HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-07 - Orange Coast PilotPRAGUE. Csecboalovalda ·
(AP) -Soviet ~ldeot Leoaid I. Bresbnev Quieted feara ol So-
fiet mlllt.ary intervention in
Poland today, aayin1 the Poll.sh
Communist Party would be able
to deal with its problems.
Brezhnev in a speech to the
Czechoslovak Communist PattY
Con1reas charged that enemies
of socialism were using
••economic pressure and
blackmail" as well as ''prop-
aaanda lies, ruaes and dem·
a10Jy~· ag!}nst Poland's com·
munist regime.
But the 74-year-old Soviet
leader said the Polish party
·'with the support of all true
Polish patriots" would be able to
.deal with its own problems.
Warsaw Pact mane uvers,
which have been under way in
and near Poland since Mai:ch 18,
were completed ~oday, th•
Csecho1lovak news a1eocy
Cetka reported. It said forces
were "retuminll to t.be places ol
their permanent stationin1."
The maneuvers raised fears in
the West that the Soviet-led
Warsaw Pact forces mi1ht in·
tervene to crush the independent
labor movement in Poland.
··As far aa the Soviet Union iJ
concerned," ln'ezbnev said, "it
baa been and continues to be the
loyal friend and ally of socialist
Poland." .
In a clear reference to Poland,
Brezhnev said "class enemies"
are ''instigating and supporting
counterrevolutionary forces in
those places where they sUJI ex-
ist, and carrying out other sub-
versive actions.
''You will, comrades. re·
member all this from your own
· experiences," Brezhnev said, re·
/erring to the events that
prompted Warsaw Pact forces
to march Into Czechoslovakia in
1968. "These showed convlncin1·
Jy that the plans of reaction hold
~ut no prospect oC success."
Tbe Polbh Communist Party,
he said, would "prove able in
adequate measure to oppose the
designs ol the enemies of the
socialist system, who are at the
...
same Ume the opponentf -of the ,
independence of Poland.
It will prove able to auc·
ceaafully defend socialism, the
true interests of its people, the
honor and security of their 1
homeland."
Walter Stoessel. un ·
dersecretary of state for
political affairs and a former
U.S. ambuaador ft> Poland and
<See POLAND, Pa&e-.U>
-..... . .
faees drug eharges 'Warped fantasy' tag.
10-year-old Texas case
n s ? e oun
Suspect:
'warped
fantasy'
By DAVID ltUTZMANN °' -o.My "'9t , ....
A Long Beach man standing
trial for murder in Orange
County Superior Court suffered
from a "warped fantasy" that
culminated in the killing of a
popular Seal beach Catholic
priest in February, 1980, a pro-
secutor says.
But the defense lawy·er
representing murder defendant
~Ronald S1,>ring, 33, told a seven·
m an, five-woman jury Monday
that his client should be found
guilty of no worse than
manslaughter.
·'I suggest to you that at most.
the evidence you're golng to
bear in this case will be in·
d icative or involuntary
manslaughter and certainly not
murder of any degree. This was
a tragedy," Chief Deputy Public
Defender Ronald Butler said.
However, Deputy District At·
torney Dave Carter said Spring,
a Vietnam veteran who spent
time in two mental hospitals,
was angry at the Catholic church
because be believed a former
high school girlfriend had been
put in a convent.
This apparent "fantasy" led
Spring to make threatening
phone calls to church officials in
Chicago, Carter said, only days
before be allegedly punched
(See PRIEST, Page A%)
IRllCI CDAIT WllTHIR
Patchy low cloudiness
tonlaht, otherwise fair
lb rough Wednesday.
Hi1hs today and Wednes·
day 67 to 72. Lows tonight
48 to 58.
111111 TlllY
TM contrOt¥nJ1 ovn A~z
llftMr Haig aa &«Ma'l/ of
Stcateftat °"'¥ contmw1 but
a&lo hlata up. Sea column,
J>og• Al:
Arw~
HOME IN HANDCUFFS
Ex-ho8tege Clymore
'IJ"s Masada
viewers dip
for Part II
NEW YORK <AP) -ABC's
share of the TV audience for
Part 11 of "Masada" dipped
slightly in two of three major
cities, but exceeded 40 percent
in each location nonetheless,
overnight. figures from the A.C.
Nielaen Co. showed today.
In New York, 46 percent of the
total audience frQm 9 to 11 p.m.
saw all or part of the ~ecoJld of
four )nstallments of ''Muada"
Monday night, compared with ~.
percent for tbe premiere episode
Sunday evenin&.
The audience ln Chicago for
Part ll drwped from 49 percent
Sunday nllht to 41 percent Mon·
day. ln Los An1eJes it fell frorn
47 percent lbe fltat nicbt to '2
percent for the •econd chapter.
NBC, with re1ular proaram· mtna. sulfered in all tbree
markets ror the second atralcbt
ni1ht.
Suspect
arrested
in plane
• By JOHN NEEDHAM °' .. o.i.y ...........
Forme r Pakistani hijack
hostage Craig Clymore has ar-
rived in New York City where he
faces charges of being the
ringleader of a nine-member in·
ternational drug s muggling
operation.
Clymore's lawyer. Ronald
Kreber of Laguna Beach, said
his clienl arrived io New York
at about 3 p.m. Monday in the
custody of federal Drug En·
forcement Admini s tration
agents who had accompanied
him from Damascus, Syria.
Kreber said Clymore, 24, a
former Lake Forest resident,
was placed under arrest by the
drug enforcement authorities
aboard Lufthansa Flight 404
from Frankfurt, West Germany.
Ar~
WHITE HOUSE STAFFERS FORM GIANT GET·WELL CARD
Pre9'dent, three others, recovertng trom wound• .
The agents reportedly placed
the Laguna Beach High School
graduate under formal arrest as
soon as the plane entered U.S.
air space.
Clymore was one of the more
than 100 hosta1es on board a
Pakistani jetliner hijacked by
three opponepts of the Pakistan
government March 2.
FBI to question
Reagan on attack
The plane was eventually
Clown to Damascus, where on
March 14 the hostages were re-
leased in exchanJe for the
freedom of ,54 jailed political
prisoners ln Pakistan.
Upon his release by the hi·
jackers. a grand jury indictment
naming Clymore and seven
other Southern Californians was
made public by the U.S. At·
torney's office in New York.
While he was in captivity, the
4See CLYMOllE, Page A%)
WASfllNGTON <AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan, described as look·
ing and feeling fine, planned to
give FBI agents a flrst-hand ac-
count today of the attempt on his
life eight days agq.
Investigators had an appoint·
ment with t.he president at his
hospital room . Reagan 's
counselor, Edwin Meese III, also
planned to be there.
"It's part of the routine in·
vestlgation," said Lar:ry
Speakes, White House deputy
. ~
Treasury bill ~IJa up
WASHINGTON (AP) -YieJcb on sbort-te,.m. Treaaury
securities have reverted thelr decline and jumped to thelr
hiahest levels ln five wee.ks.
As interest ratea .in teneral bounced up Monday, tbe
Treaaury reported the avera1e Jtiscouot yield OD lts •·•eek blUa an the weekly auction wu lJ,'ID percent, tbe hl1ht1t. 1lnee
14.133 percent March 2. A week earlier. th• 1teld wH 12.078 pet·
cent.
The avera1e rate on U-•eek bllla rote to 14.147 pereat
from 12.501 percent, the hlchett •lnt• the 14.4U perctD\ ot
Marcb2. .
press secretary. .
The session marks the presi·
dent's first official par1icipalion
in the probe of the March 30
shooting.
SpeaJte.s also announced that
the president will make a major
economic address from the
White House after he is dis-
c barged from' George
Washington Universit; Hospital.
T.he spokesman said the address
probably wUI be nationally
broadcaat, but likely will not oc-
CUJ! before April 15, income tax
day. •
There Is n0 word on when the
pres,ident will be discharged.
Asked whether Rea.can 'a ten·
tative release date had slipped
back, Speakes said no firm date
ever had been fixed.
"It'• a day-by-day thin.i,:• be
added.
The latest medical bullet!u
indicate Rea.ian 1tll1 la rlmnini
a sllaht fever and receivlnc an
eirpanded ranie of utiblotlct 11
I prec:lutiOll H•imt mfectioa.
Sptaka refued Monday to re-
veal the speclftc ft,bre, but a
source who iollat.d oo anonymi-
ty said it WH leu than 100
de1reea. The normal body teJD.
oerature ta •.1.
.. -Roets," ABC's l'ecord·aett.bie
mlnlHri•. attracted an averaa•
ol ee per~t of the au"ience U·
tlonwt• throu1h an el1bt·nitht
nm in wn . Ralln.ia for "R4ota"
lncreated rneaaurably each •
8'altln1 today, banta and thrift lnatitutiona m11 pay llP to
14.033 percent, \4 polnt above the .. week THU\lf'J rate, on
.10,000 lllMDOllth Ctrtlficatel.
BQY,,.. ot 2~·year cel1iftcatelcan earn 12 percent at thrift
\ftltltutkJM and 11.'15 p4rcent at bank1. ThOI• ratet are at \heir
cetUnp.
Becauae of tile 1bo0Ua1,
.ftea1an wu fornd to eimoel a I
aerin of 1peeebM before ute
Jecl•latww dellped to HU hll
.pto1r1m of tax ud bud1et cull.
Vice Pr~ldent Geor1e 8uib will 1ubtUtut• for R111an et a
(See &EAGAN, Pace A.J) evenlnt.
Police
' identify·.
skeletons
ANGLETON, Texas <AP> -
The identification Qf the skeletal
remains of two girls missing
since 1974 may lead to new clues
in the deaths or disappearances
of 40 t\en-age girls 10 years ago.
The bodies of 21 girls have
been found in three adjacent
counties -Brazoria, Harris and
Galves~'" -since the girls' dis·
appearances were reported in
1971 and 1972.
·'There has got to be a com·
moo denominator in all the kill·
ings," Lt. Matt Wingo of the
Braioria County sheriff's office
said Monday. "We f ust haven't
found it yet.
"We plan to go through the of·
fense reports of the other kill·
ings carefully in the hopes of
pinning down exactly what it is
that links them. We will do what
we can, you can bet on that,"
Wingo said.
He said that even though the
cases were several years old,
the investigation was being re-
newed because of last week's
identification of the remains of
two girls from Dickinson, south
of Houston. who disappeared in
1974.
He said there are striking
similarities in tbe deaths
<See VICTIMS, Page A%>
•
Nem.JHJ:per
calhfor.··
Haig to quit
MINNEAPOLIS (AP> -
The Minneapolis Star to-
day called for the resigna·
tion of Secret&~ of State
Alexander M. HalJ Jr ..
sayina "his icnorance of
the Constitution makes
bl m look just pl aln
dumb."
The refere.nae wu to
Hat1'1 usertlon lut week
that be was' hl C4Dtrol
wben President Reaaan
WH shot and Vice Presi-
dent Georee Buab was
•way from Waahln.iton.
Under lbe CoaaUtutlon.
the secretary of state ls tlftb In line to Ua• pre•·
ld.ency.
"Worse tba~ t.oOttlna ,dumb, he at. bla coo) 1n
the mldst ol trtli1," the
Sta~ .. id. "Hll,f-1hn to show crace \IHer pru-
~ure WM 1ft91M•1, CGD·
• 1lclerla1 all ~anted mlllW'Y ad N White H~t r.cord. '' • • .,
The long and the short of ft
Juxtaposed against the elongated, slender shape of an
ocean-going tanker. this catamaran sailboat seems as
diminutive as the period m an exclamation point. The
The Hunlington Beach City
Coul)cil has decided lo stick with
· its earthquake ordinance that
resulted in the condemnation
' last year or 52 buildings in the
· old downtown area.
The city has given the build·
ings, erected in the 1920s and
1930s. about one more year to be
rebuilt to safe conditions or be
demolished
Several council members r ear
firmed support of the ordinance
after Councilman Bob Mandie
suggested Monday that shop
owners on Mam Street near the
mun1c1pal pier be given a time
extension "so that we don't have
a bunch of razed buildings down
there."
Councilman Ron Pattinson ob·
jected. He said demoHtion prob·
ably will be postponed b~ court
ch a llenges to the ordinance
anyway.
Co11ncilman Don .MacAllister
agreed. "Why weaken our posi·
lion , .. he said.
Fire Chief Ray Picard added
that he was "stepping up code
enforcement" in the rundown
shopping area.
Calling 1t a "d eteriorating
situation,·· Picard said the fi re
department was making "add1·
lional inspections to get some
semblance of maintenance until
something can be done on the
earthquake ordinance ...
No action was taken on Man·
dic's recommendation. ln March of last year . the City
CA»eaine s ale
...
crossing was captured by a photographer as the two
vessels went their separate ways in the Atlantic Ocean
off Port Everglades. near Fort Lauderdale. Fla.
Council enacted the ordinance
after a private analysis showed
the 52 old brick bu ildings to be
unsafe in the event of an earth·
quake.
Last July, the city approved
construction of a semi-mall
beautification concept on a three
block section in the downtown
area most affected by the earth·
quake ordinance.
Currently. crews are working
on the $325,000 semi-mall con·
cept that calls for Marn Street to
become a one-way street from
Orange Avenue to Pacific Coast
Highway.
A textured street surface .
park benches. bicycle racks. ad·
ditional lighting. planter boxes
and trees are to be added to the
downtown area by this summer.
f're• P-.e Al
PRIEST ••.
Father Felix Doherty of St.
Anne's Catholic Church in the
head.
Father Dohe r ty. 64. died
several weeks later from com·
plications associated with U\e
blow. Carter said .
The prosec utor said his
evidence will show that Spring
dr ove hi s c h oppe r -s tyle
motorcycle to St. Anne's on Feb.
5, 1980. and asked to see a pnest
about a wedding
A housekeeper had Father
Doherty brought to the back
door of the church r ector y,
where the pnest told Spring to
go to the front door instead.
Carter said.
However. the defendant began
pushing and shoving Father
Doherty. he said , and then
punched the elderly cleric in the
forehead with his clenched right
fist.
As Spring walk ed away,
Carter told jurors. he told a wit·
ness. "You didn't see this."
slips I 0 hours
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP> -Countdown for the space
shuttle Columbia sltpl*I about
10 hours behind achedute today
because of persistent technical
~roblems, and launch C?rewa
·worked through their rest period
in an effort to maintain Frtday'1
dawn liftoff.
"At, this lime there la no tm·
pact on the SC?hedule; there is no
trouble to meeting a launch at
3: 50 a.m. PST Friday," stfbttle
test director Bill Schick told a
news conference.
The latest problem cropped up
overnight when gas C?ontami·
nants were found in the lines
that service Columbia's power·
producing fuel cells. Schick sajd
this was not unusual because the
lines had not been used for
several weeks .
"We will continue to purge the
li nes until they are clean ,"
Schick said, saying the work
would take several hours.
The Columbia's two-astronaut
crew. J ohn Young and Robert
Crippen, were winding up train·
ing activities at the astronaut of·
fice of Johnson Space Center in
Hous ton today. They planned to
fl y here Wednesday for final
preparations for the launch.
They are to take Columbia up
for a 54 1 2-hour spin -36 times
around the globe in an effort
to test all its complex systems
before g11iding the craft back to
Earth for an airplane-like land·
ing Three more flights are
scheduled during the next year
before the shuttle gets the go·
ahead to ferry people and
materials into space t'Om·
mercially
lt ptcked up the couot that Ulel'e
w ea a lot of work to do. ftal& die
schedule would be very tllllt and
that at ttmea they ml1ht be
a11lnat the wall,·· said Mark
HeH, a spokesman for the N•·
tional Aeronautics and Space
Adminlatration.
"We are tonfldent we'll be
able to make up the time during
the buUt·ln hold." be aald.
Launch requires near-perfect
weatber at three locations -the
Cape: the prime landing area at
Edwards Air l''orce Base.
Calif., and the backup landing
site at White Sands, N.M.
IC weather ar other problems
delay the launch more than six
hours beyond schedule Friday,
the liftoff is likely to be del\tyed
until Sunday because a 48-hour
turnaround period is required
once fuel has been pumped into
the tanks.
Young, 50. a retired Navy cap·
taln, is a veteran of four space
flights. His last. a walk on the
moon. came nine years ago this
month. Crippen. a 43-year-old
Navy captain, is making hi s first
space trip 16 years after he first
became an astronaut .
Columbia is the world's first
s paceship capable of repeated
trips into orbit . Each shuttle -
ther e are three or four others
beside the Columbia planned in
the U S. fleet will be capable
of 100 or more round trips.
They are envisioned as the
backbon e of this nation's
m1 litary. scientific and com-
mercial space 'effort for the re·
mainder of the century
f're•P~AJ
REAGAN .•.
speech Sunday in Tuskegee.
Ala .. Speakes said.
VICTIMS ...
although another investigator
said he doubted a single killer
was responsible
Wingo said most of the victims
were shot in the head "execu·
lion-style."
Ex-Yippie leader
gets three years
Though param edics were
called, Father Doherty was not
hospitalized until several weeks
later after he coll apsed. He was
taken to St. Mary's Hos pital in
Long Beach, where he died 10
days later. He never regained
consciousness.
Spring was a rrested by in·
ves t igator s after a church
employee recognized him as
having attended several meet·
ings for alcoholics.
Monday. during the first 12
hours of the countdown , the
launch team lost four hours
because of problems with a
leaky valve and an electrical
short cir cuit. Schick also re~rt·
ed that scuff m arks were found
today on three more wires in the
spaceship. and these had to be
r epaired.
To catch up on the work.
Schick said a planned 6·hour
hold in the countdown that start·
ed at 10 a.m. today had been ex· tended to 14 hours -borrowrng
six hours from another 8·hour
hold scheduled Wednesday A
total JO hours' hold time were
built int o the five -day
countdown; thus, aJm,ost half of
It would be used by midhight
Bus h and first lady Nancy
Reagan will be the president's
s tand -in s t o ni g ht at a
Republican dinner al the same
hotel where Reagan was shot.
Extraordinary security steps
we.-e being followed at the
Washington Hilton Hotel. where
nearly 3.000 guests were expect-
ed at a Sl.OOO·a-plate. black-tie
drnner toni ght to raise money
for Republican candidates for
the House and Senate. Most of the bodies had been
dumped o n the ground. he
added, "and while they weren't
actually buried they were very
carefully concealed
"The girls were mostly 14 or
15 years old. all came from the
same area. had the same or
similar hairstyles and fa cial ap
pearanccs." Wingo said "This
leads us to belt eve they "'ere
killed by one or t\\O persons. not
more than that ··
But another investigator 10 the
s h e riff 's office . Barney
Woodward. said he doubted the
case involved a single ki ller.
"We're not working anything
like a mass murder.'' Woodward
said.
·'It is true that there are
similarities in the eight Brazoria
County deaths There may be a
link there 1s a lways the
possibility when you are work·
ing on homicides of young girls.
But 1l is my personal opinion
that. no. we are nol dealing with a
mass murderer.··
Woodard said Wingo ··re·
leased information to the press
and it got Jacked around But 1r
he made those remarks. I'm
sure he cao back them u p ··
Wingo said he believes the
murders were sexually motival·
ed. allhough the decomposition
or most of the bodies makes it
impossible to verify that
"l think it is a sexual thing
and that the killer or killers
have severe sadistic tenden·
cles." he said.
The girls identified last week
by medical examiners compar·
ing dental records were Georgia
Geer. 14. and Brooks Bracewell.
12.
Partial remains bad been
found in 1976 along a county
road north of Angleton. but
Wingo said "the investigators al
the lime did not do a complete
search and only found enough
just to create anxiety ..
Jde ot1fication was rinally
made possible when the area
was searched again last month
and teeth were found.
O"ANGe COAIT
NEW YORK tAPl -Abbie
HoHman. the former Yippie
leader who surrendered last
September after nearly seven
years underground, was sen-
tenced today to three years in
state prison for selling cocaine
in i973.
Hoffman. 43. will have t o
serve at least one year before he
is eligible for parole.
In Manhattan's slate Supreme
Court. Act ing Justice Brenda
Soloff ordered the grayin g,
curl y-haired activist to begin
serving the term April 21 .
After originally pleading inno·
cent to charges of selling co·
caine, Hoffman pleaded guilty in
January to criminal sale of a
dangerous drug and faced up to
five years in stale prison under
a plea bargain with narcotics
prosecutors. In a pre-sentencing m emoran·
dum released Monday. assistant
district attorney David F. Cun·
ningham asked the judge to s_en-
t e n c e Hoffma n to an in -
determinate sent ence of five
years under which he would
have to serve at least one year
in prison.
Cunningham said Hoffman
was the "prime mover" in the
Aug. 28 . 1973, sale of three
pounds of cocaine to an un-
Thief le aves
footprints
A barefoot burglar is being
sought toda y in t he $2.200
burglary of the W.O. Adams Co.
Owner David C. Houston told
investigators the Joss from his
business at 630 W. 17th St. Mon·
day included an acetylene torch
and paint sprayer ng along with
its lengthy air compression
bose.
He pointed out barefoot prints
on the wall on each side of the
socket where the burglar ap·
parently had to use his feel to
get leverage to rip the hose out
of the ~all fitting, police aaid.
Dilly Piiat MAINC>Wa
~P.Haley
~N.WNd
M, fnom.t KMVll ....
1'*'-A. Murphlne .............
~'"°L f:.t:d 8chuknan
i:'-~
~ H. Goddenl Jf. ~ .......
no wot ..., St., c.t• Meta, Ci\. ~ii.-...: ... IJeO. c. .. MHll, Ci\. "626
dercover police officer. Hoffman
disappeared, forfeiting a Sl0,000
cash bail. In 1974.
A pre-sentencing me moran·
dum submitted to the court by
defense attorney Gerald Lef·
court was unavailable. But Cun-
ningham said Hoffman asked for
a sentence of probation in return
for his service to a residential
drug treatment program.
Attached to the defense papers
were hundreds of letters from
Hoffman's supporters -includ·
ing actors Ed Asner and Jon
Voight. authors Shana Alex·
ander and Studs Terkel. singer
Peter Yarrow and former At·
torney General Ramsey Clark -
asking for leniency.
Ho!fman. a founde r of the
Youth International Party. or
Yippies. has been free on $25.000
bail since shortly after his sur-
render.
Fro• Page A l
CLYMORE • •
news of the indictment was kept
secret for fear Cly more would
be harmed by the hijackers .
A bout a week after his re·
lease, Clymore was arrested at
his Damascus hotel by Syrian
authorities and taken to the
Citadel prison pen41ng efforts to
extradite him lo the United
States.
Kreber said his clie nt was
scheduled to be ar raigned on the
federal drug-smuggling charges
in Brooklyn's federal court to·
day. However, he said he is at·
tempting to have the arraign-
ment put off until Monday .
K reber said he would be
checking into an allegatipn by
Clymore that the extradition
papers allowing him lo be re·
turned to the United States were
not in order and had not been
signed by his cli ent.
Clymore and his alleged ac·
complices are accused of smug·
ellne S12 million worth of heroin
and hashish oil into the United
States from Pakistan.
The nine members of the al·
leged dJ'U3 smusglln& rine are
accused of making up to 12 trips
each. cooceaUng the drugs by in·
aestlnj condoms filled with the
heroin and hashish o1J.
Two of Clymore·s aJleged as·
s oclates, Including hls elrl
f rlend , were 'nteroe pted by
custoD\S agents at New · York's
John F. Kennedy Atrrort in
P'ebruary, 11Jegedly with druo
on their persons after arrivina
on a fUgh t from Karachi.
Pakistan.
Clymore it being htld at the
federal Metropolltan Corredlon
Center 1n New York, accordin&
to hla attorney. If convicted,
ClymON and the et1ht other de-
fendtntl could race up to 1.5
yeara ln priJon each, drua ..,.
f orcement authorit.let HY.
Butler told jurors in Judge
James K Turner's courtroom
that Spring s truck Father
Doherty with a "soft-gloved
right hand " whit'h caused a
"very small skin abr asion."
He said the pri est's
housekeeper was concerned th at
he see a doctor because Father
Doherty was taking a highly
"sensitive and dangerous" heart
medication which thinned the
blood.
Trauma to the body. Butler
said. could be disastrous if the
dosage was not adjusted or
stopped.
Fair funds eyed
NEW ORLEANS <AP I
Backers of a 1984 World 's Fair
in New Orleans are confident
t hey can raise another $13
million by Wednesday to assure
the federal government's en·
dorse m en t of the project.
Without such an endorsement it
is unlikely the Bureau of In·
ternationaJ Expositions will give
final approval to the project at a
mee\ing in Paris April 22.
tonight. •
"The launch crew knew when
f're• Pafl# A J
POLAND •••
the Soviet Union. told NBC-TV's
"Today" show that Brezhnev's
remarks meant the Poles "have
some more time to put their
house in order, according to So·
vi et li~hls."
In his speech, Brezhnev also
reiterated firm Soviet support
for communist Cuba. defended
t)is proposal for a moratorium
on the stationing of medium·
range missiles in Europe and
criticized the United States and
its allies for their reluctance to
accept the proposal.
Western diplomats, who re·
quested anonymity, said the
positioning of the remarks hint·
ed at a linking of the Cuban and
Polis h issues. One s uggested
Brezhnev might have been
wa rning the United States to
stay out o.f Cuban affairs if it ex-
pected the Soviets to s how
restraint in Poland.
White House limousiaes carry·
mg the president's wife . Busb
and his wife. Barbara. were to
enter the hotel through the
garage. instead of stopping out·
s ide at the "presidential en-
trance" where a would-be as-
sassin fired six s hots at Reagan
on March 30
"The Bushes and Mrs. Reagan
will have a closed entrance and
exit directly into the garage
and take a back elevator."
s aid Larry Mee art h y. a
s pokesman for the gala.
Othe r precautions also were
planned but were not discussed
publicly.
The president s le pt well
through the night and awoke lo·
day shortly after 7 a.m .. the
White House s aid . David
Prosperi , a ssis tant press
secretary. said Reagan's tem·
perature was "ne ... normal" -
indicating the president still had
the slight fever he has had for
several days.
The president met with three
top aides and got briefings on
developments in P oland and
Lebanon. James A. Baker Ill.
chief of staff, sent word back to
the White House that Reagan
"looks fine. feels fine."
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Robert Van 'Etten, left, a dwarf from Orlando,
Fla., began work as a government employee
Monday. He was caught in the Reagan ad-
ministration hiring freeze after being promised a
job. and then appealed the decision and got the
job.
Almost every day the
Senate does business, Sen.
William Proxmire chides it
for not ratifying a 33-year-old
treaty against genocide.
Treaty opponents say the
issue isn't as clear -cut as it
might appear. that al worst
the treaty could be used to
prosecute Gls and other
Americans abroad as mass
murderers.
But Proxmire, D-Wis., de·
nies that and says the issue is
simple indeed.
Each morning. a s the·
Senate prepares to go about
its business, Proxmire brief-
ly takes the floor to discuss
the treaty. explaining it, re-
butting arguments against it
or just appealing for its
ratification.
lloek atar ZU. JOiia aald
JM would not live tn the Uni\· ed Statel "ll they paid me 10 "~ads (S211) a mlnute"
bee the country la too
•lol T 4-year-otd 1l11cer
spoke to reporters on a
1topover at Heathrow Airport
on a ruiht. from Parll to Loe
An•eles.~ make a promotJon
movie. 1le bad been in Paris
for a party. •
Of Ensland. John said:
"We have enoufh trouble
with our soccer violence. but at least people don't walk the
streets with guns.
• '1 really believe that
vloleQce on teJevlsion is the
root of the evU. A lot or it
could be cut out," John said.
Fortt\er Black Pantb~r
leader Eldridge Cleaver says
he plans to join the Mormon
Church after completing
2,000 hours of public speak-
ing under a court sentence
calling for community
service work, The Salt Lake
Tribune reported.'
The newspaper quoted
Cleaver as saymg he stiU
must do 600 more hours of
community work. He was or·
dered to do 2,000 hours of
public service as part or a
senten ce imposed in
Alameda County on his guilty
p I e as to three ass a ult
charges. He was also placed
on five years probation.
Cleaver spoke in Salt Lake
City at the ValJey Assembly
or God Church. He said he
and his family also attended
the 15lst Annual General
Conference of the Church or
Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints.
Frequently, the senator
finds himself playing before
an empty house.
Former U.N. Ambassador Andy Young is a
candidate for mayor of Atlanta. He was joined by his
wife . Jean. as he made the announcement Monday.
Rain spattering Midwest
Wet, snowy over ~acific Northu;est
C'oasfal ..,~afMr
~., •• c:.c ....... --·k ..
"'••• ... WI 6t '""" -Outer welers Pol11t Conception 10 Sen
Clemenl8 1mno northwest wlncb IS
lo lS knots with • 10 1 toot Me\
through 1on19111. Elwwn.re southerly
winds 1 10 11 ""°ts !Ills morning, be<omlng Wftlerly 10 to II llnots In
efternoon end llghl •nd •e rl•ble
1on1g111
11.S •...... a.,,
Siiias..,. M#W'IY over rn..ch 01 IN , ' ..
n•llon Moftday, DI.II ,,,.,,. tlurrlu luu!
were KellarH over the uocier Ohio h•
Valley Into western New England ~ and ecrou the northern Ro<llles. s ..... ~·. Slr01111 winds crHtH bl-Inv dust mmm co11dlllon1 from eastern Monten•
ec:r•s muc:h ot Nonti oat.ow ...., '"· to Mani-.
Tempe<at-reached the •-~ 81rlft lngllm .. 31 Kans Clly ., JS
over llOllthltm FlorltN, llOlltMrn T ... 111 ..... rcll S7 37 LHVeoas 14 47 u •nd southeastern Celllornla. llols• •• 27 Liiiie Roell .. 4S
Widely sutterw II/towers were lloston .. •I Louhvlll• s. ,.
forecast tor tOdey over southern Yk• lro...,.n11e IO SS Mamp4\ls 70 d
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Mltsourl Valley end the nortlMrn Cot11mbus " J4 Oltl• City 70 • Pacllle Coast; around 10 from Soulll Oal·FtWth 12 ,, OmallO 71 " Carolina acrCIM tho soutNrn Ohio Denver ,. )6 Orl8fldo ,. u Valley, tho mid MIUIUlppl ll•ll•y, O.sMolnH .. 2' P'hllaclpllla 50 4S
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1 daUy Md delivered to the cJeU of UM appropriate editor. No •clrculatJon calla. pJ•aM.
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-Assassins' targets
ASSASSINATION TARGETS -Eight U.S.
presidents have been the target of as-
sassins. Top row <from left). Andrew
Jackson escaped ; Abraham Lincoln .
James Garfield and William McKinley all
were killed: bottom row. Franklin D.
Roosevelt was spared in 1933; John F . Ken· 1•
nedy was slain in 1963 ; Gerald Ford sur-I'
vived two attempts on his life, and Ronald
Reagan was wounded last week.
OC-Caltrans war looms
New wrangling over
transportation funding is shap-
ing up thls week in Sacramento
between Caltrans officials and
Orange County representatives.
County leaders are objecting to a new proposal released by
Caltrans Director Adriana Gian·
turco which would give Orange
County 9.6 percent of the un-
specified state money allocated
to Los Angeles. Ventura and
Orange counties from 1983 to
1987.
They were expecting to get
about twice that figure, or about
20 percent. of the funding.
Assemblyman Richard
Robinson. 0 -Garden Grove. said
Monday that he believes Ms.
Gianturco is trying lo circum·
vent the gains made by passage
last summer of SB512, which
guaranteed that Orange County
would receive its full percentage
of funds. Robinson claimed Orange
County taxpayers could lose as
much as $378 million in state
funds over four years. He said
that's the amount of money
legislators agreed last year that
SB512 would send to Orange
Cou nty.
To prevent the loss. Robinson
said he has asked Gov Brown to
send the Caltrans proposal back
to redrafting.
"I am convinced the governor
is not about to undo the action he
took when he signed SB512,"
said Robinson, who noted that
Ms . Gianturco lobbied against
the measure
Meanwhile, however. county
delegates and lobbyists are tak·
ing no chances. The group was
to meet today for its regularly
scheduled breakfast meeting
and Robinson said "I'm sure
this wiU be the hot subiect. ..
The officials Aave abol't a
week to get the Caltrans pro·
posal changed before it could be
read into the legislative journal
as record and thus become law.
At issue 1s the complicated
way that the state allocates its
funds ror improvements and de·
velopment or highways.
Caltrans doesn't set the fund·
ing levels for highway projects;
that function is handled by the
appointed members of the
California Transportation Com-
mission.
But Caltrans officials in
Sacramento do decide how much
each of its 12 districts will re-
SURPRISED?
ceive. It bases its decision on so·
called needs studies submitted
by each district. t
In the latest needs study sub-
mitted to Sacramento by
Caltrans Distnct 7 which in·
eludes Los Angeles. Ventura and
Orange counties -the needs for:
Orange County represent 20 per·
cent, or $2 billion. or the project-
ed $10 billion total for 1983 to
1987.
But in the proposal released.
from Ms. Gianturco's office, the:
county is projected to need $349
million of a total $3.6 billion.
County officials don't quarrei
with the need to pare down the
estimates to meet the state's
dreary financial projections. But:
they claim the paring wasn't
equitable.
Daily P'Hot Deti•ery
1,Go...-..tHd
Monday-Friday II You do not have ~r paper by 5 30 p m call t>efore 7
pm and Your copy will be dehvered
Saturday and Sunday II you dO not
receive your copy by 7 a m . call
before 10 a m and yo ur copy will be
oeftvered
Clrulaffoft Te4HhOMI
Most 0f8nge County Areas '42-021 Northwest Huntington Beach
and Westm1ns1er 5~ I UO ~una Niguel 4tMtoo
f
We've been doing that to people lately with our ladies
department. Come in and see our new spring collection, including
Lady Norman, Lady Thomson and J. G. Hook. We think you1l
be pleasantly surprised.
s
High coUrt uphoW. revelation in libel aui.t
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court bu refUMd
to free the defunct Overdri\'e
Maeuine's owner from bavin1
to disclose a conlidentlal source to a man sulnf the magazine for .
libel.
The justices, without com·
ment, left intact Monday rulincs
that require Mike Parkhurst to
reveal the source's identity to
Murray "Dusty" Miller, former
1ecrelary·treasurer of the
Teamsters uajon.
A federal trial Judie and the
5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeala
said Parkhurst had to surrender
the inf01'mation, or pr .. umably
face a default Judament. ·•we hold that a reporter bas a Flrst Amendment prlvt1e1e
which protects the refusal to dill-
close the identity of confldeutlal
informants. but, the privilege ls
not absolute and ln a libel cue
as here presented the privileee
must yield,'' the 5th Circuit
court ruled.
The June 1972 luue of
Overdrive, a ma,al1ne cov.n..1
the truekin1 industry, publllhed
a nine·pace artlcle entitled
''Central States Penslon Fund-
How Your Sweat Finances
C'roo~a. Cadillaca."
A portion of the article aJJeeed
that Miller used hll Te&lllSten
post and bis position as a f\&"d
trustee to swindle the pelliion
fund out of $1.6 million thrOUCb a
fraudulent loan to buy a DalJu
sand and gravel firm.
' MULE&, A TEXAS resident
'When the article was publiahed
who subsequently moved lo
Virginia, sued Parkhurst and bis
CaUfornia-based ma1azine in
federal court in Fort Worth,
Texas.
Jn pretrial "discovery" pro-
c e ed i ngs, Miller's lawyers
learned from Parkhurst and
James OrinkhaJI, the reporter
who wrote the article, '\hat the
portion about Miller was sup-
plied by a confidential infor-
mant.
Miller's lawyers then tried to
force Parkhurst or OrinkbalJ to
disclose the source's identity.
U.S. District Judge Eldon
·Mabon three times refused to or-
der diss:Josure but finally, in late
1977, ordered Parkhurst to sur-
render the information. The Slh
Circuit court upheld the order
last July 15.
IN SEEKJNG HELP from the
Supreme Court, Parkhurst's
lawyers argued that the lower
courts were wrong in ruling that
Miller had exhausted alternative
sources before Judge Mahon
granted his request.
''Ir these alternatives had
been exolored. disclosure of the
confidentiaJ sources would have
been unnecessary,'' Parkhurst 's
appeal said. "The Sth Circuit
court ... erred in determining
that alternative sources were
exhausted even if it correctly
stated the proper First Amend-
ment test."
In a cross-appeal, Miller
argued that the appeals court
improperly labeled him as a
"public figure" for the libel law
.... .....,.. purposes.
Monday blues
Passersby cast no more than a glance at unidentified
New York City window washer as he hangs precariously
from window by single strap. The man was subsequently
h auled to safety.
Mormon leaders
rap homosexuals
SALT LAKE CITY <AP> -Mormons Church leaders, speak·
ing with unusual frankness, have told members too many are
getting church welfare and warned that homosexuality is ''an ac-
quired addiction."
They also instructed local leaders to ease financial demands
on ·their congregations, spelled out the church's goals and
counseled members lo view criticism as Satan's effort to halt the
Lord's work.
The 151st Annual General Conference of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints. which concluded Sunday afternoon.
also was the second conference in six months to attract placard-
carrying criti cs of the church's stand against the Equal Rights
Am endment.
Elder Hartman Rector Jr. or the church's First Quorum of the
Seventy said Sunday that if children are favored with a happy
family Life, "they will not want to be homosexuals, which J am
sure is an acquired addiction just as drugs, alcohol and
pornography are."
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
THAT APPEAL ALSO was de·
oied review.
Public officials and public
figures who sue for libel must
meet a more stringent standard
of proof to win. They must prove
the statement was false and
harmful and that the defendant
acted with "actual malice" -
knowledge of the falsity or with
reckless disregard as to its truth
or falsity.
Private individuals who sue
for libel must prove only that the
s tatement was false, harmful
and made negligently.
Fossils /ill
200 crates
PEKING <AP) -Chinese
scientists have unearthed fossils
of several dinosaurs dating back
160 million years but in an ex-
cellent state or preservation,
China's official Xinhua news
agency said.
Xinhua said enough fossils to
fill 200 crates have been found
since the latter half of 1979 near
Zigong in southwest China's
Sichuan province.
·f-::: :--..•
Fresh Fllet of Sole.~-........ : ...... 3.t8 lb.
Capi. Sean's Fully Cooked Shrimp MORNING FRESlf PRODUCE
{Great for Salads and Cocktails> ..... 3.39% lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top choice beef a1ed at least 30 days to the
peak of perfection.
• Boneless Rolled Beef Roasts ........ Z.18 lb.
Thick CUt L-ODdon Broll or Reg. CUt .
(Great to Barbeque or Broil> ............ Z.18 lb.
Lean Ground Beef t Ground Hourly) ...• 1.4t lb.
Ranch Fresh Local A1p~agu ...... l8e lb. Lg. Sweet Local Strawberrlea .... 5te ~.
Jambo Bawallan Papayu .......... Sk ea.
FREg HOME bE~IVERY SERVICE .
($50 cnimlnuml delivered ln our completely
refrigerated trucks. Your order la under
refrt1eration Crom our atore to your door.
DELAN.EY'S WINE CELLAR
Delaney'• Private bbeJ .
Champape ........... Uha. oriUtper caee
CH1dJu C•b <One Uteri . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '·" ••·
(One Uter ..... , ............................ f.11••·
Scorelb)' Sc.tcb l7l!O mill .................... u1 ..
08ea1rama V.O. (One Uter) ••.... , ....... , •.. •·•ea ..
AU Uq'¥)f' and wlQe plue tu
Cookies tor son
·law 'out'
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court bH re·
f&&Md to relnatate a Califonlla
law that barred dlstribuUOD o1
anonymous poUUcal campalp
literature.
The justices, without comment
'left intact Monday a 1tate court
ruUn1 that struck the law.
The Imperial County dilltrlct
attorney accused tbr~ men ol
violatine a section of the
California Election Code maJdnt
lt a misdemeanor to reproduce
or distribute "havin1 reference
to an election, to any candidate,
or to any measure'· without
identilyinl the person responti·
bte for it.
THE PROSECUTOR'S com-
" P.laint named Richard Schuster, I ~obert Simon and Melvin W. '
.Lewis.
Mrs. Dorothy Brady. mother of White House press
secretary James Brady, arrives a t George Washington
University Medical Center carrying boxes of cookies for
her son. Brady was shot last week during assassination
attempt on President Reagan. Mrs. Brady lives in Cen-
tralia, Ill.
, Lawyer Joseph C. Daley, Jr ..
of El Centro, who represented
the three men, said the com-
plaint centered on a direct-mail
letter circulated during the 1978
campaign for election of a coun-
ty superintendent of schools.
The case has not come to trial,
so no evidence has been formal·
ly presented to determine
whether the three men were con-
nected with the letter. he said.
Shooting forecast
by seer hoax
s
BUT ,THE THREE successful-
ly asked the state courts to block
prosecution on grounds that the
challenged section of the elec-
tion code violated the Constitu-
tion's free-speech guarantee.
"Since disclosure require-
m e nts undoubtedly tend to
r estrict the freedom lo dis-
tribute and consequently deter
Cree speech," the state Supreme
Court said, "the latter right
<free spe€chl encompasses the
right to remain anonymous."
LAS VEGAS CAP) -While TV
talk show host Dick Maurice
acknowledged "perpetrating a
hoax," self-proclaimed psychic
Tamara Rand apologized for
laking "literacy license" with a
"re·enactment" or a prediction
that President Reagan would be
shot.
But the Los Angeles woman
continued to maintain she pre-
dicted the shooting before it oc·
curred.
She created a stir last week
after broadcast of a segment of
Maurice's show, purportedly
made in January, in which she
predicted Reagan's shooting at
the end of March.
As recently as Friday,
Maurice said the tape, shown
March 31, was authentic and
was a re-enactment of a predic-
tion made on tape on Jan. 6.
But in a copyright article in
Sunday's Las Vegas Sun,
Maurice said, "My foterview
with Tamara Rand , in which she
predicted the assassination at-
le m pt on President Ronald
Reagan, is a lie."
Maurice's article began with
the words, "I am sorr y ... I
have committed the cardinal sin
of a columnist. I have perpetrat-
ed a hoax on the public and feel
very much ashamed."
The state attorney general's
otrice urged the nation's highest
court to reverse the state courts,
arguing that the disclos ure
statute is justified for "the pre-
vention and detection or fraud
and corruption in the election
process."
"THE INVALIDATED section
attempts to assure this through
complete disclosure as to who is
saying what about whom," the
state lawyers ar gued .
THERE'S A TIME
ANDA PLACE TO
CARRY ON. ,
Some airlines a.\k you anJ your carry-on' tn 'hare the 'amc '>CCJI ~pa1.:e. So you end up
with an uttachc where your feel arc !\Uppo!\cJ to he Or a tcnni~ mc"cl between >,"Ur knee!\.
But not when you lly Continental.
\\e already have plenty of overhead ~tomge fnr ) our briefca.'>c or overnighter. And we· re
adding new carry-on compartment'> 10 every 727.
Our new compartments are ---~~~:; ':ipecially de!\1gned so you can hang up your garment bag. That extra
!\Uit will arrive a lot less rumpled,
which is why you put it in a ganncnt
bag in the fi rst place.
We don't think you should
share a ~eal with anything except
your own two feet. So we've in-
crea ... cd our carry-on space. And
you'll enjoy a'more comfortable
flight.
That's nor all either.
A<:i soon a~ the plane lands,
you can get right off with your bags.
So next time fly Continental. Be·
cause nowfthe·e·s a time and a
place to carry on. Call your travel
agent. company travel depanment or
Continental Airlines.
To Denver: 6:05 am~ 7: 10 am.
11:25 am, 3:00 pm. 5:00 pm, 5:28 pm~
To El Paso: 8:00 am. 10:05 am~
10:30 am. 4:15 pm~ 5:00 pm.
12:45 am.
To Houston: 8:00 am~ 8:25 am,
10:05am: 11:20am. 11:25 amt. 3:00pmt,
5:20 pm •. 6:05 pmt, 1:05 am.
Tu Phoenix: 9:35 am. 5:28 pm.
Tu San Antonio: 7: 10 amt, 9:35 am~
10:30 amt. 6:05 pm. 12:45 am~
Tu Tucson: 10:05 am, 4: 15 pm.
I RUNES
J
J
. .
LONG BEACH (AP) -A mao who aUe1edJy
pulled a iun and tried to rob two women outalde a bar bere wu ldUed when one of the •omen pro-
duced a l\lft of her own and ahol him , police aaid.
Lt. Dan Shea said the man, whole ideiitity wae
not released pend1n• notlficaUoo of next or kin, ran
about 50 yarda ~fore he coU•psed' and died.
Shea quoted wltnesaea aa aayine the aunman
approached the women, who were alttint in a car
outaide the lnsplraUon Bar, and ordered them to
hand over their money. One woman then reported·
ly drew out a handgun and shot him.
u uhite. declining
LOS ANGELES <AP) -The number of white,
non-Hiapanic people livlng ln the nation's third·
largest city bu declined to less than half of the
population during the past ten years. Meanwhile, th~ Hispanic population has boomed add could
become the largest ethnic group, according to the
1980 census.
Fatal oil fire
SOUTH LA.Kl! TAHOE (AP) -In·
veatleators at Heavenly Valley Ski
Resort were "J>robln• a ch.Ullll accl·
dent 1n which at least 17 peraona
were reported injured.
Three persons were reported ln
serious condition after a "ca-
ble Jumped off the track," according
to a ''cursory" report issued by t.be
E l Dorado County Sheriff's Depart·
ment. Four others were hospitalized,
but were not listed in serious condl· Uon. ·
Some or those injured were tossed
onto the snow; others crashed into
No Wdiac -tie
to recent Bay
deaths found
SAN FRANCISCO CAP >
Authorities say they are looking mto
any connection between the recent
killings of Bay area hikers and the
Zodiac killings of a decade ago. but
they say there is no evidence so far
linking the crimes.
metal ban ol the chairs wherl the ca·
ble "dropped about 10 feet," accord·
ln1 lo Wllllam ~lllebrew, 1enera1
manager of the resort, one of the
world'• largest ski areas.
THE CABLE FELL OFF itA pulley
when two teen·a1e boya began
"swinging the chairs." KUJebrew
contended.
The sheriff's department said the
accident would be investigated by the
state OccupatlonaJ and Safety Health
Administration
The accldent occurred on the
"Ridge" lilt, which serves an in-
termediate-level ski area of Monu-
ment Peak, which. at 10,067 feet, is
the second highest peak in the Tahoe
Basin.
Killebrew said some of the injured
fell 10 to 40 feet.
Officials said they didn't know how
many passengers were on the lift
when the cable slipped.
The injured were initially taken to
Barton Memorial Hospital here. Four
were admitted with unspecified in-
juries. but were not listed in serious
condition, authorities said. In fact, demographers say Hispanics are h"kely
to become the city's largest single ehtnic group in
, 1984, up from 28 percent of the population in the
1980 figures.
aJ arrested in riot
BAKERSFIELD <A Pl -About 20 people were
arrested after a stabbing incident erupted into a
small riot among a crowd watching drag boat
races, Kem County authorities said.
Long Beach Fire Department officials are probing the cause
of this Southern California Edison Co. oil storage tank explosion
that killed Robert Doan, 54, of Buena Park. Doan had been check·
ing gauges on top of the tank when it exploded and caught
fire. His body was found at the bottom of the tank 12 hours later.
Damage was estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
A man known as the .. trailside
killer" and described by authorities
as a psychopath is blamed for the
killings of live. and possibly seven,
hikers in Marin County and the death
of one more in Santa Cruz County
since August 1979.
0 F FICIALS SAID TWO persons
with skull fructures were sent to
Washoe Medical Center in Reno.
Nev., where they remained in serious
condition. One of the patients also
had spinal injuries. hospital officials
said.
Nearly 100 youths threw rocks and bottles at
Bakersfield police, Kern County Sheriff's deputies
and California Highway Patrol officers at Lake.
Ming , five miles northeast of here, said Kern
County Sheriff Lt. John Howard.
Brown raps tax plan
In the late 1960s, a man caJHng
himself the Zodiac killed six people
in random shooting attacks.
No letters have been received in
the most recent killings , and the pat·
tern appears different from that or he
Zodiac killings
Levis r e funds
c alle d 'f r and'
Fault ~r st.adUun
BERKELEY <AP) -The University or
California's Memorial Stadium could collapse dur·
ing an earthquake, because it is being weakened
by sliding motion along an earthquake fault that
runs right through the stadium, engineers say.
The stadium, which seats 76,7~. bas already
been damaged by the slow, sideways movement
along the fault, say university consultants Ben J.
Lennert, an engineer, and Gamiss H. Curtis, a
geologist.
SACRAMENTO (AP J -Criticizing
President Reagan's tax cut plan as a
new version of Republican "trickle
down " economics. Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr. has predicted that
Reagan's plan won't reduce un-
employment or curb inflation.
"I'm convinced that the present
economic ills are not going to go
away by just a tax break for the few,
but will require a new social compact
in which labor plays a prominent
part .. along with "progressive busi-
ness representatives." Brown told
the annual AFL-CIO legislative con-
ference Monday .
In a partisan speech before the
labor delegates, Brown borrowed a
phrase Vice President George Bush
coined when he was campaigning
against Reagan last year. calling the
Reagan promise to reduce taxes and
deficits at the same time as .. voodoo
economics."
Brown attacked Reagan's plan for
across-the-board tax cuts for giving
inordinate benefits to the rich, and be
ridiculed Republican theories that
the wealthy reinvest more of their
tax savings and create jobs so that
the benefits ·•trickle down" to middle
and low income people.
Netivork vot,e
forecasts hit
SA N FRANCISCO CAPJ -Three-
fou rths o f California r esidents
believe television net works should be
prevented from predicting the out·
come of presidential elections until
voting is completed in California, a
California poll indicated.
SAN FRANCISCO !AP> -A novel
scheme to refund overcharges in the
price of Levi's Jeans to consumers
may lead to only a 33-cent refund for
each pair of Jeans purchased, of·
f1 · als say
A letter sent by the state lo all
alifom1a residences had promised
p to two dollars per pair. but of·
icials say so many requests for re·
unds have been received that the re·
und will be as IJllle as 33 cents.
No proof of purchase 1s required to
claim the refunds .
---~JH •-----
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What will tt take to caavtDce the aute Lijtalature
that Oranae County vota"S were NriOUt 10 montbl ato
when they reeom~ended meraer of the court-related
functiom ol the Oranae County SberUf'a Department and
Marshal's Office?
In all the. machinations that have occurred, It seems
Sacramento powen hRve lost slpt ol the tact the mer1er
was called for by three of every four voters who went to
the pol.la. .
Public sentiment on the issue bas been cast aside due
to a myriad ot confiicts on bow the merger could best be
accomplished. While that issue may have been reseJved
locally, it appears far from resolution in Sacramento,
where several ~ompeting bills to permit a merger are be-
ing argued.
Deputy sheriffs provide court baliff s and related
services in the superior courts; marshals perform a
similar function in the municipal courts. It has been
estimated that about $1 million could be saved annually ii
the two functions were merged.
Everyone says great, metge the two, but agreement
stops there. Sheriffs' organizations fear a marshals'
takeover, while marshals' groups fear a sheriff takeover.
And while the bickering continues, the voters who
said they want the merger accomplished are left holding
the $1 million annual bill.
New drilling fight
Gov. Jerry Brown should have plenty of support as he
challenges new Interior Secretary James Watt's decision,
after only a month in office, to open four Northern
California areas to offshore oil drilling beginning in May.
Brown bas declared he will take the fight to the
Supreme Court if necessary to protect the environmental-
ly sensitive area.
Oil drilling, he insists, would involve risks for the fish·
ing industry, tourism and the general beauty of the
area, and could ]>ermanently change the character of
Northern California.
The four areas included in the oiJ lease sale are the
Santa Cruz basin north of Monterey Bay, the Bodega
basin off Sonoma and Marin counties, the Point Arena
basin of( Mendocino County and the Eel River basin off
Humboldt County.
Brown contends that Watt has made an illegal move
in reversing the decision of former Interior Secretary
Cecil Andrus to exclude the fou• from oil lease sales.
Andrus' decision, he says, was made ~fter extensive
studies revealed the tract contains only a minimal
amount of oil. not enough to offset environmental con-
cerns. The state Coastal Commission agrees.
Given the offhand attitude of the new Interior
Secretary with regard to environmental issues. it seems
likely Gov. Brown will have to· follow through with his
threat of legal action.
There is no disputing the rare beauty of the Northern
California coast. and Southern Californians, who have
had their own problems with oil drilling, s hould be ready
to back the governor.
Changes in order
If a majority or Calif omians have their way. there'll be
some c hanges made in voting procedures by the time the
next presidential election rolls around.
A statewide survey by the Field Institute found three-
f ourths of those questioned saying they were unhappy about
television projections of the outcome of the November vote
that were broadcast before California polls closed.
Almost a third said they believed the early projection
and President Carter's concession kept many people from
voting.
This is in line with Secretary of State March Fong Eu's
estimate -based on pre-election voter turnout predjctions
-that up to 400,000 people may have passed up voting
because the presidential race already was decided.
Seventy-four percent of those polled thought television
projections before the western polls close should be pro-
hibited.
Many said· thev would favor changing voting hours
to avoid a repetition of the early projection and concession.
Of these, 60 percent said they would prefer voting on
Sunday and having the polls close simultaneously na-
tionwide. Almost as many -SS percent -thought the
problem could be solved by opening the West Coast pol.la late
on Monday and closing them early oo Tuesday.
While the premature announcement of Ronald
Reagan's victory could not have altered the outcome of the
presidential race, many local candidates had good reason to
believe they were deprived of anticipated votes because
voters didn't feel like going to the polls after the announce-
ments.
This being the case, it's by no means too early to discuss
and agree upon a policy that would give every voter and
every candidate an equal chance at the polls. • 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. Address The Daily Pilot, p .0 .
, Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321
Boyd I Three meals
ByL.M.BOYD
Eatine of three reeular
meall a day ooJy dates back
about 100 years, surprisineb.
Breakf aat at dawn, dinner at
dusk, that was tbe pattern
for centuries. Lunch was
whatever anybody could
•
a.•ld RaqM c.rtaln·
' 11 ,...,. fmt. Hit flnt
bit YietorJ wu 1eutnc
Coa1r•11 to cut tbe. dairy price 1upporu.
S.em1 only yaterday
bt 'WU Nklaa. "What ii parlty!"
IMPRESSED '
grab sometime during the
day. lnJect, Dr. Samuel
Johnaon Gn75S defined lunch as tbe amount of food a
person could hold in one
hand. Bosses started about
150 yean ago to divide the
workday into two secUona,
-early morning to noon, early
afternoon until dUJlt . Evtn-
tually, that made routine of
the bllfer midday meal.
The manner in wblcb a
Japanese bows depend.I on
wbom be la bowinc to, and
•by. Clerlr• in Tokyo •tora
learn the proper bo•• fronl videotaped leuooa. Bow 1:
To a fellow worker. Bow 2:
To a Wltomtt. Bow 3: To
•lcnal 1oodby. Dlffetent
body ....... different Um· ... •..
You Just won't hear about
any mote Carlbhu bur·
rleanet named David.
Fredenc. Camm., Audrey or •
Betay. Tbo&e storm um•
have bemi retli'ed.
W ASHJNG'J'Off -~b
tbe Wblte lfOuM Mi WI~
ordered ldm"''•tr.U. oftldall
to 1top auauttta1 see,.., al
State Alexander Hate lo Order to
preaerve bi• effecthene"
abroad, the anti-ffaJ1 campalcn
hat ideological root• havlna
notblnc to do wJth hll conduct
after the 1hootin1 of PreaJdellt
Rea1an. It.a orllin ls bit hard
antl-commwmt policy, esp'ecial-
ly bis move to save El Salvador.
At iasue ia more than Hals'•
sudden dash fro01 the White
House Situa-
tion Room to
the newsroom
upstairs to re·
assure an
agonized na-
tion the after-
n oo n of
Mar c h 30 .
That irritated
Defense
Secretary
Caspar Weinberger, worried
about his own authority, and
confirmed White llouse concern
about Haig as a team player.
The news media promptly put
Charles McCabe
Gn. Ha11 lD tlae uniform of
Capt. QUM1, 011 t.M b.riak of
Nilacy.
Thia antJ·Ha.is campa\Ol bu
many earmarkl ot past •ti.cu
on an1 b1ih official ln any ad·
m1nl1traUon wUJJn1 to condemn
communist a11re11ion. The
moat recent vfcthn w••
Zbl1nJew Brzezinsld, President
Carter's naUonal security ad·
viler. Before that, ln the early
Vietnam W•r days, the victim
was Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara.
•'THE P&ESS is trying to do a
real job on Al Haig," one White
House aide told UJ, Tbat indict-
ment represents a sharp about-
face by the president's men· who
bad been doing their own "real
job on Al Haig" the past two
months. They changed only
when the battering or Haig en-
dangered U.S. foreign policy.
What startled White House
aides was incessant repetition
over network television Monday
altemoon or the brief segment of
Al Haig in the White House
press room. Along with the
prUldeat'a own docotn, Ile Ud no idea whether a nadoul
calaal1ty wu at band. When he
beard deputy White HoUJe pr..,
aecr.tary Larry Speake• unable
to anawer· a queatlon about
military alert, Hali rushed to
face the press.
. HAIG WAS understandably
overwrou1ht. He was, therefore,
leH than precise in attempting
. to Hy he was doln& all that
could be done in the absence or
both president and vice presl-
deot. That lent itself to easy dis·
torUon. Television commen-
tators said flatly Haig had con·
fused the legal succession,
putting him.self third instead of
fifth. Worse, they appeared to be
using that segment to plant the
idea that Haig was exploiting
the assassination attempt to
further himself.
Such treatment is not unique
for Haig. Brzezinski was the
constant target of the news
media, particularly after speak-
ing out against Soviet ag-
gression in Africa. The attack at
home mirrored the savage as·
uult cm him la the Soviet ,,....
Moscow'• pro0a1anda bin'•
a1alnat Jlait, foUowlng lt.1 bad
line aaaln1t communl1t •·
panaim.lam ln El SalvadoJ', bP
not matched the anti-Brsesinal
poison ; ~ut it far exceeds
K rem Un crltlcbm of Cynaa
Vance and Edmund Musk.le.
Af ain, attacks at home cotD·
cided witJ> the Soviet abuae.
THE UNDERMINING of
Haig's preslice abroad betan
during controversy over crtm
management. Evidence was the
statement attributed over
television to a Middle Eastern
diplomat -believed witb.in the
administration to be an braeli
official, but not ambassador
Ephraim Evron -that Hall's '
usefulness on his current trip to
the Mideast had become ques-
tionable.
The degenerative process w~s
hastened in the hours after tbe
assassination attempt by ad-
ministration officials . "Haig has
mortally wounded himself," one
official outi;ide the White House
told us. An official from another
department said privately that
Haig had affronted most Cabinet I
members gathered in the Situa· I
tion Room "because he insisted
on taking over."
Yet, White House chief or staff
James A. Baker Ill at the
hospital had designated Haig •s
his White House contact point
As secretary of state, Haig has
clear legal Cabinet precedenee.
As a career military officer, be
understands military com ·
;nunications, alert readiness and
com mand and control; Wein·
berger has sp ent only two
months at the Pentagon.
BAKER AND presidential I
counselor Edwin Meese I CI have
seen to it that anti-Haig prop·
aganda from the administra·
t1on will stop. Belatedly. they
are alarmed al the implicatims
of a denatured chief diplomat.
But the media present a larger
problem for Haig. He was fif1;l 1
selected for public flogging dur
ing his Senate c6nfirmation
hearings. The role enlarged
when Haig lost to Bush as crisis
manager and played his cameo
rcle in the March 30 drama. But
his crusade against communi't
expansion seems lo be the real
reason that, like Brzezinski and
McNamara, Haig is fit for floe·
ging.
Virginia schools win bilingual debate
I s hall use as a touchstone for
the early Reagan administration
the way it and its leader are
handling the problem of bi-
lingual teaching in our educa-
tional establishment. Since our
educational system is heavily
under federal subsidy. the prob-
lem is the president's, as is bi-
lingualism's parent problem, the
immigration crisis.
The core or the problem is
Spanish-speaking children and
whether they
should be
taught in
their own
language or
in English.
This is a mat-
te r that has
become, by
inattention
a nd in -
decisiveness
on the part or previous ad-
ministrations, emotion-ridden
and politically explosive.
THERE HA VE been several in·
terestina developments since the
la1t time I wrote on tbe subject.
For one thing, public opinion bas
become very vocal about
Sydney Harris
English as first language in the
schools.
This yea r , if Preside nt
Carter had not been defeated. a
rule by the new U .S. Depart-
ment of Education makin1 bi-
lingual education mandatory
would have gone into effect.
Under it, local public schools
would be forced to educate non-
En glish·spea king students in
their mother tongue.
That proposed rule had many
local school officials up in arms
because it would require special
teaching in English along with
transitionaJ instruction or other
subjects in a student's first
language. Cost of program: As
much as $591 million, with
Washington picking up one-third
of the nut. It would affect an
estimated 3.S million children.
EARLY LAST December the
state or Virginia decided it
would' have none of the U.S.
Department of Education pro-
aram. The Virginia education
department decided that
Falrfax County schools need not
teach foreign-speaking students
in their native language. This
action w.as the resolution of a ,,
fi ve-year fight bet ween public
offitials and the county, Wi.Wfth e
government threatening t o
withhold up lo $18 million in
funds.
The feds. unexpectedly. ac·
CPpted the all-English program.
The USDE. in a letter to Fairfax
County school authorities, said it
was much impressed with the
results of the county's $2 million
program to teach English to
foreign-speaking students.
THE LETTER said, according
to U Pl, "achievement test scores
of students in the program
show.ed they had made 'consis·
tent and significant progress;
through intensive English
c lasses, a nd concluded the
system's teaching methods were
an acceptable alternative to
federal rules requiring school
districts lo provide special
classes in foreign languages to
s tudents who do not speak
Engli s h as a primary
language."
The importance of the
Virtinia initiative can hardly be
overestimated. First, it got
USDE to agree that its Au1U5t
1980 iuidelines were far from in·
fallible. Second, and perhaps
more important, it demonstrat·
ed that if one county in Virginia
could go all -English, there is QI>
reason why every county in tM!
country, including San Fran·
cisco and Los Angel1>s . could not
do the same thing. ·
Effort and the support or the
federal government are all that
is required. That, and a bri~
handling o r the politicians.
Chicano and otherwise, who
staod to gain most from in·
troducting this immense booq·
doggle into the public schools.
And finally , Pres ident
Reag-t'· who reportedly wants
to abolish the USDE, has lent a
receptive ear to the Virginia ac-
tion. The decision to go all·
English is much more easily
made by a president or the U.S
than by a governor of California.
where a Chicano cabal appears
intent on setting up a hu1e
Spanish-speaking enclave in thls
state. 'Ibey would do this in t.be
name of civil rights, whereas
such a procram as proposed by
USO E would almost certainly.
with the help of the politicians,
result ln Illiteracy in two
tanguagea.
Don't judge conteinpora,-y art too hastily
A hundred yean a10, in 1880. a painting submitted t~ the
.Royal Academy in London' was
condemned by the Juda es' com-
mittee to the dark eellar al~
rejected and the deaptaed. The
judges contemptuously dl•·
ml11ed it u a "tblnf," ••a coo·
founded arrangement." and "an
luult to the art of palDUn1.''
It wu the lut picture the artist ever painted that waa to
be seen at the
A~ademy
durlJll bis
IUethne. No
Individual or
ln• tltutlon
IDJ•tlere
•ould tben
fay even a
bOUllDd
dollan for a
palotlnt
which la now deemed prtceJ ....
It ...... llM:oncetYaiM to •, a
cutUI')' later, Utat tllft familiar
pletUN •• 9"I' attaclred u NY· olu~. IWf·fMJled, •MOm·
petent and demeaning to the
cla11lc tradit1on of painting.
Even tta modest Utle, • • Arranae-
ment in Gray and Black" was
rlcHcuJed by curaton and staff.
did provoke laughter or re·
vulslon -but this tame, 9llmost
too "realistic'' old lady in a
chair?
LOOKING AT IT today -
where lt .. ooe of the mott pre-
cious PCJIMHloaa ol the Louvre
-we se. OD.I)' an elderly wouian
WEIL, THE NEXT time'you .
happen to visit an art callery, or
are otherwise expos~ to what is
in. a dark dre11 and a white
1bawl, 1lWn1 calmly in a chair. I
To our e)'Mt ll la a qulet and
eonvenllonaJ ·p6rtralt, 'lmo.r-'·
cau•int11 old·faabloned. If
anl'tbbll, we llDd lt • little trite, toin4"wbat too "pldortal" for
our late, a mueum pteee we
inay r.mote11 admire tMlt can·
not 1et netted about.~ •.
We.at in tblt Hdate and
peaceflll arr1D1ement could
Ila H 1Urted tbe crlUea, lb•
publle and 10 1D8DJ fellow
artiatl ~~to IUCh Wlld out-
buntl ~ lndtpedoa, acorn and
derllloD? We ._ uildentaDd
wtii Van Got.b'1:,1ttanp ama •· tlllltMUe':nowen eoaM •
__ ,.. _____ _
known as "modern art,'' try~
keep t.biJ little story in mind.
For l\ is well worth rememw-
ing tbat each generation ia too
close to the work of ita contem·
poraries to Judge it fairly ..S
rationally. Onty a few eyes are
open to tb-e genuinely la·
novatlve.
I do not 1ugge1t that we
automatically have to "•P· preciate" whatever is new aad
atartlinl; that lJ inere trmlly
anobbllm. But neither sboukl we
feel that we ban a ritbt to •·
mlaa or delpiae whatever ti ~
or dlff erent ;. tba\ la me
Phill1Une atuffl.neu. We MM to
learn to t•peod out uttim•
Jud1ment untll we ban •· veloped a new way of lootia&:ftt
-• new ~t. .. J kDow 'What. I
Wte .. Only m~ans "I llt•
I'm uiid to."
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AH lt llrillea • DOW u I
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Pllio.t IOll cone11uc11on giving 11 Ille apt>M/-
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"Some of those raindrops are scoring two . "Go watch TV, George. rm hunytng 11 fut MI can."
points."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENJ\CE Hank Ketchum
~J
"Does this model come with optional
heavy-duty springs?" "Poor kid ... He could be sittin' on a tack and all they
can S<rf is 'There's nothln' wrong with hll'LUNGS'I"
ON MORNING~ WHEN '\'OU
HAVET06El 001N6 AND
YOU'RE (-J(IJX;J6Y FROM THE
6lEEP CAPf)V\.E, TAKE OtlE
Of THE~E TO MAKE YOU
PERK!
GARFIELD
HERE COME.~ ARLENE.
SHE'S CRAZY ABOUT ME
OOENAS DIAS, flCN ~WEET.
l KNEW YOU'D COME MCKTO ME.
t>oN1T ICEEP LOOl<IN~
AT ME LIKE THAT, MooN .
1rve <5or MY OWN
OPINIONS TOO-..
by Harold Le Ooux
by Jim Davis
OF coo~ voo Dte_fAToo. YOU'RE SITTINC:r UN MV Roeee.R MOOSE
NANCY
MISTER.I
HEAR THERE
ARE LOTS
OF FAKE
MASTERPIECES
AROUND
CITY
MUSEUM
GORDO
FUN" "t' W IN"ER•EJ\N
"THE MQNE.c,> WA5 R5H1"
HERE ~"THE DRAWER AND ~ IT'5 GONE I!
t;' ~··) d? /~\
by Jeff MacNelly
by Ernie Bushmiller
1'AL..K A&OU""r A
PA1"11!!!N1"'S SHRINK et!!SSIONS &l!!IN' l!"Fec-r1v• ...
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I DEAR PAT DUNN: Pleue tell me ta.
addresa ot the place wbere l eu 1Write to
have ny name removed from jl.lnk•mall Ult.a.
S.W., Newport Beath
WrUe &o Dtrect llatJ Ma.-.. Aasocla·
&lea, •aU l'Nfer..ee 8enke, I B. ard 8&.,
New York, N.Y. tMl'f. 'AM t. die ........
llaU" I••, ftll lt .. , ud ..-... e. DMMA.
Tllll1 b'a4le PMelatlell &Mta wtll ull IU t,•
member eompulee lo 1&op ~ )'09 aclt,
ea&aMls ucl ..UeMatieal. Sbtee t .. Wrda .r
all dine& mall advertl1ten betoml le DMMA,
W1 Moeld ltelp eUmlaate moe& of your UJI·
welcome maU.
'Refund check expected
DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm having trouble
getting a refund for merchandise I returned
to U.S. General Supply Corp. last November.
I was told several months ago that a check
bad been sent to me. but it never arrived and
ftly later letters haven't been answered.
L.K., Newport Beach
AYS coetaded I.be Plal.Dvlew, N.Y. mall·
order ftrm, and a refund check will be malled
to yoa u soon as a "•toP. payment" order OD
I.be first refund check clean &lie bank. There
was DO explanation as to why their letters of
laqalry were Ignored, but you are advised to
expect your refund within three weeks.
Some glaucoma inheriled
DEAR PAT DUNN : What causes
glaucoma? Can it be inherited and what are
its ea.rly symptoms? I'm concerned about
Aerobic Exercise Classes
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J:,1Y1£ .......... e~x~ER~C~IS~E~A~N-O._.~· ..... COND ITIONING SALON
1110..,.. DriY•. c.-....... 719·1411
CViewS On ®. C ~·~~~
en 1 'CJ. ~.: .M~ .~.uenta .nealtll,\~·'i .~·
By GERALD WINKLER, D.D.S. ~· J'
ADULTS AND ORTHODONTICS
Teeth·stra ighten 1ng
braces. loog associated
with sc h oo l -age
ch ildren . are n ow
becoming more popular
with adults The
American Association
or Orthodontis t s
est imates that some 4
million Americans are
undergoing orthodonl 1c
treatment Out of this
number. O\'er 20', arc
over age 20.
Wh y are so many
a dults su b Ject1 n ~
the m selves t o lhe
orthodontic regimen ~
There are several likely
explanations. T h e
development or braces
that are l e ss
noticeable. the ability
of adults to pay dental
fees that their parents.
perhaps. could not
arro rd . a wid er
acceptance of braces by
an adult genera.
tio n attuned to . .
se If ·improvement ,
concern fo r good
health. and naturally.
good looki..
l 'nt1 l the m1d ·l960's 1l
was accepted wisdom
in the field that braces
were for kids . T he
th eory was that
orthodontics could be
successful only 1f the
patient wa s s til l
grow1nR Now . 1t 's
generally agreed that.
though growth 1s
helpful. it's not always
necessary for effective
treatment Today. you
can produce the smile
you 've always wanted.
a s the circus
announcers tout ··For
kids of all ages ..
