HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-13 - Orange Coast PilotCAPE C-A-NAVERAL, Fla.
(AP> -The astronauts of Colurh·
bla, their roekelibip sailing along
Uke a "champ," tested control
systems today for Tuesday's
searing r~·entry after sources
said photographs .indicated the
underbelly heat shield -crucial
tosurvivaU -is apparently intact. On Flight Day Two, "every·
thing's working just fine," a
mission director said today.
"There's nothing remotely re·
se lJ1 bling a problem.'•
~ohn Young and Robert Crip·
pen were 1twakened from a chilly
night's sleep in orbit by a country·
we stem tune that celebrated their
"mean macbJne." They be1an
testing Colum bia for the
dramatit landJnt that will con-
clude the mission that thrust the
United States back Into the space
race. .
Cabin temperatures ovemlthl
were in the 60&, a few depees
below normal and Crippen said,
"we iot about ready to break out
the long undies." Shuttle Control
quickly re.solved that by dunu>inl
wateroutof a heat exchanger.
The song. "The Flight .<>f the
Shuttle Col\imbia," warmed their
spirits. It said. in part, "Many,
many hours went Into this thing. A
job well done by the shuttle i;pace
team."
The music was written by Jerry
Rucker, an insulation technkian
OBSERVERS CHEER -A4
EDWARDS READY -AS
at Cape Canaveral for Martin·
Marietta Corp., aud sune by Roy
McCall ~ a country-and-western
singer from Titusville, Fla .• the
town that is closest to Kennedy
Space Center.
Following breakfast, Crippen
ana Young plunged Into a day of
ex\enslve testin~ of spaceship
syS\ems -w9rklng well except
for minor "inomalies." A re-
markably cle11r telecast shqwed'
Youn1 testing the ship's ffigbt
controls.
•'The vehicle Is performing just
beautifully, much better than
anyone ever expected on the first
flight." Young said Sunday.
"ll 's perform Ing like a
champ,·· Crippen reported.
The astronauts relayed their praise during a four-minute
telecast to Shuttle Control nine
hours after Columbia vaulted
spectacularly off its lnunch pad at
Cape Canaveral.
The maiden flight of the world's
firs~ reflyable spaceship is a test
flight, and Young and QOppen
weretodojustthattoday. Nothing
glamourous like landing on the
moon. Just dogged cMcklng and
rechecking or all the systems. as
they did Sunday after launch
Of the til es, National
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration spokesman Charles
Redmond said. "We are very in·
terested in understanding what
went on, but there is.still no con·
cern. U you define a major prob·
tern as Ont' where we think there
might be danger to the lives of the
crew members. no, this doesn't
come anywhere near being a ma·
jor problem." Today's work scfledule: The
pilots e·1aluated the accuracy of
ship flight controls, assessed the
small steering jets that guide
their orbit and their descent, troubleshot a minor cabin pres·
surization problem. adjusted
Columbia's startracker align-
ment <navigation control> and did
more test operations by remote
control on the ship's cargo doors. F~om the moment of the fi ery
<See SHUTTLE, Page A2)
Catching a glide1 · I IRVINE SHOOTING
eat s ca e
• • .. mur er-su1c1 e
I
\
..
AP .........
HITCH-HEIGHT -Hang glider pilot Frank Knippers gets ~
free ride 1,300 feet up by tying on to a hot-air balloon at.-
Hammond, La. The ride down for Knippers. after his re·
lease from· the balloon, was about three minutes. This
was his first such launch.
Lois. Wax county's
refugee aid chief
Lois Wax·. a. member of the
Orange County administrative
corps, has been named to head
the coun(y's new team to handle
reful(ee resettlement issues.
· Ms. Wax, 38, ha·s worked six
years for the cowity. She· leaves
a budget ~oordinator j)ost in the
County Administrative Office to
lead the five-member team.
which will report (o the county
Board of Supervisors.
reliable information about the
refugees, they will try to in·
stitute programs to help the
newcomers fit into the social
fabric with the least frlcUon, she
said.
·'The goal of this program is
self-sufficiency," she explained.
The supervlsors decided to in·
volve the county more deeply
with refugee resettlement.a in
the wake of county reports pre·
dieting more severe sociat ·prob-
1 ems unless resettlement
tensions are reli~ved.
3 gangs clash
Sallta Ana · • in
Santa Aila police inveeU1aton
are piecing together information
today in the wake of Sund•y's
bloody club between mf'mben ol
two Loe An1eles street 1n p and
a Santa Ana youth 1an1 at a party.
Three people and perhaps more
were injured in the fi&bt that
erupted at a home at 2226 S.
Diamond Ave. in Santa Ana.
Mayor
held in
assault
L vine Mayor Art Anthony was
arrested over the weekend on
assault with a deadly weapon
charges in connection with the
beating of his wife, Elaine,
police said today
Anthony. 50, remained in the
jail ward of UC Irvine Medical
Center this morning. said police
Chief Leo Peart.
Elaine Anthony. 60. .suffered
cuts and bruises on her face in
the beating that took place
Saturday afternoon in the An·
thor1y hom e at 18691 Via
Palatino, lrvine, police said.
Peart said that ··a gun and
fists" were used in l'•e assault. He
refused t-0 say exactly how the gun
was used or what ty~e of weapon it
was. Anthony, a form.er Marine,
was placed In custody at UCIMC
because he evidenced "emo·
tional strain." Peart said. He
explained that once doctors de·
term ine that Anthony can be
placed in Orange County Jail,
Anthony will be given a chance to ~st ball. ·
Ponce 1a.Jd two Gardena·mell
believed to be Los Angeles gan1
members were arrested by of·
ricers wh~ quelled tbe di••
turbance.
Booked at OrangP. County .Jail
on attempted murder and assault
charges were Luis Antonio
Vargas, 21, and Luis Antonio
Vidaurrazaga, 20. Both are being
held in lieu of $25,000 ball.
ACCORD ING TO officers,
about 20 members of the two Los
Angeles gangs -Companeros
Baby Locos and Barrio So Las
Rifas crashed the party at
about 1 :OOa.m. Sunday.
Attending lhe party were Santa
Ana youths who belonged to the
Sth Street Gan&.
Violence erupted almost im·
mediately, officers said. and
police were called when a
• neighbor re;><>rtt:d bearing gun·
fire.
Between 15 and 20 officers Wf!re
needed to break up the righting.
resulting in tlie two arresls and
confiscation of knives and a gun.
Injured in tl)e fighting were
Ernest Lopez. 18. of Harbor City ;
Matt DeArcos. 21. of Huntington
Beach, and Robert Hernandez.
18, of Santa Ana.
LOPEZ SUFFERED gurishot
wounds in the neck and hand and
is in serious but stable condition
at Fountafn Valley Community
Hospital.
DeArcos suffered multiple stab
wounds and was report4l<f in fair
condition this morning at the
Fountain Valley hospital.
Hernandez was treated and re-
leased.
Police believe others at the par·
ty also were injµred and have not
yet sought medkaJ attention. It Is
believed one man suffering from
a ~unshot wound went to Mercy
(See GANGS, Page A2>
THE AD HOC· refugee com-
milte~ was authorized by the
supervison, who said the county
needed a s~lal management
team to gather data and propose
programs to eare resettlement
problems for the as.ooo to 50,000
refugees in Orange County. •
No Reagan appear.anees
Presid~t stays upstairs, builds strength · B EVE R LY Cl/R T I S Hunter, refugee Jflairs
coordinator in t be county
Human Services A1ency, wlll
also serve on the manatement
team ..
Three other employ~es who
will work part-time, bave. DOl yet
been n~.
· Ma. Wax 1Wd her irouP wUJ
lnventorj HrVtces avmlable to
refugees, help tel up an •d·
vl1ory committee, and develop •
profile ol ~ ~ eaa.rta1
the couaty. •
ONCE 9,>lJN'ft' offlct•b have
quarters.
Speake• said Reagan was not
Ukely to rnake a radio speech on
his economic proposals this week
but aald tt may be done later.
A1 he recuperates at home from
tbe buUet wound in his left tuns in·
n&cted by a would-be aasusln two
weeks •So,· Rea1an aJ•o may
, .... ~ ........... ., Coqre11
tor a ..,,,....., report ID how his·
ecoooM • tl'lartna, s.,.u., .... ~ .
But tbe praldeat plliDed to
apend IDOi.:..: not all, Of Ule
weelr Mel tn bl1 upltein
Uvlfta ....-... rtnt lady Nan·
C)". a.apa.ba redftorattd \M
rojftop Mlartum for Re..-•1 u .. ana.t-W. r.oavalilc.-..
After lietn.1 releated from
CMlly rll-4 St-" -
AW ALTS SHUTTLE
Charles Bell
Mesanplans
to see return
of shuttle
Moiher's
probl~ms
revealed
An lrvinP woman shot her son
In the head Saturday while he
was doing homework in the liv·
ing room of the family home and
then went into the,bedroom and
kilied herself with the rifle,
Police Chief Leo Peart said this
morning.
.. She was emotionally erratic
and had a history of mental
problems," Peart said.
·Morris L . Greene returned
home from wClrk at l : 30 p.m.
and found the bodies of his wife
Nell S., 48. and son , Brent D .. 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Greene and their
son had lived at 48 Redhawk,
.Irvine. for about 212 years .
neighbors said. m
Neighbors said Brent was a
freshman at Irvine High School
and active in the drama depart-
ment. Last year. while still at
Lakesi(le Middl e School. Brent
was picked to play the leading
role in the Irvine High School
performance of "Oliver."'
Ron Taggart, who lives near
the Greene home. said Morris
Greene called him Saturday af-
ternoon from work He was con·
cerned about being unable to
reach his wife a!ld asked Taggart
to g_o check on her.
Taggart said he rang lhe
doorbell but got no answer.
Inm ates secured
SAN QUENTIN CAP> -In·
mates were locked in their cells
Sunday after oue prisoner at·
tacked another with a baseball
bat. The assault apparently
stemmed from a personal dis·
agreement, according lo a prison
s pokesman.
ORAIGI CUAST lllTHIR
Low clouds in night and
morning hours. Otherwise
fair through Tuesday.
Slightly cooler afternoons.
Highs in mid·606 at beaches
to low 70S ln Inland areas.
Lows tonight 52 to 56.
111111 TDllY
. Southlnl CoUJ°""A botff)ol&
/ora1 cdlWate °' A•&e oftd
Loi AnQtlel DodQtrl win.
PogtCJ.
,•
Gll·Ume Ilion, Col'811bla W. almost a fla 1H1 machine,
)othered by only 1 few DU11aee
problem&.
A remark.able ~V•'7 fol a
craft that only 1 few montbl •o
criUca were calllnc aucb ~
tetlna Udnp u "•Patt ~~
and "aluminum Dumbo .... ColU.i:ii·
bla bad. fallen two yeart beb1*I
schedule, bedeviled by technical
troubles wkh Its maln enatnet and
thermal tltes.
The three powerful en1lnea
were perfect Sunday. At least one
oftheshlp's30,l'l2tll~sweremtss·
ln1 and U or 1' were damaged by
the rlgoro~ launch atresa, but
Na ti on al Ael'onautlca and Space
Admln.1stratlon offlclab said the •
'&RPS were In non:critical areas
and posed no threat.
Nell Hutchinaon, one of three
rtight directors at Shuttle Control,
aaid the affected Ules probably
were hit by a shock wave as the
craft barreled up through the at-
mosphere. · AST80NAVTTE$1'SSPBCTACLES INSPACE
John Young aboard apace •huttle Columbia
"' WMiUNGTON lAP> -5'11·
clitnt Md-So¥t.t rt.torte ot the Rt11A-. ad~tratlon l• mak· loa u; .&. aiHu ln Europe
nerYGUS aad ll ralJ,DI concern it
could tQmpltcate the 1ltu1Uob In
Poiand, say• a aenior State
Department official who baa just
returned from Europe.
Tbe official 1ug1eated an ln·
ttnt&on ~ SC>ften his own anti-
Sovlet at.a~ment.s i.o the future,
• barring a major new a11reasive
move by the Soviets.
Th~ official was on the
afrcraft ttiat carried Secretary of
State Alexander M. Hate Jr. back
from Europe and the Mideast on
Saturday. Tbe official told re-
porters on the Qlght home that,
"in general we want lQ be careful
in· addressing the issue of Poland
• and 1: .. t.We1t telatlons an
1reneraJ. ''
Since the outset of tbe Rea1an
admldl.alfaUon, there has been a
steady 0\ttll0tuin1 of crlUciJm of
the Sovtft.s by various hJlh of·
flcial1, including the president
himself, Secretary Haig i&nd
Secret•r1 of Def~nae Caapar W elhbersel'.
Reapn helped set the tone
'When be denounced the Soviets
at bis first news conference as
liars and cheats bent on world
conquest.
Raia bas chimed In with
critlcllm ol aUe1ed Soviet sup-
port of terrorism around the
world and repeatedly bas de-
nounced the Soviets for their
menaeiac posture tCJward
Poland.
For bis pa.rt, V{ejnberger said
Probable Orbiter approach
and landlng pattern _k._ Ed••• Air Potoe ..... Cel. ~ a. llB parking lot sale due
,.
' • Urben 8( ...
T ....... MilP:..._ ......... ~ .. ..--.. .... ,
Funds to pa_y for new college headquarters
By PHIL SNEIDERMA.N
OI -DellJ l'lleC IUff An un'Paved parkin& lot at
Golden West College in Hunt·
ington Beach will be sold tp.belJ
pay for a new Coastline Collea•
headquarters in Fountah
Valley, according to a decisior
by Coast Community Collegt
District trustees.
The decision has drawn a let
ter of protest from ' the Goldff
West Academic Senate, which
contends the lot is needf'd l<
ease parking congestion oo th(
east side of the campus.
Th·e senate letter also protest
ed that Golden West facult)
members were not consultee
prior to the board's action.
The lot in question is on thf
east side of Gothard Street.
north of Center Drive. The 2.7
acre site, oiled but unpaved, it
used for overflow parking wbell
the paved campus tot on thE
west side of Gothard ls filled.
DISTRICT SPOKESMAN
Richard Simon satd the trus~
concluded the overflow "is no1
necessary for the future growth
of Golden West.'..: .
He noted that the lot is no1
contiguous to the roain campus
and said district officials believe
students can find parking places
in ohter campWI lots.
According to Simor(, district
Chancellor Norman Watson
responded to the Golden West
faculty's objections by remind-
ing them that Ora nge Coast
College property in Costa Mesa
was sold in the mid-1960s to
finance the purchase of the
property on which Golden West
was built.
The lot. zoned for community
service and education, is cur-
rently being appraised, Simon
said. A city zoning change would
be required before ·any com·
merc ial development could be
built on the site.
ousing resale controls mulkd MONEY RAISED through·
sale of the overflow lot will help
the district purchase an 8.5-acre
parcel on the southwest comer
of Warner Avenue and Newhope
Street in Fountain Valley. ltes~e controls for new af-
fordab e hQ.using built along the
coast h ve been opposed until now
by members of the Orange County
Boa rd or Supervisors .
They have preferred to leave
real estate markets unencum-
bered rather than to limit the
prices ofhomesduring resale.
But the supervisors· position
may be changing soon because of
compromises reached with
representatives of botb the south
coast regional aod state coastaJ
com missions.
PLANNING STAFF members
from the county and the com·
mission have been meeting the
pas t month to settle differences
over a set of state-mandated
policies governing use of the
coastal zone.
According to the recently-
reached compromise, the county
would impose resale controls on
up to 3,000new affordable housing
units planned along the coast.
This would be done if the com·
mission and the stat e Air
Resources Board lift conditions
on development of aboUtS,OOOnew
hom es within the area served by
the Aliso Water Management
Agency.
The agreement is part of
negotiations .;nvolving the local
coastal programs prepared for
commission approval by the
county. The programs, mandated
by the state Coastal Act, are de-
signed to protect the coastline by
spelling out how coastal land can
beu~.
THE COUNTY is preparing 10
s uch documents covering unin·
corporated parts of the coastfrom
Seal BeachtoSanClemente.
These coastal programs were
Rites set Tuesday
for Phil Niekum
Laguna Hills resident Adm.
Phil Niekum (USN·Jlet.), who
directed amphibious landings in
some of the South Pacific's
bloodiest invasions in World War
11, died at 76 here Friday.
The retired admiral, a 32-year
Navy veteran, will be eulogiied
Tuesday at 2 p.m . in rites at
M cCormh:k Mortuary in Laguna
Hills. Burial will follow in Ar-
lington National Cemetery,
Washington, D.C.
Adm. Niekum commanded am-
phibious task forces that captured
. ' Ala~a slide
fo~~louds
ANCHORAGE CA P > -A
massive landslide on Mount San-
ford was mist en for a volcanic
eruptioo by earby residents
and airline pi pasain& over-
head, a Univ sity of Alaska
scientist says. The giant sU e on the moun·
tain's sheer\90 face expoeed
layers of old, e ash which
was pushed l11 • huse plume·
shaped cloud b strong updrafts,
Carl Benson, member of the
u.n l versity' G&ophy1teal
In1tilut.e S after flying OVeT
the 11.~ Oot peak Saturday.
I
the South· Pacific islands ot lwo
Jim a, Okinawa, lheya Shima and
AguniShima.
Landing craft in his fleet car-
ried the Marines who raised the
Flag over two Jtma's Mount
Suribachi.
He was later to serve on the
Republican· State Central Com-
mUlee and the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Republican Central Commit-
tee.
Survivors inc lude Adm.
Niekum's two daughters, Malin-
da Niekum, of Fullerton and
Suzanne Morasco, of Conriec·
ti.fut ; a brother Norris, of
Pennsylvania, plus two .sisten
livlng in Arliona, mortuary of.
ficialssaid.
&utter ritea
roundup 1et
A roundup of Easter suu.rtse
services alon1 the Orange Coast
will be published ln the Dally
PUot Saturday. .
Church offlclal1 abould -4
inf ormatlon to the Relialon
EdltoT, P. 0 . Box 1580, Colta
Mesa 92626, so that 'lt wiU ar·
rlve before noon Wednesday.
appr<Vved once by the
s upervisors. but planners for the
regional coastal commission rec·
om mended denial based on
several reasons, including hous-
ing issues.
At that point, county officials
decided to negotiate the dif·
ferences. ralher than confront the
commission during stormy and
potentially fruitless public bear-
lois.
One of those involved in the
negotiations h as been Peter
Herman, planning aide to 5th Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley.
Herman said that Riley and other
supporters of the compromise
sliU have to-sell the agreement to
other supervisors and members
of the coastal commission.
HE THINKS Riley will have at
least three votes on the board,
From Page A1
MES AN. • • grams is the people are highly
motivated," said Bell, recalling
the nights of the Apollo mission
when his father wouldn't come
home lD'ltil 8 or 9 o'clock.
B\lt somehow the sbutUt mis-
sion hasn't sparked the same en-
thusiasm or past space pro-
~rams. From the beginn ing it
was plagued with budgetary
problems and critics have called
it everything from a "Space
• Turkey'' to an ''Aluminum
Dumbo."
Even when his father retired
three months ago Bell says they
were unce~ain whether the
shuttle would be launched on
time.
"lt was supposed to go up in
1978," said Bell. "It was part of
the demoralizing thing about it
slipping and slipping and slip·
ping."
Despite the delays. the budget
cuts and ·Jong string of set-
backs -all systems appear 10
now.
Says Bell, "ll's going to open
up the door to space. For a few
dollars even you can put a
payload up in space."
-JODlCA.DENHEAD
Woman faces
theft charge
from school
. 'A 2l·ynr-old Van Nuys woman
w11 captured at Dana Hila. HlaJf
School ear_ly Sunday niomtaa
after lbe •Ue&edlY broM into a
bulldinC bl tbe campus. takinS
school equi~el!!t the Orance
County Sbertn'aamce reported.
Ad ... re~1~1
"mulled WfftdOw at tlMl acbool at
aboutl a.m. wblleen patrol.
Momentl l._, IM •lleaedlY
foUDd Lari .Deli Rau1J .bldlna
beblDd • eon-. ~ the hlldlJtl. The..., Mid tbe womu wu
c:u~ • cuaera. c:alcula~ a c:uamr•dili*•••ot,.., fa~W. fnilD UM IMilld· ~ .. ;..or-..~
Jell OIH.,.flOllaf tiatlfarJ.
even though members such as
Supervisor Bruce Nestande have
adamantly opposed resale con-
trols in the county.
"lt ·s best for the county to end
state involvement in land use de-
cisions in our jurisdiction and this
apparently is the best way to do
it," said Herman.
The moment of reckoning will
come as the coastal programs are
resubroil\.ed i.o th~ supervisors. lf
approved, they will first go to the
regional commission and then to
the state. ,
BOTh THE coastal com-
mission a nd t he state Air
Resources Board have regulated
housing development in the Aliso
Water Management district. The
commission has imposed restric-
tions on a sewage oull all permit in
which it requires certain controls
on affordable housing. •
The Air Resources Board alS{>
has restrictions calling for lo"'
and moderate housing. supposed-
ly to shorten commuting trips in
the south county and ease air
pollution from vehicles.
There still are several other is·
sues to be ironed out between lbe
county and the commissions.
What to do with sand dredged
from San Juan Creek, whether to
extend University Drive and bow
wide to. build Sand Canyon Road
throueb the Irvine Coast are just
three.
But Herman said those matters
can be resolved later in the proc-
ess if the compromise on the hous·
ing issues is rat\fied first.
-ClennScott
On this parcel, priced at $3.4
million. the district plans to
build a new adminis tration
headquarters for Coa stline
College, which currently leases
office space elsewhere .
Construction costs are projected
at $4.3 million.
T he f~rmal design of the new
Coastline complex is expected to
be unveiled at the May 13 board
of tru.stees'meeting
Coastline spokhman Jack
Chappell said preliminary plans
call for the construction first or
a four·story central office build-
ing, with Coastline occupying
three of the floors. <The fourth
would be leased to other
parties).
In the second phase, related
retail shops and business offic~
would be built around the main
Coastline headquarters.
Chappell said no claa8es are
planned at the site. Currently,
some 32,000 students are
enrolled at Coastline, which of·
fers classes at 160 sites
throuabout the d.iatrict.
' •
From Page A1
GANGS. • •
Hospital later ln tbe day Sunday
for treatment but fled when a
nurse began to caJJ police.
A police spokesman ujd the de·
partment's special gang detail is
investigating the Incident.
In Eaqe" tut week th-t ~·~~'};~
Sovl.et "t.Jareat of violence or In· ..•.• :
tlm1datlon" asalnet Poland,.1.:' •
might preclude talk• with ~ .,/ ··
Soviets oo w•Y• of (\OntrolllnJI • • . ,
nuclear mrssUe deployment lii f: •
Europe. , • : • .~
But the senior State Departl • t·i~
ment official on the Hai' plane • ~:
aald in the airborne brtefinc roru •. · J ..
reporters, "There may be somt :·: !f •
concern about repetitive tbreatsM· · ;.,_
or h igh-level reference to• 1 dangers probably in all of lbe '· j"
capitals, which is a consequence · , .
of their adjusting to an ad-'•·. :'
ministration .... " ) • -,1',"1
The official. who Insisted on ' ~ ·•
anonymity as a conditio for·· 1'i-
brieflng reports on the outcome-:l
of the Haig trip, acknowled&ed ~ · : '
that the Europeans' concern.1 I
may be justffied with resRCCt to ~
the tear that i.t could ca.use th~ ... ~
Soviets to act tn Poland an wa)1. • . ~
contrary to Western interest. s · . ··one might make the casf!' .•!
t hat an overemphasis. repeated "'·
warnings at a high level, could ,. .?
distort the decision-making pro-'=;· ·r
cess in a negative way.'' the of-
ficial said. ·
"Clearly, 'f'ery lime the West:ii· '-:
opens its ~futh, every lime i~ · · '· ·
says somettiing. it has an in·~·: '!:
fluence on calcul ations. And .~·
therefore we have to be very . (
measured and very thoughtful iQ • ·
s peaking to this very sensitiv~.
and important issue ... he added.
Haig vlSlted Rom e. London', ·
Paris and Bonn, a nd er.coun·
~red concern in all four nations
over a nli·Sov iet s tate mt nts '
from W.1shington. The offi cial
said the concern partly ste ms
from the change in policies from
~h e Carter administration and
the decision or the Reagan ad~ ·
ministratibn to "speak frankly
and honestly."
$246,500
jackpot told
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE. Nev.
(APJ Grace Steblay busily f~
quarters into a slot machine.
She didn't notice the bells and
lights unlit a woman beside her
told Mrs. Steblay s he'd hit a
jackpot tor $246.500
.. She al most put another
quarter into the machine," said ,
Phil Weidinger. a spokesman for !·
Caesars Tahoe casino. following
the jackpot Sunday on a pro·
grcssive slot machine
The 22-yea r -o ld Fremont
wom a n. who wo rk s al the .!
Genera l E l ectri c C r edit·-•'
Corporation, had put about S5 i11:::·· ·
quarters into the machine befo~·
the jackpot.
Glenn hacks
. shuttle cost
WASHINGTON <AP> -The 1
space shuttle was "worth everY : !.
nickel" of its $10 billion cost · •·
because of the potential milltarl':: 'i·
benefits alo11e, s ays the first·-· :
American to orbit the earth. t.
Those benefits, s aid Sen. John f:
Glenn. D-Ohio. could includ~ :1 "las~rs in space ... defensive · 1
weapons from above the at-;.
mosphere -as ICBMs come up · .f
you could hit any weapon that · ·• ·
would be coming over to attac~ ·,
the United Stat.es.··
Glenn. whose round·the·globl: : . ·
trip electrified Americans in . •
19621 appeared Sunday on the-·':
NBC·TV program "Meet the·.·.·'
Press." .. :,~
. . ·"" .... · ... , ...... .. : . :i ·' ..
.. , ..
.' '(" ' . " -i I
. •:• ....... 1 .... '• .. ··· 1 ..... , ., .,.,.
· WASHINGTON (AP) -Wte Hou•,.._......,.,. JUM1 ~
• Bradf fleel a 1oa1 neoveey
from tM Wlet wouftd la bit brUI· Mil "the penoa you aU
haw• bown will alm0tt cerUln·
ly IM -.ck/' a phy1Jclan aald.
"ff1' 1urvtval 1' extraord.lbary
and 1hla recovery la remarka·
ble,' aald Dr. Denn11 O'Leuy,
. dea" of clinical aff alrs at
Qec>Jfe Wuhlnston Unlvenlty
Hot'1\taJ.
Tl\e ~-year·old Brady WH
shot ,at close ranee 1n the U ·
sualpatlort attempt acalnat
Pres¥tent Reaaan. The bullet
entered over Brady's left eye
and .ripped throu•h bis skull,
corning to rest in the rtaht aide
of hlahead. ' In five hours or emercency
sur.-ery. doctors removed 20
\
In a briefin• on Brady'• condi· tlon, O'Leary at fint lfflJled to
try to tone down some of Ute op-
timletic reports that bave sur-
f aced about the prees secretary
this week.
.. , think at this juncture we au
ouabt to keep our expectations
at a reasonable level," O'Leary
said. "His procresa from here on
out is goin1 to be slow.
"WE'RE talkina now weekl,
months, recuperation, a lot of
hard work !or Jim Brady to re·
gain as much function as poesi-
ble." be added.
First Soviet bloc
casirw set to open
.,
·.I
··l
BUDAPEST, Hungary <AP> -
Wit!\. the blessing and money of
Hunaary's Communist govern-
ment, the Soviet bloc's first
gambling casino opens here
April 2S in a partly medieval at-
mosphere. Hungarians will be
barred, however.
In contrast to the vibrant
nlghtJ).fe of Las Vegas, Atlantic
City ,and other Western gambl-
ing b"ubs, Budapest's casino -
on the fourth floor or the Hilton
Hot"l -will make an attempt at
elegance and old-style European
tradltion. "
The blackjack room for ex·
ample, is in a part of the build·
ing -Converted from A 14th cen-
tury tower, rising near what was
a former Benedictine abbey
whose remains were incorporat·
ed in the hotel complex.
FROM atop Buda Hill.
gamblers and regular hotel
guests will enjoy a view of the
Danube and the skyline or cen·
tral.Budapest.
At the gambling tables. it will
be ,as businesslike as anywhere
else, . but with chips exchanged
only for West German marks.
"But our guests may ex·
change any Western currency
for. marks," an official of the
state.run Danubius Hotels and
Spa Co. said.
Danubius launched the project
with the help of the Austrian
Casino Co. of Vienna, which pro.
vided all technical knowhow and
holds a 49-percent share of the
Sl.35 million capital stock.
A TOWER restaurant and one
of the Hilton's nightclubs were
refashioned earlier this year to
serve as casino premises.
There will be two French
roulette and two American
roulette tables, thr~e blackjack
tables and one each for bouJe
and baccarat.
An adjoining room will accom-
modate 32 slot machines and a
snack bar.
"Casino Budapest" will be
open from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. seven
d1tys a week and guests will pay
a five-mark ($2.35) entrance fee
that can be redeemed for chips.
There is no tax on winnings
and, officials stress, money won
can be freely transferred abroad
in hard currency, which is not
possible in other business opera·
lions in Hungary.
Hungarians are kept away
from the tables because of the
country's stringent regulation
that prohibits them from buying
foreign cunency. Few, if any,
other East Europeans are ex·
peeled to be seen at the casino
for similar reasons.
Hungary is visited each year
by some two million Western
tourists. more than half of them
from neighboring Austria and
from West Germany.
... .
••we f"1 very .. m1-Ue tbout
bl.I llMntal .ua.. abOut t.¥ re-tura ot hit pertaGality.
'1Re ma1 not be preciael)> the
way ht was bef0te and u.ndoubt·
etJly thfre will be some subtle eh.nfel, bu& they may be sq
1ubtte ,that even the people )Who
are very cloae to him art 1oln1
to b ave trouble identlfylng.
those."
Later, however. O'Leaey .,.
aured reporters that "Jim
Brady, the person you all have
known, will almost certanJy be
back."
RE SA.JD lt probably would
lake a year before Brady could
return to work, and that Brady
will have an undetermined
amount of motor impairment . "I thJnk it ls probably a rea-
sonable expectation -I really
want to hedge this -and he will
be able to walk with a cane,"
O'Lear)' said. "He might do bet·
ter than that. But he might not
do as well as that and we just
don't know. It's far too early."
O'Leary said there is some in·
dication Brady may have lost
part of his sense of mell, which
could have a bearing on his
ability to taste.
HOWEVER, O 'Leary cau-
tioned that "there are also
separate taste capabilities and
taste assessment is quite
tricky."
Brady's speech "is pretty
good," O'Leary said. "His
speech is not really slurred. It's
pretty normal."
Brady has been taken off an-
tibiotics and his temperature "is
staying down," the doctor
added. He continues receiving
medication to prevent swelling
of the brain, but he is beyond the
stage where that is a big pro-
blem, said O'Leary.
Up to four more weeks of
acute-level hospital care will be
required before Brady can begin
a rehabilitation program,
O'Leary said. He added that
Brady would be hospitalized for
much of the rehabilitation period.
IN A telephone conversation,
Brady was said to have joked
wilt) Vice President George
Bush's press secretary about
going shark fishing this sum·
mer.
Brady also spoke with his own
deputy. Larry Speakes. but was
not as animated. Brady spoke
only in reply to questions and
made only one-word replies,
Spealtc!S said.
Southern skies sunny
Cold front with hail hits from Missouri to Ohio
FORECAST 011_1_ as 11
Havana tl 70 Coast.al ~ather
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• . Oelty ...... U.. ...... Holding thliir lnternatwno.l winter Special Olympics medal.s are Costa
Me1an1 Debbie Keyes ( l.efi J, ailver: Allison Reese, gold.
UCI frosh rank
lowest on tests
BY RICHARD GREEN 00.o Oally l'ilet Slall
Freshmen entering UC Irvine
• in 1979 scored lower in verbal
and composition tests than their
counterparts on the other seven
University of California cam-
puses
And the UCI composition
scores were 26 points below the
national mean.
But UCI Associate Vice Chan·
cellor Carl Hartman said these
statistics. contained in a recent-
1 y released s tudy on Un ·
derprepared students, don't in-
dicate UCI students have special
problems in language skills.
Rather, these prol.J lems are
shared by university students
across the nation, Hartman ex·
plained.
"fN TH~ last six mon{hs I've
talked to people at the Universi·
ty of Arizona. Uni\'erslty of
Michigr.n, Michigan State. the
University of Illinoi s, the
University of Iowa ttnd Cornell
University." he said. "They say
th~y ·ve been worrying about
these trends for longer than we
have."
He claimed that the scores of
UCJ freshmen on the verbal and
composition tests we ren't lower
in a statis tica lly s ignificant
sense than the scores of
freshmen on the other UC cam-
puses.
"What has happened is that
students at all levels have less
facilities in verbal skills than
would be desirable," Hartman
s aid. "We're seeing a social
phenomenon. We became less
language oriented after World
War II."
HE SAID lhttt the UCI ad·
ministration is now considering
what C'an be done to enhance the
basic academic skills of the un·
i versity's students.
In the 1979-80 school year. UCI
spent $310.000 on courses and
$134,000 on programs for un.
derprepared students. according
to the University of California·
com miss ioned s tudy on un·
derprepared stuaents
That study indica ed that all
eight University of California
scores on the ma th portion of the
SAT.
According to the study, SAT
and Achievement Test scores
ha ve been dropping nationally.
The decline was more pro -
nounced at the Univers ity or
California. but UC freshmen still
score above the national mean
on these entrance exams.
THE study says that SAT
ve r bal scores oroppe<l ~6 points
nationally from 1972 to H>7S. This
com p ar es t o declines of 36
points in California. 43 points at
the Cniversity of California and
56 points at UCI.
.. Many changes have occurred
in the last decade that affect the
preparation of students for col·
lege, .. the report said by way or
exp I a n at ion . "Important
societal changes in family
structure. mobility, drug usage,
television and parental attitudes
heve taken a toll.
"'California's high schools
ha ve been asked to alleviate
'We're seeing a
social phenomen-
on. We became
less language-
oriented after
World War II.'
racial and ethnic segregation, to
a ssimilate a nd a c c ulturate
thousands of immigrants. ref-
ugees . . handicapped and to
attend to tl1e legitimate needs of
those at the bottom of the
achievement scale."
Hartman theorized that the
trend of declining basic skills in
the UC system may appear
more pronounced than the na·
tionwide trend because those
s kills used to be at such a high
level
. ' ,, f.t.'f.Rf!~t11E_N .
The lnt•rn•tlonal Winter
Specll:l Olympics made 1•1 a
bl1 Y"1 tor A~e Rot•' 1pedal
education class at Colle1e Park
Element.-ry School In Costa
Mesa.
Five atudenta made rnoeey in
> a Special OJymplc• televtalon
com mere lat with U.S. speed
akaUne ch•JnP Eric;, Heiden.
One atudent, Mt. Rosa con·
rides, bad a speakiDI part and
has earned more &ban Sl,000 1n
reslduala so far.
BUT THE CAPPER came tn
mid-March.
That's when sixth-grader Al-
lison Reese. 12, and fifth-grad.tr
Debbie Keye&, 10, took a gOld
and silver medal for figure
skaters in thelr age category at
the 1981 International Winter
events.
More than 600 educationally
handicapped youngsters frt\m
across the U.S. and seven other
nations gathered in Stowe, Vt. to
compete in skating, skiing and
bobsled events.
The two Costa Mesa girls
represented California in their
figure-skating events after earn-
ing top medals in the annual
Orange County Special Olympic
competitions last year.
Both have been skating since
they were first graders. follow-
ing their s pecial educatinn
teachers onto the ice every Fri-
day morning at the Ice Capades
Chalet in Costa Mes a for an
hour's workout.
"IT'S GREAT FOR balance."
explains Ms. Ross who ruefully
confides that she broke an srm
last year while zipping across
the ice.
The teachers didn't make ·the
week-long, all-expense-paid
fliJtht to V~rmont. though.
And they weren't the re wtten
Allison and Debbie. clad in thefr
skating costumes. stepped out
on the Ice before a gathering of
hundred s to perform their
routines to musi<'.
'"Yeh." admits Allison, look-
ing at her toe s. ··we were
scared."
D.e bbie adds, .. Allison kept
s~ying, ·r know I'm going to fall,
I Jus t know it.· And she did."
Despite the fall. AIJlson's
figure eights. camels, sit spins,
edges, dylng swans and bunny
hops were best in the competi-
tion, with Debbie's a close
second.
IN ADDITION to their near·
saucer-size medals. the girls
brought home new skating out.
Ci t s and skates. pins and a
number of other gifts from the
International Special Olympics
committee.
But best of all , they agreed,
was the Vermont snow.
Next to becoming professional
ice skaters when they grow up,
the two agreed they'c:t--most like
lo Jive in Vermont where the
snow floats gently to earth and
Is great for s nowmen and
snowballs.
~:e~~:; :C~~::s~~ ~~~r~:~bna~ "BECAUSE this decline shows Pair win grants
t. f h s h l t· A nosignsofabatmg. it deserves the por ion o t e c o as IC P· · h Cal Stale Fullerton studen•r Utude Test ar.d the English com· attenlJon of t e university com· K hi M ...,
position and math sections of the munity. which must decide how to at een iller and Andrea
Ah. addressbasicskills problems and Pronk, both of Huntington c tevement Test. Beach, are rec1' "'ents of the an-Addit. 11 · f th · h how to pay for the courses and ... 1onA Y. six o e e1g l nual Coors Commun1·cat1·ons · I d' UCl it programs that will do so," the campuses inc u 1ng w · d ·d Scholarships at the colle•e . nessed decreas ing fresht~n~a~n=--~st_u~y_s_a_1_·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~-e~_....~
~ ~ ................................................................ .......
thz. original ~-9
I I
TOKYO CAP> -U.S. Am·
b1111dor Mike Kansl ieJd aaya
the Reaaan admlni1tradoa la u ·
aemblinl an Asian poHcy de·
al1ned to ••Id "threats and de·
manda" wbleh may prove more
acceptable to s overnmenta ln
thla critical reiton than b1a pre-
decessor's.
·Mansfield, a Democrat and
former Senate majority leader.
voiced implicit criticism of the
policies of President Jhnmy
Carter -the man who named
him ambaaaador to Japan -ln
an interview with The Associat·
ed Press.
HIS OBLIQUE references
were to the ,c arter admlBistra-
tion 's exertion of pressure Oft
J a p an t o in crease defense
spending, and to its hard-nosed
approach toward human rights
in Sotlth Korea and the Philip·
pines, both Important U.S. allies
with U.S. milita ry bases on their
soil. 1
H E W.ELCOMED South
Kor ean President Chun Doo-
bwan's visit to Washln.don, the
first by a foreign leader after
Reagan took office, and Chun's
decision to commute the death
sentence of opposition leader
MORE PRACTICAL
Mtke Mansfield
AP .........
Mine officials drop thermometer through hole in street to mecuure
temperature in smoldering underground fire.
T he Japanese have com-
plalned of the U.S. demands for
a boost in defense outlays. As a
m atter of policy these are held
below 1 percent of Japan's gross
national product <GNP), com·
pared to about 5 percent for the
United States. The government
recenUy endorsed a 7 .61 percent
hike In military spending for fis·
cal 1981, short of the 9. 7 percent
increase urged by Washington.
Billion-dollar pot bust
-Coal fire roasts M ost ci ties report dr ug trade still flourishes
MIAMI <AP> Ma rijuana
• • • tiny mimng town Mansfi eld, who was asked by
President Reagan to rem ain on
as a mbassador here despite
strong Democratic Party ties,
defended Japan as "living up to
its commitments" on the de·
fense issue.
supplies have plummeted and
pri ces ar e s k yr ocketing in
Chicago and Los Angeles, but
authorities in other m ajor cities
say t he pot t r a de still is
flourishing despite the federal
gover n m ent's Operation
Grouper.
CENTRALIA. Pa !AP>
This little coal town, its un·
d e rside already roasted by a
mine shaft blaze that has burned
and belched for 19 years. is also
being split in two. d1\'ided over
whether it s necessary to move
the town to save it.
Th e emotional debate, car:-ied
on in parlors. taprooms and the
post olfice foyer, moves to the
ba llot box May 19. The question
on the ballot: Should the town be
relocated so the fi re can be dug
out?
"THIS IS GOING to have a
who l e l ot of bea ring on
wh atev~r·s going lo happen,"
Mayor J ohn Wondoloski said.
add ing that elected officials will
work to relocat<' the town if
that's the will of the voters
With e mergency m o nt:"y ,
permission from the Lcg1 sla~ure
and cooperation from th e
neighboring township. officials
could annex land and rebU\ld the
town away from the fire. hl-
said.
The non binding rt:'ferendum
won't force officials to take ac-
tion but will a llow the 1, 100
town speopl e to see where
their neighbors stand. Mostly
they stand where their houses
stand. and are likely to vote in a
way reflerting whethe r their
houses are threatened or not.
Adding to the confusion and
fear 1s the fact that no one
knows exactly where the fire is.
.. t:o;verybody's on edge," Won-
doloski said. /
A DUMP FIRE in 1962 spread
Io a coal o utcropping and
wo r ked its way into the m aze of
abandoned rnj ne tunnels beneath
the town's south ern and eastern
edges. Smoke now billows out of
hol es bored into the ground to
vent the fire's gas and beat. The
holes. 2.000 of them, out number
the people.
In some places, the tern ·
perature a dozen feel below the
surface is 900 degrees. Burials
are banned at local graveyards.
Efforts by the federal govern·
ment to extinguish the fire, all
futile. have cost $3.5 million.
"As (the late Prime Miruster
M asayosh i) O hira promised
Carter last year. they will con·
tinue to make steady and signifi·
rant progress," he said.
"I THINK the way to conduct
relations with Japan is to re·
cognize that it is a sover eign na·
lion. that it is an equal partner
a nd that it wilJ do its share
without pressures or dem ands."
He added : "I would expect
less of that in this ad ministra·
tion, which is formulating an
Asian policy which will be better
understood and more appreciat-
ed in this part of the world."
He said the United States is
"getting away from the percen-
tage factor and looking more at
su b stan ce. A n d they <the
J a panese> a re a lso m oving
tow a rd pri vat e diplomacy
rather than newspaper threats,
pressures and de m ands .
Three weeks ago, the Drug
En forcement Administration
and the Coast Guard revealed
details of the 22-month un·
dercover sting, saying H had
cr ippled 14 major na r cotics
gangs and intercepted one-third
of the marijuana s muggled into
the United States from South
Am erica.
But several commanders of
big·city narcotics squads think
federal claims are exaggerated,
and DEA officials now caution
agains t too m uch optimism
about the long-range impact of
Oper ation Grouper.
"SOURCES HA VE said they
have no probl em getting pot,"
said Detroit Police Inspector
Willia m Dwyer . "DE A m ay
have t emporarily severed
Colombian marij uana, but there
are other foreign sources plus
what we get from California.'·
"There's always a supply. I
don't find any difference," said
IAIBTTINSUIMtf
.-~~-craaava~~flnmvliCllllMw:>m--~~-
ln Business T~ Make Business Happen
• "Our 24th year" At Creative we have the money you need.
Loans from $25,000.00• for any business or
investment purpose.
Easter Bonnet
Parade/Prizes
~ Au10 & Homeown~rs ~·; .. Ouotes By Phone
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HOUP
541-5554 «" llS.l 4l7
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t&F Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker.
Open 10 children .:-~--:-===~==~ 2 lhru 7 Just
put on their' bOnnets ,.._"''\.£ A\.L
and bring them lo ~ 'tH£
Huntington Center ALO~GG~ co•S1
this Sal at 10 30 am Oil•~ ~ £
to enter PariK!e & l o~ 1M 1 ludg1ng starts at noon Ill\. O~\L '( f'\LO
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TAX SHELTERS
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DIDUCTIOHS UP TO 500"0 THIS YU.l
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714/ ... 4-2507
t(O FRILLS TEETH . HING s22 SOUTH COAST
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lllOllCES I IEW PROIRll
211D TRUST DEEDS
• Ho ~AMumlbll • Futf • 30 •• , Amortlad
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CaU Wllllam 8. Mltchtll-Brokers WelCOme
•All loans secured by a comb1na11on of
real and personal property.
4425 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 (714) 752·7923
LOAN APPLICANTS TO
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK
IF YOUR LOAN APPUCATJON IN 1980 WAS
FIRST VERBALLY APPROVED AND LATER
REJECTED FOR INVALID OR SUSPECT
REASONS, PLEASE CALL DR. D. L. WARWICK,
2095 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA, AT
(714) 548-7771
lnllr Y• f.astlr
I It.a NII!
Pllone Orders
Acceptld.
Lt. Louis Scapicchio of the
Boston Police drug control unit.
Inspector Charles Sibon said
narcotics a gents see no "ap·
precia ble difference" in the
amount of pot available on the
streets of New York.
BUT IN CHICAGO and Los
Angeles. the results from Opera·
tion Grouper arrests made the
second week of March have been
drain a tic. authorities say.
"The word is that m arijuana
is hard to get right now" in
Ch icago, said po lice Com -
mander Leroy Mart in, chief of
the narcotics section.
"We 've witnessed a 25 percent
decrease in the a mount that hit
the streets of Chicago in the last
two weeks," he said.
ln Los Angeles. Sgt. Roger
Langer called the 49 percent
drop in pot seizures in the past
two weeks "a ver y sizable
change."
Operation Grouper was uni·
que. Instead of using paid inlor·
mants, nine DEA special agents
infiltrated 14 major smuggling
rings.
In 24 cases, information pro-
vided by the agents allowed the
Coast Guard to seize drugs on
the high sellS.
The undercover agents
told the gangs they could pro·
vide help in handling the drugs.
"We offered the smugglers
better service, more trustworthy
crews, good warehouses, protec-
tion and the fastest off-loading
service they had ever seen,"
said one undercover agent. "We
became so popular we had to
turn business away.
The sting netted an estimated
Sl billion worth of d rugs -1.2
million p(A'inds of marijuana , 831
pounds of cocaine and 3 million
d oses of methaqualone. Also
seized were 30 ocean-going
"mot her ships" used to smuggle
narcotics, two airplanes and $1
m illion in cash. Indictm ents
were returned agafost 155 sus-
pects.
DEA warns t h ere a r e
thousands of people r eady to join
the gangs decimated when Lheir
leaders wer e arrest e d and
tossed into jail with bonds as
high as $21 million.
A FEDERAL jury in Panama
City. Fla., has convicted nine
men in the first trial resulting
from Operation Grouper, finding
them guilty of aUempting to
smuggle more than 10 tons of
Colombian marijuana into this
country. No date for sentencing
was set
The Summer
suit in
seersu cker
For the coolest
of fc¥>rics,
seersucker has
little competition.
We select a blend
of polyester and
cotton, thus adding
wrinkle resistance,
fo r suits with an
i mpeccable look even
0
on warmest days.
Washable. Sizes 6 to 16.
3-bu tton blazer, $130
Fly-front skirt, $52
Blue and tan stripes.
·.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tbe na·
Uc>n'i tariest volwiiary school
deaecrecation program ls a
failure, says the chairman of the
• taak fe>tte set up to monitor it.
• After five years, Harold K.
:t.: BroVin says se1re1allon ls as ~: bad or worse than it was at 18 of .·:~ \he 23 minority-dominated ·~· schools involved. :4: Today, only two have achieved
.;:· desegregation and three other
I
H~ ~~~:ls wi~r! ::::~ ~~':e m"o~
·:~:. segre1ated than they were ln
·1 : 1977, Brown said Thursday.
The~ was no public reaction
to his statement& from officials
I
of the San Diego Unified School
District. But 40,000 of the 110,000
students are described as taking
part ln desegregation programs.
Last fall, a judge warned them
to speed up desegregation or he
would order mandatory busing.
Superior Court Judge Lollis
Welsh, acting on a sllit brought
by Larry Carlin, ruled the 23
schools were racially isolated
but agreed to the voluntary plan
on a five-year basis.
I ..
Special "magnet" and other
programs were set up to attract
pupils to other schools, by bus or
" family car. I
..
'·'
.,
I !
Malpractice
award huge
SANTA BARBARA (AP l -After a nine-week
trial. a Superior Court jury awarded the family of
a deceased woman $892.038 in a legal malpractice
suit against attorney Lawrence B . Chapman of
Carpinteria.
:· Chapman said he would appeal the verdict.
Marine uif e held
'• ...
CAMP PENDLETON lAP l -The 18·year-old
wife of a Marine who died of a knife wound In the
back has been jailed for investigation of murder, a
base spokesman said .
Sgt. Craig D. McClellan, 25, of St. Paul, Minn.,
died on the operating table Tuesday night. He was
found in his home on base earlier in the evening. ..
.
I !
I '.
Rapist sentenced
MODESTO (AP) -A man who admitted rap-
ing a loan company employee was sentenced to the
maximum 21-year commitment at the s late
hospital in Atascadero.
Stanislaus County Superior Court Judge Hugh
Rose 111 ordered Gary Devon Holcomb, 27, Wed-
nesday to return for sentencing review if his
psychiatric evaluation changes.
Onlinance illegal,
SAN FRANCISCO (AP l -Any group has a
constitutional right to pass out literature al
airports without giving authorities advance notice,
even if the public might find the material of·
fensive, a federal court has ruled.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled un-
constitutional a Portland. Ore., ordinance reqllir·
ing groups lo give one business day's notice of in·
tent to picket. demonstrate or distribute literature
at the airport.
Trollies to roll
SAN DIEGO <APl Jn 31-li months, engineers
say, new vei'man-maae ·1ro11i~s w1tr roft Clown
. . tracks between downtown San Diego and the Mex-
ican border.
The MetroRQlilan Transit Development Board.
which earlier said the $115 million light·rall line
•would be in operation by September. has moved up
. . the target date to July 26.
· : ' liquor and dope
plaguing Indians
• l
f .. I i
_I :
~
' I ' . i I '
L t
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Unlike white doctors, the
Sioux medicine man expects to puff on • peace
pipe before he'll treat a patient. Theo the spirits
tell him what's wrong.
Also, he won't take money. But don't try uain1
his roots to cure yourself because they only work
for him.
Stanley Red Bird, chairman of Rosebud
Medicine Men & Associates of Rosebud, S.D.,
passed this all along in an interview.
"We want white people to understand that we
have wonderful medicine for many sickneases,"
said Red Bird. "We have medicine men who have
cured cancer and they bave cured heart disease,
b\ll no one wants to understand that."
An urgent need exists, be said, for medical
clinics on b1I reservation where 11,000 Indiana are
served by only five medicine men.
Alcoholism and other 4J'UI abuse are in the
blHett health problem• and "we wt.ab white peopl•
would &et to1ether and abut down the p(ace1 they
manufacture Uq\M>r and dope," Red Bird said.
'500 ,000 BAIL
Edward Richardton
The man who was arrested
here Wednesday night for
threatening Reagan was com-
mitted to USC Medical Center
Thursday, said Secret Service
Agent Larry Sheafe. Sheafe said
Ronald Peppler. 23 , had
threatened Presidents Ford and (;arter an the past and also
former Alabama Gov . George Witll~e.
An armed man was taken into
custody in ]Sew York City Tues-
day after he threatened to com-
TARGET OF FIVE AWAITINd TRIAL
President Reagan John Hinckley
plete the attempted assassma· ktll presidents Lyndon J ohnson.
tic>n that left Reagan and three Ri chard Nixon and Gerald Ford
other men wounded last week. was jailed in North Carolina on
Edward M. Richardson, of cha~ges of threatening to 85.
Drexel Hill, Pa., who allegedly sassinale Reagan, police said.
was carrying a loaded gun whon An unarmed man was arrest-
a rrested, was being he ld in ed at a Ma ryland bus station
federal jail on $500,000 bail pend· '-Vednesday night for threatening
ing an April 17 extradition hear-Reagan and a Pennsylvania
Ing or a bail reduction hearing. man was.undergoing psychiatric
A psychiatric examination wa:. testing Thursday after he told
planned. fellow workers he wanted to
Also on Tuesday, a 34·year-old "finish the job" when Reagan
man convicted of threatening tc was wounded.
SACRAMENTO <A•> -A
dtvlded 1tate Board of EduU·
tlon has apgroved rules atmed at
movlna students out of the bf.
lineual education pro1ram
fast.er.
Tbe board'• only Htap~(c
member called the action 'lbUJ?l·
day "an abusive act."
The board approved rqula·
tlons, effective this· Joly, lm·
plemenUni a new blllneual
education law that is supposed
to put increased emphasis oo the
teaching of English to the pro·
gram's 288,000 students.
The key vote was 6·'3 to., let
school districts decide when sta.i·
dents are ready to leave bi·
liflJ'ual classes for English-only
Cla'ssrooms.
Slate school Superintendent
Wilson Riles' Department of
Education had proposed keeping
students in bilingual classes un·
til they scored at least at the
34th percentile -better than
one·third of all students -on
standard tests of basic skills.
Most school districts set lower
standards for removing students
from the bilingual program.
Some district o((icials told the
board that their costs would be
driven up if the state set strict
s tandards.
The new law requires schools.
for the first time, to set stan·
d ards for students to leave the
bilingual program.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Air CaHfomia has a fnlsh new name
and a fresh new sfy)fi.
There's a new excitement 1n
the air
You can see 1t
You can feel 1t
You can Rv 1t!
Air California 1s now A1rCal.
And we're out to win the \Nest
with stvte
VIie have new wardrobeS
that Marv McFadden designed
for us. They re far from trad1-
t1onal and far.and away, the
most innovative a1rflne ward·
robes vou 've ever seen .
Our planes wear the bold
nev-1 AlrCal colors. and once
inside. you'll find relaxing,
contemporary 1ntenors
Another thing you II find
with A1rCal is that we have a
way of doing things that will
keep you flv1rg with us again
and again
And that's stvle1
When you trv us. you'll see.
we do more than JUSt get you
there. we get you there 1n stvle
~IROIL
You1l like our Style
e Orange Count)' Board of SUpervilol't may have be~nl~ty Jaa.t week l.n qulc,ldy approvift1 a $10,008 feasl~ty study for a propoged equeatriao ~· near
Alis<>jCreek for the 1984 Olympic 11mea. •
The supervisors decided to seek the Olympic alte
becabae they figured it might attract outside money to
construct the equestrian f aciUties already planned for the Alis~ Viejo Greenbelt.
They acted without prior notice to approve the
feasiJ>llity study because county officials said a formal
pro1>9Sal to host the equestrian events needed to be sub-
mitted immediately to the Los Aneeles Olymplc Organlz·
ing Committee.
A little more time to think mipt have been bandy.
Prelllninary comments from officials at the organising
committee have not been supportive of the county's
chances. One ~pokesman said the Santa Anita racetrack
is close to an agreement on staging the equestrian events
there.
It appears doubtful at this late date when most of the
Olyrrlpic sites have been selected that a sketchy proposal
from Orange County to build an entirely new f acillty
could outweigh a relatively safe plan to use an existing
site.
In their effort to save taxpayers money, county of·
ficials this time may have spent some unnecessarily.
Wast access rule
A beach access ruling by a three-judge federal panel
in San Francisco could have far.reaching effect along the
CaJif ornia coast.
The panel upheld the action of the state Coastal Com-
mission in requiring that a major development in Sonoma
County, 120 miles north of San Francisco, provide public
access for five beaches along a lO·mile stretch.
The judges ruled that the commission was carrying
out its duties under the Calif omia Coastal Act when it re·
fused to issue building permits for the Sea Ranch de-
velopment until the access question was resolved.
Owners of the property bad ref used to grant beach
access. contending the commission's demands were un-
constitutional. A::; a result, no building permits had been
issued for the 1,300 remaining vacant lots in the develop-
ment since 1977. Five hundred homes bad been built
before the access debate developed into a stalemate.
Meanwhile, a state Assembly bill has offered the
owners $500,000 compensation from the state for granting
the coastaJ access. They have until July I to accept this
compromise or pursue their case to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
CoastaJ commissioners said the five beaches were
chosen because their public use would have a minimal ef·
feet of the privacy of the homeowners. They pointed out
that failure to impose the access requirement would have
resulted in a 10-mile s tretch of private beach. in defiance
of the Coastal Act.
Under the circumstances the commission appears to
have acted correctJy and the owners stand to receive ade-
quate compensation for complying with the coastal law.
S01og bill disniantled
Some fancy footwork in Sacramento has effectively
gutted a measure that could have contributed much to
the fight for clean air -in addition to releasing $850
million in federal highway and sewage project funds now
blocked because California does not yet have an annual
vehicle emission inspection law.
The bill not only provided for annual inspections, but
included safeguards for motorists against overcharging
and unnecessary repairs and guaranteed that inspections
and repairs would be properly done.
It did permit owners to have their cars checked at
local service stations and garages instead of being ob-
liged to trek to state inspection stations. That's what the
station oper ators wanted, and it might have been fine.
But the operators didn't care for the idea of replacing
their present testing equipment with more accurate
modern devices. And they didn't want to have to check
and keep records of performance levels after making in-
stallations or repairs. So these and other guarantees have
been amended out of the measure. ln other words, the
station and garage operators prefertowritetheirownrules~
The resulting bill may satisfy the federal
requirement for an annual inspection program, but it will
do precious little to help the smog situation or to reassure
motorists who will have to pay for the service. • 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.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71•) S.2·~21 .
Boyd/Special service
ByL.M. BOYD
If something goes wrong
with your car in Denmark,
you drive it straightaway to
one of the hundre d -plus
dealers identified by a specia!
service sign. The serviceman
takes your car and loans you
a bicycle. You tum in the
bike, no rental charge, when
you pick up your car.
Next time you smell skunk,
111111•
We already have tbe
rce Afe, the Stone Ase,
the ron A.10', the
Machine Al• ete. Let'•
hope the prntnt 11e won •t 10 down on the
book• aa Ute Crime
A1e.
call It a good thing. At Jeut,
it's not dangerous. Animal
experts now believe a rabid
skunk can't discharge lts
odor.
One humor maaaalne and
only one is publiabed in the
Soviet Union. It's called
"Krokodil" and the govern-
ment controls it. lt'a not too
funny.
Q. Can a ratUeanake live a
yeat without eatiDJ?
A. Most probably. Snake
experts say tbe rattler
doesn't have much of an ap.
~tile.
Anybody on tbe Job ever
accuae you ol draafin1 your
feet 7 Nevermlnd. Nobody'•
bu1lnea1. Only qutttion lt
preUmlnary to HPort the phrase about toot dr11Jini
1tart*9 up In the old loatal cams-. Wb«t ooe ot tbe men
OG a twe>mM ••• clraQed I
toot, tbe other fellow did
most ot t.be work.
SolPetbiat .... JOU CH do
at1'0pU,....ll•umer8te.U
Ult f..,. ai&lmill ilimtid
CtlarDe. n. Stit·till ...._ Joll• .............. ,,.
~ ....... , .• ....,
TV ee•mel'cla&a. ~•1 ....,.,
HARJUSBUllG, Pa. -Uke an
nUnct eaeray IOW'ee, Uke tbe
cosaa 'ol dead vo)ca.no1. the tour
coolh•I towen on Three Mile
lllud llmply are. They dOft't
apend tbelr time doing but be-
inf ..• beln1 nothing but a 1row·
inf burden. They fuel nothinf
but run for physical and flnan-
e I al health, they 1enerate
nothlq but worry and concern
as this sprine marks the second
anniversary of America's beat
known nuclear boo·boo.
After two years, enough
technical and financial pressure
has built up
to run a
turbine and
1enerate a lit·
tle of the
juice TMJ
isn't making.
The radioac·
live mess in·
side the CriP·
pi ed plant
can't be left
un attended indefinitely : it's
either going to have to be
cleaned up or one of these days
or months or years it will be
Bob Greene
runnlo1 loto the Su.aquebun&
River or blowint ltt lethal
douds over Buffalo.
To clean It up wUl co.t the
next·t.o-bankrupt General Public
Utilities Corporation a biWon
bucks or more, for theae are the
kinds of estimates that are In·
variably loo low. Upward of $&50
million additional dollars wiU be
needed to repair the plant and
put it back in service, providtna
the people in this part of Penn·
sylvania will aUow it.
THREE MILE ISLAND ac·
tuaUy has two nuclear aenerat-
ing plants. Facility No. l has
had no accident and could be
started up tomorrow if tbe
authoritid would permit it,
although a visitor gets the im·
pression the mere news of such
goings.on would cause 1,000
spontaneous abortions. (By the
bye. Dr Ernest J . Sternglass,
professor or radiological physics
at the University of Pittsburgh's
School or Medicine, believes
radioactive escapes at the time
or the accident have caused hun·
dreds of fetal deaths and
ttlHbtrthl lD Pton1ytvanJa and
Western New York. See the
March 'J. and 7 issues of the Na·
tlon.)
Even lf No. 1 were started up
again General Public UUUties
doesn't have the money to clean
up its eerie. glowlna mess at No.
2, and it doesn't have any place
to get it. The Pennsylvania
Public Utilities Commission
isn't going to let the electric
company make its innocent
customers pay. lf it did, the
jump in the rates would be so
appalling the population would
be driven out or forced to join
the Amish farmers in the
neighborhood, those Penn-
sy Iv ania Dutc h religious
quietists who Jive without elec·
tricity, automobiles or buttons.
A COMMl~ION appointed by
then-President Carter. recently
wrote a lette r to President
Reagan recommending that the
federal government put up the
money. That is certainly what
WaJI Street and the investment
world would prefer .. If GPU
went under, I don't think there
would be another nuclear plant
buill aaain by one company. The
risk would be shared tar more
than 1s the cue today, whlch ii
reat!y what should happen
anyway," says Leonard Hyman,
the vice president tn ch-.rge of
being smart about e lectric
utilities at Merrill Lynch.
This ls but a conservative way
of saying that a bankruptcy
would force the atomic enerey
industry to start calculating its
real costs and risks. The debate
over the health and safety con·
siderations can never be setll~
to all sides' satisfaction, but the
free market can help us sort out
the cost of making electricity
this way
THE BREAKDOWN at Three
Mile Island is as much an or-
dinary part of nuclear power
generation as flat tires are of
automobile driving. The causes
lie in the design of the equip-
ment, lhe training of the person-
n e I and the ability of the
management routine factors
present 1n any elect rical
generating plant, whether it
uses atoms, oil or coal. 1f the
economics of the atomic energy
generation are so shaky that the
companies can•t even pay to re-
pair their own equipment. we·re
involved in a sham.
Atomic is the only industry
where all start up research and
development costs have been
paid for by the taxpayers as well
as much of the continuing R and
0 . The industr y's damage
liability owing to explosions or
escaped rad1at1on is severely
limited by special legislation -
and yet with all this government
help lhe industry 1s now saying
they make so little money they
can 'l afford to pay for it when
the pipes burst
The nat ion·s electric com·
pan1es are sagging with over·
capacity so that if there ever
was or will be a safe and conve-
nient time to find out if nuclear
can make 1t on its own, it's now.
We can begin by telling the pro·
prietors or TMI that the
giveaway window is closed. If
they can 't make 1t as a red-
blooded private enterprise. gee
whiz. we·re sorry but it's belly·
up lime for the httle radioactive
fi shies in the Susquehanna
'Bachelor book' boosts the dating game
DALLAS That Texas
bachelor book is about to go na·
Uonal. Good.night, America.
You may have heard of the
book. Its official title is "The
Greatest Little Bachelor Book in
Texas.'' It is published in Dallas,
sells for $4.95 and has become the
biggest cultural phenomenon to
come out of this state since the
Ewing family took over Friday
nights oo CBS.
The bachelor book is simplicity
itselC. Its subtitle is .. At las~ -a
woman's little
black book,"
and there's
really not
much else
to say. The
book was
conceived by
•Sue Goldstein,
a savvy Texas
promoter, and
now she is on
the verge of
hitting the really big money.
Goldstein's theory was elemen·
tary. For the last decade. en·
trepreneurs have been coming up
with complex ways for men and
women to meet one another. Com·
puter dating services, video
matching companies . . . the
permutationa were endless, and
all al ming foT the same result.
Goldstein took it all back to
bhlcs. She recruited 20Q Texas
bachelors, got photographs of all
of them, lnterviewed them and
wrote brief biopaphles of them,
Sydney Harri8.
and then published the book. Each
man came complete with his ad·
dress and phone number
IT SEEMED too obvious to
work. But .. The Greatest Little
Bachelor Book in Texas" is a best-
seller. and the men whose pie·
tures and biographies are in its
pages are being besieged by
women.
·'There is desperation on the
part of quality women out there,''
Goldstein said. "The women who
are calling and writing the men in
the book are intelligent, attrac·
Uve, voluptuous women. Women
are changing, and there is no
stigma attached to picking a man
out throueh a book. Women have
found out that what they grew up
learning about the normal way to
meet a man doesn't work.''
Goldstein is full of self·
confidence, and so she wasn't sur·
prised that the book became an
immediate hit in Texas. That was
the plan. But what has s hocked
her is the degree to which women
around the country have
responded.
"What in the world would a
womaninSeatUewant with a Tex·
u man?" Goldstein said. "But
the letters are coming ln from aJl
over the country. Women are
sending our bachelors airplane
tickets. The letters have ranged in
location from Anchorage to Boca
Raton, Fla."
Naturally, the national ap·
peal ol the book is not &ost on
. '
Goldstein's business sense. She
knows that. no matter how al·
tracted the women of America
are to the Texas bachelors, there
is a limited market in trying to
sell Dallas and Houston men to
Ohio and California women
So she is in the process of licens-
ing bachelor books all over the
country. She has defined 30 dif-
ferent bachelor markets in the
United States, and is making ar-
rangements to publish a separate
bachelor guide in each one.
.. It's determined by population
density," Goldstein said. "'New
York City will have its own book.
Los Angeles will have its own
book. San Francisco will have its
own book. But all of North
Dakota, South Dakota and Mon·,
tana will be combined in a single
book.'.
Goldstein said she is convinced
that if the bachelor book strategy
will work in Texas. it will work
anywhere .
''TEXAS WOMEN are
traditionally very reluctant to
participate in something like
this very actively," she said.
"They prefer to be pursued. So if
it's caught on here, It's going to
work everywhere else.··
Basically, she said, the at·
traction of the bachelor book is to
womenlntheirmid·20s and older.
"'Jn their early 205. women are
still in a sociaJ situation twhere
meeting men is easy," Goldstein
said. "But as they get a little
older, the s ituation chanjtes.
Since women are postponing mar·
riage longer. career women of 30
or 35 or 4-0 finally realize that they
want lo get married. and they
become frightened."
Goldstein said that, no matter
whal women like to tell
themselves about freedom and
liberated morality, most of them
are really after just one thing.
"'To find a hus band," she said.
"That's what most women want.
To fall in love and find a hus band
-that's what most women will
admit they dream about, if
they're be ing hones t with
themselves,·· .
So far, she said, the Texas
bachelor book has resulted in four
marriages. And for the bachelors
in the book who have not married
the women who come knocking on
their doors, life has become in-
triguing.
"For a lot of them. it is their
first contact with women who are
so demonstratively aggressive,"
Goldstein said. "The men aren't
used toit. A woman wtll call one of
the men and say, 'I saw you on
page 177, and you are most ap·
pealing.' The men say that It feels
good to get that kind of attention.
·'Being pursued is a new thing
to a lot of men. Even tbe very suc-
cessful ones. One attorney in our
book called me on a Monday
morning. He sounded dazed. He
said, 'A woman came to see me
Friday night, and our date just
ended.' "
An intellectual ·exercis~ for spring gardeners
Sprin& aeems the appropriate ceal a aec~t mess11e; what
tlme to CSevise a qui1 on nowen famous prlloner ln history was
-not ~cally, wbl~h would tli.Pped aueb a meaaa1e iD tbe
exhau1t my knowledae in a nower .. part of an escape plan
paraarapb, l>ut lo terms of their thattalled?
seneraJ UIOtlaUoot In hlltory, $.. Wbu ftbwer•a name means
, Ute~ature and life. My bulc 1 "turban," and came originally
reference ll "Flowen In History" from Turkey?
by Peter Coat.a (Vtkln1, 1970). JI s. Why did Marperite wear
you have any Ooral' natr at aU only camelllu tn both Dwnaa'
you abould set at least one-Ui'kd novel and in the opera 1d$pted
correct. <We won't count No. 8, from it? (Sb• wH know ae
wbtch it Juttfor fun). "Camille.">
1. What do the fucblia, UM 7. What do lheM b,\ve ll com·
mapolla and the camellia bave mon: Cardiul RiclMDeu, Helen
•in common? Traubel, Lo,,ell Tbomaa, Sir
, J. Whit 11 the e>nly nower TboilH Lipton, and QuHn
mntlaned by J11v.a, •~la tna• EUaablUlf Uoaed .,.... often than y other 1. Pl"Obabb u.e uct111t -&nd
ID dMt 16bM'I c~ the lnC* cumbenome
I. WMell nowet fl'OWI belt, -name for • 1peclt1 of a oddJ,:::t;• WtMn lt 11 lllMnl· popQlar QOWer 11 Ult Oenna.n wuta~ W.·IHYll •• rrau Ollerholf arthnerln
.. .,._, · Scb~~m '; wbat ia lt ~ fJI tM c....._. ~ t'UI .. .,l"ih? ... .-. ...... Ull put IO._.~ I . laat tlowel'
utifi1ed io the maklng of bread,
rolls and cakes?
10. What is the name of Ni-
jin.aky'a f am.ous ballet, chono·
arapbed by Foklne, in lfbJcb a
Oower actuaUy comes to life and
dan~es with the ballerina? ·
11. What ls the ftower named
after 1 beautllul youth in Greek
mytbolou. who wJS Joved by
Apollo but ktlled out of jealousy
by the 1od of the west wind, and
from whoae blood tbl• now er
apranc tn 1tten
12. What lam°"" ••te -bom.
Quotes
of one of the Seven Wonders of
the ancient world -was named
for the rose, and impressed a
picture of that Oower on lta
colna?
•• I l
,•:
«>••11 ... ~ .............. _,,..._ 4'·"
"1 aee a tall dark man on a TV pmc lhow."
S olar refund
coffers bare
' SACRAMENTO <AJ.>> -The stale of
California is offering refunds for installing solar
equipment but the benefit fund has run dry,
says a state official.
About 2,000 persons who are owed $1.2 million
might have to wail until July, the s tart of the new
fiscal year, to get their money.
THIS IS THE FIRST YEAR that Californians
can receive a refund, instead of a tax credit, for
solar additions to homes and apartments. The re·
funds apply only lo persons who either owe no tax·
es or whose tax liability is less than the credit
amount.
The director of the state Franchise Tax
Board's statistical bureau, A1 Desin, conceded that
the amount of money needed to cover the refunds
was underestim ated.
Desin said lhe refunds are going primarily for
solar swimming pool systems, and the $1.5 million
originally set aside ran out three weeks ago.
H E SAID HE IS ASKING FOR an additional
$3.S million to cover all eligible refunds. But the
slate Department of Finance hasn't yet been able
to attach an appropriation on a pedding solar bill
by Assemblyman Gary Hart, D-Santa Barbara,
the author of the original solar tax credit legisla-
tion . Oesin said .
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE.
