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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-20 - Orange Coast PilotDRllll CDAIT YIUR HDllTDWI DlllY PIPER MONDAY, APRIL 20. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Bout u:ith depression lost Dist11rhed Viet vet kills wife, COLUMBUS. Ohio <AP> Gerald W Highman loaded a shotgun no one knew he had, shot his wife. then called his father. Merril HJgh man and the police found the couple, both 28 years old, in the bedroom. JoAnn Highman was dead at the scene. Gerald died a few hours later Saturday at a hospital. Mrs. Highman's 5-year-old daughter, Carri Kidd, was asleep in another room Gerald had asked his rather to take care or her. was seeing a counselor regularly. HIGHMAN WAS l7 when he fought as a Marine infantryman in Da Nan g and Quang Tri Province. He was wounded twice during hls Vietnam duty, wtuch ended in August 1971. "He was pretty well mixed up when he came home," his father said. Highman planned a violent act "'Usually there is some hint to let us know Lo look at things." Lynch said "Dad. did you get a good night's sleep? .. he asked. "Ye!>, .. his father answered. "I just killed JoAnn," Gerald said in a l'alm voice "He'd do good and then no good It just went on for 10 yedt-s " Highman had begun to give away various possessions several months ago '"but it was rational and appropriate when he ex- plained it" Then. Merril ll1 ghman re me mbt>rs, his son !'>aid he was go ing to k1 II h1 ms elf ''O H. MV GOO, no, Jerry Pleas{· don't do 1t. ·· his father beg~ed .. I tried to talk him out of 1t, saici l would come nghl over But I kne~ hl·wouldnotwml ·· The shoollngs seemed especial- 1 y tragic to those who knew Highman, because after 10 years of depression and flashbacks stem ming from his combat ex· perience in Vietnam , he seemed to be doing better. He had a steady Job, married his childhood sweetheart six months ago, and Last April, he told a Columbus news paper, he was driving around the city when suddenly he thought he was in a rice paddy. He heard sniper fire and saw helicopters . He even asked a farmer for a gun to protect h1mselffrom the Viet Cong Similar fla s hbacks and nightmares plagued him for years. A Ll'M'LE MORE than a year ago. Highman began seeing a counselor at the Operation Outreach Vietnam Cente r in Columbus His parents said Gerald SN~med lately .. Jjkt>has happy old self " He "seemed to be coming right along. But he still had his ups and downs." said his counselor. Russell Lynch .. It was hard for him toacceptsurvaval " Lynch said he had no 1nd1c<it1on MERRIL. HIGHMAN said his ">On sought mt"d1cal treatment at the Vt'terans · Adm1n1stration Hospital in Chillicothe in M arl'h ··They talk(•d to him for about 10 minutes and told him to go to the VA l'hni<· at l'n1vers1ty Ho'>p1lal :· ll1~hman '>J 1d ·AIJ the l'lin1c did <See \'f:T. P ag.-A2) I He's bullish 12 others at large? uspect VOUNG MATADOR David Renk. 18, of Houston shouts as a bull p(J~Ses by during a bullfight in Juarez. Re nk was promoted to full matador. the youngest American to reach that r~mk • ID coast Slayer parole reconsidered MONTGOMERY, Ala (AP) The Alabama paro le board has aar eed to review the releaae of con victed sex s layer Ric~ard Mark Ellard because or new in· formation on his alleged 'criminaltendencies." Faced with a lawsuit and de· nunciations by state lawmakers. the boar d deaided to have the double murde rer returned from a prison in Jackson. Ga , saying 1l wants to consider new in· formalioninthecase. Frognapping uncovered The board's action came after state Attorney General Charles Graddick issued an advisory legal opinion s aying the board could change its mind about paroling E llard Graddick followed the opinion with a threat to sue the board if at didn't put El lard back behind bars 1n Alabama At a news conference, Graddi<·k blamed Ellard's parole on a con s piracy by pardon board meml>E-rs and stale prison of f1c1ali> to r elieve overcrowding in Alabama·s prisons through the pa role route Kermit s ha ken up a fter San Antonio expe rience SAN ANOl'NJO, Trxas I AP ~ M 1si:. Pigg) ""a!> flt tu b<.' hog t1ec1 and San Antonio c1t1zens wen· hoppin~ mad KNm1t the f'rog had been kidnapped t1nd pohct'. fearing thl' worst, said h<.' mtght even havt• croaked. "l "m JUSt heartsick about dear Kerm." wa1lt•d Miss Pigg~ in a statem ent pubh.,hed b) lhl' San Antonio Expres!> and News "Why would <inyone want to hurt the poor darling? .. sh<' moped. jumping to conclusions Bl'T BY SATl'R OAY. the 13 foot-tall. shagg~ green verswn of the world's most famous frog wa.; sa!elv bark at San Antonm·s W1tte Museum. s lightl y worst> for wt>ar with a brokl•n fool and broken n~hl arm Kermit. the a ffable star of The Muppet Movie and '"The Muppet Sho"" ·· had been on dis play al the museum's front entrance column. hunging by wire-. Museum officials report eci him missing Friday night Wc'r<: JUSl glad he"s back,'" said a San Antonio police dis patcher .. Everybody"s been so worric·d about him," she said. add1n~ that lht're had been hundrt•di; nf inqu1r1es about Kermit ., safety And what brilliant piece of de· lecllve work led to the frog's freedom'? '"Some people came back from Chance of shQwers slight in county For all the cloudy, wet weather over the Easter weekend, Orange County received less than a half inch of rain, according to the Youth gangs raid resorts SOUTHEND, England 1API - Bands of youths broke into shops and sm ashed property today u rival g rou ps k nown as Mods, Pun ks, Skinheads and Rockers invaded Britain's sea 'resorts for a second consecutive Easter. More than 8,000 youthJ were re ported Cllmplna out in the tt· aort1 of Southend, Scarboroua h fnd Brlchton over the four-day holiday and causin1 -w1de1pread diaturbances. aulhoritles eaJd. But olficiall uld the rMOrt.I )Ve re calmer then they were Jut year, when hundreds or youth• ~"" arreste d a fter v,olent cluhel With ruce. Nationai Weather Ser vice. A weather ser vice s pokesman said the showers would be moving eastward to Arizona today, leav· ing on ly a slight chance of rain tonight and Tuesd ay Temperatures Tuesday are ex· pected lo be in the mid-eoa. wltb fair weather predicted. T he weekend rablfall of .39 inches brought the year'• tot.al to about 10.5 inches apokesman said.1 Normal rain/au for this Ume ls 11.95 inches. J . Sherman Denny. a Hunt· tn1ton Beach resident who hp ke pt ralnlaU reconh for the pu t 50 years, said since 19'l6 there have ~n only 11 sunny ,Euter Sundays ln Orange County. "It didn't alway1 raln , but sometime. t.he fo1 wa• 10 thl~k outdoor Easter •unriae •en1ca had lo be m oved lndoor•." Denny a aid. ·•My advtce l• not to plan ror cood ...eat.h ron u ter.'' va l'alion and he was just s1ttmg in their front yard." said the dis- patcher. who declined to give her name "We don·t know "hY som eone would take him ·· KERMIT JS PART of a travel· 1ng exh1bit1on . "'The Art of the Muppets'" which opened Apnl 4 at the Witte Museum . said John Regnier. museum public re- lations director. The exhibition has been in Los Angeles. Chicago, Denver. San 01ego and Minneapolis. and in· dudes graphic wall murals, a photographic presentation de· pi<:ting "Pigs in Space,'· and ~ther audio-visual materials De aths probed R EDSTONE. Colo. <AP > Fifteen coal m iners who died in a coal mine blast will be buried this week as a team or experts working deep within a mountain t ries to find out why they died. One official said t he bodies "were not badly charred, d is· me m bered or disfigured." ELLARD, 35, was sentenced lo concurrent life prison terms in Alabamo and Georgia for the 1971 murders of Charlotte Parks of B1rm1ngham and l 'nivers1ty of Alabama at Birmingham student Sandra Swisher Miss Swisher's skeletal remains were found in Douglas County. Ga . which led lo Ellard's conv1ct1on in Georgia After Ellard had served eight years tn Alabama, and escaped twice, the parole board decided March 2 to release him to authorities in Georgia He becomes eligible for parole in Georg1a next month. but Ceorgaa parole board Chairman James Morris said the board had decideq not to release Ellard for at least three years. Alabama parole board C hairwoman Sara Sellers o f Montgomery defended the board's decision in a news con- ference Friday, saying it was an ·'acceptab le '· and ·•safe'' practice to release parolees to states which have issued de· tainerson inmates. WHEN ASKED if she con· sidered the board 's procedures <See PAROLE, Page AZ> Pinup poster covers ·route to escape MADISON, Wis. CAP> -Posters have been ordered re· moved from the walls and ceilings of all Dane County Jail cells following the weekend escape of three inmates through a hole concealed by a pln·up. Stanley Klein, chief deputy ah,rtff. tasued the order after officials discovered that a centerfold picture from a '1 girlie maiutne bad been used to hide a bole sawed into die · ceilina ot a cell. ' The three inmates in the cell fled the JaU about. mldoiabt Friday and Am~ at lara• today. Official• aaJd fraamenta f.rom a hacksaw bllde were used to aaw tbe 18-lnch hole that enabled the md to reach freedom. ·· · na e ama FALl(LAHO ISL ANOS LOYALTY FiGHT The Argentinian government is pressing a historic claim to the Falkland Islands. whose residents a r e Britis h and want to r emain so The British are willing to g1\'e up the Falklands. one of its last colonies Park hires ambulance after deaths ANAHEIM 11\PJ In the fare of rontrovcrl>y over medu:al pro· cedures m the rece nt deaths of two park patrons. Disneyland of· ficials have hired an ambulance service w)1i le r eviewing their medical policy. The park has signed a contract with Medix Ambulance of Tustin that went into effect over the past weekend A driver is to be on duly from half an ho ur before opening until half an hour after closin~. Disneyland came under criticism because paramedics were not summoned in either case. both of which occurred dur· ing the past six weeks. Instead, a park nurse ac· companied t he individuals one a homicide victim and the other a 34·year-old woman who collapsed wh ile visiting the attraction with her family -ln a Disneyland van .not equipped with a siren or life· saving equipment other than ox- ygen. D isneyl and p ublicist Ann Alenalds said p ark officials will meet IOOQ with Or ange County medical officials to discuss the p ark'smedlcalpollcy. Cr itJca aUeged that the park had a policy agalnat summon.Ing paramedics tn order to avoid bad publtcity, but park offlclals have denied the charae. nyins Ule nurse on duty decided on a cue- by·cau bull. The !adlily ol atabbtna vic&.tm Mel C. Yorba of 1Uvetald hu rued • t80 mtllion dollar •ult .,al.nit txaneyland over th• '-ut ofmedictJcare Police surround • station lh STE\'E ~IT('ll F.LL Ol lft• O•ilr Ptl•I SI.tit Orange Count~ Sheriff's dep· uties s urrounded a service station in South Laguna this morning and captured a robbery suspect who hid in a res troom for more than an hour. The suspect , a tall. blond h;.ured man, walked out of the rest room with his hands held high after deputies o rdered him to surrender T H E D R A~1 AT I C 1nc1dent b<•gan shortly after 7 a m when a Laguna BeaC'h motorcycle of f1ct•r . en route to work. reported ly -;a"' a 'ehidt• matching lhl• c1<'!.<'npt1on of a car involved in an early mommg robbery in San Juan Capis trano Sht>nff's Sgt David Whl•t'ler said lhe San .Juan Countn· Club 1n San .Juan C<.1 p1 s trano was robbed of mort> than $4.000 by three men , one of \.\hom brandished a !>hotgun Deputies were searchin~ a res 1dential area 1n upper Thret.' Arch Bay thi~ morning in an al ll•mpl to find th(' other t\.\O sus perts ·we believe there are still two '>uspects in the area. · Sgt Wheeler said. The three men. who reported I} took $4,000 in receipt~ from the country club at 6 20 this morning, are also believed linked to two Garden Grove robberies that occurred Sund:w. Wheeler said. · T HE SHE U , station at Coast <See SUSPECT, Page A2J ORANGI COAST WIATHIR Clearing tonight. sunny and a little war mer Tues- day. Lows tonight 42 along the coast. 50 inland. Highs T uesday 65 lo 70. INSIDE TODAY A writer toq1 a wry loo1' at tht tl~ we apend afond· ing. sitting. pacing. all to wait for $Orne thing See Page A7 INDll UesJJ,ian loses I WASIU.NGTON (AP> -WhJte Hou.e press tetary James s. trrady, ~v*in1 from.. a bullet wound ID tbe bralo, auff ered a hl•b t.elbperature and a rash over weaeod, probably ln reaction to medication to ward otr sebures, pbyaic\ans said to- day. child custody But tbe dQCtors said Brady never was ln any danger, and by \bi& morning his rash had faded and his temperature was only sliehtly elevated, accordln& to a White House medical report and Dr. Dennis O'Leary, dean of climical aUairs at George Was hington University Hospital. ··He remains alert and in eood spirits," the medical report' said. W ASHJNGTON {AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court lef\ Intact a tullo1 today that strips a lesbian ' mother from Jefferson County, Ky., of the custody rfgbu of her 6-year-olddaugbter. The justices, without comment, refused to review a Kentucky ap· peals court ruling that forces LuAnn Stevenson to eive up custody of he r daufbter. Shannon. The eff~t of the Kentucky rul· ing was postponed march 2 by Justice Potter Stewart. Today's action ends that postponement. WHEN LUANN and Gary Ray Stevenson were divorced in 1977, . Presidential yachl Potomac for sale SAN FRANCISCO <APl Someone with a spare $2(),000 might want to bid on the former presidential yacht Potomac, a favorite of Franl<lin Delano Roosevelt, when it goes on the auctiOJl block in Oakland on Tues- day George Brokaw, US Customs Service district director. said the vessel. which was seized Sept 11 in a manjuana smuggling case and sank March 18 , will be sold at1 Jack London Square " as 1t 1s and whereitis atlhe buyer's risk." He said the s tartmg bid is sub· Ject to change but the minimum w111 be no higher than $20,000. The 165-foot Potomac will be on public view at the square from 9 am tolla m .andthesalebegms at noon The hiith bidder wtll have to make arrangements to low the Potomac from the auction site by Tuesday evening Onlv bids offered in person will be accepted and payment roust be in cash. cashier's check or certified check. The money must be paid by 4 p.m . when the boat will be released Europe war would drag? WAS HI NGTON <AP 1 Reagan adm1n1slrallon defense s trategists are beginning to think about the poss1b1hty that a European war with the, Soviet l'nron might be long and fought with only conventional weapons. Pentagon sources say If these thoughts evolve into formal doctrine. tt would represent a s harp break from past assumptions that a ma1or Eu ropcan conflict probably would be decidt'd within 30 to 60 days before a n y ma1or mobilization could be earned out and probably would re- quire the use of tactical nuclear weapons The sources said over the weekend Defense Secretar y Caspar Weinberger is interested in ··Jooking more seriously at the possibility of a longer conflict." perhaps even outside Europe as well as on that continent. Money supply up sharply NEW YORK <APl The nation's basic money supply ~howed another sharp increase m the latest reporting week, the FederaJ Reserve Board reported Friday. The Fed said M lB, which in· eludes cash and funds in check- ing-type accounts, rose $4 .8 billion to a seasonally adjusted $428.7 billion in the week ended April 8 . .. From Page A1 SUSPECT • • Highway and the entrance to Three Arch Bay. was 2'Ur· rounded for more than an hour this momtng. Arter the suspect surrendered, deputies remained in position, suspecting the other two men mleht still be holed up inside the restroom. But alter a half-hour deputies stormed the restrooms, dis· covering them to be empty. 0 .. ANGa COAIT President Roosevelt acquired the luxury yacht from the U S. Coast Guard in 1935, and it later was sold to the state of Maryla nd Since then, Elvis Presley. Danny Thomas and others have owned il. The Potomac was towed to San Francisco ip August 1980 for re- pairs and was seized Sept 11 along with 21 tons of marijuana and the vessel Valkyre The Potomac was appraised al $250.000 based on representations by its last registered owner. Fresno Business Investment Co Man stabbed in Santa Ana; suspect held A 21 -year-o ld man was stabbed to death in front or his home late Saturday night after beco m ing involved 1n an argument with another man. Santa Ana police said Officers said Ern est D Ramirez was fatally stabbed 1n the s ide and neck with a four inch folding knrfe while he stood in front of his home at 614 E Walnut St. with his brother and several friends. Booked al Orange County Jail on suspicion of murder was Augustin Saucedo. 23. also of Santa Ana Police said Saucedo and another man drove into the driveway and became involved in an argument with Ramirei who criticized them for careles~ driving Saucedo allegedly attacked Ramirez with the knife. then fled to a nearby house. where he was arrested Wrong turn brings alert SACRAMENTO CAP1 The U S. Air Force says two elderly women "made a couple of wrong turns" and drove up to som e B-52s that are on constant alert to counte rattack, supposedly with nuclear weapons. Mather Air Force Base in· formation officer Chuck Muston said that the white· haired women were ··spread-eagled" against their orange sedan and searched before being released T he women said they were trying to find the Bradshaw Road residential area near the base. Sexual action course at OCC A four ·part ser ie s. ''Understanding Sex ual Interaction ," will be presented at Orange Coasl College on Thursdays this spring . Admission is without cost to the series. beginning Thursday and meeting on successive Thursdays between 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in Fine Arts Hall 119. Lecturers are Jim Howalski. counselor and mental health team therapist, and John Flowers, clinical psycholoeiat. Information may be secured by calling 556-5880. Dilly Pilat MAIMOfflCE •Thomu P. H•l•Y NIIMI Robert N. Weed ......... r.., Thomaa KHVll ~Murphln• ~1~it\.°1:.. ~Schutrnen ... ~~ten Kennteh N. GoddMd Jr. ~,...., f, Pl Wttl ... IC., C:.0.&e Mffa, CA, #NII _..,.._! lloa IMO, C:. .. INN, CA. t2t.2' VOL. 74. N0._110 , Stevenson agreed to give up custody of their tbeo·infant dauabter. The eit·busband re· quested a change of custody after learnin1 that Mrs. Stevenaon's lesbitm lover had moved in with her and Shannon. A state trial judge turned down Stevenson's attempt to gain custody, but the Kentucky Court of Appeals reversed that ruling last summer. The 11tate Supreme Court refused to hear Ms. Stevenson's appeal Dec. 9. The appeals court said Shannon's father, -who has re· married, should be given custody for "the best interests of the child." A Kentucky law prohibits such custody changes within two years or a divorce unless It is proved that the child's environment "may endanger its physical. mental. moral or emotional health" and that "the stability of consistency is outweighed by the advantages attendant to change." IN ORDERING THE custody chunge, the state appeals court said. "The key word is the word 'may· . The potentiality for s uch danger is the test, and the courts are not required to wait un- til the damage is done." The appeals court quoted a court-appointed psychologist in d1scussmg the · ·sociaJ stigma" at· tached to homosexuali ty and the possible future harassment it could mean for Shannon According to the appeals court, Ms Stevenson worked for a time in a lesbian bar a nd openly acknowledged her lesbiati re· lattonship with her live-in lover, 1nclud1ng the performance of what the court c.-alled a ··mock wedding " The court noted that Ms . Stevenson dented any overt Jes bian relations hip in her daughter 's presence. adding that there was no proof to contradict s uch testimony IN SF.EKING SU PREME Court review. lawyers for Ms . Stevenson argued that the state courts had deprived her of equal protection . ··T his court must not be mis led bv wh1ms1cal incantations con· cernmg 'social stigma .. Even if '>tigma or harassment could con· .:;t1tute a danger. no such harassment was ever shown to be a factual matter in this case." the appeal said ··Rather. these words were tn· tetjected into the record by ;uppos1t1on and prejudiced im· aginatton." the lawyers a rgued. The Supreme Court has refused to s tudy "gay nghts" since the 1uslices ruled m 1967 that aliens found to be homosexuals could be deported as persons ··afflicted with a p sy c.-hopathic personaltty ·· The Amencan Psychiatric As· soc1ation since has rebutted the court ·s finding. voting in 1974 to e liminate homosexuality as a mental disorder and reclassify it as a "sexual orientation dis· turbance " GNP growth tel/,s rapid recovery WASHINGTON <AP> -The national econo my grew at a brisk annual rate of 6.5 percent in the first three months of this year as recovery from last year 's recession apparently picked up speed, the Commerce Department reported today. The increase was the biggest quar terly gain since the 9 percent recorded in the second quarter 01 1978, department ana lysts said. However. economists inside and outside government are forecasting a quick s lowdown in t he growth rate over the next few months as inflation and high inter est rates take their toll on consumer spending. The report said the ••real" gross national product -the in· flation-adjusted value of all goods and services -rose at a aeasonalJy adjusted annual rate of 6.5 percent to Sl.51 trillion in . the first quarter of lhis year after rlaing 3.8 percent in the last three months of 1980. The inflation adj ustment measures current GNP in 1972. dollars. From Page A1 VET ••• w11pushp.lllsovertohim." Tom SCott.1 an admlniatnUve officer at lhe Chillicothe hoepital~ aald SUnday that recordl ab.owed HJ1hman IOU&ht treatment for a neck and a.nn l.QJUI')' ht auttalned on bJ1 Job In 1m. The olflce con· firmed Hlcbman wa1 liven an ex· amloatlon by a medlcaJ doctor and referred to the outpatfeot cUntc. The reeorda did not 1bow a requett for p1ychlatrlc treatment, the offlcer 1ia14. ROYAL ANNIVERSARY -Frank Sinatra (left) and his wife. Barbara, host a 25th an· niversary party for Prince Rainier and Princess Grace o f Monaco in the e ntertainer 's Palm Springs ho me. Sinatra co-starred with the former Grace Kelly in her last movie. "High Society." Court no relief for $1.95 loser WASHINGTON <AP I A New York man who earned his fight over Sl 95 all the way to the U .S Supreme Court came up a loser today The nation's high est court. without comment. refused to help Frank Makara of Jencho. N.Y . m hts two year effort to get a refund Makara·s $1 95 feud with the British Petroleum Corp had its Mots in the gasohne shortage that hll thC' metropolitan New York area two s ummers ago Makara purchased $5 05 worth of gas at a BP station near his home J uly 16. 1979 He was forced to pay $7 for it Bec·ause of the shortages. the Tavern brawl fatal to one TULARE <AP > One man was stabbed to death after a bar patron was told he couldn"l leave with an opent.>d beer. Tulare Count\. sheriffs officers reported · Six people were arrested after a melee resulted 1n the s tabbing death of Jose Cervantes at the Five HJ bar near here Sunday Rooked were Jose Galaz Sr 50, Jose Ga laz Jr . Stanle~ Galaz. 20, Lu cinda Galaz. JO. and Arlen£> Galaz. 21. all of Vis- a It a . and Ebod 10 Cer vantes Vtllalobos. 25, of Porterville Promoter, lawyer face court action LOS ANGELES (AP l While a federal grand jury continues to wade through evidence in the al· leged embezile m ent or $21.3 million from the Wells Fargo Bank, two figures In that case were due in federal court today. Boxing promoter Ross Fields formerly known as Harold J Smith faced arraignment on a charge o f making a false statement in a pass port ap- plication His attorney, J ennifer L. King, who also raced ar· raignment, was ch arged with making false statements to the grand jury. state's energy office ordered stations not to sell less than $7 worth of gas for six-cylinder cars a move a imed at dts couraging the practice of ··top ptngoff." Makara, a 73-year·old retired patent lawyer, told the Justices a station attendant charged him $7 for the $5.05 worth of gas and , "'hen Makara obJected. s aio . ··You· re not lea v1 ng this pl ace unless you pay the $1 95 " Makara's legal argument that he was deprived of h1s property the cash m violation of his constitutional right to due proc ess was re1ected 1n the New \'ork courts Telling the 3us lics he had s pent about $100 1n h1s legal fight, Makara added ·· Please excuse the inform a lit v of this appeal. Matters of s ubstance are immensely more important than matters of form td those who s incerely labor for 1ust1ce among humankind · Cubans grab 4 U.S. sailors H AVANA I AP > Cuban authonties have arrested four American sailors who s trayed into Cuban waters from the Navy's Guantanamo base on Cuba's southern coast. the l' S interests section said today An official of the section. the American diplomatic representation in Cuba. said the four were held at Boqueron near the naval base at the eastern end or the island. A Cuban foreign ministry of· ficial acknowledged the sailors were in custody, but declined comment beyond saying the U.S. interests section h ad been notified through official Cuban channels. Gypsies charged GREENSBORO. NC. <AP> Eight Polish gypsies have been c harged wi th interstate transportation of $89,000 tn stolen jewelry and silver in an investigation of a group that re cuits ill egal aliens for a nationwide burglary ring Man robbed, bm barely EL CENTRO <AP> Ray Miramontes ended up by giving away more than the shirt off his back when he stopped to pick up a hitchhiker on J 8 The h1tchh1ker. dressed as a Manne. pulled a gun Sunday on Miramontes a nd order ed the 19 year old El Centro man out of l.Joth his pickup truck and his c lothes, Imperial County Sheriff's deputies said The) said Miramontes was le ft standing nude on the highway. while his 1980 Chevy pickup rolled off towards Yuma Artz . "ith the hitchhiker in· side From Page A1 PAROLE • • • adl'quate to protect the public from mmates who have com· m1tte'1 violent crimes. Mrs Sellers replied. "Yes. I do " Mrs Sellers s aid the board "ou ld huve Ellard returned to Alubama for a review of his case be<·au"e 1l r<.'cently learned of aJ . leged threats by Ellard on the ll\l'fi of v1ct1ms of his cnmes and new information on his ··criminal tendencies " She declined to elaborate Ron Tate. a !>pokcsman for the Al<tbama Department of Corrections, sa1d Alabama of· f1c1ab are to pick up E llard from tht• µnson at Jackson. Ga., on Tue-.day Reagans attend private service WASHINGTON CAP l Pres ident Reagan and his wife r eceived communion at a private Easter service The Rev Louis Evans. pastor of the National Presbyterian Church. came lo the White House to conduct the ser vice. The m1mster and his wife met socially with the president and Mrs Reagan beforehand. Reagan remained out of the public eye as he continued con· valescing from t he gunshot wound he s uffered in the chest three weeks ago. . . :· -------~------~ ------- D.Jttet Sportswear at t"8 Goroge TIOClflonol. rugged. dciM . HOf9 wet~~ cotton n.JQfC1tl tNrt ~ ~9'depoc:Mts AllO Q Or.at PQP·~11:> to ~tocket v.thPOUCh " ,, AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 I I t • . ~ TWO 011' those, 58393 by Russell and SB76(\ by Stiern, would change the i:lefinition of obacenity in law to make proe· ecution euler . It would chanee the current definition, which re· quires books or rilms and the like to be "utterly without re· deeming social importance," to merely be matter that "lacks serious literary . arlistt<'. political or scientific value." A bill that would require grocery stores to provide toilet and hand-washing facilities for their cua\Omera lt befor the Aa· seqibly Health Committee. The bill, ABllO by Alsemblywoman Gwen Moofe, D·Lol Aneelea, (4. opposed by the stores. which aa)> lt would be too expensive ror small groceries. InC9me taxes, particularly the m ind-numbiog differences be tween fede ral and state forms. were on most people's minds last week, the annual fiJ. ing deadline. But with that de· adline over. the ~gialature will probably continue fts inaistencft on state autonomy and reject any efforts lo conform s tate la"' with federal law to make return6 easier for taxpayers. THAT MEANS that the two houses' policy committees have long agendas over the next two weeks . The Assembly C riminal Justice Committee, which gets all the anti-crime bills in- troduced in the lower house, is even planning an unusual hear· mg next Sunday on 50 bi lls. Cause goes on Marigold has top connections Besides the $850 milhon bond bill, anti-crime bills this week include a package of m easures backed by the Se n ate Democratic leadership and another set of proposals seeking lD make obscenity prosecutions easier. Other topics include income taxes. public access lo health re· cords, mortgages, farm workers and children's car seats The $850 million anti-crime bond bill is up at the regular Criminal Jus tice Committee meeting today The bill, by As · semblyman Terry Goggin, D· San Bernardino, would have to be approved by state voters as well as the Legislature and gov· ernor IT WOULD spend $500 million of the bonds for prison con· struction and maintenance and $350 million for Jails . The bonds would be paid off by selling the aging San Quentin prison north of San Francisco. The bill would also increase the state's 6·cents -per-dollar sales tax by one quarter cent That money. almost S500 million a year . would be used for grants to s tate a nd local police a nd pr os· ecutors. The Senate Judiciary Com· m1ltee on Tuesday hears six bills by Chairman Omer Rains, 0 Ventura Three of those would lighten laws and proredures re· lating lo child molesters. The same commlttee has four bills relating to pornography and obscenity. three by Sen. WASHINGTON !AP It 's spring Time perhaµ!>, lo con sider the mangold Time, perhaps. to recall the late Sen. Everett Mc Kinley Dirksen of Illinois, whose thunderous prose 1 m mortalized what might otherwise have been an ordinary flower "It 1s as sprightly as the daffodil, as colorful as the rose. as resolute as the zinnia, as del· 1cate as the ca rnation. as haughty· as the chrysanthemum~ as aggressive as the petunia. as ubiquitous as the violet. and as stately as the snapdragon " And not only that "ITS ROBl'STNESS reflects the hardihood and character of the generations who pioneered and built this land into a great nation lt is not temperamental about fertility . It resists its natural enemies. the insects It 1s self-reliant and requires little attenhon. lts spectacular colors lemon and orange, rich brown and deep mahogany befit the 1 maginative qualities of the nation" Each year until h1~ death in 1969 , Dirksen introduced legislation to have Congress declare the marigold , so m etimes known as the f'r1endsh1p F'lo~er as the national flo"er of the l 'niled States But as politician. not poet. Dirksen was a rt•ahs l "I AM full\ sensible of that faC'l that all per'>on~. young and old, male and female, nch aQd poor, have their own preference when -it comes to a flower ." he said in !>ponsoring the legislation on Feb 4, 1969 "But mine goes for the marigold for a variety of reasons. "It beguiles the senses and enables the spirit of man. It is the delight of the amateur garde ner and a con s tant challenge lo the professional," he said Smee his death. D1rk!>en's son- 1n Jaw. Sen. Howard Baker. R Tenn . has .carried on the tradition of introducing the legislation in the Senate And this month. wit h lht· nation's C'apilal once again abla2e with cherry blossoms. azaleas and tultp:-. Baker once ag<11n took up the cause l 'S ING languagE' similar to that used by his late father·sn· law. Baker. now the Senate Ma Jonty Leader. said the United St:.ite~ 1~ one of the few nations of the world "'h1ch has not adopted a national floy, er "While I am a .... arc that many flowt:n; have been nominated for t his honor ... he said in introduc· ing the leg1slat1on, "I believe that the marigold. \lohich was brought lo our shores in the earliest days of our own history and which has flo urished in every part of our great country, 1s uniquely suited to become our floral symbol. ··It is grown in great profusion rn everv one of the 50 states and ~trangely enough 1t 1s not the of· f1c1:.1l flower of an} slate. Long a~o 1t was ackno .... ledged as a symbol of religious fa1th and graced the altars both at home and abroad," he said. Colorado welcomes rain Moisture finally falls on state 's parched plains C.Oastal. u~ather POINT CONCEPTION TO THE ME JttC.<IN BORDER .<IND ovr '° MILES 011,.rwlM wf\terly w•ncl• S lo 10 •nol\ toCI•• b•comtnQ norHlwtsttrly 10 to JO lo.not• 11•1• •llornoon •nCI l1Qnt •nCI ••rt•ll•• totHQh1 Two to 3 toot w1'\lef\v '"""•" Fe1rtonlQM U.S. swnmary Snowt " ano • few tnunotnhowen .,.,, ••lln9<•-' ~Y lrom tM ,."'"' Wt•I co .. , IOIM Aoc"u. mid P"'"" mld-Mlu 1ulpplVelleyenCllhe 0~10V e lley•nCIGretl UtU• ~tronQ •Ind• '"'•O up dull In Monr.n•. Wl\11• ,,,.,,. ln IM Cetllornl• mou,H••ns prompt•d tr•¥•1 •d¥ltorlt'1 tt w•s. mMtfy \UM'f from the Sovt-O.s.rts IO IN Plelns, •nclonmwchofthe E .. teo .. 1 Mor• t"-'t an tric:n of welcome rein 1•11 on -1• ol Coto<•OO • peru..cl u11ernpl4llns hm.,...elur•• """"° llM "4111on el mid .s.v r~ from • IOW ol l6 In Merqu•tt•, Midi lo • Nqll of ti In Jtcksoovlll•,Fla A•lny -lher .... IO<IKHt elonQ wlll\ • 1 .. 1-~ritodey from tlltnOl't-nA0<klttloun1re1P1tln•. •tll\ much ol 11\e Hm• tor 11\e Soullle"I A•lll wn pr.ell<'"' 10< Ille mld·All.,llC st.In end eetler11 Greet Lnn, but"""'',,.., were••-~ 10 l>"Oell on Ille,_,,_., Pia"°''· UP' jMr MIU lsslppl VelleY•nd Fl0<IO. .. .,, ...• , Innl ... ,., ~ \ ........ \•C'• Clt"f.t• .. o., ...... ,.. lllIIllII -- - - -- <Alifonria Tiie 0\11._ lo< T-y I\ sunf\y and w•rtntf. A we~come cntinoit ffom recent•-" Hight TuetdAY ~Id be ti~ 10 70, Ille Hellon•I Wulher S.rvlu w ld Moun .. ln are.u cen ••P«I nlQllS between .e ~ H , wt Ill tonlQhl's low1 UlolS 111 upper c1eurt1 Tue•d•Y. IPI• Nellontl -Iller S.rvlc1 It P"Clk I 11\Q 11111111 of 6J to 7J In IOwer Clfterlt, lM IO<K .. I cellt 10< ISto '2. Temperatures I .AllMtny 141 Le "'' SI J1 -----------Albu(Jue ,. 4l Am•rlllo u Sl AllltVillt All.,11• All•nl<Ctv 8 •••1rTtorp 81(M•nonm 81\ln•rck 801\e 8o•ton Brown.vii• 8uttato Cl\ .. tslnS< Cll•rl>tnWll Cl••yennt Cl'llce90 C1n<1nne11 Clevetencl Cotumtl<I> D•l·FIWll'I o. ... ., Ou Mot,.• O.lroll Duluth Hullord Helene Honolulu HOU\ton 11 so 1• •S S9 ,. .. .. u " SI 1" 10 n .... " n ... ll 11 0 JO ., •t •S .Ol so 0 24 S2 4l U u 4' 1' Sl ll 02 n o l6 ., .. O' St so u » u 01 n >t .. . •I .., M 0 as 12 It ,, Soulhem <Ali/omi.a mrf report ..... .... ..... .............. a..c11 ·~ _,, ..... A119 Mil• Zum• 2 J 10 I , S.nta M9nk• 2 4 IO l , fll••= , • II ' , s.n .._c--tv J • 11 ' J "'''t~ . /bt~11'119. Tt.. De.Uy PUot want. to bear obHrvaUou from i(a react.rs -paJ11allUtJ. comment.i l.boUl the paper it.Mat. it'• '9aay to tell u1 your vleWI. J ust call lbe number below Ud your 10eNa1e. I wW be recorded. Meua, .. will be trUllttibed Mveral Um• •daily ~ deUv"ered to the de9k of tbe •wrc>Pri•~ editor. No' lCtre ulation calla, pleaie. · , ' T.U Ui •hat'• oo tour mind. TIM awnlMr It la Ht'¥lce M 'bOun a clay, Hvtn d.a;• a week. fJ42•8088 · , • Ow SW SW w w •ndn•phs J•<kMwlle K•"sClly LHVe11ot• L•lll• Rock LOSA~IH LOUi\¥ilt• Me"1Jlnls Ml•mt Mtlw•ukee Mpii·SI P NUll•lll• NewO•IHM N~wVor• Norlofk Okl•CHV Om•h• Orl•ndO Plltl•dpl\1• P"°9"'.._ P1t1>burgll Pll•nd,IN Pll•nd.0•• Reno S•llLO• S.nDl•f10 S•nFr•ll S.•111• SlLOUIS SIP Ttmpt SISl•M•r"' Sp00M Tuls• W•sMnqtn CALll'OllNIA Belt.erslMllO Blylll• Eurelt.e Fresno Lene ester Mtrysvllle Monterey ,.,..., ... O•kl•ncl Puo R~H AeCI Bluff Redw-Chy Rel\O $e((-IO S.tlnes SM!ttB-r• Stock'ton Thefrnel Ult.lei\ ~-81118•• 9bh°" C•l•llM 1!1 Ctntro L.ong 8HCPI Monro., le MtWlllOn H-l*iee.dl Ofltarlo I ::~ s.n..,_... S.11te AM I T.._v.,..., ., 50 17 " ., ., SI 11 ., 50 ,. •S SS s• 54 ll u 54 OJ u .. OJ u n 49 l6 ,, •0 " u 16 60 uo •• II .. " •• SJ u 61 11 6S SI OJ '° s• •• .. 17 l>l s. ll 60 17 s• 50 Sl '3 11 SI .. OS .. SI OS SI ,, ,, u .. M H 71 15 ol so 21 •S ... ,. M 19 70 SI HI IA .. ,. •l S4 .OS ,. se SI 41 .11 u ... 1s » ... SS Sl .0 1) ,. 57 51 50 .so S9 S2 .u SJ 40 .01 SJ 0 .33 '° .... .CM JO " ,, ., "' ,, St Sl ,. u .. ,, • SI • ·°' u S3 IJ u ., S3 .21 ,. ... .It ,. » .1• 62 JJ .OJ J7 " 12 " ,. ... ff to • IJ 6J S2 20 ,, II Road damage ~ows .. rr.•ca.ea.&MNwtre SACRAMEN'J'O -The price ta1 on a growint backlo1 ol CalJfornla road and brtd1e re- ealn baa been peHed at more than $9 billion by a atudy re- leased t-Oday. Accordin1 to The Road Information Program (TRIP>, the Washington. D.C ·based re· search agency which released this study : Nearly 40 percent of California's paved main roads, some 23,090 miles, now require .resurfacing or rebuilding. Nearly 15 percent of the state's roads, some 8,734 miles, suffer from obsolete design de- ficiencies and should be up- graded for improved driving safety. -ONE out of every seven bridges in California, a total of 3,706 spans, are now too old or too weak to adequately handle today's traffic volumes and s ho uld be replaced o r re- habilitated. TRIP's study cited drops in highway repair revenues and .an indus try inflation rate that tias tripled road work costs an less than 20 years as primary causes in the growing repairs backlog. "We're watching a multi· billion dollar road and bridge in· vestment crumble and we're swiftly a pproaching the point where catching up on the state's road needs will be nearly im· possible," said Jerry Toll Toll is chai rman of the Sur fa ce Transportation Advisory Council of the As· soc1att!d General Contractors of l'alltorma. v.h1ch requested Tht' Road Information Prograrn study TRIP recommended a 10-year, $944 million-per-year program to catch up on California's road and bridge repairs. By comparison th e s tate, counties and cities have budget- ed only $708 million for road and bridge repair work as well a.s ne w construction during fl.Seal year 1.981, $236 million short of The Road Information Pro- -gram's recommendation for re- pair work alone. The S9.4-4 billion TRIP recom· mendalioo does not consider re- venues that will be needed to repair additional deterioration or to keep pace with the un· certain rate of future inflation. the study said . A 4.1 percent drop in motor fuel cons umption last year coat California's hi&hway pro- grams $33.S million In loat motor fuel tu revenue, according to the study. T RIP noted that the growing use of smaller, more fuel· efficient vehicles is a leading factor in the decreasing use of motor fuel. The Road Information Pro- gram reported that to keep pace with inflation, five states have replaced fixed, cents-per-gallon motor fuel taxes with variable taxes based on a percentage of motor fuers wholesale or retail price The Road Information Pro- gram is a resear ch and in- formation agency s upported by highway·related industries. TRIP's study is based on data from the C alifornia Transpartation Commission. the state Boacd or Equalization, the Cal ifornia Department of Transportation, the F ederal Highway Administration and other government and private agencies. .... .,,....,_ REAL EARFUL -Emmett Kelly Jr listens to the call or the wild from one of the elephants at the Ci r cus or the Americas, currently performing at the Los Angeles Sports Arena Le ft a g ain divided Fre nch election • In LYON. Franec• tAP l With thl.' first round of th~ F rencl;i pr<.•1.1d<>nl1al clectwn s ix days av. ay. the Soc1albl'> are tuning 111 v. 1th Jppn•hcns1on t•Jch time thl') sµot Communist Part) I e ;i cl t• r G l' or g e !> M arch a 1 s ht·av' dark evehrov.s on t<.•lt•\'l~llHI Tht• r11mmon w1:-.dom 1s lhal M arthais is more rnlcresled in blo<·k1nJ: thl' rise of Socialist learl<·r Francois M 1lll·rrnnd than in promoting the rt•al poss1biht) of v1('ton b\ a un1 f1ed left against the centt'r right gov~ ernment of Pres1d<.•nt Valery C1sc·ard d Estaing While prot'laimin~ thl• need for a leftJst <1ll1ance. Marchais began his campaign by cnt1ciz· ing M1tterand's ·uourgo1s pohtiral orientation and 1ns1st- 1 n g th<1t an} <'oal1t1on gov crnment with the Socialists in· elude Communist~. something M1ttcrand courting the moderate vote says he will not a('cept MANY obst•n·l'r-. fl.It thl' issue of d1re<'l Communist pe1rt1c1pat1on an the administration was deliberately r aised to scare the moderates away and ins ure a vic tory by Giscard d'Es taing, with the Communists rema ining the s trident voice of oppos1t1on Marcha1s· fear 1s that the Soc1ahsts. whose share of the electorate rose from JUst about 5 ) percent to well more than 25 percent in the last to years. 1s getting too popular The sense of woaking·c,lass identity is strong in France, and Marchais hopes to make sure it remams linked to the Communist Party The first round of voling 1s set for April 26 (( one candidate does not wm an outright majori· ty. a second round will be held May 10 A second round is con· sidered a cert ainty with Giscard d' Estarng and Mstterand raring earh other in the runoff as the l wo top first-round vole getters T HE candidacies of Marchais . Neo C:aullist Jacques Chirac and six mtnor party candidates virtually assltre that no one will receive the majority ne~ded for WHO'S HE HELPING? Georges Marchais J f1r~l round victory In the 1978 P:.irliament elC'l't1on ~. the Soc 1al 1s t · Communist alliance appeared headed for s ucces!>, but late in the campaign Marchais started attacking the Socialists. The center-right coalition held, and many leftists blamed Marchais for the collapse of the "Union of the Left " But the idea of a umfied left. and the realization that st is the on I) "'ay to end 23 years of center right government. re- m a 1 n~ s trong a mon g both Soc1 <1lisls and Communists. and Marcha1s recently has softened his <1ttacks against Mitterrand. "WE MUST beat G1scard. and 10 do so we must have a unified left. .. he declared last week at a campaign rally here in France's ~eco nd la r gest city, an im · portanl rndustrial center. But M archais also repeated his in· s1stence on Communist Cabmet m1n1sters. 'It as inconceivable to ask for Communist s upport and then ex· elude Communists from the gov· ernment," he said. His stance in ret'errt days h as been that Mitterrand. and not he. 1s block- ing the left ist alliance. lt'S stnz.td1 <Z8po pus-•which rnaXiw this 9horL eo outetarlmg whz.n~ ma.Jf1..1t ~vrz..s,just rzn~t.o mem . QNl. 'of t:h<z. moet OOmfurt.obl<Z. ehorte ~11 flNflI \),11.6r fl~ colors-white, swiss blue, sogz., tan ond nt:Ny . ai2.Q.S 28-38. - t l J I ,, '1 DONALD._ &O'l'Usao :. WABIUNGTON (AP> -Wbllt '81an 11 an effort to pleue Hmlnl.IU f,i., ~atenin1 to tUl'll •to & ~al embarra .. meat for Democratic Party oltlclalt etth11 ready for th• 1112 ectionl. , At 111-..e 11 lmplementaUoa ol relOluUon adopted la1t awn· er by the Democratic National onvenUon that would deny nanclal and technical H · lance to candidates who fail support the Equal Rl1bt1 mendment. • Eleanor Smeal, president of e National Organbatlon for . omen, wadts tbe resolutioo to appl1 to coa1ret1io11aJ campalp commltt.MI aod atate party or1anluUoN u well u tbe naUooal CQmmlttee. J,\ut top party olftclall are de· termlned to apply the resolution only to the Democratic National Committee. a ~lion certain to create an uproar wben the ex· ecqtlve committee of the party meets Ma7 8. The national party or1anlsat1on play1 no role in providln1 either tecbnlul or financial assl1tance to state leclalative candidates, the people most direcUy concerned wltb ratification of the ERA. The first sign of potential trouble appeared hours after the . coovebtion adopt'd the re•· olutton, wbtcb aald, "The Democratic Parv 1ttall withhold ftnanctaJ 1upport and technical campat1n ualatance from candidates wbo do not support tbe ERA." 1 . Feminiatl were prepared to open the battle over the res- olution at the national com· mlttee meet.ins ln Waahiniton last February, but a last-minute compromise poatponed the clash until May. Ma. Smeal made it clear she But the batUe lines were clear. believed the Democratic Party Marjorie Thurman, the was far broader than tbe /Democratic state chairman ln national committee. In fact, Georaia, told the February activist.a pressing for the res-m eeting "there's no way I'm olution said they defeated an e!-golna to withhold funds from fort to have lt refer to the com-candidates who don't support mittee rather than the party. ERA." In the South, she argued, Party officials quickly reject- ed the NOW position on grounds it sim pl y would be un - enforceable. that would amount to conceding races to Republicans. NEWS ANALYSIS cotnmlttee, ad.sJing, "I support ERA and I hope it is adopted." Theodore W\ller , director of th e Senate D e m oc rati c Campaign comm ittee , said, "Traditionally, the committee h as made no Judgments as bet ween reeularly nominated Democratic candidates." .._ __ _ adop~ a platform that con· tradlcted hl• poaitloo on tbe ll· s ue . Reaaan contended tbrou1hout the camp1i1n Ul•f wbUe he supported equal rllhtl for women, he opposed ualnc a conaUtutiooal amendment aa the keyst.one of efforta to achieve equality. Jimmy Carter was une- quivocal in his support for the ERA, but he still drew OJ)· position from feminists becauae the drive for ratification had stalled during his four years in the White House. Bay of Pigs recalkd On Capitol Hill, it• also Is clear tbe Democratic campaign committees in the Senate and House will ignore the resolution. "We don't have a position on it," said Rep. Tony Coehlo of California, chairma n of the House Democratic Campaign Ironically , the intraparty c la s h s tem s rr o m the Democrats' efforts to show strong support for the ERA in contrast to the Republican con- vention move to drop its support for the amendment. Ronald Reagan opposes the ERA, and he didn't want the GOP convention that was going to nominate him for president to NO STATE has ratified tbe ERA since 1977, and approval of at least three more states still are needed to make it part of the Constitution. What has some Democratic politicians gnashing their teeth is that t h ey, not th e Republicans, are the targets of feminist criticism 1961 event s haped Cuban-American relations . WASHINGTON <APl -It is a fprbidding place, once best known for its swampland, al- ligators, wild pigs, sea snails and mosqwtos. Christopher Col um bus dis - covered tbe area on a June day in 1494 and was intrigued. Fidel Castro thought it had promise as a resort center No one could have predicted that this uninviting tropical jungle would one day become the setting for an event that has done more to shape Cuban· American relations than any other. NO EVENT did more to con- solidate Castro's grip on power than the Cuban victory over the CIA-sponsored exile force which invaded Cuba at the Bay of Pigs 20 years ago. Echoes of the U.S. defeat are sUU heard today. By the standards of modem warfare, the battle was small scale. On the Cuban side there were 87 dead, while the invaders lost 114 . In Cuban eyes. however. the defeat of a force t r ained, eq u ipped , f inanced a n d transported by the CIA was an epoch event -·'the first defeat o f imperialism in the Americas." For the United States. the col- lapse of one of the largest secret operations in American history was a humiliating fiasco. In the space of a few days, the exciting hopes generated by America's new president. John F. Kennedy, gave way to bitter disenchantment. T he invasion plan had its beginnings in the final m onths of the Eisenhower administration, which believed that resistance to Castro's rule was widespread and growing and that Cuba had become a Soviet satellite, a base for hemispheric subversion Jt was assumed that a small· scale exile invasion would touch off a s pontaneous uprising throughout Cuba , leading to Castro's downfall. Despite his reservations, Kennedy agreed to t h e plan , mindful of his c ampaign promise to restore freedom to the island. Hunts win silver skirmishes with SEC On the night of April 17, 1961 , the 1,400-man rebel brigade, trained in Guatemala under U.S. supervision, arrived at the Bay of Pigs aboard invasion vessels launched from Nicaragua Disaster ws as almost im- m e di ate . Th e h ope o f a clandesti n e la nd i n g was s hattered when t he invaders were quickly spotted by a militia patrol. DALLAS <AP) -Fighting tooth-and-nail against alleged in- vasion of their financial privacy, the wealthy Hunt family of Dallas has won several skirmishes with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The legal battleground was in the private chambers of U.S. District Judge Robert Porter, who has g iven the Hunts permission to question SEC agents concerning a government investigation of the Hunt family involvement in last year's col· lapse of world silver prices. "I think it is just a nother step RE YOU PAYIMC'i TOO MUCH FOR YOUI HEALTHIMSUllAMCE? •1 .000.000 GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL ,.. ..,.... c.