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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-04-22 - Orange Coast PilotOH ANGE. C:OUN TY C At If U li NI A I ': l ~ N f ':> • going By STBVE MARBLE Of•DIMy .......... . He walb alo'W,y and stiffly and baa so many scars he's lost count. NB cop learns victim's pain; fights to return to force But be does wait. His fellow Newport Beach police omcers doubted he ever would again. · Sat. Gree Mattson. who deacribes himself as "mangled and bolted ba~k together.·· bas set his sishts on one iOal - 1etting back into uniform. .HIS WIFE Stacey, tells him to be thankful he's alive and let It go at that. It was three months ago on a cool January evening that Mattson was hit by a car. He was standing on a shoulder of Pacific Coast Highway on the West side of town investigating a minor collision. The car knocked Mattson off bu feet. He was thrown over the hood into the windshield and then carried down the road for several hundred feet. He was in a coma for six wee1's . The 3hyear·old policeman nearly lost his left le1. His neck was broke~. two Vertebrae were crushed, one of bla lungs was punctured and he lost part of his liver In all, he's had four operations including one on his neck that doctors warned could leave him paralyzed. It didn't. He may need a fifth operation. "PRE'ITY BAD, I guess, but I don 't remember any of it," says Ma ttson, ~ecuperating at his in-la ws' blufftop, ocean-view home in Newport. .. I'm going back to work," he says, fiddlin g with his neck brace. "The docs hem and haw a bit, but I'm going back. That's just the way it is. T he hus!~y , tnll policeman, EARTH DAY AITES -Students bounce giant ball off trampoline on UCI campus as part of the annual UCI celebration of Earth Day. the day on which environmen- talists seek to fo cus national attention on ecological is· sues. Tom Hayden, who has long stressed these issues, despite hU Injuries, looks fit. Re smiles and jokes and says he watches too much TV. He bas trouble walking and his wife says he still talks mott slowly than he did before he was hurt. He says his memory or the accident is va1ue, like a dream almost. A bad dream. "I SOaTof remember running to gel out of the way. Then the car h•t me and I remember hittins the winds hie ld. It s hattered. Then I went over the top -that's it. I woke up about six weeks later." At F o unt a in Vall ey Community Hos pital, where he'd been treated in the trauma center, doctors placed a metal bar in his skull. A 10-pound sandbag was attached to the bar to keep his spinal column immobile. His wife says l)Urses had to tie his hand to the bed to prohibit him pulling on the bar. A false move, she said docton warned, could mean paralysis. "THAT'S THE first thing I noticed," Mattson says. "I'm a policeman and a pollceman shouldn't have his hanch tied up like that. I thought someone was trying to pull a fast one." After 81 days in the hospital, most of which was spent in the intensive care unit Mattson was sent home. He say}progress has been slow and frustrating. He says he thinks of the two-acre lot he and his wife bought recently in El Toro. He planned to build his own home. He says it's frustrating sitting in a chair all day. even with the ocean view. • The two o f them la k e spoke at today's UCI observance of Earth Day and en · vironmental models and displays were erected on cam· pus to illustrate what man is doing to his environment. Events also were held at other campuses. opposite views of the 22-year-old woman c harged with hlttina M attaon . She faces felony drunken driving and hit-and-run cbarses. His wile says she's angry. She wants the book thrown at the woman. Mattson says he, too, is angry about what happened, but doesn't want to be vindictive. "l'm a victim," he says, "and as a policeman I know what a victim goes through. The truth is they don't get a whole hell or a lot." HE SHRUGS and smiles and adjusts his neck brace again. "I'll be okay, I can walk sort of," he says. "But I can't dress myseU, or make lunch. or walk up steps. I JUSt keep an upbeat a ttitude because, if I don't, I'll never get anywhere. "I just want to be normal and gel my uniform back on '· 'BOLTED BACK TOGETHER' Sgt . Greg Mattson Irvine bout kills boxer An l8·year-0ld Santa Ana man died Tuesday after participating in a boxing match during a din· ner break from his JOb at an Irvine metal polishing firm , police said today AdoUo Escobar, an em ployee o r M .P .C. Industries. 2150 McGaw Ave., complained he wea injured after the match and hla fellow employees called Orange County Fire Paramedics at 7:55 p.m. He was taken to Tustin Com· munlty Hospital, where he <lied a abort time later, police said. Polle• lnvettl•ator Dennis Howe 1Ud the cause ot Eacobar'a death won't be known uritil the com pletlon of an Oranae Count y Co ron e r 's autopsy. "AlthouJth a POiice investiga. llon is being conducted there 1s no r e ason. at this t1 me. to believe the re was a criminal violation." Howe said. Irvine police Capt. Chuck Bozza said this morning that some employees of M . P.C. industries "put on the gloves and sparred around" outside or the firm on their dinner break. M .P .C. Controller John Spencer said the employees are "encouraged to stay f\t and ex· ercixe." He said, however, that the company doesn't organize - any athletic events or buy sports equipment for the employea. He said Escobar h•d worked for tbe eompan1 since July of 1979. Police said they were unsure this morning whose Escobar's boxing opponent was. Woman dies in fire despite rescue try A 52·year-0ld Newl?Orl Beach woman was killed early today when fire spread through her Lido Is le home a nd drove back neighbors who tried to come to her rescue. Authorities said this morning's $125,000 blaze was the second ma· jor fire at the Via Lido house in the past two years. In early 1979, firemen said. Union to picket recycling event Authorities said Marianne Cahill never made it out of her bedroom in the 241 Via Genoa home which broke out in names at about3:15a.m. The victim's mother , 84-year· old Marianne Burke oC Monrovia, sustained bums and smoke in· halation in the blaze and was treated attbescene. Mrs Cahill was found in a hallway of her Lido home suffer· ing Crom smoke inhalation. They said that $40.000 fire was later de· termined to have been caused by a cigarette the woman dropped in her bed. Neighbors reported there had been a third fire in the home but authorities were unable to COO · firm that. County collection for charity stirs labor·management con/ lict Orange County employees who take time al lunch Thursday to d•nate collections of aluminum c•ns for charity at the Santa Ana ctvic Center will face an unw111al sl1ht-plckets. But the benefit for the Albert Sitton Home for abused and a ban· dolled children bas turned Into a most tmusual observance of a statewide recycling program. The recycling day was billed as part of the Great California j Resource Rally, a week·long ~ campaign sponsored by the state '"l!anel claims BillJ 'lied' Solid Waste Manaaement Board tospurinterestinr ecycling. Instead , it haa become in Orange County a mini-symbol of labor· management conflicts. At issue was an invitation from county Supervisor Thomas Riley's office to the Coors Dis· tributing Company to supervise the recycling. Coors wasn't Riley'• first choice, but two other diatrlbuting companies declined to participate. Coors. however, is tbe subject of a national boycott called in 1977 by the AFL-CIO and several other groupa who claim the company uses unfair tabor practlc•. Coors representatives w'-'> de· ny the allegatloda, appaNntJy were eager to join in the county's recycling promotiQD. Not only did WASHINGTON (AP> -The they agree to pay their usual 35 JUJtice Department, wnUn.i tbe c,enta·per·potmd of aluminum to• floal chapter to Billy Carter•• conatructlOd fund for the Albert Libyan affair, concludes there Sitton Home, they voJunteered to was no wronadoln• in the White pitch in two cents.per.pound ex· Rouse or anywhere else in the tra. Carter admlnlatratlon. But it Memben of the executive com· .aUU 1aya the former president'• mltteefortbeOrao1eCoualyC.- bn>ther lied to mve1U1aton. tral Labor Coundl met Talday )UchaeS &. St&allHsa, the nlt.bt and voted unwmoualy to JwUce Deplltl8eftt'1 chief f.n· ~ek-Tbunday•a •••t beea\114 t.tAal lnvelt.liat.or. tu.med over otCoon'part.lclpeUoa. a final reJ>Ort Tue1da1 to BUlF~arty,repretentaUvefor ~Solicitor 0-••ral Wede H. tbt ~merlcan re41eraUoa ' ol ~~=· ~..:::. =.~:..n::t.~ =~~ .. :.. .. .:•=: · ••ded not to Mek cbar1e1 bl comnaulilty;poup m1mben plan U.. cue. toplelt.titUl'IDltMnooabOur. A mwm.nt bj the c~al "W• wW '9e Otll tMn lil forft,'' dh1.110D 1aftq It,~ aa•lDe he p"'8''Fli ... :.. "ir Ult matmal ....._ dnt'°Ped Ata,......,.....eeMklllGD· "and reacb a 1o•~h1110a · da~labOr l•Hffl crlUel1ed ~, ...:.::-=~· IU M4 die=••'*" Of -2'"1e -UM f/I 1-,,,·•ra,llj • .;I~ to t.M start. btta1Millld••to&Mlf ...,_., t~ Riley, meanwhile, reportedly was on the nrgeof eallln& off the event but ultimately decided - with other board members' back· tng -to go through with it and play down the protests as a labor . Issue. He is calling attention to the event's charitable function and noting that the Coors selection waa not meant to be a statement for or against the boycott. .Fogarty also baa stressed that the picketing is al.med at Coon and not the Albert Sitton Home. Nooneelsewasinthehome. Fire officials said the Monrovia woman tried to come to her daughter's rescue when she heard screams comina from the bedroom. But the woman, authorities said, was driven back by amoke and beat. Was fUJh · .endangered? ' ! 'Rare snail darter found in other Tennessee waters ne•aee waterways. "It indicates tbat the darter ls more widespread than we orl1iniilly thought1 '' Hid Gary fflcmao. '• TVA biolo1ltt and team member. "Whether that was a naat0, I don't know," Hlckman 1ald1 re· f etrins to the anaU da,..r-dam controveny. "That wa1 tbt belt Fire officials said the cause of this morning's blaze ia still under investigation. A neighbor. lrvin JusUn, re- ported that names from the early morning fl re reached heights of ts to 20 feet and could be seen for several blocks. Fair and sunny throu1h Thursday. Lows toni1ht SO at the beaches, ~ inland. Highs Thunday UpJ"!r ec>s to mldtb. llllDITDUY DetpUe court r.#ngl, UIO lcno• a11d poltu poUctu UmUtng .trip 1«1rehe1, malt' poltce deportmnu 1UU conduct euch Horcht• - 1omeUIM• o/ bod11 CQotftte -on J>CGPW occued of ,,....., Actress IUts drug ~/i.ear.ings lfr HOLLYWOOD CAP> -Ac· ' treas Cathy Lee Crosby '> cr1t1c11ec1 a conertaaufnat corh· mlttee lnvesUgaUn1 Hollywood 0 drug ,abuse to4ay, 1a.yio1; . "Media hype a'nd tenHUonall.arn '"''.have betome more important ..,.than flndln1 solutions to pro· blema." Tbe star of ABC·TV'a "That'• , Incredible'' aeries, who bad ad· • mltted previous drug uae in '• testimony before the same , House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control in t i September, aaid ahe was refus. .• ine to tesUfy thJs t.ime because ,. "some members of tbe commit· I• tee aJ"e ualn1 tbeae hearings for their own ends. They're poliU- ' ciana." · She declined to say which membe~ she referred to, not- ing: "I don't wish to play lhal game. That's exactly what they're uking me to do. and I don't intend to stoop to dolnt it to them." Miss Crosthr, who held a news conference at the Los Anaeles Press Club before the hearings at the federal building got under way. said that when she initially aireed laat year to testify at the current hearings, she was as· !• 6ured the heanngs would be held ,fnformally at a private res· ·• idence and would be for the sole • purpose of finding ways that celebrities could help "un- popularize drug use by reducing peer pressure.·· But she said she was offended by news reports that she was . "blowing the lid off cocaine use in Hollywood," adding with a laugh "I haven't had a lid in years." Although she said she was as· sured by the committee's , chairman, Rep. Leo Zeferetti. I> i N. Y .. that the news reports had been blown out of proportion and that the original intention of soliciting help from celebrities was still in force, she noted that some committee members kept issuing press releases indicat- ing, from her viewpoint, that they intended to use the hear- ings to find out which individual celebrities were using drugs "What started out to be a nov- el idea, using ce1ebnt1es and tn· eluding the kids to help find solutions, turned into an in· vasion of privacy and an in- vasion of trust," she said. However, pressed by re · porters, she declined to charac- terize the ttearings as a "wiCch hunt." At September's hearings, Miss Crosby criticized previous gov- ernment efrorts to curb drug use by focusing on enforcement. At today's news conference she dis- tributed copies of her September statement: "Enforcement, buy. · ing up crops worldwide and con- stant seliures, coupled with an advertising and educational philosophy of scare tactics and exaggerated and false statistics, was not working." She said the one group that had not been consulted in trying to stem the problem were "the victims, the kids themselves." She urged the committee to set up investigative bodies to deal with the youths themselves to try to stem the problem. On Tuesday, committee press deputy Phil Leshin denied the probe was just an effort to single out movie stars or even the mov· le industry. "Today's session covers law enforcement, wh'at their prob· lems are. what their perception js of drug use on the West Coast. ,So it's not only Hollywood, it's the West Coast." he said. noting that future hearings will be held eround the country with sports ~<figures, business leaders, "even :aerospace workers in Miami." T our boat ibms aground I• CAIRO, E1ypt CAP> -A tour boat ran aground and partially •ubmersed in the Nile River. 1 leaving 13 people missing and I Injuring a do2en others, officials reported today. The Minlatry of Tourism aald the 90-t.on Bardees carried 83 ~1 p auen1er1, ineludln1 aqm~ . Americana, when It tan •&round .lD a raln and dutt atorm ln the I 'area of J:dlu, 513 mUa south of 1 Cairo on Tue9day. "I've never 1een 10 many eggs," the youna Newport man remarked this week. "I found Lbem in my dirty sock.a, tn my aofa, Jn the toile\-you name tt." VANDENBERG BLAMES the whole thins on hlA girlfriend from Pasadena. He .. ys she has an "interest· ln1" sense of humor. According to his explana,tlon, she purchased 500 eus, "mostly rejects," from a ranch and then spent the better part or two days coloring Lbem. •·1. was away on business," be says, "and she came in ~radc:1.~ them. When I came back, they were all over the She also left behind a sign that proclaims "Cation! Easter egg deposits." ' Vandenberg says the word "cat.Ion," which is sup· posed. to read "caution," is another example of her in-tere~ting humc;>r. He says he's a poor speller and she won't let him forget it. BUT HE'S PLENTY GOOD with his math. Aller find· ing only 426 of the 500 secreted egp, he knew he was in trouble. "There's still 74 eggs out there," be says, "and if it go~s loo long may~ I can borrow one of those odor· sniff~rs from the fire department and find them that way.' But for the time being, Vandenberg says he has plenty Oelfr ............ Tom Vandenberg ponder1 what to do with ballcet1 of egg• left him by generous Ea..ter Bunny. of eg_gs. He s tarted keeping them in a laundry basket after running out or room in his refrigerator. Asked what he plans to do with all the eggs. he admits, "I don't know." And, after a pause, "Why ? Do you want some?" • ~ew payoff 'asserted ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP). -A former state official accused of sharing kickbacks with Sptrb Agnew bas testified he never saw any money actually bein paid to the t.ormer vice prcisldent, but say1 It wu clear to hlm Agnew got a share Of Lbe payoffs. Jerome B. Wolff, who headed the State Roads Commlsalon ln 1967 -68, testified Tuesday Ufat he, l.H. "Bud" Hammerman and Agnew, a former Maryland governor. split kickbacks from consulting engineers awarded stale contracts for highway work. W our was a key witness in the trial of a .-:tvil suit filed by three taxpayers and joined by the stale that seeks repayment of $298, 110 in alleged bribes and interest from Agnew. The trial , which opened Tuesday, was in recess today to a Ito w prosecutors to prepare witnesses. Agnew served as governor from 1967 to 1968, when he left to become vice president in the NiKon administration. He resigned in 1973 after pleading no contest to an income tax charge. Airlines ruling delayed Child molest law stiffe ned Prosecutors contend the alleged kickback deal began in the mid-19605. when Agnew was Baltimore ~ounty executive, and that the pay ments continued whtle Agnew was vice president. Agnew has consistently denied that he accepted any kickbacks or other illegal payments. Decision due on commercial access at John Wayne SACRAMENTO <AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee, under pressure from militant groups of parents. has moved to stiffen the laws against child molesters Under cross-examination by Thomas R Harrison. Agnew's lawyer. Wolff said Agnew never asked him for any money and "never said to me that he was getting anything." The Orange County Board of Supervisors has delayed action until May 5 on a plan to regulate which commercial air carriers serve John Wayne Airport. ,Faced with d1((ering pro· posals, board members. as ex· peeled, agreed with Chairman Ralph Clark at Tuesday's meet- Man slain ne ar bank LOS ANGELES <AP > A s tore employee who went to a downtown bank with his boss was shot to death in the driveway of the parking lot, but the gunman and his accomplice fled without the victims' money. The victim, John Garcia, 34, had been ~arrying a large bag of coins and the store owner was carrying a small bag of paper currency as they approached the United California Bank Tuesday afternoon , said police Lt Tom Shepherd Two robbers approached the m en in the parking lot. Shepherd said. A scuffle ensued and one of the suspects pulled a handgun and fired at least one shot. hitting Garcia in the upper torso. mg that a l wo-week postpone- ment of the item was in order. Airport Manager Murry Cable has prepared a plan that would permit the introduction of Pacific Southwest Airlines to the airport, while eliminating Fron- tier Airlines and Western Airlines. Under Cable's plan. PSA is favored because it has promised to fly the new and reportedly quieter DC-9 Super 80s to and from Orange County. Frontier and Western would be removed from the airport un- der his plan beca\lae neither would comply with an Oct. 1 deadline to begin Super 80 service at \he airport. AirCal ·and Republic Airlines. both of which are purcbasina Super 80s, would be virtually \m· affected lJD(fer Cable'• propoHI until Ul88 when they would bave to compete directly with other carriers for flight authorize· lions. Haig protested SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP> -Fif .. ty·five faculty members critical or Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. are protesting his selection as speaker at Syracuse University's May 9 commence- ment. Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose district includes the airport, has offered a different airport access plan. Under his proposal, the tour air carriers now based at the airport would be per mitted to keep the flight allocations they have, but would be forced to c2n· vert their fleets to Super 80s within a tbree·year period. Action on PSA'a long.standing request to begin service between Orange County and San Jose and Sacramento would be delayed under Riley's plan, possibly for several years. Both plans are ~imilar in that the ultimate goal of each is to red uce jet noise. Under both pro- posals, overall noise levels would have to be reduced before 1upervisora could consider an in· crease in the 41 departures now permitted daily. It approved bills Tuesday re- q u1 ring prison sentences for many child molesters and finge rprinting for adults who work with children The bills, by Sen. Omer Rams. D-Ventura, are backed by such parent groups as "Stronger Laws Against Molesters" and "Mothers of Bakersfield " Gu errillas slain SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador CAP> -Ten leftist guerrillas were killed in fighting with soldiers in Tejutepeque and eight civil policemen were found s lain in San Ml\f'.lin , near the capital, army solircea reported Tuesday. Squatter's riglltS awarded Kitty, 17 • CHICAGO (AP) -Kitty can rest easy. She won't be evict· ed after all. A condominium association in the Gold Coast, a wealthy neighborhood, went to Circuit Court in December to have Kitty. a 17·year·old Angora cat, evicted. Her owners. Arthur Nasser arid his wife, Nancy. acknowledged their North Lake Shore Drive building's bylaws prohibit pets, but said they were not informed of that before moving into their unit in 1977 . Nasser also argued that Kitty, owned by the couple since she was 3 months old, "sleeps most of the time" and is both quiet and clean. The two sides reached an out-0f·court settlement this week. Kitty will be allowed to live out her twilight years in the condo while the N assers agreed not to get a new cat when Kitty dies. WolfC said. however. that it - was clear lo him that Agnew was getting a s hare of the money. In her opening statement. Assistant Attorney General Dina Motz said the three men received at least $207 .500 from consulting engineers, including $120.000 wl\ich they shared and $87 .500 which Agnew is alleged to have received directly from two engineering firms Both Hammerman and Wolff were named in the original suit. .Hammerman , a former Agnew adviser, has paid back $30,000 plus $22.455 in interest and Is no longer a party to the suit. The state has agreed to drop its clam against Wolff in return ror his testimony. Once WolH is dropped as a defendant, only Agnew will be left. making him the sole target of the state's attempt to recover the $298.110, which includes $177 ,500 in alleged income plus interest. Mrs. Motz said the state may raise its claim later. "It Is clear that in abusine his high ortice, defendant Agnew seriously injured the people or Maryland." she said, contending the alleged bribes resulted "in h!&her contract p_rices fo r inferior work or a loss of the best bargain -or all or these things." According to Wo lff , Hammerman came to htm in early 1967 to propose that after Wolff selected potential recipients of co.nsulting contracts. Hammerman would solicit them for payments of 3 percent to 5 percent or the total contract amounts. FOUR DAYS O•LY THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY: APRIL 23·26 I ' I l I .... .,.... Richard Barley proposed to Nina McKenzie and she wasn't going to let him off the hook -even though he was 2.000 miles away. marooned on icebound Coast Guard ship that isn't expected to be free until June or July. So Nina rabove. Laughing over microphone at Richard's"/ do." talked friend Bob Winters r hoU:ling mike J into arranging the nuptials via ham radio . Siar /OLJeS I gunshot charge Rock star lkt> Turner, who with his ex -wife Tina gained fame with such hits as "Proud Mary·· and "I Want lo Take You Hi gher," has been charged with as· sault with a deadly weapon in the shooting of an Inglewood ne ws paper de· livery man. Police said delivery man Andrew Francis had ac· cidentally hit Turner's dog wilh a thrown newspaper in December He was confront ed ou t s id e Turner 's apartment house April 13, when Turner started yelling a bo ut the December in- c ident. detective Ruu Enyurt said. Francis is a deliveryman for the Daily Breeze, a Torrance news pa per Turner, 49 . who was divorced from Tina Turner in 1976 and has si nce re- marrit.>d. was rclea~ed on ·$1 .500 bail Agriculture Secretary John R. Block paid his expenses to finish 3.387lh in the Boston Marathon. says aide Dave Lane. Block. a 46·year·old jog- ging enthusiast, was timed of- ficially at 3 hours. 6 minutes and 46 seconds in the running class ic Two aides with Block al&<> paid Uleir expenses .and t.ook vacation time for the trip, Lane said." CabJnet officers are exempt from the law re- quiring use of vacation time for pl'rsonal business Ruth B. Love. Chicago school superintendent responding to allega- tions that tistenmg de- vice' had been /ound in her office. la.ughs ar sign she found at her neu's conferen ce: "C1ty Hall rmc ruphone ... YellowstO~e gets Republican activist Maureen Reagan, the pres- ident's oldest daughter. says she will be married to O r ange County law clerk Dennis Renll on Saturday instead of Friday ror con· venience's sake. The ceremony was de· layed one day to t•oi n cide with lhl' re<'ept1on after White House doctors said the president would be unable to travel to the West Coast The wedding of the 40 year old Miss Reagan and 28-year- old Revell originally had been set for Fr1dav so President and Nancy Reagan could attend while en route to a\ met•ting with Mexico's Pl-cs1de nt Jose Lopez Portillo. A reception with some 70 guests. including M 1 ~s Reagan ·s mother actr('Ss Jane Wyman, was set for Saturday Queen Elizabeth II celebraled her 55th birthday with most of her family at Windsor Castle "'est of London With her were Queen Mother t;lliabcth; her husba11d. Prince Phllip; her young sons. Prince Andrew and Prince Ed"ard. and her daughter. Princess Anoe, with her son. Peter. Assoc1at~ Press newsman James Boardman of Salt Lake City was critically in- JUred when struck by the pro- pe lier of a tw1n·en gine Ceuna cargo plane at Burb&nk Alrpon, a family member said. Boardman, 29, was listed in critical condition following eight hours of surgery at St Joseph Hospital in Burbank. snow County mulls failure to report property transfers Orange County oflic6al1 think they can grant exc:ep\lon1 to most ot the 1s.ooo resident.I who don't want lo pay penalty tees ror ramna to report property lransfera aince Propositi9n 13 waa ~nacttd. But, a. the county 8oatcl ol . Supervisors learned Tueaday. no one is sure yet who should de- cide. The supervisors were advised Tuesday. by representatives from the County Counsel's Of· tJce that they can 't ma'e blanket exceptions. as proposed by !he county Assessor's omce. THUS, THE SUPERVISORS gave leaders of those two offi ces three weeks to meet with of· fi cia ls in the County Ad· ministratlve Office to recom- tnend a better. or at least more legal. system . The state Legislature has ruled t~at any property transfers OJI.tit bl report~ to the assenor'1 of· ftce. Project ManaJer Howard Whltoomb uld the rule WH made because auess~ents jumP' to "'Jaf'ket rales once owne,Shlp ct\an&~ P~alty lor f&Uure to report • tra~ater is either 10 percept <>I the tax or ttOO. whicbever 11 great•r1 But Whjtcpm b said the legislature left a loophe>le tor persons whO think they had a good reason tor ttot notifyin& the count)I. THOSE P ERSONS ctln seek exceptions from the supeFVisors by demonatratlng "reasonable cause," which may mean they didn't know about the law. Whit- comb said his office has 13,000 petltlons for exceptions from 24,000 property owners who foailed to report transfers in 1919. The first batch of 2.800 ap- $500,000 P ROJECT pUcaUons tor exceptions~• sent Tuesday to the a~rv The ass sor·~ oflfce had reco . rnended approval. But the action was postponed because of 1 County Cou.nsel op6nion tbat each application muat be re vieweet for its reasonable c••· f>tpub' 'C•unt~ Coun•el Lon W~eon aaid·tome or the •P$)11Ca· tJona. didft:t include any reason why the transfers weren't re· ported. HE SAID THE STAFF cnem- bers -are expected lo devise some review panel to look 'at each application to meet the in- tent of the law Wbitcomb said workers in his office don't dispute the require- ment to review each application. but said it would be a conmct of interest for them be<'ause they have advised property owners to seek exceptions Hall repairs 'on time' After four months of dis- ruption. a $500.000 project to bolster the ~tructural integrity of Orangl' County government's Hall of Administration is near- ing romplel1on. Ralph Clark, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors. an- nounced Tuesday that the board "'ill resuml! meeting in the three-year old fi n· story build· ing May 5 The board since December has bt>en meeting at the old count ~ llall of Administration. now the home of the county Human St.-rviC'es Agency JOHN FRANKEL, of the coun- ty General Services Agency facilities d1v1sion. said the first phase of a three-phase S1 million proJect to repair the building was completed on lime and within the amount budgeted · He credited the general con tractor. Gentosi Brothers, of Costa Mesa, for m~eting the t1mt.• and cost provisions of the repair work contract The initial phase of the work involved the installation of large diam et~r s te('I cables to tie together exterior walls on the building's second. third and fourth floor~ THE CABLES WERE tl'ns1oned after they were in stalled a process similar to that used in tht.' construction of highway bridges. The remaining $500.000 in work \\Ill JO\oh·e 1mprovt>ments lo tht.> shear walls in the core of the bu1ld1ng Consultants di· termincd thosl' walls t'ould ('01 lapse in the event nf 3 major ea rthquakl' Far lt•ss d1sruptmn "'111 Ol'l'Ur Frankl'! said For that reason. publil' us(' of the building will again be permitted while work 1s in progress Tht> hall localed in the SJnta An.1 Cl\ll' l\·nter tomplex. wa., construc·tl'd at a cu~t of S8 9 million ('1msultants said the uni que. IO\'t•rted pyrafn1<J shape of th<• struC'lurl' tontrihult•d lo 1ts structur;il fla\\s NOW threatens protest By O.C. HUSTINGS Ol"tH Delft ...... itaH Memb()rs of the National Organization for Women <NOW I a re threatening to demonstrate Saturday at a Carl's Jr. restaurant in Newport Beach The women say they don't care for bur,er chain owner Carl l(arcber'11 views on abor· \lot\. < .. • • REP. JERRY Patterson wiU talk to cert1f1ed public accoun· tants Thursday night about how rinancial institutions. specifical- ty Engmeers Club • • CECIL HICKS, Orange Coun· ty's district attorney. will dis· c uss "Violent Crime · Is Society's Response Ap propriale?" wheo he appears next Wednesday a\ a Town Hall h.aocb~ Coitta Mesa. !tick.a, the count,, .. ewer &>tW· ecutor, is scheduled to talk at 12:45 p.m. in the Balboa Room at the South Coast Plaza Hotel Luncheon tickets are $11.50 per person. Reservations are needed. Call <2131 628·8141. • • • ly savings and loans. are likely lo fare under the Reagan ad- ministration Patterson. a member of the SCIENTIST AND political ac Financial Ins titutions subcom· ttvist Freeman Dyson will speak m1ttee or the House Banking, on "Science for Science's Sake L a g u n a :-.: 1 g u l' I R t· p u b h c µ n Women Thl· ml•cting will bt' 1n tht· community· room at Republk Federal Savings, 30212 Cro\\n Valley Park"a :> Laguna Niguel The pubhc I!> invited A cate~d luncheon will folio\\ the mom.lng meetin1. Reserva- tions at SS per J)eNOD aht>uld be made by ,Sa,utday. CaJ.L Mrs. Am es Crawford. 496-0778. or Mrs. MitchelLSlayman. 831-3514 • • • P,\TRICIA PHii.LiPS, Mar) Lt•mbke and Sharon Ludwig "'°ill represent the Capistr ano Ba' League of Women Voters al the slate league conventwn May 1-3 in San Jos(' Finance and Urban Affairs Com· Public Support of Astronomy" mittee. will be speaking in at 8 p.m. next Wednesday in UC D ht Tornado watches in Texas, New Mexico Coastal ~ather Am•r1Uo An<hor- Alllevilf• All•nta Allanllt CHY 8•1llmor• lllr"11"GINln 81smarck 9o1,. Anaheim at a JOlnt dinner meet-Irvine's Science Lecture Hall. onors soug I. .. i ng of lhe Los Angeles and Tieke(s are S3 for general ad· by b loodmobile -Orange Count) chapters of the ~isslon. $1 for UCJ students and !~ !! California Society of Certified $2 for UCI staff, faculty. alumni The Red Cross bloodmobile L.•QM .. rlabte winds becoming wut•rl' 10 to 1' kMls with 2 to l 1004 wind wa"'91 In ,...,__ I IO ) 100! wnterly -t lllr°"91\ IOf\191\1 V.S. summary Showeu -thundMtllO-rt Cort· llnueci luet4a, o•er 0"11<11 of ••\lern T•••s. and lllundenllo••O •••o ootteo --11\.<..,lral Olltanoma - _.tlleHi.<n tc:anws. Torn-w•l<lw• -t In eflecl tor parr ot ttw ~ lor pam of •eJlern -~II central TuH -parts of MllMn ,..., Mulco. T~1 .... cr .... ,,...., cenlral Olcl•"°"" ..,., ncw'lleMtem l(ans•s· R•ln -. mooted l~o Ille UjlCler Mlult,lppl Vally, an• • ••• 111ow•n .,._ ~~I Ufl· lin..ed -~r.tn ,...._ wltll frtule •'°"9 ltw <tal of~·-­Soutll Utllllna Tiie P.c Ille Nor1h.-.SI Mto llH some llgftt rlin -drlUte. wlMI• IN 11or111ern ano tefllr•t RoclllH lled sc•tlered r•ln s~wert •ncl some 119111 '"°"'· V•ll-•1-Nallonal Park r_.ilO 6 ll'lc:"-S of -'"°"' onU!e9100A'ld • A Jlorm a,11..,. -....,.., OIMtral C....0• ~ ..... •Ille~· lt19 al up IO a tnd JD ... IC-Ille oorlllern Pl•l11•. T•mlM'••tures .. .,. ...... crrrn .. " ~ ~ .::.:::.... \h ....... \.,.. .. •• o ... .,, .... IImIItl ---=== the MM1IMm Pl•'"' and tower MIS ••ulppl llaHe'( to the Greai Uk•• wllll rek> .,_.,. o .. , IM Pacllk Nonll-• and the norttwm R0<.kl .. HIGlll• '" ltw !Ol -r• predicted IOf Ille Nort"98St, IM Gr .. t Uk" ft· 9lon ano Iha upper MUslulppl \lalte', In Ille IOs Ill tlle dH•rl Soulllwffl, c.tllomla and most ot llw South. ano In the \0. and IOs ........... Wlifomia ~ ••ound Illa lle11on •I " am PST r8119ff ''°"' 2' al MoftepeOer. 111., to fO at LA...-. Teus. Solltllem C.lllomte w111 be talr tll~~~a.:;.ect ,::::•,,::: tl'w ..... 11 1-'tday Tiie IOUtll COMI -----------. can HP9d ~telly toe or loW Clouch wrlnt Ml'ly .....,.,."'9 -.. .. Or8fllll c-.ty wlU llne 11\tM to- day ellCI Thllrtday ''°"' ttw .._.. 60s el t1'e bNcl"9 to IN mlf ilOt 111 Ill l•nd a...-~ tonlQl>l .SO to H • tnt•"" ••I~ •llooll4 ,.. .. hlglll II the IOI tocAey1ancl Tl\ur'Mley, wltll lows·lll lhe-. Mounlairl lllvi-In Ille 60S, lows In Ille '~ lllrwQh 'f!IUnclllY • Hort'-'! dlttott11 can .. P«t hlflfls thro11911 T,.,rway 71 to •· I-• " lo SI Soullltrn 6"ert lllflflt • to t6 l-•S61o'4, ~ort,..,.,, ...0 C.nlrat c.atll•rnle tatr 111r0Ufh 1'11\U'Mey u c• for palclly 10# <IM* 9ltd tog In coastal area• and In -lnl-,,.tteyt Partly <IOud1 -r Orl90tl oord9•. warm uvs 11\tand, Temperatures lt4T101t Ml .... « 2' IO 4t Boll on Cll•rlnton SC Cllartnion WI! Cll•v•nnc CTl1c•QO Clnc1nna11 Cl•••t-Cohunt>us O•l·FI Worth Oen.,.f OesMoi,.• Oetroll Oulllttl ~,· ~ Public Accountants. and other students. They are will roll dnto the South Coa~t , -• • • available al the Associated Stu· ss 14 dents Box Office at VCI. Medical Center grounds Friday :; !~ COl'NTY SUPERVISOR • • • in South Laguna from 12 45 t<1 ~· o 5:30 p.m ~ ~ Roger Stanton or Fountain Donors must be bct\\een ~ ,, JO Valley will be talking Fnday in GLORIA WALLS SEELYE of and 65. weigh at least 110 and ~! ~ Newport Beach about affordable As se mblywoman Mari an 10 good heal~h. -" housing. Bergeson's staff will be the prin ~ : Stanton will appear at a din-cipal speaker next Wednesday For appointments. call the i. " ner meeting of the Orange Coun· at a 10:30 a.m. meeting of the hospilal at 499-131 l. ~ !: ,--~~~~~~~~~--=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-~~~~~~~~~~......- » • .. " . ,. ,. •l .. 11 14 11 st J! 11 6S .. . .... n. 5" .. ~ ~' !: . .. .. 2t ... l! :: ~ » SI '4 61 SJ .. ., . ,, n ,, . .. SJ v •• . " .... ,. . t ..• p .. == ': If ;: ,, Ge m Talk II,' ./ (' Hl'MPllHll-."S C'<'rt1/wd (i<'mulu141.t l\(iS WHY BUY GOLD QI 0 )eWflrJI gift" Time Is pr~ci9us. And ~o is the look of diese fucredlbl.Y _ afford able Seiko watcf\es. So l•mou l• s.lk,ror tl'K' un~ omistnc precision lt achle,·es. you could ror1tt Mv. buuurut !I• ko can be. H~re. two 1upetb rerolnden. Sleek and trim allt bractlett. with 1111 th~ appeal or flnto 1ewt1ry and the heart Of• 1' jf:••I ~lko. • "'" ~1 &lw ~ o1 ~Im pnlf.wht.'fl• VtlU -.C.'l' thi<. -.lllJl. i • W.ASHJNGTON (Al» -ftnO court acUom OQ school bUJlnJ in three Acnert~aa ttllet ln three d1y1 •hare perbapl only one tre.lt: None ha1 cll••ced the ccmatitutlonat law ln tbe hotly debated lllue~ The bjjin~ C1f ac.hbol c~ldftDi care to taik>r the dt1ttre11t1on s ll ll 1'1 a v a 11 d t o o l to , remedy, lncludins bU1in1, to the deJtcre1ate tctlool dl1trieta •ffeco of tbe dia,aosed t bat u neon 1titClti012 •U1. COnttitutlollal lU. di1crhnlnat• aaatnst 1tudent1 And the Oonatltutlon, a1 admlrilltraton to be co&orb~ when u1lpln1 dtudenta and f aculcy to Individual ffhooll. Tbe "ttuu court ectlon1 .carried ilinJficant hnpact. or potential tor It, for ttboola In Loa An1eles, St. Louil and bffame of race. • Interpreted by the Supr•me re.terat Judse• 1tfll 'muat take Court, stlJl 1'equfret-1chool .. Scout aids woman from rapids ". WOODSTOCK, Vt. <AP> -Acting on instinct, a 11·year· old Boy Scout dove into the cold waters of the raame Otta· quechee River, saving the life of a Massachusetts woman whose brush with death almost tumed a raft race into a tragedy. . "I thought she was horsing around," 1ajd John Loftus, who spotted Liz Rocha of Tounton, Mass., from the river bank. "Then I saw she was turning blue. And she was beginning to panic. On impulse, I jumped in after ber. "U just happened so ta.st. Anybody would have done it," Loftus said. THE RESCUE CAME only moments after Ms. Rocha and several othen aboaro the raft were dumped into the water clurtng the Fourth Annual Ottaquecbee River Raft Race. At least three others from the raft. made of inner tubes Str4lpped to the board we~ able to right the craft and con- tinue the race. But Ms. Rocha lost her life preserver and began floundering in the rapids. AL1110UGH THE WATER was only about waist deep, slippery rocks below the rapids made the footing unsteady. . . ........... "I kept trying to find my footing. But I couldn't stand up," Loftus said. I Spectators aid John Lo/tUI, Tight front, and Uz Rocho, wearing } helmet, from foaming water! of the Ottaq~chee River near I w oocUtock, Vt .• after LoftUI rncwd the troman. He struggled to hang onto Ms . Rocha, who was too frightened to respond to his commands. • :freeze put on federal booklets I ' Reagan says too much money s-pent on public relations WA S HINGTON <AP > - "Organic Gardening : Think Mulch" and "Common Sense in Buying a New Car" may be among the first casualties of a Reagan administration drive to reduce federal spending on gov· emmentpublications and films. Charging that federal agencies waste too much money on ··un· necessary and expensive" public relations, President Reagan is or· dering a freeze on new booklets and films and is seeking reporu on how to trim existing projects. Production of films and other audio.visual products costs the government more _than SlO<t million a year, Reagan's Office of Management and Budget estimated as it announced the pr~ident's freeze. The budget office did not have a specific estimate on the cost of publishing government books. pamphlets. magazines and other printed materials. But. said Edwin L. Harper, OMB deputy director. "obvious l y a tremendous amount of money" is involved. ··The federal government is spending too much money on public reJaUons , publicity and advertising," Reagan said in a statement releru1ed by the White House press office. "While we have a duty to keep the citizens of this country in· formed about government pro- grams and activities, we should not use this as a license to produce film s, pamphlets and magazines that do not truly serve the public interest.·· he said. "During these difficult economic times, we cannot afford to waste time and money on acli vi ties that have Hmited benefit to the people of this country." Under Reagan·s Creexe , each federal agency has untll July lSto submit plans to OMB for cutting spe nding on promotional activities. At a news briefing. Harper read a few titles of government pamphlets contained in a con· sumerJn(ormation catalogue, in· cludi6g "Organfo Gardenine: Ttlink Mulch," "Common Sense in Buying a New Car," "Automotive Rust: Its Causes a nd Prevention" and "Dried Flower Arrangements · · WHILE ACKNOWLEDGING such free booklets may be in· formative, Harper questioned whelher "it is a f~eral priority to be involved in these things.·' The Defense Department, for example, publishes 645 different pamphlets and has an extensive film library, he said. Harper a.1ao displayed for re· porters several examples of materials received by the White House from disgruntled tax· payers complaining about 1ov· ernmenl spending on questionable projects. Ocala; Fla. But none rote to the level of Datloftal treriCl·••r - urlibia what lawyers c~ll l"- W•llk.Ol leaal precedent. A federal appeal.a court lo CaUf ornla over the weekend cleared the w~ tor an end to forced ~log for racial balanee in Loa A121elea, the 11aUon•1 aecond-IM1est ,8Chool dlltrict. But tbe greal victory for anti-busJhf forces fn that city offers no road map to busing opponents outside C1Utomia. The Loe Angeles controversy. over the buslna of some 23,000 students, was and is entansled ln state law and strictures of the California Constitution. Uqtll 1979, the atate constitution required even more adherence to racia1 balance in public schools than did Its federal COW'lterpah. Until then, Integration could be forced on California school dlrtricts even without proof that the racial imbalance was a product of discriminatory policies. A public referendum changed that , matching stale constitutional requirements with those imposed nationwide by the Supreme Court. The referendum result was upheld by state courts and now American Express to consolidate NEW YORK <AP> -American Express Co. and Shearson Loeb R)loa~es Inc. have announced terms or a preliminary meraer agreement under ~hich the Wall Street itlYestment firm would become an independently operat· ed subsidiary of American Ex· press. Officials of both companies said in a joint announcement that the transaction would be a tax.free merger. in which 1.3 shares of American Express common stock would be exchanged for each outstanding share or Shearson common stock. With about 15.6 million s hares or Shearl!OD common stock out- standing, the deal would involve about $875 million worth or American Express s tock. Shearson also intends to grant American Express an option to buy up to 2.5 million shares of She arson common stock for $S6 in cash per share, the company of· ficialssaid. The consolidation is subject to approval from regulatory agencies and from stockholders and directors of both companies. ia under challen1e ip the Calif oml• Supreme Court. The 9th U.S. Clrc:ult Court of ~ppeala 111t weekend merely refuted to po1tpone the dlamantlln1 of forctd busing ln Loa An1elea, where no diacrhnlnatory polices W§re proved, U'1til tbe state Supreme Court rule., The controversy appeara destined to reach Ute nation's hl1hest court same day - probably sometime later thi• year. Meanwhile, however, le&al scholars or lawyers with t.beir own buainl battles to fi1bt will find preclOUI little help in the . Los Angel~ case. In the St. Louis case, the Supreme Court on Monday refused to head off any racial desegregation plan for the city's schools that might include schools from the surrounding suburbs. The court gave no reason for turning down an emergency request from Missouri state officials aimed at temporarily blocking such a possibility -but the key may be that so far the "interdistrict" plan is only that. a possibility. At the same time, the nation's highest court refused to curtail the government's authority to go into court seeking forced busing. Again without comment, the justices refused to sidetrack the Justice Department's lawsuit aimed at forcing the racial desegregation of two Ocala elementary schools. The Marion County school district, where the Ocala schools are located, for many years segregated the races by law. The government's suit contends that the two predominantly black schools are vestiges of that official segregation. At issue was whether school districts can be sued by the Justice Department for practicing racial bias while receiving federal funds. even though Congress has banned the Department or Education from filing such suits. Although little can be read into a refusal to hear the county school board's appeal from an appellate court victory for the Justice Department, it can be slated that the high court passed up an opportunity to trim the government's authority in the busing business But that action is not likely to foreclose the same issue from returning The Supreme Court used a case from Charlotte, N.C .. to first make it clear that busing can be a valid way to achieve desegre~ation. That was April 20. 1971 -10 years ago Monday. • • St~ one eourte ~ month • EnrOlmlnt In)' WQf1dng day Of evening • New COUfMI begin each month • Daytime Of evening cialMa -..allable • Fecutty ha Ngh academic a.nd J)(ofesllonal crede~ wehaw- mo,.c:oat~ , Llebfraum41Cft but none nntr 19' f'.15 l WINE CELLAR AND ~·FINE SPIRITS PllCll~VIT .. OU6H SUNDAY MAY JID IM•LIHOOK CAlllMIT 54UY .. MON'17 • pfNtlglcQ OIPI cabero.t tt\Jt you can drink • pr cellll' ~·7.4Sf 1.Y.llAUUIU . 64.MAY llAUJOLAJS '71 • pert.ct plenlc wfne for your aprtng outlnga reg 14.60 LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two civil rights groups say they plan no further attempts this year to retnstate mandatory buslnt for scHool inteera,ion, and have • been asked by anti-busine forces to ald efforts to make voluntary integration a success. As '1,300"school children settled into new classrooms '1nder a voluntary busing plan in the n ation's second-largest school district. the state Supreme Court this week denied without com- me n t an American Civil Liberties Union petition to block tfle end to mandatory busing. before U.S. Supreme Co url Justice WUUem Rehnquist. I I 1'HE CIVIL rtahtt aroui> ~ d not ·"wish to cauae yet another pupil rea.sstanme.stt durinc the current school semester." ac- cording to a. withdrawal notice filed in Wasbiniton wf\h t he Supreme Court. Ov~ Lhe weekend, Rehnquist turned down an NAACP request to b&it the voluntary busing, but dicl not issue a ruling on t.he or· ganization's challenee. He had Purge bill off said he would do so after hear· Int from school board attomexl later this week. The first act!Qol da~ in ~ years without IJ'andator~ buslna went smootbJf Monday as 7.Jli atude n ts re t ur n e d to nelghbort\ood act\oots. Some 23,300 first-t hrouch ninth-graders at 153 scboots were involved in the busing pl~ that the school board voted March 16 to dismantle after Easter vacation. But 16.000 chose to continue riding buses to finish the school year where they beean it. "' . ~ ·tos ANGELES (AP> -An ... ,, ofliclaJ says a blaae that Jnj ured•' at l•••t 1 ven people and forced)• the evacuatl9n of 700 guetla from the 12-story Amfac Hole near Los Angeles• International Airport had the potentia l to become a mtjor diaaater. But t he deputy fir e eom· • mander, Albert ScbU,lt%, said t hat because of devastatlft& hQ~I fires in Las Vegas, tbe d• partment had It "hl&h·riae operations procedure'· that pro- vided an immediate plan or at· tack for firefighters. After an alarm warned guests of the fire that had broken out Monday in a fifth-floor room. helicopters rescued those who had escaped to the roof and others ran down stairways to the main noor. The fire was con· trolled about 50 minutes after the aiarms sounded at 2:30 p.m ACLU attorney Fred Okrand said the organization piano~ no further attempt to reinstate the program during the current school year. The National Association for the Advancement of Calored Peopl~ decided to d rop its petition, which was pending SACRAMENTO <AP> Faced with strong opposition, a Democratic assemblyman has shelved a bill to allow the Democratic Party to purge candidates like Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Metzger. The move was made Monday. R ET URNIN(f CHILDREN were greeled with orientation talks in assembly halls of their neighborhood schools . Some found themselves in slightly larger classes and others were unable to lake elective courses available al thelr old schools. SPINNING OJ Monterey disc jockey Jeff Turner has b een spinning like a record at a Cannery Row amusement park with t he aim of breaking the Guinness Book of Records mark of 312 hours. He rides from 11 a . m. to midnight daily, taking a break every 9 hours. ··Flames were pouring out the window. fire was lf\'Shing out of there ... said Maryr Mccumber. who works at a dryqJeaning shop next lo the hotel. · 'l could hear people screaming " GOP eyes reform link to school funds SACRAMENTO <APl Assembly Republican leaders say they won 'l vote for a bill to give schools an ad ditional $310 million next year unless it is accompan1eti by some teacher seniority reforms They told a news conference ttus week they want the school districts to be able to consider competence as well as senionty in layo Hs , requ1re teachers lo pass proficiency tests when changing subJects, and delay the dates for layoff notices. The Assembly Education Com m itlee this week was lo consider AB777 b y the c hairman. As· sem blyman Leroy Greene. D· Sacramento: rt is a comprehensive school financing bill U1bt would give school districts 10 percent increases in their state funding next year. T HAT WOULD cost $310 million more than the 7 .2 pet-cent increases required by current law. and $470 million more than the 5 percent in· creases recommended by Gov Edmund Brown Jr .. What we are proposing is to hnk increased school funding with badly needed educational reforms," said one Republican. "If there are no changes. no re- forms provided. then there will likely be no Republican votes for AB777 .. \ BILLS THE Republicans want · AB2086 by Assemblyman Robert NayJor, R-Menlo Park. to require school boards to consider com- petence as well as seniority .ln laying off and rehiring. AB1801 by Assemblyman Gilbert Marguth, R·Livermore, lo require proficiency tests when shifting to subjects not recently taught. -AB1714 by Naylor, lo change layoff notice dates from March 15 to May JO each year. -A81504 by Marguth. lo allow dis· tricts to dismiss teachers for lack of funds. !BIT14 by Naylor, to make il easier for districts to dismiss teachers for incompetence. Gallo farm labor vote set. aside by panel , SACRAMENTO <AP > The stale farm labor board has set aside a 1975 union election because it found that E.&J. Gallo Winery Inc . favored the Teamsters union and unlawfully snooped on the United Farm Workers The Agriculture Labor Relations Board, in a decision released Monday but dated Friday. ordered the winery to cease surveillance of and in- terfe r ence with UFW representatives, stop giving unfair support to the Teamsters and re- instate two UFW supporters. The UFW represented workers at the Gallo vineyards in Stanislaus, Merced and Fresno counlles from 1967 to 1973, when the two sides could not reach agreement on a new con- tract. The Teamsters then started organ· \ ·Go~dwater says he's candidate for Senate ' SACRAMENTO CAP) -Ending at least three months or political speculation, Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. has form a lly announced h is candid acy for lhe R e publican nomination for U.S. Se\lat.e in 1982. l n bis f orma l s t atemen t, Goldwater, wbo has represented the amuenl San Fernando Valley sub- url>s or Los Aneetes the past 10 years, made no mention of 74-year-old fn. c~mbent Republican S.I. Hayakawa, who has declared be wUl seek re· electiOJ\. i nstead, the 42-yeat-old Goldwater focuted bia formal announcement ex- clusively oft Govi-Edmu"1 Brown J r.. who la expected to a eek the D e.m octaUc nomlnatlon for 8 1yakawa '1 ae,t. "Jer:ey Brown's rtf)&Hl to com· pl,te 1cbedul" freewa1s, hi• bolUll· ty toward nuolear "wer and hla 1 e neral •a m a ll-li •be•utlful' phllo.tophy all te1Uty to tfi• f .wt Utllt tM pemor It 1tmplr out OI *' with t.ht ~tiolll lllW llP.lridml of tb• o•erw tlilfl•I •llfrt\1 Of CiMfn .... •• \zing the farm workers. ln 1973, Gallo signed a contract with the Teamsters. UFW began a strike against Gallo. When the slate farm labor act went into effect in 1975. the Teamsters , who have since withdrawn from the farm labor field, filed a petition to be recognized and the UFW intervened. An election was held on Sept. 10. 1975, and the results were contested, with the lJFW charging the company with unfair labor practices. After several adjustments, the results were 237 for the Teamsters and 232 for the UFW. The board found that Gallo violated the state labor law in August and September of that year by .. interfer- ing wlth and surveiling UFW or- ganizen as they attempted to speak with" Gallo employees. THE BOARD $aid Gallo photo- graphed its employees as they met with UFW organizers. It also said Gallo supervisor Luis Salada at· tended a union meetin& and disrupt- ed it with threatening and obscene gestures. The board also rul«d that Gallo supervisors and security guards 11· legally photographed two UFW or- ganizers as they spok~ with e m ployees at a housing area on Gallo's property. T he ALRB also .aid that Gallo vtolated the labor Jaw by at tb~ same tlrne "providing the Teamsten with preferential access \If ita employees and property, ~Y campah1n.lng on behalf of the Te•mst us •a by con- do n t n g a nd-or auis ttn• the Teamsters' coercive actiont aeainat UFW sup por ters a m on e the employees." T he board allo aaid that Ga llo violated the law by flrine employea Jesus Garcia and Lorenzo P erez because o/ uni• aotlvltlea. The ALRB ordered tbe ftnn to reinataw them and itve them back pay. TAX SHELTERS a. & Gos • Real &1ate • M 5 tomps • f::qupmenl L.cninq DIDUCTIOMS UP II..,_ T .. S YIA.I aaaAl.D L. llOZM PIMAMCl.AL •YtcH 7 I 4 /644-U07 ...... _ ........ ...... announces a new program 2nd TRUST DEEDS • No pre1111y/ANU ....... • Fllllt l\lncl•"ll • 30 yeltf 4mortind UOIQ 15yn A_.., • loan II 0.000-UOO 000 • o.n.r/NO'I Ow- • S...nv L°"n' Pu<chaw Mon.y Call Wilham B. Mitchell Call today for quote • No Qbt1gat•on trans notional tund1ng (714l 975-1128 :E:~tE:~ The Senior Citizens Trust Is proud 1 to announoe that the 1 981 Health Provider Dlrectofy la now available to ell Senior CitJzens *lhout chalge. For the substanrlil list o f physicians. dentists. and other practitioners o fferi ng their services at superb savings, call or write: Senior Citizens Trust, 1400 No. Harbor, Fullerton. Calif. 92635 Ste. 100. We will forward your l.D. Card and Directory upon receipt of your name. address. date of birth, and phone number. THIS PIO•IAM IS Fiii TO Al.L SMOIS I 7 I 4J 179-7115 Page 3 of Apftl 22, 1111 K·lttART "St»t· lngtfme llorula Buy•" adw"'*'nt the 4.50 mens Y•MCk shfrta, 3.50 tank tape •nd 4.00 athletic aholta •r• Incorrectly dHcttbed. Thia l'(ldae. la not Adldaa brand, doe• not origin• wttll~ae, fa not lanNd by Adidas and haa no •aaoddon wtth Adk:IH. We rear-t any Inconvenience thla may h.v• cauaed our customra. For Ev~ Room 1v Open Daily 1C>-6 p.m. Quality you can see, tQUCh and · Friday 'til 9 p.m. rely on. Moth~r' s Day Special $998.95 For Country ' China Hutch and "Solid Oak Table with 4 Chairs. No substitutions ---::... SOLID OAK 42" ROUND TABLE With 21 " leaf Princess Leg with four County Winsor side chairs (as shown) !r. fl fl, H ,, ·~ N 1n rt b IO 6 3 11 ti • - ., \ t I During a recent vl1lt to Orange County, the chairman of the House committee that over· 1ees reCU1ee resettlement was found nodding bis bead in agreement wltb several things local officials had to say. I · The officials claimed before Rep. Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky ., j tbat federal regulations, in many cases, are f rustratlog e!forts to ·~ res-ettle refugees. Mazzoli is . chairman of the Committee on Immigration, Refugees and International Law. For example, Mazzoli was told, paperwork has made in· effective a federal prosram to promote refugee employment. In a separate program, income ex· clusion policies have made it ap· pear some refugees are better off financially than they really are, thus making them ineligible for public health a~sistance. Ai.o tr9ublin1 t(> eounty Of. ticiall iJ lanaua1e used by the U.S. ~artment of mate to de· line .. f imily .. -wordlng that bat virtually u1ured that even I ar diltaot relaUves of persons living ln the county ean relocate here. Final))r, tbe local odtcials complaJotd of a lack of cootdination amt>ng federal agencies responsible for refugee resetUement. In the vlew of th, local of· ficials, changes in the variout programs where problems have beeq identified oould go a long way to helping Orange County re- settle the thousands of refugees who are arriving annually. It is hoped Mazzoli, on his re- .turn to Washington, can help pro- mote some action to bring about the changes those on the front tine believe are necessary. Guest UJOr.ker plan California Sen. S .I. Hayakawa has renewed his effort to win congressional approval of a guest worker program to legalize the status of Mexican nationals seeking temporary employment in the United States. His Guest Worker Act of 1981, introduced this month, would establish a five-year program un- der \thiQlt Mexican nationals who post a «SO<> bond with the United States government would be given a guest worker visa good for six months. Al the end of that period they would be required to re~urn to Mexico and their $500 bond, plus interest, would be returned. They would be entitled lo apply for another six-month work stay after one year. again posting the bond. • Hayakawa says research has shown that most ilJegal im· migrants from Mexico remain here only temporarily, returning to take their earnings to their families. Most return lo their homes permanently by the time they reach the age of 30. he notes. The guest worker program, Hayakawa believes, would fill their job needs, and the needs of Am erica n employers in agriculture and other fields , pro· t ecting both worker a nd employer by giving the immi- grants legal status. The $500 bond, he contends is about what many of the illegal immigrants pay to "coyotes" who now smuggle them ,across the border at great risk. The plan would differ from the former bracero program by permitting the immigrants to seek work in any area and in any field, rather than being assigned to a single agricultural employer. It would require payment of legal wages and the guest workers would be subject to standard U.S. taxes. Details would be worked out · by a bilatera~ commission of American and Mexican officials. Hayakawa introduced a similar bill last year. but it was blocked in the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee. This year, as a member of the majority party, he hopes for a better hearing. The bill merits at least that. As things stand, Mexican would· be workers continue to p<>ur over the border, risking substandard working conditions and always under the threat of deportation. If there is a need for their services here, and there appears to be, some legalization or their status is in order. Honor V-ietnam vets The emotional welcome ac- corded the hostages on their re· turn from Iran sparked more than a little bitterness among many wh o were sharply re· minded of the very different re· ception given returning veterans of the Vietnam war. That in turn has inspired some rather tar<fy action to rec- ognize the contributions of the 2.7 million who served, the 57,69'2 who died, the 300,000 who were wounded and the 75,000 who were l)ermanently disabled. . This weekend, proclamations from Congress down to local city councils are calling for rec- ognition of the Viet vets. Congress has declared Sun· • day, April 26, as a national day of recognition for veterans of the • Vietnam era. In Orange County, the Board of Supervisors has declared Saturday, April 25, as Vietnam Appreciation Day in Oran1e County, honorini especially the 300 county residents who died in the Vietnam conflict. The same day has been designated by the Costa Mesa City Council. Residents are urged to fly their flags on both days. This is indeed a minimum gesture of ap· preciation for the sacrifices of those who ~erved in the unhappy war, and who have waited far too long for any gesture· or publie recognition. ()pinions expressed In tt\e space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· I tw"tssed on this page are lhose of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <7Ul . ..-2.4321. j LM. ~oyd /Significant beards The beard 150 years aeo was the true. Look at those who sell physical mark of the experienced physician. culture. To men, they promiu to And l.f a young doctor couldn't grow a build it up, to women, to trim lt proper beard, he was ln deep pro-down. feaaional trouble. Patients simply wouldn't Kcept blm, accord.lna to Q. Is there really such a lhinl iJr the biltorical footnotes. Amuinc \t ls cards as "begtnner's luck"? llow little • thl•I can move the A. Maybe. But ii not, there'• at mHae~ of men. France'• Kine least one explanation for what Prancll I bad ,., ucly acar on h1a appears to be be1lnner'1 l~k. Jn ebla. He arew a beard to bide lt. So games that can be won by clever ' all the Fren<"";.pen old enoup to do blulftnc, inexperienced playen can ao 1rew beards, too. make tueh tactic• uHlest. Their ••Jtoranc. actually bandlc•~ tbe " 110lt IMQ wllh \bey .... ,. Wuer, uperta, Who Uaeref~ •lsnDlY have ••t women with they were amau.r. to play ta. carda reti r.. on xe..-.ou abou.Qd, Hrtalnly.~8ut c UDDiDI . And tbo•• ••P•rt• fOf" tbe maJortty. the for•1olnl holct. 1oqietlmea re&llle it &oo Jate. ft •h : I :· .. "' </ .. ti •J ~~ •l I •I II I •: --.JW \ Reagaµ blocked Navy game WASHINGTdN -A hospitalized President Reagan did not wait for the tragic sinking April 10 of a Japanese trawler by a missile-firing Polaris sub- marine to bring the admiraJs to heel by ordering full speed ahead on a vital sub· marine communications system they wanted stopped. . From the White House. an undated memorandum ordered Secretary of Defense Caspa r Weinberger to countermand the Navy's decision to cancel its extremely low frequency <ELF> communications system. The memo bore only Reagan's name, not hls signature, but it had been orally ap- proved from the hospital bed of the in- valid commander in chief. • · . . . There shall be no funding re- ductiorui," Reagan said "You should advise the Navy that I am not inclined to terminate lh.iB much-needed program without compelling evidence to do so." THAT PRESUMABLY scuttled the ef· fort by the admirals to play the familiar old Navy game: Put aside cUTTenUy needed projects at the expense of fund· ing futuristic systems. Surprisingly. the Pentagon civilians did not brtng the Navy brass up short; the decbion on a piece of hardware had to go all the way to the president's hospital bed. The Navy leaked the first news of th~ lo the public via no champion of the Pentagon: Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, a liberal Democrat and all-out environ- mentalist foe of ELF, a system destined for his home state. When Levin passed the word to the Detroit News. lt ex - ploded with the force of a Polaris mis· site among defense leaders on Capitol Hill. For 20 years, the Navy and a few brave politicians willing to lake on the environmentalist lobby bad preached the soundness and safety of Et.F. Witho~ it, the president cannot coin· municale with submerged U.S. sub- marines; they must come close to the surface and trail theit antennas. That 1s probably w~at happened, Navy submariners told us, in lbe East China Sea tragedy April 10. Tbe U.S .S. George Washington. a Polaris missile sub. was almost certainly surfacing to pick up new orders. Thal maneuver would be unnecessary with ELF. JN AN INTERNATIONAL emergen· cy. the president could not order U.S. strategic s ubmarines to prepare for I -,A-11-/ 1-11-11-. __.~ possible missile firings, or to rush to a new location, without risking their destruction by an enemy as they expose their surface antennas. ELF is "the critical linchpin" to wartime deploy. ment or the subs, wrote Sen. John Tower, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, in an angry note to Weinberger when he first heard about the Navy's decision. Why , then. did the Navy risk con - gressional wrath and the commander in chief's personal affront by cancelling ELF? The full reason is shrouded in Pentagon mists, but defense specialists including many submariners -say the reason was simple greed for defense appropnations. The Navy brass decided the $34 million earmarked for ELF in the com· ing fi.scaJ year couJd be used to develop a futuristic aircraft for communicating with submarines called TACAMO. Then, In another year or two, it could return to ELF, knowing that growin1 con"resslonal support of the ELF system would still guarantee delivery of the funds. c1 I N SO DOING the Navy betrayed its friends who. on April 7. bad won a ref· erendum over the environmentalists in Ashland County, Wis., where the first part of ELF as being built. Supporting ELF in the name or national security, veterans groups have spent thousands of dollars to argue there is nothing to fear from the underground antenna. ,· Th.e VFW had wired Adm. Hayward, chief of naval operations, two weeks earlier that cancellation would destroy Navy credibtlity •I The decision reversang the admirals \\tas made by the White House on two grounds First, ELF is the only foreseeable system lo give the president command-and-control access to missile- firing submarines, which are a vital part of the strategic triad: second, c r edibility of the entire defense establishment, not just the Navy. was on the line at a time the new ad- ministration is t r ying lo restore American defenses PENTAGON CIVILIANS, in distinc· tion to this While House postUTe. did lit- tle to bring the admirals to heel. Entire- ly exempted was Secretary of the Navy John Lehman, who pleaded conflict of interest stemming from his activities as a Washington-based defense consultant. Although Weinberger quietly informed Wh ite House aides of his own doubts about the Navy's decision. he did nothmg publicly lo force a reversaJ. That left 1t up to the commander in chief. The display of a decisive preai- dent able to make a quick political de· cision from his hospital bed is J.he one dividend to emerge from the ELF af. fair. What Reagan should now do is transfer some of that spirit to the Pen- tagon. Can businessmen serve ~mpartially? To the FAitor: Ab -the Blue Ribbon Committee! Now, finally. the Oranee County Board of Supervtaon la seriout about finding a site for an honest to CoodneN ffllonal airport to serve t.hb part of Soutbem Caflfomiat -or la it? Somehow it is hard for me to believe that the m~ set~ to .erve on lbls committee. no matt.er bow honest and sincere they may be (which I believe them to be). are ,olne to select the site that will best serve lbla area as our ultimate regional airport. How conceivable is It that the president of Disneyland is going to push for the only" temaOOng, 1oeical site in this area which ia Camp Pendleton? l mean, this man may be president but he sUU answers to a board of direct.ors. How are the directors going to react to a proposal by their president to put the major air transportation center for this ~rea 50 Jllil8' cloeefl to Sea World and the San Dle10 Zoo and 50 miles further from \heir Dfsneytana investment'? HOW MUCH interest will there be on the part of the Se1erstrom family to move the jet transport operationa of th.11 county away from their lapel boldln11 that almo1t bound the John Wayne Airport? Wtll Mr. Fluor really pu1b to mo•• lobb w~ Airport 50 Dill• from bJj -.orld beadquuten wbeH be 11 cWTentlJ two blocks from the airpon faciUU.? Will in fact thete well·llltentloned men seriously consider' interim Jolat aUlltary/clvillan uu of El Toro Marine find the reeional airport site that should no\ only bave been found 10 years ago but shouJd have been built and in operation by now. TOM WILLIAMS Airport Coalition Wrong punishment. To the Editor: I wu angered upon reading your April 15 story regarding the 100-year sentence given to the Vietnamese teen· age refueea for their alleged crime of MAILBOX rape. My anger did not stem from the harahness of their sentence; it is time our judicial system put some fear into the mlnd.a or·criminals. However, I am furious to think these refugees. who I consider iuests in our country, can violate our laws and then be supported by us taxpayera for the rest of their lives as they live in our prisons. If I bad a Aett •ta.Ying ln my home and he violated" ai1 rules, I would uk him to lea~. Wby t. then, can we not dePort these ref\lgeea oack to thell" own count.ryT • 1 am personally gratified to finalJy see recognition of thes~ violations. Especial- ly in view that many mortgage brokers have a fiduciary responsibility to t.heir clients and g\l to great lengths to protect their clients· interests ReaJ Estate Commissioner Fox urges an investor to review appraisals and credit reports. I suggest a potential in· vestor should demand more. In fact, by doing so. many of the abuses can be aJ. leviated in the beginnlng. Doing business with an established, reputable firm ls one matter doing business with a "crook" is another . THE REPUTABLE broker should provide not only an independent ap- praisal and credit report but an ap· · praisal done by an independent fee ap- pr a ls er who is designated and credentialed; possibly more than one credit check, and documentation verify. lng past credit history and most im· J)Ortant to the "chain of title," a Polley of Tttle Insurance. ' In the normal course of business, an in-· vestor should check out the company's references and background of its prtn. cipals. A telephone call tb the Depart· ment of Real Estate in Santa Ana wm verify lfthe company Is properly licensed or lf they may have any "unfavorable" com menta re1ardin1the company. · lf any ruort.caJe broker refuseuucb ln· quirles made~ them, stay completely away I It ls your bard tamed money, and any company abbuld, If they are worth their •alt, meuu,-. up and live an &c· countJnc of wbO they are, what they are, aa well u wbatt.hefnvntmentls. ROBERT J. SPARR, CRA I I t I I I ., AliMWNPreu A woman~ for diuaken drlvin1 ln Arlliipo.,, v,.., WU taken to the co\inly Jail, •tii~ nak~ and aearched. Sc) .,.., a woman arreated tor pl•>'IAa bee sterto too loudly. And a woman who ate a turkey aandwich on a subway. • In Fremont , Calif ., it happened to a woman who went to the police station to explain she dldn 't need a n ew doe · license because her doe bad run away. In Ocean City. N .J .. it WU a woman arre~led for soin&. barefoot OCl the Boardwalk, and in Wheat RidJe, Colo. it was a 14-year-old girl accused or steal- ing f 1.35 worth of candy bars. Despite new laws and poUcles llmltUia ati1~1eattbea, 111aa1 police cUpartmenll 1till fo~· aome people 1uapected of ml.Dor offeftMll to undm1 and aubmlt to aearcbes that may Include ln· 1pectlons of anal and "•lin•l bod)' cavities. aay the American Civil Ubertiea UnJon and the Justice Department. "The pr,actlc~ la rampant," said Hatrlet ICuJ'Juder, an of· ficial at ACLU hea4guartera tn New York. ' ACLU Offtclab say they have no argument. with the 1trip· searching of people accused of serious crimes but. malntaill too many police departments strtp- search people accused of minor offenses. ·'It seems to be strange that we require a warrant to search a Israeli Parliament blocks pork ouster TEL AVIV, Israel CAP> -In tbe Book of Leviticus, the Old Testament is abwidantly clear on pigs: "their carcasses shall ye not touch, they are unclean to you." Nonetheless, Israel's Parliament has just knocked down an attempt to outlaw pork from the Jewish state. The law was sponsored by the Agudat Yisrael party, a small faction of orthodox rabbis, and got through two readings in the House before opposition laborites and liberals in Prime Minister Begin's Lik ud bloc joined forces against it. Agudat Yisrael withdrew the proposal at the end of March. FORMER PRIME Minister Golda Meir. a founder of the Labor Party, used to tell proudly of how her father went hungry in the Czarist Russian army rather than eat pork. But the late Mrs. Meir's successors in the Labor Party argue that to outlaw pork would offend Israel's non.Jewish residents just as Jews abroad would be offended if denied kosher food. Among all the Jewish religious injunctions, many made ror general health reasons, the ban on pork has special significance. Many Jews suffered martyrdom at the hands of medieval persecutors rather than eat pork. During the Spanish In· quisit.ion, Jews who converted to Roman Catholicism continued to practice Judalam In secrecy and You can Charge DAILY PILOT Class if led Ads 642-5678 were called ~arranoes , from a Spanish word meaning swine. On the other hand, today's secular Israelis, who are 75 percent of the population, are against what Labor Party leader Shimon Peres calls "interfer· ring in the individual's dinner plate. PORK, WHILE easily ob- tained in Israel, rarely goes by its reaJ name, chazir. Instead it masquerades as "white steak," "special steak," and in one American-style sandwich shop a few years ago, as "oink meat." Parliament banned pig farm· Ing in 1956 and gave a monopoly lo two left-wing kibbutzim in re· mote areas. But no law was passed banning the marketing of pork in butcheries and restaurants. and municipalities have the final say. Tbe result is a patchwork of regulations that make pork illegal in Tel Aviv but legal in some suburbs. Even where pork is illegal, it is so popular that merchants pay the fines as though they were a pork tax. Aaron Barzilai. owner of a Tel Aviv restaurant, says 80 percent of the steaks he sells are pork, and he doesn't mind pay- ing an average of 1,000 shekels -$110 -a month in fines. Moshe Tsur, a pork supplier in Tel Aviv's Carmel Markel, says pork is cleaner a nd more nutritious than beef, and cheaper too, be(!au.se Israel lm~ pons most of Its beef. BEEF STE.K OFF per lb. any cat piece .... 09 lb. OFf per . POUCE 8A Y THE searches help' keep dru11 and weapoils out of the jails and protect of- ftcera and Inmates. "It's not meant to punish anybody," Arlington County Sheriff Jim Gondlea said. "lt'a meant to protect every body.·· Court rulln11 have generally upbeJd authorities' right to con. duct strip-searches. But the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that people who are illegally strip- searched can sue for cash damages. Lois Upton, an ACLU attorney in Chicago, s~d strip-searches can violate several con - stitutionally protected rights, in- cludiiai the gu•rantee against unrea10Dable searches. Sex discrimination was the basis of the nation's first major strip-search' case, in which Chicago poHce were named in an ACLU lawsuit a lleging women were strip-searched more often than men. IN THE YEAR since Chicago police changed their rules and offered cash settlements to 191 women, suits have prompted new search procedures in Houston, Suffolk County. N.Y .. Independence, Mo., Thornton, Colo., and Racine, W\s. And the Justice Department ~cently entered an agreement with Lee County, Fla., to limit strip- searches. Chicago offered each plaintiff S250 if she had been routinely strip-searched and $1 ,000 it a body cavitv search was done. The ACLU said the largest strip-search settlement was the $25 ,000 which Suffolk County, N. Y., authorities last month agreed to pay legal secretary Diane Sala. She was subjected to a body cavity search after fail· ing to respond to a summons she never received. "I 'm happy with the settlement, yet ... I will never in my life be able to forget the search," Mrs. Sala said BARBARA FOSTER , a criminal justice researcher for the National Confer ence of State Legislatures. said 1 llinois, Michigan , Missouri and Connecticut have passed laws limiting strip-searches, and several other 1tate1 are con- 1lderin1 aucb laws. A GIFT -A month-old male orangutan clings to mother Jane, a 20-year-old Sumatran orangutan, at the San Diego Zoo. The un-named inf ant wiU eventually go to Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo where his mother was mated before being traded to San Diego. Buy soughl of town plagued by fire CENTRALIA, Pa. <AP) A pair or "front people" for an un· disclosed buyer say they are prepared to offer $30 million to this town plagued by an under- ground coal fire At a me et in g to h elp townspeople decide what to do about the 19-year·old fire burn- ing in abandoned coal tunnels under the town, two Bloomsburg businessmen stepped forward and offered lo buy every home ror $40,000 to $100,000. Burt Wandell. a real estate agent. and Da vid Linnet, a stove manufacturer, said they were fronting for an unidentified American company wishlnj( to gain the rights lo tht' anthracite under Centralia. "We will not say who we represent because "'e do not want to start a bidding war. · said Linnet. The deal would depend on whether the company round sufficient reserves beneath the town of 1.100. Linnet said It would go forward with the deal if provable reserves of 15 million tons of anthracite are found, he sa id . The government has estimated there are 7 million to 10 m1lhon tons. Before any homes are bought. the plan must win approval from every property owner. . SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A corisumer lobbyist was awankid Ut,550 tn tees by the nate • Public Utiltttea Comml11ton, which alfo received a proposu to set up • truJt fund to pay con· 1umer ad\'ocates w~o Intervene against utWties. d The reel went Tuesday to 'dJ David L. Wilner, operatin• u Consumers Lobby Aeainst » Monopolies at TtbUl'()Cl for bis ef, .>l forts before the PUC aeaiD§t .t& Pacific Telephone. ol WILNER 'S COMPLAINT, S filed in 1976, alleged the dJ telephone company re1ularly s:> railed to collect full termination n charges as required when re-i'.l moving and replacing its facilities for new switchboard 1 t systems. 11 After negotiations, Wilner and Pacific Telephone agreed on a 1• settlement in 1977 in which the ls utility agreed to pay $400,000 for <l a "benefiejal public purpose" to G be approved by the PUC. The !? plan was to use the money to q help pay for speciaJ telephone tl equipment for those with im· H paired hearing. q The major question remaining before the commission was Wilner's fees request for work ) performed before the com- mission. The PUC denied this in 1978. But the stat e Supreme Court in 1979 held the PUC has the power to award fees in cases I-' which result in creation of a 1 common fund for public benefit (. THE COURT ALSO ruled that ii the f>uc may award fees and n cogts to a non-attorney such as l'J Wilner when appearing in a representative capacity 'll Com m issione r Richard Gravelle proposed that the re-· t mainang $370,500 from the utility h be used to create a trust fund for •Q consumer advocates. ?. L Reed Waters, a Pacific ::l Telephone vice president, ex -.\ pressed doubt the PUC could legally set up an advocates trust 'I fund f. 1{ Funds pledged .. ISLAMABAD, Pakistan <API <l Nearly 17 months after a mob or 10,000 rioting Pakistanis rt ransacked and burned the U.S n Embas sy 1n Islam abad. rl Pakistan's military government ;I has pledged $13.6 million to re· ,l build it. lid tft . .r. " 1 \ '1 i t u ~ (i . ) !() ~ •O ,. •c ~ l :l The wise investment of money can be a complex decision. But it doesn't have to be. The simplest path is often the most profitable. As well as the safest. •> .. ., While some other people are trying to decide what involved finan- cial step to take next, you can simply be making money. Risk free. Newpon Balboa Savings offers a full range of financial services, with each account federally insured to $100,000. Sman. And safe . Stop by our nearby office and talk to your friends at' Newpon Balboa Savings. Discover what the bulls and the ~ars are missing. Write yourself a profit check. Why pay, for a checking account when your checking account can pay you? Our new Profit Check service actually pays you 5 Y4 'fo interest 6n the balance in your checking account, Very jnu:restingt 0 () ~'J •• I r.\ .. ,.. ,, r ~ l· ' • HOSPITALIZED Country singer Loretta Lynn was reportedly admitted to a Reno hospital after complaining of stomach pains. Her manager said she w a s u n d e· r observation for gastrointestinal disorders. · -Media satisfy Hispani WASHINGTON I AP> Mexican-Americans a re generally satisfied with the ir community newspap e r s and broadcast station s. although their leaders have complained. a study says Hispanics surveyed in· dicated concerns about specific coverage of their community but did not have a generally negative attitude about the news media, said the s tudy from Michigan State University. However, two·thirds Of the Hispani cs in- terviewed indicated they would like to see at least part of the newspapers in Spanish THE RESEARCHERS said the Hispanics sur· veyed were primarily Mexican-Americans. The researchers in terv1ewed 1.700 His pamc and non Hispani c adults. 700 students and 88 His- panic community leaders in Stockton. Salinas . San Bernardino a nd V1 s a li a .ca11r ; Tucson. Ariz.; Santa Fe. N .M . a nd El Paso . Texas A I though they were less likely to subscribe to newsp a pe r s than Anglos. those who re~d papers spend as much time doing so as non· Hispanics. she said. They were also more approving than Anglos of television news cov· erage. the study said. THE RESEARCHERS found that Hispanics and Anglos spend equal amounts o f time watching television news. a lthough His · panics tended tt:> watch m o re da y time television. The study said Hi s- panic leaders viewed the media as the voice of the Anglo. and they com · plained of inad equate coverage of and pro· •r amming for His· panics. L pca l radio was v i ewed as most responsive. as an His· panic-oriented station was available in most or the comrnunities. The researchers as- lt!ssed the overall read· ability of newspapers. finding editorials and news service stories more difficult to read than local news stories. The is-month survey was sponsored by the Gannett Co., which ~as newspapers in each or the communities. Erosion funds set SACRAMENTO <AP) -The state will 1et tH7 ,ooo ln federal m•ney to reduce erOIJion d411'8Je at Lake Tahoe, ta·• 1tate Water Ri1 ourcea Control • NUduid. t;JCdtonala ultld for U mlJUon, bcn onl1 IJ 1.1 mtlllon waa available •f.tlon•lde from the federal Envaronmental ,PrOtedion Attncy. ~~'!