HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-15 - Orange Coast PilotCf, AN< , E 1-: V lJ N 1 Y <.Al If I )11 r4 I A 1 '
, Pl.ies ioo yeftrs
, . .
·to ·t~ee Viet rapists
·-
·.
The utronauts., exuberut aft.er 'l'ueldaJ'• piapo6Dt1 lanclinc, ~ ~altby and eacer to partictJ>at.e in ftrt11tt1pact proJ~ta. Today thn beeJn .-n eXhauttlv~ week of debrief· tnaa witbs)!ac~ ageocy teclu'llcians.
· When Young and Robert Crippen broua.bt Colw:nbla
down tnim orbit to • rock-bard Jake bed in California'• llc>-
jave Desert, they 4iemonstrated that the UAlted Sta\ef bu a
space machine that maket all otben oblo&ete -a macbine
that can Oy into spJ~ and retum to Earth lite an airplane.
· ready to fly aeain. a hWldred or more times. (See related
stories, photos, pages A4, A5.)
I ne BStroflaUts, ln.tbeirO\\'D W8)' r pro"-bb'•aid it bat.
''You can't believe what a flyiq mac~thia ii,•• Younc
said. "J think we've eot a fantastic andremarkabJe capabUi-
t)' here. We're really not too far -the human rac~ isn't -from goiagtothestars."
<See SPACE suunLE, Pace At>
By DAVID IUJTZMANN Of ... .,.., ...........
IJl ooe of the harshest sen-
t ences ever imposed in an
Orange County rape case, three
teen-age Vietnam~se refugees
have been given prison t erms up
to 118 years by a superior court
judge who termed their crimes
•'atrocious.·'
Despite pleas for leniency by
four defense lawyers Tuesday,
Judge Francisco Briseno said be
was imprisoning the three de-
fendants for the rest or their lives
"because thls kind or behavior
<kidnapping and rape) is not con-
doned on either side of t he Pacific
Ocean."
A fowih defendant in the case,
who is 17. was remanded to the
I LAGUNAN filT-RUN VICTIM
custody of the California Youth
A utbority for 90 days of
diagnostic testing.
THE LENGTH of the sen-
tences for the eldest three -118
years for brothers Bo Pham, 18,
and Dung Pham, 18, and 100
years for Minh Nguyen, also 18
The four defense lawyers, in·
eluding Dixon Walcott and
Clarence Hewatt, said that if
any of their clients had been
conv icted of fi rst-degree
murder, the maximum term al·
lowable would have been 25
years to life in state prison .
stunned a ttor neys who BUT PROSECUTOR Carl
represented the trio. Armbrust, who argued for im·
Bo Pham's. lawyer, Lawrence position of the maximum sen
Buckley, s~.1d the _cour~. had ,-tences against the defendants
taken ~he ~lood~b1rs_ly . ap-300-plus years -said he was
proach lD dealing with his client. more than s atisfied.
A n d a ll o r n e Y D e n n i s "l was very pleased with it,"
M c Heroey, who_ represen~ed the deputy district attorney said
Dung Pham, said se~lenc1ng "l was very pleased with the
!aws whlch en~bled . Briseno to way the judge handled it.·· 1mpo~e t~e stiff pnson terms Armbrust said that any sen-
were ll'rahonal. tence ranging from 100 years to
500 years "was academic" since
it meant the three young rapists
would spend the rest of their
lives In prison.
State law requires that two·
thirds of a sentence be served
before a prisoner can become
eligible for consideration for
parole.
Th e Pham brothers a nd
Nguyen wouJd be in their 80s and
90s before this could happen.
BE FORE THE sentences
were meted out by Briseno-in his
11th floor courtroom in Santa
Ana Thursday, Armbrust had
told the judge that "it was time
to send a message to the streets
CSee VIETS. Page AZ)
• • .suspect JO e c
~thony ease told
Irvine police chief details procedure
• ~.Y ... ~ICllAllD GREEN !f! -0-'ly l"l• IWI , Jrvine Police Chief Leo Peart
claims that no special handllne
was given lo an assault with a
aeadly weapon case involving
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony.
He also said at a press con-
!erence al the police s tation
T~esday that his personal
involvement in the case was
justified and proper.
. ALTHOUGH HE knew Mayor
Anthony was insidt a home with
tii~h powered weapons. Peart
!\aid he thought the police's
special weapons team should not
havelrledloslormthehouse.
Peart admitted, however, that
it was !5-0mewhat unusual that An ·
thony. once apprehended Friday.
was taken to lt:E. Hoag Hospital
psych iatric ward instead of
secure jail raci!.ities elsewhere.
He also said that no handcuffs
were placed on Anthony during
the trip to Hoag Hospital.
Accordrng lo Chief Peart
the assault with a deadJy weapon
incident involvins Mayor An-
thony came to his attention late
I NB woman jaQ..ed
in car crash death
A 22-year-old Newport Beach
man was killed Tuesday evening
while working on his parked car
on the Balboa Peninsula when
another vehicle struck him and
hurl ed him n early 100 feel
through the air, according to
police.
Police said Mark Gregory
Meyers, 1312 Balboa Blvd .. was
pronounced dead at the trauma
center al Fountain Valley Com·
munity Hospital.
Gwen Susan Rieke, a 22-year-
okl Newport Beach woman, was
arrested al the scene on charges
Of felony drunk dri vin~ and felonv r
manslaughter, police said. She is
being held at Orange County Jail.
Offi cers say Meyers was work·
ing o n the e ngine of his
Volkswagen, legally parked
along a center median in the 1200
block of Balboa, when struck.
The victim 's 21-year-old
girlfriend, Pamala Jo Gilbert of
Costa Mesa, was s itting in the
parked car at the time, which aJ5o
was struck, police said. She was
treated for minor injuries at Hoag
Memorial Hospital. .
Police claim minutes prior to
t he accident, they had clocked the
driver doing 59 miles per hour
while eastbound on Balboa in a·
25-mpb zone. They said she struck
the center divider twice before
11:.• •11•1•1.c·u·n-w·ia·il""i•e • slamm1n1intolh~ man.
Tbuta48Y ..,hen l:Laifte •Afttboqy,
50, the D\~or's wife, ~ked on
hls <Peart's) door in t.he Turtle
Rock area cf Irvine.
"Elaine's face was s wollen and
bruised, her nylons were tom. she
had no shoes on, s he was sweating .
profusely and th£ back of her n~k
was covered wilt) blood," Peart
said .
Peart said that he applied basic
first. aid lo the woman an.d ar-
ranged 'for her to be plaeed under
a doctor's care.
According to Pea.rt, Mrs. An·
thony told him that her husband
had beat her with his fists and
fired a handgun al her. causing a
s uperficial, buJlet wound lo her
neck.
PEART !fAIO he called the An·
thony home and Irvine city coun-
cilman Bill Vardoulis answered
a nd said that Anthony had calmed
down and wasn't near a weapon.
Anthony ~elephoned V41rdoulis,
his political ally, minutes after
the alleged assault and asked
Vardoulisl to come to his res-
idence.
•' I
Peart sa,id lhal after 'dawn on
Friday he and' assistant city
manager Paul Brady Jl went.lo
the ~yor~a hou~ atid recovered
two .45-caliber m ililaty
automatic handguns, bul werep't .
able to fmd a rifle that Elaine An·
thony s~dalso was in the house.
They took the guns and four
family dogs that Mrs. Anthony
said she was concerned· about
from Anthony's home.·
At the time Anlbony was in hls
den and refused loco me out.
Downey
driver
• ·gives up
Costa Mesa police have arrest·
ed a 21-year-old Downey man oo
suspicion of manslaughter ad
felony hit and run drivins in coo-
peclion with the April 5 death of
Laguna Beach resident Kevin
R . Pehl.
Arrested when he voluntarily
walked into Costa Mesa police
headquarters· abo ut 8 p.m .
Wednesday was John Thomas
J-ankford. L
Investigator 'Floyd Waldron
said Costa Mesa offi cers ques-
tioned Lankforq earlier in the
aay wil!hout res4lt after a lip led
them lo the a lleged death car
parked in front of his Downey
home
' WALDRON AJD Lankford
apparently co tacted an al·
1 • . . Af'W....,.... torney who su gested that he
ATLANTA'S GRIEF -George~. foster·father of Larry give himself up. .
Rogers, Atlanta's 23rd child death investigation victim, Pehl, 28, wa killed about 2
wipes his eyes at the youth's funeral in Atlan\a. See related a .m . April 5 as be and a friend
s tory, _PaBe A4. walked across lacentia Avenue __ .:....:.. ..... --J:_::...---------------------. in front .of the ewport Station
QC · morgue . staff
dJJ,e ·n.iif:e ' asSist~nt~ ·
•
Nine assistants will be hired to
s t aff Orange County's new
JI\Orgue when it begins opera·
lions in Santa Ana in"1une, but
the additional positions are ex·
pec\#d to s ave the. countr
money. ' •
Orange County has never haet
a fn\>rgue, a facility where
bodies ar:e examined f\>r th~
cause of.death.
Until the new Sl.28 lmilllon
facility iJ completed: member~
o( t he Orange County Sheriff.
Coroner's Office will continue lo
supervise autops~es in
morituaries through_o'ut ,the
county. .
It costs about $130 a case tq
pay a mortuary for the space
and assistants to perfqrm a n
nightclub ln Co~ a Mesa.
Witnesses tql police it ap-
peared the driv oflhe de11th car
s werved to a r d the two
pedestrians, hi ehl in a shower
of broken hea light glass and
continued norl on Placentia
Avenue.
T h e impacl~knocked Pehl
more than 50 r t. He was pro-
nounced dead onJarrtval at Foun-
lai...., alley Comm unity Hospital.
Ho~pital.
INVESTIGATOR Waldron
said today that Lan"ford's ar-.
res t Is only a part of the continu-
ing investigation and that the
susptfl bas •refused to make
statements other than that he
was the driver of the car dis-
.. Nl1ht and Q>orning low
clouds, with only partial
clearing along beaches
Thursday afternoon. Lows
I tonight 50 along the coast,
55 inland. High.s Thursday
62 to 65 at the beach, 65 to
·72 lnland.
WhcJt :JOreign affairs~
• •
autopsy. j
WITH THE countiis own
• morgue and workers, the cost
. next fiscal year ls expectM lo be
$106,000 less than if the same
procedure were continued, said
Tom Beckett, analyst 'in the
County Administrative Otfice-.
(See SUSPECT, Pa•e At)
Lifeguard
fBDds. split .
SIDI TIDAY
; In Elk Citt1. oJdd .. thne'• o
;' e far onyoM wlw 100nl•
0 '°°'" -""' noC ~ ~'*'1M> conw• to 100tlo con find a
.~lact to live. S•• '• B~rn
·~own," POQt Alf.
I II
Colle~e stu<:f e~ts stum~ed. by government tests t
W,.\SHINGTON (AP> -Most scored ~bove 67 f>ercenl 'and no
colle1e students know little · one got m~re than· 84 of the 101
about. foreign affairs and 1 questiods i:ifht on the camplex
alJeable minortty 1eem1 to care multiple-cbolce tat prepared by
leaa, a govetnment-sponsored · the Ed\ICational Testtn1 Service.
s urvey indicates. · ETS and the Counc~l on
The survey of 3,000 students on Leamin1, a non·proflt research
185 campuses f<>Und 65 percent 1roup, a~ed tbe ~roject. It
or tbe seniors were tatumped WH paid for by 1rant.J \cJtalin•
when uked what naUona belont $500,000 from th• National
to tbe Or1ani11tlon of ,Petroleum Endowment for tbe~manitlel
1Jxporttn1 Countries. ¥11 than a n d t b e D t p a rt e n t o l
JO percent realli.ied OPEC bu Educaticn And tUO! from the
membe.rt out•t• the MiddJe Exxoa Educadoa FOun at.km.
East. The reaulta were releaud.
Ov•r•~r:.•.:;lora answered • today at 0 e o rJ •town
oely 50 W •the fontp • Ullhirlt'1't 8eMol ~
affairs queatlotl• correctly . SesvU:e. where educators Ind
fre1hmen 41 pneent and experu on forel1n affairs
two-1eu colle1• 1tudenu 40 exprened 1larm and eaUad
percetll. upon eoUea• to uparade tWr
'Leu than ooe teacblnl.
~\
I n q u ~ s t I o n n'1 i r e 1
acc~panyine the ,teal, more
than one-third of the student.
indicated they were not
interested ln forei&n relatlona.
One ·senior In five and one
rr.esbman ln four sald they
tatel)' read articlea about
lnfArnational attatn.
R latory majors 1cored lb• hi.bat on the test, 1etua, 51.a
of the 101 queaUona correct.
"Surprillncty, fotel,,. lancu•1•
majors were alllbUr be&o.r dM av.,.... (SO.I>." lt'l'SaaJd.
Tile IOWHt ICOHrl were
lutare teacbera -"9tae1tJoe ma.ton -wbo aV•re19d at
........ COl'lk't ..... kl ...
............. A .I maJon wen
allead of thoH m1jort•1 ta
IOCl!i Jdlncet .8. .
A bout 2,300 aulopsie, were,
pertorm«l by the cou11ty last fis-
cal ytar. Supervlsln1 Deputy
Coroner J. Stevena aald about
2,500 are expected to be
perform~ next fiscal year.
STATE LAW requires that the
Sberllf·Coroner's Office muat be notified la 1everal ln1tances1
fncludioC aiJ cleathJ involvint
trauma, ease• where no
pbyatclan had aeen a vlcUm at
least 2'1 days before death or
where a vlttl m arrivu
unconsdoua at 1 botpltal.
Autopslea are performed l~
• about 12 percent of tbe cue1,
The tounty t..Jll continue •ta e\ll'IWK COC1tract wbJcb pays
'p•tbo.l01ltt.t from the Aftatoi
Claem lladical LabOnt ..... ln
... ~ 1boUt llto ,. Meli
tutoPQ,tNid Bffkett. I
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors baa doJed out
$248,000 to five coaatai cities to
assist them in offaettinl U. COit
of l)roviding summer 11fepard
service.
Under the finance auiatance
package approved Tuesday,
Seal Beach will receive •1.•;
Hunlln1ton Beach, Stl.lOt;
Newport Beach, S88,081; Lapna
Be; ch, $3~'1H , and San
Cl~ente, $34,821.
nte county aaon.y wlU toate
from a fUnd coota1Aia1 rev•uee
from Dana Potnt Harbor.
The state reeeatly 1ue4 tt.e
county, clalmln1 Utott f\lDdi
aho'Jld not II ._ tor eq r i.t ..
lturea outtldt the bai'W. fte
Jewault U. ,...Unt '-a...-'<:ounty Superior Court. r ~
,
I
I
S&.ld Crippen; "Wt are really ln the apace bu1lJ\da tO
atay."
Amert ca had left manned apace Rl1bt to the Soviet Vbkft atnceltr~.
Shortly after tb• wbeell·doWD landlq on Ro1en Dry
Lake. the two utr•auta cllml>c!d aboard apace a1eney H·
ecuUve jeta fOf' the trip back to the Jobnt00 Sp1ee Cent.er ..... ...
'• &be neJtl MYeo wark daY• th•Y *ill mMt wltb Na· Uotial Aeroftautlc. and Space Administralloo 1peciaUats,
dlac\Mllu In 1reat detail every one of Colull\bla '•system a to
plnpolnt iny flaws ln de•llD or procedure.
They have few problems to analyse. From the moment of
lta fiery blut-off from launch pad 39A at Cape Canaxeral on
Sunday. Columbia performed almost flawlessly. Tbe
utronautahad only a few minor problems to tend to.
Columbia was parked today at Edwards Air Force Base,
where techniciana will carefully check it for the next week c)r
so before it Is returned to the Cape, buckled to the back of a
special Boeing 747 jetliner. ·
Its next flight, a four-day mission, is scheduled for
August or September, wit~ rookie astronauts Joe Engle and
Ric bard Truly at the controls.
Officials said initial inspection showed the spaceabip to
be in very &ood condition. There were indications a few non·
critical thermal tiles on the top of the vehicle suffered some
damage. But the important ones, those that protected tbe un-
derside from re-entry heat, were in good shape.
Ground crew operations were stretched several hours
long,er than expected when toxic freon gas was detected
around the ship. One NASA official said the concentrations
were s mall, perhaps from a vented cooling system.
If subsequent test flights are successful, officials may
consider acceleratlr.g the shuttle program, perhaps cutting
the lastofthreetrial runs. That could advance to mid·l982the
date the shlp can begin moving routinely into space. ferrying
up payloads for military, scientific and commercial mis·
sions.
Donald K. Slayton, a former astronaut who heads tht!
shuttle test flight program, said the desert landing at
Edwards was so perfect that Columbia may return to Earth
at a 15,000-foot runway at Cape Canaveral sooner than ex·
peeled. The first ianding nearthe launch site now is setfor the
fifth mission.
Alan Lovelace, acting NASA director, said Columbia's
shakedown flight was sweet vindication for the long-delayed
$10 billion rocketship. flali?shlp or a fleet of at least four shut-
tles that will anchor America's space effort for the next two
decades. Each will be capable of at least 100 round trips into
s pace, carrying as many as seven people and 32tons or cargo.
"I trunk John and Crip have opened the gateway to op·
portunity, and I hope the United States shows the resolve to
seizethatopportunity," he said.
o.My ............ .., ... Irie. 0'0.-11
Vietnamese refugee defendants expressionless
during tatter stages of rape-kidnap trial; from left: TungThumh Le, Dung Pham, Minh Nguyen,
Bo Pham.
From Page A1
VIETS GET LENGTHY PRISON TERMS. • •
"H there's any mercy or sym-
pathy to be shown by this court,
let it be shown for the victims,··
the prosecutor said or the seven
women ranging in age from 14 to
21 who said they were abducted
by the four Vietnamese refugees
and then raped in 1980.
"They got their kicks out there
in the orange groves." Armbrust
s aid, "and now it's time to pay:·
But Hewatt, who represented
Tung Thumh Le, the 17-year-old
defendant sent to the California
Youth Authority for testing, said
the four refugees fled a culture
that was almost preh1stortc in
comparison with urban America.
America.
''THEIR ACTS SHOW no in·
tent as we know it in our socie-
ty,.. said Hewatt, whose client
faces formal sentencing in three
months.
If considered amenable to
treatment, Le could be sent to
CY A where he would remain un·
til he was 25. At that time, he
either could be released or sent
on to state prison. depending on
his response to counseling and
treatment.
A jury convicted the Pham
brothers and Nguyen on more
than 50 felony counts each in
connection with six of the rape
incidents last year
Le was found guilty on 40
counts in connection with five
r ape incidents.
The charges on which each
was convicted included rape,
robbery, kidnapping and assort·
ed sexual misconduct counts.
Armbrust contended that the
four abducted women off the
streets throughout Orange Coun-
ty and drove them to secluded
grove areas near Irvine. where
they were forced to participate
in sexual acts.
Ex-hostage tells
of weeping siege
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS,
W. Va. <AP> -Former hostage
Philltp Wa rd says he was
hospitalized for six weeks
b ecause o f physical and
emotional probl e m s h e
developed during his captivity in
Iran. b~t he says he is well on
the road to recovery.
Relaxing for three days at this
mountain resort with some JO of
his fellow hostages, Ward said in
an interview with The
Herald-Dispatch or Huntington.
W.Va . that his ordeal didn't end
upon hi s return to the United
States
He said that while he did not
cr y once during the time he was
held hostage. he found· himself
crying several times a day once
he was freed.
to his government job. but that
he is feeling "terrific" and
hopes lo resume a normal life
soon.
For now. he said he wants lo
e njoy The Greenbrier with his
wife , Connie, and the ir
9-year-old son. Scott. The former
hostages are holding a reunion
a t the elegant southern West
Virginia resort and are meeting
with the doctors who first
exam in e d th e m in Wes t
Germany after their release to
see how they are readjusting.
Ward was a foreign service
telecommunications officer at
the U.S. Embassy in Tehran
when the compound was overrun
by militant students on Nov 4,
1979. During his 444 days of
captivity, Ward said he was
physically abused and Jost 40
pounds.
The space sflutUe Columbia. its tiles intact, ll
examined at Edwards Air Force Bcue today follcwing its successful maiden voyage.
Ward, a Huntington native,
was never in the foreground
w h en the hos tage s were
televised in groups shortly after
their release and did not talk
with reporters.
Since his re lease from the
hospital. Ward s~id he bas been
"doing odd jobs around the
house, farming and refinishing
bird feeders for next winter." •
From Page A1
SUSPECT. • •
covered in front of his home.
Waldron said Lankford's
small, light-gold Plymouth has a
new front left fender a nd
headlight.
Colombia~Miami-OC
coke tie 'severed'
Police got their first break in
the hit-and-run case last week
when a Huntington Beach man.
who said he read of the death in
a newspaper, called police to re-
port he bad been a passenger in
the rear seat of the death car.
WALDRON STILL will not re-
lease the name of that witness
who told officers he bad sought a
ride home from two men with
whom he had been playing pool
in the Crystal Palace Saloon
south of the death scene early
April 5.
·Police also still seek a woman
described as a "regular" at the
Crystal Palace' who shot pool
with one of the two men
described t)y the Huntington
Beach witness.
Waldron said Lankford is cur·
rently free on ~.000 bond posted
at Costa Mesa J all late Tuesday
ni1bt.
A Colombia-Miami-Orange
County cocaine connection has
been severed and 11 pounds of co·
c.iine seized. Fullerton police said
Tuesday.
Five people have been arresteQ
on suspicion of conspiracy to sell
cocaine, said police Sgt. Bud
Lathrop. Two of those arrested
are from Orange County: Jean·
nette Morrissey. 18, of F'ullerton
and Scott Bailey, 23, of Placentia.
Three Colombian nationals also
were arrested: Juan Fernando
Mora, 33, who was llving ii\
Coconut Grove. Fla .. John Elkin
Castano, 21, and Juan Osorio, St,
both living In Miami.
A fourth Colombian suspect.
Luis Carlos Escobar , 21, who was
living in Tustin, escaped arrest
and is sought on a federal arrest
warrant, Lathrop said.
Ms. Morrissey and the three
Colombians were arrested on
April 7 in Mi~mi after she re·
portedly led undercover agents >
from Fullerton to Mora's Coconut
Grove home allegedly to sell them
the cocaine for $275,000, Lathrop
said.
iii1y~ CIHalfted lldveltlelng 714/M2·H71
Afl othef depe,,mente 142-4121
'ThOmM P. Haley
~
~N.Wffd ,......
M. Thomas~·· ...
ThomM A. Murphlne ..........
f':i:f:~:L !:::" Sctlulman
~~
~:;.GcMfdwd Jr.
MAIN Of'FICI
U0 WHI a.y tl., c .. te Mtu, c.4. Mell....,_: ... IMO, C•ta Mtu, CA .,._
Street value, after breaking
down. Uie cocaine iqto s maller
quantities, was estimated by
police at$2.5 million.
She is being held on $100,000
bail, Castano on S250,00 and
Osorioaitd Mora on $500,000each..
Bailey was arrested Tuesday in
Placentia.
Less gas used
in California
SACRAMENTO <AP > -r,e.s
gasoline was burned in
California during February than
in any month since February
1977 , 1 the state Board of
Equalization reports.
The figure for the 28 days of
February, reported Tues.day,
was 842 million gallons ,
including aviation gasoline.
That was down 8 percent from
the 916 million gallons pumped
in January and down f percent
from the 875 ml111on gallons of
February 1980, which bad 29
days.
The previous low figure wa.,
821 million gallons in February
1977. I
The Board of Equ~lizatlon administers the se en-cent
per.gallon excise tax on
gasoline. It compiles t e usaae
figures from sa es by
distributors lo retail o~lets ~d
broken.
Game feud;-2 die '
TEL AVIV CAP> -A dlaputed
1oal ln a •occer match between
two Arab vUlatea In aorthem
larael baa caused two de•t.b a.d
lnJurtee t.o lt other peopa. t0 far,
poUc. report,
''1'11 tell you why it was
different for me." he told the
news paper. "I was tqtally
paranoid and totally exhausted.
I needed rest. I had blood clots
in my legs and a hyperactive
thyroid."
. He said he entered a hospital,
which he did not name, Feb. 4,
two weeks after be was freed.
and was discharged March 16.
W a rd, who now lives in C ulp~pper . Va., said he Is
awaiting hls physician's decision
on whether be is ready to return
Vet retrial due
SAN DIEGO <AP l -A federal
judge has 'sch.eduled a retrial in
June for Fernando Valdez, the
crippled Vietnam War hero
accused of robbing seven banks.
A hung j,ury was declared
Tuesday in the first trial after
the jury reached an impasse
following a day and a half of
deliberations.
~ll)ake waves ,'JI
The 2-tone bikini by
EENI MEENI in jade/White,
yellow/White, lilac/White,
•11.00 ea. piece.
Wear this beautiful bik nl
with or without the tie -in
. .,lvld red with purple trim
Only •20.00 set.
If there'• an Easter Week. be a ch crowd tbil year.
llfepardl from Seal Beach
San Clemente say they haven'
seen it yet.
Oh, there have been more sun
seeken than normally populate
south coast beacbea durln8 a
spring weekday, but for an area
that used to beef up security for
Bal Week madness, the turnout
is somewhat underwhelming.
Take Newport Beach, for·ex·
ample.
Lifeguard Capt. Bud Belabe
says close lo 80,000 souls vi.sited
city sands Tuesday. He said
that's a good sized crowd even
for a summer weekend.
BUT NOTHING like Easters
past . when hundreds of
tnousands or college kids on
s pring break converged on the
town.
Belshe says there have been
no problems and no rescues so
far, with 26 lifeguards on duty in
key towers or in six mobile units
foughly one-third of the sum·
mertime force.
Harbor Patrol officials say
boat traffic has been light thus
far in Newport Harbor. with no
major incidents.
"Maybe they all went skiing
this week ," one harbor
patrolman said.
In Seal Beach, lifeguards say
crowds are running between
7 ,000 and 9,000 a day, with..park· 1
ing available in the city's $2 per
day lots
THE CITY IS operating with
six to eight guards a day -
about four less than last year -
because of budget constraints.
1 But those guards aren't being
pressed. Crowds are light and
water temperatures are chilly.
The foot-high surf is also no
threat to swimmers, guards say.
Guards at Huntington city and
state beaches say crowds are
below normal for Easler Week,
with city sands hosting about
15,000 visitors and state beaches
reporting 3,000 to 6.000 per day.
City guards say they haven't 1
had to close off areas to surfing
because of the low turnout of 1
swimmers in the water, whlch isl
about 62 degrees in Huntington l • f
IN LAGUNA Beach. lifeguard I
Mike Dwinell said about 12,000:
vis ited that city's five miles of I
beaches Tuesday about four 1
limes the normal amount.
But he said things are quieter
than usual and there have been !
no rescues or incidents. l
The same story holds true at !
Aliso Beach Pa rk and other •
county strands where Lifeguard !
Inte rnational Beach Services, •1 Inc president J im Stauffer say~ ....
the weekday turnout has been
.. s urprisingly light."
"Maybe they all went lo t~
(Colorado> River,'' he s uji
gested. a
San Clemente lifeguard Larry
Moore said 13 guards on duty ii\.,
that city find things are going\
slowly, with only 8.000 visitors
showing up Tuesday. )
And Cheri Zapel, who guar<!l
the beach at Doheny State Park~,.
says small surf and 59 degree..:
waters are keeping light crowrui,.
out of the ocean. l
". Jury at impasse .
SAN DIEGO <APl -A hun1.
Jury was declll'red Tuesday in th#~
trial of a crippled Vietnam War"
VPleran charged with committini"
seven bank robberies. A decorat•
ed war hero, Fernando Valdez. 31;.'
faces a retrial in June.
Be a standout on the beach
In this monokinl from OP.
Bright flowers on White
backgroa.md, •21.00.
These are just a few from
our wonderful collection of
1 & 2 piece suits.
Get yours today!
'
f
Jobn T. Downey, the
former CIA agent who spent
more than 20 years in a
Chinese prison, is resigning
his Connecticut job to run for
the Democratic nomination
for the U.S. Senate.
<..r Lady Bird Johnson tours grounds of Headley-Whitney
n· Museum irl Lexington, Ky., with Phyllis George
.,. Brown, wife of Kentucky governor. The former first
·l· lady planned 1Jisit later Tuesday to Murray, Ky.
Downey told Gov . .Bill
O'Neill his resignation as
c hairman of the state
Department of Public Utility
Control is effective May 8.
O'Neill said he expected
many other Democrats to
seek the Democratic nomina-
tion in 1982 to run for the seat
now held by Republican
Lowell Weicker Jr.
11.
.. ·:w program
debat.e eyed ~= . Ted Turner, president and
chairman of Turner Broad-
casting System Inc. in Atlan-
., ta, has sent telegrams to the
;,heads of the three major
television net~orks propos-
11. ing a debate on morality in
·programming.
;;. "Within the past few days
. you have spaken on this sub-
,, ject at the annual meeting of
,: the American Association of
.: Advertising Agencies,"
· Turner said in the telegrams
1 to Fred Silverman, president
.. of NBC; Gene Jankowski, 1~~ president of the CBS Broad-
.. cast Group, and Fred Pierce,
... president of ABC Television.
Similar invitations were
,.-sent to the Rev. Jerry
•lt. Falwell and Cal Tlaomu
1, of MoraJ Majority and Dr.
1• Do•aJd Wildman of the Na-
Downey. SO, a New Haven
lawyer, was captured in
China in 1951 on a mission for
the CIA. He was released in
1971 .
The Congressional Club, the
pontical group built around
Seo. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.,
has opened a nationwide
television ad campaign seek-
ing support for President
Reagan 's economic pro-
gram.
C•rter Wrenn, executive
director of the club, said it
bought $100,000 in TV time
and plans to spend $250,000 if
It can raise that much. So far
it has ~uced 10 60-second
commerci~s.
tional Federation for Decen-
1 cy, Turner said.
,.. He said the one-hour de-
bate would be televised on
1,. WT BS-TV and the Cable
,, News Network, both viewed
t· on cable television na-
tionwide.
There's nothing exciting
about being pregnant or
being a farmer, says
Princess Anne of
England, who is both
these days.
The first ads were broad-
cast on Washington station
WTTG, and Wrenn said more
time will be bought on cable
televi.aion systems in ~Uan
l a, New York and Los
Angeles. Alter that, be said,
ads will be run in selected
congressional dis tricts
around the nftion.
{'
Rain soaks Northeast v
'ihunderstorms forecast for southern half of U.S. ,.
~~.~~= ~ ,.ff(to -1010 u k...,q In of· I~. -l' 1-.111Ito2 Ifft.
tJ.S. summary
Molt of Ille Ntlon ..,jo.,.o M-·
bl• -•"-T-y, but pert ol UM
ltor1Mtit -clrenc-bJ relM oftCI 11 ... 1-r.ll In Mic~ ~cold fran1...,.. .. 11eo.,., rolrt• •NI
•WIN!e ....... , ...... ~· o• •r._.i ..,_In _, M lc11'9oft,
llOt1Nrly -....-toU ___ ,...,..._,. .......
lrtt. S.ver el clt .. t In New
JOfWJ and IMw Ycwtl ,_...., reln-
lalj lfl o-a •---" olld .... Inell.
Stroftt -tf sAlr1y WllMh OS Mefl
01 SS """' _,.. ,_..... frOfft ,..,._
ffll'IVOfllo lo Vermont.
T na~•lont• ,,_ lrt IM_...,,, PlolftL ""Goo• do ... l\M ,.rtly CIOudY 1 , wltll 1.......-.tutM rooclllrtt -. 5"1nnJ lllle• oftd mlld tem·
lllrft ,,_.,elled -the Nortll
rol tlllrd of.,,. Milon.
t1tlllM cover•d the Wnt ofld
to ti. --• condltloM tw SUGc.eMflll retum IOftdtnt of tflo
tlMlle Columllla.
II• NotloMI Woollier S.rvlu
......... .,MldmoetoftM
w111-.1Uft1111M,bllt~
atorna wlll IM Ken.r.ci from
Mexlcle tD ._ -"'-"' Altotltk t. s.-nollO_.. torecatt ,..,
Poc"k ...,.,,....,
WOOtllor. Tiie .......... "°"of -M • llon wllt worm ltlto tlw 70. •fld IOI.
•Tefftpot._ or1IUftd tile Miion OI
mlOCIOy Tundoy roneect ''°'" • tow of 27 In s...tt Ste Mari., Mich., to •
hltll of U In Palm~-
U:difomia
Tiier• •Ill .. llltlo Ch0fl99 In Ille
Soullllofld'I "'90lMr Ollt,_ o,,.r Ille
MXt two M\IS. NIQM and mofnll>Q
Cloudl Wiii COrltl-olOflO Ille COOll,
•ltll low __, -111 all areas. Portlol afternoon c leorlnt on
MOCMI fenco.t.
Chicago
.,.._...,....,._..._..,. Clnclnnoll
Ctov•tono
Columl>US
Ool·FI Wtn
O.nver
0.1Molnn
O.trolt
Duluth
Folrbal\IU
Hortlord
Holono
H-h1lu
... ,-..... , ... , ..
"\' .. , ., .. .. ---~ J MA llOMAI WI AJHU SU Vl<f
NO~A US 0• t •' <•••••••
In Nottllenl and Central Colllorltla,
wHlh•r wlll i. ..-uy fair on4 mlld
tmond ~ Thundoy. lncreo11ne
low cloucb -log •IOrtt the cool!
melnly ltlgllta -momlnt1. PoMly c1oudly In Ille nor1nwest ond SI ..
klyou1 locUy and tonlgnt wltll •
cflonce of roln.
Temperatures
NATIONAL
Albany SS • Atbuqw Jl 44 AmorlllO ... 41
Anc 'IOf 1199 , u u A.,,.vlllo 77 " t\Uonta .. .,
"°"''°" lndf\Oplls
Joe: honv11M
Juneau
KOMClly
LotVotn
Llllle Rock
LOUllYlll•
Memplll1
MIOll'll
Mllwoukoe •t .. Sl.P. NHhvllle New Or .. _
Now York
Norfolk
Olllo Clly
Dmoll•
Orlando
Phllodelplllo "
Bal Isle bridge 'lpork halted for 'Bal Week'
after merchants tell of business crimp
Sudace repair work on tbe
Balboa i1land brldae wa~
ordered to cease today after
l1land qierchani. complained
that the repair Job 11 ldWna tbelr
Easter Week bualne11.
"We're taklna a treat
beatlng," island real estate
aaent R.E. t'Tex" Griffith told
Newport Beach City Council
members tb1a week.
Bridie work, which be1an lut
year, hu resulted in traffic
beioa reduced to a 1ln1le lane on
the SO-year-old structure. Jt a.l.eo
has produced regular traffic
snarls.
"Someone is goin1 to end up
gettinl in a fist fight out there,"
complained Island furniture
shop owner llay Louwe. "It just
isn't fair to the merchants."
COUNCILMAN PHIL
Maurer, a Balboa Island resi-
dent, called the single-lane setup
on the bridge this week a result
of "poor planning."
"The real crime," Maurer
went on, "is that merchants
weren't told this was going to
happen until last Fr\day."
The week before Easter
long-known as Bal Wef'k on the
island -is considered a prime
business time by Balboa Island
shop owners.
Ben Nolan , Newport's public
works director, said the work
shutdown could mean up to a
$25,000 loss for the contractor,
Peter Kiewit Sons Construction.
Nolan said the city will have
to reimburse the contractor for
hjs losses.
During the council session,
Nolan tried lo talk the elected
leaders out of shutting down the
repair job.
"TREV HAVE GOOD
momentum going now," he
observed. "If we close it down
it's possible the project could la1-
over into June.
Do41y ,.._. ,..... .-, P.-1dl O'o-11
Temporary halt to Balboa Island Bridge comtruction Wednesday
may smooth Bal Week influx and please merchants.
Too many people
spQil tlw fishing?
The bridge work, calling for a general refurbishing and nelit, Since 1949, Orange County crete stanchions on either side
fishermen have tried their luck at of the creek -have been in wider bike and pedestrian lanes . t f th rt place for 31 years. The boards 'th 'd · · II to catching rout rom e ma · on ei er SI e, ongma Y was made ponds along San Juan have been installed annually by
be completed before Easter. Creek ; .. the Cleveland National the county under terms of a Bad weather and construction .... complications are blamed for Forest. permit issued by the Forest
the setback. Now, the dams that have Service.
Island merc hants, mostly ·~reated the fJshin~ holes are in lL _
clustered along Marine Avenue, Jeopardy. THE BOA'""5 generally are
protested last Christmas when U.S. Forest SerVice officials installed in early sprin1 and re-
t raff i c on the bridge was complained to the coWlty Board main in place throu&h the sum·
narrowed to one lane. of Supervisors this week that too mer. The ponds have been
Real estate agent Griffith many peopJe -includin1 som_e routinely stocked with trout by
reported tbtt many abop owners UJtde$irabl41 r-~ eoosreeat· tbe J!~te F h a,nd Game
bad lost inoney during tbe illl by the pdnds and alOng the Dep~ent.. f
Christmas season and bad creek. Twenty-ninetof the 40 dams in
stocked up for Easter In hopes of Forest Service officials said question are j•long Saa Juan
brisltbusiness. that litter problems and the Creek east of San Juan
.. All I can tell you." he said to potential for swimming aecl-Capistrano. Other9 are located
council merdf>ers. "Is that we're dents are their chief reasons for along Trabuco Cr.eet, which is
just a bunch of people who are wanting to remove the dams and also stocked, and other locations
eager to make a living." let the stream flow unchecked. in the Santa Ana Mountains. Repairs on the bridge, as well
as the one-way traffic. are SU PEil VISORS AGREED Brian McGuire, a ·Clev~and
scheduled to resume on Monday. with the Forest Service that a National Forest offieial, told -STEVE MARBLF , supervisors tbat"the f~eral gov· study of the damming program ernmenl is facing $11 million in Audubon was in order, but refused to or· personal injury claims from peo-
der removal of the dams pend-pie injured while swimming in
I d ing completion of the survey. the pools.
st 41 tOUr 8 ate "They're easy to close, but not He said it was only reasonable
12 " easy to reopen," commented .. • The Sea and Sage Audubon Supervisor Harriett Wieder , w.ho for a study of the situation since ~ !~ .Society will spansor a Cree tour said the board needed more In · the permit has not been updated
., o of the Starr Ranch nature formation on the purported prob-since 1949. !~ : sanctuary on Saturday from 8 lems along the creek before • The County Fish and Game
>1 21 a.m. to 2 p.m. final action is taken. A repart Commission, supervisors were 11 12 Persons wishing to take part was ordered to be prepared by told, wants lhe dam program lo !~ ri s hould meet at the entrance o( the Forest Service and the coun-continue. So does the s tate
: : Caspers Regional Park on ty Environmental Management Department of Fish and Game. •2" OrtegaHighwayeastofSanJuan Agency and presented to the "After all, f ishing op-
17 • Capistranoat8a.m. board within three weeks~ portumties in Orange County
;: : For information call Jane The dams -created by in· are very limited." ~ state of· 11 ,.. Berry at646-1488or Marge Mazur 1 d 'I
14 S1 stalling boards between con· ficia sai .. ~ :......:a~t~7~44~-6.::17~0~·---------------------------------------------------'-------------------------n n
it C2
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SS 41 ... s. » m
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74 47
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Talk
By J .C. HUMPHRIES
. Ctrtifi«J Gemolol(iat. AGS
'!lt, TouChesof
-,,-.i_Class ~
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I 8. I .._.,.., ..,.....lltutft wlll Ille ml141.
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OrOltllt C:-y CM Hpe<l high& I•
NJ olld lllllndlly r.,..,.. frOfl'I •2 to '1 • ._... tM llNcMI tD lew 70. lnlafld
oreH. OvemltM _,In UW SOL
lt1loftd Ytllleyl will !\OW ..,.,.. In
u. 70. and ~ '°"' re11gl119 ,,...,. u to ...
At1011t1c CllY 80111...-
lllrmlftt'*"
SS 49 .. "" .. ..
Phoenix
f ltllburgll
Pllolld, Mo
Ptlond,0,.
Roll!d Clfy
Rono
Rl<flmOrld Soll Lok•
$oolll•
St~l1 5tfl·T-StSte-le
5-0ll-Tulw
u • .. . ._ SI
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
... aJmon ninything
Tbere are about 2,600 known
minerala. You have probably
beard Of a~t halt or them, and
moat people can identify no
more than a fe..t dozen by nune
and •llbt. Some of tbe names
are almple and aelf-explan•tory
. . . ruby, emerald, pearl, for
example ... lmmedlatelJ.
ldenWy with colon. But, how ln
the "World did we find names for
·all tbe otben? Some mlnerala
are Dl.ll\ed for people wbo ftnt
ldentlfled them. There la a
JoeamUblte, tor ••ample,
oam.ed for aa American
1eoJ.o1t1t named Joe Slllltb.
Otb..-minerall M tbelr 11 .. e1
from places wben tbQ were
flut dlaeover•d. Tb•rt a~e oreaonl~. benttoti. )for San
Bentto, Calif .) and
tranquillitytte (found lD u,, Sea
of T~-.uWty oa tti• moon).
• I I
MOllfttolM Wiii hovo hi .... bottl
M'ttlfllN .... IOWSlntMJOL
0...N Will lilt fair tllrOlllf\ T~
doy, ~ *-11119"a-. ... In
a ... tllern 4loMrt1. L ... 4S lo SS
-1llonl -..rt&, H to 65 ~do.. m.
Bismarck
llollO' ... _
erownsvlll• 9uffolo
Cllort1tn SC
Cllerllln WV a..v. ....
SS " 7'0 »
JI " ts n
" " 70 '2 71 SS
" »
•Southern Cal,if omia .urf report ................ ,r:w , ... 1-w: !! I l .. ,. •t I WIW
ti J • • •
Wesll ....... n "
~ta tM o .... t ..,. ... ,. '"not ctn.Ilk" .... u ••
ODee belle¥ed that ......... .....
1&oa• would hep OM' ~roe
ftttiM Jil&olicated. GUMt ,_ r ......... ,,_ .,.. i.u. ....
for .,_..., .... Med. Wldela It wu tbou•bt to reHmble.
I
-I c.
Tht> dlamoncl. nmure's horclesr s ut>stonre
<ancl It's most l><'aulif ul. t<x>. W<' ml(lht acl<IJ Is
stllln9 preny on th<'S<' foncy shapt•s of !J<'llow
g0ld, a11est1n~J' 1<> the crealiU<' Imaginings of
our flnc• )t'welry cl<'Sl!lners. sample theS<·
/ouely ladles I• karat golcl rln(ls. each set
with beautiful rouncl dlamon<lS:
I\. Six round diamonds totaling .4 0 carats
complern<•nt th<• featurt•<I 1.os curar
dlamoncJ.
a. Flue round 'diamonds total .4 I carats.
c. Nine tound diamonds total .81 carats.
o. Four roi.Wl<t diamonds rota/ .42 C"arats.
•
Y).NDON (AP) ':"'1 Black P1tP
in l.Ondoii'1 Brtxtoa ala• dllUtet j w,eat oa a ramp .. e forU.. fourth
atrailbtollht, •lllubl.Di wlDdowa
' Ud eettiq fire•. But the rlGt.en
, stayed away trOllll Police, a no
new hUWi• or arrei&a were re· ported.
f
LUie Dumber of ~laeka aaaln
surged throu(b Brixtoa lo S.Utb
London, after dark Monday. 'they l attacked MVeral storea and a poet
J otrlce buildina. add101 to the
1 destructlol\ ol Saturday and Sun·
I day nlahts estimated at more
I
than '2 million. Police with riot
shields moved into the area, but
no clashes between ~lice and
rioters were reported.
With 200 people injur~ and 199
arrested, the weekend rioting and
battles between police and mobs
of blacks and some· whites was
Britain's worst racial violence. l Black leaders said it waa
Separatia~ vidon
MONTREAL (AP> -Premier
Rene Levesque's separatist par·
ty was still in charae In Quebec
province today after a convtnc·
ina election victory that in·
creased its majority in the pro-
vincial legislature and kept alive
the dream of an independent
French Canada. Unofficial re-
turns from Monday's voting
gave Levesque's Parti
Quebecois 80 of the 122 seats in
the Quebec National Assembly
to 42 for the Uberal Party.
Cltolero kiUs 32
APWi.,......
BEIRUT, L~banoo <AP>
Mortar and artillery ftre rained
down on the Lebane.e ParUa·
ment building today, trapplnc
some government minlstera and
legislators inside. official com·
munlques reported.
Syrian forces and rt1bt1st
Christian militias accuaed each
other of the bombardment of VUla
Man sour, near. the mldcit1 Green
Line that divides the ChriaUan
and Moslem sectors of Beirut.
THE CHRISTIAN-controlled
Voice of Lebanon radio said
shrapnel tore through the glass
windows of the conference halls.
forcing four ministers and 14
members of Parliament to dive
for s.llelter, then crawl to bide in
the corridors. ·
I
touched off ·by "heavy-handed"
police action. But they said It
stemmed from anger and fruslra·
tion over unemployment -about
20 percent, or twice the national average, In Brixton.
! Soviets uithdrauing
JAKARTA, lndonesia CAP) -
Cholera has killed 32 people and
caused some 516 to be
hospitalized in three regions of
West Java, health officials said
today.
Photo of execution in April 1980 of old Liberia, Africa, government won Pulitzer for photographer
Larry C. Price of Fort W01'th
The radio accused Syrian
peacekeeping forces manning the
Moslem side of the midcity <livid·
ing line or shelling the building,
and said a Parljament guard was
wounded by shrapnel. One shell
hit Defense Minister Joseph
Skat's limousine, parked in the
building's courtyard, but Skar
was not harmed, the radio said.
A communique from the Syrian
command charged the Christian
militias with opening mortar and
sniper fire at 11 a .m. as three
Parliament committees were
meeting. It said Syrian soldiers
did not return the fire "out or con·
s ideration for the s,afety or
Cabinet m1rusters and roemt>ers
of Parliament."
WASHINGTON <AP> -U.S. intelligence sources report the
first general reduction in the
readiness of Soviet troops in and
around Poland in tbe weeks since
the crisis appeared headed for a
mi Ii tary silo'!Ydown .
Most of the victims since the
intestinal disease broke out last
Saturday have been children un-
der 15. Bad sanitation during the
long dry season and unclean
food and drinks were said to be
the main reasons for the spread
of the disease.
Pulitzers awarded
Small toum paper winner on St. Helens coverage
Ci1"
Atlitnta cops say
deaths not solved
ATLANTA <AP> -Atlanta of·
ficials said Tuesday they have
not solved° any or the 23 slayings
of young blacks and urged FBI
Director William Webster to
stop making ·'casual press state-
' ments" suggesting a break may
be near.
Webster was quoted in
Tuesday's Atlanta Constitution
as saying there is a suspect in 12
to 16 of the cases, and three or
four other cases not connected to
each other or the others have
been "substantiall y solved."
I
f
I • I
I
I , I I
"The question is, have we
solved the cases? The answer is
no. We know more about some
than others. but we do not have
sufficient evidence to indict,"
Public Safety Commissioner Lee
Brown said.
For his part, Mayor Maynard
Jackson told Webster in a letter,
"Your statements undermine
the public's confidence in our in·
vesligation and create a great
deal of misdirected media
speculation and invective."
All our fine stock will be included in this sale. Porcelains from $2.50
to $6000. Ladies Diamond Rings from $20 to $10,000. _Furniture,
including fine French Louis XV & XVI style furnishings. Clocks.
bronzes. ivory, chandeliers, Oriental items. silver. cyrstal. Lladros. fine.
art. jewelry and gold. etc.
Thurs., Fri., & Sat. April 16-17-18 I :00 to 5:00 PM Daily
EMPIRE GALLERIES LTD.
Z722 N. Main Street. Santa Ana. CA 92701
714-547-7384
doused with champagne Monday
after the announcement that the
newspaper had received the cov·
eted gold medal for public
service in journalism for its
series "Brown Lung: A Case of
Deadly Neglect."
The series or 22 articles
charged government and il1·
dustry with ignoring the disease
caused by cotton dust in textile
plants. one or the state's leading
industries.
The Pulitzers, awarded an-
nually by Columbia University
on the recommendation of a
jury. were endowed by Joseph
Pulitzer, late publisher or the old
New York World. Except ror>the
pubJic service award, which car-
ries a gold medal, winners re·
ceive $1,000.
New York Times writers took
two Pulitzers. Houston cor-
respondent John M. Crewdson,
who "walked across the Mex-
ican desert at night with smug-
glers," received the national re-
porting award for a series on the
treatment of illegal immigrants
which led to a J ust1ce Vepartment
investigation.
* * * Winners
Here ls a llst ot ttll """IL•r Prl .. wlMffl
JOURNALllM
Publl< Servl<e; Cl\erloll. (N.C.I Observe.
General L..ocel R-11no: LOf>9vlew (Welll.)
Oall'I' N.-SC.If
Special Loul A-rtlng. Ciera Halla\ ancs
Robert 8 . 1..-of the ~rl•-Oallr Siar
Natloftal A-111>9: John M. Cr ... clson o1 y,_ New Y Mil Tl,.,,..
lnternaUGl)al A-11ng Sftlrley Cll<lllMln o1 ,,,. M letnl Herald
Edllotlal Writing: No awercl
Edllorl•I Cartooning Mille Peters ot the
Dayton (Oftitll Dally N•-
Spot N9*$ Pflologr.,..., L..eny C. Prid ot -
Fon Worth IT•UI) Siar· Telegram
Feature Pftolovr.,.., T•ro M Y-1 o1
lne Dalrolt Ft• P..ss
'°"'"-IM'I'. o..le A-rton of,.,._ v_ TlmH
Crlll<llm: J_,_ Vwdl•'I' ol tM wattwneion SI.,
Fee lure Wtltlng Janel Cooke "'' the WHhlngton Post
LllTTWRIAND DRAMA Fl<llon .• ,. Conf-ac:r ol Dunces .. by Jatln
KeNWKtr T-(cleoaMc11
Drama. "'Crl,.,,.. of the HHrt"' 11., &e~Mltr
HISIOf'I'! '"4rne<l<an Eduullon Tiie NallOMI
E•-lenca, 171).1176"" i.y LA.,ren<e A Ctemln 8109<_.,..,., ··r.1er llM Gr .. 1 HI• ui. anci
World" by Aoller1 K. Maule
Poetry: ••n. Mo<nlng Of ,.,. Poem"' by Ja,_.. S<hu.,.ler
Ge&etal Nor!-Fl<lion Fln-·Sl«I~ y,_,. ••
Pollliu -Culture·· by c ... 1 E S<l'IOrllle • Music. No award
•
THE NEW fighting stiattered a
nearly week -old cease.fire
between Syrian soldiers and
Christian militiamen here and in
Zahle, 30 miles east. The truce
had been sporadically observed
t"wo people were killed Monday
in Syrian shelling of Zable. and
the city's mayor, Aziz al-Abdi.
was slightly injured . a Christian
spokes man said.
Syrian soldiers have main·
tained their siege of Zable since
April l , when they moved in to
stop the building of a military sup-
ply road. The Syrian action ignit·
ed a week of'fighting that killed
265 civilians, according to polioe
coont
THE ZAHLE outbreak was
rollowed by fighting among
Syrians. Christians and Lebanese
army regulars in Beirut. The
shooting gave way to a cease·fire
Wednesday, but it has been a
shaky one. ·•we are sitting on top
of a volcano." Bachir Gemayel.
the Christians' top mili tary com-
mander. said today.
Can you name the major ri sk factors that cause--
heart attacks? Do you know how to reduce your
chances of having a heart attack? Can you learn
to live-and live well -after having a heart attack
or undergoing coronary bypass surgery? You'll find
out all this and more at Hoag Hospital's infonnative
semi~at, "Your Heart-Will the Beat Go On?" "'
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian
Presents
Your Heart •••
will the lbeat.go,on?
Monday
April 1.7, 1981
7:00 to 9:00 pm
Grace Hoac
Conferebce Center
301 Newport Blvd.
Newport Beach, CA
Janet M. Kelly, R.N., Community Education.
(Introduction)
Joel H. Mancbest~ M.D., Cardiologist (Definitions,
signs and symptoms, risk factOrs, diagnosis and
treatment of coronary artery disease)
Debbie Grayston, Registered Dietitian. (Nutrition.
Preventative and Rehabilitative)
Carol Covinpon, R.N., Cardiac Rehabilitation.
·(Definitions and Goals)
Please mail the follo..tn1 rqlttrltfon fonn to Hoag Memorial
Hoepital Pretbyterian. tommunlty Education Department. 301
NHrport BouleYard, Newport Beach. CA 92663. TH£RE IS NO
ADMISSJOf" CHARGE. Limited aeadni available.
Nam._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Adclreu--~~~~~~~~~~---
Oa yti me ffhone (
I I
QUINCY <AP> ~ TM pound Harcb has been
called off 101' tbe mll1ln1 12-)'ear·old atrl whoee mother, brother 6Dd brother'• friend were stabbed
to death ln the mother'• home.
Tbe bod.1• were discovered· earl)' Sunday ln
nearby Kedd1e a b'9avily wooded area ln the
Feather River Canyon about 120 miles nortbeut of
Sacramento.
Eour die in bloat
OLANCHA <AP> -Four people burned to
deetb when ll\elr car colllded with a tanker-truclr.
c..-ryin1 gaaollne and one ot it.a \aDks npJoded,
California Highway Patrol official• reported. .
The accidC!llt, which occurred on Highway 395
seven miles south of here, blocked traffic for several
hours.
10 flee county jail
• MADERA CAP> -A convicted killer and nine
other inmates who allegedly fled the Madera
County Jail remained at large despite a widespread
search,offic::ialssaid.
The escapees cut through two sets or bars.
shimmied down a utility pole, climbed over a
screened walkway and scrambled over an eiahl· root fence.
Tuv remain critical,
BEU.FLOWER (AP> -Two high school girls,
who survived a weekend car collision that killed a
cheerleader friend, were reported stJll in critical
condition by hospital auth'>rities.
Christine Achen and Clarissa Graham, both
16, were critically injured this week.
Man knifed on bus
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A man was stabbed
nine times.on a Municipal Railway bus just hours
after Police Chief Con Murphy announced a 41 per-
cent drop in crime on transit lines during the first
quarter of 1981.
Thomas Dennis, 31, was outbound on a city bus
when he got into a fight with another passenger
who finally stabbed Dennis with a knife.
Pot petition
misses ballot
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A group that wants to
decriminalize marijuana usage failed to collect
enough signatures to qualify their measure for the
statewide ballot, but are ready to start all over
again, a spokesman has said.
Rich Marcella said the California Marijuana
Initiative group turned in petitions this week bear-
ing an estimated 28,000 signatures at the Los
Angeles County Registrar's office in City of Com·
merce, the deadline for that petition drive. But
those efforts combined with petition drives in the
San Francisco. Orange County and San Diego
a reas failed to produce the required 346,119
signatures needed to qualify an initiative for the
ballot, he said.
"We 're going to start another initiative
drive," he said. "We just lost a battle; we haven't
lost the war," he added, saying that even though
this petitioo drive collected fewe{ signatures than
one in llB>. the group will continue its efforts.
The group plans to begin strategy planning
this week for its next drive to get on the ballot, he
said.
TRANS NATIONAL FUNDING
lllllOUllCES I IEW PROGRAM
2110 TRUST DEEDS
• No Prepay I Assumable
• Fast Funding
• 30-year Amortized Up to 15 yrs. Repay
• Loans-$10.00Q to SS00.000
• Owner-Non-owner • Swing Loans/Purchase Mooty
(714) 975-1128
Call William B. Mitchell-Brokers Welcome
The Senior Citizens Trust
is proud to ann.ounce ~hat the _1981
Health Provider Directory 1s now available
to all Senior Citizens v.;thout charge .. For
the substantial list of physicians, dentists.
and other practitioners offering their
services at superb savings, call or write:
Senior Citizens Trust, 1400 No. Harbor.
Fullerton. Calif. 92635 Ste .. 100. We will
forward your 1.0 . Card and Directory upon
receipt of your name. address, date of
birth. and phone number.
THIS PIO•UM IS MH
TO ALL SlllOIS
• 7141 ,,,., ••
East•r·Bomlt
Parade/Prim
Open to~ 2ttlN7.W
put 01"1 tNir bQIMltl
al'ld brint tt,.,-n to
Huntl""°" °'"'9t
thl• Sat .. 10:30 Im toenw.,...&
Judtllna ..... noon;
... ll'ld & 40l hlv
## ........
BURBANK (AP) -Johnny
Caraon said a strike by the
Writers Guild of America has
forced blm to auapeod tbe
"Tonight Show" because "thb ts
e11entially a comedy show" and
without the writers it would be
Just a talk show.
HEAVY TOWING JOB -An J.8.foot, 2,300-pound buting
shark is lifted by tow truck to trailer In San Pedro after it
was caught in a fisherman's on net and died. The shark
was given to the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural
History for scienutic purposes.
Carson cleared up erroneous
reports that he had walked off
the set Monday night in sym.
pathy with the striking writers.
He denied he bad walk~ off and
said that although he sym·
pathlzes with the writers, the
suspension of the show was
more a practical necessity.
The writers, who have been
without a contract since Feb. 18,
picketed 20th Century-Fox·
studios Monday in their first
public demonstration since their
walkout began Saturday .
Picketers will move to Para·
mount on Thursday and
Universal on Saturday. Arrest of 6 breaks
caviar black market
Few suc h dramatic
announcements as the
suspension of the Carson show
are expected during the writers
strike, however , since most
regular TV shows have finished
the season. Movies weren't
expected to be affected before
next Christmas.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -An
undercover investigation into the
black-market sale or caviar has
netted sixmenand$25,000worthof
sturgeonroe. authorities say.
They say the practice threatens
to deplete the already decreased
sturgeon pbpulation.
The six were charged with
· violating the fish and game codes
after being arrested by agents of
the California Fish and Game
Department in recent weeks .
Jack White, press officer of the
agency, said that the men ar·
rested face fines up to $500 and
s ix -month jail terms if con·
victed.
"Our continuing investigation
involves 60 persons and 37
restaurants, baitshops, wholesale
markets and fis h markets,"
White sjid.
"A s ingle gravid female
sturgeon can yield as much as 40
pounds of caviar with a resale
value of $5,000." He said that
while roe obtained illegally has
been sold by fishermen for as little
as $5 a pound, it retails for $130 a
pound.
Illegal fishing is a serious threat
to the sturgeon popultttion, which
is too low to permit commercial
Layton s ues Cffi
over 'docudrama'
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Former Peoples Temple
member Larry Layton bas filed
suit against CBS-TV, contending
a 1980 movie about the
Jonestown tragedy will prevent
him from gt:tling a fair trial on
federal charges of conspiring to
kill a congressman on a Guyana
airstrip.
Layton, in a suit filed Monday
in San Francisco Superior Court.
alleged CBS slandered him in its
"docudrama" called "Guyana
Tragedy." which aired last April.
fishing, White sald. Since 1954,
sportfishermen have been limited
to a take of one sturgeon a day in
California waters.
White said the unique black
sturgeon roe has become prized
because imported Russian and
Iranian caviar wholesales for$400
a pound and caviar imported from
Louisiana wholesales for $110 a
pound.
White said the fishermen use
large hooks tosnarethefishinSan
Francisco Bay, wheretheyfeedon
herring roe during the winter and
spring before spawning in the
fresh water of the Sacramento
River.
Two other "live " TV
programs NBC's "Saturday
Night Live " and ABC 's
"Fridays" -will stay on for the
immediate future, the networks
said Monday.
"SNL." afflicted with low
ratings after two changes of
casts and producers this season,
will take a previously scheduled
two -week hiatus after its
broadcast Saturday, with no
return date set, NBC said.
"Fridays" will broadcast
through May 8, as scheduled.
Astronams given
California medal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Space shuttle astronauts John
Young and Robert Crippen have joined such persons as the
three California hostages and comedian Bob Hope as reci·
pients of the Order of California.
G<>v. Edmund Brown Jr. presented the two astronauts
with the medallion on a ribbon after they landed at
Edwards Air Force Base Tuesday.
The Order of California is "the highest award that can
be given for non-combat or a non-lifesaving situation," ex-
plained Col. Andy Wolf, public affairs officer for the
California National Guard.
The governor's office instituted the award about three
years ago and 10 persons have received it since then, he
said.
Most recently, Bob Hope was given the award in
December "for his more than 40 years of service to the
armed forces," Wolf said.
In February, Brown gave the award to three Calif or·
nians who were among the hostages in Iran. He presented
the medallions to Donald Hohman of West Sacramento,
Jerry Plotkin of Los Angeles and Richard Morefield of San
Diego at a ceremony on the Capitol steps.
The award consists of a round, brass-colored medal re·
sembling the state seal hanging from a rainbow ribbon.
HIWPOaT
HARBOR CRUISE • SUMDAY UUMCH
ATTHICA .... Y
714 675-7522
Aerobic Exercise Classes
Designed To:
• Build and maintain
cardiovascular strength
• Improve muscle tone
Increase flexibility %t~ . tl 70,.. [m£ EXE.BCISE AND • _ _.Qc~O!l!IN'!i!O~IT~IOP!N~IH~GPS~A!"!'. L•CiJP.
I llO Illy ... .,..... •• c.... ........ 71f·l 4M
NEWPORT
BALBOA
ROTARY
SALUTES
HARRY
BABBITT
For his· outstanding community service,
HarrY Babbitt of Newport Beach has been
eefeC:ted as recipient of the first annual
MIWPOD,Ml.IOA
IOTARY POUt•ATIOM
10.CHAllTY AWMD
Following a distinguished career In ahow
~neaa, Mr. Babbitt moved to Newport a.ch In the early abctlee. and dunng tho•
twenty years hat appemed It more than
~undred fund-railing events In Newport
Beach, and Orange County, helping to r ..
funds for such charitllble organizations •
Hotig 552 Club. Mll'Ch of DtmN. Spatio
Leaigue and the ChUd Guktance Oink:, to · name but a few.
Spotltbfed by the Ao~ Foundation
Of Newf)CJft Bttteh
Ht-1111Or640.t 104 h11ln11
Quaity
you cin
see, t9UCh
and :
rely on.
ROUND OAK BALL & CLAW TABLE
WITH LEAF ANO s5291s FOUR PRESSED STAITS
BA~KEO CHAIRS AT
Complete line
1 Oo/o Discount
Off Future Sates
With Purchase
of Table and Chairs
-
I =--
Over 20
Differut
Styles
DESKS:
Carved
. Roi-Top,
Aats
. Various
Sizes
I
I _J 1 j ,,_ ,..
" ~
of Fine Oak ~~.._
Furnishings
Olnlngroom eet. ~ grouoe. Ofb tumttu,., "Bat:&. a.iat9(M, Bedroom Mta.
All Bathroom fbcturei, Pull Ohaln T o1•
end Cebtneta, ~ HutoMe,. aun.e.,
Huuera, Qun C.blneta. Mln'ora, Umps,
H.n r,...., etc. '
For years, the Oraqe Coun-
tf eonstruetion industry has com'"
plained that tbe business ol ap· Pb1nl for the necessary develop-'
ment approvals and permits was
just too dlfftcult.
Often builder~ found
themaelves shuffled from one
builcUne to another In their quest to get the necessary paperwork
completed so work could begin.
In these days of high-interest
constructloo loans every delay
adds to the cost of the f mished
product.
That situation ls going to
change. The county Board of
Supervisors, at the urging of the
Environmental Management
Agency, has approved the open-
ing of a "one stop" processing of.
fice. It will be located in the
county En1ineering Building
in the Civic Center complex
in Sant~ Ana.
The office will be manned by
technicians knowledgeable in all
aspects of project approval.
They'll be able to answer ques·
tions about the county general
plan and zoning and be able to
provide quick processing of de·
velopment plans and building
permits.
It's likely that certain de-
velopment proposals will be sub·
mitted that go beyond the scope
of the one-stop office. But their
numbers probably will be few.
For the most part, introduc-
~ion of the one-stop offices prom-ises to put to rest the objections
of the past and help insure that
plans get processed quickly and
efficiently. This should assist, if
only in a small way, in keeping
the cost of new housing under
control.
New space vis~ons
The launch, flight and land-
ing of the space shuttle Columbia
were so incredibly precise it's
hard to recall the apparently end·
less problems that bad beset the
project since its inauguration six
years ago.
Columbia's launch was three
years behind schedule and $4
billion over its initial projected
cost: Some skeptics believed it
would never get off the ground.
when even as late as last week
yet another glitch delayed the
launch. ·
The perfection of the fiight
and return put all that into his-
tory.
Now. six years after the last
manned space flight, the United
States is back in the space busi-
ness, this time in a manner that
truJy opens new horizons.
While the first space
excursions were scientific
marvels, this one promises to
begin a new era of practical space
travel.
The reusable shuttles -
Columbia is doubtless only the
first -will open new fields of
communication around the globe.
They could bring to reality the
dream of inhabited stations in
space, serviced and supplied by
shuttles, usable for aU types of
research. They could set up solar
generating stations capable of
supplying power to entire cities.
And of course the military poten-
tial, notably the potential for de· tense, is enormous.
The Columbia was launched
20 years to the day after Soviet
astronaut Yuri Gagarin became
the first man in space. The
American space program soon
caOght up and surpassed the So-
viets with the moon landings. But
then our space program went in-
to mothballs while the Soviets
worked steadily to improve their
capability.
Now we have made a giant
step forward, and this time it is
no scientific spectacular. The
brief journey of the stubby,
workhorse aircraft that turns
into a space vehicle and back into
an airplane, can be the beginning
of an era that will change
lifestyles for generations to
come, as did the first flights
across the oceans, not all that
long ago.
Law rwt equal /or all
Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
was guilty of inexcusable
behavior in clamping a three-day
secrecy lid on the arrest of Irvine
Mayor Art Anthony for allegedly
beating and shooting at An-
thony's wife.
Worse than the blackout of
information on the case was the
revelation that Peart had waited
two days alter the assault before
sending his omcers to arrest An-
thony.
The accused mayor now is
free on his own recognizance
after spending two days in the
psychiatric ward at UCI Medical
Center. He awaits arraignment
May 1.
Following the beating inci-
dent, Mrs. Anthony fled to Chief
Peart's home where she was ad·
ministered first aid.
It was not until the following
morning that Peart and an assis-
tant city manager visited the
Anthony home, removed some
loaded pistols ; but still did not
take the mayor into custody.
· That did not happen for another
24 hours.
•
Jt is not difficult to imagine
how long an ordinary citizen
would have remained free in
such a case.
Having been involved in
an earlier, but much less signifi·
cant example of special treat-
ment for city officials, Chief
Peart should have been even
more alert to the need for equal
justice.
At that time the chief down·
graded a petty theft report on the
police books when a city council
member drove away from a gas
station without paying a $.1.87
bill. He later was accused of
"poor judgment."
U that was poor judgment,
what would the current case be
called?
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvit·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Sox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
6"2·4321.
LM.-Boyd/Useful, skill
What IOrt ol •kl.II cao you learn
that will eam you a 1ood llvtnc with
little threat that you'll be replaced by
a machine? Not too many auch
career craftl come to mbMi, what?
Bat one such ta w11mUtnc. TboH
wbo put topther fancy halrpleca
ta)' they don't worry much about
bavln1 to look for other llnet at work ctown tbe line. •
Writ.ea a client: "U you dcl:l't tb1nk tt aa11 ln the Bible that there were
tlll'ee wtte men, read Matthew 2:1·
II." Qalte IO. Wlae qien tt mentions,
tbouch not t.IU'ee. Three 1i1b are
SdenWlecho, some acholan eay that
suggesta the number or wise men,
one glft from each.
How do you account for the • fact
that women 1enerally are more
satisfied with their firat names -than
men are with theira? Survey!~ re·
pdtedly.sbow tbia. But tM anlll,.U "
offer no expluationa. Too obfloui, ·
maybe. That more men thu women
w'"t to be somebody tbey'19ft0t.
YC>u say you wouldn't care to eat
snails? How about that seafood
labeled abalone 1i.u? It'• pret~
popular on the Weat Coast. An
abalone la just a bl& Mqolna an.U.
••
Armed service skills sagging:~
w ASHINGTON -Nine out or 10
American soldiers who operate and
maintain the Army's nuclear weapons
in Western Europe flunked basic tests
of their military skills last year. This is
an appalling statistic, but frankly, it
comes as no great surprise. For years I
have warned about the deterioration of
our armed services.
While the shocking details have often
been hidden from the American public,
our Gls' iJ>.adequacy is no secret to our
allies. WeSt German Foreign Minister
Hans Mathoefer once remarked in dis·
gust, "At least our soldiers do not use
drugs and can read and write."
My associate Ron McRae bas seen
classified studies that leave no doubt
about the cause of our problem: The
United States has put the burden of its
defense largely on the poor and un -
educated. As a result, with the Defense
Department about to spend billions on
sophisticated new weapons, the services
don't even have properly trained
personnel to man the weapons we
already have.
HERE ARE SOME OF the depressing
details from unpublished reports:
-Not only did 90 percent of U.S.
nuclear weapons technicians fail their
basic-skills tests. but 86 percent of the
Army's artillery crewmen flunked, as
did 77 percent of the computer pro-
grammers, 89 percent of the tracked·
vehicle mechanics and 82 percent of the
Hawk surface·to-air missile crews.
-Many technical manuals have been
converted to comic·book formats
G. -----------------------JACI AllfRSDI
because the Army's technicians can't
understand standard written instruc.
tions. One unit found that a third of its
supervisory personnel were functionally
illiterate. Black soldJers, incidentally,
score better than whites. apparently
because the Army is seen as a road to
opportunity by blacks -but a dead-end
by better-educated whites.
-IN NATO competitions, handpicked
American crews finish dead last with
dismal regularity. ln a recent gunnery
exercise, American crews failed to
score a single hit, whjle allied gunners
racked up scores or 70 p ercent or better.
-In all of the Army's combat
units, there is a total of just 25 enlisted--
men with college degrees serving their'
first enlistment. Since World War JI!!
college-educated enlisted men have1
kept the paperwork flowing as clerks-.
and supply personnel. Now these func·
tions have to be done by junior officers!.
or senior noncommissioned officers;
with better things to do. '1
-Multimillion·dollar aircraft are sit.,.
ting idle because the maintenance staff
doesn't know how to order spare parts,
or because there aren't enough trained•
mechanics to keep the planes servlcea-·
ble. c
THE ARMY might take a leaf from.
the Marine Corps, which emphasizes\
quality in its recruits -"a few good1
men." The Marines claim they now.J
have the finest personnel they've ever0
had, and outside experts agree. ,J
The Reagan administration has
signaled its intention to make service
careers more attractive, and Congress''
seems to be in a mood to go along. Burl
many experts are pessimistic. They se~
no way to lure the better·educated midi!
die class back into military servic~:
voluntarily. •
The only r ecour se, these experul
believe. is a return to some kind of draft'
within the next four years. .1
Polls show impact of women's vote
W ASHlNGTON -The official White
House line, as articulated by the presi·
dent's pollster, ~ichard Wirt.blio, is that
Ronald Reagan's popularity ratings
have dropped because his economic
program is so tough that it is making
everybody a tittle angry.
Those nice folks from Call/ornia may
not be lying about that, but they are try·
Ing to kid WI a bit.
There really was some shock around
here when the second Gallup Poll of the
new admirtlstration was released. Alter
all those nice' stories about Roa and
Nancy and all that talk about natJonaJ
optimism . . . the president came out 18
points lower than Jimmy Carter ~ad
durine the same week four ye!" ago.
Tbe question. asked every lour years,
is: ''Doyouapproveoftheway ( ) is
handling bis job as president? When that
blank was filled with Jimmy Carter's
name in March. urn. 75 percent ol those
answering said, "Yes."
This year, with Reagan's name in the
space, only S9percentsaid "Yes.''
BUT ECONOMIC boldness was not
the principal reason for Reagan's
decline, whatever the While House
would have us believe. The reason,
shown by other polla and by so~e of
Gallup's figures, is not spending cuts .
The reason is El Salvador.
In the Gallup Poll, the tip-off comes
when you compare the president's ap-
proval rating among men and with bis
rating among women. Male respondents
RICllAll Rf fVll
backed Reagan by 64 percent to 22 per·
cent -a 42 percent positive margin -
wlth 14 percent undecided. Women sup·
ported him 56 percent to 25 percent -a
31 percent margin -wi~ 19 percent un-
decided. .
T.ft'T'S AN 11 percent overall di!·
ference. It's already getting close to the
difference on ElHtion Day last year,
when men voted for Reagan over Carter
by more than 20 percentage points wbi!e
women divided their vote equally
between the two candidates. The reason
then, polls and lntervle~ indicated,
was that Reagan was perceived as be·
ing more militaristic. He was, as many
women thought. inore likely tO get us
Into war.
"He has had some slippage becausJ
of the economy, particularJy among
blacks," said Patrick Caddell, who was .
President Carter's pollster, and has 1
~en independently surveying Reaian's'
popularity. "But the major reuob lor" rua popularit~ drop is that the tough talk
on El Salvador juat confirmed a lot otl
fears that women had about Reagab. He~
was weak already with women and biS'
patterns of support are tending to go-~
back to where they were before the'
election. One ol the reasons these num-
bers mtg.tit be more significant than:·
they seem to be is that women have'·
always tended' to be a bit more sup-'
portive• ~ inctambent presidents than
men." r
, J
THOSB NUMBERS akeady seem'
very significant to me -both tor the
future of Ronald Reagan and the coun-1
try. They reaffirm, at least for me, tb6-
biggest story or the 1980 election:
Women are declaring political indepen~i
dence. They are thinking and acting difJ
ferently from men. Polls have alwa)'Sl
shown women to be less mililattsticl
than men -in 1969 Gallup polls, 64 per-
cent or women Identified themselves as
"doves" compared with only 48 percent
of men -and In 1980 they began to vote
differently. In a big way. · 1
A long, ~ard day at the supenn~ke.t etc.
What a day! Fir•t." bad to go to
supermarket. Hatesboppio1. Themlasus
bad liven me a lilt:
"2 lb. potatoes." Old potatoes? New
potatoes? Sweet potatoes? Froien trench
tries? Baaged asaortroent. Check.
· 'l cube marg." What brand? Who
knows? Check. "Doz. egp." Lar1eT
I •
"do not squeeze the triggers."
Asked clerk if be bad any specials.
"Well, there are these Saturday Ni1ht.s
for only $29. 99,'' he said. ••Just rot a fresh
sbipmentln from Florida.''
ASllED HIM which gun he would
recommend. He frowned. ·'That
depends," he a.aid. "What did you plan to
utefUor1
"To kill people,',' t •-14 testily. Such a
dumb q\Mf.tloll! ls there aft)' other use on
earth for• bandaun? Tbe clerk SJl\irked. •'Anyone in
particular?" bel=r. 4'Mtndyourown~•!'' lsnapl*t.
Rul17, ~ ablJutDOIY ! ttr were buylna a
lee oflambwould h• 'IHDt to know wt.om I
wu bavtn,fordlnMrT
t mmt al)' U..t par btm lD bis place. He
retreated quletly, t picked out • nice .38,
plated It tn tM cart ad beaded tor the
.checkout COQnter. '•A double ba&,
pleue,'' l Wd!M cl•k. "And don't put
th• ... t.apoltbetUI ...
'19'iNUdn1,'' be satd . ........ llillu.laore. t roraot "1 qt.
m&k.'! :AhrUI '°'1et "l qt. rnli." Hatt
mlk • ..;P.i4~ away in ldtcMn. ~ ~~.Hadte,.,_ditver 1
liceDM""""9d. Wbat ad&J!
LONG LINS fwr&Aal idea~. LoDa~,.. IOI' wrtu. telt:~ . .LUdc)' , ••
ltlidltll ~8'"'1. ••o. .,,.......,, .. u oa·
com1.-car at nl'9lt, you malt dim ~
li1hts withJn (a) 800 feet; <b> 500feft; C.c)
wbocares?" Mlasedflve.
Had to stand ln Une for eye test. Had to
stand In line to have picture taken. Did J
wanttobefingerprinted? ldidnot. "Looae
here, ~oung lady," I said angrily, ''Y«I
have put me throu1h t.hrff bourt o(
rigmarole to make sure I know the laws1
can see what I'm almill1 at and will be
identifiable to the authorities the moment
ltake aateerl111 wheelln haod. Why? '1 •
"Becuase, alr," -ahe •aid snootily ••automobiles can kill people.••
Such a <\&Jmb answer! Who on ta~
would want to kill anybody with d
automobUe? .}
\
"l'lft qulttlna, ~DMD Cnlloe. It bu beea im-t:lftl beblt your 'Man Friday' -.nd Monday, Tuelday,
Welt!telday and Thunday."
Marine cited
62 years late
SAN DIEGO CAP> -At 21, Charles Gukill
was ltft for dead ln World War I with poison gas in
his lWigs, bullet wounds in a leg and his shoulder
broken by a German rifle butt.
The young Marine corporal out of Washington
~ate College at Seattle was on the Champagne
f•ont in the last big push of the war in October
1~18. After losing 6,000 men, French troops were
rtplaced by American Marines on Blanc Mont
rid1e.
. In a citation Tuesday, 62 years later, the
N arine Corps says Gaskill's sergeant was
wounded and he volunteered to lead a 17-man
patrol to knock out a German machine gun which
was boldinguQtheAmericanadvance.
l
BUT GERMANS AMBUSHED them, killing 12
in hand-to-hand fighting. Gaskill remembers that
••a big German got behind me and chopped down
at my neck with his rifle butt."
The blow broke his shoulder, but Gaskill and
other· survivors moved on. A shell hit, burying
Gaskill up to his n•ck. He was du1 out but a
medical corpsman saw him coughing up blood and
told the stretcher-bearers to leave Gaskill in favor
of another American with a better chance of
living.
: A DAY LATER, A French soldier found him,
ci!fered some cognac and helped him to a field
hospital.
. The National Military Order of the Purple
Heart found out that Gaskill never got his medal
and collected proof in his behalf. Brig. Gen. James
McMonagle designated himself to pin the Purple
fJeart on GaskiJJ in the ceremony Tuesday at the
Marine Corps Recruit Depot.
Charles Gaskill, now 84, has a medal finally
for the wounds he suffered in World War I.
Lawsuit dropped
irwolving church
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The Riverside County
District Attorney's office has dropped a case in-
volving the Church of Scientology, but a suit by the
church alleging civil rights violations continues.
The district attorney after nearly two years of
legal battles, decided thb month it did not have
enou1h evidence to prosecute the church for al-
legedly using its members to take out loans based
on false employment information to pay for Scien-.
tology courses.
Prosecutor Gary Tranbarger said church rec-
ords were seized from the Roverside mission in
June 1979 after several disenchanted members ac·
cused t.be leaders of the actions. A month alter the raid, church lawyers ob-
tained a temporary court order sealing the rec-
ords contendinJ that some of the documents
wete' "sacred religious confessionals."
the records remained sealed during about 18
months of legal battles, but were reopened in
Jan~ary.
Tranbarger said after review, the prosecution
declded it did not have enough evidence for a case.
He added the district attorney's office would have
dropped the case sooner if the court had not or·
deted the documepts sealed.
NSW ltNOXVJLLS, Ohio <AP> -AD FBI
lnvHtlaaUoa into alle1ed laflltratlo11 '' tw~ d•f•DH plant.I by Tia• Way latematlonal 11
ludicl'GUI, qya a •DOketrnan for the rell1loua lroup t.Ut reportedly bu conducted ,-eapon
tralnlnf cdu ...
There could be foUowen ol Tb• '!l•Y at \he two
Chryller Corp. plants. '1but mont Roman Catllollct
ue probably work1ni t.bete and tbey are ~ belft1
accu1ed of lnflltratln1," 1ald LonneU Johnaoo,
1pokeaman for The Way, which la baMd n4'ar this
weatem Ohio town.
"Any uaoclatlon ls purely coincldent .. l," be
Hid. "There is no connection any more ~an if a
person were Roman Catholic or Baptlat.' .,
Earlier thla week, th• Cblcaeo S -Times
quoted a Chrysler official as say-ins the BI bas
been called in to check reports that foUo~era of
The Way were worklnt at plants in Warren, Mich.,
and l.Jma, Ohio.
,,
"We do have a prelimiUI')' inve1tl1atJon under way la accordance -1th tbe ext1tin1
dome.tic aeeurity 1utdellnes to determine If there
have Men any violations of federal law," FBI
tpokesman Wiley Thompson said In Wa1blnston.
D.C. "Tbere have to. be allecatlons of crlmJnal
activity present for the aeency to undertake an
invesU1aUoo." •
TbomPIOll would not elaborate.
John Swffney, director of the ClUzens
Freedom Fouadatlon, a nationwide anti-cult
network, said be wu interviewed by the FBI at bla
California home in February. He said an
unldentltled a1ent ••told me that they're very
concerned -not from the religious an1le but from
the security angle."
Bob Heath, a ~rysler ~eaman, said the
automaker had not been informed of any
investigation, adding "Chryslenlid not in the past,
nor are we presently conducting any kind of
\
trive1U1atioo. ·' The Way International deacrlbet ltHU u a
blbllcal research center that al10 conduct•
weapons trainln& for "b~ttn1 a nd outdoor
safety.''
According to Johnson, tbe lnvuU11t1on., Ja
baaed on the usumptlon that the or1a.oh:1Uoo it
tryln1 to learn about 1overnment weapon.s. He
blamed the media "for blowina out or proportion"
a huntin• course offered at The Way CoUeie in
Emporia, Kan. The class was dropped, he Hid.
The Way is not a paramilitary oraanlzatton,
Johnson said.
The lnvestiaatlon reportedly be,_!n late tut
year when a civilian Airmy employee reported
members of The Way had obtained jobe, some ln
sensitive positions. at the plants, which produce
and test M-60 and M-1 <formerly XM·l) tanks. Tbe
M·l tank is said to be the most sophisticated tank
weapon now in production by any nation.
Coming soon to Orange County
and the San Fernando Valley.
Bank of America Pushbutton Banking:
Banking with us will be m ore convenient
than ever. With your VERSATEL card you can
make transactions at n~arly 40 VERSATELLER™
automated teller m achine locations in Orange
County and the San Fernando Valley any
hour from 6 a.m. to midnight, 7 days a week.
It's as quick and easy to use as a push-
button phone. Your VERSATEL card and confi-
dential ID Code identify you. The ma~hine
asks which se rvice you want. You press a few
buttons. And in seconds you can withdraw
cas h,.make a deposit, make a loan payment
or handle other routine banking transactions.
Early birds cash in. The first'S0,000 cus-
ton1ers who become VERSATEL cardholders
beginni.ng April 13th, will receive a $2
Deposit Bonus. For your application, ask at
any Orange County o r San Fe rn ando Valley
branch. And plan now to try
Pushbutton Banking. Personal
demonstrations start May 4 .
l
by VlroJJ Partch (VIP)
\\This slice has a knothole in it." · "George, that 11NOT1 r9Cllner!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson Hank K~tchum
~ ~,.
"Never mind catching the fly! You're mak-
ing mincemeat out of my sofal"
-. ~I
"Don't be afraid. Joey. If an'yone says anything -i
to us. we JUSt say SHHHHHHHHHHI ..
IJii."'.:m--l!!!ll~!!l!!!!e'rovm;o;;(;fOi;tt561 DON' l YOU DARE 10UCH MY I FEEL !JC> FORTUNA1E ro HAVE AOOEV f1,f) A
FRIEND! bHf'!> BEEN
WONDERFUL TO ME'
MOON MULLINS
DE!J6ERT. COUNSELOR! I'M
HAVIN6 ll WHEN I 6£1 &ACK!
~ by Ferd & Tom Johnson
Dear&-~,
I still think
of you often.
GORDO
1\1£ 8Utl &if'1'1NC,
SOM£ ~'fftANCt.£ NOME
CAL.I.~ LA'fC\.."11
M£1Lt
DR.SMOCK
C&..AMP !
SPONG!!.' COMING •uP/
~r loved Pl mo~ than life f tself, but
pi turned mt down.
I WONDER
WHAT IT IS
So why am I
writing to you.?
c-,_,..,.,_.
by Ernie Bushmiller
by Gus Arriola
WHAi ~RI Of THE C'-X..L.£ IS ~
BEAN PL.ANT IN Rl&Hi NOW ~
114£ ~E ~IN&!>, I
SA-4 Mt\.l.O, &\J'f 'ft4f;
l ALLtR N£~~ SA-IS
•AN-f-1\41NEr ! ----
1"14£ N I ~AH& llf', AtilQ
rf flUl&S AbAtN, ANO
14£ ~£ 1''41N'7 ~A~~I
11' ~-!> Ot.l AU.
NI~~ I.ON& !
by Kevin Fagan •
MA'f&t rr'S AN Of~l£"4E
~'AU.tit~·~ Y£~ ~M-4.
by George Lemont
'CAUS~ ,.HE!N 1. 'P e>ecoMe AN ACC!!SSOA.-,.t .'
D&Aa &l.AOBU: Yter no.-,. .... •
1•r ~...._ Wltat'• •Ille a-.-1 .. eu ........... ..ay _, ............ ....
••~ •ereltHt1, '•' alto by la1uHee
eela .............. pecd•4* ..... ,.,.. w .••• , ................. ,..
Ilk• Mw ,f"Hl!lptly , .. PIJ JOV ......... eaa •••• die ,~, ot , .. frteadl •••
a•ISllbora •• you ellarader, 1eaeral ~tadoe ud mauer of Uvla1. ~~ow do yoa kaow If aafavorable ___ ..._ II la you ftle? U9Cler &M law
..,._ ... deaJes JH credit or employmeat
. •r flliilli ,.., iasuuee rates oe tile bull of
•• UfaHrable credit r~ 11 reqalred te
Wt ,. .. lite re11oa for ~Ile deellloa, aad lO
•revkk roa ~ &lie 1ame ud addret1 of the erfflt as-e1 ... , prepared die report.
Y• line a rtlll& to c•tact u.e reportbls 11ency ud tell tllem JCNI wut lO review
7owr ft.le. U yoa make tMI req•lt wt&kln •
•111· ol ftndl.D1 oat a•t your problem, the
r-.ortJ.Dc company eaa't daarse you for the HrVlce.
If you find lnaccarate or Incomplete
IBformatloa ta yoar rue, point It 0.& to tlte
credit •&ency. Unlea1 your objecdou are
obvlouly frholoUI or lrrelenat, tltey're
required to re·lnveaticate. If tltl1 aecoad
clteek fa.111 to verify Uaf laformatloa, tltey're
legaU, boaad to remove U from your rue.
Evea If the re·l•n1tlgatloa doe11't
re1ult In the removal or correction '' objectionable Information, you have the right
to lnclllde yoar own venloa of the dllpate,
where It will be part of all future report.I.
In deallnc with a credit report1n1
agency, It's also Important to know what
rt11tu you don't have oder the law. Yoa
can't, for instance, demand free of charce
the kind ol report on yourself that a business
gets when It pays for the reporting
company's services. Nor are you legally
entltled to a copy of your rue, althoap some
agencies wllJ give you one. And regardless of
what you resolve with the creibt reporting
agency, tbe law does not compel anyone to do
business with you.
A booklet by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. gives all tbe details. Order
your free copy of "Fair Credit Reporting
Act" by writing to Consumer Information
Center, Dept. I08J, Pueblo, Colo, 81009.
• "Got a problem' Then wnte to Pot \..l Dunn. Pot wiU cut red tape, getting
• the an.nuen and action you nud to
•
solt>t inequit~s in gove-rnment and
,... busmen. Moll your questions to Pat
I I Dunn, At Your Seroice, Orange C006t·
Doily Pilot, P.O Bo:r 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 As
many letters a& posnble will be answered, but phoned
inquiries or letters not including the rNder's full
name. addreu and bu.riMu hours' phone number
cannot be COMldered. This column a~rs daily ez
cept Sundays."
rend switches
population
CHICAGO CAP> -Migration out of big cities
s translated to faster population growth in rural
eas then in urban areas for the first time since
orld tvar II, a Loyola University sociologist
ys. . The trend is a nationwide phenomenon,
rofessor Kenn~th M. Johnson said in releasing a
udy or preliminary data from the 1980 census.
The figures indicate that rural population
cross the country rose in the past decade by 15
rcent and the metropolitan population by 9.1
ercent.
Johnson said the dis parity is more pronounced
i Illinois, with only 1.5 percent growth since 1970
r urban areas and 5.2 percent increase in rural
reas.
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WINI AW.ARD -
Irvine J'eSldent Irene
McCarthy ·has re-
ceived 1980 Dolphin
scholarship from
women's arm of
Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of
Commerce . Ms .
McCarthy will use
$500 award to further
her graduate studies
ln real estate and
,
management at Cal
State Fullerton.
;:: Democrats
I.
·· lose in
,.
1 • state purge
.,. SACRAMENTO <AP>
•' -The Democrats lost
the most heavily in the
automatic purge follow-
1 n g last November's
election, Secretary of
State March Fong Eu
has reported.
Vote rs are purged
from the rolls if they
both failed to vote and
moved so that their mail
couldn't be delivered.
They must regist e r
again in order to vote.
Ms. Eu said 10,939,951
voters remained a fter
the purge: 8,775,459 of
the 11,361,020 registered
in November had voted.
OF THE 421 ,069
"lost" voters, 233,947 or
55 .6 pe r cent were
De (Ylocrats, lowering
that party's registration
to 5,809,042 or from 53.2
percent to 53. l percent
of the total.
The Republicans lost
only 113,558 or 27 per·
cent ol the loss, leaving
3,828,910 registrants, up
from 34. 7 percent of the
total to 35 percent.
The "de cli ned ·tO ·
s tate" regi s trants
dropped 52,278 for 12.4
percent of the loss. end-
ing with 1,018,543 or 9.3
percent or the total reg·
isle red.
THE AMERICAN In-
d e pendent party lost
7 ,353 members, r etain·
ing 139,845 or 1.3 percent
of the total.
The Libertarians lost
7 ,459, leaving 79,734 or
0. 7 perc~nt of all the
voters.
Animal
" abuse cited
I· in schools
NEW YORK (AP ) -
Totally "unjustifiable
atrocities" against
animals are being
•' com milted at school
sc i ence fairs , the
American Society for
the Prevention o f
Cruelty lo Animals has
charged, eiting the case
of a 10th grader who
bled rats for up to 18
hours.
'the ASPCA warned it
,, will take legal action, if
necessary, to stop the
, abuses.
I I The ASPCA cited a
;. project submitted by a
& Brooklyn high school
, • s4pi.omore to th e
" curtent New York City
Science Fair. The
project's goal wu "to
demonatrate the
bleed.inl time Of rats,'·
and the rodenta were
bl~ for 16 to J8 boura.
In another Science
Fair project, t.be t0elety
Hid, an el1hth-1ude
atudent from Qunns
appffed e11u:er-cau1in1
elaemtula to abDut 35 to
40 mice to determlae
--.ether 1•rlic would cure cancer.
CAWBRlDG&. Mut .. <AP) AlumaJ GI tie ....
colleae IOdal ll'OUP ln tbe nat:loa have been Nki4 to IMIP
Harvard's Hasty Puddlnl Club pay tlS0,000 bl mortaa,..,
proper1J taxes and Mbtl that mlabt COit the oraanlutloa
lts cutJe-like clubhouse.
omcen of tbe 211.year-old club couJd aot be reacb.t
tor comment on the report lJl the Harvard Crimson, tbe
campus newspaper.
The Hasty Puddina Theatticala. the oldest U.tater club
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IN 8 '' POTS
In tit• uuon. ii a part ol tbe IOCJaJ club IMlt operaa. UAdtl'
• Hpar.te budtet. It.I yNrly Cambrtdee productlona are
petfonned 1n tbe club bulldlnt. and die tMatrtcall' man·
and ~-the-year awards an Preletlted tlleH.
The (club owet 1bout •11,000 t.n back tue1. Dnld
O'Connor. • lawyer with UM Cambrtdae delinquent tu
unit, ~ the Crimaon that the city bu "for a whlle
def erred any tas tuina.
·•we will not do tt much tonier," O'Connor said. ''If
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reduced by law, 1tartin1 ln July.
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•II ,,.,
QULVER CITY CAP > .,.
-Republican Sen. S.I.
Hay akawa says the ~(•
growing ranks of his
challengers are "soft in ~') : 'II the head they don't
know what they'r e
doing:·
Hayakawa, 75. said he )
hopes the list o r
challengers grows to
100, remarking, "The
more the merrier. Then "'
they'll knock each other
off and I'll win." •
A M 0 N G t h o s e ·ll
considering challenging '" him in the 1982 primary ,.,,.
are former Sen. Dennis ,,
Carpenter of Newport
B~ac h , Reps . Barry
Goldwater Jr .,
R-Woodland Hills and I
Paul N . "Pete " 'l
McCloskey Jr., R-Menlo r:
Park, Maureen Reagan, /
daughter o f the
president and Loyola
Law Schoo l Dean 1 ...
Theodore A. Bruinsmat. 11
H ayakawa ,
addre ssing the
California Scholastic
P.ress Association this : ,
week, said Northern ..
California olive growers
had suffered a $500
million loss last year .,,
b e c a u s e t h e ~
Imm igration a nd ·1
Naturalization Service ~:..
bad deported 500
undocumented workers
just before lhe harvest
time and growers
contended there were .,~
not enough workers to ,,,
bring in the crop.
WHAT HE meant to ·11
say, an aide explained
late, was that $500,000
was the estimated loss '6
Moonies
hit uith
1,am,uit
!\ I
•J
1•
SAN FRANCISCO 'l '" (AP> -Claiming she ·r
was brainwashed during
the five years she was a
Moonie , a f ormer
Unification Church .,
member has filed a $10 °
million lawsuit against
the church. ..,
Barbara Dole. 24, of )
Wynnewood, Pa .. said ·] she spent five years as
"a beggar on the :
streets" for the church 1
and collected nearly
$300,000. •
David Hagg«:r.
directbr of legal affairs
for the church in New
York, ca lled th e
allegations "absolute
nonsense.'' ·
THE SUIT was filed
recently in Alameda
County Superior Court.
In It, Ms .. Dote · said
church members l
• enticed her to attend a
weekend workshop after I l
she met them in I
November 1975 at UC
Berkeley. 1
The group told her it j was "concerned about
social and ecological
' problems," but at the'
workshop she w11
"subject.eel to . . . mind
control technlque1 and
... a sophisticated
• i n d o c t C' l n· a t i o n
procedure," the s ull
said.
RAD SHE been told
the iroup represented
the Rn. Sun Myun1
Moon's church, the suit
said, abe would not have
attended.
Ms , Dole left
church lut Au1u1t.
PlTl'SBURGR(AP> -Talklna e&evaton IUlde ee workers tbroqh U.. upa fnd downl of life tn the W..un,boule Electric Corp. belidquarten.
But the deal1nen of the amootb-volced
menell say the elevators actually are open1.n1
dotr• on a qUlckl~ approacblna ace when ~m
puten and macbtnet will talk wfth the people who
optrate tbem.
• 'Thll 11 one of the fint commercial appllca-
tl°'1 ol voi~ 1)'11thetll on the muitet, '' aaya Alan
M'8del, one or the enstneen wbo helped create
tht bank of eJevaton ~tb courteoua electronlc
voices.
04'1REaE Aat: A NVllBU ol meua1ea, like,
•p ue let the doort clo1e,' U you bold them open
too lone.'' be says. "The system 11 smart enoush th~t if someone walks on and doesn't pmb a button
for a noor1 lt says, 'Please select your noor.' and
after you ao it says, 'Tbank you."'·
Althou1h Westlngb'ouae bellevea Ila
Mi~roPbonlc-80 system will usllt the blind and
the absent-minded, Mandel doe&D't pretend the I world baa been eagerly awaitln1 the tauung
elevator.
Instead, he says the invenUoo is important for
j
another reason.
"'Ibis whole spe~b technology ts about to toe
o~!t" Mandel says ~n a burst of enthusiasm.
"whatever you can dream in a few years wiU
become a reality! _,
I -. ·'One day a voice from the dashboard of your
car ls going to tell you when your oil ls low or
I when your alternator is goln1 bad. Your oven is
.
&olna to tell you wben dinner lt done, wflen to
baste tbe turkey and bow to make your
craadmother'a favorite Ntlpe," ... 11y1. "And it'•
all pouible becaUH ol the mlcJ"OPl'OCetlOr. ''
MlcroproceJ1ora, tbe mint-1l1ed wafen of
1Ulcon com~, coolly perform the electronic
•funcUou that once required a roomful of hot
vacuum &ubel.
Capable of replacine tens of thouaaf ds of tranalltors, mJcroprotesaon already have elped
reduce the alze and prtce of calculators an com-
puten, boost the t\ael efficiency of som auto
en1lnee, and more recently, re-create sound
For now, thoulh, commercial products featur· •
in1 voice ayntheslaera are limited to a few i~ma -
the Westinghouse elevator, a talkinl box th.i helps
children learn to spell, and a talklnl alarm clock
that 1ets more insistent the tonier ill 411aater
sleeps. ·
Voice synthesizers are not to be confused wi&b
recordings, which for years have provided enter-
tainment and added a touch of sophistication to
dolls, robots, amusement hall games and even
elevators.
"WE'VE BAD A TALKING elevator for years,
but they're taped systems," says .Tim Davis,
spokesman for Schindler-Haug.btoo, one of several
companies tied as the third-leading el,vator·
makers behlnd industry leaden Otis and Weat-
liighouse.
"In department stores, the tape would tell you
what's on that floor, and there'd be music and a
little advertising thrown In," be says.
Conventional voice recordinss store sound as a
groove In a vinyl disk or as a malJletic pattern on
plastic tape. The sound is reproduced mechanical-
ly by spinning the dish under a phono1rapb needle
or pulling the tape past electronic tape bead's.
BUNNY RIDE -Two Baton Rouge, La.,
youngsters look on with excitement as an
Easter bunny passes through their
neighborhood. Underneath the huge ears is
Mary Martin, a student nurse at
Southeastern Louisiana College.
Unruh aide goes to brokerage company
Unruh said in a statement that he accepted 'the
resignation "with deep regret."
1
1
Condors souglit
for breeding But electronic voice reproduction involves no
moving parts and, perhaps more importantly,
holds the promise of one day enabling co"puters
to construct sent~ces after being "taught" a
vocabulary.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treas urer Jesse
Unruh's top aide, Grover McKean. has left his job
to join a private brokerage firm.
McKean, 32, said he ls trading bis $52.000-a -
year job as chief deputy treasurer for one with
Shearson Loeb Rhoades, In~ .. lo Los Angeles, that
pays "substantially more."
In an interview. McKean said he handled gov-
ernment financing during his six years with ·:
VENTURA <AP) -Kesearcbers seeking to
f learn more about the end ..... ered California con·
dor have asked the state permission to capture
some of the giant birds and breed several in cap·
tivity at the San Diego Zoo.
No California condor bas ever been born in
captivity, but John Bornemd, the National
Audubon Society representative to the Condor
Research Center here, said this week center of·
ficials hope the plaDl)ed breeding experiments
would be successful.
BORNEMAN SAID THE 'grpup has asked the
state Fish and Game Commission "for permission
to capture an as yet undetermined number of con·
dors for radio telemetry and captive breeding."
The state agency bas scheduled a public bear·
ing on the matter for May 26, Fomeman s~id, and
the commission is expected to reach a fmal de-
• cislon at its July 28 meeting.
HE SAID THE PROPOSED research -along
with similar work under way in the Peruvian
Andes with other breeds of vultures -is important
to learn more about the condors' flight, nesting
and breeding habits, as well as threats they face
• and causes of mortality.
Such work with condors has been restricted
since the death last June of a condor chick that
suffered shock and heart failure after being
handled by an Audubon Society researcher in the
Sespe Condor Refuge near here.
Borneman said only adults -no chicks
would be used in the proposed experiments.
Junk f ooth /,ead
to offlery dnmks
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Steady diets of junk
food can cause dietary deficiencies that may lead
to aggression and cravings for alcohol, tobacco
and drugs, a diet researcher says.
"Food can directly aff~t particulait behavior
patterns," said Alexander Schausa, direttor of the
American Institute for BiosoclaJ Research in
Tacoma, Wash., urging counselors to check diets
while investigating antisocial behavior.
He said, for example, a deficiency of zinc
could reduce a teen·ager's desire for vegetables,
making him irritable.
Netlbme Society CMMAT&i----.AT
646-7431 .... ·-__., ... -.......... ---· .. , . ----c.-11r-...-M-~·
DEATH NOTICES
ISLAS
MARY P. <PENA> ISLAS,
age 36. resident or Santa Ana .
Ca. Passed away on April 12,
1981. She is survived by 2
children Mike Pena. Jr .. and
----------1Victoria Pena both or Santa
Ana. Ca. She also leaves
behind 4 brothers and 2 sis·
HAU01 UW~MT. OUVI
Mortuary• Ceme1erv
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa Mesa
5<40-5554
PllllCl .. OTHIH
l&l•OADWAT
MOttTUAaY
, 110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
ULn& .. ••OM
SMITM & lVTMtU
WffleLWCHAPll
427 E 17th St
Cotta Mesa
~&.9371
ters. Reci~Uon or the Rosary
will be on Tuesday, April 14.
1981 al 7:00PM at l1"\ Baltz
Ber,eron·Smith & Tuthill
Westcllff Chapel. Mass of the
Resurrection will be on Wed·
neaday. April 15, 1981 al
lO:OOAM at Our Lady of
Guadalupe Catholic Church,
Santa Ana. Ca. with Rev.
Gablno Perez officiating. In·
terment will be at Harbor
Lawn Memorial Park.
Services under the direction
of BaJu Bergeron-Smith &
Tuthill Weatcliff Chapel Mortuary &t&-9371.
KENNEDY
LOIST. KENNEDY. a resl·
dent of Newport Beach. Ca.
Pused away on April 12, 11181.
Born January 3, 1911 In
Cblcaao, Illlnola. Survived by
her 1lstft Abble Startord of
Auatralla. Funeral services wlU be held on Wednesday.
A»rU U , 11181 at.2:00PM atSt.
Jt1ne1 &P1Jcopal Church • .Ne~ leacb, C•. Inter·.
tntnl di be at Rote !till Cem~. Cbicap llllJIOl•
Ob Wedne9da)', Aprti 12, 1111.
SIM ~ ~ m•mber of St. "•m• Ifill ~opal Chtth. In· temat.lclnal Game · f'lam. At·
aotlaUon. Th• Newport Rarbcw Auxlliarf, Cllll•
Qqlddee c...r ol Ofenp
Ceunty, tbe Ctdldr ... llom.-
lee19'Y. the Outdoor RJclera
Uaoelatloe of Amerlu, fteatlnll Jlldert lal•tftl· _... ... W~ Yacbt Chae>,1 ,lM AU&Mrl. Oulld, lne.,. 0¥1111t1~,._., Amwtea. .... ~ ........
F .. eratlc*. Paclfte View,
'llOl'tlllr7 Newport Beacll
dlredCld.•
I
What are you waiting for?
Unruh. and "they are hiring me for that expertise,
not for whom l might know."
%State
Thanks to a new California law, you're allowed 40% of the cost of insulating your
attic as a State income tax credit-up to a maximum of $1500. (Less any Federal tax
credit or utility subsidy.)
Another nice thing: a tax credit is even better than a tax deduction because it's
subtracted from the taxes you owe, not your income before taxes. SSO on the l",ost. So don't wait. Insulate your attic now .
._, Insulate the attic in your house to tbe
R-19 standard using approved materi,als and the Gas Company will send you a check
for $50. That's wh~~her you have an independent contractor do the job or you do it
yourself. If you have the Gas Cbmpany do the installation, they'll automatically take
OOL fi • $50 off your insulation bill. ·
0 70 ~ftBftCJftg. The Gas Company will lend you the money to
insulate at a low 8% annual percentage rate. All you have to do is be a Southern
California Gas Company residential heating customer and meet the qualiqcations.
Help on your gas bill. · · · ·
Attic insulation means you'll use less ·energy
heating and cooling your home. That'U help keep
your utility bills down.* For more, information
call the Gas Company at 1-800-422-44.22.
