wu moved nearly
three mllll over atty streets recently. The
3,000-eqUJre-foot structure wW house hia·
torical doCumenta and artifacts.
N e'W~rt gets qew
j
per~onnel chief
' I
The 34-year-old former assis-
tant 1personnel director for the
City of twglewood h as been
named Newport Beach's new
personnel director.
Lorenzo Mota, a resident of
Lakewood, began his chores in
the Newport Beach personnel
department Monday. He will
earn $2,287 a month.
Mota, who is married and bas
four children, is a graduate of ·
Cal State Long Beach where be
also ean)ed a master's degree in
public administration.
He replaces Wayne Schwam-
mel, who left Newport Beach
after serving as personnel direc·
tor for two years. Schwammel is now the personnel director in
Santa Maria, satisfying a desire,
friends say, lo move closer to
the San Francisco area.
Mota, who started his career
working for the state's Employ-
ment Development Department,
likely will be initiated to city
business quickly with contract
negotiations with all city
• employee groups set to begin
this month.
WiJJi am Brown remains as
Newport Beach's safety and .in·
suran ce adminis trator, the
second' ranting position in the
personnel department.
OCC slates
• air courses
Re1istration for air
transportation courses "Tbe Private Co-Pilot," "Air Traffic
Control for PUota" and "Hana
Gliding,'' is being conducted al
Orange Coast C0Ue1e in ca.ta
Mesa until April 10.
The nine-week courses an tui·
lion-free. Information ii availa·
ble by calling 556-5712.
.,...,,,,.. ..........
TAKES PERSONNEL P0St
Newport'• MOte ...
Chikl,birth
danes
availabl,e
..
The Capistrano Adult Schoot ia now offering free courses in
c h ildbirth e duca tion at
Capistrano Valley High School
io Mission Viejo.
Classes ate scheduled to be.On April 8 in room C-1 of the school,
located at 26301 Via !:scolar.
The classes will run for nine
consecutive weeks from 1 to 10
p.m.
For further information and to
register call Andrt:a Ysals,
certified childbirth instrpctor, at
495-6423, or the adult school of·
fice at 493--0658.
Anti-violence bill /alters
'
SACRAMENTO <AP) -.U-·
torney General George Deultme-
j ian 's proposal to let a court
forbid a meeting of any group
planning violence, including the
Ku Klux Klan, has run into free·
speech resistance. .
It happened Tuesday at a bear·
ing -its first-before the6eqate
Judiciary Committee.
Giant f oumlation
ends charitable saga
Solontkath
figurewim
trial, tklay
SAN PRANCJSCO (AP> -Cit·
IDI reluctance ol aome witneuei.
to tuUty, former People1 Tem·
pie member Larry Layton bu
WOil a delay ID bis federal trial
on cb.rles of compiring to kill
Con1re11man Leo Ryan at a
Jun1le airstrip ambush in
Guyana ID 1171.
Before cbanlina t.be trial date
Wednesday from Kay 12 to July
t, U.S. Dlltrlct Judie Robert F.
Peckham criticised Layton'• at·
torneys for falllDc to obtain a
medical expert for a psycblatric
defense and for not pro~diq
the prosecution with a
percblatrfc proftle of Layton by
Tuesct.y, .. onlered.
ft&CKILUI AL80 poetponed
until July T a beartq on a de-
f eue motion to suppreu an al·
le1ed confesalon Layton 11.ped
ln Guyana four daya after Ryan
was alaln at tbe Port Kattuma
airstrip.
The fatal shooting of the coo-
1ru1aum and four otben oc-
curred Nov. U, 1171, a few boura
before tll PeoplH Temple
members died In a ma11
murcler-.Wclde at their nearby
Jon'*1wD MWement on Ol'den
from cult leader Jim JOlles. a, ... anc1 the oUMra ud t.em
Yl•ltinc Jooea1oWD on a fact-
find.lq million stemmtn& ttom
complalnta about tbe cult'•
operatioa.
L.,um'a lawyen wanted a de-
lay In tbe Kay 12 trial date to
enable them to subpoena doeu·
menta and tapes from several
1overnmmt qencles, make an investl1alive trip to Guyana,
and tty to round up more wit·
neHea f« the defense.
'"SO•B wrrNESSES simply
do not want to become involved,
attorney Toay Tamburello said.
''They want to be left alone. So
we need more time for in·
veaU,.ticm."
Federal Publlc Defender
James Hewitt told Peckham a
paycblarlc defense bad not been
formul•ted because there are
only 10 .. ycblatrilta ID t.be COUil·
try with expertise ID mind ~·
t.rol and mos& were either un·
available or not interested wort-
1.Dt wttb Laytoa.
CAllSON CITY, Nev. (AP) -One
of the nation's blgge1t foundations
went out of business after 1lvm1
away $192 million ln line with w1sbes
of its founder, sin and yeaat magnate
Max C. Fleischmann.
for their blindlin& of the foundadoa
and ruled: that they bad "fully a;d
c ompletely" catrled out tbelr
respoDlibllitiea. Not present for the
session were tnaat9" Walter Orr
Roberta and Sffsiona Wheeler.
·Marin
bans plea
barga;n
SAN 'AFAEL CAP>
-The Marin Courttf
dlatrlct attorney bas
announced an end to
plea bargaining on "You're all fired," joked Diltrlct
Court Judge Frank Gre1ory in tau·
ing the fmal order Wednesday &-
solvinc the lrult set up followinl
"lhjor" Fleiscbmann's death In
1951.
felony charges.
From now on, if a
felon ls convicted and
doesn't ao to jail, "it
will mean only one thing
-the Judie didn't send
btm," 1ays District
Attorney Jerry Herman.
IACIWISlftO CU> -.... ......... , ..............
• ,. ...... UDl••• lh ,1111 ~ ........ .., ........... 1W tbe atate al Ca.UlorDla,1
a I WOlaaD f« tile 1tate N-UN _..,..._Mid.