~ board wlll ~ ~llllon f()r (, ' We 'll come right out and say it. We think Newport Center is a pretty nice place. Its plazas, its landscaping, its sculptures, its range of shops and businesses, the way it fits in with and serves the community surrounding it, the look of it-we're pleased with these things. Truth is, we often show off Newport Center to visiting planners and governmental leaders from aJl over the world, as one of the most successfully realized (though yet incomplete) examples of master planning in partnership between a private developer and a city anywhere. If that sounds immodest, we can't help it, because that's how we feel. This sense of pride has been there from the beginning, when the chimes at Robinson's first sounded the opening of Fashion Island. That was almost 15 years and 500 acres ago. Golf course included, that's how much of Newport Center's land has been developed to date, phase by phase. A little more than 73 vacant acres now remain for the final phase. When they're built out, that'll be it. Newport Center will be completed. · We'd like to tell you a little about our plan for completing Newport Center. Our view of it. We believe it's a damed good plan. It has to be, not only because that's wh~t city government would demand, but also because that's what we demand. Newport Center is very important to us, as you may have gathered. But equally important, as far as we're concerned, is what the plan means to the community. We think it means a lot. For one thing, it means millions of dollars in public road improvements east of the Upper Bay -improvements that won't cost Newport taxpayers a dime. For another, it means millions of dollars in additional tax revenues for the city -revenues that could go a Jong way toward keeping Newport I year and lhere'1 dlJcuUlon 1bout lt bfcomlna an Armr•wide ertort. proaum waa the firs\ that put other people Iott more than 30 pounds each. Four unlor aer1eanta lost tnou&h welllht for their tielCht to re-enll1t. teeth Jnto it. . uwe•ve even had aome ctvlllana volunteer to come ~re at their own expcn.ae to participate 1D the prorram," .. Blewster said, cltin1 one cue or a San Dteao man who wanted to travel bere. While all the mlUtary services have had wei1ht-reduction policies for many years. the Fort Et.11tl1 Afttr a mecUcal acreenln•. partlclpants were ordered -not encoura1ed -to reporl. to a special meN hall three tlmet a day, seven day1 a week. Twenty.one of t.he partlclpanta already ha\le reached Army wei1ht standardl for their heiahts. One c•ptain lost 41 po4Jlds. Nlne One man Lott 10 pound.I in the first hall of the effort, then re- cained il and an addlUonal seven pounds. The backalldh~a came when officiala made mess ball meals optional after the first five weeks. Paid Advertisement "Equally important is what the plan means to the community. We think it means a lot!' the well-kept and well-protected community that it is today. Those are some of the things that come with the plan. Here are some other things, for Newport Center itself: • A matching pair of 12-story office buildings. The long-prepared site for them is north of Fashion Island near the existing 18-story towers on Newport Center Drive. •A 400-room luxury hotel, surrounded by gardens, in the same area The hotel will be of a residential character, with no convention facilities. • A gathering of small, low-rise office buildings plus two restaurants in the Newport VilJage area between MacArthur Boulevard and Avocado Avenue. (We had planned to have severaJ retail shops there, but locaJ residents and merchants offered some good reasons to change the plan. So we did.) • Clusters of one-and two-story g&.rden offices at three other sites on the perimeter of Newport Center. , It will take five or more years to complete most of these projects. When they're done, Newj>ort Centet's building space will be expanded by about 20 percent There will be expansion in two other areas, as well. We mentioned them a moment ago. Roadways and city revenues. We'll be a little more specific. First, roads. The city's ·consilltants say our Newport Center plan will create a need for SOJlle $3.3 million in public road improvements. We're going to pay for these improvements, of .. course. And we're not stopping there, ' We also plan to upgrade portions of Jamboree Road, MacArthur BOUJewrd and Coast Highway by another $5 million worth. As Newport Center is buHt ou , this $8 milli?n·f lus road improv~ment • program will occur right along with it. It wilJ help complete the city's master plan for roads. And at no public cost. Also as part of our Newport Center plan, we're going to hav e a transportation management program. It's designed to reduce peak-hour commuter traffic from the center. It involves van pooling, expanded bus services and staggered work hours. We'll finance it, to get it going. As for city revenues, well, they're considerable. Right now, Newport Center generates $1.5 million annually in surplus city income. That's net, above the cost of municipal services required by the center. Under our plan, this surplus revenue -in today's dollars -will go up by another $1 million every year. The $1 million in additional net revenue, by the way, is enough to cover the totaJ annual budget of the city's 22-member police detective division. Or wages and benefits for 34 fire-fighting and paramedic personnel. Or the entire budget of the city library system. We were curious, so we looked it up. We researched something else The airport. What kind of impact will our plan have on the airport? This is what we found out (from an inde- pendent consultant who knows more . about these things than we do): The additional development will be the origin of an average of 41 departing passengers a day. That's about one passenger per flight. It amounts to about I~ percent of the airport's current daily passenger total. So there's an impact, but it doesn't really seem to be much. And in no way will it cause a change in the number of flights. ~ Now, we're not saying our plan is perfect. We're just saying, all things considered, that it's a good plan. For J;>oth Newport Center and the community it serves. So there you have it, our Newport Center completion plan. lately we,ve heard some questions ~ about it. They're good questions. Nexrwee~ w.e'll answer them. , .. Easyto!'lo Soon, you can learn how easy 1t is to o your banking with the new VERSATELLER™ automated teller machines in Orange County anet the San Fernando Valley. To give you a personal demonstration and~swer questions, helpful peo~e will on " . hand at the machines ginning May4. Ii In minutes you'tl be an expert. At the .. ft • same time you ca'n enter our "Try it f .. Now" Sweepstakes. Th~ grand prize is ) .. . a Princess Crvise for two. And you could also walk away with one of our over 20,000 instant cash prizes. Easy to use. Banking with the VERSATEL:LER machine is '"" as quick and ~asy as making a call on a pushbutton phone. Insert your VERSATEL® card, enter your confidential ID Code and . follow the instructions on the display screen. In sec- onds you can withdraw cash, make a deposit, pay a loan, transfer funds between accounts -easy. If you have a question, that's easy, too. Each VERSATELLER mac hine has its own phone th at connects you directly with the VERSATEL Center. ~~Ollf<M:I. Soon you can bank -~ without going in the bank. · Want to make a deposit? Use the VERSATELLER machine in the • morning. Need cash at noon? An automated teller withdrawal saves time during your lunc h hour. loan payment? Do it the easy way. Pay through the VERSATELLER machine. Easyto~to. VERSATELLER automated teller machines are open rom 6 a.m. to midnight. Saturdays and Sundays, too. You 'll find them at Bank of America branches throughout Orange County, the San Fernando Valle{i and in the Sa n Fran- cisco Bay Area . Before long, they'll be a I around the state.I"' Pu shbutton Banking. Ano~her Money Convenience from Bank of America . • -1 Want more information? Call toll-free 1-800-362-7152 BANK OF AMERICA ' ------ I ~ f • j I 1 'l l j DEAR PAT DUNN : I 'sent a book I re· celved u ' eift back to the publisher for a re· fund. I mailed it Feb. 10, and they still ha'len't 1ent the -refund. I think it cost about $14,N. 0 . W .• fiuntington Beach The l*Wisher, Harry N. Al>tam1 Inc. of New Yo,rk, says the book you reeetved bas been CHlt ol priat for some tlme, lind no re· fund CID be luued. The boot wlU be malled back to you, U It can be located. The publl•..., advises you to ask the penoo who 1ave tile book to you where It was purchased. You lbea could attempt to return it to the re· taller and request a refund, uedlt or ex· change. The book store would have no legal obllgallon to accommodate you, however. Radio recept.ion DEAR PAT DUNN : Occasionally our house radio picks up a voice conversation when it is tuned to an AM station. This is very disturbing and I want lo know who to call about it. P .H .. Newport Beach The voices may be from another radio station with a stronger signal than the one you have tuned In. Try more precise tuning and perhaps relocating your radio, in case a weak or defective antenna ls causing the signal drift. If you hear a privaLe conversation, a mobile radio unit or citizens band radio may be the cause. In this case, contact the Federal Communications Commission by phoning (213) 426-4-151 weekdays between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Materials will be sent to you , l • tbat wlll help you resolve the problem, poulbly without the direct ...Utance of. tbe FCC. ~. DEAR PA,'l' DONN : My son wants to go to eamp this year. but J have no idea of where to find a U~t of summer camps in the Southern California area, Can you help? P .E .. Costa Mesa A free Ust of American Camplo& A•· soclatlon·accredlted 1ummer camps ls avall-'>le by wrlthag: American Camping As· aodadon, Recreation and Leisure Studies, Cal State Long Beach, IZSO Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach 90840. Camps listed include pubHc, private· independent, day, cburcb, school, travel, 1ports and for disabled chUdren. Certification Is by a volupteer team from the Amertcaa Camping Association. Staff, locaUon, lactlltles, food, protram, leadership, transportation policies and other points are checked before camps 1re accredited by tJle association. • ··Got a problem"' Then tunte to Pat '-'.. Dunn Pat will cut red tape. getting • ~ the answers and aclion JIOU need ro • 1olve inequities m government and bu.tineu. Mail your ~stions to Pot n Dunn. At Your Service, Orange Coast Dally Pilot. P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As many letters as pt>ss1ble will be answered, but phoned mquanes or letters not ancludang the reader'& full name. address and b1mness hours' phone number cannot be considered This column appear• doily er· cept Sundays ·· ' r' I ' ( HARBOR BOULEVARD • ot; I . Auto&~ ),:-· Ouotet Bv Phone Call 142-1671. FMmS--_, Put • few word• to work fof ou. 1 ... IH4wH .. l07 ,,, ........ c .... -.. ... f nme ts running outl · To aet in on this great FREE offer from Kodak. Four KODAK Color Regrtnts for the pllee of three., Stop in t01 corl)plete detalls Hurry free otferiends Mav 13 .I LJ' SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK! 9 00 AM TO 9 3Mlt MOii TllllU SAT 9 00 lN TO 1 00 , .. SUllOlY ' ·' . ' DISPtAY THROUGHOUT THE MA~ ) R '.SAL . APRIL 24-26 r... 't . I " . ( \. I .... A« V'!" " r ( SOUTH COAST PLAZA \Jr IA • 1 .. - PRICES PREY AIL: WED .. APRIL 22nd thru SAT . APHIL 25th WE HONOR YOUR CREDm • Super • Essentials · Plus vrrAM1Ns 60 TABLETS Conlains 12 V11am111s and 11 Minerals "SUNSHINE" Vitamin C w/ROSE HIPS Vitamin B-12 500 mes.. 100 TABLETS 3.59 OYSTER S.HELL Calcium 3 1ablets provide 750 mg potency plus 375 I U ol Vitamin 0 100 TABLETS 2.29 Potassium Gluconate 100 TABLETS 1.89 ---------' ~HOP,; lll\VS Ji wr FM' ... • . ._. ~ .. PUSHES BOOK i . Mcu Cleland ~ ~ ~ ~ :i ~ t . r ·. FORMER AIDE £ Jack Watson q 't.Local I f"')>o Ii tics c ·; inviting :~ ATLANTA <AP > : Max Cleland. who went ~ to Washington with J,1 m my Carle r f o u r :i. years ago to run the f. Veterans Admin · i ~ ~stralion , is back ~ -home in Georgia pro ~ tnoting a newly .! )>ublished book and ! J>oostiog himself a s a ~ possible candidate for l,...govemor in 1982: ..... Clel and 's book . •'Strong at the Broken Places," describes his ~ fight back from the i Vietnam War grenade ' explosion that left him a $ triple amputee. He lost $ both legs and part of an f arm . Cleland says he plans , a tour that may tell him : if he can build the " support and financing ~ for a statewide political ~ career. :-That would make tum ~ the third member of f Ca rter's "Georgia 1 Mafia" to return home ( from a long look al state ~--a n d Io c a 1 po I i ti c s . ( ~ Former United Nations • Ambassador Andrew ! Young a lready has an· ~ nounced he will run for ! mayor of Atlanta, and ~ former White House 1 aide Jack Watson is be· . ! ing mentioned as still i another p ossible f gubernatorial candidate. < "There's one sample ; reason," Cleland. 38. ( aald of the spurt of in· f teresl in local politics by men who helped shape • national policies . :· ''We're unemployed " f ' !-~·Pair /ace l unripened ~ fmit rap VISTA (APl -Vista .~ Avocado Co. and two i: former employees are ~ accused of packing 750 ~ tons of immature fruit ~ Sept. ll·Nov. 15 to take advantage of peak I prices at the time. Deputy Dialrlct Attorney Charles E . Bell in San Diego said a ~ 201-count misdemeanor ~ complaint waa filed 1 ., a1alnat them. The men were identified by Bell as Jan Kln11 former orraUona manarer o Vista AvocadO oned by John Llvaclcb Prodact Inc., and Vincent Medrano, K1n1'1 aaailtant. Coevletion could brina 1 niulmwn six montbi t.n Jall and SSOO floe on each count. BAYER ..... FH1 Pain IWlltver ZOO Tlllm 2 .49 NOXZEMA SKIN CHAM Gruseless med•cated refreshes an<I mo1stu11zes dry complu1ons .... ~[ 1.49 SAVE•t .00 PHISODERM ll1Nflf19 .... t .. _ Incl tOllOrll-• SAVEaoe PHILLIPS' MIU( Of MAGNESIA LIQUID Regular or Mtnt flavor SPECIAL! 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Now the MERIT era surges ahead with MERIT ULTRA LIGHTS. A milder MERIT that's going to set a new taste standard for ultra low tar smoking. ' MER!Tand MERIT ULTRA . · LIGH;TS. They're changi11g the.future Qf smoki'F-today. Ultra lights : 4 mg· 'tar;• 0.4 ITIQ nieotine av. per cigarette by FTC Mtlttocf Kings: 8 mg ''.tar: '0.8 CllQ oicotlnt av. per cigaratta.FlCRtport Bec'.79 .. Child model Tamara Jones, 11 , is coached on the art of geaturing by linging irutructor LouU Pola!µki dunng weekly lesson m New York City. Polamkl ha! coached 11.1Ch notablea <U Beverly Sills and Patty Duke Astin. Tamara, left, atroll! along Broadway recently with friend Diane Barrows, 14, after a dance clcus. Dia~ played "Tessie" m the original Broadway production of the long· running mwical. "Annie," b<Ued on t comic atnp. Pre-pubescent lovelies 'pretty baby' models NEW YORK 1AP1 The sensuous face that bN·kons from the fashion magazine 1s that of a sophisl1l'.ated, mature woman v. Ith wind-swept honey blonde hair and fuU . moist red lips The model is Tamara Jones The r~sl 1s illuswn Tamara is 5 foot 1 and her measurements are 261 2 ·24-29 She afms to weigh 75 pounds. but usually v.eigh~ in light TAMARA'S LOWER teeth are stl lt webbed with metalllc braces. She's a hopeless klutz with a yo-yo. but claims to be a whiz at jacks Tamara is 11 years old. She is the ne west -and youngest entrant in the "pret- ty baby" rnodel'wars A score of more of these pre-pubescent lovelies have signed with New York modeling agents and are competing s uccessfully with olde r models women of. say, 18 or 23 Tamara and h l'r m other m ove d to N e w York in November. In January, Tamara signed with the preall1lous Ford Agency. .. Modeling wasn 'l m y first love." Tamara says "It was just the first thing I did " Tamara began modeling in Miami, her home. at age 4. At 6. she and her mother were jetting to New York for periodic assign- m ents . Tamara appeared in a TV commercial for White Cloud toilet paper, in a print ad for Gloria Vanderbilt jeans and in McCalls, Women's Day and Good Housekeeping magazines. "As a child." she notes. "not as a high-fashion model." The hi~b·fa&hion work began last summer, after mother and dautbter met Steve Tannenbaum., a press agent who says he saw something "Brooke· ish'" in Tamara. "Brooke" 1s Brooke Shields. the first nymphette to make a fo rtune by looking like a grownup. Tannenbaum thinks Tamara Jones will be the next. TAMARA'S PARENTS agreed lo let her try. Her father. a Baptist chaplain. is in charge of pastoral care at Ja c kson Memorial Hospital in Miami; her mother was a scl'lool teacher until Tamara decided last fall she wanted to come to New York fuU-Ume. Tamara's t.rud ambition Is to be an actress. The problem, she says, is that she grew too tall for most children's roles and for much of the kiddie fas hion work ·'There's a 10-vcar old 1n m v building who oniy comes up to m y wais t and she s peaks French." Tamara says 'Tm built for modeling. not theater.·· "NOY. that she's older we felt she knew what she was giving up a nd what s he was gaining ... says her mother. Janice Jones TAMARA HASN'T given up her theatrical a mbition s . Between modeling jobs. she 1h\1s at a nightclub that caters to kiddte talent. "I belt and f sing legit.'' she savs. She has auditioned for a TV series and continues her tutored schooling. She 1s taking lessons in singing, in dance and in ice skating Tamar a says s he 's n ot troubled by the sensuous. even erotic nature of some high fashion photography ·'Ninety-fi ve percent of my work is regular. It's wholesome things. like Macy's ads." she says. But her mother says Tamara wlll never be allowed to do worts like the suggestive Brookiio Shield!; TV ads for Calvin Kleinf Jeans ,, ' NOW, ANY driver who puses a i.t for a Cius I license ill a small tt\ack combln~Uon can operate any truck with any kind of car10. f.Youna's blll would dlvtde Class I four cate1ories anct requtre in· uintlY difficult tralnln1 and stan· rda for each classlflcatlon~ lA, ee-axJe combination; 18. five-axle combination; lC, combinations of vehicles; and ID. an extra-size or eight load. A driver would need ex· ra trainine to haul a tanker.type vebicle or hazardous materials. A driver wo~d have to train at a truck d'1vin1 M?bool or pass a Department of Motor Vehicles test for. each license level. THE BILL would raise the license fees from $3.25 , the same as passenger car licenses, to $15 for an application and $12 for renewal. The bill would also make It easier for a driver to lose his license by "GOOD drivers under my bill would not be penalised," YOW'I& said. "Neellaent driven -it wiU take them off the road." The bill l1Jupported by the CaUf.ornla Truck!~ Aaaociatlon, which represents truck.ln1 firms, but 11 opposed by the Teamaten Union, which repreeentl drivers. George Smith, president of a Santa Maria trucking firm,. said bis com· pany has a successful proeram to promote safety amona Its drivers, but small firms and owner-operators can't afford to do that. "Trucks are 1otn1 faster. They're tailgatlne. They're drivin1 more rudely," he said. "Our Industry ii a et ting a black eye . . . My driven are outraged by what they see on the highways." But Larry Kurbatoff of the Teamsters said a driver could lose his license for 30 days for two convlc· lions for tailgating while carrying a hazardous load. Tailgating is a "very subjective" offense and two convic· lions would not necessarily make a driver neelleent, he said. ·'This is totally unnecessary to create t ru ck driver safe ty.·· Kurbatoff said. flelmet proposal fails SACRAMENTO (AP> -A bill to require young or inexperienced motorcycle and moped riders to wear b elmets died in an Assembly com· mittee when it failed to draw even a single vote. Assemblyman Richard Floyd, D· Lawndale, had modified his bill, AB996, which originally mandated helmets for all motorcycle riders. but no one on the Assembly Transporta· : ,• lion Committee moved to approve the measure. The bill, as amended. would have required helmets for motorcycle and moped drivers 18 years old and under or holding a motorcycle license less than one year. Those drivers· passengers also would have to wear a ,be Imel. • FLOYD said he amended the bill because he realized he could never get a total mandatory helmet biU out of the committee and "for the first ar we feel we're dealing with"peo· pie who are more prone lo acci· dents." He said riders wearing helmets have half as many injunes as those \\!ho aren't and government ends up '1aying for the serious injuries of riders who don't use helmets. "I agree with them they have the right lo bash their heads against a curb and dle, but they don't die - they linger in a hospital, sometimes for years, like a vegetable." he said. Assemblywoman Marian LaFollette, R-Malibu, saying she'd "just as soon ban" all motorcycles. nonetheless asked, "Where do we draw the line as far as how protec· live we should be of everyone 1 •· ASSEMBLYMAN WALTER Ingalls, D-Riverside, suggested that the state refuse Medi-Cal benefits for anyone injured in a motorcycle acci· dent and not wearing a helmet. Ron Roloff of the Modified Motorcycle Assocalilon said ap- proved helmets can cost anywhere from $7 to $169 and haven't been pro- ved to increase safety. ··People that want lo wear at shoulcJ be able to and people that don't shouldn't have to," Roloff said. Robert Hayes , a former as· sem blyman representing the California Off-Road Vehicle Associa· lion, wondered if helmets would be next mandated for bicyc les. skateboards and roller skates. California is the only state that has never had a mandatory motorcycle helmet law. Twenty-nine states have repealed such laws. 1Vude ,photos allowed GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP> -A federal jud&e bas ruled that a stale son inmate may bane pictures of de women in bis cell as long as they e not photographs of bis wile. 'Chief U.S. District Court Judge Wendell A. Mlles uphe ld a Marquette Branch Prison rule, saying the reasons r the regulation outweighed inmate Marlon Riddle's claim that bis civil rights were violated by officials who tried to seize two.such photographs. ''The court is not unsympathetic with the plaintiff's desire to keep the two· photographs," Miles wrote. "On the other band, the prison policy ban· ning such photographs is un· derstandable." WHEN THE PHOTOS of Riddle's wife were found during a search, Riddle ate them rather than '(lve them up, prison officials said. ------ PUBUC NOTICE P:ICTIT10US IMn!MalS MAMa ITAHUNT Tiit fol l-1"9 P«IOfll ara del PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE MOTICa OIVITIMO f'•CWOIAU Hallee I& ,,., .. , 9101\ IMt Ille ... ,.., Of TNA9H .. the Hun~ .. Kii ~ HIP k'-4 Ol&tfkt wlll NC•lvt prapouls • ltt-Kl'I, Tnl> 1"9 lllG Ev.._11111 Senrkft meetlflt tlM 9"Clllcal'-Oii Ill• '" ""Office of NICI Ol1trkt. f'r~& t!IMI M c1..,1y m«1'ed "lteMarcl'I, Tntlnt anc1 lwalvet'-1 S.rvlcft RFB •~". ---I• Al· IYft I . lt-ey. ~ne ~. """" ..... 8Mctl ""'°" """ le ..... OIN!lct, llUI YOf11'-·-· H.,,.. - TODl'S JIM VODKA BEAM 175-LrTER 1.7~R ' 659 1010 CASE OF 6 39.54 CASE OF 6 60.60 Thomu P. Leonhard, a cement mason from Amhent. N.Y ., lost track of hla three youn• children after his former wife m1rried Paa· quale Calabrese, a mobater·lurned· Informant. The eovemment placed Calabrese under the witness protection pro- 1ram and refused to reveal where he, hit wife and three stepchildren were llvln1. Leonhard foueht the eovemment wit.bout 1ucce11 for eieht yean to BOO RD'S JOSECOERVO GIN GOLD 1.7!>-UTER I LITER 501 719 CASE OF 6 48.42 CASE OF 12 93.48 KEO BEER TIA MARIA 750-MILLILITER 1016 CASE OF 12 12 l .91 LJQ<JE<JRS Southern Comfort. 750ML Jagennelster. 750-ML Frangelico, 750-ML BOTTLE CASE OREAT FOR S<lMMER PARD<JCCI WINES BOTILE CASE RETAIL RETAIL BLOCK& POOL PARTIES RETAii RETAIL 5.74 63.72 BUDWEISER Cabef!let Sauvignon 750ML 11 .45 127 .20 Chabhs 750 ML 4.40 48.00 2.95 32.18 ............ .11 .92 129.95 3140 ~en ch Cl OIORmi ba1!d 750 ML 11 .89132.08 112-KEG 1•1endoc no es mg 750ML Irish Velvet, 7»ML 2.90 31.60 3.19 34.76 Yukon Jack. 750ML Kamora, 1»ML Drambuie, 150 ML 6.46 71.73 BUDWEISER Chardonnay 750ML 6.41 71.15 2 n20 Chenin Blanc 750ML 4.86 53.00 3.30 36.00 13.35 148.24 v-Burgundy 150 ML 13.16 146.07 1/4 KEG Z!nfande! 750-ML 2.95 32.18 3.19 34.76 .. 10.53 116.95 COORS Pinot No1r 750 ML PEDRONCELLI GalUano, 150 ML . Greensleeves, 750-ML 4.24 46.20 BOURBONS Ancient Age. 1 75-UTER J 2.20 66.50 Cabin Still, 1 7~>-LrTER . 10.35 57.50 Earty Times, 1 75-UTER 11 .62 64.56 Ten High, 1 1s.UTER 10.91 60.50 l.W. Harper. LITER 7.80 86.60 Jack Daniels, LITER 10.31 114.48 Jim Beam, 1.75-LITE.R . . .... 11.92 66.15 Old Charter 7 Year, 1 75-LITER .. .. 15.03 83.48 Old Crow, 1 75-LITER 11 .72 65.09 CANADIANS Black Velvet, 1.15-UTER ................... .11.43 63.49 Canada House. 1.1!>LITER ............. 11 .74 65.19 Canadian Club, 1.75-UTER .. ...... . .16.90 93.90 Canadian MJst. 1.75-UTER ........ 11 .45 63.1 8 Seagram's V.O •• 1.7!>-UTER ........... .16.76 93.09 Canadian Lord Calvert. 1.1'-UTER .12.05 66.95 Seagram's Crown Royal. UT'ER •.. .15.62173.55 Windsor Canadian, 1.15-UTER ......... 12.59 69.90 R<Jft\S Appleton, 7»ML .. . .. . . . . . ............... 8.29 92.07 Bacardi Gold Reserve, 750-ML ......... 8.98 99.69 Mt. Oay Eclipse, 750-ML. . . ....... 8.31 9Z22 Bacardi Lt. or Dk., UTER ............ 6.50 72.13 Bacardi 151 Pf., LITER . . ........... .11.05 122.75 Castilo U. or Dk •• 1.15-LITER ....... 8.7 1 48.37 Mysers's Jamaican, 1 75-UTER ....... 18~67 103.69 Ron Rico Lt. or Dk., 1.15-UTER .. . .. 11 32 62.89 TEQ<JILA Cuervo Gold, 1.15-LITER ............... , .... 14.72 81 .76 Cuervo White, 1.1!>LITER .................. 1328 73.74 Cuervo Gold 1800.150-ML ............ .10.0611 t.75 Montezuma w. and a., 1.7"'-lTER .11.17 62.0t Montezuma W. and G., UTER ......... 6.20 68.85 Pepe Lopez·Gold 1.7'-UTER ............ 13.04 72444 Puerto Vallarta w. and G., 7~ .. 4.61 51.20 Don Emllo W. and Q., 1.1~ ..... 9.73 54.06 Don EmllloW. and a., UTER ........... 5.56 61 .79 &iuza White. UTER ............................ 7 .50 83.34 8auia Gold, LITER ............ , ................. 8.38 93.08 Two Fingers WhJte. UTER ........ , ....... 829 92.07 Two fingers Gold, UTER .................. 9.14101.50 Henandura Anejo, 1'°""'-............. .14AO 160.00 292° l/2KEG COORS 202° 1/4·KEG ENRY WEJNHAR 33os 1/2KEG HEJNEKINS 6500 l/2·KEG UTE 2800 1/2-KEO · LOWENBRA<J 3335 1/2-KEO MICHELOB 3615 1/2-KEG MICHELOB 2130 1/4.f<EQ MILLER'S 2800 lf2·KEG OLD MILWAOKEE 2015 l /2·KEO PABST 25so . Cabernet Sauvignon. 150 ML 3.67 40.00 Zlnfandel, 750ML 2.75 30.00 Rose Wine, 150 ML . 1 .85 20.1 3 French Colombard, 750ML 2.63 28.60 Johannisberg Ri eslfng. 750ML 3.30 36.00 Chardonnay. 750ML 4.84 52.80 Gewurztraminer, 750-ML .. . 3.60 39.60 COCKTAIL AND DESSERT WINES Hcuvey's Bristol Cream 750ML ...... 6.74 73.46 FlckJJn Port 750-ML ........ . ....... 4.53 49.28 Savory&James, crm.Shry .. 750-ML ... 3.63 39.60 Sandeman Port 750-ML.. .. . .... 7.76 84.70 Cresta Bica. Trip. Cr. Shr. 750ML..3.13 34.00 Dubonnet 750-ML . ... .. . .4.49 48.90 Dry Sack 75().ML . . .. 5.31 57.95 Harvey's Amontfllado 750-ML 4.93 53. 75 Maglgal Pale Dry 750-ML . 3.95 43.04 CLOS D<J BOIS Chardonnay, 750-ML . 7 .67 Gewurztramlner.cEa11y 791750-ML . 4.45 Johannisberg Riesling. 750 ML ... 6.05 Plnot Nolr, 750 ML .... 4.45 Cabernet Sauvignon '78. 750-ML. 6.05 Merlot. 750-ML ... 6.05 NOCHE DOS BO ENA EQOIS 12-0Z .. 6 PACK 12-0Z.. &PACK 83.60 48.40 66.00 48.40 66.00 66.00 LIGHT OR DARK 199 . 212 CASE OF 24 7 .60 CASE OF 24 1 OAS WARM w~ BEA<JUEO Beau Tour, 750-ML ........................... 4.04 44.00 Beau Velour, 7»ML ........................... 3.49 38.00 Burgundy, 7~ ........................ : ....... 3.30 36.00 Cabernet Sauvlgnon, 75Q.Ml .•........ 5.15 56.00 Plnot rtolr Rose, 750-Ml. . . . . . ........ 2.63 28.60 Beaufort. 7~L .................................. 5.65 6 l .60 Chlbi(s,. '1'°""1. .................................... 3.30 30.00 G~Beaujolals, 750ML ................ 3.30 36.00 ~ Qreneche Rose. 750ML .................... 2.20 KOO Plnot Nolr. 75().Ml. ............................... 4.23 4'.00 Beauclalr. 1~ ................................. 4.84 52lM> Cab. Sauvlgnon, ReMt-.. •1,, 1~ • .12.1 O l ~00 "'tMl.l Pllllll.-Or"'91 CO.at O.ily Piiot, AP'll U, 1', Mey •• 11. "" 1-..1 PUBLIC NOTICE ---------. • N1lll1 l'ICTITIOUI IUSINaH NAMa ITATUHNT T~ lollowl1tt P••tor>t ere clOlftt bvslfteUet; COL.LEGE E$l ATES, uan Coll• HerMOIO, C OJl atrOftO ll•ecll, Colltortlle ._,... CHARLES FRANCIS l(ING. mn Colle tftrmou. Co11l•lr ... o 8eocll, CelUOOlle "'2A. HAR·GAR HOLOllolOS, INC., a Celltorrlia uw-eii.n. "3 Soulll H..- Slru t, 4t111 lloor, L.ot A1tte•ea. Celllorftlt t0011. C-'\,.TOR Ol!VE LOPMENTS, LT O .• a C.lllornle corp0rallo1t, I" Sou 111 l10pe SOHi, 4'1h floor, Lo> All991H, c:.llfornla'IOOJI. S.G.G 0 HOL.OINGS, INC, a Callfor"'41 <orpOr.CIOft, Jl3 South H- S.,eet, ••th ltoor, Los .An9eles, C.lllt>r..i. t0071. $ARICK ttQL.OINGS, INC, a Celltor~ <.Of'poro\loft, »3 South H- SI rt el, 41111 floor. LO\ .... ,.1 ... CalllorllJt ll0011. ARTSIL HOLDINGS, INC, a YO. CllOICJ1 •SWDtOUSI e10U11D w:no '"•IUYOI •WNO&IMATVW cot11or1tla <Clr!IMOtlon, m S...111 H-1r···~111!••············~1~=~!~===~~-~-~~~~'!1!!·~1r·~~~~~~~~··········ir·~; Slreel, 411h lloor. Lo• Angelo , C•lllornle 'IOOTl Th11 business It c.onc1 .. cted by a e-ner al CMr1nef"shlp ;;!;;:::::...:::::::::======-::::::: CIWlts Frencls 1<1"9 Th" tlol-1 w.s flied with Ille Counly Cltrk ol Oronoe County o n .April>. ... , l'IHtH PYbll•ned OrM191 c .... O••ly PllOI, Aorll 1. 15. 72.]9. lttl 11a..~1 PUBLIC ~OTICE NIJIU FICTITIOUi IUSINIU MAMll 51 ATE MINT l l\e lollowlnQ Pt•ton\ art <101n9 ou\4neu •-' K T RUS, • oener•I P•rtnership, •1707 Yanottllp Awnut, Santa .Ana, -.:•1iforn1• 9170.S OTH ENTERPRISES, IN{., • C•lllorn1• corPorallon, 11707 van· <1erllp Aw-Sanla Ana, C.ltlornla 9210S McCULLOUGH CONSTRUCTION INC. • C•lllorni• corp0rallon, lA36 Ea\I Long rt<ltl• Orio Oran90 Calllorn•• "IW Tl\ls bu•ineu I\ conducle<I Oy • gonor•l ....-tMNh•P OTH ENTERPRISES. INC Ooutles w HaMOft. Prftlclenl Thi• •la1...-t was l1l<!d ••11th Ille County Cieri< ol Or.,,oe County on Aprll l , "" KINDEL & ANDEltSON IDOPI .... __ 11¥9., S..Jle I"° Now"" INC .. , CA ttwo .. u .. u Publl"'9<1 Ot-c .. st Oally Pilot, April I , IS, 11, 2', 1911 1/03-tl PUBLIC NOTICE .. ,,.., su,.t:•fOltCOURTOI' THE STATt:Ol'CALll'ORNIA l'OR THt:COl.INTYOFORANGE IN.A·l·~ In .... M•llH ol the Est•I• of DOROTHY 0 L.EWIS, O..:eav<I NOTICt:Ol',.RIVATI SAL.I 01' LEASl!~OINTIRUT IN RIAL.,..O,.ERTY NOTICE HEREBY IS GIVEN 11\al Roberl A. Holl, •• 1i. .. ecutor of Ille Wiii of °""""" 0 L.ew .. , CN<teMCI '1'111 Mii, al private >elo, 10 IM h1gheU _,.. lllMI bl-r. "'*" lerm& .->Cl tondl · tlotl• -r •Mllocl .,,., wb'9<t "' ,.,.,.,.,..11"" .,, ,,.. • .,.,. .... 11u-"*-"' all OI ti-r191\\. lltlo 8nCI lft. tero1t of OorOll'ly O. L.twl• I Iha dHle· d.ofttl -.Cl of the rlgftl, tlUt, •ncl "" torut that her •st•l8 ha• acqylreo. by oper•llon of•-or otherwise, In oncl lo tlte IOllow\ng ~robed 1 .. ..-tn- •oresllnrfflpr-rty The oeco<ient's luse!IOl<I 1n1erut '" the r eol properly lft '"" Coty of Newporl Buch, County or Oron.,e. Sl•te or C•l1torn1a. Oeurtbed ., toHOW\ LOI> • -lo(; t-tl>er Wtlh _,. e xclus111e N~h for 1ngreu and •orou tftrc11.gl'IOul Loi }.C, eppVrlenenl lo •••<I L.of• of Trec1 No S4IO. Clly of Newport B•eclt. Counly ot OrM191. !Ot.tlo 01 Cetotornto, ••'"°"'"on • moP recor<leO flt 800ll 196, Pago lS, :i. •n<I J7 of n"llt<•U•neOtJs m •1H, re<:ord s ol Ora1190Counly. Celllom•• Said r .. I properly commonly 11 known a1 2046 VIU• C•1on. Newpor1 Buch, C•li-•nlo60. Tllo terms •nd c-mons of soi<I 1 .. sehold lnlefelt ln rN I pr-rly are set fortn '" • ..... dele<I Apr11 I I..,., betwun Ult lrvlhe Compony, •• ltuor. and The BluH1, • partMrshlp, • •• ,., .... wtMch •• , rKOf'Oed on NOY• ember l7, I ..... In Book 1)" ot Po91 l~J In the Oftk;ltol Record• of Orar191 GERITOL TABLETS HIGH POTIMCY llON & VITAMIN TAILm Botti• of 100 REG. 7.99 VIDAL SASSOON SHAMPOOOI .. OI FINISHING llNSI 9othare 12·oi. Sizes CLOSE-UP TOOTHPASTE SUPER SIZE TUBE 1·2/10· Ol. TUii REG. 1.45 All'h·PllSfllANI' OIDIODOUNT All doy prot.aion. llG. 1.19 ''VELURA MATE'' BATH TOWELS souos&num 269 If PWKT J.H -4.St 27"1&A2'" and 2T'x~" frln~ ,_,,. Mony colors, pot· tem•. Whtie t todlt lcKI. COACHER STYLE MEN'S BASEBALL WARM-UP JACKET NYLON TAFFOA SHEU WITH FLANNEL LINING 9!! BUY Drow •Iring wo111, snop closures 2 pod1•fl ~·, sii.. ostO<fed team colors , I BAKED BEANS flOM l&M FAMILY FAYOltn 16-~. can. GLASS JARS FOR STORAGE "f UROPEAN COLUOION" 99 ~ UTH lUTU 2 LITll JAi JAi 1.n 1.7t 1-1/J UTH J Ul1I JAi JAi .. ., 1.tt Wld• mouth fOrt w ith col orful, o lrtlghl Iida. 1001 u ... at home, CASI Of tt \CASI Of 12 IRlUGI COOUIS ,... . ... JEANNEnE OPTIC GLASS TUMBLERS AMIH GLASSWARE 11 -l /2-0Z. BfYlRAGf 29.~ 6 Yf·OZ, tin SUPll P11a LOWREY'S BEEF JERKY SHAPED & FOIMID SUSO.D mas •1 •• ''• ->-=-------"' ~ NABISCO tlj •..1ftf'l\\\ d "'\'~, .... · CUCKERS; c...... YM CIOICI I ----~ .K•"lt. t -1/2.0l. ftlSCUllS, 11.0l. WKUT MNS,_ 1-01. VIGIYAU lll9'1 l.. SUPEIPllQ County. Calttornla The lnltroll of tM 1'·01. C..-r ........ , .... J9' ...... Ins.a~ le•M ·••tonY9Yoclto l~ .. ···-t"';=:::=::::::=::::::::::::::sr• ...... "~::. ... ~11. ...... ..L ________________________ -l-----::::::::~~~====~~~"'------~--~~1-.......... iiiliiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.•11!"'" th• decedttftt by An ln11rument r•· , ,. tMde<I on O<lober 1, I~. ln Book au •I P•ge t •• 1n llte 0111<181 Records of ~ County T,,. term Of H id , .... comnwn.;ed on April 1, 1"4, •nd enos °" -<" ll. :io>t, subjt<t, ttowew•r. 10 ••rtfef' termin•Uon •1 pro- vlCIO<l In SOl(l INM Said loawhold 1nteru1 In rt•I pr~ perty •Ill be SCICS wt>i-tl lo teneral Ond _.,191 le•H al>d H · s .. smenta for Ille flK•I Y••r 19tl.f1, • "'" nol rel pa.,..,.o, all 1a ... -•-s.,,,.,,u ""'<" m•y be lovle<I or •u euocl •~lnsl solCI pr-rly wbt.equet\l IO 11\e d•t• ot 1111• not lee; coftdlllo1t1. coveno1tls, reltrlc· 11ons, ••-Y•llOflt, HMmants, rtohlJ, •ftd rig/lb of way of reconl, 11 •nr Seid .. ...,_ lrlleretl In real - porty wlll belMlldon,,._, I,'"'· 10.00 o'clOCk A.M , or ltlerootler within tlw lime et-.S by law, al Ille offlc" of Taylor IC..,,... S<Hftmera & •-·al· 1ornevs for v.. ~. fl tl:M Paclllc Mutual 8YHdlnt. SU WHI Sl .. 11 StrHI. Lff A"'91H, cam .... nlatoot4. NOXZEMA MEDICATED CREAM Comfortobl• chair• with 1trong web --•=..J ... tuap•nalon Ofld olti· mlt'um from.I:. 1ROUBL-SA VER LONG LIFE LIGHT BULBS PACIAGE Of 4 IULIS 99c .1 COATS& CLARIS.:: '9141 w1o will be rn.-UllOft 11\o I .................. , Nld Pl'ke to be ,.Id all NI ,_.., w pwtly Ill castt •ftCI h batMU -, credit, Ille temu of wtll c'"lt .. 1119 KaipUlll!e W IM enc..-~ t. .. ....,._lt!M ~ 11 .,., lt!lllllilli•l!ll!l····--·~l!l!•lllii••·•~--··-----•! ~...::.:.. _________ .J ______ ..:..=:::...._~-----------111•--·•···~·········~·· .. 1'W119ft • lM aato Pfka tJ Nici bf m•-el cr.cllt, Ille _. .ti Ult Crfflt ft'Mllbe.,,.._M.,f .... of ,,,. ""~ MCurN bf • _. .... .,. ...... ~---~ .... w. T• ~ ..... .,,_... 11141 .. lle •• ....... wMll 11• .... '"""-" ... • llle l'fft ,,....ny .,. te lie lfltM llf .... -..,., .... '"'· r-fer ""' 1tJU1 y .. f' In ""*" ...... t. mfde wlll lie ..,.., .............. , ..... .,_ .. ,,.. 111r-.uei11 Mlkll Ula ae» •Ill .. efteCUd. Olfl9r ...._ ot ..... If ...., ... IM H---1~ II)' llWHKUWf •nd •Plll"O_,.llylNC-1, ... ., ....... -....... fer Nld ........ 11141r..-... fMI ,,..rt,, said .,,. ., ~ l'llllll Ila Ill wrltlftt •nit""* .. '"~ .... , .... .,...., .,. -"'"*" .. -· 1114. Self..,.,,... .. left et llM lffkft ef Taylor K..,_ S.-a & ....... ............. ,., .................. 11*4 l'ecl'fk _,..... ·~ S2> ..... Sllllfl' ................... Callffnll• .,._er.,.., 191 IMM111 IN offlu ef .. c: ...... fl ................ cewt. ...,_ ..... ., ..,.,. IMy ... ,,.... • Mt lllllf ~ Ull. flttt "*ttlll• .. tlMt fllllClc.o Ml ....... "" lnllr"'9 .. ....... ,.,. ............ -.. """ ., .... .., .... 11 ... tr~. O.....Mttl\:;. • ....,A..:Hlll, YA Y&.OtL•Uf'PH, .U...•1 ........ . tt••.. • 5 ----·-W.7-1.C'& ... ,_..., ~ ar-. au o.itr .._ •" "·it; n. ,., 1ttW1. MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson +21. c•-,_..,._..,,.. "Mom, bang the refrigerator door ... I can't get Marmaduke out of the cockpit!" IVDGE PARKER c-:;::::=::::s;~~~;;;f NOTH IN,, SEER ·· I MEAA DEA~··· ~ < ' ~ ~i.I f l "Gee, I don't see anything that looks like a pretty kettle of fish ... do you, Joey?" , by Ferd & Tom Johnson • • Hl·Y.A> WILUE·· TH' MISSUS L.ET you OUT ? GET THE ROLL OF WHERE ARE GORDO .t. IC.New rr/ rr~ ~'1 • FUNKl' •INKEBBEAN FAA~<,> .~-zJ.; I I 1M/NK '100'\JE l3E.EN PlA'-'ING SPACE INVAOER5 A U1'rlE lOO~! tAl ... NEll.1 'foU KNOW, I OOft''f ti)AMf 'fO 1tU. "°" WlW "lb ott1llt ... GAUZE AND THE SCISSORS 7 BANDAGE IT lllMA'f ·~ 1"'-1~ MA'f'ff~, ~&6LE. '? ~~£N1'f 'fOO Evtft l:rOME 70 M1L.E.-S ~~ lolCU~ 6EfOU. '? ~ by Jeff_ MacNelly by Ernie Bushm1ller I HAD TO USE THE WHOLE ROLL by Gus Arriola by Kevin Fagan ~'f '~ 1"£ CO\.l£~ ~~K\t.1& \..O'f, NO ... ( I I I f 1 'fr-G!.4Aj 1'5lJ.LLIGAN . IDOEFICLD, Conn . -Several n.lpta a week for the put dlontb or more, the tetephC)rte hu runa a~out halfway throuah dlnner. , ' The caller -aom times male, soJtaeUmes female -is always polite, eaeer, effusively friendly, but the message varies a blt. Not much, Just a bit. The call aoes aomelhlna like UUJ: ·•m, tbere, Mr. Mulligan, how are you tonight?" ·•Er ... er ... just floe. F. e." ." ~Hey, that's great. This is Ma· jestic Frozen Beef and we know you'll be interested In our whole side of beef plan, which we cut up any way you want ... "Even if my wife answers, they always ask for me. MY BEEF ISN'T only against the beef people. Some evenings the pitch is for groceries by the crate, magazines al half the an· nual s ubscription rate, shavin& lotion by the hQgsbead, aluminum sidine at carload prices. Last night it was the Green Grow the Rushes On lawn service, who just happened to be In our neighborhood and as a personal favor could work me into their busy schedule. A demurral on my part against any of these products or services always brings the wounded, accusatory question : "Sir. may I ask why not?" It was right about here I useo to blast off into lower earth orbit PUBLIC NOTltE l'ICllTIOUi aUSIN•H NAM• STAT•,..ENT T .... ~1-1,. __, I• OOln9 IMl,SI· rwss .s. VITA-HEALTH RESEAllCl'f, IMS T111tln Ave1tu. • 10, Colla Mua. Callfornl1n.27 Leo OMlouo, 210 Nice La"' 11209. Newport ~.C.llfornlatlMJ Tiiis buSlneu •• C-UCIOHI by .,. .... dlvidual. uoo.ooub Tiiis , .. _, "!-.., filed will\ trw Cou1tly Clerk ot Or-County "" Aprt16, 1•1 .. ,,..., PublllhlG OrW9 C:O.st Dally Piiot, Apnl I, IS, 2J, :19, 1te1 IUJ-11 PUBLIC NOTICE with crles of "because 1 hate Junk phone callJ" or "becav.se I'd llkt to get back and flnish my dinaor." BUT MY WIPE, who ls more tolerant of the hucksters in our mldst,told me l was being petty and uncharitable. "After all," she admonished, "They're just doing thelr Job." The same could be said of tbe lion cage keep1t ln Nero'• Colosseum or tn chaps with the violin cases in hicago on Si. Valentine's Day, but I suppose she has a point. It was right about here I de· , cided to make it more interest·· Ing and less difficult for my dinnertime callers. I took my cue from Jay Sharbutt, the AP drama critic, who always leaves amusing little messages on his telephone tape recording device for the press agents and others who call while he is out of the of· fice. "This is Jay Shal'.'butt." one of bis recent recorded messages greeted my call, ''I'm orr in Central Park Sheep Meadow wool-gathering for my next Sun· day piece, but if you'll leave your name and phone number when the tone sounds. I'll get back to you.'' ONE WINTER DAY when I called, Sharbutt was "down in Times Square doing my ritual dance to Dec•mbet in my new Eskimo mukluks .•• " When Majejljc Beet c~l aaaJn the other evenln• d asked plaintively ~Y l w s not interested ln half a cow, I told them we were all ve1eterians on a low·calorle diet that restricted our menus to dandelion roots and bean curd. · Tbe lawn people beard tbout our herd or long.faced 1ous who •hare the ground·keepio1 chores with our pair of reticulated giraffes but at the moment all our pets were on bi-re •t the 10U course. Would Green Grow the Rushes On be interested in their services? We seem to have been cut off about then. The aluminum siding lady was given an architect's tour of our transplanted Italian Palladian villa in green veined Caracalla marble wlth frescoes over the flying buttresses hand.painted by Giotto Buscano Secundo. SHE AGREED THAT only a Philistine would tamper with such a civic treasure. · I asked the adenoidal type flogging the magazines if he had any cat digests. because our cat loved reading but had a rather short attention span and was already bored with Good M ousekeeping. The wholesale grocer's phone contact person was horrified to learn about our Tasmanian tin· borer beetles, second cousin to the Caribbean carpenter ant. which last winter ate their way through three cases or hot Italian peppers and a drum of crankcase oi l in our basement. SOUTH COAST PLAZA An Exhibition of the Chrysler Imperial JEWEL COURT 1 N7J12' l'ICTITIOUS aUSINlrSS NAMlr STATl.MENl Tn. IOll-lllQ person 11 dolnQ IMIM· neu •1: HYOR°"' 111•1 Au1uml'I Clr1Cle, HU,,ll"llfOft 8M<Jt. C:.Nlor,,ta,,.., LuDor HlaYKek, 171•• Aut...n" Clrcle, Hwnllnaton e .. cf\. C.llfomta tU47. With Fashions Arranged by Saks Fifth Avenue Thursday, April 23, 12 Noon Tiii• II'*'-11 tol'llluclltd by ., 1,,. dhrldlial. ,....., L.-Hl..,Kell Thia ... .,,_,, •• 1""9 .... -C-ty Ci.no of Or.._ c:ow.ty 01'1 One Lucky Person to Receive Gift from Mark Croes Valued at $750 r ~llJ, "''· Publl"*' Orenge CMs1 o.lly Ptlot,l~============================;;=~ <Allf'lfl, U,22,2', 1•1 1701 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8Ui1NllSS NAMlr STAlEMlrNT Tiie lollowl"9 persona are dol'lll """' ....... INDUSTRIAL COATING CO., 1'4tl S.nla CMlolta, F.....,.laln Valle.,, C•lilornla '17 .. J . MMoof Merltellno Co • 11462 Santa Carlotta, Fountain Valley, Calllornla '17• This °""MU 11 CondUC:tecl by an ..... 1nco1110ratecl auoci.tlofl other tl\e1t a ~·1 ..... .nip Jam.s J l'arrell Tiii• llacenwnt .... llfecl with Ille County Cler~ of Oranve CoUl'ly on Ap•il•, 1•1 , 1'1SMl1 Publlllled Orang. CO.st Dally Pilot, Al><ll I , 15. tt.1', 1•1 1•11 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICTITIOUI IUSIN•SS NAMll ITATllMlrNT The fOll-11'19 ...,.""', an ootn9 IMIJl ....U .. TRENT-MUSICK, LTD., J4all Neille Gall RNcl, Laeur1a Hiits, Cal lfornla '26». Robert I!.. Wl\Mler CManaolne Gener al Pa~ of Trent. Lid., a Callfornla ~al Per-rllllp). 24111 Nellie Gall Road, La9una Hiiis, Call!Ornla t26S3 Huntington Beach Pad&: Coast Hwy So. of Pier 15 Convenient Locations Newport Beach 1400 Pacific Coast Hwy 4111ulkll.·Watg Corp., a California corpontlon, 11u1 Irvine 8oUlevarcl, Sulit 203, Tustin, Celltomla ti.eo. Tllls~-•~«~~ltd~al~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, .,. ....... ...-... TRENT LTD. lrtRaetnE Whwler, .........,,. Oan«al Penner Tiiis Nlemtnt w• IU9d With Ille Cowtty C .. 111 'tf OrM1911 <;o.;nty on Aprll 6, ltll. "'""' PV01""9cl Or .... COHl o.lly PllOt, ~,, •• u. 22. 2'. 1"1 ,.,..., PlJBUC NOTICE RACITr.S FOURTH ANNUAL GRADUATED DISCOUNT SALE WEDDING MEMENTO -The image of one of Queen Elizabeth Il 's Corgi dogs glances at busts of Britain's Prince Charles and bride·to-be Lady Diana Spencer, in a dis· play at the Coalport Porcelain Company in Stoke-on·Trent. The royal wedding is to take place in London on July 29. Santa Barbara 'slumlord' hit with fine ' SANTA BARBARA <AP> A landlord who calls himself the biggest property owner in the city was called a .. slumlord" by A Flclltloua 811alneu Nema St•tement llled wllll Ille Covnty Cieri! la valid tor nw ., •• 111 •ft•r wlllcll II-conllnulng 11ua1ne11H must r•n .. Put!Alc.tlof' 11 ,,_ ... ,., 0111., II Ille r• •r• cllangH. Call Ille Legal Oepulment et tlle DAILY PILOT ror ln lo r m•tl o11 ••d nee••••,., tor-. 642-4321. IJd.'32 the district attorney's oJfice and assessed a $25,000 fine. l n a negot1 ated settlement agreed to by Jim Delmonte and the district attorney. Delmonte agreed to bring his property up to code standards within 90 days. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS EVERYTHING IN STORE GOES! Office E ... p•.t. L_,., TaMe1. F.raltwe, Pktwet .ct Acce1torie1 • 646-1671 DICK METTEE FINE FURNITURE ANO INTERIOR DESIGN ·-~In today's highly competitive business wotl~. yov ho~ to do,omethif'9 a little differenf If yov wo11t to 1tol'\d out from th. crowd Qnd rf "9 up •tro Miies ot the co\h reel1•. • KOGM RADIO STEREO la.I FM FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT BEACH Exdusfve l..nifad Engagement! TOGETHER! in lOMM TONY DANZA GOlll9~~ ~m···~··••11•• .,...,, .. ,.u ·~ llA&Y .IANSICA8CEU.O ................ 1'.-1 Bablloala and Randy Gardner are &lad to be beck ln Califomia. • Lookin1 a bit weary after aJm0tt ao week9 on the road, the world-champion niure 1Jcaten are finJ1h1n1 their flnt aeaaon as 1tarsofthelceCapade1. Thuhow wUl be atthe Anaheim Convention Center for aeven performances throuah Saturday bet ore end1n1 its aeaaon ln Los Angeltt next month. The dynamJt duo, cheated or a medal (possibly ,old ) at the 1980 Olympics becaus• or Randy's Injury, were at the Brea MaU lee Capades Chalet to pose tor pictures, discuss their life on lee and thrUI the knota of 1mall children i.n skates asktn1 for autographs. A. larae sl1n at the end or the rlnk sald, "Welcome Tai and Randy." but they seemed not to notice It. A ft er tossing otr a few death-defying spins on the lee for photographers, they chanted clothes and answered questions for reporters in a small room near the Ice while a noisy group or rans stormed the door. Off the ice and out of costume. they looked like any young, attractive couple u little un· comfortable wi th the fuss over them . "It's good to be home," Tai said in referencetotheirtour. ----NOW PlAYING---- .... CISTAWSA An'h~llTI 011v~ In C-• i;...,., /1 4, 879 98SO (m l tn-u« llU t,A i.I • • 11 4 ~"' 4•J ll Tiit Saddl'&"k I / 14 I ~81 5880 •• w .. odb•·d~· C1nedome /1 4 I~~ I IJb~~ I I,. I bH 755] lJCIU WlSTlllSlll ~uutn Co4~1 H1 W11 39 Dr•f' In 11 4 49• 1~14 1J;t 18911693 J 89J UC~ ~ ''""'~'-' ~ti\····. •'ti! H ....... ,44.,... Cetl• ..... •919--4141 ~ IUUlllAlllUlllt l~ CINI Mt ;Long<john~r~ Fish& Chicken Dinner $2.49 Our crtspy ftsh fillet from the Icy , North Atlantic and ~ boneless whltemeat Chicken Planks~ ..• wift) fresh cote slaw and golden fryes, that's a winning combination. Both were bom In CaUfomla. and altMu1h they traveled •• amateun. the pace waao't •• unrelentin1. "We do up to 11 1how1 a week," Randy said. "The preaaures are there. but ll'• dlf(erent from competition. • '1'here we had perform1n1 peak• two or three tlmea a year, but here we have lo be •up' more f!Onsiatently." They work up routines much as they did when preparln1 for judgln1. the difference now being that they can chan1e and improve the act conatantly. addlna and ~ lellng steps that don't work. "We have a coach on the road but can do only about.an hour oJ practice a day because or our performance schedule.'' they admitted. Neither has time for many other interests. and life on the road Isn't all applause and spangled costumes. ·'I try . to sightsee in some of the places we play.·' Randy said, "butt l's hard when you don 't know your way around or where anything is. "ll 's easier when you have friends In a town.·' And ~vtr dltappolntmentl they 1\dY~ from th'jr lnabllltY. to comPl(M' aaatnat their Ruttlan rlvall at Lake Placid lut year tuave been overcome. "We're doln1 now what w~ would have done. anyhow." Tai noied. "We )ust didn't want to wait until '84. It'• too Iona and too hard on us mentally." Another hardship mlaht have been finances. They estimate it cost their parents $15,000 annually to keep them in skating competition for the seven or eight years they were climbing to the top. ''Everyone tllinks or the Olympics as being exJ)ensive. but there the government pays for your fare and team uniform." Tai said. "But in world competition. we had to pay for everything ... Randy would like to see national restrictions on amateur skaters relaxed. "We should be able to accept more s ponsorship, like skiers.·· he said . Both enJOY the new f!nanc1al independence and wi II skate for at least two more seasons with the ke Capades under the present contract. __ ......... "CAVEMAN" (PO) II a •a a •• ••• .,{, ....... AllOOOUA•ll t• ·CAVEMAN' (POI ., .. , •..•.......•. " . ...._ '°'*...., ...... .aAUT'f THE HOWLING 1•1 ........ ~.,,.. ... , .. " , . . ~ ...... ··~· ''NIGHTHAWKS" (RJ ·-.......... '" .. ,.." .. '"-STAA WARS '"' -·-···-........ , .. ... .... , .............. , .. .. -""""• "CAVlMAN" IPOl ..... ,.-. ............ ,_ -"""···- 1111t-M 1:11. ... lur\ ......,. 1.00 .,._ ... IM IM,~TAllT NOTICE' CMllOIUll UllOfR 12 fllH! ---•NCAW14-cmll ~[jJ;·] :~:t::: 11 NO AM CW RMIO Will\ 1..,.11_., Alt<•-Y lltlftf V-Owft AM POfU I ,,,_..,h i-..,·-~rr•-- 1 mI&1 •97;.;· CAO:::;;~::~ - I No AM CW R-WIUI 19ftlti_., Aitca-y ...... Vovr Owft AM --.. •·u.-"MAMA IOLITA" CON "MUICO NORTE" ne....,_ .. ne _ __, "TM! FINAL ~,LICT " CAI Levon Helm headlines Bear Levon Helm, former drummer and vocalist for The Band, will perform Monday at the Golden Bear in Huntington Beach. Helm will pe rform with the Cate Brothers. a rock, rhythm and blues ensem ble He lm performed with as a youngster in Arkansas. Fo r ti c ket in - formation. call 960-5436. A • "ALL NIGttl LONG" (Al f Ho AM CM Rlldlo Wttl, l911ill011 Ait<•-Y ar1"9 V-""'11 AM PO~ .. _._ .... le .,o.. .. c:;,....,,, ...... JA•ICAAN "THIEF10 1•1 _,.,...,., .. ........ ) . .............. "McMNQ a&JLL" 1111 fl\.ue ~ • "ELEPHANT MAN" "ORDINARY Pt!OPLE" 1111 1'\.111 "COALMINM'a DAUGHTER" .. -EYB•JG-MOIU•NIWI WONDMWOUAN Wonder WOtfllln la plti.d aigliMI • IOrmef Nmy ~ wt\() ..... tum41d I enemy -oen• end _., 10 deelfOJ • ~ ~ FC)(~ I , .. , plene. I TIC T /ltC DOUGH M•A•t•t4 FrllM ~IO 0..-· Ill Berk« whel1 Hawk. Is appointed Chief SIK~ at the 401711\. • GOODTIMU A Nlf-c>roel.uned "lheo- berd of the LOfd" Mks .i-10 becom. one o1 hlalienl- FONDA SINGS -Peter Fonda stars with Susan St. James in "Outlaw Blues," a movie about an ex-convict whose coun- try-western song was stolen to become someone else's hit tonight at 9 on Chan- nel 2. • TOMOMOW/ TODAY A report on how etlmlnala r.ta uttng comc>Ut«I. a I IO'Vlval llO<y IDOul the rem.,kal>le ~ac• of the Northern Elephant Seal; • IOOk •• how ll<:ien· 11111 are probing for the smallellt petticle of mallet. a commentary by Nobel L-.ir•le llnua Pautlog 8i) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) <IJ C88NEWS QI A8CNEW8 t:ao II JOUR'S Wll.O 8J WELCOME BACK, KOTTEA When HO<t/lack la pro· moled 10 a higl\e< ciau. I 1veryone •• 1nclud1ng Atnold -wants him to 11ay w1111 the s-•r.oo• ., aa.NY HIU. Benny plays e honeymoon- ., ~ding the night on Amwiean I Ru ... an dis. ou•• 1e,,,10<y CHANNEL LISTINGS • KCET NEWIMAT GI> ITUOIO SEE "Cop Show" Eiplorer Scoull uaial lhe Glendale. Arizona POia O.Ot . Ne. Yorll City kl<I• make A • IO disco dencmg (RI ())NEWS 9 8AAHEY MIU.EA Barney purs Illa Ule on the line when 11 c-to a cl\oic9 of ousting a group ol lllnanll from • llellbag hotet or facing departmen- tal charoee (Part 11 l:te8 EDIT~ 7:00 6 C88 NEWS a NeCwewa Q HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Fonzie. Ralph all<I Pots•• are !rapped 1n a lire tha1 detlroys At's Drive-In 0 AIJICNEWS 8 8UU8EYE aJ M•A•S•H A a11ong w1noa1o"n a11ec1a Iha membe<a of 1na •0771h In varying waya ., STMETa ~ SAH F'AAHCl8CO 11 KNXT L8S1 ~os Anqpl,•~ GI KNBC 1NBC LO"-AnqelP';, D KTLA 1lnO 1 LO'> l\nQl'lt:' 0 KABC N 1 ABC1 LOS AnQPlf"> { "FM81CBS1 S.•n 01cQt> 0 KHJ TV 1lncl 1 LO~ An 11•1,..., ~ KCST 1ABC Sdn D • 11 GJ Kn"V 1lnO 1 LU"-Anq1•1,. ., KCOP rv 1 lnt1 I LU'> A r1111· ,, ... fm KCE T TV, PBS1 Lu' 1,n1.1 .. 1 .. ., ml KOCE rv I PBS1 Hu 111 nqton Be ll ll When 111 ..-illed wile dlaappeara, the evidence point• to he< husband. known lo become vloi.MI when drunk fD OVEAIEASY GI.Ifft Eleanor Steber IR) i> MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT (I) TIC TAC DOUGH @J MERV OAlfflH Guestt Steve Kan•ly Mimi Kann.Oy, Malachl Marlin · )"7:*> 6 2 ~ THETOWN Hosll Steve E<Swards and Melody Roget'S Take a IOOk al altematr-lo new5pape<s and how they d1fler lrorn olhe< ma1or pubhcallona H"lhef and Ennoe cable TV WOe<· Sl8ra D nos WAS AMERICA ··Growing Up Cruldhood In !he country end on me city al the lurn or the cen lury IS dee>ICl.0 D SHA MA MA GUffl Isaac Hayes 0 EYEWITNESS LOS ANGEi.EB Hosll 1ne1 Pedroza and Paul Moyet IOOll at jN/11 super s1ng1ng group Oevo and s1agetrighl 0 FACE THE MUSIC aJ AU. IHTI4( FAMILY Archte'• plagued by his economic plight wt>en ne can't go 10 work hlmaetl and he cant Sland Ille lect that Edith 11 wor••ng (Part ., fE MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORl (I) LtSTUCI Mor• is cnallenged lo a tlloot·OUI by one of his charon lrorn Ille day-care C41nte< ~M hero IS Biiiy ll'le Ktd IRI aJ CAAOL BURHETT ANOFRl£NOS Sklla 'Mothe< 01 The . Brode. "Tne Perfect Crome, ·s1raa1va11us e:OOA MOVIE Ovll•• 81uu 1!'171 Ptter Fond•. $uwn S.1'11 J•m•• Sln119r /tonowrller on run from l•w "'••h ~om•" who ••Plolh rih \ltu•Uon to m•ll• f\lm • # ,,., 0 NBC WHITE PAPER Ree<,ian The F1<at Hun- dred Oays ' ROQ9r Mudd eaam1nea Ille 11r11 months ot 111e Reaoan admml11ra- uon and 11s •mo.cl on l!w M~ha Mason back on - By JACKIE HYMAN ' As .. cla• "'r•• Writer LOS ANGELES It's been 51,"2 years since Marsha Mason moved on from her stage career to Cilma, winning three Academy Award nominations along the way. But the star of "Audrey Rose." "Cinderella Liberty." "The Goodbye Girl" arid "Chapter Two" the latter two films written by her husband. Neil Simon 1s back in the theater. and man especial- ly challengtng role: Mary. Queen of Scots "I FELT it was important lo go back," said M iss Mason . relaxing after a matinee performance at the Ahmanson Theater of the Los Angeles Music Center, the complex where the Academy Awards presentations are held "You body a nd your voiC(' as an instrument can get ad· justed to the more intimate qua lities that movies have. You have to get the rust off" Miss Mason 1s s tarring in the classic Fretdnch Schiller drama "M°ary Stuart ... translated and adapted by Joe McChnton. Michael Learned. who has won three Emmy awards for her television series. "'The Waltons ... plays Queen Elizabeth l Robert Foxworth. whose film credits include "Da mien Omen II" and "Airport '77," ts the Earl of Le icester. Coincidentally. it was Miss Leamed's winning of her role on "The Waltons" that gave Miss Ma son a break in the theater She took over Miss Le arned's part in a n American Conservatory Theatre of San Francisco production of "Private Lives." and went on to star in a number or ACT productions and recreate one of them "Cyrano de Bergerac" on PBS ' "I WAS always grateful to her." satd Miss Mason, who looks smaller. prettier and more vulnerable in person than on film Then. 51 'l years ago. a fter a well-received pro- duction of "The Heiress" m the Los Angeles si.ab· Marsha Ma.son a.s Mary. Queen of Scots urb of Westwood. Miss Mason left the stage Now she's back. in part at the urging of Ahmanson artistic director Robert fryer. whose th.eater this season has featured performances by such m ovie s ta r s as Charlton Heston and Katharine Hepburn. "My original feeling was that I would play KNBC G 9:00 -NBC White P•per. "Reaa4lll: rfhe Flnt Hundred Daya.'' Roger Mudd examines the impact of the Reagan adrninistraUon on the nation. KOCJ,!: · 8 9:30 -''Tomorrow/To· day." A study of the many ways lasers are being utilized; a report on public safety and the electronics industry. nation. foreign policy, the economy. delenM and the poUllcal pertle9 • (!I ~ Mll..l..M Righi •lt•r Dietrich embet'k• on • p«tonai campaign 10 avoid au wot'Mf\, the aquad room beoomet hlled with got· 080UI C¥! gltlt (R) vlall to UC1i Obe9rtetory etop Mount Hamilton: • repon on public Mfely and Ille llectronlca lrlduetry; Ofle ~fiction ......... vlMre on Mw ~lorte I th~ our future. . GJ tM/N ONff'IH fl.Im 8HIAJ( PMVIEW8 "The Lile And Death Ot Bled! Fiims" Roger El>efl and G-Slai<el talle t took al wtiy tt>e era of ftlm1 by. tor and tbOul blaclt Amerleana h&I ended 9:30 0 @) TA)(J Reverend Jim falls for Tony's d1vqr~ slater and Ille two bec:Ome 1nvolv9d 1n a bllnrre ella1r (A) fE) HOLL YWOOO WEEK IN RE\llEW "' dllc\JMlon on the work· ongs of tne him and TV •r>dus1ry hOlled and pro dUC41<! by Emmy Award- winntng wr•let Pte<re Seu v11ge. featuring three Hoity· wood reporler panellSll and a tead1ng industry fig. ure '1.i) TOMORROW I TOOAY A study of tne many waya taaera are b4t1ng utilized, a 10:00 8 Cl) MMN ~ t-Ille lrllUITIA ol turning 40 and • MW r-wllh•~ men I G • QI!) NEWS 9 20110 MASTEN'tECI THEATM ··T...,_ ~ Tiler ... and Laur..nl a wed<Sing olghl beeornM a rnecabr• avenl as their ~ulve guilt conjurea u" Ille tiaunllnQ aoifll of Camille tPan 2)0 tO--*I aJ NEWS • IHDEP£NOEHT HETWOAt< NEWS 8!) MV8TERY "Sergeanl Cribb Wa•· won. Sergeenl Crobb 11 catted on 10 oe up the IOOte ends alter 1 woman conleaae1 to the murder of lier phol09rapher hut· bend s au.sl8tlt (Part II '1:00. GI 0 (I) «IJ HEWS Q ST AA TREI< Captain Kirk ptays a game of da•lh with a maniacal JOHN DARLING WELL-, WILL-ARO, Ii LoOK"S LIKE. IH£ COUN"TRY IS IN FOR SOME NtCE WEA'THfR FOR THE NEX.1 F"EW ~YS/ Hotla Damien S1mp.on and Stacy Hunt d1acus1 breakthfough 10 Cf .. IMty wtlh guetll Or Sh•llCa Ka1aguNa M O and Or l/1ola Neel Ph 0 GJ MOW • * * "Spy In Your Eye" 11966) Bretl H•IM)I, P~ Angell ., INDEPEHOEHT ~HEWS t .10 0 MOVIE • • • "Terror In The Sky" (111711 Leif Ertekaon, OouG (t958) Takaalll I Tltur•day'• Dat1lh•r Mol'lr• ~MORNNG- 11:00 e * • ·~he Star Padler" ( 1934) Jonn Weyne. Verna HIHle 11::90 8 * • * * "How Gr- Wu My I/alley ' (Part 21 ( 1941) Waller Pidgeon. Maur-1 O'Hata -AFTEAHOOH- 12:00 m * * Blowing W11<1" I 1953) Gery Cooper Bat· t>era Stanwyci< • * * * "Rieherd Ill f19SS) Laurence Oliv19r. John GMllgud B&Md on Sheltnpeere's play 3:30 0 * * '" "Agemat A Crooked Sky" ( 1975) RICll· ard Boone. s1-•n Peter- by Armstrong & Batiuk 1'1-WS ~1 • ..JO+J. ANO ITL.L 0E .JU51 PERFECT F~ ALL CF 1'HOSE Fll-E. FOLKSIN AKRON, OHi() ... ~~age as queen Elizabeth," said Miss Mason. adding that she looked al several other plays before director Jack •O'Brien suggested that she take on the title role in "Mary Stuart." There was some consideration at first U:6' the two leading ladies might switch roles hallway through the run. but, says Miss Mason . "That idea lasted five minutes The production values would have been hard. and then there's the rehearsal lime ." MISS Mason. who regrets never having been to Scotland. turned to books to research the role, which contatns one scene that never actually hap- pened . a confrontation bet"'een Elizabeth and Mary She said both the physical demands of the part and the emohonal ones are quite stringent. 'It's an extremelv d1fflcult role because it's underwritten," she satd "The Elizabeth scenes ha ve great conversations. where in Mary's scenes so much of it is responding t o what is happening ·· ln add1l10n. she said. "You're dealing with a different ktnd of language, and you also had to fit into a historical setting how they dressed and why, and your carriage rm wearing corsets. as they did in that pertod · · The production 1s a change from shooting the ftlm "Only When r Laugh." a Neal Simon scnpt that Miss Mason finis hed filming in January. She plays an alcoholic actress "who's trying to re- <.'sta blish her relationship with he r 17-year-old daughter." played by Kristy McNichol. . "JUST because of the way movies are done. lh•.s has an entirely different energy level," she said. "You only shoot five minutes a day. To do stage, you have to be physically fit. 'The actress. who seems remarkably collected women Speak up for someone who has JUSl fm1 shed a draining performance and has another one to do the same night, said she draws on her practice of medllat- in1t She became interested in meditation e~ yurt ago and explains, "The whole philosophy behind it is you honor yourself. you worship yourself, you respect yourself because God is within.you. It's ex· tremely positive from a creative point of view ''It's extremely relaxtng and it gives you a perspective NOW PLAYING MAl .. 1 IRlA Brea 529·5339 AMC OUllGE MALL Orange 637 0340 MAU SOUTH COAST Cos1a Mesa 546·2711 EDWA.RDS' WHTIROOll Garden Grove 530 ••O 1 EDWAUI' UDDU llCll E'I Toro 581 ·5880 Ul c1n ClllUIA Orange 63•·3911 "Listen! women Speaking!" Share your views and ask Questions on this live participation forum presented by KOCE and the orange count\' commission on the Status otwom·en . Hosts .kn Cooper and Jo taies hJite ' \Q.J to PhOne ' 714·8$·5050 With 'PJr~. ·. . ·'. .. ~· ~- := . . .· .· -'rVSTIN AND NEWPO&T·MESA branches of the American AHoclatlon ot Unlve~lty Women . :CLUB CALENDAR ''meet today In the Harbor Day School of Corona ldel Mar at 7 p.m. ror a twid-ralalng event, ''Good Books for Young Readers." For more ln- rormation call 769-0217. SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY Alumnae 'Chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi meets ror art ex- . hibit Saturday in the Zonta Clubhouse ln •Newport Beach. The auction begina with a pre- view at 7 p.m. For more information call 830-5218. COSTA MESA JUNIOR Women's Club meets for cenvention Friday and Saturday in the Registry Hotel of Irvine. For more information call 754-5611. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Woman's Club meets for luncheon Tuesday in the clubhouse, 3i442 El Homo St .. San Juan Capistrano. For more in- formation caH 493-5287. PA&ENTS WITHOVT PA&TN&U ffuntlJlcton Beach .Ch1pter will have a 1prln1 dance at I p.m • .Frid,a,y. A 'SOI house party will be held at ... SINGLES CALENDAR 8:30 p.m. Saturday, ln HuntJ..oaton Beach. For lnformation, call Gerri at 9&t·5*. BIG BAND SINGLES wlll have a dance at 8:15 p.m . Sunday in Anaheim. For lnformaUoo. caU 525-7657. ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a dinner- IRVINE BUSINESS and Professional Women's Club meets Tuesday in the Hungry Tiger restaurant, 2101 E. Edinger. Santa Ana. at 11:30 a .m. For m<?re information call 8.l3·5461. NEWPORT HARBOR BUSINESS and Professional Women's Club meets for in- stallation and awards dinner Friday at 6:30 p.m . in the Sheraton Newport Hotel. For more information call 645-5072. .. Girl should play baseball QUESTION: Our 12-year-old daughter will again be playing baseball in the park department league here in Costa Mesa. She pitches and al~o plays rightfield. Since last season her figure has become anything but boyish! Is there any harm in hl!r continuing to play? ANSWER: First of all, let me congratulate you on encouraging your daughter to play what ASK THE DOCTOR has traditionally been an all-boy sport. Baseball 1s a terrific game and il"s good to see the girls out there playing it along with the boys. Your daughter's newly acquired "anything but boyish" figure will cause certain changes. The mechanics .of running and throwing will be different from what_;he is used to. She may be a bit awkward in the lteginning o( training. but should soon get ac· customed to the difference. There is no reason why she shouldn't go on to be a fine baseball player As far as pitchina is concerned It is dangerous for youngsters to throw curve balls. Pitching a cur ve puts stresses on the elbow and shoulder which may produce permanent injury! Anyone who im't fully grown should stay away from this pitch. Most young players are aware ol this but can't seem to resist throwing one from time to time. Young pitchers should also be taken out after three or four innings lo protect their arm The most important warning I can give to young baseball players bas to do with the oc- casional injury. The injury usually occurs when players collide. When someone is hurt and gets knocked to the ground, let him stay right where he is' All too often some well meaning adult tells the child to "get up and walk off the injury." This is absolutely the wrong thing to do. If a muscle or bone is tom or broken. moving it may well make the injury far more extensive and severe. You will note that in professional sports an inJured player hes right where he is until he is examined and permitted to get up. Your children should abide by the same rule The player should he stall until or unless the pain subsides. Wants to quit crazy smokes DEAR ANN LANDERS. I am a 13-year-old and Jive in a rather small town in Vermont. My mother is a well-known psychologist. Recently I started to smoke pot with a girl I hang out with My mother knows about it. but she won't tell me to quit. I really want her to order me to come straight home after school and to stop Qllllllll smoking these crazy cigarettes. but she refuses to do it. According to her. I am old enough to make my own decisions. I don't feel secure enough to be in complete charge of my own life. Please print this letter so my mother will see it. I feel afraid and alone. - UNDECLARED WAR IN NEW ENGLAND • Dear \Jndttlared: Sounds as If your mother bu read too many outdated boou on how to nlae children. Someone should teU her tlae perml11tve approach of the '50s w11 a dismal fallure. It pro· duced a crop of unmotivated, lrreaponalble., mlud- up "klcls. Very few 13-year·olda are 1ufficleally mature to lJve without guJdellnes. You need to have limit• set. II your mother won't order you to 1top 1mok- ln1t thoee crazy clgarette11, pretend I am your mother for today. I am telling you -stay away from pot. lt could mess up your hetd In ways you wouldn't believe. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why do people ask for an honest opinion. and when they get it you wind up in the outhouse? A close friend of mine has been dating a man who is the absolute pits. She asked me what I real· Ly thought of him. l said he was a terminal bore. egocentric, insensitive and a very chintzy tipper. Instead of thanking me, she screamed. "If that's what you think or him. l don't want you to attend our wedding." Now my husband is mad at me tor opening up my big mouth. <The man is a customer or his.> I repeat the question: Does it1 pay to be truthful? -SIBERIA FOR ME. DEAR SIBERIA: There's a dUference between being truthful and maJdnc mincemeat out of a penon. The next time you are asked aacb a question, think of aometblng positive to say. Everyone has at least one good quallty. CONFIDENTIAL to Torn and Tormented: If you don't dump that loon you will be lD no con- dition to go to ANY c:ollece -either the one of ht• choice or yours. Discover how to be date bait without /oUlng hook. line and sinker Ann Landers' b<><>kUt. "Doting Do'• and Don"la," wiU hsJp 11ou be more poued and 11&re o/ younel/ on dales. Send SO c~a along wflh o long, atomped. aelf-addreued en~lope With 11our reque11 to Ann Landera. P.O. Box 11995 . Chicago. Ill. 6()611. Leo: ·Roadblocks are removed TfJUJlSDAY. APRlL 231 1981 BJ.SYDNEY OMA RR AIUES (Mar. 21-Apr.19): Focus on information. collection of data, security, principles or law. Journey could be part of scenario. Caneer, Capricorn natives ftaure prominently. Sense of dlr,ectlon can be regained. Long-range proapecta· coine Into focus. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20>: Ueht touch spells 1ucces1. Heavy-banded methods are doomed to HOROSCOPE f aUu'!;,!f,Patent 1011 can be tramformed Into prof· it. Oe , SqiUariua peraom filUJ'tl prominently. O•• wboahares baste concerns becomes valuable al· fy. . G MINI (May 21-Jun• 20): Detallt require cloH tcrutlny, eapeclally where contracts, •creemeatl eater ptcture. ftevlalon.s could be neeeuary. $coi'pto. Aquariue naUvea play prom· l.otat roJ•. MaritaJ •t•tu commands more-than· ut11al 1ttMrtloo. ' CANCBa <I,.• 21 . .iuly 12): Examine varioua po11JbU!Uet, optlon1 eo•ected with lpeclal 1trrieee, dependent.I, emplOJi:neot. O.lftllli, ,.v1r10, Sfflttarh• penoa1 play •llliftemit R)la, Ch~n1n Ot'cur-~.Ud}O,oeeom•.ndaUentkiD. LloO ;<July ia.:Aq. 21): RO..Sbloekl are rt· mo.id :~ ba•• ~~ ebM•IO win, to advanc•, to .aalfe _, Ud ..... Ta--. Libra~ kOrplo and &lat a•mhr I 01ure ·ftomln•DUJ. Home ~ u~. Yw'U M ban'-r. more ..... I WE CA8E will have a pc>etry read.ln1 at 7 p.m. Sunday. For lnformaUon, call 83'M.506 . GET-ACQU.\fNTED HOUSE PASTY led by Emily Coleman will be held at 8 p, m. Friday in Anaheim. For information, call (21~) 828-8949. NEW AGE SINGLES will flave a bike ride at io a .m. Saturday in Irvine. For lntormation, call 770·3296. ADVANCED DEGREES LTD. will have a social at 8 p.m. Saturday in Newport Beach . For information, call S51·4S35. SMITH COLLEGE CLUB of Orange County meets Thursday at 10: 15 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Francis Fabian, Jr., in South Laguna. For more information call 951 -7260. TEMPLE BAT YAHM annual dinner dance is set for Sunday in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. For more information call 644·1999. JUNIOR EBELL CLUB of Newport Beach DELTA GAMMA t\1-VMNAE of Santa Ana and Newport Harbor meet at 9;30 a.m. Tuesdar, In the home ot Mn. James Wlllon ln Newport Beach. For more ln!ormation call 851-1842. • AMERICAN ASSOCIATION of Retired Penont meets Saturday at noon in the Senior Center. 3807 Sandbur1 Way, lrvlne. flARBOR SENIOR CITIZENS Club otters classes in travel beglnnln1 today from 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. NEWPORT BEACH CHAPTER of Jfadaasah m~ets Monday at noon in Temple Bay Yahm to celebrate its eighth birthday. For more in· formation call 760-l380. EXECVT.IVE WOMEN INTERNATIONAL meets tor dinner and play Tuesday In the Harle- quin Dinner Playhouse in Santa Ana. For more information call 540·9380 LAGUNA BEACH KIWANIS Club meets for swap meet from 9 a m. m the Laguna Beach High School Administration building Saturday. HAPPY HOMEMAKERS meets at 10 a.m . Fri- day in the Fountain Valley Civic Ccmter. 10200 Slater Ave . Fountain Valley For more in- formation call 847-1958. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ..u'\p\.l .u. r_.()tKr 1'41 ·\,;-A. ....t.'-£ co .. st MOTICll IMVITING a10$ n AUMENT 0,. AUMbONMllMT o~~ ....a£ Hollce Is Mraby 9lvan lllal Illa 0,. USll 0,. .a ,, o.-1 n .... ,. ol TNSI-ol Ille HuntlnQIOft "ICTITIOU$ aUSIMllU MAME ~s;• lllJ __. •••ell u,.1an Hlgll Sc'-! Dl•lrict wlll The foHow•ftll .,.,..,.., nave •ban· ~~~=~~~~~~~b===~~~~r.-~~~ receive HaleCI blClt lo• •upplyln9 CIO<loCI Ille.,.. ol lt.e ttclltlOIA t.ullnon TelepNIM Syljem -lnl.,..nco MHI ,..,.., EMERALD SAY ASSOCIATES 1"9 or .,..... to Ille -••kellonl Oft LT O , •I 1600 Dow Sl,.of S•11te lll, Illa In u.e offlU of Ulcl Dlflrlcl Hawp0r1 11H<11, C.ltlornl• •1'60 Interiors ______ by Valle' QUESTION: We ore mov1nq fr a lage home to a four room condo. How do we use eve':Y inch of spcxe! AHSWER.; h 1s difficult 10 alS'w'er yo4.1 quesrt0n You g::Ne no hint as to ...+.at you needs oe. In one case a special wall unit was desi~ ro revolve.·'' gave eK~ro space for storage of serving troys, etc. It hod boots on one side and the stereo ~pment on the other. This deo may be of use 10 you Hoving a decorahng ?oblem? Send 11 10 us. l.terion by 'Y •· hie. 1117 A W ttfclff Dri•• Newport leach, Calf. 926'1 Our de~...,,~ yo.1 prcibleml., '"-neit ed.hon No P\-oorle Coll'--f'loo1. lllcll •11•11 bt Clterly merUCI Tiit locllllou• Clvllnou n•mo ro "Tel~ Sn ..... AMlnt-nce, lllCI rorrocl to •DOV• wet llltcl on OrM'IQll II OS," -Mel lo Allyn E A-toy, Couniy on -y ll. I* Purcnu ln9 Me"•t•r, Hunlln9ton WOOOVIEW PAOPERTIES, 8•ecll OnlOfl Hl9n ScllOOI Olltrlct, INC . 1.00 Dove Slreel. S111te Jll, IOUI Yorktown Ave. Hunllneton "'•*POr1 8Hcl' C•ltlornle t:!MoO l•a<I', c.llfomle 9lMot, -recelv..S lhll -neu w•> c-led CIY • •I Of' before l 00 pm Tllur..,.y, AC>rll ttmot..i °'""""""'P ». lftt, •I wl\iCll time -piece olclt wooov1 .... Pr-r11n Inc Wiii be IK'blicly _,_end ree4. Lyle 0 ScKnll.ell'* Eecfl Dicl/>Nll rema in •elld tor e •b PrH-..t period ot lO "•" •II•• '"' dele ttOa&ttT MOlllllSOM •Pe<lltod tor tlle receipt 01 blclt uw Offices Tht l\oarCI ol TrVll .. > W'lall ti. lllo HI M•w-'c.Mff 0.l•o. t.OI• jud9'1 of '"" Qualll\I of l<!UIP<flOf\I kit• ... olleroCI encl rewrvn tt>e rlQl'\t lo rtle<I .... .,.,, a..c:11, CA 91WI any Of' ell blch encl lo wel.,, an11 Ir ••9<1ler.11 ,,., .. n Allyn E A-10 Purcllat•A9 -N9or PuClllll'led Or-(OHi Oeoly Piiot, April IS 12, u•1 17.c>-41 PUBLIC NOTICE FIJ71l• Pwbl•"'"4 Or-Coa\I D•oly P1101 "prll 1 I. IS n. lttl IS'7 II PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •USIMESS MAME STATEMENT ---'"• fotlOW'lnQ Pl''°" ., dON"tQ bu" l'ICTtTIOUS aUSlllESS nu••• llAMISTATIMlllT AP PLIED SERVICES H r .... toflow1ng "''°"' .,. dOtno Aml\lld ffYIM (11tforn11 t17U bY'"".'' .,. Bffnty Allen HOOY4'' ,.. Amfs.t.o GEOAGE S DELIG>il AHO AS 1rv1"0 C•11torn1• '1114 • SOCIATES, ll AlloQ,,tnv, lrvlnt. T11i.' °'™"""" CO<lclU<l9cl by.,, on C•lllornla 92714 oovodu•I · Gtor9t Mertln HJonfl, JI Al &H,.y A Hoover 1"9hefly, trv•M, C.llforn11 92/f4 '"'' M•tetTWf"ll ..,1, M ed w ith the E<tlin 01119111 H1o•I" 11 Al Cownly C:lt" ot Oronoo C.ounly on 1e911onv. rrv1ne, Calll0<n1e t1114 Mert" )() 1911 Tht' -..nH\ '' t oncl\Ktltd by 1n •n dt••Ou•f c.eo<911 M H1or111 E'tlln 0 H/Of'111 l"" •lat-I *•l liltcl •llh lllo County Cler• of Oran90 Counly on Merch lO. ltll OOW, "°'«MIL.Liii & D~UIHANTY Fl-PuClll\llt<I Or_,91 Co.\I O•oly P1101 Apr II .... IS, n. 1'111 IS .. t i PUBLIC NOTICE N-71303 Y•.,." H11l MecAl1-81,. .. , ... , .. tit, c--... ..... lnrl1M,C.l~tZ11S NOTICE OF DEATH OF JAMES HOWARD Ft5"'S REINHART, tlk.J JAMES P11bl11r.d Oranot co .. 1 Delly Piiot, H . REINHART, ak.i JIM --------------------..iApr111,1,is,n.1M1 IS,._,, REINHART ANO OF WOMEN'S HEALTH CARE Complete wo~en's health care provided by experienced board certified obstetricians and gynecologists. • ~•cy TesffRg e cORfrot. Df ......... FfttMcJ IUD llrtlt CoMrol plla • Co .. llh ,....... Clledl .. ................. .... s.. .. • Obsftitrkll c ... & Dthwy ·~ T-.. Ug.tto. -,......_ '·~-Male •AIOITIOH ---PETITION TO AD· PUBLIC NOTICE MINISTER ESTATE NO. A-101315. 111CTmous eu1011!u T 0 a 1 1 h e i r s MAMll ITATllM•MT f. . . d . t ' ri.o touow«nt P••ton• ere "°'"' bene 1c1anes, ere t ors 11us1n•n•:. and contingent creditors of LA p ALM A T ER II Ac E James Howard Reinhart APAATMEHTS, LTD., 16162 8o1Kll ' aowte ... ro. Hun1111oion ... , ... aka James ~· Reinhart, ce111orn1e ~ . aka Jim Reinhart and Hect ... M.,uc11, ,. .. , ... ,,.persons who may be ~:1r1~:,:.:~ Hu"''"'10" hecll. otherwise interested in the H«lorAMrM<ll will and/or estate: Tiils mt-I •lh 111.0 wllll ,.... A petition has been filed County Cieri< 01 Oran~ Cbunty on by Eleanor P. Reinhart In April 6, '"I. . C ,.,,..,. the Superior ourt of P11bll•llecl 0ranoo Coall o.11r P1101, Orange County requesting AP'll I , n, Z2. n , '"' "'"' that Eleanor P. Reinhart -~ appointed as personal PUBLIC NOTICE representative to ad· ---minister the estate of ,.~~~'::!:~:.:::r James Howard Reinhart,· Tiie to11owln9 perMllll •r• "°'"'of Costa Mesa, ca. (under bu11neu .. ._ the Independent Ad · JAYA EVltASI AN AU TD ministration of Estates SE IWICU. mo WHI Finl Street, Act> The """titlon Is set tor S.111• ..... c.tltornl• tJ7Q:I. -..... AD1t1AA.H M LIH1t, 11Hs o...m hearing In Dept. No. 3 at Ave11.,., Fountelll ve11ey, ca111..,.,,1e 700 Civic Center Drive '21~·0E!iOEo uwiAOATMODJO West. Santa Ana, Ca 92701 mu QuerU "'--· FOYnt•tn ve11ey'. oo May 6, 1981 at 9:30 a.m. ce111 .... rt1 .. 21•. IF YOU OBJECT to the Tllh bufllWJI ll COflduCl9CI by • nrantlnn Of the petition llml led l*'trwnlllc> • • ' Mr'-M Linn you should either appear ~===================~! n1, ~1a....,_t .. .,. 111ec1 will\ u. at the hearinQ and state 1-county c1er11 01 a.-.... County on your objections or flle Apru 2• '"'· ,.,.,111 written objections with the Free to the ,Pahlle FOCUS ON /COMMUNITY HEAL TH Sl'ONIOU:D IV PACIFICA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Publlr.lwd <>-.coast D•llv P1io1, court before the hearing. Apr111. u. zz. H. "'' 1100 .. 1 Your appearaoce may be 1-----------In person or b~· your at- P\JBUC NOTICE torney. IF YOU ARE A •m111 CREDITOR <Jr a cont· P1CTtnou1 •u1utau \ngent creditor of the de· r11e 1oi'::!1~!!-:'!!tno '"'"· teased, you must flle your 11eu .. : claim with the court or'; .. 1 ,. E Dor 'o u " " £ present It to the personal IHTIRPlttSIS • 11. ••• HINE OOT ""epresentatlve •ftftl'llnted SQUARE O£Vat..OPM•1ns. ~I•.. .. .. -Gtlde11-•I ,. .. , .... ,, 1eu1 '"''"e by the CQ\,lrt within four 11..-•• TW11111. ca._.. months from the date of ouv Hll.TOH DILLOW., .. •-first Issuance of letters •s. MfMl, c.u .,...., CA ma. fttaA I ~-11 700 f T'lllt ....,.... l• cAllldllic11tc1111 • "'' f rov ,_,.. ,n .,... on o dh,--..1. he Probetf Code of =z..": 04,..,., Callfornla. The time f()r '"" .....,_. -111e11 "''"' "" flllng claims Wiii Mt ex· tr Ci.t'll of °''""' c-.tr "' plr• prior to four mon\hl. 11 a,"" .__ from the Ola'-! or ._,.,.. ,......,. °""" CM• o.ttY ~ lno notked .oove. Altlll.U,D.lf."'' ,,..., YOU MAY EXAMINE ---the fll• kept by the <.OUrt. PU,UC NOTJClt If yoy IN Interested In the ----------1 tst•t•, vqu 1nav me • ,... qunt wttn the court to r~ ctlvt ~lal notice of the Inventory ot estate auets and c.f the petltlonl, •c"' ,count& ind reporh dttcrlbtd In Se(tlon 1200 of tht C.llfornla ,.robatt Code. · Dev~ IWtt~ Tlftll WW ~. Atlefiey It ~·· ~:r. C.ttr =:;£;.CA tlMt~'CJ'm f'ublllhed Orange COHl1 o.u,. Pltot, Aprlh1~)~J ?.19'1 ,,~, :· : ~ ·' .. t f economy "'UfI!l!.'1.'l!,• When 0 . William MHJer finished addresstn• th 15th Annual Chapman Economic Forum, Chap. man's chairman, George ArC)'rocs, told him he sounded "more Uke an Orance CGunty R.,publlcan than a Democrat." Miller, who served aa chalrman of the Federal R~serve Board and secretary of the Treasury in the Carter administration. told several bundr~ guests at Tuesday's Forum luncheon he endors~ President Reagan's economic propos6a· - although he suggested modiflcatlona were4teeded. "WE HA VE TO DEAL with the root causes o( our economic problems, not the symptoms," Miller said. "We must reduce the role of government in economic activity, and that means less govern- ment spending, less deficits and less borrowing . There should be a transition from the public to the private sector In these regards. "We need to expand investment, changing rrom a consumption orientation to an investment one. "We must reduce dependency on imported energy, thereby becoming more self·sulficient. "I THINK THERE IS agreement on these broad ideas, but not on the specific policies and ac· lions." Miller commended Reagan ror keying in on four basic elements, each a cornerstone to the prea· ident's proposal: 1. Cuts in rederal s pending. 2. Cuts in taxes. 3. Cuts in Cederal regulation. 4. Cuts in federal growth rate or monetary ag· gregates ' AMONG THE MODIFICATIONS Miller believes neC'essary 1s a reworking or Reagan's tax· cut l')lan. "There are two parts to that plan,·· Miller said "The hrst is a liberalized deprecia\ion to en· C'Ourage business investment. and the second is a general across·the board cut in tax rates. .. My pro1ecl1on would be that there will be an agreement on Ii beralized depreciation for busi· ness I think there will be some reductions on in- dividual income taxes, probably not for three years. ··rr we reduce taxes and don't reduce spend· mg. 1t will add to higher federal deficits and more inflation " MILLER DWELLED ON the need for reduced federal regulations. and cited his record at the Federal Reserve Board. He added. however. some government controls remain necessary. "Then~ are legitimate reasons for government regulations." Miller said "'We should remember it was not govemmenl regulations that made Love Canal. it was Love Canal that made government regulations.·· PUBLIC NOTICE ltll1D ~ICTITIOU5 aUllNIU MAMIE5TATaaMl .. T T111 'OHOWl"t .... _, ••• 0.1"9 ~~·-· McCULLOUGH $ YST E MS, • ~, .. ~lflll>. 11101 V-rll1> Avenue. S..U. Ana, C.lllO<IW• '1105 DTH ENTERPRISES. INC .. • C•lllornl• corp0r•11<1n, ttlOI \Ian oerll1> Aw ..... !><lnl• An•, C•lllCHnl• '170!1 McCULLOUGH CONSTRUCT!°" t NC • • Call lorn<• corpor•loon. lAU E ••I L01'0rtdOI l;>r1 •e, Or1noe. C•ltlorno• 92W 111;, ~IM" I• conouctt<I by • oenerat P""IM•.i.•p DTH ENTEAPAISES. INC Oouo• .. w Ha11son. PrwiiOMI Tiii\ stal..,._,1 w•• 111..0 .. 1111 lhe Co.,nty Cltr-o! Or.,.oe County on Ap.tl l, ""· Kl .. DEL& A .. D.llSOll IDDl'I ... --a1w., Sollte 1"' "••'9rt 9NCll, CA '16M '"",. P11bl1\Nd Orano-Co .. I Diiiy Pilot, AP<il I, 1S, tl, 1', 1'11 1104-41 PUBLIC NOTICE flCTITIOUS aul!Mf.SS MAMf. STATIMIMT Tiie tollowtno pe< '°"' 1r1 dOlnO buitneu as ORA N GE COU NTY ADVEllTISER. t•1 Vt1 F11HK..,t1, Mlulofl v .. io. c;.111or"'• ti." M EACHANTS PU8LISHU4G. INC., • C..hfo.111• corcior•llon. 1•• Vt• F•brtonl•. MtUI01' Viejo, c.i11orn•• ta" Tiiis _,...I 11 <Of>dUC .. d by• CO< por•tlon Me<c...,..., Pvbll~nQ. '"' Fr_,a P . MeMlllO, ~.~, T"ll \Uf-1 *•• flied wllll llw County Clerk of Or.,.oe Counly 011 Aptll 7, 1,.1 "ISffff Publl\Nd 0r"'9f Coe" O•ily Piiot, April I, U. U, 1', ,,., , • .,._ .. PUBLIC NOTlc'E PUBLIC NOTICE flCTITIOU5 •vsn••U !CAMIE STATaMllNT Tl1• roll-•"9 --•re CIOl1'g l>onlMH.U P V C WEST Jl WOOO Wind. Irvine. C .. 