LetS work together
to save e.nergy.
.. 6.' '
t t , I ISS!
..
,·
'.
SHOWDOWN DUE -
The re-election of
Premier Rene Leves-
que's separatist
Partl Quebecois in
Quebec is seen as set-ting {be stage for a
possibly climadic
showdown over keep1
ing Canada whole.
Se x bias
• winner
• qwts
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
{AP) -The winner of
what is believed to be
Harvard's first faculty
sex discrimination case
says she will not teach
at the university next
fall.
Dr. Theda R. Skocpol,
33, associate professor
of sociology who
charged s he was not
given tenure because of
her s ex , s aid by
telephone this week
from her hom e in
Princeton, N.J .. that she
will accept one of
several other offers of
tenure.
SHE SAID Harvard
has agreed to reconsider
her tenure application
and a recommendation
will be made in late
May , but s he must
accept one or the offers
from Stanford, Chicago,
North Carolina and
Wisconsin universities
before then.
"Next year I 'll be
elsewhere," said Ms.
Skocpol, who taught at
Harvard for eight years
and then spent a year at
Princeton. "However,
I'm not withdrawing the
case."
She also said if the
tenure decision is made ,
in her favor, she will
consider accepting it
after the 1981 ·82
academic year.
MS. SKOCPOL is the
winner for
"distingui s hed
c ontribution s lo
scholarship." Her 1979
book. "States and Social
Revolution," won the C.
Wright Mills award.
Agnewctue
• testimony
expected
ANNAPOLIS. Md .
(AP > -A former
Maryland road
commissio ner has
agreed to testify against
former Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew in a civil
suit s.eeking $87,000 that
A'gnew allegedly took in
kickbacks while he was
governor, court
documents reveal.
Documents filed this
week indicated Jerome
8 . Wolff negotiated an
agreement with state
officials . to testify
against Agnew in the
upcoming trial of the
lawsuit in return for
being released as a
defendant in the case.
Judge Bruce
Williams, meanwhile,
ruled Agnew would not
be required to testify at
the trial, scheduled to
begin April 21.
Wolff , who was
chairman of the
now -deftmct State Roads
Commiuion, told
federal prosecutors he
acted as Agnew '•
middle m an an d
collected brlbe1 from
Maryland contracton.
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1ia8 work for everyorre but housing is scarce
LI( CITY, Okla. (AP> -bl
1 ateon4t-time boom towa cW oa' the bl1h plalu,
re'• a p&ace for anyone who
nt1 to work -but not
ryoae who come• to wort
ftnd a place to Uve.
be natural 1u boom in Elk
y is larsely hidden from
tortsta ~aaln1 tbroup on
ntate 40, the old Route ae.
e forest of derricks that
rked earlier boomUmea le
e due to an Oklllhoma law · itina drillen to one deep 1u tu per MO acres. , tlut Ute fllutea sUll add u, to '°°m town." '
EaauAav•s aalti;s tax
Qllectlone were 24 pe,rcent
it.er than February 1980, IJld
town's three banka and three
a¥in11 and loans have
tlmated useta of more than
million -about $20,000 for
each maa, woman and cblld ln
tllil town of ie,too.
Tbe ta cemua 1bow1 a 21.7
perceot crowth rate In the 19'10I.
Townapeople think lt was more.
Nearly a quarter of the 182
Some who come
to work must
turnaround
and leave for
want of shelter.
t.elephone directory Yellow
Pages ls listln1s tor companies.
ln the oil and gu business.
Elk Cit)> first stnack it rich on
oil in the 13408 and '50s. Five
years ago another wave of
rrosperit1 rolled over th t.OWll:
ocated 110 mllu frodt
Oklahoma Clty, when tlmen
be1an drillln1 for 1a1 ocked
deep ln the Greater An arto
Baaln.
Experts estimate tbe entire
baaln bold• about 88 .rUlton
cubic feet of recoverable 1u In
deep sones below 15,~ feet.
Shallow zones may cont;ain an
additional 30 trillion cubic feet
or more.
Tbe boom baa brought money
and people to Elk City. bJ,Jt lt bu
also brought trouble, u IJ"Owth
threatens to outstrip the town'a
capacity to provide eaaentlal
services like bousln«i.
Drilling foreman Jerry Grace,
31, supervises two rigs 15 miles
north of town. If a man cets off
the bus in Elk City, dead broke
and unskilled, Grace sais he'll
put him to work that aftrmoon,
~gent Orange defended
Consumer health group rebuts hazards of herbicide .
., WASHJNGTON (AP) -A consumer health
jroup ·says there is no convincing evidence to
' upport banning a controveralal herbicide
~tained in Agent Orange, which was uaed widely
tP Vietnam.
• In a report released Tuesday, the American ~ouncil on Science and Health said the herbicide
2, •• 5-T is not hazardous to people.
But the council's executive director, Dr.
J,:lizabetb Whelan, recommended that it be
regulated to ensure that it is used carefully.
"When used properly, it Is a very useful
ebemical," she said .
~ ''However , it should be regulated to assure
\hat it is used in a prudent fuhion."
" The council concluded tbatl "no scientific
eports presented to date halve shown any
jonvincing relationship between the traditional
~ ~
use of 2,4,5-T and adverse health effects in
humans."
These conclusions, based on an examination of
studies that bad been done on the herbicide, were
challenged Immediately by environmental groups
and others pressing for a total ban on the
chemical.
"It's important to recognhe that you don't
have to wait to act until there is a mountain of
scientific data," said Marchant Went~rtb, a
spokesman for Environmental Action Inc. "There
is mounUng evidence that this chemical and its
contaminants are harmful."
Dr. Whelan , defending the council 's
conclusions, said in an interview, "Any herbicide
has a toxic impact and we are not saying it is safe
at any dose. But at present levels of use, we are
,saying there are no known problems."
· Jlisahled vets protest cuts
'~ FRESNO <AP> -Disabled veterans in Administrator Joseph Mason also bas pro-~• beelcbairs led about 100 demonstrators through posed a two-week suspension for elective surgery.
e downtown area to protest Reagan administra-Also under consideration are eliminatipn of a
n proposals for cuts in veterans benefits. psychiatric unit and an in-patient alcoholism pro-
Members of the San Joaquin Valley Veterans gram.
l ssociation were critical of plans to reduce capaci-"Instead of help, we're being told we're aolng
()' at the Veterans Administration medical center to get cuts," said disabled veteran Reason I
tiere from 258 to 220 beds. Warehime. "lf that happens, it's going to be borri·
kAC:K ANOER!\ON)
;. REVEALS in the ..
ble."
Fresno City Councilman Leonel Alvarado, a
Vietnam veteran, called budget prqposals
"absolutely intolerable."
lOO's
•
..
at $10 IA hour. Witlt ..a unual 51
,.rent. tU1110Yer ln rou•bneea. Grace's operation· la ft\&Dlt)' for
men.
But some wbo come to work
must tum around and leave for
want of shelter.
Garry Dickson, 29, and hla
wlf4', Shirley, rt, drove Into Elle
City one recent rainy day from
Grenada, Mias., their worldly
&oods piled lo the back of a
pickup truck. Dickson, a welder
helper who bu been out of work
for four months, had been
offered a Job bulldinl a n~arby plpellne.
TBE DICKSONS bad been on
the road three days, searchin1
the hi1hways of western
Oklahoma for a place to stay.
"We found some little motels,
one room, no phones, no ice
l>uckets -just a be~. a
bathroom and a TV. And they
wanted $20 a night. That's the
cheapest we could find," the
travel-weary Dickson said.
Houses are for sale in Elk.City
and ·low.rent apartments are
available for those below the
income ceillng. But for people
like Dickson -too poor to buy
and too rich for subsidized
housing -setWng in Elk City
can be a nightmare.
• GROWl'H "HAS put pressure
on u s to work harder at
planning," sa:d Mayor Larry
Wade, who dollbles as publisher
of the local newspapt:r.
But Wade denied that Elk City
is a boom town.. at lenst in the
rougb·and-tumble sense of the
19205.
"The oil and gas industry is so
much more sophisticated ...
People have to know what they're
doing ·more than in the shallow
drilling days," he said. "You're
dealing with people. who are
professionals.''
Source3 protectetl
W A&JUNGTON (AP> -Except
in .. all but the most exceptional"
instances, reporters do not have
to reveal their source• in civU
cases, according to the U .s: Court
of Appeals for the District of
Columbia.
The court made the comment in
upholding a lower court's refusal
to make a reporter for the-Detroit
News reveal 111' sources in a ease
for damaaea acain.st the FBI, the
Justice Department and the al·
tomey t,eneral.
I Af'WI .......
Donald Maninez, left, and Ronni McAUster paint a drilling rig
contracted by GHK Inc. in Elk City, Okla .• one of the state's new era boom towna. .
NAACP to protest
. I Reagan budget plan;
PITTSBURGH CAP > -
Members of the National
AssociatiQn for the
Advancement of Colored People
will l obby C.ongress t,bis
weekend to protest the Reagan
administration 's budget
proposal, which "takes from the
poor and gives to the rich, .. says
the group's director. •
Benjamin Hooks unveiled an
llternative budget that includes
a proposal to eliminate federal
income taxes for families that
earn less than $10,000 a year -a
proposal that would cover 4:$
p~rcent of the nation's black
workers. the NAACP says. The
government 's poverly·line
income for a family of four will
be $12,600 in July.
has work for everyorre but housing is scarce '
LK CITY, Okla. (AP) ...... 18 eacb r ~. WOIDU ud cblld tn rroapeiity rolled over tbi&GWQ;
•' ltCoDd·Ume boom town t.bll town ol lt,too. oc ated 110 m llu from
cW olt tbe bltb plains, Tbe ~ cen.ua 1bow1 a 29.7 Oklahoma City, when lmen
e'a a place for anyone who percent arowth rate ln tbe 19708. be1an drilllnl for 1a1 ocked nta to work -but not Townspeople think lt wu more. deep in the Greatet An arlto
ryoae wbo comes to wort Nearly a quarter of tbe 182 Basin.
ftnd a place to llve. Experts estimate the entire
he natural 1u boom in Elk basin bolds about 88 ~rillion
)' ii lareely hidden from Some who come cubic feet of recoverab!!t.IU in tori1t1 pa11in1 throuab on deep zones below 15,uvy feet.
ntate 40, tbe old Route 68. t k t Shallow zones may contjain an e forest of derricks that 0 UJOr fflUS additional ao trillion cubic feet
rked earlier boomthnea la turn around or more.
e due to an Oklahoma law · The boom bu brought money ~i~ ~Uaencresto. one deep IU and leave /OT and people to Elk City, but lt,.bu
_. ...., 1 also brought trouble, u powth ~tm~wnfla\l(ff... still ad? Uf to want of shelter. threatens to outstrip the town's ~ Ml capacity to provide eaeentlal
FEaavAaY•s saleis tax
ollectiona were 24 percent . &ber than February 1.980, ud
town'• three bank.1 and three
avin11 and loans have
mated uaeta of more than
millloq -about $20,000 for
telephone directory Yellow
Pages la llstinea for companies.
in the oil and gas business.
Elk City fll'St struck it rich on
oil in the 19t0s and 'SOs. Five
years ago another wave of
services like housing.
Drilling foreman Jerry Grace,
31 , supervises two rigs 15 miles
north of town. If a man ceta off
the bus in Elk City, dead broke
and unskilled, Grace saf s he'll
put him to work that aft moon,
~gent Orange defended
~onsumer health group rebuts hazards of herbicide .
.., WASHJNGTON (AP> -A consumer health
jroup says there is no convincing evidence to f upport banning a controverslal herbicide
jOOtained in Agent Orange, which was uaed widely
fn Vietnam.
• In a report released Tuesday, the American
ouncil on Science and Health said the herbicide
2 ••• S-T is not hazardous to people.
But the council's executive director, Dr.
J:lizabeth Whelan, recommended that it be
regulated to ensure that it is used carefully.
''When used properly, it la a very useful ~hemical," she said.
~ "However , it should be regulated to assure
tbat it is used in a prudent fashion."
"' The council concluded tbati "no scientific
~
~
eports presented to date halve shown any
onvincing relationship between the traditional
use of 2,4,5-T and adverse health effects in
humans."
These conclusions, based on an examination of
studies that bad been done on the herbicide, were
challenged immedjately by environmental groups
and others pressing for a total ban on the
chemical.
"It's important to recognhe that you don't
have to wait to act until there is a mountain of
scientific data," said Marchant Wentworth, a
spokesman for Environmental Action Inc. "There
is mounting evidence tha\ this chemical 'and its
contaminants are harmful.••
Dr. Whelan , d e fending the coµncil 's
conclusions, said in an interview, "Any herbicide
has a toxic impact and we are not saying it is safe
at any dose. But at present levels of use, we are
.saying there are no known problems."
· pisahled vets protest cuts
·• FRESNO (AP) -Disabled veterans in Administrator Joseph Mason also has pro-
E• heelcbairs led about 100 demonatrators through posed a two-week suspension for elective surgery.
e downtown area to protest Reagan administra-Also under consideration are ellminati>n of a
on proposals for cuts in veterans benefits. psychiatric unit and an in-patient alcoholism pro-
. Members of the San Joaquin Valley Veterans gram.
~ssociation were critical of plans to reduce capaci-"Instead of help, we're being told we're going
(y at the Veterans Administration medical center to get cuts," said disabled veteran Reason I
here from 258 to 220 beds. Warehime. "If that happens, it's going to be horri·
~A4 :K ANOt:RSON)
; REVEALS in the ..
ble."
Fresno City Councilman Leonel Alvarado, a
Vietnam veteran, called budget prqve>sala
"absolutely intolerable."
1(.)0'.S
• 10nty
41mgtar
... at $10 ID hour. Wit.ta llD MDual 51
,.rcent tunM>Vtr in rouabnetb.
Gtace's operadon' la ftun1ry for
men.
But some wbo come to wort
must tum around and leave for
want ot •helter.
Garry Dlcklon, 29, and hia
wif~, Shltley, 27. drove Into Elk
City one recent rainy day from
Grenada, Miss., their worldly
1oods plied in the back of a
pickup truck. Dickson, a welder
helper who has been out of work
for four months, had been
offered a Job bulldln1 a n~arby
pipeline.
TOE DICK.SONS bad been on
the road three days, searching
the highways of western
Oklahoma for a place to stay.
"We found some little motet.,
one room, no phones, no ice
l>uckets -Just a b e~. a
bathroom and a TV. And they
wanted $20 a nieht. That's the
cheapest we could find," the
travel-weary Dickson said.
Houses are for sale in Elk City
and low-rent apartments are
available for those below the
income ceiling. But for people
like Dickson -too poor to buy
and too rich for s ubsidized
housing -settling in Elk City
can be a nightmare.
• GROWl'H "HAS put pressure
on us to work h arder at
planning," satd Mayor Larry
Wade, who doubles as publisher
of the local newspapu.
But Wade denied that Elk City
is a boom town. at leo.st in the
rough-and-tumble sense of the
1920s.
"The oil and gas industry is so
much more sophisticated ...
People have to know what they're
doing ·more than in the shallow
drilling days," be said. "You're
dealing with people. who are
pr~fessionals."
Sources prot,ecfetl
WA&fflNGTON CAP> -Except
in "all but the most exceptional"
instances, reporten do not have
to reveal their sources in civil
cases, according to the u.s: Court
of Appeals for the DlstriCt of
Columbia.
The court made the comment in
upholding a lower court's refusal
to make a reporter for the-Detroit
News reveal hU sources in a.case
for damqes a1ainst the FBI, the
Justice Department and the at·
tomey t.eneral.
Den
con
era
N
H
p
Me1
As
Adv.
w i l.
wee I
ado
prop
poor
the i
Be
I
..
TILEVISION STOCKS 87
811
. _ ..
• Have you heard
any good books
lately? . . . 89.
CiVic leaders to tak~ Walk for charity
T.ey used t.Q have titles like
l\ff)'cll.na Week or Walk·A·Thon,
but even clv~ events are adopUni
catchyUUd'Ulesedaystocapture
media-conscious patroqa.
Thus, when local dl1nitaries
conyened twice recently to
promote their causes, they
unveiled plans for nothing less
than the Great California
Resource Rally anJl Super Walk
America.
Nothing is simple anymore,
except for the fact that proceeds
from both events will go toward
charities.
ABOUT 9,000 participants are
expected to turn out on Sunday,
April 26 in Irvine to take part in a
smorgasbord of pedestrian
Controls
on home
s ales eyed
The Orange County Planning ·
Com mission has endorsed a
co mpromise agreement to
require resale controls for 30
years on all new "affordable"
housing units built along the
coast
The commission's decision to
go a long with a re cent
agreement reached by county
'
:. and California Coasta l
Com mission aides sets the stage
1 for the co unty Board of
I Supervisors to consider the
compromise May 6.
J
1
THE COMPROMISE is an
agreement that the county will
impose resale controls, or deed
restrictions, on about 3,000 new
low-cost homes expected to be
built in the coastal zone.
In return, the commission and
the state Air Resources Board
are to lift regulations, including
similar resale controls, on up to
5,000 low-cost homes planned in
the jurisdiction of the Aliso
Wate r Management Agency
inland in the south county.
The planning commission
reviewed on Monday local
coastal programs for Dana
Point, Santa Ana Heights and
Aliso Creek
The coastal progr ams are sets
of policies mandated by the
state to s pell out ways local
governments will protect the
coastaJ zones. The state Coastal
Com mission has final approvaJ
power over the policies.
THE COUNTY is responsible
for prod ucing 10 separat e
coastal programs covering
unincorporated parts or the
Orange Coast . The housing
poli cies are expected to be
similar in all.
Altho u gh the planning
commission and the supervisors
each approved the 10 documents
earlier this year. they are going
through the process a second
time after staff planners for the
South Co a s t Regional
Coastal Commission recom·
mended denial of the programs,
partly because or differences on
housing policies.
Orange County officials had
opposed resale controls in the
first versions. Questions still
rem ain whether a majority of
the board of supervisors will
switch positions to approve the
controls to expedite acceptance
of the coastal programs.
She ll blast
· injures two
Mesa girls
A 15-year·old ·boy bas told
Costa Mesa poJice that he didn't
realize the farce of a Sbotl\Dl
shell 'a exploeion when be •c·
cidentally wounded two youn1
lirls in hll neighborhood.
Tbe boy, officeo said, aboved
the abell Into a pipe In hit
aaraae and then hit it with a ham·
mer. ·
The explosion Monday bluted
pellets thrvu&b hla i,.-•1e door.
Two ol the pellet.a bit SbJDna
Lynn Walker, 11, of 641 W. Cove
St., la the arm and Naneea
Salama, 8, of 2082 WaUace Ave.
ln theai&I.
The 1ir11 were treated for
their lQJw1es at Hoa1 Memorial
Hoapttal, poUce reported, after
th~ youth ru1hed out to
apcnolfse.
J . .,.,
actJvtues aponaorfd by the March
of Dimes.
All the even\I be1ln at UM
Oranie County If arbor Municipal
Court faclllUes, 4601 Jamboree
Road.
There will be the 32-kilometer
(20-mile) walk, a one-mile "qec
trek" for well-to-do walken Who
put up $500 and 10-kilometer and
5-kUometerruna.
Runners will pay a '3 entry fee
-$8 if they want T-shirts -and
distance walkers wlll be out to
earn pledge money.
"THE IDEA, OF course, is to
get pledges, to walk, and then to
collect your pledges,'' said
Dorothy Sutherland, executive
'
l
director of the Mareb of Dimes'
Oran1eCounty Chapter.
To lncreue the fun, or&iniiera
also sponsor a so-called team
walk, in which groups can
challenae each other. So far, 108
teams have re1istered, aaid
Charles Stevens, team walk
chairman.
Retired U.S. Marine Corps
Brig. Gen. Thomas Riley, now an
Orange County supervisor, ls
chairman of the exec walk, and
the event has bis trademark. A
3S·piece Marine Corps marching
band will accompany the
executives as they stroll to the
nearby Chanteclair Restaurant
for brunch.
Among those walkers will be
the honorary chairman ot thl•
year's walk, I.Joa Angeles Rama
football Coach Ray Malavut.
He told reporters at a preas coo·
ference Monday that he didn't.
persuade any of biB players to
join the activities.
"I have a hard enough time
getting them to work out in the
off-season," he joked.
Ms. Sutherland said the
chapter's goal is to raise $350,000
this year. The money will go
toward research and care to fight
birth defects. Last year, the event
raised $205,000. •
The Great California Resource
Rally, from April 20 to 26, is
sponsored by the state Solid
Waste Management Board to
encourage people to recycle their
goods.
AT AN OUTDOOR press
conference Monday , board
Chairman Terry Trumbull said
about 46 million tons of trash is
collected each year in the state.
That's enough, be said , to stack
10 feet high along Interstate 5
from the Mexican to the Oregon
borders.
To promote recycling -and to
raise money -Orange County
officials have struck a deal with
the Coors Distributing Co. for a
week-long recycling campaign.
During the week, Coors will pay
the usual 35 cents per pound for
cans r eturned to the main
recycling center ln Tustin. The
company will pay an extra lwo
cents per pound which wiU go
toward construction of a new
facility ln Orange for the Albert
Sitton Home for abused and
abandoned children.
SUPERVISOR Riley al.so wu
involved in the arrangement, •
claiming the home ls one of the
county's most deserving project.a.
County employees will collect
cans on April 23, with all 37 cents
going to the home, and Coors also
will buy aluminum for 35 cents
plus two from schools during the
week, s aid public relations
representative Carolyn Charkey.
-GLENN SCOTT
FV dad, son
hail shuttle
On Sunda~ morning, David
Martz, 27, of Fountain Valley,
stood on the roof of a nine-story
building at Cape Canaveral,
watching nervously as the space
shuttle Columbia prepared to lift
off. ·
Martz bad worked on the com·
puter program governing· the
final nine minutes or the
countdown, and he breathed a
sigh of relief as tl'\e craft zoomed
skyward.
"It was a picture pe rfect
launch," he said.
Two days later and nearly
3,000 miles away. his father,
Kenneth Martz, 54, also of Foun-
tain Valley, was among the
s pectators at Edwards Air
Force Base who breathed another
sigh of relief as the reusable
rocketsthip gilded to a safe land-
ing.
"We were all apprehensive,"
s aid the o lder Martz, who
worked on ground s upport
systems for the shutUe. "It's a
very complex vehicle and many
things could have gone wrong.
"WE WERE UP ON a slope,
but most of us hardly saw the
shutUe until it was a lmost down.
But we did hear the sonic boom
as it was coming in."
Both father and sob are
employed by Rockwell lnterna·
tional Corp., which built the
shuttle for NASA.
The father, who has worked at
Rockwell's Downey plant for 16
year s, worked on the Apollo
space missions before moving
on to the shuttle project.
His son David, a 1972 graduate
of Fountain Valley High School.
majored in biology at UC Irvine.
His chief interest, however, was
computers, and h e Joined
Rockwell as an engineer in 1979.
The younger Martz is on short
term assignment for Rockwell
at Cape Kennedy.
In a telephone interview from
Florida after the shuttle's re-
turn, Martz explained that he
worked on programming for the
crucial minutes before liftoff.
"I WAS 0 REALLY nervous
when we launched." he said.
"There's a lot of critical timing
in the last 30 seconds."
He said he watched the shut-
tle's landing on viewing screens
at the Florida space center.
"There was a period of silence
during the communications
blackout part of re-entry,·· he·
recalled. "Then there was
another period of nervousness
when the shuttle was comine in
on the runway and its landing
gear wasn't down.
··Everybody cheered when it
3id comedown."
Martz said he's been assigned
to continue his computer pro.
gramming work for the next
shuttle flight. scheduled for late
summer.
-PHIL SNEIDERMA.N
'Students win cash
in annual awards
Sixteen high school ;seniors
from Huntington Beach, Foun-
tain Valley and Westminster re·
cently won $2,900 in cash awards
\.
\ in the semifinals of Bank of
America's annual Achievement
Aw a rds competition.
First place students in the four
' judging categories will compete
in the finals May .20 for addi-
tional cash awards. First place
winners were assured a
minimum.cash prizeof$SOO.
Second, third and fourth place
runnersup were awarded $100,
$75 .and $50 respectively.
The semifinalists were select-
1 ed by judges on the basis of the
, studeQts' grades , leadership
qualiti~s. community activities
and their performance in a
group discussion of current is·
sues .
Chairing the panel of judges
was Dr. Frank J . Abbott,
superintendent of the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis·
1rict.
First place winners wen!
Howard Aihara, Leslie McClen•
don, J a mes Hollingshead and
David Li, all of Huntington
Beach.
Second place winners were
J eanette Hagan, Laetitia May,
and Lisa Troy, all of Hunt.tncton
Beach, and Scott Jordan of
Westminster.
Third place winners were
J &{Des Johnson and Scott •
Mo1'sch, both of Fountain
Valley, and Tanya Tbomu and
Garrett Toy, both of BWltlnston
Beach.
Fourth place winners were •
Dana Huth, Mar~ Mar1olln and
John Husapla, all of Huntlncton
Beacb, and Thomas Hwan& o(
Fountain Vallef.
-~
Death 'exeuaed! -
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
shootina deatb of an unarmed
Mlaaloo Hl.lla routh -Kennetb
Ramlrel -b7 • pobeeman wu
accidental and Wlu.out ertmi&at
ne1U1ence aDd tber.ifol'e WM a
case ol "excua•bl• boallelde "
lb• dlltriet •ttome1'1 ocaee ~
lri •--~report Tuili"a1.
PARTICIPANT
· Chuck Smith
SHARJNG PULPIT
John Huffman Jr.
PASTOR
RaJI Ortlund
I
23rd sunrise service
set for Harbor High
The 23rd annual Easter Sunrise
Service will be at 5: 15 a.m. Sunday
at Davidson Field , Newport Harbor
I High, 16th Street and Irvine Avenue
in Newport Beach.
~ Area p~tors parttcipattng tnclude I Chu ck Smith of Calvary Chapel in f Costa Mesa, John Huffman Jr of St. t , Andrew's Presbyterian Church in f 1 Newport Beach, and Ray Ortlund
f ' I. r--:::~-=::--~-
1 ·
(. I
I :
L ! .
H I ..
H .. I : . ' I :
from Mariners Church in Newport
Beach.
Music will be provided by the
Maranatha Christian Academy
Children's Choir and the Praise Sym-
phony Orchestra.
The public is invited to the non-
denominational ser vice and urged to
drive early lo assure a seat. Parking
is available in the high school lots on
15th and 16th streets.
I : ---------"'"'"'
I . ow.,.... i Frank Kallas, standing by mural outside his Van Nuys restaurant, says
j ex-wife m error about his death
I Gov. Carey's bride
l;has startling news
J:aallery of husbands slipped her mind
I; ALBANY, N.Y <AP ) It was a
I; whirlwind courtship and there was a
' lot to do lo get ready for "New
York's politica l wedding of t he
yea r ." In the rush. Gov. Hugh
I. Carey's new wife neglected to make
t public some key d etails or he r I · marital history.
J. Evangeline Gouletas, who married
the governor last Saturday. first told
: reporters she had been married once
: before. and that she believed her first
: ex husband was dead.
Then, a few days before the
; ; ceremony, she acknowledged that t : there had been a second husband, i from whom she also was divorced.
i FURTHERMORE. EARLY THIS
: week it turned out the first husband
: was actually alive and well in Los
-..Angeles.
Finally, on Tuesday. 1t developed
there is a third ex -hu sba nd
sandwiched between the two past
marriages s h e had already
acknowledged.
Asked if he himself has be~ sur-
:,prised by any of the revel ions.
Brcarey would say only that, .. l's a
private matter."
~· ,-: Carey, 62, and his 44-year-old wife.
who met at President Reagan's in-
• >'auguration, were married in a Greek
Orthodox ceremony in New York.
MRS. GOULETAS·CAREY, as she
wants to be known , is a millionaire
real-estate developer from Chicago
who was born in Greece or Greek·
?.·.American parenu. Carey, whose
·~,first wife died in 19'14, is a Roman
\l~athollc and said during pre-wedding
&1tnlerviews that be hopes tO have the
.,~marriage recogniied by his church.
Of But the church does not recognve u1~e marriagel of divorced people un· ·<• ess it 1&nctlon1 the divorce, and un-
eas Carey receivea that aancUoo, he
may be barred from certain religious
1•.f unctlorui. That could be at least a
·llr.leht political liability for the two· ·I rm sovernor if he seeks a Ulird
nl erm next year.
l The Rev. Damien Pickel, 1peakin1
1for tbe l\oman C11thollc Archdiocese
bf New York. uid Tuesday, ''We
~n't have any comment rilht now
bi'>" the covemor'a situation ...
· But a spokesman for the arehdAC>Cen, who asked not to be
ldatlfted, .. id the newa ot a t.blrd
u -b•Wd "doeln't materially fl·
f~ct" Carey's standing in the church,
s ince he was already marrying a
divorced woman.
Carey hasn't said much about it
all. Mrs. Gouletas-Carey on Mon-
day dismissed reporters· queries.
"Those are 25-year-old questions,"
she said. "It's almost like going to a
graveyard and digging a grave.
They're not relevant to what kind of
person I am. There is only one man
in m y life and one true love in my
life. and that is my husband."
The confusion over Mrs. Gouletas-
Carey's previous marriages began
within hours of the official announce-
ment of the couple's wedding plans
two weeks ago.
The governor's press office quickly
ha nded out a 10-page biography of
the bride-to-be prepared by officials
or American lnvsco Corp., of whkb
she is board chairman.
''1955 -MARRIED. WIDOWED,"
was the only mention of previous
marriages.
That marTiage, Mrs. Gouletas'
aides said, was to restaurateur
Frank Kallas and ended with a
Greek Orthodox church divorce in
1958. Mrs. Gouletas-Carey told re-
porters it was her understanding that
Kallas later died.
A few days later, reports ap1,>eared
and were subsequently confirmed
that there had been a second mar·
riage "in the mid '60s" to EvanieJoe
Metaxes, 11 draftsman from ber
native Athens. Aides said it ended
with another church divorce in 1971.
I On Monday, first-husband Kallas
surfaced in Los Ansetea to say he
was alive.
1 But aa the 1ovemor and h1a bride
arrived in Buffalo for a busl.nesa trtr.
that wu to include a honeymoon pi •
&rimae-e to Nia1ara Falla, tbey were
asked about reporta of a thlrd p1'e-
vioua marriage.
A&ain, Mrs. Gouletaa-Carey didn't
want to talk. Carey'• aide• conftrmtd
later t.bat Lbere had been a third mar·
riaae between the other t", WI OM
to Geor1.. Kalteaaa, • Greelr·bom
enslneer, now believed livto1 In
Greece.
We sell firs t quulily and dis<:onlinucct
mere handisc from St.•ars Hctu1l <ind
Catalog Distribution.
"Was " µrictts quolt•d un• lht• rl'gulur prit·t•s ;it whkh lht•
items \H'l'l' forml•rly o(r~·n·d by ('atulog 01' In man~
S<.'urs Rt.•I Hll :-;tort•s around lht• 1·ountry
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------------------.. ------------------... ·-----·--------·· Miller's • I B-12 ! BABY BEEF
Unproc~ed I 50mcg. I LIVER
BRAN $219 I 99h I ~~~~-~Ch\l•t $1.29 An t'Xl'dlcnt ~1urn· I · ,.. I IOO \'l'J(Clahk
of dkl:a~· tihc:r !"iO t;ih' too t:ah' I c:oatcll tahki.. W~Onlrr..,._.,., I W~Orilr'-~1 I W~OnlyfJopl .. 412391 ·········~···-----------------~----···------------------1-lysiJiie i BALANCED B I E LOTION ~~~!~;1, ,. I COMPl-!'X ~O-t'1g. I 4000 l.u. ad\l-t"'c~~~~·, $399 I ~~~,1~~~~slnuur ~499 I rnlkln14 ahtiu1 it spcd3l fotmulatlon ~ I
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' '
LAGUNA BEACH. 1919 by Clarence Hinkle Dr. William Otton admires JEWEL COVE by Benjamin Brown
'Laguna Legacy' showing at museum of art
By JEFF PARKER
Of u. o.lly ~ .... SWt
The Euca lyptus School is back in
·session. Early California landscape paint-
ing is a craze again as collectors scramble
for works. galleries off er them at premium
prices and museums organize retrospec-
tive showings or early California artists.
The Laguna Beach Museum of Art,
focal point for the once-dismissed
"eucalyptus school" or painting, is now
showing "Laguna Legacy," a look at the
paintings created in the Art Colony from
1910 to 1940. Some 26 artists have been
chosen for the show. All are dead, a ll were
seminal influences in the development or
a California style that is now surviving h is-
tory in fme fashion.
''There seems to be a certain nostalgia
in the air right now," said exhibit curator
Jeanette Leeper. "People want works by
California painters, rendering California
subject matter. This exhibit was chosen to
give people a deeper look into what was
happening in this art colony in its early
years ."
Rather than choose well-known paint-
ings to show Laguna's early artists, m any
or which are in the permanent collection or
LB MA, Leeper spent months searching for
rarely seen works . Many of the paintings
in "Laguna Legacy" have been culled
from private collections -some are being
shown for the first time in public.
·'There has been a lot or enthusiasm
from collectors a nd galleries for this
s how," she s aid. "Sometimes, you run into
trouble with people who don't want to
help, but the people enthused about this
early California work are very proud of ll. ..
Leeper 's strategy in choosing the
IN SAN GABRIEL CANYON by Marian Kavanaugh Wat chtel
works was based on the idea that several
paintings by important artists would pro-
vide more impact than a smattering of
single works by lesser artists.
Most of the painters represented have
been given space for three works. Hung
close together in 1920s gallery style, they
provide an interes ting and in-depth look at
the beginnings or the Laguna artistic
sensibility. Trends and influences flow in
and out of one another , with the paintings
grouped to show the various sub-schools
and movements .
Although the s how was not curated to
show only Laguna Beach scenes, they
dominate the show just the same. "The
artists came here to be able to work out-
side in the fantastic light," said Leeper.
''So you've got an abundance or landscape
and seascape in the show. Figures are rare
and most, though not all of the scenes, are
SPRING MORNING by Dan Bartlett
from Southern California." The well-known
painters such as Edgar Payne, Anna Hills,
Frank Cuprien, George Symons and Gran-
ville Redmond are generously represented
in ''Laguna Legacy.'' Lesser known works
by Clarence Hinkle, Maurice Bra un and
Joseph Kletich show stylistic and
thematic concerns that varied from the
mainstream or the "eucalyptus school" -
Hinkle 's bold "Laguna Beach" and
Kleitsch's brooding "Clorcharts" break
from the pattern of t he exhibit and enrich
it greatly.
Rarely-seen works by much-imitated
painters William Wendt, Cuprien and
Guy Rose a lso help to trace California
la ndscape painting back to its sources -
one of which was Laguna Beach. This
pleasant, peaceful s how runs at the
Laguna Beach Museum of Art through
May 2.5.
. I
Mr. Apology quit stealing to ~ar co__~f essions
The phone rings at 3 a.m. in Mr.
Apology's New York apartment.
fbe caller says he used to murder
and rape, bµt now finds mugging
more satisfying. It's not my prob-
lem, he explains, it's society's
problem. A few minutes later the
phone rings again. A tender young
voice confesses to stealing Heath
bars from a local store. She Is
very sorry and wants to stop. ·
Another caller confesses to hav-
lnl an affair with a friehd's wife.
Another confesses to bavineu af-
fair with a fritmd's husband. A
caller from' California says tie's
raped 42 women and wants to
atop. A voice id~ntlfies himself,
says he's calllna from Atlanta,
wberehewisbes "everyone would
catch me for what I'm dolnc
here." Another caller la 13 yean
old ud jmt 1ot h.ls 1irlfriend prepant. "I'm too afraid to tell
ber mother," be 1ay1, ••ao I'm
leuln1,ou." .
llr. Apolofy (tbe only name
ht'llstveouttbeledaya) llatenato
Uiillr voices over cotf ee the next momlrc -all l'eCOrded ·on bil
an1wertna machine. People call
blm M boun a day, •••1'1 ar. Some calls are better than otben,
some are worse.
He's a New York artist, age 36.
and he's collected 37 hours of
taped confessions since becoming
Mr. Apology last October. When
he's collected "enough'' con·
Cessions, he plans to play them
a ll. His service is to give callers
''a charice to confess their
wrongs without jeopardidng
themselves," he said. "It's a
chance to apologize not to God
or the government, but to people
· -the ones that are reaUy hurt."
Mr. Apology began the project
as an outgrowth of his own
personal conleasion. As a Jife-long
s hoplifter not.icing that "lhe cope
were atartina to look youn1er, •'be
decided to quit bis vice once and
for all. He worked h1a shopliftln&
"confession" into a sculpture and
felt a sense of relief when that
work wu viewed in public.
''I feltuortof penance in mak-
ln1 this sculpture 'publJc," be
aald. "By conleaaina I felt
stron1er about quittin1 my
habit."
•r. A.POlolY then de1iped a '
poster which read: ''AttentJon
Crlmlnal1 ! Amateur, pro-
fe11lonal, blue and white collar,
you have wronged p'eople and •tis
to people you must apologize, not
to the state or to God. (1et your
m I s d eeds off your ch est !
Apologize for your wrongs
without jeopardizing yourselves.
Mr. Apology will tape recor4 your
anonymous call. Do not identify
yourself and call from a pay
phone to prevent tracing.
Describe in detail what you did
apd)bow you feel about it. When
enoqgh statements have been col-
lected, they will be played to the
.public at an advertised timt and•
place. Apology is not usociated
with any police or government
agency." ·
,He distributed the poatera
around New York City and the
calla began coming in Immediate-
ly. As news of the "service"
spread, callers from throughout
the country, especially
California, jammed the Mr.
Apolol)' lines with sundry taJea ot
criminality -both petty and
serloue-and attendant 1wlt.
"On Jn1 answerini machine
tbere it a time for caUen to leave
lhtirowa numbera lf they want to
talk to Mtneone in per.on. About
one·thlrd of my caJlen want to
talk to me directly. This project
· proposes multiple moral dilem-
mas for me a1most daily," he
said.
Although Mr. Apology guaran-
tees that the cdhfessions are com·
pletely confidential. he did make
one exception recently -the
caller from Atlanta who was beg-
ging to be stopped for "what I'm
doing here." Mr. Apology notified
polJce of the caU , who took the in-
formation under submission in
their search for the killer of young
Atlanta blacks. "I never would
have done thaiifthe caller hadn't
said he wan~ to be caught," said
Mr. Apology. "When I play these
t.apes finally, all names and in-
formation that mi1ht lead police
to people will be erased. • ·m sure
the police will want to hear some
oftbem.
''I've had people call who say
they're 1olna to kill tbemvtves,
but never' in aucb a way lhat I
could peraoaally do Mnythina
about it. [haven't been tested on
thatone7et, ·• besaid.
Allhouch Mr. Apolo1Y believes
be may be doing a ju.1Ufiable
'tervlce for many people, he hu
~ad• enemlei. Several eallen
have threatened to find out who
he "really is," the~ do various
things to him. One caller who
h as "never apoJogited for
anything" told Mr. :Apology that
he would shoot hJmlsometime in
1981. "I'll say one thing before I
pull the trigger,'' the caller said.
"I'll say 'Bernie. telephone call
-it's for you."
Anyone interested in calline
M,r. Apology can get him at (212).
255-2748. -JEFF PARKER
Theate~ tour set
A field study course that ex·
amines theater ants in Europe
will be offered by Orange Coast
College this summer.
The course includes a 33-day
tour ot Wutern .Europe. The
tour ts aet for June 28 through
July 30.
Students will view plays In
London, Parjt, Athena, Rome,
Florence, lrlunieh, 8alabur1,
BerliD and t\mlterdam.
The count alto Includes atopl
Jn Corinth, llf~. !pldana,
NaupUa and Delpbl. A flv.Uy
Ae•P.!ft cruiM includes 11to111 in
RbOct'h, Crete, and Bodrum:
Turkey.
Courae instructor It O~C
apeecb and drama profeelOI',
Jack B. Holland. Holland has
produced and directed more
than 40 plays, and ts a stall
critic for Orama Logue
MaWazine. A professional Kt.or
himself, he has appeared ln 50
television productions and hfne
films, including Avc:,o ll:m-
baasy's "Fear No EvlL"
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My b\llbud IOU
hit brotber'a bOUae for hit halrcuti. Tbty
ave ble!l cutttna each other'• halr for yean.
ey an not prol ... lonal barben but they aH
retty 1ood at It. Aa you know, balreuta are ea·
alve these daya -10 lt'a a nice way to .. ~e
fewdollan.
My brother-in-law bu to have bll beer
very nlpt. After a six-pack, be fallJ asleep.
wtfe (a d111y redhead) likes to drink, too,
t the has a hollow le& with 1pon1e1 in her
1. I ~v• never seen a woman conawne to
ucb booae lD au my lite. Sbe also llkes to
ance. So alter my brother·ln·law panea out,
he redhead puts on the music and 11M and my
uaband dance for houri. 1bfte ls a po11lblllty
taat they alto do other. thins•. but I can't·prove t.
When my husband comes home (like at 3
.m .), be is dead drunk and can't get up to 10
•
to work the next momin1.
I used to take the kid• and 10 wltb1lhp, but
t.be redhead doean't like the kid.a, and thiy are
acared to death of her. They are even afraid to
uk to 10 to the bathroom lD ber bouae.
What's the solution? -BAllJER BOP
B LUES IN BUFFALO
Dear Baff: Start to aeff•P••1 I1•u ltnbaM ....... wbetl Ile 1oea rw ~ ltateau.
Take die'* u well a•t41M1e..,._ _.I••• ..
keep &lie• amue4. Bow ..., eu a lailre•t
talle, aaywayt All Her at tile lllOS&. It ma1 be
aa upleuaat IMNr IHlt k nn beau paU1a1 •P
wh.llU.......,,•aaela•-... •ute•er.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Wttb the bauball
Hatoa comiDI up, IJttJe Leac-will aoon be ln
f\111 awtq. Ann. will you do the t.boulanda of lJtUe
Lea1uen aerou the country a bl1 favor and
publ.ilb the f0Uowi.D1 poem? ft ru ,.vetal
yean aio lD the Dayton Journal Herald and
w .. wr1£ten by Bob Fox a former pltcber lD tbe
minor leaauea. He alto mana1ed a Little Lea1ue team. ln Mr. rox•1 own wor'dl, "I UJed to
band the poem to mothen at the 1ames wben tbey
became a little hoeWe." -THAN1ts FROM A
CONCERNED MOTHER JN VERSAILLES,
OHIO.
Dear llotber: Bob Fox'• poem HJI
vohunn. Here It la. TJaaab for tltarta1.
JUST A LITTLE BOY
He eta.ads at IJae plate wltb lileut poucllaa
faat.
TM~a,..._..;dlee.bl..._eu&.
MMI ... OM e .......... llllli, M ..... .u..... r Ald&atUda•••e.twwN ...... S.a• w
M•e. •
Tlae ball •Mta tM plate: Mt twlaf.1 ud M •lues.
Tllere'• a cro•• fre• Ulle e,..., 'wtda ••e boot ................
A dllcMi""1etf volte eltet: '8UUse "*'tile
bam.'
Tears ftU Illa eyea; dae tame'• " ... pr
hut.
So open you llleart aad live lalm a break.
For It'• momeau like dab, a maa yoe c:aa
make.
Keep thlt an mlH wM9 Y• ltear eomeo11e
forget. /
He't Jut a UUle boy aad Bet a ••• yet.
emini: Important c~anges Hot water helps stop bleeding
BSDAY, APRIL 11. 1•1
8 8YDNEY OMARll
l ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 19): You have rare op·
potlunity to correct past mistakes. Contract or
a1r_,ement can be renegotiated. Key ls to be
th01'ougb, to be aware of small print and to read
between the lines. Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo' persons
figure prominently.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20 ): Check facts,
. figures; it is necessary to be analytical. Get
HOROSCOPE
together with one who shares basic interests, con-
cerl?s. Delay is temporary. Employment picture is
brighter than it might appear on surface. Gemini
Is i(\ scenario.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 >: Important
changes occur, especially in domestic area. Focus
on reunions, decorations. purchases of luxury
items. Affair of heart dominates scenario. Taurus.
Scorpio persons figure prominently. Money news
is good!
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Terms are de·
1 fined ; property values come into clear focus. Em-
phasis on security, completing transaction, safety
• devices and becoming familiar with basic tech·
nlques. Older individual will lend benefit of ex-
perience.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Recent tests, inquiries
bring favorable responses. Ideas jell; conference
takes place with individual who can supply funds .
Cancer. Capricorn natives figure prominently.
Short trip involves relative. You're on rigt.t track!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Completion of as-
stgnment or project brtn11 financial &aiq. More
persona are l.Dtert1ted lD your work. views. Yoa
can strike chord of unlvenaJ appeal. Kn~it, act accordlnalY. Arin, Ubra natives play key oles.
LIBIL\ (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): What seem a dead
end turns out to be an excit.J.n,, fresh op unity.
Emphasis on independence, oripnallty ~n affair of heart. Leo, Aries, Sagittarius person fi1ure
prominently. Juqment, intuition are on &et.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): People are in·
trigued as you maintain aura of m stery,
glamour. Being discreet now ls essentia~l You'll
gain access to confidential data. Clandes e con-
fe rence is on agenda. Apparent set aclt is
transformed Into major triumph. ,
SAGl'ITAIUUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Spirit of
conviviality dominates scenario. You'll have re·
ason to celebrate: long distance messa1e or call
verifies validity of your claims. Gemini and
another Sagittarian figure prominently. Horizons
expand.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Goal, which
had been temporarily obscured, once again comes
into view. Business opportunity exists. Some re-
visions are necessary. Red tape will be shoved
aside. Aquarian proves to be valuable ally. Cash
flow resumes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cooperate with
Capricorn. Be ready for significant changes and a
variety of experiences. Emphasis on travel, com-
munication, pursuit of educational Rroject.
Abstract principle of law is clarified. Ybu'll be
loved.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20 ): Guard
possessions; don't place temptation in path of
others. Someone wants something for nothing -
you could be prime target. Major domestic adjust-
ment is also part of scenario. Legal settlement is
on horizon and you' U be beneficiary.
"A.lie tlw Doctor" u a MW f Nhlr• of tlw DaU11
Pilot turlttm bl/ Dr. John D. R.ONfl o/ Newporl Beach. It
will be pubU.tMd twice a wnk on WedM.00111 and
Friday1.
QUESTION: This· may sound like a silly
question, but if J cut my finger, should I put lt
under bot or cold water?
ANSWER: Your question ls far from silly.
People seem to be divided about 50.50 as to which
they advise. There is, however, a correct answer.
If the fin,er is held under warm water, the
bleeding will stop sooner. All body functions are
sped up with increased temperature. (Too hot,
though, is bad because burning might occur). The
function in question, clotting, is likewise sped up
with warmth. The warm water also facilitates
cleansing the cut with soap. Soap and water is as
effective an antiseptic as is iodine or other
store-bought preparations.
The best method for stopping bleeding is
pressure. Apply direct pressure on the cut using a
Ask the Doctor
finger, hand, or towel. Apply pressure as long as
bleeding continues. lf the laceration is extensive,
keep applying pressure while the patient is being
transferred to a medical facility.
Dr. Rosen ~lcome1 your Q1'eltiona. Send your
reque.t1 to "Aak the Doctor." .P.O. Box 1560, Cotta
Mesa, Ca .• ~
Outdoor singles plan dftnce
BALBOA SKI CLUB will have a general meeting
Tuesday, in Newport Beach. For information, call
752-0128.
OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a dance party at
7:30 p.m. Friday, in Costa Mesa. Financial plan·
ning for singles will be the topic of a seminar at 7
SINGLES CALENDAR
p.m . Monday, in Huntington Beach. For informa-
tion, call Bob at 556-702fi.
ORANGE COAST Sll"fGLES will have an Easter
champagne brunch at noon Sunday, In Fullerton.
For information, call Ann at 751-0291.
WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP of Orange County will
go to dlnner at 6:45 p.m . Fnday, in Anaheim.
WE CARE will have an Easter picnic at 10 a .m.
Saturday, in Santiago Canyon. t'or mtormat1on,
call 837-1506.
Toastmasters meeting is set
P ARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS Huntington
Beach chapter will have a TGIF at 8 p.m. Friday,
in Fountain Valley. For information. call Gerri at
964-5296.
MAKING FRIENDS with the Oppositt Sex is the
topic of 8l) event led by Emily Coleman and Dr.
Ke ith Tombrink at 9:30 a .m . Saturday, in
Anaheim. The daylong workshop will be followed
~Y a dance. For information, call (213) 828-8949.
NEWPORT HARBOR TOASTMISTRESS Club
meets Monday at 11:30 a.m. in the Balboa Bay
, Club. For more information call 494-3651.
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWCOMERS Club
CLUB CALENDAR
meets W~esday. April 22 at 9:30 a .m . For more
information call 842-4589.
Bf!IDGE GROUP of the Newport Beach Senior
10% OFF
on all
Easter Plant Baskets
with a
copy of
this ad.
~*II
3416 Via Udo
Newport Beach, CA
675-1631
Citizens Center meets at 10:30 a .m. in the center, ~o lunteers ia· 11 .... ~ n;torl L -sp;tals 2101 15th St., Newport Beach. Fridays. For more ••llC.I 11 JU.I 11
information call 548-7534.
SOUTH COAST JEWISH Youth meets for pre-
Passover party Friday at 9 p.m. in Huntington
Beach. For more inlormatJon call 831·3921.
A volunteer program to monitor and evaluate
the public psychiatric hospitals serving mentally
disabled in Orange County has been announced by
the Orange County Mental Health Association.
Persons, becoming friends to the elderly.
AU volunteers are trained and supervis~ by
professionals.
COSTA MESA WOMEN'S Club meets Friday at
11:30 a.m. ln the club hobse, 810 W. 18th st.. Costa
Mesa. For more information call 645-143'7.
Volunteers will visit one hospital a monthe and
each hospital al least three times yearly, preceded
by a three-hour orientation. · WHO ~EEo'S YOU?
ORANGE COUNTY WOMEN Lawyers meets
Monday at noon in the Sadd.lebaclt Inn of Santa
Ana. For more information call 547-7874.
The asaociation also needs volunteers lo
participate in its Visitation Program to Older
For information about either program. call
Nadine Cohen at 547-7559. ·
1yn 9(A"4f(. 9cU,lons
3420 Via Udo, Newport Beach, Ca.
(Formally Gene Burton)
Dresses & Sportswear
Open Dally
. 9:30-5:30
•
Sizes 6-18
. I·..,,
DBllM DOUIU IOl1' -Blazer Jacket ..... , ...... J8"
western Pant ............ ll"
Blou18 ....•.•........... 22"
1 I
ALIO AYAa ":' Button Frontlrt .............. W
,.,.._ • •' •• t ... • •I.• t t •• e '".•••It •• 14"
\
DMtper' 1la7mOD41 WalMe ......... WOl'k la
rooted la t.be &baker tradttlon ol Amertcaaa.f
wlll N •u•1t at a tea lloeda1 to wblob 111emben Ol the hlltorlcal 10Cletlt1 ol Cotta
lleaa, rc.u.tatn Valley. Guchn Grove and
WeatmlnMer are lnvited.
Watt.. creaUve vie• JM"llldent ol Gtar. baa
created and uaembled a eollecdoa of bome
1 ~ lacludlnl bed linem, table liDena,
fabrics. hand-loomed tbrowa, batb acceasoriet
and 1tcneware .. He'll be at tbe tea for tbe
blttorlcal 1oclety m•mbera at tbe
ComPMJ'• 8outb Cout Plua •tore.
Followlbl tbe tea, beld to celebrate o 11D• of U.. ...,.., OomtrJ Gear a.. Wattel wUl
stv• a talk to be followed by a perlormance ~Y a
croup from tbe American Folk Ballet der
dlrecUon ot Burch Mann.
The public 11 lovlted to meet Walt~ for
coffee tn tbe 1bop at 3:30 p.m. and to vi•~ tbe
ballet performance.
-llOag group matches award I .
Tbe Hoa1 Foundation bu awarded a '85,000 The grant also will help tbe center meet an
metehln1 1rant to the A11l1tance Lea1ue of urgent community need for its services, Mrs.
Newport Beach to enlarge lts Child Day Care Kemble said. The center has an enrollment of 48
Center tn Coeta Mesa. children with a waiting list of 200.
Mn. Robert Kemble, leaaue president, said = tbe Hoaa 1nnt will help the two-year buildtnl A professionally staffed center, be ed by
pro1ram to expand the exlatinl center at 2032 Rita Jamieson, the facility opened its d four
Oranae Avenue onto two adJacent lots. Ultimately, yeus ago to provide non-profit, full day Cfire for
thecenterwWbeabletoaccommodatelSOchildren. pre-school children of low income, sh~gle or
Construction la scheduled to betln June 1. working parents with fees based on ability tp pay.
Ballet help to midshipman
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP> -One might think
Admiral Chester Nimitz or John Paul Jones would
be the tareet ol admiration for a U.S. Naval
Academy midshipman. But as Art Farrell
prepares for a naval career. ballet dancer Mi.kbail
Baryshnikov is bis hero.
LIKE FOOTBALL PLAYER Lynn Swan.
Farrell bas found that ballet helps him in sports.
"I oriainally began taking ballet beeause I bad
trouble with my hamstrings and needed more
flexibility for track. It has helped my form and
body awareness in pole vaulting ," said the
21-year-old senior of Manhasset, N. Y.
Farrell, who has been able to incorporate his
leasous into his track practice routine, says "twice
a week I Joe tbe mile to the studio (hallway
through practice>, take my ballet lesson, and jog
back to the academy for the rest of practice."
After only one year of dance, he landed the
lead in the Annapolis Civic Ballet Company's
performance of "The Nutcracker" ballet.
"In addition to being talented, Art is an athlete
and is in excellent condition." sa!d Grace Clark,
bis teacher. "It's still very unusual for a young
man to come in at such a late age and develop into
a good dancer so quickly."
"MY FRIENDS WEREN'T surprised when I
began dancing. They always thought I was a bit
crazy anyway," Farrell joked. "My parents think
it's great, but my Dad, who is a retired Air Force
officer, keeps asking me if I want a green or pidk
tutu for my birthday," be added with a laugh.
The 1977 graduate of Chaminade High School
in Mineola, N.Y .. was the Sophomore Athlete of
New York State for track as well as first team
AU -League for football.
Although be played football in high school, it
wasn't until his senior year at the academy that he
decided to try out for the 150-pound football team.
"I bad dreams of 1oin1 to the Olympic
Goodwill Industries
slates celebration
Goodwill Industries of Santa Ana will
celebrate Volunteer Appreciation Day Wednesday,
April 29, at 2 :30 p .m . in the Goodwill
Rehabilitation and Evaluation Center.
The celebration will honor the 840 volunteers
who gave some 1,000 hours of volunteer service to
Goodwill last year. Refreshments will be served
and entertainment will be provided.
For more information call Connemara
Reisinger at 5'7-6301.
ICmli HOUSEWIFE
trials for pole vaulting and placed all of my efforts
toward that. This year, however, I fell that I
needed a change of pace. Football has been a lat of
fun, and wbo knows, it may help my vaultln1,"
said Farrell, 'wbo bu already vaulted 18 feel.
The defensive back finished the football season
with a selection for the All-American first team.
"He shone above everyone else on bis first day of
practice," said coach Tony Verducci. "It was bard
to believe that he hadn't played football ip three
years."
"I know this may sound strange, but~I think that a regular college would have bee more
restricting than the academy," said Far ell. "I
came here because I thought that it wou d be a
unique experience. U I had gone to a regular
college, I don't think I would have been able to do
half of the things that I've done, because I would
have been too busy working for tuition."
Farrell, who has lettered six times in track,
has earned a purple belt in karate and has
traveled through Europe twice during his 3ir.t
years here.
"MY FIRST REAL look al the Navy was
during my first summer.training cruise aboard a
destroyer in Hawaii after my freshman year," he•
said. "I realized that I likt?d the working
relationships and the comaraderle. This past
summer. I was Cln lhe aircraft carrier USS
Lexington, where I learned the various roles of a
junior officer. The cruises have helped me see bow
what I have learned in class is applied in Che fieet.
"My major doesn't leave much room for fun
courses," said the futu~e naval aviator, who is
m ajoring in operations analysis anti who will be
commissioned an ensign in the l'.S. Navy in Ml!Y·
"During my travels, I would like to pick up
courses in writing and film. But most of all, l plan
to continue with ballet."
Plan washes ahead
Plan ahead for doing
laundry when traveling
with a recreation vehicle,
trailerorcamper.
Save both space and
lime by premeasuring in·
to small plaatic bags the
proper amount or de-
tergent and other laun-
dry aids for a wasbe't
load. Fasten securely.
Place all the needs into
a medium·size plastic
bu and add coins for
washer and dryer.
Make up as many in-
divid\.lai laundry product
bags as will be needed for
thelrlp.
If liquid products are ·
preferred, measare and
store in small coolainen
such as clean baby food
jars.
This eliminates lue·
ging large boxes and bot-
tles to and from .the laun-
dromat.
Looking for Exciting Fvn~ Time Wk. W/Fllm Studio. Profit Sharing
W/Terrtflc Inc. Potential. 'Mii TrWn,,
1714J 917-4016
WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE
See Uve ,
1 Chicks Hatch
Complete women's health care provided by
experienced board certified obstetricians
and gynecologists.
• ~•er Tntt.g
• coMrol:
Dl .. llf •1• FfflhMJ
IUD
llrftlC...trelplls
• Co .. llh ,...... Clltdl ..
..... ell_ .. ..._
hpS--
• Olalfall"lcll Care & Del..-y .. se ........ T .... Ut...__,_.
v • ..a.,-M*
•AIOITIOM
. .. ~.,,
VAUDEVlu.E PAERAVATION -Milt Lanon bolds an Ed Wynn statuette inside Society for .:,
the Preservation of Variety Arts building in Los Angeles recently. Larson, a sometimes.\
television writer, is hoping to revitalize vaudeville in his museum. ..: 1
•I
Opera comes to Oklahoma -'iff --I It im't just footPall that draws Sooner State crowds
By DEBBIE SHANNON
NORMAN, Ok!a. (AP) -There's an electrify.
• ing moment before the music begins when the
cowboy boots quit scuffiing on the auditorium
floor, the charged-up .children scramble back to
their seats and the house lights nicker off. ·
The stage lights up. The piano chords echo.
And the costumed singer booms out the first
magical notes of "Rigoletto" -in English.
It's another night at the opera in Hobart, Okla.
Or it could be Elk City, Lawton, Idabel,
Guymon, Muskogee or any of the other towns on
the Cimarron Circuit Opera Company's trail
across the slate.
THAT SMALLER Oklahoma communities
crave live performances isn't surprising, their
civic leaders say.
That an opera company will pack up several
Bernstein. olis~d
from DC beat
NEW YORK (AP) -Carl Bernstein, the
former Washington Poet correspondent whose cov-
erage of Watergate was dramathecl in tbe movie
"All the President's Men," is beln& replaced aa
ABC News' Wubingt.on bureau chief, the network
aaid Tuesday. .
Bernstein, with no previous broadcast ex-
per ience, was a aurpriae appointment as
Wubiqton bureau chlef tn February of last year,
al a repca1.ed salary of $150;000 a year. ABC said
Bernstein baa now been named produoer and prin-
cipal correspondent, ''a new ABC News special re-
porting effort." ·
The network said Bill Knd'Wlea, current ABC
News' Southern bureau chief In Atlanta, will be
Bernstein's successor in Waahtncton.
In addition, ABC said Stan Opotowaky. ·current
director of television news coverage, will become
director of political operations, "a new poet brlne-
ing together and expanding several ABC News
units."
Robert Murphy, now deputy W aahlngton
bureau chief, will be Opotowsky's successor as
director of TV news coveraie, the network said.
hundred pounds of costumes, lighting and simple '1
props, then drive hundreds of miles lo stage an •··
opera in English, is. The Norman-based company .d
provides the talent; the town the piano and '
performance space. often in a church. •• The company that now includes 60 members , ,
was formed in 1975 as a gamble by University of
Oklahoma voice teacher Thon1as Carey and his
wife, Carol Brice Carey.
"I had an awful lot of gifted students become
good singers. But a lot would come back a year , 1 later," after graduation. "and say teaching was • 1 frustrating. They wanted to sing," Carey said. I
' "I TIIOUGHT there must be something lo do , 1 fo the limbo period before they're ready for New
York or Houston or other places,'' he said. Carey ,1 himself bad sung in Munich, Germany, before . :
coming lo the university. ·
"In EUflope, every town has an opera house .. ,,
h •s not always full, but it bas a regular season,"
Carey said, adding that he put $1,500 into forming
the non-profit company.
In Oklahoma, it's a cinch each town will hav~
a church -and that'• where Carey's troupe firstt
began perfortning. -
Contribuµons, grants and a $300 fee charged
the group sponsoring the show help the unpaid· "
singers stage about 50 performances of "Rigolet· ·~
to," "Martbr," "Hansel and Gretel" and "The ·
Magic F1ute'1 each seaion. . , It
Getting ~ost Oldahomans over their skep-'
. ticism about opera is part of the eroup's job, ..
singer Anne Roberts. a draftsman by day, said. i3
"PEOPLE THINK, 'Opera! I'm not going ~
see that.' 'f¥y think it'll be big Brunnhildes with
breastplates and spears. But when we go to a farm· rt•
town with an opera, they love it. And the nextlrH
year, when "ego back, the howie is packed." 11 In Idabel in February, "They had a basketbalf
tournament going on in the school gym. But 3QP
people came to see 'Hansel and Gretel,'"
performer Nancy Engel recalled.
All operas are in English. Members do their
own translations, and, Reader's Digest-style, con·
dense the opera. Casts, too; are scaied down.
"We did away with the archaic English and we
ceded to 'Oklahoman' to try to fl'Ulke it more en·
joy able." Ms. Engel said. I
. '• f
SOUTHER
CALIFORNIA
lf~me~oo
AT PETER'S LANDING
APRIL 15-19
Southern California talen't will
showcase at Peter's Landrnq
Easter week. See dancers.
singers, bands. comedians
and musicians vie for a major
HOLLYWOOD AUDITION!
{
I
eourcee. TM result wu "The Meua1e," wbltb at· tracted •wanted publicity wbea black Mlllllm• lD wu~m o.c.:i. •t.atect a 1le•• to preMeat 1bow· .., kn. TD• 1UDmen miltakenl)' believed
that Mollammed w41 portrayed lo "Tb• lle11a1e" • 111 violation ot Mulim belief.
• "1 never intended to portray Mohammed, jU1t
u l wouldn't portray Jeaut or other rellatoua
leaden," Akkad remarked. "Not becauae ~ 1ny
relt1loua reuona; I 1lmply don't beUev~ ln it
artistically."
The results on "Tbe Me1Ja1e"; "It was
banned all over the Ma.lem and Arab world. The
film did all riliht in Europe. It wu a diaaater in
the UnJted States because of the ev~nta in Waahingtoa.
' .. BV1' IN THE LAST two years 'The M~asage'
bas been playing ln Moslem countries. It was just
a matter of their seeing the film and reali,ling it
eontatoed notbin& offensive. ~ow it ls playing
everywhere in the Arab world.
. ••Alt.bough two months in an Arab country
MOUSTAPRA AKKAD is an improbable sut· would equal a week's receipts for a film 1n New
cess story. He baa spilt his 48 ye&rlJ exactly in two York or Los A.aeeles, 'The Mesaag~· plays pn and
-baU in the Arab world, hall in America. Born on. Some people 10 once • w•k. as a IOJ1 of re·
and educated in Syria, he developed an early love-) Ugioua experience. By now 'The ll9"a1e is a Dt·
aUalr with American fllmJI. He came to LQIJ u, ha protlt, and it will be a steady earner."
An1eles to study film at UCLA and trSC, appren· Akkad made a futer, more spectacular profit
ticed with Sam Peckinpah, branched into making on "Halloween," John Carpenter's llWe thriller. A
dQcumentaries and TV movies. $300,000 investment led to a $30 million gross, and
His longtime ambition was to film the story of Akkad poured his bonanza Into "Lion of the
the birth of Islam, and he managed to assemble Desert." The backing also came from other th~ $17 million budget from Arab and other American investors. German tax sheJ~ers, Kuwait
'Masada' tops week's ratings
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC's "Masada" pro·
vided the network with the punch to win the prime-
time ratings race for the week ending April 12. But
the long-term winner may have been CBS.
The concluding installment in the four-part
ABC miniseries was the second highest-rated pro-
gram or the week, behind CBS' "Dallas," figures
from the A.C. Nielsen Co. showed. Part III of
"Masada" was fourth in the ratings, Part II fifth .
The opening installment finished in seventh place
the week before.
The powerful performance by "Masada"
helped boost ABC to the No. 1 position In the three·
way competition, for the second straight week,
with an average rating of 19.2.
CBS finished second at 17.5. with NBC third -
for the sixth straight week -at 14.9. The networks
say that means in an average prime-time minute
during the week, 19.2 percent of the nation's TV·
equipped homes were tuned to ABC.
"Masada," through its four-night run, grabbed
seventh place in the all-time miniseries
sweepstakes, with ABC's .. Roots" still the un-
I -a "ANAL
' CONFLICT" 1111
I "THE POSTMAN
ALWAYS
RINGS TWICE" (RI
·1 ·:;~j.~;
NOW PLAYING
MANN BREA
Brea 51!9 ~339
AMC ORANGE MALL
Oranqe 637 0340
MANN SOUTH COAST
Costa Mesa 546 2711
EDWARDS' WESTBROOK
Garden Grove '>30 4401
EDWARDS' SADDLE BACK fl roro 581 5880
UA CITY CINEMA
Orange &34 3911
JJ&c,..1,.1(.. ....
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
Anaheim 879 98~0
llO PAUii ACCIPTlD
fpe !NI qMffMf!I
challenged leader.
The good news for ~BS. the season's No. 1
network, was the perfennanoe of two new series -
.. Private Benjamin" in third place, and "The Two
of Us" in eighth.
That configuratiOA, coupled with an 11th place
finish for the first installment in CBS' two-part
production of ''Peter and Paul," left the network
with seven of the week's 11 highest-rated pro·
grams. .
Part II of "Peter and Paul" will be included in
the ratings released next week.
Here are the week 's 10 highest-rated shows:
"Dallas," with a rafing of 30 representing 23.3
million homes, CBS; "Masada," Part IV. 27 or 21
million. ABC; "Private Benjamin," 25.8 or 20.l
million, CBS; "Masada," Part Ill, 25.7 or 20
million, and "Masada," Part II. 25.6 or 19.9
million, both ABC; "60 Minutes," 25.5 or 19.8
million. "Dukes of Hazzard," 24.2 or 18.8 million.
and "The Two of Us ... 22 .7 or 17.7 million, all CQS ;
"Love Boal," 22.3 or 17.3 million. ABC, and "M-A· S·H," 21.9 or 17 million, CBS.
&AARhl
Anaheim Orove·ln
879 9850
NOW SHOWING ~ com llUA IUIC( WES llllllSHI
UA Cinema UA C11y Cinema Ht Way 39 011ve In
540·0594 634 3911 891 3693
W£STllllllSTH UA Twin 893 130~
"STAR WARS"
' "CAPRICORN I" 1Nt
~WAA.T_.,-1~ I "AUCEIN
WONDERLAND"
••AMY"~
C-.0~~ I "AAOINQ BUU" CIQ
"FORT APACHE'"
A gi.mt of a man
~nst a general
seel<ing glory
... a spectacular
adventure of
arch enemies
in battle-.
l:'OAOINA~Y PEOPLE"
"11H8UTE" (R)
, -
I . "STIR CRAZY"
''USEO CARI" 1111
1 ..... 'f: .!f& Y; •
"FINAL CONFUCT"
"THE VISITOR" (A)
·~-....... ~.
c .... -..... ...... _, __
oU lnterelta and En1lf1b producUoQ eompanlH,
wbleb 1upp1led aervlcet for the ftlmfa1 lD Llbft
and R.olne.
· IA bl.I ~ee tulte at the ...cl ol tbe 8unMt
Strip, MoustaDha Akkad doean't ... m like the
Arab Cecil B. l>ellUle. He'a a pipe.smoker wttb a
quiet manner, desert-lined face and f...U bead of
sray!na hair. He's also a dreamer wbo enJoy1
movlni cinema armies in far-off pl,cet. Hla fUtu.r.
dreams: "The Prlnce11 of Alhambra" and
"Saladin and the Crusades."
HAPPILY, AJUlAD couples vlalon with a
shrewd business sense. In.stead of dlulpatinl' the
"Halloween" profits by diatributlng tbe film
through a major company, be combined wltb
show-wise Irwin Yablana to release it independent·
ly. He entertained deals from Paramount and
Warner Bros. to diatribute "lJon in the Desert"
but decided for an independent release.
"You can have a hit with the major companies
and not see a penny -all very le'lal," he said.
"Uon or the Desert" bas been sold to all major -
markets except Italy. That may be a problem,
Akkad admitted. The Italians are portrayed, ac·
curately, he insists, as ~thless conquerors wbo
shot prisoners, herded Llbyam into concentration
camps and banged Mukthar in 1931 after a 20-year
rebel war.
"We received some threats from the fascists
when we were shooting in Rome," said lbe film·
maker. "I th.ink the Italians will realiie that our
film is accurate. We did not deal in stereotypes ;
there was no black-or-white on either side.''
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ALL NIGHT LONO 111
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The day trriYel '°' TlMtma
"DEAR UAR" -Jane Alexander and
Edward Herrmann star in the Hall of
Fame production about the 40.year
"love affair of letters" between·
playwright George Bernard Shaw and
British actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell
tonight at 7:30 on Channel 50 and 8:00 on
Channel 28.
, lo merry ~ toot-* 14er Kel1h Ander-'· ~,,
•GD IUICTNC
ooa..I :..=. MCNl!Wa
Mo IUU.IEYE
MEAICAONA ....
"Your Probleml Are My
P,o1>4ema·· Member• ol I
"'-'_, dlKUll the prob-
leml of alcohol lbuM.
• lllENNY HU
Benny decldel to oew his I ::-lel< • llOlld•y In the
I KCET NEW88EAT
l'T\JDIOIH
"Orient..ing" The -
sport ol Ol'ialltMring In
Richmond, Va. la demon-
ltrlted; 14911 Al Hartig. kite
men: thoroughbred h<lr.-
-trained in <>c:.11. Fla.
(R)
Cl) NEWS
0 IWINEY MIU.EA I "lew York City la 1tllled by
• major .-iorm Ind
CHANNEL LISTINGS
..,MY and hla inen -plegll9d by a deed men.
1:00 I C88 NIWI N9CNIWI
HAWY o.\Ya AGAIN
Richie le lhodled to leem
that Jolnle'• 'ftrlt date It
with Spike. a plnt·llz.ed
lrepllca~ :.:;-Foone
JOt<lllf8 WllD
OOOGa DUGOUT
ITMl.TI CW IAH
FMHCllOO
Stone end Kaller -called In to in-ttgat• the mur-
der of • c:hemls1ry tNCtl«
• OYERrMY
Gu .. t: Ro09r Baldwin.
founder of 1111 AtMric:ln
Civil Llbertloo Vnlon (R, GD lllACNlll. / LEHAER
AEPORT
(I) TIC TAC DOUQH
OMBW~
Gue1t1· J•ck Cuter,
Stephanie WlntlOw. Lind•
Ev.., MMld AdM\a, PIUI
Lend.
1:1&. OOOGIR PM G.&ME
1:80 8 2 ON THE TOWN
fJ KNXT 1CBS) LO'> Angeles
D KNBC t NBC1 L 0'> Angeles D KTLA 1lna I Los Angeles 8 KABC TV tABCl Los Angele~
(I) -..FMB 1CBS1 San Diego
G KHJ TV (Ina) Los Anqeles
o:I KCST 1ABC1 San Diego m KTTV (Ind l Los Angele'>
Cl) KCOP TV 1 Ind I Los Angeles
&;) KCE T rv t PBS) Los Anqeh•s
ml KOCE TV 1 PBS) Huntington BeJCh
Hoet8 8..,_. Ectwvda and
Me6ody Aoow• till• • looll
II 1111 rec>ld growth ol
emell U-tre In Loe ~ ....
I ,MIA. y llllJO
IHANANA
au.t: JohMY Tlllott1on. 8 HOU.YWOOO
IQUAM8
0 FN2 THI MUllC
..... "LI.
Loe Angelee Oodg«I II
San Frend8co 0111\11
• MACNEJl / l.EHfm'
AIPORT GD HAU.CWF ......
"Oeat Liar" The legendery
.ao-year COl'rMPQndenca
between playwright
George Bernard Shaw ind
Britleh actrMI Mrs Patrick
Campbell Is brought to 1 tetevialon In a two-act
dramatization by Jerome
Kiity. Edw1rd Herrmann
and J-AtelUlnder atar
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
An exclual,,. Swill rejU,,._
natoon d •nlc. a lron1-Une
N1~jet pilot
l:GO fJ CJ) EN08
Enot 8tml II wtnnl_..('he
11•1e pi1101-•,i(c)o'11ng
cl\amplonst11p and eapoa-
~ a croohO cop.
D ~PEOPLE
F-tured. Satah Purcell
takea part In I rOlter derby.
• Mii-• rytecl gltbologlst; •
crowW!g contoot IOI' roo-
aters. 1 female window
c'-* Ind re(>lltm1n at
the Empire Slete BYildlng
(Al
8 MOYIE * * * "Any WedneldlY" ( 11166) -*-Foncia. J-
Robardt. Evert Wed,_.
• HAU."", ..
"OW Uet" The l9glindary
40-YMf: OOl'f~
betw••n P,1-ywrlghl 0-ge ~Shew and
8'1tltfl act,_ ¥•· Petttoll ~ le brougtit to
,.........,..,.~
.... ~ by JerOMe
l<llty. idWlrd HenfNM lndJ-~ster. • t:OO. (I) MOY9
"We'rt Fltfltlff 910." men Kerin Mllf*I. Paul Meer-. A """n er-. at New York yo11tll1 bond toeetller to p1tro1 their
neltllborllood •t•lntt crime.
D a.P'MNT eTN>KU
Arnold ~ 1 1trong
1ttachrnent to the tempo-
rary houMkeepot, who
reminda him flt his own
late mother. (A)
8 9 ALOHA
PAAAOl8E
Sydney reltkldloo 1n old
'°"9, Elliot and Dianne I
band togethet to jazz up
their plain ••terion and
EYll'ett 1ttract1 a bllutllul
women with hla nonexia-
tanl weatth G CMas IN THI! HOAH
Ot'Ant!CA
St1n Mooneyh1rn and
Carol LaWT'ence holl thl•
documentary on 1111 mOl'I
thin II• million people In
Africa who hev1 been
1llac1ed by war 1nd
drought and the retu1t1 ol
IUCl't.....nta. GD MAN< AU88ELl.
America'• madcap man.a-I
man periOl'ma from Iha "•of the Katherine COi'· I
Mii Theater on 1111 c:ampua
ol Iha St1te University ol
New YOl'k II BYHllo
t:30 G THE FACTI CW UFE
Some of Mra. Garrett'• I
c:f\argee .... ~ in •
.. ot.n ...... Ind ~ up •I I
the police atlllon. (Part 1)
(Al
• MAM Al.WI L I "'"*'lea'• madcap marlla-
men perbrnl from the
Sisters play support
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP> -
Meet ~ey and Judy Landers.
a l)a.tt of striking young ladies
whose careers so far have been
devoted to supporting roles. This
seaion, Audrey plays Afton
Col'per, J .R. Ewing's newest gir friend, on CBS' "Dallas" and
Ju )' is Stacks. a female truck
driver, on .. B.J . and the Bear"
on NBC. Each admits that, sur e,
someday they'd like to have
their own series But for now
thef are content with their lot.
An" the public apparently cares
little for the positioning of
nabies on the credits . t he
Landers sisters maintain.
... WANT to build up to the
point where I can be the star of
my own show, but right now I
like what I'm doing," says Judy,
20. "If your supporting
ch~tllc~r is well-liked and on a
visible show, it doesn't matter to
the F.ublic. Ir they like you, they
don t mind. The audience picks
whoever they like."
Adds Audrey, at 22 an
eigr-year acting veteran: • • still get letters from my
soa opera fans, and that is
amu.lng because I haven't been
on a aoap for four years.
• e also notes that, in this day
:~ r T 11 .'I •r. ..
''·' ~
of spinoffs, today's supporting
role can mushroom into next
year's blockbuster lead.
"J.R. didn't start out being the
star of the show." she says or
the "Dallas" villain portrayed'
by Larry Hagman. "He just
brought so much charisma to
the s how that the audience
selected him. Eventually the
writing changed around that.
but it was the audience first that
made him the star."
SERIES are necessarily writ·
ten with detailed ideas of the
lead character in mind, but as a
supporting player , "you have
the freedom to expand your
character,'' says Audrey. "You
are the catalyst. Ir you are not
the lead. you make everything
else happen.
''And you know something else
which i s a practical
advantage?," she adds. "In my
s how. there a re· so many
characters and so m any little
stories going on. I don't have to
go in five or six days a week
from 4 in the morning until 7 at
night."
RUTH Lande~s . the girls'
mother and manager and a
former actress herself, sees
another plus.
"l think the advantage to not
being a star of your own aeries
especially when you're as
young as these girls are -is you
don't get typecast as quickly,"
Mrs. Landers says. "Ir you have
a series and you're the star and
the series Oops, it stays with
you. You're identified with that
character and it's very difficult
for you lo go with another
show."
Judy's role as Stacks is an
example of a supporting player
being allowed lo naturally grab
a larger share of the show. "B.J .
and the Bear" started with
seven female truckers playing
opposite B.J . (Greg Evigan):
the roster will be trimmed next
season t o three. including
Stacks.
"I LOVE playing the silly
blonde, but I didn't want my
c haracter to be one·
dimensional." says Judy.
"When we started the show, I
talked with the producers about
that, because I didn't want that
to happen. Now they write so
that Stacks has all the emotions
and all the different sides to her
personality that any other
character would have -that I
have."
Orange Coast DAILY Ptt.OT/wed~. Aprll 15, 1981
ABC• 8:00 -••Greatest American
Hero." IJinkley tangles with an enemy
submarine after~ pupU'1 wacky mother
wreaks havoc on an espionage opera·
tion.
CBS 9 9 :00 -"We're Fighting
Back." Movie about a small group of
New York City youths banding together
to patrol their neighborhood again.st
crime.
NBC IJ 9:00 -"Diff'rent Strokes."
Arnold develops a strong attachment for
th~ temporary housekeeper because she
remittd.s him of his own mother .
•tag9 of'"'~ eor-I Mii Tllellter on tne c:empy1
of IN State U"""'9itY of
New Yertl 11 8Yfll6o. e THSIDGSCW IUfMYAl
FM!Md on tocatlon In India,
Brazil. &uadOI', Engllnd
end the United Stat•. 1
number of unique tolu· I
Ilona IO the ptot>ieml ol
dolly 1Uf'11¥11 tor near1y I
one bllllon people' wno live •
on 1111 edOI ot 1t11V1llon
.,. OICllT\lned, I 10:00. OUMrt
Sam pt-that 1 .U..
peeled rl!Plat cal\'I be
guilty becluM hla IM1h
merka don't m1tch thoee
teh In the 'llc11m (R)
eGeNEWS
89 YEGAI I
While -chlng tor the
people whO k1119d 1 min
during I robbery, 090
atumblel ac:tou o caalno
1klmmlng operallon,
b41dtmall Ind •ttern91ed
oxlortlon flll THEY T£U IT FOR
THE TAUTH: OlAAk
STOAYTEUJNO
John Allman'• documenl•-
ry expl()(oo 1111 Ntlt.-known
IOlk culture of the Ozark
mountain• ol .c>Ythern
Ml11ourl and northern
Arkansas
-·~ NETWON<Nlwa ID TOMOMOWCAMI
MUCHLATP
Ber1"9 ~Iman, I ounllYor
of thr.. yNTI In Nui
oe.th c;Mlp9, r«urn1 10
the Illa of her tonnent with
1 group of 19 high ICllOOI
1tud1nt1. N1rr1tad by
Edward Aaner.
11:00 ••• (I) 9 MEWi 8 ITAATMI<
Whe11 1n unidentified
9')llCllhlp 11111• 10 heed
Ol'der• to atop. Capt. Kirk 1
pull the USS EnterptlM In
pureull G NEWl VWID GAME
• y•,t.•a•H
The c;ompany'• young
KOl'Nn plngpong Ct\arnpl·
on perauadel Hawtceye
Ind 8.J. to lend him mon-
wy IOI' In engagement ring.
., IENNY Hill.
A.I hOll ol I quiz Mow .
Benny trin 10 P<-1 •
t>Nulllul blond• with 1 hOl-
klay lor two
fll) DICK CAVETT
Gueat· J-Lapolllre
11:30 fJ (I) NeA
BASKETBALL
Ptoy0Hg1me 0 TONIGHT
Holt Johnny Coraon
G.-i.· Olthann C1rro4I
JOHN DARLING
1t:00• MCMI *** "A FC>f9i0n AHalr"
(11MI) Jean Artl!Yt, John
Lund. OM -"** of 1
commltt.. Miii IO etleCll I
WI .. l'llOI' ... In pojlt•
Wo.id Wer 11 Germany tllle
'"'" e a LOYleoAT
"Cindy" MelllH 811e
Anderaon, CMolyn JonM;
"Plly 8y Play'' Clvltto-•.
l)ller George. Lyl\da Day j
George; "Whlt't A Brother
For?" Patrlel< Wayne, Tom
Hlllldi. (R)
IJ GUNl•tOQ
A ~ ol 1rl09dlel
IMdl to thl dMth of thr ..
cowboya, one ol them 1
h1end of M1tt'1.
• ttotlalOH:
NPoela.E
The IMF e1tarta Ill lnltu-
-to recovet a llTllll
country'• prk:elell natlon-
11 lt-•
• PHIL080PHY t2:.30 0 TOMOMOW
Gueala elnga< Mlchlel
Murpny: author Stephen
King. atock markll onalyal
Joe Gr11wille
Cl) ONE STEP 811'YOND
"The VllllOI'" Ellen and
Harry lllY8 been married
IOI' 19 year• when Harry
Clepllrt1 on 1 trip lully
ln1eodlng never to return
1:00 IJ PSYCHIC
PtiEHOMEHA
"Ore1m W1nderM" Host
01m11n Stmpaon end
gUMI Lewrence Blair di•·
CUii lhe explOl'ltlon ol
tribel lovong m MOVIE * * • '"' "Mariorle Mor-rnnga11r ( 19S81 Gene Ket·
ly. N•••ll• W ood An
lmpreuionabMI young gtrl
Thur•da11'•
'Da11•h•r Mol'ie•
-MORNWG-
11:00 Cl) * * 'PatadtM Can-
yon" (19351 John Wayne.
Monon Burnt
11:.30 U • • "The Lett Woman
On Earth" ( 11161) Anthony
C1rbon•. Belly Jonn ·
Mor111and
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 CD • • • "The Laa• 01y1
01 Pompeii ( 1935) Pr ...
ion Foater, C11si1 Rath-
l>One
W • • '"' "The Defector
( 1966) Mon1gom11ry Clill,
Hardy Kruger
3:30 0 • •'It "CrHlurea 01
The AmazOl'I" I 1977) Docu-
men111Y
by Armstrong & Batiuk
~~~~~~~~~~~~--~
!HEN ALL OF A 5UOOEN
ONE DA'< ••• 000M! 'IOtJ COME HOM: AJCJ FINO
5HE'5 USING °™E DUST cov~ ~ ~ STEREO
F='OR A JELLO N'IOLO/
Sisters Audrey L~nders f le/tJ of ~Dallas" and Judy of "B.J. and the Bear."
,8 fini1h
! teclmical ...... tT•TWtlT ~===-...,.,.::-...,... .\":.1~m-~"=--.t•c·---..... , •. ....,"
l b'amm• • g T!'9 '94ie\ltl ... ...,_ .,. 11o1.-. '" ,.._.... ..,_ .,, •• ,... '"' ... ._. ... ..,._, .,, •1111 .:t..'=J'•TllWT 1 nee .. E ~ Meekl 11 .._ --.,_.,. -~..... Wll11Mt•· _,,....: TM ,.., .... ..,, 419illtl It ......... wlll .... ,..._ti• lw TM .......... ,_,_ .,. .... ......... -........ .._............... ····~ .. ~· .. ----...... _... ..-.. --.. __ , ... ..,. c:... ..... ~ IO<IATll, ,, ............ lnlM, .... ll'OaT • w, ~ Mccuu.ou ..... ., ..... ~· •• ·.'::'r•; ·~= ...... ----... -....... ..,._ --' •t ht S t .. C tMl1 c.llfwflltt17M ........... ....,. ~ ....,., ~ ... V ..... r ....... • Mlf•Ha Ct•l•ttt•• 1.-W.
c. I OU II O&ll M•IWMM ~ ...... '""' OHltt Martllt "'"'"· at Al· .... A--. ..... ~CllltlnM..... h:•.-o.e.e ..... .., ..... "'1 cat .... -. • r.aideotl have complet· L ................ Ctt .............. ...,_.,,,,.,... Cellfenlt .. •m UNll'LITI YAC:MY I INC.,. DTM .. '"'"''"·IN(.,. ...., CAWI ......,.,,. ... 1 CM ..... fl&UfOl I •d a "Hf·lons at&t49· Mo11t .. uu,.. llwMf. ,.. 111-1111111 oel1t111t "''"'"· 1' At· ~.·• _..,..,.., *' •~ ce11rer111a c~. ,.,., v-Pe..,11°' ..,,_ .... ..... ...... .,......,..,... c.t•• ...,_, Cllil••'1 " LW ......... t ...... GaltNl"NU ... ...._y,fr\llM,C......,.,.t9H _.__U.V...,.Hti .. "' •U•A-. llMe-..ceufllnlla..... .JJIK. • ---C.111-..,GttlW c.l.._,tUW :CuDded pro1rem to T111a "''""' •• u ... , ... •Y '""111111wa1a~'""•lft· T111a ........ 1tc..-.c llY•cw· tt7tt. ~....., ...... ~._. "'*'.._~...,ee.tOtlt,111..., HA...,.,_"°"' become certified teall ~---. .,.....,, •••• ·~ CON1ntuCT1°"' ---.._..,.. ·• • • ._u.,,,:s,,... , .... c.11,.......,--.,. 'ee ... =tclaoa for I San ~ uu:MllNlwf 0-...-...,.,,." Ulolfl .. Y'°'"' I INC ... c.MlllltM ......... ,. ~ ......... .., .......... w..t' ••• .. •.•DA .,r .. I, •11 "-· u • au Tllll........,. -n ....... tN lvliftD.H~ 1'11111ael."""* • lut l.4"!frl-.a ~''"'·Ora""• '.••• • "' -·••uo .,~.. c.tl...,lllt_I· ; /uanCapl.itr&DOftnn. c-t .. Cltfll ti Or ... CNll,~ 111 Tlllt ~ ._ fl ... wll'! t111 ,,,_._,. Cellfel'llMltlW, , ... ~ .-"'-nvan.D CAlfTO• OIVaL
Tb •• luaen ••• all M.,c11•.*1. ,_., Cltrll tf or-. CHM' ... Tlllt ...._...... .. ....... '"'• ......... "IMIUctM "". tfllNl"91YO.O.MlO...... uo ..• ~ CMl .......... 4
• Pl_. .._rcU'ltll C_I, C....-If°".,.. CllillMy 111 lllftHtlN ... ..._ ._.__. ...... ...._., 111¥1•1 ..... WTml.WT•tCT S-t.11 ,..._ ,.,..._ ._
employ ... ol 'E:ndevco ........ 0r ... c-co.111 tt1• eow ..... H:UtUHLAH ... T'f ..... , ... ,,.,. OTMIMTlll ... IMl.INC. ............. ~ .. o .... , llOTtCllW~Ofl ,.... .... QlllfwlH ..... In" ....... _.-6.,. the p-· ,_.,,._,_.,_._,_"_•_a._1_• ____ ,_$9S4_i ~ ,.,.., ~w . .._. •~c:.Mr~•••..._... ••unva1n HAW 1.0.0.0 M0&.01 ... .....,......._ '"" .-"',, .._ • .._.._ ll'u-.1.,.. 0r11119 c:aetto.11,, .,...._ ~ c ...... c.... DrNe....., ._..MA. ,,.. '""-=.,.., otwk1" cw...,._,. ... ,• .aram funded by tbe Pvauc NOTIC.. ....ne.c , s11•~ ,..,111.e,11.u.1t11 I ,.,_., '"" ......... -,.... "''"' ... ~•NMt.1'11, .. ._._. .,...,.,... o.c.,....w "''''· *" "'"'' u ,. C Ji, j W .. j D Jf'VMt ~ .. ,, .. c-ty Qert1 tf OI'-C9uf!t' all"' 1'1• Ml!.. ............. It_,.., -.. ._,.... ....... , Cel!Wlllt-1, • orn • or ... t• . ,.,..,... ..,,,u,1-.. ...., ........ Me¥ ....... A"Or9ft'•---.o.c.......... SAlllCJ( HOLOUUU •• Education and TraJnln1 ""c.OP~f'Oll ,...,,... ~ .... CMtt o.t1y P11a1, PUBLIC N~S f :cu1HL.&MM..., ,..., * ...., ... ...,..,.. • .,_.. ,... aa ... ci..1ct~ _, ... ...i ... cei1"'"" ~--. •
Act CM._. .......... ,.. ~ii'·'· 11,n. '"' lff6.fl --r---· .... ~~,.. '"' .............. ~ ....... -~ ~. A~ Str .. I, .... ""'· ..... A • ._..,..,... ........... CA_ Ot9" ............ !fl .. Ora111t ~..,..._ 1W ... ..._. 9'ft ... Call..,...Wll. Tbe Pf"OIJ'&m •l En· ALCOMOUCMVl.llMSLtct.... '1CT1T\ouaw.1 '" .,..,.,. c.Mtoma,l'ltltt._•_..._,_. c-i..-,_.........,..,.._,..,.. AllTl•L MOl.DtNM. J
de v co tr at d .,... PUBUC NOTICE .. ,.,..,A, T ,..., .... Or.,...CMttDe11y ,,..._ '""'lf'we -••· •" 111a1 ••••-,""...,.II Olnden• .. ot.. c.,,.__._......._.
employee1' tecbnni!al T~=J=-~~......... Tiit '°'....,... ..,_ '• ~ """· "-"Ill.,,,.,,., t•1 ,1...., ••lie ... •~..,_,.. ir1c1 .. .__.. • .,..._..._,., 17, .. , .. ,, 'et" .... ,, ...., -~ ... OtN•'-M" AIC4llelk .. _... ,ICT1Tt0Ulautt•IU neu.-. 't ............ ONw. ,.,, ..... ,_" •:• ............. catll.,.,. ... I. -skills ao they could un.. ca..w.., M"" °" ""-• HI• a MMMnATSMl•T c oweov MAYH.Allo •ANO, DATa1>: Al"l t.,,., 0 11trtct Office. ott c...... °'""· T111a .._._, 11 H""' r 102 Oerllftfftrd C••t• Meat PUBUC N"TJCE MWCIW.SUMHIR lrvlfll,CA: tlflffal,....,...._ 1radet.heirjobs. WINl (P\lkJC:eATINO~Cll,• ... ~,~ ..... ~ li'W-... felfll C1lltorl\l1~116 ' ~ • 'f' JUOOIOf"THI '· ltroi.t ,._, lltWO Oelllf•I Olarl•ll",_ltlOllt
G d tell llCOflallc ffVtretH •t Sttt .,... ·--SUNlllOll ......,.'"T ,........._,......, ..._. •-~ I 0 T I 11...._ ....-t & uatea Include Werner AWIM, "~ a..<11. OUllOLOOICAL TllCHHO\.OOY Them•• o. Kvtlll, un Gerl· "C'""°'"•UllNlll ........ -·-·-- -.., •• •112 hit...,,_ - --M ax l 0 e Baker , Cetlfomta.... noo .,....., ..,.. $411'9,.. ~ l~tord,C-t.MtM,eatll lll•ttatt MAMSITATIMllNT T•IDWAY,.....,.DMaYa•. or-.c-o c-•Y c11t11 ot 0r..,. ca.tr
,....1.,. 0r-c-....... ,..... Meet ~,... • n,1, ~ .. 1a ~\!Id by an 1... TM r.11owi-__ ., ... '"' TOaa1..oa aaA&&&.TOll ,....!Kt L.ac.MNft: ,,._,., >. ,.,. S le p h an i e J ones , ---.._., -• dMw•• .... ....... 11111,.. , -.-...., Tfte .....,. ,,.._, '"'-.-. ,,.,.... Aprll u . '"' 1 ... 1 •11111111 Ill lllellerda, !Ut Thom.. K-ll\ltlMUa: ~ ~.... '""· alta ~-~lien Of PvOlllMd Cir .... C:-1 o.lly ....... Deborah Swenson and ~k°""9,""'9Mtta,Cellfenll• Tiii• ... ~. w .. lllN wltll Ille RllTIRllMl!HT INN OF T•hCll..... c-..Wltacltll .... ~111•""'"-Md .-,.,11e,u.22.n,t•t '~
Cal W·u· 11 1 s Puauc NOTICE ·-l'ULL111nOH, 11eT1Rl!MaHT INN ,.~ .......... ,.._ ,,_ .... 1 ,.1 .............. ~Of_ ..... 0 ,. ....... . l 1ams, a 0 an lttcllard H. Her111t, 1N71 VI• COuftly Cl•l'll of orene-i. Counly °" 01" OALY CITY, "l!TIR•¥1lHT INN --_.,.. --' !«, , __ ._.. -..... ....... ... ---..---Juan Capistrano. s.n... .,..,. L.tMe, eatltenll• ._. Merell "· ""· 1 Of" CAMPe•L.LJ HTIRIMllNT 1HN •or. u. n. tt, M•rt, 191 '""'' ~~,:: i;::,:0~'::,,':!; PUBUC NOTICE Al K 1 K b '1CT1nouseu11 .. 1U •41wn N. ~au N-"'...a OI' tUHNvv.-.1.e. RIETIRllMl!NT 1 so aro yn unsc • 111AMat.rATlldlfT 1t..i C:.UMMll.Cal"-"la,.. P"b".,,.. 0r-. c o .. i o.uy ,.., •• 1HH o,. FRIMOHT. RIETIRl!Ml!NT PUBUC NOTICE fte•tlacMclfllwn. N 1•-· Laguna Niguel; Lucy G. TIM 1oi_.,,. --. 11 •lrlt taus1· .1111 ,, """'lie. ., ,.,,Met• Iii''·"·•·'·•· u , '"' ,....,.., 1 " H o " a u " L 1 " o "' M IE • ,,. ..,.. ... ~"' ot .,. ~ • -
M ......... Orlff ,. ____ ,. .. , ....... ·--R"T11t·~·NT INN 01' ··H J .... IE .... of o..tal '*'--''°" ...... Of NOTICE OF DEATH o~ art Inez. s an • • .................... .-.... -ort .. ....... -.,... . NortCllTOc••ono•• lmpro,,_ Olllrkl .... 10Q, Wllkll J a ME s "0 w a RD
Cl 4PPLIEO s111v1us, u J-H ...,,, 115 1•1 Dewey PUBUC N C"" 2'70 Hef'llot Blvd .. ~lie 211, C.te •. .-.... •• ~ ....... "" "" em en te ; Marilyn •mltt•O. 1rv1ne, c;.111om1em" strwt. s.11AM...c.:c.tifWl!tet1MDS r. Me ... eatlfot"ftlat»Jt 0tteuuc TaMSftu _,. .... ..._._..., 1111•11<1--1" im. RE I NH,.RT, , .. 6 J ,.....,ES
S e T CIK. 6WMWU.C..C:.I II• •moullt Of .... Mlflt .,.,_Jllmott-"" -,..... mith, Dana Point and w .. ., Alllf'I H-r. :tt Alftlstad, 1111 111111-. i. c~ ,., • • Retlrernenl ,_ °' """"'<•. '"'· Netk•ll._..,el"""toc,....,..ot ,., .,,,.,.-. ,,. ....,... .., wttkll H. REINHART, •le.a JIM
W e n d y w 8 I k e r , •r;•~· =~,':1~""' ,., en '"· llflff•I ::.'::::::·Rk.lwnfl f"1CTmouuus1 .. ass ~ ~·;'.'~1~orrn~"ros~~o ~.~ 111e w11111" _., tr_,_. 111e1 • -... wtH budcl 1a 11 ·~'"' u. R E 1 NH ART AND o
Capl.strano Beach. OlvlOU•I. Tlllt ....._I w• ,. ........ 1-t.. NAMa ITATII.._ .. ,. C•lltorftl•... bulk tr ..... 1• elllMll .. be""*°" ...... Of WWlll,.,. 1"•0-11 Olt-p ET IT I 0 N T 0 a D
·FOR THE RECORD ........
MIUIOM COMMUNITY'
llOlf"ITAL
Mal'dl •• "" ' Mr IM IWs. Tlmoihy McOowen, San Ju•n ,...,..,_,boy
Marclll, tte1
Mr .... Mn. UM Mc°""'91, LA9"M
8e•ch, bOy
MercJI t, , .. ,
Mr.'"' MrS.'Mkllael Cawlfl, lrvlfte, lloy
MT. •M Mn. l.Awrenc:e Mlllei.rlt11, Htwport 8oac:I\, t lrt
~tt.191 Mr. •lld Mn. Stllwn KnulsOn, lrviM, .. .,
MtrcllU, I.,
Mr. •tld Mn. Frenll Sunt. LA_.. Nft.,.I, afrl
Merclllt,191
Mr. •llCI Mn John BrltM, Stll J1Mn Caplslr-. boy
MtrdlU, t•t
Mr. •nd Mn. lluuell Henry, San JllOI\ Cacolslr-. boy
MeRJI 11, '"' Melanlt J-Cra'9, LAIUN lleec:h,
bOy
Mr. •lld Mra. lllCNrcl t<•Y•. '"''"'· bOY •
Merc8tt,1tlt Mr •llCI Mr• Jelfrey O.vll, 0-. Polftt, bOy
MarcliJ4, '"' Mr. •nd MrL PwklL ~ •• INIM, glrl
IAHCLIMINTE GllllallAL llOlf"IT4L
Marc• 11, '"' Mr. allCI Mn. llk rw.nl 51\ean, San Clemenlt, boy
Mr •nd Mn. Wllll•m Turnou11, San Ctemente.1lr1
Mercll 2', , .. 1
Oebu HerOld -w1111e Seav. San Clemtnlt, bOy
MM'cll1',1tl1
Mr. and Mrl. Br•d Norr It, S•n Clemenle, boy
Mr 'and Mn . SI.....,. LActon, San Clom1t1le,00y
M4lrdl •• '"' Mt, atld Mn Tilomti Hoity, OaM Polnl,t lrl
C"ery1 H-•nd ROO.rl Harri•,
S•ftCl•mente.olrl
MercliJ1, '"' Mr atld Mn J•....s t..ee, Caplllr-
Beach, 111r1
-'" Tiit tot_,,. P«Mn Ito dolnt butl P•rtoftel proper!' 11erel"•"" !rkt Ho, tQI • ,....,'* lfl ~-11 ttn to "" • lletMyA.Hoowr C111"t' Cl..,_ of 0r-. c.u..1, °" ,,. .... , • ThltllUlt.,...it~teabv•<or· detcrlbld. perlorm P'°""'""· *'''"·'"'"'"MINISTER ESTATE NO. Thlt ltll..,_I •II llled •1111 ,,_ Aprll ta, 1'11. ,.,.... M411-WIES1' SALES, 212 Oret1t9 porall°"~-·~ 1..,.. Tfte --....._ ...., ... o1 tlln tor, eftd co1utruct c•pllel A ·10•-r.
Couftty Cllf'lt of Oran'9 Couftty on St H I h II C Ill "-·-·-" • f I ltl ~ Merell JO,,., ...... I.MM 0....... c..tt Otlly ....... n:t,~'· -PO• ~ J • •rftl• of AIMrico, lft<, Ille lfttendM lrlfltteror It J.A.C.O. ec I .. lhnlugll '* '" l'llPMM .. T 0 a I I h e i r s I
l"t.,_ ~.1S,tt,2',May6,t., llOMI Merit H. Wiibur, ft2 Orel\.. L.W.Mlcllllld, ~::•lrte:.,S.UOMleyTwr-,lrvlM, ~':'~=~~::.)~~~beneficiaries, Creditors A:,7,b:~~.~~=l Cont Oallyl=j SlrHI, NewPOrt BHCll~ellfOrftlA Tllll ::...ic:.::io:: llltd wltll llM T"9 -end bull-aoclreu of lrwlne. Ti. llenlfkltrltt of tM pre)lcl and Contingent Creditors Of .) PUBUC NOTICE .,...,, County c1er1t or Oren99 CounlY on Ill• '"'•"deo tr111al•,..• I•: Goll er11llecll'-oflfte~ty. James Howard Reinhart;
Thlt bulllllff I• cOtlCIYC by.,.'"· M•re" JO.,.,, '"llrnetlonal eor.,.Mloft, 1m Etst 2. ""Jee' N-: 1Rwo o...re1 aka James H . Reinhart, PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS austNHS olwldual. ,.,,,.. EOlt\e9r.5-AAN,CelHOf'ftlat170S. Olltlt•lloft ._, Siie for 1.0. •ta>
M«IL H. Wiibur Published a.-.,.. ca ... t Dally Piiot, Tl\ot u.~ypert'--1 ._,_1, G•-C·D aka Jim Reinhart and NAMa ITATaMal!IT Thll mt-was II .. wlUI the detcrlbtd II\ ~ti 11: Molett, mold Prolo<l l.oUltlGft: per 5 0 n S W h 0 may b& l'ICTITIOUS eUllNEH T,_ lollowl119 -*' It delnt bull· Couftly Cllrtl ol Or~ ColHllY Oft •prll I, I, U, 22• l"1 IMIJ-el l\outlftl aM mHtera uMCI for Ille Thi ,..._.. projl(I lft<ludff cle-
NAMa STAT•Mal!IT MH .. : Merell ... 1'11. I m11111lac:llft ol ..... !or ..,.. CluO., •1911, sit• llCQUltlllofl, COftllNC:llOfl Of otherwise interested In the •
Th• 1011-1"1 ,..,_ •• ,. doing ECOHO I.UBE •ND TUNE, ,10 N . l'1111as PUBUC NOTICE '°"'"" wtt11 re1a1ac1 '"*'"°'"''of'°'' '-''•• •ec11111et, P'Mlnl.ftll •tudr.1, .,., wi 11 and/or estate: ""''""nu: Harbor, s.ntaAN. Celllorftla92703 •111»11llhlcl o.-.,.. eo.J O.lly Piiot, cltltM, toll llMCll.,,, '°'' .... tts .. -relm~ of "" 1Rwo Ceptl.tl A petition has been flled COUNTRY CLUB INOUSTlllAL lloberl P. E•rl, U4~ Cyftthl•, Aprll 1, IS, 22. "· , .. , 1615.ft Is IO<•llcl •: ~ OMr.y Tenac:e, Rnttwe l'unds. TN 1,..-ox1m ... 1oce. by Eleanor P. Reinhart In
P4RK,nnc;..,t.,.Orlw,H"""""°" c°'T~·,.~cailtorN1 ~!~~ b l"1cr1nouseus1Na11 ''"'""·CallforN•tZ71S. uor1otllftytlulfec111u .. 1s-..on the Superi'or Court of Beach, callloml• tM7 ... --s ' ,__ y ." NAME ITAT•M•NT , ... bullnKI -"'"" ,,. Y id Ille •lleclwcl l'9uf'ot. -,-..