Gerald Wlnklrr. O.D.~.
and .\sSOC'lates
UOI h ocado. ~uile ~5.
~e" port Beach
Phone: 640·4 IOO
tbia beeaUle my older brother told me be bp
Oils~.
11.G .. Colt.a II••
GlaaeMaa la •rest•n tut ballda ..
fro• • neeu ..... -u. ....UaJ ......
Ula& dre.aa&es l• Ute e)'e. U I& doela't· drala ,,.,.,., , eTHtllaUy Ute .,ue 9fne bew•ea
••••1ecl, padaaJly redaelq U.. field ti •b· ....
Some r • .,, ol 1Jameoma an laltertted,
M eiavt.c your eye1 tested replaJ'ly for
"elQl'e II lmpor&u&, partk.,arly lf yM're
e~r a1e4t.
For tM mOlt part, &lallC!Oma eaun ao
•l•lble lips of clJatreaa, and may MC be pala· •
f•I la lta early 1tase1. Two 1eaeral
17mptom1 are loH of aide vtatoa aad tJMble
adjastl•I to aeml-darkae11 or low U•lat
levels. "Keepl:D1 AB Eye Oa Glaacoma" la aa
Informative free booklet tbat e:aplalm I.be dlf.
fereat cauea of l)aHoma and bow to delft&
It early. Order t,y wrt&lnl to C:O...amer ID·
formatJoa Center, Dep&. 58JJ. Pueblo, Colo.
8Hlt.
A "Got a problem? Then write to Pat · •"-1 Dunn. Pat will cvl red tape. getting ., the a1UU1era and action you need to
•
solve tnequit~a in government and
M bualnesa. Mail !JO'A' qu.eationa to Pat
Dunn, At Your Sennce, Orange Coaat "
Daily PzJot. P 0 . Boz 1560, Costa Mesa , CA 92626. Aa ·
many letter& aa poanble will be ~ed, but phoned
mquanea or ldtera not including the reai:Ur's /ull
name, oddrea1 and btumen houra· phone number
cannot be con.ndered.
•lfers :
Mary Dent Crisp,
once high in the GOP
but who quit over the
abortion issue, says
the 1980 landslide vic-
tory was not a man-
date for conservative
social issues.
Shun cash
MOUNTAIN VIEW
CAP) -Citinl excessive
red tape e a reuon, tbel
City Council has voted to
phase out a fede ral
block grant program
that has contributed $2.4
million to the city. The
council voted 5-2 to up·
hold the recommenda-
tion of City Manager
Bruce Uedstrand.
/ ·. \1
/I~
~
...
..
Death benefits hinge
on timi~ of divorce
COCOA BEACH. Fla. (AP) -Is
Sonya Holloway a widow or a
divorcee? More t.han·$50,000 may be
rldlna OG the answer, accordina to
the parents ot her estran1ed
bu1band, who was killed when the
Harbour Cay condominium col·
lapsed. •
A divorce decree for Sonya
Hollow~. 20, and Michael Crease, 24,
was aiped March 27, the same day
Cresse and 10 other construction
workera were cru1bed to death ln the
collapse of the unfini.lbed building.
Cresse's parent.I HY their former
daughter-in-law ii contending the
decree was not stcned until after the
accident, making her a widow en·
tltled to a small life insurance policy,
$50,000 in workers compensation
death benefits and a ny damages
resuJting from the tragedy.
MS. HOLLOWAY WOULD neither
confirm nor d e ny the Cr esses '
charges.
"I would rather not discuss it." she
said. "If they are that immature ..
I'm sorry it happened, but life is
life."
Lou Cresse said he teamed from
his son's attorney. Stanley Andrews.
that Ms. Holloway would attempt to
have her divorce set aside. A bearing
in the case is scheduled Wednesday.
"The idea that someone would ex·
ploit my son's death for money just
fl abbergasts me I can't sit silently
......
4'
'::-,
by t.hl1. She sees millions In It," Hid
Crease, a Brevard Community
Colle1e professor.
"SHE'S CLAIMING he WH dead
before the divorce was signed and
you can't divorce a dead man.··
A childless widow is entitled to
weekly payme nts of half her
husband's weekly waaes, up to
$50,000, according to Gabriel
Blumenthal, a Titusville attorney
who specializes in worker's com·
pensation claims.
Cresse said his son and Ms.
Holloway went to divorce court
March 25. two days before the fatal
accident. Andrews said a divorce set·
tlement was reached at the hearing
and that he prepared the divorce or·
der and sent it to Judge Richard
M uldrew's Melbourne office later
that day for the Judge's signature.
WHAT TIME MULDREW signed
the order that Friday could be a
critical legal issue but Cresse's
father says it shouldn 't matter.
.. The marriage was dissolved
We dnesday," Cresse said. "He
C MuldrewJ didn't gel around to sign.
an g it until Friday. but the intent was
there It was granted ··
Michael Cresse and Ms. Holloway
"ere married 1n November. 1979. but
marital d1fftcult1cs cropped up within
months. his mother ~ays .
·'-.
1 l~ I 't~
'• ··.
How to take up to a $1,750
tax deduction today.
Open a Rock Solid Individual
Retirement Account at Gibraltar.
At Gibraltar,"' we think you should take ad-
vantage of every available tax deduction.
That is why Gibraltar offers three Rock
SolidTW lndividual Retirement Accounts-
IRAs that could give you up to a $1, 750
deduction on your 1980 return while helping
you build a high-interest retirement plan for
the future. How to qualify
If you were not covered by a qualified pen-
sion or retirement plan during 1980 or were
self-employed with no retirement plan, you·
could qualify. But you must open your IRA
before you file your 1980 return.
Lat income to tax
Our IRA cuts YOUI' 1980 ~ burden because
the entire qualified deposit is deductible
from income. R>r exampJe, if you are mar-
ried and your spouse does not work, you
could deduct as much as $1, 750 or 15% of
earned income, whichever is Jess. If you are
ingle, you could deduct up to $1, 500 or
15%, whichever is less. You may qualify for
an even larger deduction if both you and your
spouse are employed. Ask our IRA Coun-
selors for details.
Make your redrement fund Rock Solid
A Rock Solid IRA has other built-in advan-
tages. too. It shelters part of your income
throughout your peak earning years. It de-
fers tax payments until retirement when
your income may be lower and your tax
ljability less. One more bonus. lRA interest
is also tax deferred.
Teams with Sod.al Security
A Rock Solid= supplements Social Secu-rity in a big way. ~or e~ample, based on
an annual e ned mcome of $15, 000 with
a yearly contnbution of $1, 500 to an 8%
Account. you \WUJd build a fund of $77, ll4. 71
in just 20 yean. Beainning at age 59 ~ you
can withdraw your bads in a >ump awn or as
~ need them. Then, • 62 when Social Secu·
rity begm, you tlll e1'oY the benefits of
both retftmen~ plans.
Three IRAs, one right for you
Naturally everyone has different needs. So
Gibraltar offers a variety of IRA and IRA
Rollover Plans. each designed lo help build
your Rock Solid future.
89'> Account. This three-year plan guaran-
tees 8% interest compounded daily. Add to it
anytime. Minimum deposit $20.
JO .. Month Cercificate. Earn up to a maxi-
mum 12% interest for 2~ to 10 years. Mini-
mwn deposit' $100.
26-Week Certificates. If you have saved
$10, 000 in IRA funds, Gibraltar will pay the
maximum 26-week Certificate rate the law
allows.
1Une is Nnnlnl 'out
April 15 is the deacDine to fiJe your 1980 tax
return. So act now. Stop by your neighbor-
hood Gibraltar branch today and open a
higb.interest IRA. It may be the best tax
shelter your hard-earned dollars~
C•~-...-'-A"""'*"1!1
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The spirit of Marlboro
in a low tar cigarette.
' .
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I
I
: + :1. ...
· .
• t -.. '-
• I••.,), .. L~t
Oeltf PWIWf~
HUNTINGTON BEACH BUSINESSMEN AID LOAN PROBE
B<>b Shuss (left), Vince Havel appear on '60 Minutes' show
* * * * * * Take precautions
in seeking loan
Business loans have become
more difficult to obtain in the
current ecoc;iomic climate, and
many business owners are will·
ing to pay more than $1.000 in
packaging fees to a company
that claims it can arrange low·
interest government loans.
Investigators warn. however.
that some companies make
grand promises and accept
lucrative fees but are unable to
deliver the loans they described
as a "sure thmg."
FOLLOWING ARE some pre·
cautions s uggest ed by Hunt·
ington Beach poli ce Sgt. Bill
Van Cleve and Herschel Elkins.
senior assistant stale Attorney
General:
If a loan packaging com-
pany makes any promises or
guarantees. make sure they are
in writing.
Check the loan packager·s
track record Ask for the names
of other businesses for which the
company has arranged loans
and verify the success stories.
The Small Business Ad ·
minstration hm1ts the fees that
can be charged to package its
loan applications. IC a firm
charges more than $1,000, do
further investigation.
The SBA m aintains a list or
packages it has worked with and
their record of success in obtain·
i n g loan s . Check out the
pac kager with the SBA
-BEWARE OF applications
that must be approved by a
"loan committee." Often. such
committees are made up or loan
packaging company employees
or relatives who approve all ap-
plications and eliminate the
chance for a refund.
Consult with a bank or the
SBA to determine whether you
can complete the applications
without the aid of a "packager."
If possible, put the packag
ing fee in an escrow account un··
til the contracted work is com·
pleted.
Beware of "mterim" loans,
in which a packager assures you
your government Joan 1s on the
way but offers a more conven
t ional loan in the meantime.
. Immigrants have
I trouble adapting
Husband and wife role re·
versals and offspring who ques-
tion unquestionable a uthority
are leaving many immigrant
Vietnamese men uncomfortable,
an Orange County educational
authority reports.
Vu Due Chang, Indochinese
Education project coordinator
for the County Department of
Education, told Friends of the-
Costa Mesa Libraries recently
that adjusting lo America has
been difficult for those immi·
grants.
CHANG, HJMSELF a 1976 im·
migrant, explained that in Viet·
namese culture, the family is
the most important unit of
society.
Generally. he said; it is self·
1ufllcient and autonomous, with all members sharing in Its pros·
perlty.
ln Vietnam, he said, the home
ls the center or actlvlty. Moel
cbUd.ren are bom there. It is the
place for funerals and for
worship al ancestors.
THE HOME 18 an adoption
center and welfare bureau, to
some dearee, he aald, where
relatlYS who have no bome ol their own are welcomed.
woman who often is able to find
work and becomes the
breadwinner because she speaks
better English
And the children , Chang
s aid, begin to question authority
of parents alter watching their
American peers.
''This is muc h different from
the homeland where even mat-
ters of marriage were decided
by the parents," he s aid.
TUESDAY, Aprll 7, 1981
STOCKS 85
FEATURES 86
TE LEVISON 88
,• m
Japan threatens
U .S: dominance
of computer field. . .B3
probe
..
D
Partners, bitten orwe, call on law in loan pitch
'
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ot ... Oelfy ...... lwt
The sales pitch was all too
. familiar.
It came from a well-dressed
youni man who bad just parked
his white Mercedes outside
Havel Mold, a Huntington Beach
industrial company.
The firm's owners, Vince
Havel and Bob Sbuss, said they
needed $250,000 for expansion.
The young man said he could
help them borrow the money at
low interest through government
agencies and private sources,
for a loan packaging fee or
$2,550.
Arter paying this fee, the busi-
nessmen were .. 70 to 90 percent"
certain to receive the cash they
desired, the young man said.
WHAT THE young man did
not know was that the "friend"
sitting beside Havel and Shuss
was a Huntington Beach police
detective.
He also did not know the local
businessmen had lost $2,000 the
previous year after accepting a
near-identical pitch.
The partners were not about to
be burned twice.
Cooperating with local pol.ice
and state investigators, Havel
and Shuss turned the tables on
the "loan packagers."
In a recent "60 Minutes"
broadcast , the Huntington
Beach partners aided reporter
Mike Wallace in exposing such
tempting loan offers that, ac-
cording to police, frequently pro·
mise much and deliver nothing.
HUNTINGTON BEACH police
Sgt. Bill Van Cleve, who heads
the economic crimes unit. says
that since his appearance on "60
Minutes" he has received calls
from businessmen in Newport
Beach, Laguna Beach and other
cities. all claiming they were
taken by similar orrers.
He said the Long Beach firm
operated by the young man who
visited Havel Mold is under in·
vestigation by Huntington Beach
police, as well as the state At·
torney General's office.
"IT ALMOST seems like our
$2 ,000 loss was worth it,"
declared Vince Havel, pointing
to the wide exposure the loan
packaging pitch has received.
Havel and Shuss started their
industrial firm six years ago in
Garden Grove.
The business took off, and'
three years ago the partners
needed money for expansion.
They were approached by a
sales man for a loan packaging
firm in October 1979.
Accor'lting to Havel, the
salesman assured the partners
that the federal Small Business
Adminjstration was anxious to
back loans for companies like
Havel Mold.
FOR A $2 ,000 fee. the
salesman said his company
w ould do the paperwork
necessary to obtain a $250.000
low-interest government loan,
Havel says.
The partners recall that the
s alesman claimed to have an in·
side track with SBA officials.
They were told their packag-
ing fee was refundable if their
application was rejected by a
loan committee.
"We were anxious and gulli·
ble," Havel says. "We assumed
the loan committee was the peo-
ple who decided whether we
would get the loan. But it was
the (loan packaging company's)
committee, and they approved
every application."
THIS APPROVAL, which
meant the partners could no
longer receive a fee refund, did
not guarantee they would re·
ceive their loan.
The partners had been told to
expect word on their loan within
90 days. That period passed, but
tbe men were assured their ap-
plication was being processed.
FinaJJy, the partners viewed a
newspaper article, which said
the loan packaging company
had been indicted in another
county on charges it had made
"oral misrepresentations" in its
loan packaging transactions.
.. We kind of kissed our money
goodbye," Bob Shuss recalls.
LAST SUMMER, in their new
quarters in Huntington Beach.
Havel and Shuss received a
postcard from a Long Beach
firm, outlining a way to obtain
low-interest loans.
The pitch was nearly identical
to the one they had swallowed
the previous year.
The partners called to arrange
an appointment. They a lso con·
tacted Huntington Beach police .
Sgt. Van Cleve learned that the
young man wtio founded ·the
Long Beach firm was a former
employee of the first loan packag·
ing company Havel and Shuss had
dealt with.
WHEN THE Long Beach
salesman arrived. Van Cleve sat
in as a .. friend."
··it was so obvious to hear it a
second time," Havel recalls
"But we played along, hoping
the guy would trip up somehow
O•llyPUMP-
l00KING INTO LOANS
Sgt. BUI Van Cleve
a nd give Sgt Van Cleve the
chance to arrest him."
According to Van Cleve, the
salesman promised Havel and
Shuss they were a s hoo-in for a
loan, but his written contract
contained no guarantees
The salesman was asked to re-
turn later. when the partners'
bookkeeper would hand over the
S2.S50 packaging fee.
MEANWHILE. VAN CLEVE
learned that Mike Wallace of .. 60
Minutes" was preparing a piece
on loan packaging fees. A pro-
ducer contacted Van Cleve and
the Huntington Beach partners.
When the loan salesman re-
turned, he was unaware Mike
Wallace and a camera crew
were hiding in an adjacent of·
fice.
As soon as Wallace heard the
salesman repeat that the loan
wa s a near-certainly, the
camera crew burst in.
Wall ace helped reveal that the
salesman had few qualifications
lo serve as a "financial consul·
tant" and that he seldom was
able to obtain the loans he pro-
mised for his clients.
"AS OF NOVEMBER 1980,
(the salesman> had never gotten a single loan through the SBA."
Sgt. Van Cleve said.
The police detective said
pu blic1ty about s h ady loan
packaging companies is pro-
bably helping to put the firms
out of business.
The Huntington Beach busi·
ness partners are pleased with
their decision to go public
"When people get t aken, they
usually are too ashamed to ad·
mil it to anyone."· Vince Havel
observes. ··And so the chain con·
tinues "
··P eople should s peak out.
That's the only way to eliminate
this sort of thing.··
Cuts alar~ Viejo radio·
Federal budget slash dooms program aid
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Of -. o.i1y Pl ... SUlff
Directors at KSBR ·public
radio at Saddleback College say
proposed federal funding cuts
for public broadcasting won't
wipe them out, but a lot more
money will have to be raised in
the private sector.
Under proposals drawn up by
the Rea gan Adminis tration
spending for the Corporation fo;
Public Broadcasting would be
cut from the $l25 million spent
last year to $100 million.
IN ADDIT ION, funding for
National Public Radio. which
produces programming for sub·
scribing stations throughout the
country, would be cut entirely,
leaving local stations res ponsi-
ble for filling air t ime formerly
scheduled with nationally syn-
dicated programs .
The proposals under President
Reagan's budget have already
cleared the Senate, and are now
being debated in the flouse of
Representatives .
KSBR Development Director
Donna Couch sajd the station.
which broadcasts from Sad-
dleback College in Mission Vie-
jo, would probably receive the
same amount of funding from
the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting as last year.
HOWEVER, THE pinch will
come when the station has to
come up with more locally pro-
duced shows, all having to be
paid for with the s ame amount
of money that previously didn't
have to be stretched as far.
Mrs. Couch said KSBR's 1980
budget was $240,000, with about
$50,000 of that amount coming
from the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting. The remainder
came from the college and
private donations and grants.
"With no national entity filling
any of our broadcast day, we
will have lo produce virtually all
the shows," Mrs. Couch said. "I
don't think we have any reason
to believe that the Congress will
Charges
reduced
on Munro
LOS ANGELES <AP >
James Michael Munro. one of
four defendants tn the Freeway
Killer case, has pleaded guilty lo
a reduced murder charge after
agreeing to testify against the
man accused of masterminding
the killings of young men, the
district attorney's office said.
Munro, 19. of Long Beach,
pleaded guilty to second·degree
murder in the slaying of Stephen
Jay Wells. whose nude and
strangled body was found behind
a Huntington Beach gas station.
r efuse lo go along with the presi·
dent's proposals "
MRS. COUCH said KSBR is in
a better position than many
other public radio stations that
rely more heavily on syndicated
programming.
"The only day we really de·
pend on National Pubhc Radio
for programming 1s on Sunday,"
she said. "We're going to havel
to come up with local shows•
from 6 a .m. to midnight if they
are closed down."
She said another eight hours of
programming would have to be'
produced for airing during.
weekdays. Mrs Couch added
that inflation will make 1t more
difficult to put to~ether pro-1 grams to fill the air time now
filled with national shows
KSBR ALSO stands to lose one
pa rt·time and two full -lime
employees under proposed cuts
1n CETA !Comprehens ive
Employment and Training Act>
funding.
In addition, the $85 ,000
s atellite signal receiving dish,
and other equipment installed
last year lo enable the station to
receive nationally produced pro·
gramming, will be rendered use·
less if National Public Radio is
forced to close Its doors.
Munro is also charged with
one count each of robbery and
sodomy in the Wells case, but
deputy district attorney Sterling
Norris said he will seek dis·
missal or those charges provided
Munro honors his promise to
testify against William G.
Bonin, charged in the murders
of Wells and 11 others .
"Of the entire National
Corporation for Public Broad·
-casting budget. about 8S percent
Munro's testimony "will goes to public television sta·
significantly help our case tions," Mrs. Couch said. "Witb
against Mr. Bonin:· Norris said. inflation and fewer federal
However , Norris said .. no dollars. we just have to raise
hard and fast deals with the more money from private
other defendants have b-een sources." made." She said a fund-raising cam·
Norris said because of the plea paign is being planned for later
bargain, security has been this year. It will be the begin·
beefed up around Munro, who ning of a stepped up effort to
was arrested last July 31 in gaip private support for the
Michigan. radio station.
Womm bom and reared ln
Vietnam lurn tbat UMy alwan
owe obedlenH to men, first to
tbelr fat.hen and then to their
bread·winnlnc bua.,..,dt.
Altport llretijJIUer• eo••eaded
Orange COunt~ Supervitorl have commended penonnel of fire 1t1tton
33 bued at John Wayne Airport, The 1roup wu ftnt on tbe scene when
an Alr California jetliner cruhed Feb. 11 and wu prS for prevent·
1n1 a PoSSibJe holocaust. From left, Chier Larry Holms~ttall-.ebief
Mlke Ahumada, Rodney }Geor1e, James Owen, Mark Menier, Mt•e
Overton, John Moore, Art Wilkerson. Joe Kerr, Jeff Pedenon and Jane
Van Sickle. If a womaa'1 buaband dies, be
aald, abe obeys ber oldett aon.
Jn America, be noted, it 11 the
,
:c
I
' .~.
"" '
.,,
I •
-•
. -. .. .
' .. I .. . , ... .. .. ... .,
.. .. .. • . ... .. .... . .. . -.. .. • .. ...
•1 •• .. • .. .. ..
I : .. .. • • .. • • • I •• .. " ... " , • .. .. • ,. ..
"
rvuvrr OF THE LONG GKEE1'i': Seemt lite
every time you turn around aJoGc our couWae tbete
days, somebody i• being beriefttted, honored, retired
or fund-raised. You, of coune, are invited.
You are invited, that is, to buy a table at
perhaps $100 per plate, eight to the seatin1. Or
m•ybe lt's to fund·raise for a political candidate and why don't you drop around for a glassful of ice cubes
at $100 a round? ·
If we keep up the
current pace in our· ~
region, we are likely • to end up with more f&
fund -raisers than ~-r..\ ..
there are funds. Or at JOM MURPHINI ~
1
~
least people with any --------''.-.--jingle remaining in ·
their jeans.
PONDERING IT ALL, you might conclude that
the politicos were the ones who got all these cash
tributes started in our area. Politicians are handy,
so we might as well blame them as anybody.
As it developed, candidates needed w lure a lot
of Long Green into their treasuries so they got on the
fund -raiser bandwagon.
Right now we're supposed to be in a non-election
year. Therefore it was a great surprise to note the
other day that a fund-raiser was being held for our
incumbent Orange County Sheriff-Coroner Brad
Gates. ·
"Goodness," you say to yourself, "I thought he'd
just gotten himself re-elected ... ''
This, however, must not be true. Another news
note came tt)rough indicating one of his potential op-
ponents was also holding a fund-raiser.
Is your calendar crossed up? No, not really.
They're all just getting an earlier push on for 1984.
By 1984, we'll prob.ably all be facing lures td\get
Hapless tnCtim being fleeced in GMther fund-rauer
us into fund-raisers for candidates in 1990. There's
no end to it.
WE CAN A~ be separated from our hard·
earned cash by attending tributes to outstanding
citizens who have done good deeds. I was lured to
one of these the other night for a worthy person put
on by a worthy charity .
Throughout the entire tribute, they said a lot of
ni ce things about the person being honored but failed
to mention one thing he'd ever done for the worthy
charity.
DON'T TW NK FOR a minute it's just the high
and the mighty who can separate you from your
coin. Consider when the doorbell rang just the other
night and your corres pondent answered it.
This grimy little face peered inside, squinting
against the porchlight glare. Abruptly, he held up
this publication in a grimy little fist and announced:
"I really wanna go to camp." As if by signal ,
tea rs streamed down his tiny cheeks, making
rivulets of mud .
"I'll take two," I blurted, tears streaking my
own cheeks into mudpies. "Keep the change."
"You just bought two subscriptions to one of
your competitors," one of the family members be·
moaned loudly .
''I DON'T CARE," I blubbered. "I just want the
little urchin off the streets ... "
Then just the other day, one of my compatriots
here in the office convinced me to sponsor bis spind·
ly, weak little boy at five cents for every lap he could
run, to benefit the Little League .
"My kid has a pulled achilles tendon," my co-
worker confided with a wink. I signed up .
ON RUNNING DAY, the kid was struck by a
miracle. He turned into a perpetual motion machine.
He ran forever. It cost me ten bucks.
There sure are a lot of ways to get fleeced
around here.
Cancer drug 'overrated'
WINNIPEG (AP) -A Manitoba
researcher says the experimental
drua interferon ls overrated u a
potential cure for cancer and may
even worsen some form• of the dis· eue.
"It' almost inevitable that the.re't
oln to be dlsappointinent Mtacbed
to it," says Dr. Arthur Greenberc.
Greenberg, who bas been 1tuctytni
the drug for two years at the
Manitoba Cancer Treatment and
R~earcb Foundation, said scientists
have been lartely lpored In \be rulh
to aet the dJ'UI oo the market.
NOTIC&OF SPECIAL MEETING
Jo ..... ,,. .... ~....,....,T..--""" ... 11LTO
111 LM 'flll IBllllll snl1 .
•MJllllS. lfta cu. ~ of HO unlta-ift-32 bulldlnga on t.e acre 11tn, ln•lud.. 2 llWllM'l"9
QUEENIE
"I'm no )oqer into slqiftl. I'm Into plaiter."
Plant cost doubles ,
FRESNO (AP) -The projected cost of the
Helms hydroelectric project being built east of
here has doubled to a "mind-boggling" $600
million in four years, said a Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. spokesman.
Arthur Strassburger, manager of the utility's
civil and hydro department, bla.med "inflation and
50 other factors" for the increase since the con·
struction contract was awarded to Granite-Ball·
Groves.
5Ellli'1FF
RESTAURANT
IRUNCH •LUNCH• DIMMER
WED. MITE SPECIAL
0.. of JO s.tect .,.._. .........
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
& KING CRAB LEGS
ca ....... s1o•s
Call 142-5678.
Pu\ • taw wotd•
to work tor ou.
(714) 975·1128
Call WIUiam 8. Mttchelt-Brokera Welcome
N-M's new menu in
The Zodiac:
J ust one more reason to come
Sur:iday-shopping with us.
Each Sunday between 12 and 4. indulge in
a buftet of fa mou.!> N-M dcs.!>cm.: all you can
cat. .+.95. And N -M·~ Wine Bar and medley of
hor~ d 'oeuvre~: all you can eat. 6.95.
Before you go brow ... ing. ~top in for lunch!
T he Zodiac. M iddk Level. Newport Beach.
3000 PALM AVENUE
HUNTINGTON BEACH 536-8866 ~c::;;;;;;;;:igs;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~~;;;:;;im;;;;:;:~~==~~l.'lj'·"l'""U.: .... h.IOtunMun .Tu.:' \\.:J . lhu" .'i.11 Hltu•lln ~UnJJ) l}h1'>.JnJno1"'1)pen1nl.i,V.:ga'
Todays
Maximum
Interest
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for 30 months
withno·minimum · balancein
Home Federal
Country.
Earn Home Federars maximum rate on 30-month to 10 year
Money Market Certificates -Paying V. % more interest than
any bank. Effective through April 13.
%HCME
FEDERAL
SAVINGS % ancf loan Association cJ San Diego I
Check the Yellow Pqes for the olficc n«nist )'Oil.
"ti ~111111hiter•lwen10 Ttmllin oo dlslo6lt b ~ J~ tt this rate. F"6tril lt~IOM ~ Hbltlliltlll ~ b earl1 'lfili..'lfll o( __ ,..,. ____ .. ·-~·-~ . l*I
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-
I
I
' I I
I I
I• I. •
T hriving computer industry is expected to grow 20 percent this year.
'falls' Reagan • survives
President abl.e w disengage se lf from ego
By JOHN CUNNIFF
Al' l1tilfteu AM!rst
NEW YORK President Reagan's self.
confidence. his ability to disengage his ego from
the tas k and his talent for intellectualizing crises
will continue to serve him well. says a manage-
ment authority
But, adds Prof. Eugene Jennings. author of
"Executives in Crisis," Secretary of State Alex-
ander Haig has shown himself so deficient in these
areas that his enemies "wi ll pick apart everything
he does."
J ENNI NGS, A P SYCHOLOGIST AND
management professor at Michigan State, has
spent his adult life analyzing, teaching and writing
about corporate structures and people. especially
as they involve power. and has been a personal ad-
According to Jennings, on a self·confidence
scale of 1 to 10 Reagan scores 9 or 10 (compared to
5 for President Carter). "Just to believe he could
be elected president at 69 demonstrates it," he
says.
Secondly, he continues, Reagan shows he is
able to separate his ego from events. "He doesn't
take hi mself seriously. He can laugh, have fun, be
witty and joke." Jennings observes, addin g that
anyone who takes himself seriously becomes
ser iously taken by the consequences.
His ability to separate his ego from events
strengthens Reagan, he says. "It gives people the
idea he is unattackable." In fact, "it even dis-
cour ages enemies from making an a ttack on
him ."
, · viser to chief executive officers.
Jennings s tudied the recent behavior of
Reagan and Haig. and concludes that Reagan is
prepared to sail through the post-trauma shock
that sometimes immobilizes people in leadership
positions.
"He has." says J enni ngs, "what Haig hasn 't."
First, "he has primary self confidence -a gut
feeling he can take what the world throws." says
J ennings of Reagan. "It isn't new. It's related to
task ; he had it as a union leader, and he has it
now.··
•
Computers fut11re e l e (i
U.S. concerned &bdut Japanese eontrol I 4 8.Lff.!.T~fe -F.q1aeen. "J•paa , .. udl aa pernet· • Al~h be dldli't euctly put lt th11 ••Y, the more eftllneerln• 1radt1atlll 1neua.U1 ttiu .,_ :
cnax ol wh•t Gary E. Llebl, president ol Newport the UnJ~ State.. flere, we 1111 oDJy ts perHftt of
Beach·bued Mlcrodata lntemat1onal Corp., said our need. I about tbe computer lnd1.11try wu u follows : -Reeearch and development. "Tb• typical
Ther9'1 aood news and bad news. U.S. company 1pend1 t percen~. OD UD. Hltaehl, , •
The tood news, Liebl told members of the for example, apenda 13 percent.
World Trade Center Association of 01'anae County Im -Productivity and quaJJty. "You have to ad·
at a hmcheon Monday, was that the industry ls , ire them for their product. At this Point, they
thrtvlqc. bow more than the U.S."
SALIS BE SA.ID, ARE expected to climb 20 . la there any way for the United States to ret•la
percent to isi billion this year over laat year's $52 its 82 percent market share? Liebl think• there la.
billion, and this despJte a worldwide recession. ay "ln 1950, planeloadl of J apanese came ber• to
1985, that fi1ure Is expected to rise to $140 billion. learn, to observe. l propoae lt'a time to swallow
FurtAennore, the United States controls an 82 our pride and eo there and learn," Uebl said.
percent market share -a most enviable position. araybe too enviable . That's right, here comes "WE NEED A NEW UAISON between 1ov· the ttad news: ernment and industry." and that can be ac·
• Japan threatens to assume control of the ln· complished by tax incentives and a cbanae tn ap-
dustry. effectively supplanting U.S. dominance. preclation laws . More money tor lt&D la needed.
"Japanese competition is the greatest "Lastly, we have to be wllllnl to walt, to allift I
c)\allenae we face." Liebl said. from expecting immediate returns to e1tabU1bina
He cited sever al reasons for Japan 's success : a two to three.year plan. We have to think ahead,"
-~alition. "The government, industry and Lie bl said.
people ill work together. In this trtumverate ap-Liebl aJso said strinsent recutatiooa, lntema·
proach, everyone is working toward a common tional distribution problems and the control of the
aoal." high-growth cycle are additional challenges.
: !f!ro~0.00 to $500,000.
11NCOME PROPERTV SECONDS,
~
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I .
-. _... ~-...._ ......
eompalli .. &AAounced tb•Y bad,1lcned a
rneJ'ller qreem•t.
lta stock fOI' eacb St. Joe tta approval.
tba ... not IOld for CQh. The mercer la worth
That deal wu ap9roved $2.8 bU.lloa. bued on the
by tbe Fluor board *'5.$0 per •bare cloetnc
Saturday, a day after price ot Fluor stoclc on
the St. Joe board save tbe New York Stock Ex·
Under tbe mer1er
a1reement. Fluor wlll
excbance 1.2 ·~ of
Closing upsets town·
~ HAMILTON, Mo. (AP) -J .C. Pen·
"ney Co. 11 cloetn1 tbe •tore where ita
6'ounder waa born and where be
never forgot bia btrthplace -belpin1
pay 'for the hi1b school and a public
library and sinlle-handedly brinain1
in a shoe factory that l1 the lar1eat
employer in the town ol l,700.
turned retallln&, and 1ome townapeo-.P!• .aaf tbe corporate tlant la 1bunnln1 ~-folks root.a for profit.
"U be were alive today, that store
,,.nuldn'\ be pulled out of here," nid ••non RJdi.nC•, who knew James· , C'ub ~ well from the retailer'•
tfteq'*lt vt&ita.
"He bad a great attachment for bis
birthplace," Ridings said. "Ile .liked
nothlne better than to come here, put
on old work pants and 1boes, then
tramp around the fields cleaning up
bits of barbed wire ao farm lmple·
men ts wouldn't be damaeed."
IUdinp, editor of the w~llly A~·
l 'fOc ate Kamlltonlan, said Penney
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freeway necwork, as well a~ immediare proximity ro local housing.
Given the demogr<iphics and location i1 has 10 be one of the ou1scand ·
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of rhe buildings. should make ir borh an immediate and long rerm
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AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS
AND DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS.
. . . . . . . . . ~· . . . . . . . . ' . . .
Now you can use your
interest-checkjog
attOUJit in places
,that don't
takechecb.
It's easy with Citizens
Visa CHECIUiABR
Ute YOW' lnterat·Cheddn& Accoant Almost Anywhere.
With Citizens Visa Check Card~ you can use your interest·
check.mg account in town, out of town. around the world-
evcn in places that don't take checks! That's because Check Card• is accepted wherever Visa is ... even
though it works just like a check.
Lene Your Cbec9'~ • Home.
You won't need your checkbook. when
you have Check Card~ Although
you use it like a crqlW card, the
amount of your purchae i$
deducted from your
lnterat·dtcck.ing
account.
Cililens Vila Check
Card.• One beeudfut
wsy to U1e your interest·
dalckina eccount. See your
na11at c~ offico today
fOrdetaill.
chan1e Friday. A total
of •s percent of the
a h a r e s air e t o b e
purchased for cash.
Fluor ls an Irvine·
bu"d international
8ft8(neerln& &nd COD·
strucUon cornpany. St.
Joe is one of lbe natio~
leading producers of
lead and tine and has
au batantiaJ coal in-
terests.
In March, Seagram of·
fered to acquire St. Joe
for $45 a share, or a total
of $2.1 billion.
--CTORS CORNER
Rere Cofn• & ••mp•
GOLD & SILVER
Prices tor 4+11 .... c ......... ....,CA.11Ul .., ....
~--1111• .....
IOOC= :::: ::::.: ,.,.._ ....... ..., ..
,.,._ Sit-.... •• tm,.
'-~-... c.11 ... _.... ....
(114) 55&-a50
South CoHt Ptue Vlll•11• -....... . 1~--..... c:.-..... ,
TELEX
RECEIVING & SENDING
Public Service
Overseas
and
Domestic
FACSIMILE
I .. 714-t7t-1711 --~ bt.754
•t •D MILUVI .. CDITA MIU
PVBUC NOTICE .
SU PaRIOlt COURT OP c:ALIPORNIA
COlntTY OP O•ANOa
Ml C:hrk C-Drt"9 W"' s...-..Cet ..... tmt MARRIAGE OF
Pttill-r: YOLANDA REYES
Ats~; JO$E R. REVES
C......,._:Dl..,..
SUllllMONI CPAMILY LAW>
NOTICSI
YM ............. Tiie C-' -.y flK ................. _ .... .... ~.--.. ,...... ...... . .. , ............. st ...... . ,., ................... . ....,.. ...... ...-w . .,.. ..... .. .................. ,.. ......... . ......... H_,_, ........... .
AYllOI
Utte• lie t i .. ••M••••••· at
,,. ..... ,.... --~· u .. &la
·-... -... E• ......... _,,.. ... ....._LHla.....,_._
.... w.-.
$1 UtW ..... .-icl"'° •1-)t * ..................... ._,.,
llettrlt l•-tel•Mtelt, ft tlla
--·· ............. efe9Klee, ,, ... , •'-· ,_....,. ,...iser-. • u.,,. ....
I TO THE RESPONDENT
Tiit 1)9111'-r IWS filed • petition
concernlnv your marrlaoe tt you tall
to Ille • ,._, .. wllhln lO Otys of Ille
date that INS -S II ~fvtcl OI\ tov, your dtf..,11 may be .... 1 ... ec1 "'"
Ille covrt may ••'ll.,. • 1Ud9mtnt con-teining "'lwnctl-. 0t other Ot'clen con-
cernl1111 Ol•lslon ol pr-rty, ll>OUMI
IUPl>Orl, dttld CU"O<ly, (tlfld ._I,
•llon\ty ... ~. '°'"· -"'"' otlltr ,.. lltl •1 may be 9,..ntecl by tt>e c°"rl.
Tiit vam1111mtn1 of waoes. tekln11 ot
money or pr-rty, or olller court
eullloflrtd procffdlngs mey •lso ,..
lull.
Otttd. OCI. JO, I_,,
L" A. Bran<.11, Cl•rk
CarOlyn E. Ac osl•. 0.puty
Publll"9d Orang, Coasl Dally P1101.
Marci\ 31. AIH'lt 1, 14, 11, 1911 tSIW l
PUBLIC NOTICE
l"IC'TtTIOUS IUSIN£SS
NAME STATEMENT
Tiit IOH-1"9 pe< SOl\S a•• doln9
bvstntnes
WESTERN C IOI.I • 171 W. 1.i11
Slrett, C.ta -. Cetlfornla '2627
Je"'" QulM 11-. no C.11• Ot
Madere, Leueedi•. Cetlfor.W. tJD14
Cerotym """°' Reed, 210 Cell• Ot
Meeter•. Leueedla, Cetllorlll• t»U
Wllttam Alt.., Kott>Stll. 11111
Mou,,laln View, Trec.uco, Cellforlll• .,.,.
Sendr• Louis t<oe11se11. 11711
Mountain Vi-, Trelllleo, C.llfornl•
92'11
Tlll1 1>111lneu t1 cOflduc~..i by •
VtMrat _."*"'111p.
' J-sO.RHd
Tlllt Itel-I WM lllecl wllll I.tit
County Cttrll ol Or.,119 C.....nty on
February U , 1,.1,
1"1 ... tl
P11blltfled Orainoe Coe1t Otlly Pltol,
Mar, 17. U, JI,...,,,.. I, t .. I 1371 .. I
PUBUC NOTICE
\ ........
Aoben CasnpbeU hu been named at·
1oclale partner or Laguna Niguel-baaed
Birtcher Pacific.
Dr. TllomH Croolca hu been named vtce
president or marketing for Costa M .. a.baaed
XMARKCorp. . '
Dave koneb has been na1J1ed "Market-1.D,I Department Mana•er of the Year" Cor
Walker ac Lee lnc. of Anaheim.
I . David W. Canovell and Ja•et I'. Eper
have announced their part.nerablp and 'formed DAVCON Inc., in
Irvine. Dee Tbeodore Graham and PrlscUla
llHea were honored by the company's
Southern Re,ton for their outstan4ing sales
records in 1S80.
lob Terry has been promoted to group
vice president in charge of the Business
Products Group at Basso & Associates Inc ..
Newport Beach.
&eanetJI P. Bartelt was named president
of the Western Meta! Lath Division of
Republic Corp. He lives in Newport Beach.
James R. Cbeaesnore
has been named engineer·
ing manager tor the Com·
ponent Products ()lvialon
of EECO Inc.
Lovell C. Cbase Jr.
has been appointed vice
president , sales if
M.icrodata lnternalional Corp.,
of McDonnelJ Douglas Corp.
Snvder-Lan~ston Construction Co.,of Irvine, has begun building Unive rsity <..:enter,
a 20,000-foot retail center
at 1468 University Ave. in
Riverside.
Craig Scolt was elected secretary of
Metal Bujlding Dealers Association, Southern
California Chapter.
Steven L. Edwards
h as joined The Simon-
E hr e n f e Id Group, a
Newport Beach-based
financial corporation.
John P. Engberg has been promoted to
president of American State Bank in Newport
Beach.
Saffell & McAdam Inc. has begun re·
modeling the first home of Huntington Sav-
ings and Loan. on Warner Avenue in Hunt·
ington Beach.
Laurence M .
•owuos Netherton has joined the
Huntington Beach Company as acquisitions
manager.
Dorothy D. Des Coteaux was appointed
sales manag e r o f Sevi ll e Real
Estate/Partners, in San Juan Capistrano.
Sharon Dopulos has. been promoted to
manager of employment and employee rela-
tions at Anaheim-based Carl Karcher En·
terprises
Ashwill-Burke's Irvine office has been
named lhe exclusive sales and leasing agent
for the mdustnal complex being built at the
Smith and Railroad streets intersection in
Corona.
OVER THE c OUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW VORt< 'tAPI Clrrko • •~I, Helm Ase: 6 •V.1Hoaell ~JO ~n~r • :u~. lll4 NASDAQ SUMMARY HASOAO ~·-C:IUSoGa e-.. ~ HenrctF 1 U\lo 2~ HU<orp U 1311. SvcMer 11\or 11"-M>owlftO tllofwtt blcts C:IUUl.4 J214 Ullo. Holobm 211o ?'11 OollvyM 1' 1' ..... Svcm•I • ~ aftcl lowest olferl by 'IUUIB 1' 1''\lo Hoov•r 14 14\lt OfuoCa• ~ ~ SllMtO 31" ll~ marker ,,....."as of ClarkJL ·· JOI!. ~ HorlzRs • ...., •'ll OllF•rro .,...., IJ Sllwmr • ?•V. ?•\lo 4 p.m. Prlc:M do not ClowCp 1"-l\lt Hyal\lnt ll JI OllerTP 11 11\lo S<elWtr 10''• 11114
ln<t"4terttall,,...rlluplColrTlt t~ t•h IMS Int I~ 19 .. I PCA lnl I..._ I~ SwEISv lllS ts-. HEW YORI( (AP) The totl-11>9 1111 marllcto.n Of comm-C:ot0ttlo4 1'-14 '1' Infra Incl Sl4 4141 PabltB 1114 I~ SwnEnr "• ..... •flow> ,.... Owr 1"4 • Counter
IHfOft '°' ~ COf'llCIH u 3S'.lo Intel 1 :» llo'"'I P tG•A • VY. U"" Sl•n<IY" ~10, >410~, • •lo<h -w•rranh tNt .,..,, goiw Ut) Slo<l &let ,.:._ (mt$11r ts.IOo 11 tntrcEnr I"" 9 l>aul•YP 11l4 llYJ • StctMtcro " I> 111« mcxt -down ttw mint baMCI on AEL Ind !<All ts Cmwhl ••~ 11 tntmtGs tcw. 11\ltl Pey1scs 11 tll't StctR•v• lJ>\o. l4\I> percent o1 t l\an99 r~rolos or volume AFAPrOI I tVt (OftPac> s )4Vt M~ 1,,BkWSI\ ll''" I~ PetrMI ll 'I> " StenUP ll 321/> tor Monday.
,IWM ~ •'-S jCOf'dla 10Vt 21 tweSoUt 20 ~I PfflaEnl IP\ t:W. SttrlSt l..._ ..... ~ Ho se<llf'lllH tradl"9 bet-'2 are Incl· Accuray 11 ttV. ~rotTre s )4"" U Jamsby ,,.,. 11111
1
Ptnl•I• 22 22\lo Slr•wCI 21 U U.S.cl Htl -perc..,1-cnanott •••the AOdltnW 1' 14\lt utlrl'O s 2\lt 314 Jerico > 23 Ul'I Ptlrollt 11'1> 131J. !>ut>ar11 U u• .. dltltrtn<t .,_._ 1"9 previous tlool"ll ACl•Rou s Slit ycttron t1 11111 JltfyFd S-16 ~ Petri! wl •l'o"' •2 SuperEI I~ I~~ •d price -IOINy" l•ll bid price .
AfllBlft U UVt entyM S7Vt 39 JCKlyl\M J2¥o J3 I Pettibon """ 11•1. TtME OC • ·~ AteBncp ~ Ullo OteOts • ti ITV. k•i•SI pf t4V. "'"'' Pllll•H•I XJ•;, ~ lfmpu ~ Ute
Al .. Alu 11 J711o OaylM•t ti 11111 t<el•er ,..., 2+-! PltrctSS '''" tOV. ~ncoPd ~ St ul'S Atlcotn< at 40 OBMr I'-I-Kaman 31 ltYJ P•nkrtn JO JO'> tnonFd IS tS•'1 Name I.A>! Cha
Allylll 1Vt ,_, OtlllbA9 n"" 4.1 t<mpAm IS tS\iol P1onH18 »Vt ~ UnMcGll 11~• It I Tt"AmRl , ·-, 11;, Atlea i.-. .... OttCanT It 11'11. kayum 4 ~ PIUllne °"' I"• US Enr ll' • I~ 2 Sl.,,,LI J'-+ "O
""'9rta t J7YI JI"" OewtyEI 2 .. Jlloo ICtllJS" 1 4Cl •ti'> Pooll • •YJ US Sur • JI"' 1' J Roftlw 4V. • 1 AFlft a a 1"llo OlaGryt lO'olt 22 l(..,fftl t ~ 24Y>• PrtsGM 44 4'Vt IJS lrO ,..._ U'-4 Br•WdHS 41'1> ., ,,,_
Af'wn 5"' • ~"' a 2'Vt IClmt>att '"'° IN\ PraS1eyn '3 4>4 Ull•B.,, "" J2-s O<nRsEci , • '"" := =~~·re::. ?t::~~=t ~a!~i ~~c 2,:~4.~~::.~p }l~:J~ ~ ::g ft:. ~, .·,JV. ~=~r:: U: ~= &°.!..~o • '~ 1~1 ~~;r:.v lt\(, l~y, ~~~·.':, 2~s ~;,z-~:!,'o~~' ~ ~t i :~:kf..c1 i~ ; 1""
AOwa..-t JI" ~ Ourtron t~ 14 ICullcll• s JOO.-t ~1 O...•rCll l•'h 1711o llrcotn 1 JOIOIO'"· l1!_ tO Ecilll<CI n v, .. l 'I> AtlltsMe ZJlll 22\lt l!•Orltt ~ 29.,.. L.anceln ~ 1''\lo R•venPr 10 10". Velcro g N ~ tt UnvEng t~ • 1'11.
. AWtldllfl 7\Vt n l:ell\Vnce tVt 10 L.eMRn 6 611• Aayehm 10 11 VlctraSI "" ·-12 Syn<or WI 1 • ''• ,.,_,.. 10 111\lt l!conl..ab lO'olt ~ L.antCo l3Yt l4 R•ymncl 1'''-JO VldtoCp 14"-u~ 13 Perino 19.,. • iv.
Aftes,41 IS U\li l!tPasEI "-•111 Lltnvs -21~ llHvCm ' •"' 1' V•HB\11 ti~. ti~ u "'"'"" cvpl 17~ .. 2 A~ """ flYI EIOtr.. 414 •Vt LldStor 12 .... 12 Ree>NLft 21 21\lt W•llEnr ""-10\ IS WtllGa s 1J•1> + JY> An I .... ~ EltHU<I 1"-I._ LtnBul s »Vt 1'\io Road Ea 4i"" 4'\lo !Wttdlrn • •V. t• It.lour> 1~ • °"' ~ II 21'IOI J:2 EtMoovl 1'\o'J 21YI L_.,,, ..... 11 RoObMy ~..,, .. Wtll(;e s ""' U 11 ORC 2"" • v. "'~ ,.. ..... EnrOtv .. YI t7 MCIC 14\'t u AOWIOll 2'H l ''-!Wendy ' """ 141o. II T cllMll ~ • • .. Atdeolt 11 Jiii. EnrMtltld s ... S.-. GF 0 s 14'¥. IS Rou .. t '""' 19\lt W>tOrtl tl\fJ 12'°' 19 N•nlcll. s • v, AllGsLI IS .... I~ enR1v t• ...... Macl>GE I~ ll RulSlov I~ IS'il WOt~ jOV, St .... 20 UnlSllllr 7\1 • \lo
AUenRs t411o 1.-, Entwl>IJ 7'• I Ma99IP1 U~ ~ tl'~~ 39»o ~1::!.~~ I~ I!~ 11 Cembe• l~ + .,, :::r~ ::v. l~ ~=~IL l~ l!... ==p~r .... 41'>1 StHtlGd Ciiio ~ 1 Wmor~ JPO 2• n Z~Cv";,1~ !f't : ::
BanqHE I~ IOl't FSC l"-l Ma!i1o.rt .,-., • l S1Pa11I 1'>lo Jt"" IW-Lol l• 241'> 14 VubaGclA J2t;. + 3 laes~c I 9 ._. •"-FllC>rlh 1'-l ... Marllon s 11\lo tll't S<•nO ,. IWrtglllW s•;. s~ 2S Sc-..... • ,.,, Ba r 21 2111. rrarmGp ~ JOl.'o Mau LP »v, •"" , ,.,4 1 I I· 16 ZlonUI• is111 ,,. •• , &Mk 11 ... 11"' FidtCOf' I~ ti MayPt I l7 l71/• S<rlool1 SI .,..,, ,, • Not aocNlc•bl•
8ettlM 711> I FtlkSYI 42\lt 42"' MeynOll 11~,.~ t1•,t! . I
BffltPll '" 1 IS-t• Fl8otln 2111. 2714 McCorm ..., -u PS A 0 DOWNS Bfflllyl -Jj f'IEm,S t~ 1•11o McFerl '"" tt'loo N 8eULeb .. \lo .. YI FIWn In ~ ,\It McOll•y 14\lt ,, I a .. Mvt .,.,. UVt rr1a98h ~ JO'-MtyerF •l'I 1' 11
BlbbCo 10. 11\lt Flk ll9r 16"' 11•'11. MhUaW I~ 1111> l BtrdSofl , • ...., 1~ Ftoa1Pn1 ~ JI MdldC•i> 11 12v.1 ~'· \prt.. •
Blrtc:llr •Yt ~ Fl•HFla 11\lt 21 .... MldlAH ~!;]6331~ NEW YORK IAPI Mo51 ettlvt ow r s. Bly•oat t~ 1'Vt fl11ro<b t 11"" I• MJ.qtl.. ...--by 1 BOflania , 1. •• 4,... ,.0,.110 ~ l4 Mittie• ,...... •t>e·<ounter stocks •ugr.11.., HASO :~:oms s:: ~~ ~~~~~911 ro 11~ =.~!al~ ~ ~llo ~lrll..:oamc:Pt.. ":.C,"'.':o 1'~14 Alk~ ~~. : -bM TO CJ) ~ ,p., 2'4.600 ls-.. 2 7·16 -I .. ,. 10 lutltls 411'1 ...... FrenkEl fS\lo I~ MonlCot ,:~ ll"-Halmi .. . 131,G t S-J2 1 l-16 + J l2 11 CB~'L'"'fi1~ I~~ l~\lo FF~~:i > u~ m: ~~;,,, 2t'I> JO'M ~m":.~,~I 204,200 I l ·Jl 1.... . . 17 ., ~ ..,. •• 191.600 t l·I• I" -1-16 t) CPT CJ) 4'\lo 4'111 FullrHB It ttllt Mor9R1H 4 ...... Lo<llE•P llS,JOO 1 1.... 1 ... u
CelWISv JO .... 12 GalaayO 11\lo 12" Mon,,ln 12111 12 HenryEn 111,JOO 2\lt 2 J " -1·1' IJ
CenradH lilt ll't OnAutm ·~~· ·~~ :0 ... 1~1',":' ~ J01"' wnOlgll ITJ,100 1114 12 -.,, •• Ctf1ERQ ,... JVt GnOt•c:s ~ "" "" MiGto Z l•J.jOO J.,, 3'-,. ~ 11 CWS•C Ullo 2• ~/tJEJI . 12 IJVt HarrgCp I • JO E I oci . 160.600 )~ 31'1 -M• ti CplnAlr 1... l~ ~\'EFn 7\i't 1 NOi• I 20"-~ mp r Car~ 1.-17~ OrffftM ""' 1n11 NJHOes 17\olo ""' 4dvancecl >41 ~ Cav C 1.... 114 OrtyAd• U \lt .. HlckOG s ts14 U \lt O.Ctt--21 C11Vt s , ..... I~ Otflnllt • llllo ,. .... Nicole\ IW. 10 Un<llanglcl 1,7'0 21 Cllr,.,$11 ,..,.. ,._.IOyrodyti • •'ii Hltltfl A •t 4114 Totel 1n .. s J,011 23
CllartHO ll'-12ft H•mlPI ,..., Ullo =~::G•s ~--:~ Hew highs • t1l 1• Clltnl..e• 141'1 2JI'> H•rdWllt WI 1011. HoE rO ~\lo 21 Hew to.n . • • • • , , S. 2S ~::r~':.'t, 1~1~\l'tl~~~~; :"'" ~ ,,.:,,~Gi s 11.,.. 11~Tol•t sates ~ • ....... •• ».m.200 ,.
C-42" 42-. HarllNt 11'0 14 HwllPS tl' ,.,_
OOWNI ,...,,.. I.All 1'~. StllPe<PI , S-16
CnP«Mn • -l\lt Hyatt Int 2l -s ~~~.::fo .... -"' JI-'> -....
Hume• JV. .,,
AMeclS¥ '"'" ,.,.,
~~~f:« 314 -.... J"' -S-t• Mullll* 2S"' -)1,lo
ROCK Inv 2 -....
TtaEn wt 3•~ --AGrgFn ll'I> -1111 1 -... ~lc1'l" JV, -~ ~10 , ..... --• dOtl " -1 Rc!IMtbp , 7 ... "' E....,_,En JVt -'4
t•lt WI 1\1> -14 ou1ov ..... ._
SI=
,_
,..
Te I ,_ 14 CHWld wt 2'11. 14
Ea!M .. •Fb 114 -llo MlrclEq J\lo "'
MUTUAL FUND
Po.
UP 4U Up l t.1
Up JO.I Up :zl.2
UP V.J UP U.t Up 21J Up tl.7
u p 19.o Up 11.• Up 16.2
Up 14.J Up IU
UP 11.1 Up 11.t
u p 11.1 Up II.I Up 11.1 Up II.I Up 11 I UP t0.7 UP 10.7 Up tO.l
Up 10.J Up 10.l
Pct. Ofl 40.l ()ft JS.I OU 11 J
Ofl U.6 Off t2.S
011 12 s Ofl It.I ()fl ":% Off It. Oii 11.• 011 11.t
Off 10.7
Ofl 10.0 Oii t.7
Off t.7 Off t.7 Off t.S
Off u Off t .1 Off t.1 Off u Oii a.7
Off I.I Off LJ Ofl u Oft u
'
•
rdlty Dow Chemical umdted ttodO Du P•t
u tbe proltt leader of tb• chemleal lndllltr)' 1n lMD.
The final l(Ore (IJl earn1Qp after t.utt) wu:
Dow: S805 million
Du Pont: $716 million
Tb.la was a reversal of the 1979 1tand1n11. whlch
looked like this:
Du Pont: $938 ml Won
Dow: $784 mlWon
The top of the compo1t 18 not e.nUreJy new P'C)Ull4
for Dow. In the climactic year of m•. wben Jllthud
Mllllou.s Nlxoo reslened as president, Dow 1purted
spectacularly
while Du Pont
slumped mi~·
erably -anlj
the Midland,
Mich., kid
wrested Clrst
place from the
Wilmingto n ,
111111
Del., granddaddy of chemistry for tbe lint time in
history. Dow held that lead for the next three yean
until Du Pont reasserted ita aupnmacy in 19'18. Now
Dow is back on top aqain.
DOW'S ASCENDANCY is especiaJly noteworthy
in that it's still the smaller or the two companies. Du
Pont has been the largest chemical pl'04luffr in the
nation for as Jong as anyone baa been eountlng. In
1974, for example, when Dow outearned Du POllt $587
million lo $403 million, Du Pont'a sale• :were ta.9
billion lo Dow's $4.9 billion. Last year Du Pont'a sales
came in at $13.8 billion while Dow's were $10.6
billion.
Many more people '90rk for Ou Pont than for
Dow. Du Pont has some 132.000 employees. Dow has
only 56,000. •
You get the pi~ture? Dow is a lean, ageressive
outfit. Du Pont is older and fatter, more set in its
ways.
Neither Dow nor Du Pont makes many products
that you and I can buy directly. However, we prob·
ably have stuff all over the house that uses
chemicals supplied by these two companies.
DU PONT IS, of course, the king of the synthetic
fiber business: nylon, Orlon. Dacron and Quiana all
came from its laboratories. Teflon and Lucite are
other Du Pont inventions. But Du Pont rarely makes
the final product (you see Dacron listed on a tab in
the shirt or suit you buy). and after a while il soon
finds itself in a commodity business, where the price
competition can be fierce (Hart Shaffner & Marx will
drive a hard bargain). The trick is to keep coming up
with new "miracles," and the fact is: Du Pont bas
not come up with a new "miracle fiber" for a Jong
time.
Du Pont paints are still a big business. But Du
Pont fled the antifreeze business (remember the
Zerex brand?>, abandoning the market to Union
Carbide ( Prestone), another lumbering chemical
giant which usf'd to rank second ~ind Du Pont
before Dow passwd it like a shot.
Dow has been called the "chemical compaQ.Y'a
chemical company" because it makes so many blsic
• chemicals used by other companies.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
• MeA ~16 NEW Y0AKIAl"l Fina! Oow·J_, •YOS-
NEW YORK IAPJ: S.lu •• p.m prtc• ~oc~'· ~ •
ef'CI Ml cllanQll ol the llft•n mosl M:llve 0-. Hi-. '--C-0..
N9w YOtll Stoel! Ea< ... nge IJWH • Ind 1000 'IO IOOf.ff ... 7 "6.24-12.17 Ir.cl~ neti-lly •t more tn.n St 10 TF11 47 02 QLH ~.1' ~11-6.jA ~.:•r m:: =---:: U Utl IOt.SJ 110.01 IOI.SS IOU~ O.SI
GenTel&EI 4Jl.a 1''" -"' .., SI" J.o.JO Jtl .. Jl4.SS Jl7.1'-•JIS 14.tr.r T& T Ol 100 51'9 I lndut l.f2l,l00
SUMMlft ~ 44:100 S4-" Tr•n · · · · • .. 1,.)47,.JOO
..
J
Teuc:o Inc 1".510 »Ill ~ ~ Ulllt . . . · .. · .... ooo 5!~ !i ~ -I~ wttA1 siocKs .. iiio 5.~.-,
StdOllC•• l --40 -iit HEW vo·ioc IAPl JIPr, • Am Alrlln Xll,200 IS -\lo
s..r."oeb m.-ltfll -'9 T-Fl..o<Cp 215,700 «J\lo -IV. ~
Pwl!CO SI,@ >4111 t:~ 12111
AMERICAN LEADERS
~·"""'' NEW YORK IAPl· S. .. l, • p,m. price and net c"-O! IM len most active •-r•c•n Stock Exc,..noe 1u..-1, ~~"\ ~t'-ltv Ai 1~~tnen1J~ _1111 Ch•mP Ho 140, 100 21'1 -Ill lnstrum Sy1 111,tOO 1 Ill ~:~·~·~ '~~= H: I~ HouOllM .. ''VI 501'1 -'t. <Nernrcom wt 12 • oQ llVt .. "' GllMI Pfl ti,. JO 12~ -\'a ~,.::,·1r.J a::: 1~~ _ ~
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW YORIO. IA>'! -T ... loll0wl"9 1111 1110WS lhe Haw YOtll Stock Excll-
SlocU allO •wranu tMI Mn VoM "" h most •"'1 down Ille ,,_ N...:I on r:;<..,t of c-.ge ,.oafdle" ol votume
Ho =rt. ,,_."!I llelOW S2 .,. Incl·
Ydad. HAI •nd ~ .. ~ CIMln .. 1 Ara I,..
dlfft1'9nc• i.i-1r. 11rwv1out cto1'1"9 prl(e 8"" tolNY• ~~m. ptlce. •
Nat'W ~ CMI PC\
I Pnwlt 2 .lGPf JO + I~ Up 20.1 1 Wlelloldt Str J + ~ Up 11 0 l PPGlnd 57~ + S Up t .S
• Pl•ntron 1014 + '"' Up t .S 5 Alt .. n Inc ... • "' Up •.• • Orenlhlle Wolo + 1\11 Up I •• 7 Tootl Roll IOV. • ~ Up 7 .• I NSPw 4.5"1f M\'J • 21'1 Up '.I t Grthltty SV. + "' Up 7 ,J 10 Culbro Cp I"' + l'lt Up 1.• 11 f4111tlle M 11 .. 'It Up •.7
12 CllOCllFC>ff t•1o • I'> Up 6.6 11 lllPw 4.70llf 11\'J + 11'1 Up •. 5
14 Colllnl Alk '°" + " Up 6.J IS Oan lllv•r 11111 + 114 Up 6.J ,, IUcllVlcll ~ + 2 Up •• ,
17 WAll,llm lff ooJ..ll\ + Vt Up 6. I
Ntm. Lest CllO P<I. I OKC C«P 40c '411' -12\11 Off 11.7
I KtWlll•r s"' -" Off 10.t J Olll•G E pf 6'/o -" Off t .1 4 P•PL Upf ftVt -I\') Off 1.7 S EIMM!Me J\') -VI Ott U
• L-•nstn 1~ -'"" Ott 1.1 7 Soeclt• P1Wt JS\11 -2MI Off 7 .A
I J(t"AIM 10\1. -1\') Ott 6 •
9 LfVCp M ,. -JVI i .:. 10 Adem MUiis s.--'II •.J a=~·. 1==: :~ u uni.ra itl'I -21'1 •.O 14 Vllll"O\I Df ~ -11'1 •.O 1J Ind i2 -~ Of! S.t
It II llld 6 -" Of'I ' •
GOLD COINS
MIW y~I( tAP) -"'1t8t MM Pr..,"' ...., ,...,. ,....,... wltll Tlwr1Nr• l'l'k ..
I(.....,...,, .... , .......... -.u.a.
............ I.,.., •.• ~ •• llP ... ..
.... • ..... 1.2 "" .... ..,. .... .. PA ........... c-. ... ,,.. ....... ,. • ......
~~~ I~ :::: r~r.· i:
WHAT AM[X 0t0
HEW YOR!l IAl'I ~. •
METALS
~..-..i c..,IJ • -4, U.S._,,.._
llo"' UM ,.,_cents a pound.
l!IK 0 \4untH"°"""."41WACI.
Tiii S7.4W7 Metel1 'l¥fflt c-lte lb.
Al ......... 7Hanu•~.M.Y
MffC.,,, taS.00 ,.., II~'. ,.-..._ un.oo l'!'f cie _ ... _._v ___ _
SILVER
Ha1141fa.~.S11.270~1nlV-•·-
GOLD QUOTATIONS
L ...... ; _....,,. ll•lftl t.SM.JS. up •HA
LH•M: •llerMOn flaln; UN.75 • .,.
SIO.U .
Perll: •"-'-f1Jrl119'54J.IO, ""'10.u . .,,,......,., ll••nv uu.02 . ..., •10.n . bt'kll: .... ...,.,_ 11111119. uu.oo ...
.11.00; '"'-OO•lllecl.
M•••f & M•r .... •: Oflly delly qvote
f.S», 7 J, .. $ IG.7 s. 1 ...... : enlr oetty C11Me s,su.7S, 19
tlUS. • ........ , anlf cMlly ..... ,~
.SJJ.10, ... 11.11,
SYMBOLS
1
l
BY SANDIE JOY .... OM!, .........
A year'• work. Wbat'Jl It get you?
How about nearly $77 ,000?
Th.It'• how much the AuxWary of Hoag·
llemortal Hospital realized from its year's ef·
forts.
The money -$'741,783.851 to be exect -wu
turned over to the hoapil~l last week at the. aux-
illary's annual luncheon at the Marriott Hotel,
Newport Beach. •
The 1,018-member auxiliary also donated
more than 73,500 hours of service lo the hospital
durina the put year.
Totalled, since 1962, the auxiliary hu given
$1,269,331 plus 1,318,160 hours of service to tbe
Newport Beach hospital. Th1s year' a donation will be used for ren·
ovation of the opthalmolon and gastroin·
HAPPENINGS
testinal laboratories. expandJng the ultrasound
department and toward operation of the daily
living kitchen in the occup~tiooal therapy de·
partment.
The auxiliary's cash donation is derived
from numerous sources including dues, dona·
tions and bank interest from the Copa de Oros;
sustaining, active and Candystriper dues: the
Hunters' bridge-fashion show luncheon. rum·
mage sale and s tamp machines; Nightingales'
sale of baby photos; the Girt Box and Gift Cart.
The past year's v'olunteer work includes
64,079 hours given by adult members and 9,594
by Candyslripers.
Topping the lis t or volunteers is Bev Cox
who hJls given the hospital more than 15.000
hours of work over the years.
Another star volunteer is Doris Kohaut who
bas accumulated 9,500 hours in 10 years.
Among others recognized at the luncheon
for their volunteer service were SaJJy McBride
with 9,000 hours, CarrolJ Beek with 8,500 hours.
At Hoag AU%iHoru luncheon weTe rtrom left)
Jacquie Miller, Jane Clemens, Edythe Bulloch
and Bette South.
.Myrtle Eckes for 8,000 hours, Bernadette Goetz
for 7 ,000 hours, Alex Shaffer for 6,500 hours, and
Dorothy Hetzler, Dora Hill and Bea Lace with
6,000 hours each.
Also recognized were Bev Langston. Marie
Zambitom, Matt Kinney, Katie Romberger and
Irene Lee with 5,000 hours each.
Each giving the hospital at least 4,500 hours
were Bette South, Maryhele Beahm, Frank
Williams, Peggy Kreyser and Louise Man·
d erbach.
Jacquie Miller was recognized for 4 ,000
hours ot volunteer service while Marion Tilton
and Marion Frazer each had 3,500 hours and
four women -Clara Arntson, Jane Nickertz,
Barbara Gumbiner and Marie Hiebsch -each
gave 3.000 hours.
In acknowledging the auxiliary's work.
hospital Board President George Hoag said it
was important to stress the sense of harmony
the group brings to the hospital.
In addition to Hoag, luncheon guests in ·
eluded Larry Ainsworth. who is an assistant ad·
ministrator at the hospital; John C. Barbadian,
who recently was named personnel director;
Frank Hall, who heads development and com·
munity relations; A. Jane Maradei, executive
liaison for the medi cal staff; Douglas Myers,
Walter's 30-day anniversary
Do you know what yesterday was?
It was the first 30-day 'anniversary of the
last show done by Walter.
Whatya mean, Walter who?
CRONKITE. The beloved dean or American
broadcasters who became a legend in his own
time. My gosh, can't you remember where you
· 1111 IDM BICI
were and what you were doing when he uttered
his last , "That's the way it is"? I sure do. I was
in the kitchen frying onions for baked onion
s oup when m y husband called and said. "Erma.
this is it! Walter's s igning off for the last time."
I remember earlie r that day we watched
Eric Sevareid as he observed that Walter
received more attention at leaving his job than
President Carter.
"President who?" asked my husband.
"Carter! You know Jimmy Carter."
"Oh, THAT President Carter. I remember
him now. He was president before Reagan and
his vice president was ... don't tell me ... it's
right on U1e tip of m y tongue."
"Has he been on the American Express
commercial yet?"
"l don't think so," he said. .. He went to
funerals a lot. What was the Pope's funeral he
went to?"
"I 'm not sure. There were two very close together ." .
"I think it was the year Oakland won the
pennant. Or was it .P!ttsburgh? Let's see, they
inte rrupted Charlie s Angels with a news
bulletin."
"~re the Angels in the National or the
American League?" r asked.
"No You remember them. They were a
television s how."
"Are you sure you· re not thinking of
Travels with Charlie?"
"That was a book by John Steinmetz."
"You're confusing him with a senator from Ohio ...
"I am not." he said. "That's Howard Tao·
nenbaum."
.. Don't be ridiculous . Tannenbaum is a
German word for Christmas tree."
"That's it !" he said. "That's the year we
bought the li ve Christmas tree which was 1977... . ..
"Wh at's the matter?" I asked.
"Now 1 've forgotten the question. Are we
getting old ?"
"Nonsense," l said. ··1 don't know about
~ou, but l'll never forget Walter Brennan say.
mg. 'That's the way it is.' if l live to be a hun·
dred!"
Still riding in back of bus
UJ!:AH ANN LANDERS: I am a black
woman who never dated a white man until two
years ago. Please help me sort this out.
The man is a well-to-do professional, un·
llllDllll
married, no responsibilities, no commitments,
nice dresser, good-looking and can talk on any
subject under the sun. I didn't go looking for
him. He sought me out.
Mr. ··Perfect" treats me very weJI. He
bou"ht me a car for Valentine's Da_y and has
been very generous in other ways. Hut be has
yet to take me out in public. We meet at his
place or mine and have had some mini·
vacations elsewhere, but we always travel
sepa rately
l have never met any of his friends or fami-
ly and he has never asked to meet mine. When I
hint that we may not be right for each other. he
says I am crazy and he wants our relationship
to last forever. No mention has ever been made
of marriage. How long do you think this will
last? -THE MYSTERY WOMAN
Dear Woman: It will last as long aa you are
wllllng to be lnvlalble and let bJm buy yoa off
with gifts. If you haven't figured out where you
flt Into his Ille, I can tell you. It's at the back of
the bus and out of sight.
Ge~i: Begin special project
WEDNESDAY, APRILS
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <Mar. 21-Apr. 19): More persons
will be receptive to your polnts ol view -key is
to express in dynamic, creative. positive man·
oer. Do it now! Focus on trips. visits, calls and
selectim of quality material.
TAU&US (Apr. 20-May 20): Money is
lorthcomln1 for purpose of home improvement.
You are on brink of maj~r discovery.
~ HOROSCOPE ·
DipJomatJc approach wins allies. You locate
article that had been lost or stolen.
GE•INI (May 21-June 20): Set policy, de·
ftnt terml, avoid aelf·deceptioo and aet aot.ni
oa spectal project. fli1hlt1ht lnlliaUve,
ori1lnallt,y and conftdence ln your own Juda·
mut. ClJcum1tancet favor your efforu, ambl·
tton1.