-: '*""' S.,_ -S~ at Y0vt 0-ICMl SV.. _ Y __ l COSTl,...,.941 •1289 , .. .._._ .. _,,_,495-0401 -~~-ca ... °'""""""· .. "_,"""'·' "Our 24th year" g_ Auto & Homeown~rs ~3!::· Ouotes By Phone f-llSIUIG ., 541-1114 or 1Ji-J4J7 1914 ...... c .... Me .. toward protecting our privacy rights," said family spokesman Tom Whittaker "As we've said before, any time we feel the SEC has overstepped their bounds we'll challenge them " Porter, in a closed heanng, also said the SEC could not ap- peal an earlier ruling directly to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals in New Orleans. a com- m is s 1 on attorney said in Washington . In that ruling, Porter agreed to hear Hunt al legations that their rights to financial privacy had been violated The guerrillas pushed inland, but by the next morning Ca!'tro's forces we r e responding ef- fectively to the challenge. Rebel supply shjps were either sunk or seriously damaged by tbe Cuban air force Within three days, the invaders. ho pelessly pinned down in swampland, surrounded by Cuban troops and their sup- ply lines cut, were forced to sur- render Almost 1,200 were taken prisoner . Kennedy took full responsibill· ty for the debacle. "How could J have been so stupid to let them go ahead?" he asked afterward. A riot of colors, but still Brooks Brothers Our exclusive "fun shirt" is a colorful way to . . go casual. It's a random array of different stripes and different colors, in cool cotton gingham, short sleeved, and decidedly a conversation piece. T he collar, as Brooks Brothers regulars would surmise, is correctly button-down. Sizes 14Yl to 161/i. $32.SO ISTAIUIMID llll ~ EX-HOSTAGE RE-ENLISTS -Marine Sgt. Gregory Persinger, 23, right, former hostage in Iran, recently made his final . ... ,,.._ jump as paratrooper at Fort Benning, Ga. Airborne School. Pers inger has re-e nlisted for a military intelligence career. SPRINGB ~89 DE CASPERtff9 NEW ORLEANS 't79 CHICAGOti79 NEW lORK/NEWARK tJSI+ COLORADO SPRINGS tt9 DENVER*89 OMAHASf29'* GRAND JUNCTION •tt9 PEORIA Sf99 . INDl.ANAPOUS ti69* NEW LOW FARES TO EVERYWHERE. Don't wait for summer to have fun . Tu.ke a spring break. Now you can fly to your favorite city at a price that won't break your budget. Continental's having a special spring sale to Denver and many other cities throughout the country. Continental cap take you to Denver Qr beyond from the airport nearest you . Burbank, Ontario. Or Los Angeles International. To take advantage of our spring break sale, just purchase your ticket within three days after making your reservations. Should you need to change or cancel your plans, there is a $10 charge. Seats are limited. Fares are effective April 18 and al l travel must be .completed by May 31, 1981 ~These discount rares are one-way Coach on selected flights. Rues on other flights are slightly higher. Spring for a bargain. And call your travel agent, company travel department or Continental . ......... '""" .,_.,..°""'"'' ""'1M'11ptly•""""" N•·Uf'l-·'*''*"''lh'fll """'""~ ISJI-Fir-<k•~ 'tlofll/~111\ "-"" t•pl1111i1"' 414• "'" -n.11<-_..,.,_,,.on tllftllcd l FJ"-tlw 41l8 tn.-.. fift'> .-,,....e.11~~1 • I I • Hang~Cler's injurjes fat81 OCEANSIDE <AP> -A 58-year-old pilot whose motorized bane &lider crashed Thursday in an open are• oft Oceanside Boulevard bas died of bis injuries in Trl·Clty Hospital. Police said Frederick Koeni1 of Escondido was up about 6() feet when his craft zoomed straight up for 4-0 feet and then at'raight down. He died of intemaJ injuries. Sex escapee' nabbed WALNUT CREEK (AP) -An escaped sex of- fender has been arrested in Walnut Creek for in· vestigation of running an escort service that al- legedly provided prositutes to its clients, police re- ported. Edward Eugene Gee, 41, who went by the name Joshua Eddie Swartzman, escaped from Napa State Hospital in May 1979, pofice said. lnvest1gators said he kept one-th.ird or the $150 fee call girls collected. Rabies canier /eared MARTINEZ <AP> -A rabid skunk that was found hanging from a tree in Martinez with a rope around its neck may have infected its executioner , health officials say. "We don't think it committed suicide, and we need to find whoever did it," said health de- partment spokeswoman Carole Walton. She said human contact with rabid animals can lead to death. Expansion bid ends YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK IAPl -The major park concessiona ire drafted a plan to ex- pand its role, but has no intention of implementing it, s aid the company president. Yosemite Park and Curry Co. wrote a pro- pos al for taking over park entrance stations and other government functions at the request of the National Park Service for budget reasons, said President Edward C. Hardy. However. the in· house outline was discarded before copies were of- ficially sent to the agency. he said trans ....... ........ announces a new program 2nd TRUST DEEDS ·No 1>t•P•~/Assu,_ • Fut tuno1ng -30 year Amort•ted Up lo " yra R- • loen 110 OO<H~ ooo • Owner /Non Ow- • Swtng loana ~MOfWI' Call Wiiiiam 8. Mitchell Call toelay lor quote • No obt1galion tions notionol funding c114) s1s-112a =~a ~ FREE LECTURE! REVERSING THE AGING PROCESS - AND USER BEAM THERAPY FOR CONTROWNG PAIN th.M ant the c:Otttro•enial toplca ulected by DR. MORMAN klHG llALS, k., for his t.ctun hi "- lc6oa ROOfft at ffM SOMlll Coost ftlcna Hot.I, A.pril Zht. The pubtlc Is corcl9- ly invited to attMd. ~ hn starts at lptft. Or. leals is the Medical Director of the Lifestyle Medical Clinics, dedicated to improving the quality of health tor women. He 1s also director of the King Family Medical Centers which are for the control and relief of pain. In Dr. Beals' lecture you will ... LHnt how to stay younger. more vivacious, and how to be actively enerQetic . . . """" how hormonal replacement can add to the quality of your life as well as giving you a longer life . . . LHnt how the controversial treatment used by the stars has become a safe treatment LHrw of the latest cancer studies in relation to the use of estrogen and progesterone. H r• w..t to be ctp•c and to enjoy the optimum of health and live longer, all while appearing younger, this is a lecture you cannot miss. • llh dhc...ao. of the new cold laser beam· ~rapy you will have an dpsSortunlty to aee one of these remarkable space age machines In operation. lkt .... of,..._., suffering from arthritis, problems with the joints and spine -even asthma, have found great retlef with this new cold laser beam therapy. n.r. h .. --.. for the lecture: however! aeatlng rnervatJona are ll9CU11ry. SIMpty call tf\e King Famlty Medical Center In the Fairview/Warner Plaza, 2800 W. W1rn,r. Cati· 71~9403. GIV9 them your,,.,,... and how . many will be In your paify. ._, .... ltt This could be one of the moat lnfcwmattw lectut'M In your Hfe. Siatlng • limited. Call today' ror your ,..,.,atttma. Th• Soutti Co•t Plaza Hotet .. fuet North of the 405 Frwy. Take the Brlatd Ot't""f8('nP. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MonQay, ~pril 20, 1981 ~each .~oWers .. _ . ....,,.destroy crops ............... WHO AM I? -Orphaned by 1906 San Francisco earthquake, Edna Davis or Eva Hutchins -remains uncertain of her identi- ty, and her mother's . "1 've felt a ll my life like I've never stood on solid ground," she says of her unknown roots. Reincarnation a// air planned LOS ANGELES CAP> There's something new in recycling these days a Reincarnation Ball, which 1s being brought to life by a woman who says she was once Queen Isabella. The come-as-you-were costume affair was an- nounced by Ehzabeth Long, who claims to be a psychic and the former Queen or Castille, Spain. Also making the announcement was singer- director-agent Roy Childs, who says the event's musical seJections will include oldies. Ms Long said that no proof of past identity will be required and gues ts will be allowed to come as "the persons they would like to have been." 1( they prefer. Ms. Long, who remembers sending Columbus off on h.is journey lo America, said she decided to organize the ball because "so many people think they have lived a previous life." . ..·~" .... ··:· ::·... .. ···: ··•·•· . ... . ; ·:·:·.· .·.;·:·:-:··-.. :·· SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Stran1llng under a glut of 1ood harvests, California cling peach growers are paying themselves to rip out at least 2,000 acres of trees. Two years of perf~ct peach· growing weather has combined with a declining market for canned peaches, producing a six-month backlog of canned peaches in warehouses, accord In g to officials of the California Canning Peach Association. "WE HA VE heavy supplies on collision with depress ed de- mand." said William Allewelt, pres ident o f the Tri-Valley Growers canning cooperative. Cling peaches. which stick to their pits. are used for cannjng, while {reest one pe aches are generall)"lsold fresh The peach association hopes to r e du ce the supply or cling peaches. and drive up their prices. by paying farmers $50 to remove trees producing a ton of pe aches, up to a maxi mum of $750 an acre. Association me mbe rs are as sessing themsel ve!i to finance the pay m ents They say the peach glut ha:. driven the pnce of peaches ilnd ha~ forc~d the g r o w er o Y.ned can nin g cooperatives to lose money on each case sold Charlie Griffiths. \ice pres 1d e nt f o r P ac ifi c Coast Trail work due YOS EMITE NATIONA L PARK <API Special funding to rebuild a trail damaged in a rock slide that claimed three lives here was approved by the National Park Se rvice About $150.000 will be used lo restore the upper Yosemite F all trail obliterated in a Nov 15 slide , 'S\ Bxecuti~e ~{)elnonslrato ciearance , .. ELDORADOs, COUPE DE VILLEs AND SEVILLEs SALE PRICED THROUGH MONDAY I · Closed Easter Sunday• Open Until 9 P.M . Monday! THE TRUTH ABOUT FUNERAL PRICES In greater Orange County At Harbor Lawn Mortuary people are important. We believe that every family deserves a perfect final tribute . The family selects the type of service it wants and the price to be paid. .. CREMATION •••••••••••••••••••• 5325 Or Choose From Other 5546 Types Of Se"ices From •...••.••••. ~:.~~~T:ROM .............. · · · · · · · · 597 Producers, said the case of ~eacbes be sells wholesaJe tor $13.30 costs $16.25 to purchase and process. HE SAID Pacific Coast, one of three big canning cooperatives, lost $1 million last year. The peach a ssociation said that by March, the surplus of pea c hes h a d mount e d to 12,471 ,304 cas es, equal to al- lmos t half the 2.4 ,990 ,000 cases ~old last year. The voluntary tree removals upset Harry Snyde r. West Coast r e giona l dire c tor o f th e 'Consumers Unio n . lie s aid growers "are getting together in an anticompetitive fashion to all agree to limit produce " The re suit. he said. will be highe r prices for consumers GRIFFITHS disagr eed "To the outsider, it looks vicious like we'r e laking good fruit when people a re going hungry," he said "Bul its :..t matter of hf{• and death to the farmer lf he k eeps h<1rvt-s tin g in s u c h a bundance. hl' Y.ill kill himself and the indu:.tr~ " APPOINTED -The naming of forme r Congressma9 J e rome Waldie by GOV\ Bro wn t o the s ta te farm labor board has been de- nounced by a farm leadet who objected that Waldie, of Contra Costa County. "has alway~ sided with the Uniteq F a rm Worke r!> ·· Appointed. s imultaneously \.\as forme' s t ~le Sen Alfn:d Song Crillle victim fund millions in red SACRAMENTO <AP t The state progra m lo pay v1cl1ms of vwlent crimes 1s $2 7 mllhon in t h e red . and th e Rr o \\n a dministratio n 1s H•c k 1 n~ e m ergency illd to s tart the mont'~ flowing again T he program stopped pa) in~ benefits last month when 11 ran out of mone~ unde r the we1~ht of a 30 percent increase in th(• number of claims Officials say the increase 1s caused an part by the number of violent cri mes and in part b) publ1l'1t.> about the program l 'ndt'r l'Urrent law. tht' pro gram coulc1 not p<i} claims again until the O!'\\ -;talt· budget tool( effC'('l .July I Hut an :.11rk lo \ssl'mblyman John Thur man. D ~od c!>lo. said th<Jt the Bro\\n ildm1111stration has ,1sked rhurman to put $2 7 m1ll111n in ">lall' fun<l!-for the v1ct1m prnj!ram tnlo h1~ AB698, a bill in lht• A~semhl_v GOING OUT OF BUSINESS EVERYTHING IN STORE GOES! 1727 W.....tclff Dr .. N•wport l•odt 646-16 71 DICK METTEE FINE FURNITURE AND INTERIOR DESIGN Most service to Denver. 4 fligh ts daily. $110 one way- Fares subject to change without notice. ....... s,K• __ ..,... ce•11t ....... s395 ' .............. c ...................... . . -J Just call your travel agent and say you want to fly Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060 . J I Harbor Lawn· Mount OiiW • I ·Memorial ParK · Mortu~ " ·Mausoleums· ·crema1ory ' . . . . The U.S. Forest Service !1111 it has a big problem eJong Juan Creek in the Cleveland lona1 Forest east of San Juan C lstrano. · Too many people up there. aeys the USFS. Litter. lUegal 1tctlvitles. Accidents that create liability problems for the federal •ovemment. The USFS answer to these problems? End the yearly practice of installing dams along the creek. If ponds aren't creat· ed, people won't be as attracted to the area and the problems will go away -so goes the USFS re,asoning. . What the USFS fails or re· fuses -to recognize is that the p4rpose of the dams is to provide ponds that can be stocked with trout by the state Department of Fish and Game. This practice has created one of the few fishing opportunities in or near the county. It's unfair that parents who want t-0 take their kids out to try the new fishine pole or the serious fisherman who desires the challenge of catching a trout without traveling hundreds of miles, suffer because the USFS and other Jaw enforcement agencies cannot or, will not, con· trol the other problems that exist. It's also rather unsettllne that the USFS, an agency whoae principal duty is to promote public enjoyment of nalionul forest lands, in this case wants to do just the opposite. Driver funds needed If a bill now in the hands of the Legislature is not approved and signed by the governor, state fund· ing for driver education in high schools will end in June. The measure would extend funding for four years. But Gov Brown has said he believes driver education should be paid for by local school districts ouN>f local laxes or by diverting wl\atever other state funds they may be entitled to. Given the financial state of most school dis tricts these days, that's obviously a pipe dream. Ori ver education couldn't possibly be given priority wh en academic subJects, enrichment classes and sports programs are being cut right and left. The absurd part of this is that funding for driver education comes from traffic fines paid to the state, in the amount of $19 mHlion a year . That's money Brown would like to use elsewhere. But most law enforcement agencies, the Department of Motor Vehicles and the insurance companjes seem con vinced that driver education is a valuable con- tribution to public safety. It's certainly important to parents. who would have to pay for private driving instruction wiless their teen-agers wail until they are 18 to qualify for a li cense. Both in- surance rates and the issuance of Licenses for those under 18 now are contingent upon driver ed certification. While driver education courses don't turn out perfect drivers, they at least guarantee that the kids know the rules of the road and have had some com- petent instruction in handling an automobile clearly a necessity in California. No doubt the governor could find other uses for the traffic fine revenue. But in the interest of the dn ving public it should be kept in the driver education program. No time for i~rance With modern technology rapidly shrinking the globe. and with the increasing in · terdependence of nations for re- sources and commodities. it was startling to learn last week that a majority of today 's college s tudents are ill -informed on foreign affairs and. even worse, that they don't care An extensive survey of 3,000 students on 185 campuses was conducted by the Educational Testing Service and the non- profit Council on Learning. Not one of the students answered more than 84 of the 101 test questions correctly. Overall, seniors answered only 50 percent correctly, freshmen 41 percent and two-year college students 40 percent. Only one senior in 10 scored better than 67 on the ex- am. given in multiple-choice format which should have made it easier. • A questionnaire that ac- companied the exam gave some clue to this outpouring of ig- norance. More than one-third of the students said they were not interested in foreign affairs and rarely read articles on in- ternational s ubjects Small wonder educators at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service voiced alarm and called upon the nation's col- leges to upgrade courses in the field of international relations. The upgrading could well begin at lower school levels where youngsters now learn little more than the geography, history and governmental processes of their own state and the United· States. For too many, the rest of the world scarcely exists. But the rest of the world comes closer every day and ignorance will not keep it away. Opinions expressed in the space abOve are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are ttrose of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit- ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92b26. Phone (7U) 6"42-4321. L.M. Boyd/Old golf trick Seasoned citizens who long ago took up golf will tell you that courses once were equipped at each hole with • box of sand and a bucket of water tomaketees. If you want to speed up an oncom- tna sneeze, look at the sun. So ad· vises a Montana man. For re850ns unknown, he says, that tickling wam- ln1 will convert to a sneeze almost immediately when you turn your eyes toward extreme brightness. Our Laniuage m an ls still trying to track down the origin of that term "1brlnkin1 vlolet." And of "the wfJoJe nJne yard8.'' And of "naked as •Jaybird.'' Recfntly wrote that "aubbook· keeper" hu more conaecuUve dou· bit ltden t,f)an any otber word. Just arrived from a t Jndly cJtent 11 a clipped col~mn -m y own from many years •lb -whJcb ootet the Job Utle of a certaln 100 man known aa a "raccooanookkeep.er ," Meroory 'D\Ult be 1llpp\n1. Not even every student of the Bible knows that the name· of "Galilee" comes from the Hebrew word for cir cle. . Did J say only the cat , camel and g1r affe run by moving both left teas and then both right lees alternately? Add that harness horse known as the pace~. please. Most favorable months for buying stocks are May and October. Studies of the seasonal action of stocks over the last 80 years so indicates, I'm told. Althou1h Washincton, D.C., ba1 both an "I" Street and • "K " Street. It has no" J " Street. Wby l• duatT Q. lD a tYJ)lcal buJlftpt1 bow lon1 doea lt take a matador to kill a bull7 And bow many bulla doH the matador kUl in one aftes;noon? A. About 20 m1nut.ea. Two bullt. The better paJd of those matadon can make $85,000 ln oae day's work, Ind dentally. Thomas P. H•l•y • PubllSMr Thomas Kelvll Editor ••rlNN'• KreaMc" Edttorl•I Peoe Editor } ' l'Ml NUtf.>?f! Tax enforcers miss mobsters WA SIU NG TON Uncle Sam has an l mpr~11t1lv<> arsenal of weapons to use a11alnat lallpllyera who Intentionally or accldenlally 1klmp on what they o we the gov~mment. Without warning or court order, the federal apparatus can seize all or part of your bank account, confiscate your paychecks or slap a lien on your busi- ness or personal property. But for some reason, while the feds are sometimes overzealous in their pursuit of small·time chiselers and befuddled citizens. they have been strangely negligent in their pursuit of drug traffickers and big-time racketeers TWO SPECIAL ACTS of Congress, passed in 1970, empower the Justice Department to seize mobsters' assets in addition to civil fines. Yet the number of forfeitures under these provisions can fairly be described as paJtry Jn short. racketeers are getting better treatment than run-of-the-milJ tax evaders. Through March 1980, assets forfeited and potential forfeitures in narcotics cases prosecule4 under the two statutes amounted to a piddling S3.5 million. Yet law enforcement officials figure that the illicit drug trade generates about $54 billion a year My associate Tony Capaccio h as searched through the records and found some of the most flagrant examples of mobsters being let off the hook by federal bloodhounds who track petty tax cheaters to their financial graves Here they are: Jose Valenzuela's organization rake~ in $10 million to $16 milLion a year Q J-AC-1-Al_D_IRS_D_I -~ from its heroin operations, which ex- tended Crom laboratories in Mexico to the sidewalks of New York. Valenzuela Ii ved high off the hog; he spent $63,000 in cash on luxury cars dunng one three- year period, and put down $396.000 mostly in cash to buy and redecorate a mans ion in San Marino. Calif. Valenzuela and 69 members of his dope ring were convicted, but only S55,000 was assessed in fines No assets we re seized. -THE "BLACK TUNA" marijuana s muggling ring beaded by Robert Meinster and Robert Platshorn handled more than a million paunds of dope, earning gross receipts conservatively estimated at $300 million The gang spent thousands on yacht~ and ex· ecutive Jets and even ran up a $60,000 restaurant tab in a single night Yet when the feds attempted to seize two re- sidences worth $750,000, five yachts and an auction business that was used as a front, they wound up with $16.000 worth o r asset.!> In his prime , Leroy "Nicky " Barnes ran the biggest heroin operation in the United States, accordmg to the Justice Department He and his gang earned millions pushing Junk at the re- tail level in the streets of Harlem and the South Bronx Barnes himself had five Mercedes Benzes. a Cadillac. a Corvette and a Citroen Maseralt His 1974 and 1975 lax returns listed a total or S527 ,000 in .. mis· cellaneous" income He had Sl 5 m1lhon invested in M1 ch1gan real estate. The G men put Barnes away for life and fined him are you ready? - $125.000. There were no criminal forfeitures A convicted associate of Barnes , Joseph "Jazz" Hayden. listed $204,140 1n misct>llaneous income on his 1975-76 tax returns He drew a 15 year sen- tence, a $25.000 fine and forfeited not a penny Old things have a special meaning I 'm always on the lookout for something good a bout people Often months go by. There was a story last week about Roman Totenberg, a violinist whose violin was stolen last May after a con- cert. When he was young he'd lived on almost nothing to save enough to buy it and not only was it of great sentimental value to him but also he'd used it to play for almost 40 years. The musician was quoted as saying it was like having a child kidnapped and he didn't know whether h.?'d ever play again with another instrument. If the story ended happily and added to the flimsy proof we have that people are basically good, the thief would have read about the musician's grief and re- turned the violin. If be did, I never read about it, but even if he didn't the story isn't all bad for people. Our affection for the tools we use is one of our more pleasant characteristics. IF YOU'RE A concert violinist, you like your violin but it doesn't have to be that special. lf you're a carpenter, I suspect you have one saw you have a special feeling for. IC you do a lot of cooking, you probably have one pan you wouldn't trade for all the others. Years ago l knew an elderly man who bad whittled birds for a hobby most of bis life. He had a knife his father had given him when he was 15 and it was sh arpened down to almost nothing, but it was still s harp and he was happiest when he had it in his hand. I suppose that knife was one of the mos t endunng things in his hfe. It was always there. always dependable, and there is no way to estimate the total pleasure it had given him over the years. WE AU NEED some of the material ~hings that provide continuity to our I~"' -AllY-Rl-Oll_H_ ....... ~ 1Jves by always being there and always being the same. As a writer, 1 type a Jot. Tht: English la nguage is often slip- pery. evasive and compl~x. but my typewnter is simple. easy and dependa- ble. It doesn't care how poorly I may be using the language. ll knoc:Cs the words. on the paper with a loud. comforting clack. I'm very fond of my typewriter, and if someone stole it. l'd never write again. Oh, I suppose I'd write again because actually I have 17 m ore like It. This is an Underwood No. 5 made about 1920 and J buy every old Underwood No. 5 I find. I can only write on this model typewriter and 1 don't want to run out of them before l run out of time or things to say. Most of us tend to be more sent1· mental about some of the tools we use than i!> absolute!} necrssary but it's one of our most charming faults I even like the trait in myself I have a shavtn~ brush in the medicine cabinet in the bathroom that I carried with me through four years in the Army. It's s pent time in Fort Bragg, England. Normandy, Germany. and it has been to Berlin and Moscow. J 'vc been shav- ing with an electric razor for 20 years now but I wouldn't think of discarding that tired.looking old s having brush. It served me well. and every once in a while. when I've let my beard grow over the weekend, I'll lather up with it and shave with a blade just to let the brush know 1 haven't forgotten it. Most of us get attached to our cars If wt keep them for a few years. I've owned cars that l liked and felt terribly disloyal to when l turned them in on a trade for a new car. It seemed so un· gratefuJ of me lo just dump it and leave it in the hands of some hard-hearted, secondha nd _ car dealer. He wouldn't care. He'd sell it lo anyone in order to make a buck off •l I WOULDN'T try lo defend our at- tachment to inanimate objects on grounds of rl!ason or logic, but you have to admit. caring for the things that serve us is one of the few nice things we do. Trickle down economic theory doubtful Here is the slc.inny on how Ronald Reaaan's revival of Richard Nlxoo'1 Trickle Down Theory of Economics will h-elp the rich at the expenae of you and me. · . A keystone to tbe Reaaan economic packale la a m_.or tax cut. The exact amount ta not aetUed upoo, but 10 per- cent • year for the next three yean it the moat commonly heard figure. Thia 1111111111 tu cut la paired with the mu1lve cuta in covt!mment 1pendlnf now ~ by the Rea1an troops. · Tll• ldea ot the tax cut IOUDdl woa· duful Uc.pt th¥ It la wronc. TM ldu la to cut~•'• tu" 10 that people· will aavt sntrt. l'be bank woWcl ~ tben have kU ol mOIMY to ltnd for lnve1t- mat into Mw tOo&I, plania.IDd .cafllp. ment. Thll, ln turn. wC>Pld Pl'OdMe a higher level of productivity which will whip lnflatJon and it wlll also generate jobs to curb unemployment. THE llEASON I say that th.la theory won't work ls based on past observa· tlons of human psychology, For the averace fam.lly maltin& $15,000 a year, espel'ts prtdlct 1 10 percent lax cut would mean $880 more lo that famUy 's pocket. 1b1t It hardly enou,it to oftset the Jump In Social Securlt.y taxes that came Jan. 1. Contrut that wtth what 1 tu. out ol 10 , percent meana to the rtcb family mat, ln1 $200,000 a year. That fa.mlly wouJd have about '30,000 more ln the old aocll. . . significant job nor do they boost in- dustrial productivity. Jn fact, all they do is shovel more coal on the fires of runaway lnnation by driving up the price of such Inflation hedges. The 'trickle Down Theory haa never worked before and anybody who thinks It will work now is either amoq the wealthy or a dev"t~ of the Good Tooth Fairy. • ~- - ~· Cl••· .... -----... -~-10 Orange C<>aat DAILY PILOT/MC>nd«y, Aprll 20. 1981 Days laden with waits BY LOVISE COOK If you make lt throu1h tbe moml.nl • .-..-..._..-GUEST REPORT you can head for lunch. Better leave I'm waltlnl for We. eal'ly or you'll wait for a table. Waiting for the doctor. WattJnJ for tbe ( A little quick sbopptn1? Walt your bUJ. Waltlng In the 1upermarbt. Walt· tum at the counter. Theo wait to see ii ln1 CMl the telephone. Waitioa for tbe want a batb, you'll have to wait for the ·what you want is lo atoek. And don't elevator. WalUna for the li&bt to tub to fill. toraet to waltfor your change. chan1e. Five minutes maybe. A 1overnment 1urvey shows the PERHAPS A DASH to the bank. averaae wait for a doctor's apPOlntment ONCE YOU'RE dre11ed there Whatever line you pick inevitably will la one week. Then tbere's hilff an hour shouldn't be any waltlnl there -lt's off turn out to be the one with the customer ln the walUfta room once you set to the to work. U you llve ln an apartment who wants to deposit 326 pennies or has doctor's office. buildlna. you'll have to wall for tlle six sepal"ate transactions. ll's no surprise. elevator. It's always going up when WE A.RE onEN reminded that we you'regoin1 down. It 's the sa m e stor y at the sr:ind ooe-thlrd of our lives asleep _ Do you drive to work? lo winter you'll super1Uarket. Al least you can read the f Stud! b wait for the car to warm up. In sum· ma1aztnes and scan the paperbacks e 1ht hours out 0 every 2A. es Y ·mer, you'll wait for the air conditioner while you're waiting. When you reach the television industry indicate the to cool thinJ(s off. the head of the line. the clerk has either average person spends 6·7 hours a day In a car pool? Is there ever a morning left the cash register to round up two watching the tube. f That leaves more than nine hours to when you don 't have to wait or roJls of quarters or announces that it's wait. someone? Or a day when all of the time for bis or her break -and you Wak'e up in the morning. 11 you're the lights are green? wait while the new clerk slowly, ever so "U you think for one momeat you can lmpreu me by nervous type, you may lie there for a Then the re's the telephone. You slowly, gets set up. doing 10methinl nice on Sec:retarlel' Day , Wedoe9day, minute or two before the alarm goes off pick up the nnging phone. "So and so ts Looking for a little relaxation after a MANSION -Actor • George Hamilton h~> J placed The Cedars.~ a his 1828 Mississippl~ •. plantation home, on )ij the market. The , price for the 137-acre· :.l property? $1.2 'q million. ''q IJ • you're npt." -waiting for the bell to ring or the calling. Please hold on." Or you make a bard day's walling? The best movie -----------r------------buzzer to buzz. call and get one o ( those an. probably has a line half way around the Well test s .)~ FRESNO <APl AJl BA , head ' __ P_U_B_LI_C_N_OT __ ICE Want some coffee? There goes noun ce ments : ··A 11 o f o ur block. U there's no line, it's because you , another minute or two, waiting for the representatives are busy. Please wait got there at the wrong time and you'll NOT1ce 1Nv1T1No ••ot water to boil. and someone will be with you in a have to wait for the next showing. $17 ,000 federal grant will 'i permit Fresno County to f test about 1,000 private' wells for the banned' l pesticide DBCP. ·' J • b Holle• 1• M re11, 11•v•n ,.,., ,.,. Into the shower. Wait a few seconds minute." Click. Five minutes of re-Home to bed. And a little more wait· '""""' eou ... Dhtrl<t 01 or.... until the temperature's just right. If you corded music. ing. To fall asleep J 0 IMnl of TNllMa Of IM Coast Con>· County, c..lltornle, will receive weled.--------------------------------------- FR NO (AP> - ichael Cardenas, bead f tbe-"'$naJl Business Adminilstralio o, re· sig,oed bis post cm the State ~liter Community Colleg.e District Board h«l[e. , l --;,er of resigna-tion wa accepted by tnastee:y~wbo expect to name~placement at a M ~ S meeting. 'i~.d&llas served on the :.&b.aiil eight yeai;s. 11ld1 111> to 11:00 • m., w.-ldey, Aprll 2•. ttll •I th• Purcllealn9 O.per1,.....1 ot aeld coll ... dl1trlct l0<eled M 1J10 -· A....,.,., Colle MHe, c.lllomle, et wtlkll llme wld lllcl1 will bit Pllblldy --.,,., rMG tor: PURCHASE OF MICAOCOM· PUTER SYSTl!MS, GWC. All bids er• to be In eccotdenu wltll llM l id Form lnllrucllons end C:-1· Ilona end ~lllcellon1 wlllcll ••• now on Ille -Mey be M<IKH In Ille ofllce of 1,.. l'ur<"-1"11 Agent of Wlcl coll• Ol1trk1 Eecll ~ ITIUll 1..om11 •Ith 1111 llld e <..,...I clle<k, ce<tlfled Cll«k, or ~'bond -PllYMll• lo u. order ot U. C.O.SI Community Co41-Dlatrlct loerd of Tr111tMs In en emounl not leu tlwn five perunt 0%1 of llM Mini bid e1 • VUM•nlff tllel I ... bld<Mr wlll ente< Into the proposed COf'llrec:I II Ille -h •w•rded to him. In ttoe • ...,,1 of fall11re lo enler In-. llEA'I~ NOTICES lo tucll <-••Cl. the Pl'~' of u.e . CIMKll Wiii ... fortelled, M In tlle cu• of • bond, Ille lull aum _..., wlll be lcwlelted to ..id toll-dlltrk1 I Ho bl-INIY wit-•• hit Did lcw .. ...f'AZIO period of 1cw1y.11,,. 14ll cleYl ah•• . ~-rr;:r.-• Ille dei. wt lor Ille °""'"II 111erwo1. Vli'lL"t;NT FAZIO. resident TM &oerd of Trusteea , ... ,.,,.. ,,,. or C~r.i ~esa. Cu Passed prlvueoe of re1ec11nQ .,,y and ell blctt ~wAy o n April 13. 1981 at the or to welw eny lrr99<11arille1 or In· ak7 6f'P9'.1re IS s urvived b) hlS formelll~~n,.:~ b~d =~~~t>IOdlng )'111 e Vita Fazio o r Costa Sec..-,,&o.rdofTrUllMI Me11.a. Ca i son John Fazwor Coast ecwnm..w.lty co11-Oh ,.. __ . • C· b h trlct ""'sta Mesa. a t rot er Publl"'9d Or-coett Dally Piiot, Carolo Faz1oor R ome Ital). 4 Aprll 1>.211. '"' 11u-t1 sister s Angella Agosta. 1-)-ances Lore. Mane Fazio uhd Antonma Plazz10 all of PU~LIC NOTICE P r a n ce Rosan· will be reell C·1" elJ on Monday: April 20. 1981 NCHITHOaAflfO• al 7 JOPM al the P1erc1 JUOICIALOIST•rCT 1111...-....--,A- Brothers Bell Broad" a~ ,.......,c..""5 Ch apel with MassorChnst1an PLAINTIFF c A w ACTION rial on Tuesda). Apnl 21. ltEN~~":·i~ANT SUNWEST I 81 at 10 OOAM at St DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, J achim'~ Cathohe Chureh JOSEPH FAMME., DAVID PALASH, I tcrment at Holy Sepulcher DOES 1 ~~~ullve, mete rv. Oran11I' Ca CAHNUM•••:A·!Mo47 ierc e Brothrrs Bell NOT1c1r1 v ......... --.TIM r o a d w a \' M o r t u a r y <._. IMY •* ...... 1 Y .. wl..._. . ,_ ...... __ ,,_,..... d_._r_cc_t_or_s _______ 1.1u.1. • ura. ,...,.. -ltlfer'Met._ -· \ I ....ca •OTHHS l&L..OADWAY wotlTUAl'f 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 U.L Tl ID GO OM SMITH I TUTHIU WHTCUff CHA'IL 427 E 17th St Cos1a Mesa 646-9371 AVISOI U .... M U.. ..,_._. .... •1.__. _..._..... _ • .,., •I• •••I-I• • -•• ... U•. ..................... &.M ...... ..._ ......... If yow wltlll to -Ille -I<• of .,, ettomey In INI ....et«,.,... IMllld dO to prompUy IO 111•1 your wrllle11 ••-•, If""".' tn#IY be filed on time. SI Utled-IOllcltM el consejo dO Ull ·~ ... ette UUlllO, d-rl ftecorlo lnmedlelemente, de ut• menere, ..., r_.te escrtte, 11 lley ......... _... -.... ..,_. tlempo I TO THE DEFENDANT: A Clvll complel11t llU Deen llled DY IM ple lntlff -Inst.,... II you wllll to dO· lend llllt 1-11, you must, wlt11l11 • cley1 efW 11\11 ,_ Ii _,,.., on yo11, II .. wllll 11111 court • written r-to IM ,_ .. 1111. UnlHS YOll ' do so, y-dOfeult will be .,.l•red on rtDCIU OTHDS SMfTHS' MOITUAAY 627 Main S I Hunting1on Beach 536-6539 r AClfiC YtlW Ml:MOllAl rAIK Cerrelery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pacific View Onve NewPorl Beach 644·2700 McCCMlMICIC MOITUAllH Laguna Beach 49-4·94t5 Laguna Hills 768·093J San Juan Captslrano 495·t776 !tUillM;"" LA ..._MT. OUYE Mortuary• Cemetery Cre""'tory 1625 Gisler Ave . appllcetlon of Ille plelntlff, -th11 court mey enter • ludQment ~ln1t YOll Ir>< h relief demended In the complelnt, which coutd re111lt In 1er11ls11men1 of w•oe•. telling ol m_, or ~., cw otller reu..i ••· q ... 1ted In IM complelnt DATl!D· AUOUll ll, 1'79. ly Ille Clerk -Vlrolnle Devl1, Deputy o•o•o• IYICUL.Mll An-, .. &..r- ... f'l ........... w ..... l•lte• ....... 1, "'"'· ca. Miii Tel: U:IS>U..WI P111>llllled OrenQe Co.st Delly Plloi Apr. 20, 27, AMy '· 11, '"' 1960-tl PUBLIC NOTJCE --------- N·TUU NOTICa 0" •ULlt TaANS,.ll It 11ea. •ttt-4111 u.c.c.> TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Mollee h lleret>y gl•en lo Ille redlton of Tl!llRILL BEASLEY - ERltY ll!ASLl!Y, Tra11sferort, llOH b11slneu •ddreu h 050 l•rr•n<• '"•rtiwey, lnrlne, C-y of ....... SI.et• of Cellt-• ....... Dulk trensler Is Hovi to be -to OHi OUR CLEANERS, INC., a Cellfornle orporatlon, Tr-te<M, w,_ ll<nl· •n •ddr eu 11 4722 lerre11c 1 Perkwey, lrlllne, County of 0r.,,.., Stete of C.lllOf'llla tZ714. TM pr-rty to be tr-i.rr-ed 11 Costa Mesa 5-40-555-4 o loceted M 4UO ..,.rence Perllwey, l~===:===~~ Irvine, Unit ''P", Counly of Or.,.., Stete of CAlllOrnfa n714 . PUBLIC NOTICE Tllla bulk 1r ... s1er Is 1ut>lect to C.llMftla Uniform C-.n:lel C.- --------1«11on•tt11. NOTICS TO caaDITOIH Said ,...._,y la cletcrll>eod In 99Mrel o,.euuc TRMIP•• es: All &10<11. In lrH•, ll•t11rn, is.a..,,,_."' u.c;.c.1 ""'INMfll -eood w111 of .. ~ oll<• 11 lle relly t lven 10 11,. lmprovtmenta, '"""" 9'M tr.-c ,..,. of GAYLO•D WAGNER ..... n•IM .. tMt .., clMnlno Dual-. M MIE E. WAON811, Tret11ltro"• IUIOWn 11STOHICllEl!K CLflANlllS ___ ..., .. , ..... Wfllftt e nd loc•t•CI •l USO •• ,, .. IC. I ~. City of ..._,, llffcll, P ... IL••Yi. lrvlM, Unit "P'', County of ef Or ...... SAMe of Callfonlle, Of'Mtt, -of C.llMmlll '271'. e Wiil tnftllet II~ 10 lie TIM Wiil tr...,.,. wlll lie -• • U e A L 0 W I N, IC I a IC _ ... on et eftet tN 2NI _....of J- T• aPlllSal. lflfC., • C.lllonil• '"'· • .-Cllll'IH m•y ... "' .. ·' 11t1911, Tr...,._, w11oM llWll• WELLS PARGO IANIC, N.A., llCl'WW -...,_ 11 29 aedlllll, City et OetN""*"' ae: ._,_ No. ..WI, CeltaMaM,c:.dyf/fOr ...... St ... f/f MON~ Ceftw Ori,,., •ttJO, callfer'ML N-,..n IN<ll, Cewlty ef Or .... , Tll9 11'....-tv .. lie tr-lerrM 11 MA• et Cllllfenlle. -.Cr.._. Ill ...-11 •1 All llOclL 111 All clelml nut lie ~-9t INI ,, ... llllllnt, ~.,,_. ............ lt\'1 • ..,0fJ-. ,..,,_.... ..tll of tllll Tr-i AteftCY ~ Ult Milk tNMf•r el.. lftc!WM tM klle•11 u SEVEN SEAi THa tr~ flf llWW 1ic-, Ill ~ TllAYl!L IP«CIALllTS •llCI __... t -,ell<ltll!laMlatlll9 ...... "4.,w et Ht "C" 111--'* A-, CJty el le tM .... M wNdl .. l'-9f *--~ 9Mclt, c:-ity ., OrMllt, .. .,....,,... .... ~·· ., ....... ~ A.keflelk9"w ... ~. n. Wiil .,........ wtH • -Se.., .. .._ ..... .,......,.., ... _ ..... .,.,. ...... .., .... .,. ..... ... .--...... !flt et tl:lt e.11'1. et w•ITEllN ,,...,.,.... w ....... ...,.. a.I MUTUAL ~ COllPOAATIO.., ._, If ....... frwm .. *'"• tnl AMllUM; Ariltl\ lt-'1, ..._ ... ...,_, ~ t07S """"" ,_..., freM It t ... $. Yer'M, ...... ttl1 Utlft "A" llyM 08M .. MlteAM T...clll,Cel...,.a. et•r ... ~"'"• Cellfer11t•1 VI•• ''*.., 1e1t ••"' tllllle clal-111 c1 .. 1t•r .. sata u11IW9rtlt1 Dr1 ... UleetC,_,...,_ .......... ......,,, 1,,,1111, ~I Tr..,_.~ ,.,. , ......... ----. ,..-.,, ~l ........ .._ .... ,,.....,.... lhc ...... 0.-.. .... "'"""' '" -···-· *'-· .... ,, tlM .. .,_...,,. •• ,QAlw!M. Tr ........ tllr .. ,.a ..,_ ,_.. ~ ...... "" .... ;.... ..... ........ . ~ ....... ,... ~ ...... , IUl'll I~'-· .............. , lllC., I • ..,.. ......... A~Ui........ -~ *""'"·Kitti .. LU-MM;a.A. o.ir-.,...,., .................. .. ,,., .. Ulllil. ~ ......... _ ....... . .... ..3!!!!!?:!:! ......!..-:::. CMle o.f" ....... ~-,,: .. ~·~·· ...... ·' ~ AIW'll a."" ftO.ft ... .. • ...... ·;o \ .. Chextra heads a full fleet of banking services in Home Federal Country. Chextra ... the flagship account at your Personal Financial Center. 1bere' s smooth financial sailing for all your money in Home Federal Country. 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Huntington Beach Office: 2111 Main Street • 531-1511 6olsa-Golden w,st Office: 15091 Golden West Street • 898·0934 Laguna Hiiis Office: 24300 Paseo de Valencia • 770· 7171 Legune Niguel Office: 30131 Ta.vn Center Ortve, SUite 145 • 495·2680 Irvine Ottlce: 4543 Campus Drive • 762-6161 · San Juan Capistrano Office· 31972 Camino Capistrano • 493-0601 Santa Ana Ofnce. 17th end Main Street • 835-4336 SUI 8each Office: 1350 Pac1llc Coast HW)'. • (714) 898·3481 (213) 596--6576 Home Federal Saving$ and L n Association of San DI ;o .. r ANGELES <AP) -The· b Ji' ~ a bit lon1er atjd_ a couple pounds have •ettlll a.round 'SDl&lle, but wbeC:-It really ti -in the ~ocal etiords -DY Mathia hasn't chan1ed b IA 25 years, . Arwl for tbe countless millions W'Ye srown up, ar.oWQ.i~er ailf -most importantly - romanced to the matcbliiias Mathis tenor, that's cause "'*' celebration. Mathis ts celebrating, too -his silver aqoiversary in show business, something few tet to do while still performiqf' and selling records (more tbt,n 100 million worldwide since 1956). same kind of. music that an awfU.1 lot of people 4J1 over the world~ ll'a not "ftty complicated, ~ .. isn•t too pYdKecbn.lcal and C e bad a lQt -of very outata~ people in n\y musical canlir 1 1uldin1 me. · "\WE'VE AVOIDED fads ," he •al&. adding : ··Every time sometb!n~f new comes in , I'm absolut.elj tempted to jump on the bandwagon." But While he's experimented with other styles, Mathis has never abandoned tfle kind of rOft\fJlil4 ballad that swept him to the ,top -"Wonderful, Wond~tful , '' "Chances Are," "Misty," "It's Nol for Me To SPEAK.ING OF recor<ls. It's Say," to name a few. considered unlikely that anyone ''It-'1 the thing that I feel that J will topple the longevity mark. do best, and I'd be silly. I think, set by his ''Johnny's Greates\ not to concentrate on t hat as mts," which spent an tncredll>le ·• "1uoh as _wssible," he said. 9'n·plus years on Billbpard He admitted the h its have magazine's album charts. / bffn harder to come by of late. At 45, Mathis -once ••. .. ,'t1.bere .is .so much music no~ athletic scholarship student a( tfl. ~e ass1mJlated by the public San Francisco State -has: t°fiat the market that I had become a poised performer wh~, ~-lmost .a corner on for ~ great talks of his career with an ap· :r: tong ttme roma nllc·lype pealing if somewhat reserved l>allads that market has dis· candor. appeared. Now everything, even ··1 really don't think there's the ballads, h~ve a ve~r heavy much o ( a secret," he said of h.is pulse beat behind them. longevity in a conversation al his Hollywood Hills home. "l th.ink perhaps I sing the Airport noise eff eels cited OAKLAND (AP > Health problems including high blood pressure, poor hearing and heart trouble are more prev· alent among those who live in airport noise zones than other people, according to the director of an anti-noise group. Jim Buntin. director or the Center for A Quiel Environment. told a convention o f the Ca lifornia Environmental Health Association that people in noise zones also drink more and bave babies born smaller and sooner than average ··It indicates something is go- ing on and we need lo take a closer look at health effects of airport noise." Buntin said. MATIUS, WHO HAS sung so many songs that h e rents warehouse space to store ar· rangements, also found that two main sources of material in his early days -Broadway musicals and songwriters who sold their tunes rather than sing them themselves -have all but dried up. "Now what I do ls what most- ly everyone else does -Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross. They £ind a producer or producers who write the songs, arrange the songs and produce the songs, and live with them for two or three weeks or a month or whatever amount or time it takes .. Cu rrently, for exam ple, Mathis 1s working on an album with producers Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers or Chic. Although he once put out four records a year "and thought nothin~ or it," Mathis now spends less time in the studio and devotes six months of the NOT MUCH CHANGE Johnny Mathis year lo performances and tours. ' He never travels more than a month at a time, however. "AFTER ABOUT three weeks on the road, mentally I'm in· capable of thinking," be said. "I'm like in a trance And you're dying, you're saying, 'If I sing "Misty" one more lime I 'll go crazy · "But you figure if you did three weeks, you can get by that last week. I've missed a couple of performances through illness, and I think that's pretty good in 25 years. Some nights, of course, I just don 'l feel like it, and I probably don't sinJi as well as I s hould But I do sing " When not touring, Mathis s licks mostly to the golf course and his home. originally built by Howard Hughes for screen siren Jean Harlow and reason enough for anyone lo turn into a homebody. It features not only spectacular views of the Los Angeles basin but also an indoor swimming pool, a wine cellar and a kitchen in which he has built something of a reputation as a cook. items sought DEAt\-PAT DUNN: I sent a $17.87 check for three room humidifiers to Mail Order Marketine last January. My check was cashed promptly, but no merchandise ever arrived. I wrote to MOM about this March 9 but there hasn't been any answer. ' L.S .. Costa Mesa Mall Order Marketln1'1 actton Hae "apttlalltt .. offered no explanatlop as to why your merchandise bad not been ablpped, aor why your letter bad not been answered. Sbe did promlff, however, to mail )'Oar OYerdue order immediately. Let A YS know ~ 'U.ere are any fw1ber problems. This firm flH been a frequent s ubject of readers' complalata, particularly ln the areaa of ooa-dellvery aad lack of reaponse to consumers' written com· plaints. Teddy bears rerolled DEAR PAT DUNN I heard something on TV about how children's teddy bears were being recalled. I think the problem was with eyes and noses that were easy to pull off. which could be a c hoking hazard for youngsters. l didn't hear or read any more about h., but I'm concerned because my baby has several teddy bears Can you give me the details on this? L K , Newport Beach Nearly Zl,000 stuffed teddy bears are in· volved ln the Consumer Product Safety Com· mission recall after the CPSC determined the bears were dangerous following testing in "normal use and abuse" play by young children. Product code tags on the toys are numbered 202·50, 202·94 , 202-95, or 202·219. Another label sewn lo the leg of each teddy bear reads, "Suokyung Limited. Made in Korea." Anyone having one of these teddy be ars is asked to mall It directly to Far East International, ll82 Broadway, Room 901, New York, N.Y. 10001. The company will pro· vide full refunds or another toy animal or comparable value and will reimburse con· sumers for malling costs. • "Col a problem'> Then wnte to Pat \.... Dunn Pat wall cut red tape getting .., ..J.. the answers and action you need to • solve inequities m govemmenl and ,..., business Mail your questwns lo Pat I I Dunn. At Your Service Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa . CA 92626 As many Letters as possible will be 01uwered. bur phonttd mqu1nes or letters not mcludmg the reader's Juli riame. addreu and business hours' phone numbfor cannot be considered This column appears dally ez. cept Sundays " CONSUMER A Vt t l.:OSING HAIR? TRY THIS AT NO RISK Houston, Texas -If worked. However. It I• youdon'tsufferfrom lmpouible to help m a 1 e p a t t e r n ev~ryone. baldness, you can The great majority of cases of excessive now stop your hair hair fall and baldness loss · · · and grow are the beginning more hair. and mor e fully For years "lbey uld it developed stages of couldn't be done.'' But now a firm or l•boratory ma 1 e pattern consultants hu developed baldness and cannot • treatment (or both men be helped. and women that Is not only But, If you are not stopping hair loss but is really crowing hair' already slick bald. how This treatment for can you be sure what 1s .. Sebum" hair loss was actually causing your hair tested by forty five loss" Even if baldness dermatolog ists and a may seem to . run '" the Southwest ll!edical school. family." 1t 1s certainly not Theaverageresultswere proof or the cause c>f YOUR h111r loss t Hair I011s was reduced Hair loss reused b) lo normal, or i11gn1!1cunlly lifbum can also run in your decreased in 7!1' • of the family. epd rp,1tny olll~r cases. ' condition$ cin 'uus..-t\at 2 Evidence of ne~ hair loss tr you wait until yd\1 growth "as reported in are shrk bald and your 55' • or tht' cal>t':. hair root!> are dead, yt>u 3 The pat1t'nt!> hair are beyond httlp So. 1r you th1ckl•11t>d in thin area!> 1n still h<1Ve any hair on top 50'; or the cases of your head. and would 4 Short. thin ham. m the like lo stop your hair loss !> p a r., e a r t! a i. " e r e and gro1o1. more hair reportt•d growing long~r in no" 1i. the time to do 61'. of the tast''> !.Omethlng about it before S Nu detrimental '>1de 1\':. too l<1te c•frect!> "ere reported Loe.,t·h Laborator) Tht•\ dtln 't c•ven 11.,k you Consultants. In c . "111 lo lakl' their \\Ord for II 'Upply YOU With lre:itment Tht'~ 111\ ill' \ou to tr) the for 32 da\~ at their rl!>k treatml•nt for :12 day., <1t 1f th.e} bel1e\t' the their n.,k, .ind .,ee for trcatmt•n1 will help \Ou \OUr.,t'lf' Ju st !.t•nd them tht• Nu1ur,1lh thl'\ \.\Ould 1nforma11on h.,tt'd bclo"' not offt•r th1., opi>ortunll} ;\II 1nqu1rtt'., an• an.,v.erl'<i unll''~ thl' trt'alment l'Onfid~ntially ,I>' mail NO OBLIGATION COUPON To Lewi.ch Laboratory Consultants. In c Dept C·4. Box 66001 , 3311 West Main St llouston, Texai. 77006 I am submitting the follo\.\tng information "1th th under:.tanding th<1l 1t will be krpt stnrtl) conhdent1al and that I am under no obligation whatsoever Does your forehead become 011} or greas)? llow ::.oon after washmg? Do you have dandruff'' Dry or oily? Does your scalp 1tch'1 When? llow long ha!