G•r•ld t<lelft, n1:12 V•ll• A.oac1. olvldual. PUBUC N011CE Th• toll_,,,. ,.., ... , •r• '°'"I trlftlflror et Mid IOCatlofl 11: J .4 .c.o. Tiii pro1«1 ,_l•t• of ti. Tiith Orange County requesting
Sen Juan c.pj&lr-. C.lllornl• Roe.rt P. EArl butlftltl es: Goll '"' Ml• of Generel C>tlll .. tlofl ...,_ of th t El p R I h l Eert Welk, tM Sltyllfte Drive, C Thla 1111-1 ... llled with l,_ PICTIT10USeUSll .. all 4POTA AOVIEltTISIHG AGEN· Tt\et~bullttrantf.,.lslfttendedto lmprow-Olstrkt .... IOI, wttkll a eanor · en ar
L.a11uft• llMcll, callfornl• ,:.~~~y JOC, ~.;~. ol Ore119t County Oft NAMa STATaM.NT CV, I .. ~Ill, C.-0.1 Mor, be <OftlUlfttftated al tl\e olllce of were eutlwhild ., l"9 elKlienlft 1m, be appointed aS personal
T111s 1>Usl111u '' cond\Ktad or • c.111ornl•n625 J.A.C.D. Golf,'"'" Irvine, c:.111om1a tfte•m-lfMllbtlfte...,.••-representative to ao, .... ,.,~ .,._ ,,. foll-ng --Iii dOll\t bull· • POTA CORPORATION <• '27UonorotwMay '· ,.,. ly N.7.IO,CIGO. Thi_.,...., wtlkll minister the es tat• of ..
"-· Mtl\oMy a Publhl.., 0r.,,.. CAlltl Dally Piiot, ""' "' Ca 11 lorftla corpor•llOI\), tUI Tiie -end....,_ of l,. Plf'Mlft bonclt wlll •~la ll ecC01'1111'4lllll tfte . .-.i 8roYlon April I, •• IS, 22, , .. , IS4-11 VITA·HE41.TH RESEAf'CW. 1"5 Marg11erll1, Coroi;o• Oel Mar. wltll wllomclelll't m.y .. lllocl It K.C. "'''" of WOt1l$,.,. 1,..,0-11 Oh· James Howard Remha. ~
Allioo'MYI al I.AW Tulllft AYeftllO • 1°· Cost• MH•. C•lllorftl• nus, f".O. •oa 1450, SchMI, &quire, ''° ..._. Clfllltr Irk! N•. IO)OI ,..,,,.. ," """'',.,,lo of Costa N\esa, ca. {u By~ c. J-PUBUC NOTICE Celllorl\femD. N•wPOrt llMCll, catlloml• HMO Ori .... Suite IOO, Newport •ucll, pertorm Pl•Ml119, Cles19", •<quire the I nd e pendent A
This ,.,.,_1 •ts 111ec1 •It" t11e H ..!-.!°~~,m,~k!!;!~ •209• Thi•.....,,... Is~'"'" •CM· c111forn1a nwo. -t11e 1 ... ur.., '"" tor, o"d coftttrucl ce•lt•• m ·inlstration of Estat County Cl•rll of o...,.. CoufttJ "" ew,_.,_.,....., -.... •·-poratlon-1111"9 claims boJ .,,Y c..-w ..,.II 111 ltclllll .. llW""lll t• '" f-11 '° Merell JO,,.,, l'ICTIT10UI •UllNHS Thi• ---,, conducted Oy an .... .......~..... Aprll JO. 191, WN<ll I• tlle butl-s devetopmel\I cleclt lCM\S of 1urltdlc-Act). The petition is wt,
JONas, MAMON•Y a eRAY'TOlll N-• ITATIMaNT dlvlduel. DwtYMR.c1er11. .,., IMfore 111e '°""'"'in.ti•" d••• tlon•I lgltllClel, we11 es 1111 City of hearlflC;I In Dept. No. 3 at A~\"t•U .. w The lollowlftl per1011• are 001n1 1.-oOaboul> ,.,........,. 'PICllllClebo¥t. lrvlne. Tl'•btMll<llrlftoltftep"'1o<·1 700 Cl · C t 0 I Ave• .,._1111 ,_ 11us1".._. •: Tiii• s1e-1 w• meet wltll ,._ '"'' sta'-1 w• 111• w1111 ttw So 1.,. 11 It ~ to ..,d "'"'....., .,. 1,,. clt/~.,"" c_....,ty, VIC en er r ve
.... ._t~ °"""· E & p DESIGNS • .,~, Olet1onl, County c .. r .. ol Oren .. Coutlty Ofl Couftty c1 ..... of Oren .. COuntY on Tr .... ,_ Mid 1.....-ct Tr111....-... J. Prole<I -· lltWO Ollll .. tlon West, santa Ana, Ca 92701
s.t11t• Hun111191an llMCll, C.llloml• tlMI ""'1"· 1•1· ""'" '· '"'· .,.,... ,..., ,,. fll&lowtnt MllU-1 bull...u B_ So .. tor 1.0. ••osG._c.o on May 6, 1981 at 9 :30 a .m .
Ne._.n-.-, CMltonlla ~utttt Str.!11,1-:.~,,:=-:.~11~1 ~~'::;! Publt-0r_. CAll•t oau~'= P11bllllhlcl Cir-C-•t Dally Piiot, ~~ 1':: =:-:-m•:: ':i:.~ Pr;/:'~P.,.oJoct lft<ludff ci. IF YOU OBJECT to. the
Publl..,,.. o.-.,.. eo.11 oa11y Piiot, '2144 •prll t, IS, 22. "· '"' 114.fl Aprll t, IS, zi. 29, 1•1 H1M1 So"t• A..._Catllorftl•. ''"'· ,, .. ec:qul•lllOft, ~truclllft of granting of !he petition, ~
April 1, 1. u. 22, 1•1 1fft.f1 "'•-J. Moorw, mu Send°""'' -oa1ec1 ._,.. t, ,., cep1i.11ec111llel, ,,._...,. •tudies, -you should either appear
ci ,Fo....tt1"V•ll•y,eet11orni•t27oe PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ••ucal"auatra•.no. relmt>u..-Of tt1e 111wo c:e.itai at the hearing and sta~ ...... J.-.. Str ..... Yocu,C.-&• ..... Ru•rve FUMS. TIM opprulmate . . , • I
I T111s --wos 111ec1 w1111 ,._ 11 • .......,.etr.Dr.,1t11.• l«•llonlfpt1~11ec:11111 .. 1,_ your ObJ~Ctl?ns or file ·~.
-----------COUtllY Cllr1I of..,. C:O..nty on Merell "CTIT10UI •u:ri•11 l'ICTITIOUI •UllNHS "-..rt ...... c.. ,..., on Ille llltcflld llO<ifU. written objections with the • -
F1C:T1T10UI MlllNau I JO, '"1. "'"-Th• ro':'!~T:!'!o,,, ".~. °''"" Tll• r:!':.="•~• oo1n1 f"ubllthM OrMtit Cota oa11y f"llot ™ proJocl consi111 of ,,. 111111 court before the hearinQ.
NAME ST4TUHNT Pwblished 0.-ai>Oe ca.st Deity Piiot, butl-M: buslMts•: April IS, t•t l .... l. ~:'...=r~~l~:.c'."t~I:;: xour appearanc e may be4
T°"tollowlnepe.-.lsdolfttbusl1 Aprll1,l ,IS.22.1"1 I~ 'WARMINGTON COMMEltCIE O & I( OEVIELOf"MENT CO. --were•u-uectl>ytlll-tlonlnlfU, IO person Or by your at•
,,..... CIEHTEll ASSOCIATES1 ,..,., Nat• Utt s..,..r1or •••.CHI• .Mn•. PUBLIC NOTICE t"'•-ofM1ebel"1-llOl1N1e1y torney. •
MONEY UNLIMITED, 4000 PUBLIC NOTICE °'"~~·=E·~TIPfor"lll .... ~!"M'l .. HGTOH c.tltorllltt'a27 S7,tJO,OOO. TM purpoM tor wlll<h I F y 0 U A R E A
M•cArtllu< 81vd., S...fte JOOO, Ne•POr1 "'"""' " """ t<enfteth Lu Coller, 4U H . boncla will be ICllO It lo accomplltl\ Ille o' j e .. ch, C•lllorn•••l660 co ..• calltornl• corporetlOfl, 1"'2 Newport Blvd., Newport 8HCh, Pl•ftofWorblorlmpro.......,1Dlttrk l c RE I TOR or a c ont .. I JOM Lawrence Ande"on nil l'ICTITIOUI aUSINaSS Hele A-. lrvlftlt, calltornl•t2714. C•lltor.W•t2MJ No IOS ts revlW In Merell lf71 to ingen\ Creditor Of the de-
Alt•nU Avenue, #I, Huntl~9lon lllAMa STATIMENT Thll bu11MU h <ondll<lld by a Oevld Kl"I, 114 Urcl, Newporl perform plaMl"9, dollln, acq11lre Ceased you must file your
BH <h, Ce11ror11lat,._. Tht rollowl119 person• are CIOlng llmlleclpertM"""' Beach, Celllomla'*l l ltu lor, •ftl\ <Oftslru<I caplt•I Cla1·m 'w1'th the COUrt ,_ Th,. bullneu tt c-..Cted by .,. n bulln.._." The R_, P. W1rml"91on Co. Thh b•lllMH h conduct ea by • rec:llltlH "'""4111 1"2 II\ .._ .. to .,.
OtVIClu•I I . COLOR IT RIGHT TV, u77 w. Wlllle<nJ. Plflm<11t1, _,.,~Ip. ol Ille ..... """'*'' dlcltlons Of jurltdlC· present it to the personal
JOIWI L Anderson , BUer, Cosi. Mew, Celllomle t3'26 S«rllMy K..,,,.111 L. Cotl•r ti I le 11 t11e Cl f t ti · t d
Tntt tl•toment wn llltd Will\ 1nel Ktnneth Or-Frledlotl<I, 2Jl7"G" This --t WAS llllO with t.. This 11.t'-1 WAS tiled wflll Ille Ir°:::. ~...!.~..:softftepr~j~I represen a Ve appOIO e
County Cltrk ol Oronee Count, onl E SanleCJM .. SantaAna,Celltornl• Co1H1ty Clerlt Of Or ..... Counly on Covftly Clwlt ol 0ren'9 Couftty on erel...;clll~~IM<Oftlll'lllftlty by the COUrt wiU1in four
M•rc11 n 1•1 n 1os ""''"· t91. Merell JO,"'' • f"ro1oc1 Nome: 1Rwo General months from the date of • l"1SMJ1 Tht1 _.._. ,, <ondll<tea by.,, •n-"'*" ,.,_ 01>11eat1on Bond s.r.' tor 1.0. •to. first issuance of letters a5 • .,. Publlll>ecl 0.--CAll•t O.llt Piiot Olvldual. Publlllhlcl Or .... Coast Oolly Piiot, P111>ll,_ o.-.,,.. CAllst Oally Pllol, Gr-C·O 'ded · Se t• 700 ~ ' Mar 1S />,pl, I • IS , .. , ,._.; K-0 . Friedl-4prll •• u. 22. "· ,., , .. 7 .. 1 4prll '· •• IS, 221"1 1~1 Projecl l.oull\in: P/OVI in c ion ,,. •• • • . ' This, ... _, WAS 111«1 wllh Ille -----------Tiii ~ projoct '"'_,"' t'he Probatt> Code of ••
Couftly C•••' 01 Oran .. eou"'' on PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE '""· ,1 .. ecqu1J111 ..... c0Mtruct1on of California. The time for ,, PUBLIC NOTICE Mtra.i. it11. ,. cep1t.1tec:mt1n,~119st""'"·•tld filing claim s wilh not ex· I ,...,.. relmbu,._.,. of 11'9 IRWO C4tPlt.1 · I t f th '' • NOTIC• TO e•aDITOttS •ubll&IWCI 0r.,.. ca.st 0•11' Piiot, NOTICI Of" T•USTl•'l IALE "CTITIOUl•UllNIU R ... , .. Funds. fll9 •llP'Hlm•l• toe•· Pl re pr or 0 our mon s '
OI' euu: TllANSP•• "'"'111•1• 15• 22• ,., IJlt.ll T.a. .... .... lllAMEITATEMINT uon of ""~' 1ac11111n '' Wlw" on from the date of the hear· •
PUBUC NOTICE
.-..n• 1.1•1 Cllc.6111•117 U.C.C.I NOTICE IS HEltEev GIVIH, lhet Th• toll-11\9 ............. 0011\t the ••tac-l~res. I ing noticed above. Dr •no Mrt John S11<kle l, San Hollce "tterel>y tlwtft I• 111o PUBLIC NOTICE on Wed.....U-,, ~I Jt, t•t. et 12:00 butlftlttft; TM -)let c-isu of tlle louttl\ YOU MAY EXAMINE
c1em1t1te, bOy creditors ol OWll.E HEGOIEM ...... O'CIOCk -°' .. ,d cMy, '" tlll -TRINITY CUSTOM OR4PERI ES, wit ot Geftw•I Obllgatlon 9otlds of . -------------1Soc1e1 s.c11r1ty No. 11 s11.i.2u 9 Irene• IOllboJ o1 u. o11ic.. ot REAL uSJ-B eircll, Newport B .. cll, tmpro-D1Jtr1<1 Ho. t•, W11lc11 the file kept by the court.
---"---Tr_,.rw, ..._ llualMtt .--1. l'ICTITIOUI eu11111au ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, CelllOmla .. ,. ·-Ind lly ""•loctlOft '" tt16, If you are interested in the
711 Wnt 17111 Str-. Wiie A .... Clt'f of MAMI ITATIMllNT louted at 117 North lroMwey, SUI.. Julie R. C...lle, lt~A Howe Drive, llll amount Of MI01111"9 epptoxlmate· estate you may file a re· -PUBLIC NOTICE CoS'I• Mew, c-ity of~ ..... st.ta of Th• loll-lftg per1011s •r• 001111 A, '" IN City Of Stllta M•, C-ty ot Stllta Ane, calllorftl• t1)'0t ly •·l.510.000. T,. ~ tor wttkll t ' th the rt t __ C•lllotlll• 11111 •~trMtfw 1,....,.. boltlnns es: Or•n1•. Stet• of C•ll!orftle, T K C•ftfll• Sue MertlMz, "' West bonds will tie Mild ls lo ac:~lllll u. ques WI COU 0 re·
l'ICTITIOU5 •USINEIS lo ....... to •RAD•URY SOU•RE CROWN POTTERY, 2101 $.. Val• INVESTMENT COMP~Y. INC ... Sllallmer Orin • 1. CHI• Meu. .. ...... ~tor lmpro-• DI•-c e ive'special notice of the
IUIMllTATIMlllllT CORPOR•T10N, • C•llfer"'' s1r .. 1.s...t.a-,Ca11foml•t2704 c1111or"'' c...--•llon, os ••Y • c.11torftl~ 1r1c1No.t••.-..o•"•....,.1t7' inventory of estate a5se~
Th• ro11owlftg per-. er• ""'"' ~ ........ ,,.., .. Tu 1.0 . 11-rt L. CMW, lOJtt .. yvi .. , pofftltd T,_ UftdW end pw..-" "'"'' l>utlftltt ,, COftd..Cted by • to perform PMMllll. ...... ec.,1,.. d f the tltlon c butlneu" No.. It fS.JUVS2. Tra11tlet11 Wl\Otl Senta,.,.._ CallfomlA t2'07 tlle -or tale GOftNrrff II\ U\tl CW· .. ~ral lllf1nlnttlp. lllH lor, •ftd conttruct cepltel an 0 pe S, a •
L 4 PA I.MA T ER 11 ACE buth\HS •ddreu ll 1"40' aelbo• M•rll 5'tonelle, JClll 'Y'lll-lloM ttlll OHO ol Tru1I neculed f)y Jull•ll.C...llO ft<llftles ltlr'Oulltt tta lft ,_. to C 0 Un t S and re PO rt S
AP4RTMIENTS, LTD .. Hlt2 Beach Boultwonl, City of NQPOrt IMacll, Drive, CGste Meu, C.llforlll• tJUl6 HIER•ERT 0. JENNINGS .... LINDA Tiii• II..._,. .,,. flled wltll ... ""Cleve~ CleeltloM Of jurlSdk-desc ribed In Section 1200
Boulturd, Hunllft9lon e .. ch, C-lyolOr ..... st.lltofCallfomle. Tiii• b<islneH ll conducted l>y • l.. JENNING$, IW ....... tftdwlll, MCI C""'IY Clltll ot Oren .. Cd\fftly •ft 11-1 ....,cift, 8Yltll MU. CJty Of Of the California Probate
Celllornla t'lM7 • Tiit ~ to 111 tr-f9r..cl It ..... ,., .,.~. ~--HowmMr 21, 1m. '" ....., ""'" '· 111\. lrvlM. TN lllftefkle•llt of lfll projl(I Code Hector MarHCh, H IU ... ,11 ... ",_ 111 tMWat .. : All AKIL '" llMr'll SloNtole 1MOt Of Olfklal .......... Mid c-,....., .,.. Ute clU-ol-<~ty. .
eoulnard, Huntington B .. c11 , tr ... , n...,,.., -.a1ptneo11 .,.... ..., This --wos meet wl"' tlle t,, •• PoOIJ 1071. R • ..,..,., 111str1r PWll.,_. ar.,.. Coalt Dalt'""'°'· Hem• Of ..-.CY U~ltlf ..,... David Sterling Tingler
c a111orlM•tM7. wlll t....-l""'9lt end 1..e.-.cs c °""'Y c11r11 or Oren .. Cou111y o" -n• No. um, "Y ,...,._of•.,_" Apr11•, u,u. 2', '"' 1~1 1ec:ta: 1n11n11R-11w111ro1strkt Law Corp Attorney·~ •l •
H«lor Merucll 1mproveft'IMIU ., "'-' c.t>Y Senk• M•rch JO, 1"1. or cte1 ... 11 '""'"""'lit --1onnMc. 1--------------Colltact ,._, Kellll l.lwlfl9er L SCIO N' -Center -:1 Thi• ............ , ... "'" wltll ,,. -1-_,_ .. "COPY SERVICE" '1...i ol lllt otllltltlonl -wM ""'""· ,,.. 4rH Coede: 1714) ,._,., a.1m, aw, e ... _.. ... ...
County Clerk of 0ren99 Counly 011 lftd ~ 9t 711 "'"1 l7UI Street. Put>ll-0r.,.. C:0..1 Oally Pll«. c:ludl"9 INl certalft ~or *'tult. PUBLIC NOTICE E•leMllft: 2a Drive, SUfte t20, Newport
Aprll•.1•11 Sult.,...., Otylf c..&e -... ~ Aprll •.•. u,22, t•1 Ut>ll Notice of •111<11 ••• ·•~erd•d t-------------Mlt'9tti0fl-to •wkl lllt-Beach CA 92660· (714) ·' .,._, of 0ro,,.., 51e1a., CAl!fwftle. OKamber 2', , .. , I" lloak tll'J Of Of• tlol sltfWI~ ofhcta: N-11-1..cl 644,5'3J ' , .
Pul>lllhld o.--. CAllll O•lly Piiot. T "' bulk treftshr w111 •• PUBUC NOTICE fkl•I Rocerdl ot Mid~,.,,,.... N011C:STOCIOICTUCTOtU t o11ec1~Jl.l4. t•'.__ ·RtiubllShed Oranne r ..... st .' Apr Ill, U, 22. Jt, t•1 H-..1 <CNISUm~ Ofl or elter the JDttt day '2.S, llac:or•'a Ill..,_. No. 46110, • CM.U ... POlt etDS ~.. wi.t""' ••w I""""
ol Aprll. "" •• 10:00 a.m . •t --------------•WILL. SELL AT PU•LIC AUCTION lelloolc:&11rkt: COAST COM· A11i.t.anUecreterv Oa ~ Pilot, April 15, 16, .,.,
WESTE·N MUTUAL ESc·o-TIM TO THE HIGHEST ••OOlllt ,0. MUNITY' •GEOISTltlCT .. !:-',, ,',"'". ,.,°' .... c-Dally,.",'°' .. ,· 22, 1 81 1796·81 . CORf"OAATIOH, ..._ ....... i'. n; lllOTlca OP T•usraa•s uui CASH lewful _., ..... Ul\lted ... OMl91N: tt:•l'ded!AMeflfte ..... PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS eUSINEH
NAMa STATaMa•T
Tlw IOllo•l"I PfflOllt .,. "'"'
_, __
COMPUM«HTAllV COt.OltS, •1
Vitt• eo,a. Newport •••ell, Calllornlat..o
Heft(y CetOl"1 ltomtfl, at Vlsi. e.n. Newport e.ec11, Catllornl• tawo
Judy Ann Foote, JOU North Pl~ Or-. C.IHorfll• tlMl
Tl\lt ll<IJlness It conduct.a by •
...... pe~. .._.,R_
TlllS tl.t..,._t -llled wllh 11'11
Coul\IY Clm OI Oren99 °"'"'' 011
Ent 17tlt si.. .. t, Suite tos. Costa T .s. Ho.,,.. si.i.•' a11.,..,_lit1111 IMM.,.... MlldOJlf"-":. '"' MeM ColllOnlla.. TMUMlolltdatefor Oft April 2t, lttf, et 10 A.M., all rlqM, Utleendl....,__ ._Id..; /'loce Of etd lt«tlpe: Offkle If tlle llllfte d olms"' ""llCl9W rl'tef'recl to NEST MORI.LANO SERVICE. INC... II, •• Tnalel, '"end,. !Mt tMI -Purcl\•Mllt Aftl\I. Merl•ll ... Nlft,
Mrtlft It AIWIUO ,., :•lltoNlle COf'POf•llon," the now duly erty t lhieted 111 •Id Col.ft(t/ •"4 Coetl C__,,ty Cal .... Dlltrlet. ta70
lot ' . •-ll'ltlCI Tn1st .. ~ -pursuanl Si.i. ffKr111ec1 es lell-· AdlmtA..,.,,C-taM9M WMlt"-IOtlleTr_tor .. , too..defTrvttelNC ...... llYSAMEUL f"AitCELt: ' ""feet ld1,.tltlc1tllt\ .. eme:
tll!MIS""9_end....._ ..... E . GLODICH AHO WA.HOA All tlllt~t1-t1iun..lftu. ORA.HOE COAIT COLLaOI.
• ., Ille Tr ......... tor""' ..... """' GLOOICH Hus••HOANOWll'IE ~ Ll•ltAllY SIECONO ,LOOlt ~~~~~tet Tru~tor, ~.,~ Fot>rwiry U, ,;.o: fc:,';~:! =" 9Mcl\, deecr*M M CAAf"llTllfQ-elO•W
OWll• ·HIOgitm T•-l'ltror H lnu. No. 17$ll, In 8-!Utt, Pa.. Lot i. 1t1 Block A ol Ttacl in, " l"lac• "'-.,.. "' fl .. : Off!« 9' e • A D e U • y I O U A I a 1101 or Oflklel Rec•d• In ,,_ otllce or eMwft Ill\ e f'l\IP _., Ill MMl K Pl\'tlcal Facllltl .. f"l-"'9 Treller
COltf"OllATIOtt IM C-.ty ltocor• Of Or-Coun· ,.,1 .. 17 ,,., 11 of M.ladllefteou~ l'aclllty,.Jlllftf191ttr,c-t,C-.WIY
A'9llMnlia<elPM..... •r:;,1~~·:'E~':r"'..~ai.1c 4 UCTION ~~r,~:o••• of °''"" Co11nty, ~~CAO:.~~.~AW,. CMl.t
er: TenyA. Mc~,,......... TO THE HIOlfllT 81001£11 l'OR f"41tCIELJ· NOTICIEISHERl!IYOIVIENtllettM
Pubtlsllecl Cir .... Cout Dell' PlltC CASH, IPIYll>le et lllN Of Hie Ill All 11111 cerl..1t1 IMCI tltua ... II\ the HoYl•ft<lltl'lld $cfloOI District et ~llltlt
Aprll lS, t•t ''°"''· 1awtu1 money of Ille Unlled St• ... l el Clt'y of N-porl .. ecll, Cowlty of COllftl,, CelllOf'ftle, tc:tlftt •r eftd
111e toll-lftl """ eddreu wltll Orenee, 5*.1Mofeall"""'9: 111ro11•h lls Qever11lng •••rd, P\JBUC NOTICE U-lllC Olec:• tllere•t nolltd· Al ti• A...,,_ Of Let as Of 9IOcll A of ller•I"'"" referred ti u ,,'"1, N•rlh f..-MlrOllC• to u. Collftly Trtcl us. cw-Ott"""· .. ..._ "OISTlllCT'",wtlltee.i ..... to,"1'....C Pwll-Or .... Coesl Oelly PllO(, ~---------C0\11'1-... 100 Civic Col\IM Orlwe .... """,_..11'1 .... a. ..... ,. ••t ... U\afltlll .............. 11 .... , _ ....
Aprll•, t•t
Ajtrlll, u,n,:tt. "" , .. ,... MUNtaf"ALCOU"TOl'TM• WUI, In ltlt Clly ot Saftt• Allf, of Mlte•l'-t"""" -· ol l>ldllorU.--'ol•COlltra::llotl ..
------------I 0 UT M 0 •AN 0 a JU 0 IC I A C•lllorllla, ell rlottt, tltlt 91\d lnter .. t Oraf\99 ~ Mc: IDN u IOI.... abtve llf'Ojl(I
OllTlllCT COftwtted to --,_,,, by II ijllder htl"""" e1'111e..:.. ~ <~-elch llNll be rocet...., In Ille jtlace
COUNTY' Off OllAMll ... ,, °"" of Tr\ISI II\ "" P•lil!ll'1Y ,_ of .... l.114 as; .... ...,,.. • U' ldetttlf1" ........ -.... be ......, JTATaO#CAUllllOltfUA •ltueted I" Mid Couftty atld State "#"1te.,.1ftOft *-"' ~" eM publkly rMd....., lit tfte ..__
PllBUC NOTICE
••o-v...., PMllW9J doKrlblCI •. Lo( sol trtcl No........ Nkt lot. Miki "'""'1)1 ~ .._ ..... tlmellldplocs.
.. rCTITIOUSeUSfMaU .............. CAfM17 111 IM CllY ol C.i. #MM, Couftly of t11e SoulNn'f Hiit .. Maae1 0r'"1.. Tlllt'ewtllbe•ll0• ..... 1t~
MAMl ITATaMaMT f"UlllllTil'ff: ~LIES HOWARD, Oraftta, Stele of Collfomla, ea ptr lllOWft Of'I •Id ,.._P t11 Trect 61*; lor .. ell Ml Clf llltl docullltfltl ta
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To <kvelap mn~ for Thursday,
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Orange Coaat DAJLY PtLOT/Wedneectay, Aprll 16, 1981
·Tapes tHe new twist
~
Costa Mesa firm ~cializes in turning boqks into cassettes
BY JIUY iANE ac~acBUA> •bout twtce a year but acldl etabt or 10 new Mot.t or .. ...,........ eacbmontb
The ~mmuter waa delllbted to bit a red U1ht Rental prlcet to uae a ta.,..S boolt f« a moetla···
and amlled at the bumper-to-bumper traffic on the bell.a at ts.llO and so u blp u $12.IO. "It'• about
freeway at ru1b hour. 50 cenb an hour, and you can't blr9 anyone to nad ',
SomeUmet he even wu late to work becauae to you f« that," aay1 Mn. Hecbt wttb a laq.b. I
be aat In his car liltenlne intently· Titles lnclude both ·ftctloo and non·ftctl•.' 'r.' t A rock and roll fan? A talk ahow junkie? No, a clasaica and best aellen. '
bibliophile. "Best of the Wall Street Journal," "Davkl
HE WAS ONE of the 12,000 to 15,000 people
who ll1ten each day to taped venlon1 of bookl.
They've cllscovered the Jo)'I of 1oln1 around ln
literary circles.
Book.a on Tape, a Coeta Mesa company, was
befun ln ms by an Oran1e County stockbroker
who works In Los An1eles.
Duval Hecht, tired of wa.sUna hil boura ln the
carbon monoxide fumes, bad been 1bocked to find
he could use recorded literature only If be could
find a way to have hlmseU leeally blind.
Copperfteld" and "Advise and Coolent" al'9 ca,., ,
lured on tape, as are "The Key to Rebeeea" aad
"The Orilln."
·When lists of new offertn11 are 1eot out, "tb«
phones rln8 off the book," accordini to Mn.
Hecht.
THE COMPANY STOCKS from 100 to l50
copies ol each title depeodin1 upon lb popularity.
Since books averaee 10 tapa of • or .,
minutes each, the company's fint practical prot).
lem was packagint for sblppin1 aa well a1
W I T ft A ---r-...,.,.,.-.......... . 11!11-:; storage within the
warehouse. Tapes are packed in
small cardboard con-businessman's acu-/12 o men, l{echt decided ·
other freeway jockeys , IRE~
would like the chance to
b ear the books they
never have time to read.
Now president of the
company, Hecht con-
tinues his journeys to
the big city, leaving his
wife Sigrid, vice presi-LI ft
dent, to ru';l the .com-flf'{&R
pany on a daily basis. ..,. .. ,
They began by record-'"'""'
ing Geor~e Plimpton's N•I
"Paper I.Jon" in August,__..
1975, but three years of
groundwork preceded
that milestone.
"We had a hard time
tainers and stacked In
s pecially designed A·
frame shelves. .
Like librarians, com-
pany employees check
in the boxes returned in
large mailbags each
day.
"We average 350 to
500 boxes returned each
day, but on Mondays it's
wild -we process about
600," says Mrs. Hecht.
getting an author to let t
us record a book," says .. • t'ltJ 1 N FRTIJ. ,. •v "'1
After checking in the
boxes by number in a
ledger ("We're looking
for a smalJ computer to
save on bookkeepine
hours," she says), tapes
are rewound at a Tate of
Mrs. Hecht. "Our plan . . .
w•s to give the book a Life on a bookahelf -or .., it tape1helf?
one per minute.
"H they can't stand
mdoRannon opens and helps check from 356-fOO tape1 daUJ/.
PVBUC NottCB -----------PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE r.tJBUC NOTICE
good, straight reading
without background music or extra dramatics.
"OUR READERS TELL the story. just as a
mother reads to her child."
Customers in homes, autos and businesses en-
joy the change of pace from a diet of rock and roll
or Muzak while their hands and eyes are engaged
in other pursuits.
The company now stocks . about 400 titles, and
authors are paid an advance royalty plus a fee
each time a copy of their taped book goes out.
"The film industry W(lS a big competitor for
us," Mrs. Hecht admits, "because the spoken
rights to written material used to be lumped
together. and studios can pay a million dollars for
a book.
"Now movie and recording 1:.l1hts are
separate.''
Boob on Tapes updates a catalog of titles
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
the high-speed rewind,
they won't be sent out," •YS Mrs. Hecht. "There's
nothing more frustrating than having a tape 10 out
at an exciting point in the story."
For anyone whose tape does fail, a call to a
toll-free number will speed a replacement the
same day.
Master tapes are kept separate, and dupllut-
ing machines can create 1.5 copies trom a muter
in three minutes, recording bbth the front and
back of the tape simultaneously.
Because voice qualities can change durin1
high-speed duplication, an equalizer makes the
voices sound more natural. t
The office employs about 20. but books aren't
recorded there.
A DOZEN READERS record at studios of
their choice and are paid by the hours of complet·
ed tape.
TAX SHELTERS
01 g Go\ • Real b lO!e • 1vt "'CTITIOUS llU.... '-~I-~ l>.. lf·111m ,.ICTITlOUSaUllNlll STAT .... WTOf'AaAMOO.Ma•T MAMlllTA,....,. ,.tCT1T10USaus1•1ss •OT•c•OPeeo.lllSPOMllalLITT S•omP\. ~·-" ~-...
"1BLIC NOTICE
\
,l!ICTITIOUS aUllNIHS MAMa STAHMaNT o,. UH Of' The IOll-•1t1 _ _... M• .. ,._. NAMa ITAT•M•NT Netk • Is ......, 11-tllet ti• un-DIDUCTIOHS UP TO •oo-Y. TMIS TIAa
"'::e:•sTATIEMINT ,.ICTIT10US9UllMIUMAMI bull-•: Th• '°'._'"' --· ., .... ,,.. ..-."'*' wtll,.. tie ,.........i1>1e 1or GHALD L ICOZAll AMAMC&Al. SBYtclS
11.,!'20,..owlng per1«1s ere doing l>U!l~o!~Wlftll --sere CIOlng Tiie following.,.,._ llfte eben· LAOHMOHO SEcu•rTY AGEM· llWJ~~-~: WEST, JI Wood WllMI, ~,!_--.._or !!_~llltn COfltr• ..,-:,•.d~ 714./"44-H07
,__: TltlENT·MUSICK LTD 2U ll _h..,.eltMfletltl_.._._ CV, l>M lfA Leeeft Mrwt. CMta -•--....,M"tM!f ,...,
--aAClt ROSE, 1121 ... wport N•lll• Gall flloed, L•911u' Hills, n-Uo\EAALD MY ASSOCIATES. -... Giii........... lntlM, Glllllornl•t27l4 tlllsMtle. l~=~=~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiii IMN,Celllemi•fl627 CAlllotni.t:liD. LTD .• et .. Doft sc ....... SUI• -Jolvl .... ,,.. .,. ~ ....... c:..u Jet111 Allred Weston, " Wood Oe'941111'91alldeyel~H.1•1 H. $Npnw1, S1S 11tll Street, ltollerl E. W1'eeler 1..._91,.. Ne._t a.c11. CallfonlN fiMO -... cal...,_taa WIM, lrvlna, Callfomle '271• ,,__ ..... z..,_
... 9Mcll,Ceflf-•.... Gener•• ,.ert_ of Treftt, Ltd... Tl•• fldlU-WMMH Mme re-c. .... Herrls,IUl~.c.-.. H~ fllklla,.. Wftt•. Jr., JI 11S.Wo.tlerc-t, .
..... A. ._,,SU 17\11 St .... Callferftle GOflerel ~) ,.,, lerrecl to - -Ill• In ~..... Mew, c.tllonl6•... WOOi! Wlllll, lrvlna, C.1119ml• f271' ..._.. llMch, c.iu. '2'6J EXE cu TI VE s u ITE s 9Mcll Cellf«N• •-• COUfltJ an Mllr 11 ltlO &« T11i. llllslnesa Is 'ond<Kted lly • ,,_..,_ 0r-. eo.u OeilJ ,.,..._
" .ll\l:llnoss ·,l COndUClecl by . ~:.·1:::n~~Hd, L•911n• Hiiia. WOODVIEW Pi.OPERTIES. eon~·=~-~~~ '"-· ..... r.1...-iilllp. Atwll "· U,21, ,.., 1111-41
I ~f'9NI». """*"·Weltz Corp.,• Cellforftle INC., , .. Oo.,. Street, Suite m , Tiii• -IMH Is conducted bJ • Thia:...:....-:: ,;,ltd •llh lM -----------JADE MANAGEMENT H. ~ "''-•lion. 17'71 ,,.,..,,. ......_d N••-18Mcll. Celllotlll• t2IMO .. ,,.rel P9f1Mrlllllp. PUBUC NOTICE "!! ..--•• llled "'1111 , .. Sult 2U TUICI CelllOrN n.10 ' Tllll bullMU •H GOllducted by • Jotwl Henls COUfllJ Cler1l 'of ~ .... County o n!tnC:.~•rk ol 0r .... County on T: •• .;...,.,.:~ Is COIMl~lecl •• y • llmltecl~. Tllis ltMtfMftl ... llled ..... -MerchJO, '"'· 881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14
re.. • '" .. ,~, ...... ,., __.. -...._rt .... IM. c ... nly Clef1l of ~ .... CollntJ Oii ,., ,.ICTIT10US •USIMIU _ L le D ~ ... ,~ Publllll9CI 0r.,.. Coetl Delly Piiot, N EWPQRT BEACH ....... ~Oren-'~-· Delly Pl.... TltENT LTD. y • -·-· ·-· "'41rch ..... ,. NAMI ITATIMaNT '""") .,_ -.__.. -.. bJ R-..t E. 'Wtleel•, Its President ,., .... April 1; I, U, 22, I~ 1m-4t The , .. _,. .,.,._ II doing busl·
rll ·'· u. 22, "" IS'9-11 ManeelnvGen«•I Pef1nH 110••11T MOllllllSON PubllllWd Or .... Coell Delly Piiot, nes1 es: 714 631 3651
Tiiis •te-1 •• tlled •1111 llW Lew Dtflc• April I, I, U, 22, 1"1 14'W1 PUBLIC NOTICE w E S T. E R N s 1 E R R A --County Clerk of Oren .. County on SM M._tCllMor Drl¥e, la'NDSCAPE, llJt s. Ge.-Drive,
Aprll •. IM1. s.ll•-{°e11te Aloe, CAlllorl'll• '17CM ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~~~~~~f ,.,,..,. N.,.._,a.adl,CA,_ PVBLIC NOTICE ,.CTITIOVSIUSINISS RlcllerdC. Ramlre1. ll2'IS.O------___ _
Publl.,_, Or ..... Coett Delly Piiot, l'IJ71M MAMI STATIMaNT Drive, Senle Alie, Celllornle t27CM
• ,.ICTITIOUS •USINIESS Aprll I, IS, 22, 2', "" ....... , Publl•IWd Or ..... Coest Delly Piiot, ,.ICTITIOUI •UllNllS Tl>• , .. ,_Ing per...., ,, OOlng buSI· Tiiis -Inns Is c-.Cled bJ .. ,,.. ¥Mil STATIMENT April I, I, IS, :n, ltll U'l7-11 NAM1 ITATWM•MT neu et dM duel ~
Tl•e l'Olf-1119 .,.,...... Is CIOlng buSI· Tll• lol-1119 Pff-S are 001119 A·I COMPUTER PAPER co.. RICMrd Ramirez
nu1. PUBLIC NOTICE PVBLIC N6TICE busln"' es: · lllJ S. 81rcll, S.111a Ana, Celllornla lhll ltei-t w•• llled •llh , .. ~KNIT WIT, 3'f E. 1711> Sir"'• _ ARTISTS INTEltNATIONAL, tOI 91707 County Cle<k al Or ..... County on
2' tfMeu,C.lllornl•t»27 Dover Dri ve, Newport l••cll, Bot>Oy 0.voer ~werl, Ull s. "'41rchl0, IMI. ...,..., s Jo.nne '-r• 2'1 A voe-. f'ICTITIOUS •USIMIU NOTICE Of' TRUST•l'I SALi C-'llomle t2oWO Blrcll, Senl• AN, Celllornoe t1701 Publl.,_, Or-C:0.11 D•lly Piiot,
"Bt, o.l.t Meu, Cellloml• '12'17 NAMI STAT•MaNT ~ ... tlm.... Donald George, U O Del Mer Tnh buslnels 11 conducled by en in· April I, I, IS, 22, ltll U'1 .. I
T""'1llolllneu Is condueted by an In· The lollo•lng persons ere dOlng • T.S.Ne.:Ml1l.J Sllores Terrece , Solen• •••ch, dlvldu•I dovldM;I. llUslnttues: NEWPOAT EQUITY l'UNDS, INC .. Celllornlen!IH 8-yO Sowtrt
-, O -'-C-r JAYA EU RASIAN AUTO U dllly AppointMI TrwtM Uftder tM Jenls Grencla lll, Ito Del Mer Tllll .iel-1 *H llled wllll , ..
This st~t.,...,,t we1 filed ••'" tM SERVICES, 2320 West First Street, ~o~~~·:t~i:L~=Tf~"',;'0~1~~ S"o''' Ter-rec•. Solana Beach. County Cler" o• Oran99 CO\lnty on ------
Countt Cler• ol Orenge CounlJ on S.nte An.a, Celllornle t:r10l. HIGH EST Bl ODER FOR CASH C.lllornle'2111'1J • Merell 24, ltll. N72tll M•rC0.23, '"'· ADltlAAN M. LINN, 11Jts Quartz This .......... ,, COflduclW by • IJ1-,.ICTIT10US au111t•ss
PUBLIC NOTICE
' l'tiMl' Aven,., "-itel11 Velley, Celllomle (~yeble et time el Mlle In lawful ,,....,.alpertnenllip, Publl11Wd Orenoe Coeil Delly Piiot, MAMIE STATIMINT
Pubn"'9d Orenge coes1 Dally Piiot, n1oa. m-y of lfM Ulllled St•tes) ,ii r'911\, DGneldGeof'oe • M•r. H, Atw. 1, I, IS, 1t11 1491·1• The tollowlng _ _., are dol11t
Mer. 2S, Apt'. t, I, IS. 1991 14-0-11 SOEHOED RAWIROATMODJO, lltle encl lne.relt COll¥eyecl to Mel now Thia sle'-t .., .. flied •Ith t.. llusl-•
11S'IJ o-11 A-.,,_, .. " v ........ held bJ It ....., .. Id Deed .. Trvst In County Cleno of Or ..... C-nty ... TUSTIN HEIGHTS SHOPPING
C.Jllornle'210I. tlle pr0119r1-rhtffln.aUer de1Crlllecl; Aprll6,1"1. PUBLIC NOTICE CENTER, IUJ 1rv111e aouleverd,
• Construction loans
$500,000 minimum
PUBUC NOTICE Thll l>Uslnan Is conducted by e TRUSTOR: GARV L. POELSTRA , ,.111Mt1 Tustlll, Cellfornlet2119D.
llmlted -'neralllp. encl DIONNE A. POEUTRA, ll..-.cl Publllll9CI 0r.,.J C:ou t Delly PllOt, -Ro-11K9 RHl Estele Eq111ty
_.._ M. Unn and •lie Apr II 1, U, 22, Jt, ltlt lil4-tl iJICTITIOUS •USIMIESI Fund IV, e Gfoup Trull, UO C.lllOl"Ne fllC'TITIOUSaus1••11 Thia .... _, ..... flied wltll Ille 8ENEl'ICIART: MARV IN A. NAMISTATIMINT Str Ht, Sen Frenclsco, Calllornl• NAM~ ITATIMIMT Count, Clerk ol OrWIOf' County Ori KR E 1 N e nd I AMA L. KREIN, TIW IOllowlno perlOfls ... dolflg ~IOI.
The loll,....ng penon 11 OOlng bust· Aprll 2 ltll llutbend end •II• es Jelnt t-b. PUBLIC NOTICE business es· Thia llullMU la eoncllleted bJ •bus!·
nMI U ! ' . ,.lfft17 lte<cw-5-pltmbar It, 1..0 es In-H i WP 0 It T CL EA N I N G neu trust.
VIDA DEL MAR APARTMENTS, Publllll9CI Or-Coeal 0.llJ Piiot air. No. 2'.S11 In bOa11 '"'°· Peeo UOof -Sl!RVICES, tn·I', ltlverslde Drive, Jotwl It. c-ly
IMOa Sell Circle, H1111ll119ton lllMcll, Aprll 1 u. 22 2t '"' !Too.ti Ofllcl•I Records In Ille offke of Ille Mfb» Newport leach, Celllcwnle "'6J ~9 ltNI Eatete
CA. uut. ' ' ' Recordtt ol ~ ... C-y; Miid deed l'ICTl110UI aUStM•U Bernard MelN-. U& HemlllOll \ EQlllty l'lftl IV
KoU Centre Newport, West Tower SuJte 8800
4000 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach
ptlJauc NOTICE
Men! L -...-i11, • Misty Acres of tndt *Krllles IN loll-Ing II"• llAMI ITATaMaNT SlrMI, Apt. A. CMU Meui, C•lllorf'f• Th'-iui-t w• llled •Ith the
............. Hills Ella!•. Ce. t0274. PU,LIC NOTICE perty; I Tiie IOllGwilll PtnOft I• doing bull· tU27 ClMlnty Cl•f11 of Or .... Couftly Oii Tiii•,..... ii <-led by .. In· • Lot JI In BIOClc c of Trect No. Sit, lneu H ! R •ndy LOiiis Metnleton, JU AIN'll J, 1'11.
Olvldu''· In tM CltJ el ~ 9Ncll. es -HTDAOM,. 17161 Avtllmn Circle, Henov•• OrtYlt, co.ie Meui. c•woml• ,.,..,11 ,..._.. L. ""-nlil MOT1C• lllYITIMO a10. mep rocerdod In 11ook 17, p ... , U to H11nllnvtOflJMOl,C.llferMent47. t2'2' p bllllWCI Oranoe eoeat Delly PllOt
Tiii• ...,_. -llled •ltll ,.. Notice '' llef'UJ glwtl thet llle J6 lncluSIYlt pf Mlscell-~.In • L11b« Hlevec:-.i, 171'1 A11l1Ut1n Tiiis buslneu II conducted by • "'4W~l-t IS 12, 2t ltll 11twi ceuntJ Cleft of ~ .... CO..nly on Boerd el T..--of ttw Huntlll9t0fl UM office of the c:-tJ R-dtt ef ,Clrcte, HWtllfltlon llNCll, call,.,. .. nere1 pertnenlllp. •---·-·--·------Merell s. 1'111. •-11 Unloll Hill\~ Dtwkl Wiii ..... c~. ~-e. MelllietOll ,.tun. receive M•lff lllds for ._.1,1n1 1m 1 . ~-Boulevfrd, HewPott Tiii• lMlllMN la ~ndl«lltd bJ • In·. Thi• llet-1 ••• 111ec1 wltll tr.. PUBLIC NOTICE ,..... T...,_ ~ MlllllWllellco meet· 9HCll,C.llfw1'1e'3161 plvldu•I. fl1fMt1 County Cl•rlr Of Oren .. County on1 ___________ _
• iew lno or -' to IN 111e<:lflc.tlOM on "(11 e atrwt ..._or comtlMlll di· • LUODr Hl...,acek "'4orcll n.1•1. Nma -•=t:Clllllr DriW Illa In VW elflce of MN Dl•rkl. sleMtlofl ls ,._ ........ na wwreftty , Tiit. ......._t -lllM wltll IN l'IMU1 ,.ICTITIOUI 9UllN•U
...... Ilda 1llell lie <leerly lfterlc .. Is 91¥911 M to Its compteteMM cw cor· CelH!ty Clef'll of Or~ CoUnly on Publll/Wd Or ..... C:0.11 Delly Pllol MAMa ITATaM•NT 11---1~,... "Tel.,._. Sys'8m Mal~. •kl rec1M111." April J, '"'· !Mr u. Afw. 1, 1, u. n11 1440-li 001 l'WllN!ld Or Coeal Delly Pilot, •W," ........... to AllY1t E. 11-iey, TIM _,klery under ..W Deec1 of P11Dllt1Wd Or .. C.• 0.Uy Pilot, ..,!.~~~l"9 llO"-~ ere ...
-..111.u,a. ,1"1 12'MI "•rcllHlllV Men ... r, Hu11U119ten Trvst,.,_ofellrMC!lordofeult •111,1S,1:2,2t,t"1 17'1 .. 1 . PUBUC NOTICE K·TllUS. • 911Mf'8I pertNrllll,,
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Constnreting a plaza suite
When the $24 million Pacific Mutual
Plaza, above, is completed next year it
will include a modern sculpture garden
designed by four California artists. A
portion of the seven-story twin-office
towers will be used by Pacific Mutual
employees, with the rest leased to other
businesses. Some or the reatures or the
structure along 800-840 Newport Center
Drive will be solar bronze tinted glass, a
complete fire safety system, and a
three-story parking facility, below. The
$250,000 outdoor sculpture garden will in-
clude works by Tony Delap of Corona del
Mar, Benton Fletcher of San Francisco,
Stephen Staebler of Berkeley and
Michael Todd of Los Angeles.
VTN Corps.' eantings drop
Third-quarter profits drop to $4 ,141 , or 0 cents a share
VTN Corp. of Irvine, a highly diversified in·
ternational engineering, architectural, planning
and environmental design firm, had net income
for the third quarter ended Feb. 27 drop to $4,141,
or· no cents a share, compared with $36,649, or 2
cents, for the like period a year ago. Revenues
dropped to $5.3 million from $6.1 million in the
comparable third quarters.
On Mar ch 17. VTN Corp. announced a change
in management. whereby Chief Executive Officer
Kenneth W. Carlson, Chairman of the Board
ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS
James J Trindle and President C Ri chard
Nelson, co-founders of VTN, would retire from ac-
' live participation John M. Leach was named
president.
Net income for the fi rst nine months was
$75,488. or 4 cents, compared with $205,901, or 11
cents, for the same period in 1980. Revenues for
-lhe first nine months were $16.6 million vs. $19. 7
million.
Far West Financial Corp. of Newport Beacb,
parent of Far West Savings & Loan Association,
had net earnings increase to Sl.3 million, or 68
cents a share, for the three months ended March
31, compared with $1.2 million, or 65 cents, for the
l\ke period a year ago.
In the first quarter of 1981. gross revenues
jumped 24.3 percent to $27.6 million from $22.2
million in the like 1980 quarter. Gross revenues
and overall profitability in the first quarter were
enhanced by real estate profits, gains on tbe sale
of securities and mortgage-backed securities
' transactions, according to a statement released by
the company. . . Savings growth amounted to $11.2 m•ll!on for
the first three months of 1981 compared with $3.4
million for the 1980 period.
New loan volume recorded during the first
three momlhs th.is year reached $33.8 million at an
average yield or 17.38 percent compared with $58.9
million al an average yield of 13.29 percent for the
like 1980 period.
Peb'omlnerals Corp. of Santa Ana reported
revenues of $28.4 million for the year ended Dec.
31 compared with $13.5 million for eight montbl
ended Dec. 31, 1979. Net income increased to $5.2
mi Ilion, or 65 cents a share, compared with
$405,000, or 7 cents, for eight months ended Dec. 31
the previous year.
True Data Corp., Irvine, received an initial
contract valued at more than $1 .2 million from
Pa radyne Corp. or Largo, Fla.,.to furnish products
for systems being supplied to the U.S. Social
Security Administration by Paradyne.
Seabawk OIJ lnternatJonal Inc., a Newport
Beach independent oil and gas company, said it
pl ans to make an underwritten public offering of
units comprising 2 million shares of its common
stock with warrants to purchase 1 million addi·
tional shares of such stock. The offering is expect-
ed to be effected about June l.
The First American Financial Corp. an-
nounced four underwritten title companies. in
three of which it holds minority interests, have
purchased 272,700 shares of stock from Penncorp
Financial Inc . and Glickenhaus & Co. Tbe
purchases were funded by loans from First
American.
Wright Energy Corp. of Newport Beach has
entered into an agreement in principle contemplat-
ing a proposed $3.5 million private financing,
which it hopes to consummate shortly. The pro-
posed financing, which is subject to lhe acquisition
of definitive documentatioo, would involve lh.e is-
suance by Wright Energy of $3.5 million in prin-
cipal amount of its 10-year, 14'h percent converti-
ble mortgage bonds due 1991. Such bonds would•be
convertible into shares of the corporation's com-
mon stock at tbe rate of ~ a share and secured by
a second mortgage on its oil and gas properties in
Kansas and Kentucky.
The board of directors of W.R. Grace & Co.
declared a quarterly cash dividend·of 57'h cents a
share OD Its common stock, payable June 10 lo
shareholders of record May 7, 1981. W.R. Grace
operates the Coco's, Reuben's, Baxter Street,
Gorda Uz, Isadore's, Cano's and El Torito-La
Fiesta restaurants in Newport Beach.
Newport PbarmaceatlcalJ bternatlonaJ lac.
bas purchased a seven-acre· site located on the
southeast comer of Alton Parkway and Toledo
Way, Irvine, from The Irvine Co. for $2.2 million.· ,
COLLECTORS
CORNEA
Ae•eeot"a&Stempa
GOLD & SILVER
Prices for 4-14-11 .... c;-..-.. .,._CL,,, ..
~= 5~=.: 100 • ..., ...
-~"°' ........ '°" Sii-.... ...1' ,.1' ,.-...... ·--· Coll .... -..... (114) Ill 11110
SOuth CoHI "8u Vlfte .. ........ -... c-.-........ c..-
In Bualneaa To Make Bualneaa Happen
At Creative we have the money you need.
L'bans from $25,000.00• for any business or
Investment purpose . •• Where you deal directly with the ?
len<Mr and not a lo.n broker.
•All loant Hcur9d bV • combln1tlon of tNI and personal property.
BUSINESS
Challenges result in development of a 'new personality'
By lOBNCUNNIFF
NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe American con•
aumtr'I ablJJty to ntlary b1a deslret la WeUeniq
under tbe cnslau•ht or lnllation IDd blab lnterest ratea, but lb.at doesn't mean that be can't tbrow
hia weilht aro~d.
A facet or tbe new
peraonallty, ror example, seems
tO be a reluctance to talte on
cfebt, a tratt lbat bu rorced t.be
automotive industry into
rebates and which conceivably
could force more permanent
price cut.a.
T B E M 0 • E CUNIUl'I'
conservative mood baa shown up in housing
markets as well, as can be attested to by sellers.
Housing prices in general continue to rise, but the
rise bas slowed and actuaJ price decreuea, amaU
and temporary though they may be, are becomln1
more common in some areas.
Ot all things, an occasional iaaoline station
has been forced into ,Providing some of the old
civilities, such as wiping the windshield, even if
they are stiU a long way from offering free road
maps and air.
Americans, it appears from the statistics and
surveys, seem to be more determined than lhey
bave been in a long while to live within tbeir in-
comes and are demanding the same from govern·
ment at au levels.
They are resigned, too. The old faith that
financial matters gel better and better each year and each generation, a trait sociologists found dis-
tinguished Americans from Europeans, bas been
worn down by events.
IT TOOK A WHILE and it took a lot of events
to do the job, but the realities eventually provided
overwhelming evidence of deterioration in, for ex-
ample, savings accounts and insurance policies.
Members of the current generation also re-
alized they couldn't live in the manner of their
parents, no matter what lhey were told , if only
because they co,ddn'l afford to buy and run the
size and type of house in which their parents
raised them. Nor, possibly, afford as many kids.
But another facet of the American character
may still live. Challenge, the same sociologists
say. induces results. It forces people to seek
answers. It encourages a new way of looking at old
situations.
Today, enormous amounts of research anr' tie-
velopment are under way. In a relatively few
OVER THE c OU NT ER NASO LISTINGS
year1, 1iaabl1 cotiaputer operaUooa bave sprouted
from men ideu. Elfftrlc car reMarch ii cl0te!to
produclDI a practlcal, tuel·Hvln1 saeau 10r
tf1Ut1portatJon. And solar enero, a6 IDdustrJ that
existed in only rudimentary ronn 10 year1 .,o, ta
now aubetanUal.
LB88 Pl18UCIZED PE&llAPS, but lnvolvin1
the potent.lat for even 1reat.tr cban1e. i• the de·
veloprnent of telecommunlcatJona. Everyone
knows a bit about lhe home computer that ii change the kitchen; leas well known are devel
mentl in data transmission that mleht chant• e
very site and role of the house. Why abJft PM le
from home to office or pJant each day when lt.la
more energy-efficient and less coaUy to moye
data? :
Behind many of these changes, or certalnb'. a
factor in their dynamics, la the ubiquitou• con-
sumer. Unable to live well in the old manner, '!d
at this point probably not very much lnterestedan
doine so either, he and she are forcing chan1es de-
signed to make them happier.
Nobody can put a timetable on the new
lifestyles, but the greater the resistance to the qld
tbe sooner the new may come. The consumer still
has weight to throw around. While ll mightn't help
to eet a windshield wiped, it could help to satl~y
more basic needs.
And it might even resurrect the old American
notion that, financially at least, things can im-
prove, each year and each generation.
~al computer firm~
Canadians strike deal
Nelma Electronics of Toronto, Canada, hu or-
dered in excess of $1.1 million of Costa Mesa-based
New World Computer Co. Inc. 's micro-disc
memory units and has agreed lo become the ex-
, elusive distributor for New World Computer's disc
products in Canada.
Nelma Electronics is a major distributor :Of
electronic products and represents the first major
international order in Canada.
Philip Haines, president of New World Co9'1-
puter, said in a prerared statement. "This iml>()r-
tant new relationship will provide a significeit
marketing exposure for New World Computer to tJie
entire Canadian market place. The initial or4er
calls for the delivery of 500 of the company's eight-
inch micro-discs and 500 controllers."
UPS AND DOWNS
N•me TIME 0C
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Orange Coatt OA.ILY P.ll.Of(Wednelday, Aprll 15, 1981 s ,,. ............ ""!'"' ........................ ______________ ..... __________________________________ ..._ __ _.. ,_, ____________ ............... :
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OfffAT'IOlnl~llD• T•AN t Oll , ...... YOll•.M••••n. "'-C"IC. tteW, IOJlO.. DITllOIT .... o ClltCIMl ... T1 tTOC• IXCMA ... 0 MllD ltl .... TID e'I' TMI lfA tO AliD llUTUtlt
P&G· set 1
1
Stimmit plani I
Procter• Gamble tP•G>. which la 1ood at coo·
foundina ita competitors, IA now conloundin1 iu
critics. The ClocinnaU Invent.or of 11de, Crest, Pam·
pers, Cbatplin and Head & Shoulders ls aayint. In ef·
feet: "All 1-tibt ll you want no advertialnt. we cao
give you that too."
A lot of people who read Consumer Reports, shop
in co-op food stores and want Ralph Nader to be tbe
next president foam at the mouth about adverti1tn1,
regarding it as intrusive aod wasteful, not r~o1nl1·
lng it as an American art form that bas gone on to
conquer t.be world . And il'• only natural then that lhe
object of their greatest scorn ahou1d be the bl11eai
advertiser of them all: P&G.
P&G's 1979 expenditures on advertising were
clocked by Advertising Age magazine at $61<1 miUion.
You can ju.st ttear those people groaning at the
mention of this
outlandis h
fl1u re: "Why
don't they atop
all that ad ·
ver tising and
reduce the
prices of their
products?"
llllll
WELL, P&G, which asually feels it can do
anything it sets its mind to, is going to throw a bone to
these critics. In June it will introduce a new line of
paper towels and toilet paper under the brand name
Summit. The Summi! line will be available
throughout the country primarily in non-food out-
lets like K mart but it will not be advertised. That's
right, lhe country's largest advertiser is not planning
to put a cent of advertising behind the Summit towels
and tissues.
The Summit paper products are expected to re·
tail 25 percent to 30 percent lowe r than the
established P&G brands in this field : Charmin and
White Cloud toilet tissues and Bounty paper towels
Don't think P4cG has given up on advertising. On
the contrary, it's spending .a small Jortune to let us
know about the new formulation of Crest toothpaste,
and it's gearing up to push a bunch of new products.
· including a hair conditioner called Abound, a toilet
bowl cleaner called Brigade, a diaper for incontinent
adults called Attends ahd a prescription acne treat-
ment. Topicycline. All of these entries wil! receive a
full measure of P&G advertising support.
BUT SUMMIT IS going to be a new thorn in the
side of arch-competitor Scott Paper of Philadelphia.
Scott had the <'onsumer paper business -toilet tis-
sues and towels -locked up until P&G came along
and blasted its way to the top with Charmin and
Bounty. ~
Scott was stunned, but came back and sur-
rounded P&G with a s lew of brands : ScotTissues,
ScotTowels. Cuttonelle, Soft •n' Pretty, Waldorf. Job
Squad. (It's an old m~rketing theory· If you can't
beat them one-on-one, outnumber them.) As a result,
when you add up all the Scott brands, the compaft)'
has now regained first place in the bathroom tissue
and paper towd markets. However, Charmin and
Bounty remain the individual brand leaders in their
categories.
Charmin and Bounty jostle in the quality, high.
priced end of the market. But P&G has had nothing
lo p lace against a low-priced entry like Scott's
Waldorf. Summit wiJI rill that gap. It will also give
P&G a contender against the generic, no-name
brands and the s tore labels. Inflation has boosted the
sales of these offlbrand products.
So if you want to try this Proct~r & Gamble ·
brand, you have to look for it. P&G is not going to tell
you about it. And who knows. if Summit sells, P&G
may award it one of its multimillion-dollar ad
budgets.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
I
'
NEW YORK (APJ -S.lH. Tuei.. p<ice .,,., net <!Minot Of the llltHn most •cllvo
NEW YORKIAl'I 1-onal Oow-Jonu alfQa, tor Tue.ao. ""' " STOCKS Open HlQh U>w C-Cho lO lnCI 991 26 ,,.,S6 911 11 m It-U i 10 Trn 4~.11 441.10 Q.U3 . -.'4 IS Ull 105 S6 10.. 14 1CM.S7 I .~ &.t0 ..S S1k 317.26 ... 51 383.0' JIS.-t.72 lndu• .. '.. . . . .. '... •,663,ADO Tran 1.we,100 ~s11~~k •. :. : •• ..:rl~
~-York -Sloelt Exc ... noe IUUH, tr.01"9 nallonally a1 ri-• 11 .. 11 $1. ISM 1.0J3,900 St\.\ 1 Amer T~ T 914.@ SS"°' + 1 K m•rt M0,500 21 tt 111 IUlttnPur 611,000 12\.\ v. ~!OOlllnCI )Gt,@ '4 • "> xon 47', "'6h \.\
.-.CO In< i •= l~ + ~ ~an ,900 111-' I ,,~.,.Min ~ Sli. • '"' "rrk1~"l'1° -~:m ft)E : ~ ~atl\XfrL ,900 1 "' + 'II eyhOuncl ,.00 1 ~ + ~. merH•n .500 31~ +IV• Sony Ccwo .SOO 17Vo
WHAT STOCKS DID
AMERICAN LEADERS ,
.~
SILVER ,.......,
Sllwer 111,JOO -l:'rO'f -.,, H•rrnenGflfr•lly._
. ,ir,
~, • I ~ " '• . .. :
...
Ot'af)Qe Cout DAILY PILOT/We<tnelday, Aprll 1S, 1081
:,I .JI ·'·
I
High country taste.
Light and mild.
Above all in refreshment .
.,
---<\• .. , ..
I
I
:Basket
I
I I I 1
!
~Gf sweets . : .
• What nicer way to welcome spring than with a
p~rty.
· ·: Whether it's a bu.ffet luqcb orsitdown dinner,
inake it really special by creating a centerpiece
your iueats will remember. 1
• Fill a pretty basket withllowen oftbdeason
tod a selection of bite.sized treats, to serve with
Coffee afterwards.
The baslcs are NIY: Creamy Cocoa BOnbons
alld Chocolate Mint Square& require no bak.in1,
.Mini Cocoa Cupcakes take just a few minutes in
the oven. Cocoa b ready to measure and mix,
without pre-melting, which saves time and steps.
I Use food colortnga to blend delicate pastel ! • frostinp-lavender, peach, pink, green, blue and
yellow. Sprinkle bonbons and cupcakes with tint-
ed sugar pieces, silver and gold shot, finely
chopped nuts or coconut. Carefully arrange your
custom-made confections in a basket or crystal
bowl.
•
• ,
When you're invited out, remember that "ny ~fthesesweets would make a present your hostess
will appreciate.
CREAMY COCOA BONBONS
3 ounces cream cheese
2 cups confectil)ners' sugar
14 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon melted butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
Pastel Coating (recipe below)
Soften cream cheese in small mixer bowl.
Add confectioners' sugar, cocoa, bullet and
vanilla . Shape into 17-inch balls (cl\ill, if
needed, to handle). Chill completely. Dip in
Pastel Coating. Store in refrigerator. 2 dozen
bonbons.
PASTEL COATING
3 tablespoons butter
l'h cups confections' sugar
2 tablespoons milk
'h teaspoon vanilla
Red or green food color <or create your
own special blends -e.g., peach, pale blue,
lavender --by mixing tints.)
Combine above ingredients in top of double
boiler; heat stirring occasionally unW melted.
Tint pastel pink or green with food color. Dip
cold centers int4> very warm mixture (beat
coating over hot water); quickly remove with
tork and place on wax paper-covered tray swirl·
iqg top. Refrigerate until firm.
: Note: If white chocolate coaling is avallaf>le
OJJlit pastel coating ud dip centers in melted
(See EASTER, Pace Q)
Liver saute,
cabbage great
for. Passover . . . CS
.. . .. ... ..
.. 4
•
v
...
~
Creamy Cocoa Bonbons, Chocolate Mi~t Sq"'.'res and Mini Cocoa Cupcakes all begin with unsweetened coroa
Candies are
easy to make
One of the loveliest ways to
mark the Easter celebration is
to flll a basket with special
candies. f
When you can say that you'•e
made the candies yourself, it
becomes even more special.
The three delectable candies
given here can be made easily at
home with the help of a candy
thermometer.
All three feature the dis-
tinctive flavor of j>ennut butter
chips -a wonderful addition to
the candy·m.aking repertoire,
for they measure easily and
quickly, hold their shape at
rO(>m temperature, and blend
qu)ckly and smoothly when
melted with other ingredients.
The prettiest candidates of all
rori an Easter basket are the
Pastel Creams with Peanut But-
ter. Coating. Tinted centers in
pink, green ao,d yellow are
baaed on an easily for~ed -. cream cheese mixture, ft st
chiJled, then dipped in a Pe ut
Bu\ter Chip Coating.
Both peanut butter aP,ips nd
chocolate mini chips re
featured in Peanut Butter B 't-
tle for a candy that's downri ht
irresistible. Another clas le
flavor combination is th•
peanut duo ln Peanutty es
-a favorite that requires J'5t
lour tnaredlents. • ,
yellCl~ food coloring in second
part and l lo 2 drops green food
colocing in third part.
Shape into 1-inch balls (if
necessar.y. chill until mixture is
firm enough to han4)e>; place on
wax paper·covered tray. Cover
loose Ir ; chill several hours or
overnight. Centers should feel
dry ~o touch befor e ~aling; re·
move from refrigerator about 20
minutes bef9re coating.
To 'nlake Peanut Butter Chip
Coating, melt peanut butter
chips and shortening in top of
double boiler over hot water;
.cool mixture to 95. degrees F. Us-
ing a fork or fondue fork, dip
' each pastel cream into peanut
butter mixture; gently .tap fork
on side of pan to remove excess
coating.
Slide pastel cream from fork
upside down onto wax paper,
swirling thread of peanut butter
from fork across top for dee·
orative touch. < Pe\nut butter
mixture should remain between
90 and 95 degrees F . for dip-
ping.> Chijl coated cteams 15
minutes. Slore covered in a cool
place. ·
PEANUT BUTfER 8811TLE
(Makes about z ,......,
2 cups (l2·°'1ftC8· package)
peanut butter chips, divided
l it\· cups butter or
margarine
PASTEL CREAMS WITH t l~cupssugar
PEA.Nt.IT BU'ITER COATIN 3 tablespoons ll&bt corn
(Makes alMHll 1 doaea) syrup .
. CENTERS: · 1 3 tablespoons water
1 packate (3 ouncd) creJkn 1 ~ cups coarsely chops>ed
cheese, softened ' peanuts
. ~ cup butter or margarlnle, i,; cup semi-sweet chocolate
softened . , 1 rnflni chips ,
4 cups unsifted c ~a · Lightly butter 13-x 9-incb '*1·
fectiooen' suaar I Spread}. cup peanut butter cblpe
1 ~teaspoons vanma I evenly bver bottolb ol pan; let
Red, yellow and 1reen food Hide. ln 2~-quart sauce
colorin1 . : melt butter or mar1•rine;
PEA NU.JI'· BUTTER CHI, ln su1tr, com IJl'UP and w ....
COATING: Cook over mdum ta.at, ltlntna
2 CUPI (12-ounee paekq,) constantly, to Jtud-crack atqe
peanut butter chips • (300 dearees F). Remo.ta from
2 tablespoons aolld ve.-.-beat; ltlr in claopped ........
b&e shorten.in& Immediately .,read mixture
To make centers, combine evenly in prepared pan, ~
enam c:beeae and butter or . tareful not .to dlaturtt =s
marsartae lD larte mixer Mwl; Quickly 1prinkle wt~ rem
beat until 1mooth. Blend in ecia-l cup peanut butter c:biPI ha~en· auaar and vanilla. cbocollde minl clalpi. ~ eocD· Dt¥ldt am.tun lnto t.t,aree parts. pletely. R ... ,. froa pu;
WO J drape red foo4 ~ break Ulto JJMw. 9kft tn tl;bt-liil·~ .. part, 1 to 2 drop9 ly covered container.
I
I I :
i .
. 1
* Or .... Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Aprll 15, 1981
~~~&~~~~~ ~
world, the ctlebraUcm of ~ teupoon salt mixture. Mix well. Chill. 1lned eoalttUoa~n •UC· Be•• n by, ah 1 n e 2 tap. unsulphured to 5 HrVl.naa. MOIABID CA&S .
Easter symbolises the 1 teaapooo baktn1 Roll out a portion of ar and ~ te~.a poon cook1e1 a •JnOotb white molasses GaANDJll.\'ISPECIAfr 1 packaie chocOlatl}\
reblrth of Cbrlat, and powder t~e dou1h, '4-anch thick cream of tartar. t'dd re· coatlnc uslna a rubber l clove Ctu"llc HAM GLAZE cake mix
comes al U.at tlme of ~ teaspoon bakln1 on UahUy noured board. serv.ct e" whitt\ and v. spatula and gently 2 tbap. butter or \.icupappleHuce _....,. 4 e1P • ·i ·
year when natural soda Keep remaining doutb teaspdon vantll~. Beat 1moothln1 white frost· margartne 'rA1 cup unaulphu._, ulpb rM iii
tlfe i1 beiJrC reborn after l teaspoon around chilled. Take a l·pou.nd with rO\.al'Y or ~lectric int over the cookie. minced parsley molaases moa~.:Sup una u -!Tc:;
lta 1001 wtnter sleep. cloves empt)' coffee ~. with beater until ftostlna Make 1 decorattna tip salt and pepper IA teaspoon ground • 1: l
Easter, and ita joys, 1 teaspoongin1er both Uds removed, bend bolds its shtpe. Cover by r0Uln1 waxed paper Scrub carrots and ginger • 1 package chooolalt J
10 back far in time to l ~ teaspoon cin· into oval or egJ shape wltb damp cloth until and fillina it with frost-allce into one-inch 1 c l ove garlic, INSTANT pudding .;t~
the rituals of tbe an· namon and cut oyt eeg·shaped ready to llSe. It frost· in1, or ute your cake dee· pieces. Cook just until crushed l cup water t ;.
clenta lone before the ~teaspoon nut.meg dou1b, place on un-ing•s not stiff enou1h for oratint tips. lmag1na· tender-crisp in a cov-In a saucepan, com-Combine all intre;,i')
arrival of its present Cream together 1reued sheet. Bake in decorating, add a little Uon does the rest. Just ered saucepan with bine appl.esauce, dients and .mix weU.yn
Cbri1tlan meanin1. shortentn1. sugar, and :UO-degree oven, 8 to 10 m'Ore c onfectioners remember, don't pile gin1er ale, molasses, molasses. ginger a nd Beat on medium speed i
The word "Easter" molasses. Add ege yolk. minutes. Cool. Yi~ld : 2 sugar. your cookies too high, or 1arllc or garlic powder garlic over medium minutes or 300 strok~.11'-
itself la derived from the Mix well. (Reserve e11 dozen S.lnch en shaped To make colors, use your design will suffer. and butter. Sprinkle beat. Brush ham wi\h by .h a nd . Pour int.QJ ?
An11o-Saxon goddess of white for frosting.1 Sift cookies. , vegetable dyes and with minced parsley and glaze every 10 minutes greased bundt cake pafbdJ I
Sprln1, "Eostre" to !ogether flour, salt, bak-1'0 DECORATE. follow instructlqos, us-CRISP CARROTS salt and p~pper (pre-duri~g last '"' hour of Bake ~ degrees for "9!li
whom the month of tng soda. baking powder Ornamental Frosting : ing s mall batches •of 6 large carrots fer ably white pepper> cookmg. to 45 nunutes. •ii
April was dedicated. .11~1 ~t~~;~\~1~~~~ Ralplls Easter Parade of Values ~~~
m eant the uoiveru, All Ralphs Stores Wiii be ....... ..,.ular houn on Easter Sunday, April 19, 1981 : '0
while others believed w:r.-• •-. .~
that the outer shell 0 "
represented earth, the «wnr<p
white of the eg1, water, -
and the yolk. fire. Doubla Coupon It is thought that the .., .
co lori n g of eggs
artisUcaJly originated in
Europe. However, the
decorating of eggs goes
back to the time of the
Egyptian Pharaohs,
wheo c hildrea rolled
their brightJy shaded
eggs against the sides of
the Pyramids.
Transfer of the egg
from pagan to Christian
symbolism took place io
Mesopotamia where
early Christians used it
as a representation of
Lhe resurrection and
dyed it red to represent
the blood of Christ.
Over the centuries egg
decorating, especia lly in
the Slavic n ations ,
became a famous and
honored custom, with
many of the handcrafted
pieces becoming valu·
able heirlooms that
were handed down from
generation to genera·
tion.
Decorating an empty
egg shell requires pierc·
ing each end of a raw
egg with a needle and
blowing out the contents
until it is empty. then
lacquering the surface
of the shell to give it
hardness before apply-
ing a given design.
In other countries.
Fr ance for instance,
Easter egg gifts are
made of satin, whi le
people i.n Russia shape
eggs fr om wood .
England is famous for
its c hocolate eggs
wrapped in beautiful foil
and paper, and Austrian
children are given egg
s haped boxes with
favored trinkets inside.
But leave it to the in-
gen 1 o u s A m erican
housewife to come up
with a new and novel de·
light for Easter 1981 -
Gingerbread E aster
Egg cookies, made with
molasses.
They're easy to dec-
orate, a cinch to make,
and are happily expen -
dable, particularly when
youngsters get hold of
them.
Unsulphured molasses
can become the key for
a unique and fun-filled
Easler Feast. It features
in addition to the cookie
·'eggs," a succulent
baked ham, a most un·
usual way to prepare
carrots, and a chocolate
molasses cake that can
only be described as
scrumptious.
Here are the recipes:
EASTER EGG
COOKIES
17 cup shortening
112 cup sugar
1h cup unsulphured
molasses
1 egg, separated
2 cups all purpose
.., ... ,.....Ky
"Purveyors of
Oldt1me Neaghbofhness"
10 16~Dr. .,...,.,. .....
760.0111
Any
Roasting
Pan
\
Umtt One Item and One Coupon p., CYMOIMr ,
Coupon 1!"9ctlve Apt. 11 """ Apf. 22. 1111
SUPER COUPON
PrtMnt tn1a ~oupon atong wilh any one Manufaciu•era·
c:ent..ott coupon and gee douoa. the H""'O• ..,,,.., you
purcnate Iha 11em Not 10· 1nclude "retail•('·. ''frH· or
·o•ocery purch•M" co11POn• or HCt~ llle"<11l11• Of tne 1 11em EacluOes llqUOf. ~acco a.nd fluld milk P!'oduc•
Umlt One 1'9rn P9'JI~' c..-
and Limit 3 Double Coupona Pet C....,_,
Coupon Htctlve Apftl ,1t t1Wu April 22, 1111
per
lb.
,._ • «Mn • 11 It's 11·ke Save .15 Witt! Coupon #490
11 i~ri; Ii •.. , 55c • gltting
Ralphs ; OFF 6 II Eggs with coupon # II
'
UmnOnol ......... OMC ..... ,_C_ .• eggs scUPE"R.COUPONllf __ tr_e_e_!_
I J
USDA Choice
Large Meaty End
Rib
Roast
-~per
-lb.
3 lb.
Californian or Valchrla-Frozen Gra~·
11-13 lb. Avg.
Hen
Turkey
79
\
• •
•
per
lb.
P1esrn1 1n1s couPOn aaong ''"'" nn~ one M1nul1c1u1ers cenas oil coupon ano gel oouble 1"e savings wnen you
~''"'nase the •lem Nol IO include rela11er l•ee O•
groce•y ou•cnase coupons or e•ceeo 1ne value ol 1ne
·tflm E 111<.lu<Jes l1Quor tooacco ano Uu10 m•I~ orooucts
limit One Item Per Menufec:lurere' Coupon
end Limit 3 Double Coupon• Per Cuelomer
Coupon E"9ctlve APf'll 11 thru April 22, 1111
Shank Portion
Farmer John
Smoked
Ham
Butt Portion .89 eer lb.
Peak of the Season-Red Ripe
Straw-
berries
• 12 oz .
basket-'
Aalph8 Golden Premium•
Auorted Flavora
Ice cream
•
•
; • <r ~gal.
ctn.
R•.lpha-Twln, Party Flake or N•turel Grein
Brown •n ·serve ·
Rolls
-pkg. lfF ot12
Ralphs wlahea •·flappj
Pauove~ Ho~lday .. . .
to' all our J,w11W Frlenda •
'
!l\.t
'•'' ·rt I
. ' ' ,,
. .
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Coolrlnt with children W.....-~.,.
it 1IUD year·r®Dd and ;' l.rrro.ti._
hti be I Ver)' 1peclal 1 ~ CU p I he IV )'
family activity at cream
Entertlme with thi• J me .. urlne table·
•laborate-lootdn1, yet spoons alfted conrec·
• I m p l • • t o • m a k • tlonen' au•ar
Chc>colate·Coconut Bun· 1 measurtng tea·
ny.Cake. apoon vanilla extract .
'1 n d e t p a r e n ta • Gara.llh
auterviaion, children One 3'-'·ounce can
c a.n 'le a r n to m e 1t coconut
chocolate, measure dry Jelly beans
lnfredienta, crack e111 CHOCOLATE CAKE:
and mix all ln1redienta Preheat oven to 350
lnfo a moist batter for a de1rees. Melt over hot
homemade double-layer (not bolling) water, 1
chocolate c.ite. c u p s e m i . s w e e t
The f u'n part 1 s chocolate morsels. In
watching the bunny take am all bowl, combine
shape by frosting one flour, salt and bakin1
I ayer and cuttin& the soda; set aside. In large
other layer iato five bowl, combine butter,
plecea for the body, brown sugar, sugar and
ears, legs and la.ll. Even vanilla extract; beat un-
toddlen can belp put the til creamy. Add egga,
plecfiB
0
"1ether anct give one at a time. beating
the e touch with well after each addition.
white fra,Ung, shredded Stir in melted chocolate.
coconut al.\d jelly beans. Gradually blend in flour
A handsome Easter mixture alternately with
centerpiece, it ia one buttermilk. Pour into 2
th~t the children will be greased and floured 9.
proud to miij(e and hap·, inch round baking pans.
PY to eat. Here ls the re· Bake at 350 degrees for
cipe for Chocolate· 30to35minutes.
Coconut Bunn,Y Cake. Frost 1 cake layer
-with 1 "4 cups Chocolate
,_CHOCOLATE · Butter Frosting .
" COCONUT 8 V N NY (Reserve remaining ~ ~ CAKE cup frosting for decora-
.. Cbocola$e Cake lion.) Cut remaining ~ 0 n e 1 2 • o u n t e layer in half. Place ~
package (2 cups) semi· layer on top of frosted
s w e e t ~ ~ o c o I a t e layer in an upright posi-
morsels, divtded lion, extending 1 inch
2 1/4 cups unsifted over frosted layer. Cut
( flour . edge should be in center
1 1 measuring tea· of cake layer directly on i spoon salt . top of frosting. Place re-
• 1 me.asuring lea -maining ~layer so that
J ~poon baking soda cul edge is nearest to l ~ cup butter. sof· you. Cut 2-inch sJice,
tened . perpendicular to cut
t
~ c u P f 1 rm I Y edge, from both sides of
packed brown sugar cake. Use 1 piece for the
~ cup sugar tail and 1 piece for the
t 1 meas uring teas· ear.
poon vanilla extract Cut remaining center
3 eggs piece of cake in half.
1 cup buttermilk• Place on either side of
Chocolate Butter cake layer half to form
Fros~lng legs. Round out edges of
11.1 cup mtlk ear, tail and legs, if de·
\.14 cup butter . sired . If necessary,
1 cup (6 ounce) secure pieces with
semi-sweet c hocolate toothpicks.
morsels. reserved from Frost with Whipped
12-ounce package C r e a m F r o s t i b g .
1 l m~asurrng tea· Decorate Whipped I ~poon vanilla e~tracl Cream Frostin~ with 2~ cups sifted con-coconut. Usin g dee·
Cectioners' sugar orative t..ry tip, out-
--., . --~ ---
Chocolate-Coconut Bunny Cake ii Eaater centerpiece.
!ine bunny with remain· Remove from hl at. Stir sugar and vanilla ex·
10g Chocolate Butter in 1 cup semJ-sweet tract. Beat until stiff
Frosting. Place jelly chocolate morsels and peaks form. Makes one
beans to form eyes and vanilla extract, transfer 9-inch cake, 2 cups
nose. to small bowl. Gradually Chocolate Butter Frost·
CHOCOLATE BUT·
TE R FROSTING : ln
small saucepan. com·
bine milk and butter;
bring just to a boil, stir-
ring occasionally .
beat in confectioners' ing 8J)d 3 cups Whipped
sugar. Cream Frosting.
WHIPPED CREAM,
FROSTING: In large
bowl, combine heavy
cream. confectioners '
•Note: 1 measuring
tablespoon vinegar plus
enough milk to equal 1
cup may be substituted
for buttermilk.
Boneless ham takes the spotlight
Joyous will be Easter
feast when an im·
pressive boneless ham
captures the menu
spotlight.
It simply needs to be
baked in a s low oven
and glazed if desired.
Carving, too, is easy
because there are no
bones and little or no
waste, points out the Na·
tional Live Stock and
Meat Board.
To dress up the ham
for the holiday parade of
foods serve it g~rnished with peach alves
stuffed with rushed
pineapple and riysms.
BAKED SllOIUtD HAii
Place an 8-lo µ-pound
boneless • 'fully-~ked • •
~moked ham ()Q •. rack an an open roasting pan.
In se rt roast meat
thermometer so the buJ b
is centered in the
thickest part. Do not add
water. Do not cover.
Roast in a slow oven
(325 degrees) until meat
thermometer registers
130 degrees to 140
degrees. (Allow 15 to 18
minutes per pound for a
whole ham; 18 tQ 25 ror a
4 to 6-pound half ham;
27 to 33 for a 3 to 4-pound
portion.>
81 BA&M&AGllUMJN¥
San~ and Klcbflle were wate,.ln1 their wetibt.
Tfiey planned to meet
for lu.ncb, but keep it
ll&bt. .
Sandy JUllHted J
rettaurut that featured
a buff et, but Michelle
pref ernd to be waited on.
Sandy reaaoned tbat
the wide variety would
make it easier to select
diet· wise choices.
Michelle thou1ht it
safer to order from a
menu.
BEFORE YOU de·
cide. consider this:
-Caterers and
restaurant operators re·
port that they need more
food for the same number
of 1uests ah buffet.
-Researchers observ·
inl restaurant patroM
report that thoH who opt
for the buffet over table
service tend to be
heavier.
-Even animab over-
eat when their chow 1J
served help-yourself
style. The presence or
other animals at the
same trou1h will in·
crease the quantity of
food comumed.
An animal that bas
finished eating will go
back for seconds if
another animal comes on
the scene and start.a to
eat. I once attempted to
discover m y dog's
favorite flavor of Alpo by
opening several cans at
once. My experiment
proved two things: (a )
they're all bis favorite
and (b) it was a dumb
idea!
BOTTON LINE re-
commendation: if you
have to weight-watch.
beware the buffet.
You don't always have
the option of choosing la·
ble service. Here are
some weight-wary tips
for coping at buffets:
-, Make believe you're
in a cafeteria line with a
cashier at t.tie end who is.
goin1 t:> chMge you -in
calories-for everything
you take. In fact, this is
true. Where calories are
concerned, there's no
free lunch.
-Try to assess the
calorie.price tag of every
Item before you choose.
Mate believe you have
..
only 1 certain amount ol
calorle1 ln your wallet to
spend and mu1t,
thereforei select your
meal wiae y.
-Case the Joint first.
Walk put the buff et, aana
plate, and ahop with your
eyes. Value-wise buffet
buffs know that the
costliest items are
strat~lically placed at
the end olthe line, so that
impulsive food ·erabbera
will have no room on their
plates when they get
there. Why pile your
plate with macaroni
salad when you could
have crabmeal?
-DON'T KID
yourself with the ·'I'll
only last~ it" scam. You
know you'll probably eat
most of lt. Make it a rule
not to take anything un-
less you really DO plan
to eat it. That rule ap-
plies to quantity as well
as variety. If a serving
person piles your plate
with more than you
should eat, ask that
some ol it be removed.
If your plan is just a
taste, only take a taste.
-Take everythine you
plan to eat in one trip, on
the same tray with no
backtrac king for
seconds. Th ere i s
psychological
satisfaction in seeing all
your food at once.
Moreover, it's too eas)"(o
lose track d what ~ou 've
eaten if you divide if
amongseveraltrips. Hik·
ing back and forth to the
table de>e$n't count as ex-
ercise.
der from a menu. Doll't
tlll u'-on old favorltea.
Here • yow chance to
try mu11el1, fennel,
cblckpea1 or maoao
wlthoutrilk.
-Never mind bow
much or what other PM·
ple eat. Recoanlse the
tem ptatioo to match your
eat1n1 hablb to tbose
a r o u n d y o u .
PaychologJcaUy prepare
yourself for the fact that
every buffet line includes
a model-thin wraith who
hauls off enc>u1b food to
feed a truck driver.
Maybe she la a truck
driver. It's a fact of life
that some people can eat
more than others and still
stay slim.
--VARIETY IS part of
the pleasure of buffet
dining, but remind
yourself that lt'a inad·
vtsable, lf not lmpossi·
ble, to sample ever·
ythlng. DM't even try.
Decide in advance on a
theme for the meal:
seafood and itema that
go with it, for example,
or only the Italian or
French foods.
-Beware the money's
worth syndrome. Keep in
mind that the total ex·
perlence of dining out is
what you are billed for, 1
.not merely the food. It's
not really important to
walk off with your share.
Low-calorie mayomiaUe,
tartar sauce, French dreu·
ing. cole1law. For there and
more, plu.r diet tiJ», aeftd a
stamped, aelf-addre.,ed en-
~lope and SO cents to SLIM
GOURMET SALAD IDEAS,
P 0 . Bo:r: 624, Sparla, N.J.
01871.
-DON'T TAKE rood .---------
for other people at your
table or accept their in· ,.
vitatk>ft to help yourself
to their extras. Food
trading is another self·
decept ion . Other
people's food bas just as
many calories as yours.
This is a hard rule to en-
force amon1 a group of
congenial gourmanics;
it helpS if you explain
your reason for Dot
wanting to share your
food. -U~ the buffet ex·
periftlce as an opportuni·
ty to sample unfamiliar.
low-calorie foods you
might De unwilline to or-
$1.1
Going Into
Bus•ness?
As re~red by law,
new businesses
using a Flctltloua
Bualneaa Name muat
reglst., that name
with the County Clerk.
Call the DAILY PILOT
LEGAL DEPARTMENT
for forms and further
Information.
842-4321
Ext. 332
... 4
On these MJB favorites
l#l~l:t•l••~C•Wll
CLASSES STARI' MONDAY. APR'L 27TH
Limited Enrollment • Limited Enrollment
' .
CALL NOW FOR INFORMATION: 857·2200
COMPREHENSIVE CLASSES WILL CONSIS1 OF:
• ·FLOOR PLAN • PRINCIPLES Of .DESIGN, FURNITURE. PLACEMENT
• FUNCTION.Al ROOM .ARRANGEMENTS • COLOR CO·ORDlNATION •
LIGHTING • FlOORING • CARPET • WOOD • Tilt e VINYL e WIN·
DOW' TREATMENTS e W~LL COVERINGS • ACCESSORIZING. & . .ARCHI·
TECTURAL· PRINCIPLES I * &prwuntativ•• from well-ltnown ""'1Wfactun,.. wiU give you valuable information
about '"'1Mro~ /tom. funW'""6• product.. •
OUlt DUION COUllll caTlftCATI WIU U OtYIN TO AU DUDINTI I COMl'Lih!fO THrCOUBI Of •YINI Y1LLAOl INTRIOllS.
•
'
I I
I
I
r I
l!!ojoy tho oaUll•ttlon th la, In• Ir r o • n I Pl-lamb fat-side up ~~~.i lor of cooldn1 lamb. the aprlblti ... ftut. in 1baUow rouUn1 pan, medlwn or 170 .,_,....,
U1ht and tendertiearted IU.ll'!aTIME With sharp knife, cut for well·don.. Allow
en tree. Sat Is f y t n • LBG or LAMB trequent ,a Uta in surface lamb to stand '" warm
I because a let of lamb (I to• 1erv1D11. of lamb. lnaett iarllc place 15 to 20 1Dlnute1
, 100~1 so impressive ob clepndlq • aue ot lel silvers ln sllta. Gently before servtna.
the platter even thou1h ' ol lamb> s queeze lemon Julee E .. 8 T. a .., y ., -
lt la u easy 11 S and P Leg ot lamb (6 to 9 over latnb, f\lbblne into ,. • .. • ·
· (a Cood sprinkle or ult pounds) s litf a nd a urfac'e . OPSNB .. r
and pepper) to prepare. 2 cloves garllc, cut For a feativ~ Euter Lamb is naturally into slivers Sprinkle wt~ •alt, pep-breakfast or bruncla,
good like whole 1rain Julee ot one lemon per, summer eavory and team up ham 1Ueea,
and pure honey because · Salt swee~ basil. Rub season-sauaa1e Un.kl and bacon
It is raised on mothet"s Ground pepper ines into lamb aurtace. strlpa on a platt•r to
milk and green gi'uaes It\ teaspoon dried Roast in oven preheated serve with hot croaa
or forage. summer savory lo 325·degrees tor 20 to bun1 or other tr .. ditional
A little known fact 14 t e a s p o o n 25 minutes per pound, or breads, sqgeati the Na-
about lamb ls that the crumbled dried s weet llntil meat thermometer tional Live Stock and
fat is Uke the shell of a basil registers 140 deerees for Meat Board. nut .. .it peels off. This ,_:..::..:..:.:...._ _______ __:_ ___ ,_\ __;;.-----------------------:----~--=-
s e pa r able quality
pleases diners who are
avoidinc fatt y or
ma rbelized. with-Cat
meat. Another unusual
characteristic of lamb is
that its fat bums at a
l o wer temperature.
Therefore, experts on
la mb cookery suggest
cooking your Easter leg
of lamb at 325 degrees
Fahrenheit, preventing
any' unpleasant burning
odor and preserving the
natural moisture.
After deciding upon
leg of lamb as the center
of attraction at Easter
d inn er, let your im·
agination go when plan>-
ning other menu items
to accompany it.
La mb likes oven·
roasted potatoes, herbed
r ice or a n y of the
pastas. Fruit or green
salad are matchmates
as a r e m ost of the
popular vegetables with
./ the first -of.the-season
asparagus or green peas
leading the list.
Lemon chiffon cake
b r igh t ened with
strawberries finis hes
Egg ideas
handy for
holidays
Easter activities often
include the incredible
·edible egg.
During thjs spring holi·
day. the egg is much
more than something
good to eat.
It also symbolizes re·
newed lire and serves as
both a decorative craft
object and as the inspira-
tion for springtime fun
and games.
FARMERJO.HN
SMOKED HAM
SHANK PORTION-FOLLY COOKED • UMrT 1 (Purchase over b"l'hit·reg. price lb. 1 .09) LB.
ONE PER FAMILY SO EVERYONE CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS LOW PRJCE.
HAM PRICE EFFECTIVE THRO SAT .. APRll 18.
Leg of lamb Look!
1mpresBive on the
platter, but it's as
easy aa salt and
pepper to prepare.
Please Shop Early
AD Stonl9 WID ..
CLOSED EASTER
Soow...,loyw !M..J ~IMI ... .., Wit& tbeJr ,.....,.
For centuries. long
before the Christians
adopted them as their
symbol. eggs represent-
c d r ebirth to many
cultures These symbolic
eggs played a significant
r ole i n numerous
festivals marking the
start of spring.
THE ART of egg dec-
orating goes back many
centuries. too Originally
dyPs were made from
things found in nature -
such as bark, leaves and
flowers.
FARMER JOHN 78 TABLE KING ]59 FOR THE EASTER HOLIDAY VONS IS FEATURING ~MOKED HAM BONELESS HAM A COMPLETE SELECTION OF U.S.D.A. GRADE A ~vCOOKIDeUTTPORTK:>N • 't01s 'MiOt.£0fttW.F TURKEYS, BONELESS TURKEYS, STUFFED TURKEYS,
(~ IM'f lmlt· reg price I>. I 19) LB. ~ 2.-t~ IM'f fimll· reg. price lb. 2.29) LB. FRESH TURKEY • AND ROASTING CHICKENS.
Although today you can
buy commercial dyes.
you might also enjoy ex-
perimenting with natur al
ones.
For yellow dye. boil
onion skins in water. Try
spinach for green dye,
and use beets for red.
Then. dip your eggs in the
strained colored water
for creative, colorful
eggs the natural way.
AFTER YOU'VE dyed
your eggs, why not have
an Eastereggroll?
The White House
sponsors one eveey year
for thousands of children.
This tradition began
when Dolly Madison was
First Lady and continues
to be a !unfilled event. Or,
consider an egg toss ln
which pairs of contes-
tants vie to see who cu
throw (and catch!> an
egg over the greatest d.11-•
tance without breald.DI
It.
AN EGG race Is
another idea. Each com·
Pt1titor starts out with ah
egg in a spoon. Tbt •ill·
ner is the penoa w6o
crosees the llnilJI Bae
first 1rith bit or her eu
intact.
If you'd ratbw creaw
delicloua diabea with
your eall, WltJ not maM
a bard-cooked tll
cas1ero&e or a SitlMMI e11
uled sandwich?
Tlley're both ... , end
ecoaomica1•.,....* • 1reetw1ytomakttbetdn
last a little lonpr. lap
re.Uy are tnc..-tble, ecll·
bleed tun!
I
i~tJ-IHI•~ • f
·~-~Oll(Hlll!" All Amer. Peanut Butter ~~nut
~.llowt
• lt 1
1 •
lf family and friendl
1ather frequently at your
bouae durins the
Passover holiday, you'll
wanta varlet)' of interest·
inf and dellclous di•het
to serve, tncludlnt IOme thatare0Ud1et minders.
An euy menu includes
our Holiday lJver Saute
served with Skillet Cab·
ba1euasldedish.
Chicken livers are full
of iron, easy on the food
b.&ld1et and plenty
veraatlle. We suggest a
aentle sauteelng with
onions, parsley and tar-
low·cost mafvelous
snenu a.rved wlth potato
pancakee. allcea of apple,
mat10 and a f avorJte
wine.
HOLIDAY LIVE&
SAVTE
1 ~ pQunda chicken
llvers
\4 cup pareve
margarine
Y. cup finely chopped
onion
1 tea•poon flavof
enhancer v. c up chopp~
parsley
1 teaspoon dried leaf
tarra10b
Cut chicken liven Jn
half. Me.It marcarlne tn
JarcuklUet. AddelUcken
llvenandonlon.Sprintle
with flavor eobancer,
par11Jey and tarra1on.
Cook over medlun\ heal,
stirrina freqoent.b', until
Uvers are done, 8 to 10
minutes. YleJd: approx-
imately Uet"Yin&s .
8Jt1LLETCAllBAGE
2 qu•rta shredded
redorcreeocabbaae
2 tablespoons lemon juice
~cupwate~
I
l teaspoo~~flavor
enhan&.'el'. dJvldeo
3 tabl•~ pareve
m1r1artne
~ leUpoGll l>'Pper
Jo lar1e aklllet, corn·
bloe cabba1e. lemon
Julee, water and ~ teas-
poon flavor enbancer.
Dot with margariile. Cov· et. Cook over medium
heat 10 to U minutes, or
until crlsp·tfand,er .
SprlnkJe with re4Jlainln1
Y, teaspoon 'la vor enhancer and epper.
Toss U1hUy. Yi~: 4 to 8
servings. ·
Pas sover
celebrants will
savor the rich
variety of /lavors in
Holiday Liver Saute
and Skillet Cab·
bage.
ragon. ...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....,...,:--:-:'~~~~~~--~...;...,..;.-...___,:;~..,.,_~~~~~~......,..-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:.._~~~~~
Skillet Cabbage la so
alrnple yet special
enough to serve when
friends are coming by
during Passover week.
Nutritious cabbage, one
of \be best vegetable
buys, com bined wltb
lemon Juice, provide.s a
zesty contrast to the lux·
utious taste of the Holi-
day L( ~er Sau t e .
Tocetber, they make a
·Selecting
right ham ,,
Jlam for Easter is an
e~y tradition to keep
for there is a ham styled
and sized to meet needs
of all familie$.
'l'o help you choose the
ham that is just right for
your Easter celebration,
the National Live Stock
and Meat Board offers
the following guide to
ham selection.
There a re two basic types of ham -''fully
cooked" and "cook-
before-eating."
Most of today's hams
are fully cooked.'' They
have been smoked .
cured and cooked and
are ready to eat. To
serve hot, these hams
should be heated to an
internal temperature of
130 to 140 degrees.
•'Cook· before-eating''
hams should be cooked
to 160 degrees. Hams
are labeled "fully -
cooked" or "cook -
before-eating." Ask
your retailer if you are
unsure.
The following a r e
styles of ham that are
offer e d at most
supe..-narkets for your
Easter dinner.
-Bone-in Hams in-
clude whole hams, half
hams. s hank portlona.
rump (butt) portions
and thick center slices.
Shank and rump por-
tions have had the
center slices of the ham
removed.
-Semi·Boneless
Hams have at least one
bone remaining. usually
the round leg bone. They
are easier to carve than
other bone-in hams.
-Bone less Hams
have all the bones re-
moved and most of the
external and internal fat
trimmed away so there
is little or no was te.
They are especially easy
to carve.
The lean meat is
shaped and enclosed in a
casing. Boneless ham
may be labeled
"rolled," "shaped" or
"formed" and may be
sold whole or in halves
or pieces.
-Canned Hams are
usually boneless cured
ham sections that have
been p~aced in cans,
vacuum-sealed and then
fully cooked. A sm,all
amount of natural dry
gelatin is added before
sealing to absorb the
natural juices as the
ham cooks while pr~-
esaing. '
When deciding what
.aize ham to buy. con·
sider first the number or
persons to be served.
Then consider second
helpirip, individual ap-
pe tiles and planned
leftovers.
A boneless smoked or
canned bam will provide
up to 5 servings per
pound. Semi·boAleu
hams yield 3~ to 4 serv-
\.ftg s per pound and
booe·in hams yield a to 3~ servings w fOUlld.
Leftover blm. can be ~sed In a variety of easy.
and economie9l follow·
u)> meals . Ham
IUdwicbel Qd salads are alw-.,s popular, "1
Uw1 can be .tu1\ tlie
b••lnnin• of many jJlllltlbWU•. dcl ltripl Or C'fbel of
ltn to ca11erole1 , ~n.cre1med or: baked btUll
etttns flam "'-...... GtaUlld um will ~ ID i'tNlt INHI, 9iMU•. cab_,• roll• illid-.tted~.
YOUR8~HAPPYIA8TER
1 ·\ s r r R c. ( , < > 1 , 11 s
OtOCOLATE EASTER
EOOS 69. . .,,~.
·" GET A '-l!RSOMUZED
CHOCOLATE EASTER
EQQ POR E\IERYOrtE
,
/,
l!Ol lf)/\'v 11 0\\1 l~S
.49
a1 1uNSaorll Bro11 for about U whole wbeal fbr .PJacema1mallareu.CS chlcllenUvert mubroom.a and on.Jon ; of over 1&0 .. 111 po'91Qr <
Adult ouet dlabetea mlnatel, tllnilac ooce. crumbl bakln1 dlab. Spoon ~pound 1Uced lrtsh mix t.hrouch. Combine cookbooltl '"°''"",.' #W":l bap,_ to PeoPI• wbo llakee ' ieritQll. AP'. 2 ta btespoon • PI n eapple c bunk• muahrooma chicken conaomme, n ' '° A e R o B I ci
1,.. obeN, Heardlq to proxt~ IOO eaJOriet cboppedparaley around the chicken 1 small onion, sliced sherry and pepper; pe>ur NUTRITION (~
D a• i A ffNbl per •erVlae. ' ~ teaapooa fround pieces and PoUr remalD· thin over liven. Bake In a with Dora MHn.rbtrg, r dl~IDJ, th. Dlvt11'!.i e~~ from mari~~f! "' MK•DClllC&l:J-e 1iqer -ln1 Julee over all. Bake 1,\ cup cblcten con· 350·de1ree oven for 15 1'.D.J. 11 110" ho1'• o • of ll~atiollam •nd •-•• altemate c.-.-'""' PINSAJ'PLB '4 teupooo '\_Ut!Qf& In a 350-dearee oven for aomme minutes, or unU1 liven ~eUJJ., qw1tion, M. 1
Nutrt at St. Luke'• ol Jamb, 8J'eeD peppel" 4 balvea chlellen Dip cbichn preaata 1 hour. Makts 4 aerY· 2 tablespoons sherry, are cooked throu1h. to Jiuw Roth cl o tlw Otpr '
HOlpttal Center ln New and mushroom caps. brea1ta, 11lin removed into Julee frqm the 1~,s. Appxoxlmately 200 wine . Makes 4 servlnaa. Ap· PUoa. P.O. eoz J.WO, c...._
York. Place • cherry tomato 1 can Ul~ ouneet) ploeapple chunk's, then ealorfes per aervtna. 'rt teaspoon pepper proximately 220 calories MHa nns. PlnN ncM r
ffHblm explains, ''I at tbe end of eacb unsweetened pineapple coat with a mixture of BAK~DSHEaBH!D Cut cblcken liver• ln per servtn.. a 111/..0J:ldreiud •tamped ,
don't think I have ever 1kewer. Brush remain· cbunkl In oatural Julee bread crumbs, paniley, CHICK.EN LIVERS hall; place In a greased envelope for a pertOIMll 1
seen 10 adult ·onset ,-'-0_•~m_art_n_aa. __ 0_v_er_a_11_. ___ ~ __ c_o_p_c_r_u_s_h_e_d__;1;..:~~n..:.1_e_r_•_n_d_n.;..,a_tm_e_1_. ___ 1 _poun __ d_fr_es_h_w_h_o_le_s_m_a_l_l _b_akl_n_g_di_s_h_._A~d_d __ J_un_e_Ro_t_h_u_tM_a_ut_hor __ rep_Z~-·-----~77 diabetic who, la not
obese, but 1 have seen
obese ~ulta who are not
diabetic. altbou1b that
rarely happens.''
Hashim has conducted
many experiments to
1et a better understand·
inc of the problem of
overeating and lll rela·
tionshlp to de1enerative
dlaeue.
HE SAYS, "In aU my
time In medicine and
nutrition, l have never
seen an obese person
who la immune from an
abnormality -for ex·
ample, in carbohydrate
tolerance or diabetes -
who doesn't have a little
bit of arthritis, who
doesn't complain o(
some physical problem,
and who doesn't have a
blood pressure pro·
blem." Studies with animals
have indicated that an
area of the central
nervous system is con·
cerned with regulation
of food intake. There are
systems that initiate
feeding , and there
are inhibitory syetems
upon the initiators of the
feeding. But even those
who overeat get some
sig nal eventually to
stop.
As Hashim notes, "I
have seen a person eat
two gallons of ice cream
at one sitting, but he
didn't eat three gallons.
His signal was reached
at the two gallon level."
Of all the patients he
has studied for evidence
of satiety , norm a I
weight patients eat onJy
enough lo maintain
weight, but obese pa·
tients seem to eat
without sensible limits.
OBESITY IS a pre·
valent disorder in this
country, in some of the
Western European coun·
tries and, more recent·
ly, in the OPEC coun-
tries.
Yet, as Hashim points
out, "It has been known since the days of
Archimedes that if you
take in too many
calories and don't ex·
pend as much in energy,
you will become over·
weight. In the adult this
overweight is ex ·
emplified by deposition
of fat."
Diabetes is now con·
sidered to be the third
cause of death In this
country, according to
Hashim , but h e
elaborates that it ls not
diabetes , per ae.
because 90 percent of
the diabetics in this
country are obese and
suffer from adult onset
diabetes. It is this group
that can benefit from
careful calorie control
and stepped up physical
activity to bum off ex·
cess calories.
Here are some low
calorie main courses
that are suitable for
those who are tryina to
lose weight.