Martlla Miid, mua1er tJl tM
State tJl Calllonla Lelillaton' ~ Symm, wiileb COY·
en an ...ur.t and eJeeted at.ate
oftleiall, cciaftnned WedDMdaJ
Uaat a..,an la 1Wl covered bJ
tbe 1roup bealtb insurance
Polley be bad u '°"rnor. .
STATS ascoaos .. , tile
atate PQI ., per mon~ for
Reaa•'• Blue era.. ud BJue Skield Ma1tb aDd ll09pitaH•atton
laauraace and toward bl1
peoakm.
It wun't immediately known
wbe&Mr tbe pretldent woold UN
that ia111rance to pay tbe
medical bills from the H ·
ausloatioo attempt against him
Monday, or bow much t.bole·bllla
ml&bttOtal. But deputy White Hou.se preu
secretary Larry Spea.kea cited
Rea1an's state-provided
medical insurance when ques-
tioned about the bills Wednel·
day.
"ML aMGAN 18 covered by
health insurance with the State
of California. Mr. Reatan was
elilible to continue his coverqe
like any other retired state
employee, and be dld exerdle
that option. Beyood that, I am
not permitted by Jaw to diaeuaa
any individual's benefits," Ml.
Nishi said.
For most state employees, the
1roup insurance covers about 80
percent of the coat of moat
medical and hospital bWa.
Reagan's penaion for bil eipt
years u 'overnor lM'7 lhroulh
1975, wa.a tnereased aulomalical·
ly for inflation from $17 ,600 lat
year to fll,'32 th1a year. sate
records say.
...., ...............
BANK OP AMERICA 8'UDINT AWARD wtNNMI
Yloeolta Yentoo Md Ctwt .. Mr ca.Meley
8 coast stUilents
winners Of awards ..
EJCbt Oraqe Cout ltudentl
were wilmen in the Bank of
America'• 3Clb annual Achieve·
ment Awardl semi·ftnalt in four
categories: vocational, fine and
liberal arts, and science/math.
First place winners of the
vocational arts cate1ory, Vic-
toria Verrico of Dana Point, and
Flne Art.I catefory Cbrtatopber
Cassady , ~vme, will advance lo the fin May 20. They are
assured of ash prizes of at leut
League sets
• art auction
An art auction to raise funds
for the U.gue of Women Voters
of the Orange Coast will be held
Sunday at the Veterans '
Memorial Comm\mity Center in
Lacuna Beach.
An art preview will be at 2
p.m., with the public auction
beginning at 3. Ticket.a, at $3.SO,
may be purchased at the center
at the corner of Legion and
Catalina street.a.
For information, call Becky
Jones at 4M-4l687.
$500, butareellgibletowin$2,000.
Second place 1'1nner1 were
Steven Bein of Newport Beach,
Derek Krueaer of Irvine, and
Arkady Mai of Dana Point.
Each received $100.
Third place winners receivfni
$75 were Usa Payne of Newport
Beach and Bettina Nicely of
Laguna Beach.
Joseph Mader of Newport
Beach received $S0 and a foUrth
place title.
Selection of winners was made
on the basis of the students'
grades, leadership qualities,
communJty activities and their
performance in a group dis·
cussion of issues.
Cartoon classes
Cartooning classes will be held
beginning next week at the
Laguna Beach School of Art,
with syndicated comic artist
Roger Armstrong at the
blackboard.
Armstrong's features include Little Lulu, Ella Cinders and
Napoleon and Uncle Elby.
For inform ation, call the
school at 494-1520.
·.
. ..
I
Delly .......... P-...
FIFTH GRADE WRITING CHAMPS DISPLAY TROPHIES ANO SKILLS AFTER TESTS
From left.,.. Mal-Tr•ng Nguyen, Stephenie Sehek, Georgina SmHh, Thuy D•ng
8 students picked
• • •
. ' ..
I . . in writing contest
:~
! I
Eight elementary school
students have been selected to
represent the Newporl·Mesa
School District in Orange
County's annual Pep and Quill
contest April 25.
Selected from amone 53
comp~titors in district lourth
and fifth grade classes were a
fourth grade handwritinf team
'Item price'
bill advances
SACftAll&NTO <AP) -Tb1I
year'• "lte,n priclq" blll bu
puled its ftnt letlalatiVe check·
point.
1'bil bW, AM by AIMmblyman
Keneul Rosenthal, D-Loa ~--• .,.. a 5-1 vote,_......, ot tti• A1Hmbly Conaumer
PrOteetlai and ToJdc M1tirtali Commmft, 1oin1 to th• A•· • •UlblJftoOr.
.
·composed of winners Nam Chi l ~ Ton·Nu and Thu Vu of Sonora i
School, Mi Mi Hu of Bear Street 'c •
School and Kristen Phebus of l
Andersen School. l
David Schwartz of Eastbluff
Sc h o o l w 1 s s eTe c t e d a1l
alternate.
The fifth grade team la
composed of Georgina Smllb tr'
Harbor View School, Stepb~
Scheck and Mai·Tran1 NIUY• •
of Newport Heights School a
Thuy Dans of Bear Street
School.
Fifth 1rade alternate
Jennller Adamson of Woodl
lcbool.
j
RAWHIDE RANCH PROVIDES SUMMER TRAINING FOR KIDS
RObert Chown, 14, •ntetUln• fellow etuc:tents wtth ~Ho
Old west ·camp sclwol .
trains fulure ranchers
BONSALL <AP) -Cl arence
Chown built Rawhide Ranch to
resemble a sort of Old Dodge City,
but the Christian non-denominational
school revolves not around guns, but
horses, cows. eoats and rabbits.
'It's an experience that eve~ kid
lives -and he learrus while having
fun," Chown said of his 47-acre Old
West camp.