RANCHO MIRAGE (AP> and author or the bitterly an·
Film director Norman ti.Nazi book. "The Scourge
Taurog, 82. whose movie or the Swastika ... died
credits included .. Boy's Wednesday
Town," the Oscar winning
·Skippy... ·G 1. Blues," SAN fRANCISCO <AP1
·Blue Hawa11" and ··Girts Josephine Keotaau Hurley,
Girls. Girls." died Tuesday.' 84. the first mother in U.S. Catholic church bistory to
HASTINGS. England <API b~ve two .sons who became
Edward Frederick bishops. died Wednesday
Russell, 85, a soldier, lawyer
DEA TH NOTICES
MILLBRAE IAP> John
Pap•n. 21. son of As
semblyman Lou Papan. died
Tuesday nil(ht of a rare
vascular disease from which
KINGSMORE he had suffered since age J
RL'TH E KlNGSMORE.
age6J. resident of Seal Beach. LONDON <AP> J Ca Passed a\\ay on Satur· Will amn day. April 11. l98I al Long lam Owen, 80. a for.~er
Beach Memorial Hos ital Lab~r member of the Bnt1sb . P . Parliament who was cleared
'.'t1rs Kingsmore was ~rn in or charges that he spied for
Huntington Beach. Ca on Czechoslovakia. died Fri December 12. 1917. Beloved day
\\ife of Reese B. Kingsmore.
beloved mother of Lloyd E Wilkerson, of Seal Beach. NEW YORK tAP1 Juan
Ca . Earl L. Kingsmore of T. Trippe. 81, a pioneer of
Santa Ana. Ca , John C transoceanic rlying who
King!>more of Long Beach. founded Pan American
Ca .. also surviving are 3 Airways and guided it for
grandchildren and J great more than four decades.
grandchildren Friends ma~ died here Friday after an
call at Pierce Brothers extended illness
Smiths" Mortuary from 12·00
noon to9:00PM on Tuesday. . PVBUC NOTICE
April 14, 1981. Fuperat -~------servi~es and interment will MOJJca 0,. TllUSTIE'UALI
be private. The family SUI· Molic."lt t1er•bY 9IY11n 11\al on Mon
gests contributions be made o.r. llM 20ltl ~ o1 Aptll, ""· •t 2:00 to the American Canter P~·•1 J0101T~c.n1«or1,,..~11. . JIO, Ill Ille CllY of UO\IM Hll\MI, Society Pierce Brothers tOUfttr °'°'.,..·Slat• o1 c.111qn.1a. Smiths" Mortuary directors. C1111to11 E. 1uc11erd•, elto•no 1or 536·6539 lrUSIH Ptfker Escrow COMP•llY. · .-oa strMC tdclreu i. >0101 TOWlt
HUIO« '-A~M-MT. OUVI
Monuarv • c.eme1erv
Crematory
1625 G111er Ave .
Costa Mesa 54().SS$4
110 BroadwlV
Cotll Mesa
&42·9150 .
IA&.TZ&•MI<*
SMfTH & tVfHILL WHTCUff~Plf.
427 E t7th St '
CostaMeee 64~9371
r•c11te ••w MIMOllA&. r Ill.I
c.mt*Y MOflU•IV ChaOtfl-cremetory
3500 Pacific VIN Drive
~Port Beach
&M-2700
C•11t•r OrlY•. Suitt 200, Le91111e
Nl911el, Ctfllor11lt , end #11011
1,C•Pll-n.,,,.._r 11 (710 IJl-0071,
wlll Ull ti "'*IC tu< llM to the llltflnl lllddllr for CMll, Ill 1twf\ll _, of Ille
Ulllled SU.t.t, ell peyelll .. et the fllM
ol Mlt. etl IMC c.ntl11 •Ml pr..-rty
tllu•1t• 111 lht Gllr ol Sen Jue11
c..i11r--. ~ • 0r-.. Stet• 01
c.tllorm-. llller\llM M lelfoln:
Loi 1 If Trtct tllM. .. tMWll !Ml Map
rK ... dtd Ill tleell GJ, p ... 11, tl -
It .. MllCMIW Mltll, recMded t i °''"" CtoMIV. Callfonllt PMclll2
An M-1 !or 11191""1 t nCI tgr9's
.,.. Ult c .. --ffl tM 11'1., ... cotWd 111 ..... ,...., 11, 11 -1'
tf ~~.In llM Oflle• ot
Ult c-ty Rt<.OI'*" of H id Cclufltl'. Tlw tlr•I tddrHI tw otller common dffl911ellaft of Ult 1tld properly 11.
~11 Pt uo Ol •n•, Se n Jue ll ·"'-·Cell,.,.,, •. lcl Nie wlll bf ,,.... WllllOlll COY•
11a1tl or w•rrenly r•ttrdlnt 1111•. -'*'---UMIN"-" to Mtllly lllt tltllt•tt•11s Hcurtd llJ end
1111"'°*" .. Ille poww ti .... COft>
ltl'tM It\ JNl certain dMcl of 1ru11 RI· N tM0-7' t-'*41 by RONld L. Htr·
trtYt .,.. lltHltlt•I• Harvron •
.. II .... Me ._.., M Tr¥RVI la
P•ller •• ,_ CMlllM'I' as T,_..
Mf RIC,_. 0. St~ ..,0 V•l•YM C.
Slrtttl, M1111te11t1 tllO Wiit, n
-..efk ...... --""" It, '"'· Ill ............... ,.... .,..,, ..
OfllCIPI ,._., .... U. c.-ty et Of ...... ,,,~.
llNfktfl ................ .... .......... ,..........,~ ....
Otttl •TAil .. ,..,... .,...._,
tt, ..... .,.. ........ '*.a-~
lki.1 """'*'" ar-.. c.ity, -tfc.I...,.. Tiiis ....... .._.~.
.......... •tc."911 --.. IJlit Tr..,._.., tM MIO 9eftefkleriet.
Olt ~ .. "''· """" ...... . ..... Wlltl ~ ..... **•
t i l•I•. lllt tellewl1tt amav11t ,...... .......... ..._. .... _ ,... .................. _... ., . ........,..~-......................... ~ ........... ..._.:,",ti>.•
1"'9;-.0 .. ""· ~ ... lkkflllr* ~,.,,,...
C.-.1 .. ....,... ... T_ c. ... , ............. ue-=~=· c ... 1 IHlly --.---....... ... .... u.41
Gllrl1 Ta.riNr, M11 Co. aapenllOI' of
•en·la19dtse N.l•t•nu, told AY8 &la1t • ,,, ... meek 11a. Me8 •IJled ao,.. Dec.•·
llace ,_ dlda't reeelve I&, lla1 Ce. 1111 Ptlt a
e&op ..., oa ~at ebee-. H will tlke lt • 11
day1 ,_ &be baa • re•oad u • wlaeder
Ulla elileck ll11 beell t11bed. If Ute elleck
baaa't been cHlled, May Co. will l11ue
aaotber refuad check &o yoa.
Ca/fein conlem furie.
DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm supposed to cut
down my caffeine illtake. Conaequently, I'm
drtnklng a cofCee that ta 98 percent caffeine·
free. How much ca,Uelne is that? Atao, bow
much caffeine is in tea, chocolate and cola'! I
can't find any definltlve information on t.b1a
at the library.
L.V.D., Corona deJ Mar
The 1111owat of caffeine lD coffee. &ea,
cola and eome other soft drlnb, c~ola&e.
cocoa aacl many dra11 varies llplftcaat11.
accordlllg to tbe Food and Drag Admlnbtr•·
lion.
Colas contain from S% to '5 mWJirams
'
<ma> per ll· .. ce eaa. 8eM ~ Nit
drlake, like waace drtilil, • ., lul.e ,..,,....
added -If h II lilted• U. lefMI.
A liUle eap of dlfee ••1 lulYf I If·
felae eeoCeat raeli•• from 11 .. 11$ ... .. r: ..... • laow l& wai brewed. Dll'lp .... 11 tM -.tper ruce, peree&.._. la *e ..,.....
IHtaat or freese-4rled Ila• lett -• ..._. ..
m1. Evea decafte•ated eolfee (.-eia i1 J"
Gff) bu a 1maU amout -free 2 ... •I·
A OM·IDlnllte brew ana1 • bll of black
tea yleldl Z8 m1 of caffeble, wW.le 1 tlaree·
mlna&e brew eoatalu ff ma.
Caffeine II foaad la claocolate u
follow•: l ounce milk claoeola&e, t m1; 1
OUJICe baking chocolate, S5 m&; I oaaee
1weetchoe.ola&e,Ztm1; lcapcoeoa,smi.
--e "Got a pr.oblem" ThLn write to Pat ..... 1 Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, gelling
• tM answer• and action you need to
•
1olvt inequitsn rn gownamenl ond
bta1ness. Mail your QtAeltaom to Pat n Dunn, At Your Service. Orange C003t
Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA .92626
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BUD CUSTOM TAILOR
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COASTLINE HEAL TH STORES
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COST A MESA ST A TI ONERS
A Complete Line of Fine O ffice Supplies"
-Phone 642-4563-
THE CREEL Y'S BOOKSTORE
"Four Generations of Bookselling"
-Pt-ONE &46-7502 -
FIVE M GEMS
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-Phone 645-0822-
Ml CASA MEXICAN REST AU RANTS
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••• AHD THOU•H OU• ............. ...wh
.......... ye.'I ...
... .. ...... 4••tlty, ...._ .... _.Ice.We ,..,..., ....... ..
.... w ........... ,:-: '"" .......... .. ...........
----·
' I ~ ' I
..
" History on cotton -a Patten rub~ing Mayan soldier -another Tikal treasure
Always 'One president
behind' in Guatemal·a
By JEFF PARKER Of .._ o.i1, l'llM ,...,,
J oan Patten was raised in the high socie-
ty of New York City but now prefers the
teeming jungles of Guatemala. She
spends several months of each year
sale to individuals and galleries. It is the first
time s he's been in the United States in three
years.
.. I'm having more fun here than I've had in
months ... said the husky-voiced Mrs. Patten.
called "Jungle Joan" by acqvaintances in
Guatemala. ··Wh en I'm in Guatemala, there's a
lot of work . It's hard work, expensive and hot.
rm not sure how many people would really go
there, paddling up remote rivers in a canoe with
the help of severaJ hired hands. trekking into
the jungle on foot when the rivers dissipate,
searching for ancient stelae -carved stone
monuments of the mysterious Mayan In-
dians.
in for jungle work, although so many of them
think it sounds romantic."
Mrs. Patten herself evolved slowly into her
present occupation. She moved to Guatemala •
over a decade ago with her then-husband, who
worked for the U.S. Government. Bored and
..confined in her Guatemala City home, she
began making short trips into the jungle to
make rubbings of the stelae.
When Patten finds the monuments, often ob-
~cured by years of jungle growth and centuries
of secrecy. the hard part of her job begins -
casting the huge artifacts with latex and
fib~rglass -a process which takes hours of pa-
tient work, always challenged by the heat of the
jungle. When the mold is made, it is removed
from the monument, leaving the ancient stone
The weekend trips turned into week trips as
Mrs. Patten became fascinated wilh the history
and reproduction of the stelae. Trained as an
artist in New York, she was familiar enough
with mold making lo begin devising a way to re·
create the stelae in concrete. As her proficiency
in rubbings and castings grew. people began to
buy her works -and a hobby quickly turned in·
to a vocation.
, unmarred. Later, in her bome in Guatemala Ci-
ty, Patten will cast an exact replica using con·
crete and chances are the s~tue will end up in
one of Guatemala's librariea. airports or gov-
ernment buildings.
Mrs. Patten's work is complicated by the
Guatemalan government, which sporadicllly
tries to revoke her permission; robbers who loot Dozens or her cement stelae now grace
Guatemala. They're so accurate that thieves
have made c(f with a number of them , thinking
they've got real Mayan stelae. ·'The thought of
som e poor bastard schlepping around
Guatemala with a 1.000 pound stelae that says
uoan Patten on the back just tickles me.·· she
said.
1 sites, shaving off the carved figures with
diamond saws. cutting them into plate-sized
squares and selling them to collectors ; the op-
pressive heat ; pumas; monkeys: spiders and
snakes.
She also makes cloth rubbings of the stelae
carvings, cotton backgrounds over which oil
paints are spread to capture the detail of the
stelae. She's in California now, visiting friends
in Newport Beach. and offering the rubbings -
some of which command prices of $5,000 -for
Most of them have been purchased by the
go~ernmenl for use as decoration in the
Guatemala City airpart, others go to govern·
ment gardens and institutional buildings. Some
I Gala festival for
1 perf orrrwrs is · set -.
By MICHAEL~UGAN -·oe.-o.st,~ •"
A,· 'Prevue ala" or·
Oraiage Couaty's unique
l Festival of Learning and
Pe Ff or m >io g. which
brind top wrtorm~artlsta into cont~ with the1 youne dO
aspirlilg ~ten> , bas beep
sched\lled tor 7:30 ff+m ., Aprll 27
at the South Ooati Repertory
Theatreintost.a Mesa.
The eat• will bQaor Nadine
Conne'r , Mona Paulee and
Martiall Singher or th e
Metropolitan OJ>era and present
Charles Roe, baritone witb the
New York; City Opera, pianiJt.9
James Matffntal• and H~rietta
Pella and the Festival Slnaera,
according to Mrs. Edward W.
~cbumacher, $,.elal event•
chairman.
Festival participant.I to appear
io· the festlval include Diane
,Pilcher. winner ot the o.._e
· nty District .MetropoUtao
ra auditlom and Mt!llssa Tosh
Lone Beach, winner of the ap.
p e.ntice cllvislon lo the Los
1elesCounty District.
' her youne art&..ta who wlJl aP-:
r lndwle Carl HaftMll lild
• wre-nef ·~Ko&atow1kl ot ;A aheim; Lettie 6mlth of Brea;
rote N. Dray a11d Marilyn
cy of Costa lle1a; Anlta
, lllrk Oarda and Rodney
lfry of 1'11UertoD; There wa,. al Fountaln Valle1; Vlc ·
a JloUIM ol Lajuaa HUl1;
Marco Schindelmann or La
Habra; Bonita Jarot of Hunt·
ington Beach; Kevin Henry 'and
Deborah McKenzie of Los
Angeles; Susan Mon.tgomery.
John Nix and Bonny Rinas of
Orange; David Stonemab of
Jllewp<>rt Beach; Lynn Reid of
Placentia and William Aile)' Slnd
CharlesSihillingofSanta Ana ••
Costumes worn by Ms. Conner,
Ms. PauJJee and Singber wHen
they appeared at t•e
Metropolitan Opera will be
modeled by feslival Ringers.
R eservations are '25' ,,_;
person, with the deadline MC for
April 20. A light s upper will a,.
provided. Call 543-0543 t« in-
formation.
In ldcOt on to Ms. Cortner, Ms. Pa wee, Roe and Singh er. partiet·
pants bi the May Festival WlU be
coached .bY Glyn Ro!lttE 4lredot l>f the Seattle a· ~-a. i"rieclman, pt w
tbea\ef art& at UCLA~ Natalie ·
Llmonlck, director or use·.
opera workshop : J amu Maaaencate, pianist and UCLA
lanauaae profeuor; Michael
. Hebadon, New York chOrf'W-
Hpher 811111 body movem• re-
aearc:her; Henrietta Pelta~facul· ty member at the Ca mla
lulitute ot the ArU •nd di ~ the Euterpe Opera Club ot Loi
AliSel•; and Susan Brenner, fHtlnl founder and dlrfftot'.
vocal teacher and •Inter,
~
Datlr ~II•~ ... .., •k lYN •-
Joan Patten. back in states for first time in three years. shows Latest rubbings
of Mrs. Patten's monuments are now the only
remaining record of certain stelae -the
originaJs having been stolen or decimated by
thieves after she had made the molds.
contacts arc invaluable and transitory. "I'm
always 011e pn•:.1dcnt behtnd." she Jokes.
Some lSO of the cement reproductions are
part of Mrs . Patten's garden in her Guatemala
CttY.. home. Shocked visitors to the garden
She. wa:-. raided by troops on her last jungle
outing. who arrived with submachine guns
cock l'd and d<'t"lared they were there to ap-
propriate hl'r molds and shut down her expedi·
lions for good Sht> produced the necessary
"think they 'r e in a graveyard." dumb
founded by the huge some sculptures stand
papt•rs issuP<I hy lhc Institute or An -
14-feet high, weighing thousands of pounds I and
realistic statues. "If I ever try to move them.
thropology llnd successfully deterred such
action. but th<• threat or revocation is always
prt•sent
I'm sure the newspapers will show up for that."
she said.
Mrs. Patten considers her life in Guatemala
to be a mixture of excitement and exasperation
Professionally, her biggest problem is a fickle
Guatemalan government. which with one hand
is commissioning her to make statues, a'nd with
the other is trying to lake away her permit to
safari in search of the originals. Government
Tht• Mrn1stc>r or Education commissioned
Mrs Patten to make stclae for a public garden
m Guatemala Cily But the Minis ter of finance
claimed to own the land I he was r aising rabbits
on 1l > and wouldn't think of turning it over for a
stelal' garden. The Minister of Finance was re·
centl~· shot, so the fate of the land. and the
garden. 1s still to be determined
(~ JL'NGl,E, P age 82)
'Inside L.A. Art'
• nice museum tour
By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Of IM o.llJ Piiot Stall
N ext time some shirt-tail
cousin from Noo Yawk.
or the Big Apple as he or
she is more inclined to
call it, denigrates our Southland
culture, there's this little book
you can lay on them
True, Orange County residents
migb~notjump up and down and
clap their hands at the· title ·
"Inside L.A. Art," because it
ranges over far more territory
than that between covers.
Deborab Asllin 's amazingly
concise catalogue of nearly 200
Southland art museums ,
galleries, private, public and
comlnercial, fCtually begins jn
Orange Couoty:
Listed first is the Ct)arles
Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main
St., Santa Ana, ard she proceeds
to tell you everythinl yot.t ever
wanted to know about the quaiJ1t.
old m*1sion u a source ol civic
pride. •
This ambltJoias opua or artistry
of every kind in Southern
California leaves out no detail
U.tt mlpt complicate or spoil •
vWit for the out.-ol·towner.
transportation, whether or not
ther e is wheelchair access. ,
availability of dining service. in·
Corm atlon on ancillary shops,
tour times and schedules and
finally the place's focus.
Focus m•ans what to expe<:l in
this context and the booklet,
com piled by Chronicle Books,
870 Market St., San Francisco,
94102, forewarns one.
Bowers Mu$eum's focus ac-~ording to Ms. Ashln's syn~psls,
1s a genera l museum with
cha nging and permanent collec-
tions on CaJifornia and Oranie
C'o u n t y h i s t or y , s t r e ss In 1
natural~ history, science and art. ...
This ·brier synopsis makes '1t
simple enough to pick one or
more destinations for a day'a
leisutely enjoyment of the
cuJture, past and preunt.
One inight take ln just one I
museum -or just beeln to
scratch Its surface on a day's
visit or hit MveraJ amalMr
onea within a circumf ereoce ol
hlC'rltory where several art
located. A rtmdown of' facilities ;and
fact•· about o.ch aaltery, mua...-. creative photolflJ)hY Llatlap ln Ila. Albin'• com·
Wil:.ter lnchul" Oat proheneh• diuetory. to I : name, loca~ SQ'4ttiland culture an alto itr . lelephohe • llllM·. • divided lnto four m~or aeeUGM:
ben, ad ... tqn,· frctJ oi.t'p.id, ' fJH.i.seums, non profit 1all"1•j din~ tN, tht tiip, ~-univertlLy 1aller1 .. and ~ facll(~{el', • ~·rvlct by publt'c Merclal tallert ...
;.
I
BLUE MONDA VS DEPT. -You C&l\'t re~ aet
. much for 15 cents these days. One of the Items you
can't buy for that prlce l• privacy.
Th.ls condition surfaced in recent. times when a
group of cuaromers hailed Ma Bell before the
California , Public
INTESTINAL BYPAll SUp;
port Group ot Oran1• County wUI
prenol 1 lecture on new 1ut1lcal tecludque1 developed fot the
w ei1bt·reducln1 OP.et' a ti on.
Sur1eon Sidney Kahn wrn distuas
coa1tructlon of the Hubbard
Valve. Tbe lecture Is 16t for 7:30
p.m . today, at St. Joseph Hospital
ln the city or Oran.e. For In-
formation, call Pam at5'7·1594.
OR. FRANK KLINE wlll Pre·
tent a aemlnar on "Tbe Slrell r4
Belnt a Mental Healt1'
Professional" at 8:30 a.m. Tues· day. at ffri!• Hospital Nuero-
psychlatric Center tn Brea.
Utilities Commission, ~ a lleging they'd been
jobbed by the
telephone people. ~
1ess T~~~:~~~~e '!v8~~ TOM MURPHINf .w~
Fathers-in-law don't make good b0sae8
pay 15 cents to keep, ·
themselves
anonymous. They want unlisted telephone numbers.
Tbey don't want to be found by anybody. They just
want s0me peace and quiet so they can go to bed. turn
the electric blanket up to nine and assume the prenatal
position.
ALAS, AFTER BRINGING their complaints' to
the PUC, these customers have learned to their
Government operativH probing unlisted phone numbers
DEAR ANN LANDERS :
Every person who reads your
column sees h111)self sooner or
later. I did a rew weeks ago. The
letter was from a young man
who was ambivalent about
worktng ror his father. His
girlfriend urged him to make the
break. I hope he listens to her.
I "ve spent my life working for
my father·ln·law. He is a good
man but has to control every-
thing' and everybody. He never
lets me forget he is the boss. I
made a bi& contribution to the
business, but I never got any
credit. I always wondered Ir I
could have made it on my own. I
wish now I had had the courage
to leave and prove it.
When I was 40 I had a chance
to go into business with a college
friend on a 50-50 bas is. My
father·in-law persuaded me to
stay with him. After all, he was
66 and would soon be retiring.
Well, he is in his 80s now. still
there and bragging about what
great shape he is in.
If you print this letter (and I
hope you will >. please. no name.
1111111111
initials, city or state. I'm not
hard to spot. J ust sign me -
TOOK THE WRONG FORK JN
THE ROAD
Dear Took: Don't worry about
belnl spoUed. Vour letter eou.1d
have eome from any city Jn Ole
U.S. or Cuada.
I know ol many aou and sou-
ln-Jaw who are happy ln family
businesses. But most who chose
that road wish they hadn't.
While nobody can s peak for
everybody, you have spoken for
a large number -and I thank
you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
sister, JiU, left her husband over
a year ago. About the same
time, my husband's brother
separated from his wife. They
started to see one another and
are now living together. Jill
would Hice Lo marry the lllf.
•This brotber·ln-law bu blown
two marrlaees because"he
couldn't stay in bis qwn bed. I
know for a fact that even now he
is sneaking around behind my
sister's back, seeing ex-wtle No.
2. I
We Uve in a s mall town, and
I'm sure JUI wUI find out even·
tually and be terribly hurt. I
want to tell her now so she will
not waste any more time on thil
rat. I'm afraid if they· cooUnue
to live together she might get
pregnant.
My husbapd says to stay out
of bis brother's business. We
fight constantly over this. Tell
me if I should tip Jill off, or let
her ruin her life with this bum.
-CONCERNED lN ILLINOIS
Dear Concerned : I 'm with
your hus band. JUI wm find out
on her own -one way or
another. U you blow tbe wblltle
and things don't turn out well for
her It will forever b e "your
fault." M. V.0 .8 .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
husband calls his mother twice a
week. She Uv'et • · ~
away, and our ptto-.• l
avet••e• U~ a mont .
Sometimes she calls Mm, and"'tr
he isn't at home and l ror,-et to
tell him, she calls t.a~ and
aeya, "Have HJM pbofte me,"
and hanca up. Thia burn• me.
He 11e11t her mOlllty to ha•e her
car repaired. If it isn't ope <Mns.
H's another. He makes '30.000.• w
year and we're always ~l'Oke. ll
I 'd appreciate sdrne hfrd-r,
beaded advice. -, SLOW BURN
IN CHICAGO n
Dear Bun: Yo.'JI never .., t,
tbla oee, Toeu. to accept ~ ; ·
situation grefff'Wlly. Soll•Y h ~·-n
Inf to call ma ... H loa1 • she
ltves. You caa MC o. tt.
What's prud11h? What'• 0 .K? If
you aren't nre, you need some help.
It's avmloble in the boo1'let . "Neck-
ing and Petting -WMI Art the-
L1mits?" Matl your rtqtrett to AfJn
Landers. P.O Bo:r JJ9t5, C#ticagO.
Ill. 60611, enclonng SO cents and a
long , stOfftped, 1el/~reued m-
oelope • •
gloom that unlisted with the phone doesn't necessari -
ly mean unavailable
Some of the complaining customers alleged that
their phone numbers had been released to public
agencies without even the benefit of a warrant.
Leo: Place mnre emphasis on mnney
Very true. ruled the PUC savants . There are
many agencies who ar~ allow~d to ha~e your
number just for the askmg -listed, unlisted or
whatever.
The state utilities commissione rs noted that in
the case of Pacific Telephone, non .published in·
formation is released without any legal process to
the Federal Bureau of (nvestigation, the U.S. at-
torney, U.S. marshal, the Secret Service and the
federal Drug Enforcement Administration.
THOSE ARE JUST the feds who can grab bff
your unlisted number State agencies can too. These
include the state police, the California Highway
Patrol. and the Justice Department.
At the Orange County level, government folks
have no perspiration in getting your unlisted digits tf
they're in the Sheriff's Office, with the DA, the fire
department or the narcs. .
City officials, however, do not make out sp well.
Only the police and fire officials can get your
number.
If you are inclined to have trouble with legal
agencies of the government. you're obviously not go-
ing to be able to hide very successfully behind an un-
li ~tcd phone number
TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1981
By SYDNEY OMA RR
ARIES (Mar 21 Apr. 19>: Re -
cent collect:on or fa cts. figures
will now be put to good use Ac·
cent on service. basic require·
ments. test ::iuestions and family
relationships. Cancer, Scorpio,
Pisces persons f igure in
scenario. Build on secure base
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20):
Horizons expand: special invita-
tion indicates increase in
popularity. Affair of heart rates
high on agenda Imprint style,
take "intwlive leap." A roman-
tic Gemini lends spice to your
life. In matters of speculation,
stick with number 3.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
What seemed a set pattern will
now be subject to revision. Older
individual wants you to make
definite commitment. Play wait-
ing game. Time 1s on your side.
Aquarius Scorpio. Leo persons
HOROSCOPE
fi gure prominently Stand pat'
CANCER t June 21 -July 22):
Travel. variety, romance and an
outlet for creative ability
dominate scenario. Test ideas.
be ana)ytical. You are on brink
of discovering "true motives ...
Gemini , Virgo, Sagittarius
persons · figure prominently.
Don't qwt!
LEO <JuJy 23-Aug. 22): Em-
phasis on money. special pay-
ments, collections and ability to
locate ''missing link." Taurus,
Libra, Scorpio persons figure
prominently. Family member
wiJJ acquiesce to your desires.
Be a "gracious winner."
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22):
What appears to be a defeat will
boomerang in your favor. Lunar
cycle hjgh: trust your own jut.lg·
• • .Jungle Joan TEAR GAS (CS)
· (from Page 81)
L1f<' 1n liuatem<ila City t'an be hazardous on
a pt•rsonal as well as professional level for Mrs.
l'allen She lives in a ont'e-grand and now de-
raying home ont'e owned by t.he president. and
her landlord b trying to convince her to move
out so he can rnise the rent (there's a rent
moratorium now >. A 1udge she hoped would
rule in her favor in the bitter dispute was re-
cently shot. so she's now back to haggling with
the landlord o\'er repairs he will no longer
make. lier television, blender and jewelry have
hcen the target of numerous thieves and maids.
and she recently hired another full-lime guard
aftt'r the first one was shot and killed by a gun-
man using a silenced pistol
TELEPHONE service is undependable. food
and rent are expensive (you could rent an
ocean-front house in Laguna Beach for what she
pays l. and gelling her Ford Mustang repaired
1s always a batlle. But living in Guatemala City
has an appeal of its own too.
"I'm kind of a celebrity in town." she said.
.. A big fish tn a little pond ror sure, but it's nice
to be known. Really, the only reason I stay
there is because of my work.
.. I didn't know enough about the jungle to
be scared when I first started going out in it.
Now, I'm much more aware of what can hap·
pen. but I can deal with it too, hopefully.
"Wflt:N I'm out tn the Jungle tor two months
al a lime, l really forget about my problems.
The immediacy of what I'm doing takes me over.
I've changed a lot in the last few years. My de-
sires are simpler. When I come back to the
States and see so many people with so m'any
things, all complaining, I can't really un·
derstand it. When I get the chance I'll gel a
home in the U.S. so I can work a few months In
the jungle then come home for a while. But J do
miss the jungle sometimes. l like the privacy
and being so far away from the city. I like the
sound of the howler monkeys at night,·· s he
said.
Braille unit shown
TOULOUSE, Fr•nce (AP> -A team 1of
French sclent.Llt.s bu uaveUed what \hey claim ii
the first portable macbhle tbal lnatanUy translates
printed words lftto braille and wUI aUow \he blind
Lo read books or newspapen without any other aJd.
Protect Yourself with Ch!nical Shield
U1N o!MI corried by ti-. L.A. 'olce Dept. .
We otter the required 2 hour course and permit to cury
tear gas All classes taughr by police otticers Classes
held at our ofltce or at yours for $16.20 (includes class
and permit
Classes 7·9 pm. wednesdays.
10-12 Noon Saturdays
Classes held at your office by appo1n1ment
for 15 or more -no add1t1onal cost.
545-5724
18011 Skypoft Ordt, SUte 'E, Irvine
IMerl to hadp~w..t ef c.f. ltt ._.,
Pos_!ess1on of tear gas without a permit Is• felony.
(f@
PeASOrtAl
PAOTfCl''°" S)'STl!MS
DO YOU HATE YOUR FIGURE?
Jean Marie Offen·ly Par ••• The Mott
Sophl1tlcated lqulpment Desl9netl
for The Mature femelel ,
AT NO OBLIGATION \
COME TRY OUR1
• INNER-OUTER THIGH ARMER • LES
MACHINE f OR FRONT & BACK OF THIGHS
• HIP & THIGH TRIMMER • SMYB.INC .
WAIST & TUMMY TONfJ • EXEICYCLE
•. SWISS FACIAL • BUITERA. Y
FOR FIRMING BUSTS &
UNDEJ + ARMS • SPECIM. UNIT
FOR LIAING BmQS
OUI OWN fAMOUI
nt1aAP1UllC IOUNGI I
(owerl•llllofttt1Mt-11t1"""J ,
Greet for,,,... & C1rculot4on I
ment, intuition. You'll be at
right place at crucial moment.
Start something new. Pisces,
Cancer. Scorpio natives play im-
portant roles
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221 :
Responsibilities are clarified;
special meeting takes place and
you're granted added authority.
Visit to hos pital could be on
agenda -relates to one who suf-
fe red broken bone. Can cer .
Capricorn persons figure pro·
minently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 J.
Long-standing project can be
successfully completed. Let go
of emotion.al "security blanket."
Relationship solidifies -you
col!ld be inextricably involved.
Aries, Leo, Sagittarius persons
play important roles. Reach!
SAGITrAIUUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21): Go for "brass ring ."
Perceive potential, refuse to be
limited by those who lack im·
agination Special civic honor
could be on agenda. Leo and
another Sagittarian figure pro-
m inenlly. You &et the promG·
lion!
CAPRICOllN t Dec. 22-Jan.
19!: Lines of communication are
established; legal loophole is
discovered. Abstnct principtes
fall into plac~. Focus on travel.
special publications and ability
to bridge distance. la nguage
barrier. Write the report~
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18)
Take steps to bait penonaf ii\·
flationary spiral. Check uedlt
cards. lnstst on essential
material. avoid unnecessary
clutter Gemi!li, Virgo, Sagit·
tarius persons figure prominent-
ly Major discovery indtcated as
superfluous material is re-
moved. '
PISCES <Feb. 19·Mar 20').
Maintai n s leady, moderate
pace. Atcent on Jeeal rights,
permissions. Focus also on
partnerships. public relations
and marital statlll. Aquarius.
Scorpio. Taurus natives figut'e
prominently. You•can afford to
play waitttig game.
The Change St•rts WhetfYou Do ...
The Time To Start Is Now ...
The Place Is "/lowers"! CN"fle If An!
O<a,,,.hutly ""9'0¥6 the •IY Yo<J
IOOI< ie.1 and eoo-al .. oltM!rs \Ille 11 ~e lt>e
change Easy ltfld Fun even ll'le e•e•c1• cla!ISes 1 •
All eta.es tailored 10 ,.our age and rw!4Kls
OMNGf COONfl
#'l Town & Count~, OFMp
f114) $41.a228
John Robert .Power$
Thft Orr911>al Beeury & lm99e Oevel0""'9nt Spec1al1;slJ
Thelanc6me
I nstitut de Beaute ...
at SFA in
South Coast Plaza ..
a private salon where you'll fln't:J a full
range of expert skin care servi~s and
beauty products, a$ well as the special,
personal attention you exp«t 'from
Lancbme and SFA. Indulge! in a visit
to the lnstitut and let one of our
trained aestheticiennes introduce
you to these services:
• in-depth skin are programs tail~
to your individual neeps .
•makeup lenons,and •pp/ic.atlOl'ts
• eyebrow shaping
.• waxing to remove unwanted hair
from face or legs
• at..home skin care prolrams of
simple, daily complexion are
devised just for YoU
To Introduce you fO lhe lnefltut,
)QI will receive 1 110 gift
certfflcate tow•rd ~ ~
lnttftUte S.WICM ..-; ,,.~.
ol L ~dventurer Bag. llOp_ian_ • COtt1e
by aoon ... In CoanMifle Q;ttOfMN.; ••
_,.,. we are all tn. 11/rJjj '°" .,., · ~
: I
I'
'
:f p
~d~ ,
Preparing for breakfast fashion show are f from left) Nancy Carlson of Laguna Beach,
Janet Brown of Newport Beach and Ann MacQuoid of Laguna Beach.
't ")
:>b'?'"
tharity
President
nallled
Mrs . Robert Steele
has been elected presi·
dent of the National c;.ft_ a r i t y L e a g u e ' s
~wport Chapter.
On her board are the Mm es. Richard Ferda.
A.nthony Tully , Don
,4dkinson . Jam es H.
~l'!v anaugh. Robert
l't1))um, David Henley.
,.~pnry W . H astings.
.)Iphn C. o· Donnell . J ohn
Robey Thompson trnd
ElQwardStarnes.
n·~dviser to the Na-,f!~nal Charity League
i~}Hliors is Mrs. Albert
J.1&ig e l e. Th e p r o -
~ionals will be chaired
b.y, the Mmes Nanci
~{'app Mill er and
~ra ldB. Doan.
~anel
~~lots
.mJe d
nJ t Two local women .
Ruth Stut zma n of
Laguna Hills and Estelle
· rshall of Laguna
Beach will serve as
committee chairmen for
t"w annual California
Con ve nti o n o f t h e
Philanthropic Education
O!'gani zation set for
May 11·13
Some 600 d elegates
are expected lo attend
the convention. which
wt»· take place in the
L~ Angeles Marriott l ffotel. The PEO is an
-eP.ga nization dedicated
to helping women
i!cllieve higher educa·
t i o n ·s t h r o u g h
scholarships and grants.
Alcoholism
talk set
"Alcoholism. a Fami-
ly Affair" is theme of
the annuaJ dinner May
, 16 for the National Coun·
•ci I on Alcoholism · s
:o range County Chapter.
, Actor Dana Andrews
will speak at the dinner
to be held at the Mar·
riott Hotel. Anaheim.
Reservations at $50
.per person can be made
1 by calling the council at
835-3830.
mnrs
CUJTOM ~N.O • , Spedellzlng In
SHADOW llOXIS
1803 Newport Blvd. C~Mesa t ~11 ,.A
...
I I
' '
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, April 13, 1981 ••
~New, New NewpoDt' style show
A cbampacne breakf11t and fa1hJon 1how which la a proaram of therapy and coumellnl for
themed "New, New Newport" wtU be htJd Maye recovertni female alcohollca ln a Colta MeH
at The Broadway's Fublon llJand store. halfway house, and Tb~hlld Advocate, a new1let·
ProcMdl from the $10-a-penon event, held to ter wJtb lnformatlon of cbUdren'• aoclal, ema.
celebrate the store'• remodelln1, wtll benefit pro-Uonal, phy1lcal and psycboJoilcal need.a, wblch l.t
1ram1 of the Junlor Lea1ue of Newport Harbor. sent to county a1encies, fn1tltutlon1 and ht·
Benefit ctiatrman la Ann MacQuoid of Lacuna dlvlduals.
Beach. Her committee includes Nancy He1ness of Projects to be lnltlated tbl1 year Include the
Irvine, Kitty Schuler of Santa Ana and Janet AJbert Sitton Home Speakert Bureau, COP ES
Brown of Newport Beach. (ChUd or Parental Emercency Services), The
The Junior Leaaue is an or1aniaa~on of more Gallery at Dana Point Marine Institute, Foster
than SOO women who are trained for community Care Advocacy, the Natural History Foundation
leadership throush an educational and volunteer Lecture Serles and Disaster Preparedne11 Volun·
aerviceproaram. teera.
The league initiates projects that wiU use AMe Nutt of Newport Beach was tnatalled tut
the training and skills of it.a members. Once a Thursday as Junior League president, taJdng over
project bas been established successfully, It's turned the post from Nancy Carlson of Laiuna Beach.
overtoanappropriatecommunityagencyorgroup. For lnformaUon on the lea1ue or reservation•
Current projects include New Directions. to the breakfast/fashion show, call 640·1450.
Costa Mesa High reunion set
Members of Costa Mesa Hiab School's class of
1971 are sought this month by members of a re·
union committee hoping to 1et the old class back
together for a 10th anniversary reunion.
Committee fl}ember Sandi (Van Valkenburg)
Scheafer of 3192 Chemin de Fer, Costa Mesa. said
her group is planning a buffet dinner·dance for Ju·
ly 18 at the Costa Mesa Country Club and a picnic
at a city park the following day.
I ..~ .··~ . . ~.
Class members interested -or who know
where others may have moved -are asked to call
either Nell Ritchie, 548-3880, or Mrs. Scheafer.
556·9967, by May l.
Committee members also include Jean
<Chambers) Juratsch, Bethany (Brown) Bennett,
Cheryl <Zagrodsky> Weibel, Doris (Keyes> Briggs,
Joyce <Dawson> Jones, Chancey Bayes and John
Carpenter.
J
,., . ·~
,'(:
I '
LOS ANGELES (AP> -You Composers -tbOtJe wbo aren't tall, 40-yea.r-old eit·New Yorker or another collaborated
may never have heard of slnaer-tQl\IWrlten -aeaerally bat become one of the top all• such top •on1wtttenr 11 Paul
Charles Fox, but chances are are the unknown soJdiers ol eon· arouad naures ln COl)t•mPotary Wllllams, Carole Bayer SNer;
you've enjoyed at least aome of temporary muslc, and Pox ll no commercial music. Sammy Cahn. Hal Pavicl, JIOI)
hl11 mualc. exception. With little fanfare the On fe>nl•· ht has at one time Crewe and Olmbel. I If you go to the movies, you Hi• seentiJlCly endlesa U.t ol
mj&ht remember his Oscar-projectl tncludea two poulble
nominated sones "Ready to '1"J'7 • ' t 1• t Broadway muaic1l1. ln 1971,
Take a Chance Again" from ~ISS ops 18 alone with compos91'-arranaer
·'Foul Play" and ''Richard's Artie BuUer, be deal1ned a.n4
Widow" from "The Other Side By 'J'be Auoelated Preu 9. "The Best of Times" Styx, built Ever1reen Recordln1
of the Moun\ain." The following are Billboard's A&M Studios, a Burbank facUlty On televlston, you've heard his hot recent hits for the week end-10. ''Don't Stand So Close to caterln1 primarily to the rum
themes for "Love, American Ing April 11 as they appear in Me" The Police, A&M and teJeviaJoo industry. For the
Style" which won two Emmy next week's Issue of BUJboard TOP LP'S San Francisco Ballet, be wrote awahrfJs,L''Wide8Worl~.0f.~poH rts," maoaztne: 1. ''HI Infidelity" REO ,"A Song For Dead Warriors," "T e ove oat, appy • Speedwagon, Epic about the plight of American In·
Days," and "Laverne& Shirley," HOT SINGLES 2. "Paradise Theater" Styx. dians. And he's currently wot:k·
tonameafew. 1. ''Kiss on My List" Daryl A&M ing on a symphony and choral
And if you just like lo relax to Hall & John Oates, RCA 3. ''Arc of a Diver" Steve opus in honor of Israel's In·
pop music on records or radio. 2 . .. Rapture.• Blondie. Wlnwood, Jsland dependence Day.
Fox has been there too, most Ch alls 4. "Moving Pictures" Rush, notably with the 1973 Grarrlmy-rys Mercury With fingera in so many
award winning "Killing Me Soft· 3. "Morning Train" Sheena S. , . Winelight,, Grover musical pies, what kind of com· ly... co-written with long-time Easton, EMl·America posing does Fox prefer? 4. .. Just the Two of us .. Washington, Jr. Elektra collaborator Norman Gimbel. 6. "Face Dances" The Who, "I like it all, actually, for dif. Just this winter , Fox had his Grover Washington Jr., Elektra Warner Bros. ferent reasons," be says ... A
own brief fling on the record 5· "Woman" John Lennon, 7. "Zenyatta Mondatta" The film takes m e five or six weeks,
charts. playing piano on his re-Geffen Police, A&M l really can slnk my teeth into it. A .. W~, cording of "Seasons,'' a stately 6. "Angel of the Mornine" 8. "Another Ticket" Erle In television, 'Aloha Paradise,'
ore h estral piece based on Juice Newton, Capitol Clapton, RSO for instance, J bad a couple of
Pachelbel's 17th century "Canon 7. "While You See a Chance" 9. "Double Fantasy" John weeks to write the first pilot
in D Major" that was also used Steve Winwood, Lsland Lennon-Yoko Ono, Geffen episode and a theme. It all went
as the theme for "Ordinary Peo· 8. "Being with You" Smokey 10. "The Jazz Singer" Neil very quickly. l liked the im·
pie " Robinson. Tamia Diamond, Capitol mediacy of it."
AST AIRE HONORED -Entertainer Fred Astaire, left, is I
presented with the American Film Institute Llfe Achieve· 1 ment Award by George Stevens Jr. Stevens wrote the script 1 and produced the salute to Astaire that was taped for future
release.
-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--;:============;r=:====~==::z:::=======r--
DOING BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME?
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Flctltloua Buatn••• Nime and
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advei1tll"9 Pfe•H Nlf MM En.332. .
MATINEE MADNESS
11:00 A.M. Sat., Aprtl 11th thru
Sun., Aprfl 11th SPECIAL
Admit 2 ,_..for $Ouch~ Pia.a ,nee of 1 -;:.;,·11~ ...... thf• edl
* IAIGAIN SPECIAL *
ALL llATI 12.00 ALL DAY
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11 Ho A/IA CM A.tldlO With l9ni11C111 Ac~•-Y 8d"IJ Y-Own AM l'o<tabl ,,,_..,., 1-eY•-~ .. ---~ et 1..11,,_ St. EllC.Al;!!UR 1•1
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NIGHTHAWKS ~I -THEOLOVf 1111
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~ -. -
Orange Cout OAtL Y PtLOT/Mondly, April 13, 1981 ••
-EYNeG-.. , ......
WONDlfl WOtiMH
wona.r WomM '* tne .... ol ptlnllng P.t• by •
OCU"tletfeltar to • peny
QtOCltl.
I TlC TAC DOUGH M•A•t•H
\ '" or6« lo , .... money to
-"' Ills KorMn houMboy I to medical 9dlool, Hfttll.
aye Mfl up • ralfla wllfl Iha
pria Ming a "Week9nd In
Toi.yo '#11h one of the rwr-. e OOOOTIMU
Thelma glwa a Ginn« pat·
ty tor Mt ,_ boyftland
with euch Hl\Htlonel
r-.lts that Florld1 ruetlM
hOme from Aruon1 to ,..
wnel's 1>1ppenlng. (Part t) 1 8D PAOOIHBTOH BEAA
Plddlngton ••-10 sl1y
out of trouble et a rugby
mllell. I lency tffl&ur1n1
Ind a wu mUA«Jm
COUNTRY COMEDY -George Burns, who
started a country music career at age 84,
trades qu.ips with Minnie Pearl at the
Grand Ole Opry in ·'George Burns in
Nashville???," a special to be rebroad·
cast tonight al lOon Channel4.
er;) ~COMPANY ~ C88NEW8 di A8CNEW8
1:30 I llUU.leYE WELCOME SACK,
KOTTER
Gabe Is O.lermlne<I lo find
out whO •• rNl)Ollslb,.
whe11 AoHlle Totil•
1nnounces that one ol n11
11uoen11 11 the 111hll' of
hll' unb<>fn c:hild
Cl) BEHHYHIU.
Benny goee on s1t111
fD KCET NEW$8EAT
~ STUOK>SEE
"Stunt Kid" Hollywood
1111111 lod Reid Rondell Pf"
forms a world record-
bra1k1ng jump oft • twon·
rlM (A)
())NEWS crlJ BAAHEY MILLER
S.•na't and tits men .,.
stymied when a morttc1en
reports a llOlen body
4;66 IJ EDCT~
CHANNEL LISTINGS
1:00 IJ C8S Ntwa D NBCNEWS Q HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Hoping tor more p11vecy.
AiUlle moves m with his
brother. onty 10 d1~ver
II'• not tne peradllMI he
expected D A8CNEWS
U JOKER'S WILD m DOOGEA OOOOUT
g) STREETS Of SAN
FRANCISCO
Slone undeigoes a deh
c:all operation lo restore
his heating 11ter en 1n1ury
auHered during a hOldup
'4lav.11um pllftiatly dear
fil) OVEAEASY
Guests Rosemary Cloo-
ney Hero 0..-.berg (Al
ml MACNEIL I LEHRER AEPoRr
()) TIC TAC OOUOH
@) MERV GRIFFIN
Gu111s Jim Staflord
Eydie Mc:Ciurg. Wiifrid
Hyd&-Whlle
7:111 CD OOOOER PRE-OAME
7;30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosls Steve Edwards.
Mel-Ody Rogers A profile
of • nusband-and wife
teem tllal conducts semi·
nars on p1otoc11on against
c;rune. 1na popular old
ti KNX T CB51 lll' Anq1 1t·
0 KNBC 1N8( 1 lo-. An )Pl"
Q KTLA lnl L•"A 'll• ... ..,
0 MBC. lV1ABC,1Lv., Anew•·-.
l "'FM01CB:.1 S,in [),.•q1' G KHJ TV find 1 Los An 11•11.,, . I
rfG KC5T 1ABC1 :,,1n 0"'4''
Q) ... n v 1 lnel 1 L "' A 11 w1,. Cl> .... coP rv 11•1 1 L ~A• q,,., ...
f.ID KCEl P,, 1PB!:>1 Lo" An z, "''
a!) KOC[ TV PBS1 Hunt ., 11 '" BP "11
radio .. rlee, "Your Hit
Perade". 1 look at peo-
ple s reaction• 10 lhOM 24·
hour 1u1om1ted b•nk
lellet• 0 FIGHT I.ACK WTni
0.4\llO HOROWITZ
Q 8HANANA
Gue•t Cheri.. Nelson
Reilly
D HOU.YWOOO
SQUARES 0 FACE THE MUSIC
CD 8ASE&ALL
Lot Angelft Oodgels al
San Fre11e1aco Giants
fll) MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT ml ONCE UPON A
ClMSIC
'The Tlhsman" RlGllerd
learns thal Kenr>elh, now a
MosHlm stave, Is heir 10 the
Scoltlsh throne end !'OW
w01'1hy ol Edith (Perl 6) (Al
(I) P.M. MAOAZINE
V1d~eling, the singles
trend ot the '80s
l:OOIJ(]) PRIVATE
BENJAMIN
Captain l ewis gleefully
orders Judy 10 undertake
the annual Jungle Swamp
Surv1v1t Compefllion 0 UTTLE HOUSE OH
THE PRAIRIE
Allet Lau<• breaks of1 hef
engagement 10 Atmenzo.
• hl5 Sliter plots IO gel them
back together 1n lront of a
mlnt.tlf (Perl 21 IAI Q MOVIE
e • * "Wings 01 F11e
t 1967) Suunne Plesnene,
Lloyd Nolan An a11•etr11t
attempts 10 uve the busi-
ness she rune wnh her
lather by winning en air
race
D III THAra
IHCREDIBLE
Feewrld· a blind arche<. a
tne<1lc11 discovery that
pute an end to sweaty
paJma 1 notM that ropes
~. domlrlo .a.rd. ·-~ COtl JIC 1 iON
t:.tMU.....-~•llt
.,.. pllohl °' l*MIMed ~In~
r.=.~ . * • * "Tiie .loll• II Wld'' ( tUl') frank lln11t1,
JHnne Crain. e.1o~
comedW1 Joe E. Lftlll
'*"901M lo 0¥9f'OIM
mob ln..,. .. IOI In fli4
CM-
• GNAT
~
"L~d Bllfneteln Con-
dvci• Mahler'• Symphony
No. a, 'AHurrectle>n"'
Leonlll'il Betnat .. n con-
duct• Ille Londorl ,)$ytn·
phony Ort:hM1t1 arid Ille
Edlnbufgll Cl\0tu1 IMth
eololll• Owne J..-Bak•
end Sllaila Armetrong In
Gu.tev Mahler'1 lympl!O-e OH.w.. QW\.IN
OOMIDV n.ATM
"Tlltle'a Punctured
Romance" (11114) Chente'1
crimM u • slick lortu"*'
hunt• c:etch up with hlm
IPllt 2)
8:30 8 CJ) TitE TWO OF U8
B.rentwood gets landed
with the t11.k Of owr...w>g
1 le«i·ege slumber party
wflerl Nill hes to do en
impOrtllll Interview lhll
night m> MOVIE
* e * "My Gal Sii' I 1942)
Alt• Hayworth. Victor
Mature A men becomes a
s..cc:estlut songwrnet and
l•ll• In love w1tn a mualeat ....
t:OO f)(J) M·A·S·H
A l1t11r from Aadu
brightens Col Potter'• day
unt~ Kllngef ~tllly
br .. ks htsay-ol8"el 0 809 HOPE SPECIAL
Loni Andelaon. JUI SI
Jonn, BtOOlce Sh1 .. d1 and
Melleu M1nche1ter join
Bob Hope tor • mualeal I
c°"'9dy salul I I 0 apr Ing
O ®J DYNASTY
Blake C1mngton 11 pul on
11181 IOI' the muro.t ot Ste-
ven 's lo_., Teel
U CNSIS IN THE HORN
OFAFAICA
Stan Mooneyham end
Cerol Llwrenoe hott lh•s
documentary on Iha more
then llll million people In
Alric• whO have been
1llecled by ,..., and
drought and 11\e results 01
such event•
9:30 IJ ()) HOU8E CALUJ
Conrad P~ler otters lo
let lout dlfflfenl people.
•nciudlng Ann end Charley.
use h,. mountain cabin for
the weekend
10:'00 I) LOO GRANT
The Tnb's na•d·dnnlOng
police reportet gets led up
With every1h1ng and trlea •
dru11cwayou1 CJ OEOAGE BUAHS IN
""8HVILl...E
LO<'elll Lynn, Larry Gllhn,
Minnie Pearl and Roy Acuf1
join 84·yMr-old COl'nedilll
George S..rna In his first
country muaoc apec111 (RI aom MEWS ll«m IOAP
Jessie• 11 kidnapped by
cornmunlet• and tllten 10
TUBE JOPRERS
NBC e 8:00 -.. Little House on the
Prairie: Laura Ingalls Wilder." In this ~oncluaion of a two-part sertes, Laura
breaks her engagement to Almanzo and
returns his tjng.
KHJ IJ 9: 00 -"Crisis in the Hom of
Africa." Stan Mooneyham and Carol
Lawrence host this documentary special
on the more than six mUlion people in
Africa who have been affected by war and
drought and the results of such events.
CBS 8 10:00 -"Lou Grant."
Driscoll, the Trib's hard-drinking police
reporter, is stricken by job burnout and at.
tempts a dr~tic solution.
Mellguey. end El cn.1-
111"9"' CNctar IO a duel lo
the death.
• THaEDGEOf
SUfMVAL
Fiimed on IOClllon In India. I
Btw. ECUlldo<. England
and Ille United SlllM. a
number ot u,,lqua IOlu-
llon• lo the problemf of
dllly aurvwll tor ne6'ty
one blttlon peop,. wt><> 11\19
on the edQ8 of 1terv1tlon
ere lllln'llned
1o:aom NEWS
Cl) INDU£NDENT
HETWON< HEWS
a!> MMTEAPtECE
TliEATAE
"Th1r111e Raquln"
AJthougn Slly end with·
dr•wn. The<-11 strongly
lllrllC1ed to het 11ckly hu.. I
bind'• old school friend
(Pert I)
11:00 ti 1J 8 ()) 9J NEWS Q STAR TMK
In rel()OnM to • dl11r ...
Clll. the Entarprl .. 11 aenl
10 Iha m1n1ng planel ol
J1nu1 SI• IO lfW8111glle
mystetk>ua death•
0 MEWL YWEO GAME
ti) M•A•&•H
MystetlOUI l\aOpenlngt In
tne 40771h seem 10 con·
l11m the Korean belief In 111
un_, WOfld of demons
and ancestral 1p111ta.
Q) IEHHYHIU
8eNly hOels the "VIiiain Of
The v.., A-da ...
• DICKCAWTT
~·· J-Woeoott Che "-· (P.,, 1 of 2) '
t 1:t0 • CJ) QUINCY, IU.
A s>e'ient dlM wf'"8 undel'
the care of a bllldl ~
cl1n •"d tne hoepltal
ctalml It WM Che ,_,It of
1119 doctor'• m1ac11egnoat1
D TONIGHT
GUMI hott· 8111 Coeby
Gueata· lrlene Mandrell.
The Hudson Brother•.
Aober1 Culp
e a AllCNEW8
NeGH'TUHE
0 t..Er8 MAKE A DEAL.
m REX HUM8ARO
Cl) BAAETT.A
Tony jOlns a mu•defous
motorcycle gang end !Inda
hll 1nlormanl'a llfe la In
danger
fD ml CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS
12:00 8 SPACE: 1M
John and Tony ere trapped
on a plane\ stalked by an
1wesome creeture and
hlunted by an ancient
•1111"1 "'Y'll<Y
JOHN DARLING
• 0 ~NlfAlt *MD
TWo "" Dell lllflO have ....,.., "* and • OOf'l*9y ......,. WfW>'• ~ to ti.
llted .,. ~. RMl'k•'• ........ ,"') •-.oa ~ l*f~ Widow. and
,. four .. hunt Mell
Cl--. In r-. tor tl'\41
c»eth °' • fifth '°"
• PtM.oeoflH'(
I lt:aO IJ T'OMOMOW
CW.tt· lrlall l)OllUCll 9CllV•
Ill Be1n•d•tt• Oevltn
1
I Mc:Alielley, Sgt Mil Wll-
lltm Arthur Connelly, the
Army's Mnlor enllatld
m.an, baMt>llll pllyet LM
MRZHM, 9Clor PaYI Dooley
• ONI ITEP lllYONO
"Tne VIiie" In • hypnotic
trence. Mery L-h11 a
villlon or aomeone trepped
inenelav11or
11:40 l'J CJ) HARRY 0
A mWI '1 dee th Is INUmed
to l\lve ~ CluMd by hl•
l'leert '°"d111on, but his
moth«-•n-l1w ln11111 1na
doc1or "'" gulhy Of m11-prect1Ce (A)
1:00 G MOVIE * * "Comln Round Tile
Mount1tn" ( t938) a-I
Autry, Ann RUtnarlord A
rough and tough cowpoU
comet to the reecu• ol •
oirt wt><> l\ed money alOlen
trom he< U PSYCHIC
PHEHOMEHA
, •• M(MI * * * ''ll't A WondMut L*" ,, ... ,, .--,._
.,,, DoNw ...... " -·· "**" .... ._,."'"' "°"'----~ "'"' wflet ,. l\OIN ec-i
wOllld be ... If lie ...
M\'et'*"·
t:tte NIWI ....... t:IO. IDffONAL. 1::11 • MOV9 **'A "C0twlc:t1 fOU<"
(194131 Ben G~e, S«illrf
Wlll\man A COl\VICt
~. ·-.,..,,.., di.wing hit t 7 • ...., l)'leon
t•m
Tawsda11'•
Da11• l•r Ho111lr•
11:00 e e ·~ "Sagabrutll Trell"
( 11133) JOhn Wayne. Maney
Shubert A cowl>Oy un)Utl·
ly lmprl.anect tor murdef
HCapM 10 tlunt down Iha
,.... killer Ind pr0\11 1111
own Innocence
11:30 0 **'A "Down To Tt>e
See In Ships" (Pert 1)
( 111491 Ak:herd Wldmatk.
LIOnel Barrymore Atttw 1
wt1111ng c:ep1ain who hlS
tllt8fl his grandson to Ma
Is kNlecl ll>e boy l'Cjtlla Iha
wrongs 11e·1 done to tne Old« man .
-AFTERNOON-"The 2 Ill Century" HOii
Demian Simpson and
gu.t 8udlmln91ar Fuller
Wiii diac:uu Iha philOlophy
ol 1 tr" think« ID SPEAKOUT
Cl) IHOEPE.HOENT
NETWON< NEW8
1
12:00 m e e * e . The tnlOf'm·
er" (1935) VtC1or Mel•·
glen, Heeth4w Angel A tr1-
ilor In the ,,..,, Rebellion 1a
1:108 MOVIE •'it "Key w .. 1" (1972)
S1eph1n Boyd, Woody
Strode A lorm11 CIA
age<1f operating • Flot1da
bolt m&1lna becomes the
target of• madman WI\<> 1s
anxious to Mii,. • grudge
([OJ AOAM-12
In MPlfll• l\ehc:optMI,
Iha of1ic»fs pur-a llOlen
tight 1lrcr1tt (Pert 2)
ovlfcome by fits or con-
IClen<le he doesn ·I unoer.
tllnd
Cl> • * '.-\ "Thundet In The
Eut' ( 19S31 Alan Ladd.
Deborah 1<111 A bllnd Qlrl
•llMtplt 10 help relieve
tensiona 111 .. • ,,._,, sells
guns lo 1 m&1111aj811
3:30 0 e •'.-t "Secret World
01 "81)1114N" ( 1917) Docu·
rnentery
by Armstrong & Batiuk
~ l~i MEAN~ iliE ~ A~ YO~ Pl..lt.CE ~ ~ I~ Cfff
'Private Benjamin' taps topical telly trend
orna Patterson of' Private Benjamin·
By JERRY BUC K
LOS ANGELES tAPl -"Private Ben·
jamin" is pulling extra duty Without so much
as a three-day pass. she goes from the movie
screen to television.
CBS recruited Lorna Patterson for the TV
tour in place of Goldie Hawn, who starred in the
hit movie comedy. But Eileen Brennan, as Ben-
jamin's gung-ho nemesis. Capt. Doreen Lewis.
cind Hal Williams. as the gruff drill sergeant,
signed up. Craig Nelson. also from the movie.
makes a guest appearance in the second episode
in a four-week run. tonight at 8 on Channel 2.
.. Private Benjamin" is a comedy about a
pampered socialite who enlists in the Army only
to discover that Dior doesn't design in olive
drab. Gucci doesn't make paratrooper boots.
and you can't send the chipped beer on toast
back to the chef.
"This is a very topical situation." said Miss
Patterson "Women are in the Army. lt's
topical as we ll as funny You couldn't have done
this a few years ago. People would have thought
it contrived and stupid. There are more women
in the Army now, and there's a possibility of a
draft for women."
THE SITUATION is so topical that botb
ABC and NBC have their own women-in-the·
Army comedies coming up. CBS rushed to be
first. In fact, the movie still is in it.3 first run at
the theaters.
The series takes its comedy from the part of
the movie in which Judy Benjamin learns from
Capt. Lewis that she's not at a summer resort.
·'The difference bet ween the movie and this
is that l get to play only the middle part," said
Miss Patterson, a small blonde who bears a
physical resemblance to Miss Hawn. "I don't
get to play the beginning, and I don't get to play
the reaJiza~ion. As soon as that happens the
series is over. You would have no more con·
flict."
The theme of "Private Benjamin" is
similar to many service comedies, Crom "No
Time For Sergeants" to "Gomer Pyle, USMC ."
~e's Bob Hope's private Dial-a-Joke
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Gig Henry ts Bob to him on the phone. Some days J have to say the washroom." ~ope's private Dial-a-Joke. I 'll call you back. Henry is one of only two permanent comedy
The gag writer, on vacation with his wife at "I don't get as many late-night calls as I writers on Hope's staff. That means he has to be
t.ake George, N.V .. was awakened by a knock used to. I have emphasized to Hope that I go to a phone call away to provide comedy material
n the d oor at 7 a .m . one Sunday. It bed al 10 p.m. l'm an early morning person and for Hope's frequent personal appearances
was the motel owner telling him Hope was call-he's a night person. I was on his New York starr around the country and around the world.
•1ng from Vienna. He needed some quick. topical for 10 years before coming out here. Then J'd "Although I work on all his specials, the ~ags . get a lot of late calls because or the time dif-biggest part of our job is writing gags for hjs
1 Another time Hope phoned from London. ference:· . personal appearances," he said. "He's
ltrhe comedian had been at a party given by Another time Hope called from Palm sorpewhere several nights a week."
Lord Lew Grade, and had to tape a monologue Beach. Fla., an hour before show time. He 'd Tbe other permanent writer i$ Bob Mills.
in the morning for a TV special. flown in with Lou Ferrigno. who is "The ln· Other writers are hired as needed for Hope's
"Bob is demanding, there's no doubt about credible Hulk:' and he needed some gags. specials on NBC.
;it," said Henry, an affable, balding, seemingly Among those Henry wrote: "He's really huge. His latest special. "Bob Hope's Spring
µnOappable man who·s been with Hope for 28 It's the first time I've flown from L.A. to Fling. ' will be broadcast 'tonight at 9 on NBC
years. "He wants good material and he wants it Florida at an altitude of three feet. We bed to Channel 4. lt star:s Loni Anderson, Brooke
It's Innocence vs. The System. Innocence
always triumphs in the end. Each episode turns
on Judy Benjamin's failure lo adapt to Army
life
LORNA PATTERSON'S barracks mates in·
elude Lisa Raggio as a tough street kid who
chose the Army instead of jail, Joyce Little as
an upwardly mobile recruit from the ghetto,
Joan Roberts as a naive country girl, and Ann
Ryerson as an Army brat always on the lookout
for an officer to impress.
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EDWARDS' WESTBROOK
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El Toro 581 5880
UA c1:n CINEMA
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ANAHEIM ORIVl·IN
Anaheim 879·98!>0 "° "Ulll ACCVTU roa i,111 uu-...-r
C•ll 642-5678.
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gratefully acknowledg~s the ge,ierous support of the growing list
of Bene/actors and the five-hundreQ, patrons for its fully subscribed
major annual benefit
scheduled Saturday, May 9, 1981
Fluor Corporation
Beacon Bay Enteiprises, Inc.
McLain Development Company Gene Washburn Winslow Maxwell
J .M. Peters Co., Inc. Saffel & McAdam, Inc.
The Irvine Company
Neiman Marcus
Occjdential Research Corporation CommerceBank Melder Gallery Gallery West
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American state Bank
Balboa Bay Club Beeco T. Phillips Morgan
Treasure Tours International-Paris -Ruth Jensen
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Schema
John Wayne Tennis Club
Charles H. Barr Jewelers -Courreges -Crown Hardware -The Broadway -
GellOM -Balaton Boutique -John Hogan -Ivy's League -Matthews -
NorcUtrom -Saddleback Interiors -Saka Sth Avenue -Slavick's -
The Storekeeper -Veta• s -Ullman Sails -Brooks Brothers -
Richard Ouellette -Command Performance -I . Magnin
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.,.,,, ........
It's J;>an Quisenberry
to the rescue for
Kansas City again. C2 .
.
Angels in hom.e opener I
' I
Can A's continue complete-game saga?
8Y EDZINTEL OrtlHt OallY ...... S\Mi
Sure, it's early, but who's to
s ay that tonight's Angels home
opener agains t the Oakland A's
doesn 't hl\\f.e all the elements or
a n honest td goodness rar.e ror
the pennant, you know, the kind
you get in September?
F ir s t. there's the teams .
Oakland comes into tonight's
g am e (7 :30 > a t Anaheim
Stadium with most wins in the
m ajors (4·0 l afte r sweeping
its open i n~ series at Min·
nesota over the weekend and
presen ti ng M a na ger Billy
Ma rti n w i th fou r complete
gam es.
THE A'S STAFF hod 94 com-
plete gam es a year ago, a
m odern major league record. So
it's not surpris ing t hat after
Steve Mccatty fired a shutout
Sunday at the Twins, Oakland
pitching had run up a string of 26
scoreless innings.
T he four straight victories
r epresent the best start since the
A's moved frC\m Ka nsas City to
Oakland in 1968
The Angcb. on th~ other hand.
have experienced t he expected
problems with their s uspect
s taff. having allowed 22 runs
th r ough four ga m es . Ye t
Manager Jim Fregosi brings
home .i 3·1 record and a world of
h opes and pr o mises for a
Wt.•s tern D1v1 sion contending
club
The reason for {hat , of course.
he~ in part within the bat.£ of
p1::ople like Fred Lynn. Don
Baylor, Brian Downin g, Rod
Carew, Dan Ford, and so on.
Jim Fregc,si
only swing, but run a nd steal
and do all those other fun and
cleve~ things in baseball as well.
Second, the re's the managers
There's the fiery and ne\·er a
dull moment Marlin. who prob-
ably expends more energy than
most of his players wit h his
cus t oma r y "c h ats'· w ith
American League umpires
Billy Martin
Martin's fi rst at Oakland. ft was
a situation of a club which no
one wanted taking on a manager
whic h no one wanted What took
place was. well. typical Martin.
typical A's.
F rom a cellar dwellar in 1979,
the Martin A·s jumped to second
place in the American League
West in 1980. and won 29 more
games than the year befort!
T hen there's Fregos1. Afte r
gu id ing t he Angels to the
division flag in his fi rst full year
as manager in 1979, Fregosi has
had to struggle to reestablis h
him self as the No. 1 Angel in the
hearts of fans.
I
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corps of press personnel and of.
course, the fans. 1','>r Fre,osi. it!
all amounted to a diverticulitis
condition which reqired operat-'
ling on at the end orthe season.
Some say that Fregosi ha~
s ince mellowed , that he now
tolerates the m~ia and has a
good handle on the inate pres-
sures of the job. Time will tell.
o r course there's a whirlwind
of other factors that make this
four-e ame series so attractive1
Factors like a new addition to
the s tadium to the tune or some
25,000 more seats, the new Laces.
i.e ., Lynn, Rick Burleson, Butch 1
Hobson, Ke n Forsch and others
and the prospect that this could
be the start of a year like no
other in the history of the majM .
leagues whic h is yet to ex-·
perience a season-ending strike.
THE STRIKE? Yes. the
pla yer s tri k e whi c h has
threatened to end baseball as
early as May 29 is still a dis tinct
possi bility. It hasn't gone away
although seldom has been heard .
a discouraging word from either.
players or owners lately.
"If you want to know the:
truth, I haven't heard a word
a bout the strike except
from the media." Fregosi said
recently ·
Tonight's pitching mat ch-up
has Bill Travers fo r the Angels
m aking his first start against
Brian Kingman for the A's.
Travers. picked up as a free
agent from Milwaukee during
the winter tr ade meetings, i~ a
28-year -old left-hander who post-
ed a 12-6 record last year with a
3 92 ERA.
Tom Watson clenches fist in j:>y after sinking putt.
BUT THE ANGELS, much to
th~ de light or Fregosl who
wo rked hard with his club
during the s pring. have thus far
demonstrated that they can not
IN OAKLAND, where team
s upport takes a back seat to
eve rything, they' re calling the
A 's brand of play. Billy Ball.
Tha l 's short for scrappy. snappy
and happy. With Martin at the
controls, the once all-mighty A's
h a v e r e discove r e d what it
means to hus tle a ro und the
bases, dive in the dirt and win
games.
Evidenc e las t season ,
HIS 1980 EDITION of the
dream team fell flat on its col·
lective behind with help from a
~uestioning and demanding
Kingman, a right-hander , was
8-20 with Oakland last season
but had a respectable 3.83 ERA.
.Grand Slam job
~-...
Watson wins second Masters
AUGUSTA . Ga 1AP 1 Tom
Wat son. the Masters cha mpion.
believes someone will achieve
professional golf's Grand Slam.
··If we homo sapiens don't blow1
ou rselves up in the near future. I
think somebody will do it. .. he
said .
For sure. Watson has the only
shot at capturing all four of the
sp o rt's major cha mpionships
this year. Hi s two-shot Masters
victory Sunday over Nicklaus
and Johnny Mill er assured that.
So. could what Watson terms a
billion-lo-one shot occur in 1981"
He grinned a nd said. "Ask me
after the PG A <the year's final
major in August.I'·
·BEN HOGAN came the closest
to pulling the elusive feat in 1953
when he won three of the four
current majors. the Masters. the
l ' S. Open. tht' British Open and
the PGA
Ho wever. t he I a te Bobb y
J ones achieved the Grand Slam
of an earlier er a when he coll ect-
ed the U S. and British Amateur
~nd Open championships in 1930
NY tinhorns
win shootout
with Kings
NEW YORK !AP) When the
Wild West shootout was over. it
was the tinhorns from the East
who had blown away the riflemen
from out West. It w as not sup·
posed to happen that way.
Watson passed the slam 's fi rst
milestone when he withstood his
own nerves for a final round of
one-under-par 71 for a 72-hole
tota l of 281 , seven under for trips
over Augusta National'~ revered
6.905 vards.
·'I was so nervous I felt like I
was 1umping out of my s kin all
d ay ,·· said Watson after his
second Masters crown in the last
fi ve years. the fifth major pro-
fessional t itle among his 23
American Tour victories of 11
seasons .
WATSON THOU GHT he re
quired a round in the 60s. con
sidering the ideal playing condi·
lions But no one made a move.
assuring him of the fi rst place
r heck of S60.000
Nicklaus· bid for an u n·
precedented sixth Masters title
turned sour with his 72 Johnny
Mi Iler threatened Watson with a
68. which tied Tom Kite for the
low round of the muggy, sunny
day
Nickla us and Miller earned
$30.500 paydays with their run-
nerup totals of 282. Australian
Greg Norman. playing in his
fir st Mas ters. shot 72 and settled
fo r $16,000 and fourth place at
283.
Only 10 other pl ayers in .the
original international field of 82
could solve Augusta National's
par of 288.
SEVE BALLESTEROS of
Spain. the defending cha mpion,
couldn't even make the midway
cu l. Ray Floyd , the leading
m oney-winne r in 1981. s hot
69· 286. Gary Player. a lhree-
time Masters winner . had 71-288.
Jay Sigel of Berwyn, Pa .. 37,
the British Amateur champion
(See GRAND, PageC2> Astros' catcher Alan Ashby and first ba.!eman Danny Heep g't tangled up.
Dodgers'
pitching
well and fine
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
Los Angeles Dodgers· pitching
was s upposed to be full of holes
aflf>r they lost veteran Don Sut-
ton lo free agency and injuries
beset Jerry Re uss, Dave Goltz
and Bob Welch. -
But after the first three games
of the 1981 season , the Dodgers'
beleaguered staff Is 3·0 and the
bullpen has recorded a save.
Rick Sutcliffe followed vic-
lpries by Fernando Valenzuela
and Burt Hooten in the first two
games or the seas on-opening
series against Houston with a
win of his own on Sunday. 3·2.
Sutcliffe, hoping to return to
his 17-win form of 1979 after only
three victories a nd a 5.56 earned
run average last year. scattered
six hits into the eighth inning but
needed relief help from Steve
Howe as the Dodgers completed
a s weep or the .National League
West d e fe nding c hampion
As tros.
"I don't know how much this
first win means." the 24-ye&r-old
Sutcliffe. said. "It's been a long
winter. It's very rewarding,
especia lly afte r las t season
when I had the reeling of not
belonging."
Sutcliffe spent the winter in
th e Arizona Ins tru c tional
L e a g u e a n-d 1 a t e r i n the
Dominican Republic . under
the tutelage of Los Angeles
pitching coach Ron Perranoski.
"Perrv C Perranoski > gave up a
lot o f his time . even at
Christmas, to work with me,''
said Sutcliffe. "l feel I'm a
starting pitcher agaln and that's
where I feel I can help the
club." '
Sutcliffe shut out Houston on
two hits for five inninas, gave up
a pinch homer to Dave Bergman
to lead off Lbe sixth and was still
(See DODGEllS, P~ae a~
"I think we just wanted it
more." s aid New York de·
fenseman Tom Laidlaw, whose
..40-foot screened wrist shot pro-
vided the winning goal as the
Rangers defeated the Los Angeles
Kings 6-3 $unday night to clinch
.their best-of-five preliminary
round National Hockey League
playoff series three tarr )S to one.