SlllSH·KA·BOB
1 pouqd lean lamb
chunks
IA cup dry red wtne
~ teaspoon dried
rosemary
2 green peppers,
seeded and cut up
12 mushroom caps
4 cherry tomatoes
Marinate lamb chunk•
in red wine with
rose~ary for at lea•t
one bout.. Re move
_,_
K-..AA -unu~-aA•A ..
--~ ..... _ ....
--..u C--llAM
. .'I"
IA'I"
Ll'2"
u•7"
IA'l19
I PILLSBURY READY TO SPREAD e.VAR. t i 2• FIOSDlllS ........... 1~.0Z. I l'tLLHURY PLUS 11.vAJUmu C . CAKE MIXES ........ AEO PK 77 I DllH uou1D t I 0~ DElllASSAIE ..... 22-oz. I ,ACIAL AIST. COLO"' OR WHIT! 9 c . KLEEllEX ................. ~CT. 7
• TRASH U ML, IO OAL . ,2 •• ILAD IAIS ........... »CT.
• PL.Ame ••• ILAD WRAP ..... 1~IOFT . I · PILLSIUAY HUNGRY JACK IUTI'ERMILK ••• PAllCAKE MIX ... 32-0~ ~
• CONC. LAUNDRY ~ENT t , •• FRESH S1ART ....... »o~
CHll'fOH KAAn ;raAIN>I ~ • l'till.AOE~IA 'f.11M f NAPKINS CREAM CHEESE LS
IC>CT7 5c •~83• t41•
REG IVAA.
AFHOLOS
1 sH'ist'A 'Mm' DIS LIQUID OIL
12-0~23• I 68• !a"•327 12-0~
Ml ••• flll IE . Ill MOii
1:11 ro ti .
• AP!llf!!!!~O#\Y.
DmlTU "°'*A .: ........ ~ ................ : ......... lfk •1.H
. Clllllll ml't ...................................... 1.~ ...
. Cll.IEIT Qllll .................... .' .......... : .................. ,m •.8.
ICllEllY ICOTOt ...................................... 'Pk 111.11
El~ .................................................... m 111•
1~77c
.~21c
·~·----CHllA
Mll•llJC8ro-HUT ...
WA LEI ClffU CMl ~" ~'4lu.tl Oii f
mm-•~ t 1-Ullll CUPf,fllT -~ l'LONO.\.
JljAL Oii -1111!1-•• ~lll-1 -Wfi .-rm1111 •.Jiii IBL_-•1.21
.. .
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I
/
''~"n c:bloroptiyU tb•
"'"ii ~w:aq" 18· tJC(paUGa ol a ~ ll'OW• ~~= lkla Color la DQ~ca&ilotrt,_..., how•vw. ud ..,. DO ef.
.feet OD t.be 1"4et JUkl-
De .. oftbefndt within.
x roetmU"J• llD4 =r; 1 medium he+ci lresb I orancea, Joncer, or untU botb ]>otnt 11 reached: do not
mla ftll. RUbH p eaullllowr HetloMd YelfUblel are tendu. Jn lboU. RtlDOve from beat,
over ... , IDd into_.. 1 medium I bunch Reaiiov• out.r leav .. t1nal1 eaucepan, melt jadtf or~nfe Hctlont;
rtlJNdllllhriUasaYOl'Y fnllabriCcoli from caulitlower, trim, butter; bfMd ln fiour, 1mlx gent y . Atrance Or~ ~. Ptac.. , l ta~butt•r 1llc• off root a Jeavtni -tall and pepper, coo11· l 1Ve1etable1 on aervln1
mHt In tla&llOW rout.IDa or m.,...ua. ea&&Jl.llowtr tn OM wbole minute, Stir ln oran1e !'platter; pour aauce over ,..JaU,uiiilonnci,ln ltablelpooo our piece. Pllc.lnlaraeket· Julee, ~uatarc) and all.
lltd..,..0¥•,allowb11 ~taefoOD• ~ Ut or·~ wttb 1· chives; coot. ov~r tow Yield:GtohervinC•·
21\of!m&D.-perpound ~te11pooa "~r lnch bollln1, 1aUed beat, 1Utrtnc ~tqtly, JI AKE D 0 NI 0 N 8 or '-8 t t J m •a t ~euporaQCejJulce water. Cover, cook 16 untll mixture boll• and · FLORIDA
tbermo-.eter resJ1ter1 l tablttpoqn pre. mlnutet. Meanwhile, re· thltkena 11l1ht1y. Beat 8 medium -size
1'10 d•IJ"MI. One bour parecl,muatard move lute leave• and leH wlt.h cream; stir a yellow onions. peeled,
befort roast la done, 1 teaspoon snipped tou1h plria ot broccoli; iJitle of the hot orange quartered
meat. Bute occulonally 1 ea apean. Add broccoll to ~et urn ml x tu re to or rlne, mlted
wltb or~e Juice., ran ~cup lllbt cream of kettle with caullflower; Aaucepan. Cook, stirrln& an (6 ounce can)
For a .. c.y aecompul·
meat to the JM>!k rout,
plan on Bated ()DJou
Florida, very simple, but
dellcioul and attractive.
The onions cook tender
and coated 1otden with
oran1e Julee at tM same
timetheporkilrouUn1.
No matter what meat
)'OU decide to serve,
thou1h. Ve1etablet with Oran1tSauceSupremei1
a dau.lJ.q col!U)lement.
A fresh head of
cauliflower aod vibrant
broccoli 1pear1 retain
their lovely colon when
cooked in Just a
minimum amount of
water. Mantled ln a
savory orange sauce
(also excellent over
asparaeus ), the
vegetables delight the eye and palate of every-
one who revels in
springtime's new sensa·
tions.
1p00a oraqe Julee over cblve1,fre1hordrjed separate Into lndJvldual \nixture lnto the egg. ~lespooqs butter
dripplnp until mea ii halfandbalf cover, cook 15 niinutea vl1oroualy. until bolling fro oocentrated
done. _.;_--;~~~~'---;-~~~~~~~~--:;;;:---;iifiii't;iiiiii~;;;F;;:;:;;::-:=:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---: Yield: 6 tervlncs. ' "
STUFFED PORK
ROAST
Spoundloinofpork
1 teasp000 salt ~ teaspoon dried
lear sage .,,, teaspoon pepper
1tl teaspoon dried leaf
thy me, crumbled
1tl teaspoon dried leaf
rosemary.crushed
Savory Orange Stu!·
fing•
~cup orange juice
Have butcher crack
backbone of pork loin.
Make a deep slit in center
back of each chop. Com-
bine salt, sa1~. thyme,
•SAVORY O&ANGE
STUFFING
~ pound bulk
HUH .. meat
lcupcboppedonion
3 cups corn bread
crumbl
2 oranges, peeled and
diced
· ~ cuporaneeJulce 1 egg, aUptly beaten
1tl teaspoon salt v, tea.spoon dried leaf
sage
~ tea.spoon dried leaf
thyme
y, teaspoon dried leaf
rosemary
"4 teaspoon pepper
BrO"VJl sausage meat In
skillet, breaking up with
fork as it cooks. Add
onion: cook untU soft.
Add corn ~read crumbs,
orange piece~. oranee
juice, egg, salt, sage,
thyme, rosemar¥ and
pepper; mix well. Spoon
about 3 tablespoons stiJf. ·
fin& into each slit in pork.
Any unused stuffing may
be baked in a covered
dish during last 30
minutes of roasting.
VEGETABLES WITH
ORANGE SAUCE
SUPREME
Cook pasta 99 different ways
-Almost 100 different
ways to cook pasta and
dosens of ways to utilize
~orn in the kitchen are
offered in new
cookbooks this week.
Among cookbooks bot
off the presses are:
"ti WAYS TO Coot
Pata," by actors Flora
and Robert Alda,
published by Macmillan
Nblisbing Co., is $9.95
Jn bookstores. Both Aldas
si~I their favorite pasta
dilbes as those that com·
bine past.a with seafood
or •eget.ables, or both.
Mbre than 22 pages of
seafood recipes are in·
eluded from Spaghetti
con Vongole (Spaehettt
with White Clam Sauce)
to Linguine con ~alamari
HOT OFF
THE PRESS
(Flat Macaroni with
·Squid).
"K"NDY KORN
Cookbook,'' publisbed
by Willetta Enterprises,
Twin Falls, Idaho ,
includes a variety of
recipes for table corn
from appetizers through
main dishes and
desserlf. The 80-pace
booklet is available from
mail-order seed housea
lncludl~ Burpee Seed
Co., Riverside 92505. In
addition to recipes such
as Jellied Kom Salad,
Korn Croquettes and
Steamed lndian Loaf, the
.booklet gives advice on
storing, freezing, can-
.ning and drying sweet
<COrn.
545-5724 ~ 18011 !kypcft Ordt, Wit E, Irvine
IMe!rt .. fl I .. sti.-Wltf fllf c.lf. hf .....
POSMMlon of tear gu without a p«mit Is a felony.
Shop here only for qumlty;;
because that's all we carry!
Pf ASONAl.
PROTECTIOl't S)fSTeMS
BUY ONE PACKAGE
OF BUTTER MINTS OR PARTYMINTS
AND GET A SECOND PACKAGE FREEi
. ~
• Ol' F"..r."'· .... "'ca.kot po•~t wt" Fuu~~re'di:::. · ·t.ORN' BEEF ~i 6q ~"lus~BA~·M'' 'J..-
... ~ .. ~ -fTEAl< ·,· ... ·!· WJ •
. a.~i' ~-··'·'M• ·~: FouMia6.,,VO.ll-st"ote • . • . P.OW Of.leltt l ~ ... lOMA· .. PM . .. -.. . __ ,. . .._._
'
:
t
]
j
)
J
)
j ..
l
.
j
j
I
l
I
r
• .
•1 •mm KELI.Ba ba"·moon.s and ftin of Season waahett1 raw -lM . Divide Imo 3 portlon1. raw ea1 u larae as a colored eH on •• ,, .. ,,"
Like to 8'°>' an W>-douab to cJae; brush ea11 <ln ahel ) tn 3 heapln1 table· C6lor oae portion pink dime on the Jarp end. Scattw lemon altawa
usual, deUclou Euler wltb eu mixture. Make (pla1Uc> aack contain-fpoonacomatarcb wttb beet Julee; one Pour out e11; rt nae around etas to resem
meal fHturln1 tradl· a deslan ol al .. h-markt ins berbe for ~ hours 3 .heapln1 table·. sreen wlth spinach shells well; draiA. nnt.
tlonal baked bun and opportunity to brown, between decorations. before cooktna. Since 11poonuucar Julee; one yellow with a Stand empty shells up-LEMON ln'KAWS
colortdeuaprepar9dln discard it and the skin. ijJsert\wo;maUfUnnels cl~ane~ sl\el~s are lpintcoldmllk bltolcoMen•~S,.ffron rlaht tn a pan of meal, Pare lemons ln lon1 untrlldJtJoniJ manner•? Marinate ham in fie fu_ade of otl throuah porous, eH• wlll absorb 3 eigs, Whipped Tea. or oats: pour blanc •trips the width of a
Mate lat Century sauce 2 hours. Remove; c•se so steam can herb's flavors. Use 'H 1 pint bollina milk SAFRON TEA manee sJowly throuah a strew. Boll in water un·
Ram cooked with bay cut slash -mark~ in . escape. Bake in preheat-teaspoon sa(e i)l sack Ya tea.spoon vanflla l or 2 dried leaves funnel into dry sbelll. tU tender. Throw them
liaves and ftis. Roman meat, 1-incb apart. Fill ed 30().de,ree oven unUl with g egs; ~ teaspoon Diuolve cornstarch aatfron boiled in P I a c e d l s b i n into a rich syrup U cup
Mateus Aptcius wrote incisions with honey. brown (2 hours). tarraeon In ~other; \4 and sugar in the cold 1/4 cup cold water refrigerator several water bolled with 1 cup
the recipe th tbe first Make a c•se of the Mash fies ; heat; dis· teaspoon each: farsley, milk; stir In eHs; pour Cool before str1ining. hours, or overniaht. sugar>. Boil unW clear. Pll:unbUoswh-~ d~·~nogklbAo.Do.k puff pastry: enclose card bay leaves; strain chervil, tarragqn in a mixture into boilln1 Mold the colored blanc Line fiat dishes with 1 Drain. ~ .... ham. Whip egg yolk with for sauce. third. Dye eags in each milk, stirrlna constantly mange in empty eee or 2 tablespoons mint Serve cream and aug-
Surprise auests with 1 teasi>oon cold water; INVISIBLY SEASONED sack the same c~or. until it boils again. Add shells. Carefully break Jelly, to represent grass. ar at the table to op-
d e11erts or colored brush over case. Apply EGGS -1839 BLANC MANG EGGS vanilla. Makes 4 cups. out a piece of shell of Discard e11 shells. Set tionally spoon over eegs.
Blanc Manee Eggs of ,---------------------------------------------------+----~----------------------------------------------------------------------------1960 nestJed in lemon-
s tr aw on Mint-jelly "grass.''
FIRST CENTURY HAM
<MODERNIZED>
7 pound cooked, ten-derized ham
3 pounds figs, dried
3 bay leaves
% oup Champaene,
or water
~und puff pastry
from116wiss or French bakery
1 ege yolk
Honey
Cover figs with water
or Champagn e;
marinate overnight to
reconstitute.
Place half the figs in a
pan deep enough to hold
the ham; set ham on
top; cover with bay
leaves. remaining figs,
Champagne. Half cover:
simmer 21h hours. turn-
ing every 30 minutes.
Since the fat has no
Versatile
sweet
potato
··Which would you
prefer, potatoes or stuf-
fing ?" Why not sweet
potatoes? Sweet potato
cookery should not be
limited to "candied
yams".
However s erved,
sweet potatoes add a
nutritional plus to any
meal. One J 'h-ounce
sweet potato provides
over 100 percent of the
recommended daily al-
1 ow an c e CRDA > of
vitamin A, 36 percent of
the RDA of vitamin C
and S percent of the
RDA ol iron.
Three main varieties
of sweet potatoes are
produced in California.
The Jersey, usually
labeled "sweet potato".
has a creamy colored
skin and a yellow. mea-
ty, somewhat dry flesh.
The Jewel, with its
c opper or tan skin
enclosing a bright
orange, moist flesh, is
generally marketed as a
yam.
The red or purple
skinned, deep orange-
1 fleshed Gamet is also
sold as a yam, but like
the Jewel, belongs to the
sweet potato family.
BACON-MUSHROOM
STUFFED SWEET
POTATOES
4 medium fresb
California orange sweet
potatoes (about 2
pounds)
6 slices bacon
\4 pound fresh
mushrooms, sliced
\4 cup sliced green
onion
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine
'h teaspoon salt
\4 teaspoon leaf
tliyme, crushed
'4 teaspoon leaf
oregano, crushed
IA cup erated, Ched·
dar cheese
Wub sweet potatoes;
prick with fork. Bake at
350 dearees, so . to 60
minutes, or unW tender,
In medium aklllet, ~
bacon· until crlap.
Remove baC()O, drain on
paper towel ~ crufJ'--
ble; set uide. Pour olf
all but 1 tablespoon
baCClll dripptnaa.
Add 111ubroom1 and ar.-oalon to ak.lllet; coot until tender. Cut.
thin lenetbwlse, slice
'from top ol e• sweet
potato: dUcard •lice.
Scoop out u.lde of sweet
potato, tea.ins a thin
•bell. M-.111 ·••eet
pOtato.; beal ln butt~, 1alt, thyme anl onsano. Stir iA bacai,
m•illroOml Md anen
aelGa. Padr mlmire lDto
..... Place lD lbaUow
bakl';l.::n.-:;Sprlakle WU. BaleatllO ., ••. .=:: . .::
~ ............ -4 ....
Lower overall meat prices.
BONELESS . 138
WHOLE HAM
~utiv COOlce<l wartt Aooto s 7 LD'i
•HOlll ll: 1 SB•
lD
SHANK PORTION88
OR HAM •
ru11v COO~l'(J 801\P In lD
LARGE END
RIB ROAST 178
B()(l(lfO Bttf LO
CROSS
RIB ROAST
eon~\ eon0t0 B~•' crwc~
SMALL END RIB ROAST
ll~DfOffff'
RIB EYE STEAK
FILET MIGNON
•• 1 .98
.3.18
.4.68
~£~.~1SHOULDER ROAST •• 1.18
Hormel Curemester Ham.
BONELE'>S FULLY C001(£0 l B 2 98
Grade A Tom Turkey ARMOUR GOlOEN 51 'IR AIJTTER !IA«;tfO
111 ?')LBS ~ROZ£N LB 79
Grade A. Stuffed T urkey FROZEN
ARMOUR GOLDEN 5 TAR 9 12 LBS LB 69
Boneless Turkey ARMOUR GOLDEN STAR
BUTTER BASlEO FROZEN LB 1 79
Foster Farms Grade A Duck.
FROZ[N 3 5 LBS LB 99
Deli Key Buy.\·
fl CUDAHY
oBAR·S HAM 719
canntd S lO Cin
b ~!~,~.~.~URY DINNER RO~~,~ ••• 6 9
L ~~~~~e.~ CHEESE , '1 ••t 1 .49 I
b ~~~~M CHEESE ·roi• • .,.69 b Utdy Lee Dips ' VAR 8 oz c f NR
Cheese Spreads AONOElE f' I VARlfTtES •oz PKG
6 Pillsbury Cookies f' 'V"RIET11:;S I~ Ol PKG. o Italian Salami p MAA~O POLO SLICED 9 OZ PKG
b Hor1J1el Kolbase. n M PKG
p Vlas1c Pickles, KOSHER DILL b WHOLEOAHALVES'310Z
l~iquor & JJ ·;,,e
49
t 29
119
239
189
, 09
. p PAUL MASSoN .2 99
6WINES ~ '
EITMl'llcl ory or Rf\411e (ISflt I 5 ltr atl
TOP SIRLOIN
STEAK
8011~\ 80f10"<1 BM'f lO.n
BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
run Cul Bonato Bttf
BLADE CUT
CHUCK ROAST
BonOtOBtt•
GRADE A
TURKEY
249
lD
179
lD
.98
LD
.69
lMJy ltt Tom BOl\IHI 18 n llX FfOltn ~
SHANK H.ALF OF HAM
'Ul'" OOHO ..,..,. !ff .. 1.18
~~/c!.~2!JION OF H~M •j. 98
~E.NJ.~l'~~T HAM SLICES • 1. 98
CURE 81 HAM H~LF
~Wl ~'f\\f:\,al\o (OC)t'fO ~ •• 2.58
Fresh Roasting C,,•cken. l AC"-,Y F '\RMS l !I 88
Tyson Cornish Game Hens.
OA,.DE A FROZE"I ?O OZ EACH 1 48
Louis Rich Turkey Breast coo .. Eo
'™<)l(EQ B B 0 0\IE"' ROASTED l B 2 88
LOUIS Rich Turkey Ham. (TURKEY PASTRAMI LB 2 Oii) LB 1 98
F11rmer John Pork Sausage.
HOt OR MILD I L8 ROLL 99
Lady Lee Bacon. SLICED I LB PKG • 1 34
H'in e
I' R1eneheu Wine. 0 CONC.ORO 1H1R Bil
I' Rrchelreu Wine.
349
'79 6 CONCORD 7~ Ml 8lt
L Gallo Wines HE.ARTY BURGUNDY RHINE RED ROSE CHABLIS 81 AN(:
OR V•N ROSE 'SLTR en 269 .
2.Y9 I' Liebfraumilch Wine. 0 LITTLE RHINE BEAR 750 Ml 8TL
( ·ann<'d ,{ P ackaged
b ~~EAPPl~ JUICE
l ~~.?o~~ .!P,;1c0Ts
L LADY LEE YAMS . .. , l"Ol c•~.69
1001 c•~.69
Canned&Packaged
L2~!~P~:EA~~~
or SOJnClwten
!CHERRY 99
PIE FILLING •
Su0<tm.l 11 01 can
f HARVEST DAY65 b PEARS •
7'J 01 c.in
f' HEINZ 6 KETCHUP . .99
41 01 Btl
L LADY LEE CORN CHIPS. Ol ... ~ 4 9
b LADY LEE MAYONN~.l~E •• 1.14
'b ~.~.!LEE MARSHMAL~C:,~~.59
b ~~~PY CRACKERS
b f,R,_UIT COCKTAIL
I' U:idy Lei> F rwt Punch 8<1Sf' h '201 B'l
'I' French s Mustard 1• nl 1A11
6 Pam Cooking Spray f VEGETAALf fl()/ CAN
~ Angel Food Cake M11
"""o •• 65
((~ .39
149
67
t 49
BETloV CA()rl(fR '"OZ ROX l Hot Roll Mtll PILL!>BURV ,, II/ SOX
'25
89
1' Blueberry Mullin Mui O BE TTY CR()('l(fR 13 OZ 0• »
Wesson 011 1• oz BH J, Seven Seas Dressing.
l/IVA ITALIAN 'i~l•O ROZ en
1' Wheat Chex Cereal b RALSTON n oz 9011
1 17
1 \9
69
1 64!
I' Heinz Gr~viea. 3 VARIETIES 11 oz JAR 61
6 Vermont Maid Syrup 2• 01 SIL 1 49
Ji H einz White Vl(leQar .,. b D1«;l tllFO 111 oz BlL . ~ Krall Macaroni & Cheese A DELUXE 1• oz eox
llousehold & P r l
38
I 07
.89
H 5 5F llOI
b VILLA PAPER PLAT~"~' .. ,, 1. 75
b ~~•~o~~ TISSlJ~ ,.,,. •o .. 93 .
b ~~2!X NAPKINS ~" .. , • 70
b ~.~0 PAPER T~WELS •w t!J\• • 66
L ~~eo WRAP '°'"IOl,.69
¢PASSOVER GREETINGS
· · _, All stores closed
Easter Sunday, April 19.
n!
~
~010hf 1d""' ro ho --..s ~ ~
Come In to LuCk!J this wu lc ,.nd
plclc "P your fru ltoolcld.
Produce
HAWAIIAN
.89 PINEAPPLE
Juo<v Ff~n (.lCn
LARGE
.25 'AVOCADOS
C.llitorn•a \ F<IW\r Eacn
GOLDEN
.29 BANANAS
TPml)f1n9 ~•IX' lD
ROMAINE LETTUCE ,. ~.29 " \Al AO '-4\.'f"ltf
TABLE CARROTS •.• 15 , -ic -., •• ._. • ._a
CHERRY TOMATOES
•• ~, •• •II .69
Dairy & Frozen
·f' GRADE AA 65 6 ~v~PIUM EGGS. 001 crn
L ~~.~~!-!,.~.'.MEAT PIES ""'"'"•29
L ~~~~~ON'S CHICK~~, t(• 2. 99
b ~!J, RITZ PIE SHELLS " .. ,,. 6 5
l ~~.~~ .. ~ PIE ,. r1 •• 1 . 9.9
L J~~~:s ~1zzA ROLLS . ~, . • 8 5
I' Botds Eye Vegetables. O WHOlf K(RNH CORN OA f'r A<;
10 OZ PKG 39
I' lady Lee Ice Cream b SOIJA"'ES ·~ HAvrin~ OAL c. TN 1 49
I' Ore-Ida Cob Corn 4 r r ~·Kr. 1 05
b Parloty Marga11ne 1e cz CtN 67
I' Real Cream Topping 0 LADY LEE 6 OZ CT N 89
llealth & Beauty
I' JOHNSON'S
6 """00( '"""''~ b ~~HNSON'S LOTION
b t0?,~NSON'S SWABS
l ~~~J~~RO ,
L RIGHT GUARD
:.."r'~:':~~llOOI' -·
b ~~!~~~~STICK
b l~J!,MACK EFA
L !~~J!MACK CELAVE
f
_j
'1
~
'o{ .. . ,
I
,
• ' I
I
I "
'
I
1l
•'
'
• By llA&TIN &LOANS
Do the companl" •bole product.I •• buY aJ~t every trip to lbe M&permarlret Hal~.
Utt about U1 1boppen!
\ Judtlna from the experiencet of my aden, tbeauw.rla a4hftnlte1•!
Juanita ElkiDJ from Belleville, Mich .• t•
elved a coupon from Heins for a free Jar of
icklee. The only problem wu that a!le bad
ent for an offer promisin1 two free Jart ot ravy.
"When I wrote to them about It, they
romptly replied and aent me a check for
, " abe reported. "That's what I call IOOd
ustomer relalloDJ."
Cheryl Shuler of Butler, Pa., decided to
Y one of the Dak canned hams that she bad
een advertised on television. But ahe had
ome trouble opening the can.
She wrote to' the company abo\lt her
problem and several weeks later recelv.d a
letter of apology from the president of Dak
Foods. And that wasn't all that she received.
Along with the letter came a replacement
am that was larger than the one sbe had
ught and a large Oak-salami.
"I was really pleased to find that Oak
lands behind its products," she said.
David Ritter of Eugene, Ore., com-
lained to Chex that be had found very few
aisins in his last box or Wheat and Raisin
hex Cereal.
ln response, he received a letter from the
ompany's octice of consumer alfafrs assur-
g him that, "We have taken steps to insure
bat our new cereal has an equal or greater
umber of raisins than any othet raisin-type
eral." AJong with the letter came a full re-
und and a couron for another box or Wheat
nd Raisin Chex .
Judy Behr of Williamsville, N.Y .. was
ure that the Uncle Ben's offer headlined
'Save up to $6" was-a cash refund. She com-
lained to the company when she instead re-
" ...... ..., ........ a· ,·j, .. ftitil~'· ~-pt.....,, .....
thl6id:. .., ol Uae ldY.tiMmrt llld
bMWd msattlatd coupons -tWI•. tut~ . Jut~ of tM compu11'1 letW~: ·
• · p;y._ dlaulb •• do not feel an tn1W HlN been iaadl .In the olftr, we valu. you u a
customer IDd wiia1d Ute to, In toDM way, .•.• ,.,.. ~ ,,..,..,.,
II you will Had u one-haU ol tbe eoupou, we wlll for.-Ud to JOU that value In cub.•·
She wu lmpre1aed with the fatmea• ol
this r•ponae, and ao am I.
&EPlJND UPDATE I
Many readen wrote to me con~m~1 the recent Kraft Groceries Otter. Tbey s y
that they purchaaed the Macaroni a d
Cheese Dinnen but found that the requlri.d
red aeala were not printed on the side panel~.
Tbe people at Kraft aay that tbere .... a
probkm ·and tbat ln this one• cue they "'Ul
.ecept Unive"ar 'Product Coclet instead of red seala.
If YO\I bad this problem and if your te-
fund 1fonn bu expired. I su11est that ybu conta~t Ma.ry Smoley at Kraft Consu~r
Service, 500 Peshtigo Court, Chicago, 60690.
In early February, Post Office Box 4147
in Youn1 America, Minn., was inadvertently
closed for those requestln~ the Totino's $1
Refund, which does ~ot expire until the ehd
or April. If your envelope came back marked
"box closed," resubmit your proofs 1of
purchase with a short note or explanation 40:
Totino's Refund Offer, P .O. Box 200, Yo@c
America, Minn. 55397. If possible, include the
"box closed" envelope.
• REFUND OF THE DAY
Write to the following address to obtain
the form required by this offer ror a $3 refund
and a 50-cent coupon: The Great Flex
Rebate, P.O. Box 3389, Maple Plain, Minn.
55348. This offer expires Dec. 31. 1981 -------------------------------------· CLIP 'N' FILE REFUNDS
MNIUI ........_. ...., •JO.en~ Sefld U. requlrH r11-rarm
Cllp out tllis Ille -"' k-II •1111 slml .. r ,..,.__, Md -llotbn _,.I •ill! Vfthr.,.-1 Pl'OINcl Codi c..,_ -bewreot , .. ,_ oflert •1111 ._...,.... from -~tM>i.t Pkk•ge ot E•·lAI• Piii\. Eqolres c-s. tor eqmple, SIM1 coll«IJnt u. ,,....... De<. )I, 1'11.
proofs of pUrcheW wlllle ~l"IJ lor tM required r• NYQOIL RelWICI. Receive• ll rll..,4. 5-ld 1111 r•
Jund fonM •I ti. suP*f,,,...ll•t. 111 ne......,.. -q11lre retlllld form end ,,. lull lfGlll penll lrcrn -m99•1tnn. --tredlne •1111 fr1-. Offen 10.0llll<• NllQUll ,.,ton. E'Jlpirn Mey SI, 1•1. mey noC 119 evell-In •II ...... of 1M c-try. ~ SINE OF'f' btre Strength Cel>sUI• Refund oo ....
1-10 ,.....10 -.celve •«II••"-· Receive a 50-<1111 refund. s.nd Ule reqylred relund
ANACIN<URAO Fr .. cw .. Oftff. RK......... form end 1111 -"•' •lltl ,,. -nb .. SIM Off E•· fuM ..,.i to W. swtc. of Ct.Ir• ...,,..... $elld !fie tr• SlrenQUI """' MecllclM N-A11tlr\ll '-"'ln" ,.q11lrad relullcl fotm, ... aut.r cwto11 from 100-lrCHll -51,. Ott E•tr• St~ pecU91. EJtpll'ft
tel>let Ankln, Ille Unl ... l"Mll ,..,_, c.. ~ O.c. l l, "'\..
•llcl pee~ sln fNm Or• ..,.._9" O·lncl\, » TUMS~ Oller Receive a $1 "'uncL s.llcl IN Nlld•~ slu, auortw SO •::r, llH or -1..i recwlrtd .-..-lorn!, t,. ,,,...,.,.., lrcrn -1• ~ sl.r.• •lltl ao fl'H) • rt9-reolpt r.lllet TMf\'11 bOCll• and a r99lster reulclt. lbp4re1
•1111 IM price of IM.......,.. clrci.s. tJIPI-Sept. J-JO. 11111. ». 1911. TYLE"°'-$1.iO Oflw, Receive a •t r9f\n:I -e BROMO.SEL TlER·HALl.S·LISTERINE Gold Jlk.nt ~ Send Ille reqvlrM relullcl form, IN w .. tiwr S.vi~ Recelw a St relWMI and fouf' U. .,. .. ,. Mer CM-tram orre _.._ Of .....,.,.
cant couponJ. Sellcl Ille required r•fllfWI fcwm -the Stre119111 TY'-1 THlet~ or Cepwt" lnol IM 12-
bollom Oii end "-Will! Vnlwers.t l'rOCIUCt Coclt& t.blll or 11<-iiw11 1111> .,d • reain ... receipt •ltll from 1-ol ltle lolloWlno iw-.c" ANl!I"· .,_ Ille Tyl..,.. price clrdM. Explret .),... JO, 1•1. Seiner, Hell' c~ Formul• or.-LISllflM VICKS FORMULA 44-0. Rectl .... ,........, oC u
loHn9". EllPirH J-:IO, "'' ce1111 to '1. Send Ille required refund twm -Ifie OIUREX oo .... Rec.el ... ,, relWl\d. Send t"9 r• tftllr• '""' (.-\Oft _., ·-Int I,. --
q11lrtd relullcl lo(m, -front l•bel tram Olul-.. llul..._. .-11y f,,.,,, Vlc:lll For....,I• ...0. ,,_ Water Piiis, Ohwn c.wi" or Olur•·2. w lrcint 1S unta, tend Ille .,.,.1 from >-• ,,__ .... o. ~• from ..., vttMnln _..._ ~ • ,_., ,.... Fw so c...u. tend IN '*"' Jrom ..._. ,.."""4• celpt. Eaplres Mo JO. 1•1. ...o. Far ,J, '9111 u. ....,., trom "-• F<DIT'llUI• EX·LAX Sewe SI OHer Receive e 5CkWll .-..-4•0. E~J,_JO, 1•1. ~----------~----~-------~------------J
· crowave ~king class scheduled
Microwave
inglime Fantas y COOKING WITH CLASS Community College.
s is the title of a
1ss to be offered
urday at Sisters Gift
>P, Huntington Beach.
'he class. taught by
home economist Sally
Lans ing, will teach
mi c row a ve cooking
Cheer
Detergent
171 oz. 5ss
comet Cleanser Powder
21 oz.
.55
techniques. Ms. Lansing
is a foods and nutrition
instructor for Coastline
oxydol
Detergent
840Z.
343
For reservations and
information, call either
Susan Rahn al 841-9500
or Sally Lansing at
963-0811, extension 258.
Cost per person is $12.
Gain Detergent
4901
199
Bounce
Fabric
!n~~.2s9
SDlc ahd Span
540Z.
211
8
" Ivory Bath
~2:! ....... 82
lfJutd
J20Z.
1~9
wlaUa cboeolate followla1 ma1nafact•rer'1 1u1ar; lldd vullla and en yolk. Combine nour,
dl,.etiom. cocoa and bU1ns soda; add to creal!Md mlxture
CllOCOLATS Ill.NT IQlTUU alternatfiy wttb mUk. Beat JU1t unUI blended.
I tablelpoone 1wfft butter Beat ea Wtdt. untJJ •Utt; c~ly fold into ~cup ua1..-.ned cocoa batter. PW 1maU eulkak• pania ·u4'·1ncb ln
2eupe ~ectson•r'.f su,ar dlamettl') 2/S "'»· Bake at a50 .,,.... for 15to11 s tabl•llOOM milt mlnutel or until cake test.r lnlerted tn cent•r
1 teu58ftllla comes out clean. Frost with PuteJ l'lut.ln1.
llllnt (recipe below) Decorate wttb ,colored •Prinkles, if desired. llelt butter email saucepan over medium Makea2doienbite·tliecupcake..
heat; add cocoa. Hea~ Ju•t until mixture beaina PASTEL l'&OSTING
to boll, 1Urrln1 consta~ untU 1mootb. 3 tablespoons butter
Remove from heat; add ectloner's suiar. l"' cups conlecUoners' su1ar
milk and vanilla. Return to low beat; beat and 1~ teU})OOIU vanilla
•Ur until dlidure appean melted and 1loeay. 2 tablespoons milk
Pour half onto lisbUy lfeaMd cookie 1beet. Red or ~n food color (or create your
Quickly spread into t-lnch tquare with 1patula. own special blends -e.1.. peach, pale blue,
Chill, while prepann1 Mint PUUna. Spread mint lavender -by mixing Unta. >
evenly over chocolate layer. Cblll 10 minutes. · Combine lngredlenta except food color in
Place remainlnf chocolate over low beat until small bowl. Beat until spreading consistency.
melted. Quick y spread over fillln,. CbUl Divide froeting in haJf; Unt i,; pink ; tint remain-
thoroughly, cut loto 1mall squares, serve cold. ing half pastel creen.
About 4 doun squares.
lllNTFILUNG D--1--•f-LJ_ Combine 3 ounces ere.am cbeeH, 2 CUpl~n;,:J avaiu.iv~
confectioners' su1ar, '1'I teaspoon vanilla, '4
teupoon peppermint extract and 2 or 3 drop1 "MORMON Country ' ' CAL I F 0 ll N I A
creen food color; blend well. U needed, add 1 Cooking," written by Favorites" ls a 144-page
tablespooumllkforspreadingconslstency. w· f spiralbound booklet PARTY VARIATION : Omit chocolate •nni red C. Jardine, including re~ipes for a
square procedure. Place chocolate mixture in food t!ditor of the CaliCornia lifestyle,
pastry tube. Form I-inch patties on wax paper-Deseret News in Salt ranging f1 om Indian covered tray; chill untU farm. Prepare Mint Lake City.Utah, and foods such as Acorn
Filllng; spread small amount onto one published by Deseret Stew and Juniper Tea to
chocolate patty; top with another patty. News Publichinc co .. Spanish and Mexican
MINICOCOACVPCAKES offers dishes from dishes such as frijoles,
3 tablespoons bu.tt.er a p p e t i z e r s 8 n d 1 t o r t i 11 a s to o c e a n
lf.a cup sugar beverages such as Hot, r a v or it es s u c h as
~teaspoon vanilla Spiced Apricot Nectar Hangtown Fry and Tuna
leggyolk and Frost> Grape Juice/ Pilaf. The book is ~cup unsifted all-purpose flour Cocktail to desserts such available for $3 each
3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa as O~ang~ R.rusin Cake r r o m Go I tJ en We st
lA teaspoonbakingsoda and JO·Minute Cocoa • Publishers. 4113 N .
"'2 cupmilk Cake. The hard·bound Longview . Phoenix
. 1 egg white 336-page book includes 85014 . Include SO cents
Grease and nour small cupcake pans (see recipes built on basic r or p os tag e and
below) or use paper liners. Cream butter and ingredients. ' handling.
RICH, DELICIOUS,
MOUNTAIN GROWN
COFFEE
NOW .OPEN TO
SERVE -YOU
~ \) f ·:I
"'" , I "',~ / -· ~ ·~<.'t I ""''/) J\,, ' · . . I ). Ii :•1 ._ r•. /. · ....._: ,,,._.,,. 1~· . f . .. . ... . ' . ,,.
--' ,.. 1
f • \ ' • ':._ I ..-•
-r • \. ·. =· 1 1 t .-• \ \'. /. I, ~ • SE.-\FOOD :\l.\RKET
~. ~ 4 •...._ • • . • ~' I .......... • ·-1 ''-I I t I<.. ( I I\ ' ,/'I~~ , /.' ""'" ~"" ' .. . . "' r -· -"". Jr JI / ._ ~ \ :-1
,· HOl'SE SPECIALS SEAFOOD SPECIALS
Whole or Halt
Cook&! talllomla •599 Lobsters RI-ue lb. ii..
Sew England style
Clam ~howder
.\ fun11i h' '' 1lh un~ !\l'ufuo,1 m1•ul •1!!
<2 lb. limit per person)
Best buy ot the Seuon • Excellent to broil
*********** * Freezer Special •21s '* ....._ lce1andlc Cod ~· ....._ ~ Skinless boneless rq. l.~ ~
•********** WINE CELLAR SPECIALS
Ill fJI. ~
Fresh French Bread
l{uk1-<t null~ ftitm l'uti .. s1•rl1• lk• frann· 89.:.
IMPORTED
CHEESE SPF;Cf AL
loaf
•299 Imported Jarlsberi 11>. ~or"' 11~ .. , nntsl. excell•nl wlth seafood and \l1ne
Fetzer Chenln Blan~ •399 . Stoned Wheat Thins
Grett with chHSe.
Prtcee tood lhru next Wednetd&y 1 ff~ 9/J~ ff~~
I
n
If OM *died cblckea makH an eQjoyabl•
weekend dlnner, t•o b· chleltent auk• H 1 f eatlve. Jtlt especlally
n nlee for Easter. Invite
o tu~ to Join tht fimlly,
PoWder Idell a toucJI f1I
the exotic Orient. A
•m~ 11u• ta •~ed
Oft d\lliq roatt1D1 '°" • special lll!Uh1n1 tcM&ch.
I '> and keep the work •t a
\ minimum. I 1 Here's an eaay-to-put· \.! to1etber atufflns that
What rnak• Ulla rec·
lpe 10 simple ll th• use
of a pr.pared poultry
dreasin1 mix.
With all ot the labor
and eueaswork taken out
of drel$inl preparaUon,
today's cook has more
tlme to meet the I 1\ uses a perfect flavor
\) balance of ve1etablea.
apples and nuts. Curry I \T
, ,
I
Sweets withoui 8Dgar
The Euter Bunny and
Ill• basket of su1ary
aoodles ia just around
the corner, and tb is
too(h de<:ay.
Tilts mtah.9 the risk df
tooth decay is Increased "°' only by the su1ar in the sugar bowl but by
the sugars and syrups in
jams, jellies, candies,
cookles, soft drinks ,
cakes and pies as well
as sugars found in
breakfast cereals,
catsup, flavored milks,
and ice cream.
To help keep your
teeth cavity free this
Easter, here are sugar·
free treats.
CREAM\' EASTER
"EGGS"
6 ounces cream
cheese
8 packets sugar s ub-
stitute
1-i teaspoon grated
orange rind
•.; teaspoon grated
lemon rind
2 table s poon s
chopped walnuts
'h c up s hredded
coconut <unsweetened>
Wo rk cheese with
spoon until light and
fluffy. Thoroughly mix
in sugar substitute. grat-
ed rinds and walnuts.
Form into 12 egg-shaped
balls about 2 inches in
diam e t e r . Ro ll in
coconut. <To "dye"
Easter E11s, spend a
few minutes a couple of
days before, and rinse
coconut in food colorin1
of your favorite pastel
colors. Drain thorou1bJy
and set aside, un· covered, to dry.)
ITALIAN MACA&OONS
""2 pound almonds .
4 teaspoons su1ar
substitute
2 egg whites
'h teaspoon almond
extract
Blanch almonds and
place in warm oven 5
minutes to dry com-
pletely. Chop almonds
very fine, then crush un-
til reduced so a powder.
Add sugar s ubstitute
and mix well. Beat egg
whites until stiff but not
dry and fold into
almonds and sugar sub-
stitute. Add almond ex-
trac t and blend all
together gently but
thoroughly. Butter and
flour a baking sheet and
drop batter oo sheet by
teas poonful. Leave a
space of at least one
in c h between
macaroons, shaping
spoonsful of batter into
ovals. Sprinkle extreme·
ly lightly with additional
s ugar s ubstitute, let
stand 2 hours. Bake in a
375-degree oven for 5
minutes or untH dJicate-
ly brown in color.
Specializing In
FRESH PASTA
• Fettuccine • Ravioli
• Linguine • Lasagna
• Cannelloni • Sauces
• Antipasto Trays
Italian Delicatessen
Sandwiches • Catering • Deli
THE PASTA MACHINE
427 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Bea.ch
We've
Got
Playwear
You'll
Adore
like thla cl ... lc
494-3150
knit eport lttlrt
~llble In white.
royal. red. coral.
\#\~J9d•.
8'aa4-19.
Metchlng knit
lttofta In royal,
eotal and jade only, .,_. ... ,e.
cbaJhn1•• •f creatl••
cocWswy. Nowilidaya. , oae
can ~· vaJ11ty aAd
ver1atWt1 la •em11 b1
fXJertm.ftUnc with Mw
lattrpretaUona of old
elttald.
TyDleal of thne in·
no\'aUve new dJabes la
Oriental Apple Stuffln1,
w.hlcb would be u tood
ln turkey as lt la In
chicken.
OAIENTAL APft.E
STVFPING roa
CBIC&EN
1 packaae <2 &-ounce bags) cornbread 1t'1ffln1
3 apples. peeled,
cored and dJced
1 cup melted butter
or margarine
1 cup c hopped
celery
1 cup pibeapple
Juice
1 teas poon curry
Powder
~ cup chopped
..
0 w~r. c
r-------~--r-~~2;~~==~~~
QUALITY MEAT!
·~--....,
C.110 .. C.IJS ,,_, $111 ~ ... °" .. ._.
<·Ho n 1• <us .,,.
, ...... . ...
LOW PRICES! LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PROD UCE!
Boneless Tip Roast .:=. .• 121• ~Chiffon Napldns :It 75' • raytor Wine. c:: H• 1411 Cherry Tomatoes = -89'
London Broil Steak ':.::o • 11" SS Foil Wrap ~ t t. 4~ DIS Champagne : 3=.:1500 = Boneless Rump Roast.::. • '1" I'.-& Green Peas--2,:.99' 115$ Old Smuggler C' 1: ~"
Beef Cube Steak ""':..DMMI • 12° Sit·Multlmeat Bread~ ~79' · 11:$ Smirnoff Vodka ,:. 1: '911
Filet Mignon Steak~ .... '3" li$Green Giant .:..-'1: •1• s; J)tn ~ ~ i: '9"
Smoked Ham _ .. =:"' . 111' DS Del Mo.nte catsup :: •1• 1111tz 8ter 12E'2•
Cure 81 Ham ~ • •211 • Stuffing Mix .;.. ·~ 49' e: i! t.\J t' I 11)
Center Ham Slices~.::..·· 12" D$Cragf"l0n~Beveraoes=89* Style Hair si>ray \: 99'
Lamb Loin Chops ':=:' • 1341 D; Gold edal Flour 5:.99-st Ory tdea Roll On '&:~1''
Premium Gr0und Beefia'i° '.. 117' • Oc Spr~y 0C" 1: 49' .SiS Coppertone lotion = '1"
Celery Hearts . "::1='
Tropical MangOes
-49'
..._. 79'
Rid Radishes 2-49' r-r-. Avocados -35•
Vtta Pakt Orangie Juice -99•
Green Onions • 2-49'
CrlN Cualnbers ... 29• .c ·sv1 .141.•at1
ffllh&.MfyMu"1$-'6~ '3"
Premium franks ':" · i.: •1•• .• Whip Ing Cream~=: 59' Colotprlnt Fiim ,:::;. ~ '1~ 4,1nttt African Violets ... 1151
• Fresh Dover Sole Fiiiets • 1211 • Biscu s ..;,. 5t:. '1" Potarold SX10 ._.,. ,. '64& 1-fndt Tultps .,_ '3"
We~e Given LO~ PIUCEI ~ Mlw ~ .......
I
For Easter , or any
weekend dinner, fill a pair
of chickens wtth an in·
novative Oriental Apple
Stuffing. It's easy when
you begin with a packaged
corn bread stuffing mix.
.; Most '} ~ )
"Safeway Stores•
Are Open ,..r
Easter
Ap'ril 19th
:s-~~ $298
~12~·
~-~ $379 ~&1: .
f I
I
0
~000
EaSter o
11 Eaater •II rollln1 aw .. l ·-le•ID ••--MUI '7l~,.
on the White House lawn sauce pan offl' SO. heat "'•· 8'0all ~ into 11n 't ol\ your aoclaJ until partlallJ m•ll9d, the _.. .. u« floured
calendart.bi1seuon, it's Remove from beat; •lt:r, l·IDn la1.er:J pana,
likely another event is rapldly unUl entirely, alteraatla~~.c~lon to
scheduled -the all-melted. Add 1 ~ cupa Helt ~ Qlt!ltbrou1b
family dinner at your (about) ftued ~ bat.ten wffll •:au!& to \! house. toasted, ll delirid. marble. Bake dirett·
By all meana, follow mix well. S..read oo bet· 9d oa Pick .. •: . Jl'Ul
' throul}l with traditional lna sheet, aeparatln• and troat With wttJpped
meat and vegetable flakes ot coconut wltb a toppl.11. Make a border
favorites. f o r k . c b l l 1 u n t 11 around top edael of cake
Then, summon your chocolate la set. Store in with the tiate4 1reen
most creative efforts a tightly covered jar. ,coconut. Scatt'r jeUy
and bring a dessert that beans over coconut.
will charm the children EASTER SWIRL CAKE Store any left oyer cake
Swirla o/ chocolage·coatfd
/laked coconut garniah an
Easy Easttr Egg Cake to
celebrate the day. Cake
layers, trimmed to oval
1hape, are gently topped
and held together with
chocolate filling .· Frosting
is thawed /rozen whipped
topping.
as well as the "cllild" in l packaae (2-layer lo refriprator. ' every adult. ·~~:_:~__::__..:..__:_~~~~-=-~....:....::~~~~~~=-~~~~~-==:::::=:;::::::::::::=:::.::;::::::..:.::_~__,,~~-,-~~~~.;__~..;..:..~-;-~~~~~~~~~~:;-:-~
Easy Easter Egg
Gake will meet the oc-
casion , and you'll
wonder why you never
tbouabt of it. Conve-
nience is literally buHt
into this artistic treat.
"Frosting'' is thawed
frozen whipped topping,
and packaged cake atlx
r
can be used to produce
the two baked cake
layers you'll need.
> Both cake layers are
1 easy enough to trim to
form two ovals, one
slightly smaller than the
other. Once stacked, the
smaller cake layer on
top, they 're gently
: topped and held together f with a luxurious semi-
> sweet chocolate filling.
' Finally, the cake is
mounded and rounded
with thawed frozen f whipped topping to re-
t sem ble an egg. Swirls of J chocolate-coated flaked
coconut and jelly beans
add color and texture
contrast.
Easter Swirl Cake is
another artistic and de-
licious way to celebrate
the holiday mood Here again , convenience
comes into play with
packaged cake mix and
thawed frozen whipped
• topping. ~. The surprise inside
the cake layefs is a
yellow, pink and green
f
marbling. Gr een-tinted
flaked coconut grass
placed around the cake
edges is a nesting place
{ for jell y beans.
• EASY EA.STER I EGG CAKE
4 squares semi-
sweet chocOJate
l cup unsifted COil ·
l fectioners sugar
l egg . slightly l beaten ,
1
l tablespoon hot
water
2 tablespoons butter
or margarine, softened t '2 teaspoon vanilla
5 2 baked 9-lnch cake
layers, cooled i 1 container (8 ~ ounces> frozen whipped
\ topping, thawed ~ Chocolate · coated
·• coconut
• Me ll chocol ale in
I. saucepan over low heat.
Remove from heat. Add
I sugar, egg and hot
w ate r : be at unti l
smooth. Add butter, 1
tablespoon at a time.
I beating thoroughly after
each. Stir in vanilla.
Trim cake layers to
• form two ovals. one i about 6 inches wide and
i the other about 7 inches
wide. Spread chocolate
filllng over tops of both i layers and stack, plac·
I' ing smaller oval on top.
1 Frost entire cake with
t whipped topping , ! mounding on top and
I
; rounding sides to resem-
ble an egg. Decorate
with Chocolale·COfled
&.. coconut and jelly beans,
-if desired. Store any
1. ieftbve r ca~in 1 · refrigerator.
'
.
l .'
; ~
I I ' I
C H O'C 0 L A T E -
COATED COCONUT.
Heat 2 squares semi·
...
•. , ....
DPlll
1a1na1u11DAY
Pleose check your
Loco\ Store for Hours
El Roncho w,lt1b C09e & Goblett
TURKEY BREAST . ... . . LI. 2. 19
from lowo Avj_. Wgl. J0.4().lbt.
SUCKLING PIGS . . .... la. I • 98
FRESH TURKEYS
El RANCHO GRADE 'A' HENS
•~~H~'=~ 99c
, WOltTH 50' &a.
0
Sol\ Ferf\01\do ~ium-6-0Z
PITTED RIPE OLIVES . ........... • 79
PEPPIRIDGE FARM
... STUFFING MIX
~{j SMALL 6 9~ [.~ 8AGS " ....
,Oregon 3 .fllt
ANJOU PEARS ........................ La. 7 °
•un " .......
l 8 .79 L•.
UMll '
El Roncl>o·l.eo11 Oo.t Mot bcHd 22% fol ·
GROUND BEEF ... . . . . . ... la. 2. 19 C & 0 8ro..d AV9 Wgl. 4-5 lb.
FRESH DUCKS . . . ........... l l 1.29
ClEAlt SPRINGS
F811HIDAHO
RAINBOW TROUT
.....
.".'. .12 ~-OZ "· I • 5 9
Aloslton froie11 Oefro•f9d
K81G CllU UGI ............... la. 3.89 HOJ, Oefrotled C.nter Cut
IW ........ lftAKS ........ lt. •.ff
freth 8-01. Jot Eotletn ... 2.49
-.111111 OYllllll ..... 8-0Z . .I .69
f~Fillett ••ClflC--...-..... ll. 1.59
r
Unde .. ,,., 6-o&. lof\9 Groin·f.otl Cooltin9 Crown »Counl, 3·1'1)' •
WILD RICE ....... :.......... . ......... I .19 LINEN SOFT NAPKINS ............. I .09
Hormel Cure 11 ~le or Holl
BONELESS HAM . _
Armo11r't Veribe\I Boneleu Rolled
PORK LEGS .
l8 2 .89
l8. 1.89
SLICED BACON
El RANCHO THICK
La •• 99
Kr off Minioture· IQ 'l'I ·Ot. Stondord foil 12'' • 2 ~· I(' '9' t 1 lb loot
MARSHMALLOWS "II REYNOLDS WRAP....... .. ..........• 13 H'"AWAilAN SWEET BREAD . . 1.29
S la W REG. COLOMBIAN OCEAN SNAY NABISCO
CO.FFIE .
• H I. 2 19 CRANBERRY SNACK CRACKERS
m Gl~~os • !
II ~: 45c ~ .~~·89C
~1···--------------.;.._----'
HAWAIIAN
Pl Ill APPLE
RID
YAMS
•o •• 1o. H-;oocs r,r Ttft ''fil£rtr
GENMAICHA TEA .......... l.•S '"o•itMlMl'tOllUCIOlfl
.,, 01 P\o JK,...._Non
SEAWEED ................... ~· ~5"ACl!.15'A 2Ac
6\, OL"e DJ-ly~ • ,p ••• lt ,,
BEAN TH Rf.ADS ................. 61
COLOR Atti..ti-o4~119
plus normol de~
chorge. Mo foreiQn film.
NAYIL
OR ANGii
1001 .......... ~-
AJI MIRIN ................. 1.59
2 211> "•·" .......... """'Mlto ' SOY SEAN PASTE ........ 2.39
,._, "•·K.9--
SOY IEAM$ ................... 61 CorOH't 29 CARROT CHIPS ........... 5.5 Ol. Pltg.I •
PRINTS Off•r valid April 16 tllni April 22, 1981 01 :-pl~
«odol I to-t•· ,,.., 12 ......... -.. an•• • •110C•S ......... : ............. I .ea COL .. •lllNT ............................... 2.19 , .......... ~ 2 ·29 !J~ A• ;sS MM.................................... •
'ii1AG1Cm1 .............................................. 1. 7 9
·-,,..,...o..-,.. _.Alll'Y -.S ...... _ ....................................... 49
.... """ & °""' t!!'.:-. 19 -Avoca .. -.1 ......... -...................... : .• 12••·-~ 69(!. ............ AllY .................... I.
Tulips. daffo,dt11, Bake la o•• at l50 lbarpe~1Marcbwe
UUea. The frelb facet of de1re• for l bour •5 l CID (12 ouee)
Easter flowers are a mlnutesto2bounoran· wboJt kernel corn,
1urt alp •Prine ls here. tll done. JI neeeuary, dralaed
Wby not celebrate 'over cover with foll d\lria1 · 1 packaae (10 Remov• from a meal "buddinc" with last part ol baklnl to ounce1> frolen broccoli beat. Stir In corn. lood Oavon? prevent overbrowhlnc. 1pean, coolUcl aod Cut brotcoU '!an la· When the croup 11 Yield: 4 Ml'Vi.Qll. · · drained. to 2 or S plecea. lact ln
11naU, beat the leftoven CBEDDA•~UOCCOLI· Melt 1 tableapoon ol 1-quart cuaerol . Pour
by maklnc C,bicken with COaN BAKE Ml• martarlne. ~ wlth corn mixture ov~r broc-
l
I"
Ltmon-Hon~y Stuffln1. S tablespoons crumba. Set aside for coll. Sprinkle ••th top-
The btnl ia lemony on margarine toppiq. ping. 1
the ootllde u well aa ~ cup corn flake II e 1 t rem al n l n I Bake ln oven 1 at 350
the inside . Herb· crumbs mar1arlne in small de1rees approximately seasoned croutons 2tablespoona0our aaucepan·over low beat. so minutes or until
When the group is small,
beat the leftover1 by maJv
1ng Chicken with Lemon
Honey Stuffing. The bird
is lemony on the outside j
as weU as the in•ide . I .
flavored with a squeeae ~cup milk Stir ln flour. Add mllk tborouabJy heated and
of lemoa and a touch of ·1 pack ,age ( 4 1radually, atlnina unUl bubbly.
honey makes the stuf· ounce, 1 cup) shredded smooth. lncreue beat to Yield: 4 servln11. flna.Betoreroastln1.do ,.........~...._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....,,-~~~~-'"---'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--a final brush-up with
lemon Julee and melted
mar1arine.
For an accompanl·
ment to cook in the
same oven, there's
Cheddar Broccoli-Coro
Bake. The ve1etable duo
in this casserole ia made golden with cheese and
a topping of com flake
crumba.
CHICKEN WITH
LEMON·HONEY STUF·
FING
2 tablespoons
margarine or butter,
melted
1 tablespoon
lemon juice
. 2 lablespoons fine-
ly chopped onion v. cup margarine
or butter
~cup water
2 tablespoons
honey
2 tablespoons
grated lemon peel ~ablespoons fine-
ly snipped fresh parsley
3'h cups croutons 1 (3 pounds) whole
fryer chicken, washed
and patted dry.
For glaze , stir
together the 2 tables-
poons margarine and
the lemon juice. Set
aside.
In large s aucepan,
cook onion in the v. cup
margarine until tender.
Stir in water, honey,
lemon peel and parsley.
Add croutons, tossing
lightly. Spoon into neck
and body cavities of
chicken. Fasten cavities
by securing skin with
s kewers . Tie legs
together with string.
Place breast side up on
,,rack in roasting pan.
· Jrush with glaze.
" Peachy
ideas
Canned cling peach
slices packed ir. light
syrup (s ome times ~ called econvmy pack)
a re a dieter's best
friend ! Drizzle the
drained peach slices
with low-calorie bottled dressing and serve with
cottage cheese. . .. .
Here's a delicious salad or accompaniment
which can be prepared
anytime you have • free
moment. Drain a can of
c ling peach slices
packed in light syrup
<economy pack ).
Marinate the slices in oil
and vinegar with red
onion rings and a bay
le,af. Great with ham-
burgen, casseroles or
any leftovers! ••• If you think family
desserts aren't in your
food budget, try canned
clio1 peach slices
packed Jn li1ht syrup
(economy pack>. Serve
them right from the can,
or fold them into a
packafed pudding milt. Your anilly will be all
smiles. ••• For ao easy and
economical peach cob-
b ler, top clJng peach
slices in a baking dl'h
with a mixture of rolled.
oats, margarine, brown
sugar and clnn'Amon.
Bake at 350 deereee uq·
UJ bot and bubbly. Make
aure to use canned 'cllnl
peaches packed in Upt
syrup for e~ti'a
economy.
,.
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11EAE
ARE
a Rt.•ad «tll tc•da~·'s
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Local, county, state, national and
international events c ome to ~our
doorst ep in the bJ;ight,
light a nd lively Daily
Pilot.
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No other newspape r brings you
more new s of your city counc il ,
planning commission,
school and c ollege
di stricts and county
government.
Orange Coaat fAILY PtLOT/Wednelday,'AprH 16, 1981
YIR 11•1111 llllY PUB
To keep up with ·
all that's happ~ning
in your community
you need the
· DBiIY Pilot
· ••• every day
REASONS 'Yl1Y. • • "
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'-17/ The sports action at 15
Orange Coast high schools, three
community colleges, UC Irvine
. and Cal State campuses i s
r egularly reported by the
Da i ly Pi lot sports staff.
K eep up with nation-
a lly ranked college
and pro t eams, too!
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B Save money and dJ shopping time
~En.joy yc,11r S1111d;1y
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TV Week, the latest ne w s and
features about your community,
your money and you high I ight
the interesting reading ~
packaged in your ~
Sunday Daily Pilot. _..,.
Enough to r e ad FAMILY , ' UJEEKLY'.
and enjoy.
GU Tune 'in to tht.•
{/ latest TV lo~s
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lox 1560
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OrlngeCoMt DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, Aprll 15, 1981
'
That's exaCtly what
Crown Hardware is doing.
Being able lo supply you with
exceptional merchandise and service
has always been our · aim.
Whether ii' s home appliances,
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quality products, with l~e ·aid of ouri helpful and
knowledgeabl-staff •.
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OPEii . 7 1iAYS . '
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\
. . . • ·t
liff Plaza. · Coron~ del· Mar ·Harbor VieW Ceoter ·
. (formerty Rion) ·
I ~ . 3107 .E; Coast Hwy. (formerly Imperial) .
" .
'
Angry Anteaters
CLASSIFIED .. · topped by Titans .-. . D2 . .
I
ROGER CARLSON
\
A golde~. m~ment to be reinemhered • • •
• I ~ ,., • ' o..1i',...t.._ ....
! In the near future there iJ 101n• to be a lot on lneton Beach, will treasure for yean -atthou1b
the s.a.tbJect of water polo, but on thla occasion I'd be has no gold to prove it.
. like to take you back to sometl\lng -an event only . "When the boycott was formally announced by
a handful of athletes are aware of -aomethln1 the U.S. Olympic Committee," recalls the 51-year-
tbat everyone should know about. old NitzkOWlki, "we were in Ottawa, training
I It is a tale of a band of unwan~ wa~r polo acainst the Canadians and we had prior commit·
playt!rs, whose years of tralnln& and sacrifice ments to compete ln Belgrade and Budapest.
went down the drain when the Russians crossed "We had a 2~·hour meeting in Ottawa and it
the borders of Afghanistan a yellJ' ago. ' was the toughest 2~ hours I've had as a coach.
For days the handwriting was on the wall, tbe "Grown men were shattered ... seven years
decision to boycott the M06cow Olympics bad been of work . . . the chance for the gold medal . . .
made public, ,confirmed and re-confinned by the and each man's love for bis sport ...
ovemment. "It was truly a dramatic thing. We felt like an
Llke someone with terminal cancer, the army unit in no man's land and all of a sudden it's
merican water polo team held out hope a1ainat over. Do we remain operational? There was
he odds, prayer s which went unanswered. almost no seue in continuing, except lo( our
l A.lthough it was business as usual in most arenas, original commitment. , : ,., · ~amateur athletes were obliged to quit. "It was finally decided to punµe il. b\rt ••
'· What developed were moments U.S, water of us needed it. What was reaJize4 was ou'r flnett
polo coach Monte Nitzkowski, a resident of Hunt· hour ever and something that sbowtd btfyond a 1~------------------------------------------------------~----~ ......... ----~--~
I
.,
,.,...,........
IN ,HOT PURSUIT--5eatUe Mariner's Jim Anderson, right, is run down by Minnesota's Rob
Wilfong, between second and rust bue Tuesday night in third inning action at Seattle. An·
derson was tagged out. Minnesota nipped the Mariners, 5-4.
doubt what we could have been in Mosco .
·'Twelve kids new into Belgrade and you have
to realize, in Yugoslavia, there were millions
watching on national television, people who really
revolve around water polo. Tbe refs were Yugosla-
vians, too.
"Well, we were up 6-2 at halftime and hung on
to win, 8·7."
Playing in Yugoslavia with their refs Is like
trying to win a diving competition in East
Germany. And Yugoslavian water polo Is just
about the class of the Wbcld, with the exception of
the Russians, who be•t O\lt Yugoslavia by one
point to tarn the 1980 Olympic gold medal. But
Yugos~pa, a world power, was beaten in its own W.-~·team beaded nowhere. i~tt W85 our final curtain," recalls Nitzkowski.
"And ,u it turned out, it made the whole thing
even more depressing, because we knew what we
were capable of."
••
Those deeds went unnoticed by the American
pr public. Water polo remains a sport
wi ecognition -until it does somethln1 that
otb grab a piece or the glory -such as
America-. hockey team.
"Cute• sportswriters sometimes liken water
polo to a fish report or badminton. If only they
could make such comparisons within arm's length
of an Eric Llndroth or Jack Dickmann. If they did
they'd be well advised to know how to swim.
While America ns were celebrating what
Nitzkowski considers their ftnest hour in water
polo in communist territory, others were lying ,
dead in the Iranian desert, victims of a rescue ,.
mission which failed to free political hostages -a
para doxical situation which s till bothers
Nitzkowski.
That this information about the water polo :
team's monumental SUC('Ps.c; ePt.R more than a •
<See CARLSON, Page D2>
It's no time to panic t
I So says Fregosi as Angel bats stay quiet
By EDZINTEL
C)(\ll<t 0...-, Hie Slaff
"Don't be silly," Angels
Manager Jim Fregosi said
straight·faced as he turned
away from a group of reporters
following Tuesday nig~ 'f. a:ame
at ~nahtfiP.1Stadium.1'5'pts"/'O .. tim61fe panic. It's a long seasPtt,, .
my frtenda."
So it is, but for how much
longer can the supposed lethal '• An~el bats take a siesta? · '
' I ., ~l
IN t'WO GAMES hdw agaln"'sf
Oakland, the Angels have col·
lected a total of nine hits, includ·
ing just four Tuesday against
right-bander Mike Norris as the
A's remained-undefeated ln 1981
with' a S-2 win before 26,483.
The realization hit hard with
every one of the 26,483 that th.is
is the same Angels lineup,
basicaJly, that Fregosi satd
would del.initely challenge the
club record for runs scored (866
in 1979).
It began to hit bard with some
or the Angel players Tuesday
night as well as demonitrated
by the somber lockerroom
scene. The evidence was clear
on the faces of those from whom
all the ftrt:works are expected:
Don Baylor (O-for-4), Fred Lynn
(0-for-4), Rod Carew (O·fot-3),
Bobby Grich (0.for-3) and Butch
Hobson (O-for-3>.
SOME OF THE r eporters
tried to corner Baylor for a rew
words but the big designated bit·
ter wasn't much up lo the oc·
casion, telling all of them in so
many words to go jump in the
lake.
That wasn't surprising, com-
ing froO'l the former American
League Most Valuable Player
who oq]y two years ago led the
majors in RBI with 139 but so far
has·collected two base hits and no
RBI iosixgames.
What wa~ s urprising, no
downright amazing. was Norris' ' .
JimFrego1i
r e a ct ion t o hi s ow n
performance.
"I 'm not ecstatic about
tonight. ha ppy, ~es but not
ec~tatic,'' Norris, a 26·year·old
right-hander who won 22 games
and o,yas runner-up to Steve
Stone for the Cy Young award in
1980. "I don't .ever see myself
walking eight batters like that
again."
Johrrson and Tony Armas. I .
Ar mas. who beat the Angels
with a two-run home run in the '
home opener Monday and was S
named the league's Player of 1
the Week for the period ending
Sunday, scored the final run
when he scored o n Shooty
Ba bill's infield g rounder with ,
the bases loaded in the eighth.
THE A'S got their final two c
runs in the ninth. Singles by '
Dave McKay and Rickey Hen-
derson and a walk to Murphy
loaded the bases and Johnson \
delivered a two· run single.
Norris, who uses every bit of
his 6·2 frame to power an ex-~
plosive delivery, had a two-hit
shutout going until the eighth.
From the fourth to ninth inning,
he did not allow a hit.
The Angels scored two runs in
the fin al inning on sacrifice flies:
by Bobby Grich and Carew.
··My curveball 1s starting to
come around a nd my screwbaJI •
seerrtl> to be there," Norris said. 1
·'This ls turning out to be a fun l
season. Tomorrow ni ght we (
have Rick (Langford ~ who I
think is a better thrower than I C
am. I'm looking forward to 7-0
<See ANG ELS, Page D4)
Hanis 'file
r
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L • • • t ' > ( • 1 '
, .
'FUii contact' fight
ends in J:>oy' s death
From AP cllapatclle•
TIJUANA -A 15-year-old boy died. Citbting •.
another teen-ager in a combination box.int-martial
arts match at Municipal Auditorium. Aller he col· lapsed in the ring, fans in the arena clamored for
more.
Alfredo Castro Herrera collapsed Saturday niebt after
starting the second of three scheduled rounds or boxing
mixed with karate and judo.
In the opening round, only light blows were reported
~truck. The other fighter, a 16-year-old and the promoter
were questioned and released.
"The death failed to calm the audience down," said Raul
Topete, editor of ~TA, an independent daily newspaper.
They were jumping from their seats yelling for the match to
continue."
The sport called •·full contact" has become popular with
Mexican teen-agers in recent years but has no regulations.
Participants wear cushioned shoes and can use any part of
their body on their opponent.
In the United States. the California Athletic Commission
has taken steps recently to rt!gulate the sport.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"It's challenging and scary as bell. It's an actor's
dream." Character actor Paul Dooley talking about
his portrayal of Casey Stengel at New York·s American
Palace Theater.
FL YEAS, BLUES ADVANCE IN PLAYOFFS
Mike Crombeen flipped Mike Zuke's center-~
ing pass past Greg Millen at 5: 16 of the second '
overtime period. giving the St. Louis Blues a 4·3
triumph Tuesday night over the Pittsburgh
Penguins in the decisive game of their National Hockey
League playoff series. The victory advanced St. Louis to a
Stanley Cup quarterfinal playoff series with tbe New York Rangers who surprised the Los Angeles Kings in four games
. At Philadelphia. Al Hlll's second-period goal snapped
a tie and the Flyers went on to a 5·2 victory over Quebec and
into the quarterfinal round of the playoffs. The Flyers had
won the first two games of their series. but the upderdog
Nordiques battled back to even the series with victories at
home. The Flyers outshot the Nordiques. 37·18 to give goalie
Pete Peeters hi s second victory of the series.
ROCKETS LEAD SERIES, 3-2, AFTER WIN
SAN ANTONIO Moses Malone and m Calvin Murphy, Hous ton 's inside and outside
thre ats, teamed up for 70 points Tuesday night to
power the Rockets past San Antonio 123-117 for a
3·2 edge an their National Basketball Association Western
Conference semifinals
Malone scored 10 of Houston·s last 15 points to stave off a
furious San Antonio rally that cul the Rockets' 14-point
fourth·quarter lead to one point twice in the last four
minutes. the last time al U0-109 with 1 :57 to play.
Houston won its second game in HemisFair Arena and
can put the series away tonight in Game 6 al the Houston
Summit
FlSK'S GRAND S SPARKS WHITE SOX
Carll•• 'l•k'• arand-alam Jlomt run Ill blg~ted a •li·n&D fourth in.n1nJ Tburtday and
pow.,_ the Chlcs10 ~hlte Soll to a N vtctoo
over tlait Milwaukee Br wers belon a monS home
openina-4'>' crowd of $1,Sel> In Comlatey Park. The alam
came Off Pete Vatb'fl II who wu makln.a bl• debut with the
Brewers . . . Jn oCber American Lea1ue action, &oa
Jackl09 homered twic• and lloy 8aa11ey bit another u Mln·
nesota broke a strine ot 2e scoreless tnnlne and defeated Se1t-
tle, 5-4 . . . Rick Pe~rs singled home LM W~er ln the
ninth inning to give Detroit a 6-5 victory over K1nsaa City In
damp, chilly weather tbat spoiled the home opener for the de·
fendlna American Le•gue champs . . . Tob1 Barralt'•
wlnd·blown pop rly triple keyed a firsl·lnn1n1, four-run rally
that propelled Cleveland to a 7·1 win over Texas ... RaJn
postponed the Boston-tltimore came ... In the National
Leaeue, Houston's Joe lekro scattered seven blla and drove
ln two n111S with a sins as the Asttw downed Atlanta, 9-2 for
thi)r fint victory ... I Pitcher 8nt, 8efft)'I \OSled a tWO-
h\tter at San Diego to lead Cincinnati to a 4..0 victory . . .
Rain and bad weather postponed the New York Mets' home
opener with St. Louis and Montreal's home opener wllh the
Chicago Cubs . . . Former Angel Fruk THua, now with
Boston, sustained a c~t on the chin ill a two-ear accident
Tuesday at a rain-slicked traffic circle ill Cambridge, Mus.
BASEBALL TODAY
On this date in 1947:
Jackie Robinson became the first black to play in a
modern major leag\le game as bis Brooklyn Dodger
teammates defeated the Boston Braves 5-3.
On this date in b•seball in 1968:
Al Weis' error Jlllowed Norm Miller to score the
game's only run as the Houston Astros defeated the New
York Mets, 1-0, in ,24 innings at the Astrodome; the
longest l ·O game in major league history.
SANTA ANITA SHUTOOWN STILL POSSIBLE
The question of wliether or not there will be •
thoroughbred racing at Santa Anita Thursday
s hould be answered by today. Racing may abut
down at the track because of a boycott of
horse owners and trainers ... Bjom Bor,, 5-tlme Wimbledon
champ, suffered a humiliating first-round defeat Tuesday in
the Monte Carlo Open to Victor Pecci . . . Former mid·
dleweight champion Carlos Moo.ion was released from prison
in Argentina after serving one month on charges of
possession of an illegal gun ... Calgary, Alberta has taken a
big lead in the propaganda stakes for the 1988 Winter Olym·
pies . .Sugar Bowl officials are expected to announce within
30 days that the annual football classic will move to New
Year's night and be televised by ABC·TV ... Geor'e
Thompson. a scout for the Oakland A·~. was killed in a hit·
and.run accident in Sacramento ... The Swedish national
hockey team. quicker than expected, defeated the United
States. 4·2 in a rough hockey match and reached the finals of
the .. A .. pool competition in the World Championships ... The
Tampa Bay Buccanneers signed Dallas Cowboys place
kicker John Reveto as a free agent.
TELEVISION, RADIO
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings
~re: " • ''excellent; '" .r worth watching;././ fair;' forget
It. n 7:30 p.m., Channel 11 ./ ./ ./ ./
DODGE A BASE BALL: Dodgers at San Francisco.
Announcers: Vin Scully, Ross Porter and Jerry Doggett.
The Dodgers, off to a perfect S-0 start, are enjoying their
stay in San Francisco. Tonight, Burt Hooton CJets the starting assignment, and he'll have a tough time trying to impro...e on
the performance of his teammate Fernando Valenzuela who
gave up just one run Tuesday night. Ed Whitson (~) gets the
start for ttle Giants.
Murphy came off the bench to bomb the Spurs for 36 OTHER TELEVISION
points.while Malone scored34.mostofthemonpowermoves ll :30 p.m . (2) _NBA PLAYOFFS _ Milwaukee at
• beneath the basket. Philadelphia (delayed).
; Rookie Reggie J ohnson led San Antonio with 25 points, RADIO
~ ~ George Gervin would up with 23 after scoring only one basket Baseball -Oakland at Angels, 7:30 p.m .• KMPC (710);
(i in the first half and Mark Olberding contributed 21. Dodgers at San Francisco, 7 :30 p.m .• KABC (790).
i ~......_ ________________________________________________________ ___.
.. ~ .......
IT'S MINE-Mike Dunleavy of the Houston Rockets reacts as
be battles for a loose ball with San Antonio's Paul Silas
Tuesday night in NBA playoff action. The Rockets won.
123-117, to take a 3-2 lead in their Western Conference
semifinal series.
Anteaters angry
Titans win dispute-filled game, 14-3
Four Cal State Fullerton
hitter s belte d ho m e ru ns
Tues day· as the Titans destroyed
U C Irvine , 14 -3 . in a
di s pute-filled South e rn
California Baseball Association
contest at Fullerton .
The Titans· Mark Pirrucello,
Mike Rubel. Bill Moore and
Jerald Traylor all clouted home
runs as Cal State Fullerton
improved its SCBA record to
11 ·2 , 27· ll overall.
Cal State Fullerton broke open
a 6·2 ball game with four-run
seventh and eighth innings
Traylor, who had already a
singled in one run in the third
and doubled home another in the
fifth. rip:>e<f a two-run homer in
the eighth to put the game out of
reach
Earlier, Tray lor was the
center of a controversy when a
pitch by UCl's Larry Hicks ap·
parenlly struck him on the foot
and went lo the backstop.
But the home plate umpire
merely called it a ball. bringin~
Titan Coach Augie Garrido out
of the dugout Garrido convinced
the umpire to examine Traylor's
bare foot which showed a red
mark The umpire then awarded
first base to Traylor.
. ~.
·Monarchs sharp; Gauchos' Stuetz to step down
That brought UC I Coach Mike
Gerakos out of his dugout.
Gerakos was steaming from an
incident one inning earlier when
a bas e hit by Mike Nagle was
ruled an out when Garrido point·
ed out that Nagle's bat had too
much pine tar on it.
While Gerakos blew off steam,
UCI first baseman Dave Glick
came in to hold his coach back
and serve as a peace maker. But
as he was going back to his
position. Gli<'k apparently said
something to somebody and was
kicked out of the game.
t Seahawks breeze
Mater Del High's Steve Men· while Bishop Montgomlry fell to
doza tossed a three-hitter to 1·6.
spark the Monarchs to a key 2·0
• extra·inning victory over host
Bishop Montgomery to highlight
, prep baseball action Tuesday. t In other games, Estancia cap· t lured fifth place in the Bolsa
( ~ Grande Easter Tournament with i a win over Artesia, Ocean View l continued its winning ways with
l an easy verdict over Arroyo
Grande in the Santa Maria ! tourney, and Huntington Beach i dropped its Anaheim Tourna· i ment game to Troy. "'
t AT BISHOP Montgomery,
Mendou1 was in total command
-while he patiently waited for bis
teammatE:s to get some runs.
I The Monarchs finally obliged
but they had to scratch to bring
· two across.
l Mike Linsten open ed the
· eighth with bis third hil or the
game. The Monarchs tried to
l• bunt him to second, but the
throw thel'e was too late. A wild
pitch moved tbe runners to i second and tbird, and Amin i· David followed with a sacrific'
t fly ror one run. t~ Bishop Montgomery then
l walked the next two batters,
and the Monarchs prQ!WltJ.Y t broueht home another run on
t Rick Moore's !tqueeze bunt.
The victory upped Mater Del's
An•eh..11 Leaaue record to S-4.
ESTANCIA DOWNED
Artesia. 4·1 to take fifth place in
the Bolsa Grande tourney. The
Eagles got a solid pitching
performance from Jim McCahill
who s cattered five hits and
walked no·one while striking out
two.
McCahlU helped his own cause
with a 2·fOr ·3 performance at the
plate including a run-scoring
double.
Tony Ablett's triple brought
the Eagles· first run home, and
back ·to·back dollbles by
M cCahill and Mike Deutsch ac-
counted for another in the sixth
inning.
The victoty boosted t he Eagles
overall record to 11-5.
OCEAN VIEW ripped Arroyo
Grande, 12-1, in the Santa Maria
tourney as Bill Small went the dis·
lance, striking out nine in the pro-
cess.
The Seahawks erupted for two
runs in both the first and second
innings and then put the game
away with a seven-run outbunt
in the third.
Doug Irvine was 2·for·2 at the
plate including three RBI, while
teammate Kevin Stanley
knock.ea home rour runs Wltb a
double and a single.
The victory gives the
Seahawks a. 2·0 record In ~e
tourney, 12-6ioverall. They'll play
tor the' cf)ami>ionsbip tonight at 7
lo Santa Marla.
At the A.na.heim tourney, Troy,
down, •-2 alter six innlnss, ex-
ploded for atven runs lo the U>p
of the sixth on seven hi\.I, lnchad-
ing a two-r\in homer by David
Cochran.
Huntington Beach b~ aCQftd
three times in the thlrC;t on the
1tren1th of sln11•1 by SttH
Pbllllps Utd Rieff Carillo, • dou·
ble by John Oontal\'es and Brian
Patrick'• sacrWce fly. Tont
Phllllpe kn9tkfd in tbt tbll'd nm
10! the innlnt wttb • doublt.
The Jou drOpped the OUtn'
overall~ to 5-n . Thi1•ft M
off untll d~ Wednetday WtlB U..)' face Fountain Valle1 la
lmaMtl.Aape~OD
Dick Stuetz will step down as
head coach of Saddleback
College's baseball team at the
end of the season, and long-Ume
assistant Jim Brideweser will
replace him, the college has an·
nounced.
Stuetz became the Gauchos'
bead coach in 19'15, taking over a
program which hadn't produced
more than 11 wins in any one
season.,He has improved on tbat
figure each year and holds a
career record of 95-108.
Stuetz will remain in the
school's physica~ education de·
partment and continue his duties
as the Gauchos' defensive line
coach in football.
"I 'm going to miss the game a
lot. But the program is in most
cap able bands," Stuetz said .
"I'm glad Jim wanted to take
over. The kids are going to
benefit because there's going to
be some continuity.··
Brideweser, a 12-year veteran
of professional baseball. has been
Stuetz's assistant for the past
seven years.
Baseb·all standings
Monte Nitzkowski
From Page 01
CARLSON •••
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Dlvblo•
W L Pd. GB
Oakland &. 0 1.000 -
Chicago i l .667 2th
Aa1ela 3 3 .soo 3
Kansas City 1 . 2 .333 3lh
Texas 1 3 .250 4
Minnesota 1 4 .200 4th
Seattle 1 4 .200 4th
token reference a year later, East Division
Nitikowskl takes little offense. Detroit 3 1 .750 -
"We'd Uke to be apprecia~ Baltimore 2 1 .667 Mi
and it does hurt Clack of it), but Milwaukee 2 1 .667 th
I'm a realist. It doesn't cha.nee New York 2 2 .500 1
anything or . make it any less Toronto 2 2 .500 1
t han what it was.'' Boston · 1 2 .333 1th
Nitzkowksl's Olympic water Cleveland 1 2 .333 l~
polo team will be in action at Cal T_..,. • .__
State Long Beach from April OHIMds.,,.....2.
2S·May 2 against the world's ~::;r:.:1:.-r .. ·~"'
best -'Russia, Yugoslavia, ci.wi.w1, -r-1
Hungary, Italy, Spain, Cuba, :'.:=:..~~!1
etc. • 0111r..,,.... K--.d
And althoueb five 9f those o.t.i..-1~':~f:"MeHa ,...,..._
standouts won't be witbl tbe cur· •o rent team that shared in the ••Ill,_. to. Mer11111t• HI « • ..._ tT_.i
elory ol Bel1rade (Lindroth, ~,, .. ...-,.._ Ml et Clllc ... ,,.,. •
Gary Flrueroa, Peter Scbn~. ·~: .. O:. ,..,.., w1 •t T•JtM CIMOIO\MI
Chris Dorst and Jobn Siman), New v .. CM9Y 1•1 •• T-'9 cT.-... •
othera1 such as Newport Harbor· '':~~ CP'WYM>" K-•ci1., 10.., •• ,,
Hltb prvduct Kevfh Roberuoa, M~ Clr'k~ •o •• 1eet11e c~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Divlalon
W L Pct. GB
Dod,ers 5 O 1.000 -
Cincinnati ~ 2
2
.667 l th
Atlanta ~ .600 2 . ,
San Diego 2 4 .333 3th
San Francisco ~ 4 .333 3lh
Houston ~ 4 .200 4
. Eut Division
New York 2' 1. .667
Philadelphia i 2 . 500 l1'J
Mcntreal 1: 1 .500 ~
St. Louis. 1, 1 .500 "°'
Pittsburgh l 2 .333 1
Chicago 1 2 .333 1
T_..f'ak-
~ 1. Sen FreMlace.1
Cllkeeit•I ....._ .. ,, peMI!, rein
St. I.._. et Mew York. ptld., rel"
Hovs-.t,AU.Ut
Cln<lnMU 4, Sen 0 .... 0 J' ()ftly....-~ .... T..,,-,._
O••t•n lMooton l·OI et San l'r•11<luo
CWllltMft M)
Cllk"9 l,__..1) atMelltrMI Clll...-.M)
SI. UUll l~IMI Ml et M ... Yeril C~ , .. I
PllUburoll lllblllY 0·01 •• Pllll•ffl,111•
Clllutllwen141
Al.lent. c-...0-01 .. H-(lllYM M>
Clfl<lnnetl CSolio 0.11 •I SH D .... CMure Ml
The Titans went on to score
four runs in the s eventh
including three on Rubel's
homer
UCI starter Cas Soma <3-3)
absorbed the loss. while Titan
stagter Jim Sutton went t>.,,._,
innings to pick up his fourth
victory against one defeat.
Terry Schroeder, Jbn Svendub , .. ,.
.)oe V•r•u, St.eve Hamann Qi -----::;:;::;;:;:~~---==:'.:::;:;:t:~~:::::::::::t:=zt:::::::t=
Drew McDonald will t>e thert.
So will Unlvenlty Hl•b product
Peter Campwll and Jaml•
Beraeson. another former ate
from Newport Harbor.
Ju1t oace It would be idee to
see the American~I»~ adopt Ill beroel BSFOR~ ~ faet, ln·
1tead ol Jum.plD1 on MDII
.. ••• btAtr .. the ....... bont·
nanaw. H•,_ODUle~ aha•, untn0wn1 tlat.. dolil'I
from tWr r-.id1nc•, 11111 ta llile 1t. .... ,,,.. ........ .
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RAHCBO 1'A COSTA (AP> -
Tom Watlan la •WI ridla1 • hqb
from bit Maten triumph u be
com11 in to defend hU tiU• in
what many players eonalder
1011•1 "Flltb Major,·· tbe
MONY -Tournanieat of Challlpiom.
"Tbe l'*'°wn ha1n1t set in,"
Watson •a.id before a practice
round over the 1,0IO·yard, par T2 .
La COila Country Club course,
alte or the unique event that
Mflns Thursday.
"It wu important to me to
wJn Ule Mllat ni," he saJd, "but that's tllatory. Now l'm looking
altead to the Tournament of
Champions.
"Obvt.oualy, l'm playing better
than 1 was, at the first of the
year. And when you've got it
1olng, you want to keep it goina.
ride that horse as far as he'll
take you."
Watson, golf's outstanding p~rformer over the past four
seasons and gunning for a fifth
consecutive Player or the Year
title, used a victory in this event
last year to kick off a string of
three consecutive victories.
And he'll be seeking a third
co n secutive title in this
winners-only tournament. Jack
Nicklaus, back after a year's
a bsence, calls it golf's "best
rormat."
And Lee Trevino and Johnny
MiJler have, for years, placed a
high priority .on t.his tournament
which brings together only the
winners of regular PGA Tour
titles from the: past 12 months.
''You've really accom-
pUshed something when you
b\°?<at all the other champions
from the past year." Trevino
said. He said hP was fully
recovered from some back pain
that bothered him last week in
August, Ga.
A I though there are nine
multiple winners from the
qualifying period with Watson
winning six events · a relatively
large field of 29 players will be
chasing a $54.000 first prize.
UC Irvine's
Louganis has
diving lead
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP> -
Four-tim~ champion Greg
1 Louganis of Mi ss ion Viejo
'Nadadores placed first in the
. .mens' one-meter springboard
final~ Tuesday in the 1981 U.S.A.
-1ndoor Diving Championships at
Ohio State University.
Louganis, 21 , of Mission
Viejo. tallied 575 .04 points for
the event , held at the
university's Peppe Aquatic
Center. He won on the last of
his 11 dives.
He is a student at UC Irvine.
Kelly McCormick of Mission
Viejo was l ea ding the
preliminaries of the women's'
thret'l·meler springboard event,
with 467.40 points, going into
Wednesday's finals.
Others placing in the mens'
l ·m eter springboard finals
were : 2, Ron Merriott of
Kimball Divers in Ann Arbor,
Mich., with 565.11 points; 3,
Dave Burgering, Mission Viejo,
559 . 71 ; 4, Randy Ableman,
Mission Viejo. 546.tn; 5, Rick
IJ'heobald, Southern Illinois
"tJniversity, 545.07; 6. Kevin
M achmer, Kimbell Divers,
543.42; 7. Matt Chellcb, Hobies'
Heroes of Bloomington, Inc.,
537 .57 ; and 8, Ron Meyer of
Razorback Diving Club in
Fayettesville, Ark. 500.16.
The top eight In each event are
to be invited to the U.S. Olympic
trials in 1984.
The championships continue
through Saturday.
o.ltt'"*'IWf..._.
An easy follow-through motion dUplayed by OCC's Don SmUh.
From Page 01
HAS UCI FOUND • • •
mission in the orient. ,
Capener played his high school
ball at Torrey Pines in Del Mar
where he averaged more than 20
points per outing. He then played
one season at the University of
San Diego before taking leave.
Mulligan c alls Capener "a
helluva shooter," who chose UCI
over BYU.
'liant
hannnered
in debut
PORTLAND (AP > -Ex-
major league pitcher Luis nant
was embarrassed in his Pacific
Coast League debut Tuesday
night as the Edmonton Trappers
pounded him f.3r six hits and
e iiht runs n two Innings
and beat the Portland Beavers,
12-5.
Tiant was si1ned by the
Beavers to a reported $125,000
contract and failed to make the
parent Pittsburgh P irates
roster.
The 40-year-old rigbt·hander
gave up a grand-slam homer to
Gary Holley in the second in·
ning.
Tiant fle ... home to Mexico
prior to the PCL opener and ar-
rl ved SWlday with a case ol the
flu , but said be felt good enough
to pitch.
Tiant bad a 15·1 record with
Portland in 1964 and began a
major league career tb•t ln·
eluded a world series ap·
pearance with the Boston Red
Sox.
Right-hander Nardi Contreras
got the victory for Edmonton,
scattering eight hits and striking
out six in six innings.
·'The important thing is that
we ended up with peoele who
wanted to come here," 4tXplains
Mulligan. "We didn't have to
kiss their ass to get them here
and then have to coach them." . .. .
With five scholarships availa·
ble and only four signings,
Mulligan still has one left. He
hopes to use that . to sl8)1 a tall
freshman (which looks dpubtful)
or a tall red-shirt (which seems
like a better possibility) ..
"The only thing we really
didn't get was a bil man," ex-
plains Mulligan, "but then there
wasn't a lot out there to choose
from.
"If we can't sign a freshman,
or a red-shirt possibility doesn't
contact us, then we'll just leave
the scholarship open." • • *
M VLLIGAN ON VCl'S
FUTURE:
"I think we're in good shape. I
really do.
"We probably have the best
point guard in California
C Barkey) and we have a guy like
Spinn who is a good defensive
player -which we needed.
Plus, we have Crossley who is a
great athlete and a sleeper in
Capener, who b a great shooter
and he's 6-6." • • • Mulligan's imports have
changed some roles on the An·
teatera.
Jason Works, the darling of
Crawford Hall who bad the fans
on their feet and Mulligan order-
ing quart.a of Maalox to keep bis
ulcer in check, will move to the
off.guard spot with Randy
Whieldon and K'vin Fuller.
Rainer Wulf, who stArted most
of last season at forward will
either come off the bench or red·
shirt. A decision as. to bis statua
will come TbanltsJivinl day. • • • Next year's .roster figures to
look Uke t.b.is .(remember, UCI
doesn't own a le.gill mate
Foley calls it quits center ): · .
Guards -Whieldon, Worts,
Johnsoo, Fuller, BarUy, Robbie
Beal.
MIAMI (AP> -All -Pro de-
fensive tsack Tim Foley, bam-
per'd by a knee injury laat
seas.on, quietly has announced
From Page 01
ANGELS. • •
after tomorrow niJht."
The An1el1 are 3-3 on the
1ea1on.
bis retirement after 11 years
with the Miami Dolphins.
Meanwbil~. there were indlca-
Uon 1 tliat Bob Griese, the
DoJpbins' mainstay quarterbac~
for more than a decade, alao
waa close to makin1 a decision
about bit future.
Fol.ey, who played on three of
the Dolpbina' Supt!r 8owl,tell1Jl$,
was •~rally re•arded as a key
player Jn Mi•mi's ao-eaJled "No
Name" defeoae dur••• tbe
team'• heyday In tbe early
1970I, He eanMd AU-Pro bol)ors
two yean ..,o, alts bll lllDt!l
aeuoo wit• tb• A.merlean
Leacue Eut Club.
But tbe D·YHr·old missed
mueb of U..1180 MMOQ with an m.IW'1 to tm rl"-'t knee.
•
. Forwards -Magee,
McDonald, Crossley, Wulf.
Spinn, Capener, Grant Tayi,r,
Ray DoMeUy. • '* • • .
UCI will play Nevada·LH
Ve1u at the Anllheim Conven·
Uon Center Dec. 12. • •
5-IOk races
scheduled :
Two thousand diatapce · run-
' nen are expected-to take part in
tbla year's March of t>lmu
5-lOK runs Sund.,-, April • in
Irvine.
Rama Coach Ray lfaJavul
and the 1811 POiter CbJld, Stem
Olsen, wUl officially 1tart tbe
race at 9 a.m .
MAYNE, ALWAYS on tbe
lookout fw the kind of quality
that la synonymous with OCC
baseball, didn't see the fl.rat two
1amea ot the tourney -the ones
Smtth woa.
Instead,' he wu at the cbam·
plonshlp 1ame. He watched
Smith devel~ a sore arm and
leave the game in the fourth in· ntnc ·
Mayne waa smart enou1h not
to judae the 6-1, 175·pounder on
one performance. So he
persuaded Smith to take a look
atOCC.
"It's the best tbinl that ever
happened to me," admit. Smith,
whose off.the-field ea&y going
atyle greatly resembles the eue
with which be pitches for the
Pirates.
In his two years at OCC, Smith
b,as complied a masterful 18-2
record. He was ll·l in 1980, al-
lowing 2.6 earned runs in 101 in·
nin1s for a 2.32 ERA.
This year, be started the
season off with a bang, going 36
innings before allowing an
earned run.
where his team played against
Smith's two brothers, both ac-
complished athletes at Redlands
High.
··I heard Donnie was interest·
ed in getting out of San
Bernardino and I also heard
from sources that he {Don) was
the best athlete of the three!"
Mayne recalls.
DONNIE LEARNED a lot
from bis family. His father,
Lee, tauaht him everything be
should know about baseball
when he was young, and it was
one Of his brothers who in-
troduced Don to a slider. "I
didn't know what it was before
he told me," Don says.
Smiih was· also an accom-
plished hitter in high school.
He batted cleanup and played
left field when be wasn't on the
"HE TAUGHT ME how lo
and wttere to throw the pitches
on certain counts. He alao
showed me how to slow the tero-
po of the game and take control
of the situation." r!
"He likes a pitc to go lnto a
game with the atti ude of 'I'm in
command'," Smith explains.
"It's something you have to
learn on the community colle&e
level."
• • • While former OCC stars are
continuing their success at
Arii.ona State, former Golden
West College standout Matt
Palmer is having an impressive
season at Oklahoma.
Palmer is hitting a solid .400
this season. He·s clouted five
homers, knocked in 22 RBI amd
scored 20 runs for the No. 4-
ranked Sooners.
"THE STREAK! It wasn't on
my mind too much," Smith
says" "I tried not to worry
about it. I didn't have my
best stuff that d::; \the day the
streak ended against Cerritos). I
knew sooner or later, they'd get
to·me. Heck, nobody's perfect."
Smith is close to it, however.
His onJy loss this season came
at the hands of Fullerton, 9-6. In
that game, the Pirates loaded
the bases in the last three in·
nings but couldn't take advan-
tage of it.
Pirates roll to 8-1 victory
"I just wasn't meant to win
that game," he says.
It's easy to see that very UtUe
shakes Don Smith, and that, ac·
cording to Mayne, is the key to
bis success.
·•His strong point is bis emo-
tion a 1 control. He's a very
mature kid and a very confident
kid," Mayne says. "Donnie's not
only an excellent athlete, but be
bas the mental makeup for great-
ness, as well.··
It was no surprise that Smith
was a big bit at OCC, particular-
ly to Mayne. Before comin1 to
OCC , Mayne coached al
Eisenhower High in Rialto
Seven Orange Coast College
pitchers combined for a six-
hitter Tuesday afternoon as the
Pirates rolled to an easy 8·1 vic-
tory over visiting Cuesta College
in non-conference baseball ac-
tion.
In all, OCC Coach Mike Mayne
used 24 players and gave mem-
bers of his seldom-needed relief
corps some work. Amon.e them
was Jeff SutterJield who was
seeing his first work on the
mound this season. Sutterfield
aJlowed one hit and struck out
one in an inning of work.
Meanwhile, Rich Amaral,
Kevin Sliwinski and Mike Van-
derburg supplied the billing
power. Amaral went 2·for-3 in·
eluding a double and one RBI,
while Sliwinski was 2·for·2 in·
eluding a double and three RBI.
Vanderburg raised his career-
leading RBI total to 63 with a 2·
for-4 outing and one RBI. He
also scored twice.
Reggie Montgomery, the
Pirates' freshman hitting stand·
out, broke a five game hitless
slump with a single, while FA
Farrell colJected two singles and
an RBI.
The victory was OCC's 21St
against four losses.
The Bucs now travel to Mesa,
Aritona to compete in the eight·
team Kiwanis Roadrunner
Tournament which begins
Thursday.
OCC will face Idaho Com-
munity College in the tourney
opener at 8:15 p.m. and then
face Yavapai CC Friday at 5
p.m .
Protest review SPYGLASS llt1.
' • coDlDllttee set
This is your opportunity to move up to
Newport 's most prestigious
community. HURRY!! This won't
last! Owner is highJy motivated and
would like to trade. CaJJ Conrad for a
private showing now!
The United States
Yacht Racing Union
board of directors at its
meeting in Chicago •P·
pointed a special com-
mittee to conduct an in·
quiry intto the
c ire umstances sur-
rounding the recent rat·
ings protests against the
yachts Acadia and
Williwaw in the
Southem Ocean Racine
Conference. ·
regularities in the rat-
ings of the two yachts
may have Involved
cheating on the part of
the owners or skippers.
t<ppointed to the
special committee were
Chairman Richard S.
Latham, president and
ch.irman of the USYRU
Committee on Judges:
Henry H. Anderson Jr.
USYRU executive coun·
cilor, and Gaither Scott.
chairman of the USYRU
offshore committee.
(7 I 4t 644-fftO
•
IA Newport Center
(714) 644·9990 The special committee
will consider all aspects
of the matter and rec--::::::=====:;::===:::-i Near Lido Village
(714) 760-0835 ommend to the Ex-
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wh~ther subsequent ac-~:::::::::::=====~==::::
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so, what acpon is rec-
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There have been al-
legations · that ~he
Penn Staie
for Gaucho
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Nickey It).,.,.,,. ... w-lle<1m99rten (I .. ).
L-Vuckovlcll 10·1). HR•-Mllwaullff,
Money 111, TllomM 121; Chl<aeo. P:llk m .
A-Sl,560.
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Minnetolo, J•ll-1121, Smalley Ill. Seal·
tie, A,_,__ (II, Crul I II A-6,'43
NATIONAL LEAGUE Dodgers 7, Glenta 1
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Clork,l'I
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Martin.II Stennell,2b
S.0.11.,c LtMttt,u 81ue,p Mofllll,p
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3 I 2 0
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HOUllOf't 200 Zll OOa-t 11 0
Wa111,, ~ 141, -ler UI, OOl'•r (1)
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HOUllOf\, """' (I) ...............
Clnclnn•tl »1 000 000-4 • 1
Son 0 i..> 000 000 000-0 1 0 ,,,..,,,and Olllerry. Curtis, LOiiar 14),
Urrea (I) -K.,..dy W-llertnyl 11.0l.
L-Cunll 10.11. HR-ClnclnMtl. Fosler 121
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UC lt11lne 090 000 11-J 1 I
CS Fullenon 001 u1 ffa-14 U I Soma, ~ tu, Hku m end Elliott;
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HRs-Plrrwullo, •-1. -· , Troylet ICSFI
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UC Rl...,slde 11. l~ 2
Nori_,, Ari.-S. Ari.-Slole •
UCLA II, C.I SI Ooml ..... r Hllh 6
P:re-SI t,USC• Cal Poly ~I, Col SI HOf111tld99 l
()(c1-.. t , Pomona Pilar 4
Gr-C...10n 1 .. 1. Azusa Pacific J.t
SCBA at•ndma•
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L-.i 9NCI\ State ,, f 0 J
Loyola I S O I
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811lleloat Ml.-IOU
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llulleloal Ml.-wto
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Plllladlelphia at c.....-y • ........,.-.n1n
Edmonton at HY 111-n (It ,___,,I
Ml,,...,... al Buffalo Ill neceuaryl
Call'lfY at Pl\11-)Cllll• Ill neceuaryl
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Jeck Kranwr Open cat '-" ,. ... ..,,
f'lrtta..-SI ..... Roll Gel\l'lng def. Trey Wallkl, ,,.., ~2;
11111 Scanlon Clef. S!Wrwood St•wart, i ·l. ,_.,:
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my Auon, 21.'3. s. Frank Connor, 1t.'1.
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EMrt.OYMENT &
PIEPAIATION
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THE :REAL
ESTATE RS
' rn't' ,,,,
10,
I fiW
I tl' l M
u1!> r·
................ ~t4W OCIAtWOM1' ••(),
2 Bdnn1, 2 ba, unfu.m.) ... J
New. tuOyrly. 11111
IA YlllOMT I 1 'H1 a Bdrm, 1 ha, unfum. I
Mint cond. SIO yrly. n i 4f
CHAMHB. ROMT a 11 J
3 Bdrm, 2 ha, unfurn. it 11
f750 )'r)y. I • fi'l
All real etlate ad-
vert i a e d In lhl 1
new1_paper is 1ubject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
ln& Act ~ 1968 which
makes lt illegal to ad·
vertiae "any preference,
llmitatlon, or dis ·
crimlnation based on
race. color. relicion •
sex. or national origin,
or an Intention to make
any such preference,
limitation, or dis·
crimlnatioo."
Lae. roomy family home
w /cozy built-In enter-•' "'U associated
Thia newspaper will not
knowinely accept any
advertising for real
estate which is in viola·
Uon of the law.
EIROIS: AltterflMn
...aclcheQtt.itlrods
daffy ... report .,... '°" ....... .,.,,..
DAILY PILOT._....
labllty for .... ffrtt
iRcorrect i..sertloa
oat,.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
G.-rol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HODOWH
PAYMENT
Pay clos111g costs only !
Buy your own home!
Must qualify for mon·
thly payments. Exciting
new concept. Call today
for full details. 673-8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
YllW
Ow11«wtl~ 3 Bdrm Cliff Haven
beauty. Owner will con·
sider all reasonable of·
fers. 2 SPAS. one indoor,
one outdoor , 2
fireplaces. used brick
entertajners pool area.
Caban•. fire ring. view
Saddleback Mountains.
Fashion Lsland. lights.
Newly remodeled. new
kitchen. Call today for
appointment.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
WESTCUFF
YACAHT
R ed u ced $25 ,000.
Desperete owner seys
bring all offers. No
qualifying. Low down. 4
Bdrm siogle story home,
totally upgraded. Call
for more details.
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-63 J -6990
COSTA MESA
5 IR -SI 25,500
talnment ctr . Owner's i u.,'( 81.J () .. ( "" ;J l ... .. ,J ~, pride is obvious. Highly •tttoS.
upcraded built·m kitch. ~~~~~~~~~ bn & carpeting, etc. Huge -: playroom upstairs (or • ti1tJ
' ' ~ ~ • t,
ldds or adults! Asking C A M E 0 -: ~!;:Y~oo. Owner will SHORES ':~·:~~
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
FOURPLEX
Beautifully maintained
units ln Costa Mesa.
Priced well below com·
parable units in same area, Great assumable
loan and owner will
carry part of financing.
$205,000
751-3191
c:=. c.,f I ( ( 1
""f""' PHUPI H l 1f <1
*** Jfl'fC,..
1957 Port Trinity Pl.
Newport Beach
You are the winner of
2freetklleh
($12 Value>. to
lceC~dH April 21 ru 25
Anaheim Convention
Center
Tickets must be ex·
changed for reserved
seals at the convention
center ahead of time .
Call 642·5678. ext. 272 to
claim your tickets
*** STOP
DREAMING!
Let It happeo 9'7< as-
sumable loan 3 br. fam
rm. l:\• be Try wrap
loan (80 % LTV I
Spacious li v are• +
huge rear yrd w /btfl
spa. Walk to community
pool 6 tennis. Home
warranty + upgrades!
545-S..91
~walklrBLea
REAL ESTATE
ASSUMI
LOW IMT. LOAM
Assume 963,000 loan at 10~%. owner will carry
2nd and 3rd. No qualify.
ing! S harp 3 bdrm
home. Family room and
2 fireplaces. Only
$1 32 ,500. Call now
979.5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
MHCIATa~? Call the l nveatment
spedalists. Touchstooe Realty, Inc
963-CIMl7
Lowest Priced ,.,,, .•
•1dl l fee :,.i;I
Large assumable 1st 111 I
TD. Walls of glass lead . t_
lo wood deck. Beautiful .• (i 'J
views from mas ter ··lw suite, living and family ;,..,
rooms! Plus. lovely
private beach. For fuU -c1tl,
details. call673-8S50 •.Iii .;..,
THE REAL ESTATERS
COMMEltCIAL rROPStTY
Tired of sell.J.ng houses 7 ·
days a week? We need one licensee to learn the
skills to manage &
broker commercial real
estate. Income from
mgml wtule you learn.
Super benefits: life in·
s uran ce. health in
surance & dent.al plan.
Contact Ken. 675-6700.
Save 6·7"1t selling your
home yourself. free info.
pacaage, call 646-1544
DOYER SHORES
s,.ctoetlicr .... ,
Breathtaking ocean.
light and mtn. views
from this large, one of a
kind, quality home on
Galaxy Drive .