R aw hide R anc h provides
variations on the same theme for
youngsters who range in age from
second graders to sophomores in
college. About 200 youngsters a week
Flip Wilson /
arraigned on
drug charges
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Comedian
Flip Wilson has been arraigned in West
Los Angeles Municipal Court on drug
possession charges stemming from an
arrest at Los Angeles InternationaJ
Airport last month.
Wilson, 47, is scheduled for an April
·l7 prelirQ\nary hearing in West Los
Aqgeles Municipal Court on a district
att.orqey'I) complaint of two felony
counts -possessihg cocaine and
PQSsessing hashish oil.
.J
.fOLJCE SAID THEY found the
ddlgs on him at the airport MarchlO as
he-' arrived from
Florida, where he
r ~c e iv e d a sl er-city letter
fr m the mayor of
N¥oya, Fla., to
br-tng to Mayor
Tom Bradley.
..
'
~
·-·
~''•r ~~
,,
'
Th e arrest
·cntlminated
se-veral days ·
;i.n\r estigalion by "'LIOff
\ . ~~
Ui~ Los Angeles pohce and Los Angeles
C0unty sherifrs deputies. )\
ttRigbt now this is being handled like
all)' other case, but we're thinking of
appointing a special deputy, because
y~ guys are making sucb a big deal
ou( of it," Deputy OUlrict Attorney l«*n Berault of the Santa Monica
t.rancb office told The Associated
~SS.
WILSON WAS SCHEDULED to be
arraigned Tuesday but appeared in
court last Friday, apparently to avoid
:publicity. He was freed on $2,500 bail
after beina booked for allegedly
·~Uessing 2.5 grams of cocaine and
·se er al grams of hashish oil.
Besides bis "Flip Wilson Show" on
NBC-TV in the early 1970s, Wlllon
milkes nightclub appearances in Las
Vegas and elsewhere, and has made
~everaJ,comedy record al bums.
participate in the summer proeram
while others come for camps at other
times of the year.
THERE IS ALSO day school for
grades two through 12 and a two-yen
vocational school for colleee-age
students.
The bo y campers live ln
dormitories shaped like covered
wagons while the girls share log
cabins clustered in Fort Rawhide.
Tbe youngsters awaken early and
spend two hours on horseback, study
veterinary science, livestock produc·
lion and rodeo.
Despite its Western motif, Chown
insists, "It's oot a dude ranch."
"We train the horses and children
the same way,'· said Chown, a
53-year-old former livestock dealer
who opened the school as a boys and
girls camp 17 years ago and
expanded it eight years ago. "It's not
in their ability lo be champions all
the time and it's important not to
break their spirit."
IN FACT, CHOWN, whose four
sons were junior rodeo champions,
believes ''the livestock industry ls a
tremendous opportunity for young
people· -a multimillion dollar
industry."
Re pointed out that former
Rawhide students easily find jobs as
horse trainers and ranchers and in a
r-n1e of relaleq fi•ld• such ~· camping and recreation.
There are from 30 lo 50 teachers or
paid ranch hands, who watch over a
student body wbicb bu included
sons of a British diplomat, a Mexican
governor and Japanese businessmen,
Canadians and Australians.
A class in Bible is taught, but
Cbown's students range in belief
from Anglicans to Roman Catholics.
THERE ARE 1%5 horses in cornJs
at bis spread three miles east of
Bonsall in rural northern San Diego
County, and the kids get 30,000 riding
lessons every year. .-
After learning lo raise farm
animals they sell them to help
support the ·school, where tuition is
$750 including room and board. That
income Is supplemented by sales
from the Western store and livestock
stud fees from area ranchers.
A rodeo buck-out is stated on
Fridays, with a charge to the public.
Both teachers and campers seem
to love the program that Chown has
to offer.
TEEN-AGER PAUL Blais called it
a ··great school -I thank the Lord
I'm here."
Bob Johnston. who teaches drama,
noted the main ingredient which
seems lo make Rawhide a success.
"There's something about God's
country and the earth that Is
wholesome," he said.
Bomall i& located north of Vilta on
Highway 18.
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A publie-relatlou flnn'1 alle1at1oo
t .pother sroup aot a lucra~ve state contract because of iu
ltic~ ti• has been rebutted by tbe state Department of Health rvtew. 1 , Tbe department OD Wednesday dellled a P.rolett 8uaaom It ~pet ot San Francilco, whlcb bid unaucceufully for a Sl mlWon,
15-montb proeram to get Calllornia parent. to talk wltb tbelr children
about sex. ~ Donald Solem, president ot Solem and Alaoclates of San Fran·
cftsco, which was awarded tbe contract, is a former executive ~retary of the California Democratic Party. :~ /onnJJ Senate oompaign group
hr SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. bas formally
.9reated a U.S. Senatecampalpcomtnlttee and ft.led papen which aJ.
low himtoraisefunda, a top aide confirms.
•2 Ttle action, learned Wednesday, stops just abort of a formal
?declaration for the Senate seat now held by Republican S.I.
,tlfayakawa.
$ell's Angels oonviction overturned
'lt SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A former Hells Angels leader bas won
p. new trial because a federal appeals court says the prosecution may
'(fl ave lied in efforts to obtain a search warrant against him.
bi The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Wednesday the govern· ~~ent mt have been guilty of '"deliberate falsification or reckless
9isregar for the truth" in the case of Lawrence "Moose" Chesher,
Cf or mer h ad of the San Francisco Hells Angels chapter. He is serving ·ia five:yeaf sentence at a federal prison in Missouri for possessing a
methamphetamine laboratory. fT(
~1,300 hear Atlanta mothers
91 OAKLAND (AP) -More than 1,300 people jammed the Allen
?ll'emple Baptist Church in Oakland Wednesday ni&ht to listen to
speeches by two mothers of slain Atlanta children.