> )>Our hair been thinning? Does hair pull out easily on top of head" What pt'rcentage of hair remains on top or head? An} thin areas" Where., An\' slick bald ar<•<1s'' ' Where" Alt.a ch any othl'r information you reel may be helpful NAME SEX ADOR~::ss l'IT\ STATE ZIP It!• Hsy to put a few words to work for you. Call 642·5e7t: v;:..c::dc~·:: Daily Pilot .. j Cambridge I I :Goodness! skates : They come by the hundreds to the :Balboa Peninsula Boardwalk each :w e e k en d -r o 11 e rs k a t e r s a n d skateboarders who find the path a haven for their pursuits. . They range in age and skating abilities .f ro'1 Girl Scout troops to mid-308 pro· ·fessionals. With the right-of-way belonging to l>oardwallc traffic, one can skate nearly the entire length of the Peninsula alm?St DOB-stop. v As the springtime weather improves, more and more skaters frequent the boardwalk each weekend on Saturdays and Sundays. Many come for the simple joy of recreational cruising, but others are there to practice and perform before the tourists. One group which regularly con· ·&r~ates at the foot of the BalOO. Pier bu ·rortned the Team Balboa 1katlq club, which is open to any interested skater re· gardless of ability. Many members are out in the park and street by the pier every weekend, practic· ing freestyle moves and jumps. Their hot· dogging often stops traffic as passers-by wait to watch. "I enjoy the tourists," said member David Shaw of Costa Mesa. "Their in· terests feeds my motivation." The size of the rolling crowd is earning the area the nickname of "Uttle Venice,'.' after the original Southern California beachfront skating site. According to Shaw, the boardwalk and pier are ideal for skating due to their availability and convenience. "There's food beresi!:Je's ~ here -it's a com- fortable ' .. Intently 1pinning, Mike McCoy is oblivious to the warning underfoot , while Belinda Denni.! works on her dance moves. David Shaw performs for spectators. • Daily Pilot Photos by Gary Ambrose ' I ~ 1 1 i I ; ! t i I : I 'I 'I . THE OLD·FASBIONED ONES bad a little window on the front and a mesaa•e that instructed you ... In Emergency, Break Glua and Pull Rina:· That set off the alarm. flbese wel'J' mainly fire call boxes. Caeta Mesa's call boxes 'are dual purpose. You can call on one in event ol either an em,rgency where you need the firtrlDUl or.to get a police officer on the scene. The city' bu J:na,intained 157 of the,.llttle c•ller spots around th-..1'1esa metropolis. But, alas, now they are going, relegated to the same tai. u buggy whips. So what ii M's on o teoah? You can't have him in town. It isn't a matter that the emergency call places are completely outmoded. The call boxes are being done in by the economy of the 1980s. They're just getting to the place where they•cost too much. CITY AIDES REPORTED just the other day that last year, Pacific Telephone Company nicked Costa Mesa City Hall about $31,000 for the emergency call·in places. Next year, however, the t>ill goes up just a bit. About 300 percent, to be more precise. The s ame service will cost $ll8,000. Since it's been calculated that only about one percent of all emergency calls come in over tbe special box stations, it seems like poor economy to continue using them for the enormously escalated telepbOne biJl. Sadly, then, veteran. Costa Metans can paek away the emeriency call &xes along with their food memories of Pin.kley'a Drug Store soda lount-ain, ~ days when the town bad more trm than traffic,. signals and tb'e vicecops spent all tb(m' time clearing . the saloons of nudie dancinl eirfs. '· . Once there was a time when ¥OU·eould have a few chick.ens in your backyard on the Mtsn without somebody calling an aniina) ~I officer. If they'd tried to get one, it would bave been long distance to Orange. You don't find many· goats around the Mesa anymore, either. ' . NOWADAYS.-WE BA VE half-built freeway in- terchanges. We '}>ut up sculptures to ho11or the llma · bean, which isn't around too DlllCh any more either. We build skyscrapers, theaters for real actors and music centers for real musicians. You have grave doubt that there's a Costa Mesan anywhere who can still play Yankee Doodle on a harmonica on a front porch with screen door j~t behind it. . No wonder the old emergency call boxes are getting the boot. / · I'll bet they'll replace them with a COIJIP\lter. Cancer: Many questions T\JESl>AY, APRIL 21, ltel By 8'JDNEY OMABR A&IE8 (Mar. 20·Apr. 19>: Lone- rance prwpeets are brtahter than odelnally anticlpated. • ··· TAtJaV8 ~Apr. 20-M•.Y 20): Direct ~ blMp QKe.,ary ftnancfal ormatiOD. Member of oppotite. MS ta!lls abOut pa1menta, loans tDti teeUritJ. PJ880HAJ. G&OWTB 1lmm.n •~red by Santa An• ·C'oll .. e wlll be offered, TluandaYI. from 1:30 to s p.m .• bellnniAI APdl 23. The aeven- WMk Mriea. UUed .. Procram- aiUD• Younelt for Succeu, •• ,,-tU be beld lD tbe l.aftna«e Md >... .... 111ent Center and ii free bl cbar1e. J'or LnlormattOn1 call ee1..a:m. · STaUS llANAGE•ENT will be tbe topic of a •ix-week ••INCm'I"' II U., tiUe ol a t...,. boUr' Mm•nar to be t.eld at 1 :80 p.m . Frlda1 ln Tu1tla. The Hmlaar, 1pon1ored by the Couaaelln1 AHoei•tea for Human .Development, will be led 10l1Tll COA•T •SDIC.A.L by Dr. Jeanette Renouf. Far in· ceoter wlll b• a 1tte for formaUon, caU 832·1020. Health J'alr Expo •11, a beaHb :: ~ 1creentn1 project for retldeatl of South Oranle County. Thie es- tJ C l&VINE Colle1e of po wUl be helclf(OID 10 a.m i to 4 Medicine will sponsor a three· p.m., Sunday. HeaJtb ~ and bour mint-conference tJtled aervlCf/I include health blaory, •'Women ln Medicine,. Saturday. betaht and weilbt, blood pres. The conference wlll foeua on aure, anemia, vlllon a~ty Md eareer opportunltle1·,. •~clal health awarene11. For lll· pro\lleru and llauea ~d the formaUon, call-.1311, ext. eos. formation, c.U MJ.9890. roture ot women in tbe bealtb , ptolflAJOn.. tor informaUon. caU MISSION CO••t1NlTY •&NTAL BEALTB It · • m.tl& Ho1pttal wUl be OOD1luctla1 sociai!on of Oran1• Co)lnt1. · • blood acremtna u eupprilrt ,_ will SpoolOr a wo~bop tJtW ""·1RE P&OBLB• ol the Health Fair lxpo 'tl at tile "The M~r Problem in Ilda.I •liA>Jiollc at work will be ttie Lasuna .Hilb Kall trolJ\ noon to Health Today -Deprea-'oa" et topic ol a. UC Irvine Extem& 4 p.m. &md~ and Monday b'OID 9:30 a.m. Friday in Tustin. Por worbbop to be held Friday and 10 a.m. to' p.m . She learned a ·les~ion hard way DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hope you will print my letter as a warning to all the fooli1b 1roupies out there who go cruy .over "celeb~tiea." My kid sister was very quiet· socially, but she worshipped a bie·name punk rock star. When abe learned be was to appear in Chicago, she drew her savings out of the bank and decided to stay in a hotel for the entire w e ek and attend every performance. After the first show she went backstage and pretended to be a long-time friend. She looked so innocent that the stage .door man bo ught her story and escorted her to the guy's dress· ing room. The star liked her looks and invited her to bis hotel for the night. The next day she moved in with him and met the other rtS'kes in the group. They . s moked dope, sniffed cocaine and Lord knows what else. Before the act left Chicago my sister had spent every dime on dope, engaged in sex with the star and was gang.raped by four other musicians. She said the ( l • , rape wu a shock, to her because she wu sure they were all aay. Now sls la back home, an emotional and physical WTeck, stone-broke and having a bard time getting her bead tocether. My parent.a want her to bring ·charges against the era.Iles, but she says, "It wu my own fault for being so dumb." Please print my letter as a warning to other youne girls who think it would be terrific to meet some of these idols in gerson. -HEARTSICK FOR MY SISTER Dear Heart.tick: Here It II. But I wondd ii It womd ban made any lmpresstoa ii yoar Iii· ter bad attn • letter like It • year •&•· Most people tblJlk, "Tbln11 like that happen to others, not me." I bope you slater geu some therapy. She'• hen throagb a great deal ud needs more tbu a comforting aulat from her famUy. DEAR ANN LANDERS: l have just traveled SO miles and wasted another day looking for a pair of shoes that fit. r am 21 years old and wear a S't!!C. I've worn the same pair of dre111 shot.~ for six years (they are in terrible shape) because I cannot find a decent style in my size. I have as ked many store managers why they don't carry anything wider. I always get the same answer -the "B" width sells better. Of counie. the store is looking for a profit, but when the customer'• welfare is sacrificed for a few extra dollars I think the public is being treat· ed shabbily. J ust think what it would be like for lar ge people if de· partment stores only carried sizes 5, 7 and 9. Many women have this problem. Please tell us unfortunates with wide feet what we can do. -BAREFOOT ALWAYS Dear Barefoot : I bave checked wltb various shoe stores -and you have a valid tom· plaint . Marshall Field's: Tbey do have a few shoes to your she, 5'1aC (FHblon Claulct), and olber styles can be ordered. Sears Koebuck : Noae available Ill tile stores. TM)' eu be ordered tlaro•cll tlletr catalope. Try tile eserclae Uipe department. Yoa ml&ht 1et lucky . Montgomery Ward: Not avallable ln tbe deres. Look ln the catalope oder die ClnaJc Pump. Sau 5th Aveaue: Yes, tlteJ do carry 51,iaC, but In very few styles. llllUllll Red Croa Slaoes: Go lido •e of thetr aiores and order what you want by loold.al at lbe shoes In other 1l1es. It may mean • altlng aeveral week a. but yoa wUI 'et them ... eveetaally. la oJcoholUm ruining 11our Life? Know the dangn rignaLI ond what to do. Read the boo~t . "Alcoholiam -Hope and Help," by Ann Land.en. Encto~ 50 cent• with your requut and a long, atom~. ul/-addreued envelope to Ann Landtr1, P.O. &r 11995. Chicago. JU. 60611. The Ch•nge Startt When You D<>.. . ~ Tfte n,,_ To start Is Now... ; The Pl~ Is "'Powers"! Change It All! ; 0.tmaltCeltv '"'orov• ''"' w•y you t()OI< feet alld •r>oetl to others WI! II mM~ !fie change En 1 am1 Fun even '"-e•eoeose eiu sei All t it ... , l111<><e<110 your ~ 111<1 needs OIANG£ COUNTY II) TQ*n & Country, Or•~ 1n •1 s.1.,221 DO YOU HATE YOUR FIGURE? "THEY. DON'T RACE at St. Jovite anymore but you can't put something like a crash behind you without thinking about it now and then. "I needed something physical to aim for and l picked Sebring as a goal. I told myself, Tm go- ing to get there · By February I ivas reasonably fit and asked Porsche to assign me to a car. ~ot a competitive one but ~omething to just get the feeling of driving ag~n." i Porsche complied to a dearee but Redman and his driving partners in the 12·hour endurance race. Charles Mendez and Bob Garretson. finished BRIAN REDMAN River'1M nitry Angels try to dry out with Seattle • J first. Redman did m01t of tbe drivln1 and won by 1IO aecooOa. With Bobby !labaJ and' Garretson. tbe team al10 won this year at Sebrina. Redman al.so rememben bb bo\lts with the Riverside cOUtle before St. Jovlte. . ''ON THE FIRST DAY of practice, the car was running superbly ;when 1 came around turn nine and dipped down to the bottom. The forces on the car pulled it up and into the wall. '·My bead bounced so hard from side to side that ·it broke the plexiglass on both sides of the helmet. It ruined my n«k but r started the Cam aro race the next day in the middle of the pack. ··Richard Petty hit me in the middle of the door, then at turn nine, the throttle stuck and due to the discomfort and fatigue I was under, I forgot to use the clutch and crashed. "The next day, I was never so exhausted in my entir e life. They guided me to the car and I finished third." As for testing cars, he learned early that he didn't care for that particuJar job. REDMAN SAYS his age <44 > prevents him from talking with Formula One owners about a ride anymore. He also adds: ... "No road racing in•the world 1s financially stable, even Formula One. It costs about $3 million to put a car in Formula One racing for the year and about $1 million in championship car racing. That's why some owners went fishing, hunting and shooting · · Redman will compete in Saturday's historical car race as well, driving a 917 owned by Otis Chandler, the same car he raced at Sebring in 1970. "They are an incredible car and I'm looking forward to the ride " Redman dominated Formula 5,000 racing for three years ln-c l u ding the inaugural Long Beach Grand Prix (before the Formula One cars took over ). His hst of victories is long and impressive a nd he is no newcomer to the Ri vers1de (See REDMAN, Page 85) 11 ,, :1 li •I i! :1 ' ,., •• ...,._!~ A FIGHT FOR EASTER EGGS? -Not exactly. Members of A's pitcher Mike Norris had words about a pitch. Randle •, the Oakland A's and Seattle Mariners got carried away in a (somewhere in this pile) was evicted from the game. ;! skirmish Sunday that began when Mariner Len Randle and •1 ~~~~~~~-=-~~__;:;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·· Patience pays dividends :, I' ,I ·I ;1 ·I . . . , ,, " 'buerrero waits. then produces !! for Dodgers !! difference. lifting Bob Welch, 1--0 to his jl first victory of the year Lansireaux had : homered an inning earlier to tie the game '; and keyed a four-run ninth inning rally \ with a two-run single as the Dodgers raised their record to 8-1 SAN DIEGO <APV For two years. Pedro Guerrero's patience had been wear· ing thin, but the Dogers' handyman is finally learning that patience is Indeed a virtue. ' Guerrero and Ken Landreaux both belt- ed their second home runs of the 1981 season to pace the streaking Dodgers to a 6 1 victory over the San Diego Padres Sun- day afternoon . Twice Guerrero had asked Dodger management to trade him. and twice he has been refused. Guerrero is getting a chance to play every day now because right fielder Reggie Smith is recovering from surgery on his right shouJder. "THEY TOLD ME to be patient and that my time to play would come," said the 24 year-old infielder-outfielder. "( don't know if Rej(iie is going to retjre this year or if he's going lD come back I want the JOb, but I hope Reggie gets well because we need him." Guerrero was the Dodgers' regular center helder tor a while late last season, On TV tonight channel 11 at 5:30 he must do is to convince up and coming players like Guerrero that their time will come. ·'The guys who are sitting on the bench are like understudies in a play, waiting to go in for the leading man or tbe leading lady 1f they are needed," said Lasorda. "You have to convince them 1t takes 25 men to win a pennant." Guerrero's home run in the seventh inn· ing broke a 1-1 tie and proved to be the . ,• WHILE LAS-ORDA is pleased that the : Dodgers refus(.td to trade Guerrero, he is ; especially happy with the Landreaux I · trade. , "We played Ken seven full exhibition 1: games before the season started because I \' had never seen him,'' said Lasorda. I "After seven games, l realized what ! talent he h'ad and what a great ballplayPr I: he was. It was a very good trade for us ." It The Dodgers are off to their best start >: since the 1955 Brooklyn club captured its :: first 10 in a row en route to a World Series ;' triumph. : ' !i Trevino sets .golf sights on bigger things// RANCHO LA COSTA (AP> -Lee Trevino turned bis back on a shot at a $100,000 bonus prize after winning the MONY-Toumament of Champions. but had his sights set on one or golf's major championships . "It's a great feeling. I enjoy winning any golf tournament." Trevino said after a closing 69 had produced a two shot victory an the elite event that brings together only the winners of PGA Tour titles from the last 12 months. "I haven't won a major since '74 Cthe PGA> and I'd hke to do that again," he said. "This may be the year I knock off one of the majors. "I seem to be peaking later this year that I have in the past. Usually I plav pretty good in Florida This year I'm playing good later. "I don't know why Maybe the old bones just take longer to ease up But 1f I'm playing good later, may~ I'll be playing good when the major <the U.S and British Opens and the PGA ) come along." And Trevino obviously still retains the skills to win in golf's maJor events He took this title his first ever in California with a 273 total. 15 strokes under par and matching the course rec- ord on the tough, 6,911 yard1 La Costa Country Club layout. The triumph was worth $54,000 from the total purse of $300.000 and marked the 14th con- secutive season Trevino has won al least once. "I've got more shots now than I used to have." said Trevino. at 41 the ol<!est player in the 29-man field ... J can hit the ball high now if I want to, can move it right to left 1f I want to I'm not as good a chipper as I used to be, and I'm not as good a putter But the other shots kind of make up for it." While he's looking forward to the re· maining ma1ors. Trevino decided to s kip this week's New Orleans Open despite a chance to win a $100,000 bonus prize. The bonus was set up for any man able to sweep both the Tournament of Champions and New Orleans titles "I have commitments in Phoenix and Tucson next weekend," Trevino said. The victory in t he T of C, the 26th American PGA tour triumph of his career, was particularly satisfying for ;: Trevino. '' "I've always wanted this one," he ! said. "I've a lways puf a high priority on 1 this tournament." : The victory . 1n a head-to-head: showdown with Ray Floyd, came after. Trevino had finished second in this· tournament four times "Raymond said he thought he'.d played well enough to win and that maybe he would win it next year. I know just how he feels." Trevino said. ''I've thought that four limes before here." Flovd. the onlv man in the field with a realistic chance to overtake the "front- running Trevino had a last-round 70 and a 275 total. ,O 'Me ara seco nd Eichelberger wins playoff TALLAHASSEE (AP > -Dave Eichelberger birdied the first bole of a three-way playoff with Bob Murphy and taguna Niguel's Mark O'Meara Sunday to capture the Tallahassee Open. Eichelberger, wbo missed a three-foot birdie putt on the 18th bole that wouJd have given him the victory outright. connected ~n a four-foot birdie putt that eased him past Murphy and O'Meara. wbo both parred the extra hole. ' Eichelberger won $18,000 for bis flrst Professional Golfers As- $Oclatlon victory since the 1980 Bay Hill Classic. O'Meara and · Murpb)' each won $8,800. He started Sunday'& final round one stroke behind l~ader Gree Powen and flred a 2-under 70 to complete a four·fOUd total of i7-under-.par 2'71 over the 7 ,124-yard Jtlllearn Golf and Country Club coune. O'Mura. a rookie lo only ht• third mo-.tb ob th• clrcutt, ehecked lD wlt.b a ff ul Murphy bad ••. 9ot.b mwed ~al toUl'D ..... wtnnlq b1riHI .,... at 11. llurpbJ milled ft'om ellbt feet below tb• eaptil .. lalle • Froin 'AP cll1patehe1 PAWTUCKET, R.r. -After 32 lonlntt and 8 boura, 1 mJnutet of olav. the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rocheater Red Wines decided Sunday that bllt.oq could wall for the end of baseball's longest aame. "We're messing with young playen and we don't want to ruln a cateer for one aame,'' itocbeater Mana1er Doc Edwards said. "The bodies just aren't there ln the minor lea1ues." · After conferring wlth h.ls superiors lo tbe IntemaUoaaJ League, Edwards asked. the game be postponed. Both teams" agreed to start the top of the 33rd inning with the score 2·2 when they next meet in Pawtucket June 23. The news hit the locker rooms as players gathered to sian a ball headed for the Baseball Hall o( Fame lo Cooperstown, N. Y., to mark the event. "Why wait?" said Pawtucket ouUielder Chico Walker, who scored the two-out. nint)).innlng run that put the aame in- to extra Innings." Everybody was ready." But if the minds were ready, some of the bodies were not. Rochester catcher Dave Huppert put in 31 innings behind the plate. "This game would have been over in nine innings and we would have won 1f the wind hadn't been blowing in so much." said Pawtucket first baseman Dave Koza, who got (our hits in 13 at bats. "There were four or five shots that would have been out of the park on a normal day.'' The previous record was the June 14. 1966, game between the Miami Marlins and the St. Petersburg Cards. After 29 in- nings and 6 hour~. 59 minutes. the Marlins won, 4-3. Rochester 2, Pawtucket 2 ltecllffl•r all•~ ... f alOft, lb 10 o J o Wllllam'-Cl 12 O 0 O IUpaen, )II ,, 0 I 0 Corey. "" $ I I 0 Ch""'°'"'· on I 0 0 0 lhtlO<CI, P' • 0 0 0 L09An, II> 12 0 4 0 llowr)Ot. II • o 1 I Hal•, pt! 1 0 I 0 Hadl-, rt • 0 0 0 ""'· pll • 0 ' 0 llonner. 1& IJ I Jo Hllpjlert.c II 0 I I Pvtnam, on 1 o o o (;ralwlm,cl B•rrett,l'b W•lker,tt t.arlbe,dll l(ora, 1111 8099~.JO e-•n,rt ~m.-w#c O"O'tt.l'tt L.alr...CK,C Vald.,,U ell r II_. I• 0 1 0 11 0, 0 U I I 0 11 0 0 I IJ I • 0 12 0 . 1 12 0, 0 , 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 1l 0 1 0 Toi.alt IOI J II 1 Toi.all 1 IJ J 19 J AO<~!« 000 000 ICIO UGO 000 000 001 000 -000 00-J P-llKUI 000 000 001 000 000 000 001 a 000 000 l»-J f -IE-~. Sonner Va1e1e1 OP -II«-•. Pawtuclle11. LOB -lteclW•er 1'. P-tucMt • ,. LO•• 1 Wall<••. --.. H-t. se -IE-. s -WMllem\ 1, ~. Harl, H-'1 J SI' IAr•~t be.... IP M It llt 91 W) J-1 P\ 1 I I J S kh,..ldlor $"' J O O O I t.wllller I • I I J • UmNr .. r 10 • O o O • ... _... ParU • J I I l AjlOftla t 000 9 S.rml .. to • a 0 0 J Smithton ~ J 0 0 ~ A•mmaf'-..1 • ..., I I 1 l'lll<h s 0 0 l HYrll ~ 1 0 0 J I HIP lly S<hneld"' ll•ribffl. Bv Park1 !Eaton>. By "-la (9oftnerl. WP -J-1. HY,.I, Smltl'l10tl T t 01 A 1,100 VALENZUELA (PAn A BIG W1NNER ARCADIA A couple of youngsters named Valenzuela are pn•tly popular in the Los Angeles area these days Fernando wins baseball games for the Dodgers, and Patrick wins horse races at Santa Anita. Neither bas r eached his 21st birthday: Fernando is just 20 and Patrick 19. Sunday was Pat's day as he guided Obraitsovy to a narrow victory in the S200.000 San Juan Capistrano Handicap at Santa Anita Obraztsovy held off the challenge of Exploded, also a Whit- tingham-trained horse. and won in 2: SO 2-S on a relatively slow grass track, wet from nuns the previous two nights. Singularity took third in the field of nine, which lost favored John Henry in latl' morning when he was scratched because his trainerd1d not lake the cond1t1ons orthe track. ZISK'S HOMER ENOS A'S STREAK . . . . ltldl&e llM'• borne run wlUt two o~t lll• 11 •l•hlh tut SeattJe 10 • 3-2 vie ovmt Oaklud ~. 1tt0nd came SUnday. 1na11p1 n• t.be A 'a record wtrinlnf atrtak at 11 ln a fllbt-ftUtd double-header. Zit.k tJ)Olled the 1treak by hlttl.Df IO .. r akk Laa•ford'• flnt pitch to blm in the el1hth \rinlll1. Oakland bad Ht a modern major le.,ue rffOrd by openln1 th• HUOQ wllb 11 atralahl victories when the A'• t•~r~ed a f~l .Ylctory in tbt rtrst ••tn•. led by altkey Headenoo'a triple and double . . . Lee May drove ln two runs and Jeny Grote knocked in another to carry K1.n1u Ctty to a 3·2 victory over Baltimore u a1et1 Gale and Reale Mania combined for a flve- hltter . . . Jon Matlaek handou!ted the New York Yankees on tour hit•. 1tving Texas a 4-0 victory, retlrtn115 Yankees in a row at one point . . . Gary Allenaoa'1 three-run homer in the fourth helped Zialc Boston record a 9-4 win over the Chicago White Sox. Culton Flak homered again for the Wblte Sox . his third against bis former teammates and fourth this year . . . Mark Bomback picked up his first American League victory and Al Wooda drove in three runs as Toronto belted Detrolt.'9·1. QUOTE OF THE DAY Former Orange Coast C.ollete pitcher DH Qallft· berry, now the ace of the Kanau City bullpen, dilcu.u- . ln& tbe control problems of another Royal burler. ante Martba: "Some people throw to apota, some people throw to zones. Renie throws to coJttinenta.'' KINGMAN OVERCOMES WALL.ACH'S HOMER Dave Kingman'• three·run homer more than •• compensated for former University Hlgh and Saddleback College star Tlm WaUacll'• solo home run as the New York Mets beat Montr~I. 7-2. to split their Sunday double-header. The Expos took the opener. 4·3, as Andre Dawson ripped three hits; including a home run. Homers by Wallach and Bobby Ramo1 had staked Montreal to a 2·1 lead before Kin~man's long blast . . Keith 'Moreland doubled home the tie·breaklng run in a four-run eighth as Philadelphia went on to defeat the Chicago Cubs. 7-3 . . . Biff Pocoroba's two·run single in the bottom of the ninth vaulted Atlanta to a 4-3 victory over San Francisco, snapping the Braves' four.game losing streak Rod &urry ran his streak of scoreless inn- ings to 15, combining with EddJe Solomon on a fi ve-hitter as Pittsburgh dealt Houston a 2·0 loss. Jason Thompson Wallach homered for the Bucs . Cincinnati pitcher Frank Pastore hit his first major league home run in the third inning, but Cincinnati's 1-0 lead over St Louis and Pastore's four bagger vanished when the game was rained out BOBBY BONDS SIGNS WITH RANGERS ,. WICHITA, Kan. -Bobby Bonds, a 13·year • veteran outfielder with seven major league clubs, has been signed by the Texas Rangers and will re· port to the Wichita Aeros. the Rangers' Triple-A . affiliate in the American Association. Aeros Manager Rich Donnelly said Sunday that Bonds, who has a career batting average of .270 with 326 home runs, will be activated sometime this week. TODAY IN BASEBALL On this datein baseball in 1941 : Joe DiMaggio and Joe Gordon combined for 11 runs batted in as the New York Yankees routed the Philadelphia A's 19-5. On this dale in 1939: ln his first major league game. Boston's Ted Williams went 1-for-.. a 400-C09t double as the Red Sox dropped a 2-0 decision to the New York Yankees. Today's Birthdays Angels coach Preston Gomez ls~. ~ontre~l Expos i!l· fielder Tommy Hutton Is 35. Detroit Tigers patcher Milt WI lcox is 31 Cincinnati Reds catcher Mike 0 ·Berry is Z7 76ERS, KINGS EARN FINALS BERTHS PHl.LADE.LPHIA -Pblladelpb.la 7tul Coacb ' Ill Bllq Cunnlnoam probably put it belt after h1I tum 1quuttd t>1 lbe Mllw.ukff Budl1 t9-98 to win their NaUooal Buketball A.11ociatlon Ea1tern Con!ereoee 1tm.1tJnal HriH. "It wu the type of same JOU don't know what to tell the tea rn t.UtlOlt," aald CunnJnlbatn. Jullua J!lrW)a scored 28 polnta and Bobby Jona 21 u tbt Slxers advanced to the EHt.f'll flnal. "What can you HY about a serlea Uke !tbts? '• said a abaken Cunntna,ham. Hll team won, but they had blown a 18-polnt lead In the doing. ~ ·. ~,· Milwaukee Coach Don Nelaon explained bis team's strategy on the last play of the game when the Sfxers, leadlne by a slnale point, bad the ball out of bounds with 9 '" seconds remaining. "We had two choices," sald Nelson. Cul\ninghom ••we tried to steal the ball or wetrted to foul . But they were loo smart and moved the ball away.'' ln Phoenix, meanwhile, Kansas City Coach C.otton Fitzsimmons referred to second-year forward ReHie King as his "all.purpose cleaner." King helped wash the Phoenix Suns' world championship hopes down the drain for another season by scoring 23 points In a 95-88 Kansas City victory. The win gave the Kings the series by a 4·3 margin and a berth ln the Western Conference finals against the Houston Rockets. GRETZKY SCORES THREE MORE GOALS Wayne Gretzky, the 20·year-old National m Hockey League regular-season scoring king, fired ' in three goals Sunday night, leading the Edmonton Oilers to a 5·2 victory over the New York Islanders that lightened their semifin~I playoff series. The Islande rs lead the best-of-7 series 2· l with the fourth game scheduled here Monday night . . Calgary's WllU Pleat scored his third winning goal of the playoffs at 2: 26 of the third period. giving the Flames a 2-1 victory over Philadelphia and a 2-1 lead in their best-of-seven quarterfinal pl ayoff series. Calgary goalie Pat Riggin, making his second playoff appearance, also p layed a major role in the triumph, stopping 47 shots as the Flyers outshot the Flames 48·25 . . Barry Beck scored one goal and set up two others in a four-goal second period as the New York Rangers registered a 6-3 quarterfinal playoff victory over St. Louis. The Rangers continued th' inspired checking and relentless attack that has marked their postseason performances to build a 2 l lead in the best-of· seven series ... Rookies Kevin Maxwell and Neal Broten scored goals 23 seconds apart in the third period. sparking Minnesota to a 6-4 victory over Buffalo and giving the North Stars a commanding 3-0 lead in their quarterfinal senes with The Sabres. Maxwell scored on a short wrist shot at 8 46 to snap a 3·3 tie and Broten put in an easy rebound at 9· 09 after Buffalo goalie Don Edwards ventured out of the net to stop a shot by Steve Christoff. JOE LOUIS' BODY IN WASHINGTON, D.C. The body of former heavyweight boxing • champion Joe Louis arrived in Washington Sunday in preparation for burial at Arlington National Cemetery ... East German Olympic cha mpion Vte Geweniger set a world record in the lOO·meter breaststroke with a time of I :09.52 in a meet with the USSR. TELEVISION, RADIO Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: "' .t .t excellent; .t .t 1 worth watching; 1 I fair; .t forget It. n 5:30 p.m., Channel 11 ./ ./ ./ ./ DODGERS BASEBALL: Dodgers at Houston. Announcers: Vin Scully, Ross Porter and Jerry Doggett. The Western D1vis1on-lead1f'l9 Dodoers are scheduled to send Burt Hooton (2·0> to the mound tonight against the de~nd· 1ng d1v1s1on champions, cellar-dwelling Houston The Astros, bogged d<>wn with a 2-6 record, are due to send righl·hander Joa- quin Andu1ar (0-0> against the Dodgers RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at Hooston, 5: 30 p.m., KABC (790); Seattle at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). Eagles seeking trade for Tony Franklin Open To A.II In May Zillgitt and Wright PHlLADELPHlA (AP> Place-kicker Tony Franklin may have booted hls last fi eld goal for the Philadelphia Eagles. ac· cording lo team officials who are openly talking about a possible trade. "I'd say Tony's future in the off-season was up In the air,'' sai d Eagles Coach Dick Ve rmeil. "l met with Tony and told bim that 1 couldn't guarantee he wouldn't be traded or he would be lrtided l told him I couldn 't give him a ny guarantees." Eagles personnel director Carl Peterson said Franklin bas been offered to the Baltimore C.olts, who got only 12 field goals out or Steve Mike-Mayer last year. "It's still in their bands," Peterson said. "They have to get back to u.s. I told them, 'If the price is too high, make us a counter offer.· We're waitlna for them to get back to us, but now everyone knows that he's Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dlvlalon W L Pct. GB Oakland 11 1 .917 Chicago 4 3 .571 Texas 4 4 .500 An&ela 4 6 .400 Kansas City 2 4 333 Seattle 3 7 .300 Minnesota 2 6 .250 Eu& DM1lon Detroit •~Boston Baltimore Cleveland New York Milwaukee Toronto 1 2 .778 4 3 .571 3 3 .500 3 3 500 4 4 .500 2 4 .333 3 6 .333 ......,,.1car .. Ml-.-.at~_..,,.,,. Tot..,..,,°""'"' IOllfft t , CNcleit • Cl•.,.IWM~.llllld .••ln l(_Qty.,....._.., Te-..~ ..... Ttrllt OMleNW. ...... 14 41 :i 5 6 6 7 7 ,...... ....... s..ntt co-MM -.1 • .._.. 1.1t,..,._ °'"· 11 Ttllff ,__. l•I .. .....,. (Tel'PU MJ Mii• ..... (YucMollCll .. ti •I T9flflta ITeM •11 o.treff C"-"N , .. ,.,,._v...-IM.IYHl,n ••1t1_.. l~Hl tt OllC ... l ....... M), " Cl8YalW IVNl18 t•I 81 1(-1 City Ike t-11,11 ,..,,.,..... 1111c~.-•11 " oa-Milld c~ , t-0) II NATIONALLEAG1JE Wea& Division Dodgen Cincinnati Atlanta W L Pct. GB 8 1 .889 San Francisco San Diego Houston 5 4 .556 4 5 .444 4 6 . .a<> 3 7 .300 2 7 .222 East Dlvl1lon Philadelphia 7 2 .778 Montreal 5 2 . 714 St. Louis 4 2 .667 New York 4 4 .500 Pittsburgh 4 4 .500 Chicago 1 7 .125 ......,,.ac-.,..,...,,.. °'"° 1 Nl-rMl•1.-Yria.f Pllll ..... at,OllUIOI Alltllt.84,5-1,.rtftC~) SI. UVIHt ClftclnMtl, ..... , raifl p lllllluf'tll z • ....._. .,.....,..._ 3 4 4'AI 5'AI 6 1 1 'Al 2\.it 2~ Si,.\ ~(-MIM......._.l~MI. .. 'llllMtl!llfll• tint,.... HI •t Allefttreat V!~z:t:Mc'**'-1 •t> at It. LM1 l"-<11 •o "" ~,--, ....... ., .... '*" W-• il-11.11 Olltv..-.~ available, we expect to get some more offers." Franklin had a good rookie year, making 23 or 31 field goal attempts and scored 105 points. But last year be slumped to 16 of 31 three-pointe r s. including several mlssed in late-season sltuatlons. He missed a 24·yarder against Minnesota in the National Football League playoffs and a 28-yarder against Oakland in the Super Bowl. 'John Doe' Hits Jackpot In Monthly -011 'Lottery' ONTARIO. C ALIF (Special) -Hundred• of averaae citizens will win oil leuc righu in dr•winp conducted by the State of Wyomina. Some may achieve ovcrn1ah1 wealth by sclli na their riahu to oil companies and rcuin· 1ng lifclona royaltie1. Incredibly. most will risk no more than SI .S and a minimal service fee 10 enter the liule-known proaram that offen every Americian the opponun- i1r. to compele with aiant 011 companies for leases of public lands. lnforma11on and entry details arc available from The H. Kirk Sanders Co.. Public Lands Div· 1sion. Boll 3697. Ontario. Calif. 91761 (2032 Carol· 1ne). Please enclose SI for posuae and handling. Official en1ry cards will be rushed by return mail to permit you to meet the May filina deadline. insur.ancc agents ;ind brokers Insurance premiums up this year? Call us for a competitive quote for Auto. Homeowners, Fire. Fine Arts, Life. Medical, R V , Boat or Yacht Insurance Bot1 Guffin 3931 Mx Arthur Boulevard Newpon Such. Ca 92660 (TWl TS2·9055 HE SPORTING HOUS __ Where Health I• a Way ~f Life and Condltlonlng le a Way of living EASTER • MEMBERSHIP . SPEClal . . . .,. . .. • l . . 4 .. " .-I .: I .. •, .. .. Af'W ......... At Rlvtrtldj 1Jl the TlQlet· Toyota OfQd Pris of end\&ranc• that tuna from oo~n WJt1J & o'clock, be will t.. paired With Bobby Rahel u bll co-driver. A• for the Loi• be hopes to. have on the race track sometime ln May , be ii overly entbusluUc. "Gettlnt around tbe rules la partly what raclq l1 all about and if they keep lettin1 anyth.lna run, I could have over 1,000 horsepower in the Lola.•• . And if be had it to do all over aeain, what changes would be make in hi.a career? ''I'd be more ambltiot11," he says with a sly. EntUsb grin. Butler set for nleet LOS ANGELES -Edison Hi&h's Jon Butler, considered the premier high school middle· distance runner in the United St ates during the 1981 indoor season, bas accepted an in- vitation to compete ln the open two-mile at the UCLA/Pepsi track meet May 10. Anticipated to compete against Butler are multi-world record holder Henry Rono or Keny a, Thom Hunt , Bill McCbesney of Oregon. Henry Mars h and UCLA·s Dave Daniels and Steve Ortiz. Butler, the fastest returning prep two-miler in the nallon, bas a best of 8:57.7 and improved on that time indoors, dropping to 8 : 55.2. The national record is 8 ·36.3, set by Glendale High's Jeff Nelson in 1979. Field events begm at 11 :45 a .m . and running events 9egin at 12 :30 .. t'd dellQlteJy Id to Formula Oae rad.Ill." Brian ~Redman #ill be very much .lb evtcl.ace at Rtventde bternatlon1l Racewa1 D\lt weekend and baninf ao>1hln1 short of another brOlced neck, flsures to be amona• tbe top flnl1ben in any event be eaten. Jfe •Wl bu that 1t1anlic \U'fe W be In front -ud to 1tay there to the end. . . "I WAS ONE OF tt factory drivers tor a Cive-car Cield in 1969 for Pouche." he says. •'They called me from the factory ln Germany and said: 'Herr Redman, would you come and test?' I called )oe Sl!ford and asked him if he had tested the 917 and he said: " 'We let tbe others see wbat breaks first,' he told me. So, I couldn't go, either. "In testing you just don't know what's going to come off the car." Redman says there are eigtit or 10 teams capable of winning at Riverside Sunday. Right now he says the degree of com- petitiveness determines the out- come and be feels that witflout factory sponsored cars, the race is wide open. Irvine Lake fishing goqd Fisbine at Irvine Lake in Orange baa been good in recent weeks with Rusty Harlow of Anaheim taking a 7~·pound trout out of the lake on a nlghtcrawler. Weekly trout plants bring many limits of trout in the. one to l 'h·pound category. Three trout of 7 Y2 pounds were also takeq during the past week by Fred Salgado ot Corona on a Rebel lure; Bob Calhoun of Anaheim on a Phoebe lure; and Mark Hanna o( Anaheim. also on a Phoebe lure. McEnroe • tans out LOS ANGELES (AP> -In a manner of speaking, it took top. seeded John McEnroe close to a Cull 24 hpurs lo eliminate fourth· seeded Bill: Scanlon from the Jack Kramer Tennis Open In reality, it took McEnroe about 85 minutes lo put his opponent away. McEnroe completed a 6·3, 6-3 victory over Scanlon early Sun- day evening in a rain-delayed semifinal match of the tournament at the Los Angeles Tennis Club. McEnroe will face sixth· seeded Sandy Mayer for the singles championship tonight The winner will earn $15,000; the loser will collect $7.500 Mc En roe's victory began Saturday night After a delay or about 90 minutes because of ram, he won the first set and trailed 3-2 in the second set when umpire Charles Hare halted the match because or more rain and ruled that it would continue where it left off on Sunday ·Will Tiant ~tback to DJajD~? ~ SPOKANE <AP) -A1ele11 Lut1 Tlant bu taken a Ion• ltep in his quest to retu~ to the ma- J~r leaaun. The olt•r·cbompl9g rl1ht· bapder -a lf-reat major- leaeue veteran -~tched the third no=hltter of la career Saturday ni&M. I viog the Portland B eavers a 2-0 International Leaaue victory over the Spokane Indians. Tiant says tie was born in Cuba Nov . 23, UMO, makin& him 40 . But tber.J!. h as been speculation that Tianl was older than bis listed age. \Ttant threw JU&t tl8 pitches m the seven-inning opener of a double-header and struck out 10, including Ted Cox on a called third strike to end the game 'Tve been with him in B06ton and have s~n him the last three years in Cleveland and SeatUe. and I've never seE:n him throw that hard," said Cox. a Seattle Mariners farmhand. "He threw a lot more fastballs than break· ing stuff and he was keeping everybody off balance." ll was a big turnaround for Tiant, wh o was shelled for eight runs in two innings by the Edmonton Trappers in the Beavers· PCL opener. a 12·5 loss. Tuesday in Portland. T1ant gave up six hits in that start but said he was suffering from the flu ··I feel I have to prove something," Tiant said ··I want to get back to the big leagues One way is to pitch well for Portland But you have to be lucky to get a no-hitter " "He pitched as well the day we left Florida." said Portland Manager Pete Ward, a former m aJor leaguer "lie threw six 1n nmgs and gave up a bl~p single to left and a bad hop single He looked very stron~ ·' ON THE WAY OUT Phoenix's Dennis Johnson looks for room against defender Ernie Grunfeld Sunday. He didn't find much and neither did the Suns. Kansas City ousted Phoenix from the NBA playoffs. Olympic trials set Site is Alamitos Bay Yacht Club NEWARK The United States Yacht Racing Union 1981 -84 Olympic Yachting Committee held its second ~ meeting here and reached several im portant decisions. ~ection trials will take place in 11114 al Alamitos Bay Yacht Club, Long Beach, with two c lasses racin~ BOATING simultaneously The trials will consist of 12 scheduled races four in one series followed by a second series of eight races approximately two weeks later Two lhrowouts will be permitted in the 12 contests Sailboard selection will be held last as a single 12-r ace event. A budget for 1981 was adopted cover mg expenditures totaling an estimated $141,000. of which all but $23.000 will cover expenses for various aspects of international competition For the remaining three years or the quadrennium 1982-83·84 the com mittee reached an overall statement of spending desirability of $216,000 per year. Such an amount is not currently tn hand. Pursuit wins Robert Babson 's Pursuit was the Class A winner Sunday in Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club·s Dana Point race, the second of the Angelman Series for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. C lass B winner was Porpy, skippered by Roy Sinclair, Balboa Yacbt Club, and the Class C winner was Revelation, Bill Fordiani, Voyagers Yacht Club. Trophy winners in class: C(ASS A -1. Purs uit, Robert Babson, BCYC; 2 Stress Breaker. Jack Larsen, BCYC; 3. Stroker, -Mike Kirby, BCYC. CLAS.5 B -1. Porpy, Roy Slnclalr, BYC; ~-Flying Colors, Dave Stone. BCYC; 3. Mariposa, Dick Hayden, ~CYC. Cops mix in football CLASS C l. Revelation, Bill Fordiani, VYC ; 2. Scotch Mist, Don Anderson, BYC. 3 Aloha 11, Glenn Reed. SSYC. Overton series Mama·s Mania, co-skippered by Ray Russell and Tom Hernchaf\, Santa Monica Yacht Club, won the Mayor of Los Angeles Trophy in the race from Marina del Rey to Newport Beach Sunday Twenty-two yachts entered the race which was the second of California Yacht Club's Overton Series. The yachts will remain in Newport for the remainder of the week and will com· pete in the 34th annual Newport to Ensenada which gets under way next Saturday with685entries. Second overall in the Mayor's Trophy race was Rodeo Drive, sailed by Roger Chittum . Pacific Mariners Ya cht Club. Hobie cats due More than 600 Hobie Cat sailors from throughout the southwest will make their annual migration to Lake Havasu City, Ariz April 30 for four days of racing, golfing. water walk- ing . water s kiing and tennis tournaments. The gathenng has been held ror five years and has come to be known as the tongue-twisting "Lake Havasu Family Fun and Recreational Retreat.·• Workshop set "Security Awareness for Boaters," a one-day workshop, will be presented by Coastline Community College from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m . Saturday, May tat Bayview Learning Center, 2531 Orchard Drlve, Santa Ana Helabta. Lecturer Richard St mod wilidlscuss such topics as "Lone John Silver ls Alive And Well," personal security at sea in foteign ports and at anchor, sell- defenH systems, and boat security at· sea ln Corelgn ports and at anchor. Tht third annual Cop'er Bowl football 1aat• ls set for Friday. Maf 15 at Eddie West Field in Santa Ana. Tb~ annual benefit conte.t pit.a the Anaheim and Santa Ana police de- partment.a in a full con· tact football tame. Fund• raJ.aed from the &al$lt 10 toward the WJdow1 and Orpbab• h1'4 of both police de· partfnenta. J 1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE •Leather covered sealfq aNa, AM/Fii lteft<> with tape player I& Cadlllac wire wheel covera. Ray Malavut ti honorary coaqb of the Analaelm •ulli wbO will be .-c. ~·••n tw pre.ta. fifHtl . . (788UDS). -• 9895 TOYOTNS TWO SEAT RTS MACHINE. \ . THE 1981 SR5 SPORT TRUCK . Outstde, tt may not look hke lhe sports cars you sketched 1n your school notebook But as they sad 1n school. don t 1udge a book by 1tscover MorePowef It's a tough truck outside Bui look under the hood of a 1981 To,iota SAS Sport Truck <ind you'll find the heart of a sports car-a 24 hler over- head cam4- cy~nder engine that's more powerful than last year yet has an EPA rating that's 20 percent htgher! Ee~imated Highway MPG. estmated MPG. ber: Compare this esti- mate to the EPA "Estimated MPG" of other trucks You may get differ- ent mileage. depending on hoN fast you d~ 1.Aieather cooditionl. and lnp length Actual highway mileage will probably be less than the EPA "Highway Es11rr.a1e • Sporty Interior Inside. the Toyota SAS Sport Truck could teach "rear sports cars a few lessons This cockp11s all business Hi-back bucket seats 5-speed overdnve transm1ssoo AM/FMIMPX stereo radt0 And big blacked-OU! gauges tor all engine functions Sporty Handllng The SRSs got what 11 takes Torsion bar front suspension Steel belted radial trres F'o>M:!r assisted fronl disc brakes Truck tough. but tuned to respond to ~ur slightest input That's what makes the Toyota SR5 more fun to dnve than other trucks and even some sports cars that look hke sports cars The Toyota SAS Sport Truck We don t call it "the sports car of trucks"for nothing v.9~AT FEE~G TOYOTA ./ . ~ •• ~ .. .. 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Merlin Ill -Grote W-G•I• 11.01 L.- Fl•n"9.,, l~JI S M<tron I II "' 22,03.7 ...... rt4,Y-..sl N-Y orll 000 000 ooo-4 4 I T .. .., 102 000 10•-4 I I T. Unde..-, It Davit Ill, LAltoclW 111 end O•lft. flNll•<ll end $unclber9 W ltletl eck Cl ·J) L.-T Underwood 10·11 A 10,757. 'laSTOAMa ,.., •• l'M~t S.•111• 000 001 000-1 • J Oeklen4 002 JOO 10•..... t 0 A-II. Ouoo Ill -llulllng; M, Norrlt, Minetto C1l, J. J-t Ill •ncl New,,..,,, W-M. No<Yl1C3-0l. l A-I 10.ll. HQOMOOAMa ..u,......a,A·1 1 s ... u. 000 020 010-J ' 0 Oekl....S 000 200 OC»-J 7 0 Perrott, C19rll. 161, Of'•") -llulllftl; L.'""9•-.,... .... ,11. w-0 • .-. 11•1 L- L.•ntlotd 11·11 S-0•-Ill HR-S..tti., Zttll 121 A-2',a.t ................. lot U>n 200 JOO 004_. ' I (l\IC"90 100 JOO 000-4 II 2 Cra ..... , l .SIMIMY 141, ......... \« Ill •nd Allenton! ••umo-rt•n, ump 141, F••mer m. t41cU'I' m ...-,.,... W-4 SUl\llY IJ.11. L.-k11moer1t11 Ct-II s- llurgmeler Ill. HR•-loston, AIMNOll 12). Clllc•eo. ,.,. C•I A-4,j19 Tdp ten 1 ..... 1111,htlMlll NATIOMAL. L•AOUI Collllll, Cln<lnMll Oaw-.""""1MI I' lynn, ltew Ywtl ---· "" ... lplll. kett,IU.Allllt Certer,MonlAll ._ ....... Mont ... Templ ... ,St.LAlull 0 ••• "l'n. 10 • 12 " .'7j ' 1' • 11 .-2 1 a ' 12 .4' 10 0 s It .Alf • u 4 10 .• 4U49 .Jt1 1 2' • 10 .211 • » ' 10 .llS 1 u 1 10 .J10 • t7 ' 10 .310 MIHllec:ll, Pt-otl May, '-n'r-lteo .._._ Tllo mp ton, PllUDYrgll, I ; Fottar, 'Clflel-1, I. I ._ ..... Ill Ce11c•,clo11 Cl11clnnaU, •; OrtHMll, Cl11<l1111ell, '; l'ott•r. Cln<tnnetl, t ; Mo<'elen4, l'tllleelltolll•. 7; ... rnlft0e1, Sl ' LAlulf, 7. Tournament of Champion• lat._.. LA C..UI t..ff TreVlllO, UA.000 61-67·,..._fll lt•Y Ftoy4. US,000 6W7 .... 1i>-<f1S 8ruc• LJetru , $23,SOO ... 11••11>-m 1111 Rogers, $17,100 ... 72-6 ... 11-- L..,ry Helton, SIS,000 n•7·7J·11-lll Tom Kile, S\2.000 6t.7).7W.-JIS Dwg T-1, $11,000 71-7 .. IMt-aa C11rt11 Sir.,_, stt.000 .._,,.11·7>-aa Tom Wet.on, SIO..UO ,.n ... 1o-.a. 0 .. 14 ~........ .... 7).ff.71-7,:...115 J.ctt Nickl ..... M.J]S 7Ht-7•7t-• 8an er.,.,...,. ta.vs 1S41·1).7'-JM Oen Hal\donllll, s1.-tt.1i.1i.1,_111 lloCI Glide<, '6,1!0 12-70.7).7)-- JOflnny Miii.,, $6,1SO 11-11·11·1$-m JOflll CCIOk, $J,IQO 1...,_1•11-.. Sutt Hoch, U.IDO 1...,.1 .. 12_., Scott 51,._, U,lllO 1S.11·1 .. 1'-M ~•rll Plett, U,000 10.1 .. 72·7>-1'1 JOM M ..... fO, M.-00 11·12-11·12-1'2 14•1e Irwin. M.500 11·11·1•11-2'4 Peter Jee-. M,~ 11·11-1 .. 1.._JM """' llHn, M.JOO 1,....., .. , .... ,.. MllM wn • .,,, ~uo 1a.1 .. , .. ,.._,.. Ho'Ward Twitty, M,000 •t-IJ.1~2'7 11111 Kr.u.rt. U,IJO 12·1•1•Tt--1" Don P-'t'. Sl,600 11-13-TT·Tt-#l W•YM L.rri, ~ 7H3-n·1~1 l'lllJ H•ncodl. $3.400 '2·1•7•7t-ll) Talla11 ..... OpH De"" £ldlltlllf'llr, SIUCIO .._f.70-VI ._,. O'MMr•. SUDO ~7 .. W -211 9oCI Mur.....,, llMIO U-67......-VI Gr99 p--._ $.t,910 ......,...12-m Ct\I Clll "-'9W. '4,Gl 12...,.7..._.,• .,.., .,.,,.,. .. ...-, .. , .... ,_vs LO<I GrMlem, U.lDO 10.11 ...... 7-276 Terry"'-• $3,JOO 11·1Hl..,_V6 Miile OoMld, U.JOO •J.JO..t-70-21' D•n• O..lgley, 12.400 71.71..,..._m S.mmy R«lwl1, $1.400 11.11,.,..._211 Tommy V•ltfttl,., U.400 10..•...,10-211 Jerry Ht.,d, ~-'1·1M1·1J.-m G.ory M<~d. 12,.00 11......._n-m B .. u B.ougll, ll,7~ ,, ............. 21. R.W. E•lu. $1,llO ........_1J-27t Jtm Dent, \t.l07 1k•·1l44-21' Vence HNI,,.., $1,.l01 70-70-71 ... -27' Ruu Cochren, SI.JOI 70-47.72.10-m luwl'( Miiier, fl.JOI 11·1J-70-11t Berry Jeeclcel, S 1,l01 70.71 .... 70-27' Tom s1or..,,, s1,J01 70-4 ..... 71-m Ce .. r s.n..do, \I.JOI '1*11·7i-t7' Forr .. t Feller, S•7S l«Mt-1,..,_. AOd Nucllolll, S'7S .... 71-70.n.-ao Bot> By....,,,''°° 11......,11-lfl ThomH Gr•y, 5116 1).70.7........a:J vktor 11..-. 5116 1• .... n•1-m Tim \I.._, $116 11*1....._Jl2 Mike Holl-..... 72-ll·IWJ-a:J Denny E-...dS.,.. 1H0-1~Ja lloOl>Y W ..... IM. ... 7W·72•,._aa o .. re11 IC~ • ..,. •7·7•7a.~m Bo«M>.,, i:-• ..,.. 11.11 .... n -m C ... rlle Gl-,"1MI 11.-.JHl-Ja R~r Cel•lll, 16.e 1~~14-Ja Fr•lll& c ..... r. 16.11 t .. 70-70-1'-313 St•nlOn Alt .. "-'"° 11*13-11-.. O•ve 11.,r, SS20 "*1•71-.. M•rll L.~JO 71-71 .... 72-.. llOQll• -·~. ~ 11·70-1~-Jtrry M<c;.e, '4S 1~11·11-llS Ed S.lt«, '4U 7Ht-11-71-llS G•ry Koen,~ 1CHH .. 1J.-llS Bruca Fleisher. SA6S 12·70-71>-7>-211 8uoely G..-, JA6j 71-71-7112-211 Mike Smith,~ 1HNHO--llot> si..-. s.u.s , ... ,.11-1>-• Berno rhomOIOll, UJO 13-10·1H•-»1 Jim llertier, MOO 70·7HHl-•7 D••lcl Jwwatrom, MOO 1C>-72-13-12-a7 LPGA toum•m•nt l•ton..,l'i..) Beth Dentel, SIS,000 M17·1•72-al OonNI ~I, $7,:Z.. 7~11...._.I P•ll't' Stleetlall, ST.2'6 7J.1 l .. ,..._a1 Ctncly Hiii, $1,* ... 1~71-71-•t •·Patti Rluo 11-10.1....._•t ll•rt>er• Mlulflte, U,566 7J.7>71M7-Ja Nencr ~t!Oft, U,566 n .7 .. 1.11_. Vklll T Heir, P,.M6 7>71-61·7>-aa Pet Me'('9n. s.2,fOO 7).7M7·11-* Seftelr• P•lmer, 12.-70-"'7>n-• KyM O'~Cen, '2MO "-'2·11·14-JIS I.AIOI .. 8ruc Prks. Sl,'42 11-1 .. THo-a. C•rotyn Hiii, Sl,"2 • 13-1).11-70-llM Jerilyn ~IU, Sl.'42 "*13-1'-• aon111e ~r,Sl,tO 10.11·10.1~ JllllyCl~St,~ 11·11*1._llM cettly llMnt. s 1,4'!0 11 .... 1 .. 10-111 Kallty .........,t. Sl,4'!0 11-1 .. 