The Rangtns fini&bed Jt~ in the
overall regular seasr • standinp
to four for the ·Klr ,., but New
York domln1tted m .. &toflbehieh·
scortne series. .
Louis uill be rerrwmbered as an inspiration tO all in boxing
''I thought we played it pretty
t11ht. We played that way all
down the stretch and knew It was
how we wanied to play them. We
didn't expect to be•t th4;sn th.la
way, ~thalotohcortna. ••t wu 1urpriMd at their weak
ddeue. They ... lned to 1tt Ured
" andtlnupthe~llalot."
The Klnp allO"pve up Iota of
1oal1 -Z3 ln the four eama -
at1d scored only 12. They were
especially embarraHed ln Game
<See SINGS, P11e C2)
LAS VEGAS <AP > -Former
· he avyweight boxine champion Joe
Louis, the "Brown Bomber" who dealt
a blow to HiUer's racial doctrine• with
bis victory over a German prizefighter
and helped open the sport to other
blacks, has died at the age of 66.
"Joe was a boxlng genius," Max
Schmeling of West Germany, defeated
by &he Alabama-born fighter lr\ • 1938
rematch, said after Louis died Sunday
mornlna at Desert Springs Hoaplt•l
here. •
"He wu tn a cerdiac arrest 1tate
when tM atrtved. They dld everytbln1
they could to revive him," 1ald "unlna
aupervilor Shirley Brown, addln1 Louis
"bad been fW for quite some time.''
Louil' wue, Martha, and other rel·
ativet were at hi• side. Not )Oftf before
the attack, Louis had attended Saturday
night's World Boxing Council
heavyweight t1Ue fight between cham-
pion Larry Holmes and Trevor Berbiclit
at Caesar's Palace.
•'The death of Joe Louis. one of America's real heroes, ls such a areal
loss," Sig Arogich, chairman of t~!
st~te Athletic Commission, aald Sun·
day. "I just 1saw him last ntaht and
watched him -mile as the crowd erupt·
~ ln applaus• when he wa1 announced. We're all Colna \0 m111 biftl." . ,
ln 71 prolenloaaJ fights over 17 years,
Loul1 won ee and lost Ju.It three. Of hla
wins, $4 were knocko\lta, t2 comlnc ln
the flnt round.
He held the heavyweiaht'crowo for 12
years and fought off 25 ehaUen1es after
taking the tiUe -a record for suc·
cess(ul defenses.
A 6·1'1\ 200-pounder, LOuia lmpuslve-
ly, relentlessly and 1ra&efull1 1talked
his opponents. When be 1tratk, tt. WH
with a qulck, jolt1n1 Jab and rapid,
powerful combinations. ~ wh~e
opp0nent went down, Louil wou.ld move
lndlrferenUy to a neutral corner •l'ld
walUor the referee to end It.
It was hta unauumlng demeanor that
continued to wln fans Cor the quiet man
of hutl)ble ort1lna. ··we've lost another 1reat
American," said entertainer Bob.=
once an amateur fiahler, •bo a
Fl1d1y nltM flthll in Hollywood durblt
World Wer II wttb Army Cpl. Joe Loula.
"He opened up boxln1 to evel')' black
rt1bter," 11Jd Teddy Brenner, fotmtt
president of Madison Square Garden
Boxing and a major matchmaker. "He
even led the way for 1uy1 lite Jackie
Roblrlaon lr\ other sports. Every black
athlete that follows owes a debt of
1ratlc.ude to Joe Louts."
'' loe waa the createst CUY and in·
aplraUon in boxlnC," IJid Sqa.r R.ay
Roblnaon, fortner world weti.rwel1ht and mtddlewelaht cbam,Pion. &aid boxer
turned t.rainv (Morre Benton) ••He w•
a bit lnaplraUon to aU black fllhtwl
comlna up, MPfflally ln the tt30a .MA .oa.•· ~
t OWa WU born JOMph tow. BiiTow
Jn Lal11.Ue, ~. oa M~ 11, ~ and
was ralRd ht a DetrOlt 1btUo. M n, be
won the UUe ~ lmoctllil .* 31-yHr-old
James J. Bra It tia ltr7.
T!Mfll.ETON SHINE~N CARDtNAL.8 WIN
a U.r"·Nn raJly in the t Ith lnnlni And 1C!Ortd th• GanJ: hm ...... tri ........ .,. durin1 II
winner~ fint b•1em1n Peu. .._.,error. k•finl
a '7·S Sl. Loub triumph over Pblladelpbla to
FromP~C1
• •
le 1.1'11, 'lflibMd low am....,.
h1teon for tb• I CODd COB·
hl1bUthl Natlon•I Leaaue baseball actlon Sunday . . . lft other umu, Oave Park~r and former Ansel IHH TIM•.-. hit home runs olt lay 8UJ'rb to pace fitll·
i>urtb to a 1-Z victory over Mont.real . . . Rookie Hable
8tMU opened the nlntb wttb a triple and acored on Mike
C•bbafe'• sacrifice fly to Hn New York over Chlcaao. 2·1
• neuUw 1ear wta.12~1M.
Yt'at_.oa, after battllftl tbe
n••. be6t crua ,,..._., pred6d·
e.d , "We're aoln• to ._ a 'W\ft.
nlna score over par aome ~ Four days ol hl$h wlnda w 'South FloriWi ¥8nks'
heat out old riv.alS
From APdYpatclael
MlAMl-RenieJackaon DaveWinfield,etal, • wll I repreaentthe "South Florlda Y an.kees •• tbia year
-at least on the pages of The Mlami Herald. Ex·
plaining that it was tired or Mlaml always bein•
overlooked by baseball's expanalon committees, Tbe Herald
announced ln February that it •ould "adopt'' anexl1tln1 ma·
Jor-league team. The team receiving the most votff from
llerald readers writing in between Feb. 22 and March~ would
be t~e focus of the Herald's baseball covera1e d&arinl the up·
coming season, the newspaper explained. The rnultl were
overwhelming. The Yankees. apparently r~elvld1 heavy aup·
port from South Florida's large contin1ent of New York ex·
patriates, received 1,002 of 2,518 voles cast, far outdistancing
second-place Baltimore with 421 votes. Philadelphia with 233,
the Mets with 172 and the Boston Red Sox with 147. "That's ter-
rific," said Yankee owner G'oorge Steinbrenner. "It just proves
what I 've said an along, that you can criticize us fortbe way we
do things, but we couldn't do it any other way and still have the
fan appeal we have.
"I'm very pleased," Steinbrenner added. "particularly
since the Orioles are such a great team and they train right in
Miami. "The Yankees train in nearby Fort Lauderdale.
·•we have fans almost every place we play. even Boston,"
said Jackson.
Pitcher Rudy May added, "With as many Yankee fans who
live down here, you couldn't be surprised. Seems like half the
people who live down here come from New York."
The vanquished took the vote in stride.
·'So we finished second to them in the poll,'· said Orioles out-
fielder Gary Roenicke. "I don't mind that too much. But we
won't finish second to them during the season."
However, Herald Sports Editor Edwin Pope noted that Mia·
mi ans have a luxury New Yorkers don't -if they weary of the
Yankees. they "can be returned to the adoption agency."
Pope predicts that the Orioles will better the Yankees an the
American League East Di vision this year.
But looking over Winfield's multimillion.dollar contract,
Pope said: "I wouldn't mind adopting Winfield."
QUOTE OF THE DAY
A sign on the clubhouse door at the Oakland A's
s pring training facility: ··Lonesome? ... Looking for new
friends'> .. Want a new job" .. Just screw up one more
time'"
BIRD, CELTICS WRAP UP SERIES
1:-arry Bird scored 35 points. including eight in m
the final 2 19. as Boston wrapped up its series with
a 109·11>3 victory over the Chicago Bulls Sunday in
National Basketball Association Eastern Division
playoff action. Chicago grabbed a 103-102 lead with just un·
der one minute remaining when Reggie Thews hit a pair of
free throws . But Bird countert>d with a layup to put Boston a-
head to stay ... The Suns may be ready to set in the playoffs .
Ernie Drunfeld poured in a game-high 27
points and Scott Wedman and Reggie King
rattled an 21 apiece to pace Kansas City to
a 102·95 victory O\ er Phoenix It was the
sixth win in mne games for the Kings over
the Suns this season .. San Antonio
Coach Stan Albeck believed justice had
been served when a last-second Houston
shot fell off the rim to give his Spurs a
114· 112 victory George Gervin was the
Spurs' leading scorer with 33 points. The
Spurs had to fight off a determined rally Bird
late in the game, however."lto preserve the victory as the
series evened out al t" o games apiece . . Marques Johnson
shot 16-for 25 and scored 35 points for Milwaukee as the
Bucks built an 18·point firsl·half lead and held off a rally to
defeat Philadelphia, 109·98. Johnson teamed with Bob Lanier
to dominate the boards as well. The series is even at two
games apiece.
QUISENBERRY SAVES THE DAY AGAIN
Dennis Leonard hurled six hitless innings and •
needed ninth·inning help from former Orange Coast
College star and relief 11ce Dan Quisenberry after al·
lowing three hits as Kansas City defeated Ba l ti more,
4·2, Sunday. to highl_ight American League baseball acUon.
Leonard retired the ~1rsl ~5 Ballimo~e batters. Quisenberry put
down a Baltimore rally an the last inning after allowing both
Baltimore runs on a bases· loaded walk to Terry Crowley and a
sacrifice fly by Jlm Dwyer ... In other AL
games, Jim Rice capped a five·run eighth
inning with a grand slam homer as Boston.
held hitless for six innings by Richard
Do,son, rallied for a 5-4 victory over Chicago
... Oakland's Steve McCarthy hurled six
hitless innings and stompet! Minnesota on
three soft singles as the A's blanked the
Twins. l ·O to complete a sweep oftheir four
game season opening series ... Al OUver
and Mickey Rivers drilled two-run singles
Quisenberry and Texas bounced from behind to defeat
New York, 6-4 . . . Ben Ogilvie and Ted Simmons belted two-run
homers to support the seven-hit pitching or two Milwaukee
pitchers as the Brewers defeated Cleveland. 6·1 . John
Mayberry clouted a three·run homer and Toronto's Luis Leal
pitched no-hit ball for 5'13 innings as the Blue Jays defeated.
Detroit. 6·2, for their first victory oflhe seuon.
. Das. M•rpby driUed an RBJ 1ln1te ln the elahth lnntni to
cap a two-run rally and 11ve Atlanta a 3·2 victory over Clncln·
n•ti . . . Larrl Herndon sot a two.·out double on a San Diego
fieldlna error In lb 14th lnnlne and scored on Mike Ivie'•
slnale a San Francisco edged the Padres, 7-6.
HUNTER'S OVERTIME GOAL LIFTS QUEBEC
seconds into overtime, lifted Quebec to a 4.3 victory '
DaJe llunter'• second 1011 of the eame 37 Iii
over Philadelphia Sunday night and tied their best·
of .five National Hockey League preliminary round
playoff series at 2-2. The li~h and decidin¥ game will be played
ln Philadelphia Tuesday night. The Nord1ques, trailing 3·1 and
held without a shot Cor more than 14 minutes or the third period,
scot~ twice in.a span of 1:33 lo send the game into overtime.
Hur.ter got theflr.ltgoal at 1S·35and Jacques Richard. pouncing
on a ~bound of a Hunter shot at 17:08, tied the score al 3·3. The
F!yers grabbed a .3· 1 lead in the first period and dominated play
with an outst_andmg defensive errort until the late going ...
Rookie surpnse Mike Bullard and defenseman Randy Carlyle
11cored lw<' go~Js each to spark Pittsburgh to a 6·3 victory over
St. Louis, evening their playoff series. Tied at two wins each the
playoff goes to a decisive fifth game in St. Louis Tuesday. The
~O·)'.ear.old Bullard, who spent most of the regular sea&on in
JUni~r hockey, broke a 3·3 tie 44 seconds into the final period.
Taking a feed from G~orge Ferguson, Bullard hit a wrist shot
from the faceoff circle that hit the pads of St. Louis goalie Mi.ke
Liut and trickled across the goal line.
BASEBALL TODAY
On this date in baseball in 1972:
The first players' strike in modern major
league history came to an end The regular
season. scheduled to begin April 5, began 10 days
late
FORMER HOSTAGE DIDN'T LIKE TRADE
KRAKOW, Mo -Former American hostage •
Rodney V. "Roc ky" Sickmann somehow kept up
with recent off-season baseball trades which oc·
curred during his captivity in Iran, but he didn 'l
care for one of them.
In a telephone conversation with his younger brother only
hours after he was freed, the Marine sergeant asked why the
St. Louis Cardinals had t raded Ken Reitz and Ted Simmons .
. Kurt Sickmann, a student at Washington High School,
said Rocky was particularly upset that Reitz had been traded
to t~e Chicago Cubs. In July, on his 23rd birthday, the
serviceman had received a card from Reitz and his wife
. "How neat." said Kathy Reitz when told in St. Louis of
S1ckmann's remarks . "When Kenny heard that Rocky was in·
vited lo throw out the first ball of the season, he said. 'Darn
-I'm not going to be there.' But we'll be there in spirit."
WAL TRIP POSTS VICTORY IN REBEL 500
Weary Darrell Waltrip held off Harry Gant II
despite a late pit stop to win the Rebel 500 at Dar-
lington International Raceway Sunday in NASCAR
stock car action. Both leaders ran well ahead of
tht; rest of the field . . Nelson Piquet of Brazil revived a
~nt1sh-Frenc~ .feud o~er ground-hugging race cars by driv·
mg one. a _Bnttsh·des1gn~d Brabham, _to an easy victory in
the Argentine Grand Prix Sunday. P1quet was challenged
only on the first lap and won from the pole position John
Fitzpatrick's car caught a bit of a cold early in the lnterna·
tional Motor Sports Association Camel GT race at Braselton,
Ga .. but recovered enough to win a sprint to the finish with
Klaus Ludwig of Bonn. West Germany
REED NAMED BASKETBALL COACH
Former New York Knicks center WilJls Reed •
has been named head basketball coach at Creighton
Unive rsity. The coach orthe Knicks in 1977, Reed had ,
been interviewed for sever al NBA coaching Jobs but
was not among the Final candidates ... Wake Forest's Frank
Johnson scored 33 points to lead the South to a 118· 114 overtime
victory over the Mtdewest in the Aloha Classic basketball
tournament .. The cause of a stable fire that killed 36 horses at
Penn National Race Course in Pennsylvania remained un
known Sunday according to track officials ... Splendid Spruce,
a 15· I shot. scored an upset. winning the $270,000 Santa Anita
Derby for the 3-year-olds in the richest Santa Anita Derby ever
Czechoslovakia crushed a hastily assembled L: S hocke}
team. 11 ·2 in their opening game at the World Championships in
Goteberg. Sweden .. Tom Jones of Tulsa eased in a six-foot
putt for a par on the second hole of a sudden death playoff to
claim the top prize of$13.500 in the Magnolia Classic golftourna-
ment . . Forward Steve David scored his 98th and 99th goals to
lead San Jose to a 3·0 shutout over· Jacksonville in a North
American Soccer League game ... The federal government
wants to sell Blyth Arena at Squaw Valley. built for the 1960
Olympics. The Sacramento Bee reported. The U.S. Forest
Service owns the 8,500·seat arena, used largely for ice skat·
ing.
TELEVISION, RADIO
Following are the top SPorts events on TV tonight. Ratings
are:• o1" • excellent;, " , worth watching;, • fair;, forget it.
II 7:30p.m.,Channel11 v v " ~
DODGE A BASE BALL: Dodgers al San Francisco.
Announcers: Vin Scully. Ross Porter and Jerry Doggett.
The Dodgers !3·0) send Bob Welch to the mound to try to keep a
good start going against the Giants' Al Ripley. Welch was l4·9with
a 3.28 ERA last year while Ripley was 9-10 with a 4.14 ERA at San Franciscoln 1980. TheGiantsare2-2ontheyear.
RADIO
Baseball -Oakland at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (7101;
Dodgers at San Francisco. 7 :30p.m .• KABC (790).
Rick SutcU!fe
From Page C1
DODGERS. • •
leading 3·1 with one out in the
eighth. But pinch hitters Terry
Puhl and Dennis Walling cuffed
him for a single and a double,
representing the tying runs,
when Howe was summoned.
The left-handed reliever. last
year's Rookie of the Year. got
Jeff Leonard to fly to right, pro-
duc ing one run. but struck out
Gary Woods to gel out of the in·
ning Howe recorded two more
strikeouts in the ninth inning to
give ham a career high of three
for the game
Ken Landreaux homered and
doubled and 8111 Russell had a
double and two singles as i.he
Dodgers collected eight hits off
loser Vern Ruhle and two others .
Russell sin~lcd home Ron Ce:v
with the Dodger:, first run in the
second inning and Landreaux
follo\.\ed a single by Dave Lopes
in the third with his first Na-
tional League home run
The third s uccessive sellout
crowd at Dodger Stadium.
50.734. gave the Dodgers a total
of 152,936 for the opening three
games.
The Dodgers are at San F'ran·
c1sco tonight with Bob Welch
making his first start against
the Giants' Alan Rapley . The
Dodgers won 13 of the 18 games
against the Giants last year and
were 6·3 m Candlestick Park
From Page C1
KINGS. • •
3, when the Rangers set 1.1 te1.1m
record for goals in a single
playoff game 1n a 10·3 romp
··une problem we had was to
foq~et about that game and don't
be hot dogs on the ice:· added
Laidlaw. a rookie who took a feed
from Ron Duguay off a faceoff in
the Kings end and sent ··a weak
shot 1 don't have the hardest
shot in the world'" through a
screen and past LA goalie Mario
Lessard for the crucial tally al
6. 44 oflhe third period ... We were
a·tot better than 13th in this sen es.
They weren't up to fourth · ·
The Kings' defense was
especially leaky. allowing the
Rangers to fire almost at will on
the Los Angeles net. Lessard, who
was magnificent Sunday, faced 16
shots in each period. including
five breakaways.
New York jumped to a quick
lead when Duguay faked LA de·
fenseman Jay Well to the ice and
beat Lessard on a breakaway only
46 seconds into --the game. A
minute later. the Kihgs drew even
when Greg Terrion -who later
would lose the critical faceorr to
Duguay leading up to Laidlaw's
goal knocked a loose puck
behind Baker on a power play.
Rangers rookie Lance Nethery
scor ed a spectacular goal with a
wrist shot from the slot while be·
ing checked to the ice at 5: 53 but
Los Angeles tied it on Dan Sonar's
shorthanded breakaway tally at
13 "26
After New York's Ulf Nilss('n
and LA 's Larry Murphy ex·
changed second-period goals, the
Rangers continued their all-out
attack oo Lessard and connected
three times in the final period.:
goals by Laidlaw. Anders Hed·
berg and Duguay's second of the
night
lead to outra1eolt9 num beJ'f
the future."
WATSON CONTENDS hil Jit-
ters were a eo<>d pre-round al
· · Uaually,'' he uplalned,
"wben I'm playing pretty de·
cenlly. I'm nervou• with the
lead. If you're not playing well
and not in the tourn•ment,
there's no need to be nervous."
Watson was at his scrambling, I
championship best down ibe I
stretch. He saved para on four of I
the last six holes, folltng $ny
hopes of hi s would -b e
ch allengers. ,
He hit his second s hot into'
Rae 's Creek. but still salvaged a 1
par 5 on the 466-yard 13th with a
chip shot that left him only a S·
foot putt.
IN A TWIST of championship
irony, Watson felt he won the
Masters with a scrambling par
at 14, a hole that had cost him
two previous titles in this event. '
"I hit a good, aggressive
bunker shot at 14," he said. "I
never thought about missing the,
4-foot putt. I thought the cham·
pionship was mine after that."
He locked it up by two·putting
from 45 feel for a birdie four on
the 500-yard 15th.
WATSON PROTECTED his
2·shot lead with two more saves
at 17 and 18. He blasted out of
the front bunker to within four
feet al 17. He two-putted from
the right fringe at 18. · · u 's better the second time
around." he s aid ... It 's in·
describably de licious. "It was
more of a fi ght with myself this
time ..
Nicklaus was not surprised his
m ost intense rival for current
golfing supremacy did not fold
in the stretch.
··Tom was there when he ·
needed to be." said Nicklaus,
frustrated at his failure to ex
tend his Masters record to six
championships
··1-1e has mental toughness. He
doesn't like lo lose That's
reflected in his putting He
makes them when he has to."
Miller seemed surprised at has
round. saying, "I didn't expect
to catch these great players. I
didn't think I had much of a
chance when I teed off today "
Miller. twice a winner this
season. birdied three of the last
six holes to apply some heat to
Watson
"I thmk I might have had an
advantage of playing ahead o(
him .·· Miller said of Watson.
"but rm not a choking dog.
"Except for a couple of guys.
I'm not afraid to lt!e 1t up with
anyone down the stretch "
Caponi wins
LPG A tourney
RALEIGH. NC. !AP> With
her lead dwindling and another
golfer threatening to overtake
her, the last thing Donna Caponi
needed was a case of jangled
nerves and a headache.
So. she took a couple of aspirin
and went on to capture a victory
in the Am erican Defender-
W RAL Classic at the North
Ridge Country Club. outlasting
Cathy Sherk by one stroke~
"I took two aspirin on the 14th
green to relax." Caponi said.
"Thal was just enough to calm
me down.··
In addition to her nerves.
Caponi had to battle hay fever.
·'I feel like one big piece of
pollen," she said after collecting
the first-prize money of $18,750. ·
Caponi seemed ready to wrap
up the tournament when she
went to 9-under par and 3,
strokes ahead of her neares~
competitor. But bogeys at 14 an~
15, plus an eagle by Sherk, whit~
tied the margin to a stroke wit~
three holes left to play.
After both golfers. came u~
with par on the 16th, the break!
Caponi needed came on th~
par-5 17th hole. •
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Boston 10', cn1uoo 101 I Bo\IOA win•
.. rl•• 4-01 w ......... y·soam•
M1tw•u._" •• Ptul.ot•Ol'l•I
Frl .. v'• Gem• Pnolaelell)lloa a1 Mllw..,kN
S..,dey, A~ll 1'
MllW6UkM al Pt'lol-lphla
WESl\ERN CONFIElt&NCIE
~ey'sk-t
Kon••• Coly 101, Pnoenlx 91 OC.ansn City
IUCll series 3 II
San Anlonoo 1u . Houston Ill (seron ttea
, 21
T ...... ,·10.m••
Hou\ton at S.n .Anf'Jnfo
WeMalday's Games
S•n Arwonio •I HOU•lon
K•n~ C•IY ~I Pnoenia Frid•y's Gemes
Hou"on •t San Anlonlo (ii nocuuryl
Phoe"'' •~ K•ns•' City (1t nec•suryl s.. ................ "
.C•n'•' C1tr at Pr.oeonfx Cit ne<t'sU r'fl
Deep sea fishing
HEWPOltT 10. .. ,·.1 -'"•no••" JO
'•nd ~n. SAi roe' c0d1 JIO n.c•tret~ •cow
Cod (Art'U -67 MOl•" IS wno baH, ,.
macktrOI, 1 na1111u1. l cow cOd, 3" roo coo
DANA WHAltF 171 •nt•tr\ 61 send o.u. 11 mackerel, 1'S roe-cod, a cow coo
SEAL aEACH 111 ""gltrl MJ rock <Od. 1 tino cod
SAN OIEOO I"' Lem.., l'l-"'"•'s •M
M & M ......... 1,,.., $l •noler\ 0 0 rO<k COCI
4 <•lt<o b.t'\s, \ ti.1rr<KW&
SAN PEDRO (U"" St. Laftdl119I -211
•nQlers 8'9 c•l1c.o o.u , i9 001uto. 2,221 roce.
'od c Pot,. O' ~Ill IS •nglors ,.,. -.110
, ,. (,.)11(0 CM\\ 260 roe_~ (00 •. u M •Cl(frtt ••
Wf\0 b4\S
MASTERS
C•l~&.t,0..)
TomWalM.'f'l,M0,000
Jack Nrc~lev•, tJD,!IOll
Jonnny Mllltr. UO.SOO
Greg NonnAn \1',000
Jorry Pate, \11,,..1
Tom Kile, \IJ,661 O•••d Gr.n.m. \11,1'7 Ra y Floyo \9 667
B•n Cro,,.,.._ \9 .. ,
Jonn MaNllO . I' .. 1
Peter J<K._,, $1,lll
Bruer L te11•t . \I ,J..JJ
G•or11• Arc~ SI ,JlJ
Huo.rtGr"'1, S1 ,lJl
Ci•1 Brl'W•r. U.SOO
Jim ~1mon\ \S,IOO
Boo Glider U .SOO
Ci41rY Pl•ytr U 500
Don Pooley ~.500
Curtis s1rano-. ~.500 c:;11 Moroan, U ,600
C•lv1n PNlt. \3,600
Lanny Wac"1ns, \3,.00
Jonn C00t.. u,.ao
H•l~ lrw•n, U,700
Wovne Lor, U ,700
Jom Col~rl, Sl,100
Gibby G11orr1, U .lSO
!.~nov Ltlo. U.lSO
Lon H1n11.i., \l,UO
D•v• S1oc1o.1on. S1.0tJ
Bruet Dt•l1n, U.011
J•Y ... a\. U.Oll Jack R"""'r. U,Oll
Mi•• Sulll•an, \l,800
a JoyS10tl
l(e1tn Fer9'1', ''·"/ Boll R090rs SI '1/
S<oll Hoen, Sl,611
Ho..,ard Twllly, Sl,IOO
Charin c-iv. '1.IOO
a R-nLtwl\
C.•••9 Sl.oier, Sl.SOO
full• zoe11~.11.soo
csao Aoki. Jl,!00
Nf'rio Su1ua1. s,1.,sc:.>
•·James HotlOrl,...or
lommy ""'"''"· $1,SOO
,, .... ,O.h-•
f~f>-11--.J .,.,,.,,..._aa
"-'~1H2-JD
1112-1"10-..
1'·1NO .. -a<
l().1~1 .. 11-211 7S.11 71.., ,..
It 1210.1>--• n 11 ... ,._ ..
71 71).IJ.I• 211 ,, .• , 73-7S-2'7
I• 70.72'71 217
70 10 1 .. 1>--111
JS.Wl-71 7•--
10 IS 11-71 111
,, 1)-09-/1-:111
731).7\.11 -11 IS 12-71 -,.., °' /910·11 lllt
1' 1).10-71 1'IO
7S 10 11·1•-tto 11 11 ]1.1..._1'0
10 Jl.12-11 1'IO
ri 1 .. JO..,. 2'•
IJ.11 ·IJ.7S-2'1
7J ... , .. ,. ·2'1
"" , .. ,. m IJ 107•-ll 1'1
"101 .. 19 m
111210-1' m
I• 11 IJ.1S 2'l
7!>11 127S 2'l
13 /HJ.IS 1'l 72 14.1 .. ,. 2'14
12·1S.IS.11-2'•
70.7J.IP2-2'S
I• 12·1S.11 2'S
ll 70 IS.77 ?'IS
I )71 7 .. 7' 1"
7411 IP• N
1110 IJ.1'-1'1' ,. 1).]).1} 1'1
7M0·7t-7)-1'7
10.1•.11-n -JOO
,. 1 .. 1s.11 x.o
70 77-19 IS JOI
11 11·10.19 lOl
Mqnolla Claulc
l•I Malll-L Miu.I lorn Jonft, \IJ,SOO ... 10 .... _.. M
Mike Smllll, '*.100 .... 1 ..... 1 M
"ll•n !>trenoot. \A,4JS .... l 70·70-2''
Bu!Ch Baird, SA,42S .. 1J)•s..t-M
LtnllY C:lemonb, Sl, 100 70 ......... -VO
John Mc(i.ouoll, U. ICO ••·11......_JIO
Roqer C:•l••n, $2,700 6'·1'0,.._..-t11
Jtrrr Ho•rd, '2,100 .._.1.10..t-111
H ell. Ferent, U,100 ,, .. ,..,_10-111
Fr•nk con,..r, u .100 •7 .... ,..._1n
O•n• OuloleY ,._....._.1-172 Sammy Rechtls, l l,7SO ,..,.,_...,_113
llr..co Fltlshtr. $1,.00 ,,......,_11 -274
JOl\11 Llll•r, 11.100 70-.7 .... 70-VS
Rod Nuckolls, St.JOO ... 71•7·71-VS
Mike Ooneld, SI.JOO 10-.7-11•7-17$
Perry Artl\Ur, s1,JOO 10•1.11 .. 1-ns
Mick ~II, 11,:IOO 70-.7.....,-llS Ted Gou\ HOO .,_7H7·J0.-11•
l:dd;e P\wc.e, S"IO 6 .. 10 .. 7-10-17•
Vlc\or R"91Mo, l 'CIO ... 70...7·70-216
Greg P-rs, J900 7~7-70-27'
8HU ae"lh. ''°° 10•1 .. 1·11-21•
J-s -IPl•YDff on-°"" hole.
1Cell1y~11,
Mert11a "-· '74 COnnlt (lllllMll, .,..,
OlWlftt CMiloy, '14')
0.'*le A41llll\, U4'
MA;tlll\ ~W·O.Vlll\, .. .,
C.1111' 'Nr ....... SW~ .. lt -.c; ..... ~ .. .,
\.fM ~..,,., U»
L-• Mur•e. Uli 411-~UU J..-v Cl.,,._ a.m ~, .. 11...._,,.,., ~
OellOyR...._142 W a. Oun'-.~ "'"" ,,_..,, '* Mertv~.w
Vlckll.-r,t.*
K\'le O'.,'-'• aaM
•00111 WellOft, tljt
Cindy Ket\llff, P»
•owl' llerlletl, '*
JO AMI ll'rtnUC., 'U.
Cindy C.llMT\Ottli11, $211
M•rltnt riovo. S2't
M1n0v ""-•· u:a aerkrelUedl llttll Slont
Vicki Slnt1tton
ClnOy Feff'Q
lt•U1y Y°""' M11ry a.. Port0t
R-rta SPeet
8ro()de Luo.lord
ElalneH-
J11ct.>. ltr\l.ch a .. erlv O."ls-C-r
Mlchctll• Welker
K11181M<>lt
l •Ll'Cllle R11y
Senta Anit a
/WI 11-DI 1s.1s.n-m 1s.1s.n-m
11 ,.,u-m
1 .. 11.n -m 7 .. ,,.,,-m ,,,, .. ,~
1i.1s.tJ-.ttJ , .. ,.,s--m
llNW~ n·1•1~ 11-1$.1....U. 'w1.11-m ,.,,.,1..._m , .. , .. 1s-m
u -11-11-m 7 .. ,,., .... ,.
10.n.n-m ,,.,..,s....
IJ.11·1t-226 , .. , .. , ...... .,.
1>-1•11-m
7 .. 7S.11-U1 ,,,, .. ,_tat , .. , .. , .....
, ... ,).7'-221
7).1f.1'-229
7W.U-no .. , .. , ..... uo
72 ... 71-Ull
11..-.1 ... u1
11·1t-1t-UI
11-1).1'-UI
1'·1•·19-1.)1
1 ... 11.1._.m
1s.,...,1-m ,..,.,,._m
IM1·1t-m
11.f0·12-2:M
'MHt-21' eHS.Jt-21'
SUNOAV'S ltESULT$
(8"11M114ete lller......,9' -IW..1
F or.I rac.e -Fro.Ir All•lr IMCH•rO.,.I, I 10, • •O. J.00, Mon1111nor Waist\
I V•l•ntu•l•I, IJ.•O I 40 , !Ung
Tul•nkn.mut11u.-..,m1. J.IO
Stcond rece S.. Rull•h Rull IH•wltfl.
l • 00, 10 61), S 00 W IC .. t d Hitter
(Mc Harguol, S.64, J 40, Hl9hl•nd >t-fl•
IOl•v.,ou , J 00. U Delly Double I Ml paid
i 111 80
T ""Cl rec• M) H-H•o•• tMcC.or ronl, S 20, 4 ao. l 20, Hualelao IGM1a111,
Jr I. 1240, S IO. Blue Bao. IV•let1ruel•).
l •O
Fourth ra<o F•~r's Bid (Plncey, Jr I
J 40, 140.140, TrH,ury Se<relarr IM<Cer
ronl. 1 IO, • 00, Princoly '"'rd1<t \Toro),
1 •o. J .OO.
F dlh r•c• Fcr•1qn S1cr•t•ry
IDola hounao>. 10 10 S •O. JOO, :>on
Rooer!o lM<H•roue1, • 00, • 20. Ntll••
Prospttlor cSnoemoker>. 3 00 U eucta
14 11) P••CI \ll>O SO
S1&ln r•u S..nsh1M Swa9 1P1r><•Y. Jr I,
s '° S••ln r~• Sun~n1"• S¥t•g f P1n<•Y. Jr I.
S <O, J 60, 1 ao, R•wbone tM<Carronl, 4 .0,
1 10 Ion• 10e1anouu.•vor1. 2 IO
Senn th race ~••en11 I R1•er•I, Sl 00.
19 <0. I 00 Arco IPon<•Y. )r I, 6 '°· • 00 •
Port M•~er \Hawloyl, I JO SI •••<I• ll•I
paid ll28 oo
U P iek S•• I I I 4 < 3 II 1>411d ~-"' 00
-.Ult Ont #IM1ng 11< .. et U1t' "°'M" U PfClt
51• con,.,l•llon paod U)I 00 w11n Its wlnn1r>0
\tc kets 01v• t\Ot\a'\J
E19h!h r•c• Spitndod Sprue•
IMc .. •rQuel, ]] 00, II CO I'°. JoMltt N'
Harold te .. ~I. S IO. S CO HOtCIO""" l
Day <Cnaomen>. 11 oo
Ninth ra<• ~Lt T• tsi-moorl, I C.O,
• <O, 3 &II. fV C>Kern ( Pon<•y J< I. ~ 00.
J •O, Follo.. fhe J"°91' IM<C•rronl 3 40 U
h•C I• II 0 1 paoO Sll4 SO
Attend41nce )9,llt
Nice Open
l••Nl<e, Freac:el 51 ...... ,, .... ,
V~nnic-.NCNhO.f Mar1o~r 11ne1.• 4,• i
Houaton Championships
\1 ........ , ... 1
Cu•U•rmo V'•tM O•t ~mmy G1•mm•lv•.
• l ••
Women's loumam•nl
l•IHll_H .. fltl-.S CI u,,. ..... , ....
ChrisE .. r'tLIOyCIClel PemShrovtr o ).61
women
COU.IEOE
All.C.I T..,,....m.,.I
(atUCS.nOI ... ,
UC lntlMt, UC 111.,er'll .. I
54"9~
Marl• Me .... f\ llJCll CS.I ,..tQloo, •-1, •.O.
l(Hllno IUCll. del Kr~ltr.. I 6-0. Melinda
Mtvtrl IUCll CS.I JOlll'M>n, • '· •-1. Nixon
IVCll. Clel <>-oe • ) • l , E.lleaoe CU(I)
dtl Wayt>*, 6-0 • 0 S•trano IUCll cltt
Lrons. o-0 •~
Oo<llM•• M•ver• /Wtvon IUCll del N•9ll•-Krtttr. • o. 6 1. Mallory No.on IUCCI dtl Jonnson
WAYn• • 0 b I Kttl•no E.lltCIOt IUCll cltl
CitO<Qe l ~on\, b· 1,6 I
uc:1n1,.•1.ucou1•1
Sl1191 ..
M•ro• MtVtrs IUCIJ .,., c;uo. • 1 • J
K••lonQ 1uc11oe1 Fr"~n.• lo l . Melinda
MtVtr> IVCll Clef C:r•l9, 6·<. HI Ptu..,nlo
I DI Clel Nollon, 6·1 6 t , MallOrl IUCI I cltt
Georoe.• 3•1. Elle<)9o lUCllcltl SMed,0.7,
1 • Owb!IS
Mevers M•yt•l 1uc11 o et Georo• Frt•m•n. • 0 • 1 Gllo S.eeo 10 1 dtl
M•llory ,.,.°"· • •. O • 1 • Ku1on9 ElltoQlf IUCll d~t C•••o·P.savenlo,6 ll.• J
Rangere 8. Klnga 3
S<erolty,..nofi
Lo> An111tl«>
N Y Renoe•s Fl"' .........
l I O·l
l I l _.
1 Nsw York 0"911•r •<Back!, .. 2 Los
""Otlu. Ttrroon I IJ•nsen, Fo•I. I 4/ J
Ntw York, Nellltry I IG1lhl H<19hUI. j SJ
•. Los 4nQC'IH, Rone r 1 tLucol, IJ 1'.
P•n•lllH OonMetonev. NY, 1 ll, Hardy,
LA. 1 3', l..OWll, l.A, 9 2' G<Hchner. HV,
10 16, L Mutphy, LA. 13 II, KoraD, I.A,
11 . 16, JOIW'ISIOM, NY. II SI.
Sec-l'trf.,.
S N11w Yon. Niisson S IJOllMI-, Oon
Me1onol. I 22 • L°' Ano-•~. L Murpny >.
14. JO. P-lly -HU911H, NY, S 56. Tlllf'd ,..,. ...
1 N•w York, Leldl•w I <Dvou•yl. • 44 1. Now YMk, Hodbero l tGrescllnor. Vadnalll,
12 II .• New Vor'k °"OU•Y s IT•t•lous.
Vlckertl, U OI. "9nelllu -Alllton, NY,
I · 11, T•ylot. lA. I . tl.
Sllots OI\ 9091 LOS A1"99IH .... u -t7.
N11w Y-1~1~1t-4 Gooll" -LOf ""9eles, Letwrd New
York, Baller. A -17,J117.
NHL playoff• ~•UMlf'AltY ltOUMO , ........... 1
....... 1c .. ..
NV 11...,.. 6, I(( ... J, tHV A-l win "'IH)•I)
Plll•OWOtt •.SI UUI~ 2, (Mri.s tltd H l
0...11« '· ~11"91Pf11• S, ltertff Uw HI .,...., .• ca-••
Ou•* "' PfllledellW\I• PIUSbur911 et SI. Leull
Misc.
--· ...
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Monday, Aprll 13, 19&1
Ettinger captures series
The ocean between Newport Pler and Jlunl-
infton S.acb was alivt with saJlboat.a Sunday as
140 yochta turned out for the third race of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's Ahmansoo and Dlck Series
combined with the flrst race of Balboa Yacht
Club'• 66 Series.
The race was the 27·milc 20 Fathom race
sailed in Ushl to moderate breezes and lots of pro·
tests. There were SS boats in NHYC's Ocun Rac-
ing Series and 88 in BYC's 86 Series
Dick Ettlnger'a Free Enterprise captuted un-
disputed rtrst place in the lntemalional Offshore
Rule division Class A in both the Ahmanson and
Dickson Series. •
Also a double winner was John Arens'
Tom a hawk Crom OYC in lOR·B.
Class A of the Performance Handicap Racing
FJeel was not scored in either NHYC's Dickson
Serles or BYC's 66 Senes because of protests.
Classes B and C were unofficial because of several
pending protests.
In the NffYC Ocean Racing Series the IOR rat-
ings are competing for the prestigious Howard
• Ahmanson Trophy and the PHRF is sailing for the
Dickson Perpetual Troph~ There are eight races
in the series.
8.YC's 66 Series consists or six races, all ofr
which can be completed during a six hour period.
Res ults of NHYC Ahmanson race
IOR·A 1. Free Enterpribe. Dick Ettinger.
NHYC: 2. Drille r . G errol Barto. LlYC Bill
Stanley, BYC . 3 Ghost. J ohn Reynolds. NHYC
IOR-B l. Toma hawk, J ohn Ar<'ns . BYC. 2.
Shenandoah. Bill Palmer. NHYC: 3 Bigwig, Ron
Melville. BYC
IOR-C I. f''as t Break, Dave Webster Bill
Lipton Cup s l ated
The 78-year old Sir Thomas Lipton Challenge
Trophy will be up for grabs starting Thursday
when 15 Southern C::iliforma yacht clubs lake on
defending Newport llarbor Yacht l"lub 1n a thrt>e
handicap regatta off the Newporl P1l'r
The Lipton Trophy .,.. as origtnally dedicated to
San Diego Yachl Club in 1!103 b) the fame d S<'ot
libh tNI merchant .,.. ho campaigned unsuccessful!)
for the• America's Cup fin• time:;
This .,..111 be the second )ear thal lhl· L1plon
Cup has bet>n raced for on a l\and1cap basis m t'r
three days For many years 1t \\as :;ailed as s ud-
den-dNtth race by yachts ra t mg "1th in 5 pt'rcent of
the defender and challeniter
After bt'mg con tested for many yt>a rs under
the s pons orship of the Southl·rn l'ahforn1a \'al'ht·
ing Associ<tllon. San Du~go \'acht Club rt'l'la1med
it last vt-ar as the official Sl><'nsor
NHYC won it last year with Tim llo~an at the
helm or Dic k EtlmJ;eer·s F'n't' Entl'rpnsc and v. tll
defend this year\\ 1th the same b<>~t\ and l'fl'\\
This year's series promise:. to lw another C'l(ISP
one v.1th Dave Ullman of Balboa \'achl Club at the
helm of Ron Melville's Big...,,~ and De nnis Conner.
San Di ego Yacht Club, s kippering Chuck Hope·s
Dust ·Em. The three boats finished in that or der
last year with less than four points scp;irating the
firs t three places
Other (•balll'ngers this ~ l'ar an.• Orillt>r
I Serendipity-43> Lido ble \' <t<·ht Club. Hlue
Norther <Peterson 421 Lo::. Ang1•ll•s \'aC'ht Club.
Five r <CF·41 l Voyagers Yacht (.'lub: Fl<tmbuoyant
I Peterson-41 > Long Bt•ach \'a<.'ht Club. Indigo
Tiger 1CF-37l Bahia Corinthian Y<tcht Club. Pen·
dragon 135 fl sloop> California Yacht Club: Lonl'
Star <Serend1pitv 13 1 South\H'St<'rn Yac·ht Club.
Mas Rap1do 10lson 301 l>ana Point Yacht Club.
Renegade t35 fl :.loop1 Santa <:Iara Racing As·
socialion: Rooster Tail t Oli.on 30> De l Re) Var hl
Club. Smark <J 361 W1ndJamml·r~ YaC'ht Club.
and Ya Turko <Pe terson 401 Pal'if1c MannNs
Y ;,i cht Cfub
1
(
Zillgitt and Wright
insurancr Jgrnt~ .111<1 hrot<rr~
Contractors:
ln ... ur;IO('\' cu"t" l'l'.'tnµ··
l'ont a('l US (111 l'OIO(ll'll\ l l{lilll 1•' f111
L 1abtl11' F:quq1m1·1i1 l'1•11w1I\ .incl
\\ nrkt·r ,: l"ump1·11-.Jl11111 l11-.ur.11w1 \\'1 ran
ii 1~0 hand It'} mir hond1n)( rw\«h
Bob Guffin
J<Jl l Mx Arthur fkiuln-:ird
NrNport Rr:ich C" 9/bb<J
< 71411'>2 <)()S~
-·-· ) Dailv_ Pilat I . \t. ROYU
INFORMS In the
Stanley. BY<.:, 2. Ruffian, Earl Dexter. BYC: a.
Seduction, Don Ashbrook, NHYC.
Olck•on Serles .
PllRF A. Not scqred pendin1 protests.
PHRF-8 1. Nu&ie Too. Jlm Nu1ent. BVC; 2.
Andiamo. Bob Sodaro, BYC. 3 Shannon. Don
Mc Kibbin. NllYC. f
PHRP'.C 1. Dark Star V, Jett and Steve\
f'arwell. NUYC. 2 Scotch Mist. Don Anderson.
BYC. 3. W1ldf1re . Jim Gronski, VYC. I
HesuJts of 66 Serles:
lOR·A 1 1'~ree Enterprise. Dick Et tinger.I
NllYC . 2. Ghost, John Reynolds. NHYC: 3
Ncws Boy, Jack Baillie. BYC.
JOH B 1 Tom ahawk . John Arens. BYC; 2
Shenandoah. 8111 P almer. NHYC; 3. Spirit. Allent
Brown. VYC 1
IOR-C 1 California Gold. Lee Colt, OPYC; I
2. Fas t Break. Webster-Stanley, BYC: 3. Ruffian.
Earl Dl'xter, BYC.
PllHF·A <Not scored pending protest)
PllRF·B 1 Antares. Alan Andrews. BYC: 2. l
M ackinac . W es Th om pson. Capo BYV ; 3.•
Mariposa. Dic·k llaydcn. liCYC. j
PllRF-C I Aloha 11, Glenn Reed. SSYC. 2.
Howlin Ov. I, Allen Stewart. VYC: 3 Scotch Mist.
Don Ander:,on. BYC
Murray wins regatta
Twl'nty mnl' boats in three classes turned out 1 Sunday for Capistrano Bay Yacht Club's Easter
Regatta The Performance Handicap Racing Fleet 1
"as di\ 1ded into Cl:iss A. Lady Skippers and No
S pinn:ikL'r classes
Then.· \\Cl"!.' ntnl' boats in Class A. The winner
"::is \'alk) r1e s kippered by Bill Murray ,
C11p1str<.1no Hay Yacht Club: second was Redline.
Fred f><'rez. Capo BYC. and third was Anes. Bob'
Rurkhard• D:ina P111nt Yacht Club
\V1mwr 1n the Lady Skipper dass of nine boats
was Hock N Holl. Sul· Ro~ers . DPYC. second was
Thl· \'ulgar Boatman. Lon Anderson. DPYC: third
\\ ,t'i 0 W lli!rold. \'u·k1 Hill. DPYC.
In thl· 11 t,uill No Spinnaker Class the winne r
"as llot Chtwolatl'. Ste\ e Schupuk, Capo BYC;
-.eeoml v.as W<1inl1. lloward Pas:e. Capo BYC,
third WdS \\ 111df1re. Don BN·ker. Capo BYC
Long B e a ch victorious .
Long R1·aC'h Sl<1t1· and
l 'SC' 11 t'l'l' top Sl'nrt•r s
Sundal to qu.tlifv for th<'
P ac·1f1 l· C.'oasl I n
LL' rl'Oll\•gi alt• Yat' ht 1 ;1g
Assol'lillllln ll•..im racing
l' h .t mp 111n:.h1 p 111 h c
Omohun dro
wins Lehman
T o m Omohundro of
t h , • h 11 ~ \ N 1• ...., p 11 r l
llarho1 \'a{'ht ('!uh cit•
f1•a1<·cl a d o1.1•n "'ab
S u n cl a ' 1 n t h c
L1.•hman 12 rt.'gatta for
Lhl' J 1m T) ll'r Memorial
Troph) Th1.• t'\'c•nt """
... atll'd 1n..,1d1· the· hay
R UlllWI up \\ ,1:-. r1.0rr,1
(;L•n!l'. '.'\ll)C. third
w;1 ::. BU '/7. Tupman .
:'«JI ) C • fourth " a!> B 1 ll
l.apv.orth I.A YC. :.ind
fifth was Mark Gaudio.
HCYC
I
:. a 1 I t' d M a ) H a L,
H(•rkelC\'
8evcri :,chools werC'
cnl<'rl'd tn the quahhca
t 1 u n r a c e s for th e·
Southern Area s ailed tn
:-.:cv.µort Harbor 1n
l.1dn 14 ::.IOf1ps
The Long Be;.1ch State,
lt•am of Chris Raab.
Kurl Miller a nd Mark
G oils on wound up with a'
pt•rfect score of six wins
a nd no lo::.::.cs
l'SC with s k1pp1.•r s
l'clcr Drasnin . Mike
Downing a nd Ru ss
Sylvcstri. had four \\>IOS
and two losses San
1>1e~o Stale \\llir J ack'
Fr a n <.'o. Chu('k Sinks
tint! S<.·ott Ha rris v.l're
third \1ith tv.o win:. :ind
fou r lo:.::.es
Oth<'r ::.chools compel -
mi? were OCC. L'Cl.A .
L'C San Diego and L'CI
\\ ith finis hes in that or-.
der
·rhis \\'eeks SJlCCia l
1978 CAOlt.LAC SEVILLE
I .1•,11 tw1 r1111•11·11 ~•·JI in.i.: .irt•J 1\:\1 F:\1 !otc•n•o wllh
t.1p1• j'l:n1•1 .~ ( .idillJC" \\1rt• "'het•I l"<l\er~
!ltltH'f1 \1 s9g95
NABERS ~ .• ~-//L .. ~.· M!~UlltbntM•d • (blfqlWAA r::;t:(/;ll.L(Jd{,; I (7"~~ ...... ····~···.Afib
¥~
rl'HE SPORTING HOUSE
Whe re H ealth Is a Way of Life and Conditioning is a Way of Living
EASTER
MEMBERSHIP .
SPECIAL
JOIN US BEFORE APRIL ZS
FOi AS Uni.I AS
_,.catwm• .. •
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ta'O A.._ ·--· C.le MeM, c:.i~.-.. .. 'llllNQI ,._ teld ... .-Ill
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~lltlNTINO ANO al)IOIHO Oft au•
Miit SCMIOVl.f 011' INSlltUC:• TION, ,_., CCC.
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Ohtrlct eoard ot ''"''"' Ill •n •tnWlll not I-•-11"'9 llW<•IM IU~I
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llltldtr wlll •llter 1"'9 Ille .,_.,..
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ol e Miid, Ille 11111 Miii! IMreof Wiii lie
lorltlled "._lcl eOll• dl1lr1<L
Ho llhld9r ,...., lilrlt--1111 lid kif
• period et lorty·ll,.. (4.51 0.Yl ali.r
Ille •• •• WI tw rile ..-1ne ,..,.., . Tiie Boord el Trusi.. ,._.., .. IN
prlvll-of reJ«ll"I ..,., -ell Mn
or to w.iw My lrreoulorltlfl or ln-
lorrnollllet In .,.., Illa or In the l>IOdl"I,
Signed : NORMAN t .
WATSON
5ecrecory. &otrcl of Tr1111 .. .
Cotst Community COii ... 01 ..
l•l<l
P111111.-Or-CDesl Oeilr Piiot.
Apr II •. 1l 1 .. 1 l•U .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICa INVITING 81DS
Nollet " l\erelly gl••n lh•I Ille
lloero ot l ''"'"' ol the C.onl Com· munlty Coll-Olslrlcl ol 0r ....
County, C..lll0t1Ne, woll recelYO M•led
Did• up 10 " 00 •.m., W•OMMl•y,
APrtl 19, lttl al th• Purclou1n9
Oep.,lmonl ol ••IO coll-Cllstrlct
IOC•led II 1)10 Aclems Avtn .... COit• Mew., Calllor.U., al which llm. wold
bids will lie l>Ubllcly --end r!Nd lor PURCHASE OF M ICROCOM
PU TEA SYSTEMS. GWC.
All D•d• .,. to De In K<ordenc• "'"" Ill• BIG Form lnstructoOfl• •nd C-1
hon• •1111 ~lliullons wlll<ll ••• -
on lite -mer De M<:urocl ln t"9 ofll<• of the Purclleslno Agent of seld collage district. 8 Eecll bl-r must sUDmll with Ills
Did • t••hler's cnec~. cerlllled check,
( or 11;a0er'1 bOncl m-pey•bt• 10 tllO
order ol llW Co .. I Communlly Collage
O•UrlCI Board ol Trust••• In an
•mount not Ins 11\en It•• percent U,.I
or the sum Did •• • 9uer1n1 .. 111et lne
Dodaer w111 tnler lnlo the pr-sed
Conlr•ct If the same os •w••clld to
lllm. In Ille •¥Int ol lailure lo en1er In-lo well conlrect, tllO proetedl or Ille
cll•c-"""' lie lorfell•d. or In Ille cese
of • bond, Ille full wm ltltnOI will De
lorleoted IO S<lld college district
Ho blOOott ,.,..,, wolhd••w Ills bill tor
• perood ol lorty.fove 10 1 ciers el1er
lht d•I• Ml lor Ille -nll'IQ lllertol Tiie Bo.rd OI Trusttft reserves Ille
prl¥11tQe ol ••1ect1119 enr ano 111 Dleb
or to wat111 •nv lrr~uterllles or In· lormalll•es In anr bid or in Ille bidding
lrl<I
NORMAN E. WATSON
Se<relery, Boera ol Tru""'
C.0.JI Comm11Nty Coll-Ola·
PuDllSN<I OrM19t COMI D•ily Pllol.
Aprll ll, lO, 1 .. 1 ll•l-11
PUBl.IC NOTICE
N72300
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
META FAYE
DINEHART, aka META
FAYE · VAN PETTEN •
GARNER ·THOMPSON •
DINEHART or MRS. M .
F. DINEHART ANO OF
PETITION TO AD ·
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A-108372.
To all heirs ,
beneficiaries, creditors
and contingent creditors of
META F AYE
DI NEHART, aka META
FAYE VAN PETT EN ·
GAR NER · THOMPSON ·
DINEHART or MRS. M .
F . D IN E HART and
persons who may be
otherwise mterested in the
will and/or estate :
A petition has been filed
by JAMES AUSTIN
GARNER in the Superior
Court of Orange County
reQuesting that JAMES
AUSTIN GARNER be ap-
pointed a s personal
repr esen tative to ad·
minister the estate of
META FAYE
DINEHART, aka M ETA
FAYE · VAN PETTEN
GARNER · THOMPSON ·
DINEHART or MRS. M.
F . DINEHART, Costa
Mesa, Ccl. (under the In·
dependent Administration
of Estates Act). The peti-
tion is set for hearino in
Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive West, Santa
Ana, Caltfornia 92701 on
May 6, 1981 at 9:30 a.m .
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you shoold either. appear
at the hearing and state
your objections or file
written objections with the
court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be
in person or by your at·
torney.
IF YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de-
ceased, yoo must file your
claim with. the cpurt or
present it to the personal
representative appointed
it I by the court within four
• • • months troM the date of
first Issuance of letters as
provided in Section 700 of
lhe Probate Code ot
California. The time for
" fifing claims wlll not ex·
•1 pire to four months frdm
the date of the hearing
1 noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the me ker,t by the court.
If you are nterested In the
11 estate, you may me a r&-
quest with the court to r•
ceive special notice of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, IC:.·
counts •nd repor t s
descrlb9d In SKtlOf1 1200 of the C.llfOt'nla Prob411t•
Code.
Jamtt £. Du,...,MeA: ....... , .. Law, 2MS '
~,.. Drtv• aut, ..... ,,
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The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-56'l8
, .. ,. -ltlt ,. 1• l: EQUAL HOUSING
::: · OPPORTUNtTY
1 ... .,,\,
:: ...... ~ Metlce:
Z UNITS
$110,000
Coata Meaa pride of
01tnerabip bar&ain !
Clean-refurbilbed t
lJve in one-rent one!
Call for detalla. S..'7171
THE :REA L
ESTATERS := All real eatate ad·
1• vertfaed in tbia
::: newapaper la subject to 1• the Federal Falr HoUJ----------1* in& Act ol l.988 wblctJ ___ _, ____ •!
:: makes It Ule&al to ad· DWL1X 11• vertlae "any preference, a bdrm, 2 bath each unit.
limitation, or dis· Fireplace, bultt.lnl. Ex·
crimlnaUon baaed on ce~t reota1 area. Near
race, color. reli1lon, beach • bay. S215,000. sex, or natiooal orialn, 142·2Z3evea. or an Intention to make
any such preference,
limltalion1 or dis· associated
crimlnaUon. · ~I' .. i LI ""f I\ r ~ ·-1
• ,/\ t-' ' • • •
Thia newapeper will not ~~~~~~~~~I knowlnf ly accept any -advert sing for real
estate which is in viola-
tion of the law.
•IOIS: Ad¥wtlsen
llMMlldct.cktlltir .. cWy...t= ..... '°"I•••~· TM DAILY PILOT •••tt
WMlty for ... flnt
l11correct l111ertlo• ...,.
H ..... fors-.
c;;;;;;;··········ic,·o~
••••••••••••••••••••••
NO DOWN
$5,000
DOWN
Payments ~ Sl,080 on
$80,900 loans. Beautiful 3 Bdrm 2 bath home with
dining/family area.
Sbaded covered patio,
double garage, call for
more detalla. 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
WESTCUFF
REALTORS
'71·HI I
LOV&Y ..... f'UM. Molt ...,.,_ .....
Her ~•lit I• t9'e lhrH1: Sltuted •• .,.ct.c .... .,. ........................ .
J ldr. F.I . l11t btly le tt.e ere• et
$212.tOO.
COLI OP MIWPOIT IW.TOIS J 1111. Co .. t Hwy., C... .. Mw
671-1111
VIEW
OWMrwtl~
3 Bdrm Cliff Haven
beauty. Owner will con-
sider au reasonable of·
fers. 2 SPAS, one Indoor.
CoHoSptcWhh
Call the experts at the
condo information
center.
Touch.atone Realty
963--0867
one outdoor , 2---------
fireplaces, used brick
entertainers pool area.
Cabana. fire ring, view
Saddleback Mountains,
Fashion Island, Ught.s.
Newly remodeled, new
kitchen. Call today for
appointment
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714·631 -6990
MESA VERDE
FIXER
$10,SOO.total cash needed
to c10&e escrow on this 4
Bdrm. den. 3 bath, fami·
ly room. fireplace. patio.
huge yard. "A Han·
dyman's Special". Only
$175,000. Call us today
for an appointment for
details on this revolu-
tionary new program
c alled T I.C.K.E .T
546-2313
FUIJM(i CLOSID IM1 Never again! This open, airy, home has vaulted ceilings, 4 bedrooms, 21f.t
baths. pool, patio, anq private be~ch. Room for your creative expression!
Offered at $324,500 fee.
U~KJU~ tif)'"l:i
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Eaet CnHt Hl9hwa11. Coron.e del Mu
WE HA VE 43 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWt'
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
The highly decorated
condo! 2 Bdrm. adults
on,y. Clubhouse and
swimming pool. 2 CAR
GARAGE. Super sharp.
Only $117,900. Call for
more details. 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATE RS
••• M..-Fort
1954 Paraons, Apt. ~C
Costa Mesa You a re the winner or
WESTCUPF
Super location at an old
fashion price. 2 bdrms.,
2 full baths, fireplace •
bar. Worry free condo
living. $129,500.
f714J 67J-4400
IJIJI ua.21H
HAR BOA
A Olvrsion of
ti arbor Investment Co
IEAUTIFUL IAY
VIEW
PAYMENT
Pay closing costs only!
Buy your own home!
Must qualify for mon·
thly payments. Exciting
new concept. Call today
for full details. 673-SSSO
VACANT
Reduced S2S ,000.
Desperate owner says
bring all offers. No
qua\ifying. Low down. 4
Bdrm single story home,
totally upgraded. Call
for more details. ---------
THE REAL ESTATERS 2tr..tk:Uh
($14 Value), to
lceC~•*' April 21 hru 2S
This spacious 3 Bdrm
home w/formal dininf
room reaturea we I
coordinated use or
wood11, quarry tile, and
french doors throughout. Enjoy the pleuurea of a
sparkling pool in the sun
drenched privacy of yo ur ba c kyard .
$3 4 5,000 1120
Goldenrod. Corona del
Mar
SEIYlCES
Ser•ott O.rwnorr
EMPtOYMDU &
PIEPAIATih
Sttoool• I nst""UM Job WaR\aod• lfftp V.entrd Ml f'
MfJCKANltSE
c .......
BoaU M 11n« Srrvtct
Boeu.M•nr,. t:q"'p ..... ,.,...,
llolla.lltfll Cha rin lloNu.S..I • ..... .sr .... 0..h ~~•s.1 ~.51or·•· TIWPOITATION
-1(11$
llllO
IOI» tOIO
t01$ -----· -mi
llJ05 -... -WIS .. -a t tOG -tOl7 ------
9010
I030 llO)O
llOtO -----
1110
lla:J 1130 11411 tue tllQ 1119 ti• -
rlUI lnllll
WIU'I 11'11111
f!U lr!U rn• 11'111
f!.i t'l'll
fl:D fT1T 17lll '73' IT» ........ tm
o-·'·
me
f!tll 17'2 ,., .. ,, ..
1747
17• 117141 . fl»
.1115' ..,., ............ := '* '* ,,.,
mt '"'
ltlTOS. USO
ua..r•I "°' A•~ ... .... ~ ............... ..
CHlllM •••...•..•... •u c.._ ........... •n
Clle•Nlot ..... -~,.let ................ ···-c.-.. ··············· ... ., c.-.1 ........... ··= eor-:e:. : ·:. :. : ·:::. :·::: .... -........... ,, -............... ~ .................. lta &..-.. ••••••.••• ,.,,. .. ••-di ................ -= ................. ---i··········•·-"···--. .................... .. ,...., ... ,.,,., .....• "'-" ........ , ..... . reietJ.N . ·····•••••••• .. ,,....,....... . .......... ' "" v.,. .... , ............. , .. .,. ........ ~
THE REAL ESTATE RS
COSTAMISA
S 11-Sl25,500
OWMEa SAYS S&I.
Not an add-00 or con·
version. A real S Bdrm family home in one
Costa Mesa's nices
areas. Handymans de·
light. Call now and save!
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
CAMEO HIGHL.Ato4DS
OCEAHVIEW
OML Y I 00/o DOWH
Now redu~ thousands!
Spacious living r~m.
features elow1ne
fireplace, 3 large bdrms
+ den. Great assumable
1.st and owner will help
finance, CaU 673-8550
THE REAL
ESTATERS
SELL idle items with a
OailY Pilot Classlrled
Ad.
I DOING ~·:: BUSINESS
,:1: UNDF;R A
..... FICTITIOUS
NAME?
II .,ou he ve Juet fl,.d
.,our new ,lctltlova
•••l11eu ft•111• a11d
llen not .,et _..,..fted
" for pu ... c:e.._, _.. ...
doft't lor .. t tllel Ille
llllllt•ll•ft •• JO d • .,. "°"' ... °' IMlfle. ''"' DAILY PILOT wlll
publl•ll rout et••ment for 131.10 . Our
clrculetloll lllcifvd91 the
entire Orange Coaet
aree •IMS ..... ~·
.,,.., Ill .. edttoM. '" order to t11b1111t your
etat1111e11t tor
publlcetlo11 teftd
•1'9r1ttrlete ~ end a
CllHll' to THI OAIL V
"ILOT, ... 0 . eo. 1MO,
Coete ...... CA HUI.
We'll CIO IN ,...._ '°' lflf-doft Mo4't ..... ~-. ,... .. cMI
Ml.utt ht. a».
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631 ·6990
Use the Daily Pilot
"Fast Result" service
directory. Your
service is our •
s~ialty.
Call 642·5'78 ext. 322
$3
c .... , ..
$100 ,
ollith*esl1•
PENNY
PINCHER
AD
3 l1ne3 ror 2 d:n !' uni~ SI 50 a da·,
Advertise one or
more items vulued
up lo SIOO Eurh
uddilronal line 1s
onl)· 66t for the l"O
days Sorr y . no
commer('1al ads
a I lo" ed Ch a rge
your Penn~ Pmcher
Ad or us e your
BankAmeril'ard Visa
or Master Charge · Coll._, -SH
1011r ad '" prh1t tOMOtTOW!
c ...... ...,....._~
l :OIAM .. S:lOf'M fw
.. ., ~··,.., w nl .., .. --~·-... ...........
642-5678
Daily Pilat
WALK TO
BEACH
Giant 4 Bdrm priced
right! Spacious living
room features wood
burning fireplace.
Owner assisted financ·
ing. Hurry. caU f13-8SSO
THE REAL
ESTATERS
OCIAMROMT
2 Bdrma, 2 ba, uhfurn.
New. Sl50 yrly.
IAYNOMT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum.
Mint cood. _, yrly.
CHAMMa .. OMT
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum.
associated
RR ,. l '1 "• "• 1', " J.> S
"' . ,. ~ . . , ,.
LUXURIOUS
TOWNHOME
w ..... "°"' ~· W/P•&SAp Remodeled to new in '76
from curb to new pier in·
eluding custom tiled
spa, stain glass & even
electric powered draw
drapes. 3 car gar w/ad·
ditional 3 car off street
prltg . Perrect loca·
tion-~.000
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
CAME 0
SHORES
Lowest Priced
Fee
Anaheim Convention
Center
Tickets must be ex-
changed ror reserved
seats at the convention
center ahead or time.
Call 642-5678. ext. Z12 lo
claim your lJckets.
***
HOME
' IN THE LAKES
SSl,500. Beautiful single
story condominium, de-
corated 1n earthtones
and woods . Excellent
location. Close to pool,
spa. tennis courts. shop. rmg, schools, etc. Love·
y lush park -like
lands caped com -
munituy. Great for busy
executive. CaJI 752-1700
THE REAL ESTATERS
CUL-0.SAC
4 Bdrm, air conditioned
home. Neat and tidy. Br·
lng a paint brush and
save! $95.000.
•
RED CARPET
754-1202
D.M.Mm-IWDr
644-9990
CAMEO SHORES
Outstanding ocean view
home on fee land. 3
Bdrm. family room.
formal dining room. 5
Ba. Gor~eous pool. Large lot U1 prest1gioU1
area. S7
WESTCLIFF
$129,500
One year new-Eutside
Coeta Mesa! 3 Bdrms, 2,,.., baths. loaded with
desl,ner touches. Mrs.
C lean lives here !
Beautiful pool-be re·
ady for summer! Only
Sl29.SOO. Hurry, 646-7171
Large assumable Isl
TD. Walls of glass lead
to wood declt. Beautiful
views rrom mas ter
suite, living and family
rooms ! Plus, lovely
private beach. For full
details, call 673-8S50 ---------
S6SOO total down needed
to close escrow!
Cheapest 2 Bdrm condo
in Newport Beac h.
Adults only , very
private. Call for more
details. 546-2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
Find what you want in
Dally Pilot Classifieds.
RtSIOfNllA, RI Al l <;TAH '>f RVIO'i
ALMOST OCEAH ROMT
Charming Cape Cod with English
gardens & huge patios. Gr~t ocean view from upper story & deck. 4
-BR. On Peninsula Point. $450,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
... & ,,Nlf BITTER
C E P U S T H I D R l R E P K R G J S
S S J T l K R I E M B G A E C N T 0 I
A P N K H P t A Z E A Z E T t A N £ V
A 6 N C U A I D T V " H H T H G G T I
C R R H T C R A A Y 0 S T S C 8 N S N
I J S l S R R S l V U U 0 U S E I 0 I
H G A 0 Q I X H H 0 C H W U G ~ R R
S A H R H M P R L A P S I H R N 0 A
t U 0 l P 0 X U R T R E U T t l l U R
C Y T A T N 0 E 1 N 6 P R A R T T 0 E
I 0 H S A I X 0 C V A V I A S T S I T
H A M R C 0 8 H S t ~ A G l N t V C H
ORAA£UYAUR6HA SK fCA
0 M a S R S S H T G N T I t H R P C
A ACS I O·I U D TR RT I I At RA
CASA DEl 110 ............... c ....
Xlnt tenna. 13% interest
for 3 years. 12132 Ed·
Inger-close to Harbor
Blvd.
OPEN WEEKENDS 1·5
631-4361, agt.
COMliiBCIAL PIOPaTY
Tired or selling houses 7
days a week? We need
one licensee to learn the
skills to manage &
broker commercial real
estate. Income from
mgmt while you learn
Super benefit.a; life in·
surance ; health in·
surance & dental plan.
Contact Ken, 675-6700.
U you've never placed a
Classified "· you're In the minority! Try It once
and see how quickly you
get results. Phone
&42-5678.
THE REAL ESTATE RS
THIS MEST
IS HATHHED
Within the security aates of Jasl'.l'line Creek:,
ne stle dowR to comfortable living in this 3 Bdrm h(>me. Th~
plantation s'hutters.
parquet floors, luah carpet, tastefulll' decorated rooms need no improvement. All this and a 9 14%
assumable loan
$335,000.
CE
111111 ILlllS aa .
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
MIWPOIT H ... HTS POUi.ft.iX
Located On Quiet Street Near
Shop.Ping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income. Minimum Vacancy Factor . Four Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans. Inspect With Offer. Jledueed
To $350.000.
1
....... ----------------. :..·: ,, .. _____________ _
LIDO ISLE
New ly remodeled traditional 3 bdrm,
. 5-bath plus lge recreation room & 2
C'patios. Beam ceilings. Best in price at
$420,000.
·#IEHIMSULA POINT IEACHFIOMT
Vn•''Panor amic view at wedge, from
__J>rime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom
-"home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine
...,,,..,.room . entry, living room, dining
room. built-ins. etc. $1,385,000.
>ii. • • IA YFROMT '6'.; 'we have several fine homes with pier
1111,v.& s lip, starting at $1.500,000.
RANCHO MIRAGE
od)prings Condo, 9th fairway, 3000 sq.ft.
e3 Bdrm , 3 bath , furn. Golf clb.
mbrshp. Trade for beach invest. prop.
-'
;·;BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
;I
• j I
.. ,.
ii' . ~
• 1,.,,• '' . .... , ~
, I
•1 '
341 Sn y ~rd1· Dr"'" N B bl':> blbl
SEE AND
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New 16.50 sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One half block to major
s hopping ce nters . Cement
drive s, a ir conditioning,
microwave oven . trash
compart o r , l arge walk-in
closets. Garage with opener.'\
Pool and 2 jacuzzis.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
310 W. WlllOft
Costa Mesa, CA
714/631-5055
fro'" S 112,000
TRADITIONAL & BEAUTIFUL
Emterft ch°"" . . . ClllClltY • a •r. .t. Spoc:iout 2·dory 3 IMd, 0 lcrcJt YMcj.
family & dlnhtCJ room. VUfronuipperftoor.
Move-in now. I ricks & wantA. $392,000.
CANALFRONT--OPEN SPACE YU
Lovely redecorated 4 bed -... 2--~
with charm. leaded calau. .-xJc• ffle, aarca. IMnq room wAh patio & .,......,.
bed', deck. Wolk to pool, .....,. & beach.
Reduud to $255,000. 0.....-anxJcMn ,..,,nit! .
LIVE ON LIDO-tOYn Y
leautiful corner home wt"' Ylew of~
Heer chtb house & t...n cowh. Two
story, 3 bedroo'", 4 baths. tnly r"OOfft.
formal dining roo'" and = MOre
Cll'Mftitles. Perlecf for -~ & .,._wport lifestyle. $675,000.
AFFORDABLE--ON WATER
A priYcrfe co'",_fty, Wood. bridl. ~s
and w«rffr are a perfect eOfllbo for this
3 bdrm., family ho.-. ~ and o,... liYlncJ mt, ptus huge farnly-ntL Prfyah
...trY and yCM1r own Madi and IOA T
SLI,. Owner wfU atslst wt"'~ A RME VALUE at $550,000, fee. ..;
BEAUTIFUL & TRAllTIONAI.
Eastern chorM . . • ...-V ""-t,-'· ~lout 2·1~, 3 lMd. ·~ Ying.
fcimHy & din~ room. VU frclM ~ floor. Mon-In now. lrtdt Ir wcrmth.
$392,000.
D U & I E
WATERFRONT HOMES. INC
REAi ESTATE
~'\lf'11 Ht'"'-•' f.-'1HfWrl'\ ~.,ntt~'1·\:t\,
2436 W Coasl Hwy 631 _1 400 Newport Beacll
rt I' I I
SIZOOO
DOWN
Prld• ot owaen9'lp a
Bdrm J batb, f1ml11 ~--.hbttd
THE :REAL
Es·1·A:rERS
A5SUMI &.Aael fl/Jo/eLM. RVM~
HI \I I 1 111 -., 3 Bdrm 2 bl home + Po<>l. Prlde ot ownenblp
home. Take advantaae.1~:::;~:•;~;;;;;;;;
Only SlOS,900. Call 6 PLIX/IASTSIDI 97~.mo now. llD. to SJ21.000 A LLS'PA 'rf With $152,000ln a41um.a· _ I,.. I , ble loans ran&lnf froiq
R•••y-s 9~~ to 11414. 21,450 _... "" aro.• income annually. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia I We 11 ke pl s lnale story S'YGLASS unit• with ' garaaes ..,IW I~"' PLUS off·street park in& . " _._... On 60'x300' lot.