I~. The two women, Venus Taylor and Willie Mae Mathis , are
11!lraveling around the country to raise money to send black Atlanta
bchildren to summer camp.
.,Tel.et/ion set.s reronl,
")I 1~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -This year's Easter Seal telethon com·
.11>leted its 20-hour broadcast earning a record $17 million in cash1 ·checks and pledges for the rehabilitation of disabled children ana
~dults, telethon officials say.
The 10th annual telethon originated here but was carried on 130
television stations nationwide. The program ended Sunday.
The Daily Pilot reported an incorrect figure Monday.
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Wayne
Burton, accUMd of a vmety ol
mlsrepreaentMtonJ and fnud
connected witb tnllt deeda. hu
been restrained from ut4nl bll
real estate and mortta1e loan
broker Ucenaes pendin1 a hearlna
next month In Superior Court.
· The testra.lnln& order was ob-
tained Wednesday In a 1ult by the
California Department of Real
Estate that 1eekl an lnJwiction
aaatnst Burton and bll companies
and "other ... relief," said
Deputy Attorney General
Richard Bakke.
Burton is accused of bilkina
$100 million from 6,000 lnveston
in what has been called the
largest trust deed fraud in state
history.
BURTON•s companies falling
under the restraining order are
Universal Financial, California
Equities Home Loan, Universal
Ho:Jine Loan and Universal Home,
said David H. Fox, director of the
Department of Real Estate.
Superior Court Judge Leon
Savitch set May 14 for Bakll:e's of.
fice as the attorney for tbe
Department of Real Estate, he
said.
Burton is specifically accused
of putting falsely inflated values
on real estate bought with in· vestor funds; co-mingling funds;
telling investors they were get·
ting first or second-trust deeds -
loans on real estate -when they
allegedly got lower priority liens;
and concealing that he borrowed
more than $25 million of the in·
vestors' money.
LAST WEEK, U.S. District
Judge Mariana Pfaelzer appoint·
ed former bank president Walter
M. Sharp as receiver of Burton's
San Bernardino-based Universal
Financial Corp. The federal order
stripped Burton of control over
the business, which includes
some of the highest priced de·
velopments in downtown Sa.1
Bernardino.
Carol gets requests
Klan rallies fn Sacranaento
Robed members of Ku Klux Klan return
shouts at demonstrators in onlooking
crowd as they hold rally Wednesday near
Capitol in Sacramento. The klan is raising
"racism" charges against a black state
parole officer for revoking a kJan mem·
ber's parole for carrying a weapon.
Coastal plan approved
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -San Mateo County has
become the first California coun·
ty to win state approval of its
coastal development program,
according to a state Coastal
Commission official.
The county can start issuing
building permits in the coastal
zone Thursday, said Peter
Douglas, commission deputy ex-
•ecutive director. It will be the
first time the county bas had
that right since state voters ap·
proved a coastal protection in·
itiative in 1972.
T he city of_San Francisco also
won approval or its coastal plan
and ordinances, subject to ap-
proval of its supervisor:s. and
Marin County won approval of
its plan, but not the ordinances
to carry it out.
THE APPROVALS will allow
the local governments to regain
authority to issu e building
permits in the ribbon of land
along the California shore,
which has been regulated by re·
gional boards under supervision
of the state board.
Meanwhile, commissioners
complained that a lobbyist for
state cities was premature in an-
nouncing a tentative agreement
that would reduce the com·
mission's regulation of the
sprawling coast.
·'There was no tentative
agreement, no agreement at
all," Douglas asserted. '"The
CQm mission was, lo put it mild·
ly, upset."
A MEMO announcing a ten·
tative pact on severaJ crucial
coastaJ issues was distributed to
a state Assembly committee this
week by League of Cities lob·
byist Russell Selix.
.,LOS ANGELES <AP) -Carol
Bbrnett has been deluged with mail
f•pm people asking her to donate
!iqme of the $1.6 million she won in
h·er s uit against the National
~~quirer to charity.
1! • : Miss Burnett had announced she
~uld give the winnings away at a
~ .e I e v i s e d
post-victory press
cpn!erence. But a
spokesman for the t.c t r e s s s a i d
~ednesday that
people apparently
did not ·hear her
announce that
s h e 'd already
chosen th r ee
charities.
"SHE'S BEEN getting an awful lot
of mail from people asking her to
i:lonate some of her winnings,··
Ingersoll said. ''The letters are going
to her, her attorneys, her business
hlanager I've even received some.··
He said the money has been prom1sea to tnree pre-c hosen
charities and added. "Besides, it
could be months or years before she
·gets any money."
The National Enquirer has
announced plans to appeal the jury
verdict.
Enquirer attorney William
Masterson said Wednesday he will
file a motion and brief next week
asking for a new trial on grounds
there was insufficient evidence to
support the verdict and the damages
awarded were "excessive."
ATTORNEYS for both sides have
said appeals in the case could take
two years.
Miss Burnett sued the Enquirer
over a 1976 gossip column item which
accused her of boisterous behavior in
a Washington D.C. restaurant and
claimed she had argued with then
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
The tabloid ultimately retracted the
item as incorrect.
Miss Burnett, who missed Tuesday
night's Academy Award ceremonies
because she had the nu, left Los
Angeles on Wednesday for her
second home on the island of Maui
where Ingersoll said she planned to
rest and spend time with her family.
Todays
Maximum
Interest
Guaranteed
for 30 months
with no minimum
K.l.D.S. FASHION SJ-OW
Saturday, April 4
A spring I~ at bright and fun
Easter fashion\ for boys and girls .
modeled by Oran~ County K.l.D.S.
11 :00 a~m . and 2:00 p.m.
Refreshments will be served.
Appearance by Surprise guest.
"ART IN"
EVery Saturday in April from'
. 1 :00 to 3:00 p.m .
. Bring your child to draw their
favorite pictures. It may be chosen to
become a finished Greeting card.