12-10-111 kl.., Uttle. S\,MO 7S.11·71·7t-111 flM(y Owyef111"'5 ,.7S.1Ml-- Me .... s..-...111e1, SIMS 7S.1t-71·12-• JYdy R~$1,otS 1\.1...._11 __ ~-...... ,P'S fl.71-11-JJ...m CMla J._, 11.oH 1s.H-1J-14-• $utl• McAll,...r,$1,otS 12·10-70-7...._.. wo,,,.n'• toum •m•nt latK-..-t,J-1 A"'Y Alcott, $14,IM 7HJ.1'-221 A't'lkO C>Qlnoto, SI0,1• 7S.7).7J-223 P•t llrec:tl1y, S1 .173 7 .. 7 .. 7~ Alsuko HIU91, U.OH 7M0-11-z21 Fut•ko N~. U,OM 1s.1 .. 11-m Muffin Oevlkl. "-"' IJ.72-14-22' Rello KalftlwMo. suit 1 .. ,._,._229 hUko Kl"°"*°· sU• 7 .. 7).77-229 T•twllooi-t, U,U:S 1s-I0-1l-UO H•119 Mlng..SNn, SJ,1» 11.1,.,.._uo Tu A·YU, $2.llO , .. , .. 1 .... UI Tos!llt Set.Int, $.2,5'0 7 .. 1Mt.-UI Seiko SlllFMQolU, 12.JIO 71·7 .. ft..-231 Hisako Hleuclll, s2.0V 77-7~1-m MlclllkO YollO'(MWI. SJ.o27 1s.11 ..... m •1i.Mle ll'YIM CNte-.a C:.-•MM Oc:N11Y'"' U11I~ •1T- 0-.. Mont• C•rlo Open ~ ""'91flll•lt W L It • • • • 4 • 4 , 1 0 11 Jimmy Connort clef. B•IHI T•roczY ... 1. 1. Jec:tl Kramer Open C•tl.MA ...... I Slf191K ..... lt ..... . Jollrl McErvoe def. Biii SunlOft, .. l, •-3 o.Met ~, .... ,. McEnrM·l'er41 T•Yo•n def. Merk Ed_Slwr_ Slew•rt, 1•. •• ... , Mond•Y night tootb•ll CT,.. 'Mt....,., f'ooua.11 i..ee .. ·a i.clleOMM Of regul.,·tMIOft Moftd41y nlgtot 19"'" to be te1..,,1...s netlonally by ••c I•" ....," sc..1 et 6 p,m PSTI · S.pt. 7 -s., 01-et ci .... 1- $epl 14 -Oeto.l•lld 111o11 ..... ..... S.PI. 21 0.11• et New Er19lelld Sept ll -•-et Clllc~ Ckt. j AtW...le., Pllll-lptlle Ckt. 12 -Mleml •I 8ullelo Oct. 1t -OllC-00., 0.trolt Oct. lt Houston at Pltuburtll Hov. 2 Mlnnesow et o.t>ver Nov ' -Bufl•lo et 0-11., No• i. -S... Di.oo •t S.ettl• No• 1* Mlnnesot. et Allenta NO• JO -Pllll-lelfll• et ltll...,I Dec T -Pllttburgl\ el <>M·•lld Dec .. -Allen!• "' ·-OK 11 -o.111-.. '911 O'- NBA pleyotfa aAaTaaN eot11'aa1NC• llMll'INAU ~·k•• Pl\lle de lpllle ''· Mll weuk•• •• c Pllll-lpN• wlM vr'" •31 WaSTlaN CONl'llllaNCll SIMll'INAU ~··I<•• City 9', "'-1• • CKen .. s City win• Mrln441 CONfl•aaNCI fllNAU ,..,. .. _, •.. ..,,.~. T_..y'tO- Phlledell'N• 41 Bor.\or1 ........ , .• o- Phll-IP"\• •t Boatofl l't*y'to.Me BollCNI •t Plll~lpltl• ,.....,A.nt16 8otlOll •t Pfllleelelpllll ....... ...,. .. Plllleclelalll•et ....... (H MC.-YI flnMy,Me.,1 •otlOft .. ....i1.-tpNa Ill M<"6MY I .......... ~ PllllMtl""'• ......... CH lloK-ryl WHTllUt COMflaaaMCI ,_....,..~ Houllotl at K-a City ........ .,. . ._ HOUllM at 1(-. City .. ....,..o-. IC•nM1Clty9t~ .... .,,Aini at KenMI City •I H-loft ....... ,.Afnllt H--at ICenut City I ll ,__ryl .. ,..,,.,..,, Kan,.. Oty et~ Ill nec.-ry) ..... , . .,..,. Hoont .... KMUI City Cit nec...-ryl tU ,,_.., fa\lorite followln1 the elblllNtion Of ~ffidtd BJom Bori ct Sweden In the flnt round, woa ll• opentnc set a1aln1t T tod1 Saturday before raln pOftpilll)edthe matcb. Couors bad to battJe the 2$. year-old Hunearian for one hour, seven minutes tn the second set before reachlnf the Monte Carlo tin al for the first time. • 'l actually played well today only when lt counted, which Is bad,'' Connon said.· 'I don'tthink 1 put enouah pressure on him in) the ~·· It Wll my fault. But ln the tle·breaker, when It counted. I think l played well." Coonon wu le*dlna 3·2 ln the Hcood•et beforeTaroc11. on.Ofi the world'• top clay court playen, held aervtce lo the alxth tame. then broke Connors' servic• for the flnt time to 10 ahead •·3. Connors broke back In the eighth game, then held service In the next game wlthout aUowtn' Taroczy a potnt. TAX St4ELTERS Oil & 'Go. • R*' &to19 • M S'°'!'f" • ~ ~ DltUCTIOMI UP ~ TNI YU.I ••MO L IOUll ~ •YICU 714 1 CONSTRUCTION I MONEY AVAILABLE AT EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or .• Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH "' 714 -631 -~51 NO FRILLS TEETH WANING s22 SoutH COAST . OMLT DENT'AL filoup·· 642-0112 JIOlt .. .._llYd..C-.MeM HERITAGE BANK • Raiden.tial '- • Cammerdal Buildin•: Takeout Commitment required alona with leala. • Land Leana up to one year 50% ap · CONTACT: • Tom Wilcher- Anaheim Office (714) 991-3860 •Jeff Johnaon- lrvinc Office (714) 833-3700 THE BUSINESS BANKERS Herit~e Bank Mun'-•mlC @'? UlllM~ Ll!NOl!flt I I COLLECTORS CORNEA Ra;e Cotn1 & Stampe GOLD ft SILVER Prices for 4-16-11 OellllC_.-_. SllverCl.Sll.41 r---~~ClthNI 8U)lncl» 1;;;iflniftllM11PWK)ll~---I In Business To Make Business Happen I KrUQPr- M<lttle 1.eMt IOOCoronn 50 PelOI ~sll ... •&evl •• , 5-le .....n Ult.U ..... u .-us .......... , .. ""·· .. 1u• MU'lf. fM.J~ '·-~-,,, Celllw~-...... (114) 556-t&SO South Coeat f'taH VIiiage ____ , ... ___ C:-"6 .. , Secretaries Week is April 19-25. Shes a V.l.P. : FLOWERS Secretaries Day is Wednesday, April 22. _·1 ~~ ...................... Jtlll~-A .... •~t• COSTA MIU ct:.; 641-0110 . l)o you read the •vauc NOTICES pultllabed ln tbis Iewspaper daily! They are a vital part of D VE PROCESS OF LAW and of the PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW ... Public notices are published under court or· dera or leglslatlve codes for the purpose of notify· l•I one or more In· dl•lduils of some pro· poaed action or put event which mey ad· , veraely or favorably •C· feet theiJ' ri1ht1, interest or duUes; and also ror the purpose of 1lvln1 such persons the opPe>rtun1ty to protect their n1hta, or &o be bun! ln the Matter. Mab)' publl't OOClcet hav• frHl ~alue lo thpayers. 1uch u thbte noilces pubrt ahed b)' mun~{pallllea. public a.ih.Srlty corporations, treuurera and others who an recNlrtd bt law lo publl1h 0Qanc .. 1 re· pol'la, budlfl h .. tln& noUcn. ordlnantff'Ot ad· venlaemnttl ol bide oh J)ubllc work Theu notlcea ICHp you In formed 11 to how and •h>' your laJt dotlart 1are beiPI .. pend•d. 'l'hey alto pnve11' or di•· HIYNP frbdi~ raklt OJ'I 1u1bl\t lr.i-'trtea and '•YOttt• la dlt a.tun1 ....... -'Y f~un . .......... oa At Creative we have the money you need Loans from $25.000.00· for any business or tBF investment purpose Where you deal directly with the Lender and not a loan broker. •All loans secured by a comb1 nation ol real and personal properly 4425 JAMBORE.£ ROAD • SUITE 180 • NEWPOR1 BEACH (. llt If ORNtA 'll6(><; 17141 752·792:l ~> BROWN'S~ The prime steak place."' Just the way 1' Profitable American CompanJet .1th pretax. worldwide earnings of over 3.S billlon dollan Paid·'No Federal Income Taxes At All! On the list of no tax companies, are U.S. Steel, General Dynatnlcs, Amertcan Airlines, Occlclental Petroleum, Boeing aad J .P. Mor1an & Co. (Report Chlh1ln1 Times, October 1880). DON'T WAIT UNTIL TD BND or THE YEA&. CAU NOW AND L8AaN BOW 'to\PVT YOU& TAX DOUAU TO WORK 'l'OR MOaE INCOME roa YOU! I PHONE: 644·250'1 CAiia llr 8emlaar Directer) ' : . • 11EAE ARE (/ Read all toda~r 's lJI itews .. every day Local, county, state, national and international events come to 'tOUr doorstep in· the bright, ..---. light and lively Daily Pilot. ®Keep an eye on ~lcwal government No Slther newspaper brings you more news of your city council, planning commission, school and college districts and county government. ~Laugh, ery or ~et '?J smart REASOrlS Wl1Y ••• fi.OFollow your team "i;/ The sports action at 15 Orange Coast high schools, three community colleges, UC Irvine arid Cal State campuses is regularly reported by the · Daily Pi lot sports staff. ~ ......... Keep up with nation- ally ranked college and pro teams, too! BS~ve '!'one! and ~ shopping time Real values on items from apple- sauce to zippers. are advertised • · every day in the Daily Pilot. Because the ads are from firms in this area, you save t~ me, ef- fort and money. ~Enjoy your Sunday ~Family Weekly, color comics, TV Week, the latest news and features about your community, your money and you highlight the interesting reading packaged in your Sunday Daily Pilot. Enough to read - and enjoy. ---- Cij]Tune in to the (/ latest TV logs The latest , most acc·u rate television guide is published each weekday in the Daily Pilot. On Sundays, TV We~k ~~. w charts the tube .... "' E in convenient, ~ \ easy-to-find ~~~~~~ listings. (ti ~ .: 1. 20 RlT(R CIGAR[ nu • ~ ........... ,. LOW TAR C AMEL QUALITY 3. <el\\ Me~ LIGHTS LOW TAR C AMEL QUALITY. 4. LOW TAR CAMEL OUALITY LOW TAR CAMELTAST 20 CIGARETTES LOW TAR CAMEb .. TASTE · 1 ~ . • Al'WI NEW YORK -Once l read tfte script or .a really .awful ForeJ1n Lesion movle, "March or Dle." It contained thlt line: "You auured me, DuPont, that there would be no turrnotl in Morocco." It's oddly soolhin1 to aay th.I.a line aloud, particularly In a crowded elevator. My only Regents nix toothhrUsh scUlpt~e rt•~tt it that it'• not lnohadld 1ft ~11111. How h• 1ot into m)'. Pl• out wtth more quot11 from 1 fln• new book Ju.t out, ''Thi 1 mu I ' U n •vu le now . " more elderly movt.. (au MovleQuoteBook.'1 roucho Marx In "i\nlmal f•t• at nllbt on TV. J But then, author Harry Haun, Crackert." ucky. The old quot• oft• a mud-mannered nporter for a -GOOD-8\'ES: "So 10~1. So matched ~aJnat the old 1crt 1rea~1 metropolitan daily heN, Ions, you ancient pelican.'' The)' didn't alwaya matcb deliHerately 1bunned louay Reita Toomer., as John Wayne notes, to he uaed wbat actu dlalo1ue when cboo11tn1 l,87e Umps aw,ay ll "The High and was said tJJ the fllm. quotes from 571 films for h1a the Mighty.'' movie buff helped in other wa tome. , . -MAaRIAG•: "Gettln1 A prime example: He di • •1 w•o.ted \o celebrate married ls serious bualness. It's need to see "Casablanca" aa acreeawrUers, oot put tbem k.tnda formal, like funerals or or check the script to know clown," says Haun., a Texa.q who pl YlaS stud poker}' WUUam Humphrey Boeart never aal came he~ ln 19'7lS to write about Garg• in "They Knew Whal "Play it again, Sam" to film• and Inmates \hereof alter They Y(anted." piano player. Never happend. 10 yean ol movl1-rtttewto1 TELEPHONE SCENES: The closest we get to that the Nashville Tennessean. "Hello. Is this someone with is where Bogie's old name, His criteria for quotation in eood news or money? No? erid Bergman, comes un "The Movie Quote Book," he Goodbye." Jason Robards in "A pectedJy into Bogie's bar a say!f, l&~t the Unea M famom, Tl)ousand Clowns." says, "Play it, Sam. Play • or r-: or memorable. He'a -VIOLENCE: "I caught the Time Goes By.'" put them into 373 cate1ories, blackjack right behind my ear. And, or course, later on Bo such as: A black pool opened at my feet. l drunkenly sighs, "Of aU the -aQLDIU5N: "We~l. there dived in. It had no bottom." joints in aU the world, she wa HARTFORD, Conn. (A P > -won't be1no patter of tittle feel irt Richard Powell in " Farewell, My into mine." University of Hartforsl regents my house -unless J was to rent Lovely." All that is in Haun's " have told New York pop artist some mice." A forlorn Peggy It may seem odd that a guy Movie Quote Book," a fine wo Claes Oldenberg they don't want Lee In "Pete Kelly's Blues." saves movie quotes the way a good read. Bat I sure wi a 23-foot-long toothbrush for -DYING WORDS : "Cancel some guys save twine. But he'd find it in his beart to their campus. my appointments." Sylvia quote-keeper Haun says he's elude in future editions one The latest effort of Oldenberg, Sidney in •·summer Wishes, never tossed out any of those the best lines of all tirpe. considered one or the natlon's Summer Dreams." he's jotted down One day be got It goes: "You assured leading contem porary sculptors, -ELEPHANTS: "One morn-to thinking about them DuPont, that there would be was a 38-foot-tall flashlight at ing I shot an elephant in my pa· This caused the book. fleshed turmoil in Morocco.'' the u~ve~i~ ~ N~~L ms -------------------,~~~~W~~~~~ works also include a con· .troversial sculpture or a lipstick at Yale University and a 101· fo ot -long baseba ll bat in Chicago. Comments or the regents were varied. but mostly they simply didn 't l ike the proposed sculpture. "I'm not attracted by his ef fort ... said regent Grace Ell s worth of Simsbury. "Sometimes things that are far out are interesting. but I don 't think this was.·· Rice Clemow, a vice chairman of the r egent s. s aid the toothbrush .. was not a dist· inguishcd piece " However. there was harsh re· action to rejection of the toothbrush. O~denberg "is a major sculpte)r and tnis clearly is a minodeague towQ." complained Bern a rd Hanson , a faculty member and former dean of the univers ity's Hartfor d Art School. _ .......... "CAVEMAN" (PG) .. •· 1.•···•••:•·•.t1 · ... ,.. •••oona•• •N "CAVl!MAN" (POI n·• •I • • 4:• • 61U • t.• · 11·• WEEKDAY QUARTERBACK -Ac\ress Jane Fonda prepares to throw a football during filming in New York for the mov- ie ''Rollover." The film in which Fonda stars with Kris Kristofferson wound up filming last week. Love scenes show topic HOLLYWOOD <AP> -James Garner, Angie Dickingson, Ro bert Urich and Victoria Principal are the hosts for "Sixty Years of Seduction.'' set for ABC on Monday, May 4. 642-5678 Put a few words to work for you NOW PLAYING MAH HU Brea 529·5339 AMC OIUNGE MALL Orange 637·0340 MAA IOtnM COAST Costa Mesa 546·2711 EOWAROS' WUTIROotl Garden Grove ~30·440 I EDWARDS' IADOLE BACK Et Toro 581 ·5880 UA CITI CINEMA Orange 634·3911 PACl"C I HAMflM DRIYE·UI Anaheim 879·9850 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE in the c--l"NIGHTHAWK" (R) " ~ ,,,.,.,. .... I "LION OF THE DESERT" 1..01 I "THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE" (Rl . t ""' .. n:E•;:;~ ~ SINGER" (PG)" The two-hour special will look at romantic clips from more than ,. 400 rTtRvies. * BARGAIN SPECIAL * All SIAYS $2.00 ALL DAY Ivery Monday & Tueldayl m~~!.~ mMfAPWA52.J ~... \.!.! ......... _ ... .... s.46·2711 IRISTOl AT $UNHOWEll Exduslve Lrrired Engagemenfl TOGETHER! in 70MM WHERE Ell(~YHUNC. ENO'> S.C. HlwaY at...-y ~9'-1S1~ '"-ITAA W""S c- ---~-·-------.... , ... ___ ., .... _ ........ "CAVOIAN" IPOI ......... -_______ ..,._ _,,_, .... • • • • • • • • • l'M:.lc nlUTIIU _..., msTI nMTCM nlUll eucca--TM9 DAY AT MAMOll .......... ~ I Alt 1'0 JN M~Y 6 .._,.., -~IUllDAYIAT~ft-- ,_,CA.\tl "THIEF" c111 ..,...,_,.,,. __ ·~­''RAGING BULL" l"1 .....,. . • "ELEPHANT MAN" .... IU.-:.W. WOllt/J# INOfNlll .,._ the ~ oownf'Y °'........, ~ ~ tM _,,... wtlO ..... fOYll ...... I 'nO TN; DOUGH eooo.,.. Til9 .... fWftly '"* ~Iron\._ CflAoO ~·L FAME SEEKER -Anthony Franciosa ~~~.:':!.. stars with Jill St. John in "Fame ls the •°'London.~..., Name of the Game," a movie about a Btown'1 painting end magazine reporter who finds the body Of ~=:~ a slain girl tonight at 8 on Channel 5. • IUCTNC CIOW'AWI ~ I . 1UUA1V1 C"-that can ba haz#d-. ~ ~ I e .,,_,..CW tAN oue to yo.#' hMlttl; guetO-_. -ll'R.t.'CllOO Ing &Qalnll mlaleadlng l.. .K*M'IWIU> I Hiving mutd«M flYe law-labala. ~ Hk.L ~. a rulh .... klllat hu • IHA NA NA 8enny !Nye 1 baDytlltet pegged hi• nut P'"Y what! ~: Larry Gatlin and wtio-·t be .... bad< Slone and Kallat lntercec>I The Qattln 8'ott.n 811\d I Km'f~T Nm. 8 HOU.YWOOO ITUDeO 1U • ow.A EASY IOUAMlt ••Gymnaat1ca" Young QYTll· G-t•: Chila RI,,...• and II l'ACIE THl MUllC M918 tniln tot Muta Otym-her daughtw, Liu M0t-e MACNEl / l..IHAllA pie ~ two lclda danta. IRl MPORT from Hebt11111ta IMka a Id-• ~I~ G OMCE lMl'ON A eflCl9 tlc:11ot\ ftlm. (A) ~ Cl.A88IC Cl) ..we Cl) TIC TAO DOUQH "The Tallaman" Edith O MRNIY aia.L.11' d) MERV GNfF1N tur,_ up In the Moe1am o.nonic: pann ·0.,, an Gu.ts: Chartal Naleon C""9 and ottare ~to Meg8181iarl and 1111 eccoun-Reilly, Eyde Mc:Clwg. Mot· S.i.dln In axctlenga f0t 111111 wtth a podcatn.1 of ~ feWcNld Kenneth'• lraadOm CPwt OfM1 are enough to meke 7:JO B 2 ON THE TOWN 7) CR) Iha o.tact'-w1a11 they Ho111· s1 ... 1 Edwatdl, (I) P.M. MAGAZINI! hlld t1eOOfne 11rwnen Melody Aoglra A IOOlt Info New Yot11'1 ~ vtgliMle .. , DTONAI.. the tf8UIT\I and horrOt ol group, th• Guardian :>'*' e91 ..we c:hlld.-.teallng: .,. lntenltlw ~; a Calltornia town MIC NEWS wtth linget I aongwrtter ~ to dou+ u an HAPPY DAVI AGAIN HltT'/ Chapltl. thl atory of alrll.ld. FONie w11 lla\11 nothing P-l:OO 8 Cll PNVATE more to do llWlth hll COUlit1 D AQtfT MCK WITH IEHJA.., CltacN attw "' lillp• DAVID HOftOWITZ WWII Privet• Banjelnlc'I .. 10fto01 Ind ct-11 on .,, Topics: tlc>e on PfOtactlng planning • 1)¥ty. Cec>taln J ' -· • hofnw against 11utgi.,.; Lewta .. planning how to e ,.,, NIW8 Pl1 hMltfl oncee: madl-atop It ------------------D UTT\..IHOUIEON !CHANNEL LISTINGS !!:n": .. 1n~«1 In. 1tegecoach ecicldaclt. Mary !_ r l . . • 8 l<NXT 1CBS1 Los Angt>lt>S D KNBC tNBC1 Los Anqelt>s B l<TLA tlnd I Los Angeles KABC·TV !ABC! Los Anqeles (I) !\FMB 1CBS1 San Doeqo G K~· TV ctna I Los An4e1e., 11§) KCST 1ABC1 San Do.-qo • KTIV (Ind l LOS Anqelt''> ., KCOP· TV (lnCl 1 Los Anqt>•"S 8ll KCE T-TV 1 PBSI Los AnqPle!. al> KOCE·TV PBS1 Hunl •1<Jlon Bedell IN-'*" and .,., expacl- .,., mol'-and Ml• "" alOf>e to find help IR) 8 MOYIE ***"Fama ti TM Name 01 The Gema" c 11MWS) Tony Francic>N. J.cil Klugman A magazlM repor'let ecd- d1ntally dhw:ov11a th• body OI a llaln gjf1 89 THAra INCMDl9l.a FMluted 1 myatetloua Mayen akull, a -who .. ,.,,..,, Altll ~, ... Coll! ---end .lllw Upotalnt ..., ..... ., .... '°*'In~ ..,..,... -tnoedY Of .,....._ ~ ~ dltwct--~~ .... • CMML9QtWl\JN OOlim>Y THMTllll "TN ~ .. Ctlatle , wtlo .. ptOM to lgftOtlne llre~pt-....., an ~ fleto wtterl • fella W9Cln plo4 una Into the ,.., thing tl:IO 8 ()) 1MI lWO Of UI •9ntWood'• .... llld • kleptomenlac aoccer J ,...,... followl Nan hOme on • day lltat ahe hie an lmpor1Mlt "'**"' MM6-u6ed. • M•A•t•H Hawtceye undef'goaa a dre.tlc ctlenga ..., hi ~ ~ com- mander Of Iha '°""' ID MOVW **'-""The 81\ocklng Miu Pilgrim" ( 1114 7) ••tty Grable. Didi H~. A woman lftodl• the WOtld by bacOmlng the ,.,... ol tllr MS to maatlf Iha tw»- wrltar ktryboetd. t:008CI) M•A•a•H- WMe dtMrlo to 8aol.d on • two-dey ,,.., Ha'Ml9ye la ambulhed and c.ptUfld by • North l<OfMll M>ldler ~ MOYll "The Str.ngar At JaHwaon High" (Prarnleral St-wt Petlt9lltl, Dena Klmmlll A I~~ to Loi Ang.Ill to ao.ippott hit n..iy wlOowed motnar and "" llbllnga 8 0 OYNASTY Claudia t9llMla Iha datallt ol lier altW """"" S'-l anda~--·Ot Iha pr-=utlon atuna the C.rlngton tamlly. II 91L.L.Y GMHAM ~ • AUIN.,..FMokY Arctlle' 1 UfliOn goea on st(l4{e. CPtwt 1) ' '"'*'.Cl) "°'* CAU.I CNtie)' II aant IO )1111 tor refuaJng to rel•... • pau.rrt'a fTlldlcal ,_di to a Sanat• 1n~11ng commltt.._ CRI • ....VGIWAH Ou.ta Chwlloll ...._ Aellly, Eyde Mc:Clwg, Mo<· KCET • 8: 00 -• 1 Anto11y and Cleopatra.'' The Shakespeare pllJ• eoo,. tlnue with Colin Blakely and Jane Lapotalre as the f amoUI, ill·tated lovers. I KOCE 8 8:0Q -"Charlie Cbaplln Comedy Theatre. 1' In .. lbe Fireman," Charlie ia a clwmy member ol an In· efficleat ~ 1uy fire bri&ade but able to prove himself a hero when fake anon becomes the real thing. · CBS 9 9:00 -"M-A·S-H." Hawkeye is captured by the enemy while the 4077 is intent on a bridge tournament pitting Col. Potter against Charles Winchester. . 991'1 faltC/tllld. Du z.noe. KM! fWlllOft. 10::00. Cll LOU GMNT Lou and aw-. euapee1 but can't prcw. U\lt a c:Mmleel plMt le calllllg • bulge In IN .-tit ,_. a 8'M9-t-dl#TIC) .. , .. ,,., II~ Jeealca ,_ a M~- an tiring pqvad. ~rt Waiki Into.,..~. and Chea-* ~ OMny ltt bad wtth ,. bride Annie. .ME.WDT Act~ director• 11\d Clil • I~ 411cu11 recurte'lt I'-In Wiiiem mo\llaa 10::10 e WDE1 CW N9TWOflK NIWI -~ TM!ATM "ftllwWe Raquln" Ther- and Uluranl'a wedding night ~a m-b<• -I U lhalf pantulYI gulll conjurH up the haunting epirll of Camille !Pert 2)9_ • 11:00 •••• Cl) (!I NeW8 • STAATAEK The EnterptlM goee In -Ch ol • mlaelng aciln· tllt on •dying ~ II NEW\. YWED GAME • MNNYHtU Benny po<1r eya • pypi4 tn thl T"-School Of Dr•· ma • OQ(CAW1T Oulott; Dr. Olww a.-. CPart 1of2) 11::IO•Cll (91 .... INCW.~ ''Raoeglin: Tiie Ari! nw. Montlla" D•I' "''"" repot18 on lite don..c.lc potlc:y of the -admlnla-tuitlon. (Part 11 D TONIGHT I GuNt ,_.. De"4d lAttet-"*'· au.ts Jotvo MaW- 111<, Peul Wlkome. Sydney Goldarnlilt. 8 9 MCNIW8 NMJHTUNl I LET"I MAQ A OEAl u•A•a•H Maj. Houllha.,·1 Ilene• atrl-at Iha 4077th and anoctt• frank by Uklng him to be Na Dell man • MAIETTA TOfl)I la aJq)OMd to a dUCS· ly dlMaM and hu only 411 holKa to track down the gun runner wt><> 11 19'9ad- ~ 11 •• CAPTlOHED A8C MEWi -Ml>NIGHT---- 12:00 II (I) QUINCY. M.E. A aupl)Olldly dMd lelevt· alon ,_""'°"'.,, ahOwtl up 11 a p<na conlwenc• Quincy 11 holding to annour>ee 'Ill llndlnga on her Olalh JOHN DARLING . ....,._ ...... llN;"' =-.... -~ .... ... •• MltfN/f-.Ne '°"'~''** ....,_ PIJll OM ... lab. Md I pretty fllrt ~ ._.....,,(.., •---•ca ~ "°.,..,, 1t'* ..... """' llflCI Nft lllto .. law ""-~ .. wt~-tfiey ....... • 11111 Ott ~HILi Jeni ......,. ...a "'9 IMP: on 111 H91gnm•nt to d"noy en organfHd crlnM ~-CPart 1) ,..1= ' Ou.et: "'-lat Wll)'"e "*-· • ONI.,..,. .VOND "Thi Stone <:ill1er" A ...,d predict.Ion of dellh II rneda by an o6d tomb- etona cun.r 1:00 • MO'J1l *'-" "Olt, Sueannal" (1938) Gane Autry, Booth HOW• ltd A man not only hM hl1 clot'-ato6an •'*tlf lrom Nm, but ha la alao uni«· tunata enough to b• thrown from a apaadlng train. GNVOC ..... ~,... WON.D eEYOHO Hoe11 Demien ~lmpton and Stacy Hunt dlacuu lhl phyalc:ian of Iha MUt• With~ Or 8'ugh Joy, MO. • 8PEAl(out • IHOEHNOEHT NETWOMNIWa 1:109()) HANWO The -ol • culno .. mutdetM and a boot< llhe OW1'1M, wNcit contal!IM damaging lnlormatlon abou\ "1fluenllll ell~. la 1tolen (R) D MOVIE 1t * •;, "Ca'I Ellert 81 S•ved?" (11174) Kathy c.nnon. Mich... Plflca The patenla of • run•-y t••'l·lgu dllperat•ly •ttarnpt to trH hat lrom lhl payctllc gtlp ol • rllig· IOUSMCI al ADAM-t2 On temporaty cklty 11 l A Tuead<ir'• ~ime~~ -MORt•tG- 11:00tl) •'4 "LudlyTeun" ( 1934) Joltn Wayne. Gabby ~)191. A ~ trlle to clHr hl1 ald•klclc of chetQN of ...meet robbery 11:i0 II ••• •;, .. All About Eve" CPart 2) ( 1950) Batte o.vta, Anne Baxtet. A 91M· •truc:ll glr1 manipulat• and conniv. '* way lo atat- dom ~AFTERHOOH~ 12:00 • * * • "0.-Mora, Wllh Feeiingl" ( tlleol Yul 8rynn•r. Kay° Kendall Atter k>llng hla talent and h11 wile. an ore,_,,. con- duc1ot trlea to regain bOth. Cl) ***"Ten llllle lndl- 1111' ( 19fle) Hugh O'Bl'len. Shirley Ea1on Ten dlap"at1 people ...,.., lhllt daalh• when ,,,.,. .,.. 1nvftM by an urwtno..n "°'' 10 • aec:kJded moun-tain manalon S:30 Q * * * "Thi Day 01 Thi Trtf1k11" ( 1943) Howard KNI. Nicole M-.y Ahet • mlllOrlll ~ ..._ ln091 oi Earth'a tM•bltanta blind, aorne atre1199 Mid• turn lnlo m111HNtlng plenta which 1ngull anything Com+ng 1118' lll«n by Annstrong & Batiuk 1/our Magazine' a 3rd generation talk show • By TOM JORY ......... "'-.~ NEW YORK -Group W's "ilour Magazine" premiered in Sdptember on JUSt YO stattons. a~d is on more than 100 by now. ~·1 guess it's the success of the fQr for a syndicated show," s~s the co-host, Gary Collins. "~ur ratings have been superb. ~ we're thriUed." ·col li n s • off· ca mer a ex. i rance says a good deal about t ready popul ari. ty of the ekday series that offers ments of the traditimiaJ talk a w in a magazine format. •• ~'WHETHER it's as simple as an actor finding the right role. and causing that jmmediate sensation," 1ays Collins, at- tempting to explain bis own almost immediate acceptance b)! station managers as well as viewers, "that's been the case wtth this show." .Coll.in.s, an actor with guest credits for more than 100 ' television shows, including episodes of "Charlie's Angels.'' "Alice," "Fantasy Island" and "The Love Boat," didn't simply wade into his "Hour Magazine" role. He auditioned for the job in the spring of '79, then spent several months in preparation at Group W stations in Boston, Philadelphia and San Francisco. Production of "Hour Magazine" began in July. "When David Hartman bega" doing 'Good Morning America.' it changed everybody's lhin.ld.D& about hosts," Collins says. "You can be an actor. and be articulate. < •·I try to do something that most other interviewers don't do, and that is discover aloo& with 'the audience. I do my homework," he says, "but 1 don't enter lhe interview know- inl everythina about the pe.non being interviewed. And l think my dramatic background, as welt as my c'oriosity. helps. 11 Astaire feted · by institute The series' producers describe ''Hour Magazine" as "third generation," after tbe show with the charming host who could sing and dance and the Phil Donahue approach, with the is· sue-oriented program coupled with audience participation. "Hour Magazine," they note, features the traditional talk show stuff ....: interviews, dem- on at rations, audience in· volvement -with the slick package of a TV magazine. COLUNS is co-host with Pat Mitchell, who reports from re- mote locations by satellite. Ms. Mitchell is a former Look magazine reporter and talk show host at Boston's WBZ-TV. She later was bost of "Panorama," a daily two-hour program broadcast ln the Washington area. While Ms . Mitchell provides taped segments from the field, Collini ls at work in the "Hour Magazine" studio in Roll)'wood. NEW YORK <AP> -Fred Astaire, on his way the podium to receive the Life Achievement ard of the American Film lmtltute, ran off a w dance stn>s. ----NOW PLAYING---- "It wu excit.lng to see it, 11 said Bob Fosse, one the celebriUea present to pay tribute to Astaire. e occuloo, tn Beverly Hills April 10, waa filmed CBS for two-hour special Saturday. Foeee, winner of one Oscar, three Emmya and x Tony awards, seldom appears at such event., pd wu nervous at this one. He appeared, "taJk- 1 a couple of minutes," be said, becauae of bla miration for Astaire. _. cma111& .,. -At!jhtrm Onve-ln CIMM c.-Woodbrtdet CulfdofM 17U>87998SO 171•1.,._,..,. l7\4)~51 0655 t7U)'34·2SS3 . llU n T• tM11& IUlmtll UA Movies Sad418Kk South Coast Hi.Way 3! l)(M-111 <rn1990 40Z2 (71'1 Sll·SIBO <114>49' IS14 (JH)ftl·litJ MrrmlOUA Twrn 17141893 130S interviewing guests, introducing the program's regulars -ex- perts on subjects like nutrition and ha1r-s.tyling, and encourag· ing &.he audience to become a part of the program. Collins says be had. for some livie. considered the host's role with "an envious eye. "M'8ry Ann and I." he says, referring to his wife, former Miss America Mary Ann Mobley, "had done a lot of motivational work at sales meet· ings and the like, and we had found that type of audience Ln- teraction alJuring . "PART of the reason we have been successful," he -says, •·as we have been for 15 years. is we have been willing to explore all areas that interest ua -com- mercials, the motivational work at business conventions. song and dance. "I've always felt that if you have a talent, you have to work bard to kill it. But to become too selecUve aboul your craft is to be pre-emptive " · About two years ago. CoUL115 and Miss Mobley sat in for one of the Lalk show pioneers, Mike Douglas. And. says Collins, "We had a heUuva good time." Not long thereafter, he was approached by the people put- ting together "Hour Magazine," and the rest is history. Collins, raised in Southern California, began his acting career while In the service. After discharge in Europe, he hitchhiked to Rome and got a part In "Cleopatra," "the big one,'' he says, ''with Liz Taylor." He returned to this country a couple years later, appeared in Tennessee Williams' "The Milk Tr a In DoMn 't Stop Here Anymore" on the New York stage , and in '65 was in Hollywood for a part in the TV series, "The Wackiest Ship in the Army." Gary Collim and Pat Mitchell, stars of "Hour Magozine." 11Did they hove Easter yesterday in your town, too, Grandma?" MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "Guess where we'll start this year's spring cleaning?'' JUDGE PARKER AwARE THA1' Dl!<'tJ!'J610N OF HE~ HlJ58AND b DEATH 15 EMOTION- ALLY lJP5ETTIN6lO MAG61 6EN50N. oAM 5LIOOffiT5 THEY TE.KMlNe.TEJT: MOON MULLINS IQe·h<H ·· THIS StJRe WAS A LITHE CHE.AP!~ You Bou'4µT ME oNOUR r--' HoNf'I· MOOt.J . '(es, Bt..IT WHEN You CoNsrt>E~ INFLAiloN ... 18-Attc tt Wiid -t4-'°'* HPhoblll by Virgil Partch (VIP) 1 "I hate Mondays." DENNIS THE MEN.\CE Hank Ketchum I J f I } '~ • /f.7fJ "I was gonna run <Nlay from horn,, but Mom said to wait tor HERi You wanta come with us?" I DON"T fHNK JU EVER OE A&lf TO ~t;J UNTii. I KNOW A&OVT THf PHON£ CAU. FICOM THAT WOMAN ! by Harold Le Ooux TAAl f'l()NE CAU. MAY HM tW> NO'fHIN(; TO 00 Wm1 eo&'5 OfATH! 'fOV'V£ 00T 10000N WITH Y~ LIFE, ti. :>T (;tVE ~lf THI~ KINO()f A MAllN6.' by Ferd & Tom Johnson c-:..;..o:-~·--a NANCY THIS ARTICLE SAYS THAT SHUT-INS N EEO PEOPLE TO READ TO THEM ""~ ~ MAD:.a: ta(]llllX)/ MVJJtt -6 M.APPIN& N.KJ ~-r ~ 10 ee DI~~/ 4~~-L f'tJNK" • tNKEa8UN AS ,rA" A9 UR&AN COW&oY P>.AA9 eo, Poe, ' 1"Ml. ONS P09SN''1" QUt"f'S .MA~l!J 1'1" / ,,. by Kevin Fagan .... •-! 11M00'1Mf ~ MUN'f ··J int ~ cooH :~ .. , '> ( ' l I ,.. ......... Motlcet , All real ••tale ad· vertlaed lo thla ~•paper ii 1ubject to tht·Ftc1enl l'alr Houa· OCIAH AND IAY VllWS Ins Act o1 1M8 which French doors Open to outdoor livin~ milea it We1aJ to ad· area. open floor plan w/cathedra vertiff .. ..., prtf erence, ·I· d k li llmltation, or dis-ce1 mgs an s Y ·ghts make thls 3 1 erhutbatlon baaed on bedrooml 2 bath home on an oversized race, color. reU1ion, lot a mus see! Offered for $425,000. MJt, or nat.lonal ori11n •• ., an intention to make any aucb preference, limitation, or dis· criminatkm." Thia newspaper will not ltnowin1Jy accept any a(lvertlslne for rea I ~le which ls in viola· tJoil of the law. U,_.l()U~ li()M~~ REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 EHt Cout Hlghw•v. Corona ~I Mar WI HAYI 47 OF THI HST A61Mn tN TO~, ----------.-1llRTOWHHOME COSTAMISA SUJ,900 Upgraded 2-sly w/frplc. Assume bt, 2nd & 3rd with total payments of ~.Seller I.a motivated. Ask for Wendy Slller. 7S9·1221 R~Mft}( Rt:ALTORS 5 IR-$125,500 OWNY SAYS SEU Not an add-on or con· version. A real S Bdrm family home in one of Costa Mesa's nicest areasA Handymans de- light. Call now and save 1 THE REAL ESTATE RS YllW o....-•CAlr"Y 3 Bdrm CllCf Haven beauty. Owner will con· aider all ru.sonable of· fera. 2 SPAS, one indoor, one outdoor, 2 fireplaces, used brkk entertatnen pool area. Cabana, ~ riQJ, view Saddleback MOWltatns. Fashion lsland, lithts. Newl,y remodeled, new kitchen. Call today for ...... @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 BUILDER'S BARGAIN · R6'Mft}( fl~ \I l f ,,...., CAMEO HtGftUMDS OCEAN VIEW ......... tllH TbiJ 3 Bdrm 2 Ba home haa been completely re· modeled to.fde to in· el ude a beautiful, aoufmet kitchen with cuatom oak cabloeta. Top quallty carpets and window coverin11 UtlTS enhance the noor plan of tbla aplll-Jevel Trina model. LoYely canyon XLNT RIWllNC and buk bay view from Two at SU0,000, ab al the totally private deck. U7s,ooo. ei1ht at Many floancing '223,SOO , twelve at pe>ulbilities.$239,SOO. $695,000 and twenty.five D.M.t .... W at Sl,07S,OOO. CaU for ln· ___ , ... __ ttt_o __ _ to. MS-9111 ONLY 100/oDOWN ~ Now reduced thousands! Spaclou.s livini room, _.. .-re at u res glowing fireplace, 3 larae bdrm111---------759-1111 OP~N HOUSE REAlTV / +den. Greata.ssumable ._ _______ • lst and owner will help finance. Call 673-SSSO THE REAL ESTATERS IL.UffS IEAUTY Only S22S,OOO buys beautiful• bdrm end un· at . Picture perfect & re· ady to move in. Newly listed. .. WHTCU~ SEA COVE Outstandt,ng_ builders OC~OMT A M E 0 PROPERTIES lot. 66X~ wtth charm· 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unlurn. OC~OMT Choice comer duplex. 3 Bdrm , 2 bath• up. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath down. Can convert to a larger home. SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE! $895,000! 759-1616 lalboa lay ,rop.~~~~~~~~ Realors SHORES mg 3 Bdnn home, cov· 1 New.$850yrly. 714-631-6990 ered patio Live there 1 .~~ONT while you build' Lot next ""''"' •'7S.7060• SPYGLASS VACAHT Reduced SZS ,000. D91perate owner says bflng all offers No quahfying. Low down 4 Bdrm single story home, totally upgraded Call f°' more details. Lowest Priced d 0 0 r a Is 0 f 0 r 13 Bdrm. 1 ba, un.furn ---------i sale 66X300'. Near Mant cond.S850yrly. l•--------Fee W A l K T 0 Newport 's Back Bay CHANMS.FllOMT Tremendous view home. Ideal for large family with maid's quarters or guest suite. Pool & jacuui. Former model home . @ Large assumable tst Bll!•CH Calltos~.646-7171 3 Bdrm, 2 ba. unfum. TD Walls ol glass lead ~ S7SO yrly. to wood ~k. Beautiful Giant 4 8drm priced views from master right! Spacious Uv1ng su1le, livmg and family room features wood rooms' Plus. lovely burning fireplace . SEA COVE private beach. For fuU Owner assisted financ-PROPERTIES details, call 67l-SS50 ing. Hurry, call 673-SSSO 714-631 -6990 SELLE~ W /FtNAN~E N-iffiiill Beautiful exec utive THE REAL ESTATERS home, S Bdrm, 2 master - s uites, stereo thruoul. Have something you SELL idle items with a Fountain Va 11 e y want to 2*'11 ? Classified Daily Pilot Classified 641-1991, agt ads do 1t well. 642-5678. Ad. 642-5678 P UBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ( N72JOO NOT~~i'~E ~:~1i~~0t.i::N tMI 'NOTICE OF DEATH OF ,,,. B~rd Of lrU\-ol ,,. .. ...,,, M E T A F A y E \ •no•on &Hell en, xllGOt Dlt.tr.c1. of D~'"'EHART aka META Oran~ Countr. c.•••torlll•. w111 r•· ? , t .. w M•l9d bldl MC> to J Cl) PM on IN FYE · VAN PETTEN • ~110.ro1-"'<11.1911e111wottk•ot ;~RNER • THOMPSON • W ld Sc-DISVkt. •°'•leelat 1JS.14111 EHART MRS M Str .. I. Hun1J"91on S.acll. C:.llfOnlla. Or • • at wlloc;ll IJITW wkl bl<h Wiii M PUOll<ly F. DINEHART AND OF openeo_,_..,, p E TIT I 0 N T 0 A 0 . STEEL LOCICEAS MtN ISTER ESTATE NO. ,:~,d~1~0a,,': '0,~,1~r"::~;:::_• =~·~ A~ 108372, I ~ olic•h°"'• '""''"•••"'°"'on Ille on T 0 a I I h e I r s • •lie office of .,,. Pwclle""O Agent of beneficiaries, c reditor s .aid Sc'-' 01>1r1e1. TJS."'" s1re.1. '1un11n11ton lleecl\, C•lllorn•a. t?6AI apd Contingent Creditors Of No bidder may wlthd<aw llil bid for M 'E T A F A Y E • period o1 •latv 1.01 da~ attcr ,,,. DINEHART, aka M ETA 0·;~ .. ~~~::~~,,.~~MHlll!I· P.A YE VAN PETT EN · dARNE"' . THOMPSON . 1noton e.ecn cur School 01s1r1c1 ••· " M•VH .,.. riatll to rei.ct ..,., or •II !flNEHART or MRS. M . bid•, anc1 not necuw.r11., ac:ceot ,,,. ~ O I N E H A R T d •-••t bid, -to waiw any 1atormall· r-· • a n ly or lrrotQUlerlty Ill enr bid rKelvecl. persons who may be D•••o.Al>fll••.19'1. otherwise interested in the Hun«ngion aeacn ~and/or estate: cur Sc'-' Dlstrk• \ ol O<'Mga c-.1, petition has been filed 11ot18-1. b ~ J A M E S A U S T I N Pur~l119 Agent / ~jA'RNER in the Superior P.ib11:,:~...!:, ,...," 0 •11, PHot C:j:.furt of Orange County AP•. 20. u. "" 1~1 reQuesting that JAMES ___ _ 'WSTIN GARNER be ap· PUBLIC NOTICE pointed as personal r~re sentalive to ad· minister the estate of ,_,ETA FAYE DtNEHART, aka META .;,.YE · VAN PETTEN G'ARNER ·THOMPSON · c.4NEHART or MRS. M F . DINEHART, Costa Mesa, Ca. (under the In· de'endent Administration (\f Estates Act). The pet1· ~,.. is set for hearing in ept. No. 3 at 700 Civic enter Drive West1 Santa Ana, California 9i701 on May 6, 1981 at 9:30 a.m . IF ·YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, 900 shOUld either appear at the hearing and state f'1Ur objections or file · •iltten objections with the ffart before the hearing.· Y•ur appearance may be 1a..3>erson or by your at· tarney. IF YOU AREA CREDITOR or a cont· 1"'9ent creditor of the de· G•sed, you must file your cl•im with the court or QQ!sent It to the personal ~resentatlve appointed ey tht coort within four monthS from the date of fffst lssulJlCe of letters es i vlded Jn Section 700 of ' Probate Code of llfomla. The time for ng claln;is will not ex- • Jo tour months from ~ date of th• hearing ~o~a~;~· EXAMINE tfte flle kept by the CO\lrt. =ou are Interested In the 1te, you may tUe • r•· st with the court to re· Eve s~lal notice bf the entory of •state assets ! d of the petitions, ac· .t_unts and r f porh ft(rfbed In Sectlqn 1200 _. tM C.flfornla Pr~t. .... , ... L o.,...rM~~ M' lAw, 2l4S ....... -DrtftE..a.lulttJ, M .. a, Caflf•n1ta •: t1~·1•1~ • ~ o.ty'= NOTICl TO CO"TIUICTOltS CALLING l'O• lll>S School District. >IVNTINGTON llEACH CITY SCHOOL OISTRICT ll•d Oe ... lne J 00 o"<lock pm ol ,,,. 2'1h day of Ap<ll. , .. ,. Pie<• Of 81d A9<•19t. OISTRICT ADMINISTftATIVE CENTl!ft -11S 14111 Strut, Huntington &each, Cahlorni• •2'-11 P roject ld1ntlflcat1on Name· ReOl<orallng Smith School Place S,.clflcellon1 ••• on Fii• (S.m~elAIJOWJ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ille! Ill• ebov...,.med School District of Orange eoOJnty, C.llfor,.la, •<tl"g bY 1110 lhr-h 11' GoverninQ Board, ht,••n•fl•r r eferred 10 •S "OIS TR ICT,'" wlll ..eel,... 1H> '°· C>ut not latu INn ti.. •bove·llaled time, H•l•d bldl for IM award of• cQl11ract •for lh• above proj« I. a1<11 •111111 t>e r.uh•..S in the ptac. IO.ntlll.O lt!Ove, Wld INll be opened llld p11bUc:lr rM0 alOUd et the ebove- llated lime -piece. Tllare wlll t>e • $20.00 """'911 •• Qulrtd tor HCh .. , of bid doc-ts to o ... rant• Ille return In (IOOd cendltloft Wlllllll It dey, .nar Ille Oll'lnlno blO clete. E41<fl bid m111I conform end C>e r•IPOfl.ive to U.. tonlract docu.....,ts. EKll bid 11-11 119 accompM1led by llM tec:url\r relorreo lo Ill the tonlred 60<11"*'° end b'f ttw 1111 ot "'--" WkonlractorJ. TM DISTRICT _.,es Ille,,.._, to '9jact .,,., Of .it lllcll or to waive any 1r,..11t.,tUu or 1n1onnalllle11 In anv Dkl&#lllllll.....,... ltie 01,TAICT '-• -.i-from Ill• Olrectet of Ille Ot:pettmaflt of .~ .... ~.,.. ....,., ..... Mlllftt , ... Ill -........... Ill .. MUllty In _.... ltlb llflft Is • M ~ "" .. ,,. creh « type ef ---,....... lo •11e<llllt -c-l••< 1. r-.-rates .,. Oft flla .. Ille OISTIUCT ~ lecetM .. 7*5 t• '""" ~ -..:11. c:.11,,,,.... f1MI. ~!My W ..... M -4Wtl. A ~en ffl .,._ ,.., _,. la postacf ..... JoO .i ... \'M~~---.... ., .... It ~ ...-i e W«tOllf ..., f/I •lfllt Ill ~ The .... fw ...... •!Ml .... ert1• ~ tl\tll " et ~ Urneencl~f. II fllell be tnefldetDl'J llHll IM, GOfolT"~ \ti wNm h ~eel 11 •lll1rc1"'· encl 11po11 an~ wa ~f~WWl'"""-'1tNYnDI ... tl\1111 Ula .... .,.,, ....... "" All '"'1111\tft .......,.._ W "-I 1411 tM H • eclltlM ti 1111 '*""ac1. Me ....., mey WIUIW-Illa bid tot • ,.,. ........ llty 1¥1 .,. .,.., t1- ---.., .. ~ol"41a. A jllyMMt ~Mile~· ..... •In " ,....,... jllrlOf .. ·~· ~--,,, .. (~t. ,.... ~ ............ "' .. !Wm ... """ lit -~~·· .....,........,_ IV;....,..Y~Ma6all Clift .............. Qlllll oetfy ,..... .... ,,,.., , .... , THE REAL ESTATERS LAND Prime MI, approx . 60,000 sq ft S10,S5 per foot Seller wtll carry fin a nclng at below market rat.es 751-3191 C::. SEl f:C T -t-" PJmPE:Hl tE.S THE REAL ESTATERS EXECUTIVE MESA VERDE! associated BROKEAS--REAL TORS 202\ W boll>"" b n Jbt.I COMtieCIAL PROPERTY Tired of selling house! 7 days a week? We need one licensee to learn the s kills to manage & broker commercial real estate. Income from mgmt while you learn. Super benefits; life in- surance ; health in- surance & dental plan. Contact Keo, 67s-6700. DWl.EX 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unat. Fireplace, built-ins. Ex cellent rental area. Near beach & bay. S285,000. 642·2253 eves. associated SROl<EAS-llEAl TORS l02S W Balboa 61 l J66 I Very popular Republic home with covered en· try, massive hvtng room and family room, f1replaces1 elegant formal dining room , huge country kitchen overlooks sparkling 1~~~~~~~~~ pool 3 car garage and1 - many extras Owner wall carry 1st TD at 12"1-In- terest Pnce<i at only $265,000 Call to see, 543-2313 ASSUME SI 00,0CV> Of loana at 12?.. Interest, on this fantastic Mesa Verde 4 Bdrm 2 bath home with 2 fireplace11, expanded family room, 1900 sq.ft. of Ii ving. Priced at only 1139,950. Act now! Call 546-2313 MESA VERDE FIXER! StO,SOO tot.al cash needed to close e1Scrow on this 4 Bdrm, den, 3bath, faml· ly room , rlreplace, patio. huge yard 'i' A Han- dyman's Special". Only S17S,OOO. Call us today for an appointment for details on this revolu· tionary new program called T J.C.K.E .T . 546-2313 EASTSIDE 4-PLEX Fixer l All 2 Bdrms. wai. to •II •hopping. FantHllc lnve.tment. ODlY $225 000. Call for more detaii&. ~2313 .- 121/20/o FINA.NCI NG Pre.Uiroal home, local· etl ln Me.a Verde on a diet Y..lioed' atreet. 4 li'fte 1>dnns, 2 baths. fabJ\b' room. flreplace1 coootry lrltcbu, luab JandJc:apma. Floanclnf avaHabJ• at 12YI~. Ps-\ctd •114,900. Don't •att, call Me.2Sla *** l.M.CJI 907Walnut H untingt.on Beach You a re the winner of 2tr..~ ($12Value), to lceCClfMldn April 21thru25 Anaheim Convention Cent.er Tickets must be ex· changed for reserved seats al the convention center ahead of time. Call 642·S8'78. ext. 272 to claim your ticket.a. *** ClftfOME 3 Bdm 2YJ Ba, den, l year old condo, No. C.M .. 1740 sq ft, de· corator's delight, as· sume lat, owe 2nd. $177,SOO EASTSIDE C.M. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, vaulted cellinp, frplc, corner lot, owe w/20% dwn. $149,SOO IEACH DUPLEX 2 Br 1 Ba & I Br 1 Ba, Fee land, walk to beach, owe at 12~% lot. w/30% dwn. S220.000 C .M. TRIPLEX Three 2 Brdm 1 Ba units, garages. patios, 1ood location & income, owe w/lS w/$50,000 dwn. S18S,OOO. EASTSIDIVA 3 Bdrm 1 YI Ba. f am.11¥ nn, alley acctSt, 2 frplc. needs TLC. SUS,000 ~ . ·~ . '. . . ~ . . . . .. ~ . •• .. : : • J.t. RCTaylorCo M .tl ur.arr uCEu1NC1 SJlfef ,.., LAGUMA RACH Panoramic ocean view (>40 l)<)QO Potentially one of --------- Laguna's most charm· ing properties Two bedrooms,. Dining Room. Two fireplaces. Ask for Carlyn Steiner or Jane Minsltoff. $289,000. 631-7300 ...... GREAT INVESTMENT 3 BR 1 Ba, $72,900. As- sumable financing & seller w/also carry paper, Call for terms. 752-6499 Pian lll Realty ASSUME I O'lzOlo W. o.1vsuo,. ... Spa, fireplace. family rm, RV access. C/21 Starbl.J"d & Assoc 962-4450 ---------Sell idle Items RfSll)f NltAL ~r AI I SIAll <;fRVICES REDUCm COMTEMPOURY CONC8'T 642-5678 In Old Corona del Mar near beaches & shopping. Magnificent designed 2 story Townhome. Imported tile floors. Fireplace. 3 BR. 2th BA . Large Fam. Rm. with wet bar. Formal din_ing. $335,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 NEWPORT DUPLEX $325,000 Hew ot1 "'• _... l.t • ...... Newport locatto.., ...-U• .,._ & beec9'. Two 1,aclo111 lb•d. ••ht of qHloty eonstr.tlcffoa. StrHt to ,.._. locatloft. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC R£AJ.. EST A TE S..Wa, R•nlala, Proprrt~ M..,.,,...n1 315 Manne Ave Belboa Island Mt•H,.,.,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.. 1002 ···················~··· IUGAMT ''VaSAIU1S•0-aCLUS1VI OM llG CANYOM 4IOLP COURSI Spectacular Deane Homes "Versailles" located. on largest lot of all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf course view! Professionally landscaped yard with mature trees in a private park-like setting including a lovely lge pool & huge spa +an attract i vc gazebo. Gated front courtyard entry w/fountain. Marble floor in foyer with glittering chandelier. 4 Bedrrm, den, formal D.R. & 4~ baths. Priced right at $825,000. Call I or appaintment. WISLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. UAL TORS 2111 s-J~ ... 1...t NEWPORT CENTER, M.I. 64~9 I 0 CASA DEL RIO lewllMMewCo.dos Xlnt terms. 13% interest for 3 years. 12132 Ed- in1er-cloee to Harbor Blvd. OPEN WEEKENDS lG-5 641-1991 ; 631·4361, agt. a: IEDllE BLllRS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE NEWPORT HEJCiHTS POUR~ Located On Quiet Street Near Shopping. Excellent Condition. Good Rent Income. Minimum Vacancy Factor . Four Two-Bedroom Units. Assumable Loans. Inspect With Offer. Reduced To $350,000. SAM CLEMENTI lMftEX Super Buy. Upstairs Unit With Three Bedrooms . Peek·A-Boo Ocean View. Wet Bar. Living Room With Fireplace. Cathedral Ceilings. Wrap-Around Patio. Spacious Down s tair s Unit With Two Bedrooms & Living Room With Fireplace. Laundry Facilities. Good Income Priced At $195,000. ...... ..::....-;. .......... 759-9100 #2 Cot'f* ... Pim MewporfC...... CLIFF HAVEN YUFRONT $975,000 Gored proportloft• ....... ._ ... wttta doWo4lp vu • .,... .......... r.rlect d•cor condltlo• r•fl.ct•d tllrv l 1Mdroo1111, lar9• 11•1119-f•1Hy Hd Wllsd f'OOMI, Pri•ofe .... rooM. .... «*k. spa. OWMr wtl c..-ry ~ LOWEST PRICE-UDO ISLE .... • DK01.tor1 ....... Low"t price c ......... for ........... ...,.... °" Udo I .... StelMcl CJ1-. aOl6 ,.tlo .... loh of poultllftlH ...... 2 ..... z bcllh ~.j'dlllilMJ ,.., Wt .... 11•.W. -I-• .... ''11.C" to ..... It -. .... $299,000. CANAi.FRONT-VU $255,181 Lonfy redecorofM 4 ._..a111, 2-ttory • ... cMnll, ....w ............... .... l•lllQ ..... wltta paHo .. _.... ~ .._ w•to pooa • ._. ........ •1WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE S..l.rt R~n1.ol1 P"""'"~ M.oo09f""'nl 2436 W Coa.st Hwy 631_1 400 Newport Beach CPALUCSORKRP8MAEJ1L SOHEOEAYTCI SLJlNQL T~OEDMEOAZ GOATNN S J I I X I 9 T V N Z W S $ R S T T R t R 0 F A U L D £ I I £ I EPSWMAO JWYRlYDAN H E M A M L S P £ H W 0 l 6 A M H T 0 U I I E A T W H L I.. f A 0 0 N A H t R I 'l D V 8 TT£ RR I ILER 0 AR ~ y Lr MA, RI r RR z p N R ~, E RSLPJOTOGGRALENKIRI U C A L 0 A H 1 a t l A Q A Q C £ I 1. P l I R £ N E L a N I 0 L U A M L C A ITOStSYRAMIR"'llCAA a L I L I I T M $ L A K T £,A ~ P O P I i . 1 1 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.,, Boy,,d, D•·•• NB bl'> t>lbl 1 I ~-~ REALTORS 675-551 t LOVELY "E" PLAM. Most popular model eur built in th• lluffs: Situated on tpKtocuklr qreenbe" with ........ yfew. l ldr. F.R. lest bwy In flt• area at $252,900. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy., Corona def Mar 675-5511 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. 25'k down Take over $85,000 loan owe carry great (mane and owner will carr y a A PETE BARRETI . REALTY LOWDOWM Vers a l ll•• 1 Bdrm/atudlo penl.bouae condo wltb farae at· sumable loanl. $1119,900. Call today m.MllO. ALLSTATE REALTORS LErS.TALIC C__...Splh Joell H Lftd. Mc)r. '7S.1771 1006 .. ~--;.' _,,, I ' ''I I f ' ' I ' ( /( )( J 156-2660 DUm1IH Lowest prieed 1 Bdrm + ' loft CCll>do. v.-, aharp end Wlit. Vacant and bas lockbo:s. e12,........,._ ... ,. .. c ..... fo•:t.a. V.., 10>4 640-&Jl7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ST AIMID &LASS CHATIAU Sensational 3 Br, !~ Ba c~ndo, new carpet. ceramic tile uld loads ol stained clau. $1.12,000 Anoe M ccasland 631-1288 SALi IY OWMlll WISTMOMTHOME 3 Bdrm + booU!I room. 2 THRACE Out1taodln1 Cardiff model in Uoheralty Park Tenue.. 2 8dnD 2 Ba + loft bide-away. Great location. pool greenbelta, flnlahe~ 1ara1e. A must to aee. Call for \ktalla. ~--;. 1 .•• 1·,,(.li I: f >I I Y '•'ii ,'t)()() TUITLllOCI Ira ' ar Want Balboa Isla nd Ba. Pricedforqwcksale Home-have Calabasai 1117,000. 847-T?M land-lots. 675·3457 till~~~~~~~~~ Saturday. (213)888-SOIS2 H ... ltrgto. .__,. I 04 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Best priced 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, famU1 rm. Open bouae Sat/Sun 1-5. 5372 Sierra Roja. COl'Ofta .. Mm-' I 022 •••,•••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2 STY L.AteMARIC C/21 Me.,..C.tr 640.5357 IRVINETERRACE 4 Br . 2"'* ba, 3 car gar. *•ESTATES! AXER Newly painted " carpet-Sinale at.ory attached 4 Br. bonus room & ed Sto3K assumable ln. home in fabWous Wood· sparkling pool Supenor Aslung Sl59.900 Fast brid1e Estates. Huie location Won 't last escrow Bkr963-83'77 backyard, all the Wood· Prin. only Greg Astle IUDS OI( bridge Al!latities and as-759-1221 sume a lligbloan. Owner WM~ RF.Al.TORS 3 Bdrm. 2~ bath. front will consider help on unit Ideally located tori secondary financing ctuldren ~ mo 19011 Sl6S 000 Alabama •l. North of ' . Adams. Immediate oc· c upan cy Bro ker, CUSTOM MO .. ..wPOltT C.Omp&.etely cuatom home, clean and immaculate 2 private brick patios, epaclaua llvlng rm, 3 Br, 3 Ba, 1ourmet kitchen and all the foodies. Plush carpets, walkinJ. distance to the Beach & Water. Ooo t miss t.bia one for $265,000. QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES 752-1920 • tbdrlll, a., &ISWDe apros. SIJ.,OllO at 1114'-. J"rplc , dlt · bwaaber,eprhsklen, ctua. Sut.900. 8kr (114)411-TOaO. AllUMI lttTD P'ineat l ocation . SpMloua 3 bdrm home. Oor1eou1 lt alian ceru1lc tile, cem.rat air, drHm kll(ben. lovely breakfHt ana, AM/FM Intercom aystem. Pluab master aulte. Executive elesaace bu.lit far entet · tatatn1 ! Offered at $239,000. Xhrt finanelng, call for details Mhsiolt V"fo RHlty 7 I 4/IJ7•'500 AM 1080 IOPllT IUCll ·~ 15.. dOWD and MA.tDe lout . n.. .cUo!nbt• TRlPLEXIB ln CdM ~•.amide~ Pal. PLUS two du pl•st• and triplex ln a row oa 1IUl St, Balbo9 Peolnau OnJy 1 lot from •and ad aurt. Abeol\ltelY pri,_ ~ propertlea. : ) P. ounu.-..-·-1 r for 30' boat.. • " ~ .. ' t FOUlPUX/ ... v.-.,~ •l MANY MANY MOREi., C/21 Newport C*Jv '40.5J57 ·: I 4-8-IZUNITS "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• i---------•I Good location lo Oran,.:• l Bdrm 1 ba $41 K pet" GllAT,..MS Lovely 2br. lba home. Low down payment, OWC! unit ·•• ' ltkJNIHlty .. r • t)t..asu :1 ' This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home s its on Linda Isle . A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'-70' Yachts. For Sale or Golde. W ... ltJtrt IU-1581 DUPLEXONR2L01' ~ Prime E'side Cbs~ ~~~~~~~~~! Mesa. owe w/$30,09!Q. cash. Asking Sl25.~J Trade. We are deve lopers so submit land or other Real Estate to own~r J im Thompson. (7141121-1210 '213) 591-1363 11001 352-3710 rlffAlbhh railer at bch $14,900. Terms, OWC or trade 499-311\6 ---PALM SPRINGS AREA. 2Br 2ba. 4 ynold. Compl (urn. On 9 hole exec golf course in adlt park View San Jacinto 638·9300 ask for V1rgin1a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Clean. modem 2 br, 2 ba, dbl wide. Nr So Coast A~OFlHEAV'I«~ D MACNAB·IRVN: REALTY Plaza, 10 attractive park wtall fac Below '40,000 Call eves, Mon Thurs, 556-7985. ~------ 645·1103 SHOPl'IMGC~J COSTAMISA .;., Prime comer locati()\l_. on b usy 19th Street.., lOOo/, occ upied El"·~ cellent tu benefits dltb' to long term land lease.:1 $477 ,000 Owner w\~; . l finance. ,•.; 1, 1714) 67l·440b 121 JI Ul-2121 HARBOR A D1v1!i1on of ·~ llarbor lnvestmenl Co • . ... 