CANCBa (June 21.July 22): What bad been
Hbulcall wl1l b9eom.e aolld -alll• ~pPear
h'om "behind the 1cen•." ftelatl~ ln·
WM .. : IDOneJ and romance domlUte lD· ~llllMmario. LIDO<: •Aue. 22): &mphasil oa com• PlllkiD. ra • at out proJecta and NeofnldDI U..t wtaM w .,._ a meN ac:qumtane. ii d•
....... Into "Miioul NlatioalldpJ' ~ l+¥Ui00 (Aul. D-!iept. 23): 'Poe• ......
ttart la MW dlNcUoe -lal~Upt oe ....... clence, on1tnaJlty and alllty to imprint •
personal style. Dictate your own terms. Your
position is stronger than originally anticipated.
Define ambitions. .
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 22): You perceive out·
line of your own future. You can know what to
do and when to do it. Personal philosophy
comes into sharp, clear rocua. Plan ahead for
travel, unique contacts and communication with
one who lives ln another land.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Others tend to
be extravagant at your ex~~mse. Be aware,
check credit ratings and insist on detailed re-
ports regarding expenses. Accept accolade
from one who decides special policies.
SAGITTAJUUS (.Nov . 22-Dec. 21): Em·
pbasll m le1at affairs. special documents, need
for tYlnl loose ends. Focus also on partnership,
Jolnf eflorta, public relaUooship and marital
1tatua. Dela)'! CAPalCORN '(Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Be
ana)ytleal wbtre special tasks, bask issues are
concerned. Take nothing tor ff anted. Locate in·
cllvlclual who is willing to lend benefit of ex·
~rlence. Be aware of Ucenae and other requir•·
menta.L.!!'cludln1 leases an4 lettera of credit.
A'l'JAaRJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Retptte from
rouUne com ... tn 1urce of cffatlvity, chanae.
variety and romance. Family reunloa could...,.
oa atenda. Jtmpbula on ~c adjustment,
home ~•tJons1 remodelln& and purchaae of luxury ttem.
PllCD (Feb. 19-Mar. 20); Obtain valid
hint trom Aquariut meaaa11. Atten.t on bOme, •
property, baalc security, aatety meuuns ind
avOictuee ol aell-deceplloa. Define mHnlap.
aee P90Dle al tbey are and aeleet ODly quallt.J ~·~ \
Jean Cl1ld Alan Ahson, general chairman. get re·
ady for race
who 1s director of strategic-planning; Michael
Stephens, chief administrator. and WHliam L.
Fagan, newly appointed director of facilities
and maintenance
Louis Kaa. who retired last week as
facilities and maintenance director and says
he's headJng out in hb camper lo places where
he can't be reached by telephone, was honored
by the auxiliary which made. him eighth vice
president in charge of criticism. complaints and
the new auxilia ry offices.
J ack West. who has been taking the baby
photographs at Hoag since the early ·sos. also
was a guest of the auxiliar y.
Among those running the show at the
luncheon were J acqui e Miller , J ane Clemens,
Edythe Bullock. Bette South and Myrna Vogt.
Ms . Miller is auxiliary president. Ms . Clemens
is first vice president. Ms. Bullock is its past
president, Ms. South is publicity chairman and
RUFFELL 1S
UPHOLSTERY
s.:...~ ..........
1921 HAllOl IUD.
COSTA. MlSA. -541-1156
At Adam and Eve ball were Mr. and Mr•. War·
ren Co:r rle/t J and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beechner
Ms Vogt announced volunteer awards .
Ms. South <actually, it's Mrs. because she's
the wife of Academy Award·winning cinemato-
grapher Leonard South) wears two publicity
hats.
Her other hat is pubUcity chairman of the
ann~al Newport·Ensenada Yacht race, which is
com mg up April 25.
Alternating her hats a t Wednesday's
luncheon, she talked enthusiastically about an
Ensenada Send·off Luncheon to be held April 23
at the Balboa Yacht Club in Corona del Mar.
The Ensenada luncheon, which is open to
the public, will include a panel of sailing
specialists who'll be prepared to answer ques-
tions about the race.
Reservations for the luncheon can be made
by calling 673·3515
Ebsen mwter of ooremonies
Balboa Island resident Buddy Ebsen was
master or ceremonies two weekends ago for the
annual Adam and Eve awards benefit dinner
dance at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. He at·
tended the star-studded event with his daughter,
Cathy
Theme of the afr1ar. co-produced by
Newport Beach re~1dent Don Daves. was "A
Shower of Stars · ·
The evening began with a black-tie recep·
lion in the foyer of the hotel's grand ballroom
and was followed by a g<7Urmet dinner or wine.
San Souci Salad. Duck· a !'Orange and the
dessert. Coupe Marcell~
Sally Forbes of Corona del Mar shared
fashion show coordination duties at the ball with
Carol Kaplan of Pacific Palisades.
Among Orang~ Coast residents to attend the
ball, which 1s held lo honor Hollywood's most
outstanding and ras hionable talents for their
philantnn)pic endeavors, were Marie and War-
ren Cox , Susan and Robert Beechner and Joyce
Rhoem
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOOS IVSIHISS STATl-.illENTOI' AMllCIO'llMllNT
MAMIE STATllMIENT Of' US& Of'
Tiie loOowtnq per'°" I• doonQ IMl•i f'ICTITIOVS IUSINlllS NAMll
MU .. TM 1011-•nv s-r-~·-nee
G R E E N K E E P E Fl l t • S I the u•• ol Ille ltcllllous buwneu n.me
MAr9uente Park.,•• M1uoon V1e10, THE SttOE DOCTOR. 4l?A e .. 1 .,_ __________ ,c e11forn1•'1•'1 11111 StrHI, COita !NH. C•lilorn1•
E vel1fl J H•mPI°" 90'I W 8•1boa 91U/ -:==========:--~ Boute"•rO. '='•tbo.e, (..t)1torn1•.,..,, TIH' F'ct1tl0Ulo Bu.Mne-n, H•me r•
Call 642-5678. Tiii\ oo•• "" c-.ueo b• •n 1n torroo 10 '"'°"' wn h lecl •n Or.n90 Put a te w w o rds d•••0u•• Counly"" s-...:>
t k f e .. 11n J H•mpton Scott EOwerd Holnw>. 20SO e .. 1
'===O=W=O=r==O=f =y=O=U=. ::::_j TlllS st•l""""'I wu 111.0 w•lll 11'1 O<un Front, &.lboa. C•lllorn•• 92 .. 1 · County Clora of O•Ml9t Counly on Tiii\ tiuwneu w•• condU<led bY .,
.----------------------.. ! Aprol l. 1'111 ln.alvo<lu•I l'UUS4 !>coll Hoonws
Publl>hed 0.~ c ... st Oa1lv P1101. T >I> >l•loment wn flt ed wltll ""
Apr II T 14 11. lt, "" t•U II County Cftrk ol 0r_,9t COu"IY °"
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOVS IVSINESS
NAME HATEMINT
Aprof l, 1911
l'U7Ul
PuDll~ 0.-Co.st O•lly Pilot.
April 7, 14, 11, 21, "'' 1'2f.t1
PUBLIC NOTICE l M ro11a...lt19 °"''°" •• 001n9 bull ~===~======-===========~lntSI ~' 0 UL 0 E N GIN EERI N G l'ICTITIOOS IVSINESS
NAME STATEMENT BEDWETTER
LET THEM HAVE A ORY BED
TN ,,. •• .,.,, em you u:n ti'• • Mdw•t,., ~ IM ""' of '"'-' feM#y
too •• .,,. eM to .,,, ... ff.OVI Pf*-rtt end ~q no INtf.._ ~·
......... fl NtJOwot II Uof'I c.ev" comP"c. .. d Pt~Olf*C. .. ptOb~
...... I'll • ... , I •tittlMif II I to M ... H tM<•v .. "1fwetnl'l9 ..... "
f'IOI C~IH IJy 0'99Mt •tite:I Ot Otee•M CM b4 fftCMd s.Nf fOf OVf
"" broc~re ltctwettl"t -'WMt II 1 AM A.bo"t Mtd Mow To l"6
CONSUl.Tl<NT~.,, Eo1mon1. '''"'"e.
C•l1forn1• 91114
Gary H•••l•nd Gould. 11 E•>I
mont. Irvine, C•1tforn1• 92114
Thi> ~nM• '' cOl'lducteo by en 1n dl•idual
Gary H Gould
Thi\ st•l•ment .... filed .... 111 IM County C1tr1t. of Or 9"9t County on
M•rch 19, t9tt 1'1Ja11
Publl"'*' Or-c ... st O•lty P ilot.
Marcll 11 Aorll I. 14, ]I 19'1 l~.tl
The laU-lnQ per!MW\ " doinQ busl-
nes.• •• THE SHOE OOCTOR, 4l2A EHi
111'1 SlrMI. Cott• Mew, C.lilOl'nl• run.
J •e Chui Shim, S Union Hitt,
C•rM>ll. C.llloml• 9070 .
Thli bu$1Ml5 Ii cOftducttld by .,, on•
dlvldu•I .
J • c..... Slllm
tt • ~ oy ...,. .....-c..t ooc-tor9 No 04>tte•MOf"I
.. Equally Effert1ve for Adults~' P UBLIC NOTICE r--••-•••·•-----------... " 'ICTtTt<M.t.,,IUStNESS NAME SUTEMENT Mell to PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL. l TO. Tll• loll-•"9 per'°" I\ °"'"Q bu\t
311 Firsl S treet Nekoosa Wt !>4457 nH> ••
Tiii• •t•lonwnt was 111• wilh Ille
C°"nly Clerk of Of.,,ge County on
. Aprll J, "" .. ,,.,..
PUbll>Nd 0rM199 C...tt Dally Pilot,
Aprll J. U, 11, 21, 1•11 1•~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
~·· P4R£NI'> '<4,,.(
ADDRESS
Cll'll ______ .. T4tE ___ ZtP __
PHONE.---------
P1c1f1C 1n1''"'•t1ona1 ltd 1918
Wf Hft P SOME DOC TORS CH It OREN
Fl A 0 ENTERPRISE!>. 1011 W 11111 Str .. t. (Oil• MeH, c a n!orllle NOTICIE OP INTllNOIEO TltANSPIElt ttUI UNOlllt SIECTIOMS Min ANO M114,
CALIPOttMIA aUSIMUS AND R•Y Arthur Dav,., Jiii 8•rbados PltOflll.UlotlS COOIE
P l•Ce, Call• MAH, C.•lllorn•• .,.,, Gerald 0 Mlllwp tl<e-s.c:
Tlllt bu\lneU I\ Conlltttltld I >n tn 5aC. NO.. ' , tllO' N-r1 '91vo_,
Cllvlouat r~ ••• Mata C..lllornl•
Thtt :.::~";",.~~v\~ltld ,.,111 lhe I. Fol~Y Wll \~n. Intended
County Ciera or OrenQ<t County on trentlet'ff, Sec. SK. No.: • ~ Cl'Mlrl•rnaQne. L-ea.ch, CalllOl'nla.
M•rch ll. 1911 l'U7"1 Kind 01 llunse Intended 10 114 1-----------------------4 trentlerrecl: ON·SAl.E BEER AHO Publllhed Or•nge ,.,.,, O••IY Pilot, W INE FOR PUBLIC PREMISES
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE
FOR VENUS DE MILO
• INOIVIOOAL COONSEUNO * FREE FIGURE AHAL VS.S
• FREE RECIPfS ANO OA.ll.V MENUS
• MOOERN EO\M'MENT
• PROVEN MSOlTS
TOTAL COST
SAME·PRfCE TO ALL!
AT VENUS De ... 0 THERE ARE· *' MO HIOOlN COSTI * HO IUM'tdU * NO '*l·YIM Ofl llffTM • HO GIWICICI ..... ......
M•!._17,24.ll,Apr '·'"' 1)2041 LICeNSE•42·~7.
PUBLIC NOTICE Totet c-lde•ellOI\ to be peld tor Ille
twsl,,.U and llcenN I• S16,000.00.
CHll lo be depOalled, ..... -. SJ,000.00
f'ICTITIOVS IUSIHIEJS Oem•lld,... '°'ti. balenc• DI,.,,. MAMIE STATaMaNT lob4d•-'lff ............. · $17.-.00
Th• fotlOWillO __, l• oolftQ busl· Oemana nole lor tl'l4I -• ol II"
.,.11 as. C.l·Wfft Concrete Oellw•ry ven1orynotto11"HC1totl'le"""of:
S.rvke. 10171 Oflole A.,. .. Founleln .............................. $1.000.00
Veltey,U lltornlat?109. Note and Securlt• A-l I• n orofthe5ell9f' ............ u.s,-..o
Oarrtyn J. Dolan, 10177 O<'lot• TOT.t.L: '"'*'00
Aw.,,ue, Fountain Vall•Y, Catllornle Tl\I ptw;e W!Wf"t ti. c,~etleft
moo. [ 111e trantlff of -11<1.al...u ...-tM -~nut• Tlllt bullMH b c-.C-4 ..... 4"I In· k~M b lo be Hid Is: WIUTIEltH
tfllfltillaal. UTUA1 ESC"OW IMI So. V-0.sm~ J~M I Tiiis •I.a"'"*" was lhed wltll $1 •• Sutt• 101. 'T•til\, c.llfernl• ,_
<:wnty Cltr It. of Of.n .. C-ly Oft or at!« AIW'll U. t•t. Tiie pertlft ...... tlWt _c __ •
Atl<'ll I, t•t. tloft lot 1119 tr-'9r of IN ~
..... the l~ ,, to " ... •"-" tN D•partmellt Of AIGOllOllC .. ~ ...
COfltrOI llH _.-owed Ille~
trenslef.
PUBUC NOTICE •1<r•• Mtckr: WHlOfl' ......... 1
E1<n>W, t•I Sa. Y-St. s..lta 101, •-----------1 T111tln, Calfllarnl• ""'· Alt11: "~'ll.~ovt eus1M•st a-.ru.,,., .,....,_ ...... STATCMaMT Oef4*1 0 . Mll!Mp
TM lolttwllll 111tnon II CIOlnt INal T......,.,.,
MH •1 0• l"oleYWl'-
O&T AIL PLUS, 1111\t O-I01, 2100 Tr-..,_
"'''"'""" ltd.. cos .. a.-. ••• CA ma. .-VIHllllM o...,.,.. eo.i o.11y ~"'-c11r11...,_, L'('GftS, $\Ille 0-102. taoo •111. 1•1 1WMI
,. •• ,.,,_ ltd • CAie•• Niese, ~ '262'. Ttlh ...,.,,,." ,, UH'4!1Klt4 .. ., • 1'
rel .,_l'Wnlll._ PtJBUC NOTICE
C11n1•f'tr l.Ylflt '·-----------This 1111i.rner. ••• Ill'° wllll the
<:tv11ly <:ltttl ., 01'111 .. Co1111ty °"
""~" 13, ..... 1"11111'4
P\lllllltf!M Or .. CoHI O.hy l"llol.
llMrcl\.11,«. JI, "41<117, 1 .. 1 IJIMI
PUBUC NOTICE
. \
l
I
:i
PERFORMANCES WIU. be given nigbUy ex·
cept Mondays at varying curtain times at the din·
oer theater, 140 Ave. Pico. San Clemente.
Reservations 492·9950.
Lee ShaJlat is directing "Asbn," a story about
a couple desperately trying to have a child. Dean
Santoro, Mamie Mosiman, Irene Roseen and Don
Tuche comprise the cast.
The show runs nightly except Mondays
through April 26 with an 8:30 curtain at the rep-
ertory theater, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Reservations 957 -4033.
BIL GEKAS AND Lee Cruldress are directing
"Girl Crazy," which plays Thursdays through
Saturdays at 8:30 at the Cabrillo Playhouse, 202
Avenida Cabrillo. San Clemente. Ingrid Starrs,
Carolyn Hoekstra, Jim Villenti, Dick NickJyn, Sal
Galliano ancj ~ohn Childress head the cast.
Performances will be given through May 2
with an 8:30 curtain. ReservatioDB '92-0465.
Joe Cordio has the starring role in "A View
From the Bridge," with Rae Weeks, Dick Vara,
, Alan Stone, Linda MacAlistaire and Peter Sto~
rounding out the cast. Michael Bielitz is directing
the drama.
Performances are scheduled Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m. through May 2, with speciaJ
showings April 23 at 8 and April 19 at 2:30.
Reservations 830-9252.
Field movie shelved
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Blaming "bad tim·
ing," a spokes woman for the Rastar film organiza·
tlon says the $9 million Martin Ritt-Sally Field
film collaboration "No Small Affair," bas been
canceled.
Spokeswo'man Mary Kay Powell said a com·
blnation of exhaustion on the part or director Ritt
and scheduling conflicts for a proposed new direc-
tor. Mark Rydell ("The Rose" I led lo the decision
to cancel the film. which was being Cilmed in New
York Cor Columbia release.
The mm concerned the relationship between a
New York night club singer -Sally Field -and a
high school student, portrayed by newcomer Mat·
t.hew Broderick.
P' "'l
r--U\CAGE ['I
\.
AUXl'Olt~S
~ ~ ~
RJ Uneted Art.ts ...,
I Now / edwards LIDO CINEMA " I PLAYING I MlW,OH ILVO. 4T VIA uoo
'" NEWPORT HACH 6734350
l'lolClllllA--• .. -..,. ...... --,...-.................. -N't
CISU IOl W MJA ,... ll T•
Bristol UA Mov1n Lincoln Drive-In Saddleback
(714)540 1444 1)14)990-4012 (714) 821 ·4070 (714\ 581·5880
... lllCTOW llUCW llMl lllAllCE WUTMlllSTCI
Edwards Twin Woodbridge I C1nedome Cinema West
OU> 848 0388 (714) ssi om <11 41634-2553 l714) 891 ·3935
NO PAIMIE8 ACCEP'TR> FOR THt9 ll!NGIAGel\llENT
* IAIGAIN SPECIAL * Al.L llAll $2.00 AU DAY
1.-y ••••r a ,.,..tt.yt
(ns::~£) en~~:::!!)
~
I
COMPLUING TBSI& 1ebeduled ...... .
menta with llnaJ ~~---W. weekend are:
-"ReJatlvelJ s,.akfnc" at the Laiwaa
lloaltGn Playhoule. toe Lapa Canyon Rolld,
Lacuna Beacb <*.()141), playtnc tolilfbt t!lrousb
Saturda)' at I p.111.
-''Ablenee of a Cello .. at the Colt& M"a
Civlc Playhouse, on the Oranc• County Fair·
trounaa, Costa Meaa (15'·5159), wlth doalnc
performances Friday ind Saturday at 8;30.
AL90'0N STAGE and eontlnulna tbelr retpec·
tlve runs are:
-"Chapter Two" at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, 3503 S. R1rbor Blvd., Sant• An•
(979-5511), pl1yin1 niabtJy except Monda)'a
through May 3 at varytnc curtain timea.
-"Red Rover. Red Rover" by the Irvine
Community Theater at Turtle Rock Community
P1rk, on Sunnyhlll Road off Turtle Rock Drive,
Irvine, pJaytni Fridays and SatOrdays at 8, Sun·
day at 2, lhrouch April 18 with ticket.a available at
the door.
-"God's Favorite" at the Newport Theater
Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive. Newport Beach
(67~143), playln1 Fridays and Saturdays at 8,
Sundays at 2, t.hrouah April 18.
-"Everythina in the Gatden" at the Newport
Harbor Actors Theater, 390 Monte Vista Ave.,
Costa Mesa, playina Thursdays through Saturdays
until April 18, with tickets available at the door.
c1m;r~·1-~=~------_ ... , ...... ~ ... -_....._ _ _.~
THE flOSTMAN Al.WAYS
"·-~-, ........ _.. ... ---Of'--OfU>tNARY PEOPl.E ·--.. --CaMl·-·--THtU1111 ... ~·-__ . ...,..... ....
THIEF 11t1 t:•J;_, .. ,, .. ,,,. -t.MT-•1'111---TME FINAL CONf'UCT 11t1 ,1::9 ....... ... .. -.. ... a. ......... .
__ .._ __
FAlllE _.. --... ,.-............ .
_..__,,__
OMMNAftY~.., -TH! CHINA SYNDIM>llE .,...
f ... AM CM Radio Wit!. llftlli.t ACU&-y .,,,. YOll l>wft AM
.... ~..... __
~ ... ,~~ .. , ... )
,,.-.. ~----RM':2J'nl."'
ICAN~•
... NA CM It_.. Wll~ tlftlllM N.c.--y 9rllll V-.Owft AM .. ~= ) -..:-~:.-
J erry Lewis· misses a drink mixer while his
attention is diverted in this scene from
"Hardly Working," his first U.S. movie in 10
years. Lewis plays an unemployed circus
clown trying his luck at odd jobs.
PICTITIOUI au111e•11
NAMll ITATSMUIT
Tiie lollowlne per10n1 er e clOlnt
$lnUtti.
T'NT Sll.ltSCREENE RS, t M11 oyn Avenue, lr~lne, C•lllornle
14. Creit Matthew Thorn.n, 1101 Wttl
1Sleven1, '1fl, S..I• AM. C:.llloml•
"2707
Joey Anne T-•· 1101 Wttl t>te"""'• t 141, Senle ANA, C:.111..-nl•
'2707. I Tiii• -u I• condU<led by a11 In•
'llhlOVal llw.-a. wlt•l .
Cr •19 M. ThOn\ti
I Tiii• --· ... llled •ill> .... ICounly Cl•r11 of Otai1t11 CouMy °" ....,.. II l, 1 Wl
I "'lt)O Pul>lllhld Or-CM1I Delly PllOI,
.... .,..111, 1•. 21, a , n1 1 1M0-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS auSINUS
MAME STAT•M•MT
T111 to11owlno person1 ere dolno
l>UllnllUH'
COAON4 OEL M4A CONSTAUC·
1f10N CO., 1151 Port Sten"-Platt,
NewPOrl BHcll. CA '2..0 /
I K•rl Wllll•m Roller, 710•1 Alo Grende, El Toro. CA '2~
Jol\n A.II•" Gleeson, IUl Port ------=---~-------+--------stanltop• Pl • Ntwpor1 BHClt, C4
JA .. I CAAN
"THIEF" c111 llOM ,._,
~, .....
I·-""·-''SEEMS LIKE "RAGING BULL" 1111 OLD TIMES"
l't.UI ~lltl
• "ELEPHANT MAN" "PRIVATE BE"JAMIN" -·
fl..0
Tiit\ 1111\lnH• '' condut ltd by •
Qtntr•I PArlM"lllP K•rl w Roller
Tit•• "•l1me<1I weJ flied •1111 the ~oun1y Clt'1• ol Oranoa Coun1y on
M<>r<lt 20, IMI "-Publtlhed Oren" CoeSI Delly P1101,
..ilarc h 14 11. Aprll 7, u , 1•1 141W1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
..... waMDIR WOIWt
....... In .....
·--~°'.,,,.,.. ................... w-
•WONftle ....... ~ a ...._ ffom Pwlldlea
i.ncL (Pllrt , )
nDTAODOUeH M•A•a•H a.-. end l<lnger
'V --,_tlo llMM>nl ..... ~ tNlr trou-Trouble due
... M ..oei.•e Bar. • 9000,....
J.J.. T1'lllM end MldlMll ........, !NI their ,_
~ le IM Oltty N'\11¥-
lng wtt-II' a trlal
..... a dengerOUI alml-
1111.
High priest Vernon Dobtchief (left)
warns Peter O'Toole of impending doom
in Part 3 of •·Masada," the historical
miniseries continuing tonight at 9 on
ABC, Channel 7.
• a.mcTNC -r~ • WILOOla llAQ(,
Hotlfladl d*-9 that
.. ~ be .,.,,.,.,red out
of ludlanan jUet .. he and
Mary ~ there It
-~them that
jUtlt fl'tlndthlp. (Pllrt 1) • __,HILL
Benny bullde ttle Chennel
t\IMll M Fred Scu«le. I KQET NIWU9AT
ITUDK>e&
"CobbW'' (A) 1:::rv~ w.. hit men 90 on •trllc•.
8'Wnlly ttt. to ""' the Pf•
,~~whli.
delillnO """" a men-11""0')' r:.(P.rt21
t:l6 IDfTONAl
~ C:.NEwa
I ...CHEWS
HAPf'Y DAYS AOAIH
'Rlellle'• adv~ In 1111
-ICNIP« oolumn lllmo-1
bring. ~ end to Pot.i.
end Rllpll'. lrlendlNp
CHANNEL LISTINGS
• MCNEW8 I JOKBl'I~
M"A•t•H
Tired of the GI dl9I of her
end lllh, HMWl!e)'e ~
to Chlc8QO tor an order of
ribs.
• 8'TMnl 0# IAH
........alCO
Whan the kHler of 1111 son
11 ffMd on a legal technl-1
callty, .,, Irate ratller •t•
out to punlltt Iha Cffmlnal
lllmNll.
• OWREAIY
"Olabet•" G~ta: Biii
Talo.rt, Or Tlladd~I 1 Prout (RI Gi> MACNEL I~
AEPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH aJ MERV GRIFFIN
G~t•· c.clla Plallhakov
and Laocelot, Tony Canu,
S'-'-Euton, Jacklyn
Zeman
7:<10 8 2 OH TffE TOWN
Hoata· Steve Edward•.
Melody Rog«& tilgnliglltl
or OIVMI Hatfield'• collec-
llon of • ..,.11on iw.tory wtlll
rilm Clipl and 111111, I lo<*
11 I,_ conoepl, "sperm
bMk•"
tJ KNXT 1C..8 $1 l ,.., An11•·lo
0 KNBC 1NBC..1 Lo-. An·1t>I••" O KTLA .tnu, L11., Ario•·•·· D KABC TV • ABL 1 L ll"> l\nq•• ' ,
1J' "FMB 1C lh1 S.in D"•qn 0 KHJ T'J 1 ln111 L '" l\n ,,.,, . .,
~ KCST 11\0(1 '>.!<ID I 'l'
CD I\ nv 1 ln<l IL ti' .. ''""''''"' '
II) KCOP TV 11n 11 l ·~Ari 1•· •
fD KCEl TV 1PB::>1 Lu-.. •\n111 • ·· m> KOCE TV P8':)1 Hunt 11 l' 111 St> icn
G lfAMILY~ e ettANANA
ou.t:Mwy~. 8 EYEWITNIU LOI
Alo!Ql!M
Holta Inez PedroU and
PflUI Moyer pley t01M
Yldeo 0-. t•• • IOC* et eome llOIMetNI WMP-
on1, end 11ucty the 1'81 pop-
ulatlon In La. '-noalM· I F~THl....0
AU .. THI 'AMIL Y
A ti.nle tal!M ~ 11 the
Jeflertone' home '#Mn
Geotge IMm• 11\at Archie
wlll be among the guMtl
al LloneO engaoemen1
pllrty.
• MACHEl. I l.£HMJt
MJIORT ID HlW8
CJ) P.M. MAQAlJNl
A look at 1 kld'a c;amp: tt..
·~ec>CIY" lootc In faefllon
l:OO 9 PAUlllRITOWN
a.uMt'• 111ner rwtum9 to
P~town to mMI• on.
last effort to ragllltl t"9
land wlllCf1 -, • .,, from
him wtllle he.,, .. righting In
Ill• Sp1nl1ll-Amerlcan
Ww.
D LC>eO
Per1tlnl, CllM! Cat1IOfl and
Hildy are held "'*• by bank robt>en wlllle Lobo
trlel to rlMIClfYJ Ille tltua-
uon and calm do.n • gung
lloSWAT~
U MOVIE * * "The Lui Of The
Poweraeekera" ( 1111111)
Ge<>tge Hamilton, Kevin
McCarthy Blackmail. ~ t
denla and -tual death
ere Ille r.ultl of I !>Mk
Pfesldent'• demenda for
Illa ton-ln-1-·1 ~
lion. 8 9 HA#"t' DAVI
A poeentlal .,.-1111>e11 1w
.................. ......... ., .. ............ ...................... .... ** '!T_._ Al TIMI Aeelk" ,, .......... .................. Miaa_ ..... ,... --·-·---*"==· J",;, ... __ __
........ "' '* -~--· .... ...............
~ Metr ........ ............... .. ,~c.rr.-...... Ullnt ...... ......
• itMitl•DON 9YNDIQi8
Ttl• World l.ltetehlf•
CNMde ....... -.,,.. Of*"°" .. .,...
·~°'~·-'"*"-' Md ~ ;b:
''Tiie c..r o.oei-or
Un )QM" a-....,..
-----~ .. ---Ill .. pi.null "' • °"" for ......... ~ oer, .,. .....,.. 08flOW "'*" dlill'lle • ~
tlol*ll IU'ftber °' .._ In
UnXlan.(R)
• MYST'IM
'"The Aeclno a-Hot-.
• For eour.." Sid alld
Chico .,. c:aled In ~ a
horW not tllYOf9d to win comaa 1n 111'91 end !he
lllldl bodunal&W9 '-•
bundla. (Part 21
Cl) THE MXTIM ··vou Ate What'• Eating
YOAJ'' 1:11• 9 lAYIMI& .......,
TWo .... gu)'I ••• Lav-
-and 8tilttly out to dinner and tNrl expect the
Q!t1 to prcMde ~ .
• CMOl. IURNETT' AND.._
Cl) KIBC'I NOP\.£
HO. Cl) MOYll
.... "Gator"' (111711) Burt
~. L..-.i Hul1on.
An .. -mooi .... and •
tele'llelon ~team~
10 flOtlt Hie si-ol • e«-
~ polltlden. (R) 8 &IANDn.~
8J, 1ufterlng from
----~"-'-· l1't of a INWderOUI ~
er wtlo do. not WMI 8J to
he long ~ \0 regain
,. "*'M>ty.
e 9 MAMDA
An ernlaNty from Rome
--command of ttle Roman legion and
embarll• on a eartaa of
Drutalftlee dMlgned to
deltroy the ~ lplnt:
IMNa ,_ ~
and lloPa the brutallt ....
.,, action that II taken by
Ille~ to -that
God 11111 -1k>Nd thelf eauae. (P.rt 3) • ....v~
~ta: CeQllla PleaNkov
. and LMCllot. Torry ~
si-ea.ton. Jacalyn z.man. MrM Mftdlelaon.
•taHAW
Gu.ta: KMny Rogw9.,
Elhll ...,_, Millon Ool-
tar 8and.
CBS • t ;OO -"Gator.'' Burt R~ynOldi Pf ay1 a mooublDer who taket
on a corrupt political boa 1D Ulla movie
with Lauren Hutton and Jerry Reed
(photo below) .
• ABC D 9:00 -"Muada." The third
1'Jpisode of the four-part miniseries
based on the Romans' seife of an Israeli
fortress ln .the first century .AD. Peter
O'Toole stars (photo at left).
-~ ..,... ..... 0.... Hor-.
-fiw Couteal" I'd end Ola .. Olllad Ill..._.
llof9t flOC .._.. to win
.... "' tlral Ind the tr-* ~mall-. loae •
bundle. (Part 21
• NIYt/A "flle c-DMec9-Ot
Un Xian" CNl'998 ....
tietl IMMI-*' -~ In "*' """"" °' • oure for ~ een-
• .,/tit,...
Wt.I c.-~ 0.-'° ..... _.. ... In ,...._..'° ...... ... 1'19 .. , .. ,,... .. ....
..,.,. .... ctai.
1 ..-.w.m.,..
M•A•e•H
.,...., .,..,...,.. tll ...
... "'Hot Upe 9fld "'CGt •
ll'onet•• 1-tt• man
~ COl'IQelft In tfle
40ntt1 .
• MM1'TA
.... -.. .. ~ ...... , .......... " ............... .....
··~ ':'Ttle ..... DllllftK 011., ....... 0-.,..
:::.. ......... Tllf ..
-..... .... 111 ..
MlilltllltM. •••••ca .......... 111..,. .. a
wevtteled ptlNftet ot ......... ,....... --~
•• 11 l*t
~113. TNW..._ ....... .,_.
Int Ill ........ '-"'
oountry • .,.,, t> • .ONa .,..111\'0HD
''Tiie TtlP'' A ~ man
~ .....,.. _,,__
~·· ~-1'0MOMOW Oi.laMe: ~ DIMI .Jr.;
..,,., ..-Atdbone. • Oll9.,.. JllYOM>
"Blood ,,..,..,.. A youl'O
Plllr10f died .... ,.19 10
-I I ..... t)'flltlt dlc\a-•• 1*9. OONUNa
Oualitl.: lemll Winter•.
Helafl Wallngl, Ml Com-·
S*!Y. W.P. 9Nnnan .MCMI
..... ...,.,. ~ Of
8cot1" (1172) \/.,_..
~. Glenda .ledl-
aori. au-i Mary Of SC04-
lerld ta~ ........
deflel "" Ma of lier cou.-
ln, ElirabMh I ol ~
• INDll BIDINT
~..wt
.. ,-.. -.. --• • Wi • ............ (*1).C......._. .......
..... #( .......... .. ,...., "' ..... .-M'• l1Uo•0$1Cll .. ... ............... °" ._ ............ . ,.. .......... . .. , .... di ...,.,.
•• "TM ............
(1Mt)~W.-,Mar·
-HlfwMllOlt. °"""' .. 11CJOir Ill CelforNa. • """' ...........
~ ... pollll of ~
~--~1 .... o11111r
OMI twnll)'.
W4Pd•nd•W'•
Da9f l•r Mo.,lr•
11:00. *. "Senta,.
8~" (1tM> "'°"'
WeyM, ~ Cott1ofw\. 1118
Tlwee ~ lfY to
olMr. ~_...,Of
murdeflno • GOid proepeo.
tor • , ,:ao D • • .,. ··eamno lklldoo
Dtummond" (1951) ~ ...
~ ..... gwet~ '°"· Wh9n crocilla ~ "*"' tary rader 10 --!he
populece end ~ off dra-
metlc '*811, o.tectlw
ONtntnond II M.cl from
r9C"-11 lO "-ligate .
-AFTERMOOH-cet. an eNtt¥e -wt1'C:ft a.lrN • dllpr~
llonlM number Of ._ In
Un )(Jen. (A>
--· WAUCING TAU
T Of"t ,_. Ille lie wtl9fl he
truat9 II\ •-oon \0 ... '*" «** • ...., rObtlery
'*'0-• OQ(CAYITT I 1:ao1 = 12:00 • ••\\"TheyMetln
8otnbay" (1941) c 1ar11
Gable, Roullnd Rulaell. A pew ol ,.... ,,..,... 19 A hlgtl IChOol pet of an.ttt
""*«'• wtio ta now • hit
IMfl 18 llft'ed to kNI tlloe ...m. ·~---.. ~ In Blllngual Edu-
10:a0 il'°"N1M
..... aNT
NETWON<..wt
• VIC IMDIN'I
TBNI "°" TMa flVTUM ~ lennfl coech Vic
Braden lfltroducae vtewoarw
to hll "leugll and w4n" phf-
loaophy and dllpelll com-
mon mythe about the lor..
llMd ltfOll•.
• kAOK MAN"I &.MO
"K.nyan." The llfe of
Kenye'a ftrlt preaident, ""'° -c:onllOered Dy '"Mf'f 10 be the "F11her Of
GuHts: film director
Fedatlco Rlllnl. act« Mtlr-
oallo Maetrolennl. (Pert 2
Of 2) ,, •• Cl)...,.
UIQTMU.
llHNtCltyn. "'-'•
-~ . Hoet: Johnny C•r•on .
OUHll: Dick Cavett,
Suuwtne~. •o MCHIW9 .-m.M I LIT"& MAKI A DIAL
HOCWrlHMOU
Col. Kllr* ,._ Sgt.
ScrllAtl wttfl • tough. no-
-guiwd. ··~AK ...
-Ml>flOtfT-I
tt:OO. MOVIE
A lrican Natlonalllnl." II
~.
11:00 8 8 8 Cl) 9 NIWI 1
JOHN DARLING
•• "See How They Aun"
( 1"5) JoM FotlytM, Seo-
,, a.gar. A rnurdarer
1-.ckl down tlvM orl)hanl
* • "Stan6'y" (11172) Ai.x
Rooco, CMa Aoblnton. A
rattlelnak• 1>41corne• a
Vletnem veteran'• pereon-
•I -pon or reveno•
~mankind.
1:11 • ..we
~1:~
• • • "SulpenM" (19'44)
Albert Dekker, Barry SulN·
VWI. Wiien lhe OWf'4ll ol ~
Ice llllOW I• found mur·
Oared, one of Illa 9mplay-
-~ 10 , ... Ollef
the d..o man'a .-II II
....... 1111...tte
~•wow ••~ "All Trwi. Leed To
l.M VeQM" (1975) Tar ..
Gr-. PN1 Sllwts. A Cai-"°'nla polioellloman and I group of U.S Tr-.ry
9genla 00 underC0\'9r to
penetrele lhe Lu VIOQ
undenworld
toroad Into flohll"O the
J epanH• ln11e1d of -chino ror a tr-•. • * *'~ "Portrllt Of A
Moblt9('' (19111) Vic Mor-
row, Leelle Pamlh. Ouleh
SctlUIU galN power 10
become a major
uncMI .or1d figure.
3:00 QI * * * "San FraneilCO ln1ern1tlon11 Airport"
(111701 Ven .Johnton. Per-
nell Roberie Hljtclcer1
altempt I $3 mflllon lltllt
from • CMQO ~ -'Mle
hc>ldlng Ille pllOI' a '#Ire
llOalege
>.aO D *•'.+"Madron"
11971) Jllet\ard 8oone.
lAIMll Cefon ,._ gunflOlll•
end e Fr~i.n
®" """<> a#'Vlved an In$-
.,, mM8Kfe Mt OUI on I
d•••rl trak to elude
Apec:tle W.,r\orl
by Armstrong & Batiuk
LOOK, "I'M NOT GOlr-6 ~SIT H~ H-C/ SPLrT HA~!
Reasoner's
news beat:
the world
Last chanc~ for 'Saturday?'
NEW YORK tAP> Corsica
for a piece on the Foreign
Legion. Switzerland for dinner
•t the world's best restaurant .
West Germany for a chat with
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. Ila·
ly to find out what Neapoli tans
p.pe an when th ey say "ar·
tanjtiarsi."
l A.ll in the course of several
months' work for Harry
Jteasoner. who had been just
about everything there was to be
in broadcast journalism re·
porter. anchorman, commen-
tator. essayist -when he re-
Q.ined CBS' "60 Minutes" just Inc two years aflo.
"And I've just finis hed a piece
on the Philippines." says
Reasoner, who-now can add.
with some legitimacy. foreign
'correspondent. to that resume.
~ Reasoner co·anchored the pre·
mte1e edition of "60 Minutes" in
·1968, left the s how for an
anchorman's job al ABC, and re·
turned to CBS in the summer of
19'18.
J ''Mike Wallace and l started
?\he show in •ss,·• Reasoner re· l~aUs. "and we were on every
Jotber week. Now , it's an article
f of rallh every Sunday night. No
matter how long the football
••mes go, we're on in ruu."
In •Gafor'
Lauren Hutton portrays a
TV reporter who becomes
involved with moonshiner
Burt Reynolds in "Gator"
tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel
2.
'Gorilla' special
airing on KOCE
The largest of the great apes
-the gorilla -is quietly disap·
pearing from the wild . The "Na-
tional Geographic Spedal:
Gorilla" documents tl\eir en-
croacl\ing e.xtinction and con-
ser vationist attempts to pre-
serve them Wednesday at 7:30
p. m. on KOCE, Channel 50.
WINNEROF2
ACADEMY AWARDS
lDoludll:aa BEST ACTOR
BOBERT DE NIRO
By PETER J. BOYER
LOS ANGELES (AP> -So,
the cavalry has at last arrived,
probably too late. Dick Ebersol,
Michael O'Donoghue and some
other founding geniuses from
lhe glory days or "Saturday
Night Live" have come back to
the show, to be relaunched
Saturday in the hope of giving it
some measure of respect in the
final few weeks or the season.
It may well be the final few
weeks of "Saturday Night
Live," ever .
"This is a real 'raise-tbe-
Titantic' job, a real Alamo
challenge," says O'Donogbue,
one of the circle of very talented
writers that made tbe early
"SNL" lhe singular TV classic it
was.
"I DON'T TIUNK we can save
it, but I think we can give it a
real Viking funeral. We owe it
that."
'O 'Donoghue's return to the
show is part or the last-ditch
"SNL" restoration effort, to be
made official at an NBC presa
conference this week. The
show 's new producer, Dick
Ebersol, is another old 'SNL"
hand. Even Lorne Michaels; who
created "Saturday Night Live"
and whose departure last year
brought on its great crash, is
helping out with advice on a new
format. .
O'DOnoghue, who returns to
the show with the title "Crew
Chief," or some such1 plans to
call on some or the onginaJ Not
Ready for Prime Time Players
for some highly promotable
guest appearances.
Yoko Ono, J ohn Lennon's
widow, is said to be set for an
early guest spot.
THE NEW "SNL" cast mem·
be rs, to be introduced at the
press conference Thursday. are
Tony Rosato, from Canada's
popular "Second City TV,'' Tim
Kazurinsky and Catherine
O'Hara. They will join Denny
Dillon, Gail Mathias, Eddie
Murphy and Joe Piscopo. the
only remnants of the disastrous
"SNL'' as rendered by Jean
Doumanian. who resigned as pro·
ducer last month.
O'Donoghue may not believe
the show has much of a chance
of righting itself for the long run,
but this new "Saturday Night
Live" should be the most excit·
ing late·mght television venture
s ince, well. "Saturday Night
Live." O'Donoghu(' is a valuable
asset.
The co-founder of National
Lampoon has a rare comedic
talent, an inspired lunacy that
found expression in the early
"SNL.'' He left "because J got
bored with live television, but is
back for a final try.
"''~ wrTH sue.mus "THIEF"
NOW PLAYING~~
--------
NOW PLAYING
1 o• 1110 rLAZA
Brea 529· 5339
EDWAllDI' MlWPOflT
Newpo11 Beath ~· 0760
C:l•DOME Orange 634·255J
lDWAllDI' JIEJO TWIN
Mission V1e10 830-8990
UA TWIWCIWEMAI
Weslmlnster 893· 1305
'AC•'IC i fCMHITAIN WAlUY OfllJE·IN
Fountain Valley 962 2•81
IO , .... ACCVT1D
fClll Tllll PIAllMOT
For Clauified Ad
•ACfJON
Calh
Daily Pilot
AD· VISOR
64.2-V78
'
"ALL NIGHT LONG"
"XANADU" Ill)
t ·FlNAL CON.;_l;,,." 1R)
I "THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS
RINGS TWICE" (R)
• • r nm.,.
I I "THE JAZZ. SINGER" (PG)
,,
\
Paul McCartney'•
"ROCKIMOW". a "PINK FLOYD"
STADIUm [1
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coll 6 l 0 7860
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H-lOll et S.. AnlOlllo
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flrtuy'aoa-a
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Son AnlOlllo •I Houaton, If ne<HWry.
K•nuos City •I -I•, If nec:e~ ,n.., • "'°"' u Houlton at San Antonio, II neceuary
NHL Dleyotfa l'RELIMIMARY ROUND ,..,. ........ ........ ,·,~·
NYAMl9ert•IKI ....
M lnnM«A •I llollon
Toronto •I NY 1s1...-rs
Edmonton •I MontrHI
V•n<-•I Butl•lo
Quebec et Pflll-lphl•
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Chic-•I C.19afy ~Y'IO.-H
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Toronlo•tNY lsl-rl
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Ven<ouwr •t Bufl•IO
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s.-y·•o-1u .... 1NYR-n PhllMelpllle et Quebec
HY •• , ........ •I Toronto
SI. LO<lls •I PHtsbuf'11'\
MontrNI •I Edmonton
B .. 11.10 •t vancou••tr
C•l040ry •I Chlc-~y'a G•-•
Kl .. ••tNYAenven
St. Louos •I Pittsllurgtl
Phll•delpN• •I QuebK
NY ••-n•t Toronto
Celoary •I Clli<"90
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Buffalo •I Vancouwr
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Edmonton at MoMrHt
Vancouwr•t llull•lo
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Chi< ... et C.l<N<•
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Manlr••• llt09er1 , ... 111 •I Pllb_..,.
(Bllllty .... ,, 40,000.
lftw Yorll IZ.chry •·101 •I Clllcaoo
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San Ol9llf (""111 IN) et SM Fr--.0
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Tol'Oflto IC1arcy 1,.1'1 et O.trelt <Mems
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111 •n• Foote, atacllw•ll (ti. Lerch,
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Ill, GosM(lt (t) -Cer-. 0.IH (I). W-
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1e1..i.-o
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Ml•ml Univ. 000 020 QllO.-2 1 J
Slone, Mc Greoor U I •nd Gr•h•m, Mo••'" "1; P-. Silvas 141, S.ce (ti, BrownJno 111 .,,.. C•llro. a.11ag11er Cl l. w-
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Slnoleton. MIKray
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s.rmi.neo UI, Clerll 111, Parrott ltl -N•rron. W-....,,lster. L--M<C.lty. HA-
SH tue, 11~.
Htah echool N....-1....-albT_.1s1U ,,...........)
c:.-... Mer •• ··-'-J CoroMclltl-m •1 ~ 14
E1tan<la 11• 000 1-1 6 I
L•..-w>. R-m -Mw., • ..._ m;
Merlo.•I, C.,nulo.e UI •nd Di.10. W-
1..•t•n•. L-Marllel >B-Tvcller CCI.
Nieman IEI.
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a r11<e ,,..,_ def. -'-L11i1 Clert, ...
t ·4, 1·•· A•mnh l(rltme11 .. ,. VIJ•Y
Amrllr•J, k , ... 2 .... 2; Mel P"'<•ll def. H-Glldeme~ ... J. 1• • .i.. Hi.,.rn clltf.
Ferdl T~. M . W ; AIU --.... Atwlnd AIN'ltr•I. S.7, 1.s, '°I; hn MclC-
del Frencltco Gonuler. M , M ; VIC19r
Poccl ctet. -l'fl-.... 1, M ; Akll faetl
def. SM,.,,_ SW.art ... 1, ... 2.
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trint• ........... Owl• ~ .... ~.,,. o .. rr.ro, w.
... ,; Eric Oelllkur I-P•w• H .. 111a, 1•. · l-0 (haltMbydanlMM).
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High echoof
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WonMn
COMMUNITY COU.101
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lnln. at eor-dtl Mar
lbt-la al LA Quinta
U11l•tnltY et Ill Toro
()(Mii VIOW el Cotlla Meta
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I a I
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EdlMNI ac Marlfta
N9-t HMtlor el Wastmln-
Hllfttl ..... lk«h •t F-taln vauo
High 8Choot ~r
Alt-Cll' .. A
l'lrttTHm
Glenn ""9eNf'll CWestmlnsterl, Marlo C.-
1• tS.nt• Anel, Cl• Coolman 10..ff•yl, VIC·
tor l!•lol'I <Font.net, S<O!t E••nt !Mir•
Cott•>, Lewis Garcl• IO•mlenl, AIH Cko~~ (!UieMI, P•"' l(rumpe (W••
Torr•ncal, si. .. L.ecleuma !Simi V•llev).
Tony Mall• t Oamtt<'ll. Brt<'ll P•tmer tct•re-
monll, Geoff storey CRothno Hlll1I. 0.....
StracllH I Edi-), Martin V•squel CAIMm.
t>r•I, Fran<IKO Ve9'1 (S.nl• An•I, Gr•Mm
Wltherell ISouth Torrence)
Soc.aM1'•-IUcll .... CH~ ......... ~II); Ed C•r·
rlllo COr-), Lull C..taneda IMuor), Merk
Ch•rllon tS.nl• Monlcel, Del• Ervine
CNorlh Torr•ncel, Steve Guttmen 10•••
mo1111, Scoll Heworth IWnl Torr•nc•> •
~radO J~• (OIK Pueblos), E11rt-
Jlmlne1 COomlnoueO, S.rto Lu• IH•clenda
H•lohl• w11 .... 1. SNow11 M•ncMol 1e .. 1 • .,
CllYI. Brian Mitchell (Simi V•llerl. Jews
S.111ene !Sant• ANI. Todd Sl\r_, lilloll·
1119 Hill1); Wiiii-Sollewalll IO<Hll V ... );
Andy Wa11e< (Atc.acH•I. """'Te-Oe rrell llrldOllord I Simi V•ll•YI. Eric
Cl'l•vu lfontan•I, Tim CIY* IR•tllng
Hills). Gary~ ls.nt• ~al; Mltie
Kerl111 C~ View); Lao Marcllil (Santa
Monica), JoM Marllner CS.11ta 8ar-•I,
Miiie M<Certt'ly 1c1..--1, G<09 MeftdoD
I S •n Goroonlo ), Alberto P•aecll•
CH••l-1, 1(1111 AOIW19WI CEI lllancN);
MalheW Aogiw1 IPoMdWWI, Brent SMaf
CCl'l•lt•y), °°'i9 SWanson CP•loe v-•·
JOM Vli1"9N (Alta ~I, Brien We9-
ClllOY•ll Pl•yer O! year: s .. ,,. Sl'larp ( Rolllf'lt Hlltll.
Co•ch ol YHr : J .. to Frlltos Ciani• Afta).
Coeet •r•• reeulb
UWilUNA HAOt ... M'I CL.U8 ... c.M ... lltl
~-T~:fllltMA -1.( .. )
w 111 Hiiborn i.1.u -ss1. l'a11C Carey
IM·t -U) end Wiii lloecllef'I 1704$-SS);
Fllthl a -I . Ille) ltlch•rd Miiier
1 ... 11-m ..,. 1ttctwrd •-• 1'1·i.-so:
FIJtN C -I. Carl llKlllMd 17'1-21-191; fllgiht 0 -1. JolWI l>Nry 112·21-Stl; Flltlll E -t.0...~179-...... 511.
Misc.
PVBUC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUI 8UllMISS
..... STATaMIENT
The , .. _lno porlOl'll ••• dolno
bullnff••:
Anderson, Adams &
Barnes, a Law Corpora·
lion, by : Jack B. Adams,
Attorneys at Law, P. 0 .
Box 429, 4100 N. Rosemead
Blvd ., Rosemead ,
California 91770, (213)
115·2191
Published Or ange Coast
Dally Pilot, Mar. 31, Apr.
1, 7, l98l 1571-81
PUBLIC NOTICE , ___________ _
f'ICTITIOUS aUlfMISS
NAM& ITAT9MllNT
TM foil-ln9 perton1 ere doing
llwM-•: THE l'ART5 FINDER, 1)141 L.u
LuMa, w.ln'llnller, C.tltornl• t2'13.
H•,,.._ ln..,.tor"y Senrlctt, In<.,
• C•llfornl• corporation, 1)141 I.A• L ..... t, WettmlMI«, C.lllOl'l'lla '2.ta.
Tlll1 ~la ~led by • '°' p0utleft. Hanlson lnwnllwy Sef•lcH ,
PUBUC NOTICE
trlCTITIOUI BUllM•SS NAMa STATCMaNT
TM fOll_,.111 W&Oft It doine bull· ""'ti. OVEAH.AO SYSTEMS. ltOO
Do••r. Newp0rl Beall>, Celllor"I•
tt..O Robert M. Lenlr, ltoO Dover,
Newport Bea<l'I, C.llfornl• t2'60.
Thll bulinHI 11 <Ol'ldui<•d by ... In·
cHvllN•I.
R-rt M. L.enU
flt171M
Pullill/'led Oranoa CM1t Oally l'llel,
M.,. 11. 24, JI. At>f. 1, "" l~I
PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii' 1tai-1 was ltled with l"9
co .. nty Clerk ol Orange County 011
M•r<ll 21, 1 .. 1.
,..,, ·.u,.•••oacounO,CAt.IPOtlNIA Publl\l'led Or-CN1I Deity Pitot. COUNTYOFOltANGE
M•r<l'I ll, April,."· 2I. .... u 2s-11 In Ille MelW of Ille A#Clutlon ...
-----------J-WllltamWlllFora...,..orN•me.
PUBLIC NOTICE c.e.......,.•,-oaa• TO SMOW CAUSI
FICTITIOUS au St NESS l'CMI CMANO• 0, .. .,...
NAME SYATE,..ENT JoM Wllllam Wiil,... llled• petlllon
--------
Tht IOllOWlf'IO "'"°" ,, doonQ D.... In lhil ,....., lor en~ ••lowln9 pe(J· ne\\ 0 !loner lo ,...,... llh -from~
CH•RAO LAND & CAfTLE COM· Willl•m Wiil loJolWIWllll .... ,,..._.
PAN y . ]100 Airway, S...ol• tn, Cos I• II Is hemy orclered tt'lill •II~
M .. •. C•lllorno• •:i.u lntaretled ill llW matter aforewld •
J•mes W Murr•y. SH Vo• Lido Pl•• l>efore 1"111 ,00Ktln ~ l
Nord, Newporl Buell. C•lllorn11 •I 100 CM< Cenler Ori•• West, SMta
92•63 An•. Callfomla, on Mey JO. '"'· •t
Thi\ ~non ts condlKlld Dy an on 10:30 o'clOCll •.m .. ---U.re
dlvidu•t stiow c-.11ony1"9y """"·why IMd
J•,_ Murru petition lor cl'langa of,..,.,. -not
Thi\ U•ltmenl was toled •llh IM be Or•ntad. County CterM ot Oren90 Counly on II II IU<U'IH orclereCI 111111 • copy ol t11ls order to ll'IOW c-be 1"'1>11-Martn 20. 11111 ,flSP+I In 11,. O.ily l'llot, • ,._ o1
p.,Dll\hed Or•nQe C<Mt>I Oaotv Pilot. eener•I clrt"I-. py114lll'lecl In lhl•
M•r<h 24, JI, Aprll 7, u , 19111 1'14,11 county •I le.ul once • -for•-
--__ ----_ __ conae<utl .. -. prior IO ti. NY of
wldMarlno. PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS aUS.IMES5
NAME UATEMCNT
The tollo•inQ perM>f'I• ••• dOtl'IO .,.. .. " ..... BEARL Y LEGAL., >001 Redhill
Btdo • 4 Suite to•. Cott• Meu,
C.11tor111• .,.,.
Pamela Prenun Fellm•n, 1130
G•l••Y Ori••· Newport Beach .
C•lltornla '2MO r.•thlyn A. o&.ont, 1140 TU\Ul'ly
u 110, COiie Mffa, Ca hlornl• 90ttt
Thi\ °"'°neu " conducted Dy •
~ner•t partneohlp
Pamel• E Feltman
otathtyn A 0-1
Tiii\ II••-· wes tiled Will'I ....
County Cieri! ot Orange Count~ on
March ll, '"'-l'IJ7"'
Pulllilhed Or~ Coesl D•lly P1loi,
M•r 11 24 JI.~ 1. 1•1 IJ1W1
PUBLIC NOTICE ----------~
flCYITIOUS aUSINEU
NAME. STATEMENT
Tne fot1ow1nQ persotu •'• doino
buslneuM
A E c .• Ull McF•dllen. Hunt11101on
8H ch. CA '2Hf J•mos Mltell, IH87 Cll•tuu Ln .
HunlongtOl'I 0..ch. CA '2M6
Voclor .IOllMOn • .e97 Nt.lftl'lat~n Or ..
Hunttnoton Bff<ll. CA 92M7
M•rcellno Ruboo, 7J3• Bequeplt
Ave., Pico Ri .. r•, CA
R-rt -..1gomery, 1117S El Moro,
Minion Viejo, CA 9'1MI.
Oeled Aprll l, '"'· R-lclJ.-
Judge of llW S-tor Cour1 Merll•J. I'..-, Jr.,
IWl._,,81Yd.,SWtoal• H•...._ 8-11. CA '21M7. 11141 ..... , ..
Published Oranoa eo.11 O.lty Pilot.
April 7. 14, 11.11. 1•1 ltll .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th• IOllOWll'IQ perM>fl• •r• CIOinll
°"'Inell••· HOGUE BARMICHAELIS, 1'16
Newport Blvd , Cos~ ~•. C.lllorni•
'1621
Su"t•t R•St•vr•nt\ '"<. •
Cetllornl• corporMlon, 1'7• Hewpor1
Bl•d , COi~ ~. CeoJtorni• '21U7
Thi\ Duslnnl 11 ~ucted by • cor-por••--S.mset Relt.1ur•nt1 Inc
Juti., Borrc•-lkl
Vic.• PrH•Otf\l
T Ill\ \lateme"' ••$flied with Ille Counly Clerk ol 0r .. oe County Oii
Merell 11, '"' l'IS11'1
Pullllv.d Or~ Coast Deily l'llot, 't9' 17,24,A{>I 7. , .. , IJIM1
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICYITIOUS aUSINU~
NAME STATIMENT
The lottowlno person• ar• dOing
o..1tneu•
PACIFIC TRAVEL MARKETING,
IOI $1\1...,.,,S 'Way, Benh A. CM>tn C,
Newport 8Hcl'I, Calllor-nl• t1Ml.
SPECt flC YOURS. e C.lllornle Inc This buslnet\ 11 cond .. cled Dy •
J-W Harrl1on 0tn•r•I parlner\l'llp
OICK CHURCH RESTAURANT"',
1'9t NewPOrt Blvd .• Cosu Mn•,
C•lllorni• nu• ,corPoretlon, Poi.I Otttce &oa '"' • Hewpon BMc:h, C.Htornl• t111'1
Thil --ts c-..ct..i by a cor· PQOClon
SPECIFIC TOURS
aruce e~1-ec111,
Prft ...... t
Thi• Ila-I was llled .. 1111 ....
County Clerk ol Or.,.ge County on
rcnts, 1•.
Tllit St.11-1 WM !IC~ wllll Ille J•me.M11.i1
County Cieri! of Or-C-ly on This •t•t-1 io>as flied with the
Aprll l , '"' ' County Cterk or Or .,.oe Coun1y 011 ,.,..,.. M1r<h ll, 1~1
Publl-Or ..... CoHl 0.lly l'llot, 1'157116.1
Aprll 7. 14. 21.11, IWI IU ... I P"Dllsl'leel ClrM19e Co.\I O•lly PlloC.
Much 17, 14, J1. Aprll 7. ,,., 1316 .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE
8URTOM & ll~EBlllECMT l'ICTITIOUS atlSINISS PUBLIC NOTICE ------------LAWYaRS NAME STATllMENT FICTITIOUS aUllNEU
....tOlfta .. ltt7 Tiie lottowlr19 person1·•re dolno NAMESTATEMllNT
•t si.i,.,ani Wey bu1lneu a Tha loll-lnQ per1on 11 dOlna b"sl· N.--.rt e.dl, c..tlfWMet.U. •ART LYONS EQUIPMENT, IJ461
'"'"' L•"• Circle, Gar.,... Grow . CA '1MO nessT•~E LAW KIT, 1lf11 Mann StrHt, P11bllllled Clreftll' C:.0.11 OeUy Pllol, Arthur LYOl'll, 1J462 u ... Circle, tr•lne, C.lllornl• tVU.
CHUN HIEN KING, 11!1 H
Oresoen, An-Im, Calllornt• '*'
Sha .. -· Klno. llH N. Or-•. Anaheim. C.tllornl• tJIOt
Tiii\ _,,..,Is Condu<ted by an In
dovldual.
ChYn Hien Klno 1
Thll It.It-I •M Iliad wllll IN County Clerk ol Orange •County on
Merell 16, 1"1 ,,,_,
PubllllWd Or-C:.0.11 Delly PllOt,
Mar 11, 24, ll. Apr 7. '"' 1117-11
PUBLIC NOTICE ~rch II. April 1, 14, 21, 1"1 UTt.tl Gerden Gnwe, CA t2MO L•wr....:e Alen A9r_., ll011 Mann
C•ndaee Lyons, 1:1462 L•u• Cortie. Str•I, lrvlne. C.tJlornl• •v1s FICTITIOUSaUSINESS
G•rdt1'1 Gnwe. CA t21MO Tl'lll Ollslneu 11 c-ucted Dy.,. In NAMESTATEMIENT PUBLIC NOTICE This butlneu 11 c""""clotd by en In di•idu•I. The following perlOl'll are dolna
ORANGE COUNTY SUrE!tiOiii dlvldualwtn..rLyonl IA-er>etA Agren O..slneuM
COUlllT Thll 11 ........... 1 WM ltled with the BAIAAWOOO ASSOCIATES IUS1
Tiii• 1l.eteme111 w•I Uled with Ille County ~'" 01 Oran~ County on B•rr•ll IAIW, Sant•,.,,.., CA n1os \ :v:..~:.v;,~ County Clt rll ol Or_.ge County on Merell 21, 1'11 Thom .. 01borne, IJU1 Barr .. t
PLAINTIFF: TIMOTHY MACRES. M•r<h IJ. 1"1· l'UTMS l'IMlll L•ne, Santa An•. C~ 92705
PATRICIA MACAES, MARILYN PubllshedOr•~C.o .. tO•llY Pllot PuDlllhed OranQeCotlllO•llY Pilot, Jolln B"ller, UO H•nover Slree l. P:OLEY S COTT llAI RO •nc . .,.. . M•r<ll l l,Aprill.14.21,1'11 u20 .. 1 Cosl•Meu,CA'2'>6. BE ANAlllDIHE BAIRO M•rcll 11• 24• JI, Aprll I. 1"1 IJU It M•ry Ann PflllllPI, W•ybury IM,
DEFENDANT. J"AMES OLDHAM, PUBLIC NOTICE Roule 1ll, East MlddltllUry. Vermont
•Ito ·-.. JAY WILLIAM$ -PUBLIC NOTICE OS74q SANDY WllLIAMS, THE ESTATE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Jo'l'ln Kim, 1433 Enr-ade, Wlllttler,
0, RUTH I. HllWGOOO, ROBERT H. l'ICTmous BUllNISS NAME STATEMENT CA ~l ::~:~N·H':',.r;:::,R~.':;!!~'"!n~ Th• 1:!'!~,.!T:!=•;. doing ou!~n·os~o~~owono W""'' ••• doona H~=r~~~;.'s~Chelie, Hecl-
OOES llhrouQlhlC,lnclt.1slwo. bullneUM: FIBE RFORM DISTRIBUTORS. Spencer Crump, US PolnHtli•,
SUMMONS THE HAIR SHANTY, 7JS Baker, ••Ht CortstrlKlton Corcte Wut, Suole CIH'OnedtlMer,CAt1•U
CASI! llUM••• JJl261 • o. C•ta -· Calllorl)l• t»2'. A, lr••nt. CA 92714 Oona Id J enni no•. , .. , Gerdenl• NOTl~I y.., ... .,,. .... _._ TIM Mertha Que...,.,, .. 12 StonyDr~. Robtrl Iller Oll•as. 1'77 Oebor•h A••""•· Fountain V•lley, CA'270I,
CMrt lftOY llKldt ... ,,,.. rev wltlloVI An.ro.tm, Cellfotnl• tao.. Lene Or-. CA.,,,., Hope VOii Henof\. 214 "A" P•l......-
yow ...... llMrf lllltna yw ,...-M-1 Que-. 9'12 Stonybrook, AoDert FrodtrlCk HoCkl, Jr , 0 11 Slrfft, Costa Mewl, CA t1'7l
wl•I• •• ,._ Ill ... die .......... tloll An•helm, Calllor~a ,_,., w .. 1 HoQhland SL, S•nla An•, CA Tnll bullneu ii <OndlKted by e Ml~~ou with 10 ..... 1,_ advice of an Thlt buSlneu ,'' cendllcled by a 9270) general ~'*:"~me
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h•<erlo lnm•fl•t•mente. u Ht• PUBLIC NOTI E PUBLIC NOT'J.Cs-flK'TtTIOUS 1ustNllS1 m-r•, IV ...,.,ta a1erita, II h•Y :&1 "" HAMii STATaMeMT , •ltun• • .,... _ re9'tlt•ta e llempo. f'ICTITIOUS aU..SINIH I. TO THE OEFENOANT: A clvlt NAM5STATIMENT Th• IOltowlno P.,IOl'I •••• clolnt
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Sea View Le••ue baseball
leader Corona del Mar Hltb up.
ped it.a overall r..ecord to 10-1-1
i«.onday with a non-leaeue ~~rdict over ldgue rival Estan·
cla lo the semitioals of the
Mewport Harbor Elks touma·
rh'ent, the oft·delayed tourney
which began in early March.
The Sea Kings dealt Estancia
" 8·2 setback behind a 1'·hlt as-sa u It, which included Clay
Tucker's 4-for-4 day at the pla~,
including a double.
Gordon Moss and Mario
Ybarra each went !J.for-4 behind
the pitching or right-banded
senior Larry Lagano.
By ~'L~'l }e;.~Nl>Y
Ever wander what ad~iee the women
1olf pros mlaht lh'• to 11ptrtn1
a~ateura to the LPGA tour?
Perhaps .Ian St.ephenton 11•• the moat conclte advice of all when she
says: "Look Uke a tl(l :.... but play like a
man."
A number of other. cautJoo youn•
golfers to think twice befOl'e aeWna
their aigbt.a on a com,.Utlve car"1 u a touring professlonaJ despite the O'OW·
in& 'prise. money and endonement opr
portuniUes.
·'The tour is not u Clamorotll aa
many ameteurs think." Naiacy Lopea·
Melton says. "Many of the players don't
make ' llvioi at lt. Only the top 20 per-
cent."
Then there's Amy Alcott's tblnkina:
''You shouldn't turn pro for the money.
It's moi:e important to be doinl wbaat
you love for a living."
htty Bers, one of the original foun-
ders of the LPGA says: "Don't turn pro
until you're ready to face intenae pres·
sure and competition and don't con·
sider the tour unless you like to travel."
,,... P-.,e €J
JoAnne Carner adds: "You no &oncer
can wln a COdpJe of city or •~te touna•·
menu and be sure of matln• it u a
pro." •
VirtualJy aJJ of the tourtn• pro-
feaaloaala earee to tw4 buic rules tor
GOLF
wouJd·be l>l'Olessionats: Finish coUeae
fint and then 'J)lay in as many amateur
events aa posilble before Joininl the pro
itow.
Cert6lnly good advice to young
women think.Ing of maJdn& the pro JOlf
tour their livelihood. . . ..
HOAG MEllOIUAL HOSPITAL re-
ceived a ~beet for $10,000 from the
Women's K~mper Open ,olf tourna-
ment from chairman Jim Poteet. "Il
looks like we'll be a~le to band them
another check· but I don't know how
much it wiU be at the moment," Pot~t
adds. ·
While this doesn't measure up to the
$25,000 presented to the Arthritis Foun·
elation each ot the nrat two years ot tbe
tounwnent, It doe. live ti.. ~pttaJ a aubttanUaJ amount for UH ln "Hfad!GJ th~ t•clUty even further. • '* • • THE SATCHEL CLUB, ; men'• IUJ>-
port aroup ol Sant• Apa·Tu.ttln Com·
rn unlty Hospltel, will stage a golf
tournament at Santa Ana Count?)' Club
Mooday with a shotgqn start ~t 11:30.
Entrle. are limited to tbe fint 1._. men
and women pla)"!rs with handtcapt1 not
required.
Don Klosterman, vice presJdent and
ieneral manager of the Rama, is the
honorary chairman while Ed Arnbtd of
KA BC wl11 serve as master of
ceremonies at the evening dinner.
For further information on entering
the event, call 953.3450, Proceeds will be
used to aid the bum unit at the hospital. • * * ...
COSTA MESA GOLF and Country Club
men's club bas dedicated itself to get-
ting more young golfers interested in
the junior program. It doesn't cost
anything to join since the club already
pays the SCGA yearly handicap fees .
Any youngster interested in learning
the same ol coif or lmprovtni lbeir
1 J•me and under 18 years of a1e shouJd contact the club by wrlUna to Costa
Mesa Men's Goll Club, P.O. Sox 1733.
· Costa Mesa 92626.
"We are planning clinics and tourna-
ments this summer tor the junior golfers
who sign up," aays president Scott
Weaver.
Incidentally, club memberships are
open again for an annual fee of '75. Those
interested may pick up a membership ap-
plication from the pro shop, fill it out and
return it with a check. Tbe rolls now show
534 members for 1981.
t * * THE INDUSTRY and Services Golf
Asso c iation is again offering a
scholarship valued at $500 or more lo a
junior golCe r who resides in Los
Angeles. Orange. Western Riverside or
Western San Bernardino County and
plans on auending college in the ran.
Criteria used to determine the winner
includes scholastic aptitude. goJfing
abilitv and fin ancial need. Applications are now available with
interested juniors urged to request one
bv writin~ lo: lSGA OCCice. P.O. Box
1282, Chino. 91710 or by calling 594-5442.:
BASEBALL WIVES: NOT ALL GLAMOUR
18-year-old Mrs. Whitaker.
··Everyone thinks Carolyn is
her husband's daughter." Mrs .
Summers s aid of the older
woman . ''She we ars string
bikinis like everybody else out
by the pool."
CERTAI NLY GORGEOUS
faces and tanned bodies are part
of the baseball wife milieu. But·
th ese are no t a bunc h of
airheads who latched on to
famous husbands. Many of the
baseball wives could make it in
t he world of business -or
E'ro•P~€1
PIRATES. • •
28-year-old Kevin Bazyouros, a
former beach player.
There's also former Universi-
ty High star Scott Richardson,
ex-Cosia Mesa High player Dave
Maxner and Estancia products
B o b R e id e n and Dan
Vrebalovich.
Two former South Coast
League stars Laguna Beach's
Mark Cody and Mission Viejo's
Randy Huffman also see action,
along with Golden West College
transfer Tom Gregory.
Two players from four-year
s <>hools also streng then the
P irate line up· ex-Ohio State
player Jim Glover. who red·
sbirted last year and still has
two years of community college
eligibility; and Bob Wheelock. a
26-year-old from San Diego State
..vho's also got two years left.
From the start of the season -
when Wetzel and his wife Kathy
entertain the te~ at a barbe·
que dinner l<>' the last state
tournament game a tightly
knit family is developing. And
that. Wetzel says. is the key to
the Pirates' success.
But don't think he's overlook-
ing his players.
"By far this is the best
volleyball team we've ever had.
And they're all first -year
players," he beams.
anything else -and many do.
Mrs. Summers has a health
studio in Arizona during the off
season and ran another in the
Detroit suburbs last summer.
She plans to do a five-day-a·
week radio talkshow this year
when ure club moves north to
begin the regular season.
Mrs . Wilcox helps Milt
manage a speaker's bureau
featuring major league athJetes,
and they soon will open a n
athletic shoestore in a Detroit
suburb.
··We als o get to d o th e
yardwork and mow the grass,"
Mrs . Parrish said, laughing.
"Be sure to tell them that, too!''
Some wives concentrate on be-
ing mothers and keeping homes.
"MY JOB IS to keep Bruce
.happy, that's my career," said
Laurie Robbins, 20, who has a
two -year-old daughte r and
another child on the way. "We
were high school sweethearts,
we married young , and we have
built a Jot of trust in each
other."