Every chila wi II nmve a handsome
certificate.
• • ancem
Hmne Federal
Country.
Earn Hom~ Federal'• maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Market' Certifi~ates -Paying % % more interest than
any bank. Effective through April 13.
Parents reBCue cuts
Mariners Elementary School parents in Newport
Beach have launched the third session of a successful
program to offer enrichment-type programs cut from the
public school curriculum.
Students from throughout the Newport-Mesa District,
and from parochial and private schools, are attending the
31 classes offered at Mariners School to any child who
lives in the district.
The classes include music, ornithology, art,
languages, biology, drama and others. They are offered
before and alter normal school hours.
Parent-paid fees range ~tween $15 and $30 per class,
but Mariners' supporters say they'll pick up the tab for
students whose parents can't afford to pay.
Most of the 200 enrollees are from Mariners, about 15
are driven by parents from homes in Costa Mesa and the
rest come from other Newport schools.
Fee money mostly goes for teachQrs who receive
stipends larger than offered by the community colleges,
says Mrs. Marion Robboy who spearheaded the Extra
Time Classes program.
Mariners School parents who have worked bard to
make the program a success are to be congratulated.
Other schools' parent organizations might well use the
Mariners effort as a model in their own neighborhoods.
Even though no academic credit is offered for work_.-
done in the classes, these programs offer fine educational
opportunities in a distric~ whose money woes will mean ad·
ditional class cuts In the future. ,
Citizens can help
In an attempt to strengthen the fight against crime,
Newport Beach police have helped form a citizen lookout
network known as Neighborhood Watch.
Neighborhood Watch programs are hardly new to the
Orange Coast and have been particularly successful in
Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach.
But the program is new to Newport Beach and has
been initiated with an eye toward combating commercial
and residential burglaries, which are on the increase in
Newport.
The program is simple enough. The city is divided in·
to zones and each neighborhood zone selects a number of
individuals to take turns keeping an eye on the
neighborhood. Suspicious activity is reported to the
police.
• •
Each zone also has a leader who attends regular
police meetings where he or she learns what to look out
for and the latest on crime trends.
Police report that reaction to the program has been
exceptional. Hundreds of interested citizens have shown
up for preliminary Neighborhood Watch sessions at the
police department.
By all indications, and judging from the program's
track record in other cities, this appear\ to be a positive
move.
With crime in the Southland soaring to absurdly
dangerous levels, every new or old idea helps.
• Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (7141"&42-4321 .
Boyd/R~
ByL.M.BOYD
One. fact more than any
other explaJn5 why rewards
offered for information lead·
ing to the capture and con·
viclio_~ or criminals have
been lt'1 successful. Lawmen
claim that there's aJmost in·
variably at least one person
other than the criminal who
can name the guilty party.
1l was not the mother of an
ualy baby who said: "You
can't love a butterfly unlil
you have loved a
caterpillar." It was a
Benedictine nun. About 500
yeanaao.
WASHINGTON -Tlte
cltalo ... bttwee ~ Ua&*-4
••• • t11it ao.w um. oc--cura • two ~· TMN II • dlnct. Uat GI eommtmlca~ b1 dt~lk--.. oral adllale and, ................ am..
But tMN 19 allo a CiOYWl COID·
mYDlnttps aetwoitt, wldcb car· rl•..,...meu.,..
DIPloQlau are lD ~--· re· 1pett Uke rare tropical blrdl.
They bav•
learned to
communicate
wltb ope
aaother,
throup near·
laaudlblt
1°'*91, polet
and 1esturea.
If there la to
be an •ccom·
modatlon between them, they may prefer
that it be implicit rather than
explicit. •
An arran1ement may be
reached through a process of
almost imperceptible move·
Mailbox
IDIDtl, cobadMiaHI, 4llMi'Mt
........ ralled~ud koowtq 1m11... rou; tbll
cleUaate proeeu, u uaderlta.Dd· ••f appears to be JeUIDI be .... th• Ronald ltHIH
White HOuae and tbe Leoa1d
BreahMYKnmlln. .
asas II TRE tacit, tentaUv.,
tenuoua arraniement u It la un·
deratood by my sources at ~
blp19t leve.1J:
-Reacan wllJ boJd down tJ.S.
interventiaa in £1 Salvador and
seek to cool tbe crltlJ. Breitmev,
ln r~um. will restrain Sovtei
forces in Poland and try to keep
a lid oo that crili..I.
-Any Sovlet move a1ainst
Poland, It ls also undenlood
would be countered by U.S. ac·
tJoo acaiost Cuba. The United
States may not be able to stop a
Soviet lnvuioo of Poland, but
the Soviet Union is in an equally
weak poe1Uoo to prevent a U.S.
military move against Cuba.
-Breshnev will halt, or at
least restrict, the flow of
mllltart 1uppUe1 to tb• ••·
1aar1enu in SI Salvador.
Otb•nriM, Rea1an will at.art 1upplylq tbe perrlUaa who an
battUnl So•l•t troop• In
Aflbanlltan.
-a&\GAN ALSO ••nta tbe Kremlin to atop encoura1l4• and
1upportlnc antl·Amertcan move·
menta 1D Central America, or
elae be wtll atlr up anU.Sovi«
activity in Eaatem Europe.
-Reasan i..I most concerned
about a pouible Sovlet thrust in·
to Iran, which would threaten
the Western World's oil supply
In the Persian Gull. Hints have
been relayed to Brezhnev,
therefore, that the United States
would· resist any overt attack
and respond to a covert move by
se1uUn1 mass arms shipments to
Communist China.
-Reagan has also sent dis·
creel signals to Brezhnev that
the United Slates will no longer
remain passive while the Kremlin
sets up pro-Soviet governments in
Africa. U Brezhnev sends his
Cuban allies into another African
eouatry, RHI•• at1lat n·
cour.,. the zcYptlau to mDY•
.. aiDltUb)'a. , t
Of eoune, tbMe arruc•••ta are pNeariOUI at belt ucl:emald
be uPMt by aew deveao;m: ....