2 HOUSES OH A LOT I L~ Ast ..... · S40-l666 2nd on th.ts great 4 bdrm mg. I beauty Only J l29,500. Jasmine Creek decorator Whelan catlnow979-5370 ~Ft~~~~ i:,J;een· 963-8182 The lareest model in W oodb r idge Estates-2300 sq ft of lu..-u.rious living space and your own pool and spa. Priced tA> sell at Sl.IM,900. Almoat Sl00,000 in as· sumable n.nancine. IA YFttOHT EUGAMCE! A truly beautiful home. Tall stately doors open to a sparkling pool and garden e ntrance. Designed by THEUERKAUF w/high ceilings and s un filled rooms. 4BRS incl. large master s uite w /his & hers baths. library and garden room on the bay. A leasehold estate. $1.700,000. R Aune. CAHHBY VIUAGE Steps to the water. 2 Br. 2ba. s unken tub in master bath Pool. pets are allowed Pnce re duced to $62,500 Owner anxious. TERMS Ir PRICE Good 10come oo afforda- ble Costa Mesa. 3 & 4 un it properties. Sensible owners want to sell. Real Estate ALLSTATE· ~8145 REAL TORS Steps to CdM Beach Lov FOURPLD All units are 2 Br, 2 Ba. good rents. no vacancy Cactor. Price Sl85.000. Loan ia assumable. ·,Jx· NEI&ilil\ COii tjM11,U H ~ Sell idle items IW2 567R ely 3Br home on -- ----beautiful street Pr1nc A,...McC•l•d 6ll-12H \\OOdb ridge Realru SSJ -3000 - Wl\TlKtROl'IT HOMt-!:»i " RE.-.LEST ... TE 63H400 714 641 ·0763 • .' ON WATER-VIEW-SLIP SMrf ........ fl:h i ..... h I MOW! Al ,._ ..d' ........ ..,,..-4 tty .... city. ~ wil •slat..,.... ._..-., fabulous Mewport locatloft with "'"'"dous VIEW of ,.-..1ay. loat slip fot' ~ yacht. ~e land. Hen ulattnq 2-"tory home but plOft• & pennfh are inducted l1t safes priu. lett pric.ed °" layfrottt. s 99 5. 0 0 0. WATf-RfRO~r HOMES'"'< RI '\I l ..,f "Tl ,, SEE AND BELIE\'E The very finest buy in the Harbor area. New 1650 sq. ft. condos. 5 minutes to beaches. One h alf block to major s hopping center s. Cement drives , air conditioning, mi crQwa ve oven. tras h compac t or. large walk-in closets. Garage with opener. Pool.and 2 jacuzzis. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS l80W.Wlhoft Cos .. MIH.CA 7t4/Ul·5055 ,.,... $136.000 only Brkr· 962-2900 or 675-<Y104 IEACHDUf'UX Xlnt shape, privacy It parking. Owner will finance $90,000 dwn. ---------• 4ti0Darranca Pkwy, lrvlnr IYOW"8 o..._..T,..C... Plan S 2 bdrm l ba on CHARMIMG Drt.X strum. Principal ooly OWC lge 2nd TD As after 1pm. Good rate of return. Broker Cl\ri.s 9157 1568 BUYING ? SELLING ? 552-7552 sume Sl04 500 at 11"""" If someone told you that ~~~~~~~~~ So of Hwy Close to you w o u Id s a v e r: park BeauL street Sub· thousand!i of OOLLARS mlt $310,000. BY owner. when ~1ng or 'ellln& (213)430-9"6. your property & sli\l T•itet'odla.1+ 0.'-'--1- C-_-_.._-M-... ----1-0-2-... 1 have the total and quah· U'9"' ,. lY service or a pro· fess1onal realtor. would you take the time '° 2 story 4 bdrm. d.iDtnt rm. adcseci den .,, /wflt. bar, atepa to park, comm. PoQl 6: teanil. Aa- s uan a b[e loan. Owner will assist m f\nancln1. $210 ,000. Fee. Agl, IU().56e0. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IHVESTIN LOCATION Sharp 2 Bdrm condo tn Mesa Verde. Pri~ lo sell now at $98,500. Call Anne M ccasla nd 631-1268. R&'MR< call 848·14tlti LOCATIOH t \ . ' . 1,{ I I Huntington Beech LOCA 110H fountain Yaltey ls just one of the ~l•ll•t• features al thla out.stand--""!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!! ... ~!!!!!!!!~~~ I ing Plan 2 in Campus View .. 3 Bdrm., 2 ba. i---------i ASSUME I OJ{40/o LH High assumable loan. 5 Bdrm. 2 ba, near $169,000. fl l-:1\1.Tlll<S 6 PLEX/EASTSIDE RIO. to $325,000 With Sl52,000 10 assuma· ble loans ranginf from 9:Y,.% to 11"', 27,450 gross mcome annually Well kept s111gle story units with 4 garages PLUS off·street parklllg On 60'xJOO' lot beach . next to la rge park. 2600 sq ft. New cpl&. Asking $164,900. Owner will help nnan. Call Century 21/Berg Rulty 962-8891 STOP HEU 644-7211 This super nice 2 Bdrm 2 Ba condo la just right ror a young couple starting out. All the amenitiea WA TBROH'T 2787 Bn:.tol St Cost<1 Mesa. CA HEWPORT HBCiKT'S! Lovely family home with 4BRS. family rm. 3-car garage. Extr a off street parking. Serene gardens accent lovely yard. Assumable financing. $249,500. J oyce Edlund ...... ,..,,...., 1400 •••••••••••••••••••••• HEWPa.T Near beach, two 3Br un- 9 O ffice building its, 2 car gar. nr park. TSL INVSTMT 642-1603 $425,000 Hurry won't _ DUPLEX ·M.I . 642..a235 last ' 8111 Grundy , 675·6161 ,,...trial/ Pro,..-fy 2100 ..... !'Y Lots/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •.-port hlP Crypti 1500 8062 Sq. Fl. ooocreu ti~ 901 Dover Drtve Harlx>r VIBW Ceru.er •••••••••••••••••••••• up NNN leued at lop~ 641i-e23e 644-6200 remat1on companion market. Xlnt S.A. loca· ~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!niche , PacHic View lion. ~403,500. PaQg ~ Memorial Park. 1520. Franklin. 752-5111. 1 EIGHTS COM DO Cu a t om fio me n e • r 673-4492 eves all. 7pm. Momt• Detert, 1 Quiet Npt Hita/Clif· water. O wner wil l lt.....t 24W fbaven coodo w/pool • finance with low down. Property 1600 ................... _ _. 1ara1e Great us um a· 1_~_._962_-2900 __ . ____ •••• ••• •••••••••••••••• IY OWtB •d ble financtna. No quali· Lease option, 2bdrm. 2ba Brand new 2bdrm co~ fylng . Gre1 Aatle IAYFllOMTHOME condo, (Monticello). do, fully furn. BehinG;I 759-1.22l. Glorious 4 Bdrm 4 ba. 2421 Minuteman, C.M 1ate1 of prestigious lo,.. w/pvt dock for your $91 ,500 Webb Realty dian Wells Racque~ R&'MR< IU:tll Tllll " HARBOR \tlEW HOME "Monteao'', 4br, 2ba. Fee Land. loan assum. 675-2139 •LIDO ISLE* Lovely 2Br, 38a home. BeautUulJy remodeled 2yra aao. kM.000 with xlnt financing Open Houae: Sat. Sun 1·5 119 Via Yella Owner/ A&ent : 673-0IW't yacht right at your front 831-2170. Cl ub. $159,000. Xllilh door. Excel Peninsula terms . Ca 11 R o.s, t. Point lo cation . (7 14 )345-476 2 o~ St ,295.000. Owner/ SUPBCLIAH <213)3432830 Builder Charles McKin· C· I IUILOIMGS . . q non. 675-2763 suitable for light in T1Me ~/hltenal .,., dustry and offices. Front Ow...,...., 245t 12~% Nu Financ'g ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prime location, 3000+ bldg contains 4 carpel Laguna Beach ocean~1 mm • • • are here. Large low in-Woodbridge prime terttl loanavailable and Laltefront location seller wiU carry a 2nd. Views forever. 3 Br. 2""1 H.V.H. Monaco. beaut. Priced right at $109,900. ba, pvt spa, flex. rtnanc-neighbors. beaut. view. sq ft or luxury. Beautiful ~~~h~a~!: ~l~:s bjd: front unit from S6000 tun! sunny kitchen. separate has 2. 12· doors. full purchase price. Ti ate' breakfast room . fluorescent ltghting share units in award.' Sumptious master suite 1101220 power. lge mezz. wtnning Laguna Shore~ with 3 closets and Yiew storage space Lot is overloo\in& the ocean.· deck. Oak Oloors and 5oxlZO' Concrete Youreceivegrantdeed.' p l u s h c a r p et s dnveway and lg parking EnJOY a full week everf throughout. Formal din· area Security fence year compl luxuriour in_g rm. garden window, OWC S2l.S~OOO or lease furn. Secur. gate. PY\: 2 cov'd pati0& and trailer option at •225.000. Sub parltin&. spa & pool. Cfll' access. Xlnl flnancmg, mil on tenns. Bosko 49'-3521ext228 '-: ltHlht• outstanding pr ice. $274,000. I~ lllMCI IJty ing. Spectacular! Of-beaut. area, 2bdrm. 2ba. --------1 552·1800 and ask for Owner/aat eves &t Mis-sion Vieio Reolty 7 I '4/837 .950'.) WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 63H400 be .... 2-••••••••••••••••••••••• GOLDEN TOUCH '1M100 re red at $35t,llOO. Call d en , r or m al d 1 n CONDOMIUIUMS Lynn Noah. weekends "'"151.9. rw UMITS Tow•&Cathf • _____ _.;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~I~~~~~~ Large private decks &t Triplex Ii Four-plex in IHlton 552-1100 •- Larae bouae wanted. wit)' trade prime real es~ acreaae eq uit y~ $600,000. (714) 751· patios. Only 3 left Xlnt good Oran~ County1---------1 IActCIAY tenns. 13% Interest ror 2 area. Auumable Jou, L1,..a leslt 1041 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home years. OWCI ••••••••••••••••••••••• plua ideal moth.er-in-law aoooMEYERPLACE ~ THISHAICIS quarleu. Comp l. OPEN DAILY 10-5 80lOflllllCST w eat h ere d c e d a r w /bath. siz:o.ooo. Ml-199l; 631-4381, agt. ltWL shakes, that la. Cuatom loy McC.., llr. 3Br , 2Ba Mesa Verdei t, . REALTORS dealgned 3 bdrm. fam 141-7729 lid r. . • 39 ...... <SI' ~ASSOCIATES rm, 2 bat.ha. kt.enalve t~~~~~~~~~I so mancmg. el ,soo. a4Wlll use of wood glaaa ai 1: By owner 556-7174 ceramic tile. Beam cell· ...a AttrHtive h<Mase on quiet in&, frplc. $165,000. HOAO. HOSl1T AL tree lined st . L~ yrd. --------•I )IWklaReal\y 1 Bdrm, completel'y E'slde, Askins SUS.000 4JAI~ (71A)4M473l. furniabedcmdo. Walllto 645·1103 Noq~.....OdYll -· -~ beacb. lec:urit.Y. pool. paymenta. \ow lnierest Priced beJoW market at FOUR.ft.IX rates, no klen Jdnta, 2,S, StJ..2,000. Open blMlle Sat BYOWNER fs 4BDRM Towobom• fs Sun4a1 1·5 ft 200 Xlnt F\nanclng! lo Huntlnatoe Beach, llcN.U, UbltlOll. 1100 _1_~_aoso __ or_49). __ 1l.S3 _ ___,""""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEAi 1141 SM4D ..... • ... , .... o.,1e. • ••••••••••••••••••••• Seconds lo the water. H ..... Pw!llsh1d Excellent 3 BR owner'• ••••••••••••••••••••••t "home-llke" unil fl 2 Cotto...... 312'4 ·····················~~ s:no ooo Foun1.aln Valley areu. C/2 I .......... C* &75-00'73• (n4)MS-41.23 Call now for 1DOft de-PLENTY OF ROOll 1 __ _!6~40&!1111~7~--I~~~~~~~~~ ~UME l0.15f. LOAN: 60LOEIWESl Sita.at.cl Gil. poo1 .. laed ~POll'f.CUST Spactoua 3 ~rootn . ..-aa lot. UU. I bedroocn, 2 11 ~ -.. ,,_ 1--------1 t FOREXPANSJON 1_ Famll1 room, dlnln• REAL:•wn~ batb bomt w1&111 a • -••n "' ... • f-, s ' r::: ocatlGA. Pool, -----8room.:..11brtekPOOftnLplla~e. "\ 1f.sm~n ~1~~~K:· , •· ~ ~ para DI nl• --auu b& la lat/S\lb l•I 8l 15 8.ut aum•10.7Kl io.o.owurj~~~~~~~~!I perf•ct fqr the aCUn Oout. will be p floan~•·.,,.... 1044 fam .•-.-4'7..ml C/21 =rte.Ir $154,010, 1'ARBE1'L ... ••••••-•••-•••••••• 6 117 BKR. MD-1111 .·btf!OO BEACll HIDEAWAY. &acepUonal 2 b4rm .,,,., .... een, fJ'plo. Prha\e • aHr ev•r· ,_...._..._ ____ ~ ..... , ..................... •• pool.1.beadl, riewol Br.IBacaQwtCul.-. ... D. \;UIMO 611ona. UC. c-.toltd•~ fU00 /1110. ttoop. !!Kl. Jt4. bM& ~. _m_.i. __ ._Ait ___ . ____ , coveted peUo, f..,ie. 4 ltr + mllld'• quutera. .../mo. 1Dd Oardmer. aeaut. decor, nper ID-llOO;~mautm. ""· top ol Spy,iua. * •• OIOO/mo . Koo p . ...._...._. Gl·lal. Aat-473 ... Drl•• SPYelASS l•r Iba In Sp)'llua Hill wttlll mouatabl view. Pvt l~/d • 2 frplc •. .._,.mo. CSTM IAYROMT .. A.yaU furn. ii desired. 1, Slip for 2 Jae boata. 3 Nnn, •be. 3 frp&c1, 2 kitcbena, paUo and dffk OD ea,. Security ,. 1,atem. $DOO/mo. ' --w ......... .._. ........ '31·1400 c-. ..... You are tbe wlDDer of lhe ...... c•u vat.>.'° lcec., ... , Aprll 21tbna25 Anaheim Ccnventioa ... , ................. . Br. 2 Ba. Family room, dlnin1 room. '875/mo. Call Ltoda ---------• IM&-1371 Newport Crest Sbdrm, 2~ba, ocean view, over· look• tenola courta, frplc, cloee to beach. l1i1JPilll Any classification. No canceltatlon Rebate. f •·:w,· fer ... . 4Jld ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIWPOITMACH 2000 aq ft of buutilully decorated office· space available for leue wttb all attra c tl•e ,. I .. r; l·. r fl r I ~ (:~ , .. •' I· I ; ,· '· !~~-~~~ ..... !~~ ..... ~.~ .. !~.~ ..... !.~~ .... !!.~! ~-~-~ ..... ~?~!! ~!.~.~ ..... ~?~ .. ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~-~~ ..... ?!~ .. ~.!!~ ..... ?!.~~ ~-~~~ ..... !!~~ ·500 aq ft ln Downtown 75. Approx. 2000' In· W.t21·2~Yleld7 FOUND: Teniermix·blk ACCT .. Cl.B.I AUemblus/Electroa.ic:t AUTOM<YMVE I Lacuna Bc:b s treet dua 'If Office. 11101 On your TD 's Notes Ar wbt m• Malamute-Tbe Jolly Rater Inc. baa Im med. opeolnl for Dealer Trader Jnven· AUTOS~ I level. atylltee, 7sz.OfS29 Redondo Ct. "Q". Hunt tiRauen-lDveStora$S fOIJll ADS silver It .Wbt remale, a position open ror an ac· final aaaem~ly position. tory Control Deak. Auto Ca{eer rwt.:•tY for Bcb.142-2D4 Call DennlsollAuoc. Great Daoe-Brtndle, c:tc clerk with 1 yr ex-Ex P .• 1 t b . air uperience necessary. s~espeopew i ~antt~ 1LU11:ury 1200 sq. ft. 8'100 aq rt office + &n7314 Al£ f1££ female, Shepherd mix· perience. Duties lnc:lude screwdn~er desirable. Top. salary. Call Cindy ~~~1{y~~JnaJo~a~e Lacuna Beach ocean warehouse, Irvine In-, blk " brown female, AIR analysia, auditing Small rnendly Co. or Spnnger. Count 's ftnest Lincoln· vlew. $1,000/mo/IHae. duatrial. Call 646-lOM or Purcbue d ol ro dT.D;ls l'..U.. Spaniel mix·rust fs wbt Hln repor1a fs 1eneral ocean. 645-3632 aak for Cormier·DeLlllo MercJry sales staff and ~; Inquire M&IOBI Co. 18753 :!fiange . or eta1 s ~ female, Airdale mix-blk acc:t1 duties_. Xlnt Wea. Chevrolet enjoy substantial in· 4SZ5'0ffice.Crpt,paoeled Noyea, 11157-92N. Bkra. 960-1J157Bn*er 642-5'11 Ir brwn hmale , ::ner:~•=a c:on-ASSB•BS 18211Beacb8lvd come and company walls, IM • wtr' fW11. Coop invited. Malamute·blk It wbt · w A.,;. in C CO~· ELECTRONIC 84'1..f081 benefits. Work with Ground nr. Prtt1. 2052 LOW 4Yo Un LOST: LI Oranae cat, ~':~l:~ 1:,~b~l:.~11ek parlte1oll:~c· Mec:banical assembly. so-3331 ~~~:O:'t~·rJ!~t!~ Newport Blvd, C.M. Dbl r ACIFIC i.dTrwt~ altered male, WAS male, Shepherd rob-t70'2G~Ave Immediate openin15. AUTOMOTIVE Mercury in Costa Mesa. ~t (lOllOaq. ft.) atoreor IWFf Low cost eqw1/i loans wearin1 blue collar. yellow w/blk female. (7l~ Work near the beac:b. DPBllMCID Call BillH~ldf?r a dis· +.IN-4181or&M-222B. avall.$20,000to ~.ooo. ••Gua '' REWARD Newport Beach Animal ~ppt~· '64.5-3&32 AUTOCASHllEll cua1ionofthi.swuqueop-IMDUSTRIAL 18 yr. loan. ~umable. 546-8437 . Shelter&M-31SS8 AcchlealY... nc:ellent wontn1 c:ondl· portunity. (714) ~5630 8AyrRONTOfficeapace Owneroccupaed. lions " flinle benerlu far Jeaae. • PARK IANICBS MATL Lost: F wbt •baalY Ben· FOUND: Gold Quarta a.tr AaM bl including retirement Bab Y s it le r . l t t e ~ MORTaA"CO. jl-type doe. ,ray ean. dJ1Jtal watcla, vic:Tttvor for boapl. corp. ofc. ILUI tit. JOSS! fian· 40 hours per week. housekeeping, perma· I.JI---"'••· ('114)73158"4 h B 494-20()0 498--0842 ._ Stef•-. N.B. ldeotlf" ramtllar w/conectlon .. 5 A•• em b I• r a • 1 t nent, wk.days, 7:30am· Fully rum. (Udo Peo.in.) ,,.,__. • · · · • • -1 procedura (lna. com· • ~ a ary commenaura e b Perl f c:..t. ...... C& An eatabllabed O.C. . en1ravin17~ ~'1 • aelr-pay acct.). p 1 c: k 1 1 e r 1 Ir with experience Call 6pm. Nftport Beach. '1 ~~ter. WPect or T 1100 rt it Mort1a1e8ankin1Com· Lost: calico Manx kitten ta --lnmeRula warebouaepertou for Stan at . Mr.Hood:644-6141 • yac'!'wmm ... ,Xerox • wo-aq un • pany wi red bacvtana, Balboa Found: Silver necklace ct:-· · • l--'-··-TOPPAY! NAWN uae • computer Ume-avail. for occupancy Plerarea.175-7I08 w /beart abape. "Joe ete).8lt'IO n'""'--BABYSITTER·Woman share avail.~-May 1st. •31• per sq tt. $100 000 note at ~ re-love Colby" written CALL lHOMAS D n e e d e d t o h e l p -Call MZ.'MIM or 642-4483 t~. Call brobr. Due in Lost 4/8: Fred Doble pup, 644--8112 ADV~ 641-1144 CA 1...,(..., w/children 3yrs & 3mo Prime Newport Center M-SB-4,Sall0.2. 10 yrs. Mark Conley. Reward. For info or re-1~so SALIS E.0 .E. M/F ltiOO~rtxw 1\1\.11 in my home, refs. Ortlce space w/apec· Storege 4550 Brk. 963-8377 turn 557-4236. • For Laiuna-Baud (,,..,,, ~1 s4o '1JOll 962.0010 , t.acularocnvtewroraub-••••••••••••••••••••••• ~it., IU'U-Found: Maletanmedium ••••••••••••••••••••••• magazine. Generous ------- leue. lO'lllaqft. 780-920t StoraaaJivebciov• .ilb-.nn·•-.-w a1se do&. bas brO'¥n col· FIRST LADY ~!1tm!8~:.· ~~Y p:!: ~.~:~Lf::i.,w;A~~ AUTOMO'JTVE Banking .. Coeta ll•a avail. for T J y~y=yrl.K lar. Slater. F.d"arda, Escort. Mo-d~ef •. ~· but will train. JlacGr .... Yac:M.I, J.&31 S"'US--R Ta.LSI lmmed. OCC\1119ncy. 3000 TDer~! ... .._ ... 1=:'" ,_ 5 H.B. M'1·~ IWI -•-4414 Pla-Ua. Colta M•a ,.. .-.--- .. ,. .... . ~ '·· "' .. ,,. ., .. •• '2 .,. .. ' . .... . ,.. 'I '•t4 . ~. .· -~ • 2800 aqt ... ,,,....&q# ~ ..,_ yr. I Ji . -"' I -' ''~-~.... ~II ' ,z;= Joln • be-1(U} J),at,aU~ ft, Call ec • ._, Jloa. I~ lat TD oo 245 acre Foaud: Toy Poodle, cal,) ~ A/a.c;"-•.,...,..,... ~ AUTOlllSI' dttlerA!p ~ Newpor\ 1't'f11ou are a mature in· • 4' tbruFrl.M.8at1~2. ~'t"Ocado percel Mlioln· \.O.tdenlfy.H.B. * 1345 * Dt.Won~~. c.~LISMAHA.. Beach. StnJ1bt aalea dMdual teettn« a ,luU "'!Ji: •n1 development. -.o550. ' 11<1 'iJSAAceep&ed bu immediate oper:dej ~ pres needed. Excellent time Teller potltaon,•, .. t Approx. 60009q fl. in $550,000 new a~al. r u.Ufiedtndfvidual Da un experience P~ beefita. Irvine Savlncs 11 In·.-~ --'---+------Fountain Valley nr San Strool buyer w/"212,000 Fa.and: blactfemaleTer· COVER GIRL or aq rerred. lltnlmum 5 NIWPOllTDATSUH tereated in you. Pleuantr • .,,, Dlefo Fwy. Sl,320/mo. equity. lit $190,000 rler mix, 1entle. Vic to auilt accounUn1 ~eara fleet esl)erlea~. 888Dove5tre« working c:ondlllona, · Cal John "6-9360 or Takes it. (714) '151-4527, L 0 n I B e 1 c h . * OU'fCALL * maoaier In tbe ad· Excellentbendita. NEWPORT BEACH good salary & benefit : .~ To 12 m .1'09Q. ft. to '50 S48-7533 '138-3050orm.1153. (213)43'·8030. 953-077I MC/VISA mlol.U.tiaa ol a /r lune· NIWPOlrT DATSUH (No Ph. Calla Please} packa1e. Experience · ~ ':" clrecpt, ph ans tlon. ltequlrea ex-888DoveStreet preferred. Apply In . .,., p o to copy . l ...... W_.... 4600 A I / Found : l1e white * H>XTLADY * perience in related ac-NEWPORTBEACB AUTO ROUTES person between tbe,· ;,., )57 170'7 ....................... ;:::,'.',j.f' Samoyed or Amer OUTCAUONLY f.:~~·cc!:~ CNoPb.CallaPleue) Re1i1ternew1paperhu hours o r lOAM to ,., Yount prof. coupJe look· Lott&Fomd Husky, Hunt. B c h . VISA MC a ir systems. Pre-vioua afternoon auto routes 12Noon.at: it l.&1 in& for bouM wfth oeean •• ••• 842·2018 91 ~· c:__...tt ,_ co11~•-IL/or available in Lacuna IRVINE 8"L ASSN . ....... .. view to rent for weddin1. ••••• •• •••••••••• • * Z.. I I -* ·~ ... -uuu • -In Sept. approx the Ith •nu•'9All b 5100 Found: 4 /14, quality aupervlaory experience Beac:b, Lasun• Nt1uel & 1~~~in~;;,~Jvd. ~-~ thru the 13th. Call Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• volleyball , Newport •• dealreable. Company Turnyour Dana Pt. Applicants 752·2ili00 W 1f ...... SPIRITUAL located close to Garden unusables muat be over 11 years or •X) o at (213)_,...5064 or .. RANDOPIMI.,... Send Ph No. to Box 2011, READINGS Grove Frwy off of a I e Ir b a ve an . ____ EO_E_._._··-- lve. meas. T H E C 0 0 K E R y Nwpt. Into 1--• ehi I E --'--------• 1oam-10pm. Fully Uc'd. Knott'• Ave. for fu.rt.ber bl econom .,.. v c e. X· RESTAURANT FOUND: Fem Yorkie 492-7298 or 493-IQM 1815 lo formation contact USa e per. not necessary but ....... , ...... / All•c• 500 W . Coaat Hwy Terrier vie. S. Pacific S. Camino Real, San Cathy at (213)135-1553 Cash. call helpfol. Call 951·7113 (Across from Balboa Cat Hwy L.B. ~-2'11l Clem betweeJJ iAM·UAM . Daily Pilot wkdys after noon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bay Club) Open 6AM· classified ... In Ha 3PM. Breakfaal·Luncb LOST : Female 642·5678. Sell with EASE! o,,.. ... , 5005 Open 7 days. Malamute, vie CdM. A Tl.ANTIC Classified Ads 642-5678 ----------t••••••••••••••••••••••• 1t6-8829 MASSA GI SPA 4410 EMPLOYMENT AIY. •--------• B d b 16 SCUMUTS LOST·. 8, .. ._ _ ..... _ mal• e pampere >y ••••••••••••••••••••••• estab'd. 12 )Ta. Beach ... • ww...: ... Beaut. Girb. Open For 11tore • olllce space area. Furn. lncluded. Tenier, nr GWC. S50 re· lOA M ·4All 7 day a. at NUOBable raw. Low overhead. 6*8229 a Yftll£1S ward~ 892-3844 Phone~ 160 te J100 S. ft. evea • wknda. RIN" MESA-~EbR ......_"........ Mayhem -Whine-.-~ ..., ·-E1cel-Pa)'ina-To Place your 1.SZllleHVerdeE,C.11. o,, .... , 5015 WHILE . "Fast Result'' i4M12J ••••••••••••.,.••••••••• Hll doctor told him the D .. &rt1 t I~ answer to his faUque Service Directory ht..L•lll• Newport/Costa Meu waa bed -be should ad ... Call Now UTf~ftcmbaayBeacb Sacrifice . ..,.7"1 st•Y out of it for a 642·5671 Botlevard-Huotlnctoo w...y te Loom IOJS _WH_l_L_E_. -------1 lat. JH, =~· ~~ !:,.:'e;l' ••••u••••••••••••••••• Want Ad ~ult.I 642-5678 ________ .. cOir M&tlable buat.neu. hd TD Lw 2 Print. baU., avail.a-$100,000 to SZ50 000 18% bl• immediately. 10 + p0lnta. Cad: Bkr., Yett Jeaae. Attractively ..... 5711 ~i4n1.mu• .-,-....._--,..,-,-,..---• 1'~11 •• ~ .......... ~~.~! ~!£ ...... !~!.~ Store •pac!e fw leue. 1111 ~· ft. 1a mo 1q. ft. lD UuallDlton Seacl). fl•slbh term-. nsJ•.,.,_ Wldo• bal money for ...... ··----· IND T.D.'• •DJ alae ~1e1l\.' -· ._.,, -above~· Mo ttedlt ~11 ·•,1!' flllt W/lpW / i~D· ._• I' DO • hr adioD S..fli"'. . • . call AG f7a·U11 uutbO• M1&t1rt1 ......... • llMC&Jlll 1lt.62Dd 'l'Da, ... .$1111 + Owaer/lfoa Owner an.e.c.. eommercW • IDdUl&ltal PZTER D<>B• ..... m.toQ Waat la•__.,_ Kiil ... ,, .... , ........ 01•• ftll~•·a..t 'l'.D.A m.Gl. 1HE G ii lf1 lends •ISCOllTS• H ... /C>Mcit/M.w • 75f.1216 * . * 529-lllJ. Win. Now HlriD1 MC VISA IXOTIC neons •111-1946• , SemqallotO.C. BANKING ·,-.~ TB 1 a5 ',• •. ., IKKP"G CLBlK , • " Im med. openings for •P-... ,., pUcants with bank U · • 4 .... perience. Xlnt benefit.a · • ' ' a n d p I e a s a n l a t • • .., .. ;· moapbere. Call Sylvia ...,. Wate-n. 5S2~100. .-• .., IANK OF lllVINE . I_,... Equal Opp Emplyr ---------\; ..:.. IA•MG :··.~. P/TTBJ.aS '·~ Xlnt oppty. to work in at-~ . ¥-. trac:tl ve S.ttL positions ' · · avall. immediately In ''""' Anaheim, • Co&ta Mesa ~ offices. Call Kathleen at ,'~ · 75'-1801. Orange Co&jlt • i1't Sl&L. EOE .. ·~ ,, ... \ ,\ ,. ,. ,, IMPERIAL BANK ~91 Te .. c:.twDr. .!{ c ......... CA.92626 2t 71+641·Z200 ••• ht.2'2 Equal Opp Employer 9.anklnl TIU.la Exper. required. Ol'IAICLA YS IA.Mk ., Contact Cathy Antunez r, Ul-1511 ~,O."'E. M/F/V/Jl 3. ,. .. e our ad 111 today's ~ . ei assified und er ·:~cretary" .. ~ ~; Cttt-1 .. ~nla:lo1 :. ,ffew AcCllllts Full Time CARRY OOUNTD P&MOlf tw -..... -..-..... -•! ~. 1r.i ~ ':-'.,.::: IMllL IFflCE •• • · 17'5 !ftwport Bhd., 'M. elp wanted flt, p i t Ja.wt..lw • , urvr1 A ru C.M. .. aaadwidl ma. coanter ll50 Su JG.qUll Hilla J ~·~ c---u.. • Small~ blt belp. Plua de Cafe, 8d. MEDICAL '1 l~T,.... v9"1_,.._. benefltal forac. 'Guy'aJ>etiTD-NOl. CoronadelMar Gro~ol Irvin• baffd Mo D • • r r i . S 11 p • r curaa. tn'I& ms-,.. .. •w.oll-t You an u.. wlnDer ol TIAMSClllEI Clerical co . a • e k a n l c • Sudwicll, ec.&a Iii••· .._. ~ ~ ,.._.. _..,_ 2 ff'Mtlclllh Work at home., &op pay1 I .... a. ............. WH .. YOU11flMIC appearln• lndlv. wit.b MMllT. tltude for num'bera Telephone IGUdtoc. No ($• .. vaJ• ... ),•-RequlreaminUnumSyr4 llzzllf& 1--~ Spanllb apealllnl ..---------be:r:,.•• t.ot paat H · pper. nee. Excell. co. .. -""' acute hot Plt•I ex• J'uU tlme, aper. helpful y abWt)' • Ute typ1.n1 to COUlm/CW. pe ~ la aeeounttat beHrtta. Commia1loo Ice C ... 1 pertence ln all j)baua ot but not ..-c. Many com· ••-.U. Y join thelr friendly at.aff. Pull UQlt Deeded for DOl ~~ Pleaaaat J>l'Oll'•m • proftt sbar· April 21 '\hna IS medical dictation. Mon · , P8D)' ~· AJlllly at: Some office bktmd a Npt. Bcb. medical lab. two llrl om~. Pleue int . Apply In person: AnabelmConven.Uon Fri. 9-5. 71MSOO. ~!!t 11~~entia Ave., Cl.mtll plua. Co. baa nice ?!_..,..-~~r~. pbootBobDoddafora~ Pennyuver, lHO Tlc .. eta~uterat bee•-MIJC...u!!..ll . ""'9~ -llCWllONSTS aurroundinu. fd . raw.er m • ._.. -·-· Polntment. Placentia Ave .• Costa • -• -..... -m beneflta • 1tart 01 Phone: Dr. Notrlu, l>RIME=OLSCO . ...;M--•..,.•-------I cban1ed for retened 6 mornin11 a week, IOOll•B '•n aaJary to-. Call: NO-OHO ·-A aeau at the cooveutJon 7AM-9AM. EllCell. driv-TO $20,000 SICllTAIUIS ·Illa J.... ~ • 7~ HOMEMAKER center ahead of time. ins rec. req'd. Apply :· OFFICE WOID t7J.ttll D• ,.,_.., .. , Oppty lot homemakers Call IU-5878. at. ZT2 to pen 0 y u v er, 16 6 o PIOCISSOIS th Operator a.led for DJs. to develop mktina clalm yourUcketa. Placentia Ave., C.M. MANAGER DATAIM1"IY 1818 E.' St., S.A. dorf/eotrtx a,.&ema tor •IMllM.OMCI career. We Lraln. P'or * • * --------" Tu.attn arowtni m1 Jr. S.C......, ioai tenD aMipment. Exp. belptvJ, id. typ1n1 appt. ta-ooto MODBJMG, off ' ~,;..~~· w• ·-.......... employ-Lite secretarial up. Call for more iDfo. Tod ablllty, proflclency u-•~-Comm 'la. films, ex· enexeepticinalnu'"e ~ ..... .,_... nee. for thla intereaUn1 Service9,m..ao /fl 10.-k b no.~ LIGAL SICUTA•Y needs for take cba.rae i:nd.lv. ment a1eocy. We pay f;,· in nee. area of • curff, •Y Y IOI--tras ... SCAS new -b'tb ~oven -1mt you to -r'" -ben • G pt D• --y touch, ll.blt.. co. beoellt.I. __.. or p•r•l•t•I wltll fa ces. all aies. 957-0282 . .. 1 u.o • wberey~llk:. .. ·co. reat op y. to -Y-Informal ale, C.M. Call Now hJriq P IT day ..__... -... __........... ability. -amkr. Prior If lntere.ted, call or land a top job without a Pull time far local d• lllWe a.lltAll,MS-5800 be»taa, inta'vlew 2·4pm --· r --r-_.._.. •Motorcycle Mech• , broad uper. with A/P, lot ol bk1md. Starlin& UVftiea, dat drivtna,... Moa·Tbun. 37 Fuhlon ''•••::,,• • Airport Eaper, FIT, must have AIR, lnvolcinf, P IT. come by. salary $1,250. Call : cord required. 557-CU •IMllAl.OfFICI uland, Newport Center. .,..., • Ida. e.-: own tools. nice working Mail reaume to: P .O. 2102 Busineu Center lite JoM Mr. West. Newport Sta- Box 1.8258. Irvine, ca. Dr. , t 201, l r v In e . ... Ea cell. typln1 akl111 , HOST 111.1---=s Jeclde .... I :lOPM, atm01phere. 642-8870 92711 llS3:H41 or 27957 Cabot 972-ttH Uonenlnc. 110me bkpe. 6 computer tn'W'••-IJJ..ttll. ---------1 Rd., La1uu Nl1uet, 1818 E. 4th St .. S.A Delivery men over 11 for eaper. desirable. Send Full • part time avalla· ---------NURSING BualneHm.an seeks p/t 831-0SU or lel.52 Beach W«d Proceaaor L.A. Tlme to bomea in resume to: Cwbman 6 ble. Apply In person LEGALSECRETARY RN_,Aaf.TIME associate ln wholesale Blvd., U30E, Hunt· 6 ff'· t c ...... •am -•am, Wakefield , 4041 3-SPM.JoUyRoler,400 Laauna Htlla recent 3-4dysaweek.Country mos. exper. su 1c1en • oa u .. acArthur Bl., .. 150, So. co .. t H'"'V., La •una H aupply.754-1742 lnatonBeaeh. on Savin 950 to land ecooomy car required, -,. -.z • Calif Probate exper C lub Coov . osp . B U S P "' RS ON • IEL[~··u· posB h. wicth ehatab'd . Nptl no collectinl k00/450 =P:~. ~~!1~' Ca. _Be_a_c_h_. ------1 Sne/Hcea~•u~· XintCtalypJl!'.g .. " _sc_9·_306_I _____ _ WAJTRWESforcoffee '" ..._c 'n ~: as frlexcedlfl. mo+ bonus 846-0837 or ---·--·----Housekeeper/Companion. •• ..., req. -.... OHICEMAMAGER ...,ne ta• very en Y ·~ ..... • ...... -•• -r Uveinorout. Winslow for 1ppt. a hop. Apply to Betty. s E ~ v' c e s t h Sta ti g ---· ""--~ 837 l<*l A young consulting firm San Clemente Inn. w a moap ere. c r n Appllance service com-S»-2009. --·-------i.n Newport Bch is look-a 0 E U/F /H salary to $1,200. au: DIHT AL ASST IDA ff h f (f'""' Avenlda Esplandian, ~. . . ... •••• J-L-toa pany. eavy p ones, t d L~ ..Ill s~'Y m1 or an exper 0 h.~ San Clemente. •---------Front 6 back office. U1bt typina, book.keep-Houaekeej>era wane . ..-Ar. ~ manager. This person 972-9955 Work houn • days you ing experience. Mk for The Sea Cliff Motel, 1681 Law office exe .• BS wJm wlll handle all acctg & •CAI DIUVERS• 1616 E. 4th St., S.A. want. $6 to t7 per hour. Dennla, IC.2-0240. South Coast Hwy, L.B. typln1. dktaphone, ill finance incl state & Cb .. C b Clerical Jr Secretory No Varlet{. CalJ between 9 4iM·'892. train on Lenier word fed•ral tax-. Some ex· ~~a HlltlrTISll ' ' • 8. I no answer leave •EHllALOFFfCE processor. Real estate, ec~tive s'e'cretarial ---------• The job al your choice. SH. mag. &4.5-5742 F lt da(a, accountlng, b u 1 I n e s s I a w · duties also required CAl'TAIH All akW. needed. Top Beautifully decorated ienera otrice duties, HOUSBmBS $ 130 o . $1 70 0 I m o . Competitive salary in· i offices of an Irvine DENTAL Ortbo A11is· •lnt .. -neflts call Bob We bave immed. open· Sltyparlr., lrvine, Needed Weekends, baaed developer needs tant. RDA with exper. .. ...., Io Is for four !r799810 eluding benefit package. stroo1 Cood-wine service lite secretarial bkgrnd. pref'd . Euell. wa1e. 770.1175 L.H. housekeepers. Full time --·--· -----Call Bobbi 759-8972 & aft back1round send re· y 0 u n ee d t 0 be 80 .... -•• _1 """"ition.a. &Pll to SAM LRA u -uHH 6pm ~l-51.84. sume to: Ben Brown's _, . 1 & 552·7 1 sn--~ ..--sw-•-Restaurant 3llOS Coast P•v1ess1ona a sense 1---------Law Office needs abift. Excell. fringe Small Newport Beach P A I N T l N G H So Lagun 9'ZIJ11 . of humor 11 a must. 1Dental Aaailtaat, exp, to meaaenser to do ieural Mneflts packa1e. For law firm seeks le1al MAINTENANCE wy. · • Startio1 salary to compllmentourPedoof. office dutiea, alJlo must lnterview,call: LU Slot-trainee. Succeasful can· Experience req Apt CAI WASH !'!pt Bch ~ $1,350. Call. 1 Ci c e F u 11 or P I T . bave a aood car! Salary ten, 714-Ml-llUI or apply didate abould have good pamttng, repairs & Light c a s b 1 er wanted . Equal Opp EmplyT M/F R"-Joa..o. 561-5580. + mlleaae. Call Candy in peraon at: Advanced 1eneral olficeskills & be matnt CM . NB area. CaabJertwanted.FuUor 972~9955 1---------951·0633 Health Center, 1300 ea1er to learn. Will TSL MANAGEMENT part time. Newport, San· 1616 E. 4th St., S.A Dental Auistant, full or 1---------Briatol St. North, Suite train. Starting salary 642_1603 ta Ana, Fountain Valley, a.al( Rec.,....,st PIT. needed immed in •IHllALOfflCE lOOE Newport Beach. $750-$900.&sl·kM. ________ _ Cos ta Mesa . Call 7-Eleventall lhitta, &d. Beaut. waterfront ore. Costa Maa office. Eap Small, bmylale9office, EO M/F Q CLERK E PART TIME T*5 .... y. F/ or P/T. Will • X -Ray lie. req . Irvin• a-·. 1-'-lno ••. ~~~~~~~~~LI UOR · xper 644-4460. -Go ahead co. 1eek1 '" ,,.. ...,.. • ""' = I ed c • ht. ood Need six key people to train, 1920 Balboa, NB. efficient indiv. with gd. 63l ·l'20. perienced penoo to han· HSEKPR-live in. 5 days. pre err '"rug ' g hll positions Wrll train Full Time ls Sat. Only C .ollSHIER _11_U9_1_0 ______ , t y ping . Fr I end Iv die filing, Ugbt typln1 & pay, good future. Apply Call 979·9368 Poaa'lione available in "" " D~ •--L.A.-.& II .. C II Engl. s..-aking. non-an· ..--on ........, E Cst C.r Wash. Wl.IJ tram· . at mo 1 p here , so _..__ a paperwor.. a .. -r -'" • Q>.,, · our new i..-.ma Niguel Chair aide ln N.B. Endo. •-.... -... smoker. 2 toddlers. Hwy CdM •-· Santa Ana area. Call Cler'"a pleasant personality "'"ne,_.-. Hill R f __ .:..;..• __ . ----r..o.RTTIME oftice. Eaper. preferred. • office. 2~ day/week. 1--_;_______ Anaheim s. e s. -- p[eaae call: ,_r..e __ ti_ci_a_, 644 __ ....., __ . ___ , p"' In' TIME wanted. Co. has excell. Muat be exp'd, able ~ •IMllW. OFACI req. 1r74.5410 1---------General office aft, 20 hr Fyl "" benefits . Starting T CHl.._.E wk , mature. 55wpm . "' ?1~no.J:~ CASHIER Housewives, wort while salary $1 ,000 up. Call ::P~;Ja•tlc. op pay P /Tt aft,t 20 ~! wk. Insurance MA 1""11 heavy phones, 645-6501 HOUSEWARESALES your children are In Rita JohnSOft ma ure, ype .,.,wpm, INSURANCE RECEPT. SHOP Pat or Ruth !1 .• . . CALIFORNIA FEDEIAL Equal ()pportunJty Employer .JJi.nla:lng , I RICB'1"10HIST f.'!ewport Beach S&L has fthmed. open111g for a .Receptiorust Must bave d previous Recep . ist's exper., must be rsonable & enjoy meeting the publac Sa1ary comm with f!x 'Jltr. Full ins urance benefits & pa1d career .~Parel Please call : Ms. Denny Parisia .. 71~ t4EWPottT IALIOA SAV~&LOAH E.O.E. BARBER/ HAIRSTYLIST ll c llentele. 70% m . with 1 wk paid cation. Newport.er lnn Ir Deaiana. &44·2580 Help, Full• P /T, top for abarp. Port 11, . ece-3111116. R PERSON full Ir rt-time dys. colle1e .C.M.S.5544 IAITB4DB ply in person El am i no 20111 khurstH.B. autl cl ans Ir nlc uri.lta with clien- ; be sell-employed, k your own houra. rsl clan salon . .2234 IOOICICllPH ed full charge to erate • supervise D .P . accountinc item for amall but in& f\nn In Irvine/ Toro area. Xlnl •tart· aalary • benefits. 1771 Apply in peraon: Crown school. Part Ume pos. 971-9955 DENTAL~ISTANT hpeatvy Rpbonesuth • 64S-e501 General office duties in· Hardware, 1004 Irvine, avail. from 9 to 3PM, S • or J m med . open 1 n g . (WestclllfPlaza)NB Mon.tbruFri.,towork 1616E.4thSt ... A. Reg.chainidedental 1---------eluding typing. Self ma c h i ne operator ln speciality drugstore. S.CNtary, Ho SH us't. ~M15 General Offt~ starter, mature. Work trainee. All girl dept. No exp. req'd. Call the Bright person with DEHTALASST Peraooable at outgoing varied at interesting. Costa Mesa plant. Ex Part Tine c OllllMlncJ y CMlfh CASHIERS UTDTEM storeManaierforappt. couple ofyrs.exper for peraon for dental $900. O.C. Airport area cell. company benefits THEGUILD estab'd le&al ofc. C hairside. Friday " Nurse/Receptionist. CallPat(714)7S2-2975. Apply · Deltro ni c. Ccrriers Adults with outslandtng attractive personalities to spend 15 hrs per week counseling youth ages 10 15 Evenings & Weekends Available. S75 pe r wk . Cal l 2 30·5 JOpm. Mon thru Fra 642-4321 ext J.43 . Ask for Lan Typing & dictapbone iome Saturdays . Non-smoker. Ellp. pref MS-0413 DRUG plus warm personality Newport eeneral prac-but wlll train a quick lnaurance for a fr iendly ofc tice. $10 per hour + learner. Req. lite typin1 Peraonal lines & lite ------- 16 I O.S-....... Dr. Startin& salary Sl.200 bonus. Alk for Judy· • book.keepin1 aa well as commercial lines assis· MAIDS Newportleedt Call 7-.9357. id communic ation tant needed for Newport Exp'd apply to Angie MARKETS For 2nd 6 3rd Sh.itls ~jjJ338 Rita Johltto1t DIMTAl./Aul,.._, ala:Ula. N.B.644--0511. Beach insurance agen· Sao C lemente Inn .....,. 972-9955 No expr. nee. Costa c Y Sal a r Y com · 492-6103 We promote to manage-~-------­ment & supervision from i---------- wathin. WANT A CAREER? Co&taMesa 111 Del Mar 631-9421 Lagtma Beach 49t-9233 Huntingtoo Beach IMl2-9116 Challen1in1 position in progreaalve N.B. Dental Office awaits en- thualastic, exp'd Front Office Manager. Good starting salar y . Call 644-9211 A.alt for Betty CLID-SH•Pltlll &UCllYl*i Position ellt..ta ln our Shipping-Recei v in& Department. This poei- t.ioo wotdd involve lilht packing & receiving . Ability to wo.rt with de- adlines. 10 key Ir typlns JS..45 wpm are requJred. Applicant with shipping· receivlQC experience a definite, plus. Please ap- ply in penoo: PLISSIY SIMICc:.eucTORS lMl Kalaer Av., Irvine mpanioa to live-tn wllb Malr.e your shopping elderly woman , easier by ualng the Daily bouaewon. Must have Pilot Cluailled Ada. car. 546-191 . .. Hewport leedl Looi& to LlllC)OFint CAREER OPPORTUNITY lGlG E . 4thst..S.A Mesaarea.556-Ma GIHllALOFACE meosurate with ex-_M_A_l _D_S_, _H_E_A D C , _ _._ t1rnt Lookin& f« a very IA. penence. Pleaae call fOI' llWr1ll •--tin ...... Um j b pt .,.. ~ H 0 U S E K E E P E R Love to type . · ke nice oc.ea I ..-.. • e 0 ap · .....-""""". surroundinos with in pleasant office ? 1 ... .r.-... ..-E En1lish speaking, Mor • Clerical, for mature "._.__ F 6'$-7700 friendly people an a ---Loe ,...._p c H CL-., 'SIC"Y super co which offers pe • ...,... auuu · · ·· _, ~.olla..JCE firat rate Mne{ita & gd Npt. Bch. Eaper. • Property/Casualty. MAl"'U"'U"" raises. This is for you. must. Accurate typinc. Peraonal lines agency For motel. Exper'd Or~Coast D Pilot 330 W ay Street Costa Mesa. Ca Equal Opport Employer Starting s alary to wboenjoyswortrlnflna no shorthand. 20 hr. uper.Salaryopen. Est. 64.2-3030 Sl.054. Call friendly atmoapliere. w~ lncludea Sat" Sun. a1ency. QIM. 673-8650. i M Part-Ti' me Chair•lcd• ._ ..... r ience Call. 1146-7431 ,._ ________ Ma nteoance anager: Rita JohnlOft • ... ,_ ,. 2SO unit Condo requires STUDEH'TS 972-9955 and x-ray licence euen-General Office Insurance outdoors maintenance, HO .... tb...o.o.wl!.ft11: t.ial. RDA preferred but ~ 1616 E. 4th St., S.A. not oeceuary, if you're OPPOIJUllTY grounds, sprinklers, Ear n extra money. PIX TrcalMff abarp! 4 day/week lo . WANJEOI fences, mowers, etc, ex· working p/time in your U you Like to talk on the Newport Center 1eoeraJ per. references r e · own home, introducing phone & can handle practice. Interested? We have job op · • quited. Call 962-0337 or the New Daily Pilot to some tyfing, this co. call Marett at 780-tOU port unities 1ulted to _982_·_45_1_3_. -----The Orange Coast Area! will tra n you. Nice M Tb yourakllla,experience~ Immediate career op-Setyou.rownhours!Cafl oppty. tor someone juat ~~on~· ~un~.~~~~~I work achedu.le-r:rtwdti> la available MA.MAG-a Weekdays between 4pro 1tartJn1 out or comlnl •SECRETA!!!S or EX ERIENCEDd Pwty...... &6pm, 960-U27. back into work force. Dental Receptioa1't See •PBX REC.-.~. Life, Property an Woman with eltp In ~~~~~~~~~ Full ar part time pos. adunderGenenlOffice. •GEN.Of'C.CLERKS Cullalty Aieat in the aalea " personnel = avail. Call: Futdon lalmad"4-41111. Pleue come by for an Newport and Coat a supel"Vtlkln to manage p 8 X OPERATO R . Rh JoMaoa lntervleworcall: ltesa area. Dual license party rental store. Able telephone ans serv. day 972•9955 140-4400 prehrred but not lo work Sau. Apply: 6 relif graveyard abifi. DISl8•1 · · neceuary. Leads pro-N Bl c M will train. 547~47 1616 E 4th St .. S.A lteel IVICll HESTON J vided, crouP insurance 2025 ewport ·• · · M lnlOaalonVleio _ ,. provided. Eacelle11t op-MANAGERS·part·tlme l person office. gd on SecNtwy a::a ~·ffda ex~r. lo portunity for aairessive for whale outlet. Some phones & with people. t a.ty tltorttmd? electrical connectora, individual. c ollege/exp pref. or 2 days week & cov~ Publlat>lne co. aeeka berm et t c a ea la , 831 3838 for vacations. Dependw· prof ea a Io n a I t 1 p e tranaducer dmip, com· Por appohitment · ble & flex. Hrs 9-5pm. aecreta ry for their ponenta materlala • ccmlact: Manaeer wttb experience 6'6·7417 between llMpm. corporate V. P . Rusty metboda. 19004 Skypark Bl. IOHALD AALSITH for Ladies BouUque in ahortland OK. This co. DuUea include deal1n. Suite235 Irvtne 21 J.701-2300 Newport Beach. Good rHSOH FRJDA Y i s I r e a l f o r clrattin1, materiala te9t· c;w--salary. Smid resumt to needed for office in advancemtint & pos . Jn1 • RJtD project•.·--------Ad #193, Dally Pilot, Irvine Mus t have promises to be excltinf' lhcbantcal En1lneer-Gaeral . p .O. Box 1580. Costa transportation for er· Co . offers ex cel · Ins de1ree pref'd . n..1 ... a.,cw, Meu,Calll.92826. rands .. help with sorM benefits & s tarting QulUied candidates h89W~ •llATWISTBH office duties. Minimurp salary to $1,300. Call: aend reaume to: Mn. SAYNS MAMA.GER/ ASST 32 hrs per week. Call lltt.Jolllta. Jana , 23111 Via Secw9w_.., For fabric aloft. Fab. btwn 8 :30·5, Keri 972·9955 Fabrie~Suite 803· lyr.n.p.<inve19rd AffirmativeAction exp. pref. Call Gerl: _979_·_Z7_z_4 ____ _ 1816 E. 4th St .. S.A. MllaloG Ca. ,._l Equal Opportun.ity 646-4040. PHSOH AtlDA Y TNIMe ,,.. S11eft Employer MAIDn.,._ Over the counter sales. Co. nr. So. Cst. Plata PESK CLERK-I« motel, A"rn • I M •WAQB Boat store. 831-2.810 eee.ka bri1ht lndlv. who wUltrain,bnftujble. s IS ..... 2P,,. -- ,.._ b •-t na at un, ·~· or N•w, small comraoy·, PHARMACY Tech uaet p ones .. can Yr-..,_74'5 2 py .7p11, Tuea rl, lnaurance "' " 35wpm. No previoua •---------CPM -tPM. Sales, re'· ACCOUNT... new recreation• pro· F /TJma. Will train . exp. req'd. Co. offers Donut •bop. Early AM aervaUom • J'9Cel)t1ori rGS baa opeiainsa In duct. UK. Send reaume M uat typ• 40wpm. Ire at advance mt. abift, no GI*' nee. App-d\lti Customer Service Dept. to P .0 . BM m, TuaUn, M o u l \ o n p I a z a ••cell benefits & lJ: DlppltJ Danuta, 115' ... toaemceautomobile ln· CA. 92UO . Pharmacy, Lae•n a atartint Hlary to $615. NetrparttJvd.C.11. Wllltw/W.,._ aurance accta. Muat Hllla, Mr. Dreyfufl Call:............. ~-ti •• u~:.:~-~ exp. ~:'m'!i:-1~ ·::~ 7tl-J114 972-ottll N I •d"*fr.,· Exper. ~-Start· lilt E. (th St., S.A. &aper nee · 00" Pleaae call for appt. tac salary comm. w/ex· Jr. bM. l:~~ 7-5:ao. C.M. IO·THI, )lon-rr1.. per, • ablJttJ. z.C!q. StCi cla r• Mo SM t :•SPll co. Mneftta •cu.er .u· To you.ns mirt1 . mer. _... ~~~~~~~~~I vaocemeot potential. WUl train sharp penca P IT drlnr 2Pll·IPM t%A call: Linda, to a1111t •/charts • Koa·l'tl. N•wport 1 r a p b • . l y r . ...cta-.-IOMie aecretulal u p. OK. )11--------•I 1'b1' 11 a top co. wttb uceU. be-neftta • loveb' fWTOUDdlnca. Starttna 1aJaf'J f1,U8. Call: u.J ...... t72·ttll itlt E. 4th St., 8.A, INTBIUO'& DESIGN ....... na. tn.-. esper ""·will trabf. •1.0 JMffOI tmmtd. OlleldDI· ~art dale, .,._. joattloa 2•11 11'1ft. 8•lar1 t_eiotlabJe. Call: LJa IAat"8 n..u.111• or applf ha pel'M!I: Ad· •uee 8~ enter, .... 8rileel .. Nortll l•lte ..!.!.!J lfewpori susMfP ~ NX OfllATOI Aeroepact lliil&wr mf. SALIS-CO.• •llOM Jr. baa lmmed. ooeata. hll or Pfl\ G~ U • f o r • s Per 'd · · P 8 :l Uoaal readiaa ed1oaeatioa P I T 111 S be I p for opvatot • ~lat co. expandfo1 to tbe "Oenta'• sped&lty 1bop. to operate 801 Pulte bU1ine11/commerclal FaallJoa blud. No expr. Co1t10Je. Top pay • mrkt. We are teekiDI ~. 7&-•l lOtolpm. bebefttl womo lrmetop""8t IOSAM. IMC. our unique relldln1 pro. Quality Coalrol 71...,,.55.D duct a to key deciJlon llaoufa~ol electro-Equal~ Emplyr maken. Tb1a ill an ide-1 SICMTAIY mecbaalcal equip. needa ~~~~~~~ opp. to make Ira "1S Wanted,_ "--ral ,. __ entry level qtaallty COG· Call (114>•assa. '"" vaM' ~ trol l.n.apectcr. Some pre-llC.,,OMIST --------• tractors. a1·20M. vtou.a Hp helphll but lntemat'I. mktc. firm SALIS~/T sac-·•y wm tram tndlvktual wtth n e e d • R e c e P • Yake a new at.rt, at· -· -t 1d mecbanlcal back· Uooiat!Typiat for front tractJve new bed• bath Permanent part dme irouod. Salary com· d81k. Handle phones, store now takln1 ap-from 1 to 5pm. Gen of. menaurate with up. c.reet villton. '5wpm re-plication. for full ll pit flee, small lab, typma Located ln SJC. can q'd. Accuracy a mu.at. salea poeWom ln mark· report.a. stt-1083 Tom Job.nloo for app't. Non·amk.n. OPiy. Call: in1/r eceM01 poaitlon1-~-8-E-C_R_ET_A_R_Y __ (71 ) ... __ Mn. Coplan, SS&-6901. exp belptw must be en· C __ ,_-_1_·---· ____ 1 IMS EqitJpment, 2805 th 01 i u tl c It ae lf. lnaurance olftce, apo OUALITY COMTIOL Barranca Rd., Irvine. motivated. Bch. Office and promot· Marine hardware _E_O_E_______ STIOUDSUMEH ina a'kllls a must. 493-2021 manufact\lrer needs llC8'110HIST W Al9tOUSE Q.C. inapect«·sbipper. With or without typina F o r a p p t . c a I I SCTIY(':r! Llaht drivina. Salllni 0 -.-..ed. Top pay. Tf'rn· (714)594-n.1 eded ........ p bust uowled&e helpful. Call .,-.. •-Cull u c II ne WIW • •• • for appt, 546-UOl. Santa porary • me. • Sales net• Uti1aUon for busy Tod Services at 979-8900 Newport Beach law rtrm Ana. . GIEATHOUIS with congenial attorney. "' ALITY IEMTALAGEHT 7141759-0700 c:.n.OL for La1una's leading t..,.2PM R.E. ornce. Full time. or SECIETAIY/Let)al Imm ed. openlna in final R. Elie req. 49'7·$411 4,..ff'M Experience in liUaation impedion, bole & fit. R.E. SAL"""'PERSON .Lr or collect ion. Non· tine. must pass co. .,_, ro Join the Los Angeles smoker. Huntington pby,ical includlni back sates, exchanges, inveat· Times Circulation Team Beach. Ml-1400 lt·ray. Takln1 applica-ments. Hlghcomm. New tit adapt your work -------- Uom btwn. 8fr 10AM ex-tk P /T ok. Newport sc h ed ul e to your SECIETARY cept 4·20. Stratoflex, Pacific R.E. ~3683. lifestyle. Work Sh.rs/day Fu 11 t l me . R . E . I 17171 Armstrong Ave.. in a Times Circulation knowled&e helpful, but I Irv., ·EOE A Kendavis IESTAUIAMT sales office near your not req. Newport Center * •SICllf AlllS* * SltL/S\lJlll'/~.eoo Accountiot/J>ed24,000 Le1al/TlO/~,ooo Exec/abJ00/---.,..19000 Expel. Callullanl Oun Li.I Relnden A,ay ._!nc. . 4020 Blreh Ell '84 !!iOE Newport/13UJJO/F1" SICllTAIY GIM. OfC. P /T 20-25 bra. per wk. for one woman (3 man ) enalneertna "c. io Coela Mesa. Excell. salary. Please call Tom, aft.er 3 :30PM, Moo-Fri., 84S·28'2, Thompson Floatation Co., EOE SECRETARY Bonk Experience We have an lmmedlale opening fOf' a Secretary with a minimum of two years platform ex· perience. SEWING MACHINE s.a111 SaJJ ~E!!~~1M2 ...... a..,..... -.. TbelrvlneCompanyhaa \STA.TIQIBY • ·TYPISTS Boy• Eu.ropean 10.IMJ, lmmed. OlM"DP for lull Sto~ ln CdM need.a 1ales Re&ilter today tor local "!.. •5~ ~T ... ~ COlf~1 time Secret.rln wltb peraoo I/time, 5 dai•· te --'"-' ta •• ... ,...,,_ -·· ~• .. 1 ............. Ba-... 1 t ... 1 mporary-pmen . ......... CO: X o •«• n1 con 1. 551-4145 3WllEl'LBICYCLE tn Lela , · Especially One clieot.ele. ._ .. , ...... -.·t1-m e rclaJ /Jndua trl al, Pbone87~1010forappt. -..,.._,.. '" Real Estate, Property rn. L'""~ ..__ Mana1emeat, Encmeer· ---------i U ,. II '\'::. Schwinn VU.tty 8oYI 10 lnl or Arcbit~lure a s~ rfwotMY"9SOHHfl.S8MCU 1pd, JllDt CODd. t t5. plUI. l.JIUIW J7Ulirdt5freef 7S9·93S3 We offer excellent C!OID· AftALYSJS M..,_.f~·I -,-.-d-.. -,-.-.. -,-rWl--1-0_2_1 penutloo Ir benefits l•1~~~~ ~~-n.-~~-~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pac1ta1e. Fantastic Exploslve arowth has It REDWOOD ZX6'•1 work enviroomeot. c reated . a need for TYPISTS Xlnl decldn&. 1-20' ioDc:" persons with IOlid 1c1en· . N l ad j..-1-._ If you qualify, pleue ap· ply or send resume to: L.Aucuatine a 1HE IR'IWE CD/FfllH( 500 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach, 92663 Equal OppEmpl M/F SECRETARY Customer Service exp. Order processing, type so+ wpm , quotes . phones. Irvine mfg. 540-8894, ask for K.H. Ufic experience. WUUng *Immediate Operunas ew 0 --·~ to relocate to beautiful •P/time,F/lime, T"'mp. mill. 55' /ft. 148-tUI Monterey Peninsula. •Top Pay _a_n_ytl_m_e_. ____ _ Relaxed work at· For more info, call Tod c-er•lr 1030 moapbere. Terrific op-Services at !r79-8900. liqlll ...... por~uoitles . Good wanted L l ve ·ln ••••••••••••••••••••••• salaries plus bonus & all $ / k Nlkllormat n'3 w/2.0 benefits. Send resume in house~eeper lOO '!' · SOmm lena, fluh, IOOnl,. confidence or call: The E n g I i 9 h SP ea k 1 n g lens, le many other IC· M a rs h a 11 Gr o u P , 770-1832 ces.sories. Everythbl&.1.D. Pt;rsonnelService, attn: Wanted pit delivery brand new cond. $425. Michelle Peerson. PO. pers on 11_5 car pro· S40-5719 Sox A·I, Carmel, CA----------93921. (408l 82S·S700. vided, call Sus an al 4.llS Pacemaker Crown "FreetoApplicanl" 63_1·_7_24_0 _____ Graphic, F4.7 Optar Telephone SECUlrTY GUAlDS LAY OH THE IEACH Openings for qualified AU DA. y WORD PROCESSOR t3Smm lens $125. Polaroid adapter, rum holden at good prices. RoUeinex n.R F3.5 t&o. 646.7909 individuals. Good &tart· 10 t'mmediate open1·ngs. . · Refund bl Mag 11 for law office m ma pay. a e un· Short application. Work 0 -h N Dogs 1040 Ind., Co. Sandwich Maker hfs home le have more time developer_ 833-8300 11.ALESTATI 7 A M-3PM Mon.· Fri for your family, studies, (Susan>. THERE IS ROOM AT I 646-8883. call anytime or leisurely penods. We -------- lform deposits. 97g. 7243 M F . lk Huntington ccac on-ResponaibillUes include &63S-8191 S·9pm. on· n . ta mg smoker. 848-1400 KEESHOND Pur;· • "'C. on our telephone. Deep 1'A. heavy loan document•· _5_1&1> _______ /n_M_E--1 voices Preferred . Y •ROM.AH Cham P sire. M F. Pet • lion, customer contact ~ ,_., $3 35/hr guaranteed, "" show . Pvt Pt Y · ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIIE TOP FOR YOU! Restaurant pay hourly wages & -------- Co h R E JOH~'S commissk>ns. Secretary me ear a top . . ""' Exec. s.cntwy and notary services. Mfgr'a rep needs PIT more money ea sily For tool rental firm. 2131697.1345 aft8 pm. Must possess stroni non.mokerinCoronadel Neat appearance, good --------- trainer teU why our peo. IESTAUIAHT LOS ANGELE.5TIMES To ..._J&at pie do weU and how you 8 .. .. s fl A .-~ sec r etarial skills. Mar office.Hrsopen,8-2 ~t~i~!:O~C:a!YH~;, handwriting, benefits. DOGTRAlNlNGlN Shorthand is preferred pref. Pleasant phone N. Lag Bch. W'-dys at Will train. Apply : 1930 YOURHOME too' Th A rilZl oo-..eeper, now ac-137S un ower ve Fin . Svces . firm , ~8;M. For~ ..:Serva'. cepting applications for C.M Fashion bland, oda. top-but not necessary. personality. Light typ. .. Newport Blvd C.M or Obedience ing le riling. 675-5090 ~fr~d. First come, first 22600 Lambert-1.203 El ProbLemSolvln& tlon1 call846-7'34. fullt ime. Apply in ~0301 notch exec. sec'y. for SDOftlJ()red b person bet 3 & 5. Mon· very busy, cbaU'g. poa. We offer an outstanding • Toro. AAA HOME DOG benefits packa&e which Self Gret!il World is l~k· T E L E P H 0 N E u--L~-TRAINING.838-9215 CENTt.IRY 21/Goldstar Fri 2250 E. 17th St.. San· Equal Opportunity S t r 0 n g e x p . & ta Ana. Employer type/s hrthd. skills a includes a complete Ing for an a11ress1ve, board n..--.. So ,...., --_ _._be C U oti ted ind' "d J for Switch "~ · me •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ..i h business w ..... v . a m va lVl ua typing, 5 day wk Apply •~ 1005 Easter ~up.,.es. C am· Receptionist SALIS must. Non-s mk rs . Personable lndivldual to RESTAURANT lmmed. part time open· p I ease . Ex c e I . PAT between 9AM and interior plant sales. to H t 1 La a Mrs ...... .,....... pion hne AKC ree. 4PMforappointment. Base fee al)d com· oe awi , ·•••••••••••••••••••••••YU Lab do Rt greet our customers, tng for Reader Ad dent/med. benes. Call: answer phone" process ff£YI representative for loaide •7~1~4·~1M~O-~O~J.23~~~~~ our billln1. Growing Co. • sales posiUon. Gd. com· = 0 miulon pay. Xlnt OP· Baltazar, 494·11.Sl, 425 S. WANTED TO IUY ~~ ra r vr. portunity to make good _Co_a_s_t H_wy_._La_g_. B_c_h._ t buy o Id gu n s, CITIZENS BANK money,bavefunandbe TELE pH 0 HE diamonds,lvory,jade& Beauti fu l Golden with xlnt benefits. Call YOU'RE pany benefrts. Apply in , f M2·1593utforJohn. person: Penoysaver, Theres an easy way or 29'70Ha.rborBlvd. oo your own. Call SOUCnBS collectibles. Call (714) Retriever pups, 8/wka Suite 206 Coeta Mesa "";838;;;;·;;0300;;;;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;=:::: Hiring now for summer. 