Mrs . Summers, who concedes
she married Champ partly
because be was famous and
handsome, feels she does her
part in supporting him.
She has a collection of more
than 40 whistles -many in the
form or jewelry -and she bas
made it a practice or blowing a
whistle when Champ comes to
bat. Occasionally another spec-
tator, not knowing who she Is,
will chastise Mrs. Sumers for
her outbursts.
·'Some girl at the ballpark
wanted me to stop the other
day," Mrs. Summers recalled.
"She was afraid I was going to
make him nervous. I felt like
saying, 'Honey, I've been blow-
ing this thing for 10 years and in
front of 50,000 people and he's
still standing out there.·
"You feel this hostility, but
you can't say It."
It bothers Mrs. Parris h
that people often dol\'t realize
what hard work baseball can be.
''This is Lance's office," she
noted. "They're out here four or
five hours before a game and,
often, don't leave until midnight
or 1 a.m."
And when the players finally
get home, it's frequently the
wi ves who get out the linament
to massage out the bumps and
hurts. the team trainer doesn't
do it aJI . And the lrainer can't
provide the emotional support a
wife can.
·•You get protective of them,"
Mrs. Wilcox noted ... Especially
whe n you see things written
about them in the paper that just
aren't true.
"It can hurt when you know
what's going on and somebody
writes something that's really
not the whole truth.'·
-""l"·
THE FUTURE is a scary
prospect for many players. The
changes can be no less drastic for
their wives.
Carolyn Craig, who aJready
has been in basebaJJ 30 years,
knows her life could change
drastically after the major
leagues.
"Once his playina days are
over. then it gets tou.ab." u.id
Mrs. Craig. She and her buaband
live in the San Diego area DOW,
where he nms a b&Hball camp
for youngsters in the off seuon.
"It's tough to get into the
coaching business because there
are so many ex-ball players out
there wanting the coaching jobs,
and there are very few of them
available."
The wives inter¥iewed said
they really couldn't imagine life
without baseball.
"It seems like outside of this,
it might be very dull," said
Wanda Wilcox. "I just cannot
imagine anything outside of this
life and what we're doing."
And, said Arlyne Parrish.
'Tve had the other life and I
koow what it's like. I hope he
plays 'til he's 50!"
KC pitcher
close to deal Angels top Padres, 4-2
KAN S AS C ITY <AP )
Pitcher Dennis Leonard and the
Kansas City Royals are nearing
agreement on a fiv e-year, $4·
million contract, The Kansas
City Star reported in a copy-
right story Monday.
The report from the Royals'
spring training camp at Fort
Myers, Fla .. s aid Leonard, a
20-ome winner in 1980 for the
third time in four years, prob-
ably would not sign until after
tlle start or the season.
• ·'The language about guaran-
tees and stuff will have to be
iJoned out," Leonard said. "The
'9'ain thing was to get together
on a figure before the season
~arted, so l don't have to go
~rough the season with negotia· ~ns on my mind.'' •
Leonard had said be would
come a free agent after the
eason if no asreement had been
ached before the start of the
1 campaign.
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Tom
Brunansky drilled his first home
run of the spring, a two-tun shot,
and a two-run bases-loaded er-
ror by San Diego first baseman
Randy Bass helped the Angels
beat the Padres 4-2 in an exhibi-
tion baseball game Monday
night.
The victory, .the Angels ' filth
in six games against San Diego
this spring, boosted their record
to 16-8 in exhibition play.
Brunansky's s econd-inning
homer was one of just two hits
the Angels collected in five in·
nings orr San Diego starter Juan
Eichelberger, who entered the
game with a 7 .11 earned run
average. Dan Ford walked and
stole second before Brunansky
delivered his third and fourth
runs batted in or the spring.
Angel starter Mike Witt. with
his third victory in four starts.
blanked the Padres for five ln-
ninas. allowing Ju1t two hlta.
With the impressive outln1, he
odgers nip Gian~s
PHOENJX <AP> -Steve Yeaaer'a three.run
mer capped a slx·run, nlnth·innln& ral),y &het
ed the 1.4e Angeles t>odlen to a ll..f elllbition
seball victoty O¥er th• San Franclaco Glanta
~ onday m1ht.
The Glulta eotered &he ninth With a &.$ lead
"ri&hl·h.nded relief ace Gre1 Mlntoca pttchba1 ..
Ken Laadreaux daub.led with one out and Out·
Baker 1truct out. Otantt' m.aa11•r Frank
btlllOll tbm UHd some unconvenUdlal 1trate1Y
at backfired, walkin1 Steve Garvey lnten-
naU7.
Pinch batter Ron Roen.lcke, • ..,., •lio WU .,.._1111 to the mtnon bJ tbe DeQin 111 11~11
• theG lined a run.acoriq alq)e to l1jllt for a M
lowered his earned run average
to 1.45.
The Angels made it 4-0 in the
sixth against rookie reliever
Tim Lollar. Bass ' error on Brian
Downing's two-out grounder
came after the Angels loaded
the bases on a waJk to pinch hit·
ter Rod Carew and singles by Ed
Ott and Jobn Harris. San Diego
shortstop Ozzie Smith $aved two
runs with a diving stop of Don
Baylor's apparent ground single
behind second.
San Diego scored two un-
earned runs in the seventh off
Angel reliever Andy Hassler.
With two out, Jerry Turner
singled for his third hit of the
game and went to third when
Butch Hobson let Juan Bonilla's
grounder go through ,his legs for
an error.
Pinch hitter Craig Stlmac then
beat out an infield single to
score Turner, and Smith singled
home Bonilla before Hassler
ccSuld 1et out of the in.n.ing.
'11111 l~f OIH L t% T
DOIMAN'S UMmD l£TUAo WARRANTY
Lifetime llmlted wc11rrc11nty against defeu In workman-
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We have produced millons of rop qualiry
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E78xl4 2for242~~T
1u•.p.· 2-fi GLASS BE1JED
2900 WHlnWALLS
SIZE SALE flT SIU SALE ru
A78/ 13 A78 13 29.00 I (><) f 78 I 4 lS.00 2.28 FU 1.6 9 878 13 10.00 I 80 C78 14 17.00 244
(78 13 31.00 I C)Q H78 14 19.00 l (>l
87811 4 30.00 I 92 C78 I S 38.00 2.50
18 SE.RIES p.u~t!r rirr i tot A ynoofh. comfonAblt! nae Two flbttgl.Us bt!lrs C78 14 31.00 I 93 H78 15 40.00 2..72
Md l ·ply pofyfitt!r coed CA~ng In" br<Md. n..111.rdd dt!~gnrd f0< .i rapid w.ltt!I C::l'f)lact:rnenl E78114 34.00 Z.14 L78 15 41.00 z 95
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
All SEASON
PISS180Rl3 FET 1.52
Aggre~sM radW cread ctehvt>r!t o ct'llt'nl 10.1ct g npprng •"~
t\on In almost any ~a1~r r Mem< SJX'C•fltauons allows for
mort' air J>fessure, combined wllh radial consrruc11on. me.1ns
Jess rofllng 1t sls1.1nce and gre.1ter fuel ~v1ngs Two polyester
body plies arid IWo Rbergl.Jss bell~ combine 10 give .1 smooch
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30,000 Mlle
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WHITEWALLS
Sill SAU fll Sill SAU fll
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r1 6s aoR1 3 41.00 I <>O rHs 7SRl 4 54.00 2 57
Pl8Sl7SRl 3 44.00 I 82 !>205 7SRIS 50.00 2 42
r 1ss 1sR14 46.00 2 07 P21S175R 15 54.00 2 59
P19575R14 48.00 2 15 rz2s 1sR 1s 57.00 2 75
r2os 75R 14 50.00 210 P235175Rl5 61.00 2 8 5
llo.od 1Cln1 J0,000 Milt! "''lltonwlde U...lt«d WMr~ Ro.-d King
c.i.., M11..t ""'""Mlt'd 10 g•Yt! you lOOOO mtle\ of Ut!MI we~r In
notrl.J P"'~ng~r '"' V\t! on tht! \Mne co1r II 1t dot>\ noc IAllt! you1 Wt!
to .-ny llo.ld King delllt'r lht!y II •f'r>l,.{l' 11 with" nt!W ont! lrte during
tilt! ft"! 1 l2 inch ot rtt'MI wl'"' Ot cti.vg1ng you only 10< ~
mde.ige 1l'Ct!1~<1 plu' ft'dl'•·•' t'•<•\<' '"" bt\se-d on tht! tvrrt!nr "dlVSt·
mt!nt rm<e lo< trt!lld wt!"' 1n l'.tl'U ol I JZ inch l'lool of m~t!.-ge
reqv11e<I A \m .. 11 \erVICe c1i .. 1ge m .. y b" "ddt!<I Ask for w1t1tt'n wdr
fAnty with t!!KIU)lOM Mid dt'l<•h . . . . . . . . .
f R l ( • \ 11 11 r-. 1 : '. ( . ''' • T ; ; '' 1 ·,,, • 11" ., " • ... 't , ( , ', "11 -. r ( H 1 , ,, ~[I rn·\l•f 1'\. '\,lllJI 11
.
B_RAl<l &. SUSPlNSIO~ WORK&. WHW. ALIGNMENT AVAllABll lUES. THRU SAT. 8a.m.-6p.rn.
AMM•
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'19~st.H *599J.,_,s
25,000 Mill fOI
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f'NilAP'T•IM•
NSW .YOU -1)i Clbb'a lllU.me 4,111 lllU .. a .arr ... ._ •• .,..,. uve ..._ .trt...U, .Md ......... *lie.~. -tt ~ ~-.. ..._. .. _..._•munb&e a bit.
ha a ~ _,., bl Tbe ~ N ... JD the rorua.....--:-wu 11 ....... tM S&. LOala-ba•M ,,....,
........... •Wat ........eb bu dllcov.r.d..,.. U. .... -... -_.._._ •• i.-IDCI 1110 ~ cblp away at lali l•Dd·
l!f7ftlune.
Because of u.ese errorw, Uti· paper
lpolata out. the "Gearlia Peacb" aat ·oo&Y
last -. bit ud ooe point en bll lifetime
_..,. ... (the aew pres are reportedly
•.tto Dd .•>. bUt au.. mo Asnerican
• Leilcue battiq cbamplooship baa bee.n
quuUoned u weU.
Accardlna lo a Ntw York public rela·
tlou ftrm, .the alleged erron were dis·
eovered...,... more than nine years of re·
search iii preparation of ''Daguer·
reot,,.,_.," the Sportln1 News' compilation of lifetime recorcb
• of bueball'a bri1hteat stars.
Accordlnf to The Sportlnc News, Cleveland second
baseman Napoledn Lajoie actually wu the winuer of the 1910 ".UiDI race, eclipsing C.Obb With an 8-for-8 performance on
the Jul day of the re1Ular season and outh1ttin1 tb\Detrolt
Tlfer ereat, .383 to .382. Cobb. is listed in official asebalJ manuafa as the batting champion tbat year wJtb a .385
aver ace.
· But the ev-ents of that season-ending surge by Lajoie were
clouded by controversy, and Cobb was declared batting
cbampion, for one reason or another, by Americab League
President Ban Johnson, said The Sporting News.
That season is among nine straight championships by
Cobb, a major league record, and one of 12 batting titles be
won.
r------fl-te •I tlte •••------
Cinctnnati catcher .lokaay Baell, on his aching body:
"I need cortisone shots for both knees. I take
butazolidin, endlzine and muscle relaxer. U I were a
race bone, I would be disqualified."
Designated hitter Otto Vel~z bit three home Iii runs, went S-for-5 and drove in eight runs as
Toronto trouced Philadelphia, 16-2, in exhibition
baseball Monday. Gartb lor' added a pair of home
runs in Toronto's 22-hit •attack off Phillies pitching . . .
Mike Terra pitched seven strong innings in pacing Boston to
a 1·4 vi~tory over the New York Mets . . . Greg Pryor'•
two-run double off Graat Jackson broke a 7-7 tie and carried
the Chicago White Sox to a 10·7 decision
over Pittsburgh . . . Jorge Orta tripled
and homered and Jolla Deaay scat·
tered six hits in six innings as Cleveland
edged Houston, 4-3 . . . Al Wiiliams
pitched eighl strong innings and Min-
nesota turned Montreal away, 6·1 . . . St.
Louis broke loose for a 4·1 victory over
Atlanta, led by run-scoring singles by Kee
Oberkfe!J, Keith Hernandes and Danell
Porter • . . Harry Spilman singled in the
winning run in the eighth inning to pace weLU
Cincinnati put Detroit, 3· 1 . . . Marlo Meadeu'• flyball
single gave Texas a 5·4 victory over the New York Yankees,
who have pul slugger Reggie Jacksoa on a IS-day disabled
list because of a torn plant.aris tendon in the lower part of bis
leg. He'll miss the Yanks' first five games of the regular
season . . . Larry Hisle hit a game-tying home run in the
ninth and Robin Yount singled in the winner as Milwaukee
edged the Chicago Cubs, 4-3
lt'oedftt f a.,or• ia-ce .. ferwaac
SALISBURY, N.C. -John Wooden, the legen·
dary college basketball coach from UCLA, said
Monday that if the NCAA is intent on expanding
the championship field it should go all the way and
let every team play.
m
"I am not for expansion," the retired coach told a
seminar of the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters As·
aociation, in commenting on efforts to enlarge the field from
48 to 64 teams. "But if it's done, let every team enter. There
are 262 colleges in Division I. They could reduce that to 64 in
a single wee.kend."
SC•l"!JeU'• c•reer IWtl..,_ •1'ft'
Pittsburgh's Wltue Star1dl says the next dis· •
abling injury he incurs will mark his retirement
from baseball . . . Sport Magazine bas been sold
to Texas oil millionaJre Ray L. Hant . . . Former
Laker coach Joe Mullaney has been hired to coach
Providence College basketball, where he turned the Friars
into a national power in the 1950s and 60s . . . The New
York Giants have extended Coach &ay Pe.rldu' contract at
least through the 1982 National Football League teason for an estima~ed $125,000 annual salary . . . Brigham Younc
University's Danny Aln1e received the Woodell Award as col·
lege basketball's player of the yeu Monday ~ght, lob
WOGdea made the presentation . . . Rice basket.ball coach
•tte Scllaler has resigned . . . Rhode Island Uhiverslty
• 9-•sketball coach lack Kraft did likewise r . . Bobb7 AlllMm
increased his lead for the Grand National drlvint title and
now hoJds a 129--point lead over atcllant Pe&ty • • .
1• Armijo of H~ •••ell ~ ltll boaial
C&l"Mr d.-WIUllli a S... ~ OM• WM at tM .... of lt • ._ came blek •trolll ID a aoYlee neat at tbe Olrmplc
Audltorlum ID LOI ADS•lH
reeeatly.
Armljo, a a.1ear-olcl t t""'8t
at or-... Coat cou ... by way
of l!!diiOe ff1Ch ScboOI, captwed
tbt welterwei1bt ( 141) DO~
tltle with flve 1tralaht 'victortes
at tbe Loi Anaelu fi1bt
eatpor1um. Hi• aeco1td.·rouad
knockout in tbe final match
earned him the troph y aa
outltandinl boxer oL the card as
well.
Armijo fou&ht Ernest Curtis ill
the final match, an hour after
h11 1emiftnaJ which be won by
unanimous decision. In his five
bouts, Armijo had three
llnockout.s and two unanimous
decisions.
He la quitting the rine for the
second time to concentrate on
life1uard duties for the coming
SUIJlmer month.a, then plans a
return to the amateur ranks and
perhaps a pro careef. in the fall.
•'There were over 100 fighters
ln the tournament in Los
Angeles,•• his father and
manager, Clyde Armijo says.
"Now he's going to concentrate '
on his lifeguard duties and his
school work for the spring.
"But he's going to continue
with his boxing in the fall and
turn pro next year. I've talJted
with Jackie McCoy and be is
Interested in having him when
he does turn pro.'·
At Edison High, Armijo was
on the water polo and swimming
teams but hasn't tried for either
squad at Orange Coast.
His father was an amateur
boxer of note around the Vallejo
area at the same age. "I bad 40
amateur fights and won 38 of
them," Clyde says modestly. "J
beat a couple of guys that went
lo the national Golden Gloves
finals both before they went and
after but I never did go into it
that much."
T'1e younger Armijo is a
red-headed, southpaw boxer
fighting out of the Westminster
Boxing Club.
-By Howard L . Kandy
fakers due
for changes
after fall?
I NGLEWOOD <AP> -When you go from champs to chumps,
you can expect some changes for
next time.
That's the situation with the Los
Angeles Lakers and speculation
mounted Monday on just what
might be the changes.
After winning the National
Basketball Association cham·
pionship last season, the Lakers
w ere upset by the Houston
Rockets in their mini-series this
year.
Earvin "Magic" Johnson was
the goal In the 89-86 finale Sunday
at the Forum after being the most
valuable player in the cham·
pionship series only a year ago as
a rookie.
Owner Jerry Buss was quoted
by Doug Krikorian of the Los
Angeles Herald-Examiner as
saying he wanted to get MO&eS
Malone, the star of the Rockets
who scored 23 points in the fmal
game.
If Buss truly want.s Malone, the
6· 10 center said, •'Tell him he can
have me, baby -for the right
price."
Malone becomes a free agent
after this season. ·n appears the two Lakers most
likely to be on the trading block 1will be guard Norm lNixon and
forwardJ1mChones. I
Nixon, who scored lS points
Sunday, wants to play point
1uard, but that poeitfon appears
to be owned by Johnaon, despite
bla sbowinl Sunday •ben be
started at forward, hlt only 2ol14
field 1oat attempts ands of 11 free
lb.rows.
.,, . .,.......
LOS ANGELES CAP> -
Proapecta tor a aettlement ta the
a ult to move the Oakland Ra.Ml_..,
to Loe An1etes have be~ to
brtihten, tt wu reported'!lllciill·
day. r
Mtl Dunta1. columnlat fortb
Lo• Aneeles Kerakl·Esam1Der1
-rote that ••a mediator of IOl1a
alao bu been mtrodueed to dltit
case.HelsLewWauerman,cbieJ
of Unlv~al Studloe, the wortd's
largestfUMhouae." ~r
Durala11ald Wasserman wa(~
friend of National Footba[l
Leaeue Commissioner Petp
Roselle and of W i tlh~
Robertson, fldd of the AFL-Clq
ln Los AnJeles County who ~
chairman of the Los An•eles
Coliseum Commission commit·
tee seeld.ne lo bring a pro football
team to this city.
The Los Angeles Rams moved
from the Coliseum to Anahelm
Stadium in adjacent Orange
County in 1980.
SOMElltlNG TO SHOUT ABOUT -Dodger manager Tom·
my Lasorda hopes there will be plenty to yell about when
the bsaeball season opens Thursday. The Dodgers host
defending National League West champion Houston.
Durslag said Wasserman "is
attempting to bring peace with a
plan that would call for Al Davis
to sell his interest in the Oakland
Raiders and take a similar posi·
tion with an expansion team ul
Los Angeles."
NL West outlook
Astros stronger than· year ago
By Associated Press
Know how close the Houston Astros came to
winning the National League playo(('s last year'?
If Gary Woods hadn't left third base too soon,
costing the Astros a vital run in the fourth game.
Houston would have won the game in nine innings
and the playoffs in four games instead of losing in
10 innings and five games. respectively, to the
Philadelphia Phillies. The Astros settled for the championship of the
NL West despite losing J . R. Richard to a stroke
and having to go without fellow right-hander Ken
Forsch for a while. A 1981 return for Richard is
stm questionable. Manager Bill Virdon isn't making any predic·
tions but will say that the Aslros "are a stronger
club than we were a year ago," warning, however,
"The entire Western Division is stronger."
TO STRENGTHEN an already solid pitching
staff, Houston traded third baseman Enos Cabell
to San Francisco for Bob Knepper and signed Los
Angeles' Don Sutton as a free agent. They join
starters Joe Niekro. Nolan Ryan and Vern Ruble,
backed by Joe Sambito, Dave Smith and Frank
Lacorte in a deep bullpen.
The As tros a r e built for their spacious
Astrodome, a pitcher's paradise. They have little
power, featuring instead a bunch of contact hitt!?rs
who will run you to death. The base stealers in-
clude outfielders Cesar Cedeno. Jose Cruz and
Terry Puhl and second baseman Rafael Lan·
destoy. •
"WE HAVE GIV EN you many things. except
for one thing a world championship. You shall
have it in 1981 ," Los Angeles second baseman
Davey Lopes promised faithful Angelenos at a
luncheon In January. The Dodgers tied for the NL
West title a year ago, losing a one-game division
playoff to Houston.
To accomplish their goal, the Dodgers JllUSt
stay healthy, something they haven't been able to
do the last two years. T he keys are ri'ht fielder
Reggie Smith (shoulder). shortstop Bill Russell
(finger) and relievers Terry Forster (elbow) and
Don Stanhouse <beck and shoulder). For in·
Sneva pair booked for theft
SPOKANE. Wash. <AP) -Two members of
the Sneva auto-racing family have been charged
with second-degree theft for allegedlr taking S800
from a sate stolen from a fastfood restaurant in
Spokane, authorities s aid Monday.
BlaJne Sneva, 24 , was arrested Monday on the
charge, and a warrant citing the same charge has
been issued for his brother, Jerry Sneva, 31, who
bas competed in the Indianapolis 500 and other
major auto races, Detective Jack Neumiller said.
The money was taken in 1979, police said.
Tom Sneva, the most celebrated of the race.
car family, was not implicated, Neumiller said.
'l'he detective said Ed Sneva, their father.
agreed to contact Jerry, who is in Indianapolis,
and ask1him to be in Spokane Friday to be booked
on the charge.
surance, in case Smith hasn't recovered from sur ·
gery, the Dodgers traded for Minnesota's K~n Lan·
dreaux last week.
Russell, Lopes, first baseman Steve Garvey
· and third baseman Ron Cey will compnse the in·
fi eld for the eighth year in a row.
Garvey, Cey and outfielders Dusty Baker and,
hopefully. Smith will try to make Los Angeles the
best home run team In tM league for the fifth con·
secutive year. The Dodgers also hope for mor~
punch from their troika of catchers -Joe
Ferguson, Steve Yeager and Mike Scioscia. Rudy
Law should improve in center.
WITH SUTTON GONE, it will be up to Jerry
lle uss, Bob Welch and Burt Hooton to pick up the
slack. along with last year's sensational Sep·
tember rookie Fernando Valenzuela. With Rookie
ANALYSIS
of the Year Steve Howe and Bob Castillo on hand,
the bullpen will be loaded if Forster and Stanhouse
return to their old form
The Cincinnati Reds finished 31~ games out
last year despite the assorted ailments of slugging
left fielder George Foster. pitching ace Tom
Seaver, shortstop Dave Con('epcion and pitcher
Paul Moskau, plus Johnny Bench's reduced work
behind the plate. Bench--has said he will now catch
only two games a week \
Bench would like to unseat first baseman Don
Driessen, third baseman Ray Knight, Foster or
Dave Collins. w~o moves from center to right with
Ken Griffey going the other way. Second baseman
Ron Oester, a coming star, rounds out the every·
day lineup.
Seaver, Frank Pastore and Mario Soto give
Manager John McNamara a solid threesome on
the mound, and Tom Hume is a top-notch reliever.
BOBBY 'COX GAVE UP a job as third base
coach for George Steinbrenner in New York to
become manager for the equally unpredictable
Ted Turner in Atlanta. Turner spent a fortune on
free agent outfielder Claudell Washington. then re-
fused to yield to Gary Matthews' salary demands
and shipped him to Philadelphia. opening an out·
field job for rookie Terry Harper.
Center fielder Dale Murphy, third baseman
Bob Horner, first baseman Chris Chambliss and
Washington will break down a few fences and
second baseman Glenn Hubbard and shortstop
Rat:ael Ramirez are an up-and-coming keystone
combination.
San Francisco and San Diego feature new
managers. Frank Robinson takes over the Giants
while huge Frank Howard will try to whip the
Padres into line.
JOE MORGAN, Robinson's old teammate, bas
hooked on with the Giants, along with third
baseman Enos Cabell , outfielder Jerry Martin and
pitcher Doyle Alexander. Starters Vida Blue and
Ed Whitson, plus a strong bullpen, will provid~
good pitching but the only Giant who really scares
anyone at bat is right fielder J ack Clark.
~ GROUP
g.~IF,
LESSONS
f
Oelt• P'I ........... ~ P'elrtdl O'~M
THIS IS WHAT IT MUST LOOK LIKE TO OPPONENTS OF ORANGE COAST COLLEGE'S HIGHLY RANKED VOLLEYBALL TEAM THIS SEASON.
OCC'S KEV1N BAZYOUROS (LEFT), DAN VREBALOVICH, SCOTT FRIEOERIC~SEN (RIGHT} SHOW HO~ IT'S DONE.
.But they wouldn't ehange it -For baseball wives, it's not all glamour
LAKELAND, Fla. (AP> -lt's
not all glamor or the easy life,
being married to a major
leaguer.
The baseball wife lives out or
a suitease or endures the fre·
quent separations during road·
trips. She takes care of the kids
by herself for much of the year.
And just as much as her
husband does. she worries about
the sudden change or address
that comes with a trade or a trip
to the minors.
BUT MANY WIVES find ideo·
titles of their own. Furthermore.
many of them say, the advan·
tages of marriage lo a blg
leaguer far outweigh the disad·
vantages.
The toughtest part is living
with the uncertainty, never real·
ly knowing where you'll be,
sometimes from one month to
'the next.
hazards of being a baseball
wife?
"Well, sitting on your duff."
said Mrs. Summers, a native of
Westerly, R.I .. who deli ghts in
calling he rself Miss Poison
Mouth.
"RAISING CHiLDREN by
yourseU," said Mrs. Wilcox.
who grew up in Oklahoma City.
"The guys are gone. They play
baseball for six months durine
the season and they're gone half
of it. So. you've got the kids all
the time."
And the women are well
aware that there are plenty of
ballpark groupies who would
love to keep their husbands'
beds warm when they are out of
town.
"You can either live with It or
you can get a divorce and get
out of it," Mrs. Wilcox said.
Arlyne Parrish, 26, wife of the
Detroit c atcber, had another
answer.
"l jUst say, 'It doesn't get any
better than this.' He's got the
best at home," said the native Of
Whittier, who now resides in
Irvine during the off season.
"I've been on four different
ball clubs." said Barbara Sum-mers, 34, wife of Detroit ncers'
outfielder, Champ. "I mfabt
read in tomorrow's papen where
Champ'• going to the Atlanta
Braves. Now, I have to leave
10me really aood friend• that I'll 'Dever see a1ain and I've 1ot to co MRS. PAllRISH noUced that
Into a totally different area. I Lance's road trips became-more
bave to find out wbere to abop all of a strain on ber alter they bad
over a1ain, what to do and It's thelr first child two years ago.
tou1b.'' But she also sea one very dll· tinct advantage to the road
· WANDA WJ.LC()X, 30, the wife tripa.
of Detroit n,bt·bander Milt, bu "He comes and 1Je>es, so we
been m four major lea1ue dUes never ban time to fipt," she
-three ol them with Mn. Sum· 1ald. "We're uct.S to see eaA!h
men. They've lteceme ek>H other aa_ain and It's lfe•tl"
change every C'ouplc of wt'eks
and gt'l into doing our own
things for a "htll' and that's a
great feclsnl(' ·
NOT St'RPRISINGl.Y. many
wives of profe~sional athletes
are as concPrncd about physical
cond1t1oning as their husbands.
Each morning this spring.
about 20 wives in the Tigers
camp could be seen rollerskat·
ing the two miles from the team
motel along the shore of Lake
frtendt. _ Quite frankly, mGlt of the
"I thlak,a.U of &he .omen wbo women don't mJDd to Me tbetr
are la ......,... laa.e to be a Httle busbuda 10 off on tbe 1blrt •
bit of a ppay," Mn. WlJcox trips ol three to five 4-11. IC•
Hid recently wtaUe 1be and the lont two-week trlp1 tbat ~
Hvenl otber Tl1er1• wlve1 • toll. watcb4'd their llusband• in "When Chaqip•e boaaet I bM •P'1nf.......,drllll. to 10 beck to ea~ fa\,_.,,,
11 n : llammen and · Jira. 11~1 . Summers ~ '"!tt WUicia MM .... t1Mt Aa-1 ot be I on the ....S,J~~ p
Wal , ....... ...._ to I miDor to eatmc YoPft. lomi to leqae d•ti -baell &o llDaU .. rly, w.atdWla 811 .., ,~ pro-
...,.. _. •• ,~ ,.,--. 1r~m1 and tb~n11 u:rae ttiat:
.. , l'U t ~ TIMll, wlMll ._ 1 .,.., loolr .,~,,'fl'!•-~ea 11 .. 1 ;e to a ebaa1• of at· •
··-· ••• 'ft'aKVll • • ... • • aa't ._.,....~ ,..... II I& •• • u.,.,. tn where
-.a7 mon. •• we bne • 1tead1 Ctiet Of our
· Wb8t .,.. aome o1 UM otber hubaiidl. We 1et a ch.ance to
Parker to Merchant Stadium.
Tht•r<'. lhl'v drapt•cl their skates
ov('1 a ratl. \\,tlrhed the workout
or the• pxh1h1t1on game. then
skat<'d !Jack
Crvstal Whitaker. the wife of
the T1gt>r'i' second baseman did
double dut~ rollerskating while
pushing their infant daughter.
Asta, in a stroller
Carolyn C'ra1g. 49. the wife of
pitching coach Roger Craig, has
no trouble keeping up with lhe
<See BASEBALL. Page C3)
At top of class
OCC volleyball
boasts quality
By CU RT SE EDEN
04 llw D•ilf Pli.t Staff
It's a good thing Or ange Coast
College is hosting the state com-
muni ty coll ege volleyball
tournament early next month.
The Pirates won't have to spend
much money on gas.
Coach Bob Wetzel ·s squad.
like a well-oiled machine. just
keeps mowing down one oppo-
nent after another and is cur·
rently ranked among the top
teams in the state.
And because of the coll ege's
close proximHy to the beach,
Wetzel can be assured of future
s uccess without having to look
too far for quality players.
"The volleyball player is in a
good class of athletes,'' Wetzel
says. "Our philosophy is to work
with not only class atheltes but
class persons as well. ..
THIS VEAR, his Pirate boast
a 4-1 conference record going in·
to the final four regular season
games. And the team's success
. hasn't hinged on any one player.
or . for that matter . any one
group of starters.
"W e -have 12 players on this
l<•am. and right now , any one of
them can start," Wetzel says
"'ith confidence. "We ·ve trained
very hard to be in that position.··
Those players. a mixed bag of
former beach players and high
school stars from the Orange
Coast area, not only work as a
team , but their off-the-court re·
lationships play a key role in the
team's success.
"I'm a born-again Christian
and we have four or five Chris·
BOB WETZEL
.tians on the team. I think that'•
important. We 're very mucb
concerned with the spiritual and
e m otional development of a
pl ayer," Wetzel explains.
"WE WORK HARD on being
close and try not to worry about
egos and internal strife. I feel
the more time we s pend
together, the quicker we're go-
ing to grow as a team," the
veteran coach says.
Wetzel's philosophy isn't •
newl y acquired idea to attaia
success. He's u sed it wit•
positive results for some tim'
now .
A former pro baseball playeri.
Wetzel was also the assistant
and then head coach of the ~
basketball team. John ValleM
wh o went on to gain fame at
UCLA, played under Wetzel ~· After leaving coaching for
few years, Wetzel returned
· the court, but thJs time tutortn
a volleyball team. He says h
liked the class of a volleyb
player and has worked to make
his players more of a "total
athlete.
"We spend a lot of time with
each player, conseting them ~
th_Jtit classes -education la the
primary thing."
WETZEL SAYS one of the
most intelligent things a
volleyball player can do ls plaf
at least one year on the co~·
munity coUe1te level. .
"There's always the blue chip.
pers who can aet a suaranteed
scholarship, but most 1.bould
play on this level. One lhlnl I
recommend is that a player aeta
,our,ean of aood education.
"I a player can't 1et that
1uarap\ee, t recommend tbeJ
spend at lust a year on the eom-
munltJ colle•e level a.nd then
transfet".'' he conti.nUe1. •
What Wetlel ii 11)'in& la tb•
this year be baJ 10me vety in·
telH1eot playen wbo are IMrn·
lnl thttr trMe bodl • ... oil ,
tb• louft -...... to ..... t~aam•t beitb.
.A MONG TBS PlaAI'&
pl•J•l'I .. lkGtt • wtio 18 ltaruDI dll&*e "°.,wi.......,. , comlnc to OCC:""DIW
Santa Alla cou.,. tt z ts
<See PIUTU. Pa .. Cl>
MODISlfm
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HA 0 IM UY 0 U ff HM W0R U ESE Y
0 Y R H T P M A 0 l Y U C £ I 0 A t I
I I A t J 0 0 M C M £ D L 0 8 M E A E
QUC8TXUCM£RAXLKMRHM
U W R E J A V Q [ E , £ R 0 M " P T C
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
· ; • v l. l • • "', 1• 1. ' , 1, r f) I
" ,, ~1 n.w,,,,,.i
REALTORS
675-5511
CHARMING COM DUPLEX. Walk to
beachea, achoota and ahop8 from thla
Immaculate duplex. 3 Bdr with F.P. end
2 Bdr rentel unit.
COLE OF NEWPORT RIAL.TORS
2515 E. Coast Hwy., CoroM .. Mor
675-5511
New exclusive!
EXPANSIVE UNOBSTRIETED VU
A gr-.dios. f'ffldnc• of llt•o.11aau
wfth CloM-4ip VU1 from MOit r'OOMI.
Oipty, charoctw ond......,.. refltded
from spacious ..try to ........ ll•Mc)
l'OOftt. fOl'lftd dift.mL, .......... falNty ""
a11d totalty •q•lpp•d lrltchH with
br•akfast area. ThrH comfortable
bedrooms ,,.... bfllfard l'OOflt fcan IM
con•erled to 2 mor. bedrOOM1J. Two
..... deck·pcrtfos, ,,..s MW prfvat. tpea.
3 car CJGrOCJ•· Ow11tr will carry finmtclnCJ. $975,000 fff.
CHARISMATIC--8N WATER
EDINt-.t COflhMpOI City J.sfory ...... Git
prlvat• Isle. Co,.,.er property witlt
prf•ot. boat sHp. StahMd ..... Mede•
tia., wood, CJIOH & .,._...., decor
fhroucJhout this 4 bM. + ~ ,.
hcltM; CJOWIMf lrftclNtt, lcrcp bakony &
~ SI ,200,000 f••· OwMt-wt• ossht
wftt. finarteiftcJ. Properly h frM & c,._.
s.bftt. $598,000.
BEACHFRONT OPPORTUtlTY!
OwMr has bouC)ht CMOthet & h ,.._,, to
move! lssunac•late and bea•tffully
l'llCIWolMCI 3 Md. home with ,.,_.
snalntafMd 3 bed. home wlfft s.-atw
IClllltdry nn, 2 car CJCFCIP• Room to
expclltd & CJO 211d story. A CJl"fff .... In
o quiet sectfOft of the OCEAHFROMT.
Owner wlll assist with flnHchUJ.
Property 11 fru & clear. Submit.
$598,000.
WATERFRONT HOMES. INC
Rf.Al ESTATF
'-• •, H. ,,,.,.1, f'''°"' ••,. \.1.,,, '"'',..,.."'
2436 W Coast Hwy
Newport Beach 631-1400
HFSIOfNflAL AfAl £S fArE SE.AVfCfS
CYPRUS SHOIES ESTATE
Next to San Clemente's Casa
Pacifica. Lush green park between
you & private sandy beach. Two
master suites plus 4 more BR's . 7
baths. Exercise room. Call for apt.
$2,275,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
'::!=.' S@\\~lA-~~~s· :::
~.,. QAY a. P'OUM-----•r.:'::',..,::-..:. ~
io.. io kotMfow ..... _.
,, 1' 1 ',: i EI I
I l LA IT
I I. I . r
••••••••••••••••••••••• PENN .POlNT BEAUTY
Comp rea.od. OuUtaod·
inc fin. lmmed occ. 1.Jt
pymntl Aua•8l. B)'
owner, 2113 Miramar,
NB. For appt dya
556-3900, eves Ill wk end "2·0346.~.
c.,....._..-.1011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DIVORCE
forces sale ol 2br, lba,
den home. Allum lSt.
Capistrano Palisades on
Portola. $117 ,000/0BO
496-4822
CoroH .. ._..,. I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jasmine Creek decorator
home, plan 1 on green·
belt'lr:nmac. ~.500
640-81'5
Good Duplex on best
street, pool. hi income.
Owner, $320,000. Prine.
only. 640-4999.
l\_:;_4 ti<'''''
.''I 'f . --/ -
HMICCll•
4br. 2ba +beamed cell·
ln1. fam rm, " dlnln1. Ins ulated, copper
plumblna. n-w root, cov-
ered paUO " 1aa bar·b-
que.1 l{eeal\aded .
,1J0,000$30K Dwn
Assum. exJ4Un1 lat at
5 v. '1o interest. OW C
balance amortized at
10'!. lnterest-nolballooo·
nopts.
PP ONLYMS-2319
MESA VERDE FOURPLEX
All units are 2 Br, 2 Ba.
Thia 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda
Isle. A private guarded Community in
the heart of NewPort Beach. Boat
sllpa for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or
Trade.
We are d evelopers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner Jim
Thompson.
l7141 IZl-1210 '2131598-1363
llOOI JSJ.J7 I 0
Spacloua two-atory on
tree lined atreet.
SIDRMllATH
Priced to eell. Only
good rents, no vacancy ----------------factor. Price $185,000.
$192,500
For appointment call
751-3191
C:::. '11 I I ( 1
-t-' PH( JP! Hl ll '1
Loaa is assumable.
A_.Mcc.lmd
631-1200
RVM~
R t:Al.TOR'i
________ ,Low Down. 3bdrm, lrg
fam rm, nicest on cul-de·
sac. $114,990. POIMTSTO
PEIFIC110H
Thia home truly de· lmmac. lbdrm w/encl serves "The Most Beautiful Home On The patio, many xtras,
CUSTOM HOMI ..wPOaT
Completely custom home, clean and
immaculate 2 private brick patios,
spacious living rm. 3 Br, 3 Ba,
gourmet kitchen and all the goodies.
Plush carpets, walking distance to the
Beach & Water. Don't miss this one
for $265,000.
J 9UAL PLACE
PROPERTIES
752·1920
View! Location. Ocean &
hills . Prime Hrbr Vu
area. $380,000. Bev Cov·
ington, Bkr 770·8887,
768-6663
Block" award. A func· $123,000. Both with xlnt
Uonal balance of beauty, financing. 963-7398,
comfort and conve · 779·0112.
nienc e . Co mplete HOM•Sh*•R ~ w I rem ode led k1 lche n __ F_O_U_RP_LEX----"'--'
-an Inspiration to any cook. SS6.2660. $128,900 AJJ units are 2 Bdrm/2 Ba -good re nts . no The Sunniest Home m : vacancy factor. Price
JASMIHE CREEK S18s,ooo. Loan is as ·
2bdrm & den. cheeery s u m a b l e . A n n e
kitchen. plantation shut· .....:...--__;;;;==--• Mccasland. 631·1266
ters, pvt comm. with SHARP CONDO
pool, j ac & t e nnis 3 bdrm, 2 bath, pool.
$285,000. By Owner near So. Coast Plaza .
_1_sg.._1_1_76_. ------1 S 1 1 s , o 0 0 B r o k e r •
ly Owner/Loe Dpl• 644~134 --
Brand ne~: 2 bdrm w. fotlntaln V•y 10341
vaulted ceilings & frplc ; • ••••. ••••••••••••••••• remod. a bdrm. 4 car FH BUYING ?
SELLING ? prkg. sa12.ooo. Greg. VA/ A TERMS
833·2650 days; 551-4051 In the ever po pula r
eves. Wes tmont homes . 3 I( someone told you that
large Bd + Bonus rm. y o u w o u Id s a \' e 1---------c Below market prlce. thousands oC DOLLARS $200Kat 12'12% 1127,000. Call Anne when buying or selling FIHANCING McCasland631·1266 your property & still
COM CO'nAGE huve the total and qual1· l y ser vice or a pro-PLUS IHCOME ress1onal realtor. would
or 3 Br 2 ba home with you take the time to
is o I a t e d m a s t e r call .....
bdrm/parent retreat or
in·law quarten + 2 br --------
cottage. Any way you
describe it · it's charm·
ing, up to date and beautirully decorated.
Priced at $280,000 with
very special financing.
CAU Foa DETAILS
644-7%1 I
ST AIMED GLASS
CHATEAU
Sensational 3 Br 2'-11 Ba
condo. New carpet ,
ceramic tile & loa~ of
stained glass. Sll2.000.
Call Aline Mccasland.
631-1266
RVM~
ftt:Al.TORS
Steps to CdM Beach. Lov· V ""(FH"" TERMS ely 3Br home on "" "" beautiful street. Prine. in t e ever popular
only. Brkr: 962-2900 or Westmont homes. 3 lrg
675-0704. Bd + Bonus t'Ql. Below --------i market pnce. SlZ7,000.
Costa Mesa I 02 Call Anne Mcc as land •••••••••••••••••••••• 631-1266
1042 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Goldetl West htatff
Beautiful S&S txec. 4
bdrm home. Elegant wet
bar, bll·in bbq inside &
many other amenities
incl. a huge yard that 1
backs to a bea utiful
park. Just 2 yrs old !
Broke r. 963-8182
•••••••••••••••••••••• RVMtt< 6 PLEX/lASTSIDE * •$15MI RED. to $325,000 •
With $152,000 in assuma-Try $15,000 down and as· RFAl.TllRS
ble loans ranginf from sume lb.ls brand new 2 9~ % t 11 % 27 450 Bdrm attached home in
• . 0 · •11 ST A I H ED GLASS super Woodbn'dge. Ask-gross mcome annua y. . Well kept single story CHATIAU . 1og . only $117,500 and
units with 4 garages Sensational 3 Br. 2~ Ba · available right now.
PLUS off-street parking. cood~, !"ew carpe t , On 60'x900' lol. ceramic Ule and loads of
644-7211 stained glass. s112.ooo
/Jh NIG(l
(}AIL[Y &
1,SSOCIAHS
A .... McCcnlmtd
631-12'-6
\\OOdbrldCJe
Reahg
551·3t00 I
•no Barnnu Pkwy, lrvlnr
"LINDA ISLE"
Open fiowe
Saturday and Salllay
APRIL 4th Alll 5th
FOR SALE -MAKE OFFER
Po ssi bl e L e a s e Option .
OWNER-BROKER on Premises! Boat
Slip for 65 · Yacht. 5 Bdrm, security
Gate, + Community Tennis Courts
and Clubhouse.
CALL
17141828· 1280 or 1213)598-1363
IY APPOINTM&IT OHL Y
9AM·5PM
n MACNAB-IRVINE REALTY u ·-... --~
EXCLUSIVE llG CAMYON LOcATIOM!
Popula r Plan I by Broad.moor. Highly
customized. SBRS, large formal living
rm and dining rm. family rm w/wet
bar. private master suite w /study and
fireplace. Spacious patio areas w /pool
and spa. $975,000. Lynne Valentine
644-6200. (0 ·69 )
SPECTACULAR VIEW! 3 spacious BRS
and 5 baths comprise this dramatic
floorpl a n in Irvine Terra c e .
Marvelous new kitchen, planked
floors, high ceilings and waJls of glass.
$690,000 leasehold. Cathy Schweickert
642·8235. <D· 70 >
lfewport Beach
901 Dover Drive Harbor V1fJW Cent.er
642 8235 644-6200
ASSUME RN. t"ilte I 044 LacpMa leach I 048
Rancho San Joaquin ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE Of'TlOH
RVMt«
HF \I Ti>lh
Villa. 2 br, 2 ba. sgl sty. 1 LEASES THE SHAJCES 19Gf ltdlation blk tennis & golf clubs. Ranch Realty, the leas· We al h e r e d c e d a r
Luxurious, custom con·•--...iillll __ _
do. 1700 sq. ft. 2 frplcs, 3
bdrm, 2'h baths. S800
mo. $165,000. 642-4623. Clean & sharp Tri·Plex $158,000. Open Daily ing leader has ma ny shakes. that is. Custom
In best H.B. location. 12·5. 2 Segura. 552·1717 leases to choose from. designed 3 bdrm, fam
EASTSIOE Seller Is \villing to carry Owner/broker. Coop. $495 to $1100 per month. rm. 2 baths. Ex.t.enslve
3Bdrm 75xlSO Jot, $9500 paper & use a graduated Call now. use of wood glass &
d $933 · $125 ooo pay ment plan with a ceramic tile. Beam ceil-own, mo. · · B d T h · r 1 Sl""'OOO Drive by 201 Monte Vis· minimum down pay. roa moor own ome. mg, rp c. ...,, .
ta,631·5476 · ment.CaJlnowformore He r itage Park. 3Br, MiasionRealty _;..._ ______ , info. 2Ba. 1-story end unit (714)494-0731.
IUILDa Ha.PS w flrg. patio. Many up. SH ... Bir. n E 21dnn $87,500 grades. Assumable loan ~ M YOUIUY Great starter or rental UMDHMUICET VACATJON CONDOS HIW COMDOS h o m e . Q u l e t at 9.25%. Pvt. party. College Park Syracuse Summer or winter times
XLNTTaMS ne'ghborhood. SOX130' _s_i29_.500_._559-_9077_. __ -1 Plan featuree 3 Bdrm + avail. Great wtits from
1 JCYo W.est R• R! lot has plenty of room CCNtdo Speckllhh den, 2 Ba, large family $12,500.
for kid.a to play. Seller Call the experts at the kitchen. Aaklng lOOO's L....-Vllap R.I.
Por 1,... has agreed to carry a condo information u.nder markets. Call for 497-1761 OML Y 3 ~ 2nd and you can assume center. detaU.. --------
Lfe pvtdeeks frpaUoe. the loan with monthly ToucbstoneRealty Mew,.,ta..dt 1069
For4Sdayselerow payments or $865/mo. -._, •••••••••••••••••••••••
Bldr provides drapes. Bett.erHurey.C.UNowl 5 Br. Ba. Harbor vlew
2000 MEYER PLACE ~ 60 llUICSl' T_. Rock Ga.. Hom e . $3 49 , 5 o o. OPENDAJLYl0.5 LOEllWL lmm·aculate Jasmine Owner /Agt. Comm .
__ &t_l·_l9'_1. ___ a1_e_n_t __ 1 1,EA• 'TORS model, 2 Bed + ~n. ORANGETREECONDO pool.673-7161 --------i · T t; '-OWnen ready to move. MISA YllDI ':fl;t ASSOCIATES Mah Offer! $23,5,000. Plan 5. 2Bdrm lBa . ntlK.UffS
.. ~-~ 141 llll Darrell PaabGl-1• Pr Inc IP a 11 on 1 y . 311--¥.e.....I ~ I f10a,5oo. After Tpm Finest origin.al area.
Exlst1n1 low Interest Iii~ W ·TW. lfanlve ~t villa. flnaoclnc. Pride of 2 STY' •-.=H~I ...,.... Smartly decorated in ownership. LarH 3 _.._ • MHD 4LAR6B l ~· .. Bdrm + famUy room 4 Brl 2~ ba, a car 1ar. r HOMI popu ar ~a, nearu1
ownera unit and three 2 New Y cJK"!ted " carpet. H.... ThJI could be the answer r=:t. ~uma:e S2.J2~
Bdrm 2 b9&,b uita. All ed. Sl usumable ln. 48r bomt w/spe xbit for your ~I family loan-try $U.000 down). ~'!!_lude built!-'!.~..: .. "~~l..!,Ulr...:.~Fast C?Oad.tlll.000.111:..0.' need•. bdrm, plus Att,l404580 • ... _tacee aDd ent~ ~·v-· -_._.. bollu1 or 5 bdrmt. and .......;:;...... _____ _
•ara1es. Excellelrt t'OD• Newl)' ,..ioodJed t.o.ue famUy room °tfilh wet
dltloe. J'or more ln· 11, bela. Wllbr, a., d.,; * STAITEI! bar. a bathl and triple
ronnaUon, call St0-11.51 • rr,lc. Totally up· Your owa 1 br C!CJftdo tn carac•.
1raded. lar1e aa1um. 1orfeou1 Nortbwood • ~ &oaa . owe 2nd. 411 area of lnotne. Cif,..•t · HERITACE
Ht (•l 11 'I<'. . --------..., . .,.1, .... llM'790. emotional •Pc! 6' .....,. qwner 1rill help ~ • • ..,. OI C11J for~
:..~~~,1~ eldldAtr -IDO, IJOl .....
Alabam1 •nl. Nortl9 ol ....
Achlms. lmlnedUaM OC· SSI• ... ~c1. Broker, rreea ""·'"llli
IACICIAY
Jbr, 2ba home plus ldffl
motbfr-in--la• ~· Compl. w JalUb. ,000. .. , .. ~ ....
141-172'
•
s
•
" ... .,t(f here'• another bYHetln on the furry
monat.,. who hew Invaded auburbta. '"
$1.2,800 au:arded
in death of 2
BALTIMORE (AP) -The Maryland Criminal
Injuries Compensation Board bu awarded $12,800
to a newspaper editor whose wife and unborn son
were killed by a woman target-shooting with a
pistol.
Board Chairman Joseph M. Pickens said that
Thomas M. Townsend sought $58,000 from the
board,' which gives crime vicUms cash awards ac-
cording to damages they suffer.
Townsend, editor of the Carroll County Times,
has filed a $6.8 million civil suit against Barbara
Jean Langley and three companions who were
target-shooting with her Nov. 24, 1979. Marion
Townaend, who was eight months pregnant, was
shot to death while she was riding in a car driven
by her husband.
Ms. Langley, convicted of manslaughter in the
Townsend case, is serving two concurrent 17-year
prison terms.
Boat demolished
HONG KONG <AP> -Seven members of i fish.'
ing family from Macao were killed when their
shrimp trawler struck a World War II-vintage float·
ing mine and exploded off the Portuguese colony. ac -
cording to reports reaching here.
DEATH NOTICES
FRITZ
WALTER LEO FRITZ. re·
sident or Costa Mesa. Ca. for
23 years Passed away on
Apri I 3. 1981 lie was a
veteran of World War I 1n
the U S. Army, he was a
me mber of the Carpenters
Local #1453 of Huntington
Be ach. Ca He was a
member of the Newport
Harbor' Senior CiUzens. also
a member or the VFW Post
of Costa Mesa. Ca He is sur-
v1 ved by J daughters. Bever
ly Delles of Huntington
B each . Ca . Mildred
Strausbaugh also of flunt
1ngton Beach. Ca a nd
Audrey McConnell or Ohio
and a son Cyril F'r1tz of
F ountain Valley. Ca . 12
grandchildren and 6 Rreal
grandch1ldren Services are
schedulded for Tuesday.
April 7. 1981 al ll ·OOAM at
the Harbor Lawn Me morial
Chapel with Rev Bruce Kur·
New York, Robert Mooney
of Reno. Nevada. 2 sisters
Anna Coyle of Lexington.
Kentucky, Eleanor Tantillo
of Paltz. New York. Recita-
tion of the Rosary will be
held on Monday. April 6,
1981 at 7·:.JPM at the Sl.
John the Baptist Catholic
Church Services will be
held on Tuesday, April 7,
1981 at lO ·OOAM at the
Church Interment will be at
Good Shepherd Cem etery.
Huntington Beach, Ca . Vis·
1talion w\11 be on Monday .
April 6, 1981 from 12:00 noon
lo 4 OOPM. fn lieu of flowers
the family prefers donations
be sent to St. Joseph's
Hospital for the helping of
lhe Hearl Associ a lion
Pastoral services Pierce
Brothers Be ll Broadway
Mortuary directors. 642-9150
PUBLIC NOTICE
rle of the Pres byterian "cT1T1ousauS1NHs
Church of the Covenant of· NAME STATEMIENT
flciatin..:. Services under the ... ~=~s~ollowlno person '' clo"'9 1>usl·
direction or Harbor Lawn· AMaURGEY"S EL.ECTRIC, t4S Mount Olive Mortuary of Coronedo Or to . Coste Moe.
C l M "•O """• Celllornl•t26lllo. os a esa . .,. . .....,.. · On•lll• ""*'rveY. t45 CorOftedO Or Ive, Colt. MH.11. Celllornle t»2'.
MOONEY Tiiis 11u11 ... u IS conductltd by.,."" dlvlcluel. EDWARD C MOONEY, o.v111eAml>u<'gey
resident of Costa Mesa. Ca T111s st . .._, •n llled wit!> tlle Passed away on April 2 County Clerlt. of Oren~ county on ' April J. 1191. 1981 He was born tn New Ftttue
York February 13. 1917 He Pub11.-Oranv-co .. t Oallr Piiot,
is retired from the Postal Aprn 1. 14, 21.11. "" 1nw1
Services where he worked
for 22 years He 1s survived PUBLIC NOTICE
by his wife Anna Mooney· 2 ,.1CT1T1ous au11t1au
sons Edward C Mooney. Jr NAME nATllMEMT from Seattle. Washington. T11e 1o11ow1119 .,...son is c1o1n11 11o111.
Sgt Robert ~· Mooneyh of u ::r AMI H o, •OO..., Jumln•.
Rantoul, llllno1s. 3 brot ers CO<'on• •i -. c.111orn•••»ts. Lieutenant Col J ohn P Ed•ard A. o.i1rou. 400...,
Mooney of Stockton. Ca. and J•sml,.., eor ..... 0.1 IMr, c.i111orn1•
EuRene Mooney of Yonkers. ~2~is llUSllWH Is condu<led by •
McCOllMICX MOITU.UllS
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HA.llOa l.AW~MT. O\IVI
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
540-5554
,..c••on.s
~MOADWAY
MC>ln'UMY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
842-9150
Mlft .... Otf
IMITN I ""*" ~CHA ..
421 E 11th St
CostaMeu 8*9371
llmltecl pe,.,,..,.Sl>i!>. Edwerd A. Oulroea Tl\I• su.i.n-t WH 111.i with the counly Clerk of Orenge Collnty on
Aprll J, 1•1. .. ,,,,..
PullllMWll OrW>Ot Coest Oelly Pilot.
""'" 1. 1•. 21, 21. "" a»-tt
PUBUC NOTICE
fltCTITIOIJS aUSINCSS
NAME S'tA1'•M«NT
TM foUOWlflll per_, 11 clolft9 l>utl·
... uas:
AOYERTISING ~ MARKEt1HG
NETWORK, JH• Pullm•n SlrHI, CHI• Ma.a. C.llfornt• t»2' Edward Gordon Kelly, 2111 Oc:a..,••Y. LAewna a..<11, C.llfornt•
tu61
Thlt N!Mss I• c...OUC•el Ill' en In·
c11v1w.1. E. Gor-Keu, ™' llM..,_t ..... llled """" !tie Covllty Offlt of Or.,._ Covnty on
~rc"U,t"I. fl\J1"7
PvlMIJMd Orange GMft Dally Piiot,
~·· 11. tA. ''· ~-1.1•1 1m~1 1 P\JBLIC NOTJCE
.. ICTl'nOUI llVlt• ..
...... STATbMMT T-. .......... ..,_,, ....... _. .. ,
lhlTM't 11t•IOL.a-A1t1'. HI Av•t •ll• ltrtat, Catt• llllaae, Ceflfwftia .,, •
flllttl..,. O!Mll'f'I, -...... MtMt,c..u-...c......,,....,. Tllls..._l•~_,alllft• ... ~.
IMll M. Oloftll Tiiis ........,.. -,..., Wltll .._
C.-.•1 ~ .. °" .... c..ly • .......... Pl-,......... Clf .. C.-0Mty ~
_. '· tf,t1 ... "" MIM1
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COSTAMISA
111-SIZl,IOO
I OW ... SAYS S&L
Not ~ add~ or con-
ven&on. A real 5 Bclrm
1 family bome in one of
I Eau.a• ..-.-•NG Cotta M11a'1 nJceat .,_ """-are••· ffaod1mana de-' OPPORTUNITY • Ucht. Call now and eave!
~-,. .. @ ,.... ....... Notice: • -t"
All real estate ad-~
v•rtl1ed In this
newapaper ta subject to SEA COVE
the Federal Fair Houa-ROPERTIES inl Act d 1988 which p
makes it illeaal to ad-714-631·6990
vertiae "any preference, ----------1
llm ltaUon-. or dis-CAMIOHIGHLAHDS
crlmlnatlon based on · OCIAM VllW
race, color, reH1ion, OHLY l°"'oDOWH
""· or national origin, Now redl!Ced thousands! or an intention to m~e any such prefe rence, Spacious livin1 room,
limitation, or dis-features 1lowln1
crtminaUon." fireplace, 3 larae bdrms
TIU& new&paper will not
knowln1ly accept any
advertl1ln1 for real
estate which la In viola-tion of the law.
111015: Act ... rtlMn
thotllct cllHk ....... odt
dally ... ,.,.. .,..
ron lwdlately. The
DAILY PILOT as.._.s
labllty far .... first
Incorrect l1t1.rtlo1t
Oftly.
HouetfarS. I
·······················' 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MO DOWN
PAYMENT
Pay closing costs only !
Buy your own home!
Must qualify for mon·
thly payments. Exciting
new concept. Call today
tor full details. 673-8550
'THE REAL
ESTATERS
+ den. Great. assumable
lal and owner wUI help
finance. Call 673-8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
WESTCUFF
VACANT
Redu ced $25,000 .
Desperate Qwner says
bring all offers. No
qualifying. Low down. 4
Bdrm single story home,
totally upgraded. Call
for more details.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-63 I -6990
C AME 0
SHORES
Lowest Priced
Fee
Large assum able lsl
TD. Walls of glass lead
to wood deck. Beautiful
views from master
suite, living and family
rooms! Plus, lovely
private beach. For full
details, call 673-~
IMl'llX a bdrm, a Nth tach Uftlt.
Flreplace, b\!Ut-lnl. Ex-
c.llent rental ana. Near
btacb ll bay. t285,000.
142,2251 eves.
associated
11 ,, , r J.. d • " • 1.J ,
• • ,, I ' I '
' FIXERl . 1.~ s 10,500
Total cash needed to
CUSSIC MIDITHUHIAM IA YFllONT
An offering w /exceptional quality and
exceptional financing. 5600 S<t: ft. of
fine crafts manship. featuring : 4
bedrooms, 5 b aths, den, dock to
accommodate 60' yacht. Located on
114 feet of prime bayfrontage. Owner
will carry up lo l,?.50,000 at 81h% for
g ualified buyer. Exceptional at
$1,750,000 F ee. Debra Bibb agt.
cloae escrow oo this 4 111U<t1rAnncnu.:1s.wu-
Bdrm, den, 3 bath, faml· SH
ly room, fireplace, patio. DOYB OllES
hu1e yard. "A Han-Attractive four Sedroom
dyman'a Special". Only home. WeU maintained.
$175,000. Call us today .both inside and out. AU
for an a ppointment for rooms are .11pacious, in·
details on t.hls revolu· cludinl ~ ud fami-
tionary new program ly roo~
c alled T.J.C.K .E .T . Uppe_r~
M6·2313 $2.tt,SOO. U~l()U~ ti()M~'
THE REAL
ESTATERS
OCIANNOHT
631·7300 H.I.
COlldo Specialist~
Call the experts at the
condo information
center.
Touchstone Realty
963-M67
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Ea•t CoHt Highway, Corona d•I Mar
WE HAVE 4 3 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unfum. --------
w ATStFROHT I W oodbridge prime
lake f ron t location
Views forever. 3 Br,
2i..,ba, pvt s pa, flex
finan. Spectacular! Of
tered at $3S4,900. Call
552-1800 & ask for 1.ynn
Noah Town & Country
Rltrs
Oce• 11/J llocb
SlO ,000 ! Price reduc·
tlon ! Now Sl69,500!
Includes land + warm &
cozy 2 bdrm dollhouse .
fireplace -2 car garage
+ room for boat or RV
QU ICK F.SCROW OK!
New. S850yrly.
IAYFllOHT
3 Bdrm. 1 ba. unfum.
Mint cond. $850 yrly
CHAMMB. RtOHT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum.
$150 yrly.
associated
BROl<fRS AEAL TORS
l O]', ~ Balbn' t.' 1 'bti I
MESA VERDE
FIXER
Superb bargain! Cov-
ered entry way leads to
a 5 Bdrm, 3bathtri·level
home with faml.ly room.
2 fire places. formal din·
ing, 2600 sq.fl. of living
area that needs rixing.
Call now for more de·
tails. 546-2313
2 UNITS
$110,000
Costa Mesa pride of
owner s hip bargain !
C lean refurbis hed !
Live in one-rent one!
Call for details. 640-7171
I THE REAL
ESTATERS
VIEW!
lalboa hy Prop.
Realtot-s
•67~7060•
VIEW!VIEW!
f r o m the &and to
c atahna. Giant ~sq ft INCOME UNITS IN
2 story, 4 bdrm. 3 ba N E W P 0 R T
home S~.000 down As
sume 1215,000 loan BEACH ASSUME$110,742 Owner will carry These umts are jus t
in loans at$L347/mo Ex balance varant m ove steps from the beach
quisite c ustomized intodayCall5369311 and eac h has 2
Country French home bedrooms, 2 baths, and
3bdrm. 2'"1ba SL59.200. 'AL S garage space. Localed Beth Duncombe . agl. L TA TE on a double lot, this pro-
957·6507, 963-9101. -petty can be divided for
REALTORS sale or development. On-
MO APRIL -ly $270,000.
FOOUM' 1-------1 D.M. Marshal Rltr
Priced below market. Top of Spyc)kns 644-9990
Owner anxious to move. Gorgeous custom estate.
Best ~uy in entire area! ocean & harbor vie ws,
Submit all offers be ultimate design and de·
creative! 545-9491 corating. 4 Bdrm , 3•".I
UNIVERSITY
PARIC VILLAGE
Spacious 3 Bdrm +
bonU5 on the greenbelt.,
h ig hly upgraded
w/s kylighls, filtered
ce n tral air
refri11erator , washer &
dryer i n clu d e d .
$165,000.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THE REAL
ESTATERS _____ ,~Walker Blas Ba. formal dining.
Sl ,495,000 Owner will
carry Sl,100.000. ~ 7M-1111
$3
c aft qrt you
$100
oll it takH is o
PENNY
PINCHER
·Ao
J l1nt•s for 2 d<1vi;
Oil I y S 1.50. a d a'y
Advertise one o r
mon• 11ems valued
up to $100 Ea<'h
add1t1on11I line 1s
onl y 66t for the two
days. Sorry n o
r ommerc1al ads
allowed Charg e
your Penn~· Pincher
Ad or u se )our
BankAmencard Visa
or Master Charge
Cell todlly .ct '" yo11r •d tR prlRt
tCNROfTOW!
VllW o ...... ~
3 Bdrm Cliff Haven
beauty. Owner will con·
sider all reuooable of-
fers. 2 SPAS. one indoor,
o ne outdoor , 2
fireplaces, uaed bric.It
entertainen pool area.
Cabana, fire ring, view
Saddleback Mount.ains,
Fashion Island, lights.
Newly remodeled, new
kitchen. Call today for
appointment.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
REAL ESTATE
COMMBCIA.L
Pl Of an JACOBS REALTY IT'S A MO-MO! NO painting! NO clean· ___ 760.9~33
ILUFFS IEAUTY
Only $225,000 buys
beautiful 4 bdrm end un-
1l. Picture perfect & re-
ady to move ln Newly
listed.
759-1616
Tired of selling houses 7
days a week? We need
one Ucensee to learn the
skills lo manage &
broker commercial real
estat e . Income from
mgmt while you learn.
Super benefits: life in·
surance : health in ·
surance & dental plan.
Contact Ken, 675-6700.
ing! NO remodeling! Lv·
ly 3 bdrm, 2 ba con<'".
Prime So. Coast Plaza
area. Great tenns-rate·
payments! 545-9491.
laycrest IHuty
Homer IJke this are not a
thtng or the past This
beautiful model home.
with its 3 Bdrms, large~~~~~~~~~~
family & IJving rooms. 1s 1i---------• located o n one of
W estcliff's largest lots
for maximum priva cy
EASTSIDE
4-PLEX
REAL ESTATE
W at.rfrollt 11\.-a..x Large assumable first, -.........-OWC balance. Call us for
W /PWl'r & Slip details . Proudly offered
Remodeled to new in '76 at $325,000.
from curb to new pier in· I lboo •-•-..1 Rlh. eluding custom tiled a ,_ "'
spa, stain glass & even _ 67_3-8700_ Fixer ! All 2 Bdr m , walk
l 11 h · F electric powered dr aw o a s oppmg. an· drapes. 3 car gar w/ad· Tra de your old stu.rf for
tast1c investment. Only diti9nal 3 car off street new _goodies w1\h a
HARBOR RIDGE
\'ou can reside in tbls
Harbor Ridge residence
for only $479,000. 3 Bdrm
Renaissance with lush
courtyard landscaping.
Assume loan and owner
will help carry.
RCTaylorCo
l,40 CJ<)OO
S22S.OOO. Call for more prk g . P erfect loca· 1jCilaisisi1fiied~a~di.i64i2i·567iji8iii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiilmiiiimlii 7 I 4-63 1-6 990 details. 546-23l3 tion-$650,000 11
w A8~~HT o '.f4-W!M -J_A_C~-~>6_R_,~_o _TY_
Giant 4 Bdrm pric~d
right! Spacious li ving -----....,----t
room features wood HORSE
burning fir e p lace.
Owner assisted (inane· PROPERTY
ing. Hum. call 673-3SSO
THEREAL
ESTATERS
Located in Santa Ana
Heights. 4 Bdrm 2 bath,
10 stalls. room for riding
ring. Excellent rinanc·
ing. $20,000 down. Owner
will carry. Call 752·1700
!THE REAL
1ESTATERS
SAHT A AHA HC.TS
This 3 Bdrm 2 Ba pool
home ls located on
Bayview St. &. offers a
view or the mountains, ---------
city lights and backbay .
Lar&e assumable loan &
the OWC a 2nd. Full
price $189,000. Ask for
~errySmitb
NEW CONDOS
XLNT TERMS
Edlnaer & Harbor
Ml-1991, agent
Call 642-5678
100/o
ASSUMAILE
A sharp 3 Bdrm, comer
lot in El Toro. New
carpets and paint. New
central air conditioning.
Large shaded yard Ask·
ing $98,850 VA and FHA
term!l available. For an
appointment to see, call
MO-ll.51
-: , ... HERITAGE
. REALTORS
SEE AND BRI~
$99,900
LOFT
CONDO
Fabolou.s 2 Bdrm 2 bath
condo wltb hu1e loll muter suite. 2 car at-
tached 1ara1e. Many • many exiru. cau to see
64f·2J1J
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
THI VllY FIMIST 1UY
IM THI HAllOI MIA
E!IE
110111 ILlllfS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
I LUFFS
HST FIMAHCl~G AVAii.AiLE
Assumable Loans At 7Y'"'k Fixed.
Owner Will Carry $100,000 Third,
14o/c ; for Five Years. Amortized
Over Thirty Years. Rare "Q" Plan
With Spacious Living/Dining Room
Area & Cozy Conversation Pit.
Ideal Location With Large Enclosed
Patio On Lush Greenbelt Near Pool
& Tennis Club. Perfect Home For
Entertaining . $229,500.
MIWPORT HEIGHTS FOUR.ft.IX
Located On Quiet Street Near
Shopping. Excellent Condition.
Good Rent Income . Minimum
Vacan cy Factor . Four
Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable
Loans . Inspect With Offer. Reduced
To $350,000.
(5) ·--........... 7~91111 1zc..,. ... ,._
"9wtMriC.....
l
I . I
-Daily Pilid
A.,y classlficatlon •• No cancellation Rebate.