But It would be accurat. to re-
port that Rea•an and Brahnev
are bepmln1 to Wlderat&Dd one
another. t
WATCll ON WASTE: While
fundl f« school lunches are be-
lo& cut bade, the admlnlatraUon
bas manaeed to increase federal
fundiq for tbe nation's &uo flll·
clonadOI. The Army's Des>Ut·
ment of Civilian Marksmansb.lp,
with it.I customary support from
National Rifle Association lob-
byist.a, will be given $4«,000 thla
year. The money will go for
''trophies and classification
badges" won by private gun
club members, who are pre·
sumably prospective Army
recruits. Incredibly, the NRA
, had talked Congress into nearly
doubling last year's target-
shooting largesse. but the
budget cutters were able to bold
the increase to "only" $19,000.
-Energy Department
poohbahs have three melho,ds of
getting cars to use on govern·
ment business: The cheapest op-
tion is to requisition a car from
a Genera] Service,J Administra-
tion motor pool. The second.
slightly more expensive way is
to have the GSA lease a car
from a private firm. The third
and far more costly method is
for the bureaucrat to lease the
car' himself and send the bill lo
the government. Under Option
No. 3. the official gets to use the
car for private business, as long
as he pays the modest mileage
cost. Predictably. investigators
found that three out of every
four DOE bureaucrats entitled
to cars choose the third method.
-Some developers have been
taking advantage of federal
housing subsidies for the poor to
add unnecessary luxury items
that in effect increase the sub-
s idies they get. In Santee. Calif ..
for example. a government-
s ubsidized project included a'
s wimming pool, rec r e ation
rooms and paved parking.
What do economists know about workers?
To the Editor:
Regarding Nicholas voo Hoff.
man's March 24 article on
''Promise lo Older Americans,"
we wonder if George Will, who
voices the opinion that the elder·
ly are America's biggest prob·
lem, has ever known a blue col·
Jar worker? One who does
physical labor all his life? One
who at the age of 62, has lo force
himself out the door every morn·
ing, wondering if he can make it
to 65?
IS TIUS what he has to look
forward to? So some nut that
has it made, and never bad to
work or pay into Social Security
can tefl him that he has lo work
until be is 70 or 75? That he is
lazy. selfish and socially ir-
responsible? How about the
children he has raised, who are
now working and paying taxes?
Are they a drag on the economy
too?
required to pay the other $3.S
million out of funds they need
for other purposes when most o(
them don't even know where
Newport Beach is?
It's time to look at the poten·
tial results of all our acts before
we act on just the emotionaJ
view of the moment. It could
save us a lot of future troubles.
GOLDIE JOSEPH
To the Editor:
[ agree that a competency test
for teachers would be great
.... but just what can be done
with a tea c her proved
incompetent?
I propose that both the
previously mentioned test and
the removal of tenure for
teachers would be the ideal
system. A mere test alone will
not suffice in the effort to rid our
schools of incompetent teachers. Whal are these s o-called
economists trying lo do to America? Give our country THE NOW ·OBSOLETE
away to a foreign power? lf the system of tenure was evoked to
American worker does not have prevent nefarious employers
a voice in these matters, what is from firing teachers for such
the use of working, paying tax· ridiculous reasons as smoking
es, raising .chlldren (5 ) to cigarette s o r dating
become good Americans? "undesirable" members of the
Mr. von Hoffman really laid it opposite sex.
on the line In his article. I wish As anyone can see, we no
this letter could be forwarded to longer need this, mainly due to
' so-called economist Norman ' the presence of strong unions
Macrae and George Will. And to and effective upholding of the
our President. Do you think it law. Only incompetent teachers
would mate a difference in their • need be afraid for their jobs, and
way of thinking? Even a little? only they will have you believe
MRS. L.SANDERS tenure is neces sary , not
obsolete.
8-clc •••e•d•
To the Editor: The present cost of cleaning
up the Back Bay with the City of
Newport Beach required to pay
_...40,000, as repqrted in y«*r
paper March 20, should be borne
by the 1ealou1 envlronmen·
tallau. They're the otlea that
caused lt lo aet 10 dirty.
Between SPON, the Friendl of
the Eartb and the Coastal Com·
mlsaioo they stopped lts dreQ·
int fot eoou&h years to realfy
cauae-tbla unfort.unai. condition.
Now ol CCJi'&rle the COila bave
1rown to borrendoul amomta.
Pa1'ne tbole coeta abcM&ld .-at be
tbe burden ol the .,....a.ce, ~
of tbe saloua tdkJti!tll~t cWMCI
them.
TBS COIT of paylna few the
preeervatioft of environmental u•Un•• bu already we(Cbed too b .. vil)' on tbe PoPUlace. And
tb•J.,.. pWq tJtecl ol lt. ft1
1bould UM ctt&em of Newport
Beacll baM to pay $440,000 tor
tbla unnecnaary expendltUf• , •h• then ate ao may vital aervie.a that are not 1ufftcMatl)'
tunded? Anc1 wbJ llloull cttblDI ot ottilr parts Ol tbe C;OaDtrf be . .
\
EILEEN DORN
..,.••Irita
To the Editor:
I would like to solicit your help
in trytn1 to redress what I
believe la a sreat disservice to
thla community bein& perpetual·
ed by the Newport-Mesa UnUied
School Dlltrtct. I have made re-
peated attempts at brlncine to
the public's attentlqa tbe der·
elictioo ol duty I feel that the
board of tru9teel la •bowlna in
not conaidertll& tile aale ol the
three vacant and unused acbool
sltet it now owns. These prop-
ertie1 bav. a cunent apprai.led
value of approxlmately tu
million wbicb would 1•nerate approsimatel1 '4.'1 miWon Ill in·
terMt Income uuauaUy for t.be
acbool dll&riet -all ol wbidl
could be \Md by dM diatrlcl
David La~en of Ru&an •
hck• .... of tbe molt prom.I·
Dtlll aebool ~-a~11 la Uae ~, acatecortcaDy
refat• Ute conteetJoa. of tbl
Sap&. ol Sdtooll, Dr. Nicoll, that
UM HMol dlleitet 1l i'iltndlitd from Mllai tMM 1arplm ..._ .... ol iM ..,. ........