4 Bdrm 3 Bath/highly ~4,.7211 upgraded. Pool. Juuni, • ,.
spectacular ocean and
night light views !
S79S.OOO
RCTc1ylorCo /Jn NtLl l
Ul'\ll f Y &
l\~SUlll'\T ES
LEASE OPTIOH ,,4() '"100 Luxurious. custom con· --"======~-1 do. 1700 sq. ft. 2 frplcs. 3
2 HOUSES OH A LOT bdrm. 2~ baths. S800
3 Bdrm 2 Ba. 25% down. mo. $165,000. 642-4623. owe carry great financ-
ing. 5'0·3666
Whelan Real Estate
Mffd A Ta Sh91hr7
Call the investme nt
specialists.
DOLlJolOUSE '
$3,000DOWN
3 bedroom, liv rm
w /frplc, high ceilings
throughout, s tained
glass dutch door, new
paint, white w/dutch
blue trim, 2 car gar., lrg.
landscaped lot. Home
warranty. MUST SELL
'lldrm z Ba..., wet bar,
11clifsq n, OW\; '131.900
' Bdrm z Ba, lTOO l!l ft, wume loan, k>W dwn.
SAM JOA9UIN Y1UASa Fantastic 2·story condo. Mltr suite plus den/lo Stees to PC>Ol and ~a. Low
Interest tinancm&. SlM.500. Barbara Grounds 551·8700. <E-76)
t:niae
c.&mpu.1 ~ Oenl,er WOOdbndge VUJAge Cent.er
'fea.1414 861·8'100
f130 000 ' H•t ...... 1Mdl040
3 Bdr,n 2 Ba. "T"·plan, ••••••••••••••••••••••• UMD8 MAUIT
Colleae Park Syracuse
Plan features lt Bdrm +
den, 2 Ba, Lv•e family
kitchen. Aaklnc 1000·1
under market.. Call for
ieoo 1q n. awe. s121.eoo. au .. HIW
TR\DITIO\,\I.
~1./\1"1 'r
HOM[', i> ll\IVf ',T ~fl\j lC:,
631 -7370
GLOUCFSI'ER DR. Uni·
que area, 2 story condo
eed unit w/dbl aarage,
pool le clubbouse. Owner
will help financ e .
~.ooo. Alt. 675-5200.
Fot.te• V6y I 034 •••••••••••••••••••••••
STAIMID GLASS
CHATIAU
Sensational 3 Br, 2i,.\ Ba
con do, new carpet,
ceramic We and loads or
stained glass. S112,ooo
Anne Mc c a s land
631-1266
u.uoa ·adorable 3 BIR
dollhouH . $109,500 · s
pOinta. Beth Duneombe,
Alt· (714 )957·'507 ;
NS-9101.
· ASSUMll~
No quallfylnc. '30,000 down. Popular Dutch
Haven. below market
value. Mo. pymt SlOlB.
By owner. Prio. only.
831-5042 eves.
. -11
-'·-;. I -. I I I ~.'I ·-I IV ~ ·,•.1 '()()()
HlfiH ASSUMAl&.I
4Br home w/1pa, xlnt.
cond. $189,000. 552-6940.
STANDOUT W ATaRONT
A beautifully uparaded Woodbridge pri me
Franci1can Fountains lakefront location . home. Frahpalnt i.naide Vie ws foreve r . 3Br,
and out. Plus lwcurloua 2 ~ba . pvt spa, flex
new carpet. A spacious 4 finan. Spectacular! or.
Bdrm 2 Ba beauty with tered at $354,900. Call
formal dlninl. breakfast 552·1800 & ask for Lynn
room a nd more. Super Noah. Town & Country
financina by owner. _R_l_tr_s_. ------
Asking $200,900. l.oCJ'Mo leadl I 048
lalboa 1.-ct l.lty ••••••••• •••. •• •••••••• 67M'700
1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
THESHAICH
W ea there d cedar
shakes , that ia. Custom
designed 3 bdrm, fam * * $15M! rm, 2 baths. Extensive
This 5000 SQ . Ft; Home sits on Linda
Isle. A private guarded Community in
the heart o( Newport Beach. Boat
slips for.(3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or
Trade.
We are developers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner Jim
Thompson .
1714) 121·1210 121JI St .. IJ63
llOOJ JSZ..J7 I 0
CUSTOM HOMI MEWPOn
Completely custom home, clean and
immaculate 2 private brick patios,
s p acious living rm. 3 Br, 3 Ba .
gourmet kitchen and all the goodies.
P lush carpets, walking distance to the
Beach & Water. Don't miss this one
for $265,000.
J QUAIL PLACE
PROPERTIES
752-1920
Touchstone Realty, Inc
96:J.at67
Condo 5,-cJallsh
Call the experts at the
co ndo information center.
FAST. Sl21,500. 494·1096 I No Qualifying! Low
eves. down! Assumption. 4
I Bdrm. 3 ba, Sl33,SOO.
TrySl5 000downandas· use of wood glass &
s um e this brand new 2 ceramic tile. Beam ceil·
Bdrm attached home in ing, frplc . St6S,OOO. Mission Realty
SHAlrCOHDO Bkr. 848·<7709 super Woodbridge. Ask· 1714)494--0731. ing only Sll7,SOO and -------~
Touchstone Realty, Inc
9634167
3 bdrm. 2 bath. pool,
near So. Coast Plaza.
Sll5.000. Broke r .
H..tlltgton leoch I 040 available n ght now. SUPER HOME!
Perfect for all those pre-
cious antiques, Huge liv·
ing room . massive frpk . beamed ceilings . wood
floors · spa off master
s uile. Oversized lot
S375.000.
:· : .·
•• : • • : f
'I..,; • :••
644-0134 jii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil YOUR 2ND CHANCE!
Sold first day open. but
fell out S99 ,500 VA
terms on great 3 BR l ""1
ba. Devin & Co. 642·6368 ltfAl ts !Arr UCEL4lNCC StNCf ""
WESTCLIFF
Neal three bedroom home. Cathedral ceil-
ings in living and dining
rooms. Great location ·
con venient to shops,
park and library. Possibly one car is
enough. Shown by ap-
pointment. $235,000.
631-7100 .....
~····· ~·-7 ... 1111
PIESTIGIADDUSS
OHL Y $430,000
Dramatic e n tryway
leads to lovely. larae. 3
bdrm . 2 lt'I bath
t.ownhome. Huge living
room & rormal dining
room. Walls of glass
lead to brick patios
Priced lo sell with xlnt
financing.
759-1616
MOVEIM
COHDITION
Immaculate 3 Bdrm 2
bath. Near new paint.
Sprinklers front and
back. Covered patio.
Near schooa. Aaking on· ly $125,,000. Call 540-1151
, :~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
APPEALING
Move your famiJy into
thll 3 Bdrm home and
e$y livina on tbis tran·
qutl cul-de-sac.
PRICE & TERMS
Only $110,000 " 13""'% new loan available.
556-2660
C:.'11 11( 1
~ I 'HI 11 >t ~ ~ I rt '•
3 +BONUS
Balboa Peninsula 2 MUST SELL this darl·
newer custom houses on lng home in North Costa
<Orn" lot. Ea<h w/2 m i$llB.OOO.
ga r , 2 bdrm. 2ba , REDCARPET
balconies w/ocn & bay 754·1202
views. patios. $425,000.
Lge assum. Lit. 675-<7727 I 17 /10/o FfN.
or 644-9155 Falling out oC escrow,
l-olbo--o-r-.-.. -... -.. --1-0_0_71 owner bought another.
must sell fast. l mmac, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde Pool Home. PENINSULA BEAUTY b d · ed I Like new, 3Br + Den 4 r + en. slam g ass. XLNT FINANCING new paint in/out. too
$449,000 Lit l>flY Aua. many amenities to list!
IMMEDOCCUPANCY AGT. John Cox. 641-11458
2113 Miramar. NB or 631'1266
dys 556-3900. wknd &
eves 642-0346:549-4225
CoplstrcMo leech I 011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DIVORCE
forces sale or 2br. lba. den home. Assum lat.
Capistrano Palisades on
Portola. Sll7,000/0BO
496·'822
GOLDEN TOUCH
CONDMllUMS
Large private decka &
patios. Only 3 left. Xlnt
terms. 13% interest for 2
years.
2000 MEYER PLACE
OPEN DAJLY 10-5
631"'361, agt.
COf'Ofla .. Mer I 022 -------•••••• .. •••••••••••••••
J asmine Creek decorator
home, plan 1 on green·
belt Im mac. b>S.500
~145
The Sunniest Home in:
JASMIMI CllH
2bdrm 6 den, cheeery
kitchen, plantation shut-
ters, pvt comm. with
pool , Jae It tennis.
S28S,OOO. By Owner:
759-1176. \
SZOH .. I 21/2%
EASTSIDE
R-2
Remodeled 2 Bdrm, 2
bath, fireplace. Alley ac·
ce11. 127X65. Hur ry!
fl.45-9161
/
OPf N HflllSI
1.'I Alf Y
FIM~ ALL OFFERS; Super
CDMCOTIA•I two stor y home. 4
PLUS IHCOMI bedroom•, dinl.na room,
or lt Br 2 ba home wttb aeparate ramlly room,
11olated master flreplac•. Lota of 1 1tora1e apace. T~ktd bdrm P•ttnt t't!treat or on Iara• lot amoo11t
In-law quarten + 2 br fruit trea. All ortert ~:i:rt:e i~ylt .::ta~ b • a t d . u 29 , t 0 0 •
lnl. UJI to date .rid T AR 8 ELL, BK "R .
beautlruUy decorated.~~;..;._ ____ _
Priced •t •.ooo wltb IASTS'f: ...... very 1pedal ftnlDtillt. Dri •--•-""' I C:AU.flOIDlfAILS v• to --,_a
644-721 I :::.·,T:~·CI~= c .•· ..... ~.bl.
Century a /GO~ "6.,,,.
I,\, I ' ..
I I ~ 11 11\ I I '
... 1111
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
CONVERTIILE
3 Bdrm 3 Bath home
Easily convertible to 5
Bdrm. Great location.
just over 1 mile to the
beach. 2800 sq ft for only
$175,000
Cal 751-1191
C:. ',{ 11 < I
~l'H<ll'• 1~111 •,
..............
Clean & sharp Tri· Plex
in best H.B. location.
Seller is willin& t.o carry
paper & use a araduated
payment plan with a
minimum down pay-
ment. Call now for more
info.
21.... $17,500 ,.
\\bod bridge'
Rult1
551·3000
4t2tlbrranu Ptlwy.lr111M
*•STARTER! LOCJUH V-. R.E.
497-1761 Your chance to live in --------
Irvine. l br condo in Log.a H• I 050
gorgeou1 Nor thwood •••••••••••••••••••••••
area of Irvine. Great OPEN SUM l-4
e motional appeal & 24995 McriR Court
owner will help finance. 4 Bdrm + den. 2~. ba.
Call fordetaHs, 3100 sq. ft. Pool &
jacuzzi. Many edras. \\bod.bl1dge Larae assumable loan.
Re,,.,h11 W o If i n g e r R e a I t y
-• (213)539-13M.
Spac 3Br 21,.<, ba 1500 rt LEASES condo. View. A/C, frpl,
Ranch Realty, the leu-close lo shops. 9"'2% In
ing leader has many Sll0.000. Own /agt
leues t.o choose from. 831-7()(8 k95 to Suoo per monlh. ---------..
-~ r· .. ·"' H ~ ' • . , I I ~ \W) '•'•I .'(11)()
Mewpoti leocla I 069 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Houae & 2 car gar. near
high school. Fee land.
Sl30,000. Al\. 641-0763.
Great starter or rental home . Quiet
neighborhood. 50Xl30' R3 lot bas plenty or room
for kids to play. Seller
has agreed t.o carry a
2nd and you can usume t.be loan with monthly
payments of S865/mo.
Better Hurry-Call Now !
Broadmoor Townhome. THEILUFfS
Heritage Park. 3Br, l ll~lAYel
2Ba. l ·atory end unit Finest oriainal area.
w/lrg. patio. Many up-Massive greenbelt vista.
surERI FINANCING! Fine 3BR residence in Irvine Terrace .. Well
priced at $259,000. Beautifully situated
and excellent financing. Coby Ward
642-8235. <E -75 )
llewport -..Ch
901 Dover Drive Harbor Vtew Center
642 8235 644-6200
2000
KINGS ROAD
2 master suites
builder 's dream!
40' apart 2nd s tory
OPEN DAILY I 0-3PM
Rhoda Magil, Rltr. 642-3600
grades. Assumable loan Smartly decorated in popular tones. nearby at 9.25%. Pvt. party. pool. Offered at $212.000
rrlYote Cocou1wity
Spectacular 3br, 2ba,
amenities (spa , etc) Blk
t o beac h. $195,000! !
Rich, 759·~. 646-95~ 60LDCllUICSJ ,_s_129_.soo_. SSQ-_9'117_. --(with assumable hl bal. LIHIL ,_ loan-try $43,000 down).
4r ... ~: !!fskb~e~ DICDOIABJ,._!2""5 _A...;;g_t._64_0-_5560_.____ SEA VIEW
Newport Bay Condo
Sale. lease, or lease op-
tion to purchase. Securi·
ty bldg. 2Br , 2Ba .
w/marina & Catalina
view. Boal dock a vaila-
ble. By owner. 673-3.570
days, 548·9094 eves. ....,., BALBOA ISLAND Jbr , "Nantucket" in 141-1511 U pgradeds thruout. private community.
Beautiful back yard Stor ybook "Victorian". Pool sized Jot, like new 2 houses on large lot. All
so rts of po tenti a I .
$140,000. Agt 641-0763. 2 STY LANDMARK
4 Br, 2~ ba. 3 car gar.
Newly painted & carpet-
ed. Sl03K as!umable ln.
Asking SlS9,900 Fast
escrow. 8tr 963-8377
with spa, 2 Bdrm +den. Complete with bdrm condition 1 with view.
2 '14a bath a· do u b 1 e loft, s piral staircase. 3nd $200,000 assum. lat. By garaae. l~ years new. t d k d Own er 1903 Yacht Asaumable financing s o r y s un ec an Cam1llia $365,090 will REft11CED
available. Offered at charming front porch. 5 cooperate with brokers. Owner :"'1·11 ... ~ creative $J'8,000. For an ap~lnt-Bdrms, 4 ba. Superbly .,.., appointed and decor at-833-3622 or 644-8018 with financing oC this ment to see this ovely ed. Fairly priced at custom architects home ~ndo. call540-ll.51 S625.000, owner Cinan. Versailles 2bdrm, SSS,000 in Newport Heights. 2600
KIDSOK avall. For appl. call dwn. S80,000 assum sqftdesignedforfamily 3un~t~r:!fe:ti'Y 1:-~iJ":~~ ~7221. Small view W· 7»2270: living. 13JS.OOO _ Open
W l"ff Rff H: 642-2682 Sun. 1-5 438 Riverside children l650 mo. 1901 esfc I y
Alabama •nl . North °'1~~~~~~~~1 • •LIDO ISLE• ~EM·A: B. 631 -1266
Adams . Immediate OC· E CONDO --------•I Lovely 28T, 3Ba home S J c upancy. Broke r , ORANGETRE rao1•t1s•1 E B ti( II od I d • M• ~8182. Plan 5. 2Bdrm 1 Ba. ~ _. uu u Y rem e ,e C .J tr.o I 071 pr in c i pal a o n I y . 117 3lttt SfNet 2yn afo. '484,000 wrth 0,..1 FOURPLEX $103,500. After 7pm 2 Bdrm beach house-. x lnt f na ncing Open ••••••••••••••••••••••• 552.7~2. Great S/W rental area. House : Sat. Sun. 1·5. 119 3 MllHfrMst.a
All units are 2 Br, 2 Ba. ---------1 Steps to beac.h. $l80.000. Via Vella. WITH OCIE.AH VIEW
good rents, no vacancy PICTURE Eve167~. Owner/Agent: 673-0697 R-choS..._ factor. Price $185,000. 1 ............. EW -Loan is assumable. ~" I O.,/o RHAMCING Estates AMeMcCetl9d PERFECT Residential & com· Beaut. 3 bdrm, 3 ba, lge Over 3,000 sq.ft. of
6ll·IZOO Spacioua3bdnn.2·st.ory mercial on l lot · Old fam. rm. Open house elegance. Exclusive new
p a t I o H o m e i n Newport. 3 bdrm, 2 bath Sat. & Sun. 2300 Heather homes, from $515,000.
RVM~
I!~ ·\I Tl If( ....
Low Down. 3bdnn, lr1
lam rm, nicest on cul-de·
H C. $114,990.
Immac. 3bdrm w/encl
paUo, many JLtraa,
$123.000. Bath wit.b 1lnt
financing. H3·7398,
719-0112.
~ ... SW.!""'
BUYING J
SE LLING I
Deerfield, on a cul·de· upper apt. 500 + sq .. ft. Ln. 631·0517 14\.'.a% financing avail.
sac street. Close t.o park; on around floor for of~1ce, Charter RJty & Invest. pool and acboola. Lota o or 1hop. 4 car parklng. H . V .H. Monaco, beaut. c96-8122 831-8811
uparadea . note addl· $350,000. 6'75-4T1'7 eves. nel&hbors, beaut. view, 1---------
llonal coimter & st.ora1e beaut. area, 2bdrm, 2ba. Ott.r Real Estate
s pace in the kitchen. d0 e n . f o1 r mta I d I n . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Be autifully panelled w n e r a g eves : = H-..
walls. PatJo and plan· 644-15111. • I IOO ters and ienerous pallo
cover. <>wner oflerinl ~~~!!~~~~~1·--------1••••••••••••••••••••••• 1enerous t.enna t.o help IACI IAY railer at bcb $14,900. rou purcbaM. Priced pt BLUFFS BARGAIN 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home Terms. OWCortrade nst,000. 3 B d r m t w D b m e plus Ideal motbeT·io·law , ____ 4911-a __ u __ _
SW,000. Walk t.o ever· q U art er 1 . Corn PI · PALM SPRINGS AREA.
ytbin& pool, tennis. w/balh.SZ20,000. ZBr2ba.tyraold.Compl
1cbool.I, parlc A: •bop-Roy McC.., ...,, furn. On 9 hole exec golf
ptna. Agt. 875-5930, ,,·~~~l~--~~7~7~2t~~~I courae In adlt park. 840-ll44J 1~ View San J acinto.
•Oceanfront Trl·Plex. WATllllMfDft.X 838-9300ukforVir1lnia.
Xlnt loc. • fin. Prin. SJlf .100 1400 aq ft home, 5• Pk
Ollly. Faces Newport laland. 2Br, 2Ba.sl.lftporch, la
h •.. .,. ,. .. -aa11rr.. •• .__ ·~---673-_ma ____ Very aoUd aea wall 1nd fn"d 1r.a-a4)••645-1182 If aoroeone told you t at -.,&'1 ~---= ,,..._ .-dock. For detaJl.a ca.11 " 'IW, ..
you would s • v e Cu1tom h'Ome near Alt.f15•18118 Mobile home, JOXJZ. dou·
thouaands of DOLLARS 1--------• wat•r . Owner wlll -'-----------.bl• -.Ide. SU,500. when b\lyin1 or ael1Jn1 MIW USTIUe noanc• wtth low down. l•--l!llm----N t B h
your property • ltlll Gree& buy ln Callfoml• 1-";...:lt:.;._• IG--·.-2900--·____ •YtMlmaACI e w,/1 r •a c: ' havethetotal andquaU· Ho a.-.. ..-,-.--1_aa_1~_1_1. ____ _ m•.~•x -·· 1•y---HOM1 ..__ .,., • .,,, ty ••rvtce of • pro· cov.Nd ortde "' "'_..' A coay 1 bdrm home A@a l';i"•Jlll•
feuiOM.1 ~•l'°r ·would qi own tpl Good Olorloua 4 Bdrm 4b• wltll formal din.be rrn fw•• UOO you lake. 01e \\me to nnancl . Owner wlU -«l~t dock for fioPr and jiool. Rllhl.Y ... ,..,. • ........... _ .. _••• 1
call ....... J_, art lnclualve U\llt yac rt&llUlJ'OW' iont ..a-b&evkwofba:rbor&Dd ,....,..,~ door. Z-xcel Pnlnaula _. .,_ ".,._ Pt. \ocaUon •1,2115,000. oceu. A r,rt -Ullt at Just llate I R•I lot,
Owoei: /Sul• Cherin onlytuo, • ..17'1all I l!:Mtlid9. Ooodfot'l«:m·
j P[ Tf J RAHAL IT
fH Ai I Y
llckbanoa f7S.l7G and ..,_, dot. H•a 4 nlll&al lac:iom•
DabBlbbMO-,_ uatte. II"'~ ... ..-ablt flaeacla1. llon fHll .... ~"'''' • •1\ I I t •
"'L '-'I " I • I 1 I )\ , I
• Items llilJ Pilat
Private Parties only --no commerdat businesses please. ~ny, ctasslflcatlon. No cancellation Rebate.
°"9r'Ri4W. OtMrlHI..... ""'"U.fw;h-~ " .. " ...... ht1d .................... d ... It i Al=•-·••Uifw& ......... ....,.,., ....... """"' ····•········································· ··············~······· .•..•..•.........................................••................•...................................................................... .... , .. ,.._.,tv 1400lllC ... r....,.1-t 2000C.•H .. W. HJJO...P.... JJJ6 L1.-1heclt 3241W"........ JJH C..teM... JIJ4COlteMese ll24H•"'9fORIMc~ 3140 ......... ::., ...•............... :.:: .. ! ..........•................................................................•.•.•.....•...•.......... , .................................................................. .
NIWPOIT lmmac. J br, Irvine Ter-••NR. HA.RINA, 2 br, 2 Oeeanfront rent.ala $350 HOKE FOR RENT BEAUTJP'UL 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 Br. To•nbouH. Uvlna Quiet, clean, adults. 2br.
t Office buildlni. OCIAMYllW ;~:;~~':I.Jae, ba,fprlc,zcar1ar.tisoo mo. fr up. Adlta only. 3 ~··MOO. ~e: MeuVerde,1100sqft. rm , d1nln1 area . l\<Jba.ear.no petsS.25
$425,000. Hurry . won't DWI.IX · • per ino . .._,_ 499·3118 ya ta r.ara1e. !IM-25ae fplc, lndry, patio, d~· kitchen, frplc, gas " 960-3795 ___ _
lut I Bill Grundy, Drastic reduction on CUSTOM B~YFRONT. H•t ....... lwll 1240 Li.-iH• JJIO :97,_;f."'A:t .. no fee. bwabr, encl car, Adult.I. water, alt.ached garage, ;;-area, mile to be;ich~-
$'7$-1161 brand new Balboa Avall furn if deslf.ed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• no pell. m . 3107 Mace. pool, Jacuul, laundry huge new 2 Br 2 Ba I..
C • 1 ....._ duplex. lat owners ~ Slip ror 2 tie boa ta. 3 3 B 2 8 uie\ Cw de-CHiio•' ' 1 5'0.'400. fac. on property. Mature • · '' ... 1f'J .-. depreciation. Great ren-Bdrm 4ba 3 I~ 2 r • a on qwe'l . Attractive 3 Br. 2 Ba. In U.f lll•d 1425 adults no children no r o man tub . ma r b I e .. •
Cryph 1100 tal area. 100 feet from · ... : ... '••-•-.. • aac.Cto.etoBcbfrSchs. ~wiaVUJ,qe.Nopeta. ••••••*••••••••-••••••• 1 Br. Eaataide. amaU but ta Avail immed ';.,,,,,. frpl c . 2 sundeeks. 1
••••••••••••••••••••••• lotcumu, pe..,. aOO Encl. yrd, boat acceaa. mo f97-fl112 II f pe · · ·..,,.,., 646··US2 Harbor Lawn-Mount beba.thcbp.l•~2rbdrmg-e3bdr.2 bmalh' 3. B•Y· Security aystem covered patio, frplc. · · BachelorCONDOvacant, cozy wS ots 0 neaftt + $27S security. ,
ll "'--.... •-/mo ......,Im 1--1 Gardner M1t1•--ya..a... ~2Jl.7 S500/mo. Ne wport wood. :m. M2·9450 a 631-4984 SEASPRAY 28 2b 0 ve 2 vir:metery plota Owner will assist in _.... · ._., 0· "'"' · --r' • • 5PM · · r · a· .. toaether S700(both>. ftnanclnc."2$,000. WaterfrontRomea 963-MOO;S:§.3833ext322. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach9'71-042.S · SPACIOUS&SUNNY Crplc. Rec. & s<'l'urity.
IMla-3626 Realtors, Inc. W -1400 • * * 310'!'1':>o~:O baT.!!~fo"! 2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo, pool/· Bach wi~ loltj s;:ree. 1 Br enclsd gar, pallo, Nr beaeh S67o. 891 6396''
Jflllll.ee Rlt 831·0300· ~· or S.Cout Plaza. stove, c • poo · up. d /w. Adults, no pets. agt lktil 11 I I c-# l\l·.1ltv 1600 MAGMIAC94T 110016tbSt. Y • .US.45:13,557-4351. 2S3Avocado.MS-640t. $350. 2 bdrm. I ba. minutrs
180 dearee ocean & NewporiBeacb ... wport.._. 3269 Irvine Condo 3br, 2ba, 1 Br. refrlge, stove, c/d, S48·90MorS40-S446_ from bch . S395 Call f ; ~:: ~ ;1 111
IMYESTO."S l•--------•I harbor view custom Youaretbewlnoeror ••••••••••••••••••••••• new dra--. a/c, lndry garaee. $350. 2 40 2Br.Adul~only,nopets. 548·0S44or7$9·5391
1 __________ 1 hom e for lease by z frwlkllltt 3 Br 2 Ba, ipcl. refric. .-Avocado MS-646' ----DBJGHT owner, Irvine Terrace. 3 fenced yrd, S7SO/mo yr-rm. cbe to pool, avaU . $400/mo. 755 W 18th St '""'-384(.•
Primecommercialloca-..... ~ br,3~ba,maid's room, ~$14CV=to ly.Aft.873-3355 now k lda olt . Call Newly decorated ape.. &-646-9507. •••••••••••••••••••••••,
lion ~ blk from ferry Pro 2100 liv. rm, deo, din. rm, A~~zlGU'~ 751·7984 anytime aide, 2Br. tba$. upstairs. Beautiful 2 Br. 1 Ba~ ORA NG ETR E 1-: 1 HR ~::~s'u1:.' 3t~B~l~! ;;;;:.~·~~;::.~;:;;~rl~~ ~~rfu em b;/ipoolt •1 rol~ans~ Anaheim Convention Nl!·,cr:11ptl~~!1~r J~ •2Br. 2 Ba. l story, pool, 63nol .,f .. ~ t s . 400 I mo. Duplex. wood burning cmoondAo~tA,!.~·6tJ>Ol61 >I. $425
land. Owner financing. up.NNNlea.sedattopof min.lyr.$4000/mo."call Center earace. Leasel800/mo. patio, S.C.Plaza area. ..,,~ frplc. built·in gas --"·'""'
Lease option . Ca II market. Xlnt S.A. loca-568-65Mor (212)572-4230. Tickets must be ex· lat, lut&dep. 95'7-9303 Child OK. k95. MS-1082, Sharp Bach Unit. Stove le kitchen, large living LacJ-a leoch 3848·
Carlene for detail!. tion . S•03,500. Pa u I chaneed for reserved 833-1653. refrige. Adults. no pets. rm .. carpets. drapes, 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
67S. J77l Franldin, 752·5111· Lease 2bdrm, partlaUy ~:!~rata:!:J°:r~~0e~ VILLA BALBOA 2 Bdrm 2bdrm, kar aar, covered '300. 543·1377. ~~.g$;~~. ~:i:as~m& L:eeac~~ uv~~~ rtea~'.~~r~~ ·
LohforS. 220 furn. lrg yrd, encl patio, Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to l~ ba. Ocean view. patio, '4 mile to beach. kSO. 2 BR, patio, pool. S275 security. Sun & $400/mo. Call Darlvn•'.·
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 b~k to beach or shop-claim yourtickeU. Avail on s hort term Access lo pool & courts. Adil.I. no pets. 32S J, 17th Eves. ~Sl32. Daily 9.5 661-1162 or 494<K>72
IESIDEHTIAL p1J1g. $750/mo. lat 4r last. * • * $850/mo. S575. H.B. (213)925-4796. Pl. orr Santa Ana Ave.. 957·0701 -ACREAGE C714)626-6272or85l·S665. H.V. Homes custom 3 (714)675-~. 646-5137 aft.llAM
4.3 acre · high view S4rS Exec. 4 bdrm, 2i.t ba, Bdrm, 5 ba wlth pool.
building site . looking 4 Br, pool, beach, view of din. & ram. rms. nr Prof. dee. Compl. ocean· 2br, ocn view, adult con· 2 BR, 1""2 ba twnhouse.
do. lmmed possesion A. f d f down on lake. Exclusive ocean. Cameo Shores. G 'west College, like /bay view. $250().
area Owner will Sl 900 /m o . Koop . new. $900/rno. 962-6139 UDOISLE 2 Bdrm ,J~~ call 586.5779. 1r, gar, nc . pa 10. Adlts, no pets. $435
645-4837 Lease option, 2bdrm, 2ba s 631 1266 Agt ft 6 condo, (Monticello) finance. Only 100,000. . . . a . . I ba home. Yearly $1200
2421 Minuteman, C.M. CaU today 4 Br + maid's quarters. 3 Br 2 ba, dbl gar, ram rm I mo.
831·2170. I,. view, top of Spyglass. Fenced yrd, kids OK . condo. $850/mo.
3br. 2ba. frplc, lge patio,
pool /r ee r oom S600
1st /last + $200 sec.
645-7555 $91,500. Webb Realty ALL STA TE Beaut. decor. s uper w/fr plc and sky light. 2 Bdrm 2 bath LUXURY
S2000 /mo . Koop . $650/mo.960-1980 59,400 sq ft lot . potential I REALTORS 63l·l266. A.gt. Waterfront Homes. lne. Hunt in gt on Harbour
office site and elose to ' • LOOk * Realtors 631·1400 !bd rm upstairs. like
J .W. Airport. 645-1103 Mo...tailt,Desert, CostaMesa 1224 2bdrm,ll;'Jba condo with ~~~~~~~~~~j new. wlk t o Harbor
Agt. lnorl 2400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc + pool. Avail /Market, pool/jac/ten· ----------i••••••••••••••••••••••• KIDS/PETS ()I( NOW ! kso/m o. Call H.t.or View nis. S.75536-·0017
BEAUT. S bdrm home, E·Side 1 Bdrm S425. Mike_646-__ 99_1_1____ ~~a~i~°: (~ml~ :Orm~ 2 Newport Crest Jbdrm,
locatedonBishop Creek W/Garage. 642 -2510, CA V G F . h' ·i 2v-ba,oceanV1·ew,over· with view of Sierra & 646-4848. L l F . L I l N ! urn1s mg ava.i at nQ "I
M•w&dlmn!
2 Br. l Ba. Maple St
Adult, no pets. Ground
floor. S375 Sierra Mgml
Co. 641-1324
LARGE BA C H
w/PATIO.
l le 2 BR APT.S
C athedral ceilings,
frplc, dshwhr, balcony.
ln quiet Adult complex
witb pool, spa. No pets.
$335 & up. Mesa Pines.
Quiet Jbdnn w/encl gar, Newport IHch 3869
priv patio. incl util. no •••••••••••••••••••••••
children/pets S355 PARll NNIPQRT 857-4828 or642-0350 ft l.n
Newer 2 Br. 2 Ba Sun
deck, dshwr. $4.25. Avail
approx . 5-1. 760-1418
eves or wknds, S48 8675
days
3 Br. 2 Ba Valencia.
townho use. 2 children
OK. No !)t!ls. S525. Sierra
COUNTRY CLUI
lJVIMG 9'1ngles. 1&2 bedroom
apts. & townhouse~.
From S510 644 1000
Oceanfront (or Winter-•
Rental~ Furni~hed &
unrurn Broker 675 4912.~"
M gmt.~o.64\.1324 _NO FEE' Apt & Condo
2 Br. 2 Ba Laundry fae rentals Villa Rentali.
New paint. $475 Call _ 675·4912 Broker
631 -3537 _ 2 br. 11'1 ba + gar. Hoag .
IALIOA ISLAND
Main Street · high vis· 1biUty location on prime
corner. Has existihg re-
tail business plus two
rental units
While MlS. Call: Owens ---------1 S pacious 3Br. 2Ba extra. Sl.200/mo Lse. No looks tennis courts,
Valley Rlty, 714-873-7109 3 BR. 2 sty, Back Bay w/jac. Boat door. Nr bch pets. 201.S Port Bristol frplc, close to beach.
condo. Pool & jacuul. S8sO mo. Bobbe 646--8133 Cr. Call Elaine 644-5997 SBso/mo. 642·1Z12. IMSTAHT IM!
253 int in Moonndge $850. 631~. ask for or631·4361 _o_r_64C)._5_35_7 _____ 1 8 2 B din f 1 Deluxe large 3 br. 2 ba. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt .. carpets.
2650 Har la. 549-2447 Hosp urea. nu dl'cor,
open hse Sat & Sun 11·3.
4238 Hilaria Wd }.
SSOO mo 8.'JG.5875 cabin. ~.000, 10% dn. Ruth or Steve 3 B 2 B Hom 2
2 r. a, rm, rp c, 2 condo. E·side. Avail drapes. laundry room Gar.. forced air, dis · Immac 38r. 28a, cul.de-r . a. e, car car gar. Nr College. lmmed. 2446 Elden. Apt Adults only, no pets On ·
WATI HI HON'T hwasher. washer/dryer, Duplex.. I bdrm, 1 bath sac, frplc, patio, $690 garaee, frplc, kitchen $525/mo. A.gt. 76G-9333 ly $~mo.
ttc >Mt" hw:. furniture, 1"'2 ba, custom plus Uving area. Private mo. 847·'525 aft 3PM. w/dswar, diapoHl 6 gaa A·l . S62S mo. 642'5312· TSL MGMT 642-1603 BEST VALUE
REAL ESTATE frplc , lge lot Nr forest & entrance & patio a~a. H=''mt range. dining area. Apa lac••,......... Custom 3 br, 2"'1 ba con ----Versaill es corner pen· 173-elOO Goldmine s ki area . Stove&crdrig.incl.'350 ;;;;;;:,:" Beaut . patio & ....................... do,frplc,jacuni Avail Nr HarborShppgroomy. thouse2 Br 28a.eomm"
Co"do"'i.l .. "'l/Tow .... Jerry, 9~3395. mJooa.nPnreSfte.r .!..!~ull82t..787lm~-3242 backyard. Avail 4·20. Coste MeM 3724 May 1. Adults only S650 2br. adults only no pets, pool. 1a r . wgt rQom ·
...,... .....ro ••••••••••••••••••••••• $700/mo. 1st, /last., ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 642•5312_ no gar S3SS642-31S3 S700/mo 675-3787
lllouses for sale 17~0 Out of Camty mediate occupancy. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Family room, security, cleaning dep. SUS CASITAS -------0-mta-Point--3826 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Property 2550 dining room . $875/mo. CaU21S/-...a32. Furnlbr.apt.•-•·up. 2 Br. 2 Ba. All r e-OCEANFRONT Townhouse 2Br. 1"'2ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4Br. 2B a, $850 m o . Call Linda Aeent -.... furbU.hed. large rooms ••••••••••••••••••••••• Furn 3 Bd rm 2 Ba 2
SSS.900 SI0,000 dwn As Sierra Dawn Hemet un-1st/last $300 security, 846-1371 SanUaco Dr-Exec house Encl. gar. Adults, no k25. No kids or pets I or 2 br. balcony, D W · car garage with office.
sum S60.000 1.oan al furn. 2br, i ba. across new cpt/pol, formal din-BROADMOOR condo •, vb~·i.!_: April 1~. 43bBr, f!J5;2,l::~ew8:_por5PrtMBl. 646-1807. elehan, ~oa1rn lnarunodcr•~a & washer & dryer incld
101,;%.0wnerw1llearry rrom Clubhse#3.S380in· ing,2,000sqft.75'-0986 -a ua1uamst.rswte, a,_...._.. -.. • ws r," · "'n Av a 1 I N o "" 2nd. 536-4664 dys. cl. pool/club racil. eves: Peter'• Landini. 2 br, 2 11 family rm, full liv. rm, Studio E. Side. uUl pd, Spacious 3 Br Duplex 661·0252. _ Wkl y/ Mnlhly
675.9821 CM 925.2873 Condo. 3Br 2~ ba. encl ~ pool, tennis, sec. frml din rm, COIY kitch, pvt yd, or aboppi.ng $325 k25. Pool&laundry fa c. 2br, lba, view. S4SOl mo: TSL MGMT 642 1603 DES'8tATE! Hemet. · patio, frpk , bltn kitch, ~ 213-m.3629 laund rm & many many mo.,,~,, ..r.1 S43-9556
N t B C h dbl ..J.--so .,.........., 2br.2ba,S.SSO/mo E Blurrs Condo. •Br e w po r ea gar w .,.,.,r. •• . '"... 1244 extras. 75e-8974 "
Versailles 2br . 2ba. OCEAMV1EW RonSay97~S370 •••••••••••••••••••••••B LUFFS CO ND O ... wportleoclt J76f EASTSJDE. clean 2 BR. 493-0467 3Ba. sundk. pool. S8i5
patio, frplc, pool, Jae. Moving to San Diego? 2-Fta-"'CH WOODBRIDGE3 Br J ~ r d . ••••••••••••••••••••••• encl gar. '425 mo + S410 Big 2 br nr Dana mo 645 347~. t2 131 Harbor & Ocean View. See ocean & Mt-Helix _._ 5o"ll • ~ Bay ront 3 br. en, 3 ba. Luxury Oceanfront security. 251 16th Place. Harbor, adults. D 25081 ~1 4460
quick sale By Owner from hillside, \<Jaere Oak parquet flooring, Ba . Condo. $575/mo. StOOOmo Agt644·1133 Weekly.2or3Br.Comp. Apt.B,nopets.Call evs, La Cresta . Owner.
SI 3 2 . 0 O O f ir m home Privacy. Fruit patio cover. gardener, ;r3k ~7~4_>83J·~t>~; . . f urn. incld linens . 979-3848 494.6848 1804 Clay Nwpl ll,::hti. 2
(213)821·794.9 trees. Separate garage. lovely M esa Verde (213)498-609(). WESTCUff AREA 641).4784. • * * _ Br I Ba Near ~!'hoob s/ ---sundeck Perfect for 3bdrm , 2ba . 1825. Jbdrm Condo w/pool. MlritaCoM H•llt4Jfoftleoch 3140 No pets $535 m o oug:.::s-. I IOO professional couple or 771-2007 days, &'1·9087 Nice 4bdrm, 21,.;ba house, Ve r Y P rivate ! 0 n Fantastically furnished ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 0349
investor S1 2s.ooo. eves 2 frpl c. or shopping Rutland Rd.Adults only. townhouse, with ocean 19361 BrookhurstSp.26
••••• •••••••••••••••••• 54.5·5420 1 j . S500 ca II 675-6646 or view. Tenni11 court. pool v"ouunatrlenlhegton..,;~.,8ecrhor lv eBrrs a i· Pl I ee sn tC'h·?nud~oe· ur. "'I 1HE S ...... D For lease, 4 Br. 2 Ba. center, poo , ac, tennis. ..~ .. 3622 .. ...., v "'""" """" S725 ""''l -'" ft 6PM ......,. $925/mo. 76G-9117 lalbooP-.0..,.L o.tof Stah Home i n desirable .o1.1 --.ua er · ---------1 2 frwHdrefl SS251mo
Seconds to the water Property 2600 neighborhood. Children Woodbridge Townhome. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Steps to beach. ($14 Value). to 968-5133
Excellent 3 BR owner 's •••••••••••••••••••••••• pets OK. nso + utils. 2 2bd ILb $750. Property House. le• c..-. : 01.~.1-~~~~io&lc9801)11 .
"home·like" unit & 2 40A scenic Oregon Coast. 751·877lor547-9733. story, rm. ).,... a. M2-3850or642-1010. Aprll2J\hru25 • p0•0·;,·A·,: 'Room •
BR 2 ba. -ntal un1"t Electricity, fenced, out-pool/.mote. 7n!.ios1•~. lake. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i Con . · '" d . · · 4 Br 2 Ba Redwood Spa $600 ..-.., Harbor View Homes·3Br, G ral 1102 Anahe m vention • G••Otn l•nO\C~p·nq Ideal for home & in-stan 1ng vtew. access•· · · • d r nMft• t ._ Center • J~ 10 eucn & snop\ come. C~ to Newport ble, owner492·2499 ne~r Bear" Paularino. 2 Woodbridge Nice 4 Br 3ba en. am rm,&> ..... ' x ra ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ticket s must be ex-• Stt •a Gain
pier & s hop&. $289,950. R•at Est• cMhtldrenCoolt.;~ t6951.1...;..Slerra . super family home. c 1 ea n · 18 O O p 0 rt A"Mn FOil IBfT changed for reserved W .a. tl T--'-C • gmt ... -. $950 /m Renwick, corner lot , H.B .. N.B., Costa Mesa seats at the convention
Rflllton 644-49 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl900/mo. 4 Br, rum. or un· Waterrroot Homes, Inc. 975 .0040 dys, 640·5836 •
SEA ENVIRONMENT
% •i ••fl,,_11 TC1N t• H
~, ... 4'°100 • Y .,_.. 0• bc"-cJt 2100 . . . mo. comm pool, S97S mo. Somethin.aforEve~one center ahead or llme.
r / I 836 Realtors 6311400 Bach. to • Br. U um. Call 642·5678, ext. 272 to
11tc ... Propeny 2000 Hca~~o:O.!:! ~:~:t3'a~~ p':.:,~dio ~.~~ · Oranae Tree 2 br. 2· ba. evs. Afts. Certain locations claim your tickets. ---------
•••••••••••••••••••••••Nicklaus golf course & 546-3170 • Hrbr View Hmes. 3 Br 0 fer : Pool , s pa , *** 2 &c 3 Bedroom s .
ArPU VAi.LEY Wildomar, trade for lot. ~:~it~::~. ~!,~25· Am98 · 2ba. frplc, beaut. carpel· ~~ef~~ed 1~'!'h ir::'!1: lbr, nu carpet & drapes. $40()..$4SO. Kids OK, no Near n ew 4·Plex, 2 land , motorhome . 2Br, lBa, wshr/dryr, o;o lng and yard. No pets. 11 b .1 . Ad 1 petsS3lO/ pets please. Wate r /
bdrm. 2 bath each Wlil 678-2534. garden, couple only, sm aBCTALS $825, l yr lse. 644-7220 or ~~r~~~s, lea To,:~~~·:.s~1 ~~no mo. Trash Paid. Carport.
with fireplace. enclosed child welcome, S500 mo. 2br l~ba $550 549-8755 design. 964-Z566or97J.2971. Agt..
patio, double garage R...tab tst Is last-$200 sec. 3br Zba $675-$775 TSL MGMT. 642-J603 tbdrm new ape., xlnl I~. no fee
Sl65.000. Bill Grundy, 673-3614 3brZba Sl250Fum HarborV•tc.oll 1787 Oranee. all built·
Rltr. 675-6161. ;;::;·;;_:.:;;;••00 Uperaded 3 Bdrm 2YI Ba lolloo P11•• 1tll• 3107 ins, cpl/drapes, adults·
-SPOTLESS 3 br, 2ba townhouse. Avail. aft ••••••••••••••••••.••••• no pets $31.S/mo avail INCOME PaOPHTIES ••••••••••••••••••••••• h o m e I n n I c e 4/20. S950on leue. Drive S3so Util pd. lBR Duplex. May tst. 646-7993
Looking for income un-IGlboo P1 L 1.ta l I 07 neigh borbood. Dis-by 2706 Hillside Dr-&call 417 E. Bay Ave. Balboa
2 Bdrm, 2 ba, cpt.s, drps.
dlw. encl gar, Beach & 5
Points area. $430/mo.
842-8032
its!! We have S pro· ••••••••••••••••••••••• hwaaher. fprlc. & patio. 1-568-9343 or 1·346-2034 No pets. 5'7·1155 l Br. Quiet, secluded. perties U\ C.M. Pnced Attractive 2 Br. 1 Ba. 3090 Murray Ln, '625. for info. ---------pool, well landscaped. Large 3 BR ~l;'J ba, with
right at l ess than patio, garage. Avail. 714.744.1307 ---------11 BR. yrly leue, cpta, crpts, drapes. No pets. garage. Kids ~ pets
llXGfoss. No bank 4·22 thru 6-15. $375/mo. Newport Crest 3bdrm , drps, atv, refrlg, gar. Agent 731.6829 or welcom e . 1 mile to
financing required. In· 213/446-6247.. Almost new 2bdr, condo. 2~ba, ocean view. over· Avl 6-1. $4.50. 873.0834 or, S•fMl574. ocean. $600mo. 9&t"2937
lerested'>TilencaUus. D p ..._.. 1126 2story,2~ba.frplc,att. looks tennis courts, 213-277·4640
1 _. o..... 2 car gar w/opener. u.5z2c ,. ... 1 "-I frplc. cloae w beach. ---------1
NEI
,,tm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail May l, $675/mo. .,. ~ A rv5Mll~ R\lb(f $850/mo. 842-1272. Coro.a .. Mer 3122
Deluxe !'ew house com· ChHdren olt. 548-3561. ••• •••••••••••••••••••• plete micro etc. SlOOOtno W 0 0 D B R I D G E Npt Hgts. beamed ceil-Spacious l Br w/garage, APAltTME:MTS
Vacant spac. cath. pen·
thouse, 3 Br 2 Ba. xtra
clean, dbl gar $595.
536-8610
UJlij!l._OJ fl'l'. 493-0WT Cbarmlna duplex, newly "CREEKSIDE" Willow ing, 3br. 2ba, frplc, 2 car laundry r.cll. ~:-mk ee~utllul landscaped
714 641-0763 Li .. • leecta 3141 decorated, 2 Br 1 Ba, 1st Plan. Proreulonally 1ar, encl yd, $750/mo. for Faye. 640-8800 garden apt.a. Patios or 2 Br 1 ba. '475/mo. Patio.
2787 Brislet St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• & last, $5.25. 311 E. 21.st landscaped Model home year lse' avail 5/4. decks. Pool & spa. Heat f!r 18702 D. Demion
Steps to bch, 3br. 2ba
cpts/drapeslfrpk yrty'
lse. S750/tno. 642 3443 ~·
Quiel 2 Br garage. pool · Adults, no pets 1601 .. D ..
15th St. Newpor~R
Heights. $450. 642·7340 , - --
E. BLUFF: 752 Amigos'
Way 11. 3br 2ba enc.
gar. $650. 2br 212ba ene:
gar. S650. Taking ap·
plicatlons Sat & Mon.
5 -7 pm , Sunday
!H2:30am.
Nwpt Hghts Duplex 2 Br ..
l Ba. Adults, no pets.
SS25/mo. 517 Bolsa:
Da ys 631·~. Eves &i
Wknds 448-5041
Npt. Terrace 38r 2' 2 bac
frplc. newly dee agt
S670, agt. 891·6~
!~~ ............ ?~.~,
Security apts, lbdrm &
2bdrm. util pd, adults,
no pets. From S37S,
836-5506.
WntMlltstet-319 Costa Mesa. CA Char-'n" lbdrm on St, tA. 831-5067 on the part. 4 Br. 3 Ba. 2 644-4751 or64$-3363 2 Br. l Ba. New crpta, "'•id, covered parking. ne. 87S.2965eve . ... I .. s F Din n . ·-d r I r •••••••••••••••••••••••
be h do kl... tory. am rm.. .. oonna "' rpa, l'P c, Adulta, no peta. l or 2 • -1 B / 4 _ _._ ________ l ac . no P or ..., MaaVerde,beaut.Sbr,2 frplc, dishwar, micro· S•Jw ~o, earport. Nopeta. penonsO&. ~rge r wgarage, lBdrm . $28S /mo .
20 UMn5 C.M. ue-uM5 ba , 1 fadmberm, lrpltt, wave. S8.'!0 mo. No pets. Copl1tr.o 3271 . 781).1713 2Bdrm.1 Ba. f470 ~::S~~m~~01~ ~!~s~ ~!~,d~'!b_~~~~1i' 1~~
Beautiful 1 year old Mew,......_. Jl6t vau te apie ce · 984•2566· Aaent,nofee. •••••••••••••••••f••••ed•• LARGE LUXURIOUS 28drm.2 Ba. 1485 dep ~q Call536-75'2 appt.847-3&60evesonly -
T h • e U it• ••••••••••••••••••••• •• inp, fenced yd ~ patios, 2 Br 2 Ba fam rm. enc • • • :118 w Wiison 631 5583 · · -own ou n ·LI ISLE ha . nr scboola Wat.er incl ...... hed 1241 bacltyrd,enclosed2car PRIVATE •. New · · · Century21/SURF ,_111._ ~~=~1903 bdoo 2 bathc p1armanam3 '7SO/mo .• 3808 · ....................... rr. Vehicle storaee tbdrm , frplc d h· lBdrm. $405 LUXUIY At;~':;=:.;.;:;3,~
TS Ju~'rem•red>'7f850 Be 1 , Within walkin1 dhlstanc:._ 475/mo ht. last &c hw.,her,automaucaar, 1s1 E.18th.642·0856 A ... -. ... -•••••••••••••••••••••••
llrwpOIJ Bflf'U mo to mo. 8U1 Grundy auti ul new condoll 1or to tennis, sc ool "' security deposit req. Ira deck, avail May i.t. .--..~""'"'~ SEAWIN~ r.w IK.RllR 87s.etal ' rent. $650. Dbl 1ar dwntwn. New, beaut. 751-2585 $.550.875-1018. l Bdrm. $400 Lg apta ln tush 1andacpd
1.5" do~~ ..:::::e . ~::.e~:!;nc~;~e 10 ll,'1,.~ ~ti':~in: hate>... lJIO SOUTH-c>FHWY ~~:: :r!i:::,fna~'~·tow~h.~
lotna · ... .,.. l\CdM 0
1 CANNERY VLLG. 2 rmwlfplc,vlewofocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lrc ' Bdrm 2'-t Ba, & 2Br a vail from TIUPL1~:S~ M 00 bdrm 2 ba Mobile home. Townhouse Eutalde 2Br. "hllla from every room. lbr, 250/mo + ut.ila. Call newer bldt. Sl400/pr MonUcello2Br.2 Ba. end $395-"460mo. Adltaonly.
ociean.a PLUS · $'7SO/motwu. lYt Ba. 2 Sty. a &;sold, 114soo mo. 875·4117; Steve, day• 8M·l110; mo. Ask for Darrell unit, paUo, praft. 2 HuntinatonContlnental
d 1 d 1 VERSAILLES 28drm ear. No peg. /mo. -7877 tV• 5*1MI. Pub.131-1288 KJdt, l pet. $550/mo. Apartments t•o up nea an ' 87$-11.D •----maT A 17I01Springdale HB trt~x lo a row 00 1llb .. 2ba lunry furn pen· Loury 2bdnn 2ba view ~ L...-1116 CotN .._ M24 *-=-• 1. st.. <7l•> w• St Balboa Penluula. Utouse condo. Short ,....... be m1 ·'-I; 1r1i ••••••-'•••••••••••••••• oofee. oDly l lot h'om sand and term · UllJune. llOOmo. Nice dean 2 Br. 1 Ba. i'.o .. ~'l" uUl~ M~;·d~unt OC£AHFRONTHOllE •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• 1-9-r-,-1-8-a_n_e_w_e_r Aval). now 2 Br. 2 Ba. up-
aarf. ~blolut.ty pr1.mt Waterfrontffomea, Inc. =lad=·~·::. forHrvl•.•OOM. O')o0b pvt beach, 2 br, towalaome, •dlte, 110 atain. frplc, dahwr, propert.a.. RaUort Al·WOO + 1-r· -~ bai_~• d.ln. rm, Ila pea .... -. lll-8085. balcony fJ carase .
-Oraact"C" .... 2'7'11. Beaut. a BR 2 Ba. apec· ~/mo.•ma. a1·11'1 Water/trash paid . l DUPLD~.,_ 2bdrm 111..rn . Mobile E. Side CbannlNI lbdrm Lacular lJO oeun vlw. child, no pett . •'75.
VILLAGE
New 1"2 bdrm IWWl'f adult apt.I in 14 plat14
from S440, 2 bdrm froQ\
'505 + pools, tenni11 waterfalls, ponds! Gd'
for cookinl It heatl.D'
p.ld. From San Die&O
Frwy drlv• North 011
Betch to McFaddert
then Wat oo McP'addecf.
to Suwlnd Vlllaae< (?1')191-519. l
forao boet. boml.JW&,le .... Lldo ~d, 1ar. aiO paid, Spa, pvt ro.ct. t11S mo. ........... JJaa IAYft8m S 96'-2581orf11-2W7l.Art ..
.,0
1" .. ,;-;:,_ • ..._ Penha. AvaU May 1. Imo.~ · tl1 ·1851: Todd, ••••••n••••••n• ..... • "°'"· ....... 4~ __..~.._ .. -7 17J.11U. 111-240-ton Smalllbdnn,lblatot~ Ht1tpakl.Nopeta. SPAC10U818DRM ••••••••••••••• .. ••••" E. IWe Jbr, Iba, stovt, tn tile uul. ~ITS.' 28r,1Ba. "70-k71 Jbdrm, 2ba. dilbwas"9r, LacunaBeachlilotorlMi
llA.JlfY llANYMOa&r H U • , , • ,ct, util. pl, •no peta. Charm a bdrm, t ba m>-.lla a.ar I I• ... Lrs lliftlt ,.uo. ,,...., atovt, 1ar. S. + tlOO 115 No. Peclflc Co•M = .... a,..f c.tr••n we .1.1 IU Co1u M•aa St. boaff. PrivtcY. "r pool, iiitiw wu.oo.ui.sm 1tl1fi b••• celJl11~a. aeo . 1111 Cypreu . Hw,y, La1una Btacb .
... .,. ....................... 7t04FM ttcu\lt bch. Oate pard r.-. 12'1 . ···•·ta elN•t fll· IU-IM3. ~11,, W•lY. Klcbrii
H7 .... ,.7 ..... ,. t Sn 1207 ,.... ....... A•111.' -mo. Anll ....... _"_ ...... 'hllln1 .... mall ...,. ............. t:rr· M• lBr apt. ·Blka f"'o-A\'aUablt. Low Whlt•t ............. -.... .... u. u.---' llD'"-__ ,._,_ .. .., toMlbl• It, ___ .. , to l•udrt .... -" • I ... ratea '94..saM, Tlllilrt'• •...,•er for tHr• """' ~le, ...................... , • ' ..,,.._. -",,rNiiis~a i\;t.e. tit• ncc1'Horaa1 k 7et . ....-· t•ar:t.. hlO/mo. um. ·
,... ..... dMat '*Jdt ........ I .. .. • ••• a..,tprte darla1 Lill: .. 4'i I cw..... .u..~,,,.. ur' .............. ave '·'hi Kltc ha .,. ,.. •-.. ... Ult II& A•llllil8r lit --...i• ~ •,.. ako, Mt '9, Wlllaf •· POOi • _. 's A' ,our• l1 lletecl la '461-111 l9A pUuc• tac.hided. s.. -H.tllf.• It la t~e _. .+ .......... tviufablw dep. AYI. 11r ""8L ~aao. CUI rrwp.-< /mo. Cali CloeUled, pboat t dtlld,_ oa.1' ...... apt. ti., Jin ChltalO, ~ ·-J!lcal•~ •1ee.fTl. .. afttpm. f.141 ..... :__ ..... ...... ....,., lff·M16..--...;l(.;.;.;';;.,18.;._~-----....... -
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C&eanJnc bl YGU-" bo&ne.
Coulnldion·Alll1l* T1115 HOUSECLEANING Movl111? Ta. Starvlol LLOYD"SN'URSERY 6 PROFESSIONAL re· TrH/Sbl"tlb trim. re·
IOy::.:l.FTMtM. Topped/removed; clean JSOURBUSINESS! ColleceStudeottMovlll1 LAND9CAPEC0.1NC aumuemee.To,quali· mov., cleanupe, kul.
TlP·TOPCARPET6
PloOrCart. ..._
I.Jc. # NS-WIS "P8· ta.a renov. 151•8474 J•nlce'• Aauedy Ann, Co. hH srown. lnaund ~Ptrt '*' oontrol for ty, low t'Olt. Mi-100 Concrete dirt, etc. Jtm c t "Mditionl 8'75-2514 urne 1ood urvlce. tr", •hnib, tu.rf fs ln· •.-a.... 131·'530
25arpen ry ·"Jo.._ Y•rd c le•rlnc lawn fT124·06 Ltcenae. door aervlce. Free Eat . ..-.-. --0-K_T_R_E-.,.-C-.. -R-.. --,.~ .... • ...a ynexp .. 1m... -• ,._ I u-~•-i e41·842'7 Uc:SMST . ..,_7"3. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A .,, ~ .,, -... 1111&1: I.Jc 30tl52 Sd-2719 mowans . Colle•e St\l• Vt'llera ~oc•D DI _,,_ ________ I QUALlTYROOFlNG Trim/ remov.i.. bomal. ••••••••••.••••••••••••• · d'"'nt•. Reas. rat ea. Reljable, refa., trans. ..-T...&.. . A ti C.Uin .. • T ABC MOVING, Exper ,.. _ __, Alltypm,f'"est. •loplar)' an 1malt
cous c P CoronadtlM•rCOo•t Co. SST-7621 912-mio prof, low rates, quick •••••1••••••••••••••••• Vi11, MC. 541·5930 who)eaale. Free Ht.
+c\<oalhandtextwinl de1l1n con1ultation by ROBJN'SCLEANING careful 11ervtce. M2-0UO EXPERT PlANO tunln3 H.\RBOR ROOFING 5»-Z752 Uc.~ P2--5549 detlln d1r~tor. color H~ Se I llrepalr.MemberPTG . ---------C. .t/C ... altetchs & aJd ln obtala· ....................... rv ce-a tborouably TR E "MOVIN·MAN" la •~• -·• New • recoven. Repair ,.......,. ---HI f • Carpen\"" cabl.nets roof clean ~ 5t0-08S7 -40 I • _,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ina fin. 644-4219 1 '"ri' wnbiJla 'r" · Careful, courteous a. ---a pecl•l at/atay·busy ••••••••••••••••••••••• rouodatlona, Retaining"'"-.. reparsC, I A •· rAd ._..TCll •Cbeap. Please call ..... fw/R.,.... prlcn.ReJiable.5'1-0512SPANISH TEACHER
Walla HW.1de Reetora· ... ,-est. a nswer ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·1329 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nalive of Spain, prtv. lion.' SJ•bs, Patios. ••••••••••••••••••••••• U&l ,64.2·4S>0,24hn. TAX~AND Ne.tp•tches&texturea Le•kRepair-res/comm c lasaes, be&lnnlnf to
Bloct fr Bridt. Llc'd. DrywaUSp~clalist Hwdwoocl Roon INVESTMENTS ,..._CJ/P.,11 ""1 FT'ff est. lt:J.. I Ot 1st qua I. mat'I & labor conversation. He ena
MZ-1311 evesflllCH>539 Quodal. #It~·!'.!':.,~ re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ta" prep, shelters, TDs ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----Beat any bid. 631·9193 968·9882. M0-49'l9
rn . -· .._ . ...,_ HARDWOOD FLOORS Mr. Leonard. 661·9343. Fine ext/int painlin& by IOOR..u!. -'--5-1--REMOV AL· concrete Richard Sinol'. Uc, Ins. ED'S PLASTERJNO "9' ,,,_., .,...,.._
••••••••-• · ·Taping, Texture & Cleaned&Waxed "9IWGll Tryme.631-4410(24hrs) All types, repairs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• aaph, irading, lot clean· Acoustic "-'lin°• Fre... Anytime, 832-4881 S.A. ce All Types lnl/Ext de" ks. F----timates. Prof. Qlty typ1ng. Cass. "' .a.• up. aaw. break & re· vc• -· "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·8258 FREE EST. " '"'~ "'" "' llldµ move. Hrlyorbid est. Kevin. 675-9088, H ..... g AUTO RISK QUALITY PAINTERS Call Bob548·CT169. transcriptions. phone
••••••••••••••••••••••• S4i-241l · 613-1503 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cancelled?SR·22's? BARGAJN RATES INT./EXT. plaster -----diet . letters. reports.
Driveways, parking lot Bectrf al Haul, cleanup, concrete Low monthly rates Free est. 848-5684 patching, JO yrs exp ~.~~!.~r.~••••••• forms. resumes. term repairs, sealcoatlna. Pool decks , patios, c removal.Dumptruck Pirkellnsur. 646-3995 r NeatS4S-2977lPauJ) papers . envelopes. ~~c~d.Aaphalt. 646-4&:11 masonry, sport court, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quickserv.642-7638 •STEVENSPAJNTING -----Burglar•Fire~Scanners • labels. disc volume .
.,.. tennis cour ts. Lie. ELECTRICIAN -priced L.ct1caplng tnt/ext. Free iteml:ted PoolSer•lce,Repaln S.a res•Phys1cal \Bar· Work guar MarJah
----------• 37 087 .-.. ·~ C118 right, Cree estlmate on DUMP JOBS ••••••••••••••••••••••• est.Neat.quality work ••••.••••.••••••••••••.••• riers C.M./N.B S&S 636-0756 C.,._,t., 4 .asi ........... 7-7 largeorsrnall......... s p JSe 646-'811 r--"""' Small Moving Jobs Reoovattng.ftototilling 540-456J wamming oo rvace
••••••••••••••••••••••• THOMPSON'S Lie #396621 673-~ Call MIKE646-l39l Sprinklers-lawns-clnups ----Reliable Repairs/Acid 5.1..-C-a--a... --Video RKOrCllN)
DOORS&WINOOWS CONCRETECONSTR Oave6'2·4853 Inter/Exler/Refinishing Washes Reas.557 2783 .:~ •• ::=;?•••••••• Le•••••1••••••k••••d•••••••• Repaired or Replaced Li . . D.G. ELECTRIC Hauling & Dump Jobs Bud646-8481 ce11ings/wallpaper. Lie . -. t P aybac v1 eo cap. Free est. 635·3720 c.3&3383. 64.2·8482 lndus./Resid./Comm. Cain4'Sons 898.5105 17 yrs exper. working Porta~leSteamc;ieaning ture your ner<t party,
----------1ChHd Ccre Quality work, free est. Ask for Randy. UMOUaa.. R...tal ---w/all makes of equip. Engines. machmery-wedding or any special
All Types Remodeline & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lac. 400143. (213)867-3857 64l·84Z7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAV ~S PAINTING State contractor's he & No crpts 963-9925 event on video tape. En·
RA!palra. top qualHy · 17 $]I. tOIWK Floors ff A U LING & Q u 1 c k ·~1 Cad Stretch Limo Serving area 9 years ins. Porch Construcuon file JOY tt again & again in
yn in area. Lic'd. Mr. Hot lunch. C'.M. Chris· ••••••••••••••••••••••• CI~ a n . U p , Free Orient rugs-tv·stereo Reas. ins, llc. 760-7301 Co 673 3316 ••••••••••••••••••••••• full color & sound. We
Palombo; 962-S3l4 tian Preschool. 646-5423 CRPT, UNO, WOOD Estimates bar -phone. S30/hr + PAT ESSIAN ,-.0-. lox R-...tal-s Hun~ leadl ~,!r~o~~tp0rotpea~~y. fig~! C~ ir~•--Installed/re ,,; ........ L1·c. 631·09S3 203 · 496-8364, 831·3046 • ....,._. • -P"""' __..._ ~p ... ,._.. CUSTOM PAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tile Co. or business for an ac·
•Sh••••••••:_••t•••••••1 •••• Xhti;,t mc:re :'u tu~;~ i ~·~~ #369260. Greg 499-2652 Tree/shrub trim, garag; Masonry Int/ext Material-labor Irvine/Newport PoSI of Ceramic New re mod. curate inventory Reas
ampoo ~seam c eao. • G..-.~ & yard clean-ups. Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• guar Free est. 95~9810 rice boxes unavailable" reas rates. 675-2284 rates Call642·232S Color bnghteners, wht lunch /snacks. S57·8658 ...., l 557 827I BRICKWORK: Sm a II Rent a Box from -
crpts 10 min. bleach. Ca..'--SerTlc ••••••••••••••••••••••• es · · Jobs. Newport, Costa WALL,ArEllNG privately·owned postal TILF: INSTALLATION Window Cleaninc)
Hall. Uv.-di.n. rms $15 : ~ " •VERYLOWPFUCE.5• H la-'--Mesa. Irvine. Refs . Prof. installed. lst roll service. THE M1\I L Floors. Kitchen, Bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• .., so h $ o •••• •• ••••••••••••••••• Landscape malnt-clnups OttS•c .... -"' T s " avgrm ... :couc 1 : N rt Cleanin Se • • 675-3175 huno fr ee . Don . SUITE. 549.4733 for Reliable Craftsmen "Let he unshtneln Cbr ••. Guar. elim. ""' ewpo g rv. George, 549-2015 • • ••• • ••••••••••••••• "' c w d .., .,...... w --1·639·1429forfreeest rates/services Rogers Tile Phone allSunshine in ow odor. Crpt ~pair. 15 yrs Car Pet· UP ho_ I • --ant a R.,EAI.LY ~LEAN EXPERT BRICK & 631.0458 Cle:ining, l.td !>48-8853
up. Do work m yself. Housecleaning, Win· CLEAN-UPStLAWN HOUSE . Call Gingham Masonry Small jobs & *•PA INTING-Don't Post Box OC Airport ~
Refs 531·0101 dows Hardwood firs, M a I n t e n a n c e Gari. Free est. 645-5123 repairs. F'rplc facings Call Unless You Care! He_wport 549-2287 Wind ow Expert
wrndow!>. blmds. s<·reens
& mirrors. Rt!as Oepen· .
dable FreC' c~l Gene
545 0225
No Steam/No Shampoo
Stain specialist. fast Find what you want in
dry. Free est. 839-1582 Daily Pilot Classifieds.
· 631·9277 Landscape Refs. 551 ·4555. 760-7074 536·9801 (24 hrs> We Care Carpet Cleaners Free est. 642-9907 Expertise housekeeping, __ _ 'roperty ~m.ttt
Steam clean & uphols. C IHOUS_E & OFb FICE G ef q u. i ped& s u PP lh1 es Small jobs wanted. Brack Placing your Classified ••••••••••••••••••••• •• W o rlt gua r. Truck ea n 1 0 g Y Pro GARDa.IH urmsh ·trust wort Y & and Block Low hourly Prof sen ace to sa\t~ )OU
mount unit. MS-3716 Cessionals, reas price, W AMTtO dep 64 l·497o rate. 499· 12216 aft. 6pm ad 15 50 simple Just time & money. Newport
free estimates. 847-0886 Mowing, edging, raking. --- -give us a call on the Pac1rit R. E. 645-3683 s weeping Free WE ARE BUILDING al AllTypesMasonry phoneandwe'llhelpyou
eMimates. 646·0944 or reputation. not resting I Very reas Lir. bonded word your ad for fast re-
645·5737 on one. 979 1066 Bob S48·2753. SJS.9906 suits. 642·56'78. Classified Ads 642 5678
Custom tile 1nstallallon.
firs. ktt, bath~ & related
remodeling, free est
Roger lr"ang979 6160
The fastest draw m the ~est . .a Daily Pilot The fastest draw m the c;lass1f1ed Ad Gall To· West .. a Datlv Pilot
day 642·5678. Class1f1ed Ad 642·5678.
IOOM1 40oolR...tah to Shen 00 Office R...tal 4400 Office Refttal 4400 Office Refttal 4400 Commercld
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••··~··••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• R9'ftfal1
Mort9aC)H. Trvst Mort9aqes, Trust 5020 Deeds 5035 Deeds 5035
Lake Forest. utils pd, Rmmte wanted to sh.r lge
kit/lndry priv. rec fac, condo nr SC Plaza.
$250. 586-4038. Sauna. pool, jacuzzi.
Nice lrg bdrm. util paid,
ldlch priv. Lndry. lady.
Sl95. C.M. 545-9857
Private bath. Available
May 1st. $250 + ex·
pens es. Call 557 35Z7 or
759-0060
Small charming (urn. Luxurious 4br hse in
guest house Ill garden, Hunt. Harbour to shr
$60/wk. 49'-9575. __ w/34 yr old Physician on
Hohh, Mohfs 4100 canal, 2 blks to bch: 30'
••• ••• •••••••••• ••• •••• boat dock. ocn vu 2500
Balboa Inn oceanfront. sq ft on 3 lvl. All amen.
Low winter rates. Daily Avail. 4/15. SSOO/mo. 213
or weekly. }(jtchenetle. 598-4387
$90 & up. 61S.8740. --. ----''--------1 M shr 2br C.M. apt, Jac.
Yearly. Hotel Apt Room. pool. $200. Neat. resp,
kitchenette & bath Utils nonsmkr. MS-8398
paid. S.280mo. + sec~i-Roommate -;;nted .
ty deposit. 2306 · Ma ter Bdrm private
Oceanfront. Newport bat~. Hunt. Bc.h. S225 +
Beach. 67~4154 1-'J utils Call Steve
Yocaffotl l...tals 4250 842-9810.
~;;;:·t:·~~~·~~;:~;;~ Share lge 2br, 2ba. duplex
s leeps 4, rent wkly. Lag. Bcb. North end
673-1633 lndry tac, carport, ocn
vu. $275/sh.r util 497·4104 •NWPT. OCEANFRONT ----------
wkly lux. 2·4B R Call
613-SURF ----------
Lake Arrowhead cabin.
Easter vacation,
Memorial Wknd, sum·
mer days. sips 6. For in-
fo 497 .2057
MAUI CONDO, 4/30-5113.
'$50/day, sips 5 Call Vi.
646-1769, 7S!H500
ltwtals to Shen 430C ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving? Avoid deposits
& cut living expenses!
Professionally since
1971.
*** GeMH~ 366Avocado
Costa Mesa
You are the winner of
2freeffcbts (S14 Value), lo
luC=s Aprit2i\:25
Anaheim Convention
Center
Tickets must be ex-
changed for reserved
seats at the convention
center ahead of time.
Call 642·5678. ext. 272 lo
claim your tickets ••• HOUSEMATIS
832-4134 1 blk to beach. non-smkr:
----------1 $250 + hOO dep + 1'J •S...,...U.'-9• utils.5/l.642·2199 Counselors to personally --
select your compatible Female rmmte wanted to
rmmte to suit your share lrg. 2Br apt in
Ufeatyle. Shared-Uving. Costa Mesa. $275/mo
833 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB 54i-2244.
631·1801
FULL SERVICE SUITE
ORANGE COAST
FINANCIAL CENTER
2845 Mesa Verde Dr E.
lt6. Costa Mesa $375 per
mo. + security deposit
lnrludes all utJI . use of
library/conference &
telephone answering
Secretarial area avail
at $175 per mo. James E
Ounger Attorney
957·1414.
nAZA
EXECUTIVE SUITES
"There is a difference."
714/752-0234
2082 Michelc;on #212
2021 Business Cntr 11'213
1617 Westcliff N.B. Want
finanrial inst 7000S.r
Isl. noor. Agent 541-5032
KOLL CENTER
NEWPORT
Elegant executive suites
in prestige location
With complete support
services.
714 /851-0681
BEST RATE
NEWPORT BEACH
600 to 4200 Sq. F1
•Janitorial Service &
Utilities Included
*Adjacent to Airport
& Restaurant Row
•Acress to 3 Major
Fwys
833-8813 ----
NEWPORT CENTER
FulJ Service Suites
$CUTCOSTSS
All you need rorone
monthly fee!
64()..5470
*DELUXE OFftCES *
1 to 3 room offices. No ---------M/F lo share beaut. H.B. lease requin:d 2172 Du.
home. Pool. Diving Pont Dr. Adj. Airporter
Board, AIC, Skylight, Hotel. 1133-3223. 9-12
Fireplace , ----
Was her /Dryer + Prof. CdM Deluxe Suites. AC.
rum. Call Gary 955-2373 ampl pkg, uUI pd. ZSSS
Oideat & largest agency
in So. Calif. since 1W71
Cttdlta: ABC,NBC,CBS,
Cosmo. Phil Donahue
•Vaoff•
to all who need• place.