Huu"..,.S. Hn•n,_S. ottterlttt..._ M .. " .. 1hh~ M .... U.twuhtud H1•etu.fwldd'll• C~ • .,.._.•hu.fww. .Af.....-.•t1u.fw1L · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .............................. •••••tt•••••••••••••, ••••••••••••••••••••••• u~ J425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• • ••••• •• •• •• • ••• • .... ,.,...-... 106f._ a...-. __ ,,0,.rty JOOOMew~IMdt }t6' .. , ... ._.._. .. JJ40 Mew__..._. JJH ., ..................... hlbooPe1••• 3107 Costaw... 3124 •••••••••-•••••••••••• C:-idt... 107 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••r.••••••••••••••••• •2Br. 2 Ba. l1tory, pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prh•Ci iay .... :f................. APNYALLIY LIDO ISLE charmint 3 Br, lBa condo. Pool, MIWPOITTIRI patlo, S.C.Plaia area. SJSO,utilpd,lBrdplx.417 SF.\ClOtJSADULT2BR
Spectacular 3br. 2ba. JM.;llr:Mlrtlle Near new •·Plu, 2 bdnn,2 bath,playroom. apa. sauna, tel)nle :t Br 2'4 Ba vu ChildOK.*'85.545-1082, Bay Ave, Balboa. No Opea. beam cellana$. lge
ameniUM (spa.etc). Biil w.....i. -....... vi-bdrm, 2 bath eacb unit Just remodefed. $1650 courts, security cate. $'700/mo. Kid• Ok, n~ &33-1853. peta,. 547·1W _ _ kit. serving bar, lots or
to be ... b ttt5 0001 t "" _ _.. s.,... .... th ri .............. en"•--mo to mo. Blli Grundy, $400. Aaent. ~. & _.. ..i .. ..___•~-'-•ate wood • .-1mo no Jlt!ts ..... . • I S.,,_ ;~uo, 'd:;';blf ,~-;;;_ 6'15-616\. 536-ot'JS: ,... .... JohnManhall lryllte Condo 3br, 2ba, •..-..----" ~ 2260 Map~e St. 548 73.'i6. Rlcb, 15f.4Q, 846·9530. 9tCM S Bl G1 d ' Ul·l.281S new drapes, a /c, lndry ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-8803 Ocewfu• to-YeDa ..,.. a\65·0f~11 run y, Vllla Balboa Condo. S8r,2Baonqu.letCul-de-rOJ, clae to pool. avail 38r,2Ba.blt.ns.frplc,ocn ---
Openlbe&at/Sunl·S. ~;!n!.O:ct~i!!·,:~ tr,I · Beaatvu.ocean &lltft. sac.ClOl8toBcb&Scbs. now kid• ok. Call view,~ rno 832·6520 Spac1oua2Brlba,4 1>\ex
2l8lOW.Oceanlroot b r ..... 000 Profdec.cocnpt tum. Z Encl. yrd, boat access, 751·7984anytlme dys.661-17:.)evs Laund rm P a l11> 1~~!1,•,_A~ .. -avA.ila'tJ. · Prt1Hltiwt1la11 eta Br, Zba, den, d/r, r/r. covered patio, frplc. Cpts/dr-A\•aal May 2 ,3Br,3Ba,comir.OWC ...... 1'7 .uwu,...... $lSOO I ....,, rdn NewportCrest4br.2"'1ba, COf"OUdelMcr 3822 ,... AITD. Leue option. CbarterRlty&lnvest. MEWPOITIUC:H per mo. se. _,/mo. Incl Ga er. 2300 aq . ft , ten ·••••••••••••••••••••••• ~35•645,·6612S
Owner/ ...... CIR Rllrs ~.......... .. .. 1-·· .a.•c-........__.~...._ 541·4156 983-8600,·835-3833ext322. DI lB I ~... . ...,....."'"' ..., -~ ,,_ .--nw ~--. VILLA BALBOA 2 Bdrm nis/pool/apa, '800/mo. 1 x ocean vu, r. new Y PINE BLUl''r AP'l'S
631·3199 or 675·8307 COIOMADaMAJt 2bdrm, l~ba.2stot)'COD· l \AI ba. Ocean view. yr. lse~ decorated . w/gar I Br with loft 2 Oa in
$475,000 Suto._ 1010 3TrtplexesinaRow CANNERY VLLG. 2 do. $525. Adult.I only. Ava1·1 on short term Adults $875/mo Ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• o 1 d F ....... 9990 fant OK. pallo. HC'". HARBOR VIEW HOME on OceansideolPCH bdrm 2 ba lfobile home. 556-7888 or 963·09 2 $850/mo. Ocean v ew con o on ~ l>'IV' _ _ frplr . encl gar . 1105
4br, Zba, Sea.land. good $10,!:5!,~'!'arket. BUYONEORALL fTSO/morum. Barbara. H .V. Homes cust.om 3 Bluffs, 2bdrm. 2"'1ba, 2 Spacious 1 Br w/garage. i.tov~. d1shwai.hcr. -.p.i,
financlng,67S.2139 3bdrm, 2ba, $85,000. I OAflEMIN ~b~R~:x•;;y~~,!Bpedr:. '"... 3244 Bdrm. 5 ba with pool. car gar. frplc. $750 laundry ra<'il $S75. Ask lndr) rm No }Jel!. 1'rom •u~ """"9 ALI • th d Sh t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prof. dee. Compl. ocean· 968·6596. --for Faye.,,./\ 9900 $525 C-4o Speclalhh ,,_ . ....., · Two duplexes and one ouse con o. or WOODBRIDGE 3 Br. 114 /bay view. $2500. H.B. Condo (Adults) 2br, """" ----Sl'MC 631 IHIJi
Call the experts at .the HB.P! FORECLOSURE triplex in a row. 1 lot term · UUJune. S800mo. Ba. Condo. $600/mo. LIDO ISLE 2 Qdrm. lo/f l~ba, frplc, $500 +utal. Steps to ocean in one of
condo lnlormataon $8 000 under market. fromaandaod surl. WaterfrontHomes,lnc. Wrk (7 U>833.6029 ba home. Yearly $1200 availlmmed.968-~n the most charmmg sec 2 BR. 11
2 ba twnhousr
cenTter. hs:--R It 2b'drm, lba. $75,000. BUYONEORALL Realtors 631·1'00 R a m a . H 0 me mo lions or old Corona del Air gar. fnr rl pat111
ouc ....... ~ea Y 644·5069. ldulfor partnerships (213)498-6090. 2 Bdrm 2 bath LUXURY On Waterlroot overlook· Mar 2 Br 2 B a Ad lti.. no l't'I' c43~
...,.,......,, orsyndications. Beautiful 2 Br. Condo condo.$850/mo. ing Balboa Isle. 2Br, fireplac e . co,·e r ed 645·4837
Beautiful 3br, 3ba home.
Great asswn fin. at 12%.
Open house Apnl 4lb &
5th. 2300 Heather Lane.
831·0517
GI BUYERS: It's is, t.o
qual ify for this 3
bedroom! Hardwood
floors. Earthtone colors.
Available as a VA sub·
s titution. $92,750,
TARBELL . BKR .
540·1720
...... 1r• ...-...... Home ln Big Canyon, Nice 4bdrm. 2~ba house. 2 Ba• r e frig/freezer. garage, ocean view from Easts1de I !Jr ii Pl & I hr "'""' -A -2 frplc , nr shopplng Waterfront Homes, Inc. m i c r 0 w a v e , the deck S750. mo. Call 1 Duplex with dock golf course view, pool & center. pool, Jae. tennis. d An h kd 642 "757 h:,(', newly decor. y;irr s.
,or""ftboat. fuUyf"m.Le"•eormon· Realtors 631·1400 washer / ryer, jac, tony w ys . .., . "ar Utils "'' !S!'I() $.1~tJ .,., " -$725. SSl~ arterlJPM. I te F · f •· kn ... ., .. 8889 " "' thly. Call Bill Wedmore a arm sys m. or in o eves"' w ....., .,..... mo c•9.0433 "•~1020 call 675 3226 btwn 4 7 -----..,.. NEWPORTHGHTS. ~ Northwood Racquet HorborVlew 2 Br. 1 Ba New crpl~. Quiet 1 Br 1 f\a N1•\\
l'rpl!> & d q h Cc11i.!
casti.1de lc1l \L1111r,.
Adults onl.' SJ:t.'> I \i l
18th St. i:4, (' M
DUPLEX Triplex with Pool Club, 4bdrm, 3ba. air, Gracious family home 21.. _.._.--A. "'--i-.. -d flooring & drp:., frplc. Ho.se• U......,shecl gardener. xlnt cond, s t 0 r y 4 bdrm . "'panm-.rw-n -patio. carport No pet:.
ON THE WATEI
Fount.a.in Valley
Fourplex and
many many more!!!
••••••••••••••••••••••• $850/mo. 975-0732. Furnishing avail at noj ••••••••••••••••••••••• $580. 760 1713
Col"OftCI .. Mer 3222 Spectacular va·ew or lake extra. $1200/mo lse No lalboa Island 3706 Other RMI &tah
witb dock for :r> ft boat. ••••• ••••••••••• •• •••••
Absolutely prime prop & MobiS. H-.
pets 2015 Port Bristol ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br, lBu South of Hwy •••••••••••••••••••••••1 fromtbis2000sqftJ.M. C CllEI " Lttl II 1B lB I Adults,no""lsSS2S Shorecllff~2br:&den,lge 1 Peters townbome 2 r a ame644·5997 1 e s e r. a. ..-Al PrilM flropertW1 yard. Minl view. SHOO. mstr bd ....... •. den. 2,~ ba or 640·S357 adlt, new furn $62S mo 673-3983. eves d •--~--···-~ ---ulal inc l 673·0786 urt ---
Oft ~ Agent. 673-S3S4. Frplc. rrom dining, lmmac Blurcs CONDO 6pm. Cotto Mno 3824 loc. 3 & 2 Bd.nns. For Sale 110
C /21 Hew'port Clltr. •••••••••••••••••••••••
640·5357 760.6767 ITrailer at bch Sl4,900.
-----...----• Terms. OWC or trade
lmmac. 3 br. Irvine Ter· vaulted cell. A/C. com· 2 b r . Iba . re (ri g. . -. •••••••••••••••••••••••
lg d pool J'ac munily pool and tennis. washer/dryer, dbl galr Charming & P"". ate, I Br. NEWLY PECOR. C _._ 21 race, e Y • • • B H h Ii L .... ,,_ J $1680. 64().9900agt no pets . $ I I 5 O. po o I , S 7 2 5 1 m o 1 a ag qua Ly aun 1 Br gas pd. end gar.
601 UDO Newportc-Mt' 714/955·0"97or75115813 Isl/last/sec + cleaning dry $575/mo Yrly d twasher. pool Adult:.
_________ , 499-3816
S33,000 Assuroable Loan. 640.Sl57 760.6767 CUSTOM BAY FRONT 646·4315 (714!~5·9984 e~~ 642·~3 _
Southern California's 2bdrm +den, 2ba. 24X601~~~~~~~~~~ Avail fum if desired. Twnhse. 3 Br. 21"2 ba, premier high rise con· Viking.rolewcrpt,allap-1~ Slip .for 2 lge boats. 3 pool. jac, secluded 3 Br 2 Ba. Home, 2 car BolbooPtftinwla 3707 21r. lloApt
dominium. Spectacular pliances incl. Really Bdrm. 4ba, 3 (rplcs. 2 neighborhood $750/mo .. garage, frplc, kitchen ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newly decor Gas pd,
view or Newport Bay. sharp.F/P.$48,500.Pvt. OCEAHVIEW kitchens,patio&deckon Dys 642·9909 , eves w/dswsr,disposal&gas Shorllermrentals.12 blk e n c l gar . p oo l .
Total 24 hr security Party. Prine. Only DUPLEX Bay Security system SS9·9020 range. dining area from beach. 1 bdrm. d /wa s her Adulli.
Highly upgraded with 960-3029. Drastic reduction on $3200/mo. B e a u t . pa l 1 o & lndry 673-9327 _ _ 642·5073
all amenities You've brand new Balboa Woodbridge Nice48r3ba backyard. Avail 4 20
gottoseeittobebeveit' Costa Mesa lbr, Adu~t duplex lstowners200~ CostaMftCll 322 ·super family home. $700/mo Is t ,'las t .
Principalsonly. Mobile homes. 1Sx30 • depreciation. Great ren· •••••••••••••••••••••• S950/mo. secur1ty, cleaning dep.
,, Xlnt S9900. 10X45" Sll,500 tal area. 100 feet from Beaut. 2Br adult only WaterfrootHomes. Inc. 213 /7 36-3990 wo rk .
I Br. Carpets. drapes.
stove , refrage Uhls pd
Utensils for 4 S375
675·0935 *Cote Realty 673·3826. beach. Large 3 bdrm. 3 townbse. 2 car gar . Realtors 631-1400 213/285·4332 home aft
& Investment 'PALM SPR1NGSAREA. bathplus2bdrm,2bath. Laundry, putlina 6PM&Wknds. CodoMna 3724 640-5777 28r 2ba.•yTSold.Compl Owner will assist an course, very quiet. Orance Tree 2 br, 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• fmanciog.$125,000. $600/mo. Ask for Bob den, cjin. nn, gar. Am· Condo, The Bluffs. SUSC•SfT•S rum. On 9 bole exec golf 962 8891 c .. 1 •7u.. menities. 9550. 8.S7-2S98 "" "" course in adlt park. • ,or ........ -3bdrm. lhba, nr stores Furn 1 br apt.. S32S & up.
•Oceanfront Tri·Plex. View San Jacinto. KIDS/PITSotC 2 Br 1"4 Ba, walnut &schools.$700.64()..5274. Encl. gar Adults. no
Xlnt loc. & lin. Prin. 638·9JOOaskforVirg~ E -Side 2 Bdrm. $49S. square Condo. I car gar, pets. 2110 Newport Bl.
only. W /Garage. 642·2510, cable TV comm. pooJ 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, WeakUU. 548·496Sbtwn8 &5PM_
___ 67_3-_7_87_3 ___ ,c-c:,t;,.7&.oh/ 1500~~~~~~~~ w 4141. S500/mo.S15-7171 Lovely yard. $880/mo. H_.._.._.._. 3740
$50,000 DOWN ....................... 20 UHm C.M. 3 BR. 2 sty, Back Bay L111111 .._. 3248 646-6'789or~10 ...................... .
S 2 Cemetery lots at Harbor condo. Pool & jacuui. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---i:nstup 1·2 bdrm. ~·· 200,000. 12.75 Lawn· Mount Olive. C.M. ~~awu!\~~u! /~~ 1 ~~~ $850. 631-6995. ask ror Oceanfrnl lBr, trlr + Santiago Dr-Exec house Jac. adlt. !8992 Florida. Loanfor28~ars. S9SO both. 548-2177 call RuthorSteve cabana, deck, pvt bch, 1 A .1 12 "B H.B.842·2834or842·3172 Frplcs. Nice area. furn/ nfum adlta only ava1 . pri ... r, --------
3 Br TownhcM.ts~
Newly decor gas pd
e n c l gar . p ool.
d /wa s her Adult s
642·5073
west.a11u
APARTMDITS
Beautifully landscaped
garden apts. Patios or
decks. Pool & spa. Heat
paid. covered parkmg.
Adults. no ~ l or 2
persons OK
I Bdrm S400
2 Bdrm 2 Ba SSOO
2250 Vanguard Way
540-9621> <>r 548-2408
B<'aul 3bdrm 2h,1 '.\k'><•
Verde 4·Pk' S.'i7.• inc•
li-l. 1a .. 1 -+ St5u 1~14 ~11(.!1
or 545·6676.
EASTSIDE
Pepper Woods
I Br with lar1tc 1•al1 •
No children or pc•I 'llJ<'
Monte VL'ilJ ;i.;l;l", I all
548 9190
Spac1ou!> I hdrm ••:11111 11
apt Pool & n·c· \II 11111,
paid .\dull rt•• p..t
F:I Pu<'rt;i \I• ~ t
1959 !'tfapll' \\\" \1 t '•
Jbr. 2' 2ba. litMl '<I ti 111 ''
\'l'b drape~ 11111 $~;,u
2br . l 121Ja ·1.,1 ~ t•11.t
vrd. $450 no Pt'L' ~>I ~I ;:;
2 Br. l Ba f.11\ '"'\'d
Ra rage, pvt ) .trd ~1'ln
640 7t!L~t
2 Br. I Ba M:tpl1· St
Adult, no pets G n•u11cl
floor S3115 Stl•rr.1 \lv111t
<.:o 641 1324
28R. 21A & lBR. I BA
Large comer lo . Large _5..:.p_m_lo_8...:p_m_. _____ TSL INVSTMTS642·1603 D 1 bdrm b h S'1so.!o _:31116 · fabulous mstrsuite, 3ba. Locjuno leach 3748
house 4 Br. 2'-'J Ba. RV C "' rdal up e~. 1 • 1 . at · lg ramify rm. full !iv rm, •••••••••••••••••••••••
space behind locked oa • 1600 Do Y• W..t A plus Uvtng a.rea._Pnvate L11911H H• 3250 frml din nn. cozy kitch, Waterfront. pri v ate
gales . A II th 1 s 1 n Properly 4-rlex fw S3eK D" Stoentran~eref& .pa~ la~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jaund rm & many many beach. security, pool 2
2 Bdrm 1 Ba $470j
2 Bdrm 2 Ba $485
r at h e d r a I c· ,. r I' 11 i:'
rr plr. ds hwhr. li;il• lllJ)
In quiet Adult 1·1m1plt•\
with pool. !>Pll & i.:ar<1t.:L
No pt'ls. S420 & up \h ., •
Pines . 26511 11.irl
549 2447
Westcliff No loan quali-••••••••••••••••••••••• All 2 Bdnns. Total price v~.,. re 7!d~~ :,;:;; Attractive 3 Br. 2 Ba. in extras. 7~8974 Br. rully furn. Luxury
fying. SltoDOillira C...... $l7o:ooo. 540-3&66 mo. re r . Lacuna vmaae. No pet.s. --Mobile Home. S850 mo.
768-0654 Great fohtlOn. areal re· Joann St. 963-8182. Do $625 mo. 07.4072. . BLU F'FS Plaza condo. 4 642-1802 or975--0545
turn on Investment. Whelan not disturb tenants. br. 2~ ba. No pets. S825 •--&. 9 SEA WIND PORTOF'INO.
remodeled. lughly up-
graded, 4Br,4Ba. super
view, by OWMr. $479.000.
640-1217
DESnRATE!
$20,000 down. Sbdrm,
3ba. 1265,000. Must have
quick escrow $1500/mo.
644·5069.
Custom h ome near
water Owner will
finance with low down.
Art. 962·2900.
NEWPORT HGTS
· 10%DOWN Assume Isl, 3 Br + F.R.
Under S200,000. Call Rae
Rodge rs. 631-1266
..... c....... 1071 •••••••••••••••••••••••
16,229 sq ft or leaseable LogmaHigllel 3252 mo. 760-1573 ,,. Mewpari.--376
space . Fu 11 pr Ice Real Estate Newport Hts. 38r. 2Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
$850,000.Principlesonly. Frplc, pvt. yard . BICYCLE TO BEACH. BLUFFS CONDO Luxury Oc eanfront
AskrorMike. S625 /mo + s ecurity TENNIS. PARKS & Bayfront3br.den.3ba. Weekly 2or3Br.Comp
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Town ho~ 2bd, 1 t,;ba.
$10,000 dwn. Auum
$60,000 loan at 10~%
Owner wm carry 2nd.
536-4664dya
642-5722 SHOPPING SlOOO mo. Agt 644-1133. Cur n 1 n c Id Ii n ens
2000 sq l't .• 4br, view. --64().4784 4Br . 2Ba. $850 mo
1st /last S300 security,
new cpl/pnl, formal din·
ing. 2.ooosqn 754-0986
patio home. ram rm. S• J110tt ---dining rm. 2 frplcs. wet Capistrano 3278 Fantastically furnished
bar, dbl gar, ate. comm· ••••••••••••••••••••••• townhouse, with ocean
'ty pool. no pet s Avail approx April 15. 2 view.TeMlSCOUrt.pool
$750 /mo 497 2864 or Br 2 Ba lam rm. fen ced S92S /mo 76().9117
497·3123 back yrd, enclosed 2 car SHORT TER~tals
4Br, 2Ba. 1g secluded lot.
gar, refrlg, $800 mo.
Avail immed. 495·0967,
497-4279
gar. Vehicle storage $475 /mo ist . las t & Weekly&monthly
security deposit req. Agent,675-8170
753.2565 -----
---------14br. 2ba, 3 car gar. best
Mltsioft Vl.io 32'7 S J C a r e a , v 1 e w .
••••••••••••••••••••••• $850 /mo. 496 ·3462 ,
3 Bdrm, 1\'J ba. lge pvt 493·0085
lot. $500/mo. Thornton 5 --__..---.------1
Rlty 831-lnJO. unTG "'INI •••••••••••••••••••••• N.wpori leacll 3269 2006 S. Garnsey 2bdrm.
•••• ••••••••••••••••••• Iba, $475/mo. lsl, last +
Florence. Oregon rec pro-Brand new condos for 3 Br. 2 Ba:rarge yard, 2 $150. 644-5069.
perty, lot 53'x93'. or· rent, $650. dbl gar car garage. S745 mo. ---------1
ganiied campground. w /opener. Close to 675-0562. South L.,.._
23' T t 1 /f 11 ocean. 641·4361 •••••••••••••••••••••• erry r r w u Steps to the beach, lge 4 OCEANFRONTHQME
hook -ups, must sell 2 Br with stove, front & br dplx, 2~ ba, patio. 2 O'looks pvt bea<'h, 2 br,
$18,000. RuttvSS2·7856 back yard. gar., crpts & sty. immac. $1Cl00 yrly 2~ ba, den, din. rm. lge
drps, $495 mo. 6'7~1$35 6'73-2507 deck, $1200/mo. 499-2253,
. 49&-S021 N1ce clean 2 Br. 1 Ba. 3 Br 2 Ba. lncl. refrig, ------
encl11d garage. $450, 1st, fenced yn1, $150/mo yr-Tntbt
last + security dep. 2546 ly. Agt. 673-335.5 •••• • •• • ••••• •••• • • •••
Orange "E". 548-2778. ADULTS COURTYARD
Walk to beach. Beaul. TWNHSE 2bdnn. l""ba. Z·flltB'LACES Newport Crest 4 br con· attached gar, frplc. air.
Oak parquet floorinc. do, ram. rm. din. rm. pool. Redhill, nr S.A.
patio cover. gardener, pool, tennis, $1100. Frwy. SS50/mo. Call
lovely Meaa Ve~de 646-0686 • 73Ml86or'lS2-2827. 3bdrm . 2ba . $825. ------~M"'----1----~-----1
771-2007 d•ys, 6'1·9081 Npt Crest condo. 4 Br 2.i,.; Tustln Greens spacious
eves. Ba, split level. dbl clean2Br,l~Batwnbse,
garage. Lease $800/mo. new cpta, frplc, 2 car at-
i.t, last &dep. 957.9303 tached gar, easy access
let fwys, S525 mo.
752·141'
YEAR·ROUND FUN
Social Act1v1t1es D•
reel"'• Free Sunday
Brunch • 8 80 s •Par
l•e~ • Plu~ much more
GREAT RECREATION:
lennrs •Free l essons
• (pro & pro shop1 • 2
Health Oubs •Sauna •
Hydromassage.Sw.m
ming• 011v1ng Range
BEAUTIFUL APART·
MENTS: Singles 1 &
2 Bedrooms • Fur
n1shed & Unfurnished
• Adull L1v1ng •No Pe1s
• Mooets Open da•ty
910 6
Oakwood
01rden Ap•rtmenta
Newport S.tch/So.
1700 16th St
100••' ·' 1t51t11 1714) M2-M13
• Newport S.tc:h/No.
880 lrv111e
i.1 1611•1
(714) ~1104
398 W Wilson. 631·5583
FAMILY APT5.
Brand new beauliful lrg
apt, for families with I
or 2 children. Near park
Heat paid. No pets
2Br , l Ba $470-$475
398 W. Wilson. 631-5.'>83 ----------2 Bd 1 Ba. S375 C~an &
quiet. no kids1pets Call
Craig. 631·1266
R&'M~
Rf:.\t.TORS
Stunning Lge 1&2 br. 2 ba
garden apt. pool /r ec
area 710 W 18th St.
Large 2 Br Small child
OK. No pets $395
545.9950
EASTSIDE. sunny 2 br.
gar, adults. no pets,
$385. 16021st. 548-0165
Lrg 3 Br. 2 Ba. crpts.
drps. carport. Nr OCC.
Water ancld $495 No
pets. 751-3696 .
1 Br, refrige. stove, c d .
garage . S350 . 240
Avocado. ~6404
Bach with loft. refrige.
stove, cld. pool. S370 up
283 Avocado. 645-&t04.
Dona Point 3826 •••....................
I or 2 br. halronv. 0 W.
clean. rom launcln ~· ws hr. gar nr 11r ;,11
213 924·7257 eollt·t·!
HYnthujt011 Beach 1840
••··•···•·•····•······· THE WHIFR.E TREE
Luxury Adult unrb ;•t 'lf
fordable living I l ,\· 1
.Br Well dl'lor.ilt>il
Olympic sau• pc'IOI h~hl
ed tennis court, Jj\"JZ7i.
• perk like land~~·upinl!
Most beautiful hid~ in
H B.
From t.:!15 M6 0619
,ea .·' AOUL T ~-LIVING
• l & l 8~ Pil , AQI\
• D•'"" l<"t \ ~HU
• Poo 4 Rt " ~ • G•''""" l ' ~ i.
• Jo~ 10 8uc• ~ . ' .
• Stcur r OllH
SEA ENVIRONMENT
9632 HAMILTON. H B
962 4!'.00
2 & 3 Bedrooms
$400-$450. Kids OK. no
pets pl<'ase. Water
Trash Paid Carport
964·2566 or !773 2971 Al<rl
no fee.
2 Bdrm. 2 bn. cpts, drps,
1 Br. East.side. small bul d /w, encl gar. Bt.'nch & 5
cot.y w /lots of neat Points area $4501m o
wood. $33.S. 642·9450 aft 84.2·8032
5PM. -----------1 Hunt. Landmark tbdrm
condo. 40/yr age mln .. sec. & many o tber
amenities. $400. 96CH 347
2 Br. To~e. Living
rm . Dining are.a .
'Kitchen, Frplc, gas &
water, euacbed gar•ge.
pool, jacuzzi, laundry 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse .
fac. on property. Avail. Near beach. Garege.
tmmed. $$00 + $275 Toddler Ott S'65
security. 611-4111M. 96G-1279 or 83HMl65
========~ Large 3 BR 2"'1 \>a, with
earage. Kids & pels
welcotne. 1 milt> \p
ocean. MOO rno. 98' 2937 AN /d'FORDABLf;
ST ARTD BOllE
Tlda a 9dnn houae •· Jo1• an *91 location
near tbe beach ••O Dao.a Pt. llarina.
P••turu l•lude a
Ureplan ud ue of comma•lt1 pool.
1Ua.•.9tm
3br. H~ba, nr. school .
11• ..1ppln1. a sty twnll t
$41Sfmo. tm-5373
1'tov~,
~ I
. ... ..... ,. ........................ .
••••••••••••••••••••••• Stepa to bcl\, Jbr, home,
L1 Stud.Jo. ocn view. $425 Jl"J» '· 1'ftl wkly. mo. utll 1ncl"d. lit/last ,_87_,._l_llsaa _____ ___.
+ dep. 48M.U.8. Kona, JU. 2 Br, Condo.
Mew...t .._. 316' Near Hilton, alee1» 6. ••••r.999•••••••••••••• 5-30 to 6-13. "Wily"
PAii tlWPOIT
COUNTIY CLUI
UVN
Sinalea, 1112 bedroom
apta, & townhouses.
From $510 644-1900
Oceanfront for Winter
Rentals. Fumlshed &
Wlfum. Broker 675-4912.
Na-$551 •
PARK CITY, UTAH
z blocks from Resort.
House sleeps 8. 4 Br.
Avail. Easter week. Slooo. Call53802~vea.
•NWPT.OCEANFRONT
wkly lux. 2·4BR. CaU
673-SURF
lewtatatosew. 00
BEST RATE
la
NEWP~T BEACH
600to'4200Sq. fi.
•J anitofta! s.mce • UUUU. lnehaded
*Adjacent '° Al.rport It Rettaurant Ro-* ACctll to a Major . rwya. CAUfMA
f EllUL s. ..........
et5 TOW1Jeent.r Dr.
Co.ta Meu. Ca tJD6
Equal Opportunity
Einployer
•
NO FEE! Apt. & Condo
rentals. Villa Rentals. Moving? Avoid deposits
875-4912 Broker & cut living expenses!
•••••••••••••••••••••• CUckoo'a Nest for Sale. Found: Cocltapoo, IJ'•Y • 8LC::J SICIJT ilY
_N_e_w_po_rt_Bea--dl-.-$1-.-25--1 ~~q11:';.r:!11~J:'ob; :'i!~e1,f:rt~':a1:ir:. Local Newport Beach
aq. ft. New dlx olfice or blcl&. Offltreet parldna. Cocker/Terrier, trl· aavin1s •loan has im·
Will a ·ccept •h•TP
trainees with previqus
customer contact t?X·
perience. Type 20 t.o 30 wpm.
2 br, 1 ~ ba +gar, Hoag Professionally since
H d 1971. ret a 11 w /pvt bath, Call '87..._for colored male. Terrier med. open.In& for a Loan security, a/c, eoo.uoo mix, aborthalr, brown, __ ..;,._ ______ , Secretary. Real estat.e osp area, nu ecor, HOUSEMATES open hse Sat & Sun 11·3,
4 2 3 8 H i I aria W a y , ____ 832_·_4.1_34 ___ _,
$500/mo. 11»5875 *Shored LM"CJ*
IESTVALUE Counselors to personally
select your compatible
rmmte to suit your
lifestyle.Shared-Living.
833 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB
aq. ft. ~ 31st St. (next Mo.er lo &.o. 5025 female. Retriever mix, A.MSW .... SYC. loan ex per. preferred.
to Bank of Newport, ••••••••••••••••••••••• black female. Collie 61.AVIYAID SHIFT Pachain& for mt.MC.
Lido Cannery area). We have money t.o lo~n mlx, tan •whitefemale. Many benefit• ar top Salary commensurate
875-32.38, (213)6'1·9100 for 2nd fr 3rd TD 1, Shepherd mix, larce tan wages. 312 3rc1 St. #C, with ex~r.:.fi Full Ind· $10,000 to 125,000 • up. 1 Calm T---' Laguna Beach. aurance UIC'lte 1ta & pal No credit requirements. ma e. oenaer • tan career apparel. Pleue
We offer career QP· portunllies, competitive
salaries and wide range
of company benefits. Versailles comer pen-
thouse 2 Br 2 Ba, comm
pool/ jac., wgt room. S700 mo. 675-3787
PRIME
WATERFRONT
RETAIL
SPACE
For fast friendly male . Newport Beach Applications being ac-call:
services call Old Ranch Animal Sbelter644-!656. cepted for full time para Ma Denny Parisia LINCOLN
Mgmt Ir Investment driver/shop helper. 714-MS~ SAVINGS
<114) 826·5940 or SCIAM-lEJS Background In pressure MIWPOITIALIOA
evea/wknda call agt. cleanine equipment SAVINGS & LOAM & LOAN
9'75-0083 ANSWERS helpful. Calif. driver's E.O.E. equal opportunity
631-1801
OCEANFRONT Rmmte wanted to shr lge
license It good driving ~~~~~~~~~I employer m/f • 2ND 01 ~-3-~D TD Voyage-Balky-record a must. $3.50 per -= ~~~~~~~~ condo nr S.C. Plaza. Furn. 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 Sauna, pool, jacuui.
car garage wtth office, Private bath. Available ---------washer & dryer incld. Avail. 4·lto9-15. May 1s t. $250 + ex-MD 's facil, in HB. 2,000
TSL MGMT. 642-1603 penses. Call 557.3527· or sq.ft. Reduced t.o $1200
LOAtG While -Ne,ate -hour to atart. Apply l•--------1 OnOwnerorNonOwner HAVEANY 7717 u -•-.,._ S 1 BANKING IAIPEISOM
759-0060 I mo. lse. Red Carpet,
His sister had a t.ou0 b 1 ........ ~t. u te Female pref . for beer occupied property. In-.. A Irvan· e "'""'•£NO terest only or amort. time In school. They _. ___ . _ _,......., __ ,___ tavern. Day, nights, &
E. Bluffs Condo, 4Br, I•--------· 893-1351 38a, sundk, pool, $900 ---------1 1st TIME
AVAILABLE
500-2600 Sq. Ft.
loans. S34-4&&2. Tranaac· araded 91' a curve and ARTISTS to share studio wr1E p/time. PenonabJe·, de·
tion Muter Inc. shedldn tQAVEANY. fr exhibition apace. IMPERIAL pendable. Xlnt wages, tips & working condi· Mo ........ Trwt FOUND: 4/6/81 WATCH ?7l-34!9aft.6pm. lions. Apply in peB<>n.
Dffdi 5035 vie. of Laguna Be.sch, --------• DIUll UAM to noon daily. Lit·
mo. 645·3474 , <2 13 J * * * NEWPOl'TCEMTIR
541-4460 Responsible, employed Full Service Suites
....................... CA. Identify at L.B. ASSBcaS DNWl >tie John's Inn. 20072 No. Sattler~ Co. Police Dept. Loe. Mission Viejo cc>. Santa Ana Ave. Santa
fem to sbr lux BACK S CUT COSTS S Versailles lux. jr. I br. BAY CONDO w/prof All you need for one
r efr1g, sec , $435. woman & daughter. monthlyfee!
760-8390, 994-6860 <Mikel Priv. furn rm. bath. gar, ~5470
cooking/lndry fac. All NEWPORT BEACH
SPECIALTY
CENTER
All types of real estate _R_e....:po;.._rt_1J_8l_·O_l806 ___ -1 needs Assemblers w/2 We'N .....,.... ..... Ana Heights. So/east
lD. t _ _._ in '"""' yrs. exp. Candidates a ....,_ I. tt. ..__ corner of Redhill &
1 & 2bdrm apts, from amen. $300/mo incl util. •DELUXEOFACES•
S370 Adults, no pets No deposit. but rer's a re 1 to 3 r-00m offices. No
ves m"'""" s ce ~. FOUND : Desert Tortoise ._ ._ Bristol. 754-9648 S~ Ill vie. Newport Beach must have gd. manual clal CD _..., wiffl
1409 Superior. 64.5-8684. req. Phone 548-0963 eves lease required. 2172 Du·
Bachelor Ocean & bay 1~&~w~k~n~d~s~~~~~~ Pont Dr. Adj. Airporter
~__.-... 548-0928 dexterity, gd. eyesight, :J:port.ffies .. all• Bartender, exp, F /T, 6 -•.,. neat in appearance & de-( '42-217 I 545-06 I I pendable. Wort is in life for ~ to days week, pvt coun ry FOUND: Pet bird, pleue support medical elec· foill a Ill ow be..tfM club, C.M. Call af\.er view $500. Utils pd 1-Hotel. 833-3223. 9-12
642-3572 Lv msg. M/F to shr 2 bdrm apt a CdM Deluxe Suites, AC,
Widow has money for idenlify. lronlca. Gd. benefits. Costa Mesoofflc:e. 1 0 am Francisco · HkjllVhll.., 2ND T.D.'a any size 875-~0 Only responsible SC9·0377.
N rt H . hts D-1-cross Fashion Island. ampl pkg util pd 2855 ewpo e1g up ex $330/ · I ·1 c u ' · 2 B 1 8 Ad Its mo mc . ut1 s. a j E. Cst Hwy. 675-6900
.. ,,..1;:,;r above $10,000. No credit PencNIClls 5350 penona seekin& perma-NOnCLEttl( BATH ER & Brusher
T_......_ 1 -.-1.1.-.t, no pnlty. For action ••••••••••••••••••••••• nent emplymt. need ap-. t d M F · f r. a. u . no Paul, 640-8937
pets. SS2S/mo Isl. last & Sm a 11 off i c e : 18 2 7
d e p o s i t . I n c I d s F /21 ·30 to shr Jbd on Bch, Wes tcliff Dr. N. B. Good
Gardener, water paid. Bal Penn. S275 mo. Avail loc. SlS-0 per mo. 631-0900
............. ...__ call AGT 673 -7311 ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli, If JCHI e..e two to wan e on.· r1. or
anytime FIRST LADY 511-3830 fttree ,._... .._.IRCJ ~~[oJrooming shop.
517 Bolsa. Days 631·3520, 4/ 15 673-6438 Brian
~..-:c..:... ~ Mackerel ..... MtcJ. Escort. Models l~~~~~~~I expenewce .ct "'°"'
(714J'75-1'62 SJNCE1981 rertyo.c.n. ASSEMBLERS. We will optlt•de, JO• CH B e autician s &
manicurists with clien·
tele; be self-employed,
pick your own hours .
First cla ss salon ·
557-2234.
Eves & Wknds 548·5041. Rmmte Wanted to s hr
2br, 2ba hse in Irvine,
own bdrm. ba + use of
all rec. fac. S250/mo +
util. 552·9794 (home> or
640-0770 <Ben>
NWPT r&flNSULA
Exec offices in elegant
s urroundings. Across
from City Hall. All sup·
port services available.
From 225 to 4750 sq .fl.
673-3002
--------i lat"2ndTDl,*50K·SUI+ * 97,.1345 * train . Apply 7AM . 41Mllfy for this pos~ Prt....Locatlo. Owner/Non Owner ~ MacGregor Yachts, 1631 t I 0 •. s 0 111 • Newport Heights
2 Bdrm with pool 3226
Clay St. $475/mo + util
C/21 Newport center
640-5357 or 7~67
SFRa ar Condoe MC & VISA Accepted Placentia, Costa Mesa .-..&.--. .L-.. _.. 1270 Sq ft on busy Beach -r-· · ·-r --
Boulevard-Huntington Comp~i;,~~:~rial COVER GIRL AUTO DITA.JUNG ,....t.rncl. Dllties •
Beach. Ideal for real 640-60l6 873-9043 * ourc•• • * Steve's det.&iling needs U.. 9'• At,J loard-estate office, st.ore or ,.._ bard worklng energetic h• CJ L 0 a•1 , L 0011 other suitable buainesa. Want invest.or for Npt 953-0778 MCNISA detailer.Experpref,bul Doc••••tatloas,
BOAT hauling & It . main·
tenance. 2703 W. Coast
Hwy, N.B. 548-3641 1804 Clay. Nwpt Hghts. 2
Br. l Ba. Near schools
No pets S535 m o .
675-0349
Son C &.mewt. 3876 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Wanted female room·
mate, non-smoker, to
share 3 bdrm house in
nice area. w/solar heal·
ed pool. Call Paul
(7141556-8765 days .
2 Br. 2~'l Ba. Triplex Christian prof. F shr 3br
Rush e wood throughout apt w /same, 23-:.:1 $160
Quiet a rea Nr Bch, surf No kids 549-7189 view SSSO/mo 492-5516
3890 Dana Pt. shr apt wht M .
2bdrm, 2ba. $2:50/mo, 1st
••••••••••••••••••••••• & last. util incl. 768-4234, Security apts, !bdrm & 493-0987.
17fttSTUB
Costa Mesa. 3 rm suite,
A/C. Plenty of parking.
545 sq. ft. $450 per mo.
RealonomJcs 675-6700
~.~"~!':i~~t·er;~u:o ~t'!~::·oro~:~--------~~\a:zec . 646-173&: -..1ec1g1 of TCD's Y~ar lease. Attractively TD Agt """" ... 6,1 * POXYLADY * ...t11..w~ priced. . . ,.,,...,,., · OUTCALLONLY AUTOM011VE ...,.... .,.,_..,.
642-4l21,ed216 W.t21-22"oYWcf? VISA MC P.ART'S CLEUTYPIST
Weekd.ays On your T.D.'s Notes * 97~1 Ill* COUHTaMAM lnpott....._w••
230 E.17th.St. 900 Sq. Ft commercial SSRaiaers-lnvestors$$ Ii---------Dealership or foreign dltde 0 ... &.a&... •miom COSTA MESA Call Denniaon Assoc. •• auto pal"U experience -....., FROM75<SQ. IT. apace for lease. CdM , 673-7314 SPIR.rnJAL prefert'ed. Call Glen for ~al dlpalwww•ls
l&S-900 sq. rt. air cond. ~!~~~~14~~~~1 Coast -R-e-al_E_s_ta_t_e _a_g_e-nt_w_i_U lOam-~~~: Lic'd. an appointment. wlftt f ... t""99 .ct
office suites for immed. _ _;_ _______ I pay 203 interest on 492-7296 or 492.9034 1815 aoy CAlYll teMrol office .......
occupancy. All ulils, CoM1111rcW $25,000 loan from private S. Camino Real, San IOLLS IOYCE Also Nt,_lllW. for
janitorial serv., con(. lewtah 4475 party aecuredby2bdTD Clem AMDIMW switchboard rell•f,
2bdrm, util pd. adults,
no pets. From $375.
836-5506.
rm., parking. Call Terry ••••••••••••••••••••••• on local singlefamUy re----------64M444 111allroe111 a1td .. ,.
Cressman: 5:>4-9000. Store.. Space for lease. sidence with larie equl· PHONE FUN ---------II H ...,
0 . UGO sq. ft. & 1260 sq. ft. t L t 8AM·12PMM.C./VISA * AUTO SALIS P ••· H•'] ,...He pen-minded female to NEWPORT DOVER DR. in Huntlngton Beach. y. eave message a (714) ~ ..,. .... D 1 ••SI~! co•tact • typhHJ share 2 br, 2 ba twnhse Executive su1'tes ~Ith FI ex i b I e term s. 64&·2S2l. i---------"'" ._ ~ ...... f 4•50
Aporton...ts Fwnlslwd
or UnfumishM 3900 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VIII C F ~ Get set for '81-'82 & the -0 .... WpM a~ a Nwpt. all ran-privacy. prestige, con-213/596-7202. LOW o/o llATI J -Car! Neat Chevy at.ore ello ~·
cios aft. 6, 549-9311. venience. Ground noor, 2 .... 0 ... UST DEIDS A nAMT'IC In excit'-ft Ai-in·
BOOKKEEPER
WANTED
Full or p/t for active
sportswear company.
Varied duties, mature
person. 641).66811
Bookkeeper/Person Fri·
day. apply in person.
Village Inn Restaurant,
127 Marine Ave. Balboa
Is land.
lookl&...-aClertr
A/P knowfedge helpful.
3 to 4 days per wk. Hrs.
9-5, apply at · 1660
Placentia Ave., Costa
Mesa r e a s o n a b I e . Shops, stores, etc. 312 " '" MASSAGE SPA .. ,. • ...,.. Iott.
Fem to shr 2bd, 2ba, hse, Secretary/bookkeep-sq.ft., 12' hi w/lge dr." Be pam~ered by 18 dudsdtrial combpla wi ill ,...._. ~ S E A W I 111..1 D Dana Polnt. S225mo. + 21 o ft / 1 It Low cost loans avail•· a 3 com lnat on wlttii .....__ • ex--a-& IOOU&Pa F/C J""lll 'l.l util.lst/last.496-4589 ing /r eceptio ni st. s q . · w s n ·bl S Beaut. iris. Open aaleapersonanowforEZ ~,..,.. .._ Fashion Island invest-VILLAGE 631·3651 weekdays. _548_·_724_9 ______ 1 15eyr ~~':.toN$ol!iOf,~: lOA M ·4AM 7 days . atral1ht sell & lease. mdexc.epffolllal ment firm. Excell. op.
New 1&2 bdrm luxury Fem~le , non-s moker, Custom, executive office, Co a l a Me s a ' payment pena ty. ~P~bo~n~e~~~~3433~~~~~ Generous pay & demo IMN1rtthls. For pra•pt portunity. Exper. &
adult apt.s in 14 plans stra ight, room .. bath. 400 sq. ft. Pvt bath with Harbor/19th. 1250 sq ft. Owner occupied. Onken r: plan. Auto exp. not t'e· c••l•r...... ....... maturity req'd . Call :
from $440, 2 bdrm from CdM home. Avail. May shower. Balboa Penin. Rentorleue.Moveinat National Mort1a1e1i---------quired,butpreviouasell· co•toct SHllLEY 714-640-0123
$!i05 + pools, tennis, lst.$300/mo.760--0553. $285mo.64.2-4623. your convenien ce. Company. 714-731·5144. DOTICISCOITS ln1 helpful. See Sales 61LIHT to .,...,. ~~~~~~~~~
waterfalls, ponds! Gas McNash Realty, 642-1334 An established Or:ate •s••it46* Mgr. ._t __. .......,. Roommate t.o shr 2 br, 2 .... EWP-c----Co t 111-B .,.. HOW"'ltDC--._. • •1rnew 1ppa ....... for cooking & heating " '"" _..,_ or642-6578 un Y .,..gaae · ServlngaJJofO.C. "' -... ~ _ ___... paid. From San Diego ba condo in Woodbridge, Pl'fftigious ocean view ---------1 ingCompany. ~~~~~~~~~ DovefrQuallSts. _.., Frwy drive North on Irvine, own br& ba, rec full servic e suite .................. 450 I-NEWPORT BEACH
Beach to McFadden fa c. $250. 631·1985 200-SOOOaq. ft. 644-7180. •••••••••••••••••••••• Purchue of 2T.D.'s •r· I'll do anyt.hlng legal for _A_UT_O_ll_.-w<n--..,.----IMPERIAL
then West on McFadden 1---------.i-~~~~;:~;:--1 SSOO up. 1640' lndus'l/Of. ranaed. For detail.a call money. 8-210t between vu Ye.
to Seawind Village * * * AIRPOIT AltEA nee. 18101 Redondo Cr. 960-lll578roker 5-7PM LOTMAN • BANK
(714)893-5198. Furnished o r un -"P".HuntBch.842·2834 1----------J Full lime. Responsible, •tSTo-C......Dr.
ROCHRs 4000 Responsible. employed furnished Execuli ve A•o•cu wls/ IMOW YOUI #"57 mature pet'llOll needed ~"'
fr rem lo shr lux BACK Suites in Irvine. walking MESA ,.,....,,,,./ Charts, forecasts, for apeclal duties. CothW....
BAY CONDO w/prof distance to Airport. AU Lost&Follld c areer, mate com-References required. CA.t2626
Laguna Beach Motor Inn, woman & a daughter. ser vices avail. Your INDUSTRIAL ••••••••••••••••••••••• petabillty, life lesaona. ll111t have 2 years ex-714-641-2200
•••••••••••••••••••••••
985 No. Paciric Coast Prtv furn rm, bath, gar, Secretary or Ours. 2021 Numerolociat. 811-6525 perience. Call Steve Id. 2'2 Hwy, Laguna Beach. No deposit, but ref's are Business Center Dr. PARK Lost & Fomd 1100 Harvey f« an appoint· Dally, Weekly, Kitchen req. Phone 548-0963 eves Suite 213. 714/752-0234. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ment.
available. Low winter &wknds. 711 W. l7tla.St. Lost: small abagty dot, Have •omethln& you IOYCAIYM
rates. 494-5294. l~~~~~~~~~I Beautiful private office• female, calico. C.M. tit want to sell? Claaalfied IOLLS IOTCI I· in Irvine (Orange Co. & Cost.Mete.Calff. N.B.area.642-tm. adadoltweU.142-5678. &IMW
Freeway access). 64~44'1 Ro o m w /k itchen
privileges . Phon e
962-7520 from 6PM to
9:JOPM or weekends.
38r Npt. Hts. house.
$199/mo. lst. last, +
dep. 'tli util. Resp. Non-
s m k r. Avail. May 1.
645·9634 aft. 6
Receptionist. con-640-6444 ference room , pax 1·1870 sq. ft. Unit avail.
library, space for staff for lmmed occupancy.
available. and free park· l·ZIOO sq. ft. & 1·3700 sq. Nice room to rent In
C.M. Home. n/smkr
557-9689
I 714 7"'2 8995 ft. untt(a) avail. April Luxurious 4br hse in ng. · ~ · ; lat . 2 Storaae
Hunt. HarboW' to shl' 833-899() Warehouaea avail. for
---------w/34yroldPbysicianon San Cleme nte space lmmed.occupency,2000
Room w /kit & lndry canal, 2 bib to bcb; 30' avail. Jess than 60< a fr 2800 aq. ft. •»·~ aq.,
prlv. In quiet C.M. 4 boat dock. ocn vu.~ foot. Privatebat.be&alr ft. •Leu.Irle office bn.
bdrm , 2 b a home. sq f~ on 3 lvl. All amen. conditioning. 873-3022 or Mon thru Fri. 8-4. Sat.
Nonsmoker, worktna, ~,;:a~3871. 4/15. l..'500/mo. 213 '92-412l. _1_0-_2_. ______ --l mature M over 30. S2SO .....,.... + ns deposit. 986-0A4 --------NEWPon noo aq ft office +
at\ 4 M ahr 2br C.M. apt, jac, E warebouae, lrvlne In· • · 1 .,,.,... N t xec. ofc oa Dove, am-duatrtal. Ca1J ....... 1 ....... or poo • _..... ea ' resp, I -tum vw-.,.. Nwpt. Deb Compl furn, nonsmkr. ~ f. e -an. · or UD· lnquli"e llaroai to. 18753
am detached, lnn, bach, um. 110· to Mo. Full Noyea 15'7-nel Bkra l peraon. pool, 1ar, FemrmtetoshrlgeC.M. aerv!ce, oU>er tenant. CooplDvtt.ed. · ·
050/mo. ulil Incl. 2 Br 2ba, fU11 facU apt. CPA I . 714f7S2.l878.
&U-2M3 S270/mo5U-4Z98 N.B. fully lmproved of. 1100 aq fl 2 otnce1, front
tt 2 ft • reu eat.ry. Ovttbead Furn. room 6 bath, Office._.... 4400 ca apace. 187 aq. · door, no power. ms 00 $175/mo. Emplyed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ground rtoor. Ample lt .... 1'1S-.1. malt, clean. Ref'•· f\AZA parklna. Call '7S.O.OS. _..;_ __ ...:..;,;;;;_ __ -I
Auto TrllDll R & R man,
tull time. t~la req.
541-2288
Babyaltter wanted, for
3~yr old . 1 or 2
d•11 /wk. My home.
&3.00/hr. Reta. requlred. ......u.
BAB~J:R
Help! 'WOftinf Mother
Deeda reliable Babysit·
llr, pa.rt Ume ta Loot
Beach. Call Irene 1u1-.-.
Bab,.ttter ....s.d IA my
H.B. home.' bn ury.
Call alt. 8, 905129.
. Equal Opportunity
EmployerM/F/H/V
** BANKING
Wells Far10 Banlt ,
Oran1e County AJrport
office, baa an immediate openJn1 f« a : , ....
PartTtme
to worll: JO bn per weell:
<lloa-Th""' t :ao.a:ao •
Frtt:»t:S>).
Stx montha ~revlou•
bankinl ~penence re-qalred.
IOOICD:Btll
FUUCHAlt'iE
Ouutand.lng opportunity
for experienced con·
struction development,
real estate full charge
bookkeeper, for rapidly
expa nding multi ·
corporate NB firm . Light typing req .
Congenial environment.
benefits, pro("rt sharing,
major medical & OP·
portunity for advance-
ment. Send resume incl
Salary Hist & dates to Pal Parkinson VP. QuaU
Place Company 1400
Quall St. Swte 135, NB
92680 or call
(714)752-IBIO
.......... c .....
Full time. exper. helpful
but not nee. Many com·
pany benefita. Apply at:
1660 Placentia Ave •
Cost, Mesa
•IOOllmaS!
AUTOMOTIYll
Pleasant "°"'11ll coodi-
Uona ln excitJn1 Airport complex. Experienced
oaly. Some tni'ftl. Flet-
lble boun. OpportunJty
for advancement. See
Office lllJ'.
HOWAIDce.r.1 Dove•~&..
NEW POR'l' BEACH IUOUI Evn: -..mr La1. Nia. lllCUl"IYI SUfTIS CoW'tely '° '*"'· BADLY HU:DED, April· Ma1.June cmly. Acceaal-PERFICT
Wt provide aaa ucalJent
ulary and btnallta
pecll:a,. IDd a friendly
work ID I atmo1pbere. ;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;:;:; PS .... COl&ad:
LOCATION
..:.~~ ==· o. .. ...,.
A/C.~•wlc1ll
f79-9997
blt ............ "°"" •pace for -....U.trtbu·
tlo8 • CGDIOUd.tu. of cnova. Al.l.ll"IS. 1000 aq ft
Offdtd. WJaet UYe )'OU. frMlOI
\
, !!~!!~ ..... ?!!~ .. ~.!!~ ..... ?!.~. ~-~!!~ ..... !!!~ ~~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~!~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~~ ..•.. !!.~~ ~~·r.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~-~!~~ ..... !L~~
--C .a.SHIER . 1· . .._ R "'""""CU'M'ER ...a ......... C M"'l~"' .... CE Order Oesk. hll• lypr.n g, llEAICFASTC"""' ~ Companion-ave 1n . Draperywork"°'.<>mnee..,, GA M...,u l"SU~ E ~ ..... ..,..An. mailing.wtlllrarn >tday
.Full time permanent. FuU-time,Sdaywk,off Fem.neededt.ocarefor exporwllltramheavy· wanted for active Hotel Personal lines & lite lnter1orplantma1nt.rt week Rl•nefiL<, S38Shr
, Sday week. Experienced sun & 1 day during wk. 72yr old lady on walker. duty sewing machine sportswear firm. Xlnt front Desk commercial lines ass1s-w/ben. must have gd start 979 7660 , only. Good starting $4.00 per hr +. Exper M us t ha v. e own operator. Mon-Thurs, arrangement64&-6688 tant needed for Npt. driving reco~. 54~625~ ·
salary&benents.Apply req .. Pbotography tra~sportat1on . In· 7·5 :30, F /Tor P /T . Clerk Bch.ins.agency,salary MAKEMORE •--·,Parit'ryWorker.f'•T.no
J-SPM . Jolly Roger, 400 Unlaauted, 16889 Beach tervaew, calJ: 833-0379 S42·llMJ General commensuratew/exper. F bit 1 exp net· For 1nu•n•iew
1. So.CoastHwy,Laguna Blvd.,H.B. eves. · Full time. Order Desk. We areseett1ngapeople Pis . call for appt our am 1ous coupes callSJJ 9561 Beach. Drivers needed. Part Lile typing. Good on oriented perMlO able to 644-5522 ___ needed to make extra m·
CERAMIC Tile appren· COUNTER or COOK time positions available. phone. $4~/br to start. It ried hou Must come PIT Call for appt •CAI DIUV&S•
Checker Cab
T7~0222
lice. Exp. only. Willing FT /PT. Gary's Dell, Call for appt: 831M\i1. A• D Reotal.a.&42·1186. ::r a;eapt with ~gures. JNSU_R A NCE A gen~ Y 494·5168
t.o team. 631-4379 CdM, 67S..2193forappl. Full time poeltion offers s.ervice rep; comm I. -------Drivers. SmaU car re· General Offlce Worker excellent com pan Y lines acct. handling, 75% Manager, Office work.
Cleaning lady needed p/t Dato Proc~ quired. Eam bii S. Call lluattype40wpm benefits, including a free of c ., . ~53 field. Un-counter help for rood CAR WASH own trans. Top pay. Call Operator needed for nLx-between W 41 1, Mon.· <A»ta Ilea 549-5'2 meal per abift. Apply in derwr1tma. ~rvice sales serv Ice. Seasona I, C 6
·Cashiers wanted. Full or MarieS40-6996 dorf/ent.rix aystema for Fri.Ml-101.,,...-non. MOG·Fri., 9AM· pos . Car expe!'se. mo.). H.B. area. Call E.
. part Ume. Newport. San· 1---------long term aaslgnmenL General On1te roon Pel"IClllDel. aalary, co~m. Mm .. · 3 Songrath, (714 l5't.t·5378
ta Ana, Fountain alley, CLu.t•4Ci Call for more Wo. Tod DRJVERS Crou Coun· Eatabllallled a.cal Co. MilllOn'HOTa. yn. comm I. underwrtt· or write 14581 Acada Or.
r! Coat.a lleaa. Ca ll Ne•d e~&f'l~c ~•~er Services~ qy.N«!sped41Uereq'd. needa,._forneord ... ,,._._ D lnguper.MusthaveF Tusl\nCa92680
644-4480. person tO helP'm'at'ntain ' MacGrelor Yachts, 1831 keepina, lite typing, 90Ch .. ewport~ .... r r. & c lie. Orange & L.A. ----·-·--·-
my laundromat nr Hunt· DELIVERY Placentia, Coeta Meaa heavy phones. Salary Newport Beach Counties Call· MANAGER/ASST C .a.SHI d Equal Opp Emplyr M/F Diane. Bul. tock "' inKton Center. Approx. Full time for local de-accor in1 to exp. For Cabric st.ore Fab. Car wash. Will train. lShrs/wk. m-0329 liveries. Xlnt. driving DllVBP/T Beneflu.CaUM.2-:MtS. 833-SSSO E.O.E. exp. pref. Call Geri:
Santa Ana area. Call record reqwred. Phone 6 nites ~ wk. Approx: 2 .,1 ........ 8. HEii • 646·•040 Leticia,~-l•--------1 for appt. 557·9'212. Mr. hrs. a mte. E:lftll. driv· elt4aAL OfftCI HOUSECLEANERS " "" ~ . ----Clerical Emmona. Newport Sta· in& rec. req'd. Apply: Expr. nee . Must be 'lp$5/br,car.MS-Sl23 545-7144 Manager with experience .. Cashier for H.B. Drug CLERICTfPIST tionerslnc. Pennysaver , 1660 quick and efficient. for Ladies Boutique ml
r Store . Ex P not Laguna Beach elec· PlacenUaAve.,C.M. Work w/ftprea, pbonet, LANDSCAPE Newport Beach. Good
.. •necessary. Perm . tronic mfgr. has im-Dental Aasistant. Eamblg--OChltk-sl· fillDI • mlac office ~AJtDB& salary. Send resume to
IM7·2!i63 m ediate openin& for Newport B e a ch . _.., ..-dut.iea. Part or full time Hotel Person needed p /time Ad IJ693, Daily Pilot,
sharppel'SOllforgeneraJ 4dys/wk. Experience or ble. 30% commisaion. hrs avail. Xlnt OP· MAlllOTTHOTIL for lawn maint. in Cd M. P .O. Box 1560. Costa
CASHIER' clerical duties including Professional School £.•II Fbtriwn...,1l~A01117•1PM. portunlty for advance· DIMMaCOOIC Musthaveeitper.Tues& Mesa,Calif,921626.
HOUSEWARESALES typing for our f>urcbas· grad.MS-3535. ..on.· ·--~ · ment with fut growing IRIAKFASTCOOtC Thurs, 8AM-Noon. Call.
Apply in penon: Crown ing Dept. & woridng in company. Salary com· Full time openings cur· Terry, Mon-Frt,673-2268 l•--------•I
Hardware, 1024 Irvine, stockroom pulling job Dental Office Recep· a--OMIC ~!888nsu3 rate w/expr: renlly exist for ex· Legal MariletlngAssist. (Westcliff Plaza> NB kits, issuing material. tlonist. in an office for the -·• .....,.
keeping records. Gd. practice of pediatric ASSIMM.YLIAD perienced dinner cook 41 LITIGATION SECY CASHIER/ Clerk for re-
.. ..., tail store. MWlt be ex-
per. Call : Balboa
• Marine, ~9871, E.O.E.
• M /F /H
t yping skills a m ' dentlttry. Call S..S-5588 & Fast growing lnterna· ~EMEllAL OFFICE breakfast cook with pre-For medium slle firm.
Min. SOwpm.Stocktoom ask for Theresa. tlooal Co, In stable Looking for a very In· stlgious hotel. S ue· Good skills, shorthand
.. -1..r .. 1 field has need for •· ti ....... •' j b cessful applicants will ex per. ""'.,.-. not nee. energy ..,res ng _. • ume o be able t.o work in nexi· pref'd. Newport Beach. we offer gd. pay Ir DENTAL ASSIST. a lead electronic aa· in P.lea1aafnt office! ble situations, be or· Xlnt benefits. Call Rhon· benefits~us a 4 DAY F /time cbairslde. Ex· s e m bl y Per son... Clen ca • or mature . d . 1 bl da, 640-7"""' ORK EEK C U ~ G fl ""•alifl "'--· I 7 • ~ .. _ p c H g an u e , a v a 1 a e ~ w . a .or per. pref. p of ce. ..,... cauuua inc . yrs person . .-:a.-. · · ·• weekends & comfort.hie ---------
interview appt. Person· S45~SS3. Nr So. Coast exper , i n electro Npt . Bch. Exper. a withrecipecards.Enjoy LEGALSECJt!TAIY
CISHIEIS nel Dept., Telonic Plaia. mechanical assembly, must. Accurate typing, 11 t A.S.A.P . Full time. 'At
Berkeley, 714·.t94-9401, PCBaasembly,Collwir· no shorthand. 20 hr. exce en company thebeachinLaguna!2
Laguna Beach, E.O.E. DenU.I Nurse, chairside, in g. harnessing. Ii week includes Saur Sun. benefits, including a free attys. Variety practice. -
U M !~~~~~~~~~ non-smoker, Pedo. exp. mechanical assembly; Call: MS-7431 meal per sbll\. Apply in Salary generoua. Exp . TOTE i: pref. Fashion Island. be able to train as· -.;..--------1 person. Moo-Fri., 9AM· only.CaU494·750'3today.
644-0611. semble ra : orfanize Noon, Personnel ' '· ' CLBUCAI. manpower & material MilRIOTTHOTB. Typing 55, hvy phones. DENTAL Ofc. Insurance resources; & display 900 Newport Center Dr. MARKETS
1s sought by progress ive
construction Cirm lo as·
sist Business Develop-
ment Personnel in all
aspects or marketing.
Responsibilities will. in·
elude proposal writtng,
development of various
marketing tools. market
research. administra· tion of marketing
systems, & direct sales.
A Journalism/ Market-
ing background, with
knowledge tn the con·
Parts
Experienced engine
parts counterpl'rson
Will consider training
the r11(ht perwn Appl y
1n p e r so n . t o
Boatswain's Locker,
2-tJJ W Pac1f1c Coast
Hwy, Newport Beach. . -
Part Time Salff
Must be people oriented
& amb1t1ous. Nttd car
call Richard 675 5895
Part Tine
CowtMffftg Y outt. c..nen
Adults with outstanding
attractive personalihes
to spend l5 hrs per week
counseling youth ages
10·15 E\0en1ngs &
Weekends A\•a1lalile. S7S
per wk Ca ll
2 30.5 30pm Mon thru
Fri. 642·4321 e>.t 343
Ask for Lori.
Orange Coast
Daily Pilot
330 W. Bay Street
tosta Mesa. Ca
Equal Opport Employer
PART TIME Person
needed in Book pasteup
Mon & Tues. No exp.
nee. Apply. 1600 Plaeen
tiaAve .C 'l\1
For 2nd & 3rd Shifts
'We promote to manage.
, ment •supervision from
.within.
&ome acctg. helpful. & accl. coot:roUer. Must Cood leadership skills. Newport Beach
Responsible job for the be exper'd. Npt Bcb. Qua lifted applicants Equal Opp Emp\yr M IF
LEGALSEC!Y
Salary & responsibilities
comm esurate with
s kills . 7~ wpm
minimum. Santa Ana·
Jrvine industrial area.
P.O. Box 15-487, Santa
Ana 92705.
struclion industry 1s pre· ---------
•' .. .,
..
WANT A CAREER?
C(JSla Mesa
lllDel Mar
631·9421
right person. Sl,000. group practice. 640-1122 should contact Ray
Call: Judy, S•0-6055, Gilman at Scientific ---------
Coastal Penonnel Agy, DENTAL A8.5'T. Sat. on· DrUling International
2790 Harbor Bl.. CM. ly. Modem new famlly 557·9051, E.O.E.
Never a (Je. EOE practice ln C.M. Call ---------i !~~~~~~~~~~ _E_m_il~y_S45-__ 588S_. ____ 1 Electr o-mechanical
La(\DUI Beach CLERK · DIHTAL/Allht Technician/Sr. Unusual
'9t·9233 G r a v e yard s hift . CHAlRSll)E, Min. 2 y opportunity for mature
12·8AM. 7·11 Store. Full expr. 4 '4 days weell. So. person. Reaume to :
Huntinatoo Beach time. Experience pre· Laguna. Salary negotla· Dept OCP /2268, P .0 .
,, , 962-9116 ferred. Call btwn 9AM & ble. 499-1355 Box 76381, L.A., Ca 90076 --------• 12noon. 556--0832 __ D_l_MT_Al._AS ___ S_T __ , ________ ,
111
n
I
To Place your
';Fast Result"
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ad .... C.11 Now
642-5671
bt. SJJ
cu• TYPIST 556-84811 l:MGIMB/TICH.'
Insurance co. near O.C. 0 __..._. •--r..a.......a TIMPOltAIY
airport needs a gd. _,.. --typist 40·50wpm for 2~ day/weeJr. M.ust be
1eneral olc. duties. Ex· es P ' d • able & en·
per. helpful, but not nee. tbusiaatic. Top pay
Call: Laura, 833·8450, ,_631_·3380 ________ 1
1401 Dove Sl., 1550, N.B. --------.i E.0 .£.
omcE CASllEI -·
HOUSECUAMEAS
Flexible hn, own trans,
good pay. No experience
nee. 54<>-0857 LEGAL SEC'Y Exp'd legal sec'y for
Hotel m a n a g I n g s e n i o r partner or small Npt •PM H-.a.eeper Beach Law Firm. Call _..,. S.W-4477
Fttl 1'1-/f:Yff We are see.king reliable SEC'Y"'-EGAL
people oriented persons. Im med opening In our
Enjoy excellent co. Jrvlne office. €lvll Pree·
benefit.a includinl a rree Uce w I minimum Z·5 yrs
meal per shill. Apply in exp & xlnt typing skills.
penon SIAM-Noon. Moo· Salary open call Fran
Fri. Personnel. 833-3622
f'd. Send resume to
Margaret Holmes. P.O.
Box 2390. Newpo rt
Beach, Ca. 92660. EEO
Employer M/f'
Part-Time
STUDENTS
HOMEMAKERS
F.a"r n t>x tra mone).
workinfl p llmt> m your
''"'" hom<• il'ltmduclnK MATERIAL the Nev. Daih l'1lot to
The Oreni:e Cna'\t Area' HAMOUHG Set vour 11v.n hours• Call
lmmed. opening for Weekd ays bet11t l't'f\ 4'Jm
parts clerk, rubber hose & 6pm. 900-1527. products. must pass co ________ ._
physical including back
x-ray. Taking applica·l•--------· tions betwn 8 & lOam on PBX
ly. Stratoflex. 11G1J PBX QP£D•TOR Armstrong Ave .. Irv . M
EOE A Kendavis Ind, Full time position avail.
Co. for day shift with rotat-
MAa11onHOTIL --L-IU'!.-... -.SEC_,.-'Y--1-------·1 ...__ MECHANICAL
in& weekends. Qualif~ed
applkant will be rella ble person with pleasant
& erfirient phone man
ner. Enjoy excellent co.
benefits in ludlng a ft'ee
meal ppr shin.' Apply
9AM ·Noon. Mon-Itri .
Personnel
E x P ' d on l YI. " I n l TECHNICIAN
secretarial & Enallah Lanr m far. needs skills req. Xlntoppty for person with exper. In us·
r .. bt peraoo. 975-1156 Ina standard shop &
L.~u••n band too\s. Job includes
.---f abrication of li&ht
metal pafts t.o drawings.
Some exp, oo lathe &
rnUl desirable. Wlll train
quallfled applicant in
•ome areas . CaU : 41M1Uforappt. E.O.E.
MilllOTT HOTB.
900 NewPort.Center Or.
Nel#port Beacb
Equal Opp Etnpln..,M/F
3 sectlob•l bookcase•
with secretary, kOQ
complete . Twlrr TOO v-· DOGTR.AINJNG waterbeda w/1paCfr :1 11 Obedience /Problem savera. Sl25/eacb .'
SALIS P/T FOi ..s ! r ~~ r~ !~!. ~~~too TRAINING ;:1~ss;:~. like new. (2)~ i..;;;..=~;.L,.:;;.;..;.,....;._ __ ~ llomllal• '*9UWl for lmM.Siat. opeolnfl for dlamoitds. ivory, J~ & ~ a1C.,..OMllT f•brlc store. Call Gerl: HVeral ah•tP '"Y' It collectibles. Call (714) ~~~~~~~~~I \i~:~~c :::~:::~· ~ lm.oeclla~ opninl iA ~. b 1alaf,...,travelentlre '72-ttzU,aaltforDane. Easter pups. AKC. dr metal lltll. cabinet &
ff l ,.. , t s•• ---AM --~=· Sec' Y (elhatc ) · 12 U.S. wK.b unique you.Ill Bl hon Frilerv•na all p · _,. btaut u newpor --.BIWWWY" ~.,....._•••'' brs/wll,Tu•t·Thurs. butfoe111roup. Yo\lAntlque 55S"PBX c ~.;;:,.-· TeakW unit. nc..,..
Beach. Cballea1ln1 Anhtant lhaa1er Past •ro::J. deveiop. Typhta, mlmeo. phone, mutt be 11 or over twltcbbo&rd. Xlnt. cond. . to sell! 7~ f, o •it i 0 n · B' u 1 'I wanted in Ntail l\ore. ment Co. motlvtt· reeepllon. Cbaarcb ex· 1ln1le, well 1roomed' $1000. 118&-lMS BasenJI pups for sale: 3 Circular Curio. S.150. Oak. elep~.u·~· t1P•.:t Penoo .uh t:li' Some ed, Hlf-start., to lwl· perience'. 1st \Jalted andablttottartnow.No • trl• l red It wht drop-leaf table & (
wpm. or appo · bofer•~f. ~ ,f:.fa':O d le a v arlety of lledlodi.t Churcb, Seal expert.nee nec .. ary. 2 po .. r Bear rug, 9""' • S175/0B0.(714)963-1758 chain. $250. Hitach~ meat, ~"llTL '"pootibllitlet. Duties Beach. (211).Gl.oaN. weeka tralnlnf pro· mounted head, clawa, S200
Beceptioniai, neat ap· CbarUesLec:ker loclude bkkpl, con· 1r1 m. 11oteh and felt llnlna. beaut. cond. Scotties, 2 M .. brindle ~l:~~!!!s~· "
pearance a must. SA.LISl'BSOM tract1, typln1, (SO· SIU.AYON \raaspo?tatioo l5000ftrm.4874'195 J blk , pedigrees
., _ _..._ .. r,-arc .... -. ... al • tJ tlOwpm) fr markelln1 IHH •nMI furnilbed. Foirlatervlew • I IOI w/papers, all shots. 9 Blue velvet sora. $300. "'~cu "" w•-•... llatun .pei"IOb •°" a.a · XI rv.. coat.ad Toni Jlalrlf'Ove 1f-•U• S250 ea 640-""""• or fl.rm. buayphcoel, client q11e It rill abop iD Coat.a coordination. ot Eam .. ormoreanbr. at u•rrso.tooo ext2A8. ..'-••••••••••••••••••• mos . · """"' Matching 15 ' I ined contact, 1reat office. Mesa. 25 br wt. Tuel.· IJ'Owth potmU&l • tood Calla-0522 ' HARBOR AREA 640-8243 drapes. SlOO 2 green
Call Beclty•'lJ..U. Sa\. llaa.Mpm. Pb. for saluy. J0-40 bra/wk. TYPIST, must ~e S/H APPLIANCESERVICE Adorable Cocltapoo pups. swivel rockers. S75/ea.
appt, Ul·IS'13. Send reau.me to 1278 SHIPPING Clerk, part or apeed·writtn1. 4/hn, we buy ~ances 110 ea Call ft 1 c orree table. SSO. Eod ta-llC.noMIST Glenneyre PO BOX 48 Ume. Mull bave exper. 2 . 3 d a y s w e e It . ..we sell • auar. 544 784i a · pm. ble. $40 Bugger seal 2
Wltb Ol' wit.bout tyll6nl Salelpenon La1UDa Buch CA 9211Sl C1ll: Balboa Marl11e, (714)~. appliances. 549-3077 · child bike carrier. S100.
needed. ToP .-1. 1'em· Ladies ready to wear. SECRETARY P/Ume 20 ~9811, E.O.E.11/F/H Fne to Y• 8045 Black vanyl bar w 14 porary. full time. cau exp preferred, b ra ol d µ TfPtST I IUY l.PPl..IAMCES ••••••••••••••••••••••• matching stools, SlOO.