1lon\la"nJU Jolln Allred Wulon, ll WOO<! ~·"nd. ''"'"'· C...ltfornl• 92714 Horbert RKN rd Wttt..,., Jr . Jt wooo W•IWI, l•vlne, C.llfoml• 92/U T hts bus1ntt' IS co"Ctuct•d bY • ll<t1'or•I Wr1nerUl•P John A Wttlon '"'' it•tetnent ••s filed '*''n tne County Cl•rk of OrMQlf County on M.rcn JO, ,,., PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOU$ aUSINUS NAMI STATIMINT fhe •0Ho•tn9 oerson~ •r• do1n9 b""""" .. RET I REMENT INN OF FVLlEATO ... RETIREMENT ,,.,. OF DALY CITY. RETIREMENT INN OF CAMPBELL, RETIREMENT INN OF SVNNY\IAlE. AETIREMEloj T INN Of FREMONT RETIREMENT INN OF BURLINGA M E . RJTIAEMENT INN OF SAP< JOSE, 1f10 H•r-BIYd Suile 111. C°'te M .. •. Cal•ICHn•• 91'21. Athr"'"""' tnn\ ot Ament•. tnc • w .. ntnQton corpor•\•on. 1910 Herbor Blvd Sutll 111. C.01U M\11 . C•tttornt• "lt2' T"'' DU!o•MU •t ConctU<ttd bY • COf POf'•t•on A•t•r~t tnn\ Of Anw:t•t.•. tnc l W Mtdl•nd VICI PrHldenl TntS 11•1•-nf .., .. ltltd wit" the County Cl••-or O•efloe Co\lnly on March 30, 1,.1 PIS-Publl\lw<I 0r""91 c .... , O.lly Piiot. April 1. I , u, n. ,,.1 1603-lt PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS auSINISS MAMIE $TAT•MUtT Tiie 1011owln9 P••sons are dotnci l>llJIMUH: COR..aRATE OIVllLOPMENT 'ICTITIOUI 8UltNa$S ASSOCIATl!.S, 2001 S.yvi.w A..,.,.., NAM• ITATIMaNT S.tnla AN Heiciht1, C..llfomla•VIS Tiie lello•l"9 ,.,_, •rt clelnt Cllaflt Y·Hall tncor~•tect, • bo>tl-•: C•fllor..i. corpore\IOfl, llMSI 8eyvlew 411Tl$TS IMT•aNATIONAL., tOI Av•n111. s.Ma A,.. Htlgflb. C:alllomle Dtw., Ori"'· "••Ptrl aeech , t271S C.Jllonlla .,.._ Thlt llUlllllU I• COflClll<IH by a tOf" 0.,\ald Oear09, lto 0.1 Met poratloft. Shore• T•rnc•, S•l•11• •••<h, Owi.y·Helt '"' • C.lllof!NftlJS Olenn D. Mar11n '"'" Grand•lll. ''° Del Mar ~ Sllora1 T•rr•u. ,.,.,.. •••<II, Tiii• t.late!Nftt -1(1911 wltfl IM ~.,.,....._..,$ ~'' ci.r-ot 0r .... C»unty on Tiii• M l1'HI 11 ,_,_ ..., • Merell JO,"" ~··----· "' .... ~ Ploolltfled Or...., CMSI o.lly l'li.1, "'" ~ -•u• wltll "" .... ,. '· •• IS. n. 1111 lu.HI '°""'' ,..,. Of 0r.... c-ntr °" •11•.'•'· ,,...., ...,...._ D'Mll C.11 Del~ "'lflt. ¥11 t , '~ 22. ,., ,., 1's..41 PUBUC NOTICE OeHy l'llmC ...... ., aic.MNlt ........ George Argyros. left , chatl wUh G. WiUiam Miller at Chapman Economic Forum. Commenting on the 6.5 percent annual growth rate of the economy in the first tbr~ months this year . Miller pointed out the economic problems th.is country faces are long term. not short term. Ke also said people ahouldn 't be surprised at the country's resilience. "We've absorbed economJc shocks in the past. yet we're still the most productive country in the world." MILLER SA.ID THERE are two ways or in· creasing productivity. The first Is the condition of the work force, which he feels lacks experience. "We have a healthy, well.trained work force, but it's not experienced," Miller said. "We've added 9 million to the work force in the last four years. mostly as a result of the baby boom. That problem of inexperience 1s already starting to correct itself.·· The second, and more important factor in im· proving productivity, is increasing indus tries' in· vestme nt per employee. "Employees today are less well-equipped." Miller said . "We should encourage more research and development, which is the foundation of modem tools and equipment." Miller said he plans to return to the private sector this fall. "WE ALL HAVE THE same objecllves, the same goals ," he said. "and they a re balanced growth, high employment and price stability. Inflation stands be-tween them " Financial planning lauded Businesswoman burns $5 bills to prove her point It's a real attenllon grabber. the s ight of a roomful of \\Omen nppang dollar btlls into tiny pieces · But when asked to whip out a SS bill. Anne Fish· er received no volunteers during a spe~ch Tues· day to the Newport Harbor Dolphins club. The president of rnnovative Investors wanted the women to shred their Washington-stamped c urrency to illustrate the value of paper money. SHE EMPHASIZED her point by burning a wad of $5 bills and destroying a stock certificate. "l can still sell it ... s he explained. "There is a difference between value and money. The value of money is basically psychological." T he Garden Grove businesswoman explained that financial planning need only take t wo hours every three months, "The time it takes to get your hair done.·· Understanding the real value or money 1s the first step in planning a solid financial future. Ms Fisher explained "EARNING AN INCOME is not enough ... she cautioned "You have lo go beyond that." Going beyond that means freeing extra dollars for investment purposes Before investing any funds in a company or product, s he suggested one should first: ' understand Lhe program; know how quickly the money can be withdrawn; be aware or any future li abilities; know all tax benefits arid the history of the product. THE WORST THAT CAN happen is that you would lose every penny ... said Ms . Fisher. '"And you·d still have all the tax benefits.·· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS auSINl5S NAMI STAT•MINT T"e IOll-i"CI per...., ll 00"'9 bull ""'•' WE STER N SIERR A LANDSCAPE. 111t S G-Orlve, S.rtla A111. Cefllornl• •2100 RK,...,dC. AemtNJ, llttS. G- Orlvo, Santa M•, C•lilor1'1• '2704 Tiii\ bll>llWM 11 c....o..<1.0 llr en t" dlvhtu•I. RlcNrCI R...,lre1 T"ls suit-I w•1 fltacl wl!ll Iha counly Cltrl• °' Or,,.09 Covnty °" M .. ch lO, 1"' ,, .... P11t>tl\llt0 <>< ..... COUI Oally Pilot, APrll I, I , U. tt. 1,.1 !!l"·lt P\JBUC NO'l'ICE --------- PUBLIC NOTICE --------- PUBUC NOTICE "CTITICIU5 aUSl .. ISS NAMI STATIMIENT Tiie loltowlnQ P••IOftS •r• doing bull1'etta. COLOR ll RIGHT TV. tS77 W 8 e-er. Coaie AMw, Celll0f'1'1• t2'U Kennell! e>r.... Frledt...O. 1l17"'G ' E. S.nte Clara, Senta 1'n•, C•llfo<"n•a 92105 Thi1 bUtl,,... 11 t011c111ct.O bf .., In. dlwlO.,•I. Kenneth b. Frle41- Tllll alat_.1 w•a lilied wll" llw Counly Cl•rk of o,..,,.,_ Gounty on Mtrch i , '"'· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE MUNICll'AL COUaT O~ TH• $0U1'N OllANO• JUOICIA DISTlllCT COUlfTY 01' oaANOI ITATI 01' CALJl'OaNIA PUBLIC NOTICE F oundiltions eroding? SACRAMENTO -caurorn1a·1 currently 1tron1 economic vitality re•U on lhrff foundatlooa -emp&oym nl, hou.ln1 a.ad transportJtlon -and two ol these are badly erodln•· Peter C. Kremer. prealdent of The Irvine Company, told a aym· poslum explorin& opportunitlea ror continued economic growth. Speaklna on "C•lHornia'a Emerains Economic Vitality Crisis." Kremer warned • luncheotJ a1tdience Tuesday that California is rapidly losing on providln& adequ11te affordable housing and on the ability of ib citizens to move • easily from hous ing to employment. i "Without adequate housing and transport.a· ~ Uon. California's balanced . broadly divenified and .. geographicaUy dispersed employment base will • wither." Kreme r said ... THE DAY·LONG SYMPOSI UM was co· : s ponsored by the California Council for Enviror,1· t mental and Economic.' Balance. California Build· t ing Industry Association. CalTax, the League of :. California Cities and the County Supervlsors As· : soc1at1on. : ··During the past three decades. Cahfomia has : become the nation's leading state in economic vitality. attaining this position with an ideal com· bination of three necessary ingredients: employ· : ment, a place to work, housing, a place to live. _ and transportation, means of getting from home to ' work and back again.'' Kremer said. ,,. , Kremer st ated that as California enters the de· cade of the 1980s, its lamed economic vitality is • headed for a crisis. :' Job growt h is expected to be in the area of :. 240,000 new jobs each year. a 2.4 millwn increase : in jobs to 13 million by 1990. he said .._ "BUT HOUSING PRODUCTION is not keep-~ ing pace with household formation. resulting in a : statewide shortage or 279,000 units by the end dT !' 1980 and an expeC'ted shortage of 800,000 units by 1990. ·· he said He traced the current housing shortage and .. coming hous ing crisis" lo increasing demand re· suiting from the ,6aby boom generation reaching household formation age. a soanng divorce rate. a reduction in average household s ize. longer life ex- pectancy and new 1n migration At the same time. he said. suppl} of housin~ was curtailed from 1973 to 1977 bv the credit crunch and rc('ess1on. and since 1977·b~ lavers at- federal. state and local government regulatior\i ~ enacted in the early 1970s and tightened dunng the • recession .. Transportation 1s al!>O not keeping pact' "1th California's growth."' Kremer char J;(ed . addin~ that .. our once·proud highway and freeway system is agmg and 1n net.•d of improvements. repairs and completion JUSt as dema nd for these roads 1s m- creasinl'( ·· HE BLAMED THE HIGHWAY transportation crisis on unwillingness to increase gasoline taxes while inflal1on in the S<.'cond half of the 1970s e roded the purchas ing power of the state·s highway funds. and a resistance on the part of those admin1stenng highway funds to complel..f and improve the highways and freeways : ; ---:. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS •U51N•U ~ICTITIOUS ausi .. tns ..,.,.. 51'AT•MAINT MAMIE 5TAT•M•NT I . T"• foffo..,11'0 "'"°"'' ••• "'"• ,,.. IOI~,,. --· .,. .. ,,,. """~~'" IMnlnn• .. UNtFLITE YACHTS APOTA ADVERTISING AGEN NEWPORT BEACH, 1001 W c ... tl CV I~ --•t• COl'onll Del M,,,., HIQ<\•n. ~-rl lk-c" C•lllCH"'• C•t1rorn1• 91'U '1Ml AP OtA COl'IPOAATI O N ra UNIFLITE YACHTS INC. •1C111rorn·• <O•PO••t•on>. .. J. N•••d• COf'ODt"•lton 4'60 S E•tl•rn. M•r9utrll• Coron• D~• M•r Sutle 100. Lot> V~>. Ne•ld• '9109 C•ltlornl• 92•H. P 0 Boa USO. Th1\ bu"M1i\ '~conducted tt1 •<Of" Hew piof't S..Cf\ C•hfOfn'• •1660 por•hof\ Thi\ ~nft' ''conducted Oy • COi" Un1t111e Y•c,,ts. inc oor•hon n., .... , E PYll••m AllOl•C~por•lt"" p,.. .. Oont Ow•yMR Cl•rk. This lt.at~l w•~ fUecl with UM Prtttct.nt •• County Ctor~ of Or""Qe County •n r11,. >i.tmwnl w•• rited wt!" 18'', Mucl\ lO. 1'111 County Cltrk or O•anO" County °" l'U*7 Aprot ~. 1'91 Pubt1....0 Oranoe c ... >t Oa11y Pilot. Aprol I, •. u . n. tMI UIO.at Publl>lw<I Ornr'19t (04'\t O••lr P1lol, April I , H, n. 1'1. 1'111 l•IHI PUBLJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSIHIU "CTITIOUS aVSIHESS ,.AMESTATIMIHT NAME STATIMENT , T"• foUowlnQ persons •r• doing lhit toUowlnQ Pt''°"' •r• do•nv bt.1s1n•ss ., bu\tnt\~ e\ M I. M APA!HMEHTS. 112 VI< CROWN POTTERY. 1101 ~ Y• Ion• SlrMI. ~U. Ml ... C•lllornl• Sl•Ht. S...te AA•. C11<rorn1• 97104 ,,.,, A-r1 l CM'tor, 10l't B•y•1ew M•h-~"•reel Jt1•. S•l••r S.nta Ana, C.llfor,.,. '11101 l •M , N-1 a..c,., u1tror1'•• '1'60 M•"' ~I•, lOI? vettow\1-Mol\a.....-SNrHr. m• Stiver Ortve. C.O. .. Me'MI. Ottforn•• tll.7' , L.,••. N-1 Ila.ell. C•htornl• •~ Thi\ b<n•MU I• conducl~d by • TlllS bu1u1us 11 con011<l•d 111 qen1r•r .,.,,,_'1\lp ' flu\r..nd -wile "Yrll Scier>-ci•• -mnwdt SMr•t r"'' 1t•t-t ,. .. r.teo '"''" Ille T"" •i.t-1 w•• ltt"' "'''" ,,._ Counly Cler-ol OrMIQe County on Counly Clerk or Cff..,9' Collnly o,. M•rc" lO t,., M••<" :io. 1•t ru .. t Pl Publtslw<I Ora119t c ... ,, O•tty Pllol PubhSlllCI Or-CoHI O•Hr P1101. All(il 1, •• IS. 11 •... , •Stl-1• April I. I, U.11, 1•1 15'H1 ---- PUBLIC NOTICE fVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ·-l'ICTtTIO.S aus11t•H lfAMa STAT•Ma .. T , . T ... '0410Wll\O ... .._. h d'lnCI 1>U4! n•ua'; PA"l(COURT SIX, 1201 W. ~ Vet• •IOI, Orenta, C.tffomla '*' • Jo"n G Wftl, M.O .. 1111 Vilt• Prl•.O•. s...t• A,.., c.ilfor'..i. n1os,., , Hiii boljlllftf It <Olldu<IH by ett fif. • dlvldual .IONIG. W.Q, M.0 . • , Tiii• Slat-I w_. ftled Ojl(lltl INt Cou,.ty Clt•ll of °'.., .. County on Mercll 16, 1111. JAC•toN, ICIDO•,_ a IUC«LIMO, ~-Law , ........ ~. .... ,.,.. ......... ............ c..ro.m.. . ' ~ ..... CA..... ~· " PulNlllWCI Or"* c.tt o.lr, Pl . A.ptll 1, I, 1S, U, 1"1 ,..,..-t PUBU<= NOTICE \ WASHINGTON (AP > - Treasury blll yields are down for ibe HCOnd week in a row. The averaae discount yield on 26-week bill.a sold at Monday's auction waa 13.821 percent atalnat 13.6'6 percent the week be(ore. Ttte yield on 13-week bllls was 13."3 percent, down from 13.783 percent. Beginning Tuesday, banks and thrift institutions could pay as much as 13.871 percent on their · six-month $10.000 s avings certificates , 0.25 pe rcentage points above the 26-week rate. The 2~·year certificates are at their controlled ceilings of 12 per cent at thrift institutions and 11. 75 percent at banks. • Construction loans $500,000 minimum fh .f)L-'{/, ' (r~,,thPJ'l f .>.rt:nanr~o/ Tr t?~t?loh~-"lt Koll Centre Newport, West Tower Suite 8800 4000 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach HAROLD KENT GARY MILLIONS TO LOAN NEW RATES! $10,000 to $1,000,000 2ND • 3RD TRUST DEED LOANS Prompt Funding 90 Days to 15 Years • SWING LOANS • 2ND·3RD T.D. LOANS • Residenllol Speciohsls • Apartments • Commercial • WE BUY DISCOUNTED T.D.'s • We help structure nores tor mo1dmum soleob11ity • \f'~1fo1·1 _i JJac0~.· /1~111!t<1tJ ·1i1t'. llCfNSW MOllJGAGI IOAN &IK>'IP CALL 714/955-1055 •000 MocAllTHUll 90UlfVAllO KOU ftNANCIAl IOWlll'S • SO!lt •10 NfWPOQI !llACH CAltfOllNIA 97660 27% 6-12 MONTH TIRMS ALL S!CUREO T.D. $5,000 MIN. S.C.P.M. (714) 640.7993 Celt 642-5678. Put • few word• to work for you. _ _.._CTOAS CORNeR A.,• Coln• A Stampe OOlD I SILVER Prices for 4·21-81 e>..-C .... MM.M lllYW CJ. Sii.JS hW SIM Kn11111••-.... .JS UM.JJ #Npl• IAal• "'4.1J UM.IS 100 Corone• M61.7S $41t.7S jO Pnos MltM Mil.ti '°'" Sliver IYos t~ t.~ '·-~--"' Cool ... ~ ...... ( 714) 55l-ll50 South CoH t Plau Vlllege --·-· , .. ,__..__,....., EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 DO YOU NEED HELP? 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In Business To Make Business Happen At Creative we have the money you need Loans from $25.000.00• for any business or investment purpose Where you deal directly w ith the Lender and not a loan broker. ·All loans secured by a combination of real and personal property 4425 JAMBOREE ROAD• SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH CALIFORNIA 92660 (7141 752·7923 PA$8QQK ACCOUNTS 9" Annual Vleld No Minimum Balance Interest Potd Day In/ Day Out Compounded Dally Credited Monthly Thrift 8y Moll -we pay ~toge both ways. f·llll ~ccounta •Plus 3/•% Interest $10,000.00 Minimum • lnteMlt Monthly A11•t1 over $140,000,000.00 Serving Calllorn/1 ov.r a quarter century. I ~t Locaftolll Cotto Melo 2000 Ho'bOI -.a loraono •n. V9'\NO M (11") Ma-JIN (211) Nl-<»00 OlonQ9. nn £ 1CON11 A• t01Tonc. 19201 ~ort. ~ve (71,1) .. ,..JOO (21J) t)W070 OorwNv ... 1 hWON ..a WNt1191. '57&6 Lo rooe ,..., tUonel (211) M.3-Qttf . ..---. ... N .-ona k b Qeoo. 3'I\ loor'la Al9'YJ ..a ,, ~ "'"' 2»I011 tf.501 lloc eoc.t lfWf Ian Ola:io. .r.o ~ Po (21JI ....,IOI CfU) 17M2IO Do you read the PUBLIC NOTICES published in this newspaper daily? They are a vital part of DUE PROC.:SS OF LAW and of the PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW ... Publ ll' n o t 1t·es a r e published under C'Ourt or de rs or lc1?1slat1 \ e C'ode'> fo r the purpose of nollf> 1ng o n e or mo re 1n di\ 1dual!. or som e pro posed a C't 1on or pa st ev ent wh1 l·h may ad versel) or favorably ar fe<'l their ri!lhls. interest or duties. and also for the purpose of 1uv1ng suC'h persons lht-opportunity to protect their rights. or to be heard in the matter Meny pubhC' notices have great u lue to taxpayers. s u C' h as t ho!le notices p ubli s h e d b y mu n1 c1palilies. publ1C' authority corpon1t1ons. t reasurers and others who are required by law to publish financial re· ports . budget hurlng notices. ordinances or ad· vutisements of, bids on publtc work Th ese no llcu keep you in · formed as to how and why your lax dollars are beina upended. They alao prevent or di•· coura1e rraud1, raids on public treaaurles and favoritlm In the letttne or public contraC't1. PUBLIC NOTl(:U MAV AFFECT vova LIFI. vova PllOPEITV, oa VO a Bll INESS. BIG SELLER -A model of the Dodge Charger used in the "Dukes of Hazza rd" t elevision series is the hottest-selling model auto on the m arket toda y. according to a toy st.ore manager in Royal Oak, Mich. School honors Paul Volcker NEW YORK (AP J -PauJ A. Volcker 1s the 21st annual re· cipient of the C. Wa lter Nichols A w a r.i:t f ro m Ne w Yo rk University's Graduate School of Busines s Volcker. c hairm an of the Federal Reser ve System since Augus t 1979, is the seventh banker lo receive t he awar<I SELL idle items wllh a Daily Pilot Classihed Ad. a y LOIUAN PETaY For a number of yeara, electric utWty companies have been overwhelmed by industry problems. A num~r or Investors have tried the bond substitute/total return approach to inveatina in utilities, b11t r suspect that they have been disappointed, not only because Interest rates rose (which. of course, atcected bond prices. too) but also because earnings and dividends may not have grown at the expected rates. That problem. in tum. was caused by the utllJtles' need to do extraordinary a mounts of borrowing at high Interest rates or to sell new stock al pnces well below book value The problem s of the industry do not need to be documented. Aside from the high cost of m o n e y • til e y I n c 1 u d e u n · responsive regulation, declining or unstable demand, inClalion, fue l prices, fuel availabilit y, construc t ion delays , and environmental obstr uctions. IT APPEARED THAT many reeulators a nd managements seem ed unwilling or unable to co m e to gri p s wi th the difficulties confronting the in· dust ry and, for that matter. the r atepayers. Within the past year , however , ther e have been signs or change tha t indicate that m a n y r egulat o r s a n d ma n age · ments aretak· 1ng positions that mav re· fleet a more realistic out· look. T hese changes c an b e seen in "auv OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND hl1her rates ol return ~ina , sranted, a new vie w of con - servation measures and non- standard sources of enerey, and more attention belog paid to planning, construc tio n a,d financina. ' The investors' attitude towafd I electric utility •tocks hat ~n 1 essenUaUy neutral to negati . • It you are an investor in utilltJ . ! you normally e xpect moat ( r your r eturn t o come fro~ d i vide nds . H o weve r , a . preciation may occur in utill y stocks even if dividends rema relatively flat. j MANY INVESTORS baJe rocused on whether utilities ha'<>e their own natural resource aj.. sets Other areas which should be considered H you Invest ln utilities are: better regulation~; improved interna l funding; la peak in spending; improveme9t in operating per form ance; :a favorable shift in nuclear oif.· I o o k , p o t e n t i a I f o· r ·diversification . and. of cow-s •. good fundamenta ls ~ ·' A n o rm a l in c r ease !Jn dividends should a pproximate?4 pe rcent annually. The aver age utility company yields a bout J3 pe rcent. Thus. if the stock priqe grew with the d1v1dend <i.e .. rto change in yield ). the total retuin could be 17 percent per yeat. Obviously 1f interest rates go up. there will be pressure on ~ stock pnces : For the investor seeking ovef all return, as well as the ui- dividual requ1nng income from investments. ut1lit~ stocks may develop a new followmg. ; • 1 f,onan Pet ry 1s an account e{· ecut1ve in the Santa Ana of /ice df Merrill l.yncl1 Pierce Fenner & Smith. Inc 1 t NASDAQ SUMMARY N•me w ,.oTrn un Ch•,NLI 8 10"Ph1't IM>mel GeneU:n wt Sc•nO wt Scoctn'f tnt0 1e Cmr>M<t Scl\W118 Enr81 ' EH lnl SI H•ndl 8rynMw Gt net En EqGICI "" Lull\.., O•l•O • GtOlel Belun" A111no GtMlEn un C..-r..iH GnSl\M Alt• IJwt UPS L•HI ,., .c"t s '1') , ... It ' 1 J ,. . .. )•... • 'h 13"-• , ,,,., .. '°''• • l s11. • ~ 1•4 • I S''> • V. \•, "' 1 s 16 • s " 1116 •S·l6 .. , . "" 1•. • t . II • 1"- ,. 1 't-14- / ,, . .... l"• • ~ IJ 1'4 J,,. • .... OO'#NS i...11 cnv 4V. I sv. 1•;. ''" "' '"' -~ )t) ~ Ht -"" o •.i. -•'!lo 1\\ -" l'ft 1\1. 900 -IC>i )7•<. 4V. " J'l'I '"" -,,. ) IS-16 -\\ , ... , v. 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''i ,, 1 ·= MwO.C ""'" ai:Ji Ml. t;;. a -...1 MetMo UM NL M4lt C 4.tl J.. I!"• t 1 ~YM T I ts. 1+.•• •'ff':o to.11 11 I: I~ ii N ~Ill L'fl'l(lll ,_.. Ill ).» '·" ..,,..,.., ' ,.. ;,.., •• ,1-tt =t !:r .... ~~ ,;s; ...... : Jf.! I It.JI n:n "-1· J !! v':r it."!! ~ • ::::i•.0 K .. 1l:i "" ~"' ... i .. ts ;;r,;•• G rt .. tA tri all ·& l1' Wftc" I :I j =t i;M~: ra: I~ 15i 1i·!: =11 ""? . ' ~ .. l · ~ ~ ltt ~I. 1'rr t ~"' u .. , 1111 ~~~ ab 'D~ ti :.'1~ 'J.i .. :~'. ~tt -J. ..:'tr:t ;;:# "~~ ,.,u ~ I i .. JF "' " ' ,_ ~-,T :;Jt' .,. "?~" .. = 11111 ..., a.· 1 1 . "t I ...., v• 11. 11 "Ir• 11 _,. .t1 ... __.. ~ 11.a NI. N ND 11. AM UI l.1 N ltW!t I.ti t 1• • ~ ScveraJ commuten to New York City who Un " )'elr·round ln We tchetter are formln1 their tlnt car pool for this summu -but air~)' they are bofltd down In c:onlusion about how the driven can be prop. erly paid for expenses without vk>latina their auto Insurance contracts. Thia belUddlemenl ia ahocklb&1y widespread, and ll applies. too, to many other aspects of aulo insurance. Now, as the big driving season of 1981 &ets under , way, it 'a vital to have the facts Tbe answer to the above car pool question '' that if you use your sh a re·the·ride deal in which car in a typical @ everyone takes --------------------~ ·~~rifson~r~~i;:~ IYlVIA PDIJIR ~ z : does all Lhe - - driving and col· lects only for expenses Crom the passengers, yoµr policy provides regular coverage. Insurance pro· lection is not affected as long as your car pool ls not intended as a business operated for a prom. But an angle you must consider: In a car pool, there are several passengers in the car. and should your car be involved in a serious accident, you could become liable for a big ~um for bodily injury to these passengers. The solution is to boost your liability limits. Q: SHOULD YOU HAVE collision insurance on an older model? A: The honest answer is: No While much de· pends on the value of your car, collision insurance is just not worth the cost if the market value of your auto is only $100·$.100. Q: WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE between col· lision insurance and comprehensive insurance? A: Collision insurance provides coverage for damage to your insured auto when it is damaged by contact with some other object. Comprehensive insurance provides for payment of loss resulting Crom such sources as glass breakage, windstorm, vandalism and malicious mis chief. A deductible 1s usually applicable to collision losses and also is available for comprehensive ·Q : WHAT IS A "non-assessable" policy" A: Undet a non.assessable policy, you pay only one rate and if your insurance company has a bad Joss experience with you during a year. it cannot re· turn lo you and ask for more money On an assessable policy, the company can return and ask for more money to cover losses There are insurance compames which still write assessable policies . To be on the safe s ide. Liberty Mutual or Boston, one of the country·s top auto insurance companies, urges you to ask if the policy being sold is or is not assessable and lo choose only a non-assessable policy. Rates may be increased from policy term to policy term, but you will never pay more for in· s urance already bought STO&KS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES Na" YORKIAP> l'INf Dow·J-·~­rfectc~' l1'W JI j .._ °'9fl Hltfl !AW C-alt AMERICAN LEADERS GOLD COINS HIW ~IC (Af'l -llfkfl ... , ,,..,...., •• .. ,. "91M, c...,._rt4 •ltll ,.,, .. ,., """' .., ,,..., . IOIS.'7IOID.•1001..W 1•.-1t,• '"·" ..._ .. 46.1' Qt . .,-S..11 101 20 IO? M 10..4.J 101.*-o.15 ,..,,. '""s. •. ., 1'0.7~ l .• ao Tm 1S Ull 6.S S1k llldu•' Tr•n Ulll1 4,Jl6.- J,144,6'D ~.- WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK IAPI Apr. JI Prn. Mvef\~ TOcla~ ,,. De<ll....:1 "' 721 Un<h•noeo »' JU T04•1 luun 11JOJ "" N•w 1119"• '"' ,,. lff• '°""' " 11 WHAf ""'E• OIO ,. NEW YORK IAPI A9< Prwv AOv•n<ecl T~I o;b 0e<llM4 m J02 Un<ll~ 171 1~ Tot.t IUUff .,. 117 .... hight ... '' Hew lOWI 1l 1 MflALS T_., c;., ... , ••~·11 u"U • oouncl, U.S. deltlMlloN. UM ._.,.,,u. pound ZllK 4314 cent~•'*'"°· cletl-. Tl11 t4.7JS4 Melfll W•ll c~l• lb A......_ 7• CMIU6 .,..._, M. Y. Mtrc..-, ~.00 .. , llMI<. Platl-"6ft.llOl<OfO.t., N.y . SILVER GOLD QUOTATIONS T ...... ., .._...._,lftOf'ftlllllllCl.~MUO., l ....... , ef-tllllnt$411.00 • ....... at-lhll ... .Sit. It. P·rHttMt: 11.ino.-1.00. l•rlO: 1e1e efter-11111~ tc1' 142.00..-. He 110., • MerMH: .,.,. ital"r Ml.OO, \IP'4.00 . ............ .,.,, Otlly ~ .......... u.oo . .......... , ......... , ...... ,~ uoo.u ....... . 20 ciJISS A c10AflffffiS • • ••• • =.~: 1oos ;ng Taste ;,. .ow Tar I . I By SANDIE JOY of, .. o.11-, -SUit Pies, like people, exhibit a variety of personalities. Some have an affinity for spectacular social soirees, others seek the exclusivity of a small group or coziness of a family gathering. At Knoll's Berry Farm. particularly during its Country Fair week. the most special pie is boysenberry. 'At least, the pie seemed to go over big with contestants in a pie-eating competition. each of whom, when given the "go" signal, eagerly dug in with all teeth into juicy boysenberry pies. Within moments, they were up to their eyeballs In pie -not to mention hair, chJns and cbeekbooes. It was all in good, old fashioned fun . And, although he'd eaten his entire pie -except for a tiny bit of crust -one contestant indicated he was ready to J{O al{ain. Boysenberry also is the favorite pie of Virginia Knott-Bender, so we offer you her re- cipe here in case you'd like to stage your own pie-eating contest. MRS. KNOTT'S BOYSENBERRY PIE 7 th ounces water 6 th ounces sugar Dash of salt 1 tablespoon corn syrup 1 teaspoon lemon juice ·J------------------------------------------------------------· 3 tablespoons cornstarch 2 ounces water 1 16-0unce bag frozen boysenberries <don't thaw) 2-rrust pie shell In a saucepan, combine water, sugar, salt. corn syrup and lemon juice; bring to a boll. Combine cornstarch and water; blend thoroughly. Add to saucepan and mix well. Heat thoroughly. Add frozen boysenberries. Pour into unbaked 9-inch pie crust. Cover with top crust and seal well around edges. Make several slashes in the top to release steam . Bake in a preheated 400-degree oven for 40 minutes or un- til top is,tgld'n brown. Cool on a rack. The woks of food counts with dieters ... CB Demonstrating her taste for boysenberry pie is Shelly Phelps , JO, of Huntington Beach . who was among con- test ants in a recent pie-eating contest at Knott's Berry Farm PIE CRUST In case you don't have a favorite pie crust here's one that's easy from a booklet called •·Betty Cracker's Creative Recipes." 1 cup baking mix 'I• cup margarine or butter, softened 2 tablespoons boiling water Heat oven to 450 degrees. Mix bakine mix and margarine in small bowl. Add boiling water; stir vigorously until very soft douah forms. Press dougb firmly with floured handt ln p~e. plate, 9 by 1 ~ Inches, bringing dough onto nm of plate. Flute if desired. •Bake until li1ht brown. 8 to 10 minute's; cool. •.Or, you can fill, then bake {/pp/fl----:Aat:----- Y.a cup flttnly packed dark brown sugar 3 tablespoons cornstarch ~~~,._._...-- 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 teaspoon cinnamon . 6 cups sliced, pared, cored apples 1 tablespoon lemon juic;e 1 tablespoon margarine Bake tn a 425-degree oven for 50 minutes. ..,.,. teaspoon ginger , Y. teaspoon salt 41Aa cups thinly sliced. pared, cored ripe pean 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon margarine '> Bake ln 425-de,..,e oven for 15 minutes; reduce to 350 degree1 and bw W> loqer. 2Y.a tablespoons cornstarch 4 cups strawberries, hulled and halved 1 tablespoon margarine Bake ln 425-degree oven for 40 minutes. By MARTIN STONE DEAR SUPERMARKET SHOPPER -My huaband lJ the local basketball coach -aod a pretty Sood one. His team has been the league champ for the past three years and the district champ for two years. It la the cuatom for the coa.ch to give a victory party •at the end of-each s uccessful season Cor the team members, cheerleadera, aaalstant coaches, scouts and all of their dates. Each year the party has 1rown, and so has the expense or hosting it. You can imagine how much all or those healthy youn1 people can eat. We finally decided that we bad to find a way to help us pay for the party. YOU GUESSED IT! Refunding has come to the rescue. As this past basketball season rolled on, we saved every box top and label. We got ourselves organized and turned almost all of them into cash. By the end of the season, we had enough money to pay for the whole party. And th e trash bags that we used to clean up afterwards were free. The party was a great success -and know- ing how economically we put it together made it even more enjoyable. J .J. FROM MICHIGAN DEAR J.J. Give me an ·•it." Give me an "E." Give me an "F." and soon. What does it spell? It spells fun and savings for millions of smart shoppers. Thank you for the lovely letter that s hows just how much we refunders are on the ball DEAR SUPERMARKET SHOPPER ..... My Cather is retired l used to make a beeline for his kitchen closet and his trash can every time I visited him. I would show him the Universal Product Code from the box or trash bags, the cover from the bathroom cleaner and the empty cereal box. "What are you 1olng to do wit.b all that trash?" he would uk. Try u I mi1bt to explain refunding to him, he always looked at me as though l had lost all my marbles on the way home from the supermarket. THEN ONE DAY I got an idea. I took a feyt of the proofs of purchase that I got rrom hifn and sent for the offers using his name and ad· dress. It wasn't long before I received his call. "Did you send me that money?" be asked. I could tell from his voice that he was truly sur· prised. Now when I visit my dad, he opens the door and points to a neat pile of boxes and labels piled up in a carton In one comer 9f bla kitchen. I can't tell you how happy J am that I decided to share my refunding with him. -A.B. FROM RACELAND, LA DEAR A.B. -Thank you for sbarin& thla experience with us. I hope that other readers will decide to share their couponing with their retired parents. · REFUND UPDATE Tbe cons\Jmer -relations people at Swift and Co. have inf6rmed me that they experienced an unanticipated delay in fulfillln1 their popu1ar Soup Saver Offer. "We bope that those consumers who have requested but not yet received a Soup Saver will be patient with us for a few weeks longer until all our requests are processed," says A rye Oethmers. Swift's consumer-relations manager. REFUND OF THE DAY Write to the following ~ddress to obtain the form required by this offer : Welch's Free Milk Offer, P.O. Box 1390, Arlington Height.a, Ill. 60006. Send for this form by July 15, 1981. ------------------------~------------· CUP 'N' F ILE REFJJNDS ....... , .. , .. _ .. ,, c;HMI&. ...., .. ...-c ... ,. .. ,, Clip CMll lhlJ 1111 -klel' II •lllt Jlmlt.r <-1Mlff coupon• l)lvorago ref11nel offen wltl\ blv .. 991 <OliPO•'J. lor u•rnc>I• $1.,, co11ec:t1119 llw ....-CS P<OOfs of pur<IWIM w1tll1 t-lno fOf !hi required rlllvtWJ lofms al the •uP9rmar1<1l, In --~" -~ii,,.., -,..,..,., lrlell"9 wlll'I trlonds Olten may nG( De avalle0!9 '" •II ., ... "" 11>1 "''"'''Y All-10 _, lo retelY9 11chr1lund TIMM,.....,.. otMn l'llYI a val"' .. U1 .N. Tlllt ........ , "'""" otten art -'111 a t.UI If JfJ .lJ, AUNT JEMIM.' Pancake 5n1Ut Oii.r Aec11v1 I pan<•k• sNll.l"·pouttr Send lhl recaulre<I rtfund IOl'm and one Do• Donom from ""Y ~'1>.pound PIC"-ol Aunl Jemima Panc:lk• -Wllll• Mt• Exp1ru Oc:l JI, 1'11, or ,..,.,., Wl)p!ln '" ''"''"'"' OtAPEREHE \l Rtlund Off., Stnd 1111 req.mld r• fund IO<m ancl llw p<nll Ind <llK from ,_ pacll.199• ol O•a1>er1ne Biby Waln Clothl E•P'"' J une lO. i.et L l FE 1no11n Liit ~te< ~" Set Ott., A1<1lv1 I poJttr encl pon sat Stnd lhl requir1C1 r1IUl'ICI l0<m ancl four putcl\a.w ~h from Llf• cerMt Eap&re\ Ot\ 3\, tttl WET ONES Fr• Ct1b -Ptlyl!lft Toon Al(lhl I FIW>er Price criO .,.,.t play..,. toy.~ ti. requir9<1 r• lllnd form, "'"' ""''' <114> •lr•P• from &alloy Sitt Wei OM• encl 11 tor Po•--r.ano11t>Q. l>r _ ,,,. torm -prool of purU\lst anCI $4. E•Plro Sepe. JO,'"'· WHEATIES Save 51.20 Offer. lleteive lour JCk.,1 cou_.. Send llw reg11lreel rotund lorm -tt.. onllr• bo• bottomo. trom ...., •-wi.auos llJO .. L Tiii• °"" It llml .. CI to con.in lftl ~Expires J .... lO. ttet Bon11t' TlleM .,,,.,, dllft't ,.quire '°'ms (HEX CAIGllllOok&, f'.O. Box 15CMI, &111 ... 1111. Ill. •m•. Re<eiY9 "" to ,,,. tr• c--4U. Seftd W• proof-()!. o..rchau M•tt from Clw• c1tlll• tor Heh , __ S.l•ct <~(•) .. Chu. Ille H•turol Woy to GooO t.ooa1no, Ult•, ,,,. >'artymaur&, C.IW• O'Nlt .. A· Recipe -···"Thi Br an Chi• Plan IOf' GoOCI ~lnQ," Cnea ""*'"II llw Mkrow•YO Way:· "Chi• Party Ml•· ., Snao~....., Canelll• • Expiro Jar\. ll 1''3 CHt.11 P•rty Mia Oe<O<•ll .. fin, p 0 Bo• UOl1, 8e11 ... 11 •. Ill 62222 RIKllYe • CMCO<lllYI lln. Send 12 prooh ol PVr<hlMt from Cho• ctrull E&Plret Awo. ll. "'' ICE LLOC.G S Cl\lraclor Place Mats Oftlr. P.O 8oJ1 UIS. At•IUY•lle, H C 11m. Receive two Ir• ptao mah ~nCI llv• prool-ol·purc""e "'•" lrom •idl ~" Oii l(ello09'& SuQ<or Smacks pack•ves. £,.p1,.., Nov. JO, "" KELLOGG'S,, R1t11nel Oller. p 0 a .. soi., l(el•M-. Mlclt. fli003, ~ fOlir prool-<ll~M H•I• from &icl• panel• of Ket109g•a A•llln •r•n PICll•OH· lilqllrH ,\j)tll JO. 1"1. ------------------------------~------J \ £?CX:::::JC:::Jc:>oc:>e:x:::n::::>c::>c::::y '· "CJ'\) 0 I 0 0 ~ a 'lraditiolis ••• start at your dinner table. 0 0 D 0 0 If this y•w's Eader Ham was not H eiting ..• n•d fflM try a •Batted 30 hours I •Honey 'n spice Glaze 0 • Splral sliced for eaay serving • O • Whole or half hams • Nationwide shipping service Q •Full service Delicatessen O e • Old Worlt1 Chee6e Shop HONEY ey . Party trays I 0 ml 1"" ··· •Sandwiches to go Q s~Km HAM! l(ed Ha"ls o ~ 1100 I.. COAST HWY .. c-.. M• 'HOMI 67 ).tffo 0 24611 IAYMOMO WAY .t k TOIO II>., a TOIO, P'HOMl IJ7-J U 2 0 1906' RACH I U D . .t •AaA&D, HUMTIM4HOM llACH,l'MOMI 14M17S O a ~ISO Anaheim. Orange. Rancho Mirage. La Habra. San Diego. Lakewood 0 n ~ake Vlllaoe, North Holtywood. Woodland Hills. Santa Monica. Pasadena \.Xx:JOOc:x:JOOOOOCOc::JC:JCJCJoocooca~ IRVIn KEAT CO. Shop here only for quality, because that's all we carry! IASPA~ E:•2~. SMALL WONDERS. C& W Petite Peas are the smallest, castiest peas from the pod. We pick only the best for ... \ .· · · -------- C& W quality. ~ When it comes to qual- ity, freshness, and flavor, no- body beats C & W Petite Peas. We built a reputation offering only the very best vegetables. •'• 'Ollll Savor the C & W differ- ence. And save 10' on any C& W vegetable. {*'!'!~~'!Peas ~ SWEET SAVINGS. 10¢ Sav~ l~ on any C & W Vegetable box or hag. 1 •• 1h,R .. 1a1l..:r~t ..::,.\\ lh•·\·tt ~1ai•J.,_,.1llh 11nt'1u,, 11f,1rl1111,\t1.1t 11\1, f 11111•7 l 1nH ~ 1 "' •, 1t 1 ,,,, .t, .,,,,, l''"'"'"'lrt.""li1,t ,,J,tn1 .. u1, I"'"'"""" .. ""'' {,,, • .,,1"' '••' "'"' 1 I \ .!). \\ t r "" t J .. \ "''}'°' t! h\ I\ h •t f, •~"' ·1 l I nu h '" I •' tt 1·' ..l ,, t ( O•H HI• r mtt I I " u1 ..fl,~I •\ ,, ... f ,~h,,, rt·'"''''• I,,,, f '"'''"'1.11, 11,, \1 .. ,l1111h 111l '' t ·' ,,,,, I I t •••11••H"•"••··rl1 I 11'•1·•1 11""' 111 t1f1r.11 l1 ·ll••h 1i•111111 lhL\1 ,,,,,,,,, ,,1i '" '"''"'ul •1 n t 11 r t "' ~udd I I'. 1 , 111 • d 11 , , 'f , ·I t t, f o ', "• h, 11 ' •• ,,, '" 1 ~ '•· 1, • •1 "~\\ tt '"'·~·J .. t•t> n .. ,u;11~.11r ... ,. T,·~,. .... ;'-'47; \)ff,,'""'"" 1),., U, l"""I l 1; • ~ ,,,, I''' I 'I' 11 1.l1, I \ 1 , ' I I 141\ I I • \\ "11 H .. ,, l1 f I lj I '··• j,J j\ II fl 1 I h ti 10~¢ OCP ·-481 ~ ~got quality down oold. titlj ~---~-~---------~--~------------~ The fresh peach pte la one of those treat clanlc deuerl• that br1n1 a wal'D) smile to the faces of Ameriun1. To many peribna, it i• lh• ~t of an possible aumtl\erthnedeliabta. Bu\ btifore tht 'ple there Is trie peach, tfflf Tbla Is one ~ the oldeat and most renowned of all fruits. ll originated in China, over 2,000 years ago. There, lt was nurtured by the privileged . It was When ~·dy use tbe pie, thaw lt at room temptratut"e f r about 30 mlnutet. ,.,..,_beat lt for another 30 minute& in a 350·degne ovell. FRESH P~ACH PIE ~cupsuf 2~ tables ns corn 1t1rch th teaspopn ground cJnnamon 8 cups peeled, pit· ted, sliced peaches (about 12> 1 tablespc;><>n lemon juice t retlpe double crust try 1 t.blespoon corn oU mareartae Sllr to1ether 1u1ar1 corn starc h ano cinnamon. Toss with pead\es W\til well coat· ed. Sprinkle with femon f·uice. Arran1e ht pat~Y ined 9-in~h pie plate. Dot with margarine . Make sev¥aJ slits in lop crust to permit steam to escape. Cover ' ple with top crust; seal '\ind flule edge. Bake in 425-degree oven 40 mJnutes or until crust I.I brown. Make 1 <D-lncb> ple. P EACH COBBLE& FoUo w recipe for FTesb Peach Ple. Omit double crust pastry and margarine. P lace peach mixture ln peased 8 x 8 x 2·inch baking dlah. Sako in 400-degtee oven 30 minutes. Arrange 1 packafe (7.5 ounces> refrigerator blscuJts on top . Bake 10 to 15 minutes longer or until 10Jden brown. Makes 10 servtnp. PEACU TAaTS RAMSAY REXALL' DRUGS s1oo OFF ANY COSMETIC WOTH PURCHASE OF SoO OR MORE • MP Fector • A9¥lon • Ard•n • Almay w ........... ..--~mil • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • s • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • RAMSAY • • • • c.mH2 Exp ......... 1zw C· 126-12 Exp ......... •Z"· C·12&-20 Exp. ........ s41t• C-11~24 Exp. ........ '•"· • C.1~24 Exp. ........ '•"· DRUGS • • • • Kodacolor II • Follow reci p e ror Freab Peach Pie. Omit margarine. Roll out pastry: cut lnto 24 (3~· lnch > circles and 24 (2· lnch) circles. Line 2~· inc'1 muffin pa'l cu ps wlth Ja r ger clrcles. Divide peach mixtur e among tarts. Top with • COSMETIOUE 2246 NEWPORT BLVD. smaller circles. Bake In • FINE FRAGRANCES (1 BLOCK NORTH OF 22nd ST) , 'l'lueTaa • PHOTO FilNISHING • H!AL TH & BEAUTY AIDS 425-deeree oven 30 • GIFTS COSTA MESA minutes or until lightly ...., ,_., w . , .... s... IO.J 64L774"' --ht It.kw-o.- b rown ed. Makes 24 II••••••-.•••••••••.,..••• .. ••••~------·--.. _-_,.,. tarts carried as a delicacy by ---------------------------------------- traders to India, Russia and Persia . For centuries it was known as the Persian apple. and its botanical name is Latin for Persian. Today, the United States is t h• Jea'dlng world prod.ucer of peaches. Many of the 2,000 varieties known world -wide were d e · veloped here. Basicll,lly. peaches fall into two types: Clingstone and freestone. Mo&t of the ear Ly. maturing v arieUes are clingslone or semi· cling. That is, they re- sist pulling away from the pit. Freestone, of course, pull away easily. Peaches are a low- calorie fruit. They are high in vitamin A , v itamin C. potassium. and other minerals . Because their sugar con· tent does not increase after picking, It 1s im portant to select ripe or nearly rape fruit in the market And peaches mus t look good to be good A nice red blus h alone does not mean a peach 1s at its besl It should also be deep yellow or creamy yellow m back ground and should be firm or sltghU y soft to the touch. Avoid those that are green or hard: they are underripe. R eddish brown sroft peaches s hould also be left behind cor used very quickly> bet· a use they are overripe Peaches ripen rapidly at room temperature. but 1( they a r e Lo be held for a few days, refrigerate them To peel a peach the easy way, dip 1t into boiling water for 20 to 30 seconds Then plunge it into ice water The skin will slip right off. The Fresh Peach Pie recipe can be translated 1nlo a numb er of variations. like tarts or a cobbler. Because of the generous JU1ce of peaches. thickening is 1 m portant. Ry tossing the raw fruit with sugar mixed with corn starch, which has no taste or color of 1t5 own. the fill 1ng will thicken while cooking without mask ing fl a vor or dim inish1ng the ' r ich peach color All of the following recipes were created 1n lh e Kingsford's corn starch test kitchens For a co mplet e sampler of other fresh fruit pie recipes send for a free copy of "The Ultimate Fresh Fruit Pie ·' Write to Fruit Pies. Dept FP N, Box 307 Coventry. Conn. 06238 But there 1s no reason to bake only for today Peach pies can be successfully frozen for those long winter months whe n fresh p e a c"h e s a r e n o t av a Hable (the season lasts from May to October I. To freeze a pie, unbaked, increase the corn starcti by one tablespoon, and do not cut slits in the top. Freeze the pie qulck- 1 y, uncovered. Then place a paper or aluminum plate on top and overwrap it with foll or freezer wrap. or slip it ioto a plastic freezer bag. Do not defrost the pie before baking. Put It direcUy Into a preheated 425-degree oven. Mter 15 mlnutea of baking, pierce the paslr)' to al- low steam to escape. Piercing before freei lnt may dam~• the fruit, and pierclni before bak- 1n1 ma1 eaute. \be pastry to craok. Peacb Pl• ean aJIO be ba.ked before freeslng. Cool It ~bJy before wrap,tM,'Ud fr!'!Jln,. 'a v1~lll *•• •·• 8-'LAD • A:ru••• qtaarter d tiard·t'OO ed •-•• , t UYfted .... WfteJ and etAoH-,... • ., •• t'bWID on tlilp Jettuee. Sprkakl wltll • nttle eri.p.fded:'"~ iftd fe"e Wt1IJ 1dtrJa~ dreuin,. VOPIS ~ow PRICES ArtD . HOT ~· SPECIALS~ G11lllllVDJDJ . , . • _ __:_-----' BONELESS _~J78 ROUND STEA.KS TABLE KING BEEF -FULL CUT LIMIT 2 tPurchase ~r flmit reg prrc .. lb I 96) LB LARGE AVOCADOS -.M<)()I H !>fl IC" TC r U\\10" c .. SAVEWITH EVERYDAY LOW PRICES AT ·VONS .79 TOMA TO SAUCE e •XJ~l1f GROCERIES l.>ll~TLllot1't<..f IMI Sweet Relish ..-.N1f)C)"tr lb(ll.lf"lf AIJTIU Italian Dressing "'~(JAJI Mott s ,\pplesauce I l'llOIKI llOrrl.l °"""'"' Jerseymald Water «l Oii<[ llOTTI.(_ S"nsweet Prune Juke 8 OUNCE C"N tl."ln 6 1Pu<rN.., ~ lom~ "'9 pnc-~ 211 PROD<JCE flf IJlAlt fMA'fOJI Italian Squash "' .49 l"!I .. ( M\ll-' White Rose Potatoes ll!I .29" ..,-.flt ;l0"'4~M"'I .29 Navel ranges '" 1'11(.<;;t .69 Roma Tomatoes Lll f "L.,., IOl>'>Ufl .19 BulkCanou LAI ' LIQUOR a:n~ch )UT[ll Don Miguel Chablls ~o Chabll• Blanc ~t~~ H~ JtoHI ChabUa 599 279 489 1 )99 ~9 DELICATESSEN MEATS ~l(Ml!EU~lf'I.~ Top Round steak Ti'll!Le l\INl,,((MtEHCUf Beer Chuc:k Steaks TAOt.C ttnc rcr«• Beef Cube Steaks •e 2 38 Ill 138 Lii 248 ' l•l!ltt<lh(.llf..tf f!OUl'ICIWI llO''lllt~ 248 Slrloln Tip Steaks '" roa.t '""' llt.lf ll"l '> QlUCt< ~u• 209 Family Steaks U1 r11a£11rc;• 111'>\ ""° u:Mf'l'COll 188 Boodess Rump Roast U1 m CICflOlllC LOf1 14 9 Countt,y Styte Spareribs Le ~~~~~t LAI 1 99 .~V~ UI 109 SERVICE SlAFOOD DOUBLE VALUE COUPONS ,-~----------------------------~---~~ I *I VOllS VCNIS VOii won VOllS WOii VOllS VOllS WOtlS V01$ VOii VOlll VOit$ VOllS YOU VOlll I •I •332 i • I 0 1 •I DOUBLE COUPON i • '• 1 Pr~nt th!$ coupon olong "'1th ""~ Ol'I<' manuld< tur<'r \ u•n._.. ott , oopon : : I end~ dooblt' the wvmgs from Von> Not w n ludo-n'tdtl(or lrf't < uuc <:n~ ! I coupon!> Qn'IUI' than ~ doll.!tr Of '"'" ('('(! lhl' vdlUt" ol II'" •lrn 'I ca I lunflltUOf'"iOUSJUfl l.,.tl•w1•~Mtu•...-~'tAiJ"'lf 1 i(ftm11 S ....,.. • t • !1 11 • v,,c...,v• r -· '-->· ... -~.cw h.A..,.. . .. '"'••In ,n. ,,. • , :s I I { """" I'""' .... ~ l •. "'' •• "' !1 I VIII won VOIS V0I$ VOii YOllS VOllS WIS VOii VOllS VOllS V0I$ VOii$ VOit$ VOllS YOtlS YOIS I ,-----------------------------------~ I VIII v.I ¥Olll WOii VOii VOlll VOii V0I$ VOii VOllS V01$ YOIS WllS VOIS YOU VOIS YOIS I •I •332 i ' :1 DOUBLE COUPON 1: : 1I Pr~t this coupon 4IOnQ wrlh ""Y. onl' mdnuf&< tvr!'r' <en~ ott • uupon l 'i e end gel double the ~111nq\ lrom Von~ Not to 1n<'luck retil•""' f,..... ro.ipon' coupons g~r than one dollar or t'~C'~d th•• valu<-ol th~ 1ll'm :1 lttnol °"" rovpv!f 1~r ,.,.,.,.,..,, ""' >' • '"I"'" •••fl lutool \ • "'""'" 1• I 1: •1 cu-.tOfnrr t "lud•'"J IM,Ut" totlt.t• 'r "'lhJ~J qnl~ I 11..-11,.' 31 I ( •lU\io<' """'I """' l1 '" ""' ,, .... I ''8 I !l I I voa VOit VOii voa WOii WOii voa YOllS YOU VOlll YOQ VOii VOii$ VOllS VO" VOllS VOd I ·-----~--------------------------~--~ 1 '911 Wiii '°"' VOU WOlll YOta VOllS YOll WOii WOlll WOlll VOllS WllS VOIS ¥011$ WOii WOO I •I •332 I' !1 DOUBLE COUPON 1! I Pr~t thtS COUCX>O 11'°"9 with onv ~ nldnul4C'turer ~ cenlS o#f C'oopon 3 I : end Qt't doobl.. tht' wvmgs from Von• Not to nctude ~ titt coupons a I I C'OUpON gl9tt"r \hon ~ dolla< or t'>.Cttd th<-Y4llJI' ol th<-~,.m c I I lino or-coupon,..,,,......., .. ,_.,._,._, ............... , .,. •• ,.. I • 'I CU9IOm<f ~tuclor>Q """°' ,.,.,...o"' l1uod""" "'""'"" I' I Coupon good """' 2.} IO """' ~ I 1181 I , _______ _. .. ,..,.,..,..na._na,_1 ------------------------------------· :.188 FROZEN FOODS VONS BAKERY 8N"QIJCl µ~z ...c MjSt o v.a M•n Pleaser Dinners j °'1'1Ct'.PACM0( ohnston Apple Pie 139 199 ELEGANT STAINLESS FlAlWARE ~ AT BIG SAVINGS! ITEMOFTHEWEEK 4· 9 DINNER KNIFE ~0 •• 89 • LA JOLLA OR PRJNCESS. Completer Pieces Also Avlllable At Vons Low Prices -----·-4/0M/" ~14.S/20 6(166/24 ..49EA '121-&/27 612$-1 /0 I 11o:z 11oe ,.. ... -- J IUNE ltOTll trace elements. You try someUtlnc ne•. Some ~le eat the don •t ha+ e t o be • Make a real effort to ln· me Wn11 day atter nutrltjpal1t to know troduce a wld• ••· • ay eltber becauae what food &Nes what in· aortment of fooda int.O 1 tabletpoon lemon ey' re too l aay lo are d le n ta lo the your menu each day. }ulce June Roth v the oadhor d v en lure l n lo functloolna of tbe bOdy It's a start toward betttt ~ teupoon salt of over hoeni11 popular atatortal experiment• u IOl\I a lbere Is an health. \.t teaapoon pepper cookboolci. hschuUag tfw because tbey're too awareneu to have a ZUCCHJNJ Mt:DLEY v. teupoon rround new ·1,\tr0tnc Ntltrldon," ed to bother. broad tptttrum of 2 medlurn iuachlnl thyme Wash spinach leavea co·a..t>tored wUh Dr. Don LltUe do they reaUie fruit.a, ve-ttblea, daifY 1 a~all onion Wash zucchini an4 cut and trim ol roots and Manftttberg. Ifl I/OU ho" 0 at a monotonoua menu prodµcta, 1ralns, abd 1 cup sliced treab into cbµnka . .Place ln a hard stems. Place in a tpjcial dMt qw1tfon. write frequently devQld , of meal, fish or fowl each muabroom.t deep saucepan with saucepan with a small to Jun. Roth clo the Dailt/ aenUal trace rq,lnerals day., ·· 1 cup allced celery o n l o n , e 1 i c e d amount o( water, onion. Pilot, P.O. &z 1560, Coda dnutrients. Here "1'e a group of 2tomatoea,chopped mushrooms, lllced salt, nµtm eg and Mtso9%626.Plea1eencloae At a recent Food and vegetat>le diabea that l,ii cup tomato juice celery. tomatoea and pepper. Cook covered a 1elf-addre11ed atamped utrition Copference may entice your meat· 1 green pepper , tomato juice. Add green over low heat until envelope for a peraonal ld in New Orleans, Dr.• and-potatoea eaters to chopped pepper, lemon juice, tender, approximately replJI . . Wayne Callaway said .-:..~..;:...:.;..:.;..;...:.:......:..._.:..;..._:_ __ ._....:...;..._ _____________________ ....:.... __ .....:..-_____________________ -:----~- person abould eat a riety of foods. "Most foods contain ore than one trient," he explained, and no single rood pplles all the essenUal trienta in the amount u need. By l'°creasinc e variety ot foods from hlch the overall diet ls ,.,osen, you are less Jtely to develop isolllled ericienciea or ex· esses." These statements uld be the q\ost im· ; rtanl advice that yone could learn out nutrition. ; The old.fashioned '11eal·an d -potatoes JJ1rson who never eats a ~gelable or who limits getables to a favorite r w begins to deal with I s :.ging health by mid· Attention must be paid sources of vitamin A ark yellow and dark een vegetables) and ta min C I citrus fruits, strawberries, and green lhfy vegetables), plus f6ods that offer a large stelection of ot her vjlamins, minerals, and ' Nuts good .. . 01 main . dishes, too Most American cooks relate nuts to desserts. because nuts appear often in recipes for cookies , cakes and pastries So it's a sur· prise to some lo find nuts being used m main dishes, vegetables and salads The accompanying re· clpe for Vegetable Nut Pie is that kind of sur· prise In gredients for Vegetable Nul Pie are like those used in a quiche, but three rourths of a cu~ of c hopped pecans are added wilh lhe. cheesr to the pastry shell. Thtw adds an in· teresting texture and boosts the nutrients. Make it a main dish for brupch lunch or !!Upper, and complete the menu by adding lhree·bean salad. a hot roll or comsticks and a rruit dessert. VEGETABLE NUT PIE (Makes I senlngs) 1 (9-inch) pastry shell, unbaked 2 tablespoon s margarine 1 cup chopped onion ·~ cup chopped red bell pepper 4 cups coarsely chopped fresh spinach ~ cup c hopped pecans 11/4 cups grated Swiss cheese 11/• cups half-and· ha tr 3eggs :Y4 teaspoon salt ~ teaspoon ground black pepper Prebake pastry shell ~t 425-degrees for 10 minutes. Melt margarine in a large skillet over medlum heat. Add onion and red pepper; saute until nearly tender. Stir in .fpia.ch and aaute un· tU Wilted. Nobody offers more assurance or stronger total guarantee of Lower Overall Prices than Market Basket AU IUAllTITY llltHTS UataV£O ltO Ult TO OUlH$' Oa FOii a(SAlE oa ~•MOCIAt USf .aa ITAUQ CLOIOI S UASH ll. BLEACH ltHZ. m. ........ !It coii;;·"· ' !l! Pears .39 16·tl 2:45 "" Uft trilt .14 '* Ta1q ;iios 1.29 ~Cabbage I 1· llt·ll .. ... ~ iC8 'Ch'Bst~· ~ !lt t;~9"na .. 99 11·11 2.39 ... ,., b-.t IMUI f ..... '9ck MM °"'""' 3 .. 15. Ht Cheddar Cheese r: 2.19 fij Fabric Softener 't:' Sprinkle pecana and , ,--------~-------. cheese in •bottom of pastry s helJ ; s pread tpinacb mlxt~re over cbeeae layer. 'Beat to1ether half· ancl-halt. •111. H it and pepper~ )IOUl' into pie abell. Bake at uo tttir .. for' 15 mln\Mt. It until 9Uffy and a kldle lnHaCC4.0Mr COai81 ou.t • Do not ewer· l>alle. it• •nd 1erw bot. Actllllll .... nuu IO waJP'wl.Q llle#t aad ve~1a.111•naftn. ~ ==''=Cc': ........ ~· ftlld tomttDte reel• ln 1'Tbe t tboolt fl'OID Planterw... P'or a ce>pJJ; Write to The Nut Coo& Bos tf2. Mi&oii NSUU0., New YOC't, .Y. 10010. Tripi• The-Difference--.. Guarantee! lllf n WrW•T ltl•a .... ,. m ... ltOlll Al •AUil IUUl tOIUAllf PlllCtl fljjJ W'HC Oii fill IAM Ill.a Al Alf DlllU CONft•llOllAI IUrtHAllC£1 ,. , •• OI UCll nt• PUICHA&lt llUY N vau .. Tiil eo11ra11116111 If IM(lll ltTAI. ti ltW'Cll Ultlt YOUI lll•llll •Mat IAllln RKllTU !Ar! AllO !HE OIMU JIM( I ,.ICfl IO MAAlfl IAU£1 Utt wt WIU rAJ YOU 1 .. 1'\I IHI OlfFUCllCf •Ct.Mt. l'lllCU lf'F(CTIVE WED Al'll 21 lllRU lUU .,. 11 1981 ·119 MARKET BASKET WESSOI .IEEF Oil H·IZ. B ETS ·m. !ij s~·~'c'i;' c'ilii>s /' ,......., Plew '"" . 73 8! Por.k Roast fl ••ftt •"··-1.29 fl! PO'rk'ch.;p~ft .. !8 Sweet Bread 16·tt ·-· ll 159 . 1.08 .. 1.49 lllflt. ll'lff If Ftr-Jtltfl Ceftlt< C:.I !H Applesauce 3~-11 1.01 ~ Smoked Ham Slices .. 1 . 99 .., ' .48 f111t•· '""" ,.., •• .59 ~ Zest Bar Soap ~ ,.., if Turkey Drumsticks I~ ... 2•1 ·WEEK OF OUR NEWLY REMODELED BALBOA Bl Vlr. STORE •I .. REGISTER TO WIN THESE PRIZES! GOOD ONLY AT: JIOO IALIOA llYD . . EMTJ" llANKS Al ITOllE *RCA 125'' COLOR T ~V. * BRASS SHIP'S CLOCK *BRASS TRI-POD TELESCOPE MAMO-MAD« TUIWOOO& llAU Tll·NO 'lVS AU II.US 1"'. u-TIUSCOH . •EW SERVICE SHOPPES ·1 ; . ~ * Service Hot Foods Dell •, * Service Fresh eafoocl *Service fresh Hoi Bakery J *ll•trltlonal & Health Foods Lower Prices Overall Guaranteed! lllMS & NIClS GOOO OML T AT: 3100 BALBOA BLVD., ·NEWPORT BEACH AND 11 SO IRYINE AVE . lltm AUIOtto PlllClS EFFECTIVE WEO APll 72 THllU TUES 1'11 21 1911 Cranberry pie good any time Regional America has size) vanilla flavor pud- contributed to lbe lore of ding and pie filling traditional holiday l'h cups milk foods, New Englanders 1 cup vanilla ice cl~iming that the cran-cream, softened berry culture began on Remove cranberry Cape Cod about 1816. sauce from can in one While recipes ran the piece; c ut into thin gamut from pudding to slices and arrange on deep-dish pies, certainly bottom of pie shell. not one could have ap-Prepare pie filling mix proximated the ease of as directed on package preparing this contem-for pie, using l "'4. cups porary C ranberry milk. Blend ke cream Harvest Party Pie. into hot pudding. Pour Fortunately, for those into pie shell. Chill 3 of us who rely on the hours. Garnish with pre- convenience of pudding pared whipped topping. and pie filling, the re· if desired. cipe calls for just one 6· Note: One of the cran· servingsizepackage. berry slices may be set What makes this such aside and cut with small a dream to preparE' is cutters for garnish, if simple: thin slices of desired. canned jellied cranberry MIN I C R AN 8 ER ll Y sauce are arranged on PIES ' the bottom of a pie shell 2 cups raw cranber- before a mixture of pre· ries pared pudding and pie 1 cup sugar filling and ice cream is 1 cup water chilled in it. 1 package (4-serving For thE' inspirt'd cook. size > vanilla flavor pud- small designs can be cut ding and pie filling 1 out with cookie cutters •,2 teaspoon salt from a s lice of Jellied 2 t a b I e s p o o n s c ran berr y sa uce orange juice W h i pp e d top pi n g 1 teaspoon grated carnish is ideal back-orange rind cround for the jellied 1 tablespoon butter cranberry cut-outs. or margarine If you have a penchant 10 baked 3-incb tart for fresh cranberries, shells. cooled add Min i Cranberr y Combine cranberries, ' Pies recipe to your file. sugar and water in A cooked cranberry saucepan. Bring to a full mixture with just the boil and boil gently for 3 right tartness of orange minutes. Meanwhile, juice and orange rind combine pie filling mix, perks up prepared salt. orange juice and , vanilla flavor pudding orange rind; stir lo form and pie filling. The pud· a smooth paste. Add to ding-cranberry filling is boiling fruit, stirrin& to ehilled in tart shells, an blend. Cook and stir ideal dessert for buffet over medium heat until serving. mixture comes to a full C a A N B E R R Y boil. Remove from heal; HARVEST add butter. Cool abouts PA&TY PIE minutes: theh pour i'1lO l can (8 ounces) tart shells. Chill. jellied cranberry sauce Garnish with prepared 1 baked 9-ineh pie whipped lopping and ad- tmell, cooled dilional grated orange l package (6-serving rind. if desired. Cherries, yogurt nic~ rnatchup yogurt 1 cupsourcherries 4 tablespoons black currant jelly 1 ready to serve graham cracker crust Place 4 containers of vanilla yogurt in a cheese-maker and' let drain acc<>rdlne to direc- tions. If a cheese maker is not used, place 4 con- tainers of · yogu rt in c h eese .cloth Hoed str ainer and let drain over bowl in refrigerator for 16to24hnurR. When yogurt Is firm and lo cheese form, spread evenly into crust. Stir currant jelly into sour c berrleJ and t horoughly coat them . Place cherries on top of yogurt cheese and serve. VANJLLA T OG URT MOU> TOPPED WITll CID&· aau 2 con tatners ( 8 ounc4'1 each ) vanilla yoaurt l envelop• un · n avoNd•ellUn lr\.,.a1poon1ut • v.cupwater l~ cupe aw.t cber-rtea t Mtx ce&aua, Nit aqd wa ter la • 1aaeepan. ff t at u tll 4hnlved. &elDOM hill beat. Stb' ........ ~-. ., ....... ,...111o. ~ mold. CbW U..W Ml Ua· mold aad H tte '°'?'Itta 1oaeae1 .. er ..... eu11 ... --a. BLUE • BJ: BoN-1J •• . . I 111'81 ... s e Margarine ~°"-4 I 0 c=i I.flt. l=1 c..1 ... QUALITY MEA I! LOW PRICES! Chuck Roast '-=it:' • •131 D$ Whipping~reaml--. =:59' Arm Pot Roast "::'C:::-"•1•• D$Biscults •• 5~ '100 -· Boneless Roast~ • '1 .. • .._..a.o.. Cheese ....::.=.,.. • '1" Cross Rib Roast =--.... '"= .. •1• 1-2' Bel-air Pizzas·.=:-'l:' 111' • Chuck Short Ribs ~ • •1•• Dt Man Size Dinners: _ •121 Stew Meat -:.t""t .. '111 DS Ice Cream._..::--::..'2°' Pork Steak i::.=-• 11--• Bread~~ 't.: 79- Lamb Chops -.=-"'1" DS sread :...~ '= 79'" Whole Hog Sausage= ::'111 l!i$ ~rape Juice':::" ='1" Beef liver .:==. • '1°' •Mayonnaise & Safeway cOrn Dogs . .., .. •Purina 1001:. • Detergent ~-., .. $129 c.n6rt.net El :;:~ .... res·11. Mushrooms ,. '--It• I 8 0 Sleok ~~"'· Cl,, .... l=1 P\f. LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PRODUCE! ~v dk ... ..~ssn .... 0 a o ..... ~ , ... 1-i Ten High "'t'..'::• i~ 5999 11!$ Old Smuggler ':c~ :~ 5999 I-& Scoresby Scotch .. i:., , ~ '5" DS Gallo Spanada ··~ ,:,:. s199 Scotch Buy Beer. :.'t-6 !f: '131 SCOTCH BUY Delicious Apples ( ... "'t.., • 45' Red Potatoes -·· 49' -.. ,. Green Peas ~ .... " 69' Tropical Mangoes _ 79c Fresh Eggplant ::: • 39e Bunch Spinach ,=. -29« "' Fresh Avocados ,:::, 3 ~ •100 Syngcmlum _ _., .... "::'3" HEALTH & BE ~UT Y ,\'..-:. ·- L u~ce~ne Ice Milk Guaranteed LOW PllCE Protection With Safeway DOUBLE CASH REBATE! . . ::~·h 75" ...... ,, "' B ,, .. , Con •ti t-.1 Jb IJ I I h Hl .' J 10 ,,, . . . ;.. .. ·: .. : ' l I 8 ,., '2 •I Tt_. IUHtoUI· navor ol frltncb. lrta~ Cream liqueur UM& Pll SeDda UMU to 1Se1ant l '4 cup1 •nbam deuert urvtce. It cr1cller fl'\llnbl blend& ;PedteU1 with ~ c ,u'P II n el y eakel, fnaltl aricl pud· ,, cboppeCI 4"0uted pecans dlllCl. lt cen eebuceany v. cµp 1qu of yoUtfa~orititrec:lpes. '4 cup ( ~ stick> Tl'f IJddiD( it to )'OUI' butter, ~lted f avoHte chC9late soutne. 5 es11. Hparated UH It tn bread puddin& "'i CUJ> a~ar or your favorite pecan !,<\ cup lime juice pie recipe. 'Al cup Irish Cream Lime Pie ls a heaven· liqueur I treat for ramily or 2 teaspoons arated Pie made easily Nowadays, ease or preparation with a de· licious result is impor· tant. This Easy Chocolate Pie i~ a case in point. It's one bf th.ose pie marvels that bas only thr~e lngre· dienta along with thawed frozen whipped topping. It cbllls in approximately 3hours. Perhaps you have the major ingredient already on hand -frozen whipped topping, either in the freezer or already thawed. While you may use It as a topping most of the time, now is the time to discover it as a great ingredient if you haven't already. Thawed frozen whipped topping if folded into a luscious mixture of sweet cooking chocolate and sour cream. That~s all you do before spoon· ing all into a crumb crust and chilling for 2 or 3 hours. This fives ample time to set the dessert buffet tabl~ and even ar· ran~e flowers before the front door chimt!s ring. Remember, however, to garnish with chocolate curls before serving. M ocba Cheese Pie is another sensational com· pany pie which combines thawed frw.en wt4pped toppina and aweeC cook· lng chocolate with a few other ingredients. This one is frozen in a crumb crust. EASY CHOCOLATE PIE 1 package (4 ounces> sweet cooking chocolate 1/• cup water 1':1 cup sour cream 1 container ( 8 ounces> frozen whipped topping, thawed 1 baked 8-or 9-inch graham cracker crumb crust. cooled Heat chocolate in water in saucepan over low heat, stirring until melted and smooth. Gradually add chocolate mixture to sour cream in bowl. Fold in whipped topping, lJlending well. Spoon into crust and chill 2 to 3 hours. Garnish with· chocolate cur is, if de- sired. MOCHA CHEESE PIE 1 package (4 ounc~s> sweetcookiae ~bocolate l tablespoon instant quality or decaffeinated coffee 'Al cupmilk 2 tablespoons sugar (optional> 1 package (3 ounces l cream cheese, softened 1 container (8 ounces) frozen whipped lopping, thawed 1 baked 8 -inch graham cracker crumb crust, cooled. Heat chocolate, instant coffee and 2 tablespoons of the milk in saucepan over low beat, stirring until chocolate is melted. Beal sugar into cream cheese; add remaining milk and chocolate mix· ture and beat until smooth. Fold in whipped topping, blending uotil -smooth. Spoon into crust. Freeze until firm , about 4 hours. Another use for yogurt Jn a salute to one or the West's favorite tastes, Conky Johnston. president of Johnston's Yogurt, has created her own "Frosty Pina Colada Yogurt Pie," utilhing Pina Colada yogurt. Tbe perfect touch to a light meal. Pina Colada Yogurt Pie uses whip- pln1 crea'tn, honey and cruahed pineapple , added to Pina Colada yoaurt, for the re(rubinlly Ulbt filling. "We wanted to create a flavor unique to the Wett, and our research showed that Pina Colada waa especially popWar1" she continues. "NoWj,hf:a excltinl Pina Coladr\f osurt Pie rec:- tpe 8llowl ua to c•rTY our deUdous ftavor Idea tbrouata to dessert. ••We develop•• a apectal cru1t u1ln1 vlnUla waftn, coconut and "*81' whlcb bas a mataroon·Uke q'u.llty \bat'• leu expeaslve aad tutel better t.ban uald& Nil macaroom, ", ••• ioliiltOO Adda. l••t rtaht for an illtit'ioaia pOOI party .. or HrYH u aa el~1aat afttr•dtDDer dHHrt, Pld Caleda YOIUl't Pie eu ~ -.. 1abelld of ti••,: eoavealeace, ... lD tlM treeur 911UI approxlmatelJ 1S minutes befor~ serving time. "Reducing the liquid in the crushed pineapple enriches the flavor and color of the fruit,·' she says. "And a sll1ht pre· freezing of the pie filling makes it possible to mound it cloud-high in the deep eight·inch shell ror a more spectacular result. ''I serve my Pina Colada Yogurt Pie often to 1uests and family, and it's aJways a bit.'' ahe adds ... It'• so simple to make, and also very impressive." CONKY JOHNSTON'S FROSTY PINA COIADA YOGV&TPIE 1 (8>4 ounces) can eru-:~ ::!~':artonJ JohDltoa'a Pina Colada Yoaurt ~ cup wblppin1 cream a table1poon1 hol)e)' l cup vanJlla water crumb• (2• t.o ao cookies) -~ cup flaked coconut ~ cup melted bQtter ormaraanne Coeon~nd Um• .aUe• foi' . ilUoil ~ara undra•a•d platapple lnto 1mall Hue.... Bo&& ra~ untll ,,,,. ta AdaHd. and mbtun la IJmo.t \.lntU mixture coats back of lpooD. Turn into wee bow J. Cool. When yolk mixture 11 at room temperature, beat en wbltea until foamy . Gndually beat In re!· maintn1 \4 cup 1ucar and beat uoUl 1Wf 11nd llotay. Fold into custard mixture. Spoon Into pre· pared ple crust. Freese · SPlCt:D corr&£ unUl ready to terve. Ten 4 cupa extra 1tron1 mlnut• before aervlna. bot coffee remov• pie trom 2 pieces cinnamon freea..-. COmblne heavy stick, 3·lncbe& Iona cream, 2 tabletpoona ll· 'wbole clovea queur and \4i cup suaar. 2 pieces oranfe peel, Whip ~o 1oft pealu. 3·lnchea long Spread over pte . l cup coffee ice Ga rnlab wttb l t me cream slices. Ground nutme1 / MuSic. · . EDIJC&J ION c TeR Find ... the whol~ NOW ENROLLING GUITAR CLASSES OfFeRiNa ..• Peanuts 9an9 everyday in the Daily Pilat 642-4321 SPUTTOP NATURAL BRAN AJ.o F eatv.rt.Dg: Open-graln Texture Pure Vegetable OU 15455 JEFFAEY ROAD IAVINE. CALIF 92714 . Primary Course . . . . ......... age 4 to 6 Keyboard Fundamentals . . . . ... age 7 to t 1 Electone organ, Guitar. . . . . . . . . . . All ages Compos1t1on . . . . . . . . . . . Under age 15 J:0A ~ iN~'MATiON PL.Ba CBLL ••• (7t4) 559-5440 I. - ) •}'.) ti .... , .. :·} • -I ··~ '•' ~ ·o 'f>. .. , ... ·>I g q A 11 ri >l q r b ) ) I • ,, t ' l I ~ Many dieters fail because they make the mistake ol shortchane· lng the appearance of their low-calorie meals. "Why bother?" they reason, "it's not what I really want." But a haphazard presentation onl y serves to reamrm the idea that anything other than fattening food Is reaU_.y second-rate. rr anyttflng , low.calorie food and diet alternatives deserve more care than fatten - ing favorites. Actuall y, many "light," low-fat and low- sugar products taste just as good. Most are, in fact. healthier than the more calorie-laden products they replace. However, the mere fact that th e y ARE alternativ~s may be a turn-off for some people. That ·s particularly true where federal laws re- quire c alorie-reduced substitutes to be labeled · 'im ilation," because the product is made with less sugar or fat than 'he conventional item One way to a void re· minding yourself. or your family. of your CC1lorie-s a ving ··s ub- s titution game" is to keep these labels out of sight. rr you 're trying to slim down, you're already "appearance con - scious... Here are some tips for keeping up ap- pearances with the food you serve: Don't put the s kim milk container on the table : u s e a milk pitcher. And make it op a que Some people think low-fat milk is more transluceot than the full-fat kind . Serve s kim milk in colored g la sses to cover its bluish tinge. If your bread is low- c a lorie, high.fiber. low- sod1um or high-protein. get rid of the wrapper. Look in the dime store housewares department fo r a plasti c bread keeper. Serve bread in a basket De cant low-calorie salad dressing into an attractive cruet. Keep your sugar sub- stitute in a sugar bowl or sugar shaker. Use the granulated type rather than pills or packets. Don 't serve diet margarine in its telltale tub. Scoop it out of its container into a small bow I or butler server. Switching to "light" beer? Don't drink it out of the can. Pour it into a frosty mug. Put salt substitute in a s alt shaker. Or fill the s haker with y our favorite blend of dried herbs. Transfer low-s ugar jellies and preserves to a pretty jam pot. If you make your own ••• EH salad is not just one, but many recipes. It can be as simple as chopped eges and mayo, or as dressed up as an e11r·mushr.oom -so ur crea m m ai n -dish combo. Eggs ore com9alible wtth almost any other food -they like to pair up with foods or contrasting taste and texture. pant·•-tm or 4ltt ~heeae. lean brHltf .. t atrlpa, chicken Crank s: discard the wrappers. Clfar your kltel\en counter ot UM can from wat•r·paclted l\lna or Soak the label off the fruit, tbe cartob that jar of low·calorie ("lm· . tow-cholesterol e11 sub· itation" > mayo.nnaise, stltute comes tn ... an)! o r t r an a I e r t h e packa1in1 that serves mayonnatse to an empty as a rerpinder that your "real" (real fattenine! > rec;lpe is c·alori~revlsed. mayoMaJsejar. Serve diet soda over Rewrap such products Ice In a &1us, garnished as fal·reduced cold cuts, with a lemon wedee. Come Into Luclcg this tu«k and pick up gour free booklet/ FRYING CH1¢KEN wnote llOOV Gradt A Tyson lb CUTUP .65 CHICKEN Frv1nv ~A rvson lb ""BRUMSTICKS .99 OR .THl<SHS fflln9 Cl'llC1IM Grllllf A T~ l.t) CHICKEN 109 SPLIT BREASTS k'ying Wltfl t~. Cf o10e A Tyson lb BONELESS 179 ROUND STEAK Ful CUt 80nOeO llftf lO CROSS 1,98 RIB ROAST 9ar'ClllO lll!f O'IJO( Lb CORNED BEEF 1·68 BRISKET LICIV lft POlnt Cut Lb !Center Cut. Rat. lb 1 831 I BLADE CUT .89 CHUCK ROAST llOnOed 8ftf lb TOP SIRLOIN STEAK llOOOlllff~•Blllllt ~~~~,~~~.,U~ ~OAST. ia 1. 79 !2~,~!' STEAi( II 2. 28 ~~~~-ND RIB ROAST ia 1. 98 ~~~~~~2.Y~'~"~~~~., 1.1.38 T ·BONE STEAK BONELESS TIP STEAK 11 2.58 ll 2.28 ~gg.~~~~~F PATTIE~11 '"4. 48 FRESH BEEF BRISKET 11 2.18 ~O HU •• Corned Beef Round, LAOY LEE. LB • • ,2.18 Country Style Sparerlbt. RIB ENO l'OAK LOIN 1.8 . • • 1 58 1 88 208 Pork Loin Chop•. Al8 CUT, LB ....... Polll Loin Chopa, Ata CUT LB •..•. lltllan Style Sauaage, FRESH POr.1<. HOT Off MILO, LB . . • . . . 1 98 Hlllel'llre Saueaoe. SMOt<ED CHEOOARW\IRST, , KNOOt<WUf\ST OR BHF, LI ............... 2.38 Armour Sliced Bacon, 1a.o~ ~o . . . . 1 21 Lady LM Sliced S.con, 1 1.a. f'fCO .,. •• f 3A Never urve uylbblt ine look.I more ltn•l'Oua on paper. plat" I than It re~Jy fa. Always put the moat A I war a~ s l 1 c e a c.lorit·rlch. in1redh~nt sandwich In 4uartera. on top, where you get to For some reaaon. four '" and tale them lint: 1 quartera add up to more a apriilkle ol 1ucar, • than two halves! 1ntin1 ol cheese. toast· Serve 1Mad1 untossed. ed · nuts or chocolate with the dre:sslne on top curJ1. · where you can see It. Steal a trick from U.e Mix it at the-table. luncheonette : pile Allow lobda to cool off sandwich fi11ln1s in the a bit before you top center of the bread. them with lneredients When you slice the that melt. Butter or ••ndwich in half, the fill-cheese that has .. dis· fl POTATO /;BUDS Bttty Crodeer 19 oz IO~ !'FRUIT.STAND 87 oDRINKS • J R.lYOn '"oz 8tls !'GRAHAM 69 t. CRACKERS • L1C1V t.I ~or C1MamDn 1& Or IO• PLADYLEE 49 /;-CORN CHIPS • 10 Oz B;tg p CHERRY PIE 99 oFILLING • . Suprema 11 Oz CMI }'HARVEST D~v55 oPEARS ·• l9Clt (¥1 !HEINZ KETCHUP .99 32 Oz Btl L ~,9~~ ~~ICOTS 1'otf .... 59 L MARSHMALLOWS «•O•lH-TUlf llOl l-"'059 LOTTER POPS tlCI llC)l o89 L LONG SPAGHETTI l-lfl ... 1101 .. G 1.08 L~S~SPEARS :O~! ,..1.08 L ~NEAPPLE JUICE .•OlCNlo99 r Long Grein Rice • MAHATMA S LO BAG l Harvest Day Syrup. &t oz BTL 1 1 Harvest Day Corn Tortillas. LA TOFITILLA 36 CT PKG • l Harvesl Day Flour Tortillas. LA TORTILLA 12 CT PKG 4 Johnston's Pie Crust. GRAHAM READY 6 OZ Pl(G : Wesson 011, 2• oz en 2 51 2 23 69 53 69 1 19 l Lady Lee Mayonnalte, 32 oz JAR 1 1• l Seven Seas Dratting, VIVA ITALIAN 9 OZ 8TI. . . , . . • .69 r l(raft Bar~cue Sauc.. 'REG OR HIOl<ORY SMOKED. ,, 9z en . . .91 lOrtegaTaco Shella, IOCT.llOX .... ~ 4 Macaroni & Cheete OlnMr, l<RAFl onuxE ,. oz BOX.,. I French'• Muel~rd. 2• oz JAR•· • l 07 .61 aw ,. ... .,.,tn.,.,..o...,....-e mtw~ t••...,.,.. ~ ... ,,,.,.,..,.....,..,.,. ... · /Jeli Key Buys !CHICKEN FRANKS .79 Udlf lft OIMff 16 oz Plcg .;xLNT BEEF ·TAMALES 1s9 6 Pack 18 oz Pltg L ~~!,BURRITOS ~01 .. c • 3 9 L ~.~~IG'S SLICE~ M~~T0~ .. c.45 L ~~l'~,!!S~UI!~ • 0 1 u ... 19 l Krall Deli Swiss Cheese. 1 59 SllCED. I OZ PKO l Chicken Bologna LADY LEE SLICED 16 OZ PKG 1 09 1 Chicken Salaml, ~ LADY LEE SLICED 12 OZ PKG 1 09 J Polish Sausage. LADY LEE 12 02 PKG 1 59 i Lady Lee Hot Unk Sausage. 170Z PKG 1 59 2 19 ; Schlrmers Knockwurst. IJOZ PKG Dairy & frozen p STOUFFER'S oLASAGNA 229 11 oz Plcg L !~~s PIZZA Rous ,0 .. cc .85 A l~~~R~AL M~RGARIN~•or c"'. 77 L !e~E~~ MEAT PIES 101 IO•. 29 r Banquet Chicken, " WHOLE ,RIED 60 oz BOX 4 79 l Pie Sn.tis MAS SMITHS IT OZ PKG 89 • Minute Maid Lemonade CONCENTRATE ~ REGU~R OR PINIC 12 OZ CAN 67 l Ote·lda Omner Fries. 2• oz PKG 1.05 • Johnston's Apple Pie. I 9' 38 OZ PKG ,( Oownyflake Waffles. ECONOMY 111 2 OZ PKG • " 1.99 llousehold & Pt1I f, LADY LEE FOIL ICAY\'OUI~ tll 'l'.otlo89 L CL~D PLASTIC WRAP 100,,,_.69 L VILL~ PAPER PLAT~~"""' 1. 75 L ~~l;!_!-USH CLEAN~~t .. G 1. 39 i~~f~~.?~.,, 100ct .. G1•37 L'~!lfJ?Nl~E DET~IUi!~!. 1. 9 3 l Jonny Cat Cat Litter. 2s ta SAG . • 2 •3 I faultleH Fabric Finish. 20 oz CAN 90 tn.st Pl'ICft Not ''*"five II\ sanu ,.,.,., tnc1 san tUls ~ Counrlft • . appeareCI'' 11 leas HtflfYinf. The smaller the aerv· lne or tt-e lower the calorie count. the more important It ls to Ule at- tractive tableware. One chic. sUm yeun1 woman we know baa be1un her · • collee-t,top.. or out· rageously expensive china with just one place setting . She uses it every day . . . to serve herself! dlah, no matter whal It' le, oo matter how smallt1 Even If lt'a only a alngte1 cracker or four 1r11>e1. .Paper doilies on a-Pl•~ dresr up Uny servlnu; and make them seem like priceless treasures. 1 --j Serve everything on a Enterto4tllno ldNi! s~ a 1tomJ¥d, 1el1-oddre11e . envelope pnd $0 c.nt• t . SLIM GOURMET CUP 'N'; COOK PARTY RECIPES.j P.O. Bor 42. Sparta, N.J ,1 07811 . I I • FRESH 49 STRAWBERRIES• l!f<J l!ltl' NAVEL ORANGES Large EitSV fO ~ .23 lb DELICIOUS lB 98 APPLES 3~~~0 • Ital W~llington Extra Fancy FRESH BROCCOLI BROWN ONIONS RUSSET POT A TOES . .. 49 .. 29 ll .29 Liquor & U'ine !EXCEDRIN L EXCEORtN PM W\ 1.49 '°' 1.99 b ~~~~ ~Noo ~~,!;(;>N "°' 1. 89 '°' 1.59 ,01 1.49 b ~~~;~_e~ TABLETS *' 3.19 _; ~L~~~ VE CRE~~ 1. 39 A~1GLAZE • 99 A~~~~~~ ... ,-.. eor 1.89 "rS~!~P TOO'.~.P~s.~~ 1.29 i ox Toothbrusti, MEOtUM SOFT • 99 ~ FIRM EACti . • • l Blc Lady Shaver, N!W 3 PACK 87 'MIH Breck Hair Spra)'. NON·AEROSOL SUl"tfl UNSCENTED OR SUPtR -.. UNSCENTED. 9 OZ • . .. .. .. • . .. 1 6f tOld S~lte Stick PEOOOR~T.J MUSK. RtQULAR OR LIME. 25 04 • .. ••. 1.19 4~~t.,L,.~t~~·s'J<~~~~~:~~.~AR 1.99 • lB•Y* Aspirin, 24 I • • . ... .. •• • 73 lMulO·Vtlamln, MIOl GVAAO I TT WttfltON~ ISO I , ..... nit. "' •• lNvtritonlc Shamooo ... CflE:ME.R&OUl.M 6 ... OR WILD'LOWIR f8 02: , , • , •11 " llll• Lotion. C°"40•TIONER. REGULAll OtUXTRAl~Y llOZ ................ ,1 ... 'Nutrltonlc Permanent. son cuRL .. f.11 O· Tip Cotton 9wabt, aoO'S .. ., • .. . .. • 1.39 Rav. Solt ,,.,,,,, RlflU, REGULAR 0111 IXTRA C""\.Y ••••••·. • , .......... 2.• '• •1 J ... Home baked food la tJ'U!f I Cift of Jo)'. •.ft 1 a Joy to make. • Joy to receive and a Joy for the budaet. too. A. bome-l>aked l~Y ll one of the least e"· pensive. but most •P· ifrec:lated lifts you can itve. Baktns your eifta Jfiintnates the worry ibc>ut selecting the right sile, color or decor for tbos~ oo your list and figbUng the crowds to fJnd sales help." claims popular food lifts. Jt ls alnfully rich, but very easy to .make. Tbt pltstry ta absolutely "fool·p~f." even for a beitqner. To shorten p•epara~lon time, the pie shells can be made ahead and troaen for several weeks. GEORGIA DERBY PIE A chocolatey kin to tbe South's more famous pecan pie. Mak ~a one n · •. inch pie. . ~ teaspoon instant coffee crystal• Pr•bea& ovep to '25 , 2 t 1 bl • • po o n s deareea. Prick bottom of bourbon wbilkey ple abeU. Bake Jn pr., \1t cup cboppe~ heated oven .t tq ~ walnuts or pecans rntnules or only until "' cup 1u1ar crust be1in1 to dry. 2 ew Remove and cool while lh cup white coJ:n m1klna tllllnc· Reduce syrup oven ~ll)perlt'1re to 850 1 teaspoon vanilla desreea. Dl11olve ln· extract atant coffff in bourbon 4 tablespoons < lh over very low hut. Pour stick) butter, mel~ over walnuta, stir and ~ cup semi sweet set 1lide, Beat auaar chocolate chips and •11• until well . Whipped cream blended. Beat ln corn and vanllla. Stir ln duct oven temperature chocolatt chipa and to US desreet and bake nuta. ttour fUU01 Into filled pie 30 to 40 pte 1beU, bake In center mlnutet. ol 350 decree over 40 to VNM&IO PIE SHELL 45 minutes or WlUI flll· Specially formulated tn1 ta 1olclen and firm tor convection baldoe. and cruet JJ Ji1bt1y tbl1 recipe can be baked browned. CooJ COmj>lete· ln a standard oven with ly befOf'e aerv1n1. Top equally good results. each slice with dollop ot The pastry dou1b ls wblJ>Ped cream, if de· euy to hand.le, even tor sirtd. bellMen. Convection oven : l'h cups all·purpose Preheat to 400 dearees unbleachedttour and bQ"e empty ple irteaspoon salt <lorswe:etdouchonly). 8 tablespoons unsalt· ed butter, chUled 1 package (3 ounces) c~am c~eese, chilled l iarge en. sll&htly beat~ eredlenta to1et.her until cnh:hre rf•eznblu coarae mHI. Adel tbe "' and work lint with 1 fork and then by band Caroline Kriz, cookbook ~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~----~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-(optional> syrup. melted butter shell 3 to 4 minutes; re· 2 teaspoon• 1u1ar Combine flour, salt and suaar <opUonal> in mixin& bowl. Cut butter and cream cheese into '>4 inch dice and add to dry inaredienta in bowl. Wttb fio1en or paetry blender , work in· un tll doueh eomea to1elber in a ball. Do not be afraid to squeeze or blend doulh. It. ahould have a smooth eon- slstency. Flatten into patty shape, wrap lo plastic and refriaerate 'h to 1 hour before roll· ing out. Roll out on li1tht· ly floured surface to a thickness of ~ inch. author and former editor of C u is in e Magazine. Mrs. Krli suggests giving food gifts that are. more imaginative. have greater appeal and are generally less costly than the usual fruitcake or candy. Her bopk ·'Convection Cooke ry.·· a general cookbook for convenUonal and con· vection ovens, includes a delectable variety of recipes for food gifts. "Another way to cut cos t is l o use foil bakeware as gift con· tainers because dec- orative tins often cost more tha n th e food itself. Foil pans are in· expensive, plus you can bake, freeze and give in the same pan. The food stays fresher. too. Georgia Derby Pie is one of f's . Kriz 's most Use f o r lefto ver ham, eggs II ere's the perfect a nswer to the usual post- Easter dilemma of what to do with leftover ha m and hard·cooked eggs. Use them to m ake a Ham and Egg Supper Pie, an impressive, low I cost enlrec that's simply delicious The ham fillin g 1s f mi xed wi t h canned crus hed pineapple That's the secret of ils extra.good fl avor and moistness. Laye r the ham and egg fillings in a pastry crust. then top with chees e crumbs. Bake and serve hot as a savory, hearty suppe r. Fillings and crumbs can be made up early. Crust, too, or use a deep 9-inch pastry shell from your grocer's freezer. It takes only a few minutes to assem ble, and a half hour to bake HAM AND EGG I SUPPER PIE I (8 11" oz ) c a n crushed pineapple l unbaked (9·mch> pie shell 'l.s c up f i n e l y chopped onion 4 tablespoons but- ter or margarine 2 tablespoons flour •14 cup milk l 1h tables poons prepared mustsrd 1 2 teaspoon salt '" teaspoon herb pepper seasoning ' •/4teaspoon dried dill weed 2 t ab les p oon s mayonnaise 4 la r ge h a rd · cooked eggs, chopped 2 cups c hopped cooked ham 1 cup course soft bread crumbs 'h cup shredded Cheddar cheese Turn pineapple into wir e strainer to drain well. Partially bake pie s hell in hot oven ( 425 degrees ) 10 minutes. Meanwhile, saute onion in 2 tablespoons' butter in small sautepan. Stir in llour, then milk. Bring to a boU aod cook 1 minute, stirring constantly, to make a very thick sauce . Remove from heat and blend in mustard, v. teaspoon salt, herb pep· per seasoning and ~ teaspoon dJU weed. Blend ~ cup ot this • sauce ,mixture with mayonnaise, e11• and remaining ~ teHHPJa salt. Add remalnlirt sauce to ham and wdl· drained pineapple. Pack ham mixt~re into the partially baked ple stlell and top with ea mix· ture. Melt rema-lnlna 2 tablespoons butter and t.ou With bread cna.mbt, remainlnf \.it teatpoon dllJ weed and cbeeae. SS>rtald• over top of p'e. Reael oven U.ermortat to moderate (350 de1ree1 F) and bake pie ao mtnutel or wsill hot au tap ta browned. Let ataad 1 mLawa befOl'e cutUDc. Mahi f aerv· lap. I ,j. U 5 D A Cho•~• Rou Cut I 89 BEEF OMAHA ROAST te • U S D A Choice ltoul'd Cul S..f 2 •9 Bc5NELESS RUMP ROAST . ta •• u s o A Choice S.ef 8oneleu Top Roul\d 2 • 9 TERIY AKI STEAK ... ,... . .... ll , ... U.l.D.A. CllOICI RUMP ROAST•. ROUND CUT Of 9fff ~USDA I 77 CHOIC£ La. e l J-01 Voroet•e\ KAL KAN CAT FOOD .49 .89 32·01 Bottle Ttee Top APPLE JUICE l 6 Pock Be" 8.ond VARIETY PAK f 1.49 PKG. OF 4 G.E. LIGHT BULBS 60• 75• 100 WATT SOFT WHITE 1.8 ~' . RED YAMS .............................. L8. 39 US 0 .A Chot<e Center Cut I 29 ta 2 .59 BEEF SHANKS ta • U S 0 A. Choke 8oneleu S.ef Round U S 0.A Choice a .. f Chvck llol'efeu Rolled SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ...... . te 2 . 79 SHOULDER CLOD ROAST .... tll 2.49 lAltGIMIATYRIYHSWITHGtlLllS Git~ 69C SPLIT BROILER .......... ~·.~~.~ .... L8. l eon ~ Not h cH d 12'14> fot ta I .•9 El RANCHO GROUND BEEF te 2. I 9 U S D A Chorce Pornl Holt CORNED BEEF BRISKET r ...-. I ( \ I <1 111· "' FRESH FlllETS 3 4 9 ENGLISH SOLE ....................... La. • frou n o.lro,t.O Nothrl\ Center Cut 3 8 9 HAU•ut ITIA•S . .&.a. • Frore" Oefro\led Motlow' S t I ITUfRD CLAlll,2-0 1. IA.. ,_ lorge No I Wl!lte Muicon 7 99 IHIUONllUHU ........ &.a. • Fruh F~let P0<1foc 79 RID....... . ............ La. I . FROllN SOUTHERN STYLE ORE-IDA 2 LB. 79c HASH .BROWNS ....... . . - 21 Yl •Ol . o.lvae f~ PILLSBURY BROWNIE MIX . S 2 lrter Bottle 1 .2 R.C.·DIET RITE COLA 1.39 ... 73 6·1'1< I 2-o&. Con• 1199 -Orel • c•v$H 9 6 oz Aul Vor Golden Groin DR. PEPPER •vt•N011s 1.6 NOODLE RONI Ki'iSPi""CilACKERS ....... 65c Molh••'s SANDWICH COOKIES New ICrott LQhl & l••ely J2·ol. MAYONNAISE Ke,.tll<liy S1roiQhl ·'· 1.25 .1.39 • , S·oz. 9wo11ion CHUNK WHITE CHICKEN 71-o~1$4W OVEN BAKED BEANS Pkg. ol 25 .79 .79 JIM BIAM 9. ft. BOURBON 17H1ler eY ALKA llLIDR 1.09 liter. 90-Prool ..-.,ucHO GIN ... 4 .49 6~•~iiiliii ... 1.3a 8-ot '°4'1vl llock Sproy RIGHT GUARD 1.59 1.59 FANCY ITALIAN SQUA$H 6 4·01 8o""'1 Pk. Sproy or Powder A/P RIGHT GUARD .. U.S. NO. 1 COACHELLA RUSSIT 5 LB. BAG POT A TOES GRAPEFRUIT 39~. 2sc, .. 59!. • s 01 eo. si.,,...,,.,. BAMBOO TIPS 0 21 01 l'\o Slt>roliilu Ajltwlt1 ~ SEASONED SEAWEED ''••lo• -..v-CURRY t()f'&S f)f Ttf£ fJfll£t'(f ~1 lo• SIM< ..... Aro,. .II ·--~_, RICE CRACKERS 1.19 .ff ll-et •.au ·•••••a• ... I .5-01 ~ 1(-Ooohi No MOOD SOUP STOCK ... .19 I •9 siw.i.•• r 1004'c "• BAMBOO SKEWERS... 3 ... t I El Roncho SwH I or Hot ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE lll 1.49 lll 1.49 1.09 El Aondio Pork & Se<non1nQ BRATWURST El Roncho Ronch Style THICK SLICED BACON LB U.l .D.A. CHOICI BUF CHUCK ROAST 6lADE CUT 8 9 c 1•. 6 , 0 1 Oil• Wo1.,, (h·d~n of 1h~ Sro 1.79 .99 CHUNK LIGHT TUNA 32 oz bottle I I 5 WINDEX RE FILL • BLUEBONNET MARGARINE l-l6 STICK 59c 32-or Oolsy Frett. JUICES ............................... EA. 1.39 Wh.lle •PPle 1tay1 htlh ln ple popularity , however, the moat beloved of American deuerta seems to be vanilla tee cream . Chocolate ice cream and chocolate cake are not far behind. As far as America's taste in main dishes, the tbree mos t popular foods are the hamburger and hot dog, both of German orieln, and the french try, which despite its name is as American as apple pie, the flag and motherhood. Research indicates that some s upposedly All-American foods tend to be regional in their reach. Chili is almost as popular in Cincinnati as it is in Fort Worth, bul there are areas of the nation in which it is barely considered digestible. In Minneapolis/St Paul, more popcorn is eaten than anywhere else ; most folks in New Orleans won't touch it. Chicago denies second city s tatus when it comes to consumption of hot dogs, but the slew for which Brunswick is justly famous fall s flat. Yogurt and frozen yogurt have captured both coasts. but are still eyed with misgiving in .n a n y m 1 d w e s t e r n 1.owns. Grits virtually are unavoidable down SC\ulh . where they're se rv e d up with breakfast even more often than Yankee chefs Easy as apple 'pie A number of cooks wh o ha ve bak ed America's standard ap· pie pie <made with the sliced fruit ) have asked me for a different version l suggest using shredded apples. The only recipe of this sort I have tried came from a professional cook tn England: it calls for l wo crusts and less s ug a r than the u sua l American apple pie supply haab brown•. Deaplt" these dltferel'\CH, however, there's hardly a town of sile th.at doesn't boast a taco stand, a chop auey joint and a pizza parlor. And just about everywhere, certain All -American combinations are served again and again. Ham and eggs. Peanut butter and jelly. Fried chicken and potato salad. Pie and ice·cream. To celebrate the taste all Amttf oans teem to most enjoy, here are Great Atnel'ican menus for spring ind •ummer celebration• -a lazy day brunch and easy picnic lunch. Both feature favorite Amerlc-.n dishes. LAZY DA.YSOF SUMMER BRUNCH Ham Slices Deviled. E~gs American Pie• Red, White and Blueberries• Toast or Sweet Rolls Pr•seni '"'' coupon aloog ..,,,, any one Manulacturera c;en11.olf coupon and gel <IOuble Iha ""'"9t """en yOO purcl\asa 1ria •lem NOi to 1<1clu<l4 rela•l4l• Ir" or grocery purcl\ue coupons or ••CHO I"• •alue of Ille •l•m E·clu~s houor 101:1acco and flu•Cl ''"'~ prod~ts Llmtt One lt.m p., Menut.cfuret'I Coupon end Limit 3 Double Coupone.-r Cueto,,. Coupon EttectlM Aftr. 2S ttwu Apr. 2t, 1N1 PLAINWRAP.. Approx. 