972-4926 & ask for Dane. old, AKC. 881· Ul88. 1680 Placentia Ave., you to sell that bicycle Receptionist wanted PIT, SJ'ID CM Mon-Fri l·SPM you no \anger~· J111t t-12 noon. Mon-Fri. Lile M · · ·· ad•ertlse It 1n the Equal Opp Emplyr Work 3-9 Mon-Frl. No * * * Female Maltese Pup m/f/h USE THE exp nee. No selling Call Ir_._.,_._ $150 typln1. phones. Great MAJEllAll SALIS LADY Cla11ified ! Call 64.2-5678. benefits. Call 541 -0280 • for exclusive children's I •1 p•1 "' askforJamie. CARL'S JR. has both t°;~ca:~:IN~~a. ........ II r I 11· Receptionist/Secretary FULL and PART TIME --------.. Receptionist, general of. positions available im· Sales • G I A • • ~: «!;!!:i,:~~!2.~ mediately for : ' =.:;~&. A1s1~i:~~ • . ~~~~r!-... SSlg1111ef1t •. won. varied • lnterest· COUNTER &mo. uper. Call ror ln· e . . Secretary ti .-• \nl· $900. o.c. Airport te...,,· .......... 1231 I a r e • . c • l l p a l PERSONNEL . . ... . --. • " ' -r .. ec~e I . (714)752-2&15. SALES p /T -u UUt M I • bnmediate openina for v individual. e IECB'TIONIST All shlfts are «>pen, days ornings neces11ary or • MUlt b6 capable of tla , fast-paced .• Pleuant office In N.B.. and evenings <must be fabric store. Call Gerl: varied and lnterestin1 duties newspaper ·heavy phones. 549-7971. 1.8 for nights> &46-4040. e ueeuUve & personnel administrator. Call:• • ~""'321, ~t. ~7 ror appt. • Receptionist for growing Good pay, excellent SALISl'IRSOMS rn:u~a~c: ~~en~y~ ~~II~ :e~e~I~~ ~ e 1 n :u::~ needed. Hiah fashion •• Editor's Secretary •• ba ve xlnl secretarial/ i>ortunity. ladles speciality store. telephone skills. Top Ex per. nee. Good .Achallenginaopportunityiabeioiofferedb)'. 1 a I a r y ck be n er 1 t Please apply In person: beneflu. CaD: &M-noo • the Dally Pilpt for someone with thee package. Call Pat. Tues.-Sat. .intelligence, wit and altUls required to be. l75-MOO 2 · SPM SALIS PB50MMIL aecretary lo the editor. It's an lnterestin& r ail • position requlrina the tools oC tbe trade -.,. R.... t' ,.;.+/"'-I Of or contemporary rel wpm dictation, 70 wpm tYl>lni, dictapbone -. ~ep t0r-• u.:nera -stor e . Only career· •and 9\e ability to shift. mental cean on abort . rice. Growini Newport ind d B h R E d I m e • mature women e noUce. The benefita are eeneroua. tbe pay e eac · · eve 0 P· need apply. Must be U · • reasonable. AppllcaUona beiog acupted only . menl firm hu immed. per'd . Salary p lus t.b.rouih appointment by calling ... 642""'321. o e e d for re c e P · comm. Pleue apply in • ext 277 tlonist/general office. peraon or call: Apropo, ' Heavy phones, typin& & &M-2652 or #29 Fashion e • public contact. 752-NIM. Island. Npl. Bch. EOE • Accounts Payille • RECEPTIONIST . Npt 23002 ... Fonst Seamstress needed. • Bookkee~ • Bcb. law office, uk for L...-H• Prefer experience sew-• e Caryn 714/'""'518 ing sails. Santi Ana. A full-time position Is ava able Cor accurate . Equal Oppty S47-134-4. e penoa with at least two years experience la llC.noMST Employer M/F ---------• • processin& accounts payable for computer e •-------• Seamstresa wanted, e.p input. cash reporting and dllbursemeot. Wes & LJtllt...... 1---------helpful b'* not~-• 1cheduling and lorecastlna. Wlll pre~are at in fJobn w ayn1 e ~ITAIL 645-7'50. • b~~~ dpeposlts. tMuat. pos~th &oodood oalflcee ,Airport or 1 penoo o c. Aaat ..... anager women • 1......... ermanen po111t1on '" g s ary. Need take·charce specialty store clothlni SECRETARY/Law ore. and company pald benefit.a. Call: 642.-4321. j)el'IOO. 50-2203 eJlp. necea. NANCY Excell. skills for 1 man I Ext. m for appt. • RECEPTIONIST-For CRAJG ~1~ ofc. Salarynea.673-9201 . Cl .,. d Q tside Sal , • 'doctor'• ofc, exper 1tH SICUTAIY •• aSSI 18 U 8$ • belpfuJ.DCJt nee, mU1t be ASSISTANT DlREC· Anawertni phooes, typ-e sateaperson to handle Real ~a late. efficient, lk worll:loc TOR l n a tk I e 0 e r a l .Development accounts and automotive . w/1>99Pl•, type well. Gd OFNURSES secretarial work. accounts. Must have at lea1t 2 years .atary, friqe benefitl. Day bra, fleJlible Newport Beach. Call e experience. Salary plus commisaloo. Muate M2-Ua 1cbedule.G Mild for Mn. Sam, (2U)37&.eM5. .~encar,Fmlleaae paid. Excellent company . Wons ran Avenue 1-------.---1 ~e ta. or appoJntment f« interview, call SELL Idle ltema with a Conv. Hoap., 1730Grand I•-------• e N2·S678, ext. 217. • DaUy PUot Claaalfled Ave., Loni Beach. (213) SICll'r~Y/ • • Ad. 5"1.m7 &.o.,... .. .,. Pat Tnne Evenints • Only dedi c ated, • Ca•11l•1Y_...C.-, ·• inollvated, fr conaistent •Adults with outstandlna attractive. •.PPllcantl Deed apply. e personaUties who enjoy worklna with 10-15 ~i:t'fl~~=--= .year old youtba. Start a\ $4.00/h<>Ur. 2:30 PM. not neceuary-.•ceU. e •od 5:30 PM .. 6'2·4321, ex\343. • =' T'lin:!~c :: • 0 o':f. ~:' • 1anlu.Umi, located ln : 330 w e l'ouQUia Valle)'. · ay Street • IN·IOIO Costa Mua, CA ~~~~~~ .• F.qual Opportunity Employer • Have 10methW to""' •••••••••••• •·••• ' Clusllled adl4olt weU. DAILY PILOT 966•0151 all lpm. 2589lM~~rite m -338.5, M2.-056S - °FAST Ty,...t/P•h-41p Misllion Viejo RESULT" Min. 3 yea.rs expenence You are the winner or i n both are a s 2 freetldlf'h SERVICE Quadrat.et. Capable of CS12 VaJue), to Registered Al(C Labrador puppies 7 •ka old mid May. s.59-9603aft 6pm. DJRe.CTORY full-charge Art Dept. Ice C--'-s l Darkroom experience a AprU~i's Fwwitwe 1050 For Resu t pl1.11. For lnt.ervtew, call Ailabelm ConventJon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service CaJI 855-1137. Center 642-5671 Ticket• lllUf\ be ex· 1 IUY.....,... na lt't time ta plan for that chanaed lot reserved Lea 157"'1-' ' l:at. vacation trip. For extra aea~ at the coovenUon --------- People who need people cub, why not sell som,e center a.bead ol time. Trade your old stuff tor sbould always check the of UtoH Item.a you ~00 t C~ 642-~. ext. 272 lo new eoodies with a Service Di.rectory In the need with a Clau1fled claim yourticltetl. Cla illed d ...... ~ DAILY PlLOT ad? 642-5678. I * * * as a . ,._ .,.., • Automatic Garage Door SysJems FOR SAFETY ... SECURITY ... CONVENIENCE Automatic Garage Door Operators by Stanley LOWEST PRICES IN ORANGE COUNTY "We Are Never Undersold" STANLF.Y Day or Night Prompt, courteous - conscientious service. RARt1!1 ~ [J~f~UN ' •I lo • ',f1 •'•' 031-3311 t712 ........ , ............. . 'M Malibu Wepn t cyl 1ood ru aatna tran1portatlon H1S 5e8811 '78 Cllevette, 4 dr, 4 1pd, al e, All/FM, 17,000 ml'a.S3900.~. '79 l'ord 150, lTK ml. For'I'bea.t 8\l1 Or Leale Deal lnOrl!Die~ty ... Come Sti UJ Tdday J. ---------1'79 Rabbit Deluxe, J1.... 9730 $4900/080 P.P. Mo.ma: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5'8-88St; Dys: "51·1371 •n Jaiuar 3.1 M.K us all uk for Bob '62 lmp•la, wbt, 68,000 Dirnn~ Tbl unique Maple Beau.Uful Color TV, 2 yr C1IO be uNd 8 ai&ea. I.Del wrnty. Free delivery p 1d1 I linens 1400 Sl48. 6"-1'11f. •MOPm• 848-2652 'IO Pucb S_port MKll, SQR _.,. n. •• A n--. Ii x.lnt COOd. '500/beet Of· ---------· DION,...... ~ fer.548-1117(1'fta) t d b l300 Tum&.able w/spkrs. 1---------1 Basset In. rm ta le $$00/0BO 873-2244 eves, w~leaf, 3 aide chain, 1 87,_3S20 t I IO arm chair, xlnt cond, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $200. 646-7358 Panasonic VHS Model 'Tt HONDA 750 CBK xlnt Mhc•I••-IOIO UIOO 2~ old perfect cond. w/w1'1 low ml ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. l6506S1·1532 u500 Call day only AnMPAIMTBSI 23" Color TV. Exce1.1 __ l _·J011 ______ _ Near new Greco EM-400 c o n a o le . W a l n u t 1---------1 alrleae aprayeT. let 1750 Cabinet. SlSO, 9G·1W 1711%400 takes! ~·5312. --------•IHts & ~ Xtras, nu Una/ba\l. teoo/OBOor trade . , ...... 2 ••• Mrs.W..H..- 2023 Federal Ave. Cost.a Mesa You are the winner of 2fnetlcbta ($12Value), lo lceC~ Apn121 ;s Anaheim Convention Center Tickets must be ex changed for reserved seats at the convention center ahead of time Call 642·5678. ext 212 lo claim your tickets *** Cookware. 20 pc slalllless ,a steel waterless, new. won in contest, reg $445. sacrifice. 97~9368 ........... ••••••••••••••••••••••• to101------- WECAHSELL YOURR.V. S59-L304 Snow white Easter Bun 14' Skiff w/5 hp motor, --------- nies. llOea. gas lank & bait sled. RENT: 22' lux. mtr 54().,S6lO $400, 631-4870 aft 5 pm. home. Sips 6, self.cont. ----127S/wk. + 8< mi. John Wayne Tennis Club loah, M-.ea:ucau/ 640.8585. reg. membership, mU$t Sff•lce 90201--------- ~ '""'~C......, HU Kart>or Rlvd. COSTA MESA 979·2500 & sa•na .. 2"0211~ Pkwy. Mlsabi Viejo A Ve!')' Pkwy. nit (off 5 Freeway) ll 1 ·2041 4tMt49 CIOHd~za CREVIER ort1. very well main· •----------1 2600 Hc\rbor Bfv<t orll( mt, 1 ownr • es· lal~ed lluat Sacrifice '79 Rabbit DIESEL, 4dr, Cost-'~. 540-9100 tremely 1ood cond .• 8*t570 sort, Jo ml, xlnt cond, '!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!LJ w/immac Int. S2,000/b1t 145-7~1 .: otr. 760-91115 ICwa_.... t7l4 , I 1974 Cadillac Cpe C--_....._-----9-3-2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 7 B U G a m f m , J>eVUle, velour int., pin ort........ t 'TS, xlnt cand., r-41ala, mecbankal/body/tlre1 stripped, areal ahape. ••••••••••••••••••••••• catm wbla, Sooo. lood,$14.50 Sac.$3200.a31-0792 SHOWIOOMCOMD. N7·1591aftSPM. ~H7S ----------1 '7ST·TOP Due to 1eriou1 lllneu p ... bra .... • pow'"'r 1 --•-t7l6 '80 VW D-· .. --na~-1 Sta. ow ... r .... • ... _,. ....,. u&eae must sell car ol lu.xury window1, power 1teerin1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wan. Am/Fm stereo xlnl aas mileage '7S with tilt/telescoping "79 Lailcl•·Zacato Coupe. cass, air, 1:tra tank, Coupe de Ville, blue steerlna wheel, air, 12,500 mi. Owner mov· lu1g · rack, 20,000 ml. w /wht llhr upbol. very A )I/FM stereo, rear ini, price reduced. dill cond, 40mpg, S8soo. cleao " good cond. window defogger, (714)815-7208. (714)~2521 Grea. S3llOO/OBO~ automatic trans. Snow Meldtt 9731 •57 vw BUG looks and white with Burgundy in· 75 Cpe De Ville, white. red terior. 27 ,000 miles. l m · & •••••••• ••••••••••••••• n.ua great, completely I th l b 1 1 Sl • llOAOWAY •79 11 a&da RXTGS, 5epd, stock. Phone"""""· ... ,,,.. ea er. runa ~at. New m a cu ate l r u o u l . . -----------• tires, trans. Loaded. 754·8790 or Answer Ad SA"tA A"A anrf. new Ul"fll all ex· ·-.__ 835·3171 . iru, $8196/080 494.1736 '79 vw Ccovt. l.3K mi. First 12,000 takes it. 11209,642-4300·24m•. rw1ulT1.,i•t10111V*<>••c1t110t aft8PM Blaupuntt. am/fm cass. 497·3417 _Ford 9940 *Us~.~.. Merc ... lem 97~0 Bi&ht Yellow tao int. '76 Seville, ll.lnt cond. ful· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...., ""''f'T Truly exceptional cond. ly loaded, $S400. '66 Fairlane 2.89. auto, '78 S.301A ("'•"1) ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-so. 67" .... ..., . .,_ ""' ~·-951-9500dys4119-3'745evs good transportation car '19 320t (7580) $35() 499.5754 ; '79 320iA SIR (7089) SELUNG YOUR '76 RABBIT, reblt eng, c ... aro 9t I 7 --------- or '80S28iAsunrf. (001.3) MERCEDES? air, AM/FM, auto. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• M.rcury t950 '81320iA<OlU) WIPAY cond .12'700.751·8771 v .... Rahd · ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEIUY CLEAN CARS AHDTRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET .!>O< 11.ir h"r Ill\ cl Cf~l\\11'.:-,\ ClotedS•lbys TOP~SS VWW b li U·_....,._1•1. ORANGECOUNTY'S Call Jack Bacon '79 estp a a -~ FfMIST '7153lA JIM 5UM0NS Xlnl cond, lo mi, sips 5• '71 ai.vrolef LlNCOLN·MERCURY Alloy wheels, stereo 9verzrs s tereo. am/f m tape C01RaroI.2IT·Top DEALERSH1P ca11elle. power win· _.._ deck, ice box; sink, elec Stereo, ma& wheels, dows, 13,600 orieinal 1970 Harbor Blvd. book·up & more. $9800 power windows & door ~---_.,~ J~ miles, exceptionally COSTA MESA Call Bill o r Claire. locks, 33,000miles -._,, T~~-, n ice! PRICED TO •S3-l·.1Z1-6---~--9300-l-63_I_·_S35() _______ , (351VQE) LINCOLN·MERCURY SELL!! (899\TPY} I 16 18 Auto Center Dr. I C,_•ierMohn '62 190SL coovert., both !!'!:~•••••••••••••!??.~ $5995 SD Fwy·Lk Forest exit lsl & Broadw•• I t d I RVlN E -tops, comp res ore . #I VOLVO o--· I Ra Santa Ana llS-3171 11•/11•< .,,..., -~ 831\7000 "~·~ JNORANGECOUNTY' u- n.e MOit bc1tillg P.tOfY_. IMW,._ h11eOr L ... C.-.le Mcl.mwlMW!! 1-vOrLHN 1,0 ....... ,._, 17141 522-5333 OllAMGE COUHTT"S OU>IST '67 200D, 4 dr. a /c, auto, good cond. S300o or best offer. MS-S89Cl 10 M 828a5E, 4-dr sdn, blu, UK mi, xlnt cond. $6800. 6is.ml ---MG '742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 MG MIDGET Showroom cond, $3300 1·983-8370 MGI '744 • •••••••••••••••••••••• SALIS, SBVICE A.HD LEASIHG OVERSEASDEUVERY EXPERTS EAJU..llllCE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd. '78 Camaro COSTA MESA Aar. automatic, power 64t.-9l03 540-9467 s teering, 27,961 miles, ORANGE COUKTY t882V El ~4918 VOLVO Barwick Imports Largest Volvo Dealer 831-33 t l "78 M arquas wagon, 9 pass loaded. New Mcchehns. Xlnl cond. kOOO. Owner. 675-6161 Mftt-.c] 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Blue Mustang Convt. Xlnt cond. 1 o wner $3,500.49~. '65 Mustang, xlnt cond. 4 new radtals, new '72 302 e ng, a 'c, ps. am.fm cass. S2800/0BO . 962 3433 11 b 5/1 bet ff ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wo S~.P.-h ~.~ ev~ or !k:ds~r B o .a t M a i n t . & & Accet10IWt '400 ---------Reflnishl.ng. Dock pamt· ••••••••••••••••••••••• SU-1200 Sales-Service-Leulng Ror c.. ..... anc. '79 Convert. lmmac/plua extras. W/blk int. 213 ·432 ·7338 or 71~·7178 in Orange County' BUY or LEASE '69 CAMARO -POfttloc 9965 DIRECT I owner, clean, auto. mags. 30? eng. 2 barrel ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Bonoev1Ue 4dr Sedan. gd cond Must sell. Sacrifice dys 964-64Q, eves 964·~ REDWOOO 2X6'a. ing/repair. Local 20 yrs For .. Xlnt decking. 8-20 ' long exp. reas •prof. 646-4866 Datsun z New load JUSt lll Crom loah w.- mi 11. 55•/ft 646 9885 ~,_., tOJO motor &nytlme ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,..ts Must Sell Pool Tbl Genoa !>oz. hoist 40' 21'. + 761.5'37 w/light & acces 4 14" Wte new $750 Ensenada --------- chrome nms w llres $50 winner W~ED Se1t-'71 TORINO GT pans C~ 646•0859 tanl, storm Jib" tn·sail transmission, vecy good S48-2990 Call 642-3418 WINEBAGO Ca mpe r 50 hp elec. st.art Susuki ~=~I ~~~~:e 1:;~c°::!~ O.B. en1, llSOO. Boat & Alltos for We StS0/080646-1.883 trailer rree w/sale or ••••••••••••••••••••••• --eng. Oave642-4&53 IMPORTANT Swap family tennis club loah Poww 9040 NOTICE TO membership an Irvine •••••;••••••••••••••••• READERSAND for ., or $500. 833-&ns ADVERTISERS I '71 SIOPJACK. The price of items .Rug IO' X 12' Brown 24' w /traller. Xlnt advertised by vehicle bQrder, squares/circles financl.ng. Call Gary or dealers In the vehicle in bright autumn colors Don 831·1400. classtried advertising Stso. 646-21652 , . columns does not \n. --------13 Fiberglass open boat elude any applicable Lo••l•u•i It trlr . $475, Days taxes, license, transfer Helium Bouquets de· 752·7000, Ray McKee fees, finance charges, lhe red. Perfect ror , . fees for alt pollution con· every occasion 673-«19 ~4 Aluminum Gregor t.rol device certifications -,... ---boat. 9.9 Evlnrud e or dealer documentary Aul hen t I c p 1nba11 w/Sears trailer. All like preparation charges un· ~achine, late 80's, good new 675-5382 less otherwise specified cl)nd.12SO. &IS-3865 TAXES by the adverther. Mkcel•1-.. Must sell immediately · bff•u/ W..ted 1011 18' Relnell deep V wit.b Clilssks '520 •"f•••••••••••••••••••• \15 mere. 0 /8 . $3000/bst ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eng. perambulator, dlr 673-1917 · 4 6 F o rd Wood 1 e , good rt>ndallon restored, $U,SOO. ALSO 64S-S678 16' Fishing Boat with •29 Model A Town Sedan. ------t r a i I e r c1t S 0 b P 4 dr. restored. Ideal (or Mltaical ./ Evenrude. Ocean ready 1 tu den l 11 o, !O o. ~Mia M IOU s.soo 67H161. ··~···················· 8Sl-214S 1---------CONN Direct.ortrombone '64 T-Bird Coovt. 68.SOO with caae Ex-cellent '77 Tri Hull. Ulbp Volvo, orig ml, full power. air, ~nditlon. 1100. 67!>-~2 17~', all brand new 1.nt, speed control. recllnlne aJter6PM In cl trailer. $4300. p.,aa. 1eal. KelaeyHayea --840-3410. T . B I rd w I re w b s . Saxophone. Selmer w It ' net. Uke new. •a".· Pacific Chllde 1923 hl,SOO/OBO. or : ~ 75.2·2552; Home: 965-3263 112·1867. Clasaic Block bland ---------• Cutter Diesel, some U · Mr· Phillipe. F.ender Telecuter elec. sum ab 1 e fl a.an c in 1 Wltffl Drtfts t550 1tUitar w/case, $300. 875·8711. •••••••••••••••••••••• "4·5259 , '12 Inter. &out areal TRUllPET 21 Lyman Lap1trake cond . h4. Leavlna S Cla11Jc Bay Boat. Nffda Country mutt Sacrifice ~Iver bell, Re~::19 work. S500. f'IS.21188 Beat offer by 4·20·8i ----------IBo&t partner wanted 24' 6"-0450 Office Pwapa • & Sear Ray Su.odancer 1-'T-C_C_be_•_BLAZ __ i:':""R_4X_4-,1 t .. p • IOll 1171. Jmmac .• Npt Beb w/CB, PP$3150 "••••••••••••••••••••• boat 1llp S110/mo 86-5111 St,norttte Dlc:\ater ''Em· S Call WI m7 busy". Arudoua to tell, + llOO. • Neb tl6 IOOd cond. Aattn.c $150, w '"° ·-········-·········· •ms •C..., ...... o LOY•/.-... ~ dual rems! Ideal m--for leaaeaj»era, etc. i----------t (a..1111). OMLYSlftl HOWAIDQ1.,tilit t&;-~OI llMlll HIG+t IUYH Top dollars for SpoN Cars, Bup. Campers, 914's, Aud.i's Ask for U/C MGR JIM MA.llNO VOLKSWAGEN L8711 Beach Blvd HUNTINGTON BEACH 142.-2000 TOPDOU.AR PAID FOR GOOD&Cl.liM USED CARS! miracle mazda 2150H.._ It.cl. Rolls hoy~ BMW Opel '746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15t0Jam~ Newport Beach 64().6'44 '74 Opel Manta, burguo- '75 2002. snrf. new tires, dy, vmyl top, 1.2,000 SS295/0BO ~1691 752-5120 '61WAGOH New '80 BMW nai, white '600/080 ~5879 [!t:JW9, ~\i·~~:~··1::~J 1 0 t 20 Garden Grove Bl Clw•rolet 992 Garden Grove 530·9190 ••••••••••••••• •••• ••• w/black l.nL BBS wbla, 1---------alpUle suspension, aarf, ft-.,.ot 9741 '69 Gold Volvo, 1425, reblt air, stick sbilt. 8,JOO mi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eng, AM IFM radio. xlnt MMlts.al CLEAN '73 MONTE C ARLO Salver w buraundy Interior. Air cond . AM/FM cuselte. power brakes, steenng take over Bu)' or leue. LI!. •SE cond. SLSOO/ofr 760-91.95 Pleaae call Eves . ~ 151.nSJ a.st tor Antoruo. DIRECT! Colt t717 1911 P£UGEOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 Dodge Colt, good TUltlOs cond .. 1950. D-._---98()..-299S __ t_7_2--10 IEA~~~ITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• SlSOO 768-583'7 ....................... ----- 9901 ........................ I ••• . G~ll• 1471 Peragon Irvine You a re the winner of 2 fnetld&ets ($12 Value), lo COlta MeM 645-5700 - NEWPORT REACH 752-0tOO ,orsclile t750 luC= AprU2~2S Anaheim Convention ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 Trans Am. gold. xlnt cond S619S 831·8012 '69 FIREBIRD good cond. lots of xlras, Sl200 OBO or trade for p u 646 1446 '78 Trans Arn. 28.000 mi. 1mmac cond. Many xtras. Needs minor body work & tires. SSSOO. ~ill negotiate. 497·1182 eves . L.B. 9970 '71 T ·Bird, lo mileage, loaded. new top & tires. SST-8888. '974 WANTED! Late model Toyotu and V o I v o I . C a I I U S • • llllP.!""!f!t!ftr.t'ft!lffti POISCHI lt7t 1-a-au-ifi_ed_A_ds_a_r_e_re_a_ll_y m . Fully loaded. l.S,400 1mall "'people to people" on,. ml., dnt cond. ln· aalel calla with bi& re· aide • out. Blue book adenhip and bi& re-•bo...._.. a. la8,S'7S; our 1ulta! To place your aale price b 126, 77S. dalsltled ad, call today (.,..). AM for Duke tc.5171. Center Tickets muat be ex· '74 Vega GT, aoto. changed for reserved SlOOO/OBO seat.a at the convention S57-7621 al e, TODAY!!! 1• l!t1rle Ike TOYOTA-YO&. YO .,,,...,._ •• , "78 610 WON, am/Im wlllke . CM••...... ' CUI, rool tacit, aakinl ~ 6.._UOJ er UO.t467 SZ'fOO THEODORE ROBINS PORSCHES '74 260Z loaded, Jtlnt! Must sen s.:50/080 FORD "'.J'•I' >i11Rf1011 fllVO (0'>111 •Al \II 6·11 OO·l' WANTED ~m '72 s10 station Wafon, 19'70 Poracbe 91', Allow us the opportunity runnl.ng on 3 cylinders. Jood, UlOO. to COMlder tbe purch~ M A K E 0 F F E R ! Gl-0317 or trade-in ol your clean _..1405 ._._ •- Porsche. Check with Us ~ --F-Today ! '78DATSUNPICK-UP •••••••••••••••••••••• ;a,~ wtcamper•beJJconct, amtfm, •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. new Urea. dot . URGENT, M:USTSELL. ~ ROY .............. ••0 $31JOOOBO. 559-9Zl9 CAIVEI a..~3~,7:.~ ::un after8or554·l.359 ROU.S·ltOYC( T1plllllar Pail For Your Car! JOHHSOM & SOM u.c• t ku °':'l. 2128 Barbor Blv . Cost.a .... 540-:;ao '77 Dataun 8210, === $3100orbeltolfer. ~ S48-910I OOSID SUNO~VS '80 Datsun 2IOZX, auto, •et Cloud ll, RRD. ale, w/all options, sunroof, leather Mata, reeenUy cuatom clJrome, black o'ballled, $18,000 or t..t w /red later. Prtced to olfer. MUr75 aell by pvt puty. Sl.Z,500. Call4M421 5-lt 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! ltllSMI TUllOI center ahead or time. Call &4~5678. en. 272 lo claim your Uclteta ••• Have something you want to sell? Classified ads do it well. 642·5678 . ...... UMd ~Used Mtos. U1ed ················-······· ....................... ··-···················· 1910 CADILLAC COUPIDIVIW (604ZBJ) . 1910 CADIUAC R.HTWOOD aaou(ittAM {325Z8W) I t7t CADtUAC SIDAMDIVIW (463WWZ) M O NDAY APRIL 20 . 1981 ORANGE COUNT Y. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS ..-~---------Bout uith depression lost Disturbed Viet vet kills wife, COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP> - Gerald W. Highman loaded a shotgun no one knew he had, shot his wife, then called his father. ··Dad, did you get a good night's sleep?" he asked. "Yes," his father answered. . "I just killed JoAnn," Gerald said in a calm voice. Then. Me rril Highman re- m embers, his son said he was go- ing to kill himself. "OH, MY GOD, no, Jerry. Please don't do it," his father begged. \ "1 tned to talk hi~ outoflt; said I would come right over. But I knew he would not wait.·' Merril Highman and the police found the couple, both 28 years old, in the bedroom. JoAnn Highman was dead at the scene. Gerald died a few hours later Saturday at a hospital. Mrs. Highman's ~year-old dauehter, Carri Kidd, was asleep in another room. Gerald had asked bls father to takecareofher. The shootings seemed especial- ly tragic to those who knew Highman, because after 10 years of depression anti flashbacks ste mming from his combat ex- perience in Vietnam, he seemed to be doing better. He had a steady job, married his c hildhood sweetheart six months ago, and was seeing a counselor regularly. HIGHMAN WAS 17 when he fought as a Marine infantryman in Da Nang and Qua ng Tri Province. He was wounded twice during lus Vietnam duty, wtuch ended in August 1971. Last April, he told {l Columbus newspaper, be was driving around the city when suddenly he thought he was in a rice paddy. He heard sniper fire and saw helicopters. He even asked a farmer for a gun to protect himself from the Viet Cong. Similar fla s h backs and nightmares plagued him fo r years. ··He was pretty well mixed up when he came home," his father said. ··He'd do good and then no good lt1usl went on for lOyears." A UTl'LE MORE than a year ago, Highman began seeing a counselor at the Ope ration Outreach Vietna m Center in Columbus Has parents said Gerald seemed lately "likeh1s happy old self." He "seemed to be coming right along But he still had his ups and downs," said his counselor. Russell Lynch. "It was hard for him loaccepls urvivaJ." Lynch said he had no indication Highman planned a violent act. "Usually there is some hint to let us know to look at things," Lynch said. Highman had begun to give away various possessions several months ago "but it was rational and appropr iate when he ex· plainedit " MERRIL HIGHMAN said bis son sought medical treatment at t he Veterans' Administration Hospital an Chillicothe in March. ·'They talked to him for about 10 minutes and told him to go to the VA clinic al University Hospital," Highman said "All the chnic did <Se-e VET, Pagt' A2> Cops hunt armed holdup pair · HB's council I caught, 2 flee in S.Laguna j to back police I 1 The Huntington Beach Police Department will be getting moral support from the City Council tonight. City official!> have drafted a resolution supporting the police and criticizing the courts for al- lowing individual officers to be sued for punitive damages for al leged excess1 ve force L: NTIL RECENTL \', cities were sued for excessive force. but not individual officers who would h ave to pay court penalties from their own pockets The new trend has caused low morale among Huntington Beach Half inch of rain for holiday For all the cloudy. wl't weather ovH the Easter w<.'ckend. Orange County received less than a half inch of rain. according to the N at1onal Weather Service A weather service spokesman said the showers would be moving eastward to Arizona today, leav mg only a sh~hl chance of rain tonight and Tuesda> Temperatuaies Tuesda} are ex- pected to be in the m1d-60s, wtlh fair weather predicted The weekend rainfall of 39 inches brought the year's total to about 10.5 inches. spokesman said Normal rainfall for this time is 11 95 inches J Sherman Denny, a Hunt· ington Beach resident who has kept rainfall records for the past 50 years. said since 1926 there have been only 11 s unny Easter Sundays in Orange County "It didn't always rain, but sometimes the fog was so thick outdoor Easter sunrise services had to be moved indoors." Denny said ··My advice is not to plan for good weather on Easter." * * * Cool weather cuts Easter beach crotvtliJ Cool, fainY weather resulted in some of the\ smallest Easter weekend beacl'~ crowds in recent memory, west county beach of· fie lats reported. At Huntington City Beach, about 5,000 people vt.lted the sands Saturday, with a similar/ total reported Sunday. About 2,000 people braved \be weather at ffuntlngtol'). State *"" Bolsa Chi<:& State beacbea on1 eachofthetwodaya. 1 1 Buch olficlala reported that tbe vacatloa turnout• 1were healthy until the •eatber tOoaa a tumfortb woneSaturday. I City Beach Ute1U1rd Lt. 8UJ RJcbardson aaid b.ll tot••• for the entire vacation perlod, April Ill tbrou&b lt, were U0,000 vfaltoh, 138 tae\1411, %1 minor tint aid ln· cldenta, el&bt m~r ftrat ald In: ctdenta Ucf UIOlt chUclnn. • t police offi cers, many of whom have requested duty that allows tnem to avoid confrontations with the public, according lo Police Chief Earle Robitaille . Although no Huntington Beach officers have been s uccessfully sued. Robitaille s aid the res- olution is "absolutely essential" to let the poli ce know the City Council supports law enforcement. "If we're to obtain a goal of a safe city we need to show support for the police department so the officers can carry on their duties and know we're behind them," said Mayor Ruth Bailey. "OF COURSE, we don't con- done excessive force and never will, but the offi cers need to be firm ." She said in the downtown coastal area .. gang fights and party houses" need to be con· trolled during the summer months. The resolution also urges the state Legislature to "review laws pertaining lo personal liability of individual officers·· It stales the "need for the highes t morale among those who enforce the laws and the benefit to the community of changes in the basic attitudes and feelings of our citizens toward the police de- partment. .... The City Council meets at 7 JO p.m . at.2000MamSt Promoter, lawyer face court action LOS ANGELES <AP> -While a federal grand jury continues to wade through evidence in the al· leged embezzlem ent of $21.3 million from the Wells Fargo Bank. two figures in that case were due in federal court today. Boxing promoter Ross Fields formerly known as Harold J . S mith -faced arraignment on a c harge of making a false statem ent in a passport ap· plication. "\ Dally l"llet ""°"' lly Suve Mllt.,.11 Bv STEVE MITCHELL or Ill• 0.11, Pllet St.If Orange County Sheriff's dep- utie s s urrounded a service station in South Laguna this mornang and captured a robbery suspect who hid in a restroom for more than an hour T he suspect. a tall. blond- ha1red man, walked out of the restroom with has hands held high after deputies ordered him lo surrender Tiff: DRAMATIC 1nc1dent began shortly after 7 a m when a Laguna Beach motorcycle of- ficer, en route to work, reported· Jy saw a vehicle matching the descrjption of a car involved in an early morning robbery in San Juan Capistrano Sheriff's Sgt ·David Wheeler said the San Juan Country Club in San Juan Capistrano was robbed of more than $4,000 ~ three men . one of w h ofil brandished a shotgun. '.' '· Sherif f's deputy keeps shotgun at the ready as robbery suspect surrenders m South Deputies were searching a res· idential area in upper. Three Arch Bay this morning in an at· tempt to find the other two sus- pects Laguna. Park hires ambulance "We believe there are still two sus pects an the area." Sgt. 'Wheclcr said The three men. who reported· ly took S4.000 in receipts from the country club at 6 20 this m o rning . are also believed linked to two Garden Grove robberies that occurred Sunday. Wheeler said Disneyland officials have hired a Tustin a mbulance firm to serve the amusement park but contend the move is not in response to the recent deaths oft wo park patrons. Park officials say Medix Ambulance, a 3·year-old firm with four a mbulances, began service last Friday which calls for a driver to be on duty starling half an hour before the park opens un- til ha lf a~ hour after closing time. THE AMIWLANCE ser vice will replace Disneyland's own medical van, which is equippe4 with oxygen but no other life~ saving equipment and no siren: Al Flores, a park spokesman, s aid M ~dix will ser ve the amusement park until officials decide whether to equip their van with lights and sirens Disneyland came under criticism because paramedics were not summoned ant wo recent cases m which persons died Instead. a park nurse ac companied the 1nd1v1duals one a stabbing victim and the other a 34-year-old woman who collapsed -to the hospital in the Dis neyland van. FLORES DENIED that the park has a policy against sum moning paramedics. He said the park nurse is left lo make a de- cision on a case-by-case basis. "But we have re-emphasized to our nurses that there is a new paramedic station that is close lo the park." commented Flores 01 s nevland officials a r e scheduled to meet with Orange Count} medical leaders to discuss the park's medical polic~ The fam1lv of stabbing v1ct1m Mel Yorba of Riverside has flied a $60 million suit ·against Dis neyland over the medical care is- sue. Youth gangs raid resorts SOUTHEND, England <AP> Bands of youths broke rnto shops and s mashed property today as rival groups known as Mods, Punks. Skinheads and Rockers invaded Britain's sea resorts fo,. a second consecutive Easter. More than 6,000 youths were reported camping out in the re· sorts of Southend, Scarborough and Brighton over the four-day holiday '9Jld causing widespread disturbances, authorities said. But officials said the' resorts were calmer. than they were last year. when hundreds of youths were a rres ted after vlolent1 clashes with police. Money supply ... up sh~rply · THE SHE LL st ation at Coast Highway and the entrance to Three Arch Bay, was sur rounded for more than an hour this morning After the suspect surrendered. deputies remained in position, suspecting the other two men might still be holed up ins ide the restroom. But after a half-hour deputies stormed the restrooms, dis- coverin~them to be empty. Deaths probed REDSTONE·. Colo. (AP> Fifteen coal miners who died in a coal mine blast will be buried this week as a team of experts working deep within a mountain tries to find out why they died. ORAllil COAST llATHIR Clearin1 tonight. sunny and a little warmer Tues- day. Lows toni8ht 42 alon1 the coast, 50 inland. Highs Tuesday 6S to 70. 111101 TODAY A tdriter tt1M1 a wrJ1 took at the tiim 1.tlf ~ 1tcmd· ing, lifting, pocmg, au to waft for aomethfng. See Pag1 A1. -· NEW YORK <AP) -The 1 11111 • nation's basic money supply showed another sharp lilcreqe ~· Y-t.mc• ., In the latest reportlbg week, the ~Ii=-~ Fedenl R~enre Board reported • = ~~ Prlday. · C4llllkJ ca The Fed 11id Ml8, w~lcb ID· r:-,::_ i: cludet cub and funds In cheek· = , -. Int -type accountat rost M.9 ,1 · 1 C:: blJlioa to a seuonady acijuatAld ...,. 1• • '428. 7 bi.Ilion Jrr the weelt nded AprlJ I. .. .. .. If ·~ I Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT/Monday, April 20, 1981 I 1. The Santa Ana-Tustin Com- munity Holpital got a new name and a oew non~proflt corpora~ structure tO<i~y. Dlrectort of the hospital held a breakfast meeting at the Saddleback Ion ln Santa Ana to announce thal-.tbe hospital will henceforth be called Western Medical Center. Included under the new corporate umbrella will be the 241-bed Santa Ana Convalescent Center, aJso renamed today as the Bartlett Center, and five te rtiary health care services. WAYNE SCH&0£DE&. ex· ecutlve director ot the hospital Hld the new arransement will increase administrative cost- cuttiDg while the name wlll reflect varioue countywi~ services provided at the hospital , which is near the border of Santa Ana and Tustin. He said onJy about 65 percent ol the hospital's patients come from Santa Ana and Tustin. The new corporate structure aJso will in crea se the or- ganiiation's chances for expand- ing Into the affluent Irvine market, be said. By establishing the corporate structure separate from tbe hospital. Schroeder aald otncJala hope to dispel concern that the existing hospital would simply be taking over new turfs by mo~~-g ~to Irvine. • "l'hlB demonstrates that they (the hospitals) are separate.'' Schroeder said. THE FIVE HEALTH care services included under the new corporate umbrella include Ute Orange County Rheumatology. arthritis Institute, regional al- lergy and clinical immunoloey ins titute, respira tory disease mana1emenl center, Southern CalllfornJa lnfertltlt;v lnaUtur., and the Ot-an1e County fteciOl)al Head and Neck InaUtute. The Bartlett Center, a 241-bed convalescent tiome, is named after Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bartlett. He ls co-founder and chairman of the Bosp:d of Centuo' 21, a national real estate firm. The hospital had no choice in changing its name. A Superior Court ruling last year ordered SATCH to find a new name because its title was too similar to the existing Tustin Communi- ty Hospital. Pair sought in slaying ............... TORNADO'S PATH -This aerial view shows the path of damage from a tornado which roared through the Tulsa, Okla., suburb of Bixby Sunday night. Five people were killed when the twis te r ripped through a trailer park (story Page A4 ). From Page A1 Two young Costa Mesa men are being sought today as sus pects in lheshootingdeathofa31-year old man last Monday evening in the parking lot of a Costa Mesa restaurant. Armed with warrants, local police combed Costa Mesa and the Sacrame nto a r e a thi s weekend for the two men - Samuel Monsoor. 18, and 23-year- old Rami Darwiche. COSTA MESA police assert the m en are Jinked to the shooting of Carl Lawson, found dead last Tuesday morning in his car in a commercial complex on Edinger A venue in Santa Ana At firs( Santa Ana police handled the case but were unable to determine where Lawson bad been kiUed. Later in the week, two unidentified witnesses informed police they had seen the s hooting. According to their statements, police said, Lawson and two other men pulled into the Harbor Boulevard parking lot of Jojo's Restaurant Monday evening. The witnesses told officers they saw three men start to fight and then heard four or five "pops," like the report of gunfire. POLICE SAID the witnesses cop1ea down tbe license plate of the vehicle and then came forward after reading accounts of Lawson's body being found. Costa Mesa police. who were handed the case late in the week, said they were able to identify the other tw • men in the car, but came up mptyhanded when they arrived a. their apartment. The sear c h wi d e n e d to Sacramento when police were in· formed that one of the wanted men -Monsoor ·-had relatives living in that area. But when police arrived in Sacramento. they learned the two men left the area IO hours earlier VET ... was pushpillsovertohtm " Tom Scott. an administrative officer at lhe Chilhcothe hospital. said Sunday that records showed Highman sought treatment for a neck and arm inJury he sustained on his Job in 1978. The office con- firmed Highman was given an ex amination by a medical doctor and referred to the outpatient clinic The records did not show a reques t for psyc hiatri c treatment, theofftcer said Lesbian custody ruling upheld Dally P'ilet 1"11H ...,_ STEPPING DOWN Mayor Ruth Brnley Europe war would drag? WASHINGTON CAP) The U.S. Supreme Court left intact a ruling today that strips a lesbian mother from Jefferson County, Ky., of the custody rights or her 6· year-old daughter. The justices, without com menl, refused to review a Kentucky ap- peals court ruling that forces LuAnn Stevenson to give up custody of h e r d aught er . Shannon. The effect of the Kentucky rul· ing was postponed march 2 by Justice Potter Stewart. Today's action ends that postponement WHEN L UANN and Gary Ray Stevenson were divorced in 1977, Stevenson agreed to give up cust ody of t heir then-infant daughter. The ex-husband re- quested a change of custody after learning that Mrs. Stevenson·s lesbian love r had moved in with her and Shannon. A slate trial judge turned down Stevenson's attempt to gain custody, but "the Kentucky Court of Appeals reversed that ruling last summer. The state Supreme Cou rt r efused to hear Ms . Stevenson's appeal Dec. 9. The appeals court said Shannon's father , who has re- married. should be given custody for ''the best interests of the child." A Kentucky law prohibits such cus tody changes within two years of a divorce unless it is proved that the child's environment .. may endanger its physical, mental, moral or emotional health'' and that "the stability of consistency is outweighed by the advantages attendant to change." IN ORDERING THE custody change, the state appeals court s aid. "The key word is the word 'may' .. .J. The potentiality for such dan~-r is the t est. and the courts are not required to wast un· til the damage is done " The appeals court quoted a court-appointed psychologist in discussinglhe ·'social stigma" al· tached lo homosexuality and the possible future harassment it could mean for Shannon . Aecording to the appeals court, Ms. Stevenson worked for a time in a lesbian bar and openly acknowledged her lesbian re· lationsh.ip with her live in lover, including the per formance of what the court call ed a "mock wedding " HB to pick new mayor tonight Wh en the Huntington Beach City Coun cil selects a new mayor tonight, it's a good bet that only the las t name of the city's top offi~ial will change. T hat's because Mayor Ruth Bailey mo:.t likely will be replaced by Counci lwoman Ruth Finley, who currently serves as the mayor pro tempore WA S HI NGTON l AP l Reagan administration defense strategists a r e beginning to think about the poss1b1hty that a European war with the Soviet C naon might be long and fought with onl y conventional weapons. Pentagon source!) s ay If these thoughts evolve into fo rmal doctrine . it would represent a sharp break from pas t assumptions that a major European conflict probably would be decided within 30 to 60 da ys before any major mobilization could be carried out and probably would re- quire the use of tactical nuclear weapons. Prison escapee shot The court noted that Ms Stevenson denied a ny overt lesbian r e la t ionship 1n her daughter's preseoce. adding that there was no proof to contradkt s uch testimony. IN SEEKI NG SUPREME Court review. lawyers for Ms Stevenson argued that the state courts had deprived her of equal protection. A poll of six council members was less clear on who will become the nev. mayoc pro tempore, which appears to be up for grabs Mrs. Bailey will give up her gavel tonight after serving in the mos tly ce remonial mayor's position for the past year She will remain a councilwoman. The sources said over the weekend Defense Secre tary Caspar Weinberger is interested in "looking more seriously at the possibility of a longer conflict." perhaps even outside Europe as well as on that continent. A Santa Ana man who escaped from Terminal Island feder al prison in February rem ained in serious condition today after be· ing shot in the head by law enforcement authorities near Reno. Nev., last Tuesday. Steven O. Smallwood, 23. was s hot when he tried to escape capture at a Sparks. Nev., shopp ing mall, an FBI spokesman said Th e s p okesma n sa id Smallwood was captured along with John Scafiddi. 20. of New York. Both men escaped from Terminal Island in San Pedro Feb. 14. according to Peter Hecht. public information officer at the prison. After the shooting, Smallwood underwent surgery at Washoe Medical Center in Reno, where he is listed in serious condition ac- cording to the FBI. Last w'eek Sma llwood's condition was listed as critical. but his condition is now imp r ovi n g, the FBI s pokesman said. Smallwood a nd Scafiddi were s erving 10-year terms r'br bank robber y at thetimeofthefr escape from prison. They a re suspected of taking Frognapping uncovered Kermit shaken up after San Antonio experience SAN ANOTN IO, Texas <AP> Miss Piggy was fit to be hog- tied and San Antonio citizens were hopping mad. Kermit the Frog had been kidnapped and police, fearing the worst. said he might even have croaked. "I'm just heart.c;ick about dear Kerm," wailed Miss Piggr in a statement published by the San Antonio Express and News. "Why would anyone want to hurt the poor darling?'' she moped, jumping to conclusions. BUT BY SATURDAY, the 13· foot·taJI, shaggy green version of the world's most famous froa was safely back at San Antonio's Witte Museum, slightly worse {or wear with a broken foot ana broken right arm. Kermit, the affable star or "The Muppet Movie .. and "'The Muppet Show" had been on dis· \ play at the museum's front entrance column. hanging by wires. Museum offi cials report- ptf him missing Friday night "We're just glad he's back," said a San Antonio police dis- patcher. "Everybody's been so worried about him," she said, •adding that there had been hundreds of inquiries about Kermit's safety. And what brilliant piece of de- tective work led lo the frog's freedom? "Some people came back from vacation and he was just sttting in their front yard," said the dis- patcher, who declined to give her name. "We don't know why someone would take him ." KERMIT IS PART of a travel· ing exhibition, "The Art or the Muppets" which opened April 4 at the Witte Museum. said John iiiylilat MAIN~ r:::::-P. H1i.y Aober1 N. WMd ......... ~Thoma l<MYll ~Murphlne ~HJ'~ •west ..,M., C. .. Mew.CA. Mell.-..: lelC IMO, C.la ~. CA.p!!! Regnier. mus~um public re- lations director The exhibition has been in Los Angeles, Chicago, Denver, San Diego and Minneapolis, and in· eludes graphic wall murals, a photographic presentation de· plcting ''Pigs in Space," and other audio-visual materials. Man stabbed in Santa Ana; suspect held A 21-year-old man was stabbed to death in front of bia home la~ Saturday ntaht after becomln1 involved tn an I argument with another man. j Santa Ana POllce aald. Officer• ntd Ernut D. Ramlrez waa fatally etabbed ln the aide and neolt with a four· Inch fold.lnl knife while be 1tood ln front -d b1a home a.t S14 E .. Walnut St. with tdJ brodlet and several friends. Booked at Ora.nae County Jail on auaplclon ot murder w11 Auauatln ·Saucedo, 28, •llo Of Santa Ana. Police aaJd Saucedo ..-d uOt.hit man d~ve iDto the drtvtway and beceme involved ln an &rl\&IDent with llamirea, who crttldnd them for eiieJMI drivlJ'll. Saucedo al111ed11 -att1clted Ramlrea wltb the knlf e, then ned to 1 nearb1 boult, where be I ... arrested. . part in a string of bank robberies since the ir escape. the FBI spokeman said, the most recent in San Francisco April 14 when two men fled on motorcycles with nearly $25,000 Sexual action course at OCC ·'This court must not be misled by whimsical incantations con· cerning 'social stigma.' Even if stigma or harassment could con- sti tute a danger ."' no such harassment was ever s hown \.0 be a factual matter in this case," the appeal said. "Rather, these words were in· terjected into the record by A f 0 u r . p a r t s e r i e 5 , .rnpposition and prejudiced im- One year is the tra amona1 term for the mayor, who runs' Cit y Council m eeti n gs and r epresents the city at public functions. Mrs. Finley, 56. was appointed to the City Council in May ol 1979 to fill a vacancy. She was elected to a four-year term last year. , ·u nder s tanding sex ua 1 aglnation,"the lawyersargued. Interaction," will be presented The Supreme Court has refused Le at Orange Coast College on to study "gay rights" since the 88e sites grow Thursdays this spring. justices ruled in 1967 that aliens WAS H 1NGT 0 N < AP > Admjssion is without cost to found to be homosexuals could be d ed .. rru ted Interior Secretary James Watt, the sen·es, beginning Thursday e port as persons a c d . . · h h t h · espste mounung pressure from and meeting on successive w 1 t a P s Y c 0 Pa 1 c environmenta lists, has added Thursdays between 7: 30 an<4 personality.·· two new offshore oil leases to the 30 · Fin Am H 11 119 The American Psychiatric As-9 : p.m. 10 e a · sociation since has rebutted the five already proposed along the Lecturers are Jim HowaJski, California coast in a bid to open counselor and mental health court's finding, voting in 1974 to the state·s entire coastline \.0 oH team the rapis t . and Joh n eliminate homosexuality as a d .11. al di d d I "f ·1 n mg. The exact areas \.0 be Flowers, clinical psychologist. ment ·sor er an rec assi Y 1 leased will not be known for lnformation may be secured by as a "sexual orientation dis about two years calling 556·5880.==.:::..;· _________ tu_r_b_a_n_c_e_.'_' -----'------------------ . .. , ( .. Jimmy Doolittle . who led a band of atrmen ma surprise raid on Tokyo 39 years ago. waves from the cockpit of a vintage plane during the raiders' amtual reunion i11 Columbus. Ohzo . The group reunited in Newport Beach Last year. ' Friends from lfolJ)'wood days sipped champafnt and feasted on cavtar to celebrate the 25th an· niversary of Prtaeett Grace's marriafe to Prtnce Ralnler of Monaco. Actor Fruk Slaacra threw the party for the royal couple, who were in Rancho Mirage so Princess Grace could attend a 20th Century. Fox board of directors' meet- ina . Princess Grace, the former actress Grace Kelly , has maintained her Hollywood ties. She co-starred with Sinatra in "High Society" before giving up her acting career in 1956 to marry the prince. The White House is pulling such name attractions as former President Ford and e x -Dalla s Cow bo ys quarterback Roger Staubacb off t he bench to lobby for its economic package. A,..,,,,..- Rick Rios. a San Jose escape artist w1th a perfect record of death·defymg . escapes . is rescued from a trailer park pool m Santa Cruz after failing to free hmzself /rom 60 pounds of tire chains Onlookers pulled him to safety after he cried for help and sank below the surface. Much of nation soggy Showers spre{ld coast to coast; mountains snowy Coastal. ~ather C1u r1nv tonivt>t. wnny atMI • little w•rm•r T"'w:l•'f Lown tontQht •2 •lonv tM ,.,... so lnl•nd Hlg111 Tuel<S•f ~ 1010 Waler .0 E''•whera. w \nCS\ .,..,, to norll\wHI. lo .. ••IOU by Tuelday att1rnoon Wrst•t•J' , •• ,., 1 to l f"C V.S. summary A•ln and h••"Y thunderstor"'' f>!l•Hd trom u. <•nlral Rockies to t!W ml<l·All4tnllc c ... 11 today SllOw•ro elso -•• reported In 1"9 Well Later 100.Y. UIOwen a"" tom• ll\uncle r-ers were ••!"<led to reacf\ frOf'll ~rtland to SCMlthem c;.oro1a, oterca1 lnlanct parts of tM e a11ern Gulf ,...... -re--· V•lley, IOUtNrn 1M1rt• of IM -er Oh io Valley, ce11tral Mlnourl lhr-1\ Mr11'en> Arunw • 10 .. swrn Wyomlnv end us•rn COIOr- S"ow• r' were forecast over eestern -Yori< lhrOUQll sovtllem N•w EnQl.n.s. <f\anolne to.,._ O'Hr nortr..m Me•ne And tttunClltr.-.n were u11«lect over •eslem ~.,. a<rou VIAii\ -.._vao. to centre! Cellfornle. chenQ!nQ to snow In lhe mou,.ta 1,., lemperahlf'" ••-1"9 netlon eerly t-y renoect from n •I s. .. 11 SI• M•ri., Mich. to IS •I .... ..-. r .... U:difomia 1'11e out-tor T-y 1, ,...,,.., ..w we,,,_. a -IC-<,..,,.Qlt from recent.-S. 1111111 r..-v .-.1.o 11e <IOW to 10, the Nat\Onel WMlhef lentk t said. Mou11uln ••-cen ••.-Cl l\IQM -•-». wttf\ t0<'19M'1 ,_, U IAIJS. In 1.tPC"r 0.HrlJ T11etday, tll• NatlO<\al WHl,..r ~rvou ,. prt01CI lllQ hight Of U IO 7J II' IOWtr de ... rf\, ,,.. fcwe<•st <alll ror H to 12 Temperatures Alti.ny Alb<>que Amar II kl All>eville Atl4tnta Atlanl<Cty aalUmon alrmlllQhm 8hm.,o . .,. .. Boston 8rowntvUe allftelo Cf\•rl1tnSC Cf\erlllnWV c11e1enne Clllo90 Cine I Mall Cleveland Columbut Oat.FtWtll oen .. r DesMo•1-1 Detroit Ouhllf\ Hantorc1 Helene "' ..... ,. ST "° 14 ., u lO II 56 41 .. 