Bea uhfully decorated .
landscaped Wllb sparkl·
mg pool. on extra large
lot. 4 Bdrms." Ba. many
outstanding quality
reawres. lll50.000
ld (
.\ 111
$ "
'I ;;
'lti
•!
-.•It
I
·: ..
~ lo.:
,: ...
tJ
·I ~.
th
• •'.C
RCTaylorCo
( .11) i, t( I
• J ,,.,
WHA rs Uf'ilt9UE
AIOUT UMl(i)UE
~ I
,, IJ
• I I I
· ctl
ANYTIME VIEWS-4
Bdrm, 21'2 bath home on ,1 I
large lot in Harbor View
Hills. Views of ocean, ..
bay and night lights!
Just $425,000.
DELI G HTFUL
DUPLEX-Two 2 Bdrm
units with skylights and
bay views . Walk to
beach. $450,900, assume
$290,000 at l3"'2'k.
,,.,
!I
11
OWMEI SAYS S&L
Not an add-on or coo·
version. A real 5 Bdrm
COltdo S,.chllth Call tbe experts at lbe
condo information
center. Touchstone Realty. Irie .
963-.CJMl7 Bl G BE AU Tl F'll L
SPANISH-5 Bdrms.
charming patio, pre·
stlge of Lido Isle,
9850.000. ree.
,1t
I 1f
family home in one of 1---------Costa Mesa's nicest
areas. Handymaos de·
Ught.C@d,.ve!
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
7 J •-63 '-6990
3 IR TOWHHOMI $113.900
$129,500
WISTCUfF
Sharp 2 bdnn. cond<lln a
prime locati!in .
Fireplace & bar. Low In·
terest assumable T.D.
t7 l4t 613-4400
t JI J) '2'·2121
HARBOR
UJ>Craded 2·•\y w lfrplc. . A Olvblon or Aasume lit. 2nd It: 3rd .. ..__~ Co
wilb total payments of ~~n~ll~ru~u·r~l~n~ves~t~m~e~nt~~·~I
934. Seller ls motivated. r.
Ask for Wendy Sitler.
159-1221
USITHI
DAILY PILOT .. ,.n ·
llSUL~ •¥1C• DlllCTOIY PorResult
Service Call
642·1671 ..... ,.
RVM~
' ' ' -
WOODSY IN
IRVINE-2 Bdrms. 2
bath. fantasUc patio.• J
lle,uuruuy decorate• 'I wrth 'ea rthtone1 .
&127,900.
COUNTRY FRENCH IN l
SPYGLASS-Every df!!. ''• tail of this malhltlcent \ .. 11
home ls C\Jitom. 6 ·.o
Bdrma. Wt baths. view.
1875.000 fee. · !I ,,.,,,
SUJ>ER UOUSE-
Cameo Sborel, 4 Bd~ • study, view, pool an4l ~
spa, Incredible at ,
187S ooo. •he . 11·
THAT'S WHATS .iw
IA YClllT CUSTOM HOMa
AbllOlutelY labWJ>Us Lyons & Cushion
• Cuitom fioor plan. Spacious livlnS t • room dealped for entertaining. Large
•• &fp a rate. formal dining room &
fantastic 1a mlly1 room SuJ>4,!r modern
kitch e n boasts of Del Piso tile,
• microwave, 2 aelf·cleaning ovens &
~ ma ny ext ras. Master bdrm suite
1 ~e_parate from other 3 extra large
bdrms. $'4~000 with great terms.
1315 ANTI\jUA WAY THURS l·S:OO
WISLIY M. TA. YLOl CO.. UM. TOIS
"f Z9 11 S.. JOI ...........
I ! ..wf'OIT CIHTH. Kl. 644-4910
SPLASH!
5".ASHf -Star, cool in the pool ! t We U be pleased to sbow
• • to anyone who wants to
•, .. save money! 7% exist·
Ca to. Exc:elRc• Thia truly distinctive
Harbor View Hills home
has been magnificently
appointed for the ap.
preclation of a dis·
criminatlng buyer.
CHARMING COM DUPLEX. W•lk to
be•c•. Khoola •nd •hOp• from thlt
lmntacutllt• duplex. 3 ldr wtth F.P. •nd
2 Bdr rent.I unh.
' COU OF NIWPOIT RWTOlS
UIS E. Coeat Hwy., eon.. .. M•
675-1511
Dt.111.D • $71 950 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace, bulJt·lns. Elf· ,_ total • f_ ol ... _e 2 ceUent rental area. Near "' prr~ "'""" beach • bay. $285,000. bdrm homes in areal
6'2-2253ev•. area. Seller want. quick
associated
R~,,~ Eu·. ;./f I\ r 11J',
/.! l ~ fi • 1 r ' ~ ~
aale I: ls olferinl ~%
financln1. 759·1501 or 752.7373
WALKER&LEE R.E.
ii• ins loan, SZ26tmo. Call
now · won't lut! ~9491
.. '~Wllkarll88
outstanding ruturest. AM Some or this property's1~~~~~~~~~1 c·~· 111.e.
are: a new master Bdrm 1--------•I lt-'IM Mew 1 suite w /Jacuzzi tub, MEWrOITH&HTS Xlntterms. 13~ interest
... __ R_E_A_L_ES_T_'A_T_E __
llAUTIFUUY
ltlPUUISHED
beam ceilings, oak Deluxe townbouse for 3 years. 12132 Ed-
cabinets, skyUghu, mir· duplex, 3 bdrm .f. faml· inaer-close to Harbor
rored entry, remodeled Jy, 2~ bath each unit. Blvd.
kitchen, trench doors, F rplcs, a ll built-ins, OPEN WEEKENDS 1-5
ii • bdrm home in good
e • locatlon wltb a com·
pletely remodeled
kitchen, new paint, new
cpta and drapes. Owner
and much more. A decks & patios, Park· 831-4361,agt.
beautiful home oo fee like l a n dscaping .1--------
land. Offered at $410,000 SELLER WIU. HELP
lolboo l.a-d RJty FINANCE! $Z95,000!
I . flnancln1 available.
$132,SQO. Call now
67).1700 ..... ~,...
• f'19.S3'10
; ALLSTATE
. REALTORS
~ 75 .. 1111
CE
IBDBIB BLllRS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
LUXURY CONDO
Convenient Location . Two
Bedrooms, Two Baths. Plush
Carpets. Plantation Shutters.
Skyhgflts. Top Security. Lock Up &
Leave When You Wish. Only
$255,000, Large Assumable 101h3
First Trust Deed.
NEWPORT HORSE COUMTaY
Glamorous 2 + Acre Estate In
Beautiful Setting With Your Own
Privacy. Formerly Home Of Movie
Star. Just Listed. Large Five
Bedroom Home With Double
Master Suite, Large Family Room.
& Gourmet Kitchen, Surroundin·g
Sparkling Swimming Pool. Your
Own Stables. Priced At $2,500,000.
(S:j· ·--...........
..W EXCLUSIVE
Sl'YCM.ASS LISTtNG .
This beautiful 6 bedroom house 'is
the crown jewel of Spyglass Hill.
Decorated in a traditional style. it
features e legan t wallpa pers1 window coverings. carpet, ana
wood flooring. You can enjoy the
spectacular ocean view from the
kitchen, family room, living room,
or master suite and from t he
cus t om p ool a n d spa . in' t he
elegantly landscaped b~ckyard.
9825,000. Ask for CathY.
. ......
•675-7060•
New Exclusive!
CORONA DEL MAR-BUILDERS!
All R· I lot ht old CDM lft a ...-
location. rlClfts fM:luded In priu. Drtn
by 31 4 Marigold Md cal for details.
$215.000.
NEWPORT CHARMER-POOL
5upet' fC111tHy a,..o 0tt a .... m..t.
~ pool mtd ct.ck area m o MCa.ted
bock yard HM"ouded by gre ... ry.
0,... 11•"'9 rOCMn .... Mwty ,_ ... d
ldtdww. Two MdrooMs + .. that C.W
be 3rd bedroom. $115.000fw.
LOWEST PRICE-tJOO ISLE
.. ..,.. & DtcCN crton ltwtt.d! Low..t
price ~ ltCMtM for flrsl "-IMfyer °" Udo Isle. StalMd 9fas. sOllllh .-Ho
CllMf lots of posaJbilltfn m lhis 2 bclr'M. 2
bath ~;/dWftcJ ""' It'• .... u ..... -t-t . IOfM "Tl.C" to ,,... It
acb able. $299,000.
ON WATER-FRONT ROW
Mtwty c.t.corahcl 2 ldnft. 2ba co-op.
Gonjeous Catalina wt hniRcJ ~
.Jew. Assum. lo-. Seier ..ti •slat Ill
fincmchtg. loot 1llp o•alL $215,000.
TRADITIONAL & BEAUTIFUL
Eaahrw ch°"" •.• ......, 1111~.
Spoclous 2-story, 3 bed. krge il.la9.
.... ., & dlnlMJ "°°""" vu .,..... .,.,.
ftoor. Mon• ROW. lrlck & w.....th.
Clff Ha .. ". $392.000.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL £STATE
~it-' R,·""'• flt,~tt\ Md~ n-nt
2436 W Coast Hwy
Newport Beach 6,31-1400
'=~':' S«:\\'1lA-i&f..~s· ::: -----IAoo4.., QAY I. POUMI -----
•='':.": ·=---...... '! ~ low IO fonto follf .... ...,...
A CLOSE I I' I I I I ____ r-..
__ e_u.,..o __ r...,o_, :
r r 1 r _ · .1
.... , -.. -A-· l-O-.T---.1 1
. ' I· I I I . 1
Thet guy 11 io optlml11tc
•bout beef pflcH, he juat
le•Md • pot roHI with option ------... --. TRA Y WE I ~l,.........,1--rl--rl --r-t e ~ :-.... CZ~
yo.. ........ '-..... No 3 below.
UDO-Newly remodeled tradltJonal 3 bdrm,
~ bath plus Jge r ecreaUaQ room & 2
15". Beam ceillnO. Bat in pri~ at
000.
NSULA POINT .. a.IONT
~anorattiic view at wedge, from
'prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom
home. 3TOO sq. ft. featurinl marine
room , entry, livin g room, dlnln g
room, built·iQs, etc. $1.~.ooo.
IAYFIOMI'
We have several fine homes with pier
& slip, starting at $1,500,000.
IANCHO MllMI
Springs Condo, 9th fairway, 3000 sq.ft.
3 Bdrm, 3 bath, furn. Golf clb.
mbrshp. Trade for beach inyest. prop.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
l.11 f1,,1 .. ·I· [!• ,. '< ~ f, ··, t.l/'l:
OME OF THE LAllMST LOTS
IM •-nt1 COUMTaY"'
of Diamond Bar. Behind guard gates
high in the hills, 4 acres, equestrian
trails throughout community, scenic
setting & ready for custom builder.
Beautifully developed p rivate
community at the top. Priced to sell at
$175.000. Tom Allinson 642-8235. CE·79)
Wnrport hitch
901 Dover Dr1ve H.arbOt'Vl.eW Center
642-8235 644·6200
Balboa Peninsula 2
newer custom houses on
WllSTCIJRI Attrac~lve three
bedroo m h ome .
Cathedral calinp in liv·
inl and dbdnl rooms.
Exceptloaally cove·
nlent location .. for
acbools, library, shops
and banks. Owner will
help wltb financing.
Price only $235,000.
631-7300 M.I.
CUTSTAMDIM6 MOITtnW)09
fAMILY HOMI
This beautiful Spanlah tiled
Meadow Home in Northwood featu
a p rivate courtyard ••l l"f wt
fount11inJ. 4 BRS, 2'h batbl plUI fa
room . .r.;arthtone decor tpd s u
landscaping make,~ an excel
family home. owner will ..... t wl
, financing. $198,000.
IEST rAllC LOCAnoM
Lovely 3 BR, family room and ~ bath home on large comer lot next
park. Immaculate condition, e
maintenance landscaping. Walll
distance to school.yet so qui' .
$139,950.
YOUMG , ...... 55t.a700
irriDe
Campus valley Center Woodbridge VllJa8e Center
762-1414 551·8700
TERRIFIC FINA.MCIMGI
Lovely bright and cheerful 2BR & den
Rancho San Joaquin townhotne
w/sunset views. Owner will carry a.
3rd T.D . $175.000. Jackie Wiley.
551 ·8700. ( E·BO )
Irv1.ne
Campus Valley Omt.er Woodbridge Vt.Uage Center
752-1414 551-8700
corner lot. Each w n car lalMto I.a-ct I 006
gar , 2 bdrm. 2 b a, ....................... C HwlflMJtow leoctt I 040
balconies wtocn & bay Want Balboa Island oata Mno I 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• views, patios. $425,000. Home-have Calabasas ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 STY LAHDMAU
Lee asswn. lst. 875-CY1Z7 land-lots. 675·3457 till INVEST IN • Br, 2~'1 ba. 3 car tar.
or&44·9US Saturday, (213)888-5052 LOCATION New_ly painted & carpet· ed. $103K assumable In. 11•••••••••••••llllllllr. Ccwo11acWMcr 1022 Sharp 2 Bdrm condo in Asking •1s9.900 Fast .. Mesa Verde. Priced to • sell now at "8.500. Call escrow. 8kr963-8377 ........ , ............. .
RfSIOEN !IA, RE Al CS I All ')£RVICES
OM THE GOLF COUISI
2 BR. + den. San Joaquin·model in
choice location with spacious
o u tlook . Sunny patio unit.
Assumable loan. $199,000 Fee.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
~); .. 1])~~!'~
M EWrORT llA.CH ISTAll OCEA.M VIEW. Elegant customized home on just Under
""2 acre lot. C6mpletely prlvate
expanded 4 bdrm nome. Oversized living room, private dining · room, & gaJed pool
area. This is a beautiful umque
psoperty newly offered at
f19S,OOO.
PRESTIGE A.DDRISS OMLY $430,000 Dramatic entryway leads to
. loveih, largft 3 b1trp, 2th bath town o1 md~. . uge 1 vmg rooallsm !' forma rnmg rQOm. 'W bf glass lead to brick _patios. Priced to sell witfi xlnt ~ancing. ·, t
• 5TIPS 'TO LAD ~:-eni;:iie~~t'lf~ Ji!l!lt~ Shows Hke mod:1':"Airi8~ model. Large fa mitt ' room w/y~ulted ceiliqg. F~oor to ceillng bookcases. Huge
fireplace & form al dining rm. Take ovel' s ubject to ex.astin_g 1st T.D. & n..ote a t 8~% interest. Brana new on t he market.
Jasmine Creek decorator
home, plan 1 on green·
belt immac. Sl)S,500
640-81'5
A n n e M c C a s I a n d KIDS OK
631·1266. 3 Bdrm. 2~ bath, front
$200Kat 121/10/o
FIMAHCIMG
CDMConA.GE
rLUSIMCoME
or 3 Br 2 ba home with
iso'lated master
bdrm /parent retreat or
in·law quarters + 2 br
cottage. Any way you
describe it · it's chArm·
in1. up to date and
beautlfulJy decorated .
Priced at $280,000 with
very apeclal financing.
CA.LL Foa DET A.ILS
. 644-7211
R&'Mtte
H .. :Al.TllHS
EASTSIDE .
R-2
Remodeled 2 Bdrm, 2
bath, fireplace. Alley ec· cess. 127X65. Hurry •
645·9161
:. OPEN HOUSE
REALTY
/.
APPEALING
Move your family into
________ 1 this 3 Bdnn home and
enjoy living on this tran·
qu.il cul·de-sac.
/Jn NIGEL
GAILEY &
l\SSOCIATES
Slepe to CdM Beach. Lov·
ely 3Br home on
beautiful stnet. Prine.
only. Brkr: 1112-2900 or
87~0?0..
HAllOI VIEW H1US
4bdr m . 2~ba, Lusk .
Sandpiper. ideal fam
home. ~el. quiet cul·
de-sac. Vlew slde. Poss.
PRICE & TERMS
Only $110,000 & 13\lt%
new Joan availlble.
556-2660
c::. •,[ l l ( ' -f-' l'H()PI H111 •,
new lat TD at 13%.1--------
unit. Ideally located for
children l650 mo. 1901
Alabama •nl. North of
Adams. lmmedlate oc-
c upancy . Broker,
963-8182.
FOURPLEX
All units are 2 Br, 2 Ba,
good rents, no vacancy
factor_ Price $185,000. Loan i..s assumable.
1.. .. Mcc..._.. . 631-126;1 -~
BUYING '
SELLING ?
H someone told you that
y oo would s ave
thousands of DOLL,\RS
when bu:iimg or selling
your property & sllll
have the total and quali· ty service of a pro-
fessional realtor. wdt.lld
you take the time to
call 848-1466
I ' ' ' I R I
0wner consid. 2nd.
Owner /bkr will coop.
752·2838, 844-51119. GOLDEN TOUCH ";:~~In Valley
CONDMtlUMS Specl•H• ..
I I cl D Large private decks & I=~====~= ·• Y 1 • r • patios. Only 3 left. Xlnt llAND MEW ·
Wal• ft• terms. 13% intemtt for 2 U.Uog . adorable 3 it /R ~citing CUit.om ta>me. Incredible lot she. years. doUhouae. $109,SOO • S
Pri le .__ h · te 2000.MEYER PLACE pot.nu. Beth Duncorribe, va _.c, pnva OPENDAILYl<>-5 All. (714)957·8507 ; a Up. fM land. $3,8SO,OOO. 631 ~-. gt ""'"t101 Linda Ta1Uanetti, ex· 1-------··_a ___ -----·-----
cluaive a ent. FOua.ft.EX
IL\cHNw Xlnt shape, priv,acy &
parking . Owner will f~aQC:e. 180,000 .dwn.
GOod rate or return.
Broker Chril 115'7· 1568
1024
BY OWNER
Xlnt Financing!
$31,0,000 615--0013
6 PLD,llA.STStDE
IED. to $325,000 With $152,000 in aasuma-
ble loans rangins from
9~ % to 11 %. $27 ,450
gross income annually,
Well kept sin1te stol'Y
units wltb 4 gara1es
PLUS off-atnet parklng.
On 60'd00' kit.
644-721 t l
/Jn NIGEL
GAILEY &
l\SSUCll\TE'ii
ASSUME 13°/• No qualiCying. S90,0oo
down. Popular Du~h Haven, t>elow mar. et
value. Mo. pymt ~0 . By owner. Prin. obly.
831·5042 eves.
ASSUME I Ol/•o/o
5 Bdrm, 2 ba, ntar
beach. next to l•tkl
perk. 2600 sq rt "'w ~pts. Ask~I '18',ho. Owner w\ help' flbln.
Call Ceotu y 2l~lrg ltealt~
L.Al(HFA.M&Y~
Like new_~~~.~!i. famrm,r~• bon u s rm . , or
lndacpn1. Owner ~l help w lfinucina. 1 d.ooo. OWNER /A T.
~
' I
' • ~ . t
, I
I ~
I
• I
I J
• (
I~
p
I
I
I
' . '
,
et.Jadmoor Townbotne.
Jlel'lta1e Park. 3Br. IBa. l ·•lor)' end unit ,W/lrc. ~. Many up. R•4n. Aaawnable loan il 1.25%. Pvt. p,trty. u.soo. 5»90Tl.
UMDaMAUIT ~•I• Park Syracuse All feat~ 3 Bdrm +
, 2 Ba, large family
cben. Asking 1QOO's der markets. Call for
ls.
Ht6H A.SSUMAILE
4Br bome w/1pa, xlnt.
cond. $169,000. 552-6940.
WA. Ta.FltOMT
Woodbridge prime
lakeCront location.
Views forever . 3 Br.
2¥.ba, pvt spa, flex
ftnan. Spectacular! Of·
i.red at $3.'>4,900. Call
"2-1800 & ask for Lynn
Mpah. Town & Country
Rltra.
AREAL
VALUE
At a time when good
buys are few and Car
between. We ar e proud
t_, present this im ·
maclalate ' bdrm. 2~
bl. Plan 4 in Turtle Rock
Hllls. Fabulous VIEW.
Qulet and private loca·
tlon, extra large pool
sized lot. $289.500. ...
ltt2S CAMPUS ~llt'l_,.E
ltP.••leocll I041 •• ••••••••••••••••••••
THlSHA.KIS Weathered ced ar
shakes. that is. Custom
des\aned 3 bdrm. fam
\rih• 2 baths. Extensive
UH of wood glass &
ceramic \ile. Beam cell·
tne. frplc. Sl65.ooo. Mission Realty
(714)494-0731.
~
TERMS, TERMS.
TERMS!
Thu fantastic lot in a
pre s tigi ous
dtilbborhood bas great
dtean and canyon views ind subordination possi· bte. $147,000. 49'7·3331
HMIOI VtlW KMOU.$ COteOI
2BR & den, 2~ bath condo with pool,
spa artd tennis f acUlt.let. $900 /mo.
Association dues paid by owner.
Decorated in eartht.onee. Immediate
oceupanct. No peta. Sandie Fix. ·-;;.;;;.;;·;;;•;,;;;•• 644·~· ( ·81) ••••••••••••••••••!~!~ H.B., H.B., eo.t.M••
OCaA.i....av..-•ewpon-..ch BachelorC()NOOvacant, SoD\ttbiQlbEvtnlCJM !!!!!!!!l!!!!!i!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!! -----------1 llovllli ~&n"'meeo? 901 DoverI>rtw H&rt>orvi.weeow ~:::~ewpor t ~J!· ~·~= Leue OP'ion. 2bdrm 2ba See ocean • Mt. Helix Ma.82:5& &M·6200 o i fer : Poot. •pa . ---------~1!111111--~--111!19 confo, (llontleello). from b\lllide, \<\acre z Br. Z Ba. Condo, pool/· rtreplace~ laun. room. 24.21 lltn=an· C.M. home. Privacy. Fruit Jae .• nt S.Coast Plaza. beam ea eel Una•. -1 "OO -b R alty •~ "-...... •-1ara1• -..... .. ~~ ~,._ "'"'7 ·-1 aarade&, all bulll·IH. -•0 • .. • "~· ._,._.__ .... C....W... J224 L .... 1a... 1241 ......,.,....--,..., . ._ · Gard~n Is To•nb™e
l3l·Zl70. S~c~::~nJe:!:~le r:~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine Condo 3br, 2ba, deslJn.
Sf,400tq ft&ot · potential rnveator. $125,900. S ,Brdm, 1tudy, 3 Ba, new drapes. ale, lndry TSL"MGMT. &U-iec>S
office. 1ite and close to 5'5-(240 Harbor /Baller, $800, Charm 3 bdrm. 2 ba nn, clae to pool, avaJI
J .W. Airport. "5·1103 llt/lut+P>Oreturna· houae.Privacy.Nrpool, now kids ok . Call ...._,, h dr 3107
Agt, New MobUe Home 3Br, ble cleaniJli. S31·2000 tennu, bcb. Gate cuard. 751· 7984 anytime •••••••••••••••••••••••
1----------· ZBa, fl'plc, redwood Adlta. t8QO mo. Avail l-----------1 $.1SOUUlpd.lBRDuptex.
I deck, cedar shake aid· 2Br w /stove II trig, end May 15. Owner499-3638. •2Br. 2 Ba. 1 story, pool, 417 E. Bay Ave. Bafb9a Mew llrcWYel Ina. nr lake tl skiing 1ar, adults, no pets S475. patio, S.C.Plaz.a area. No pets. 547·l1.56
IAUOAIS&.AND I SU,900. Terms or trade T73W. Wilson63H889. Lag•·Mmt 3250 Cblld OK. $495. 545-1082. Corou .. Mlr 312~
Main Street • hip vb· 419-3816 3 br 2 ba lllOO + utils ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_833-__ 1_65_3_. -----~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
ibillty location on prime. l°"'of S.......... Ne;,.. crpta new kit. AttractJve 3 Br. 2 Ba. lo 2bd 2 ed Spacious 1 Br w/garaee.
This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda
Isle. A private guarded C.Ommunity in
the heart of NewPQrt Beach. Boat
slips for (3) 55'-70' Yachts. For Sale or
Trade.
comer Has existing re· 1 ._ • • Laguna Village. No pets. rm. car gar, cover I und r il 1675 A ll tall bilainess plus two roperty 2600 stove. (~g. washer. lge ~mo. 49'7-4C11'2. paUo, 14 mile to beach. a ry ac · · 11
rental units ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'enced·an yd w. fruit Access to pool & courts. for Faye. 8*11900
• H< NT 40~ scenic Oregon Cout. trees. Clo&e to shopping. Hewport .._.. 326' 1675. H.B. (213)925-4796.
WATl Kl~ ,!.c I ~ect:riclty, fenced. out· 646-lZ77 eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714)67S·4902.
ttOMI • JE 1tandin1 view. accessi· Npt Crest condo. 4 Br 2t,.; •---------• R~E~ I ble,owner492-2499 D .. PoW 3226 Ba, s plit level , dbl 2br, ocn view. adult C?n·
We are developers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner Jim
Thompson.
.,,__.., •••••••••••••~••••••••• garage. Lease IBOO /mo. I do. lmmed. posses1on
---------.... ...... •Close to manna 3bdrm, 1st, last &dep. 957.9303 call ~S779, Coado111l•l-/Tow•· bcM.gt 2100 1 .,..ba, frplc , yard, """"for .. 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $600/mo. Townhouse. I ________ _
••••••••••••••••••••••• Have $80,000 equity in 4~4486. • VILLA BALBOA 2 Bdrm Townhouse 2Br tt,.;ba custom home near Jack H --.._.-hd---.. -eocll--.-~-2-.. -0-1 l t,; ba. Ocean view.
t714t IZl-1210 UIJI 591-1363
_., 900 *"·0000 d• A ' Nicklaus &olf course &c _..._,.oe ~ .. Avail on s hort term ....,, · ~ ' wn. S· W'ldo •-d f I t ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"°CJ\/mo. sum $60,000 loan at 1 mar, ... a e or o . ~ 10'1'.1%. Ownerwlll caTry land, motorhome . * *'*' H.V. Homes custom 3
2nd. 536-4664dys. 67S-2534. Fnd~ Bdrm, S ba with pool.
20 Pergola Prof. dee. Comp!. ocean·
11001 352-3710
INVESTORSOEUGRT lt..tah Irvine /bay view. $2500.
16,000DOWN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vouarethewinneror LIDO ISLE 2 Bdrm, Lo/, Custom home n earl•-------.-Exec lB.r Condo Hwff~ 2frMtlc:kds ba home. Yearly $1200
water . Owner will PltOIATESAU w /w•ter view, s tep-I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ($12Value),to
finance with low down. 117 lltltStr..t down llvin~ rm ~/frplc, INewportleodt 3169 lc•CCIDOdn
Agt. 962·2900. 2 Bdrm beach house. formal din, kang sz ....................... April21\t\T\:25
Great S IW rental area. mas t e r w I w a 1. k ·i n LIDO ISLE channlng 3 Anaheim Convention
IAYFaOMTHOME Steps to beach. Sl80.000. c loset. Entertainers bdrm 2 bath playroom. Center
mo. 2 Bdrm 2 bath LUXURY
condo. $850/mo.
Waterfront Homes, Inc.
Realtors 631· 1400 Glorious 4 Bdrm 4ba Eves 673-8086. patio views, sparkling Just 'remodeled. $1650 Tk kets must be ex
w /pvt dock for your IRJde> HEW waterways. Low down & mo to mo. Bill Grundy, changed for reserved!~~~~~~~~~
yacht right at your front Residential & com · assume existing fananc· 675-6181. seats at the convention I~
door. Excel Peninsula mercial on 1 lot · Old ing·n o qualifying. ---------1 center ahead of time.
Pt. location $1,295,000. Newport. 3 bdrm, 2 bath 857·0211 Call 642·5618. ext 272 to
Owner /Builder Charles upper apt. 500 +sq. n. ---------1 CANNERY VLLG. 2 claim yourtickets.
McKinnon 675-2763 and on ground floor for office DESPSlA TE! bdrm 2 ba Mobile home. * * *
Dab Bibb6f0.766S or shop. 4 car parking. Newpo rt Be a ch ST50fmof11m.
HARBOR VIEW HOME $350,000. 615-4Tn eves. Versailles 2br, 2ba, Waterfront Homes, Inc. * LOOIC *
"Montego", 4br. 2ba, patio, (rplc, pool, jac, Realtors 631-1400 2bdrm, li,,ba condo with
Harbor & Ocean View, !~~~~~~~~~~I frplc + pool Avail
Harbor View
Gracious family home 2
s t o ry 4 bdrm .
Furnishing avail al no
extra. $1200/mO lse. No
pets. 2015 Port Bristol
Cr. Call Elaine 644-5997
or 840-5357
Fee Land, loan assum. quick sale. By Owner 1: NOW! $450 /mo . Call
675-1139 st 3 2 , o o o f j rm . Beautiful 2 Br. Condo Mike646-99ll. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Home., 2 car (2t3)821·'1N Home In Big Canyon . \garage, frylc, kitchen SIAVIEW golf course view, pool & CA L l F . LI V I N G ! w /dswsr, disposal & gas
3br, "Nantucket" in ~a!'._H/ fullyfum.Leaseormon· Spacious 3Br. 2Ba range, dining area .
private community. OCEAtiROHT ORlnS. 1100 thly.CallBiUWedmore w /jac.Boatdoor.Nrbch Beaut . p atio &
Pool sized lot, like new Byowner3br,4carpark· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644.7020 $850 mo. Bobbe646-8l33 backyard. Avail 4-20.
condition! with view. Ing. Combo Uv. & din. ME.AlntESAND ---------1 or831.4381 $700/mo. lst,/last., $200,000 assum. 1st. By frplc, rm room for 2nd ._._ __ .._ n-&..w -L.-d security. cleaning dep.
Owner 1903 Yacht st,y. OWC. 6408 Ocean· -r---...,.....-Ho.. .. U ....... wo lmmac 3Br. 2Ba, cul·de· Call213128r>-4332 Camilli• $365,000 will front w. NB. Open dally Seconds to the water. ••••••••••••••••••••••• f 1 ti 1690 ------·---'th b-'" Excellent 3 BR owner's c--. del Mer 3222 sac, rp c, pa o. =~~~~tB._en. _1_1_-5_. _16_98_,ooo_. ___ -; "home-like" unit & 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 847-4525 alt 3PM. WESTCUFF A.REA
BR. 2 ba. rental u~il . CUSTOM BAYFRONT. 2 BR condo. pool . lbdrm Condo w/pool.
Venailla 2bdrm, SSS.000 WESTCUFF Ideal for home & Jn· Avail furn if de.ired. wash/dry, highly up ~~nd'M~ ~d~~oo~y~
dwo, $80,000 aasum · Dover Shores Estate. C9me. Ck>se to Newport Slip for 2 lie boats. 3 graded No pets 9550 1500 call 67S·6646 or
3br, 2ba, frplc, lge patio,
pool/rec room $600
1st /last + $200 sec
&tS-7555
Newport Crest 3bdrm,
2'"2ba. ocean view. over·
looks tennis courts.
f'rplc. close to beach
$850/mo. 642-lZ72.
2 Br, 2 Ba. din rm. (rplc, 2
car gar. Nr College.
$525 /mo. Agt. 760-9333
Woodbridge condo. 2 BR.
CIO$e t~, lge brick patio, mo. 833-9186
alt6PM
sroectacular view over-ooking lake from this
2000 sq ft JM Peters
Townhome, 2 master
bdrms, den, 21,o'.aba, Crplc,
formal dining, vaulted
ceilings. a/c, tennis, no
pets $1150 (714)7S2·83SO
or75l·S813
..,.._ .. fwWaJ.d
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
CorcMIG def Mer l722 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CoJ.)', small furn. Studio.
No kitchen. Employed
Female. Non.smoker .
Ref's. 640-4999.
CoataMeso 3724 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SUS CA.SITAS Furn 1 br. apt. S32S & up. Sma.llview.W:730-2270: priced right. Almost 'Al paer&sahops.$289,950. Bdrm .. 4be, 3 frplcs. 2 mo.847:~af't5PM · 833·3822
H: 6'2·2682. acre. Iota oC used brick. W..a.yM. TaytorCo. kitcbena,patio&deckon ---------1.---------1
Large living and din1n1 l..tlon '44-4910 Bay. Security system Super 2 bdrm coodo. nr 3Br.2Ba.Stepstobeach.
Encl. gar. Adults. no
pets. 2110 Newport Bl.
*LIDO 151.R* Lovely 2Br. 3Ba home.
Beautllutly remodeled
2yn a10. "84.000 with
xlnt financing. t)pen
House: Sat. Sun. 1-5. 119
Via Vella.
rooms. cosy den . $3200/mo. beach. tennis, pool. $7SO. Property House,
Marvelous custom lanai iltc0Me P1operty 2000 WaterfrootHomes J a c u s z 1. sa un a . 642·3SSOor642·1010 .
with flr e plt and••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtora,Inc.631-1400 clubhouae, sec. gate.
548·4968 btwn 8 & SP M
CASA. DE OllO
ALL UTILITIES PAID barbec ue and s pa. A.PPLEVALLEY $42S /mo. 493.9797 or Hal'bor ViewHomes·3Br,
S42S,OOO fOC' further de· Near new 4·Plex, 2 4 Br,pool,beacb,viewor 5(2.7737 den,famrm,grdnr,xtra Compare before you
taila,callAnnPeten. bdrm, 2 bath each unit ocean. Cameo Shores. clean . 1800 Port ren t. Custom desig_n 64~5200 witbflreplace,enclosed $1900 /mo . Koop . S&S 4bdrm. 2400 sq ft. Renwick, cornet lot, features: Pool. BBQ .
patio, double garage. 631·1.2e6. Agt. new, cpts/drapes, spot· comm pool, $975 mo. cov'rd garage, new
C d $1~5.000. Bill Grundy, 4 Br + maid's quarters. less. Super roe. Musl 975·0040 dys, 640-5836 1 (urniture, surrounded Newpo rt Bay on o. Rltr, 87S-6161. See! $895/mo. 962-6139. evs. with plush landscaping.
Owner /Agent: 673-0897 J PETE
Sale. lease. or lease op-Beaut. decor , super 968 4602 Adult living at its best. I BARRETI . .. REALTY tion to purchase. Securi· IMCOMEPROPEltTIES view, top cl Spyglass. --·--------1Hrbr View Hmes 3 Br No pets.
SOUTH OF HWY Lrg 4 Bdrm 2'N Ba,
·newer bldg. $1400/pr mo. Ask for Darrell
Pash. 631-1211!6
Costa Mno 3124 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Wc:atfleld
FAMILY Arri. Brand new beautiful lrg
apt, for Carnllles with 1
or 2 children. Near park
Heat paid. No pets.
2Br, 1 Ba. $470-$475
2Br. 2 Ba. $490
398 W. Wilson, 631·5S83
1 Br. Eastside. small but
cozy w /lots o( neat
wood . $33.S. 6'&2·9450 aft
SPM ---
Bach with loft, refrlge.
stove, c Id, pool. S370 up.
2.83 Avocado. 645..6404.
1 Br. refrige, stove. c td.
garage. 1350. 240
Avocado. 645-&404
Sharp Bach Unit. Stove &
refnge. Adults. no pets
$300. 548-1377
$450. 2 BR. patio, pool.
Adlta, no pets. 325 J, 17th
Pl. Off Santa Ana Alie ..
646-S 137 aft 11AM
2 BR, 11.<z ba twnhouse
Air , gar. fncd. patio
Adlts . no pets . S43S
&t5·4837
LARGE BA C H
w/PATIO.
2BR &2BA APTS
Cathedral ceilings.
frplc. dabwhr, b&l~ny.
In quiel Adult cooiplex
with pool, spa. No pet.a.
$335 & up. Mesa Pines
2650 Harla. 549-2447
Custom 3 br. 2Va ba con·
do, frplc. jacuni. A41ail
May 1. Adult.sonly. $650
mo. 642·5312.
Spacious 3 Br Duplex
1425 Pool & laundry fac.
543-9656
t y b 1 d g . 2 Br. 2 Ba. Looking for income un· S 2 0 0 0 I mo · Koo P · HOME FOR RENT 2ba, rrplc, beaut. carpet· Bach furnished $370
w/marina & Catalina~~~~~~~~~ its?! We haves pro· 631·12186.Agt. 3 Bdrm. S&OO. Fenced Ing a nd yard. No pets. 2Bdrm(umisbedSSOO * * *
view. Boat dock availa1 r. pertle.s in C.M. Pri«d Costa M... 1224 yard & garage. Kids & S82S. 1 yr lse. 644,7220 or 36S W. Wilson, 642·1971 •Lindo Cab•ero
ble. By owner. 673-3570 S.J... right at less than ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets welcome. 964-2566 54.9-3755 t~ leoctt 374 11798TannasAve days,548-00!Meves. Capla.,_ 1071 11XGross. No bank Sfml"OM or973·29'71.Agt.,ooree. ---------1 -nJWi9I• FountainValley
••••••••••••••••••••••• financing required. In-KID -Harbor Vu llCMls •••••••••••••••••••••• You are the winner or 2 bousesonlargelot.All 3 MllnFrMcriM terested?Thencallus. E·Side Bdrm. '425. 5Bdrm ,2 bahome,locat· Uparaded3Bdrm2'h Ba $37S/up 1-2 bdrm, pool. 2*""tk:keh
sorts or potential . WITH ocs .. YYllW .I w /Ga rage. 642·2Sl0. ed ln nice neighborhood townhouse. Av ail. aft t:c· adlt, 18992 Florida. ($12Value). to $140,000. Agt&U-0763. l--&..-;::1....__ ii _64&-__ 4848 __ . ______ 1 $77S/mo. Call Century 4/20. S950on lease. Drive . 842·2.834or84.2·3172 lu c_.du
-.--2 l, / S U Rf' R e a It y by 2708 Hillside Dr & call ril Hhi BLUFFSBAROAJN htat.l 3 BR, 2 sty, Back Bay S46-7S42forappt.tosee 1-568-9343 or 1·346·2034 H.l.11ftHEST An::e:r:&in~~on
3 Bdrm twnbm e Over 3,000 aq.ft. of 'I,;,. condo. Pool & jacuzzi. forlnfo. Spanl5bEetat.eLiving! Center
SlSS.000. Walk to ever· elegance. Exclmive new 714 1641·0763 $850. 831~. ask for HH•::e ________ .__, Beautiful partt.1Jke sur· Tickets must be ex-
ythine pool. tennis, homes, from ~15,000. 2787 Bristol St. Ruth or Steve 3242 Newport Crest 3bdrm. roundloga. Terraced changed for reaer ved
schools, park " shop. 14~% financing avail. Costa M'esa, CA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ba, ocean view, over· pool. Suriken gas bbq, seats lll the convention ping. Agt. 875-S930, CbarterRJty&lJlvear. • Duplex.· 1 bdrm, 1 bath 3 Br 2 Ba. FarnHy room, looks t ennis courts. s parkling fountains . center ahead of Ume.
640-8146 496-8122 831·8811 ---------1 pluslivina area.Prtvate din{i;g room. S875fmo. frplc, close to beach. Spacious rooms . entrance 6: patio area. Ca 11 Lind a Agent tBSO /mo. ~lZ72. Separate dining area. Call 642·5618• ext. 212 to I 000/o AMA14CIMG -._r 1 _ _. L..t...&. OCIAJl4 VIEW Stove & rein,. incl. S350 846-1371 W a I k . in c I o set s , claim your tickets~
bdrm ba 1 ~ _ __.... D•--mo. Preferladult.787~ ----------' THE-·~ l ... k ' h •· • * * Beaut. 3 , 3 • ge ••••••••••••••••••••••• --~ S 1 1_.___ ~2.... ~~ home h .e ate en "' ---------fam. rm. Open house =:u-Drastic reduction on Joann t. 983-3182. m· • T..,. ~ .... Lovely 1 level hl1hly up-cabinets. Walk to Hunt· On the Orange Coast· st &Sun 2300Heather r-.-brand new Balboa mediateoccupancy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• graded 3br, 2ba, pool lngt.onCent.er. lbr, nu carpet&drepes .
look to Ungo first a · · · For S 1100 1 """"'· Nice 4bdrm, 2'1'.lba house,' $1150 lease. agt 759-1092 1 Bedroom·furn, a.HI\ Adults, no pets 1310/mo. Ln. 831-0517 dup ex. 1.St owners&;.,.,-,., .... r, 2Ba, •850 m o. 2 f 1 b · ~ <•" """""' ------------------••••••••••••••••••••••• d I don G t .. u • rp c or s oppang 2Bedroocn-fum,1610 __, . .,"""' DUPLEXRXB! H V H Mon co beaut T U t b b $14 900 eprec a · rea ren-lat/last $300 security. t r Poot 'ac teonll Lido Isle 2Br, den, 2Ba • . ; . a • . ra er a c • . tal area. 100 feet from n•w cpt/pnt fonnal din· cen e • ..J • . AduJLs, no pets. 2 Br • 2 Ba newer OCEAMVIEW nei(hbors, beaut. view, Tenns.OWCortrade beach. Large3 bdrm. 3 "' • ST25.SS1.fmlafter6PM. frptc, formal din rm. 2 UtllitieaFree! IHng your paintbrush 4' bf"aut. area,.2bdrm, 2ba. 499-3116 bath plus 2 bdrm, 2bath. In&, 2,000aqft, '754·0886 car elec dr garage, Sl2SO townhome, adlta, no
btoomtosave-.ionlhis den . formal din . PALM SPRINGS AREA. Owner will Haist in Condo, SBr 2\<\ ba, encl ~~~:g~.~~4 :~~1:. _m_o._A_d_l_t.s_._~_3-_T1_58 __ -t LAQUJNTAHERMOSA f:~i7fa35 mo. 83l ·80M,
cllrty dawgl I Prime Owner 1a1t eves 4' JBr 2ba. 4 yrsotd. Compl financin•· $C2$.000. patio, frplc, blto ldtcb, IBSO/mo. 3 Br 2ba, tree lined st itl 16211 Parkside Ln, 1 blk L••una Beach duplex weelrenCS.Mt-1519. 1.·-.0n 9 holee-~golf , , W.ofBeacb,3blkSS.of IA.Yn~-.,,. w'/attached,.,.....Sub-uuu '"""' dbl gar w/opnr. S750. WaterfronlHomes,Jnc. Weate'lifr, nlu for Edi.Dger. "' -~
am olfer! iat-1.SOl or I•--------eourse in adlt par~. RonSay'79-53'70 Reallo!'J 631-1400 cpl/aml fam. ms. incl M7·5441 1u.7373 View Sa Jacinto. ._..A.•s (rdnr. NopeU,846-2389 SPACIOUSl.Bi>RM W-9300 aatfor ViraJ.nia. Almost new 2bdr, coMo, ..,..., -'~1.0;;~;;~;:iPk1~~~~~~~~~J 2 atory,'2~ frplc, att. 2br l~ba 9550 Santiago X>r·Euc: bou.e. Lr• private patio, r.tc. 1. l.OO•Qf\bome,5• Pk 2 car 1ar w /opener. 3br2ba 1675-"75 4br. fabuJoua maater hlch beam cel:ii•·
21r,28a,tWaPC>rch, lg 20 UMITS C.M. Avail May 1. ts75/mo. 3br2ba $1250Furn suJte, 3ba, tee fam rtJ\, w•l?t;in ctotel •·
lncdlJ'Cln,edlta64$-lM2 Beautiful 1 year old 1..._Cbl_ld_re_n_ok_._sa.,_3561 __ . __ 1 full liv 1'1!1t fonnal diO ~~a,:d:'~·~~-~
T h u It rm. COi)' akben, lndry Mobile home, 2QX32, dou-own o use . n •. Qlarmln1 duplex, newly nn • many ma117 ei· Bay S\. 9-1 · '!l!e!!!~~!!~~I bh w I de. $35. 500. "1>loe. Nlce area. decorated, 2 Br 1 Ba, Ut traa. $1800/m0. 1 .. , r New port Be at h . TstlNVSTMTSMZ-1603 • l.ul. ti:ZS. 311 E. Zlllt
tlt·Ta. . 2 br, den, 2 bll. Wa.Uc to
beach. Teania Is PoOl
OcdOfroat fOt Wiater
Rentalt, l"u.rDitbed 6 wrturn. Broker. 8'JMIU. MZ:t. Quiet E'Slde upper,
2 JIR 2 Ba, ran1e. 1ar. llST y AWi
Adlti, 00 pets. Ml-1425 Venalfle. comer pen-
Weaulde 2 Br, 1 ~ ba, ~ 2 Br t Ba. comm
cpl•. drp1, bulltlns, poc>I, Jae .• Wit room.
d k v.. •--.. '700 /mo.1'7S.3187 ec • 1ar. • .-...... u . 1 ________ _..
Teq-<MO!&leo.0488
ll~taJ,.. l br, adulta, no
pet&, encl. 1ar., rril 6 elec. stove, 132$. 203S
Nlerton. &o-51184
o-'r.w 3126
•••ft••················ l o3r!2 br. balcony, D.W ..
cl n, coin laundry &.
ws r, gar, nr ocean.
661;-0252.
,~a AOUL T ..di'~. LIVING
• 1 & 1 BR Pi110 AOI\
~ OoShflUl>t•> & 880 \
~ Poot ~ l\t t llOO"'
• G1•0t" La"0\tl 0•"0 n. Joo 10 Bo ch & SllOP\
S G t'
SEA ENVIRONMENT
%UHAMIL TON H 9
962 4 ~00
••• ........
1'50 lbnutrite • Corona de1 Mar
You aretbe wtaMr ol
!he .....
(S12VaJue), &o
tceC~a Aprlln ~
MESA
INDUSTRIAL
PARK
7 t I W. 179'. St.
CotMMIM.Celf.
64M46J
Place a HAPl!Y AD
In Ulla column for OQJy 13.ZS.
CaUNZ-se78
..... §: .__......_,.. ____ _
---~_,;,;
Found: M Germ. Shep,
approx. 1 yr old. Bay St,
C.M. 75~7.631-0121
,.,....... SJSO
•••••••••••••••••••••••
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models ,...,o.c.n. * 972-IJ45 * MC II VISA A~pted
BANKING
,.
'
,.... . ~--
SS ••• s IKKP'G ClBI( ,.1 A.-Im med. openings for ap· .. Loe. Mlaaioo Viejo co. AJlcinta with oanlt eJi<'"
needs Atsemblen w/2 ~rtence. X1Dl benefit&,..: yrs. exp. Candidates and pleasant at -''!
mU1l have gd. manual mospbere. cau· Sylvl• ~
dexterity, ed. eyesleht, Waters. 552-6100. "•'•
neat in appearance & de· IAHIC OF eRYIMI ~ .. pendable. Work I.a in life
support medical elec· "!'!~E!q!!u~a~l~Opp~~f:nl~p!ly~T!!~ tronics . Gd. benefits. ::
Only ':!lf,,°nsl ble penona I perm•· oent emplyml. Med ap-fAf:~ll: Mn. Parelll,
Help y(>un.elf to a •
Heaping selection of l
Quaurled Hopefuls i
in the DAILY ~ILCYJ' "' •
HELP WANTED AD8i
I
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WtCartCarpltCleantn COMt• ~~tn* •••••• HOUSm.&AHINo BIUCXWORK: Small PATmaAN 17 yn uper. wor~lol Portaba. .... a.r-. -~ • ..,... u ,,..... ••:-' W~ taOUIUMJllN!Sl!lt J•M. NtWllOl't. Coeta CU8TOM PAINTINO w/aU mu•°' equip. Ea11DN.wbWW)'-t • worlr 1t1ar. Traek c.f.,__ ....,, 11" .... tdiiftl.ratlq~ Janict'alluactyAN>, lfeuf: frvloe, Rtfl. lQt /t•t. Mat.trlal·labor Stai.~'llic. • Noc,,._. ..._
wt Ult; ..,mt c.,.,..,,. •~Iona a w • t .P la 1 . F re• f7S.Z14 ~. rrui 1 1ur. J'rweat. ••10 lnl-Pordl Coutoicllon ,.
NoSt.eam/NoSballlpoo JSynexp.•malJobe eatlmate1. ,.._ON4 ot EXPERT BRICK la WAU.P...... Co.17a.13» ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••
Stalo 1peclaU1t, IHt Llc.•W Mi-Z'71t 645-lm ROBJN'SCLJ:ANINQ liluoary. Sm.all jobs 6 Prof. lnttalled, lit roll ,,0. lox..... Hwtlst4Ja ...... 1' clry.r,..-. ... 1511 CoronadelllarCollltCo. ttanhlaw ~rvl~&.boro'9sbl1 repaln. ~le fac1n11. b"n l frte . Don , ....................... TltC..
dealfn CGM~ by •••• ;1................. c eanboult. 540-0l57 Befa. 551 • 711).7074 1.-.1uHorfreeest. lrvlne/Newport poll of. Ceramic. Ntw·Hmod. cf.P~~:~.,:e. dt1J1n dlr.c:tor. color C~~~~ft· :,~·~ WE ARE BUILDING a Small Jobi wanted. Brick **PAINTING-Don't flee bo•• unavailable? reu.rai..175-DM
TIP·TOPC•DPE'J'6 ~:t ... ~:....~~·obtaln· ,.P. al ASnbiOC1we'r ·d reputaUoo, not reatlnj and Block. Low hourly cauuni.YouCarel Rent· a · Box Crom TILE INSTALLATJO~
An .... ~w ___ ,t " OD OM. m-lOlf rate , .. J.m aft lpm. 5»-•1 (2' bn) prlvately~ed poetal Floors Klttbeo Batb l'Joor Care. •aee · 14'1,M2-G00,2'bn. . ' aervlce. THE MAIL R ll b' I C rt' Drywel Japa.DeMlloulecluftla& AllTypesllbsGnry NEWPOllTPAINTING SUITE, 5'9·'733 for e a e ra amen C••t. Acr 1 ttc ....................... .....,.o-4....... Experimced. Weet1~. very reu. Uc, bonded. Comm.llndua. ,.,_Jd. rata/aervlces. ~~~ .. ~· Tile Phone
' •••••• •••••••••••••••• D ~'-"-•••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Own Y ,,_ -.&-. Aeouatlc CeOlno rrw ..,.., HARDWOOD n.oc>RS trans. MZ·S198 Bob 50-2'75.S. 531-9808 Free eat. Low rata. Poat Box OC Airport '
+ cuaiom II.and tulurina Qual. • New • re-Cleaned A Wand TWO Lad* wW clean ..._ • ._ 873-0737 Mew 149·2217 Cu.tom Ule imtalla~,
Llc. """-532-5549 mod. t . m.Ji549 Anytime, m-.Dl S.A, your boUM or apt. Esp. ••••"'•••••••••••••••• Palntinl done ret.IODable flrs, kit, batM ft relatea
C___./Ca•:• TaplnJ. Texture • u 1 I t I( depe~ble Is rtf. Movln1? The Starvlna and rl1bt. Call Tom P'N••rty U•111•.t rRoemod,~~..!!'~~-eat. !~~!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ -• Aco&Ubc Ceilin•• Fr.e "" • 5U-t9116--" CoUe1e"'"'~·Mo~in ...... --n-1.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1er ......... ,_.._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• K t -· ••••• •••••••••••••••••• .,.......,. ~----.,,_. P f rvt to ...;_...::....~_...;;::...; ____ _ , d e.t ev D 67" ""'88 Co. baa ...,_.,,,, 1-· ro . le ce aave you r-... •~ ,..__
t oun atioa.a Retalnln1 _,. ·1e11o.. • ~·..-• Haul, cleanu", concrete .. -~-""' tl ·-_, --w ll H~:-1 . R to v•-,,.,... ~ SUNSHINE same 1ood aervice. '"tC....,... me &i money. Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••f1J!•••••••••••••••• a a, tua10e es ra· re_mm!>or.~ al. DUmptruck. HOUSECLEANING tT124·431 License. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pacific R.E.645-3883 AOKTREECARE
brkria---..a.:t lot tlon, Slab1, Patios, •ch'-:.. ~aerv.ec2-7UI Hon t Re:li bl Prof ••1 ••..., LLOYD'SNURS ,., _.. 90....... ...... Bri ... • 1 'd ea • a e, · ... ._, ERY • •----tr---'--Trim/ rernovala, bonaal, a, 1ealcoa in,. ~• • uo. .... c · ••••••••••••••••••••••• DU ... PJOBS Refer ••1 •-1d LANDSCAPECO INC --_....._ -"•pb It .,.,,. ,. 1 M2-1317evea~ • · -·MW ya •BC MOVI"'G E • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ato'41ary animal• ""' a • ,..,..._ ELECTRJCIA.N-priced Small ..... "-"J_..... n , .. • x~er Expert pest control for h I F t
..i .. bt f--•-·•-on •vns .. .,... i.c ... T• prof, low ratea, qwck •~, abrub, t··-" •-In-P ROFESSIONAL re· w o eaa e. ree ea . ~ REMOVAL: concrete, ... • ''"'"' c:au........ CaU MIKE,,.....,1._l ,_. ... ...., u.n • _.. '"' li .,_ Z'l .. "
j l1A Ht --.....__ aapb, 1ra·u-.. , lot clean-large o.r amall Jobs. _,.. -•••••••••••-•u••••••• careful service. 552-0UO door aerviee. Free Eat. aume ae.,,.ce. £op qua . ---·--------~ -Uc t39ml 67""'"'" H l1n ... Dum TAXD•"1ft Li """7 .......,7H3 ty,lowcost.6'2--1470 , .. _..._.. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• up, aaw, break 6 re-. .,.,._ au I• pJobl. "',..., THE "MOVIN·MAN " la c . ...., . ....-... · ... _.. Boottee_pin1 aervicea move. Hrlyorbld. · D.G. ELECTRIC Ask for Randy. INVESTMENTS c f I rt • .. _ llooftltg t.••••••••••••••••••··~ av 11 Kc ffl ~MU 141.aaT Tu_prep,sbeltera,TDs. are u • cou eous ,._,... •••••••••••••••••••••••:SPANISH TEACH!!~ a . ome or o ce lndua /Reaid.IComm Mr. Leonard, 881-93'3. •Cheap. Please call ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUALITY ROOFING native of Spa.in~ prlv. aftA~.J!_esree f'fl 840-0.88 Pool dec .. s, patloa, Qualttywork,freeeat: ""--/shrub trim, '"ara,... 642-1329 EXPERT PlANO tuning claues beglnnlDf, to I v.-. .. Ll 400 '3. u~ • .~ ••-.c• ,..a..aa.-/9 . '--•-repair . Member PTG. All tyj>ea, free est. converiation. He ena ·. masonry, aport court, c. 1 (213)8S7·S57 •yard clean-ups. Free ....................... -·--.i• lpliiMJ .. 848-881.8 Visa, MC. 541-5930 968.9682.~
C.._..1., tennis courts . Lie. llloon est.557·8271 AUTORISK ....................... HARBORROOFING .. !ii£ ................ 374087.851·1986,847·7078 ....................... c .. s.rr&ce c u , ', Fine ext/lot painting by ......... /R.... . fypllM)s.r.lce
. DOOR&•WINDOWS THOMPSON'S CRPT, LIN~O WOOD •••••••••••••••••••••• ance ed. SR-22 s. Richard Sinor. Uc, ina. •••••••••;(.-;; ••••••••• New & r~vers. Repair •••••••••••••••••••••••
· Repalred~Replaced CONCRETECONSTR. Installed .Lie. Elderly • H.andicapl>ed Piri:i1monthly~3995 Tryme.631-6410 (24hn) Neatpatcbes&texturea sp_ecla~iaUt /~1t•Y·b~sJ Prof. Qlty typin1. Cua, Free~ 13$-3720 Uc.393311 642·8482 •38921SO. rq499-211S52 Care Service providing ~T ~DIW". QUALJTYPAJNTERS FrffHt. 193-1439 prices. ea e.548-transcriptions, phone
II'!!. • ill In home rrsonaJ care BARGAIN RATES Leak Repair-res/comm diet , letters. reporta,
• •11 Ty~1 n~....1-Un1 •-CL.u..ac-••• t R.1.cbar or Donna · . f -um ... term "" ~ • --· •• •••••••••••••• lBtqual.mat'l&labor orms, r..., "'"• Repa n, top quality, 17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··~'Eivw·• .. •••••••• 499-5693 • ~enovating-Rototll.ling. Free est. 848-5684 ED'S PLASTERING Beat any bid. 631·9193 papers, en velopea, ~n~ area. Llc'd. Mr. 1511. I '~ * W~RJCES• srrinklen-lawns-clnups •STEVENSPAlNTING AllTypes Int/Ext labels, disc. volume.
l bo: _.. ..... ... ~ • Landscape m=.t·clnups IA-'--D ..... ....... ES w k M I h a • _._,.. Hot I ch ... Cb-'· G 20 ....__.., ave___, Int/ext. ""----1·tem1'z-.. 645·8258 FREE T. ROOAMG or guar. ar a un . ..... •..,.. eorge, u •••••••••••••••••••••• Bud ~1 r '"""' "" 636-0756 ~tr-t-tianPreschool.M!-5423 CLr.AN·UPS/LAWN antaREALLYCLEAN est.Neat,quaJJtywork. INT./EXT.plaster All types, r epairs .---------_...._ .r. 1 '---... ll--&...a ~4561 decks. Free estimates. Wl:tdow Cll J ! ••••h•••••••••••• Ca.-lftg s.rr1cft M a I 0 t e 0 a n c e _ HOUSE? Call Gingham :-;::::,,,,::':....... pNaetact~'29T130yrs(Peaxp). Call Bob S48-0769. •••••••••ru•••• •••••• ~poo & steam clean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• L· ..... ·cape Girl. Free eat. 645-5123 I ter/Ext /R f" is· ha· g _,. ul ......, 181 Cad "•--"ch Limo n er e in n _____ __; _ _..;._ ., __ _.... 5-a-"Let The Swlllhine In ..
r bttgbtenera, wht Newport Cleaning Serv. ""---est. .. .... 9907 ""'rlise '"-···-keepin" g, ""'~ ceilings /wallpaper We •oo15--t--Repairs ~-.. , r··-C llS '"'--w· d •-10 I bl h '"''""' """"" "" UUWH! Orient ruga-tv-stereo· · · r .....,._, ••••••••••••••••••••••• a uns .... ""' in ow crpto m n. eac . C a r p e t U p h o I Cal •-.,__ """'5105 c Hall, Uv .-dln. nns $15 ; Housecleaning, Wtn '. TREES equip &i s upplies bar-phone. $30/hr + n .. .,.,..,, .,.,.,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Burglar•F1re~ScaMers• leaning,Ltd.548-8853
av1rm f7.50;couch$1.0; dowa Hardwood flra Topped/removed; clean furnished.trustworthy& 20%.49f.8394,831·3046 DAVE'SPAINTING SwimmingPoolService S_afes•Physical Bar· Wind ow Expert -
chr •· Guar. elim. pet 631·9""7 • ups, lawn renov. 751·' .. 76 dep641-4970 Se . 9 Reliable. Repairs/Acid r1ers C M /N B S&S odor. c.-tt"'"ir. lS yrs "'' -rvt.ng area years Washes. Reas. 557·Z783 646.4871 · · · · win~ows, blinds, screens
D• r _...k Find h . WA General Housecleaning SEL_L ldll'. items wi_t~ a Reas, ins, lie. 76C}.7301 & mirrors. Reas. Depen-exp. o wor myself. · w at you want m NT ACTION? Reli"able, refs., trans I Daily Pilot Class1f1ed Refs. 531-0101 Daily Pilot Classifieds. Classifed A ... ,, .... ",,.,8 Ad . . Have something to sell? Find what you want in dable. Free est. Gene ""...., ...,, 962-0510 I--·-------Classified Ads 642·5678 Classified ads do it well. Daily Pilot Classifieds. 54S-022S
i ~£~:! ..... !!.~! .. ~~~ ..... !!~~ .. ~~~ ..... !!~! .. ~!.~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~~ ..... !!.~! ~.~~~ ..... !!~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~~ ..... !!.~! ~.~~~ ..... !!~
Banltq IAl«IMCi lookk ...... Cltrt& Businessman seeks p/t CHJLD M . . .#~ TIUSTDHO P/TTB.LBS BANKING Bankina A/P knowfedie helprut. associate in wholesale th MOO:'::!· SS:1 per Clerical
IMVISnen Xlnt oppty. to work in at-IAt«JMG LOAM SECRET ARY 3 to 4 days per w_k. Hrs. supply. 754-1742 ~h0f s · e ~ e r r~ n ~~s: . HYE mS!t00.
COUMSB.OR trac.tiv~ 8"L posilior;us TlllER See our ad in today's Loe.al N:~\ Be~ch ~-1!~e~fi~l~v~t Clo~~~ •CAIDIUYBS• Completecareof20mos. nf ~~~ll~ :::fJ. ~~ep
NeedM for aggressive, avail.. immediately in c la ssified und e r saedvmgs . f u im· Mesa .. CheckerCab oldbaby,preparefood &i a -Neveraf '
young mortcage co. We Anaheim, & Costa Mesa "Secretary" m · openmg or a Loan 77~0022 feed the boy. change pay up to~ of funded offices. Call Kathleen at A• o.t1tmcliltq op-Secret.ary. Real estate diapers, toilet trai.n ,
growth &ou amount to 754-1801. Orange Coast port.Hy exlsh 1o.-• loan e~per. preferred. • IOOKl9B F /C CAPT AIM launder clothes & bathe
qualified He 'd R E. S&L. EOE l•dl•ld ... wltll 1ls Cltb.m... Packagtng for FHLMC. Fashion Island invest-Needed Weekends, the baby constant
M··-• ha ·. Salary commen.surate . . · e:~ro~ ve m· ...,...., ,..,..._ T..... with ex per. Full in· ment firm. Excell. op-stron1 food-wine servlce s u_perv1s1on needed,
Q.o_. C .su.&..m Banking tsperleace. As a aurance bendit.s & paid portunity. Exper. & background send re· pnvate room & board. A-~·71~, ...... 2a.o,. ey LomShlpplld~· .__..._111 ...._.._ __ lal career apparel. Please maturity req'd . Call: sume lo: Ben Brpwn's Take ad to ~tat_e
1 ' .. _.. '"" FH "t: _. L A... ~ ,_ ~ Banking ll 714"'40-0123 Restaurant 3ll06 Coast E plo ment Off
• A A .... COMM-a.., .__....., ca : H So La """"7 m y ice ln ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!! -.. , ._,....... • llEC.nOMST Ms Denny Parisla wy. · funa .,_, Orange COWlty oor 301. Acler DOsition is IL --&.ll....-N rtn--cb.,•-•b dpa)d ' b Biting available 'fn our loan •• c• vn....-H· ewpo _,. ~ aa 71~ IOOIOCl99 CA.SHIER . 67'7·010. A ior Y
Ac warehouse /shipping celle•t 111.-Ms met immed. open1D1 for a MIWPOlrTIALIOA FULL~u••4E ' employer •• ;c.mth dept. bwfita. ...... '-'-• Receptionist. Mustbave s•v ...... s•LO".._. ~• Car wash. Will train .~~~~~~~~!!] 'l''W r-bad previous Recep· ._ .. ...._ • """"' Outstandin& opportunity Santa Ana area. Call :::
Caw..a... Must have experience in tocl9y ill _. ........... lionist's exper. mUlt be E.O.E. for experienced con-Leticia, 644-4460. l•--------•I Clerks
PAITTIMI
Housewi ves, work while
your children are in
school. Part time· pos.
avail. from 9 to 3PM,
Mon. tbru Fri .• to worlt
in speciality drugstore.
No exp. req'd. Call tM
store Manaierfor appt;
~ packaging the loan for Cost• Mesa offlce. personable As enloy atrucUon development, CHJLD Monitor, $581 per
secondary marketing to Co•t•ct SHllLEY meeting the pub le. real estate full charge CASHJER month. Requires 3 mos. FNM.A It GNMA. Call Sal _...h Bar Help, Nl Is PIT. top bookkeeper, for rapidly HOUSEWARESALES exper. Complete care of Er.perteoce Preferred
Alic>· part time positions
av8'able in our South Coast Plaza office. Call·
Kathy Amburgey
• , ' 54().4088
f EllUL ~ .... Lo.
dSTownCenter Dr.
Cost. Mesa, Ca 9216216
..... Opportunity Employer
Miss Bradley. ~ILIHT tG WI g1 ary comm. •m H · SS for abarp. Port 17, per. Full Insurance C.ll e Jt Pan d Ing mu It i · Apply in person: Crown tow children ages 1 & 10. COLDWB.LIAHICEll • lwfet ,.,... mppa~ benefits &i paid career .MS--. corporate NB firm. Hardware, 1024 Irvine, Prepare meals, feed,
ResideontJalMortgage ..... apparel.Pleasecall: Be au t I c I a 0 a " Licht typin& req. (WestcliffPlau)NB change. bathe baby, be .~ces. Ca. Ma.
7
Denny
1
•• .., ~la manictaril&a wl&b clien· Concenial envirooment, sure 10 year old gets to
u•"""' IMPERIAL ,..._ tele; be self-employed, benefits, profit ab.arin1, C.....,./Cltrt& achool on time. Dis-(714)97S.1(8) MIWPOlrf' IALIOA pick your own boura. major medical It op-Exp' d . for Mar In e cipllne as needed. Free
E.O.E. BANK SAYIMGS&LOAH First class salon. portunity for advance-hdware stort!, full time, private room 4 board.
E 0 E ment. Send resume incl id. co. bendlta. Call: T k d t st l 695 Towwc.hrDr. · · · 557.2234 Salary Hist •dates to 'Balboa Marine, 549-9671. a e a 0 a e
Q IJ EOE M F/H Employment Office , Banktn1 COllwW.... Bkltpr fam w/Conal. Co. Pat ParldmooVP. ua / Orange County. DOT
TB.La CA 92626 BARBER/ needs . Dependable. Place Company t 4oo 1---------1 301. 677-010. Ad paid for
E ··'--" 71 ....... t.••oo HAIRSTYLIST w/gd traffic record. PIT Quail St. Suite 135, NB xper. requu..... --AA 9 2 6 6 0 o r c a I 1 CASllERS by employer . IARCLAYSIAHIC bf. 2'2 Full clientele. 70% NB.CM aru644-7917 <7l4 )752.~ c c th E l Opp Emplo comm. with l wk paid
THE GUILD
DRUG
16105-....... Dr. ..... ,.. ....
&~7338
ontact a Y Antunez qua yer vacation. Newporter Inn IOOICJ[llP8
63M5ll IS. 644-2:! lookkeeplilg Cltrt& U Ta TE M ~ E.O.E. M/F/V/H HairDesigns. -2580 · Need full charge to Fulltime,exper. helpful
Placina your Classified ~~~~~~~~~!Placing your Classified operate " supervise but not nee. Many com·
CLBICAL/IDPR
Home Furn ish ing s Retailer needs alert person for general book-
Cletis Pelcy
D . 0 . E .Tru: t t y p e
4S-50w pm accurately.
Gd. benes. Call: Sher·
ree, 540-6055, Coastal
Personnel Agy, 2790
Harbor Bl.. CM. Never • fee. EOE
J ad ls so simple ... just There"s an easy way for ad is so simple ... just Classified Ads are the :y·s?~! · f:/ ~~~fltlbu~ pany benelita. Apply at:
give us a call on the you to sell that bicycle give us a call on the answer to a successful growin'" flJ'tll In Irvine/ 1660 Placentia Ave., • MARKETS keeping & clerical. Must
For2nd&3rdShif\s be se lf-starter. Call phone and we'll help you phone and we'll help you garage or yard sale! It's " Costa Mesa t wor~ 'vour ad for fast re-yodu no l~ge~ ~e. Just word vour ad for fast re· a better way to tell more El Toro area. Xlnt start· ---------sulb M2-S678 a vert1se 1t 1n the ~ people! ing sala~ & benefits. lllEAICFASTCOOK
We promote to manage· 1_B_ru_c_e_644_.-8860 ____ _
ment & s upervision from
5day week. Experienced Ir:=·==~· :::::C:la:s:s:if:ied:! :C:al:l :642:·56=78:·:s:uJ:ta:·:642:·5678::·::::::::::::::855-::1:77:1::::~.-I Full time permanent. only. Good starting
salary &i benefWI. Apply
J.5PM. Jolly Roger, 400
within. WANT A CAREER?
Costa Mesa
lllDel Mar
• •
THE ORANGE COONTY JOB FAIR IS COMING!
MONDAY AND TUESDAY; APRIL 20~ AND 21st
9 A.M. to 9 P.M. .....
AMAHEfM COMY'"'10H CEHTIA
100 W. ICATB.LA AVE., ANAHEIM, CALIF.
FREE ADMISSION
Some of the job openings that these companies wi II be attempting to fill include:
UNSKILLED : Production & electronic assemblers,
warehouse, shipping & receiving, etc.
SKILLED: Machine Trades, Bank Tellers,
Mechanics. Inspectors. Bookkeepers, etc.
CLERICAi..: Clerks. Typists, Secretaries, etc.
I
TECHNICAL: Computer Operators. Programmers. Orafts~n .
Designers, L~ Technicians, etc.
PROFESSIONAL: Englneera1 Ac~untants, Financial Analysts,
Admtnlstratorl/Managers, Sales Reps, etc.
It you are looking for a /ob In the Orange County area, then this Is \he place / I
to be. Don't mlss ltt I Be therellt l>tease bring your pen or pencU./
AppHeattons wlll be accepted. PartJal ll1t ot companies attendlnQ lhlt year's Job Fair Includes: ·
•·ALLERGAN PHARMACEUTlCAl.S
• PAQFIC MUTUAL LIFE INs. 00.
• BANK OF AMERICA • ROCKWELL INTERNATI~
• COl.DWELL IANKEA -FOREST I. OLSON • AUTOMOBILE Ol,U8 OF 80,
CAUFOANIA
• KINNEY 8"0ES • CHIEF AUTO PARTS • DENNV'S INC. • CALIFORNIA COMPUTER CORP. • OIRTlcti •
• MICROOATA CORP.
, . ..
• EMERSON ELECTRIC CO. • vAAco OtL ~oou
• TUNGSTEN CAABIOE M,-CJ, •THOR TEMP • ftCA INTERNATtOHAL INC. • 8MtTH TOOl,
• !ECO, INC. .. • AMIRICAN ~VINGI & L~
• AM OOCUM,tt~TOA • OOMftUTEfl ~OMATIOH • 1HW lICHNICAL • ACCOUNT~U8 800KQ!PINO -
So. Coast Hwy, Laguna
Beach.
SELL idle items with a
Dally Pilot Classified
631-9421
Laguna Beach
49'-9'l33
Huntington Beach 962.91.lS .
Ad. 642-5678. ~~~~~~~~I
mm 8"Hl(ING/OONSUMEI! U)Nj PROCESSOR
~ WE'RE • THE BANK
THAT'S PUTTING
AN fNDTOTHE
DULL WORKDAY.
The fastest draw in~tbe
West. . .a Daily Pilot
Classified Ad. 642·5678.
l!li1 BANKING ~ WE HAVE A JOI
YOU CAN COUNT 01.
Are theJJ any jobs left that you
can oount on? Yes. And we have a
few of them.
We're looking for experienced
oommerdal and chief tellers who
want a career that will amount to
'something more than just a day-
in, day-out job with no future. Our
available teller positions have
that something.
Positions that give the solid
security only a bank can give. Not
to mention the sense of aax>rnp-
lishment you feel at the end of
your day.
All you need is previous teller
experien~ a basic knowledge
of math and the ability to com-.
municate with people in a very
friendly way.
If you qualify call us. there
_maybe a job for you with lots of
room for advancement
It's a job where you11 count
for us.
And oouot OD U8.
Call for an appointment
For Commercial Teller openings
in Huntlnaton &ad>
(71•) 53&88U
fltceD&ia (714) SU-0220
~~==>W'.:o
l
I
.--"-!'~~11111111----~--~ .... ---.-.-.. .............. ~--------.......... i.;m~liii.i"'"',5, 1981 ~~~.!!~ ..... ?!~
...., • ...., 1100 1 ---~ ....,w...... nM .W.w..w 11~w.w...... 11oc .w.w"""'4 1111
cooecs
• mos. exper. Apply
btwn 9AM & Noon.
Charlie's Chill, 3001 ~ RedhUl, BJda. #2, Ste.
1221, CM, 92111211
.COUNTER PERSON for
.f.rint shop, from 9AM·
3PM. Apply in person.
•ll79S Newport Blvd ..
C.M.
•••••••••.••...•••...•• ,{~: ... ~c: ... ~·~ ...................... ! ............. ..,!!~•··~··· ~~~"T •••••••• ~f!········ ••• .,.. .................. . 1MPOaT 1&x.,ott~ SHAia PlalOM,..AY 1 llCWikWIT1 1AU1••10M 1sc•11T!.n 1· Dtnnor,..... IOO\'tt~: vr:-•effed for office la ._w~ °" .,..... bllal r.u • ,.,._., .,....._ • 4•UI• ~ f •
ltf lm~ °'l.:: linaud. opentn1. lrvine. lluat have Medtd. Top PA)'. Ttm-. cs.~, no Dlabt.I. ADDly : .-.eerel r1 •Ji "I plec. lrom..... .. uh lne OPHlllOl' traoaportalion for tt• ~r)'. (UlJ UbM. Call Re ert'I, COit& ...... 11lU11. aowl of bate UM u.& 1'» pe1foc m tfale4 All ctrl' dept. rucb., Mlp wit.II tome TIICJ strvlc.w .a f7$.llCIO ttll ••Port amt. ' bkpt. • ......_ a mu.t.
marteuai a ftulbUlty Costa 11 .. ,a.t. Sa· otnce dutM!i MbUmum ·• ~ ., ~ •• ·~· Ca 11 111 • r 'I o r
atpdlu aod monitor cell. rom~ beollftu. a hn pw welt. Call Joan.ne-Tlf.~ .. aalea treodl. Mutt have :J_~ Y ; DelttonJc, btwn a:so s, Ktrl llC•llOMST SALllP9llQMI .. ·----~;;;_,;. __ • • lD b~ln Or4ly,e~ UI "-~ -m.1124 :t~l!1.1=. :::.:·:. r=d~s!'.:tt:a= "llCllr .. ,'
--------ellper 111 t.ema oea, MA.llMTaw4C-· -.,,,1-PllSOMFRIDA.Y volved. F/Ume, perm•· 2•Ptfi" nee Good • ----,._._.,
* * * trade. P'llilney ln Can· .. t Sal ·-m ltb ..___ • .. · r.n .• ~ ... 7100 -"..,., .. tone•• fs Ensll•h rt· Needed to perform o .. o . r.l'co .... w .......... -...-· Only dedicated , Itri tWI ut-..1 .. ~ ""' For mcMI. l:xpu'd. varied offtcedUd•: lYJ> ex9er. Ca I: Ul-6800, motlvattd. • conaiateot 1401 Hattor Blvd. q .. .iv. _......per mo .. .., 142-JmO lna. computer Input, atifor Jody -applicanta Med ~Jy.
COit.a MeH bn week. take ad to pbone anawerina. etc. tn Exper. ln real •late r•
Youaret.hewlMUof nearest Employment MAMAe• amall frimdly mf'dlcaJ * *WfS* * lat.cl field belplw, but 2 free Mdletl Development Depart-,..., ..... apeci~IUa manulaclur-llC.-rlOMST .,.,_ not neceuary-excell.
<SUValue).to ment Office. DOT Womao with exp. lo inl firm near ocean. 4 lnternat'I. mkta. firm arowth oppty. with ex
I = llU.117·014. Thia ad a a lea It peraonneJ yean office experience need • R • c e P · Profeulonal a a lea pandln1 ~· dj'namlc or·
Acp•rllC21 25 paldforbyemptoyer. 1upervi1ioo to mana1e ls /orcolleaeteveleduca. Uonlst/fypiat for front person or not ex· gaoh:atloo, located In •-• ti J d c 11 desk. HandJe phones, perienced. We can aho• F l 1 v 11 Anabel~ Convention 9utr. ANoc. Im. party ren ... at.ore. Able on requ re · a greet vilitors. 4.SWJ>m re-you the molt succeuful .J.:C:C, a n 1 e 1 ·
Center ..... CC • ...... , lo work Sau. Apply: Terri :~. ~·d. Accuracy a must. method of earning!
Tlcke•s must b e -. n ...... ...., 202SNewportBl.,C:M. k oo1 C II b d i ~!!!!!!!!!!!!=!!~~ • e •-9 :0 am fo 5 :15 pm PHARMACY Tech .. on-am rs. y. a : eyon your ncomt -
chan&ed for reaerved GINHAL OFRCI Saturdays. Exp. ln data MANAG ERs.part·tlme F /Time. Will train. Mrs. Coplan, 559·6901. &oala. SECIEl'A.RY seata at the convention Clerical, c ustodian, process! I or g am for while outlet. Some Must type 40wpm . IMS Equipment, 2805 Harbor Lawn-Mt. Olive center ahead of Ume. librar ian. Full time. 0 • 't' 0 r · Barranca Rd .. Irvine. Memorial Park ia start-to stock brokers Call 642·5678, ext. 272 lo 675-6110 min&, debqgmg prog. colle(e /exp. pref. Mou It o n• P I a z a EOE Brokerage firm . ----------1 languaaes, JCL for 831·3838 Pharmacy, Laauna ing a before-need sales claim yourUckets. • • staff Newport Center. Mature GINY.Al.OfftCI JBM /360/370&dlak IBM Hills. Mr. Dreyfus. · * * * 370/155. Apply in writing MANICURIST needed 768.3784 We are looking for person. Sood typin1 ea· Ot t O .. aWry~. Looklng for a very in-to Coast Community with exper. at Tbe Receptlooltt mature men and women sential. $800/mo. Call
terestlng part Ume job Colleges. 1370 Adams Beehive,CdM675-6720 PLANTLOWMG T,..&lelCJll lo arow with ua. Earn Marjorie 9·l2AM ELECTROMIC in pleasant office? Ave. Costa Mesa, 92626. person needed ro.r pt/· Lucky you! A glamorous while you learn. _644_-_244_2 _____ _
'Growing s wimwear!•--------
manufacturer bas im
.. ,1nedlate opening for
person with 2·3yrs. data
~ ~ntry experience. Call
Julie : 496-1291.
Dato 'roceulng Operator needed for mx-
dorf /entrix systems for
long term assignment.
: Call for more info. Tod
I 'Services. 979-8900
Deliver L.A. Times lo
bomes in C.M. & H.B.
•sslE~•y • R•D Clerical, for mature c reer 'or you Train 1·0 "" .._ .._ 556-5947 by S pm 4/27. lime poe. in CdM. &ift a 1 • Fast growing interoa-person. Location P.C.H., EOE/MF. MICHANICAL sh~. Call : 673·2268, law, insurance claims or lional Co, in st able Npt. Bch. Exper. a TIC...._I,...... word processing. Bring energy field has need for mu.st. Accurate typing, l1t.....c:e ,,_ "'" 9A •4PM. Moo-Fri. your smile & increase
a lead electronic 85· no s horthand. 20 hr. S-....._ TIADa p tr SALES REPS your paycheck. Exciting
s e m b 1 Y Pers 0 0 . week includes Sal & Sun. ·-··-r Laser mfgr. in San Juan Needed to sell sna.ck variety! Plush office. Qualifications incl. 7yrs _c_a_l_l :_S4_6-_7_~_:i____ 7 I 4 / 6 6 I • I I I 4 , Capistrano has entry nice boss. great benefits.
• l I ·5711 level ernilioo for indi v. service program lo local Get OD the phone & call e x Pe r . 1 n e I e ctr o G•n•ral Office 'th 11•-in · h d com pa · E · k "' " w1 s "" usmg an · mes. asy, qu1c Kay Bazan, 540·5001, mechanical asse!'"bl,Y. WOik TIMPORAIY Insurance & power tOols & reading sell. Unlimited earnings Snelling & Snelling of ~CB assembly, Coil wir-PBX Rece ... 1ooilts Personal lines & lite blueprints. Exper. de-potential. 67;l.7320. N•wport Beach A0 ency, 1ng, harnessing , & ...... ....., ' -• bl b "' "' mechanKal assembly; Secre ..... es. Clerks, commercial lines assis· ,..ra e ut not nee. Ex-Quality Control 4340 Campus Or .. EOE
b bl · tant needed for Newport cell. oppty. lo learn r~~~~~~~~~~ e a e to train as-IVICKI HESTONI hasic machinist skHJs. Manufaclorerof electro-r: sem biers ; organize Beach insurance agen· ~ mech nJ J • ed •-i 1 -• c y . s a 1 a r y c 0 m . Call for appt. 493-6624. a ca eqwp. ne s manpower "' mater a l I I allt resources: & dis play & Auoclatea mensurate with ex-E.0 .E. en ry eve qu Y con·
Call for appointment
540·8096
SALES PlllSONNB.
for contemporary retail
s tore. Only career -
minded, mature women
need apply. Must be ex· per'd . Salary plus
comm. Please apply in
person or call: Apropo.
644·2652 or lt29 Fashion
Island. Npt. Bch. EOE
SICIETAltY
Wanted for General Con-
tractors. 631-2004.
SECRETARY.
General contr actor
seeking sec'y w /good
skills, accurate t ypist,
cons truction bac k ·
ground preferred. Call
641-8305. Clark.
d I d hi k'll 18004 Skyparlt Bl. · Pl I r trol inspector. Some pre----goo ea ers P s I s. Ste 23S lrvi.ne per1ence. ease ca I or vlous exp helpful but
D-tal •--z1t-a Qualified applicants . appt.644-5522. Mtcllcal.Aulst.t will train individual with
I ':J.6AM. $375-$450 mo +
~nus. Dependable car.
MS-4481 or 964-4982.
ltENT Al. AGENT
fo r Laguna's leading
R.E. office. Full time.
R.E lie req. 497-S411
Sec r e tary Ad
ministrative Assistant to
President, looking for
consci e ntious take
charge ty pe, ereat
career oppor for riih( in
dividual. s.4(}-8882.
..... A.a• -s hould contact Ray 540.0400 E Chair side tn N.B. Endo. Gilman at Scientific ---------xper In Lab pro-&d mechanical back-
orfice. 21.2 day/week Drilling lnternationa1I•--------• Insurance ~edube~~or N~jPfrt ground. Salary com-
Musl be exp'd, able & 557 9051. E.O.E. General UNDERWRl'Tet 0e,cac.,.4 Ul8luma og sls mens urate with exp.
enthusiastic Top pay ~~~~~~~~~~ TltelalboolayCIMb He'ad Underwriter for ·'""' · Located in SJC Call
631·3380 lsltOW~ $2 ,000,000 book of MEDIC•• Tom Johnson for app't. Electro-mechanical ._....,. b'I b · · ~ (714)831 ""'~" DENTAL ASSISTANT automo 1 e ustness m . .......,. Reg . chairside dental Technician /Sr. Unusual , Pro Shop expanding general agen· TRANSCRllER opportunity for mature cy for both liability & Work al home, lop pay. ass't s.45-9475 _ _ _ person . Resume lo: AHeml.t physical damage. At-1 Requires minimum Syrs
Dept OCP/2268 . P.O. Sat /Sun, 9AM·2PM or tractive salary & frmge1 acu te hospital ex· Detttal~Ofc B 76387 LA C 90076 2PM·7PM. Tues /Fri, be f"l k C n I . all ...._o r •nd Cha1rside. Fun at· ox .... a 4PM-9PM. Sales. re-ne Is pac age. a : per ence tn .,. ... ses o " Linda, 714-549-8161 medical dictation. Mon.·
R.E. SALESPERSON for
sales. exchanges, invest·
menls. High comm. New
& P /T ok. Newport
Pacific R E. MS-3683
RESTAURANT
Sandwich Maker hfs
7AM -3PM Mon ·f'ri.
64&·8883. call anytime
Route Walker
Sales
RENTAL
SECRETAIY
Permanent part lime
from l to 5pm. Gen of
rice, small lab. typing
reports. 549-1083 ---------
mosphere salary tom·•--------• servations & reception F · "mens urate w /exp ENGINElllfTICH. duties. n .9·5.768-8500.
. 00-7580 Darlene TEM,OltARY JEWELRY SALES
Real Estate Sales
Experienced agents are
needed to work with ex-
ecutive level c lients.
Must have proven track
record . You will be
working with pro·
fessional associates. Our
ortice offers:
Joggers. earn while you
JO&! $4 /hr + bonus.
5/hrs a day. Liqu1dyne
Energy Systems Call Al.
1~·053S.
CONSULTANTS
B r euner·s R ents
Furniture Showroom in
Westmins ter seek s
career oriented person
for entry level pos. in
home furni shings Breuner's is Califom1a 's
largest furn. rental co. &
needs qualified sales &
mgmt. staff for expand
ing mkt. Retail exp pre·
SECRETAIY /leQCll
Experience m litigation
or collection. Non-
smoker. Huntington
Beach. 848-1400
f'd. Will train. $4. hr., de· -------11111!1-
E I e c l r o n i c M"'s SoaAHewdmnt Exp pref. Apply In
.. ; 1 DESIGN engineer/technician for SAM -2P&1 , Mon thru person, Klrk Jewelers, _.. debugging /te:;llng of Fri., 5:30AM-12Noon, 2300Harbor Blvd.C M ', ~ EMGrtH~ new Mil spec. carcwt de4 Sat1Sun -Mfg. co. in Mission VieJo velopmt. Must be ex· •area needs exper 1n 'd · d · · w ft IVl-'"---eleclrical connectors. per ·'" esignofswitch a .,., ..... ~s mode power supplies & l year dinner house exp.
-e rm et i c s e a I s · analog ctrcwts. RF ex· 4.5 nit.es. SPM-llPM transducer design, com ~r desirable. 3 mos.
ponents materials & Job with growing laser Please call for appt. • methods. Duties include design, co. Independent contrac· 64 5 7 3.S8 . Mon.Fri . tor status lcoosuJtanl) 9 ·JG.SP M drafting. matenals te'it· • arceotable Potential for -~~~~~~~~~ ing & R&D pro1ects permanent employ· 1 Mechaniral Engineer-ment. Call · 493 6624 GROUP REP for foreign
tog degree pref"d EOE exchange program in ~ualified candidates ~~~~~~~~~~l o.C cities 3-4 weeks send resume to Mrs. I this summer. Should
J a n s . 2 3 8 9 I V 1 a File Clerk know commWtity welL
Fabricante. Suite 603. Part Time Find host families. or-
Miss1on VteJO, Ca. 92691 Call Cindy Spnnger gan1ze program. take
Cormier Delillo students on tours. Xlnt
s2o5 .80 to S411 60
WEEKLY workmg part
,or full lime National
eompany. Start 1m
mediately No t•x
perience necessar~
Ve ry httle outside work
~No selling. Send name
and address for com
plete details to AHIA.
4414 Centerview. L>epl
264, San Antonio, Texas
78228
Chevrolet salary for the energetic
182 11 Beach Blvd & enthusiastic. Please
847-6087 send letter or resume to
s.49-3331 I n t e r s l u d y 4 8 2 2
Barkwood. Irvine. Ca
92714
$1 ,QOO GU.AIDS
Full & Pert Time F'ull & part time. All
Expanding co. needs areas. Urufonns Cum'd.
hard wo rkers Co. Ages 21 or over, retired
benefits. Rapid adv an· welcome. No exper. nee.
cement. Car needed 18 ·A pp I y : Uni v e r s a I
& over Protection Service. 1226
Donut shop. Early AM CALL 10AMT03PM W 5th St., Santa Ana.
: shirt. no exper nee App· 7 14-847-2422 Interview hrs: !H2 & 1·4, ~ly : Oipp1ty Donuts. 1854 ~~~~~~~~~~ _M_on_·F_n_'._
~port Blvd C.M. r ---Health -GENERAL OU1 ce. . DRIVER. for light de swimwear mfgr. has im-EVERYIOOY LIKES
liveries tn Harbor area. med.openingforwellor· A WINNY
Neal ~ppearance, full or ganized person. Will Be part or the fastest
. I part-lime. good dn\•mg train for various duties growing company in the
record. Call Sue .540.4174 Call Julie, 496-l29l health & nutrition field.
, Master Blueprmt, 234 -Unlimited income opp-
; Fischer, C.M Ftnd what you want in ~i-~~.Mr. Armstrong :
·Sell idle items 642-5678 Daily Pilci Classified!!.
..
I ' ..
,,
·'
._ Newport leach loalt to
Lingo Rrst
CAREER
OPPORTUNITY
Help wanted Cit, p/t
sandwich man & counter
help Plaza de Cafe,
Gary's Dell 752-5401.
HELP WANTED!
Telephone solicitor. No
exper. nee. Excell. co.
benefits. Commission
program & profit shar· mg. Apply in person:
Pennysaver, 1660
Placentia Ave .. Costa
Mesa
HOMEMAKER
Opply for homemakers
to develop mkting
career. We train. For
appl. 962·0010
HOST ,IHOSTISS
Full & part lime availa·
ble. Apply in person
3-5PM . Jolly Roger. 400
So. Coast Hwy, Laguna
Beach.
Housecleaning. lady
needed for 3 hours per
week $6.50 per wk
6'5·3331
Insurance
ACCOUNT ltEP.
FBS has openings in
Customer Service Dept.
lo service automobile in-
surance accls. Must
have gd. oral & written
communications skills.
Exper. desirable. Start· ing salary comm. w /ex-
per. & ability. Excell.
co benefits Ir rareer ad·
vancement potential.
For appl., call: Linda,
714-~9·8161
KITCHEN HELP
lo learn food prepara-
tion SJ.75Jhr. lo start.
Working hours . SA M-
1 PM , M-F . Lori's
Kitchen. '.l1T1 S. Harbor
Blvd .. SA Call. 979-0747 1
for appl. I
Lab Tech Exper lab tec h for
Newport Be ach
Rhe um atologisls Ore.
644· 1881
LEGAL
Growing Santa Ana law
office requires 1 legal
tra i nee & 1 legal
secretary. Good basic
skills a must. 641 1358 (Jean)
LEGALSF.cRETARY
Laguna Hills recent
Calif Probate exper
necessary. Xlol typing &
S/H skills req. Call Mn.
Win s l ow for appl. 837.1()60
LEGAL SECRETARY
or paralegal with
lteo•y • .,.,. ..........
pl••1tl•9. Airport area.""· lch. c• Jackie aft. I :lOPM,
IJJ..ttll.
LEGAL TRAJNH
Unique Npt Beach Law
Office seeks ambitious,
legal trainee /recep-
tionist to start approx-
imately 6/1. Your op-
portunity lo grow & ad·
vance. Xlnl typing Is
communication skilh a
must ! Experience
helpful-but not required.
Sa l a r y open phone
Barbara 648-4466
LEGAL TRAJNH
Small Newport Beach la w firm aeelts legal
trainee. Successful can-
didate should have good
1eneral otnce skilla Ir be
eager to learn. Will
train. Starting salary
1750-$800. 851 ·9'34.
LINGUAID '
P /tlme. $U5 per hour.
144-M<M
j J
•t Llq110r Clen. P/I'. nltee.
--~------Alk for Steve:
.. -~·-
MODBJNG,
Comm 'ls. films, ex
lras ... SCAS needs new
faces. all ages. 957·0082.
Need i mmediately
couples for janitorial
route own 'trans/phone
good pay, reliable peo.
pie 581-27:.l.
HOWHllJNG
Food Set-Ten
Host-HodnMS
loollti11per
1 .. Pll"IOM
Ir you a re interested in a
new & exciting career in
a fresh fish 1r seafood
dtnner house pleue con-
tact us ~.Gary & Paul
McFADDEN'S
BAYSIDE 333 Bayside Or. N. B.
Applications a ccepted
Mon -Sat. from 3PM·
5PM phone673-2733
'"WE OO ITWlTH FR ESH FISH !'.
OFFICE MAMAGSt
A young consulting finn
m Newport 8ch IS look-
mg for an exper office
manager This person
will handle all acctg &
finance incl s late &
federal laxes. Some ex·
ecuti ve secretarial duties also required.
Competitive salary in·
eluding benefit package.
Call Bobbi 759-8972 & aft
6pm 551·51.84.
Order De* Girl ~usl have~. handwrit· tnf, ans. es. some fi Ing. all 8 to 5 ,
549·1157, Pickwic k
Paper.
Ortho Receptionist. P tr
for fun office. Flex. hrs.
Xlnl wage. 552-7801.
Outside Sales agent
needed for travel agen·
cy, exper and /o r
w /following . Orange
County Airport area.
540-5851
PARKING UYI' BOOTH
ATTENDANT & DOCK
ATTENDANT. Apply
Mon thru Fri, btwn 9am
&5pm.642-4644
Part-lime, lo assist prod.
mer .. garment mfg.
$3.75/hr. 631·TT10
Manar~menl Marketing
Spare lime income.
from your home .
Unlimited potential for
people-oriented self·
starters. 851·9352.
PartTne co .... ,, .... c....-.
Adults with C>lUtanding
attractive penooalilles
to spend 15 hn per week
counaelln1 youth a1ea
10· lS . Evenlnes at Weekends AvaUabfe. 175
per wk . C all
. 2:'-°"5 :JOpm. Mon Uma •Fri. 842-4331 ext. 343.
~klorLori. 002;:r
no w~ySlreet
Cotta11 ... c •.
Equ•I Opport. f!mploye'
•Best beach location
•Liberal commission
Program.
•Nat'l referral program
Call now for appt
Walt Hemphill, 673-7300
ltlCEl'T /TYPIST
Sharp person with ex·
ceptional typing skills &
knowledge ol bookkeep-ing. Small engineering
office. 957 -1141 , o r
832-7996
Sales
AHEXCmNG
SALES OWTY.
We are entering a
tremendous new field of
entertainment that is sweeping the nation. We
are lookmg for a sales
oriented person who has
a desire for above
average income. You
must be personable &
confident tn your abi~ty to communlc1He with
others & have dependa·
ble transportation We
pending on exper Full SECRETAIY p ft
or p /time. Mon-Sat.. Excellentop"""'un1ty1n 9-5:30 & SWl. 12 Noon· ,,... •• SPM. Contact. Cindy new, modern sales offi ce
Mills, 891·2388. EOE in Irvine. Good pay &
~~I~Ylr!~~~~
mercial /industnal real es tate company has
openings for a
secretary /bkkpr.
Shorthand req. Exper. is essential. Salary 1s com· mensurate with expr.
Ca ll Georgia al
Corporate Realty Inc
975·0888
Sea ms tress needed .
Prefer experience sew·
1ng sails Santa Ana.
working conditions. Re-
quires good typing &
telephone skills Mom·
ing hours. ~2782.
E.I. DUPONT Equal Oppty Empl M 1F
Sec rel a ry /Receptionist
wanted for manufac.
lurer o r top quality
sailboats. gd office skills
req. Insurance & other
benefits 751-1343
REC E PTJONIST-Busy will train if necessary.
relocation firm needs Excell. fringe benefits.
mature . personable. re· Af ply at· Teleprompter
ception1st capable of o Newport Beach, 901 __ _
handling very busy W. 16th St.. Newport Secretarial
547-1344
SECRETAIY
Fullt1me . RE
knowledge helpful, but not req Newport Center
developer. 833-8300
(Susan).
rr. Beach phones. front o ice ap-1-~~~~~~~~ SALES SEC'Y SECRETARY. hvy typ
mg, top salary Fashion
Island. 644-5~1
pearance a must CBX 1-Rolm System. good com-SALES W1lh a young dynamic
pany benefits Call computer billing sales
Frankie 752•0707 lo ar-CO-ORDINATOR organization. Must have D1rert phone contact xlnt. verbal s kills . range for interview w t dislributor & clerical or secretarial
E.O_E_M_F__ _ customer. involves or· experience. Call Linda
der placement. entry & Devorkin at Safeguard
follow up for standard Health Care Systems.
catalog items. Training 714·957-1121.
* * SECRETAIUES• * Accountanl/DegS24.000
Reep trSO/FWlS12,000
Legal motdictSlS,000
Exec tshlOO/corpS18000
Ex pd. Consultant Ours
Liz ReindersAgy, Inc.
4020 Birch Est '64 EOE
Newport/833-8190/Free
Receptionist/General Of·
fice. Growing Newport
Beach R E develop-
ment firm has 1mmed.
need for recep -
tionist/general ofCice.
Heavy phones. typing &
public contact. 752-9484.
provided Pleasaot 1 working environment in
Irv. Start $1,000 to $1100
mo. Belden Corp Elec·
tron ic Div. Contact
Jeanette Hall 83J. 7700
Receptionist, lite typing, Sales
filing , answer phone. GREAT HOURS
Ai rport a r ea. Non-
smoker pref. 549-2400.
RECEP110NIST Pleasant olfice In N.B ..
heavy phones. 549-7971.
Receptionist with gd ly
ing & spelling s kills
N.B. location. Satar
open . Ask for Pa
wkdays: 675-QOO.
REC En /CLERK , ........
Jacoby & Meyers, one o
America's largest la
firms, Is seeking
Receptionist/Clerk fo
our Mission Viejo office.
You must have previo
experience with good or·
ganlzaUonal skills, Uk to deal with public, wor
efficiently for approx
imalely 2tllrs per week.
Typing• 40wpm. J( yo
meet the qualifi<l,lllions,
• a re interested ln lh position, olease call Co
an appl. &twn lbe hou
of 9AM 64PM.
A't.=· JI t
JACOIY & MIYHS
618 So. Sprina St.
L.A. California, 90014
llC.-rlOMST Art /Full Receptionist.
Typinr. lilbt bookkeep.
log It other cleric•
work. Hl.SMfl & Assoc.
851·1651.
9AM-2'M
or
4PM-9PM
Join the Los Angeles Times Circulation Team
& adapt your work
schedule to your
lifestyle. Work 5hrs/day
ln a Times Circulation
sales office near your
home & have more time
for your family, studies,
or leisurely periods. We
pay hourly wages &
commissions.
LOSANOELESTJMES 1375 Sunflower Ave.
C.M.
~l
Equal Opportunity
Employer
SALES
Jmmed. part time open·
in g for Reader Ad
representative for inside
sales position. Gd. com· pany benefits. Apply In
person: Pennysaver,
1860 Placentia Ave .•
C.M. Mon-Fri .. 1·5PM
SALIS
Major publishing firm
has openlnes in o.c.
area for sales reps.
Protectec\ territory, high
comm .• no travel, com·
plete training. In·
lerviews will be held
Thurs It Fri only, Call
for app'l 50-40&0.
RECEPTIONIST, aen. Sala otc. duties, F /time. Now hlrln& Au tatant
Tues·Slt., pvt. country Mana1er Traineel. Min.
club. can: &44·5404 Imo. exper. Call for ln· lentew: IG-1231.
SECRETAIY
Answering phones. typ·
ing & gene r al
sec retarial work .
Newport Beach. Call
Sam. (213)376-6945. Find what you want in
Daily Pilot Classifieds.
·••••• f Daily Piloi I General Assignent :
: Secretary to :
• Executive Office • e Immediate opening for versatile individual..
• M~t be c~pable of handling fast-paced:. vaned and interesting duties for newspaper
• executive & personnel administrator. Call :.
• 642·4321, Ext. 277 for appt. •.
: Editor's Secretary :
•A challenging opportunity is belna offered by.
• lhe Dally Pilot for someone with thee
inlelliaence, wit and skills required lo ~ e secretary to the editor. It's an interealina•
• position requiring the tools or the trade -80. ··wpm dictation, 70 ~m typing, dlctaphooe -.
and the ability to shift mental gears on lhOrt
• notice. The benefits are aenerous. the pay•
• reuonable. Applications being accepted only.
through appointment by callini ... 842~'3al
.ext277. •
: •ccounts Payable :
• "!'' Bookkee,er •
•A full·Ume position Is available for accurate •
• person with at least two years expert~ b\ •
• process~g accounts payable for computer •
Input. cash r eportina and dlabunemen( e scheduling and forecasUna: Will prepart e
• bank deposits . Must possess lood ofttc•e -
•
skills. Permanent poeiUon with 1ood sal~ •• ,
and company paid benefilB. call: 6'2""'31f . e Ext. 277 for appt. ,. I
: Classified Outside Sales ~: -
e saluperson to handle Real Estate~ •
•Development account• and automotive~. accounts. Must have at least a years
e expetlence. Salary plus commlMioa. Must'. have car, mUeare paid. Ex'*1em company· e benefita. For appointment for tntervtew. can • -1----... ~-.-·842·567&., ext. 277. • i..1.!' ='~~... • . Part Time (Qainn,, • •!'Unf•n•d. brae Ci i•iY .... ~ ~ !ft&,~!:i·~= Fil •Adult. with oulstandiU •Hncllve•
• • e person1UUft who enfoy wortc.lq Wit.h 10.1se
.year ofd )'OOlht , Start al S4 001hbur. a;ao PM •
• and 5::.> PM. 6'2·'321, Hl ~3. . ~~ . • .::11.~ e Cotta Mesa. CA' • F.qu.al Opportunity ~yer •••••••••• •
I I
I
l
I
,. wlhw • IOIO Or•nge Coat DAIL V PeLOT/Wldnelday Aprll 16 1 "•1 !11 ....................... -_. • 9V ~
tllllll••Uihi .. IOU Olrla' BR : ni1but1nd, ~'-•awl ~~/ . Trildl ti ~-.... ... *-"'· mincw, cbett, I • __. 1,.,.1 9.,.7 desk hutch. clWr twtn ! J • m · -v •••••• .......... ••••••• •••••• •• -........ .... ~-'1 bed. (~mpl.). ••••• ................ ....................... •Ca...MU .. O •CAnWMJl9c,
..,,.. BR: dtMl bed, Smit b •Coron a I.UY V>4111Sh6re IUH ... OIMOI'
twlD matt. dellr, byte~. a'=~~I~ .r:· with dual ,...,., W.al sza.. c•ett, 1oed eond . Call DeteboTBay 6 for Jandacapen, etc. !:I!'~~,
1--.......,..___...;;;: ___ ,-~ •51oe Beach. Aallt for Janet (Ser. 80!lt). ' ras~
Vet.rtnaey rr.im.l Wt, 10~~ Wat#bM v1 .... w~ tide Smith, 131·71DO. .. ................ !~ OWO~ .! !.!!_I OPBN W&aDfDI relleble, bardeoorillD•, -~ .. ,_ ~ • H -~,.... CALL a> penoaneeded,881·1151 ..... •• .. •••••••••••• ~.-wUJhelPs.c •y dt1kt 117$/ta., 7IK001 ll'wtt.hlllb• Dove•QuallSta.