Senate Bill No. 90, Assembly Bill
No. 8 as Dr. Nicoll stated al the
school board meeting of Jan. 27.
or any other existing California
law.
I WOULD like to issue a public
challenge to Dr. Nicoll to defend
the erroneous and misleading
statements that he had made in
reference to school financing . A
thorou«ih inquiry into this dis-trict's holding of these prop-
erties needs to be made im-
mediately, before it is too late.
The district's ability to sell
these properties has already
been partially encumbered by
the Naylor Bill which became
effective on Jan. 1, two months
after I first addressed the issue.
If this district procrastinates
another year or two, it just may
be that the state will introduce
some new legislation that will
totally restrict a district's right
to retain the funds derived rrom
the sale of excess property
because or the financial
restraints placed on the state by
Proposition 13.
Al a time when the board of
trustees is eliminating a
multitude of courses and
se riously considering the
elimination of junior and senior
high schools to save a mere one
million dollars, it seems to me
they could well afford to pay an
attorney several thousand
dollan to check out the validity
, of the claims I have made. This
is certainly a small price lo
pay if it means the possibility of
acquiring another $4. 7 million
per year in operating funds if I
am right -and I am right!
TOM WILLIAMS
Coordinating Director
Parents for a Responsive
Board or Education
~•eeu
To the Editor: Supervisor Thomas Riley's
latest blut at Newport..-Beach
for ita declaion to sue the county
over propoeed airport expansi.on.
la extraordinarily unseemly for
someone who, supposedly,
represent.I Its citizens at the
counly level.
Mr. Riley ouaht to know, and
everyooe else does know, that
expanded f aclliti• at the John
Wayne Airport will brint ex·
pended use and aH lts dreadfUl
conaequencea for Newporten.
!very thinklns peraon rec·
o•ni .. that, if tbe matter plan ta implemented, Newport'•
future la doom•d. DQes Mr.
Rlle1 tblnt tbe dty tboald alt
t>ack and accept l,ts own an·
nlbUa&ioD?
In tbelr declakln to brln& a
awt. dt1 dftdall are merely
~ CClllltltuent 9rti11are .
A groWld swell of public opinion
is demanding to be heard and
none of Mr. Riley's ranting and
raving will quiet it.
AMY ROBSART
AU .... re IJettellt•
To the Editor: 1
While reading the le tte r
regarding the proposed Newport
C ente r expansion , it i s
interesting to note how the
"inconveni ences" of a few
people are always named, but
the benefits to all are never
mentioned.
How about the fact that the
expanson of Newport Center by
the Irvine Company will bring to
the City of Newport Beach
additional annual revenues of Sl
million for all to benefit from?
How about the fact that the
Irvine Company is spending $8.2
million of its own money to
i mprove the roads to help
alleviate c ongestion for
everyone's benefit?
How about the fa c t the
expansion will provide more
goods and services for the
residents of Newport Beach so
all can maintain and enhance
their standards of living? Isn't
that what it's all about anyway?
It is alway s too easy to
pinpoint "inconveniences" of a
few . Possibly these few should
lake a broader look and see the
benefits for all to share. After
all, they are a part of the "all"
too !
HOWARD DERMAN
... llfllat lt1
To the Editor:
I do not understand all the fuss
about the Newpqrt Center
expansion. It is impossible to
have progress without some
sacrifices. Since Newport bas
already become the sacrificial
lamb for the airport., wby
shouldn't it also be sacrificed to
meet Oranae County's need for a
proper urban center? If
Newport"s decay will come
anyway ii the airport expands, it
makes no sense lo fie ht
urbani1ation and
commerclalliation of the city.
PETER ZWINGLI
• Ltfltr• from l'eOCkr• crt wlconw.
Tht . right to cMdnu t.ltn• CO fd
apace t>r elimiftott libel a. rttenlld.
LtU~• o/ .100 wordl or "" well bit gu~n pttfemect. AU l1Un1 """'
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t•lfP'M*d to NJ.... NGfM Clid
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"'"'' bf ,..,,,. ,., "'"fbt• purpow•.
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~ ~,
•• BOies trades
for big profits
It's not everyone •ho toes around aaytn1 he's ln
the faates~wi~ bmlnns there ia. John M . Boles
says it -8Jid be says It wkb a lot of conlldeoce.
In 19'79, Boles & Co., baled in Menlo Park, had
sales ot $200,000.
In 1980, the company did about $5 million.
Tbll 7ear J act Bolet believe. be ha.a a tbot at
reacbiq $25 million In aalet.
That's rapid arowth, alJ right, but it's nothin1
compared to what Boles sees a.bead. In 10 years be
looks to be doing an annual volume of $18 billion,
which would
put him in the
league of cor·
porate giants.
How many U.S.
companies did
$18 billion last
year? Fifteen.
There are a
lllTll
couple of amasing aspects to Boles' predictions. One
is that he's in a business most people never heard of.
Another is. that it involves absolutely no manufactur·
ing. Boles doesn't make anything.
So what does he do? Jack Boles is an intema·
tional trader, moving goods out of the United States
and bringing other products into the country. He buys
goods in a foreign country and sells them in another
foreign country.
It's an operation modeled on the international
trading companies of Japan, the biggest one of which
is Mitsubishi. whose annual turnover Is now S60
billion. But just 10 years ago Mitsubishi was doing $18
billion. Jack Boles' target for 1990.