61 " » 01 .. ~ CM IA 66 St 20 10 .. 1 11 .. " 17 ., .. 34 04 11 .. .. 47 ,. so •1 S2 ~ 14 62 4$ S1 Sl l3 .03 s• .. ·°' 11 u St 41 17 ., 4j 01 S2 JS .01 .. 15 ., " M '2 Honolulu HOU\ton 11\dnaplls Jacllsn ... ue KansClfy L•s Vegas L•Hle llock LosAn09llt\ LOU,\tt•U• Memonl\ M 1•m1 Mihw•ukere Mpls St P ,..."'"'"" HowOrltam H••Vork HorlOlk Okie City Omat>a Ortanoo Pl\llacltlP'lie Pt>oe11i• PlttsburQ11 Pll•nd,Me PllatMl,Ore Reno S.llLO• Sen 01991> S.nFr•n Seattle SI LOUii SIP·T•mo. SIStOo\arle 5"t<ane TUIMI wu111n111n as 82 u ,, 61 .q 1' s• ., IJ II ,, 60 76 " .. 65 12 6S 90 M ,. S4 '° 60 SJ S7 .. ST u ... IS 50 4S ... 10 12 ,, ., n 61 SI II n .., u 18 " SJ .. 11 ,, JI 12 12 ., , .. 61 S-4 SJ Ot .0 .. 03 .0 .. 01 s• 41 01 » ff • 01 0 OJ \I 02 so 47 so 11 ., 16 42 60 11 ~ °' Soulhem Calif omia mef report "•""'In lwC. ,..,lod In MCOndS. CAl..ll'OIUUA HI l..e ,.<, BO•f\ll•IO 81ylh• Eureu Frnno LatKa•lff Mary•~llle M ... t•ro Ne<tdles Oa•l•IMI Paso Aollln Atd 81uN AtOwOOO (tty Reno S.cramemo S.llrws SM!t• 8¥bolra Stooton lh41rmal V~lah B•ruow Blv llu r e .. 11oe> Cat•lln• El Centro Lonv BelKI\ Mof\rO•t• Mt Wlltofl Ntwport S.lKh Ontario P•lm Sptlnos Pawo..-. S.n BerN<dlno S.nta AN Tello. ValltY WOR LD A mstero.m At"9ns B•nvkOk Beirut 8e1Qreoe 8.,lln 80901• Bruue•s 8'Alre\ Ca iro OrlKti C°"n"-n Dublin Frankfurt Geneva Helsll\•I HonvK- J•rvsalem Jo'bllro l(leY l..lme l..lsbOn Tham in U S-4 OS 7q )t SI .. J1 Ct •0 J~ » .... SS SI .0 IJ s• SI SI so so 5q Sl IJ Sl "' 01 SJ '7 " .0 ... °' so ., II •I m 11 sq SI H ., .. " ,, jl • OJ u 53 ll S3 ., 53 ,, . s. 4q " )6 J1 ,, 62 n OJ SI SI ,, " st C9 " so 1] 6J S2 10 ., JI u ,, IS 51 ., IA .. s• " " 50 " •• 52 S2 34 13 u " .. eo ... 50 l 7 61 oJ .. :n .. 36 41 lS ... 11 ... » 10 so u :n . 11 .. .. Sl .... ......... A,.. MH otr SAN FRANCISCO ..... .... .... h9clt A"'I -· ll'N Zwm• 2 Mfll• Mlftk• 2 ""'&:'. 2 Sen o-ty J Olll'°'* fer T-y; 1..lltl• ch11199. J ' • • 10 '° 11 12 , I 2 2 2 J J J sw (AP) -Teamster leader S: Rudy Tham, convicted w last year or embeullng money from the union, has been elected · pres· P!"'--------------------..---................ ..., ........ ______________ "!"9" __ ,1dent of 'tbe union ' 1councU that rules on 1strike sanction for 80,000 Bay area union members . Tham is laecretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 856 ln 1S•n Francllc!o. Ora~ Cout DAIL "f ptLOT/Mond1y, April 20. 1981 grows f'r .. u. a.aaea.wtre SACRAMENTO -The price ca1 on a 1rowtn1 baetloe of California road and bridle re- palra bu been peaed at more than • billion by a 1tudy re-leased today. Accordin1 to Tbe Road Information ProlJ'am (TRIP}, the Washington, D.C.-bued re· search agency which released this study: -Nearly 40 percent of California's paved main roads, some 23,090 miles, now require .resurfacing or rebuilding. -Nearly 15 per<:eot of the state's roads, some 8,73' miles, s uffer from obsolete design de· ficiencies and should be up· araded for improved drivlns safety. -ONE out of every seven bridges in California, a total of 3,706 spans, are now too old or too weak lo adequately handle today's traffic volume& and s h ould be replace d or r e - habilitated. TRIP's study cited drops in highway repair revenues and an industry inflation rate that has tripled road work costs in less than 20 years as primary causes in the growing repairs backlog "We're watching a multi· billion dollar road and bridge in· vestment crumble and we'r e swirtly approaching the point where catching up on the state's road needs will be nearly im· possible ... said Jerry Toll Toll is chairman of the S urfa ce Transportation Advisory Council of the As- sociated General Contractors of Cal1torma. ~hach requested ·1 he. Road Information Prografl'\ study TRIP recommended a 10-year, $944 million-per-year program t-0 catch up on CaWornia 's road and bridge repairs. By comparison the state, counties and cities have budget· ed only $708 million for road and bridge repair work as well as new construction during fiscal year 1981, $236 million short of The Road Information Pro· gram's recommendation for re· pair work alone . The $9.44 billion TRIP recom· mendation does not consider re· venues that will be needed to repair additional deterioration or to keep pace with the un- certain rate of future inflation, the study said. A 4.1 percent drop in mot.or fu e l consumption last year cost California's hitbway p~ grams $33.S million in lost motor fuel tax revenue, according to the study. TRIP noted that the growing use of s maller. more fuel· efficient vehicles is a leading factor in the decreas ing use of motor fuel. The Road Information Pro- gram reported that to keep pace with inflation, fi ve states have replaced fixed. cents-per-gallon motor fuel taxes with variable taxes based on a percentage ol motor fuel's wholesale or retail price. The Road Information Pro- gram is a res earch and In- formation agency supported by highway·relaled industries . T RIP's study is based on data fr om the Cali fornia TransPortation Commission. the state Board or Equalization. the California Department of Trans portation, the Federal Highway Administration and other government and private agencies. ,.,._......,.. REAL EARFUL -Emmett Kelly Jr. listens to the call of the wild from one of the elephants at the Circus of the Americas, currently performing al the Los Angeles Sports Arena. Left again divided French election • ID LYON, France <A PI With the first round of the French pres1dent1al elt>ct1on six days away. the Sor1<1hsts are tuning in "ith apprehension each time they spot Communist Party leader Georges Mar cha1 s· heavr. dark e'ebro"s on televaswn · The common wisdom is that M archa1s 1s more inten'sted in blocking the rise of Socialist leader Francois Mitterr<1nd than in promoting the real 1wssibihty of victory by a unified left against the center-nght gov e m ment of President Va lery Giscard d'Estaing While prorla1mang the need for a leftist alliance, Marcha1s began his campaign by critic1z ing M1ller and 's ··bourgo1s political onentat1on" and insist ing that any coa lition gov ernment with the Socialists an elude Communists. something M1tterand courtin g thl' moderate vote says he will not accept. MANY observer:. frlt the issul' o f dir ect Comm uni s t part1c1pat1on 1n th e administration was deliberately raised to scare the moderates away and ins ure a victory by Giscard d 'Es taing. with the Communists remaining the strident voice of oppos1t1on. Ma r chais' frar is that the Socialists. whose share of the electorate rose from just about 5 percent to well more than 25 percent in the last 10 years. 1s getting too populaL The sense of wo1king class identity 1i. strong m France. and Marcha1s hopes to make sure it remains linked to the Communist Party The first round of voting is ~el for April 26. If one candidate does not win an outright majon ty. a second round will be held May IO A second round 1s con· s1dered a certainty with Giscard d'Es taing and M1tterand facto~ each other in the runoff as the two top first-round vole getters. THE candidacies of Marchaas, Neo-Gaullisl J acques Chirac and six minor party candidates virtuall y assure that no one will receive the majority needed for > WHO'S HE HE LPING? Georges Marchazs a first round victor~ I n the \978 Parliamen t t> I t' <· t 1 on s . t h e Soc 1 a I 1 st - Cnmmun1sl alliance appeared headed for success. but late in the campaign Marchais started attacking the Socia lists. Th~ cente r-right coalition held, and many leftists bl amed Marchais for the collapse of the "Union of the Left.·· Rut the idea of a unified left. and the realization that it is the only way to end 23 years of centcr·right government. re · mains s tro ng a m ong both Soc1alist.s and Communists. and Marchais recently has softened his attacks against Mitterrand. "WE ML'ST beat Giscard. and to do so we must have a unified left ." he declared last week at a campaign rally here m France's second largest city. an 1m- porlant industrial center But M ar chais also repeated his in· s1stence on Communist Cabinet m1n1sters "lt is inconceivable to ask for Com munist support and then ex- clude Communists from the gov· ernment," he said His stance in recent da ys has been t h at Mitterrand. and not he. is block· ing the leftist allianc·e ~~~~~~~~- I ( ' BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - ItraeU-backed ChriaUan militia ·gunneH pounded Tyre, the Palestinian 1uerrUJas' chief port, today as the port city ol Sidon observed a day of mourn- ing for 16 people killed by the Christian's lon1·ran1e artillery barrage Easter Sunday, the Sidon's 1overnor's olflce re· ported. Heavy artillery fire excbqea . .also were reported acrou Beirut's Green Llne that divides th' capital city into Christian al\d Moslem sections. Low-flyin& Jsraell jets swooped over Tyre and the Mediterranean city ot Sidon as border militia positions lobbed about 20 shells into several sections ot Tyre, which is l2 miles north of the Is raeli frontier and SO miles south of Beirut, the governor's office said. Saudi's purposely created oil glut NEW YORK (AP> Saudi Arabia deliberately cre~ted a world glut of oil in an effort to stabilize prices and wants in· dustrial nations to reduce on consumption as a way of forcing oil producers to lower their prices, aC£ording to the Saudi petroleum minister ·'We engineered the glut, and we want to see it stabilize the price of oil," Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani said Sunday on the NBC-TV program "Meet the Press.'' Reagans attend , private service I WASHINGTON CA P ) - 'President Reagan and his wife ~eceived communion at a private Easter service. The Rev. Louis Evans, pastor f the National Presbyterian ~hurch, came to the White ;House to conduct the service. The minister and his wife met W cially with the president .and rs . Reagan beforehand. eagan remained out of the public eye as he continued con-v a I escing from the gunshot wound he suffered in the chest three weeks ago. ' IE YOU PA YI.,_ TOO MUCH FOi YOUI HUL 'FH IHSUIAMCl1 •1 ,000.000 ,_GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL ..... q.t. C4I: 64CM071 I -'llee ....... St-al Y0uo Ooa. (Call SIOnt -YOUI Neal .costA -.&A641-1289 , . .._.-. ........ ~5-0401 ~ -c-c..--cs...-..,_,,,., ... A_,......,.I mttllSlllm "Our 24th year" g_. Auto & Homeowners r k::· Quotes .av Phone fMlllSllSIUIG ., ~4a.Hl4 • IU-J07 1t1•~-c .......... R"fugeea 'quiet' FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. (AP> -A Cuban retu1ee resettlement camp here wu quiet today after a weekend of violence apparent· ly sparked by frustraUon at loina detention and the sb00Un1 ol a. refuree by a security officer, authorities said. More than· 40 people were injured and three cara burned in the two weekend. incidents, according to federal officials. E. Germans Dee · MUNICH. West Germany (AP ) -Two young East Germans threaded their way through border minertelds and barricades into West Germany during Easter weekend, police said today. The two crossed the border without incident early Saturday morning, according to a spokesman for the Bavarian Interior Ministry. 13 killed in raid MANILA, Philippines <AP) President Ferdinand E. Marcos promised ··more for ceful measures" against terrorists after lJ people were killed and more than 150 wounded by a grenade attack on a Roman Catholic cathedral in the southern Philippines. Military authorities blamed Communist guerrillas for the two explosions that rocked the San Pedro Cathedral Sunday in the heart of Davao City , in southern Mindanao 610 miles southeast of Manila . Rioting kills 2 BELFAST. Northern rreland (AP ) -A British army vehicle killed two youths during the firth night of rioting in Londonderry. and youths in Dublin stoned a police station. But elsewhere in Northern Ireland the 65th an· niversary of the Easter Uprising was peaceful. Rioting broke out again Sunday night in Londonderry, the province's second largest city, after a Roman Catholic march to the ci· ty cemetery commenorating the 1916 rebellion in Dublin against British rule. BIXBY, Okla. <4P> -A. tornado spawned by 1 violent 1torm bllltlD1 oUt ot Kaaaa de- 1110U11'ed a cowatr)' cbu.-cb filled wttb J!;aater worablppen fn northeast Oklahoma and killed fl ve people ln 1 nearby trailer park,-ofllda.la 11id. Twist.en also dama1ed homes , and f arm1 in Kentucky and Indiana. Fifth-two people'· suffered storm-related injuries ln the Tu1u nea, 15 bom.. .,,.,. dntrOjed and 10 we,. dam.,ed, the Reel Cl'Ola r"*PQrted. The bod.I .. ol five relaUvea were found Sunday nl1bt after a tornado bit Bbbl, a rural 1ub- urb 1outb of 'l uJsa, 1eavln1 bebiod bait the sue of tennis balls police 1ald. TUfsa C.Ounty Deputy Sheriff Budd)' Mabee Tdentlfled tbe vlctlma as Michael. McCuUn, 28, his 27-year-old wile, Charlotte, t.belr chlldnn T6bya, 10, and CbtU, 8, ud Uotber rel- ative, Zeak Taylor, st. ~arch parties formed befon dawn today to check fields nea1. the traller park and' the cbunll for more vfcUma, and extra police were on duty lo Tulsa, where loot.inf was reported aoon after the storm passed Sunday night. About 30 people were injured when the tornado smashed the Uberty .llellbta Jl'tttWUI Biptlat Chufda la Bhb)' about 5:45 p.m. Ps1 !:iunday. llm Layne, 30, wbo wu at- tendlllf the Easter service with bla lamUy, w11 trapffei for about 15 minutes tn the wreck.,e. ''MY EAU 1tartln1 popping and someone yelled 'Get under the seats','' Layne said. "I dove underneath the peJiS and just then that's when t{ came down and /inned me. I didn't think l coul 1et out." When Layne wriuled free, he said be and two other men ''went to get a backhoe ... and I 1ot • van and we took &everal people from the church to the hospltaJ ourselves. "You could really hear them prayine Cunderneatb the wreckage>. 1 know I prayed for a long time before I even moved." THE AMERICAN Red Cross set up a shelter in Tulsa for the fam11Jes left homeless by the storm, but Red Cross worker Carol Lofton said most people apparently were staying with their damaged homes. EASTER PARADE -Traditional Easter bonnets were few and far between at Sunday's Easter Parade on Fifth Avenue ,.,..,,.._ in New York City . One elderly woman (second from left ) wore floppy bunny ears and another person went ape. A s pokes man for Public Service Co of Oklahoma said at least 5,800 homes in Tulsa were without power during part of the night, and broken gas mains were reported at one or two Oklahoma Natural Gas Co. locations. Rivers dump ground for kilkrs? ATLANTA (AP) -For the O ffi cials said the body DarronGlass,lasts~enSept.14. none of the victims had been fourth time in six weeks, the may have been in the river for Hand said the Bell case was dumped in water. body of a young black male has several weeks similar tC1 those or severa l other With the discovery of Bell's been pulled from one of the Bell. who lived in the same youths whose bodies have been body, five victims now have area's r ivers the apparent neighborhood as two other found in DeKalb County this been fished out of area rivers. new dumping grounds of the victims. was last seen al a year after their disappearances Including four of the last five. killer or killers who have taken restaurant where he occasional· from Atlanta. He declined to dis· the lives of 24 young blacks In ly did odd jobs. cuss details. Authorities have speculated the past 21 months. Richard Harp, manager of the that the killer or killers may The badly decomposed body Of b Authorities have said they have started dum pine the restaurant, has told police t at h b f th lS·year·old Joseph Bell, missing .., believe t at a num er o e victims in rivers to wash away the day after oell was last seen. · I ted k·11· g B t I th · h h bee SI.nee March 2, was di'scovered h II cases are iso a 1 m s, u any c ues at m1g t ave n he received a telep one ca h I · Sunday afternoon in "an isolated be in all 24 of t e s ayings, left behind on the bodies. d · 'bl .. ti from someone claiming to authorities have said the victims an very maccess1. e sbecbon Bell who said , "I'm a lmost wer e killed and their bodies Ha nd said Bell's body ap· of the South River m su ur an dead." parently had been dumped off 0 K lb C l b l t t dumped elsewhere. e a oun Y Y a coup e es · Bell's disappearance was be· the Klondike Bridge about three· ing a new trail bike, authorities ing investigated by the special Prior to the Dec. 8 discovery four ths of a mile upstream from said. tas k for ce investigating the or the body of 16·year-old where it was found lodged in a DeKalb Public Safety Com· other 23 slayings and the dis· Patrick Roger s in the tree at "an acute turn .. in the missioner Dick Hand said an appearance of 10-year -old Chattahoochee Ri ver, however. river autopsy would be conducted to-.--------------------------------------day to determine the cause of death. But he said authorities are treating the c a se as a homicide. SPRINGB *89 DE NEW ORLEAN$ 'i79 CHICAG0 .. 79 NEW ~NEWAIKtJ58t COLORADO SPRINGS *99 OKLAHOMA CITY tt29' DENVER'89 GRAND JUNCTION ttt9 INDIANAPOUS 'i69t KANSAS CITY tf291 WICHITA lt291 NEW LOW FARES 10 EVEIYWHERL Don't wait for summer to have fun . Take a spring break. Now you can fly to yo':lr favorite city at a price that won't break your budget. . \ A riot of colors, Continental's having a special spring sale to Denver and many other cities throughout the country. Continental can take you to Denver or beyond from the airport nearest you. Burbank, Ontario. Or Los Angeles International. but still Brooks Brothers Our exclusive "fun shirt" is a coforful way to go casual. It's a random array of different stripes and different colors, in tool cotton gingham, short sleeved, and decidedly a conversat1on piece. The collar, as Brooks Brothers regulan would sunnise, is correctly button-down. Sizes t•Yz to 16Yz. $32.50 IStAl&.ISMID lltl ~JI~ J'urntshtngaf or~ Jfomm tr 90111 ~JO WEST 71lt STREET, LOS ANGBLBS, CALIP. 90014 PAllUON ISLAND, NIWl'Oln" IMaf ~ To take advantage of our spring break sale, just purdwe your ticket within three days after making your reservations. Should you need to change or cancel your plans, there is a $10 chalge. Seats are limited. Fares are effective April 18 and all travel must be completed by May 31, 1981 ~ 'Jbese discoUltt ma are one--way C.oach on selected flighb. Fares on alba' Oighb are sligbdy highct Spring for a betpin. And call your travel agent/ company travel~ or Continental. · 'l'lw< ~ •~ ...c1o..1on.....,11e........,. .,..,.,.. "'" ..,..._""' CNI '"""' '"'"' 1m.n t su• ,,_.,."',.,..., '11~11111"'" "''",..,.""' ... -~_,.-.. ft~ t lil'fenl .. 4126 "'*" ''"' ....... .,..,., , ) 1 ~. I j Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/MOnday, April 20, 1981 I H/F .. I Oaklan(I to vote I • • on ant1-cnme tax OAKLAND (AP) -A special U7 milllon anti-crime tax measure will be on the ballot Tuesday in lhil city, aaid to bave, the highest urban crime rate in California. Measure A, which proponents say would not only stop police layoffs but would also allow the force to gl"ow, would authorize collection of the tax over the next four years. In the first year, they say, $8.5 mftllon would be collected. The controversy aurl"oundlng the measure involves not only the tax but also tbe way it would be s pent In the Police Department. Officials in other cities with high crime rates are keenly interested in the out- come. ~'nmrm' RIDGECREST <API -What was described as .. a s mall swarm of ea rthquakes" peppered this inland region 120 miles north of Los Angeles. shaking things a bit. but ap- parently causing no injuries or serious damages. The largest of the five tremors re corded early Sunday meas ured 4.4 on the Richte r scale. The first one hit at 12: 45 a . m and was followed by four more. the s mallest measuring 3.6, a spokeswoman said. Protests rap ai,d LOS ANGELES <AP l A peaceful weekend demons tration brought more than 2,000 people out to protes t U.S. military aid to El Salvador . a country tom apart by a civil war which bas claimed the li ves or 10.000 people, tncludln1 several Americans. Durlne tbe protHt, dem- onstrators m41rcbed about a mile from El1htb Street and Columbia Avenue to MacArthur Park. There, several speakers denounced the Rea1an administration for continuing to send military aid to the eov- ernment of El Salvador, accord- 1 n g to Rebecca Traver, a spokeswoman Cor the Committee In Solidarity with the People of El Salvador. BURBANK <AP) -A sherifrs department SW AT team used tear gas to flush an armed map out of his home after a four-hour standoff, police said. Steven P . Morgan. 27, sur- rendered and was taken into custody for investigation of armed robbery of a nearby Taco Bell restaurant Sunday. Police said he had fled into his home after the alleged robbery, and fired s hots when police tried to get him to come out. MARIPOSA <AP) The body or a Mariposa County supervisor was found in his car which had crashed off a winding mountain road into a ravine, authorities said. The car dri ven by Carroll Clark, 58, plunged 300 feet over a cliff on a road between Yosemite National Park and Mariposa Saturday evenin g Friends began looking for h1m when Clark failed to return to his home at Midpines, but his body was not discovered until mid- morning Sunday. A~WI ........ FREEDOM -Gospel singer Nancy Case carried cross out of maximum security prison at Carson Cit y, Nev , as s he and daughter Katie Came (left> are released after fi ve hours as inmate hostai;es. They and seven others sang hymns "with knives at our throats" until inmates were convinced de·. mands for freedom wo uld not be met. Rowdy crowds mar weekend in desert PALM SP RIN GS <A P I Throngs of tourists were heading back home from this desert resort today, ending a holiday weekend that left several people inJured in out break:. of rock and bottle throwing Authorities said the city was peaceful Sunday, one day after 23 people were arrested in sporadic bouts of fightin g and con frontations with police Several police officers were among thm.l• tnJUrcd Saturday, but none or the inJurit'-. "'as serious L'nough to warrant hos p1t<1lization, pol1n• said Tht> mam confrontations oc- cur r t'd al thl' three sto r~ Travt'lodge Motel when p<ihl·t' responded to n•ports of an unruly cro Y.ct and 1nc1dent-. o f vandalism The offll'L'r"' Y.l:'n' met by a hall or roc:b Clnd bottles when tht') gav<' a d1sµer.,u l order to the estimated l ,!'llXI to 2 (}(XI ~ouths galht·n:d at lhl· mol(•I announces a new program 2nd TRUST DEEDS •No P"llP8Y/AQU ....... • Loen • 10.000. f li00.000 -°""'*' "'"" 0.... •Swing Lo.int ; 'S\ executive ~uelll0nstrato i c\earance • F• lur>dtng • 30 YflW Amortized \k>fll 16yn R.-., ~~ Call William B Mitchell Call tooay for quote • No obllga11on trons nallonol ~ {714) 975-1128 =!=~ FREE LECTURE! REVERSING THE #lltl PROCEsS - AND LASER BEAM THERAPY FOR CONTROWNG PAIN Dr. leala is the Medical Director of the Lifestyle Medical Clinics, dedicated to Improving the quality of health for women. He is also director of the King Family Medical. Centers which are for the control and relief of pain. In Or. Beals' lecture you will ... LHrll how to stay younger, more vivacious, and how to be actively enerQetlc . . . LHn how hormonal replacement can add to the quality of your life as well as giving you a longer life . . . LHrll how the controversial treatment used by the stars has become a safe treatment ELDORADOs, COUPE DE VILLEs AND SEVILLEs SALE PRICED THROUGH MONDAY I Closed Easter Sunday• Open Until 9 P.M . Monday! THE TRUTH ABOUT FUNERAL PRICES In greater Orange County ~t Harbor Lawn Mortuary people are important. We beHeve that every family deserves a perfect final tribute. The family selects the type of service it wants and the price to be paid. CREMATION •••••••••••••••••••• 5325 or Choose From Other S546 Types Of Services From ••......••.• ~:.~~r:aoM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 597 AppeBI d.enledt · on Li\ busing LOS ANGELES (AP> -Some 23,000 Los Angeles school childttn were going to school · whP.re they chose today as mandatory busing came to a halt in the nation's second· largest public school district. One of the last challenges to ... the school board's declsion to stop forced busing was set aside, at least temporarily. late Sun· day as public schools we re wind ing up a 10-day Easter break. U.S. Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist refused to or· der the desegregation bus ing of 23,000 students to continue although he said his fmaJ de· cision on an appeal b y the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People would not come at least until the middle of the week. ''THERE IS NO trace of doubt at all that lh1s is the end of mandatory busing," a Jubilant Los Angeles school board Pres ident Roberta Weintraub said as 1t appeared the 18-year legal battle over desegregating the cit) '5 school system finally "as drawing to an end Offlctals said parents of 7.300 '>tudents forced to ride buses lo school up to ont• hour eal·h way acceptl'd a board offt>r to get out or the mandatory busing pro gram starting today Parents of the other children being bused dl'Ctdt•d to continue voluntanlv In th e prnj:!ram Until the current -;chool year end-. June 19. they said ·seven thousand children will he coming home to their nl'1ghborhood !>ChOOl5 r feel "l'ry good about 1t ... said state Sen t\lan Hobbim,, a long11ml' busing opponent THE BATTLE over bus ing lll•gan tn 1ntcns1fy in 197!! when u slate Judge ordered busing 1n ~rades -t 8 as a wa\ to start inte eratlng t..he 529,oOO.pupil school system, even thous.b state Of· fictals blamed desegregation problems on housing patterns rather than the intent of the school board. Bus ing was expanded to grade;; 1-9 and 153 schools thts year The controversy cam e to a head in 1979, when voters ap- proved an amendment to the California Constitution, a llowing busing onl y in cases of tn· tentional d esegregation The amendment was upheld by the California Supre me Court in March. Clouds part for rites on Easter morn LOS ANGELES 1J\P 1 Easl rr Sunday was unt) p1l'ally gloomy and wet as two storms moved through So uth errt California, hut th<' min let UJJ and the sun peeked throu~h the clouds just long t nough for man~ trad1t1onal sunrise ser vices About 10.000 pcopll' and the -;un came out ror the 60th un· nua I s unrt:-.l' se n ice i.JI tne Hollywood Howl Al'tress June Lockhart rt';.HI a pol·m ;,ind Hob Keeshan . tclev1s1on·~ Capt<•in Kangaroo. read ::.cnplure at the non cknom1n:.itional sen lt'l' £n R1 ver!'.1 dc. nc•a rl\ I 000 people sat on hlankeb on the rr>cky slopl' uf Mt Huhidoux for a non·denominat11>nal Sl'rvice benc•ath a laq::io \\ooden rross'. Not stne<• ;\prrl fi. 1969, had s hc>~ers fall(•n on the st·n 1ct>. which ha::. been a \rad1t11m s ince 1909 --------------- GOING OUT OF BUSINESS EVERYTHING IN STORE GOES! Office Eqli,...., L..,., T ..... ""'thlre, Pktwes md Accestorfes 1727 Wwfclff Dr .. 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It ... 9f ,.....,, suffering from arthrttll/ problems with the joints mld aplne -even Mthma, have found grMt relief With thla new / cofd 1 ... r beam therapy. ,..... h •...._for the ftcture: however,' eeetlng r9Mrvatlon1 n nec11•1!1Y-Simply call the Klfi{j Fam1ty Medi<* Cenllr In the FalrvitwJWamer Pt~~2800 W. Wwner. Call• 71~ Glw them youf'. namt and how f'IW1Y wUI be In your f*'Y. -._, -. • nit• could be OM Of the mott Informative JecturM tn ~ Mte. Seetlnsr ta Nmlted. Call tbday fOt ~ .-vatlona. ·nit 8Duth CoMt Plaza Ho.. ~ North of the DFrw,. TwtM.._. "flmP. l I orest Service plan ignores public good The U.S . Forest Service cl~ms it has a big problem along S~ J uan Creek in the Cleveland National Forest east of San Juan Capistrano. Too many people up there, says the USFS. Litter. Illegal activities. Accidents that create liability problems for the federal government. The USFS answer to these problems? End the yeitrly practice of installing dams along the creek. If ponds aren't creat- ed, people won 't be as attracted to the area and the problems will go away so goes the USFS reasoning. What the USFS fails or re- fuses \o recognize is that the purpose of the dams is to provide ponds that can be stocked with trout by the state Department of Fish and Game. This practice has created one of the few fishing opportunities in or near the county. It's unfair that parents who want to take their kids out to try the new fishing pole or the serious fisherman who desires the challenge of catching a trout without traveling hundreds of miles, suffer because the USFS and other law enforcement agencies cannot or, will not, con· trol the other problems that exist. It's also rather unsettling that the USFS, an agency whose principal duty is to promote public enjoyment of national forest lands, in this case wants to do just the opposite. Driver ftuu1s needed If a bill now in the hands of the Legislature is not approved and signed by the governor, state fund· ing for driver education in high schools will end in June. The measure wouJd extend funding for four years. But Gov. Brown has said he believes driver education should be paid for by local school districts out of local taxes or by diverting whatever other state funds they may be entitled to. Given the financial state of most school districts these days, that's obviously a pipe dream Driver education couldn't passibly be given priority when academic subJects, enrichment classes and sports programs are being cut right and left. The absurd part of this ts that funding for driver education comes from traffic fines paid to the state. in the amount of $19 million a year That's money Brown would Ii ke to use elsewhere But most law enforcement agencies, the Department of Motor Vehicles and the insurance companies seem convinced that driver education is a valuable con tribution to public safety. It's certainly important to parents, who would have to pay for private driving instruction unless their teen-agers wait until they are 18 to qualify for a license. Both in· surance rates and the issuance o( licenses for those under 18 now are contingent upon driver ed certification. While driver education courses don't turn out perfect drivers. they at least guarantee that the kids know the rules of the road and have had some com- petent instruction in handling an automobile clearly a necessity in California. No doubt the governor could find other uses for the traffic fine revenue. But in the interest of the driving public it should be kept in the driver education program. No time for igrwrance With modern technology rapidly shrinking the globe, and with the in creasing in terdependence of nations for re- sources and commodities, it was startling to learn last week that a majority of today 's college s tudents are ill-informed on foreign affairs and, even worse. that they don't care. An extensive survey of 3.000 students on 185 campuses was conducted by the Educational Testing Service and the non- profit Council on Learning. Not one of the students answered more than 84 of the 101 test questions correctly. Overall, seniors answered only 50 percent correctly, freshmen 41 percent and two-year college students 40 percent. Only one senior in 10 scored better than 67 on the ex· am . given in multiple-choice format which should have made it easier. • A questionnaire that ac- companied the exam gave some clue to this outpouring of ig- norance More than one-third of the students said they were not interested in foreign alf airs and r.a r e I y re ad a rt i c I e s on i n . ternational subjects. Small wonder educators at Georgetown' J)niversity's School of Foreign ~"1ice voiced alarm and called upon the nation's col- leges to upgrade courses in the field of international relations. The upgrading could well begin at lower school levels where youngsters now learn little more than the geography, history and governmental processes of their own state and the United States. For too man~ the rest of the world scarcely exists. But the rest of the world comes closer every day and ignorance will not keep it away. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views e11· pressed on this paoe are those Of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. LM. Boyd/Old golf trick Seasoned citizens who long ago look up golf will tell you that courses once were equipped al each hole with a box of sand and a bucket of water tom aketees . If you want lo speed up an oncom· int sneeze, look at the sun. So ad- vises a Montana man. For reasons unknown, he says. that tickling warn· ing will convert lo a sneeze almost lmmedlalely when you turn your eyes toward extreme brightness. . Our Lan1uage man is still tryln1 to track down the origin of that term "sbrinldng violet." And or "tbe whole nine yards." And ot "naked 11 a jaybird," ReceatUy wrote that "aubbook- . keepu" had more consecutive dou· ble tettera than any other word. JQ.lt arrived from a kindly client t1 a clipped column -m)' 0"1\ from m any years 110 -Tthlch nc>tes the Job UU. of a certain ltOO mao known aa a "r•ccoon.nookk .. per." Memory must be 1Upptng. Not even every student of the Bible knows that the name of "Galilee" comes from the Hebrew word for cir· cle . . Did I say only the cat, camel and giraffe run by moving both left lega and then both right legs alternately? Add that harness horse known as the pacer, please. Most favorable months for buyin1 stocks are May and October. Studies of the seasonal action of stocks over the last 80 years so Indicates, I'm told. Althou1h Wasbin1ton, D.C., hH both an "I" Str• and a "K" Street, Jt baa no "J" Street. Why 1• that ? Q. In a lfP1caJ buJUlght, haw loat cloa lt takf a matador to kill a bu.117 And bow ma n1 bull• doH the matador kW in OM afternoon? A. About 20 minutes. Two bulll. The better paid of those matadon can make *35,000 ln one day's won. lncidenlAl)y. Tax enforcers miss mobsters WASHINGTON -Uncle Sam has an impressive arsenal of weapons to use against taxpayers who intentionally or accidentaUy skimp on what they owe the government. Without warning or court order, the federal apparatus can seize aU or part of your bank account, confiscate your paychecks or slap a lien on your busi- ness or personal property. But ror some reason. while the feds are sometimes overzealous in their pursuit or s mall-time chiselers and befuddled citizens, they have been strangely negligent in their pursuit of drug traffickers and big -time racketeers. TWO SPECIAL ACTS of Congress, passed in 1970, empower the Justice Department to seize mobsters' assets in addition to civil rtnes. Yet the number of forfeitures under these p(ovisions can fairly be described as paltry. In short. racketeers are getting better treatment than run-of·the·mill tax evaders. Through March 1980, assets forfeited and potential forfeitures in narcotics cases prosecuted under the two statutes amounted to a piddling $3.S ntilllon. Yet law enforcement officials figure that the illicit drug trade generates about $54 billion a year. My associate Tony Capaccio has searched through the records and found some of the most flagrant examples of mobsters being let oH the hook by federal bloodhounds who track petty tax cheaters to their financial graves Here they are· Jose Valenzuela's organization rake!i in $10 million to $16 milLion a year Q -JA-CK-11-D-fRS_D_N -d from its heroin operations, which ex - tended from laboratones in Mexico to the sidewalks of New York. Valentuela Ii ved high off the hog . he spent $63.000 in cash on luxury cars during one three· year period, and put down $396.000 - mostly in cash to buy and redecorate a mans ion in San Marino, Calif. Valenzuela and 69 members of his dope ring were convicted. but only $55,000 wa s assessed in fines No assets were seized. -THE "BLACK TUNA" marijuana· smuggling ring headed by Robert Meinsler and Robert Platshorn handled more than a million pounds of dope. earning gross receipts conservatively ·estimated at $300 million. The gang spent thousands on yachts and ex· ecutive Jets and even ran up a $60,000 restaurant tab rn a smgle night. Yet when the feds attempted to seiz.e two re- sidences worth $750,000, five yachts and an auction business that was used as a front, they wound up with $1 6,000 worth of assets In hi s prime, Leroy "Nitky" Barnes ran the biggest heroin operation JO the United States. according to the Justice Department He and his gang earned million~ pushing junk al the re· Lail level in the streets of Harlem and tbe South Bronx . Barnes himself had fi ve Mercedes Benzes. a Cadillac. a Corvette and a Citroen Maserata His 1974 and 1975 tax returns listed a total of $527,000 in "mis- cellaneous" income He had $1.5 million invested 1n Michigan real estate. The G·men put Barnes away for life and fined him are you ready? - $125,000 Tht.>re were no criminal forfeitures A com•1clt'CJ associate of Barnes. Joseph "Jazz· Hayden. listed $204,140 1n miscellaneous income on his 1975-76 tax returns He drew a 15·year sen· tence. a $25,000 fine and forfeited not a penny Old things have a special meaning · r m always on the lookout for something good about people. Orten months go by There was a story last week about Roman Totenberg, a violinist whose violin was stolen last May after a con· cert When he '4as young he'd lived on almost nothing to save enough to buy it and not only was it of great sentimental value to him but also he'd used it to play for almost 40 years The musician was quoted as saying it was like having a child kidnapped and he didn't know whether h<!'d ever play again with another instrument. If the story ended happily and added to the flimsy proof we have that people are basically good, the thief would have read about the musician's grief and re· turned the violin If he did, I never read about it. but even if he didn't the story isn't aJJ bad for people. Our affection for the tools we use is one of our more pleasant characteristics. IF YOU'RE A concert violinist, you like your violin but it doesn't have to be that special. If you're a carpenter, l suspect you have one saw you have a special feeling for. If you do a lot of cooking, you probably have one pan you wouldn't trade for all the others. Years ago I knew an elderly man who bad whittled birds for a hobby most of his life. He had a knife his father had given him when he was 15 and it was sharpened down to almost nothing, but it was shll sharp and he "'as happiest when he had 1t in his hand I suppose that knife was one of the mosl enduring things in his life It was always there. always dependable, and tt}ere is no way to estimate the total pleasure it had given him over the years WE ALL NEED some of the material things that provide continuity to our I~"' -.N-DY-RD-DN-IY_...,..~ lives by always being th.ere and always being the same As a writer, I type a lot. Thf! English language is often shp· pery, evasive and complex, but my typewriter is simple, easy and dependa- ble. It rloesn't care how poorly J may be using the laneuage. It knocl<s the words on the paper with a loud . comforting clack. I'm very fond of my typewriter. and if someone stole it, I'd never write again. Oh. I suppose l'd write again because actuall.v I have 17 more like it. This is an Underwood No . 5 made about 1920 and I buy every old Underwood No 5 I find. I can only write on this model typewriter and I don't want to run out of them before I run out or time or things to say. Most of us tend to be more sent1· mental about some of the tools we use than is absolutely neci>ssary but it's one of our most charming fa ults I even like the tr;utiin myself. I have a shaving brush· in the medicine cabinet in the bathroom that I carried with me through four years 1n the Army It's spent time in Fort Bragg, England, Normandy. Germany, and it has been to Berlin and Moscow I've been shav· mg with an electric razor for 20 years now but I wouldn't think of discarding that tired·looking old shaving brush. It served me well. and every once in a while. when I've let my beard grow over the weekend. l'll lather up with it and shaH with a blade just to Jet the brush know I haven't forgotten it. Most of us get attached to our cars if wt keep them for a few years. I've owned cars that I liked and felt terribly disloyal to when I turned them in on a trade for a new car. It seemed so un· grateful of me to just dump it and leave it in the hands of some hard·hearted, secondhand car dealer He wouldn't care He'd sell 1t to anyone in order to make a buck off it I WOULDN'T try to defend our at- tachment to inanimate objects on grounds of rP.ason or logic. but you have to admit, caring for the things that serve us is one of the few nice things we do Trickle down economic theory doubtful Here is the skinny on how Ronald Reagan's revival ol Richard Nixon's Trickle Down Theory of Ecooomlca will help the rich at the expen•e of you and me. A keystone lo the Reaaan eronomic pack_,e· ts a major tax cut. The exact amount la not settled upon, but 10 per· cent a year f oT the next three yean 11 the most commonly beard f'llure. Thia ClllCI 1111 bigher level of productivity whJch will whip lnflation and it will also generate jobs to curb unemployment. T HE a EA.SON I say that this theory won't work 1s based on past observa- tions of human psycholon. For the aver ace famlb' maklni $15,000 a year, expert.a predict a• 10 percent tax cut would mean $380 mqre ln that famJlys pocket. Thia ls bardly enouab to oftaet th• Jump ln Soclal Secu.rl~ taxes that came J an.1. Contrut that with what a tax cut of 10 ,percent mean.a to the rich family mak· ln1 $200,000 a year. that famUy would have about '30.000 more ln U'le old sock. • # significant job nor do tht!y boost In- dustrial productivity. In fact, all they do is shovel more coal on the fires of runaway inflation by driving up the price of such inflation hedaes. The Trickle Down Theory has never worked before and anybody who thinks it will work now 11 either amon1 the 'Wealthy or a dtvvtee or the Good Tooth Fairy. • .,.. .. 17S •• 1 • .,. pl 2A1 • • A .. JI UO 1 •M ··~ ...... " ......... 1 • ltlnCM UO 10 .., AC... pf U0 .. t• ACatrr . IOI 1 tl ACYM 1Al10~11 AOT UOU IS. .t.llPw 2.2' 7 •tt AFetnll .to 6 1' AGnCi> i S 17 "°" jpf 1" . . ' AGla.t 2.0. • 11 Tbe ftnent ~ o1 takeo-1 .. u4 taaover •· · tempt.I • Gil coa\NDlet briDo to ml.ad Gell ou·· 11nt. feeble effort at dlvenltlcation. Comlq to &he ecm- clu.sloo Uialt lt bad to cet Wo otber builMIW, Gu.If round a ll"1y cbolce: IUnllinl lbw. Ba.ntum 6 Balley Circus. . Tbeclealneverwent thl'OUCb ( RJnilinl Broe. ended up ID U.. more loaical, lf incompetent, band.I ol KatteJ, . the toy maker), but It epitomiw the kind of tlltnktnc that loel oo ln the exeeutlve ~ suites of oU com· • panies . Our ~~ e» t 0 u ' b 0 i l --t~' :::i.:~ :n~~ '.111111 mm ~ what to do with -.,... the mound.a of mon~they accumulate. , TD C'A.88 n.ow is certainly extraordinary. tn 1970, Euoa (tbeo known u Standard Oil of New Jerse,.) bad 1ales of $16.5 billion. Last year Enon took in $110 billion, Mobil S64 billion, Texacossz bUlloe Stan- dard Oil of California $43 billion, Standard OU 'of ln- dlana $28 billion -and ao on. Of the U>p 10 u:s. com- panies meaaured by 1980 profile, eigJrt are oU com- panies Conly AT&T and IBM brea.ktbemonotooy). Whal with our crucial dependence on Middle Eut oil. the pressure is on these companies to take their ex. tr a ordinary profits and use them to develop new enern sources. Indeed, the companies have long argued that they need these bumper profits to do just that. But look ~t the sorry record. In un•, Mobil bought M arcor, holding company for Container Corp. of America, and Monteomery Ward. Not only didn't that give us any more energy, it didn 'l produce any reasonable profits for Mobil. Laal year. in fact, Montgomery Ward presented Mobil with a loesof $160 million. 1 IN lm, ATLANTIC RICHFIELD bought tbe cop-per producer, Anaconda. Again, not only did this ac- quisition taJI to improve our energy position it did nothing to enhance Arco's profit performance. Nor did Atc:o make any friends in Montana when it closed the 75-year-old smelter at Anaconda, Mont .. claiming it would cost $400 million to bring the facility into com- pHance with environmental standards. Arco ls now shipping the copper mined at Butte, Moot., to Japan for smelting. In 1978, Philadelphia's Sun Oil Co. had the bnJUant idea of taking over Becton, Dickinson, a leading sup- plier of medical and hospital equipment. It managed to get bold of 34 percent of lhe company's stock and then presented Becton, Dickinson with what it thought was a fait accompli: "You're ours." But the top people at Becton fought back-and bard. They went to court and won their point: the Sun move was declared illegal. The big oil company had to back off (and think maybe of the oil business). In 1979, Exxon provoked a storm of criticiam by its $1.2 billion acquisition of Cleveland's Reliance Elec- tric. Exxon defended the move by explaining that Reliance was working on a new energy-efficient mot.or, which met our national priorities. However. a couple of weeks ago Exxon conceded that the molot' wu oot co· ing to work. On top of that, Reliance lost $6 million laat •year. OTREa OIL COMPANIES are following Arco's in- vasion of the mining and metals business. Standard OU ~ of Indiana has boupt Cyprus 14ina. Union Oil bu ac- quired Molycrop. Standard OU of Obie> ta pJaruim. to put up $1.7bllllontoacqulre Kennecott, tbeoatlon'slar1at copper producer. And Standard Oil of CallforaJa lut month an.nounced the biggest btd ever made tor any company anywhere: $4 billion for AMAX, a major pro- ducer of many meta.15 (molybdenum, tungsten, nickel, copper. silver, aluminum). By moving into the minerals field, these oil giantl have oow found themS'MveS depicted as e.ngaJint in "extran~us. gluttonous gobbling." Who makes thia !statement? Sen. Edward Kennedy? No, the depletion comes from Malcolm S. Forbes, chairman' and' edJtor- 1in-cbief of Forbes magad.ne, who says ln his current 'iss:'Je that the big . oil companies "are spendln1 jbiJlioos to take over major mineral companies in· !stead of usint their huee cub piles to develop addJ- tional energy sourcee." • Tbe oU companies have made a lot of money in the oil business. Their critics seem to be sayin1: "Fellas. stay with what you know best. Leave the dlverslfication to others. Besides, you don't do top well once you leave. the oilfielda. '' Gold metals quotations Gold By The Auodated Press Selected world gold prices today: l.andolt: closecl due to holiday. l.oodoa: clos~ due to holiday. Parle: closed due to holiday. Frukfut: closed due to holiday. Zukb: closed due to holiday. Pa.Dd7 fr Buman: only daily quote $482.SO, off ~.50 Ell(elbard: only daily quote $482.SO, otr $5.50. Enielll•rd: only daµy quote fabricated 1'96.08, off $5.72. SU~ Band¥• Barm1a, $11.1.30 per U'oy ounce . ...... NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonterroua meta.I pritel to- day: · C.,,. ~-11 eenta a pound, U.S. desUnaUoN . ..... -.. centa a poWMS. a. o~ eeau • pOuad, delivered. ftl ............ Wtet eompol.lte lb. At b • '11 et!eta a IJoClnd, M. Y. ••w1 MJ0.00 per rfaat. Pldbue Mtt.00 troy oa., N.Y . . l ' I .. , . ' ~ ~ . ' l . , I 1. 20 'llfllt CIOAJIE IT(S LOW TAR CAM EL ~UA.LITY G~Mel(. LIGHTS LOW TAR CAM EL QUALITY ---·· ·4. LOW TAR CAM EL_OUALITY LOW TAR CAMELTAST~ 20 CIGARETTES LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE . . I !i j I . 1 Of~ANGE COUNl ' l ALIFOFH~IA 25 CEN T S /JO.ut uith ~pression lost_......._._ __________ _ Disturbed Viet vet kills wife, himself COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP) Gerald W. Highman loaded a shotgun no one knew he had. s hot his wife, then called his father. "Dad, did you get a good night's sleep?" he asked. ··Yes,'' his fa th er answered. "I just killed JoAnn," Gerald said in a calm voice. Then, Merril Highman re members. his son said he was go- ingtokillhimself. "OH, MY GOD, no, Jerry Please don't do it." his father begged. ·'I tried to talk him out of it. said I would come right over. But I knew he would not wait.'· Merril Highman and the police found the couple, both. 28 years old, in the bedroom . JoAnn Highman was dead at the scene. Gerald died a few hours later Saturday at a hospital. Mrs Highman's 5-year-0ld daughter, Carri Kidd, was asleep in another room. Gerald had asked his father totakecareofher. The shootings seemed especial· ly tragic to those who knew Highman, because after 10 years of depression and flas hbacks stemming from his combat ex- perience in Vietnam, he seemed to be doing better. He had a steady job. married his childhood sweetheart six months ago. and was seeing a counselor regularly. HIGHMAN WAS J1 when he fought as a Marine infantryman in Da Nang and Quana Tri Province. He was wounded twice dunne bis Vietnam duty, which ended in August 197.l. Last April, be told a Columbus newspaper, he was driving around the city when suddenly he thought he was in a rice paddy. He heard sniper fire and saw helicopters. He even asked a farmer for a gun to protect hi ms elf from the Viet Cong. Similar flashbacks and nightmares plagued him for years. "He was pre~ty well mixed up when he came home," his father said. "He'd do good and then no good. It just went on for lOyean." A LITl'LE MORE than a year ago, Highman began seeing a counselor at the Operation Outreach Vietnam Center in Columbus. His parents said Gerald seemed lately ''likehishappyoldself." He "seemed to be coming right along. But he still had his ups and downs," said his counselor, Russell Lynch. "It was hard for him lo accept survival." Lynch said he had no indication Highman planned a violent act. "Usually there is some hint to let us know to look at things," Lynch said. Highman had begun to give away various possessions several months ago "but it was rational and appropriate when be ex- plainedit." MERRIL HIGHMAN said his son sought medical treatment at the Veterans' Administration HospitalinChillicothein March. ·'They talked to him for about 10 minutes and told him to go to the VA clinic at University Hospital.