TodServlceutW1'MllOO. t :lfMPm. llOD·Sat. FIT hl'C ·11~1tc. ~· C:· ~ ;:· SHOE SALES, cbUd:tena· Invoice office needs Les 967-3133 Golden Ret. max, M, 9 549.3200
RECEPTIONIST, ieo. only. Call~. .~-Se· '::!1.os urc Y /teens, full /part tJme, person accurate with W h •. ..a-. ....., mos. Cree to good home ------....., a,v•.r-exp'd penoo, brly, in· ll1ures It !().key add. as er"' au ... ,.er .. .,.., 6'2·6572.832·5890 Jewelry 8070
ore. duties, F /tlme, centivu, benefits . C.M.979-8900 ea or best offer. Kirby ---•••••••••••••••••••••••
Tues·Sat., pvt. country SA.LISPllSOMS SECRETARY 0 r Children's Bootery vac, $60. 96()..899t 6 mo old kittens, trained Heavy 14KG Heart Shape
club.CaU:M4-5404 needed~~~ fHblon paraleaalwilhbeavyex· &U--2*Mr.MJ1ter TJ9fstltecep1 L d K t 1 &verylovable.5467841 Pill box w/2 Rubies ---------1 ladles s y 1tore It per. in estate planning. AUTO LEASlN'U CO. a Y enmore ap si an. 7pm $350/080 llCB'l'IOMIST shoe salon. Exper. nee. Airport area, Npt. Bch. STA.TIOHBY Pleasant surroundings-washer/dryer. HOV. l rr --. -. -759-L643 TfPtST Good benefits. Call: Call : Jackie alt . StoreinCdMneedasales N.B.area.lmmedopen· otd .1400.G.E.Port.Dts· LAB/ColheM1xTrained,
Active real estate office 644-7100 1:30PM,m.9983 person f/tlme, 5 days. i n g f 0 r g o o d hwshr $1.50, Sears room loves children, all shots
bas openiog for a welll~~~~~~~~~~ISSEE~C~R~EET:rAA~R~Yf.-~R~a~p~idd~ly~I Xlot working conds. typlst/r eceptionlsl re· a/c $2.S~9223 Nds . largeyard ~-8979 !!room-... penionable in· Especiallyfinecllentele quires 0 eneral office .. • ..,.. SAL~ REPS ex pandlno company. · s"llla, good• dri"'"g re· APt size Frig Sl2S Sm Fu"'ltun 8050 vidual. Must be ex per E • Phone 675-1010 for appl. .. rn• $ w h •· with typing &kills of 45 to A C T I V garment & film market-cord. Salary negotiable. freeur 100.. as er .... •••••••••••••••••••••••
60wpm. R.E. exper. de-SPORTSWEAR in& nationwide. C.M. Teacher Contact Nancy645-7661 dryer $125ea Port dis· * * I BUY * *
sirable. Call Suzan Kodak film markellnl located,typing<book· Swim Instructors hwaherSl00.646-5848 Good used Furniture
Ut-0%13 company. We are pre-keeping req. Good ,,.Deeded full & part time. TYPIST Whirlpool washer & Appliances OR I wall sel aently doing several personality & neat. ap. Experience preferred. Part time. 2-3 days per . . or SELL for You
Pvt party wants to buy
SILVER DOLLARS · top
price 675·8120 ___ _
Mi1cellOMOM1 8080 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Prof. pharmacy P IT
employee. Days l ·tl
Mon.-Fri. Bk.kpg skills It
millions of $'1 annually . pearance. Negotiate The Australian Swim wit. Vacation relief. Ap· dryer. white~5/paar. MASTERS AUCTION
tOO's of accounts remain starting salar y. Call for School at Racquetball ply al: 1660 Placen«a. 960--646-1686, 83).9625
open for the ri&hl an appt. ask for"'Mr. World in Fountain Costa Mesa Westingh.se refrig. $200. -
person. Call Mr. DeRob· DeRobbk>~l I Valley. Call Diane : TYPISTS Sears washer & dryer , Sora 8' Yellow xlnt rond
John Wayne Tennis Club
F a mily membe rs hip
$1 000 incl trans fer
675-5455
WA.MTED
Ba by Stroller
751·8967 r•lall eicper. nee. Call ________ _
Terry Grant for a ppt,
Park Lido Pharmacy.
642-1580.
P ltime, 7days, 2hrslda•·
ly, AM delivery, L.A.
· Times. SIOO per week.
Laguna Beach. 49'-8496.
IECEPTilllSTS
Re1ister today for local
tempor•ry assignments.
557-0045
Cf\-Llf\:.
Tl Mf'OAARY .''fllSOf\INtl SYMCI S
37 z l lirdl 5trMt
bio545-0421. StclfT••y 1 962·1374. SlSOea. 548--2765 $100 -•lmmediateOpenmgs
SEAMSTRESS (M/F ) Xlnt skills, mature. non-Teacher. Pre-School. •P/tlme,F/Ume. Temp
Prefer mature person smkrH.B.898-1376 someexp. Benefits. FIT. •Top Pay with sailmaking ex· 548.2SSO. For more info. call Tod
perieoce. CaU631-59SO. SECRETARY. hvy. typ. Services at 979-8900.
ina. top salary/Fashion TEACHER Full/Part
lslaod.644-S'Tll time. Pre-School & TYPIST/ SICIETA.llY For manufacturer's,_ ________
1
Refridge freezer. white.
working S75. 646-3104 or KING SIZ E BDRM st•t,
642·8954 x Int cond. 5 pc. $295
Lllton microwave 1570, 548-8569 evenings
contest prize. new in l920's walnut burl double
carton. $.500. 645-8914 bed (no mattress>. ve ry
agent. Must have good
telephone voice & type
accurately No Bkkplng.
Aides needed . Hunt. WOID PtlOCESSOR
Bcb. area. Call Marilyn Entry·level position in ••SECIETAllES•• 847.5284. well-estatslished firm. G.E. refrig. dble door, Z
Recp/TSO/FuoSU.000 Mu.st have st.rong typing yrs old, 13 cu ft., Sl6S
n1re, Sl8S. 962-1961
9-5. 640-8110. Legal/TIO/diclSlS,000 & grammar skills. Full Call 644-7269. Exec/shl00/corpll8000 Teodler"t A.MM t' A p1 · to · PUii.iC Secretarial Ex pd. Consultant Ours. Elementary, M2-0U1 , ~':.e·FJ>enles111 ~~berl Ken rn ore was her I ga s
IB.ATIOHS ~~~~~~~~~I SALES SEC'Y Lil ReindersAgy, lnc. Bein, William Frost & dryer set. perma·press.
He~:--"
P /T IM E help f or
women's spedally shop.
Fashion l.sland. No ex pr.
nee. 759-9951 10 to 6 pm.
Kang bed w/frame, $100
Dinette. ~ Seel hide
a.bed, $75 6 twin bed!>
wlframes & bedd 1n~.
$25·50. 631·5:m
R ll Cl k E WI.th a young dynamic 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE Telephone Assoclat-. l401 Quail $300. 6 mo new compac Vacation club PR for re· eserva on er · X· • •y O ... -.E 11t•CH "'" f M l T 6" computer bi'lling sales Newport/833-8190/Free -" '" -St .• Newport Beach tor. SlSO. 644-TI89 O A K A N T I Q U E sort condos. P /T even· per. pre . a ure. u""'.· .u •o•y •-S Stud •a OK Frida '" • 979 7"""" orga"1'•0 t'-. Must have -"" DRESSERS. a!>sortC'd infa"' at. en..,, . , __ _::...Y_· u.1--· _. _ _,_. -1 u .... ""b' I kill 10 immediate openings. Weitw/W~ Frigidaire frost-free nuoreocent tiaht.i., mis<: W ly Paycheck Call xlnt. ver a s s . Security officer, P /T, f · /f look •· 0
.. · · REST••••~ I l t i J Short a...JtcaUe>n. Work Apply blwo 9AM & re rig reezer, s "' •tools, et~ Call Dean. at M:J.795'1from 1-SPM ""-"' c e rica or secre ~r 8 wkends for Ir& apt. com· .,.... t $90 642 7030 .. ' Sandwich Maker hfs experie~ce. CaU Lmda plex in N.B. S3.SO/hr. S.9pm. lloD·Pri, \alklni 12PM. Charlie's Chili, runs grea • · · 675·6000
7A u .3pM Mon.-Fri. Devorltan at Safeguard F f •. on our te&epbone. Deep 3001 Redhill, Bldg. #2, G E D 'sh a s h e r .. or In o contact .. am voices preferred . Ste.12216,CM.92628 · · 1 w OFFICE DESK 9C IHSPICTotl 646-8883. caU anytime ~~~~l~e Systems. Lupia at&M-1900. $8.35/hr 1uaranteed, ( p o tac rub b 4: ~ I w/Ciling drawer . I y r Gquri;.~"'•n~isvei~uc: .. ;:: Restaucaal I sacuama.a••-s more . money easlly WA.rTllSSIWAITll Portable/Cooverllble old, $95.673-7578 JOHHMY"S SECREl'ARY --paulble. Coalll b7 I L ll•ture. i>nv.t. Cl ub. Bronze w/wood cbop-Qpeu"~~tyln~~~o~I~ llST"'"_....... G_....... OinpedJvDll11d·~ ... !.orGoodqu.asllfltart~ Bet. um N. co-i Hwy. IDtervleW9 Thunday. ~a· ... ~~o~k6PMtop. $1'15 All wood BuMtl bdrm ~· mEWUUo ,... N. La& !kb Wit dys at 11·4Pll. 1801 Bayside ...,1.1.-.... set. $400 End tables. tee~nolo1g~-mec1 hctanical. Now accepting app~-~CE in& pay. Refundable UD· 31MD. Pint eocne. first Dr. CdM. a1s100 673-~aft 5 optica "' e e ron1c lions for luUtime · ~ . . llorm deposit.. 978-7243 hired paru le usemblies used k e e p e r • p M Immediate openma in lr638-81.91 · WAREHOUSE Clerk/ ..,,...... 8030 Dinin g game table, 4 up-
mC021aaers. host/hostesses, bus our purchasing le dis·.;_;.;_;.;_; ______ l'be tu\ell draw in the Driver. Must have ex-••••••••••••••••••••••• hol chairs. S200 0 8 0
Individual will be penons&coolts.A.pply tributiondept.foranex·Have aomethiag you W. IM''"' Pilot per valid Calif .MUST SELL: KOWA 675·4358,675-2244 respon.slble for in.spec-in person bet. 3 & s. perieoc:ed person with want to aell? Claaified ea.. · .a Uo1 • • 3SMM CAMERA tion of incoming parts. Moo.-Fri. 2250 E. mh mt. typing skills It a ads do it well. 642-5678. ClauifJedAd. IG-58'78. ddrl1ver1 's lie. & 'cxce1
1
11. $175 080 ·557-8393 Matching couch & hide a
with heavy emphasis on St .. Santa Ana.1 p I e a s in & P ho n e • p•iat r 1.;:, n: ~ c ·~:s.r1= bed. S3SO both corcee & 2
mechanical items. Olher 1_;_...;.. _______ personality. Variety of ······~ I .111 I Ba a a e. ·Video, never used '80 end t a bles, 31$150 duties will include in· llSTA.UIAHT ot her general office E.O.E. M/F/H RCA model 007 color 675-4358 675-2244
spection of In-house Exp'd. wailry for Con· duties. Xlnt. benefits & camera It Akai portable ---· --
manufactured parts & ti 0 en ta I cuisine worltlna cond. with a • • • SELL idle items with a recording unit with all Spring aar Kg Si bed. lk
quality control of outg~ restaurant. Table side g~wlng company. App. • Daily Pilot Classified acces. & cases incl. I new. Qn sz box spnng &
ing products. At lea.st 3 cooking. salads. eotrees Iy 1D penoo at: • Editor's Secretary • Ad. $1750. 557-4010, 821-6800. frame 631-2423 yn. ex per. in similiar & desserts. Call for appt. THE JOLLY ROG ER •
Br unswick Pool Table
S200 or best orrer
642·3T78, 645.6342
4 place seUJngs of Royal
Dynasty by Steirf now
Kirk Steifr appraised
$2500 wall sell S1800
549·2888
Manufacture r Goes
Ret:.aal ' 50-70'7c off
normal store pnces. Oak
Etcgere Wal l Un its
SI 19·Sl69, Oak entertain·
ment centers $S9·Sl99,
Solid Oak Coffee & End
·Tbls S49·S99. 1242 La
Loma Circle. Anaheim
630·8272 ------
R F.MODELING SALE·
Custm drps 1 yr old, orr-
wht. 58" length. $50 ea
6'8"x 12' sliding dr win-
dows ISO. 12 new Cra.med
scree ns $50 Amana
refr1g fru S50 Katrhen
sank Frigidaire ra nge
best offer Other odds &
ends 549-0012
lo•• lolloons
Send ~omeone you love a
bouquet or:.> multi col·
ored balloons Heavenly
for Easter & your own
pe r so.-. a I message
Perfect for every OC·
ca s1on. We deliver.
673-4419
duties is required. Call 49'·8460, Mon-Fri, &-5 INC. • ... daallenginl op portunity is beini offered by. •49s.~forappt. E.0 .E. 1----'-------1 17042GUletteAve. the Dally Pilot for someone with lbe. IETAIL SA.LlS Irvine e intewaence, wit and 111r.ills required to be
"'Ui ' 19¥ IV&IHGS 71._546-0331 .secretary to the edJtor. It's an lnUrestinc. Automatic Garage Door Systems
,. -. • • h · l poeiUon requiring the tools of the trade -80 •
C_....,OL Bed le Bat specaa ty ~retarial ewpm dlctaUon, 70 wpm lvni"o, dlcta-....fte -_..,~ shop expanding to Foun· S..,."'RETARY and ~r-.. ......,.. Jmmed. opening in final taln Valley. Need exp'd LEGAL """' • the ability to sill.rt mental gears on abort.
inspection. hose & flt. saleapersoo s :ao.g:OOPM 2 man Laguna lkh Law notice. The benefits are generous, the pay •
ting, must pass co. Moo-Fri. Some wknds, Ofc look i ng for e reuonable.ApplicationabelngacceJMd only
physical including b~ck call Mr. Anderson aecretaryw/legalexper .• throulb appointment by calling ... 8'2-4321 •
FOR SAFETY ... SECURITY ... CONVENIENCE
Automatic Garage Door Operators by Stanley
I I
x-ray, Talting appUca-6M-8860. Pl Ir Criminal. Salary .ext m . e
lions btwn 8" 10.m OO· ---------negotiable. 497-1729. •
ly. stratonex. 17611 SA.LIS ClBIC.aet.11 _...;;;...__ ___ ---1 • Classified Outside Sales
Armstrong Ave, Irv·· Office Supply Company • • EOE A Kendavis Ind., baa full time positions SlCllTA.ltY Experienced salesperson to handle Real.
Co. available. Will train. MAIKET'IH(iD9'T. • Estate Development accounts and
N rtStatiooerslnc u ajorvtt.aminmf-has .automotive accounts . Salary plus e
Real Esta\ .. Loan ewpo · • •· comm•·slon Must ha ·1 'd ~ 5S79212 Mr Emmons opening in Irvine. • ... · ve car, nueage pu .• Counulor.SeeondTD's. · · · · Should be creative, or· Excellent company benefits. For
Ma.Uy residential. Ex-SALES eanized, lake chart• • appointment for interview, call 642-5678. ext .
panding company. type or person w/top e 271· e ass.tm hi or Pest Tllllle quaUty 11t111s and able to e
Attractive bed & bath work well under pre· • C 0 ""-•
Beal F.atate Sales
Experienced a1enu are
needed to wortt with ex·
entive level clients.
Must have proven track
record. You will be
working with pro-
. fessional ~lates. Our
office off en:
*But beach localk>n
*Liberal commission
Protram.
•N•t'I referral proaram
CaU now for appt.
Walt Rempblll.17~ 7800
store now laking at uure & against de· • amera per...... • r::u::sie:or ~J~a le ~c::~rting salary and • Experien~ed at least 5 years. Must be able.
mar .. lng/---'ving rvwti b f I l • to use newspaper camera and plalemalt.ing . .. i-.~ ..-· company ene •· systems. Excellent wages and benefits .• tlon. Experience helpful, Pleasant worklng condi-• A 1 · must be enthusiastic le tions lo modern ofc. PP Y m person w/resume to Orange Coast
self motivated. Please tend resume Is • Daily Pilot. •
S t r o u d • L e n i n salary history ln strict • •
Warehouse confidence to: Classified • Proof Reader • lfor appt call: Ad #835, Daily Pilot, PO 7141596-7241 Box #1580 Costa Mesa, .Parl·time with al least 1 year experience,.
Sales
GaEATHOURS
9A.M-2'M cw
4PM-9PM
CA 9211128 • prererably newspaper. Excellent company . ~~~~~~~~~ benefits. PM shirt. Apply between 9am & r: e spm, Monday through Friday. •
~~ry • •
M ~ .. :~t L • Part rne Eveninfs •
I RECEPT·GENERAL
Knowledte of MedJcare • CI 11 ... , .... c;;t;.. •
Worker's Comp. daira· .Adults with optstandlna attractive.
OFC
Oran1e Co. airport are•.
TJplnl 50 +. mature self
s tarter. Front offlce.
Call P•t. 752-2'75
llCB'TIOHIST
Pboae1 as deriul duttea 1rith larp olftc:e tupply
COIDPIDY. Will tralo.
"-e tor •PSJt: 557-1212. lilt. Emmona. Newport
8Utionen lac.
Join the to. Angeles ble. Excell. nl&r)'. persooalJUea wb6 enjoy working with IC>-15 .
Tlmes Circulation Tum betlefitl, WOl'kin& condi· •year old youths". Start at S4.00/hol.Lr: 2:30 PM ts adapt your work Uons. Wettml oster .8.J\d ~:30 PM. 642-432l. ex.t 343.. •
schedule to your lledlcal Gl'O\lp. Call: • •
lifestyle. Wotk 51\n/day ,ll_n_._~ __ ._m-_1m __ 1 • 0~ CMlt . •
in a Tl.mes Citt\llaUon ·-~~.
aala om~ Dear your • 330 WD. sa·'1':!~ • bom• • ba" mote lime ~-~ • ror your famil.y, atocUea, e Costa· Mesa, CA
or Jelaunb' penClds. We e Equal Opportunity Employer • :0~111~:~.···... • •••••••••••••• ~
LOSANGELESTUIESlr:~~~~====~:;:'"'.__~_,_-:--....;.~~--,.:0.~~---:-~i UTI Suanower Ave.
C.M • ....-
!qya) Oppartunit1 EmPloyer ..
SALB tmm..t. ~time oPID· ta1 for Reader Ad """9 ........ , ...... ..... ...-.Gcleoco·
Ja1 ......... A,,., ID
,. .... D: P•B.DJH••r •
"" PlaeHU• A .... c ...... Prl.1-tPll
You can be a
WINNER
LOWEST PRICES
IN ORANGE COUNTY
"We Are Ne.ver Undersold"
S TANLEY
Q _
Day or Night
I • t
. Prompt. courteous -
conscientious service.
, • ' I I
I I
, ,
CF1EVIER
~ ..:, XJnl c:on4. Must VW Va.n, 'G, Meda •nl
WllUY
•cLIAMCAU
AMDftUCKS
G t If•~' MU tH00/080 '15Z·l40' w ork . m •ke o ffer.
IA•HA AffA cb'l.UZ.WT'l•vee. Me-ot1$or540-0'137. Wlodaurfer, oever ~. 831·SI 71 1-=-~---::--=:-1;;..;;..::.;;..;;.;..;;:.~----teoo. (213>442-0W >Qiitl;
nt1W1111Ar&OM1W0 111M:.-ltl.B. '71 alSL, '31,no. Van w/avmoof, 1mcc af\. apm ('114)13.H J.o..
)f8ple/Y.UOW Tu It.hr motor. &.Vamp or ut• Call Jfm Viviani. 1 .us •• ~I* ltK mt. 2 &olJS, c..,, PP tor parta. Make offer. ..,.
2 "'" 14().1J18,N2·2112 Jobn....ai.s. Con-..._ ·~JI
'115.IOlASJR (241.t) 1---------1 ••••••••••••••••••<i•••• Kara"•• Gold •UP"Y ,.,,,,,,_,._,,,.,,. "l'fl ... colauto (OOO>) "' MB lll6L Roadlter ... R 1bblt, ""'vert. Lo SHOWIOOMCOljD.
uaed 100 yrds +. sa.~ IMJtORT.urt "711:101 (7580) witb bardt.op, restored. i,ni,, ac, Am/Fm tape. ''1n -TOP
yd.6'2·2113 NO'l1C£TO ''ltl20lAS/R ('1•> Wk day1 a fter &p~ Xlnl cond PP $9600 Power brakes, po~er
Everett • Jenntn,. ~~~= •mJ.A...,,.(OOll ) UJ-1451 : wk end s . .7~-5699 ____ window1,power 1te.fin1
Tuveler wheel cbair ._ 0 Tb4e -... "' Item• l.~~~~!!~~~~:~~C~I~•:•~··~~~=-~ Ml-IUI. .,_._ --9772 with talt /teleacopJ~I ard Saf T
r•• "'"""'o s t eering wheel. air. $1'1$. Gu ian e-· lM advertJMd b• veblcle ........ --E1tat• Sale. '76 M.BZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aid /FM atereo, rear WalkeT "3G. Sln1er de· ava.i · •ten Int .. vebfcle " .,...,_ (5GSL. bo&ht.opa,lealber VOLVO win dow derotau.
luxe Toucb • sew. •••· clua.t. fted advert1.oa 'l"'op dollars for Sport.t lnt, sten», dot cond. automatic trans. Snow
inl m achine in cab!Ml .,. WtllcM -·· IL. col"1DDI does aot 111• Cu a. Bu~. Campen , Sl8,9$0/0BO. 540-8811 S ..,.LES, SERVICE white with Burgundy in • uo .. AU in x.lnt cond. ""ly aqut1. trteraO.r, dude H¥ appllub11e tH'•,Audis :' ... DLa.t.orl ... G terior. 27,000 miles. hn· •'"0372 S AAA~ ....... tu.u.lltw'!H,tran1 er A11trorU/C MGR •1t~OOD "'" ~" It thr uout • ...,,. l2,uvv. ,.,,.: -· ' feea,' flhance ch•.tfel, JIM MARINO ., OVERSEAS DELIVERY ma c u a e AQUARIUM 17 lallon, evu ' ,......._ leel lor air poll-<on· VOUISWA-Blk, Slll.>00. 8'7·Z13& EXPERTS !~~~~~ A,n:o.~~.:.: ATLAS lank/stand. a U 1 8 • s a , C r u hi ~ t . trol device eerUf1catioGI lfnll ft--ch 81\'d. '77 '50SL
2
h
accea. incl . .,.25 Cbarac\et Boll\ Parau.1 or ea.er ""'"'umen-..., HUNTINGTON llEACH H5-0100days -- --.... /0 8 0 ~-d ' ~ •·•v ~ . (•••a11CE . 4 rs .
979-9348 WinHr. ffl-'81'1, 11'1· preparation c8'ar1es un.. 142-2000' ,__;,________ 494-'7llevea/wknds VOLVO '74 Vette. 3504spd. Brown
r---------, SURP le11 othe'rwile specUJed __ _.:.. _____ ':'t OIAM&ECOUMTY'S •--------t966HarborBtvd w1black inter T ·lop EJec. bed, dble, wicker · bytbe84\'ertller. TOPDOU.AR OLDIST '65230SLWhite.25mpg 2 COSTA MESA G
0 0
d <:o n~ . ,
bdbrd, <:oel $1000, sell 1971 WJA• / . & tops, 4sp, beautiful '
646
_
9303 54
0.
946
7 amtfm /cass Must .sell S400.xlnt.MS-Sl46 24 · •l trallar.~Xtat A.2:!~fc. tSZ PAID FOR _$12_.~·5.s2_-1_943__ _ _ --S6S00.
6
1a-9270
w.Mcol financtna. Ca.U Gary or••••••••••••••••••••••• GOOD• CLEAN MG 974% ORANGE COUNTY Ford -,-9-40
1aat1 m 11111 1011 Donl3l·t
400
. ·, 6 Fo rd w oo d i e. USED CARS! ....................... VOLVO ..................... .. •••••••• s 000 • • ~o Sal""s·Service·Leasing rt
1 ••••••••••••••• 17rt. GJa1ply. UObp, restored, 13, · ~ "' '79 MG beautiful conve Largest Volvo Dea er ·
66
8cyl column. clean.
CONN Direct.or trombone Mere, Inboard, out. v..-y '28 Model A Town Sedan, Roy Carver.Inc. Only 9500 mi by origmal in Orange County' new brakes batt·y radio with .case. Excellent Cl..an . y ba ul S2,500. 4 dr, rutored. Ideal for Rolls ltoyce BMW owner who reluctantly BUY or LEASE $125
4
97.4002
condition, Sl<lO. 61S-8052 546-l330 ·~5 aft8 atud e n t. Sl0 ,000. IS40Jamboree must sell .646·8610 DIRECT mira cle
mazda after 6PM. ' 175-3181. Newport Be.!,C:..h_ ~0-6444 is· Runabout wtth con· ---------Fender Rhoda 88. vertible top. IS flp Mere. "6 Muataag Sedan, 8 cyl,
Xlntcond.$475. O/B , trlr, w inch , 289, orl1 owner , AC. 2150H.,._ll.,d.
631·9243 USO/bat otr. stt-24116 auto, PS, $3200. 640--0325 Cotto Mesa 645-5700
Prof. quality Da Vinet •79 26, Penn y., f!/B •15 Ford Victoria , 2 door.
Accord1an w/cne. $600. turbo diesel, fulfy eqmp' t.ardtop, OrilioaJ. $5000.
962-1913 Xlnt cond. Am.lipus to 711--
Takamine C-128 classlcal sell. (714)67:J.lta. i ..... --------
WANTED!
Lale model Toyotas and
Vo l vos . Call u s
TODAY!!! g~ a r . ;:xJnl cond . loeh • ..,/ I~ 9530
w I ti a rdca•e • S l 25 . C........ tNO •• !.~~!~••••••••••••• 644
·
5259 ~----....................... '78 Dodce RV Van. Self· TOYOTA.YOlYO SeV ~.r. Cs~ Elec •IMMAC 28'-34'BOATS conta ined. Xtras. low 1u 6 H.,._11•4
Earle Ike
Guilar·'._,/case ""&. amp. 6/12mo. plans prepaid miln. 842·5241 c.,,. M••• s 0 675-0386 "-from $180/mo. iqtludlfts I'll. 646.u oJ • Ho.to7 275
av_e ___ --slip, lesa<llS1l4'"6-Sl94 •Wl9HtDri'f" 9550 ----
Electric Guitar w/bsc •••••••••••••••••••••••! $140, Amp $80, Snare SAM•lt:He ''151'oyotaLandcruiser I
dr um S30, Attack Eq 2 Masted TO' Schooa\er Great cond, xtras, clean, $20, 540-0603 sips 6, 8 by reqttest , $3?00/0 BO. 675-6267
Strat Copy elec Guitar I with amp & case,
$175 1080. 644-6829_. --
Office F.Nture &
Eqel,.,.... IOI •••••••••••••••••••••• STEAL IT, MUST SELL
Conference table 14ft
solid oak. Sl500. Day
&46-9048, Eves. 661·2990
ch ildren welt ome, 2 ---
beads , full r@iy, maln ''14 Chevy Blazer. Nu
salon, al!Xi · dei!el, tra ns & brakes Dual
now av alla le f or s hocks, CB, AM /F M
c h a r t e r-. C a I I Cassel w /power booster
(714 )6'2...ut or write to Fully Baha equip. Sac
SAMARANG : l»O BOX $3500. dys 675-1151. eves
838 I N 8 CA 92960 631·7137
loots, S• 90'0 T .. _ -9560 ·············~~........ rwc: .. 14' AM F Suofl.sb S.Uboat •••••• •••••••••••••••••
aJ\d cartopbcb . Special Telephone dive rt~r . $400 946-4647 Purchase!!
e liminate expensive ------~1 answering service. 21' S loop, bui lt 1938 Low •
Divert the call to the <Classic), new ri&, fresh 1910 4 spd. 5 apd.
number of your choice. bottom , SS.SOO. 873-4508 D..._Plck Up's
Original cost S1200. for 32• Ericlson. "ft'J d ean, Trt•ndaus
sale, ssoo 675-3411 __ well equipped, u:t.soo. Savlnal!!!
Typewriter. se lf · W i ll confider M•rfOww
correcting, full size, of· partnership. -.J081 M •• Hilt,.,.. ...
ri ce. as new. s375 . 17' FiberitaD stlop .rp.
898-8940 __ 2. fast . OB, trlr, fr Jl&ru
Office desk 44Jt24 ... all beaut. s-orn..-..
metal w/walnut fin ish ..... S ... /
BARWI CK DATSUN
.. "",,. C ar1...tTC7toO
831-3311 top. 4 drwr full ~usp cab Do~u M70
filing t ab. Both hke new. ••••••••••••••••••ei••• ~each Wood bookcase BOATSUPSFOaaart * Ce...MU•ao
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us the opportunity
to consider the pur chase
or trade-in of your clean
Porsche. Check with Us
Today!
Top Bellar
Paid
For Your Car!
JOHNSON & SON
Lm.c~
2626 Harbor Blvd°:
Costa Mesa 540-S63Q
W•Pey
OVER
la.look
For Your Good VW. Porsche or Audi
P~ot 9748 BMW 5301, '78, mint cond ••• •• • ••••••••••••••• •• Oay s . 951 5006 .
Wkends /eves . 499·5146. LEASE
'78 BMW 32X>i,4spd. melt DIRECT! 10 120 GardenGro11e 8 1
pamt. a te. amlfm cass. Gard£>n Grove 530-9190 snrf, alloy whls. pos1 1981 PEUGEOT
lrac, Recaro seats. lux· TURBOs
us pkg P.P. $9850 1080
ACter Gpm· ~g.9140-BEACH IMPORTS
Dcrh¥ft 97%0 848 Dove Street
'78 264 Silver tilk lthr 1nl.
am fm cas.-.. lo mall'"
$6450 759 OH22 t'\ l'~.
834-1042 days ••••••••••••••••••••• •• NEW PORT BEACH
1972 DATSUN 752.0900 Autos, Used
240% COUPE - --9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 speed trans . AM·FM Porsche • Gearal 990 I
radio & mac wheels A • •• •• • • • •••••••• ••••• • •••••• • ••••••••••••• • •• hard to rtnd model .. this PORSCHE 1979
one 1s really sharp ' 928. fully loaded. 15.~00
(278GMX >. orig mi.. xlnl cond. m
ONLY $4595 side & ou_t Blue book .
• .t. l(Bl STREET wholesale 1s S.26.375, our "' sale price 1s $26,775 USED CARS 1200368> Ask for Duke 1425 Baker St reel or Make. COSTA MESA
54S-3334 THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
:2060 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 642·0010
•CARS WANTED•
RUNNING OR NOT
$25-$300
CASH
FREE TOWING ·77 Porsche 924. black.
1
OP EN WEEKENDS
xlnt cond $7,300 Call Ed 1714 1891 0517
---4_!1~6938. IJ E E p s . l' J\ R s .
Roll1Royc:e 9756 PICKUPS from $3~
••••••••••••••••••••••• Available at local Go' t &:.:.;;;;;ii;;.;....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i(I #} DEAlfR IN U.S.A. Auction~ For D1r~rtory
?.==::;m;;;;y---~ I call Surplus Data Center
CHEAP!!
Slightly used lurbo kit
'70· '74 Oat.sun Z cars
768-5837.
·79 280ZX . wh.ite ext wine
int. 18.000 mi. am rm .
auto. air. xlnt cond
S8 500 OBO
rR ROY 1415>330-7800
R CARVER luidt 9910 r ROllS·ROYCl •• ••• •• •••••••• •• •••• •• ==~a·:" '73 Appola, auto trans. \...._ ___ .,....... a c. p s. Orig .ownpr
(lOSEO SUNOAYS 644·55l9
Saab 97 60 Cadillac 99 15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
·10 Torino 4dr, gm/wht.
reg. gaa, auto, p/b, pl~.
a c. good cond $900
548 6809
197 6 Ford Greodo
2 dr, I owner, auto, PS,
PB, AC, vinyl roof. AM
radio. $1875 (609PW P I
1714 1645·7661
Mercury 9950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
OHANGECOUNTY·s
FINEST
LINCOLN MERCURY
l>EALERSlllP
~ ?t.«J,.
LINCOLN MERCURY
16 JR Auto Center Or
SD FW} Lake Fore!oot
t'Xll
IRVINE
830-7000
078 Marqu1~ wagon. 9
pa s~ loaded . New
M 1c·helins Xlnt cond
S4000 Owner. 675-6161
78 Mercury Zepher Z7 . lo
m1, PS, PB, auto. 111n
top S3300. 97!M1099 PP
'63 COM ET Convt New
eng. top. :ri mpg, runs
gd Sl,600 496-_55~ __
Mustang 9952 .................•...•.
1968 Ford Mustang, V 8
Red exterior. black vin)'I interior New s teel
belted lire.. runs good
$\495 642-4321, ext 210 or
even1ngs640 7049. _
'65 M L0 STANG 6 cyl.
4::.pd . ~d m 1l eu ~e
SJ40<1 I >BO 644 5585
S2S 960·2795 NPT &CH. 25'·•·. LUV 'l>tolt Sh*e
Peh 1087 80-tMt with dual rears! Ideal
••••••••••••••••••••••• for tandscapers. etc.
(714 )640-0488
1976 280Z. 2+2 Auto trans. a c. am/fm
stereo. mags XJnt cond
$S,5SS (714)528-1~ -
LEASE COHTEMPUTIHG 1 ·77 Mustani: 11 Black
'CADIUAC? 4Spd am fm s tereo. DIRECT! We specialize in JeaM.•:c. New tires. good cond. Copper Salm Bunny, nu ,_.,, .._ (Ser. 6056).
cage. box trained, all ac· ••••••••-·•~••••••••• OML Y $5991
VW-PORSCHE-AUDI
445 E. Coast Hiway for the business ex S3195 or bes t offu
cess incl S3.S. 84&-76216 AlrcNft t I I 0 HOW AID Che'lrot.f at Bayside Drive
New port Beach 873-0900 1981 SAAB
TURBOs
ecutlve & professional 536 4912 aft 5.30
~ 1090 •••••••••••'!••••••'•••• Dove &c Quail Sts. Pianos & _.. ,..-•79 Seneca. l.llJ equipptd; NEWPORT BEACH '76 F 10, xJnt rond. 4spd.
liftback wal(on. 11.200
m i New tire:. $3100
830·7940.
laNJe S.Ction ·73 CONVERTIBLE
Of Hew 1981 Mint cond. SSSOOIOBO. ••••••••••·.~··.••••••••• roe rtowD It main · 131-0555
"Davenport Piano. good rained . C714) ~11 ---
Premium prices
paid for any used car
(foreign or domestic>
in good condition.
BEACH IMPORTS Codilocs 644·6159
cond. Weekends only '77 CHEVY LUV, chrome
661-8759$400/080 c-~ 5*/ 9 20 wheels. wide tires .
848 Dove St reel
NEWPURTBEACH
How In Stock! OldsmobN 9955 NCAADBEILL1l~ ······,·;;;~~~······· · 1 a.-I aftl /(m stereo cass, G~and upnght conso e ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• $2!J75/ bstoffer. &40-0010 piano. Nancy Hart, xJnt F ibe rlllaas shell to fit ---------
cond, Sll95. 496-7485 · 7 2. r"7 9 Ila n c h e r o . '72 Ford Courier. 4Spd, 4
See Us First! HOftdo 752-0900 9727 •••••••••••••••••••••••
VISIT YOUR !:>!.~~~ ........... !?.~~ ~ CUTl,.4SS Sitt.LOH l < .00 H.1rl"'11 Blve1
(O'>I•\ ~ S40 <>100
T HOMAS ORGAN w 548-9992 cyl , camper s he~l.
••en be t J ackman whls, radial Leslie spkrs._,.,or s 9· H a r vut Cabover UreS am/fm,xlntmech.
offer, 831-6215 w /h1drl j•ck1 ' Ras 1135010 8 0. 846-1648. .!SSS llarhor Hhd
S ... 11...CJ 1093 stove-heat.er-Ice llox-nu . \I · 111 OJ:lll
•"' d fl d Must sell before 4/l2, 1978 _l_o~t ~· ' -· _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ur tains -g co
Rossignol SM200cc Skiis 6'2·9'168 aftS Dodge truck, only L8K A..tos, l11tported
w/Soloman 727 bindings Must sell a.er~ 41iz 12• mL 645·0946 aft 4PM •••••••••••••••••••••••
usedonceS200493-_9759_ camper . sel.(-~t. Call _w_k_d-'y'-s------:--Alfa lCMMO 9705
TV Radio 64S-0946 aft4PM wkdya. '86 'i'JT P .U. good cond, •••••••••••••••••••••••
HIFI. shr.o 1091 twbe4U. 9140 $750 Call 8-5PM wltdays LEASE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••• , ••• 54>1080.~
Beautiful Color TV: 2 yr Summer ts com ing, buy '79 Da tsun King Cab, DIRECT! Sw ~n8tr,6.~~e delivery your moped now! ur79 21.000 mi. air , xlnt cond,
i.. ·.,.. · Honda Expre11 xlat $4600. ~56'8
J B L LlSO Spkrs cond. U OO. nl•422• 9570 . d dys-55t-7l23M Y•a
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
ORAHGECOAST ·79 Toyota C orolla
HONDA Liftback. Sspd, xlnt cond -
$3100 /or assume pymnts '79 SeV11le brand HEADna'ARTERS on168.wmo. &W-11.50 Loaded. 966-1oss
TV 6312244 TODAY!!! '74 Cehca GT Rebuilt
new '
engine Good cond Cad ·1sSev1lle 41M Fe UHIVERSITY amifm. a /c, Mags. $3000 quipped. New tire!>
SA LES&SERVICE oroffer. Eves545-8365 Sacrifice for $8,699
OLDSMOllLE --------754 3630 dys, 552-9742 . HOMOA '79 Corolla, 2D 17M m1 eves wkend'
'-MCTRUCKS Am/Fm stereo. heater ---
,. S3650 IOOJWRCl 960-2834 '79 While Cad Seville Osl 2850 Harbor Blvd --w spare tank Xlnt cond
COSTA MESA VollawCICJ'ft 9770 + extras. 962-6683 or 540.9640 •••• ••••••••••••••••••• 673·0139
----'60·'65 VW left & right
$850/pair never use . •••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 Prelude. red. xtras, door '73 left dOOT S50
very lo mi . auto. each. Wes\J!m style whl
$7150/0BO. 644·26.Sll rims for Super Beetle
Sansui GXlO component M•to:=/ .,_..__1 ........_.... PORTS '79, Honda Civic. 5spd. b
. t $130752 5120 ti IO ,,_ .,... IEACH IM am/fm cass, xlnl cond. Auto htwonc:e '68 Eldorado. l'(reat t1rel'. ca me · . Sc u-_.. ,._'·'· a~a Do Str""'t 9 """6 · k ff --.,. •••• -~ ....., ve ... ~ $4300farm.4 3-""'-· _ Problems ? Any ris . S6 00 or bes t o er
S20 ea. 548-97 44
'76 C adilla~ Seville
AM F M tape Air Nev.
paint Spoke whls Good
cond. $6900 631 2184
T h.b 87005 •••••••••••H••• • 1979--..av• NEWPORT BEACH thl
Port. os t a COMPACT TftAILER .......-u,, ·79 HONDA A"cord LX, SR·22's, low mon y 642·5251 or5484747_ am/fm cass stereo top C _..._ 752-0900 " rates Pirkel Ins 646-3.995
9917
. · ff 1973 Calalla Lun ate CMIY~ a 11 8 c ces inc I a I c. Ccnnaro of the hne, S2.25 or 0 er. Rae .... .,,. Hitch S4f5. c .B., st•reo. air. power · N
642 7030 • .,,,., "' '78 Alfa Romeo Sprint am /fm cass play er '69 Squareback · ew ••••••••••••••••••••'•• · 495·0048 steering, imm aculate, Voloce fully eqwp, xlnl $6500/0 8 0 call aft SPM engine, trans, brakes, '78 Camaro 'o:!!_1~. '72 HONDA SL70, extra low mllea(lu_.....;.,) cond,bestofr.557-0268 498-842? radial s . S2780. Ca ll Air a utomatic. power
...,.. re-' ~ 848 8058 steering. 27.961 miles. G••;:;:.;. ••••••••••,••O•I~· copanrdt.• i~;-.. •. lllt A.di 9707 '80 Honda Civic lSOO OX. --·-------l882VEI >
4 Door. Equipment in
eludes. split pwr seats.
cru1~e control. stereo
cassette & tilt wheel
Has ONLY 23,000 miles'
1126WZG>.
ONLY $5995
IAKERSTltEET
USED CARS
1425 Baker Street
COSTA MESA
54S-ll34
'76 Cutlass Supreme. sun·
roof. air etc. Quick sale
$2,000 finn Lauren or
Bonnie 540-4786
'66 Olds smo~ cerllfied
xlnt mech . new
tires 1 b r a k es S5QO
494 6739
Pinto "57 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'72 Pinto. nu tires. must
sell SllOOlbst ofr. PP.
962 5340 eves
'71 Panto. runs, needs
work. whole or parts.
make offer 631-3396 -------SZZS:...~ · $6395 ••••••••••••••••••••••• best offer. 955-2646 dys ; '75 VW BUG good cond, $4918 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •79 .......... t II '78 5000, Xlnt cond. fully S88·3082 eves/wkends. new tires, runs great, Barwick Imports
21'Sea fforsehu1J&deck. xlnt.(t)nd .• &•=• tftl(. equiped 07<Yl'ZW) PP 9730 a m /fm stereo 960·3470 Ul-llll t979POHTIAC 0 d
. t 1640 8'1-9387 J•911•r eves W..,.GO ... $5 O 11cou n · S6001080. ts2 ---------1••••••••••••••••••••••• SAFARI "' "
Pomona Ave., Cost a ----~Ir'----:. Wanted: Audi 50005, 'BO ·-J 'duar 3.8 MK 11S all '72 BUG xtra clean. rblt '70 CHEV. Rally Sport Autom atic trans .. a ir
Pontioc 9965 •••••••••••••••••••••••
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: PRAGUE, Caecho1lovakl1
.(AP) -Soviet Prealdeot Leonid J. Breshnev quJeted fears Of So-
!¥iet military intervention bl
:Pola¥ today, aaylni the Polilh
:communi.lt Party WC>uld be able ~to deal with it.a problems.
( Breihnev ln a speech to the
·caecboalovak Communist Party
. Congress cbar1ed tbal enemies
:of so~lalism we re uatn1
:•·economic pressur e and
blackmail" as well as "~
aganda lies, rmea ind dem;
~eos.v~: ag!fnst Poland's C9m·
munist regime.
But tbe 74-year-old Soviet
leader said the Polish party
"with the s upport of all true
Polish patriots" wo\l)d be able to
deal with its own problems.
Warsaw Pact maneu vers,
wblcb have been under way in
and near Poland since March 18,
were completed today, the Caecho•l~vak newa a1ency
Cetta rtflOrted. It aald forces
were "returnln1 to th~ places Of their penpanent 1tatioa!na."
Tbe maneuvert railed fean in
the Weat tba& the Soviet·led
Warsaw Pact lorces mlf)Jt in-
tervene to crush t¥ independent
labor movement in Poland.
••As far u the' Soviet Union ia
concerned," Breshnev said, ''it
bas been and cQntlnues to be the
loyal friend and atty of socialist.
Poland."
In a clear reference to Poland,
Brezhnev said "clan enemies"
are "instlgatlna and 1~portin1
couaterrevoluUonary forces ln
those places where they stUl ex-
ist, and carrying out other sub·
versive actions.
"You will. comrades, re·
mtmber aJl this from your own
experiences,'' Brezhnev said, re-
fer rt ne to t he events that
prompted Warsaw Pact forces
to march into Czechoslovakia in
1988. "These showed convincing-
ly that the plans of reaction hold
.out no prospect of success."
The Polish Communist Party.
be said, would "prove able in
adequate measure to oppose the
designs of the enemies of the
socialist system, who are at the
same time the opponents of the
independence of Poland.
W a lt e r Stoesse l , un-
der secr etar y of 1tate for
political aCfairs and a former
U.S. ambassador to Poland and
the Soviet Union, told NBC-TV's
"Today" show that Brezhnev's
rem arks meant the Poles "have
some more time to put their
house in order, according to So-
viet lhlhts." ·
Shuttle countdown lags behind
:Spring on trial
Priest death
'not murder'
By DAVID KUTZMANN
Of ... DMly ~ S\afl
A Long Beach man standing
trial for murder in Orange
County Superior Court suffered
fro,m a "warped fantasy" that
culminated in the killing of a
popular Seal Beac h Catholic
priest in February, 1980. a pro-
~ecutor says.
FBI gets
s-,Wqting
details
WASJllNGTON CAP> -Presi-
flent lteagan, still show inc no sign
of infection and bis temperature
near normal, gave the FBI a first-
hand account today of the attempt
on bis life eight days ago.
FBI Director William Webster
'nd two agents met with the presi-
i!ent at midday. The president's
{()unnlor, Edwin Meese III. also
planned to be there.
''It'll part of the rouUne in-
vestigation," said Larry Speakes,
White House deputy press
secretary.
The session m arks the presi-
dent's first official participation
in the probe of the March 30 shoot-
ing.
A late -m orning medical
bulletin said the president's con-
dition "has improved further"
and his temperature had returned
to near normal and was remain·
ingstable.
X-raysshowedsomeclearingof
the bullet-punctured lung, the re-
port said. There still is evidence of
damaged tissue along the bullet
path, but the affected area is
smaller today than It was Mon-
day, the report said. X-ray equip-
ment has been temporarily set up
in the president's suUe to monitor
his chest.
Culture tests taken to detect in·
fection were normal, though the
president still was receiving a
. (See REAGAN, Pace AZ)
Nemtpaper
ca/,ls /or"
Haig to quiJ
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -
Tbe Minneapolis Star to-
day called fOI" tbe resi1Da·
tlon ol Secretary of State
· Alexander K . Halg Jr.,
aayinl "biJ ienorance of
tbe Constitution makes
him look just plaia
dumb."
The reference was to
Hal1'1 auertlon lut week
' that be waa In control
when Pn1ldent Rea1an
waa abot and Vice Presl·
dent Oeor1e Buah WH
away from Waabln1toti.
· Under the Conatltutlon,
U.e teeJ'«aO' of atate I.I • tlftJI Jn line to tb• pres·
idnc1.
••worae tban tootla1
dumb, be loll hla cool In
tM IDklll ol crtm," the llar Nld. "Illa fallun to
1bow IJ'IC9 uDder Pl'ft· ... .. •(ipaWD•. toll·
1lderta1 bla VIUDltd .... ...., IDd NboD White
Houae record.''
But t he defense lawyer
representing murder defendant
Ronald Spring, 33, told a seven-
man, five-woman jury Monday
that""his client should be found
guilty of no worse than
manslaughter.
"I suggest to you that at most,
the evidence you're going to
hear in this case will be in·
di cative o f i nvolunta r y
manslaughter and certainly not
murder of any degree. This was
a tragedy," Cbie( Deputy Public
Defender Ronald Butler said.
However, Deputy District At·
torney Oave Carter said Spring,
a Vietnam veteran wbo spent
time in two mental bospitala,
wu aqry at the Catholic ehurab
because be believed a tonner
high school girlfriend had been
put in a convent.
This apparent "fantasy" led
Spring to make threatening
phone calls to church officials in
Chicago, Carter said. only days
before be allegedly punched
F ather Felix Dohe rty or St.
Anne's Catholic Churctt in the
bead.
Father Doherty, 64, died
several weeks later from com·
plications associated with the
blow, Carter said.
T he prosecutor said his
evidence will show that Spring
dro ve his c hopi;>er -style
motorcycle to St. Anne's on Feb.
$, 1980, and asked to see a priest
about a wedding.
A housekeeper had Father
Doherty brought to the baclc
door of the church rectory,
where the priest told Spring to
go to the front door Instead,
Car ter said.
However. the defendant beian
<See PRIEST, Page AZ>
BB suspect
faces dual
theft counts
A Newport B eac& cos-
m e tologist faces burglary
charges this week followin1 an
episode at a Corona del Mar
restaurant wheTe tbe woman al-
le.edly rlf1'd several p_ursea and
then etruck one of her victhna,
police said.
Anna Natalie Sundata, a 37·
year-old Huntington Beadl resi-
dent, was arrested Friday eve-
nin1 in front of the five Crowm
Restaurant.
Police say the lncldenl betan
wben a customer, Jewel Chap-
man1. noUced the woa»an al·
le1ewy loin& tbroulh her purse
lo a resi.urant restroom.
Mrs. Chapman told officers
she recovered bel' purse and
followed the woman into tbe lob-
by where she confronted her,
astia1 that ber po11euioa be re-
turned.
Instead, say polio, the
woman aluaed Mn. Chapman
ln the face and uted to n ... But
another restaurant C\11\0mtr ara"9d the woman and held ber
unUI POiice anived.
Officers claim the woman, ap-
parentl)t •ensiDI trouble, UWd to
-dump toCDe of thettoleo loot lDto
• planter In front of tu
NltaUl"Mt..
Polle. ·~ they rftOY... . ialtlc! eomb, • mirror ud ....
i)ciii that Naon;.d t.o llri.
....... aDd ilJi CNdlt ~ ttaaa blhalell to ....., female
e..tomer .
That ucond vltUm, po&la.
117, WllD't aware that ber punt
bal be8li rilled.
I
----
Delly I'&* It.ff Pllele
TEACHER ED LAMB CHECKS ON THREE FOUNTAIN VALLEY BOYS IN 'SPACE SHUTTLE'
Younpten mmulatlng llf• of astronauts In attemp1 to break school record
FJ/ student,s
get taste of
space life
As the countdown continues
for the long-awaited launch of
the Space Shuttle, three Foun·
tain Va lley students are getting
a taste o( the astronauts' liCe in·
side a mock space capsule out·
side Northcutt School.
Ttie three sixth graders are at·
tempting to break a school ·rec·
ord by s pending 125 hours
isolated within the capsule.
(Five years ago. three Northcutt
girls spent 120 hours isolated in
a modified truck for a similar
class project.>
The rules of the experiment
are that the youngsters must not
leave the capsule and that no
food or other supplies can be
passed in or out. The boys mu.st
prepare their own meats, sleep
inside the ~apsule and rely on
portable sanitation equiment
within the unit.
Mission control for the project
la Room 9,_ where students and
adult supervisors a re in constant
contact with the capsule via
radio, llJ'I intercom system and a
video monitor.
The students, Dan DeVoll, 12;
Jeff Gurner, 11, and Jason
Pltaker, 11, entered the capsule
hist Frtday evening and are ex-
ected to exit it at 3 p.m.
Wednesday.
"We've made it clear to the
bovs that lf they want to come
<See CAPSULE, Pa1e ,\%)'
•
Alaia attorneys
fight on unpaid
The two defense lawyers who
represent convicted double
murderer Or Louis Alaia of
Huntington Beach say they will
stay on the case even though
they have not been paid for any
of their work.
With Alaia scheduled to go
through a second sanity hcanng
in May, his Long Beach'lawyers
said Monday they will have
spent more than a year on the
case before it is resolved.
"We 've never been paid, ev-
erylhing's been tied up in estate,"
Albert C.S. Ramsey said.
Both Ramsey and co-counsel
Edward George Jr. have been
Alala's attorneys since J une.
1980. when t he Huntington
Harbour orthopedic surgeon
fatally stabbed his former wife
and a Long Beach attorney in
the woman 's Gi lbert Drive
home.
Alaia, 50. was convicted of lwc
counts of second-dgree murder
by an Orange County Superior
Court jury earlier this year.
But the same panel dead-
loc ked on the question of
whether AJaia was sane at the
time he killed Mar~y Lou Alaia,
(See UNPAID, Page A2)
In Huntington Beaeh
School conversion
plan to be mulled
A proposal to utilize Clapp and
Peterson schools In Huntington
Beach ror the instruction of 260
severely handicapped students
from Fairview State Hospital will
be considered tonight by Hunt-
ington Beach City (elementary)
School District trustees.
The board meets at 8 p.m. at
Clapp, 20581 Farnsworth Lane.
C lapp and Peterson are
scheduled (or closure at the end of
the current term because of
declinhlR enroUment.
The request to place Fairview
.students in these sites bas come
Crom the Orange County Depart-
ment of Education. 1
Lynn Hartline, ·'usistant county
superintendent. said a new atat.e
law requir~ that handicapped
students be educated in a lC!ll
reatrlc:Uve environment than th•
hospital where they currently ate
tau1bt.
M 1 . Hartline aald Peterson and
Clapp ftC'e aeleetecl ltec1ua. of
thelr pron..uty to tbe hoapital, which la loeat.d In COlta M•a.
Atso, abe noted; Clapp eau awved
•• • site for IPfffiJ educatlOli cJa11• and bu d•ian teatww
for the bandleaPPecS. •
Workers
attack
proble~
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla.
<AP) Countdown activiti~ for
the space shuttle Columbia
slipped about 10 hours behind
schedule today because of
persistent technical problems.
and launch crews worked
through their rest period in an
effort to maintain Friday's dawn
liftoff.
"At this time there is no im·
pact on the schedule; there is no
trouble to meeting a launch at
3:50 a.m. (PST ) Frlday," shut·
lle test director Bill Schick told
a m1d-morninl'( news conference.
The latest problem cropped up
overnight whui gas contami·
nants were found in the lines
that service Columbia's power·
producing ruel cells. Schick said
this was not unusual because the
lines had not been used for
sever al weeks
"We will continue to purge the
lines until they are clean,"
Schick said. The job was ac-
complished shortly before mid-
day.
The Columbia's two-astronaut
crew, John Young and Robert
Crippen, were winding up train-
ing activities at the astronaut of·
fice of Johnson Space Center in
Houston today. They planned to
fly here Wednesday for final
preparations for the launch.
They are to take Columbia up
for a 541h-hour spin -36 times
around the globe -in an effort
to lest all its complex systems
before guiding the craft back lo
Earth for an airplane-like land-
ing. Three more flights are
scheduled during the next year
before the shuttle gets the go-
ahead to ferry people and
materials into space com-
mercially.
Monday. during the first 12
hours of the countdown. the
launch team lost four hours
because of problems with a
~eaky valve and an electrical
short circuit. Schick also report-
ed that scuff marks were fowid
today on three more wires in the
spaceship, and these had to be
repaired.
To catch up on the work,
Schick said a planned 8-hour
bold in the countdown that start-
ed at 10 a.m. today had been ex·
tended lo 14 hours -borrowing
six hours from another 8-hour bold scheduled Wednesday. A
tot.al ~ hours' hold time were
built in to th e five -day
countdown; thus, almost half of
It would be used by midnight
tonight.
DRllCE CUil lllTllR
Patchy low cloudiness
, tonl&ht, otherwise fair
tbro u1 h Wednesday .
Highs today and Wednes·
day 67 to 72. Low• toni~ht
48 to 58.
111111 ,.,
The controoer111 oon A~z
an<kr Hcdg oa ~,., of
St<#• noC oftl~ ccmtfnuft bill
alto Mot• up. S.. cof.,,111,
,. POI/CAI.
lllEI
By •-'LIEl!f.A•
• Formtr Paklatant hlJ•ck tioetqe Crall Clymore bu ar-
rived ln New York Cit)' where be
face• char1ei Qf beia& the
rtn1leader ot a nJn•membef In·
ternatlonal dr~·•l1lu1ella1
operation.
Clymore'• Jawyer, Ronald
Kreber of ~una Beach, said
hi• client arrived in New York
at about 3 p.m. Monday 1n the
custody of federal Drue En·
forcement Administration
aeents who had accompanied blm from Damaacu,. Syria.
Kreber aaJd Clymore, 24, a
former Lake Forest resident,
• was placed under arrest by the
drug enforcement authorities
aboard Lufthansa Flight 404
from Frankfurt, West Germany.
The agents reportedly placed
the Laguna Beach High School
1raduate under formal arrest u
• soon as the plane entered U.S.
air space.
Clymore was one of the more
than 100 hostages on board a
.. Pakistani jetliner hijacked by
three opponents of the Pakistan
government March 2.
The plane was eventually :i flown to Damascus, where on
March 14 the hostages were re-
• 11eased in exchanJe for the
• freedom of 54 jailed political
prisoners in Pakistan.
Upon his release by the hi-
jackers, a grand jury indictment
naming Clymore and seven
other Southern Californians was
made public by the U.S. At·
torney's office in New York.
While he was in captivity, the
news of the indictment was kept
secret for rear Clymore would
be harmed by the hijackers.
About a week after his re-
lease. Clymore was arrested at
his Damascus hotel by Syrian
authorities and taken to the
Citadel prison pending efforts to
extradite him to the United
States.
Kreber s aid his client was
scheduled to be arraigned on the
federal drug.smuggling charges
in Brooklyn's federal court to-
day. However, he said he is at-
tempting to have the arraign·
ment put off until Monday.
Kreber said he would be
checking into an allegation by
Clymore that the extradition
papers allowing him to be re·
turned to the United States were
not in order and had not been
signed by his client
Clymore and his all eged ac·
complices are accused of s mug·
gling $12 million worth or heroin
and hashish oil into the United
States from Pakistan.
The nine members of the al-
leged drug smuggling ring are
accused of making up to 12 trips
each. concealing the drugs by in·
gesling condoms filled with the
heroin and hashish oil.
Ex-employees
suing HB
restaurant
The State Department of
Labor Standards filed suit Mon-
day against Maxw el l 's
Restaurant. claiming the Hunt-
ington Beach restaurant owes
$107 ,000 in wages to 300 former
workers.
Precarious per-cit
ANGLETON, Texas CAP> -
Tbe identiftcaUon of the 1keletal
remains of two 1trls mlHlDI
since 1914 m•y lead to new clues
ln the deaths or dilappearance1
of 40 teen.age 1irls J.0 yean ••o.
• The bOdies of 21 1lrl1 bave
been found in three adjaceDt
counties -Brazoria, Harm and
Galveston -since the girls' dll·
appearances were reported ln
1971 and 1972.
•'There bas got to be a com·
moo denominator in all the kill·
logs,'' Lt. Ma\t Wingo of the
Brazoria County sheriff's office
said Monday. "We just haven't
found it yet.
An unidentified window washer clin.gs
desperately by a single strap from a wm-
dow of a building on New York's Seventh
A venue before being pulled to safety at
right. The scene was recorded by freelance
photographer Howard Forman.
"We plan to go through the of·
fense reports of the other kill·
ings carefully in the hopes of
pinning down exactly what it is
that links them. We will do what
we can, you can bet on that,"
Wingo-said. .
He said that even thou1h the
cases were several years old,
the investigation was being re-
newed because of tast week's
identification of the remains or
two girls from Dickinson, south
of Houston, who disappeared in
1974. • Safe.buildings demanded
He said there are striking
si m i larities in the deaths
although another investigator
said he doubted a single killer
was responsible.
HB refuses to eme quake ordinance
The Huntington Beach City
Council bas decided to stick with
its earthquake ordinance that
resulted in the condemnation
last year of 52 buildings in the
old downtown area
Tbe city has given the build·
ings, erected in the 1920s and
1930s, about one more year to be
rebuilt to safe conditions or be
demolished.
Several council m embers reaf·
firmed support of the ordinance
after Councilman Bob Mandie
suggested Monday that shop
owners on Main Street near the
municipaJ pier be given a lime
extension "so that we don't have
a bunch of razed buildings down
there.''
Cocaine sale
Councilman Ron Pattinson ob-
jected. He said demolition prob-
ably will be postponed by court
challenges to the ordinance
anyway.
Councilman l}()n MacAllister
agreed. "Why weaken our posi·
lion." he said.
Fire Chief Ray Picard added that he was "stepping up code
enforcement" in the rundown
shopping area.
Calling 1t a "deteriorating
situation," Picard said the fire
department was making "addi·
tional inspections to get some
semblance of maintenance until
something can be done on the
earthquake ordinance."
Ex-Yippie leader
gets three years
NEW YORK <AP I -Abbie
Hoffman. the former Yippie
leader who surrendered last
September after nearly seven
years underground. was sen-
tenced today to three years in
state prison for selling cocaine
in 1973.
Hoffman, 43 , will have to
serve at least one year before he
is eligible for parole.
In Manhattan's state Supreme
Court. Acting Justice Brenda
Soloff ordered the graying,
curly-haired activist lo begin
serving the term April 21.
After originally pleading inno-
cent to charges or selling co-
caine. Hoffman pleaded guilty in
January to criminal sale of a
dangerous drug and fa ced up to
five years in state prison under
Fr .. PqeAI
REAGAN •..
a plea bargain with narcotics
prosecutors.
In a pre-sentencing memoran-
dum released Monday. assistant
district attorney David F. Cun·
ningham asked the judge to sen-
t e n ce Hoffman to an in-
determinate sentence or five
years under which he would
have to serve al least one year
in prison.
Cunningham said Hoffman
was the "prime mover" in the
Aug. 28, 1973. sale ot three
pounds of cocaine to an un·
dercover police officer. Hoffman
disappeared. forfeiting a $10,000
cash bail, in 1974.
2 robbery
suspects
nabbed in FV
No action was taken on Man·
dic's recommendation.
In March of last year, the City
Council enacted the ordinance
after a private analysis showed
the 52 old brick buildings to be
unsafe in the event of an earth·
quake. Last July, the city approved
construction of a semi-mall
beautification concept on a three
block section in the downtown
area most affected by the earth·
quake ordinance.
Currently, crews are working
on the $325,000 semi-mall con-
cept that calls for Main Street to
become a one-way street from
Orange Avenue to Pacific Coast
Highway.
A textured street s urface,
park benches, bicycle racks, ad·
ditional lighting, planter boxes
and trees are to be added to the
downtown area by this summer .
Judge nixes
charges in
jail death
An Orange County municipal
court Judge has ruled there is in-
sufficient evidence lo hold an
Orange County Jail inmate on
murder charges Involving the
death of ~rnother prisoner in
J anuary.
Judge Alan Praia's ruling
Monday followed a preliminary
hearing in which a defense
lawyer presented unusual
medical evidence that indicated
William Knemeyer, 19, died in
his sleep of unknown causes.
Wingo said most of the victims
Fro•PatJeAJ
PRIEST ...
pus hing and shoving Father
Doherty, he said. and then
punched the elderly cleric in the
forehead with his clenched right
fist. As Spring walked away,
Carter told jurors, he told a wit·
ness, "You didn't see this.''
Though paramedics were
called, Father Doherty was not
hospitalized until several weeks
later after he collapsed. He was
taken to St. Mary's Hospital in
Long Beach, where he died 10
days later. He never regained
consciousness. Spring was arrested by in·
vestigators after a c hurch
employee recogniied him as
having attended several meet·
ings for alcoholics.
Buller told jurors in Judge
James K. Turner's courtroom
that Spring s truck Father
Doherty with a .. soft-gloved
right hand" which caused a
"very small skin abrasion."
H e said the priest 's
housekeeper was concerned that
he see a doctor because Father
Doherty was taking a highly
"sensitive and dangerous" heart
medication which thinned the
blood. Trauma to the body. BuUer
said could be disastrous if the dos~ge was not adjusted or
stopped.
Fre•PatJeAJ
UNPAID ..• Judge Plaia's ruling meant
that Calvin Chapman. 41 , a
transient originally jailed on 37 and Marvin Tincher, 50, her
jaywalking charges. could be re· pr~sumed lover. The stabbings
leased soon from custody. occurred in the presence of
His lawyer. Walter Zech, used Alaia's two young children.
a pathologist's testimony Mon -Ramsey said he and George
day to show that Orange County Likely will be compensated wi~
Sheriff's Department deputies the sale of apartment houses an
attempting to revive Knemeyer which Alaia had an interest with
may have caused the internal bis former wife as well as the
damage at first believed to be family's former Gilbert Dri\te
were •hot ln the bead "exeeu-
tlon·ttyle."
Most ol the bodies bad been
<Jumped on the cround, he
added, "and while they werft't
Jctually burled they were very
carefully concealed.
•'The aif ls were mostly 14 or
U years old, all came from the
same area, bad the same or
similar bairstyles and CaclaJ ap-
pearances." Wingo sald. "Thil
leads us to believe they were
kllted by one or two persons. not
more than that."
But another investigator in the
s t\erlff's office, Barney
Woodward, said he doubted the
case involved a slngle killer.
"We're not working anything
like a mass murder'," Woodward
said .
• • J t is true that there are
similarities in the eight Brazoria
County deaths. There may be a
link -there is always the
possibility when you are work·
ing on homicides of young girls.
But it is my personal opinion
that, no, we are not dealing with a
mass murderer."
Woodard said Wingo "re·
leased information to the press
and it got jacked around. But if
he made those remarks, I'm
sure he can back them up."
Wingo said he believes the
murders were sexually motivat·
ed. although the decomposition
of most of the bodies makes it
impossible to verify that.
"I think it is a sexual thing
a nd that the killer or killers
have severe sadistic lenden·
cies, .. he said .
Councilman
shuns vote
on HB/irm
Huntington Beach City Coun-
cilman John Thomas didn't vote
on two Items affecting the Hunt-
ington Beach Company Monday,
despite permission to do so from
a Superior Cou rt judge.
A suit has been filed against
Thomas in Orange County
Superior Court charging he
shouJdn'l vole on matt~rs affect·
ing the Huntington Beach Com·
pany because his crane and
trucking business does more
than Sl0.000 in annual business with the development and
landholding firm
Friday Judge Edward WaJlin
rejected the motion by Tom
Livengood, unsuccessful can-
didate for city treasurer last
year, that would have ordered
Thomas to abstain from voting.
Postponed for the third time.
at the request of Mans ion
Properties Inc., a subsidiary of
the Huntington Beach Company,
was council consideration of a
2.8-acre subd1vision on Lake
Street between Yorktown and
Utica avenues.
Thomas abstained on the 6--0
vote for postponement. He was
out of the room and didn't vote
when the City Council continued
another reioning request by the
development firm for affordable
homes near Palm Avenue and 38th Street.
The affordable homes are a re·
quirement that the California
Coastal Commission attached to
the December, 19'19, approval of
the SeacUff IV housing develop-
ment.
In their suit, department of·
ficial s all e ge that the
restaurant management railed
to pay adequate amounts of
overtime, made unauthoriied
deductions for meals and didn't
pay workers for working during
meal breaks, between April,
1978 and December. 1979.
broadened range of antibiotics as
a-precautionary measure, the
medical report said.
Fountain Valley police arrest·
ed two robbery suspects hiding
in bushes near a freeway on-
ramp this morning after a patrol
officer fnterrupted an al1eged
armed robbery of a restaurant.
the result of an assault. home, now oo the market. ~~~~~~~~'-'-'-~-'---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If the state wins the case, the
average payment to workers
would be about $359. But in a few
cases, former workers who
toned many hours could win
from $2,000 to Sl0,255, according
tothe suit.
Maxwell'• is owned by the
L . .R.C. Corp., and president Paul
Wimmer wu unavailable this
mornln1 for comment. However,
another restaurant spokesman
aald the corporaUon mana1e-
ment believes the state's figures
are inaccurate.
"The president is in excellent
spirits," doctors said after their
morning rounds at George
Washington University Hospital.
·'His color is good and be is eating
well."
The report said White House
press secretary James S . Brady,
who was shot in the brain, sat up in
his chair twice Monday, can drink
by himself now and is eating solid
foods on a regular basis.
Consultations have started with
physical therapists about a re·
covery program.
In another development, Secret
Service Agent Timothy
McCarthy, who was wounded in
the liver as he tried to shieJd the
president, was dlschareed from
the bospltal. Before leavtn1, he
met with Rea1an and talked
about ~e~booting.
Cte•alfled edverttllftt 7141M2'-M'71
M ottter dlpllrtf'Mnt9 Ml..4321
John Clinton Laboie, 25, and
J e rry Sitters, 26, both of
Riverside, were arrested near
Slater Avenue and the San Diego
Freeway at 1 a .m. and charged
with armed robbery of Wendy's
restaurant on Brookhurst Street
near Talbert Avenue.
A revolver and pellet gun were
found in the bushes, authorities
said.
PoUce said officer Mike Luke
saw two men allegedly holding
.guns on Wendy's employee Kurt
Joachimst.aer, 19, at the back of
the restaurant.
The suspects fled when they
aaw the patrol car, accordin& to
police. Police said they arrested
the pair after cordoning off the
area. No •hots were fued and no
money was lost, police aald.
Police aald the restaurant was
cloaed and the suspects IP·
proached &he enu>loyee as be
was locki111 up.
J' .... P ... .4.1
CAPSULEi.
out within the qej(t few mlnutee,
the project will still be a tUC·
ct11," u,plalna Ed Lamb, a
t .. cber who or1anlled tht ptoJ· tct.
But lntervlewed t.broulla an lJt. t.rcosn •Yttem MODday after.
DOOD, the bo)'I Hid tbeJ W(el'e
eoiilldmt u.y WW mall• 1\ tO the tad. ~
Find the diamond of her dreams.
the diamond of her dreams will
come from the man of her
dreams. And you'll find it in our
tremendous sel~tion of styles,
sizes, and prices.
Robert Van· Etten, left, a dwarf from Orlando,
Fla., began work as a government employee
Monday . He was caught in the Reagan ad-
ministration hiring freeze after being promised a
job. and then appealed the decision and got the
job .
A I most every day the
Senate does business. Sen.
Wiiiiam Proxmire chides it
Cor not ratifying a 33-year-old
treaty against genocide.
Treaty opponents say the
issue isn't as clear-cut as it
might appear. that al worst
the treaty could be used to
prosecute Gis and other
Americans abroad as mass
murderers.
But Proxmire, D-Wis., de-
nies that and says the issue is
simple indeed.
Each morning, as the
Senate prepares to go about
its business, Proxmire brief-
ly takes the floor to discuss
the treaty. explaining it, re-
butting arguments against it
or just appealing for its
ratification.
a ....... ._ ....
be ~ nOt Un ID the Unit·
tel •• "U th9Y paid me 10 pou,dt ct2lt) a minute"
becau. the toUntry ll too vlolent.
Tbe 3'·year-old staaer 1poke to reporters on a
1topover at Heathrow Alrp0rt
on a fiiabt from Parts to Loi
An1eJea to make a promotion
D)ovle. He had been 1n P8N
for a party.
Of En1land, John nld:
"We have enough trouble
with our soccer violence, but
at least people don't walk the
streets with guns.
· 'l really believe that
violence on television ia the
root of the evil. A lot of it
could be cut out," John said.