BOLES REASONS THAT the American economy
is ripe for the large-scalt! entry of trading companies .
We're ~g a huge deficit in our balance of trade,
meaning we pay more for our imports than we get for
our exports. And the vast majority of American com·
panies don't do any exporting. The trading company
can step into that breach. One Japanese trading com·
pany, Nitsui, already does so much business here
that it ran.ks as our sixth largest exporter, according
to Boles.
A trading company should not be mistaken for an
agent. The diffe1ence is that a trader actually takes
title to the goods. It buys them from the manufac·
lurer and its job then is to resell them (anywhere
in the world).
THE FLEXIBIUTY OF ·a trading company is a
little breathtaking. It's a deal maker on a world
scale. Boles, for example, has marketed U.S.·made
computers in Europe and China .
This concept ha£ excited a lot of people who see
trade barriers between countries coming down. Boles
has on his desk right now a stack of resumes from
people who buy his gospel, that the United States
needs a big international trader.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
Pct. Up tt.4
Up 'I" ~= i.~ Up 1.6 Up ... Up 7.t Up 7.7 Up 7.S Up 7.4
Up 7.0 Up •. t Up 6.1 m tt Up t.S Up 6.1
METALS
C.....-'1~C...U•llOUll4,U.S -.i-
llOlll • ...... ,..c..u • ..-.
ai.c "~"' C9lltt • '*""· .. ,,..,.... , .. 17.aM '*'-'• WM4l ~t· 111. A.I min •• 16Uftl•• l*lftll. H.Y.
Mwcwy M&Oll '9r llaell. ......_ s.m.oo troy°"• H. v.
SILVER
Halld, A H_,_, '1LI 10 per troy-··
GOLD QUOTATIONS
THE JaVINE S80W IS tbe only opening on
the Orange Coasl this weekend, while three other
producUom will be drawing their fln&J curt.ms.
They are:
-"The Merchant of Veni ce" at South Coast
Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Cost• Meaa
(957-t0.13). Closing performances tonight through
Sunday at8 p.m. with weekend matinees at 2:30.
-"Murder at the Howard Johnson's" at
FRENCH-
POPI WITH sua-TITUS
. nos c c ••" ....... I NOW p• .. YING {l!g ~ Cpro-.. oe "'•' • 613 6'90 '-"'
·THE FINAL
CONFLICT
AUO ON ftll: 90~aD8 and conUnutnf their
respective l'\UUI are:
-"Chapter ho'' at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, 3503 S. H•rbor Blvd.. Santa Ana
(1'7t·Slll), pla7in1 nl1bUy exeept Mondays at
var)'ial tlmee lbrouib May 3.
-'1God'a Favorite" at the Newport. Theater
Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport B,ach
(115-11'3), piayin1 Fridays and Saturdays at 8,
Sundays at I, throqh Aptil 11.
-"l'ferytllini In the Garden" at tbe Newport
Harbor Adon Tbeater, 390 Moote Vlata St., Costa
Mesa (ticketa available at the box office), playin1
Tbunday1 through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and this
Sunday au:~. unti.1 Aprll 18.
FOA Tll06E or YOU looldq ahead to MXl
seaaon at the local t.heaten, Uaree eo•mualty
playbouaes h•ve unveiled tbelr plana fw t•t·lMZ
on the Orange Coast.
· The Huntington Beach playhouse will open
wltb a musical, "Guya and Dolli," In September
and roUow with a eew corned~1 "Love, Sex and the
IRS,'' After the ,,ew years rous In, the Huntln,Wn
players will offer "Angel Street," "••1 Around the Moon," "Vlllit to a Small Plant," "A Man for
All Seaaona" and 1iThe Gatiebo." 'I'
Waite plays prie st
At the W estmiJlste• Community Ttteater, ttaeae
abows have been ~cheduJed, not neceaaaril7 1D or·
der: "Green Grow the Lllaca'' (the noe-mualcal
version of "Oklahoma"), "Tbe Freftt Pa1e," "The
Hauntina of .Hlll House," "The Seven Year Itch," • .
HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Ralph Waite stars as a
Catholic priest mist.akenly arrested tot armed rob·
bery tn the CBS movie "The GenUeman Bandit."
"Middle of the Night" and "The Pajama Game." ,.,._ _ fa f ••sere e s ••• The Newport Theater Arts Center will in·
The movie, filmed tn Yonkers, N.Y., also sta1s
Julie Bovasso, Jerry Zaks, Joe Grifasi and Estelle
Parsons. It is based on an actual event.
augurate its new season in October with a musical,
as yet unselected, followed by a children's show in
December. Then will follow "Bleacher Bums,"
"On Golden Pond" a nd a revival of "The Bad
Seed."
SNEAK
PREVIEW
TOMORROW AT .8 :00 P.M .
OFAN
IMPORTANT NEW
FILM
R ~o
Ulkl tl l~UfllS ruu:-::'ut 1 111uoin
---------------
CINEDOME 22
WEST CHAPMAN AVENUE
ORANGE • 634-2553
"THE FINAL CONFLICT" Will BE SHOWN BEFORE AND AFTER PREVIEW.
Crack into a place of hot, steaming crab legs. Or pop a generous
serving of delicious Popcorn~ shrimp. And then do it again!
It's all you can eat. Every day of the week.
Each special is serv ed with your choice of a crisp tossed salad or cole
slaw, baked potato or rice pilaf, and another favorite, sourdough bread.
All~ can eat. All week long.
Alaskan Snow Crab Legs
All you can eat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... $10.95
Popcord Shr imp
All you can eat ....... _ ........... $6.95
Veteran emcee Bert Parks rehearses for the
upcoming Mrs. America pageant at the Las
Vegas Hilton Hotel along with Judith Pullen,
Mrs. Kentucky, and Wendy Kae Womble.
Mrs. North Carolina.