5 lb. Chub Ground Beef per lb. • Save 37 p•r • lb . •AmertcH Pie 1 packaae (12 ounces> shredded hash browns, thawed ~teaspoon Silt 'h teaspoon summer savol'1,c~mbled I.ii tea.spoon pepper 2 tablespoons butter or margarine · 2 tablespoons oil 1 c up shredded Monterey Jack or American cheese t medium tomato, thinlr sUced Heat butter and oil to1ether over moderate BLUEBERRIES' heat in a 8· or 9-inch Jn mixing bowl . aklllet. Crumble hash combine 1to2 cups each brown bricks into strawberries and sliced skillet, add salt, savory bananas; add ..., cup and pepper. Cook 5 to 8 fresh or thawed frozen minutes untll golden blueberries. Pour 1,4 cup brown. Turn potatoes. orange juice over Set aside "'• cup cheese: mixture ~ toss to coat sprlpkle remainder over fruit. Serve in glass potatoes . Arrange compotes. \omato slices over top: DOWN HOME sprinkle with reserved PICNIC LUNCH cheese. Cook S minutes Vegetable Crudites longer . Mak es 4 Southern Fried servings. Chicken •RE~, WHITE AND Northern Potato Salad• Mother's Apple Pie Lemonade • Nonbern Potato Salad 1 package ( 1 pound 4 ounces> frozen crinkles ( french fries l ~ cup mayonna1se •,:i cup chill sauce 11:i cup c hopped onion ·~ c up c hopped green pepper 1 tabl espoon prepared mustard 1 tabl es poon horseradish I l tablespoon lemon Juice In lar~e sklllet cover frozen potatoes with salted' cold water. Cover and s immer about 6 minutes or until fork tender. Drain In large bowl. combi n e mayonnaise. chill saucf. onion , green pepper, mustard. ho rseradis.h and lemon juice. Add potatoes to mayonnaise mixture . Ch.il l thoroughly Makes 6 servings . ~~~~~~~~~~ PreHnl ""' cOuPol'I f lOr>g will\ any one M1nuracturer1 ce111t-ofl coupon af1d gel OOut>le the 1a~1ng1 ...,.,, '/bu purCl\Ue '"• •••m N04 10 •ncluele re1111e1 ''" °' ·g•oct ry purc,,ue coupe>ns o• t•C41ed •~• ••lue of ll'le •tem E•Clueles l>Quor 101>acco and lluld m111, 1>'oduc11 Limit One Item p., MenutactUNf''I Coupon • and UmH 1 DCKtbte CO\lpont pw c""'°"* Coupon En.ctJwe Asw. "thru Apr. II, 1N1 4M!> Double Coupon Pres•nt \f\t9 COYPQ/l •10"\a t11r1fn """ one M1nvt1clure11 t enlS·OO OOUPO" ana Q~I OOuD l' I"~ Sh "OS .. nen you OurC"•S~ lnip fem ..... Ot t f'IC•ud~· tld 1ip• ltM 0' g•oce11 o-..'c"as.: "· l•O' s ,, ~·cet"Q tnf' .aruf' ot 1t1• t~m £,t.lvoe, 1lu1r.."'' •·itiai..co ano • ·tl ~ "' O'OCjuCU • Limit One Item Per Manufacturer'• Coupon end Limit 3 Double Coupon• per Cuetom.r Cotipon Eff9Ctlv1 Apt. 23 thru Apr. 21, 1111 USDA Choice Beef Round.:.eonetess USDA Choice-Beef Chuck Boneless-Sholtlder Fillet-Pacific • London Broil per lb. 99 Clod Roast Fresh Red Snapper per R•lpha-Chilled-1 OOo/o Pure Value Pack .59 29 Orange Juice Fryer Wings per lb. Oacar Mayer-Meat or For cooks who want a richer shredded-apple pie. here is a recipe from Nika Hazelton's "American Home Cook- ing " <Viking > Mrs Hazelton says that her recipe com es from South Dakota. • 1h gal. ctn. Beef Bologna 129 12oz. pkg. NIKA HAZELTON'S SHREDDED-APPLE PIE 1 large lemon 4 to 6 cooking ap- p I es, peele4 and shredded to make 31 2 to 4 cups 3 egg yolks 12 cup sugar 2 tablespoons heavy cream 1 a cup raisins. pre- ferably golden 13 cup s livered blanched almonds 111 teaspoon ground cloves 1" teaspoon ground cinnamon 111 teaspoon ground mace 1 " teaspoon ground ginger •,:i to 'h cup ground a lmonds 1 unbaked 9-inch pie shell Grate yellow rind off the lemon and reserve. Squeeze the lemon Into a bowl. Add the shredded apples, and using your hands mix so that the apples are moistened with lemon throughout; this keeps them wtlite. It the applies are very juicy, drain off lemon juice; if they are dr7, keep them in the Juice. Beat together the e11 yolks su1ar and cream. Stir lo tile rai$lne slivered almonds and spices artcS mix weU. Tum the apples into the en mixture and milt thoroUllblY Sprinkle tbe ground 1lmo11ds over the bottom of ple 1bell: they wtll absorb moisture from tbe ftlllal. and keep tM cr'Ult drJ. Tum fllUng into cn&1t ud amoo&b top. Bake ln a pre·heated hot oven (400 d•1ree1) ror 25 min.atMI eaao .. p(e from ~ tid rnd ~=-~--=111 bakt tit •boil 2JO more ..... ;.until ....... ii 1olien tirown ud llH· Jo1 Ht. C.ool for 1b0ut 10 mfautet before eervto1. 12 oz. pkg. Aalph•-W"lte or Wheat Super Bread --~'h lb. E1 loaf•· 49 Ralphs-Blueberry, Corn or .89 Bran Muffins pkg. of 6 I iOUililiUiAiii10ridS;~:-1 19 : Assorted Flavors '2 gal.129 Ralphs Sherbet ctn. Plastic .99 Glad Wrap 200 ft. roll California Brandy-1.75 ltr. Btl. 109~ Christian Bros. .f . Orange Cout.OAJLV PtLOT,wedneeday, Aprll 22. 1181 -sandwich off.e~s 'opportunity for. inventiveness ay •ITZllUUtU.£a 4 pall butter, melted or Provolone center of each ball to dearee oven for U tarraaoa rina~over tardlnet. 2 1llcea buttered .~ More varletlea of ~ chive, finely Resnove mu1broom hold one m\&lhroom cap. min= OC' wiW cbeeae Alfalfa 1prout1 Add the1prouta. Garni1h bread ~ . undwlches probably minced stem•: 111ince them. Insert m\llWoomt, wftb bu Md it aU1htJy % slices rye bread with lemonwedaea. Cover tbe buttered '·,bave been lnvented than ~ teaspoon corn-Saute atema, chive and top down, ca•it:Y up. brown. Serve open-buttered bread with mu1t1rd; ibave any other cate1ory starch parsley 1n 2 pau butter. Spread remalnla• butter laced. Romaine lettuce PBOVOLONE -1.\GE 1prinkle with aatei top . of food.a. V.. teaspoon mar-Di11olve cornstarch ln over the bread; q,rinkle SAaDINBfi Julee..,. lemon 2 slices Provolone wlth bacon, opliobal •, Whet.her ainale deck. joram mll~; add lt wbtle wltb lemon Julee, mar-TA•aAOON Lemon wed1es cheese tomato, then the cheese. double or triple deck, v.. teaspoon stirrlnc to heat; add 1 Joramandtarrqon."U t can aardlnes, Set Romaine on the 2crispslicesbacon Toast in a preheated 'open-faced nn1er lenath tarragon slice cheese, tom into mushroom cuttlet with cleaned buttered rye; cover with 1 teaspoon mustard oven under the broiler ··or closed French roll I/• cup milk shreds. When melted, the cooked mixture. i.teupooo mustard sardines and lemon V• teaspoon Sage for 5 minutes or until ·lengtb,thecomblnatlon lspri1parsley,fine-removefromname.Cut Dlvlde remalnin1 '4 teaapoon white juice.Heattogetherthe Optional: 2 slices, c heese bubbles and 'Of ingredients for ly minced ln half, lenathwhe. cbeesetocovertberolls. wine mustard, tarra1on and peeled tomato sprinkled browns slightly. Serve '.sandwiches is limited 3 slices Swiss cheese Scoop out enou1b of the Bake ln pre.heated 375· white wlne wbiJe stir-with V. teaspoon basil open-faced. •onlybyimaainatioo. ~~~:.=.:.::....::_..::..:-..:....:..:...:..:......::..:.=..:.:....;;;.:;..:._;;.;.;.;.::::;.:._;;..;._;,;.:.;:..__;:~~.;__~..;;.;..;..;..;.;;.;.-.;..~;.,;_~~~~.-.;..~,_;---=-.;.._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ But regardless of what ·combinations you in- . vent, don't forget to add herbs for 1enri c h ed flavors. John Montaau Sandwich (1718·921, the 4th Earl of Sandwich. was a British politician, postmaster-general , secretary of state. first lord of the admiralty and noted finHcier. With all o f his activities, the earl must have •n an extremely busy man who carefully measured his lime. Some sources say he was reluctant to spend the traditional twp hours on leisurely luncheons so he Invented sandwiches which he could eat while working at his desk. Other sources say the ear l was an avid gambler who spent long hours at dice tables Reluctant lo leave his games, he invented saudwiches so he could eat while playing In any case. the earl 1s given credit for invent ing sandwiches Ever since. people havf' enjoyed inventing their own combmations He re are rive you might like to try COLD BEEF & MINT % cup rare beef. cold, minced , either from a roast or steak <doggie-bag> Juice of 12 lemon Grated rind 12 lemon 17 small onion. thin ly sliced 4 fresh mint leaves. minced Romaine lettuce 2 sli ces buttered toast, without crusts Place le ttuce on bread; then onion. beef. lemon juice. rind, mint VARIAT ION . With Roquefort-Butter· Blend 1-in ch cube Roquefort cheese with 1-lnch cube butter , both room temperature. spread 1t on beef. or bread STl:'.JFFED MUSHROOM SANDWICH 2 larg e. raw mushrooms 1'".! lemon 1 French roll Molly's Pie said the best F•SH POB SAi.£ !fl61foAST 11sl.39 11rcHOPS i111 CHOPS ltanlft 11irk11JSAGE 11'1.49 \I ggc i STATER Bll0$. CBmREI #EAT 1$ UNCf»IDIT10NAU Y IUARANTlED W"'90ll CUl'TWllO 1141. -----_...,,_ lVf"t ~lC-lOl _.t .. V'f t0111 0flO,_.ALL f C.UA~filjlf((O f0 ~l.t.M '°"°"''O.,,.~'t~l IN CMf.f'"IJll'I M"""°'-0 YAlllft'Y •AK HwntMIZ ........ c .. STATlll IAOI. IMllrT c•--- E 80AST _, .... ll97• ll •1•• FAE.SH aAll·M ....... ;-.Hl .. AST t1t1•• 99·~B -ICU CMUC9t eotllLUI •HOUtDall • 1 M HUT LI a.a.OasT ti'I" • 1 ~·LB WILS()N CEATIFIEO MIAT PllA•K 1t-OZ 99cEA Hlf l~CllT • 11• C•CKSnAK 1..1 IH,IOllSL&M •••11• •na• HllllOUWO~ n••n&11 Ul'I" ll•2 .. c;; .. Sn&ll UI •27 • "'"" ..._ lllOT TO lllC&D -''" • 1 " ........... UI ... V ... ILABU IM STOl\U WITH SUlVICE Olli C»<l ~ NTATOSALA• V.lli9c: ~Ill CAIUI01 IWll,_ ••• aALA• v.u• IVIJlfMttl IUCl TO OflOCll AIKNC ..... C C--~LI. IAIWllUClD TOOllDCll •21• ·80AST8... ..t1 'lllMCllT' 'I" JACKC--ti u798 ;u";i(9 u' I" MCttS TVMfY • oz. aOLOellA lllC:tn TVMn IMAMI Oii _,. ' I" ....... "°'-lA IWT'9 OAM Ill '2" TW .. rtaoAST u lwn WMITllDAlllll t LI '2" RltlllYHAST IA ~~~~~~~~~~·~~~ e llouie«,.coou.ft llKE ··2H &:'&,.'=""-""''="69' ... . ...... aw. ~. t • ! iPiiiifii'' OONI MAC :,z. 91 • l -_·;~... • : 87' •. ·--...... • 19 emus P~.,., ...... • .... 93' • PRESERVES •OZ. 2 PICKLES ~~BUCH I ·~z JSC .. NESCAFEINSTANT •3•• 1s 0 $119 W COFFEE . u~oz. f ,, oz I ILEACH 89 c SHOITEllllG ="'°"'" I ..oz '1'1 CLOROX 1~0i: TEIDER'VITRES ME!~~AM(l 'IJOZ a1c • lB S?32 69c CAT CHOW EllENO t . ' . 2QO.CT. DOG SUCKS ="~IHA IOHZ • .. H'OLL 6 9 c JOlllY CAT L'"'" • 1 iissi'ir~· COLORS . I iiiiililY. I LUVSSMALL · DIAPERS .. I iPPLi JUICE . HOH OAIAT PuAIHA~<>UflMET CA£AMEA SE.VOOO Of! TIM'IA COFFEEMATE TENDER VITTLES I 22oz•209 • •2-0~8 I c OEUIXE oo,f:<S(fo f(ffT'''Dlmi K DINN R ·~l8S 3 41 • .. ·OZ99• t nt· FOOD ?(t c 24-C'f. 2 l -::.:LO(-KAMPS Mc,i.w..y HOl 99 99c PAIC MIX ~k":1' .. 'll• 11-0Z. BROWlll MIX ~ CA()Cl(fA I llAOe (YE '~; COOL HIP l .01 79• llAL KAN ~ T1lfll Of! • c'l/ri:80o ~)4A9• . SIU t I I »Ol $117 ZHOZ s12A r•wz 5l37 l&OZ '1· ftftlO,. VAIUETY.Ull lUSH HANOINO 13 9 9 liULEUit ~'"c" ~oT • Fll0181 FOOD$ lal$(l( cm °"'"~ coe --Pl ~~':'~LIN<>M --mTS :::i't':'O:.. ~~t: cat CAI( ()flt~··- I I I ' . iiiSiYs *I Wlft .28:1&t .. . ... •u9 r'"'"""Q ,.,...,•4.11 ma. tol11• - ( t \ ANEW .,.,,..... TRY TO STOP ME Boston's Larry Bird goes up for a shot over Philadelphia's Darryl Dawkins Tuesday night in NBA playoff action at Boston. To see who won the Eastern Con- ference opener, see page D2. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Paivtucket fans got money's worth By HAL BOCK APS,..,•Wnwr Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jack I don't care 1/ I never get back . That hnc from baseball's na- tional anthem wasn't meant to be taken so seriously. But the other night. 2Q hearty fans at the International League game between the Pawtucket Red Sox and Rochester Red Wings very nearly never got back. 'l hat was the night the two minor league teams played 32 innings. They quit al 4 o 'clock in the morning and by the time the weary players and club officials staggered out of the ballpark. the sky was begionihg to brighten with the first signs of daybreak. IT WAS A game for the hi.story books -the longest baaeball gall\e In terms of innings and time ever played. "We should have known it was golqg to be a long night,'' said Mike Tamburro, general manager of the Bed Sox. "We were scheduled ,to start at 7:30. but abo"t 1.0 minutes before gametlme, on e ll&Jlt after another went out to two of our light towen." That delayed the start of basebal11s long"t pl1bl b}' 30 minutes and wben the game started at 8 p.m .• it was with on- ly eigbt of the 10 Ught towers at McCoy Stadium in operation. So, ptayln& in sort of a twilight 20De, tbe Red Sox and Red Wini• weq,.t at it. Pawtucket was tralll•• 1.0 in the bOt~m of the ninth but 1ta1ed a tbri1Un1 rally to tie the game Chico Walker, who was to go l-Jor-1:$ tor tne night. doubled, advanced to third on a wild pitch and then scored on a sacrifice fl y by de- signated hitter Russ Laribee, who was on his way lo an O· for-11 mght's work THE HOME FANS -there were 1,740 in the stands when the game started -cheered the dramatic comeback. But they didn't know what they were get· ting themselves into. The two teams struggled into extra inrtings with an occasional threat here and th e r e but nothing resembling a run When the clock pushed past midnight, TambWTO consulted his Interna- tional League bylaws and dis· covered a rule c overing marathons. "It says in the bylaws. no in ning shall start after l2:45 a .m .. " he said. OK. Simple. Show the bylaws to the umpires and we all go home. "That's what I did," said Tamburro. But they didn't go home. ••JACK LEITZ was the umpire crew chief and he said there was no mention or the 12:45 rule in his instructional gwde," Tam- burro said. "He also said he had to go by bis instructional guide." So the game went on. And on, and on, and on. Rochester scored a run ln the 21st inning but the tenacious Red Sox came back to tie lt acain in the bottom half of the Inning. ty- ing it at 2--2. UC Irvine scored 16 runs Tuesday. and lost. See D3. Angels shut out by stingy Bannister4 Mariners Mariners a 3-0 win before 21,438. on April 11 ln Seattle allowed the Angell BY EDZINTEL O(IN Delly,.. ... , .... Well, there's one thing that can be said for tbe Anaets -their timing ia good. The Angels, who ln collecting 11 hits in a six runs. including three home runa in 6-1 win a night earUer. looked like they eight innings, enroute to a 7-4 loss? Sure might finally have broken out of a week-was. long bitting slump, reverted back to their •·A big key was my rhythm, I worked a If they could pick a time of the season to glve their bats a vacation, this might be as good a time aa any. "Go ahead you bats, get in your bags and go to Louisville for a week." old ways Tuesday. lot faster tonight," Bannister said. "I find that when I work raster, I bave better The closest the Angels came to scoring rhythm It was definitely something l was in the first inning after Rod Carew planned out singled and stole second before Rick "In the past, I hadn't pitched intelligent- Oh yeah, there's another thing that can be said for the Angels. Sometimes, they don't waste a thing -like hits. Tuesday night. they Wlsted just two singles. Unfortunately. that's all they had to work with. Burleson walked. ty. I was working too slow and thinkin• But Juan Beniquu grounded into a about what I was doing too much." third-to-first double play and Fred Lynn Maury Wills, his manager, agreed. bounced out. Little did anyone know. it "We've always felt Floyd was a capable was good night Angels. Butch Hobson pitcher I predicted he would win. 20 games singled in the third for tbe Angels' other this year He has all the physical tooi.. Floyd Bannister. who came into the game with a record of 0-2 and an ERA or. don't let this one out. 11.45. looked like something out of the Cy Young Award mold as he shut out the Angels -retiring the final 20 batters -to give the Seattle hit. He's so close to becoming a superstar ·•it's amazing how when your rhythm is pitcher There's just one key we're tryin,1 going how well you can thro.w strikes." to find out and that key may be shuttin1 Bannister said a little tongue in cheek af-out the Angels." ' terward. Fregosi, who has seen his team lose silt Was thjs the same Floyd Bannister who !See ANGELS, Page Dt> _:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;::_~~~~ ...... Choking isn't part of Astros HOUSTON <APl -Houston pitcher Bob Knepper. trying to break the Astros out of a four- game losing streak and protect- ing a one-run lead, had to double-check to make sure the Astros really were in a devastat- ing slump. •'In San Francisco after three or four losses, the throats would tighten up and everybody would be drinking a lot of water." Knepper said Tuesday night arter he had quieted Los Angeles on three hits for a l ·O victory. IT WAS HOUSTON 'S third victory in 11 starts this season but Knepper didn't reel the pressure "Here. you'd have thought we were 8-2." said Knepper, an off· season acquisition from the Giants "I 've n ever been nervous with this team. The whole atmosphere is so re- laxed." Knepper's relaxation lulled the Dodger bats into only their second loss of the season. Pedro Guerrero got a pair of singles and Dusty Baker added a seventh inning hit for the only sareties off Knepper. The Astros offense. brunted all season. did not explode against loser Jerry Reuss. 0-1. who yielded eight hits. But Knepper's third inning double and a run- scoring single by Cesar Cedeno was enough for the Astros to win for the third time in 11 games this season. "NUMERICALLY THIS was an important victory." Knepper said ·'It was important for us to establish that we. could beat Los Angeles and that they hadn't psyched us out. You don't want lo go 2-20 Eventually you have Lee Trevino on 'blacklist' LONDON (AP> -American golfer Lee Trevino and Formula One motor racing champion Alan Jones of Australia are amo ng 128 international sportsmen and women named on a "blacklist" in London today. The list. issued by SANROC, the South African Non-Racial Olympic Committee. is to be submitted to the United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid. It ls hoped that gov- ernments will bar sportsmen named on the list from compet- ing in international event.a. All those named have etther played aport in white-minority ruled South Africa since January 1. 1981 or bave "been involved in providin1 respec- tability for apartheid sport.•• to start putting something together." Reuss. making his first start of the season. said "I was satisfied with my game. How could I not be? He <Knepper> outpitched me and he outhit me too." Knepper, I ·O. s aid he hoped he could continue hitting but would have to improve his baserun- ning. Knepper was thrown out trying to stretch a seventh in- ning single into a double . "IT WAS TERRIBLE baserunnlng," Knepper said "( stopped at first base for coffee and pizza before going to second base." Guerrero was the only Dodger to hit consistently again Knep- per. He collected singles in the second and fifth innings and in the eighth flew out to leftrielder Jose Cruz on the warning track in foul territory. "He was getting a good com- bination." Guerrero said. "We had only two or three guys that hit the ball good. His curve was coming on the outside comer. You can't pull that pitch right there I just let his curve ball go." Houston Manager Bill Virdon was just happy for the victory. "It doesn't matter how . we Just needed to win," Virdon said. ··Tonight, it was good pitching by the pitcher and good hitting by the pitcher " Dally Pli.t ,... .. ..., Oart ·-Seattle owner George Argyros, a Newport Beach resident, roots on the Mariners. Argyros goes on sheer faith Mariners owner optimistic despite slow start It JUSt wouldn 't be nght to believe that new Seattle Mariners owner George Argyros is thrilled with his club's 3-9 start in 1981. But for Argyros. there's more to baseball than just winning -much. much more. If nothing else. Argyros, a 43-year-old land de- veloping tycoon who 'purchased the franchise in January for an estimated $13 million, is getting an education. "There's still a lot I have to team." Argyros, a resident of Newport Beach, said. "But I'll tell you one thing, l never want to go through the education l went through last Friday rtight <when the streak· mg Oakland A's walloped Seattle in the A's home opener. 16-1)." EVERY TEAM WILL HAVE that kind of night. Unfortunately for the Mariners they've had more than their share in the past and in all likelihood. will have more in the future. But that doesn't keep Argyros. always the optlmlst, from thinking the positive. "Alread1. .'\ttendance in the Kingdome ls up 64 percent over last year's pace through ei1ht games and I think Maury <Wills, the manager starting bia first full year~)~· doin1 a really fine job.'' And apparently. Wills ' feelings toward Argyros are mutual. "He really caret about this club, you see hl_"'1 in here 1the clubhouse> all the time, talking to tbe players. giving them little pep talks. The best thing about George in his enthusiasm and positive· ness I like being around people like that." Last year, under Darrell Johnson, then Wili., beginning on Aug 4. the Mariners finished in l~t place in the American League West Division. '38 games behind the Kansas City Royals with a 59-103 record. In its four-year ex1stence. the Mariners have never rinished higher than sixth place in t"e division. , So what makes Argyros think that with a new manager, about 20 new players and especially a new owner, that things are going lo tum around in 1981? JJlid Louis win fight whUe on the canvas? I I I I I ' I I : I J '1 : I ! George's picture: Nopret~~ From AP dllpakltee Nf;W YORK -Oeorae Steinbrenner, principal owner of the New York Yankeet, reportedly expreued h1I diapleuure over a picture of blm ln the Yankee yearbook and aeveral outdated tact.I ln the book by order· in1 50,000 coplh removed from concession stand.a Tuesday nt1ht. The $2.50 yearbook hat been on aale at Yankee Stadium and throu&b the mail alnce O~nlnl Day. "1 don't lhin.k that Geor1e liked his pie· ture. Sure, there are errors in the book," one sLadium official said. ·'There is no price on the cover, they have pictures of g'l)'a who have been traded away -but take a look at Geor1e's picture." Steinbrenner's picture on page 3 is half the page, a profile 1bot. But the Imbalance in the proportion ol red makes it look aa though the volatile owner ls wearing lipstick. Although nobody connected with Canteen Corp., wbich operates the conceasion stands, or the Yankee's front office would comment on the removal of the yearbook. One vendor, however, said that the books. which were on sale when the stadium o~ned Tuesday night, were ordered taken off at 7:30 p.m .. one-half hour before the start of the game against Detroit. The yearbook, printed during spring training, is usually revised after the June 15th tradine deadline. This book bad original· ly been held up when the Juoo Thompson- Jim Spencer trade was made, but later called off by the Pittsburgh Pirates. Other players traded away since tbe book was printed and ready for sale on April 9, when the Yanks opened at the Stadium. in-cluded Ruppert Jones, Tim Lollar, Joe Lefebvre and Chris Welab. Quote of the day Billy Marthl, manager of the Oakland A's : ''I believe if God bad ever managed, f{e would have been very aggressive, the way 1 manage." Hot-hitting Laniford ~ Boston Can97 I Qr\ tM MDeftCID Le•rut -~ ~ ~ tbNie hlta and droV• ill two ,,_ ...... ,. tcUead tM Bclltoe a.ct los to I lCM ramp~-Tuu. LMlb'd. IC'- qiilNd .... =·~~:r.~:·.m a dOubte and a pa:tr or 1lD11es to ralae hit batdftJ avera,. to .415 . • . Jn otber American Leaeue 1ame1, "-Y ae ... .an1•1 fourth hlt of the 1ame, a ba1e1~1oaded ainale ln the bottom of tbe nlnlb, and a tour-hitter by BrlU a.ra , -.J--' Ii Ye tbe Cbtca10 White __ ,YTV Sox a 2-1 vlctory over Baltimore Bea 01Uvle 1maahed a three-run homer and Mooee ea .. scattered nine b.lts to lead Milwaukee to a 6·2 victory over Toronto. Haas pitched the Brewers' first complete eame of the seuon. He did not al· low a walk and struck out ooe . . . &e1ite JacU.'1 sin1Je produced one of two un· eamed nma that gave the New York Yankees a 2-0 victory over Detroit and dropped the Ti1en out of first place ln the Eut Division . . . A run-scoring double by Bo Dias tr11- 1ered a three-run ninth inning as Cleveland beat Kansu City, 4-1 behind a seven.bitter by Rick Walts . . . Oakland's Tony Arma• ripped a bases-loaded single in the loth in- ning and S'4!ve McCatty'a six·bitter gave the A's their 13th victory. Rockets. 76ers off on right foot Moees Malone scored 29 points and trig· gered a second-hair surge that carried the Houston Rockets past the Kansas City Kings, 97-78, Tuesday night in the opener of their National Basketball Association Western Conference championship series. Held to 10 points in the first half, the 6-10 Malone was unstoppable after intermission, accounting for every Rocket point but two in the final 7:49 of the third quarter as the Rockets took charge of the turnover· plagued Kings. Robert Reid scored 19 for the Rockets. who went over the .SOO mark at 47 -46 for the first time this season. Game two of the series will be played tonight, also at Kansas City ... Reserve guard Andrew Toney scored 11 of his 26 points in the fourth quarter, including two free•tbrows with two second& len, to lead the Philadelphia 76ers to a 105-104 victory over Boston in their Eastern Conference cham· pionship showdown Boston rallied from a lO·point deficit in the fourth quarter to take a 104-103 lead on two free throws by Larry Bird with four seconds to go But after a time out. the 76ers inbounded the ball from midcourt to Toney, who was fouled as be drove to the light baseline. The rookie froJll Southwestern Louisiana calmly sank both shots for the win- ning margin. ...... , ....... pkewd .... bm.lap of 1corei...a ball and drove lD {wo rum, iDd at~ ... ..,..r, wtuMMa a nm batted Jn tJdl MUOD, drove In four to pace the Atluta Brava to a 1().1 rout ot CtncLMat.l Tund&r 11 N attoual Lea1ue acuoa. 80111, 1·1, aurrender~ th.ree 1Jn1la to the bot· bltUn1 Dave C.llbl.a, Mio 11 battiq .481, and a palr .of bannlesa btmt hits. The 1011 waa tbe third atralpt !or tM ~ and t.b.ttd in tour meeting• with the Braves . . . ln other ac· tlon, rookie Tim aa .. ea Booo• tied a club record with four stolen bue1 and knocked in two runa with a aist4J·lnnint 1tn1le, hla third or four hlla ln tb.e same. leadtna Montreal \0 a 10·3 victory over Philadelphia. Gary Caner added a two-nm homer for the Expoe, bis second of the seaaon . . . . Gelle Teaa(e and Toauny Herr each drove ln two runa with extra bue hlta ln a six-nm tb.lrd lnnilll and Alldy R.baC!Oll pitched a five-b1t'4!r, lead- lnl St. LouiJ to an 8--0 victory over Cbica10, bandinl the Cubs their ei1hth loss in a row. Rincon struek out fivJ aod did not allow a walk . . . San Diego's CluU Wei.II posted his first major le ague victory as ~ Padres downed San Francisco, 3·1. Welsh, 1-0, al· lowed one unearned run, three hits and walked three before leaving for a pinch-hitter ln the seventh inning. It waa the second start for the 216-year-old left.hander. Louis laid to rest in 'fitting place' ARLINGTON, Va. -Joe Louis, a sharecropper 's son who wore boxing's heavyweight crown a record 12 years. was buried Tuesday among the nation's war heroes -a patriot to his son. his president and millions of others whose hearts were cap- tured by the great " Brown Bomber." To a three-volley salute from seven rlflemen of the Old Guard. Louis was laid to rest dh a sunny slope or Arlington National Cemetery, barely 500 feet Crom the Tomb or the Unknown Soldier. It was "a fitting place for a rnan whose distinctive patriotism and extraordinary ac- complishments made him one or the most un- forgettable Americans of our time." accord· ing to.President Reagan. The convalescing president's eulogy was read by Defense Secretary Caspar Wein· berger. who was joined at graveside by luminaries from the political and sporting worlds. They included Sens. Paul Laxalt of Nevada, Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and Carl Levin of Michigan, and former heavyweight champions Jersey Joe Walcott, J oe Frazier and Muhammad Ali. BaiebaJI today 0. Ulla date la b&Mball la utt: Toan S..ver ol u.. "" Yon litta Utd a maJor MllU41 recOrd b1 ltitldAI out lt SID Dte10 t>.ttera (lncJdA& UM la•t 10;...atber record>, lD a 2-1 victory overt.be Padrel. On Udt date bi 1Jlt; The Chluco Whit Sox routed t.M Kan111 CUy A's 20.S, 1cortn111 n&ftl ln lbe 1 venth lMln1 on 10 walkl, OM bit bat.Iman, three errors, and only one bJt JobJUlY Calll5on'1 aln1le. On lhi• date ln 1818: Jn the first official 1ame to National Learue history. Bolton ~\*1 • &-5 victory over Pb1l1delphla. Today's Birthday: Milwaukee Brewere pitcher Moose · Haas is 25. Lakers agree to pay Tomjanovtch The Lakers have a1reed to pay Hou.a ton Roeketa forward Rad)' Tomjuovlell cash and a structured, t ax-free settlement for in· juries he suffered during a 1977 on-court s kirmish with fo rmer Laker Kerml& Waablagtoa .. Allee Vicki Darrow, wife of the boxing promoter known for the put 10 years as Harold J. Sml&Jt~ wu ar· raigne d Tuesday on a fugitive warrant fro m North Carolina and freed on $25,000 bail. Darrow, who has been known as Barbara Newmaa Smltla, Tom1anovsch was not required t~nter a plea at the arraignment in municlp~ourt. Smith's true name is Ro.a Flelda ... The general manager of the Detroit Pistons. Jack McCloskey, met with Virginia sophomore Ralph Sampson in an attempt to get the 7-4 center to forego his last two years of college basketball and join the National Basketball Associ:ltion. However. McCloskey said after the m eeting in Cavalier Coach Terry Holland's office that he didn't think he was persuasive enough ... West Germany defeat- ed the United States. 6·2, but the Americans still have a chance lo win the B pool in the world ice hockey championships in Goteborg, Sweden. They have s ix points while the Germans have four. and each has two games to play. Television, radio TV : Baseball Dodgers at Houston. 4 p.m . Basketball NBA playoffs !Houston at Kansas City1, 11 ·30 p.m .. channel 2 <taped> RADIO : Baseball Dodgers at Houston. 4 p.m .. KABC (7401; Seattle at Angels. 7:30 pm .. KMPC 1710). I From Page 01 I: ANGELS SHUT OUT ROGER CARLSON i. I I ~ i ' l I\ 1 l I l ' of its last eight gaines. was at a loss for words again. "I thought J esse <Jefferson> pit c bed well tonleht . bul I thought he looked better against Oakland"· be said . "I didn't think Bannister threw that well, but you can't say too much when a suy pitches a two-bitter.·• Jefferson (G-2) pitched 7~ in- nings, aUowiPI three runs on nine hits, while striking out nve. His relief, Don Aase, finished up, aUowin1 Just one bit the rest of the way. In the final game of the homestand tonight, Ken Fonch (1-0> who blanked Minneaota in his last outing, 4--0, takes tbe mound for the An1ela against Ken Clay (0.1) for Seattle. • • • However. the rest of the starters are all struggling. in· eluding Don Baylor (.059 ), Brian Downing (.206), Gric h (.184). Hobson (.200), Brunansky (.152 > and Benique2 (.167 ). Designated bitter Richie Ziak got the Marinen' scoring start- ed in the tint inning with a two- out single to ri,-bt to score Joe Simpson, who bad singled and moved to second on a balk by Jefferson. Jim Anderson then bit a two· out single to center in the second to score Tom Paciorek, who bad doubled. And Bruce Boehle singled home Julio Cruz, who led off the ei1hth with a single and was bunted to second by Simpson in tbe fourth. After that. the Angela (5-7) take to the road for a seven· game stand against Minnesota Bannister, who bad given up 1 d be i i F ·d six home runs in 11 innings ln and Oak an · g nn ng " ay. his first two starts, walked one ln gaining his first Hfetime win against the Angela. Ban· and struck out tw~. Ba~ister nisler equaled the Mariners' was backed by a pair of rme d~· club recori for a low-hit eai:ne, fensi~e plays from Paciorek in established by Rlck Honeycutt • t-:rt field, who ~k a~ a base on July 10 1979 against the hit from Carew in the sixth and Yankees • from Bocbte at first base, who Banni~ter was 9-13 at Seattle robbed Dow_ning of .a pou1bte last season but bad a respecla· e xtra-base hit in the eighth. ble 3.•7 ERA. . ...... L 1110T•• -,.__ '**' '6tc:M• .. I w&I throwing so fast '*""-~,,.1l'9MOl111at1011,.......,. toni ah( th.al at Um es the catcher fell_,,,._,.,_...,., Ito 1"'· ....... ----1 & T~y wttl> tt. ....,.,,. R-A ch.ti ef 1IW (Jerry Narron> couldn't put up u 11iwm. \..MllUI. Alt .,.....,. .,,_, chl'1fte the signs fast enou1h," Ban-:==..-:~u!:.=:'::.! nister said. "I still think the roe.1or c~. 1.a1a .....,., ".,. .._... .itcN"' 111 Angels will snap out or their llit· '"""'_.....,,.. Wfw• ,.,,....,Int"'' C01Ntie<• wllfl SM Antlflle flf tM TeU• ~· II -,... ting slump aoon. They're all ex-,.,, •• '"-' "~ •"' .. 1 ,.,, .. 11•rt• •"" perienced players. I waa just ::::=.-:W~'!:';::.=e'~:~:'=: more on tonight than they 11. .. 11.nb6M1L1it9-111e11r11ume11nu5-.M were." ,.,. ..... , ,,_ lleeft JM --L.errt ..,_"' j t h i.. '•• Mllw--Iii~ • Ml wl11. o .. r Ille ""'911 ffl. By collecting us l e two nh.n, Ill• .... sllUIOOlt .•. l'••m•• ...... tlllrll the Angels ' team ba\ting i.. .. m.., c:.-, u..1w11 ••• ,.,. A,.,,.,kMI avera0 e dropped to .210. to ..... ve 1" "'"',,. ..,. .. '"'° T,_..v MtM'• & ...... willl ..... -........ ....., ..... m a t c h t h e s e a s o n I o w .. 11111.i -t1w11 lw'• rffftad 1111 .,,.,.1...., ot bu hed S t da 8 1,..,... llelfl.9 • bit 1M9W ~? NoPe. "I wolllcl es la s a ur Y · ur ~.. rotNr 11e .., _,, ............. , ,_ 11W1:" now leads the team in batUn• """.,...,.,.~,-·,,_,_·WI"• 1th -a~ r at ed "\.Y ........ ,." \lllo '*"'-· ' , ... ,_,,,.... ....,. w a ,U#O aver e, o ow u 11eme to "'*--'* my un• WwN .., .... 1 Lynn at .2'73 and arew at . 271. • .. • ,,.,., • • dldll't M¥ .. 11., _,_.. w;ilson rebuffed B'g Ten blocks ex-Hornet that the conference would not have counted 1m a1ainat his four yean of eUllblllty. Wlllon played ln tbe openln1 1ame that yur, waa !Jljured and withdrew from acbooJ. , ·Mesa volleyball team making noise It seems a long time b et ween celebrations, maybe the imagination is working overtime. but there is some noise emitting from Costa Mesa High -and it is being produced by a volleyball team that bas come from out of the blue to contend for the Sea View League champion.ship. Championship? Wait a minute. Irvine High was the preseason favorjte and Estancia is a two-time CIF finalist and currently in the lead. But lhat lead is only one game following Costa Mesa ·s "upset." which stopped Estancia's long winning streak in league play. As a result the ~ustangs of Coach Jerry Winanl are only e game out of the title room and appear o be a shoo-in for the CIF playoffs -sometbi.n,C the Mustangs have never done in volleyball. • And. it's being done with a squad which boasts three juniors and three sophomores among the top eight players. "l knew we would be fairly good ," admits Winant. "But I didn't want to do too much talking early ¥1 the year." His club wen. unnoticed in the Orange County and cu· oreseason polls, but a re- cent check shows the Mustangs No. 5 in Orange County a fter shocking No. 2 Estancia "In the past it a lways seemed there was a key mjury or we'd lose one or our best players for one reason or another," ex· plains Winant, who came out of the Mater Dei High woodwork to becom e the Mustanis' coach. What has the Costa Mesa student body hopping is a combination or seniors Paul Knipp and P J. Kiley. juniors Paul Coenen and Mark Panoncialman, sophomore Dan Maxner and Junior Ken Bardsley. Others who have been contributing a great deal are sophomores Jerry Dahill and Tom Kennedy, Charles Hamborg and jun ior Mark Amold. ·'There has neve r been a winning tradition here," says Winant. "The kids never knew.how to win. it seemed. •'But I think we turned the comer against Corona del Mar. We won the first game, 1.5-3, then lost, 9-lS, a typically in- consistent show. Then we were down 11-14 and won, 16·14. Again we were down. 12·14 . and won 17·15 . Ever since the kids have been very confident and they're gettine used to wtnning. · · Seema like I've beard that one before - It doesn't seem to matter what sport you're talking about. confidence seems to turn pages. Winant reveals it is doubtful he'll return to Mesa a year from now because or the lack of a teaching opening at Costa Mesa, thus whoever inherits the Mustangs would seem to be in a pretty good spot consider· ing the returning talent But that's getting ahead of things. Right now. espec1ally wi th a growing list or fa ithful, the noise is now. not later • • • Another Orange Coast area coach who 1s feeli ng pretty good a bout his crew is Newport Harbor High golf coach Steve Dye. The Sailors are 9-1 and r ecently averaged 77 against Edison In competition on the Los Lagos course at Costa Mesa Country Club. Dye 's nu ggets include John Waganseller, Jeff Reck, Mark Choiniere. Nancy Mockett, Kirk Stone and Phil Leider, all seniors with the exception of Leider, a freshman. • • • NOTES AND THINGS -Newport Harbor High water polo st ar DIHY Riley, an All-CIF choice for the CIF champions. bas accepted a scholarship to attend UC Irvine . . The United States Achievement Academy has chosen Ke•ID Shelden of Corona del Mar High as one or its winners Westminster stops Sailors Baseball standings W estmlnster High continued its domination or the Sunset League baseball race Tuesday with a convincing 9-5 victory over host Newport Harbor. The victory, whJch improved the Lions' league record to 10--0, was keyed by a six-run second inning. Westminster converted six straight singles into six runs In that inning after falling behind, 2-0 in the first. Mick DeLavallade tripled in the seventh inning for the vic- tors to knock in one nm. and Gerado Llamos added a double in the sixth. Newport Harbor's Clarke Smith went a-for_., while team- mate John Klrcbber1 tripled home two runs ln tbe fifth inning aa \be Sailon (2·8) attempted to 1et back into the same. Starter Rick Caatle went the distance for the Liona, scatter-.ln, el&hl hlta. Bum pt&iinin8 to pick Kogen HOUSTON CAP> -Coach Bum Phl\UPI ot the New Orleans Sabttl •AYI he plans to pick Nl· Jlln8 baclt Geor&• Roaen, the Hetainao Trophy winner from South Carollfta. ln next week'• n.r.t round of the National Foot· ball Le~ draft. PbUllPf, \n houaton to be honored Mooda1 nJpt •t th.e ft"t Cancer F'llbten blD4~ Ilia~ r.poru he mt1ht ll· non ..,..,. ID UM ftrat NUDd in IHoiotlA•r81H!e rarlor, Nri Caro11Da llMbacll:tr. AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dtvllloa W L Pct. GB Oakland 13 1 .929 - Chicago 5 3 .625 5 An1ela s 7 .417 7 Texas 4 8 .400 7 Seattle 4 B .333 8 Kansas City 2, 6 .250 8 Minnesota 2 8 .200 9 East Dlvlalon Boston Detroit Cleveland New York Milwaukee Baltimore Toronto 6 3 .667 - 7 4 .636 - 5 3 .625 1h 8 4 .800 1h 4 4 .500 l ~ 3 4 .• 29 2 3 8 .Z73 4 "-*'I'•~ s .. ttt•~,....-o ftHlll'ltv,T-4 Mll---•,:.::-2 H-Yor112. 10 Cttk ..... ........,.., CM ... ltMt ~Cltyt 0.11 ....... ~ .... ""' ..... , T .. E .. S.MtMIQoy0.11•1 <ft-111•1.11 TeusC~Nlol t•<Mnlnl .. I Ml_.,.. ~._....0.11 «O..~ Cit..,._. 1 .. 1 Ml ..... (c:..w.tlt-l)MT--:~MI Det"'4tl ... M l ....... "10ftll M) .. 111-. (Mc~ 041 lit 01k.oe1 I~ ·~l=••IW141 IGerleftd l·tl •I ICU .. • City l'--"11 Ml, NATIONAL LEAGUE West Dlvlll1oa W L Pct. GB Dod1en Atlanta Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Houston 9 2 .818 - 5 5 .500 31h 5 5 .500 31h 5 7 .417 41h 4 8 .333 Slh 3 8 .Z73 6 East Division Montreal 7 2 .178 - St. Louis 6 2 . 750 'h Philadelphia 7 4 .636 1 New York 4 ' .500 2~ Pittsburgh 4 4 .500 21JJ Chicago 1 9 .100 SIJJ .,....,...1c.-"-""'· ........ ~ .... ~. ""~·J It.I.Ne ~· M~ ,.....,..lM.clt SM oi.a, 5"" ~-llU I OftlY911ftW~._. .,...,.,_CV.._,.. Ml •t "--CWWn ·~u:-(~ .. ,,_=--, cLA1C811•11 "'l~COr .._.1-il•I ......... 10..111t-.i .... , QWC ... I~ Mt .C It. UW. ca.r-t...:.. ..,.,_ ''°'" • ., ..... .......,... ,,..... HJ.: ftr.-Clt<• COrlffl41 141 •t SM DI ... cirw-1....,,0.1 •Wt••ll," \ Oruie Coast College put ita 19 hit.a t.o Cood uae, Golden West squandered moat of it• lS hJta but atill came out on top and Saddleback used a solid pitchlna performance aa all three teams picked up key conference "11aaeball victories Tuesday. At Fullerton, Orange Coaat continued Its torrid hitting cam· paign with an easy S.3 victory over the hoet Homeu to take a two-aame lead In the South Coast Conference race. · In their last four games, the Pirates have walloped 72 bita and scored 53 runs lo raise the team batting average to .350. TUESDAY, IT was Mike Van· derburg and Larry Lee who did B4SEB4U mos t or the dama ge Va n· derburg ripped a smgle, double and home run for three RBI. while Lee went 4·for·6 and scored twice as OCC improved its record to 9-3. Meanwhile, Don Smith went the distance for OCC. striking out a season-high 12 batters while scattering eight hits. OCC, after a 3·3 first round, went 6-0 in the second round. One of the reasons behind the second r o und s u cc e ss is freshman Reggie Montgomery who has broken out of a slump Afte r going hitless 1n rive games. Montgomery has turned around lo hit 560 m the second round He was 2 for-3 Tuesday. MEANWHILE, GWC left 11 runners on base a s Cypress starte r Grant Walling constantly pitched out of trouble But m the end, the llu.sllen ~lied out the \llctorr. GWC (11-6) won it tn the lltb wben Bob Grogan opened lbe tn· ning with-a sin1le and moved tO lhird on a double by Steve Spr- inger. Jack Settle was walked intentionally and GWC was Ill· ting pretty with the bases full and no one out. However, GWC did the same thing earlier, only to have Wall· ing somehow pitch out or the jam. That wasn't the case ln the 11th, a• .Chris Scbul1 btou&ht bom._e,.Ahe winning run wlth a sacrifice fly. · G WC reliever Ron Hendrick hurled seven innings, allowing j us t three hits and striking out three. He lowered his ERA to 1.48 in Southern Cal Conference play. but il was the third time he ha s pitc he d i mpre s s ive ly without gettrng the decision Mark Stone pitched the 11th to pick up the win AT SAN DJ EGO CC. Sad- d le back pitcher Ben Amaya thre w j ust 93 pitches to dispose o( the Knights. 7 -2. The victory m oves the Gauchos into first place in the Mi ssion Con ference's Southern Di vision with a 9·6 record. Amaya struck out four and did not a llow a walk in collecting his fifth win against two defeats Leading the Saddleback hit tang attack was l ark Swancoat with twohHs and wO.RBI , Peter HarreJJ who ~ i for-4 with three runs sc Cl. Rack Irwin who was 2-for· with three RBI , and Rusty E vans ~ho went 2· for-5 with an RBI. SaddJeback broke open a 2·2 ~am e by exploding for three runs in the top of the eighth and l\\ o more for insurance an the ninth inning. Eagles get scare Uni, Artists, Mustangs win Est ancia Hig h's volleyball tea m , beset with i nj uri es. needed fi ve games to overcome a charged up Coron a del Mar team Tuesday to highlight prep volleyball action In other matches. lrvine took Universitv an three strai2ht games; Costa Mesa did likewise to El Toro. Laguna Be a ch needed onlv three to too La2una Hills ; Ocean Vi ew downed La Quinta in r o ur . a nd S a n Clemente needed fi ve to get by Mission V1e10 ' Est ancia. 11·1 in Sea View League play and 12·2 over all. picked up a win in ~a me one behind the pla} of outside hitter Brad O'Connor B u t the Sea Ki ngs. 5-6, bounced back to take the next t wo as Joe f'uschetti was am pressive from his outside hitter position. The Eagles then pulled out 15· 13. 15 10 victories as Juniors Fenton Carey and Bill Sieker Richard: Astros not con~erned HOUSTON <A Pl Houston Astros patc he r J R. Ric hard could have lost his life last July 3 0 to a s tro k e . N o w the on ce-powerful strikeout artist says his comeback a ttempt may be overshadowed by the Aslros · season-opening slump. "I think I'm more concerned about myseU than they (Astros! are " Richard s aid Monday dur· ing' batting practlce prior lo Houston 's 5·2 loss to Los Angeles. "I think I'm going to start worklng out on my own, st.art doing more things that I should do." Richard. placed on the Astros' 60-day dilabled list at the start o( the regular season, says he's 90.. percent ready to pitch in the major leagues. but the Astros, who have lost elgbt of their fint 10 1amtt, aren't spending as much Ume with him. "!. think it's iomc to be up to me and I'm going to have to wort')' about the things l should be doi"I·" the 1980 National Leaaue All-Star atartJng pitcher sald. "It's going to be me pttc~a and not tbem." .. tu rned in strong performances Costa Mesa improved its rec ord to 12·2 with a str aight set triumph over host El Toro The Mus tangs. with sette rs Paul Knipp and Paul Coenen teaming up, along with sophomore mid die blocker Tom Kennedy. made 1l nine wins against two losses m Sea View League play 1 rvine topped Uni versit y behind the selling of Fred Ve rcelles and hitters J ohn Bax- ter and Craig Moothart Cniver s1ty got some sohd work from junior Chris Maller Laguna Beach kept its perfect record intact I 15·0, 7 0 an South Coast League play 1 with a wm over Laguna Hills Artist Coach Bi ll Ashen used his second stnng throughout the m atch. and mid· die blockers J eff Blue and Larry Alle n tu rned tn a dmi rable p e rform ances Setter J e ff Spurlock was also sharp for the wi nners Ocean View handed La Quinta its ninth losss against one vic- tory in Empire League play with a fou r-game victory San Clement e upped its South Coast League record lo 4 3 with a ha rd-earned \\.an over Mission Viejo as hitter Craig Kamazes a nd middle blockers J erry Borlin and John Eddo had good mghts Rand\ H uffma n v. as 1m pressive.for the Oaablos UCl's 16 not enough Cal Poly !Po mona! starter Mark Border was pounded for 16 runs on 17 hits in 61/4 innings Tuesday but still picked up the victory in a 19-16 non-conference slugfest over host UC Irvine. Border, Cal Poly's ace, got off to a s haky start a s the Ant· eaters kicked him around for six first-inning runs. But C1l Poly responded with five runs in the second, third and fourth ln· niogs. The big bitter for Cal Poly was Jottn Hotchkiss who had little trouble reading five UCI pitchers. Hotchkiss went 6-for-7. ripping two homers, two doubles and collecting five RBI. Tea.mmate Jim Cannlcbael. meanwbUe, went 5-for·6 with two doubles, and Matt Rundle belled a grand slam ln the second inninJ for the wtnnen. UCJ fot a •ra,nd slam rrom Lee Granger ln the lint lnnb>S· He added a ~rlple end two •In••• for • pttfecl •·ION OUl· , -ua, wblcb tndu&Mt .even l\Bl. ~he Alueat.era' Mlke :Natl• had two hit.a, includwa .n RBJ slnale In tbe seventh wbteh• eatablilbed b1m as the ~ leader for mon blta by • UCI plater-• Wfth ·till ~ m four ,.., al UCl.>tf&C)e er-Med &h• man Ill bY Jell Malldotf WM>.-.. Ille> tfCI UDUonii from lln•H bad a career 36'7 btt.I. 'Y' f I . . . .. AMERICAN LU.GUE • M•rtne,. 3, Antela 0 IUTTI..• CALI f'OtUtlA "'"" ir::.~·'' ; : ~: Car...,, ID evrlrif'I, " a.NQUJ., rf Lynt1,cf ••vtor. db Oownloe.< llrMsq.tt Grlth.ib HoblOn,111 '''" .. • 0 I 0 aoc.llle, ID • 0 t I ZI ... cl/I • 0 1 I Hotron,c • o 1 O Alle11, pr 0 0 0 0 Gul .. n,c O O O O PKl.,k,11 •I 1 0 llenclle,Jll • o t o HendMI. rf I 0 0 0 aoo o u oo l 0 0 . )000 J OO O l OOO 3000 JOIO Aneltn,Aa 3 0 I I Gray, pit I 0 O 0 "~!';<.~i 15 ,_03°,: ~ Totals • o 2 o k ......... .._ .. Seelll• 110 000 010 -l CotllOrflla 000 000 000 -0 E 8r.....,,1ky, 1.ynn. OP -S..!lte 1 C•lllornl• t 1.0e -SoottM •. Colllornla 1. 18 Pocioreti 58 -c.r-. "11e11. S - Somp-1 SHiii• Bennlttr (W, I ti IP HR ' 2 0 1!111 II so 0 I 2 Cell!•""• J•""""' 11..0-11 713,llOS 12)10010 JelletMJn T -1 II "-71,'38. A•H Bait. Burt1M>n Lynn C•••• O<>wnln9 Fores Hobwn Oil Gt1cn 8•n1QU•J Brun•n.ay B•ytor Tolllt Aa .. Renko ~ncnu l•hn Fo,.ch J•lle'""' Wiit Tr•v•r' H•Hler 0 ACQUISIO Tol•lt Angel •veregea IATTtNG "I• H Hiii Rll .. " a 1 41 12 1 10 O IJ 0 6 l3 7 I • )O t12 4 J})Jll 110300 llSlt • 121200 " 1 s J • 3'1200 l7J 17 14 7 )A PITCHING IP H al SO W·I. • 1 4 4 1.0 1 2J •0.0 ' I l l DI 24 l ,. • 10 2· I 1t'l't 1• 7 I 1.0 ,. > 16 0 10 0-2 10' I I• J • O·I ,._, 9 l l O·I 6 a • I 2 l·l 2 •ttlHI 101 10' u ., S-1 P(L ?'II 173 .271 1li. 1li. lCJC) 196 104 "' 112 019 _JtO EllA 0.00 I 11 100 HS ,., ~ .. '22 7 °' 7 10 11-00 J7' llM5Utl,ll ... rt• T.... 001 001 011-• • o BOiton 010 Ill !Ux-10 IS I J•nk1n•. Com•• 0 1, Hou1111 171 •no Sunqber9, T,_, •nil Al .. llton. W-Tudllr Cl 0) L J-IM 11 II "-U .2ll I,_.,.. 6, II• J•Y• 1 Mllw..,kn 000 IOJ ~ 1 0 TO'onto 000 000 011-2 • 2 HU\ and $1mmons. Stiel>. M<l.Avgtill,., lit •11<1 Whltl W-H .. > 11.0I I. -511eb l~JI HA Mllweu~ ... Ogilvto (21 Toronto, M•f ... 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Dodgers O I.OS ANGEi.£$ •It, It" 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 , 0 t 0 3000 J 0 0 0 )020 J 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 LOP9\. tb L.enclre•, ct BU•r, 11 Gerv•v. lb Co . 341 Guerrer, rf Y••o•r, < AutWll, u 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1000 KOU5TON PUl>I, cl Bond, 21> c..ieno. cl Cnu ,u I vi•, lb How•. 3CI G•"'"· n As.ltby, c Knepcier, p Ml rlt" A 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 I t ) 0 0 0 l 0 I 0 J010 ) 0 I 0 3 0 I 0 3 I 1 0 Smltll,l>h Thomu u Aeuu , p Ferg1<1, pll Tol•ll 1' 0 J 0 T ot•ll .JO 1 I I Surell.,l!l<l..,._ L 01 Angel" 000 000 000 -0 Houu on 001 000 00• -I E -Howe OP -Hou\lon I LOB -Loi A1199I .. 2, HOUSlon j 78 -1(-r J6 - Puhl 1.HA-4ft A•uu ll. 0.11 H ... 1-. IP HA I I I Ell el SO I 0 7 ICne!>iNr IW. Hll • J 0 0 0 PB -At l't>Y T I • A -71,'04 E._ll,P111Hlnl Phll•Cl•lplll• 200 000 100-J 10 0 -.1ru l 007 OU lOa-10 ll 1 Avll'I..,.., Lyle l'1 ones Boone, Sonde""'" •<Id C•rler W-S•ndor•on (2·01 L- Rul"•tn (2 II HA-MoftlrMI. ter-i.r (21 A-t0.117 canlMll I, C-I Chic-000 000 000-4 ' 1 SI LOUii tilt 000 IOa~ U 0 Kravec. M•rtz (JI, Eotlwtck UI. Copllle Ill lftCI Devi•. RlfKOl'I •nCI Te....:• W -Klncon 11·01. L-K••••c (0·21 A-II.SS'. .,_,., .... , -.ue1110 000 IOI 107-10 12 0 Glnd nntotl 000 000 001-I 1 t 8099', C-191 oM U.MdlCI; Solo, Bair m. MDsUv Ctl ond !Mn<I>. 'Ill-~ (I II L-&ICO (1·21. HA-llonto, HCl<'Mt' (1). A-1•,D22. ,. __ J, CW0Ma I SM l'ron<:IKO 001 000 000-1 4 2 Son Olt911 000 020 Ola--l 1 t Al•J!Mlder. Holl-(71, Ml"ton Cit -So••; W.1111, ~' (I) ond unnedy. w- W•ICll (1.01 L-•uan0er (2.1). s-t.uca Ill A-7,2'1. .. , • Or ... CMtl •• ,...,..,. J 0rll'"99 CO.If 310 IOl 01~ 1' 2 "uli.rton OtO OOt too-I I 0 Smltll ""4 0 1•; CMq~11. Ml,..r <•>. utper Ill -~IKCO W-5'nltl\ 1•21.1.- Conqvtll \10-21 2e-Ven<Mrllurg COCCI. Groof (OCCl >I K•ller CP:l Hll- Venoer~ \C>CCI, l.IUOtl (Fl ........ , .. ,, ..... DI..-cc 1 SoclcSl•*lr. liGO 0Q0 OJ2-7 11 I ~II 01990 CC 000 100 100-2 1 J Aml>Y• -tr•ln. &In . Yelt04\ l'I end Trlolo • W-Am•Y• (HI I. l let 11 '""'" 1511 JS-SwMCHl (Sii, Komtonlk (501 COMMUNITY COLLEGE South CoHt Conference Or•ne• C-tt P:ull•rton C.rfilot Son 01900 Me\.& SMIO AM Ml Son Antonio GroHrnonl T,.....y'15urn Or•-CO." I, F111 .. rion 3 Cerfll0$ s. Ml Son "ntonlo 1 ~"'I• AM 1, Son 01-MUO • T!twMtyhG•m•t Or•nwe Cool et S<tnt• "n• P:ull~on •I Groumon1 !Min 01-~u •I C..rn\01 W I. GI ' 3 I I l I S 2 • • J •• l I I l 10 Southern Cal Conference L"Hefbor GolcMnWKI ,._nt.s Monie.a e .. 1 Lot Ano-le. CypreH l.O\ ""1191 .. CC: R•o Hol'ldo I.A 5oulnwnl T ....... y'•kwK Go10.n Wftt J. C"'"'" 1 W L GI 11 • " . II ' ' I . ' 1 10 1 10 ) ,. LA ~111 l.O\ ""991•• C:C. \ Alo Hanoo• LA H•rDot 1 E•U I.OS ......... 11 Soni.a Mon•t• • T-•y'tG""'•' Golden Wesl •I ~nl• Mon•U Rio Hanoo •• l..O\ "-1•• cc. 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(lfttel s.-1 EASTERN C:OMl'ERINCE T ..-sdoy' 1 ken Pl'llllellttPNa 10S B<xlan 1114 (Pttil-""'4• 1u d1 ur1e1 1.0J T-.... ·1o.me Ph1l•<W<P"•• •I Boslon ,.,~.,.1Gam. eoston al Pl\11-•Ph!• -y·1G41me Bollon •• ""'1-IP'W• -y.A..,tl 1' Ph1ta.WIPN••I Qoston Ill n.<esw rf) .... ,.., ..... ,1 Bo•lon •t PIUl-Ptll• I•• ...... wry) _,.i.w,1 Pnttaoetpru •I Boston ht M<ffU<YI WUTEllN C:ONl'ERIMCE T ... Mrf·1so n Hou•ton '1 o<anw• Coty II lHout ton l•oct• ''"" 1.0l TMl9iK'tG•m• Houuon et KaMOt Clly Fn .. v·•G•- K•n u s City at HOU>ton S~y'1Geme I(.,., .. , C•IY et HOU>ton -~y.A,rtl1' Houlton •t lla11u1 City (II MC.SH•' l ,.,., .. ,, .... ,1 t<ans.os C1ly •t -ton (It nec"..,''l ~.MaJl HOu"on M K.anu• City (II nl<ffll•YI L09 Alamitos T\11.SOAY'S llllUl.TS (5""• ......... M...U-.tillOI Ftnt nee -fl'Nllv'• tlOy IAv!Mftl, ••. 2.•, l 00. Thrlll S.U. N (Vellondl~I. '·'°· J-'O; Adlos Arel• (c;Nrt-1. J. " eaocto (S.ll ~Id UI .0. Se<ono roe• No e.1 IAnCMrM>nl, J JO, l.llO. J_W>, Eort O.rt IKIHblff I, l .0, l 00 • hrbros (Pwrryl. 4 llO Third re<.t H-OY Gori fTr•m bleYI. s 00 l .00, HO. """".' Sc.emper !Gou•.,.tel. S •O. • 20, Flow•• Moun10lt1 (V•ll•nd 1r>gh•m1. 10 oo U u acw I• 11 pawl U 7 00 Fourtn ract AnOn Oynorno IK...OM•I. I 20, J.110. l .0, """" • OH n (TretY\bleYl. • 20, I 70, °""" U"Y CPleru). S.2<1 Fiith rao A-v1n•ld ,,,.,, .. lt<u-«iltt'I, 13 oo, s.111. l 40; s.nv. 0.•no cc-1a...i1. I 00, 3.00. Ea G<anO tOuomtrl, l WI U ea •eta ff·O """' llli.611 Sl•ln r•<.e Holy C0<0IU>ngol,1.20 ... oo. 3 .0, Gallon'• Ml\\f cc;rutldyl. 10 00, I JO, Bold Sl<Hk ISonlwyvlllel. J.10. Sevenln roeo M" M 15Mrrenl. 11 '°· 1•_611, 9 00. CDurltry J.,,lct (Wllll•m1I. t.111. S 10. Boott BA!y CGruNIYI. • 611 U UKW 1..i I paid '718-111 S2 Pick Sia 11•-7·•..).61 pela '~Ml #Ith SI wl"nlng lkktls Clive llO(W$1 U Piek Sh contol•lton paid \9 10 wlll'I 744 wlnnlr>g llCU IS (IC&K r>O<W\I E•ghll'I roet -0o1oen G••,., I Ovnntoonl, a 20. I 20, 1.llO, $1.,,.., Poinl ISl'lerrent. I 10. 11 •0. lrlSllHttl 10\llO<nl, 1000 N•nth roet Tako a 5toer (Wllllau•I, 1'.10. S Ill, 1.0, Mo~I H•PllY Popl•r CAn dtn onl. 6 20 • 20 Ten Percent•• 151t mtrm4nl s 00 n oxecl• ll 41 poia ,., Ill Tenth roce !lny 8<Kk,l'IOI (Desan-I, 720.J111. •.oo. Bo Awo (t<aim•ttrJ, 110 • 10. R•"°"" IGrunoyl, • 40 U tJta<IA U -<1 pa1CI \1•1 «I. "llt nOonet -.,,.. Senta Anita T"11UOAY'S ••sULTS , ........ ,-........ .,., P:lr•t r.e -Mklnigftl A<liofl !Wini-I. • oo. J Ill. 2.20; Oeor "d91•1cM IT orol, • «I. 2.MI, HonNlr'n E.,,..,t lo.1-SOY•l. 2AO S•COllCI ••<• -Al Yovr Pl•••llr• (VotenNel•I, 21.ao. 10.00, 1.00, MO\ot1t• A•• (PlnUYI. 6.00, s.oo; AOCI PllWI' (At .. rol. 1. 20. S2 Dolly OoWle ,,., ) pe Id $47 .00 Third rec• -GolOlm M.lelre lt4o•1eVI. 1 .40, 3.40. J.OO; Futur• Pride I Plnoy>. >.oo. '·'°· StarG«ll (Oel-ldSOY•I. J.60. Fovrtl\ rec. -1"""'4e0 ent<y) S•"' A<.· unc IWltlllNll. 1.40, 1.00. J.40; !kln111t - (Cotl.,,....I, 1 . .0, 7.00, JM; Mvllcal•OY (0.le--yel, • . .O. Fiith •«• -lnc11Ptlon cv11enwe1o1, 7.20, UO, 7.IO; Nevoelo Aeollly 1o.i-......,_1, ).40, UO, AJr OllnQ (McHorg ... I. UO. u ... •Cl• 11·31 pekU5'.50. !.1•111 .... -Cllfr•nl A•llO 1•1 ... ral. '1 .10. 27.20, IJ.20; TreHvry Se<rttory (McCor.-1. •.OO. J.to; llOtd C:enlldone• (Ce~). IS.40. Sowtrttl rea -~·1 WIN (Pln<oyl, s . .o. J.40. UO; Ml• Wnc,,.ler lMcC.W· ronl. UO, t~ a... a.y COtlv•rnl. '-°" S.S uoc:i. o_.1 pelcl "uo. U "le.I< Silt !MO-N ... 11 llOIO $1,atS.•wKI\ 216 wlMlfte lklalb (fl .. -~). U Pk k Slit <OllMlollOf> pelcl S1•M •ltll W •!Mint lkkm(...,.,_..._I. E I 9 11 t II ;o t e -f> I r a I e L O w (0.IO,,_,...I, IUO, J 00, J. .. ; ~ ( f>l11<•1l. ··"· 1,40: ... ,, C•l•ory IM<H.,...11 U9. Nlntfl ,.,. -.. __ ,.., .. 1"1M.ily), •.to, s.•, ut: WllW>lne Ur11 IOlll!otMll. 14.00, 1 M l fll'wd Oii< (""""), ..... 1$ •• o<ta IS-H .... "'51.90. Att.--4,.Stl. f>\11(..., Dal~ C.M<CM,... ... ,, Ml---HH'll•lldal A "9'lllMll HAWl•Y Mepte 'VelatUIMO 1..ot.....ut -... ,...0-.a.u: 9l\ltt (.Ill~ 0-. ~WM, IJl OW.-,..,_ Wll•. "~ ... .., .... ,, JO<U. L.tU, ..... L.llltft', um. """'er.-. "9c* ..... f'wji LIM, S. OI-.. ...,,..., , S- te P'• lloMrv••r. u""' f>lru cr .. a , .. ~ .. , ... ,, U. .. aallU.CM..O -Ar._.... u.u, tit ... , '--Ila, ~ VOiiey. i...M, Lytlo Ct ... ·~ .. M<H111 .. ~,, --.. •• ,.......,.._UM, SMtAI,.... ,lll.,.r, ...... At\0•1-1--.. ..... 1 O•·---~ NI ... hrk l.tM . VIMfUllA -M.tllll• er..., l"lrv Lallo, sonte ,..,.. C1"ll. s.w. Cf• c~ Sec- tlenl. Vent\lto•11.,., (Mol11\,.0tlr.I. SANTA aA•_MltA -SMIO Y"'r ltl-. k •• N -Alder Cr-. ao.. Cl'Mll. lrftllt Vtlloy lte•rllOlt, C:..e• Cr .. k, Enlitne CMlt.. l(tnl IUwr Cde<Mcret OHi to Kitt P•••rllouH, l•r•ll Powerllo11u to O.tn4Kral Oen\, IC "1 ,..,..,...lletne '° LAM ,...,..,.,, Kem "II••• ISooltll Forti), .._ Yoe111Ct-. At.f't•• -Co<Mln .. , .. , lfalt end -l'Oflr.11, Martl ..... 11 .. Cr-. Pl.UMI Valley C•Mll, $11-Cr .... . INYO -Ww er-. Big Pi .. er-. 81.,..,.. 0...-I i..o.«, MIMI•. Soutll Md 111- tau 111, ~ "'""·~,..Ct•. tnoe~ Cr .... ...._ Pl,. er-. OM! Creet. !North FOrkl, 0 ••111 Ri•er U lrldtH oo"'"'"""' to Sl••orl L.e ... 1. PMeH"I Voll•Y A•wr-VIMr, S-IM LAU. ~rltl C.-. Sy..-Cl-. T•llDOM CrHll, Tl_.,... Cr ..... Tvlll• Cr-. MONO -a..ci. • .,. er-. Con•ICt er-. C04\vl<.l l..oke, Gren\ Uk•. GUii i.OU, HlllClll Cru a, J,,,. I.Ok•. l..H Vlnlns Cr..,., L•ltle Welker AIYer Ma"1molh CrHll, Mc:GH er ..... ~ lltw r <a.mon crou1no - 8 1g Spr1111111. Plrw er-. Rtv•rw Ct-. Ao111nson CtHk. Ao<ll cr .. k (P•redlso C•m P 10 Tom'1 Prout. llvSll Cr""· S/letwln Cr••k. su .. r I.Ht, Sw-r er..-. Twll\ 1.0•, 6 rlCIQeporl IUllClt< ones i.o...etl, Twin L•ku (~hi, \/.rfi11lo Cr""· WelU< Alvtr (CJvl• P:l•I Com119n1uno lo town of W•l~er, 1.NvlU IM~ CAmpgrounCI 10 Sonor• BrlclOel ~ • • . "' Women's aottbell COMMUNITY COi.i.EGE Or .... CU1I J, Clwttey J f Ch•lf•y 000 001 00 2 I I Oren~ c ... .i 001 000 Ot-l I I Mcl(ton-Br-ti, HIM> •nd Crut J8-C.at••• IC.I I HIGH ~CMOOI. I -""°'• EelMlll f01~n 000 000 0-4 I I M•r1n• 001 001 a-4 • 0 B•U• ""If W llollo. Kyltr •11<1 Marcone 1 18 H•ll-.Vh IMI, Marcott• IMI 1 l'-teM Vellrt•. H,_........, loO<ll J , Hun11nv1on 8".o<h 000 00'1 -1 I I l'OYnt.1n "•ll•Y 0.1 Ola -4 1 JI &orion -C-< Venom•n'""" Arte099. )8 ......... \Fiil I o ..... ..,_I. K•tell• 0 I K••ll• terleitsl I CIF ratings I 4A DIYl~t6N I . £d1Hfl, 1 A19h•lll. J 6 u•n•, •: Arudo•, ~ Gattr. • »nt• Ana, I Pat1I•~. I Tu•ton. 9 Mlr•IHlt , 10 \...e Quinto J" DIYl510M I St Jotel)ll, 1 W•>tern, 3 l • H•bre, • 81thop A,,..1, ) Long Beach W1IM>n, 6 B,;rroullft> (Burbank), I El Oor•Clo. ~· S•v•n"•• 9 !ioulh Hiiis. 10. l"'ine. , tot,OIVISION t 8e111"'-•, 2 R•rnone, J Monte••"·• S•nt• F•. I Centra l, t. OaflJI Hiii\; 1 Bonll• I "'uw , 9 ""-HI•. 10 L.e Se•M .. PQA money Seeders I II oy "'°"" U 11,.0t 1 8rvc.• l.lwU 171.1~ 3 Jo4\nny Miiier 170 .... • Tom Welson llOAllS S Tom Kot• llS..J1'j • Hele ,,..in t U.la I C,;rt11 Sir-tO.,U. I 1. .. Trevino IOJ,m ' An<IJ •on IOJ.St7 10 Boll A090trs IOJ.422 Volleyball HIG" SCHOOi. lrvlM ael Un1verslly, 1!>-9. IS s. 1S·ll. Co•t• -WI""' El Toto, u ... IS ... IS-'7. t •11uno Beech oet l.Ogune Hiiis. IS-IQ. ISll,1S7 S..11 Cle..-nlt Ml MIMkw'I V1t jo ... IS. 1)-4, 11 10 II IS, ti IS <Kun View cM1 LA Quonla, IS 7, IS·I. •·IS. IS-10 Es1.,.c'4 oel Corona Clltt Mer. 1S-t, •·I), 10 IS IS l , IS-10 NHL Dl•Iofts QUA•T••iilN L ROUMD , ..... llt'fo-1'1 f dt'>Of\IDn al NY ls lender I (h-t\ '"" Mrl",ll) Mlnn<tffl• •I Bllffalo IMINW\Ot• INCH t•rlu , ).II ColgotY al Pl\11-11>1\•• (<;otpry •- wrtu, ).I) NY \llanger\ M St. 1.eull "'°""" 1"4 wrlu , ).II ..-..... ,..o-. SI. LOVll •I HY Aengen.. 11 rte<.•-rr 9vllol0 at MlntwlOlo, II ll<IGetNry NY ltl-rlOI E'.-nlon, 11 MC"'°'' P1111odtlpt11• et ca•ee-.v. 11 "et•ssory s-NJ't0.-H Min-ot IWttolo, 11 fll(alOf'l' C•teory at PllllOOelPfll•, 11 ~.., Eel"'°"'°" .. HY 111 ......... If nece•MrY NY ltetlgerl oC $t, l..O<Mt, 11 MCH-l' Misc. , ' , , "Jbppy Secretaries' Day!" SUK & RNIY CAIUUVO,.OUI C U L G E D A L 6 0 L A L E 0 T l B D s·c TE A 8 v L 0 s EAL y p E ct I 8 H I SW 0 0 FD A 8 S X.A TV I A 0 T 0 V L B W S R E G I T R 0 S I A C C E 0 TELE A A A A AT Y 0 Or'f TR E A C A S I P H l A C P 0 T 0 A A 8 0 T S R C A 0 A E S R S C T H A H R R E T 0 R A E H H Y R E U A 0 S P T H A M 0 S P ( W S T H E T 8 S 0 0 I H I 0 H A S L Y 0 T H 1 G I E I P S H A V G V R A A V L R E K E R R N H L M S 0 L A I N S A F 0 R B P I E R R E D I R M S I R R N D C W 0 H 0 G S 0 R l 8 0 1 L C M T I A L P L A I K E Y M E A U H I A T A Y Q 1 R D U A H A T S U A S S L 0 I~: H6ddln wordl Wow..,._ fanllrcl, .... • ...t, up, dOWfl °' dleplllty. Find _.. end boil It In. .. ,. ... Uore w.w ~ Cit Tltn ...... "' Chit '--"'* Woft i Dot lmOOfl ~ Hytn1 s..I l'Wttfllr No human rabies ATLANTA (AP> -No cases or rabies in humans were reported in 1980, only the second year that has happened since record keeping began in 1938, the national Centers for Disease Control s~d. DEATH NOTICES "°',._........ .nC8 lllWIT•• "ICTIW ..,...... iiiiiiftw WI .... .... .tte.,._n ••~:i::neu ~ MMllt ,., • .,._.,. . MMlllTAT....,.., ,... ............... ~ ........ -.~--t ............. ..,_.,. , ........... ~--..... ...... . ....... , ......... _,,,.... ....... ---~ . M•a •HOllU••tMO t. .... l'ACfPl' .. Al .. 11 .. AMC• ·,·,l-IA' •AN OIOITAL.. '1 .. I OIVUOMIMT, ltll ~..... ~ .._,_ ~ec& ........ ...... ~ (.el_.ettl'\4. Tenec.,Cllm....._~....,. ....~A----..~--.; ................. ,_,........,.. tt11M.••owa•oe1aa1ao.. ....-n-Wlft '4ttk'tM •· •uy1-. tltS •••Ml,.W*" on,,., Caflf•~I• Jlf1 0 ......... eT•t .. ,C.U--. • n --,..,_., ............ a. ~ ftMS. ~... • • ., .................... tef -. u. v ................ !'Nit TM&....._ II~ 'Y M lft NOT tea IS M&ll•rt .. V.M .._. fftOMAI O, MUITHL. &at ........... MA, Oll...,..fftt, ~. Ille •~ ...._......., a.ta ... •-.,._ C.. 'flll• ._._I• c~ llf • ........ ..,..,_ .., .......... ,.... ..... ,........... !!> ...., .. ,...., .... Tltll .....,_. .. llfell wlttt h Ciiia) W • .. ._,.et ..... t.M... Ylll• ~MM te <• .. OM ity a ,..,.. .. ......... C.-tr C.ltrtl .. Or.._ ea-I\' • die Jiil-.. IMy, ttlt, ll .. lfta _._.,,.,.,.... Tllh ........... wee ,.... .-.. "-'II», 19', ef tM Dil&'lct. M ~ ...... , W ~A...._, c-iy Clertl flf Or ..... c-itr M ~ '"'"'"''"• ta H I• Olttrlct ell """-°'...,.... Marc:•ts. ""· .......... 0r-. (lletl Oelly ....... ''"'~· ~ .... ..... Tll16 ----,.. ....,. ... 111..a A~ll tt. 10,Mty '-II. IWI le.Ht '-'• lenlolit .... __. ... ,_..., C-ty Clllf1' ti ~ CeoMlf 9111 ,._,,..... Ol'91111t 0Mtit Deity l"lte4. t• C9ftetNd .... _. fW tllt Ol*kt, "9rll ., .... e,ltll tt, 9 , Mlf i, U. 1'11 1-.., at wflkfl lllM NH .,......., will Ill Pl__, ~l<ly ........ tfltl ,_. ..... at IM l'\lllt ..... Clr._ Qetl 0.llr ""*• ------------1 Ottlce.t Aprllt2,lt.IMT'-•a. "9t , ..... , -'BUC NOTIC., lft\llNI! "AHCH WATIR .-v c. "CTl"'°"llMl.lltlU OlaTtltCT, 001 CamJut Orlve,1-----..,...,.......,.,,..,....,...,,..---_ MAIM lfAHMaNT ,,.vlM, CMllonll• nm PtJILIC HOTICB .,... -.,-0-.,,-"-°"-,-...... u-IT-.-.-.. -IA&.9---1 .,..!.":. :-\':.r':O:w""::I 111c1 .-""'' ~ •o aM ': T.a. ... ... CO., ttt• TalMrt A-, ,._..,.. ;:..~i::~ '::::.... ~ f'ICTJ'10.IUMlttMUS ltOTIQ IS H•llHY GIVRH, u.e1 Vallt'1',Cal ........ at2M .., .... OiWk.t ond t111i1t tie ec-. , lt~ITAT .... NT 911 W.......,, ""'1119, l .. I, at U :Oll COMMl!"CI .. UH 0 I NC., • plHllM ..., ... --"y ,.. ........ to TM ~ ...._ ... ""'-...... :cleck = = :!d -~ "!. o:.:i.: Calll0tnll C411'1*'Ali0fl, t1l40 hllltrt tMrelft MUN; 1:'T':TI HCUlllTIRS 5Et1VICR A,,_, ~lalft \lelCey, c:.allfonllo C-'9UflMctlltrect~ere TOlll fUNI MO. I•, ....i t!91"9'f lecated •II' Nottlt a,_.ay, Sollte tt70l. Oii me ond mty M • ..,..,... Ill !tie ef· Ave-, ~ aMcll. c:.llfomle A 111 4M 0 .., of ........ AN , __ 1 of T11i. "'*-Ill Ulldu(tM ll'tl o Ut· _. ... 1 , " -· • ..._,ty po,.tloft tlo o1 "" Ohll1tt 'I'd lft.,. OfflO .. .....,., M. Mttta UH s-r .. t Orant•• State of Callfor11le, T IC ~.",. F\JNO INC.. 1111 l!ntlnetr/Altl\llO(t al JaM ...... ,.,...... et11'9mia IH\l l:ITMINT COMPAHV, INC., a s-a. Hacbn, Carollo~ I0141 W.,rllf Aw.. Tlll~ .....,.· 1. ~ •v .,. u.. Celll•"'le c....-al141ft, .. 4111, -~ Wte IOI, ~n ValteY, Cllitwnlf ctl\llNat. '°""" T""*-....-W _... __. to Tlllt ,....,_, -filed wUll t11e flfOll. U.J1M.-.U. ,._,...., ..... ~llltMlcet• C-ty Cltf1l of Or.,ee Clullt'I' 911 c.,lff llWY lilt ~fllltll at .. of• Tll.I• ....,.._. ••Illa! wlu. t .. lelfl o .. d oc Trust .... cvt•• ey "-"11 iO ltl1. II~ of Ii. ~/An: ... leet ey ...,. c;ouftty Olflt Of 0r-. OWMy 911 Hlll•RllT 0. JENNINGS_. LIHOA ' .. , .... , _,, ., $IUD -•t ... tMa cell It A,jlf'fl. "'' L.. JaltMINOS.. ......... Md ...... -Pullll.-OrMte C..tt Deity l"CleC, ltOt r•fwldltlH ,....,..._ et WMVIW ' • f'MMQ ,......,. *-"llltr t1, 1'19, In .... ~1122, It, May •. U, l"t 11$1 .. 1 lM iJ'-oncl ..,eel~ ert "" Pvl>llllWd OrMlllt C..tt Deify PllM, 1M09 of OHklet R9'Mb of .... C-. turned. ,.,,,.1 22 19 ,. • u "" •an•i ty 11 .,.., !01' Rec.,.,.• 1n..,.._ Pl•M eftCI \P«llketl-wlll .. I . ' 'I'_._.------.... No. um, b, ,.._., • aw.Kii malled. -'-'· le protc1Ktlve er cSeteull "' peYl'IWftt er~ bidden tw aft eddlU-1 $1.00 I-PUBUC NOTICE et Ille oetlQltklnt _...., ...,....,, In· relvftd•Cll•I lo cover '"• cut or cWlno !NI cer1o1111 brMCll or ditfeull, PUBLIC NOTICE ,..., ... .,,.Mflelll,.. H•llce of •"lcll we• recordeo f'ICTITIGUSaU"NEU Under 111• prevlalon1 of the f'ICTITIOUIMlllNEU DKem-2' i• ln .... lllt)e!Of· .....,.. STATUHN1' C.lllomla l..allor eo., -Ol'9Ctor of JtAlld ITAT•M•NT flcl•I "~of Mld oJ,cy ....... Th• toll-11>9 ""'°"' are dOln• t,,. O.Nr1menl of f~rlet Reletlofts Tl'le ,.,._,,. ~ 11 do'"° lloHI-tU, RKM-'• lnstn;,,.... No 462!0, l)Uslnua •. .. .. determined.,,. pr-evalllftt rat• of -... WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTIOH OIAL·A·WI FE. SI" 011nbar O, w•ee• tor tlW IOC•fll'I' '" •N<ll ... • ARB AR As c LE AN ING TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR Hunllngton BMcll, C.lllornl• ..... work 11 IO .. pertorl'IWcS end tlW ll'VIM SERVICE, 2A10 CMllon Piece. c ..... CASH, lewful money ol .... United Dottle Hart, .51 .. Oullbar-0. HUllt· Renell Wetw 0t1trlcl "• MllDptff selO Mesa, C:atlloml• ••• Stet•• •II pey-at 1,,. time of wie l1>9ton 8Mch, C.lltoml• •iMt pr•v•lllno .... °' ...... A COpf Of 9All8ARA MARIE DUNCAN, •II rloitt. till• WICI ln1«9'1-l'lekl "~ Ann IClno, 20321 Mensen!, HUii!• ..,..,. prewlllntl ret" are on llf• at I.lie 2410 Carlton Plau, Coale Moe, It, 91 Tr•• In encl to that rMI prOC>-1no1on BHch, C.flfomf• t~ Office Of tlW lrlllne llanch Wat« Dis. Calltomla m•. erty sltuete'd In seld county t.~1 C..rol -'°"· 1911• WlllCIJem trl<t and wll be ,..... avail•.,.. to Tiiis bualneu la condllcled Dy en In. Stal•, detcrlllltd u loCI~: m•r Lene, Hunllno1on le•cll. any fntel'Htecl jWlrty 011 request. A dlvlduel. PARCEi.. i ' CalllOrnla 9»41 COPY of W<h •• retM INll .. -t· 8-• Ounc.-1 All , ... , urlaln ._ .11 ... ,.., In , ... 1'•"9 I'-, II S Pal01, Irvin•, ed on \lie JObtlla by Ille Coritrec:IOr. Tll~ Slat-t was llled Wlll1 the City ol "-PC>fl BM<ll, described ea Calltornf• '2715 11 thell be mandatory "pon the Con-Coullly Cleril Of Or.,99 Co1.1nty °" follows te>•ll Tiiis bualntt1 Is conducteo DY • I rector to whom tM conlr•d la M•rch 24, 1911. Loi ).. In BIOck A of Tr.ct •73, H -r•l-tnef'\hlp. ••••ded, end~ any tutlconlroctor f'IM141 th-non• map rKorded In DoOlt 20, Ann IClng under hlM, to ...,, not I•• than tlW Putlll"*I Orenee C...11 Dally Piiot, P•ou 17 end II ol Ml.c:elleneo1.1• Tlll1 ,..,..,,...., •M flleo Wltl\ 11,. •pee lllec rel ea lo •II workrn•n Aprll 12, 1',May '· 11, 1•1 1.-..1 Mapa, ••<Ord• of Oranoe County, county Clerll ol Orenoe County Oii eMploy..S Dr u...... In .... eucullon Of -C.lllO•"'•· Aprll 10, 1"1 Ille conlrecl PUBLIC NOTICE l"ARCEL 2 f'l..U. E•ch bid or pr-I allall DI m-All 11\at Utlaln land tltuai.d In the PuDlllMCI Or-CO.st O.lly PllOl, out or .-NtlecS on • form turnlu..d Clly of NewPO<I Beech, Co..nty ol Aprfl 22, 2', Mey•· U, ltlt , ..... , H part of the contrect doc-ms. -l'ICTITIOUS aUllNISS Orenoe, Stale Of C.illomla. PUBLIC NOTICE N·7UJI NOTICE Of' SALE 01' •UL l'•OPI! ltTY AT l"•fYATe SALE NO.A·IMllS In tM SUS-rlor Cour1 OI the State of ca111orn1e, for Ille C:-.ty of Orenee If\ Ille Mall•r of lhe £,tale ol CYNTHIA llAllROS, C>Ke•-N~ke I• i.ret>y Ql"9fl that tlw Ill\ def'\IQMd wlll Mii el Prlv•l• ula, lo I .. hiO ...... -bell t>ldOW, ...Oie<I to COfttlrll'\atkln of laid ~lor Court, on or alter , .. •111 Clay Of May. 1•1 a\ tlW Olllu OI James A Burgen, Ad· mlnl•l••tor. 2t0 E (.hapman Avenue, S1.11te E, Orenot. C:-.ty Of Or.,99, Stal• ot Qlllornla, all Ille rlofll, 11\la an4 lntwest of said dec••SM et \tie time of °'""' end •II .,,. rlotH, 1111• and lnler.M tllal llw nlete of Mid cSe-ce .. ..i ,.., acquired DY -•lion Of I•• or otnerwlM other 11\en or In NOi· tlOft lo lllet ol wkl CIKeeMd, 1t \tie llmt of-"'· In .,,d lo all tile certain re•I property sllualeCI II\ 11111 C:il'r of Santa Al\a, County ol Oren99, Slate of Calllornl•, perllcularly O..rl-• loll-,, -II· Lot 1' Of Tree! No llOI, Ce>11nly ot Orenge, State ol C.lllornla, •• per map r• corded le 8ooll 12', Pa99a l encl • of rnlK'911-,.,....., In \M ofllce ot Uie COYllly Recorder ot Wld c-ly. · more '~Y known es 113 N Mantle Yne. Senta Ana, Celltornle tZ701. T•rma o1 Wit c.etl\ '" ,...,. ... -Y of llW Unll9d ~•In on confirmation of ..ie l•n pertenl Of •-t eld lo• daf>Oliled wilh""' 8fds or of1er'1 lo IM In wrllffto -will tie rec.i-at IN .,_ ... Id o111c.e at any u-_.., IN tint pubf lcetkln llereof _....,. deW OI Mlle Dated IN• lDtll cSey of Aprll, 1'et J-A lkirgan AOmlnl>trator ol IM E•LM• Ols.ald~I Allor,.~ tor Ja..-P \..OWQll•en PuDh-Orenoit CO.lt Dally Pilot, Apr II 21, 23, 1', ltl\ 1'°4-t\ ---------- PUBLIC NOTICE MUSI 1M ec,_led by a Ualller'• NAME ITATaMRNT A pOrtlon 01 Lot 1S of 81o0 A ol check, •certified <lle<k, or• .,._.. The fot._ffto __, 11 cSolno D<nl· Traci •7J. Corone Del MM, H ll>Own bond In ., -t not '"" tllell I°" of neu ••· on • ,....., r-.cordecl 111 -zo, pege II llWamo.....tOIV..bld,-pefet>leto ANTIOUARIUS, 71t W. ltl" of Ml1cellanito.i• Meoa. records ol the order of. or for Ille .....,II of, Mid SltM\, Co.la-. C.Ofornfe t•• Oranoe Co.....ly\ detcrlb9CI h fOI'-': Ohlrfct,••tllec ... maylllt;andeech Oernlc Cerr A•ttoom. •U Beolnnlfllla\111e..-1Sout11e<1y cor· 910 or ,,_., Sllell be IHlecl 111nd HIQhlano Ori••. N••PO•I B••<ll, ner OI ~LOI».-· North 5022' lllM wl\tl , .. So;cretery of IM 01\lflcl Callt0<nla 9MolO Weal to u.. ...--rly corMr ol at or belont Ille lime In lhb notice -Thl1 ~ 11 conouc1eo DY ., In •••d lot, Wold WHl«iy corner llelno vld.., T .. -"""'ti-ci.o or dlvl®•I the Soul"9t'IY llM ol Hatel Drive. ~ bonCI ....,, lie QI..,. • owar•nlM lllat Garl\k Cerr Aveloorn •llown Oft w ld map ol Tract UJ. the bf-will enter lnlo • cOftlfecl Tiii• ~-was lllecl with U.. t,..no HOrtllerly •lonO tlw We~•rlY wllh the Olslrlel If -•nlltd.,,. -n.. County Clerk of Or_,99 CoutllY lln. of Mid Loe lS, -lhe Eeslerly and wlll be dKlarM lor1•11ff II the April a , 191\ llroe ol ~ Drive to • po1n1. wld IUC<eulul -,.._ .., .,.,., Into "' polftl l>elftQ U.00 ,.., H..U-1 • ..., •• wld tonltecl Publlthed Or._ CO.al Delly l"llOI r\t11I anQ1e1 lo tlle HortllWes\erly ••· flle 8o¥d 01 01..cton of 0.. Olt-Afl'. 21,2',MaY•. II, ltll lltl .. I lellSIOll Of the s.utllwtiterjy line of lrlcl rna,_, , .. r!Qllt lo rej«t ..,., w ld Loi U , thence Sou_,lerty 111 • and .11 .. "'. enc1 to.,.,,,. •nv ano •II PUBLIC NOTICE direct 11ne1ot11e Poin101 a.o1nn1,.11-1rreou1 .. 11y In *'Y Did TM ttrwt ecldrHS or ou..r cOMmon Publi"*' Orenee CM~ Delly PllOC, -dealonatlon, II a11y, ol u.. rMI Pf'Of>4r· Aprll l,, '"' "" .. ' l'ICTITIOUI au111t•U ly Mr~ dHCl'I ..... 11 purport~ ....... STATUAaNT •• be. 212 Hazel Drive, Corona De #Mr, Calll0m141. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS au SIN EU NAMa STATIMaNT Tll• followlno persons ••• dolno buslnenes: WBP INVESTMENTS, lftll En- te(pr lu Drive, Gerden Grove. Celllornl• tao Joell. A. WN;len, \3'11 Eftte<J)<'h• Or Ive, GarOen Grow, Olllornl• •~ Rotlert J Pe .. c•. IJtl\ EnW!M'lw Orlve, GarOen Grow. <;allloml• •~ r 111, l>llslnn• 11 concl11"•d by • oeneral partnenflfp. Jeck4.WN .... Tiiis Sle'9Ment •• filed w ith t .. County Cle•l of Or.,... County on Aprll 10, 1911 CAPltlna ltASDAN An....,.etuw -· ......... c..-DrlV9 ...... Irv .... CIC-• t27U Tiie foll-1119 _..,.., •r• dOl"9 Tiie llftderslQIW!d dlKl•lms .,v and i...s1n~ fs PR 0 0 u CT S 1 u., ell ll•l>fllty lor !tie lncorrectnesa ot • MIO 1trMt addreu or oti.r cOMmon MacArtllur Blvd .. Sult. 200. lrvl,ne, Malellatlon. Callfornla mu $41d wile wlll be ..,_ wll'*<I (OV•· ROSSO CORPORATIOH, .tale of nent or werre11ty, eaprett or lmplled, Incorporation. C•llfornl•, IUU r99ardlnQ lllle. _ ... ulon, or •"'um· MacArtllllr 91..0., S..11• 100, lrvlne, brancu, to ••loafr lhe prlnclpel Calllornle mu Miene• ol U.. No'9 or o-ot>llgatlon ROSSO CORPORATION tecured DY Yid ()Md of Trust, wllll In· R. E ~lyll.. IWHI .. pr°"IOed In .. Id Nole or olhe• l'rftl<lenl oOllgatJon; plus ed•en<H, II •ny, ..n· Tiii• ·~· ... filed ...... ""' de• .... lwms OI Yid Deed ol Tru>I County Clark of or .. oe Counh Ofl encl ln19fHI Oft •ny """ edYen<H, Aprll 20, '"1· and "'us'"'· c.11¥ .. • •nd eapenus of 1"1"40 Ille Tru--of lhe lr16ts cr .. 190 Pllt>ll-Or#9 c ... s\ Dally PllM, by 1eld 0Hd Of Trust. The tolal Apr 12, 19, May•. \J, 1911 ,.,._.I •-I of wk1 *19allonl, lncludlnQ PUBLIC NOTICE • $TATU1lllEMT Of' AUNOOttMaNT principal, eccrued lnlerul, otMr aMe11nll llWn -· encl ruson•Dly Hllmaled I .. &. Cf\MQes and ·-· of -l ......... at tlw tim. Of lnlU•I publlcallon of 11111 Nolfe•. I• i 107,116 .. Of'Ul«Of' l'IC1'1TIOUS 1141SINall NAMR Oeted· •111.1"1 .., .... l TM tol-"'9 portoft llM --.. cS Publlshed a.--. c ..... Dally PllOt, u.. UM of tN lkllllOUS to.1\ln.u ,..,.,,,. TI(·~.,,._, C-ny, Inc. Apr U.H.Mav•.u .1 .. 1 lltWI IN~TA TUNE•» ..... , £61 .. r •C.llloml•<e>rponl-. Avenue, H..,l1n9ton S..Cll, C.lllomf• u Tn41M n..47 By RMI E•lale !o«urllltt TIM Fktlllous lklslnH• HafM <9-Sentu, a C.llfomle l•r...O to -WM filed In 0raft9' CGrJ)Or•lkln, l~Agenl NHMa c°""tyon"-Y2'. ""· c-•fO.J.Moreer l'ICTITIOUS MISINaSS LEWIS M. METZA, SlQS WllcrHI lt7N.~-·y.Sle.A PUBLIC NOTICE NA.Ma STATRMUfT Ro.d, A,._.m, C.lllomfa ta07. $MIU""41,CA'2701 Th• lollowlno penons er• cSolno Tl!I• bulltwss wM conduc-DY en C714ltS.1Mt i...slnns H llldlvl~. "'"°''"'" Orenoit CO.II Delly Piiot, NOTICE OF DEATH OF AUTO CENTER MACHllH. IAWllM.~• Aprlll,U,22,1911 MARTH A PH IL P ANO LTO . !I Auto Center Orlw, lkilkllno Thi• tt-t wM llled wlUI Ille OF PETITION TO AD· A,Un1t1,1rv1ne.ca111orn1et21u Cou11ty Clerk of Orenee eounty Oft l"aul Beeud•••u. lllt E•ll Aprll10, 1"1. M 1 N 1 s TeR EST ATE No. BuMtt, An.i-1 ..... c.111..m1. ,.,.s "' A 108529. Dal-811.utt, SUCI Oun!oc> Drive, P..,tlll"*' Oreft99 Co .. t O.lly Piiot T o a I I h e I r s ' R•;~~!'4:;=~: = .. ct•d by • April 22.19, IMY •. '" "'' iaru1 PUBUC NOTICE beneficiaries, c re di tors 11m11..i par1MrMll9. NOTK• OP T•u1T•••1 u.La NEWKIRK and contingent creditors of P•u• &•INOtWll PUBUC NOTICE i.-h tDl1..,_ J A M E s A L v l N Martha Philp and norsons T"11 ... ....._, •• flied with t,. -N"WPO!T5."'•QU;~~NOS, INC., h "'" County Clerll 01 0•.,o-County Ofl ,. " " • • NEWKIRK. resident or t e who may be otherwise in-Aprll n, 1911 1tOT1C9T000ttTllACT01t1 ••duly -"'tied Trvs1.ee .,.., .,,. SouthCoastAreafor3lyears . terested in the Wiii and/or ,.,_ CAUJMOl'Oltatos ~°l'L_L,~T-PV!,lbed,c !-"ucTot,~intTOwT•HLEL p d A 120 1981 PAJtKEll& l'llUINKUN Scllool OIUrlct: COAST COM· .,,. " .... " """ ------------asse awayon pben ·, h Estate. IW ... ~Aw. MUNITVCOU.EGEOl$TRICT HIGHEST ••DOER FOR CASH He was a mem r o t e A petition has been filed 0r-.. ca.,.... Bkl ONdliM 10.ooo'cl«lt A.Mot tlW Cpayeb•• •• 11 ..... of w•• In 1.-.fu1 • ,_ClllOTHIH m&.eaOAOWAY MC>atuAIY I 10 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 UlTZl8.aOH SMTM&TUTtttU WISTCUff CHAP'll 421 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 64&-9371 NaCl MOTMlllS SMITMS' MOITU.-T 627 Mam St ttlntington Beach 536-6539 PACMC YllW .-.c>IJALPAaK c.n.tery Mortuaty CNQe•-Cremalory 3500 P~hc VteW Drive NewJ>0'1 88ach 644-2100 Seafaring Masonic Lodgeby Jeanne Philp Briggen Publl.,,...Oren9ec...1tO.llyPllot,JOltldaUl"Pf1:.1t11 m_y .. -Unl!MSUIM)•llr .. I, 708 F&A M C N l s . c rt f Aprll 22. H. May4, 1J, 1911 , ...... , PIK• of Bkl ltecelpl: Olflu of -llll• .,,., _.... c.onw'l'ed to--II · o e wpo r in the upenor OU O Purchul1>9 t.eent, Marla" l"errln, ,.. .. ltY 11...., Nici o-o o1 Trwt In Beach . Ca He is survived by Orange County requesting • eo.1tc-1ycoo ... 0111rk1.mo t11J9prep9rty1Wn!Mf~-"'-· his .. "re Alta V ~e'-'kirk o that Jeanne Philp Brio· PUBLIC NOTICE Adam1Aw.,eo.1aMeu TRUSTOR: GARY L. POEl.STRA Nev.port Beach. Ca .. a son gen be appointed a s ProJect 1den1111catlon Nam•; -D•OHNElt.POELSTRA.- r ' ' 0 R A N G E C 0 AS T C 0 L L I! 0 ' eftCI wire James A Newkirk. Jr 0 personal representative to f'ICTITIOUS•UMNUS LIBRARY Si!CONO f'LOOR al!NEFICIAllY . MARVIN A Ne" p o rt Beach. Ca. a administer the estate of NAMaSTATUdWT CARPIETING-810•• KREIN ano IRMA L. KllEIN. daughle r Patricia Ann Martha Philp (under the Tll• 1011ow1119 _._.~ere dolnl Place,.._ .... on 11 .. : Office ef 11-.M.,..wffe•lei1•11-~-c .,.,11,.... •· Pllvsk•I Fecllltlft ..,_... Traller lltc.....,. ~ It, ,,. u ln-W 111 cut of L'kiah. a .. Independent Administra· COAST.H&At1IHOAIOCEHT£R. Fec111ty,JoMPot1«,o-1~.., w.Ho.aun1n11oG111PJO.~Uoof grandchildren and 2 great-tlon of Estates Act). The ,.,. 1e.i c-st Hltl!W•Y cor-_. eo11 ... Oltl.. 1vo ..__Aw., co.ta Offkl•I ,._. 1n .,,. offiu of .,.. grandchildren. a brothe petition is set for hearin'iJ Mar ca11tom•~ ' ~.cA-.m41s.m7 b<.,_.,Ol'..,..c:-y;Mld-..i HaroldNewkirkoU .. asVegas. in Dept. No. J at 700 Civic EVl!~YN o. wH•TE, ~~El:"~==·~::~:;~~ .. ~,._ fol~ pr• Ne\'ada Masonic Memoria Center Drive, West, In the ~~... -teln v.no, .... orn . CO<lnt'(, ca111 .. n1a, Ktlne '" •M Loi It In alOCk c"' Tree! No. Sii, Services are scheduled fo city of Sant a An a , PoNALO H WHIT£ 1~ &Im t11rou•11 It• oo ... r111n1 •oer•, '".,.. CllV o1 ~ ll..cll. •,., Wednesday, Aprtl ~. 1981 a Calif-nla on May 20, 1981 Clrcl• F_,te1'n ve11ey' callfor11I• ll•r•ln•lt•r ••l •rr•d h ••-.,___In.-o.,..... »to "' WOI ' ' "OISTRICT",wlll,_.l ..... \O.W\9* *6 IMl\ltl'le e( Ml.al'-IMCIS, fn ll:OOAM at tbe Harbor La" at 9:30 a.m. · Thia Du$1-• 11 concSvct..i by a 1atwui.1N-..-1U1\edllme,-i.. 11w of*'-of Ille Cow'ltY 1tec..,.,.., MemorialChapel.Off\ciatin IF YOU OBJECT t o the ~··•~Ip t1hhtor1M--Sofecontr.:ttwttw .. 111c-.... willbeWorshipfulMasteran granting of the petition, Put1fltMc10rMtit.C...1t 0•11~1= ·~"=' .. rece1-s 111 ,,. llllk• ~.~==';"'.,.,,, HewPon Chaplain Orma Crank or th vou ShoUld either appear A1N'll22 "INY• IJ "" , ..... , klenlllleel Moft, _, ........ '"""I . ,., • ..,. ..... or<-•-Seafaring Lodge #708 F&AM. at the hearln'iJ and state · • • ' _, pu1111ct., rMd .._, M ,.,. _._ tleM'*' , .. ....,, .._. • .,. ... ,.,.iv Cremation with scatterin g o your objections or flle -9&a1Hti-onc1p1aca. ••.,.,.,.•to u:ac_.._ or«<· ashe11 at sea. In lieu otnow~r written objections with the PUBLIC NOTICE 1.i":~~1~!:9!:'°e.fo::wir::;~ r.c~-.,:,:;,k!MY _. u1c1 OINcS of contribut ions to Hc>ag court before the hearing. -..-an•ttieret111Nlfn91*1~ Tnnl.W-tf•WMCl\ore1et..,11 Memorial Hospital. New Your appearance may be tJtCTtTtausau•1ttau w11111n • 119yt""" u. * ~ ... 111 ·~ •ltM"-M(urect t11e<e01, B h C t d t ltAMS ITAHM•lfT cUI•. ..,_..,.,. •-"'911 Mil cSelwre4' .. eac . a. are sugges e In person or by your a • Tll• toll-'t111 --I•..,.."'°": ladt blf ,,.u•t con1°"" .,,,, 11e -. .. .-a1wod a"""-oec1erat18111 St'rv1cesunderthedirectiono torney. ,,...... ,...,..,,.. .. .,.~.,~ "'o.-_, DllNlld tor s.ie. e1te1 Harbor Lawn·Mount 0th· 1 F y 0 u A R E A COVNT"v CAalN WIEST * bc1111111111a11wacc°""*'1•ny._ wrltt.f!Mttullf....atltftdol•tectten Mortuary of Costa Mesa.C REDITOR or a con · Prome,.toryOrlveE11t,N•.,;-,wcurlt-,reterre1no1nt11e,.,...,.ec1c1K ... te-•••llel_. .... 11u111 .Heh Clllloml• tWO mefttt oncl"' tM .... ., ,,,....... .. p,...,., • MtJtf't' ........ ............ 540·5554. llngent creditor of the de-""THUii CHA"Lis ••SCH • ~111tr11e..._ .,.. IMrMIW .. 111•ra1....,. '-" HILTUNEN ceased, you must file your ,.,,mOlllOf''( Orlft Eul ... .;Port TM OISTAICT ,_,,.Ult,...,. to .. i.~-~ ...... .-..... to I I Ith th t Sffdl (MHonllanYO ' "9i«ICN1Ytrall ... ww•el•.,yl,.. M _.. ._,,..., It, 1M .. THEODORE G ca m w e cour or T111,·..,._.1.~11,111 ift. ~1ant*wl....,,,..1t"6lfl...,.._ 11111r.H .. -.snlf1-..1Pa.P1111tu1·, HILTUNEN. passed away present It to the person.I dlvlllllat er1nttte....,,.. .... ,.~ .. .-... on April 19, 1981 at Hoai representative appointed N..a-.rte•IMtd\ n-01STRICTll9a1MelflMt,_.,. ,. .. • wttt .. ~•'='..itMltl Memo ... al u~;,r.tat. He was -the court within four Tiii• ............. •• 111e11 Wiii! w Dlrectw • • ~,_.. ., la-~., ~· w ,_ n nu. _, d f ~I\' Cletl of er.,._. Ol<Mty 9" ._!NI __.,. -........ ,,..... .. piW, " .......... J ..-, W born b'I Mi~ gao on No-months from the ate o _,1120, 1..,. ,..-i,,.111~~ .. "!!!'~i.~rtt= ~~ -• , : .. ,.'.!:t:=::: vemt>et 1. 1932. He wat a res-first Issuance of letters as ._ ............... _. .. .. -._ .. ld-t o( H ........... on Beach. provided In Section 700 of ,....,.,.,.. Ol'Mtlt OMtt °"'"' ,...._ -11crtft•.,,_.,_,. _ _... "..,,. °"".,"""" ............ """ _ .. .,,.. A II .. 2t,,.. .. • t-"7.-t ~IM .. ~l"-rlbil .. llt ....... ,,......_~lf•Y• ca. for approxhnately 15 the Prob•t• Code of ., -. • ' ,.. ... 1 ,1 ... u.1>11T.-tC'hMe11-....a1 tlMitf' .. ..,,,. .. ..wo..ion,..., (Hrs. lte .,.. .. a veteran of Callfornla. The time for Offlu•U'I••*""•""*,... '-:.:J.,,dltlrfln.,.. ·~ .. .,.. &b• United Stat.es Manne filing ctalms wUI not ex-PUBLIC NOTICE =:. C:::-<=.'-:..:"'~\;,.._ !.w O.::, ~ r::; .== :! Corpa and served from lt52 p lre prior to four months ~,.. ......... _. ,...._ A _...,. T1llnlfY, _., 1, ,_.,. o:• to 1954. tte received tbe from the date of the hear· ,,_cnT10..aMSH1U1 c:r. ...... ,.,...,, .. ,...... aa.et•• .. •cu•T.o.~c- Nttlonal Defense Service lngnotlc.edaboveex· MINE ,,, • ..:=,::=;:"! ... 199 •,,.-. .......... ~,.,....,. r.:~·:=-:.t=.i:~=. 'Ribbon. Ke la •urvlved b)· YOU MAY A ~-..... "'-""""'• .__._..., flf C.a11ter114e, ••11• r••rewr.,.. 111 bl• wsre W•nt-lyn A .. and the file kept by t"• court. •LZPCAL0.4117C....-.D<'twe, .-<1> .... nwr•fw ... ,,..~.,. Peef,....-.~ ... ...,._.,,. ... chiufhter Pamet. both 0 lf you are lnt,rested In the 1rv1M, c.111en11enns S -u-..--... ..... .-u_.,.. aa. • " HunUnKton Be•c:h' Ca .. •ftd ntate, you IMY file•,... lllC '!"'::'~~ ~.-..... ~'*"*' .. '1:..'!"9.=:~"':.:U:::= illiliiiiiii~ • •later ElellJO,. Johnson ol qunt with the court to , .. siffra c.i-, '"""°' et1.,....... 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The ramll7\1u11eatt that Jahn c. f)enney, f>W\ney IACIC•.awa•wacu.. ..,.,.... .. ~....,. ~ ... --.~. <ton.tlou be en.de to .. P..wtYf 3"71 Via Lido, ::::::.•,: :t:=-.':'~'== a;;,._., Am•rtl'1ft· C.11c.,. ~lfty Sult.•·~ 8Mc9', .... ._........ -.a--. ,.............., rvlcet l.mdfr lM dU'ectlGft Catff1Dmf.ef*3,t ........... .-..... Oe== A o.aw.r:...._, o r Batu S.raeron..Saaith • PUbtllMd Orange co.It ...,.......,. ...... ~,U.:,.': ::.= Tulhlll WeatclUf Ctlapel Dally PllOC, Apr'W~, ~ ..... w ... -. ~ ... CWI... ~~IP ...... Clllll .............. . •lilillillsiisliiliiii••iiss• ·MortoatYMknl. 29, 1'11 1 '•·9'1!11.MWt.~1'5!. -, .... ,... ~-.e.11.• · ,..._.. OC IAMPIOMT COteO MIWPOn""'CUS-:T~ ' Bd.rm t"' Ba. l'.R., pool, t.nnll,. ·.=· c::J· Roy, S4o.alor EQUAL HOUSING • OPPORTUNITY ,.........,. Moffce: Whelan RealEState All real eatate •d· vertlsed lo tbl1 newspaper Is s ubject to the Federal Fair Ho1&1· ln1 Act ol 1968 whlcb makes ll llle1al to ad· vertise "any prtie~nce, limitation, or dis- crimination based on race. color, religion, aex, or naUonal orialn, or an intention t.o make any such preference, llm itatloo, or du· criminaticln." Thj1 newspaper will not knowln1ly accept any adverti1lng for real estate wbJch Ls in viola lion of the l•w. El.ROIS: Advrisen altcMUclwdrtMlroda dally -report ~ ron 1 ....... dlatefy. TM DAILY PILOT • ._. labllty for the fint l1tcorrect l1taertlo1t only. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OHH-LA-LA ls what you will say when you see thi s s parkling c lean 48r. form. din, fam rm, 3 car gar. home in Mes a Verde. Approx. 8yrs old & 2200 sq ft, w /central air, heated spa & so much more! Just re- duced $5,000. Now $238,000 & anxious! Clyde Johnson Rllr 549-211W4 HODOWH PAYMENT Pay closing costs only! Buy your own home! Must qualify for mon- thly payments. Exciting new concept Call today for Cull details 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATE RS COSTA MBA 5 IR-S12S,500 OWNER SAYS SELL Not an add-oo or con version A real 5 Bdrm family home in one of Costa Mesa 's nicest areas. Handymans de· light. C@nd me! SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7'4-631-6990 CAMEO HIGHLANDS OCEAHYlfW ONLY I OC¥o DOWN Now reduced thousands! Spacious living room. features glowing fireplace, 3 large bdrms + den. Great assumable 1st and owner will help finance. Call 673--85:>0 THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCUff VACANT Reduced Us.ooo. Desperate owner says bring all o rrers. No qualifying. Low down. 4 Bdrm single story home, totally upgraded. Call for more details. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 :6990 C AME 0 SHORES Lowest Priced Fee llAUT'lfUU.Y llfUUdHID .. bdrm home 1a eooct location wltb • com- p I et e 1 y remodeled lcltcben, new pallt!t new cpts and drapes. U1rner rfnancln1 available. $132 ,SOO. Call now 979-5370 LLSTATE REALTORS POIMT'STO PERFECTION This home truly de- serves "The Most BeautiCul Home On The Block" award. A func· tional balance of beauty, com fort and conve· nience Complete w/remodeled kltchen·an inspiration to any cook. 5:16-2660 $130,900 w/VA terms. C::. <.,fl ( ( I ......... l'HOPE Hl ll '• SELLER W /AMAMCE Beau tiful executive home. 5 Bdrm, 2 master suites. stereo thruout. Fountain Valley . 641·1991. agt _ _...;. _____ _ GREAT INVESTMENT 3 BR 1 Ba, $72,900 As· s umable financing & seller wl also carry paper C aJJ for terms. 752 6499 PtanN~lty LET-STALK C°""""siaa Splh Jack H Lnch. Mqr. 67~1771 ; . ·~ . . ; . -; ' . ~ ~ . : .. OLDHEWPC>aT New two and three bedroom coodoa Conve- niently lcxaled. Lovely bay view BwJder's pro- gram creates an urgen· cy lo sell Terms very nex1ble $169,900. TWO FOR 1345,800. 631·7300 M.I. loyf1 Oill C4*lo ExcellwtT.,.. Fantastic value with owner financing. This 2 bedroom adult condo has a beautiful main bay view on r~ land with boat slip availability. Thia is the best priced main bay waterfront condo in Newport Beach at only S335.000. D.M. M«rsW RHr 644-9'90 CASA DEL RIO le.elMM.weoNos Xlnt terms. 13% interest for 3 years. 121.32 Ed- lnger-cloee to Harbor Blvd. OPEN WEEKENDS 10.5 641-1991; 631-4.361, agt. WALK T ·O BEACH Giant 4 Bdrm priced right I Sp•cioua ll ving room features wood burnio1 fireplace. Owner uaiated fln&nc· ln1. HWT)', call f73.8550 THE REAL ESTATE RS OMEYUIO&ID Bes\ locuiUon, steps to pool• voUe,...U ~ t UMDll SI 00,000 Laree a15um1ble lat Tl>. lhll• qi ..... i.act to wood dttk. kaudtul vi••• from mailer • 1.alt•, u.-. aad tamJly toomf I· .Plus, lovely lriv.te beacb. J'ot Ml ~. c.Ul7N550 T'HE REAL ESTATE.RS WHAnUM9UI AIOU'r \MOUE SUPER HOtlSE - Cameo Shores, 4 Bdrm, study, vlew, pool and spa, Incredible al 1675.000. MEDlTERRANEAN- Baylronl, UOO sq.It home of exceptional quality. 114 feet of fron· taae with slip and side lie. Owner will assul w /financing 11, 750,000 fee. SPARKLING CLEAN- Citihome, 3 Bdrm, 21h ba, fireplace. 2 car garage, end Wlil, some view! 1240,000. IN SEABLUFF -2 Bdrm, 2 ba, tennis, pool and fun surroundings. Close close by. 1145,000 LIVE LIKE A MILLIONAIRE I Bdrm penthouse 1n Newport Beach Guarded gate, pool, fym. and many extras. 139,SOO I-' U N L l V I NG 0 Id Cd M, French doors. patios. decks, country kitchen 2 Bdrm. zi, ba, 2400 sq ft al $357 ,000 THAT'S WHAT'S UMl9\JE .UOUT U,..l()Ut 11()Ml:S Realtors, 675-~ STOP DREAMING! Lel it happen 9°k as· sumable loan. 3 Br, ram rm, l~ ba. Try wrap • loan 180 ".4 L1'V > Spacious hv area + huge rear yrd w/btfl spa. Walk to community pool le tennis Home warranty + upgrades! 545-9491 r , .., .... 1111 REAL ESTATE OC~OMT 2 Bdrm" 2 ba. unfum New. $850yTly. IAYROMT 3 Bdrm. I ba, unfum Mint cond.18SO yrly CHAMHB. FttOMT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfurn. S7SOyrly. associated BRO •.[ll S "1111 TC;"S 'I); , 't/ti Otllt '' l " f I h ':. I SPLASH! SPLASH! Stay cool in the pool! We'll be pleased to show anyone who wants to save money! 7% exist· ing loan. 1225/mo. Call now wo n 't la st! 545.9491 ~w. .. 11.ee REALESfATE COMMEACIAI. PIOfSTY Tired of selling howses 7 days a week? We need one licensee to learn the skills to manage &: broker commercial real estate. Income from mgmt while you leam. Super beneflU; life ln· surance; health In· surance • dental plan. Contact Ken, 6'1$4700. DUPUX ~bdrm, 2batheacb wllt. Fireplace, built·lQI. EJt· celJent rental area. lfear beach It ~. s:aa.ooo. 642·2253 eve.. associated ,, . . . ". . ,•, fAIULOUS VllW •AIULOUS "~ e-., FAMOUS VYM.ASS Beautiful 4 Bdrm, 3 bath home with one of the best views in Newport area, Grea t owner financing & extra incentive for you to Pl.JJ'Chase now. With approx. 20% down he will carry financmg for qualified buyer. Best buy in Spyglass at $650,000. IOMHll IAlllNGTOM. AG&n 675-6000 M~52 VllW ow .... wtlc.ny 3 Bdrm Cliff Haven beauty. Owner wilJ COO· sider all real!Olable of. Cert. 2 SPAS, one indoor. one outdoor. 2 fireplaces, 111ed brick entertainers pool area. Cabana, fire ring, view Saddleback Mountains, Fashion Island, lights. Newly remodeled, new kitchen. CaJI today for appointment. m SEA COVE PROPERTIES 71 4-631-6990 PktwePtrftd Immaculate 3 Bdrm family room home In prestigious Turtleroc:k. Beautiful decorating. vaulted ceillnp, atrium, covered paUo. Priced to sell at $197,500. The fastest draw in the West. .a Daily Pilot Classified Ad Call To day 642-5678. HARBOR RIDGE ESTAlt S1 ,99S,OOO P•ora"'lc VU frolft hllltop, plus a ,....Hlcettf Hw Lo..is XIV Manor HOUM with lmpreu l•e d•tall. GrandloM 4 bedroom. libr ary, fonMI cln.nn. A cu.tom ho"'• for the dlscriminathtg exec.utf••· CLIFF DRIVE VUFRONT $975,000 Grand proportions throMCJIKMd .Cth dose-up VUt from MOtt ,...._ Perfect decor & co11dltlon r eflected thnl l ·bedrooms, large ll•llHJ. fGMUy a11d bilfcrd roo111S. Pri•at. ._.. "*" plm deck Ir spa. Owtter wil C"'Y filllee:ilNJ, OCEANFRONT HOME + income $2 200,000 pg I 1llla ,., ... rlr you c.Ml"'t WW today! 0Hllty co .. fnlcfloe t. .. ,, I n ,_. t. bewllM pr0f9rtf· Y•-. two ...... larcJft' ..... _.. u ........ .ct ~e iltco .. + •pa ecWlall • tt. ott.r, ,._a .. ,. oh,.......-.. OWMf' ftedble wttlt ........ Wll COMldw leaNIM) thea.cl.fonnrVU. WATERFRONT HOMES, IN( RlAI fS1 Aft- 2436WCoastHwy 631_1400 Newport Beach CE 110111 BLlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE LUXURY COHDO Conv e nient L ocation . Two Bedrooms, Two Baths. Plus h Carpets. Plantation Shutters . Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up & Leave When You Wis h. Large Assumable 10'h% First Trust Deed. Only $255,000. NEWPORT HORSE COUNTRY Glamorous 2 + Acre Estate In Beautiful Setting With Your Own Privacy. Formerly Home Of Movie Star. Just Listed. Large Five Bedroom Home With Double Master Suite, Large Family Room & Gourmet Kitchen. Surrounding Sparkling Swimming Pool. Your Own Stables. Priced At $2,500,000. 159-9100 #2Corpar•Ptau H.caport~ IA YCllST CUSTOM NOMI Absolutely fabulous Lyons & Cushlon custom floor plan . Spacious lfvlng room designed for entertainin&. Carge separate formal dining room & fantastic kitchen boasts of Del Piao tlle1 microwave, 2 self ·cleaning ovens & many extras. Master bedroom suite separate from other 3 extra large bdrms. s.@0,000 with great terms. WISLIY tl TA Y&i<>I CO .. UALTOltS 2111 S-J114d ....... MIW .... ~--CIM'J9. M.L 644-4910 UDO ISLI Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional 3 bdrm, 3 bath home, newly decorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath p~us lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. $420,000. PENINSULA POIMT IEACHFROti4T Panoramic vie w at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq . ft. featuring marine room, entry, Ii ving room, dining room, built-ins, etc. $1,385.000. IAYFROHT We have several fine homes with pier & sHp, s tarting at $1 ,500,000. Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bny\•n•· Drov•· NB b75 6lbl A·01v1,,ion or llJrbor lnv~lment Co Sell with EASE! Classified Ads 642-5678 HONEYMOON COTJAGE: $299,000 l ldrm, l batt., patio .ct qreenery. EXEC. CORNER-VIEW $675,000 l ·story, 'l b*"t, fom rm MKh "'°"· CONTEMPORARY 2 Story $475,000 Spocl0tt1 4 I*'" with new decor. B.E~~flc!Yf,~O~ .J~~oo Call ffW cletaih • the ••• A.ttd • • • w. HP• Olllen. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL EST A TI. ~ ..... Mt ,,,,,1, PtttC:Wtl\ "'trM .... "~"' 631·1400 * W tff PAYS MOt}I DCUlllMCI * Cl.OSIM•com Large spacloug l bdrm. units with brick woodburning fireplaces and private balconies or patios. Luxuriant tree s haded ground!. Tennis, pool, spa, sauna, clubhouse enclosed and undeq~round parking. Located in a prestige area of Tustin. Three shopping centers, bus and freeway less than two blocks away. Relatives and friends can help you qualify. Below market interest rate at 13'h%. 5 left at $73,500. QUAIL MEADOWS 17554 Vandenberg Lane. one block south of 17th Street, between Yorba and Prospect Take 17th Street exit east from Fwy 55. Right on Yorba left on Vandenberg. 832-2300 ask for Sandy Open 10 :00-5 :00 p.m. of nttwporl REALTORS 675-SSI I C.AREER OPPORTUNITY -Jola a pro9r .a1l•e and dya.WC real Htate flrftL Excelettt comml11i0tt ~ttroctiH offiut and tots of ~ 011btaftc:e GYollabt.. Call John or Vo6y at 675-SS 11. COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 25 IS E. Coast Hwy., Cot'OM cW Mar 675-5511 n MACNAB·IRVINE REALTY l:iil . .._ ..... __ ' srECT ACULAR OCIAHFROMT N<?rth Laguna private cove just minutes to Ne•vport Center. 4 BR, family rm home w/crashing surf below & Catalina sunsets. $895.000 Barbara Aune/Terry Hanes 642-8235 . Wewport -..ch 901 Dover Drtw Harbor View Cent.er . &l2-8236 644·6200 BALBOA ISLE $41},(0) Terrific loccrtlow near .._ ........... Chanftiftq 2-story, l bdrm. lcJt ldtchett, formal dmlftCJ nn. Muhr ._... ~= Me*htt.d. c~ CIRd Two os. Loach of wood. wCll"llllh .cl Isl c ......... WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL E.ST ATE. Salt• Ron••'• P10l>l'•lv 1'1•""9"""'"' 315 Manne Ave Salboa Island 673-6900 RfSIDflllTIA, Rf Al I sr,.t\ SERVICf S DOVER SHOlllS-SOPHlmCATIOHl Bay fro n t! One of the largest pier-slip-docks in Dover Sho~es. Bright, cheery & elegant desc~bes this s BR. on the water. Looks like a mod el ! Own er wi 11 carry all financing. $1.750,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 TwoTrWlan Rtpi ln the heart ot t~ Penlnaula. Slde by eacb-but both for $530,000 or juat ooe for bait. T1'y '50,000 down and aeller will can')'. JACOBS REALTY '7M 70 HAllOI DGE FantasUc Renai1unce model ror only 1479.000 Highly upgraded and great location. Appl on· ly. Seller motivated & wUI usiat ln rmancing. RC11ylorCo I , ' H '' S..,....Sfoap••r This is the one. A sharp home just right ror a young family or couple that needs room to arow. Near new carpet & paint throughout this 3 Bdrm house. Super location. Only $97.500. lalboals&c.dUy 673-8700 Corona dtl W.-I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 80 OCEAN VIEW Sunsets. Catalina, 3 pvt beaches. Fee land under 1400,000. Call Tim Rhone FAt-elJ.YHOMI Lar1e 1 yr old home in Costa Meu wi\h 3 bdrms, 3 bat.hi den and family rm, 2 fireplaces. Lee back yard. Clc»e to 1hoppln1 and parka. Good ... umable loans. '225.000. MIADOW,Ad New exclusive quality and well planned home with luxury and spaoe. St ate I y 2 st o ')Y Haverford plan Qn ~x120' lot near South Coast Plaza. Large 3 bdrm, den, huge family rm ; fabuJoua. bright. well kept country kitchen. Super family area. 1209,000. NEAil NEWPORT Spotleu home on pool size lot in a QUIET Cami· ly neighborhood conve· nient to all. "Pride or Ownership" home with 3 bdrms and 2 bathii. Owner may carry 1st TD with 204* cub down pay· ment. Reduced to $172,000. 631-1266. WATERFRONT Mil ,~~~~R~~~~~f~-~~ft~~~T~E~ DUPLEXCDM Below the Hwy, compl remodeled owe 2nd un der $300.000 Call Tim Rhone 631·1.266 1-ii!I Jasmine Creek decorator home, plan l on green· bell immac U)S,SOO 640-8145 "IRVINE TERRACE FIXER 4 Br. bonus room & sparkling pool. Superior location. Won't last. Prin. only. Greg Astle 759-1221 R&'M~ Ill-\I fllll'- 9~ F1NANCING: ll's true! Assume 9% loan, owner w1U help finance Spr awling 3 bedroom. 21"1 bath home. Formal dining. family room. fireplace Pool sized lot QUIET location $169,900, TARBELL, BKR. 54&-1720 . EASTStDE. 1 Br, R·Z lot, '86,000 . By owner. Owner w/help finance. 646·6193. MESA VERDE HORTH BRAND NEW LISTING 4br. atrium model, Sl65,500. Ag!" Beth Dun· combe 957~; 963-9101 3 + BONUS MUST SELL this darl· IEACH DUPLEX mg home in North Costa Xlnt shape, pnvacy & Mesa. Only SU8.000. park:inf. Owner will .REDCARPET finance. $90,000 dwn. Good rate of return. 754-1202 Broker Chris 957-1568 Fo.taln V~ I 034 CHAlt.41t4G DPl.X ••••••••••••••••••••·•~ owe lge 2nd TD. Ar.· S,TAINID GLASf l sume StOC,500 at 11:11•'1 CHATEAU So. of Hwy Close lo Sensational 3 Br. 2"'2 Ba I park. Beaut. street Sub· condo. new carpet. 11 mit $310,000. By owner. ceramic tile and loads of 't (213)430·9156 stained glass. S112.ooo >d 2 uniL' on lg lot, 3 bdr 2 ba. 2 bdrm 1 ba , ,4 garages, Broker. 675-0563. Ann e McC a s land 'J 631-1266 R&'M~. tn ,1 ·1111<-.. DrollMlllc ~x 2 Bdrm + loft w/frplc. _______ _. SALE IY ow.-a ~ wet bar In ea unit. Outstanding rtoorplan w f great tenants $395,000 WESTMOHT HOME 3 Bdrm +bonus room. a Ba. Priced for quick sale $117.000. 847·7™ YOlll'HOIM+Rewt ... I~~~~~~~~ Lovely 3 Bdrm front Un· r: It. w tfrplc & beam cell· H..tlftcJtoft leadl t 040 ings . 2 Bdrm unit ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/year tse, So of Hwy 2 STY LAHDMARIC '485,000. Call Bllr~ara 4 Br. 2~ ba, 3 car gar. Glass. C-21, Sandpiper Newly painted & carpet· Rily. 64o-4950 ed $103K assumable ln. c t M I 024 Asking $159,900 Fast .. ~!.~ .. ~•••••••••••• escrow. Bkr~ INVEST IN LOCATION Sharp 2 Bdrm condo in Mesa Verde. Priced to sell now at S98,500. Call Anne McCa11land 631·1266. MOYllH COMDITIOM Immaculate 3 Bdl'm 2 bath. Near new paint. Sprlnklera front a nd back. Covered patio. Near achooll. Alkln& otl· ly $125,000. Call ~1151 · ~ HERITAGE ~F Al TOR-.. FOURPLEX All unita are 2 Br. 2 Ba, Sood renta. no vacancy factor. Pdce $185,000. Loan Is assumable. AM9 McCellmcl 6lt·l26' R&'M~ I l ~ \I I ' I H '· BUYING) ~ELLING 7 QUAIL PLACE ' PROP.ERTIES 712-1920 llMTALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• tbr ii,;ba BR, 2 sty, Back Bar. Jbr. 21>8. condo. Pool 6 Jatuu . Jbr. 2 ba. t 100 1141841-07'3 '850. Ul.-i5. uk for Or. 2.,._ b• ............... •••••••• 2711 Bri1toJ St. ,_a_u_tb_or_~------• 3br.2ba. Furn T;;:~.~~!~· ColtaMesa.CA •Br , 28a, H50 mo. •••1• tstllasl S300 security. DUPLIX. M.I. new cpt/pot, formal dln· PALM .SPRINGS A1'EA. Near kach1two38r WI· ln1, 2,000eqft. 7~-0986 2Br 2ba. On old. C.Ompl It.I, 2 ear aar nr park. IW'll. Ont bole exec 10u TSL JNVSTMT M2-l603 Condo, 38r zi,; ba, end count In adlt park. ______ ::.....;;....:..;..--patio, frplc, bltn kJtch. Vlew San Jacinto. 4PLIL$tt2,500 dbl 1ar wlopnr. $7SO. '38·1300 Uk tor Vlrainia. All 2Br. MS sq ft. each. Ron Say 97~5370 Separate meters, lndry tlul ...... hedt 1040 HIC9HA5SUMAIU ••••••• •••••••••••••••• 4Br hom• w/spa, xlnt. --------•I cond. $189,000. 55.2~. Clean , modem 2 br, 2 ba. hook-ups in ea. unit, •Br. 2 Ba. Redwood Spa, dbl wide. Nr SO. Coaat c: om m 1.1 o It y pool . near Bear Ir Paular~o. 2 ----------1 Bluffs condo, 2 br. 1 ba, Plan, in attractive park WeetmlhAer. Good ... children ok. kW Sierra Orangetree patio home 2 wash' I d r y, ref rig 43 ASSUMAILIS No qualifyin1-small dwn pa)'menta. low Interest rate1, no loan points, 2.3. ~ 48DRM Townbomes in Huotlncton Beach, FoW\tain Valley areas. Call now for i;nore ,de· tall• ~GOLOEMST ·.,~,;> l!s~~ri?:e~ 84M518 BY OWNER-3Br. l3•Ba. $107 .900. 968·26"4 or 957·2677 *STARTER HOME Fledble financing on this 2 Bdrm Greentree fixer. Owner will help with cost. CaU for de- tail•. e-H .';'\~<:H '~ l 1\ L l 'y !_,!I l /000 IYOW.a OIWICJe TrH COftdo Plan 5 2 bdrm J ba on stream. Principal only after7pm. SS2-7SS2 Ocean This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in tt~e heart of Newport Beach. Boat shps for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. w/allfac.Belowl40,000. sumable long term Mamt.Co.6U·l324. Bd.den.pool,centr.air, $650/mo.646-4315 ' Call eves, Mon-Thurs, Hnancln&. Prlnc only. Beautiful new condos for adults, 552-5440. Marty , Blk 8 554·7985. Aat.536.0123 rent. U SO. Dbl gar _77_0·_1_980 ___ . ___ -I') to ch,2br,lba,nu ________ __.-~~------carpets, drapes. (need EASTSIDE(:.M. w/opener, 400 aq. fl Lagwtoleoch 3248 yrd, frplc, 2 car gar . CAMMaY VILLAGE H prime unlta, all 2 Bdr. astro turf deck. 8'1·l99l; ••••••••••••••••••••••• $800/mo yrly Comer of Steps to the wat.er, 2 Br, lot size 1.32x300. Prin on-68t·•361 agt. Oceanfront rentals S600 River Ave 48th St 2ba. sunken tub in ly. For appt caU John Nice clean 2 Br 1 Ba mo. & up. Adlts only master bath. Pool, pets Cox, agt. 63l-1266 499-3816 SCM JIHlft are allowed. Price re-enclad garage. $450. lst, ----Capi1.,._ 3171 duced to S62,500. Owner I••••._..~ last+ security dep. 2544 Charm 3 bdrm, 2 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange "E" c•"Z778. anxious. 2 new condos on I . Live .,...,.. house. Privacy Nr pool, 28r 2Ba fam nn. fenced WATERFRONT other. Seller will finance gar. yrd, avail SI L lst + Ad Its. $800 mo. Avail gar Vehicle s torage HOMES at S13% for 3 years sec$675 M2083S May 15.0wner499-3638 S475/mo 1s t . last '6 - in one. rent or sell the 3bdrm, 2ba, Crpk. rangl>. tennis, bch. Gate guard back yrd. enclosed 2 car REAL ESTATE 641-1991, 631-4361, agt. · · · __ security deposit req We are developers so submit land or 631•1400 48r furn or unrurn Sun drenched lux. home. 7S8·2S65 . 32106 Via de othe r Real Estate to owne r Jim 6 U. L.A Sl40,000 nr USC w/pool. $800/mo 83S 3 br. 212 ba. ample yrd. Oliva ~~~~~~~~~~ Gr $17,000, try 25% dn or pre 51 d 10 0 CM I nr school $900/mo. Call ------Thompson. -submit. BJcr~ . r · 497-1825. Santo Ana 3280 T rffft'ock•--'-Adltsl400sqf\.2Br,28a 5'6·3170.631·7370 ---_____ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 OnF..~· sunporch fncdgrdn CM l•--------•lchild welcome, E-side &.og.ot4Hh 3250 Beaut 3br.2ba,frpk .all (714182• 12•0 ocnair.5 •Pk64S-1862 TAXSHB.TEll 3b 1 f h . ••••••••••••••••••••••• new decor Drive by 2 story, 4 bdrm, dining • l21J) 591-1363 4UMrn ca~· t!un, rs paint. Attractive 3 Br 2 Ba in 2317 S Lowell $600/mo rm . added den w/wet 1800) JSJ.3710 Mobile Home at the bch Wtrpepd. yrd26·59&a0r SS25 Laguna Village No pets. tst. last+ SlSO 64-4 5069 bar, s teps to pa rk, in Nwpt Quiet young 960_3989 · range SS95mo.497-4072 ----comm. pool & tennis As· people 's pk $10,500. Upstairs units with - -2 Blks from So Cst Plaza, sum able loan Owner ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ S.U·2080 Ocean View! SJ.95,000. ----- -11.0C)tlfta HkJ-1 3252 6 or 12 mo lse l600 mo ____ __ __ will assist m financing. - -------ROIERTS RLTY. • 2br . 2''2ba, Twnhs $700 !••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt rond SSl-4540 PROIA TE SALE S210.000. Fee. Agt, logwto leoch 1048•--------l•och Property 1350 ('114)493-0202 498.-1040 Frplc, pool . spa, garage l4bdrm. 2ba. frplc, gar. in 640-5560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IACX IA y ••••••••••••••••••••••• S49·3232. _ lovely neighborhood Soutft lCICJlliftO 3216 ri:u~a; ·~i:~·/~1~:~ W .ATBFAOHT THE SHAKES 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home ! SPECl~Ll.ANDSALE Time S=cre lwter'tal 3 Bd 2 Ba Laurel Point I s735 lease incl gardener. ••••••••••••••••••••••• be' d W db d Weathered ced plusldealmot.her·in·law Oceanv1ew Iota, Morro Ow 2450 to h $7501 nopets499-4721 OCEANFRONT llOME Lie carpet AIJ>O a d oo ri ge prime h a r t C 1 Bay area $5990 E -Z wn ome mo ---O'looks pvt beach. 2 br. on800sqft room&tolal· Lakefront location. sakes. that IS. Custom quar ers omp term ... ~a·Ul f ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail . 5/1 Diana New 2br 2ba CONDO l d v r designed 3 bdrm f w/bath S220 ooo s. "" . views o L · . 2 1 2 ba, den, dm rm. lge y remo eled kitchen I 1ews orever 3 Br. 21.7 • am · · · the Pacifi c Ocean, aguna Beach orean· 631-1266 Agt frplc, ocn view. tennis deck.Sl200'mo 4992253, w /b1t.1n m1crowa\ e ba, pvt spa, nex. fmanr· rm, 2 baths Extensive Roy Mc~. Rttr. Estero Bay & Cayucos front unit from S6000 full courts $725/mo &H 5951 499·5021 oven. Sped al alarm ing. Spectacular! Of-use of wood gla!>s & 548-7729 675.7239 ror appt to see. purchase. price Time Secluded 2Br. lBa patio days, 645·939!1eve!o system, newly painted fered at $354,900. can ceramic tile. Beam ceil----------•! Agt s~ar~ units m award home, pool, adlts. no -Condominimns exterior&newhotwaler S52·1800 and ask for ing,frpk.Sl6S.OOO. ----winning Laguna Shores pets, $525 mo 2453 wportleoeh 3269 Unfwnislwd 3425 lank. SJ20.950. owe bl Lynn Noah. Mission Realty BAYFROHT l11sittess P'roperty 1400 overlooki~g the ocean. Orange Ave. see Mgr ............................................ .. TD w/25"• dwn at 13', Town & Ca.try _ (714)494-0731. __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• You receive grant deed. Apt B Npt Crest l"Ofldo, 4 Br 2' ~ Bachelor CONDO vacant, amortized over 30 yr!> R oft 5 52 1800 IAUOAISL4HD MEWPORT Enjoy a full week every ---Ba . spilt le\ el. dbl S500 mo Nev. port Univ Prk Vi llag;-JI Exceptional 2 bdrm $425,ooo. Hurry _ won't furn Secur gate, pvt gar · ec . patio. pool, lst, last&dep 957-9303 lilfal•lM:~Farillln~559J· •• ~··9'l-L • on . BEACH HIDEAWAY ~eo:u~~eh~a~~:·~~~~I 9 Office building . year compl luxurious 3br,2'd2 b:,condo,2 car garage LeaseS800/mo Beach978-0423 Beaut 3 Bd, bonus rm. w 'beam cell. frpl c style with pier & slip last! Bill Grundy. parkmg.spa&pool Call $700 S40.4083 Newport Crest 3hdrm. Private Sl.600.000 By app'l only Bosk ~,...... .,~., H-....t...--VI 2' b Julliard, grnblt toe . ·near ever· 675.6161 o ...... -......lexl226 -ew <) a,oceanv1ew.over Good hnanctn" & terms. ything. Only $171.750 67J-l633, 644-9000 or con ----------.Cbdnn. 2ba, Gracious ram1ly home 2 look s tennis courts . ., L VIII-• IE. tact your realtor. c .-. Loh/ R•al IE. t....a..-$650 t 4 b d r I I .. _ .. Hwstm"""-$1 59,000 Agt Mary . OCJUftG .,....,.. ""'"" etn ... •ry .. s;I _. s or y rm rp c. c O!>e to .,..,acn H.,..,:;;· I 042 857-2040 497-1761 IA YFROMT HOME Cryph I 500 belt-. 2800 _ _ 548·7879 Furnishing avail at no S8501 mo. 642 1Z12 ---Glorious· 4 Bdnn • ba. -••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••.•• 2 B d rm & G a rage extra Sl200lmo lse No •••••••••••••••••••••••• Gol~n Wnt Estates Beautiful S&S Exec 4 bdrm home Elegant "el bar, blt·m bbq inside & many other amenities incl a huge yard that backs to a beautiful VIEW HOME NE·R er•cH w pvt dock for your Cremation companion Large ho~ wanted. will w/drapes, wall to wall pets 201S Port Bn~lol Xlnt to<·ation, 3 Bdrm. " LI' yacht right al your front niche,. Pacific View trade pnme real estate carpeting$4SO 548_4162 Cr Call Elaine 644 5997 den. family rm. 2 wet-Oceanside of highway door Excel Peninsula Memorial Park. $520. acreage equity or ----or640·53S7 bars, close to ten -12blklobearh.Ahome Point location 673-4492evesalt 7pm 5600.000 (7141 751·4828, E·s1de.charming2bdrm, n1s pool $330.000 Call with that charm that is Sl,295,000. Owne r / _OMllM ___ rd_ -,.--736·3059or49J-1_153_ __ lba. yrd. nu crpts. drps. Barbara Glass. Cent 21. hard to find 2 Bdrms, Builde r Charles McKin· Property 1600 Rl'ftfals stove. 324 Costa Mesa St S_and~perRUy.640-4950 d1ningarea.frplr,patio, non.675-2763 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S595 /mo Ut 1I pd fncd yard Privacy. , ________ ,,H-•s ll!..-.1.1..-~ 760-07S9or64.S-Z223 S269,SOO BLUFFS BARGAIN ,. -· ~- Newport Crest 3bdrm. 2' zba. ocean \lew. over looks tennn. courts. frplc. dose to beach S8SO mo 64.2· 1272. W oodbricllp Cnefl DOHHA MOHDOR 3 bdrm twnhme Walk to Irvine coodo near pools. R ..Mo-... 9 ... 1081 ever ything: po61, tennis, tennis and shopp1'na 2 •....-vra __ ..,_..,... _ ., schools, park. shopping . B.drm ~tarter home , or LCIC)llft• .,..,.... I 052 Agl. 675-5930, 64().81~ park Just 2 yrs old ' l•--------•I Broker. 963-8182 ---'""'e 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER CLEAH C••••,•••M•••••••••••3••1•2•4• Newport Hts. duplex. 2 + 3 er 2ba. t;:; hned st in C-1 IUILDtMGS OS 0 "° bdrms gar huge yard w s uitable for li ght in-••••••••••••••••••••••• $550/m'o ~7814 . estcllff. nice for dustry and offices. Front •Br. furn. or unfurn. · · -cpl/sml fam S775. incl bldg contains 4 carpeted w /pool. $800/mo 836 Dmto PoW 3226 grdnr. No pets, 646-2389 * *GORGEOUS! If you are a discrlminat 1ng buyer that ap prec1ates lhe verv be~t this magnificent tiome 1s for you Custom Oak bannisters, Pecan n oor iog, ceiling moldinl(s. etc etc 3 car garage fine investment ••••••••••••••••••••••• s101 .soo Spac 3Br 2"" ba 1soo fl TERMS Ta.MS 642-5200 rondo View, ale, frpl. Condo SSOOO cash to the d led ff. 2 P r e s i d i o D r , C M . • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • - - ---~~th~.aRear i1~:\tdg 546·3170; 631·7370 Ocean & hills view 3 BR WEST<;U~ AREA has 2-12' doors, full ---------condo, fplc. W!D, tennis. lbdrm Co!ldo w/pool j PETE J BARRETT .,. REALTY close to shops 9'•'4 In existin g lsl & 2nd Sll0 ,000 Own1Agt T .D 'S, 2br. 2ba. at 831 ·7048 "Versailles" 963-3677 fl 1 Dona PoW 3126 pool. $600. Agt. 496-S980 Ve r y pr 1 vat e ! On uorescenl 1ght1ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ _ _ Rutland Rd. Adults only 1101220 power. lge mezz. New 3 br. 2 ba home, H_...gfofta.och 3240 $500 c all 675·6646 or ~""e--:--------------storage space. Lot 1s micro. v•rv attractive. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-3622 HARBOR VIEW 5ox120· conc rete -~ and so much more Call I~~~~~~~~~ ;~~~~~~~~ for details l09•a leach I 048 ; 1242.SOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMES driveway and lg parl<mg SlOOO/mo. 493-0467 Immac 3Br. 2Ba. cul-de-BIG CAHYOH s it f .,._ •-.-.o. sac, frplc, patio. $690 1 Portofino mdl w/4Br 2~ area. ecur Y ence . ..-wport-... 3169 mo. 847-•525 aft 3PM. Exclu~1ve. full secunty, Ba in the main house. OWC 1215.000 or lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba. bonus nn wlloft & full op.hon at S22S,OOO. Sub-LJDO ISLE charming 3 HOME FOR RENT Private yard. wet bar & Ba adjoin the garage. mit on terms. bdrm. 2 bath, playroom. 3 Bdrm. $600. Fenced fireplace, many other \\OOdbrldgc RHllU 55 1-3000 1mnarrann Pl.v.,,lnlnf DECORATORS DELIGHT Upgrades thruout Beautiful bark yard with spa. 2 Bdrm + den, 2 ' , b a t h s·. d o u b I e garage, 112 years new. Assumable financing available Oflered at St48,000. For an appoint· ment to see this lovely condo, call 54().1151 ---.s ~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS TERRACE Outstanding Cardiff model in University Park Terrace. 2 Bdrm 2 Ba + loft hide-away. Great location. pool, g reenbelts, finished garage. A rtnist to see. c ll(J d ~--· I "'.! Ii .. f . l I , '•' 1 '(JI)() ••ESTATES! Slngle story a\tached bome ln fabuloos Wood· bride• Eltates. Huge bee1t1ard .• aJt the Wood- bl1d1e ammtti• and as-, ... a hip toeD. Owner will toui..-ta.Ip on ••tolld•rl flaaon••. Jll,000. ·ne llra.-t mOdet ln Wooctb rJ ct1 • &l•tet·Dlttca It ot ho· uiou Uvinc 14*• •Dd !r own pool and •P•· ttd totielf tit ttM,iOO. M9tott ---ln ... TEENAGERS HAVEN Bring the pool table and musical instruments and set up a special room for fun and enjay- m en t. See all the possibilities with this spacious 4 bdrm, 3 ba. W1mbelton Model in the Racquet Club. Sl79,000. FABULOUS 5TH FAIRWAY Overlooking the 5th le~ and fairway of the El Niguel Golf Course. Is this spacious 5 Bdrm home with custom pool and spa . Assumable finan cing available '359,500. 49&-1720 106' Perfecla1Tangementfor WATI:.RFRONT Just remodeled. Sl6.SO yard & garage Kids & amenities including in-laws, It.ids, omce or HOMES mo to mo. BIU Grundy. peU welcome. 964·2566 Maids room S14SO mo studio. Lrgyrdaccented REALESTATE 675·6161. or973-2971.Agt .nofee. Call Anthony wkdys b · ·u Aak 631-1400 642·5757 eves & wknds. . Y an mv1 ng spa. · Beautiful 2 Br. Condo Walk to beach. lrm cot· 644-8889 1ng $342,900. Sl50,000 as· 1~~~~~~~~~~1 H · B. c sum able loan Owner 1: ome m 1g anyon, tage, yrd. 1296/mo. No --will consider 2nd. Call golf course view, pool & dogs. 42l Lake960-39S9 On Golf Crse 3 bdrm 3 ba Tom Baron 559-9400. MISSION VIEJO fully furn. Lease or moo· + den & bar S 11 00 thJy. Call Bill Wedmore Tri-level 2 br. 21; bacon-64S-760Sor646-1713 SHOPPI~ CNTR ~-7020 do, frplc, atrium. pool, H -nG • tennis, racquet ball. 2''2 A R B 0 R RI D G E 10 STORES. manage-~--------• mi. beach . Adults . CONDO ment available. 3 yrs CANNERY VLG. 2Br ss751mo. 536-2Sl2 3 br. 3 ba. Sl,500 mo. old. $450,000 down. Full 2ba mobile h ome. Steve, 640 9345 or Great • Bdrm on comer price $1,400,000. Prine. $7SO/mo, furnished. 4bdrm. 21/tba, frpk. wet-752-1920 lot with room for RV , only. Agt.644-9513 NR. OCEAN . Short bar, l block beach. No --------- boat , etc. $279,000, term. 2 Bdrm 2ba. Only peta.1725/mo.964-2283 HorborVlewHCMMS owner financed 6'>1103 Co•do111l•l111M/Tow1t• '650/mo. Super exec 2 story HEIGHTS CONDO --------•I houH for .. 1700 Waterfront Homes, Inc. 2br, lYJba, Condo. adults. 4bdrm. fam rm. on park, Quiel Npt Hgls /Cllf· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtors 631-HOO w /frplc, $500 + util. vu, aardener incl. S\200 fbaven rondo w/pool at VILLAl.A.UOA DESPBATEI 918-ssn.~work 494-2023. garage. Great aasuma-Outstanding V iew! New po r l 8 each ble llnancina. No quali· Corne r top roor unit. Versailles 2br , 2ba , MEAallACH f I G I Lease opt.loo. SS.000 op-pall f le 1 · Apts available now. Y n i . reg Ast e tion money, $850 mo . H o. rp . poo . Jac, 759-1221. Xlnt terms.& .... 760-8617 arbor & Ocean View, By week ormooth. .,.,. qui ck sale. By Owner 1 ___ A_g;::.en_t.;..' 67_S-&_17_o _ ___. $13 2,000 firm . IUDS O« BLUFFS Plua condo. 4 3 Bdrm, 2.,..,. bath. 1700 br. 2"'1 ba. No pets. S82S sq. rt. Triplex Formerly mo. 760-1573 owner's unit. Ideally•--------• located for children $650'" mo . Immediate oc · VILLA BALBOA 2 bdrm (2l3)82J-7949 cupancy. 963-8182. 1 1~ ba, ocean view, avail Low down, low pay· D_,.sta/ •••••••••••,••••••• .. ••• --'-----''-------• on short term S8SO/mo. ment s. Clean 4 Bdrm a .. ih S• .Pa • I 11 3207 l"IH 3244 LIDO ISLE 2 bdrm 2 ba LIDOISU *LIDO ISLE* family home. ready to ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••.•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LU X U RY C 0 N DO Lovely 2Br. 3Ba home. move into today. Great i..1•A.l1HISA.i..1o tep• to beach, cute Woodbrid&eNice4Br 3ba S8SO/mo. Beautifully remodeled creative terms. Call "-~ lbdrm, util paid. Year-· super family home. HVH custom 3 bdrm. 5 2yrs ago. MM.000 with 673-3002, agent. lalbo4' ,_, Dllpln ))'. 210 '4th St. $530. $850/mo. ba with pool. Prof dee xlnt Cinancin". Open Seconda to the water. 673-7~ all -Avail WaterfrontHomes, Inc. c 1 /b HouH : Sat. S~. 1·5. 119 S-c~~ 1071 Excellent 3 BR owner 's May lat. _.u. RealtoH 631·1400 omp ete ocean ay ...,.. • ...--"home·like'' unit & 2 view· $2500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR. 2 ba, rental unit. ~· clll Mer 3222 WOODBRJDGE 3 Br. l 'I• LI DO ISLE 2 bdrm· l "• ___ ___;:;____;_:_.:..:...,~ l Ml ... FrMlriilo Ideal for home fl in· •••••••••••••••••••••• Ba. Condo. $575 /mo. l1a home. $2000/mo. WrntOCIAMVllW come.CklsetoNewport Br,pool,beac:h,viewof Wrk (714)833-6029 yrly. • __ ..._, *-L....-pier and shope. $289,950. ocean. Oameo Shores. R a m a . H o m e ~~-W .... yM.T-a-Ce: SUOO /mo . Koop . (213)496-«lllO Waterfront Homes.lnc. ~ ...,... 631129' Act Realtor$ 631-1400 Over 1,000 sq.fl. of ........ '44-4910 . · · 3br,2~balnWoodbrldge.~~~~~~~~ ele1ance. t:xcl1Mlve new ..... "'•l'tr 2000 Incl all ame.n.itles. 2car 1 · hoine•i rrom $5U1~· ...... ••••••••••••••••• SPY-..SS a a r ' fncd bk Y rd . Buffs. s br, 2~ ba. very H~~ inandal avau. .._, LIV u a_ 'Br 3 ba tn Spyitua Rm $850/mo Mt-8W1 pvt en<l unit, upcraded, CbarterRlty61nv•t. ~ r -· •itb en~ view. Pvt · · leaaetl000.159-0415 498-IUI 831•8111 Near new 4·Plu, 2 cr&yrd , 2 frplc•. ---------....:..;:.;;.1 bdrm1 2 bell\ each wtlt SlfSO/mo. • •bdrm, 2tla, auu.m• wltb 11~. encloMd _ aprol. 181,000 at 11'4~. p1Uo, do~bte 1ara1e. F r p I c • d I I . •111,000. 8Ul Grundr. hwas ber ,eprlnklera, ... NU __ •:..f7.-M..;...W;_,.;_. ---- cluo. flS9,tOO. Bkr t••--llliliilll-1111•1 (71' )US.1Q2JO. Newport Terrate 2br, 2ba, built-Ins, park set ling. S650 mo. 646·4139 or 642 1272 Harbor R1dl.(e CONDO 3br, 3ba. den. v1ev.. poot 1 tenn1!> s pa s ec Sl700 759-8903. 644 6424 Watch the !>urf ftom th1i; beaut 1 Br condo S800 mo Isl. last + sec 772 3053 TownhOMM Unfurnfslwd 3525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br, 21'2ba. Cam rm. IRe master bdrm w1deck, 2 patios. formal dining area w/wel bar, spiral s tairs. frplc , gar , Newport Hgts area avail 5 11. $800/mo 548-3365 .. ,....... .. FwWsMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• lal>oalsa..d i706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Charming & private. tBr, lBa High qlty Lndry S5 75 /mo . Yr l y 1714 )675-9984 eves (213 )45().1051 ---lalboa Pu•tMlla 3101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SPACIOUS• Professional decor. 2br, 2ba, spjral stairs, frplc, sky lights. patio, spa , 2 car gar. 1 blk to bch. util Incl. $800/mo. until 6/15. Al so downstairs Bachelor. patio. spa. utll incl. $400/mo until 6/15. 00-6406 aft 6pm. 3724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASADEOIO ALL UTIUTI&S PAID Compare before you rent. Custom design features : Pool. BBQ. surrounded with plush landscaping. Adult liv· ing at its best. No~-Bach rumt.shed $370 36.S W. Wilson, 642-1971 S32.5 Mo. Deluxe Mobile Home. 'Mature adults, no Pf!U. Quiet, secure. 1991 Newport Blvd. 646-3313 H_...,.._.._..3740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $375/up 1·2 bdrm p0o\, jac, adlt, l8Sllli2 i'lond•, ll.B. IU·a:MorM2-3112 H.I 'tFIMIST Spant.lb D~t. LMn1I Beautiful park-Uk~ 1ur· rouodtn11. Terraced pool. Sunken IM bbq, 1puklla1 founulna. Spaclou1 roonu. ~parate dtn.ln1 are•. Walk ·ln clo1et1, homelik• kltchH ti. cabl~. WeMt to Jlunt· 1n.1ton center. l Bedroom-f\lrft. ..- 2 Bedroom·f'Wll. '810 Ad\ilb, ~'P*· utlUU.J'i'Ml • rantHtltally furnl1bed te>WObOUN, wtt.b oceH view. Tunll court, pool. St'lS/mo. •9117 YIA"·"OUND flJN· Social Achv1t1es D• •eC1"• •Free Sunday Brunch • BBQ s •Par t11s •Plus much more GREAT AE~EATION· Tennis • Free Lessons (pro & pro shop)• 2 Health Clubs• Sauna•• Hydromassage • Sw.m ming . 011v1ng Range BEAUTIFUL APART· MEHTS· Singles 1 & 2 Beo•ooms • Fur n1sheo & Untum1Shl'd • Adull Livong •No Peh • Mooeis Qppn daily 9 lo 6 Oakwood Garden Apartment• Newport a .. ch/So. 1100 16th St 1 OovP• Ji •&ti> 17141 142·5113 Newport Beach/Ho 880 1rv1ne 1 BR. kOiS 161 E. 1*.h. M2·~ PAii lllNIT COUMftTCWI LMMe Sln1lea, 1112 ~room apta, 11 townboullet. From "510 6'4-1900 Ocea"front for Winter 3BR, 2 Ba Ssso Rentals. Pumlabed • unfuro. Broker. 875-'912. SEAWI MOTtt •Weekly rettt•I• n9w avail. •t88andup. •Color TV. •Phones ln room11. 2 BR, 2 Ba 151E.21.at.~~ 2274 Newpe>rt Blvd. C.M. NO FEE! Apt. & Condo Ms.7'46 Bachelor $380 rentals. Villa Rentals. lBR. $410 675..0UBroker LlVE IN NEWPORT 2250VanauardWay BEACH FOR SlOO PER 540-96218or543-2408 OCIANFRONT WEEK.645-0MO ABA requires 3 Furn. 3' Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 ........ 4200 1617 WestcWf NB Want ................... 4500 rnanaHrs. SS0.7S,OOO/yr E . side lrg 2bdrm in lri· car 1ara1e with ofltce. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rtnancial uat.' 70ooa.f. ••••••••••••••••••••••• potenUal. Co. car upon plex, patio, lndry rm. :~be! ~ 14?'erN inocl~ Furn. 2bdrm Mesa condo. lat. fioor. A&entM1·5032. '575. Approx. 2000' In· quaUfyiq.543--0802 1_ad_u_lt.s_. Ul5 __ .67_3-_3600_. __ 1 Wkly/Mnthly avail. 6/27 thru 8/22. due ' l /OUlce. 18101 lo&.o. 5025 Child Welcome. E·side TSL MGMT. · 642.1603 1525/mo. Call Answer ICOLLCEHTB Redondo Cr "Q" Hunt 2br. taun, pool. $450 Wtr, 1---------1 Ad 1446, 24hrs, 642-4300. HEWPOa'T Bch. 842-2834 &as pd 145 E. 18th. E. Bluffs Condo, 4 Br, ac:atto....... 4250 Elegant executive suites 645-2708 3Ba. sundk. pool, $875 •••••••••••••••••••••• in prestige location --------1 mo . 645·3474 , (2 13 ) With complete support Meaa""" Aph. S4l-4460 teps to bch. lbr, home, services. Jbr Jba $ / sleeps 4, rent wkly 7141851.0681 MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK ' 535 MO. Quiet 2 Br. garage, pool 673·1633 W, gar. cathedral ceil. -------1 ..,_ frplc, dshwhr, balcony. Adults, no pets. 1601 "'D" •NWPT OCEANFRONT H.-,,., rORT CEHTBl •••••••••••••••••••••• Adults only, no pets. 15th. St. Newport & Lado Isle bayfront. FullServiceSwtes 7 11 W .17th.St. 5...._..Mh).Co. 5035 549·2«7 Heights.S4.S0.642·7340 W/s ml boats Wkly . SCUTCOSTSS CostaMna.Calf. All types o! real estate EASTSIDE. clean 2 BR. Clirr Haven, 1804 Clay, 2 ~3·S_U_R_F______ All ~oin:r:::!one 642-4463 investments since 1949. en<.'I gar. S42S mo + BR 1 Ba, fplc, 00 pets. entat1 to SW. 4300 64().5470 1·1870 sq. fl. Unit avail. Speddh:McJ ill security 251 16th Place. SSOOmo. 675-0349 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1----------I for immed occupancy. 2RdTDs Apt. B, no pets Call Beaut. 3 br, 2 ba, frplc. 1 Moving? ~void deposits, •DELUXE OfftCES • 1·2900 sq. rt. & 1-3700 sq. 642-2171 545-0611 979·3848 blk beach. S67S. Adults. & C'ul living expe~ses . 1 room. from 1235/mo rt. unit(s) avail April . Sharp 2 BR l Ba in 4-plex, 679 Center St. No. 7 S400. no pets. Savage Wilde & pl97rol fess1onally sin ce No lease required. 2172 1 s I . 2 S l o r a g e W1NdDowThDas. money ~or DuPont Dr . Adj . Warehouses avail. for 2 . . s any s1z_e Co. 675-6606 HOUSEMATES Airport er Hot e 1. immed. occupancy, 2000 above 110,000. No cr~tt 963·6551 ---Stps to bch, West N.B 832-4134 833·3223. 9-12 & 2800 sq. ft. •33<·34• sq. {. no pnlty. For action 2bdrm . gar with CdM Deluxe Suites. AC, rt. •Leasing offi(•e hrs. ca ll AGT 673·7311 2 Br I Ba. frplc , dshwashr, crpts. drps. gar $460. C.M. 821·1890. operator, frplc, beam •Sh.-.d U•incJ* ampl pkg, ulil pd. 2855 M1,. o2n thru Fri 8·4. Sal. _a_n...:..y_ti_m_e _____ _ c e i Ii n g . S625 Yr I Y Counselors Lo personally E. Cst Hwy. 675-6900 .,. L---1 n~ 642·3493. select your compatible Mac • ..,... nan MtCJ. I Br with loft. ref. stove. --- p o o I 283 Avo C'a do WESTCLIFF 2 Br. 112 ba Hayloft Apts C.M $440 townhouse. Adults only, 821 -1890. no pets $550/mo. 1728 ---Bedford Lane 548-7533 r with ref. stove. gar ------ S 325 240 Avocado VILLA BALBOA rmm te to s uit .your 17thSTREET 8700 sq rt offi c e + SINCE1981 lifestyle Shared·Living. Costa Mesa. 3 rm swte, warehouse, Irvine In· lst&2nd TI>s, SSOK·SlM + 8330overDrSwte31NB I A/C. Plenty of parking duslraal Call646-1~4or Owner/Non Owner 631-1801 , 545 sq. rt. S400per mo. inquire Ma.ros1 Co. 16753 SFRs&Condos I Realonomics 675-6700 Noyes. 957 ~ Bk rs. Com merciaJ & Industrial Coop 1nv1ted PETER DOBBS MEW PORT IEACH -640-6016 673-9043 1 or 2 omces w/recep & PACIFIC s torage. Prime loc BLUFF \-.--------·I Ha y loft Apts C M Adult Only Want investor for Npt bayrronl home. Give well secured 1.st or 2nd T D Agl. 675-6161 --1:821·1890 lBr lBa Oceanfront 2br. lba, gar, - -28r 2Ba frplc, wkly wihl June I H E GABLES 2Br FromS600fmo I 3 0 0 7 5 1 6 I 4 7 , w gar AdlU., new cpls, JRL PROPERTIES (213 )331·5417 d rps. bltns. fncd yd, 645·4566 645-6459 water pd 636-4120 ---Oceanfront On sand. ran 2439 ··G .. Orange S465 Dnve by 509 Femlear. 4 tast1c view. 3br . 2ba, -Bd, 2•, Ba. nu bldg, 4 car new avail now thru June S33S 1 BR, gar. upstairs, gar. $1350/mo. Avail. 15-orpart.AGT675·4912 E Side Nopets.\'acant 511. Ask for Darrell Peninsula, steps to sand 2 br rurn. Lge patio. $400/mo or $150 wkly to June 20. Summer wkly, $4()().$4 50. 67 3-424 3 Sublet Oakwood, lge lbr, pool. jac, tennjs courts, health club S480mo incl uttl. Sec. ref 646-6787 . ,.,.,. ..... U11fwllbhed ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3802 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AnMTSFOltHHT H.B .• N.8.,Costa Mesa Sometblng fOf" Everyone Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. Aplt. Certain locations o ffer · Pool , spa. fireplace, laun room. beamed cell1ngs , garages. all built ms Garden & Townhouse design. TSL MG MT 642· 1603 lalboa , ....... a 3807 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S350 Util pd. lBR Duplex. 417 E. Bay Ave Balboa No pets. 547· 1155 Isl + last + SlOO 2 BR. Pash. 631-1266 S395 541 ·5331. 646-2325 2br, 112ba, 610 Joanne St. C M no children, small dog consider ed. S42S R~M~ R EAi.TORS 642·7344 _____ , ., 2br condo. nr 5 C 1 blk lo oce~/bay, year Pl SA "'r"" ts I ly, S7SO/momcl. ut1I, bll aza, ...,.,.,, nope · 3 Bd A I 5 l 549·3232 ins. · vai -----835.2844 Lge l br. nr beach, bit· 1 Br Versailles pe;: ms. gas & water pd. S385 thouse. $525/mo. lease + sec 642-4014 ___ or lease option 968-5133 2 br twnhse. 1•2 ba.1_A_M_. ______ _ carport. no pets. kOO Jbr, 2,,.,ba, ideal ror 3 mo. 559-7222 (!Mi only) singles. 2 frplcs. atrium 3 br dplx. Nwpl Hgts, w/waterfall, dbl gar. 283 $500/mo, lsl & last Knox St. $850 / m o + dep. 557·9186 675· 1458 for appt Dcao roW 3126 2bdrm. 11,ba. adult!>. no ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets, $39~2682 I or 2 br. balcony, D.W . - clean, coin laundry & Ocean View. spa<'. lux ws hr. gar, nr ocean uriou s 2 BR 2 Ba 661·0252 ___ V e r s a i I I es A I I Bachelor w/refr. S200 amenities. 1750 557-1997 2 br with view. $450 493-0467 Steps lo bch 2 BR I Ba. fplc. dbl gar. patio. S630 Bachelor apt, all ut1ls pd, mo. yrly. 968-82S3 Oldest & largest agenc) m So Cahr smce 1971 Credits ABC.NBC.CBS, Cosmo. Phil Donahue • 120((. to all who need a place. Newport Beach. 641·1899 Garden Grove, 895-3482 Rmmte wanted to shr lge condo nr S C Plaza Sauna . pool. Jacuzzi. Private bath Available May 1st $250 + ex· penses Call 557 3527 or 759·0060 Mormon t.o shr rum1shed Newpl res Pr1v ba, gar. + ext ra s Jerem y 645·3994 Furn. or unfum 752·6550 Luxury 1200 s q rt Laguna Beach ocean view Sl,000/mo tlease 494-0066 INDUSTRIAL PARK I U S Whittler An . 525· Office. Crpt, paneled Costa Mno, C a. walls, gas & wtr furn •Two-1600 sq (t units Ground nr. Prkg. 2052 avail for occupancy Newport Blvd, C.M. Dbl May lsl. •31< per sq rt unit < 1050 sq. fl.) store or •Ca II 642· 7604 or 642·4463 ofc. 556·418lor644·2228 M·S 8·4, Sal 10.2. FULL SERVICE SUITE . Storaq• 455 0 ORANGE COAST ••••••••••••••••••••••• FINANCIAL CENTER Storage Warehouses in 2845 Mesa Verde Dr E. Costa Mesa avail. for 116, Costa Mesa. Share 1mmed occupancy. 2000 350 sq ft omce with & 2800 sq fl 3Jr per sq. anolher Realtor or comp h Call 642·«63 Mon other small busmess. thru Fri 8-4 Sat 10-2. W..t 2 1-22°/o Yiekt7 On your T.D.'s Notes $SR aisers· In veslorsSS Call Dennison Assoc. 673-7314 Purchase of 2ND 1'.D. 's arranged. For details call 960· 1957 Broker 350/oSOUD 3 YR. YtEU> Terms . 250,0003 yr19'7c TD behind $88,000 5 yr. 8'k 1st TD on 2.45 acre avocado parcel adjoin- ing developme nt . $550,000 ~w appraisal. Approx 6000sq ft an Strong buyer w/1212,000 S250 per mo. + security. includes uttls. & phone answering Ot her RoommaLe to shr Lag services avail 957--0701 Nlsuel apt. 2 Br 2 ba. g.5 daily. Fountain Valley nr San e quity . 1st 1190,000 Diego Fwy 11.320/mo Takes ll. C714) 751-4828 . Call John 556·9360 or 1_7J6._306_9_0f"_493-__ u_S3. __ 1245 + \.'1 util. M/F . , ___ .;__ ____ _ 24/32 Blk to bch Pool & Jac Refs req Call Lou15 661 ·3984 Fem t o s hr wts ame. House on Balboa Is l S275 675 6998 eves & wknds NEAR AIRPORT Pror. F shr 2br. 2ba lux twnhse, C M. area 675·3638, 557·5484 f'e m non /s mkr s hr wls ame. nice 2Br 18a dplx an CM. gar S1501mo 646·8662 543-7533 100,000 note at ~ re- l...tah W..ted 4600 tUJ'll. CaU brobr. Mark ••••••••••••••••••••••• Conley, 963-3377 LG CLEAN·lBr. bch, adll$, no pets, '395 mo yrly 673-0072, 673-5706 3 blks from PCH . •OCEAHROHT• _S_JOO_l_m_o_. _83_1_· 1_87_3 __ --i Fr pie. panelled, patio. lbr, SS75/mo. 642·0045 NB lux twnhse. pool. H-""CJfoft leodl 314 eves mature M IF', $215 mo. Capl1h'.o hacJI 3111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br. 2Ba. bllns, frplc, ocn view, 1500 mo. 832-6520 dys. 661-1730evs ---31 2 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious 1 Br w/garage, laundry fac11. $575. Ask for Faye. 640-9900 2 Br, 2 Ba duplex w/sun· deck . 411 Poinsett a . $700/mo lyr lse. 675-0124 Jackie CosftlMf'ICI 3124 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,«o AOUL T ...lf6.. LIVING • I ,, l 811 P.i-o Aols • Oos•••s~r, & 880 s • Poo1 & Rtl Room • G••Ct~ l•~Ou~o·nq • Jo9 10 Bu en & Snoos • St t I G I SEA ENVI RONMENT % l} HAMIL TON 11 8 %] 4SOO E . Blurrs Condo. 4Br, 3Ba. s undk, pool $850 m o 64 5 3474 (213 )541·4460 640--4305 LOST : Bak Ir wh1tt male _______ __...... 1'errltr, Ill' owe. -.... AMIMALHOIPITAL' watdD4 -.-.. Perm FIT poaJUoo f.d.. Found: Fem. mixed Ter· cJud hll Saturday•. l h S C!lunln1. bath in~. r er, yn1. w t, pr· t•n•r al a11l1taoee, in1tteld, CM. MM7"8 mlnlmuco .,. 11 Y'1· Lo 1 l : Ma I e Golden _l_rv_l_n_e_w_.u_u ___ _ Retriever. ··au.ty''. No ~oUar. Vic Colt.a Met• area. N&-2&U. Found: white kitten, ap- prox. 4 mos old, Harbor View hi HW.. 144..-et Found: Balboa ocun- f r on t , blk framed eyeglaues. Wltdy1 752·1665 Fnd: Sm llbt-tan M do1. Mixed. W/cboke collar. Magnolia & Garfield, He. 4/19BU3834 ans FOUND: Male Show Qual ity Sealpo1nt Siamese vie . West m uuter. 898-5991 A/~COUICTIOM Dlvltloa cl ~ corp. hu Immediate O'Pftinl for a quaUOed lodf vidql t o auilt aecountlnJ manager lo tb• •cf· mlo11traUoo ol a/r fuoe. tlon. Requlru ex · perience In related ac· countlnl function• lncludlnl computerized a ir 1y1tem.t. Previous credit In collection fi/aT aupervltory experience deaireable. Company located cloee to Gardeb Grove Frwy orr of Knott'~ Ave. for further information contact Cathy at (213 )63S-1SS3 between 9AM·UAM. Lost 2 Male Sable/wht Aaaemblen/Electronics Collies HB area . lmtned. opening for 968.3927 aft 12pm final assembly position. Exp with air rtt"'IOllab 535 screwdriver desirable. •••••••••••••••••••••• Small friendly Co. nr FIRST LADY Escort. Models rarty o.c.n. * 972-1345 * MC & VISA Accepted COVER GIRL • OUTCAU • ocean. 645-3632 ask for Wes. ASSS.LIAS ELECTRONIC MeC'hanical assembly. Immediate openings. Work near the beach. Good benefits. 645-3632 for appt. 953·0'778 MC/VISA Assemblers *FOXY LADY * OUTCALL ONLY VISA MC • 972-11 31 • •• SPIRTTIJAL READINGS lOam ·lOpm Fully Llc'd 492.72911 or 492.9034 1815 S Camino Real.' San .( ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Previous experience with cabling, harness· mg. soldering and work· mg with small sub as· Clem -sembhes ATLAHTIS MASSAGESrA Be pampered by 16 Beaut. Girls. Open 10AM ·4AM 7 da ys . Phone 645-3433 THE GirHriends •ESCORTS• HOtH/Offiu/Hohl * 759-1216 * * 529-1113. 24111"1. Now Hirln• MC VISA We oUer a stable work environment with an ex· cellent salary package. including company paid Medical, We & Dental Insurances Pension Plan, Savings Plan with high interest rate, 11 paid holidays per year and 1 week paid vaca· lion after 6 months. This position must be filled immediately. Apply in penJon or call : 7 I 4-546-7781 mDS TIUVUC. INC .-.....o. •• -~ 3180 Redhill Ave. (S.D. Fwy Ii Paularioo> Costa Mesa. Ca 921626 Equal Opp Empty M/F AUTOMOTIVE Dealer Trader lnven· Lory Control Desk. Auto experience necessary. Top salary. Call Cindy Springer . Cormier·DeLillo Chevrolet 18211 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach 847·6087 549-JJ:Jl Bab ys itter , lite housekeeping. perm•· nent. wkdays, 7:30am· 6pm Newport Beach. Mr. Hood: ~141. Babys itter, mature person for 2 sons. ages 10 & 11 , 8·6 daily, June l· Aug. 15, my home or yours, Balboa Pen. area. 673-6285, MS-4991. Banking If you are a mature in· dlvidual seeking • fwl time Teller position, Irvine Savings It in· terested ln you. Pleu~t workin1 conditions, &ood salary Ii benefit package. Experience pr eferred. Apply in peuon bet ween the hours o f lOAM to 1.2N00n. at: ; IRVINE S6L ~l'f: 11552 MacArthur Bl~ trvtne, ca. mu 752-2800 EOE : .. .IF Banll:tni PJTT"IMS xintop~rw.s ln atva cti•• PC*i. tloot avail lmmed, to Anahei m • ColU M• olnc.. CaU KMMI~ at. 714·1 .. 1. OrHa• Cout.ML. &0.£. ...... , I . .. .. .. .• -: •! .. HelpW-.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• elpW...t.d 7100 H•fpW..e.d 7100 Wmllhd 7100 HelpWtllhcl 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• elp W Clllhd 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 71 O H•lp W anhcl 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• eanking BANKING Banking Ta&.a IOOKKEIPER F/C Fashion Island Invest- ment firm. Excell. op· portunity. Exper. & CASHIER 1 ................... , .................. - HOUSEWARESALES Apply in person: Crown Hardware, 1024 Irvine, (Westcliff Plua} NB Cleric al CLERK Oehvery men over 18 for 7-Eleven, all shifts. gd . L.A. Times to homes in pay. F IT or PIT Will C M 3 am · 6 am . train, 1920 Balboa, NB. economy car required. 673·6910 no collecting $4001450 RE.Al £STAT£ TELJ.ER Experience required IAICL.A YS IAHK LOAN CLOSER Contact Cathy Antunez maturity req'd Call : ,._ _______ _ 714-64()..0123 ,. CHILD Monitor. ~1 per mo. Must have 3 mos ex per Provide complete care or 3Yi yr. old boy. Prepare meals, keep clothes & room clean. bathe him. supervise & monitor behavior & manner of child. occupy him with games & superv1se his play Free room & board Take ad to nearest State Employ- ment Service Ofc in Orange County. DOT 301. 677·010. Ad paad for by employer. JOIN COi! -----mo + bonus 646-0637 or CLERK/TYPIST 646-5844 A• o•btmdlltCJ op-631-1511 AAhcmce yow ~ ,_._lty exists for• E.O. E. M/F/V /H 1--------- ..ct CJrow wfttt yos l•dl•ldHI with six ----------1 IOOICKEEPH skills •t Sec.,lty ...,....., pr•.W.. Teler i-----------1 FULL CHARGE Pacific ... ! We .,.. eaperleace. As a Bankin1 Outstanding opportunity o • • o f S o • leodff la tM ttn.clal LOAM SECRETARY for experienced con· Cellforwl•'s fastest ,,.0 .... 1ty. 1--'el Local Newport Beach struction development, ... ...,..... • a. •-h l real estate hill charge CJr'OWllHJ fill•'cial liit-ICMk c• offW ex.-savin1s • iuan as m-bookkeeper, for rapidly stft.tes CMd we c.... cellHt ._.__._ •d med. opening for a Loan ex Pan ding mu It I . __.... Secretary. Real estate r-"Y M.e a,111a91 beweftts.. .............. loan exper. preferred. corporate NB firm . ...__ L.. .... r-p .. ..io~ ( ""°' .-.C Li I b t t y pin 1 r e q . ~ JCMI wt ._.. "' tod9y lft Olllr bewllM ac .. a .... a or "~-· Congenial environment. htate C...,. a. $..ta ffl Salary commensurate , . Cott• Mff• o ce. with exper Full in· benefits. profit sharing, AAa. Ce•tact SHIRLEY surance benefits & paid major medical & op· Yo• sh04lkl "••• • GILIERT to arr-career apparel. Please portunity for advance· ~ call ment. Send resume incl ........ of OM ,._. • W9"Ww appoa.t.. Salary Hist & dates to .. .._.a L. L.-&. ---a Ms Denny Parisia • ..,..... .. --.."'a-· """"· 714~ Pat Parkinson VP. Quail MYillg• ..cl locm Of' O P lace Company 1400 MOrigop c-,•y • IMPERIAL HEWPottTIALI A Quail St Suite t~. NB -kOCJIRcJ real "tate SA VlttGS Ir LOAH 9 2 6 6 o o r c a I I r--BANK E.O.E. (714)752-1920 ..... We offw •He.._. 695 TowaC....,.Dr. .......... ,_:kep 9d Coda Me-. ntl•rlH wt.let. ore CA 9262' co••H111rote wltll 714-641·2ZOO _i w &t.262 Y_. e.,..,..u. • Equal Opp Employer looklt""'9g Clet'tl l•--------1 Full time. exper. helpful Banking but not nee Many com- N 1-Rts pany benefits. Apply at IW NNVU 1660 Placentia Ave .. Full Time Costa Mesa CASHIERS UTDTEM MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shirts We promote to manage· ment" supervision from within. WANT ,\CAREER? Cost.a Mesa 111 Del Mar 63J.!M21 Laguna Beach 494.9233 Huntingt.oo Beach 962-9116 One of the Nations Oldest & largest tem- porary employers 1s looking for office personnel 1n the following areas: •TYPIST •f'lLE CLERK •KEY PUNCH •CRT •REPROTVPlST •BOOKKEEPER ·c·l-en·c·.·1-----·1 • s w I Tc H B 0 A R D OPER PIX ~st •SECRETARIES Laguna Beac"h mfg co Receive xlnt benefits. needs sharp person for work short or long term our front ofc. to operate Get high rates at some of switchboard. open & the finest companies in route mail Ir assist with the Orange County area. P e r s o n n e I D e p t . MO fHS workload. Type SOwpm . I Challenging position in min Previous clerical CALL OR COME IH progressive N.B. Dental exper desired. " day COi Office awaits en · work wk. We offer gd. · thus1aslic, exp'd Front pay & benefits. Call for 3303 HartMw ll•d. OfClce Manager. Good appt . .J'elonic Berkeley, Ste D·2. Costa Mesa starling salary. Call •7~1~4·~4~94~·940~~l.~E~.O~.E~-~~ 55~ on22 644-9211 Ask for Belly = IMIV 4SW PM . small co. very -. -good benefilS. call Anne Dehvery Driver. gd dnv· 642-9363 ing record. vahd Calif. -----dnvers I.le FT Must COM PANJON mature for know Orange Co Costa senior c1tuen. CdM Lt M e s a BI u e pr 1 n t . duties. refs req Car pre· S48-S57t ferred 73Hl84 -----!-=' Companion to hve-m with elderly woman . housework Must have car. 548-3366 -----COMPANION, female, hve m 2 days/wk. Sat & Sun preferred, care for 71 yr old lady on walker Own car. 833-0379. COMPUTY f' A YIOU. CLERK Will train . Bkpg . knowledge helpful. Ref's. nee. Hrs. 9-S. Call : 642-HSS btwn 9AM·10PM DBJYSlY Dependable person, part time, Tues & Thurs for planning firm in Jrvine. Contact· Bev, 641-8820 --------- OEMT AL ASST RDA Front & back office. Work hours & days you want. S6 to S7 per hour Varaet{. Call between 9 & 6. I no answer leave msg. 6-45-5742 Dental Assist.ant. exp. lo compliment our Pedo of· rice Full or P I T 548·558-0. are "Loo II I a 9~~~~~~~~ ~ ....... to ... e .... ,_ _______ _ Tellers Bookkeeper FIC People who need people Equal Oppty Employer Ed.ctded Pavc.IMtdl! Trade your old stuff for should always check the ~~~~M~I F~~~~I CO MPUTER Systems Dental Assistant. full or Engineer. ~.000 a year. p /T. needed immed in M us t b ave Ms E E Costa Mesa ofCice. Exp DegreeplusSyrs.Elec· & X-Ray la c . req . lrical Engineering ex-63!;1420. Y• '° pleOM Bankinc ell for • lahnlew Full Tame&Sat Only Positions available in our new Laguna Niguel ofCice. Exper. preferred. Please call: lOO% Free. '#onderful new good lea with a Service Dlrtt~ry In the = co. desperately needs Cluaifiedad.642-5678 DAJLYPILOT .. -------• per. Determine com-Dettt9Asslst.t •ppol•t•eat 17 I 4 J 719-4224. TfilER Full Time your talents to charm ................................... .. their adult students & 11 • a ® No experience nee. Will train. Position avail. ln our South Coast Plaza ofrlce.CaU: Kathy Amburgey ~ CAUFOINIA Don Fylpaa 714-77()..6441 CAUFOINIA .FEDERAL create a bkkp. system for them. Plush olc. plus nice boss plus room to grow! Call: Kay Baun, 540-5001, Snelling " Snelling of Newport Beach Aaency, 4340 Campus Dr .• EOE SECURITY PACIFIC BANK Equal Opportunity Employer S••..._ Ir &..o. ~~~~~~~~!!Boy to do packaging. T ....,.,._ o Room for advancement. FEDEIAL 695 own ~ter r. Bar Help, Full & P /T, top S. Santa Ana, S40-58SO Costa Mesa, Ca 921628 $$ Cor sharp. Port 17, 1---------f.n Equal Opportunity Equal Opportunity C.M. 646-31166. Businessman seeks p/t Employer Employer ~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~BAR PERSON f 11 •. associate in wholesale = = u • aupply. '154-1742 part-time dys, college•--------- And it isn't at UCB. We offer positions with advancement just a few short steps away. For aample, we rurrentiy Nive an openina for a consumer credlt officer. Someone who knows all upects of direct consumer loan . Buie cndit analysie. C.oDection experience. Some accountin.a akille. And a ~eral knowledge of lftnch operations. If JOU qualify, call UL You11 fiDd out succes a feW itiOrt ltepe away. OK. C.M.646-5544 BUS PERS 0 N • W AITR ~ES for coffee IAITIHDSl shop. Apply to Betty, Apply In person El San Clemente Inn, iu C a m i n o 2 0 1 1 l Avenlda Eaplandian ,_B_roo_k_h_llnl_t_H_.B_. _. __ 1 San Clemente. Bookkeeper Auist. •CAIDIJVIRS• Perm . P/T. Mon-Fri. Checker-Cab Exp req. Llte typing. 7'10-0222 l~key. Pleasant work· --------- int cond lo N.B. ad CAIWASH a 1ency. Non-s moke r Cashie r want e d . pre/. ~. Ca1blet1 wanted. Full or BOOKKEEP E R rull :~n~':1;~~~=:· charce ror hon• ranch c 01 t 1 M u a . c .a al operation. Computer ex· u• '*· pe r d ulred. Sala r y --------- open. Nwpt Bch Joe. Car Wu h ~lp, full or R u p o nd t o : l2U) P IT. apply ln penon, 871-1311 Mef.ro Car Wuh, 29$0 •---------• Harbor Blvd. C.M. ••• .....-.cw AIP kllo•fedi• w5w· a to • 4111 per ~Ill. . 9·5. •APb at : 1f 0 Placeat'J Ave., Cott• 11... '----...,--~--- .. Mewpori le•c• L.-to . ..... ....... CAREER OPPORTUNITY puter requirements for Chair aide in N.B. Endo. CLERICAL expansion program. office. 2~ day/week. JOIN THE Design hardware & Must be exp'd. able & software system for gas enthusiastic Top pay #I TEAM AT dispensers. Develop 631·3380 computer-based techni· ------OSH MAN'S ques for auto service & DENTALAS.51STANT SPORTl~G repair. Dlrect invention Reg. chairsidedental f"'lll ~roject for measurina _a_s_s'_t ._54_S·_94_7_S ___ _ GOODS now from oil wells. Take DEMT AL ASST Immediate full time and ad to neatest State Employment Service, Ch&irslde. Friday & part lime openings exist Ou nge County. DOT s o m e Sat u rd a y s at our divisional offices. Newport ge-ral prac 003. 16'1-062. Ad paid for ..... · The seJected individuals t" SlO per hour ..... by employer. ice. ,... for these entry level bonus. Ask for Judy. positions will be detail ---------1 760-9'357 · minded and have some --------- cler ica I experience. COOK DEHTAL/......_. Hours are flexible. Dinner Coot, S nitea a No ex pr. nee. Cost• week, exp a must. Apply Mesa area.~ In person, no phone ----------. calls. Jolly Roger --------.. Please apply in person to: OSHMAN'S Restaurant, 400 S. Coast Hwy, L.B. SPORTING GOODS COUHTBHIU' 3300 S. Fairview St. M o n . · F r l . S u p e r SANTA ~A Sandwich, C.O.ta MtsJl, 714-$57-9811 EOE MIF _5'5_·-'887 __ . _____ 1 Clerk al HHlrTISU The Job ot )'OW' -choke. AH 1kll1* needed. Top a -Neverafte! COUHTBHU Brlabt, energetic person needed ror busy dell 4t ham •hop. Possibility ror advancetMnt for the rl1 bt ~non. Contact Stan at~. D_...Q ...... IACIC OflftCI We are lookinl Cor • brlgbt. energetic In~ dlvldual . a self-1tart~t who enjoys wocklns ln a friendly atmosphere Cbait1fde exper l•nc• and x-ray licence ft.HD· Ual. RDA prefened but not neceasary, lf you 're sharp! t day/week .. Newport Center 1enera1 prac tice. Jnterested ! Call Ma,..it at 1eo.~ llon·Thus. NATIONAL Dl!'.SK CLERK·lor -·'· EDUCATION wU1 \rain, htl llexiblt. 4400 .. ., .... c c •• Dr. . ...... .... ,.,..-.c .. J .. llliHlllte Cl ...... 4)p- 910rt'lfti&f b available for EXPER1 £HCSD Lll•, Proparty &od CNUl lt)' Aleal lo aM Newport ead Coeta _....,..... _____ __,_ Meaa area. Dul Ueenae preferred but not neceuary. Lead• pto-vld.ed, aroup lnau.rance provided. Exc:eO.nt op. portunlly ror aa1res1tv• lnd.Mdual. For appo(ntJQent contaet: lOMALD AALS~ 2 I J.101·2300 Pfitllill c •• , •• , .... Adwt.t ~=tndlnl altracUYe ~ to 1pead 15 ln per .... eouo••llu 1outb ., .. lO·U. £onhu • w .. unda Avan.ab ... trs ---------' p • r w k . C a 1 l llC.noM'ST I 2:3N:ac>pm. Moo Uma Slc;UTAAY Ftt. M2·4al .-i. S4S. LalW\1 ad apnc1 nda. Mk for Leri. perRnabl• lndlvldual O;te...t for front ofc. Dtvtnlfled D ,.. dutlet, accurate typlnf. 330W. ay~t Salary + bmdlta: Cal : Costa JI.a, Ca. '714·UHU7 Equal Opport . Employer R.ceplionilt Part· Time HEY! Yml1£ STAI MATDIAL! CARL'S JR, hh both COUNTER PERSONNEL Dool&l 1bop. tarly AM shltt. oo es.-MC. App-. Equal ()pportuntty GW-MECHANIC for Mrv. ala· STUOIMTS tlon. E:itp. forei1n & HOt48~S Personable lndJvldual to 1reet our cuatomera, answer phone & procesa OW' bllllna. Growing Co. with xlnt bendita. Call 842· 1593 ult for John domeatic.Apply .1.251N. Earn extra money, Gu.a.•~ GllATWISTBM Coaal Hwy, Lat. Bch. workl.nc p/time in your Receptionist wanted PIT ly: Dipph.y Doouta. 1854 1~~E~m~plc>~y~et~M~/F~~I Newport Bl~. C.M. 1: All 1blfts a.re open. day1 and eveninas <muat be ----------1 18 for nights). DNINt'YW..,..._ Neecfs ~. hemmer, Experienced. Moo.· Thurs .. 7-5:lld. C.M. 6'2·1843. DllUGClBIC FuU time, Moo-Fri., 9-6. Professional pharmacy, uper. Call: Terry t;rant for interview, 6'2-l.580 EM•IMllR/TICH. _.,, SAVJ.-S MIUMI" .... own home, lntl'oductnc 8-12 noon Mon-Fri Lit~ Full • part time. AU ~-the New Dally Pilot to ' · arees. Unilonns fum'd. ArfltmatiyeActloo Full & p/Ume front ofc. Tbe OrangeCout Area! typlna. phones. Great A.ees 21 or over, retired Equal=unity 8u1y G.P. in F.V Peg Setyourowuboun! cau beneflt1. Call 641-0280 welcome. No exper. nee. Em yeT board le Ins. 979-9111 Weekdays between 4pm ask for Jarnle Apply : Universal ~~~~~~~~~M-.. 'cal, full Urn'" rront llepm.~l.527. REC..-..-...ST Protection Service. 1226 = """' "' l~~~~~~~~~I 1511"' 11 "'""' 1 w. 5th St .. Santa Ana. office poelUon. Mission I: Telephones, ll1ht typ. Interview hrs· ~12& 1·4, Insurance Viejo . Executive & PBX 0 PE RAT 0 R · ma. Call Robin7S2·6211 Mon-Frl. ACCOUMT llP. medical. secretarial ex· telephone ans serv, day FGS has openinas in per. includlng in.surance & relif graveyard shirt. Recept1on111t for growing Hang Gliders mfr needs Customer Service Dept. billing 495-1080 wtJI train. 547-3747 N e w Port Be a c h gnl laboren. to service automobile ln· Insurance A&ency . Must 547.1344 surance accta. Must MEDICAL Full or part· have xlnt secretarial/ have gd. oral & written time. f~ont office PBX telephone skll11 Top HEAD communications ullls. Tranacribmc exper. pre· SWITCHBOARD s a I a r y & be n e f 1 t GROUHDSICEEPH Exper. desirable. Start· fd.MS·IMOO. package. Call Put. Good pay, excellent Please apply in person Tues. ·Sat. 2·5PM TEMPOltAIY Electronic engineer/technician for debunlngltestlng of new Mil spec. circuit de· velopmt. Must be ex · per'd. in design of switch mode power supplies & analog clrculls. RF ex· per. desirable. 3 mos job with growing laser co. lndependentcontrac tor status (consultant) acceptable. Potential for permanent employ menl Call: 493·6624 Head groundskeeper ing salary comm. w/ex· MEDICALASST QP£RAJOR 675-6300 needed by Huntington per. & ability. Excell. For front & back office. __ R_E_C-..-.--~--15-,-23002 Lalle Forest Beach City School Dist. co. benefits & career ad· is;..- 1 "'" LCICJlftl Hill 12 mo. position. Exper. vancement potential. Laguna Beach.494-1181 United C allfornla Part/Full Receptionist. pref'd. $1.233 to Sl,533 For appt., call: Linda, uEDlc•• "'SST. 1 L ti L Typing, light bookkeep· EqualOppty dependin° on exper. Ap· 714·' .. 9-8181 '"' -A 0 •• c •rt'ett Y •GI ing & other c lerical " "" B k ffi 'd I i1Hp ailable for Employer M/F ~-~~14th St., H.B. ~~~~~~~~~l ua{ N~~~~:t"Pce:~e~ i:w1t~hboard ~~~~6s~asson & Assoc 1~~~~~~~~~ INTERIOR DESIGN 644-0970 HELPWAMTED! Sales, flex. hrs. noexper operator. LkJM typ.q RECEl'T'IOMIST RESTAURANT FIT. PIT sandwich man & counter help. Plaza de Cafe Gary's Deli. 152-5401 Telephone solicitor. No nee. will train, 499-1461 MEDICAL ti ,...Urecl. S•s & UC)llt ~ exper. nee. Excell. co. --------•I TRANSCRIBER C .. for at 1n John Wayne benefits. Commission JAHl'Totl Work at home. top pay 1 mt Airport for l person ofc program & profit shar-Requires mimmum Sy rs Need take c h a r g e .. 1 · Im med. opening Part <•n....,... mg nPPY tn person . a c ute hos pltal ex person .,.,,....,\N _ Penny saver . 166 O time. weekend position penence m all phases of Pl t A c t 2·11 s hift. S alary RECEl'TIOMIST ESCllOWSCTIY l acen1a ve . os a negotiabl•. Call Liz med1cald.ictat1on.Mon.· EOE Mesa "' F · 9 5 768 """" Neat. attractive. good needed for lrv1ne office Slollen. 714-641·1616 or n . -~--mrn personalJty Phone ex Must be experienced, HOME WORKERS . apply in person . Ad · MEDICAL •' perience . Interviews pref. tract escrow Hrs8 Editorial work in your vance Health Center, RECEPTIONIST 12 4pm . Tues da y to S. Mon thru Friday. home for sm publisher. 1300 Bristol St. North. Busy Newport Center or Friday, full-lime. Salary call. for appt. 5S2·40SO Steady work· l0-30 hrs Suite 100, Newport face. responsible, en UNfTED CALIFORNIA BANK commensurate walh ex· Tona ___ per wk. Prefer BA. Call •Be~a~c~h~·~E~O~E~M~/F~~~I thusiastlc, typing. PIT A FutuniWlth Im.rest perience. Harlequin Om $1000 M&r..tn- Expanding co. needs hard workers Co . benefits. Rapid advan· cement. Car needed 18 &over. 9-tforappt.832·0965 _ F/T.S40-20'l3. ner Playhouse, 3503 S ---Harbor Blvd. S A.. Jewelry st.ore in So. Coast uEDIC ,..1 ,....,SIST. Equal Opportunity 9'19-SStl osless Plan needs bright ... -Aili EmployerM/F/H 101 IUIN5 person for office duties. Front/Back office. CdM ~~~~~~~~~IR EC E PTIONIST· For Now hiring P IT day 540..9066 area 673-8200 d · r hostesa. interview2-4pm ·-------PHSOMNIDAY oc tor 5 0 c, ex per Mon-Thun. '37 Fashion KITCHEN HELP MEDICAL ladl Ofc. needed for office in helpful-not nee, must be lsland,NewportCenter. PREP,COOK&CHEF Limited x-ray permits Irvine. Must have eHiclent, lk working Experienced. The Quiet required. 646-3903 transportation for er· w/people. type well. Gd HOST/HOSTESS w CdM rands .. help with !!Qme salary, fringe benefits RETAIL Asst Manager women specialty store clothing exp n eces . NANCY CRAIG SM-1495 RETAIL CLERK Costa Mesa Stationers. 270 E 17th St.. C M Fulllime Apply in person l0-12only IN ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OFNURSF.S Da y hrs , flexible schedule. Ask for Mrs. Wong Grand Avenue Conv. Hosp., 1730 Grand Ave .. Long Beach. (213) 597·8817 Full & part time availa· oman, '640-7440· MESSltteH office dutiea. Minimum 1_6'2 __ ·4_532 _____ _ ble. Apply in person 6 mornlo1s a week . 32 bn per week. Call J.SPM. Jolly Roger. 400 LEGAL SECRET AIY 1AM·9AM. Excell. d.riv-b t w 0 8 : 30· s, Keri IECIP'TIOMtST Saillng Instruct.or needed CALL10A.MT03PM 714-847-2422 SALESPERSON , mature. P/Ume & some wknds. 67~2634 SALESP/T Mornlnga necessary for fabric store Call Gerl. 646·40CO. SAWr/T We need 3 sharp people with fas hion background to work tn our men's & women's dept. Salary + comm1ss1on , c all for appt. THE LOOtC 644-6500 SALUPHSOM PIT sales exp'd approx 20 hr week must be able to work Sat Good al titude needed Apply in person Bidwells Boull QU~ 3467 Via Lido SALES rstSOMMEL for contemporary retail store Only c areer· minded, mature women need apply Must be ex per 'd Salary plus comm Please apply 1n person or call· Apropo. 644 2652 or #29 Fashion Island, Npt Bch EOE SALES REPRESEN'TATIVE Party plan program. work own hrs & earn top money. wall train. Everything supphed Merchandise 644·5198 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna ing rec. req'd. Apply 971-%124 Orange Co. airport area in Npt Bch. 2S-Z7' cruis· ~ach. o r paral•CJal wltla Pennyaaver, 1860 ---------•law firm seeks recpl ing sailboats Wknds F1JRNITURE Store nds. 1 _________ 1 heaYy ..,.... a. "Mh PlacenllaA.ve .C.M. PBSOHFltlDAY Lite typlnf pref'd .. now. full lime summer. Seamstress needed for part time helper for de· i---------1 I I "'I t Over the ~-ter sat~. phones & ront ofc . 645·1100 Ille & hvy sail work. exp. liverie s It vario us P ••• •9· A rpor ~ ..,,,_., ""' ._ illt Good k HOUSECLEANERS -.-..._., ._ ... ,...... MODEi.i~, Boatatore.631-2810 8:30-5 :30, M·F Aa.. for s•LES·. orw ram wor · llCll'IAIY ~ Small omce. Typld'I. bookk••PlDI and pboo ... Irvine. S,,S.2323 * •SICll'f.-S• * Sl\80/ J\£/,._.11,000 SlrL/Supi1r/R)~U.eoo Accountanl/Delt.tUOO Exec/ 1h100/ corp$li000 Expd.C.ultant0v9 Us Retnden A&>'t IC\c. 4020 Blrcb f.lt 'M EOE Newport/aHUO/Free .... SIECUTARIES • Work parttime or ~ ~ ~ temporary. Call: • iv1c11 .RESTONt &AMHllln ' 54CJ.0400 ..... Secretary PROJECT . MAHAGEMEHT ... Be part of the team! · Report lo and work for two Project Managers iu . the reside ntial bldg'. arm of The Irvine C'o, Succeu{ul candidatf will type 60wpm & takto dictation accurately ' Independe nt dec1 sio~ maker a must Secretarial exper. with. Proje c t Mgmt ., Engineering & Architec· ture definitely pre· fer red Please apply Ms Parsons ... 500 Newport Center Dr Swte3SO Newport Beach, 92663 7 1~·3389 Equal Opp Emplyr M!F' SECUTARY/ Lo• f'rocestor Only dedi c ated . motivated. & cons1steRtio applicants need appl~ Exper. in real estate re lated field helpful, bCh.' not necessary-exceH ' growth oppty. with exr panding & dynamic QC gan1zallon. located W F o u n l a i n V a \ I e )',. 964·9090 • : duties. Approx 30·40 T •rth "''"' «""' -·-•"T" ~ ----------1 P lt L " · t o ... r,car.,.., .. ""' J _. _ Comm'ls, films. ex· a y or auren . 1ng enviro nmen hrs. per wk. S4 hr Pref. ~~~~~~~~~! ackle ...... 1:3--M, SCAS needs 1--------•l ss11005 SIZ,000AMONTH7 7t4/S.7·1344 non-smkr. Inquire in r-lll-ttU tru... new Penoonel 1--· -------I'm 25 yrs old and $12,000 1---------Secretary z:i person. Tues. lhru Sal. HoUHkeeper/Companioo. faces,allat•.95"1-0282. Ii flJ-~Y llCB'TIOMIST wa• my Income in ECRETARY/Law ofc. bec..Sea1t•f A at 19Cll N---Bl.. CM Live in orN. ---------• MOTB. u Full time Mon-Fri. Must March. Thi.I month 1t Excell. skilb for 1 man To••••••• -• .. -....-· LEG 'SECRET.RY ..,•11rr irT ··-· "• 8:n-2009 A.~ " , be personable & well should double. I have a orc.Sala...,ne0 .673-9201 Fan . Sv c""s . f1·r!!I -~.... ....IGHT UDITOR ror growing service •J • .. , 1 -~ Lacuna Hills recent " A groomed, & enjoy meet· home on the Ocean & Fashion lsland. ne !; OFACE Cl.Stt< o•HkHper A i d•. Calif Probate ex per 642-3030 ~;~~~ ~N:~?; Ing the public. Requires drive an SB0,000 Clenet · l SECRET,0ARY C top-notch exec. sectt'" Major brokerage r1rm M•t•r• for •lderly necessary. Xlnt typing• ed · 1 good spelllni & pen· Full or part time pos1· nsurance o ce. apo for very busy, challenf' near OC Airport Entry lody. W....... S/H skills req. Call Mrs . MOTHER'S~LPER ~~e:!iou~~u~:'!1;f~, manship No typing lions available now ror Bch Office and promot me pos. ! Strong exper,A. level position, JOwpm ,.... .... 5..._3611 Win s low for appt . SPECIA.LPBlSOM emplymt.agy.uper.as Phone experience pre-qualified self-motivated Ing · s kills a mu s t typ/sh slulls a mu!\lrc typing. Hours 6 2pm 837·1060 We are looking for a consultant w/mgmt. ferred . Full company people. Mark (714 ) 493.2021 __ _ Non s mkrs . please · Call Judy E c kert •---------special person to help capability. Xlnt. comp. benefits. Apply Pen· 543-0646 Xlnt. dental/medici.1 540-8121 HOUSB9ERS LEGAL SEC'Y with our 21h yr old han· package including mjr. nysaver, 1660 Placentia SCTIY/Leaail benfls. Call: 714-640-01291 We have immed. open· Law office exp., 8S wpm dicappedson. medical/dental. Send Ave., C.M. Sales needed with P.f., bust 1-:::::::::::::a C.EMERA.L OfftCE I n g s f o r f o u r typing, dictaphone. Will Varied famllly duties in· resume in confidence to. ----$ 3 6,000 + ness litigation for busy Ii Appliance service com· housekeepers. Full time train on Lenier word elude help with our older Box '813, Daily Pilot. IECEf'TIOMIST / Newport Beach law rirm SEC Rrl\. R pany. Heavy phones. positions. 9PM to 6AM processor. Real estate. children also but with P.O. Box lS60, Costa SECRETARY BEVERLY HILLS with congertlalattorney. s;1A y ,. light typing. bookkeep· sh ift. Excell. fringe busine ss law emphaslsonatotalcom· Mesa,Ca.92626 Consulting Orm is look :~~~l~~~~~~~i;:0~~rf~ 714/759-0700 We have an imme4, ing experience. Ask for benefits package. For $ 13oo .s1 7 o o / m 0 mltmenl to his welfare. ing ror sharp. energetic O.C. Need key people for I opening for. a full ti111~. Dennis, 642·0240. interview, call: Liz Slot-sky park , 1 r vine. Training helpful, but not & positive person lo han· Su""rvision & Training. SECRETARY L. secretary 1n our cor, ten, 714.641.1616 or apply 9'19-9610. necessary as we train Picture frame manufac-die busy phones. Must Fu7i / Part time. Will Experience in litigation porale headquarters lb"' GEMERALOFFICE in person at: Advanced and expand the right lurer looking for exp t y pe min. 50wpm . or collection Non· assist the Offi cl~ Small,b~ysalesofrice, Health Center, lJOO LEGALSECRETARY per s on Full tlme matureperson.lnvolves 644·9174 train. Xl.nt. career or s m o ke r Huntington Manager with variowi Irvine area, seeking ex Bristol St North. Suite Npt Ctr, good typing employment with com· mat cutting, glass cut· - ---5 uPP1 em e n t. Ca 11 : Beach. 848-1400 duties· typing (60+ wpip_ perienced person lo han 100. Newport Beach slfills. flexible hrs. pany benents and com· ting & assembly of RECEf'T'IOMIST 9-SPM , Mr. Zuckerbrod accurately), supply or, die filing, light typing & EOE MIF salary commensurate. mensurate salary Must custom framing c .M. With or without typing at 913·8443 Secretary dering & inventory. rn. all paperwork Call ~~~~~~~~~l _s._s._1_ss_s______ be dependable Call area. Call today-good needed. Top pay Tem· Sales & delivery drivers E~thu~iasti ci ;·~~r~ ing, etc. ExceU. salary & Anne, 545-2848. Mrs Canfield 3 to 6 pm. starling pay 646.4863 porary & full time. Call needed . Immed open· ta e c arge n JVI 8 benefits with future HSEKPR·Live in. 5 days Leg a I Se c l y , E x Mon l hr u Fr 1 da y Tod Services at 979-8900. with proven manage growth potential. Must General Office Engl s peak mg. non· perienced. Xlnl skills. 675·8729 wk d a Y 6 · 6 4 2 · 5 81 8 mgs for motivated peo-menl ability needed for be non-smoker & have Personable & outgoing s moker. 2 toddlers . salaryoeg.,onthewater wkends. pie Caneasilyearnover busy 1 person office in car For 1mmed. in· pers on for dental Anaheim Hills Refs. in Newport Be a c h •MotorcycleMech• Receptionist I $10/hr. Call Craig after South Lacuna Varied terv1ew call· Caryn Nurse/ Receptionist req. 974 .s. 10 (714 ,67s-9690 Ex per, FIT. must have --•,•H_SOMMB. _____ , HOSTESS _1..:.P_m_·_9S_l ·_2&U __ . ----1 respons ibil1t1es incl Whalen at714-~9 Non-smoker. Exp pref own tools. nice working WOODllJDGE /T bookkeeping, service MCS l.._.C but will tram a quick IMSUIA.MCE Lt=.G .a.L SCTRY atmosphere 642-8870 EMPLOYMENT Lovely Interior Design S A.LES,_. tech . management & 1 f"'lll • '" ~ co•-aoa c t ff bU Make a new start. at-s D-'-' teamer. Req. lite typing CLEllJ(/SEC'Y Experienced . ror,amall .... ~..,· ... -•5 ~ en er o en pu c con· tractive new bed & bath general office skills 2960 . .......er Ave. &bookkeepingaswellas Property/Casualty N.BlawRrm.Wordpr"'-"11:"_."""._ Exper. pref; consider tac t to Receptionist Compensation equal to SantaAna.Ca.92105 d · t I .,,_ Deliver LA. Times to sales oriented person working Saturdays SAM store now taking ap· .,_ d E I""-Em I :kills~':.i~e~e!.~~~~. on Personal lines agency Ccesalsl~~ ~~-desirable. home s in Ba Ibo a w/prevlous business bk-toSPM pllcatiorui for full & pit your ability. ~n re·~~~q~u~a~..,~-~~p~y~r~ exper. Salary open. Est. .,.....,..,, Peninsula. 3:30am·6am. grnd. Xlnt. comp. sales positions in mark· sume to A.bbottSystems.1~ G-IMH.ALOfC agency.CdM.873-86:JO. Licensed Real Es tate SSSO/mo + 548-8441 or package. Sarra Berk Ing/receiving position 70SouthLaSenda,South ~~ ed fl IU d :---------1 6'6-1413 A.gen c Y . l 8 9 s 2 Please apply: exp helpful must be en· Lacuna. 921677 or phone Sea•' .,. lmmd b.I ~ poed' 'don.I e· INSUR •NCE salesperson to sit new ----· ------1 M a c .. rt h u r • • 3 2 0 • The Pe--... el Dept thus i as tic & s e If. 499-3836. To S 15.000 pen a e 1n 1v1 ua to " condominiums. 631-4361 .... u•c.1.:M!.. " ,...,.... motivated. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;::;1 assist marketing & " -...,_ Irvine. 8:n-2892 EOE -'! r New sales ofc. ln I weneral office, good typ· UNDl'llMIRITING Liquor Clerk, mature, 11'4..PART·TIME !~~~~~~~~~ w lHEIMNE CDMAIW( STROUOS UMEH To Place rour Work out ol L.A. for ing & variety of office Ulft eves. Full or part-lime. 3·4 dys a week. Country P--cL........1t~.._ WAllHOUSE "Fast Result'' wks. w/carpoot Sh. nee s It ii It re q u Ired in ASSISTANT Also St~k Clerk, part· CI u b Con v Hos P. ' ..... -~ 500 Newport Center Dr. F o r a p p t . c a I I Servi' ce Directory Irvine Personnel~· .. l k n l ti C 0 T o'"' ,,,,., 549 3061 Chris tl an . Ear I y Suite 350 (714)594·7241 ..... E l?th r~•* .... µynam c wor e v ron· me. • om .,,.,...,,... --·--------1 childhood educ. courses N Be ........,., d C 11 N ..,.. · '..,...,... .. .. a menl. Newport Marlene day•. ewport ach, v-a · · · · a ow Suite 224 6'2·117 En&ineertna. ~3632 _...:.__....._ _____ 1 Nur1ln1 or exper req'd. P /Ume. 71~-3388 SALES Fu 11 time, 642 1671 Thia poaiUon, which sup-Liqour Clerk, full & part· MUIS• AIDH _642_·_9_18_1______ Equal Opp Emplyr responsible female to • 1 ._IMllAl.OfRCE port• the eftoru of our time. Costa Mesa . 7:30-3:30pm&part-iime PRISs--•o.... ~~~~~~~~~work In women 's bt.lU WantAd.s underwriters, requires rawi " I"' b b h ._·;::::::::::::~~::;::;;;::;::;:;:;;::;:;: Looklo& for a very In· aucces1fwexperlencein1_54_9_·1_422_. _____ --i 3:30-7:30pm. Country FuJly qualified offset. R.E.SALE3PERSONfor eac wears op . ... ret~nc ~ UTf~ jo~ rating commercial in· 1---------~':~~onvat. Hosp. Min 3 years experience. aalea, excb.anles, lovnt· 960- 6755 .,!'1 P1 ea1•a,n ° ce · su.rancepolicles. M •CHlllli..IE ---·------i Davidson 701. Ryobi menu. HJpcomm. New Sales 4;' er ca.:......_~[-mPaCtuHre A f"'lll with TSl. Darkroom a & P /T ok. Newport ~non.~ .... Q llfl d did t Office Manacer 1 F tn•-H 11 GHAT HOUIS .Nipt. Bc:b . E•per. a ua e can a H SHOP Wanted: arellabteotnce f.~· • ..!" ~ .. ,ew, ca , _P ..... a_cll;....l...;.c_R_._E_ . .u. __ 388:_3. __ 1 !lnc m u 1 t f o 1 • • a s or an lbdMdaaJ lnterat· ........ 1.... •• cnuat. Accurate typ • analytlca /numerlcal lrnmed. opeotnc. edla m~••or• ----·------• tAM-ZPM ,io 1borthand. 20 hr. abltityandmmlbeable macblne operat or -it ...... d~ ln H.B. PIODUCnOH or week lncllldelSatltSun. ,_ f "-...11-~• lu •-•-All .. 1 1 d~ ...,. "" ........... ~ &all ,..._,..,_ ""' uncU<>U .. ""'"ve.., u..lu•ff. ..-r e • Wrlte Clua fled Ad TIA»8 .. .--Tr-"" : • I t h •m l D 1 m a I CoJta Ma& Plant. • t144. Dai.b' PUat. P.O. Rubber bole prodtteU, tupervlalon. Ability lo cell. cOCDplllJ,y beoeltta. Bent 1~. Cotta Maa mutt p .. co. pbyalcal communicate elfectJve-Ap9ly : Delt.ro nlc:. aaa. r -lncludlna back X-ray. ly, both vttbalb' and In 545-0tU "' kl ll t' w r lUa1idt..il• • muet. ~~~~~~~~ o--~.......... .A • n 1 •PP ca ion• r:: ..---~ blWD I Is JOAM only. ll•poui 1-ctude ........ -lllut b•~Fwrit· St r a t on ell. \ 717 l ratln• Hd ....... -lnj tom. A t A I poUclH and endo..... :xp'dcr"" ': 1f••• ftJlo~~· all a' t o s~ EO';~ l°'tJ:~ ~: snen\a. ~ .. •••,. • an. ut-1157. Plckwlc:k 1_eo_. ------- Con&ad: t>CBBIS l'OWL&lt 71...U.1414 i~~~~~~~~-1 Pal»ft. p lll AIO I llEAD /Tlll.B h elp fo r ff o u 9 I K t t p E R P A I !'I' T J N G I womeo'upecialt)' ibop. MAairn:NANCE Patb.aonlaland,No .. pf. Eftf~' 1ptlkln1, Mor .Etperlcnce f t Cl,. Apt nec. Tae.•t tOtol pm . r . ...,_noo P*int101 npatn • 1'111t11------""---1 M A ~lt VP • 81(tM ••lat.. CJ!(. NB ...... OUAIJT.YCOMTIOL CAft~ brt..u fl ~1o-TIL M ANAOSM &NT llarlae •ardw a u • •0 • .,_ Ml-l toa Join U1t Loi An1elH Times CJrcWauon Team It ad a p t your work •cbedult to. your Weatyle. Wdl'tl :llln/d11 in a Tlrnea Clmaletlon ••lff oMce nar )'OW' home • ba~ IDOl"9 tlm• IOI' your f.....U,. •Uacu ... or Ml•unl1 Plfkldla. We pay hourly watH • comm..._. . . .. retary ...... ,......, w co. will traln for fml. P&eaaant votee & p l)'pln1 akllla needed H.IY otnces In Jrvlne. mo. 1a1ary reviews . W'TY ! To Sl,100. Call· arjorle Sullivan. 40·5001, Snell I n1 Ir atlllol of Newport each Acency , 4340 ampua Dr., EOE ( CoMt OAlL.Y PILOTJWMnftday, Aprll 22, 1981 ....... tffO ....................... ..... rtM 6 I' Marble CDP coif .. tbl ~"NL•& ...._,..,.. ta.il.._f;r... .._W..., flfO IOJO t100. Bra nau1a1itydt 11 miaf, ........ , .............. ;e~ .. ••••y ....... •••••H• ................ ".~ •• ··~-;.· ••0 •••••t••:_::• loua•e cbr $70. Orn •••• •l•••••••o•••••• • Alamlnl&9 Gretor UIPOa'fAH!' ••PAY~DOLLA'll t!: ~~~ ':o velvet wtH c:hr: •so. Sm I t II· co J',~o n a boat. t .t vlaru•• JlfOTICSTO for top uHd ca · wtltnHa SZoO Al10 '80-IOIS ty,.•tlw, •oa.l -w/S.ars tnU4ir AU Uke RSADllRSAJCD fonl1n. doefttlct 11r dart • Mt • ISO. Gbod coodlUon. • HW 17wa:2 • ADVDTlllUUI dmf• II row ca.c; lt ..... ~,~· Waterfitd, kine •i. tolid Call Daltbout Bay la · The JN• of lt•at• HtrAI ettao ••• •1.11 pine w/11ottna, upbol. Jkacb •~.ror Jutt TAXll edv•rtbed by nblclt Jl'JRSTf I040 1ld•, •us.~ Smith, at·•. llut HU lllUDICtietely • dealtre ia the vMkle • • .. ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• 5 P ltd ............. t Wood• dt•k• •100 JI' RtU\eil den V with daHl1'ecl advertblDI ~· . ESMOND PuDI AKC e '0 -'N wa er " • ' US men: 0/8. b>oolbat columv doa not ln· Champ •in Mir Pet;,. bdrm Ht. iclot cond, aecr•t•(Y ~h&lft. tso. otr.1'1a.m'1 · cl\lda any al>pUcable a 11 0 w j> v t · t $tooo1oeo. Call Anawu TRS-to hi.le n wttb P~ tua, UeenM. tranaler , ____ .....;, ____ , 213/Wf.OOaftlpg. Y • Ad fte.S,kM3oo.Z.On. P'am. t7501rmaQYotber 18' Ft1bln1 Boat wUb ffff, floarict char1e1, ~ Telepll111 S.. · items 151·1Tll. tr a '1 er Is 5 o hp feet Coralrpolllltloncon· :. #I .. ~ ... ~ ExclUni vacation club, DOG TMlNING JN Bdrm set. bklode wood, 2 d .. 1 /t It £Hon.ide. Ocean Nady trol devke certif\caUona 2925 H~bor Blvd. promoOn1 for retort YOURHOME lpl dreutr. 2 nttt Hal· " ypewr er t500 or dealer documentary COSTAMESA condo•. need• 3 to e · Obedience 1tand1, hdbrd. plate ret~rn. 3 «fl~ chn. 1 ~l-214& preparallon charaes u.o-979.zsOO brlaM, reepooaible, am· ProblemSoMna 1ta11 mlrror, IM compl. sec Y chr, 1 hiahback lea• otllerwtae specified bltloua people. Gd. AAAHOMEDOG 642-4919 I awivel c:hr all In &ood '1'1 Trl Hull , 13'tlp Volvo, bytheadverUHr. w.e1uv phone volce nee. Ouu. TRAINING 638-921.S cond, wUl take beat offer 11\A) • all brand new int / -" •&•Inst comm. Wkly. · Antique Oak Dinina.Tbl muatbeaold"p\ctledup lnct' trailer. $4300: ~· CLIAHCAIS Sml oil comp.ti))' hu P IT par.check. a pit ahirt• SAMOYED PUPPIES, w/6 cbn, S.WO. Antique by.Aprll29.54G-170I 940.3410. C••k• '520 A.ND TRUCKS (2 dy1 > openln1 for lood av . Call: •~. Mon·Pri., AKC 4 wu old. Av all at 8 Pump Orcan S'750, ( 1) ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' \yptna 1kiU., load with 543·7~7 or543·8137 wlu, Pvt pt.y. Holly. ~hr aofa$5Cl0873-4'24 9 Walnut delb. 9 awlve1 21' Lyman Lapstrake '4 8 Ford Wood le, numben, ~ exp. re· Tvaa..t/,_....__ 'll0-8008 lve maa. 8, P . t 0 •. Whl' chain, 15 aide chair•. Cla11lc Bay Boat. Need• reewred, $13,500. ALSO q,'d. 640.8500 rr--·~ rm reen .,. .e 640-9420 •work. '500. 873-2968 '29 Model A Town Sedan, Min . 3 years experlence 0ou1e duo seek home Davenport SUS 4 dr, re1tA>red. Ideal for ST A nOMBtY I n b 0 t h a re a I ~ brothers, aae 2. Shellie: 548-8955 ,... 1017 Boat partner wanted 2.4' II tu dent $10.s0 0 . Store In Cdtil needs sales Quadralek. Capable or Basloji, seldom bark, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sear Ray Sundancer 675-6181. CON ... UL CHEVROlfl "'-~ f \ 1 r '• •t I~ , \ ' , (',I \ \I I ' . ';4(1. 1200 person 1 /time. 5 days . full·char1e Art. Dept. watchdop, lit. yr rood. 3 PC. Drexel Bdrm. set, 3 SNAKES; 2 Pythons ls 1 1978. Jascnac., Npt Bch ---------• Xlnt working conds. Darkroom eicpenence a Wnda M0-4SIO 538-61&6 bdbrd, nite std, bureau Boa. All nice. Also boat •Ii p u 301m 0 ''4 T·Blrd Corwt. 68,500 --u-1-Au-... -tv-y __ _ E1peclally f1ne clleotele.1 plus For interview, call · · · $500. 551-6389 aft 5PM lar&t1 1nake caae. $325. +'1900. Call SS7·932'7 orig ml. full power, air. " vrn -• Phonel7~J010 for appt 855-1137. Cairn Terrier 11 mos old, G...,. Sde 1055 543·4967 speed control. recbnana Top dollan for Sports STOC -·--T y p 1 5 T / W 0 R D male· looking for fun ••••••••••••••••••••••• y A dhd Mako 23, '17. nu trans. paas.1eat. Kelsey HayesC 91~~.·.·A~~,,-,· C..mpers, -""5a family $Ul0642·21635 MOVING ri oung muon re upb, bimini. pamt. Full T -Bird wire whs .. ..... TIAJMEI PROCESSOR ref g. _bkcase, parrot complete with lg fish, VHF :uohp OMC, St 1.500/0BO Work Asldol' U/C MGR ICU.-~•••aDS Colle&ecrads.Oppty.in ~nier word processor Ft-fftoYOM 1045 ~~E~~"'p1~:1~~\::;3 ca ae $350 646·1869 18 St0,00067:>-t483 752-2.552.Home 955-3263 JIMMAIJMO "• -"' Newport Beach area ror Will tram Laauna Hilts ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 642-3850 Mr. Phillips VOUCSWAGE:M penlnl• for qualified hard working en· LawFirm-typingwills& Free AKC Beagle. \/yr Jewelry 1070Pf..os&n....-: 1090 13· FibergJaas boat. trlr -----18711Beach81vd. dlvlduals. Good start thuslastac Uld1v Send re· trusts Must have strong old, female. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _...,..._ adJWILable for 16' boat. 1963 T Bird, wht ext. HUNTINGTOHBEACfl pay Refundable un · · & 8"7 4609 ••••••••••••••••••••••• h blk I h AC I k orm d'eposlts. 978-724l sume to· PO. Box 430, ty.p1ng grammar - . l4K pendant \11 7 lK KAWAI CONSOLE Jonson o/b 35h P wt ant, . I e 14Z.2000 Marlton New Jersey I skills Call Mr.. Winslow M Ml i "'-h l 13 015K diamonds retail PIANO w 1 10 S700/08054&-596S new. $2800 M8-2080 SJ8·ll9t ~3 · .. lor appt. 837-l060 M Sh~ T;; ~~~~is a~~ S2600 sell Sl800~8722 old Perl. a ~o~d M~~~ '78 21 · Whalecr;rt Nova~ R•creotioftal • P~~~~~k:~/~:pes:;:~~~: i---------• TYPIST good home 642-5102 Ladies 14K cluster ring s ell $2000/bs t o(r XL. fully equip w/trlr, Vehlclet 9530 Person al Lanes Dept p ENS 1 ONED. Mature-2S 3500 .o cwtO-retail S5500 sell 846-2051 V8 Volvo eng, 25SH. P. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Assist ore mgr m small. STOCK 1·k s D b •· 1 b Insurance Agy. Apply an Sprin"er Sec guard 64 8722 1 e new 12,000 64.2·2928 une uggy "' tra1 er usy prop. mgmt con-person . 333 N. Newport .. -------- -PIANO/ORGAN days. eves 731·0«3 clean. new eng tr ore Costa Mesa Ad 81 N 8 Seeks retiree's lo pro-Be au t i f u I d am d MS-7996 ·vancement oppty. Non CLERKS -··-·-· -tecl & love.640-1177 h h b 1 h on loots, l...t/ ~~o:xe~r 1 ~~!~~~1:'.st~ Rapid growth has t•reat· Typists To good home Fem. blk ~c;:~~=~_o~. ~~7· 14 K LIQUIDATION •• ~~~~••••••••!?.~~ ~.~~~!!~.~~ ... !!.~~ Ad No. 743. Daily Pilot. ed IMMEDIATE open· T . SOWPM Lab mix. spayed, all MlsuUCIMOllS 8080 12ft00ftto7PM •IMMAC28'·34'BOATS '744wdSCOUThaslotsof TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAM USED CARS! miracle mazda i PO Box 1560. Costa mgs in our busy stock JPISts shots l yr 842-7378 ••••••••••••••••••••••• le91~A.prH20 6/12mo.plansprepaid miles. must sell $2500 ~ Mesa. CA 92627 room Wall issue and Cookware, 20 pc stalnles!. Kawai. Thomas, Vox. Crom $189/mo. including firm Xlnt ant 675·5267 , ---- -stock parts as well as as· Dicta SeC'JS Fr~e,:~;:1•:~· st eel waterless. new. Fender· Rhodes. slip, lesSOOB 714/964-5994 ;,.ckl 9560 2150 Hwbor It.cl. ~ M~:r~·~;"!~:-4i,T ~:~~::iu~1~~~orR~~~1~!: Exec Sec'ys 646-12.SZ :aor~i.I'acc:~e;~~K s.ws. T:~~~~egus lo~~.-5~--~o ....................... COiia Mesa 645-5700 ,nonsmoker in Corona del I year st.ock-room ex SAVINGS ••••••••••••••••••••••• S-iol W .&.MfED I I(. ,""rience. preferably an Ch--J....CCll"'Hf'? Yr olddo&togood hOml' Mus t Sell Pool Tbl Someuni•~ ... -1o~cosl Sabol , fiberglass, com r----• Mar o 1ce1 Hrs open. 8 2 .. ~ ....,..., Sh ph d IG Id "'""' .. PurcL-~11 L od ( Pl electront<'S and some ex· L-~ for a e er 0 en max I "" hghl & acte!. 4 14 '" lri~ ~-le plete, racing sail. S295 mac.. ate m el Toyotas and pre easant phone .,_.., 548 3281 eves h • ..._ .._ 673 .,.,.,., L •... 111a-1 V o I v o s C a I I u -.. personality Light typ perience Wllh computer Chal•nCJilMJ , t' rome nms w tire' SSO 394 I I So. lristol ·...u.v ow ,_--r· · •· r 1 575 .,,.,,. reports would be helpful ........-..t.t.. 6. c ood 646 0859 1910 .. .....,. _..a 5 spd. TODAY :!' .. ~gm 1ing _ .,,.,.,., o,.......-""J? arrotw tree I · Sart+oAM.C:a. 8 ' SABOT CB. full} .,.,._- 'Sales THIS IS AN INPOT WINEBAGO Camper <AtSw\flower> equip. F G mast. good DohW1PldiUp's Self Green World as look , EXCELLENT Use lemporar} JOb!. 8 " ~4923 Shell xtra lge w cou('h l714) 75 I I 121 sail S35-096J..0571 Tremendous OPPOR N To your shopping tool We I th k b d 1•--------•I S " 10g for aggr ess1 ve. TU ITV Fem A1rdale mix approx al ma es into e 1" d r av~!!! d d d I BEGIN A CAREER IN haH• long & ~hor1 term S2SO OB0646-l88J L1 o 1xer upper. v.. • motivate in 1v1 ua ~ A GROWTH Jobs a\ ail able in the 3 )rs Plea!>e 1denllf)' WURLITZER. sp1netle trailer. $625 Hi ghlander Mm Wft -lor interior plant sales O C Airport art-a Week 631 1030 Swap Cam1l) tennt!> d ub model 44l0. two 44-note trailer. SJOO 631·3147 and in.....W.. -.. _. .. • Base fee and com ORIENTED ......... , r-t'" " ... COMPANY ly paychecki.. quarter!> Fem Whtp""'l 9 mos old membership 1n Irvine keyboards. 13 pedal m1ss1on pwd Xlnt OP· bonus lnps Ne.,.er a fee "" for? or S500 833-8415 note~. auto tone control. port unity to make good Excellent company paid Call for appt toda) Oeaut dog. lovl'lt ever earphone Jack, sohd ma ~ money, have run and be benefilsincludmgdental 557 0045 vone Annae631 l030 Rug JO' X 12' Brown pie wimatching benrh 1:1n you r own Call plan , paid val.'at1on -Funtltunt 8050 border. square:. t irdes $400 cash or $450 de· Laser 14 fl. xll con, race ready. Cast . 2 s ails, many x.trasP1 P 675-8166 BARWICK DATSUN San Juan Cap•,trmw> 831 -3311 Earle Ike fO'fOf A·VOl VO t•UH~at•<l c ......... . '°' •O·UOJ er 540.UU PORSCHES WANTED Allow us the opportuntl) I I S98-0300 after 6 months. etc App· cn-un-:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rn bright autumn colors hvered. :-,.i11845 CHEOYLEE Offshore JI' ... SHl•pt........_ DEPT ly an person or call * * I BUY * * $150 646·2652 dsl cruise ktch $45,000 * .-~ . mi>-----SportfngGoock 8094 PP 17~~!:7~·9047 Order filler I ::t rEMPOQAllV PfllSONNH s11Mc1s Good used Furniture & Lo•e IGloon1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I at SI / .. . .. .-. 4 day wk, Co ben 3723 lirch Sttt.t Appliances OR I wall sell Helium Bouquets de Underwater N1konos 11 oD:~kl ps 9070 • CtMv.MU'80 LUY I/Jo-ton Stall• with dual rears' Ideal for landsl'apers, e ll· <Ser 6056) lo consider the purr ha!>e or trade-in or your clean • Por~che Check with L's j,.. 979-7660 !~~v!':..~~·-"<--· NewDOf"fleach oMrS6.ESLTLEfRorSY~UuCTIO.., livered Perfel·t for camera. Nasluba flash. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHOP TRA.IMEE 3180 Redhill Ave. t 0 "' "' " every occasion 673-4419 S350 . Aluminum tank .. Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 O E. 646-8686, 833.9625 SlOO. 645-S528 .. Learn engraving & other Au then l i c· p 1nt>..a11 -BOAT SLIPS FOR RENT • ma c h1"ne.• Company IS 0 fwy & Paularmo1 W h NPT BCH 25" 35· OMLY $5998 HOW .ARD Chevrolet Dove & Quail St~ ~ 1 IUY ll!ll•R..,ITURE machine. late 60's. good inc Oler lSOOXTR · benefits & good pe>tentaal <7l4 l 546·77Sl TYPIST rv " s 642 4644 I Eq ual Opp Emplyr M F 3 .• da•.•s per week Vaca L-""7·8133 cond 250. 645·3865 shotgun New cond $210 _:.__ ___ _ or right person 3121 · .. • --~ ""' ---- -incl a ccessories RedH11l,C M lion reltef Apply &l B1u red ·s· sha•>e l"hatr. Squaregame table, 979 7300 brr 6pm . soft. MOORING 1660 Plarent1a. Costa " ' S145 •-bo C U67., EACH ER's Aide want· 3'x6', 11.lnl cond. S150 a· · 966-0550 art 6, Daw~n "'or at a .r3121 N t:W PORT BEACH 833.0555 1977 CHEVROLET •Just moved into town" ed Exp 5 mornings, Mesa wine i.ofa. S150. plush 675-8172 Prof model hvy duty elec bicyde exerciser. SJOO 673·38216 Pvt dock. ltmiled accei.s. avail. approx. May 1st for lge pwr boat, Balboa Cove. lo bridge , S250 m o Call Mrs Long, 673-1190 1h TOH PICkUP W1des1de s hortbed model with automatic trans . pwr stet'rang. fiberglass shell. mag type wh~L'l & wide tires & a b lac k beaut)' I 11 f'96.4 4 3 ) Then &el acquainted t wil.h I.he Classlf1ed Ads J They're the easiest way ' to f111d Just the items and · ~ services you need• 9 12. afternoons 4-6 TYPISTS 960-6487 c; ENUINE RUBIES Susan. 640-8820 • lmmedlate Openings Only S20 per stone' • P /hme.F/time. Temp Mu!!l sell butcher blk lbl. 640-8681! lla~e something to sell" Class1C1ed ads do al well. •Top Pay 4 ch rs. S225. 2 dressers. For more info. call Tod nite stand & mirror S225 Oeteclor Compass Com Ser v1t'e<. al 979-8900 & more 975 0253 art I Magnum cost S400 a!-k For Sale GUN COLLEC TION 12> Parker Bros Dbl Barrels. 1 51 ; .••••• • Daily Pilat , I General AssignnEnt : "I WORD PROCESSOR Mag II for law o((i(•e an Hunllngton Beach Non smoker ~18 1400 Merchanclw 6PM I ingSJ-00536-33'75 D1n1ng Tbl wuque Maple I Panasonic Stereo Multi can be used 6 size:. 1nrl plex S) stem w sharp µad s linen., S400 spkrs S7S. lO 'pd bike 646 2652 $25, Pekine5e 2 ) rs old Winchester.:.. <JI Model Transportatioft 12's. 97 & 37 (21 Parker ••••••••••••••••••••••• H a I e R 1 I I e A.ircrcrft 9 I I 0 JO 06,243 13 gun~ total ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 1981 wltnd~/eves ,80 CESSNA 182 OMLYS4799 MIRA.CLE MAIDA 2150 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 64S.5700 ~ : Secretary to : : • Executive Office • ' • Immediate opening for versatile 1nd1v1dual e Must be capable or handling fa st paced .• !.f • varied and interestan~ duties for newspaper ~ • executive & µcn.onnel allm1nastrator Call.. ~ • 642-4321. Ext 277 ror appt • •••••••••••••••••••••• A.fttiqHS 800 •••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED TO IUY I buy old guns. diamonds, ivory, jade & collectibles. Call (714 I 972-4926 & ask for Dane Hand c arved Chinese Editor's Secretary : • chest. S495 Baslletl din rm table wlleaf. 3 side chairs. I arm chair, xlnt cond. S200 646· 7358 s·soFA Like new. green pattern. SlOO. 645·2985 10· SECT Yellow tones. match'g. 1.'0rf tbl $375. 536 8531 •A challenging opportunity 1s bemg offered by. S36-9439eves • the Daily Pilot for someone wtlh thee --:--- -Octaaonal Sparush dining intelligence, wit and skills required to be. American Oak glass door room table. 4 chairs. • e secretary lo the editor It's an interestinl bookcase. Princess Xlntcond $8950 6158172 posilio i th 1 r he d • dresser. sheet music • dn requ ring e loo so t tra e -80 cab1"net, submit offers wpm 1ctatlon. 70 wpm typiJli, dictaphone -'I •and the ab1hly to shift mental gears on abort• 675-8172 anytime ( • notice. The benefits are generous. the pay• Solid Oak Partners Desk. English oak corree tbl. glass top. 24x56 S275 640-9139 w1paper:. $50, 846 8253 before SAM art 6l'M , Radio, IFR Nr new S..7,000 I HIFI, Steno 8098 Use-back ava1l1549-2203 POOL SLIDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• CCIM Sde/ '74 Chevy Blaier. runs 8 · Qu e e 0 c ur ve Beautiful Color TV. 2 yr R.r."· 9120 great, many extras. Aquaslide s2501090 wrnly Free delivery ••••••••••••••••••••••• hard & sot\ lop $3750 545·0327 1148 646"1786 --CAMPER SHELL-Fits 53l·03l7 Punasonic VHS Model Dodge Step-side truck '78 Ford 250, service Sofa. chair. wall unal 1600 2 hours old perlecl $200. 493.7309 aft 5PM. body, manual lift gate, Buy as set or each Call o · 897·163~ _ _ cond.$650&3l·1532_ -Motorludllkft 9140 ~~~!~~o.'!2i.l~ava s 23" Color TV Excel. ••••••••••••••••••••••• - Sw1!1g set. sax leRs. Needs C 0 0 s 0 1 e w a 1 nut *MOPED* ·79 Ford 150, t7K ml ~-~/ou unbolt S15 Cabinet. SL50. 962·l523 '80 Puch Sport MKll. Service body. hyd gate itlnt cond, SSOO/best of· S6 2SO I OB0. Da v is -:-----Sanyo 19" color TV, less B c "'"' 1"'0 • Oriental Rugs. must sell. than I /yr old. Zenith fer. 543-3917 (Tina) rown o .,._. """ ~hand woven rugs. free stereo, tumlable, IHrk, Motorcr::=s/ 69 Ford 16' natbed, l '<z silver dollar for each cau. & two matching Scoo 9150 ton. good cond. '3800 ~ur~t:a~~~-spkrs, less than l /yr old ••••••••••••••••••••••• 552·6568 1980 Stockland Shell for 548-9992. small truck perfect --,-, MarW cond. S4005.5\.!M97 Eqellp.....t :S • rt.hreasonhable Appllcat1ons bemg accepted only. 60x43. Beautiful cond Selling ent1..,. house full ., oug appointment by calling 642·4321 ·~ "76 .,.,400 e ext 277 • Muat sell-need room $500 or furniture lor living wu. • • • Firm. 847·1323 rm. bdrm & dining rm. Xlras, nu tires/bat\ 'il Dat11un lots of xtras, new rams. tires, paint OB05J6..a30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A t P~I Everything near new. As is,$4.SOlirm • ccoun s e • A.ppl9Mft IOI must sell 1mmed orrers· SCR'u 'ETS 9010 54Mlt2 Blue Bencb seal for Mint •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ------1 T k Ne •u 0 ""9060 • • l.'an help wl deliver y rue w ~ ..., ... • BOOkkeener e AP~t1~~~~~~~CE 549.9010 ANSWERS 18' Whitewater canoe .. 78 Honda Hawk, xlnt _af_te_r ~-pm_. __ A full lime position 1s eva'°l;ble for accurate We buy~ appliances Early American maple Afford Gouge Like new ~967 cond., 5000 mi, best of· Chevy Luv '80, longbed. epenonwithatleasttwoyearsexperienceine ··Wesell~od.guar bdrm set. dbl bed. Image -Umber fer.675-3972 AMIFM cass. stereo. , • l~p~~u~~~h a~%U:r~in~a~an~e Jf:b~~~~~. appliances. 54~3077 bQokcase hdbrd. mirror I ask~o:{Y 9~~Mw~al he Se!:_~... liiCIRU/020 'Tl SUZUKI RM125. xlnt 16K ml. camper ah~ll • scheduling and. forecastlno. Wil~re~aree I IUY ... -............ 15 & dresser . des k & "" .-.-;c SS500 631·0844aft 5. b It d 't •M • fl ~,.-W".,.,..,"'-matching swivel chair. wanted lo be when he ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. must aell because ---• an epos1 s. us t possess g o cee Lea 9578133 ... 0 _9992_ grew up.·He said, "I B o·a t Ma in l & moving! Call 760-9415 "6 1 Dodge "•T work and company paid benefits. Call : 642-4321. Frigid are w /bottom ' Refinlshlng. Dock paint· ---------I 1ldll1. Permanent position with good salary. · .,...., want to be J'ust like you Ken truck, 4-apd, 6-cyl, utal Ext. :m for appt. • freeier. 89"x:rr. OUve 8 PC BDRM SET Dad, but wit~. a better in&/ repair. Local 20 yr1 • 7 8 6 5 O YAM AH A boxes, rulfS xlnt 1650 • Green S75. 641-1616; aft 6 Twin beda w/hdbrds, GOLF GAME exp. rea& &prof. 646-4666 SPECIAL l0w mileage. 499·57S.C .- Classified Outside Sales • 556-1139. dresser, lamp tbl, desk, M I al ... M..... 11000 080 675-1852 after '70 Oatiiun 1600 PU . Nu cabinet. white formlca ~· ~ IOll 1....:..___. 9030 6. brakes. radiator , & • Salesper11on to handle Real Estate . G·E dbl oven range. l tops. avocado/ gold 111 ...-..-----------1 j b R • Development accounts and automotive . oven aelf-c leanlng, baaea. 2malchlng swlvel ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-.••••••••• '76 Honda 750. Xlnl cond. va ve 0 · uns ireal. accounts. Muet have al least 2 years harveat gold, 1150. chn, &ood cond. $300. CONN Di~rtrombone 50 hp ele~. start Suzuki Low mileage. Extras. Xlnt mpg. SllOO. pp e experience. Salary plus commission. Mu•t• 851.5814 or975-0311 Must sell by 4126 wlth case. Excellent 0 .8 . eng, SUOO. Boat It ·~ 64$-l44e (42178Y )496-3916 • have car, mlleaae paid. Excellent compan)'. 640.7028 N B · condition, $100. 675-llOSZ trailer free w/aaJe of · · W .a. ..... ED!! benefit• For appointment roe Interview. call lkydet 102 · · alter8PM. en1. DaveMZ-4853. Motor ....... S./ "'"' ·642-5878,ext.277 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 4Pc "llMO'"RattanCouch TRUMPET ...... ,G'#lf' 9040 lttlt/S .... tl60 ca.-1..-.. • • Part 11·me EVB°!!!f!. . •• Boy1 European 10.pd, "chair $200. Amer. Oak Silver bell. Reynolds •••••••--•••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••••••••••• Tap.,._. Yellow, very 1ood cond. Sctry SZOC>. Amer Oak SW 5-40-4479 1971 SICWJAC.. WE CAMSB.L , .. , $'75957-<1742,148-9071 dreHer w/mlr~ $200. --------24' /t II XI t YOUR R.Y c.n J ... Hec)9 or • Ca• •iYOllltt C · • SWHEELBICYCLE Ena Oak dresur c•~wll•t • 0 wl r~rG n • • ~d ulta\1 wlth outatandln& attnc:t lve e 2'",llkenew.tl75 w t mirror $'75. Ena ~..;., 1015 ~:~~f4cio. ary or ____ sse.._130t ____ 1 M e•L~......_.__ per1onaut1n who enJO)' worklna with 10.1$ 14.5-~ Ubra~y detk. oak. $200. ••••••(•••~•••••••••••• , RENT : 22· lux. mtr re•...-..._._. Sofa " tove1eat, wht O t lv et u Pr in tt n a 13 Fiber&)a.u open boat home. Sips 6, sdf·cont. 135-3111 ~ .. boya blcycle, 135. call Tahitian COUonS400. Ub Calculator, DMawnma • trlr. t4'7S . Daya UU/wll. + a• m 1.1---=-.....,."=====--I new. Mile. ea..nse 1', $50. 8'2·5251 752·7000, Ray McKee a..o.asas. _ _;._.:..;;~~~--~ Yoq can be a WINNER Today' I )6,l H•tbut 81wd '••t<J~n l.ttu•• ... .,._nJl Top Dollar Paid For Your Cu ! JOHHSOH & SOH Linc•Met-cwy 2626 Harbor Bh·d Co'>la Mesa 540-~311 W•Ptrf OVER llwloolr ·. f>'or Your Good VW. Porsche or Audi ·~-. VW-PORSCHE-AUJll 445 E Coast Hiwa~ al Bayside Drive·· Newport Beach 613-0900 Premium prices paid for any used car 1rore1gn or domestic 1 in good condition. See Us First! ..!888 lla1 hoi Hhd l"11,tJ \ll·'J ~o O:l30 Alttos, I"• ort..t ....................... AffelCMMO '705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! 1911 ALFA SPIDERS IEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove-Street • NEWPORT BEACH 752At00 s i 1 1 F QDCll~ ROBINS t () ll lJ ' .. <I ' I'\ M l , •Ut••u.M * '71 oatauo 82l9, 42K ml, ......... 1 xlnl cond , muat HlL ~~~~) $8000,5*.,, 'Tt .-.11a <•, ..,. w 'll VW 15CIO, '11 top, \IV· '7t levllle Spe". l!d , 'IOmAAWf (onJ 110 GM,a1p/f10c... I y Item . c I e. n I .. ' > JOOfreck,Utin1ltlOO ttan1porutJon, 11800._ft w only 1000 ml, hH 'Ila.A <•U> -.'1121 5984414 evtrytbln1 .• bltck/ C ..... S~· 71 --.. 971 1J'70 Poncbe 914, nan 11Jver. PP. SlS,600.'--------o- ,,_ 1ood -100 . '78 vw Bue. Gold mlot 975"0311 '71 ... •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ -• .:.--000 T b '-l---------i••••••••••••••••••••••' Alloy •beell. 1tereo ,._., t245"DIR ~~7 AM /FM'4~~o /~e~: '7181.ACKOAD IHOWIOOMCC>te. ··:e1111tte, power win· lt7t, xlnt cood, lo mt, 'Tt tll SC Tarsa. mJnt 142.9118 Loaded,ult,'500 'T5T-TOP : dow1, 11,IOO orl1lnal rt ed i 1 _ _. •aJ d F ll 1 .....,, 144-1415 Power brakes. power =::mllH, ..!.~eeptl0oally P c or m-. •· con • u Y equ p....,.. wtndow1, power 1teerln1 :::Salee! r&ICED TO 4N-t77l.t76-GO w/many opttoas . ·i~e~t:V:.tf.!1::.~:~;:; "nSa\llllt,Xlotcood.fUl· wttb tlll/teleacoptn1 -!:~Sl'!LLI I <mVPY> '75 Xl9 JtJJll eonct /f C\&ltom pa.lnl Best or-CUI, alee-5, ZlmPI, lo ly loaded w/1un roof lo 1turlo1 wheel, alr, ;:: C,.........,. tape, ~ewpa1n1,':S:,p:, ~;f3>~~31·0232 or mla. $ss00/0BO nabta ml1 17200. t48·420J; All/FM 1tereo, rHr ltt"er.dway $3300. Call AnswerAd · 8'75·4~. M6-0518 window detoarer. Santa Ana 135-1171 t4&4, 142-4300. ,57 3S8A. Clean runa well, • c-9917 automatic trans. Snow Cl I S 69 S. ·---· wj\tte wJth Bur&undy m-'nlew..t..... 'Tled121~ally2-dr, cherry .:~1 c . OOO/OBO Sl.200/0BO.m.ocs.e ...... v·::..:·.·;;;~·0•0 terlor. 27.000 miles. lm-, .. OfY... r , x ... t coad. AM/FM . -maculate tbruo ut ! IMW ,_d If Or 1tereo, nu radial.a, !1lC •• Ina '716 '61 VW, reblt UIOO, dual UMd C..11 754-t790 or Answer Ad Leele.C-..... mi, saoo. T5'-4121D ........ ~.............. carbs, Ct.mtom In • out. '71 CMw•• #209, 642"'300 . 24 hrs. McL._ IMWH H_. 9727 *1 DEAUR IN U.S.A. Sacriflce t.1000. 968-9110 c-.ro UI T-Top OIMJ4I" tfJJ a-. Ora.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ IOY .... f772 Stereo, ma1 wheels, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., h-.... "-I ¥1SrT YOUl CAIVIR •••••••••••••••••••••• r:wer window. " door '75 COUGAR XR-7 reatur. 17141522-5333 OUMCM COAST ~;~~E 1~,'0i~i~~ 1 ocu. ~~v~i)· !:~y P:tr· :::r,w:t.e::: H O ... D.. ~ .. ff.. Lie. 202MSZ . $2497 . 19711MW ,... A --$5995 Johnson & Son Lincoln 2002COUPI HEAD"AllTERS ClOStOSUHOA'fS s:~~· . :!~~y . Costa Mesa ~a:a~U:W: ~ tc~nd~ TODAY!!! Mb t760 OVERSE~D~ERY a n d L 0 W m l I e s ! UMIVIRSITT •••• ••••••••••••••••••• . EXPERTS • l990NCA). SALES6S.ERVJCE f: OML Y $5995 OLDSMOllLE ::~ MIU.CU MADA HOHDA :~ 2150 Harbor Blvd. GMC TIUCU •• COSTA M~A 2350 Harbor Blvd. LEASE DIRECT! IAJtLllO YOLYO 11186 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA '80 COUGAR XR-7 with tilt, cruise, atereo, pwr windows . Uc. 183ZAT - '7950 -Johnaon & Son Lincoln Mercury -Coata Mesa 54G-se30 9940 645-5700 COSTA MESA ORAMGI COUMTY"S OUMtST 540.'640 198 I Sill '46-9303 540.9467 ~ ~ TURI01 OR ....... A.a COU...-~ l!Jl.(ID) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.."..., "'' '75 Torino 4Dr, auto, PJS. '76 Honda Civic, mint, re- liable, new paint, cass, am/(m. SJOoo Must sell 963.8033 Kathy. IEACH IMPORTS VOLVO ·1scamaro PI B, AIC, nu tires. 8480oveStreet LargestVolvoDealer Air, automatic. power c lean . PP $1695 . NEWPORT BEACH in Orange County! steering, 27,961 miles, 551 2889· 752...0900 BUYorLEASE I <882VEl l '80 LTD WAGON . "Ford ---- ---DlRECT I S49U Factory Driven'', roor Salea·Servl~Leaslng 750 Honda, Custom 820 Toyota 9765 Barwick Imports rack. air cond., stereo, Roy c.-. .... lttc. kit, many extras, see lo ······.················· ~·,·~c~~~-,!.i~·~ lll-UI I Lie 654ZGZ -16997 . kolla 1loyce BMW appret:. 9&4·5633 69 C:ORONA • T e ,69 C ......... •o Johnson & Son Lincoln 1540Jamboree IJ Good paint, good Int, "'°"""' Mercury Costa Mesa CICJllGI' 9730 runs great. Must sell im-1 owner, clean, auto, 540-5630 Newport Beach 64G-6444 ••••••••••••••••••••••• med. SUOO. 673-1210 I 0120 Garden Grove 8 1 ma11. 307 en1. 2 barrel •----·----- New ',O BMW 753i while '87Ja1uar3.8 MKllS~IJ . -.-GardenGrove530-9190 c arburator, difllal '81FAIRMONTwith8,000 • or10. very well main-78 Corona Wgn, lo ma, I ... /f 1700 ·1 6 I w/black int. B_BS whls, lai~ed Must Sacrifice air auto pa etc xlnt c oc •. am m . m1 ea, cy , pwr. ateer- allplnetl skWJpemhlft um8 soo' snr!, 846-8570 '4200. 67~ , , 1980 Volvo DL lOK ma· Fl RM ! 9915-8989 ing, auto. trans., Lac. a r , s c s . , rru. _ , .. 76 vs / IC adl BIG959 · $5950 ·Johnson take over Buy or lease. ---CMH f7]4 '75 CELICA ST, red, AM/FM stereo, AC, xlnt xbit ~:n~: 8,!!"an~ ~tra~: & Son Lincoln Mercury · Please call Eves :••••••••••••••••••••••• amt fm cau. S3400 call cond.S9,000.646-7596 12875.968-8057 CostaMes.a540-5630 751·7153 ask for Antonlo. '73, xlnt cond .. radials. I 7 l 4 ) 7 6 0 8 5 3 8 or U.Collt tt45 •79 320IT 11 ed cstm whls, $4900 . (2131439-9680 lw'lroltt 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Op&J, we car 847-9598 at\5PM. -•••••••••••••••••••••• '78 TOWN SEDAN (ully for please call. 4~·-0616 80' Super Celica, 1ood S for appt to&ee. nde f7JI cond. automatic, air •••••••••••,••••••••••• EE US FIRST! loaded, incl power win- ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond.-crul•e control, WehaveaJoodHiectlon dows & seats -Lux· ~... 971 S '79 Mazda RX7GS, S.pd, many xtru. 988--0SlO of N E W & US E D urious ! Uc. 233UKH · ••••••••••••••••••••••• anrf, new Uret. all xtru. Cbevroleta! ~ -Johnson & Son . 197' CANI $8495/0BO. 4'M-1731. ....... 9770 Ltncoln Mercury ·Costa . Th ia coupe has an ••••••••••••••••••••••• Me1aS4-0-5630 : automatic trans .. pwr. Mwc ... ._ 9740 ?l VOLKSWAGIM co..iNHl CHEVAOli:l ··steering, air cond., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1,..Hl..,.G" cuatom Interior. 4 cyl. I n en1lne • runs ereat! SElJ.ING YOUR Yellow with a black top, ---------- (31.SMYO>. llERCEDES? aJr cond., roU caf,e ma1 ~ 9901 Miits.ii ONLYS3595 Wl,AY wheeb ldaioeOOdcon-··········te···--····· CLEAN '73 MONTE To, DOii I ... SS dlUon ! $3IJOO or best 0£. '7S no•uET w-. auto. -,.. I j •! '• • H ' I !'. \ \4 ' \ !>4b-1 200 ttso ORANGE COUNTY'S FtHIST LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALERSHIP MllA 8 C!:!.._MADBl dA CallJaekBa~ fer . Call U2-'770 p/i , a~/fm cm, xlnt CARLO. Sliver w / 21500ST .. ...,. v · JIMSLRtOMS weekdays : 548-0081 COlld.*51111 butCuad1 ioterior. Air e--?14ft/JJI•• C A MESA .,_ evenin&a 6 weekend.a. U eood .• AM/FM ~~e. ~ 64M700 IMPOltlS no answer, PLf!AS!: ... HIO power.,,.._ateerin&. LINCOLN-MERCURY 18-18 Aut.oCenter Dr. D...._;;_ uno Harbor Blv4. keep tryln&I ••••••••••••••••"••••• fUOO '711-5'37 -t7ZO COSTAMESA 'M Riviera xlnt body no , I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Q l -12'71 ~tllOO '9C). ·as VW left fr rteht enalne/tNm $195 , 711 CheveUe, to ml. a c, ~~~~~~~~~! door. '73 )eft door. sso 142-104.2 au lo, tilt, very clean. SD Fwy.I.Jr Foreatexlt lRVlNE IJ0.7000 . each. We&lem style whl 96&-1#5 61 200D, 4 dr, a/c, auto, rims for Super Beetle Cedllec 991 s•-.--------'79 MARQUIS 4 door with good cond, S3oOO or best S20ea 541-9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 Cbevette. 4 dr. 4 spd, factory air, AM /FM ofrer 645-5880 . CONTIMPLATING al ~, AM I FM. l7.ooo stereo. U c. 827YBO · '73 280C. Xlnt cond. Muat '80 VW Duber Diesel Sta. CADILLAC? mt a. S3900. fl3.as83. $6650 • Johnson 6 Son sell S7SOO/OBO 752-2404 W gn . A.m l Fm stereo We specialize in leues '79 Z28 T-Top, 1/0 am/f~ Llncoltt .. ercury' Coata dya ; 552-5477 eves. cass · air· x.tra tan~. for the bualoeu ex.-casaette, map a~a.rp, Mesa 540-5630 luge rack, 20.000 ma. ecutive 6 professional 648-8838 .:..:,.:::::;;i;iiiii;ii~~~~;I '79 JOOD sunroof, xlnt cond, 40mpg, S8SOO. L_...Se"c"-1---------'76 Montego MX, auto, am/fm. S18,300/Will (714)540..2521Greg. o=-f-~...__--,,., '70 Caprice, alr. Pl, pb, radio, a/c, new battery DOWN DIUV•I AMT YINCLI IH ITOCIJ l'Ull TAI ... UCIN .. OM An. CllDfY •UT.RIOI MOC1911'7 ....... ~1 • .. WOM YOUI JOI? • SHOITOH DOWM PAYMltfTJ •SLOW · CUDfT' HISTOIY1 •MIUYAIY1 WE CAN HELP! NEW 1910 FIESTA 2 DOOR SIDAM 5 11~ (Stk 2451 ) (356740) .,. pi.. l&Jo ' - -J1lt00 -'°'., --C-pn,,.-141311•P""lu.-·~ ._ Oelerrecl """"*'' ptlce -17721 31 -l~ NEW 1981 ESCORT SDtOB!t (Stk. 0432) (206171) ==~~ :.O,~~ J:,.a::.=. ': :! -~.,.,_pt .... -.... 1 _,.,..... NEW 1911 FAIRMONT 2 DOOR SIDAN I 5 149~ PINTO 3 DOOR IUNAIOUT 5124!!.. (Stk. 2802) (174898) .,.,.... ...... --1134"-""'° -c--9llOl700 pU ...... -'~ .... Delwrect _.., P<i<le -., ,. )4 -, ..... MEW 1911 COURIER PICKU, 5 136~ (Stk T0378) (501638) 11• pl.-tu A I-_, 113111 .. -lot IO _..,,., c.. pt\cle -NM6 QI ...... -_, -... o.wted PllY"*'I pr--llMO 30 -11.1 ... NEW 1911 MUSTANG 2 DOOi SEDAM 515P- (Stk 0520)(1&7761) (Stk 0481)(1133141 lllt pl .... & --114'00-IOt IO e1w pl.-IU a ""--l 1Ut1 -lor • -C.. jlflc. -tlOOt 22 pluo Ila, -6 OOC ._...,. C.... P<ICO -.. 141 t6 pl ....... -& -._ ~~...--*21 "6 N'l'lll3f".. io..0etotrw,,.,.._1price -•n •• -••4"> NIW 1981 GRANADA JDOoalmAM 5 155~ (Stk. 0334) (110377) 11W ,.._ -& --f111&W -IOt IO ~,:;:.;; :-~.roiz..~-=::1~ NEW 1911 PICKUP FI 00 STYUSIDE .. $J58~ (Stk. T0494)(24378l ., ..... -• ---..... _ lor., -.~,,__...,. .. ,. .... _._ -. o.i.-...,_ ~ -110.rraa ,.,.,., ~ NEW 1911 MEW 1910 VAN LTD 1100 CAaCJO 2 DOQR SIOAM 5165!!m 5 165~ e1w ,. .. J~t~~(~~~)-'°'IO (Stk. 2321) (111774) ......-c.l'I Pt ice -eeee161 pjue tu.•-& ooc f1W pluo tu & 1'-dooon ., .. W -lor IO ._ ~...,.....,.P<1,,.-•1o.11too N>f14 1,..., -.. c..i.--1110331 """...._ __ ,_ '18 M 0 NA RCH with .. ---~~~----..... ----it.-.__o.1er_rw.;.;;.;,pe;;;.'".;;;-.;;;'1.;;pnce;,;,;;;.-..;.;";;;00-.••;,;.;'°';.;,N'fll.;.;.;,;;•Ufll.:;,;:;.m '86 MALIBU AM I F M stereo, pwr. MEW 1911 t d ~L.4" -,,_..,.. am/fm radio, $500 or $1300540-4935 lt72 DA lSUM ra e .,_. ,....., 'S7 VW BUG looks and C.,.llCI besl offer. fM...&909 240J COUPE Opel 97 46 runs great, completely Mow"' Stock! 1911 T-BIRD .... .- .. radio. m., wheels le ex· '74 Opel Manta, burgun-. -----. 4 s~ trana .. AM-FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• atock. Phone892-2402 ~~ tra sharp! l2'78GMX) dy, vinyl top, $2,000 79 VW Convt. 13K m1. L A m I Fm c a s 1 . windows , f~ctory air EXP teoo/080. cond. Lie. 008UNQ . 575-5405 S3997 -Johnaoo • Son J DOOR S,OltT COUPE Chryslff 9'25 ~:::~:=W'Y . Costa s 18~ OHL y $4595 955-11198 B~aupuntt am/fm cass. -Bight Yellow tan lot. ZClOO 1-i.\rbor Blvd MllACUMADA '"'"' 9741 Truly exceplional cond. c~Mes.\ 540-9100 . .•.................... ----------1 •79 LE BARON WAGON -'80 ZEPHYR with only MOMTH 2m Harbor Blvd. •••• • • ••••••••••••••••• $9750 673-8735 . COSTA MESA LEASE . 64M700 '76 RABBIT. reblt eng, DIRECT.I air, AM/FM, auto, xlnl aond. $2700 7SI·8771 "l8 EL 008,A..OO .SIAR· Town " Country with l l ,000 m1le1. 4 cyl., RITZ . Lealher Interior, roof tflck, pr seat.a & bucket seats, stereo. lilt, cruise. U c. 47800F windows. Ut:. 839WUM · La~. 601ZEE -kT97 · · '4S7SO . Johnson ii Son S6850 • Jobnlon ft Son Johnson ft Son Lincoln Lincoln Mercury . Coata Lincoln Mercury -Coeta Mercury • Cost Mesa !Stk. ~) (105805) l lW pl .. lal & tic..--e11t It -10t 10 _...,. c;..,,pn,,.-sr111 1•p1 ...... -•ooc -~~llWIOe-f,Z.1-.U -11.25' TOWMLAMOAU 5 274~ (Stk. 0115) (116087) 11w p1 ..... & "'*'--" m••1-11reo :":. °== ~i':ic: !!":1~1~ "'l'-Oeme . . , M id -Weeki S PEG IAL I 198 I PEUGEOT TUUOt IEACH IMPORTS STOit!! Me11a S40-5'30 Meu 540-5630 S40-5630 Take Ume to relax and ---..----------------1...:..::::.....::=.:::.__ _____ 1 lhop at borne. It'• aim· Due to 1erlous illness '78 CORDOBA with sun· ta.g 9952 pie wltb Dally P llot must selJ car of luxury roof, AM / rM atereo, •••••-•••••••••••••••• Cluslfted Ads. And If xlnt gas mileage '75 beautlfully equipped. '65 Muatan&, dnl cood, 4 you have 1omelblng to coupe de Ville. blue Lie. 205258 · 14152 · new radials, new '72 302 sell, call a fr.lendly w/wbt It.hr upbol very Johnton 6 Soo Lincoln e n1 , a l e, ps, am-Im Claullled Ad-V11or at clean ft iood cond. Mercury -ea.ta Meaa ca 11, S28QO I 0 8 0 . ROBINS-READY TRADEINS OVER I 00 TO CHOOSE FROM! . - 599* OVER INVOICE saLE OM ALL 2101. 310. IH STOCKI ...................... Sal• tf'ldl Tue1day. Ac>ril 28. 1981 et *9t of tlUelneta. Copy of ad muet be Pl'Heneitd et tllMof~ • 848 Dove SlrHt NEWPORT BEACH 75J..0900 Claasified Ada 642-58'71 S3600/0B0&4U444 540-H30 962·3433 ...... UMd ....... u .. d ...._ UMd .. ....._ Uttd '78 Mustang It Ghia. dlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. ••••••••••••••••• blue. ale. pe, wire whl1. ""'°°· 759-1050 '79 Mustang, 4 cyl, 4 apd, a/c, lo ml, lo.ded, $4995. 171-1094 ·~l orig. owner, It blue, Mtop, 8 cyl, good cond, lt7lllOU ""10 IUMAIOUT ,,~.....,. . .,...w--.---• --snoo '2845.988-8097 --------~ ""° 9917 lf77 POID LTDWACJOM . · IRAllD· NEW . 1981 PlYMOUll CHAMP """'°"" •liUIH'MIOft _ .... ,,,. Equipment includes 4 cylinder engine. 4 speed window defro ter. '1980 (IRYSLER CORDOBA Long wheel base 8 pass Max i-Wagon . Auto . trans.. air cond.. con- vertabed, pwr. steering & brakes. high back swivel c hairs. AM-FM stereo w,C.B ., tilt wheel. conv. pkg .. sport pkg. & much more! (204643). List price · -$13,606. SERVICE HOURS: ....., ..... Fridey 7:10 .... to 1:30,... Salm., 1:06 ..... to 5:00 ,... 511 OUR SllVICI DEPARTMENT AIOUT RINTIMG A 'II CHIYSLll OR PLYMOUTH. TAKE YOUR CIOICEI · BRAND NEW 1980 HORIZONTCl 4 cyl., 4 speed trans .• pwr. steering & brakes. custom interior. 2 tone paint. radio. custom wheels & more! (157159) EACH NOW ONLY 1975 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED SEDAN Automatic trana .. air cond., pwr. steering & bfakes. pwr. windows & split seat. AM·FM ~,'"YS•i 795m"" .... , 1975 HRYSLER CORDOBA COOPE Automatic tren1 .. air cond .. pwr. steering & bfakee, cruise control. pwr. wlndowS & ... ,, ~~::O~Sj'i ii ~ 1978 DODGE Dl~LOMAT WAGON Automatic transmlaaion. air Cl00d1t1on1ng. power 1teering & brake•. AM·FM 8 track. . ~:·;;~~· 'Sjjf J '" . ..,,., 1979 CHYRSLER CORDOBA COUPE Automatic transminlon, air oonct, power steering. power bfakes, vinyl top, radio. wsw tires & m9rel (538WWC~ 53795 1979 CllYSUI CORDOBA loeded with options inc. auto. trans .. air cond., pwr. 1t"rlng-brall .... ptlt •at & wlndowa, tltt, crul ... AM..fM CM141t19, ~r• wtieel coven. wsw tlr• & "'°"'' t984YOZI. 54695 BRAND MEW 1980 HORIZON SEDAN 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission. power brakes, custom interior. radio, wsw tires and more! (396801). 1915 PLYMOUTH y ALIA NT smAH 6 cyt. engme, automatic trans .. power steering. radio & morel (270l VJ). 51895 19 8 PLYM HORIZONS Economical • cyt. engine. pwr. 1i.er1ng & brakes. au cond.. bucket Mal•. AM-FM radi o w/cassette. wsw tires & morel (1~253). s3495 1979 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COUPE Automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr steering & brakes. radio, split seal. vinyl top WSW 11m & morel (532WWCl 53795 1980 PL YMOOTH VOLARE SEDAN 6 cyl., automatic trans., air oond .. pwr. steering & brakes. vinyl top, custom ~.'~~t·s4495·. mo'•' 1979 DODGE PICK UP VB. automatic tran1misslon, poMf 1-.rlng & brakes. bucket seat•. mags & mortl (1P97893). S41tJ , I - (1HANC.E <. 1 llJN I 1 LAllf r)HNIA 2'1 CENTS By STEVE MAaBLE 01 ... .., ......... He walb slowly and atitnyi and has so many scars he's lost count. NB cop learns victim's pain; fights to return to force But he does walk. His fellow Newport Beach police officenJ doubted he ever would aeain. Sgt. Greg Mattson. \liCho describes himself as "mangled and bolted back together ," has set his sights on one goal getting back into uniform. HIS WIFE Stacey, tells him to be thankful he's alive and let it go at that. It waB three months ago on a cool January e vening that Mattson was hit by a car. He was standing on a shoulder or Pacific Coast Highway on the West side of town investigating a minor collision. The car knocked Mattson off his feet. He was thrown over the hood into the windshield and then carried down the road for several hundred feet. He was in a coma for six weeks. The 31 -year-old policeman nearly lost his left leg. His neck was broken, two vertebrae were crushed. one of his lungs was punctured and he lost part of his liver. In all. he's had four operations including one on his neck that doctors warned could leave him paralyzed. It didn't. He may need a fifth operation. "PRE'ITY BAD, I guess, but I don't remember any of it," says Mattson, recuperating at his in-laws' blufftop. ocean-view home in Newport. "I'm going back to work," he says, fiddling with bis neck brace. ·'The docs hem and haw a bit, but I'm going back. That's just the w2y it :s. BOUNCING BACK -Participants in past Celebrate UCI events have had a ball. This year's version of the annual lets-get-acquainted festival on campus for the whole com- munity will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. Among the activities will be lectures, campus tours, bluegras~ The husky. tall policeman, despite his inj4ries, looks fit. He smlles and jokes and says he watches too much TV. He hu trouble walking and his wife says he still talks more slowly than he did before he was hurt. He says his memory of the accident is vague. like a dream almost. A bad dream. "I SORT of remember running to get out of the way. Then the car hit me and I remember hilting the windshield. It shattered. Then I went over the top that's it. I woke up about six weeks later." At Fountain Valley Community Hospital. where he'd been treated in the trauma center. doctors placed a metal bar in his skull. A 10-pound sandbag was attached to the bar to keep his s pinal column immobile. His wife says nurses had to tie his hand to the bed to prohibit him pulling on the bar. A false move. she said doctors warned, could mean paralysis. "THAT'S THE first thing I noticed," Matt.son says "I 'm a policeman and a policeman shouldn't have his hands tied up like that. I thought someone was trying to pull a fast one." After 81 days in the hospital. most of which was spent in the intensive care unit, Matt.son was sent home. He says progress has been slow and frustrating. H e says he thinks of the two-acre lot he and his wife bought recentl'y in El Toro. He planned•to build his own home. He says it's frustrating sitting in a chair all day, even with the ocean view. T h e two o f th em take opposite views or the 22-year-old and rock music performances. art exhibits, 5· and 10-K runs. nature tours, medical displays and testing pro- grams. The Wayzgoose Medieval Faire in Campus Park will feature jousting, juggling, music, food and game booths. Santa Ana teen dies in boxing match Boundary panel s~ught Census figures show population of districts 'uneven' By FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL OftlleDallrP!tltta.tl Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Ralph Clark has proposed formation of a five-member committee to redraw supervisorial district boundaries. Beach, Cypress Loa Alamitos. Stanton and Garden Grove, la un- derslzed l1y24,307 persons. Also undersized are the Isl Dis- trict, made up of Fountain Valley, . Westminster and Santa Ana, and the 4th District. including Buena Park. La Palma. Anaheim and Orange, by 6,885 and 9,678 persona, respectively. Superv1sorial district boun· darles were last redrawn in 1977. Clark haa..l~uggested that an ad <See tMNEL, Pate AZ> woman charged with hitting Mattson. She faces felony drunken driving and hit-and-run charges. His wife says she's angry. She wants the book thrown at the woman. Matt.son says he. too. is angry about what happened. but doesn't want to be vindictive. "l'm a victim." he says, "and as a policeman I know what a victim goes through. The truth is they don 't get a whole hell of a lot." HE SHRUGS and smiles and adjusts his neck brace again. "I'll be okay, I can walk - sort of," he says. "But I can't dress myself. or make lunch. or walk up steps. I just keep an upbeat attitude because. if I don't . l '11 never get anywhere "I just want to be normal and get my uniform back on .. o.llf ,., ... , ..... ,._ ·BOLTED BACK TOGETHER' Sgt Greg Mattson ----- Seems unrea~ Reagan says WASHINGTON <APl -Presi-\ dent Reagan. declaring that the attempt on his life "still seems unreal,'' said today in his first interview since he was wounded that he continues to suffer pain from hjs injury. He said he hopes his assailant will "get well, too." Reagan said he rem ains op- timi..stic that he will be able to win approval of his budget and tax-cut proposals. He also said he remains opposed to gun con- trol. REAGAN MET AT the White House with tbe senior news service reporters James Gerstenzang of The Associated Press and Helen Thomas of U,nited Press International. Questions were limited to inci - dents surrounding the shooting. The president, wearing a blue- gray suit. walked with a steady although slightly stiff gait as he ente red the map room in the White House for the 19-minute interview. His chee ks were rud· dy and his voice showed no ef· feet of the lung injury he re. ceived .. ·'It still seems unreal." he said when asked about the at tack outside the Washington Hilton Hotel on March 30 He said he realized there had been shots fired and that his first instinct was "to take a look." But he said a Secret Service agent "had a different idea." HE DESCRIBED THE sensa- tion of being shot as ''the most paralyzing pain. as if someone hit me with a hammer." But the president said that sensation did not occur until he was in his limousine speeding away from the shooting scene. He described his near-panic trying to get air after he was taken to George Washington Unive..Slty Hospital, and said, "the mqre I tried to breathe." A,.W,,.._ MEETS PRESS President Reagan, with a brisk walk, steps into the Treaty Room at the White House today to meet with reporters for the first time since he was shot March 30. the less air he felt he was get- ting. ·'I almost had the feeling it would diminish to the point I wasn't getting any," Reagan said, adding that "then they shut me up" by sticking a breathing tube down his throat. In a letter circulated to fellow supervisors Tuesday, Clark said 1980 census figures show that boundaries must be chanted to more evenly distribute popula· lions amongdistricta. The 5th District, which includes coastal Orange County from Costa Mesa to San Clemeote ex· ceeds the "Ideal" district size of 386,314 pel'IODI by 19,215. Was fish endangered? Asked how he Celt about his as- sailant, lhe president aaid : "The fee Un& is, Indeed I pray, that he can find an answer to his pro- blem. He seems to be a very dil- turbed young man." I DRAICI CUIT lflTlll • The Ideal district alze was com· puled by takinc the county population u determined by the 1980 cenaua and divtdln1 by five, the number of aupervllorial d~· tri~ta. TBE JRD Diatriq la. ovenlied by 21,Wpenont. ttencompaua much of northern and eut.m Oranse County, laclu4lg La • Habra, P'ullertoa, llre•, '1'racen• tia, Yorba .uncta=VIU. Park, £J Toroanl..,.lon • By contr_~h~~~ Olltrtot, la. cl~dlD& H~wn eacl), Se.al Tiny fisp that blocked building of dam multiplies Falr and sunny throuch ;I'hursday. Lowa ton~ht 50 at the beaches, 55 inland. Hl1h1 Thursday l.lppe1 80s to mld80s. llllf 11111 DetpUe court rulJng1, MW lcno• OM poUc• poUctu UmWng 8'rip HOrclw1, '"°"' police deporfmentt 1Wl conduct 1'Ueh 11orc1'H - 1cmi.-tme1 o/ tJoctw co'*'-• -on ~ acCUNd o/ minor ol/trua. S•• Pai• A1. 2 Oran1e Counly'a Human Services A•eocy WlU end the fiscal )>ear lD better nnuclal condition than offtciala pre· dieted three montha aso, accord· in1 to a report prepared for the .count)' Board of Supe".laon. · With the ncepUon 41 the coun· ty General Relief J)rocram, through which flnan~1~1 aid is gl ven indi1ents, offtcaala are now predicting t he agency will wind up wlth more than $4 .S million by June 30. could 10 more than '3.s million in the red. In the updat~ Teport, interim agency director Larry Leaman said: "Result ls that. with the exception or General Reller, the ·worst scenario' picture pretenl· ed ln January wlll not occur." · The General Relief account budget, ~aman said, still re· mains 'volatile ." During March . supervisors were asked three Umes to transfer money from contingency funds so that General Relief payments could be made to qualified recipients 10 areu an whlch officials S&Jd tbey felt bud.let au1menUtiC1D woufd be requfred. With the exception of General Re lief. olticiab now say, "The other nine areas have been dealt with through other correctJve action and wlll not require augmentaUoa lbi1 year. "However, it la important to note that most of these areas of concern will continue to face us as problems in the coltlinc year," Leaman said. .......... TIN ffnr lnail darter, umtefl for Olmort two yeara ltalled comp~ion of tM TenneHee Valley Authority's '"1• TeUtco Dam in Tem&eHH, mGJ1 not be aa rare cu once thought. The HSA budget for the cur· rent fiscal year ls about $89 million. About $11.8 million com- es from local tax dollars. with $77 million from grants from the state and federal governments. a nd fees . Officials have not yet been able to expl4in the unexpected jump in demand for General Relief, other than to hnk it to the nation's. current economic problems. Among the nine areas where financial problems were evident '" January included operation or tuberculosis clinics, hiring of clerks to screen applicant.I for financial aid, operation of Albert Sitton Home for dependent childre n and utilization of stale hospitals by county residents.for which the county 1s billed. I :.Religiom meeting policy suit topic Three clergymen and a teacher are among seven persons suing the Saddleback Valley Unified School District to change its policy of allowing StU· dents to meet on campus for re ligious gatherings. The seven, working through ·the American Civil Liberties 1 Union. filed their suit against the district's Board or Education 'Tuesday in Orange Count y ., Superior Court. Superior Court Judge Luis Cardenas ts scheduled to hear arguments June 3. The suit challenges the 1 board's 4 to 1 vote on March 25 ' to continue allowing clubs. such as the New Life Club at Mission Viejo High School, to meet on campus during lunchtime for re ligieus purposes. Board Presidel)t William Kohler said Tuesday the board majority intends to fight the suit us.ing donations from supporters to pay for court fees At a press conference Tues- day. some of those who filed the suit said they want to reaffirm constitutional protections for au religious beliefs. Clergymen in Mission Vie10 who Joined 1n the suit are Ph1lhp Peace of the Shepherd of the Hills United Methodist Church. David Sandberg of the Shepherd of the Hills United Church or Christ and Rabbi Steven Schatz of Temple Eilat. Linda Smith, a teacher at Mis· sion Viejo High School, also is a plaintiff along with lawyer Hugo Anderson Jr . retired Marine Corpi Lt. Col. M B Margolis a nd Jack O'Bnen, all district presidents. Hollywood drug hearing rapped HOLLYWOOD CAP ) -Ac· •tress Cathy Lee Crosby cr1t1ctzea a congress1ona1 com· mittee investigating Hollywood drug abuse today, saying : "Media hype and sensationalism have bec9me more important than finding solutions to pro blem5." The star of ABC-TV's "That's Incredible" series. who had ad- mitted previous drug use in . testimony before th e 5ame House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control in September, said she was rerus ing to testify this time because ••some members or the commit tee are using these hearings for l their own ends. They're politi· clans." From Page A1 PANEL ••• hoc committee, similar lo one c reated four years ago, be established. The comm ittee would be made up of one aide from each supervisor's offi ce. CLARK HAS proposed that his appointee to the committee. Stan Oftelie.serve as chairman. The coWtty Counsel's Office. Clark said. has advised that a re· districting plan must be adopted by Nov. 1. Should the board fail to meet the deadline. the matter would be placed in the hands of a special three -me mbe r panel ·made up of the District Attorney. ·Assessor and County Clerk "I see no reason why the board or supervisors cannot handle this assignment swiftly and complete the redistricting by June of this year,''Clarksaid. Clark said lt should be the com· mittee's goal in the redistricting ·,effort to draw lines that would •keep communities or cities in- tact. THIS, HE sald. would be in keepin1 with the spirit or a state proposition approved by voters laat June requlrln& that city and county boundariea be respected wben reapportionment of con· 1re11i6nal and state .Assembly andSenatecHatriclloccurt. Clark'• p.ropo.aal ,will be con- aldered by the board at lta regular meetintnextTuesday morni.Da. She declined to s ay which members she referred lo, not· ing "I don't wish to play that game Thal 's exactly what they're asking me to do. and I don't intend to stoop to doing il to thl·m ·· M 1ss Cros bv. who held a news conference ai. the Los Angeles Press Club before the hearings at the federal building got under way. said that when she initially agreed last year to testify at the current heanngs. she was as- sured the hearings would be held informally at a private res- idenc<· and would be for the sole purpose of finding ways that celebr1l1es could help "un· popularize drug use by reducing peer pressure ·· But she said she was offended by news reports that she was "blowing the lid oH cocaine use in Hollywood." adding with a laugh "I haven't had a hd in years." Although she said she was as· sure d by the committee's chairman, Rep. Leo Zeferelli, D- N. Y .. that the news reports had been blown out of proportion and that the original intention or soliciting help from celebrities was still in force. she noted that some committee members kept issuing press releases indicat· ing, from her viewpoint. that they intended to use the hear· ings to fmd out which individual celebnties were using drugs. "Whal started out lo be a nov- . el idea, using cetebnt1es and in· eluding the kids to help find solutions , turned into an in· vasion of privacy and an in- vasion of trust," she said However. pressed by re · porters, she declined to charac· terlze the hearings as a "witch hunt." At September's hearings, Miss Crosby criticized previous eov· ernment efforts to curb drug Ule by focusing on enforcement. At today's news conference she dis· tributed coples or her September statement: ''Enforcement. buy. H\i up cropa worldwide and con· stant seizures, coupJed with an advertising ond educational philosophy of acare tac:tlcs and eunerat.ed an4 f alae at.ati1tlc1, was nol'Workln1.'' MAINOFFtcl 1'home9 P. H&i.y fllMltw =t:JN.WMd ~ ThomM l<eevll ~Murphlne ~H.,~ ~lohulman L~ ~"'· .. Wo t 141'114., Cflltt MtM. CA. 1111a11.-..: ._ u ... c-t• Me ... ca. flt» From Page A1 FISH ... would provide electricity needed to lure industry to the region, and the 16.000-acre lake created would provide recreational f acillties. But area residents didn't want to give up their land, environmen- talists didn't want the Little Ten· nessee River destroyed a nd Cherokee Indians didn't want the remains of their ancestral homeland buried beneath a lake A !though area residents and the Cherokees sued TVA to halt the dam , 1t was a lawsuit filed by en· vironmentalists on behalf of the snail darter that almost brought TV A to its knees Telhco's gates closed in Nov em berl979 Shuttle delayed EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE IAPJ NASA officials s ay there is nothing specific or serious delaying the space shut· tie Columbia's return lo Florida, but once again that return has been delayed . Departure for Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral was moved from Fri· day to Saturday morning In January, agency officials had wamed that the HSA budget The January report 1dent1l1ed Union to picket benefit Coors participation in recycling day flayed Orange County employees who take time at lunch Thursday to donate collections of aluminum cans for charity at the Santa Ana Civic Center will face an unusual, s ight-pickets. But the benefit for the Albert Sitton Home for a bused and a ban· doned children has turned into a most unusual observance of a statewide recycling program. The recycling day was billed as part of the Great California Resource Rally, a week-long campaign sponsored by the state Solid Waste Management Board to spur interest in recycling. Instead, it h as become in Orange CoWtty a mini-symbol of labor-management conflicts. At issue was an invitation from county Supervisor Thomas Riley's office to the Coors Dis- tributing Company to supervise the recycling. Coors wasn't Riley's first choice, but two other distributing companies declined to participate Coors, however. 1s the subject or a national boycott called in 1977 by the AFL-CJO and several othe r groups who claim the company uses unfairlaborpractices. Coors representatives who de· ny the allegations, apparently were eager to Join in the county's recycling promotion. Not only did they agree to pay their usual 35 cents-per-pound of aluminum to a construction fund for the Albert Sitton Home , they volunteered to pitch in two cents-per·p0und ex- tra. Members of the executive com· mitteeforlheOrange County Cen· tral Labor Council met Tuesday night and voted unanimously to picket Thursday's event because or Coors' participation Bill Fogarty. representative for me American t•ederation of State. County and Municipal . Employ~es. said union and other community group members plan lo picket during the noon hour. "We wall be out tht-re in force." he promised. At a press conference held Mon day. labor leaders criticized Riley and the other members of the board of supervisors for not being sens1li veto the a r boycott. Witness says Agnew received kickbacks Squatter's righls awarded Kitty, 17 CHICAGO <AP ) -Kitty can rest easy. She won 't be evict· - ed after all. A condominium association in the Gold Coast, a wealthy neighborhood, went to Circuit Co~rt in December to have Kitty a 17-year-old Angora cat. evicted. He~ owners Arthur Nasser and hi s wife, Nancy. acknowledged their North Lake Shore Dri v~ building's bylaws prohibit pets. but said they were not informed of that before moving into their unit in 1977. ANNAPOLIS. Md. (AP> -A former state official accused of sharing kickbacks with Spiro Agnew has testified he never saw any money actually being paid to the former vice , president, but says it was clear to him Agnew got a share of the payoffs Jerome B. Wolff, who headed the State Roads Commission in 1967 ·68, testified Tuesday that he , I.H. "Bud" Hammerman and Agnew, a former Maryland governor. split kickbacks from consulting engineers awarded state contracts for highway work. Wolf( was a key witness in the trial or a civil suit filed by three taxpayers and joined by the state that seeks repayment of $298 ,110 in alleged bribes and interest from Agnew. The trial. which .o pened Tuesday. was in recess today to allow prosecutors to prepare witnesses. Agnew served as go,.vernor from 1967 to 1968, when he left to become vice president in the Nixon administration. H e resigned in 1973 after pleading no contest to an income tax charge Prosecutors contend the alleged kickback deal began in the mid·l960s, when Agnew was Baltimore county executive, and that the pay ments continued while Agnew was vice president. Agnew has consistently denied that he accepted any kickbacks or other Illegal payments. Under cross-examination by Thomas R. Harrison. Agnew's lawyer. Wolff said Agnew never asked him for\ any money and ··never said tQ me that he waa gettinl anythin"." Wolff said. was clear to was getting money. however, that lt him that Agnew a share of ,the ln her opening statement, Assistant Attorney General Dina Motz said' the three m en received at least '207 ,500 from consulting eniln eers, lncludln& t120 000 wtVch tbey shared and *87,5oo which Agnew ls ·aue1ed to have received directly trom two en1tneertn1 firm•. Both Hamm erman and Wolff were named ln the ori1tnal ault. Mrs. Motz s aid the stale may raise its claim later. "It ls clear that in abusing his high office. defendant Agnew seriously Injured the people of Maryland." she said, contending the aUeged bribes resulted "in higher contract prices for inferior work or a foss of the best bargain -or all of these . things.'' According to WolCf . Hammerman came to him in early 1967 to propose that after Wolff 1e1ected potenti/I recipie.nts of con1 u lti I contracts. Hammerman would sollcit them for pay ments or 3 percent to s percent or the total contract amounts. Wolff said he asked for one-third of the money. but said he cou ldn't get that much because Hammerman came back later and said Agnew wanted SO percent or the money. Wolff testified he received more than $30,000, a quarter of the money which he said was solicited by Hammerman and delivered in white envelopes. He said Hammerman a lso got one-fourth of the money and Agnew got the other half. Nasser also 11rgued that Kitty. owned by the couple since she was 3 months old. "sleeps most of the time" and is both quiet and clean. . The two sides reached an out-of-court settlement this week. Kitty will be allowed·to live out her twilight years in the condo while the Nassers agreed not to get a new cat when Kitty dies. Ex-soldier suing AnnyJ PIERRE. S.D. (AP> -An ex- soldier who claims in a $3.9 million laws uit that Army LSD experiments 24 years ago made him mentally ill is still plagued by ·'powerful aggressive and homicidal urges" and "feelings of depression," a psychologist has testified. The Tuesday open ing of a trial in Calvin Sweet's suit against the government marked the first time a case Involving Army LSD expe riments had reached that stage. The case centers on the claim by Sweet. 43, that three doses of LSD he allegedly was ~1ven in Army drug experiments at Edgewood· Arsenal in Maryland in September 1957 left him "un a ble lo hve a normal life." Fruit fl y fo und MERCED <AP > -A state laboratory confirmed another sterile Mediterranean fruit rty wlls found in the San Joaquin Valley An insect localed here last week was the seventh caught m the valley in the past two months. Others have been found m Tulare. Fresno, Madera and San Joaquin counties. •OUR DAYS ONLY · THURSDAY, FllDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY: APRIL 23-26 H ~ .. ~ >. ~ ( ~ < ' ' > I~ ' APWlr-- Richard Barley proposed to Nina McKenzie and she wasn't going to let him off the hook -even though he was 2 ,000 miles away. marooned on icebound Coast Guard ship that isn't expected to be free until June or July. So Nina r above. laughing over microphone at Richard's "I do." talked friend Bob Winters f holding mike J into arranging the nuptials via ham radio. Star faces gunshot charge Rock star Ike Turner, who with hi s ex-wife Tina gained fame with such hits as "Proud Mary" and '"l Want to Take You Higher:· has been charged with as- sault with a deadly weapon in t he s hooting of a n Inglewood newspaper de· livery man Pohce said delivery man Andrew Francis had ac- cidentally hit Turner's dog with a thrown newspaper in December. He was confront- ed outside Tur n er·s apartment house Apri I 13. when Turner started yelling about the OeC"ember in· c1dent. detec t ive Russ Enyeart said. Francis is a delivnyman for t he .-Dally Breeze, a Torr~nce news pa per. Turnt'r , 49, who was divorced from Tina Turner in 1976 a nd has since r e - married, \\as released on Sl.500 bail. Agnculture Secretary John R . Ble><:k paid hi s expenses to finish 3,387th in the Boston Marathon. s ays aide Dave Lane. Block. a 46-year-old jog- ging enthusiast, was timed of- ficially at 3 hours. 6 minutes and 46 seconds in the runntng classic Two aides with Block also paid their expenses and took vacation time for the trip, Lane said Cabinet officers are exempt from the law re- quiring use of vacation lime · for personal business Ruth B. Love. Chicago school superintendent respondmg to allega- tions that listening de- vices had been found in her office. laughs at sign she found at her news con/ erence : · 'C1ty Hall mzcrophone. ·· R epub li ca n activist Maureen Reagan, the pres- ident's oldest daughter. says she will be married to Orange County law clerk Dennis Revell on Saturday instead of Friday for con ven1encc's sake The ceremony was de layed one day to coin cide with the reception after White House doctors said the president would be unable to travel to the West Coast The wedding of the 40 year- old Miss Reagan and 28-year· old Revell originally had been set for Friday so President and Nancy Reagan could attend while en route to a meeting with Mexico's P r e s i d e n t J o s e Lop e_z Portillo. A reception with some 70 guests. including Mi ss Reagan 's mother . actress Jane Wyman, was set for Saturday Queen El i z abe th II celebrated her 55lh birthday with most of her family at Windso r Castle west of London W Ith her were Queen Mother t;li zabe th ; her hus band. Prince Philip; her young sons, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward, and her daughter. Princess Anne, with her son, Peter. Associated Press new:sman Jam es Boardman of Salt Lake City was critically in· J ured when struck by the pro· pelle r of a twin-e n gin e Cessna cargo plane at Burbank Airport, a fa mily member said. Boardman. 29, was listed 1n critical condition following eight hours of surgery at St. Joseph Hospital tn Burbank • Ill Northeast Shivers Rainstorms continue to sweep many regions V.S. summary Thunoer.1orm1 WICI r aln>hOwen covered • lwga portion oC Ille Miion lOd•Y '"'"' the ....-rn Plaln1 and Grul LAl<H to the Gut I CcNst ttates L•Qllt r•in !ell •'-Ille Pacific Hortnwnt to.st hm-•t11ru In lh• Horthee•I wert unwuonal>IY Chtlly ln In. 10s ....S JC)\ •Ith lrHH wernlf\9$ P<Kted tor eutern Wnl v 1r111nl•, 'Nry•-. Oel-•rt end northern Vtrotni. Aeln1hower1 and U111ftCHrilorms were rorec•I 10 atrefth nor111w ... e1 I today lrom tlfllr1ol T•>t .. thrOUQll tM MIJ>SIHIPP -()nlo veli.ys •nd 11\to eastetn North Dalo$. Rain •'°"9 ,,,. WHhln9'on CoH I to lfw HOf'tMrn ReOln was t~1ed to ,,.... to snow In lllglWr •••-I°"'· Tttn ... retures ... Ganel t1W netlon t.trly toll•Y rtn .. CI from U In Montpel5-r, y1 .• to 7' 111 McAll«I, r. .... Wast,al, ~ather Ft lr end ""'"t '"'°""' T~.ty. 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" .CM .04 .01 eounty mull8 failfJ.re to report property transfers J Orance county Oflitl•l• think that any property trJnafen cniwl pllcatloM for eitcepliObl I they can 1 ... nl exc•ptlona to be reported to the assessor's of-sent Tuesday to the supervl . most ot the U.000 reaidtnta who fice. Project Manager Howard The assessor's office had rec~f- don 't want to pay penalty feet Whltcomb said the rule was mended approval. But ttie ac':'t" for falling to report property made because a11eaamenta was postponed because of ,a transfen since Propc>sition 13 jump to market rates once County Counsel opinion thet was enacted. . ownership changes. each apJ)Ucation must be a4e- But, as the county Board of Penalt>: tor, failure to report a viewed for its reasonable caus,. Supervisors teamed Tuesday, no transfer l! eather 10 percent of Deputy County counsel Ltn one is sure yet who should de-the tax or $100, whichever is Watson said some of the appli<$1· cide. greater. . tions didn't include any re~ The supervisors were advised But Whitcomb said the why the transfers weren't rF· Tuesday by representatives legis lature left a loophole for ported Crom the County Counsel's Of-persons who think they had a flee that th ey can't make good reason for not notifyin& the blanket exceptions, as proposed county. by the county Assessor's Office. THOSE PERSONS can seek THUS, THE SUPER VISORS gave leaders of those two offices three weeks lo meet with of- Ci ci al s tn the County Ad- ministrative Office lo recom- mend a better. or at least more legal, system. The state Legislature has ruled exceptions from the supervisors by demonstrating "reasonable cause." which may mean they didn't know about the law. Whit- comb said his office has 13.000 petitions for exceptions from 24.000 proper ty owners who failed to report transfers in 1979. The first batch of 2.800 ap- $500,000 PROJECT HE SAID THE STAFF me1· bers are expected to devi e some review panel to look l each application lo m eet the I · tent of the law Whitcomb said workers in his office don't dispute the require- ment to review each application. but said 1t would be a conrnct of interest for them because they have advised property owners to seek exceptions Hall repairs 'on time' After four months of d1!i · ruption. a $500.000 project to bolster the structur al integrity of Orange County government's Hall of Administration is near ing completion Ralph Clark. chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, an· nounced Tuesday that the board \\ 111 resume meeting in the three year old f1 v~·story build mg May 5 The board sin C'e Oecl'mber has been meeting al the old county Hall of Ad ministration, now the home or the county Human Services Agency. JOHN FRANKEL, of the coun ty General Services Agency fa ciltt1es d1v1s10n, said the first phase of a three-phase $1 m1lhon project to repair the building was completed on time and wilhtn the amount budgeted. He credjted the general con· tractor, Gentos1 Brothers. of Costa Mesa . for m eeting the time and cost provisions or the repair work contract The initial phase of the work involved the installation of large diamete r s teel cables to tie together exterior walls on the building 's second , third and fourth floors THE ('ABLES W E R E tensioned after they were 10 stalled a process similar to lhal used tn the construction of h1gh'Aay bndgcs Thl' remaining $500,000 1n work will tnvolve improvements to the shear walls tn the core of the building Consultants de termined those "alls could col lapse tn the t'\'ent of a ma1or earthquake f'~ar less disruption will occur. Frankel ~aid For that reason. publtc· use of the bu1ld1ng will again be ~rm1tted \\htle \I.Ork 1s in progres~. The hall. lo<'aled in the Santa Ana Ctvit· Center complex, was constructed <•t a cost of $8 9 m1lhon Consultants said the urn que. inverted pyrnm1d shape of the structure conlr1buted to its structural Cla" !I NOW threatens protest Bv 0 .C. H USTINGS ~IM O.lly l'tlet S\.ttf Members of the National OrganiJation for Women l NOW ) a re thteatening lo demonstrate Saturday at a Carl 's Jr restaurant in Newport Beach. The women say they don't care for burger chain owner C•rl Karcher'• views on abor- tion . • ,, • RE P. JERRY Patterson will tn lk to certified publtc accoun- tants Thursday night about bow fmanc1al institutions, specifical- 1> savings and loans. are likely to. f~re ~er the Reagan ad- m1n1stra~ Patterson. u member of the Financial fnst1tut1ons subcom· mittec of the House Ba nking, Finance <\Dd L'rban Affairs Com· mittee. will be s peaking in Anaheim at a Joint dinner meet- 1 ng of the Los Angeles and Orange Count:v chapters of the California Society of Certified Public Accountants. • • ,, COUNTY SU P E RVISOR Roger Stanton of Fountain Valley will be talking Friday in Newport Beach about affordable housing Stanton will appear at a din- Gem Talk WHY BUY GOLD as a /ewtlry gift? ner meetinft of the Or ange Coun ty Engineers Club * • CECIL HICKS, Orange Coun · ty ·s district attorney. will dis- cuss "Vi o lent C rime t s Soc i ety's Response Ap · propriate?" when he appears next Wednesday at a Town Hall luncheon in Costa Mesa Hicks, the county's chief pros- ecutor, is scheduled to talk at 12:45 .p.m. in the Balboa Room at the South Coast Plaza Hotel Luncheon tickets a re $11 50 per person Reservations are needed. Call (213) 628-8141. • * ,, SCIENTIST AND political ac tivist Freeman Dyson will speak on "Science for Science's Sake· Public Support of Astronomy·· al 8 p.m. next Wednesday in UC Irvine's Science Lecture Hall Tickets are $3 for general ad· mission, $1 for VCI students and $2 for UCI staff. faculty, alumni and other stu~ They are available al the As sociated Stu· dents Box Office at UC I . ,, ... GLORIA WAL~ SEEL.YE of Assemblywoma n Marian Bergeson 's staff will be the prin- cipal speaker next Wednesday at a 10:30 a.m. meeting of the La gun a :-q1guel Republ1c jn Women The meeting \\-Ill be in the community room at Repubhc Federal Savings, 30212 Crown Vallc-y Parkwa y, Laguna Niguel The public 1~ invited A catered luncheon will follow the morning m~etmg. Reserv,a lions at SS per person should be made by Saturday. Call Mrs Ames Crawford. 496-0778, pr Mrs . Mitchell Slayman, 831 ·351,4 • • * PATRICIA PHILLIPS, Mah Lembke and Sharon Ludwig wlll represent the Capistrano Bay League of Wom en Voters at th<> state league convention May r ·3 in.San Jose Donors sought by bloodmobile The Red Cros~ bloodmobile will roll onto the South Coast MedicaJ Center grounds Friday in South Laguna from 12:45 to 5:30 p.m Donors must bJ: ~between 17 and 65, weigh at 'feast 110 aDd be in good health. For appointments , call tl\e hospital at 499-L311 Time is precious. And so is the lC>Ok of these incredibly affordable o watches. i I ATLANTA (AP) -County lice say they're lnveatlaatlng * port.a that the ~fh vlcthn ln a r1ea of alayln1s of' youne acks, Michael C. Mcintosh, ay have known Joseph Bell, · e 24th victim. A medical examiner said, .. e.anwb11e, that at was "rea- eiable" to assume that the at- on Mcintosh was sexually ivated because his body was d nude. Mcintosh and Bell, whose dies were pulled from sub- 4rban riven within a day of ttach other earlier this week, ~ere known to hang around the ~ame southwest Atlanta fried· f}sh restaurant, Fulton County Police Chief Clinton Chafin said. feto threatem mdar pWne &al.e WASHINGTON !AP> -Presi- dent Reagan is going ahead with the sale of sophisticated radar r~connaissance planes to Saudi rabia, but he's stalling in send- g the plan to Congress in hopes quelling strong opposition ere and averting a threatened to. The White House formally an- unced the sale Tuesday - • · ggering criticism that it is a ' angerous action·· and a "mis- ke" -but dropped plans to nd the proposal to Congress xt Monday. The deal would be lied if the Senate and House ted against it within 30 days ter it'is sent to Capitol Hill. Bank plan nixed by Dakota toun MINOT, N.D. (AP> Voters in this prairie town decided not to get into the banking business by an overwhe lming margin Tuesday, reJecling a proposal t.hat would have made them the owners, operators and patrons Qf the nation·s first cit y-owned ~ank . .. Free enterprise is still alive !nd well in America," said Ken )ohnson, chairman of The Task force for Free Enterprise. "1hich opposed the measure . l'We said to a proposition that smacks of soc:ialiam, 'We want noihing ~o do wiOi yoµ. We wan~ 1ovepmieot out of our lives.· '' Diseaae tra£k«J. · NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP> -A state capitol cafeteria frequent· ed by lawmakers . state employees and reporters may be the sou(ce of a strain or hepatitis that bas infected three legislators and a gubernatorial aide, officials said Tuesday. Nuke plant leahJ OYSTER CREEK, N.J . <AP> About 10,000 gallons of "low- level" radioactive water spilled into a catch basin . seeped through the walls of a building and soaked the ground outside the Oyster Creek nuc lear gene rating s tation Tuesday, authorities said . No injuries were reported. WASHJNGTON <AP> -Dutch Creek No. 1 Mine near Redstone. Colo.. where 15 miners died in an explosion last week. has been cited for 1,133 health and safety violations the last five years, the Mine Safety and Health Ad· ministration said Tuesda-y Warranls issued NEW YORK IAPI -War· rants for the arrest of two former members of the Black Liberation Army were issued Tuesday in the ;;hooting of two policemen gunned down inside their patrol car while making a routine traffic stop. authorilles said Named in the warrant were Anthony LaBorde, 31. of South Ozone Park, Queens, and James Dixon York . 40. of Linden, N.J . U:?ader absenl WASHJNGTON <AP l Ailing Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons failed to attend a meeting of his executive board Tuesday , but union officials sought to discourage speculation he would step down because of his battle with lung cancer. .. .,.~ CLAIMS HARASSMENT -Phyllis Schlafly, militant oppo- nent of Equal "Rights Amendment-. displays at Senate co~­ mittee hearing in Washington, D.C. a booklet on women m combat which she calls sexual discrimination. The action came during a Tuesday hearing. BEIRUT, Lebanon. <AP> - Syriu-Chrlltiab fl1hllni rated anew in BeirUt and Zable today and laraell jets flew over the Lebanese capital and th~ southem port citlea of Sidon and Tyre, authorities reported. Palestinian anti-aJrcratt bat- teries opened lire on the Israeli lets, but none was hit. The pl&l!es. did not return fire and heaaed back to Israel after sizinC up the situation of Israel's Christian al- lies in the south. THE FRESH hostilities scut- tled efforu to reQpen Beirut's in- ternational airport. and the city's harbor functioned at 20 percent of its capacity. officials said. The Syrian forces and Chris- tian militias fought with field guns. mortars and multiple rocket launchers across the line that divides Beirut into Moslem and Christian sectors. A police spokesman said six residents were killed in Syrian shelling of Zahle, the Christian city 30 miles east of Beirut, rais- ing the official, nationwide death toll to 24 since Monday. The fighting has sent some 200,000 realdent.t of Zable Jn.d 100,000 lnhabitant• of JMirut back into underground shelters. Beirut lnternational alrport reopened briefly Tuesday night to allow three Boelng 727 Jetllnera of Lebanon's Middle East Alrllnes to ta.Ice off with a bout 100 passenge rs each, bound for Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the Ivoty Coast. Christian mortar shells ex- ploded around the planes as they took off, but they were not hit. officials said. After the takeoffs, the airport was closed again. "THE SITUATION is very bad." said Moslem Prime Minister Safik Wazzan as he and Christian President Elias Sarkis tried to negotiate a cease-fire and head off a renewal or the 1975·76 Ch ristian-Moslem civil war The Synans are in Lebanon to police the a rmstice that ended the civil war. but the Christians say the Syrians have become an occ upation army bent on destroying the C hristian militias. Major oil firm's profits decline NEW YORK <AP > -With Americans buying less oil and worldwide production far higher than demand. the profits of one major oll co mpany have declined, and that may be the beginning or a trend, analysts say. M obi I Corp .. the second- largest oil company, Tuesday became the first to report its earnings for the first three months of 1981 They were down 24.3 percent to $640 million, or S3 01 a share, from $846 million, or $3.98 a share, in the same period of 1980. Analysts expect most oil companies to report lower earn- ings for the quarter, reflecting both the worldwide glut of oil and the fact last year was a very profitable one for the oil com· pan1es Oil prices ar e up substantially from last year. largely due to in- creases in prices charged by oil exporting countnes. That has boosted profits made by oil com- panies on e xploration and pro- duction, be<."cluse they too can sell crude 011 at the high prices. But lower demand has led to sharply reduced profits -and losses in some cases -on refin· ing and marketing operations. Mobil said that decline more than offset the increase in ex· ploration and production opera- lions. Worldwide production of oil is now about 2 million barrels a day above use, leading to in· creased. stockpiles and more competition. Mobil said that its revenues in the quarter rose to $17 billion from SIS billion, but that its worldwide sales of oil products fe ll 5 percent to 2.29 million bar- rels a day Most of that drop c a m e an the United St ates. where sales were down 11 per- cent to 764.000 barrels a day Abducted tot found safe DALLAS <APJ His disap· pearance has not been explained but Rafael Delgado's return lo a hospital was an occasion for re- JOici ng to his doctors. his family ahd the police. ··1 was so happy ... said the baby's mother, Mary Delgado. 20. "It's Just tremendous... said Dr. Heinz Eichenwald. chief of staff at the Children's Medical Center. The month-old child, who suf· fers from seizures that result from a brain infection. was ab- ducted from his hospital bed • l s hortly after 10:30 a .m . PST Tuesday, 10 minutes after a nurse bad checked his crib. He was missing most of the day, and police and doctors is· sued warnings that 24 hours without medication could kill the infant. They e mphasized that the seizures would appear lo be merely drowsiness but that anyone tryjng to feed him during those convulsions could kill him because he might inhale the milk. Finally an anonymous tipster told police there was an aban· doned child inside a soft drink crate behind a store eight miles from the hospital Pohce spokesman Bob Shaw said the officers who retrieved the baby Tuesday even ing "don "t think he had been there very long ·· The infant was taken back lo the hospital where pediatrician Dr Ron Perkin examined him, verified his identity and re- turned him to the intensive care unit "'The baby 1s an good shape.'" E1chenwald said. a nd ··a great load has been lifted·· with his re- turn WINE CELLAR AND FINE SPIRITS PllCIS 11 RCTIVI T .. OUGH SUMDA Y MAY JltD IMGUMOOI CAIMHIT~ SAUVl•MOM 177 a preatlgloul l .Y. llAUUIU GAMAY llAUJOLAI$ '71 .JAC4i)UIS ' IOMIT v, • • • Ae>dble tchedullng hts lntD your timetable • Over 30 admlsslpn and counetHng locatiOns ttlrooghout Southern we have more costly Llebfrlumllch but none flner reg M.75 . napa cabemet that ~ can drink or cellar 1 CHAMPA-.. enjO'jabte drinking for brunch • reg 17.48 reg '3.38 Celifot"lia · • Fln4nclal ~Id avalleble t 1 ( ' ' I c I. LOS ANGELES CAP> -A Superior Court jury hu awarded the biggest settlement yet -nearly $2.3 million -to . the family of a Modesto man killed in f! 1979 DC-10 crub In Chicago. The latest judgment brings to more than $8.3 million the total settlements reached in seven suit.s during the past month in the nation's worst air disaster. The May 25, 1979 crash, which occurred after an engine fell off the jumbo jet, left 273 people dead. financial .su9pori, love and 1af- fectlon on behtlf of i>onahue'• wife Yvonne, '5, and hfa two children , Carrie, t. an<t Danielle, 14. • Among wttneasea in the cue was Joseph GaJlo, vtce president of the world's lar1est winemaker, who testlffed that Donahue was a blgh•y valued ex· ecutlve with a bright future. J,.ISTED AS defendants were the McDoMell Dou1Ias Corp .. maker of the jetliner, and American Airlines. ment for $1.33 milllon was rea- ched on behalf of lhe wife and two sons of 36-)'ear·old J'9mes Pint of Newport Beacf\. an in- surance aMuity aale1m8J) who netted between $40,000 and $$0,000 a year, was reached on Monday, Walkup said. Last week, a jury awarcjed $1 ,229,300 to the wife and tbree sons of Richard Keely, 51. of San Francisco, a .$50 ,000-a-year nuclear engineer with Bechtel Corp. IN THE FIVE cases settled by jury, the awards totaled $1.8 mllUon more than the plaintiffs had been offered ln out-of-court settlements., Walkup said. ATTORNEY BRUCE Walkup of San Francisco, who handled six o( the sults, said a jury voted 11 ·1 Tuesday to award $2.287 million to the family of 36-year- old Jack Donahue, a $60,000·a· year manager at Gallo Wine Co. in Modesto. The case was the last of six handled by Wa.lkup lo be set\led. the lawyer said Tuesday. He ex- plained he had withheld word of the other settlements -four of them by verdicts and Qne by out· of-court agreement -until all cases were resolved to avoid publicity that could prejudice jurors. In a case hand~d by attorney Larry R. Feldman, a Superior Court jucy on April 7 awarded , ,.,. _ _.. $1.8 million to Sharon Lent, 40, The suit clailfted loss of An out -of-cour~ settle- of Wood land Hills, whose THREE-WAY TRAFFIC -It was two-way traffic on this San Pedro street uptil Jerry Clari\ husband and two sons died in the <left) and John Collver came along with a third direction -down. They were on a training crash. flight out of Long Beach when their engine failed, forcing a landing. · Assembly panel backs flexible mortgage rate / S A C RAM~NTO <AP > -A hom eowner could be paying 73 per· cent interest on his mortgage after 30 years and owe more than he did at the start, under a bill approved by an Assembly committee The 11-0 vot e Tuesday of the Finance. Insurance and Commerce _ Committee followed only the briefest di scussion The bill, AB650 by As· semblyman Tom Bane, D-Van Nuys, goes to the Ways and Means Commit- tee. It is the latest attempt by savings and loan associations to obtain pe rmission to adjust mortgage in- terest rates over the life of a loan to reflect changing money costs. Most mortgages c urrently" have fixed Interest rates. That means a homeowner pays perhaps 12 to 14 percent interest over the entire 30- year life of a loan. Sa vlngs and loans, which handle most of the mortgages iQ the state. say they can oo longer offer such loans because they must obtain money at high rates like ~8 percent while holding long-term mortgages that are being paid back at 7 percent or 9 percent. / Stale law has for years allowed .a mortgage on which the interesl,raie could be adjusted up or d,&wn armax· 1mum of 212 percentage points over lhe life of the loan. The Legislature last year passed AB3142 by As - semblyman Alister McAlister. D·San Jose, that allows interest rates lo vary up lo a maximum of 5 percen· tage points. Crime fighting plan rejected OAKLAND (APl A crime· fighting plan to tax residents for a beefed-up police force was being de· feated Tuesday by voters in Oakland, one of the few California cities to re- ject tax-slashing Proposition 13 in 1978. Measure A, which needed support from two-thirds or the voters to pass. would have added more than $39 million in extra taxes on homes and businesses over the next four years to hire 88 additional police personnel and prevent cuts tn other depart· m en ts Tighl,er obscenity standards nixed SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The state Senate's Judiciary Committee re· fuses to tighten restrictions against obscenity or let prosecutors shut a business which has distributed ob· scene materials. · But it did approve Tuesday, on a 5·1 vote, a bill to make it a crime to film persons aged 16 and under engaged in various sexual acts. Liber.als uin in Santa Monica SANTA MONICA <AP> -A liberal slate or candidates backed by a coali- tion ol rftiters took power for the first time In this coast residential community. where four new mem- bers were sworn into city council. The new members who took office Tuesday were: The Rev. Jim Conn. a community activist; Ken Edwards. a planning commissioner and county probation officer: Do lores Press. former commissioner of the city's Rent Control Board; a nd Dennis Zane, a tenant organizer with Tom Hayden's Campaign for Economic Democracy. \ Panel backs ftmds for tromen's wtit SAC'RAM ENTO ! AP > The California Commission on the Status of Women. threatened in the Senate with a cutoff of funds, has won a vic- tory in the Assembly. ·An Assembly Budget subcommit· tee approved 3·2 Tuesday the $407.000 proposed in Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's fiscal 1981 ·82 budget. Man found slain said to he Coaster singer MODESTO (AP> -Homicide de· tectives say they are investigating several possible motives In the kill- ln1 of a man iaentiJled as a rock'n' roll singer whose mutilated body was Cycle helmet bill killei/, discovered almost a year ago but on- ly now identified. Police· using dental charts Iden· tified the body Tuesday as that of Nathaniel "Buster" Wilson, 45, ac· cording to Stanislaus County sberirf's Sgt. Les Weidman. ·------"-----, TAX SHELTERS ~-------------~rl.J 01 & Go\ • Red Estote • lvt Stomps • ~Leming DIDUCTIOHS UP ~ TtH Ylil 611.ALD L ltOZM AMAMCIAI. SIHICIS 7 I 4 /'44-JI07 announces a new program 2nd TRUST DEEDS •No P<•1>41YIAauiNbie ·Fut lun<11119 • 30 year Amort11ed Up to 15 Yf• Repmy • Loan S I0,000-•500.000 •Owner/Non Ow- • Swu>11 Loan1 PurChHe Money Call W1ll 1am B. Mitchell Ca11 today for quote • No 0011gat1on trans notronol 11.Jnd1ng (714) 975-1128 ~~~:~=:~~ The Senior Citizens Trust . is pr9ud to announce that the 1981 Health Provider Directory it now available to all Senior Citizens Y.ithout charge. For the substantial list of physicians, dentists. and other practitioners offering their services at superb savings, call or write: Senior Citizens Trust. 