Newport Beach, 841·1899
Garden Grove, 811$-3482
Rmmte wanted clean,
quiet, non-smkr . 2br ,
2ba. Ya blk from bcb
Roommate to shr 2br on E. Cst Hwy. 615-6900
bch /Balboa Penin. HWPTP84ttfSUU
$250/mo. lnc utll. gar, Exec offices In elegant
Jndry. Avail immed. surroundings. Across
Mike 673-8117 from City Hall. All sup. ----------1 port ser vices avaiJable.
FOUND: Young Med Size From 225 to 4750 sq.ft.
Mix Shepherd Blk/Gold 613-3002
!r7&·6'1l7 --,-7-.. -S-Tl_l!ET __ _
....... Costa Mesa 3 rm suite. fier•..t' 4350 AIC. Plenty ot parking.
545 sq. ft. ~per mo .
HIWPotrt.llACH Realonomics 675-6100
2000 aq ft oi be&uutully s
•••••••••••••••••••••••
decor•ted o(lke apace 230 E. i7th. t.
P .. N t available for 1eaH with FRCOOSTM 7~ MSQES. !... ar .. ewpor all attractive " r •
Steve 845-59
townhoute, 11ht w/prof. furnlahlncs anll. for 165-900 sq. ft. air cond.
pe.non. Heaitb apa, ten· aale. 833-tMeO aat for office 1ulta for lmmed.
n\a, etc. M0-7•. Rocky. occupancy. All utils, 11.ture/F to w beaut __ ..;,_. ______ , jaoltorlal aerv., conf.
Nin 2br 2~ba twnbH !!'Sld~:=-ce. rm., partbaf. Call Terry
flf•t H1t1 USO/mo 4*0lOO cr ... mu:SM-9000.
... TU&ew -......-------Office...... 4400
Roommate1 2 br, 2 ba •••,••••••••••••••••••• vtew •pt. Put .,,,.wport. ~...i .....1n -1 ....... -Cultom, ..-;uuff"' ce, -mo. --409 1q. ft. Pvt bath w\Ua ~ to 1br hlrnlahed lhoWer. Balboa P.aln.
Mwpt rw. PriT be, 1a.r. •mo. to 4ID
eatraa. l eremy ...
AJIPOIT .UIA
Furul•bed or un· f.arnlabed Executive
Sutt. in lnine, waltln«
dlaitnce to Airport. All
aervlcea avail. Yo.ar
Seentary or <>-an. 2021
Bu1lou1 Center Dr.
Sult. SU Tl4/~
MIWPOIT llACM
\ or 2 omc. •/rteep fl Prime loc.
PERFECT
LOCATION
40Sfwy./
Harbor ll•d.
2210Sq. Ft. o.a..x. office.
On-litelllCJlllf.
FULL SERVICE SUITE·
ORANGE COAS T
FINANCIAL. CENTER
2845 Mesa Verde Dr E
116, Costa Mesa. Share
350 s q fl office wllh
another Realtor or comp
other small business.
$250 per mo. + security,
includes ut1ls. & phone
answering. Other
'services avail. 957-CTIOl.
9-5 daily.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
A/C
979-9997
Ocean view and double
offices in full service
suite now available at
"The Executive Office".
NEWPORT CENTER
644-449'Z
PRIME CORHER ,
COM.
2,380sq ft. avail 1mmed
For lease Hi~h identity
loc. on Pacific Coast
Hwy Ideal medical.
dental & R E.comm'lof·
fices. S2.380/mo. (below
market). Owner wall
neg. a remodel, Call Tam
Sloat ( 714 )752·8011,
(213)269-0364
NPT ICH SUl-l.EASE Shops, stores. etc 312
2000 sq fl, 5 luxury of sq.ft .. 12' tu w/lge dr. &
fices +rcpt area. On 210 sq f l. w /si nk .
·1 s JO M8·7249 Dove. 4 yrs av& at I. ----------
per s/f. Afternoons & ....,trialRfllhll 4500
eves call 714/857-4922 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Need investor to open a
Unisex Beauty & Barber
Salon. have over 80 cov-
eted awards. incl the
Australian World Cham-
pionships. Call Ken 714 ·84().1267
Mc.My to Loan 5025 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2n d TD . 1612'?. am · mortized for 20 yrs due
in 7 S75K max Bkr
937-5667
--------820 sq ft. office k50 MESA
MONEY AVAIL. for any
r eason . $20,000 to
$200,000 on homes. con·
dos & 2 · 4 units thru San
Marino Savings & Loan
Assn. No prepay penaJ.
ty. Fully ass umable
owner & non-owner oc·
cupied Very c·o m
petilive rat.es! Ask for
John Goode. area mgr ..
(7141752-8052 for COD·
500 sq rt ln Downtown OCEAN VIEW INDUSTRIAL
PARK Laguna Bch. street Costa Mesa 631-7770
level. skylites, 7SZ-0529
Luxury 1200 sq. rt. L.B
ocea n view
Sl .OOO /mollease
494-0066
525' Office Crpt. paneled
wall!;, gas & wtr rum.
Ground Or. Prkg. 2052
Newport Blvd. C.M. Dbl
unit (1050sq ft.I store or ore 556·4 lBl or 644·2228
OFFICE TO SHARE
In Corona del Mar. Call
644-8494,_ : ~ ~
1.25 Sq. Ft on
NEWPORT
HARBOR
1 .
I 035 Sq. Ft.
Plush Offt'ces
layYJ.ws
Pri•ot. Patios
Lots of Windows
Porill.g~
For the bUsiness man
Who wants to make a
good Impression.
w-.11.ost.
CaRToclay!
(714)675-8662
4450 •••••••••••••••••••••••
For store & office space
at reasonable rates
711W.17ftl. St .
Costa M.sa. Calif.
642-4463
l fidentia~ntervie)"
500 to 2700 Sq Ft.
MESA VERDE DR
PLAZA
Mo~4JH. Trwt
J.1870 sq ft. Unit avail. DHds 5035
for immed occupanry. •••••••••••••••••••••••
1-2900 sq. ft. & 1-3700 sq. Sattl..-MtcJ. Co.
ft. un1t (S) avail. April All types of real est~e
1525 Mesa Verde E. C.M
545-4123 I s t 2 St o r a g e mvestmentssince 1949
Prime LocaticMt Warehouses avail for SfMciali1:ilMJ !ft
1270 Sq fl on busy Bearh 1mmed occupancy. 2000 2Rd TDs
Boulevard·Huntington & 2800 sq ft . •D'·34• sq Beach. Ideal for real ft. •Leasing office hrs . 642-2171 545-0611
estate office. store or Mon thru Fri. 8·4 Sat -.---
other suitable business 1().2. Want investor for Npt
2 Private baths. availa --bayfront home Give
ble immediately. 10 8700 sq fl oH_ice + well secured Isl or 2nd Year lease. Allrartively warehouse. Irvine In· T.D. Agt. 675-6161
priced. dustnal. Call 646-1044 or
642•021, ext 286 inquire Marosi Co 16753
Weekdays Noyes. 957·9266 Bkrs
COtMMrciat
Retltal1 4475
• •••••••••••••••••••••• Store Space for lease
1500 sq. ft. & 1260 sq n.
in Huntington Beach
Flexible terms
2131596· 7202.
Coopmv1led
PACIFIC
BLUFF
INDUSTRIAL
PARK
HEW MEDICAL/ 1835 Whffffer A•e.
DENT AL 5' A.CE Cotto Mesa. Co.
New Suite on xlnt site •Two-1600 sq fl units
Water views, generous avail. for occupancy
tenant improvement al· May 1st. •31• per sq ft.
lowance. high identity! •Call 642-7604 or 642·«63
Contact Tim Sloat M-S8·4,Sat1~2.
752·8011. <213)269-0364_ Stor• 455
W Oftt 2 1-220/o Yi.tel? On your T.D. 's Notes
SSRa1sers·lnvestorsS$
Call DeMison Assoc
673-7314
---------------------. ...................... .
Use "'6tW!I At/ service
when placing your ad ... a
Oa ily Pilot ad number will
appear In your classified ad
Storage Warehouses in
Costa Mesa avail. ror
immed. occupancy. 2000
&t 2800 sq. ft. 3:1' per sq.
(t. Call 642·«63 Mon.
thru Fri. IH. Sat 10-2.
Lar_ge Single Garage In
East Bluff. S75
64().5296
RtwtahWlllhd
Youna prof. couple look·
ing for house with ocean
view to rent for weddin1.
In Sept. approx the Ith
lhru the 13th. Call D•.
Wolf at (213)m.5084 or
Ive. mesa.
Coron. del Mar. Married
couple aeeb 1or2Br UD·
"1rn. hoUle ~apt. with
r~asonable rent. Xlnt .
refa. Nb cblld, pet11.
213-38t·877•. ------_ ..... , ..... ,
, ... c. ••••••••••••••••••••••
. .................... .
Widow has money lor
2ND TD 's any size
above SI0,000. No credit
•. no pnlty. For action
call ACT 673 731 1
anytime
Mackeref Roh MtcJ.
SINCE 1981
1st&2nd TOs. SSOK SIM+
Owner t Non Owner
SF Rs & Condos
Commer cial & Industrial
PETER DOBBS
640-6016 673 9043
Real Estate al(ent will
pay 20'1 intere!>t on
S25,000 loan from private
part) secured by 2nd TD
on local single family re·
sidence with large equ1·
ty Lea\·~ message al
646·2821
LOW O/o R.ATE
2ftd Trwt Dffds
Low cost loans availa-
ble $20,000toSLSO.OOO. JS
y r loan. No pre
pa y ment penalty
Owner occupier.
l.AHICER5 HAT'L
MORTGAGE CO.
(714)731 ·5844
An established Orange
County Mortgage Bank·
ingCompany. ----
IHVESTMEHT
OPPORTUNITY
20'1 return on your in·
vested rapital serured
by a T .D. on Calif. R.E .
Invest 6 mos to 5 yrs.
SSOOO·SS00.000 Prin·
c1pals only. Call Roger,
( 714) 523·2840 Assoc
Mtg Co .. Downey, Bkr
Purrhase of 2ND T 0 . 's
arranged. For details
ra II
960 1957 Broker
.Announcements/
Personals/ Lost & Fa.Md •••••••••••••••••••••••
Announcetneftb 5100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Trnphy Guide -
Mouse Wholly
HISTORY
To l:l\'e you an idea of
how old he is. when he
went to s<·houl they
didn't have HISTORY
Happy Ads 5 I 20 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MAl(f: SOMEONE KAPPY
MAICE SOMEONE' SMILE
Place a HAPPY AD
10 this column
for only SJ 25.
Call642 5678
THE CA KE SURPRISE
Homemade cakes de·
It Vl red with a flower & a
smile! Stl.548·4364
. we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
In at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad·.
this service Is onlv S7.SO
week. For more lnforma ..
tlon and to place your ad
call 642-5678.
nve1t tn 1our futv.1
Low. tnlual blteatihtlal
ln •Intl• famfl1 "•· •ldence, AlbaqlMrqYt -Nn llnlc:o-ftla ett1 ot The r~ ,.,.. mst .._,.,..-ca,..._
IT'S EASY! Look for your nam• and addrtu ln t0iay•1
claa llk'4 ttttk>n. U you find lt, caU M2·SC78 Est. t72 alMI
we wtll arranat for you to pick .. ,..., tlt'k•tt •• Iii'
or write: OerW' A-.
.. CtrUtle N. It s.lte ·a~Alltllq.rnt7
1 nH rest omtt of tbt
H ... w-.. 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• 7100 IOoUIS• -ll!l!!llllll!l,l-..ll!!Plllllll-t
THE Babysitter want.ed, my a
mo old dauaht•r MC>fl· Glrffriends Thur, 8::.MS:~. Beacon
*ESCORTS• Bay, CdM, So. tiNwpt
Lott. Sbort-halred white
Cat, altered, deelawed,
"Ajax". Collar. Island &
Oceanfront , Balboa
Penln. REWARD. Dys:
&45-IMIOO ext 2584: eves:
675·5939.
HCNM/Offke/Hohf area. 646-8617 * 759 1"'16 * BABYSl'M'ERN~ed : 2 --------• • afternoons per week. * 529· 1883 * 2·6PM. M~t havA! car.
Lost. female Doberman 24.Hrs Now H.lring Call 644·~ aft 6PM or
pup, 5 I mo. Choe. & tan. MC VISA 759·3868 days. CdM
C h o k e ch a I n N r Banking
S .C.Plaia. REWARD.l•--------•I Ellper ience required.
551-4236. EXOTIC ESCORTS Utility clerk & teller
Lost: Vic. Altso Pier, sm •551-1946• M/F/V/H E,0.E.
shep mix Bandit face, Serving all of O.C. IARCLA YS IAHK
curley tail, long hair Contact Cathy Antunez
Bkkpr faro w/Consl. Co.
needs. Dependable,
w/ad tramc record. P /T
NB, CM area 6"-7917
Boat Cleaner M/F, p/l in·
cl wknds, no exper nee
$3.SO per hr. Apply btwn
9am & 2pm 11t 2633 W.
Cs t Hghwy , N .B.
64S 7100.
.
~·.'.':''"'
AIUCHAl•I Outltandlrul opportuoJty
for txperieoced con
atructlon d velopment,
rtal catat.e fuU char&•
bookkteper, toe rapidly
•Jt.,andln& multi· corporal• NB firm .
Ll1bt typlns req.
Constnlal tnvlronmeot,
benefita, pt'O(lt 11hario1.
major medical " op Npt Bch 558-8520
portunity for advance· Equal Opp Emplyr M /F
ment. Send raume incl
Salary Hilt & date• to
Pat Parkinson VP Quail
P lace Company uoo
Quail St. Swte lM, NB
92660 or cal l l (714)752·1920
IREAKFAST COOK
Full time permanent.
Sday week. Experienced
only. Good starting
salary & benefits. Apply
3-5PM. Jolly Roger. -400
So. Coast Hwy. Laguna
Beach.
CLBtK
Graveyard shift.
l2·8AM . 7·11 Store. Full
time. Experience pre·
ferred. Call btwn DAM &
l2noon. "6-0032
Clerk
MAIL CLERK
The Irvine o. has un 1m
mediate for a Mail
Clerk.
''Bjo rn ·· 499 4848. (714 )974·LOVE 63J.1511
499 4262 Christian Singles Assn
Meet Chnst1an singles
thrlf proriles or parties
PO 3832. Orange9266S.
Banking
Businessman seeks pit
•Bo-a·u-------•I associate in wholesale
supply. 754-1742
Mail C l erk
respons1b1bt1es include
sorting & dlstribut1ni.i
mail. setting up meetanl(
rooms & running er
rands If you are in
tere!>ted. pleai.e appl>
btwn 9 and 12. Mon,
Tue & Wed
Lost M1htury McCaw
Parrot Vic Verde Mar.
Villa Pac1f1ca complex
962·7967 REW ARO
JR TRUST DHD rACIRC
INVESTMIKT SEACRAFT CORP.
COUMSB.OR ·Boat Carpenter
fmoloy.....t& Needed for aggressive, •Man 4 yrsexper
Lost 12 mo old grey & 'nparatiaft young mortgage co We •Top Pay
hi F S • •••••••••••••••••••••• pay up to 23 or funded •4 day week w te chnauzer, Job W 7075 O 1 · home-cut uke Benji red s CIRhd. growth loan amount to n Y ex per 1 enc c d
II & n ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• qua lifted, lic'd R E personne l who take co a.r eal''.>llarwhen Doctors , repair o f person. Must have in prtdeinthe1rworkneed
lost n Laguna SIOO re· autoclaves, EKG mach. vestor followIDg . apply.
w( ard 499-3295, 549 7681 Reas. reli MDX 631-9229 A.M.C .. Bkr·Downey Contact Mike Howarth,
ans.service> (714)523-2840 751-1343
Help Wanted 7100 3301 S Susan St., S.A.
Found Baby Rabbit , •••••••••••••••••••••••---------•·----... ----•I 18th & Walla<·e. CM ACCOUNTS Banking 631 llW
Found. Pan. Cairn Ter
rier. Beige Golden tol·
or Fem Vic-Boh:.a
C hi ca H eil H B
840·6169
FOUND Golden
Retriever C'oll1e mix,
Chihuahua. Ket•shond,
Australian Shephl•rd &
Puppy , 4 German
Shepherd mixed pups.
Basset mix, Terr) poo,
Dobie m1>.. also t•atl> &
kittens Irvine Animal
Care Center 75-t 373-i
'A Y AILE New Accounts CLERIC
The Jolly Roger inc. has Co•~elor an A I P clerical position .. to> ror an industrious in· Experience Preferred
d1v1ducil General office Also part time positions
& or accounting ex~ available in our South
per1ence preferred Coast Plaza office Call
Xlnt benefits & working Kathy Amburgey
cond1t1on::. Apply 1n ~4066
pPrson at .
The Jolly Roger Jm·
17042 G1llellc A\ l" CALIFORNIA
I nine fEO[DIL 714 ~·03.11 UUl
t\D\' ERTlSING SALF-"i Sayings & LOC9t
l 'n1quc high po\\ered 695TownCenterDr
direct mJil program CO!>la Me:.a. Ca 9'l(;26
Sell to retailers Man} Equ.il Oppo11.u111t}
IOOICKEfPER
Part-lime. Must be ex·
perlenced in payroll &
payroll taxe:. + light
t yping & A tR, C1D
Work with l'O·owner
Mrs Herman in growing
typesetting <:ompany A
weeklyTues &Thurs +
2 Wed per month
Salary negotiable In·
terv1ew1ng from tpm
Spm llcrman Typo •
graphers . 180t7RI
Skypark Circle. ln·ml'
Ca II on I> 1f ner<':.:.a r)
549 2231
Bookkeeper.:.
•BOOKKEEPERS•
•CAI DRIVERS •
CheekerCab
770-0222
CARPENTBtS
wanted for residential
remodel. Must be ex
perienced. 631·2004
CAR WASH
Cashiers wanted Full or
part lime Newport, San·
ta Ana, Fountain Valley,
Cos ta Me s a Call
644-4460
CASHIER
Car w:.ish Will train
Santa Ana area Call
Leticia. 644·4460.
CASHIER
Full·t1me. 5 day wk. off
Sun & l day during wk
$4.00 per hr + Exper
req Photography
Unhm1ted, 16889 Heat'h
Blvd . H B
CASHIER
llOL'SEWARESALE.S
,\ pply in pen.on Cro" n
Hardv.are. HP.A lr\'lnc.
1We:.tchrr Pla£a >NU Found bm blk "ht big
pupp) 15th & Santa
Ana. C M 642 9283 repeat -.ales. generou:. ---•i;•:m_p.lo•)•e•r--•I
l'Om m 1:-.s1on Youn!!. Kelly Sen ices ha:. an CCHh~/Clflil
L Augustine
500 Newport Center Dr
Swlt' 25<1
Newport Beach
Equal Opp Emplyr M I t-"
CLERK TYPISTS
A maJor Newport Beach
mortgage b<1nking cum
p<1ny b looking for sharp
clerk typists to fill our
immediate opL•n1n g:,
timo prcv1ou.o., offH·e ex
pericn<·e del.irablc &
typrng requ1remrnt or
45wpm ne<·c•ssary These
are entry level po::.111011:.
"With good l(rowth pClh•n
t1:.il We oHt•r >.Int c-om
1rnny paul l.>t'ncf1b &
fr el' 1ni rk mi.: For J ppt
l'all 640 4.SllCI l'\l :z:t0::! I 1-. (I 1-;
Cieri.. & Xl•to\ l'OPll'r
opt•rator 2 I hr::. f)t.'r dJ)
!\1on Fri SJ 1111 hr
631 0055
enrrgct1c l!O·!!etll'r:. l'all ---------•I need for an a::.::.i~tant hdware :-tort· full llmt'. C'on-.tru<'lwn
D.a•~ Dt'tYw For rental 1\ore. Good
drlYlnt ~ Ovu 18
Saturdaya required
Wa1e1 open. Unitt-d
Rtntal, 710 W l9th, C.M.
845·0760.
o ... talA.ul5t.t
Chair side in N B Endo.
oltice 2'1'! day/week
Must be exp'd, able &
t!nthusiastic. Top pay
631·3380
DENT AL Ofc Insurance
& acct. controller. Must
be exper'd. Npl Bch
group pradice. 640-1122
DENT Al./ Assist
CHAIRSIDE. Min. 2 yrs
ex pr. 4 '• days week So
Laguna. Salary nel(otia ble 499 l:lSS
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Reg chairs1de dental
ass 't. 545·9475
Dental/Front Ofc
And Cha1rside. Fun at
mosphere salary com
mensurate w exp
645· 7580 Darlene
Dental
COMPUTER SERV.
REP
Tired of working an the
dental oHice. but would
hke to use the skills you
have acquired over the
vears m dentistry" An
xlnt opportunity. exists
with the team of
customer scrv1t·e rep~
for Scifeguard lle:.ilth
Care Systems. tht•
foremo ~t den
tal mcd1c·al cumputl'r
bllltng & information
system Expenenl't' 1n dental adm1n1qrnt1on
required. good \',·rbJl
skills & the ab1ht} to
v.ork well with people
Please c·all Linda
Oe,ork1n at
714 957~1121 ext =235 or
:.end re::.ume with :.alar.)
h1stOr) to Saft-guard
Health Care S):.lems.
22113 Fa1rv1cv. Hd Cu:.ta
\1r ~J CA 9:tli2ti
OPS MPS Found leather foothJll
engraved NAUDL'TS
Jamboree Rd 644 9672 Ne"' ConrepL-. PubhrJ ~
llllO!> 714 497 ~
1mmed1ate. temporar)I F:xp'd for '1.ir1nl'
Banking bookkl'<'per m Lhe lr\ine gd co benef1b l'Jll * $300.$60 0 WK •
Loan Shipping Dept. area Balboa Marine 54!J 91171. GN oul of the hot '>Ull & DESIGM
FHA/VA LOAMS EOE M F JI into our air l·ond off11·t•:-. ENGINEER Found Sml M dog
goldcn color. nu collar
\oH' Ellis W:.ird 96<! 36AA
Lost Lido 1:-.l<' Blu1• gn•)
male <.'utk;qmo pup
R e w a r cl Ii 7 :1 1 ·1:19 •
675 7150
,.\o.,semblcn. Ele<'lron1rs
lmrnl·d OP<'lllO!! for
final :.issembly pos1t1on .
1-: · ' p w 1 t h a 1 r
:.crC'"dnve r desirable
Small fr1cndlv Co nr
m·.-a n 645 :w;;i! ask for
Wt•.,
A l' I e rk posit ion 1 :-. Must have 2 >rs t-xper No e>.p nt't' Will lol'Jll' MfJO: co m Mission\. ll'J•i
available in our loan & be available for ap m11ffH·t•do-,t•sltovou area needs c>.per 111
wareho use s h1pp1ng prox 3 mo:!:o. Must be b1I CASHIERS 10022 lmpN1JI V.·:.i.' t'lectric·al l'Unnt·<·t11r:-. dept 1 n g u a I s Pe a k 1 n g L:n1 t E. lall aftt·r lllt\M he r rn et 1 l' :,. e :.i I~ .
Must have cxpenence in Japanese1 E:ngb::.h 534 !J32S tran:.dul·er design, 1·orn
packaging lhe loan for If interested, call or U TOTEM I ponL·nt:-. m:.itcn:.ih &-::.econdary marketin.: to com e by Contral'l IJ M v l'll'rl.. method:.
FNM A & GNMA Call ::!102 Dus mess Center Au t 11 t• '<pl' r 1 t• n • 1· 1 Ou tie:-indudC' iki.ign
GIMaA&. OMCl''0
FAST FOOD C lerltal, custodlad;I
Pina parlor at th• llbrartan. F1lll titfte
Mach. MUil be 11. Ex· 1_tn_s_e_1_10 _____ _
perlence not necessary
Leave me11a1e.
673-1811.
GIM~OfflC• Looklnr for a very 1n
terestlna part time Jet>
FIL! CLER 1n pleasant offiN'~ K Clerical, ror mature Entry-level position person Location p c.H ; ~vallable immediately Npt 8ch Ellper. 8 in our Newport Bea.ch ol· w flee. Some previous of· must Accurate typlrt11 fice expenence des1r{A· no s horthand. 20 h rs
ble. x1nt. co P!l•d ~!~~~~r~~sat&S\I"{ benefits & rree parkin.:
For appt., call : 640·4580 General Office .. '
exl. 11202 ~.0.E. WOii TIMPORAlff ·
Fiie Clerk PBX Receptionists,· • ·
Pan. Time Secretaries, Clerk•" •
c~~;.~\~~.~~i'1~cr lVICKI .HESTONI.
Chevrolet --,
18211 Beach Bl \'d Ir Associates
847·6ar7 18004 Skypark 81.
~3331 Ste 23.5
Sl,000
Full Ir Peri Time
Expanding co needs hard worken, Co
benefits Rapid advan
cement Car needed 18
&over
CALL IOAM TU 3PM
7 14-847-2422
GENERAL OFFICE Cleriral duties. phonl"l>,
1·ustomer serv. will train
1n bkpg Maturt' Pt"r::.on
p ref'd ll rs flex
642·2256 for appt
GENERAL OFFICE
We are lookmg for a rt'
liable m;iture person fur
followinR
•Typmj!
•Some phone:-.
•Opt>rnte 10 kt•) adding
rnal·h
•Outgoin!! m:.111
•F1hng
•Training in
't>h1rlc procedure~
•l'er:.on looking for
Jd\ ;iucemcnt
Paid med1<:al, 'acal1on
& hollda:.s S;ilar y com
men~urate with l'Xpc·r
Trail Rite Boat Trlr Mf
gr 3100 W l'l'ntr.il. SA
556 4540
c; E N E R A L () r r I <'l'.
!.w1m"ear mfgr ha~ 1m
nwtl opt>nmg for "'l'll or
i(;JOIH·tl P<'l'>411l Will
lra1n for \anou:-. dut1l•:.
Call Julil'. 491; 1291
540.0400
General
The 1oaaoo1oyc ....
is now Mring:
Receotioftist ·: 1 yr. officeexper
Type 50wpm Ex<"ell
appearance " -<
Men's S~ Attendent
1"'lex1ble Hours
W oiter /W oitreu
f: x penenccd
Please c·all for app1,
645 735H, Mon Fri ,
9 .30 5PM
GENERAL OFFICE
ln!>urance co. near 0.C.
airport need:-. a gd,
typ1~t 40 5Qwpm no oCr
exp nec.1 1 ~hrday,Rod..'
benef1ti. C:.ill Laura,
1133 K-150 1401 Dove St . asso. NB E 0 E
CoverneS!> Nann\ f;)(
perit.>nn•d L1\E~ 'm m)
home Care for l~mo old
bo} Lite housev.ork
Ref!> Call 497 t48!J Ga.r}
Bobe I
GUARDS
Full & part time All
areas Uniforms furn,'d
A)(l'S 21 or over. retired
wekome No cx~r o~~f
A p p I )' L' n 1 ' t' r s a
Prntf'l·t1vn Sen u·e. 122fi
W 5th St . Santa An.a.
lnlt'r"'e" hrs 9 12 & hl.
Mun Fri
1"'0UN D Malt· Young
Setter type \'11· E S11fr
Ce<:1l Pl:.ic-<' 5411 21:.!H
Miss Bradlcy Dr . 11208. Irvine, MARKETS nN·es:...ir~ To1i sJlar.v 1 ·•r·ftinn m"t I 1 1 J u a ,.., "en:i ~ <'" GE .... ER '"'L OfflCE COLDWa.LIANICER 83.11441 or 27957 Cabot For2nd&JrdSh1ft~ <.:allCmdySpnnl(t'r 111 ~ & H&D prllJL'('h ....., ~ llAI RnR .. :c;si-:n
& !\1ASICt.:RIST .A.SSEMILSlS Residential Mort~age Rd , Laguna N11~uel . We promote to mana~e Cormll'r lx•hllo Mel'hanic-al l::ni?ini·i•t Ex pr 111•(' ~u ~I Ill'
l.01· M1ss1on Viejo co Services 831 0542 ment&superv1:,1onfrom ChNroll•t IOI! o.lt•j!rt:l' pfl•f ·11 qu11 i.. J11cl df1t·1t•rH " l'l IL'ntele. h1ghc::.1
nimm prl )!real loc
Thl' ll:.i1r H:.indlcr'
642 114114
Personals 5 350 •.......••......•...•.•
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models j
Porty Dmteen.
net'd!\ A~sl'mbler:. w 2 Irvine.Ca IEL[~The w1Wth.JAnNTACAREL'R" 11!211Hcachlll\CI 'l~ualifH«i l'arHl11l.1t1•-. Wurkv. f1gun•-..ph1111l•:.. ) rs e'<p Candidates 17141975 1~ ·~Girt". "' 847 t)(Jlf7 ,end re.,,ume tu \Ir, lil111i.: & m1..,1• off11•t• cl~•u)( ... l~rh1la)\.e"dgdeyme~.a1".,uhat.' EOE ~ clloslDeUlMIMesaar 5493331 Jan~ 231191 \ 1.1 <hlUllt'S l'Jrtl 11r;_ftullttllll' "' "' " J., t-""'•Cr <; I Fabncanle. Sulit• li03. n J\ JI ·' nl 11 fl neal 111 appearance & de 631 !H21 Cook nighL'> full lime. Misi.ion \'ieJO. CJ 92691 porlun1t~ for ;11h :.in1 <'
J.>('nd:.ible Work ism hfc J•---------E O E M F II I( 0 0 d pay. qua lit> I mt•nt "llh f;J-.1 .:rov.1111-:
llt·lp v. .rntetJ f t v.i
~Jntl" ll'h man & counter
help PlaLJ de Cafl'.
c;:on -. Dell 752 ~OI * 972-1345 •
s upport mt•d1ral elec BANKING ----------Laguna Beach reiitaurant Lag lkh tomp.rn' S:.il.1n 111111 tronit•s Gd benefits I 494.9233 Calll'hef"9400ll S205 80 lu S.itl i.u men:.uratt·" t"q>r
\1 C & VISA Al'tt·pkd Onl) respons1hle looklr~Ci.rt · WEEKLY v.orkml! part 8151®i3 I ~~~ut~~~~·~it"gn~~~ TUL£R ~ t~ ~k~:;1~~ whkel~:~~ Hunl~~l~eal·h I COOK/Experienced 1 111 full 11.mc. :'l:dtwn.il I GENERAL OFFIC E HELP WANTED!
COVER GIRL ph Call Mr. Parelh. • !I 5. appl.) a l 1660 ----------l>a\ &. e'l' .,tuft Xlnt 1 t>rnpJn) Start 1111 I "t1nw pm.1t111n :J\Jil I
• OUTCALL • 581 3830 An outstond1n9 OP-I l'ldl'Cnt1a AH· . Co:.tJ l ,Jt:.in &. lx·nt'flh Jnll-. m' d 1 at l' h """ l'' llr' IOam ll> 2pm \Ion
!1.530778 MC \ISA ----------1 Portunityexids foran Mr!>a Roi;Pr 2'>Hi:I l..1kl• pl'rii•ni·e nl'l't•'o:-.af\ thrul-ri Mu.-.t lll'.ihktu
I indi •iduol w ith s ix ClllLD Momtor.S58tper l t-"or1•.,1 l>r 1-.l 1111 11 \en hllll'ou~1cl1•v.ork I ''IX' 111 IS"'pm l.111•lik
Tl'IC'phonl' sohc1tor ~•>
e\ Jh'r Ill'(' f:Xl'C'll I'll
hl•nef1i... l"omm1-.,wn
Jlrflj!ra m & prof11 sha r
1n~ \ppl) in per-.on
Penn):-.J\er. lbt>O
l'La·t•nt1<1 1\v(' . Costd
!\h•sa
----------Al TO I.OT Attent1£•nt I month Reqwre:. 1 n111' J 71;!1 19911 ="0 selling Semi name kpg bat ki:round hi·lplul • FOXY LADY • 1 full time. mu.'ot IX' 18 months .pre•ious Teller IOOICKEIPER F/C expt·r Compll'll' 1·Jrl' of ·11111 ,iJJn•:-.s for i·om W 1 l l t r a 1 n 1' d I l
OUTCAl.LONl.Y M1~'olon \'1ejo. Laguna e .1 per1•nce . As o Fa!.h1•1n Island in,·<'sl to"A <'h1ldrenJl-!l'~ I & HJ C OOtcS µk•lC' dt•ta1b to AHIA., 71 4 645 7'.111! a'k for
\ISA Ml" ll1lb area 11482212 ask leader in~ financial ml'nt firm Exc·ell op rreparl' mt•al,. ft>t'tl . 1; mu' l''<Jlt'r 1\ppl\ 1114 Ct·nten•1t·"· Dept I Kan·n
•972·1138 • for<.'arl community, Imperial portun1ty E.>.per & r hangl'.hathc·b;ih) ht' bl"n !l\~,'f,, '\111111 :.'i>4.Sa11AntomoT1•xa:-. .. llo !>p1tal A«l'Ount~
Rt>c·e11a l.Jll· Clerk
needed al l'Orporate vf
f1l·e Fam11Jar with c·ol·
---------AUTOMOTIVE ••
Bonk can offer e x· maturity req d Call -.ure 10 Yl'ar old i.tet:. In Charlie ' (.'h1li , :Jllfll 7H2211 (,ent'.ral O!f1ct• ".ork&
• 714 640 0123 ::.chool on timl' 01 , Hedhlll. IJltJ~ a:t Stl' Typing South s:.inta
SPIRITUAL PARTS
H EAl>INC:S COUMTEltMAM
celleRt salanes and ciphnc> a:-. nee<IL•tl. Frct• tt2W. CM. 9'.!lllf; Oonut shop Early AM Ana 540 58.50 be-ftefits. P&eOH 1'oin us shift. no C'Xper nC'I' App
lOam IOpm Full) L1l"d l>ealership or foreign
492 7296 or 492 0034 Hll5 auto parts e>.pericnce S Camino Heal. San preferred Call Glen for
todal in our beautiful private room & boartl COUMTSl HELP ly D1pp1ty Donuts. 18!>'1
Bookie....-.... Ci.rt T a k e a cl l 0 St a t •· M o n .. F r 1 S u p " r :'II rt Bl d (' •t Cos o Meso office. Full t1m;~rx-P:r. helpful Employment lHf11·c. Sandwirh. l'o~ta Ml•:-.a. 'P"J><J " "
Clem an appointment Contact SHIRLEY but not nee Many com· Orange County DOT 5-l5 4867
GILBERT to arrancJe pany benefits Apply at. 301. 677 010 Ad paid for
1-;1t•1·1runic Sound Te1·hn1
c·ian 1-:xperienC'C'd in
Simplex T1mmg de' ll'l'
Sl27:1·Sl554 per month
Apply al Capistrano
Un1f1ed School 01::.tnct.
32972 Calle Pcrfertu.
SJC 496-1215
*. *
Mike McMiiian 412 Costa Mesa St
Costa Mesa
ROY CARVER
ROLLS ROYCE
AMDIMW
an int•rYiew appoint-1660 Placentia Ave . by emplo}er Costa Mesa
You are tbe wmnerof
2 frft tidlets
IS14 Value>. to
lu CCIDCldH
April 21 \hru 2S
Anaheim Convention
Center
T1rkets must be c·x
changed for resrr,ed
seals at the ronvention
center ahead of l1mr
Call 642 5678. rxl 272 to
claim} our llrketi. . *.
mettt.
640.6444 IMPERIAL
AUTO MECHANIC BA ..... K DICK WATSON 1"'111
AUTO CENTER 695 TownC...ter Dr.
Takinlol applications for Costa Mesa.
2 Journeymen mechanics Excellent CA 92626
salary guarantee. 7 14-641-2200
medical insurance pro-Ext. 262
gram & other benefits Equal Opp Employer
2345 S El Camino Real. l•---------
San Clemente 492· 1603
C9 5 Mon ·Fri > Bar Help, Full & PtT. top
SS for sharp Port 17.
C.M 646 3666
Bather & brusher wanted
for Grooming Shop. Mon
lhru Friday 644 4000
Are You
Ready?
Choose Your Days & Houn
Our conton~ deSffe to mo1nto1n e~cellenr customef services offeu
several p<>\1llons to quol,fierl condidotes os
TEUERS
Full or Port.Time
Seletted 1rd1vduols \hould be coreer morded ond well <J"wned We
prefe1 ptevoous bonkonq experience.
We offer o rewatding environment, ex,ellen1 benefits ond o poid
vocation th1\ year. Perl ltme tellers working less thon 21 ~ per
week will quolify for o ptemium 1n poy
rATMAGIU.
. '714t 760-6000
hi Hewport leach~ to
Lingo Rrst
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY
Fotlr special people for 0 • .,..,
-,.cld tr .-.g procJl'mR
• Ungo Rtaf E1tah 11 praud to
offn 4 1peclol people th•
carHr opportnlty of o Ht.
time. Wt °" selectittc) 4 people
to 1M9ift an ittdtpth .,... an ane
"fast start" 1ol•s trolnln9 ,. .....
• ~ -,.clol ,.-op1e wtl t.. wortdncJ perMllCINJ with M9y
11Mrp. Mflrf 11 o w• llloWft
.,,...._, She Is °" the fealty of
tlM CoUfo,...lo AHoclaffoll of
Rtoltora 011d tltt Motlo .. I
Auodatlolt of Rtaffon. ..
•Mary wtl be ,.,-.OHly hiM9g
....._ 4 apeclel ,..,a. • ar; o
-of • klftd 60 day ..., ..,
..., "' .... field ..........
prog;w. •
• If,_ ... IJcettMd ........... ..
fomcl ...... us. , ..... . ,...." .... , .......... ._
wtlei ..... -•'"-• for SKa.. ul to4oy fw • •polwheaal.
Ails for .... Tr•••rldee,
CCIM Ylco rN114Mt, 5*t
• Us1~r or Mary ~ ... ca1. &rector ot wn 1.-..
"4~7020 6_4~020
COUNTER or COOK
FT PT Gar} ~ Dt'lt.
CdM. 675·2193 for appt
Doto Emry Optr.
Growing s w1mv.ear
manufac·turer has 1m
mediat e open1n.: for
per ... on with 2 Jyr.., data
cntry expt>nenrt• Call
Juhe 496 l291
Doto Process!ncJ Operator n('('ded ftlf n1>.
dorf entnx systems for
long term ass11?nmcnt
Call for more mro Tod
Sen 1CeS, 979-8900
Deliver Lt\ Time~ lo
homes in C.M & H B
3 6/\ M SJ75 S450 mo +
bonu11. Dependable car
546 4481 or004·49R2
tlsc th(' D.'11ly Pilot
"Fast Rt'S\Jlt " service
director) Your
service lb our
specially
Call 642 5671\ f'Xt 322
Cashier
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMIL Y LEAD Fast growing intcrna
t1onal Co. 1n i.tablC'
energ} field has need for
a lead electronic al.
se mbly per so n
<,tualH1cat1ons ind 7yrs
exper . in elertro
mechanical assembly.
PCD assembly. Coil w1r-
1 n g, h arnessing, &
merhan1cal assembly .
be able to train as
sem biers; organize
manpower & material
resources, & display
good leadership skills.
Qualified applicants
shou ld contact Ray
pilman at Scientific
Drilling International
557-9051. E.0 .E.
OFFICE CASllER
Enjoy working as Office Cashier
in Slavick's Jewelers. Duties
include verifying sales balances,
doing daily banking transactions,
disbu r sing funds and o the r
related duties . Exce llent
Company Be nefits Package.
CONT ACT Ml. McDlaMOl'T
1714) 644-1 JIO
SLA.VICK'S
Fif"\8 Jewelers Since 1917
lerl1on procedures 1n
. G eneral ~c~ . ~olving insuranre rom
Greater lvrinc l rC'cl~t. Pan y & ~ e If pay L'11ion has 1mm<'d P I , opening. hrs nC'x. no exp accounts Knowledgea·
nel'. will tram Cont;u·t ble in third party btlhng
Amv 556 3110 proredures Contad · Mrs Irene Ruiz. Ac
General Office co u n ts Re re 1 v a bj ~
Grt•ater ln•me Credit Supen 1:.or 640.8950
Union has 1mnwd F T
opening. offt>r-. full
benefit pkg, no exp nl'l'.
"'II tram Conldt'l Am~
5S6 :1110
Want Ad He.sulU. 642·5678
HOST /HOSTESS
Full & part time availa-
ble Appl~ in per:.{fp
3 5PM Jolly Roger. -lOO
So Coast Hwy. Lagup~
Heath
·••••• • Daily Piloi • • • Editor's Secretary :
•.A challc!lging opportunity is being offered by . the Daily Pilot for someone with the
• intelllgenl·e. wit and skills required t.o be •.
• secretary lo the editor. ll 's an interesting .
position requiring the tools or the trade -80 e wPm dictation, 70 wpm typing, dictaphone -•
.and the ability to shift mental gears on short .
notice. The beneril.ll are generous, the pay •
ereasonable. Applications being accepted only •·
.through apPolntment by calling .. 64H321 •
.ext 277. • ,
• Classified Outside Sales •
• Experiertced salesperson to handle Real •
•Estate Development accounts and•
• automot1 ve ..accounts. Salary plus.
commission Must have car, mileage paid .•
•Excellent company benefits For
• appointment for interview, call 642·5678. ext ~ .m. •
: Camera Operatm · ·:~ e Experienced 11l least 5 years. Must be able.
• to use newspaper camera and platemakil\( ' ~ystems 1';xcellent wages and benefits •
• Apply in person W / rtsume to Orange eoas•
• Uuily PHul. •
: Part Time Ev~ :. • c ..... ,v.... •
.Adult11 with oul!\tandina altracllvel •per•onolltl~s who enjoy worklng with to.ts
year old youths . Start at $4.001 hbur 2~3o P M
I 0!.9'_PC...,
~al!J, ..
330W
Insurance
UMDlaWRITB
Head Underwriter for
s2.ooo ,ooo b oo k o r
automobile business in
expanding general agen·
cy for both liability &
physical damage . Al·
tractive salary & fringe
benefits package. Call :
Linda, 714·549-8161
KrTCHIH HB.P
Prep, cook or chef. Quiet
Woman, CdM. ~7440
Insurance
ACCOUMTR•. I
FBS has openings in
Customer Service Dept.
lo service automobile in·
surance accts. Must
have gd. oral & wnllen
comm unication.s s kills
Exper. desirable. Start·
mg salary comm w/ex·
per. & ability Excell
co. benefits & career ad·
vancement pote ntial
For appl .. call . Landa,
714-549-8161
KITCH EN HELP
to learn food prepara·
MODELING,
Comm 'ls. films , ex ·
tr as. SCAS needs new
races, all ages. 957-0282. ----
MOTEL Desk clerk. part
time. full time. Nr.
Orange Fairgrounds.
645-7700. ask for Jeannie
*** M~ Pfll!ll/le 919 Bayside
Newport Beach
You are the winner of
2 free tidets
1S14 Value>. to
fit• CCIDCldH
Apr1121thru2S
Anaheim Convention
Center
T ickets must be ex-
changed for reser ved
seats at the convention
center ahead of time.
Call &42·5678, ext. 272 to
claim your tickets.
*** lion. S3.75/hr. to start. Now hiring exp. Hostess.
Working hours · 5AM· Apply in person. SS/hr.
l PM . M · F · Lori 's Beachhouse Restaurant.
Kitchen. ~ S Harbor 619 Sleepy Hollow Lo.
Blvd., SA. Call · 979-0747 L.B.
ror appt ---------
LllbTKJt
Exper lab tech fo r
Newport Bea c h
Rheumatolog1sts Ofc
644-1881
Order Desk. lite typing,
mailing, will train. 4 day
week. Benefits. S3.851hr.
sLart 979-7660.
LEGAL
Outside Sales agent
needed for travel agen·
cy . exper and or
w l follow1ng Orange
County Airport area
54().5851
Priltt Shop PencMI
To operate press, F IT,
333 3rd St. Laguna Bch
P /TIME help for
women's specialty shop
Fashion Island No ex pr
nee. 759-9951 10 to 6 pm
PT/TIME
Need extra income?
Looking for sharp peo
pie. flex hrs. 979-1066
QC INSPECTOR
Growing laser co re·
quires individual ex
per'd. in inspection &
Quality Control of hig h
technology mechanical.
optical & electronic
parts & assemblies used
in C02 lasers.
I ndividual will be
responsible for mspec-
tion o f incoming parts,
with heavy e mphasis on
mechanical items. Other
duties will include ID·
s pe~t ion of in-house
manufactured parts &
quality control of outgo-
ing products. At least 3
yrs. exper. in slmibar
duties is required. Call
493-662.Cocappt. E.O.E .
SECIETMY
Accounltn1 department of national
mortgage banking ftrm needs
secretary for contn)ller. This entry
ltvel poaition perfect for numt>era·odented person with good
t_yplng lkllli. No short band requlred.
Call ~erri (714) 97S.l<&l.
COLIWRL llAtlO
RecepUonlsl with gd typ.
Ing & 1pelllna skills,
N.B. loc1tion. Salary
o pen. Ask for Pat
wkdays: 875-6300.
RECEPTIONIST, gen. otc. duties. F /llme.
Tues·Sal., pvt. country
club. Call: 644-5404
IECB'TIOHISt
Full time Mon-Fri. Must
be pe r sonable & well
&roomed. & enjoy meet·
1ng the public. Requires
good s pelling & pen·
manship. No typing.
Phone experience pre·
ferred. Full company
benerlts. Apply: Pen·
nysaver, 1660 Placentia
Ave.,C.M.
RECEf'TIOHIST
With or without typing
needed. Top pay. Tem·
porary & full time Call
Tod Services al 979-8900.
R E. SALESPERSON for
sales, exchanges, invest·
men ls. High comm New
& P /T ok . Newport
Pacific R.E. 645-3683.
Route W a Iker
Joggers, eam while you
jog! $4 /hr + bonus
5/hrs a day L1qu1dyne
Energy Systems Call Al
754·0535.
SALES
Balboa Island boutique
Partt1me Experience
preferred Funk y
Things. 675-5446.
Sales
SALISP/T Mornings necessary for
fabric store. Call Gerl .
848-40.0.
SALES PEISOHHll.
ror contemporary retail
store. Only career-
mi.nded, mature women
need apply. Must be ex-
pe r 'd . S1Uar y plus
comm. Please apply in
person or call: A pro po,
644·2652 or #29 Fashion
Island. Npt. Bch. EOE
SALES TRAINEE
Cu'°"*' RelcltioM
This is a permanent
position for career
oriented highly motivat·
ed individual. Our com·
prehensive sales train·
1ng program will
prepare yqµ m develop
mg new actounts as well
as maintain exist mg
customer base m the
O.C. area. Individuals
willing to work hard &
take direction wilJ de-
v e I o p h ighl y pro·
fessional sales skills
with unlimited income
potential.
For confidential in ·
terv iew with Southern
California's largest in
dependent dealer. con
tact Lori Murray
CALIFORNIA
COPYING
PRODUCTS INC.
17741 Mitchell, Irvine
714-979·2333
E.O.E. .M 'F
Seamstress needed
FALLBROOK
GTI DIRECTORIES CODO• TION AMTiqtJE
SHOW and SAU AM .............. , ......
& .... .,..... ~,,, c ....... .... o,,......,.., ....,.. .. Ml' AT THE lllGH S<.:11 001.
So Mission & StaJ:l'
Coat·h
Secretary Ad
minittrative Assistant to
President. looking for
conscientious take
c harge t ype. great
career oppor for right ID·
dividual St0-8882.
Security officer, P IT,
wkends for lrg apt. com·
plex an N B. $3 SO/hr.
For info contact Jim
Lupis a l 644-1900.
April 16, 17, 18
TY P I S T I W O R D N<JON T08 00 l'M
P ROCFSSOR Take I 5to Hw> 711
Lanier word processor at <kearu.1d ..
W I · H'I DONATION SI 50 ii lralD. Laguna 1 Is PR IZ~ UAll.\'
Law Firm-typing wills & FREE PARKL'llG trusts. Must have strong, ______ ... __ _
typin g & grammar
s kills Call Mrs. Wins lo" ... --" 8010 for appl. 83'7·1060 "'n-OllC" -...•••.•...............
TYPIST
Part time. z.3 days per
wk Vacation relJef. Ap
ply at. 1660 Placenl1a.
HARBOR AfU:A
APPLlANl'ESERVlt'f':
We buy u~ed apphann•,
we i.ell rct·ond. guar
SECURITY GUARDS Costa Mesa apphar1<:e!> ~!I :10; 1
Openings for qualified -TYPIST/ 1 IUY APPllAHCES
individuals. Good start· Les !157 111 :1:1
Ing pay. Refundable un· WORD PROCESSOR
iform deposits. 978·7243 Entry-level position 111 Kenmore wai.hl•r i:.1 ...
&638·8191 well-established firm dryer set. permJ pn'"'·
---Must have strong typ111g SJOO 6 mo new l'O mp111•
SEC U R ITV GU AR 0 & grammar skills Full tor. $150 644 7789 wanted, weekends only. tame Apply in person to:
Sat/Sun 8 4. 675-6101 Mr Fuentes at Robt>rt G E 0 1:. h w a :. h 1· 1
Mon Fri 8 4. Bean, William Frost & I P o t i. t r u ll b 1• 1 '
SELL AVON
FUU TIME
Earn S6 or more an hr
Call 966-0522
SERVICE STATION
ATTEND ENT
Fullt1me Apply 1n
person 604 S. Coast
Hwy. Laguna BE.' a ch
Assol·1ales. 1<101 Quail Portable Con\ l'rl 1hli·
St . Newport BE.'aC'h Bronze w w1iod c hup
TYPISTS
•Immediate Openings
• P llme.F time, Temp
•Top Pay
For more mJo. call Tod
Serv1C'es at 979-8900
ping block lop $11 1
951 1344 aft GrM
Large Uprii:ht 1;
Freezer Run~ grt 1
St2S. Ph &15 8'H4
Monlgom er) \h.11 rl 11,1·11
---------• ft refrigerator. Ii 1111>0111 $36,000 +
BEVERLY HILLS
Health & Nutnt1on Corp
setting up operations in
O.C Need keS' people for
Superv1s10n & Training.
Full/Part lime Will
tram Xlnt. career or
s upplement Call
9·5PM. Mr. Zuckerbrod
at 973-8443
Prefer experience sew SEWING MACHINE TYPISTS
Register today for local
temporary assignments
old white. cm ".111 .1111
$275 646 3104
ing s ails. Santa Ana OPERATOR
547·1344. Sa1l loftexp 631 1842 ---
SEAMSTRESS <M 1F > • SHIP"MG PERSON
Prefer mature J>('rson p IT help afternoons to
with sailmak1ng ex assist 10 our shipping
perience. Call 631-5950.~ dep'l Must be s harp &
Secretarial
SALES SEC'Y
energetic 557-0551
STATIONERY
Store in CdM needs sales
557.0045
Cf\-Llr\:
f(MIJIOIAQY PH!SONN(l SUIVICES
l 7 2 3 llrdt Strut
NewPort Beoch t .O.E.
Lg reblt Fr q.:ctl .1111
Refrigerator $125
" 964 !)(nJ We!>t1ng hOU!>t' rdr11•
St50 Sear::. "·"ht r l'..
elt><: dr)l'r ,;,, c-.1
S48 2765
SALES-COMMISSION With a young dynamic
Full or P rr. Growing na· com puter billing sales
tional reading education organization. Must have
Co expanding to the xlnt. verbal skills,
business/commercial c lerical or secrt>tarial
mrkl. We a re seeking experience. Call Landa
women & men lo present Devorkin at Safeguard
our unique reading pro-Health Care Systems
ducts to key decision 714·957·1121.
person f /l1me, 5 days. ---------•
Rdngl•ralor
Huni. gn•al SXo
6fi I 2!1:U
makers 1111.s is an ideal -------
opp to make lrg SSSS Secretarial
Call 1714Hl98·~ LEGALSECRETARY
Xlnt working conds
Especially fine clientele.
Phone 675-1010 Cor appt.
STOCK Clerk part time
for marine hardware
sto re Call Balboa
Marme, 549-9671, E.O E
MIF/H
--• 2 man Laguna Bch Law TEACHY SALES I Ofc looking f or Exp'd ror paid p i t
Full Part T• secretary w legal ex per Church School position, ~r tme I Pr & Crirrunal Salary Sundays only ca ll
Attractive bed & bath negotiable. 497.1729 499-3088 monungs store now taking ap I ---
Veterinary kennel ass't. Apt !>Ill' Kt•1\nl1111• 1~.i
reli able . hardworking. stovt>. goot.l l·rmd. $!.ill
person needed. 661· 1658 8!18·4957 aft 51nn
Waiter/Waitress I .Id. M ........ ...: I 8025 Apply blwn 9AM & UI lft9 u .... ..-.a S
12PM Charlie's Chill. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••
3001 Redhill. Bldg ::2. REDWOOD 2x6's
Ste. IS226. CM. 921626 11 to 20ft t lt•Jr lln'. ""'
----truck load 1.-ntl-. l.1 II
WAITRESS/WAITER 645 9137 e>.t l:!'i .ill\ 111111·
Mature Private Club
Interviews Thursda y.
11·4PM . 1801 Bay::.1de
Dr CdM
Cameras &
Equipment ao 10 .......................
- ----Canon 28mm lt·n~ S7!'>
Hlue velvet aofa, S300.
Mat c h1na U' llned
draJ)t"•. Stoo 2 .creen
awlvt'I nx'ktnl. S75 ea.
CoHec table.$.)() F:nd to
blc.>. '40 thijt£ctf seal 2
rhlld bike carrier, .11DO.
81Jt'k ~•nyl bar w/4
matrhin..-11tool~. $100.
!>411 J261l
f':urthtum· 7•.,' Sofa $75. 2
<.:ornt-t l>t'<li. & storage
unit $7:1 l~i :Ci34
Ht•1'1111\•r hkt• rww Beige
and hro"n <lt'•ugn. 150
610 713.'i
Kin~ ",clt·d>o•d w<nelcss
hi r '( 'und l·o-..l S500
S:!OCI ()Ill) li'll li!JtiO
M.cplt 1!1111111: rm table.
dt.111 ~ hull h p:.ad 2 lh
!"ti! Ii 11. . 'It. I:!
1111 11 I. It I cl ~ t• l II a~
,111r,1i.:1·, rlrJ"l'rs lnnl.'r
'ttrrn~: mJttre,.,t., St75
ht '·~11 1•1 ,1rt t "k1I "'· 111
Jtl 11" "!..ml'
1'111 1<111 ,,.1 m .il table
\\ 11 .ti ,\ 1; t .Int' bJCk
ii r Ill I f!,1 II S, l 5 I>
">-1•· :.'1111 111 am "kt•nds
1>1111111 1.1hl1 h\) .. ohrl
m.q1l1· drnp lt•.,r .,,,at!>
11 l11ld ... m.ill inti
hn1 11 ),,u, '°' 12 ;irca
r uv , 11·.111111 rt1.1d1· Wild
I Ill 11 ~ 'Clll:Jll'' In
i.:11ld 111 .111i.:1• ht•li't' \\Ill
It• ht llV. II "l!°)t) S,•1• lO 11µ
1111·1 i. 11; ~'l:.'1:! "k1•nth 1•r .. ,,
Ill :1111 ... l r1.t11•1 llrn., l(E.'
11111111• l1'.Jlh1·1 111\l•do
'"' ·' 1 h111 111.111• M loo'l' ptlh>\\o •1 rrws '""" nt'W
~:111 "" II'' '.'I I 21111
, 1' .... )ii.
Garaqt' Sole 8055 .•.•...........•.••.•••
'••II I I ~.lft
'•llr 11 •
I I• " I 'I" I iJ)l
J~w elry 8070 .•...............•.••••
I . . 1 • " ·, 1 to hu \
.... fl\ I 11 fl"f I \ft" top
Jtlll t I •••l°I 111
1,11111 1, I I 1111.-.. 20 ph
1 .1 I \I .1111111i.1· 1 11t \our
11, " •1111 S!1 p1·r
I 111 '"'',.. • .)it.>(
Miscellane-ous 8080 . •....................•
lo" e Balloons 'H Ud llfllf"\lfH' \1HI \ti'-t' ~J
1,.,,, 111• I ,,1 •• 11111111 rot
'llld l1tflt ••ll 111•,l\t'llh
.. '" I· •• 11 I ,, 111111 "";I
, • , I I!' •• j II• •. .,, •• l! l'
I' 1111 1 I •r 1 1 ··n 01
I 111 \\1 dt•l1\Lr
II •
\IJ \I
\ i I \
·•'-,,
1f,1f 1•1-1"
\I ' .1111111
1.11 11 .d I
'fl~.1 OHO
1.11•1 111 d tllift-"wl..t·r
l11lli1d "'"' 'l-1111111, <,1•11
'II Ht '1111 I t'llfl 1;.15 5 J lh
Growing Santa Ana law
office reqwres 1 legal
tra i n ee & 1 legal
secretar y Good basic
skills a must. 641 1358
(Jean) Part S._
Rea I Estate Sales
Experienced agents are
needed to work wtth ex
ecutive level clients
Must have proven track
record. You will be
working with pro
fessional associates Our
phcallons for full & part SECRETARY P ttime 20 Teac her wanted. Aft
time sales positions & hr wk Gen olc dut;es school Sdays/wk lPM·
marking/receiving pos1· Call: Christ Church By 6PM _or 3PM 6PM
lion. Experience helpful, theSea,S7J.3ll05 Cert1f1cate or exper
WAITRESS1WAITER 673.-0314
W C'ar for wicker basket ATTN P .Alt-'TERS!
I u n ch s er\' 1 <: e OOCJS 8J40j '1' 11 n•" 1:10·1·11 1-·M 100 Must be people oriented
& ambitious. Need car
call R1chard67S-5895
must be enlhus1ast1c & ---------Call Susan 64~8820 930·130PM. Monf'ri J••••••••••••••••••••••• 1111< 111.1\PI 1-.11:7511 ---------
LEGAL SECRETARY
Laguna Hills recent
officeotrers self motivated SECRET ARY
S t r o u d s L e n 1 n Answering phones. typ. T.acher'1A1•
Preschool Mon Fri .
mornings. 4 hr day
Garden Grove area
97 1·5533
Earn Sl25·S1 5() wkly KEESllONI) l'up" \h( t.d • c.i •. 11'
Calif Prob11te exper Part-time. Sat eve S-11.
necessary Xlnt typing & help s upervise develop-
S/H skills req. Call Mrs. mentally disabl ed
•Best beach location
•Libera I commission Warehouse i n g & g e n e r a I
For appt call sec r et a r 1 a I work
Must be neat. persona Champ ::,rre :0.1 1-' 1'1'1 & I ..
ble & energetic· 979-0747 s h o "' I' 1 I pt 1 H.1• I. I" 11tif1·111• \nl 1
aft lOAM for appt 21_3 697 1345 afl Ii pm I i.:1.11 11' ~ 1 '" ll,11 g.1111 Program.
•Nat'I referral program 714/594-724!__ Newport Beach. Call
WORD PROCESSOR
Mag 11 for law office m
Huntington Beac·h Non·
smoker . 848-1400
Win slow fo r appt adults 645-1435
837-1060 ----Part lime. to assist prod.
LEGAL SEC'Y
Exp 'd only , xlnt
secretarial & English
skills req. XJnt oppty for
right person. 975-1156
LEGAL SECRET ARY
or ,arale9al wltlt ..... , . .,.. ..........
platt11la9. Alr,ert
WH, Mpt. lch. Call:
Joclde "'9. I :lOPM,
133-9913.
LEGALTIAJHH
Unique Npt Beach Law
Office aeeb ambitiou.s,
legal lrainee/recep·
tionist lo start approx·
haately 6/1. Your op-
pe)rtunily lo grow & ad·
v•nce. Xlnt typing &
communication skills a
must! Expe'tlence
htlfful-but not required. S.. ary open phone
Barbara 6441-4466
LIFMUARD
m gr . garme nt mfg.
S3 751hr 631-7770
Management Marketing
Spar e time income.
fro m your home .
Unlimited potential for
people-oriented self.
starters. 851-9352.
Part Tine
ComselaCJ Youttt
C-..Mn
Adults with outstanding
sttractave personalities
lo s pend 15 hrs per week
counseling youth ages
10·15. Evenings &
WeekenM Available. $75
per wk Call
~:30-5 :30pm. Mon thru
Fri. 642·4321 ext. 343.
Ask for Lori. o,...coast
DalwPUot 330 W. day Street
Costa Mesa, Ca
Equal Opporl.
Employer
Call now for appt. ---------• Walt Hemphill, 67J.7300 Sales
HICKORY FARMS
Opportunity to sell
gourm et foods & gifts ltECEPT/TYPIST Flex. hours. Will train
Sharp person with ex Fashion Island. 640.6030
ceptional typmg skills & ---------• knowledge of bookkeep
ing. Small engineermg
off ice. 957-1141. or
832-7996
RECEPTIONIST-Busy
relocation firm needs
SALES
Im med part lime open·
1ng for Reader Ad
representative for inside
s ales position. Gd com
pany benefits Apply an
person Pennyi.aver.
1660 Placentia Ave •
C M Mon-Fri . 1·5PM
ma lure. pel"SOnable. re
ceptionist capable of
ha ndling very bus>
phones, front oCfice ap Sales
pearance a must C BX Now hiring Assistant
Rolm System. good com Manager T'tainees Mm
pany bener1ts Call &mo. exper Call form-
F rankie 752·<J7<J7 to ar terv1ew: 642·1231
range for interview
E.O.E M/F SALESPYSOH
Ladles ready to wear.
RECEn/CLERK exp preferred, hrs ,_....,.. 9:30-6pm. Mon . .Sal. FIT
only. Call: 646-5388
Jacoby & Meyers. one of ---------• America's largest law
Pltime. Sl.7S per hour. i---------6'4-5404
firms, is seeking a
Receptionist/Clerk for
our Mlaslon Viejo office.
You must have previous
experience with good or·
ganisational skills, like
SALESPMSOH
Full & parttime. No Sun·
days, no nights. Apply:
Llq\wr Clerk. PIT. nltes.
~k for Steve:
MU537.
a...c •• rlor
1qtervleW1 w1tll irowlng
dlllbpany 1pedatllin1 ln
1-1e real eltlte loena.
Ut • 2bd T.D.'s. R.E.
KtenH .-eq. Hou1ton-
K&rtlord 11\5-llll
LOt PERSON Muat be
'91lable • have dnt.
dtl•lnl l"k'Old. DetaU·
0t1 exp. a must. Npt.
-'"· ~lJ..-...S 5'ev•
Part-Time
STUDIKTS
HOMIMAIMS
Earn extra m oney,
working p/t.ime in your
own home. bllroducing the New Daily Pilot to
The OranJe Cout Area!
Set your own boun ! CalJ
Weekdaya between 4pM
•tpm. teo-J.U7.
Relnert 's, Costa Mesa,
1816 Newport Blvd.
to deal with public, work ---------emclently for approx-SALISPSSOHS
n eeded . High fashion
ladles speciality store &
shoe salon. Exper . nee.
Good benefits. Call:
644-7100
imately 2Clln per wee k.
TyJ>ing: 40wpm. If you
lheet the qualifications.
• are Interested in the
position, p&eaae call for
an appt. btwn the hours ---------ortAlll •4.PM.
.... Story:
PlllSOM FlllD.A Y 21 3 AIMOtt
NHdtd to perform JACOIY&...,•s vadedoM~duUel : typ. &19So.SpringSt. Profe111onal aales
101, computer input .1~~L~.A.~.C~allfoml~~~t.~900~1~4~ per1on or not ex· phone anawerin1. etc. In 1_ perlenced. We can show
1mall friendly mecUcal llC~ST you the most auccasful
.Sam, (213)376-6945
SEC~ETARY 1Creat.ive Telephone Sales
design firm seeking ./ N 0 E X p
secretary w stron g ·
skills, knowledge of NECESSARY
bkpg. & shrthd. a must Who lesale produc t s,
C a I J M a r y 0 r large dlstributmg firm
X-RAY TECH
For radiology office in
N e w p o r t B e a t• h
Pleasant working cond1-
t1ons & good benefit::.
CRT required 631·4422
Joanne 714-752·8746 IMMEDIATE
SECRETARY
to stock brokers
Broke r age firm ,
Newport Center. Mature
person. good typing es·
sential. S9001mo. Call
Marjorie 9 12A M
644·2442
SECRETARY
Permanent part time
from 1 to 5pm Gen of.
fice. small lab. typing
re po rt.s . 549-1 (Xtl
SECRET ARY /LecJol
Experience in litigation
o r collection. Non·
smoker Huntington
Beach. 848-1400
Sec rel a ry I Execuli ve·
afternoon p rr for design
firm in Irv. Must be exp
w/shorthand & gd typ.
ing s kills. 833-3500.
OPENINGS
Good pay/Co benefits.
rapid advancement
Earn while learning
Several office locations
to choose from. Call
after lOA M 534·9325
YARDMAN
For Looi rental firm
Neal appearance. good
handwriting. benefits
Will tram Apply t930
Telephone Newport Blvd c M or
LAY OH THE IEACH 22600 Lambert 1203 El
ALL DA y Toro
10 immediate openings . ...,._ L-:_-~_:-
Short application Work ...... re__.
5-9pm Mon-Fn. talking •••••••••••••••••••••••
on our telephone Deep AftffqH1 8005
voi ces preferred •••••••••••••••••••••••
S3.35 t hr guaranteed. WANTED TO BUY
mor.e money easily 1 buy old gun s.
possible Come by 3 L diamonds. ivory, jade &
Ent. 1180 N. Coast Hwy, collectibles. Call 1714)
N. lag .Bch. Wk dy~ at 972-4926 & ask for Dane 3pm. 1''1rst come. first ~ --
hired
Tool Sales pe r son s .
Unlimite~ earnings. No
exp necessary. Own car
545-0781
TYPIST, must take S/H
OT speed-writing. 4/brs,
2 ·3 days week
(714)644-0083.
Antique China Hutch
German, $500.
898·4957 aft. 5pm.
ANTiqtJES
40' container English
Oak, etc. arriving
Monday, April 13th.
SECRETARY P/T
Excellent opportunity in
new. modem sales office
ln Irvine. Good pay &
working cooditions. Re·
quires goOd typing ·&---------
OUR OPENING SALE
FRIDAY 17th 9AM
<Wholesale Only)
AllA ANTIOUES
Commerce tJark
3303 Harbor Blvd #Cl
telephone skills. Morn-
ing houn. ~2782.
I.I.DUPONT
Equal Oppty Empl. M IF
Secretary /Receptlonlal
wanted for manufac.
lurer or top quality
eailboata, gd office skills
req. InsW'allCe 4t other
benfill. 751-UU.
C.m. 751-2070. 848-9366
<Next lo405 Freeway)
T,,i1t-erMff••
Fast & neat typing es·
sentlal. Some creative
writing, simple pasteupe
& layout.a. Advertlalnf
or mktg. exper helpfu .
Character Important, ----------•
non-1mkr. llftfd. Salary
open. call Jim.
0 ENDARME LTD.
714-895-17S44t 21~-6511
Ea s l c r pup~. ,\ h I ·
B1chon Fn::.l' µuµ~
645 4377
Adorable lo<'k a pol) 111111.,
$10 ea Lill ,1ft ~111r1
546 7841
DO<: 'l'HAININ\, I'
YOLI H 1101\H:
Obed1ent'l' l'r11ltl1·111
1
1
Solvang
AAA llOM fo: DOC;
TRAIN INC; !15:l H:U I
frH to You 8045 . ...............•..•...
Free lo i.tood hntn,. I I
month "h1l<' (,EH \I \'
S HEPfl EHI> 111.111
556·6884
Fvmitvre 8050 .......................
**I BUY** Good used Furniture• 1'(.
Appliances Oil I "•II wlll
or SELL for You
MASTERS AUCTION
646-8686, 833.-9625
I IUY FURNITURE
Les 957 ~133
KING-SIZE BDRM sl'l.
xlnt cond. 5 pc. SWS
Gladys, 751 5221 day!!
Early Am Solid wood
bdrm furnllurt•.
book case hdhr tl.
dresser. mirror. dc~k &
chr 548·9992
3 sectional bookcas1•s
with secretary. S400
co mplete Twin
walerbeds w lspn1r
saveTs . $125/earh
557-3973.
!-:• 7 , 11 1· .1 r I ht' ~1 t
111!11111 "I :,7,, C.73 0311
:-..rr1\ 11 f'h111w .\11~\\l'f'IOj.!
\l .. I, 111 '"·' \lr11 run
Hiit •• ond >'.UI :)!",:.!1
-... w illic:wn Fn~d
\It •• 1 \ 1 ·rd1· I> r
t I .t \11• .... 1
I 111 1111 \\lnfll'r of
'1 free tickets
I 1 I \ .t hw [11
lce Co~s
\ p1 •' 1 hru ~5
\11 h 11 .. 1·,..,"·ntinn
I • llh r
I I I I I 11111 I he ex
ll,1111•1 ti t •I rri.erved
... 11 .11 II•• , 11n\ e nt1on
11 1111 I 1111• 111 nr trme
I If 1ol.' A•1'°I 1 \I 272 to
• I 11111 \ .. " t II 11. , .. •••
REDWOOD 2•6'1
H Ill 'CIJI t11•,11111i: out
r 1111 k 11 t.111 •·nil., 45• ift
1;.1~1 !11:111•\I l:!i' anytime.
lllllJW'\ I\<; Broadway
'I rup. I" L!.111.,:1·. Belgian
J11•.111t \ a HH1.'<I lo see!
1\11111 c ond $1ti1MJ Ila rd to
rum c• h \ 1;:11 l !149 or
fi;H l~•.>1
Cool.\\,,, ... :.>cl 11<· stainless
'll•t•l "·•lt•rless. new.
"'"' 111 r·ontt•:.l, reg $445,
,,,1('r1f1n' !n9 9368
S1n~lt• ma ple bed ,
l>ix1ktJM' hdbrd SSO. Obi
""er book<·ase hdbM.
foot hrrt llre!l!ler w/m lr·
ror Si5 Kitt hen tbl ~hrs
s;i5 'II t'\' 40 Chanoel
I' .u·1• I ' II $75 760-9133
You can be a 1peelalUes manufactur· Part/Full Receptionllt. melbod of earning• . MACHINE lnye~~':rn:-!x~~c! TyplnJ, lltbt bookJlee~ beyond your income
·; SHOP 6 /orcollepleveleduca· 10& • other c lerical C~r Lawn·Mt. OUve
fJDm•d . opealn1. tlon required. Call ~~esr.IMOft • Aaaoe. Mtmorial Park IJ etart.
SECRETARY, tlvy. ty~ 1----------WINNER ~1. top !lalary/FashJon
llland. 644-5771
bcbS.• o'•rator 1_T_•_rr_l_:~---·------------lnl a before·need aale. --------• \lltlu•. All lltr1 dfft, p• ....... L--. Rl!CEPTIONJST staff. ••SICIDAlllS•• Qiiift.a •• ...-. ix. -"' ..., .. .,.... OENl!R.ALOFnCE We au lookln& for Accountaot/0.~1000 ML cem,...y ~ Ptl'Mtt Oltded for fl(/· G 0 0 4 le I e P" 0 n , mnure men and women Recp!TSO/l"ur\ll2,000
-p !ILiy ; D a It r U l c , Um• poe... Ila CdM · llA Ut • l t . to 1ro'f ·with ua. Eam Le1alfn0/dkttl5.000
.,.. lbop. can: e11-22at, ::r~10:,• ai!~ .. ,.,>·~:1' while rou team. Ex"/1h100tcorpl11000 tAJl..(P)(, Mon-Fri. Expel. CoafobnlO\t.n inotlne.d; l"llte area Callfora---'otment .. l n-t-..a-•~I ' c•USaadra-.al:IO .,_. ...., • ._.._..~.,. DO. n aomet~.J.:: ,.._ fu._. draw la t.. 540 01\0iC 4020Blrcb Ell '14 BOE
lo ... , ........ Dally PUot ttav• IOaMtldnl to MIU -OU~ Newportfm.11'0/,.,...
dO ll wll. ........ aa.tnec1 Ad.-....,.. a .. tfied eda lo It •ell.