· Nllrkor mat rn w/I 0 utemble&llO•sssa dt1kl NO·SlOO, Flle EvlJlru~e. Very cleao NEWPOJt>J'BEACH TH-14lT
Ynm.IMAIY/..., 50mOa a... flalb, IOOll'l IOU uU moat of e1blnetMl-ll78 :Jt,h UO/bn. us-4713 llW15 ...._, d4 W ! hlJ Or p/Ume 12 DOOll Jen.a, 6 many other ac· f·I lt immedl tel r 5pm. ••N•••••M•••••••N••• to tpm Mon ihru Fri c.aori•. ~erythlo1 ln ,.m ure a y, ,... IOl7 '71 El Camino. New Alfel'.... .,. &>over Shn Vetertnary brand new cond. s.2$. CaU5$2·7'707bel. 'ltipm ........................ ,_1poutwllua palnt, wheels 4 tlre1 ....................... .
llolpltal.S.O.TOllO 540-5119 ..... s. 1051 COCKATIELS . Breedla1 ....................... Pa/PB/AC. SlOOO stereo L~ •sE ....... c• 1035 ....................... rri~lth c::!deettup.ror c.....,.. S./ 1y1tm. XIJit cond. $3800. Iii.A ~""'"aSJWAITll •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Waterbed $130, CoJOr TV afoo M· M) obi~· llleilt tl20 538·4142 DIRECT' • aatun. P.rCvate Club. tlilver Tabby Shorthair SUO. many other mile d ce. d t • t lk ' .. ••••••••••••••••••••• • Intervtewa Thursday, apayed female Due to 1t,m1, chuP.l All week ~ai!!1 lamM C a . a. • CAMPER8pack stove '74 Chevy LUY P.U.,
T••c... 11·4PM, 1801 Bayalde clrcumatances~uat flnd 1on1! 17082 'A" St, HB. 1 !!r!....~ l:Sr~~~ &icebox. ' needs engine repair 1911 ALPA1 -Dr. CdM. adwt home ror my com· 842·2813 Beach/Warner ~t!.091 _, 64.2-3'80 make offer ~3643 SPIDllS
Seeret.ary Eo'd fo'1aid p /t WAITRW/WAITER panlon. Lee&&S--0130. ...,.,•lry 1070 ed.... 9140 '78 Chevy, 6 cyl, ~ ton. '
lbec. S.C......, ~~'!i"~~ ~ on f;'8~':i'i W /car tor wicker basket "'--1040 •••·~··•••••••••••••••• 2 lar&e blrd caaes. beaut. 4spd stick, 37,000 ml. IEACH IWC>l'TS To ,,_ld1at I u n ch •er v Ice . :::?: .................. Genuine RUBIES 20 pt.a white wrou1ht iron. Very clean. 13150. Call 8'8DoveStreet ~
Flo . Svcea. llrm , 499-I088momings 9:30-1:30PM, Mon·Fri. KEESHONDPupa.AKC. eacb,Marquisecutyour 640-8&49. moped, &ood condition 642·9271. NEWPORTBEACJI
...... ~n bland, nds. to,~ Teoc..,..1 ... Earn $125-llSO wkly. Champ aire. M/F. Pet cboi~e only S3S per ra .... & ar,.. IOtO $200. Irvine, 752·5963 -,7-4-D-a-ts_u_n_m-in-1·.-l-ru_c_k-1, 752-0tOO
no"'" exec. sec'y. or Preschool. Mon-Fri.. Must be neat, persona· 1 how . Pvt pt y . ne. 64~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• C'I If ---------very busy, chall'g. poe. 'mornln11. 4 br. day, ble" eneroet.lc ~0747 213/197 "'5aft8pm I Ou ..... t I t ed auto, am m, runs good, AIMii 9701 s t r 0 n ' ex p . • Garden Grove area. •• . • . Ct •n• 1010 uen.., p ano UD • Scoo t 150 needs body work, 1400 .................. ~ ....... .
type /shrtbd. skills a 9'71·5533 aft lOAM for eppt. Ea• t er pups, AK C, ••••••••••••••••••••••• refinished new keys, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96().5572 71 AUDI
must . Non·amk rs . ---------•Wanted p /t delivery Blchon Frtaepu.... Lo••l•a-plays 1reet. 845·60S6 II indoor Motorcycle l E I T E E P H ..-.,_ ... eves s ... ..... '80 Datsun Lon& bed, m1r· Dynamite Foit 2 door P e a s e . x c e . L O N E ~raon 11·5 car pro-N-43TZ. ..,.,n .. someone you lo9e a · wap -eet.. uu.es, parts, sunroof. Automatic 6
dent/med. beoea. CaU: Switckboard()per. Some vlded, call suaan at DOG TD"'l'UTIUG IN bouquet ol 30 multi col· PlANO. New, HENRY F. & acceslOl'les. Friday, ~~ J;,:171411i::a.~· air. lt'sslickl (S35XDF> 714-M0-0123 typlnr.-6 day wk. Apply 631-7240 ""'"''"'' ored balloans Heavenly MILLER, $1200/0BO April 17. 6pm-llpm. O.C. ._.795 ~~~~~~~~~I lo Hotel ~. Mn. YOURHOME For Easter & your own 7eo.1S68 Fairgrounds, C .M. V•s 957 -SICllTAIY BaJtuar. 4fN.ll.51, 4.25S. w ..... _,,..,. Obedience personal message. 24/br. info. lntenhows JIM MAIUMO
Coast Hwy, Lq. Bch. Mature, experienced, ProblemSolvln& J>ierfect for everr oc· GRAND PIANO 498-9228. ~;;;;;;·~:·:~;~:;~:. VOLISWAMM
GIM.OFC.P/I' for sailboat hardware AAAHOMEDOG cuion. Wedel ver. Beautiful tone, music ,79 HONDA 750CBKJdnt ~b,reg.gas,$17501080 l8711Beach 81vd. 2J0..2S hrs. per wk. (or one Telephone b · N B .,~E c .... ~ TRAINING. 638-9265 173-4419 teacher sells. Reasona· -1678 14•2000 1J LAY OH THI lliCH witness. · · ,_.._.. cond. w /XtJ'a's low mi · .,. • w o m a n < 3 m a n ) I F ood h b''-'"TTH p••..--s•. ble. 1163·8840. •2soo Call day only engineeringo<c.inCosta AUDAY . WELDERS MacGregor ree to & ome IA "' """'.,. • Alltos W..t.d 959 '78 sooo, X1nt cood. luUy Mesa. Excell. salary. 10 Immediate openings. Yachts, 1631 Placentia, Lab, year old, very !ova· Near new GttJCO EM·400 Sewing MachMl1 1092 631·2068 ....................... equ.lped (170TZW> pp
· Please call Tom, arter Short application. Work Costa Mesa ble. 548·~ airless sprayer. Isl S750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,7 K Hond Lo 1 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 831-9387
<J • S : 30P M. Mon· Fri., S-9pm. Mon· Fri, talking ________ _, takes! 642-S312. Necchi Dial-a-Stitch, all 7 750 4 a. mg, for top us ed ca r s . W
9712 64S·2842, Thompson on our telephone. Deep WOID NOCESSOlll Easter Puppies. Cham· wood fold-out cabinet w top cond. Best offer roreign, domestics or IM
FloalationCo., EOE voices preferred. Mag JI for law office ln Py~oll~l~b/adKoCr Rr~~·. Sanyo .!Shone Answering brass handles & pull.up 642·2S32or63l·S067. classics. tr your car is •••••••••••••••••••t •••
$3 .35 /hr guaranteed, Huntington Beach. Non· 53&.0906 ~achtne, t95. Xlnt run· spoolrack,allattach,pd MOPED· MTBC good extra clean, see us ForTheBest more money easily smoker. MS-1400 ---------1 Dlng cond. IJ4G.SS21. _S85_00., sell $450. 631·4870 cond , $37S FIRST! Buy Or Lease Deal
Secretary poss1'ble Come b 3 L Be t Id l . h Se Cit l ANG u• ....... In Orange County ...
-..... ,, Ent. 1180 N. Coast Hwy, ter, papers & shots, Jov-avail for sale $00/pr. box ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2) H d T 11 B'k k & V~ ltw · Y Mere....... au . 1 yro ns l· o ce EL Tickets Sporffn9Goock 8094 _...._.., ~ ComeSeeUsToday!.
Spice of Uh! N. Lag Bch. Wk dys at ••••••••••••••••••••••• It· d S7S 642-0862 673 7795 aft 8PM f h. 1 f ( on a ra 1 es Are you Ured o( routine? 3pm. First come, first ........ 1005 _ea __ ,_s_. __ . -----i seats · 6 ts 1ng po es. or surr, 70cc, & (1) Yamaha MX
Act now to bring excite· hired. •••••••••••••••••••••••PUPPIES: Ready for * * * deep sea, lake new, 90cc S800·Motorcycle
ment to your work day. WAMTEDTOIUY Easter64&-~ MCll"CltCilbert $lS-$l8.S48-9832 carrier for front of
Your skills are needed ... ---------r I buy old guns, 6weeks nghtnow 103 ViaAnlibes TV,Rodlo, traveltrlr.S'lS.546-7046 ! by a busy executive re-T1ttfft & Lo. diamonds · ory j d & Newport Beach H IFi, St.no 8098
#I 111 Or-,. C-ty
292S HarbOr Blvd
COSTA MESA
SADllEBACI
BMW -•dY to hire. 1,.,_· Free to C ..__er-le . ' iv I a e B •a u t Ir u I Go Iden ·----------vv·lf) 111._.-_...... • Uecllbl Ca I (714 ) " Youarethewinner or ••••••••••••••••••••••••· you ! Call: Marjorie Newport·based com-~2 & es.kc Retriever pupe, 8/wks 2 frffffdwts Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr '76 KZ400
Sullivan, 540-SOOl. Snell-puter service bureau, ·4926 as or Da.ne. old, AKC. 661·1996. ( 112 Value). to wrnty. Free delivery Xtras, nu tlres/batt.
In g & Sn e II i n g o r s e r v 1· n g r 1· n a n c ,· a I * * * ••48 "~6 1786 Best offer or trade. Newport Beach Agency, customers state-wide, _.._ 548-8192 J~•..&a.1..-.L. Give a bundle o( uncondi· I Ice c~ .. ... .
-..... 4340 Campus Dr., EOE tfonal love to yourselC, I April21 25 Phase linear pawer amp,
--~=~~~~esreapr~~s~t~'ti!! 9322 em Ave. your parents or your Anaheim Convention digital synthesized tuner ~~~~~~~~~ ; Westminster kids. Shih-Tiu puppies, Center 1973 H da 350CL In
..
witbmin.of3yrs.thrilt Youarethewinner of llwks,4~5004 Tic kets must be ex· JVC pre·amp & eq. on .· x t
SECRET R & loan experience. Ex· 2 fneffdwts changed for reserved wtblt In graphic spec· cond, 13.000 orig mi. A Y cellent fringe benefits, ( $12 Value), to fTff to Y• 1045 seats at the convention trum analyzer, Harmon· Must see to apprec. S700 Bonk Experience great opportunity for Ice C__... ....................... center ahead or time . Kardon tmtbl w track. firm. S40-S719
growth. Call Norm April2l'\hru 25 Free Pu PP i es ' CaU 642-5678, ext 272 to Make orter.644·5366 ___ '80 H o nda ATC llO, W b I DePlanque. ON-LINE Oobe Old E llsh I i e ave an mmediate c 0 M p u T E R AnabeimConvenlJon rman/ ng c am your tickets SQR 8750 Quad Rec. & Bassani pipe, Cooler
opening ror a Secretary SYSTEMS. 644-1801 Center Sheepdog mix, 3 male, 1 * * * 6300 Turntable w tspkrs. rack, ridden 3 limes. like wilb a mutlmum or two r~~~~~~~~~ Tickets must be ex· female . 493·4172 Ive 0 0 $7SO D BROWNING Broadway $500/ B 673-2244 eves. new , . ave yea.r s platform ex changed for reserved meas. 7 893 8059 aft s 842 6978 perience. TOPLESS MODaS seats at the convention ·-----b-----1 Trap, 12 gauge, Belgian ~3·3320 · ; · • · ·
S75 DAY, PAJDDAILY. center ahead of lime. Pretty Ta by' fem · Beauty, a must to see! loah & Merine Motor H-., SaM/
Responsibilities include Noexp.nec.826-2S83 Call642·5678,ext.272to spayed , needs good Mintcond.Sl600Hardto s-..a-... Ret1t/Storage 9160
.heavy loan documents-claim yourtickets. home. Landlord won't come by. 631·1949 or •• ::r:r:::::••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
tion, customer contact TIUCK DIJVY * * * allow. 497-3989 631·1SS4 GeMral 90 IO WE CAN SELL
and notary servi~es. With good pickup P/f Yellow Lab Cl"08 F ap ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must possess strong delhery.6T3-5340.· ---------8 lds,h , · Cookware,20pcstainless HaveYourboatdellvered YOURR.V. secretarial s kills . fAUBROOI prox. moso · appy, steel waterleu, new, b•ck from Ensenada 559-1304 Shorthand is preferred TYPIST, must take S/H friendly dog. 6Jl·l030 won in contest, reg. SUS, f c 11 ---------a ter the race. a RENT . 22· lux mtr but not necessary. ' or speed.writing. 4/brs. AHT19UI Big Shep. cross, M, ap· sacrifice. 979-9368 Clark 67S·71<19or631·6300 · ·
We offer an outstanding
benefits package which
includes a complete
business wardrobe Call PAT betw~ 9AM and
2 • 3 d a Y s week . SHOW ..t SALE prox. 1 yr old, friendly. ext 14 lve msg. home. Sips 6, self-con~.
(1141644·0983. 6Jl·l030 (Annle) Single maple bed . $275/wk. + 8< m1.
AT THE IDGHSCHOOL bookcase hdbrd $.'SO. Dbl * * * 640-858S. TY P I ST I W 0 R D So Mission & St•&e F l ve mostly blac k , silver l>odtcase hdbrd, Cralal.MJler
PROCESSOR Coach medium long hair KIT· footbrd·dresser w /mir· 7922 RfuneCircle
, 4PM for appomtment. ... ~-· • 16 7 II •••••••••••••••••••••• Lanier word ...,,.,._sor ~ I TENS, jmt in time for ror. S75. Kitchen tbl·chrs Huntington Beach
Will t rain. Laguna Hills N"' Nro'a:oOPM. Easter. Call now avoid $3S. New 40 Channel Youare~winnerof Forsale
'!• -0
qnzENS BANK
2970 Harbor Blvd.
Suite 206 Costa Mesa
Equal Opp Emplyr
m t(lh
Law Ft rm-typing wills & Take l·S to Hwy 78 the rwsh. Pace CB S1S. 760-9133 z f,.. tidll'h
trusts. Mmtbavestrong atOceanside 546-1879 Angel Season Tickets· ($12ValueJ,to Dats181 Z
typing 4t grammar DONATIONSl.50 Fw.ltwe I050 two·section 13 behind lceC.... motor skills. Call Mn. Winslow P RIZES DAILY 3rd b d w·11 April 21'\hru25 FREE ARKING ••••••••••••••••••••••• ase ugout. 1 for appt. 837-1060 P I BUY sell ~ of season games. Anaheim Convention + ott.r-.....
._CT * * * * (714)840·5051 Mon·Fri, Center 761-5'37 '''"':'f" · Good ed F 't & be Tic kets must be ex· 1----------Personal Lines Dept. Antique China Hutch us umt ure tween iam·Spm. h d f d TORI OGT C G l500 Appliancea---OR I will sell c ange or reserve '71 N parts. ·6 Insurance Agy. Apply in erman, · or SELL for You Snow white Easter Bun· seats at the convention transmission, very good . . SECURITY GUARDS person : 333 N. Newport --8_98_-4_957 __ a.f\_._s..;;.,p_m_. __ 1 MASTERS AUCTION nies, s10 ea. center ahead of lime. Call 64.2-3418
Openings for qualified Bl., N.B. 646_86161 n~ 9625 540-6610 Call 842·5678, ext. 272 lo t---------
ind.ividuals. Good start· i--------i AMTIQUES ~ clalmyourtickets. CHEAP!!
1...-.. fr'!r~a>:i-e::~~~~7~~3 Typists 40' container Enghsh I IUY FURHITUIE J~:gn. !!~~e::t;;~ ~~~ ----~-*-*----Slightly used turbo kit ·
r &638·8191 • Jypl.Sts 50WPM Oak, etc.arriving Les 957·8133 sell by S/l, best offer. 14' Skirt w/S hp motor, '70·'74DatsunZcars Monday, April 13th. t k •-b it 1 d 76S-5837 Early Am. Solid wood 642-6634.evesorwknds. gas an "' a s e . 1---------SELL ·v-.... OUR OPENING SALE $400, 631-4870 alt s pm. ~ ~ '°'" OictJSec'ys FRIDAY17th9AM bdrm furniture , Everes t & Jennings if·• FULL TIME (WholesaleOnly) book c a se hdbrd , Traveler wheel chair loats,,.ower 9040 (;~.Earn '6or more an hr. EllC Sec'ys AllA AKT'IQUES dresser, mirror, desk & Sl7S. Guardian Safe·T· •••••••••••••••••••••••
utoaforSale ••••••••••••••••••••••
"'i Call 986-0522 Commerce Park chr. 548-9992 Walker' $20. Singer de· Will trade Big Bear Lake ~· Ch~C....,.7 3303Harbor81vd#Cl bed luxeTouch&Sew,sew· or oc nrront Mobile
IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS ~. SERVICESTATJON L--"'--foro C.m. 751-2070,848-9366 King water · wa veless Home or trlrs for sport • ATTENDANT ~ (Nextto405Freeway) htr-X /cond·cost $500 ing ·machine in cabinet fishingboat-28'.4~3816 ~·· · Ch ... >Dging $2000B0631'"6966 $200. All in xlnt cood. ·• Fullt1me. Apply in 0 ,,_....,7 631-0372 '78 Wellcraft Nova XL.
The price or items
advertised by vehicle dealers in the vehicle
classified ad.rtising
columns does not in· elude any applicable
~person : 604 S. Coas t Antique Platform rocker, Bunk bed set. Has
-;: Hwy, Laguna Beach. Use temporary jobs as new upholstery, & anti· storage, drawers Inner· -i>· SEWING MACHIN E your shopping tool. We quedlsheso<rerS46-61160 spring mattresses $17S. RA have long & short term 642·5849 aft 4 wkdys, or ~ OPE TOR Jobs available in the Appla.cft 10 I 0 all day wlmds. ~ Sail loft exp. 631· 1842 o.c. Airport area. Week· ••••••••••••••••••••• •• •
T ly paychecks, quarterly HARBOR AREA Dln. Rm aet, oval table ~ Stor~ inA~~sales bonus trips. Never a fee. APPLIANCE SERVICE w/lear & 6 cane· back
.._.person f'":-e, s days CalHorappt.today: We buy used appliances arm ch•irs, U SO.
)!! Xlnt wo';ki~g conds. SSJ-1145 -·we sell recond,guar. S46·2704aft.Sorwkenda. -appliances. 549-3077 --!· f:specially rtne clientele. Dining table, bvy solid ~ Phone67S-1010forappt. r-n. L·n-I IUY APPLIANCES maple , drop leaf, seals ~STENOGRAPHER . \J \• fl : Les 957-8133 14, folds small, inti
... /t' I • TEMl'OllAllY MISONNll SUMCtS linens $600. 10xl2 artia c 1me 1or prepanng a Lg reblt Frigidaire rug custom made. WUd flt book. For interviews. 1723 llrch Street Refrigerator Sl2S. circles & squares iln
i:;rt c:.tontact Leo, at 546-9793 HewDOff leach 984-9C173 gold /orange /beige /Wh\.
e STocK Clerk part time t .O.E. Westinghouse refr ig, te/brown$150.Seetoap. ~ for marine hardware !~~~~~~~~~~ nso. Sears washer & prec. 646-21152 wkends or
6: etore. Call: Balboa TYPISTS elec. d ryer, $7S ea .1_ev_e_1_. -------
Marine. 549-9671, E.O.E. •lmmedlate()penings 548-2765 FJoor'lample sale. No re·
M /F /H • P /llme,F /lime, Temp. 1100able otter refwsed. Apt size Kenmore gas ~Classified Ads, your one· For mo~~:~~all Tod stove, tood cood, Sl.50. ~ve bndoo•a of tdo~lars.
" stop shopping center. "-rvic .. •' """""""". 898-4957 aft. Spm. v·PC rm ae a rom ..,., ~ ..... ,..........,., $199, swivel rockers
'1?: A-------------------20 cu. ft J .C. Penney lrom •· We 1uarantee (i: freezer, very good cond. lowest prlc.w or double
Work after school and o,.
Saturday g e tt i ng new
ou1t9mers for the •r••'•
leading newtpeJ*. Bfg $Plue
prtus, ttlpa •nd bonUM& .
$3.50. 5"--4038 tbe difference back. •-Ref--ri-l -•r_a_tor--.-,-ood--nm--.• Bristol Furniture, 2112
nlng condition, $3S.' Soutb Brlatol, S.A.
631·13Sl daye 911·0413. (Next to
1----'------1 Bullden Emporium).
ydn 1020 lk bl •••••••••••••••••••••• MWll aell butcher b t • Red 101pd bow' Schwinn 4 chrs, 1225• 2 dres&ers,
Caliente, 31•':1.m, SlOO. rote atand Ir tnlrror 1225 ...,.3577 It: more.~
--BiJ red ·s· shape chalr, &..., faateat draw in lhe ...... •lnt _ .... ..,., •' W nt a Dally Pl.Jot '" .. v • .. ......,, -· oi ctaaiuieci Ad. Call To-wlne 1oCa, Sl.50. plush.
dey Ml-5'71. MCM481
Antique Clawfoot bath
tub, 1st S7S takes.
64.5-8375
Fully equip. w /trailer.
$12.000. Dys· 642·2928;
eves: 731-0443.
1 8 ' B a y C r u i s e r . taxes, license, transfer
Good Buy: 2 yr old swim-Character Boat Parade rees, finance charges, ming pool, 12'xl2'x3'. On· WI(\ ner. 673· 7677, 673· fees for air pollution con· ly S5S.,S46--01'1. SURF. • t.rol device certifications or dealer documenrary
REDWOOD 2X6'1. · I t78 SICJP JACK. preparation charg~ uo·
Xlnt decking. S.20' long. 24 · w /trailer. x Int less otherwise specified
New load just in Crom financing. Call Gary or by the •dverti.ser.
m ill. SS•/ft. 646·988S Don63J.1400. •-"--sl anytime. --.!.~-_..;;._....;._ _____ 13' Flbergl~ open boat CIOa•I 9520
LAWNMOWER & trlr. $47S , Days 7••••••••••••••••••~••• McLanefront-thrower 752.7000 RayMcKee'-46 Fqrd Woodie .
$.'SO. 898-4957 aft. SpfJl. ' restoretlt $13,SOO. ALSO
34 ' Diesel Trawler '29 Me>QelATownSedan,
SIRIU IEJS w /N.B. mooring SSS.000 4 dr, restored'. Ideal for
"""-642·6631 s tude n t . $10,SOO . ANSWERS loah, Sal t06 _l7_5-6_l8_1.. ___ _
Solace-Doubt-•••••••••••••••••••••••Restored 19S8 Ford
Baton -Watery -Pacific Chllde 1923 pickup. 1Mon.,Substan· TOBUV Claasic Block llland tial amount of money
That guy is so optimistic Cutter Diesel, sbme es-was spent in rebuilding
about beer prlc:es, he aume ble financing. truck. Financing avail.
just leased a pot roast 175-8711. STSOO or best ofrer. For
with option TO BUY. SC ff 0 CK S b t further informaUon. a 0 • please contact Art Mmlcel w /trailer, race rigged. Bayllaa, South Coast
1'6tn.•lf• 1011 $425. ......, _ ' Bank, $40-5300, Mon.·
••••••••••••••••••••••• "'"'.....,.... ~ 9 .. 111 "PM CONN Directorlrombone .... V _,_ r "· " ~ .
with caae. Excellent ..., ent ure. '"''t cond, 4 wt.et Drha_ 9510
condition SlOO. 675-8052 new ln '78. Stored for •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• after 6PM. 2/Jn . S&Ua, Evinnlde, Jeep Cbenikee "Tl, 14,000
outboard, rad.lo, utety ml LlkeMW. '7000. Alto SuopboM: Selmer
Sipet. Uke new, $4.50.
!62·1867.'
Fender Telet!uter elec.
kuJtar w /Case, $&.00.
.... 5259
equJp., trailer, etc. M utt l'TS.1417. aell. 494-7803 or Mi-7549.
'12 Inter. Scout 1reat "111 CA~~2$. Dl•el, ex· co nd . 4x4. Leeviol
traa. ·rrua boat la lm· Country mutt Sacl'lfSce.
mac. f U,900, calJ BHt orrer by 4·20.81
112·8-~--~0&:~&50~----
0'Day '71, ll.lie ..,,, fu» ,,... '560
'equip, Newport ttorat•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $12,450 or 811\UDe lK 5...._w
loan. 5414Ml ....-
979-2500
WANTED!!
CHI~
T°'aid!!
Call Jim HOC)Clft o r
Mill.Lab
Cr~•ier Moton
835-3171
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
AMDTRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
.'X:!>l 11..rlw.r Ill\ d
c OSI\ \H.S \
S46-l 200
HIGHIUYER Top dollars for Sports
Cars. Bu~s. Campers, 9t4's, Audi s Ask for U IC MGR
JIMMAaJNO
VOLKSWAGEN
1B711 Beach Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACJI
142-2000
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAN
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda
2150 ff ... lfyd,
Cotta Mesa 645-5700
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvo s . Call u s TODAY!!!
Earle Ike
TOYOU..\'OLVO
ltUH..._lhd. c ........ ..
""-U•·UOJ w u o.to7
PORSCHES
Allo~sA!{~gunity
to consider the purchase or trade-in o( your clean Porsche. Check with Us Today!
131831 Herl>Ot BlvCI
O••c141n Growi "' lll•2Jl3
Top Dollar
Paid For Your Car!
JOHNSON & SON
LIK•Mercwv
2626 Harbor BlvO. Costa Mesa S40.S630 w.,.,
28402 MarJuerite Pkwy.
Mission Viejo
Avery Pkwy. ed\ (offs Freeway)
831-2040 495-494' Closed Sundays
CREVIER
&I ST & HOADWAY
SAIHA AHA
835·3171
!HE UlTIMATf OAIYING MAC"'N£
•USEDIMWs•
'76 ~.301A S/R (2419) '77 6.30 csi auto (0040)
'79 3201 (7560) '79 320iA SIR (7089)
'80 S28iA sunrf. (0013)
Closed s-.ys
77 IMW3201 Dynamite 2 door
automatic with air,
stereo. etc. 58,000 miles
& very clean. (471SYH )
$7195
JIMMARIMO
VOLKSWAGB4 18711 Beach Blvd.
842-2000
Th• Most bdtidlg
P..tOfYow
IMW Ptrdlme Or
LeGN CCMlld le
M1Lare11 IMW!!
l•yOrL.eas.
ly OwPhaMPlm!
17141 522-5333
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
&
• Sales-Service-Leasing
Roy CarYer,lnc.
Rolls 'Royce BMW
1S40Jamboree Newport Beach 640-6444
'7S 2002, snrf, new ti.res, $5295 /0BO
752-Sl.20
Capri f715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 Mere. Capri, 80.00D mi, $1800 OBO. Xlnt int., stereo, ~6812 aft S
Colt '717
·~······················ 7,1 Dodge Col-t , cood cond., 9950 .
960-2995
'74 260Z loaded, IDt !
Mwstsell .-0/0BG ~71 ~1 1 '72 SlO Sutlon W
ruonln1 an 3 c.y
MAKE OF F OVER
.... looll
P'or Your Good
VW, Porsche or Audl
• 492·1405
.. , ... , • 4 ~ H
.. ' . '
VW·PORSCHE-AUDI 445 E. Cout Hlwey at Bayside Drive
Newport Beadt 173-0000
Premlum prlcea
paJd for ~ \lled car
lfonlp ~domettlc)
lll .ood ~on •. ~Ual'\ntl
'78 DATSUN PIClqUP w/t•m...-lbelli=, newtl~alol URGENT, MtJST
s.'800080.9
alter e or SM-
1
l
•tDEAlUllU.S.A. WANTED: 'lt~tJ. VW 'If ..... O.•W•• c•
camper, wW pa'I cub. ooad NIO or bHl. mv.. ~t.r;Y· tb·QJlt or Delpenwm ....
IOUS·IO¥Cl 1174 C adlllac Cpe , .. ..._.. •tt Rabbit Dehan, DeVW., v.aour im., p&a .....;r;;_ .-etOBO P.P. Mom.a: stripped, ,._t 1bape.
----~...... 141-_,: Dys: 951-1.3'71 Sac.ISI00.1114791
CLOMP IUND-!YS -uk for Bob 1"11 Fleet11fDOCS Bflbm
'fl Cloud n. RHD, a/c, "7t Rabbit DllSEL,'4dr, Brown/W~ top, white
leather ... ta. ~Uy anrf, lo mi, amt cond, lea. int., mooo root, new
o'bauled, $11,000 or belt "'5-7521 radtall, wire wbla. 45M
otter. su.ms '• vw BUI, front end mllee. You ba\09 to tee it
97'0 wrecked, enline trans to believe the care th1a
•••••••••••••••••••••• Int I fine. 845·.UUJ or =~ ~ved. '8150.
LEASE ~. c..... 9t11
DIRECT I '61 B U G am I f m , ••••••••••••••••••••••• • mechanical/body /Urea Y.._ l.ted
--1ood.SH50 UsedC..U 1911 Sill 496-1415 •71 a. ....
TUUOs '71 VWSquarebackradio, c ..... uaT-Top
new clutch, iOOd work· Stereo, ma1 wheels.
IEACH IMPORTS in1 cond. Sl985 551-71181 Po•er wtndowa " door
8'8 Dove~ eves locks, 33,000 miles.
NEWPORT BEACH ot.o 9772 (351VQE)
752-0tOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• i--~-~-----· 97'5 VOLVO
75 TOYOTA sas SA~ •Ytcl
SPORT COUPE AND LIASING
5 speed. Dynamite! OVERSEASDELIVERY
(829MFV> EXPERTS
$2495 JIM MAJUNO lilLI IU
VOLKSWAGIEM VOi.YO 18711 Beach Blvd. 1966 Harbor Blvd. COSTA M~
842-2000 '46.-9303 540.9467 '78C&maro
'71 CORONA Yellow 73 YOLYO 164 Air, automatic, Pow.er
W /blk l·nt 411pd 11teerin°, 27,961 miles,
!lt. 9725 · • • 6 cylinder, au•Amatic • $1 1 7 5 I 0 B 0 day s ..., (882VEI)
• ••••••••••••-•••• (213 )637·2213, nites steering, air, cruise, and $4911 '79 .BRA VA FIAT 18,000 546-8198 many more extras. Xtra Barwick Imports
mlli onl~ln 't cond --------1 clean ! (l2lG~) 131·3311
llUST S 548-0905 al\ C'7011T~~C?':~S JIMS!~~ ... O --------~~ ~ _ _," '68 Camaro, new paint &
~ 5 speed lift.back! Fae· YOLKSWAGEM tires, mags, sten!<> etc. • 9727 t 0 r y air , s t er eo. 18711 Beach Blvd. MUST SELL 545-9227
••••••••••••••••• Dynamite! (8S8UQH) 142-2000 after 6p m.
'!VlSIT YOUR $3495 '68 Camaro Convertible, NGE COAST JIM MARINO OUNGI COUMTY needs work, tB50 as is.
q Hft.lli...IDA YOLKSWACHN VOLVO 851·9226askforSteve. "" 18711 Beacb Blvd. Largest Volvo Dealer D~•A.RTERS 842-2000 in Orange Cowl~! CM•rolet ff20l ~ BUYorLv.a.c •••••••••••••••••••••••( TODAY!!! '74 COROLI.A 4spd, a /c, DIR~ NIVBSITY amtfm, su;oo10Bo
LESA SERVICE 645-02'15
OLDSMOllU YolkswOCJl'I 9770
[ GM~~~KS ...... ;;·~·..-S ......
2850 Harbor Blvd. Dynamite 7 passenger 4 10120GardenGrove 81
Garden Grove 530-9190
4 COSTA ME.5A speed. Original blue &
.. I 540.9640 white. Runs & looks •--------great! (OOOLWB> 75YOLYO
Dynamite 2A2DL 4 speed
with air. Original & sharp. (oo:m3)
'77 hatchback, 5-s pd. $3995
A¥./FM stereo, 38K mi, JIM MAJUNO XW cond. P.P . 839-5871 YOLKSWAGIEM 'w.. 18711 Beach Blvd. '79 rrelude, n!d. 5 spd, 84•2000 a /A. am/fm, reg. gas,•---------800. 953-1620dys
'Trllonda Accord, AC, 5
spd trans, xlnt cond.
611-7578
$3ff 5
JIMMARIMO
VOLKSWAGIEM 73 VWGHIA 18711 Beach Blvd.
CONYBmlLE a 2 Only 38,000 actual miles. 1 ____ 4_·_2_00_0 __ _
........ 9730 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1979
MONTE
CARLO
COUPE
,,,,,
.MALIBU
lf.ANDAU
Automatic tran1 .•
etereo tape. power
•teerlng. powf' ~rake.a , electr c
¥ttndowa , a ir conditioning, tilt.
crulH, door lock1,
(999WRJ).
$5695
**** 197•
MALIBU
CLASSIC
COUPE
Automatic trans ..
power s teering ,
power brakes, a ir
conditioning, cruise,
vinyl top, (5'48XWD).
$4995
'82 EXP'S
ARE HERE!
PolD"I
TOMOllOW
CAlll ... I TODAY ,
PllC•PIOM
$6988
9 IN STOCK!
llADYFOI
DBJYIRY
2t•ACITT
4'•AHWY (PrlCH Vary)
SUllSIT
~ F RD
616-~0JO
'79 Ranier u4, PS, PB,
auto trans, tilt whl,
AM /FM stereo cass,
17 ,000 mi, like new.
17500. Contact Johnny
642·7671 or aft SPM
971Vi324
9950
ORANGE COUNTY'S
FtNEST LINCOLN-MERCURY
DEALERSHIP
~?t.t/JH
LINCOLN-MERCURY '
16·18 Auto Center Dr.
SD Fwy-Lake Forest
exit IRVINE
130.7000
'78 Marquis wagon, 9
pass . loaded . New
=ellns. Xlnt cond.
. Owner , 67~6161
'78 Mercury Zephyr Wgn,
27,000 mi, $t000/best of·
fer. 644·1210
~~-:':! •••••••••• !!~~
'73 Blue Mustang Convt.
Xlnt cond. 1 owner.
$3,500. 49:H8311.
'80 Mustang, 6 cyl 2dr
auto p /s a/c f /m stereo
lo mi. l6000831~
'67 Jaguar 3.8 MK lIS all
ori1. very well main·
talned Must Sacrifice Mf·8S70 .
4. s~ed. o'1ginal blu~ '77 Volvo Wgn. Auto, air,
f1n1s h . Like new . cass, ps, pb, new tires,
064317) 55995 brks. batt .. great cond.
844>-1590.
JtMMAlllNO
YOLKSWAGIEM
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
Automatic trans.,
AM ·FM , p o w er steering , power
brakes . a ir
conditioning, tilt,
vi nyl top . cruise.
(884YZH). '
M_. Wt '74 Mustang II
CLEAN '73 MONTE 4sp,4cyl$lOOO.
l ' '74 JAG XJ6XL • 1lver, classic, SBSOO.
-640.8379. 8J3.2009 ·---GWa 9734 •••••••••••••••••••••••
9901
'6(). '65 vw l~t & right •••••••••••••••••••••••
door, '73 le.ft doer. ~
each. Western style whl
rims for Super Beetle
$5795
c A R L 0 . s It v. r " I 640-9368 Oeniae
burJundk interior· Air -.65--M-us-t.-F-as-tb-a-ck_2_+_2
~~e~ :rCs~=· w /rally pack. Lo mi. Sl.500 763-5837 $4500. Dave 559·5790,
eves Ai wknds 548-8124
S20 ea. 548-9744 '61 GHIA, xlnt. rond. No •--------
'65 Mustana 302 en1lne. 3
11pd , mags, sunroof.
l2200 (213) 63CM968 d.ts. Bestoffer.
~ 644-~
Ulifcla 9736 .......................
·~cla._Zagato Coupe, ~.500 m1. Owner mov·
in_g , price reduced.
(7J4 )835-7206.
9738
• SELLING YOUR
. MERCEDE.5?
WIPAY
OPDOLU.R SS Call Jack Bacon
JIM SLIMOt4S
IMPOltTS U70HarborBlvd.
COSTAM~
·1Z76 83!U300
CHIMPOITS
Mt Dlwe Street
EWPORT BEACH
'71z.ot00
IOYWDIES&
Dynamite L Model 2
door 4 speed with fac-tory air. Very sharp!
(719ZSM> 1--------S6HS
JIMMARIMO
VOLKSWAGIEM
18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
DAVID J. PHILLIPS
Wll _.. Y'!" ....... .. ,
51Gr.OFF .
....... 11 .. &1 .. 1'4111 w.w; ~ ,_ ... ~ ......... c, .. , .. COf~
...... Afrtl21, ltll.M ... ·utfld .. ..,.... .. ,. .
''" POMTIAC ''" c•n ''" PQDI TUMIAM ..._ a-11 •r•rfr "'~ .A LOldedf Cl I rtte, cruiM, full 4 dr., auto,, O/I. low F\ltl= Cf\lltl, ~ ooweund mor.. (524CM). .nl ... (1Cfl41). 9940 ,.....~
Blue bOok 97161. •ue book MMC>. · ' boOk te411. ·
Ltrl MU NICI ~.'I ULI NICI ..,,, ..... ,_.
56995 ·54395 s 395·
9955 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1980
CUTLASS
SUPREME
9-e, Automatic trana ..
1tere o. p o wer
1.-t •er I n g , a ir
condltlonlnQ. cruise,
tilt. vinyl to~. electric wl~ (576~UN).
$7595
Llixurioua , .... avine '11
Olde Delta • Diesel,
one-owner, loaded with mas. Call Sue 613-70ll
orl51-0IU
'80 Ome1a. 2 dr, 6 cyl,
a /c, p:.a :W, 20,000 ml, ...
9961 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71P_..A*9 .....
'7' Bonneville 4dr Sedan,
1d cond. Kuat aell.
Sacrifice drl: .....-: ... : .......
EXPI
COME IN~ TEST DRIVE FORD'S
ALL NEW AMalCAN IUILT TWO SEATER
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IMMEDIATE DELIVERY.
NEW 1981
ESCORT
.
EPA
29 MPG CITY
46 MPG HWY.
5199
DOWM DB.IYBS AMY
Yl .. C.U IM STOCKI
CPWS TAX AMD UC .. Slt
OM UP. CRIDtT
•LITTUoa
MOCUDIT7
5 132~
• MIWIH
C.6UllOIMl.A7
• .. WON
YOUI J017
•SHORTOH
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NEW 1911
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Z DR SEDAM
5142!?.n. 5155!,'MrH
(Sttt. T0378) (501638)
11".,... ... a 11c. -$142 e1 mo '°' eo
-CMh JWlce -•100 00 pt.,. ... -' -... o....-_. __ ~.,
,,,.. l t.-
· New 1911
GRANADA
Z DR SIDAN
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tlft 111 ... ta• & 11c doM> 11~ 38 mo '°' eo "'° CMll pnc. -a 1111 00 pi.. taa • .._ &
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~EW 1911
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515"" 516572
(Stk. 0334) (110377)
., ....... -• le:. -11&4 40 -tor to -. c.. 11"--..,oo pi..-·._ a t°o~. ~·~ ,., .... ,,, P''C.f -
(Stk. 0481)(113314)
11• p1ue 1aJ1 & lie --•1• n mo '°' eo -Caofl,,--11111&00,.._ ..... _, doo tu Oet.,r•d ,., .... ni p••c• -
110 ..... 10. ~ 1"*""
ROBINS-READY TRADEINS
OVER I 00 TO CHOOSE FROM !
51981 52522
I '71 fOID , 1971 CHIYIQllr
PIMJO IUMAIOVT NOYA SIDAN .
4 crlln• ...... 4 opeed ,_, rlldlo --lo ...,..........,, Ill!~,..._ llG'!"' ..... -1144ZYH) A....,• OftiY ~ Pll"!'9' _....., _ _,.I -,,_ ... low . . .....,~ ... ..,,,,.~
52700 53096
197' llOID
PINTO 4 cyt . 4 .,_ h•••....,,,, f9clOIY elr .,.._....
AM/FM ....... ""'ri ......................... -___ &,,,...,H.114-(~) ( ...
•. ,..., 53399
19MDATSUM •
210 400Ga .. .. -~.---........ J:Jt"' ......... -__,,
••f!Ola PINTO IUM•IOVT hulll!Mnl....,...,.-...C••-._,,,_
.. _,.,.,..,.. ........... ..-0 ~ ---___ ....... (111ZN4) •
..
. '
l
t
SPACE CENTER, lloustoa CAP) -Columbia and 1tl
Jubilant astronauts, back from a remarkabte maiden
voyage, dramatically advanced America's ch_..oet ot cain· in• a work.Ina foothold in soace bv 1983 -and aomeday, 1aid
Commander John Young, tor• ·goin1to the stan. • •
The shuttle, resting comfortably ln Calitomla, 11 A-OK.
The astronauts, exuberant after Tuesday's pinpoint
landlns. are healthy and ea1er to participate in tutu.re apace . . . r.rojeeta. Today they began an exhaustive week of debrief·
nss wtth apace agency technicians. ·
When Young and Robert Crippen brou.8bt Columbia
down from' orbit to a rock·hard lake bed in California's Mo-
jave Desert, they demonstrated that the United State, bu a
space mae4'1ne that makes au others oblolete -a machine
that can fly lnto space and return to Earth like an airplane,
ready to fly again, a hundred or more times. <See related
stories, photos, pages A4, AS.)
The astronauts, in their own way, probably said it best.
''VOUCAN'TBEUEVEwbatallylngmachlneUUJi1,''
Young said. "I think we've 1ol a fantastic and remarkable
capability here. We're really not too far -the human race
isn't-from going to the stars."
Said Crippen: "We are really in the space bttsiness to
stay."
America had left mannedspaceflighttotheSoviet Union
since~975.
Shbrtly after the wheels·down landing on Rogers Dry
<See SPACE SHUTTLE. Pa1e A.2)
Mayor's
handling
defended
;!~-
BY RICllAJlD GREEN or .. Dlllff,..... ,...,
Irvine Polle~ Chief Leo Peart
claims ~at no special handllnt
was given to aq assauit wttb • deadly weapon case tnv61Ylnl
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony.
He also saJd at ~ press con·
ference at the police station
Tuesday that his personal
involvement in the case was
justified and proper.
ALTHOUGH RE knew Mayor
Anthony was lnside a home with
hi~h powered weapons. Peart
said#:e thought the police's
~pecial weapons team should not
ha ve tried to storm the house.
Peart admitted, however, that
it was somewhat unusual that An·
thony, once apprehended Friday,
was taken to thE. Hoag Hospital
psychiatric ward ins tead of
secure jail faci~ities elsewhere.
He aJso said that no handcuffs
were placed on Anthony during
the lripto Hoag Hospital.
According lo Chief Peart
the assault with a deadly weapon
incident involvinc Mayor An·
lhony came to his attention late
Thursday when Elaine Anthony,
SO, the mayor's wife, knocked on
Ms ( Peart's l door in the Turtle
Rock area of Irvine.
"Elaine's face was swollen and
bruised, her nylons were tom, she
had no shoes on. she was sweating
profusely and the back of her neck
was covered with blood," Peart
said.
.Peart said that he applied basic
first aid to the woman and ar·
~anged for her to be placed under
a doctor's care.
According to Peart, Mrs. An·
tbony told him that her husband
bad beat her with his fiats and
<See MAYOll, Pa1e A2)
i
IRAlll CUil llATllR
Night and morning low
clouds, with only partial
clearing along beaches
Ii Thu.rsda7 afternoon. Lows
tonJabt 50 -1oag the coast.
55 inland. Hlebs Thunday f! 82 to 6.5 at lhe beach, as to
>! 'T2 Inland.. .
1111111AY
, In EUc C1C11, Okla .• t/!Mt'• o
J*lcc /or ~ tolto ~
lo .,.,,.. -~ "°' ..,,.,... fOho COfl'WI to toOrit CUii ftrtd 0
ploc• to !Ive. S•• "Boom
• Totoft," ,,.,. A14.
Ill
!Wly "*'rWI .....
HARSH PENALTY
Judge Francisco Bm~
.
Riley plan
for airlines
offered ·
BY FREDERICK ScHOBMERL °' ... .,.., ........... Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley has offered his own
plan to regulate entry of com·
mercial airlines to John Wayne
Airport, claiming an earUer p~
posal isn't workable.
R i I e y ' s p I an , f el e a'S ed.
Tuesday, provides that the four
airlines now serving the airport
-AirCal. Republic Airlines,
Frootier Airlines and Western
Airlines -would be permitted
to keep their existing night
allocations for at least one year.
UNDER A .SEPAR~TE
proposal advanced by Airport
Manager Murry Cable, Frontier
and West.ern would lose
permission to .servt! the airPort
because they could not meet
. requirement.I for inJroducUon of •
new and qui~er jet airer.aft.
According. to Riley's plan,
each air, carrier would be
required to meet yearly noise
reductlon standards. Airlines
that fatled to meet lbe objective'
would lose rusht.s. Those Oights
would then be made anUable to
other airlines ••klna entry to the
airport.
'Phe supervl1or'1 propoaal
would .,,ectlveJ)' dllaJ tor at
leMt one year aa1 8diclD on
Pf.clfic Soutb•Ht Alrltaea•
request to beeln .. tiff at John
· Wnne.
Under Cable'• .a.a PSA wu
favored bectllM lt airMdy baa
taken delivery of quieter jet.I,
tbe J)C-1 Super 10 ,
manufactured by McDoan.ll
Dou1l11.
·~-......... The apace ahutele Columbia, itl tile• intact, ii tmmin«I at Eclroardl Air Force Bcue today foll.owing its
aucceltlJvl: mmden ~·
I :
8Y DA YID IWTZMANN °' .. ~ ........... In oqe of the b&Nbe1t sen-·
tenc•• ever imposed ta an
Oral),. County rape e~, u.r.. le~ ... Vietnam~ ..-...,. .have~ given pnlOll rim .P
to ug )!9.,-S by a su~~r court
judge wbo termed th~ Climes
"atrocious."
Despite' plea's for lep1~ncy by
four defeµse lawyers I Tuesday,
Judge Francisco Brise_,o said be
was imprisonine tbe three de·
fend ants for the rest of their lives
"because · this klnd of behavior
(kidnapping and rape) ls not con·
doned on either side of ~e Pacific
Ocean." ,
If there's · an Easter Week.
beach crowd tbis year,
lifeguards from Seal Beach to
San Clemente say they haven't
seen it yet.
Ob, there have been more sun
seekers than normally populate
south coast beaches during a
spring weekday, but for an area
that used to beef up security for
Bal Week madness, the turnout
is somewhat underwhelming.
Take Newport Beach, for ex·
ample.
Lifeguard Capt. Bud Belshe
says close to 80,000 souls visited
city sands Tuesday. He s aid
that's a good sized crowd even
for a summer weekend.
BUT NOTWNG like Easters
past , when hundreds of
thousands or college kids on
spring break converged on the
town.
, Bt!lshe says there have been
no problems and no rescues so
<See CROWDS, Page A2)
A fourth defendant in the case,
who ls 17. was remanded to the
cu~tody or the California Youth
Authority for 90 days of
diagoo5tic testing.
• • • 'D.11~ PIMt ~.., ~etrk* O'o-11
Vietnarnue refugee defendantl erpre~11 as jury verdict i$ read; from left : Tung Thumh Le. ung
Pham, Minh Nguyen, Bo Pham. . ·
THE LENGTH of the s en·
lences tor the eldest three -118
years for brothers 89 Pham, 18,
and Dung Pham, 18, and 100
years for ;Minh Nguyen, also 18
-stunned attorneys who
represehted the trio.
Bo Pham's lawye11, Lawrence
Bockley, said the , cpurt bad
taker> the "bloodtl)irsty" _ ap·
proach in dealing with bis client.
A n d' a tt o·r n e y l> en n is
McHerne¥. who represented
Dung Pham, said sentencing
hlws which e9bled Briseno to
impose the stiff pz:ison terms
were irrational.
The rout defense lawyers, in·
eluding Dixon Walco-tt ~d Clarence Hewatt, s aid that I
any of· th,ir clients had
convicted of firsl·degr e
murder, the n;iaximum term ·.
lowable would have been ~s
years tolifeil)stateprison. l
BUT PROSE'CUTOR Cafl
(See VIETS, P .. e AJl I
Suspect in hit~run.
·death surrenders
Costa Mesa police have arrest·
ed a 2l·year·old Downey man on
auspidon of manslaughter and
felony hi( and run driving in con-
nectioo with the A~ril 5 death of
Laguna Beach resident Kevin
R. Pehl.
. Arrested when he voluntarily
walked lnto Costa Mesa police headquarters about 8 p.m .
Wednesday was ·John Thomas
Lankford. •
• · Inveatigalor Floyd Waldron
said Costa llesa officers ques·
tioned Lankford earlier ln the
day without result after a Up led
\hem to the alleged death car
parked in front of his Qowney home. · ' ,
WALDRON SAID La>'lkford
ap-pare nO y contact ed i11n 1at·
torney who suggested that h~
give himself up. t
Pehl, 28, was killed about 2
a .m. April 5 as he and a frien<!
walked across Placentia Avenue
in front of theNewport Station
nightclub in Costa Mesa.
Witnesses told police It ap.
peared the driver ofthe death car
swe-rved. toward the two
pedestrlan.s, hil Pehl in a shower
of broken headUght glass and
continued north on Placentia
A'Venue •
. . .
What f ol!eig":· .afjllirs?
~ollege students stumped by government tests.. . . ..
·Tax return
deadline dne
by midnight
• ' Three Orartge County post of·
fices will remain open until mid·
night tonigh~ lo allow for last·
minute filing of state and U.S. in·
come tax returns.
Tax forms m~t be postmarked
April lS'to avoid being late. Those
n ot,. filing by th& midnight
deaaUne can be charged a 1.2 per·
cent annual rate on the balance of
their tax bill, according to an In·
t e rnal Revenue Service
spokesman. ·
Huntington Beach's · main post
office at 6771 Warner Ave will re-
main open until the mlghnitbt
deadline for filing: A spokesman
said a large crowd is expected
there during the evening hours
until the post office closes.
The Laguna Nli'"uel maln
branch at 29911 Nieuel Road wtU
also remain open until mldnilbt
to accommodate fUing of income
tax forms. ·
Postal authoriliesa-.ld &.be main
sl>st office in Oran1e at 1075 North
Tustin Ave. also wtll remain open
until midni&ht. ·
Accorilin1 to 1JlS ofllcJall. lax·
pJyers who c•n't meet tbe mldnlaht dead.tlae caa ,_ 41 t.o-
inQath extenstoo untll June U, but
their application for an exteMloq
.must include a check for at leut
90 pertent ol the eaUmaled taxes·
due UncleSam.
Taxpayer• wbo don't a.ave
l
AIC.4TA (AP) -A Central
Valley teen..aaer dled and nine
otb~n wve Injured att«r the
plcqp ..,_k 1-which they were
rlclias rm oft U.S. RJ1h•'110l,
the Calllomta Hithway '\latrol
reported tOday.
Tbl'ee el tlM vicUm1 were ln .
criUcal c'OOdlltoo with akull frac·
turea -at Eureka General
Hospital, a spokesman there
said. Four others less aerioualy
hurt '1Nl'e in Arcata Mad River
ColQmwdty Hospital.
Hlabway Patrol dispatcher
Mont Soulis said the youths were
on a late nitht ride to the beach
when the accident occurred
about 11:15 p.m. in the north·
bound lanes. Ei&ht of the
pasaenters were riding in the
bed of the truck. A, ........
According to Soulis, the
driver, Carl J . Carranza, 18, of
Huntington Beach, told officers
that he was attempting to pass a
vehicle by driving in the left
lane. then swerved suddenly to
the ri&bt and ran off the road.
ATLANTA'S GRIEF -George Hood, foster father of Larry
Rogers, Atlanta's 23rd cblld death investigation victim,
wipes bis eyes at the youth's funeral in Atlanta. See related
story, Page A4.
The dead victim was identified
as Debbie Kroeber, 19, of
Lemoore.
The three critically injured
students wen identified as Joe
Carrion, 19, of Azusa, Myron
Sipp, 18, of Huntington Beach
and Brenda Majnussen.
OC morgue staff
due nine assistants ·'
Carranza and one of the riders
in the back were treated for
minor injuries and not
hospitalized.
Crowd s o11ght
for Valley
budget mee t
Fountain Valley officials are
hoping for a larger attendance
tonight at the fourth public meet-
ing to be conducted by the citizens
committee studying the city's
budget problems.
The session will begin at 7:30
p.m . at the Community Center,
behind City Hall.10200Slater Ave.
Although turnouts at previous
meetings have been low . city ad-
ministrative aide Jdan Dean said
offieials are encouraged by a
strong response to the commit-
tee's questionnaires, which were
distributed last week to most
Fountain Valley homes.
Ms. Dean said almost 600ques·
tionnaires have been returned to City Hall and said he results
probably will be tabulated by next
week.
The questionnaire explains that
the city is facing a budget
shortage of approximately $1
million and asks res idents
whether they desire increased
taxes and what city services they
would prefer to reduce.
From Page A1
Nine assistants will be hired to
start Orange County's new
morgue when it begins opera·
lions in Santa Ana in June, but
the additional positions are ex-
pected to save the county
money.
Orange County has never had
a morgue, a facility where
bodies are examined for the
cause of death.
Until the new $1.28 million
facility is completed, members
of the Orange County Sheriff.
Coroner's Office will continue to
s upervise autopsies in
mortuaries lbrougboot the
county.
lt costs about $130 a case to
pay a mortuary for the space
and assistants to perform an
autopsy.
WIT H THE county's own
morgue and workers. the cost
next fiscal year is expected to be
$1~.ooo less than if the sa~e
procedure were continued, satd
Tom Beckett, analyst in the
County Administrative Office.
A bout 2,300 autopsies were
performed by the county last f15. •
cal year. Supervising Deputy
Coroner J. Stevens said about
2,500 are e~pected to be
performed next fiscal year.
STATE LAW requires that the
Sheriff-Coroner's Office must be
notified in several instances,
including all d~aths involving
trauma . eases where no
physician bad seen a victim at
least 20 days before death or
SPACE SHUTrLE. • •
Lake, the two astronauts climbed aboard space agency ex-
ecutive jets for the trip back to the Johnson Space Center
here.
FOK THE NEXT SEVEN work days they will meet with
National Aeronautics and Space Administrati_o~ specialists,
discussing in great detail every one of Coh1mb1a s systems to
pinpointanyfiawsindesignorprocedure.
They have few problems to analyze. From the moment of
its fiery blast-off from launch pad 39A at Cape Canaver al on
Sunday Columbia performed almost flawlessly. The astrona~ts bad only a few minor problems tote~d to.
Columbia was parked today at Edwards Air Force Base,
where technicians will carefully check it for the next week or
so before it is returned to the Cape, buckled to the back of a
special Boeing747 jetliner.
ITS NEXT FUGRT, a four-day mission, is scheduled for
August or September, with rookie astronauts Joe Engle and
Richard Truly at the controls. .
Officials said \nltial inspection shc;>wed t~e spaceship to
be in very good condition. There were mdicatlorut a few non·
critical thermal tiles on the top of the vehicle suffered some
damage. But the important ones. those that protected t&e un·
dersidefrom re-entry beat, were in good shape.
Ground crew operaUons were stretched several hours
longer than expected when toxic freon gas wa~ detected
around the ship.
I F SUBSEQUENT TEST flights are successful, officials_
may consider accelerating the shuttle procraml perhaps cut·
uni the last of three trial runs. That coula advance to
mid·l982 the date the ship can ~I.in moving routinely into
apace, fenying up payloads for military, sdtnUfl~ and com-
mercial minions. b d th Donald K. Slayton, a former astronaut who ea I e
sh. utUe test flight program, said the aesert landina at Ed wards wu so perfect that Columbia may return to Earth
at a 15,000-foot run,..y at Cape Canaveral sooner than ex-
pected.
where a victim arrives
unconscious at a hospital.
Autopsies are performed in
about 72 percent of the cases,
The county will continue
its current contract which pays
pathologists from the Anato·
Chem Medical Laboratories in
Anaheim about SlOO for each
autopsy, said Beckett.
According to job classifica·
lions approved Tuesday by the
County Board of Superviso~s.
one supervising morgue asSls-
tant will make from $1 ,539 to
$2,079 per month.
Other assistants will ·earn
from $1,090 to $1 ,626, depending
on experience and duties.
Stevens said the 10,000-square
foot morgue is planned lor com·
pletion in early June. Recruit-
ment for the nine workers will
begin today.
From Page A1
CROWDS. • •
far. with 26 lifeguards on duty in
key towers or in six mobile ~'8 ·
-roughly one-third of the sum·
mertime force.
Harbor Patrol officials say
boat traffic bas been light thus
far in Newport Harbor, with no
major incidents.
"Maybe they all went skiing
this week ," one haf"bor
patrolman said.
In Seal Beach, Jifeguards say
crowds are running between
7 .000 and 9,000 a day. with park·
ing available in the city's $2 pef
day lots.
THE CITY IS operating with
six to eight guards a.. day -
about four les·s than Jasl year -
because of _,udget constraints.
But those guards aren't being
pressed. Crowds are light and
water temi:iieratures are chilly.
The foot·high surf is also no
threat to swimmers. guards say.
Guards al Huntington city and
state beac~es say crowds are
below norrnal for Easter Week,
with city sands hosting about
15.000 visit.ers and slate beaches
reporting 3,000 to 6,000 per day.
City guatds say they haven't
had to close off areas to surfing
because of the low turnout of
swimmers in the water, whJcb is
about 62 degrees in Huntington.
From Page A1
MAYOR. • •
" fired a handgun at her, causing a
superficial bullet wound to tter
neck.
PEART SAJO he called the An·
tbony home and Irvine city coun-
cilman Bill Vardoulis answered
and said that Anthony had calmed
down Md wasn ·t near a w6apon.
Anthony telephoned Vardoulis,
hls political ally, minut:es after
the alle&ed assa'Ult and asked
Vardoulls to come to ,ht• res·
idence. ·
Peart aaid that after dawn on
Friday be and a•eiltant city
manager Paul Brady Jr went to
the m ayor'• bouee and recovered
two .U-caliber mllltary
automatic ha.bd1uns, but weren't
able to O.nd a rtlle that Elaine An·
thonyuldallowuinthehOUH.
They took the 1un1 and four
f amUy dop that Mn. Antbony
eald lht wu concerned about
from Antbony'1bome.
At the time AntlM>ny wu in hl•
den and ref'UHd tocom.OUt.
"Peart aald a plan wa1 l~ter
ttruelf wbereby AlltMDJ, IO, • -.poumformerMeftne~. WoaJd ...,.. to .OhmtarUJ _...
iall Mcsllf m tM .,.,...,.e
hid olffoa&HospAtal
Arm , ~for Im·'.
po1Uioa ol tbf, muJm~ MD
tencff acalnlt the d.tendanta -
300·J)l\al yeara -Hid be wu more than aatisfied.
"I wu very pleued with It."
the deputy dlatrtct attorney eald.
"I wu very pleased wltb the
way the judge handled it."
Armbrust said that any sen·
tence ranitng from 100 years to
500 years "was academic" since
it meant the three youn1 rapists
would spend the rest of their
lives in prison.
State law requires that two.
thirds of a sentence be served
before a prisoner can become
eligible for consideration for
parole.
:rhe Pham brothers and
Nguyen would be in their 80s and
90s before this could happen.
BEFOR E TH E sentences
were meted oµt by Briseno In his
11th floor courtroom in Santa
Ana Thursday, Armbrust bad
told the Judce that "it was time
to s~~d a n,iessage to ~e streets
''If there's any mercy or sym.
pathy to be.cbown by this court,
let it be shown for the victims,"
the pr<lfiecutor said of t4e seven
women ranging in age.from 14 to
21 who •aid they were abducted
by the four Vietnamese refugees
and then raped in 1980. '
"They got their kicks out the.re
in the oran~ groves," Armbrust
said, "and now it's time to pay."
But Hewatt, who represented
Tung Thumb Le, the 17-year-old
defendant sent to the Callfomia
Youth Authority for testina. said
the four refugees fled a culture
that was almost prehistoric in
compl!-fisoh with urban America.
America.
"THEIR ACTS SHOW no in·
tent as we know it in our socie-
ty,'' said Hewatt, vA.ose client
faces formal sentencing in three
months.
If considered amenable to
treatment, Le could be sent to
CY A where be would remain un-
til he was 25. At that time, he
either could be released or sent
on to state 'pris<tn , depending on
his response to counseling and
treatment.
A jury convicted the Pham
brothers and Nguyen on more
than 50 felony counts. each in
connection with six of the rape
incidents last year.·
Le was found guilty on 40
counts in connection with five
rape incidents.
Armbrust contended that tlie
four abducted women off the
streets throughout Orange Coun-
ty and drove them to secluded
grove areas near Irvine, where
they were forced to participate
in sexual acts.
.Lifeguard
funds .split
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has doled out
$248,000 to five coastal cities to
assist them In offsetting the cost
of providing summer lifeguard
service.
Under the finance assistance
package approved Tuesday,
Seal Beach will receive $21,489;
Huntington Beach , $61,109;
Newport Beach, $98,037 ; Laguna
Beach, $32 ,792, and San
Clemente, $34,821.
The county money will come
from a fund containing revenues
from Dana Point Harbor.
The state recently sued the
county, claiming those funds
should not t>e used· for ~xpend
itures outside the harbor. The
lawsuit jg pending in Orange
County Superior Court.
The 2-tone bikini by
EENI MEENI in jade/White.
yellow/White. lilac/Wh lte.
• 11 .00 ea. piece.'
Wear this beautiful bikini
wtth or without the tie -In •
vivid fed with purple trim. Only •20.00 aet ..
W lSHINGTON (AP> -1,'be
nation's industrial production
rose 0.4 percent in March, an lo·
crease moetly due to stepped-up
auto asaembly, tbe Federal
Reserve Board reported today.
The board al.Jo aald production
bad declined 0.4 percent In
February. rather than 0.5" per·
cent as reported earlier. after
growing for six straight montlu
in recovery from last year's re·
cession.
'Blootly'
protest
broken
WASHINGTON (AP> -Six
demonstratan were arrested on
the White ltouse grounds today
after they splattered blood on
the North Portico of the
mansion, officials said.
The protesters also threw tax
forms against the large whit~
pillars of the portico. the ~rel"
Service reported. Tod~y 1s the
deadline for filing personal
income tax forms with the
federal government.
Charles Feeney, a Park Service
e mployee who was working on the
grounds when the incident oc-
curred, said the demonstrators
burled baby bottles containing
blood at the portico.
Then "they got down on their
knees and started singing, ..
Feeney said.
Asked how be kne" the sub-
stance was blood . he repli;d. ''It started coagulating ...
A Secret Service spokesman.
Dick Hartwig, said the protesters
threw "red paint or· blood" and
tax forms against the pillars.
They were taken into custody im-
mediately, he said.
They were nQt immediately
identified and Hartwig said be
didn't know what charges, if any.
would be filed against them.
It appeared that the dem-
onstr4tors gained access to the
White House grounds on a routine
public tour.
It was not known if Presjdent
Reragan, Tecuperating upstairs in
the White House living quarters.
was a ware of the protest.
Easter hunt
set in FV
Children will be able to search
for candy and prizes Saturtiay at
the fifth annual Easter Egg
Hunt sponsored by the city of
Fountain Valley and the Foun·
lain Valley Jaycees.
The free event, open to
children to age 9, will begin at 11
a .m. at the Fountain Valley
Recreation Center, 16400
Brookhurst St.
Children are encouraged to
bring Easter baskets to hold their
eggs. •
Biggs appe al set
BRIDGETOWN, Bat"bados
(AP) -Great Train Robber
Ronald Biggs has filed a petition
a.ppealing a Barbados
magistrate's extradition order to
return him to Britain t.'J finish his
prison sentence.
Appatelllly spurred by rebatlk
boosted au~ sales, the induatry
assembled automoblles at a.o ID~
nual rate of 6.5 million unltl in
March, about 12 percent abov•
the rate ln February. Overa-'1
output of auto products roee '7.f
percent, the board reported. •
All the figures are adjusted f'*"
seasonal variations. f'
March's industrial produc~
fieures were down 0.3 perce~
from March 1980 but were 8 ~
cent above last year's Low ln Ju
ly , near the end of the recession.
Industrial output in the n...-
quarter of 1981 average 1.6 per:,
cent higher than in the fourth
quarter of last year. the report
said.
The robust auto production led
to a 0.5 percent increase in the
overall consumer goods
category in March, the report
s aid.
.. Production of home goods
such as appliances edged up in
March but output of consumer non·du~ables decreased slightly
further," it said.
Output of construction sup-
plies also declined somewhat.
but output of business equip·
ment rose 0.8 percent, "due in
large part to sharp increases. in
production of building and mm·
ing equipment and trucks."
The production of basic
materials for durable goods rose
0.8, percent, "mainly refl~cting
increases in the production of
parts for consumer durables and
for/equipment," the report said1
Non -durable-goods materials
"edged down further."
··Production of energy
materials declined, mainly
because of s trike-related
decreases in coal output:· the board reported.
HBcouncil
eyes change
• • in campaigns ..
The J\Untington Beach Ci~y
Council is considering changes an
an election campaign ordinance
that the city attorney says is unen·
forceabl e and a city council
membersaysisridiculous. ;
The current ordinance seeks t9
limit individual donations to can-
didates to $200.
l I I l i ~ • .
Cit y Councilwoman Rutr\ ,
Finley has i'eque~ed that a new ,_l
version of the ordinance come to
the council next Monday.
According to an analysis by Ci~
ty Attorney Gail Hutton and th
Orange County district attorney' I
office, persons making excessiv~ J...
donations could be fined a max-
imum of $100, but the candidate
accepting the donatio,i doesn'!.H
violatetheordinance.
Also the $200 limitatjon can be
ignored if donations g~ to an in:;)
dependent committee "working
on behalf" of a candidate. or if·:
money is spent on behalf of a can·:.::
didate without his request. ae;-.... ·
cording to Bill Amsbury, assis·:.~
tant city attorney. '
Mrs. Finley said the une_n·.:.:
f o r c e a b I e o r d i n a n c e 1 s-·-
"ridiculous." She called for en-
forceable limits and increased }
disclosure laws on donations at'
the last council meeting. ;.
Next year. four City Counc~l~ :.
seats and the City Attorney s •.
office will be up for election. ::·0
Be a standout on the beech
in this monokinl from OP.
Bright flowers on white
background, •21 .00. ·
These are Just a few from
our wonderful collection of
1 & 2 piece suits.
Get yourt tod•yl
,,
"
)
Lady Bird Johnson tours grounds of Headley-Whitney
Museum in Lexington, Ky., with Phyllis George
·Brown, wife of Kentucky governor . The former first
lady planned visit later Tuesday to Murray, Ky.
1Yprogram
deb(;ite eyed
. Ted T\uner, president and
chairman of Turner Broad·
casting System Inc. in Allan·
t:a, has sent telegrams to the
heads of the three major
te levision networks propos·
ing a det)ate on morality in
programming.
"Within the past few days
you have spoken on this sub-
ject at the annual meeting of
the Amel'ican Association of
Advertising Agencies,"
Turner s aid in the telegrams
to Fred SUvenna•, president
of NBC; Gene Jankowsld,
president of the CBS Broad·
cast Group, and Fred Pierce,
president of ABC Television.
Similar invitations were
sent to .the aev. Jerry
Falwell and Cal Tllomaa
of Moral Majority and Dr.
l>oHld WlldmH of the Na·
Uonal Federation for Decen-
cy, Turner said.
He said the one-hour de-
bate would be televised on
WTBS-TV and the Cable
News Network, both viewed
on cable television na-
tionwide.
There's nothing exciting
about being pregnant or
being a farmer, says
Princes s .ctnne of
Eng Land, who is both
these days.
c.ar1.. ". c...... cme~ U••' NI... .._ln1'1ratloa
alde -w.-.ate flrin; baa~ 8,W'Wep CUil' pallia for priloD NIGf m.
~ •• bora·a·~ Cbrtl.; ttan wbo aer•ed ••v•• montlw ol a one· to ~ year Jail term for obi~
• Jwttlce wbUe a pres~eMSAI
aide, tGld a news COllf.,...
alter addreUlq lnmat.t at
Graterford Prison near
PhUadelpbia Udt week: '
"It'• a real crlait and tbe
terrible thins l• that the
enemy ol coutructlve IOlu· tlon l.1 public apatby and
demalOlicpoliUclana.
"I wu one ol them, ~ I
know what I 'm talklnt
about.'' be aatd.
Cobon 1ald the solution II
to 1et the non-viot,nt
prisoner o¢ of prison and in·
to a Protram to work to pay
back IOCiety for bla crlmeL
He noted there is now '5.8
billion in new prison ~on·
struction planned lo -the
country because of ove~
crowdin1.
Job• T . Dowaey, itbe
former CIA agent who spent
more than 20 years ip a
Chinese prison, la resigning
his Connecticut job to run for
the Democratic nomination
for the U.S. Senate.
Downey told Gov. ,_m
O'NeUJ his resignatio~ as
c hairman of the state
Department of Public Ut~lity
Cootrol is effeet.lve May ~
O'Neill said he expeCted
many Jother Democrats to
seek the Democratic nomina-
tion in 1982 to run for the seat
now held by Republican
LoweU Welcker Jr.
Downey, 5o. a New Haven
la w yer, was captured in
Chi na in 1951 on a mission for
the CIA. He was released in
19'7 l.
The Congressional Club. the
political group built around
Sen. Je~se Helm~. R-N .C ..
has oppned a nationwide
television ad campaign seek-
ing support for President
Reagan's economic pro -
gram .
Cariter Wrenn, executive
director of the club, said it
bought $100,000 in1 TV time
and plans to spend $250,000 if
it can1raise that much. So far
it has produced 10 6C>·second
com°'ercials. ;
The: first ads w~re broad·
cast on Wuhingtctn sutJon
WTTG, and Wrenn 11aid more
time will be bought on cable
televi$ion systems in Atian·
ta, New York ~nd .Loa Ari1eles. After Uiat, M i-'cL
ads will be run in selffted
congressional district,
around the nation.
More showers f oreca'st
I Rain extends from Pacific Coast to Carolinas
f1xutal, irealher
Nlalll MCI mornln9 ,_ cloud•.
Ont)' •••ll•t cteulne T1111roctay
•ll•tfloon a1on9 lleecllu . t..o••
IOfllfltl JO to SS. HIQM Thvndey 62 lo •s •1°"11 1r. coe11, 7S 10 72 lnlelld.
Wat ... '1
l!llewllere, wol to 1oulllwul
wlnct1 IO lo IS knoh Tlluroctey
•II••-•1111 I IO J ,_wind ••vn. ••sfffi, 1..i1 of 1 lo 1 ffft
Sllowen ..... 1-nl>Ow.,., were
1ce1ter ect 1od•Y over Main• a"d
acrosa Ille CMlllW-. llW T-
V•119J aflll '1'om Cefllrel Ar ..... lft to
nonheell Texas.
Showero etw 1911 over -•l< .. lrel
eflcl _,.,,_. TeUI. Wldtly ocal·
1erecl reifl -.,_ ,,_,..,, ctol-
cel'ltral ..... Mulc.o --Ml CM/I ... . uuifomia
Felr ...tller II ·--through Tllur'HaJ ...:191 for nlelll and morn·
lne ,_ ct-In Soutt>em CetHor11la
coeolal and veti.-t ereK. Hl9ll ,_,.11H'H on Th11rloday
llloulcl lie In IN -70s In Ille l..OI A .... ln .,..., wltll ~In IM llPIMf'
*· t n coe1tat va lleJI on Tllllrloday,
1119111 .-.14 range from Ille I-IO
mlcl 70. Md lows lnHn.,. tow to mlcl *· In~ velleTS .-UPKt
IOll MCI -dowdl Tllunde)' !r*'n·
lne, lottowecl tit a llUNIY efte,_
wltll llitN fl'Qm U to, 71. I.OW 111011MI ...... ---.,-n. Tiie .,......., W.t(lller Servk• 11
• P'ffktlfll tittle <'*'le lfl -l•ln _..,. ________ ... -··· wflkfl ............ 1119N"' tlle
l ... ..w ..... 1 .. u.JD1,.tt11NO.,-
V•ll•Y, NttW Cl\efttle 11 ellO •••-· w11111111N••as-i.w. u to .o.
Temperatures
Alllany
Alfluque
AnchOreee
letllmo,.. 91.,,.erck
9olM
IOllOfl
811fleto
CMrt11n WV ,,,. ... _
Cllk eQO Cle,,.lend
Ml LA l"c._
SS 2t .II
60 ,. .01
J7 1'
.. 41
SS 17
11 • s.1 ,. ,. ao
11 ,.
61 12
M Q
M JI
Southem <Alifomi.a auef report
Vellclte•p~ • ....-,: H.itMlfl~...,ledln~ ......
• I .
, 1"'N ldt111U"9 .
..,. .....
t
I t
!
... ..:. ........
...... ,s... ...... -'" .... ,.... ,....., u 1 ,
I '• U I I
J 111! ' ' I I J
••
0
ll
1' .OJ
IS
11 ..
ll
1' .OS
;M
u ,,
12
11
1t
>7 " lS
-1.04 44 .IJ JO ,,. ..
41 • 45 .22
60 • 40
II .OI
40
4' .II
... 11
•
Surf ece repair work on the
B•lboa Jaland brld1e wu
ordered io cea1e today after t•tand merebant1 complained
that the~ Job II ktlllns thelr
'Easter Week buaineu.
••We're taklnt a are at
beatln1." tsland real estate
acent R.E. "Tex" Griffith told
Newport Beach City Council
memben thJs week.
Bridge work, which betan lut
year, has reaulted ln traffic
beln1 reduced to a 1in1le lane on
the 50-year-old stntcture. It also
bas produced regular traffic
snarls.
"Someone ls going to end up
1ettinf in a fist fight out there,"
comp alned island furniture
shop owner Ray Louwe. ''It just
isn't fair to the merchants ."
COUNCILMAN Phil
Maurer, a Balboa Island resi·
dent, called the single-lane setup
on th~ bridge this week a result
of "~r planning."
'"The real crime," Maurer
went on , "is that merchants
weren't told this was going to
·happen until last Friday."
The week before Easter -
long-known as Bal Week on the
island -is considered a prime
business time by Balboa Island
shop owners.
Ben Nolan. Newport's public
works director. said the work
shutdown could mean up to a
$25.000 loss for the cpntr actor,
Peter Ki ewit Sons Construction.
During the council session,
Nolan tried to talk the elected
leaders out of shutting down the
repair job.
"THEY HAVE good
momentum going now," he
observed. "If we close it down
it's possible the oroiecl could lai-
over into June.··
The bridge work, calling for a
general refurbishing and new.
wider bike and pedestrian lanes
on each side, originally was to
be completed before Easler.
Bad weather and construction
complications are blamed for
the setback.
Is land merch ants. mostly
clustered along Marine Avenue,
protested last Christmas. when
traffic on the bridge was
narrowed to one lane.
Re-al estate agent Griffith
· reported that many shop owners
had lost m on ey during the
C hristmas season and had
stocked up for Easter in hopes of
brisk bU5iness.
"All I can tell you," be •aid to
council members, "is that we're
just a bunch of people who are
eager to make a living.··
Repairs on tbe bridge, as well
as the one-way t r a ffic, are
scheduled to r esume on Monday.
-STEVE MARBLE
Audubon
tour slated
• The Sea and Sage Audubon
Society will sponsor a free tour
of the Starr Ra nc'h nature
sanctuary on Saturday from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m. .
Persons wishing to take part
should meet at the entrance of
Caspers Regional Park on
Or(ega Highway east of San Juan
Capistranoat8a.m.
For information call Jane
Berry at646-1488or Marge Mazur
at 744-6170.
'
Gem
Talk
By J .C. HUMPHRIES
Certified Gemologiat. AG.!
WHAT'S IN,A NAME?
... almoal ewT)llhfng
....
There are about 2,600 known
minerals. You have probably
hea.,d of about hatttof them, and
moat people can identify no
more than a few dozen by name
and •ight. Some of the names
are simple and self-explanalot)t
. . . ruby, emerald, ,earl. for
eumple . . . imme.diately
lde11tify With colors. But, bow in
~e -world did we find namll$ for
all tbe othen? Some minerals
are named for people wbo first
identified them. There la a
Joesmitblte, for example,
named for an American
1eolo1t1\ named' Joe Smltla.
Other ml.Mrala 1et tbeir nallMI
(r(>m places when tlteJ nre
first dlaco\'ered. There are
oretonlte, benlt.llte >for San
Benlto ,·catlf .> and
tranciuJ1llt)'lte <fOUDd in tbe Sea
of 1'nDquW'1 oa the moon).
A111.-,.· la tM Greek phr ...
for "Dot dnd .. ._ ... ll ., ..
Ollot iM&Aved 0.f WHftDI' ti.ii ltoee wo.ald "it.., on• from
ffUIU lidolieatM. Genet 1• ru· .-. ,,_ 111e tlllli ... ........................
•at tboqbt to ,, .. mble.
Deit)' ...... ~., ~O'o-tl
Temporary halt to Balboa Island Bridge corutruction loday may
smooth Bal Week mf lu.x and pleaae merehenl.!.
Too many people
spoil the fishing?
Since 1949, Or ange County
fishermen have tried their luck at
catching trout Crom the man·
made ponds along San Juan
Creek in the Cleveland National
Forest.
Now, the dams that have
created the fishing holes are in
jeopardy.
U.S. Forest Service officials
complained to the county Board
of Supervisors this week that too
many people -including some
undesirabl es -are congregat-
ing by the ponds arid along the
creek.
Forest Service officia ls saJd
that litter problems and the
potential for s wimming accl·
dents are their chief reasons for w~nting to remove the dams and
let the stream flow unchecked.
SVPERVISOllS agreed
with the Forest Service that a
study of th·e damming program
was in order, but refused to or·
der removal of the dams pend-
ing completion of the survey.
.. They're easy lo close, but not
easy to reopen," commented
Supervisor l{arrietl Wieder, who
said the board needed more in·
formation on the purported prob-
lems along the . cr eek before·
final action is taken. A report
was ordered to be prepared by
the Forest Service a nd the coun-
ty Environmental Management
Agency and presented to the
board Within three weeks.
The dams -created by in-
s taUing · boa'rds between con-
crete stanchions on each side
of the creek -have been in
place for 31 years. The boards
have been installed annually by
the county under terms of a
permit issued by the Forest
Service.
THE BOAaDS generally Jr~
installed in early sprin1 and re-
main in place through the sum-
mer. The ponds have been
routinely stocked with trout by
the Slate F ish and Game
Department.
Twenty-nine of the -40 datn1 ln
question are along San Juan
C r e-e k east of San Juan
Capistrano. Others are loc11ted
along Trabuco Creek, which is
also stocked, and other locations
in the Santa Ana Mountain5. {
Brian McGuire, a Clevelan
National Forest official, told
supervisors that the federal gov-)
ernment is facing $11 million in
personal injury claims from peo-
ple injured while swimming in
the pools .
He said it was only reasonable
for a study of the situation since
the permit has not been .updated
sin~e 1949.
The County Fish and Game
Commission, supervisors were
told, wants the dam pfogram to
continue. So d oes the state
Department of Fish and Game. .'
··After all , fi s hi ng o p -
portunities in Orange County
are very limited," a state of-
ficial said.
•
. . Touches <;>f •
· ·Class~
~-~ -.. v ·~-'
'1 ~. o.
8.
c. • •
The <llomoncl, nu1ure·s f'larclest S\.lhStance
<and Ir's mosl f)(•autlful. 100. W<' mlQhtaclcll ls
slltlny P"'"Y on thf'S<' fancy sha(><'S of ~.wllou.1
gold. atteslin!I to rhc• cwdtlue lmaplnln!IS of
our fin<' )<'W<'lfY clc•stgners. sam ple• rheS<·
~IU ladles I• karor (JOI~ /IH'tgs, eucll set
with beoutlf ul round dlamorids: ·
A Six rounrl <llamonds totaling .40...carats
comptemenr the f<•aturf!cl 1 .os carat
<.Uamond.
a F)ue round diamonds total .• 1 curots.
C Nine round <11otnonds torol .8 I carots.
D. Four round diamonds tofol .42,carots.
..
CMllee W. Ce ..... ••· Um• Ml .. M•iDlUradon
aide IDd wa..,.at. fl~.
UI beiWl a two-w• ~· palp for prilOft Nfortll.
Calloe, a bon-q~ CbN-U an wbo urved 1even
montM ot a oae-to UttM-rear Jail term ror oblt.nacWll
. Juatlce while a pr•l•entaal
aide, told a newt eonfereoee
after addrellua. lnmatee at
Grater(ord Prilon near
PbUadelpbia um Wffk:
"It's a real crllil and the terrible thinl la that the
enemr ol coutruetJve aolu-Uon ta public apatby and
demalOlicpolltlclana. '
"1 was one ol them, 10 1
know what I'm talkln1
about/• be aald.
Colaoo said the solution la
to 1et the non ·vJol~nt
prisoner 04,lt of prison and ID·
to a procram to wort to pay
back society for hia crime.
He noted there i5 now S.S.8
billion in new prison 1on-
struction planned ht the
country because of over-
crowdinl.
Joh• T. Dowaey, 1lhe
former CIA agent who spent
more than 20 years in a
Chinese prison, is resigninc
his Conne<:ticut job to run for
the Democratic nomination
for the U.S. Senate.
Lady Bird Johnson tours grounds of Headley-Whitney
Museum in Lexington, Ky., with Phyllis George
Brown, wife of Kentucky governor. The former first
lady planned visit Later Tuesday to Murray, Ky.
Downey told Gov. ~Ill
O'Neill his resignation as
chairman of the state
Department of Public UtJUty
Cootrol ls effeetive May St.
O'Neill said he expeCted
many •other Democrats to
seek the Democratic nomina-
tion in 1982 to run for the seat
now held by Republican
Lowell Welcker Jr. 1Yprogmm
debme eyed
: Ted 'l'u'ner, president and
chairman of Turner Broad·
casting System Inc. in Allan·
~. has sent telegrams to the
heads of the three major
television networks propos-
ing a det)ate on morality ln
programming.
"Within the past few days
you have spoken on this sub-
ject al the annual meeting of
the American Association of
Advertising Agencies,"
Turner said in the telegrams
to Fred SUver11ta•, president
of NBC; Gene Jankowski,
president of the CBS Broad-
cast Group, and Fred Pierce,
president of ABC Television.
Downey, So, a New Haven
lawyer, was captured in
China in 1951 on a mission for
the CIA. He was released m
1971.
The Congressional Club. the
political group built around
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.,
has opened a nationwide
television ad campaign seek-
ing s upport for President
Reagan's economic pro-
gram.
Ca~r Wrenn, executive
director or the club, said it
bought $100,000 in TV time
and pJans to spend $250,000 if
it can raise that much. Si) far
it has produced 10 00-second
com °'ercials.
Similar invitations were
sent to .the aev. Jerry
Falwell and Cal Tltomu
of Moral Majority and Dr.
DoHld Wlldmu of the Na·
Uonal Federation for Decen·
cy, Turner said.
He said the one-hour de·
bate would be televised on
WTBS-TV and the Cable Newa Network, both viewed
on cable television na·
lion wide.
There's nothing exciting
about being pregnant or
being a farmer, says
Princess ~nne of
England, who is both
these days.
The' first ada were broad·
cast on Washingt.On station
WTTG, and Wrenn it aid more
time will be bought on cable
televi.Sion systems in At:lan-
t a , New York lad .Loa
An1eles. After t.Ha . bi i ... t ads will be run in seiecua
congressional districts
around the nation.
More showers forecast
Rain extends fro.Ji Pacific Coast to Carolinas
O.nver 47 O Wastal. trealher ------· OH _I._, SS JI O.lrpfl U 1' .GJ
N..,_1 M<I '"°""'"O •-ctovda. Ollly par II al c tearlno Tl111nd•y
•11.,,.oon alono lleacllu. Lowa
IAWlltttt SO IO )S, Hltht T~y 62 lo u •'°"II ti. c. ... 1t. 1s to n In._.
Wa1M'1.
l!luwhere. ••" lo 1oulllwnl wln41t 10 to IS knoll Tllursd•Y
attar,_. with 1 lo J ,_wind • ......,
••st«ly ·-•of I lo 2 f--4.
FelrlN..U 11 U
He .. N '1 11
Hou1t°" 11 ..
lneln•pll• 1' Jl
J-av •I 1' .OS
Kal\S City SI J4
l .. V~ 17 •S
lPS Anv-lal 12 SI
Miami 11 11
Mll#Wk• SI Jt
1 lo\pl~Sl.P 41 1'
New YOrk 1t )7 .1'
Omllfla HU US. swnmary "•"'" Piii~ H » 1.IM r=vi:i Plttsllu"" •• U .1) 5110wan...., 1~n .. re
"•ll••M loday o"''' Moina a11d
acra111 IN Carol"-. UW T-Vattty and from central Artioftus lo
nort1Mo11 Teus.
~ Pllanel. Mil SO JO .M
•••• PUalld. Ore 12 44 ~ ~ =-l'•pldCfty 62 '1
iho .. n S•••••••'Y Oulvdtd .-:~mond ~! : .J2
... 1;;;;n;;;;ru.,u .. •_-_._._=_=_= _______ .. _o_•_• _u_• _o._o1_c .. --.... ·.. s." o1eoo " '° Sftewffa ai. let• over ... ,<.,lr•I
and _,,_ Tu••· Widely sctl·
lerM ra111 Mid -•!Iowa<• _._
central Mew -,.k:o and ""'-"' ~ ....
~ SanFr81t U a Solilr.rn Calttornl• dll«t •reos c•n loo!< tD< an-n and ...,.nlno
wind• of Is IP u mpl\. Hf9M si.ovtd
lie IO 10 !he ,_ .,. In u,,._, dewru
ond In llW tOs In '-t .. ..,, •• wlUI
•-• o to s~ In ......., oes«ts .nci u
to •s In •-• detert,.
Cal,if otnia
Fatr ~ 11 •-WCI lhr°'*"
ThurHa'f ellUPI ~ nl91rt and"'°'"' lllQ low c-111 ~ Callfornle
coastal and viii lay••••· Hl9ll 1..,_olures °" Tllurlday
ltllovld .. In Ille tow l'OI In UW Lff
A .... I" -· wl"' towt In Ille~ so..
111 c ... ,i.i ••ll•Y• on Tllvrt&ty,
1'1191\a "'°""' r.,. from u. -to !Md 70. 8ftd,!owt ,......, !flt•-10 mid so.. '"tannHl•le valleys can .. 119<1
, .. olld .low clctudlt Thu'9day m«n·
..... fal~bt ·-.,_ 11 "'· l'$T r.,..i rrom 21 la..flUr. wlttl l'lltN from 74 to.7t. LOW ihoul4 ,Mlcf\.,to171nllytN,C•t1t;" ranee ...._.,_n. TIM 'Not....., W..,,., Service 11 ,.-ti---------,· prffktf"9 lltue d\919 In -ttln ,_, wNCll~ ...... llloflt In U..
I* .... !OWi '" lN :aos .. .,, lN 0.,-V•ll•r. llffit <'*"9 I• •ISO •tlfleCWd, -'tfl llltN• '°.., a.w tewt as to 40
' I
Temperatures
Alb611Y
Attivqva
AnchOraoa lalllmon
91.,,,•rck
8olN
lo11on
l111te10
CMrl1lnWV c,,..,_
Clllcatp Clevelond
Ml La f'~
SS 2' .It '° ,. .01 l7 21
.. 41 .Ill
SS l1
11 • » ,. ...
JI '° -~ 11 • JO
" J2 MU
t4 ll ••
... .....
t
I t
............... ...... , ......... -,.,.. ""' ~ ra U I t
'
., ,, 1 •
I 1111 I ,t J t • J
SI Loul1 6' «I
S. Sle Marie q II .Ol
I $P041ene 60 41)
W•MllnGIGft 1J • .1J
WHlllnftll 1J 4' • Ii
CAU POllNlA
lallarsJleld 71 54
llt!M ....
Eur•-• 56 4l
Fresno 11 SO
uinc•M.ar 7S 42
Marysville 76 41
Moftlerey 60 fO
NHCl .. 1 to 51
0.kl•nd ...
Paso RC1'11n 1' • · Re(! llvff It 41
R...,....Clty 7• 41
RtllO 67 17 S.U~o 7-t 11
S.llM• 71 ,.
kMa~ ~ U ~Marla ., S4
$lodlOll 11 40
•
Tllerlllal ti Ml
Uklall IO ". . .,.,_ .... 11,..... ., ti ..... ,. u
<;JMllN ... J6
atCMltro • s1
l.CMlllNCll ., S2
~ .. MCWl19M tow U .._,.,,aaedl 4S M
Olll\Wt. ~ 71 •
....... ""1NI ta " ..,....._.. ,. " ..,..,_. ,. a
&lllUAM 71 » T.._V_., M 9t ,.._._.ICM :..,...... .. 111.• . ""'W ldtt11"1Uj
,..,.... n•·•
· Cwet• • 11
· The 1>*11.y PUot wants ,lo bear obaervalJOM Crom lta readen
-pertiCll&arlJ comm•ta aboutlbe paper ltaelf. lt'a ea11 to tell u '"' ....... ,, ...................... Ud 1WI' ._. ...
lwW ~be wM. ••••,.. wtU &e trwcrtbed Mver .. Umea
· cblJJ and detinred to tbe 6-k ot UM approprta~ Mitqr. No'
Lelrc .... eaa.. ~. · J.al • ..... OD Jour ~ ...... DUIDW ii U. Mnle. M
a.oanadaj,tn•41a,.afteli. fJ42•808fJ.
"~ ... ·~ei.... .. J1 • ..., ...... 4••n.-. I""-., .. rt(....... II 11 .......... ..,,
Surf a« repalr work on ~
811lboa Island brldte was
ordered to cease today alter
11land 1Dertb1nta complained
that t.he repal.r job ii klllln• their
Easter Week bualoea.
··We're taJrinc a freat
beatlng1" island real estate
a1eot B.E. "Tex" Griffith told
Newport Beach City Council
members this week.
Bridge work, which began last
year, has resulted lp traffic
belnc reduced to a sin1le lane on
the SO-year-old structure. It also
has produ.~ed regular traffic
snarls.
"Someone is going to end up
gettlnf ln a fist fight out there,"
comp ained island furniture
shop owner Ray Louwe. "It just
isn't fair to the merchants."
COUNC ILMAN Phil
Maurer, a Balboa Island resi·
dent, called the single-lane setup
on the bridge this week a result
of "poor planning."
"The real crime," Maurer
went on, ''is that merchants
weren't told this was going to
happen until last Friday."
The week before Easter -
long-known as Bal Week on the
island -is considered a prime
business time by Balboa Island
shop owners.
Ben Nolan. Newport's public
works director, said the work
shutdown could mean up to a
$25,000 loss for the contractor.
Peter Kiewit Sons Construction.
During the council session,
Nolan tried to talk the elected
leaders out of shutting down the
repair job.
"THEY HAVE good
momentum going now.'' he
observed. ··u we close it down
it's possible the oroiect could la1-
over into June ...
The bridge work, caUing for a
general refurbishing and new.
wider bike and pedestrian lanes
on each side. originally was to
be completed before Easter.
Bad weather and construction
complications are blamed for
the setback.
Is land merchants, mostly
clustered along Marine Avenue,
protested last Christmas when
traffic on the bridge was
narrowed to one lane.
Re-al estate agent Griffith
reported that many shop owners
had lost money during the
Christmas season and had
stocked up for Easter in hopes of
brisk business.
"AU I can tell you," be laid to
council members. "is that we're
just a bwich of people who are
eager to make a living."
Repairs on tbe bridge, as weU
as tbe one~way traffic, are
scheduJed to resume on Monday.
-STEVE MARBLE
Audubon
tour slated
• The Sea and Sage Audubon
Society will sponsor a free tour
of the Starr Ranch nature
sanctuary on Saturday from 8
a.m. to 2 p.m. .
Persons wishing to take part
should meet at the entrance of
Caspers Regional Park on
Or(ega Hi ghway east of San Juan
Capistranoat8a.m.
For information call Jane
Berry at646·1488or Marge Mazur
at 744-6170.
•
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Certifuid Gemologist. AG.!
WHATS IN .A NAME?
... olmorl nierything
'
There are about 2,600 knOWQ
01in<1ra1s. You hl\_'ve probably
hear'1 of about hall'Of them1 and
moat people can identify no
more than a few dozen by name
and alcht. Some of the names
are simple and self-explanatory
... ruby, emerald; pearl, for
example ... immediately
· Identify With colors. But, how ln
the •orld did we find names ror
all ,tbe others? Some mtnerala
are nad\ed (or people who ·first
ldentlfied them. There ls a
Joeamithlte, for example,
named for an Amerl"•n
teoto1l1\ named' .Joe SmlU..
Othe1' minerm 1ei tbelt nama
tr9m places wbe,. they wen
flrat discovered. There are
or·eapnite, b4sn\t.;)ite )for San
Benlto ,·Callf .> and
.traoquttlltytte <fomwl in tbe Su
ot TnacauWlf oca the moon).
Ametb11t ll U.. Gnek pbrue
for "Dlt clnlnt~' •-• lt JIM 9D•belivld r • ..,... ..
llOIM WOUid ep OH °ltom
l•Ubll llllOideatel. Ganet ,_ lta,.... fielD ... ~ ... loi'po..,••Med.wtNt•
was thotaeht to r~Hmtila.
Dally ............. ""'*'" O'o-tl Temporary halt to Balboa Island Britige Con8truction today may
smooth Bal WeekinfluxondpleaseTMrehonts.
Too many people
spoil the fishing?
Since 1949, Orange County
fishermen have tried their luck at
catching trout from the man·
made ponds along San Juan
Creek in the Cleveland National
Forest.
Now, the dams that have
created the fishing holes are in jeop1trdy.
U.S. Forest Service officials
complained to the county Board
or Supervisors this week that too
many people -including some
undesirables -are congre1at·
Ina by the ponds and alon1 the
creek.
Forest Service officials said
that litter problems and the
potential for swimming acci·
dents are their chief reasons for
w~nti.iig to remove the dams and
let the stream flow unchecked.
SUPE&VISOllS agreed
with the Forest Service that a
study oC the damming program
was in order, but refused to or-
der removal of the dams pend-
ing completion of the survey.
"They're easy to close, but not
easy to r eopen.'' commented
Supervisor H,arriett Wieder. who
said the board needed more In·
formation on tbe purported prob-
lems along the creek before·
final action is taken. A report
was ordered to be prepared by
the Forest Service and the coun-
ty Environmental Management
Agency and presented to the
board within three weeks.
The dams. -created by in·
staHing ·boards between con·
crete stanchions on eacn side
of the creek -haV'@ ·been in
place for 31 years. The boards
have been installed annually by
the county under terms of a
permit issued by the Forest
Service.
THE BOAIWS generally Jre
installed in early sprin1 and re-
main in place through the sum·
mer . The J)onds have been
routinely stocked with trout by
the State Fish and Game
Department.
Twenty-nine of the 40 dam.a in
question are along San Juan
Creek east of San Juan
Capistrano. Others are located
alollg Trabuco Creek, which is
also stocked, and other locations
in the Santa Ana Mountains.
Brian McGuire, a Cleveland
National Forest oHicial, told
supervisors that the federal gov-
ernment is facing $11 million in
personal injury claims from peo-
ple injured while s wimming in
the pools.
He said it was only reasonable
for a study of the situation since
the permit has not been .updated
sim:e 1949.
The Cowity Fish and Game
Com mission, supervisors were
told, wants the dam program oo
continue. So doe..s the state
Department of Fish and Game.
"After all , fishing op-
portunities in Orange County
are very limited." a state of·
ficial said.
~ .. '.]'ouches 9J ·
. .,,. ·cJass Av iJ
0 .
••
c . . . ~
The cllomoncJ. narure's hardest sul>stonc('
lan<l It's m ost t><•outlful, 100. W<' mlghr aclclJ Is
sttl/ng pretty on these fancy shap<·s of yt'llow
r1<>lcJ. orrestlnn to th<' credtlue Jmuglnlnos of
ou>' fine )<'W<'lfY clestoners. sompl<' tht'S<'
loue/IJ JacJles I 4 karat oulct lff'l~fS. t•uch St'I
with l~utlf ul round dlamon(IS: ·
A Six round cllomon<ls 101c11Jng .-«:>-earars
complement the• featured 1.05 carat
<JJamond.
B. F}ue round diamonds total .• 1 carats.
c. Nine round dlaf'nonds tOfOI .BI carats.
o. Four round diamonds to1al .•2 carats.
.'
W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Ef·
' fort• to end the 20-day coal •strike are s1aalled, with
• ne10Uators for the naUon's IOft-
, coal induatry and the United'
Mlne Workers tradlne chutes '
on who ls to blame for the latest de~dlock.
Union and industry bareainers
met for about five hours Tues·
day. but ended the talks with
both sides report.in& no progress.
Clai.m aupported
ATLANTA (J\P> -An FBI
agent, alleging some of the
children were slain by their
parents,sayshisbossbad "tbefull
facts behind bitn" ln announcing
lhal several of the 23 slayiogs of
youoa blaeta were "subatanUally
t0lvedJ' • ,
I LUili •flttlied
MIAMI <AP)-PoUceaaythey
don't know if there is any llnt
between tut month's arrestsof 13
men in a commando \.raininl
operation near a nuclear plarntuct
the arrests of two of thoee m en on
weaoons charges in connecUoo
with an alleged terrort~t plot.
FBI drill set
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. A<P> -
FBI agents and police training
to fight terrorists and free
hostages planned secret drills
today in this city built durjng
World War II lo manufacture
atom bombs.
I
... _.,.....
LONDON (AP) -Lea*'-ol
non-communist n•tlons and
their newspapers m.atcbed
superlatives today in saluilnl
the flight of the space 1huttle
Columbia. They said it bera14s
both a new era in space exploril~
lion and the resur1ence of
American technology.
· "The shuttle is tar Trek, Star
Wars and the E ire Strikes
Back in Life," sai e Guar-
. dlan, a liberal British ~Y· "It.
Is beautiful, futuristic and
patriotic in an era when
Americans have found little to
cheer about."
"Through Columbia's victory.
American prestige has been
launched again in the world," •
said the Rome leftist newspaper
La Repubblica. Japanese Prime
Minister Zenko Suzuki called the
flight "magnificent," U.N.
Secretary General Kurt
W ald he im sai d it wa s
"dramatic" and the Chinese
news agency Hsinhua used the
word "historic."
I U.S. sends more ·
: arms to Salvador
I
WASHINGTON <AP) -With
the bulk of U.S. military aid still to
be sent, American arms ship-
menls to El Salvador alreadybave
topped the tonnage of weapons
that the Reagan adminjstration
Mrs. Thatcher and Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi left the
airport. Sever al dozen more
youths chanted and passed out
leaflets as the motorcade reached
the presidential palace where the
British visitor is staying.
BRADLEY'S FINAL SALUTE -The caisson
bearing the body of the late General of the
Army Omar Bradley, followed by his five
star flag and riderless horse, crosses into
..............
Arlington National Cemetery where he was
buried Tuesday. Bradley, last of the
five-star leaders who shaped victory 36
years ago, <tied April 8 at age 88.
A COMMENTATO R on
Yugoslav state television, nar·
rating footage of Columbia's
landi ng, exclaimed. "Spec-
tacular!'· A bakery owner in
Islamabad, Pakistan, said, •·All
praise to Allah. who enables men
and women to think, plan and
operate such wonder machines as
the shuttle "
Congratula tions weat to
Washington from the Canadian
Parliament. Italian President
Sandro Pertini and Korean
President Chu Doo Hwan.
• contends Soviet-bloc countries s muggled lo leftist guerrillas. Panda gets 2nd chance THE MESSAGES praised
astronauts John Young and
Robert Crippen -and the
technical e xpertise that sent
them a loft on a rocket and
brought them home Tuesday on
a glider to a wheels-down land·
ing in the California desert.
The Defense Department said
Tuesday that the U oiled States has
sent 343.2tons of military supplies
to El Salvador since Jan. 1. That
compares with an earlier Stale
Brixton 'quiet' As a lover, Hsing-Hsing's still a ding-a-ling
1 Departmentestimateof200tonsof
Soviet-bloc weapons in the hands
• of the guerrillas.
Policies rapped
NEW DELHI, India (AP)
Small Communist demoDJStra-lions and angry news paper
editorials condemning Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher's
racial policies greeted her today
when she arrived for a four-day
visit to India.
About lwo dozen noisy youths
waved black swatches of cloth and
s houted "Go back! Go back! ""as
LONDON (AP> Young black
rioters in Brixton !tayed off the
streets Tuesday night, letting the
s lum wstrict in South London
sleep undisturbed for the first
time in five nights
Report p remature
WARSA W, Poland (AP>
Poland's Communist party
newspaper said today that reports
the government was expanwng
food rat1001ng were "pre-
mature." Trybuna Ludi, lhe official party
paper, said the Polish Cabinet had
reviewed a draft plan for expand-
ing food rationing bul that no final decision had been taken.
WA SHINGTON <AP) -Poor
H sing .Hsin g . Hi s panda
gir)friend is making goo-goo eyes
at him again and he still can't
figpre out what to do after eight
years oftrying.
This lime, Hsing.Hsing was
supposed lo give way lo a rival -
and still may, if the rival turns ou\
to be interested.
Hsing-Hsi ng 's Intended,
Ling-Ling, got in the mood
Tuesday, about two weeks early,
and started giving "come hither"
signs.
She bleated and ignore<! her
food . More important for an
a morous male panda, s he walked
All our fine stock will be included in this sale. Porcelains from $2.50
to $6000. Ladies Diamond Rings from S20 to $1 0,000. Furniture,
including fine . French Louis XV & XVI style furnishings. Clocks.
bronzes. ivory, c handeliers. Oriantal items. silver, cyrstal. Lladros. fine f~
art. jewelry and gold, etc. 1 r:;
Thurs., Fri., & Sat. April 16-17-18 I :00 to 5:00 PM Daily /j~·
EMPIRE GALLERIES LTD. ~~C . , 2722 N. Main Street. Santa Ana. CA 92701 ·
714-547-7384 ' .i ~-~~~~~
backward. the sign that "today's
the day."
Officials of the National Zoo
quickly hustled Ch ia·Chia.
imported from London lo take
Hsing-Hsing's place as fathe:-of
the hoped.for baby panda, into
her presence, with a screen
between them.
"I want to be alone," was the
only way to interpret his growl.
But from Hsing-Hsing's room
came the "here I come readY. or
not" bleat.
So1 the old boy was given
another chance.
A lolofgooditdidhim
He tried sev'eral times -
nothing. Ling-Ling finally got so
frustrated she started whacking
her would·be lover, prompting
him to beal a hasty retreat lo the
other sideorthe cage.
Zoo spokesma n Mic hael
Morgan confirmed again what
everybody knows from previous
courtships: "He just can't figure
out whattodo."
Zoo officials have been trying to
breed a panda ever s ince
Hsi ng.Hsing a nd Ling ·Ling
arrived in 1972 as a gift from
China in honor President Nixon's
trip there. If they succeed. it will
be only the second panda born in
captivity.
"ll is a tribute to the courage
of the two men who ventured in·
to space and to the skill s of your
scientists," said Waldheim in a
cable lo President Reagan from
Geneva
West German President Karl
Carstens told Reagan. "With
this s uccessful flight, America
has made a great step forward
i n man's inves tigation o f
space." British Prime Miruster
Margaret Thatcher said she was
"thrilled." Eric Quistgaard.
head of the European Space
Agency, which plans to launch
sa tellites aboard the s huttle.
hailed the "magnificent s uc-
cess"
.
Can you name the major risk factors that cause
heart attacks? Do you know how to reduce your
chances of having a heart attack? Can you learn
to live -and live well -after having a heart attack
or undergoing coronary bypass surgery? You'll find
· o~t all this and more at Hoag Hospital's informative
seminar. "Your Heart-Will the Beat Go On?"
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian
Presents
Your Heart •••
will the beat goon? ..
Monday
April 21. 1981
7:00 to 9:00 pm
Grace Hoag
Conferebee Center ·
301 Newport Blvd.
Newport ~ch, CA
Janet M. Kelly, R.N .. Community Educ.ation.
(Introduction)
Joel H. Mancheste~ M.~ Cardiologist (Definitions.
signs and symptoms, risk factors, diagnosis and
treatment of coronary artery disease)
Debbie Grayston. Regi ste;ed Dietitian. {Nutrition.
Preventative and Rehabilitative)
Carol Covington. R.N .• Cardiac Rehabilitation.
(Definitions and Goals)
Plea~ mall the fqllowlna resistratioo fonn to Hoaa Memori1I
Hoepital Prdbyteriln, Community EduCltion l>cplrtrnent. 301
~Wl>Ort Boulevlfd. Newport Beach. C1' 92663. THEJIB IS NO
ADMISSION CHARGE. Llmitl!d seating avallable,
Natne~~-----...-~-~--~
AddtttS------------'
Daytime Phone (
'
'
I
LOS ANGEI,.ES (AP) -Detpite cballen1ea
from 18 people..tnch1din1 • former mayor be bad
faced twice before, Tom Bradley won a landslide
vicwry in his quest for a third term w{tb the
bl&hest percentaae or votes ever cast for a Los
Angeles mayor. :
With 99.2 percent of Tuesday's vote counted,
Bradley had 63.6 percent, or 279,501 votes. to
, fd'rmer Mayor Sam Yorty's 32.3 percent , of 142,Z<M.