Former Black Panther
leader Eldridge Cleaver says
he plans to join the Mormon
Church arter. completing
2,000 hours of public speak-
ing under a court sentence
ca I Jing for comm unity
service work, The Salt Lake
Tribune reported.
The newspaper quoted
Cleaver as saying he still
must do 600 more hours of
community work. He was or-
dered to do 2,000 hours of
public service as part of a
se n tence imposed in
Alameda County on his guilty
pleas to t h ree assault
charges. He was also placed
on five years probation.
Cleaver spoke in Salt Lake
City at the Valley Assembly
of God Church. He said he
and his family also attended
the 15lst Annual General
Conference or the Church of
Jesus Christ or Latter-day
Saints.
Frequently, the senator
finds himself playing before
an empty house.
Former U.N. Ambassador Andy Young is a
candidate for mayor of Atlanta. He was joined by his
wife, Jean, as he made the announcement Monday.
Nation cooling down
New storms develnping over Northwest area
Cocutal te~adt~r
P•lclly tow clo11olneu 1onl9hl,
olltorwl .. f•lr Wldnftd•y
C!Ml\lal -•. Inland M Coa•l•I
ltlOll •1, lnl-12. Wiier 51
EIMwhere, -r wetera nonllwefl
winch n to u knots will\ • 10 1 fool
Mil lllr""9fl lonlOlll WHlerly wlnO•
10 lo II ktlOU In •lttr'_, o•er Inner
Wlltr• Wtlll llglll and variable wlnO
One IO ).foot WHterly \-II
Partly c-. to tunny \Ille• and
MISonably Cool l...,,.....al11rH l<fOSI most Of IN cOl#>lry ,.,._ on IN
llH ll ol WHklnd rain• Bui new
11orm1 were O•••lop1119 1n 1111
Nortllwnt, tro.n \lie Pac:lfk CM1t to
the central RocklH .
Wllllo II •• , Coto -Clear O\llr
niefll for "'°"' Of '"' nation, wldtly 11<at11rld "-" toll from Soultllrn
Mlnnotota to nortllenl Color-.
1 so1at1d 111ow1n 1110 001110
eastern Tues -tOUthern Florio., alld ll11ro _,. ocatl~ rein and
snow sllow1r1 In 1111 northern
AoclllH -IN Pacific Nortllwnl.
T1m,.r1turn around 1111 MUOI'
Prly today rlft09(! from tt In Cut
8•nk, Mont. to17 In 81ytM.
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. "''ttz l!Jmnl"9
The Daily Pilot wants to hear obServaUou from lll reacten
-particularly comments about tM .,.C' ltlell. lt'• eaay to teU
UI your view.. JU1t call the number low Md 10Uf m..,..• wlll be reeorded . .,..,.,. wW be tnwrtbed Mftlral tlalaes
daU1 and clelivered to the delk of tb8 appropriate editor. No
•circulation calls, please.
Tell • what'• on your mind. The number ll lD MrYle. 2'
hoult a day, Mven day1 a wa fJ4a•flQ8fl
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..
• ASSASSINATION TARGETS Eight U.S.
presidents have been the target of as-
sassins. Top row (from left >, Andrew
J ackson escaped; Abraham Lincoln,
James Garfield and William McKinley all
wer e killed ; bottom row, Franklin D.
Roosevelt was spared in 1933; John F . Ken-
nedy was slain in 1963 ; Gerald Ford sur-
vived two attempts on his life, and Ronald
Reagan was wounded last week.
OC-Caltrans war looms
New wrangling over
transportation funding is shap-
ing up this week in Sacramento
between Caltrans officials and
Orange County representatives.
County leaders are objecting
to a new proposal released by
Caltrans Director Adriana Gian-
turco which would give Orange
County 9.6 percent of the un·
specified state money allocated
to Los Angeles, Ventura and
Orange counties from 1983 to
1987 .
They were expecting to get
about twice that figure, or about
20 percen~. of the Cundine.
Assemblyman Ri chard
Robinson. D-Garden Grove. said
Monday that he believes Ms.
Gianturco is trying to circum-
vent the gains made by passage
last summer or SB512. which
guaranteed that Orange County
would receive its Cull percentage
of funds.
Robinson claimed Orange
County taxpayers could lose as
much as $378 million in state
funds over four years. He said
that's the amount or money
legislators agreed last year that
SB512 would send to Orange
County.
To prevent the loss. Robinson
'
s aid he has asked Gov. Brown to
send the Caltrans proposal back
to redrafting.
· · 1 am convinced the governor
is not about to undo the action he
took when he s igned SB512,"
said Robinson. who noted that
Ms . Gianturco lobbied against
the measure.
Meanwhile. however. county
delegates and lobbyists are tak-
ing no chances. The group was
to meet today for its regularly
scheduled breakfast meeting
and Robinson said "I'm sure
this will bethe hot subject.··
The officials have about a
week to get the Caltrans pro-
posal changed before it could be
read into the legislative journal
as record and thus become law.
At issue Is the complicated
way that tbe state allocates its
funds for improvements and de-
velopment oC highways.
Caltrans doesn't set the fund·
ing levels for highway projects;
that function is handled by the
appointed members of the
California Transportation Com-
mission.
But Caltrans officials in
Sacramento do decide how much
each or its 12 districts will re-
SURPRISED?
ceive. It bases its decision on so-
called needs studies submitted
by each district.
In the latest needs study sub-
m i l ted to Sacramento by
Caltrans District 7 -which in-
cludes Los Angeles, Ventura and
Orange counties -the needs for
Orange County represent 20 per-
cent. or S2 billion, or the project-
ed $10 billion total for 1983 to
1987.
But in the proposal released
from Ms. Gianturco's office. the
county is projected to need $349
million of a total S3.6 biUion.
County officials don't quarrel
with the need to pare down the
estimateS' lo meet the state's
dreary financial projections. But
they claim the paring wasn't
equitable.
Dailfy ftiaot Dell•ery
..~ ....... "' Monday-Frrday II you do not have
)'OUr paper by 5 30 p m call before 7
p m and your copy will be deltvered
Saturday and Sunday If you oo not
receive your copy by 7 a m . call
before 10 am and yaur copy will be dehvered
ClrulotlOft TelephDM• Most Oranoe County Areas 44ZA1ZI
Northwest ~unhngton Beach
and Westminster 540-IUO
Laguna Niguel 4tMIOO
• VVe've been doing that tq people lately with our ladies
department. Come in and see our new spring collection, including
Lady Norman, Lady Thomson and J .. G. Hook. We think you'll
. be pleasantly swprised.
-~ .. -~ --~~ -.
-
Hlf ~ eo.t DAIL y PU..OTITuelday, Apnt 7, 1111
No ch~e planned.
in Reagan column
I I PHILADELPHJA (AP) -A columnltt for tbe Univeralty of
Pennaylvula newtpaper w\11 QClt be praMe\&'*i fQI' the 1tln1 ln tbe
Daily Pennaylvanian that be wtahed Pretldent Rea1an would die
of bJs iunahOt wound, a Secret Service aa•t HJI.
The column by Dominic M8,PDO, D, allo defended John W.
Hinckley Jr., the man accused of attemptlnc lo uaa11inate the
presldent as ''someone who couJd 1et upset and ancrY enou1h
about the pollUcal aystem to uae a bullet to cancel out the baJlqt."
Kevin Tucker, apeclal agent In cbarse of the Secret Service oftlce
here, aaid Monday the a1ency bad completed its investi1ation of
•the incident.
Retard«l man /eamd among Atlanta ,JBatl
ATLANTA (AP) -While the diaappearances ol )'CUD.I blacks
stu.n Atlanta with increasin& frequency, police investi1aUn1 a
series of chUd slayings have beeun aearcbing for a second adult -
a 21-year-old retarded black man. Larry Ro1en, who loots like a
teen-ager.
The first adult, also described by police as mentally retarded,
was found dead in a river last week. A total of 25 young blacka
have been slain or reported missing in the Atlanta area In the put
21 months. Twenty·two have been found dead.
IJani,.SaJr Jenja UDT breaJclhroUIJh
NICOSIA, Cyprus <AP> -Iran's president bu denied
publishinl( reports of a breakthougb In negotiations to end the six·
aAHl-SAOll
month-old lran·lraq war, but there were re·
ports that a new peacekeepln1 mission will
travel to the two Persian Gulf nations.
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr told Iran's offidal
news agency Pars on Monday that the peace
proposals by a nine-member Islamic medial·
ing t eam "were v ague." and that a
withdrawal of Iraqi troops from Iranian ter-
ritory must be simultaneous with a ceue-fire.
Jodie Foster's dorm target of bomb hoax
B•JRUT, Lebanon CAP> -New flabtln1 broke out la !Abu. toda1 after IJria ¥vwd
to reled PY comDl'OIDIH ~
Cbrtaum felrfl9 it bl been -· allDI fCJr teYm days. Tbe Vatted
StatH, meanwnue, laaued a 1tronc new appeal for an end to
tbe Syriall·Chrtltian warf ate tbat
by some acCOW'lll hu claimed at
leaatlMJIV•·
IA.._.. pvemment sourc•
~ \be Syrian stand wu maie Dl.m toCbrilUan President
&Uu Serkll a ~Ollem Prime
Mlnllter Sbatlk Wa11an even
before tbe dllpateh of Syrian
Forelp Minister Abdul Halim
XbadcJam to Beirut for talks to-
day.
The United States lnstrueted ill
am baaaadors ln Bel rut and
Damucua to appeal for an end to
the Syrlan.ChrlltJan fl1btlna ln
Lebanon.
"We are 111dn1 all concemed to
wel1h tbe unpredictable come.
quences of escalation,.. said a
U.S . official who arrived in
Riyadh, Saudi Afabta today with
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Hai1Jr.
He said the decision to launch
the appeal was made durinl an
'urceot meeting Hale had in Am·
man, Jordan, earlier in the day
with the U.S. Ambassador to
Lebanon John Gunther Dean and
U.S. Ambassador to Syria Talcott
Seelye.
A communique from the Syrian
forces command beadquarten in
Cbtaura on Lebanon's eastern
border with Syria said the town
came under intermittent shelllne
today from positions to the west
and a Lebanese army lieutenant
was wounded.
Cbtaura is four miles southwest
of Zable, site of the heaviest fight·
ing in the last seven days of
hostilities between Syrian t.roop9
and right-wing Lebanese Chris·
ti an militiamen.
The decision to launch the ap-
peal wu made duitq an...,.
m..un, Halt bad ln Amman,
Jordan, urller ln tbe day .tth
tbe U.S. ambauador• to
Lebanoo and lyrla, aald the ol· ftclal, Who requeated anonymity.
He said tbe two ambuaadon,
John Gunther Dean from Mtut,
and Talcott Seelye from
Dama1cu1, returned to those
capitals carrylft8 mnaaies from
the United States ur1lng peace.
The olftclal said the meua1e
carried by the ambaaaadon Ud·
der1core1 that the United Stutes
la committed to the territorial
lnte1rtty ol Lebanon.
He also said the Israeli 1ov·
ernment may be facln1 "Ir·
reslatible preasure" to intervene
in the cooflJct between Syrian
forces in Lebanon and the
Lebanese Christians.
However, Israeli newspapers
said Israel bas no plam for im-
minent intervention in Lebanon,
and that pressure for such ln·
tervenlion subsided when Haig
made it clear that Washington
opposed such a move. There was
no immediate comment from
the Israeli l(ovemment.
Sex, drug charges
Fire station code
change urged in KC
KANSAS CITY, Mo. CAP> -
The city's chief investigative of-
ficer bas recommended tighten·
ing fire station s uper vision in
the wake of allegations of drink·
ing, drug use and sexual activity
by on-duty firefighters .
"What we're saying is the city
ought to run the Fire Depart-
ment," city Auditor Thomas
Keyes said Monday.
January or to identify who was
contacted during the inquiry.
Although Ms. Hefner had pro-
vided a list of 200 firefighters
she said had engaged in sex.
drank or used drugs on the job,
Keyes said it would be difficult
to pinpoint the individuals in-
volved. NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP> -The Yale University dormitory
where actress Jodie Foster lives was evacuated briefiy when an
anonymous telephone caller threatened to blow it up unless ac-
cused presidential assailant John W. Hinckley Jr. was released,
police said. Students were allowed to return to Welch Hall, a
freshman dorm, after police made a brief search Monday and
found no bomb. Accident probed
Keyes said he believed most of
the allegations made by 22-year-
old Cheryl Hefner. who claimed
that misconduct had occuned at
23 of the city's 31 fire stations
during the past 41h years.
"I really don't think there's
enough information for us to
lake individual disciplinary ac-
tion." said City Personnel Direc-
tor Thomas Lewinson, adding
that it appeared "tbere is no
m a nagement in the fire sta-
tions ."
Dismissal. urged of cl.aim against Iran
THE HAG UE, Netherlands CAP) -The United States has
asked the International Court of Justice to dismiss the American
claim against Iran for damages resulting from seizure and holding
of the 52 American hostages. U.S. Embassy spokesman Jacob
Gillespie said Monday the petition also reserved for the United
Scott Douglass of the U.S. Forest Service inspects. the mechan~m of the Ridge Lift at Heavenly V af!ey sfc1 re-
sort on the California-Nevada border near South Lake
Tahoe. A derailment of the cable injured 17 people Sun-
day. Six victims remain hospitalized. State inspectors re-
portedly had ordered improvements on the lift shortly
before the mishap.
"l think her allegations were
true, based on her statements to
us and the s tatements of
others... Keyes said. But he
declined to release any informa-
tion compiled since he began in·
vestigating the complaints in
Keyes recomme nded that
commanding officers should
more carefully scrutinize station
activities and also suggested
procedures for reporting person-
nel rule violations.
. States the right to reinstitute proceedings if lran fails to live up to
the Jan. 19 agreement ending the hostage crisis.
Phone calls
Execuhon stay ordered in Flmida •
MIAMI (AP) -A federal judge today stayed the execution of
David Leroy Washington, who was scheduled to die in the electric
chair Wednesday for the slaying of a minister and two other peo-
ple.
rate to rise
WASIDNGTON (AP> -The
cost of a long-distance telephone
call probably will go up about 16
percent, perhaps as early as
next month, under a government
ruling giving the American
Te le phone & Telegraph Co. a
bigger profit margin.
Mayor Byrne to~ hoWJing project
CHICAGO <AP> -Mayor Jane M. Byrne says she plans to
move back to the luxury apartment s he normally occupies after
seeing that · ghter security measures are im-
plemented the violenx·plagued Cabrini·
Green publ ouslng P, oject, which has
become her empor me. ·
The yor also gave another indication
Monday at she plans to run in 1983 for a
second fou r-year term as mayor of the na-
tion 's second-largest city.
&hostage roul.e 'freedom road'
In a brief public announce-
m e nt following a closed-door
meeting Monday, the Federal
Communications Commission
said it had voted unanimously to
raise AT&T's authorized rate of
return, or profit margin, from
10.5 percent to a floating range
between 12.5 percent and 13 per·
cent.
After the announcement.
ALBANY. N.Y. <AP> -The route traveled by the S2 former
American hostages from Stewart Airport t-0 the U. S. Military
ACADEMY AT West Point would be designated "Freedom Road" un-
der a bill passed Monday by the state Senate.
AT&T spokesman Pie Wagner
said the company will aim for a
16 percent hike in interstate
phone rates. mcreasing r ev·
e nues by $1.4 billion over a
year's time. At the full 13 per·
cent rate of return. he said, long-
distance rates could increase 17
percent.
XS. MARKET
DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD
Freab flld of Sole. ~ ................ 3.18 lb.
Capt. Seaa's Fully Cooked Shrimp
(Great for Salads and Cocktails> •.... 3.31~ lb.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and t.op choice bfff aaed at lust 30 days lo the
peak of perfection. .
~ Boneleu Rolled Beef RoalU ........ Z.18 lb.
Thick Cut LoDdoa Broll or Beg. Cat
(Great to Barbeque or Broil> .•••.•.••••• Z.18 lb.
Lean GrOud Beef <Ground Hourly). ••• 1.49 lb.
EASTER SUNDAY 18 IUST
TWOWEEKSAWAt
· Delaney'• wUI feature Sprtn1 Lamb, Fresh Lot•I· Zacky Farm'• Turk~• and of cOlane Delaney'• FamOUI Aced Prime Rlbl of 8.t witb all exceaa bone aQd tat removed for your euy tablMicte carviD1. AJI
Prime Nbl ot Beef are lied at leut. JO days lo the ,.., or pertec!t.&on.
For tbet tradklonel Jtaater Sunday Ham we will have Bar If bonel .. hamt or boa•ln bamt ettller whole or
a ~U ball. We would apprecla'8 twr •pectal orders ta
adwuee ao we cu U1Ur• you U.. preper qultty and
NrYlff we at DtWMJ't are faanou1 few. Thaall You! '
'l1dl 9d taecthe Wed., •II tllr'8 fill. •11' •
'
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Raacb Fresb Local A1para1U ...... l8e lb.'·
Le. Sftet Local Strawberries .... 5lc a.kt.·
Jambo Hawallu Papayu •......... 5lc ea.
So. Americu 1$uuaa ...... 4 lbs. for $1.M
FREE" HOME DELIVERY SERVICE
(150 mlmlnum) deHvered In our completely
refrl1erated truclu. Your order Is under
refrt1eratJon from our store lo your door.
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
Dela..,•a Pwba&e Label Ch•,.,ae (150 mlll · usea .... aa ... ,...c ...
Caa.._ a.t. (One Uter) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . t.11 ea,
•rta1er a.e.ta llaac (750 mU> .......••..... •·•ea, ,k......,.8cGkh(7SOmll) ....... , . ., ........ , s.sa.-
. (One Uter ............................. ,., .. t.aea.
'tea1ra .. V.O. (One Liter) ........ , . , ....... •·• .. .
AU Uq~ ~d wlM Pl• lU • ~
•' I r.,.111 ;all, DMt or bt-!u ................... ' S.71
WSNOWnA'ftl&l,._NlrA
l!'f ~ OIOCUY DSPd'l'llDT.
THERE'S A TIME
ANDA PLACE TO
CARRY ON.
Some airline~ a.'k you and your carry-ons to share the same ~cat space. So you end up
with an attache whl!rc your feet arc supposed to be. Or a tenni s racket between your knee~.
But not when you fly Continental.
We already have plenty of overhead ~torage for your brief ca'ie or overnighter. Anti we· re
addi ng new carry·on compartments to every 727.
~ . .. .
Our new compartmcn~ are ~ ..... !!!~:; specially de 1gned ~o you can hang
up your garment bag. Thal extra
suit will arrive a lot less rumpled,
which is why you put it in a gannent
bag in the first place.
~don't think you should
share a seat with anything except
your own two feet So we've in·
creased our carry-on space. And
you'll enjoy a more comfortable
flight
That's not all either.
As soon as the plane lands,
you can get right off with your bags.
So next time fl y Continental. Be-
cause now there's a time and a
place to carry on. Call your travel
agent, company travel department or
Continental Airlines.
Th Denver: 6:0S am: 7: 10 am,
I 1:2S am. 3:00 pm. 5:00 pm, S:28 pm.•
lb El ~: 8:00 am. 10:05 am:
10:30 am. 4: IS pm: 5:00 pm.
12:45 am.
Th Houston: 8:00 am~ 8:25 am. -
10:0Sam.911:20am, 11:2S amt, 3:00pmt,
5:20 pm, .6:os·pmt. 1:05 am.
lb Phocni"': 9:35 am, 5:28 pm.
Tu San Antonio: 7:10 amt. 9:JS am:
10:30 amt. 6:05 pm. 12:45 am~
To Tucson: 10:05 am, 4: IS pm.
t J
~
I
I·
LOS ANGELJ:S (AP) -Tbe flamboyant career of boxlnl pro-
moter Harold J. Smith haa ended In a federal courtroom wltb tbe
reHlatloo that he 11 someone elle -a tugitlve "bad check and ~nco .,Uat" named Rota Field.a.
Smith, who uaed a Ue with Muhammad All to become a major
force In the boxln1 world, bunt into plpln1 aoba aa be stood
before a mallstrate Monday and conleaaed "My t1'U6 name ta Roea Fletda."
Woman ldU. gunnnn
LONp BEACH (AP ) -A Redeodo Beach woman who alleaed·
ly ahot and killed a man when be tried to rob her la not beinl held
by Lona Beach police, and it will be up to the county dlatrlct at·
torney to decide whether ebareea will be filed agaimt her, a police
apokeaman aald.
Sandra Edwina Murray, 37, was .interviewed by homicide de·
tectives Monday after the Sunday night sboot.ine in which she aJ.
leaedly turned the tables on an armed would·be robber outside the
Inspiration Bar, said Long Beach Sgt. Dick Wood.
Fox OKs merger pact
HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Denver oilman Marvin Davis, SS, who
wasn't able to buy his way into the newspaper business or pro-
fessional baseball, bas bought himself a big·bucks Hollywood film
and television studio by signing an $800 million merger agreement
with 20tb Century· Fox Film Corp., the studio announced.
The agreement to merge Fox with a company controlled
primarily by the Davis family was signed Monday in New York,
only 12 days after Davis abruptly withdrew the same offer.
Attorney gang victim?
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A federal agent says contract killers
may have been responsible for the gunshot slaying of a Los
Angeles attorney who had offered to cooperate with the govern·
ment about his practice of laundering large sums of money for ma· · jor narcotics dealers.
The attorney, Nathan Markowitz, 45, was shot three times at
point·blank range Friday in the stairwell of a Century City parking structure.
Surrogate mom reneges
LOS.ANGELES (AP) -A surrogate mother who once agreed
to give her baby away but now wants to keep him is planning to
have the newborn boy tested to determine bis f~ther's identity.
Denise Lucy Thrane's attorney, Stan Springer, said tests are
to be conducted at UCLA Medical Center as soon as the infant,
born during the weekend, is able to undergo them.
You Are Invited
to see the
MISS El .I.JETTE COLLECTION
presented by
Miss Elliettes special emissary
EMILEKANIM
You n1a~; choose from a large collecrion
of short and Jong chiffo ns.
georoe11es and uoiles for clay and evening
o r place special orders.
Informal modeling.
NEWPORT CENTER STORE:
We<lnesclou. April B ancl Thursday. April 9
JOHN HOG.AN
111 Fashion tslancl. Newpon Center: 644 · 7 100
La Jolla: 7636 Girard. 4 54 ·7121
Fashion Valley. Son Diego: 291· 7100
Steana riverfJoat •Inks
The Delta King, one of the finest steam
riverboats to sail on western rivers, rests
on the bottom at a dock in Richmond. The
Delta King and a sister ship, the Delta
Queen, were built in 1927 at a cest of $1
million each. The two plied the Sacramento
River from San Francisco to Sacramento
until 1940. The Delta King was purchased
two years ago for $35,000 to be a floating
restaurant. The Delta Queen still operates
on the Mississippi River.
'Canned Heat' founder Hite
dies of heart attack at 38
LOS ANGELES <AP > -
Robert "The Bear" Hite,
founder and lead vocalist of the
blues·rock band Canned Heat,
has died of an apparent heart at·
tack after taking ill during a
performance.
Police said the 38-year-old
musician, whose nickname
stemmed from his 5·fOOt·9, 370·
pound physique, died in the back
of his van early Mon<1Ay, parked
in front of his Mar Vista home.
After the first show at the
Palomino C lub in North
Hollywood Sunday mgnt. Hite
complained he didn't feel well.
climbed into the back of the van
and was driven home by road
crew members Jose Carcamo
and Jorge Reyes.
On the way, the crew mem-
bers said, Hite fell asleep but
began perspiring and gasping
for breath as they arrived at his
home.
Fire department paramedics
were summoned but were una·
ble to revive Hile, who was pro·
nounced dead at about 2 a.m.
The coroner's office said an
autousy was planned.
Born Feb. 26 , 1943, Hite
became fascinated with music
as a child and eventually as-
sembled a collection of more
than 100,000 albums
The band first emerged on the
national rock scene at the legen·
dary 1967 Monterey Pop Festival
and scored its biggest hits in late
1968-early 1969 with "On the
Road Again" and ··Going Up the
Country."
I
TUJUNGA (AP) -Vandals
u1ln1 hatcbet·Uke Instruments
destroyed the interior of a amaU
church, leavina nothing un·
touched except the walls and win·
dows, police said.
Vandals entered the Shepherd
ot the Hills church in this com·
munity 20 miles north of Lee
Anaeles through a side window
sometime between Sunday after·
noon and Monday morning, said
Los Angeles police officer Roy
McFall.
"They were so thorough," said
the Rev . IrJ Schahrer. "There
must have been 20 to 30 chops on
the piano keyboard. The organ
keyboard was even more
destroyed. The electronic part
was just chopped in hundreds of
pieces. I don't think there was
anything left that wasn't at·
tempted lo be destroyed, bent or
broken."
Mc Fall said the suspects en-
t ered through a window and
ransacked the interior of the
schoolroom, kitchen, main omce
and sanctuary.
He said they destroyed the or·
gan, piano, pews, books, altar,
fluorescent -l it cross and
bathrooms.
On the walls, the phrases
"Stoners Rule" and ··cocaine"
were written in black pen, police
said.
McFall said that Stoners Rule
is the name of . a motorcycle
gang in the San Fernando
Valley, where Tujunga is situat·
ed, but it was not known if the
gang was linked lo the van-
dalism.
"These guys are pro-
fessionals. It seems like there
was a group of them. All of the
altar caring equipment such as
special trays for the communion
were s trung all over the place
and bent." he said.
The new way
to spell ecking.
It's VISA®. The checkbook that s}ips
right into your wallet.
Your old bank checkbook is a thing of
the past. Use your Imperial Savings VISA®
Check Card instead.
· Cany it everywhere. It's good
anf\.Vhere a VISA® card is accepted.
:frouble-free WorldWide Checking.
r-Deitt01Qns are deducted from your
•At~•~ st account.
'
Sheriff.Mfmsbal
merger no closer
What wi,ll It take to convince the •t•te Lectslature
that Oranae Oounty voters were seriOus 10 monthl aao
when they recommended merser of the court-related
f uoctiona of the Oranae County Sherifrs Department and
Marshal's Office? .
In all the machinations that have occurred, It 1eema
Sacramento powers h1lVe lost slaht of the fact the mer1er
was called for by three of everY four voters who went to
the polls. . .
Public sentiment on the wue baa been cast aside du.e
to a myriad of conflicts on how the merger could best be
accomplished. While that issue m~y have been reselved
locally, it appears far from resolution in Sacramento,
where several competing bills to permit a merger are be-
ing argued.
Deputy sheriffs provide court baliffs and related
services in the superior courts; marshals perform a
similar function in the municipal courts. It bu been
estimated that about $1 million could be saved annually ii
the two functions were merged.
Everyone says great, merge the two, but agreement
stops ther e. Sheriffs' organizations fear a marshals'
takeover, while marshals' groups fear a sheriff takeover.
And while the bickering continues. the voters who
said they want the merger accomplished are left holding
the $1 million annual bill.
New drilling fight
Gov. Jerry Brown should have plenty of support as he
challenges ne w Interior Secretary James Watt's decision,
after only a month in office, to open four Northern
California areas to offshore oil drilling beginning in May.
Brown has declared he will take the fight to the
Supreme Court if necessary to protect the environmental-
ly sensitive area.
Oil drilling, he insists, would involve risks for the fish-
ing industry, tourism and the general beauty of the
area, and could permanently c hange the character of
Northern California.
The four areas included in the oil lease sale are the
Santa Cruz basin north of Monterey Bay, the Bodega
basin off Sonoma and Marin counties, the Point Arena
basin off Mendocino County and the Eel River basin off
Humboldt County .
Brown contends that Watt has made an iJlegal move
in r eversing the decision of former Interior Secretary
Cecil Andrus to exclude the four from oil lease sales.
Andrus' decision, he says, was made after extensive
studies revealed the tract contains only a minimal
amount of oil. not enough to offset environmental con-
cerns. The state Coastal Commission agrees.
Given the offh and attitude of the new Interior
Secretary with regard to environmental issues, it seems
likely Gov. Brown will have to follow through with his
threat of legal action.
There is no disputing the rare beauty of the Northern
California coast, and Southern Californians, who have
had their own problems with oil drilling, should be ready
to back the governor.
Changes in order
If a majority of Californians have their way, there'll be
some changes made in voting procedures by the time the
next presidential e lection rolls around.
A statewide survey by the Field Institute found three-
fourths of those questioned saying they were unhappy about
television projections of the outcome of the November vote
that were broadcast before California polls c losed.
Almost a third said they believed the early projection
and President Carter's concession kept many people from
voting.
This is in line with Secretary of State March Fong Eu's
estimate -based on pre-election voter turnout predictions
-that up to 400,000 people may have passed up voting
bee a use the presidential race already was decided.
Seventy-four percent of those polled thought television
projections before the western polls close should be pro-
hibited.
Many said thev would favor changing voting hours
to a void a repetition of the early projection and concession. or these, 60 percent said they would prefer voting on
Sunday and having the polls close simultaneously na-
tionwide. Almost as many -55 percent -thought the
problem could be solved by opening the West Coast polls late
on Monday and closing them early on Tuesday.
While the premature announcement of Ronald
Reagan's victory could not have altered the outcome of the
presidential race, many local candidates had good reason to
believe they were deprived of anticipated votes because
voters didn't feel like going to the polls after the announce·
men ts.
This being the case, it 's..by no m eans too early to discuss
and agree upon a policy that would give every voter and
every candidate an equal chance at the polls. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1580, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd I Three meals
I
BJ L. M. BOYD
Eatinl of three re1utar
meala a day only dttes back
about 100 yean, surpri•lnCly.
Breakfut at dawn, dinner at
du11l, that wu the pattern
for centuries. Lunch waa
whatever anybody could
grab sometime durln1 the
day. In fact, Dr. Samuel
Jobnaoo ln 1155 defined lunch
as the ·amount of food a
person could bold ln one
hand. Boues started about
150 yean aco to divide the
workday into two aection.s,
early morning to noon, earb'
atternoop until dual. Even·
tu ally, that made ~ouUne ol
the bi11er midday meal.
You jmt won't hear abOUt
any more Carlbbfaa hur·
rlcaS1H aamecL. Dayld,
FrtderkrCamWe~'Audrey or
Beuy. TboM 8'orm nam•
bavt bem ndnld.
W ASHlNGTON -Alt.hCMap
the White House bu belatedly
ordered a4mlnlltraUon oftldall
to atop uaaulUD& Secretary ol
State-Alexander llalc ln order to
pruerve bl• eftectlveneaa
abroad, the antl·Hahr campaip
baa ldeolo1lc1l roots bavln1
nothln1 to do wtth bl1 conduct
after the ahootlnJ of President
Reaaan. It. orlliO ii bll bard
anU-commwlllt policy', .,peclal-
ly his move to save El Salvador.
At iaaue la more than Hall's
sudden dash from the White
House Silua·
tJon Room to ·
the newuoom
upstairs to re-
as au r e an
agonized na·
tion the after·
noon o f
March 30 .
That irritated
Defense
Secretar y
Caspar Weinberger , worried
about his own authority, and
confirmed White House concern
about Haig as a team player.
The news media promptly put
Charles McCabe
Ge.n. Ha11 la the unllotm of
Capt. Qaee•. on tht brlnJc ot
lunacy.
Thia anti-Hata campalcn bu
inany earmarks of put attacks
on aay hi'91 ot:ficial ln any ad·
minlltratloo willinc t.o condemn
communllt ag1re111on. The
most recent victim was
Zbianiew Briezlnskt, President
Carter's national aecurlty ad·
viler. Before that, in the early
Vtetum War days, the victJm
waa Defense Secretary Robert
S. McNamara.
"THE PRESS ia trying to do a
real job on Al Haig," one White
House aide told us. That lnd.lct·
ment represent& a sharp about·
face by the president's men who
had been doing their own "reaJ
job on Al Haig'' the past two
months. They changed only
when the battering of Haig en·
dangered U.S. foreign policy
Whal startled While House
aides was incessant repetition
over network television Monday
afternoon of the brief segmPnt of
Al Haig in the White House
press room. Along with the
president'• own docotrt, be had
no idea whether a naUooal
calamity wu at band. When be
beard deputy White House preu
secretary Larry Speakes unable
to answel' a question about
military alert, Halg rushed to
face the preas.
. BAIG WAS understandably
overwrought. He was, th~refore,
lesa than precise in attempting
to say he was doing all that
could be done in the absence of
both president and vice presi·
dent. That lent itself to easy dis·
tortion. Television commen·
lators aald fiaUy Haig had con.
fused the legal s uccession,
putting himself third instead of
fifth. Worse, they appeared to be
using that segment to plant the
idea that Haig was exploiting
the assassination attempt to
further himself.
Such treatment is not unjque
for Haig. Brzezinski was the
constant target of the news
media, particularly after speak·
ing out against Soviet ag-
gression in Africa. The attack at
home mirrored the savage as·
HUit on hlm Ui the Soviet preu
Moscow'• propacancla barrtft
acal.Nt Hal&. followln• It• hard
line •••inst communist ex.
panslonlsm In El Salvador, h ..
not matched tbe ant1-Br1ezinakl
poison; but it far exceed•
Kremlin criticism of Cyrue
Vance and Edmund Muskie~
Again, attacks at home coin•
cided with the Sov1et abuae~
THE UNDERMINING of
Haig's presUge abroad began
during controversy over crisis
management. Evidence was the
statement attributed over
television to a Middle Eastern
diplomat -believed within the
administration lo be an Israeli
official, but not ambassador
Ephraim Evroo -that Haig'•
usefulness on his current trip to
the Mideast had become ques·
tionable.
The degenerative process was
hastened in the hours after the
assassination attempt by ad·
ministration officials. "Haig has
mortally wounded himself," one
official outside the White House
told us. An official from another
department said privately that
Haig had affronted most Cabinet
members gathered in the Situa·
lion Room "because he insisted
on taking over."
Yet, White House chier of staff
James A. Baker Ill at the
hospital had designated Haig as
his White House contact point.
As secretary of state, Haig has
clear legal Cabinet precedence.
As a career military officer, be
understands military com-
munications, alert readiness and
command and control; Wein·
berger has spent on ly two
months at the Pentagon.
BAKER AND presidential
counselor Edwin Meese III have
seen to it that anti·Haig prop-
aganda from the administra-
tion will stop. Belatedly, they
are alarmed at the implications f
of a denatured chief diplomat.
But the me~ia present a larger
problem for Haig. He was firs! t
selected for public flogging dur·
ing hi s Senate confirmation
hearings. The role enlarged
when Haig lost to Bush as crisis
manager and played his cameo
role in the March 30 drama. But •
his crusade against communist
expansion seems to be the real
reason that, like Brzezinski and
McNamara, Haig is fit for flog-
ging.
Virginia schools win bilingual debate
I s hall use as a touchstone for
the early Reagan administration
the way it and its leader are
handling the problem of bi·
llngual leaching in our educa-
tional establishment. Since our
educational system is heavily
under federal subsidy, the prob-
lem is the president's, as is bi-
lingualism's parent problem, the
Immigration crisis.
The core of the problem is
Spanish-speaking children and
whether they
s hould be
taught in
their own
language or
in English.
This is a mat-
ter that has
become, by
inattention
a nd in ·
decisiveness
on the part of previous ad·
ministrations, emotion-ridden
and politically explosive.
THERE HA VE been several in·
terestinc deve19pments since the
last time I wrote on the subject.
For one thing, public opinion bas
become ~er.Y vocal about
Sydney Harris
English as first language in the
schools
This year, ir President
Carter had not been defeated, a
rule by the new U.S. Depart·
ment of Education making bi·
lingual education mandatory
would have gone into effect.
Under it, local public schools
would be forced to educate non·
English-speaking s tudents in
their mother tongue.
That proposed rule had many
local school officials up in arms
because it wouJd require special
teaching in English along with
transitional instruction or other
s ubjects in a student's first
language. Cost of program: As
much as $591 million, with
Washington picking up one-third
of the nut. It would affect an
estimated 3.5 million children.
EARLY LAST December the
s tate of Virginia decided it
would have none of lbe U.S.
Department of Education pro-
gram. The Virginia 'education
department decided that
Fairfax Count)' schools need not
teach foreign.speaking ,students
in their native language. This
action was the resolution of a
five-year fight between public
officials and the county. with the
government threatening to
withhold up to $18 million in
funds.
The feds . unexpectedly, ac·
cepted the all-English program.
Ttie USDE. in a letter to Fairfax
County school authorities, said it
was much impressed with the
results of the county's $2 million
program to teach English to
foreign-speaking students.
THE LETTER said, according
lo UPI," achievement test scores
of students in the program
showed they had made ·consis·
tent and significant progress:
through intensive E nglish
classes, and concluded th~
system's teaching methods were
an acceptable alternative to
federal rules requiring school
districts to provide special
clas. es in foreign languages to
students who do not speak
English as a primary
language."
The importance of the
Virginia initiative can hardly be
overestimated. First, ll got
USDE lo agree that its August
1980 guidelines were far from in·
fallible Second, and perhaps
m 1re important, it demonstrat·
ea that if one county in Virginia
could go all·English. there is no
reason why every county in the
country, including San Fran·
cisco and Los Angeles, could not
do the same thing.
Effort and the support of the
federal government are all that
is required. Thal, and a brist
handling of the politicians,,
Chicano a nd otherwise, who
stand lo gain most from in·
troducting this immense boon-
doggle into the public schools.
And f inally , President
Reagan, who reportedly wani.
to abolish the USDE, has lent a
receptive ear lo the Virginia aC'
lion. The decision to go al(-.
English is much more easily
made by a president of the U.~
than by a governor of California_:
where a Chicano cabal appea.rS
intent on setting up a huge
Spanish·spealting enclave in this
state. They would do this in the
name of civil rights, whereas
such a program as proposed by
USDE wouk almost certainly~
witJ\ lbe help of the politicians,
r esult in illiteracy in two,
languages.
,JI
'
Don't judge eonternpf)rary art too hastily
A bundn!d years 110, In 19,
a palntinc submitted to tbe
Royal Academy lo London was
condemned by tbe Jud1es' com-
mittee to the dark «*lar of t.M
rejected and the deaplaed. Tbe
jud1ea coatem&Ji"'ly di.1-
miHed it U a " ,'' "a CCIII·
founded arraqemeni .''and .. an
Ina ult to tbe art of P•llDf ·" It wu the last picture the
ai'Uat 8"I' painted that WU tO
lM seen at the
Academy
durln1 bh
UfeUme. No
hult•ldual or ta1tu ... uoa .. , .... ,.
would tlM11
r., •••• •
bou11na
cloUan for a
palntln1
Wbid II DOW •med pri~.
It ..... lDeoDC:eiYable to•. a etatarJ leWr, tut tlaJa famlllar pletun ••....,au.eked urn·
olatkJU.rf, llalf-baked, lDCOID•
/'
' L petent and demeaning to the
claaalc tradition ol palntlnc.
Even lta modest Utle, "Arrup·
meat ln Gray and Black" was
ridiculed by curaton and staff. .
LOO&ING AT IT today -
where tt ., oae ol tbe mOll pre-
cious ::1111kml ol the Louvre
-we aiialy aa tlderly woman
ha a da~ dret• and • ~te
ahawl, allUDc calml1 ID a chm.•
To our 17• Jt ii a quilt and conventloaai _portrait, almost
flU•l•tl• 01d:fa1lltoned. If ~ w ftDd It a little trite,
IOIDftMt too •i.tdorlal" fot
ou.r tiMi\ i at11MUm pltee we
ma1 n•1t1IJ 9dmltt but can· .......... ~
Qiil l• "'• aeilate and pueet.I arra•1••nt eould
ba.. 1Urr.cl tbt crlUu, tb•
p•bllc and to maDJ fellow
aitllll ol 191 t.o .... wUd out·
~nta ol lndt&D ........ ...
chrtalanf ......... .......
~111 Vu Goib'I' ••11' .._
Ud flllladt''.lJOWtn eouLl ...
did provoke lau1bter or re·
vuJsion -t>ut this tame, almost
too • "realistic" old lady in a
chair?
WELL, '!BE NEXT time you
happen to mil an art 1allery, or
are otberwi.$e expos~ lo what la
known u "modern art," try td
keep this Uttle story In mind.
For it ls well worth remember ,.
inc that each aeneration is too
close lo the wort of its conteahl
poraries to Judge it fairly aml
rationally. Only a few eyes ad
open to the genuinely in·
novative.
l do not auiu•t that .,.
automatically have to "ap
predate" whatever ls new aa4
atartllnl; that la mere trendl 1
1nobblam. But neither lhould .,_
fffl that we have a riJbl to dW
miM or delplae whatever 11 ne.t
or different; tbat ts m•~
Phlllstlne stulftneat. We need M
1 .. rn to auapead out ultlma
jad1me11t until we bu-e d
vtloped a new way of lookllaj II
a new ob)llet. "I know wMt l
lite" only means "I Uk• .._
I'm Uled to."
TIN picture, ol COWH. la -commonly, If lnaccuretilj(
bown u ••Wlliltler'1 ModMi'~
A.Del it llrik• UI DOW U _a rillWt
Mtm1111111....-.reard. •
..
I '
Orange Cout DAIL v PA.DTrr...-,, April 7. 1111 H/I!
N:VS E OMPOSI TE T RAN A €Tl0NS
._,.,A,.....lllCLllN teANtOtlhl ···~ ...... tt.flWflt<. ,. ... MITOll, DH.o!T A .. 0 CllM:l• ... fl tTOCil UClllilleltMt• •t....,ID IY !\II ........ ""'"'''
.J t
~Dow tops
PontasNo.1
Fellty Dow Chemical UDHated •toctaY Du Poat
u the profit leader of the chemlca.I lnduatry lD lllO.
Tbe final score On earoLni• after tutt) wu:
Dow: '805 million
Du Pont: tne million
. Tbil wu a revena.I of the lm 1t.and1Dp, which
looked Uke this:
Ou Pont: '838 million
Dow: $'78' million
Tho top of the compost ii not entirely new 1round
for Dow. ln the climactic year ol 1974, when Richard
Milhous Nixon resigned as president, Dow spurted
spectacularly
while Ou Pont
slumped mis·
erably -and
the Midland,
Mich ., kid
wrested first
place rrom the
Wilmington .
llllll
~~ . \ ,
1a111nz4'ltir
Del., granddaddy of chemistry ror the first Um• In
history. I>Qw held that lead for the next three years
until Ou Pont reasserted it.a supremacy In 1978. Now
Dow is back on top aqain.
DOW'S ASCENDANCY ia especially noteworthy
in that it's still the smaller of the two companies, Du
Pont has been the largest chemical producer in the
nation for as long as aoyooe has been counting., In
1974, for example, when Dow outearned Du Pont $587
milHon to $403 million, Du Pont's sales were $6.9
billion to Dow's $4 .9 bllllon. Last year Du Pool's sales
came in at $13.8 billion while Dow's were $10.6
billion.
Many more people work for Du Pont than for
Dow. Ou Pont has some 132,000 employees. Dow bas
only 56,000.
You get the picture? Dow is a lean. aggressive
outfit. Ou Pont is older and ratter. more sel in its
ways.
Neither Dow nor Du Pont makes many products
that you and I can buy directly. However, we prob·
ably have stuff all over the house that uses
chemicals supplied by these two companies.
DU PONT IS, or course. the king of the synthetic
fiber business: nylon, Orlon. Dacron and Quiana all
came from its laboratories. Teflon and Lucite are
other Ou Pont inventions. But Du Pont rarely makes
the final product (you see Dacron listed on a tab in
the shirt or suit you buy>, and after a while it soon
finds itself in a commodity business. where the price
competition can be fierce <Hart Shaffner & Marx will
drive a hard bargain). The trick is to keep coming up
with new "miracles," and the fact is: Du Pont has
not come up with a new "miracle fiber" for a long
time. ..
Du Pont paints are still a big business. But Du
Pont fled the antifreeze business <remember the
Zerex brand?), abandoning the market to Union
Carbide ( Prestone), another lumbering chemical
giant which used to rank second behind Du Pont
before Dow passed it like a shot.
Dow has been catted tbe "chemical company's
chemical company" because it makes ao many basic
chemicals used by other companies.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
-._ ..,., , NEW Y6ttKIA,.I FIMI Oow-J-..,g.s.
NEW YOltK IAPJ· s.tes, • p.m. Pl'•U ~~"· """ ••
Md Ml C~ Of IN llft•l'I motl •<llW 0o9n HIGll Low C-O'll Hoew Y-stack EuM...-'-· ID ll'ld 1000,to IOGU••.'7 ... 24-12.87 UM~ Mtlorwlly ., ...... Ulen SI. ID Tm w .m Gl.11 C29.1' 4».11-'s-f.:a m:: :.. -:: 1S Ull 109.Sl 110.01 IOl.55 IOUS-0.SI
Gel'IT•lloEI 4.52,-,."" = "' ts 51~ 1'0.JD ,.1.'4 •us .,.I._ 4.15 Amer TloT 00,100 SI'--1 ,......,, J,'2l,JDO SUoeMll'I I 41A,l00 s-~ Tren I.JC ,JOO THKO llK 1'1,JOO 3'\o'J i.; U1111 • .. • .. · · • ...... • · "6,000 Oowalem .. .500 U\Oo I U Siil . . . . .. . . .. .. . . • . . . . . . . S.Q4.600
Sim• Pet •:too IOf\ ~~ ~~ m:= ~"' iii WHAT STOCKS DID StltOllCal 1 JOJ,IOO «I '11,\ Am Alrlln JOJ,200 U -14
S.W1Roeb m,.oo llh -"' l'IUOf'CP 21S,700 43•,i. 1 II. "9ol!Co .. ,4CIO MO..
AMERICAN LEA.BERS
MM.,A.nl6
HEW YORK IAP!-S.let. 4 p.m. prlc• "'° Mt ell...... of Ille tel'I moll ectl•e "merlcal'I Stock Eocr.e~ ltwes, ~=\ ~tloNl41y et 1~ Ulan,,~ IV.
O\e"OP Ho 140, 100 211> -l't lntlrtlm Sys 111,600 I l't CrystelOll llS.100 32"' -114 G<ilfCal'I 11 '7,IOO 27""' -.. HOuOllM ... SOD SOI'> '-NemrCom wt 12,600 llV> + "' ;;t8at ~I 11,200 12'111 ..... ~_, .... t.J n:: 1:~ -~
UPS AND DOWNS HEW YORk IA"I -Tiie IOllowl119 1111 _, ,,,. ,.._ von. stoc.. Eacllal'IOI
9'Dekt •l'ld wen-,,.., .,.,,. -liP IN moct el'lcl dDwl'I tlw ,,_. -on r:;ce~ ,....,.. ~rdleH of •<Mume
No te<ur~ tredl'ljl oeiow g •re ll'ICI· ~. Het •l'lcl _<.,'899 CMl'IOH ere Ille
dlffe,.l'ICe -ti. pnvlous <loill'lt
prk• and todaY't tit'''-Pl'lU. '
Heme L..i Cfla Pct I PMiolt 2.!0DI SO + ~ UP 20. I 2 Wleboklt SCr 7 + ._ Up 12,0 t fr: 11'14 S7'Wi + S UP t.S 4 el'ltrOft 1014 + 1.. Up t .S
S A IWn Inc 4"" • 'II Up t .4
HEW vo'ttK CAPI """'· '
AdverKed T~
DKlll'lad UOI VIKl\enoff 311
rotel •-1n2 .... l\lglll " l'Mw lows I
WHATAMEXOIO
HEW YORk t"PI ~. t
Toosr/1
4'2 m 1' •
METALS
,.... ...
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fl
4
Prev. 49.
294 212 lrtS ,,
'
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l.•M1'Cel'll.le_.o. ZIM Q\4 <el'lll • _,a, oellnr..s.
Tia '1 Ollt Melelt W..IL c....._ita Ill.
A_._,..16 C .. b e -"• H . Y. M__., $.GS.GO_,._.
PleU-Ul2.00 troy OL, N. Y.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~
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!
" ..
6 Gral'lltwle 14l,I. + '""' Up It 7 tooU Roll 1014 + .. Up 7.t I NSPw 4.56clf :Mitt + 2\IJ Up 7.1
t Ortllltty S\4 + "' Up 1 1 10 Cllltln> Cg ,,.._ + 1"-Up 7 .•
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1. .. 411 .. : •lt•r-llaln1 u1•.u. •ft Sit.SO.
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11 lllPw UODf 111'> + 1""' Up 6.S U ColllM Alk 1~ + "-Up t .3
, ,..,.., .,.,,_ 11.11'111 uco.11. °" .... ".
Jrr••ll"-': llall'IQ Ult.OJ, off SU.ft. 1,
Zllrlcll: let•• en.r-llal119. UllAO, 9ff ~
'21.00; uu.ooat11ac1. ,
ff Oeti ttlw•r t1YI + w, u, 6.1 "kllVklL ~ -+ 2 Up t .J W•IUlm pf ~ + \IJ Ull 6.1
Nfme ~· Cl\Q Pct. 1 OKC C.., 40C "I'> -11~ ~ 11.7 f Kroelllff ,.,. -~ 10.t > Olll•O• pt ,.,. --. t .1 • P•PL 1lipf ltYI -I th 1.7
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GOLD COINS Haw YOttlC CAPI -ll'n<et lat9 ~ .. ...-c--. ~·""""'"'I'• ......
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........ , Oflly clelly quote l•br~ ass..n . ott .-.-.
' t
••
llY MNOll! .JOY a. ..........
A year's work. What'll lt pt you?
How about nearly $77 ,000? ..
That's how much the Auxiliary of Hoa1
Memorial Hospital reallied from its year's ef·
forts.
The money -$76,783.85, to be exact -was
turned over to t.he hospital last week at t.he. aux·
tllary's annual luncheon Ill the Marriott Hotel,
NewPort Beach. •
The l,016·member auxiliary also donated
more than 73,500 hours o( service to the hospital
durin1 the past year.
Totalled, since 1962, the auxiliary hu given
$1,269,331 plus 1,318,160 hours of service.to the
Newport Beach hospital.
Thia year's donation will be used for ren-
ovation of the opthalmolo1y and 1aatroin·
HAPPENINGS
tes tinaJ laboratories. expanding the ultrasound
department and toward operation of the daily
living kitchen in the occupational therapy de·
partment. .
The auxillary's cash donation is derived
from numerous sources Including dues. dona-
tions and bank Interest from the Copa de Oros;
sustaining, active and Candystriper dues ; the
Hunters' bridge-fashion show luncheon, rum-
mage sale and stamp machines; Nightingales'
sale of baby photos; the Gift Box ano Gift Cart.
The past year's volunteer work includes
64,079 hours given by adult members and 9,594
by Candystripers.
Topping the list of volunteers is Bev Cox
who has given the hospital more than 15,000
hours of work over the years.
Another star volunteer is Doris Kohaut who
bas accumulated 9,500 hours in 10 years.
Among others recognized at the luncheon
for their volunteer service were Sally McBride
with 9,000 hours, Carroll Beek with 8,500 hours,
At Hoag AuziUory luncMoti t0ere (from teftJ
JacquU Milin, Jane Cle1MM, Edyt~ Bulloch
and Bette South.
.My..u.Eckes for 8,000 boun, Bernadette Goetz
for 7 .~ hours, Alex Shaffer for 6,500 hours, and
Dorothy Hetzler , Dora Hill and Bea Lace with
6,000 hours each.
Also recognized were Bev Langston, Marie
Zambitom, Matt Kinney, Katie Romberger and
Irene Lee with 5,000 hours each.
Each giving the hospital at least 4,500 hours w~re Bette South, Marybele Beahm, Frank
Williams, Peggy Kreyser and Louise Man-
derbach.
J acquie Miller was recognized for 4,000
hours of volunteer service while Marion Tilton
and Marion Frazer each had 3,500 hours and
four women -Clara Arntson. Jane Nickertz,
Barbara Gumbiner and Marie Hiebsch -each
gave 3,000 hours.
In acknowledging the auxiliary's work,
hospital Board President George Hoag said it
was important to stress the sense of harmony
the group brings to the hospital.
In addition to Hoag, luncheon guests in·
eluded Larry Ainsworth, who is an assistant ad-
ministrator at the hospital: John C. Barbadian.
who recently was named personnel director;
Frank Hall, who heads development and com-
munity relations; A. Jane Maradei, executive
liaison for the medical staff; Douglas Myers.
Walter's 30-day anniversary
Do you know what yesterday was?
It was the first 30-day anniversary of the
last show done by Walter.
Whatya mean. Walter who?
CRONKITE. The beloved dean or American
broadcasters who became a legend in his own
time. My gosh, can't you remember where you
1111 BDlllCI
were and what you were doing when he uttered
his last, "That's the way it is"? I sure do. I was
in the kitchen frying onions for baked onion
soup when my husband called and said, "Erma.
t his is it! Walter's signing off for the last time.··
I remember earlier that day we watched
Eric Sevar eid as he observed that Walter
received more attention at leaving his job than
President Carter
"President who?" asked my husband.
"Carter! You know Jimmy Carter."
"Oh, THAT Pres ident Carter. I remember
him now. He was president before Reagan and
his vice president was ... don't tell me ... it's
right on tl1e tip of my tongue ...
"Has he been on the American Express
commercial yet?"
"I don't think so." he said. .. He went to
funerals a lot. Wh at was the Pope's funeral he
went to?"
"I'm not sure There were two very close together."
'· 1 think· it was the year Oakland won the
pennant. Or was it Pittsburgh? Let's see, they
interrupted Charlie's Angels with a news bulletin."
.. Are the Angels in the National or the
American League?" I asked.
"No. You remember them. They were a television show."
.. Are you sure you're not thinking of Travels with Charlie?" '
"That was a book by J ohn Steinmetz ...
. "You're confusing him with a senator from Ohio."
· ·1 am not," he said. "That's Howard Tan-nenbaum."
"Don't be ridiculous. Tannenbaum is a
German word for Christmas tree."
"That's .it! .. he said. "That's the year we
bought the hve Christmas tree which was 1977." ...
"What's the matter?" I asked.
:·Now I've forgotten the question. Are we getting old?"
"Nonsense." f said. "I don't know about
rou. but I 'll never forget Walter Brennan say-
ing. 'That's the way it is,· if J live to be a hun-dred!"
Still riding in back of bus
U~AH ANN LANDERS: I am a black
woman who never dated a white man until two
years ago. Please help me sort this out.
The man is a well-to-do professional. un-
~--......:0 Ill lllllll .... -------.. t
married, no responsibiUties. no commitments,
nice dresstr. good-looking and can talk on any
subject under the ,sun. I didn't go looking for
him. He sought me out.
Mr. "Perfect" treats me very well. He
bouJlht me a car for Valentine's D~y and bas
been very generous in other ways. Hut he has
yet to lake me out in public. We meet at bis
place or mine and have had some mm1-
vacations elsewhere, but we always travel
separately
I have never met a ny of his friends or fami-
1)'. and he has never asked to meet mine. When I
bmt that we may not be right for each other, he
says I am crazy and he wants our relationship
to last forever. No mention has ever been made
of marriage. How long do you think this will
last? -THE MYSTERY WOMAN
Dear Woman: It wlll laat as lon1 u you are
willing to be Invisible and let bJm buy yoa off
with gifts. U you haven't flgured out wbere you
flt Into his Ille, I can tell you. It'• at tbe back of
the bus and oat of sight.
Gemini: Begin special project
WEDNESDAY, APRILS
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): More persons
will be receptive lo your point.a of view -key is
to express in dynamic, creative, positive man·
ner. Do it now! Focus on trips, visit.a, calls and
selection of quality material. TAuaus <Apr. 20-May 20>: Money is
forthcoming for purpose or home improvement .
You are on brink of maj~r discovery.
HOROSCOPE ·
Diplomatic approach wins allies. You locate
artiete that bad been lost or stolen.
GElllNI <May 21.June 20): Set Polley, de·
fine terms, avoid self-deception and 1et 1oln1
on 1pecial project. Hlthll1ht iQ!tiative.
ortal...Uty and confidence ln your own Judi·
ment. Cl.rcwmtances favor your efforts, .ambi·
Uon1. ·
CA.NCl!a (June 21-July 22): What had beeo
nebuloul will ~m• 10lld -alUet appear trom "beblnd the 1cenH." RelaUoaahlp in·
i...118-i moaey and romance domlaate ln· trt..-·1cmarto.
~ JI LID (,.."a:~. 22): Empbaall on com·
fleUoe, tt -out proJldl and recoplliD& tut ·wbl Md ...... a meN ~UH 11 de-
rilollM lalo "aerioua relatJwlalp." · ·~ (Aq. II-Sept. 22>: Foeua OD new
IUl'l ila ... dlriteUoD -blOUOl OD !DdillNID•
•••c•. onclnallt)' and abllllJ to '••rlnt
personal style. Dictate your own terms. Your
position is stronger than originally anticipated.
Define ambitions.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): You perceive out·
line of your own future. You can know what to
do and when to do it. Personal philosophy
comes into sharp, clear focus. Plan ahead for
travel, unique contacts and communication with
one who lives in another land.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Others t~nd to
be extravaiant at your expense. Be aware,
cb~ck credit ratings and inalst on detailed re-
potts re1ardint expenses. Accept accolade
from one who decides special policies.
SAGITTA81U8 (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Em·
phasls on legal ..iffaira, special documenta, need
for tying loose enda. Focus also oo partnership,
joint· effort.I, public relationabip and marital
status. Delay!
CAP&ICOllN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Be
analytical where special wits, buic laauea are
concerned. Take nothin1 for IJ'&nted. Locate in·
dlvldual who ls wUUna to lend benefit of ex-
perience. Be aware of Ucenae and other require·
111en~!~cludJD1 leaae1 and letters of credit. A'1'JAa1us (Jan. 20-Feb. 11>: Reaplte from
routiJM comet in 1urae of creaUvtty, than1e,
variety ~ romance. Family NUDIOD could be
on a1encta. Empbul1 on domestic acljuatmfnt.
home ~auona, remodeU.., and purchue of luxury Item.
Pl8Cl:8 < reb. lt-lllar. JO): Obtain valid
hint from Aquarlua m111.,.. Acctat OD bome,•
property, bulc teeurity. tafety meaaOtel and
avoidance ol Mlf~IOD. DeftDe meanlDO, •ee people u t.My are ind Hleet 0D11 quallu
prod um.
Jean and Alan Alison. general chairman. get re-
ady for race
who is director of strategit' planni'mi.: Michael
Stephens. chief administrator. and William L.
Fagan. newly appointed director of facilities
and maintenance
Louis Kaa. who retired last week as
fac1hties and maintenance director and says
he's heading out in hts Cap1per to places where
he can't be..feached by telephone. was honored
by the auxmary which made him eighth vice
president in oharge of c riticism . complaints and
the new auxiliary offi ces
Jack West, who has been taking the baby
photographs at Hoag since the early '60s , also
was a guest of the auxiliary.
Among those running the show at the
luncheon were J acquie Miller. Jane Clemens,
Edythe Bullock, Bette South and Myrna Vogt.
Ms. Miller is auxiliary president, Ms. Clemens
is first vice president, Ms. Bullock is its past
president, Ms South is publicity chairman and
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
S.•e fr-1, •M IM)Oiti
1'22 HA.HOR llVD.
COSTA MESA -541·1156
At Adam and Eve ball were Mr. and Mrs. War·
ren Cox fle/tJ and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beechner
Ms. Yogt announced volunteer awards .
M.s. South <actually, it's Mrs. because she's
the Wife or Academy Award-winning cinemato-
grapher Leonard South> wears two publicity hats.
Her other hat 1s publicity chairman of the ann~al Newport·Ensenada Yacht race. which is corning up April 25.
Alternating her hats at Wednesday's
luncheon, she talked enthusiastically about an
Ensenada Send-orr Luncheon to be held April 23
at the Balboa Yacht Club in Corona del Mar.
The Ensenada luncheon. which is open to
the public. will include a panel of sailing
specialists who'll be prepared to answer ques-
taons about the race
Reservations for the luncheon can be made by calling 673·3515
Ebsen master of ooremomes
Balboa Island resident Buddy Ebsen was
master of ceremonies two weekends ago for the
annual Adam and Eve awards benefit dinner
dance at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. He at-
tended the star-studde~ event with his daughter,
Cathy.
Theme of the affair, co-produced by
Ne"' Port Beach resident Don Daves. was .. A
Shower of Stars ..
The evening began with a black-lie recep·
tion in the foyer of the hotel's grand ballroom
and was followed by a ~ourmet dinner of wine,
San Souci Salad, Duck a !'Orange and the
dessert, Coupe Marcella.
Sally Forbes of Corona del Mar shared
fashion show coordination duties at the ball with
Carol Kaplan of Pacific Palisades.
Among Orange Coast residents to attend the
ball. which is held to honor Holl ywood 's most
outstanding and fa shionable talents for their
philanthropic endeavors, were Marie and War·
ren Cox. Sus<Jn and Robert Beechner and Joyce
Rhoem
PUBLIC NOTICE I PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS I STA.TEMENT OF AIANOONMENT
N-E STATEMENT OF USE OF
Tho foll-•nQ per"°" " OoonQ bu" FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME
nou es Th• follow•nv per"°" hu _,.d G REEN I( E E p E R 2 •• ~I Ille .... ol lhe IKltU-DUSIMSS M~
Mu9uu1te P.,kw•y MIS"on V1e10, THE SHOE DOCTOR, <llA East ~----------Cal1forn1a '2•'11 lllh Slrffl, Costa ~u. C..lilorr11a Evelyn J Hampton. 'I09 w B•lbcNo '2'11
J:::=========:::---1 aou11.,•ro. B•lbO• C•ltlOfn•• ., .. , Th• F1thh°""' 8u\IM\\ H•me ,. ••
Call 642-5678. Tnos oo.s1Nu IS '°"""''"o by.,., on lerred lo abov• .... 1t11<1 1n 0.Wlllf
Put a few word s dlv•oual Co..nty on~ t k I Evolyn J H•mplon Stoll Edward Holmos. 20SO Eu•
._ __ O-::W=O=r==O=r =O=U=. ::::::.~ Tnls sl.olO"'"'I was llltO wolh lhe Ocun Front, B•lboa. (altf0<n1• '11•'1
Co11"'y Cltrk 01 Oran99 Counly on T111s b<Alne" ••• conoucttO by .., 1.----------------------.. I APt1l l, 1'ill 1nc11 .. oua1 FUtU4 !><Oii HOim ..
Puoli\l'Wd Or•"9f Cw\t O•tly Pt1ot, Tf'U\ ,,.t..,,..nl w•s tiled with uw
Apt1I 1, 1', 21, 21. 19tt 1'2).11 County Ctork ot Ot...,llf County on
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
AOtll J, 1911
Fll1S5J
Publt"""' Orat>gt Co.ut D•oly Polol,
Aprll 7. 14, JI, 21, 1'111 1'21·11
Tht toUowtng per"°" 1$ dOU'tQ bu~1 ~========-----==========~lnen•1 PUBLIC NOTICE
GOULD .ENGI N EERING
BEDWETTER CONSULT .t.NTS. 17 E•slmonl, Ir vtn•,
C•lllorni• 911 U
GMy H•vol""d G°"ld, 11 E••I monc, lfvlne, C•llforn1• 9J1U
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tht foll-lnQ ~·son Is OolnQ b<.l>I·
MUe$
THE SttOE DOCTOR, '32A EHi
11111 !>trttl, Cost• Mna, C•h lornl•
t1UI
·'
LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED
TM tr.••••t em you can 9t¥• • o..,.. ..... , •Ml 11w ,..., of .,.... ta.tftHr
too It ell •"4 10 Ir.fl Hrt~I Pf"MMft"I ettd ,,...,. "4 #ft...... MO
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... , cw.H by or91"'<: .... ct Df ....... cen M •"•• s.Nf lor our
" .. ~ocJitu,. IH••ttt"t -Whet U • 4M Mo~• ef'4 "o• To fnd
U •~b,.._o.......,doctort "'°....,.....,
Tr.h bU~ness "COf\du<ttO by ~ •n
dt'itduil
<;.ry H Gould
This statement •as lflllCI w•lh 11\•
County Cltrl< 01 Oran~ Counly on
M•r<h 19 l'ltl
FUl111
Publl-.i Or•noe CO.sl Daily Pilot
M•r<h 31. "°'II I. U, 11 1911 1~ 11
J ae (hul Sl\lm, S Union Hiii,
C•rson, Cellfornla t01'5
TMs °""NU I•'"""'"'*" by .... In· dlvldual
J•ChulShim
' "Equally Effective for Adults~· PUBLIC NOTICE r---•••·---------------· . FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS
Mell to PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL LTD. NAME STATEMENT
' '· 311 F1tsl Streel Nekoosa WI ~•57 ,,.~:~:o1•-ino per..,,. ll °""'9 bu"
~··
Th" sl•l-1 ••s lllllCI wllll Ille
C°"nly Clerk of o. .... County on
Aprll J, 1 .. 1
Flff*
PuOll,,_., Or aft99 C->I 0.lly Piiot,
APf'll 1, 14, JI, 21, 1 .. 1 1'2'-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
PARENJS NA ... E ----------
AOORESS
CtTv ______ STAIE ___ ZIP __
PHONE ---------
P•c1hc. fnlp,n11'one1 ll<I 1919
AGE--
IA~• !IOI
WE HELP SOMF DOCTORS CHILDREN
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FO~ VENUS DE MILO
• IN04WIDCJAL COUNSELINO
• FRfE FIGUflt ANAL Y5'S * F~ RECIPES ANO QAll Y MENUS * MOOERN ~OUIPMENT * PROVEN AlSUl.TS
R A 0 ENTERPRISES, IOl1 W 11th Str .. 1. CMI• "'4H, Caltlornl• NOTICf 0 .. llfTElllOEO TllAMS .. IUI
nm UN~,.~~~:~~~~~:~:''· Ro Arthur O.vts, Jiii BarbaOos ... 0 .. llSSIOtfSCOOf Pl•ce. Cost• Mesa, Calofornl• '162• Tiii$ buSINH j' tOOOUCleO br "" In G•••ld D Mlllwp, llun.we. Se<. Olvldval S.c. Ho , llJD ,.._,, Blvd.,
Rar Arthur Davis (Mia Maw, Callfornta.
TlllS stal-1 .,.,., filed wllll tl\e D. Foley Wllton, l nl•nd•O
County Cieri. or O•Wloe Counly on trantlefff, Sec. Sec. No.; • Jt40 Maren fl 1"1 Cllarlem.,_, ~lie.ell, Ca rllornla.
' .. U7ttl l(lnd Of llcenu lnl•nOed lo 0. lranslerrwd. ON·SAt.E BEER AND Published Or-..oe (OHi Dally Piiot, WINE FOR PUBLIC PREMISES
Mar. 11, 24, JI, Ao•~1 _u10-t1 LICENSE •4l·l>M07.
PUBLIC NOTICE Total contldot••llon lo be peld for tlle
butlneu -•kense ls 57•.aoo.oo. CHll to be .,._tied ....•... U,000.00
.. ICTlnou• IUllMllS O.manO -'°"tile O.lenc• Of c.aSll NAMI STATIMIMT IOt>eOeposltwd .............. $17..000.00
Tiie 1o1-1ne per-. It doln9 llull· Demand ~ tor Ille a-• ot 111-neu as: Cal·W.11 Coner~ a.livery ventory not 10 .. c..o to the tum of:
,.,...Ice, 101n O..lol• Ave .. Fountain ...... • .. · .. · ................. $1,000,00
Valley c.llfomletZ7QI Note -Se<urltw Aor-.-n.l I•
D • I J Doi • 10111 0 I I avOf'olllleSal ............. ". UJ,-.00 arr yn • an, roe TOTAi.' v..-.oo
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C-IY Cl•ril ot o. .... Ceunty M«eftll'~lts, 1911.
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l'Wlllllwcl 0r.,.. toell Dally ,.,... •1141 tM llcelm I.a M lie '91d efW tM
Atlfll 7, t•, 21. a. ltll 1~ Oeta rtment el Ale.Mlle a. ... , ... Cafttrol ,,.. -.."'"1 tlle ,,.......,
TOTAL COST
SAME PRICE TO ALL! ·
.-----------tret1tfw. PUBUC NOTICE lh~rew lie...,: Wetter11 ~,,.., EiC,_, Jal S.. v..-. a. Wte IOI,
-------------1 T111tln, C•lll~rfllO .,. ... Att11:
lltCTITIOUI aUStN•U ~r1ty11 Wlllll'IONIMll.
NAM• ITATIM•NT a«• O. lii'l"-
I\ ' .
Tlle fOllowlflt l*"i..""' 11 do'"9 tlull· T~ neu H . " o. Fetey wu-DETAlt. "I.US, S\Jfte Q-202, UOO Tr.....,_
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CN1111111Mr t.f*I• Tllll , .... .,..,,. Wes 111141 Wiii\ lflt
c-ty CIHk of Oren .. Clollnty 1111 Marolt It 1'41.
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.
: PRAGUE. Caechoalovalda · 1 l (AP) -Soviet President Lecmld
blackmail" as well u "prop-
a1anda lies, ruae1 and dem-~IO•Y~ '. a1!1nst Poland'• com·
munilt relime.
I, Brer.bnev quieted fears ol So-
1, •iet military intervent\on in
, Poland today. saytac '1ae Pollah
' Communill Party would be able
tto deal with tta problems.
rJ · Brezhnev ln a apeecb to the i Caechoelovak Communlat Party •
l Congresa charg_ed that enemies
• of aocialis m were uslng
But the 7•-year-old Soviet
lHder said the Polish party
"wltb the support of all true
Polish patriots" wouJd be able to
deal with ita own problems.
War.saw Pact maneuvers,
. which have been under way in
and near Poland sJnce March 18, ; "economic pressure and . .
... ~ .........
RELEASED -Secret Service
agent Timothy McCarthy
has been released from a
Washington hospital after
recovering from wounds sus-
tained in the attack on
'President Reagan.
FBI gets
s/wptin&
details
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presl·
dent Rea1an. still showing no sign
of infection and his temperature
near normal, gave the FBI a rll"St·
band account today of the attempt
on bis life eight days ago.
FBI Director William Webster
and two agents met with the presi-
dent at midday. The president's
counselor, Edwin Meese 'III, also
planned to be there.
"It's part of the routine in·
vestigatlon, ·'said Larry Speakes.
White House deputy press
secretary.
.. The session marks the presi-
dent's first official participation
in the probeoflbe March 30sboot-
ing.
A late.morning m edical
bulletin said the president's con-
dition ''has improved further"
and bls temperature had returned
to near normal and was remain-
ing stable.