T¥PIST
lmmed. openlna for
typist recept. '8C>O + or
comm. wlexper. Full
Ume perm. po1lllon for
lr1 conat Co. Ov•r 30yn
at w/conttnued arowtb
• 1olld f\lture. Slront
phone • t)'Jltrlc ability. al u1t lYP• IOwpm 1
w/l.)'ra min alflc.-. e11pe'r,
rtq. XlAl Co. Jm, lovtly n•w omc.. MS-nit
Jus( by sending us your name and
address and by watcHlng for your
name In the clilsslfled ads of the
Dally Pilot.
Wln tlckell tQ the circus, area amus4'mcnl attracuona or •s>Qdin• event.a. Jus t ·m1 out th as coupon and man lt \ocray to the:
Cl..ufled Department, Dally Piiot
SlO W. Bay Street, Cotta Mesa, CA 92626
Aqel Seaton Tlckels·
lb•lfftlOD 13 behind
• b•M dqout. Wiii tie \I\ of~ 1ame1.
Cn•>M0-5051 Mon·fl'l,
llltween t&m·Spm.
~~.ts IOU .......................
CONN Director trombone
«llh cue. Excellent
'*>dillon, 1100. 67s-8052 lfter6PM.
Pitney Bowes mailing
mechine. stamps. seals,
Model 5830, ltke new.
steal at S27S 49-i-0142
8087 •••••••••••••••••••••••
(2) Cockauels ti> Albmo
& (1) Grey + Cage $75. :
8485393
BAYLINER
1973, 27 Feet
Twlft 130 Vot•o·~
Flylridqe
Cabin with Head
& GoU.y. Slffps 6.
Cabover Campe r . for
I
Datsun & Toyola, etc
S800 bs t ofr 548-3377
days, 957-1178eve 'wknd
8' CAM PER 6 pack. stove
& ice box.
642-3480
Autos for Selle .......................
IMPORTANT NOTICETO "79 Da t sun Km~ ("ab .
READERS AND 21.000 mi. aar ~Int t·ond.
Motorized libs 9140 ADV F.RT!Sl':RS $4<iOO 840 Sf)48 '7 6 MG MIDGET -----
••••••••••••••••••••••• The price of item ~ 198 I ALFA Low miles, 545-1914 '73 VW nu eng & tires, ·79 Ranger 4"4· PS. PB .
OnTraHer. PiClllOI & °"Jans 8090 •••••••••••••••••••••••
... , .............•..•••
T~1~:p~rs~~'loAo~be~t MUST Sl:IL offer. 831 6215 ....
Summe r is coming. buy advertised by ''eh1l'le '56 Ford P U Big Win SPIDERS 9744 minor body damage auto trans , lilt whl,
your moped now' 1979 dealers m the vehicle dov., musbee SSJOO MGI 12,000 bs t ofr C all AM /FM stereo caas.
Honda Express, xlnt c lass ified advert is in.: <213l833-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·7084 17 ,OOO mi. hke new.
BALOW IN "Cinema ll "· 1 s 12.soo c ond . $300. 891 4226 columns does not in· BEACH IMPORTS '77 MGB. gd cond, new S7SOO Contact Johnny '76 1-;1 Camino New Do St t d' 642 7671 or aft SPM 2 Cull keyboards . 32 ormabotf.r
pedals. SS.995. 675 3723. Days
dys·556-7123evs e lude any applicable paint, wheels &l lJres 848 ve reel am I rn ra 10 tape cass, Alltot llMd 979_7324 -----taxes, license, transfer NEWPORTBEACH S4000 Call after 4pm : •
---675-3388 Ga wa Transistor 40 Ps1PB1AC SIOOO !tereo 75""0900 968·2280 •••••••••••••••••••••••. fees. finance charges, -... ~ _. ______ G-__. 9901 75 Mustang II Mach I,
moped. good condition fees for air pollution con systm. Xlnt oood <NO<N. r 97 48 .......... VI V8 I ded' 2 lteyboard ell'i' ori:an
~-
499-1060.
$200 Irvine 752 5963 trol deva·ce ce .. ;r1cat1·ons 536-4142 "'-~' 9707 -t •••.,.••••••••••••••••••• ' 00 cAc 0318 '62 Owens Tatut1an. "40. _ _ _:__ _ .... --~--,,....,. or dealer documentary ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Oak upright piano tuned.
refinished new keys.
plays great 645 6056
a vail N ~~ Motorcyrle trailer, good preparation charges un '74 Che vy ~UV P .U ., '78 5000, Xlnt cond. fully LEASE
cond. carry •3•. $325. less otherwise specilied needs engine repair equiped (1'10TZW) pp
547 0427 by the advertJ.aer make offer 646-3648 Ul-9387 DIRECT! ~978 SKIPJACIC. Motorcf:::s/----GeMral ---,SSo v •• -,.,, IMW f71J
2 4 w t r a! I e r ~ X Int Scoo 9 I 50 •••••• •• ••••••••••••••• •• • •• • • •••• •••••• •••••• ••••••• •• .. •••••••••••• 191 I PBIGEOT ftna ncinit Call Gary or ••••••••••••••••••••••• S 1 J & '71 Dodge Van auto pl& F The Beet
e ves.
P~~~~E~~;~E~l~J F Don 631 1400 <2J Honda Trail Bikes ~r"tc~!. ae:!7t~b~=~hru p /b, rea. &as. S2s00ioeo Bu/OrLeaM Deal TUUOs 7~1568 IS' Runa bout ""•th con 70c c. & (I) Yamaha MX Government Atencies ~IS78 lnOraugeCouoly ...
vertable tor 3Jlp Mere 90cc $800 Motorcycle Moy have sold for under ,77 Dodge •8100. Van. Come See Us Today!·
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HIFi, Steno 8098 S450 bs t ofr 549 2486 tr avel trlr. S'1S. 546-7046 ext. 4726 for info on ~w 98&-0385
••••••••••••••••••••••• ---to purc hase bargains Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr Unafl1te 28' Mega 1977 '80 S uzuki GS lOOOS likelhl.s A.ltotW-.4 tStO
wrnty. Free deli very 290 hn Mr Hatc h. Limited Edlt1on loaded. Aaff / ..................... ..
s148 646.1786 1 14 84 7 2s6 3 o r lo w m1 s4200 eve c:!!!~ 9520 TOP"",...., ... . ---. 2J3592 1531C\es 552 47\4 RAMC:S ~
P o rt. Tos hiba 8700$ -.-••••••••••••••••••••••• PAfDFOllt
am/fm cass. ste reo. top 13' Boston Whalt'r , new ·77 750 4K Honda. Lo mlg. '66 Mustang Convertible GOOD & CLI! •H of the line, S22S or offe r l r Ir & e 11 g S2900 to p cond Best orfer Totally reswred '9,200 EA
642-7030 760-9133. 642 19'14 642 2532or631 ~ evenings 552-4114 USED CARS!
toi4itcellaneous 8080 Miscellaneous 8080 Miscellaneous 8080 Mhceta..o-8080 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
FOR SAFETY ... SECURITY ... CONVENIENCE
Automatic Garage Door Operators by Stanley
LOWEST PRICES
IN ORANGE COUNTY
"We Are Never Undersold"
STANLEY
Day or N ight
Prompt. courteous -
conscientious service.
SprlnCJI • Hardware • G•C191 Doon • Repairs
"Leading ln•laller of Automatic
Door Opener• In Otang• County"
• IRVINE DOOR COMPANY
Siles &: Service • ' DZ.1411
r
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas iind
Vol vo !'.> Ca ll u s
TODAY'!'
Ea1~/elke
TOYOTA·fOLYO
I"' H~ 11•4.
CetleMHe
"'-•0·'10l • S40-t4'7
PORSCHES
WANTED
·Allow us the opportunity
to r ons1der the purchase
or trade-in or your dean
Porsche Check with Us
Today'
'-!63• llAtllU< UlvCl
G•tdt'n Ctuvt-'" 1»·'333
Top Dlllar
Pail
For You.rCllrl J
JOHHSOM &'SOii
Liftc~
2626 Ha(bor 81v<f
Costa Mesa .s40-5e30
w.r.,
OVER ........
For Your Good
VW, Pon,h•~Audt
. -. . ' ~ . ' -.. . .
SADll.EIACK
BMW
23402 Marguerite Pkwy
M i&!ion Viejo
Avery Pkwy.exit
loff 5 Freeway)
811-2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays ·
CREVIER
&I ST & U OADWA'I'
• SAl'ITA "AHA
835·3171
THE Ut.IIMA Tl OAIVING MACHIN(
•USEDIMW1•
'76 5.JOiA SIR (2419)
·77 6.30 csi auto <0040>'
'19 320i ( 7560)
'79 320iA SIR (7089 )
'8052'iA stmrl. (0013 )
Cloffd 5-doys
Th• Mott &cfttncJ
f'artOfYow
IMW PwchoMOr
boteCCMlkth
McLaren BMW!!
lu10rU... 1,0 .. ,....., ... ,
C7 I 4J 522-5313
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
.&
llACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752..otOO
9750 •••••••••••••••••••••••
f'ORSCHE 1979
928 Fully loaded. 15.400
orig. mi., xlnt cond. in-
side & out Blue book
wholes ale Is S28.375. our
sale price as $26. 775
(200368). As.le for Duke
orMllce.
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORO
7'.>f>OHAll8011 Fl\10
CO~TA ME!.A t-41 0010
'74 PORSCHE 914
2.2 new engine. low mi.
Call arter6pm548·0905
'66 912 Ex Cond nu pnt.
S.pd. reblt. nu tires, no
d~nts S5,800 675-4174
firm
Rois Roye:. 975' ••••••••••••••••••••••• "l DEAUR IH U.S.A.
~~~VER
ROUS·ROYC£
IJ>IOJ•m-H NIWl*'11Ma<ll \.._ __ _........_
ClOSfO SUNOA'l'S
'760 .......................
LEASE
DIRECT!
CodHloc: 9915 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COHTEMPLA TIHG
CADILLAC?
'945 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'70 CONTINENTAL
Fully eqwpped, asktng
$1200. 673-1940
Mercury 9950 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ORANGECOUNTY'S
FfMEST
LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALERSHIP
We speciaJne. in leases ~-~ ~/4t/Joe for the business e x ~ T '
ecutive & professional ' LINCOLN-MERCU RY .
La~ Selection 16-18 Auto Center Dr. Of .,_w 1981 SD Fwy-Lake Forest
Coclloc:1 exit
I IRVlNE How In St9ck. 83().7000
NCA'A RPILRS '7-8 M arqu1s -wagon . S ~l)fLLJ\C pass loaded N e w
2600H.\rbof Blvd Michelins Xlnt cond.
Cos1<1 ~ 54(}<>100 S4000 Owner, 675-6161 ----
------· Must•g 9952 '76 Cadillac Seville .
AM/FM /tape. Air. New
paint. Spoke whls. Good
cond. $6900. 631-2184
'67 Sedan Deville. gd
cond $350 o r bes t.
Desperate 631-0966.
c ... oro 9917 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Y..,_Rahd
UNdC.,..!!
'71Che.,,...
Ca111oro %21 T-Top
Stereo, mag wheels.
power windows & door
loclts, 33,000 miles.
<351VQE)
$5995
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1968 Ford Mustang. V-8
Red exterior . black
vinyl interior New steel
belted tires, runs good.
$1495. 642-4321. ext 210 or
evenings 64(). 7049. ------
'73 CONVERTIBLE
Mint cond, ~/080.
644-6159
'73 Blue Mustang Convt.
Xlnt cond. I owner.
$3,500. 49J.6938.
'80 Mus tang, 6 cyl 2dr
auto pis ate rtm stereo
lo ma S6000631-4S52
'74 Mustang lI
4sp. 4cyl S1000.
640·9268 Denise
'66 Mustang, auto lran5,
289 eng. Sl~ or best of-
fer 6«·0452.
MONDAY. APRIL 1...>. IY81
11 • Ult>an ateas
OloCeQO T-Mop,~ llMI~ ,,..,,,_ _, ai-A011•• ..... 1
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP> -The astronauts of Colum-
bia, their rocketship sailing along
like a "champ," tested control
systems today for Tuesday's
searing rP.tentry after sources
said photographs indicated the
underbelly heat shield -crucial
to survival is apparently intact.
On Flight Day Two, "every-
t,hing's working just fine." a
mission director said today.
"There's nothing remotely re-
sembling a problem.••
John Young and Robert Crip-
pen were awakened from a chilly
night's sleep in orbit by a country-
westem tune that celebrated their
"mean machine." They began
testing Columbi a for the
dramatic landing that will con-
clude the mission that thrust the
United States back into the space
race.
Cabin ttmperatures overnight
were in the OOs, a few degrees
below normal and Crippen said.
"we got about ready lo break out
the long undits " Shuttle Control
No Reagan appearances
President stays upstairs, builds strength
WASHINGTON <AP > Presi-
dent Reagan, out of the hospital
but under doctor's orders not lo
work an the Oval Office yet, is
stay ing upstairs in the White
House with no 1mmed1ate plans
for public appearances while he
builds up his strength.
Reagan met t.>dav with has top
three aides and received a wri tten
national security briefing. said
deputy Whit e Jl ouse pres s
secretary Larry Speakes.
He also was meeting today with
Secretary of Stat:! Alexander M
Haig Jr. and Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger to hear re-
J.iOrts on their recent overseas
trips .• Both m eetings were
scheduled in the executive
mansion's second-floor living
quarters .
Speakes said Reagan was not
likely to make a radio speech on
hie; economic proposals this week
but said it may be done later.
HB parking lot sale
funds aid college
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OI tM 0.ilf Pilet Si.ti
An unpaved parking lot a
Golden West College an Hunt
ington Beach will be sold to hel1
pay for a new Coastline Collegf
h e adquarter s 1n F ountair
Va lley, according to a decisior
by Coast Community Collegt
District trustees.
The decision has drawn a let
ter of protest from the Golder
West Academic Senate, which
contends the lot i,s needed l<
ease parking congestion on tht
east side of the campus
The senate letter also protest
ed that Golden West facult~
members were not l'onsultec
prior to the board's action 1The lot in question is on th<
eas t s ide of Gotha rd Street
north of Center Drive The 2 7
acre site. oiled but unpaved. h
used for overflow parking when
the paved campus lot on th<
west side of Gothard 1s filled.
District spokesman Richard
Simon said the trustees con-
cluded the overflow "is not
necessary for the future growth
of Golden West ."
He noted that the lot is not
contiguous to the main campus
and said district ofricials believe
students can find parking places
In other campus lots. .
According to Simon. di~rict
Chancellor Norman Watson
responded to t.lie Golden West
faculty's objections by remind-
1 ng them lbat Orange Coast
College property in Costa Mesa
was sold in the mid-1960s to
finance the purchase or the
property on which Golden West
was built
<See PARKING, Page A%)
Irvine mayor
faces attack
on wife rap
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony was
arrested over the weekend on
assault with a deadly weapon
charges in connection with the
beating of his wife. Elaine.
police sai~ toda}
Anthony, 50. remained in the
Jail ward of UC Irvine Medical
Center this morning, said police
Chief Leo Peart.
Elaine Anthony. 50. .suffered
cuts and brujses on her face in
the beating that took place
Saturday afternoon in the An-
thony home at 18691 Via
Palatino. Irvine. police said.
Peart said that '·a gun and
fists•· were used in the assault. He
refused to say exactly how the gun
was used or what type of weapon It
was.
Anthony, a former Marine,
was placed in custody at UCIMC
because he evidenced "emo-
tional strain." Peart said. He
explained that once doctors de-
termine that Anthony can be
placed in Orange County Jail.
Anthony will be given a chance to
post bail.
As he recuperates at home from
the bullet wound in his left lung in-
flicted by a would-be assassin two
weeks ago, Reagan also may
telephone me mbers of Congress
for a progress report on how his
economic plan 1s faring, Speake3
said Sunday.
But the president pianned to
spend most. if not all, of the
week seclud~d in his upstairs
living quarters. First lady Nan-
cy Reagan has redecorated the
rooftop solarium for Reagan's
use during his ronvalescence.
After being released from
GeorJe Washington University
Hospital on Saturday, Reagan
speot a quiet weekend with his
wife and their daughter, Patti.
Aides agreed not to disturb him.
On Sunday he arose early to
watch the launching of the space
shuttle Columbia on television.
"It's a s pectacular sight," his
personal physician, Dr. Daniel
Ruge, quoted Reagan as saying.
Arter visiting the president,
Ruge reported through Speakes·
"He's in great s hape He looks
great."
Speakes and Reagan's senior
staff made a "eonscious de-
rision" to "leave him alone and
give him some time with his
family" after he returned from
the hos pital.
Ruge visited Reagan again
this morning and said later his
patient was "doing extr emely
well." Speakes. who relayed
Ruge's assessment, said there
were no pl ans for any other doc-
tors to see the president.
Speakes said Sunday that
Reagan's senior staff made a
"conscious decision" to "leave
him alone and give him some
time with his family" after he
returned from the hospital
Vice President George Bush
will continue to stand in for
Reagan at official functions.
though aides said he probably
would no longer preside over
meetings of the Cabinet and the
National Sec:urity Council.
Burials resume
SAN FRANCISCO <AP)
Cemetery workers will begin
burying today hundreds of bodies
that had to be stored during their
26-day walkout. Members of the
local voted Sunday lo end their
walkout, which had affected 10
cemeteries.
111111111• llllY PIPll
ORANGE COUN I Y C Al IFOHNIA 25 CENTS
quickly resolved that by dumping
water out of a heat exchanger.
The song, "The Flight of the
Shuttle Columbia, .. warmed their
spirits. It said, in part. "Many,
OBSERVERS CHEER -M
EDWARDS READY -AS
many hours went into this thing. A
job well done by the shuttle space
team.'
The music was written by Jerry
Rucker. an insulation technician
at Cape Canaveral for Martin-
Marietta 5Arp .. a11d s ung by Roy
McCall a country-and-western
singer from Titusville, Fla .. the
town that is closest to Kennedy
Space Center.
Following breakfast , Crippen
and Young plunged into a day or
extensive testing of s paceship
systems working well except
for minor "anomalies." A re-
m arkably clear telecast showed
Young testing the s hip's flight
controls
·'The vehicle is performing just
beautifully, much be tter than
anyone ever expected on the first
fli ght, .. Young said Sunday
"It's pe rforming l ike a
champ," Crippen reported
The astronauts relayed their
• praise during a four-minute
telecast to Shuttle Control nine
hours after Columbia vaulted
spectacularly off its launch pad at
Cape Canaveral
The maiden flight of the world's
first rertyable spaceship is a test
flight, and Young and Crippen
were to do just that today. Nothing
glamourous like landing on the
m oon. Just dogged checking and
rechecking of all the systems. as
they did Sunday after launch.
Of the til es. National
Aeronautics and Space Ad ·
minis tration spokesman Charles
Redmond said, "We are very in·
terested in understanding what
went on, but there is still no con·
0.11, ~ ... SUtt -
AWAITS SHUTTLE
Chari.es Bell
chanip'
Orbiter's thermal protection system
CoMlnQ
laY9f of borosltlca1e glass coats
extenof ol Ille. she05 aboul
95 per cen1 of the r•envy heat
Silicone
lrana1er
coal
cern. If you define a major prob-
lem as one where we think there
m 1ght be danger to the Ii ves or the
crew members, no, this doesn't
come anywhere near being a ma
JOr problem."
Today's work schedule· The
pilots e·1aluated the accuracy of
ship flight controls. assessed the
s mall steering jets that guide
their orbit and their descent,
troubleshot a minor cabin pres
su ri zation proble m. adjusted
Columbia 's startracker align
ment <navigation control J and did
more test operations by remote
control on the ship's cargo doors
Tlte body
Composed ol 90 per cent au
10 pet cent s1ttca hbers.
k>Mn·-ke Ille absort>s rema1rMng s pet cent of heal
From the moment of the fier.
on t 1me liftoff. Columbia was
almost a fl <1wl es s machine.
bothered by on ly a few nuisance
problems
A rernarkable recovery for a
craft that only a fev. months ago
critics were calling such unflat
tenng things as "space turkey"
and "aluminum Dumbo " Colum-
bia had fallen two vears behind
schedule. bedeviled.by technical
troubles with its main engines and
thermal tiles
The three powerful engines
were perfect Sunday
Mesan to be there
uhen shuttle lands
11
Charles Bell of Costa Mesa
plans on being at Edwards Air
Force Base Tuesday to watch the
landing of the first re-usable
s pace craft.
"I wouldn't miss it for the
world,'' said the 23-year·old Cal
State Fullerton student who has
s pent the last two years working
on the space s huttle program at
Rockwell International.
Arter 35 years with Rockwell
and nearly nine years devoted to
the s pace shuttle. has father.
Harold, will have to content
himseU with a televised version
of the hi storic landing
The 63-year-old aeros pace
engineer retired in J anuary and
moved his wife and youngest son
to Oregon.
At his retirement party he
took a lot of ribbing about bail-
ing out before the shuttle could
possibly fail , ~aid his son in a re-
cent inter view
"lie never had anv doubts
about the !)huttlc's success,"
said the younger Rell "He has a
lot of confidence in it."
Behind the $9.9 billion shuttle
program is an army of workers
who have labored nine vears to
bring Columbia to its final
countdowh at Cape Canaveral
today In Orange County alone
there are 22 companies involved
in the program
FV hoSpit<!l staff
Friday's compute r foulup
wa sn't the <>huttle's first prob-
ll•m Budget cuts have con-
tributed to its two and one-hall
year lag Also. bearings over-
heated and started fires. seals
ruptured. thousands of tiles had
to be replaced and in late
January 34 panels came un-
glued
-•'The launch delavs have de-
moralized a lot of people," said
Bell. who Joined the shuttle mis-
sion as a computer programmer
in 1979 turns down • union
By PHIL SNEIDER MAN
(){'Uie Dally ~lel Slaff •
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital officials today took a
low-key position rega rding an
election in which the hospital's
employees voted not lo affiliate
with two unions for collective
bargaining purposes.
"There's no desire to make a
victery statement," said
hospital spokesman Marshall
Kandell. "We're obviously
pleased. But the most important
thing is to get on with takinl
care of our paUenUI and nol look
at \his as a win -or lose ..
situation."
The hospital's employees vol·
ed Friday on whether to join two
unions in secret ballot election
supervised by t he National
Labor Relations Boanl.
Accorcbng to the hospital, 120
nurses and other prof e1Jlooa11
voted aaalnat affU.l•llon With the
United Nunes Alaoclation of
Callf ornJa, while 112 voted in
favor.
Amon• the boepltal'• technlc-.1
workera, includinl lab 111ii·
tanta and clertcal 1taff, 18' vot·
id 11atmt amuailon •ltb tb•
Ladd home bums
LOS ANGELSS (AP} A ftre
at UM Bevtrly Olen bOID• GI the
late ilR:tor' Alu IAdd'I WW0. bM
eeUMd -·• In am.,... No tnJurMI re1.at.d frotD &bie llnd&J
eventna blue.
United Auto Workers, while 108
voted in favor.
As a result of tht? outcome. the
unions are barred from resum-
ing organizing e fforts at the
hospital for one year.
Hospital employees obtained
approval for the election in
.. January in the wake of continu·
· ing disagreements with the
facility's administrators and
directors.
At that time, the hospital's
directors ousted adminjstrator
Tom Richards, with the aim of
restoring a "h11rmonious
environment" at the 214-bed
hospital.
The boepital'a directors hlred
a new aamtnlttrator, Craig
Myers, one month a10. Jn a re-
cent lnt.eniew, Myers said he
has devoted bil first weeks on
the Job to mendihl lences with
unb•PPY employees.
Pedeetrian dies
after accident
• 'A 28-year-old pedestrian died ol
tl\jurles be received whon be wu
1tnac_k by a vehicle at 1: M a. m.
Sunday oa Euclid~~ ot
HtU ·Avmue, Fowttaln Valley
Polle•~·
FoUMaln Valley IM>&iff decllntd
to ldeDtify tbe vicUm or UM driver
peactm:a noUftcatloo ol Mat ol kin ud furtber tnYeat.11attoa lnto the
aeetdiDt. 1
"The thing about space pro·
grams is the people are highly
motivated," said Bell , recalling
the nights of the Apollo mission
when his father wouldn't come
home until 8 or 9 o'clock.
But somehow the shuttle mis-
s ion hasn't sparked the same en-
thusias m of pas t s pace pro-
~rams
ORANGI COAST WIATHIR
Low clouds in night and
morning hours. Otherwise
fair through Tuesday.
Slightly cooler afternoons.
Highs in mid-SOS at beaches
to low 70s in inland areas.
Lows tonjght52to56.
INSIDE TDIAY
Southern CoJifomia boleboU
fan• celebrate oa Ano-la and
Loa Angelt1 Dodgera wfn.
Page Cl.
INDll
f
'
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Aprll 13, 1981
Mo titer
kills son
and seH
An lrvtn11 woman 1bot ber 10G
ln the bead Saturday wblle be wa.s doina homework 1n the llv·
tn1 room ol the famlly home and
then went into t.be bedroom IDd
kUled beraelf with the rifle.
Police Chief Leo Peert 1aJd tbJ•
morning. ·
·'She was emotJonally erratic and bad a hi1tory of mental
problems," Peart said.
Morris L. Greene returned
home from work at 1: 30 p.m.
and fowtd the bodies of bis wile
Nell S., 48, and son, Brent D .• 15.
Mr. and Mrs. Greene and \Mir
son bad lived al 48 Redhawk.
.Irvine, for about 2~ years,
neighbors said. m
Neighbors said Brent was a
freshman at Irvine High School
and ·active in the drama depart·
'ment. Last year, while still at
Lakeside Middle School, Brent
was picked to play the leading
role in the Irvine High School
performance of "Oliver."
Ron Taggart, who lives near
the Greene home, said Morris
Greene called him Saturday af·
ternooo from work. He was con-
cerned about being unable to
reach his wife and asked Taggart
to (O check on her.
Taggart said he rang lhe
doorbell but got no answer.
Test scores
.'1/B
:chnols up
Seventh and eighth grade stu-
dents in the Huntington Beach Ci-
ty <elementary I School District
improved their scores on state·
mandated proficiency tests given
in January by 4 percent over last
year's results, according to
James Macon, director of educa-
tional services.
''I'm very pleased," Macon
said. "Four percent may not
sound like much but it means that
261 more tests were passed this
year."
Each student takes four tests to
determine whether he has
mastered minimum skills in
reading. language, writing and
math.
ON THE READING tests. 90
percent of the seventh graders
and 95 percent of the eighth
graders passed. In language, 84
percent or the seventh graders
and 85 percent of the eighth
graders achieved minimum
mastery.
On the writing exam. 84 percent
of the seventh graders passed.
along with 90 percent of the eighth
graders.
Math test results showed the
biggest difference. In this area, 77
percent or the seventh grade
passed. compared to 95 percent of
the eighth graders.
Macon said the same math test
was given to both grades. He at-
tributed the difference in results
to the fact that some math skills
tested ln the exam have not been
taught yet to seventh graders.
EIGHTH GRADERS will be re·
tested in May to determine if
s pecial help ha$ raised the
number of students passing the
tests.
M aeon said eighth graders who
fail the proficiency exams are not
prevented from going on to high
school. He said the exams indicate to
school officials areas needing
more attention in the classroom.
Bush def ends
budget cuts
TUSKEGEE. Ala. (AP>
Vice President George Bush has
said ·that critics of President
Reagan's proposed budget cuts
are wrong In raising doubta that
the administration is insensitive
to the economic problems of
blacks and other minorities.
"Be gay. put aside your
doubts," the vice president as-
sured a largely black audience.
"Io this president and lb biJ ad-
mlnistraUon black and minority
Americana have a man who will
act, not deal in rhetorical rum-
nam, to lmpl"Ove the quality of
Ufe for those who have 1uffe:red
from bigotry and diJcrimiution
in the put."
ORANOI COAST
,,,, . ._.....
HITCH-ttEIGHT -Hang glider pilot Frank Knippers gets a
free ride 1,300 feet up by tying on to a hot-air balloon at
Hammond, La. The ride down for Knippers, after his re-
lease from the balloon, was about three minutes. This
was his first such launch.
Police probe bloody
street gang fight
Santa Ana police investigators
are piecing together information
today in the wake of Sunday's
bloody clash bet ween mem hers of
two Los Angeles street gangs and
a Santa Anayouthgaog at a party.
Three people and perhaps more
were injured in the fight that
erupted at a home at 2226 S.
Diamond Ave. in Santa Ana.
Miuic hall
to be topic
at, FVmeet
Orange County arts en-
thusiasts are expected to gather
at Fountain Valley City Hall
tonight to discuss plans for a $30
million music baU and drama
theater complex that could be
constructed at Mile Square
Park.
The city council meeting
begins at 7 p.m . in City Hall,
10200Slater Ave.
The domed complex has been
proposed by the California As·
sociation of Music Arts. As·
sociation members say it would
be geared primarily to com.
munity group productions.
The group still must acquire
land and funds for the project.
Auto prices
hold firm
DETROIT (API -Chrysler
Corp .. following the lead of Ford
Motor Co., announced Sunday
that it will not raise prices on
new cars and trucks until
"absolutely necessary."
The No. 3 automaker's vow to
hold the line on prices came
three days aftP.r Ford issued a
similar statement in response to
General Motors Corpl's an-
ouncement a week ago ofa 3.5 per-
cent price increase.
Chrysler said it would con-
tinue to evaluate the possibility
of inr.reasing prices because of
rising production costs,
however.
U.S. carmakers usually follow
GM's lead in price hikes. Ford,
the No. 2 automaker. said Thurs-
day that it would hold prices at
least through this month.
Chrysler sales. spurred by re-
bates, recently have improved.
Chrysler bas raised domestic
1981 prices 3.6 percent compared
with 1980 model prices, while
GM posted a 9.4 percent in-
crease and Ford bad a 6.5 perceDt
jump, according to J erry Pyle,
vl~e president of U.S. automotive
aalesforChrylser.
Police said two Gardena men
believed lo be Los Angeles gang
members were arrested by of-
ficers who quelled the dis-
turbance.
Booked at Orang'? County J:tiJ
on attempted murder and assault
c harges , were Luis Antonio
Vargas, 21, and Luis Antonio
Vidaurrazaga, 20. Both are being
held in lieu of $25,000 bail.
ACCORDING TO officers.
about 20 members of the two Los
Angeles gangs -Companeros
Baby Locos and Barrio So Las
Rifas -crashed the party at
about 1 :30a.m . Sunday.
Attending the party were Santa
Ana youths who belonged to the
5th Street Gang.
Violence erupted almost im·
mediately, officers said, and
police were called when a
neighbor re;><>rt~d hearing gun-
fire.
Between 15 and 20officers were
needed to break up the fighti11g,
resulting in tt-e two arrests and
confiscation of knives and a gun.
Injured in the fighting were
Ernest Lopez, 18, of Harbor City;
Matt DeArcos. 21, of Huntington
Beach, and Robert Hernandez,
18, of Santa Ana.
LOPEZ SUFFERED gunshot
wounds In the neck and hand and
is In serious but stable condition
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
OeArcos suffered multiple stab
wounds and was reported in fair
condition this morning at the
Fountain Valley hospital.
Hernandez was treated and re·
feased.
Police believe others at the par·
ty also were injured and have not
yet sought medical attention. It is
believed one man suffering from
a gunshot wound went to Mercy
Hospital later in ~he day Sunday
for treatment but ned when a
nurse began to call police.
A police spokesman said the_d~·
partment's special gang deta1l 1s
investigating the incident.
FV seniors
forming team
A senior softball team for
men. age 55 or older, ia being
formed by the Fountain Valley
Parks and Recreation Depart-
ment
The team will represent the ci-
ty Ip the Orange County Senior
Softball League. The league is·
scbedwed to begin play lo mid·
Juoe.1 w!t.h games on Saturday
and :sunoay afternoons.
Interested seniors can call
Llnd1 Divino at 963-8321, ext.
237.
D1llyPUat MAINOfflCI
............. C-W ..... CA.
118 Benior1
sell ru~ase
Tbe SenJor Cltlzeps Club of
lluntlntton Bnch ls ,aponaortna
a rumma1e 11Je tbrouab·
Wednelday 1n Room D It tbe·
Senior R4"-THtlon Cea~r. l'ltb.
Strfft anct9faaleAv•u+.
Melt ....... t ... IM, C.uMeu, CA. nt.21
Tbe evettt takea place eacb
d1y from t 1.m. to' p.1n.
............................ ~ ....... _._""· -""·
tftnce shift?
JleuJe eonlrolt for new af.
fordable boulinl built alont t.he
coitthave been opposed unUI now
by membenoftb~Or-.qeCou.,ty
BoardotSupervlaora.
They have preferred to leave
real estate markets unencum-
bered rather than to llmlt the
prices of homes during resale.
But the supervisors' position
may be changing soon because of
compromises reached with
representatives or both the south
coast regional and state coastal
com missiooa.
PLANNING STAFF members
from the county and lfle com·
mission have been meeting the
past month to set~e differences
over a set of stale-mandated
policies governing use of the
coastal i.one.
eve9 tbou,:b members 1ucb a•
Supenilor Bnice Nestande have
adarnanUy opposed resaJe con·
troJt in l1"t COWllY.
"ll'• best for the county to end
state Involvement in land use de·
cisions ln our jurisdJcUon and this
apparently is lhe best way to do
lt," saidHenrian.
The moment of reckoning will
come as the coastal programs are
resubmitted to the supervisor.i. If
approved, they will first go to the
regional commission and then to
the state.
BOTH THE coastal com -
mission and the state Air
Resources Board have regulated
hou11ing development in the Aliso
Water Management district. The
commission has imposed restric·
lions oo a sewage outfall permit an
which lt requires certatn controls
on affordable hoUJlnt.
The Air RelourcH Boarcl alto
h11 restrictions caUlnC f« low
and moderate howslna, aupped-
ly to shorten commuUnt trips in
the south county and ease aJr
pollution from vehicles.
There sUll are several other is·
sues to be Ironed out between the
county and the commlssio.ns.
What to do with sand dredied
from San Juan Creek, whether to
extend University Drive and how
wide to build Sand Canyon Road
through the Irvine Coast are just
three.
But Herman said those matters
can be resolved later in the proc·
ess if the comprc,mise on the ho us·
Ing issues is ratified firs t.
-GlennScoU
According to the recently·
reached compromise. the county
would impose resale controls on
up to 3,000 new affordable housing
units planned along the coast.
This would be done if the com·
mission and the state Air
Resources Board lift conditions
on development of about 5,000 new
homes within the area served by
the ,\liso Water Management
Agency.
FV trustees seek
new advisory panel
The agreement is part of
negotiations Involving the local
coastaJ programs prepared for
commission approval by the
county. The programs, mandated
by the state Coastal Act. are de·
signed to protect the coastline by
spelling out how coastal land can
be used.
THE COUNTY is preparing 10
such documents covering unin·
corporated parts of the coast from
Seal Beach to San Clemente
These coastal programs were
approved once by the
supervisors, but planners for the
regional coastal commission rec·
om mended denial based on
several reasons. including hous·
ingissues.
At that point. county officials
decided to negotiate the dif-
ferences. rather than confront the
commission during stormy and
potentially fruitless public hear-
ings.
One of those involved in the
negotiations has been Peter
Herman, planning aide to 5th Dis·
trict Supervisor Thomas Riley.
Herman said that Riley and other
supporters of the compromise
still have to seU the agreement to
other supervisors and members
of the coastal com mission
HE THINKS Riley will have al
least three votes on the board.
Easter rites
roundup set
A roundup of Easter s unnse
services along the Orange Coast
will be published in the Daily
Pilot Saturday.
Church officials should send
information to the ReliJion
Editor. P. 0 . Box 1560, Cbsta
Mes a 92626. so that it will ar-
rive before noon Wednesday.
Miners adamant
ayTM~ .......
United Mine Workers officials
say coal operators must give in on
three key issues when they return
to the bargaining table Tuesday if
they expect union miners to go
along with any new contract pro-
posals. Number one. says a
spokesman. i~ reinstatement or
the $1.90 roy afty on non-union coal
processed by UMW companies.
The Fountain Valley School
District is seeking applicants for
its new school closure advisory
committee.
District trustees recently vol·
ed to dissolve the committee
that had handled this task dur·
ing the past three years.
Revised specifications have
been adopted for selectlng new
committee members: only one
member of a family may serve
on the group and only one
membe r from a particular
school area can participate.
From Page A1
PARKING. •
The lot, zoned for community
service and education, is cur
rently being appraised. Simon
said. A city zoning change would
be required befor e any com·
mercial development• could be
built on the site.
MONEY RAISED through
sale of the overflow lot will help
the district purchase an 8.5-acre
parcel on the southwest corner
of Warner Avenue and Newhope
Street in Fountain Valley.
On this parcel, priced at $3.4
million, the district plans to
bui ld a new administration
headquarte r s for Coastline
College, which currently leases
o ffice space e lse wh e r e
Construction costs are projected
at S4.3 million.
The formal design of the new
Coastline complex is expected to
be unveiled at the Ma y 13 board
of trustees meeting.
Coastline s pokesman Jack
Chappell said preliminary plans
call for the construction first or
a four-story central ofhce build-
ing. with Coastline occupying
three of the floors . <The fourth
would be leased to other
parties).
In the second phase. related
retail shops and business offices
would be built around the main
Coastline headquarters.
Chappell said no classes are
planned at the site. Currently,
so me 32,000 s tud ents are
enrolled at Coastline. which of·
fers c lasses al 160 s ites
throughout the district.
Prisoners protest
SOUTH BENO, Ind. CAP> -No
injuries were reported wheu 40
inmates took two guards hostage
for three hours Sunday. at the St.
Joseph County jail to protest over-
crowding, officials say.
If You want Ill Cord Straight ~.
We've Got'em.
Our four basic colorl arv oH·whlle. It. blue, tan
hS OW/ In 84" conon, 16'(. ~ for shrtnt<aQe controf ,
Alsll, the committee's mem
bers hip must be evenly dis-
tributed among the district's
geographic quadrants.
Applicants for committee
openings must reside within the
school district's boundaries but
need not have childre11 attending
the district's schools .
Applications will be accepted
a t t he dis trict offices, 1
Lighthouse lane, through 5 p.m.
Friday, April 24
Eleven committee .members
and two aJternates will be select·
ed in May. District trustees have
the option or appointing five
member$
The remaining members will
be selected by drawing names
until a qualified committee 1s
formed.
The last school closure com,
mittee recommended in 1979
that McDowell a nd Lamb
schools be closed. The trustees
adopted this suggestion.
Earlier this year, the com mil·
tee urged that Bushard and 1 Wardlow schools be closed al the
end of the current term. The
trustees have postponed action
on these schools for llne year.
The new advisory committee
will begin meeting in August,
wi II cooperate in the develop-
me nt or a fi ve· year district
master plan and will make
recommendations to the trustees
in January 1982.
Ff/taking
slow-pitch
registrations
Entry forms are available for
the adult summPr slow-pitch
leagues offered by the Fountain
Va I ley Parks and Recreation
Department .
The forms, available at the
recreation department offices.
10200 Slater Ave . or the Foun·
lain Valley Recreation Center.
16400 Brookhurst St., must be re·
turned by 4 p.m . Friday, April
17 .
League fees are $205 per team
and must be paid by cashier's
check or money order made out
to the City of Fountain Valley
Men's. women's and co-ed
leagues are planned. Accept·
ance into leagues is based on a
point system that awards priori
ty points to teams with Fountain
Valley residents.
More information can be ob-
tained by calling Linda Divino
at 963-8321. ext. 237.
AL'SOARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644-7030
t
-.. • I • I \,
120W 40W • oo sow
--...-.40$
·, .· l_ ......._.
40E SOE
·~ ... t'
.CAPE CA AVERALt •. Fla. I
<AP> -~ lh•F.Ountdowo nn two I
m inutes befant launch• hutb fell
over the stands. Jerry 8roW1' got
out bt1 blpoculars. NelJ
Arroatron1 acrambltd to the top
of the bleachers for a better look.
Scores stood tr,ansfixed at waler'a
edge, the closest they could &el lo Columbia, 3"4t miles away.
Tears welled and cbanta of "Go,
Go, Go," booqied from the crowd
of 4,000 VIPS as the ground shook.
flames spewed and the spaceship
thundered upright from earth In a
billowing spiral of steam.
"GOOD LIFTOFF, s ruooth
night, beautiful aiabt," said
Armstrong, the first man to walk
on the moon.
• four minutes after it streaked
from pad3$A.
"It's a'A'ful 1ood alter mu too
long a pause to see us goln1 up
again," be said. Thf' mission. he
said, I\ "not lo escape tbe Euth
but to cue for Earth. I wl.Jh them ·
Godspeed."
Plt£81DENt Reagan, re·
covering at the While House from
bl'l bullet wound, watched the
launcb.ina of tht space shuttle on
television Sunday and declared:
•'It ·115Lacular sight.'' ·Politi , cliplomatsand busi· net• other things aside to
retllf1t io tbe s~ial viewing site
to watdt ~ .1auts John YoWlg and Robert Crippen finally blast
offon their541r2·bour mission. Map shDl»s orbital paths for fir1t three passe1 of space shuttle Columbia, be~ning at r Upper center at OTTOW ( 1). '
· wrnrnrrrn fi::i":'o"'Jo{al'
· · F-antastic, great,'· said
Brown, the usually loquacious
Califonua governor who stood
awed and groping for words.
·'There's nothing like having
your organs shake inside you
from the force of those engines to
bring about an awareness of what
we're doing," said Russell
Scbweickart. a former Apollo 9
astronau
Among them were Sen. Jen·
nings Randolph, D· W. Va.; Rep.
Doll Fuqw. D-Fla.; former asttoa_.t James McDivitt of
Gemini 4 and Apollo 9,
reP-resentatives of space agencies
in ~a.Spain and Germany, <'Or·
porate executives. families of
space workers, and a pair or
sciet!ce·fl«ion movie producers
from HoUyYiood.
,
-~
March Of pilgrims
opens Holy, Week
in Britain
LONDON (AP> -With Bri·
tain's economic squeeze increas·
mg competition for jobs and
housing, more racial violence is
predicted after a weekend of an·
ti-police rioting an a black Lon·
don slum.
Schweickart c lutc hed a
calculator he used to s imulate
countdown himself, then squinted
into the blazing Florida sun and
followed the shuttle's path for
Th~ special invitation crowd
had dWindJed by one-third since
Friday's scrubbed launch, with
movie stars, legislators and some
of the better·known celebrities
Trail of smoke marks
Columbia's swift ascent
among the missing. ··A lot of the,m
h ad other commitments and
couldn't come back," said Arnold
Ri c hmond .
U.S. blamed in sea crash JERUSALEM CAP) -Singing Shostakovich, one of the Soviet Scotland Yard said 244 people
h ymns and c&rrying palm Union's foremost com posers, were injured, most of them
fronds, thousands of pilgrims are the latest Soviet artists to police, as rioting snowballed in
opened Holy Week celebrations defect to the West. South London's impoverished TOKYO <API A veteran
on Palm Sunday with a march •6,,..QQacre at V;l l,,..,,.,,n Brixton district. U.S. Navy submarine skipper retracing Jesus' footsteps down IF.I~ .. ~e
the MoWlt of Olives mto ancient Gu ATE MAL A C 1 Ty . HUNDREDS OF black and was due in Japan today to begin
Jerusalem. white youths fo ught the police a formal investigation into the Guatemala <A P > -A gang of ·th botU •· · k d li 11 · · ( · Catholl·cs an_. Protestants 1 w1 es, unc s an gaso ne co 1s 1on o an American
11 m e n apparent y looking for bo b I l d t d b d I ed b · d labored down the steep hill past firearms, invaded a small m s, oo e sores an urne nuc ear.power su marine an
the Ga1den Of Gethsemane and h ·u down more than 30 buildings, a Japanese merchant vessel. nort eastern v1 age and used · d T J • through the 01d Cl'ty 's St b witnesses sai . wo apanese crewmen were mac etes to hack at least 24 peo. D · d J t h th f · h k Steven's gate for prayers in tbe 1 l d th . 1 d' amage was estimate at os w en e re1g ter san . d Pe 0 ea · me u mg a 5-year-more than S2 million. courtyar of St. Anne's Church. old child, officials ha ve re· Police seeking the causes of U.S. Embassy officials said
where tradition says the Virgin ported. the worst outbreak by blacks in Capt Willis Rich, a senior staff
Mary was born. A spokesman Cor the national Britain said political extremists officer at the Navy's Pacific Militnrv aid rfW~ security forces said the may have been responsible for headquarters in Hawaii, will ~ J ~ massacre occurred early Satur· the trouble. which began with serve as a one.man board of in·
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador day when an undetermined sporadic clashes Friday night quiry to probe the mishap as
CAP > _ The spokesman for the number of killers raided the and escalated sharply on Satur· "thoroughly and quickly as
Roma n Catholic church in El village of Choabajito, 47 miles day and Sunday. possible ...
S l ad h S 'd h d ns northeast of Guatemala City. a v or a scu e con em A SPOKESMAN said Scotland HIS INVESTIGATION will in·
U.S. military aid to the govern· Rio • Yard was investigating reports elude interviews with surviving
rnent because "the problems are ts in eTTOr that large supplies of homemade crewmen of the sunken Nissho
being resolved militarily with BERLIN <APl -Hundreds of gasoline bombs were on hand an Maru. a 2.~ton freighter, and
massacres of the people. while youths, angered over erroneous hour after the s tart of Saturday with personnel of the USS George
the solulion is political.·· reports that two hunger-striking night's clashes. He also said the Washington, a Polaris missile-Artist's kin ~~ec1 ter rorists had died in jail. Britis h Broadcasting Corp . firing submarine based at Guam.
';/ • ram paged througb downtown called thf> Yard's press office they said.
Maritime Safety Agency as con
ducting a separate inquiry " . ~COLLISION occurred
lut Thursday in the East China
Sea. about 110 miles off the
southern lip of Japan.' The
Shanghai-bound freighter sank
within 15 minutes. Thirteen
crewmen survived but the cap-
tain and another crewman are
missing and presumed dead
The incident bas stirred a new
public furor rn nuclear-sensitive
Japan, and Foreign Minister
Masayoshi Ito today warned
there was a "danger that the re·
lationship of trust between t.be
United Stales and Japan woula
be affected'' by it.
.Japane!lf! o ffi cia ls a nd
newspapers have criticized the
submarine's failure to rescue
lbe survi vors and to
acko•led1t any in volvement
untU the following day.
s ub briefly surfaced. and also
prevented an aircraft accomp;i.
nying it from spotting the dis·
a bled ship or the lifeboats.
ITO CALLED that explanalim
"unacceptable ·· ·
While expressing regret over
the incident and indicating a
readinees to pay compensation lo
the \'iCtims, the U.S. govern·
ment has not adm1tted that the
sub was at fault. However. Capt.
John f'. O'Conne ll , the em·
bassy's naval attache and a
former submarine officer
himself, s aid a submerged sub·
mHrine ''hai. an obligation to
watch out for surface ships.··
N li R E M B E R G . west West Berlin, smashing windows, nearly two hours before the trou· The report will go to Navy
Germany <APJ The son and looting shops and damaging ble erupted saymg it had been headquart.m; in Washington and The Navy claims rain and
grandson of the late Dmitri cars. told there was rioting in Brixlon. then to the Japanese Japan's fog obscll!ed the scene when the
O'Connell denied suggestions
in the Japanese press that lhe
s ub did not pick up the survivors
because it is a highJ y.classified
nuclear-powered craft. All U.S.
warships ran pirk up s urvivors
at sea and there is no exception
for nuclear po\\ertd vessels. he.
said =--~~liliiiiiiiiiiii~r-~-=--=-=~=---~=-~~~.-r -.----ct.aa\JG 8u)lna» 110ifln .. a~inaca#'ft-------.
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Fly-front skirt, $52
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'I
'Extraordinary survival'
Brady~s recovery from brain wound amaze~ doctors
: !•!•1
•..• ,, WASHINGTON CAP) -White
1 .House preq secretary .t•mes S.
· · ; 'Brady faces 1 Ion, recovery ·~,·· lrom the bullet wowad 1n bi&-
'1 Jt>raln but "the pe~on Y9'* all ·• "'ha\'e known will almoet cen.ln· • ~ ·:iy be back," a pbyalclan a-1d.
I ''His survival ls extraordlnary•
.;.and his recovery la remarlte·
;,ble," said Dr. DennJs O'Leary,
"·.:;dean of cllnical affalr$ at
".·· , George Wasl\lngton Unlverslty
.. ~ .Hospital.
•l• • The 40-year-old Brady was
. .shot at close range in the as-
. sassination attemet acalnst
..... :.President Reagan. The bullet
~., .. entered over Brady's le" eye
:~and ripped throuch his skull,
coming to rest in t.he right side
or his head.
In five hours of emergency
s urgery, doctors removed 20
percent o! lhe tissue tn the r18.ht
hemisphere of the braln alona
the path of the bullet. Doctors
said 8 out of 10 people would not
have sUJ'Vived such a wound.
In a briefing on Brady's condJ·
tlon, O'Leary at flrst seemed t.o
try to tone down some of the op-
tlmistic reports that have sur·
faced about the press secretary
this week.
"I think at this juncture we all
ought t.o keep our expectations
at a reasonable level," O'Leary
said. "His progress from here on
out is going to be stQW.
"WE'RE talking now weeks.
months, recuperation, a lot of
hard work for Jim Brady to re·
gain as much function as posst·
ble," he added.
:First Soviet bloc ..
• casino set to open
BUDA PEST. Hungary (AP l -
With the blessing and money of
Hungary's Communist govern ·
ment, the Soviet bloc's first
gambling casino o pens here
April 25 in a partly medieval at-
mosphere. Hungarians will be
barred. however.
In contrast to the vibr ant
nightlife of Las Vegas. Atlantic
City and other Western gambl·
ing hubs. Budapes t's casino
on the fourth floor of the Hilton
Hotel will make an attempt at
elegance and old style European
tradition.
The blackJack room for ex·
ample. is 111 a part of the build
ing converted from a 14th cen·
tury tower. ris ing near what was
a former Benedictine abbey
whose remains were incorporal·
ed in the hotf'l complex
FROM atop Buda Hill.
gamblers and regular hotel
guests will enjoy a view of the
Danube and the skyline of cen
tral Budapest.
At the gambling tables. it wall
be as businesslike as anywhere
else. but with chips exchanged
only for West German marks.
.. Rut our gufSlS may ex
change any Western currency
for marks," an official of the
state run Oanub1us Hotels and
· Spa Co said
Danubius launched the project
with the help of the Austrian
Casino Co. of Vienna, which pro-
vided all technical knowhow and
holds a 49-percent s hare of the
Sl 35 million capital stock.
A TOWER restaurant and one
of the Hilton's nightclubs were
refashioned earlier this year to
serve as casino premises.
There will be two French
roulette and two American
roulette tables. thrt.>e blackjack
tables and one each for boule
and baccarat
An adjoining room will accom·
modate 32 slot machines and a
snack bar
"Casino Budapest" will be
open from 5 p .m . to 2 a.m. seven
d;iys a week and guests will pay
a five-mark <$2.35) entrance fee
that can be redeemed for chips.
There is no tax on winnings
and, officials s tress, money won
can be freely transferred abroad
in hard currency, which is not
possible in other business opera-
tions in Hungary .
Hungarians are kept away
from the tables because of the
country's stringent regulation
that prohibits them from buying
fore ign currency. Few. if any,
other East Europeans are ex·
peeled to be seen at the casino
for simHar reasons.
Hungary is visited each year
b) some two million Western
tourists. more than half of them
from neighboring Austria and
from West Germany
I •
"We feel very opUmiaUc about
blt mental •ttte. about the re. tum of b.ls pe.rsOnaUty.
"He may not be preclaely the
way he \Vu before and undoubt·
edty there wiU be some s ubtle
chanaea, but they may be so
subtle that even the people who
are very close to him are goin1
to have trouble ldentifyin1.
those."
Later. however, O'Leary as·
sured reporters that "Jim
Brady, t.~e person ·you all have
known, will almost certanly be
back."
HE SA.ID it probably would
lake a year before Brady could
return to work, and that Brady
will have an undetermined
amount of motor impairment. "l trunk it is probably a rea-
sonable expectation -·I really
want to hedge this -and he will
be able to walk with a cane,"
O'Leary said. "He might do bet·
ter than that. But he might not
do as well as that and we just
don't know. It's far too early."
O'Leary said there is some in·
dication Brady may have lost
part of his sense of smell. which
could have a bearing on his
ability to.taste.
HOWEVER, 0' Leary cau·
tioned that "there are also
separate taste capabilities and
taste assessment is quite
tricky."
Brady's speech "is pretty
good." O'J,,eary said-"His
speech is nol really slurred. It's
pretty normal.··
Brady has been taken off an-
tibiotics and his temperature "is
staying down." the doctor
added He continues receiving
medication to prevent swelling
of the brain, but he is beyond the
stage where that is a big pro-
blem. said O'Leary
Up to four more weeks of
acute-level hospital care will be
required before Brady can begin
a rehabilitation program,
O'Leary said. He added that
Brady would be hospitalized for
mu c h of the rehabilitation
period
IN A telephone conversation,
Brady was said to have joked
with Vice President George
Bush's press secretary about
going shark fishing this sum-
m er .
Brady also spoke with his own
deputy. Larry Speakes, but was
not as animated. Brady spoke
only in reply to questions and
made only one-word replies.
Speakes said
Southern skies sunny
Cold front with hail hits from Missouri to Ohio
C.Oastal iooather
Po1n1 Con..eplion 10 IM Mll•lun
bOrOtr •no out '° rnde1 LIQht
v•rl•Olt •lnos night and morning
llou" tl\ro11111\ ton1gllt IOol\ornoon
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wh1to llQM ,,_.,. moved '"'°""" IM P•<•hc Ho<trwto\t 10 tht nortMrn
Aoc ~ 1tt
Strong 1nunder1totm\ rumbled
o~•r IM Ol\10 V•ll•y •'-1 cold
front from ')OrtMrn Ml\~'* to Ohto,
W'11\\GmeP\IJ1t
Sc •lier.cl Uu1ndtt\~wtr1 wtr•
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Appeal lose8
F RESNO (AP> -A
Stan lalaua State Colleae
librarian lost bia appeal
cbal l en1i n g t b e cbancellor'a authority
over sabbaticals . Tbe ,_..--------------------------ii"l5tb ·District Court of
. "''~fl /dttllll~
The Dally Pilot wane. t.o bear observaLlool from lt.t readen
-.particularly comment.a about the paper llPll. It'• eaa1 to tt U
u1 {OW' views. Just caU the number below and your meta.,t.
1wu be recorded. Mt1111es wlU be tramertbed MveraJ Um•
1dall1 llld deUvered to tM dealt ol UM approprtate editor. No' A
• lclrc~calle, pie.... ·
Tell • what'• on )'<>Ur l'lliAd. TM number At la eervlce 14
houra a daj. Mven daya a....-. fl":l•BOBfJ .
Appeal, ln a aplit
decialon, upheld a policy
: by Chancellor Glenn
, Dumke on leaves for
· in1tructor1.
o.lll l'I ... Staff .......
Holding their lnternatwnal winter Special Olympics medals are Costa
Mesa11$ Debbie Keyes f left J, silver ; Allison Reese.gold.
UCI frosh rank
lowest on tests
By RICHARD GREEN
Miiie D•llY l'llel $1 .. f
Freshmen entering UC Irvine
in 1979 scored lower an verbal
and compQsition tests than their
counterparts on the other seven
University of California cam-
puses
And the UC! com position
scores were 26 points below the
national mean
But lJCI Associate Vice Chan
cellor Carl Hartman s aid these
statistics. contamt•d an a recent
ly released s tudy on un
derprepared students. don't an
dicate UCI students have special
problems an language skills
R ather, these proL lems are
shared by university students
across the nation. Hartman ex-
plained.
"IN THt: last s ix months I've
talked to.people at the Universi·
ty of Arizona. Uni\'ersity of
Michig<in. Michigan Stale, the
University o f Illinois . the
Univeri.ity of Iowa and Cornell
University." he said. "They say
th'!y 've been worrying about
these tr ends for longer than we
have "
He claimed that the scores of
UC l freshme n on the verbal and
composition tests weren't lower
in a statis t1cally s 1gn1f1cant
sense than the scores of
(reshmen on the other UC cam·
puses
"What has happened 1s that
s tudents at all levels have Jess
facilities in verbal skills than
would be desirable ... Hartman
said "We're seeing a social
phenomenon We became less
language orientl'd after World
War ll."
scores on the math p<1rtion of the
SAT
According to the study. SAT
and Achievement Test scon•s
have been dropping nationally
The decline was more pro
nounced at the U01vers1ty of
California. but CC freshmen still
score above the national mean
on these entrance exams
THE s tud\ ~a \·s that SAT verbal scores aroppea 2ti points
nationally from 1972 to 1!>7S This
com pCJres to dl'C ltncs of 36
points m California. 43 points at
the L'nivers1ty of California and
56 points al L'C I.
·' l\1 any changes ha vc occurred
in the last decadt' that arrecl the
preparation of studt•nts for col
lege," the report said by way of
explanation "Important
societal changes in family
structure. mobility. drug t;S<Jgl',
television and parcnt<il attitudes
hove taken u toll
··California's hig h schools
have been askt•d to alleviate
·We're seeing a
social phenomen-
on. We became
less language-
oriented after
World War II.,
HE SAID that the UC I ad rat·1al and ethnic segregation. to
ministration as now considering a ssi milate and accultur ate
what can be done to enhance the thousands of' 1mm1grants. ref
basic academic skills of the un ugees handicapped and to
iversity's students attend to lite IE>gitimale needs of
Jn the 1979-80 st•hool year. UCI those a t t he bottom of the
spent SJJ0.000 on courses and achievement scale_"
$134.000 on programs for un· Hartma n theorized that the
derprepared students. according trend of declining basic skills in
to the University of California-the UC system may appear
com missioned study o n un· more pronounced than the na
derprepared stuae nts tionwide t rend because those
That study indicatf'd that all skills used to be :.it such a high
e ight University of California level.
campuses witnessed decreasing "BECAl'SL' this declin" shows freshrr.an scores on the verbal "" ' portion or the Scholastic Ap· no signs of abating. ll deservt>S the
titude Test ar.d the English com· attention of the um vers 1ly com
position and math sections of the mumty, which must del'ide how to
Achievement Test. address basic skills problems and
Additionl\lly. six of the eight how to pay for the courses and
campuses including UCI wit-programs that will do so." the
nessed decreasing rr~shr~n~a~n=--~s_tu_d~y_s_a_id_-~~~~~~~-
CM girl,s
skate to
honor.s
~
By J ElltY CLAtlSEN ot\lle o ... , ....... '-" IJ
The Inte rnational Winter
Special Olympics made 1981 a
big year for Rose Ross' spec:ial
education class at College Park
Elementary School In Costa
Mesa.
Five students made money in
a Special Olympics television
commercial with u.s _ speed
skating champ Eric Heiden.
One student, Ms. Ross con-
fides, had a speaking part and
• has earned more than $1.000 in
residuals so far.
BUT THE CAPPER came in
mid-March.
That's when sixth-grader Al
lison Reese. 12. and fifth-grader
Debbie Keyes, 10. took a gold
and sa lver medal for figure
skaters in their age category at
the 1981 International Winter
events
More than 600 educationally
handicapped youngsters from
a cross the U S ·and seven other
nations gathered in Stowe. Vt. to
compete in s kating, skiing and
bobsled events
The two Costa Mesa girls
represented California in their
figure-skating events after earn-
ing top medals in the annual
Orange County Special Olympic
competitions last vear
Both have bet'n skating since
they were first graders. follow·
1ng their spcC'ial education
teachers onto the ace every Fri·
da) morning at the Ice Capades
Chalet m Costa Mesa for an
hour·s workout
"IT'S GREAT FOR balance."
explams Ms Ross who ruefully
confides that she broke an arm
last year while zipping across
the ice
Tht• teachers didn't make the
week -long. a I I-expense-paid
flight to VL•rmont. though.
And they weren't there when
Allison and Debbie. clad in their
skating costumes. steppe~ out
on the ict' before a gathenng of
hundreds lo pt.:rfo1·m tht'ir
routim•s to musi<'
"Yeh." admits Allison. look
an~ at her toe'>. ··we v.ere S('Cif(.'d "
Debbie adds. · Allison kept
saying. I knov. 1·m going to fall.
I JU~I know 11 And stw did_··
Despite the fall.~ Allison's
figure eights. camels. sit spins.
edges. dying S \\ ans and bunny
hops \\ere• best m lht> competi-
tion . "'1th l>cbb1t" ~ a close
SC('Ond
IN AOOITION to their near
saucC'r s1zt' medals. the girls
brought horn<.' nev. skating out-
fit ~ and s kates. pins and ;i
number of other gifts from the
International Special Olympics
committee
But best of all. they agreed.
was the Vermont snow.
Next to becoming professional
ice s katers when they grow up,
the two agreed they'd most Like
to live in Vermont where the
snow floats gently lo earth and
is great for s nowmen and
snowballs
Pair wi n g r ants
Cal Stale Fullerton students
Kathleen Miller and Andrea
Pronk, both of Huntington
Beach. are recipients of the an-
n u~l Coors Communications
Scholars hips at the college.
thz. original ~-9
thz. claesic windbnzaKtz.r,
madci m 1tngland of tha.
f\m.st all Cotton fOPlin
w1 th euthz.ntic tartan
linmg tha oncz. j8Ckrz.t
hcz.' 11 1ovrz, to ~r.
avei 1abl<z. 1n neturol,
rtNj, briti9h tan
andnzd
·~ ByTlaeAaaoclated Preu
; The unusual southerly d~pf•y
• the aurora boJ'~lli~ that
ckered across the Ml<twest
nday night also colored skies
on& the eastern edae of
ltfomla, causln1 a flood of
~Ila to police and promptinJ
:osie fire department to send out
'firelighters in search ol a blue.
At Edwardt Air Force Base ln
the Mojave Desert, where tbe
skies have bee n carefully
watched in expectation of tbe
space stiutlle's Tuesday landing,
~' Sgt. Chris~mmerell, a weather ~ station o rator, said he bad
· seen the ow.
Authorities from Auburn,
northeast or Sacramento. south
lo Riverside County east of Los
Angeles, reported numerous
callers asking about a red glow
·in the sky. ' THE KERN COUNTY Fire
Department sent a unit to a r e-
port or a big fire in the Caliente
area and was about to send
another when dispatchers
learned the glow was not a fire,
a dispatcher said late Sunday.
"Nobody knew what it was,"
said Judy Smith, a communica-
tions operator at the Riverside
County Sheriff's Indio substa-
tlon. "We had some people wbo
tbou1ht the end was nbr or the
Martians were comlnt."
~be said one caller said tbe
sight 1:onvinced him to stop
drinking.
In Independence, about 400
miln north of Loa Ancelea, the
glow had "everybody freakin1
out," said Benett Keuler, of the
Eastern Sierra Newa Service.
· • Jt looks lllce there's a tremen·
dous fire on the other side of the
mountains. It's ri1bt above the
Inyo mountains . . . red and
then kind of yellowish and
orange," she Sllld.
LARRY KENT, an engineer
for the California Depar1ment of
Forestry stution at ldyllwild, said
mountain res idents called in,
thinking there might be a forest
fire.
"That was the first reaction of
people up here," Kent said. "We
did a lot of quick checking
around before we found out what
it was."
Antelope Valley sheriff's depu·
ty Gary •Childs Hid reports ()f
sightings had come in from
throughout the area, including
som e from California Highway
Patrol officers on patrol.
1V, fihn writers
launch picke ting
HOLLYWOOD CAP> -The strike by 8,300 film
and television writers gets under way in earnest
today. the first working day since the Writers
Guild or America voted to walk ore the job to back
their contract demands.
The writers planned a mass picketing session
at 20th Century· Fox studios today, with smaller
picket lines planne<l at additional production cen-
ters through the week.
Sfuyi11g suspect heUl
SAN DIEGO tAP> -The FBI is crediting a
$10.000 reward with leading them to a teen-ager
held in the execution-style killings of four family
members gunned down at a target practice range.
A second suspect was being sought.
The suspect. Quinn Amaro. 18, of San Diego,
was held at the federal prison here for investiga-
tion of murder on federal property.
Klan rally crushed
SAN JOSE (AP) -The hundreds of protesters
:whose attack crushed a Ku Klux Klan rally were
~ust "a small handful of communists," according
to a Klan organizer.
Steven Seager. who organized the aborted
rally. contended that the Klan members "have a lot
of support out there.··
·Titanic an sto"len
LOS ANGELES <APl -A $:500 reward has
been offered for the return of the only known sur-
. viving piece of china from the Titanic, reported
stolen from a n exhibit on the anniversary of the ill·
: fated ocean liner's sinking, an exhibit sponsor
: said.
I Arw.....-
BLIST£RING FINISH -Frank Genco, Long Beach hyp-
notherai>ist, smiles as he finishes the last stretch of his
36-m,Ue, non-stop skating trek from Long Beach Conven-
tion Center to LA Con~ention Center. The 45-year-old am-
putee covered the distance in 5 hours and 15 minutes in
celebration of the International Year of the handicapped.
He suffered three blisters on his right hand Saturday.
EDWARDS AlR FORCE
BASE <AP) -Alr Force
weather forecasters, who are
fredlcting near-perfect weather
or Tu~sday 's sch eduled
touchdown here of the space
shuttle, have the odds in their
favor.
Edwards boasts of good flying
weather at least 350 days a year,
and U . Col. Winston Crandall
said Sunday that wi nds are
typically "calm to light in the
morning then they pick up in the
afternoon."
He said normal winds are
from the southwest, which send
them straight up the landing
strip , a dry lakebed.
"WE'RE LOOKING for condi·
lions to be very favorable for a
landing here," said Cr andall,
com mander or Detachment 21.
2nd Weather Squadron at Uus
sprawling desert base, where
the shuttle is to land at J :30 p.m.
EST Tuesday ... We don't see•
any disturbances. We feel fairly
r onfident about this forecast."
But the forecast for New Mex-
ico's Northrup, the Columbia's
backup landjng site, is less op·
timislic.
·'This strip of cirrus clouds is
moving Past." Crandall said.
"It's going to be over Northrup
strip at the approximate landing
time Tuesday."
At NASA's Dry de n White
R esea r c h Ce nt e r h e re ,
meanwhUe, the 18-vehlcle con-
voy and ground crews that are
to meet the Columbia relaxed
Sunday afternoon after standing
In readiness since about S a.m.
The shuttle, because of its
position In orbit, ean land at
Edward1 between about sunup
1md 1:30 p.m . PST each day or
1 the S41h-hour mission.
· The crews. who will check the
s huttle for dangerous, leaking
gases, cool its electronics and
cleanse its fuel lines. were head-
ing back to their posts early to-
day.
WEATHER CONDITIONS at
the 44-square-mile lakebed here
are being examined about as
carefully as any spot on earth.
We ather fan.casting for the
mission includes military and
government agencies around the
world. The Air Force Global
Weather Central at Offutt Air
Force Base. Neb., is even sup·
plying data on solar storms and
flares that might affect the shut-
tle radio communications.
Besides the teams' regular
weather station, Crandall said
the airmen had a special wind
sensor on the lakebed landing
strip itself and .. we·11 be sending
up nine weather balloons in the
three days of the mission.··
F o ur of the big, brown
balloons will carry instruments
to about 90.000 feet during the 12
hours before the scheduled land·
ing.
,flir California has a fnlsh nflW namfl
and a fnlsh nflW stylfl.
There·s a new excitement 1n
the air
You can see 1t
You can feel 1t
You can fly 1t'
Air California 1s now A1rCal
And we're out to win the \Nest
with stvle
I/Ve have new wardrobes
that Marv Mcfadden designed
for us They·re far from trad1·
t1onal and far and away the
most innovative airline ward~ robes you ·ve ever seen
Our planes wear the bold
new A1rCal colors. and once
1ns1de, you II find relaxing,
contemporary intenorc.
Another thing you n find
with A1rCal 1s that we have a
way of doing things that will
keep you flying with us again
and again
And thars stv1e 1
When vou trv us. vou·11 see
we do more than Just get you
there. we get you there 1n scvle
'Bradley raps critics 11';1' ~"ltt'' ~ • :iiioll'•·lrioQii:ii~ .. '1'·•iV1'M. ~IROIL .
• LOS ANGELES <APl -With one day left i before Los Angeles voters go to the polls, two is·
·sues appear to be generating some heat in the ! municipal contest -one involving Mayor Tom ! Bradley. the other in the city attorney race.
: .
·1 I d ead, 4 hurt·
lin fiery crash
I ;
j BELLFLOWER <APl -Four Bellflower High
~School cheerleaders remained hospitalized with
jmultiple injuries sustai.qed in a fiery bead-on crash
~hat fatally injured a fifth girl this weekend,
:authorities s~id.
! Re eina "Btanbain. 16, died at Paramount i General Hospital around 1 a.m. Sunday from in-
; juries suffered when a car allegedly involved in a
: drag race went out of control and crashed into the f 1irls' station wagon Saturday, Los An1ele11 County
l•'sheriff's deputy Ward Finch said.
Clarissa Graham, 16, was listed in critical con-
dition and Kay Smlt.b, 17, was listed Ira fair condi·
Uon at Paramount Kospital Sunday nlpt. In
;.-rlticaJ condition at Studebaker Community
, Hospital in Norwalk was Chri1tine Acben. 18.
' 'Diane Yoshinaga, also 16, was llsted in fair condl-
rlion there. 1
James R. Hander, 19, of Art-:sla and a 17-year-
old Bellflower 'youth wboee name was withheld
because of his a1• were booted for in~estl.aUon of
felony drunk drivina. reckless drivinl arid other
vehicular violatlou at tbe Lakewood 1berilr1 1ub-
staUon, Finch 11id.
I
You11 like our style
..
The Oranae County Board of Supervisors may have
been hasty last week in quickly approving a $10.000
feas.lbillty study for a proposed equestrian center near
I Allso Creek for the 1984 Olympic games:
• The supervisors declded to seek the Olympic site I because they figured it might attract outside money to
construct the equestrian facilities already planned for the
Aliso Viejo Greenbelt.
They acted without prior notice to approve the
feasibility study because county officials said a formal
proposal to host the equestrian events needed to be sub-
mitted immediately to the Los Angeles Olympic Organiz·
ing Committee.
A little more time to think might have been bandy.
Preliminary comments from officials at the organizing
committee have not been supportive of the countyts
chances. One spokesman said the Santa Anita racetrack
is close to an agreement on staging the equestrian events
there.
It appears doubtful at this late date when most of the
Olympic sites have been selected that a sketchy proposal
from Orange County to build an entirely new facility
could outweigh a relatively safe plan to use an existing
site.
In their effort to save ta~payers money, county of-
ficials this time may have spent some unnecessarily.
C.Oast ac~ rule
A beach access ruling by a three-judge federal panel
in San Francisco could have far-reaching effect along the
California coast.
The panel upheld the action of the state Coastal Com-
mission in requiring that a major development in Sonoma
County, 120 miles north of San Francisco, provide public
access for five beaches along a 10-mile stretch.
The judges ruled that the commission was carrying
out its duties under the California Coastal Act when it re-
fused to issue building permits for the Sea Ranch de·
velopment until the access question was resolved.
Owners of the property had refused to grant beach
access, contending the commission's demands were un-
constitutional. As a result, no building permits had been
issued for the 1,300 remaining vacant lots in the develop-
ment since 1977. Five hundred homes had been built
before the access debate developed into a stalemate.
Meanwhile, a state Assembly bill has offered the
owners $500,000 compensation from the state for granting
the coastal access. They have until July l to accept this
compromise or pursue their case to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
Coastal commissioners said the five beaches were
chosen because their public use would have a minimal ef·
feet of the privacy of the homeowners. They pointed out
that failure to impose the access requirement would have
resulted in a 10-milc stretch of private beach. in defiance
of the Coastal Act.