·· Highman said "All the clinic did <See VET, Page A2 ) Dramatic manhunt in S. Laguna Councilwoman raps manager BY RICHARD GREEN or,,.. 0.11, ~• ... s1att Irvine City Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido said today that City Manager William Woollett Jr used "amazingly bad judgment" in not quickly notify. ing City Council members of the assault with a deadly weapon Half inch of rain for holiday For all the cloudy. wet weather over the Easter weekend. Orange County received less than a hall inch of rain. according to the N at1onal Weather Service A weather service spokesman said the showers would be moving eastward to Arizona today, leav· ing only a s light chance of rain tonight and Tuesday Temperatures Tuesday are ex· peeled to be in the mid·60s. with fair weather predicted. The weekend r ainfall or .39 inches brought the year's total to about 10.5 inches. spokesman said. Normal rainfall for this lime ts 11 .95 inches. J Sherman Denny. a Hunt· ington Beach resident who has kept ramfall records for the past 50 years. said since 1926 there have been only 11 sunny Easter Sundays in Orange County. "It didn't always rain. but sometimes the fog was so thick outdoor Easter sunrise services had to be moved Indoors.·· Denny said . "My advice is not to plan for good weal!'eron Easter .. Shots ale r t Laguna cops to 5 alie n s Laguna Beach police ap- prehended five lllega l alie~ after rifle shots alle1ftclly were heard coming from a Coast Hlahway motel room. Officers c0rdoned o(( the By the Sea Motel, 475 North Coast H1gbway, fl about 2 a.m. Sun· day, and later tound four illegal aliens lnai4 e a motel room, armed with ..,_ rifle and more than 700 roun& of ammunltlon. A further search ,by officers turned up a flft.b auspect biding tn a small kitchen cabinet. Border patrol acenta who were called to the motel aaJd the men Intended to brtn1 the rllle and ammun.iUon into lladeo. , The aliens were turned over to border patrot aaenu. case 1nvolv1ng Mayor Art Anthony. She said that. had they been not 1f1ed . they could have tel ep h one d press representatives and alerted them to the situation. "FRANKLY, IT'S ridiculous that some or us weren't advised until Sunday," added Councilman Larry Agran. "Common sense and good gov- ernment ought to suggest the importance of advislli& the City Council members and the press of major events or an apparen· tly criminal nature in the city." Mrs . Gaido and Agran said they learned on Sunday, April 12, that Mayor Anthony was un· der arrest for allegedly beating his w1Ce. Elaine. and mOicting a s uperficial gunshot wound on her head on April 9 ··ft 1s almost insulting that here there was a Chamber of Commerce Chila Cook-Off on Saturday where the word was circulating l'Oncern10g this dangerous incident and nobody had the presence or mind to adv1!.e the uninformed City Council members ... Agran ~aid Councilman David Sills said he learned about the assault with a deadly weapon case at the chili cook·orf COUNCILMAN Rill Vardoulis round out about the incident on Thursday night. shortly after it happened Thal 's because Mayor Anthony asked Vardoulis to come over to his home after the alleged beating a nd shooting. Vardoulis said he didn't quick· ly notify other City Council members of the incident because he assumed City <~e ASSAULT, Page A2) o.ffy ~INC ..,.... ., ,....,_ MlkMll Sheriff's deputy keeps shotgun at the ready as robbery sr.upect surrenders in South - Laguna. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ San Juan robbers purs u e d Bv STEVE MITCHELi, of .... D•ll, Pitel Swll Orange County s heriff's dep- uties were conducting a house- to-house search of upper Three Arch Ba y 1n South Laguna to day. seeking two men they believe robbed a country club of $4,000 A third s u spect. who barricaded himself inside the women's res troom at Three Arch Bay Service on Coast Highway. surrendered to dep· uties who su rrounde d the station armed with shotguns and hand weapons. Pacifi'C Coast Highway was blocked off more than an hour before the man s urrendered. Sheriff's Sgt. David Wheeler reconstructed this morning's events this way: T H REE MEN, one armed with ~ rifle. entered the pro shop at the San Juan Country Club in San Juan Capistrano al about 6·20 a .m .. d emanding cash from a clerk. Authorities broadcast a description of the getaway car. and Laguna Beach motor officer Don Coleman. who was riding to work, saw the car idling al the service station al the entrance to Park hires ambulance " Three Areh Bay. Dis neyland officials have hired a Tustin ambulance firm to serve the amu.sement park but contend the move is not in response to the recenldeathsortwo park patrons. Park orricials say Medix Ambulance. a 3-year-old firm ·with four ambulances, began service last Friday which calls for a driver to be on duty starling half an hour before the park opens un· til half an hour afterclosingtime. THE AMBULANCE service will replace Disneyland's own medical van, which is equipped with oxygen but no other life· saving equipment and no siren: Al Flores. a park spokesman. s aid Me dix will serve the amusement park until officials decide whether to equip their van with liilhts and sirens. Disneyland ca me under criticism because paramedics were not s ummoned In two reeent cases In which persons died. Instead, a park nurse ac- companied the individuals -one a stabbing victim and the other a 34-year-old woman who collapsed to the hospital in the Dis- ney land van. FLORES DENIED that the park has a policy against sum- moning paramedics. He said the park nurse is left to make a de· clsionon a case-by·case basis "But we have re-emphasized to our nurses that there 1s a new paramedic station that is close to the park," commented Flores. Disneyland officials are scheduled to meet with Orange County medical leaders to discuss the park's medical policy The family of stabbing victim Mel Yorba or Riverside has riled a $60 million suit against Dis· neyland over the medical care Is- sue. Court no relief for ll.95 loser Coleman said he saw one man enter the res troom of the station. while two remained in the blue Chevrolet. The motoris t and a passenger apparently s potted Cole man. and sped from the station. leav· ing their companion behind. THE PAIR turned left into Up· per Three Arch Bay. blowing out t hree tires on metal spikes that line the exit to the private com· munity. Coleman pursued the vehicle on his motorcycle, and later chased the suspects on root after they abandoned the damaged car. Meanwhile, 10 sherifr's units and more than a dozen armed deputies surrounded the Shell station, ordering tbe occupant to come out of the restroom with hands up. Arter a lenithy delay, the SUS· oect emerged from the ladies (See ROLDVP , Pace AZ> IRAICI C~ llAIHfl Clearlni tonight, sunny and a lltUe warmer Tues- day. Lows tonight 42 alona the coast, 50 inland. Hlah.s Tuesday 4SS to 70. • 111111 TllAY A wntnr ,., o w,, look oi tM time wt lpind ltand· • ing, titunQ, pad11g. oU to weft /or IOJMthmg. St• P~ A7. • Tbe Santa Ana·TUJtin Com· mwatt1 hotpltal iot a n w oaSM 1uut a new non-prol1' corporate 1truct~ today. Directors of the hospital held a breakfast meettna at tbe Saddleback Inn ln Santa Ana to announce that the hoapltal will henceforth be called Weateni Medical Center. Included U'l\der the new corporate umbrella will be the 241-bed Santa Ana Convalescent Center, also renamed today aa the Bartlett Center, and five tertiary health care services. WAYNE SCHROEDER. ex· ecutive director of the hospital aald the new arranaement wiU lncr•N• adminl1traU•e eott· cutttn1 wfllle tb• Dame wUI reflect varlou1 countywlde 1ervlce1 provided at tbe . bo1pital, which la near the border of Santa Ana and Tu.stln. He said onl1 about 65 percent ot the hospital's patients come from Santa Ana and Tustin. The new corporate structure alto will increase the or- aanizatlon's chances tor expand- ing into the affluent Irvine market, he said. By establishing the corporate struc ture separate from the hospital, Schroeder said officials hope to d1apel concern that ~"" 99d the Oran,• County Re,Sonal bwatt~-boQltaJ WOUid !tlftplbf Head W Neclr JuUtute. • .....,.., over new tuna y movlq into Jntne. The Bartlett Center. a 2'1·bed -· · · convaleacent home, i1 named "l'bl.s demonstrates that lMf after Mr. and Mrs. Artbur ,(the hospitals) are separate,' Bartlett. Schroeder said. THE FIVE HEALTH eare tervicea included under the aew corporate umbrella include the Orange County Rheumatolo1Y· arthritis Institute, regional al· lergy and clinical immunology institute, respir atory disease management center. Southern Callifornia Infertility Institute He ts co-founder and chairman of the Board of Century 21. a national real estate tlrm. The hospital had no choice in chanting its name. A Superior Court ruling Jut year ordered SA TCH to find a new name because its liUe was too similar to the existing TuSlin Communi· ty Hospital. Pair sought in slaying From Page A1 HOLDUP • • • TORNADO'S PATH -This aerial view shows the path of damage from a tornado which roared through the Tulsa, Okla., suburb of Bixby Sunday night. Five people were killed when the twister ripped through a trailer park (story Page A4). Two yowg Costa Mesa men are belng sought today as suspects in the shooting death of a 3l·year aid man last Monday evening in tlie parking lot of a Costa Mesa restaurant. l Armed with warra'1t), local police combed Costa Mesa and the Sacr amento a r ea this weekend for the two men - Samuel Monsoor, 18, and 23-year- old Rarhi Darwiche. COSTA MESA police assert the men are linked to the shooting of Carl Lawson, found dead last Tuesday morning in his car in a commercial complex on Edinger Avenue in Santa Ana. At first, Santa Ana police handled the case but were unable to determine where Lawson had been killed. Later in the week, two unidentified witnesses informed policetheyhadseentheshooting. According to their statements, police said, Lawson and two other me n pulled Into the Harbor Boulevard parking lot of Jojo's Restaurant Monday evening. The witnesses told officers they saw three men start to fight and' then heard four or five "pops," like the report of gun fl re. POLICE SAID the witnesses copied down the License plat~ of the vehicle and then came ( orw ard after reading accounts of Lawson's body being found. Costa Mesa police. who were handed the case late in the week said they were able to identify th~ other two men in the car, but came up emptyhanded when they arrived at their apartment. The sear c h widened to Sacramento when police were in· formed that one of the wanted men -Monsoor -had relatives Ii vi n gin that a rea. But when police arrived m Sacramento. they learned the two men left the area JO hours earlier From Page A1 VET ••• Lesbian custody ruling upheld was pushpiUsovertohim." Tom Scott, an administrative officer at the Chillicothe hospital, said Sunday lhal records s howed Highman sought treatment for a neck and arm injury he sustained on his job in 1978. The offi ce con- firmed Highman was given an ex· amination by a medical doctor and referred to the outpatient clinic. The records did not show a request for psy c hiatric treatment. the officer said Europe war would drag? WASHINGTON CAP) -The U.S. Supreme Court left intact a ruling today that strips a lesbian mother from Jefferson County, Ky .. of the custody rights of her 6·year·olddaughter. The justices. without comment, refused to review a Kentucky ap- peals court ruling that forces LuAnn Stevenson to give up cus tody of her daughter, Shannon. The effect of the Kentucky rul· ing was postponed March 2 by Justice Potter Stewart. Today's action ends that postponement. WHEN LUANN and Gary Ray Stevenson were divorced in 1977, t Stevenson agreed to give up custody of t heir then·infant daughter. The ex·husband re- quested a change of custody after learning that Mrs. Stevenson's lespian lover had moved in with her and Shannon. A state trial j udge turned down Stevenson's attempt to gain custody, but the Kentucky Court of Appeals reversed that ruling last summer. The stale Supreme Co urt r e fused to h ear' Ms . Stevenson's appeal Dec. 9. T he appeal s court said Shannon's father , who bas re· married. should be given custody for "the best interests of the child." A Kentucky law prohibits such custody changes within two years of a divorce unless it Is proved that· the child's environment "m ay endanger its physical, mental, mor a l or e motional health" and that ''the stability of consistency is outweighed by the advantages attendant lo change." IN ORDERING THE custody change, the state appeals court said, "The key word is the word 'may' ... The potentiality for such danger is the test, and the WASH I NGTON (AP ) Reagan administration defense strategists are beginning to think about the possibility that a European wa r with the Soviet Union might be long and fought witb only conventional weapons, Penl'agon sources say. Prison escapee shot If these thoughts evolve into formal doctrine, it would. represent a sharp break from past assumptions that a major European confli ct probably would be decided within 30 to 60 days before any major mobilization could be carried out -and probably would r@· quire the use of tactical nuclear weapons. The sources said over the weekend Defense Secret a r y Caspar Welnberger is interested in "looking more seriously at the possibility of a longer conflict." A Santa Ana man who escaped Crom Terminal Island federal prison in February remained in serious condition today after be· ing shot in the head by law enforcement authorities near Reno, Nev., last Tuesday. Steven D . Smallwood, 23, was shot when he tried to escape capture at a Sparks. Nev .. shopp· ing mall, an FBI spokesman said. The spokes man said Smallwood was captured along with John Scafiddi, 20. of . New York. Both men escaped from Terminal Island tn San Pedro Feb. 14, according to Peter Hec~t. public information officer at the priison. After the shooting, Smallwood underwent surgery at Washoe Medical Center in Reno, where he is listed in serious condition. ac· cording to the FBI. Last week, Smallwood's condition was listed as critical, but his condition is now improving , t h e FBI spokesman said. Smallwood and Scafiddi were serving 10-year terms for bank robbery at the time of thefr escape from prison. · They are suspected or taking Frognapping uncovered • Kermit shaken up after San Antonio experience SAN ANOTNIO , Texas (APl -Miss Piggy was fit to be hog· tied and San Antonio citizens were hopping mad. Kermit the Frog had been kidnapped and police, fearing the worst, said he might even have croaked. ''l'Ql just heartsick about dear Kerm,'' wailed Miss Piggy in a statement publis hed by the San Antonio Express and News. "Wby would anyone want to burt the poor darling?" she rnoped, jumping to conclusions. BUT BY SATURDAY, the 13. toot·taD, shaeey ereen version of the world'• most ramous frog was safely back at Sa11' Antonio's Witte Muaeum, 111.jbtly wone {qr wear with a broken foot ano brok~ right arm. Ker,nil, the affable star of "The Muppet Movie" and ''The Muppet Show" had been OD dis· . \ play at the museum's front entrance column, hanging by wires. Museum officials report· P1 him missing Friday night. 'We're just glad he's back," said a San Antonio pollce dis- patcher. "Everybody's been so worried about him,'' she said, adding that there had been hundreds of inquiries about Kermit's safety. And what brilliant piece of de· tective work led to the frog's freedom? "Some people came ba~k from vacation and be was just sitting in tbelr front yard," said the dis· patcher, who declined to live her name. "We don't know why someone would take him.'• &E&MIT IS PA&T of a travel· IDC exhibition, "The Art of the Muppet.a" wblcb opened April • at ~e Witte Museum, said John Regnier. mus~um public re- lations director. The exhibition bas been ln Los Angeles, Chicago, Denver. San Diego and Minneapolis, and in· eludes ,graphic wall murala, a photographic presentation de- picting "Pigs in Space," and other audio-visual materials. ~ Man stabbed in Santa Ana; suspect held A 21-year-old man was stabbed to death in front of bis home late Saturday niaht after becomlna involved in an ar1ument with another -man, Santa Ana POUce said. OUtceu 1ald Ernest D. Ramlrea was fatally stabbed ln the 1lde and neck with a four· Inch folcllnf knlle while be stood In fr01Jt of · hll home at n• £, Walnut st. with hil brother uc1· several friends. Booked at Oranae County JUI on 1U1plcloa of murder wa• AUIUIUn laD~, II, allo ol. Banta Ana. Police taid Snc.do and aDDdMI' man ._. IDID tbe drlvway ..S l*ame taftll• lia~dllllimlrtS. WbO~._torc~ clrtrilti. part in a stnng of bank robberies since their escape, the FBI SPokeman said, the most recent in San Francisco April 14 when two men fled on motorcycles with nearly$25,000. Wrong tum brings alert SACRAMENTO (AP) -The U.S. A1r For~e says two elderly women "made a couple of wrooc turns" and drove up to some B-52! that are on constant alert to counterattack, s upposedly with nuclear weapons. M atber Air Force Base in· formation officer Chuck Muston said that the wbite·haired women were "spread -eagled" against their orange sedan and searched before being releaaed. courts are not required to wait un· tit the damage is done.•· Tbe appeals court quoted a court-ar.pointed psychologist in discuss ng the · 'social stigma" at- tached to homosexuality -and the possible ruture harassment it could mean for Shannon. A..:cording to the appeals court, Ms . Stevenson worked for a Ume in a lesbian bar and openly acknowledged her lesbian re· lationship with her live-in lover, including the performance of what the court called a "mock wedding." The court noted that Ms. S tevenson denied any overt lesbian r e lationship in her daughter's presence, adding that there was no proof to contradict s uch testimony. IN SEEKING SUPllEME Court review. lawyers for Ms Stevenson argued that the state courts had deprived her of equal protection. ·'This court must not be misled by whimsical incantations con· cerning 'social stigma.· Even if stigma or harassment could con· stitute a danger, no such harassment was ever shown \D be a factual matter in this case." the appeal said. "Rather, these words were in· te r jected Into the record by &upposlUon and prejudiced im· aginatioo," the lawyers arg~. The Supreme Court bas refused to study "gay rights" •in~ the tustices ruled in 1961 that alient found to be hom0Mtual1 could be deported as pen:ons "afflktecl wilb a pay c h o pathi c personality." The American Psychiatric >J. sociation since has rebutted the court's finding, voting in UJ74 to eliminate homosexuality as a mental disorder and reclassify it as a "sexual orientation dis· turbance.'' room with his hands held high. Deputies quickly handcuffed t~e ~narmed suspect a nd put him m a patrol car. They said a portion of the money taken in the holdup was recovere~ · A SHERIFF'S sergeant again . used a megaphone and ordered a ny remaining suspects to e m erge from the restroom. Wh e n none did , officer s charged the restroom doors. and found the rooms empty. Sheriff's Lt. Andy Romero said 10 plainclothes detectives were conducting a door -to-door search of the community for the two men · He s aid the S he riff's de- partment SWAT team is on · standby in the event the two SUS· peels are located From Page A1 ASSAULT • • Man ager Woollett would do so While s ome City Council members didn't learn of the in· cident until Sunday, the press didn't rind out about it until Monday Irvine police Chief Leo Peart said that press notification "wasn't a high priority." IRVINE CITY Manage r Woollett was unavailable for comment this morping on why there was a delay iQ notifying Ci· ty officials and the public of the incident. He 1s preparing a n;port on the case and how it was handled by Police Chief Pearts Questions have been raised in the ~ommunity regarding Pearl's handling of the case in- volving Anthony, who wasn't ar-~ rested until 35 hours after the al· leged assault. Cubans grab 4 U.S. sailors HAVANA CAP ) -Cuba n· authorities have arrested four American sailors who strayed into Cuban waters from the. . Navy's Guantanamo base on Cuba's southern coast, the U.S. interests aeetion said today. An official of the section, the American diplomatic representation in Cuba, said the four were held at Boqueron near the naval base at the eastern end of the island. A Cuban foreign ministry of. ficlal acknowledged the sailor& were ln custody. I ---------------Bout uith depressio'n lost---------------. Dist11rhed Viet. vet kills wife, • elf COLUMBUS, Ohio <AP> - Gerald W. Highman loaded a shotgun no one knew he had, shot his wife, then called hrs father. "Dad, did you get a good night's sleep?" he asked. "Yes," his father answered. "I just killed JoAnn," Gerald said in a calm voice. Then, Merril Highman re- members, his son said he was go- ing to kill h1 ms elf. "OH, MY GOD, no. Jerry. Please don't do it," his father begged. "I tried to talk him out of it; said I would come right over But I knew he would not wait." Merril Highman and the police found the couple, both 28 years old, in the bedroom. JoAnn Highman was dead at the scene. Gerald died a few hours later Saturday a t a hospital. Mrs. Highman's 5-year-old daughter, Carri Kidd, was asleep in another room. Gerald had asked bis father to take care or her. The shootings seemed especial- ly tragic to those who knew Highman, because after 10 years of depression and flashbacks stemming from his combat ex- perience in Vietnam, he seemed lo be doing better. He had a steady job, married his childhood sweetheart s ix months ago, and was seeing a cou.bselor regularly. Highman was 17 when be fought as a Marine infantryman in Da Nang and Quan& Tri Province. He was wounded twice durmg tus Vietnam duty. whfch ended in August 1971. LAST APRIL h e fold a Columbus newspaper he was driving around the city when ·suddenly be thought he was in a rice paddy. He beard sniper fire and saw helicopters. He even asked a farmer for a gun to pro- tect himself Crom the Viet Cong. Similar flashbacks and nightmares plagued him for years. ·•He was pretty well mixed up when he came home," his father said. ''He'd do good and then no good. It just went on for 10 ye an." A U'M'LE MORE than a year ago, Highman began seeing a counselor at the Operation Outreach Vietnam Center in Columbus. His parents said Gerald seemed lately ' 'like his happy old self.·· He "seemed to be coming right along. But he still had his ups and downs." said his counselor. Russell Lynch. "It was hard for him lo accept survival." Lynch said he had no indication Highman planned a violent act. "Usually there is some hint to let us know to look at things,'' Lynch said. Highman had begun to give away various possessions several months ago "but it was rational and appropriate when he ex· plained it." MERRIL HIGHMAN said his son sought medical treatment at the Veterans' Administration Hospital in Chillicothe an March "They talked to him for about to minutes and told him to go to the VA clinic at University Hospital." Highman said "All the clinic did <See VET, Page A2> Dramatic manhunt in S. Laguna Councilwoman raps manager B:v RICHARD GREEN Of llM D ... y P'I ... StaH Irvine City Counc ilwoman Mary Ann Galdo said today that City Manager William Woolletl Jr . u sed "amazingly bad judgment" in not quickly notify ing City Council members of the assault with a deadly weapon Half inch of rain for holiday For all the c loud\•, wet weather over the Easter we.ekend, Orange County received less than a half inch of rain. according to the Na ti on al Weather Service A weather ser vice spokesman said the showers would be moving eastward lo Ari ion a today, leav ing only a slight chance of rain tonight and Tuesday Temperatures Tuesday are ex peeled to be in the mid 60s. with fair weather predicted. The weekend rainfall of 39 inches brought the year's total to about 10.5 inches. spokesman said Normal rainfall for th1s time is 11 95 inches J Sherman Denny, a Hunt- ington Beach resident who has kept rainfall records for the past SO years. said since 1926 there have been only ll sunny Easter Sundays in Orange County "It didn't always rain. but sometimes the fog was so thick outdoor Easter sunrise services had to be moved indoors.'· Denny said." My advice is not to plan for good weather on Easler " Two Mesans tracked in gun death Two young Costa Mesa men are .being sought today as suspects in theshootingdeathofa31-year old man last Monday evening in the parking lot or a Costa Mesa restaurant. Armed with warrant.a, local police combed Costa Mesa and the Sacramento area this iteekend for' the two men - Samuel MODSQ<>r, 18, and23-year- old Ra mi DarWlche. COSTA MESA police uaert the men are linked to the abootin& of Carl Lawson, round dead laat ctoesday momina ln his c:ar In a commerclaJ complex on E&ncer Avenue in Santa Ana. . At first, Santa' ~na pol(ce '-•ndfed the cue but were unable to determine where Lawaon bid • been killed. Wter.ln tbeweek, two uni.dendlled wltoeu" ln!dnned pallce~y had aeen tbHhocidnl. • ACCOf'Cllfta to their •tat.menla, pollcuald, LaftOD and two._,.. ••n pulled Into lb• Harlir BOulevard parklq lot "of JoWa Restaurant Monday ev.a.1. -\ · • Tbe wim•e1 ta1d Offtffn U., ••• t.bne IDla ltart to II* .... ''" •SMNS. .... AJ) case involving Mayor Art Anthony. She said that. had they been notified . they could have telephoned pre ss representatives and alerted them to lhe situation. ''FRANKL V, IT'S ridiculous that some of us weren't advised until Sunday," added Counc11man Larry Agran "Common sense and good gov- ernment ought to suggest the importance of advising the City Council members and the press of major events of an apparen- tly criminal nature in the city." Mrs. Gaido and Agran said they learned on Sunday. April 12, that Mayor Anthony was un· der arrest for allegedly beating his wife, Elaine, and inflicting a s uperficial gunshot wound on her head on April 9. "It is almost insulting that here there was a Chamber of Commerce Chili Cook-Off on Saturday where the word was c1 rculat1ng concerning this dangerow. incident and nobody ha'd the presence of mind to advise the uninformed City Council members, .. Agran said. Councilman David Sills said he learned about the assault with a deadly weapon case at the chili cook-off COUNCILMAN Bill Vardoulis found out about the incident on Thursday night. shortly after it happened That's because Mayor Anthony asked Vardoulis to come over to his home after the alleged beating and shooting Vardoulis said he didn't quick- ly notify other City Council members of the incident because he assumed City CSee ASSAULT, Page A2) Sheriff's deputy keeps shotgun at the ready as robbery suspect surrenders m ::;outh Laguna. Park hires ambulance Disneyland officials have hired a Tustin ambulance firm to serve the amusement park but contend the move is not in response to the recentdeathsoftwo park patrons. Park officials say Med ix Ambulance. a 3-year-old firm with four ambulances, began service last Friday which calls for a driver to be on duty starling half an hour before the park opens un· til half an hour after closing time. The ambulances service will replace Disneyland's own medical van, which is equipped with oxygen but no other Life· saving equipment and no siren· AL FLORES, a park spokesman. said Medix will serve the amusement park until officials decide whether to equip their van with lights and sirens. Disneyland came under criticism because paramedics were not summoned in two recent cases in which persons died. Instead, a park nurse ac· · companied the individuals -one a stabbing victim and the other a 34-year-old woman who collapsed -to the hospital in the Dis· neyland van. Flor es denied that the park has a policy against sum· mooing paramedics. He said the park nurse is left to make a de· cision on a c~e-by-case basis. "But we have re-emphasized to our nurses that there is a new paramedic station that is close to the park," commented Flores. DISNEYLAND officials are scheduled to meet with Orange County medical leaders to dis- cuss the park's medical policy. The family of stabbing victim Mel Yorba of Riverside has filed a $60 million suit against Dis- neyland over the medical care ls· sue. Seko of Japan wins Boston Marathori ~ BOSTON (AP) -Toabibiko In addition to runners, there Seko of Japan, after letting four-were 3> wheelchair entrants. time winner BUI Rodgers and Crowds estimated at more others set the pace, turned on than one million lined t.be course the steam and puJJed away ln tor the race, held each year on tbe last miles to win the 85th Patriots' ~ay. a leaat holiday in Boston Marathon today. Masaachuaettl. Seko'a time was two hour• The weather wu cool with the ntne rnlnutea 20 aecondJ the temperature an>UDd 50 and the belt Ume recorded in t.b6 United •kY wu JDOlt1y overcast with an States. _ L oeca•ional 1prinkle. . Cr~ Vtrlf,n ol IAbanon, Ill., ' City police bad threat~ned to waa aecon<l, and Rodaera. •ho dlarupt t6e tace, but decided bad won the 1 .. t th.ree Bonoa t.bq woakS Nf\IH overtJme duty Marathon.I, came in thlrd. ln•tHd. However, a poUce Seko beat the record time ol tpolreslDa.n Hf4 the event waa 2:ot.2"1e« by Rod1en in 1m. well cover.a antway. Tbere were d,148 otrJclal TM poUce action waa aimed eatran&I in the •mile, •1ard at ~ tbe Neelll lay(lff Of race, i which •tarted In U11e IOO offlHn and \be planned COWll~, clmbld the ....,_ layoff ol JOO mort becaUM Of• hllll ol Bolt0e'1 111Wbl and bud11t 1ca~ptM by ended la t.H capital at tlll• tax·eUW.., a~. PnadtiiUal ~. , Tiie Glarattiaa MIAD In llrf, Mo ..-~Amlto tM leW at wbea U barilJ atbtet.. ran CooUwa ~ ta .......... alOGI UM petlll PaDI 8"ttn toolc 11 .... illiaill i.o ..... blldre to warn ~ ot 8rtM la-... _.. . ..... San Juan robbers pursued Bv STEVE MITCHELL or Ill• D.Cly PllOI Stall Orange County sheriff's dep- uties were conducting a house- to-house search of upper Three Arch Bay in South Laguna to- day, se1:king two men they believe robbed a country club of $4,000 A third s uspect , who barricaded himself inside the women's restroom al Tbree Arc h Bay Service on Coast Highway, s urrendered to dep· uties who s urrounded the station armed with shotguns and band weapons. Pacific Coast Highway was blocked off more than an hour before the man surrendered. Sheriff's Sgt David Wheeler reconstructed this m orning's events lhis way THREE MEN, one armed with a rifle, e nte red the pro s hop at the San Juan Country Club in San Juan Capistrano at about 6·20 a.m . demanding cash from a clerk. A utho r it1es broadcast a des cription of the getaway car. and Laguna Beach motor officer Don Coleman, who was riding to work. saw lhe car idling at the service station at the entrance to Three Arch Bay Coleman said he saw one man enter the res troom of the station. while two remained in the blue Chevrolet The motorist and a passenger apparently spotted Coleman. and sped from the station. leav· mg their companion behind. THE PAIR turned left into Up· per Three Arch Bay, blowing out three tires on metal spikes that line the exit to the private com- munity. Coleman pursued the vehicle on his motorcycle, and later chased the suspects on foot after they abandoned the damaged car. Meanwhile, 10 sheriff's units and more than a dozen armed deputies surrounded the Shell station, ordering the occupant to com e out of the restroom with hands up. Afte(" a lengthy delay. the sus- oect emerged from the ladies CSee HOLDUP, Pa1e AZ) llAICI cour WfATlfl Cleartna tonight, sunny and a Uttle warmer Tues· day. Lowa tonight 42 Ilona the coast, 50 inland. iji8hs Tuesday 6S to 70. · llllDf llllY A writer taM,. a ""JI look at tM time t.ot IJ)end lttUld· hag , fiutng, poci?to, oU to' waU /or .omethifto. s .. Pao• A1. 11111 ROY AL ANNIVERSARY -Frank Sinatra (left) and his wife, Barbara, host a 25th an- niversary party for Prince Rainier and Princess Gr ace of Monaco in the entertainer's Palm Springs home. Sinatra co-starred with the forQler Grace Kelly in her last movie, "High Sbciety.'' Tbe Santa Ana-T\llUn Com-11uanlty HoapltaJ aot a new eam. and a new noc-proftt corpOI'•'-' ttructure tod~y. Directors of the hospital held a breakfast meetina at the · Sadd.leback Inn ln Santa Ana to announce that tbe hospital will henceforth be called Western Medical Center. Poto~ac yacht up for sale SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Someone with a spare $20.000 might want to bid on the former presidential yacht Potomac, a fa vorite of FranlClin Delano Roosevelt. when it goes on the auction block in Oakland on Tues· day. George Brokaw. U.S. Customs Service disttict director. said the Included '"1\ter tbe new eorporate umbrella wiU be the Ul·bed Santa Ana Convalescent Center, aJao renamed today as tbe Bartlett Center, and five tertiary health care services. Wayne Schroeder. ex- ecutive director of the hospital said the new arrangement will increase administrative cosl· cutting while the name will reflect various countywlde services provided at the hospital, which is near the border of Santa Ana and Tustin. He sa1d only about 65 percent of the hospital's patients come from Santa Ana and Tustin. THE NEW corporate structure also will increase the organization's. chances for ex· panding into the affluent Irvine· market. he said. By establishing the corporate structure separate from the hospital, &hroeder said officials hope to dispel concern that the existing hospital would simply be taking over new turfs by moving into Irvine. . ... : "'l'IUI demonst.ratet that they (tJ•• bolpitaJt) .,.. •eparate." Schroeder laid. . • THE FIVE HEALTH care . aervJces included under the new corporate umbrella lncJude the Orange County Rheumatology- arthritis Institute, regional al· . lergy and clinical immunology · institute, respiratory disease management center, Southern Callifornia Infertility Institute· and the Orange County Regional Head and Neck Institute. The Bartlett Center, a 24l·bed convalescent home. is named after Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bartlett He is co-founder and chairman of the Board of Century 21, a national real estate firm. The hospital had no choice in changing its name. A Superior Court ruling last year ordered SATCH to find a new name because its title was too similar to the existing Tustin Communi. ty Hospital. Frognapping uncovered vessel, which was seized Sept. 11 ' in a marijuana smuggling case p . e e s and sank March 18, will b~ sold at · r1s 0 n eQcap Kermit shaken up after San Antonio experien ce SAN ANOTNIO. Texas IAP> -Miss Piggy was fit to ~ ho1· tied and San Antonio dliuns were hopping mad. Kermit the Frog had been kidnapped and police. rearing the worst. saJd he might even have croa1ted ''I'm Just heartsick about dear Kerm." walled Miss Piggy in a statement published by the San Antonio Express and News "Why would anyone want to hurt the poor darling? · she moped, JUmpmg to conclusions BlJT BY SATURDAY, the 13· foot -t1lll , shaggy green version of the world's most famous frog Santa Anan held in knifing death A 21 -yea r o ld man was stabbed to death in front of his home late Saturday night after becoming involved in an argument with another man. Santa Ana pohce said From Page A1 ASSAULT • • Manager Woollett would do so While som e City CounciJ members didn't learn or the in- cident until Sunday. the press didn't find out about 1t until Monday. Irvine police Chief Leo Peart said that press n otification "wasn't a hi gh pnority " IR VI NE C I TY Manager Woollell was unavailable Cor comment this morning on why there was a delay in notifying ci· ty officials and the public of the incident. He is preparing a report on the case and how it was handled by Police Chief Pearls. Questions have been raised in the community regarding Peart's handling of the case in· volving Anthony. who wasn't ar· rested until 35 hours after the al· leged assault From Page A1 VET •.• was push pills over to him." Tom &ott. an administrative officer at the Chillicothe hospital, said Sunday that records showed Highman sought treatment for a neck and arm injury he sustained on his job in 19"/8. The office con· firmed Highman was given an ex- amination by a medical doctor and referred to the outpatient clinic. The records did not show a request for psychiatric treatment, the officer said. Lease sites grow WASHINGTON <AP> Interior Secretary James WaU, despite mounting pressure from environmentalists, baa added two new oClshore oil leases to the five ca.tready proposed along the California coast ln a bid to open the state's enUre coastline to oll drlWna. The exact areas to be leased will not be known for about two years. °"ANOE COAIT lilly Plat Officers s aid Ernest 0 . Ramirez was fatally stabbed in the side and neck with a four· inch folding knife while he stood in front of his home at 614 E Walnut St. with his brother and several friends. Booked at Orange County Jail on suspicion of murder was Augustin Saucedo, 23, also of Santa Ana. t>olice said Saucedo and another man drove into the driveway and became involved in an argument with Ramirez. who criticized them for careless driving. Saucedo allegedly attacked Ramirez with the knife, then fled to a nearby house. where he was arrested. From Page Al- HOLDUP • • room with his hands held high Deputies quickly handcuffed the unarmed suspect and put him in a patrol car. They said a portion of the money taken in the holdup was recovered. A SHERIFF'S sergeant again used a Olegaphone and ordered any remaining suspects to emerge from the restroom When none did ; officers charged the restroom doors. and found tbe rooms empty. Sheriff's Lt. Andy Romero s aid 10 plainclot]les detectives were conducting a door·to·door search of the community for the two men. He said the Sheriff's de· partment SWAT team is on standby in the event the two sus- pects are located. Sexual action course at OCC A four .part se rie s, "U ndersta nding Sexual Interaction," will be presented at Orange Coast College on Thursdays this spring. Admission ls without cost to the series, beginning Thursday and meeting on suf.._cessive Thursdays between ?:ao an~ 9:30 p.m. in Fine Arts Hall 119. Lecturers are Jim Howalskl, counselor and mental health team therapist, and John Flowen, clinical psychologist. Information may be secured by callina 556-5880. was safely back at San Antonio•s Witte Museum, slightly worse {or wear with a broken foot and broken right arm Kermit, the affable star of "The Muppet Movie" and "The Muppet Show" had been on dis· play al the museum's front entrance column, hanging by wires Museum officials report- "" him missing Friday night. "We're JUSl glad he's back," said a San Antonio police dis· patcher .. Everybody's been so worried about him," she said. addi ng that there had been hundr('dS of inquiries about Kermit's safely And what brilliant piece of de- tective work led to the frog's fr('edom? "Some people came back from vacation and he was just sitting 1n their front yard," said the dis· patcher. who declined to give her name. "We don't know why som eone would take him." KERMIT IS PART of a travel· in~ exhibition, "The Art or the Muppets" which opened April 4 at the Witte Museum. said John Regnier. museum public re- lations director. The exhibition has been in Los Angeles. Chicago. Denver. San Diego and Minneapolis. and in- cludes graphic wall murals, a photographic presentation de- picting .. Pigs in Space," and other audio.visual materials. Harbor High • • semorgains U.S. finals Newport Harbor High School senior Joseph Mader· Jr. has been named a finalist in the Presidential Scholars Program, a cco rding to the U .S . Department of Educ a lion. Mader, son or Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mader. is one of 1,000 outstanding young Americans to become a finalist from among the three million youths graduating nationwide this year. Selection of presidential scholars will be made later this month by the President's Com· mission on Presidential Scholars. Presidential scholars are in· vited to Washington , D.C .. where they are honored by con· gressmen and educators. Se l ec ti6n is based on academic excellence and other achievementS' such as perform· ing arts and creative writing, demonstrated leadership ability or achievement in the sciences. Club to honor harbor scholars The top scbolars from Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar High Schools will be honored for their excellence Wednesday by the Commodores Club ottbe Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com- merce. Featured speaker at the 7:30 a .m. breakfast session will be James L. McGauch, executive vice cbanceUor at UCI. A hlghllaht will be presentation of the Agnes Blomquist Award, &l\'en annually to an outat.andlrii 1irl student, said Commodore chairman Daniel Kilmer. Tickets are available by caJtma 844·8211, Store oWJ1er abot LOS ANGELES CAP) The owner of a Venice liquor ._... ... lhOt and kllled by • robber. wbo a.llo ahOt _. WoUad4ild • cuttotll*r. TM•_.. owwaet, J .. JtOdrlf'M:I, ...... --, ••• Liquor Slon OD Llaeoln AoulevU'd fot' jUlt four m........_ police •aid. Jack London Square "as 1t Is and · t-' whereitis atthe buyer's risk." He said the starting bid is sub- ject to change but the minimum will be no higher than $20,000. The 16S-foot Potomac will be on public view at the square from 9 a. m . to 11 a.m. and the sale begins at noon. The high bidder will have to make arrangements to tow the Potomac from the auction site by Tuesday evening. Only bid,<; offered in person will be accepted and payment must be in cash. cashier's check or certified check. The money must be paid by 4 p.m. when the boat will be released President Roosevelt acquired the luxury yacht from the U.S Coast Guard in 1935, and it later was sold to the state of Mar yland. Since then, Elvis Presley, Danny Thomas and others have owned it. The Potomac was towed to San Francisco in August 1980 for re· pairs and was seized Sept. 11 along with 21 tons of marijuana and the vessel Valkyre. The Potomac was appraised at $250,000 based on representations by its last registered owner. Fl-es no Business Investment Co. Armed men rob motel Two men, one clutching a knife, surprised a Costa Mesa motel clerk early today when they barged into the office. leaped over a counter and grabbed a ring he was wearing, as well as $300 from the cash register. The bandits appeared at the La Quinta Motor Inn, 1515 South Coast Drive, at about 1 a.m., police said. The clerk told officers the in- truders did not injure him and apparently left the area on foot. uS X30 Jellyfish convoy SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The Coast Guard reported a five· mile·long convoy of jellyfish stretching south from Stinson Beach to the Golden Gale. The species was identified as "sailors by the wind" because they carry a small sail·like membrane above the s urface. condition serious A Santa Ana man who escaped from Terminal Island federal prison in February remained in serious condition today after be- ing shot in the head by law enforcement authorities near Reno, Nev., last Tuesday. Steven D. Smallwood, 23, was s hot when he tried to escape capture at a Sparks, Nev , shopp· ing mall, an FBI spokes man said. The spokesman said Smallwood was captured along with John Scafiddi, 20, of New York . Both men escaped from Terminal Island in San Pedro Feb. 14, according to Peter Hecht, public information offi cer at the prison. After the shootmg, Smallwood underwent surgery at W asboe Medical Center in Reno, where he is listed in serious condition, ac· cording to the FBI Last week1 Sm all wood's condition was lisle<J as critical. but his condition is now improving , the FBI spokesman said. . Smallwood and Scafiddi were serving IO·year terms for bank robbery at the t1 me oftheir esca~ from prison They are suspected of takin' part in a string of bank robberies s ince their escape. the J'BJ spokeman said. the most recent in San Francisco April 14 when two men fled on motorcycles with nearly $25,000. Pinup poster covers rout-e to escape • MADISON, Wis. <AP> Posters have been order~re· moved from the walls and ceilings of all Dane County ai1 cells following the weekend escape of three inmates thro gh a hole concealed by a pin-up. Stanley Klein. chief deputy sheriff, iss~ed the order after officials discovered that a centerfold picture from a girlie magazine had been used to hide a hole sawed into the ceiling of a cell. • . . The three inr.,ates in the cell fled the Jail aboui : midnight Friday and remained at large today. · Officials said fragments from a hacksaw blade were used to saw the 18-inch hole that enabled the men to reach freedom. - ----------------------------------------------From Page A1 MESANS TRACKED. • • then heard four or five "pops,", like the report of gunfire. Police said the witnesses, copied down the license plate of the vehicle and then came forward after reading accounts of Lawson's body being found . Costa Mesa police. who were handed the case late in the week, said they were able to identify the other two men in the car, but came up emptyhaoded when they arrived atthelr apartment. · The sear ch widened Jp Sacramento when police were in· formed that one of the wanted men Monsoor -had relatives livinginthatarea. But when police arrived in Sacramento, they learned tbetwo men left the area IO hours earlier. "AL'S GARAGE I 56 FASHION tSl.ANO NEWPORT BEACH (114) 644-7030 . . \ Oil .... 6 ·ft•~1r:1us I buy headacli~s The curr.eot round ot takeoven and takeover a\· tempt.a by oil companies brfn&.t to mind Gulf Oll'IJ tint, feeble effort at diverallicaticm. Cominl to U,. COD· clusl.i that it bad to get into other bulineaaet, Gull found a li•ely choice: Rlnglblg Broe. Barnum 6 Batley Circ1.11. • Tbedeal never went through ( Rinllinl Broe. ended up in the more logical, if tncompetebt; banda of1lattel. Oie toy maker), but it epitomizes the kind of t.binldllg that goes on in the executive ~ s ultesofoilcom-r., •. pan i es . Our ~l1-0 t o u g b o i I .r~t :~:~ :::~ 11u11 111111m ;c what to do with -......, the mounds of money they accumulate. THE CASH FLOW is certainly extraorctinary. tn 1970, Exxon (then known as Standard Oil of New ~ersey) .had sales \)f $16.5 billion. Last year ExSC>n'\OOk an $110 billion, Mobil $64 billion, Texaco$52billioo,Stan· dard Oil ol. California $43 billion, Standard Oil of ln-dia~a $28 billion -and so on. Of tbe top 10 U :s. com- panies measured by 1980 profit.I; eight are oil C911)· panies (only AT&T and IBM break the monotony). • ' . What with o~r crucial dependence on M1dd)e l!!~t · 011, the pressure 15 on these companies to take tbelr ex- traordinary profits and use them to develop new enqy sources. Indeed, the companies bne long argued that they need these bumper profits to do just that. But look ~t the sorry r ecord. In 1974, MobU bought Marcor, holding company for Container Corp. of America. and Montgomery Ward. Not only didn't that give us any more energy, it didn't produce any reasonable profits for Mobil. Last year, in fact , Montgomery Ward presented Mobil with a loas of $160 million. 1 IN 1'71, ATLANTIC RICBTIELD bought tbe cop- pe r producer, Anaconda. Again, oot only did tbis ac· quisition fail to improve our energy position, it did nothing to enhance Arco's profit performance. Nor did Arco make any friends in Montana wbeo it clOMd-ttte' 75-year-old smelter at Anaconda, MOPt .• claim.log ft would cost $400 million to bring the facility into com- pliance with environmental standards. Arco ;» now shipping the copper mined at Butte. Mont .. to J a)an for smelting. ·' ln lm, Pblladelpbia 's Sun Oil Cb. bad the brilliant idea of taking over Becton, Dickinson, a lea:g ~ plie,r ~medical and bospjW equipment. It m eel to < get bOld of M percent of the compan)A''s atock .., ~ presented Bectoo, l>lckinaon with what it thoue'fll was. fait accompli: "You're ours." But· the top people .i Bectoa fought bact-aod bard. Tbey went to~~ ·won their point: tbe Sun move was deelared lllepl. Tbe big oil company ba~ to back off (and thlnk maya»e ()f tlfe oil business). - STICJS IN THE SPORIGHT AMERICAN LEAD S . ! lllw'l'OM IM'l -a... -~-­~ .. --.---'Y-llocll ~ --lf-.o --•• -- 1 no 1et.n IJ 11,; 1' J 1,ttlt ,hi I IUtih ~n•1 · ' 6t I Ill J I .i n '• ' ' l .. . l~ LOW TAR CAM EL QUALITY LOW TAR CAMEL QUALITY • 4. LOW TAR CAMEL QUALITY 20 CIGARETTES (;14\M~~ LIGHTS LOW TAR CAMEL TASTE