·Bradley had needed at least IO percent to avoid
whet would have been bis first runoff.
BRADLEY'• margin bodes well for any hopes
he may have of seeking the Democratic
gubernatorial nomination ln 1982.
Bradley has made no announcement· on bis
' political plans, but he refused during the
campaign to promise that he would serve all four
years of a third term. He remained non-committal
after victory.
City Controller Ira Reiner appeared headed
into a June runoff election with Councilman Bob
Ronka for city attorney after a surprisingly strong
showing by a third candidate apparently kept
Reinerfromgettmg a maJorityofvotes.
BOTH RE INER, who held 49.74 percent of the
vote with 11\0re than 99 percent counted, and
Ronka said late Tuesday 'they expected their
vitriolic campaign to take on a more s ubdued tone
before the runoff.
Ronka pulled in 31.54 percent of the vote and
Charles Zinger, a deputy city attorney. had an
unexpecteldy high total or 16.94 percent. Reiner
needed to get at least half the totaJ vote to win the
office outright.
Priest unhurt
in kidnapping
SAN FERNANDO <APl -A Roman Catholic
priest who was locked in his car and robbed of $350
was back at his church despite threats from his as
sailaot, authorities said.
Police are looking for a middle.aged man who
abducted the Rev. Thomas H. Rush from his office
at Santa Rosa Catholic Church on South Workman.
Jai.l plot foi/,ed
REDWOOD CITY <AP> -Sheriff's deputies
who foiled a weekend attempt lo smuggle jewelers'
files and marijuana into the San Mateo County Jail
say the files might have been meant for convicted
murderer Luis Rodriguez. Catherine Wolff, 22, of
Sunnyvale. was arrested Sunday night on a charge of
trying to smuggle the files and a small amount of
marijuana concealed in hollowed·out felt-tip pens in
to the jail, Sheriffs Sgt. Mike Dows aid.
Auail.ants sol.lgN
LOS ANGELES (AP> Police are seeking four
men and two women who allegedly jumped into the
back of a car stopped at a red light, kidnapped the
two passengers. robbed them and shot one of them.
said Oet. Rick Lane.
'
Air Force heUcoPkr hooert abow a picbp trucl{ GI C~ ipace orbiter rit1 in background. .
Choppers ~ calW to contain U.. cvrioul drit1ing out to the 1pOCecra/1 a/fer it• n&eceuful landing.
'Back in space ... proud'
Success of shuttle mission opens new adventure
By The Associated Press
From the stuffed couches of
VIP lounges to American bars,
from campers at a des ert
airbase to European capitals,
whoops and cheers went up to
herald the flawless landing of
the fi rst reusable rocketship.
President Reagan, recuperat·
ing at the White !louse from an
assassination attempt, did not
altend Tuesday's landing of the
s pace shuttl~ Columbia at
Edwards Air Force Base. Calif.
But in a state ment relayed by
the Wh ite House. h e told
as t ronauts John Young and
Robert Crippen. "Your brave
adventure has opened a new era
in space travel."
"WE ARE BACK in space ..
and proud of it ." said Secretary
of the Air Force Verne Orr.
About 170.000 people in recrea·
t ional vehicles and mobile
homes congregated in a remote
area near the desert landing
strip to wait for the shuttle's re-
turn after two days in ·space.
"It just makes you proud to be
an American, that's all," said
Warren Steinbach of Lake Los
Angeles.
VIPS INVITED by the Na·
lion al Aeronautics and Space
Administration were closer lo
the landing· site than the camp·
er s . Celebrities on h and in-
cluded actors Roy Rogers and
Leonard Nimoy and former
astronauts Scott Carpenter and
Rusty Schweickart.
Astronaut3 Young f right), Crippen !hare proud moment with
wive• VirginiaCrippenf left JandSusy Young after return.
A.stronaUts cited
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Space shuttle ast ronauts John
Young and Robert Crippen h.ave joined s~ch persons as the
t hree California hostages oHran and comedian Bob Hope as re-
cipients of the Order of.California .
After the s huttle came to a SALINAS <API -Oakland School Superinten stop. George Page, director at
dent Robert Black burn testified in the second trial of K en n e d y Sp ace Center in
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. presentedthetwoastronautswith
the medallions on ribbons Tuesd~y after they landed at Edwards Air Force Base.
The Order of California is the highest award that can be
given for non-combator;.non-lifesaving situation. Symbionese Liberation Army soldier Ru ssell Little Florida, stood outside to bask in
that two long-haired young men ambushed and killed the congr atulations of his co·
furmu su~rin~ndent Marcus Fo~er in Un ,-~w~o~rk~e~~~·~·~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TRANS NATIONAL FUNDING
lllOUICES I IEW PROGRAM
2110 TRUST DEEDS
• No Prepay/ Assumable
• Faat Funding
• 30-year Amortized
Up to 15 yrs. Repay
• Loans-$10,000 to $500,000
• Owner-Non-Owner
• Swing Loans/Purchase Money
( 714) 975-1128
Call Wiiiiam B. Mitchell-Brokers Welcome
The Senior Citizens ~rust
ls proud to announce that the 1981
Health Provider Directory is now available
to all Senior Citizens >Mthout charge. For
the substantial list of physicians. dentists,
· and other practitioners offering their
services at superb savings, call or write:
Senior Citizens Trust. 1400 No. Harbor,
Fullerton, Calif. 92635 Ste. 100. We will
forward your l.D. Car:d and Directory uPon
receipt of your name. address, date of
birth, and phone nu"1ber·
TH•S PIO•UM IS ....
TOALLl•IOU
C7 I 4J 17f.7MI
HEWPOIT
HARBOR CRUISE
&
SUHDA Y llUHCH
lt..TTHIClt..HHBY
714 675-7W
Aerobic Exercise Classes
Designed To:
• Build and maintain
cardjovascular strength
• Improve muscle tone
• Increase flexibility
·Ow IOTTOM LM "TIMI,... •• ;!°'""' eo;;; =·:a =r-me:
NEWPORT
BALBOA
. ROTARY
SALUTES
HARRY
.BABBITT
HillYIAlllTT
For his outstanding community service,
Harry Babbitt of Newport Beaoh 'has been
aelected as recipient of the first annual
MIWPOIT ~ALIOA
~IOTAIY FOUteATIOM
.__.~0.CIWUTY!AWAID ·
FoOowing a distinguished career in ahow
bullnea, Mr. Babbitt moved to Newport
Beach tn 'he early sixt181; and during thole
twenty ·yeara ha appeaied at more than
two-hundred fund-railing wenta In Newport a.ctt. and Orange Q)unty, helping to , ....
fundl. tor .uch charttllb'e organlzatlon1 •
Ho9g 552 Club, March of OlmM,. Sputlc
1-Que and the Child Guidance Cllnlc. to name but a few.
Qualit you~
see, t90Ch
and :
rety on.
ROUND OAK BALL & CLAW TABLE
WITH LEAF AND s5291s FOUR PRESSED STARTS
BACKED CHAIRS AT
10°/o Discount
Off Future Sales
Wrth Purchase
of Table and Chairs
Over 20
Oiffereat
Styles
DESKS:
Carved
Rol~Top,
Rats
Various
Sizes
For yean, the Oranae Coun· lo Suta Ana. ty construcUon industry bu com· The office will be manned by
plained that the business of ap-. tecbnlclans lmowkMlatt•ble to all
plyln& for the necessary develop· aspects of proJeet approval.
me:nt approvals and permlta was They'll be able to answer ques-
Juat too difftcult. Uons about the county 1eneraJ
Often builders found plan and zoning and be able to
themselves shuffled from one proVide quick processing ot de-
buildina to another in their quest velopment plans and building
to get the necessary paperwork permits.
completed so work could begin. It's likely that certain de·
In these days of bigb-lnterest -velopment proposals will be sub-
constructton loans every delay mitted that go beyond the scope
adds to the cost of the fmisbed of the one-stop office. But their
product. numbers probably will be few.
That situation is going to • .For the most part introduc-
change. The county Board of tion of the one-stop offices prom-
Supervisors, at the urging of the ises to put to rest the objections
Environmental Management of the past and help insure that
Agency, bas approved the open-plans get processed quickly and
ing of a "one stop" processing of. efficiently. This should assist, ii
fice. It will be located in ~ only in a small way, in keeping
county Engineering Building the cost of new housing under
in the Civic Center complex control.
New space visions
The launch, fiigbt and land~
ing of the space shuttle Columbia
were so incredibly precise it's
hard to recall the apparently end-
less problems that had beset the
project since its inauguration six
years ago.
Columbia's launch was three
years behind schedule and $4
billion over its initial projected
cost. Some skeptics believed it
would never get off the ground,
when even as late as last week
yet another glitch delayed the
launch.
The perfection of the ftight
and return put all that into his-
tory.
Now, six years after the last
manned space fiight, the United
States is back in the space busi-
ness, this time in a manner that
truly opens new horizons.
While the first space
excursions were scientific
marvels, this one promises to
begin a new era of practical space
travel.
The reusable shuttles -
Columbia is doubtless only the
first -will open new fields of
communication around the globe.
They could bring to reality the
dream of inbabited stations in
space, serviced and supplied by
shuttles, usable for all tyJ)es of
research. They could set up solar
generating stations capable of
supplying power to entire cities.
And of course the military poten-
tial, notably the potential for de-
fense, is enormous.
The Columbia was launched
20 years to the di!Y alter Soviet
astronaut Yuri Gagarin became
the first man in space. The
American space program soon
• caught up and surpassed the-So·
viets with the moon landings. But
then our space program went in·
to >mothballs while the Soviets
worked steadily to improve their
capability.
Now we have made a giant
step forward, and this time it is
no scientific spectacular. The
brief journey of the stubby,
workhorse aircraft that turns
into a space vehicle and back into
an airplane, can be the beginning
of an era that will change
lifestyles for generations to
come, as did the first flights
across the oceans, not all that
long ago.
Law not equal for all
Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
was guilty of inexcusable
behavior in clamping a three-day
secrecy lid on the arrest of Irvine
Mayor Art Anthony for allegedly
beating and shooting at An-
thony's wife.
Worse than the blackout of
information on the case was the
revelation that Peart had waited
two days after the assault before
sending bis officers to arrest An·
tbony.
The accused mayor now is
free on his own recognizance
alter spending two days in the
psychiatric ward at UCI Medical
Center. He awaits arraignment
May 1.
Following the beating inci-
dent, Mrs. Anthony fied to Chief
Peart's home where she was ad-
ministered first aid.
It was not until the following
morning that Peart and an assis-
tant city manager visited the
Anthony home, removed some
loaded pistols; but still did not
take the mayor into custody.
That did not happen for another
24 hours.
•
It is not difficult t.o imagine
bow long an ordinary citizen
would have remained free in
such a case.
Having been involved in
an earlier, but much less signifi-
cant example of special treat-
ment for city officials, Chief
Peart should have been even
more alert to the need for equal
justice.
At that time the chief down-
graded a petty theft ref.Ort on the
police t¥aoks when a city council
member drove away from a gas
station without paying a $3.87
bill. He later was accused of
"poor judgment."
If that was poor judgment,
what would the current case be
called?
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit-
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71.C)
M2·.C321.
L.M. Boyd/Uaeful, Bkill
What IOrt of skill can you learn
that will earn you a good Uvtnc with
little tbreat that you'll be replaced by
a macblM? Not too many such
career uafts come to mind, what?
But one such is wt1makin1. Tbote
who put toletber fancy bairplee.
HY they doo't worry mucb aboUt
bavtq to look for other lln• ol won
down tbe Une.
Wrttel a client: "If you dan't tblnk
lt uys lD tbe Bible that tlMre wen
tbrff.wile maa. re" .. ...._ 1:1·
II." Quite so. WiH q1ea ft meDtklm,
tbou&b DOt thr~. Three llftt ·.,.
ldnilned eo, 101De ldlolan ~ tbilt
sunests the number of wise men,
one gift from each.
How do you account for the• fact
tblt women 1enerally are more
eatisfied With their first names than '
men are with thein? Surve11· re-
peatedly show Ulie. But the l.Ui)'IU
offer no expluatton.. Too ob'floul · ·
maybe. That more men than women
w,nt to be somebod)t they're not.
You say you wouldn't care to eat
aoaile? how about that seafood
labeled abalone 1teak? lt'• pretty
popular on the WHt CoHt. An
abalone la JU1t a bl• _Ha1oln11Da1.1.
----'
R~~lt'~~~~
...
skills sagging: Armed • service
.
W ASHl~GTON -Nine out of 10
American soldiers who operate and
maintain the Army's nuclear weapons
In Western Europe flunked basic tests
of their mUitary skills last year. This is
an appalling statistic, but frankly, it
comes as no great surprise. For years I
have warned about the deterioration of
our armed services.
While the shocking details have often
been hidden from the American public.
Army's artillery crewmen flunked, as
did 77 percent of the computer pro-
grammers, 89 percent of the tracked·
vehicle mechanics and 82 percent or the
Hawk surface-to-a ir missile crews.
-Many technical manuals have been
converted t o comic -book formats
our Gls' ~adequacy is no secret to our
allies. West German Foreign Minister
Hans Mathoefer once remarked in dis· JACI 1ua11sou gust, "At least our soldiers do not use II II
Q
---~
drugs and can read and write."
My associate Ron McRae bas seen because the Army's technicians can't
classified studies that leave no doubt understand standard written instruc·
about the cause or our problem: The lions. One unit found that a third or its
United States has put the burden or its supervisory personnel were functionally
defense largely on the poor and un· illiterate. Black soldiers, incidentally,
educated. As a result, with the Defense score better than whites, apparently
Department about to spend billions on because the Army is seen as a road to
sophisticated new weapons. the services opportunity by blacks.-but a dead-end
don 't even have properly trained by better-educated whites.
personnel to man the weapons wt--
already have. -IN NATO competitions. handpicked
HERE ARE SOME OF the depressing
details from unpublished reports:
-Nol only did 90 percent or U.S.
nuclear weapons technicians fail their
basic-skills tests. but 86 percent of the
American crews finish dead last with
dismal regularity. In a recent gunnery
exercise, American crews failed to
score a single hit, while allied gunners
racked up scores or 70 percent or better.
In all or the Army 's combat
units, there is a total of just 25 enlisted:
men with college degrees serving their·
first enlistment. Since World War II,
college-educat ed enlisted men have
kept the paperwork n owing as clerks
and supply personnel. Now these func-
tions have to be done by junior offlcers
or senior noncommissioned orfkeu
with better things to do.
-Multimillion-dollar aircraft are sit·
ting idle because the m aintenance staff
doesn't know how to order spare parts,
or because there aren't enough trained
mechanics to keep the planes servicea-
ble .
THE ARMY might take a leaf from
the Marine Corps, which emphasi:r.es
quality in its recruits -"a few good
men.•· The Marines claim they now
have the finest personnel they've ever
had, and outside experts agree.
The Reagan administration has
signaled its intention to make service
car eers more attractive, and Con1ress
seems to be in a mood to go along. But
many experts are pessimistic. They see
no way to lure the better-educated mid·
die class back into military service
voluntarily.
The only recourse, these experts
believe, is a return to some kind of draft
within the next four years .
Polls show impact of women's vote
W ASHlNGTON -Tbe official White
House line, as articulated by the presi-
dent's pollster, Richard Wirthlin, is that
Ronald Reagan's popularity ratings
have dropped because his economic
program is so tough that it is making
everybody a little angry.
Th06e nice folks from California may
not be lyin& about that, but they are try-
ing to kid us a bit.
There really was some shock around
here when the second GaUup Poll of the
new administration was released. After
all those nice stories a bout Ron and
Nancy and all that talk about national
optimism . . . the president came out 16
points lower than Jimmy Carter ~ad
during the same week four ye!fS ago.
The question, asked every four years.
is: "Do you approve of the way ( ) is
handling his jbb as president? When that
blank was filled with Jimmy Carter's
name in March, 1977, 75 percent of those
answering said," Yes."
This y,ear, with Reagan's name in the
space, only 59percentsaid "Yes."
BUT ECONOMIC boldness was not
the principal reason for Reagan's
decline, whatever tbe White House
would have us believe. The reason,
shown by other polls and by· so~e of
Gallup's figures, is not spending cuts.
The reason is El Salvador.
In the Gallup Poll, the tip-off comes
when you compare the president's ap·
proval r ating among men and with his
rating among women. Male respondents
--~ RICHARD REIVES 1 'i-•
backed Reagan by 64 percent to 22 per·
cent -a 42 percent positive margin -
with 14 percent undecided. Women sup·
ported him 56 percent to 25 percent -a
31 percent margin -with 19 percent un·
decided.
THAT'S AN 11 percent overall dif-
ference. It's already getting close to the
difference on Election Day last year,
when men voted for Reagan over Carter
by more than 20 percentage points while
women divided their vote equally
between the two candidates. The reason
then . polls and interviews indicated. •
was that Reagan was perceived as be-
in' more militaristic. He was, as many
women. thought, more likely tO get us
into war.
·'He has had some slippage because
of the economy, particularly among
blacks,·· said Patrick Caddell. who was
President Carter's pollster, and bas"
been independently s urveying Reagan's
popularity. "But the major reason for
his popularity drop is that the tough talk,
OD El Salvador just confirmed a rot or·
rears thal women bad about Reagan. He
was weak already with women and his·
patterns of support are tending to go·
back to where they were before the
elecUon. One of the reasons these num-
bers ntiglit be more significant than
they seem to be is that women have·
always tended to be a bit more sup-·
portive• o( incumbent presidents than
men."
THOSE NUMBERS ak'eady seem
very significant to me -botb,.for the
future of Ronald Reagan and the coun-
try. They reaffirm, at least for me, the
biggest story of the 1980 election:
Women are declaring political indepen.. J
dence. They are th.inking and actiri1 dif.
ferently rrom men. Polls have always I
shown women to be less mtlltaHstlc '
than men -in 1969 Gallup polls, ~ per-
cent of women identified themselves as
"doves" compared with only 48 percent
of m en -and in 1980 they began to vote!
differently. ln a big wa y. I
I
A long, -.ard ·day at the superniarket etc.
What a day! First, had to go to
supermarket. Hate shoppintJ. The missus
hadetvenmealist: '
"2 lb. potatoes ... Old potatoes? New
potatoes? Sweet potatoes? Frozen frencb
fries? Ba.ged assortment. Check.
:•1 cube marg." What brand? Who
knows? Check. "Doz. eggs." Lar1e!
lights within (a) 800feet; (b) 500r~; (c
who cares?" Missedfive. ·
Had to stand in line for eye test. Had to!
stand in line to ~ave picture taken. Old 11
want to be rin1eh>rintecl? I did not. "Looirl
here, .young lady," I said angrily, ••you
have put me throuch three hours ~
rlemarole to make sure I know the ta-.,
can see Miat I'm aiming at and will
idenUftable to the authorities the moftten
I take a steering wheel ln band. Why?"
"Because, sir," •be 1atd 1nootl.11
"automobiles can kill people... '
Such a dumb answer! Who on Hrtiil
would want to kJU anybody wttb q
automobUe?
J
---EVENltO-., ......
.... WOMAN
Wonder WOIMll ~
edee M • '-~llOn
ef"'OOnlng ... llMlth epe '° prevent • group of tr• Ion from obtelnlng • gov.
erft!Ml!t-et.
I 11C TAC DOUOH
... A•l•H
Hewkeye anCI Trapper
euampt to retrieve • •Uf>-
ply ol hydrocorllaona
atolen by black-merk-
et-.. e OOOOTIMU
The dey 1rm. tor Theim•
to merry hend90tM IOOI·
belt 1t1r Kellh Anderaon
(Pafl 3)
"DEAR UAR'' -Jane Alexander and
Edward Herrmann star in tbe Hall of
Fame production about the .0-year
"love affair of letters•• between
playwright George Bernard Shaw and
British actress .Mrs. Patrick Campbell
tonight at 7: 30 on Channel 50 and 8: 00 on
Channel 28.
• trD E.l!CTNC
eotM'Nf'f (A)
Cl) C81NEW8 9 AllCN&W8
t:ao D BUU.SEYE ID AMERICA ON A
BtHOE
"Y oor ProblarM Ara My
Problems" Mam!Mn of
AlalNn dlKUN the prob·
1
lema Of alcOhol ebuM.
Cl) BENNYHIU
Benny daddaS 10 or.. la
sldalclcit a hollday In Iha
aun
S) KCET NEW88EAT
G) IT\JOIO SEE
"Orient-Ing'' The MW
sport of orlant-1ng In
Rldlmond. Va. Is demon· J
strated, visit Al Hmlg. kit•
man, thoroughbred hor-
ere trained In Ocala. Fie. I
(AJ
Cl) NEWS
9 BARNEY Mill.EA I New Yori< C11y la stalled by
a major snowstorm and
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Birney end hie men are
plagued by a deed men.
7:00 8 C8I NEWS 8 .CNIWI
• HA..v DAY8 AGAIN
Richie i, allodlad to 'le.rn
that Joenle'8 fltat d•e la I
with Spika, • plnt..a.cl
raplea of Na Unde Fonzie
I A8CNEWI
JOt<IA'I WILD
• DOOGER DUGOUT
• 8TM£T8 cw 8AH
FAANC8CO
Stone end KelMr are callecl
In 10 ln-tlgata the mur-
der of• chemistry !Neher. 8D OVEAEMY
Guest· Roger Baldwin,
founder of the Amwlcel>
Civil Llba<tiet Union. (R, ml MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
llJl MERV GRtmN
Guests Jack Carter . ,
Stephenie Winslow. Lindi
Ev-. Meud Adema. Peul
Lend.
7: 15 CD OOOGEA PRE-GAME
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
f) KNXT 1CBSJ Los AntJl'I"'"
0 KNBC1NBCJ Los Anqe1•'"
" KTLA !Ind I Los A.ng•·IPS 0 KABC TV (ABCJ Lo~ Angell',
(£ ><.FMB 1CBS1 S..,in D•t>QO 0 KHJ TV (lnCJ 1 Los Anqel .. ~
@) KCS T cABCt San 011•90 GJ KTIV tlnd I Los Anqt>lt>'> m KCOP TV lin J I LU'> Angelp<,
fD KCE I fV 1PBS1 Lo~ AnqPlt•.,
'1!) KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun11nll!On Be<1Ch
Host• St-Edwwda end
M~ Rogen lllka a looll
at' the repld growth of
smell thMtre In Loe Ange.
lea.
I FAMILVFEUO
8"ANANA
~t· JoMny Tlllotaon.
G HOLLYWOOD
8QUAAE8 D FICll! 1l4E MUM: eu.,-u
LOS AngelM Dodgers II
Slln F rendleo Gl,enta
81) MACHE1L I LE.HAER
AEPORT
~ HALL Of fNAE
"Dear Lier" TM legendary
•O-yeer corr .. p<>ndence
bet wean ptaywrlghl
George Bernerd Sh-1nd
British actress Mra Patrick
C.mpb911 Is bfoug.ht 10
1elev1slon tn a two-act
dramatization by Je<ome
Kilty. Ectward Herrmann
and J-Alexander star
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
An exclusive Swlas rejuve-
nation clinic: a front-line
Navy jet pllOI
8:00 f) Cl) ENOS
Enos alms at wlnnt,....('he
s111e p lsto1-•,7o;;11ng
champlOnSlllp and expos-
mg a crooked cop
0 REAL PEOPLE
Featured· Sareh Pure ...
lalces per1 In a roller derby
a self-styled garbologlat: a
crowing conteet tor roo-
sters. • lemele window
dean« end repairmen at
the Empire Stale Bullding
(Al 0 MOVIE
e e e "Any W«lnesdity"
( 1966) Jene Fonde. Juon
Robards Every Wednes-
• *""' • •~ "The ~" (1M7) ,..., a.n. 8iltt Eltli(ld.
A bumbling mat1dor-
tUMed-elliger le promleed
tt1e ~t t ha cen
MdlAOa IN ~t lady In
a~. wttttln thr" ---• HALL CW FAME
"OMt u.;•· T'he ilglndtlly
"°"YM' .c«r~ I between pleywrlght
George &emerd Sll•w eod I 8rltlth eat,_. ¥,., Pltrlck
CllTlpbell la brought to
t8WMion In • tW04d
dremeUutlon by Jerome I
Kiity. Edwerd Henmenn I
Ind J-AlexencMr ...,
9:00 • Cl) MOVIE I "We're l'lftltlH 910 .. ( 1'111 Kwlri Mltioft, Pali!
Mc:CraN. A .,,..II .._ ol
New York routll• band I 1oget11er to patrol lllelr
neighborhood aoal nlt crime.
D DIPF'MNT 8TROKU
Arnold ~ • atrong I attedlrnent to the tempo-
rary houaettaep41r. who
remind• him "'' hi• own I late mother. (Al G dl ALOHA
PARADl8E
Sydney rallinQIM en old
love. Elllot end Dienna I
band together to jG:Z up
thek plain utarlora end
Everett attree1• • beeutllul
woman with hla nonexls-
tent weelth. G CN8e8 IN THE HONol
OFAFAICA
Stan Mooneyham and
Carol Lawrance hoet lhiS
documentary on the mo<a
lhan al~ million people In
Africa who have bean
elfectad by wer and
drought end Iha results of
soehavetlll
'1!) MARK RU88ELL
Amerie.·a madc:ao mm•-
men per1orms from the
s1-oe ol lhe Kath«lne Cor-
nell Theater on Iha campus
or tha State Un1Y8r11ty of
New York •• &Halo
9:'4) D THE FACTS OF UR I
Soma of Mra. G1rre11·1
ehargM t.iie • joyride In a
a1o6en ven end wind up II
Iha polioa atatlon (P•r1 1)
{R) I fD MAN< AUSSaL
Amarie.'s m~ mar11 ..
man perform• from Iha I
Sisters· play support
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP> -
Meet Audrey and Judy Landers,
a pair of striking young ladies
whose careers so rar have been
devoted to supporting roles. This
season, Audrey plays Afton
Cooper, J .R. Ewing's newest
girlfriend. on CBS' "Dallas" and
Judy is Stacks. a female truck
driver, on "B.J and the Bear"
on NBC.
Each admits that, s ure ,
someday they'd like to have
their own series. But for now
they are content with their lot.
And the public apparently cares
little for the positioning of
n a m es on the credits. the
Landers sisters maintain.
of spinoffs. today's supporting
role can mushroom into next
year's blockbuster lead.
"J .R. didn't star\ out being the
star of the show," she says of
the "Dallas" villain portrayed
by Larry Hagman. "He just
brought so much charisma to
the s how that the audience
selected him. Eventually the
writing changed around that.
but it was the audience first that
made him the star."
SERIES are necessarily writ-
ten with detailed ideas of the
lead character in mind. but as a•
s upporting player, "you have
the freedom to expand your
character," says Audrey. "You
are the catalyst. If you are not
the lead, you make everything
els~ happen.
"I think the adv&11tage to not
being a star of your own series
-especially when you're as
young as these girls are -is you
don't get typecast as quickly,"
Mrs. Landers says . ''If you have
a series and you're the star and
the series Oops, it stays with
you. You're identified with that
character and it's very difficult
for you to go with anothe r
s how."
Judy's role as Stacks is an
example of a supporting player
being a llowed to naturally grab
a largcr shareofthe show "B.J.
and the Bear'· started with
seven fema le truckers playing
opposite B .J <Greg Evigan).
the roster wall be trimmed next
season to three. including
Stacks.
"I LOVE playing the silly
blonde, but I didn't want my
character to be one ·
dimensional," says Judy.
"When we atarted the show, I
talked with the producers about
·ABC D 8.:.00 -''Greatest American
Hero." Hinkley tanales with an enemy
submarine after a pupil's wacky mother
wreab havoc on an espionage opera-
tion.
CBS a 9:00 -"We're Fighline
Back." Movie about a small group of
New York City youths banding together
to patrol their nei&b~rhood against
crime .
\ · NBC D 9:00 -"Diff1rent strokes."
Arnold develops a strong attachment for
the temporary housekeeper because she
reminds him of his own mother.
attge of the Kathar'lna Cor-
nell n..ter on Iha eampua
of Iha Siiia UniYertlty of
New York II EklltllO.
l'i) THI EDGI! OF
IUfMVAl
Fiimed on tocellon In India..
&uil, Ecuador. England
end Iha United StelM, I
number of unique aolu·
Ilona 10 lhe 1><oblem1 ot
dilly aurvfll•I for ne1rly
one bMllon people who live
on Iha aoga of 11arv1uon
-uemlnad.
10:00 D OUINOV
Sem pr-th•t • -
peeled r eplst een' I be
guilty beeeUM hla teeth
m1rk• don't match lh<>M
left In the victim ( R) ea• NEWI G 9 VBlAI
Whlle -rclllng for the 1
people who kllled a man
during • robbe<y. Dan
11umblea acrosa • ea11no
1klmmlng opeflllon,
bi.clcmell and attempted
ext0r1Jon tD THEY nl.1. IT F<m
THE TIU/fH: OZAAK
8TOAYTELUHO
John Allmen'a documenta-
ry all;ploraa 1he 111119-known
folk cullure or Iha Ozark
mountelna of 1outhern
M1nourt and northern
Arkansaa.
10:30 ·~
Nl'TWON( NrWI
QI!) TOMOMOW CAME
MUCHLATUI
Berthe ~tman, • """"'°'
of thr.. ~· In Nazi
death earnpa, return1 to
Iha 11ta of hat torment wtth
• O'OU9 ol 19 high IChOOI
atudenta. Nerretad by
Edward A"'9r.
11:0010 G (l)lll NEWS STAATAEK
Whan en unldantlllad
1paeeahlp laH1 to heed
ordeta to 11op. Capt Kirk
pyll the USS Entarprlaa In
pur'4Jl1. D NEWLYWED GAME
CD w•A•s•H
The company'• young
Korean plngpong champi-
on per1uades Hawkeye
end e J to ler\d him mon-
8'.l 'or en engegement ring
Cl) 8ENHYHILL
Aa hoal of • quiz lhow.
Benny trlee to pr._,1 •
beaufllul blonde with a hol-
iday for two fill DICK CAVETT
Guest Jane Lepot.,ra
I 1:30 f) Cl) NBA
8A8KET8ALL
Playottg1me D TOH1GHT
Hoat Johnny C1raon
Questa Diahann Carroll.
JOHN DARLING
-e MMTTA
~ ICM.ti l)lar In • eep•a deeltt, Tony UllOOY-
• .... Cllnllfllret:y lnvoMno 1
~end·~ •ll>~MC I NeW9
-"911CJtfl-I ---------
't.'00. MOVll * * • "A Foreign 41telr" 11~ JMr\ Artl'KK. John
Lund. Ona member bl e !lOl'Mlitt.. ..,,, 10 cheek
on tr009 mor• "' PQ91•
WOtld Ww II Oermeny lllllS
In IOYe. 8 9 LO'Vl90AT
"Cindy" MallHe Sue
Anderaon, Cerol)'n Jonee:
"Pley By Play" Cntitto-
pftW George. Lytlde Dey
George: "Wllet'a A 8'ot ...
For?" Patrlciil W1yne, Tom
HaUlek. (Al a GUNaMOKE
A ~ of l'lgediea
leed• to the dHth ol thrM
cowbOya, one or them •
Irland of M1tt'a
-~ NP08Sl8lf Tlaur•day'• 1 Dayl.inte Morie• The IMF a.aria Ila lnlh.t·
anoe to r-• arnelt
country's prleatna n•llon-
11 treaeure
fl!) PHtlOSOPHY I -MORNl«i ~
12:30 D TOMOMOW
Gueata. •Inger Michael
Murphy, author Stephen
King, stock market anelyll
JoeGranvtlla
Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND
"The Vlaltor" Ellen and
Harry have ~ married
tor 19 years when Harry
dapar11 on a trip fully
Intending rwtv8f to return
1:00 G PSYCHIC
PHENOMENA
"Dream W•nderer · Host
Damien Simpson and '
guaal l eWfene. Blair d1s-
cuu the exploration ol
lrlbellMng CD MOVIE ***'" "Mer1orie Mor-
ningstar · { 1958) G-Kai·
ly. Nat1lle Wood An
1mpresslonabl1 young girt
11:00 Cl) * * "ParadlM Can-
yon' ( 1935) John Wayne.
Merion S..rns
11:30 D •• "The LUI Wornllt'I
On Eerth" (1961) Anthony
Carbone. Belly Jonff-
Moreland
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 CD • • • ·'The LUI Daya
0 1 Pompeii" ( 1935) Pres-
ton Fosler. Casll Relh·
bona
W * * •;, 'The Oeleclor
( 19~} Mon1gornery Chit.
Hardy Kruoer
3:30 G * * ·~ Creaturaa 01
The Ama.zon" 119771 Docu-
mentary
by Armstrong & Batiuk ,
~EN ALL OF A SUOOEN
ONE. DA~ •.• BOOM!
"I WANT to build up to the
point where I can be the star of
my own show, but right now I
like wflat I'm doing," says Judy,
20 . "If yo ur s uppor ting
characwr is well-liked and on a
visible show, it doesn't matter to
the P.ublic. If they like you, they
don t mind. The audience picks
whoever they like."
Adds Audrey, al 221 an
eight-year acting veteran:
··And you know something else
w h ich is a pr ac t ical
advantage? ... she adds. "In my
s how, there are so many
characters and so many little
stories going on, I don't have to
go in five or six days a week
from 4 in the morning until 7 at
night."
that because I didn't want that · d h •
to happen. Now they write so Sisters Audrey Landers (left ) of "Dallas" and Judy of "B .J . an t e Bear.'
"[ still get letters from my
soa)> opera rans, and t hat is
a mJzing because I haven't been
on •soap for four years. st\e also notes that, in-this day
I I
F-~
RUTH Landers, the girls'
mother and manager and a
former actress herself. sees
another plus.
that Stacks has all the emotions -==~-=-~:..:_....:.:'.:_ ____ _:_ _ _:_ ________________________ _
and all the different sides to her
personality that any other
character would have -that I
have."
....... ...., .....
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Et1bt Soutb coau resldenu bave COll\pMt·
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fuodect pro1ram to
become certlfled teatl tetbnlctana for a San Juan Cap&atrano nrm.
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.......... _...,_ ......... ' """"" ~ CONIT•UCTION CllMr Mr :T. ,,_ fl•l&DA Awl ... t,IS.t• t*'1
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Jnc.1 completed th' pro-gram funded by the
Callfornla Workslte
Ed11tation and Training
Act.
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Tew"""" r1•yC-.,111: PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI •u11111u llAMa ITAT.MCNT
TM IOllOwlnf pereon It 4'01119 bl.ltl·
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The proeram at En-
de v co tra i n e d
e mS>loyees' t echnical
skiUs so they could up. gra~e their Jobs.
AHMIO AMA1t1a 19 ..,.,1119 .. "'9
Oepert-..t of Alc.,.llc .. .,., ...
C.nttl4 fer "41" OH SALlf a11la &
WINlf 1"'-'.UC ~TING ""-ACE), ..
aell e lcollellc M v•r• .. t •t SttO
Werner A-, H1111U ....... .._II, C1lltor111a ...
l'ICTl'hOUtMISl•IM ness;:;WIOV MAYNARD IANO llJIMlllTATIMallT '
OATlfO: .. , ,._ 1"1 Itel, •t llW 11111r tf •:to ,_,,.,, Ill ll• ••uc• w. SUMNe• Olt trlcl effke, GI ~ 0t1 .... PUBLIC NOTIC£ Tiie ..,,_Ille lier-• ere tlel,.. U72 G e rll"elorcl. Coll• M•u, !Mlal-•· C•lllorfll•nut
JUOOI Of' THlf lrvlfll, CA. SU ... •IOfltCOUllT I ... rojt<I N•m.: lltWO ~•I
Gradu ates i nclude
Maxin e Baker,
Step h anie Jones ,
Deborah .Swenson and
Cal Williams, aJI or San
Juan Capistrano.
OllMOLOOICAL Yl~OOY Tllomn D. 1t1o11hl, U12 Gt tr· neo arlAll ..,_, .,.. * c.. .. lnglord, C.lA Meu. C.lltornl• ti.~ fllC'TtTIOUI &UllNHS
N.._ITATIMIMT
T•IDWAY, .... DMeY•a, OOll .. lloft lond Salt IW 1.0 •IO?
TO••tllJO& a-.uaL"°" Gr1111t 0.0
1'111>11-0-. c..st Oell'f .. 1 .... MAM (elltwflle ,_. ' Tl\lt -NU It <ondlolctH lly tn 111·
WllllAM •• a1e11erf1, IUt dlvlclu••n-...-lt-Tiie fOll-1119 PtrlOfll a re doing ...... ,, ..... , 1 .. 1 ......... ........,._, Project i.oc..llefl.
0-..,,~ .... t Tiie ......... IH'Oi«I lllC-S.,.. •• fl1Mt1' April IS, 1"1 llM41
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. '-tc Clrlw, C-Mes., CallfCH'ftl9 Tiiis , .. ..,.,_, wes lllto with Ille .,... RE Tl"EMENT I NN 0'
FULLE•TOH. ltlETlltlf#.l!NT INN
OF DALY CITY, ReTIRlfMeNT INN OF CAMPelLL, ltETIRlfMl!NT INN
OF SUNNYVALE. ltlfTlltlfMENT
INN OP: Fltl!MOHT, ltl!TlltUHNT
INN 0, BURLINGAMI!,
RETlltlEMENT INN 01' SAN JOSE.
2'70 Har11or 91¥0.. Sullt 211. C.lA
Mtse, c.llfornle ta»
Ttl: 1111>-.. •left, .i .. -..Mltloft, ~ttrucliofl of
............. Or .... Celtt 0.11'1' PllOt, <-.Hl•I f«lllllft.. pWw\lftl ""°'"· lftd
P1otbll-Or.,_ C:O.tt Delly Pli.4. ·.•
AP<"ll I, U, 22, 2', 1•1 17-1
"''"-'• H. H•rm•, IM7I VIA Counly Clerk of 0r.,... County on
,.,.,.. Yene LIIWt. CMlforfll• t1't6 Marci\ ''· 1•1·
l[fWerd H Lu811-asJ ~ flUU'2
~. IS,tt,2',Me'f6, 1t•1 lllWI rtlma.,,_.,.,.. ol -lltWO c.,oll<ll lt-ve F..,,._ Tiit •""9•1rnA .. loc.• 11111 crf 111\ ..... 1 f«llltlff It tflOwOI Oft PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Also Karolyn Kunsch,
Laguna Niguel; Lucy G.
Martinez , San Cle mente ; Ma r ily n
Smith, Dana Point and
Wendy Walker .
Ca pistrano Beach.
fllCTITIOUS MISl,.l'SS
........ STATIMINT ReM Cella -Cl41fornll ,_. Publlllltd 0r8119t Coe~t OAlly Piiot,
Hl•I P. L_.lfll. 111 "''Mtlon M•' U, AP< 1• '·IS,"'' t•t0•1
.... •llM"9cl ·~ J 1UM Tiie project <.wists of ,,. fourtll N•7Jl03 TN I01IOWl119 person Is doMI IMW·
MUe•;
APPLIEO SERVICES, 2'
Amltted. lrvifle, Calif-A '2714
B•r11ty Allen H-r. 2' AlftlsUO, Ir vi 1141, CAI lfomle tt11'
Orh•e, c;ai. Mlle, Cellfornla HU6
J-14. Sllerll, "'· ,., 0.-y $trMt, S.. l!Mflk•, Clllhln\ll ~ PUBLIC NOTICE
MOTIQ TOC .. DtnHtl Mle of 0.-el Otll ... , .... loncb of NOTICE OF DEATH OF
Of' IUut TaAltlflla lfflPfOv.....,. Ol•rk• No. 1°'· -kl'I J A M E S H 0 W A R 0 l*-6ttt•wu.c.c.1 wert•UlflOtlndb'flheelKUollln 1tn. REINHART, ah JAMES Nllke 11...,..., tfWfl to cr.olton ol tM •mOWll of Ult laelftt -o•lrnAl• Tiiis llwllneu Is CoMUCtff llY. -------------Rtllr-Inn• crf AmtrlcA, lllC
• WAsl>lnoton (orporellon. 2'70 H•rbor &lvd .• Suitt 111. Cotti Meu ,
C.lllorlll• ma
,,.. w1w 11 ........, tr8111fwor ~' • 1., 'u~,ooo. n.. llUtPGM lot w11k11 H . REINHART, ilkil JIM _ .. ,.,.., ....
Wllllem Ut ltklle'* Thi' lluSllMlS Is condYc-by en In· dlvlduel,
Berney A. HooWf'
Tiiis .U"""-1 •" filed wllll lllt Cou11tw Clerll ol Or811eit Couflty on
fllCTITIOUI IUllNllS
NAM•ITATIMaNT
Tiie 104'-lne PetlOn It clolfl9 l>USI· neuu: Thlt _.,,.U II C-UCled by e CO<·
l>Ulk Ir~ I• -. to be t'flMt 111 boftds will 1119 Miii 1' to Kcan._ilt11 1t1t R E I N HA RT A N D 0 F
perao11•I property l\erel11•fltr Pren of Wbr1ls,., 1,,....0....._1 Dh· p E TIT ION TO AD . ~ detcrll>M. trl(t No. ICl2 • rovlMCI In Aprll 1'17 10
Tiie --11us1ne11 -ress of perform P••nn11111. oe11e11. ecqulrt MINISTER ESTATE NO. Thll 119t-t •• 11190 •1111 llllt Counly Cler• of °'*'eit CoY11ty on
M•rch 30. ltll.
AP<ll tJ, 1•1. Pl.... MAR·WIST SALE$, 212 Of..,Vt
Pvbllll'9d 0r.,,.. CMsl Diiiy .. llot, :;~~·· NtWPOr l BH<h, Cllllornl•
Por•tlon. ReUremontlnnt
of Amer1(A, Inc.
L W.Mlclllencl,
Vice !Pre$1dtnl
IM lnltnd9d tr.,.•lerot It J.A.C.O. situ for, end co11•truct <•Plt•I A·10131S.
Goll, lllC., 5622 Oetci.y TerrACo, lrvlne, fee II Illes Ulr'°"9fl Hl2 In r_ .. 10 T 0 a I I h e i r s , Celllorlll•t27U. lM ... ...._ dec:lslofle of lurltdlc · T.,. _...., bonlNU ecldfess of tlOner 998f1Ciel, tuell •• ,,. Clly 01 beneficiaries, creditor s AJK. IS, 22, 2', Mey6, Itel ltoa.el Mu• H. Wiibur, 211 Oren99 -FOR THE RECORD ,, ....
PuDllshlKI Or .,,91 Coest ()Ally Piiot.
Bfrdu
MIUIOfl COMMUNITY
HOS .. ITAL 1Mrc11 4, lttl
Mr elld Mn. Timothy Mc Gowen. !.en
Juen Cec>lslt8110, boy
MArcll 6, 1"1
Mr tnd Mil Llllt M<O.nlel. LAVUN BH Ch,boy
1Mrd1t,1t11
Mr. -Mrs. Mk l\ffl Covin. lnrlne, l>Oy
Mr •nd Mo Lewrtnct M•k•lArlen,
NeWPOr1 Beech, 9lrl
MMdlt1,1•1
Mr end Mtl. S•ven Kf'IUlson, lrvltle. l>Oy
~11u.1•1
Mr. end Mn. Fr-Sunv. LA ... N
Nl9ue1.111r1
MArcll 14, 1911 Mr. end Mr• JOlln Brlgfll, Sen J..,.n
CapislrMW>, l>Oy
MArcllU,l"I
Mr •nd Mrs Ruuell Htnry, SAn
Juen ~llreNI, bo'I'
MAn:ll 11, 1"1 Melenle J-Crtlg, LA9uN1 Btech.
"°' Mr •nd Mrs Rl<Mrd K•'ft. Irvine, l>oy
Meron, 1t11
Mr end Mr•. Jellrey De•ll, Delle Polnl. l>oy
MArcll t4, Ult
Mr. •nd Mo. P•trtck Moor•, lrv'n•, girl
SAN CLEMENTE
01.NIEltAL NOSl'ITAL
MAn:llV,ltll
Mr. end Mis Rl<Mra !>l\un, !.en
Clemeni., bo'I' Mr. And Mr\. Wtll1Am Turnt>ull. $411
Clemenlt. girl
MerOU. l"I
Debr• H~old -Wlllte S.ey. Sen (ltmt ntt. boy
Merell 2'. 1911
Mr l lld Mrs. B••d Norri.. S•n Cltmen1e, 11o,
Mr •nd ~ Steven u.son, Sen cre,,,.ntA. boy
IMrdl JO, '"' Mr •nd Mra, Tl\Of'nes Holly, Dene
Potnt,91#1
Cheryl Herne\ -Robert H•rrrs, SenCrtmente,glrl
M.ercllll, ttll
Mr e...:t Mn J eme• Let, CAPISlreno
B••Ch, 91rl
A"111,IMI
Dr elld Mf\ John Sutk1el. Sen C leme11te. llOy
Aprll I, I, IS, 22, 1911 15•4-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS BUSINIU
NAMI 5TATIM•NT
The 1011-1110 persons ere doing
bu>lt141Uel
COUNTRY CLUB INDUSTRIAL
PARK. 1111 C..111er Ori.,., Hunllnglon
BHt h, C•Hl0tnl• U M7
Gtrel<I Klein, l31l2 \/Alie Road.
S.n Juen CAplstr-, Celll«nl•
E•rl Wtlk, 991 ~yllne Drive,
LAoune Be«h, C•llfo•nle
Thi• bullneu Is (onducttd lly •
99MrAl -1ntr""p
-.MA-..y&
!lr..,iori
AtlOf'ntys et LIW
By Slapfltn C. -Th" sl<llement •• lil90 wllll llw
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI 9USINIU
NAMll ITATIMlllT
TN IOll-1119 person ll cloln9 bull· MUa.s:
ECOHO LU91f AND TUNE, )10 N.
Her Dor. SAnl• Ane, Celllo#'nl• t270J
Robert P. Eerl, 234~ Crnlhl•,
Co11e Me'-. C.llfornl• t~27
Tnh lluillMlS It <onctucted by en d lvlduel.
R~P.Eert
Thi' Itel-I WH llltd With lhe
County Clerk of Or.net Count y on
March JO. ••• ,.,,._
PullllShod Or-Coest Oelly Piiot.
April I, I, U. 2:2. t•t ISU..I
PUBLIC NOTICE
Counly Cler• ol Or.,ge C.O..nly on ~ ---Marth JO, ltll ~ICTITIOUS IUSIHIEU
JOMES, MAHOHIEY & lllAYTOll NAME STATEMENT
Atta.-.eys .. Lew Th• followlng P•'""'' ere doing
A•o fll-IAI T-l><lslneu es. m N•-' c..ttter ~Ive, E & P DESIGNS. 17•1 Cflerford, Stolle :ies Hunltnvton BeACh, Celllo.nle ,,,._
New .. rt .. Kii, CAllf......ia tll16t Ellen C Wollon:I, 1141 Cl\erford F IJtllt SlrMI. Hunllnvton Be«h, Cerllornl•
Pul>lt\heCI 0ren{le Coest D•Hy PllOI, •U4'
"'Prll 1. t, U, n , 1'1111 IS""'! Pt119t J -·· 11114 Send OunH Ct .• Founteln V•llty, Cellf«11I• tnoe
----------Pe99f J. -· PUBLIC NOTICE This lltltment wes filed wlln tlw
FICTITIOUS eUSINUS
NAME STATEMENT
The 1011-1no person rs oolno t>usl n•u .,.
I Counlr Crtrk of tnge C.O..nly on Merch
lO. 19t1 ,,. ....
Published O<enve CoHI De111 Piiot,
Ap<ll r. I. 15, 21. 1'1111 I 546·11
MONEY UNLI MITED, 4000 Mee Ar lhur Blvd • Su•l• JOOO, N••Porf PUBLIC NOTICE
B••,h, C.ellf0fftj•9MO I ---Jonn L•wrence Anderwn no FICTITIOUI IU$1NIE$$
All•nl• AYtnut "1 Hunli,,.glon NAME STATEMENT
Beach. Celot0tnl•.j26<18 ' I The following pertons •rt doing
This buiuwu '' condUct~d by ..,, 1n bus.ineis es a1•1du•I COLOR IT RIGHT Tl/. rsn w
JOfln L AnOtrW>n
1
Bahr. C.le ~. CAlllO<nl• Ul2'
ThlS •wtemen1 ••• hied wlll'I tne Ke-Drow Frledlend. Jl17 .. G"
County Clerk ol Or.,,91 County onl E. Sent• Cle,.., Seftl• NIA. C.lllorn1e
Merer. n. ''" t170S FISMJI fllh ""'lllHS I• <°""""led by.,, In
Publl•heCI Or-Coe>! 0••11 Pilot. d,.ldu•I Mer 1S.-"" 1 t IS ltll ~ 1.,._11 ICtnneth D Frlt dlend ' ' • Tiii• sttt ....... 1 wn ltl90 w1111 lhe
PUBLIC NOTICE County C•er• of Or.n91 County o"
M.,ch2, 1•1
I '1Jtmt
Publ"lltd Or-eo.u D•llr Piiot.
APrtl I.•. I). U. 1•1 15St ti NOTICE TO Ca•OITOtlS
Ofl IUut TaANSfll.a
<SK. •wi•• u.c.c.1 Nolle• I• hereby 11•••11 lo the PUBLIC NOTICE
crtdllOtl of OWILE HEGGEM --------So,ler S.tYrlty No. It 571·20-215'
Tr•ntlenw, -bu9iMu -•IS It
PUBLIC NOTICE 111 West 11111 Sir ... , Sulle A·t. City
CoUe Mew, c-.ty of Or ..... Stele OI
--Cerlfornle 11\et • l>Ulk tren:der I• •bOul
FICTITIOUS IUllNUS
NAME STATIM•llT
Tiie Oollowln9 persona are dolne
t>u5lneun
FICTITIOUS eUSINESS to be mAdt lo 8RA08URY SQUAltE CROWN POTTERY, 1101 S Yelt
Slrfft, Sent• M e, C•llfor11I• '2704
Robert L. Cer .. r, ~r B•yvlew,
S.noe "'""· C•lllornle '2107
NAMESTAT EMIENT CORPORATION, e Cellforn le
The 1011ow1ng peri.ons ere doing corporellon wlloM F-el TH 1.0.
bullneu es No. II t~21U61SJ. Tr811sferee whOM Mark ~re, 3091 Ytll-Slone
Drive. Colle Mtw, C.lltornle UU•
This ""'tlneu h cond1Kl•d lly • Qet141r er pertnerllllp.
L. p"' L MA T E A R. c E llu•IPtU •ddreu 11 3404 B•lllo• "'PARTMENTS, LTD., , .. ., BH <ll Bo11ltverd, Clly ol NtWPOrt Btech,
Bo"'l•••rd, Huntlngoon Bee ch, CNnl'(ofOr-.St•teofCAlllornlA. Cellfornle '11M7 • The ~ 10 bt trAnSlerre<I Is Mtrh $pon<19le Hector Muuch, 16111 Btecn Clet<rlbed In 9M1rer Al: All ttock In
Boultverd, Huntlnglon BtAch , lrMle, flllrturff. tqUlpmenl encl.-
Celllorn1• t'lM7 •Ill LH-lntensl .,,., UM4flold
Thi• l!At-1 .... llltd wllh 1he
COYnly Clttk oo Or.,91 County 011
Maren lO, '"' Hec:IOr MArw'h lmprov-..ts of "'9l Copy 5*Nkt
This sl•l-nl ••• llltd wllh the b<ltlness -.. "COPY SERVICE" ""'"
County Cltrk 61 Oronoe County on •fld ICKetecl •I 111 West 11th Slreet, Publls-Orenet Coell DAiiy Pilot.
Aprll 6, 1•1 Suite A·•, City ot ea.-. Mes., COUftty Ap•il 1. •. u, n. 1•1 u~ .. ,
. P:lffffS ol Oret19t, sc.te of C.lllornl•. PulMI""" Orenoe Coe'1 Deily Piiot, Th. b Y 111 l r. fl I I. r •I II b. Aprll t , 15, Z2, 1', 1•1 lift.II conaummel90 on or en.r ,,. JOlll dAy PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE . of Aprll, 1911 •I 10:00 •.m. el TU. NOTICE 0' T,_USTll'S SALE WESTERN MUTUAL ESCROW
COltPORATIOH, Wtlow-eu h UI
Eut 11th Street, Suitt IOS, C•I• T.L He. Met MeM C;tlllotnlA TMtlMIMtdettlot On Aprll 19. 1,.1, ti 10 AM .
"CTITIOUS IUllNIH llllll9,<1Alml k\ U,. etcrow r-rred to NESTMORElAND SERVICE, INC , e MAMIE ITATIM•NT rterel11 Is April JO •• , :.ohlornlt <O<Por•llon, •• ,,. -duly
Tht fol-1119 P•rsori'• Art clol119 Se,., ••• _,,.;...,~ Ult Tr-fer.. •PPO•Med Trustee under -pyr-nt
l><lllnlU H •II'"'"-names ---useci lo Deed of Trw1 He<Yted..., SAME UL CO,,_PLIMENTARYCOLOltS.•1 by, ... T ........... lot, ... pest ll'lr• E . GLODICH AN O WANDA
V Isle B•ye, Ntwport Bte ( 11. yt•rs ertU....,.,. GLODICH. liUSBANO ANO WIFI, H Cell~•· 'l1lWO O•led March JI ''" TtY•lor, rec:ot-F•br-y u. 1tl0, H•nc:Y C-Olyn Romen. •• V111t Dwllt H1199tm Tr-ftr es rnst. No JlSJI, In 8ooll IJSll. Peve Beye, Newport llff<h. C•lllOf'lll••iMO I " A 0 I u • y s~ u A. If 1101 of Offklel Recotdt 111 lheofll<t of J1o1dy Ann Foote, JOJI North COttf'CHU.TIOfl tho Counly RtcOfclltr ol Ore119t Coun
P1new-. Orenet. C••llor"'• •Mi A~ MIN ty, Slelt of C.llf0<11I•.
Tiiis bu11neu tt conducted lly e ly· Ai.tO.MclC..:::.CNUri> WILL SELL AT PVILIC "'UCTION
venetel P9r1tltrlllip P11bll-0rMQ9 c0:.ll D.ail'I PllM TO THE HIGt4EST BIPOIER FOR Nen<y,_omen CASH, (peyellle ti lllM ol -.re l'I
11115 ll<ll-1 ,. .. llltd wllh lhe Aprll tS, 1'•t l .... t . le#IUI "'°"'l' of, ... Unlltd Slelffl •I
County Cl•NI of o,.,.,_ CouMy on tllt l ollowln9 llfHt t411drtss with
"'Prll •. t•t PUBLIC NOTICE speclllc plKt 11\e,.•1 noled. Al tllt
flltt471 North 'frOflt tfllt...., lo the Go1o1nly
PuOll""" Or-C...'1 Ol llr Piiot, CourthouH. et 700 Clvk Ctnler Drlv• Apr11 e.u.U,2t,1•1 IMl•t l MUtllCl .. ALCOU•TOf'lHI WtU, In , ... City ol Stlll• AM
I 0 U T H 0 • AN 0 E JU 0 I C I A L Cellfornl .. •II rl9'1l, 1111• tnd lnlernt
Dln•tCT (onv1ytc1 lo -,_ held lly II under
COUNTY Ofl o•ANGI 'Aid Otod of Trutl In Ille prCll?erl'f
SYATI Of'tALll'O•NIA SllUAltd In Hid Goulll'f ..... St•••
PUBLIC NOTICE
a141Ctll!R v ... .., ...,_.,.., dtKrlbell •· Lot S of trect No . ...,._
fllCTITIOUSIUSIN•ll ~N'91114,CA'2617 In I/It City .. COlll MIN, Geunly OI
llAMI STATIEMINT flLAINTIFP: CH'4RL£$ HOWAltD, Ore"l>gt, St•lt Of Cllllornl•, ft per
Tiit followl119 peraon ll dolnt l>Ull· JOHN HOWARD•nd JEAN DEINIE$ Mep re<Otcted 111 8ooll 112 P•llff :10
114111 et: DEl'ENOANT: JOHN CARTER end •nd lt of MISCtll-out M9P1, In the
SflECTRUM PAINTERS. '442 DOIEi I "'"""" 10,IMllMIW olhc• OI , ... County Recordtr of J.aid
Mok lh•n•, Hunllngl 011 Btech, $UMMCHtf Cou~ly
c1111ot11l•tt"'6 CAltl •u--•: tllU Tiit \lrMI eocsr-•nd olMr com· Steven Dofl Ling, t441 Moi<IMM, NOTICll Y• !llMI ._-. T"9 l'fOI\ dttJ..-llon, If •ny,•01 lhe reel
HulltlflOlon ieeal, C..lllornl• ta4 CMr! _, ,_,.. ..... , ,.. ..... P<"-•IY detcrl-*"' II purporlecll
Tiii• l>UllneM I• <oncl\4<1ecl lly .., Ill· .,.. ................. ,... ....,... lo bl ,., PIMle ()rive, Ct1I• Mew, div~•'· .,. ... a..,.. •• .. •-• .. C•lllprnl• 92'1'. 51e_, .._ ...... Tiit unde"i9ntd TruJl•• lllKl.aims
Tiii• llM-t wM Ill• wllb ,,,. If you _..., lo'"" J,. 111¥1<1. 81 Ill any llH illl'I' few .,,., lnc:0<rt<lllOU ol
Couftt' Cltrll OI ~ ..... et.Hit• Oii •ltorMy 111111\INlll.tt, Y9U """'° ... Ille llr .. t _,.,, ..... ofltr common
Marci\», 1"1. H •'o"'ptly M t11et ;tur wtltr•11 Clet'9natl0n, 11 eny, -11ert111, $ .. d ..,,.... ,..._..,llMy,....,•m•111tltM. wit win 1119 ,,,... WI '#lU-1 co.i.
PllllQtlled Or11191 CM11 Delly l'llM, AVtlDI W tit .... II 11•1 l\Mlt er wer1e11ty, ••Pf'e" ot hnplltd,
April " •• IS, n. IWI 1,...11 It ...... ,.... ..... ~· IN. , ... ,t11111 1111•, poH'"MOfl, Ot .II(.,,,.. .-------------~·....__ ....... u.. ....... l>r911cu . II My IN,.,,..,.. .. ptlo)· ............... LHU.....,... <IH I_,, et Ille llOltCS) lt<llrM..,
,.. ....... • .. ,. Offd Of Tru.i. Wllll lollttHI
.. UMed ... •klw el ~i. .. llllf-, .s CH'OVI• 111 MIO fltttl•I.
1111 ........................ ,, .... v-... If lllf, llfldtt '"' """' Of lllCtrlt l~lltltn•"'•• CIO •tll Ille 0... of Tr111t. f•s, CMftH •1111
--. .. ,.._,.... .... , ........ ·~-of "" '"' .. " ..... "' the ....... ,..._ ...... , ... •I...... tr .. t ctMMd" uld 0... ..i TNtl,
I. TO TH• Dll'INO,.ltT: A (11111 Tll• l•tel •"'91otnl 11 Ille i!llP•I•
centotllnt llM tlelft f .... .., .. ptel11< ~· tf 11\t 114111 .. lltfl lt<WM lt'f
llH ....... ""' tr ... wllfl W ...... "'* fl"fl9"Y '9 DI Hiicl end r11.11ntbft
IN• .......... 'ltll """'-.i• a •n llUl'fl•ttll c9'h, u,.11, .. enCI ••·
'"9f'dll9_11..,._e11,_ "'"""••ti Merell tt, , .. ,, h fill wltl\ .... CISU't I Wflttlfl,....... tlll .... AI WlllCll .,,,_l ¥"111 IMfMM
.. 1111 ........... U!llew "" ............. "' ..... .,..., ........ .... .. ........ .. .. '"' .... ,;1c1ery 1111419' .. 1. 0.... .,
,iket4111 ti ... ,....It,_, lllllC_. T'1»t Mto1ofo,. tucilt•' •~ '•· llMIY tlMlt • ~ ...... rw fW llvtref to ... llfllltr•'9fllll 1 wrrtMll tllt '911df......, ii.•~ O.Cl•r.tlt11 If Otftllll 8flcl ~
1'fllCll ...., ""'" 111 9111'*'*""' -' ,., Siie, •nf • wrlltt11 Hollo 01 ..... _...,"_.,If .,.,.ny If' D1111111 -lltctlen le 1111, Tiit 1111· ..... , ,...., ,........ lft ·1111 ,_. ••u••no• ,_.. ... .,, .. Hello of
llltllllC ._..Ull .. m.llafl It s.11 lo 0t rt ..... .=-:~ ,.,....,. ... ~_. ... , ...
... I; "'=== ,,.,
......... ~. ...._ • .,, .. olCt, '°"' ,.,......,..
....... Viet~ '••n111 ••n••••'-••• ............ :£: ... """ ...... ~ ... . ...,;.:..-~--1111t • ,.... .. .
Strttl, NtwPorl 9te<h, C•lllornl•
t26'l. Tlllt lleltmtnt we• llled with lhe
County Cltr" ol Orenve County on
M•rch JO, ttll.
th• 1n11nded tr•111ftrH is: Goll 1rv1ne. The benefklMles o1 llM pr0Joc1 a nd contingent c reditors of ,
lnttrMtlonel COr'por .. lon 1m E••t •r• the <Ill,.. oft.,. ccwn""'"11Y· James Howard Reinhart,
Edln91r,S-1<1An1,c.111.m1 .. vo5. 2. ProJec:• Name: 11two Gef\trtl a k a Jam es H . Reinhart, Thi• l>Ullnou I• colld....:ad by "' In· dlvlcluel.
MMltH.Wlll>IW
Thlt '"''-' wn lllecl •Ith Ille Co11nty Cl1t11 of Or.,91 County 011
Marcll 11, ltll.
,.,..
Publls-0<8119t COHI Delly Pllol,
Th•l lhe property pertinent llertto Is Otlll99Uon lkHld Seit lot 1.0. • IOJ
dtacr111ec1 1n ...,.,., n : Molds, mold Group c.o aka Jim Reinhart a nd
llo1o11l119 •lld mHlert uted ior Ille Project Loe.lion: per S 0 n S W h 0 may be Aprll I,•. IS, 22. t•t I.OWi
'1St1U Pullll""" Or.nge Coe•t 0•11'1' Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE
m•nulACIWt crf ..._ lot golf (lubl The ~ proj«I lncrlotdts .,. th • . t ed • th
'°"'"•r with rei.wo Invent«• of eolj •len, '''' ~'"'°"· construction of O er wise in erest m e
ci1o11>t, go11 .,._...., .,11 .i..tts.,.,,.. c.i1a11ec11111o1. p1-1ng ''""'"· •lld will and/or esta te :
Aprll t, IS, 2:2, 2', ttll 1"5--11 I• local9d M: M.ZZ Oellley Terroce. ,.,,.,...,~ °' ,,.. IRWD C.plter A petition has been f iled
lrvlt141 Cellfwftl• t211S Rnervo 'und•. The epptulm•t• loco· b EI p R I h t · fllCTITlOUS IUllNIU TM 'b<.tllfleu...,,,. .;_by the w ld lion of pl\Y'JkAI fecllltlet it lllo•n on Y eanor • e n ar 1n
llAMISTATIMINT tr•,.•ftrot .. Mldroc.t1onii:J.A.c .o . uw.uechtdllourff the Superior Court o f ~
Tr.• 1011ow1119 pertons ••• c1o11111 Goll inc TIM proJ«t <0Mlt11 of the 111th Orange County requesting ••
1><11ineu ... Th•t ~Id 11u111 ,,.,,.,.,Is lnt-10 ... ,. of Gent••• Oblleetlon s-t of that Eleanor P Reinhart J PUBLIC NOTICE
APOTA ADVEltTISING AGEN· lie (Onaymmettd •I 1111 office 01 Improve,_ Oltlrlcl No IOJ. •lll<ll I · '~C::..~~!:~:.:::$ CY, IUI MM..-lle, Cor-0.1 MAr, J.A C.0 Goll, Inc., lrvlne, C.lllMnlA •ere Allthorl190 b'f Ult elKlloft In 1tn. be appo nted .as personal
Ti.. 1oi._1ng ~ 1,. c1o1nft ...,11• cerllotlll•t»2' tt1u on or •ti« MAy 1, 1•t. ,,.. • ...-ol Mlt btlfl9 .,.,,oalm•t•· rep res en tat 1 ve to ad· ,,..... • APOTA CORPORATION (• T ... ____ oflllepe .... ly U ,7SO,AIOO. TM"",_ lor •lli<h minister the estate of
VITA·HEALTH RESEARCH, IMS C•lll•rnl• corpore tlon), .. u wllllWhom<l•kMmey btlllo<l l•K.C. -Pl 1wlll betold lttoeccor111t11111 .... James Howard Re1'nhart .• T M MergYtrlte, Coron• O t l Mer, k~Af, EICllflrt, ''° Hewpor't C...ler •n of_., for 1mpro...,,_t DI.. , C~r~:~~:=.:11.:~I:: ... :::.: ~=~!:;."~~~If:.~ •• ~ USO. ~;1'1~:rJ:l~~~~::.'7::1 :::~ ~e~:o~~ '::..~~~1:r1~:~1:: r~ ;o~~d~S:n ~=~ ~Urt~r '
N••POr111Hc.h.C.llfotlll•t2Ml Thlt _,,...I• concN<-by • <ot· rn1n9 ''••ms 11'1 .,., <rodlt0< "'911 ... situ fot' •11d conatruc1 up1te1 ministration of Estates::r
poretlon April JO, t•t wflkh It the """""'' IACllltlet ""°""" 1"2 In r-a lo • . •• This 11YSl11tu ls-<-ucltd oy.,. In· .,_.Cor-•tron oey lleton ,;.. conwmm•llon d•te deveropme11t decision• of jurlsdl<-Act). The petition IS set for
dlvldu•' LA00.bou11 ==·creri.. •PKlt1ec1.oo.... tlofl•• 9991\Clff. wth as ,,. CJ1y oo he•ring in Dept. No. J afl
Tiiis ,,.._, ... llled wllh ,... fhl• , •• _, wn llled •llh lhe So fer •• I•.._ to Mid"""-lrvlt141. Tlltbeneflclerlesofl .. projecl 700 Civic Center Drive -Tre111ltr• Mid lntendltel Trensltror •rt"'° cltl.1-of the '°""""'"llY County Cieri< 01 0r.,ge C.O..nly on COUftty Cl.,k 01 Or.,ge County 111 ..,..., 1,.. lollowlflll ...,.,._, lluMnes.s J. Pro)«t N.,,... 1Rw o Olllleetlon Wes t , Santa Ana, Ca 92701
April•. 0•1· ,1,.... Apr1 ... 1"1. .._ ,,.m .. ...., tdclr-'#lllll""" .,.,. Bonc1$Al•lor1.0 . •1osGr-C·D on May 6, 1981 at 9:30 a.m.
PYC>llsi.d OrAflll* Coest 0•111 Prrot, Publlti.d Oreneit eo." D•ll:~not Y••rl IAst pest Is •m E•ll lcll,...r, Pr;!.:':..=" prolecl lncllotdtt.,. IF YOU OBJECT to the
Apr111, is,"· 1', t•t 16441 "'1rll I, u, u, n, 1•1 i.1wi ~';!~ ~.c:i:::,ni•· ••vn. •lie «<l"'i•llion, construction of granting of the petition,
-----·--------J•mnM.'419 <•PllAr fAClllUH, p1_,1nv t1..01H, •lld you s hould either appear PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ln1tn11HTr8fllter" rtlmt>..,_ of lllt IRWD C•P"•' at the hearing and state
BltUCI fllUCHTIElt,lfSQ. Rnerve Fund•. Tiie epproalmete your Obje t ' I ll
fllCTITIOUS IUllNlfSS .,... ITATIE#.EllT
T ht lo\lowlnv ptr lOfll •r• c1o1n1 1><111n .. sa:
WARMINGTON COMMER<;E
CENTER ASSOCIATES, 1'St2 Helt
Avenue, lrvlnt, C.lllMnl• t171'.
"CTITIOUI IUllHl$S NAM• $TAT•M•llT
Tht lollowln9 P••M>nl ere dOlne l>Uslt141U el;
0 a. K OEVELOPMIN T CO.
15" Superior • Bt. CHIA M•u.
CAlllornle 92627
Ke11net11 Let (olltr, 4'6 N.
stt....., Yecu,c:.iou.a a..-rouuon of phn!ul l•lll11es 11 .,..._ . . c 1_ons o_r e
., • .......,~.~··""·• ontM•lt.chtdlivurH. written ob1ect1ons with the "-'e..11,c...•MM Tiit pro1ec1 ton•l•h 01 the 111111 court before the hearing.
Publlllled Or8119t eo.11 DAiiy Piiot u i. 01 o.ner.i Oblleetlon Bond• 01 You r appearance may be Aprll IS 1•1 ,._..1 Improvement Olltrl<I No. 105, whlcn .
• · •••• .... 11>otlad by 1Me1.c11on In ""· 1n person or b~· your at·
PUBLIC NOTICE ti.. •mount of Mi. i.11111 -•olrnetely torney.
57.•so,ooo. Tiit purPoM for whlcn I F y O U A R E A
-· •Ill bt told It 10 ec(ompllsh lht THE ROBERT P. WARMINGTON
CO .• • CllK-• corporeti-, 1""2 Here A-, orvlne, Celllornl• 9V14.
Tiii• l><lslfltu I• condu(lod lly •
Ntwport Blvd .. Ne wporl Beech.
CAlllornl• 9*J
De vld Klnv, '" 43rd. Nt WPor1 Bt•(h, c.111orn1. •JtM.J
NIJMS P1eno1woruf0<lmcin>veni"'101wk1 CREDITOR or a cont · su ... •1oacou•TOl'THI No. 1os. ,..,..., ,,, MArch 10• '° lngent c reditor of the de··
ITATaOflCALlflOalllAflOR pertorm Pl•nnl119, cle1l9n, uqulrt ceased you must tile your llmllecl pertnt""lp.
The R~ P. Wermlnvton Go.
WilKem J . Pittman, Tl\h 1><11l11tu h condu(ltd lly • eenerel -1tltnlllp.
THICOUNTYOP:OllAMOI illu for, •nd construct <t pllt l I ' · -.A·"1m '"'11111 .. lh•OUQfl l"2 1,, r._, .. "' c aim with the court or
Seemer, K..,,.lll L. CollAr '" '"• M9tter 01 ,.,. Est••• ot ,,,. dt••'-'*>t decision• of 1urlsolc-present 1t to the personal
DOltOTHY D. LEWIS, OecH-. lion•• eeitntles. wc:h .. 111t City of representative appointed Tlllt Slel-t •n filed wltll llllt
co"'"'' Clfflt of 0r1111 .. county .,. Aprll t. 1"1.
Tl'lis ll<l..,,_1 WAI 11190 wllll ll1t
Cowi1.., Clw" of Or.,,eit eo ... ,.., on NOTtcaOl'PalVATllAU rrvlne. Tllebtnef1<1M1etott11tpro1ec1 by the court w i·u 11·n four OP:LllAICHOLDUrT•••ITIN •r• '"• clll.l-of , ... (Olnm.Hlfty .., ..... MAf(ltJO.ltll •11ALP110P1arr 4. Project Nerne IRWD Gen•••• months from the date of
,.,_, NOTICE HE"EIY IS GIVE• .,.., Ol>ll94llon -SAit .... I 0 • •06 firs t issuan ce o f letters a s
Pl.tOllthed 0r.._ Coett Oelly Piiot. R-rt A. Hiii, •.,. •uc•r of,,.. Group C-O provided in Section 700 of April 1, a, n, Z21'11 1u.e1 wlll of oar.a.,. O . ._...Is, dKNMCll, ProJ.ct Loc.tlon
Pul>ll"*' Or-CMsl Delly PllOt,
Apr II 1, IS, 22. n. 1•1 I 16'14'
PUBLIC N°'*1CE
wlll 1911, 9' pt1-~.lo the h'9flnl The ,.__ pro)« I lncllotdtt ct. t he pr 0 bat E' ( 0 de 0 f •ncll>Ht~ ........ --~-ll911, ,, .. «QUl11t1on. <on•tructlon of Califo rnia. The time for '':ii.''::::': ~sYtA:'. ""'.~~.tec11111,'°,. '9'>it•lfec11111et.,p1enn1ng"""IH.•11C1 f1l1ng c laims w ill n ot ex-PUBLIC NOTICE
v .,.... rt lmb<I,_,_ ol I,_ IRWD C•plle l • .
NOTICE cw Ta UST••·· &ALIE FICTITIOUllUllNllS .. ~ .. I of llw rlgtlt. title -Ill-Reserve Funds The •PC>rO•lm•I• I«•· Pl re prior to four months
T.5. -. • ..., · •AMaSTATU"INT I•,.•• o4 DoroOly o. Lewis"" OKe-lion ot p11y1tur 1.:11111 .. I• -.non from the date of the hear·
NOTICE rs HEREBY GIVEN. U..t ·Th• foll-1119 pefwns •r• clol1111 dent)-.. , crf .... rleM, lltl•, _ ,,,. tllt •ll-llvu"'' Ing noticed above. °" Wed-...,, Aprll >f, Ult, •l 12:00 bl.lslneu n : t.,..st thlil lier"*'" Ms KQUlred, by The projtc1 c-ists °' 1"° lourth YOU M AY EX AM IN E
O'(lo(k -ot sold ,,..,, In Ille .,,.. TRINITY CUSTOM ORAPEltlES. oper .. lon crf ·-cw otherwise, Ill -Ill ..... of ~·· Olllleetlon Bonds of .
lr811Ct 1--, of lllt oftlus of REAL JIU·B Blrcll. Nt•port lu<ll, lho follOWlflv dn<rlbtcl ... ........, ift. Improvement Dl'1rkl No 106. wlll<h the f1le k ept by the COUrt.
ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE. C•lllornl• terestlnrMI~:' •tr••lllhorlteclby lhet1Kllonl11 "76. If you are interested in the
locelo<I el 117 NOrth 8roedwey, Sulle Julle It. Callt, 11 .. A Howo Drive. TM clocodtnt'l IOAMflold ln .. ,.sl In lllt .,,,_ ol Mle btl119 eppro•lrnet ... estate you rnay file a re· A, In tllt CllY of ~lA Ano. County of !.ent• Ane, C.llfotlll• tl70t lh• reel properly 111 tl\e City of ly '"1.S70,QllO. The --10< which • • Orengt, Slelt or Ctlllornla, T I(. Con11le Sue Martinel, 1'6 WHI NewPOrt !Mech, c-.t'I' of Ofen99, -· wlll lie l.ofd 11 lo <K(Of'nl>lilll the quest With the COUrt to re·
INVESTMEHT COMPANY, INC., .. SllAllmtr Orlvt •t. CollA Mese, Slelt ol Celllornle, de1crl!Md At Plen of Wot111 lor Improvement Dlt· Ceive Special notice Of the
C•lllor111e corporellon, es duly ep. C•llfornlet2127 fellows: trlcl No 106 es~ In A119ul11'7' Inventory of estate assets
Pointed Tr"'''" under end -·r-nt to Thi• ~ .... ,,~, Is co·~"<l•d ~Y • Lott • end '6, toooOltr wllll _.,. lo perfonn plennl119 0.•1911 ecllul,. d f th t ·t · lho PO•tf 0t sere tonlffred 11111\91 ,•r· oener•l --Ip. • u ve .. ..._~ r ,..,HS .,.., ,... uu., •• '"'• v t Cl ti •• lo I _.... sltel for, end con. tlruct' <•;!tel a n 0 e pe I lonS, a C·
l•ln Dud 111 Trust uecultd by J""l•R.Cn tle evru 1 lllroug11out Lb1 s.. --~ 1ec11111e1·lhroug11 1t11 In ,_ 10 co Un t S and r e port S
HERBERT D. JENNINGS-LINDA Tn1s .... _, wn llled with t11t lo sold LoU of Trect No. Wiii, Clly df llM development Clt<lllons of lurlsdk· d escribed in Section 1200
L. JENNINGS, h1otsballd -Wlft, •lld Counly Cltrk of Or.nve Coullly on ~~~:;:~.:::.· •• '!"'.:.:' on°'."":i· llon•I 99t11tles, tuen •• , ... Cll'f of or the California Probate ruorc»d Novembtr 27,' 1919, In Booll April 6, :•• lrYlt141. The beMll<IArlH ol tllt pn>ject C d I~ ol Olfl(I .. Records ol said eoun. "11M'3 tecot II\ IOOll "7• ,.._, u,-ere ,,.. clllt-of lllt communlly 0 e •
IY. •t ~ 1011, Rec-r·a lntlru, p •11· ....... ,._ Pl 11 of mlaceri-...s !NIPS, rKortl N•m• ol "91n<Y Undtrtekl119 Pro· D<1vid Sterling Tingler I N~ Uv .,_ --COHI DAiiy IOI, ofOr ..... ~,C.lllornle. m.n o. • by,.....,, of • ~teeh A.,.-111, 15, u, 2'. l•t IMS-ti Seid rNI preper1y comm~i., Jects: 1rv111t RanchWtter 01atr1<t Law Corp., Attorney <It
ot 11e1eu11"' peymtnt Of' pertormA1Ke -------------~or"••"'~!!:.-.,,.,,K>•l~w.1~1-•, L"'W, 500 Newport ,. __ ttr of ti.. odllg11llons MCIWed llltrtll'I, In-know" Al _.. VlstA C.loft, ~ ......., .. ,_,. __. ~· • ...,...,
,1uc11n11 tMI <trUl11 ~eec:11 « 0efeu1t, PUBLIC NOTICE ••t:·;-',:::"'.!,~~t'-· of __ , .. Eat•n•lon: 1• Drive, Suj,te 920r Newport
Nollet or •lllch wu re,ordeCS. ----._.. -Mlll9e11on ,,,.._to evold POien· 8e<1ch, CA 92660; (714) Oeetmller 2', ttlO, In ._ 1~ of Of. IHMftolcl lflflnst In r .. I ~ .,. llel tl9nH~ ttt.<11. N-R~ro<I 644•5433 flcl•I RACotdS ol Wld Count,. •l.... NOTIC• TOC:OWTltACTOtt-191 IOf'll\ Ill. -detecl April I, 1"4, Oeted. Aprll 14, '"' ••
fU, "ecorc11tr'1 1nstn.1ment Ho. •210, CALLlllOflOttllDI bttw .. ,, Ille lnl11• Comp•"'I'· u a.ttyJ Wheeler Published Orange Coast
WI LL SELL AT l>VBLIC AUCTION $(hOOI Dhtrkl COAST COM· '"-· -Tiit Blufb,. P9rtlle""lfl· AulslAnl S.cretAry I Deily Pilot, April lS, 16, TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR MUNITYCOLLEGEOISTRICT . ••8"-J WIW<llw•rt<01Wc1111Nov• p..,1111.-0r-Coesl OAllyifllol. 22 1981 1796_81 CAfH, 1-flll _., ~ Ult UllllACI lid Ooeclllnt: IO:OOo•(loO; AMof Ult tm'9r 11, 1"4, Ill lloOll n1t at 1'191! A.,.-11 IS. 1•0 le07 .. I •
St.lltl, jtll peyeOfe et 1111: Umt Of Ml•, >Ollldeyo1Apt1!,l•I • ua '".,. Oltkllll R-., ~-.1------------~--------------•ll rlolll. till• -"" ..... -lleld"' PIK• of lld AfCOlpl• Office of Ult C-ty, (alHorniL Tiit lttllt'"1 ol ...
It, .. Tr·oa ... , In -II~ r .. I ,,.._ P.ftcrteslnv Aetnl, M•rle11 Perrin, le•-'" Mid .._ •• ~.,.. to
"'' sllu•led 111 sold cou11ty •nd Co .. t~lYCell-Olslrk t. U70 Ille dKldtftl Illy .,, 111stn1MMt ,.. stete dn<rl-•foliow.· AdArn1A .... ,eo.1<1¥eM cordlcll '"~ 1, 1"'5, 111 .,..__
PARCEL 1, · Prol•'' ldt11llll<ell0ft N•me: 7'4 •l P•t• Ht 111 Ole Oft1c11f
All ll\9t c.oruin ..,.., 1111Ml90 Ill Ult 0 It AN 0 IE COAST C 0 LL EGE R.cot'ft of Mid ~. Tiw "'"" of
City ol "-1 11McJt Clfttr-.0 ., L I I It /4 R Y S If C 0 N 0 " L 0 0 It Mid,._.. c-ICOCI 111 April I, 1"4. looo.. •• tl>Wll: ' CA• .. •T•NG-110•"5 .... •ncll 9'1 MeKl'l JI. JOit, M)Kt, LOI )4 In 91o<k A of Trect UJ .. PIA<t ,.._ .,. Oft Ille: Oftkt of llow9vtr, '9twtlor .,.,,,,..Ion .. _
llllown °" • .._ ,__ In -10 Phytleel FeclHlles Plef\1119 Tr.ii« vldff 111 Mid leeM.
P•Vtl 11 .,,., " of MltUlllMOU; Feclllly,JOfWIPotter,CoHtcemm.HlllY Set« ,........., I""'"' Ill ,.., pr•
flhp1, records of orenlll' County, Giii ... Oltt.. IJ70 AMlnl A,,.., Ceate ""'wlll l>e sold-i.<t to:
C.llfornlL Meu,CAm.i'>Wu.4107 -........ -_ .. , l-s And ...
PAltC•L J : NOTICE ISHEREIYGIVEN IN l IN ••-enb tor the rite.el .,..r ltll-12, e
All II* (erUln land tltuelltcll 111 ,,. above·~ SC'-1 Dfttrkt of Or.,... 11811 not 'l'ot P9Y8CllO;
City ot N--1 a.ac11 c.unty If County, Cel"ornle, .ct1119 by •fld -•II•-• end ·--b wllk l\ Or•,...,51ettofC.ll~: lhro"'tll Ill Oo ... r11l119 Boerd, meyl>e..,,lecllot1-... lnl1,eld
A p«llOll of Lot u of &loo A o1 l\ereln•fl•r rtltrttd to •• .,..._..,,,~111Utt41'9oftllls
Trecl '"· eor.... o.;t MAI' • .,. tf!Own "DIST"ICT'',wlllrec.tlveuPlo.llull'IOI Mike;
on • map rocordld 1n llOOll JO,.,...-It l•t•r 1111111 the _.,..,1.t..., tlrnA, ... 18c! -'otAlllll0111, 'oven.,.ts. rHIJ'k ·
of MIKtlltf!Oous MICK. l'O(Ords of l>lds for tM....,... of• (onlrett fpr ,,. ...... r-ti.n.. .. ~ rlgllts,
Q )~·~-
..
Otenve C-ty,dlscrl•••tllletn: ellOveproJoct. ~ rleM1ofw..,o41'1COf'd, ll•fl'I· ••elnnlng et UM rnoet Sou,,,.rluor· Biiis 11111111 lie ntetlwd In tlw p1ac1 'Seid ~ In~ 1n ,.., -,,., °' laid Lot u 1 lMM• North •UJ:' ldtntlflecll eoow, -lfl•ll tie tlMlltCI ,_., wl1111e Mid°"-.., 1. tt91, to~ Weal to 1119 t'flOtl ~ly "rMI' Of llld PllOlj(ly rNd lllUd el I .. ...._.. o'U.Cll. A.M., It .,,.,...,.., wlttllfl the
Mid lot, N14t ~ef'l'I c_,. •1111 st•t .. dtlt'flUMpl.C., ti""' llllow9d ~IN Ofll«e ~
IM S.Ulllerry llnt" Haul Df'lwe, -Tlrerewtllbt•rio ... d4tlolllr""'O"llf 'Taylet IC....... • ........... •l·
11tow11 111 ••Id ""P of TrllCt '71; fer U (ll Mt of bid docllJ'fl•lltt t• ,.,_.,, .., -......,...-_ et \114
lllenc• '"'1Nt1y olofte ,,. we•rly ouar.,, ... ltll ,..,,.,,. 111 ~ ctMlt¥ "~lflc loilUWlll 9111""'9, sa:n Wttt
11,,. of ._.. L.ot u , -1111 b1-...iy •1111111 • .....,. ..,., t,. bid~ Sfllll lttMt. "91 Aftetlta. c:.llfor·
,,,,
"'•' . ... A#
llM ol Htnl Drive to • Point. Nkl Ute. 1111 .. 14. •
1M>lnt 0.1,,. uAO~t Ind •t eu11 bid must clftform •fld i. Salt .... lirill .. m.,. "'"" Ille
r'9fll •llVM '9 tM ly • "-"w•""tlfltrect~b, ftlltWll!f -: ..... trice .. M ~W tension crf t11t tv llM Ekllllltlhlffi.11«-1141~ ... 111 IA C-..., ..,-tty le <.ti...;""
Mid LOI U; ~ ~·· Ill • w<ur11,,..._..tol111M~Wllt1Cltleelfo ... _. " Cl"Mlt, .. ..,_ .. -· dirt< I llfltt• tM l'ell\I O'\~ ,,..,,.. -..., t .. 119'.,,,...... •• c,....t " .. KC .......... __
Tiie tltwt ...... ., iWMf <-C4f\UkWt.. ..-i ti ..... t ......... ~If_.,~--------------------,..------'"41MIMfl. If _,, tf 8",... ,,....,.. 'tlll DlSTltlCT ,_,,,..,._ rltM .. ,.,_ ._ ..... ,nc.1 .. _.., "
ly lllrtfflllloft *'<ti._. 11 ~--reilet lft\'lr .. 1W.w11wt(,,. 911'1' Ir• ,._ fl u.11C. ... ..,.... fl 11111
•• 1>1: m ....,.. Orlvt, c«-. 0.1 r:r,::lfltMwlftfonMiltlMltl_,..., c"411t ..-111 ~W •,...If Mer, (Alfforftl.t, • tf 11"'9MMn9. .. ~_...II\' e ....-... Tiie .,,,.,.,...,_. dhc ....... M'I Mf T .. C>ISY•ICTMt ....... f,_tM ................ ......., ... .
.i1 llff!lllV fW 1111 lflllCWrfe'-of OlrKtw et tM ~ tf 111-TM,.._.., ... .._.!* .... ... ~ Ml'Wl ...,_ w .._, t-... .,,.. _.... ... ...., .. ~· ...._._. ... 1_.e1@ .. .. •.ien-11111. 1119, ... .,..,t!MI .......... ~ ........ .......,. -........ "
llldMle'#lll lae ..... ....,.~ lfo~•wtt1s•ar.,...........,1tr tllle.,_"•W'.T_IW1ille,_.
Miit., -raitlty, ........ or ....... NC:lltrllftt1r .... el__,__.. • .,_ 111.....,. ............... ..
,....,..,,,, tlltl, .....-. ., tflC-tl!KY!e .. -tct. Tlletlr---• ,,._..., • ..... fl ~ • ..
)'lflett, t1 .. 116fy Ute pfllld,.I r~ et ... OltT•ICT ~';'et ..,_ ......... wtllcll .......... ..
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Orange Coul OAJLY PCLOT/Wednelday, Aprll 15, 1881 HI F
Tapes· take new twist
Costa Mesa finn specializes in turning l>ooks into cassette
fi..ll~UAP acAaCEW>
The commuter waa delllhted to h1t a red Utht
and amlled at tbe bumper·to-bumper traffic on the
freeway at ruah hour.
Sometlmet he even wu late to work becauae
be aat in b1a car llstenlnt intently.
A rock and roll fan? A talk ebow Junkie? No, a
blbllopblle.
HE WAS ONE ot tbe 12,000 to 15,000 people
who Uaten each day to taped venlom ot books.
They've dilcovered the joys of 1oln1 around in
literary circles.
Boob on Tape, a Cotta MeH company, was
beeun ln 1975 by an Oranae County stockbroker
who works in Los Anselee. D~val Hecht, tired of wutin& hil boun in the
carbon monoxide fumes, bad been abocked to find
he could use recorded Uterature only ii be could
find a way to have himself leaally blind.
W I T 8 A
buslneuman's acu-f/2 0
men, t{echt decided
other freeway jockeys .1'RcN
would like the chance to
hear the books they
never have time to read.
Now president of the
company, Hecht con-•••
tinues hls journeys to
the big city, leaving his
wife Sigrid, vice presi-LI ff
dent, to rw:i the com-RffE:-R
pany on a daily basis. 'fRW They began by record-
ing Geor~e Plimpton 's 1"':9'!~f.J;i'fiitiJI "Paper Lion" in August,_ __ .. __ __
1975, but three years of
groundwork preceded
that milestone.
about twice a year but addl elaht or 10 new boOU
each inonth.
Rental prtc" to use a taped book for a month
be•ln at 18.50 and 10 as bieh u $12.50. "It'• about
50 cents an hour, and you can't hire anyone to read
to you for that,'' 1ay1 Mrs. Hecht with a lauah.
Titles lnclude both fiction and non-ficUon.
classlc:s and beet sellers.
"Best of the Wall Street Journal," "David
Copperfield" and "Advise and Co111ent" are cap-
tured on tape, as are "The Key to Rebecca" and
''The Origin.''
When lists of new offerings are sent out, ''tht
phones ring off the book," according to Mrs.
Hecht.
THE COMPANY STOCKS from 100 to 3~
copies ol each title depen'1inl upon Its popularity.
Since books averag·e 10 tapes of 60 or ~
minutes each, the company's first practical prob·
lem was packaging for shipping as well as
' ,
..----st o r age with in th e
t I t-warehou.c;p
r Ta pes are packed in
s mall car dboard con
t ainers and stacked in
s pecially des1gnl'd A
frame shelves
Like librarian~. com·
pany employees chcc:k
in the boxes returned in
. la r ge m ailbags each ti. d ay n y · W e av<"rctge 350 to
! VI 500 boxes returned each
day. but on Mondays it's
E.11 wild -we process about
_...,_ 600,"' says Mrs. lleeht
•l •
"We had a hard time
getting an author to let
us record a book," says To...11 N FR171. 1 • •
After checking in lhe
boxes by number in a
ledger <°"We're looking
for a small computer lo
save on bookkeeping
hours ... sht• sa) s). tapc•s
are re"'ound at a rate of
one per minute
··If the) can't stand
the high speed rewind.
they won't be sent out," says Mrs. Hecht "There's
nothing more frustrating than having a tape go out
. at an exciting point in t he story."
Mrs. Hecht. "Our plan
was to give the book a Life on a booluhelf -01' i3 it tapeshelf?
Lindel Harmon open.s and helps check from 350-600 tape• daUJI.
•VBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE
good. straight reading
without background music or xtra dramatics .
"OUR RE DERS the story, just as a
mother reads t her d."
Customers 1 --homes, autos and businesses en-
joy the change f pace from a diet of rock and roll
or Muz · e their hands and eyes are engaged
in other ursuits.
........ ~:umpany now stocks about 400 titles, and
autboMt are paid an advance royalty plus a fee
each time a copy of their taped book goes out.
•'The film-industry was a big competitor for
us," Mrs. Hecht admits, ''because the spoken
rights to written material used to be lumped
together, and studios can pay a million dollars for
a book.
"Now movie and recording rights are
separate." Boolts on T&pe& updates a catalog of titles
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
For anyone whose tape does fail, a c all to a
loll-free number will speed a replacement the
same day.
Master tapes are kept separate, and duplicat-
ing machines can create 15 copies from a master
in three minutes, recording both the front and
back of the tape simultaneously.
Because voice qualities can change during
high-speed duplication. an equalizer makes the
voices sound more natural.
The office employs about 20. but books aren"t
recorded there
A DOZEN READERS record at studios of
their choice and ar e paid by the hours of complet
ed tape.
TAX SHELTERS
r ,. t Go' • Red t:-1u1" • ,..,,
f'ICTITIOUS •u11Nan NOTIC• °" ...... sPOM51•1UTY ( l;:>mj)' • En-'P""'• I ll'O "''
MAMa $TATUlllNT Hollo I• IWreb'f 111...n tNll the '"'" DIDUCTl01'4S UP TO SOO°o THIS YU.a
fl~IT1CIUI auttNaU ... ,.. ,.CTITIOUI •ustNIU ITATUMMT Ofl AaANDONMaMT MAMa STATIMINT
Th• fo110 .. h•11 per.on\ are OolnO CH1fil91\ed wlll noc be A'4*1'41>1• tor Gia .,LD L. KOUJ( RMA.t«:IA.l S8YICES OU\IM"" any dellb or na1111111n contrac:ltd by "
"CTITICIUI aus•N•n NAM• STATllMINT 01' Ull Oft • Tiit lollowlno .. Uo•U er• dolno
NAMll ITATll!KNT Tiit IOllowfno persons are "'"' f'ICTITIOUI •UllN•SS NAMI OUllrwtlM
Tiie tollowl,,. peuoM ere 6oll\Q bvsl...UM" TM lot ...... --...... --LAO-HMONG SECU IUTY AGEN·
twonl.--•: TllEHT·MU$1C;K. I.TO 14'11 ---oftMtktJl*a-.sflltM CY, llO' #A LO .. n s•rMI, Cot .. THI( •UCK ROSI!, 1na H41wporl Ntlll• Gell Road i'..eo1.1n~· Hiii• n-• EMA!llALD IAY 4$SOCIATES. IMM. CAlllOnll••»»
P.V.C. WEST, J I WOOd Wind, My--·.,_ m)'teff, on or.,... 71~/'4'-2507
lrvlna, Cellfonlla t271f U.fadate. 1~~~~~======::::::::::::::::::::=::::~:'.:""'"""'.::--:'.:". 81\fCI., C.le Mew, CallforlMa t»U c.tllorllla nu3. ' ' L TO., •t 1* 0.... St,..,, s.,i.11 aa,. Jo,,11 -rl'l. J\52 .. r.-, Co&ta
Lfflllt H. SN-. SU 11111 St••. Rolltn E. WllMltr IM-11,,. "~ llMcll\, Cellfenola'1MO _,,._ c.lllonll• ·~
HvMl,....._.._,.,Calliomla._. Gel\trtl "•rtllff ot T""I LIO a TIM flctlti.. llMnlltfff ,,_ re. Carol Herr ... JID .. <_,Coll.I
J-A. llndllt't'. JIS 17111 Slrwt, Celllotflle o.Mrel Per~,l 241t I fernd to ...... -flied In ~..... Mew, CellforMe ta• """Uneton a..<11, CalHorlM• ,_.. M I I G I R d • c _,, ""May IJ ,. c lff I ~ S2 ..
Tllh tklalllns Is cof\ducted by t c:11:!.1e~ oa • Lltul\e Hiiia, WOOOVllW PROPERTIES, Costa'~C:~~!r~at~» rmu<le,
llmllld '*",:-:•PI Mlltkk·Waiu Corp., • Calllorftl• 1 HC., 1600 0o ... Slrff\, S1.tll• UI, Tllh ~slnen I• (..,Cki<ltd lly e ~ . Sh -corportllof\ 17671 lrvlnt eo.iteverd N•W1'0n llMc.h, c.lltonlla tJMO oenerel pe"'-llllP Tl\!\ tie•-· .... hlld wllll the s II lOl T11$tl Calif IM n.IO • Tiiis blltlMH was ~ltd by e JONI Ha,,.ls
'ot11• Alfr.O Wolon, Jt ""/iOOd DeleclW1IJllldayoll"I. l·
Wind, lrvlrw, Ol~nle t21U ~ '"911'-"" • Hen.rt Ak Mrd Wflton, Jr .• JI 11 Ot.l...,c-t,
Wood WINI, Irvine, C:.Hlorni• 91714 ._,,, Calll. 926'3
Thia lkl'41\ftl 11 <Ond1Kled .II e Publl Or .... CO.It 0.lly PlloC,
oenera1 _.,,.,..,.,p, __,,.-Aprll 14, s, 21, "" 1111.-1 Joftl\A.WfflOft c__. ----Tiiis lte-....1 WH 111..S Wllll I
Co.,nty Clerlr. of Or.,9S Covnty o
llMrch 311, "" •
P..CJBLIC NOTICE
'. Coul\ly Clerk of Or.,119 County on uT~ls b..11...:; Is C:C:no~ted .by • llmllld pariner'11tp Tltfs lltt•mel'lt .,., flied wllll tM ~rcll 21, 1'11. 119nerel .,.._,,,Ip. WoodVlew Pr-rllOI, II'<. County Clerk of Orenge County on l'U lltCTITIOUS BUSI HESS
fll5'4l4 TRENT LTD Lyle 0 . Sopl""ellnlr., Merell JO, 1"1 Put>lllNd Or81\9f Coast Daily Piiot, HAMll STATIMINT Publll/'ld Or~ Coast Deily Pilot, by Rotltrt E ·-1.. lb ~ .. -t ,,,;... April I,'· IS, 22, "" U'2-11 Tiit IOl'-1119 ...,,_., ll ooino .......
Aprll I, •• IS. 22. "" ·~11 Manaoi"9 General Pirt-•o•a•T MOlllllM* P11bll"*I Or-COesl Delly Piiot, MU ...
Tlll1 si.ien-1 wM llllO wllll Ille l.aW OffkM April I, I, U, 22. 1911 14tS-ll • PUBLIC NOTICE W E S T E R ~ S I E R R A ---Counly Clerlr. of Oranoe Go .. nty 01\ JSf N....-rtc:eo.tff Drive, LANDSCAPfi. 111' S Genoa Drive.
PUBLIC NOTICE Apru •. 1•1. s.tt•,. PUBLIC NOT er s. .. te ,,,,,., c:ai11orn1• t 77CM
EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14
NEWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
.,,_ New,..-t -..0, CA"* I L l'ICTITIOUS IUSINliiSS Rlcl\¥CI C. RllNre.l. 111' S Gt<>oa
Pul>ll'fl90 Orange CoHt Dally PllOI, f'U1U4 HAM€ STATIMENT Drive, Setlte Me, C•lllornle 921CM •:c:=========::z::;i;:=====7===-_...;:fl .:1cT1T1CIUS •UllNISS April I, IS, 22. lt. ,., 1•9'-11 P1>0lll"9d Oran<,JI Coe•I D•lly Piiot, f'ICTITlOUS •USIHlff Th• lollowlno ~''°" ,, oolno Dusi· Tiii• buslneu IS <onduclltCI by ..,, In·
NAME STATEMINT Aprll I. I. U, U , 19'1 ---~I ......_ STATIMINT .,.n es dlvlduel.
Tiii IOllow•llQ C-noQ •• 001"9 0..11· Tl\t IOlfOWlltll ~r-s are dolno A·I COMPUTER PAP'f'R co.. Ri<llM'O Rlff\IAl
nes• .. , PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE 11u11ness'" JJu s. e"'"· s.ni. ""•· c:e111ern•e This , .. ...._1 •• llled w1111 ""
JO'S !(NIT WIT, :i.' E 11111 Slrffl, ARTISTS INTERNATIONA L, tell 92101 County Cler~ of Orange Coun1y on
•1'.CO\llMeM,Callfornle '2'17 woTICaOf'TllUITEE'ISAL.E Do ver Ori Ye . Newport Beech. 801>1>y Devier So"''"· ll13 S Merell JO,•••. fl!""7 o.ns Joil/IM c-r. ltl A voe-. l'ICT1T1CIUI au11NaU " Callfonll• ,,,._ Birch, S.nll All•. Cel•lorn1e 92101 Pul>ll~ Or-Coast Dally Pllol,
• Bf, c ... Mirsa. C•llforn1• •i.21 NAME STATEMENT '--.... !Dl7..... Donald Georve. ltO 0.1 Mer TlllS bU~n•n •• CondUCl&'d Oy"" ,,._ Aprll 1.I. u. u. ''" 1s .. .-1
fllls hoslntss 1sconouc11tc1 by en 1n Tll• fon....,.11111 ~rsons ere 001"11 T . ., .... :J61!a-.J sno res Terr•<•. Solen• •••<fl, 01v1oua1 Clivlduel buslMuu: NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS, INC .. Celll0rnlef207S ~y O. ~•rs
O,,_C_r J AVA E U RA SIAN A UTO ~!i!!\~-=~::i=·:.~:.;;,1~ JanlS'OrtnCl•lll, ltO Del M., Tfli. sl•lemtnl wa.> flltd wlll'I '"'
Tiii\ --· was flllO with Ille SERVICES, 21'0 W.st Flrsl Street. SELL AT PUILIC AUCTI°" TO THE $11o res lerrece , Sole n• Beach, C.ounly Clerll. of Or..,99 Counly on wi-as
co .. nly Clerk ol Oran9e County 011 S.nl•Ane,O lllorl\lefJ103 HIGHEST Bl ODER FOii C:ASH Celllornl .. 201~ Mercfll4, 1•1 ,. •• Merell 2J, 1911, ADRIMN M. LINN, IUtS <Nerta Tiii• llutlneu h <ondlKIH by a 1'1Jl$4t l'ICTITIOUI aUSINIU
1'1S'4tt Aven.,. "'-leln Velley C:alltorl\la lpeyal>lt at Urnt ol Seit In lawful QenerelpaffrwrSNp. P111>1lllltd 0r"'9t C•sl Oe1ly Pllol. NAMa STATIMlltT
P111>ill/ted Or-coast O.lly Pilot. '270I. ' ' m-y ol Utt United States) •11 rlOflt, 1 OonaldGeor9S Mer H . Apr I, I, IS, 1'111 10 1-11 Tlla lollowll\Q petlOnS are doing ,,,., u ""' 1 • IS Itel 1443-41 SOEHOED RAWIROATMOOJO 1111• and lnlerest conveyed •0 -now Tllll si.c-t WM flied •1111 ,... bull-•
• . • • ' ln•s (Nerti,,,_ F-1•111 Velley ... .., 11, "under MlCI °"" OI Trvst 1" County Clerk ·ot o..,. County on TUSTIN HEIGHTS SHOf'PING
Cellfornla t21'0I. • • '""properly htrt!Mlltr IH5'rllltd: Aprll •• 1 .. 1. PlJBUC NOTICE ca N TER, I U2 1 ntln• 6ou11nr d,
Tiiis builne$S 11 cond11ettd by a TRUSTOR: GARY L. l'OELSTRA ~1 .... 1 --Tustin, Celltornfa._..
llmlltCI P«trwrV\lp and DIONNE R. POEloSTRA, fllilbend Publl"*' Or .... Coast O.lly Piiot, R0Mf\ller9 RHI Es&alt llqully
AdrlAan M. Um • '"°•II• A Aprll t, IS. tt, Jt, '"' 1~1 f'ICTATICN5tlnlMl$S l'Uftd IV, a~ Trust,•» CllltoflMa l'ICTtTIOUS•UllNaU This stet-• ..... "'"' with llW aEHEFICIARY; MARVIN . NAMaSrATEM£tq SlrHI, San Frencll(O, C.llfornl•
NAMI ITATaMaNT County Cltr• of o r .. 119 County on KREIN a nd IRMA L .. KRE IN, Th• loll-Ing p .. \Olls ... doing •••••
Tiit lollowl"9 PtfSOfl Is doln9 llUSI· Aprll 2, ,... ...,..,...... end wit•., tolnl tenants. puauc NOTICE f)jjlln•n ... Tl\ll lMlnOIS 11 '°"""'"°by. bvSI·
MU es; l'Uft77 Re<oro.d Seel-"· ·-.. In· N £ W>f> 0 R T c L E A N I N G ,.. .. trust VIDA OEL 111\AR APARTMENTS, PUOllslllcl Orat191 Colst 0.lly Pllol str. Ho. 2'S1l In bodl IJ1SO, ~ ISOol -SEil ViCES. 171-F, IUve~Clt OrlYt, Jdvi II, C-ly •
, .. Sell CIKle, H""tlftvlon ke<ll, April . I) Jl ,. '"' 17Q0.4: Offlcl•I Aecords·"' "" offk • ol Ille ltJ'llM Ntwpot'I tlM<ll, C.Utornte t lMJ ~9 RMI Est.it CA. '1'4t. ' ' ' ' Recorder ol O<anot c:-ty; Hld OtM f'ICTITIOUS ·~IMll6 8erMrd MatNMOn, UI Hemlllon Eqwlty Fund Ill
Melll L. ~k. -Milty AcrH -of lrllll o.tcrllles Ille toll-lno pre>-MAMI STATaMaltT SlrMI, API. A, COst• Mat.a, Olllornl• Tiiis ... ,_, ... fllecl with ...