1400 No. Harbor. Fullerton. Calif. 92635 Ste. 100. We will forward your l.D. Card and Directory upon receipt of your name. address. date of birth. and phone numb~r-. THIS PROGRAM IS Fall TO ALL SBIOIS c 714) 179-7111 Page 3 of ~I 22, 1111 tt.URT "Spr- ingtime Bonus Buy•" advett181nt the 4.50 men• v-neck •hlrt•, 3.50 tank top8 and 4.00 athletic •hotb are Incorrectly deKribed. Thi• mdM. I• not Adldae brand, do-. not orlglnllt• with AdldH, I• not llcenMd by AdldH •nd hH no •Hocldon with AdldH. We regret any Inconvenience this may have cauaed our custom,.. , , For Ev~ Room Open Daily 1CH3 p.m. Friday 'til 9 p.m. Quality you can see, touch and · rely on. Mother's Day Special $998.95 For Country China Hutch and So.lid Oak Table with 4 Chai rs. SOLID OAK 42" ROUND TABC£ With 21 " teat Princess Leg with four Coun~ Winsor side chairs (as shown) . ' I Durins a '" recent visit to Orange C.Ounty, the •atrman of the House committee that over- sees refugee t'eae"ttl~ment was found nodding his bead ln agree~ with several things local officials had to say. The officials claimed before Rep. Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky., that federal regulations, in many cases, · are frustrating efforts to reset~le refugees. Mazzoli is chairman of the Committee on Immigration, Refugees and International" Law. For example, Mazzofi was told, paperwork has made iJ\: effective a federal program t~ promote refugee employment. In a separate program, income ex· 1 clusion policies have made it ap· pear some refugees are better off financially than they really are. thus making them ineligible for public health assistance. AliO troubli.n1 to county of· ficials II tan1ua1e \IHd by tlie U.S. Department of State to de· fine ''famU)',V -wo~ that bu virtually assured that eveo far distant "'Jatives of persons liylna in the county can relocate J:iere. Finally, the local officlals / complained of a lack ·of' coordination among federal agencies responsible for refU&!Be resettlement. In the view of the local of- ficials, changes in the varioua programs where problems bave been identified could go a lona way to helping Orange County re· settle the thousands of refugees who are arriving annually. It is hoped Mazzoli, on his re· turn to Washington, can help pro· mote some action to bring about the changes those on the front line believe are necessary. Guest UX>rker plan .I 1 b . . th i . California Sen . S .I. empoyer Y g1vmg e mm1- HayakawBtltas renewed his effort grants legal status. to win congressional approval of The $500 bond, he contends is a guest worker program to about what many of the illegal legalize the status of Mexican immigrants pay to ''coyotes" nationals seekin g temporary who now smuggle them across employment in the United States. the border at great risk. . His Guest ~orker Act of 1981, The plan would differ from 1ntro~uced this month, would the former bracero program by ' esta~li~h a five.-year pr.ogram un-permitting the immigrants to der which Mexican .nationals ~ho seek work in any area and in any post a $500 bond with the Uruted field, rather than being assigned States goveritment w~uld be to 8 single agricuJtural employer. givei:i a guest worker visa good It wouJd require payment of legal for six months. . wages and the guest workers At the end ~f that penod they would be subject to standard U.S. would be reqmred to return to taxes ~exico and their $500 bond, plus · . interest, wouJd be returned. They Det~Ls would be w<;>rk~d out would be entitled to apply for by a . bllateral co.mm1ss1~~ of another six-month work stay Amencan a~d Mexican off~ci~ls . after one year. again posting the H.ayakawa mtrodu.ced a s1m1lar bond. ~ill last year, but 1t . .was blocked Hayakawa says research m . the Se~ate Judiciary Com· has shown that most illegal im· mittee. ~s year, as a member migrants from Mexico remain of the maJonty .Party· he hopes here only temporarily. returning for a better heanng. to take their earnings to their The bill merits at least that. families. Most return to their As things stand, Mexican wouJd- homes permanently by the time be workers continue to pour over they reach the age of 30. he notes. the border, risking substandard The guest worker program. working conditions and always H ayakawa believes. ·would fill under the threat of deportation. their job needs, and the needs of ff there is a need for their A m e r i c a n e m p I o y e rs i n services here, and ther;e appears agricuJture and other fields , pro· to be, some legalization of their tecting both worker and statusisinorder. Honor Vietnam vets The emotional welcome ac- corded the hostages on their re- turn from Iran sparked more than a little bitterness among many who were sharply re· minded of the very different re- ception given returning veterans of the Vietnam war. That in turn has inspired some rather tarc:fy action to rec- ognize the contributions of the 2. 7 million who served, the 57 ,692 who died. the 300,000 who were wounded and the 75,000 who were permanently disabled. This weekend, proclamations from Congress down to local city councils are calling for rec · ognition of the Viet vets. Congress has declared Sun· • day , April 26, as a national day of recognition for vet~rans of the Vietnam era. In Orange County, the Board 6f Supervisors has declared Saturday. April 25, as Vietnam Appreciation Day in Orange County, honoring especjally the 300 county residents who died in the Vietnam conflict. The same day has been designated by the Costa Mesa City Council. Residents are urged to fly their flags on both days. This is indeed a trunimum gesture of ap- preciation for the sacrifices of those who served in the unhappy war. and who have waited far too long for any gesture· of publl~ recognition. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Oallv Piiot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader c.omment Is Invit- ed. Address The Oallv Pllot, P.O. Box tS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7U) M2·4321. I L.M. Boyd /Significant beardA The beard 15'> years aeo was the mark of the experienced pbyslclan. And lf a young doctor couldn't grow a proper beard. be waa in deep pro- f e11ional trouble. Patieota simply wouldn't accept Mm, ac~rdinl to the blltorical footnotes. Amuin1 it ii bow lltUe a thine cao move tbt niataes of men. Franc•'• Kine l'rendl l bad an uely acar on hla bbl". He crew a beard to hide It. So all tbe Frent-~..neo old enoulh to do 10 ar•• beards, too, I true. Look at t.boae who sell physical culture. To meu. they promise to build it up, to women, to trim It down. Q. Z:. there really aucb a tbini ln cards aa "bestnner'• luck''? A. Maybe. But ll not, there'• at ·leaat one explanation for w~at appears to be beelnner'• luc\. hi 11mes that cur be won by d..,.. bhsm.n,, lnftperienced pl11en can au•ke l\ICb tactlet utelt11. THlr ICbOt1'DCe aetuall)' btndlcapc tbe npertt. WhO tMrefor• almply have \o plaJ Ult carda Md f91Jt·f .. OD cunat•S· And tho•• eapert• tom...._ ndM lt too late. Reagan blocked Navy ·game WASHINGTON -A hospitalized President Reagan did not wait for the tragic sinking April 10 of a Japanese trawler by a missile-firing Polarb sub- marine lo bring the admirals to heel by ordering full speed ahead on a vital sub· marine communications system they wanted stopped. From the While House, an undated me morandum ordered Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger to countermand the Navy's decision to cancel its extremely low frequency <E LF> communications system. The memo bore only Reagan's name, not his sign ature, but it had been orally ap- proved from the hospital bed of the in· valid commander in cruef. · · . . . There shall be no fundina re· duclions," Reagan said. "You should advise the Navy that I am not inclined to terminate this much-needed program without compelling evidence to do so." THAT PRESUMABLY scuttled the ef- fort by the admirals to play the familiar old Navy Jame: Put aside currently needed proJects at the expense of rund· int futuristic systems. Surprisingly, the Pentagoo civilians did not bring the Navy brass up short; the decision on a piece of hardware bad to go all the way to lbe presldent.'s hospital bed. The Navy leaked the first news of this lo the public via no champion of the Pentagon: Seo. Carl Levin of Micbl1an. a llberal Democrat and all-out environ- mentalist foe ol ELF, a system destined for his home state. When Levin passed the word to the Detroit News, it ex· pJoded with the force or a Polaris mis· site amortg defense leaders on Capitol Hill. For 20 years, the Navy and a few brave politicians willing to lake on the environmentalist lobby had preached the 1oundness and safely of ELF. Without it, the president cannot com- municate with submerged U.S. sub· marines; they must come close to the surface and trail their antennas . · That is probably what happened. Navy submariners told us, in the East China Sea tragedy April 10. Tbe U .S.S. George Washington, a Polaris missile sub, was almost certainly surfacing to pick up new orders. That maneuver would be unnecessary with ELF IN AN INTERNATIONAL emergen- cy, the president could not order U.S. strategic submarines lo prepare for ~1~r:­------------------~~-l ·~ 1: ~ fVAIS I IDVAI ~ possible missile firings, or to rush to a new location, without risking their destruction by an enemy as they expose their surface antennas. ELF 1s ''the critical Unchpin" to wartime deploy. ment of the s ubs. wrote Sen. John Tower, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, in an angry note lo Weinberger when he first beard about the Navy's decision. Why , then, did the Navy risk con· gressionai wrath and the commander in chief's personal affront by cancelling ELF? The fuJl reason is shrouded in Pentagon mists, but defense specialists -including many submariners -say the reason waa simple greed for defense appropriations. The Navy brass decided the $34 million earmarked for ELF in the com· ing fiscal year could be used to develop a futuristic aircraft for communJcating with submarines called TACAMO. Then, in another year or two, it could return to ELF, knowing that growing con~ressional support of the ELF system would still guarantee delivery of the funds. IN SO DOING the Navy betrayed it• friends who, on April 7. had won a ref· erendum over the environmentalists in Ashland County. Wis .. where the first part of ELF 1s being built. Supportin1 ELF in the name of national security, veterans groups have spent thousands of dollars lo argue there is nothing to fear from the underground antenna. The VFW had wired Adm. Hayward, chief of naval operations. two weeks earlier that cancellation would destroy Navy credibility. The decision reversing the admirals was made by the White House on two grounds · Firs t . ELF is the only foreseeable system to give the president command·and-controi access to missile· firing submarines, which are a vital part of the strategic triad; second, c redibtlity of the e ntire defense establishment. not just the Navy , was on the line at a time the new ad· minis tration is trying to resto re American defenses PENTAGON CIVILIANS, in distinc· lion to thjs White House posture, did lit- tle to bring the admirals to heel. Entire· Jy exempted was Secretary of the Navy J ohn Lehman, who pleaded conflict or interest ste mming from his activities as a Washington-based defense consultant. Although Weinberger quieUy informed White House aides of his own doubts about the Navy 's decision. he did nothing publicly to force a reversal. That left it up to the commander in chief. The display of a decisive presl· dent able to make a quick political de· cision from his hospital bed is the one dividend lo emerge from the ELF af· fair. What Reagan should now do is transrer some of that spirit to the Pen· tagon. Can businessnien serve impartially? To the Editor: Ah -the Blue Ribbon Committee! Now, finally, the Orange County Board of Supervtaon ls 1eriOU1 about fiJMllD1 a site far an bone$t to goodness reatonal alrport to 1erve t,his part of Southern California -or is lt~ Somehow it is hard for me to believe that the men selected to aerve on this committee, no matter bow honest and sincere they may be (which I believe them to be>. ue goinl to select the site that will best serve this area as our ultimate regional aJrport. How conceivable is It that the president of Disneyland Is eoinl to push for the only remainiJig, logical site in this area which ls Camp Pendleton? l mean, thJs man may be president but he still answers to a board ol direc1on . How are the directors golne lo react to a propoeal by their president to put tbe major air transpol'\ation «nter for t.hia aru &O miles clO!lel' to Sea World and the San Dte.ro Zoo and 5'> miles further from their DisDeyland investment? find the regional airport site that sbouJd not only have been found 10 years ago t>ut should have been built and in operation by now. TOM WILLIAMS Airport Coalition Wrong punUhment To the Editor: I was angered upon reading your April 1S story regarding the 100-year sentence given to the Vietnamese teen· age refugees for their alleged crime or MAILBOX I am personalJy gratified lo finally see recognition of these violations. Especial- ly in view that many mortgage brokers have a fiduciary responsibility to their clients and go to great lengths to protect .their clients' interests. Real Estate Commissioner Fox urges an investor to review appraisals and credit reports. I suggest a potential in· vestor should demand more. In fact, by doing so, many of the abuses can be al- leviated in the beginning. Doing business with an established, reputable firm Is one matter -doing business with a "crook" ls another. THE REPUTABLE broker should provide not only an independent ap- praisal and credit report but an •P· praisal done by an independent fee ap- praiser who is designat.ed anti credentialed; possibly more than one credit check, and documentation verify. ing past credit history and most im- portant lo the "chain of title," a Polley of Title Insurance. In the normal course of business, an llt- vealor should check out the company's references and backl"ound of lts pat clpals. A telephone call lo t.be Depa - ment of Real Es~ate ln Santa Ana verify if the company ls p~ly llcemed or if they may have any "unfavorable" com menta regardincthe company. ' If any mortcafe broker refuet aucb lD· quiries m.cle 0( tbem, at.ay completely away! It la yonr bard eamed money, and any com~ a.boald, lt they ~ worth tbe'r salt. hleuuni up and live an at· countln1 ol wbo they ate, wbat they art, as well u wbattbe invfftmenti1. aOB&RT .l.SPAllR,CBA I \ . Israeli Parliament blOcks pork ouster TEL AVIV, Israel <AP) -ln the Book of Leviticus, the Old Testament ls abundantly clear on pigs: "their carcasses shall ye not touch, they are unclean to you." Nonetheless. Israel's Parliament has just knocked down an attempt to outlaw pork from the Jewish state. The law was sponsored by the Agudat Yisrael party, a small faction of orthodox rabbis, and got through two readings in the House before opposition laborites and liberals in Prime Minister Begin's Likud bloc: joined forces against it. Agudat Yisrael withdrew the proposal at the end of March. FORMER PRIME Minister Golda Meir, a founder of the Labor Party. used to tell proudly of how her father went hungzy in the Czarist Russian army rather than eat pork. But the late Mrs. Meir's successors in the Labor Party argue that to outlaw pork would offend Israel's non-Jewish residents just as Jews abroad would be offended if denied kosher food. Among all the Jewish religious injunctions, many made for general health reasons, the ban on pork has special significance. Many.Jews suffered martyrdom at the hands of medieval persecutors rather than eat pork. During the Spanish In- qulslUon, Jews who coov.er\ed t.o Roman Cath0Ud1m continued t.o practice Judaism in secrecy and You c:a ri Cha~ DAILY .-1LOT Cla ssified Ad• 642·5678 were called Marranoes, from a Spanish word meaning swine. On the other hand. today's secular Israelis, who are 75 percent or the population. are against what Labor Party leader Shimon Peres calls "interfer- ring In the individual's dinner plate. PORK, WHILE easily ob- tained in Israel, rarely goes by its real name. chazir. Instead it masq~rades as "white steak," •·special steak." and in one American-style sandwich shop a few years ago, as "oink meat." Parliament banned pig farm- ing in 1956 and gave a monopoly to two left-wing kibbutzim in re· mole areas. But no law was passed banning the marketing of pork in butcheries and restaurants, and municipalities have the final say The result is a patchwork of regulations that make pork illegal in Tel Aviv but legal in some suburbs. Even where pork ls illegal, it is so popular that merchants pay the fines • though they were a pork tax. Aaron Barzilai, owner of a Tel Aviv restaurant, says 80 percent of the steaks he sells are pork. and he doesn't mind pay- tng an average of 1.000 shekels -$110 -a month in fines. Moshe Tsur, a pork supplier In Tel Aviv's Carmel Market. says pork ts cleaner and more nutritious than beer. and cheaper too, because llrael Im- ports most of its beef. BEEF STICK. __ .. ...,. home ar omc..1bUt ao~eon· can put a tlnpr lnto your t»dy cavi· ty wltbout a warrant," uld James Joy, a ColQrado ACLU of. flclal. POUCE SAY • TRE searches help keep drur• pd ~eapoiia out of the JaU1 and prbtect of- ficers and inmates. "It'• not meant to punl1h anybody," Arlington County Sheriff Jim Goodies aaid. "It's meant to protect everybod)t." Court rullocs have generally upheld authorities' rtaht t.o COO· duct strip-searches. But the U.S. Supreme Court bas ruled that people who are illegally slrip- sea rebed can sue for cash damages. Lois Upton, an ACLU att.orney ln Chicago, said strip-searches can violate several con - stitutionally protected rights, in- cludlni tbe 1uaraotee aeainat unreasonable searches. Sex dl1crimlnaUon was the basis or the nation's first major strip-search case, in which Chicago police were named in an ACLU lawsuit alleging women were strip-searched more often than men. IN THE YEAR since Chicago police changed their rules and offered cash settlements to 191 women, suits have prompted new search procedures in Houston. Suffolk County. N. Y .. Independence, Mo., Thornton, Colo., and Racine. Wis . And the J.ustice Department recently entered an agreement with Lee County, Fla .. to limit strip· searches. Chicago offered each plaintiff $250 if she had been routinely strip-searched and $1,000 if a body cavity search was done. The ACLU said the largest strip-search settlement was the $25,000 which Suffolk County, N.Y .. a uthorities last month agreed to pay legal secretary Diane Sala. She was s ubjected to a body cavity search after fail- ing to respond to a summons she never received. "I'm happ y with the settlement, yet ... I will never in my life be able to forget the search," Mrs. Sala said. BARBARA FOSTER, a criminal justice researciler for the National Conference of State Legislat\lres, said Illinois. Michigan . Missouri and Connecticut have passed laws limiting strip-searches, and several other states are con- sidering such laws. A GIFT -A month-old male orangutan clings to mother Jane, a 20-year-old Sumatran orangutan, at the San Diego Zoo. The un-named infant will eventually go to Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo where his mother was mated before being traded to San Diego. Buy sought, of town plagued by fire CENTRALIA. Pa <AP> -A pair of "front people" for an un- disclosed buyer say they are prepared to offer $30 million to this town plagued by an under- ground coal fire. At a meeting to help townspeople decide what to· do about the 19-year-old fire burn- ing in abandoned coaJ tunnels under the town, two Bloomsburg businessmen stepped forward and otrered to buy every home for $40,000 to $100,000. Burt Wandell, a real estate agent. and David Linnet. a stove manu!acturer, said they were fronting for an unidentified American company w1shin~ to gain the nghts to the anthracite under Centralia. '"We will not say who we re present because we do not "ant lo start a bidding war." said Linnet. The deal would depend on whe ther the compa n y found sufficient reserves beneath the town of 1.100. Linnet said. rt would go forward with the deal if provable reserves of 15 million tons of anthracite are found. he said . The government has estimated there are 7 million lo 10 million tons. Before any homes are bought. the plan must win approval from every property owner. SAN FRANCISCO CAP> 1-A consumer lobbyist was awUdldl\j Ut,550 II\ t~es by the 1tate l Publlc Ulllitlea Commi111on, which alao recel\led a proposal to set up a trust funct t4 pay con- sumer advocates "'ho intervene against ut.UlUes. 10 The fe~ went Tuesday to ' rfJ David L. Wllnu, operatlna u Consumers LObby A1alnat -tsa Monopolies at TibUt01'1 ror bis ef-lo l forts before the PUC aealnst 3s Pacific Telephone. 'ol WILNER'S COMPL~INT, s.R filed in 1976, alleged the arlJ telephone company regularly 6 , failed to collect full termination ·91 charges as required when re- moving and replacing its rt? facilities for new switchboard in I systems. int After negotiations. Wilner and 1 Pacific Telephone agreed on a 1>J settlement in 1977 in which the n~ utility agl'ffd to pay $400,000 for lQ a "beneficial public purpose"' to s be approved by the PUC. The ub plan was to use the money to 9q help pay for special telephone nil eq~ipment . for those with im-uH paired heanng. u Th . . . . q e maJor question remaarung before the commission was Wilner's fees request for work) performed before the com· mission. The PUC denied this in 1978. But the state Supreme Court in 1979 held the PUC has the power to award fees in cases l f which res ult in creation of a a.; common fund for public benefit 1 J I THE COURT ALSO ruled that !Vil the PUC may award fees and s n costs to a non attorney such as fl't Wilne r when appearing in a rt!presenlat1vc capacity. 1n 1 Commi ssioner Ri c hard ,. G ra vcll e proposed that the re· c'J maining $370.500 from the utility <:tb be used to create a trust fund for o1q consumer advocates. ~ L. Reed Waters, a Pacific 11 ~ Tele phone vice president. ex rn1 pressed doubt the PUC could legally set up an advocates trust • /1 fund. ill! •ni >W Funds pledged ~~ ISLAMABAD. Pakistan (AP> od Nearly 17 months after a mob of 10.000 rioting Pakistartis &ri ransacked and burned the U.S. m Em ba ss y In Is I am ab ad . 'Jrl Pakistan's milJtary government oJ has pledged $13.6 million to re-sl build it. ori 11 I . ll ·rl J fo ·~..: •) J l IO'J !OJ ff I 0\ rm ,9'> lo ·o~ ::JC1 ~ ( ··-tw lW ~ "11 The wise investment of money can be a complex decision. But it doesn't have to be. The simplest path is often the most profitable. As well as the safest. I):) 30 While some other people are trying to decide what involved finan· cial step to take next, you can simply be making money. Risk free. Newpon Balboa Savings offers a full range of financial services, with each account federally insured to $100,000. Sman. And safe. Stop by our nearby office and talk to your friends at Nc:wi:><>n Balboa Savi~gs. Discover what the bulls and the bears arc m~ing. \ Write,.«>unelf a profit check. Why pay for a checking account when your checking account can pay you? Our new Profit Check service actually pays you 5 ~ % interest on the balance · in your ch ecking account. Very interesting! ·qO nQ b-<; ,M J l J HOSPITALIZED - Country singer Loretta Lynn was reportedly admitted to a Reno hospital after complaining of stomach pains. Her manager said she was under observation for gastrointes tinal I disorders. Media satisfy ffispani WASHINGTON <AP> Mexican-Amer icans are generall y satisfi ed with their community n e w s paper s and b roadcast s tations, although their leaders ha ve complaine d , a study says. Hispanics surveyed in· d1cated concerns about specific coverage of their community but did not have a generally negative attitude about the news media, said the s tudy from Mi c higan State University However. two-thirds o f the His panics in· terviewed indicated they would like to see at least part of the newspapers in Spanish. THE RESEARCHERS satd the Hispanics sur veyed were primarily Mexican-Americans. The researchers in terviewed t,700 Hispanic a nd non-Hispanic adults. 700 students and 88 His- pa n ic co mmunit y le ader s in Stockton. Salinas. San Bernardino a nd V1sa li a.<.:a llr . Tucson. Ariz.; Santa Fe. N .M .. a nd E l Paso. Texas A !though they were less likely to subscribe to news papers than Anglos. those who read pa,pers spend as much time doing so as non. Hispanics. she said . They were also more approving than Anglos of television news cov- erage. the study said. THE RESEARCHERS found that His panics and Anglos spend equal a m o unts o r tim e watching t elev ision news, a lthough His· panics tended to watch more daytime t elevision. The study said His· panic leaders viewed tl\e media as the voice of the Anglo, and they com - plained of inadequate coverage of and pro- g ramming fo r His- panics. L ocal radi o wa s viewed as most responsive. as an His· panic-oriented station was available in most of the communities. The researche rs as· sessed the overall read- ability oJ newspapers. finding editorials and news service stories more dlfflcult to read than local news stories. The lS·mQJlth survey was sponsored by the Gannett Co., which baa newspapers ln each of the communities. Erosion fun d s set We'U come right out and say it. We think Newport Center is a pretty nice place. Its plazas, its landscaping, its sculptures, its range 'of shops and businesses, the way it fits in with and serves the community surrounding it, the Jook of it -we're pleased with these things. Truth is, we often show off Newport Center to visiting planners and governmental leaders from all over the world, as one of the most successfully realized (though yet incomplete) examples of master planning in partnership between a privai_e developer and a city anywhere. If that sounds immodest, we can't help it, because that's how we feel. This sense of pride has been there from the beginning, when the chimes at Robinson's first sounded the opening of Fashion Island. That was almost 15 years and 500 acres ago. Golf course included, that's how much of Newport Center's land has been developed to date, phase by phase. A little more than 73 vacant acres now remain for the final phase. When they're built out, that'll be it. - Newport Center will be completed. We'd like to tell you a little about our plan for completing Newport Center. Our view of it. We believe it's a darned good\ plan. It has to be, not only because that's wtial city government would demand, but also because that's what we demand. Newport Center is very important to us, as you may have gathered. But equally important, as far as we're concerned, is what the plan means to the community. We think it means a lot. · For one thing, it means millions of dollars in public road improvements east of the Upper Bay-improvements that won't cost Newport taxpayers a dime. For another, it means millions of dollars in additional tax revenues for the city-i:evenues'that could go a . long way toward keeping Newport Paid Ad\·ertisel'l)ent "Equally important is what the plan means to the community. We think it means a lot!' program will occur right along with it. It will help complete the city's master plan for roads. And at no public cost. Also as part of our Newport Center plan, we're going to have a transportation management program. the welJ-kept and well-protected It's designed to reduce peak-hour community that it is today. commuter traffic from the center. It Those are some of the things involves van pooling, expanded bus that come with the plan. Here are services and staggered work hours. some other things, for Newport We'll finance it, to get it going. Center itself: As for city revenues, well, • A matching pair of 12-story they're considerable. Right now, office buildings. The long-prepared Newport Center generates $1.5 miUion site for them is north of Fashion annually in surplus city income. That's Island near the existing 18-story net, above the cost of municipal towers on Newport Center Drive. services required by the center. • A 400-room luxury hotel, U nder ... our plan, this surplus . surrounded by gardens, in the same revenue -in today's dollars-will go area The hotel will be of a residential up by another $1 million every year. character, with no convention facilities. The SI million irt additional • A gathering of small, low-rise net revenue, by the way, is enough to office buildings plus two restaurants cover the total annual budget of the in the Newport Village area between city's 22-member police detective MacArthur Boulevard and Avocado division. Or wages and benefits.for 34 Avenue. (We had planned to have fire-fighting and paramedic personnel. several retail shops there, but local Or the entire budget of the city library residents and merchants offered system. We were curious, so we some good reasons to change the looked it up. plan. So we did.) ,. We researched something else • Ousters of one-and two-story The airport. What kind of impact wiJJ garden offices at "three other sites on our plan have on the airport? This is the perimeter of Newport Center. what we found out (from an inde- lt will take five or more years pendent consultant who knows more to complete most of these projects. about these things than we do): When they're done, Newport Center's The ;;tdditional development building space will be expanded by will be the origin of an average of 41 about 20 percent. departing passengers a day. That's , There will be expansion in twb about one passenger per flight. It other areas, as well. We mentioned amounts to about l \4 percent of the them a moment ago. Roadways and airport's current daily passenger total. city revenues. So there's an impact, but it doesn't We'll be a little more specific. really seem to be much. And in no First, roads. The city's consultants say way will it cause a change in the our Newport Center plan will create a number of flights. need for some $3.3 million in. public Now, we're oot saying our road improvements. We're going plan is perfect. We're just saying, all to pay for these impro\;"ements, of things considered, that it's a good course. And we're not stopping there. plan. For both Newport Center and We also plan to upgrade portions of .i the community it serves. . Jamboree Road, MacArthur Boulevard So there you have it,' our C}lld Coast Highway by another Newport Center completion plan. $5 million worth. Lately we've heard some questions As Newport Center is bUilt ou~ about it. they're good questions. this $8 million-plus road improvement • Next week, we'll answer them. By PATRICK KENNEDY OI UM Delly ...... '"" Trustees of the Huntington Beach Elementary <City> School District agreed Tuesday to leaJe two of the thre~ achoob scheduled for closure next year, but rejected Superintendent Lawrence Kemper's recommen- dation to move district head- quarters to LeBard School. The trµstee1 unaoimously agreed that Clapp School be leased to the Oranae County de- partment of Education to teach handicapped atQCSenta and that Peterson School be leased to Coastline CoJnmuh~College. DetailJ of the p sed ledes haven't been work out but dis- trict officials slly they expect rental Income to be '30,000 yeat- .,..., ............. Tom Vandenberg ponder• what to do wiJh bcuketa of eggs left him by generous Ecuter Bunny. Rabbit tracks Easter bunny left signatur e The 426 colored Easter eggs that Tom Vandenberg found hidden in his Newport Beach apartment Sunday morning didn't bother him loo much It's tht.• 74 beauties he didn't find that have him wor- ried "I've never seen so many eggs." the young Newport man remarked this week "I found them in my dirty socks, in my sofa. in the toilet -you name it." VANDENBERG BLAMES the whole thing on his girlfriend from Pasadena He says she has an "interest· ing" sens<.> of humor. According to his explanation. she purchased 500 eggs, "mostly rejects." from a ranch and then spent the better part of two days colonng them "I was away on business," he says, "and she came in and hid them. When I came back. they were all over the place .. She also left behind a sign that proclaims. "Cation! Easter egg deposits " Vandenberg says the word "cation." which is sup- posed to read "caution." is another example of her in· terestmg humor He says he's a poor speller and she won't let him forget 1t BUT HE'S PLENTY GOOD with his math. After find· ing only 426 of the 500 secreted eggs, he knew he was in trouble. "There's still 74 eggs out there," he says, "and if it goes too long maybe I can borrow one of those odor· sniffers from the fire department and find them that way" But for the time being, Vandenberg says he has plenty of eggs. He started keeping them in a laundry basket after running out of room in his refrigerator. Asked what he plans lo do with all the eggs, he admits, "I don't know." And, a Cler a pause. "Why? Do you want some?" j Guard dog warning I ' I OK,' d in Huntingt~n :The Huntington Beach City Council has approved a law re- quiring owners or trained euard do1s to poet. warning signs and to re slater with the city so police and fire departll)ent penonnel can be prepared to def end t.hemselvet in the event of emergency. The addresaea of guard dog owners will be put into city com· puten to emer1ency personnel will know where t.be anlm11J are when respond1n8 to a c1ll on privat.eproperty, accordln1tot.be ordinance. City officials note that on numerom recent occasions nre Cithters have been held at baJ bJ dot• and restricted In their dutlea, Warren Hall, city treasure'r in charge of licensing animalJ, said a major problem is cauaed by al· legedly W\Scrupuloua companies tbu buy "lar1e a1gre11lve breeds'' at animal poundl and train them to t>e vlctoua. "The do1s are teaaed and tormented enoucb to mall• them mean and 'ricloul aad then are sold as trained ruard clop," Hall said. THE &ESVL T of the actlvitlet, be said, "hat been a proliferatloll of unmanaaeable dot• in tM hand•oflfteptowners, '' • COMICS TELiEVISION FEATURES ly from each selected 1lte. The board majority sharply criticized Kemper's recommen· datlon that $50,000 be 1pent to traolfer di1trict beadauartera from the 54-year-old b~ld~ on 14th Str:eet and Palm Avenue to LeBard. ON A 3-% VOTE, the t#Qatees decided to continue trylna to leue the facility to an organiza- tion that would be acceptable to surroundlnj residents, many of whom were concerned that a dr\18' ~rui.uon center would be located there. In February, t.be flnancially- trou bled 1chool district ap- proved budget cuts of more than Sl million and closure of t.he three schools next year. G. WjlUam Miller anal~u• the country's problems - and the solutions . . . 89 ··when we were soul- searching about closine achoola and making all these budget cuts, never in my wildest im- agination did I envision we'd be spending "°·000 to do· this." (moving district headquarten) said trustee Paula Hulse. "I 'm angry about it," she added. Trustees Norma Vander Molen and David Sonkaen said they want.ed to take more time to rind an acceptable lessee fqr the school site. "IN GOOD con1cience I caq't agree to expend bond fund.a <\O make LeBard district hea~, quarten) and then lose rent in· come," said Mrs. Vander MoleCL "That will be money down tne tubes." ·J:alky ·license ·1 ee hike ·rukd violation of Prop 13 By PIDL SN~IDERMAN Of ... o.lly ~ ,..., Plans to raise business license fees in Fountain Valley by 15 percent have ground to a halt because of a court ruling that such an increase violates Proposition 13. On the advice of City Attorney Thomas Woodruff. the City Council voted Tuesday to delay inde finitely action on the fee Attendam injured by bandit A Huntington Beach service station employee was over- powered when he struggled with a shotgun-wielding intruder ear- ly today but escaped with minor injuries when his attacker fied with $200 la station receipts, police re~rted. Huntington Beach police Lt. John Foster said attendent Moris Haddad, 40, of Santa Ana was on duty at 2:40 a.m . when a man entered HunUnston Brake and Tire, 19501 Beach Blvd., brandishing a sawed-off shotgun. Foster said the attendent jumped up and grabbed for the weapon but was thrown against a wall by the intruder, who de- manded money. When the attendent tried to protect the receipts in his pocket, he was kicked by the suspect, who forced him to lie on the floor . police said. The suspect fled northbound on foot toward Yorktown Avenue. Police said Haddad received minor injuries in the incident but did not require hospital treatment Police hunt two men in stabbing Seal Beach police are searching today for two men al- legedly involved in the stabbing of a local woman in front of her home. Sgt. Ron Lawson. said Hazel Wandis Slattery, 51, answered her door at about 8 :15 p.m. Mon.. day ahd was conrronted by two men. The woman's daughter heard a cry for help ·a few minutes later and came downstairs to find that her mother had been stabbed re- peatedly in the chest, he said. Lawson said the woman is in stable conditiqn today. Polfce are declining to release the name oft.be hospital becaus4' the suapect.s remain at larae. he said. I No descripUons of the sutpecta or reasons for the attack have been releued by polic4'. , Crime fight lips offered b.ik'e proposal. which has drawn sharp criticism from the Foun- tain Valley Chamber of Com· merce. Woodruff said a similar plan to rah1e business li cense fees in San Francisco was challenged, resulting in a recent California Court of Appeals rulin~. The court ruled that the pro posed fee hike violated Proposi lion 13 because it would be a tax increase that wasn't approved by voters, the city attorney said. Woodruff said this court ruling could be nullified if the California Supreme Court agrees to hear San Francisco's appeal of the ruling Because the Supreme Court has not yet agreed to hear the case. Fountain Valley must abide by the lower court ruling, Woodruff said. ------------------------- D9lly .......... "' ........ O'o-tt 'BEACH VlfilTOR ,,_ Now that Easter vacation has ended, stroller qear the Huntington Pier finds the beach has fewer visitors. And the W1crowded condltioq may provide him with an opportunity for meditation as he walks through the sand and waves. The attorney said the high court may decide within a month whether it will hear the business fee case. although a d• cision on the appeal itself might not be rendered for six monthl to a year. If the Supreme Co urt decides to hear the case. Woodruff said he may advise the council theo to vote on the local business fee increase Nukes hit in college 'Earth Day'. "Natural" lifestyles we~ heralded, and nuclear energy w~ condemned dunng Earth Day a;- ti v ities Tuesday at Golden Wetl College in Huntington Beach. Several hundred sludent1, ranging from young people In hip-. pie-style attire to short·haired police trainees in gray sweatsuits, roamed among di4: play tables set up on the college•• central quad. Various exhibits boosted solar ·and wind power, promoted bua travel and bottled water and called for preservation of sea lions and the Bolsa Chic) marshland. • Other participating groups ad vocaled natural childbirth a~ called for an end to world hunger. The banner pushing the Gold• West Recycling Center adviseit students to ··Eliminate the n~ for another dump site -Thi.rdi recyclin~." , Even the afternoon's enter~ tainers. musicians from . a band called Desert Sun. sang about "good karma" and urged stO-· dents to "soak up some Vitamin D" on the sunny quad. Two speakers at the rally de·. livered searing criticisms o/.' nuclear weaponry and power: plants. Norman Solomon who has writ- ten articles and a book on victims of radiation, said the nation'•' largest West Coast storage facili" ty ·for nuclear weapons is UM Naval Weapons Station In Sell Beach. Na val officials have repeatedly. declined to comment on the eJt; , istence of nuclear weapons at Seel Beach. •fl• College pre8ident ·: I:'' to meet 8tudent8 · Philip Secor, presid•:at Cornell College, ¥ount Vem Iowa, along with alumni di 8ob Majors, will meet wi alumni, former studentl and their families Sunday at Letsuff Wotld Clubhouae 2 in lA&un • Hills. . A reception will t>e at 1 p.11': followed by a potluck hmcheoil at 1 : 30 p. m. ReservaUom are ,.., quired. CaU Lenore Giddinp 837-7258 before' Saturda Leisure World ChabboUM 2 located lnal(e Qate 12 o Moulton Parlcway. ~ I I •• ~. TllB PITCIDIAN COMETH: It WU • 1tartll.q dlaccwery made only ydterday up by Sixth a.a Sycamor.. lo the ahadow ol the halll of ot.1r Count)' . seat government. Why, It wu more Ute an appa- rition. 1 But there be was: a real, live, old-fashioned pitchman, attired In a battered black derby hat pushed back on his bead, cigar 1tub protrudin1 from one comer of bis mouth, unbuttoned red-checkered vest with gravy stains, and baggy plaid trousen. And he wu drawing a crowd by standing atop an aluminum beer bar· rel. Make that two beer barrels. He must have weighed in at a bout 315 pounds. Then he exhorted the gathering crowd with his pitch that went something like this: ~ Tl-I ...... , ll-iii-11-1'®" "HURRY! HURRY! llURRY! folks, right over here to do yow-bit for the youth of ah, Orange Coun· ty! We gonna rtUlke all them youth out there safe! We're gonna do good . . "An, how we gonna do th.ia good, I hear you as km? "I'm glad you asked that, folks. We 're gonna do all that good with THESE!" The pitchman. by golly, had shifted his cigar without missing a word and appeared to have hoist- ed a six-pack aloft with each of his chubby little arms. "And what is this, you ask?" he shouted, waving the six-packs. ·'Why, this here is El Belcho Premium Beer! Flnest brew out of Nebraska! Imported direct to a ll you good folks here in ah, uh, -Orange Coun- ty. that's it! ·'This here is the elixir of the gods. Comes to you-au in genuine a-lumeeenum cans." THE PITCHMAN LOWERED his six-packs for a moment and took a breath when a senior citizen in the front row asked, "Okay, mister, how's that El Belcho stuff going to help unfortunate juveniles around here?" "Why I'm glad you asked that," the pitchman rc;>ared. "We're going to do that with these here gen- ume El Belcho a-lumeeenum cans. We 're going to collect the empties, see? Then we 're goin' to re- encycle 'em. "And with all that a-lumeeenum money, we're comin' to the rescue of all the needy youth here in ah, er, Orange, County , that's it!" THE PITCHMAN HITCHED up his sagging belt buckle and smiled. "Now all you folb, you just get out there and drink up a whole lot of El Belcho so we can re-encycle them cans. Just remember, one EJ Be le ho makes you feel real good. Two makes you fine. Three mctkes you mellow. "An' after a six-pack, you don't care one bit what we're re-encylin'. "Just remember El Belcho's motto, 'Goes Down Smooth, Comes Up Loud -When You've El Belcho'd -You 've Said It All !" Alas, some Wrong Thinker out in the growing crowd challenged the nice pitchman. He said El Belcho was bad for working people. That El Bekho humiliated its workers and gave them lie detector tests. "DON'T YOU BELIEVE a word of that, son,'' the pitchman said, smiling a benign smile. •·All working folks secr~tly love good old El Belcho. Why , you go into a workin' town just at sundown when it's real quiet, an' you listen in the neighborhoods. ''An' sure enough, you'll hear El Belcho out there." Then he added his clincher. "Just remember. folks, when you here in Orange, ah, er, county - that's it -guzzle good old El Belcho, you're doin' it for the kids!" PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "OTIC• INVITI... .... N01'tC• UfVITI ... ~llOPOIALI Hollce 11 ".,.•b<f 91..,.,. t"ff 1 Notice I• i.ro•~ ''""' \be\ tile TO IPIAK Utah Gov. Scott Matheson h•s agreed to speak at commence- ment exerclaes Ma y 21 for West Desert High School 'a graduatin1 seniors -both of them . TODl'S VODKA I 7HITER 659 CASE OF 6 39.54 JIM BEAM I 75LITER 1010 CASE OF 6 60.60 'WASHINGTON (AP> -~ U.S. Supreme ~ bu TefuHd to bear a $10 million claim •••inst t.be ,_.. emmeftt by a mao whoH batUe to learn the wbereabouta or hu cblldreft wu""' bull for tbe movie .. Hide tn Plalia Siiht." Thoma• P. Leon ha rd, a cement muon from Amherst. N.Y., lost track of bls three young children after hi• former wite married Pas- quale Calabrese, a mobster-him~ Informant. The 1ovemment placed Calabrese under the witness protection pro· gram and refused to reveal where he, hls wife and three stepchildren were living. Leonhard roueht the government without success for eight years to ' •• leant their whereaboUaa. It wu cmly after bl• former wife dlvoreed Calabre1e that .f.Aoohard once acaln saw t!Mt younpters, wbo are now youna adult.a. The st.ory ot ~h1rd'1 n11tt. with the covemment wat told in t.M book, "Hide ln Plain Sl1ht.," and later made lntq a movie with James Caan. Muc.h of it wa5 nlmed in Buffalo. Leonhard's lawyer. Salvatore R. Martod\e, said the blah court's re· ruaal to hear Leonhard's appeal was "a disgrace." •·1 know they have many cases they have discretion to hear, but what is more Important than establishing the parameters of aov· ernmenlal intervention into re· lationshlps between parents and children?" BOO RD'S JOSE CUERVO TIA GIN GOLD MARIA l.7~UTER I LITER 750 MIL LILITE.R ao1 719 1016 CASE OF 6 48.42 CASEOF 129348 CASEOF 12 12 1.91 KEO BEER BOTil.E CASE GREAT FOR SOMMER LIQUEURS BO TILE CASE RETAIL RETAIL PARDCJCCI WINES RETAIL RETAIL BLOCK & POOL PARTIES Southern Comfort. 750ML 5.74 63.72 Cabernet Sauvignon 750 ML Jagenneister. 75().ML J J .45 127 .20 Chablis 150 ML BUDWEISER 4.40 48.00 2.95 32.18 frangelico. 750-ML .................... 11 .92 129.95 ~rendch ~oloRf!1ba11rd 750ML Irish Velvet. 750ML .... . . . 11 .89132.08 ,.,en ocmo tes ng 750 ML 3140 1/2 KEG 2.90 31.60 3.19 34.76 Yukon Jack. 750-ML . . . • .. • 6.46 71.73 Char~onnay 750ML Kamora, 750-ML .............. .. ........... . . 6.41 71.15 ~hemn ~lane 150 ML BUDWEISER 4 .86 53.00 3.30 36.00 Drambuie. 7!5()..11\L ..... ........ ... ...•. ... ... 1335 14&.J24 zt;~u~J 750·ML Oalllano, 750-ML ................................ 13.16 146.07 Pin nN 1 75().ML. 202° 1/4·KEG 2.95 32.18 3. J 9 34.76 Greensleeves. 7!5()..11\L . . .• .. .... ...... 10.53 116.95 not o r 750-ML COORS 4.24 46.20 BO<JRBONS Ancient Age. 11~ . . 12.20 66.50 Cabin Stfll. 1.75-UTER .................. 10.35 57 .50 Earty Times. 1 75-UTER 11 .62 64.56 Ten High. 1.75-UTER .. 10.91 60.50 l.W. Harper. LITER .................... 7.80 86.60 Jack Daniels, LITER . ..... . . 10.31 114.48 Jim Beam. 1.1!>-UTER . .. .. . . . . .1 1.92 66. 1 5 Old Charter 7 Yu.r, 1 1,.UTER 15.03 83.48 Old Crow. p5-vrER. 11.72 65.09 CANADIANS Black Velvet. 1.7,.UTER . . ............ 11 .43 63.49 Canada House. 1.1~1JTER . . . 11.74 65.19 Canadian Club, 1 .1~1TER . . 16.90 93.90 Canadian Mist, t.75-UTER . .. • ......... l 1.45 63. 18 Seagram's V.O •• 1.1,.UTER 16.76 93.09 Canadian Lord Calvert. 1.75-LITER 1 2.05 66.95 Seagram's Crown Royal. LITER 15.62 173.55 Windsor Canadian. 1 75-UTER 12.59 69.90 RUMS Appleton. 75().ML . .. .. . . 8.29 92.07 Bacardi Gold Reserve. 750-ML .... 8.98 99.69 Mt. Gay Eclipse. 75().ML 8.31 92.22 Bacardi Lt. or Dk., LITER ............... 6.50 72.13 Bacardi 151 Pf •• LITER .. . . 11 .05 122. 75 Castillo Lt or Dk., l.75LITER 8.71 48.37 Mysers's Jamaican. 11s-UTER .. 18.67 103.69 Ron Rico Lt. or Dk.. 1 75-LITER . . 1 1.32 62.89 TEQUILA Cuervo Gold, 1.1,.UTER ................... 14. 72 81. 7 6 Cuervo White. 1.7,.UTER ................. 13.28 73.74 Cuervo Gold 1800. 1~ ......... v .. 10.061J1.75 Montezuma W. and 0., 1.7,.LITER .11.17 62.01 Montezuma W. and G •• UTER ......... 6.20 68.85 Pepe L~ Gold 1.1~ ............ 13.04 72.44 Puerto Vallarta W. and a., 750-ML .. 4.61 51.20 DonEmllloW.andG., 1.7WreR ..... 9.73 54.06 Don·EmlUO W. andO., LITER ........... 5.56 61.79 Sauza White, l1TER ........................... 7 .50 83.34 Sauz. Ookt, LITER .......................... : ... 8.38 93.08 Two Angers White, LITER ................ 829 92.07 Two fingers Q*, UTER .................. 9.14101.50 Herrandura Anejo. 1~ ............. 14.40 160.00 292° l /2·KEG COORS 202° 1/4·KEG HENRY WEINHAR[ 3305 1/2KEG HEINEKINS 6500 1/2-KEG UTE 2500 l/2·KEG LOWENBRAU 3335 l/2 KEG .MICHELOB 3615 l /2·KEG MICHELOB 2130 1/4 KEG .MILLER'S 2800 1/2·KEO ... OLD MILW.A<IKEE • 201s '" 1/2·KEO PABST • 25so {. 1/2'K£0 _ SCHUTZ ... . 2604 "j[j. 1 /2.f<EO ,r,. · .. ·· "P.WS ..,_.. --· • PEDRONCELLI Cabernet Sauvignon, 750-ML 3.67 40.00 Zinfandel, 750-ML 2. 75 30.00 Rose Wine. 75().ML 1 .85 20. 1 3 French Colombard. 750ML 2.63 28.60 Johannisberg Riesling, 750·ML 3.30 36.00 Chardonnay, 750-ML ..... . 4 .84 52.80 Gewurztraminer. 750-ML . 3.60 39.60 COCKTAJL AND DESSERT WlNES Harvey's Bristol Cream 750-ML .. 6.74 73.46 FkkJJn Port 75().ML . 4.53 49.28 Savory & James. crm. Stiry .750ML. .. 3.63 39.60 Sandeman Port 750·ML 7.76 84.70 Cresta Bica. Trip. Cr. Shr. 750ML .. 3.13 34.00 Dubonnet 750-ML .. .. 4.49 48.90 Ory Sack 75().ML 5.31 57.95 Harvey's AmontnJado 750·ML ..... 4 .93 53.75 Maglgal Pale Dry 750-ML . 3.95 43.04 CLOS DUBOIS Chardonnay. 750ML 7.67 83.60 Gewurztraminer ,<Earty 79)750-ML . ..4 .45 48.40 Johannlsberg Riesling, 750-ML . 6.05 66.00 Pinot Noir. 750-ML . 4.45 48.40 Cabernet Sauvignon '78. 75().ML.. .. 6.05 66.00 Mer1ot. 750ML . 6.05 66.00 NOC HE BUENA 12-0Z.. 6·PACK 199 CASE OF 24 7 .60 WARM . DOS EQUIS 12-0Z .. &PACK UOHT OR DARK 212 • CASE Of 24 10.4~ W/\RM BEAULIEU Beau Tour. 750-lt\l ........................... 4.04 44.00 Beau Velou ... 7!50-ML ........................... 3.49 38.00 Burgundyt 7!50-ML .............................. 3.30 36.00 Cabernet a.Manon. 150-ML ........... 5. t 5 56.00 Plnot rtob' Rose. 750-ML .................... 2.63 28.60 Beaufort. 75().ML ................................. 5.65 61.60 Chabti, ~ .................................... 3.30 30.00 <lllNIY Bdlluje>lala. 750-ML ................ 330 3&00 Gnn.che Rose. 1~ ..................... 220 24..00 , Plnot Moir. 75().ML ............................... 4 .23 48.00 Bei&K:iilr, 7~ .............................. 4.84 .52.80 Cjb. Sauvtgnon, ~ 7'. 7~ .12.10 132.00 • \\lll""ll\' ~EVBING­......... .,....WOMAN WOftder Women II pitted 80'llMt a IO!'m« Army colonll wtlO llaa turned .,_,., ao-it and WWIQ to ct.troy a ,_ All Fon:ia t•t~ I T1C TAC DOUGH W"A"l"H ,..,.,. oomplalna to Gener· al Batker when Hawkeye la appointed Chief Sufgeon attfMl40n1h. • QOOOTMO A Nlf·c>toclal"*' "lhep- herd of the L0td" Ulla J-to~oneor 1 ,,.. hercbmef\. FONDA SINGS -Peter Fonda stars witti Susan St·. James in ''Outlaw Blues,'• a movie about an ex-convict whose coun· try-western song was stolen to become someone else's hit tonight at 9 on Chan- nel 2. • TOMOMOW/ TODAY A repot1 on how almln•tt are ualng c:ompt1ter1: • I aunri'.1111 atory •boot the remattl•ble eomet>ac:a ol Iha Northern Eleph1n1 1 Seel: a IOok al how eclen· tilt• we prOolng for the am..,._, pertJcM of rnettat; • commentary by Not>el Laureeta Unua Pauling. I GD ELECTRIC COMPANY i== e.-ao I JOKER'S WILD WELCOME BAat l(OTT'Ef' When H0tllllacl< •• pro-I moted to • hlghet cl .... everyone •• including Arnold -wante him lo 11ay I with Ille Sweathogs .. BEHNYHIU Benny plays • non.ymootl· ., 199fldlng I he nlgnt on American t R4'M18n dl•- pul• territory CHANNEL LISTINGS • KCO NIWIMAT CO STUDIOS& .. Cop Show.. bplorer Seoull ..... Iha Gland•. Arizona POllOI Depl.; New Vortt Clty kid• m•e A'a In d!ACO dancing (RI (J) ... 9 IA,..., MIU.P Barney putt hie Nia on Iha llne when ii ~ to • ~ ol owitlng • gr009 ot tlnMll fTOtn • flobag hotll or facing departmen- tal ctlafQ91, (Perl t) 1.-M 8 EDfTONAL 7:001J CM NEW8 0 NICNIEWS 0 ~DAYS AGAltt Fom11, R11ph Ind POlell are trapped In • tire lhal O.Stroya Al'• Orl,,...ln D UCNEW8 G IUlL.St!YE CD M·A·s·H A llrong wlnOetorm atfecte the mami-. of Iha 40771h In verylng Wl'/I .., 8TAEET8 Of 8AH FM.HCUICO 1J KNXT 1CB S1 LO':> Anqell'-. 0 KNBC 1NBC1 LO':> Anqeles 0 KTLA clnt1 I Los Anqt>ies D KABC TV 1ABC1 Lo<, Anqeli•'> c.}' "'FMB tCBS1 S<1n 01 ... go 0 KHJ TV (lnel I LO!. An JPIP-. @\ KCST 1ABC1 San D11•qo CD KTIV 1 Ind I Los AnQPIP-. ., KCOP TV (Ind 1 Los Anqelt•'> fE) KCET TV 1PBS1 Lo'> Anq"'"" '1i> KOCE-TV 1PBS1 Hunl<nqton Beach When an -llad wile dlaappMn. the ~ points 10 her nu.bend • k,_ to becOfM vlollflt wMf'I drunk. • OV!REAIY 0.-t: EIMnOr Steber (Rl • MACNEii. i LEHRER AEJIOflT (J) TIC TAC DOUGH ltJ MERV GAIF'FlN GuHll: Steve Kanaly, Mimi Kannady. Mallehl M artin I 7:30 IJ 2 ON THI TOWN Hosts SI-Edwarda and Melody Rogers. Take a look at alternatives to ~· and now they differ fr0tn olhet major pub4icatlona, ~1119' and Ennle. cable TV aoper· ...... D THtS WM AMERICA "Grawing Up.. Childhood In the country and 1n the city at thl turn ol the cen- tury Is d99feted 0 SHANANA GIMSt: Isaac: Hayea D EYEWITNESS LOS ANGEl.E8 Hoata Inez Padron and Paul M0'/9f look at jNnl. auper singing group "'Oevo .. and llagalrlgllt G FACE THE MUSIC CD AU. IH THE FAMILY Archie'• plagu.d by h11 economic pllghl when he can·1 go to worlt htmselt and hi can't •tend the hll:t that Edith I• working (Part 4) 9 MACHEL I LEHRER AEPOftT (J) L15Tl!NI Jazz lnltrumentallat I com- poMI' PlltnckM parl«ma In lhla program dedicated to ahowc1alng young Arnaflc:arl arti.11 ID Afff.NCAH 9HOftT ITOR'f "Paul'• Cua.. by Willa Clther A wot1dng-d- boy (Eric Roberta) In turn- of-the-century Plttaburgh lulfllla Illa lantuy ot entat· Ing New Vortl'a high M>CJ- ety -at 1 tragic CXMlt . (RI I 1:30 fJ PAN( ltlACE A blluMd trape David and Ne ataff overnight wtlh 1 roomful ol unueual clllnts D tlll MON< ANO MIHOY Mork II challenged IO a ahoot-out by one ol his charoes ll0tn 1111 day~r• canter Wt\OM hero .. S.lly the Kid (R) CD OAAOL 8UAH9TT AHOFNENDS Sklta ··Mother OI The Bride. · "The Perfecl Crime." .. Stradlvarlu• " t:O()ft MOYIE .. o .. 11aw Btuu· 11tn1 Petu F-•. 5'lwn S41nl Jam••· Slnoer /songwriter on run from l•w rneeh wom•n WllO UPIOlll his 1ltu•t10,, 10 m •k• t'um a •l•r D N8C WHfT'E PAHA "Reagan The Fl<at Hun- dred Deya.. Roget Mudd uarntnM the firat month• ol the Reagan ac:tmlnC.tr•· Uon and ite lmoact on tti. IC.NBC G 9:00 -NBC White Paper. "Reap.n: 'lbe Fint lf undred Daya." Roaer M~ examme1 tile impact of the Reagan ad1'\lfti8trat1on on the nation. KOCE · 8 9:30 -.. Tomorrow/To- day," A study of the many ways lasers are being utilized; a report on public safety and the electronics industry. KNXT 9 8:30 -"Park Place." A blizzard traps David and his staff over· night with a roomful of unusual clients. Milon, lor19' policy. the acooomy. ~ and the pollttc81 pwtlaa. • 9 llAJIM'( Mll..LM Rlgllt after Dietrich embattl 1 on a pen.one! campaign to avoid all woman, Iha eqUlld room ~ Nied with got· cal glrla. (RI MPVONA'IN ID 1HEAK PMvtlW8 .. The Ula And DN•h OI 811Ck Fllma.. Rog« Ebert and a-Sllkel take a IOolt at wtly I "9 If a ol fliml by. lor and abool black AITMficanl hU ended t:ao 8 9 TAXI Aavwand Jim 11111 f0t Tony'• divorced alltar and the two becOme lnvOlved In a bizarre affllr (R) 63 HOU VW000 WEEK IHMVIEW A .(!hlcueelon on Iha worlt· Inge of Iha film and TV 1nduetry hOsted and pro- duced by Emmy Award- wlnn1ng wrller Pierre Sau- vage. fNturlng thrM HOlly- wooO reporllf panallsta and a leading 1n0u11ry fig- ure '1i) TOMOAAOW I TOOAV A •ludy ol lhl many waya lllMtl are being ullllz.ed. a Ylllt to UCll OIM«vetort atop Mount Harnllton, a repot1 on public MIMy and Iha IMCtfonlol induttry; one llClenoe ~Ion wrl1er'• vtewa on hOw pred!Ctlona af\ep9 our Mure. ~-()) N!JMI ~ fac:ea Iha trauma of turllirlO 40 ano a ,_ r0tnance with a younger man IE:' THeATM .. Thar-Raqu1n" Tt11r- 1nd Lauranra wedding night beCOmM a macabre -t .. lhllt parvulve guilt con)urH up the haurlling eplrit ol Camllle (Perl 210 te>-..ao • NEWS ., INDEPENDENT NETWOMNEWS llllJ MY8TVIY .. Sargeant Cribb Wu- work" S..geent Cribb 11 called In to tie up the IOOM enda after 1 woman conf-to the murder ol her photograpnar hu1- band'• ual11ant (Pan 1) t1:00. DD (J) 9 NEWB 0 ITAATAIEK Captain Kl<k p11ya a game of death with a maniacal JOHN DARLING WE'LL, WILL.ARO, Ii LOOKS LIKE IHE COUN"TR'< IS IN F~ SOME NICE WEA'THE:R FOR THE NE)(.T FEW DAY5! ~MDIOHT~ 1~. CJ) ™-Jlf'RMONI eMOVW * * "The Viking ~ .. ( 191171 Don Murray. Adri- anne Cont e 111 CHAMJE'S AHCM.L.I ·~ IMP09ll8l.a t2:t0 8 CJ) MClottC..U.N & Wl'E D TOMOMOW Gu.ta· BrlOah punk rock- .,. Adam and Iha Anti • ONE STEP BEYOND 1:00 G PSYCHIC l'HlHOMENA. THE WON.D BEYOND Holl• Damian Stmpeon I' Tltur•da11'• Daf1C l•e Mo.,le• ~MORllNG- t 1:00 e • • .. The Star Pac:aer" ( 1834) JOlln Wwyne. Vatn. Htllie 11:*> G • • • • "How Green w.. My Vllley" (Part 2) ( 1114 t) Waller Pidgeon. Maur_.. o ·Hara and Stacy Hvnt dlllCUll & ICTl::ftUl'\ft!U breakthrough to cr .. livlty 1 -""•~- With Ql>Mll. Or Shaf1ea Kar111Jlla, M 0 and Or VIOia Neei Ph 0 G) MOVIE * * "Spy In YOUI Eye ' (111M) BreCI Hallly. P1et Angell • INDEPEHDENT ~NEWS t:10 D MOVll * • * .. Terror In The Sky" ( 111711 Lalf Erldteon. Doug 12:00 G) * * .. Blowing Wild. (11153) Gary Cooper. Bar- bar a SI anwycil tm * * * .. RiChard Ill 1111ss1 Laurence ouv..,. JOlln Gielgud BUICI on Shakeapeare't play 1:30 G • • 'n · Aga1n11 A Crooked Sky .. ( 10751 Rich- ard Boone. St ... art P111r· by Armstrong & Batluk 1H*:TS Rl6Hl. ~. ANO ITLL f3E JUST PERFECT F~ ~L OF IH05E Fir-£ FOLKS IN AAAON' OHIO· .. Marsha Mason hack on stage as queen By JACKIE HYMAN Aa-i•iiM f>r•t Writer LOS ANGELES -It's been 5112 years since Marsha Mason moved on from her stage career to films, winning three Academy Award nominations a long the way. But the star of "Audrey Rose." "Cinderella Liberty," "The Goodbye Girl" a nd "Chapter Two" -the latter two films written by her husband, Neil Simon -is back in the theater. and m an especial- ly challenging role: Mary. Queen of Scots. "I FELT it was important to go back," said Mis s Maso n . r e laxing afte r a matinee performance at the Ahmanson Theater of the Los An geles Mus ic Center, the complex where the Academy Awards p resentations are held. "You body and your voice as an instrument can get ad justed to the more intimate qualities that movies have. You have to get the rust off." Miss Mason is starring in the c lassic Freidrich Schiller drama "Mary Stuart," translated and adapted by Joe McClinton. Michael Learned, who has won three Emmy awards for her television series. "The Waltons. ·· plays Queen Elizabeth I. Robert Foxworth, whose film credits include "Damien -Omen II" and "Airport ·11." is the Earl of Leicester Coincidenta lly, it was Miss Leamed's winning of her role on "The Waltons" that gave Miss Mason a break in the theater. She took over Miss Learned's part in an American Conservatory Theatre ol San Francisco production of "Private Lives," and went on to star in a number of ACT productions and recreate one of them -"Cyrano de Bergerac" -on PBS. "I WAS always grateful to her," said Miss Mason. who looks smaller, prettier a nd more· vu lnerable in person than on film. Then, Slh years ago, after a well-received pro- duction of "The Heir ess" in the Los Angeles sub- • Marsha Mason a! Mary, Queen of Scots urb of Westwood. Miss Mason left the stage. Now she's back, in part al the urging of Ahmanson artistic director Robert Fryer. whose theater this season has featured performances by s uc h movie stars as Charlton ijeston an d Ka tharine Hepburn. "My origina l feeling was that l would play Elizabeth," said Miss Mason, adding that she for someone who has just finished a draining looked at several other plays before director J ack performance and has another one to do the same t()'Brien suggested that she take on the title role in night, said she draws on her practice of meditat- "Mary Stuart." in~ There was some consideration at first that the She became interested in meditation 6"'2 years two leading ladies might switch roles halfway ago and explains, .. The whole philosophy behind it through the run. but, says Miss Mason, "That idea is you honor yourself, you worship yourself, you lasted fi ve minutes. The production values would respect yourself because God is within you. It's ex- have been hard, and then there·s the rehearsal lremely positive from a creative point of view. time... "It's extremely relaxin g and it gives yo u a perspective." Ml~ Mason. who regrets never having been --------------------- to Scotland. turned to books to research the role. which contains one scene that never actually hap· pened: a confrontation between Eli zabeth and Mary. She said both the physical demands of the part and the emotional ones are quite stringent. 'It's an extremely dJfflcult role because it's underwritten," she said. ··The Elizabeth scenes have great conversations. whe re in Mary's scenes so much or it is responding to what is happening.·· Jn 4ddition, she said, "You're dealing with a different kind of language, and you also had to fit into a historical setting -how they dressed and why, and your car riage I'm wearing corsets, as they did in that perioft ." The production is a change from shooting the film "Only Wben I Laugh," a Neil Simon script that Miss Mason finished filming in January. She play~ an alcoholic actress "who's trying to re- establish her rela tionship with her 17-year·old daughter ... played by Kristy McNlchol. "JUST because of the way movies are done this has an entirely different energy level " she said. "You only shoot five minutes a day. 'To do stage, you have to be physically flt. The actress. who seems remarkably collected women speak up NOW PLAYING MAIHI IRU Brea 529·5339 AMC OUNGI MAU Orange 637-0340 MAH IOOTN COAIT Cost.i Mesa 546-2711 IDWHOI' WHTUOOll Garden GroYe 530-«01 IDWUOI' UDCIU IACll El T0<0 581·5880 UA ctn CtllOIA Orange 634-3911 "Ustenl women speaking I" Share your vJews and ask Questions on this live participation forum presented t'>y KOCE and the orange county commission on the Status of.Women . ~ . ... OPEN HOU8£ for proapectlve Cblldi'eb't Docent Tour Pro1ram membera ta set ror today in Sberman Library and Gardena In Corona del Mar. Por more lnformallon call 873-~. TUSTIN AND NEWPOBT:MESA branches of Ute American Association of University Women & CLUB CALENDAR. meet today in the Harbor Day SCbool of Corona del Mar at 7 p.m. for a fund·raiaing event, "Good Books for Young Readers." For more in· formation call 769-0217. 1SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY Alumnae Chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi meets for art ex· hibit Saturday In the Zonta Clubhouse in Newport Beach. The auction begins with a pre- view at 7 p.m. For more information call 830·5218. COSTA MESA JUNIOR Women's Club meets for convention Friday and Saturday in the Registry Hotel &f Irvine. For more information call 754-5611 . SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Woman's Club meets Cor luncheon Tuesday in the clubhouse. 31442 El Horno St .. San Juan Capistra no. For more in· •formation call 493-5287. . PA8ENTS WITllOU1' PARTNERS Huntington Beach Chapter wiU hav. e a aprin& dance at 9 p.m. Friday. A '50ll house patty wllJ be beld et SIN.GLES CALENDAR 8 :30 p.m. Saturday, in Huntiniton Beach. For informaUon, call Gerri at 964·5296. BIG BAND SINGLES will have a dance al 8: l5 p.m. Sunday in Anaheim. For information, call 525-7657. ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a dinner· IRVINE BUSINESS a nd Professional Women's Club meets Tuesday in the Hungry Tiger restaurant, 2101 E . Edinger. Santa Ana. at 11 :30 a .m . For m~re information call 833-5461. NEWPORT HARBOR B USINESS and Professional Women 's Club meets for in· sta llation and awards dinner Friday at 6:30 p.m . in the Sheraton Newport Hotel. For more information call 645-5072. Girl should play baseball WHEEL Of' FRIENOSHJP of Ort.ate County will 10 to dinner at 8:45 p.m . Prld•y in Anaheim. For lhformatton . call Rose at 636·4U11. WE CARE wiU have a, poetry reacting at 1 p.m. Sunday. For information, call 837·1~. GET·ACQUAINTED HOUSE PABTY led by Emily Colem~ will be held at I p.m. Friday in Anaheim. For information, call (213> 828-8949. NEW AGE SINGLES will have a bike ride &t 10 a .m . Saturday In Irvlne. For information, call 770-3296. ADVANCED DEGREES LTD. will have a social at 8 p.m . Saturday in Newport Beach. For information, call 551-4535 SMITH COLLEGE CLUB of Orange County meets Thursday at 10: 15 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Francis Fabian, J r .. in South Laguna. For more information call 951 -7260. · TEMPLE BAT YAHM annual dinner dance is set for Sunday in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. For more information call 644·1999. J UNIOR EBELL CLUB of Newport Beach NEWPO&T HAaBOa REPVBUCAN WolMD \ meeu Thurlday at 2 p.m . in the trome of Mn. Byron Tamutier on Lido .IJle. For more ln· formation eall '19-0UO. DELTA GAMMA ALVMNAi; of Santa Ana vid Newport Harbor meet at 9:00 a.m. Tu~day ln the home of Mra. .r,.n;ies Wilson in Newport Beach. For more lntormatlon call 851-1842. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION of Retlre.d Persona meets Saturday at noon in the Senior Center. 3807 Sandburg Way. Irvine. HARBOR SENIOR CITIZENS Club offers classes in tra vel be8}nning today from 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m . NEWPORT BEACH CHAPTER of Hadagsah meets Monday at noon in Temple Bay Yahm to celebrate its eighth birthday. For more in· formation call 760-1380. EXECUTIVE WOME N INTE RNATIONAL meets for dinner and play Tuesday in the Harle· quin Dinner Playhouse in Santa Ana. For more information call 540·9380 LAGUNA BEACH KIWANIS Clvb meets for swap meet from 9 a.m in the Laguna Beach High School Administration building Saturday. HAPPV HOM EMAKE RS meets at 10 a .m. Fri· day in lhe Fountain Valley Civic Center, 10200 Slater Ave .. Fountain Valley For more in· formation call 847·1956. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE p£(>f\.l #Ji.\.\. •\.o.,.G tttct oJJi.S1 OB .a.,aG£ IE. NOTICE INVITING llOS STATUHNTO, A8ANDONMIENT ~.. 4'LI~ Nollu I• PlereDr glnn lhel lhe Of' USll 0" ellE.I "( o..a l n Boera of Tn.rll ... ol Ille H..nllnglon P'ICTITIOUS aUSINl:U NAME QUESTION: Our 12-year-old daughter will dgain be playing baseball in the park department league here in Costa Mesa. She pitches and also plays rightfield Since last season her figure has become anything but boyish' ls there any harm in h\!r conHnwng to play'> As far as pitching is concerned it is dangerous for youngsters to throw curve balls Pitching a curve puts stresses on the elbow and shoulder which may produce permanent injury! Anyone who isn't fully grown s hould stay away from this pitch. Most young players are aware or this but can ·1 seem to resist throwing one from time to time. Young pitchers should also be taken out after three or four innings to protect their arm . "~~ llilJ...... Bea<h I.Inion HIOf\ Sc'-4 01\lrlel wltl Tne toUowlng per!On\ "41•• ao.i r-. r eceive H•led Dlds lor supplying ooneo IN u~ Of lne t1c1111ous t>vslneu ~~=====~=~~======;;;;~~;;;~Tel...,._ Stilem "'-lnteN1nc:e "'4tei· n1mt EMERl'LO BAV ASSOCIATES I-ing or _..1 lo lhe. ¥«111C•lkln• "" LT o •t 1600 Oow Slf'Tel, S..•le lll: Ille In Ille off la ol saod Ot•lrl<t NtwPOr1 a..cr.. C..l1lorn11 9JMO ANSWER: First of all. let me congratulate you on enl'ouraging your daughter to play what ASK THE DOCTOR has traditionally been an all-boy sport. Baseball is a terrific game and it's good to see the girls out there playing it a long with the boys. Your daughter's newly acquired "anything but boyish" figure will cause certain changes . The mechanks of running and throwing will be different from what she is used to. She may be a bit awkward in the beginning of training. but should soon get ac- customed to the difference There is no reason why she shouldn't go on to be a fine baseball player The most important warning I can give to young baseball players has to do with the oc- casional injury The in1ury usually occurs when players collide. When someone is hurt and gets knocked to the ground. let him stay right where he is! All too often some well meaning adult tells the child to "get up and walk off the injury ... This is absolutely the wrong thing to do. If a muscle or bone is tom or broken. _!11oving it may w~ll make the injury far more extensive and severe . You will note that in professional sports an injured player lies right where he is until he is examined and permitted to get up. Your children should abide by the same rule. The player should lie still until or unless the pain subsides Wants to quit crazy smokes DEAR ANN LANDERS. I am a 13-year·old and live an a rather s mall town in Vermont. My mother is a well-known psychologist. Recently I started lo smoke pot with a girl I hang out with My mother knows about it, but she won't tell me to quit. I really want her to order me to come straight home after school and to stop 111 llllllll smoking these crazy cigarettes. but she refuses to do it. According to her. l am old enough to make my own decisions. J don't reel secure enough to be in complete charge of my own life Please print this letter so my mother will see It. I reel afraid and alone. - UNDECLARED WAR IN NEW ENGLAND Dear Undeclared: Sounds H tr your mother hH re,d too many outdated books on bow to raltt children. Someoae should tell her the permisalve approach of the 'SO. waa a diamal failure. It pro· doced a crop of unmotivated, irresponalble, mixed· up kids. Very few 13-year-olda are 1utnclently mature to live without guJdellnes. You need to have Umiia .et. If your mother won't order you to atop amok· illll thoff crasy cigarettes, pretend I am your mother for today. I am telling you -stay away from po&. It.could mess up your head in ways you wouldn't be-lleve. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why do people ask for an honest opinion. and when they get it you wind up in the outhouse? A close friend of mine has been dating a man who is the absolute pits. She asked me what I real- ly thought of him. l said he was a terminal bore, egocentric, insensitive and' a very chintzy tipper. Instead of thanking me. she screamed, "If that's what you think of him. I don't want you to attend our wedding." Now my husband is mad at me for opening up my big mouth. <The man is a customer of his.> I repeat the question : Does It pay to be truthful? SIBERIA FOR ME. DEAR SIBERIA: There's a difference between being truthful and making mincemeat out of a person. The next time you are asked such a question, think of something positive to say. Everyone has at leut one good quality. CONFIDENTIAL to Tom and TormentH: IC you don't dump that loon you will be in no con· dltlon to 10 to ANV college -either the one of hJ1 choice or yours. Discover how to be dale bad without falling hook, line and nnker Ann Landers' booklet. "Ddtmg Do'a and Don'ta." will help you be mort poued and sure of yourself on dates Send SO cents along with a long . stamped, self-addressed envelope with your req~sl to Ann Umders, P 0 . Box Jl995. Chicago rll. 60611. Leo: Roadblocks are removed THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1181 By SYDNEY OMAJlB . ARJ£S (Mar.21·Apr.19): Focuaoninformation, collection of data, secu~ty, principles of law. Journey could be part o( scenario. Capcer, Capricorn natives flgure prominently. Sense of dls;.ecUon can be reaalned. Long-range prospects com• Into Cocut. TAUS\18 (Apr. 20·May 20): Uthl touch apelll aucceu. Heavy·handed methods are doomed to { rauare. Ar.parent loa ca.ft be tranaCormed lnto prof- it. Gemtn, Sa1ltt1rtus persona naure prominently. one whoahares buk concerns becomes valuable al- ly. • GIDllNI' (May 2l·JUM IO): DetaUa require dose acrutlny. t1peclally where contract1, aareemeni. enter plct\11'9. l\evtalo~ could be neciNary. Scorplo. Aquarh• naUvtt play Pl'O.m· lttnt ro1411. Marital 1tat111 ~mandt more.than· lftalaU.Uoa. . ,!iFCANC&a (June 21·J"1y II): Examine varioua p ••lbllitlu, opUoat connected with IPfflll .. n1c.e, dtPeM••tt, empJO;mtllt. O.mllll, Vlrco, ~ttart• penaa1 pla1 llPlftcaat roln. Cbatfl ~cu -~uda..eeom.-...uilltioD. W , (.llllJ •A... ti>:.. llollDloeb an re- ·~ • laan NM~tDwta, toadvaaee, to mU....,Md'"9.Ta..,.,Ulwa,~aDd t-t ••••er I ft1ure ,,.._ml•••tlr~ Home ~ ...,....._. YcMi'O bl....,,. ... , atON 7 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Question of lifestyle surges to forefront. Focus on residence, security. long-range projects. Property values are discusted and family member expresses strong view•. f>iaces , Cancer. Scorpio natl vea fi1ure prominently. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Take apecial care in areas of co-1lgntn1. credit, lnvestmenu and scheme proposed by one who would get-rich.quicJc. Give fuO play to intellectual curiosity. Ask questions, be r reatively s~eplical. Accepllocial invitation. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l : Emphasis on locat· inj lost object.a, ot?t~inlnl necessary funds, evaluat· ing prospects. Slfnltlcant t>roJect will be completed. You'll bertdol "loslng propaaiUon." Let1oof burden which wu not rithtly your own in flnt place. 8AGITl'ARIV8 (Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Strell in· depe.nderice, ln1Uatl'l.e and be willlna to make fl'tlh st•rt' ln new directJon. Cycle continues hiib: ID· tuition and Jud1ment hit mark. Be cooftdent, dlNtt and affectionate. Member oC oppotlt-4: sex exp..._. teellnpla "Jneanln•ful maMer." CAP&ICOllN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19>: Look beillld tbe httinediate -perceive potential, nall•1*8t aomeone "important" worlal tot you beblad •= Anolher Caprleorn1 a CmMer a.nd ~lrp _ . prominently. Dee1oe on dlreetJon; ~ etlll· munlcationelevataaelf·e1c.... AQVA•llJI (Jan. 20-Feb. II>: Flurry ol ICldil activity reau.tti ID valuabl• HiMadt. l• .... la • neatian plannln1. trevel Pd *Mt fOtr a~ a- Ptelllon. A&.lta ol romanff dDmtnata ....-to II whlcll 1DU1 ......... ,. f..utllld. CeltbJ'•, • PllCa ~,...,. it-Mar.•>: ProlriMAla _... foUo,,..,..., "':'ltl"""unru.,.w1 1 Oii i IMNMINbeM. MlitrUl1•rW= to mate ~fat reu at top. KMWlt, 1ftw· 11. ~. leorptO, lAo ........ ~ ..,... lMDl)J. JI B IG• sha ll D• Clterly m••"•d J1>t tatl•llc><a 11u1ontu n•m• rt 'Tel~ Sys...., AMlnteNlnc:e, Bid torr..i lo •bOw was 111ec1 ,,. o.-ena- • 05, -Md lo Allyn E R°"'ley, County on ~Y 13 l'leO Purchulng Meneger, Hunllnglon WOOOVIEW PROPERTIES Buch Union High S<-1 OhlrlCl, INC. 1.00 Oo•• Slretl. Sullo lJI. 1025 I Yorlltown An • Hunllnglon NeWPor1 S.•cll. C•l1torn•• tJIMO Be.c,., C.lllornla t-. and roulve<I Th" b<nlneu w•• Conclucle<I l)y a •I or C>etore l 00 p m f""n<iay. ~rll llm1ted PArl->Np 30, 1 .. 1. •• #hiCl'I llnw and placo ooas wooavtew Pr-rlttt. Inc will De pul>41clr _...., •nd ,..., LY•• O Soankelonk Each Did sNlll rem•ln valld lor a '" PrHta.nl -----::;;;;;mo;;;;;::----period of JO days alltr the Gate llOIEllT MOlllllSON Interiors ______ by Valle ' QUESTION: We ore movinq fr a loge home lo a four room condo. How do we use every inch of spoce! ANSWER: h 1s diff1Cult to answer yoix question. You gave no hint as to what you needs ore. In one case. a spec1ol wall unit was desiqned lo revolve .. It 90ve eitro space f0t st0toge of s8'Ving troys. etc. It hod books on one side and the stereo eq..ipmen! on the orher. This ideo may be of use to you. Hoving o dec0tot1nq problem? Send 11 to us. Int.non by VdM' htc. tl27A WHklffDrin Newport lecid. CClllH. 92663 Out de lq'9I ..,11 ~ "'°" problems "' the ,,.,, edrto<>n No Phone C.alls. -Pleo.se Free to the Pabllo ~ llled tor lhe rt<.elpt ot l)ld• Uw OtllCH The -d of TruslH• \llall be lhe UI Hew-1c.Mtr I><•••• sole 1udQe ol IN ou•mv Of t(lulpmont Suitt ttt ottered and rewrvn lne rlgt\I lo reject Htw,..,, ... ell, CA '2Me •ny °' •It tHd' •nd to w1tv1 any Ir· re-outar,ty U.r•1n l'llyn E R°"'lty Purchasing ~na90r Put>llshe<I Orenot Coe>I O•llr Pllo1. Aprll 15, 21, 1911 11.0 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE F IJ7114 Publllr.d 0r6"Qt co. .. Oa•IV Pilot. Apr II I, I, I), 72, 1911 1 )'17 81 PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS aUSINl:SS NAME STATEMENT T ne t0Uow1~ per\Ot'I 1i dofnQ bui1 l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS M\\ ._ NAME STATEMENT App LIE 0 SERVICES 19 Tt'le t0Uow1no pen.on\> •ti doing •m1\l•d. lrv1ne C.•htorn1•1l1U t>ustf'en •l 81rnry Alll'n HOO.,., 2• .&m••tilCI. GEORGES OE LIGHT ANO AS 1r.,nt C.ltlor!'•• '11U SOCIA TES. JI l'll1t9hony lrvant. Th•l l>US.'IH• 1\ '°"""""'d Dy .on on· C.f1forni• f771• 01 t1tdu•• Goor .. Maritn '11ort1> JI Al 8'tfnoyl' Hoo"9r t~,..,,v. lrvtn<t, Cahtorn1a ttll• l hll \l•IH?Wnl .. ~ ,,,.., •• ,.,n 1ne Evttn Oehghl H1orlh ll "' county C•or• 01 Or.,.go county on t•gMn1. lrv1M. Celtlorn1• t711• M•rcn JO '"' Tl'u• IJUOjnou h 'ondu<'td Dy .,. on 01vtdu•I Ci«>rge M H1ort1> Evlln 0 '11orth This sl•l-l .... lllCICI Wllh '"' Counly Clerk of Or.,.go Counly on Marc~ JO. "'' GOW, -MILLIN & OU.AHAHTY U•ftrl 1'7U M.C_,,_ 81"", S.Ue 1\t, Cetl ....... Wlt, lr•IM, GtlNenol• tZ71S Pub11\htd ()r¥1Q1R Co.est D••IY P1kll, April I t I) 22. l'ltl 1594 II P UBLIC NOTICE '-• ,.... ,.,..,. ci... ,.,. Sever'al commuten to New York City wbo live year·round ln West.chester are forming their lint car pool tor this summer -but a1ready they are boQed down in confusion about how the drivers can be prop- erly paid for expenses without violating their auto Insurance contracts. This befuddlement is ahocldncl)' wldespread. and it applies, too. to many other aspects or auto insurance. Now, as the big driving season or 1981 gets under way. it's vital to have the racts. The answer to the above car pool question ls that lf you use your car in a typical 0 share-the-ride deal in which ~ ..... :-, everyone takes _ turns driving, SY'lllA PDITIR or if one of you L does all the driving and col- lects only for expenses from the passengers, your policy provides regular coverage. Insurance pro- tection is not affected as long as your c,ar pool is not intended as a business operated for a profit. But an angle you must consider: In a car pool, there are several passengers in the car. and should your car be involved in a serious accident. you could become liable for a big sum for bodily injury to these passengers The solution is to boost your liability limits. Q : SHOULD YOU HAVE collisaon insurance on an older model? A. The honest answer is · No. While much de· pends on the value of your car. collision insurance is JUSt not worth the cost 1f the market va lue of your auto is only Sl00·S300 Q: WHAT'S THE DI FFERENCE between col- lision insurance and comprehensive insurance? A· Colhsion insurance provides coverage for damage to your insured auto when at 1s damaged by contact with some other object Comprehensive msurance provides for payment of loss resulting from such sources as glass breakage. windstorm, vandalism and malicious mis- chief A deduct1blP is usually applicable to collision losses and also as available for comprehensive Q: WHAT IS A "non-assessable" policy" A , Under a non -assessable policy. you pay only one rate and if your insurance company has a bad loss experience "1th you dunng a year. it cannot re- turn to you and ask for more money On an assessable policy. the company can return and ask for more money to cover losses. There are insurance companies which stall write assessable policies . To be on the safe side, Liberty Mutual of Boston, one of the country's top auto insurance companies. urges you to ask af the policy being sold is or is not assessable and to choose only a non-assessable policy. Rates may be increased from policy term to policy term, bul you will never pay more for in- surance already bought Q : WHAT IS T H E DIFFERENCE between a "split-limit" and a "single-limit" policy? A · Say you have a 10/20/S split limit. This meanr you have a $10,000 limit per person for a bodily injury claim. The "20" stands for $20,000, which represents the total the insurance company will pay for any bodily injury in any one accident. no matter how many are injured in the accident, subject to the per person limit or SJ0.000 The SS.000 represents the amount lo be paid for property ,damage. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ,:E'1.J:?i::.<!;.J. ~\n•I Oow·J-eytt STOCKS JO I~ Open HIQll t..ow C-C"9 NEW YOAIC CAP) -S.I ... T..es. l>"lce eno Ml <l••t>oe of tlw liltMn most Kii•• New Y0<• S1.oO E•<"-nQ• luuu, treOlng netlonetty at more then l 1 AmExpreu 1.JOO,llOO 40'\lt l~ I BM ™·IOO 60"-1 OowCllem 603,0CIO ll>4 ~ Wun l amt> 5'0,500 nllll '-I 10 Trn U Utt 65 Stk lndu• Tr•n VIII• 101S 611020.te 1001.U IOOS.'4-10.00 444.•• ._.. .. u. n u..02-J.m 10110 107 tt 106 0 101 09>-0 IS ,.. ll> ,.. s. •. 63 1'0.10-... At1Alcn110 im.500 o~ ·~ 81Kk Deck J07.~ lt + ''• SheerloebR 503.000 •~ ·•~ Sony Corp J01,l00 17'1> City tnn•I d1,t00 ~ • t~ NalS.ml ... ,900 :M~ + ~ Am Alrtin 4M,l00 11~ V. GulfWUI 412,100 11 , ~ Moolt 01,100 tOVJ ·~ Pan Am 479,JOO ~ "' Amer T& T "'·500 jJ\4 ... AMERICAN LEADERS WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK (API All" 11 Aft•"'9d TOCS.y uo Oecll"'4 '" U~d »l TCIUll-1'°3 '"-1119'1• 14' IWw low• 1• -TAMfJCDIO HIW YORK lit.Pl ~. JI Mvan<ed T~ Oec~Md ,., UM._,..., 11' Total IHUH Ill ...... 11111'1• • "-w•-• " •,31.,IOO 2.14',600 .... 500 ~·· 4:1. 721 »2 "" ua ,, l'ntv -;, JllQ 1'0 '17 SS 1 METALS C~~C9'1ll a~. U.S._..,.. ....... LN41..a~•l*IM• ~~ 4316> <Mlb. PllUftf, ... ,_..., Tiit ... 7S05 Metalt ..... ,.,,.. .. -. A......_7HefttU~M.Y. Merc.-y Ml0.00 Pff ftelll. Plnl-s.wt.OOtroyw, H.Y. \ . • • •• • =.~: son A .1oos Oran1e Cout CoUe1e put. lt.1 19 bttl to good use. Golden West ,q uandered most or its ts hlu but 1t1U came out on top and Saddleback wsed a solid pttcblna performance as all three teams picked up key cooference ..,,aseball victories Tuetday. At Fullerton, Orange Coast continued it.I torrid hitting cam· paign with an easy 8·3 victory over the host Hornets to take a two-game lead in the South Coast Conference race. In their last four games, the Pirates have walloped 72 hits and scored S3 runs to raise the team batting average to .350. TUESDAY, IT was Mike Van· derburg and Larry Lee who did IUSEIUU most of the damage. Van· derburg ripped a single, double and home run for three RBI, while Lee went 4-for-6 and scored twice as OCC improved its record to 9-3. Meanwhile, Don Smith went the distance for OCC. striking out a season-high 12 batters while scattering eight hits. OCC. after a 3·3 first round. went 6-0 in the second round. One of the reasons behind the second round success is freshman Reggie Montgomery who has broken out of a slump Arter going hitless in five games, Montgomery has turned around to hit .560 in the second round. He was 2-for-3 Tuesday MEANWHILE, GWC left 11 runners on base as Cypress Sta rt er Grant wamng constantly pitched out of trouble. But m the end. tbe ftuatlert pulled out the vtctory. GWC (U-6) won lt ln the 11th when Bo~ Grocan opened the ln· nlng with a single and moved to third on a double by Steve $pr· . lnaer. Jack Settle was walked intentionally and GWC was sit· ting pretty with the bases full and no one out. However , GWC did the same thing earlier, only to have Wall· ing somehow pitch out of the jam. That wasn't the case i.Q the 11th, as Chris Schulz brought home tbe winning run with a sacrifice ny. · GWC reliever Ron Hendrick hurled seven innings, allowing just three hits and striking out three He lowered his ERA to 1.48 in Southern Cal Conference play. but it was the third time he has pitched i mpressi ve l y without getting .the decision. Mark St.one pitched the 11th to pick up the win AT SAN DIEGO CC, Sad· dleback pitcher Ben Amaya threw just 93 pitches to dispose of the Knights, 7·2. The victory moves the Gauchos mto first place in the Mission Con· ference's Southern Division with a 9·6 record. Amaya struck out four and did not allow a walk in collecting his fifth win against two defeats Leading the Saddleback hit· ting attack was Mark Swancoat with two hits and two RBI, Peter Harrell who went 2-for-4 with three runs scored. Rick lrwtn who was 2·for·5 with three RBI , and Rusty Evans who \\eot 2· for-5 with an RBI Saddleback broke open a 2·2 game by exploding for three runs in the top of the eighth and two more for insurance in the ninth mning Eagles get scare Uni, Artists, Mustangs win Estancia H1 gh's volleyball team. beset with injuries. needed five games to overcome a charged up Corona del Mar team Tuesday to highlight prep volleyball action. In other matches. In me took lJ n1 vers itv 10 three stra11Zht games; Costa Mesa did likewise to El Toro'; Laguna Beach needed onlv three to too La~una Hills; Ocean View downed La (.Juinta 10 f our. a nd Sa n Clemente needed five to get by Mission Viejo Estancia. 11 1 10 Sea Vie~ League play and 12-2 overall. picked up a win in l!ame one behind the play or outside hitter Brad O'Connor But the Sea Kings . 5-6. bounced back to take the next two as Joe Fuschetti was im prcssive from his outs ide hitter position. The Eagles then pulled out ' 15· 13. 15-10 victories as juniors Fenton Carey and Bill Sieker Richard: Astros not concerned HOUSTON <APl -Houston Astr os pitcher J R . Richard could have lost his life last July 30 to a stroke. Now the once-powerful strikeout artist says his comeback attempt may be overshadowed by the Astros' season-opening s lump. "I think I'm more concerned about myself than they <Astrosl are," Richard said Monday dur· jng batting practice prior to Houston's 5·2 loss to Los Angeles. "I think I'm going to start working out on my own. start doing mol'e things that I should do." Rich.ard, placed on the Astros' 60~day disabled li1t al the start of the regular season, says he's 90 percent ready to pitch In the major leagues, but the Astros, who have lost eight of the1r first 10 games, aren't spending as much time wlth bJm. "I think tt'1 1olng Lo be up to me and l'm gotng to have to worry about the things I should be doina." the 1980 National League All.star startin1 pitcher said. "fl's aolna tp be me pitch1na .nd DOt them · turned in strong performances Cost a Mesa impro\'Cd its rec- ord to 12 2 with 1:1 straight set triumph over host El Toro. The M us ta n!.(S, "1th sette rs Paul Knipp and Paul Coene n teamtng up. a Ion~ \\1th sophomore mid· die blocker Tom Kennedy. made It rune wins agamst two losses U\ Sea View League play. Irv ine l opped University behind the setting of Fred \'ercclle'> and hitters John Bax- ter and Craig Moothart l 0 n1vl'rsit) got some soltd work from 1unt0r Chns Miller Laguna Beach ke pt its perfect record 10tact r 15 0. 7 0 1n South Coal>t L<•agut: pla) I with a win over Lagun:.i Hills Artist Coach Bill Ashen used his second stnng throughout the match. and mid- dle b lockers Jeff Blue and Larry Allen tl>rnl•d in adm irable performances Se tter J e ff Spurlock was also sharp fo r the ~inners Ocean Vie'>' handed La Qutnta its nmth losss against one v1c· tory 10 Empire League play with a four-game \ IC'tOry San Clemente upped its South Coast Lt•ague record lo 4 3 with a hard earned ~in over M1ss1on VieJO as hitter Craig Kamazes and m1ddlt• blockers Jerry Borlin and John Eddo had good nights. Rand) Huffm an was 1m pressive for the Oiablos UCl's 16 not enough AMERICAN l.EAOUI! M•ttn•,. 3, A~l9 0 saanLa c.ALl .. OltNIA .. , ... ~r~1~.ct;: ~ g lloclll•. Ill 4 0 I I 21", dfl 4 0 I I Herron, c 4 o 2 O Allen, pr o o O O Gulden, c O O O O PM:IOtll, 11 4 I I 0 R.nOlt. :Ill 4 0 I 0 Henclst1, rf l o o o And1n, U l 0 I I Ctr-. to eu;111t1, u 9.,,1q .. ,,,, rf LYM, cl B•v•or, di> Downlf'9. c 8rnn1ky, II Grlcll, :Ill HOOIOn.lO ear II Ill 4 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 300 0 JOOO , 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 J 0 0 0 3000 l 0 I 0 Grey. pll 1 O O O 4"f:ta7~",,.0,0,g~ Toi.it 11020 kKellylMlfltt SH iii• 110 000 010-J Cellfornl• 000 000 000 -0 E Brun.nny, LYM OP -Sff"le 1 C.llfornla 1 L08 -Sffllle •. C.lllornlt J 2B P.:1-. SB -CM-. Allen S Slmp"°n SMIUe B•nnltnr lW, 1·21 IP H It ' 2 0 Ell 88 50 0 I J Celltenlie Jellor'°" IL,C>-11 AIM Bala -Jelfeoan 113tll05 1))10010 T -1 II.A Jl.OI Angel av•r•g•• ClATTING Burlooon LY"" C•r•w Oownln9 ford Hobaon OH Grlcll 8en1Quet Brun1ntky Beylor Tol11\ A•W A•nko S..n<f\er Z•lln FOf\(f'I Jellerson Will Tr•¥•n .... ,,,., O'Acqu;slc. Tolelt A8 It H Hit 1111 41 14 0 I 0 12 , 10 •1 IJ 0 • ll I 4 )4 • • )) 3 I l I/ 0 0 0 • ) I • 11 I 0 0 3J I l • )4 0 0 lll )1 ,. 1 )4 PITCHING IP H 88 SO W·L I I 1.0 1 2 4 0.0 • • l 0 I 14 3 2• 4 10 1 I lS.., •• 1 • 1.0 1''. •• 0 10 01 10'•> 14 l • 0 I 1\.) ' l l 0 I •> • I 2 11 1 4 I I 0.0 101 10'1 JS 41 5 1 Pel ,.,. 17l 211 :xi. .:xi. 100 l'lt 114 .. , 112 o~ 210 EltA 0.00 I JI 2.00 us 111 . ,. s l2 1 OI I tO II 00 ) ,. 11 ... s.110, ll•"t9ts4 Toa•• 001 001 011-4 9 0 80llon 010 UJ OJ•-10 IS I Jon•.n•, com•r t•I. Houoh (71 and Sundt>ert. Tudor ano •lltnson W TuOor l 1.01 L Jen~ln> 11 I) A 1l,Ul lrewe"•.atwJayst MolwaukH 000 101 100 • 1 0 TOrO(llO 000 000 011 1 9 1 H•a• ano Simmon•. Sli•t>, Mt uUfllllln Ctl •nd wn111 W-H ... (1.01 L-Shet> I0.31 HR Mllw•ukte. 0 9llv•• 121 Toronto, M•yberry Ul A 11,0ll Y altkeH 1, Tl .. rs O Oolro•I 000 000 000--0 • I N•w York 100 000 000-1 • I Wllto•. !>el.Koor ti) 1nd Parrl,h, Bord. CHl•O 111, <;os~ tt l and 01111 W-BorO 11·01 l W1lc.o1 (Mt A 15,U• ,...,. .... 4, lloy•I• 1 Cotnllnd 000 000 OIJ_. ' 1 lt•n•es Coty 000 010 000 1 1 O W11t1 -Dt•1. Gur•, 9er~ Ill -Groll. W-lib u.01 L-Be<eneuer to-11 A-1',l..S Wlllto ... 1. Orlel .. I Baltlmorp ooo 010 000 I • 1 '"''"00 010 000 001 l • 2 P•lm•r Slew1r1 Cit ano Oe mpMy. Burnl •nd Fl\k W ·Burns (1.01 L Slew•r1 CO-II .. 10 115 A't 4, Twins l Mtnnesot• 010 IOI 000 0 l • 2 O•klano 000 110 000 1 --4 9 I ErlOWJn, Cort>ell (" .,,d Smllll, Mc:Ga"y and Heal" W-M<Gally ll~I L -cor .. 11 (0 , I HR Ml ..... •OI•, Adam\ (II Sm•llev 141 Oelcloncl, P-(IJ A-10,tl'l NATIONAL LEAGUE Aatro1 1. Dodger• 0 LOS ANGELES HOU$TON •b ..... • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 )000 3 0 0 0 l 0' 0 J 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Puhl. cf Bond. l b Cedeno. ct C.'"'· II Ivie. lb Howe, lb Garcla,u All>l>Y.C Kn1PC19r. p ••"" 4 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 I I 3000 J 0 I 0 l 0 I 0 3 0 1 0 J 0 I 0 l , l 0 LOPCtl. 20 L•nClre•, cf B•ker, 11 Ge rn't,lb co.lb GueHer rl Ye•9tr c fluswll,u S...llh.Pll Tnom .. u R1u,s, p fer9srt, pl\ Tolell 1'I o J o T otelt JO 1 I I SCwe lty lftftlntl Los Aft911H 000 000 000 -o H°"\IOC'I 001 000 OOa I e -Howe. OP -HOU\lon 1. LOB -Loi AnQelH l. Houtlon s lB -Kn-r lB - Puhl Lat A""4ft Rtun IL. t-11 H ... l .... IP H .. I I I Ell 88 SO I 0 1 Kn•p~r CW. 1.01 t 3 O O PB -All'tly T I 41 A -11 '°4 E._ lt, PllllllH J Pllllldllplll• 100 000 100-J 10 0 _,,... OOl otS 10.-10 u 2 11111n ... n, LVI• l'I end 8ooM; S.ndoraon end Ctrler W-Senoeraon l>·O> L- A"111ven 12 11 HR-MonlrNI, Cert.,. 01. A-IO.M7 ~ ..... ·.~· Chtc•oo ooo ooo ooo-.o • 2 St Louil 10. 000 10•_. 14 0 Kr•••<, Merli Ill. E•llwlo ISi. Ceplll• (I) -Devit; Rln<Clll •net Tef\KI. w -Klncon 12·01 L-K••••c 10·21. A-11,S5' .,_ .. ,11 ... 1 A11en11 ooo 101 101-10 n o CtnctnneU 000 000 001-I 7 2 h9ol. ~ 191 eM .. ,_let; Soto, Belr lfl, Mot.Mu Ctl -Bench W-aoeP (1-1). L....soto 11-2) HR-All8nl•, Horn« Ill A-14,022. .............. , •Sell Franc•-001 000 000-1 4 t Sen 01090 000 020 01•-l 7 2 AllJIMldtr, Holland (7), MllltOft (ti -$Nik; Witltfl. LuceS (t) .. d IC~. W- Weltll 11-411. L-Ale•"'"' 11·0 . ~ !II. A-7.2'1. ~le­,,..,.. ... S, Stenfwd' c.1~-. ... 1.ec1&,•2 Cll•lll'Nft t, UC •1wft1• t ... 1. "· C6I ~' Ill(; 11. c.i Mlllll ........ "'°" '1 Of•I •OCllltU 1, W)'QI• IMIV.._I • UCLAt.~' • ~I Stu~ 2J, C.I 11.tte Dom lllt<lft HIJb • AJll-'9cllk IS, Wnt.-t 1 (1.,tmlllll Ntll/td t. "'°fnoN Pitier 0 C•I ltOl't $1.0 IN, lane .. ecll St. s-1 CHWttunltY COiiete ........ l,(YMUJ c:v.r•u tit .. IOI ._J 1 I Goldtfl Wiit 010 100 000 01-J U I Well Int lftll l<•ltll; Me .... H .... rlOI to. St-(111 -Sdll;ll W-St-l~JI. L- Welllnt CM ). 28-S!Wlnott COWCI, Go411"t (GWC), ~I ICI, M<Brhtt CCI. 18- celllnt IGWCI. Or ... cee11 I, Piil...,_ J Or ..... CoH1 >10 IOJ 01~ It J Fullerton 010 001 loo-l I o Smllll ~ Ola; Conq ... ,I. M IMr <•>. LeijMr II) """SclKU. W-StnlU. lt-21 L- ConqUHI (10-11~ 28-V•nCMroure IOCC), Groot IOCCI JI-Ketler <Fl HA- y.,,oerburt l<>CCI, LUIOft IF) 1.....-cllJ, s.. 0...-cc J Seddl•tllt<ll 100 ooo ou-1 11 1 Sen 01990 CC 000 100 100-2 1 J Am•Y• -lrWlft; ""· YellOft 1•1 •nel Trio lo. • W-Am•Y• IHI L-8111 JB-irwln 1581 J8-Sw~ IS8); Kamlonlk !SOI COMMUNITY COLLEGE South CoHt Conference Orenee C:O.tl Fullerton C•rrllCK s... 01990.Mer.e S.nte Ana Mt S.n Anlonlo Groumonl T""4ey'tScw·n Orenee C:O.•I t. Fullerton J Cerritos s, Ml s.n Antonio I S.nl• Ana 1. Seti 0!990 Moe • Tll..,....., .• o ...... Orene-co .. 1 et $11111 Atw Fullerton •I Groumonl San 01'90 Mew al C.r roto• W L 08 9 l 1 s 7 s • • • • s ' t 10 Southern Cal Conference LAH•- Golden-1 S.n•• Monico E•tt LOS Ante••• Cypr .. s w L o• u • 11 • I II 6 • • lo\ AflilCllM CC Rto Honoo LASoutn- • • 7 10 1 10 l •• T-'t'•S<arn GolOen W..1 l, CyP<•" 1 LA Soutn-•11. Los Ante!H CC) RIO Hondo•, lA HlrbOf 2 E1U LOS Antlle> 11. S.nll MOftltl • 1-•,·•G•mH Golden Wul et S.nl• Monot• Rio Honoo •I LOS AnQelOS cc. EUl LO• Afl901•• •• {.yptH• LA Soutn-·• ••LA Horbor MJH lon Conference SOUTHEIHI OIYISIOH W L GI S1dolo1>1t~ !>en 01090 C.C. Soulhwestet'n P•tom•r • • • 7 t I s " ... ,, HORTHERH OIYISIOH S.n Btrnerd"'o 10 • R1ver11oe • 1 C.llrul • I Crt1lley I 11 r ... ....,, .. k .... S.001.w.ck 7 Sin Ole90 CC 1 S.n 8erNrellno S, Pllonwr • So..,lhwestem •. Rov•r\IOI t C11ru1 1 0..fl•Y 5 ~,·1ounH Cllalfey 11 Se<IOlebl<k A i¥•tMOt It Clln.11 P1lom.,. et Sen 01e90 CC Soulllwesltrrt II Sen 8erN1rOlno High school WIHtrnlM .. r t, New-IS w .. 1m1na1M 040 000 >--' u • Newport H•rtior :IOI 0» 0-S I J CHiii end Coddlftllton; H\IO'tnt. UGr.,,. duer Ill -C-w -Cattle L-NUQent 2B Lllm .. IWI 3B DeLa¥•ll•O• IWI, l(lrtllberg IHHJ W•\tmin,.1•' E01\on Sunaetleague W L G8 10 0 1 3 ) M•r•l'ia Hun11n9ton Buen foun••in Valley Ntwport Harbor T-J·•S<w .. Eo•son 11, t.\afln• • W•\lml,,.tor 9, Newport Harbor ) T .... tM.•Gem• (11 • • .. .., • •'h 8 • Fo11n111n Valley .. , HUl'll11>11lon llt1ttll •I M ii• SQuero P•rk CIF retlng1 4ADIVISION I Arcadlo (1...01, 2 A-tit-JI l Channtl lll•nOl (I• 11, 4 Simi Yllley II• 21. s WMlmlftll•r 11'·11; • BlslloP Amal (ll-41. 1 I.Ike..-111.Jl, I 8ueN 112 l ·ll. 9. Welni;I l U ·)I, 10. A•Ollnd• I H •> 011\en 11. Ecll ... 11)-4-01 >A DIVISION I VIII• Perk 119 ll. J, C.01tin• I 16-21, ) BurOanll !IS J>, • An•neom ll•·•I. S C.errl1~ (11-41, • Loe•• 111 ~II and Ketell• 11•·•>. e Gerden Grove 116 SI, 9. El~,,. tU·>I; 10 uSlera(l4 J.11 1A OIVISION I Seuous (11 l >; 1 Mon1c111r 11 .. •1. J Htrl llJ.~1), • ArlffJ• 11~5). S ,.,.__. Mer lll·M I; • S.nl• Ft (ll •l. 7 8t,,.rly Hiii\ (11.JI, •. YUUip• 114·•1. 9. SI Bernaro (11·21, 10 Ce111orn11 (10-5) IA OIVISION I Aqulrtll lie.I); 2, Rio-.. ll .. 31, l. Flllmort 0 4-11 • Beldwln P•r11 111·5>. S Elllnor• (ls-4), • Sen l'Mrtno (t-11, 7 9ell G1tdtns CIMI. t P•recltle 19·11. 9 lA BIPliSI 111+1), 10. Temple City (9·1-11 SMALL SCHOOLS OIVISIC>tf 1. MOftlclelr PrClfl (IJ.ll.1.Av•lon 11111, 3 Br•n•-ll~JJ, 4. Alo Hondo Ptlfl c II 4 >. S Orenee Lutnoren ( 10-21, •· Templet°" (9 •·1l; 1 B .. 01e, 111·41. t . Ou11n ol Angel•• I 11 ·0 ti, t Llnfl•ld Cllrlsllan 111·2), 10. Prcwldenu 112·Sl. Brtll•h H•rd Court ,., ... _,, ............ , ........ .-11 .. ... Rey ~ Clef. Merli CO•. 1 ... , .. J ... 2: Jeromy Sates *'· J.,, Hortaeo, .. ,, .... . Gellrl•I Urpl .... CIWI• MeyOlw, .... ...O; Gulllermo A-. def. AOllM OtylCl81e. 1 ... 4 .. ,M . Women'• toumement ... ...,......1 .......... , ,.., ...... ...... lt8llly Jordllll Clllf. Pein Del ..... U , .. 2. .. , : MIN Jell-dlf ... ttl N911.911, .. I, ... 2; Rtt111o1 Me,.,..... oef. Cle ...... IC_.., ,.t, t·•· M : v1re1111• ••• def. 01-DHlor. 2 ... M ... II it.lfl'r ltllleldl ••• ,,._ Sm1111, .. ,, U , '"; tvane Mll~ue' *'· s..c., _......,.. ........ ; J~ ,._ ...... L•tll• Allefl. H. W ... ,. .............. M,; ,., _,....INN) '°""' ~ 1 S, ~ .. ,; .-, M,.... CNlotl lilllll. M ...... ........ ~ SWIMI• ""'"' (NH) ... " ....... -. .. i . •t. .... "',._ ........ 1.J; Mlllltf> Nie C>o!wll Of HI -· '-1, M , ..a, M • ............ --. ..... ,, .... "' ....... O•t1l4Mit <Lal *f W.tt-. W . Ml. i.att.,, w.• llacw ... ~ ••· c:-c.eti. M i '--" Cl.9>-• ..o. M, Iott"" dtfeun. • by ... evlt; lrl.Wftla. ILl l -... I, 1•J,W, .. I. k'Mrl«I CL8l -· •&.1-4, , .. , .. ,, ~ Letli.~ II.II a.t ~. •·I, •·z. Pt. O•leer•,.llllllp•, •·• ..... JUl\fl(l8'·ltlulcfllnl IL.al Ntlll, 6-1. l .. , -· 1 ....• ., ..... 1.11a,-...1111t ,. ..... H11Jey IMI tlel MetlH, .... , J"4 te Hartm...,, ,.,, fief. Sul""-M , .,, Of-. M ; H-' (M) -· .. 1, IOll. W, ~ ...._ .. 1. CeuQMy \M l '°61, t-4, M , "'9fl1 M , -· 2 ... ; Atl'-IM ) loll. U ,M, 1-4, ,.._ ~ S.Klon-AI<,,._ IMl IOll t. N•- Ptrk•r, 1 ... >-•. 1plll w1111 S.pul .. O• Sim-. ... 1. U , CllOw-Cro-(Ml 19111, •>. w, ._itt, , ... •~. ll'Yltle H"'a. C.te -IV. ,. ..... Aotekr-11) del, TrM , .. l. def Le-. •-O. del. H. Tr.,, t-0. def Wtrner, M , Knl9'1I Ill _., 1-S. •·1, •·I, M ; H•r-Ill won. ._,.. M . •~ • .._., c11e ... 1 (II -· .. 1. .. , ... ,.-.u. o..at .. Mlller·Krlll Ill Iott to Henson·Melkonl.,, H , 1 .. , o.t Tilotft..H9\1ylft, ,_., 1-5. Vel_.,. Grllfllll 111 IOSI, J ... , 1 ... '1)111, H , •·l Wo~n COLL IOI UCltvlMS, ......... M:tlStele4 ,.,... vonlutiow ILBI Clel Me. M-,.tl, .. 2. •-l, KHll1111 (UCI) dll 8ar001, 4 .. , • 4, 1·5. Alblno ILBJ def W Myer>, .. 1, • 2, Con-"*" ILBI °"·NI...,,,• >,•·2. MetlOfY IUC.1 1 dot Poll•y, 7-5. ~. •..J, Elled9e CUCtl def Oou1. •·l. ,_. o.wl• M••,. Myers IUC.1 1 d•I ¥OnLul1ow Bardol. •·l, l>-2, Conners·Alblno CL81 def M•llory·lllXOft, •~ .••• ICHll119'Ellec!ge IUCll def Polley Wolson, 1·5, ·~· NBA pl•yoffa C.ter...cel'IMA& lleshfSe ..... ) EASTl .. f CONFEllENCI TwNey'sS<- P11111dotlpNa !OS, Bo•lon '°' lPntl•dell'N• l••d• "'".' l-0) T .... .iit'aO.- Pll1ladelpftlA 11 lloilon FrlUy'1G.,..1 Bo••on •• PTlll-IP"I• ~y'1Gam• Bo\1on 11 Pnll-lpl\•a W_.....,J, April 2' Phll•delP'>•• •I eo.1an (if ne< .. ••• y 1 f'rluy. ""'' 1 Bo•lon 11 P1111-1p1> .. Col ne<eswry I s.....,.,,MeyJ Pt11l1oelplll••• lloiton 111 neceswryi WESTEllN CONf'EltENCE T ...... ,., Sc.•r• Houston 91. It•~• Coly II IHou\lon le1ch -MrlH 1..()) T.,.ltM'1 G1me Houtlon .i Ka,,. .. City l'r!Oay'a Game 1tenw1 CllY •• Hou•lon ~y'1G•m• I( •nws {.tty 11 HOIHlon w_ .... ,,....,.un Hou1ton el Kanws City Iii neceswryl Prldey,Mef I IC lnlll CllJ •I Houston (ii n1u1wry > "'"'8y. _, J Hou•ton et IC•-Cll)o Ill neceu••Y> Loa Al•mlto• TUHDAY'S .. HULTS I HUI of M-toltflt llel'MU -lftt I Ftr'1 re<e Prudy·s Boy (Aubin), •to 1 IO, J 00, nv111 S..ker N lY•ll•ndlntf\lml, • .0. l .0, AOIOS ArollK CClllrllonl. 3 20 SJ net 11 IS JI pa Kl n• '° Second r.c• No 8el IAnclllrsonl. l 20. 1 to. 1 .0, E•rl 0.r1 I KUetlltr I, l .0. l 40. hrt>ro1 I Ptrryl. • to Tlltrd r•te Howoy Glrl (Trembley). I 00, J 00. 1..0 Andy0 \ ~amper IGoul•rttl, S •O. • 10, flow•r Mo..,nl 11n (Ve II and· 1n9neml, 10.00 U uact.o I• II P•l<I J37 00 Fourth rate -Anelys Oyrtamo IK...Olerl. 5 20, l IO, J.loO, Andy'• Dean lTr•mbleJI, 9 20, 5.20, Ouock urry IP1.,ce1, 5 20 Fifth r«t R09i"•tcl CNrlt• I Kuebler I, IJ 00, UO, 3 40. Senta Otano ICOPellndl, 1.40, l .40, E• Grand lC>esomer). 2 .o. U u · eel• I• 4) Plkl Slli . .O Sl•lll race Holf COr"d (L0"90),. 20, 4 oo. J •O. Gollon's Miu., tGrunelyl, 10.00. S 20, Bold Sl•tek !Sorww.,..ollt l, J to S•¥enlh rK• M" M (!inerren>, ll 40. 14 .0, 9.00, Country Janice IWllll1mu, S to, S 20, Boon Bey !Grundy l • Ml U eae<Ut I• 7) pe1d 1111 to l2 PIO Sia 17-6 1·•·3-61 pelO Im .0 wlln SS w1nnint llO•ll Cl•W llOrW>I U Pio Sia con101111on 1>110 S9 10 w1111 744 wlnnlno tl<k•ll "°"'ho<-). E oghll\ •«• Golden Go•rt (0u""•09ftl, I 20, S 20. 1.00. Stoney Pooni (Sllerr.,,I, I 20, 11 •O. '"'"HNI 10.bornl, 10.00 Hlnlh rau TIWlt • Steer (Wllll•u•I. t• JO, S to. S.40, Moll HepPy f>o91tr (An· dortonl, ~ 20, 4 20, Ten Porcenlor IStomor,,..,,I. S 00 U .. act• Cl-41 paid ~S IO. Ten111 rec:t Shy B11<klllot co..-1. 1 20. J to, 4.00. By" Awey (ltumeiorl, 110. • 20, R•noml (Grunelyl, • 40 Sl .. •<11 !1-41 p1ld S .. 1.40. Allond...CI 4,1" , \.01 MHMILal -... ._. Ct"•, .... ..... Ctw\l'l'I ~. 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Mlclell•, Soutll MO 111 11u 111, Coe1on-er ..... ~·· er ..... tncH,.._. er ..... L.-. Pine er ..... o.11 Cr••k (Horii! Fo•kl, Ow•nl AIV•• u 8tld911 OOw1Utrum lo St•wart unel Pl•-1 Y811ey Reter¥04r. Setlflne uu. S"8pllerds Crffll, Symmn Cr-. h- C.r-. Tl,...,,_ Cr-. Tulll• Cr .... MONO -&ucu.,. Ct-. C-vl<I Cr-. Convict I.Ike. Gr•rtt &Ake, Gull Uk•, Hiiton CtHk, Junt uke, LH Vlnln9 Cf ..... Ullle Walker River, l'MmmoU. Cr .. k, Mt GH Cre••. 0-..S Rl,,.r (Binion CtoMl"ll - Bit SP<lntil. Pine Cr-. Re.,.r .. Cr-. Robinson CreMI, Roell Creek (Per..i111 C•mp to Tom's Pl-.:•J. Ai;si> CrHll, S/ll<wln Cr11k. Sil,,., Leke, Sweuver Cr-. Twin L•kH BrldgepOf'I (U-ano L-e<). Twin Lll<O (Mlmmotr>I, YorOinle er-, W•IUr Rl1ter (C/vls Fl•I C.mptround lo lown ol Walur, l.H¥11t ,,,.._, {..amptrouno lo Sonote BriCIOllJ 'ii' . . . " Women'• aoftball COMMUNITY COLLEOI ~-CM1t J, CM fief I c.nelfey 000 002 00-2 I 1 OrenQe Coli! 002 000 01-J t I Mcie.ton-Br-n, Hlnesano (rut lB- G•rver IC.I HIGH SCHOOL ~tiow4, E-1 ... 1 Ed1l0n 000 000 0--4 I I Marona OOJ 002 • __. • 0 8•k•r eno Mellotto, Kvler ..,,., l'Mrcotle l B H•n-..011 (Ml, Mercotl• CM) F-IMA v.11., •• H1111u.,. .... _ .. I Hununoton a. .. n 000 002-2 I Fo..,nlaon Yalloy 041 01•-4 1 Borton -C-r V1n1m1n •nel Arte00e JB Huhn <FYI CIF rating• 4AOIVISION 1 Ed11u. 1 R19ne11t. l BY•n•. • - AtCIOlo, S Gehr • Senta Ane. I P.Coflu a r,attn, ~ M•r•le-\t• .. 10 U Quint• JA OIVISION I SI Josep<l, 2 W••••rn, l L• Hit>•• .•. B•S"09 Amel, 5 LOftO 8eacll Wil\Of\ .• 9..,rrouOI'• tBurt>ank,. 1 El Ooredo, I S•¥•nna, 9 Soutll Hllll, 11. trvlne. ' 1A OIYISION I Benl-r, 2 Ramone. l . MOftltl•or, •. Soni• Fo, s Central. •· 0••• Hllll; I BOft•ll t Azuw, • Artl\11, 10 L• SlrNI PGA money ltadera I Ray FIOycl '111,479 2 Bruc• LleUkt 171.US J Jon,,,.y Mllle• 110,tol • Tom Welson •JO.~ ) Tom lt•t• 11 ),515 • Helo 1,....ln I tl,3:» I Cur11S Sir-104,U. I Lee Trwv1no 103,m ' Andy Boan 103.ffl 10 Biii ROQOt" llXl,Q2 Volleyball HIGH SCHOOL llvin«dof. Unl,,.rsll'f, 1S-•, U-S. U·U Coste Mew def Et Toro. IS .... 15-e, IS 11 L•ouNI e.-.:n def UQUNI Hills, 15 10, IS 11, H·l- S•n Cl.,....1• def M1ulon Y••lo. •·U, •~. 1S 10, 11 15, 17 15 Oc .. n View def. U Quint•. 15-1. 15·1, .. u. 15 10 Esten<•• del Corone del M•r. IS·•. •·15. 10 15, U-3, lS-10 NHL pl•zoH• OUAltTIElljllN L ltOUMD T9111t111ot•10-.. Edmonton et HY IJl ..... S(l•l-1-J ....... ~I) Mlnnewt• el Buffllo lMlftnHot• I-• ... 1 ••• J.1) Celgery •t Pllll-IP>I• IC.loarY leech wrlfl, :I-II NY A~ It St L.oult lll.tf199rl 1- wrlH, J.ll Pr•r•O-. $1. LoulUI NY Renoers. If MC ... l'Y llutlato •t Ml,..llOt •• )I llKISM'Y NV lll~et EelmONOn, If nec;us.ery Pllll .... e 8t C.leerl'. It llKISM<J ......,. ...... Miii ......... et lluff•to, If ~UMY C•IO¥Y M "'-"tad819N•. If nec:.-ry ldmontloll Ill NY llll1nder a, If net11Ml'Y NY A.,._" et Sl. L.oul'l, lf_t_Y Misc . r I ,, "Happy Secretaries' Day!" f'IC'n'"*I _,...... MmC1 _,..._ .......... .,.... .. , ................ u ... .., T ......... ._ .. ....,._.. Hit~~°" ,_... l•Vt .. I M>tlLIWAae WATlll Nie I HOllftlalHO • IMI• DIVI ~-·n • 1111 0'""9N• , ........... \'9 T•mK•, 0.. ....... CM........... 1A110 CAlfYOll 4YUIUI HIMA IOWAllO e MITR<*. ,.Ml9CT ....... ltm "" o....-..,wr .... o... ...... '-"=-~~'..,.ntt·. C:.l ... f'flletilO. tllVllll llAIKM WAT8a ~IC'r Tflh ..,_Is<~-, tfl ... HOTI• IJ Ha .. a•Y •tVI .. 111tt ~.-...; tM ,,.., .............. ottlr~t .. ............... ,_ ......... 11_... ..... ,,....... Tlill ...... -tu• """ .. (!Nt) • !It .. MW .. It:• 6J'ft, '!t ~y Cltr11 .t Or._ °"""' WI 1M JltUW .. Mff, "''· a .. tiffic+ •1110, *l· ff "" DIWi(t. -.., t'-' ...._, fw PMMlll tl/tlllllll11t le tel• Ohtrl•t ell Pu!Oll ... 0r .... C.0.lt o.11, ........ ,.~. ~ ..--•• ~1122,lt,Mt,6,IS,t•t IMWI IUer, MM<atMd___. ... ~ .. c~ ......... ~U., Ol*'kt. •\ 'lllflfd\ llftw tal4f .,....,. Wiii • ~·~ ---NM elM .t.lhe M'k•ol .J ll'VINI RANCH WATIR • PICYfTtOUl•UitNIU 01\TIUG'r, •tot G•l'lltll• Orin ... ____________ _ .., ... f111oti.-Or-.. C..~t O.Hy Piiot, .... , PVllUC NOTICE ..... ..,.,.. .... , 1r111n., ta1Hom1• '"u pu-· ~~ -c• TIM ........... --~ ..... .. .. "'-..... , ~ t• ..... .. IJLK," nv•. .. NOTtce Ott HU•Tl.I'' SA ... llMIMU .. : THI OSAOI WATIR rtlt!OllM\lt It IN COllVett CllKU"'9fltl T.&. ....... CO., lllAO T•lltn A-Ill, ,....,. tw Ml41-" .. ._.....,_ ....,_, Plef\TIOUIMl\IMIU NOTICE IS HERllY GIVEN, IMI V•ll•'r, CMifvrN• t21GI. f>Y w141 DINrkt elWI mutt M afCtrll• NAMI tTATIMaNT Ml~. -""11 "· ltll, •l 12:00 COMMIRCI l'UNO INC ••• ""I" "" tlW -lltllo# """"" lo Tllo~ --It ...... lllAI· ... < .. ell -.. Mid,..,, '" tM •11· (Alltoml• COIPO(e.tloll, IHCI t.ltitrt .,..,., ,,... ... treMO ....,, Of tlle otfic .. ol REAL ""-· "-II.in \l.i .. y. CAI~• c-.._1 ,.,. ..... #~ a~ TOfl TUNE ttQ " .... 2 Ulnttr ISTATE S8CUIUTllES SERVICE, tt10l -., -~-uec --•a•n ' ' lfwllta kK•IH et 117 NOttll llrow.e,, Sufi• T11i, ~ 11 '°"°"'-11, • ,.. °" Ill• w mo .... ~ t.111,. Of. ::u-· """'......., 9NCf\. c.• A. "' u. Cltf o1 ~i. Me, c-ty of .......... Ike ti IM Oiairtct eM II! IN 41ffke 114 Ore119e, Slete ol Celllor11le, T IC Q:)Mlo\liRCE flUNO IHC. tit• •1111lllffr/Atcl\ltKI •• JOllll .. ..;·:.::..~ ~'1:· ~-SvllCrell IH\IESTIW!NT COM"AHY IHC .• -..... •· Hec11e11, ~·"roe~?:... ... v .. .!!.-,"!!..~·· '"'' ~ 1, ~" 0, M 111• c.i11oni1• <o0»0r•t1011, ., • dyty ~Po ..._..... • ' ~· _. """"' ....,._..,. cllvldv•I. llllOlllted 'rr'VIMe "'*< •1111 ~ '9 Tiii• '~t w• IUod wltll lfle tvOI. l-ltM.MfUt ,,__«MMColllerrHllllMlc...-. c-•• C'°"' ot Otet199 CHiiiy Oft ,.;.-:.'".,. -~= tt u. .,. Tl\la ..__ w• fifed wlll\ tlllt t•l11 Duel 01 T ""'I uec11ted llt ""'°11 a.1"'· t of $10 00 t Mii -:: Dy ... ~ Cov11ty Clerk Of O<.i0t Gtwtl~ .,, HE•8£RT D. JfNNINGS Md LINDA --"------------------------1 "'*" :::: 1·~..;.._ ~ 18 of 1 ~ AOtll 20, t•t I.. JIHNING~. ~ -•lie, -Pll011"*9 Oret19t COeu o.i1, l"ltol, r• --,....... .,,..._ ,,...., re<orcltd ,.._.,,.... 27, tt7', 111 a- Sl&C & RNlf CARNIVOllOUI C U L G E D A L G 0 l A l E 0 T Z 8 D s ·c TE A 8 v l 0 s EA l y p E cl I 8 H I SW 0 0 FD A 8 S X.A TV I AD T 0 V l 8 W S R E G I T R 0 S I A C C E 0 T E L E A R A R A T Y D 0 C T R E R C A S I P N L A C P 0 T 0 R A 8 0 T S R C A 0 A E S R S C T N A N R R E T 0 R A E N N Y R E U A 0 S P T N A N 0 S P ( W S T H E T 8 S 0 0 1 H 1 0 H A S L Y 0 T H I G I E I P S N A V G V R A A V L R E K E R R N H L M S 0 L A I N S A F 0 R 8 P I E R R E D I R N S I R R N D C W 0 H 0 G S 0 R I 8 0 I L C M T l A L P l A l K E Y M E A U M I A T A Y G I R 0 U A H A T S U A S S L 0 1"'1NC'donl: Htddln _.. ..._ _... ton.cl, .... - ~. up. doiMI or 1.,...... find Mdl Ind boll It II\, .. ... Uoftl .... ~ c.t T1'ln w..I " CMf Llot*'dl Wolf ~ Dot ReccOCMI Coy01m HVtM .... ""1tllr T6IWOITOW ....... DEATH NOTICES c•~~-1!~?, 148-7431 ... , -_..., __ ,.. ·-···---· _, ----c.1 ... -...-.. -. ~· ..... CIHOTHHS ~-OAOWAY MOttTUdY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa &42·9150 1At.n1a.-o" IMITH • TUTHtu. WU1'C .... CHAPll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa ~9371 Aorll 22, 2'. Mey'·'"'"' ,.,,., :::..:--ICMClfketi-.,. r•· P\IOllSll9d Or .... Cone o.11, .. u ... !Melt of Olfttlet Rec-• ol ~· c- Pl•ll• elld "'8<ltl<etlot1t wtll ... Aorll 22. 2', Mey 6, 13, Itel ta2-41 IY, et ,._. 107', Roc:o.dltr s IMI""' ---------..,.111 No lim, 111 ro41t0ft of• l>r-11 11\ellecl, 111*1 r...-t, 10 Pf'..-Cllve or deleull Ill pey....,.1 "'perlonneriu blclclors 1or M eddltlotwll 12.00 ,,,.... PUBLIC NOTICE of uw OClll .. tlonf MC-.,.....11¥ 111-P VBUC NOTICE relY11delll•I lo co••• Ill• co11 ol ch•dl"9 INt cen.111 twoecll or dltl~Yll. fllCTITIOUS 8USIM•U ~·~~::---I .... I I I ,ICTITIOUlaUllN•ll Notice ol wlllCll wu recorded .. .,.. STAHMIMT c.u:'o..:~ LA.:...'~ 'tt!11C:.,:ci.:.. ".; NAMI STATIMIMT 0.C.mw "· "111· 111 8oolo l3"1 of <>ii Tiie lot•-1119 ~·-· tt• dol119 ... ~!Niii of.~ ..... R•l•UoN T·11· fOll-1119 penon It d0"'9 llutl· ltcl•I RKerdS, Of Uld eo..nty, •• peee ll;;SIMU •: h•J Ml«mtned \tie """Mllfll .. ol MW ., tis. Rtc:OfW • lt\te"'ment NO . .altQ, OIAL·A·WI l'E, ,, .. DYllller·D, weoet IOr .... toc•lll 111 ... ~h ~... II;. R. A A"' s c LE AN IN 0 WILL SEL.l AT PU8l.IC AUCTION H1111ll11glon llekll C.lllornlet-.. ' TO THE HIGHE\T 810D£A fOR Dottle.._,,, ,·166 Olmber·O, Hullt· work Is to .. 119rlorm8d -Ille lntlM SERVICE, 2410 CerllOll Pltce, Coate CASH, l•wfYI ,,_, ol Ille Unll.cl l"41lorl 8eedl ~lloml ..... Re11c11 Weter DltlrlCt 11 ...... ..., ••kl MeN. CMll°""• •••. SltlH ... PtY-....... time ol N I• Allll tei,.0, 103:22 !..,. H pr ... e ltl119 ret• ol W80fi. A COCIY of aARllAAA MARIE DUNCAN, ellrtaht lllle-llllerntllOwlleldb~ 11191"" Beecll, C.tlfornl• ,.:;0• urtl· 11\eM P<••etttnv retes•r•o111Ue et the 1410 Certton Pteu, Coat• AhH, II." TrW.IM, In •lld to tll•I r .. 1,,,01,. c OI Alldo< " olflce of Ille ,,.,.,,. Rench Weier o~ C:.lllor11l•t2'». ••ly tllueled In wlct COYlllY fng me ·~ • .. H "°"j I 1 16 W~lldjem. Irk\ elld \NII be -e velteble to Thi• OllllMU la c-..C.111111'1' 9'\ Ill· Stele, desulllecl H IOltows: ' Cell~orni."~ Yn n 91on ••ell, eny tnl•rest.o pert' Oii rectuesl. A dlvld11e1. PARCEL 1. ,. • .,. F•k-• s Peios 1rv1M copy ol """ Wtle rele. -11 119 -•· e.rtlM'• °""<Ml All tMI terteln telld sllueteCI In lite C:.tllorlllet27U • • • •d Oii Ille l-lle by U. COlllrtctor. Thll Jl.._I wes llleCI wllll Ille Cll• ol N-Po<I llHcll, IMKrlllecl H This IK!llMU ts condYCtod lly • 11 "'•"Ill lftflldetory -the Coll· Cou11\y Cl..,k of Ore1100 to1111ty o11 IOllowa, lo-Wit: QeMrel PWtne"1tlp I rector lo wllolft lh• co11trect Is Merell 1•. '"I. Loi i. 111 8100 A ol Trecl '7J, H A1111 Kl"ll •werdecl, tnd upon.,,., tullCOlllfk'IOr "1MMJ -" Oii • ,,,." recorded In OOOll 20, Tl\h ....._, wes Ill.CS "'"" , ... Yllcler him, lo 118'1' llOI ·-l/\ell .... Pullllshod Qr111191 Coe11 D•lly Piiot, 11•90 11 •ncl ,, of Ml•C•fle11tOYI CoYllly Clerlt of OrMigo COYlll' on tpeclltec r etu to ell workmen Aprll22,2',l!My•,IJ.ltel ,_., llil•pa, recordt of Orenoe Co11nty, Aprlt 20 '"' •m1110,.ci bl' llWm 111 ,,,. uecutloll ol C•lllorllle. • .,,_ l1teco111roc:1 P UBUC NOTICE PAACEU Pwll~ OreflOI Coe" Oetly Pllol, EMii llid or "'-1 111811 '"' ,,,_ All ..... cert.oln tend ,., ... 1.., In Ille Aorlt U, 1', Mey •• IJ, 1 .. 1 1..._,1 0\11 or wtlmllled °" e form lorfll.-City of Newport 8•Kh, County ot PUBUC NOTICE N·nJJt NOTIC:E Ofl IAL• 01' RIAL "ROl'I a TY AT "RtYAT• MLa NO.A·l_,S t 11 u. Superior eoun of 111e St••• o1 C.lif.,.,..., for Ille County ot 0<111191 111 Ill• -tt•r of the E•l•lt ot CYNTHIA BARROS, Deceewct Holl<.t i> ,_,et>v gl...,, tf\81 Ille \If\ dtrtlOMCI wtll Mii et Prlv•I• ..... to Ille 1119~1 -~t Ill-. -lKI 10 conllrmellon of uld s-1 ... eo..n. on or ettff ll'le •th tleY of ,..y, 1 .. 1 et Ille OlfiGe ol Je,,,.i A BYr9en, AO mlnl"r•IGr', ,..., e U\eprrlMI AYefl .... Suite E. Orenve. Coun" OI 0<#1119, Stele of C.lll<Wnt•, ell IM rl0/11, lllte end l11tern1 of w ld d«eeuo •I llW time ol dHtll .,,d oil IM rlOlll. 1111• elld 1n1erfft 11\et the ffl•I• of Mid de· CUSH Ml •<quired b' -•UOll ol lew or ot""rwlM other lllMt or 111 ecldl tlon lo INI ol '8kl llK••Md .•• ,,,. time of dNll>, In #10 lo ell U. certeln real property sllyel..i In Ille Cll' ol Se nt• Alie, CoYnly ot Oren99, 51•1• ol Cetltornl•, 11•rl1t111er1, cttKrt-M toll-\, to wll Lot ,. ot Tre cl No J70I, COYllly ol Oret199, St•• ol C.lllorn••. e\ per m8" rt c.ortNd 111 8oGll 129, Pe99t l ...., 4 of "'1_11_ "-· In Ille otfl<.e of tl'le '°""'' RKordltr ol u11d "''"''' ' more col'ltmoflty -n<>wn H Ill N M•nll• L.eM ~n11 An•. c.a111or11te '2701 T-J OI sele US/I In I-YI _, of tM Ulll-Sle!Att on Ulftflrmellell of wt• Ten -tent OI •-I Did to Ill d ..... Silt<I Wtllt lltd ll1d1 or offers to be 1n wrlll119 - wltt lie r--el Ille efor.,.id olfk• el eny ltme etll• tlle llnl pul>Uutlon ... ,,_ -llOlon -of ~·· Oetecl INt 10UI _..., ol ~II. 1 .. 1 J-A.llYrven Admllll1tretM ol ltw Ettel• of Mid~ A1tor111Y' for J-P. ~.,, PMt>ll\l'tect °'-Coell 0.lly Piiot, April 12, U , 29, 1'111 1'!0441 PVBUC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF MARTHA PHILP AND OF PETITION TO AD· MINISTER ESTATE NO. A108S29. To all heirs, beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditors of Martha Philp and persons who may be otherwise In- terested in the Will and/or Estate. A petition has been filed by Jeanne Philp Brlggen in the Supefior Court of Orange County requesting that Jeanne Philp Brio· gen be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of Martha Philp (under the Independent Administra· •• pert Of .... CGnl•«I dOCIHNll&I, Md fllC"l'ITIOUI 8UllNIU o, ...... Stat• ot Olllornl• myst \Ht e<G-led bY • ,_,,.....,, NAMI STATIMl llT A portion of Lot " Of Block A of Cheek, e C."ifled CM<ll, °' • l>lclditr't Tiie fOll-1"9 _._, It d01f19 bllll· TrKI •1J, Car-0.1 Moor, a• .nown OOlld In.,. emou111 -IKS t1>M 10% ol ,,. .. H Oii • mep rt<or-Ill -20, pe99 II 11\eemOYntoftlWbW,,,,....peyM>leto ANTIQUARtUS, in W 1'tll ot Mt,cettoneo•" M.•P• record• o1 the order ol, °'for U. botfWfll Of, Mid Slrfft. COSte MHo. CellfOl'lll• ••» Ore11ve County, d9tert...i es loll-• Dl•trtCl,ulhe<-mey lle;-•~I\ G e rnlc Cerr A•ttoom, 161 ae9 inn"'tl•tllle,._1!>oo>U.rlytO<· llld °' ~ IMll flt ••led olld Hl91tte110 Orlve . Newporl llut lt, ,,., 01 ••id Lot JS •-•Non" so n llltO with U. Sec•et«V of ltle Dlllricl Celllornle 9'JloMI WHI 10 uw .row' W•sterly t orner OI •• or'"'"'"""' 11 .... Ill llWl llOllU pro-H11' -1 ... u I• tc1nd•1CIN b' .,, Ill· H id IOI MIO Wtlle<ly corner 11et119 ••ded T"" .._... ,,,...l'-d clle<k or dlvlOu•t. Ille !M>Yuwny lt"9 of Hutti 0r1ve, •• b0110 ....,I 111 9;....,, • ...,. .... " 11\el GM11 .. C¥r -"'•••_,, 01own 011 .. 10 mep ol Tree I '73, Ille 1>1-wllt enter Into • contttcl Tlll• \\•t-1 w .. 111.a with IN lllent• NO<t.,.rly •I-tlW weuerty ..,Ith Ille Olurk t It -··-tlle work. Coynl' Clerk ol Ore11ge CA>u11ty ll11e Of Wtd LOI ». -Ille Easterly end w111 be dt<lered lon••l_, It IM Apr11 a , 1'111 t111t ol Heiel Drive 10 • point, u 1d JIKCIUIUI _, ref\ISft to ertl•r 11110 ..... point IHtlno u 00 , .. , NO<"llWltl •nd •I wld cont•« I. Py1>1t.,,.., Or11199 c;oe,1 Delly Piiot rleM •f191•• '° nw Nonnwnterly ••· TM -d ol Dlroctor• ot the Oh· Apr 22, 1', Mey•, ll, Itel ,,., .. , tenllon ol Ille Soull\Wttlerty line ot trltl r.,.,.,,.. ll.,. rig.Ill to ••lKI eny Mid Loi J.S, thence SouUWtetlerly In • end •II llfos, -to wetve •11' .,., ell PUBLIC NOTICE OlrKI I Inc to the Pv1n1 ol 8eqlnnlno trrogulMlt' 111 MIY llid Tiie str•I ~en or ollW• common Publlu...d Oron91t Coeal Delly Piiot, detton•llon, II ony, ot IM rtol pr-r· Allf'll 22• "'' ltl , .. , ,,CTITIOUI 8UllNllS ly h•r•IMOOvt dtterll>ed 1' pyrpo"e(I PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUI 8UllNISS HAM• STAT•Ml'.MT Tl\e following ,,.,....,, ere dol119 bY\ln•u• WIP INVESTMENTS, 13911 Ell· \uprise Drl v•, G•rll•" Gro•t. C•lllor11I• t»U Jeck A --. '"" E"l-lte Orl•e, <#¥ .... Grovo. <Allfomle UMJ R~ J Purco, 1Jtll En~p<IM Ori ... ~ Grow, C.11,.,,.,,I• tMJ T llll !Mnl...s• It tond\l<led 11, e ..... ,.I -1nenftto JACkA.Wllelen TMs ~I ... 11-wllll the COYlllY Clerk of 0r ... 99 c-ty on AjlWU 10, Itel CAl'a•TZ& KASOAtt Att. .. ,.ttuw .,, ....... ~on .. a.tte• NAMI! STATl!Ml'.NT lo \Ht 111 Harttl Ort,..., C.orono 0.1 Mer. Cellfornle bu:::.• .. ~o~~~wlng P••ton• ••• doing The Ynde<"Qned dl..clelm• .,,, ano Ao SS p R 0 0 u c rs 1•••1 •II lleblllly lor tl\e 1n<orrec1,,... ol M•tArl""' Blvct., Sutt• "JOO. lrvlM. NIO '""' eddteu or ot1te1 common C•lllo•nle '171S de.19n•llon . ROSSO CORPORATION llete of Seid wte wtll lie mede wtlltO\lt cove· lncorpor•llon Cetllo rnt'• tUU ne nt or ,..,,.,.,y, upnu or lmpll..i, MetAr111ur 8fvd S..lto 100 • trvlM re~raln; title, poue>1lon, °' encYm· Callforllle nJIS • · ' bre nt u , lo 1elhl' Ille prinClpe t ROSSO CORPORATION llet•110 ol the NOii °' ot,_, otH t9811on R e -lyl< MCY•ed l>y .. j(J °"" ol T•YSI, wltll tn· ~"'-' lereat •• ProYlded In .. Id Note°' otrwr Thi• slet-1 WM 111..i with Ille ollll99l1C111, ptys 8""en<H, II eny, Y'" C011111, Cle" of Oren99 Count., °" .,., Ille term• ol u>d Deed ol Jry1t Aprll 10 Itel, encl 111te<nl on •llY w<h .c!"Anc", flt...4l -pt us, .. ,.,,..,...,.,..,._.,...,,,.. of PYbtlthod 0renve c:oeu Delly Piiot ttw Try--of the tr.ats t rHtod A-1J ,. Mey6 IJ '"' ,.,....j lly H id ()ffd ol Tryst. The lol•I ~· ' • • • •mount of '8ICI oDl'9etloM, •nt•Yd"'9 P VBUC NOTICE IT ATl'.MINT 01' AUlllOO..MIMT OflUMOfl Pr•,.<lpat, •<cru•d tnter11t, olMr omount> ll'len dlM, elld re1\0f\1t1•~ Hllmeted ,..... Cf\erl)ft end .,,...,,,., ol "'• Tr1111M, •I '"" llmt of llllU•l PYbllcellon 01 tht• Notice, is '107.)1' .. Oeted Aorll t, ltet I" ... • Cal......_ t17tS fll-fllCTITtOUI 8UMMIM MAMI PYDll.,...., o.-. eo.u Delly Pilot, The fol'"°"9 ... , ..... Ms -Apr U , 1', Mey •• u. .... letS-81 Ille YM of Ille flelll'-"""'-' N..... TI( tnvt$l..-t """"'8ny, Inc INUA TUNi. •:15 .... 2 fdl .... r e Celllvmle C0<11Melloll. .... ,,... H..,llnOlon lkkll, C.lllonll• ·~ Tno1 .. PUBUC NOTICE 91647 8y llNI lhlotl• Secu•llln Tiie l'lclltlouS 8'1\lllft~ Ne..,. ,.. S..vtc.e, 1 C.llfonW• ferrtd to ebov• w• lllod In Orwi99 c..,_.euon, Its A8fnl NITMJll C-.t,ClllJ.,_,,., lt7t. C-110.J.MOreitr fllCTITIOUI 8UllNISS LEWIS M. METZA, S»S 5'111<•••1 117N.llr_e,,Ste.A NAMl ITATaMINT ,.....,, Aneflelm. C.tllOf'lll• t1I07 ' Senl•AN.CA'1701 Tl\e lollowln9 ,,.,...,,t ••• dol119 Tltlt llull...s• we• <ondue:l«I llY .,. C11•1tSJ.2'M bY\lnHSe$. llldl•td"81. PY1111"*2 Or-Coest O.lly Piiot. AU TO CENTE A MACH IN E. Lewi\ M. MeUe A11<lll. U.U. Itel LTD, SI Auto Cltnter Ort .... , 8Ylldln9 Thia Jl<Mem.nl '"'" Ill.cl with the A, Unll I, 1rvl11e, Olllornl• 92714 County Cl••~ of Oren99 County on Peut 8eeudreeu. lllt Eest Agrll 10.1 .. 1. ••n•ll. An-tm, c.111ornl• taos " Oellon llYr'kett, SlJO OullloC> Ortve, Pullll\llod Orfn9& C.O.lt Delly Piiot, Rlnrslde, Catlloml• t1'0S APf'll 21, 29, ,..Y •. tl, 1 .. 1 lw-11 Thi\ bY"tlffl ll ~OnclY<ltCI by e llmll.cl ,.,,,...,ll'llp - P aul aMlill••ev PUBLIC NOTICE This lUl1-I wes filed will\ ,,,. CoYnly Clerk o4 0•#1119 <:.ovnty Of\ Allf'll 17. , .. , PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ClAlllf 111· EQUAL HOUSING . OPPORTUNITY hMbt..r • ....ac.: All real estate ad· vertlsed In tbl1 newapaper ia subject to the Federal Fair Hous· lng Act ol UllS8 which makes lt Uleaal to ad· vertise .. any preference, limitation, or dis · crlminatlon based on race, color, religion, sex, or nation.al origin. or an intenuon to make any such preference, limitation, or dis· criminatlon " This newspaper w1U not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which LS in viola· tion of the law. ERRORS: Acherffsen llMMlld check tMW od1 dcalty ... report ~ ron 'iMmMiatefy. The DAILY PILOT en...,.. liability for tt.. flnt lncornct insertion only. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OHH-LA·LA Is what you will say when you i.e e lht!> sparkling clean 4Rr, form. dtn, lam rm, 3 l·ar gar. home 1n Mes a Verde Approx 8yrs old & 2200 sq rt. wlcentral air, heated spa & so much more' Ju~l re duced $5,000 Now $238,000 & amuous ! Clyde Johnson Rltr 549 21644 MO DOWN PAYMENT Pay closing costs only! Buy your own home' Must qualify for mon thly payments Exciting new concept Call today for full details 67~ S550 THE REAL ESTATERS COSTA MESA 511-SllS,500 OWHH SAYS SELL Not an add-on or con· version. A reaJ 5 Bdrm family home in one of Costa Mesa's ni ces t areas. Handymans de U1ht. C@nd •ave' SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-699Q CAMEO HIGHLANDS OCEAN VIEW OHL Y I 00/o DOWH Now reduced thousands' Spacious living room, features gl o wing fireplace, 3 large bdrms + den. Great assumable lst and owner wtll help finance. CaU 613-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS WESTCUFf VACANT Reduced S25 ,000 . Desperate owner saya bring all offers. No qualifying. Low down. 4 Bdrm alngle story home! totally upgraded. Cal for more details. -@ SEA COVE PROP"Elf TIES 114-63 '-6990 CAME 0 SHORES Lowest Priced Fee Larae a11umablt lit TD. Wal.II ol ,..., leld to wood deck. Beautlflll vl•w• ftom muter 1\lite, Jivlq and family rooms I Plua, lovely privet. beac:b. f'of full fftall•, call '7M550 THF RFAL E ;_; · 1 ATE. R ::_j ....... ..,.w. . ..................... . ••• ,.. 1902 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCIAHFlOHT COMDO MIWPOITClBT • Bdrm 2"11 Ba, F.R .. POOi. (eonla " ape. Agt. lloy. 5'0.aaae or 846-0888 Whelan Real Estate llAUT1M.l.Y llFUUISHID 4 bdrm home in good locat100 with a com- pletely r emodeled kitchen, n"'11 paint. n-.w cpu aod dr~. Owner hn1.ncln1 available S132 ,500. Call now 97t·5370 LLSTATE REALTORS POIH'T'STO PERFECTION This home truly de- serves "The Most Beautiful Home On The Block" award A func· lion al balance of beauty, coqifort end c onve· nience . Compl ete w/remodeled kitchen-an inspiration to any cook. SS6·2660. $130,900 w/VA terms. C::. ~F l HT -f""" PHOP( f~ T It:.~ SELLER W /FtHANCE Beautiful executive home. 5 Bdrm. 2 master suites. stereo thruout. F o untai n Valle y 641 1991. agt GREAT INV&<>TMENT 3 BR I Ba. $72.900 As sumable financing & selle r w also c arr) paper CaJI for terms 752 6499 Plan lll Realty LET'S TALK CcM•uni1sioft Splih Jack H Ulch, M9r. 67S.1771 ~ •. r ~ • j4 ' ..... ' • .. . .. : . :·· OLD NEWPORT New two and three bedroom oondos. Conve- niently located Lovely bay view. Builder's pro- gram creates an urgen· cy lo sell Terms very nex1ble. $169,900. TWO FOR $345,800. 631 -7300 H.I. loyfrolltCOllda EuelentT..,_ Fantastic value with owner financing. This 2 bedroom adult condo has a beautiful main bay view on ree land with boat slip availability. This 1s the best priced main bay waterfront condo tn Newport Beach at only $335,000 D .M. Mm'shc4.RJtr 644-9ff4" CASA DEL RIO a.a..tfMM.wCOlldos Xlnt terms. 13% interest for 3 years. 12132 Ed· inger-close lo Harbor Blvd. OPEN WEEKENDS 10.S 641-1991 : 631--4361, agt. WALK T ·O BEACH Giant 4 Bdrm priced rl ght ! Spacious living room features wood b urning fireplace. Owner assisted rananc- to1. Hu.rry,calHl'Ja-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS OMIYIAROLD Best lOCatbl, ~ to pool• voUeyHll UMDEI $I 00,000 Ptr,ett 1tarter home wltb 1reat U1umabl• loao. Cab DOW 711·3191 LaJtWla Beach will spena at least $6,000 to solve a noise prob-. lem at the new community center, despite a charge by Mayor Wayne Baglin that the council is "trying to solve a prob- lem by lhrowin1 money at it.'' The councU voted 4·1, with Baglin casting the dissenting vote, to place insulation between the top floor and the lower level celling, as well as other im· provements, in the hopes of cut· ting down the not• volume. Senior citizens 'refuse to use the remodele~ Veterans Memorial Conuourtlty Center on Lealon Street until the nolH from dance classes in the top level Is deadened. THE REFURBISIUNG of the 50-year-old former schoolhouse cost $218,000 and th. two-story building was to bovse senior citizen club activitiea,1aa well a.a Deltf ........... "'* Tom Vandenberg ponders whal to do with baaketa of egg• le1t him by gener01J8 Ecuter Bunny. Rabbit tracks Easter bunny left signature The 126 colort'd Easter eggs that Tom Vandenberg found hidden in his Ne" port Beach apartment Sunday morning didn't bother him too much It's the 74 be;iut1es he didn't find that have him wor- ried . ·'I've never seen so many eggs," the young Newport man rcmarked this week "I found them in my dirty socks. in my sofa, in the toilet -you name 1t ·· VANDENBERG BLAMES the whole thing on his girlfriend from Pasadena. He says she has an "interest- ing" sense of humor According to his explanation. she purchased 500 eggs. "mostly re1ects." from a ranch end then spent the better part of t"'o days colonng them "I was away on business," he says, "and she came in and hid them. Wht>n I came back, they were all over the place " She also left behind a sign that proclaims. "Cation! Easter egg deposits " Vandenber~ says the word "cation." which is sup- posed to read "caution." is another example of her in- teresting humor. He says he's a poor speller and she won't lel him forgel it. Bt;T HE'S PLENTY GOOD with his math. After find- ing only 426 of the 500 secreled eggs. he knew he was in trouble .. There's still 74 eggs out there." he says, "and if it goes too long maybe I can borrow one of those odor- sniffers from the fire department and find them that way " • But for the time being Vandenberg says he has plenty of eggs. He started keeping them in a laundry basket after running out of room in his refrigerator. Asked what he plans to do with a ll the eggs. he admits, "I don't know." And, after a pause. "Why ? Do you want some?" · -By Steve Marble Utility corwersion stop-go procedure Some lean years are in store for efforts to convert overhead utility wires to underaround in unin· corporated areas of Orange County. Under a five-year under· 1roundlng plan approved Tues· day by the Oranae County Board of Supervisors, only one project lJ •cbeduled for 1982, one in 1183, ooneinl984andtwoin1885. By contrut, five project.a are · either under way or scheduled thiayear. They include under1roundint of power lines along Pacific Cout Highway between Aliso Circle and West Slfeet in South Lagunaf .ftlong Pacific Coast Highway in Dana Point, alon1 El Toto Boad east lft El 'toro and along Lemon Heights Drive in Lemon Helpta. The SQuth Laguna and El T9ro projtcta are now under conit.nac· lion, said Don WU.100, a county aid• who mon.iton underground. ing projects. Fewer future project• are scbeduled, Willon aaJd, .because the hvo power uUUUe1 aervln1 the counl)'-SanDle10Ga1and&lec· trlc and Southern Callfornla Edleotl -are allocatinc 1eu Cl\Ol\eY rorunder1roundiJlc. "And there'• the old price aquee1e and tnnatlon,'' Wllloa Hid. It lm't unUJ 1• that ~ und..-1roundlDI project •• 1ebectaled ID loUth U,uaa. lt .rtU be •IN Pactnc Cout .JIJPW11 beltNln Weet ll'"1 aftd Le a.. da Drive at dae tntnnff t.o2'1artt Arch Bay. dance cluaee and other pro. grams. But the tap~g of little feet on the wood floor over the multipurpe>Se room makee ac· tivities impOiSsible dowmtain. City Manner Ken Frank sald Tuesday he does not believe the $6,000 in acoustical Improve· menta will do much good. But if there is an appreciable imj>rovement, he suagest.s the ol~y also install ca rpetin1 downatairs, place acousUcal p'nell on the walls and replace hollow doors with solid doont. That work would cost another $8,000. \ THE ALTJRNATIVES would be to spend up to "50,000 to put in a four-inch thick concrete floor -something no one is recom- mending -or rescheduling ac- tl v HI es al the center. the cheapest solution. The council majority saad it Q. WilUam MUZer analyzes the country's problem• - and the solutions ... 89 waota the city lo do the $6,000 in improve(beots, then see H resched".1ing programs can solve the •roblem. But, &aclin &aid the council's solution "is a cheap way to buy some time." "THE ONLY WAY to solve the problem is by rpscbe4ulina programs," he said, addIDM th•t there are no guarantees tht. $6 ,000 fn improvements wall work. • "AU we're doine is 1peoc:UQS taxpayen' money because it • in easy reach," be Hid. ·~ should be taued back ih the ci~ man·ager's la'P,, the senlqr citizens' lap, and the (private). dance people and let them wo~ out schedules." Councilman Neil Fitz:patrt Ill.Id he would prefer spendint U\' entire $15,000 for improv~­ .rnents, then approach the countY1 ror funding. !Bana Point panel sets ~ug. 18 re.call ekction .. . •• I' I• Dana Point Sanitary District co mmissioners Tuesday set Aug. 18 as the date for a special recall election that. if suc- cessful, could sweep four of the five board members from office. Unanimous approval of the election date came JUSt one day before the deadline set by the county Registrar of Voters. to designate an election date. The four commissioners are ·Olympic event off for OC? The Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee has made a final decision on a site for equestrian events during the 1984 summer games, and it apparent- ly won't be lo Orange County. The site wiJJ be announced later this week. said committee spokeswoman Amy Collis. She said a formal proposal from the Oran&e County government to host the event s in a new equestrian center in the south county hasn't been submitted. Committee officials have said in the past that the Santa Anita race track in Arcadia was the front runner to host the equestnan events. Th e 'to unt y Board of Supervisors, though. decided April 8 to prepare a $10,000 feasibiijty study on building a spectator complex with 80,000 to 100,000 seats in the Aliso Viejo G ~eenbelt near Laguna Niguel. An equestrian facility already was planned for the site. County officials were hoping they could attract some outside construction funds if the county was chosen to host the Olympic events~ The feasibility study still hasn't been completed. though. The private planning-firm of EDA W Inc. of Ne\Vport Beach was hired to prepare it. Architect Gregory Pitcher said Tuesday it will be finished in about two weeks. Ms. Collis said that 20 of the 21 Olympic sites have been selected. The equestrian facility wiU be the 16thtobemadepublic. Telephone • service out 17 hours A water-damaged under- ground telephone cable left about 850 Laguna Nieuel resi· dents and 150 area bualnesses without phone sertlce Tuesday for 17 hours, a spokesman for t'ac1flc T~lephone Co. said to- day. . The spokesman said the cable is located near th~ Crown Valley · Parkway~Glenro! Drive in· tersection. The Ii t reports of the oUtag• were r ived about 3 a.m. lervlce wu rettoted at 8 p.m .• the 1poke1raan said. The sJ>C*esma.n h.ld it la not yet known whether rainwater aeeped lnto the cable or Je~ac• occurr~d in nearby water' or sewer pipes. facing recall because of a con- troversial pension plan they adopted a year _ago. T~e plan would have paid the com missioners, at age 65. "°° a month after they retired from the board with eight years of service. The four board m embers named in the recall drive are Earl Hardisty, John McComb, An~us Smith and Jack Schmidt The hfth member. Don Klaasen, was not on the board when the pension plan was adopted and is not a recall tar~et. San ce the recall drive was launched last October by the Dana Point Citizens for Action. a local citizens group, the com missioners have reduced the pension from S500 a month to $50 However. recall sponsors Ailing chief keeps job; health eyed By STEVE MITCHELL Oft ... Dlilty l"INC Sta" Laguna Beach Police Chief Jon Sparks will keep his JOb - at least for the time being - while city orricials monitor hb medical s ituation. Council members met behind closed doors late Tuesday to hear a report on the ailing police chief's medical status. Sparks bas been on disability leave since January aftel' an automobile accident in 1978 left him with back injuries. He has been undergoing daily therapy at South Coast Medical Center for the past eight weeks. and Capt. Neil Purcell bas been act ing police chief in his absence. WHAT PROMPTED Tuesday's secret session was a report that Purcell might be of· fered the top police post for the city of Coronado in San Diego County. Council member Kelly Boyd asked for the session to review Sparks' health and the probabili- ty the city could be left without police leadership were Purcell to accept a job In Coronado and Sparks remain on disabiHty. Sources close to Purcell say the acting chief would prefer to remain in Laguna Beach -as chief of police. City Manager Ken Frank told council members Tuesday that two doctors say Sparks' condi· tion is "treatable." · But Frank will be bringing in a third physician to ~agnose the chief's condition, and wlJI seek written reports from all three docton on the prognosis for re· covery, one council source said. SPAR.KS HAS SIX months ol disability leave remaining and CHIEF AILING Jon Sparks remains optimistic about re- covering, Mayor Wayne Baglin sald . "Ken <Frank> will be keeping us inform~ about Jon's health and tell us of any developments or problems." Baglin said. Purcell was in a staff meeting this morning and could not be reached for comment. But Mayor Baglin said he hopes Purcell stays tn LagWla Beach. "Neil has to decide what ia best for Neil," Baglin said. "( would hope he would stay. "But we have a chief of police. and he haa a disabling condition. We're staying with him in the hope he can overcome his medical problem." Sculpto~'s legal battles nmltiply , , C~yqn .~ • •mprov close la ~v :tJe• In u..:...llD* Beat 1ovennnet1t. W ·nuon. . But tl)ere he was: .__...~. ,Uve. old·faillloned pit~hmant attlnd ln a tiilttertd blaek tfrby bal tuahed back on-tua hta4, flpr It•~ from one com« of hla mouth. ~ Hd.cbettered fest wttb eravy statbl and ba11Y plafcf trousers. ~ be w• drawin& ~ crowd By standin1 •lop' an •tumtnum beer bar- tel. Make that t.O beer b~. He must have welped in at "f>out 315 pounds. Then he exhorted ttle ea~herlna crowd l1'lth bia pitch that wen.\ somethin& like tbil: "llUBITI BtlftYt trudt! foltl, riah\ over here to d,o your bit (C)r tile youfk•ot ah, OrMge Coun· ty ! We 1oma malte all them youth out UWte safe! We're ~a do good. "Aft, how we g'onna dO tl\ls g<JCM, I hear you aakln? "I'm glad you asked that, fol.Q. We're gonna do all that aood witb THESE!" The pttchrnaa. by _.1olly, had 1fllfted bis cicar· without missing • Word and appeared to have boist- ejf a six-pack aloft with eaek of his chubby little arms. . "And eat is dlis, you uk?" 9te •Muted, waving the six-packs. "Why, this hete is El Belcbo Premium Beer! Finest brew out of Nebtuka ! Imported direct to all you good folks here in ah, uh, -<>ranee Coun· ty, that's it! "'nU.s here is the etb:ir ol the gGm. Comes to you-all in genuine a-tumeemum eant." . THE "1QOl4N LOWEaE'f> his six-packs for a moment and took a breath wben a aellior citizen in the front roy.r asked. "Okay, •lster, how '1 that El Belcho ttuff going to h9'> imfort\lllate juveniles arouAd hen!?" "Why I'm glad /ou asked that," the pitchman roared. "We're goin to do that witll these here gen· uine El Belcho a-lumeeenum cans. We 're going to collect the empties. see? Then we're goin' to re· et1cycle 'em. "And with all that a-lumeeeridl money, we're comin' to the rescue of all the needy youth here in ah, e r , <>nmee, Ceiant1., that'• it!" . THE PITCHMAN lll'IUmD up hi.a sagging belt butkle and sft'\iled. "Now all yota folb, you just get oui tMr, aod drinJr up a wbole a.it of El Belch<> so we can re.etcycle them cam. Jmt remember, one El Belcho makes you feel real 10od. Two makes you fin e. Three makes you mellow. "An' aner a sia-pack, you doft't care one bit what we're re-encylin '. . "Just remember El Btlcbo's l!Mltto, 'Goes Down Smooth, Comes Up Lou4 -Whell You've El Belcho'd -"-'Vou '•e Sald It All!" Alas, some Wron1 Thinker out bi th emwing crowd ehallenged th nice pkcl»dl•n. He said El Belcho was bad for working .,eople. Tb-1 Bl Belcho humiliated its workers and cave Ule• lie detector tests. .. DON'T YOU HLJEft a word of that, son,'' the pitdmaa said', smllinc a beftign 1mlle. ''All working folks secretly love good old El ~lcho. Why, ,.. you 10 into a workin • town just at 1\llldowtl when it's ~ real quiet. ae' you liaten in tbe fte'l1bbortu>Odl. "An' sun enough. YM'll IM'ar El Belcho out there." . Then be adde41 bis cliacber. "Just remember. folks, wMll you here ia Or•ae, all, er, county - that's it -fuzzle good eld El Detd\O, you're doln' it tor the kids. '' PVaUC NOTICE Pl19UC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE NOf1C8 llrYITI ... f'•Of'OIAU ..... ,. l• .. , .. , ,,..... \bot\ "'-.... ~~"' ~"' .. """'~ ..... u-.. """ Sci.ot D11tl'let .... '-""..,....,,for ll-n:ll, t•· TODl'S JIM VODKA BEAM I 75.UTER 17~UTER 659 io10 CASE OF 6 39.54 CASE OF 6 60 60 W AllllMGTON (AP> -The U.S. • lurn their whereabouu. It WM Oialy ' IQnml CoWt Ml refund to bear 1 after hit former wlf e •l•orud t11· ...,.. claim •calut lbe ,.,,. Calab19e that t.-oahlir4 oece .,aia ermna by a man wboee t>.Ule to taw the younpte111, wbo an aow i .. ,.. the Wbereabouta of hit chlldren Y01&1ll aduJtJ. wu the ball for U.. moYi• "Hide 1ft The l&ory ol Leonhard'• fljllt witll Plato ScJit." tM 1overnment wa1 told 18'.tfie;'*>k, Thomu P. ~erd, a cement "Hide In Plala Si1bt, ·• and tater maton frvm Amherst, N.Y., lost made Into• movie with Jame1 Cau. track of hJ• three youn1 ebildren Much Of lt waa fUmed in Buffalo. after bll former wife married Pu· Leonhard'• lawyer, Salvatore R. 1 C-'-b -te t ed Martoche, aald the hi1b cowt'• ff. qua • .._ retie. • mo.,. r· urn · fusal to hear Leonhard'• appeal was f"formant. ••a dispace." The aovemment placed Calabrese ··I know they have many cases under the wltneas protection pro· they have discretion to hear, but aramandrefUsedtorevealwberehe, what Is more Important than hls wife and three stepcbildr.en were establlshtnf the parameten of eov· Uvlne. e rnmenta Intervention into re- Leonhard fouebt the aovemment lationshlps between parent• and without succeu fof eight years to children?" ,, BOORD'S JOSE CUERVO TIA QIN 0 GOLD MARIA I 75-UTER I LITER 750 MILLILITER 501 719 1016 CASE OF 6 48.42 CASE OF 129348 CASE OF 12 121 .91 KEO BEER BOTTLE CASE OREA T FOR SOMMER UQUECJRS PARDOCCI WINES BOTTLE CASE RETAIL RETAIL RETAIL RETAIL BLOCK & POOL PARTIES, Southern Comfort, 750-ML ....•... 5.74 63.72 BUDWEISER ~ab~~et Sauvignon 750ML Jagennelster, 750-ML ...................... 11 .45 127 .20 3140 ha hs 750·ML · 4.40 48.00 2.95 32.18 Frangellco. 750-Ml .........•........ ~ ...... 11 .92 129.95 French Colomba rd 150 ML Irish Velvet. 750-ML ......................... 11 .89 132.08 1 /2·KEG Mendocino Riesling 750 ML 2.90 31.60 3.1 9 34.76 Yukon Jack, 750-ML . ...... ............. . 6.46 71. 73 BCJD SER Chardonnay 150 ML Kamora, 750-ML ................................... 6.41 71.15 2 n20 ~henin Blanc 150 ML 4.86 53.00 3.30 36.0Q Drambuie, 750-ML ............................. 1335 148.24 V-21ur,gundy 7so.ML Galllano. 750-ML .....................••......... 13.16146.07 1; .. .xEc n andel 750ML 2.95 32.18 3.19 34.76 Greensleeves, 750-ML .. ·•··· ................ 10.53 116.95 . COORS Pi not Noir 750 ML PEDRONCEW 4.24 46.20 BO<HtBOrrs Ancient Ag~ 1 .75-UTER .....•........... 12.20 66.50 Cabin Still. I .75.UTER ....... .......... 10.35 57 .50 Ear1y Times, 1.75-UTER . . . . . .. .. . •. . . . . . 11.62 64.56 Ten High, 1.15-UTER ...................... 10.91 60.50 l.W. Harper, lJTER ............................ 7.80 86.60 Jack Daniels. UTER .................... 10.31114.48 Jim Beam, 1.1~UTER ....................... 1 1.92 66.15 Old Charter 7 Year, 1.15-UTER ...... .15.03 83.48 Old Crow, ps-lJTER .......................... 11 .72 65.09 CANADIArtS Bla<:k Velve~ 1.75-urER .................... 11 .43 63.49 Canada House, 1.1s-UTER .............. 11. 7 4 65.19 Canadian Club. 1.15-UTER ............... 16.90 93.9() Canadian Mis~ 1.75-UTER .............. 11 .45 63. 1-8 Seagram's.V.O., l.7~UTER ....... .16.76 93.09 Canadian Lord Calvert. 1.15-UTER 12.05 66.95 Seagram•s Crown Roya.I, UTER ... 15.62 173.55 Windsor Canadian, us-UTER ..... .12.59 69.90 ROMS Appleton, 750-ML ............ ......... . .... 8.29 92.07 Bacardi Gold Resewe, 750-ML ........ 8.98 99.69 Mt. Gay Eclipse, 7'°""1. ................ 631 92.22 Bacardi Lt. or Dk., LITER ............... 6.50 72.13 Bacardi 151 Pf., lJTER . . .............. 11.05 122. 75 CaatlDo Lt. or Dk., 1.75-UTER ............ 8.71 48.37 fV\ysers's Jamaican. t.75-UTER ...... .18.67103.69 Ron Rico Lt. or Dk., 1.1~UTER ...... .1132 62.89 ttQCJILA 292° l/2·KEG COORS 202° l/4·KEG ENRY WEINHAR 33os 1/2-KEG HEINEKINS 6500 l/2·KEG UTE 2800 1/2-KEG LOWENBRAO 3335 1/2-KEG CHELOB 3615 1/2·KEG MJCHELOB 2130 l/4·KEG MllLER'S 2800 1/2-KEQ OLD MILWAUKEE 2015 Cabernet Sauvignon, 150 ML 3.67 40.00 Zinfandel, 750ML 2.75 30.00 Rose Wine. 750 ML J .85 20. J 3 French Colombard. 1~ML 2.63 28.60 Johannisberg Riesling. 750ML 3.30 36.00 Chardonnay. 1so.ML 4 .84 52.80 Gewurzb'amlner, 7~·ML . .3.60 39.60 COCKTAJL AND DESSERT WINES Harvey's Bristol Cream 750-ML. .6.74 Fk:klln Port 750·ML . . . . .. . . .. . 4.53 Savory & James. crm Shry .750-ML. .• 3.63 Sandeman Port 750·ML .. . .. 7.76 Cresta Bica. Trip. Cr. Shr~ 7SO.ML .. 3.13 Dubonnet 750-ML ..... . .4.49 Dry Sack 750-ML . .. . 5 .31 Harvey•s Amontillado 750ML . 4.93 Maglgal Pale Dry 750ML 3.9~ CLOS DUBOIS Chardonnay. 750ML Gewurztramlner ,(Early 191150 ML Johannlsberg Riesling, 750-Mt Pinot Nolr, 750-ML . Cabernet Sauvfgnon '78. 1~ML Mer1ot. 750-ML 7.67 4.45 6.05 4.45 6.05 6.05 NOC HE BUENA DOS EQUIS 73.46 49.28 39.60 84.70 34.00 48.90 57.95 53.75 43.04 83.60 48.40 66.00 48.40 66.00 66.00 I 2-0Z .. 6-PACK 12-0Z .. &PACK LIOHT Oil DARK 199 CASE OF 24 7.60 WARM 212 CASE OF 24 I 0.45' WARM BE'AOUEO Beau Tour, 750-i'\L ............................. 4.04 44.00 8etau Velour, 1'°1"\L. ........................... 3.49 38.00 ~ncty. 7!1()./1\L ................................ 3.30 36.00 Cabe.met Sauvlgnon. 150-ML ........... 5.15 56.00 Plnot Nolr Rose. 1~ .................. ~2.63 28.60 BeeUfort. 7'°""1. .................................. 5.65 61.80 ' OMlttll, 750-fllt. .................................. 3.30 30~ OmMlyB....,....,1~ ................ 3.30 36.00 Q.....ctie RC>Ht 750-ML ..................... 2.20 ~00 P.lriotNOlr, 1~ ............................... 423 48.00 BillUC::lilr, 7~ ..................... , ........... 4.84 52.80 Cllb. Seuvlgnon, RMW . .,,, 1~ .. 1~.10 132.00 I I ,. THE IBVINB City Council members, In an attempt to clear up questions in the community r egardJng Chief Peart'a handJ- ing of the case, told Woollett la.st week to prepare the chronoloty. Councilman Larry Agran said he was personally invited by Woollett to read the cbronoJoc that Woollett is now witbbold.ini .................. 'L'•m Vmedenblrg ~f what '°.do with baMett of cp kft him by generow Ecuter Bunny. Rabbit tracks Easter bunny left signature The 426 colored Easter eggs that Tom Vandenberg found hidden in his Newport Beach apartment Sunday morning didn't bother him too much. lt'S the 74 beauties he didn't find that have him wor ried. ·'I've never st•en so many eggs," the young Newport' man remarked this week "I found them in my dirty socks. in my s<>fa. in the Loi let you name it." VANDENBERG BLAME~ the whole thing on his girlfriend from Pasadena. He says she has an "interest· ing " sense of humor According to hi s explanation. she purchased 500 eags, "mostly rejecti.." from a ranch and then spent the better part of two days coloring them. "I was away on business." he says, "and she came in and hid them When I came back, they were all over the place · She 11lso left behmd a sign that proclaims. "Cation! Easte r egg deposits " Vandenberg says the word "cation," which is sup· posed to read "taut1on." is another example of her in- teresting humor He says he's a poor speller and she won't let tum forget 1t BUT HE'S PLENTY GOOD with his math. After find· ing only 426 of the 500 secreted eggs, he knew he was in trouble "There's still 74 eggs out there," he says. "and if it goes too long maybe r can borrow one of those odor- sniffers from the fire department and find them that way. But for the time being. Vand enberg says he has plenty of eggs. He started keeping them in a laundry basket after running out oC room Jn his refrigerator. Asked what he plans to do with all the eggs, he admits, "I don't know." And, after a pause, "Why? Do you want some?" -By Steve Marble Sculptor's legal battl·es multiply before erecting hla br1dlt ttd workaof•rt. "THE NVMBEll of people who were contacted and the ear- ly attempta at the Involvement of the District Attorney's office indicate clearly that a coverup wasn't intended. "As to preferential treatment, I believe that under similar circumstances, where the level of iofonnatiori with reaard to the • WilUcm Miller analyze• e country'• problem1 - nd the solutlons . . . 89 Cblel Peart has contended that police held off on im· mediately trying to arrest An· thony because they wanted him to cool down. Peart also said that elthoqb AnthonY'Wasn't arrested until 35 hours following the aUeged as. sault, be was placed in the ' psychiatric ward or Hoat City !.Sanaaer Woollett said ~ is in the process of doubl~p checking with the District A~ torney'1 office to determin& whether the chronology or th( case can be released. r ::lf e said that the decision that t.be chronology shouldn 'l be re. leased was made by a dep~ dl1trict attorney and not by 00~ ttjct Attorney Cecil Hicks. l< • 1/ .,Onr•n,. 52, pe1'shes! r • • in Lido Isle home. fire ~ A 52-year-old Newpor:t Beach woman was killed early today when fire spread through her Lido Isle home and drove back neighbors who tried to respond to her screams for help. Authorities said Mary Ann Cahill perished in a bedroom of her 241 Via Genoa home. The woman s urvived a blaze two ye~rs ago in the same house, they added. Neighbors , eyeing the wreckage from the 3: 15 a.m. fire. said that Mrs. Cahill had Olympic event off forOC? The Los Aneeles OJympic Organizing Committee has made a final decision on a site for equestrian events during the 1984 summer games, and It apparent· ly won't bein Orange County. The site will be announced later this week. said committee spokeswoman Amy Collis. She said a formal proposal from the Orange County government to h os t t h e events in a new eq uestrlan center in the south county hasn 't been submitted. Committee officials have said in the past that the Santa Anita race track in Arcadia was the fro nt r.unner to h ost the equest.nan events. The co unt y B o ard of Supervisors, though, decided April 8 lo prepare a $10,000 feasibility study on building a s pectator complex with 80,000 to 100,000 seats in the Aliso Viejo Greenbelt near Laguna Niguel. An equestrian facility already was planned ror the site. County officials were hoping they could attract some outside construction fuods if the county was chosen to host the Olympic events. The feasibility study still basn 't been completed, though. The private planning firm of EDAW Inc. of Newport. Beach was hired to prepare it. Architect Gregory Pitcher said Tuesday it will be finished In a bopt two weeks. Ms . Collis said that 20 of the 21 • Olympic sites have been selected. The equestrian facility will be the 16th to be ntade public. Service held for Mesa's Mr!. Schones lived through a third fire earlier in the 1970s when s he had lived on a different part or Lido Isle Fire authorities, though, were unable to confirm the third fire This mol"Jling's blaze. firemen said, caused at least $125.000 damage to the home and injured Mrs . Cahtll 's 84 -year·old mother, Ma ry Ann Burke of . -Monrovia. Firemen said Mrs. Burke tried to come to her daughter 's rescue when she heard screams from the bedroom near the rear or the house. But she was driven back by heat and smoh, suffering burns and smoke inhalation. One neili(hbor. Irvin Justin. re-ported that flames could be seen • frum several blocks away and reached heights of 15 to 20 feet Another neighbor said one person tried to come to the wo m an's rescue by tossing a bench through her bedroom win- dow. which overloo ks a pool But that only seemed to fuel the flames. he said. It was in early 1979, riremen Fireworks sale out University High bans stan<J, Irvine Unified lcboo4 J>iltrlat trustees, who dec1c!ed tast year that cars shouldn't be sold on the parking lot at University ffiab, have now d~cided that firew shouldn't be sold ther anywhere else on school district property. Arguing in favor of the sale of fireworks Mo nday n ig ht . University High School athletic director Dick Roche said that he had already mad e ar- rangements with a company that wished to sell fireworks at the school. Irvine school Trustee Lee Sicoli said that the decision to ban the sale of fireworks at Uaj ..High anUMllllllillM>G• the school district was in keep- ing with recent school trustee dec isions to prohibit private c ompanies fr o m selling rchandJse on campuses. Also. the consens us or the sc hoo l trustees was that fireworks could prove dangerous to students who might buy them. Last s ummer. the school trustees decided to outlaw the s..ale of used cars on the University High parking lot after residents complained .that Ule parking lot was becoming an e yesore on weekends when people parked their car$ there and put "For Sale" signs on the windshields. 'Water man' robs Mesan, 93, of $110 The six-footer who knocked on the door of 370 Broadway St in Costa Mesa told 93-year-old John Fuller be was the bottled water man and that he had some money coming. Fuller told police be directed the "water man" to the kitchen area where his son and daughter- in-law keeJ> the water and their water r«!eipts. Normally, he told olflcers, the delive,.Y man doesn't bother him as he sita in his chair looking out the front window. HejustdeUvers thew ater and leaves. But Tuesday afternoon the man was persistent. "They owe me $10," Fuller: quoted him as saying afler he returned from the kitchen. Fuller tDld officers he reached into his brown wallet and pulled outa$10bill. The man took the bill and then grabbed Fuller's. wallet. Fuller told offh~ers his assailant ran out the back door. escapine with$110- said, that a fire broke out in t~ Via Genoa home and cause $40.000 in damage. They said th ii\ that e~e Mm wat found staggering hallway s uffering from s ~ inhala.. t1on 4' That fire . offi ciata said, was determined to have ~ causeA by a cigarette Mrs, ~ahill aq. cidentally dropped. Officials declined t.01specula~ on the ca115e of ttU. -~orning~ blaze. noting only that, it bega111 in Mrs Cahill's bed~. Air ca regula ltf!!e ~ I( n u \· Myster)' man, 92, arrives .i·n N~ort .frao.(t blstri ~~~~k~ caUed lo to sol ~ t-=~.:= c mor¥.Tih'e 1 of our County at 1ovemment. Why, lt wu more like an appa· d~'ffJ· . But re he waa: a "~ live. old-falhioned ~••n.:bmairl attired 1ij ~ bat~• ijack dtrJ»r hat hed b•ck on his hlad, t:lg4r tttd) Protrudlof fJ"OJD mcom.-o( b1a awth. unb~ red·cbeckered with sr•vy staiAB batgy plalcl ' troilsers. ·And he w• -~awtna p crowd b}' . stindfni atop an --~ ilWtnlnubl beer bar. 1 rel. Make that two ... ~~ • ~ barr$. He mual~, :to~tw:ff~o~:d!~ Jll llUllll~ Then he exhorted the .'" 1athering crowd with h's pitch that went sometbinl like thia' · "llUUY! nuaaYt 8UR&Y! fol.ks, right over ·~re to do )'our bit for ti.e youth of ah, Orange Coun· ... ty ! We gorvia make all them youth out there safe! We 're go~a do good . . "An, how we gonna do this good, I hear you askm? "I 'm glad you uked that, folks. We're gonna do all that good with THaE!" The pitchman, by ,aollY. bad shifted his cigar· without missing a wor4 and appeared to have hoist- ed a six-pack aloft with each of his chubby little arms. "And what iB this, you ask?" he shouted, waving t!M six-pacb. "Why, this here u El Belcho Premium Beer! Finest brew out of NebrukaL.lmported direct to all you good folks here in ah. uh, -Orange Coun- ty, that's it! "This here is the elixir ol the gods. Comes to you-all in genuine a-lumeeenum cans." THE PITCHMAN LOWERED his six-packs for a moment and took a breath when a senior citizen in the front row asked, "Okay, mister, how 's that El Belcho stuff going to help unfortunate juveniles around here?" "Why I'm glad you asked that," the pitchman roared. "We 're going to do that with these here gen· uine El Belcho a -lumeeenum cans. We're goint to collect the emptiett., see? Then we're goln' to re-• en~ycle 'em. "And with all 'th• •·lwneeenum money, we're in' to ~e res .U the needy youth here in a,, er, OFgt. sit~" THE PITCHMAN WTCRED up his sagging belt buckle and smiled. "Now all you folks, you just get '~-~he~ drint-~~ whole lot of El Belcho so we ~l re-epsycle the,iQ cans. Just remember, one El .Be ho ipakes YO\l leel real &ood. Two makes you rme. Three makes you mellow. "An' after a six-pack, you don't care one bit what we're re-encylin'. "Just remember El Belcho's motto, 'Goes Down Smooth, Comes Up Loud -When You've El Belcho'd -You 've Said It All!" Alas, some Wrong Thinker out in the growing crowd challenged the nice pitchman. He said El Belcho was bad for working people. That El Belcho humiliated its workers and gave them lie detector tests. "DON'T YOU BELIEVE a word or that, son," the pitchman said, smiling a benign smile. "All working folks secretly love 1ood old El .Belcho. Why, you go into a workin' town just at sundown when it's real quiet, an' you listen in the neitbborhoods. ''An' sure enough, you'll bear El Belcbo out there." Then be added bis clincher. "Just remember. folks, when you here in Orange, ah, er, county - that's it -guzzle good old El Belcho, you're doin' it for the kids! •' PUB~C NOTICE PUBUC 'NOTICE P\JBUC NOTICE MOTIC8 IWfTIMO .. OI TODl'S JIM VODKA BEAM 1 75-LITER 17~UTER 659 1010 CASE OF 6 39.54 CASE OF 6 60.60 WASHJNG~N (AP) -TM U.S. 8\IP.~DM c.outt bu refused to bear 1 tlO in1Woll claim 11ainlt the IOV· enJateat by 1 maa wboee battle to learn the whereabout. of bit ebildren was the bull for the movie "Hitt. ln • Plain Sllht." Thomas P . Leonhard, a cement muon from Amberat, N.'(., lost track of bis three young children after hit former wlfe married Pu· qu•le Cala~reae, " mobater-tumed-lnformant. The government placed Calabreee under the witne11 protection pro- aram and refused to reveal where be, his wile and three stepchildren were Llvlnc. Leonhard fought the government without succeas for elght years to learn UaeJr where1bout1. It wu only after lll1 former wife divorced CaJab,.... tbat Leonhard oece .,aln dw the youn11ten, who are now youn1 adulta. The story of Leonha1"d't fttht with the covemment wu told lJi the boot. "lltde Jo P1aln Si1ht,'' and later made Into a movi~ wlth James Caan. Much of lt was filmed ln Buffalo. (..eonhard's lawyer. Salvatore R. M~rtoche, said the hl&h court'• re- fusal to hear Leonhard's appeal was "a dilgrace." "I know they have many cases they have discretion to hear, but what Is m ore Important than establishing the parameters of 1ov· e rnme ntal intervention Into re- lationships between parent• and children?" BOO RD'S JOSE C<JERVO TIA GIN GOLD MARr.t< I 75LITER I LfTER 750 MILLILITER 501 719 1016 CASE OF 6 48.42 CASE OF 129348 CASE OF 12 I 21.91 KEO BEER LIQUEURS PARDUCCI WINES BO TILE CASE RETAll BOTILE CASE GREAT FOR SOMMER RETAIL RETAIL BLOCK & POOL PARTIES RETAIL 4.40 48.00 2.95 32.18 Southern Comfort, 750-ML. ........... 5.74 63.72 BUDWEISER ~aberr'et Sauvignon 750ML Jagenneister' 7»ML .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . J 1.45 127 .20 3 J 40 hab s 750 ML .. 2.90 31.60 3.19 34.76 Frangelico, 1~ ....................... ...11 .92 129.95 French Colombard 150 ML Irish Velvet. 750-ML ...................... ..11.89 132.08 112·KEG Mendocino Riesling 150 ML 4.86 53.00 3.30 36.00 Yukon Jack. 750-ML . ........ ... .. ... 6.46 71.73 BUDWEISER Chardonnay 750ML Kamora, 750-ML ................................. 6.41 71. t 5 2 n20 Chenin Blanc 750ML 2.95 32.18 3.19 34.76 Drambuie, 750-Ml. ............................ .t 335148.24 v--Burgundy 1so ML Qalllano, 75Q.ML ............................... 13.16 146.07 t/4-KEG Zinfandel 750-ML 4.24 46.20 Greensleeves. 750-Ml. ....................... 10.53 116.95 COORS Pinot Noin so ML PEDRONCELLI BO<JRBONS Ancient Age, 1 7'>LITER .. .. . •. . .. 12.20 66.50 Cabin Still, 1 7'>UTER . .. .... .. . . . l 0.35 57 .50 Early Times, 1 7'>UTER . .. • ........... 11 .62 64.56 Ten High, 1 1i;.urER .. .... .......•.. .. . 10.9 t 60.50 1.W. Harper, urER ............................. 7.80 86.60 Jack Daniels, LITER ...................... 10.31 114.48 Jim Beam, 1.7'>UTER .... . . . . . . . . 1 t.92 66.15 Old Charter 7 Year, 1.7'>LITER ...... 15.03 83.48 Old Crow, u>LITER ......................... 11 .72 65.09 CANADIANS Black Velvet, l.7'>UTER ...... . . . . . 11 .43 63.49 Canada House. 1.1'>urER ............... 11.74 65.19 Cana&an Club, 1.7'>LITER .............. 16.90 93.90 Canadian Mlst. 1.7'>LITER . . . . . 1 t.45 63. t 8 Seagram•s V.O •• t.7'>UTER ..... 16.76 93.09 Canadian Lord Calvert. 1.7'>LITER .12.05 66.95 Seagram's Crown Royal, LITER .... 15.62 t 73.55 Windsor Canadian, 1.75-UTER ... .12.59 69.90 ROMS Appleton. 750-ML ............................ 8.29 92.07 Bacardi Gold Reserve, 750-ML . .. . . 8.98 99.69 ML Gay Eclipse, 750/'\L.. ................... 831 92.22 Bacardi Lt. or Dk •• LITER .................. 6.50 72.13 BacardJ f 51 Pf., UTER •................... 11 .05 122. 75 Castillo Lt. or Ok.. 1.1s.UTER ............ 8.71 48.37 Mys~'s JamaJcan. 1.1~UTER ....... 18.67 l 03.69 Ron RJco ~t. or Dk.. 1.15-UTER ....... 11 32 62.89 ' TEQOllJA Cuervo Qold, t.75-ureR .................... 14.72 81.76 CueN9 WhJte• t.75-UTER .................. 1328 73. 74 Cu~ Gold 1800, 750-ML ............. 10.Q6 111. 75 Montezuma W. and G., 1.1~·.1 J .17 62.0l Moft•ma w. and a .. LITER ......... 6.20 68.85 72.44 51.20 54.06 61.79 83.34 93.08 292° l/2·KEG COORS 202° l/4·KEG ENRY WEJNHAR 33os 1/2·KEG HEINEKINS 6500 l/2·KEG UTE 28<!-0 l /2·KEG LOWEN BRAU 3335 l/2•KEG MICHELOB 3615 l/2·KEG MICHEL OB 2130 l/4·KEG t.\JLLER'S 2800 1/2·KEO , Ol:.D MILWAUKEE 20'5 1/2-KEO PABST 2550 1/2-KEO Cabernet Sauvignon, 750ML 3.67 40.00 Zinfandel, 7SO·ML 2.75 30.00 Rose Wine, 750ML l.85 20.13 French Colombard, 7SO ML 2.63 28.60 Johannisberg Riesling. 750 "'L 330 36.00 Chardonnay, 750-ML 4.84 52.80 Qewurztramlner, 750ML 3.60 39.60 COCKTAIL AND DESSERT WINES Harvey's Bristol Cream 750ML 6.74 Acklfn Port 7SO·ML 4.53 Savory & James, c rm Shry .7SOML 3.63 Sandeman Port 750-ML . . . 7. 76 Cresta Bica. Trip. Cr. Shr. 75<l ML . 3.13 Dubonnet 750·ML. 4.49 Dry Sack 750·ML 5.31 Harvey's Amontillado 1soML 4.93 Maglgal Pale Dry 750-ML 3.95 CLOS DU BOIS Chardonnay, 7SOML 7.67 Qewurztramlncr .<Enny 79l 150 ML 4 .45 J<>hannlsberg Riesling, 750ML 6.05 Pfnot Nolr, 750ML 4.45 Cabernet Sauvignon '78. 1soML 6.05 Merlot. 750-Ml . 6.05 NOCHE DOS B<JENA EQUIS 73.46 49.28 19.60 84.70 34.00 48.90 57.95 53.75 43.04 83.60 48.40 66.00 48.40 66.00 66.00 12-0Z • &PACK 12-0Z ,&f>ACK LIOHT OR DARK }99 212 CASE Of 24 7,60 CASE OF 24 I 0.45 WARM WARM BEAOUEO Beau Tour, 7'°1"\l ............................. 4.04 .it4.00 Beau Velour. 1~ : .......................... 3A9 38.00 Burgundy, 750Ml. ....... , ..•..............•....•. 3.30 36.00 c~ Sauvlgnon, ?»ML ........... 5.15 56.00 Plnot rtolr Roae. 1~ ................... .2.63 28.60 BeaufOrt, 7»Ml. .............................. ~5.65 61.60 Chablis. 75().11\1. .................................... 3.30 30.00 ~ Beau)olala. 1~ ..............• 3.30 36.00 QienecheRose, 1~ ..................... 2.20 24.00 Plnot rlolr, 7!!().Ml. .. ,w .. .,,., .... , •• , •• , •••••••• 4.23 46.00 Beliu(:lalr, 750-ML ................................. 4.84 52;80 Clb. Si\Mgnon, ~ ·1~. 1~ .• 12.10 t 32J>O •'•" ~\ •• Car poolers get coverage SeveraJ commuters to New York City who live year-round in Westchester are forming their first car pool for thls summer -but already they are bogged down in confusion about bow the drivers can be prop. erly paid for expenses without violating their auto insurance contracts. This befuddlement is shockingly widespread. and it applies. too, to many other aspects of auto insurance. Now, as the big driving season of 1981 gets under way, it's vital to have the facts The answer to the above car pool question 1s that if you use your car in a typical ~ sh are-the· ride deaJ in which ---------~""..;.,.. everyone takes ~~ri~son~r~~i~:~ SYlVll PORTIR , does all the - driving and col lects only for expenses Crom the passengers. your policy provides regular coverage insurance pro tection is not affected as long as you r car pool is not intended as a business operated for a profit. But an angle you must consider: In a car pool, there are several passengers in the car. and should your car be involved in a senous accident. you could become liable for a big sum for bodily injury to these passengers The solution 1s to boost your ltabiltty limits. Q: SHOULD YOU HAVE collision insurance on an older mode1'1 A: The hone.st answer is No. While much de· pends on the value of your car. collision insurance is just not worth the cost 1f the market vaJue of your auto is only $100-$300 Q: WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE between col lision insurance and comprehensive insurance? A: Collision insurance provides coverage fC\!) damage to your insured auto when it is damaged by contact with some other object Comprehensive insurance provides for payment of loss resulting from such sources as glass breakage, windstorm. vandalism and malicious mis chief. A deductible 1s usually applicable to collision losses and also is available for comprehensive Q: WHAT IS A '"non-assessable" policy" A : Under a non-assessable polic~ you pay only one rate and if your insurance com ny has a bad loss experience with you during a yea . it cannot re· turn to you and ask for more AlQ_ney On an assessable policv.' the "t'om any can return and ask for more money ib cover losses. There are insurance companies ~ch sttll write assessable policies - STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT UPS AND DOWNS Pct. Up 14.t Up 14. UP 11.7 Up IU \Jp t1.t UP 1.6 up 1.• U11 , .. VP 1.s VII 7.S VII 7.) Up 7.l Up 7. VII 6, Up '· Up U UP U Pct. g:; u Of1 u Off t.O Off 1.0 7.J ••• ... ... •. s u H ,,, ... u AMERICAN LEADERS METALS c .... r IS~to <Mb• pound, U S c1 .. u,.. llenJ. L•N .... c..-11 •pound. llM 4.J\11 <.mt• IJOU'td. Clellffr.O Tiit $4.1!0S Metals WMk c-lt• lb .,.,..._..,.ctntsapOUnd, H.v MMcwy '43111.00per ti.Mo.. f'l•U-Moft.00 troy •1 .• H v SILVER Handy & HvmM, i11.sm -troy°""'•· COLD QUOTATIONS