X-rays showed some clearing of
the bullet-punctured lung, the re-
port said. There stlll is evidence of
damaged tissue along the bullet
path, but the affected area is
smaller today than it was Mon-
day, the report said. X-ray equip-
ment has been temporarily set up
in the president's suite to monitor
b1schest. <See REAGAN, Pa1e A.%)
Neuwpaper
cal,l,s for
Haig to quil
111.NNEAPOLIS (AP) -
Tbe Minneapoll.a Star to·
day called for the rest1na-
Uon ol Secretary of State
Alexander .M. Hai& Jr.,
aayln1 "his iporance of
the Constitution makee
hlm look Just plain
• dumb."
The reference WH to
8al1's auertion laat week
:. tbat he WH ln control
when President Rea1an
was lbat and Vice Prnl·
dtDt Oeor11 Bush waa
away from WutlinstQD.
U•d•r U.e Coastltatlon. ..... ......,, of state ta Mia ID ._ to tbe pre1~
• kleDcJ. .. • •JJ:on• ~an Jookta1
....... lie kllt Ml ~ ID ... .... Of ..... tile
.. ~ .... , ..... to .. 0..,.. ...... ,.... ... .. tr.•" ... eGll· 1lderl•1 it ••u•t•d ......... NbOll ...... ..............
Suspect
arrested
in plane
By JOHN NEEDHAM °' .... CN!ly ~ ..... ..,. Former Pakistani hijack
hostage Craig Clymore has ar·
rived in New York City where he
faces charges of being the
ringleader of a nine-member in-
tern ation a I drug-smuggling
operation.
Clymore's lawyer, Ronald
Kreber of Laguna Beach, said
his client arrived in New York
at about 3 p.m. Monday in the
custody of federal Drug· En·
forcerpent Administration
agents who had accompanied
him from Damascus, Syria.
Kreber said Clymore, 24, a
former Lake Forest resident,
was placed under arrest by the
drug enforcement authorities
aboard Lufthansa Flight 404
from Frankfurt, West Germany.
The agents reportedly placed
the Laguna Beach High School
graduate under formaJ arrest as
soon as the plane entered 0 .S.
air space.
Clymore was ooe or the more
than t09 boetagela po ~ ~ p;akfitaitl jetliner hi.f'ckecl by
three opponents of the Pakistan
guttrnment March 2. • "
The plane was eventually
flowb to Damascus, where on
March 14 the hostages were re-
'leased in excbanJe for the
freedom of 54 jailed political
prisoners in Pakistan.
Upon bis release by the hi-
jackers, a grand jury Indictment
nan1tn1 Clymore and seven
otfler Southern Californians was
made public by the U .S. At-
torn.ey's office in New York.
While he was in captivity, the
news of the indictment was kept
secret for fear Clymore would
be harmed by the hijackers.
A bout a week after his re-
lease, Clymore was arrested at
his Damascus hotel by Syrian
authorities and taken to the
Citadel prison pending efforts to
extradite him to the United
States.
Kreber said his client was
scheduled to be arraigned on the
federal drug-smuggling charges
in Brooklyn's federal court to-
day. However, be said he is at-
tempting to have the arraign-
ment put off until Monday.
Kreber said he would be
checking into an allegation by
-. <See CLYMORE, Page A.%)
Water curbs
slated for
San Clemente
were completed today. tbt
C1echoslovak news a1eao
Cetta reported. It~ were "retumtna to Ule «
their permanent.ta . "
The maneuven raaect. ean in
the Weat that the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact forces mlsbt ia-
terveJJe to crush the Independent
labor movement in Poland.
"As far as the Soviet Unioa ta
conumed," Brezhnev aald, "tt
Arch Beach
man loses
Laguna fight
A Laguna B'ach -property
owner failed to convince an
Orange County Superior Court
judge to declare unconstitutional
a city ordinance tha'°' prohibits
residential construction in Arch
Beach Heights.
Judge Luis A. Cardenas up-
held the city's ordinance Mon-
day. It imPoses the building
moratorium until a mile·long
fire road to Top of the World ls
completed.
Sterling Carlson, who said he
owns two vacant lots in Arch
Beach Heights, contended he
has been deprived of his proper-
ty rights.
Because of the city's refusal to
process bis building plans,
Carlson said, his two lots were
deemed "unmarketable" by real
estate agents.
The property owner said he
wanted a court order compelling
the city to issue the building
permits as well as declare the
ordinance unconstitutional.
The moratorium was ap·
proved by the City Council in
May of 1978.
Execution stayed
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP> -
A federal Judie has stayed the
execution of convicted lc'iller
Colin Clark, who had already
been moved to tbe state's death
house, less than 36 hours before
be •as scheduled to die in
Louisiana's electric chair.
bu been and continues to be tM
lo1al friend and ally of IOdallat
Polan.ct." ID a dear feferenee to Poland,
Bredmev H1d "class enemiel"
are "iDlt111tlDI and support.i.ns
counterrevolutfonary forces ln
tboae places wbere they 1Wl e:l·
tat, and carryinl out other sub-
versive actions.
"You will, comradea, re·
member all this from your own
' experiences," Breshnev sald, re-
f errtn1 to tbe events that
prompted Warsaw Pact forces
to march into Csecbollovakia in
tMI. "These showed convinclnc·
Jy that the plana of reaction hold
out DO prospect of succeu ...
The Polish Communllt Party,
be said. would "prove able in
adequate measure' to oppose the
designs of the enemies of the
aoclallat system, who are at the
Special LB election
same time the opponenta of the
independence of Poland.
Walter Stoesaet. un ·
deraecretary of state for
polltlcal affairs and a former
U.S. ambassador to Poland and
the Soviet Union, told NBC-TV's
"Today" show that Brezhnev's
remarks meant the Poles "have
some more time to put their
house in order, according to So-
viet li~hts."
Drain tax weighed
Laguna Beach City Council
members will consider a special
election tonight which, if suc-
cessful, would impose a $70 per
year tax on each dwelling unit to
construct storm draln facillties.
The council will also be asked
to hire a consultant to prepare a
master drainage plan for
Laguna Beach for about $30,000.
City planning officiaJs say th,
town's master drainage plan has
not been updated since 1963, and
a new assessment of the amount
of storm runoff that courses
th rough Laguna Beach is
needed.
Currently drainage fees are
imposed on property owners in
only five parts of town as a con-
dition for approval of s ub·
divisions.
But drainage problems exist
in many other areas of the city,
and officials say funding of
storm drains and other runoff
facilities should be shared equal·
ly by all property owners.
Officials say they could raise
$50,000 annually by placing a
Laguna claoi~ tonight
Battle for mayor
at boiling point
B18TBVE~LL can...., •II~ eruel Ii
mayor ol Lqu.na Beach toni&ht.
it w.W be wWaout the 111P111D11 of
curredt M.Yor Wayne Bil)hl.
Be wants the Job for a second
year.
Mrs. BeUerue says Ba1lln'1
lack ol support ls in conlllct with
a prol?Jse be made to her a year aeo when he won her support for·
the posiUon.
Council members will meet
tonight at 6 in council chambers
to elect a mayor from among
their ranks to serve for the next
12 montba.
''I aftumed a year ago that
Wayne would serve for one year
and that it would then be my
turn," Mrs. Bellerue said today.
••u.••u•
Last 'Year the newly elected
Mayor Bag:lin told a standing
room council audience that be
would "remember the unselflSh
attitude of Sally Bellerue. ·•
Mrs. BeJ.lerue was supported
by two other c'ouncil members
<See MA YOB, Pa1e A2)
PQlice $eek clues
in hit-rwi death
Clues and potentially helpful
information In a hit-and-run
traffic accident that fatally in·
jurJ!d a Laguna Beach m~ as
he and a companion left a west
side Costa Mesa night club are
still being sought today.
Kevin R. Pehl, 28, of 621
Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach,
was one or two steps ahead of bis
companion Sunday when a com-
pact car apparently swerved in·
tentiooally and hit him, burling
tbebody46feet.
.ttla friend l'eter \i. \;OV·
lngton, 28, ot S.l!o Alta Vista Way,.
Laguna Beach, wu la1einl a
step or t~ behind the victim,
otherwise Police satd they might
have had a double 'fatality oo
their hands. ·
ln\'eatila~ say there la a
stron1 pouibillty the driver of
the liPt·c:olored compact CU'. -
· possiily • Ford Pinto station
wagon -deliberately aimed for
the pair.
The motorist was northbound
in the 1900 block of Placentia
•Avenue in front of the Newport
Station night club when the car
swerved and bit Pehl in the left
tum pocket.
Pehl was thrown about '6 feet,
torn out of bis shoes by the impact
u his horrified friend watched,
and sustained massive bead in-
juries. The car zoomedP.ck into
northbound lanes and sped away.
Pehl,\ whose family lives in
Hemet, was pronounced dead
about 30 minutes later at Foun·
lain Valley Community
·Hospital's Trauma Center.
Traffic Division Investigator
· Olflcer Floyd Waldron said to-
daj anyone who may provide
'fvther Information about the cu Uaat Coviniton now believes wu a tan Ford Pinto staUOD
waaon whose beadll1bt abat-
terecl, callhim.
Tbe number ls 75'-5214. the
police department traffic
: bGreaa. not the city's traffic . eaatneertna department wboM
number was Uaied incorr~y In
Monday'1,paper.
P'uHral arran1·ement1 for
Ptbl. who ,ru ln partnenldp
wltb bil broUter 1 erry In la•
' t.nor .,...,. Prodadl, i..,....
Beltdl, ......... dtncdeil ol
, MW• m ,,__ if4= ID .. ... ..., .. ... ,.
T:a._ .. Wt•11d11.
'" ... wUl be __.,t.ed Tbun-
d91 •• && at •. AilU..,'• CatWoltt Qatela la Hemet, ,.... ....... _.._ ...
.laelate.,C•••t•rr. t•••ral .... 11 •• .-. • • • ..... 1111 ........... ... ! ... ,.,.... .letfQ .... •• ~M Dif:!:!* b1 ...._ ~~·-.... ,...., llr . ..1 .............. .. ... ..,. •.
special tax of $70 per unit per
year on all dwelling units, $50 a
year for vacant lots and $80 for
commercial properties.
The only other way of funding
·such projects, they say. is
formation of assessment dis·
tricts based on benefit -a rela·
tionship that is sometimes dif-
ficult to show.
Such a citywide election would
require the approval of two·
thirds of those voting.
The council will meet at 6 p.m.
in council chambers. 505 Forest
Ave .
Shuttle
problems
overcoine
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP) -Countdown activities for
tile 1pace shuttle Columbia
sfipped about 10 hours behind
schedule today because of
persistent technical problems,
a nd launch crews worked
through their rest period in an
effort to maintain Friday's dawn
liftoff.
"At this time there is no im·
pact on the schedule; there is no
trouble to meeting a launch at
3:50 a.m. (PST) Friday," shut·
lie test director Bill Schick told
a mid-monlinJt news conference.
The latest problem cropped up
overnight when gas contami·
nants were found in the tines
that se.rvice Columbia·s power-
producing fuel cells. Schick said
this was not unusual because the
lines had not been used for
several weeks.
"We will continue to purge the
lines until they are clean,"
Scnick said. The job was ac·
complished shortly before mid·
day.
The Columbia's two-astronaut
crew, John Young and Robert
Crippen, were winding up train·
ing activities at the astronaut of-
fice of Johnson Space Center in
Houston today. They planned to
fly here Wednesday for final
preparations for the launch.
They are lo take Columbia up
for a 54'h-hour spin -36 times
around the globe -in an effort
to test all its complex systems
before guiding the craft back to
Eatth for an airplane-like land-
in1. Three more flights are
scheduled during the next year
before the shuttle gets the go-
ab ea d to ferry people and
materials into space com-
mercially.
111111 ClllT llATRIR
P0atcby low cloudlnesa
,tont1bt, otherwise fair
th rou1h Wedneaday.
H.l1bs today and Wednes·
day 67 to 12. Lows tonight
48 to 58.
lll•llUY
Bones
may link
, killings
ANGLETON Texas <AP) -
The idenUncaiion or the skeletal
• remains or two girts mtaain1
" slnce 1974 may lead to new clues
in the deaths or disappearances
or 40 teen·age·girls 10 years a10.
The bodies of 21 girls have
been found in three adjacent
counties -Brazoria, Harris and
Galveston -slnce the eirliJ' dis·
appearances were reported in i 1971 and 1972.
''There has got to be a com·
mon denominator in all the kill·
ings," Lt. Matt Wingo of t.he
Brazoria County sheriff's office
said Monday. "We just haven't
found it yet.
"We plan to go through the of·
tense reports or the other kill·
ings carefully in the hopes of
pinning down exactly what it is
that links them. We will do what
we can, you can bet on that,"
Wingo said.
He said that even though the
cases were several years old,
the investigation was being re·
newed because of last week's
identification of the remains of
two girls from Dickinson. south
or Houston. who disappeared in
1974.
He said there are striking
~ similarities in t h e deaths 1 although another investigator
said he doubted a single killer
was responsible.
.. •
IA • I ~
Wingo said most of the victims
were shot in the head "execu-
tion· style."
Most of the bodies had been
dumped on the ground. he
added, "and while they weren't
actually buried they were very
carefully concealed.
"The girls were mos tly 14 or
15 years old. all came from the
s ame area. had the same or
similar hairs tyles afld facial ap·
pearances." -wingo said. "This
leads us to believe they were
k i lied by one or two persons, not
more than that "
But another investigator 10 the
s h e riff 's offi c e , Barne y
Woodward, s aid he doubted the
case involved a single killer
.. We'r(.> not working anything
lik e a mass murder.·· Woodward
s aid.
· 'lt 1s true that the re are
similarities in th(' eight Brazona
County deaths. There may be a
link there is alwavs the
possibility when you are work
ing on homicides of young girls.
But it is my personal opinion
that. no. we are not dealing with a
mass murderer ··
Woodard sa id Win go .. r e
leased information to the press
and it got jacked around. But if
he made those remarks. I'm
sure he can back them up "
Wingo said hl' believes the
murders were sexuallv rnotivat
ed. a lthough the decomposition
of most of the bodies makes 1t
impossible to verify that
TV's Masada
viewers dip
for Part II
NEW YORK (AP l ABC's
share of the TV audience for
Part II of "Masada" dipped
slightly in two of three major
cities. but exceeded 40 percent
in each locetion nonetheless.
overnight figures from the A.C.
Nielsen Co. showed today.
In New York, 46 percent of the
total audience from 9 to 11 p.m.
saw all or part of the second of
four installments of .. Masada"
Monday night, compared with 4;>
percent for the premiere episode
Sunday evening.
The audience in Chicago for
Part II dropped from 49 percent
Sunday night to 41 percent Mon·
day. Jn Los Angeles it fell from
47 percent the first night to 42
percent for the second chapter.
NBC, with regular program·
m ing. s uffered in all three
m arkets for the second s traight
night. The network, No. 3 for the
season ·m the three-way race.
registered only 10 percent of the
audience in New York. 15 per·
cent in Chicago and 13 in Los
Angeles.
"Roots," ABC's record-setting
miniseries. attr acted an average
or 66 percent oC the audience na-
tionwide through an eight-night
run in 1977. Ratings for "Roots"
in c reased measurably each
evenini.
OAANCJa COAST
Daily Piiat
'Dot murder' .
Precarious percla
ISy DAVID kUTZMANN Oi•DeHJ ..........
A Long Beach man standing
trial tor murder in Orange
County Superior Court suffered
from a "warped fant11y" that
,culminated in the kltlin1 of a
popular Seal Beach Catholic
priest in February, 1980, a pro-
secutor says.
Bu t the defense I a wyer
representing murder defendant
Ronald Sprtna , 33, told a seven-
man, five-woman jury Monday
that his client should be found
guilty of n o worse than
mans laughter.
An unidentified window washer clings
desperately by a single str ap, from a win-
dow of a building on New York's Seventh
A venue before being pulled to safety at
right. The scene was recorded by freelance
photographer Howard Forman.
"I suggest to you that at most,
tlie evidence you· re going to
hear in this case will be in·
di ca tive or i n volu ntary
manslaughter and certainly not
murder of any degree. This was
a tragedy," Chief Deputy Public
Defender Ronald Buller said.
However, Deputy District Al·
torney Dave Carter said Spring,
a Vietnam veteran who spent
time in two mental hospitals,
was angry at the Catholic church
because be believed a former
high school girlfriend had been
put in a convent. Alaia attorneys
fight on unpaid
The two defense lawyers wbo
represent convicted double
murderer Dr. Louis Alaia of
Huntington Beach say they will
stay on the case even though
they have not been paid for any
or their work.
With Alaia scheduled to go
through a s econd samty hearing
in May. his I,,ong Beach lawyers
said Monday they will h ave
spent more than a year on the
case before 1l is resolved.
"We 've never been paid. ev-
~rythmg's been tied up in estate ...
AlbertC S Ramseysaid.
Both Ramsey and co-counsel
-Judge nixes
charges in
jail death
An Orange County municipal
court judge has ruled there is in· .
sufficient evidence to hold an
Orange County J ail inmate on
murder charges involvina the
death of another prisoner in
January.
Judge Alan Plaia's ruling
Monday followed a preliminary
hearing in which a defense
lawyer presented unusual
medical evidence that ipdicated
William Knemeyer. 19. died in
his sleep or unknown causes
Judge Plaia·s ruling meant
that Calvin Chapman, 41 , a
t ransient origina lly jailed on
jaywalking charges. could be re·
leased soon from custody.
His lawyer. Walter Zech, used
a pathologist 's testimony Mon·
day lo show that Orange County
Sheriff's Department deputies
attempting to revive Knemeyer
may have caused the internal
damage at first believed to be
the result of an assault.
Dollar declines
LONDON <AP> The dollar
slipped agtins t most key curren-
cies m ea ly trading in Europe
today. But it continued lo gain
against the British pound.
Cocaine sale
Edward George Jr. have been
Alaia's attorneys since June.
1980, when the Huntington
Harbour orthopedic surgeon
fatally stabbed his former wife
and a Long Beach attorney in
the woman's Gilbert Drive
home.
Alaia, 50. was convicted of twc
counts of second-dgree murder
by an Orange County Superior
Court jury earlier this year.
But the sam e panel dead-
locked on the question of
whether Alaia was sane al the
time he killed Margy Lou Alaia.
37, and Marvin Tincher, 50. her
presumed lover. The stabbings
occurred in the presence of
Alaia's two.young children .
Ramsey said he and George
likely will be compensated with
the sale of apartment houses in
which Alaia had an interest with
his former wife as well as the
family's former Gilbert Drive
home. now on the market.
f'r._P~AJ
CLYMORE • •
t;lymore that the extradition
papers allowing him to bt-re-
turned to the United States were
not in order and had not been
signed by his client.
Clymore and his alleged ac-
complices are accused of smug-
gling $12 mjllion worth or heroin
and hashish oil into the United
States from Pakistan.
The nine members or the al-
leged drug smuggling ring are
accused of making up to 12 trips
each. concealing the drugs by in·
gesting condoms filled with the
heroin and hashish oil
Two of Clymore's alleged as·
sociates, inc l uding his girl
friend, were intercepted by
customs agents at New York's
John F. Kennedy Airport in
February, allegedly with drugs
on their persons after arriving
on a flight from Karachi,
Pakistan.
Clymore is being held at the
federal Metropolitan Correction
Center in New York, according
to his attorney.
Ex-Yippie leader
gets tliree years
NEW YORK (AP) -Abbie
Hoffman. the former Ylppie
leader who s urrendered last
September after nearly seven
years underground, was sen-
tenced today to three years in
state prison ror selling cocaine
in 1973.
Hoffman, 43, will have to
serve at least one year before be
is eligible for parole.
lo Manhattan's stale Supreme
Court, Acting ·Justice Brenda
Soloff ordered the graying,
curly·haired activist to begin
serving the term April 21.
Aner originally pleading inno-
cent to charges of selling co-
caine, Hoffman pleaded guilty in
January to criminal sale or a
dangerous drug and faced up to
five yean in state prison under
a plea baraain with narcotics
pr0tecutors.
In a pre·1entencin1 memoran·
dum released Monday, assistant
district. attorney David F . CUD·
ningbam asked the Judie to sen·
tence Hoffman to an ln·
determinate aentence or five years under wb,icb he would
have to MrVe at leut one year
ln priaoa.
Indian issued eyecl
RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) -
Federal and local Official• met
Mond.,-to decide how to handle
the occupation of a ·Bleck Hllli'
valleJ lnlldt ~ natlorial fortet b1
mesnbera of th• Dakota
American 1ndlan Moftmeat . •
MAYOR •..
for the ,mayor's post last year,
but declined the position,
nom inat.ing Baglin for the job.
And now. the councilwoman
says, Baglin appears .. unin·
terested in nominating me for
the mayor's job."
She said a recent conversation
with Baglin concluded with the
mayor saying he would be seek
ing a second term.
Mrs . Bellerue said s h e
believes Baglin's d ecision is
political, adding, "rt's an indica·
lion he is moving over to the
pro-development side."
But Baglin fervently disagrees
with that assessment. saying his
decision to seek the mayor's
post again is based on conversa-
tions with his constituents.
"I have been in the communi·
ty the past five weeks. encourag
ing people to support Sally for
mayor ," Baglin said today.
''But the overwhel ming
response." he said, "was that
(her selection) would be an un-
fortunate thing .•·
"The reason for it," be sajd,
"1s that people feel I have been
fairly representin g a broad
cross -section of political ideas in
Laguna and that Sally very
purposely over the years has
isolated her support and concern
to a very limited set of political
issues
"She 1s categorically in favor
or against iss ues without an
open point or view." he s aid.
"The people I talked to both
s ides of the fence -felt that
with Sally as mayor. the in-
teres ts o f many in Laguna
Beach would be di s en -
franchised."
Baglin said that it was at their
uging that he agreed to accept
the nomination if that should be
in the offing tonight.
Responding to Mrs. Bellerue's
claim that his decision i,
political, Baglin said, "She is
searching for all kinds of
justification for my lack or sup-
port.
"She has to look at why she
has not learned to appreciate
and compromise the larger base
o f philosophical thought in
Laguna Beach."
But Mrs . Bellerue says it is
more healthy for the city for a
mayor to serve only one year.
This apparent ··fantasy" led
Spring to make threatening
phone calls to church officials in
Chicago. Carter said, only days
before he allegedly punched
Fathe r Felix Doherty of St
Anne's Catholic Chur ch in the
head.
Father Doherty. 64, died
several weeks later from com-
plications associated with the
blow. Carter said.
The pros ecuto r s aid his
Suspect held
in crowbar
slaying case
Garden Grove Police arrested
a man early today in connection
with the brutal crowbar slaying
or a 24-year-old acquaintance
during an argument.
Police declined to release the
name of the victim of the 2:30
a.m . attack, other than to say he
lived in Garden Grove.
Arrested and booked into
Orange County Jail on suspicion
of murder was Richard Wendell
Carr. 25. of 13222 Century Blvd .,
Apt. 1, Garden Grove, the loca·
tion where the slaying occurred.
Sgt. Bruce Beauchamp s aid
police were summoned to the
apartment where they found the
victim dead from massive head
injuries.
The initial i nd ication .
Beauchamp said. was that a
crowbar was used in the attack.
The exact motive for the slay-
ing. he said. is still under in-
vestigation.
Sworn-off puffers
can get support 1
Ex-smokers who are con-
cerned they may not remain ex-
smokers are being invited to join
the American Cancer Society's :·1 Quit Club." meeting tonight
in Newport Beach.
The support group for those
who have kicked the tobacco
habit meets at 7 p m . at 4030
Birch St.. Suite 101. The pro-
gram is free.
I ..
Find the d~ of her dreams.
The diamond of her dreams will
come from the man of her
dreams. And you'll find it In our
tremendous selection of styles.
sizes. and prices.
evidence will show that Sprtn1
tlrove his c h opper·•tyle
motorcycle to St. Anne's on Peb.
5 .. 1980. and asked to see a priest
about a wedding.
A housekeeper had Father
Doherty brought to the back
door or the c hurch rectory.
where the priest told Sprin1 to
go to the front door instead,
Carter said.
However. the defendant began
pushing and s hoving Father
Doherty, he said, a nd then
punched the elderly cleric in the
forehead with his clenched right
fist.
As Spring walked away ,
Carter told jurors, he told a wit-
ness, "You didn't see this."
Though paramedics were
called, Fat.her Doherty was not
hospitalized until several weeks
later after he collapsed. He was
taken to St. Mary's Hospital in
Long Beach, where he died 10
days later. He never regained
consciousness.
Spring was arrested by in·
vestigators after a c hurch.
employee recognized him as
having attended several meet·
ings for alcoholics.
Butler told jurors in Judge
James K. Turner's courtroom
that Spring struck Father
Doherty with a "soft-gloved
r ight hand.. which caused a
"very small skin abrasion."
He sa id the priest 's
housekeeper was concerned that
he see a doctor because Father
Doherty was taking a highly
"sensitive and dangerous" heart
medication which thinned the
blood.
Tr auma to the body. Butler
said, could be disastrous if the
dosage was not adjusted or
stopped.
REAGAN ...
Culture tests taken to detect in·
fection were normal. though the
president still was receiving a
broadened range or antibiotics as
a precautionary measure, the
medical report said .
·'The president is in excellent
spirits." doctors said after their
morning rounds al George
Washington University Hospital.
"His color is good and he is eating
well."
The report said White House
press secretary James S. Brady,
who was shot in the brain. sat up in
his chair twice Monday. can drink
by himself now and is eating solid
foods on a regular basis
Consultations have started with
physical therapists about a re
covery program.
In another development. Secret
Service Agent Timoth y
McCarthy, who was wounded in
the liver as he tried to shield the ·
president. was discharged from
the hospital. Before leaving. he
met with Reagan and talked
about the shooting.
Mc<.:ci1 tny mentioned that in·
dustrialisl W. Clement Stone of
fered the use of an Acapulco con·
dominium for his recovery, and
the president urged him lo take it.
As McCarthy departed. Reagan
said: "I wish you well on your
vacation and trip to Mexico and I
thank you from the bottom or my
heart."
District of Columbia officer
Thomas Delahanty, who was
wounded in the neck, remains in
good condition at Washingtotl
Hospital Center. the report said.
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia
<AP) -Soviet President Leon.Id
· I. Brezhnev quieted tears of So-
viet military intervention in
Poland today, aaying the Polish
· Communlst Party would be able
' to deal with ita problems. .
~.. Brezhnev in a speech to the
Czechoslovak Communist Party
' Congress charged that e•mles
or socialism were u•ing
•'econ o mic pressure and
.... .,.....
RELEASED -Secret Service
agent Timothy McCarthy
has been released from a
W asbington hospital after
recovering from wounds sus-
tained in the attack on
President Reagan.
FBI gets
shooting
details
WASJUNGTON <AP> -Presi·
tient Reagan. still showing no sign
of infection and his temperature
near normal, gave the FBI a first-
hand account today of the attempt
on his life eight days ago.
FBI Director William Webster
and two agents met with the presi·
dent at midday. The president's
counselor, Edwin Meese Ill, also
planned to be there.
"It's part of the routine in·
vestigation, ·•said Larry Speakes,
White House deputy press
sj:!cretary.
The session marks the presi-
dent's first ofricial particlpation in the probe of the March 30 shoot-
liag.
A late-morning medical
bulletin said the president's con·
dition "has improved further"
and his temperature had returned
to near normal and was remain-
ing stable.
X-rays showed some clearing of
the bullet-punctured lung, the re-
port said. There still is evidence of
damaged tissue along the bullet
path, but the affected area is
smaller today than it was Mon-
day. the report said. X-ray equip-
tnent has been temporarily set up
in the president's suite to monitor
bis chest.
(See REAGAN, Page A.2)
* * *
. Nem1paper
··cal/A/or
!l
Haig to quit
t MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -
:· The Minneapolis Star to-
day called tor the reslina-
tioo ol Secretary of State
! Alexander M. Hala Jr.,
aayln1 "hta iporance ot tbe Constitution makes
blm look Just pl ain
dumb."
Tbe referenc• was to
Hat1'1 UMrtJon 1 .. t week
that he was ln control
wben President RH1an
WU lhot and Vlee Preti·
dent Oeor•e Bush *as awa1 trOm Wa1bln1ton.
Ua••r tbe Constitution, ... ......,,of .....
Mb la l1De to t.lle Pret·
' ~n• Uaaa l~kla•
...... ... loll ldl Nol .. ......... Of .......... ..... ..... ..... ,....,. to .,... --,,...
' ........... toe• ....... ... ••••t•• ~ ... ..... Wiatt• a-r.ear..··
blackmail" as well as "prop-
a1anc1a lies, ruses and dem-
a10Jy:• ag!iftst Poland's com·
m"nlst regime. ,
But tbe 74-year·old Soviet
leader said the Polish party
"with the support of all true
Polish patriots" would be able to
deal wttb its own problems.
Warsaw Pact maneuvers,
which have been under way in
and near Poland since March 18,
Suspect
arrested
in plane
By JOHN NEEDHAM OftMDlllty ...... Slaff
Former Pakistani hijack
hostage Cfaig Clymore has ar-
r1ved in New York City where be
faces charges of being the
ringleader of a nine-member in·
ternational drug-smuggling
operation.
Clymore's lawyer, Ronald
Kreber of Laguna Beach. said
his client arrived in New York
at about 3 p.m . Monday in the
custody of federal Drug En-
forcement Administration
agents who bad accompanied
him from Damascus, Syria.
Kreber said Clymore, 24, a
former Lake Forest resident,
was placed under arrest by the
drug enforcement authorities
aboard Lufthansa Flight 404
from Frankfurt, West Germany.
The agents reportedly placed
the Laguna Beach High School
graduate under formal arrest as
soon as tbe plane entered U.S.
air•Pf~·
Clymore was one of the more
Ulan 100 hostages °" board a Pakistani jeUJner hijacked by
three opponents of the Pak.iat.an
government March 2.
The plane was eventually
fl own to Damascus, where on
March 14 the hostages were re-
1 eased in exchanse for the
freedom of 54 jailed political
prisoners in Pakistan.
Upon his release by the hi·
jackers, a grand jury indictment
naming Clymore and seven
other Southern Californians was
made public by the U.S. Al·
torney's office in New York.
While he was in captivity. the
news of the indictment was kept
secret for fear Clymore would
be harmed by the hijackers.
A bout a week after his re-
lease, Clymore was arrested al
his Damascus hotel by Syrian
authorities and taken to the
Citadel prison pending efforts to
exhadite him to the United
States.
Unpaid Alaia
attorneys
stay on case
were compJeted today, the
Czechoslovak news a1ency
Celka reported. It said forces
were "retumlng to tbe places ol
lbelr permanent atadoolnt. 1'
The maneuvers raised fears lb tb~West that tbe Soviet-led
Warsaw Pact forces ml&ht in-
tervene to crush the independent
labor movement in Poland.
"As far u the Soviet Union iJ
concerned," BrnbMv aald, "it
has been and continues to be the
loyal friend and ally of soclalllt
Poland."
Jn a clear reference to PolaJl(l,
Breshnev 1atd "chtss enemies"
ar:• "lnat11atin1 and aupportlna
counterrevolutionary forces in
those places where they still ex·
isl, and carrying out other sub-
versive actions.
"You will , comrades, re-
member all this from your own
experiences,'' 81-ezhnev sald, re-
t erring to the events that
prompted Warsaw Pact forces
to march into Czechoslovakia in
1968. "These showed convlncinl·
ly that the plans of reaction hold
out no proepect ol success."
Tbe PQ!isb Cqmmunlst P>fty,
he said, would "prove able in
adequate measure to oppose the
designs ot the enemies of the
socialist system. who are at the
same time the opponents or the
independence of Poland.
Walter Stoessel . un ·
dersecretary of state for
political affairs and a former
U.S. ambassador to Poland and
the Soviet Union, told NBC-TV's
"'Today" show that Brezhnev's
remarks meant the Poles "have
some more time to put their
house in order , according to So-
viet hJlhts."
Coln ia 'go'
Fuel line problem whipped
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP > -Countdown activities for
the space shuttle Columbia
slipped about 10 hours behind
schedule today because of
persistent technical problems.
and launch crews worked
through their rest period in an
effort to maintain Friday's dawn
liftoff.
.. At this time there is no im-
pact on the schedule : there is no
trouble to meeting a launch at
Mesa council
3:50 a.m. <PST> Friday," shut-
tle test director Bill Schick told
a mid-morning news conference.
The latest problem cropped up
overnight when gas contami·
nants were found in the lines
that service Columbia's power·
producing fuel celJs. Schick said
this was not unusual because the
lines had not been used for
several weeks.
"We will continue to purge the
Jines until they are clean,"
Moratorium set
on new sex shops
Woman faces
NB charges
of burglary
A Newport Beach cos-
metologist races burglary
charges this week following an
episode at a Corona del Mar
restaurant where the. woman al-
legedly rifled several purses· and
then struck one of her victims,
police said.
Anna Natalie Sundata, a 37-
year-old Huntington Beach resi-
a'!IU~~EN . £i an ance that City Hall
waif coot.end will make •pie)'
readJnc wl)en published as a
1etally required notice In the
Daily PUot, City Council mem-
bers have declared a
moratorium on new sex-related
adult businesses In Costa Mesa.
The emergency ordinance -
considered so essential that it
was approved Monday without
the second reading normally re·
quired In two weeks -tem-
porarily bans massage parlors
and adult book stores among
other enterprises.
Legal publication is expected
next Friday, according to the Ci ·
ly Clerk's staff.
The moratorium is to provide
City ~ney Topi ~OQd the time red t> dlart • penna.
nent control ordinance. The
moratorlum wi II last four
months or until the new laws are
approved . whichever is first.
Wood said.
Monday's ordinance -which
sent several city employees
scampering to their dictionaries
for definitions -notes that
"adult use" businesses are rec·
ognized as "having objectionable
operational characteristics." 1
As a result. the ordinance pro·
claims. adjacent -business
owners fear a downgrading of
their areas, a decrease in prop·
erty values, an increase in crime
and deterioration o r
neighborhodds.
dent. was arrested Fridav eve-ning in front of the Five Crowns
Restaurant.
Police say the incident began
when a customer, Jewel Chap-
man , noticed the woman al-
legedly going throuih her purse
Police seek elues .
I
in a restaurant restroom. in hit-rwi death
Mrs. Chapman told officers Clues and potentially helpful
she recovered her purse and information in a hit-and-run followed the woman into the lob-by where .the confronted her , traffic accident that fatally in-jured a Laguna Beach man as asking that her possession be re· he and a companion left a west turned. Instead, say police, the side Costa Mesa night club are
woman slugged Mrs. Chapman still being sought today.
to the face and tried to flee. But -Kevin R . ·Pehl, 28, of 621
another restaurant customer Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach,
gr abbed the woman and held her was one or two steps ahead of his
until police arrived. companion Sunday when a c9m-
Otflcera claim the woman, ap-pact car apparently swervec1 in-
parenUy sensine trouble, tried to tentionally and hit him, hurling
dumf some of thestolen toot into the body46feet.
I
'
t f th His rraend, ~eter µ. \;OY· a P a nter n ron ° e ington, ~.of 520 Alta Vista W"", restaurant. . u3
Police say tbey recovered a Laguna Beach, was laggtnc a
1 l b I d step or two behind the victim, P ast c com • 8 m rror an some • otherwise police aald they mtaht
Up •aloes that belonged to Mrs. have bad a double fatality on Chapman and six credit cards their hand.a. ~!to':1~ged ~ another female I Jnvestltaton say there la a
That second: victim, police 1 st.ron1 possibility the driver of
say. wasn't aware that her purse the light-colored compact car -had been rifled. ·possibly a ford Pinto station
wagon -deliberately aimed for
the pair. -
Thl! motorist was northbound
in the 1900 block of Placentia
A venue in front of the Newport
Station night club when the car
swerved and hit Pehl in the ten
turn pocket.
Pehl was thrown about 46 feet,
torn out of his shoes by the impact
as his horrified friend watched,
and sustained massive head in·
Juries. The car zoomed back into
northbound lanes and sped away.
Pehl, whose family lives in
Hemet, was pronounced dead
about ~ m£nutes later at Foun-
t a i n V a 11 e y Co m m u n it y
Hospital's Trauma Ceftter.
Trame Division InvesU1ator
Offlcer Fioyd Waldron said to-
day JJlYone who may provide
further lnformatiQ.ll about the
car J.hat Covt.naton now believes
was a tan Ford Pinto station
waaon wboae headllabl shat·
tertd, call b1m.
The number ls 7$4·5264, lhe
pollce departme nt traffic
bureau, ,aot the city's traffic
en1ineerlQI department whole
number wu lieted llleottectly in
.Monday'• raper·
• Funera arraaaements for
Pehl, wbo wu to partneiahlp
"itb hi• brotber Jerry la .. tenor o.ap Produda, w,un.
Beacll, are under d&rect.taa-ol
. Miller and Jone1 iMonua11 ID
Hem1&. BaltrJ 11.:.ldMdulad fGr
. ?:IO ,.m. W.a1 •.
II .. WtD be eelebrated 'ftMan. c1a, It JI •.•. It ..... ..., ••
CaUaeUe Clliarclll I• •met,
I ftllloWlll .., IMlrt.a lil ......., ..
· Jada}O· Cemeter1, f1iaw1I w zllinNhl.
lrzltu J#I brolMr _. bUill·
... _..,J~P.W,llr. -PeM li ~ilin't•t«I 'bf ........
......... 9llft; .... pareiiti. llt.
ud lfn. Ralph Pehl aod a Ila· ter, Kayla.
Scn1ck said The JOb was ac·
complished shortly before mid-
day.
The Columbia's two-astronaut
crew, John Young and Robert
Crippen, were winding up train·
ing activities at the astronaut of·
fice or Johnson Space Center in
Houston today. They planned to
fly here Wednesday for final
preparations for the launch .
They a .. c to take Columbia up
<See GO , Page A2>
'Warped
fantasy'
described
By DA. VID KUTZ MANN Of .. Delly "IMC l vft
A Long ·eeach m&{I standing
trial for murde r in Orange
County Superior Court suffered
from a "warped fantasy" that
culminated in the killing or a
popular Se al Beach Catholic
priest an February. 1980. a pro-
secutor says.
But th e defe ns e lawyer
representing murder defendant
Ronald Spring. 33, told a seven·
man, fi ve-woman jury Monday
that his client should be found
guilty of no wors e than
manslaughter.
"I suggest to you that at most,
the evidence you' re going to
hear in this case will be in-
dicative of involuntary
manslaughter and certainly not
murder of any degree. This was
a tragedy," Chief Deputy Public
Defender Ronald Buller said.
However. Deputy District At·
torney Dave Carter said Spring,
a Vietnam veteran who spent
time in two mental hospitals,
was angry at the Catholic church
because he believed a former
high school girlfriend had been
put in a convent.
This apparent "fantasy·· led
Spring to make threatening
phone calls to church otricials in
Chicago, Carter said, only days
before he allegedly punched
Father Felix Doherty of St.
Anne's Catholic Church in the
bead.
Father Doherty, 64, died
several weeks later from com·
plications associated with the
blow, Carter said.
The prosecutor said bis
evidence will show that Spring
drove his chopper -styl e
motorcycle to St. Anne's on Feb.
5, 1980, and asked to see a priest
about a wedding.
111111 l:IAIT llATllR
Patchy low cloudiness
. tonl1hL, otherwise fair
lb rou1b Wedaeaday.
Hithl ~ay and Wednes·
day 67 to "'72. Low. toai1bt
48 to 58.
11111111111
Tlae eofllrooertll ovtr .41-.i·
Oftd.lr Haig °' Sfcretorw o/
Ital• not ~ co"""""' but caln h«d1 up. Stf colum111 P•M·
Newport 'Beach's lDarlH
director received a $1,000 mem·
beoship in a yacht club while the
cltJ'• p)ann!n~ director eot free
meals in excess of $100 from
local development interett.I.
The diJcloeures were revealed
tn the annual contlict of Interest
reports, filed last week In Ct\y
Hall.
Marine director David
Harshberger said he bas never
used the membership provided
to him by the Newport Harbor
Yach( Club.
"It's provided every year and,
historically. I believe it was
used to get into the club if some
dignilary was in town," said
Harsh~arger. "I've never used
it. I'd feel out of place there."
According to the political re-
form actof 1974, all city council
members. planning com-
missioners and k ey city
employees must report gifts, in·
vestments and other interests.
The reports are called "state-
ments or economic interests."
Although the fo rms show
areas of possible conflict, the
disclosures don't mean there has
been improper activity. It is not
illegal for officials to take gifts .
According to the reports:
-Marin e director
Harshbarger received a $1,000
membership lo the Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
-James Hewicker, planning
director, received meals and
tickets to athletic events in ex-
cess of $100 from the Irvine
Co mpany, Ford Philco and three
land development r epresen·
tatives
-George Pappas, finance
director, received four Rams
tickets worth $65 from the Bank
of Newport.
-Charles Gross. police chief.
received a movie theater pass
valued at $240.
Hugh Coffin. city attorney,
reported getting $50 worth of
wine from the Koll Co.
-Mayor Jackie Heather re-
ceived two nights lodging and
food at the El Cortez Hotel
valued at $100 from the Newport
Ocean Sailing Association. The
hotel is in Ensenada. Mexico.
The mayor of Newport travels
ther e annually for trophy
ceremonies at the conclusion of
the Newport to Ensenada Yacht
race.
With the exception or Coun·
cil man Don Strauss. all council
members reported r eceiving
and using free movie passes.
Except for Mayor Heather, all
council members also disclosed
they received a $100 limited
membership to the Balboa Bay
Club.
Planning commissioners ex·
cept for Helen McLaughlin and
George Cokas who reported re·
ceiving no gifts also showed
they had been given free movie
passes.
Commissioner Paul Balalis,
according to the reports, has in·
terest in nine residential units in
Newport and two in Costa Mesa,
all valued at more than $100.000.
Utilities Director Joseph
Devlin shows stock interest in
four oil and petroleum firms and
Planning Director Hewicker re-
ports owning s tock in the
Newport Harbour National
Bank.
SA plants
evacuated
An estimated 1.000 workers
were evacuated today from a
number of Santa Ana manufac-
turing plants after it was dis-
covered that potentially toxic
c hemicals were improperly
mixed in a tanker truck.
The chemicals reportedly
.,ere mixed at the Townsend
Textron plant on East Warner
Ave. City firefighters sealed off
the plant and s urrounding sites
shortly before noon until the
chemicals could be diluted.
Deputy f ire ma rs hal Bill
Ree<J-r said 100 gaUons of suJ-
p h uric acid, 500 gallons or
chromic acid and 1,200 pounds of
a m monia nitrate were acciden·
tally mixed.
Paramedics treated the un·
identified tanker truck driver.
No other iltjul'ies were reported.
ORANGE COAST
Just shaken
A Costa Mesa paramedic checks out Jung Sun Noh, 26, of
1866 Parkcresl Drive, Costa Mesa, after her car climbed
a utility pole guy wire and flipped onto its top. Neither
she nor her two children, Peter, 1, and Grace, 3, suffered
serious injury in the 9 : 25 a.m. accident today at 18th and
Whittier Avenue, officials said.
New school usage
on agenda tonight ·
A proposal to utilize Clapp and
Peterson schools in Huntington
Beach for the instruction of 260
severely handicapped students
from Fairview State Hospital will
be considered tonight by Hunt·
GO .••
for a 54' '2·hour span 36 times
around the globe an an effort
to test all its complex systems
before guiding the craft back to
Earth for an airplane-like land·
ing. Three more flights are
scheduled during the next year
before the shuttle gets the go-
ahead to ferry people and
mate rials into s pace rom·
mercaally_
Monday. during the first 12
hours of the countdown , the
launch team lost four hours
because of problems with a
leaky valve and an electncal
short circuit. Schack a lso report-
ed that scuff marks were found
today on three more wires in the
spaceship, and these had to be
repaired.
T o catch up on the work.
Scha ck said a planned 8·hour
hold in the countdown that start·
ed at 10 a.m. today had been ex·
tended to 14 hours borrowing
six hours from another 8-hour
hold scheduled Wednesday. A
total JO hours· hold time were
built in t o the fi ve-d ay
countdown; thus. almost half of
it would be used by midnight
tona Jthl.
"The launch crew knew when
it picked up the count that there
was a lot of work to do, that the
schedule would be very tight and
that at times they might be
against the wa ll," said Mark
Hess. a spokesman for the Na·
tional Aeronautics and Space
Administration.
··we are confident we'll be
able to make up the time during
the buill·in hold," he said.
Launch requires near-perfect
weather at three locations -the
Cape; the prime landing area at
Edwards Air 1-'orce Base,
Calif., and the backup landing
site at White Sands. N.M.
If weather or other problems
delay the launch more than six
hours beyond schedule Friday,
the liftoff is likely to be detared
until Sunday because a 48-hour
turnaround period is required
once fuel has been pum ped i'nto
the tanks.
Young, 50, a retired Navy cap·
lain. is a veteran of rour space
(tights. His last , a walk on the
moon, came nine years ago this
month. Crippen, a 43·year-old
Navy captain, is maklpg hls ~t
space trip 16 years after be fint
became an astronaut.
ington Beach City <elementary)
School District trustees.
The board meets at 8 p.m. at
Clapp, 20581 Farnsworth Lane.
C I app a nd P e ters on are
scheduled for closure al the end of
the current term because of
declinin~ enrollment
T he request to place Fairview
students in these sites has come
from the Orange County Depart·
mentor Education.
Lynn Hartline, assistant county
superintendent, said a new slate
law requires that handicapped
students be educated in a less
restrictive environment than the
hospital where they currently are
taught. i
Ms. Hartline said Peterson and
Clapp were selected because of
their proximity to the hospiW.
which is located in Costa Mesa.
Also. she noted, Clapp has served
as a site for special education
classes and has design features
for the handicapped.
She said il has not been de-
termined yet whether the sl:hools
would be leased by the county
education department or the
hospitaJ.
Store looted
by batsman
A burglar with a baseball bat
who took a fancy to stereo and
TV gear displayed in a Costa
Mesa shopping center window
showroom appropriated them
for himself. '
Witnesses standing some dis-
tance away from the Radio
Shack, 2750 Harbor Blvd., said
they saw the man smash the
front window and snatch the
items Monday before jumping
into a waiting car.
Loss was nearly Sl,800, ac·
cording to the owner of the
Radio Shack.
Fre•PapAJ
REAGAN •.•
Culture tests taken to detect in·
fection were normal, though the
president still was receiving •
broadened range of antibiotics as
a pTecaulionary m easure, the
medicaJ report said.
·'The president is in excellent
spirits," doctors said after their
morning rounds at George
Washington University Hospital.
·'His color is good and be is eating
well."
The report said White House
press secretary Jamea S. Bracb,
who was shot In the brain; sat up In
his chalrtwice Monday, can drlnk
by bhmell now and it eating aoUd
foods on areplar ba1l1.
Consultations have started with
physical therapists about a re-
covery proeram. Dilly Piiat MAINOfACI In another develdprbent, Secret
Service Agent Timothy
McCarthy, who was wounded in
the liver u be tried to shield th•
president, wu dischar1ed from
J3'WHt ... IC.,C•e.Mete,CA
Miii ...,._, ... '*•C....M!!!, CA.-..
• tbe hoepltal.• Befor• leavln1, M
met with Rut .. · and tatkel
about theahooUn,.
M cCa.ruty mentioned U.at ln-
dustrlalia\ w. a..Mnt Stone ol·
fered the UH ~ an Acapulco con·
domlnlam for his recovery and
th• pr••dent ur'ed him to take it.
As MeC811b1.-rted, Reaaan
aald: "I ~~ welt on JWI' vacaUOD Md lo lliai~ aad I
~au JOU fNilli bettOiil Ol 811 bilait,"
By alOIARD oiBEN ... ....,-,.w....,
Irvine City CouncUwoman
lltry Ann Galdo received a SlOO
movie pa11 trom James
Edwards after complalnlnt that
b11 qew theater ln Irvine wu
showing too many "R"·raied
movies.
The gift is listed on tbe coun·
cllwoman's annual Statement of
Economtc Interests filed at the
City Clerk's office.
She aaid that Edwards gave
ber the gin and promised to
show more family-oriented films
early last year.
The only other gin listed on
the councilwoman's statement,
which cov~s all of 1980, was a
SSO dinner from the Greater
Irvine Industrial League.
Accordine to the statements,
the Irvine Company -primary
landowner in Irvine -bought a
$30 dinner for Planning Com·
missioner Lyndon T. Calerdine
and a $4S dinner for Planning
Com missioner Mary Ellen
Hadley.
None of the other Planning
Commissioners or City Council
members listed any gifts on
their Statements of Economic
Interest.
While the forms might show
areas or possible conflict the dis·
closures generally do not in·
dicate improper activity. It is
not illegal for city officials and
elected representatives to ac·
cept gifts.
Planning Commissioner
Hadley disclosed on her state-
ment that her dental equipment
supply company. Quadrasource
Inc ., does more than $10,000 in
business annually with local
dentists Victor Feld and Edward
Spector.
City Councilman David Sills
stated that he had bought more
than Sl00,000 in stock in Ave
Micro Systems. an El Centro-
based company that makes com·
puter chess games that a re sold
in Irvine. among other places.
Councilman Bill Vardoulis dis-
closed that he owns more than
$10,000 in stock in the Heritage
Bank Co.. which has offices in
Irvine.
Planning Commissioner Lyn·
don Thomas Calerdine stated
that he has more than Sl0,000 in
sto.ck in Rockwell International
Co.
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony dia· closed that he has leaa than
$10,000 invested in the Anthony
Communications public rela-
tions company which Anthony
founded and is based in Irvine.
Planning Commis s ioner
Lowell Johnson said that he
owns more than Sl0,000 in
money market funds purchased
through a local financial com-
pany.
Irvine City Manager William
Woollett Jr. said that he has re-
ceived no gifts and has no busi-
ness interests in Irvine.
None of the other City Council
or Planning Commissioners dis-
closed business interests in the
city.
Planning Commissioner Ray
Catalano was out-of-town and
hadn't yet filed his statement.
2 held in heist
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two
people were arrested in connec·
lion with a bank robbery but
another person who held up the
Hollywood bank at the same
lime was still at large, police
said. Ronald Williams 27, and
Shirley Thomas. 32, both of Los
Angeles, were booked for in·
vestigalion of robbery Monday.
CM school
• conversion
to be eyed
Housing of caty·coordinated
programs for minorities will be
proposed for Rea Middle School in
Costa Mesa when a committee
meets there tonight to consider
what to do with the school
scheduled for closure in June.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
was authorized Monday by the Ci·
ty Council to pitch for a city-
sponsored set of progtams lo
m eet services considered vital to
the west Costa Mesa community.
A Newport-Mesa School Dis-
trict committee, scheduled to
hear proposed uses for the school
when it meets al 7:30 p.m ., is
mandated by state law to recom·
mend dis position of the facility.
A similar 7:30 p.m hearing is
slated Wednesday at Corona del
Mar Elementary School which
also will be closed in June because
of continued districtwide enroll-
ment declines.
In a report considered by the
Mesa council Monday night. As·
sistant City Manager Allan
Roeder noted that Rea is in the
heart of a neighborhood with a
large number or low income resi·
dents, ethnic minorities and
families with women as heads of
households.
Recent studies show. he said.
that the area needs greater
recreational and ci vie services.
The 15-acre site includes 24
cla ssroom s, a cafeteria-
auditorium, gynnasium and
locker rooms as well as a theater.
shop areas and playgrounds.
Newport thieves
get typewriters
Burglars armed with a
crowbar broke into a Newport
Beach development office and
carried off more than $16,000
worth of typewriters. police
were told Monday.
The crooks grabbed four IBM
Selectric machines and two IBM
memory typewriters. valued at
more than $5,000 each. at Santa
Anita Development. 365 San
Miguel Drive, police said.
.. .. find the diamond of her dreams.
The diamond of her dreams will
COfTle from the man of her
dreams. And you 'II find it in our
tremendous selection of styles.
sizes, and prices.
81 IEaaY CIAVIJ:N °' .................
Kemper Insurance Group wu
the big spender lut year lD enter·
taining Costa Mesa city otflda!J,
with the Nederlander theater or·
1anliaUoo and Edwards Cinema
•econd and third.
third.
T he Costa Mesa·baaed in·
surance oreanlzation -apomof
of the annual Kemper Women's
Open Golf Tournament -doled
out more than $715 in tree
tickets, according to atatementa
of economic interests filed by ci·
ty officials this week.
Accordine to the political
Reform Act of 1974, all city
counc;il members. planning com·
missioners and key employees
must report gifts, investments
and other Interests for the pre-
vious year by each April 1.
While the forms might show
areas of possible conflict, the
disclosures generally do not in·
dicate improper activity. It is
not illegal for city officials and
elected representatives to ac-
cept gifts.
The Nederlander organization
-planning a $10·million am·
phitheater at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa -is-
sued at least S598 worth of 1ratis
tickets for Los Angeles stage
productions to city officials last
year, reports indicate.
The Edwards Cinema people
gave out about $560 worth of
passes, the reports show.
Using Nederlander passes
were Mayor Arlen Schafer,
$133 worth; Council members
Norma Hertzog, $150. and Ed
McFarland, $50; City Manager
Fred Sorsabal, $153, and City Al·
torney Tom Wood. $112.
Kemper Open tickets were
used by the mayor. Councilman
Donn Hall, Sorsabal. Planning
Department Director Charles
Roberts. City Clerk Eileen Phin-
ney. Leisuire Services Director
Keith Van Holt, Allan Roeder and
Bill Dunn, assistants lo the city
manager.
Edwards passes went t-0 Hall,
Mrs . Hertzog, th e mayor,
Roberts. Mrs . Phinney, Plan-
ning Commissioners Richard
Carstensen and Clarence Clarke
and apparently to Police Chief
Roger Neth.
Mavor Schafer and chief plan-
ner Roberts also took advan-
tage of Rams football tickets of-
fered by C.J . Segerstrom and
S<ins which has large develop-
m ents planned in north Costa
Mesa. ·
The mayor recorded receiving
the most offerings last year,
items totaling about $530.
She was one of the few of.
ficials who reported receiving a
free pass to Newport·Mesa
Unified School District athletic
e vents -an offering generally
mailed to most city officials.
Hall was the only council
member recording passes to the
annual Festival of Arts Pageant
of the Masters in Laguna Beach,
an event attended by all council
members.
Sorsabal recorded free use of
golf carts at the city g.olf course,
a standing offer for all city coun-
cil members. He valued the gift
at $120.
Salvador envoy
WASHINGTON <AP> Presi-
dent Reagan h as decided to
nominate Deane R. Hinton. a
veteran career foreign service
officer who is currently an assis·
tant secretary of state, to be the
U.S~ ambassador to El Salvador.
Dow tops
Pont as No.I
Feisty Dow Chemical unseated stodgy Du Pont
as the profit leader of the chemical industry in 1980.·
Tbe final score Oo earnings after taxes) waA:
Dow: $805 miJJion
Du Pont: $716 million
This was a reversal of the 1979 standings, which
looked like this:
Du Pont: $938 million
Dow : $784 miUion
The top of the compost is not entirely new ground
Cor Dow. In the climactic year of 1974, when Richard
Milhous Nixon resigned as president, Dow spurted
~~ .-,-lT.-.-•• -•• -.. -0-l~"'*
s pe ctacularly
while Du Pont
s lumped mis·
erably -and
the Midland,
Mich ., kid
wrested fi rst
place from the
Wi lmin gton ,
Del.. granddaddy of chemistry for the first time in
history. Dow held that lead for the next. three years until Du Pont reasserted its supremacy in 1978. Now
Dow is back on top aqain.
DOW'S ASCENDANCY is especially noteworthy
in that it's still the smaller of the two companies. Ou
Pont has been the largest chemical producer in the
nation for as long as anyone has been counting. Jn
1974, for example. when Dow outearned Du Pont SS87
million to $403 million, Du Pont's sales were S6.9
billion to Dow's $4.9 billion. Last year Du Pont's sales
came in at $13.8 billion while Dow's were $10.6
billion. Many more people work for Du Pont than for
Dow . Ou Pont has some 132,000 employees. Dow bas
only 56,000. . You get the picture? Dow is a lean, aggr~ss1~e
outfit. Du Pont is older and fatter, more set m its
ways.
Neither Dow nor Du Pont makes many products
that you and I can buy directly. However, we prob·
ably have stuff a ll over tbe house that uses
chemicals supplied by these two companies. '
DU PONT IS, of course, the king or the s~nthetic
fiber business: nylon, Orlon, Dacron and Qut~na all
came from its laboratories. Teflon and Luette are
other Du Pont inventions . But Du Pont rarely makes
the final product <you see Dacron listed o~ a. tab in
the shirt or suit you buy). and after a while it soon
finds itself in a commodity busine$S, where the price
competition can be fi erce (H~rt ~haffner & Ma~x will
drive a hard bargain), The tnck 1s to. keep coming up
with new "miracles," and the fact ts: Du Pont has
not come up with a new ''miracle fiber" for a long
time.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
Amer 16 1
IBM Ramada Inn
1Amer C..n Gen Motors BankAmer h xulnt s Am Home Gulf 011 ·Squibb Corp
'AVCO Corp NL T Corp
Boeing ~~l~M'l11
UPS AND DOWNS
P". Up 12.0 Up 10.I Up 10,0 Up t.2 Up t .I Up t .O Up U Up U Up 1.6 Up 1.4
Up 1.1 up a.o Up 7.7 Up 7.7 Up 7 • .S Up U Up U
• ,...._.,'troy u .• USS.to,~ M.Qll.
.._,....,_, 1 eroroc'.l p.e.oo ... .., ... ............. ,.~,,..., .... ...,, .... . ..... .
~ ........ -~~ .... tfeY .... tm.ot. ......
NEW VOflK lN'I -s.i-. "°"" -..0 ""'
.,.... ol --,,_, -.-.... -~ -tredlng net_.,,, at,,_"*'
fi1c111E s m.'°° :11 -.,., WemrCom ., 101,.00 19~ • " lnstrum Sys ts.200 1'-\ + ~
G<lllCan g "·'°° 21~ -V.. OWG Corp 11,300 •'111 + v.. HOmHer 76,300 11'14 -t't TtllHAlrCp n.ooo " + v.. Pluelnn 71,'00 11111 + 1111
DOr(l\stGas M,JOO 111111 + 1 WalllRIEst t 6S,200 111111 -V.
METALS
CltllN" .,_,, cenu • pounct, u. $. •
llv•rtd . ...... ,. ""''a pound. JIM 4l\lo cents a PoUnd. delivered.
Tl• $1.01" Metat1 W"41. comPQlllt lb. /,l•mlMni 7' cants a pound, N. Y.
M•rcWJ $41S.OO per llalll. l'l•U-'511.00troyoz., N.Y.
SILYIR
GOLD QUOTATIONS
....... , mort1lno llafno uo.oo. Off SIUS.
l.•11•N1 elternoo11 llwlnt U14.2S, otl
$19.50.
... flt: .,..,_fl111f19$S40.ll, oH "4.ft.
''MlllW1: fllllllfl '51M~ off SIS.".
1.•rldl: i.te •II-llwlnQ, Ul2.00. Off si1.oo; uu.oo-.ci.
" ••• , • H.,M•ll: OlllV daflv QllOI• UU.U , Oii Sit.JO.
,,.....,., 1111, dllllf qwte U1•.H. Off
'1t.SO.
I ....... : ONy CS.Uy ~ tabrk lliflll lW.12, on uo.a .
1·
•&t'~l!.i21
~ A year's work. What'll It •et you?
,. How about nearly fl7 ,000?
• That's bow much the Auxiliary of Hoa•
Memorial Hospital realbed from ita year's ef.
forta.
The money -fl6, 783.85, to be exact -wu
' turned over to the hospital Jut week at the. aux·
IUary'a annual luncheon at the 'Marriott Hotel,
Newport Beach.
The l,016·member auxiliary also d,onated
more than 73,500 hours of service to the hospital
during the past year.
Totalled, since 1962, the auxiliary baa liven
$1,269,331 plus 1,318,160 hours of service to the
· Newport Beach hospital.
This year's doaaUon will be used for ren·
ovation of the opthalmolo1y and eastroin-
HAPPENINGS
testinaJ laboratories, expanding the ultrasound
department and toward operatiooi of the daily
living ~itchen in lhe occupational therapy de·
partment.
The auxiliary's cash donation is derived
from numerous sources including dues, dona-
. lions and bank interest from the Copa de Oros;
sustaining, active and> Candystrlper dues; the
Hunters' bridge.fashion show luncheon, rum-
mage sale and stamp machines; Nightingales'
sale of baby photos; the Gift Box and Gift Cart.
The past year's volunteer work includes
64,079 hours given by adult members and 9,594
by Candystripers.
Topping the list of volunteers is Bev Cox
who has given the hospital more than 15,000
hours of work over the years .
Another star volunteer is Doris Kohaut who
has accumulated 9.500 hours in 10 years.
Among others recognized at the luncheon
for their volunteer service were Sally McBride
with 9,000 hours. Carroll Beek with 8,500 hours,
At Hoag AuriUa'll lunch.on ~ (/Tom ,left)
Jacquie MUln, Jone Clemens, Edythe Bulloch
and Bette South.
.Myrtle Eckes for 8,000 hours, Bernadette Goel&
for 7,000 hours, Alex Shaffer for 6,500 hours, and
Dorothy Hetzler, Dora Hill and Bea Lace with
6,000 hours each. .
AJso recognized were Bev Langston, Marie
Zambitom, Matt Kinney, Katie Romberger and
Irene Lee with 5,000 hours each.
Each givine the hospital at least 4,500 .hours
were Bette South, Maryhele Beahm, Frank
Williams, Peggy Kreyser and Louise Man·
derbach.
Jacquie Miller was recognized for 4,000
hours of volunteer service while Marion Tilton
and Marion Frazer each had 3,500 hours and
four women -Clara Arntson, Jane Nickertz,
Barbara Gumbiner and Marie Hiebsch _.._ each
gave 3,000 hours.
In acknowledging the auxiliary's work,
hospital Board /President George Hoag said it
was important to stress the sense of harmony
the group brings to the hospital.
In addition to Hoag, luncheon guests in·
eluded Larry Ainsworth, who is an assistant ad·
ministrator at the hospital; John C. Barbadian,
who recently was named personnel director;
Frank Hall, who heads development and com-
munity relations; A. Jane Maradei, exe<:utive
liaison for the medical staff; Douglas Myers,
Walter 's 30-day anniversary
Do you know what yesterday was?
It was the first 30·day anniversary of the
last show done by Walter.
Whatya mean, Walter who?
CRONKITE. The beloved dean of American
broadcasters who became a legend in his own
time. My gosh. can't you remember where you
IRll BDMBICI ~
were and what you were doing when he uttered
his last. "That's the way it is"? I sure do. I was
in the kitchen frying onions for baked onion
soup when my husband called and said, "Erma.
this is it! Walter's signing off for the last time."
I remember earlier that day we watched
Eric Sevareid as he observed that Walter
received more attentioo at leaving his job than P~esident Cartw-
"President who?" asked my husband.
"Carter! You know Jimmy Carter."
"Oh, T"HA T President Carter. I remember ·
him now. He was president before Reagan and
his vice president was ... don't tell me ... it's
right on tt1e tip or my tongue."
"Has ·he been on the American Express commercial yet?"
"I don't think so." he said. "He went to
funerals a lot. What was the Pope's funeral be went to?"
"I'm not sure. There were two very close together."
"I think it was the year Oakland won the
pennant. Or was it .P~ttsburgh? Let's see, they
interrupted Cha rlie s Angels with a news bulletin."
"Are the Angels in the National or the
American League?" I asked.
''.~o. You remember them. They were a lelev1s1on show."
"Are you sure you'r e not thinking of
Travels with Charlie?"
"That was a book by John Steinmetz."
. "You're confusing him with a senator from Ohio."
"I am not,'' he said. "That's Howard Tan-
nenbaum."
"Don't be ridiculous. Tannenbaum is a
German word for Christmas tree."
"That's it!" he said. "That's the year we
bought the live Christmas tree which was 1977." ...
"What's the matter?" I asked.
:·Now I've forgotten the question. Are we getting old? ..
"Nonsense." I said. "I don't know about
rou, but I'll never forget Walter Brennan say.
mg, 'That's the way it is,' if I live to be a hun-dred!"
Still riding in back of bus
U.l!:AK ANN LANDERS: I am a black
woman who never dated a white man until two
years ago. Please help me sort this out.
The man is a well·to-do professional, un·
lllUIDlll
married, no responsibilities, no commitments,
nice dresser, good-looking and can talk on any
subject under the sun. I didn't go looking for
him. He sought me out.
Mr. "Perfect" treats me very well. He
bou~ht me a car for Valentine's D~y and has
been very generous in other ways. tiut be has
yet to take me out in public. We meet at his
place or mine and have had some mini-
vacations elsewhere. but we always travel
separately.
1 have never met any of his friends or fami·
ly and he has pever asked to meet mine. When I
hint that we may not be right for each other, he
says I am crazy and he wants our relationship
to last forever. No mention has ever been made
of marriage. How long do you think this will
last? -THE MYSTERY WOMAN
Dear Woman: It wlll last as long 11 yoa are
wllllag to be lnvlslble and let blm bay you off
with Clfts. II yoa haven't figured out where yoa m Into h1I IUe, I can tell you. It's a t the back of
the bus ud oat of algbt.
G . . enu.n1: Begin special project
WEJ;>NESDA Y, APRILS
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <Mar. 21·Apr. 19): More per~oni
will be receptive to your pol.J\ts of view -key is
to express in dynamic, creative, positive man·
ner. Doll now! Focus on trips, visits, calls and
• ielection of quality material,
TAUR US (Apr . 20·May 20): Money is
f ortbcomine for purpose of home lmprovement.
You are on brink of maJ~r discovery.
HOROSCOPE ·
Jeon and Alan Alison, general chairman, get re·
ady for race
who is di rector or strategic planning ; Michael
Stephens, chief administrator. and William L.
Fagan. newly appointed director or facilities
and maintenance.
Louis Kaa, who retired last week as
facilities and maintenance director and says
he's heading out m his camper to places where
he can't be reached by telephone. was honored
by the auxiliary which made him eighth vice
president in charge or criticism, complaints and
the new auxiliary offices
Jack West, who has been taking the baby
photographs at Hoag since the early '60s , also
was a guest of the auxiliary.
Among those running the show at the
luncheon were Jacquie Miller. Jane Clemens ,
Edythe Bullock, Bette South· and Myrna Vogt.
Ms. Miller is auxiliary president, Ms. Clemens
is first vice president. Ms Bullock is its past
president, Ms . South is publicity chairman and
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
S.•t fr-•· ........
I '22 HAH Ol IL VD.
COSTA MISA -541-1156
At Adam and Eve ball were Mr. and Mra. War-
ren Cox fleftJ and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Beechner.
Ms. Vogt announced volunteer awards .
Ms. South (actually, it's Mrs. because she's
the wife of Academy Award·winning cinemato-
grapher Leonard South) wean two publicity hats .
Her other ha t is publicity chairman of the
annual Newport-Ensenada Yacht race which is
coming up April 25. '
Alternating her hats at Wednesday's
luncheon, she talked enthusiastically about an
Ensenada Send-off Luncheon to be held April 23
at the Balboa Yacht Club in Corona del Mar .
The Ensenada luncheon, which ls open to
the public, will include a panel of sailing
specialists who'll be prepared to answer ques-tions about the race.
Reservations for the luncheon can be made
by calling 673-3515
Ebsen master of ooremomes
Balboa Island res ident Buddy Ebsen was
master of ceremonies two weekends ago for the
annual Adam and Eve awards benefit dinner
dance at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel. He at-
tended the star studded event with his daughter,
Cathy
The m e of the affair, co·proouced by
Ne wport Beach resident Don Daves, was "A
Shower of Stars ..
The evening began with a black-tie recep-
tion in the foyer of the hotel's grand ballroom
and was followed by a gourmet dinner of wine.
San Souci Salad, Duck a l'Orange and the
dessert. Coupe Marcella
Sally Forbes of Corona del Mar shared
fashion show coordination duties at the ball with
Carol Kaplan of Pacific Palisades.
Among Orange Coast residents to attend the
ball. which is held to honor Hollywood 's most
outstanding and fashionable talents for their
philanthropic endeavors, were Marie and War·
ren Cox. Susan and Robert Beechner and Joyce
Rhoem
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINIUS
NAME STATEMENT
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'U7Ul
PubhShed Oraft9' CN\I O•lly Pilot,
April I, U , 21, '9, 1•11 1'i..fl
~~~~~~~~==========-====~! Tll• lolle>W1<19 .,.,'°" '' ooon9 bu•• t" nen as PUBLIC NOTICE
BEDWETTER
A I
LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED
PARENTS NAME ---------
AOORESS -----------
CITY _____ STAT£ ---ZtP __
P'<ONE _______ _
' P•cH•c ln1e,n.a11ona• qd •978
AOE--
!Ages • !IO)
WF HFIP SOME Q()('TORS CHllORfN
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE
FOR VENUS OE MILO * fNOIVIOCJAL CQUfllSEUNO * FR£E FIGUAl AHAL YS&S * ~El RECIPES ANO DAILY ,..EHlJS * MOOEAH EOUIPMENT * PROVEN RHUI. TS
TOTrAttOST
SAME PRICE TO ALL!
GOULO ENG I N E ERIN G ~SUl.TANTS, 12 Eutmont, Irvine,
ornl• 9271•.
Gary H•vll.,,d Gould, 12 Ea.t
, lrvlM, Calllornl• '""
I• bullllffS I• conou<t~d by '°" on
d du11.
c;.,.., H. Gould
Tnl• stalement wu "'"' w1111 .,,. Countt Clerk of OrMI~ County on
M•rcf\ 19, ttlt
"*" PubtiShed OrettQe Cout O•llv Piiot,
M.,cll )1. Aorll 7, "·JI, 1''1 1-1
PUBUC NOTICE
f'IC'TITIOUS atilfNHS
~ITATlflQNT
fM IOjlfWlne WWI It detftt llluM· -···
l'ICTtTtOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tiie lolle>Wl"9 person Is doln9 busl· ........
fHE 51-lOE OOCTOll, •nA Eut
11th Str .. 1, Costa IMsa, Calilornl1
t1621
J ae Cllul Shim, j Union Hitt,
Cen.on, C.lllornl• 9010 ,,
Tiiis _.,..u It conduct.., by .,. In·
dlvlOUel.
J_.Cf\ut Sl>lm
Thi& •lelement was 1119'1 will\ Ille
County Clerk ol Qr.,.~ County on
Apr-Ill, ltlt