119M. llolll"9Hlll1 Esa.t ... C.. 90214. PUBLIC NOTICE ~rty: The 1011-lftt P'f"IO!I Is dOlltll bvll· •W7 County Clffk of ~.,09 Clunty on
Tiii• __ ,, C-ltd D'I' .. In· • L.ol JI II\ 81o<lr. c of Tr.cl No. Sii, "'" aa: . l'tal\dy louh M•llllU OI\, HJ A4><'11 J "'' dlvldlutl. In the CllY ol Newport 8MCll', H per HYO~. 11141 A41t..,.n Clrclt, Hantvtr O.-lw , Coll• Maw, Callfornl• ' • f'lttnl
IMlli L. atleuf'nlk NOTIC• INVITING •101 mep ••<OfWcl '" --11, P•• » to Hunll .... e..cll, C.lllWnl•.,..,. •2•26 fl'llOlltllld Or~ eo.11 O.lly Piiot Thlt ~ WM flied wltfl llW Nollet la htrtlly 9lven 11\al lhe :M ln<hlllve ol Mlsull-s llMPt, In Lubor Hlavacek, ll\'1 Aut11mn This Dutlnen It c0fld11<\td Oy a "II I U, 23 19 l"I VOMi
C-tf Clen of Oranoa Ceuftly on loercl of Tndt-Ill IN lfUftt.1""911 t11t oltlct o1 t11t County Rteordar of Clrclt, H\llltlfllkW\ a.eel\, Cllllfelnllt 91Mrel pertnenfl4p. ' ' '
Mar<ll J, ""· fN<h ~ Hltfl klloOI Dlstrk l Wiii Miii CouMy. ., .. , • a. Maellltton ~lmtt recely• Haled bldt tor 11.1pplyl111 170S E. Ck-9clultv.,.d, NewPort Tlllt liWIMSs la cofldUClltcl W ., In· Tiiis st.i-1 "''" 111.0 wllll Ille PVBUC NOTICE
T....,.... Tel~ S.,-n Melfi~ rntet· eeach, C.111«"'-n.61 dlvlovat. ,.,,,., c ounty Clerll 01 Oranoe County on ----•..., ,.,...... lfll .,. ...., '° 1"9 -lllutlaN Oft "Ill a llrett addrftt or<~ de· Ll.tllor Hi.1111<ell Merell u, , .. ,. lqJ'lll' • .. ...,...~on.. Ill• 111 uw office o1..w Obfrtct. ~11e11 ts....._....,., rw watrenty Tl\la .-....,_, •• tllad wltll u. f'IMQI f'ICTITIC(IJ ausueau .... .. till• tMll be CIHrly "'Hlltll la tlftfl .. IO lta co.nplt'9nftl or COf· Cwnty Clerti Of 0r .. oe Oallnty on Publlttwd Orenoe Coast O•Uy Pilot, • KAM& ITAT .... NT
.............. C.. faMt "Tel.,._ SyatMI Mel'*!Mntt, ale ttctflHtl ." Aprll J, ltll. "'8r. U , •. I, I, IS, l"I 1440-11 Tl\t foll-Int p«SOfls are 001119 ~I .... Or-C.UI Dally "llOt. 4'.UJ," .....-lo All'fl\ E. lt-lty, Tiit ...,_.kltry llnder .. kl 0..0 of ~ Puljllllltlf Orange Coast o.!lr Pl'", • bllslMU ... , ._..u 1, u, zz. 2'. "" 1-..1 """11•11119 '-•n• .. r, H1111t1119to" Tr<nL 11'1' ,..._,oh llf'M<ll or default Allflll, U,22,2', 1911 11111.,1 • PtJBUC NOTICE K·TltUS,~ oener•' ~ralllp, -------------laec:ll Ullian Hl9'1 ktlool Olstrkl, la lM Ollll .. tloM MCu'9d tlle,..y, •-7 ..,........ ., ~-~. Nia
1ou1 v-.u-ri Ave., 1iW1t1nat°" ...,.•otor• 1x.cutec1 -s c1111v.,.. " PlJBUC NOTJCE ~ ~iionHft10S. .. -. -~ · IJNcll, (.ellfwllle ,_.., Mii received !Ille IHMMf'...., •written Olcltr .. lofl f'ICTtTIOUIJUSl1t•U OTH UtTERl'ltlSES. INC •• a
al at.,....,. 2:• """· T!llwNlly, a.rll 01 Default and ~ fOr Salt, Mid 1 ~ ITA,•M•NT Callforfll• corpor•llOI\. 11707 VII/I· •mD at,'"'· at Wlol<I\ ti"" .W Illa•.,._ wrlltel\•lceof~--tfe~ f'ICTtTIOUSaUllM•ll Tiit tollowfflt P«tont •re doll\9 Wrli, A-, s.nta Nia, Callfornla ~ICTtTIOUSIWSINIU wllllle..-.Cly ...... MltrMd.. ta CHM h ........ _,'°•II .. Id NAMSSTATIMllNT ..,11ntu•: f210S.
lt.UUUTAT.MaltT l•dl .... IMll _.,. ll.U. .., t ,,...rty " wttttv .. lcf ....... lofts. Tll• foOowt,.. ,.,_. " doln9 llUSI· CORl'OltAT .. DIV•LOPMaHT M<CULLOUGtf CONSTRUCTION
TIM' letlMlftt --II dolftt Wsl· ,.,, .. of • d•Y• •lier tlle cf•I •1'111 .,,.,Mftitr Ille \lftdlrslOllM cauMd '"" ••: ' . ASSOCIATES ... rvl-·-.... INC .•• c.lllwlll• corporatlaft, $46
111H1a: ..-CltlHfwlfterwc.i11 .. llllda. ul«liwtlc.llW...C:llOl\doffltCtfOftlo THI SIONI FICAfn OTHER Sollt•Ant~,C:.lllwllleftTU ant Ler19rlOo Orin, Orante,
N I N I D 0 T • Q u" It I • TM ........ T ....... llNlll ....... recorlled Septtll'lbe,. lt ,.. COMPANY, ..01 ·Werner An""'· Cl\at••'f·K•ll t11cor1Mtr•\ff, • Callfwlll•'*'·
ENTllt .. lttS•s •••·•• HINE OOT ... l ........ ......, .. ••1P"*'' lnttr. NO. 2'Snll\llOlll ll7•. P...1•·. "SSt, """"""°" aa.cti. C•lllornl• C.llfon\14 corporeitlan, 211MSI .. .,..,.. Tllla ......... II <ondllcttd by • SQUAltl DEVILOPMINTI, c/o ..... ,.. .. ,...,..,...,..,llM .. ,.'9<t of .. ldOftklalRecOfllt. m-47 ·-· SllnUAMHtltflta,c.llfOrftl• _._.,,,.,.... ..... O•l•11MSt lt••l!of'a t~I lrvlnt 111\Y OI' ........... to ..... .,.., Ir· S.111 .... •Ill bl ~ IM.tt Without l•llttr Oorla l'rltdmen, •401 tt71$ . DTH INTlll .. lllSIES, INC.
aiw., T""" ca. ft619: . ,.....,., ... ........,.. ' U\ftflMI., ••f'llfttJ, •Un• er Im· Werner Avenut, •sse. Huntln11011 Tiil& ~Is condvtlacl by• <Of• 1*11fa w . .._,
GUY HIL TI* OIU.O., 1m-t-Nil"' IE.~ pflt41, ,....,.,. Utlt, ......,..., or •Nell, allftnlle ,_., llOf'•llelt. fll'_... Str-t.C-.~CA.... ~--~ le,_., Ult r~ 'fllb ...,_I• <~9!1II'!'.,1,,. a-y-Motl lllC. 'Tiii$ 11---.t -llled wllll IN Tiils ........ 11 ~'" _., .., In-PuMltNll Or ... ceett Otilly ~.... prlftcl ... ~ "' "" ..... ,II) MC""41 dlvllfll•I. a.n.. o. lllWtln CHiily ClOl'll .. Or .... Ol\Hlly Oii div...,. A,..1111,22, ttll 17'1M~ by Mlf DeMOf T,,._ wlltl lllM,.at M ihlllff'f'rltOINft ,.,........ All!'ll a "''· Oell' ...... OI .... , 111~""'9~,...._..,.,_..,, Tllll ,.._t ... IHlld wllll tlle Tiiis ~ ... flied .. ,,, Ille ICl!foih.&AllfOllldiOM(DD,I ..........,. .. ,. .. •c N-CE .,,.., tN ..,_., ...-oe.-"' ,,., Cevn11 clen of °".,.._ c-11 01t c-1.-c1e111 °' °"en" c.o-tv 0 ,. ... ..., -...., ..... ,.. Tiii•......,. -tllW wttll .,_ .-v..... v•• INS.,,...,.....,,. .. ,..... • ., tllt -.re11n,1t11. M.trch .. .,.,, ......,....._u. ...
C-l'f Cllt1l of Of .... Cellftty 1111 • T""'" Ml of ill9 I..,,.. Cf'NIM 9y ' ,,_. • "... • flll"tJ ... a.""· , .. .,....,l'*ITOMLLAT ..... OllM .. Trwt. ........ Wiii M .. .,11111 ..... 0r-.. Co.at Otilly !'llotl PIMtll ..... ar-.. Coetl Delly Pli.t, , ......... or-.. CMst o.fl'f .......
• ........ . PUeUCMtCTIOM • ...... "'TlM'llle'I'. *" 1, "'' M 11: ~,.u,-..11t,•. u.1t11 '"'.. "-""·'IS.ft. t•I 1u.M1 ..., .... U,J2.2', 1tl1 t70Ut ....... Or ... c.. Ollty ""'-NOTtallH•ll••vo1v•N"'9tt11 •.M. llt ... lfftc.etf T.O.le!Wk•C-· ' "41f'lta.u ... ,., .. ,, ,,. .. \ ,......,, .. _..,.,~ ttlt,at ,. .. , ..... AfMrlu T'ehr,...... PUBLIC NOTICE --··c N~E _,llUC N~D W:tt •• m. • .i: 111• OM Cltf .. _..,,.,_, °'"""' rv--.. va~ ..-v v••'-r. ·or ..... c:-t.-IMrHl..c:.r-r, C•dternl•...1. '•114 l'••re<er4"ll e11 -----------1------------t----:---------PVR.IC N~E ... ..-.r ....,.. ---, .-._, ~"" ,..111 .. ,..,., '• Ptcnt*llMlll"aM .• :-.---........ .. or ..... ~ ...... ~ ... • .... ITAT&lpall'f' PIC'TfnoutllVlf•... ... .............. -
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....... lf&T'tlllMIM\' ce.MY If or_. wlll Mii ........ 1111" ..... llfltl ef , ...... , .. ,._,. flAltKCOUltT ~~1:1 YI. u --..: t..Mlw•1 TM .......... .--«t etMe .,_._ ............ ..-r.-.ctilll. ..cwM_ ....... _,... ..... VN 1•,0r11111t, a'*'I MOllTOAO• MAITllU, iU7 0 "AH G • C 0 UN TY ......_~ • Ill lewflll....., et ... U"""1 ....... .,... _. ..._... ~. ,_...., Jelwl G. Wiii'--.o .. tttl Vttel llr<'ll ltr"Ht, Sllltt !U, N••P9rt ACW•ltTIMlt, lllh Via ~.
INDUITIUAL COATING CO., .................. , ... ~ll~.91. Priv ....... .,_.,~... hacll,cal.......... llillill'9lt"'91e.~._., . .... .... ......... ,,_..... V....... Tt ............. W.1 "-Tiiie ....,_It '4111Mtte.., M ffl• Vlllder J, ••tMllf1911, ,_I I Mll'CHANTI PU•L1'HIMO, ~--.....,, ,_..,.._ _, Hll CPWI..... ,......... le•r SI"""' IMte AM, C•llt.llle INC., I ~IMNa ,__, .. ._, '911 ~ .............. C....... .._....._,..... 0..: .. 1 -........... 0 . ttrM Via '•llflCHI•, Mlaallll lfleja, ..... c.en.t ... f'ftM•I• VeUey, •4t l-WtCfl•tCfl .. ~Tltl'llfY Tllla llW -.... trtltl.. """" L 1••11 ...... -~ telllltnM .. 1. ~--~z.:c...lllCNIW llUllOl:INC. C__.., ~flt Or .... Ceillty ... A"'""9,......,. 9Ncl\, c:.11'9rlll• Tlltl.....,.1tCllMll!etN_,._. • ,... .............. _, ... _ , •• .,. • ... ,,.... ¥eR ..... ,.... ..... ,.,... .....
....,. __ ..._ -.... A ................... :........... .,1 T.0.11Mat~. IMl'C .......... .-cau-. flll• ......_.I• C..-.CIN..,. -..c ....... w ....... IM. ........ ......... .... . IS"" . 119Mf91s:... ,fa~ ........
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~:.nr:r."-"o."~ ~ar....c...~,= Afll"~:.s~Delfr~ ~~~~"='~~*"' ~~~°"''',~ -~a.°':T:..c-1°"".:
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
• Construc tion loans
$500,000 minimum
Yf.~~ ~'no nr~'f(; r>~Nnhn1
Koll Centre Newport, West Tower Suite 6800
4000 MacArthur Bl vd., Newport Beach
KENT GARY RA NOY
MILLIONS TO LOAN
MIW IA115'
$10,000 to $1,000,000
IND a SIC> TRUST DllD LOANS
Pro\onp Funding
80 OfY9 to 15 Veers • •SWIM• LOANS
• 2ND-JID T.D. LOANS II
• ~tlol Speclollsts ~ ..-.
• Apoil11!el'ts
• Comm«cld r
• WI IUY DllCOUNTID T.D.11 • w. help attuctvre not•
fof molClrnUm aalec:lbllty
• L 1e(1>jJorf !t'ar f~· /i1/11~~1y ·1i1<·.
UClfftlO ~ l°"" Malla
CALL 714/911•1011
«>00 ~ICMNMO
ltOU ~ ~ • tu111 t&70
HIWPOlfl *CM.~ t)MO I
••• Orange Coalt DAA. Y PiLOTJWednetday, April 15, 1981
Wnstructing a plaza suite
When the $24 million Pacific Mutual
Plaza, above, is coropleted next year it
will include a modern sculpture garden
designed by fou r Calif omia artists. A
portion of the seven-story twin-office
towers will be used by Pacific Mutual
employees. with the rest leased to other
businesses. Some of the features of the
structure along 800-840 Newport Center
Drive will be solar bronze tinted glass. a
complete fire safety system , and a
three-story parking facility, below. The
$250,000 outdoor sculpture garden will in·
elude' works by Tony Delap of Corona del
Mar. Benton Fletcher of San Francisco,
Stephen Staebler of Berkeley and
Michael Todd of Los Angeles.
VTN Corps.' earnings drop
Third-quarter profits drop to $4,141 , or 0 cents a share
VTN Corp. of Irvmc. a highly diversified in-
ternational engineering, architectural, planning
and environmental design firm, had net income
for the third quarter ended Feb. 27 drop to $4 ,141 ,
or no cents a share. compared with S36,649, or 2
cents, for the like period a year ago. Revenues
dropped to S5 3 million from $6. l million in the
comparable third quarters
On March 17, VTN Corp. announced a change
in management. whereby Chief Executive Ofricer
Kenneth W Carlson. Chairman of the Board
ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS
James J . Trindle and President C. Richard
Nelson. co-founders or VTN. would retire from ac-tive participation. John M. Leach was named
president.
Net income for lhe first nine months was
$75,488, or 4 cents, compared with $205,901, or 11
cents, for lhe same period in 1980. Revenues for
the first nine months were $16.6 milHon vs. $19.7
million.
Far West Financial Corp. of Newport Beach,
parent of Far West Savings & Loan Association,
bad net earnings increase to Sl.3 miUion, or 68
cents a share. for the three months ended March
31. compared with $1.2 million, or 65 cents. for the
like period a year ago. In the first quarter or 1981, gross revenues
jumped 24.3 percent to $27.6 million from $22.2
million in the like 1980 quarter. Gross revenues
and overall profitability in the first quarter were
enhanced by real estate profits. gains on the sale
of securities and mortgage-backed securities
transactions. a.ccording to a statement released by
the company. . . Savings growth amounted to $11.2 mill_ion for
the first three months of 1981 compared with $3.4
million for the 1980 period.
New loan volume recorded during the first
three months this year reached $33.8 million at an
average yield of 17.38 percent co,ipared with $58.9
million at an average yield of 13.29 percent for the
like 1!8> period.
Petromlnerals Corp. of Santa Ana reported
t~venues of $28.4 milUon for the year ended Dec.
31 compared with $13.:S million for eight months
ended Dec. 31, 1979. Net income increased to $5.2
million, or 65 cents a share. compared with
$405,000. or 7 cents, for eight months ended Dec. 31
the previous year.
True Data Corp., Irvine. received an initial
contract valued at more than $1.2 million from
Paradyne Corp. of Largo, Fla., to furnish products
for systems belng supplied to the U.S. Social
Security Administration by Paradyne.
Seahawk OU laternatioaal Inc., a Newport
Beach independent oil and gas company, said it
plans to make an underwritten public offering of
units comprising 2 million shares of its common
stock with warrants to purchase 1 million addi·
tional shares of such stock. The offering is expect·
ed to be effected about June 1.
The First American Financial Corp. an·
nounced four underwritten title companies, in
three of which it holds minority interests, have
purchased 272,700 shares of stock from Penncorp
Financial lnc . and Glickenhaus & Co. The
purchases were funded by loans from First
American.
Wrtgbt Energy Corp. of Newport Beach bas
entered into a.A agreement in principle contemplat·
ing a proposed $3.S million private financing,
which it hopes to consummate shortly. The pTo-
p<\Sed financing, which is subject to the acquisition
or 'definitive documentation, would involve the is-
suance by Wright Energy of $3.S million in prin·
cipal amount of its 10-year, 14Y.a .percent converti-
ble mortgage bonds due 1991. Such bond5 would be
convertible into shares of the corporation's com·
mon stock at the rate of $5 a share and secured by
a second mortgage on Its oil and gas properties in
Kansas and Kentucky.
The board ol directors of W.R. Grace & Co.
declared a quarterly cash dividend of 57Y.a cents a
share on its common stock. payable June 10 to
shareholders of record May 7, 1981. W.R. Grace
operates the Coco's, Reuben's, Baxter Street.
Gorda Liz, Isadore's, Cano's and El Torito-La
Fiesta restaurants in Newport Beach.
Newport Pbarmaceatlcat. International Inc.
bas purchased a seven-acre· site located on the
southeast comer or Alton Parkway and To)edo
Way, Irvine, from The Irvine Co. for $2.2 million.·
COLLECTORS CORNEA
R•~• COin• • S.ampa
GOLD• SILVER
Prlc" for._, ... , .... c .... .-.. IM'fWCt.t11M
!',..,... == ..:: ~l..Hfl ...... 100~ ~·:::-: IOP"" foM• .._ Sii_..... ...,. .. ,. , ................... -... c.e-----(114) SM IMO
South Coa .. l'tua VIH•t• ............... ,.__..._C.-...... )
27%·
6-12 MOMnf TUMS
AU SICUllP T .0 •
Sl,000 MIN.
S.C.P.M.
(7141 640.?t9J
• TurnyOl.tr
• unusab~s
In Business To Make Bualne•• Happen
At CreaUve we have the money you need.
•~into !
Loans from $25,000.00• for any business or
··mf
Investment purpose . •
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and rtot • foen broker.
•All lo1nt secured by 1 combination or
re'1 and personal property
•425 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE I 80 • N!W~T8!ACH. CALIFOl'N IA t2tlO (714) f6HM~
usable
cash. II
Dally Piiot
f
B1 IO CVNNH'I'
NEW YORK <AP> -Tbe Ameiicu COD·
1umer'1 •billty to 1atlaf1 bit dellret lt weakenln1
under the onatautbt of lnlla~ and hilh interest
rates, bu\ that doean't mean that he can't throw
his welaht aro~d.
A facet of tbe new
personality. for example, 1eem1
to be a reluctance to take on
debt, a trait that has forced the
automotive industry into
rebates and which conceivably
could force more permanent
price cuts.
T B E M 0 R E CUNNU'll'
conservaUve moo.d baa shown up in housing
markets aa well, as can be attested to by sellers.
Houslnf prices In general continue to rue, but the
rise has slowed and actual price decreases, small
and temporary though they may be, are becoming
more common in some areas.
Of all thlngs, an occasional gasoline station
bas been forced into providing some ol the old
civilities, such as wiping the wind5hield, even if
they are still a long way from offering free road
maps and air.
Americans, it appears from the statistics and
surveys, seem to be more determined than they
have been in a long while to live withln their in·
comeit and are demanding the same from govern·
ment at all levels.
They are resigned, too. The old faith that
financial matters get better and better each year
and each generation, a trait sociologists found dis·
tinguished Americans Crom Europeans, has been
worn down by events.
IT TOOK A WHILE and it took a lot of events
to do the job, but the realities eventually provided
overwhelming evidence of deterioration in, for ex-
ample, savings accounts and insurance policies.
Members of the current generation also re·
alized they couldn't live in the manner of their
parents, no matter what they were told. if only
because they couldn't afford to buy and run the
size and type of house in which their parents
raised them. Nor, possibly, afford as many kids.
But another racet of the American character
may still live. Challenge, the same sociologists
say, induces results. It forces people to seek
answers. It encourages a new way or looking at old
situations.
Today. enormous amounts o( research anl -te-
velopment are under way. In a relatively few
OVER THE c OUNTER NASO LISTINGS
MUTUAL FUND
. ' years. atJable computer operatJooa bav• 1proutfd
rrom mere ideas. Electric ear re1eard1 11 cloM 1o
productns a practlcal. ruel-11v1ia, muns of
transportaUon. And aotar enerf)', an lnduatry that
exJsted ln only rudimentary form 10 yean aao. ls
now aubllantial.
l.f.SS PUBLICIZED PEaBAP8, but involvtnc
the potential for even 1realer change, ls t.be ·
velopment of telecommunlcatiooa. Everyo e
knows a bit about the home computer that w I •
change the kitchen; less well known are develo
ments ln data transmission that might chanae e
very site tlnd role of the house. Why shift e
from home to office or plant each day when 1-
more energy-efficient and less cottly to mo.~
data? • Behind many of these changes, or certainlyJa
factor in their dynamics, is the ubiquitous cOt'l·
sumer, Unable to live well in the old manner, •lid
al this polnt probably not very much interested Jn
doing so either, he and she are forcing changes~-
signed to make them happier. ;
Nobody can put a timetable on the n~
lifestyles, but the greater the resistance to the oid
the sooner the new may come. The consumer stlU
has weight to throw around. While it mightn't help
to get a windshield wiped. 1t could help to satisfy
more basic needs. •
And it might even resurrect the old Americ4n
notion that. financially at least. things can ift\·
prove, each year and eacb generation.
Local computer firm,1
Canadians strike deal
Nelma Elertronics of Toronto, Canada, has or·
dered in excess of $1.1 million of Costa Mesa-based
New World Computer Co . In c. 's micro-<hi;c
memory units and has agreed to become the ~?'·
elusive distributor for New World Computer's dtfC
products in Canada. ;
Nelma Electronics is a major distributor pf
electronic products and represents the first majbr
international order in Canada.
Philip Haines, president of New World Com·
puter, said in a prerared statement, '"This impor·
tant new relationship will provide a significenl
marketing exposure for New World Computer to the
entire Canadian market place The initial or®r
calls for the delivery of 500 or the company's eigtlt·
inch micro-discs and 500 controllers "
10-V. 1°" Sens.or 3''! .. 1''1J 1l-14 SvcMer uv. IHo 1'1V. 1'1'1> Svcr1ul Jl.\lo J'IV• 111'> n , ShMed ~ ~
21¥o 1'114 Shwml 1~ 16
UPS ANO DOWNS
~ 0 SC•IWlr 10 .... 11 llV. IJ'h S•E1Sv IS I~
11\'r 17'41 SwnEnr :».\lo J7•/.o NEW YORK tAP) Tiie follO••"O ltsl IW• , • .,, Slandyn ~11'> lS shows 11W Ovor llW Counter
11°.t. 17"-SldMlcro I~ I~ uoco ano warr.,.u 1r..1 "-v• gone up
l1J:/,' ,n, ss11a.nRH•i1• ).I :M'IM lht mosl ""° down '"' most b6Hd on ,... P 31 J2'1'> percent o1 Ch•r>OO regardleu or volume
19 """' SterlSI '" l'"' for T ...sci•r, 13\'r 14V. Slr•wC1 15 ?6 No •ecurll.,. tr6CllllQ b4!1ow U •rt Incl
131/o IJI/) Subaru lj'"' U.ft u!Md Nrl ""° ~onl<IQe ch•nilf• ,,. Ow ~:~ ~~'I'> ~~~eebc 10'4i t«™o alll•ttnc• 11etWHn 1rw p.-evious ciowl'Q ~~ i!~ bid orict •nd Tuttdav's '•" 111<1 prke
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9'1> I~ T y\OnFo 14'1'1 IS't• .50 Sl'I> IJnMcGll 1~ 10V, •'1a J'I US Enr l:P4 14'1•
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II II.,.. Vel8kAr J7\4 J7h • 25~1 ll'lt V•nDus 11 11'~ 1
10" IS'4 verco JI"' Jl'IO. : l~ l~ ~::~:!sf 1~~ 1~ 10
11 11\1) V•deoCP IS''o IS'1> 11 JOI;, ll'lo VaNBsll 11'1> 17'10o 11
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1µ,, lSI/) WHOIO 70',io 71'!. 16 ~:~ :im I ::::~~ J~ ,;~· 11
JI J7:W. ,WoodLol 15 lS'nl 21 411;, 41-WrlgMW s•i. Slit 13
2'1> 1 11·16 llO<IVle '37 37'1'> 14 SI '11 > n.e NOi •~hUble H
N•me TIME 0C ~mk pl 8rynMw
Ol•W\1 lnlR•m AMCA Gn~vo UnHurn 9
UntvVoU c~r.N:. _,
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COGeno4un
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CutlrFd ' ~n'r~:l~" AllH AmFrnC un
Mier z un AmMclPtd
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""'· Oft 12 1 Off 20.0
011 1/.0 Off U .S Oil U.l
Off 11.0 Off IU
Off 1U Off 1•.1
Off 10.S Off lo.J Ott 10.2
Off 10.0 Off 10.G Off 100
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Procter fJ:~•ti'-<PfJG>,.whkh ls 1oc>d at COO·"' t
toundin1 tu eo¥d«on. 1a IOw confoundlnt lla
critics. TM~ lD....., ot 11de, Crest, Pam-pers, c~ and Kea4 • .Sho(aldfts ia 1ayin1, in et·
feet ; "All riabl 11 Y<* want no adyertllin8. we can
give you that tOQ, ''
A lot ol J*Ple who read C.OUUmer Reporu. shop
in co-op food stores and wan\ a.tph Nader to be the
next president roam at the mouth abo\a\ adverti1ln1.
regarding it as intrusive pd w.,tefW, not recognlz-
iDI il as an Amerlc;an •rt form that has cone on to
conquer the world. ,AJ'ld it'• cn.ly natural then that the
object of their •teat.eat 1com •bould be the biggeat
advertiaer of them alt: PlcG.
PfN'' ltnf expend~ on advertising were
cJoclted )Y Mvertlalog Ase 11\agazine ilt S614 million.
You ctn Ju,st heac those people groaning at the
mention Of this
O\ltlandhb
figure~ ~Why ,
don't I.bey ftoP . ·a 11 t b al ad ·
vertisinll and
reduce the
prices ot .their
products?"
lllJll
••
WELL, PIG, whl~b .isually feels it can do
anything it sets its mind\o, is going to throw a ~ne to
these critics. In June tl will introduce a new lane of
paper towels a nd toilet paper under tfte brand. name
Summit. The Summi~ line will be available
throughout the country -primarily in non-food out·
lets hke K mart but it will not be advertised. That's
right, the country's largest advertiser is not planning
to put a cent of advertising behind the Summit towels
and tissues.
The Summit paper products are expected to re-
ta ii 25 percent to 30 percent lower than the
established P&G brands in this fi eld : Charmin and
White Cloud toilet tissues and Bounty paper towels.
Don't think P&G has given up on advertising. On
the contrary, it's spending a sm all fortune to Jet us
know about the new formulation of Crest toothpaste.
and it's gearing up to push a bunch of new produ~ts.
including a hair conditioner caJled Abound. a toilet
bowl cleaner called Brigade. a diaper for incontinent
adults called Attends and a prescription acne treat·
ment. Topicyclinf'. AJI of these entries will receive a
full measure of P&G advertising support.
BUT SUMMIT IS going to be a new thorn in the
side or a rch-competitor Scott Paper of Philadelphia.
Scott had tbe ronsumer paper business toilet tis-
s ues and towels --locked up until P&G came along
and blasted its way to the top with Charmin and
Bounty.
Scott was stunned, but came back and sur-
rounded P&G with a slew or brands: ScotTissues,
ScotTowels, C<ittonelle, Soft ·n· Pretty. Waldorf. Jo~
Squad. (It's an old marketing theory: lf you can t
beat them one-on-one, outnumber them.) As a result,
when you add up all the Scot~ brands. the comp•"7,
has now regained first place tn the bathroom_ tissue
and paper towel markets. However, Char~m an.d
Bounty remain the individual brand leaders m their
categories.
Charmin and Bounty jostle in the quaJity. high·
priced end of the market. But P&G· has had nothing
to place against a low-priced entry like Scott's
WaJdorf. Summit will f111 that gap. It will also give
P&G a contender against the generic, no-name
brands and the ·store labels. Inflation has boosted the
sales of these off-brand products.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
• , NEW YOR°k(""' ...... , Oow·J OnH •llQs
HEW V6RK I API -S.IU, Tutt. prle• ~~oc~~H<l•v. ~· "
.nc1 .wt er.a,,.. OI IN flltHn most •ctln o,,... HIQll L.ow t:-OICI
la York smell E.ctwn<M lUUH, JO 1114 "2,.. 9'1.S6 WI 11 .... 10 '°' •nv na11oNl1v at moo tt .. n \I. 20 Trn ~ ll '41.IO <34 23 Q7.67 t.ff· 1,033,'CIO S•V. 1 U U(I 105.S6 106, 14 UM.57 IOS.:14 ,...,., Tl. T 916,600 s~ • I 45 Siil 31U6 3".SJ Jll.°' l8S" .n
K man *·m ,,,.. -~ '""'" ,, ... AGO "411tlllPur 611, 1ZV. '• Tr•n 1, ... , 100
'
ldOlllncl jl)t, ... + '-Utlls MO, ftlO .. on 47',.aQ .. ._ -V. 45 SU< 6,+.1,.00 ~f;~ , im ~·; WHAT STOCKS DID ~.!Slft'ld m· tt~ ~ ~ NEW YORIC (AP) Apr U .. ~frL M: 1101~ • ~ •rllcKmo 3'3, ~ • • Tod~'/ AINirMHS >42,500 Jt'lll + IY. AdV6n<ed ,S6
Son,-Coro l.fl.500 17'h .. ~:!.":'oecr ;;~
T~I luues 1119 New 1110'>• U Hew lows '10 AMERICAN LEADERS
'Nt(A T AMlX DO
~
HEW YORK I API Ac>r 1'
T°"fb
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'l:" :is 1107 1U 1'16 ' .. \1
.. ,. ... du,
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RANCHO LA COST A (AP) -
Tom Waucm l• atW rtctln• a blB from h1I Muten triumph a1 be
coI• ln to defend bl• tltle \n wh many players conatder
ao '1 "P'Utb Major," the
M NY ·Tournament of Cb plons, .
"The letdown baan't aet in,''
waraon said bef()re a practice
rOUl\d over the '7,080-yard, par 72
La Costa Cololl\try Club coune,
site of the unique event that
begip.s Thursday.
"ft waa Important to me to
win the Masters." he said, "but
that;a history. Now I'm looklna
ahead to the Tournament o1
Ch~pioos. " bviously, I'm playin,s better
tJta I was at the first of the
yea . And when you've got it
goi • you want to keep lt going,
ride that horse as far as he'll
tlkf you.''
, Willson, golf's outstanding
performer over the past four
seatons and gunning for a fifth
conAecutJve Player of the Year
title, used a victory in this event
las ti ye'ar to kick off a string of
three consecutive victories.
And he'll be seeking a third
consecutiv e title in this
wtnners..only tournament. Jack
Nicklaus, back afte r a year's
abs'ence, calls it golf's "best
form at."
A~d Lee Trevino and Johnny
M1ltr have, for years, placed a hi$ priority on this tournament
-hi b brings together only the
winners of regular PGA Tour
Htl~ from tht: past 12 months.
"You 've really accom·
plished something when Y.OU
b~<at :ill the other champions
from the past year." Trevino
s aid. He s aid h P was fully
recovered from some back pain
that bothered him last week in
August, Ga.
Although there are nine
multiple winne r s from the
qualifying period -with Watson
winning six events · a relatively
Jarse field of 29 players will be
chasing a $54,000 first prize.
U£ Irvine's
'Louganis has
diving lead
COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP>
Four·lime c h am pion Greg
Lo uganis of Mission Viejo
N ad adores placed first in the
mens' one·meter s pringboard
Cinals Tuesday in the 1981 U.S.A.
Indoor Diving Championships at
OhiC) State University.
L~uganis , 21. of Mission
Viejo, tallied 575.04 points for
t h• eve nt . held at the
university 's Peppe Aquatic
Center. He won on the last or
his 11 dives.
He is a student at UC Irvine.
Kelly McCormick of Mission
Viejo wa s l eadi ng the
preliminaries of the women's'
threJ!·meter springboard event.
with 467.40 points. going into
Wednesday's finals .
Others placing in the mens'
l ·meter springboard finals
were : 2, Ron Merriott of
KimbaU Divers in Ann Arbor,
Mi~h .. with 565.11 points; 3,
Dave Burgering, Mission Viejo,
559. 71 ; 4, Randy Ableman.
Mission Viejo. 546.IJl ; 5, Rick
Theobald, Southe rn Illinois
University , 545.07 ; 6. Kevin
Machmer, Kimbell Divers,
541.•2; 7, Matt Chelich. Hobies'
Heroes of Bloomington. Inc ..
537 .57; and 8, Ron Meyer of
Razorback Diving Club in
FayettesviUe, Ark. 500.16.
T}Je top eight in each event are
to be invlted to the U.S. Olympic
trials in 1984.
The championships continue
through Saturday.
I
.,.,, ........... -
An easy follow-through motion displayed by OCC's Don Smith.
From Page 01
HAS UCI FOUND . • •
missioninlheorient.
Capener played his bigb school
ball at Torrey Pines in Del Mar
where he averaged more than 20
points per outing. He then played
one season at the University of
San Diego before taking leave.
Mulligan calls Capener "a
helluva shooter," who chose UCl
overBYU.
'Ilant
hanunered
in debut
PORTLAND <AP> -Ex·
major league pitcher Luis Tiant
was emblllTassed in his Pacific
Coast League debut Tuesday
night as the Edmonton Trappers
pounded him '.>r six hits and
eight runs n two innings
and beat the Portland Beavers,
12-5.
Tiant was signed by the
~eavers to a reported $125,000
contract and failed to make the
parent Pitts burgh Pirates
roster.
The 40-year·old right·hander
gave up a grand.slam homer to
Gary Holley in the second in·
ning.
Tiant flew home to Mexko
prior lo the PCL opener and ar·
rived Sunday with a case of the
flu, but said be felt good enough
to pitch.
Tiant bad a lS·l record with
Portland in 1964 and began a
major league career that in·
eluded a world series ap ·
pearance with the Boston Red
Sox.
Righ(.hander Nardi Contreras
got the victory for Edmooton.
scattering eight hits and striking
out six in six innings.
"The important thing is that
we ended up with people who
wanted to come here," ~xplains
Mulligan. "We didn't have to
kiss their ass to get them here
and then have to coach them." • • • With five scholarships avail&·
ble and only four sl· nings,
Mulligan still has one eft. He
hopes to use that to si a' tall
freshman (which looks dpubtlul)
or a tall red·shirt (which seems
like a better possibility).
·'The only thing we really
didn't get was a bi1 man.'' es·
plains Mulligan, "but then there
wasn't a lot out there to choose
from . ,
"If we can't sign a freshman,
or a red·shlrt possibility doesn't
contact us, then we'll just leave
the scholanhip open."
* * * MULLIGAN ON UCl'S
FUTURE:
"I think we're in good shape. 1
reall¥ do.
''We probably have the best
p oint guard i n California
< Barkey) and we have a guy like
Spinn who is a good defensive
player which we needed.
Plus, we have Crossley who is a
great athlete and a sleeper in
C~pener. who is a great shooter
and he's fH>." • • • Mulligan's imports have
changed some roles on the An·
tealers.
Jason Works , the darling of
Crawford Hall who had the fans
on their feet and Mulligan order·
ing quarts of Maalox to keep bis
ulcer in check, wiU move to the
off.guard spot with Randy
Whleldon and K~vln Fuller.
Rainer Wulf, wbo started most
of last season at forward will
either come off the bench or red·
shirt. A decillon aa.. to bis status
will come Tbankag~ving day. • • • Next year's roster· figures to
OCC pjtcner: says mental aspect is the key . . ' aw CIJft IKSDEN mound. but Mayae liked wbat he ~----i HWolthepttdft. r WMia Dan Smltb wu blowtnl "He'• far ateeded m euee· down~ bitters .ttb •ae ' tatJona,'' Mayne aay1. 1.1 Dew
wbU• • Mmot at Redla.Dda ffll.b b• WU '°'°' to .,. rood. I ... Sebool, the crafty n1bt·hander Donnie h 1omewllat of a
bad vlttona of eonUnuln• hi• coache'a dreaD). He 1111 hll own
pltehJnc brilliance at a four.year routine and OWD ••1 fl lettlnC
1cbool. himself re.cly te ,Jay.
"But lt seemed like no one "From ta.at •.-~•lit. IW• a
wanted me," he recalll. very naturiJ a~.•
However, out there 1n the crowd Wbat'a ln 1tore for i,,. ....
durlnl the Santa Ana Elka after OCC?
·1·oumament, wu Oran1e Cout "I'm lookin1 forward to U,...
Colle1e Coach Mike Mayne. tog a pro cont.ad. Btlt lf I don't
MAYNE, ALWAYS on tbe
lookout for the kind of quality
that is synonymous wlth OCC
baseball, didn't see the first two
eames ~the tourney -the ones
Smith woo.
Instead, be was at the cham·
pionsblp aame. He watched
Smith develop a sore arm and
leave the game in the fourth in·
ning.
Mayne was smart enouah not
to judge the 6-1, 17S-pounder on
one performance. So be
persuaded Smith to take a look
atOCC. "It's the best lhiDI that ever
happened to me," admlU Smith,
whose off·the·field easy .1olng
style greatly resembles the ease
with which he pitches foait the
Pirates.
In his two years at OCC, Smith
has compiled a masterful 18-2
record. He was 11·1 in 1980, al·
lowing 26 earned runs in 101 in-
nings for a 2.32 ERA.
Tb is year, be started the
season off with a bang, 1oing 36
innings before allowing an
earned run.
"THE STREAK? It wasn't on
my mind too much," Smith
says" "I tried not to worry
about it. I didn't have my
best stuff that ~:;; tthe day the
streak ended against Cerritos). I
knew sooner or later, they'd get
lo me. Heck, nobody's perfect.''
Smith is close to it, however.
His only loss this season came
at the hands or Fullerton, 9~. In
that game, the Pirates loaded
the bases in the last three in·
nings but couldn't take advan·
tage of it.
"I just wasn't meant to win
that game," he says.
It's easy to see tJtat very little
shakes Don Smith, and that. ac·
cording to Mayne, is the key to
bis success.
"His strong point is his emo·
tional control. He 's a very
mature kid and a very confident
kid," Mayne says. "Donnie's not
only an excellent athlete, but be
bas the mental makeup for great·
ness, as well."
It was no surprise that Smith
was a big hit at OCC, particular·
ly to Mayne. Before comin1 to
OCC , Mayne coached at
Eisenhower High in Rialto
Don Smith
where his team played against
Smith's two brothers, both ac·
compUshed athletes at Redlands
High.
"l heard Donnie was interest-
ed in getting out of San
Bernardino and I also heard
from sources that he (Don) was
the best athlete of the three!"
Mayne recalls.
DONNIE LEARNED a lot
from his .family. His father ,
Lee, taught him everything he
should know about baseball
when he was young, and it was
one of his brothers who in·
troduced Don to a slider. "I
didn't know what it was before
he told me, .. Don says.
Smith was also an accom·
plis hed bitter in high sch~.
He batted cleanup and played
left field when he wasn't on the
get the deal J want, rd like to 10
to Arizona State," he admit.a.
That move Isn't a surprise.
Former teammates Kevin
Romine and Chris Johnston,
along with other ex·Pirates Mike
Sodders and Donnie HJU atid
pitchin1 coach Tim Kelly make
up the backbone of the Arizona
State team.
The 'llOVe would also reunJte
Smith Avith Kelly who made a
lasting impression on him.
"HE TAUGHT ME how to
and wt\ere to throw the pitches
on certain counts . He also
showed me how to slow the tem·
po of the game and take control
of the situation."
"He likes a pitcher to go into a
game with the attitude of 'I'm in
command'," Smith explains.
"H 's something you have to
learn on the community colle1e.
level."
* .. ..
While former OCC stars are
continuing their s uccess at
Arizona State, former Golden
•West College standout Matt
Palmer is having an impressive
season at Oklahoma.
Palmer is hitting a solid .400
this season. He's clouted five
homers. knocked in 22 RBI amd
scored 20 runs for the No. 4.
ranked Sooners.
Pirates roll to 8-1 victory
Seven Orange Coast College
pitchers combined for a six·
hitter Tuesday afternoon as the
Pirates rolled to an easy 8-1 vic·
tory over visiting Cuesta College
in non-conference baseball ac·
lion.
In all, OCC Coach Mike Mayne
used 24 players and gave mem·
bers of his seldom·needed relief
corps some work. Among them
was Jeff Sutterfield who was
seeing his first work on the
mound this season. Sutterfield
allowed one hit and struck out
one in an inning of work.
Meanwhile, Rieb Amaral.
Kevin Sliwinski and Mike Van·
derburg s upplied the hitting
power. Amaral went 2·fOr·3 in·
eluding a double and one RBI.
while Sliwinski was 2·ror·2 in·
eluding a double and three RBI.
Vanderburg raised· his career·
leading RBI total to i3 with a 2·
for·4 outing and one RBI. He
also scored twice.
R eggie Montgo mery, the
Pirates' freshman hitting stand·
out, broke a five game hitless
slump with a single, while Ed
Farrell collected two singles and
an RBI.
The victory was OCC's 21st
against four losses.
The Bucs now travel to Mesa,
Arizona to compete in the eight·
team Kiwanis Roadrunner
Tournament which begins
Thursday.
OCC will race ldabo Com·
munity College in the tourney
opener at 8: 15 p.m. and then
fa ce Yavapai CC Friday at S
p.m .
Protest review S"GLASS 11.l This is your opportunity to move up to
Newport 's most prestigio us
community. HURRY!! This won 't
last! Owner is highly motivated and
would like to trade. Call Conrad for a
private showing now!
• colllltllttee set
17 I 4t 644-""
•
IA Newpon Center
(714)~9990
Neer Lido Villege
(714) 760-0t35
Foley calls it quits
look Uke this .(remem.ber, ,UCI
doesn't own , a le.gitimate
center>: __ t :
Guards -whieldon, ·won.,
Johnson, Fuller, Barkey, Robbie
Beal.
Penn s ·tate ·
for Gaucho
· Sophomore forward
Tom 'McCluskey of Sad·
dleback College bu ac-
o e pt ed a full·rlde
1cbolarsblp to Penn
State to contlnue bl•
batketball career. ._
S!
That's our answer to your loan needs
Construc.tion Loans? I . YES !
~JAMI (AP) -All·Pl'o de· re~lve tlack Tim Foley, ham·
pued by a knee injury last
season, quietly baa announced
From Page 01
I ANGELS. • •
after tomorrow night."
Tbe An1el1 are 3·3 on l .. e
season. ·
hla retirement after 11 years·
with the Miami Dolphins:
Meanwbile, there were indica·
lions ttiat Bob Griese, the
Dolphins' malnatay quanerbad{
for more than a decade, al.lo
was close to making a dedtlon
about hil future.
F4le)'. who played 0n three of
lbe Dolphins' Super Bowl &eama,
wu 1enerally re1uded .. a.key
player Lil Miami'• eo-c.u.ct ••No
Name" defenae cl•rla• the
team'• heyday lD tbe tar~
1'70&, ~earned All·Pro .._,.
two yura .,o, ,..... M. alilth
,.aaoo wSti tb• Am111ean
Lea1ue Ealt Club. •
But tbe ~ar-old ml1Md
much of tbe Muon wtdl en taJlO'J to ldl 1ilbt ....
. Forwards Ma 1 ·e e .
Mc Donald, Crossley. Wulf,
Spinn, Capener. Grant Tayi,r,
Ray Donnelly. / • • • UCJ will play Nevada-Laa
Vegu at the Anaheim Conven· The 6-7 atandout 1rom Uon Center Dec. 12. ,
5-lOk races
scheduled .
1 Redlands .ffl1b wbo
1u.tded the Gaucboe to
their ftft.b •tralcbt Mil· •Ip .. Conference title WI
HHOQ, WU the 1.1.,u•'• C~· Player of tb" Year
aloai witb Cit.nu MJke
Two thousand di1tapce run· La'Velle.
, nera are expected to ta.lte part in "l Uke tbe aehoo.I. tlie
thl• year's March of Vlmea playe'rt and tbe iOacb 5·10K run1 Sunday, Aprtl • ln U> I ck .Harter>,''
Irvine. 1CcCl111key aald, "l'ia
Ram• Coach Ray lblavul r .. l excttecl about toln•
and the 1991 POiter Child, Stevie tbere." ·
Olten, will offlcl.Uy 1ta.rt the Ia b11 two 7ean at
race at t a.m: Saddlebact, .llcCIUl.t•t
Th• AAU·sanetloned eotarH aeorecl W .polntl, ao·
btJlU and mdJ at tbe 8arb0r ·eamaleted "' "'*°* Munld,.a Court .t tbe com« OI pd that • 1.m..,...a•e
Jamboree ud Birch. Rtdlti'a· M.t from tM ftoir. t1oa wUI blilt• atT un. La at 11a1oa, lie
Aw.,. .ta be ' at-In to q 'aYW.,.S II.I Potata,...
flnl1...,. la aU dl.Utom and 1 1am• IDd 7.1 re-...
drawa., ~u • bild for a tftf "" ~ ba CGild.,.... for Uro to SU.~ fer tlM pie 1 " H• ••• •Ito "Ba1 to INlhn" nm. ..... la tM "9fer9M
For mntifdrilauoe, uu UM ta 111111·1N1 ,...._.. ..
Merell ol DllDet at,,.._. et a7 <ad·DI).
2nd&3rdTrustDeeds~ YES!
Money available nowt ' YES!
StateCharteredSavuigs&Loan? YES! . -
.COMMERCIAL LOANS
INDUST~IAL LOANS
RESIDEN)TIAL LOANS
. CALL
Cfft:CK DARNALL
(714, 754-1801
w~ ~~ dlU/(/Hp'
and Loan AMOCiatlon
Ne10Uation1 have begun
between Orange County
Supervisor Thomas Riley's of.
flee and the South Laguna Civic
Aaaoclation over plans to
replace the Treasure Island
Trailer Park with a 540 unlt
Ume-share condomini'llm proj-
ect.
Peter Herman, Riley's plan·
nlng aide, said be decided to
meet with the assoeiaUon's
board of directors because of it.a
..
continued dissaUsfactlon with
the project.
Because of the negotiationa
which began late lut week, the
Oranee County Plannlnt Com·
mission postponed a bearinc
Tuesday to consider rezoning
the 27 -acre seaside property for
development of the time-share
lodge.
IT WAS THE fifth Ume since
November that the commlaslon
bas continued the rezoning bear-
inc, a sign, Herman sa14, that
som.ethini ls wronc.
"I think somebody bu to eet
in there and wort on this .,roject
because plainly the concerns ol
tbe resident.a are not working
themselves out," he said. :
The planning commtss!onen,
however, made it clear at
Tuesday's meeting that they are
not partlclpaUng in the dis·
cussions.
Neither ls Bernard SYfan ol
Hit-r11n death .·
·.
suspect arrested
. Costa Mesa police have arrest·
.ed a 21-year·old Downey man on
15uspiclon of manslaughter and ·
felony hit and run driving in con-
,neclion with the April 5 death of
;Laguna Beach resident Kevin
:R. Pehl.
1 Arrested when he voluntarily
~alked into Costa Mesa police ?.:eadquarters about 8 p .m . .w ednesday was John Thomas
!Lankford.
I • ..
Investigator Floyd Waldron
said Costa Mes~officers ques·
tloned Lankford' earlier in the
day without result after a tip led
them to the aUeged death car
parked in front of his Downey
home.
WALDRON SAID Lankford
apparently contacted an at·
torney who suggested that he
give himself up.
·Bluff development
~aws oppositi on
By STEVE MITCHELL OOlleDalty"•JMlfl Laguna Beach physician Dr.
Eugene Athert.on said be wUl •t>-peal regional coastal t!Oµl•
lllission approval of a 76-acre de·
~lopment atop the bluffs over·
looking Dana Harbor.
Commissioners, meeting this
week in Huntington Beach, ap·
· proved a $165 million hotel and
t'lsidential development plan by
Smyth Bros. Construction Co. of
Newport Beach.
Twins Ed and Chuck Smyth
have been seeking approval for
various projects on the blufftop
for the past 13 years, and Mon·
day's approval was the third
Crom the coastal panel. Previous
endorsements have been ap-
pealed to the state commission
and turned down during the past
.eight years.
BUT ATHEllTON says he will
appeal on the basis that the de-
velopment will destroy the bluffs
in order to create views for resi-
dents who would move into the
project area.
He said the company's en-
vironmental plan shows nearly a
million cubic yards of earth will
be moved, but company officials
say that is incorrect.
"We are exporting only 385,000
cubic yards, the major portion
to fill in the canyon in order lo
provide for the extension of Del
Prado and the realignment of
Street of the Golden Lantern,"
said Smyth project manager
Robert Turbin.
Turbin said the massive grad-
ing to which Atherton is refer·
ring, "was moved by the county
to create the harbor.••
; "THE COUNTY moved over a
piillion cubic yards to create tbe
b;arbor." he said. "That's When
.: (See BLUFF, Pa1e.A2)
o.&IYl'llll,._
PROJECT OPPOSED
Lagunan to appeal
Supervisor
o ffers plan
for airlines
BY FREDERICK SCROEMEHL Of ... Deity ptM .....
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley bas offered bis own
plan to regulate entry of com·
me'rcial airlines to John Wayne
Airport, clai'ming an earlier ~
posal isn't workable.
Riley 's plan .• released
Tuesda)', provides that the four
airlines now serving the airport
-Air~~l. Republic Airlines,
Frontier Airlines and Western
AirUnes· -. wbuld be permitted
to keep their existing flight
allocatiom for at least one year.
Pehl, 28, was killed about 2
a.m. April 5 as he and a friend
walked across Placentia Avenue
in front of the Newport Station
nightclub in Costa Mesa.
Witnesses told police it ap·
peared the drivero(t~e death car
swerved t o ward the two
pedestrians. hit Pehl in a shower
of broken headlighi glass and
continued north on · Placentia.
<See SVSPECJ', P•«e AZ>
Mayo r's'
futlide~~
probe~-
~
9., liE!Mao GaE•N, -t .' ~--I
cl&ihis 'that no l'Pffi ' lt~ Police Cbtft ~=
w•1 given to an anaUl wttA a
deadly -weapon cue lJJvolvinl
Irvine Mayor Art Anthony. .
He also said at a press con-
ference at the police station
Tuesday that bis p'rsonal .
inv-olvement in the case was
justified and proper. ·
ALTROVGR HE knew Mayor
Anthony was inside a home with
hi~b powered weapons, Peart
said he thought \he police's
special weapons team should not
have tried to storm the house.
Peart admitted, how~vef', that
it was som(!what unusual that An·
thony. once apprehended Friday,
~as taken to thf. Hoag Hospital
psychiptric ward instead of
secure 1aU f acil.lties elsewhere.
He aJso sald that no handcuffs
were placed' on Anthony d\.Uing
the trip~ Roag Hospi~al.1 ·
According to C~ier Peart
the ass,ult with a de,dly weapon
incident involving 1 M~yor An·.
tbony carne to his altenti~n late
Thursday when Elaine An.thony ,
SO, the mayor's wife! knocked on
bis ({>~art's) door in tlie Turtle
Rock il'ea of Irvine~' . "El'aine's face w swollen and
bruised, her nylOPS ere toi:n, sbe
had no shoes oo, ahe .Jt as aweatiilg
profusely and the-baaek of her neck
was covered with blood," Peart
· said.
Peart said tbat he appUed baste
first aid 'to the womJm and ar-
ranged for her to be placed under
a doctor's care.
Accordina to Peart, Mrs. An·
tbony· told him that ber husband
bad beat her with b1a ftl_ta and
'fired a tiandaun at ber, 4*••inl a
superficial b~Uet wo.wiCI to her
(See PaDBE, Pace A2)
L;1una Beach. one of the •PPU· cants seeking to develop the
project, which also lJ prope>Ud to
b1ve60apartmentsin which tore·
locate lonJ-time trailer park resi·
dents.
HERMAN SAID the residents
concerns about the project have
centered on its intensity; the
siae of the lS and H -story build·
ing proposed, the number of
unita and possible traffic im-pact.a.
.,.., i-11et sutt ,._
HARSH PENALTY
Judge FTanciscp Briseno
;Lifeguard
funds split
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has· doled Qut
$248.00Q to rive coastal cities to a&a~at them in offsetting the cost
of providing sumpier ·lifeguard
service.
Under the .fmance assistance
packa1e approve~ Tuesday,
Seal Beaeb will reclive $21,4$9;
. Hun~ton Beach, $61,109: New Beach,,W,031; Laguna
Be acb, $32, 792J a n-d Sara
pemente, $34,821.
Tbe COWJly money will come
from a fund containin~venues
rrom Dan• Point Har ,--
But Herman said the project
has some merit. It offers plenty
of public open space, beach ac-
cess and ocean views.
He said be hoped the talks can
yield a compromise -probably
for a project with fewer units -
that both the association and
Riley can support.
THAT COMPROMISE would
be forwarded aa Riley's recom·
mendation to Syf an, who would
decide whether to modlfy the
present plan.
The negotiators have until
May 5 to reach aereement.
That's when the commission is
scheduled to hear the rezoning
issuP
Hugh Wilkins. chairman of the
association, said his group has
suggested reducing the project
to about 350 units, with 90 to 100
apartments set aside for relocat-
ed trailer i)ark tenants.
100.year sentences
tt:i refugee rapists
' 189 DAVIDIWTZMANN
oftMO...., ......... "
In one of the harshest sen·
tences ever Imposed in an
Orange County rape case, three
teen-age Vietnamese refugees
have been given prison terms up
to 118 years by a superior court
judge who termed their crimes
·'atrocious.··
Despite pleas for leniency by
four defense lawyers Tuesday.
Judge Francisco Briseno said he
was imprisoning the three de·
fend ants for the rest of their lives
"because this kind of behavior
<kidnapping and rape) is not con·
doned on either side of the Pacific
Ocean.''
A fourth defendant in the case.
who is 17. was remanded to the
custody of the California Youth
A""hority for 90 days of
dia'Jrnoslic testing.
THE LENGTH of the sen·
tences for the eldest three , 118
years for brothers Bo Pham, 18,
and Dung Pham, 18, and 100
years for Minh Nguyen, also 18
stunned attorneys who
represented tbe trio.
Bo Pham's lawyer, Lawrence
Buckley, said the court had
.taken the "bloodthirsty'' ap-
proach in dealing with his client.
And attorney Denni s
M cHerhey. ·wh·o represented
Dung Pham, said sentencinr
laws which enabled Briseno to
impos.e the stiff prison terms
were iaatioqal.
The four defense lawyers, In· ~ludfog Dixoo1 Walcott and
Clarence Hewatt, said that if
BVT PROSECUTOR Carl
any of their clients had been
convicted o f f irst-degree
murder. the maximum term al·
lowable would have been 25
years 'to life in state prison.
Armbrust. who argued for im·
position of the maximum sen
tences against the defendants -
.300-plus yeah said he was
more than satisfied.
"I was very pleased with it,"
the deputy district attorney said.
"I was very pleased with the
way the judge handled it."
Armbrust said that any sen·
tence ranging from 100 years to
500 years "was academic" since
<See VIETS, Page A2)
Lagun1,1 m 11lls
shutdf)wn. of
one s~Jtool
' The possitile closure of one
school in the Laguna Beach
Unified School _District will be
the topic or• a public bearing
Monday in the Laguna Beach
High School cafeteria, 625 Park
Ave .. at 7 p.m.
Declining enrollments and
state and federal spendinc
cutbacks have forced the board
of ~ucation to consider closinl
one of the district's three
elementary schools or its
intermediate school.
IRllGI l:UIT IUTlll
fle ac h · turrRoUt 'light'
A committee appointed by the
school board has been boldlnc
hearings to discuss '\hicb school
should be closed, and •bat
should be done wllh the buildinl
if a decision to close it lJ made.
lnc av&Uabie tn t.be ci~y'• S2 ~
da1 loU.
'f TllS mT II •ratlna wttb 1lx to .._ pardl a ,• .r.y -
about four .... thu latt 1ew -
beca\IM GI ..,et coa1tralnU.
But thole ~ aren't ..__
preued. Crftdl are upi1 ·.na
water t.emperaturea an ehlUy.
Tb• foot·bitb liarf " aUiiD .. tbnat t..IWlm~;:paNI IQ.
Ouatdi It Runuaca-~eltJ lad
,tat.e blaeMI HJ crowdll an '9low _.... fw Suter W.., r.nua dt1 uildl bOltlill-abait.
ll,000 ftllton lllid'.llate'1*lc*il ~l,000 ........ caa, • . . Cft.'-~lia* MY theJ baftD't
--~··•Al> U' ,,
I
nrN Or-.. eo.ty '°" of· ncM wW re111am °'" •lil mw. :!f:t tonltht to aUow for lut·
ui. ftllnl of state and U.S. In·
cometureturn1.
Tax forms mutt be postmarked
Aprtl 15toavoid belnl late. Thole not flll•• by the midntcbt
deadline can be charled a 12 per·
. cent annual rate on the balance of
their tax blll, aocordinC to an In·
ternal Revenue Service
spokesman.
Huntington Beach's m•ln post
office at 6771 Warner Ave wtU re·
maln open until the migbnil)lt
deadline for fllln1. A spokesman
said a laree crowd ia expected
there during the evenine hours
until the poet office closes. .
The Laauna Ni auel main
branch at 29911 Niguel Road will
also remain open untll midnight
to accommodate filing of income
tax forms.
Postal authoritiH said the main
post office in Ora nae at 1075 North
Tustin Ave. ~lso will remain open
until midnight.
According to IRS officials, tax·
payers who can't meet the midnight deadline can get a two.
month extension until June 15, but
their application for an extension
must include a check for at least
90 percent of the estimated taxes
due Uncle Sam.
Taxpayers who don't have
enough money on hand to pay
their taxes should pay as much as
they_ can.
From Page A1
SUSPECT. • •
Avenue.
The impact knocked Pehl
more than SO feet. He was pro-
nounced dead on arnvaJ at FOWl·
tain Valley Community Hospital.
Hospital.
INVESTIGATOR Waldron
said today that Lankford's ar-
rest is only a part of the continu·
ipg investigation and that the
SUSl>eCt has refused to make
s tatements other than that he
was the driver of the car dis·
covered in front of his home.
Waldron said Lankford's
small, light-gold Plymouth has a
new front le ft fe nder and
headlight.
Police got their rirsl break in
the hit-and-run case last week
when a Huntington Beach man,
who said he read of the death in
a newspaper, called police to re·
port be had been a passenger in
the rear seal of the death car.
WALDRON STILL will not re·
lease the name of that witness
who told officers he had sought a
ride home from two men with
whom he had been playing pool
in the Crystal Palace Saloon
south of the death scene early
April 5.
-Police also still seek a woman
described as a "regular" at the
Crystal Palace who shot pool
with one of the two men
described by the Huntington
Beach witness.
Waldron said Lankford is cur·
rently free on $5,000 bond posted
at Costa Mesa Jail late Tuesday
nig~t.
Police seek
hitchhiker
in stabbing
A 21-year-0ld Tucson woman
who picked up a male hitchhiker
in Laguna Beac h Tuesday
momlng, received a knife wound
to the h and when s he was
assaulted by her rider.
Police said the woman picked
up the hitchhiker on Thalia Street
near Temple Terrace Drive and
drove him to the 700 block of St.
Ann'sDrive.
The woman told police that she
ordered the rider from the car,
but instead, he pulled a knlfe and
cut her thumb. She said be then
jumped from the car and fted.
Police are 1eetln1 a man hi h1a
mid·2IOI, Mf:djum -helaht, stocky,
and wearlnl 4ealm tromen and a
white T-shirt.
o.ltyl'I• ......... ...,....._
Sands are fairly bu3y at Laguna Beach, but you'd never kMw
it's Easter Week as beach crowd8 toke a dip from 8f'rlng
vacations of the pa.st.
Crash kills
Laguna Hills
youth; 2 hurt
A Laguna Hills youth was killed
and two other teen-agers injured
early today when the car in which
they were riding overturned on
Live Oak Canyon Road, the
California Highway Patrol said.
Pronounced dead at
Saddleback Community Hospital
was Charles Ramirez, 11, the
driverofthecar.
Two passengers, Mike Scully,
16, and Jack Fredrick. 15, were
injured in the l a.m . accident.
A spokesman at Saddleback
Community Hos pital said
Fredrick was in critical condition
and undergoing surge ry this
morning.
Scully, according to the CHP.
suffered moderate injuries. A highway patrol spokesmant
said the three were driving
northbound on Live Oak Canyon
Road from O'Neill Park when the
car hit a speed sign on a curve two
miles east or El Toro Road and
overturned.
The accident occurred at what
is known as Monastery Curve. the
highway patrols aid.
From Page A1
VIETS. • •
it meant the three young rapists
would spend the rest of their
lives in prison.
State law requires that 'two·
thirds of a sentence be served
before a prisoner can become
eligible for consideration for
parole.
Tbe Pham brothers and
Nguy en would be in their 80s and
90s before tbis could happen.
BEFORE THE sentences
were meted out by Briseno in his
nth floor courtroom in Santa
Ana Thursday, Armbrust had ·
told the judge that ·'it was lime
to send a message to the streets
.. "If there's any mercy or sym·
pathy to be shown by this court,
let it be shown for the victims,"
the prosecutor said of the seven
women ranging in age from 14 to
21 who said they were abducted
by the four Vietname&e refugees
and then raped in 1980. . .
"They got th•ir kicks out there
ln the oranie groves," Armbrust
said, "and now it's time to pay."
But Sewall, who represented
Tung Thumb Le, the 11-year-old
defendant sent to the California
Youth Authority for testlne, said
the four relueees tied a culturt
that wu almost prebJ1torte In
comp!-fiton with urban America.
From Page A1
CROWDS. • •
had to close off areas to surfing
because or the low turnout of
swimmers in the wate r, which is
about 62 degrees in Huntington.
IN IAGUNA Beach, lifeguard
Mike Dwinell said about 12,000
visited that city's five miles of
beaches Tuesday -about four
times the normal amount.
But he said things are quiet.er
than usual and there have been
no rescues or incidents .
The same story holds true 'at
Aliso Beach Park and other
county strands where Lifeguard
Inte rnational Beach Services,
Inc. president Jim Sta'1ffer says
the weekday turnout has been
"surprisingly light." ·
··Maybe they all went to the
<Colorado> River," be ?I·
gested.
San Clemente lifeguard Larry
Moore §Pld l3 guat"da on duty ln
that cifS' find things are 'going
slowly, wtth only 8,000 visitors
showing up Tuesday.
And Cheri Zapel. who guards
the beach at Doheny State Park.
s ays small surf and 59 degree
waters are k~gjng light crowds
out of.J.W!.oeian. .
•
Fives ized
in Ful erton
cocaine' busi . .
A Colombia -MiafT\1 -0range
County cocaine connection has
been severed and 11 pounds of co-
caine seized. FuJlei-ton police said
Tuesday. · ·
Five ~pie have been arrested
on suspicion of conspiracy to sell
cocaine, said po'tce Sgt. Bud
Lathrop. Two of ~hose arr~ted
¥e from Orange County: Jean·
rlette Morrissey,~, of Fullerton and Scott Bailey, , of Pl~centia.
Three Colom bi nationals also
were arrested: uan Fernando
Mora, 33, who -kVas living in
Coconut Grove, fia .. John Elkin
Castano, 21, and Juan o'sorio, 31,
both living in Mia~i.
A fourth Colombian suspect,
Luis Carlos Escobar, 21, whowu
living in Tustin, escaped arrest
imd is sought on a federal arrest
warrant, Lathrop said. .
M.s. Morrissey and the three
Colombians were arrested on
April 7 Jn Miami after she re-
portedly led undercover agents
from Fullerton to Mora's Cootnut
Grove home allegedly to sell them
·the cocaine for $275,000, Lathrop
said. Street value, after breaking
down the cocaine into smaller
quantities, was estimated by
police at$2.5 milliott.
Sbe is l:leing held on $100,000
ball, Catta~o on $250,00 .~nd
Osorio and Mora on $5oo.booea@.
Bailey wu arrested Tuesday in
Placentia.
llAINOfFa
Total auto
Sales do,,n ...... ..., "·· c.t•-... CA. .... .-..: ... u ... c. .. -.,CA..._
~ :~y.,,~ .. t_. blYill were tearnd.
He Mid It 18 llOt &be com~··
plaa w take the bllllfe CIMna.
"We'll t. c&e•nl"' tMm tlP," he
said, add1nc that Alberton bu a
·•mJsundentancllna ot i,be plan."
Tbe developmeat plan calla
for construction of two hotels,
11,2 condominiums, several
restauranta and 48 slngle-tamlly
homes.
The company saya 23 acres of
parka abo will be included in the
development.
BUT ATHE&TON contends
only a 6.5-acre parcel will be
dedicated to the public, and
another 16.5-acre parcel ln front
of the hotels can be sold at a
later date.
Turbin says the company has
acreed to design and develop the
smaller park area, then hand it
over to the Capistrano Beach
Parks and Recreation Depart·
ment.
"That not only meets our
parb reqwremenl cror the proj·
eel) but further, we're designing
and developing that park,"
Turbin said.
IN ADDITION, the larger
parcel is currently the subject or
possible purchase by the county
for open space, and Turbin said
the two parties are "very close
to a deal."
In that case, the company
would design and develop the
larger parcel, and put up funds
to maintain it.
And, in the event that deal
falls 'through, Smyth Bros. as a
condition of the coastal. com·
mission approval, would have to
leave the land in open space.
From Page A1
PROBE. • ••
neck.
PEART SAJO he called the An·
thony home and Irvine city coun·
cilman Bill Vardoulis answered
and said that Anthony had calmed
dowp and wasn't near a weapon.
Anthony telephoned Vardoulis,
his poli't.icaJ ally, minutes after
the alleged assault and lsked
Vardoulis to come to his res·
idence. ·
Peart said tbat after dawn on
Friday be and assistant city
manager Paul Brady Jr. went to
the mayor's house and recovered
two .45·talib$!r military
automatic handguns, but weren't
able to find a rifle that Elaine An·
thony said also was in the house.
They took tbe guns and four
family dogs that Mrs. Anthony
said she was concerned about
from Anthony's home.
At the time Anthony was in his
den and refused to come out.
Peart said a plan was later
struck whereby Anthony, 50, a
200-pound former Marine colonel,
would agree to vdluntarily com·
mit himself in the psychiatric
ward of Hoag Hospital.
Russ protest shot
I MOSCOW <AP) -A demand
by the Kremlin that the
"culprits be strictly punished"
for ·tiring a · shot at the Soviet
Consulate in San Francisco has
been delivered lo t he U.S. Em·
bassy.
The protest note delivered
Tuesday also demanded that
U.S. authorities take steps to
guarantee the security of Soviet
o ffices and personnel In the
United States.
SPACE CENTER, Houatoo CAP> -Columbia and Ill
jubilant aatronaut"4, bllck from a remarkable maiden
voyage, dramatically advanced America's chances of 1ain·
in" a workin2 footh0Jd ln space bv 1982 -and aomeday, said
CommanderJohnYoung,for••goingtothestara."
TheahutUe. restin1 comfortably in California, la A·OK.
The astronauts, exubertnt aJ\ei: 1uesda)''t pinpolnt
landing, are healthy and eaier to partlclpate in future epace
projects. Today they began an exbaustiv~ week of debrief·
ings with space agency technicians. :; When Young and Robert Crippen brouaht Columbia
down from orbit to a rock-hard lake bed in California'• Mo-
jave Desert, they demonstrated that the United States baa a
space machine that makes all other1 obsolete -a machine
that can fly into space and. return to Earth like an airplane,
ready to fl y again. a hundred or more times. (See related
stories, photos, pages A4, AS.) The astronauts, in their own way, probably said it best.
"YOUCAN'TBELJEVEwhataflyingmachlnethisis,''
Young said. "I think we've got a fantastic and remarkable
capability here. We're really not too far -the human race
isn't -from going to the stars."
Said Crippen: "We are really in lhe space business to
stay." . America had lert manned space flight to the Soviet Union
since 1975.
Shortly after the wheels-down landing on Roger' Dry
Lake, the two astronauts climbed aboard space agency ex·
ecutive jets for the trip back to the Johnson Space Center
here.
FOR THE NEXT SEVEN work days they will meet With
National Aeronautics and Space Administrati.o~ specialists.
discussing in great detail every one of C•lumb1a s systems to
pinpoint any flaws in design or procedure.
They have few problems to analyze. From the moment of
its fiJry blast-off from laun~h pad 39A al Cape C*averal on
Sunday, Columbia performed almost flawl ssly. The
astronauts h ad only a few minor problems to tend t .
Columbia was p~rked today at Edwards Air Force Base,
where technicians will carefully check it for the next week or
so before it is returned to the Cape, buc)cled to the back of a
special Boeing 747 jetliner.
ITS NEXT FLIGHT, a four-day mission. is scheduled for
August or September, with rookie astronauts Joe Engle and
Richard Truly atthe controls. .
Officials said initial inspection showed the spaceship to
be in very good condition. There were indications a few non·
critical thermal tiles on the top of the veh'l cle suffered some
damage. But the important ones .. those that protected the un·
derside from re-entry heat, were tn good shape.
Ground crew operations were stretched several hours
longer than expected when toxic freon ~as was detected
around the ship.
OC mnrgue Staff
I
due nine assistants
2.500 are expected to
performed next fiscal year.
I I
I .
I
! l
J i ;
i i
l .
• • . I
I
be I • I .
!
Nine assistants will be hired to
s taff Orange County's new
morgue when it begins opera·
lions in Santa Ana in June, but
the additional positions are ex ·
peeled to save the county
money.
Orange County has never had
a m orgue, a fa cility where
hodies are examined for the
cause of death.
STATE LAW requires that the I
~herlff·Coroner's Office must be l
notifi ed in several instances. :
including all deaths involvio&.-.'
trauma , eases wh e re no
physician had seen a victim at
least 20 days before death ·~-
:' t wthere a victi m arriv/sf
Until the new $1.28 million
facility is completed. members
of the Orange County Sheriff·
Coroner 's Office will continue to
supe rvi se a uto p sies i n
mortuaries throughout the
county.
It costs about $130 a case lo
pay a mortuary for the space
and assistants to perfo rm an autopsy.
WITH THE county's own
morgue and workers. the cost
next fiscal year is expected to be
Sl06,000 less than if the same
procedure were continued, said
Tom Beckett, analyst~ in the
County Administrative Offi ce.
A bout 2,300 autopsies were
performed by the county last fis·
cal year . Supervising Deputy
Coroner J. Stevens said about
unconscious at a hospital. · .....
Autopsies are performed in
about 72 percent or the cases,
• "' 1""f
The county wilt continUJ'l
its current contract which pays
paUtologisls from t1:1e Anato-)
Chem Medical Laboratories m
Anaheim about $100 for ellc~
autopsy, said Beckett. · .; ...
According to job classifica•''
lions approved Tuesday by lhfl~
County Board of Supervisor~
one supervising morgue• assi$),~
tant will mak~ from $1,539 to ..
$2,079 per montb .
Other assistants will earb\
from $1 ,090 to $1 ,626, depending"
on experience and duties.
Stevens sa~d the 10,000-squar~~:
foot morgue is planned for com~,
pletion in early June. Recruitr"•
ment for the nine workers wi1l..,
begin today. .~;~
~'
~altewaveg -;:/I
• ~ .. " t ,,
The 2-tone bikini by
EENI MEENI In jade/White,
yellow/White, 1i1ac,wh lte,
•11 .00 ea. piece.
Wear thla beautiful bikini
with or without th• tie -In
vMd ced with purple trim.
Only 12().00 Ht.
Be a standout on the beach
in this monoklnl from OP.
Bright f lo¥1era on white
bacltground, •27 .00.
.
~· ..
0
I
I
Newport-Mesa School District
trustees have Tefused to ofter
teachel"I any salary increases
for next year and noted that
teachers may be asked t.o aive
up some fringe benefits they've
already won.
The message came Tuesday in
the board's initial answer to
teacher \mion demands for cost·
of·llving raises ranging between
,12 and 24 percent.
·'The district's almost total de·
pendence upon tbe 1tate
Legislature for funding makes it
necessary to delay aubmittlna these proposals until ... rev·
enues for 1981-82 are decided by
the Legislature," tbe board
noted.
NOBODY AT tbe ad ·
mlnistrative ·level seems to
know when the Le1islature will
act on school money issues this
year.
When it does. the board noted,
the money expected nett year
mu•t be at 141.Ut equal to tbla
year's income before a raise will
be considered.
And lf allocations are less, tbe
board lndlcated, teachers will be
asked to give up some of their
already-won benefill includin1
health, dental and life insurance
items u well as some vacation
and holidays.
Dependln1 on final stale
leJi•laUve action, district ad·
muustrators predict they'll have
to trim next year's budget by as
much as SS million.
MOST OF THAT ·bud1et,
about 90 percent, goes for
salaries -including those of
about 700 non-teaching
empluyees.
Those employ~es , represented
by the California School
Employees Association, got an
answer to their pay demands
Tuesday that was nearly Iden·
Ucal to that received by the
Newporl·Mesa Federation of
Teachers.
Non-teachln1 employees are
seeking pay increases of about
21 percent next year.
Teachers' demands for salary
and fringe benefit increases for
next year would cost the district
a n estimated additional $3.5
million, the board reported.
Non-teaching employee de-
mands would cost about $2
millon more, it noted.
Hit-riin death ..
suspect arrested:
Costa Mesa police have arrest·
ed a 21-year-old Downey man on
suspicion of manslaughter and
felony h.it and run driving in con·
nection with the April 5 death of
Laguna Beach resident Kevin
R . Pehl.
Arrested when he vo luntarily
walked into Costa Mesa p0tice
headquarters about 8 p.m.
Wednesday was John Thomas
Lankford.
Investigator Floyd Waldron
said Costa Mesa officers ques-
tioned Lankford earlier in the
day without result after a tip led
them to the alleged death car
parked in front of his ·Downey
,home.
WA LORON SAID Lankford
appatently contacted an at-
torney who suggested that he
give himself up.
Pehl, 28, was killed about 2
a .m. April 5 as be and a friend
o.ltr NII ""'91
Crane hoi8ts 45-/oot tower into position in front of Costa Mesa
welding shop.
Mesa mulls tower
Official says sculpture defies order
BY .JERRY CLAUSEN Of tlle DaHr l'llet SUH
Costa Mesa's assistant ctty at·
torney, Mark Heubsch, was pon·
dering the Iranian question to-
day al City Hall. . ·
For the third lime In less than
a year, Iranian immigrant AU
Roushan erected a lowering, red
metal sculpture in front of his
Superior Avenue weldl.Jlg 1hop
Tuesday in defiance of city or·
dinances. But Huebsch believes the ac·
iton also defies the Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court orcler restrain·
lnl the Iranian from any
,ionstructlon at 1550 ~uperior
Ave. . ·The city bu filed a lawsuit
after two hours of work with a
45·tOn, yellow crane tn setting
bis newest creaU09, "Volcano,"
in place. .
Despite the Superior Court
edict regarding no more struc·
tures, the fiery Iranian be1an
moviilg .the tall piece into posi·
tioa at 1 p.m. as be had' prom·
lsed.
RouaJian pooh-poohs con-
tentions that bis towers violate
at. least two city laws, one limit·
lnl the height of constructloo in
<SeeAU, Pa•e AJ>
walked across Placentia Avenue
in front of the Newport Station
nightclub in Costa Mesa.
Witnesses told police it ap-
peared the driver of ~e death car
swerved toward the two
pedestrians, hit Pehl in a shower
of broken headlight gJass and
continued north on Pla~ntia
Avenue.
The Impact knocked Pehl
more than 50 feet. He was pro-
<See SUSPECT, Pa1e Al)
Mayor's
0.11, .............. , l'•tnc• O'o.-11 inc•~ent'.
ertlhed-.
Vktnqmne refugee d.efendantl e:rpre~aa during latter phaaes of trial; from Left : Tung Thumh Le.
i-. ..
fl._-.!..9Wl~oagBN ..
The lriri'rie City Council bu ot·
dered Olly Manager WUUam
WooUett·Jr. to prep.,. b ._..." t~~~-c n; ~ aeUon c~~ day M questions were bl
the cammunity about Jmne
Police Chief Leo Peart'• ban·
dUng of the case.
Anthony, was a rrested 15
hours after he allegedly beat bis
wife and fired a-military
handgun at her. .
A bullet grazed her head, two
inches above her left ear in the
ineident alleged lb have· oc·
curred at 10 p.m. Thursday in·
side the Anthony tlPtne ln the
Turtle ·Rock area of Irvine.
Chief Peart denied that An·
tbony was given. pr~erenlial
treatment. ..
HE CLAIMS the delay in the
arrest was in 6rder to defuse the
situation.
He added that Apt,bony
telephoned City Countilman BilJ
Vardoulis after the alleged at-
tack and 'asked Vardoulls to
come to his home. Vardoulis
tilked at length with Antbmy
late Thursday and early Friday
and maintained telephone con-
tact wlih Chief Pearl's res-
idence.
Chief Peart . sa.id iJl a press
conferen~e Friday tb1tt, ii police
had stormed the house there was
no telling what the violenl conse-quen~es· would }lave been. That's
why police waited until the next
day, at which time· they would
have the advantage of daylight
lf they had to break into the ·
house, Peart SsUd. ·
AS IT TURNED out · that
wasn't necessary.
A deal w~ ~uck in the. morn-
ing whereby Anthony would
voluntarily commit hlatself into
the psychiatric ward of' Hoag
Memorial Hoepital lD N•wpcjrt
Beaeb.
Peart said that once Anthooy
was admitted to the hospital,
police ofllclals contacted tbe
Oran1e County District At·
(See PROBE. Pafe AZ>
'
Dutlf Jlflam, Minh N11U11nhBo Pham. . • .
' , ., " • .IJ "' • , .. . . ... ~ . .
" . 7.00..yeaT sentences
to refl!/%ee rapists
C>.tlff ...... , ..........
HARSH PENALTY
Judge Francisco Briseno
' '17.,!>~TZ~NN .
.IA one ol the harshest sen·
tencea ever imposed in lfn
Orange County rape case, three
teen-age Vietnamese refugees
have been oven prison terms up
to 118 years by a superior court
judge who termed their crimes
"atrocious."
Despite pleas for leniency by
!Our defense lawyers Tuesday,
Judge Francisco Briseno said he
was imprisoning the three de·
rendants for the rest of their lives
"because this kind of behavior
(kidnapping and rape) is not con-
donled on either side of the Pacific
Ocean." ·
I A rourih defendant in the case,'
who is 17, was remanded to the
custody of the California Youth
Authori ty for 90 days of
Riley offers_plan
for airport access
BY FREDE•ICK SCHOEMEHL Ofltleo..y ..........
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley has offered hJs own
plan to regulate entry of com·
merclal airlines to John Wayne
Airport, claiming an earliel' pro-
posal isn't workable.
lliley 's plan, released
Tuesday, provi~s that the four
airlines now serving the airport
-AlrCal, Republic Airlines,
Frontier Airlines and Western
Airlines· -would be perm.ill~
to keep their ~dating fllgbt
allocations for at least. one year.
UNDER A SEPARATE
proposal advanced by Airport
Manager Murry Cable, Frootier
and Western wou-ld lose
permission to serve the aJrport
because ~bey could not meet
requirements for lntrod~cUon of
\
new and quieter jet aircraft.
According to Riley's plan,
each air carrier would be
required to meet .. yearly noise
reduction standards. Airlines
that fatted lo meet the objectives
_}VOUld lose flights. Those Oights
\vould then be made available to
other airlines seeking entry lo the
airport.
The superviso.-'s proposal
would effectively delay for at
least one year an31 action on
Pacific· Southwest Airlines'
request to begin service al John
Wayne.
Under Cable's plan, PSA was
favoritause it already has
taken 'very of quieter jets,
the C ·9 Super 80 ,
manufactured by McDonnell
Douglas.
BILEY SAID the focus ol his
plan is to reduce noise impacts
from Jet acthltYi over a
flve·Yeat period. He aald Cable'•
plan J>lM* too much empbula
OD alloelldaa of fllabtl 81D()al
carrlen who want to ff"9 ~ Oran,. Ccult7 market.
diagnostic testing.
THE LENGTH of the sen·
tences ror the eldest three -118
years for brothers Bo Pham, 18,
and Dung Pham, 18, and 100
years for Minh Nguyen, also 18
stunned attorneys who
represented the Jrio.
Bo Pham's lawyer. Lawrence
Buckley, said the court bad
taken the "bloodthirsty" ap-
proach in dealing with his client.
And attorney Denni~
Mc Herney. who represente~
Dung Phalli. said sentencing
laws which enabled Briseno to
impose the stiff prison terms
were irrational.
The four defense lawyers, in·
eluding Dixon Walcott and
Clar ence Hewatt, said· that if
any of their clients had be~n con·
victed of first-degree murder, the
maximum term allowable would
have been 25 years to life in siate
prison
BUT PROSEC..,TOR Carl
Armbrust. who argued for itn-
posltion of the maximum sen
tences against the defendants -
300-plus years-said be was
more than satisfied .
"I waB very pleased with it,"
the deputy district attorney said.
·'I was very pleased with the
way the judge handled it."
Armbrust said that any sen·
tence ranging from 100 years lo
500 years "was academic" since
it meant the three young rapists
would spend the rest of their
lives in prison.
State law requires that two-
lhirds of a sentence be served
(See VIETS, Pa1e AZ)' ...
ORAIGI GOIST WUlll-' . Nlghl and morning to,.-
clouds. with only partial
clearing along beacbeJ ·
Thuraday afternoon. Lows
tonight 50 alon1 the coast, ..
55 inland. Hi1ha ThLlrldaJ ·
62 to 65 al the beach, 65 \O
72 inland.
' eontendin1 that Rouaban muat
eomply with oldinanct1.ln erect.-lnl the forest ot. red metal l\J'Uc· ~res he lnststi ls art. Fund-raiser for governor set in Newport Beach In a letler tO fellow 1upe~. BUey 1ild;: "IJy
alrpon ..... plan WiUld lat
Ulll bNrd In tblJ rote ol nlUe
broken. Our re1pcm1lblllt1
wouN be to •tabUab aolN .. a
rtpt U.llt m• a. .-e\&nd bf
the alrUn•• =roup bond a~U. conlerrt oa alrllDel tM
' Santa Ana· 4••Y•f rrink
Barbaro, hoet ot U.. hmd·l'lllMf
and a former 8rOWll eameJ
chairman, •.ad tM -·~
be ........ ·~ 1De
bJ -~ .......... . •• •iild ... ' ......... =-.. OtMr ..... wUf' .. , ...... . ----~-------" tb•J wilb to ....... U9il...,.... 1etttas.•·
8NWD, Barbaro ~ dU&.
1t\ldltd tn • l•Uit ...... .,. Banvo ..,a tM Nltunllt ta
rtstat to make • ilAUtlft•'" amount of notH. ltll each
1ueceedln1 JHf, ... board
would aailfer upon aa alrlbM tM
rt11rt to .......... ~ thu die
precedln1 year. Tim proc111 1fOU1d elf~ ma.tat.. early
c...,uaPOaT, hP Al)
, -
SPAct CENTER, HOUiton (AP) -Col.ambia and lu
jubllanl Mtronaull, back from a remarkable maiden
voya1e, dramatically advanced Amerlca'a chances of gain·
bl• a wortirur foothold l.n aoace bv 1911-and tomeday. aaJd
Commander John Yowit, fo.r••iotn1tothe1tan." •
ntdlrttle,reetlnacomfortabb'lDC1Utonda,l1A·OK.
TM 6tn>nauu; exuberant after Tuesday'• pinpoint
land la•. are healthy and eaaer lo partlclpale tn fut!U'e sp~ce
proJecta. Today they betan an exhaustive week of debnef· inc• witbapace agency tecb.niclan.s.
When Young and Robert Crippen broufbt Columbia
down frotn orbit to a rocll·hard lake bed in Calilornla's Mo-
jave Desert, they demonstrated that tbe UnJted States hu a
space machine that makes ~n obsolete -a machine that can fly into space and return Earth like an airplane,
ready to ny again, a hundred or ore times. (See related
stories, photos, P•1es A4, AS.) The astronauts, in their own way, probably said it best.
"YOU CAN'T BELIEVE whataOyingmacbinethlsls,"
Young said. •·t think we've got a fantastic and remarkable
capability here. We're reaJly not too far -lhe human race
isn't -from going to the stars.••
Said Crippen: "We are really in the space business to
stay.''
America had left manned space flight to the Soviet Union
since ms.
Shortly after the wheels-down landing on Rogers Dry
Lake, the two astronauts climbed aboard space agency ex·
ecutive jets for the trip back to the Johnson Space Center
here.
roa THE NEXT SEVEN work days they will meet wtth
National Aeronautics and Space Administration specialists,
discussing in gnat detail every one of pol um bia 's systems to
pinpoint any flaws in desifn or procedure.
They have few problems to analyze. From the moment of
its fiery blast-off from launch pad 39A at Cape Canaveral on
Sunday Columbia performed almost flawlessly. The astrona~ts had only a few minor problems to te~d to.
Columbia was parked today at Edwards Air Force Base,
where technicians will carefully check it for the next week or
so before it is returned to the Cape, buckled to the back of a
special Boeing 747 jetliner.
ITS NEXT FLIGHT, a four-day mission, is scheduled for
August or September, with rookie astronauts Joe Engle and
Richard Truly at the controls. .
Officials said initial inspection showed the spaceship to
be in very good condition. There were ind~calions a few non·
critical thermal tiles on the top of the vehicle suffered some
damage. But the important ones'. those that protected the un·
derside from re-entry heat. were m good shape.
Ground crew operations were stretched several hours
longer than expected when toxic freon gas was detected
around the ship.
noue.d Mad OD arrival at ro.D·
tUll ValleYCommunlty H~
HoePital.
INVESTIGATO& Waldron
aald today lhat Lankford'• ar·
reat ts only a part or tbt continu·
Ing lnve.U1ation and that lhe
auapect hH refused to 1nake
statement.a other than that he
was the driver or the car dia-
covered In front of hls home.
Waldron said Lankford's
small, light-gold Plymouth bas a
new front left fender and
headJlghl.
Police got their first break in
the hit-and-run caae last week
when a Huntington Beach man,
wtio saJd he read or the death in
a newspaper, called police to re·
port he bad been a passenger in
the rear seat or the death car.
WALDRON STILL will not re·
lease the name of that witness
who told officers he had sought a
ride home from two men with
whom he had been playing pool
in the Crystal Palace Saloon
south ol lhe death scene early
April 5.
PoUce aJso still seek a woman
described as a "regular" at the
Crystal Palace who shot pool
with one of the two men
described by the Huntington
Beach witness.
Waldron said Lankford is cur-
rently free on $5,000 bond posted
at Costa Mesa Jail late Tuesday
night.
From Page A1
ALI •••
the industrial zone to 30 feel and
the other requiring a ny con-
struction to be reviewed by city
oHicials.
Roushan and hi s American
Civil Liberties Union lawyer,.
Meir Westrekh, argue the metal
objects are works of art. not
"structures" and are protected
by the First Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution.
The first t ower , dubbed
"Waterfall," was erected last
June before Roushan's battle for
proper city permits was
culminated.
Three Oran1e County ~ of·
flees will remain open untll mid·
night ton.llht to allow for lut-
minute filing of state and U.S. in· come tax returna.
Tax forms must be poetmarked
April 15 to avoid beinl l•te. Tboee
not filing by the mldnl&bt
deadline can be charged a 12 pet"
. cent annuaJ rate on the balance of
their tax bill, according to an In·
iernal Revenue Servlct
spokesman.
Huntington Beach's maln post
office al 6Tll Warner Ave will re-main open until the mtghn!ght
deadline for filing. A spokesman
said a large crowd ls expected
there during the evening hours
until the post office closes.
The Laguna Nifuel main
branch at 29911 Niguel Road will
also remain open until midnight
to accommodate filing of income
tax forms.
Postal authorities said the main
post office in Orange at 1075 North
Tustin Ave. also will rem•ln open
until midnight.
According to IRS officials, tax·
payers who can't meet the
midnight deadline can get a two-
month extension until June 15, but
their application for an extension
must include a check for at lea.st
90 percent of the estimated taxes
due Uncle Sam.
Taxpayers who don't have
enough money on hand to pay
their taxes should pay as much as
they_ can.
j
Irvine case
'murder,
suicide'
The results of the autopsy on a
teen·ager And his mother, found
s hot to death in their Irvine
home Saturday, confirms police
findings that the killings were
the result of a murder-suicide.
police U . Bot> Lennert said to·
day.
.............
IRON LADIES -That's how headline writers in New Delhi
described the meeting between British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher (right) and Indira Gandhi, her
counterpart in India. Mrs. Thatcher is on an official
four-day visit ~o India.
NB woman jailed
in car crash death \
A 22-year-old Newport Bea~
man was killed ~uesday eveni while working o his parked ca
on the Balboa. eninsula when
another vehicle. struck him and
hurled him nearly 100 feet
through the air , according to \
police.
Officers say Meyers was work-
ing on the engine of his
Volks wagen. legally parked
along a center median in the 1200
block of Balboa. when struck.
i t • • : •
; I
I • • l
\ i
' l l ~
t I t \ ~ '
. . . • I
. • I I
Be~ch turnout 'light'
Nell S. Greene, 48, apparently
despondent over personal prob·
lems, shot her son in the head as
he was doing his homework on the
living room floor, said Lt. Len-
nert.
The boy,·Brent. 15, apparently
was ·on .his stomach reading a
book and <tidn 't see his mother
coming, U . Lennert added.
Police said Mark Gregory
Meyers, 1312 Balboa Blvd., was
pronounced dead at the trauma
center at Fountain Valley Com·
ntunity Hospital.
Gwen Susan Rieke. a 22-yea~
old Newport Beactt woman, was
arrested at the scene on charges
of felony drunk dri vinJ( and felony
manslaughter. police said. She is
being held at Orange Counly J ail.
The victim 's 2l ·year-old .
girlfriend, Pamala Jo Gilbert of ;
Costa Mesa, was sitting in the ;
parked car at the time, which also 1
was struck, police said. She was i
treated for minor injuries at Hoag l
Memorial Hospital. :
•Police claim minutes prior to :
the accident, they had clocked the ;
driver doing· 59 miles per hour :
while eastbound on Balboa in a ·
25-mph t.one. They said she struck !
the center divider twice before ;
s lammiogint<Kbeman. !
Spring break crowds of old missing on coast
If there's an Easter Week
beach crowd this year ,
lifeguards from Seal Beach to
San Clemente say they haven't
seen it yet.
Oh, there have been more sun
seekers than normally popuJate
south coast beaches during a
spring weekday. but for an area
that used to beef up security for
Bal Week madness, the turnout
is somewhat underwhelming.
Take Newport Beach, for ex-
ample.
Lifeguard Capt. Bud Belshe
says close to 80.000 souls visited
city sands Tuesday. He said
that's a good sized crowd even
for a summer weekend.
BUT NOTHING like Easters
past, when hundre~s of
thousands of college kids on
spring break converged on the
town.
Belshe says there have been
no problems and no rescues ~o
far with 26 lifeguards on duty in
key towers or in six mobile units
-roughly one-third or the sum·
mqtime force.
Harbor Patrol officials say
boat traffic has been light thus
far in Newport Harbor, with no
ma;or incidents.
"Maybe they all went sltiing
lifeguard
funds split
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors has doled out
$248,000 to five coastal cities to
assist them in offsetting the cost
of providing summer lifeguard
service.
Under the finance a11istance
package approved Tuesday,
Seal Beach will receive $21,489;
HunUn1ton Beach, Hl,109;
Newport Beach, $98,037; La1UDa
Beach, $32 ,792, and San
Clemente. $34,821.
The county money Wlll come
from a fund con<aininc revenues from Dana Polnt ~arbor.
this week." one harbor
patrolman said.
In Seal Beach. life1uardl say
crowds are running between
7,000 and 9,000 a day, wttb park·
1ng available in the city's $2 per
day lots.
THE CITY IS operating with
six to eight guards a day -
about four less than last year
because of budget constraints.
But those guards aren't being
pressed. Crowds are light and
water temperatures are chilly.
The foot-high surf is also no
threat to swimmers. guards say.
Guards at Huntington city and
state beaches say crowds are
below normal for Easter Week.
with city sands hosting about
15,000 visitors and state beaches
reporting 3,000 to 6,000 per day.
City guards say they haven't
had to close off areas to surfing
because of the low turnout of
swimmers in the water, which is
about 62 degrees in Huntington.
IN LAGUNA Beach. lifeguard
Mike DwineU said about 12,000
visited that city's five miles of
beaches Tuesday -about four
times the normal a mount.
But he said things are quieter
than usual and there have been
no rescues or incidents.
The same story holds true at
Aliso· Beach Park and other
county strands where Lifeguard
International Beach Services,
Inc. president Jim Stauffer says
the weekday turnout has been
'·surprisingly light.'·
"Maybe they all went to the
Killings told
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP)
-AssassiJiaUons continued ln
Kabul last week despite the
takeover of .security patrols by
Soviet troops , a We1tern
d,iplomatic report from tbe
.(f 1han capital said today. 11le
victims appeared to be agents of
the KflAD secret police and
memben or the ruling People's
·Democratic Par\y, said a.
diplomatic source.
(Colorado) River .'' he sug.
gested. 1 •
San Clemente Ufeg.,ard Larry
Moore said lB guards on ctuty in
that city find things are going
slowly, with only 8.000 visitors
showing up Tuesday. ,
And Cheri Zapel, who guards
the beach al Doheny Slate Park,
says small surf and 59 degree
waters are keeping light crowds
out o~ the ocean.
From Page A1
AIRPORT. • •
introduction or the Super 80s, the
key to noise reduetion, and over
a five -yea r period woufd
substantially reduce the overall
noise generated by airport
activities.
Riley said the policy of the
boar4 or supervisors should be
to provide for "open access" to
the airport to all qualified
carriers.
Mrs. Greene then went into
tier bedroom ana shot herself
with the rtne. Lt. 'Lennert aaid.
Morris L. Greene returned
home from work at I :30 p.m.
and found the bodiu of his wife
and son.
The three were the only people
I i v i n g i o t he h o m e 'at 4 8
Redhawk in the Woodbridge
area of lrvine.
Neighbors said Brent was a
frdhman at lrvine High School
and active in the drama depart·
ment there.
From .Page A 1
PROBE. • •
Prayerfete
set/or NB torney's office, which recom-mended that Anthony be placed Prominenl O rang~ Count)J
in the jail section of UC Irvine clergymen will participate in an
Medical Cenler on s uspicion of Eas tertime prayer breakfast
assault with a deadly weapon. program · s po nsor e d by a
There was po reason to im-Newport Beach planning and
m ediately move a sedated An· environmental engineering firm.
thony from Hoag to UCIMC and Robert Bein, William Frost &.
a decisipn was made to officiaJJy As:-iociates anticipate 400 guests
arrest ~thony lnd take him to at the third annual breakfast at
· the jail section of the medical 7: 30 a . m . atthe Sheraton Newport
center at 9 a.m. Saturday. about Hotel. '
35 hours after the alleged as· The Mater Dei High School
sault, Peart said.. Chamber Singers will perf9rm,
and Orange County Supervisor
THE,CIDEF ADDED that the Thomas F. Riley and the Rev.
press wasn't notified immediate-Tim Timmons, South Coast Conductor defects ly not because police were try-CommunityChurchoflrvine,will
WASHINGTON (AP) -The ing to cover anything up, but speak.
Memorial services are to be
held for Brent Greene at 10 a.m.
Saturday at Irvine High School.
Memorial 5ervices for the boy
and his mother also will be held
at 3 p.m. Thursday a\ the Valley
Institute for Mental J>hysics in
Yucca Valley.
because this merely wasn't a Other r eligio us leaders· State Department is reported to t· · tin ·n be M John r hi~h priority at the time. par 1c1pa g w1 sgr. have begun the process or grant· s i f t al d e explained that police of-ammon, v car or pas or an . ing political asylum in the United ·t ff · fth c th li BUT BECAUSE of inadequate StatestoSovietconductorMax.im fic ials were very busy and had communJ ya airso e a o c
d d tittle time to notify the press Diocese of Orange, and the Rev. pa r~ing , and overcrow e Shostakovich, 42, who requested over the weekend because a George Stephanides, pastor of.St. termlnaJ and provisions or tbe police protection for himseU and Paul's Greek Orthodox Church in recently approved airport his 19-year-old son in West murder-suicide occurred Satur-L Hill
master plan. Riley s~d ••tt is ~G~er~m~~~Y~· ~~~~~~~~~-d_a_y~in~I~~in_e_·~~~~~~~~~a_g_~_n_a~~s_. ~~~~~~~ impdssible to accommodate
open access at this time." '
He said open access, through
which all qualified carriers
would compete on equal footing
for flight allocations should not
occur until 1986, the date by
which airport improvements
would be in pla~e and overall
daily noise levels at the airport
reduced by an average or 7.5
decibels. This would shrink the
size of the high noise impact
zone surroundin11 the airport
from 237to31 acres.
As the plan Is designed, the
number of permitted daily
departures would increase aa
noise reducUons are achieved.
Today, 41 Oigh~ are permitted;
by 1986 that figure would climb toss.
From Page A1
VIETS. • •
before a priloner can become
eligible for conslder•tion '°"
parole.
Th• Pham broth,ts and
N1uyen 1'0uld be in their 808 and
90t before Ulla could happen.
8 IJ'ORE THE ~entencet were QMt.ed out by Bnamto ln bis
11th ftoor court.room ln Santa
Au Tbund•1. Armbha1t bad
tA>ld Uile ~· tbat "lt WU U• to arid a llMllA,. to dte ltnlU
" ' ..
The 2-tone bikini by
EENI MEENI In lade,whlte,
yellowt'Nhlte, lilao/Whlte,
•.11 .00 ea. place.
Wear th la beauUf ut bikini
with or without the tie -lh
vivid ced with purple trim. Only 120.00 Ht,
::PI
i '
Be a standout on the beach
in this monoklni from OP.
Bright flowers .L.C?_n white
background. •27:uu.
These are just a few .from
our wonderful collection of
1 & 2 piece suits.
Get youra today!
-
DoW JOne8 Fiinal
UP 12.61
P&G sets
~ummit plan
Procter le Gamble CP&G), which ls good at con·
toundibg' lts competitors, is now confounding its .
critics. The Cincinnati inventor of Tide, Creal, Pam·
pers, Charmin and Head & Shoulders is saying. in ef·
feet: ••A1J \igbt if you want no advertjUng, we can
give you that too."
A lot of people who read Consumer Reports, shop
in co-op food stores and want Ralph Nader to be the
next president foam at the mouth about advertising,
., regarding it-as intrusive and wasteful, not recogniz·
Ing it as an American art form that has gone on to
conquer the world. And it's only natural then that the
object of their greatest scorn should be the biggest
advertiser of them all: P&G.
P&G's 1!779 expenditures on advertising were
clocked by Advertising Aie magazine at $614 million.
You can just hear those people groaning at the
men~ion or this
ou tlandi sh
figure : "'Why
don 't they stop
all that ad -
vertising and
reduce the
prices of their
products?"
t~ ' :;·, -::» J
.._...,,..~ ............................ """"Ir .,,..,
MllTDI MDSIMITZ ~lir
WELL, P&G, which Jsually feels it can do
anything it sets its mind to, is going to throw a bone lo
these critics In June 1t will introduce a new line or
p:\per towels and toilet paper under the brand name
Summit. The Summi! line wHI be available
throughout the country -primarily in non-food out-
lets like K mart but tt will not be advertised. That's
right, the country's largest advertiser is not planning
to put a cent of advertising behind the Summit towels
and tissues.
The Summit paper products are ex pected to re-
tai J 25 percent to 30 percent lower than t he
established P&G brands in this field : Charmin and
White Cloud toilet tissues and Bounty paper towels.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW V~ \.Y'l -s. ... -poQ -NI ~"" ........ _, ____ ,....
. \\ . ~ . '"" .. v.
-1 ..... • \II -"' . ""' .. "' . " • v. _..,,
-v. • v.
~ -tr.oone no,_..'ly •I--.._
r..11 8nano1 1s.t.ooo 11,, • Yt
Ouirk Air 1 .. ,700 10 + ~ Unl\,t.,be>lo• IS.,800 10 -11\
HovOllM 113.100 .. ~ + ~ Atn<Utll 131,700 •2Ytt • )Y,
Wene a 111,to0 J7!'t -"' "-troLew 113.700 JO Ret>QerOll 111,100 UV. .. i.
Cry1\alOll tS,IOO :M'I> + 11111 ,(),at.Ace 93,200 1• -1'1'1
METALS
C ...... 17-.'1 «ftb a llOU"d, U.S. -U-tlon1 .
l.eN»-.Jlcem••PGUrMI
;tliw: UV• cent1 e ...,.-. Otli•ertd.
Ti. $6.1'05 Metel1 Week <-II• lb_
Al'"'"-1• CM\b e --· V S Mercwr MlQ.00 per flask
Pt•tl-$-IM.00 lfOr or .• N. Y
GOLD QUOTATIONS
t
L•-= momlng tl•lno $4I0.2s. 011 u .1s. Le..,._: elwrnoon 11•1"9 W•.U, oll M.IS.
l'ar\1: atttt,_ ll•lne U1' '1. Oii U.:M
"•••klw1: 1111no .->.16. off u u
Z..rldl: lat• •It•,,_,, ll•lne, 147'.00, off '5.00. \,C7,,00 •t..,
H•••Y & Harma1\: only dtllr quote ... , •. u. off " 7S
1"9e1Mnl: onty dally quote M7'.U, 9ff
M.7S
111,.-.: Oflly dally quote labrl<•IAICI
MtUO. olt Sl.02
..
..
. ,.,.,.
;-. ..
~.
,,
. ...
l . • .
. .
1 . •
i
High country taste. ~ ... '~,-,; ·~ --
Light and mild .
Above all in refreshment.