Under the circumstances the commission appears to
have acted correctly and the owners stand to receive ade·
quate compensation for complying with the coastal law.
Slllog bill dismantled
Some fancy footwork in Sacramento has effectively
gutted a measure that could have contributed much to
the fight for clean air in addition to releasing $850
million in federal highway and sewage project funds now
blocked because California does not yet h ave an annual
vehicle emission inspection law.
The bill not only provided for annual inspections. but
included safeguards for motorists against overcharging
and unnecessary repairs and guaranteed that inspections
and repairs would be properly done.
lt did permit owners to have their cars checked at
local service stations and garages instead or being ob·
liged to trek to state inspection stations. That's what the
station operators wanted, and it might have been fine.
But the operators didn't care for the idea of replacing
their present testing equipment with more accurate
modern devices. And they didn't want to have to check
and keep records of performance levels after making in·
stallations or repairs. So these and other guarantees have
been amended out of the measure. Jn other words, the
station and garage operators pref er to write their own rules~
The r es ulting bill may satisfy the federal
requirement for an annual inspection program. but it will
do precious little to help the smog situation or to reassure
motorists who will have to pay for the service. • 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 1s 1nv1ted Address The Dally Pilot, P 0
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boyd/Special service
ByL.M. BOYD
If something goes wrong
with your car in Denmark.
you drive it straightaway to
one of the hundred-plus
dealers identified by a specia! ·
service sign. The serviceman
takes your car and loans you
a bicycle. You turn in the
bike, no rental charge, when
you pick up your car.
Next lime you smell skunk,
lllllY'Cll
We a lready have tbe
Ice Age, the Stone Age,
the Iron Aae. the
Machlne A1e etc. Let's
hope the pre1tnt a1e
won't I<> dowa on the
booh 11 tbe Crltne
Ace. F.K.
call it a good thing. Al least,
it's not dangerous. Animal
experts now believe a rabid
skunk can't discharge its
odor.
One humor magazine and
only one is published in the
Soviet Union. It's called
"Krokodil" and the govern·
ment controls it. It's not too
funny.
Q. Can a rattlesnake Uve a
year witboui eating'!
A. Most probably. Snake
experts say the rattler
doesn't have much of an ap-
petite.
Anybody on the Job ever
accuse you of draglJlni your
feet? Nevermlnd. Nobody's
bu1lness~ Only ..queatlon lt
preliminary to report the
phrase about foot dr111ln1
started up 1n the old 1011ina camp1. Wben one of the men
on • two-R\P saw draaced a
foot, the other fellow did moat of the work.
Sometbine elM you can do
at atiopUibtl I.I enumerate aU
Ule famout UlJDala n•uaed
Cbartie. TM Star'·Kill tuna.
John Stelabitet11 dO,. TM
COUl&r bl tbe Old Jl•ewy
TV eommer~iall . A•)' otbm1
HARRJSBURG, Pa. -Uke an
extinct eoeray source, like the
cones of dead volcanoa, th• four
coolinc towers on Tbr~ Mile
Island slmply are. They don't
spend their lime doing but be·
inl. . . belne no,hlna but a grow·
inai burden. They fuel nothing
but fears for physical and fhlan.
clal health, tbey generate
nothing but worry and concern
aa this spriN marks the second
anniversary or America's best
known nuclear boo-boo.
After two years. enough
technical and financial pressure
bas built up
to run a
turbine and
generate a Lit·
tl e of the
Jui ce TMl
isn't making.
The radioac-
tive mess in·
side the crip.
pted plant
can't be left
unattended indefinitely ; it's
e ither going to have to be
cleaned up or one of these days
or months or years it will be
Bob Greene
Monday, ~rll 13, 1981
Tl'lom•s P. Htley/Publllhtr Tho,,,.1 ICHvll/Ed1tor
&erbMe Krtlblchll:dltorl•I P-oe Editor
ruonlag into tbe SuaquebaADa
Rlver or bl9wlng lt1 ltthel
clouds over ~..alfalo.
To clean it up will COit the next-to-b~pt General Public
Utilities Corporation a bilUon
buck• or more, for these are the
k~ds of estiqiatea that are tn.
variably too ldw. Upward of M50
million additional doUars wiU be
needed to~ repair the plant and
put it back ln service, providing
the people In thi• part of Penn·
sylvania will allow It.
THREE MILE ffiLAND tt·
tually bas two nuclear general·
ing plants. Facility No. 1 bas
had no accident and could be
started up tomorrow if the
authorities would permit it,
althougb a visitor gets the Im·
pression the mere news of such
goings-on would cause 1,000
spontaneous abortions. (By the
bye, Dr. Ernest J . Sternglasa,
professor of radiological physics
at the University of Pittsburgh's
School of Medicine, believes
radioactive escapes at the time
of the accident have caused hun·
dreds of fetal deaths and
1tillblrtbs in Pennsylvania and
Western New York See the
March 1 and 7 issues of the Na·
lion.>
Even lf No. 1 were started up
aaain General Public UUUtles
doesn't have the money to clnn
up its eerie, glowing "'eas at No .
2, and it dqesn't have any place
to get it. The Pennsylv~nia
Public Utilities Commission
isn't going lo let the electric
company make its innocent
customers pay. If it did, the
jump in the rates would be so
appalling the popul'ation would
be driven out or forced to join
the Amish farmers in the
neighborhood, those Penn·
sylvania Dutch religious
quieUst.s who Live without elec·
tricity, automobiles or buttons.
A COMMISSION appointed by
then-President Carter, recently
wrote a letter lo President
Reagan recommending that the
federal government put up the
money. That is certainly what
Wall Street and the investment
world would prefer. ''If GPU
we~t under, I don't think there
would be another nuclear plaJit
built ajaln by one corqpany. ne
rilk would be sh•red '(er m e
lhao is the case today, whicti s
r eally what s hould h appdn
anyway," says Leonard Hyman.
the vice president in charge of
being s mart about electrJc
utlUties at Merrill Lynch.
This is but a conservative way
of saying that a bankrupi~y
would force the atomic enecay
industry to start calculating its
real costs and risks. The debaJ.e
over the health and saf~ty coh·
siderat1ons can never be settltd
lo all sides ' satisfaction, but the
free market can help us sort 4it
the cost of making electricity
this way
THE BREAKDOWN at Three
Mile Island is as much an Qr·
dinary part of nuclear power
generation as flat tires are -0f
automobile driving. The causes
lie in the design of the equip·
ment, the training or the persun·
nel and the abi lity of tile
'¥nagemenl ri· 1tinc factors
present in any electrical
generating plant, whether it
uses atoms. oil or coal. If the
economics or the atomic energy
generation <1re so shaky that the
companies can't f'ven pay to re·
pair their own equipment, we're
involved tn a sham
Atom1(· 1s the only industry
where all .slarl·up research and
development costs have been
paid for by the taxpayers as well
as much of the cont1nu1ng Rand
D The industry 's damage
hab1hty owtng to explosions or
escaped rad1at1on 1s severe!)
hm1 ted by ~pecial leg1slat1on
a nd yet with all this governmenl
help the industry is now saytng
they make l>O little money the~
can't afford to pa~ for 1t Y.hen
the PIPt'S buro;t
The nation·::. t'll'Clric com
pantc'i are sagging with over
capacity so that 1f there ever
was or will be a safe and conve
ment time to fi nd out if nuclear
r an make tl on its own, it's now
We can begin by telling the pro-
p r 1 f' tors of TMI that the
giveaway window is c l osed~ If
they can't makl' 1L as a red
bloodrd pri\'alc t•nlt.>rprise. ~ee
whiz wt··rf' sorry but it"s belly
up time for thl' little radioactive
hsh1es 10 the Susquehanna
'Bachelor hook' boosts the dating game
DALLAS T h al Texa s
bachelor book is about to go na·
tional. Good.night. America.
You may have heard of the
book Its official title is "The
Greatest Little Bachelor Book in
Te xas." lt is published in Dallas,
sells for $4.95 and has become the
biggest cultural phenomenon to
come out or this state since the
Ewing family look over Friday
nights on CBS.
The bachelor book is simplicity
itself. lt.s subtitle i~ "At last -a
woman's little
black book ,"
and there 's
really not
mu c h else
to say. The
book was
conceived by
Sue Gold.stein,
a savvy Texas
promoter, and
now she is on
the verge of
hitting the really big money.
Goldstein's theory was elemen·
tary. For the last decade. en·
trepreneurs have been coming up
with complex ways for men and
womentomeet~>neanother. Cofl\·
puter dating services, video
matching companies . . . the
permutations were endless, and
all airningforthesameresult. ·
Goldstein took It all back to
basics. She recruited 200 Texas
bachelors, got photographs of all
of them, interviewed them and
wrote brief biographies of them,
Sydney Harris.
and then published the book. Each
man came comp:ete with his ad·
dress and phone number
IT SEEMED loo obvious to
work. But "The Greatest Little
Bachelor Book in Texas·· is a best·
seller, and the men whose pie·
tures and biographies are in its
· pages are being besieged b~~
women.
·'There is desperation on the
part of quality women out there,"
Goldstein said. "The women who
are calling and writing the men in
the book are intelligent, attrac·
live, voluptuous women. Women
are changing, and there is no
stigma attached to picking a man
out through :.t book. Women have
found out that what they grew up
learning about the normal way to
meet a man doesn't work.'•
Goldstein is full of self·
1 confidence, and so she wasn't sur·
prised that the book became an
immediate hit in Texas. That was
the plan. But what has shocked
her is the degree to which women
around the country have
responded.
"What in the world would a
woman in Seattle want with a Tex·
as man?" Gold.stein said. "But
the letters are coming in from all
ovet the country. Women are
sending our bachelors airplane
tickets. The letters have ranged in
location from Anchorage to Boca
Raton, Fla.''
Naturally, the national ap-
peal of the book is not lost on
Goldstein's business sense She
knows that, no matter how at·
tracted the women of America
are to the Texas bachelors, there
is a limited market in trying to
sell Dallas and Houston men to
Ohio and California women.
So she is in the process of licens·
ing bachelor books all over the
country. She has defined 3V dlf·
ferent bachelor markets in the
United States, and is making ar·
rangements to publish a separate
bachelor guide in each one.
"It's determined by population
density," Goldstein said. "New
York City will have its own book .
Los Angeles will have its own
book. San Francisco will have its
own book. But all of North
Dakota, South Dakota and Mon·
tana will be combined in a single
book."
Goldstein said she is convinced
that if the bachelor book strategy
will work in Texas. it will work
anywhere .
"TEXAS WOMEN are
traditionally very reluctant lo
participate in somethiVg like
this very actively," she said.
''They prefer to be pursued. So if
it's caught on here, it's going to
work everywhere else."
Basically. she said, the at·
traction of the bachelor book is to
women in their mid·20S and older.
''In their early 20s, women are
still in a social situation where
meetine men is easy," Goldstein
said. "But as they get a little
older. the l>1luat1on c han~es
Smc~ wom~n are postpomng mar
ria~e longer, career women of 30
or 35 or 40 ftnally reahze that the)
want to get married. and the:-
become fnghlened ··
Goldstein :said that, no matter
what women like to t ell
themselves about freedom and
liberated morality, most of them
are really after just one thing.
"To find a husband," she said
"That's what most women waot.
To fall in love and find a husband
that's what most women will
admit they dream about, if
they 're being hon est with
themselves "
So far. she said, the Texas
bachelor book has resulted in four
marriages And for the bachelors
in the book who have not married
the women who come knocking on
their doors. life has become in·
tr1guing
"l''or a lot of them. it is their
first contact w1"1 women who are
so demonstratively aggressive."
Goldstein said "The men aren't
used to it A woman will call oneof
the men and say. · 1 saw you on
page 177, and you are most ap·
pealing.· The men say that It feels
good to get that kind of attentioi1'.
··Being pursued is a new thi-Og
to a lot of men. Even the very s'*·
cessfuJ ones. One attorney in opr
book called me on a Monday
morning. He sounded dazed. Ile
s aid, ·A woman came to see tile
Friday night, and our date jli;t
ended.'"
An intellectual exercise for spring gardeners I ~
i
Spring seems the approprlate
time to devise a quiz on flowers
-not bc>Ulnlcally, which would nb•u" IDY knowled1e ln a
paraaraph, but in terms of tMlr
1eneral uaociaUona in hiltory,
literature ind Ufe. My basic
refeNricels "FloweninHiatory"
by Peter Coat.I (Vlklng, 19'70). If
you bave any fioral fialr at all,
you tbould •et at least on.e·thlrd
correct. <W• won't count No. 8,
whlcb la Just for tun).
1. Wb•t do the fuchlla, the
macnolla and the camellia have
Jn comn>Oflt
2. What l1 the o~l flower mentioned by Jesus, ls men·
Uoned mQn often than y other
ha lbe 8'ble?
1. Wbl~b nower a.rows belt. od4l1=", wbeD lt. ll :Uberal· b •• ..... uM le•·lil•ftl from a pOt Of .. a?
•· 'fte ~aljs Of tbe ca.i"IUticla ... oft.ID m.d ID tbe pat'° ...
•
c:eal a aecret measaae: what
tamoua prisoner la hiltory wu
1U9J*I 1uch a messaae in the
flower at part or an escape plan
th•t failed'?
5. What nower'a name mel.QI
a "turban," and came: :>risinally
from Turkey?
6. Why dld llarauente wear
only c:amelllu ln both Dumat'
novel and in the °"'a adapted
from It? <She was kno" aa
"Camllle.")
1. What do theH have tn cotn·
mon: Cardinal IUcbeUeu, Helen
Traubel, Lowell Tboinat, Str
TbomH Llpton, and QuHn
Elltabe\b?
•• Probebty th• u1u .. t -and
certainly the 111a1t c:ambenlome
-aame for a 1peelt1 of • PGPular now. I.I \M Gtnnan ·~·rrau Oberboft•rtbauha
5:ft!r'-elllls'm '; what It tt c ID .. .,. ... ,
t . Wla•t flower le whteb
utili1ed in the making of bread,
rolls and cakes?
10. What is the name of Ni·
jinsky's famous ballet, choreo·
graphed by Fokine, in which a
now er actually comei to Hie and
dances with the ballerina?
11. What is the nower named
after a beaulifUJ youth in Greek
m ytbology, who was loved by
Apollo but killed out ol Je.W..y
by the •od of the w.,t wind, and
from whose b'ood thla nower
1pran1 ln grief?
12. What famous site -home
Quotes
"We didn't lab lb• mllllone
from the aovernment and bu1
new drapes for the olflces. We
are 1pendhi1 StfO mUUon a month on fUture pi'Oduct. ·•
-Lie A.1aeocca,
CtirjltiM' pt1aildent
of one of the Seven Wonde~rstof the ancient world -was n
for the rose. and impress a
picture of that flower on ts
coins? I
ANSWERS:
1. They were named af r
bot&nls\S: Fuchs, Maanot, d
Kemel. 2. The lily ("Consl er
the liltes of the field . , . "). 3.
Clematis. 4. Marie Antolnett ln
her Temple cell. 5. The t\llip.
6. Bec:auae ol ber couu p-
Uon. scented flowen made r
c:ouah. •PCI camelllaa have o
acent. 1. All famous varieti ot
ro1ee. 8. The ordinary l*XlJ 8.
The, poppy, for lta 1Nda. O.
"S~ct.rt of Lhe ROie!• u . Hyactntb. 12. Th• I.a. of
Rbod ... whltb ti t.be bOile Of
Colotaua od whcilie aa.. 1D Greek SDeau .. ~. •• (ft ,
"rbododeit«lron" meau ..
Uri.')
A problem shared by many people, and maoy
companies. is: eetttn• recognition. It's terrible to feel
neglected, unapprecl•ted. Th1t'' why you often see
companies break out In print or ner-vous son1 with
.one or those "just thousht you'd Uke to know" ad·
vertlsement.s, wherein lhey inform you, as if you
were panting to learn, what they do and how much a
part of your life they really are.
Foremost·McKesson of San Francisco is a com·
pany that's likely to be talked into an image·shaping,
"let 's be friends" campaign one day Before that
happens, let me
fill you in on
one or the mQre
unknown ccr·
porate giants in
th e land ~so
you'll know
when to d1,1rk
whqn the ads
come>
\~ ~ ___________ ---!1 /~\,
lllllllTZ i''Sr MllTDI
To begin with, you need to know that Foremost·
McKesson is. above anything else. a middleman. It's
the largest wholesaler in the country. A wholesaler
takes goods made by others and \iistributes them to
people who sell the goods to the ultimate consumer.
Foremost McKesson does this in three different
fields : drugs, wn ,· and s pirits. and chemicals
IT'S BY FAR OUR largest drug wholesaler. dis·
tributing more than 50,000 products to 16,000
drugstores and 2.000 hospitals. It's the largest dis-
tributor of liquors and wines. serving 62,000 retailers
in lf\ states. And it's No. 1 in the distribution of in·
dustnal chemical:., lhing~ like solvents used as
degrca!>ers.
Tho:.e are big businesses they add up to about
$3 billion a year but they're largely invisible unless
you abo happen to know that Foremost-McKesson is
the driving force behind the 1,5()()-member Valu -Rite
drug chain (a group of locally owned stores yoked
together the way Ace hardware stores and l.G.A.
food stores are I and that Foremost-McKesson.
beyond being a wine and spirits distributor, owns and
or controls certain brands coming into the country.
The:.e. for examples. are Foremost-McKesson
brands: Ballantlne's Scotch. the Folonari wmes Crom
Italy, St. Pauli Girl beer from Germany, Galliano U-
queur. Mount Gay rum
Now that we·re getting into the visible pa1 t of
Fon•most McKesson, you need to know that this is a
fairly hefty food company. but recognition here de·
pends on where you live If you're in the East . you're
probably familiar with the Mueller pasta line: 28 dif·
ferent kinds of spaghetti and ncodles They're in 22
stale~. they reach as far west as Ch icago. and they
rank. in poundage. as our No 1 pasta producer
IF YOl"RE IN the West at least in ll states
west of the Mississ1pp1 River in a crazy-quilt pattern
that takes in parts or Louisiana and Texas. all of
Caltforn1a and Missouri. chunks of Oregon and
Washington you may know the Foremost dairy
product~ milk. <'heese. ice cream. Yam1 yogurt.
Finally. a piece of business trivia . Foremost-
M cKesson is the nation's largest seller of drinking
water, marketed in California and Arizona under the
Alhambra, Crystal and Sparklctts names and dis-
pensed from more than J,600 Aqua-Vend machines in -
stalled across lhe Sunbelt from California to Florida.
This motley family results from a 1967 merger of
Foremost Dairies tSan Francisco> with McKesson &
Robbins <New York l The first eight years of the
marriage were chaotic, with members of the new
household going their separate ways. But then the
computer came to the rescue .
• FOREMOST-McKE.::iSON found that what every
wholesaler needs is a computer. The company used
to have 140 buyers sending in orders to drug
manufacturers Now 1t buys 50 percent more
merchandise with 1ust 13 buyers. You know those
computer-printed s helf labels you see 1n many
drugstores these days? Foremost-McKe:;son supplies
tbcm to its customers
A clerk walking lhe aisles with an electronic
wand or terminal can automatically reorder products
from the Foremos t-McKesson warehouse. This com-
putt-rization also enables Foremost-McKesson lo pro-
vide its retail customers w\th an elaborate monthly
printout that tells them at a glance what they bought
and ho'" much money they're making on each item
t No, the druggist doesn't pass that information on to
us.) '
Forcmost-Mct\esson will spend $45 million this
year on <'Omputer stuff. The increased efficiency has
produced a quantum jump In profits and ha!-made
P'oremost·McKesson a leaner operation. The com·
pany came into the 1970s with 18,5()() employees. Now
it's down lo 17.680. spread over 40 s tates, with the big·
gest concentrations in California (6,312) and Texas
( 1,236).
Foremost-McKesson stock, incidentally. has just
about quadrupled from its low p<>int in 1974 -and
that 's the kind of recognition no management ever
gets enough of In fact. it's the reason most com·
panies indulge themselves with these pat-on-the·
back. "thought you'd like to know us better" ad-
vertising messages
Gol.d metals quotations
,,,~,.,.
NEWYORK (AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prices to-
day: ~
Copper 11'7~·91 cents a pound, .S. destinations.
Leed 36-38 cents a pound.
Zlac 43~ cents a pound, delivered. n. '8·8&39 Metals Week composite lb.
Al.allilJDom 76cents a pound, N.Y. &Ovw $10.900 per troy ounce, Handy & Harman only
dall~1 .. \11'1 "2().00 per naak. ~.00 troy oz .. N. Y.
'\ . ~ . \
.Slit~~
• I
gratefully aclmowledges the generous support of the growing list
of B~f actors and the five-hundred patrons for its fully subscribed
major annual benefit
'
scheduled Saturday, May 9, 1981
,
Fluor Corporation
Beacon Bay Ente?prises, Inc.
McLain Development Company Gene Washburn Winslow Maxwell
J.M. Peters Co., Inc. Saffel & ~cAdam, Inc.
The Irvine Company
Neiman Marcus
Occidential Research Corporation CommerceBank Melder Gallery Gallery West
Wells Fargo Foundation Smith Tool Mr. & Mrs. Richard Steele
Pacific Mutual Bank of Newport Bullocks Wilshire Jack de Kruif Marc Friedberg
American State Bank
Balboa Bay Club Beeco T. Phillips Morgan
Treasure Tours International -Paris -Ruth Jensen
Fairfax Hotel, Washington, D.C.
Canvas Specialty
Moet et Chandon -France
Domaine Chandon -Yountville
Schema
John Wayne Tennis Club
,
Charle& H . Barr Jewelers -Courreges -Crown Hardware -The Broadway -
Gelsona -Hal3ton Boutique -John Hogan -Ivy's League -Matthews -
Norchtrom -Saddleback Interiors -Saka 5th Avenue -Slavick's -
The Storekeeper -Veta' s -Ullman Sails -Brooks Brothers -
Richard Ouellette -Command Performance· -I . Magnin
.1 l . ·'
AR~els at hOnie ·tonight
Can A's continue complete-game pitching saga?
By EDZINTEL
C)('tM o.11, " ... ,...,
Sure, it's early, b\,lt who's to
say that tonight's Angels home
opener against the Oakland A's
doesn't have all the elements of
an honest to goodness race for
the pennant, you know, the kind
you get in September?
First, there's the teams.
Oakland comes into tonight's
game (7 :30 ) at Anaheim
Stadium with most wins in the
majors (4-0) after sweeping
its o penin g series a t Min-
nesota over the weekend and
pres enting Ma nager Billy
Martin with four comple te
games.
THE A'S STAFF had 94 com-
plete games a year ago, a
modern major league record. So
It 's not surprising that after
Steve Mccatty fired a shutout
Sunday at the Twins. Oakland
pitching had run up a string of 26
scoreless innings .
The four straight victories
represent the best start since the
A's moved from Kansas City to
Oakland in 1968.
The Angels, on the other hand.
ha ve experienced the expected
p roble m s with their s uspect
st a rr. having allowed 22 runs
thro u g h four g ames . Ye t
Ma n ager Jim Fregosi brings
hom e a 3-1 record and a world of
h o p es a nd pro m is es for a
Weste rn Division contending
club.
The reason for that. of course.
li es in part within the bats of
p~ople like Fred Lynn, Don
Baylor , Brian Downing, Rod
Ca rew, Dan Ford. and so on.
Jim Fregc,si
only swing, but run and steal
and do all those other fun and
clever things in baseball as well.
Second, there's the m anagers
There's the fi ery and never·a
dull moment Ma rtin, who prob·
a bly expends more ener gy than
m ost of bis players with his
c u s t o m a r y .. c n ats " with
American Lea~uc umpires.
Billy Martin
Ma rtin's first at Oakland. It was
a situation of a club which no
one wanted taking on a m anager
which no one wanted. Wh at took
place was. well. typical Martin.
typical A's .
From a cellar dwellar in 1979,
the Martin A's 1u mped to second
place in the American League
West in 1980. ·a nd won 29 more
games than the year before.
Then there·s Fregosi. After
g uiding the Angels to the
d ivision fl ag in his first full year
as man ager in 1979. Fregosi has
had to struggle to reestablish
hims elf as the No I Angel in the
hearts or fans .
corps or press personnel and or
course, the fans. 1'"'>r Fregosi, it:
all amounted to a diverticulitis
condition wbich reqired operat·
1ing on al the end of the season.
Some say that Fregosi has
since mellowed, that he now
tolerates the m~dia and h~s a
good handle on the inate pres-
sures of the job. Time will tell.
or course there's a whirlwind
of other factors that make this
four-game series so attractiv~.
Factors like a new addition to
the ~tadium lo the lune or some
25,()()() more seats, the new faces,
i.e .. Lynn, Rick Burleson, Butch
Hobson, Ken Forsch and others
and the prospect that this could
be the s tart of a year like no
other in the history of the major
le agues which is yet to ex·
perience a season-ending strike. ,
THE STRJK£? Yes, the
pl ayer s trike whic h has
threatened to end baseball as
early as May 29 is still a distinct
possibibty. It hasn 't gone away
although seldom has been heard
a discouraging word from either
players or owners lately.
"If you want to know the
truth. r haven't heard a word
a bout the strike ... except
from the media," Fregosi said
recently.
T onight's pitching m atcb-up
has Bill Travers for the Angels
making his first start against
Bria n Kingman for the A's.
Travers, picked up as a free
agent from Milwaukee during
the winte r trade meetings, is a
28·year-old left·hander who post·
ed a 12·6 record last year with a
3 92 ERA.
Tom Watson clenches fist in j:>y after sin}:cing putt.
BUT THE ANGELS, much to
the delight of F r egos i who
worked h ard with h is-club'
during the spring, have thus far
demonstrated that they can not
IN OAKLAND, where team
s upport takes a back seat to
eve rything, they' re c alling the
A's brand of play, Billy Ball.
That's short for scrappy, snappy
and happy. With Martin at the
controls, the once all-mighty A's
have rediscove re d what it
means to hustle around the
bases, dive in the dirt. and win
games.
Evidence las t s eas on ,
HIS 1980 EDITION of the
dream team fell fl at on its col·
lective behind with help from a
=1 ues t1oning and d e manding
Kingman, a right-hander. was
s.20 with Oakland last season
but had a respectable 3.83 ERA.
Watson
seeks
a slam
AUGUSTA. Ga. (AP> -Tom
Watson, the Masters champion,
believes some'one will a chieve
professional golf's Grand Slam.
"If we homo sapiens don't blow1
ourselves up in the near future. I
think somebody will do it," he
s aid.
For sure. Watson has the only
shot al capturing all four of the
s po rt's major champions hips
this year. His two-shot Masters
victory Sunday over Nicklaus
and Johnny Miller assured that.
So. could what Watson terms a
billion-to-one shot occur in 1981 ?
He g rinned and said · .. Ask me
after the PGA l the year 's final
. major in August.)'.
BEN HOGAN came the closest
to pulling the elusive feat in 1953
when he won three of the four
current majors, the Masters. the
U.S. Open, the British Open and
the PGA.
How.eve r , the late Bo bby
Jones achieved the Grand Slam
of an earlier era whe·n he collect·
ed the U.S. and British Amateur
and Open championships in 1930.
Watson passed the s lam's first
milestone when he withstood his
own nerves for a final round of
one-under-par 71 for a 72-hole
total of 281. seven under for four
trips over Augusta National's re-
vered6,905yards.
· · 1 was so nervous I ·felt like r
was jumping out of my skin all
day ," s aid Watson after t\is
s econd Masters crown in the last
five years. the fifth major pro·
fes sional title among his 23
American Tour victories of 11
seasons.,
WATSON THOUGHT he re·
tauired a round in the 60s, con·
slderlng the Ideal playing c~di
tions . But 110 one made a mdve,
assuring blm of the first-place
check of $60,000. ...... ~ Nickl&\IS' bid for an un-
precedented sixth Masters UUe
turned sour with his 72. Johnny
Miller lhcealefted Watson with a
'8, whicb Ued Tom Kile for the
low round ot .the muggy, swmy
-day. N lc~laua and Miller earned
$30,500 paydays with their run-
of 28i2. Australian
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Louis will _be remembered by everyone
Former heavyweight champion was an inspiration, boxing genius
LAS VEGAS I AP > -Fo rmer
. hea vyweight boxing champion Joe
Louis, the "Brown Bomber" who fiealt
a blow to Hitler's racial doctrines with
his victory over a German prizeflthter
and helped open the sport lo other
blacks. has died at the age of 66. f
"Joe was a boxrng genius," Max
Schmeling of West Germany, defeated
by the Alabama-born fighter in a 1938
rematch, s aid after Louis died Sunday
morning at Desert Springs Hospital
her e.
··He was in a cardiac arrest state
when he arrived. They did everything
they could to revive him ," said nurs ing
supervisor Shirley Brown, adding Louis
"had been ill for quite some time ··
Louis' wife , Martha. and other rel·
atives were at his side. Not long before
the attack. Louis had attended Saturday
night's World Bo xin g Co un ci l
heavyweight title fight between cham·
pion La rry Holmes and Trevor Berbick
a l Caes ar's Palace.
·'T he death of J oe Louis. one of
NY tinhorns
win shootout
with Kings
America's real heroes, is such a great
loss," Sig Arogicb, c hairman of the
state Athletic Commiasion, said Sun-
day. "[ Just saw him last night and
watched him smile as the crowd erupt-
P.d ,in appla1;1se whe1~ he was announced.
We re all gomg to miss him."
rn 71 professional fights over 17 years .
Louis won 68 and los t just three. Of his
wins. 54 were knockouts , 12 coming in
the first round.
He held the heavyweight crown for 12
years and fought off 25 challenges after
taking the title a record for suc-
cessful defenses.
A 6-l 'h, 200-pounder, Louis impassive-
ly . r elentlessly and gracefully s talked
his opponents. When he struck, it was
w ith a quick, jolting jab and rapid.
powerful combinations. And when the
opponent went dowp, Louis would move
indifferently to a neutral corner and
wait for the referee to e nd il.
It was his unassuming demeanor that
continued to win fans for the quiet m an
of humble origins .
.. We'v e los t another grea t
American," said entertainer Bob Hope .
onc,e an amateur fithter, who attended
Friday night fights in Hollywood during
World War 11 with Army Cpl. Joe Loui1'.
··He opened up boxing to every black
fighter," said Teddy Brenner, former
president of Madison Square Garden
Boxing and a m ajor matchmaker "He
even led the way for guys like Jackie
Ro binson in other sports. Every black
athle te tha t follo ws owes a debt "'.
gratitude to Joe Louis.··
.. J oe was the greatest guy and in·
spiration in boxing," said Suga r Ray
Robinson, former world welterweig ht
and m iddleweight cha mpion Said boxer
turned t raine r Geor~e Benton ... He was.
a big inspiration to all black fighters
coming up. especially in the 1930s and
4Qs ."
Louis was born J oseph Louis Barrow
.in Lafayette , Al a .. on May 13, 1914, and
was rai sed in a Detroit ghetto. At 23, he
wo11 the title by knocking out 31-year-old
J a mes J. Braddock in 1937.
rn 17 years as a boxer. he earned
nearly S5 million. But he lived in high
style , always picking up the checks, and
had little left when he was through. He
was in constant income tax difficulty.
· · r really don't know how much l owe
the gove rnment," he said in 1960.
"When that income man s aid SI million ,
r stopped li stening."
He retired from the nng on March 1,
1949. but 27 months later. pressed for
money, .he came out of retirement to
fi g ht r e ig ning champion Ezzard:
Ch ar les and was defeated.
"I ' II never fight again," he said. But
t wo months later he was back in action
with a string of victories His career
ended at 37. when Rocky Marciano. 28.
lknocked him out in the eighth round of an
Oct. 26, 195\, bout.
Louis remained extremely popular.
even arter a stint in protess1onal wres-
tling dictated by his tax troubles: "It's
an honest living and it's better than
stealing."
l
\
'South Florida ·¥8.nks'
beat out Old rivals
From APdllpaklles
MIAMI -Reggie Jackson Dave Winfield, et al, Iii wil I represent the· 'South Florida Yankees'· this year
-at least on the pages of Tbe Miami Herald. Ex·
plaining that lt waa. tired of Miami always being
overlooked by baseball's expansion committees, The Herald
announced in FeJ:>ruary that it would "adopt" an existing ma·
jor-league team. The team receiving the most votes from
Herald readers writing in between Feb. 22 and March 24 would
be the focus of the Herald's baseball coverage during the up-
coming season, the newspaper explained. The results were
overwhelming. The Yankees, appar-e.nUy receiving heavy sup-
port from South Florida's large contingent of New York ex·
patriates, received 1,002 of 2,518 votes cast, far outdistancing
second-place Baltimore with 421 votes, Philadelphia with 233,
the Mets with 172 and the Boston Red Sox with 147. "That's ter-
rific, .. said Yankee owner George Steinbrenner. •'It just proves
what I've sajd all along. that you can criticize us for the way we
do things. but we couldn't do it any other way and still have the
fan appeal we have
"I'm very pleased,'' Steinbrenner added, "partlcularly
since the Orioles are such a great team and they train rijht in
Miami.·· The Yankees train in nearby Fort Lauderdale.
"We have fans almost every place we play, even Boston,"
said Jackson.
Pitcher Rudy May added, "With as many Yankee fans who
live down here, you couldn't be surprised. Seems like half the
people who Ii ve down he re come from New York."
The vanquished took the vote in stride.
"Sowe finished second to them in the poll." said Orioles out-
fielder Gary Roemcke. "I don't mind that too much. But we
won't finish second to them during the-season.''
However. Herald Sports Editor Edwin Pope noted t hat Mia·
mians have a luxury New Yorkers don't -if they weary of the
Yankees, they "can be returned to the adoption agency "
Pope predicts that the Orioles will better the Yankees m the
American League East Division this year.
But looking over Winfield's multimillion-dollar contract.
Popesa1d "I wouldn't mrnd adopting Winfield "
QUOTE OF THE DAY
A sign on the clubhouse door at the Oakland A's
s pring tram mg f ac11ity: "Lonesome? .. Looking for new
friends'' . Wanl a new Job? Just screw up one more
lime!"
BIRD, CELTICS WRAP UP SERIES
Larry Bird scored 35 points. including eight in m
lhe final 2. 19, as Boston wrapped up its series with
a 109· 103 victory over lhe Chicago Bulls Suhday in
National Bas ketball As!'ociation Eastern Division
playoff action. Chicago grabbed a 103-102 lead with just un-
der one minute remaining when Reggie Theus hit a pair of
free throws Bul Bird countered with a layup to put Bos ton a-
head to stay The Suns may be ready to set in the playoffs
Ernie llrunfeld poured i~ a game-high 27
po ints and coll Wedmau and Reggie King
rallied in 21 apiece to pace Kansas City to
a 102·95 \'IClor) O\er Phoeni x It was the
.sixth win m nme games for the Kings over
the Suns this season . San Antonio
Coach Stan Albeck beheved Justice had
been served when a last·second Houston
shot fell off the rim to give his Spurs a
114 112 victory George Gervin was the
Spurs' leading scorer with 33 points. The
Spurs had to fight off a determined rally Bird
late m the game. how<'ver . to preserve· the victory as the
series evened out at two games apiece . Marques Johnson
shot 16-for 25 and scored 35 points for Milwaukee as the
Bucks built an 18-point fi r st·hatr lead and held off a rally to
defeat Philadelphia. 109-98. Johnson teamed with Bob Lanier
to dominate lht' boards as well. The series is even at two
games apiece
QUISENBERRY SAVES THE DAY AGAIN
Dennis Leonard hurled six hitless innings and Iii
nesded ninth·inning help from former Orange Coast
College star and re lief ace Dan Quisenberry after al-
lowing three hits as Kansas City defeated Baltimore.
4-2. Sunday to highlight American League baseball action.
Leonard retired the first 15 Baltimore batters. Quisenberry put
dowi:i a Baltimore rally in the last inning after ~llowing both
Baltimore runs on a bases-loaded walk to Terry Cro"ley and a
s11c rifice fly by Jim Dwyer . In other AL
games. Jim Rice capped a five-run eighth
inning with a grand slam homer as Boston.
held hitless for six innings by Richard
Dotson, rallied for a 5-4 victory over Chicago
... Oakland's Steve McCarthy burled s ix
!hitless Innings and stompetl Minnesota on
three soft singles as the A's blanked the
Twins. l ·O lo complete a sweep of their four·
game season opening series ... Al OUver
and Mickey Rivers drilled two.run singles
Qummberr]/ and Texas bounced from behind to defeat
New York, 6·4 ... BenOgUvle .and Ted Simmons belted two· run
homers to support the seven-hit pitching of two Milwaukee
pitchers as the Brewers defeated Cl~~land. 6·1 ... John
Mayberry clouCed a three-run homer and Toronto's Luis Leal
pitched no-hJt ball for 5¥.. fnnlngs as the Blue Jays defeated
Detroit,6-2, for their first vktoryoflheseason.
TE.uTcN SHINES IN CAADINAt:S WIN hir1 ,,_,..._ tripled 11ome ooe,.. durtaa II
1 Ui,...tun r&Uy In ~ fifth lnnln1 IDcl •~red the
wtAMr an nr.t baffman Pete llMe'• error, lleytn1
• 7·1 It. Louia triumph over Phlladelpbl1 to
bltbliPt N•UOaaJ Lea,ue bMebaU action S.day • . • In
other .. mes, Due Partier •nd former l\n1el ,,,.. ino.,... blt home rum otl &ly hnta to paff Plttl• burp to 1 3-2 victory over Montreal . . . Rookie H•Mt
8roob opened the nlntb with a triple and 1cored on Mlb
Cabba•e'• eaerlllce fty to Utt. New York over Chlca10. 2·1
. DU. Marpby drilled an RBI sin1le ln tbe eJabth innin1 to
cap a two-run rally and live Atlanta a 8·2 victory over Clucln·
natl ... Larry Hendo. got a two-out double on a San Die10
fielding error In the Htti inning and scored Qn Mlke hie'•
single as S!ln Francisco edged the Padres, 7~.
HUNTER'S OVERTIME GOAL LIFTS QUEBEC
Dale Hunter'• second goal of the game, 37 ril
seconds Into overtime, lifted Quebec to a 4.3 victory '
over Philadelphia Sunday night and tied their best·
of.five National Hockey League preliminary round
playo.ff series.at 2·2. The fi~h and deciding game will be played
tn Ph1ladelph1a Tuesday night. The Nordiques trailing 3·1 and
held without a shot for more than 14 minutes of t he third period
scored twice in a span of 1:33 to send the game into overtime:
Hur.ter got the first goal at 15· 35 and Jacques Rlcbud, pouncing
on a rebound of a Hunter shot at 17 : 08, lied the score at 3-3. The
F!yers grabbed a .3-1 lead in !he first period and dominated play
with ~n outstanding defensive effort until the late going . .
Rookie surprise Mike Bullard and defenseman Randy C1rlyle ~cored tw" goals each to s park Pittsburgh to a 6·3 victory over
St. Lo~s. evening their playoffseri'es. Tied at two wins each. the
playort goes to a decisive fifth game in St. Louis Tuesday. The 20-~ear-old Bullard. who spent most of the regular season in jum~r hockey, broke a 3-3 tie 44 seconds into the final period.
Tak mg a feed from Georie Ferguson, Bullard hit a wrist shot
from the f~ceoff circle that hit the pads of St. Louis goalie Mike
Llut and tnckled across the goaJ line.
BASEBALL TODAY
On this date in baseball in 1972·
The first players· strike in modern major
l<'ague his tory came to an end. The regular
season. scheduled to begin April S. began 10 days
late.
FORMER HOSTAGE DIDN'T LIKE TRADE
KRAKOW, Mo. -Former American hostage •
Rodney V. "Roc ky" Sickmann somehow kept up
with recent off-season baseball trades which oc-
c urred during his captivity in Iran. but he didn't
care for one or them.
In a telephone conversation with his younger brother only
hours after he was freed, the Marine sergeant asked why the
St Louis Cardinals had traded Ken Reitz and Ted Simmons.
Kurt Sickmann, a student at Washington High School,
s aid Rocky was particularly upset that Reitz had been traded
to the Chicago Cubs . In July, on his 23rd birthday, the
s erviceman had received a card from Reitz and his wife.
"How neat ... s aid Kathy Reitz when told in St. Louis or
S!ckmann's remarks . "~hen Kenny heard that Rocky was in-
vited to throw out the first baJI of the season, he said, 'Darn
I'm not going to be there.' But we'll be there in spirit."
WAL TRIP POSTS VICTORY IN REBEL 500
Weary Darrell Waltrip held off Harry ·Gant ii
des pite a late pit stop to win the Rebel 500 al Dar-
lington International Raceway Sunday in NASCAR
stock car action. Both leaders ran well ahead of
lh~ r est of the field . . Nelson Plquet of Brazil revived a Bnt1sh·Frenc~ _feud o~er ground-hugging race cars by driv-
ing one, a .Bnhsh-des1gn~d Brabham, to an easy victory in
the Argentine Grand Pnx Sunday. Piquet was challenged
onl y on the first lap and won from the pole position . John
Fitzpatrick's car caught a bit of a cold early in the lnterna-
tional Motor Sports Association Camel GT race al Braselton,
Ga . but recovered enough to win a sprint to the finish with
Klaus Ludwig of Bonn, West Germany.
REED NAMED BASKETBALL COACH
Former New York Knicks cent er Willis Reed
has been named head basketball coach at Creighton
L'niversity The coach of the Knicks in 1977. Reed had
been 1nter \'JC\\.Cd for several NBA coaching jobs but • "as not umong the final candidates .. Wake Forest's Frank
Johnson scored 33 pomts to lead the South to a 118-114 overtime
victory over the Midwest in the Aloha Classic basketball
tournament The cause of a stable fire that killed 36 horses at
Penn National Race Course in Pennsylvania remained un-
known Sunday according lo track officials ... Splendid Spruce.
a 15 1 shot, scored an upset. winning the $270.000 Santa Anita
Derby for three-year-olds in the richest Santa Anita Derby ever
Czechoslovakia crus hed a hastily assembled U.S. hoc key
team. 11 ·2 in their opening game atthe World Championships in
Goteberg. Sweden ... Tom Jones of Tulsa eased in a six-foot
putt for a par on the second hole of a sudden death playoff to
cluim Lhc top prize ofS13,500 in the Magnolia Classic golf tourna·
ment Porward Steve David scored his 98th and 99th goals to
lead San Jose lo a 3-0 shutout Qver Jacksonvilje in a North
American Soccer League game ... The federa government
wants to sell Blyth Arena at Squaw Valley, built for the 1960
Olympics. The Sacramento Bee reported. The U.S. Forest
Service owns the 8.500-seat arena. used largely for ice skat-
ing
TELEVISION. RADIO
Following are lhe top sports events on TV ton1ghl. Ratings
are:•••• excellent;••• worth watching; •• fair,. forget 1t. n 7:30p.m .,Channel11 " v " ~
DODGER BASEBALL: Dodgers at San Francisco.
Announcers: Vin Scully. Ross Porter and Jerry Doggett,
The Dodgers (3·0) send Bob Welch to the mound to try lo keep a
good start going against the Giants' Al Ripley. Welch wa~ 14·9with
a 3.28 ER~ last year while Ripley was 9·10 with a 4.14 ERA at San
f ranclscoin 1980. The Giants are 2-2on the year.
RADIO
Baseball -Oakland at Angels. 7:30 p.m .• KMPC (710);
Dodgers at San Francisco, 7:30p.m., KABC (7901 .
DOdgers'
pitching
• mtune
LOS ANGELES (AP> The
Los Angeles Dodgers· pitching
was supposed to be full of holes
a fter they lost veteran Don Sul·
ton to free agency and injuries
beset Jerry Reuss. Dave Goltz
and Bob Welch.
But after the first three games
of the 1981 season, the Dodgers'
beleaguered staff is 3·0 and the
bullpen has recorded a save.
Rick Sutcliffe follo wed vie·
tories by Fernando Valenzuela
and Burt Hooton in the first two
games of the season·opening
series against Houston with a
win of his own on Sunday. 3-2
SutcHffe. hoping lo relum to
his 17-win form or 1979 after only
three victories and a 5.56 earned
run average last year. scattered
s ix hits into the eighth inning but
needed relief help from Steve
Howe as the Dodgers compleled
a s weep of th<' National League
We s t defending c hampio n
Astros .
"I don't know how murh this
first win means." the 24·yec.r old
Sutcliffe said. "lt"s been a long
winter It's very rewarding.
es pecially after last season
when I had the feeling of nol
belonging."
Sutcliffe spent the winter in
lh e Arizona Ins tru ction al
Le ague and late r 1n lhe
Do minican Republic . under
l~e ~utet a;e of Los Angeles
pitching coach Ror. Perranoski
"Perrv <Perranoski > gave upa
lot of hi s time. even at
Christmas, to work with me."
said Sutcliffe . "I feel I'm a
starting pitcher again and that's
where I feel J can help the
club."
Sutcliffe shut out Houston on
two hits for five inmngs. gave up
a pinch homer to Dave Bergman
to lead off the sixth and was still
leading 3-1 with one out in the
eig hth. But pinch hitters Terry
Puhl and Dennis Walling cuffed
him for a s ingle and a double.
representing the tying runs.
when Howe was summoned
The left-handed reliever. last
year 's Rookie of the Year. got
Jeff Leonard to fly to right. pro-
ducing one run. but struck out
Gary Woods to get out of the in
ning. Howe recorded two more'
~RANQ.
cOildn't wea 1nut the midway
cut. Rey Floyd, tbt leading
moaey-winner In 1181, tbot
89418 Oary Player, a tbr ...
tllne Muters winner. had 71·288.
Jay 5'1et of Berwyn, Pa .. YT .
the British Amateur champion
f n 1979. grab~ low amat
honors for the second :J aecutive year with 72·194.
Watson. after balllln1
new. bent grass greens, ,,r i·
ed. "We're 1olng to see 1 ~·n· ning score over par 1ome da
Four days of high winds wou d
lead to outraseous numbers in
the future.·'
WATSON CONTENDS his jit· I ters were a good pre.round sign.
"Usually." he explained,
"when I'm playing pretty de· f
cently. I'm nervous with I~ l
lead. If you're not playing weJI I
and not in the tourname~t. i
there's no need to be nervous. ' • '
Watson was at his scrambUnit. ;
championship best down Ute •
stretch. He saved pars on four f:1
lhe last six holes, foiling aD)'
hopes o f hi s would -be
challengers.
He hit his second s hot into
Rae's Creek. but still salvage4 a
par 5 on the 465 yard 13th with a
chip shot that left him only a 5·
foot putt
IN A TWIST of championship
irony. Watson felt he won the
Maste rs with a scrambling par
'at 14. a hole that had cost ~en
two previous titles in this event.
"l hit :.i good. aggressive
bunker i.hot at 14," he said. "I
never thought about missing the
4·foot putt I thouf,lht the cham-
pionship was mine after that."
He locked it up by two-putti.og
from 45 feet for a birdie four on
the SOO·yard 15th.
WATSON PROTECTED his
2·shot lead \\Ith two more saves
at 17 and 18 lie blasted out of
the front bunker Lo within four
feet :.it 17 He two-putted from
tht' right fringe at 18
· It's better the s~cond time
a round ,· he said "It 's in
descnbably delicious "Jt was
more •f a fi ght with myself this
time ..
Nicklaus was not surprised his
most intense rival for current
golfing supremacy did not Cold
in the stretch
·'Tom was the r e whe n ,;he
necderl to be." said Nicklaus.
frustrated at hi s failure to ex
tend hi:. Master:. record to six
champion~hi ps
"If l' hus mental toughness. He
does n 't like to los t• That's
refll'Cl(•d 1n his putting He 1
makes them when h<' has lo " f
M 11 l<•r seemed surprised al his i
round. s aying. "I didn 't expect f
lo l'ateh these greal players I j
didn't think I had much of a
chanc<' \\hen I teed off todav." I
Mtllt•r . lw1ce a \\tnner' this
~eason. b1rd1t'd three or the last ii
six holes to appl) some heat to i
Watl>on >
I think I might hav<' had an 1
ad\ anlagt> of pla) mg ahead of
him ... Miller s aid of Watson. ,
"but I'm not a choking dog
Except for a couple of guys.
I'm not afraid to l1.1e it up with
anyone down th<' stretch ..
From Page C1
KINGS. • • strikeouts in the ninth inning to Laidlaw. a rookie who took a feed give him a career high of three for the game. from Ron Duguay off a faceoff in
·the Kings end and sent "a weak
Ken Landreaux homered and shot I don't have the hardest
doubled a nd Bill Russell had a s hot in the world" through a
double and two s1ngles as the screen and past LA goalie Mano
Dodgers collected eight hits off Lessard for the crucial tally at
loser Vern Ruhle and two others 6 44 of the third pe riod. "We were
Russell singled home Ron Cey a lot better than 13th in this series.
with the Dodgers firs t run in the Theyweren'lupto rourth." The Kings' d e fe nse w;t s second inning and Landreaux especially leaky. allowing the followed a single by Dave Lopes ( in the third with his first Na· Rangers lo ire almost at will on
tional League home run the Los Angeles net Lessard. who
The third successive sellout ~hao~~r~n~~i~~n~~~~~~~f~~~~: ;
crowd at Dodger Stadium. fivebreakaways !
50,734, gave the Dodgers a total New York jumped lo a quick ~
of 152,936 for the opening three lead when Duguay faked LA de· i
games. fenseman Jay Well to the ice and •
T he Dodgers are at San Fran-be al Lessard on a breakaway only f
clsco .tonight with Bob Welch 46 seconds into the game. A I
making his first start against tninute later, the Kings drewe¥en ;• · when Greg Terrion who later the Giants' Alan Ripley. The would lose the critical faceoft le
Dodgers won 13 of the 18 games 1 d' i against the Giants last year and Duguay ea mg up to Laidl8"''s goal knocked a loose pock ~-===================================--:~r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w_e_r_e_6_·_3_in~C_a_n_d_le_s_·t_ic_k~P_a_rk_·~~~behindBakeronapowerplay.
l 'EASl•t
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APRIL 8, 10, 11 and 12 ,,.., '"
YDll llllTlll llllY PIPER
MONDAY APRIL 1J. 1qs1 ORANGE COUNTY CALIFOR NIA 25 CE NTS
Colum.bia performing 'like a chanip'
Probable Orbiter approach
and landlng pattern ~
....... .,, ~ ...... Cel 7J!C... euc.
;Loss of some heat tiles
seen no cause for alarm
Orblter's thermal protection system
CoMtng
Lay9' 61 bolotllieat• glut coats
•xteOC>r ol tile, lhedl about
I~
Dry lake beds
11
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP> -The astronauts of Colum-
bia. their rocketship sailing along
like a "champ," tested control
systems today for Tuesday's
searing rP.-entry after sources
said photographs indicated the
underbelly heal shield -crucial
to s urvival -is apparently intact. On Flight Day Two, "every.
thing's working just fine," a
mission director said today.
"There's nothing remotely re-
sembling a problem."
D11C1QO Tl'Clune ...... SOll<09 ~ ~...., 8-M1•• .... 1
J6hn Young and Robert Crip·
pen were awakened from a chilly
night's sleep in orbit by a counfry-
western lune that celebrated their
"mean machine." They began
t esting Colu mbia for the
dramatic landing that 'will con:
elude the mission that thrust the
Clymore's hail record
$10 ·million fixed for release of former hostage
accused of running huge drug smuggling operation
NEW YORK (AP> Bail or
$10 million , a record in the ·
federal court in Brooklyn. was
fixed today for Craig Richard
Clymore. who the government
says ran a n operation that
brought millions of dollars worth
of heroin and hashish oil into the
United States from the Middle
East.
Clymore. 24, formerly of Lake
F o rest. wa s one of tbe
p assengers on a Pakistani
airlint?r who was held hostage t1y
terrorists for 13 days last month.
According to the government.
Clymore headed a ring that r an
40 couriers, some making as
maoy as 15 trips from Middle
Eas t s ites to New York City
witnin the past three years.
It sai d Clymore bought
thousands of airline tickets.
amounting to nearly Sl million.
to keep his agents moving m
what an eight-count indictment
called a continuing criminal en-
terprise in violation or narcotics
laws.
President Reagan
has light work day
EXACT AMOUNTS were not
given, but Judge Thomas C.
Platt was told by the prosecutor,
Thomas G. Roth. that Clymore
paid the couriers between $3,000
and $5,000 for each liter of
hashish oil they smuggled and
113,oto per pound ofhel'Oba.
Among methods of smuggling
th.-..b,uoin was to swallow con-
doms fllled with the powder and
later recover them as they
pused naturally out of the body,
according to James Judge of the
f ederal Drug E n forcem ent
Administration.
WASHINGTON <AP > Presi
dent Reagan. out of the hospital
but under doctor's orders not to
work in the Oval Offi ce yet. is
s taying upstairs in the White
House with no immediate plans
for eublic appear ances while he
builds up his strength
Reagan met t.)dav with his wp
three ajdes and received a written
national security briefing. said
deputy White H o use press
secretary Larry Speakes.
He a lso was meeting today with
Secretary of Stat~ Alexander M
Haig Jr. and Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger to hear re
11orts on their recent overseas
trips . Both mee tings were
sche duled in t he executive
mansion's second-fl oor living
quarters. •
Speakes said Reagan was not
likely to make a radio speect. on
hi e; economic proposals this week
but said it may be done later
As he recuperates at home from
the bullet wound in hi s left lung in ·
fli cted by a would-be assassin two
weeks ago. Reagan also may
telephone members of Congress
for a progress report on how his
economic plan is faring. Speakes
said Sunday
But the president planned to
spend most, if not a ll. of the
week seclud~d in his upstairs
living quarters. First lady Nan·
cy Reagan has redecorated the
rooftop solarium for Reagan's
use during his r.onvalescence.
After being released from
George Washington University
Hospital on Saturday. Reagan
spent a quiet weekend with his .
wife and their daughter , Patti.
Aides agreed not to disturb him.
Irvine mayor
arrested in
wife attack
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony was
arrested ovec the weekend on
assault with a deadly weapon
charges in connection with the
beating or his wife, Elaine.
poli ce said today
Anthony. 50. remained in the
jail ward of UC Irvine Medical
Center this morning. said police
Chie f Leo Peart.
Elaine Anthony. 50 .. s.uffered
cuts and bruises on her face in
the beating that took place
Saturday afternoon in t he An·
thony home a t 18691 Via
P alatino, Irvine. police said.
Peart said that "a gun and
fists" were used in the assault. He
refused tosayexacUy how the gun
was used or what type of weapon it
was
Anthony, a former Marine.
was placed in c ustody at UCIMC
because he evidenced "emo-
tional strain," Pearl said. He
explained that once doctors de-
te rmine that Anthony can be
placed in Orange County Jail,
Anthony will be given a chance to
post bail.
Roth had asked that bail be set
at least at $3 million and assert·
ed that Clymore. a Laguna
Beach High School graduate.
had friends and assets scattered
throughout the world. Platt com-
mented: "If I fixed low bail. I
might be impeached.··
Clymore's lawyer told the
judge that his client has a book
contract for the sto ry of his
captivity as a hostage of sky-
jackers.
C LYMORE AND another
American were among t h e
passengers a nd c r ew of a
Pakistani airliner set free in
Syria March 14. Clymore im-
m e diate I y was jail ed in
Damascus and deported to the
United States.
No details were given about
the book contract as the lawyer,
Ron aid Kreber o f Laguna
Beach. sought court permission
to represent Clymore he re. a
jurisdiction in which he has not
been admitted to practice.
Pending a ruling on whether
Kreber can be the defense at-
torney, no plea was entered by
Cly more and no date for the next
court hearing was set.
The indictment charged that
Clymore masterminded t he
drug-running e nte rprise and
named three women and five
men. all Californians. as con-
federates. He could get up to life
imorisonment if convicted.
## .......
lD LU Ve1u. He was ee. LoUl.t la allowa
here, fTom left, ln 1935, 1950, 1863 and 1977.
See atory an Sporta Pqe Cl.
United States back into the space
race.
Cabin temperatures overnight
were in the OOs. a few degrees
below normal aod Crippen said.
"we got about ready to break out
the Ion~ undies." Shuttle Control
OBSERVERS CHEER -A4
EDWARDS READY -AS
quickly resolved that by dumping
wateroutof a heat exchanger.
The song, "The Flight of the
Shuttle Columbia," warmed their
sp~rits It said. in part. "Many,
many hours went into this thing. A
job well done by the s huttle space
team ·
The music was written by Jerry
Rucker, an insul ation technician
at Cape Canaveral for Martin-
Marietta Corp .. a11d s ung by Roy
McCall a country .and-western
singer from T1tusv1lle. Fla . the
town thal 1s closest to Kennedy
Sp.ice Center.
Following breakfast. Crippen
and Young plunged into a day of
exte nsive testing or spaceship
syste:ns VJOrking well except
for minor "anomalies." A re-
markably clear telecast showed
Young testing the s h·'f· 's flight
controls
"The vehicle is performing just
be autifully, much better than
anyone C\•er expected on the first
flight." Young said Sunday.
"It 's performing like a
champ," Crippen r eported
The astronauts relaved their
praise during a fo ur-m inut e
telecast to Shuttle Control njne
hours after ColumlJia vaulted
spectacularly off its la unch pad al
Cape Canave ral.
The maiden flightorthe world's
first reflyablc spaceship is a test
9S per ~ ol lhe r~try heat
flight. and Young and Crip~n
were to do just that today. Nothing
g lamourous like landing on tht•
m oon. J ust dogged checking and
rechecking of all the systems. a~
they did Sunday after launch.
Of the Liles. National
Aeronautics and Space Ad
m inistration spokesman Charles
Redmond said, "We arc very in
terested in understanding what
went on. but there 1s still no con
cern. If you define a maJor prob·
lem as onE' where we think there
mig ht be danger to the lives or the
crew me mbers, no, this doesn't
cu me anywhere near being a ma
1or problem · ·
Today's work schedule The
.. ,.. "
Tiie body Composed of 90 pet cent ai•
1 O per cen1 silica ht>ers.
roam·hke t1'4t abll01t>$ rema1n.ng
S per cen1 of heat
pilots e·. aluated the accuracy or
ship fli ght controb. assessed the
smo ll steering Jets that guide
thctr orbit and t heir descent.
trou bleshot o m10or cabin pres
sun zat1 on problem. adjusted
Columbia 's startracker align
ment <navigation control 1 and did
more test opera tions by remote
control on the shi p's cargodoo,rs
A rernarkable recov<:>ry fur a
craft that only a few months ago
critics were l"alling s uch unflat
tering things o!> '"s pace turkey"
and "aluminum Dumbo .. Colum
b1 a had fallen two years behind
schedule. bedeviled by technical
troubles"' 1th its main en~ines and
thermal tilt•s
Mesan to be there
tdien shuttle lands
O.lly ...... SIMI ......
AWAITS SHUTTLE
Charles Bell
Charles Belt' of Costa Mesa
plans on being at Edwards Air
Force Base Tuesday to watch the
landing of the first re-usable
space craft.
'· 1 wouldn't miss it for th<:>
world," said the 23-year-old Cal
Stat e FuJlerton s tudent who has
s pent the last two years working
on the space shuttle progr am at
Rockwell International
Arter 35 years with Rockwell
and nearly nine years devoted to
the space shuttle . his rathe r,
Harold. will have to content
himself with a televised version
of the historic landing
The 63-year -old aerospace
engineer retired in January and
moved his wife and youngest son
to,Oregon.
At his re tirement party he
Valor airords go
to former hostages
WA S HINGTON (AP > -
Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig J r . presented the State
Department's Award for Valor to
54 fprmer American hostages in
Iran today, praising them for
perseverence under "ex-
ception a 11 y dangerou s
circumstances."
L . Bruce Laingen, the ranking
U.S. diplomat In Iran at tbe time
of tbe hostage-taking, accepted
the award ''withgreatbumilltyon
behalr of all my colleagues, con·
scious of th& fact tha.t acts of
heroism and valor on the part of
all the services represented here
today take place often un-
rewa rded and unnoticed."
Tblrty.four ex-ho.stages, look·
ing rested and relaxed 12 weeks
after their departure from Iran,
were al tbe ceremony. Afterward,
the former hostaees were beading
to a West Virgin.la reaort and
medic.al cbeekupa on their read-
Justmenttofreedom.
Hai11aidlbenaUonowH•debt
or f ratitude to the former
boata1e1 for aenice carrled•out
UDder "1MU1Ua.lly dtfftcwt. in·
humane aod exceptionally
danaerou1 clrcum1tance.."
!le also conferred the a.te
Dtpartment'• DllU•1ui1hed
Honor Award m four department
otftclala few their tlforta In au!lt-
ln1 the Nie Nturn ol the former
hotta1•. TboeeeUaJble for UM Awu.I fw
Valor laduded rl &ta~ Depart·
ment tJllployeu, four In·
ternalional Communications
Agency officials and 13 Marine
guards.
Non-Marine military personnel
a r e ineligible for the State
Department award because they
wer e under Defense Department
jurisdiction in Iran
On Tuesday, most of the group
wiJI be n own to White Sulphur
Springs, W.Va., 250 miles from
here.
Woman faces
charge in
school. theft
A 21-year·old Van Nuys woman
was captured at Dana mus Hilb
School early Sunday morning
after she allegedly broke into a
buildina in the campus, taking
school equlpmenl, the Oran1e
CountySberUra office reported.
A deputy reportedly spotted a
1'mHbed window at the school at
1boulla.in. whil•on patrol.
Momenta later, he allegedly
found Lori Ellen Hau1e bldinl
behind a corner ot UM buUdinf.
Tb• deputy nld the woman wu
carrY1nl a camera\ calculaton, • 'caabler't check 1nc1 a boa GI pea, parpo"*'b' taken trOm U\t bulld·
ln1.
She wu Mid la Oran1t County
JaUonJU1PlciOl\otbu.r1lary.
took a lot of nbb1ng about ball
ing out before the shuttle could
possibly fail. Si.lid his son ma re
cent interview
··11e nC'ver had anv doubts
a bout the s hull le's s'uccess ...
said the younger Hell ··He has a
lot or confidence in 1t · ·
Behind the $9 9 billion shutllf'
program is an army or workers
who havt' labored nine Hars to
bring Columbia lo its final
countdown al Cape Canaveral
today. ln Orange Count) alone
there are 22 companies involved
.in the program.
Frid ay's computer foulup
wasn't the shuttle's first prob
lem . Budget C'Ut s have con·
tributed to its two and one-hair
year lag. Also. beanngs over-
heated and started fires, seals
ruptured. thousands of tiles had
to be r;cplaced and in late
January 34 panels came un
glued.
"The launch delays have de
moralized a lot of people," said
Be ll. who joined lhe shuttle mis
sion as a computer programmer
in 1979.
"The thing about space pro·
grams is the people are hig~ly
motivated,'" said Bell. recalhng
the nights or the Apollo miss ion
when his father wouldn't come
home until 8 or 9 o'clock
But somehow the shuttle mis·
s ion hasnlt sparked the same en-
thus ias m of past space pro
~rams.
ORANGI COAST WIATHIR
Low clouds in night and
morning hours. Otherwise
fair through Tuesday.
Slightly cooler afternoons.
Highs In mid-608 al beaches
to low 70s in inland areas.
Lows tonight 52 to 56.
·INllDI TODAY
Sovttr.rn CoUfornfo bole ball
fan• celebrate aa Angel.I and
Lo• Anoeles Dodger• win.
PooeCJ .
llDfl
.4 I
I
...
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, April 13, 1981
An Irvtn .. womu abot llet '°" •
the bead Saturday wblle he
was dotn1 homework in tbe liY· ln1 room ()( tbe f amlly bome and
, then went lntc) the bedroom and
killed herself with the rtne.
.Pottce Chief Leo Peart said this
morning.
"She was emotionally erratic
and bad a history or mental
problems,'' Peart said.
Morris L. Greene returned
home from work at 1: 30 p.m.
and found the bodies of his wife
Nell S., 48, and son, Brent D., lS.
Mr. and Mrs. Greene and their
son had lived at '8 Redhawk,
.Irvine. for about 2~ years,
neighbors said. m
Neighbors said Brent was a
freshman at Irvine High School
and active ln the drama depart·
m ent. Last year, while still at
Lakeside Middle School, Brent
was picked to play the leading
role in the Irvine High School
performance of "Oliver."
Ron Taggart, who lives near
the Greene home, said Morris
Greene called him Saturday af.
ternoon from work. He was con-
cerned about being unable to
reach his wife 8.!ld asked Taggart
to (O check on her.
Taggart said he rang lhe
door bell but got no answer.
Rites set
for WWII
adiniral
Laguna Hills resident Adm.
Phil Niekum CUSN-Ret.), who
directed amphibio1.1s landings in
some of the South Pacific's
bloodiest invasiona in World War
II d ied at 76here Friday.
The retired admiral. a 32-year
Navy veteran, will be eulogized
Tuesday at 2 p.m . in rites at
McCormick ~ortuary in Laguna
Hills. Burial will follow in Ar·
lington National Cemetery,
Washington, D.C.
Adm. Niekum commanded am·
phi bious task forces that captured
the South Pacific islands or Iwo
Jim a. Okinawa. Iheya Shima and
Ag uni Shima.
Landing craft m his fl~t car·
ried the Marines who raised the
Flag o~er lwo Jima's Mount
Suribachi.
He was later to serve on tl\e
Republican· State Central Com·
mittee and the Los Angeles ColJ!l·
. ty Republican Central Comnut·
tee. S urvivor s i nclude Adm .
Niekum's two daughters, Malin-
da Niekum, of Fullerton and
Su zanne MoqlSCO, of Connec·
ti'cut; a brother Norris, of
Pennsylvania, plus two sister!
living in Ari-iona, mortuary of-
ficials said.
Killer gets
execution stay
ALEXANDJ{lA, La. (AP) -
U.S. District Judie Naumann
Scott stayed the executi<Jll of
Dalton Prejean today wltb less
than 48 hours to spare, ruling
that more arguments should be
heard on whether the eonvicted
killer was too young to be con-
d emned to die, a court derk
said.
Prejean's lawyer; Thomas
Guilbeau, said he had been pre-
pa r e d lo go to the Stb U.S.
Circ uit Court of Appeals if Scott
had r efused to stay the ex-
ecution, sche duled for early
Wednesday. Guilbeau sald Pre·
jean, sentenced lo die when he
was 17 for killine a 1tate trooper,
was growing edlf aa bis ex -
ecution dale drew nearer.
lAgUllO <A/C
hosts mixer
,.,. ...........
HITCH-HEIGHT -Hang glider pilot Frank Knippers gets a
free ride 1 300 feet up by tying on to a hot-air balloon at
Hammond ' La. The ride down for Knippers, after his re·
lease fro~ the balloon, was about three minutes. This
was his first such launch-.
Police probe bloody
street gang fight
Santa Ana police investigators
are piecing together information
today in the wake of Sunday's
bloody clash between members or
two Los Angeles street gangs and
a Santa Ana youth gaog at a party.
Three people and perhaps more
were injured in the fight that
erupted at a home at 2226 S.
Diamond Av~. in Santa Ana.
Bradley
funeral
Tues~y
EL PASO, Texas (AP)
Eulogized as "a real soldier's
soldier" and "a man who in·
spired the troops," the nation's
las t five-s t ar gen e ral was
headed for his final resting place
at Arlington National Cemetery.
Thousands or mourners filed
through M unadorned chapel at
Fort Bliss for four days to pay
tribute to General of the Army
Omar N. Bradley, who died
Wednesday at the age of 88.
His body was to be flown today
by presidential jet to
Washington, D.C., for burial
Tues day after a private
ceremony for the family.
''He was a real soldier 's
soldier ," Sen. Lloyd Bentsen
said Sunday at the Fort Bliss
chapel.
He said Bradley, who died of a
heart attack in New York, "was
a man who never sought war,
but a man who inspired the
troops. He was a real hero to all or
us."
A 19-man honor guard was to
escort the casket from the
chapel to the airport. Once it ar-
rives at Andrews Air Force Base
in Washington, the body was to
be taken to Bethlehem Chapel at
the National Cathedral.
Voters mnll
teacher pay
Police said two Gadena men
oelieved to be Los Angeles gang
members were arrested by of·
ricers who quelled the dis·
turbance.
Booked at Orang~ County J:lil
on attempted murder and assault
charges were Luis Antonio
Vargas, 21, and Luis Anto!'io
Vidaurrazaga, 20. Both are bemg
held in lieu or $25,000 bail.
ACCORDING TO offlcers,
about 20 members or the two Los
Angeles gangs -Companeros
Baby Locos and Barrio So Las
Rifas -crashed the party at
about 1 :30 a.m. Sunday.
Attending the party were Sant.
Ana youths who belonged to tht
Stb Street Gang.
Violence erupted almost im·
mediately , officers said, and
police were called whe n a
neighbor re;>0rted hearing gun·
fire.
Between 15 and 20 officers were
needed to break up the fighting,
resulting in t~e two arrests and
confiscation of knives and a gun.
InjureJ in the fighting were
Ernest Lopez, 18, of Harbor City;
Matt DeArcos, 21, of Huntington
Beach. and Robert Hernandez.
18, of Santa Ana.
LOPEZ SUFFERED guns hot
wounds in the neck and hand and
is in serious but stable condition
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
DeArcos suffered multiple stab
wounds and was reported in fair
condiUon this mornin& at the
Fountain Valley hospital.
Hernandez was treated and re·
leased.
Police believe others at the par·
ty also were inJured and have not
yet sought medical attention. It is
believed one man suffering from
a Ji(unsbot wound went to Mercy
Hospital later in tile day Sunday
for treatment but fl ed when a
nurse began to call police.
A police spokesman said the.d~·
partment's special gang deta1l 1s
investigating the incident.
3 stabbed
to death
The i.aauna Be.-Cbamber of Commer~ lit hoe~ chamber
mlxer nllbt WedD at J:rlc's l·r..aa..-.
RAVENNA, Ohio <AP> -The
nation's longest teachers' strike
is over today but the Ravenna
teachers haven't yet won a wage
increase -their paychecks will
depend on the mood of the city
voters in a June 2 election.
The Ravenna School Board
met in special session Sund~ to
ratify the contract that teachers
approved three days before. The
action ended the walkout and
gave the city's teachers their
first contract ever.
QUINCY (AP) -A woman,
her son and a friend have been
stabbed to death in the woman's
home at nearby Keddle, and the
woman's 12-year-old daughter
bas disappeared.
Plumas County s herifrs dep-
uties identified the dead Sun·
day as Susan Sharp, 36, and her
son John, 16, and a friend, Dana
Wingate, about 17.
The lwo·bour 1•t-to1ether
befina at5: 30p.m. wit!reocktaila,
bort d'CMl\&VHI and door prises.
A doDaUoa ol • ii requested from ebamber membtn. For
moreJnformation, ~al14N·1018.
CteNlfted .....,. ..... n4'• •I
Alt'otlW.,.,... Ml •t
MAIN 01'FtC1
Ul Wttt..,, .... c.te ..... CA. .... .-..: ....... c... ..... 0-
Volunteer searchers combed
the woods around the communi-
ty late Swtday for signs of the
·missi ng daughter Tlna .
Authorities said they bad no sus-
pecta.
Bus rides slated
for health· fair
· The Latuna Beach senior
cltbem club wtll be provtd.1nc
bus tnnlportatioo to the South
Coaat Mtdlcal Center Health
Fair AprlJ 28.
Senior clll&ena can reeelve
phJslcal examlnatlon1 for a
nominal fee at the health falr,
which runa from 10 1.m. to 4
p. m . In the hospital parkln1
faclllty.
Pot lnformatlon, call the
1enlon club at 4t'l·M41.
................ .,, ---._,,,,,_.
HO~sing · 1itnCe shift?
•1
Comprpmise1 s~ht ~ offordable home issue
lletale cdntrota for aew ·.,. At that poklt, couaty offidab re11onal commi11100 and then to
fordable houalns bum alon1 the deetded lo negotiate tbe dif· tbestate.
coaatbave been O.PJ>Oled until now rerences, l'ather Ulan conltoot the
by membenottheOran1eCounty commlulon durina 1torm1 and
BoardofSupervlson. poteotlal.b' frulUea• public hea,..
They have prefelTed to leave lnts.
real estate 'market.a unencum· One of those invo,ved ln the
bered ratheT than. to llmlt the ne1ottatlons bas been Peter
prices of homes dunna r~ale. Herman, planning aide to 5th Dis·
But the supervisors position trict Supervisor Thomas Riley.
may be chan1ing soon becaua~ of Herman said that RUey and other
compromlaea reached wttb supporters or the compromise
representatives of both the south sUll hove to sell the agreement to
coast ~onal and s tate coastal other supervisors and members
commissions . of the coastal commiasion.
PLANNING STAFF m embers
from the county and the com·
mission have been meeting the
past month to settle differences
over a set of state-mandated
policies governing use of the
coastal zone.
HE TIUNKS Riley will have at
least three votes on the board,
even though members such as
Supervisor Bruce Nesland~ have
adamantly opposed resale con·
trols ln the county.
.. It's best for the county to end
stale involvement in land use d~·
cisions in our jurisdiction and this
apparently is the best way to do
it," said Herman.
The moment or reckoning will
come as the coastal programs are
resubmitted to the s upervisors. If
approved, they will first go to the
BOTH THE coaatal com·
m luion and the stat e Air
Resources Board have re1ulated
houising development in the Aliso
Water Management district. The
commission baa imposed restric-
tions on a sewage outfall.permit in
which it requires certa\n controls
on affordfible housing.
The Air Resources Board also
has restrictions calling for low
and moderate housing, supposed·
ly to shorten commuting trips ~
the south COW\tY and ease air
pollution from vehicles.
There still are several other is·
sues to be ironed out between the
county a nd the coQ\roissioos.
What lo do with sand dredged
from San Juan Creek, whether to
extend University Drive and how
wide to build Sand Canyon Road
through the Irvine Coast are just
three.
But Herman said those matters
can be resolved later in the proc·
ess if the compromise on the hous·
ing issues is ral\fied fi rst.
-Glenn Scott
According to the receotly-
reached compromise, the COWlty
would impose resale controls on
up to 3,000 new affordable housing
units planned along the coast.
This would be done if the com·
m ission and the s tate ALr
Resources Board lift conditions
on development of abouts.~ new
homes within the area served by
the ,\liso Water Management
Age ncy.
The agreement is part of
negotiations involving the local
coastal programs prepared for
commission approval by the
county. The programs, mandated
by the state Coastal Act, are de-
signed to protect the coastline by
spelling out how coastal land can
be used.
Cove funds OK' d;
residents to stay
THE COUNTY is preparing 10
such documents covering unin-
corporated parts or the coast from
Seal Beach to San Clemente.
These coastal programs were
app r oved o n ce by th e
supervisors, but planners for the
regional coastal commission rec·
o m mended denial based on
several reasons, including hous·
ing issues.
Bush defends
budget cuts
TUSKEGEE, Ala . CAP >
Vice President George Bush has
s aid ·that critics of President
Re agan's proposed budget cuts
are wrong in raising doubts that
the administration is insensitive
to the economic problems of
blacks and other minorities.
•·Be gay, put aside your
doubts," the vice president as·
sured a largely black audience.
·'In this president and in bis ad·
ministration black and minority
Americans have a man who wiU
act, not deal in rhetorical rum.
n am. to improve the quality of
life for those who have suffered
from bigotry and discrimination
in the past."
Easter rites
roundup set
A roundup of Easter sunrise
services along the Orange Coast
will be publis hed in the DaiJy
Pilot Saturday.
Church officials should send
information to the Religion
Editor, P. 0 . Box 1560. Costa
Mesa 92626, so that it will ar·
rive before noon Wednesday
Apologies
Press problems made delivery
or the Daily Pilot late for many
subscribers Sunday. We regret
the inconvenience.
Ft.Hl·time and elderly residents
of the Crystal Cove beach colo!'y
will be allowed to stay on in·
definitely, a state assembly panel
has d etermined .
And lhe new Crystal Cove State
Park between Co rona del Mar and
Laguna Beach will receive $8
million in improvements, foll ow·
ing an Assembly Ways and Means
subcommittee metting Wednes·
day.
A s sem blywom an Mari an
Bergeson of Newport Beach, who
attended the meeting, said she is
pleased by the committee's de·
cision to let low-income, elderly
and fuJ l-time residents of the col·
ony remain.
"WHAT WE'RE TRYING to do
is protect tbose who are full-time
res idents or woul:i suffer a
hardship," she said, adding th~l
about 20 or the Crystal Cove rest·
dents fall within that description.
While the committee is allow·
ing those residents to stay on.
vacation and weekend users of the
cottage community must leave by
July or 1982 -a full year ahead of
a state Parks and Recreation
Department agreement.
The state purchased the 3.5 mite
stretch of coastal land between
Corona del Mar and Laguna
Beach last year. The new 1,000·
acre state park includes the
Crystal Cove community and the
El Morro Mobile Home P ark,
about a half-mile south.
At the time of the park
purchase, no decision was made
a bout the future of residents of the
Crystal Cove cottages The state
parks department said no one
would be evicted until at leas t
1983, when planned uses for the
p ark are to be completed.
LAST WEEK'S subcommittee
decision changes all that.
Mrs. Bergeson said those who
are not full-time residents or
hardship cases will be asked to
leave the park "prior to the time
announced," in order to expedite
developmentorthe state park.
The assemblywoman said the
amount of lime that full-time resi·
_4ents will be allowed to stay "will
need to be refined,'' saying it .
could be up to 20 years as is the
case for mobile homeowners at El
Morro.
She said the $8 million recom·
mended for appropriation by tht!
s ubcommittee will be used to con·
struct restrooms. sewer lines and
other amenities at the new stale
park.
The rr.oney comes from stale
bond act revenues and must re·
ceive approval of the full Ways
and MeansCommittee beforefac·
ing budget hearings before both
state houses
Overcast sky
keeps crouxls
• • tonummnrn
Overcast weather kept beach
crowds to a minimum on the first
weekend of Easte r Week
vacation. Oran ge Co a st
lifeguards reported.
One tragedy was reported over
the weekend when a South
Pasadena man collapsed near the
Newport Pier.
Robert Kerr. 73, was finally pro·
nounced dead at Hoag Memorial
Hos pital
Beach crowds r anged from
65,000 at Newport Beach
described as really light fo r a
normal first day of Easter Week
to 22.000 at Huntington Beach City
Beach and 8,500 at San Clemente.
Laguna Beach had a turnout of
10 000.
Seal Beach recorded 4,000.
One disabled. 20-foot boat out of
Long Beach was taken in tow off
Bolsa Chica State Beach when it
drifted into the surf a nd wa s
pulled to safety by the state
lifeguard launch. with no injuries
or damage.
Netters make gift
of record player
The Laguna Beach Tennis As·
sociation has donated $434 for
pur c h ase of an a udio reco~dl
player for the city's recreation
department.
The record pl ayer will be ~ed
in conjun ction with classes be1_ng
held at the Veterans Memor:ial
Community center on Legion
Street.
---------------
If you want Im Cord ~~
We've Got'em.
Our lour basic colors are olf·whl-.,.lt
and ntNY In a.~ canon. 16" DOllt91•
,
'f
AL:SGARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
Crt4) 644·7030
~· .
I•.
Vice President George Bush adjusts the fit of his
mortarboard l)efore speaking at the T"skegee
Institute Founders Day celebration in Tuskegee , Ala.
Bush was awarded an honorary law degree Sunday.
Foster life
in tunrwil
After a ppearing in the films
"Taxi Driver" and "The Little
Girl Who Lived Down the
Lane," 18·year old Jodie
Foster wanted to be out of the
limelight and Ii ve the lire of an
ordinary college freshman
But the assassination attem pt
on President Reagan threw
her college life into turmoil
Sin ce investigators dis-
closed that alleged presiden·
tial assailant John Hinckley
Jr. may have been motivated
by an •nfatuation with Miss
Foster. she has been forced to
leave her Yale University
dormitory temporarily for
more secur e q uarters and ac
cept plainclothes police pro
tection. People m agazine re-
ports in its current issue
Rep. Jon Hinson, who
pleaded guilty to a sex charge
a fter being arrested in a
Washington men's room.
s pent his last day in Congress
today.
The Mississippi Republican
notified Gov. William Winter
tha t he would resign his seat,
effective at the close of busi·
ness today. because of the
Feb. 4 arrest. Winte r called a
special election for June 23 to
choose a replacement to serve
·the 21 months left in Hinson's
term .
Henry Fonda has been
given a clean bill of
health after undergoing
two days of heart tests
at Sharp Memorial
Hospita.l in San Diego.
Ex-Marine Sft. &odaef V.
••aoek1" Sltkalau, oeeof the
52 for nler A me rte an
hoata1•. ltteiM work today aa u a«OUDt exeeutlve for
rad1oata~XMOX·FM.
Slctm&u11D, wbo left tbe ... ,...... il.rUJ iilttt belnc
releUed ~m Iran on Jan. 20,
wlll enter the executive train·
ln& Protraln at the ata~.t
which la dwned by tbe Cm;
· radlonetwork.
"I 1et. aloni real ·well with
people," &aid Sicktnann."
Most newlywed.a &et to run
orr on a honeymoon after the
ceremony, but not if the groom
ls the governor of New York
and passage of a $16.5 billion
state budget ls 13 days over-
due.
Gov. Hu&b Carey on Sat~
day became the first New
York governor ln 18 years to be
married in office. The la.st
gubernatorial wedding was
the 1963 marriage o( the late
Nelsoa Rockefeller.
But alter receptions in New
York City and Albany, the
62·year-old governor and his
bride, Chicago millionaire
real estate developer
Evan&ellne Goaletaa, « de·
cided t.o stay in Albany on Sun·
day.
Suaan Fla°'ry, ~ho plays
the blond public-relations ex-
ecutive in CBS's "Dallas" TV
series, flew into London with a
tantalizing tidbit for afi·
cionados of the Ewing clan.
She told reporters at
Heathrow Airport that
another "major crisis" will
occur in the series this year to
match last year's shooting of
the nefarious J .B. Ewing.
!mprisoned Jewish activist
Anatoly Sbcbaransky has
been placed in solitary con·
finemenl for six months and
denied visiting rights for 1981,
his mother said today.
Ida Ml!grom, who last saw
her 32-year-old son a year ago
this monU1, said in a typewrit·
t e n statement g iven to
Western reporters that the ac-
tions were ta ke n agains t
Shcharansky in January. but
did not say what prompted
them.
Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski,
Poland's 79-year-old Roman
Catholic primate, is suffering
from inf1uenza but his condi·
lion is "not grave," church
sources said today.
The sources, who asked not
lo be identified, said tbe
cardinal was confined to bed.
As ked about his condition,
they said ''it is not grave."
April showers prevail
Tornadoes touch down in southwest Oklahoma and Ohio
Coastal 1reather
low nlglll •nd morntng c 1oud1.
otherwise t•er lhrouQn Tuesd•Y
Sllghlly cool•r •llernoon low•
lonighl •lonQ I"" COUI H, onl•nd •S
HoQhS T.,...,.Y mid M>s lo low 101
W•ltr •1 E lsewherr, nor1hwe1t w1nd1 10 to
20 kno" over ovter w•ltr lhrouoh
Tuesd•Y wllh ..... l lo • IHI llller
noon clurinv
U.S. summary
llprll ,,..,_,. •nd lhunder\lorm1
K•ttered .,.,.,1 tact.'/ ''°"" "10nn•rn
Okl•homa ll••ouon Ille O•kol•'I 10 11
1tnoi1
Tf'ttre were 'hOwfr\ •nO U\ti.tn \"' _, \ ...... ,..0 .,, Ou .. d t d oersh~wert trom 1"'-' Ol\10 "•flty 10 rTTTTr171\ - -• ____ :
the Allant1c •M trom J 1r91n1• to "IUUWll;;;:;::;::;._ ___________ .;,";.;;;o,;.u...;,11.;.1.;;,o•;.;;•-· ;;..•'.-'•-.---•;.;·•.,.
New Englend R•on >ullor..i lrom
PHO RolllK 72
Red Bluff n
Reclwood City •• Reno u
Se<r•mtnlo 10
S.lln•• ..
S.nle B•rti.r• u
Ttierm•I to
Ukl•h ..
B•'llOw '° Bio Bur 51
Bhllol> H
C•l•llM 67
El Centro .,
long Bt«h II
Monrovl• ,.
Ml Wiisen ..,
Newpor18e~ u
Ont•rlo ,.
p~ 1'
S.n BernerdlN 7S
S.nJOM .,
S.nl• AN 11
T-Velley S2
CANADA
"
l5
4S ..
2'
40
ll ...
M
2t
50
2'
2t
S3
'° SI .. ..
S.J
50 50 • " SI
" 1•
• ~~·~::~ T~:~:d~·~.:;; ~~;~;:~ by T"ttdev HoQhs _,.e IOfK .. I ..
••n11e from SS lo •s whole ;w~noQhl
low• were • •PKl..i lo be on ti.. ~
•n1 low.,.
Honolulu
Hou11on J_ ...
~M (lty
~1v
loul1v1111
Ml.,.,1
Mllw•uk"
NHllYllle
New on.-
New York
Okie City
Om•h•
PlllledlllcJl>le
P-11111
PorU•lld, Ore.
R•pld City
Reno
13
II
ll
II u
II
II .,
.. IJ .. C•loerv
Edrnonton " 07 .01
Monlre•I • • Monl•n•
A torn•do to ... chtd oown 1n
SOUlh,. .. t Olo.t•P>ome
llnd Ot>10·1 foril l0<nedo Of Ille
•Prtno storm,.. • ..,.. 1111 10 lul, 11 wo
over bet0<e tome -I• could l•k•
ihelter. • witnlt$ Y td No tnjur.es
wtrt rt00f1fll(ll, b\11 St'Vtr•I barns •nd
houses werr d .. lroyed or ci.m_.t in
the storm
Showers end lhunder\hO•on •tre
UP«Cltd IO st•ll•• 100.y frorr. lhe .oulhern end c..-lr•I RockiH •cron
the Conlrtl Pl•i111, Ohio V•llO,
Grul l •llK and Mid llll•nlic il•te1
Teme>er•lure$ .,.ound Ille Nllon •I
11 pm. PST Sund•v renve<I from 20
In Cul B•nk, Mont •• IO H In Oel
P•IO, Tax•1.
Cnl.ifomia
TUHcMy Sl'IOuld be -""'r lelr, Wlf'l"IJ dly ellfr COMl•I low C~I
b«rn oft In IN momlnQ, 11'9 N•tleftel
W••ll'ler S.rvke Mid lod•Y·
low clouds -lnQ Ille nlrl ~
mornlno """'• -re npectld oH r
Los 11noe1n. Ot,,._IM, 1i. wMllltr
lhowld Ill lelr wllll temper.tu•· .. Ill
Ille low ~ TWtdly end overnllfl1
lows '" IN mid JiOI le<•I 109 .... low CIOVdl were
l«ecnt lor Ille v•lleys !ft lt>e I ...
nlollt lMeuoll mid mornlne hovilt
111rou111 T-y. Otherwlu l•lr
wHIMr "''" tape<led wltll 11111•
clle111e In 1tm,.r•l11rH. Hl9ll1
lflOuld .,. In tlle -te mlf 7'0I wllll
-· tonfol!C rlfttllno ••-• '° "-
rrw -Is should i.. •••• 1on19111
wolh ••rl•bl• lhln hOQh cloud• MOY· lnQ on fuet<Ny l•te •fl.,noon winch
of IS 10 JS mph ...,re exoecled High•
were oredltled lo be "" 1i.. 70. 10 low
90\ w llh lows droPl)inQ onto the mid
40$ •nd Ml>
Temperatures
"lb•ny S2 ,.
llnchor-4l 11
All•nlt Cly •• u .12
B•lllmore .. u .61
Blsmerck u ,.
BoiM SI :JO
Bot Ion 5' l7
Butl•lo 50 40 ·°' C!Myenne .. Jt
Cllk•QO 50 .., .f1
Clevelencl to 40 .OI Denver , . ...
Oelroll 53 42 .10
Duluth .. ,. .u
f<•lrtMnb l1 II
H•I-S1 •
S.11 ute
S.n 01990
S•n Fr.n
S.•111• Spokene
CA\.l l'ORHIA
IO
13
6S ..
7t .,
n
SS
" 4J
65 .. u
SI ..
2t
•1
S1 u 01 u
Jt 01
to .,
Jt .OS .,
51 40 .OI
6S u .en l l
2' • '° ... .. ·°' ,.
8eUrslleld 7J JO
BlytM to '1
Eureli• 56 41
Fr""° 72 40 len<HW 12 »
Monterey to U
Oelll•nd 42 "'
Southern CaU/omi.a surf report,
' s.1 ...... ,
J a •
... ,.,..
11 n
It 1t
.............
......... Dtr I 1 SW t t w
I 1 SW 2 a w
Ott ewe 50 30
Reei,,. .w " Toronlo 4S 41
V•ncou,,... .. » I.IQ
Wlnnlpev s. 30
~AH AMERICAN
Ac•pul<o .. 71
B•rbedot .. 71
8erm110. 6t u
Cwr•c.., .. 7t
FrffPO<t II M
Gu•d•l•Jer• .. JO
Gu Mio loupe IS 11
Hav•n• 13 70
l(lngtlon to IS
Monl990 S.v .. IS
M•Hll•n .. u
Merld• •1 10
MulcoCllv 19 .w
MOnlerrev ,, ..
He»•u II ..
S.n J11•n .. ,.
SI Kiili II 73
T99u<leelfwl II 71
Trlnkted to 7J
OL08Al
Am11ero.m M ~
AIMnt .. S4 ••nokOll t1 12
Beirut .. u
hlotede .. ..
Berlin 10 u
110901• M 50
••ulMll .. s.a
B'Alret n ..
C•lro 72 so
CerM:•s .. ..
C-nM9tfl " • Dvblln S.J u
Fr-1"'1 7S S4
0.MYI .... ,,
Hone•-II n V•rl ... • 1118'1 clowdl Wff• pndkl·
941 lo~ -IN ,,....!Mn ¥-. ~Sun, moon, titlet ______________________________________________________ .............. ""Ii
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Orange Coeat DAILY PILOT/Monday, Aprll 131 1981
. o.llyll'l ... SUtt"'9te
Holding their International winter Special Olympics medals are Costa
Mesana Debt:ne Keyes r lef i J, silver; Allison Reese, gold.
UCI frosh rank
lowest on tests
Bv RICHARD GREEN
Ml1te D.tly ll'lle4 SIAltf
Freshmen entering UC Irvine
in 1979 scored lower in verbal
and composition tests than their
counterparts on the other seven
University of California cam-
puses
And the UCI composition
scores were 26 points below the
national mean.
But UCI Associate Vice Chan·
cellor Carl Hartman said these
statistics. contained sn a recent-
1 y released s tudy on un
derprepared students. don't in·
dicate UCI students have special
problems in language skills
Rather, these problems are
shared by university s tudents
acr oss the nation, Hartman ex·
plained.
"JN THt: last six mon(hs I've
t alked to people at the Universi·
t y of Arizona, Un iversity of
Michigc.n. Mi chigan Stale , the
University of Illinois, the
University of Iowa and Cornell
University," he said. "They say
they've been worrying a bout
these tlends for longe r than we
have."
He claimed that the scores or
UCI freshmen on the verbal and
composition tests wer en't lower
in a statistically significant
sense th a n the scores o r
fres hmen on the other UC cam·
puses.
"What has ha ppened is that
students at all levels have less
facilities in verbal skills than
would be des irable." Hartman
s aid. "We're s eeing a social
phenomenon. We became less
language oriented after World
War II."
HE SAID that the UCI ad·
ministration is now considenng
what can be done lo enhance the
basic academic skills of the un·
i versily's students.
In the 1979·80 school year. UCI
spent $310,000 on courses and
$1 34,000 on programs for un·
derprepared students, according
to the University of California·
com miss ioned s tudy on un·
derprepared stuaents.
That study indicated that all
e ight UniversiLY of California
scores on the math portion of the
SAT.
According to the study, SAT
and Achievement Test scores
have been dropping nationally
The decline was more pro
nounced at the l.Jniv«:rsity of
California, but L'C freshmen still
score above the national mean
on these entrance exams
THE study says that SAT
verbal scores aroppeo 26 points
nationally from 1972 to l!l7S This
compares lo declines o f 36
points in Califorma. 43 points at
the t:niversity of California and
56 points at L"CI.
··Many changes have occurred
in the last decade thal affect the
preparation of students for col
lege."' the report said by way of
explanation .. Im portant
societal changes in family
structure. mobility. drug l's age.
television and parental attitudes
have taken a loll.
"California's high srhools
have been askt>d lo alleviate
(We 're seeing a
social phenome-
non. We became
less language-
oriented after
World War II .'
racial and ethnic segregation. to
assimilate and acculturate
thousands or immigrants. rel
ugees . . handicapped and to
attend to llee lt>git1mate needs of
those at \he bottom of the
achit?vemenl scale ··
Hartman theorized thilt the
trend of declining ·basic ·skills in
the UC system may appear
more pronounced than the na
tionwide trend bt:'cause those
skills used to be al s uch a high
level.
CM gir"ls
skate to
lwnors
~
BYIER&YCLAUSJ:N Ol\IMJ....., ...........
The htlero1&tlonal Winter
Special Olympics made 1981 a
big year for Rose Ross· special
educ ation class at College Park
Elementary School in Costa
Mesa.
Five students made money in
a Special Olympics television
comm ercial with U.S . speed
skating champ Eric Heiden.
One student, Ms. Ross con·
fides, had a speaking part and
has earned more than $1 ,000 in
residuals so far
BUT THE CAPPER came in
mid March
T hat's when sixth-grader Al·
Itson Reese-, 12, and fifth-grader
Debbie Keyes. 10, took a gold
and silver m edal for figure
skaters m their age category at
the 1981 Interna tional Winter
events
More than 600 educationally
handicapped youngsters from
acrOS!:> the U.S and seven other
nations gathered in Stowe, Vt. to
compete in skatmg. skiing and
bobsled events
'l'he two Costa Mesa girls
represented California in their
figurc·skating events after earn
ing top medals in the annual
Orange County Special Olympic·
compet1t1ons last vear.
Both have been skating since
they \\er<• first graders. follow-
1 n g their special e ducation
teachers onto the ice every Fri-
day morning at the Ice Capades
Chalet 1n Costa Mesa for an
J')our·:. ""orkout
"IT'S GREAT FOR balance."
explams Ms. Ross who ruefully
confides that she broke <in arm
last year "'hile zipping across
thl' IC('
The tcacht•r:. didn't make the
'>'eek long . all -<•xpense·paid
flight to Vt'rmont. tnough
And they wercn 't there when
Allison and Debbie. <'lad in their
skating costumes. stepped out
on the ice before a gathering of
hundreds to perform their
routines to mus1r.
··Yeh."" admits Allison, look
1ng at her tOl'S ... we were
scared ··
Debbie adds ... Allison kept
saying. ·1 knoy, 1·m going to fall.
I JUSl kno'>' 1l ·And she d\d ··
Despite the fall. Al'iison's
figure eights c<imels, sit spins.
edges. d~ mg S\\ ans and bunny
hops were best m the competi·
lion . with Debbie's a close
second
IN ADDITION to their near
saucer size medals. the girls
brought home new skating out
fits and skates. pins and a
number of other gifts from the
lntt?rnat1onal Special Olympics
committee
But best of all. they CJgreed .
was the Vermont snow
Next to becoming professional
ice s katers when they grow up.
the two agreed they'd most like
to live sn Vermont where the
snow floats gently to earth and
is g real for s nowmen and
snowballs
campuses witnessed decreasing "BECAL'St: this decline shows Pa1°r Wl0 n gran•0 freshman scores on the verbal 11.e · f th s h I · A no signsofabating.1tdeservesthe portion o e c o asltc P-· f h · Cal State Fullerton students · d T d h E 1· h attention o t e university com lltu e est ar. l e ng is com· · h Kathleen Mi.Iler and Andrea d · h munsty.w ichmustdec1deho\\LO position an math sections oft e d . Pronk. both of Hunti·ngton A h-T ad ress basic skills problems and c 1evement est Beach. are recipients of the an· Add. i II · f h · h ho"'' to pay for the courses and it ona y, s ix o l e e1g t nu al Coors Commun1·cat1·ons · I d. UCI ·1 programs that will do so.·· the campuses me u mg w1 · Scholarships at the college. nessed decreas ing fr~e~s~h~r~n~e~n:.....~s-tu_d~y_s_a_id~~~~~~~~~~~~~
thz, original 3-9
thz.. claes1c wmdbrczaktz.r;
mad'2. m q.ng1end or thcz.
nm~t all cotton p:>phn
with authzntic tartan
lining thcz. ona. jacktz..t
hz.'11 10\A'L to 'MZBr
aveileb}Q, m neturol,
f'LN'j, britieh tan
endnzd. .
.......
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Map shows orbital paths for first three passes of space shuttle Columbia, beg1~ning at
upper center at arrow (1). . ·
wrnrnrrrn
1
March of pilgrims
opens Holy Week
"GOOD LI FTOFF, smooth
rllght. beautiful sight," said
Armstrong, the first m an to walk
on the moon.
··Fantastic. gr eat," said
Brown, the usually loquacious
Califomia governor who stood
a wed and &roping for words.
"There's nothing like having
your organs shake inside you
from the force of those engines to
bring about an awareness of what
we' re doing ," i;aid Russe!J
Schweickart, alliormer ApoUo 9
astronau ~
Schweickart c lu tc he d a
calculator he used to simulate
countdown himself, then $Qulnted
into the blazing Florida SWl and
followed the shuttle's path for
• four minutes cefter It 1treaktd
trompad38A. .
"It's awful Cood.-after mucb tQO
long a pauee to see us &olna tlP
agaln," be said. The mission, ~
aald. is "oot to eacape the Eutb
but to care for Earth. 1 wtah them
Gpdspeed."
PB E~IDENT Reagan, re·
covering at the White House from
hi~ bullet wound, watched the
launching of the space shuttle oo
television Sunday and declared: "It'• aspectacuJar sight."
Pollticiaps, diplomats and busi· oe,.meo p.rt other tbin(s aside to
return to the &~ial viewing site
to watch .,tl'I uauts John Young
and Robftt Crippen finally blast
off on their5'lh·hour mission.
Among them were Sen. J en·
Dings Randolph, D·W.Va.; Rep.
·Don Fuqua, D·Fla .: former
astronaut James McDivitt of
Gemini • and Apoll'o 9,
representatives of space agencies
in I.._, Spain and Germany. cor·
porate executives. families or
space workers. a nd a pair of
science·fiction movie producers
from Hollywood.
The special invitation crowd
had dwindled by one-third since
Friday's scrubbed launch. with
movie stars. legislators and some
of the better-known celebrities
Trail of smoke marks
Columbia's swift ascent
among the missing ... A lot oftheni '.
had other commitments and"
couldn't come back," said Arnold'
Richmond. ·
U.S. blamed • m sea crash
E~ster Bonnet
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H 25 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 •NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 926b0 (7141 752 792:\
LOAN. APPLICANTS TO
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK
IF YOUR LOAN APPLICATION IN 1980 WAS
FIRST VERBALLY APPROVED AND LATER
REJECTED FOR I INVALID OR SUSPECT.
REASONS, PLEASE CALL DR. D. L. WARWICJC,
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• Splral tllced for Nay tervlng
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· j 700 L COAST HWY .. c;....· .. Mw f'HOMI 6fJ.t1tt
24611 IAYMOte WAY .. & TOllO ID,. ll TOIO, flttOMI H7tHJl ..
" .. Aleo AnaMlm. Ortn~. Ranetio Ml~. La Habfa. stn DMlgo, ~ l1"6t11ACHIUD .... AUllLD.~TOMllACH.1"0Mll4Ml7I ~·
l'/Htl•.; Vlll999, North Holtvwoo<t. Woodland HOit. sent. Monlc1, P•Mdtrwi
\.!:Jloc:x:x::x:ccco ooc:::x:x:x::x:xocc:>cc:> . "'
Maritime Safety Agency is con·
ducting a separate inquiry
'l'O COLLISION occurred
last thutsday in t.he East China
Sea, about 110 miles off the
southern -tip of Japan. The
Shanghai-bound freighter sank
within 15 minutes. Thirteen
crewmen sw vived but the cap·
lain and another c:rewman are
missing and presumed dead.
The incide.ot has s tirred a new
pubUc furor in nuclear -sensitive
J apan, and Foreign Minist er
Masayosbi Ito today warned
there was a "danger that the re·
lationsbip of trust between the
United States and Japan would
be aUe<:ted" by it.
J apanese offi cials and
newspapers have criticized the
submarine's failure to rescue
the su r vivo r s and t o
acknowledge any in vol vemcnt
until the following day.
The Navy claims rain and
fog obscured the scene when the
s ub brietly surfaced, and also
prevented an aircraft accompa!• -~
nying it from spotting the diS:!
a bled shlp or the lifeboats.
ITO CALLED that explanation :
"unacceptable " •
Whtie expressing regret over
the incident and mdicating a
readinees to pay compens ation lo
the victims, the U.S. govern-
m ent has not admitted that the .
sub was at fault However . Capt.
John F . O'Connell . the em-
bassy's naval attache and a
former s ubmarine officer
himself. said a s ubmerged sub·
marine "has an obligation to
watch out fo~ surface ships." ..
O'Connell denied suggestions
1n the Japanese press that the
s ub did not pick up the survivors
because it 1s a highly-c:lassified
nuclear-powered craft. All U.S.
warships can pick up survivors
at sea and there is no exceptto.
for nuclear powertd vessels. he
said
'·
Colutnbia 1~nfO?t1ing 'Ike a chaDip'
I
Probtlble Orbiter approach
•nd landlng pattern -6
!dlsa• Nt ~...., c... ~C-. eun.
1Loss of some 'heat tiles
seen no cause for alarm
14
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
<AP> -The astronauts ofColum·
blf, their rocketship sailing along
Ulte a "champ," tested control
systems today for Tuesday's
seart.ne re-entry after sources
said photographs indicated the
underbelly heat shield -crucial
to survival-is apparently intact. On Flight Day Two, "every·
thing's working just Cine," a
mission director said today.
"There's nothing remotely re·
sem bling a problem.··
John Young and Robert Crip.
pen were awakened from a chilly
night's sleep in orbit by a country.
western tune that celebrated their
.. mean machine." They began
t esting Columbia for the
dramatic landing that will con-
clude the mission that thrust the
Clymore's hail record
$10 million fixed for release of former hostage
accused of running huge drug smuggling operation
NEW YORK l AP> Bail of
$10 million. a r ecord in the
federal court in Brooklyn, was
fixed today for Cr aig Richard
Clymore, who the government
says ran an ope ration that
brought millions of dollars worth
of heroin and has hish oil into the
United States from the Middle
East.
Clrmore. 24. formerly of Lake
F orest. Cahf.. was one or Ute
passen gers on a Pakistani
airliner who was held hostage by
terrorists for 13 days last month.
According to the government,
Cly m ore headt:d a ring that ran
40 couriers, some making as
m any as lS trips from Middle
E ast sites to New York City.
I t said C ly more bought
Irvine . mayor held
in attack on wife
. Irvine Mayor Art Anthony has
been arrested on assault with a
deadly weapon charges in con·
nection with an attack on his
wife, it was revealed today
Elaine Anthony. 50. s uffered
cuts and bruises on her face,
police said
Orange County Deputy Dis
trict Attorney J ack Sullens said
this momin~ he anticipates fil
1ng charges of assault with a
deadly weapon and use of a
firearm in commission of a
crime against Af)thony
··in this partic ula r case it
\\Ould b e the firing of a
handgun," Sullens said
Anthony. 50, a former Marine.
remained in the Jail ward of t:C
Irvine Medi cal Center this
morning. said Irvine Police
Chief Leo Peart. explaining that
Anthon y was taken to the
hospital after his arrest Satur
day because he exhibited
··e motiona l st r ess a nd in
s tability "
by the Irvine Company about ex·
pans ion of cabl~ television.
The Anthonys live in the Tur-
tle Rock section of Irvine.
Valor award
presented to
541wstages
WASHINGTON <AP) -
Secretary or State Ale xander M.
Haig Jr presented the State
De partment's Award for Valor to
54 former American hostages in
I ra n today, praising them for
p e r s e v e r~ n c e u n d e r · · e x ·
ce ption a lly dangerou s
cir cumstances."
thousands of airline tickets.
amounting to nearly $1 million.
to keep his agents moving in
what an eight-count indictment
called a continuing criminal en·
terprise in violation of narcotics
laws.
EXACT AMOUNTS were not
given, but Judge Thomas C.
Platt was told by the prosecutor,
Thomas G. Roth, that Clymore
paid Ute couriers between $3,000
and $5,000 for each liter of
hashish oil they smuaeJed and Sl3,~r pound of berdbt.
Among methods of smUJl)ina
tbe heroin was to swallow ccn-
doms filled with tbe powder and
later recover them as they
paued naturally out of tbe body,
accord.lng to James Judge of the
federal Drug Enfor cement
Administration.
Roth had asked that bail be set
at least at S3 million and assert·
ed that Cly m ore , a Laguna
Beach , Callr .. High School
1raduate, had friends a nd assets
scattered throughout the world.
Platt commented: "If I fixed
low bail, I might be im·
peached."
Clymore's lawyer told the
judge that his client has a book
contract for the story or his
captivity as a hostage of sky-
jackers.
CLYMORE AND a noth er
American w er e among the
passen gers and c rew or a
Pakistani airliner set free in
Syria March 14. Clymore im·
mediately was jailed in
Damascus and deported to the
United States.
United State's back into the space
.race.
Cabin lt:mperatures overnight
were in the OOs, a few degrees
below normal and Crippen said,
"we got about ready to break out
the Ion~ undit:s." Shuttle Control
OBSERVERS CHEER -A4
EDWARDS READY -A5
quickly resolved that by dumping
water outof a heat exchanger.
The song, "The Flight of the
Shuttle Columbia," warmed their
s pirits. It said. in part. ·•Many.
many hours we nt into this thing. A
Job well done by the shuttle space
team."
The music was written by J erry
Rucker . an insulation technician
at Cape Canave ral for Martin-
M iirietta Corp., a ud sung by Roy
McCall a country-and-western
singer from Titusville, Fla .. the
town that as closest to Kennedy
Sp.ice Center
Followmg breakfast, Crippen
and Young plunged into a day of
extensive testing of spaceship .
systems VJorking well except
for minor .. anomalies." A re-
marltably clear telecast showed
Young testing the ship's flight
controls.
At mid-day, Young s poke
briefly over a radio hookup with
Vice Preside nt George Bush,
who said , · · 1 think your trip is
just going to ignite the excite·
ment and forward thinking for
this country."
Y o ung told him , "The
s p aceship i s performing
beautifully," a nd Bush joked
about CrippeD;s high blood pres·
sure at launch time Sunday.
Young retorted, "Right now it's
AW A/TS SH UTT LE
Charles Bell
.Orblter's thermal protection system
Coetlnll •
.Layer Of borotlbte glus co.ts
•IClenot °' Ille: "*I• atloul 95 per cem ol the ....,,uy heat
calmed-down to about nothing "
On Sunday, Young had s aid
Columbia was p erformin g
"much better than anyone ever
expect~ on the first flight "
Crippen said. "It's performing
like a ctiamp," Crippen re·
ported.
The astronauts relayed the1 r
·pra ise nin e h ours aft er ,.
Columbia vaulted spectacularly
off its launch pad at Cape
Can averal .
Today, flight director Neil
Hutchinson said, "It's absolutely
amazing, the m achine is operat-
ing so well ; we have nothing
that's a real s how.stopper.
There's nolhin2 remotelv re·
* * *
Tiie body Comciosed ot 90 per cenl air
10 per cenl s111Ca ltbers
1oam·l•li.e 111e abSOrt>s remaining
5 per oem Ol heat
sem bling a problem "
0 f t h e t 1 I t· !.. • N a t 1 o n a I
Aeronautics and Spac•e Ad
ministration spokesman Charles
Redmond said-_ "We are \ery in·
terested an under-.tanding what
went on, but there 1s still no con
cern If you define a ma1or prob·
lem as one where we thank there
m 1ght be danger lo the II ves of the
crew members. no, this doesn't
come anywhere· nC'ar being a ma
1or problem ..
Nell llutchanson. one of three
fl ight dircc·tors at Shuttle Control.
said the affected tiles probabl)
were hll by a s hock \\ave as the
craft b<trreled up through the at
mosphPre
* * *
Mesan to be there
uhen shuttle lands
Charles Bell of Costa Mesa
plans on being at Edwards Air
For ce Base Tuesday to watch the
landing of the first re·usable
space craft.
"I wouldn't miss it for the
world,'" said the 23·year-old Cal
State f'uJlerton stud.ent who has
spent the last two years working
on the space shuttle program at
Rockwell International '
After 35 years with Rockwell
and nearly nine years devoted to
the s pace shuttle, hi s father,
Harold. will have to content
himself with a televised version
of the historic landing
The 63-year-old aeros pace
engineer retired in J anuary and
moved his wife and youngest son
to Oregon.
At his retirem~nt party he
took a lot of ri bbmg a bout bail
ang out bdore thl' s huttle could
possibly foil. said has son in a re
c<>nt interview
"He never had an' doubts
about the s huttlc"s s uccess.'"
said the younger ncll ·· 11 e has a
lot of confidence in at "
Be hind the $9 9 billion s huttle
program is an army of workers
who have labored nine vcars to
bring Columbia to its final
countdown at Cape Canaveral
today In Orange County alone
there are 22 companies involved
in the program.
When doctors determine that
Anthony can be taken from the
hospital to Orange County Jail,
Anthony will be given a chance
to post a $10.000 bail. Peart said
He added that he expects An·
thony to be arraigned on the
charges about "mid-week."
Peart said that "fists and a
gun" were used in the attack,
but refused to give further 'de·
tails of the incident.
L Bruce Laingen, the ranking
U S diplomat in Iran at the time
of the hostage.taking, accepted
the a ward '· with great humility on
behatr of all my colleagues, coo·
scious of the fact that acts of
heroism and valor on the part of
all the services represented here
t oday take place often un·
rewarded and unnoticed."
Thirty-four ex-hostages, look·
ing rested and relaxed 12 weeks
after their departure from Iran,
' we re at the ceremony. Afterward,
the rormer hostages were heading
to a West Virginia resort and
m edical checkups on their read·
jus trnenttofreedom.
No details were given about
the book contract as the lawyer.
Ron a ld Kreber of Laguna
Beach, sought court permission
to represent Clymore here, a
jurisdiction in wttich he has not
been admitted lo practice.
Pending a ruling on whether
Kreber can be the defense at-
torney. no plea was entered by
Clymore and no date for the next
court bearing was set .
No appearances set
while J{eagan rests
F'riday·s compu te r foulup
wasn't the s huttle's first prob·
lem . Budget r uts have con·
t rt butcd to its two and one-half
year lag. Also. bearings over-
heated and started fires. seals
ruptured. thousands of tiles had
to be r eplaced and in late
Janua ry 34 p anels came un·
glued.
··The launch delays ha ve de-
moralized a lot of people.·· said
Bell, who joined the shuttle mis·
slon as a compute r programmer
in 1979.
Anthony was last seen publicly
at a Thursday night cocktail
party at the Registry Hotel in
Irvine. 'l'he party was held to
make public an announcPment
On Tuesday, most of lbe group
will be n own to While Sulphur
Springs, W.Va., 250 miles from
here. ·
The indictment charged that
Clymore masterminded the
drug-r unning ente rprise and
named three women and five
men. all Californians, as con·
federates. He could get up lo We
imprisonment if convicted.
After being r eleased from
George Washington University
Hospital on Saturday. Reagan
spent a quiet "Weekend with his
wile and the'ir ·daughter. Patti.
~ides agrei?d pot to d.isturb him
Mesan named·
to West Point
"The thing a bout space pro-
grams is the people are highly
motivated,'' said Bell. recalling
the nights of the Apollo mission
when his father wouldn't come
home until 8 or 9 o'clock
-By JODI CADENHEAD
ORANG I COAST lfATHf R
Low clouds in night and
morning hours. Otherwise
fair through Tuesday.
Slightly cooler afternoons.
Highs in mld-605 at beaches
.!o low 70s in inland areas.
LOWS tonight 52 to 56.
INSIDE TDIAY
Southmt CaUfomia baeeball f ana cwbrate as Ange&. and
Los Angtles Dodger• wtn.
Page Cl .
lllfl
AM&.MlllM • ............ ., ..........
Or1rig1 COllt DAILY PtL:;OTJMond1y, Aprll 13, 1981
Bradley
funeral
~uesday
EL PASO, Tena (AP) -
EulOlbed u "• real aoldier's aoldler" and "a man wbo ln-
aptred the lroop1," the nation'•
last flve·star •eneral was
beaded for bll final re1Un1 place
at Arliqton National Cemetery.
Tbouaandl of mourners tued
throuah M unadorned chapeJ at
Fort Bliss for four days to pay
tribute to General of the Army
Omar N. Bradley, who died
Wednesday at lbe ace of 88.
His body was to be nown today
by presidential jet to
Washington, D.C., for burial
Tuesday after a private
ceremony for the family.
"He was a real soldier's
soldier," Sen. Lloyd Bentsen
said Sunday at the Fort Bliss
chapel.
He said Bradley. who died of a
heart attack in New York, "was
a man who never sought war,
but a man who inspired the
troops. He was a real hero to all of
\15 ...
A 19-man honor guard was to
escort the casket from the
chapel to the airport. Once it ar·
rives at Andrews Air Force Base
in Washington, the body was to
be taken to Bethlehem Chapel at
the National Cathedral.
Mesa panel
to consider
rondo plans
Planning Commission action
scheduled for tonight's meeting at
City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, indicates
a flurry of condominium con·
struction in Costa Mesa this
spring.
Commissioners are to consider
seven projects representing a
total of 84 residential units when
they meetat6:30p.m.
The largest project, 47 units, is
planned by Uco Investments of
Whittier, which seeks a variance
to repair a blu!Hace fronting their
projectat2179 Pacific Ave.
The s mallest is a two·unit
project planned by Susan Strong
Davis for 1754 Santa Ana Ave. She
seeks tentative tract map ap·
pro~al.
Also scheduled for con-
sideration are:
Don Reddington's permit
and map for five condominium
units at21016th Place:
-CAS Development
Corporation's tentative map for a
16-unit project at 1872 Monrovia Ave.;
-Robert Tillotson's map for
three units at 768 W. 20th St.:
-Wallace Remsen's zone ex·
ceplion permit for eight units at
183 Monte Vista Ave.;
-Vivien St. Amant's map and
permit for three units at 1597
Riverside Place.
a.. ........... " .. -.-" ...... CRASH INJURIES -Theodore Conlin, 38, Huntington Beach,
is treated by 1>aramedjcs after he lost control of truck early
Sunday on Jamboree Road near the Newporter Inn in
Newport Beach. Both Conlin and his passenger, Beverly
Walter, 47, of Costa Mesa, are reported in serious condition
today at Fountain Valley Community Hospital.
Newport oil well
battle to resume
A struggle over 16 oil wells,
which resulted in the wells being
shut nearly three months ago, is
expected to resume tonight in
Newport Beach.
Newport City Council mem-
bers wilJ be asked to approve a
joint powers agreement with the
State Lands Commission in a
new tactical move to take con-
trol of the wells.
The battle over the oil rigs,
loca.ted in the unincorporated
county territory outside West
Newport but roote d in city
tidelands off the coast, pits city
officials against Newport oilman
Robert Armstrong.
· Armstrong has agreed that the
oil belongs to the city but claims
he has interest in the rigs and
underground lines and has re·.
fused to tum that pro~erty over
to the city.
The oilman had a 12·year con·
tract with the city to pump the
oil and return a percentage of
the profits to the city. But that
contract expired in January and
the wells were shut.
The city. hoping to multiply its
profits, wants control of the
wells and intends to go out to bid
to find a new operator who will
give the city a larger share of
the profits.
The joint powers agreement,
already endorsed by the State
Lands Commissior.. is being
viewed by city offi cials as a
move that s hould guarantee
them control of the wells and the
land they sit on.
If the agreement is completed
tonight, the city and state will
take condemnation action to
claim the property and the land.
Armstrong and his attorney~.
thou~h, have protested the pend-
ing agreement and are expected
to be on hand tonight.
Newpor t City Manager Bob
Wynn has projected that the
wells should be pumping again
by July 1 if the agreement plan
works.
FW1eral
for Admiral,
Phil Niekwn
Laguna Hills resident Adm.
Phil Niekum <USN -Rel.), who
directed amphibiollS landings in
som e of the South Pacific's
bloodiest invasions in World War
II died at 76 Friday.
The retired admiral, a 32-year
Navy veteran, will be eulogized
Tuesday at 2 p. m. in rites at
McCormick Mortuary in Laguna
Hills. Burial will follow in Ar·
ling ton National Cemetery,
Washington, D.C.
Adm. Niekum commanded am-
phibious task forces that captured
the South Pacifi c islands of Iwo
Jim a. Okinawa. lheya Shima and
AguniShima.
Landing craft in his fleet car·
ried the Marines who raised the
Flag o~er lwo Jima's Mount
Suribachi.
Police probe bloody
street gllng fight
He was later to serve on the~
Republica n State Central Com-
mittee and the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Republican Central Commit-
tee.
Survivors in c lud e Adm .
Niekum's two daughters, Malin·
da Niekum, of Fullerton and
Suzanne Morasco, of Connec-
ticut; a brother Norris, of
Pennsylvania, plus two sisi.e~
living in Ariiona. mortuary of·
ficials said.
Santa Ana police investigators
are piecing together information
today in the wake of Sunday's
bloody clash between members of
two Los Angeles street gangs and
a Santa Ana youth gang at a party.
Three people and perhaps more
were injured in the fight that
erupted at a home at 2226 S.
Diamond Ave. in Santa Ana.
Police said two Gardena men
believed to be Los Angeles gang
members were arrested by of·
ri cer s who quell ed the dis·
turbance.
Booked at Orang'! County J ail
on attempted murder and assault
charges we r e Luis Antonio
Vargas, 21. and Luis Antonio
Vidaurrazaga, 20. Both are being
held in lieu of $25,000 bail.
ACCORDING -TO officers.
about 20 members of the two Los
Angeles gangs -Companeros
Baby Locos and Barrio So Las
Rifas -crashed the party at
about l ::.>a.m. Sunday.
Attending the party were Santa
Ana youths who belonged to the
5th Street Gani.
Apowpa
Press problems made delivery
of the Dally Pilot late for many
subscribers Sunday. We regret
the inconvenience.
Violence erupted almost im·
mediately. offi cers said, and
police were called when a
neighbor re;>ortE!d hearing gun-
fire.
• Between 15 and 20 officers were
need ed to break up the fighting,
resulting in U-e two a rrests and
confiscation of knives and a gun.
Injured in the fighting were
Ernest Lopez, 18, of Harbor City:
Matt DeArcos. 21, of Huntington
Beach. and Robert Hernandez,
18, of Santa Ana.
LOPEZ SUFFERED gunshot
wounds in the neck and hand and
is in serious but stable condition
at Fountain Valley Community
Hos pital.
DeArcos suffered multiple stab
wounds and was reported in fair
condition this morning at the
Fountain Valley hospital.
Hernandez was treated and re·
leas"ed.
Police believe others at the par·
ty also were injured and have not
yet sought medical attention. It is
believed one man su!fertn1 from
a gunshot wound went to Mercy
Hospital later in the day Sunday
for treatment but fied when a
nursebegantocaUpollce.
A police spokesman sald the de·
partmenfs special p.q detal.l ls
investigating thelDdcl.-.
ORANGe COAST Diiiy Piiat ce ........ _..,..,,.1Mfl••e
AM °"*•P•lllMMI -••
ThomM P. Haley ~
Aobwt~.Weed ,_.....
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'
Pulitze r
prizes told
NEW YORK (AP) -"A
Confederacy of Dunces." by the
late John Kennedy Toole. has
captured the 1981 Pulitzer Prize
in fi ction.
Beth Henley's "Crime of the ,
Heart." was awarded the prize
in drama .
The prizes were announced
Monday by Columbia University
President Michael I. Sovern.
The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer
was awarded the Pulitzer Prize
for meritorious 1?Ublic service
and The New York Times was
cited ror national reporting and
commentary.
&utter rites
roundup set
A roundup of Easter sunrise
services along the Orange Coast
will be published ln the Daily
Pllot Saturday.
Cburcb officials should send
lnrormatlon to the Reliclon
Editor, P. O. 8ox 1560, Coeta
Mesa 8121826, so that It wlU _.!f • rive before noon Wednesday,
Miners adamant
·~~~ii:j)ii:l' Workers ofliclals
aay coal operators must •ive in on
three key lasuet when they return
to the bar•ainln1 table Tuesday if
they expect union miners to 10
aloo1 wtlb any new contract pro-
poaaJa. Number one, says a
tpokeaman, la teinatatement ol
lht Sl.80royaJty on non-union coal
pr~eiHd by UMW companle1.
i1tffalt cootrola for new af.
fordable bowlioa bwU aJi the coutlaavebeen~UD now-
• by membenoftbeOran1e wity
BoardofSUpervlsora.
They tulve preferred to leave
real ettate markets unencum-
bered rather than to Umlt the
prices of bon\ea durtn1 resale.
But the su1>ervt1ora' positlon
may be cbang'lng soon because of
·compromlses reached with
re~resentatlves of both the south
coast regional and state coastal
commisslons.
P LANNING STAFF members
from the county and the com·
mission have been meeting the
past month to 11ettle differences
over a set of state-m andated
policies governing use of the
coastal zone.
At lh•t point county Olftdab
decided ,to neaotlale Use dlf.
terences, rather than COlllroat dMI
commission durlnc stormy and
potentlaJJy fruitless pubilc hear-
in•P ·
One ol thoae involved in the
n egotiations -has been Peter
Herman. plannln& aide to 5th Dis· trict ~upervisor Thomas R.iJey.
Herman said that Riley and other
supporters of the compromise
still have to sell the agreement to
other supervisors and members
of the coastaJ commission.
HE TRINKS Riley win have at
least three votes on the board,
even though members such as
Supervl$or Bruce Nestande have
adamantly opposed resale con·
trols in the county.
"It's best for the county to end
state involvement in land use de·
cisions in our jurisdillion and this
apparently is the best way to do
it,·· said Herman.
The moment of reckoning will
com e as the coastal programs arc
resubmitted to the supervisors . rr
approved, they wi~l first go to the
re11on11 commwaon and then to
tbnt t .
BOTH T HE coutat com·
ml al on and the 1tate Air
Resources Board have reaulated
houi1lng development in the Aliso
Water Management diatrict. The
commission has impoaed rettrlc·
lions on a sewage outfall perll\ll in
which it requires certaln controls
on affordable housing.
The Air Resources Board also
has restriction& calling for low
and moderate housing, supposed•
ly to shorten commutina trips ~
the south county and ease atr
pollution from vehicles.
There still are several other is·
sues to be ironed out between the
county and the commissions.
Whal to do with sand dredged
from San Juan Creek, whether to
extend University Drive and how
wide to build Sand Canyon Road
through the Irvine Coast are just
three.
But Herman said those matters
can be resolved later in the proc·
ess 1f the compr<1mise on the.flous·
mg issues is ratifi ed first.
-By GLENN SC0Tr
According to the r ecently·
reached compromise. the county
would impose resale controls on
up to3,000new affordable housing
units planned along the coast.
This would be done if the com .
m ission and the s tete Air
Resources Board lift conditions
on development of about 5,000 new
homes within the area served by
the J\liso Water Management
Agency.
T he agreement is part of
negotiations involving the local
coastal programs prepared ror
com mission approval by the
county. The programs, m andated
by the state Coastal Act. are de·
signed to protect the coastline by
spelling out how coastal land can
be used.
Cove funds OK' d;
residents to stay
T HE COUNTY is preparing 10
such documents covering unin-
corporated parts of the coast from
Seal Beach to San Cler:1ente.
T hese coastal programs were
approved o n ce b y the
supervisors. but planners for the
regionaJ coastal commission rec·
om mended denial based on
several reasons, including hous·
ing issues.
Full·time and elderly residents
of the Crystal Cove beach colony
will be aJlowed to stay on in·
definitely, a state assembly panel
has determined.
And the new Crystal Cove State
Park between Corona del Mar and
Laguna Beach will receive $8
million in improvements. follow
ing an Assembly Ways and Means
subcommittee met-ting Wednes·
day ..
Assemblywoman M a rian
Bergeson of Newport Beach. "ho
attended the meeting, said she 1s
HB parking lot sale
funds aid college
By PIDL SNEIDER MAN
Cll-Dmfy~~
An unpaved parking Jot a1
Golden West Collete in Hunt·
ington Beach will be sold to bel1
pay for a new Coastline Coltec•
h eadquarters in Fountair
VaJley, according to a declaior
by Coast Community Colleg•
District trustees.
The decision has drawn a let
ter of protest from the Golder
West Academic Senate. which
contends the lot is needed tc
ease parking congestion on tht
east side of the campus .
The senate letter also protest
ed that Golden West facult}
members were not consultee
prior t.o the board's action.
The lot in question is on th€
east s ide of Gothard Street
north of Center Drive. The 2.7
acre site, oiled but unpaved. h
used for overflow parking when
the paved campus lot on tht
west side of Gothard is filled.
District spokesman Richard
Simon said the trus tees con·
eluded the overflow ''Is not
necessary for the future growth
of Golden West ."
He ooted that the lot is not
contiguous to the main campus
and said district officials believe
students can find parking places
in other campus lots.
According to Simon. district
Ch ancellor Norm a n Watson
res ponded to the Golden West
faculty's objections by remind
ing them that Orange Coast
College property in Costa Mesa
was sold in the mid·l960s to
finance the purchase of the
property on which Golden West
was built.
The lot, ioned for community
service and education. is cur
rentiy being appraised. Simon
said . A city zoning change would
be required before any com·
mercial development could be
built on the site.
M o n ey raised through
sale of the overflow lot will help
the district purchase an 8.5·acre
pat"cei on the southwest corner
of Warner Avenue and Newhope
Street in Fountain Valley.
On this WlrCel , priced at $3.4
million, the district plans to
build a new administrallol\
h eadquarters for Coastlin e
. College, which currently leases
o ffic e s p ace elsew h ere .
Construction costs are projected
at S4.3 million.
The formal design of the new
Coastline complex is expected to
be unveiled at the May 13 board
or trustees meeting.
Coastline s pokes man Jack
Chappell said preliminary plans
call for the construction first of
a four·story central office build·
in g, with Coastline occupying
three of the floors.
pleased by the committee's de-
cision lo let low income. elderly
and full·time residents of the col·
opy remam
"WHAT WE'RE TRYING to do
is protect those who are full-time
residents or woul:i suffer a
hardship." she said, adding that
about 20 of the Crystal Cove resi·
dents fall within that description
While the committee is allow·
ing those resi<lents to stay on,
vacation and weekend users of the
cottage community must leave by
J t&ly of 1982 a full year ahead of
a state Parks and Recreation
Department agreement.
The state purchased the 3.5 mite
stretch of coastal land between
Corona del Mar. and Laguna
Beach last year. The new 1.000·
acre s tate park includes the
Crystal Cove community and the
El Morro Mobile Home Park.
about a half mile s outh.
At the time of the park
purchaS('. no dec1s 1on was made
about the future of residents of the
Crystal Cove cottages. The state
parks department said no one
would be evicted until ~t least
19S3, when planned uses for the
park are lo be completed.
LAST WEEK'S subcommilltt
d ec1S1on changes all that.
Mrs. uergeson said those who
ar t> not full ·t1me residents or
ha rdship cases will be asked lo
leave the park "prior to the time·
announced," in order to expedite
development of the state park.
The assemblywom an said the
amount of time that full· lime resi·
dents wi ll be allowed to stay "will
need to be refined," sa ying it
could be up to 20 years as is the
case for mobile homeowners at El
Morro .
She said the $8 millipn recom·
mended for appropriation by the
subcommittee will be used to con-
struct restrooms. sewer lines and
other amenities at the new state
park
The rr.oney comes from state
bond act revenues and must re-
ceive approval of the full Ways
and Means Com mittee before fac.
mg budget hearings befor e both
state houses.
-------------
If Yotl want Im Cord Straight legs.
Wi've Got'em.
Our four basic OQloft are olf·whlfe. rt Dlue, tan
and navy In M" cottoo. 16% ~ tor shnnJ<aQe control
AL'S GARAGE
56 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(714) 644 7030
. -_ .......... ._....._ ~---·--------... ~ ...
Preparing for breakfast fashion show are rfrom leftJ Nancy Carlson of Laguna Beach.
Janet Brown of Newport Beach and Ann MacQuoid of Laguna Beach.
Charity
president
nanted
Mrs. Robert Steele
has been elected presi-
dent of the N alional
Charit y L eague's
Newp<)rt Chapter.
On her board are the
Mmes. Richard Ferda,
Anth ony Tully, Don
Adkinson, J ames H
Cava naugh , Robert
Mi lum," David Henley,
Henry W. Hastings,
John c. o· Donnell. John
Robey Thompson a nd
Edward Starnes.
Adviser to the Na·
tional Charity League
Juniors is Mrs. Albert
Gei ge l e . The pr o -
visionals will be chaired
by the Mmes . Nanci
Knapp M i ller and
Gerald B. Doan.
Panel
slots
filled
Two local women ,
Ruth Stutzman of
Laguna Hills and Estelle
Mars hall o f Laguna
Beac h will ser ve as
committee chairmen for
the annual California
Convent ion of the
Philanthropic Education
Organization set for
May 11 -13.
Some 600 delegates
are expected to attend
the convention, which
will take place in the
Los Angeles Marriott
Hotel. The PEO is an
organization dedicated
to helping wom e n
achieve higher educa-
l i o n·s t h r o u g h
scholarships and grants.
Alcoholism
talk set
··Alcoholism. a Fami·
ly AfCair" is theme of
the annual dinner May
16 for the National Coun-
c ii on Alcoholism 's
Orange County Chapter.
Actor Dana Andrews
will speak at the dinner
to be held at the Mar-
riott Hotel, Anaheim.
Reservations at $50
per person can be made
by calling the council at
835-3830.
, • r .
..
'New, New Ne\Vl)Ort' 1tyle 1how
~ ' A olaampaan• bffailut an4 tuhloa ibow wtilo ii a ~ram OI uterm aid ....,.., ,_ ~=· Mew II~:: Will llo bold Nil I ""'"°"" -olt aleollollit ID I c..· -· at • lroldw11•1 r1Qt6D'r..lnd 1&ort. hallWar Mui•. ud Th• CbU4 Mvot1&1. a...-. frOm Uat. ~~· tftD" "9ld to ter wtua batormaUoe ot ......._,. IOOtal. em• o•l•br tbt 1tort'1 rem , wtU beGlftt pro· donal, '*1tloa1 ud payo ell ...a, wbtob ii 1ram18:tat Junior Lta1u1ot -.rt Harbor. 11nt to county 111no1~°fn1utuUon1 and ln·
BtMftt chairman 11 Ann MacQuotd of L11un1 dlvi duals.
Beach. Her committee mcludes Nanc)' He1ne11 of Projects to be lnJttated thla year include the •
Irvine, K..ltty Schuler of Santa Ana and Janet Albert Sitton Home Speaken Bureau, COPES
Brown of NewJ>Ort Beach. • <Child or Parental E mer1ency Services), Tb•
The Junior Leuue Is an or1anlzat;on of more Gallery at Da na Point Marine InaUtute, Foeter
than 500 women who are trained for community Care Advocacy, the Natural History Foundation
leadership throu1h an educationaJ and volunteer Lecture Series and Disaster Preparedness Volun·
serviceproeram. leers.
The league initiates projects that will use Anne Nutt of Newport Beach was installed last
the traininl and skills of its members. Once a Thursday as Junior League president, takinl over
projec;thu been established successfully, it's turned the post from Nancy Carlson of La1una Beach.
overtoanappropriatecommunity a1encyor 1roup. For information on the league or retervatlons
Current projects incJude New Directions. to the breakfast/fashion show, call 640-1450.
Costa _Nesa High reunion set
Members of Costa Mesa H.igb School's class of
1971 are sought this month by members of a re·
union committee hoping to get the old class back
together for a 10th anniversary reunion.
Committee member Sandi (Van Valkenburg)
Scheafer of 3192 Chemin dt> Fer, Costa Mesa, said
her group is planning a buffet dinner-dance for Ju-
ly 18 at the Costa Mesa Country Club and a picnic
at a city park the following day.
I
Class members interested -or who know
where others may have moved -are asked to call
either Neil Ritchie, 548·3880, or Mrs. Scheafer,
556·9967, by May l.
Committee members also inclu de Jean
(Chambers> Juratsch, Bethany (Brown) Bennett,
Cheryl <Zagrodsky) Weibel, Doris CKeyes) Briggs,
Joyce (Dawson ) Jones, Chancey Bayes and John
Carpenter.
'· :l\.. \-
t, \ \ . \ .:f . ,
'• 1 ~ ,v; .
LOS ANGECES <AP) -You CompoiMra-~ wbo lnll't tau, 4Q.year-old ea•Ntw Yorker or another collaborated wttla
may n.v~r have heard of alnaer-aonawnten -1•neralb' haa become 0o1 Ol lb• tap an. 1uch top aonPJiten •• Paul
Charles 'ox, but chanctt are are lbe uninown toldiera ol COG· around lllurit Ui contemporary WIJUama, Carole Ba1er 5"er;
you've enjoyed at leeat some ot temPorary music, and Fox la no commtttfal mualc. Sammy Cw, Hal Davld, '!lob
hla music. exception. With little fanfare the On IODp, he bu at one Ume Crewe and Gimbel. ff you go to the movies, you Hia aHmiftll)' endl111 llat ol
mJ1ht remember his Oscar· project.I includes two POllible
nominated sones "Ready to 'K1· ss' . tops 11·s1 Broadway mualeal1. rn 11'79. Take a Chance A1ain" from alon1 wtth compo1er-arrancer
·•Foul Play" and "Richard'• Artie Butler, he dealaned and
Widow" from ''The Other Side By Tbe A1toela&ed Pr"' 9. "The Best of Times" Styx, built Everareen Recordln1
of the Mountaln." The following are Billboard'• A&M Studios, a BlJrbank faelllty
On television. you've heard his hot recent hits for the week end· 10. "Don't Stand So Close to catering primarily to the tum
themes for "Love, American lne April 11 as they appeu in Me" The Police, A&M and television industry. For the
Style" which won two Emmy next week's issue of Billboard TOP LP'S San Francisco Ballet, he wrote awards, "Wide World of Sports," · 1. "Hi Infidelity" REO "A Song For Dead Warriors,·• "The Love Boat,''' ''Happy magazme: bo t b U rt SpeedwagQn, Epic a u t e p eht of Ame can In· Days," and " Laverne & Shirley•" HOT SINGLES 2. ••Paradise Theater" Styx, di ans. And he's currently work·
Lonameafew. 1. "Kiss on My List" Daryl A&M ing on a symphony and choral
And If you just like to relax lo Hall & John Oates, RCA 3. "Arc of a Diver" Steve opus in honor of Jarael'a In·
pop music on records or radio, 2 . ' . Ra Pt u re. , BI on d le' Wlnwood, Island dependence Day.
Fox has been there too, most Ch all 4. "Moving Pictures" Rush, notably with the 1973 Grammy· rys s Mercury With flneers in so many
award winning "Killing Me Soft· E:~t~~M. ~r;:~fm~~':" Sheena S. .. WI nelight " Grover musical pies, what kind of com-
ly," co· written with long-time "''ashln,gton, Jr. Ele .. tra posina does Fox prefer? 4 . "Just tbe Two of Us" < w IL colla borator Norman Gimbel 6. "Face Dances" The Who, "I like lt all, actually, for dif. Just this winter. Fox had his Grover Washington Jr., EJektra Warner Bros. ferent reasons,'' he says. "A
own brief rting on the record 5· "Woman" John Lennon, 7. "Zenyatta Mondatla" The film takes me five or six weeks,
charts, playing piano on his re· Geffen Police, A&M I really can sink my teeth lnto ll.
cording of "Seasons." a stately 6. "Angel of the Morning" 8. "Another Ticket" Eric In television, 'Aloha Paradise,'
or ch estral piece based on Juice Newton, Capitol' Clapton, RSO for instance, J had a couple of
Pachelbel's 17th century "Canon 7. "While You See a Chance" 9. "Double Fantasy" John weeks to write the first pilot
in D Major" that was a lso used Steve Winwood. Island Lennon· Yoko Ono, Geffen episode and a theme. It all went
as the theme for "Ordinary Peo· 8. ··Being with You" Smokey 10. "The Jazz Singer" Neil very quickly. I liked the im·
pie.·· Robinson, Tami a Diamond, Capitol m.ediacy of It."
A,......._
ASTAIRE HONORED -Entertainer Fred Astaire, left, is I
presented with the Am erican Film Institute Life Achieve·
ment Award by George Stevens Jr. Stevens wrote the script
and produced the salute to Astaire that was taped for future
release. ..;_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--::============;r::=====isr=========;-~
~SAOOUBACll
\S7 PLAZA
U 1010 ~ct t i Aockf14td
£1 to•o • S81·S680
~ AlllHllM ~ ORIVllll
DOING BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME?
If you have just fll•d your new
Fictitious Bualneaa Heme end
heve not yet aubmttted It for
publlcetlon, pf•••• don't forget
thet the llmlt•tlon la 30 day•
from date of fifing. The DAILY
PILOT wlll publlah your
•t•t•m•nt tor 140.00. Our
clrculetlon Include• the entire
Orenge Coe1t er•• end legal
notice• appeer In •II edltfon1. In
order to aubmtt your statement
for pubffct1tlon Mnd •pproprl•t•
copy •nd • oMC:k to THE DAIL y
PILOT, ft.O. 80a 1580, Cott•
Mea•, CA. 12121. We'll do the
reat. FOf lnfonnetteA *"' "9111 adverttlfnl pie•• Ml M2.021 1111.m .
MATINEE MADNESS
11:00 A.M. Sat., Aprtl 11th thru
Sun., Aprtl 11th SPECIAL m Admit 2 peopfe fOf t .. __ Sol_.1!' .. ~f f'U• I pttc. of 1 --·-1'1ta...I wlththf• edl * IAIGAIN SPECIAL * ALL HATS .2.00 ALL DAY
Ivery .. nday & Tve1dayl
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"MO DEAN
ROMANCE" 1111 _,_ .....•. ,.,..
CLOSING 993.15
•
A problem s hared by many people. and many
companies, is: gelling recognition. It's terrible to feel
neglected. unappreciated. That's why you often see
companies break out in print or nervous song with
one of those "just thought you'd like to know" ad·
vertiseme:nts, wherein they inform you, as if you
were panting to learn, what they do and how much a
part of your life they really are.
Foremost-McKesson of San Francisco is a com-
pany that's likely to be talked into an image-shaping,
"let's be friends" campaign one day. Before that
hapl*lS, Jet me
rill you in on
one of the more
unknown cor·
porate giants in
the la nd (so
you'll know
when to duck
wh en the ads
come>.
(.~ ________ .... ____ 'r ~ '
MOSIDWITZ ~'ft MILTON
~·
To begin with, you need to know that For.emosl·
McKesson is, above a nything else. a middleman It's
the largest wholesaler in the country. A wholesaler
takes goods made by others and distributes them to
people who seU the goods to the ultimate cons umer
Foremost McKesson does this m three different
fields. drugs, wine and spirits, and chemicals.
I
IT'S BY FAil OUR largest drug wholesaler, dis
tributing more than 50,000 products to 16.000
drugstores and 2.000 hospitals It's the largest dis-
tributor of liquors and wines, serving 62.000 retailers
in 16 states. And it's No l in the distribution of in -
dustrial chemicals. things like solvents used as
degreasers.
Those are big businesses they add up to about
$3 billion a year but they're largely invisible unless
you also happen to know that Foremost-McKesson is
the driving force b~hind the I.;.JO-member Yalu-Rile
drug chain (a group of locally owned stores yoked
togWber the way Ace hardware stores and l.G A
Joodstores are> and that Foremo:!>t-Mc Kesson .
eyond be1ng a wine and spirits distributor. owns and
I or controls certain brands coming into the country.
These. for examples. are Foremost-McKesson
brands . Ballantine's Scotch. the Folonari wines from
Italy, St. Pauli Gi rl beer from Germany. Galliano Ii
queur. Mount Gay rum .
~ow that we're getting into the visible part of
Foremost McKesson. you need to know that this is a
fairly hefty food company. but recognitio n here de-
pends on where you live. If you're in the East, you're
probaWy familiar with the Mueller pasta line ; 28 dif·
ferent kinds of spa~hetti and noodles. They're in 22
stat es. they reach "·s far west as Chicago, and they
r a nk . io poundage, as our No. 1 pasta producer.
I P VOlJ'KE lN the West -al least in 11 states
west of the Mississippi River an a crazy-qwlt pattern
that takes in parts of Loujsiana and Texas. all of
Califoroia and Missouri, chunks of Oregon and
Washington you may know the Foremost dairy
products . milk. cheese. ace cream, Yami yogurt.
Finally. a piece of business trivia: Foremost-
McKesson is the nation's largest seller of dnnking
water, marketed in California and Arizona under the
Alhambra, Crystal and Sparklctts names and dis·
pensed from more than 1,600 Aqua-Vend machines in
sta I led across the Sun belt from California to Florida
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
A1\lo I HO\IOllM W-8
17',.aG ~:; ., ... . '• G\111 011 •13,000 Joi '" IBM ,...,600 ~ .-. r. .. co Inc =:1 li'" ....
r • IJ\ m~ l1v. '4
•on . ,.,
~m 1'11 . "'' ttl2 +2 ,.r~i .,.
: ~"tEe ms ll•'o .... 10 ... ~ v,
2~ . .... ~~o ,,.~· l.P<lo "" II I ,1 v,
Al lcn Cl m:-"1''\ ....
UPS AND DOWNS
Ra~<Otl 'J"' ...
Ala ~ Alrl 11,7 '"' oome etr o ... ~
,_
Key Pnarm • a1 l4"' '" WunrCom wt ,,"' • y,
g>,'~.r.'lMf' 3 ... 56, ~~ lit
Alndalll 55, ~
METALS
c • .,.,., 41"'·" cenll • powl'ld, U S
IMStlMllom.
LHd »-ll (llf•I\ a _.a.
Zinc 4lV. c.ano a pound, dellw...o.
Tift ~.133' Molelal• w .. k <Ol'llPOlltt 1111.
AllHftl-7' Cltlll a jlOUrld, H V
Mer<IWf s.ao.oo per fta61<.
P'lall-.... 00 lro'f oz .. H Y
gratefu/,ly acknowledges t~e generous support of the growing list
of B~f actors and the five-hundred patrons for its fully subscribed
major annual benefit
scheduled Saturday, May 9, 1981
Fluor Corporation
Beacon Bay Entetprises,. Inc.
McLain DevelOPihent Company Gene Washburn Winslow Maxwell
I ·J .M. Peters Co., Inc. Saffel & McAdam, Inc.
The Irvine Company
Neiman Marcus
Occidential Research Corporation CommerceBank Melder Gallery Gallery West
Wells Fargo Foundation Smith Tool Mr. & Mrs. Richard Steele
Pacific Mutual Bank of Newport Bullocks Wilshire Jack de Kruif Marc Friedberg
American State Bank
·Balboa Bay Club Beeco T. Phillips Morgan
Treasure Tours International-Paris -Ruth Jensen
Fairfax Hotel, Washington, D.C.
Canvas Specialty
Moet et Chandon -France
Domaine Chandon -Yountville
Schema ·
John Wayne Tennis Club
Charles H. Barr Jeioelers-Courreges-Crown Hardware -The Broadway-
G,lsons -Hal&ton Boutique -John Hogan -Ivy's League -Matthews -
Nordstrom -Saddleback Interiors -Saks 5th Avenue -Slavick's -
The Storekeeper -Veta's -Ullman Sails -Brooks Brothers -
Richard Ouellette -Command Performance -I . Magnin
..
! ..
'I
',.
I
:1.
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